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Pqe Bto • The Daily Sentinel

'·

lbunday, Nowmber z.:t. z~

www.mydailysentinel.com

Rher \ alley Health &amp; \'\'elln es~ Center

.,,

Marines celebrate
Thanksgiving in Iraq, A9

Woods wins record seventh
.
PGA Grand Slam of Golf tide
.

av-.ss~IATEO

141'photo

New Vorl&lt; Rangers' Jaromir Jagr, left, of the Czech Republic, fights off Carolina Hurricanes' Niclas
wallin, of Sweden, during the third period in NHL hockey action Tuesday at Madison Square
Garden in New York. Jagr scored two goals in the ga~ helping the Rangers to a 4D win .

Jagr passes Kurri on
another milestone night
BY IRA POOELL
ASSOCIATED PRESS

"

NEW YORK - Jaromir
Jagr's smile is back and his
corny jokes are drawing
laughs again in a happier
New York Rangers dressing
room.
And why not? Jagr's
shoulder is stronger, his
scoring touch is returning
to the precision level of last
season, and the Broadway
Blueshirts are starti ng to
win on a more consistent
basis.
One other thing, Jagr is
suddenly on a milestone-anight pace at Madison
Square Garden.
The Cze.c h star scored
twice during another special night and Henrik
Lundqvist made 34 saves in
his third career shutou1 to
give the Rangers a solid 40 victory over the Carolina
Hurricanes on Tuesday.
Just two nights after Jagr
became the 16th NHL player to score 600 goals, he
passed Jari Kurri and sef
the record for goals by a
European,born player.
' "Now I'm looking for the
700th," he said wi-th a
chuckle. "Jari Kurri was a
guy everybody looked up to
from Europe. He was our
idol. To score more goals
than him ::. It's huge."
In the only other NHL
games Tuesday, it was
Edmonton 2, Calgary I.
and Anaheim 5, San Jose 0.
The jovial moods disappeared from Jagr the
new Rangers captain -last
spring, shortly after he
· broke team records for
goals (54) and points (123)
and carried New York into
the playoffs for the first
time since I 997.
The postseason stay was
short and Jagr's contribution was limited. He· hurt
his shoulder in the series
opener against New Jersey,
then the injury knocked
him out for good in the
final game of the Devils'
first-round sweep. Surgery
followed, and Ja~r didn ' t
get back t\l playing until
just before this season.
He still hasn't regained
total strength in the shoulder he dislocated, but the
results are starting to say
otherwise. Jagr has three
goals and two assists the
past two games and leads
the NHL with 34 points and
23 helpers.
. "II is not 100 percent," he
said. "Not yet. But it 's better."
And so are. the Rangers.
New York followed up' a

.

-

"I 'M!Sn 't firing on all cylin-

"I thought that

'MIS

606 Washington St . • ~avenswood . WV
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PRESS

POIPU BEACH, Hawaii
- It stal1ed shaky but ended
the same way for Tiger
Woods - SUITOUnded by hula
dancers on .the 18th· green,
:wearing a llorallei and posing
.with a trophy.
Woods rallied to win the
PGA Grand Slam of Golf for
. a record seventh straight time,
closing with a bogey-free 6under 66 on Wednesday to
beat Jim Furyk by two
.strokes.
The British open and PGA
champion, who started the
day three shot~. behind Puryk,
finished the 36-hole tournament with an S-under 136
total to earn $500,000, ~ving
him more than $3 milhon in
career Grand Slam winnings.
"I certainly played better
than I did yesterday," Woods
· said. "Gave myself some
chances. ... Overall, I really
hit the ball crisp and dear
today, which was nice."
Furyk, the world's No. 2
golfer behind Woods, closed
with a 71 to take home
$300,000. U.S. Open champion Geoff Ogilvy (74) was six
strokes back and · earned
$250,000. Mike Weir (74)
was last at I over and made
$200,000.
Woods has owned Poipu,
also · winning in 1998, '99,
'00, 'OJ. '02 and '05. He fmished second to Ernie Els in
'97 in his only odler appearance in the event.
Last year, Woods closed
with a 64 to win by seven
strokes over Phil Mickelson,
despite losing ·six pounds
because of a stomach virus.
"I've always loved coming
here." he said.
. Furyk opened with a 67 for
a one-stroke lead over Ogilvy
and a three-stroke lead over
Woods. But he wasn't able to
apply any pressure on his
opponents, missing several
fairways.

to," Frnyk said

two shots that fast," Woods

Woods used a strong short said.The Americans both birdi' ~
game to make up for his
.....
struggles off the tee during the 573-yard sixth to pull
Tuesday's opening round. away from Ogilvy and Weir~:
The 12-time major winner
Unlike previou·s events
chipped away at the lead until , where Woods was relaxed
he holed a 25-foot chip on No. cha«y. Woods appeared ~
9 to tie Furyk for the lead at6 senous. to start the round bgi
under.
loqsened up before the tum. :
After his 6-iron shot landed
Conditions at the oceanside
short imd left of 'the pin layout were sunny and llllldt
Woods· chip bounced a fe~ wmdier than the opening
feet from the i:up, ·checked round. The players were
because of the backspin and soaked by a sudden ~
rolled straight in.
on the par-4 13th. They ~
He shook his fist and smiled under umbrellas held b~ the1r
as the gallery cheered wildly. &lt;::~d_d1es f~r a few nunutes
"A lot of luck." WOOds said. until~ rams passed.
j:!veryone could sense
Og1lvy OO,gan the day a
Woods· momentum building. stroke , behmd PuT)'k but
"He played smarter and couldn t get a grnsp of the
smarter, almost like he got tncky ~ns. The 29-year-Qid .
smarter during ·the touma- Australian bogeyed three. of
ment," said Ogilvy, making the first seven ;holes, falling
his Grand Slam debut.
fi~e S!JOkes beh1nd the pace. . .
.
WelT, who was followed by
Woods took sole possessiOn about a dozen friends from IUs
of the lead on the ~xl hole native Canada, never was able
when Puryk skated h1s 5-f~- to challenge for the lead with
er for par to the left for his ·two birdies, two bogeys and a
first bogey of,the toum~nt. triple bogey on the 179-yartl
It was Woods _first I~ m the seventh that dropped him to 2
tou~ament smce b1rd1etng over on the day.
the second hole of the openHis 9-iron tee shot fell shor1
m~ r;tmnd.
of the green and plunged into
I ve never been ~n the the water. He then missed a 3c'?urse and ~'!ght, Wo~; foot . putt for double bogey
It s real!~ sl.~ppl~g away,
after stepping away because
Furyk_ said. You re alw~ys of the gusty wind.
pluggmg away, always trymg
Wei!' and Furyk were selectbecause you never know ed as alternates based on their
w?."t's go_ing to happen.
performances in · the four
He nught make a bogey, majors. Two spotS were open
you could make a birdie and because Woods claimed twu
get two shots real quick," he majors and Masters winner
.srud.
Phd Mickelson declined to
Woods reached 7 under and play.
Furyk won the 2003 Grand
took a tw?-stroke lead with a
12-foot bird1e putt on No. 15. Slam, bea~ Weir by eight
·
Furyk was inside Woods, but strokes.
two-putted from 6 feet.
·
The tournament oondudes
Woods made his move Woods' dominant year that
early, sinking shon putts on saw eight wins on tonr but
Nos. 2 and 3 for . birdie, marred by the death of his
pulling within a stroke of father, Earl, who died of canFuryk.
cer May 3.

3n!l

dismal performance . last . puck in " front, and then
Saturday in Pittsburgh with rushed across the crease to
a pair of home victories deny Ray Whitney's oneagainst Tampa Bay and timed shot at the left post.
Carolina. The previous two
After allowing at least
Stanley Cup champions four goals in six of his first
were outscored 8-1.
10 outings, Lundqvist has
On New York's four yielded a total of 14 in his
goals
versus
the past seven starts and posted
Hurricane~.
I 0 players five wins.
·
recorded points. Only Jagr
"I always keep telling
and Michael Nylander (two myself to concentrate on
assists) made multiple the next puck,'' Lundqvist
appearances on the score said following the Rangers·
sheet.
first shutout this season. "It
"I think we kept the game sounds silly ... but it keeps
simple," Rangers coach me on my toes."
Tom Renney said. "You · This loss doesn't bode
have to respect your oppo- well for the Hurricanes,
nent enough to realize that who started a three -game in
you can't reinvent the four-day road trip - that
wheel · and be so creative includes a Friday matinee
that you try to do things in Boston - with an uninthat are way outside of spired performance of th~ir
what has been successful.
own. Carolina had won
"II is more ·important to three straight and five of
just play a good complete SIX.
·
·
game and get the win and
"I thought we P.layed a
give your opponents some- lazy game," Carolina coach
thing to think about for Peter
Laviolette
said.
future reference."
"They had a step on us in
After losing three of four the skating and the battles."
to Carolina last season, the
Oilers 2, Flames 1
Rangers have split the first
At Edmonton, A, Jberta,
two this season. The
Hurricanes earned ·a 2-1 Petr Sykora had twO"goals
to lift the host Oilers past
home victory six days earli- Calgary.
··
er in the game immediately
The game was lied with
•. APpllolo
before New York's loss at
Tiger
Woods
watches
his
drive
on
the
fifst
hole
during
final
round
in
the
Grand
Slam
of Golf
Pittsburgh.
just over 6 minutes left
A,nd the Rangers don't when Flames goalie Miikka at the Poipu Bay Golf Course in Poipu Beach. Hawaii, Wednesday.
have wait long to make Kiprusoff
allowed
a
amends there. New York's rebound on Ales Hemsky's
next
game
after
a shot. Sykora was there for
Thanksgiving break is his lith goal this season.
Saturday night in the Steel
Kristian Huselius scored ·
City.
his seventh for Calgary.
"We feel like we're startEdmonton's Steve Staros
ing to find our game and received a delay of game _
kind of buying into the way penalty with I: 26 left but
that we need to play in the Oilers killed off the
order to win," forward Matt power play . .
Cullen said. "We had a couDucks 5, Sharks 0
AI
Anaheim,
Calif.,
pie of good games here, big
wins, and it's nice to go Teenm Selanne scored his
thFre now and hopefully 498th and 499th career
return !he favor."
goals,
Jean -Sehastie.n
Brendan Shanahan, who Giguere "recorded his 24th
got to 600 goals earlier this career shutout, and the
season. netted his NHL- Ducks routed San Jose at
leading 17th this season home .
and Marcel Hossa also
Giguere made 23 saves
scored.
for the Ducks.
It was the first rime since
Defensemen
Chris
• Fresh Live CutChristmas Trees
Detroit's Brett Hull and Pronger
and
Francois
Steve ·Yzerman on March Beauchemin each had a
• Balled &amp; Burlapped Christmas Trees
21. 2004, that 600-goal goal and an assist. Ryan
• Wreaths • Garland • Poinsettias
scoring teammates con- Getzlaf scored during a
nected in the same game, power play and defense man
.• Unique. Gift Ideas
according to the Elias Shane O'Brien had two
Sports Bureau.
assists. Anaheim defense • Fruit Baskets Packed Full
Lundqvist has picked up men have comb1ned for 67
of Fresh Fruits; Nuts &amp; Candy
his pace· and was sharp points, the most tn the
throughout , making 23 NHL.
• Bulk Chris~mas Candy
saves in the first two periThe Sharks were without
ods and protecting a lead Jonathan Checchoo. who
all night. During the middle mi ssed his second game
frame, he turned away because of an injured left
Mike Commodore after leg. San Jose wa~ ~hut out.
defenseman
Kar~l for the first lime thi s sea Rachunek turned over the son .

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohlo
,'i ll ( I '\ I'S • \ o l. .)h. '\ o

ttftt Jt~flt

• Owens, Ramo
give Cowboys big
Thanksgiving victory.
SeePageB1

At Bob's Market &amp;
Greenhouse, Inc.

""" nnd,,h" nl " " ' """

8Y BRIAN J. REm
BREEOOMYOAILXSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY- Next year promises to be a "big" year for road and
bridge repairs across the county,
Engineer Eugene · Triplett told
Meigs County Commissioners.
At Wednesday's weekly commissioners' meeting. commissioners and Triplett discussed
plans for pavmg, replacing
bridges and repairing guardrail on
the county's road system. Most of
the estimated $2 million in road
work will be financed through

state and federal will pave Sharon Hollow, Ponland
programs,
but Road, M'aloon's Run Road, White's .
Triplett said signif- Hill Road, Joppa Road and Hysell
·
icant local matches Run Road using Issue II funds.
come from the . Those Issue II projects . will
county's portion of require a county match of 20 pergasolme tax pro- cent, to be paid through the county's
ceeds.
Auto License and Gasoline tax.
· Eueene
Trip!ett
said While 20 percent is a relatively
T1lplett
Cot,te'fJit
Road, small portion of the total cost, the
Eagle Ridge Road expense to the county is significant
and Bowman's Run Road will be because of the scope of the projects,
paved next year, using funds Triplett said.
through the1 'state's Issue II proTriplett will access federal money
gram. Also,in 2007 and early 2008, to pave· Bashan Road from Morning
the cou y highway department Star to Ohio 248, Locust Grtwe

will

Road and Union Avenue, and to
repair guardrail on various county
roads. The same program will itlso
stripe all paved county roads.
In addition to the planned paving
projects. the Dexter Bridge and
Laurel Cliff Bridge will be replaoed,
at an estimated cost of $500,000.
The entire cost of those bridge projects will be paid through a federal
bridge program, Triplett said.
Triplett said the county received
no funding for road and bridge
repairs for 2006, and ,that's one
reason next year's allocation is as
large as it is:

·Hometown
merchants
plan parades,
festive events

Bv 8ml SERGENT
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•

INS{DE
• Give ttlanks everyday is Tl;lanksgMng
Day. See Page A2

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WEATIIER

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C'v~sta~ts ......

I !{ Ill\' . '\ c l\ I \II\ I R :.q . :.!on(&gt;

Triplett: '07 will be 'big' year for road projects ·

SPORTS

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~@ ~010&gt;ft

-s

_on,..AlO

INDEX
2

StlCI'IONS-

20 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox AlO
Buckeye Edition 810
Al.o
Calendars
86-8
·Classifieds
Comics
Editorials ' '
Faith • Values
Movies

89

A4 ·
A2-3

As

NASCAR
Sports

83
B Section

Weather

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RUTLAND - . "Kids
respond to need and kids are
givers," R,usty Bookman.
principal
· of
Meigs
lntermrdiate School stated
. after his students recently
proved him right by adopting 40 "angels" from the
Meigs County Depanment
of Job and Family Services
(MCDJFS).
The , MCDJFS "angel
tree" project happens once a
year when less fortunate
kids are provided with
Christmas gifts, clothing
and/or toys through a secret
Santa that comes in all
shapes and sizes, including
414 students at Meigs
Intermediate School. .
Each classroom is taking
a boy and a girl from the
MCDJFS angel tree . and
purchasing as well as
wrapping gifts for that
child. The kids have no
idea who the arigels are,
they on! y know what the
angel asked for this year
for Christmas. The kids
realize they may never
meet their angel and . most
have never bought a
Christmas rresent for
someone they ve never met
which is teaching them a
lesson in true. giving and
"paying it forward."
. Bookman said in the past
the kids had participated in
sending care packages
overseas to the needy but
t)lis year they decided to ·
keep their Christmas project close to home which
comes in particularly
·handy since MCDJFS are
running short on angel tree
sponsors thi s year. The
MCDJFS is providing gifts
for over 500 Je ss .fortunate
kids this year. and recently
I 00 were without sponsors. For those individuals
or groups (such as churches or other organizations)
that wish to become a
sponsor
call
Heather
Haggy at MCDJFS at 9922117, ext. 116.
When asked why give to
needy kids, 'Zach Stobart of
Mrs. Hensler's class said:
"Instead of sitting on the

Bv

BRIAN

J. REED

BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

f

Beth Sergent/pllolo

Meigs Intermediate School students recently took on the responsibility of sponsoring 40
angels from the angel tree at the Meigs County Department of Jobs and Family Services
which is still in need of sponsors. Pictured kneeling (from left} are Wyatt King, Zach
Stobart; standing (from left} Anna Cundiff, Darrin Logan. assistant principal, Mona Frecker,
school secretary, Hannah Cremeans, Heather Haggy, MCDJFS.
couch and being selfish like . anything." Wyatt King of ages other schools to take
Bevan's
class on some angels and panicisome rich. people you Mrs.
explained.
· pate in this program,"
should give."'
"We hope ihis encour- Bookman said.
"Some people don't have

Teaford to remain head football coach at Southern
BY Bmt SE11GENT

purchase and use a time
recording system for use bythe Southern Local School
· RACINE
Dennis District employees.
Teaford will once again be
The board also approved
the head varsity football · District Treasurer Richard
coach for the Southern Koker's insurance benefits
"f:omadoes this fall thanks to as of Jan . I, 2007.
a unanimous vote by the
The following substitute
Southern Local School teachers were approved for
the 2006-07 school year:
Board.
The vote came at the Samuel Bennett, Jr.. Todd
board' s recent meeting Blackstone,
Rorie
where it also unanimously Bradshaw, Sheila Buss,
Schleter,
Chad
employing David
approved
Richard Cooksey as head Hubbard, Willis Korb,
varsity cross-country track Megan Lindley, Kyle Ord.
coach for the 2007-08 year. Evelyn Stanley. Chri stopher
The board also voted to Stewan. Amy Thomas.
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

,,

Brandon Cottrill.
The following employees'
were approved for partici pation in the Temporary
Assistance
for
Needy
Families grant af1er-school
tutoring program: Beth Bay,
Donna Sayre, . Lori Hill,
Misty
Rogers . Evelyn
Stanley. Debbie Allen.
Mary Rose. Tom HilL Jim
O'Brien.
The following volunteers were approved to
participate in the afterschool mentoring program
coordinated
hy
the
Division of Community
Services a s pan of Health

Recovery
Services:
Allison Zarcaro. Reggie
Robinson.
Kelsey
Ridgeway, Kim Grabo.
The following substitute
aids were approved for the
2006-07
year:
Diana
Phillips. Trudy Stewart.
Kelley Lawson .
The board approved the
donation of a mobile laptop
unit and ten de sk top computers for district use .
All board members were
present for the meeting. The
next &gt;chool board meeting
will .be at 8 p.m .. Monday.
Dec. 18 al the hi gh 'chnol
media 'n1om .

POMEROY -lbere will
be nothing black about the
kickoff of the Christmas
shopping
se:tson
in
Middleport and Pomeroy this
weekend, or any · of the
December activities designed ·
to welcome local shoppers
into hometown shops.
Participating merchant~ in
Pomeroy and Middleport will
invite holiday shoppers to an
open house on Sunday afternoon, following the Pomeroy
Merchants' Association's
annual Christmas Parade.
The Middlepon Community
Association will hold its .
parade on Dec. 2.
• Santa will greet children
on the Pomeroy stage from
I to 3 p.m. on Dec. 2 and
16. Santa will also pose for
photos with children and
pets for $2.
The 2 p.'m. parade on
Sunday, Nov. 26, with an
open house from noon to S
p.m. by merchants will kickoff events of the season. The
parade will form at the football field at I p.m. Pets will
again this year be a feature of
the parade highlighted by the
ani val of Santa Claus.
Immediately following !he
parade there will be a judging
of ·pet costumes, sponsored
by Peoples Bank. Prizes )viii
be awarded to the most beautiful, the most Christmasy,
and the most unusual. Santa
will greet the children in the
lobby of Peoples Bankand
pose for photos.
• Merchant.s
in · both
· Pomeroy and Middleport
will hold special drawmgs
for prizes. to be awarded
throughout the shopping
season. '
• The
Middleport
Community Association will
hold it.~ annual "Christmas
Village" parade at 6:30 p.m.
on Dec. 2. Lineup will be at
Rejoicing Life Church. After
the parade, Santa will greet
children for refreshments
and photos at Peoples Bank.
Prior to the parade, at 6
· p;m.,
the
Middlepon
Mnisterial Association will
hold a carol service and light
the Christmas tree on the '1'."
Later in the sea...;;on, a poinsettia tree will be placed in
downtown Middleport, and
Christmas · carolers, a live
nativity, and other activities ·
are
planned · for
the
Middleport shopping district.
• A "Christmas Along the
· River" tour of seven Pomeroy .
churches will be held at 4
p.m. on Dec. ·w. Each church
wi II have a brief progntni and
Trinity Church wi II serve
refreshments. Ticket~ for the
tour are $5 each.
• Local banks will host and
the Pomeroy merchants will
sponsor a candy contest on
Dec. 2 at Peoples Bank. cookie conte't ou Dec. 9 at Ohio
Valley Bank. and craft contest
on Dec . 16 at Fanners Bank.

�•

Give thanks- everyday
is Thanksgiving Day
0 liH fN11b t6 tlu

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His •• •(fa 16H ~

Lttr4, for.

for~•w.

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Cluvniicks

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Gi" dlolllb ill ell eire•"' rrr-, fttr rllis is tlu
will of God ill Cllrist /nilS

P!'.STOR.
lRINITY CHURCH

/M ,_

•

(I lJtnsclollias
5.18, ESV)
.
So another Thanksgivi~
Day has passed ... or has it . have reason to rejoice.
Well, that largely depends
If .you are reading this
on wheiber we wait for this devotional column right now
holiday to roll around oooe and oonternplating its ooneach year before we actual- tents, then you can at least
ly pause to give thanks or appreciate being able to dissimply choose to live tbank- cern the written word and
fullives each and every day. think. And for tbat matter, if
It is possible, of oourse. you do not like what you are
As one old aphorism has it, reading, then you can be
"if we pause to think, we'll thankful for your legal rildlt
have cause to thank." Amen. . in this 0011ntry to fire. off a
Really everyday should be letter-to-the-editor venting
Thanksgiving Day so long your thoughts and feelings .
as we have even one blessSpeaking of this ·great
ing for which to be thankful. land of ours, do we not have
And who does not have at reason to give thanks each
least that much?
day for the liberties we
If you have but one friend enjoy? We have the right to
or family member who love;; free speech, the right to
and cares about you, then petition government and
you have reason enough for protest. We elect our leaders
gratitude. If you are privi- and have the means in place
leged to watch the sun nse or for peacefully removing ·
hear the biros sing, then you them from office, if need be.

-Wdmington Catholic diocese
releases Iist.of accused priests
DOVER, Del. (AP) The
Roman
Catholic
Diocese of Wilmington has
released the names of 20
priests against whom it
received substantiated allegations of child sexual
abuse.
The list of names was
printed in the Nov. 16 edition of the diocese's weekly
newspaper, The Dialo~- It
includes eight living pnests
accused of abusing minors
in the diocese, and two others who ministered in the
. diocese but were accused of
abuse elsewhere.
Of the 20 priests listed,
the names of I0 had previously been released publicly, either by the diocese
or by the media, church
officials said. The list
includes only the names of
priests employed by the diocese, not those employed by
religious orders.
.
Only a small number of
U.S. dioceses have released
the names of accused
priests. Advocates for victims have been demanding
that more dioceses do so, to
encourage other victims to
come forward and to warn
the public about any preda-

· f\ljs;Noaea'NW!t!2\!J8~~!D!•L-----------~------------------J•~,.!-!•~~!!¥d~•!l~h~..
~r~~-!·~~-~~~Mn~L-------------------~----_JThl~~D!ftv~
-~~s~a~nt~ln~!L·~P~aae~~~~3

• VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

tors in their midst. ·
Bishop Michael Saltarelli
said in a lener accompanying the list that he released
the names after extensive
the
consultation with
Diocesan Review Board, a
mostly lay panel fonned to
comply with the 2002 U.S.
bishops ' Charter for the
Protection of Children and
Young People.
Saltarelli said the recent
arrest of the Rev. Francis G.
DeLuca in Syracuse, N.Y.,
was a factor in his decision.
DeLuca, 77, was arrested
last month and charged with
sexually abusing a Syracuse
boy for several years, beginning when he was about 12.
DeLuca was removed
from the ministry in
Delaware in 1993 and
allowed to rerum to his
hometown after church
officials in Wilmington
learned of credible sex
abuse claims against him
dating to the 1960s.
"I am deeply troubled,
8lld profoundly regret, that a
priest of . this diocese,
removed from ministry so .
many years ago, has once
again sexuillly abused a
minor," Saltarelli wrote.

•

WORSIDP.GOD 11HS WEEK

- - - A Hunger For More--As you perhaps settle
lmge iron~- He holds it
down
after a hefty
out triumphantly towards die
Thanksgiving feast, sinking
~n wbo mutters somecomfortably mto the folds of
lhing . _ hoping that die
a sofa someplace to watoh
PastDJ
Pilgrim prayers had reached
football, traveling across the
the ears&lt;&gt;fGod. He takes die
oounnyside to. enjoy visits
11mm
Screw and hmries again to
wjth friends and/or family,
Molohln -lhe top'()( the sbip, followed
or _..,aps zinning from
t.v the sail
.· or .and the three
st~·~ore to~ ahead on
Pilgrim leaders, Carver,
your Christtnas shopping,
Brewster and Bradford.
pause for a moment and let
You can bear the whisperyour mind take you on alit- about in the wide waters of ings of others around you
tie lrip instead. .
the Atbntic?
who are as p112:Jeil 'w nerImagine for a moment that
You can bear the captain voos as ae you. Someone
you are . crammed into a quietly ask some of 111e men near you remaOO; that here is
dank, dark space, hardly who lead your group 10 pray. a strange tum of events.
l;gger than your living room, He then climbs back up, Alter all, die sailors had cruwilh one hundred and two foroes open the batcb, and is dly mocked Brewster's insisolbeT passengers. The rurved gone.You can hear your lead- ~on bringing his printing
wooden walls around you are ers, John Catver, William press. They tiad said ,that it
partly screened by barrels Bradfotd and William would be neady as useless as
and crates of food, tools, and Brewsrer. You can hear their the ,Bible the Pilgrims so
various other supplies. By whispered voices each, in dearly loved and greatly venyour elbow a pair of dlickens tum, thanlc God for the safe erated. They had laughed at
are squawking lou4ly, and journey thus far, and chen an lhe idea and only ~ngly
your ears catCh die sounds of appeal to Him to reveal His agreed to pack it into 1he
some dog whining and in a gi&lt;lry and achieve His , pu-- ship's hold- You remember
fai off corner of d1e hold, PJ5eS for His people. Then well 1be surly glances they
someone sounds very sick.
1be voices cease and a near lhrew at Brewster as they
The little sbip, the belly of silenoe follows. But William labored to bring it on d1e ship
which you've been living for Brewster, a lay minister, sud- in
the,
haroor
of
two months, is having denly speaks up excitedly. Southampton, Enlrtand.
a
time of it. You can feel You can almost malce oot
As you sit and wait, 1be
the ship rolling back and what he is saying to the other sound of sailors shouting
forth, tossed about by angry two men. Something about instructions to each cthci- filwalls of water, as howling his printing press. You're tersdowntoyourears. Then
winds spin the tiny vessel puzzled, wondering what on ·there is a long and painful
·about it in a maelstrom of eaoth a pri~l press has to pause. And then there is a joyfear. Then there is strange do with a
en mast, but ful shout Carva-, Bnldford
sound ... a crealcing, tearing, then you hear someone climb and Brewster climb excitedly
and then a loud pop. But the · up and throw open the batch. back down to you and YQUJ"
tempest still ra~ on merd- A faint gray light illuminates companions. They share that
lessly and you re foroed to the face cYf John Carver, -Mto d1e pan that they had taken
oontuiue to simply ride out &amp;ctick:ly disappears onto 1be from the JX"inting JX= was
the stonn ... literally. Then
ck. He returns very soon, exactly what was needed to
the winds seem quieter and accompanied by the captain fix the support beams that
the tiny ship doesn't teeter as and another sailor. Leaving hold 1be main mast upight.
wildly. The teetering slows the ·hatch open this time, they The mast is restored and the
even· furdler until it is noth- all climb down and carefully sails are unfurled. The wind is
ing more than a gentle rock- step through the crowded moving and you are nearing
ing. The hatch above opens hold, with a hundred sets of the end of your destination.
and you Cllll barely malce out eyes fastened upon them.
Now ... come back to the
that it is the captain -Mto They make their ·way - present. I' ve not met many
struggles to climb down into towards you until they stand people who've heard . the
the hold. There is no light to by your side. ProducinS, a account of Brewster's printspeak of, lanterns clearly heavy iron bar, the sat! or ing press and .it ~i~~g the
being too dangerous to light begins to pry the lid off of a means by which God saves
in such a storm, so you can cn~te next to you. William the Mayflower's mast (and
only hear the worried tone of Brewster steps up ~ shoves hence, the Pilgrims), but it
the captain as he explains the lid aside.lie begins to dig is an incredible example of
that the main mast was through 1be straw, pul~ out God's faithfulness to a peocraclced in the storm. You various parts of the farge pie who had forsaken all to
don't need to see bis face to printing press he had intend- follow Him.
know that there is a great · ed to set up and use at the
"I will praise you, 0
weight of anxiety upon him. Jamestown Colony in WRD, among the nations; I
Widi no mast, how can you Vn-ginia.
will sing of You among the
go on? How can your little
Finally, he gives an excla- peoples. For great is Yoor
band do anything but drift malion of joy and produces a love, higher than the heav-

":i

10: 4~

ens; Yoo faithfulness mdes to the sties. Be exlllied, 0
God, above tile beavens, 8lld
let Yoor glory b e - all die
eanh" (Psalm 168:3-5 NIV).
Maybe you're not settling
oomfOtU'blyintOyourooucb
this Thanksgiving weekend.
Maybeyoodonotbavetami.ly and fiiends with wbom
you can ~ a little time.
And pemaps zipping trom
store to store for you tooks
like oothing m&lt;n dian plain
and simple ''window -shopping" because your bank
aooount is defunct.
., ·
Fortunately, God has a
plan for your life 'that is a
whole lot btgger than human
dreams and ambitions. He
. has a dream for you that, as
you ~to walk closely with
Him, will keep your feet
· where they need to be, your
hands doing what :dley need
to be doing, and your voice
saying and singing what
needs ro be said .and sung.
Where are you in your walk
with Him these days? Are
y00 eamestly sedcing Him ,
w:ith all your heart? If you
are, then you can oount on
His power and love ·to utJ!told
you during difficult tnnes.
AndifyoutruStHimv.tloleheartedly, eva~ trivial things
will take on a huge new
. dimension, and God . will
wotk '1lehind die scenes" to
help yoo do His will. The
bottom line, however, is that
God is in oonorol and that He
has both the power and the
desire to help His people.
Therefore, no ·maaer What
· may be going on myour life
right now, trust His~:
b_less- you. Obey His
· g
in your life and the i~­
sions that He makes on your
heart. Above all, learn His
Word and be able to personally take ownership of what
He's showing you as you
seek to obey Him.
(l1wlll Mollolla iUUIItis
f-.ily lunle lllillisfoe4 in
stnalwm OIUo tlu JMSf 11
y«~n, He is t#u ptiSI«' of
Pfltllivcy
Co•••llity
CbreA, wlliclr -m 011

~--~ ...I......

ate a multicultural church. ·
The
overwhelmingly
white denomination has
associations for AfricanAmericans,
American
Indians/ A1aska · Natives,
Hispanics, Asians/Pacific
Islanders and Arab/Middle
Eastern Heritage:

In proposing the new ethnic
grouping,
the
Multicultural Ministries'
office said a recent churchwide reorganization made
clear that "those in this
European
church's
American community have
not had the structure to jour-

Ravenswood . WV, Sunday School 10 am-

Ri..,- Valley Apoo!Dik Wonhip Cemoo-.

. Mommg wol'!lhip II am Evening - 7 pm.

A"&lt;.. M;cldloport. Rev.

, ....... ~ 1 'be.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd. Rutland .
.._

SeNioei: Sun 10:00 ·a.m .

a

7:30 p.m..

ThLI1'5 . 7:00p.m., Pastor Many R. HIRIOO

A~blyofGed
Uhwty ,
us IfGel
PO. Box 467. llu&lt;ldiog Lane. Maoo.
w.v.\. PaiAor. Neil lC:nnlnl. SWiday
Scrvioes- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

-

Baptist

........ .......

c:._.....,.Oooodl
SW&gt;IIay School - 9: lOam. ,_,hing
· ~ 10:30am, E!venifi8 ~
7ffipm , Wodoeoloy &amp;;bk Study 7«1 P.,.
Interim ~r . Aoyd ROS!i

a...w.......,.c..a

-y

l'u1oc SO&lt;¥&lt; Uttle. Som&lt;Joy School , 9,30

am ,

Mam~ag

Worship: 10:30 ua,
Bible Study 6'30pm; choir
pw:tioe 7:30; youth ud Bible BuclaiCs
6:30p.m. n;aur-5. 1 pm boot stud)'

lhpe ..... &lt;hdo(S II
570 Oront St .. MM!dloport, Sunday I!Cbool
·9:30a.m .• Worship - II a.m . and 6 p.m.,

Wedtteoday

Servi&lt;le • 7 p.m. 'Postor, Gocy

- -....... Otoodl

SW&gt;day School · 9,30 am .. W&lt;mllip ·

,_..,._...,...
___....,

10:45 a.m.

Simda~

Sch. 9:30am . Warship 10:30 am

41872 Pomeroy Pike, Pastor: E . Lamar
O'Bryant, Sunday School • 9:30 a .m..
Worship-8:15a.m., 9:'S am&amp; 7:00p.m ..
W«&lt;nnday Sent~ · 7:00p.m.

-

ilopdol a....dl .

Pastor: Billy Zuspan 6th and Palmer St ..
Middlepon, Sunday· School - 9:1S a.m.,
Worship - 10:15 a.m ., 7:00 p .m .,
W~y Setvice- 7:00 p.m.

--

........

Pastor: Joseph Godwin , inlerim pastor .
. Sunday School - 9:30 a .m., Worship 10:40 a.m .. 7:00 Jl .m ., Weclnesday
Sfnices - 7:00p.m.

__..,..

-e. He ....._., be
IWICW for ~Ills or
q.miDI!s by e-irMil--f!CS·
Aml

torlluiM@pGtllwcnllllipo-

Plilon John SwiDSOn. Sunday School IOa .m. , Worship - lla.m .. 7:00 Jl .m.
,Wodnesday SeNiccs - 7:00p.m.

lis.CDIII).

Mt.U-IIoplill
Pastor: Dennis Weaver Sunday School9 :45 a .m ., Evening - 6 :30 p .m ..
Wcdnelday Serviaes- 6:30p.m.

ney together with the five
ethnic associations."
The Rev. Sherman Hicks,
executive director of ELCA
Multiculrural Ministries,
said the
European
American Association is
. part o'f "a new vision" for
the ministries' wort.

• • .·• Route
BatpelllO:IIrdl
Great •
Bend
12-4, Racine , OH,
Pastor: Ed Caner, Sunday School - 9:30
a .m .. Sunday Worship - 10:30 . a .m.,
Wednesday Bible Suidy · 7:00p.m.

new

ow-~-

•.
••
'·

11tanksgiving is a spocial holiday In lite
Uniled SW. during whiclt God ~
lltankod fa- lite bkssings of lite post
year. As ilhmk aboot tltis "'"" of
11tanksgiving, f wonder how we would

209Thlrd
Rlcliii.OH

740-949-2210
· "A Heme Ba1* for

Home ltilf:*:"

29670 Bashan Rd.

even Valentinejs Day, should be

nm

,_

-N.., ~. VPY/m/07: 1 .

Racine,OH

740-949-2217

and Admissions

'

....

Ciondo
28601 St . Rt. 7, Middleport , Sunday
Service - 10 a .m., 6:00 p.m., Tuesday
Services --6:00

Cft1111otihbllc A.,...nlonl

The Appliance llt;n .

992-m

If ye abide ill Me, tut4 My .
words abide ill you, yuW
, tiSk wlttlt ye will, tWt it sludl ·
be doJte 111110 yo¥.
/ollrt 15:7

74CJ.992.6128.
local souroe for trophies,
Ia
t- ·

IRA J-'. Rollover!', S1och• Bunds.., MuriUll

(7ol0) 992-6451

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mullierry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 I'M:\
(740) 992-3279

9:30a.m., Worship - 10:4S am .

.......,....,...

'·'

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship -

Pastor: Rev . Wal~ E. Hein).. Sill . Con.
4:-45-5:15p.m.: M•~&gt;s - 5:311 p.m.. Sun .
Con. - 8: 4~·9: 1 '5 a.m... Sl.ln . Mas!&lt;- 9:30
a.m., Daily Mau • 11:30 a.m.

. Ch111"Cb of Christ
Ooordo flfOiori!io
33226 Otildrell ·~ HOme Rd . Pomeroy. OH
Con~ 7«1---441 -1296 Sund11y morning
10:00. Sun morning Bibl e study:
following worship. Sun . eve 6:00 pm .
Weld bib~ study 7 pm

GnMClortodon Cloui'CII
Mintster: LaiT)' Brown. Worship -. CJ:30
a.m . Sunday School - 10:30 a.m .. Bible
Study- 7 p.m.

"'-"Y tJIIou&lt;h "'a....
212 W. Main Sl. , Sunday School- 9:30
a .m ., Worship· 10:30 a.m .. 6 p .m ..
W«&lt;neW!y Services - 7 p.m.

·- - . y - llloordo..tCiorkl
33226 ChildR:n's H om~ Rd .. Sunday
School - 11 a.m., Worship - 10a.rn .. 6 p.m.
W-odnetday Services - 7 p.m.
·Ml".' 1 I Ch•rd·of'Chrht
5th arn:l Main , Paslo r: ·AI Hanso11.
Children• , Diret-1or: Sharoo S11}rre. Teen
Director: Dodger Vl'ughan . Sunday School
·9:30a.m., Worship- .8:15 . 10:30 a.m.. 7
p.m., Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Pas1or. Rem Hearb. Sunday Worship - 10
a.m.. 6 p.m .. WedneW!y Services - 7

a.um. otGCMII efPrapll!c,
OJ. White Rd . off St . Rt . 160, Pastor: PJ .
Cbapma;,, Sunday School - 10 a.m ..
Worship - 11 a.m .. Wcdnesda)' Servicet; - 7
p.m.

Second &amp; Lynn. Pomeroy. Pastor: Rev.
Jonathan NoMe . Worship 10:25 a.m ..
Sunday Schoo19: 1S a.m.

EPiscoPal

G,_ Epiocepol Cloadl
326 E.. Main St .. POm6roy. Sundtty School
and ' Holy Eucharist II :00 a.m. Rev .
Edwarrl Payne

· Holiness
Commu•ltyC hurdl
Pastor Steve Tomek . Main · Street .
Rutland . Sunda y Worship-10:00 a.m.,
Sunday Servi~-7 p.m.
o.MIIe Hollllle!l!ilO..rdl
3!0S7 S111te Route 325, Lmgsvlk. Putor:
Benjamin Crawford. Sunday school - 9:30
a.m.. Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m . &amp; 7
p.m., Wednesday prayer service : 1 p.m
co~v.., l'tlgri• Cloapel
Harri sonville Road . Pastor: Charles
McKenzie. Sun_&lt;tay ~ 1\001 9:30 S.m.,
WorShip - 11 a.m .. 7:00 p.m.. Wednesday
Service-7:00p.m.

'Bc:&amp; Wtlell . . . . Cll1afd ofCIHi!Jl
Pastor:Brucc Terry. Sunday SchGQl -9::\0
am.

Pine-GI"''Vf: Bfbk: HeHIIe!li Ch•rd
1/2 mile off Rt. 325. l'utor: R~ v. O'Dell
Manley. Sunday School - 9::m a.m ..
Wnrship - 10:30 a.m.. 7:30 p.m..
Wr.dnesdlly Sen·iu - 7:30p.m

Worslrip - 10 :30 a .m .. &amp;:30 p.m.
Wednesday Sei'Ylces- 6:30p.m.

,.... Chlnh or Christ ·
Pomeroy. Harri~nnville Rd .' (Rt.l43).
PaSior: Roger Watson . Sunday School 9 :30 a.m.. Worship • 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m .• Wodne5day Servk:es - 7 p.m

...._. l'loi• a.u ..h

..-a....

Instrumental. Wonhip Sen-·ice • 9 l' .m..
Communioo • 10 a.m .. Sunday SchOO l ·
10:15 a.m .. Youlh- 5:30pm Sunday. Bible
Study Wednesday 7 pm

a.-, lllourdo ol Chritt
Minister: Tom Runyon . 39S58 Bradbury
Road . Middlepon. Sunday SChool . 9JO
a .m ..
Worshi~ - 10:.~ a.m .
RaUand Cllun:h of Clnisl
· Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship and
Communion - 10:30 a.m .. Bob J. Werry.
Minister

-ChwdlllfCComer of St . Rt . 124 &amp; Brudblll)' Rd ..
Minister: Doug Shambltn. Youth Minister:
Bill Amberger. Sunda y School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 8:00 a .m .. 10:30 a .m.. 7:00
p.m..Wednesday Services ·7:00 p.m.
Hldury IIIHsCIIuKh

~ ChriM

Tuppers Plain". Pastnr Mike Moore. Bihle
dass. 9 a.m. Sunday ; worshi p 10 a.m.
Sunday: wonhip 6:30 pm Sunduy . Bible
class 1 pm Wed .

• : . . ca..ctt of'CIIrht
Pasn: Pbilip Stunn. Sunday School: IHO
a .m .. Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.. Bible
Study, Wednesday. 6:30 p.m.

..r

om..- Cloardo Christ
Sunday sch0019:30 a.m. .. Sunday worship
-! 0:30a.m.
TheCho,.,flfChmtllf.........,.
lntersect1on 7 and 124 W, Evangeli sl
Denni s Sargem . Sunda}' Bible Stud y .
9:30a.m.• Worship : 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m.. Wednesda)' Bi ble Study· 7 p.m.

Christian Union
-

Clourch Iff C~rist In

Hartford. W.Va.. Pastor:Oa\•id Greer.
Sunday School - 9:JO a.m.. Worship 10 :30 ~. m .. 7:00 p.m .. · Wednesda~·
ServiCeS -1:00 p.m.

Pamer

P.O. Box683
Ohio 45769--0683

'

R 2 •

~orsbip

~an Bible Holilte!j!ij Chun:•
75 Pearl St.. ~iddlepon . Pastor: Rid
Bourne, Sunday Sc hool - 10 a.m. Worship
-10:45 p.m., Sunday Eve. 7:00 p. m.,
Wednesday Sen·ice ·7:30p.m.

Hysell Run Community Chan:\
~astor: Rev. Larry Le~le): Sunday School
. -9:30a.m.. Wor&lt;;h ip - 10:45 a.m .. 7 p.m ..
Thursday Bi ble StUd)' and Youth - 7 p.m.

Lam&gt;el Cliff~-- Cburch

Pastor : Glenn Rowe, Sun4ay School 9:30 a.m., Worship - 10 .30 a.m. and 6
p.m .•Wednesdny Sel'\•ice - 'roO p.m.

Sunday School 10:20- ll a .m.. Relief
Society/Priesthood 11 :0.5- 12:00 noon .
Sacrament Sen'ice 9-10:15 a.m ..
,Homemaking mee1ing. 1st Thurs. -1 p.m.

Lutheran
St. JDtin Lutberaa Church
Pine Grove. Worship - 9:110 a.m.. Sllnd&lt;~y
Schonl · 10:00 a.m. Pa"tnr: lame~ P.
Rnody

· OurSavio.rLutheran Chun:h
Walnut and Henry St!'., Ravenswood,
W.Va ., Pastor: Da vid Russel!. Sunda)'
School· 10:00 a.m.. Wnrship - II a.m.
St. Pllul Lulheran Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Sec1md St.. Pomeroy.
Sun. School - 9:45a.m .. Wor;hip - II a.m.

United Methodist
Graham United Melltodist
Worship - II a.m . Pss1or: Richarrl Nea&lt;it
Bedttel Uwited Mtthodkt

New Haven. Ri charli Nea5e, Pas1or.
Sunday worship 9:30 a.m. Tues. 6:30
pra yer Qnd Bible Study.
Mt. Otivt United Methodi!it
Off 124 behind Wilkes\' illc, Pastor: Rev.
Rulph Sptres, Sunday Sdwol - 9:30a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 ~ . m .. 7 p.m ., Thursday
Sel'\'i~ - 7 p.m.

"
Meigs Cooperative Porlsh

Nonheasl Cluster. Alfred . Paslor: Jane
Beatt ie. Sunda} School -_9:30 a.in ..
Worsh1p - 11 a.m.. 6:30p.m.

Church of God

Chest«

Mt. MOI"WWI Churdl of God

Pa~tor : Janr Rea1tie . Worship - 9 a.m ..

Mile Hill Rd .. Raci ne , Pa s1nr: J11mc ~
Sanerf'ICid . Sunday School - 9:45 u.m..

Sunda) Schn11l · · 10 a.m.. Thursday
Scnke~ - 7 p m.

uc
Pastor: Jan lavemltor, Sunday School •
9:30 a.m ., Worship - 10:30 a.m . and 6
p.m ., Wednesday Serv~- 7 pm.
~~ellllel '

tW

Pastor: Rev. Herbert Om:. Sunday School
- 9 :30 a.m.. Worship - II a.m.• 6 p.m.,
Wednesdl,y Seno-Mln- 7 p.m.

~-St.-

Sundi.y Sch'ooJ - 9:30a .m., Worship 10:30 a .m., 6:30 p .m .. Wednesday
Services - 7 p.m. Rev. Mike Clad.

Pastor: Jane .Beattie . Sunday School - 9
a.m .. Wor.ship - 10 a.m .. Thtsday Services
- 7:30p.m.
AsiM.Iry (Syracuse). Pas1or: Bob Robinson.
-Sunday School - 9:45 a.m .• Worship - II
a.m.. Wednesday Servim- 7:30 pm .
EldorpiW

Paitor: Arland Kin g. Sunday School - 1
10:30 a.m.. Worship - 9 :30 a.m.. Bible
Study Wed . 7:30

-

Putor: Keith Rader. Sunday School - 10
a.m . Wonhip - 11 a.m.

Forest Run '
Pastor Bob Robinson, Sunday School . 10
a.m.. Worship- 9 a.m.

c t)
iflnlth (1'1
·Pastor: Brian Dunham. Sunday "School 9:30a.m .. Worship · 11 :00 a.cm
11

•-CIIIudoor..,._

Otlicr Churches

~com ..it, OMirdl
2480 Second St., Syracuse, 00
Sun . School 10 am, Sundy night6::l0 pm
Under the diftlction nf Dan&amp;. Fairh .

Haymon

J1 I 1
Wall Golfel a-dl) Harrisonvillt,
Paston: Bob ud Kay Mars!WI ,
ANew•

Sunday Service. 2 p.m .
Araui11 ·~.C

A~)o.rdi

Pa&lt;itur; W11yne .Dunlap, Swe Rt. 681.
Thppers PlainS. Sun. WGnhip: 10 am &amp;
6:30pm .. Wed. Bible Study 7:00p.m.
~Cidoll.l'........

(Non-denominalional fellowship)
Meeting in the 'Meigs MKidle School
· Cafeteria Pastor: Orris Strwan
10:00 am - Noon Sunda~·: Informal
Worship. Otildrerl's ministry

Pastor. Bob Robinson . Sunday School . - 9
a.m., Worship -·10 a.m.

c

I

j

.ro.rtst

Ponland-Racjne Rd .. Pastor: Jim Proffin.
_PoorlChapol
Sunday Scttooi- 9a.m .. Worship - 10 a.m.

~
Pas1or: B.rian Dunham , Worship - 9:30
a.m., Sunday School- 10:3'5 a.

Rod&lt;S,....,
Pastor: Keith Rader, Sunday Scttool - 9: 15
o.m .. Worsh ip
10 a .m.. Youth
Fellowship. Sunday - 6 p.m.
Rdlllil
Pa§tor: Rick Bol.lme, Sunday School ·
9:30a.m .. Worship - 10:30 a.m .. Thursday
Se-rvioo- 7 p.m.

-c......-

Pastor: Will iam K. Marshall , Sunday
School · 10:15 a.m., Worship -9: 15a .m .,
Bible Study: Monday 7:00pm
Snowvllt
Sunday Sd100l - 10 11.m., Woohip • 9 a.m.
8dhany
Paston John Gilmore , Sunday School - 10
a.m .. Wo Nhip • Q a .m .. Wednesday
Services - 10 am .

CornH!I-S.noo
Cannel &amp;. Bashan R~ . Racine , Ohio .
Pastor : John Gilmore, Sunday School 9:45a.m.: Worsh ip - 11 :00 a.m . , Bible
Study Wed. 7:30p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
1'ht Church or Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day S.lnts
St. ·Rt. 16fl . 446-6247 or 446-748tl,

......,.a..dllflllt t'

- 9:30 a .m.. Sunday School 10:30 a.m ., First Sunday ofMooth - 7:00
p.m . !lCtV1Ce

'

Wor.~hip

- 9 :30 a.m .. Sunday School 10:30 am., Pasror-Jeffrey WaSiace. 1st and
3rdSunday

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship !0:30a.m.

~~

R&lt;a of Sharon Hollne!IS Ch•rth ·
Leading Creek Rd .. Rutland. Pastor: Rev.
Dewey King . Sunday school - 9:30 a.m..
Sunday worship -7 p.m.. Wtdnesday
prayer meetin}! - 7 p.m .

"-Cioon:lo llfChrist

IO: ~a.m .

.__

p.m.

Sy.- Flr8l CHrdo Iff Cell
Appk! and Socond Sts .. Pasror: Rev. Owvid
Russell. 'Sunday School and WOJ"&amp;hip- 10
a .m. Evening, Services- 6 :JO p.m ..
Wednesday Service5 - 6:30p .m.

10 a.m. 2nd and 4ltl Sunda)

Pastor: Denlil Null , Worship - 9:30a.m.
SuftdaySchool -

Pustor: Jobn Gilmore, 5\Jnday School - II
a.m .. Worship - 10 a_.m.

b.!Ldlrt
Pusto r: Bill Mai'Shall Sunday Sc~l 9a.m.. Worship · 10 a.m .. 1st Sunday
every month evening service 7:00 p.m.:
Wednesday- 1 p.m.

Radftc
Pa.&lt;;tor: Kerry Wood. Sunday School - I0
a.nL Wonhip - II a.m.Wednesday
Servtces 6 pm : Thur Bible Study 7 pm
Coolrilt Unikd Mdllodht Pllrilh
Pas1or: Helen Kline. Coolville Church.
Main &amp; Fifth S1. .. Sun . School - 10 a .m ..
Worship · 9 a.m.. Tuer.. Sel'\llces- 7 p.m.
Bod&gt;&lt;~ Church
. Township Rd., 468C. Sunday School - 9
a.m. Worsh ip • 10 a.m .. WedBeSday
Services - !Oa .m.

--c~.m.
Grand Stree1 . Sunday Sch01Jl - 9:30a .m ..
Worship - 10:30 a.m ., Pastor Phillip Bell
Torch Ch•rdl

Co. Rd . ~}. Sunday SchOOl - 9:30 11 .m .. ·
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

·Nazarene
Midillepet"t Church ot the Nauraw
Pa~mr : Allen Midcap. Sunda)' School •
9:30 a.m..Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 6:30p.m ..
Wedne!illay Services ,- 7 p.m., Pastor:
Allen Midcap

RoN5vlloF-p
Church of the Naza~ne. Pastor: Ru ssell
Carson . Sunday School - 9:30 a.m ..
Worship - 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.. Wednesday
Scrviooi- 7 p.m.

Silver Ridge- Pastor Lmda Damew(')()d,
Sunday School - 9 a.m.. Worship Service

Sunday School - 9:30 arm-- Wo rship •
10:30 a.m .. Wednesday 'Services - 7:00
p.m.
'fllonltip Ceoler
39782 S.R. 7, Reedsville, OH 45772 , 1/2
mile north of Eastern SchoolS on SR 7. A.
Full Gospel Church, Pastor Rob Barber,·
Associate Pastor Karyn Davis, Youlh
Pastor Sutie Francis, Sunday services
,; 10:00 am worship. 6:00pm Family Life
Classet. Wed . Home Cell Group-s 7:00
p.m.. Outer ' Limits Cell Group at the
church 6:30pm to 8:30 pm

..... -~

39ti Ash St .. Middlepan-Pastor Jeff Smith
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Morning
Worship - 10 :30 a .m. &amp;: 7:00 pm.
Wedne5day Service - 7:00 p .m .. Youth
Service-7:00p.m.

"'-Lilt Colllor
"Full--Gospel Church". Pastors' John &amp;
Patty Wade , 603 Seoood Ave . Mason , 7735017. Service lime: Sunday 10 :30-a.m ..'
Wednesday 7 pm

~l... daCIIIII..IkllliiiCIIul'a

Kingsbury Road . Pastor: Robert IIJance.
Sunday School - CJ :30 a.m.• Worship
~rv1ce 10:30 a.m . Evenmg Service 6

p.m
Bald Knob. nn Co. Rd. 3l. Pastor: Re\'.
Roger Willfnrd , Sunday School - 9:30
a .m. Wonhip- 7 p.m

w-

Whlk'• Chapel
Coo lvi l!e ROBd . Pastor: Re v. Phill ip
Ridenour. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m ..
~ors hip - 10:30 a.m.. Wednesday 'Service
. ? p.m.
Foolrwkwl!ibloO.,.,
Letan.. W .VB ~ R1. I. Pastor: Brian May.
SunWiy School· 9:30a.m.. Worship - 7:00
p.m .. Wednesday Bible S1udy - 7:00 p.m

F.W. Felow&amp;WpC....- r«Chrill
Pastor: Re\'. FranUin Di c ken ~. Service:
Friday, 7 p.m.
C.lvuy Blblo ce..h
Pomero y Pike, Co . Rd .. Pastor:· Rev .
Blackwood , Sunday School - 9:30 a.m ..
Wo rs hip 10 :30 a.m ... 7:30 p .m ..
Wednesday Service - 7:JO p.m.
Sm.rs.llle Community Apostollf

Cburch
Pastor: Wayne R. J.ewe ll. Sunday worship
- 6:00p.m., Wednesday - 6:00 p.m. Bible
SIUdy

Rejoictftg ure Church
500 N . 2nd A.ve .. Middleport . Pastor:
Mike Forcmun . Paslor Emeritufl L.1wrence
Foreman . Worship- 10:00 11n1
Wednesday Ser..-ices - 7 p.m.
Clifton 'hbernack Church
Clifton. W.Vi .. Sunda)' School - 10 a.m..
Worihip - 7 p.m.. Wednesday Service - 7
p.m.,
~ ~Victory

ester

3773 Genrges Creek Road .Gallipol ts. OH
Pastor: Rill Staten. Sunday Sef'\1iocs - 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. WodneWty - 7 p.m . &amp;
Youth 7 p.m.
Full Gooopol Church
oi .... LMngSaWor

Rt .338. Antiquity. Pastor: Jesst: Morri ".
Services: Saturday 2:00 p.m.

Salem Community Church
Back of ~t Colum_bia. W.Va.om Lieving
Roall . Pastor: Otarles Roush (304 ) 675 2288. Sunday School 9:30 am, Sund&lt;~y
evening service 7:00 pm . Bibly S1Udy
Wednesday sel'\'ice 7:00 pm

~-Gno&lt;R.F.I .

923 S. Third S1., Middlepon, Pastor Teresa
Davis, Sunday service. 10 a.m.,
Wednesday service, 1 p.m.
f .... l!ol Goapel Clooodo
Lon,!! Bo:nom . Pastor: Sieve Rlxd. Sunday
School - 9:30a.m. Worship - 9:30a.m.
and 7 p.m., WedDcsday • 7 p.m., Friday ·
fellowship !le!Vicc 1 p.m..

....,..._.. Co:m lilly CIMndl
Pastor: Theron Durham, Sunday - 9:30
a.m . and 1 p.m .• Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Ml·tl~porl O..lllry Cltudl
575 Pearl·SI., Middleport , Pastor: Sam
Anderson. Sunday SchOol 10 a .m .,
Evening - 7:3(J p.m . . Wednesday Service 7:30 p.m.

Flitlt Valcy Cbordt
Run Road . Pastor: Rev. Emmett
Rawson . Sunday Evening 1 p .m ..
Thutsdlt)' Service • 1 p.m.
Baile~·

Sy.-M_

_

1411 Bridgeman St., Syracust: , Sunda~·
School - 10 a.m. Evening - ,fl p.m ..
'Wednesday Servict: - 1 p.m.
~~uo~c

...-,o.u.h

Off Rt . 124 . Pastor: Edsel Hart, Sunday

School · 9:30a.m .. Worship - 10:30 a. m..
7:30p.m .

.,_... c....,u~~y 0orc1o
SundaY School - 9:30 .i .m., Woftlhi.p 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
M""' Cloapol Cloordo
Sunday school • 10 a.m.. Worsh ip • 11
a.m. , Wedn-esday Service- 7 ~.m .

Hobson Chrtstiln hllo"-shlp ChuR'h
Pastor: Herschel White. Sunday School10 am , Sunday Church service· 6:30pm
Wednesday 7 pm
lttstent,ioll Chrisdan FeiiM&gt;!otlip
936.5 Hooper Road. Athens. Pa&lt;;tor:
Lonnie Coats, Sunday Worship IO:OOum.
Wednesday: 7 pm

• HouseofHtaling MiniStries
•~. St. Rt. 124 LangSvillc,OH
Full Go§pcl. Cl Pa.s10rs Roben &amp; R o ~n:~
MusSier. Sunday St·hoo l. (/:30 urn. .
Wor§h ip 10 :30 am.,- 7:00 pm. Wed .
Servicr 7:00 pm

Pentecostal·
Pent«mtal As.Ymhl~·
St. Rt 124. Ra~e . Tornado Rd Sundi!~
School - 10 a.m.. EH·mng - 7 p.m..
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
Harriaoavifh: Pn!:!ibyterian Chun.il
Pastor:·Roben Cro~. Worship - 9 a.m .
Mldclepon Presbyterian
Pastor: James Snyder. Sunday Sdwol 10
a.m .. worship service 11 am .

Seventh-Day Adventist
SfvMih-Day Adventist
Mulberry Hts. Rd.. Pomeroy. Sawrda~
Services: Sabbat h School
2 p m ..
Worship - j p.m.

United Brethren

Mt. Hermon Unlled Br11thrt'n
In Chrisl Chun:h
Teliias Commun ity 36411 Wickham Rd,
PaSior: Peter Martinda1e. _Sunday S\hNll 9:)0 a.m .. Worship - 10:;\(1 a.m .. 7:00
Falll&gt; Goopol O.I'CII
p.m.. Wednesda~· Sen·ices - 7:00' p m
Long Bonom. Subcbly School - 9:30a .m...
Youth group mee1mg 2nd &amp; 4th S u nday~
Worship - 10:-4.5 a.m .. ·7:30 p .m ..
? p.m.
Wednesda)' 7:30p.m .
· Eden United Brethren in Christ
Mt. Olift Conairmlty Cllurdl
Stale Route 1~4. between Rl't'dsville &amp;
Pastor: Lawrence Bush, Sunday School •
Hockingpon . Su nday School - 10 a.m..·
9:30a .m., Evening · 6;30 p.m.. Wedneday
Sunday Worship - 11 :00 a.m. Wednerotl ~
Service - 7 p.m.
Services -7:00p.m.. P11~1or- M. Adam
Filii~

Llch&lt;h&lt;-

3304.5 Hiland Road, Pomeroy, Pastor: Roy
Hunler. Sunday SchoOl- II} a.m.. Everting
7:30p .m., Tuesday &amp; Thurs.- 7:30 p.m.\ ,

...
your light So shine belfoo:l
' l"llcn , that they ~ay see
.. b•~ works and glorify
IFath&lt;er in heaven."
Matthew 5:

........
..u••-

.flsbrr .funrral _,orne

_ _ ........

499 Riclllud A..,....., Athens
74f.~3
1-1100-451-9806

t•

..........., Ci·MIIII. . .

ROCKSPRINGS

Let your light so shine before
men, that they may see your
Tht aut yo• M$tl'&gt;'t, clost UJ hollll! good works arui glorify your
36759 Rocksprings Rcl.
Father in heaven."
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Marrhew 5:16

REHA~LrrAnONCENTER

740-992~

Meigs Coumy's·Oidest Florisl

East Main
Pomeroy, Oh
740-992·2644 740-992-6298

MY erace is sufficient
. PHARMACY
God so loved the world
for thee: for mY
We Fill Doctors'
he gave his only
streneth is made
lbei10tlten son...
f .
k
Prescriptions
John 3 .- 16
Per ect m wea ness.
992·2955
Pomeroy
It Cor. 12:9
1-~a.~~~~~·~ll--~~~~~--------~~--------+---~::~~---------f::~==~----~::~~+--=~----------~;--i--~~-;--~-:~~:---t
~ White Funeral Home
Blessed are the pure "So I strive always to keep ~
il Office Service &amp;Supply
:.Since 1858
. heart; J"-or they my conscience clear before ~
·v.•••rf-ihJMp
137.C N. 2nd Ave.
m
prouc• !!"~'""""'.
If yt abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
wQrds abide in you, ye shaU
SERVICES ~t1Sl what ye will, IJIId it shaU
214 E. Main
bt dorte unto you.
'
992•5130
John 15:7
Pomeroy

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

shall see God.
God and man _..
Suppn:&gt;SIOR • Exlingui&gt;hm . Spnnlcle"'
Middleport, OH
Now-.wns1.01
Acts 24:1
• Sccunly
-H--. ~F-MaJthe"' 5.·8
172N . 2ndAve . Middleport.OH
9921!"76 .
: .__7_40-66
___
7-•3•1•10
__..-..,.·s. -.r~-l'lao:.;•iiii::J.._ __;~~~,..~~L..--.-----~~~~~~=~~::L.--..;.;;;_;"'N;;,;.;;__....;..I
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio

~

Tol Free 1--877-583-2433

-·-~c.,;,..,
lbl 'Mulberry Ave .. Pom~troy. 992 -5898.

a.m., Worship - 10 .30 a.m., 6 p .m .,
Wedllelday Services - 7 p.m.

p.m.

MIDDLEPORT
190 N. Second Sl. ,Middleport, OH

Karl Kt:h1er. nl, CPA. Re@ iSiemd
Represenlalive of H.O. Ves1lnvesunent
Services~'~ Securitiei offered throogh H D. Vr~
Investment Sen·iccs"'. Member SIPC Adv1~
§entices offered lhrough H.D. Veg .-.dvisory
Servtces"'". Non-bank wbstdlane&lt;. of Well ~
Fargo &amp; Compan) . 6333 Nonh Stale H"-'Y 161
4th Aoor.lrvtng TX. 75038 (972 ! 87()...600)

.....

Fourth lz. Main St .. Middleport. Pmor:
Rev. Gilbert Craij, Jr., Sunday School -

Open 7 days a wed&lt;

992~1550 .

ArtnuiriW, Long Tmn Cart'

lilt. -

Homemade Desserts Made Daily
H - G&gt;oUI Mooh 41 o.ily s,.a.b

"' E. Main Slroel
..........y. 011 ~769
749-992-7270

FIJ!Ul~.

F-......... Cloort:ll
Railroad St.. Masoa . Sunday School - 10
a .m., Worship • 11 a .m.. 6 p .m.
Wedneldly Services - 7 p.m.

Re-v. J~ph Woods. S&amp;lnday School - 10
a.m., Worship - I J:)(]a.m.

!Miffie's 9{.esuzurant

TROPHIFS &amp; TEEs

AIIMH:ea ,
Ken and Adem~

VlderylapdlllnP a fr t
5~ N. 2nd St. Middleport . PaSior: James
E. Keesee . Worship - JOa .m .. 7 p.m.,
Wodncsday Serlices- 7 p.m .

6am - 8p

Atmosphm

740-985-3561

Sales • Service • Plr1s

.

Hours

.....U: kleWor@ciw1er-

.KEBLER BUSINESS
SERVICES

,.

Sl. Rt. 143 just off R1 . 7. Pastor: Rev.
James R. Acree . Sr.• Sunday Unified
Service. Worship . 10:30 a.m .• 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Setviee&amp; -7 p.m.

F_._....,....-.y

Sizes 81/ailable 5x10 to 10 x 20
K.n K.oller m

·.

Midlelle Kennedy

1

Hills Self Storage

ltla! of Mother's Day. Father's Da~. or

Olo, glt&gt;t 10 lilt UJrd.
frx He is good! For llis .,.,-cy nw1vrtr

'

Warm Fnmdly

feel if wt wm thanked only once a
year, oo lite foonh Thunday of
November for ali lhe dUngs lbat we
were involved in. Every day we shoold
be lhankful and txf'l= oor gnWtude 10
God for His many bleSsings. and being
thankful to God is a _good reminder to
OI.IISelves of His goodness 8nd love for
u.~;. The true spirit of 'Thanksgiving, likt:

reflected in OW' attitude
!han just
ona: each year. We shoold not ~ a
holiday to IOtnind us 10 be dww_ ..
wlterl10 hon&lt;r someone special. or 10
show lindriess 10 "'""""'- So, ..,naps
this year, we. COllld invitt a neighbcl' or
frie.nd who may be alene. 10 shaK
Thanksgiving wilh us. And, ..rule we
art passing lite lwtey and mnbmy
sa~.K:C, or having another p)c&lt;;e of
pumpkin pie, we will be sharing God's
blessing wilh olhers.

.

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

1-74U6'7.Jl56
"Still s..U t-,11 to~"

Catholic

hlw Jon 8Rdc:r1. East Main 'St..

'.

Tbaaksllvlag

'WedneS\IIy 1 p.m.

Ellis

S•rulc~rraillgs fll flee

Dinoc~or of Marketing

_.....,.c.oudl

~

. Pastor: 'M~ Haril.on. Sunday School
9:30 to 10:30 am, Wonhip tei"Vice 10:30
to I 1:00am. Wed. pteldling 6 pm

do so with
Coolville, Ohio
Localed less than 30 minutes from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parlcersburg

....,...

-v...,

_...,..Otoodl

Blessed 4l't tlit pure
ill Marl; for they
slaall see God.
Mtllthew 5:8

'

Salem St.. Pastor: Jam1e Fortner. Sunday
Schoof - 10 a.m.. Evenmg - 7 p.m ..
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

873 S. 3RI

.,

The sponsors of this churth

E"ening - 6:00p .m ..

VlbZMdl 'C1d WaJd ttd .• Pastor: Jtmei
'Miller, Sunday Schnol - 10:30 am. ,
Eveoina - 7:30p.m.

Michie! Brw:tfont. Pas1or. Sunday, 10:30
a.m. Thes. 6:;w) prayer. 'ltbl. 7 pm Bible
Study

ELCA multicultural ministry creates association for European-Americans
CHICAGO (AP) - The
Church Council of the
Evangelical
Lutheran
Church in America. has
approved the creation of a
European
American
Association to join tPe
church's five other ethnic
associations in helping ere-

___

a.m .. Sunda~·

Pastor: Don Walker

174 ..__.PO

a.. !78

�The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • POIIIefOY, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
-.myd.. lyae:Jthilll.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Free111nd
.Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich '
General Manager-News Editor

Congress sludl m4lee no law respecting an
estdlishmerr.t ()f religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise tltemof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaCubly to assemble, arul to petition
the Government for .a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to ttie u.s. Oonstltut~n

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today. is Friday, Nov. 24, the 328th day of 2006. 'fhere
are 37 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 24, 1963, Jack Ruby shot and mortally wounded Lee Harvey Oswald, the accused assassin o( President
.Kennedy, in a scene captured on live television.
·
On this date:
ln 1859, British naturalist Charles Darwin published "On
the Origin of Species," which explained his theory of evolution.
•
· ln 1863, the Civil War battle for Lookout Mountain
began in Tennessee; Union forces ·succeeded in taking the
mountain from the Confederates.
.
In 1944, during World War II, U.S. bombers based on
Saipan attacked Tokyo in the first raid against the Japanese
capital by land-based planes.
In 1950, the musical ''Guys and Dolls," based on the
writings of Damon Runyon and featuring songs by Frank
Loesser, opened on Broadway.
·
·
]n 1969. Apollo 12 splashed down safely in the Pacific.
ln 1971, hijacker "D.B. Cooper" parachuted from a
Northwest Airlines 727 over Washington state with
$200,000 in ransom - his fate remains unknown.
ln 1985, the hijacking of an EgyptAir jetliner parked on
the ground in Malta ended violently as Egyptian commandos stormed the plane. Fifty-eight people died in the raid,
·in addition to two others killed by the hijackers.
In 1991, rock singer Freddie Mercury died in London at
age 45 of AIDScrelated pneumonia.
Ten years ago: On the eve of an Asia-Pacific trade con. ference in the Philippines, President Clinton met with
Chinese President Jiang Zetnin. Both .sides signaled their
troubled relations were on the mend, and agreed to
exchange presidential visits over the next two years.
Five years ago: A Swiss airliner carrying 33 people
crashed near Zurich, killing 24, including American pop
singer Melanie Thornton. British actress Rachel Gurney,
who played Lady Marjorie Bellamy on the popular television series '.'Upstairs Downstairs," died at age 81.
Today:s Birthdays: Columnist William F. Buckley is 81.
Country singer Johnny Carver is 66. Rock-and-roll drummer Pete Best is 65. Rock musician Donald "Duck" Dunn
(Booker T. &amp; the MG's) is 65. Actor-comedian Billy
Connolly is 64: Former White .House news secretary
Marlin Fitzwater is 64. Motion Picture Association of
America President Dan Glickman is 62. Singer Lee
Michaels is 61. Actor Dwight Schultz· is 59. Actor Sianley
Livingston is 56. Rock musician Clem.Burke (Biondie; The
Romantics) is 51. Record producer Terry Lewis is 50.
Actress Denise Crosby is 49. Actress Shae D'Lyn is 44.
Rock musician John Squire (The Stone Roses) is 44. Rock
musician Gary Stonadge ·(Big Audio) is 44. Rock musician
Chad Taylor (Live) is 36. Actress Lola Glaudini is 35.
Actor Colin Hanks is 29. Actress Katherine Heigl is 28.
Thought for Today: "Slander injures three: the slanderer,
the person who hears the slander, and the person slandered." - f:rom the Talmud, a collection of writings that
constitute the Jewish civil and religious law.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

'PageA4

OPINION
Bones qf contention: Religious relic
crusader battles online auction giant
BY BRIAN MURPHY

year ago.
AP RELIGION WRITER
"As far as the boycott,
well, we've really seen no
Hardly an hour goes by impact to speak of," said
without Thomas serafi n or Durzy. "We don't . know if
one of his cyber-sleuths it's even still in place."
checking what eBay has to
But Serafin said the symoffer.
bolism is what's important.
They're not hunting for
"Yes, it'sjust a blip on the
bargains and never place a screen," he said. "But we
bid. Their interest is bone want to make a point. They
shards, bits of wizened an! taking the same position
flesh and a contemporary as Judas. They are selling
twist on the sacred and the out the church."
profane: How ihe ancient
Interest in religious patritrade in the most coveted mony of all types - from
religious relics has moved icons to stained glass - has
into the global flea maltet soared in recent years,
of online bidding. .
along with the blockbuster
"You can find bone frag- novel "The Da Vinci Code,"
ments supposedly from St. the Christian-themed "Left
Augustine being hawked on Behind" series and major
the Internet along with trin- museum exhibits devoted to
kets and, antiques. There is art and spirituality. At the
something very wrong same time, a flood of ecclehere," said Serafin, a pro- siastical items has entered
fessional photographer and mainstream
antiquarian
Catholic activist based in markets from once-flourishLos Angeles, who has led ing churches that were
an expanding campaign . closed because of shrinking
since the late 1990s to block congregations or population
the online sale of objects shifts away from older city
purported . to contain the neighborhoods:
remains of Christian saints.
But the sale of so-called
• Last month, Serafin's "first-class relics" - bone,
group, the International flesh, hair, nails and fragCrusade for Holy Relics •. ments of other body parts
opened ·a new front that's - remains a murky subcul.
truly worthy of a David and ture, one that's increasingly
Goliath metaphor: a call to shifting from the back
rooms of dealers' shops to
boycott eBay.
It seeks to pressure the the Web's worldwide mall.
world's largest online aucDozens of religious items
tion site to close alleged are on eBay at any time.
loopholes used to bypass its Most are ordinary objects
ban on allowing . bids for such as icons, medals or
human remains.
prayer cards. But Serafin
Hani Durzy, . spokesman believes the strongest interfor eBay, said the San Jose, est is for the first -class
Calif.-based company is relics, which he says has
"very willing td reopen accounted for up to 40 pertalks" with Serafin's group cent of the eBay relic list'
about its concerns after dis- ings at times.
"This is where the real
cussions broke off about" a

action is," he said. "This is
where our fight is."
Serafin describes his
motivation as part conscions raiser and part consumer crusader.
He calls the sale of such
relics deeply offensive to
believers in their sanctiry.
Then there is the caveat
emptor - or "let the puyer
beware" - factor. Clear
documentation on a firstclass relic is extremely rare
and fraud is as old as faith
- as noted more than 600
. years ago in a scene from
"The Cantertmry Tales" in
which pigs' bones and a pillow case are part of a cache
of dubious religious relics
brought from Rome.
Some recent offerings on
eBay include "the air:· that
Chnst breathed, the wmg of
· the Holy Spirit and "the
hand" of St. Stephen.
Serafin also says the rules
- both canon and eBay's
· - are on his side.
Most churches with ceotunes-old , traditions in the
display and . veneration of
. relics, including the Roman
Catholic and Orthodox,
prohibit the sale of any
objects believed to hold
body parts.
The extensive li s.: of
eBay's
banned
Jtems
include Nazi paraphernalia,
firearms and ammunition
and "human parts and
remains."
Durzy said eBay has
more than 2,000 people
assigned to cull prohibited
items, .but noted that blanket enforcement is a challenge with up to 7 million
new items going up for bid
every day.
Sellers don't make it any
easier.

Local Briefs .
Special speaker

MARATHON?

BvANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS
Joe
Mammana, who is known
for providing reward money
to help get high-profile .
criminal cases solved, has
found himself in the middle
· RACINE - The Carmel-Sutton United Methodist of an unsolved crime.
Church on Carmel Road in Racine will open its "Carmel
The head of a Columbus
Kitchen" to serve lunch from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the crime stoppers group suing
~hurch 's fellowship hall starting on Monday and continu- Mammana says he became
mg 'through Saturday, Dec. 2. Donations are accepted for a crime victim himself
the following menu items : Soups, hot dogs with sauce, after being beaten up by a
toasted cheese sandwiches, ham and cheese sandwiches, baseball
bat-wielding
h&lt;Jmemade pies, pop and coffee. The "Carmel Kitchen" is attacker who told him to
sponsored by the Carmei,Sutton UMC Friendship Circle.
drop the lawsuit..
Mammana, who owns a
egg farm, said
Pennsylvania
'
he had nothing to do with
the attack on Kevin Miles,
president of Central Ohio
Crime Stoppers.
Columbus police say they
are investigating but have
POMEROY - An action for foreclosure was filed in yet to release any details of
Meigs County Common Pleas Court by flome National · the attack. They also
refused to say anything
Bank against Charles D. Wilson, Jr., Racine, and others.
AP photo
A foreclosure was granted to Oak Hill Banks ,from about possible suspects.
But Mammana has done In this ·2004 file photo, Central Ohio Crime Stoppers president Kevin J Miles speaks dur·
Dwight C. Honaker, and others.
little to make hi IJ\Sel f a ing a news conference in Columbus. Central Ohio Crime Stoppers sued Joe Mammana,
sympathetic figure. He Nov. 15 seeking up to $131,000 the group said Mammana pledged to Crime Stoppers,
mocked Miles' allegation, including $31,000 that was paid out in the investigation of a college student's murder.
ridiculed his weight and Miles said he was attacked Sunday and was told to drop the lawsuit
POMEROY- An action for divorce was filed in Meigs suggested the beating was
County Common Pleas Court by Tena Scarbury, deserved.
Alabama
teenag~r
Langsville, against Russell Scarbury, Johnstown.
"If he was able to talk, it Natalee Holloway m
Some rewards offered by Joe Mammana
Divorces were granted to Scott E. Golden from Candice wasn't me," Mammana said Aruba last year.
M. Golden, Jewell Withrow from Gary Withrow; Jr., in an intervidw this week
Pledges made by Philadelphia philanthropist Joe
Last year, Mammana coDonna Braun from Kenneth Braun, and Ella Roush from with The Associated Press. sponsored a gun buyback
Mammana for information on crimes around rhe
Harry C. Roush.
country:
"Where
was
he,
at · program in . Philadelp~ia.
2006
Wendy's?"
The commiSSIOn overscemg
•
Offer
of
$100,000
for
information in the disappear· "I don 't know anything the Philadelphia school disance
of
Heather
Teague,
a
western Kentucky woman.
about it, but l' m sure if trict this month honored
• Offer of $100,000 for information in the 2000 dishe 's lying about me like Mammana for his philanappearance
of Gina Bos of Lincoln, Neb., and the 2001
he's lied about everybody thropic work.
disappearance
of Jason Jolknwski of Omaha, Neb.
else, he deserved it,"
"You can't have vigilante
•
Offer
of
$100,000
for information in the unsolved
Mammana said. "I'm not justice, so_the best thing is
1991 murder of Jessica Lyn Keen of Columbus, Ohio.
saying I'm perfect, but I money, and the reward
hope somebody there is money seems to work,"
~
looking at this and saying, Mammana said. "When you
• Offer of $1 00,000 for information about the disap'You know what. some- throw a big : amount of
pearance of college student Joshua Haight in
thing ain't right here." '
money at something, all of a
Lewiston, Mont.
Miles said he ·was walk- sudden people come out of
• Offer of $100.000 for information llbout a
ing his dog in an alley the woodwork with inforquadruple
slaying in a South Carolina bike shop on
behind his house about 8 mation."
Nov.
6,
2003.
·
a.m. Sunday when a car · But Richard Carter, exec,
• Offer of $250,000 for information in the disap- ·
pulled up behind him. A uiive director of Crime
pearance
of Alabama high sc hool student Natalee
man got out with a baseball Stoppers
International,
Holloway
in Aruba.
bat and started attacking warns against offering
AP photo/The Los An:leles Time•
him, he said.
large rewards since they
In this undated photo provided by the Los Angeles Times,
2004
"The arm, the leg, the can spark multiple requests
Anita O'Day, performs. O'Day whose sassy renditions of back - I was hit all over,"
• Offer of $40,000 Jor information in the slaying of
for
payment,
second
Faheem Thomas-Childs, 10, killed in Philadelphia dur"Honeysuckle Rose: "Sweet Georgia Brown" and other Miles said .
thoughts by donors and
ing a gangland shootout.
song standards that made her one of the most respected . Miles said he pulled out
allegations
that
prosecutors·
jazz vocalists of the 1940s and '50s, has died. She was 87 .. his handgun bUI was not
are paying for testimony,
2003
able to fire because of his which can hurt chances of a
•
Offer
of
$100.000
for
information leading to a
· injuries. The man eventual- conviction.
conviction
for
any
terrorist
activity in the
ly stopped hitting him and
Mammana often pledges
Philadelphia area.
left. Miles called ·a detec- help to the Citizens Crime
Source: AP
tive who works with the Commission of Delaware
crime stoppers group. then Valley in Philadelphia, and
keeps coming back over and
BY AWSON HOFFMAN
· Cavolina recently com- spent seven hours being recently paid about $10,000 hitting his wife. ·
hospital.
treated
at
a
over
and again," Mammana
A
feisty
man
given
at
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
pleted a feature film about
for information that helped
attorney,
Kinsley
Miles'
O'Day and accompanied
solve a rape case, said Santo times to bluster, he ' said. "I did my time in jail
Nyce, said the attacker told Montecalvo, the group's acknowledges his past but and I come home and I run a
LOS ANGELES - Anita her to shows and on tours.
O'Day, whose sa,ssy rendi''She got to see how many Miles to drop the lawsuit. vice president.
says it gave him a per- successful business and I
tions of "Honeysuckle people really loved her at Miles won't comment on ·
"I don 't · know where spective that made him move forward.'' .
Rose,'· · "Sweet Georgia the shows we did, in New exactly what was said dur- they're coming off in Ohio want to help people
Brown" and other song York, in London," Cavolina ing the encounter. ·
badmouthing the guy," who ' ve been hurt.
Miles, 49, said he's not Montecalvo said.
standards th.at made her one said. "She had come back
"'What I did years ago just
of the most respected jazz after all of this time. She scared. "I' m going forward
Mammana. 47, who owns
vocalists of the 1940s and really lived a very full and with my life and hopefully · Yardley Farms, a suburban
they' 11 be able to find out Phi !adelphia company that
'50s, has died. She was 87.
exciting life."
0 'Day died in her sleep
O ' Day was born in who did it and bring the per- supplies egg products used
early Thursday morning at a Chicago, Ill. She left home sons to justice," he said.
in the food industry. served
Central Ohio Crime time in jail in the 1990s for
convalescent hospital in Los at age 12 and often bragged
Angeles where she was about being "self-made" Stoppers sued Mammana various crimes, including
recovering from a bout with . and never having a singing Nov. 15 seeking up to
llf25 7:30pm
$131,000 the group said
pneumonia, said her manag- lesson.
"USO • ·
Happy Birtlulay
er Robbie Cavolina.
She began her career in Mammana had pledged.
A
Sentimental
Journey of
"On Tuesday night, she her teens and later recorded Mainmana · said Crime
Tammy K.
Music from the 1930's and
said to me, get me out of hits with Stan Kenton and Stoppers knew he pays
Hutton
40's" presented by
here," Cavolina said. "But it Gene Krupa. Her highly styl- reward money only when
Nov.
24,
1969Sept.
27,
2005
The River Cit:~: Pla:~:ers
didn't happen.''
ized performance of songs an arrest results in a conviction.
He
also
said
the
Seems
like
only
yesterday
but
12/2 8 pm "Jingle"
Once known as the like "And Her Tears Flowed
group
forged
his
name
on
a
"Jezebel of Jazz" for her Like Wine." "Let Me ·Off
it's been one year. This is your
Holiday Pops Concert
lltE SANTA CI,.AUSE 3: lltE
·
reckless,
drug-induced Uptown ," . "Honeysuckle contract.
ESCAPE (G)
2nd Birthday you haven't
The Ohio Valley Symphony
Mammana has offered
lifestyle, O'Day lived to Rose·· and "Sweet Georgia
'been here.
M~~-'w,arieltheatre.org
FLUSHED AWAY (PGI
sing and she did so from her Brown" inade her famous · reward money in various
We love &amp; mis1 you.
high-profile crime cases
The Ariel-Dater Hall
1:10 .. 3:10
teen years until this year the world over.
Love, Terry, Sharon
428 Sec. Ave. Gallipolis, OH 1
In her prime, O'Day was in several states as well as
when
she
released
and all the family
740·446-ARTS (2787)
described as a scat singer in the disappearance of
"lnde~tructible 1"
"Alii ever wanted to do is and a natural improviser
perform," she said in a June whose unique interpreta1999 interview with The tions energized the most
A Sentimental
Associated Press. "When familiar songs. She inspired
I'm singing, I'm happy. I'm many singers, including
Journey of Music .rtoo•
doing what I can do and this June Christy and Chris
1930's and 1~'• .
Connor.
. is my contribution to life."

Carmel Kitchen open

For the Record

Foreclosure

Divorces

NOw
HOLIDAY

FORA

hilll . .

SYRACUSE - The Syracuse Community Church on
Second Street will welcome special speaker Rod Walker at
6:30 p.m. on Sunday.
·

Many now make a point
of sayin$ that the reliquary,
or container, is for sale and
the actual relic is a "gift."
There are even conflicting
linguistic
signals.
On
Monday, a seller posted a
relic of St. Eymard, a 19th
century French priest, that
was described as "ex ossibus," Latin for "from the
bones." But the fuller text
says the relic "does not contain an) human parts."
Attempts
by
The
Associated Press to reach
the seller - and several
other relic dealers on e Bay
- via e-mail contact information were unsuccessful.
"We just want the same
rules that apply to guns,
Nazi items or the bones of
American Indians," said
Serafin, whose group is a
loose association of about
200 members around the
world ranging from a
Russian Orthodox archbishop to Catholic priests and
lay people.
Across the time zones,
they try to keep a roundthe-clock vigil on eBay for
any suspicious relics. They
fire off e-mails to eBay and
the seller - who is often
known only by an online:
nickname
and
e-mail
address - asking for the:
item to be withdrawn.
·
But it's a cumbersome.
process.
.
ln late October, Serafin's
gro11p protested what they
considered ·an "ex ossibus"
relic of the 19th century St.
John Vianney, the patron
saint of parish priests. The
sale went ahead, starting at
$25. Twenty-seven bids
later, an anonymous buyer
picked it up for $565, plus .
$12 shipping.

TRAINING

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

Friday, November 24, 2oo6

'Jezebel of Jazz'
Anita O'Day dies at 87

SHOPPING.

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The Daily Sentinel

'

Friday, November 24, 2006

impoitant regard.
sions and abrasions associatA good example of what ed with the . inevitable diffiwe conservatives have to put culties of living. And
up with from CNN occurred beyond that, people will fall
during our cruise. CNN ill, with everything from
knows very well, of course, heart attacks to appendicitis.
William
that popular opposition to So CNN added to its mix
Rusher
the Iraq war is heavily every &lt;iisabling accident and
fueled by the casualty lists. illness sustained by memIt is true that combat-related
deaths, at around 2,800, are bers of our armed forces in
has seen to' it that CNN is still, after 3-1/2 years, fewer Iraq since the invasiofl
·
available, and i'n the days than those sustained in the began in March 2003.
Never mind that such ·
when CNN was the only World Trade Center and the
existing cable news channel Pentagon on the morning of c~sualties could, and in'
many cases would, have.
that was fair enough. But Sept. II, 200 I, alone Fox News Channel has · compared
with nearly been sustained by these peo-:
made its appearance. in 60,000 in Vietnam, and an pie even if they had stayed'
recent years, and has average of 6,000 a month in the United' States and:
promptly far surpassed for 40 months during World never laid eyes on Iraq. No;
CNN in the ratings. This War Tl . But the figure for such consideration fazed·
may well be owing to Iraq balloons to a more CNN. By adding non-com-.
CNN 's ever more liberal impressive 21,000 if you bat injuries and illnesses to
bias, particularly when com- add combat-related injuries, its total, CNN managed to:
pared with Fox's allegedly some
of which
are, inflate it astronomically. The
conservative coverage.
inevitably, horrific. CNN
It would be no great promptly added them, hor- figures "50,000" l09med on:
the screen.
·
ordeal for Holland America rific and otherwise, and a
Does
Holland
America.
to add Fox 's news coverage big fat "2 1,000" filled the
Line really have to keep on·
to CNN's on its cruise lin- TV screen ..
ers, but Of course it would
But CNN was just getting feeding its passengers an·
cause ·an uproar among mil- started. With about 150,000 exclusive diet of "news".
itant liberals. who ·not only American forces in the the- laced with such biased, ten -;
prefer CNN but would like ater, there will of course be dentious baloney?
(William Rusher is a
to strangle Fox in its crib if all sorts of ordinary nonthey could. Thus far, there - combat-related accidents Distinguished Fellow of the
fore, Holland America has resulting in death and injury: Claremont Institute for the
preferred
annoy its con- automobile accidents, slips Study of Statesmanship and
servati\'e passengers in this and falls. and all the contu- Political fhilo .mphy.)

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PageA6

24,
OHIO
Free food fuels e01ployee energy and satisfaction

The Daily Sentinel

CLEVELAND (AP) Don't feel like eating anylhing for days after your big
holiday meal? That" s not
always the case for those
lucky enough to get free
food at their jobs.
"Employees definitely
like this kind of benefit;•
said Bill Coleman, senior
vice president of compensation at Salary.com in
Waltham, Mass.
"They love to tell their
friends: ' Does your company give you free beer? Well,
mine does.' It gives you
braggin~ rights at cocktail
parties.'
.
Coleman said because the
kinds. of places that give
their workers free food tend
to attract workeJ;'S who
already like those products
·chocolate factories
attract chocoholics - giving it away to those people
make~ it a cherished perk.
At Mitchell's Homemade
Ice Cream. with stores in
the Cleveland suburbs of
Westlake.
Beachwood,
Solon and Rocky River,
employees get to sample all
40-plus flavors and enjoy
as many ice cream cones,
sundaes and smoothies as
they want.
·"Not only is it good for
morale, but we want our
employees · to be familiar
with the product," said
Michael Mitchell, who
started the business with his
brother, Pete, seven years
ago. "Customers always ask

Friday, November

aoo6

• , Friday, November 24, 2006

brownies, cookies and
sticky buns while they
work. Workers also get frrst
dibs on any leftover cinna$11!1H!P
TlQ
bi
mon raisin swirl bread,
croissants and baguettes at
the end of the day.
"That policy goes along
with the way a lot of things
work here," said Adam
Gidlow. "We don't offer a
lot of perks or benefits, the
ingredtent costs are so low,
and they are the lahor,".•so
it's always made sense to
him to feed them. ·
Since opening the business five years ago, he has
never had an employee
abuse the policy. "We want
them to taste it," Jennifer
Gidlow said. "We want
them to know the quality
ingredients so they can
.
describe it."
Other Ohio companies
that give employees free
food and drinks include J.M.
Smucker Co. in Orrville
southwest of Akron, which
provides
free
bagels,
muffins, fruit spreads and
peanut butter to its 3,200
employees. This was one of
the perks employees mentioned when Smucker's
AP photo/Tll4 Plain Deller, Da¥1&lt;1 I. A topped Fortune Magazine's
Jon Silac, left, Jamie Charles, center, and her brother, Tom Charles, savor the free ice cream that comes with their jobs 2004 survey of the I 00 Best
at Mitchell 's Homemade lee Cream in ·Rocky River Nov. 9. Boosting workplace morale and turning employees into cheer- Companies to Work For.
leaders .for what they sen are two of the reasons most often cited by compa.nies that feed their employees.
"If we're celebrating
something special, we could
you: What's your .favorite shakes and sundaes every what they se II are two of the bakery, On the Rise Artisan have an ice cream sundae
flavor? What's good here?' shift," he said.
reasons most often cited by Breads &amp; Pastries owned social" with Smucker's ice
"Some people really
Boosting
workplace companies that feed their by Adam l)nd ·Jennifer cream
toppings,
said
take advantage of it and morale and turning employ- employees.
Maribeth
.
. Gidlow, employees enjoy spokeswoman
have a couple of milk- ees into cheerleaders for
At a Cleveland Heights free coffee, tea, scones, Badertscher.

..

Pomeroy

CLEVELAND (AP) -·
Associations
of ests. Elizabeth Reichard, a
When Hank Doll founded a Grantmakers in Washington, Rocky River .nativ~ now
group to pool money for D.C., said it knows of 220 living. in Ne~. York; is
chanty m. 2002, he hoped giVIng mcles m 39 states, plann1ng a giVIng ctrcle ·
its northeast Ohio mem- - but that figure is probably with her eight siblings.
bers ·would eventually just a fraction of the number They will pool their money
break off to form their own that actually exist.
for a presc~ool in Kenya,
circles, causing a chain
Most giving circles are so which Reichard and other
reaction of giving.
informal that there's no way family members plan to
Bunhe 15 or so members of knowing how many oper- visit in the future.
The family is making its.
of the "Giving Back Gang" ate in Ohio, said George
through
have become such good Espy, president of the Oliio donation
friends, gathering monthly Grantmakers Forum.
International Partners in
over food and wine, that no
Some giving circles are Mission, a Cleveland
one wants to leave.
highly organized and even Heights.based organizaAncl._ they're doing good have staffs, like the tion where Reichard is a
work together. Each member Cleveland Social Venture board member.
commits to donating $),000 Partners.
The siblings will discu.ss
a year toward a project cho"Philanthropy is, by its their plans over Christmas
sen by the group. This year, very nature, voluntary and dinner and hope to fund
their focus is on Lake Erie is tied directly to values, so . more projects in the years to
and other Great Lakes.
it makes sense for individu- come, she said.
Giving circles are emerg- a is who share common
"It's already been a great
ing as a popular option for interests and values to come · ~Jiperience. and it's kind of
people who want to engage together," Espy smd.
-tlfthe spmt about what the
At least one northeast holidays are all about,"
m philanthropy and socialize in the process. The Ohio giving circle shares R.eichard said. "It's a way as
Forum
of
Regional more than common inter- a family to grew in faith."

and appliances, according to
the lawsuit. The refrigerator
- the alleged source of carbon monoxide - was made
in 1947 by Serve! Co.
There also was no phone
or .two-way radio, and
Richard Common - in a
phone conversation with his
wife before he left the main
camp - said his cell phone
wouldn't work in the
remote
area,
Karen
Common said.
The ·cabin was accessible
only by off-road vehicles
and then by boat, the lawsuit said.
It's unclear when the men
died.
·
Richard Common's body
was so badly decomposed
that it can't be used as evidence, Karen Common said.
· "Most people don't know
this, but my son's body was
in cold storage in the funeral home until January," she
said. "We couldn't cremate
FOSTORIA (AP) - Like
him until we had the toxi- many train enthusia~ts, Faith
cology and medical reports Falmestock traveled to this
from the coroner in Canada. northwest Ohio town because
His body was the only evi- of the hundreds of trains that
·
dence we had."
cross through each day.
James Common was a
But she didn't come to
gnlduate student at the watch the trains. She came
Minnesota
School
of to hear them.
Theology, where he was
Fahnestock is blind.
studying to be an Anglican
She can see shadows as
priest. He was in the middle the trains rumble past. She
of an internship as a youth stands close enough to feel
minister at a Florida church · the vibrations and the wind
at the time of his death.
on her cheeks. She hears the
A message seeking com- roar of the .engines and
ment was left Thursday for smells the metal and smoke.
the Thibodeaus at the lodge.
Her husband, Richard
Also named in the lawsuit Fahnestocjc, paints the picare three successors to titre, describing the sights.
Serve! , Co.
Gould
The couple, who live in
Electronics of Eastlake, Bel Air, Md. , drove eight
Nikko Materials Use of hours to get to Ohio.
Cleveland and Whirlpool
Richard
Fahnestock
Corp. of Cleveland.
. found out about the train
;fhe lawsuit also names town,while they were taking
Ohio Attorney General Jim . a trip .to Harrisburg, Pa., to
Petro because of an Ohio see the trains there earlier
law that limits a manufac- this year.
.
turer's responsibility to 10
"He talks to everyone and
years after the product they said you can see hungoes into use.
dreds of trains coming

archants Association Invites

You to CHRIS7MAS ALOIG 7HE RIVER OPEN HOUSE

SU

Y

• 28th 12-9 PM
CBRIS,.MAS PARADE.
2:00PM

Holiday Open House
November 26 12-5
1OOO's of Ornaments
EVEtn Penguins! .
'

#•

Holiday DeeOriltlons
Folk An 6 Gtte

Kids or Pats with Santa
at Peoples Bank altar
the Parada!

Panc:lora~

~.dt!lr~~~

TroiiBeads

HartwellHouse

(lark's Jetuelrp

100 East Main Street· Pomery

992-7696

Hrs: M-F 9-6 Sat. 9-5 Sun,1!l.&lt;l;l

Canadian cabin owners . 'Giving circles' pool money for charities
sued over
deaths
of
•
t
•
ts
3 Amencan ouns
CANTON (AP) - The
· widow of one of three
American tourists who died
in a remote Canadian fishing cabin blames their
deaths on carbon monoxide
that leaked from a nearly
60-year-old propane-powered refri{lerator, according
to a lawsUit filed against the
cabin operators.
of ·
Karen
Common
Alliance said photos taken
of her husband on a digital
camera recovered from the
cabin
show
Richard
Common, 61, with red lips
and red cheeks - signs of ·
carbon monoxide poisoning. Her · son, James
Common, 24, and brotherin-law, Michael Common,
66, also died.
"I think he thought he had
the flu," Karen Common
said of her husband. "That
is my speculation. I know
he didn't feel well from the
w;cy he looked."
A cabin operator discovered the
bodies
in
September 2005 after ·the
tourists failed to show up at
a boat launch at the end of
their fishing vacation,
according to a lawsuit filed
Wednesday in Stark County
Common Pleas Court.
Karen Common is seeking unspecified punitive
damages from the Green
in
Wilderness
Lodge
Gogama, Ontario.
.
The men had been to the
lodge before, but this time
they were told that their
reservations had .been lost
or not recorded, the lawsuit
said, and lodge owners
Warren
and · Russell
Thibodeau put the three
Americans in a "newly
acquired cabin" on Nursey
Lake, about 40 miles from
the main camp.
The cabin did not have
electricity or running water
and the sole source of
power came from propane
generators that fueled lights

The Daily Sentinel • Page A7

www.mydailysentinel.com

Laurel Domanski Oiaz of
Cleveland said her giving
circle•. Colectivo, provides
·her wtth a chance to meet
young , energetic people
committed to improvmg
Cleveland. The group is
made up mostly of people in
their 20s and 30s, and each
member gives $400. They
meet monthly over pizza
and soda to talk about community service projects, 31)d
often they do more than
give money- they pitch in
as volunteers, too.
So far, Colectivo's beneficiaries have included a
program serving refugee
families, a car-sharing program and an urban learning garden. ..
· "Even though we're only
giving $400 each, wl)en we
pool our • money, "We can
make a real difference for
some individual or group,"
Diaz said.

STOREWIDE SAVINGS
i lanual BoUday Open Bouse .
Friday, Nov. 24th ·

Saturday, Nov. 25th

9:30·6:00

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Sunday, Nov. 26th l

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r

Susan Clark and Family extend a heartfelt
Invitation to their friends to kick off the
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Blind woman travels to Ohio's train town to listen to locomotives

II

through here;· said Faith to the carnival, where she Ohio last Saturday and left
Fahnestock.·
Tuesday after a dialysis
got sick," he said.
Rail enthusiasts flock to
He took her to meet his par- treatment
at
Fostoria
Fostoria year round. The enis the next day and on the Community Hospital.
town about 40 miles south following Thursday asked
To arrange for dialysis, a
her
to
marry
him.
"We've
of Toledo is criss-crosse.&lt;:! by
·social
worker
at
dozens of busy railroad been together ever since."
Fahnestock's hospital in
tracks . Nearly 200 trains
The couple traveled a lot Maryland contacted Fostoria
pass through each day.
during their marriage, but Community Hospital and
The couple will celebrate have only taken day trips in took care of the paperwork.
their 34th wedding an!liver- the last few years because of Dialysis takes around three
sary this summer. "lt all Faith Fahnestock's health.
to four hours to complete.
started as a joke," Richard
She suffers from kidney · Fahnestock said her expeFahnestock said of their ·failure and, for the last rience has encouraged, her
first date .
three years, has required to try traveling more. "They
"My friends dared ml;! to dialysis treatment three were great and it was easier
take her out and I did it. We times a week.
than I thought it would be,"
had ice cream and then went
The couple arrived in she said.

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'The Daily Sentinel
•

NATION • WORLD

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

AP photo

closing the airport and
docks in the southern city of
Basra, the country's main
outlet to the vital shipping
Janes in the Persian Gulf.
Leaders from Iraq's
Shiite, Sunni and Kurdish
communities issued a televised appeal for calm after a
hastily organized meeting
with U.S. Ambassador
Zalmay Khalilzad. The U.S.
Embassy said it had nothing
to report about the session.
AI-Maliki. a Shiite. also
went on state TV and blamed
Sunni radicals and followers
of Saddam Hussein for the
attacks on Sadr City - the
deadliest on a sectarian
enclave since the war began.
The coordin.ated car bombings - three by suicide drivers and two of parked cars
- billowed black smoke up
into clouds hanging low over
blood-smeared
streets
jammed with twisted and
charred cars and buses.

.

Hospital corridors and
waiting rooms were awash
in blood and mangled sur. vivors of bombs that struck
at IS-minute intervals in the
sprawling Shiite slum,
which is a stronghold of the
· Mahdi Army militia of radical anti-American cleric
Muqtada ai-Sadr, a key aiMaliki backer.
The militia and associated
death squads are believed
responsible for the slaying~
of hundreds of Sunnis since
suspected ai-Qaida in Iraq
mihtants bombed a revered
Shiite ·shrine in the city of
Samarra last February.
That attack set off a surge
of retaliatory killings
between Shiites and Sunnis
th~t have raged all year.
Al-Sadr associates, speaking to The Associated Press
on condition of anonymity
because of the sensitive
nature of the information,
said the cleric feared that the

Sadr' City bombings would
make it impossible for him to
hold back his heavily ·armed
fighters from a furious round
of revenge attacks.
In a television Statement
read by an aide, ai-Sadr
urged unity among his followers to end the U.S.
"occupation" that he said is
causing Iraq's strife. Al-Sadr
said the attacks coincided
with the seventh anniversary
of the assassination of his
father, Mohammed Sadiq alSadr, a revered Shiite religious leader. The anniversary reckoning was by the
ISlamic calendar.
"Had the late ai-Sadr been
among · you he would have
said preserve your unity,"
the statement said. "Don't
carry out any act before you
ask the Hawza (Shiite seminary in Najat) : Be the ones
who are unjustly treated and
not the ones who treat others unjustly."

~Poisoned
Russian spy dies in intensive care unit in London
•
Bv TARIQ PANJA

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

LONDON - A former.
Russian spy who said he
.had been poisoned died
:Thursday night at a London
:'hospital, following a myste.: rious and rapid decline that
·)eft doctors unable to pinpoint the cause of death,
officials said.
Alexander Litvinenko, a
fierce critic of the Russian
government, had suffered
. heart failure and was heavi1y · sedated as medical stuff
struggleu to determine what
.had made the 43-year-old
critically ill.
"The matter is being
investi gated as an une xplained death," London 's
Metropolitan police said in
a statement.
The fooner spy said· he
believed he had been poi' soned on Nov. I, while
investigating the slaying of
.another Kremlin detractor investigative joumalist Anna
Politkovskaya. His hair fell
out. · his throat became
swollen and his immune and
nervous systems were
severely damaged, he said.
Just hours before he lost
consciousness, · Litvinenko
said in an interview with
The Times newspaper of
) London th ~t he had been
:;silenced.
·
~ "I want to survive, just to
rshow them." he said in the
~interview was published in
; Friday's edi tion of the
~paper. copies of which were
~available late Thursday.
, They "got me, but they
~won 't get everybody."
'- Doctors at Lonuon 's
'·University College Hospital
~said tests had virtually ruled
e·out poi~oni n g by thallium
'•and radi ation - toxins once
konsidered possible culprit~
~ehind the poisoning.
~ ''The medical team at the
~hospi tal did everything possible to save hi&gt; life," hospital spokesman Jim Down
: ~aid .
confirmin g
the
Ru"ian's ·death Thursday
night.
"Ever}
avenue
was
explored to e'tah li !ih the
;cause of hi~ condition . and
i. the matter i&gt; now an ongoing ime~tigation heing dealt
-..nh by tk te ti' ~, ... he \aid.

--

BY WILL WEISSERT
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Roundys," . said
Utah
Department of Public Safety
Capt. Doug McCleve.
STRAWBERRY RESERA few days later. the sonar
VOIR, Utah - For more picked up two more bodies,
than· a decade, the remains believed to be two of three
of several boaters have been men missi ng si nce a I 995
hidden in the dark, cold · fi shing trip. ~
depths of this 26-square"When we started doing
mile lake high in the Uinta the autopsies and identified
National Forest.
the remains we found, it
Then, in a span of just two (brought) a sense of closure
weeks,
Strawberry to one family, but still not the
Reservoir gave up six of its other one. Then we find other
dead during a search for a bodies· and it's still not the
couple whose boat capsized Roundys ," Winterton said.
in mid-November.
"I'm a firm believer that
What loosened the reser• · things ,happen for a reason."
voir's grip on the dead was . Searchers found the
sonar, which transmits high- Roundy bodies on Nov. 17.
frequency waves through
If the couple's bodies had
water and registers vibra- been found first, deputies
tions thnt bounce off an would have ended their
object.
. search and none of the other
Search and rescue crews bodies would have been di s·
in the past dragged the lake covered.
for bodies with a triangular
Because of their success
sheet of metal that had with the sonar,-crews conhooks on it, said Lt. Jeff tinued to loo.k for the third
Winterton of the Wasatch member of the 1995 fishin g
County sheriff's office in . party. On Monday, they
central Utah.
locateu another body, which
But when Steven Roundy, might be that man, deputies
28, and his wife, Catheryn, said.
23 , disappeared from their
If so, authorities will be
overturned aluminum fish- able to account for every
ing boat Nov. 8, authorities person believed to h'a ve
were able to search for the drowned in the lake in the
With'
recently past decade.
bodies
·
"A bad situation actually
acquired sonar equipment.
Freezing water tempera- turned out to be somewhat
tures, 90-foot depths and an ofa. good situation because
elevation of more than of the bodie s we recovered
7,600 feet made it too dan- ... and peace that's returned
gerous to Send divers to to
those
families,"
look for the couple.
Winterton said.
Rescuers thought \hey
On Wednesday, authorihad located one of the ties identified the remains
Roundys on Nov. I I when of one member of the 1995
the first blip appeared on fishing
party:
Phii_Iip
the sonar screen. But video Shepherd, 26, .of Spamsh
from the lake bottom indi- Fork. Hi s fishing buddies,
cated otherwise. It was the Austin Lloyd and · Daniel
body of Drake McMillan, a Maycock, both 19 and from
46-year-old Salt Lake City Span~sh Fork, have not been
·
man who disappeared while tdenufied.
"This is as hard as the lirst
swimming Aug. 31, 200 I.
"We were very surprised time," Tom Lloyd, Austin 's
and somewhat taken back father, told the Deseret
New s.
"It's
when the first victim we Morning
found was not one of the heartache. Pure heartache."
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Iraqis walk past the site of a car bomb explosion in the Sadr City district of Bag_hdad, Iraq
Thursday. In the deadliest attack sinoe the beginning of the Iraq war, suspected Sunni-Arab
militants used three suicide car bombs and two mortar rounds in three different areas of
the capital's Shiite Sadr City slum to kill at least 161 people and wound 257. police said.

Dr. Geoff Bellingan. the
hospital's director of critical
care, said extensive tests had
failed to uncover what had
caused Litvinenko to fall ill.
Earlier in the day, hospital
officials said Litvinenko was
deteriorating rapidly and
family members and friends
rushed to his bedside.
Family
friend,
Alex
Goldfarb,
joined
Litvinenko's wife Marina, his
son Anatoli and the former
agent 's father at the hospital.
"He went into a cardiac
failure overnight and the .
hospital put him on artificial
heart support," Goldfarb
said. "He's on the ventilator,
he's gelling artificial resuscitation.''
Anti-tennrist police were
investigating the poisoning,
which friends and dissidents
allege was carried out at the
. behest of the Russian government. Litvinenko sought asylum in Britain in 2000, and
has been a relentless critic of
the Kremlin and the Russian
security services ever since.
On Wednesday,
the
Russian Foreign Intelligence
Service, the SVR. issued its
strongest uenial yet that it
was involved in any assassination attempt. "Litvinenko
is not the kind of person for
whose sake we would spoil
bilateral relations," SVR
spokesman Sergei Ivanov
said, according to the ·
Interfax news agency. "It is
absolutely not in our interests to be engaged in such
activity."
Litvinenko worked both

for the KGB and for a sucres- Berezovsky and others," he
sor, the Federal Security said. But he refused to say
Service. In 1998, he publicly who compiled the docuaccused his superiors of ment, saying that it could
ordering him to kill Russian jeopardize the police invesSubscribe today • 992-2155
tycoon Boris Berezovsky tigation into the poisoning.
now exiled in Britain - and
After visiting the hospital
a year later spent nine months on Thursday, Berezovsky
in_jail on charges of abuse of told the AP that British
We'll Havea
office, for which he was later police have yet ,to speak to
acquitted, and which prompt- him, but hoped they would
ed his move to London.
be in contact over the next
On the day he first felt il), · two days. The police
Without You
Litvinenko said he had two declined to comment abou I
Chrlstmu In Downtown
meetings. In the morning, whether they had the e-mail.
M.cA11hur
Saturday, December 2 J-6 p.m.
he met with an unidentified
Goldfarb said Wednesday
Spon.vored by fh(
Russian and with Andrei that there ·was nothing out of
1-'imM County Chamb(r Q(Commm.:t
Lugovoy, a former KGB the ordinary in Li tvinenko' s
IJvt' Musk Vif/r with Stllltll Door Prius
colleague and bodyguard to meeting with Lugovoy, who
Kllls.tttMria Sole• F.sdl'ol•fTrtts
one-time Russian Prime also worked as bodyguard to
l.lve Notivtty SIIJ(J Glvt•WOJ' Matb l\:lortl
Vini&lt;M!CO.
Minister Yegor Gaidar at a Berezovsky, the most high
&lt;:roll Salr - All Dol'
Hiahs.i.oot
London hotel. · Later, he profile Russian exile in
Ptuod•- HO p.m.
' Showlime: II
dined with Italian secilrity London.
7: l~p.m. .
Call the Ch~tmber at596·.503J tOr iotbnmuiun
expert Mario Scaramella to
Litvinenko refused to
on this li-ce cvc:ul or tu bu}
discuss the October murder implicate any of the people
Tio:ke~; $10, SIS,Sl~ ,
Dwight lu:nhow..-:r Conu.:rt n.::J..ct ..
of Politko.vskaya.
o.....t Admission 5.!
he met on the day he said ·he
Scaramella told reporters believed he was poi soned.
in Rome on Tuesday that he
had traveled to meet
Litvinenko to discuss an email he received from a
source naming the killers of
Politkovskaya, who . was
gunned down Oct. 7 at her
""qfie
~~
Moscow apartment building,
and outlining that he and ·
November 26-Merchants Holiday Open House 1-4
Litvinenko were on a hit list. December 2. 2006
Goldfarb said that he had
a photocopy of the four· * Holiday Parade
*Tree Lighting Ceremony
page e-mail and conflfllled
@ 6pm
on the T @ 5:30pm
that it did read like the hit
• Line up at Rejoicing Life
Crossroads
list described by Scaramella.
"What's in there confirms
Church
(Rio Grande Meigs Center)
what Scaramella said. It
Parking Lot at 5pm
Open House After parade
lists several targets for
Every~me Welcome ·
Free
assassination. among them
are
Politkovskaya,
Ftee Pictures &amp; Treats With Santa At Peoples Bank
Litvinenko,
Scaramella,
f

II

I.

· .

Immediately After The Parade
*Carolers
*Live Nativity On The T Throughout The Christmas Season/

Wood Crafts

tliverfront
Pa&amp;t
&amp; Preaent
108 W. Main Street • Pomeroy. OH
7100

R~ForWeddy
Qveaways At ParttdpaUns
~Throughout The VIllage!

FALLUJAH, Iraq - It
was before sunnse on
Thanksgivi_ng morning and
a U.S. Manne sat on a frigid
concrete curb, reflecting on
a holiday spent in his violent patch of western Iraq.
From the Middle East to
Central Asia and beyond,
U.S. service members like
Staff
Sgt. · Dominco
Washington passed a day
meant . to
c.elebrate.
Am.erican bounty in farflung deployments, longing
for home while focusing on
their missions.
"There are times when
you think it would be nice
to be home, nice to be with
the ones you love,"
Washington, of the 3rd
Reconnaissance Military
Transition Team, said while
waiting in the dark along a
wind-swept Fallujah street
for a company of Marines
searching houses.
"But you can't think too
AP photo
much about youl))elf, get too
U.S.
soldiers
serve
fooj
to
fellow
soldiers
as
they
celebrate
Thanksgiving
Day
at
a
U.S.
military
camp
iri
the
fortified
Green
down and be a disruption to
·
the other guys," said the 30- Zone in Baghdad Thursday.
year-old, who hails from
machinery was decorated
Norfolk, Va., but lives witll Cpl. Oaniel J. English, a legs, shrimp cocktail, fried are making progress."
In
the
former
Soviet
wit]) little Christmas trees
his wife and I0-year-old native of Antwerp. Ohio, in chicken and collard greens.
"It's the most important republic of Kyrgyzstan in and red ribbons.
daughter on a U.S. military the 3rd Reconnai ssance
, Battalion.
In South Korea, U.S. Air
day of the year for us," said Central Asia, there was no
base in Okinawa, Japan.
lack
of
thought
for
familie
s
A
television
lounge
at
Force
personnel at Osan Air
Raymond Yun~ , director of
From their positions
across Iraq's dangerous and Camp Fallujah planned to one of the food · service back home among U.S . per- Base chowed down on
sonnel at Manas Air Base.
turkey and mashed potatoes
insurgent-dominated Anbar show NFL games live, even crews at Camp Fallujah.
"My
wife
and
5-monththough
they
.didn't
start
here
the
Navy
in
mess halls.
Secretary
of
province, more than 20,000
The two Koreas are techMarines quickly and quietly . until the middle of the night. Donald Winter arrived in old daughter, Emily, are
marked Thanksgiving amid Cardboard turkeys, pump- Iraq on Wednesday and vi s- waiting for me at home," nically still at war, and
their work, while trying to kins and pilgrims in belt- ited the camp while touring said Air Force Capt. Karl reminders of the uneasy
Recksick of Cheyenne, Wyo. armistice signed in 1953
bring some homestyle tradi- buckle hats were plastered several An bar locations.
"The morale seems very "I have four months left to abound at Osan, some 50
around many buildings.
tions to Iraq.
Inside the base's two good. Yes , ·they have serve, and J' II do my best to miles south of the demilita· There was a flag football
rized zone that divides the
tournament on fields of sprawling mess halls, three- thoughts of home as every- make my relatives proud."
Supporting refueling and peninsula. Patriot .anti-mishard-packed sand , that foot turkey sculptures fash- body does, but I think that
became blanketed by blind- ioned out of butter greeted they recognize the impor- cargo missions for U.S. oper- sile batteries line the golf
ing dust whenever medical the troops, who piled their tance of their mission and ations in nearby Afghanistan course, and the latest edition
evacuation helicopters took trays high with roast turkey, many have told me that very is the main purpose of the of the base newspaper carried articles on what to do in
stuffing, sweet potatoe s, directly
and
without base, established in 200 I.
off or landed nearby.
Several servicemen wear- case ·of attack by chemical
"Thanksgiving is food cornbread as well as pump- proTQpting," Winter said in a
and football. That's what we kin and four other varieties lunchtime interview. "The ing Santa Claus hats distrib. or biological weapons.
Staff Sgt. Benjamin Short,
do every year. It's America, of pie. The menu also sense that the sailors and the uted handfuls of sweets to
even if we're in Iraq," said included prime db, crab Marines have is that they their fellows, and military 26, who fixes electronics

equipment on F-16 fighter
jets, said being at Osan was
better than Balad, Iraq,
where he spent last
Thanksgiving.
"They have a lot of random mortar attacks on that
base and that's frustrating.
You don't know where
they're going to hit," said
·Short, who is from Seattle.
"They're more of a nuisance but they have hurt
some people pretty bad."
In Iraq, special convoys
delivered turkey to some of
the Marines manning remote
outposts, but others had to
settle for the same rations as
a normal Thursday.
"You get used to it, missing the holidays, because
you're always gone," said
Cpl. Adam Kruse of the I st
Marine
Expeditionary·
Force's Headquarters Group.
Kruse left Camp Fallujah
on Wednesday for a multiple-day mission to hunt for
roadside bombs and said he
wouldn't have time to do
much Thanksgiving celebrating. A natlve of Huron,
S.D .• he will likely still be
in the field when he tums 21
Saturday.
When as.keu what he
planned to do for his birthday, Kruse didn't hesitate:
"Don't get shot."
Washington and other
members of the 3rd
Reconnaissance Military
Transition Team were still at
work near Thanksgiving's
dawn, after a search mission
in Fallujah's southern
Nazaal district that began
Wednesday night ran long.
As Al;!lericans back home
prepared to offer their gratitude over heavily laden
tables , Washington was
focused on safety .in the
Iraqi desert.
"While you're here
you're thankful for your
team," he said. "You' re
thankful that all the guys
with you are all right."
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Friday, November 24,2006

in

Bv BROCK VERGAKIS

..

PageA9

2006

Searchers using sonar
fmd 6 bodies in Utah
lake; some missing
more than a decade

BY STEVEN R. HURST

BAGHDAD, Iraq
' Sunni Muslim insurgents
blew up five car bombs and
-fired
mortars
mto
'Baghdad's largest Shiite
district Thursday, killing at
least 161 people and
~ wounding 257 in a dramatic
attack that sent the U.S.
ambassador racing to meet
with Iraqi leaders in an
effort to contain the growing sectarian war.
.
Shiite mortar teams qwck' ly retaliated. !Iring I0 shells
at Sunni Islam's most importanr. shrine in . Baghdad,
badly damaging the Abu
'. Hanifa mosque and killing
one person. ·Eight more
··rounds slammed down near
the offices of the Association ·
·of Muslim Scholars, the top
Sunni Muslim organization
in Iraq, setting nearby hous- .
es on lire .
Two other mortar barrages on Sunni neighbor- .
: hoods in west Baghdad
· killed nine and wounded 21,
police said late Thursday.
The bloodshed tmderlined
·the impotence of the Iraqi
:army and police to quell
determined
sectarian
' extremists at a time when
•'the Bush administration
' appears to be considering a
· move to accelerate the hand, over of security responsibilities. President Bush plans
·to visit the region next week
. to discuss the security situa' tion with Iraqi Prime
'Minister Nouri ai-Maliki.
·· "We condemn such acts of
senseless violence that ·are
clearly aimed at undermin' ing the Iraqi people's hopes
•for a peaceful and stable
•'Iraq," said .Jeanie Mamo, a
Whtte House spokeswoman.
g0vernment
Iraq 's
imposed a curfew in the
,capital and also closed the
!international airport. The
,transport ministry then took
the highly unusual step of

Page AS
Friday, November 24,

AROUND THE WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

I

64-year~old female
BY SARAH EL DEEB
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

suicide bomber attacks Israeli troops

weeks ago where women
defied a cordon of heavily
armed Israeli troops to create a di:version for besieged
Hamas fighters to slip away.
"She and I, we went to the
mosque. We were looking
for martyrdom," the daughter said.
Hamas spokesman Abu
Obeideh said both Palestil}ian
men and women are committed to battling the Israelis .
"We told the Zionist
enemy we will meet it with
many surprises ... and this is
one of the surprises," he said.
Before setttn~ out on her
mission, An- NaJar filmed the
video testament customary
for suicide bombers. A copy
obtained by The Associated
Press showed a petite woman
wearing a wh1te headscarf
and black dress, toting an
assault rifle on her shoulder
and standing in front of a
Hamas wall mural.
Reading from a sheet of
paper, she dedicated her
attack to the Hamas-Jed
government and to the
movement's military commander, Mohammed Deif.
"I hope God accepts it," .
she said.
Eight other Palestinians
were killed Thursday. In
Gaza, three militants from
the Palestinian Resistance
Committees were killed in
an Israeli airstrike on their
·car, Palestinian security and
hospital officials said . The
mihtary confirmed the air

JEBALIYA, Gaza Strip
A
64-year-old
Palestinian grandmother
blew herself Ul' near Israeli
troops sweepmg through
northern Gaza on Thursday,
and eight other Palestinians
were killed in a day of
clashes and rocket fire.
The militant Hamas,
which is in charge of the.
Palestinian government,
claimed responsibility for
the suicide attack and iden. tilled the bomber as Fatma
· Omar An-Najar. Her relatives said she was 64- by
far the oldest of the more
than I 00 Palestinian suicide
bombers who have targeted
Israelis over the past six
years.
Israeli forces were moving through the Jebaliya
· refugee camp in nonhern
Gaza on the second day of
an operation to stem rocket
fire from the coastal strip
into southern Israel. They
s~tted a woman acting suspiciously, the military said.
Soldiers threw a stun
grenade, a weapon that
.makes a loud nose but causes no damage. The woman
then set off exP.Iosives she
was carrying, killing herself
and slightly wounding two
soldiers.
At the compound where
her extended ·family lives
near Jebaliya camp. her oldest , daughter Fatheya
explained the bomber 's
motives.
"They (Israelis) destroyed
her house, they killed her
grandson my son.
· Another grandson is in a
wheelchair with an amputated leg," she said.
Female suicide bombers
were a rarity during the first
several years of the current
Israeli-Palestinian conflict,
but that has gradually
changed. The last suicide
bombing, on Nov. 6, was
also carried out by a woman
in northern Gaza.
But the past few weeks
have seen an increase in
militant activity by women
in Gaza who have served as
"human shields" defending
the homes of militants that
Israel has threatened to
deslTOy.
Fatheya said she and her
mother had taken part m•
rally at a Gaza mosque three

l:'1

force had attacked a vehicle.
The AI Aqsa Martyrs'
Brigaues said one of its
men, a 20-year-old, was
killed in a clash.
Two Hamas militants
were killed in a gun battle .
with Israeli forces, and
another was shot dead as he
was about to fire a rocket at
Israel, the military said.
Anoth&amp; man died of
wou·nds in a Gaza hospital.
It was not known whether he
was a militant or a civilian.
Despite the stepped up
Israeli military operations,

militants kept firing their
homemade rockets at southern Israel. Five were fired
from Gaza, the army said.
No one was hurt.
Palestinian
President
Mahmoud Abbas denounced
the Israeli raids, using terms
like .massacre and barbaric,
but blamed the rocket
squads for setting it off.
"There· is no need for
these rockets, because the
action of these rockets will
not reach the level of the
Israeli reaction," he told his
Fatah Party late Thursday.

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�BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentmel

PageAto

Friday,

Novemb~oo6

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

NFL roundup, Page B6

.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX Community Calendar

Club member needs
to vent feelings
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: I've been a
member of a local chapter
' of a prominent national
organization for a little over
three years . In recent
months, "Claire," a member
of our ladies auxiliary, has
been venting . her frustrations . at me over her perceived treatment from other
ladies in the group. I've li stened to her when she wante.d to get something off her
chest, but lately I'm left
wondering if these frustrations are real or imagined .
When I see Claire with
these other women, I sense
no animosity. I' ve even told
Claire that I like her, and I
also like some of the
women who supposedly
give her a hard time, and I
don't want to take sides.
I've spoken to our chapter
president about this, worried th'!t Claire might quit.
We need all the volunteers
we can get. And Claire's
husband, who is very supportive and valuable to our
· would
organization,
undoubtedly quit as well.
The president said he would
speak to Claire and her husband, but in the meantime,
should I remain a "listening
post" next time she vents?
- Impartial Listener
Dear Impartial: Claire
may be hypersensitive to
minor slights, she may want
attention, or she may, m fact,
not get along with these
women. If you can allow her
to vent without registering
approval (nod absently
while she goes on), that
would probably help Claire
see you as a friend. If you
don't want to hear her complaints, however, it's perfectly OK to distance yourself as politely as possible.
Dear Anme: One in 31
adults has arthritis, and
there are 300,000 children
with arthritis~ The Arthritis
Foundation is the largest.
private nonprofit contribu tor to arthritis research.
We are doing our best to
get information to the
community.
Some types of arthriti s
include:
Osteoarthritis, a degeneralive joint disease in which
the cartilage that covers the
ends of bones in the joint
deteriorates, causing pain
and loss of movement as
bone begins to rub against
bone. It is the most prevalent form of arthritis.
Rheumatoid arthritis, an
autoimmune disease , in
which the joint · lining

becomes inflamed as part of
the body's immune system
activity: Rheumatoid arthritis is one of the most serious
and disabling types, affec ting mostly women.
Gout, which affects mostly men. This painful condi-·
tion most often attacks
small joints, especiall y the
big toe. Fortunately, gout
almost always can be completely controlled with medIcation and changes in diet.
Ankylosin)l spondylitis, a
type of arthntis that affect s
the spine. As a result of
inflammation, the bones of
the spine grow together. ·
Juvenile arthritis, a general term for all types of
arthritis that occur in children. Children may develop
juvenile rheumatoid arthritis or childhood forms of
lupus, ankylosing spondylitis or othe~types of arthritis .
Sy stemic lupus erythematosus (lupus); a serious
di sorder that can inflame .
and damage joints and' other
connective ti ssues throughout the body.
Scleroderma, a disease of
the body 's connective tissue
that causes a thickening and
hardening of the skin.
Fibromyalgia, in which
widespread pain affects the
muscles and attachments to
the bone. It affects. mostly
women.
Arthritis is not just an
"old person 's disease ."
Arthriti s and related .conditions cost the U.S. economy
nearly $86.2 billion per
year in medical .care and
indirect expenses. The
Arthritis Foundation wants
you to khow whl.J we are.
We look. forward to meeting
new faces and building
relationships. For · more
information , log on to
www.arthritis.org or call
the Arthritis Foundation
Carla
nearest you : Bourg, Jacksonville, Fla.
Dear Car-la Bourg:
Thanks for writing. We
hope our readers will log on
to your website · for more
information or contact their ·
local foundation.
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
ten by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the · Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writer.1·
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
poge at www.creators.com.

recovery. ·
Tuesday, Nov. 28
RUTLAND - Rutland
Vill age Council, speci al session to di scuss water and
Saturday, Nov. 25
~ewer rates, 6 p.m., Rutland
MIDDLEPORT
Spec ial meeting for open Civic Center.
installation of officers of
Middleport Masonic Lodge
#343 , 7:30p.m., at temple.
All Masons and guests .
Sunday, Nov. 26
invited. Refreshments.
SYRACUS E- Syracuse
Monday,, Nov. 27
Community
Church, Rod
POMEROY - OH-KAN
r
special
speaker,
Walke
Coin Club, 7 p.m., Pomeroy ·
6:30p.m.
Library.
POMEROY Meigs
County Ri ght to Life, regular meeting, 7:30 p.m .,
Pomeroy Library.
Thesday, Nov. 28
·MASON,
W.Va.
Rac ine Area Comi11unity
Organi zation meet s at 6
p.m. at Gino 's. Members
and guests invited.
MIDDLEPORT - Special
meeting of Middleport
Lodge #363 , 7:30 p.m. ,
Masonic Temple for work in
the Master Mason degree.
All Master Masons invited.
Refreshments.
Friday, Dec. 1
POMEROY
- PERl
Chapter 74, I p.m., Meigs
County Senior Center, for
Chri stmas program. ·

Clubs and
organizations

Church events

Forecast for f'rlday, Nov. 24
MICH ..
.,
.,., ,,

,'~\-~

Other events

Monday, Nov. 27
POMEROY - Veterans
Servi ce Commission , 9
a.m., 117 Memoriai ·Dr.
POMEROY - Meigs
County Di strict Publi c
Library Aoard, 4 p.m. ,
Pomeroy Library.
POMEROY
- Local
Emergency
Planning
Commi ssion , II :30 a.m ..
senior center conference
room . Discussion (m the
Emergency
Operation s
Plan , and proposed resolu tion on Haz-Mat spill cost

At Bob's Market &amp;
Greenhouse, Inc.

• Fresh Live Cut Christmas Trees
• Balled &amp; Burlapped Christmas Trees
• Wreaths • Garland • Poinsettias
• Unique Gift Ideas
• Fruit Baskets Packed Full .
of Fresh Fruits, Nuts &amp; Candy
• Bulk Christmas Candy

•

Owens, Romo ,give·Cowboys big Thanksgiving victory ;
Hurricanes
get big win.
over Eagles
Bv TIM REYNOLDS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

tTo Looi
~(ott Liis Cliristmas . .

Public meetings

Friday, November 24, 2006

Thesday, Nov. 28
Sunday, Nov. 26
CARPENTER
REEDSVILLE - Edgar
"Duke" Pullins will be 80 "Forgiven Four" at Mt.
on Nov. 28 . Cards may be Union Baptist Church,
sent to 39879 Betzing Rd., 5:30 p.m. Church located
Reedsville, Ohio 45772 .
at 3909 I Carpenter Hill
Rd .
Saturday, Dec. 2
POMEROY Carol
Monday, Nov. 27
POMEROY Meigs
McLaughlin of Pomeroy
County
·
CIC
reception
for
will celebrate her 75th
birthday on Dec. 2. Cards George Collins, 6-7 p.m. ,
may be sent to P.O. Box Pomeroy Gun Club, RSVP
992-3034.
209, Pomeroy.

9Jttf!s 1Jsainnine
u

MIAMI - If this was
Larry Coker 's final game at
Miami, at least the
Hurricanes sent him otf
with a victory.
Kirby Freeman threw for
181 yards and a touchdown,
Javarris James' 2-yard run
in the third quarter put
Miami ahead to stay, and
the Hurricanes' defense stifled No. 18 Boston College
in rallying for a 17-14 win
Thursday night.
The Hurricanes (6-6, 3-5
Atlantic Coast Conference)
· snapped a four-game losing
streak and became bowl-eligible. Soon, they'll know if
they' II actually gel an invitation to the postseason and if the embattled Coker
will be coaching. A decision
on his future at Miami could
be announced as early as.
Friday, and speculation has
been widespread for weeks
that his six-year tenure leading the Hurricanes is about
to end.
"I'm going to be here . I
feel very sttongly about
that," Coker said right after
the game.
Following a season in
which Miami endured the
death of a senior standout,
the fallout over a sideline-

Ple•se see Clines. 16

BY JAIME ARON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

IRVING, Texas - For a
three-play stretch Thursday,
Tony Romo looked like a
guy making only his fifth
start after 3 1/2 years on the
bench.
He threw low and inside
on What could've been &lt;\
long touchdown pass · to
Terry Glenn. On the next
snap, he held the ball too
'long and got sacked. Then
he came up .short on a deep
ball to a w1de-open Terrell
Owens.
.
.
He hardly m1sfired agam.
. Romo went on to throw
f1ve touchdow!l passes,
tymg a Dallas Cowboys
record and Ieadi~g them to
an easy 38-10 vtctory over
the Tampa Bay Bt~ccaneers .
"I thought it was Aikman
out there," Ta11_1pa Bay coach
Jon Gruden satd.
..
Well , there was one dtlference: Troy Aikman needed
overtime for the only fiveTO game of hts career. And
Roger Staubach, the other
Hall of Fame quarterback.
for the Cowboys, never did
tt. . . ,
Whtl~ tt s tough to lump
Romo m with those guys at
this point in his career, it is
no l.onger ."ludic~ous " to
constder htm bemg Pro
Bowl-calibe~, as co~ch Bi.ll
Parcells sa1d earher . th1s
week.
The Cowboy s are 7-4,
with a half-game lead in the
NFC East and the secondmost wins in the conference
behind Chicago ·(9-1), and
Romo is a major reason for
it.
He's 4-l as a starter, with

three straight wins. In the
previous two, he outplayed
Peyton Manning as Dallas
handed Indianapolis its first
loss and he earned NFC ·
offensive player of the week
honors for his performance
against Arizona.
This time; Roino was 22of-29 for 306 yards, witl't a
stretch of 13 straight completions. He went 9-of-10 in
· the second half, making him
29-of-31 after halftime over
his last three games.
"The sky is the limit for
the guy," said Terrell Owens, ·
who for 'all his antics knows
a thing or two aboul quarterbacks, h1Jving played with
Steve Young in San
Franci sco and Donovan
McNabb in Philadelphia.
"He's poised back there in
the pocket. He makes things
happen on the run, He makes
great deci sions and he's
managing the game. He's
exceeding expectations right
now."
The Buccaneers .(3-8) continue Jiving down to their '
expectations.
After opening the game
with an 80-yard touchdown ·
drive, Tampa Bay crossed
midfield only once more to
lose for the fourth time in
AP phOIO
five games. Joey Galloway
Dallas
Cowboys
wide
receiver
Terrell
Owens
(81)
celebrates
s~oring
a
touchdown
during
the
caug.l:ll three passes for 71
yards in his ·fir st game third quarter of an NFL football game. against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in. Irving, Texas
againsl the Cowboys since thursday. Owens deposited the ball into one of .the Salvation Army red kettles being used
they traded him for as a prop for the charity's annual holiday fund-raising campaign . The Cowboys won 38-10.
Keyshawn Johnson, but two time- with a 74-yard drive two from being perfect. from Eastern .Jllinois who
of the C\ltches and 59 of the during a 2-minute drill that Considering he came in 0.5 spent the first six games this
yards came on that opening made it 21-10 at the break, behind Manning for No . I in season backing up Drew
series.
then opening the third quar- that category, Peyton is Bledsoe.
Romo responded to the ter with an 82-yard drive going to need one heck of a
''He's managing the game
e,rrly 7-0 deficit by leading ~hat featured a 45-yard pass game this weekend . or the well. And that's what he's
Dallas to five touchdowns in to Glenn.
new league leader is going supposed to do," Parcells
a span of six drives. He was
Romo's passer rating was to be Romo, an undrafted
at his best right around half- 148.9~ an incompletion or former Division 1-AA MVP
Ple•se see Giving. Bl

Edwards critical of teammate's
hit on Bengals' Chad Johnson

.
cltyllleglon
High I low temps

.

.,.

BEREA
(AP)
Apparently, Browns safety
Brian Russell 's jolting hit on
Bengals wide receiver Chad
Johnson lO weeks ago didn 't
just ring " Ocho Cinco's"
bell .
It
dinged
Braylon
Edwards, too.
Ed wards has .questioned
the need for his teammate's
bone-jarring
blow
to
Johnson - and other shots
,on wide receivers - in the
final minutes of the Browns'
34-17 loss at Cincinnati on
Sept. 17.
After a pass intended for
him was intercl;pted by

Browns cornerback Leigh
Bodden, Johnson had his
helmet blasted off and . his
chin split open by the hard
hit froin Russell, who was
not penalized for the shot.
Johnson later joked about
the vicious tackle, and he
even complimented Russell
for having "a great story to
tell his grandkids."
Edwards, however, didn't
find Russell 's knockout of
Johnson particularly funny.
The opinionated secondyear wideout thinks wide
receivers in general have
become targets, and showed
support for his Cincinnati

counterpart as the Bengals
(5-5) and Browns (3-7) prepared for Sunday's game.
"That's bull," Edwards
said ·
Wednesday.
"Obviously, I won't say anything to Brian because he
didn't hit me and the guy
(Chad) is on the opposite
team and I'm not taking up
for that guy. But if you look
at the nature of the game,
they (defen sive backs)
always complain when we
put our hands on them or cut •
block.
"But yet you have a play

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Friday... Sunn y. Hi ghs
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Friday
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Lows in the lower 30s.
South wi nds around 5 mph
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Saturday... M o~t l y ' unny.
Highs in the mid 60s. South
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Saturday night...M o&gt;t ly
clear. Lows in the upper 30s.
South winds around 5 mph.
Sunday
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Monday night ... Mostl y
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Lows in the lower 40s.
Tuesday... Part ly cloudy.
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Tuesday night.::-Partly
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Sunday, N Ov.

24 •holml &lt;'&gt;f !ixn:aordirusry Savings!
Qu11liry Jewelry of •rhe 'Uite!lt Pash~on!
INSTANT (!'RIFD I'If'!

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Appetizers and bt\ireniQ•
'•

.

'

�•

Page 82 •

,,

The Daily Sentinel

careers. That's something
you aspire to one day. If I
could play another 15
years, ·maybe. .. . l got
fromPageBl
things I still have to work
said. "He's a football guy on and get better at. Believe
and he's interested in play- me. l haven't arrived yet,
.
by any means."
mg well. But we've got .a
Parcells keeps sayin~ he's
ways to go here. So put the
..
anointing oil away; OK?"
wanmg to see how omo
Tell that to the fans who bounces back from a bad
chanted "Ro-mo! Ro-mo!" game. He's going to have to
.
F 's p tgame wait at least I 0 days, when
dunng
ox
os
oaII as p)ays
·
h
d
on t e roa
show. Or to the fans who
against the New York
hung his name in the Ring Giants, the first team that
of Honor during warmups; Romo will go against a secit was taken down before ond time. The first meanki~k?ff.
. . ..
ingful action of his career
It II be the ~~~t time they was against them - only a
take 11 down, Cowboys · month ago Thursday
owner Jerry Jones said
At 7-4 the Cowboys have
e~gerly in the gi&lt;Jdy win- the sam~ record they had
mng locker room.
.
coming out of last year's
Romo caught a ghmpse Thanksgiving game. Led by
of the sign. After denying Bledsoe, they won only two
he saw it, he broke into a more games and missed the
. ·
smile and called it "pretty playoffs.
funny."
'
' Parcells said things are
Then came a big dose of different this time because
humility from a player Dallas lost on the holiday
known more for his confi- last year. He's also starting
dence.
to reveal his optimism for
"That is an injustice to this club.
those guys," he said. . think we're.going t~ ~
"Every single one !)f them m It here f?r a httle whtle,
have had unbelievable Parcells sa1d.
•

Giving

·:r

Friday, Nove~ber 24,

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

Cleveland's play-calling
Glenn caught Romo's
on Wednesday.
.
first two TD passes, of 30
Earlier, Russell ., disand 2 yards. Marion Barber
missed his hit on Johnson
III caught the next two, givfromPageBl
·. as "part of football ,"
ing him an NFC-best .II
"I'm going to try to hit
touchdowns.
like that where Chad
The record-tying fifth Johnson clearly wasn't anybody I get a chance to,
went to Owens and he
if it's a clean shot,"
capped it in holiday style.by going to catch the pass, Russell said. "If I get a
depositing the ball into one Leigh Bodden already chance to hit somebody
of the Salvation Army red intercepted it and Brian this week it's going to hapkettles bein~ used as a prop just leveled him. You see it pen. "
for the charity's annual hol- time and time again. It's a
On a conference call
iday fundraising campaign. rough game and we choose . with Cleveland's media,
' "That was my donation," to play it, so it comes with Johnson dodged any quesT.O. said. "! ho)?C it's as the territory.
"But at the same time, tions about the hit that left
much as the fine.
· one of the NFL's fastest
Notes: The Cowboys protect the players. We're players groggy and bloody.
hadn't scored a first-quar- trying to do the same thing
"It's football," said
· ter touchdown in seven those guys are."
"I don't care
Johnson.
Edwards also said a hit
games until Romo's ·first
abOut ·hits. It's going to
TD .... Tampa Bay quarter- on Bengals wide receiver happen. It's part of the
back Bruce Gradkowski T.J. Houshmandzadeh by · game." .
went 10-of-20 for · 120 San Diego Chargers safety
Johnson had six catches
yards with two intercep- Terrence Kiel was borderfor
78 yards and a touchtions.
LB Derrick line.
down
in Cincinnati's win
"! don't see the need for
Brooks set a Tampa Bay
record by starting h1s I 84th those two plays," he said. earlier this season over the
Browns, who need to make
game. The mark had been "I really don't."
sure
they keep tabs· on the
Edwards' comments may
held by OT Paul Gruber....
wideout.
This. was the ninth time a have prompted bulletin- fleet-footed
·cleveland
will
keep
one of
Cowboys · QB threw five board material - in his
its
safeties
close
to
TD passes. The last was by own locker room.
Russell was not avail- Johnson, hoping that by
Aikman in OT in the 1999
opener; the last in reguia- able to the media follow- double-teammg him the .
tion was Danny White in ing the rant by Edwards, Browns can make Bengals
Carson
who
also
challenged quarterback
1983.

Critical

.
2006

Palmer throw elsewhere.
Johnson leads the NFL
with 920 receiving yards
and he's shooting for his
fourth straight yardage
title, which would be a
league first. In the past two
weeks, he has picked up
450 yards - the league's
highest two-game total
since 1970.
The Browns may try to
get physical with Johnson,
but that can be tricky since
he can slip by and make a
big play. Also, it ·Can be
dangerous to play too far
off Johnson.
"'We have to keep the
integrily of the defense
together even though we
are facing Chad," Browns
coach Romeo Crennel
said. "We have' to be more
aware of where he is and
the route he is running. If
we need help, we have to
make. sure we are providing that.
"It's a fine line because
you know if he's coming
your way, the ball is probably following him. You
might need to take a couple steps ba~k so he doesn't run past you."

.• Friday, November 24, 2006

wwwmydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

'

.. If you have a question cr a comment, write: NASCAR This Week , C/o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538, Gastonia, NC 28053

•.

·.;.

'

,. tor:=:.:.-:~

,;:

--

. ,'mPnl~~··~flllr,
,f .... an.l,ea!hPitltlc&gt;n ri the &lt;'
~
iU\ .
.
., UN year,-~ drtYfirt

.. .............. .
.. c WQ!III; IIICOnl:23 rect?oll1Ciud-

t'N ~-otthe n...t tO.Jlnli
,~ 8iflle'l IIOIIIIittecl vtctDry-

, f, the ftnt for I fO!ll dr1Wr me.

.. 'Au~. 28. WhlCh iiecs the qun.

' ' tlc&gt;n 01 NASCAA: Whet'S 1he
.

use?

'

t

~

'

·;· 'to Robil)' Gonion cralhed tn five

,!heor"

final six - · But, on
other hind, he Won at 8$,
··i' Cal~.• tate Me~~.
.'
'
'
to~~ broutlht 111e same

'. , CheW IO tlome$teld thlt won
· ·• at llan!lft!l, ~ and

T-.

· : , He ftn1811ec1 15ttt. Guess thlt .
lllNII$ It's

to Glee
the
of

Ol!t all car, huh?

Seaeonflnale
Fonl400
HOMESTEAD, Fla . -Greg 8il·
fle won the Ford 400 for the third
consecutive year; put a Ford in ·
victory lane for the first time
since Aug. 26 and won for the
11th time in a career that consists of only 150 Nelrtel Cup
races. The first time he wo~ at
Homestead-Miami Speedway, in
2004, teammate Kurt Busch
nailed down the title. A year ago
Tony Stewart WQn the champi·
onship here wh11e Biffle was again
winning the final race. This time
around it was Jimmie Johnson.
Biffle's victory will be briefly
. celebrated and soon forgotten,
and don't think he hasn't noticed. "I still get the check and the

trophy, ti'K&gt;ugh,"
he said, •and
when we get to
Daytona, I'll still
be the last guy
to win one.·
Biffle finished second in
the title Chase
for the Nextel
Cup a year ago.
This year he, like Stewart. didn't
even make the Chase . His victory
on Sunday was only the siKth of
the season for Ford, the fewest
since the manufacturer won fiiJe
times in 1986 .
Martin Truex Jr. finished second, Denny Hamlin third, Kasey
Kahne fourth and Kevin Harvick
was fifth.

.._......

Mark Martin won for the
sixth time this season in
14 series starts. and Todd
Bodine won the championship for the first time.
Brendan Gaughan finished
second, by far his best
showing of the season.
Martin also announced he
would compete in 5-10
races neKI year In a Ford
fielded by Wood
8rothers/JTG Racing. JOhnny Benson won five races
this season, two more than
Bodine, but BOdine's margin
in the season standings
was 127 points.

:· someone else wins the Nextel
• ;,, Cup dlamplonshlp on that
;-.: · date, the feet Will be only
.

HOMESTEAD, Ra. Robby Gordon crashed in
five out of the season's final
six races. It was the 189\h
lap of Sunday's Ford 400
wtlen his No. 7 Chevrolet
· spun into the turn-four wau.
Just a lew days earlier.
the versaUie 37.year-&lt;&gt;ld won
the Baja oll-roed race and
flew directly from Mexico to · . .._...BJL':...__.
practice and qualify 101' the
Nextel Cup finale. He has won in a wide range of raci"ng
vehicles over the years. Yet still he struggles in a singlecar team that he owns.
Why does he continue to fight the uphill battle in Cup?
"Refuse to lose," said Gordon . "People question
whether we will be able to pull this off. That may well be
wtrt I'm determined to do 11. I'm still confident it won't be
.long before we win a race, •

&gt;

··: . reer In I row, but as ion&amp; as

JIMMIE JOHNSON

NEXTEL CUP SERIES

No.

48

,

;s;s 'J f

•

to Bll!le apparently
has deveJ.
Bobby
knack.

This Ia the aeeond public notice published In regard to this Proposed Major Utility Facility. AEP Ohio
published the first notice In Tfte Sunday Tlmes-SenUnel newspaper, Pomeroy, Ohio, on October 15; 2006.

oped the
Labonte
Lationte .won the final races of
the 1996, '97, '99 and '03 se&amp;sons. He alsO won wtlat had
been sChe&lt;luled tolie the final ·
race Of 2001, but an earlier
postpOnement (due to tile 5ept.
11. 2001 terrorist attack)
puslle'(j the final race that year
to tile day after Thanksgiving in
Ll&gt;udon, N.H.

.

Name and Description .
of the Proposed Facility
Columbus Southern Power Company and
Ohio Power Company (operating
subsidiaries of American Electric Power
conducting business in Ohio as "AEP
Ohio") propose to constrUct an Integrated
Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC)
electric power generation plant in
Lebanon Township. Meigs County, Ohio,
on 288 acres adjacent to the Ohio River.
This project is known as the G.,at Bend
IGCC Power Plant Project. The proposed
project .will include a 629 megawan
power generation plant. a 69-acre landfill
and barge unloading facilities on the Ohio
River. The accompanying map depicts
the proposed site for the lGCC Plant. lt ·
should be noted that due to the reduced
scale and limited detail this map should
be used only as a general guide. More
detailed information regarding the general
layout of the proposed facility is included
in the application, described below, that
AEP Ohio has filed with the Ohio Power
Siting Board.

Application Now Pending
. An application for a Certificate of
Environmental Compatibility and Public
Need to construct, opera~e and maintain
the Great Bend Power Plant is now
pending before the Ohio Power Siting
Boar~.! ("Board"). This application has
been assigned case number 06-030-ELBGN. This case number should be
included in all communications with
respect to this p~oceeding. Specific
detailed infonnation on the proposed
project is included in the application
currently pending before the Board.
Copies of the application, including
specific details oflocation and
construction are.available for public
inspection at the following locations:
Meigs County District Public Library
Ms. Kristi Eblin, Director
216 West Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(740) 992-5813 . .
Ohio Power Siting Board
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
180 East Broad Street
Columbus, Ohio 43215·3793
(866) 270-6772
An electronic v~ion of the 1iting
application can be found It the Ohio
Power Siting Board's website at http://
opsb.ohio.11ov. To retrieve the
application, ~eut~ under "Current Cases"
for Case #06-030-EL-BGN.
Pursuant to Rule 4906·5·06 of the Ohio
Administrative Code, the following local
government officials in Meigs County
have been served with a copy of the
application:
Meigs County Commissioners
Mr. Michael Davenport, President
I00 East Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(740) 992-2895

(C) The chairman of the power siting
• The basis of the need for the facility. In
board shall cause each application filed
the case of a major utility facility
with the board to be investigated and
described in division (B)(l) of Section
shall, not less than fifteen days prior to
4906.01 of the Revised Code, the Board
the date any application is set for hearing
shall presume the need for the facility as
submit a written report to the board and to
that need is s!Jited in an applic11tion
thq applicant. A copy of such report shall
pursuant to division (A)(3) of Seetion
be made available to any pe.rson upon
4906.06 of the Revised Code;
request. Such report shall set forth the
• The nature of the probable
nature of the investigation, and shall
environmental impact of the proposed
contain recommended findings with
fadlity;
. regard to division(A) of~ection 4906.10
• Whether the facility represents the
of the Revised Code and shall become· ·
. minimum adverse environmental impact,
part of the record and served upon all
considering the state of available
parties to the proceeding..
technology, the nature and economics of
alternatives, and other pertinent
Meigs County Health Department
The Board has scheduled the public
considerations;
Mr. Larry Marshall, Health Commissioner • In the case of electric transmission lines•. hearing in two parts:
·. 112 E. Memorial Dr.
that the facility is consistent with regional
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
I) A non-adjudicatory hearing pursuant
plans for expansion of the electric power
(740) 992-6626
to Section 4906.08(C). Revised Code,
grid of the electric systems serving Ohio
where the Board sha'll accept written or
and interconnected
Mr. Garry Smith
systems and that the facility will serve the oral testimony from any person. The
President
hearing will take place December 12,
.interests of electric system economy and
. Lebanon Twp. Trustees
2006, at 6:00 p:m., at Meigs High School,
reliability;
51325 Portland Road
• The facility will comply with Chapters
42091 Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy, Ohio
Racine, Ohio 45771
45769. And,
·
3704, 3734, and 6111 ofthe.Revised
(740) 843-5304
Code and all rules and standards adopted
2) An adjudicatory hearing will take
under those chapters and under Sections
•
MeigsSWCD
place December 14,2006, at 10:00 a.m.
1501.33, 1501.34, and 4561.32 of the
Mr. Joe Bolin, &lt;;:hairman
in Hearing Room .11-F, at the offices of
Revised Code. In determining whether
33101 Hiland Road
the
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio,
the facility will comply with all rules and
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
180 East Broad.Street, Columbus, Ohio
standards adopted under Section 4561.34
(74(!) 992-4282
43215-3793. This hearing is open to the
of the Revised Code, the Board shall
consult with the office of aviation of the . public, but is limited to tbe parties in the
Tuppers Plains,Chester Water District
case as defined by Section 4906.08 of the
division of the multi-modal planning and
Mr..Donald Poole. Operations General
Revised Code.
programs of the Department of
Manager
Transpor1ation under Section 4561.341 of
39561 Bar 30 Road
the Revised Code;
1\eedsville, Ohio 45772
Opportunity for Comment
• The facility will serve the public
(740) 985-3315
interest, convenience, and necessity;
and lnterveation ·
• Thf facility's impact on the viability as
Eugene Triplett
agricultural land of any land of any land
The public wiU be given an opportunity to
Meigs County Engineer
comment on the proposed facility.
·
in an existing agricultural district
I 06 Holly Lane
established under Chapter 929 of the
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Section 4906.08(C) provides that:
Revised Code that is located within the
Phone: (740) 992-2911
'site of the proposed major utility facility;
The board shall accept written or oral
and
testimony from any person a! the public
Meigs County Office of Economic &amp;
• Tho facility incorporates maximum
bearing, but the riglit to call and examine
Workforce Development
·feasible water ~:onservation practices as
witnesses shall be reserved for parties.
Mr. Perry Varnadoe, Executive Director
determined by the Board, considering
However, tho board may adopt rules to
238 West Main Street
available technology and the nalure and
exclude repetitive, immaterial, or
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 · ·
irrelevant testimony.
economics oharlous alternatives.
Phone: (740) 992-3034
The deadline for filing a petition to
Date, Time and Locatloa
intervene in Cue No. 06-030-EL-BG'N u
ofPubllc Hearing
established by the Ohio Power Siting
The Ohio Power Siting Board has served
Board or the administrative law judge is
the following state aacncies with copies
Section
4906.
07,
Revised
Code
provides
up to five days prior to the scheduled date
of the application:
that:
·for the non-adjudicatory hoarin11o or later
if 1100&lt;1 cau~e is shown. · However, the
Public Uti'llties Commission of Ohio
.
,
(
A)
Upon
the
receipt
of
an
application
Board strongly encourages interested
Ohio Department of Agriculture
complying.
with
sec:tion
4906.06
of
the
penons who wish to intervene in the
Ohio Department of Development
Revised Code, tho power sltin11 board
acljudicatory hearina to file their petitions
Ohio Department of Health
shall promptly fix a date for 1 public
as early as possible. Petitions should be
Ohio Department ofNatlll'll Resources
hearing
thereon,
not
less
than
sixty
nor
addressed to the Ohio Power Siting
Ohio Department of Tl'ansponation
more
than
ninety
days
aften11ch
receipt,
Board, 180 East Broad Street, Columbus,
, Ohio Environmental Protection A11cncy
Ohio 4321 S-3793.
and shall conclude the proceeding as
.
Ohio Historical Society
expeditiously as practicable.

The following eight criteria are set forth
in Section 4906.IO(A) of the Revised
Code and will be used, alon11 with
additional infonnation, by the Board in
the reviewing of the application for a
ceni ficate to construct. operate and
maintain the Great Bend JGCC plant:

(

..

of a certificate, the board shall hold a
hearing~ the same manner as a hearing is
held on an application for a certificate if
the proposed change in the facility would
result in any material increuc in any
environmental impect of the facility or 1
substantial change in the location of all or
a portion of such facility other than u
provided in the alternates set forth in the
application.

Pablo Montoya
va. Ryan Newman .

JUMI

to

See an All-American sport opening

its arms to the similarly inclined

to The

to Pamaps

MawiiNM nnm ul 1964
ldnd ul like two In -

NASCAR officials were
seeking to avokl an intemation.
al Incident wtlen they summoned Ryan ,._,.n after he
and Juan -lo Montoya tangled
twiC1' on 1he track. Newman won
because his Dodge didn't catch

to Denny

Hamlin, the top rookie,
finished third in the points
staOdltig&amp;, which was secondbest ever for a first-year driver.
James Hylton finished second In
tile ther&gt;Urand National points
standings during his rookie season, 1966.

t·son'S
o nveaveraae
In

stellar seasons, Johnfinish in the
points standings is 3.0.

· CIA stock photo

(Abote) Jllllmle Johnson takes a lap around Homestead-Miami Speedway after cinching the season points chanlplomlllp on Nov. 19.

By Monte Dutton

. HOMESTEAD, Fla.- As is the case
~fh other sports, championships are
all-important in stock-car racing.
Stock-car racing is little different
from other mainstream sports. It rewards those who win the champi·
onships. The inability to "win the big'
one" is a heavy yoke to bear in the
would-be champion's psyche.
It's a ljiYth. Jimmie Johnson was
never unable to win the big one. Until
Sunday, he never won the biggest one,
an imperfection he shared with Peyton Manning, Adlai Stevenson, Burt
Lancaster and others.
This year, though, Johnson bore the
emblem of destiny. He'd never won
the Daytona 500 or the Brickyard (Allstate 400) or the Nextel Cup championship. ,,

.. - .. !Mit
-Well, the
champion, of

course. Jimmie Johnson
performed '

and acted Hke
tile champion
he probably

Sllould'W

. been before

nw.... For tile third year in a
row. Glee 8lftle won tlltl season's fin4ll rece.

....... - - Jeff Gofdon
finished 24th at llomHteed.
... Robby GordOn aasl1ed for
tile ~time In &amp;IX-·

There was a time in NASCAR
when a season actually began .
the ~ear before. For instance, the
first race of the 1964 season was
held In Concord. N.C .. on Nov. 10.
1963, and won by Ford driver Ned
Jarrett. The first r;:~ce actually held
In 1964 was the season's fifth.
Dan Gurney drove a Ford to victory
· in Riverside, Calif. T!'le Dayton'a
500, won by Richard Petty in a Ply·
mouth, was the eighth race of the
season .

Johnson fulfills his championship destiny.
NASCAR This Week

Now he has all three.
From the very beginning, Johnson
said repeatedly that'he thought this
was his year. Not a lot was made of it. ·
Champions think every year is their
year, even when it isn't.
And the concept of "winning the big
one" is overly simplistic. In order to
get in position to win it all, a driver
must, by definition, achieve a lot of
triumphs just to get in position, which
Johnson has done repeatedly in his
relatively brief career. ·
Johnson's impassioned crew chief,
Chad Knaus, kept saying he felt no
pre.ssure, a notion that was, of course,
ridiculous. Knaus, of Rockford, Ill., has
an impatience befitting his Midwest upbringing. Johnson, of El Cajon, Calif.,
has a cool befitting his West Coast
roots. Somehow, they make a team.
Pressur~? Johnson said he felt the
pressure; but not so much the pres·

sure of this race. Or this season. Or all
· the seasons that dido 't e~ in triumph.
Pressure, Johnson noted, comes wiih
the territory of being an auto racer.
"Pressure doesn't fall into one race
or one lap or one turn," he said. "I put
a lot of pressure on myself. Nobody
who ever tried to make a race car go
fast did it without learning how to
handle pressure."
.
As Matt Kenseth, the driver who Jed
Johnson at regular reason's end said,
Johnson was not only the best driver
of the season but also the best of the
past four seasons as a whole. It could
be argued that he has been the best
during the span of his five-year career, a period in which he has won
more races (24) than anyone else.
By winning the title, Johnson put
his detractors to rest, but it didn't really take championship to affirm his
brilliance.
·

a

Roullt awys be simply
to work harder

n••••

If NAS~AR periOdically tests the
race cars bac~ed · by the three manu·
facturers. how come one wins more
races than the other two combined?
Are Roush-, Penske ·and Evernham
that bad?' Something's fishy in Denman.., methinks.
Rlcllard Greene
Boiling Springs, N.C.

Asked about this al Phoenix. Jack
Roush said /1e blamed no one but

himself for his team falling shorf of
its 2005 performances. "That may
change next year. • said Roush. "bur
dgfn now I don 't feel/ike Ford is at a
disadvantage. We had such a good
year in 2005.1 don't think we made
the necessary technological improve-ments that other: teams were making.
We need to work flarder, and it starts

me. •

with

.

.

NmaC.

:a.

J!nvnle Johnson

6,475

·56
I.

l?!!nn1 Hamlin

·68

.. Jeff Gonion
7. Jeff Bono~~

. 78
· 147
·2111
- 247

•• Marl&lt; MllrtJn

·307

. 292

. · 4&lt;18

,au.c.. ......

:a.--

5,648

... l?!!nn1 Hamlin

· 965
· 981

.. J J . 7. l;te Busch
L Johnny Sauter
•• GI!C 8lftle

-824

· 1,161
· 1,573
. ·1,727

·1,854
- 1,859
· 1,978

c..n- TRUeK 5ER!Es
:a.

Todd Bodine
2. Johnny Benson
3. David Reutlmann
4. David StarT
5. Jack Sprague

Aunit IllAmllftal E1tttrtc , _

850 Tech Center Drive
Gahanna, Ohio 43230-«S05

••1.

.

TedMuSIIIlM

Ron Homada';
TerTI' Cook
Rick Crawford
10. Mike Skinner

••

.

'

Newman

NASCAR Tills Week's Monte
Dutton &amp;lves hill take: "Isn't it great

on fire.

=01110'

s

The Formula One driving ace tangled twice with Dodge's biggest dis·
appointment of 2006: Newman won
by TKO when Montoya's Dodge explOded. Thankfully, Montoya wasn't
injured.

champion and his crew
chief somehow get along despite being quite different in
terms of peosonallty. Jimmie
Johnson Is friendly and accessi·
ble, If bland. Chad Knaus Is intense and confrontlltional.

'

Montoya

from all over this big, blue marble of
a world?"

(B) On an application for an amendment

Criteria Uled to
Review the Application

r

sions.

:

...
,

u

The Ford Championship Week·
end wound up being Ford Corer
nation Weekend, All three
races fulfilled expectations that
they were foregone conclu-

•

s ~ f)

s

to

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1

J,~:..:.. ~J -

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Ji-J...:.::.
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.
LOWE'S CHEVROLET

I

, s

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.r.!::..

··i ~~remembered and sel·

: •.. ac,m cited.

to fight

uphlllbllttle • lingle c• owner

Font :zoo

Matt1Kenseth closed out
the season with two victories in a row and. by so do.
irig, deprived the series
champion, Kevin Harvick, Qf
a record for most victories
in a single season. Harvick,
who dominated the series
in virtually every category,
won nine races : The record,
set by Sam Ard in 1983, remains 10. Harvick did, however, win the championship
by the largest margin in history. His margin over Carl
Edwards at season's end
w.as a whopping 824
points.

(

Biffle won the final race
-soh for the thlld

Robby Gordon continues

3,666
· 127
· 136

. 311
- 338
• 352

. 353
. 401
. 414
. 447

Championship weekend a little short .on drama
•

By Moirte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

HOMESTEAD, Fla .
NASCAR's Ford Championship
Weekend fell a bit short of ex·
pectations as the title· rac~s in
all three major series didn't
pack much of a punch.
The Chase for the Nextel
Cup· was an appropriate term,
though the four drivers chasing Jimmie Johnson faced long
odds and were relying on a sub·
par performance by Johnson to
pry the championship away
from him. Surprising no one,
Johnson won easiiy by finish·
ing ninth.
A notoriously slow starter in
the Chase, Johnson had fallen
165 points out of the lead only
six races earlier.
"I never felt we were out of
it," he said. "I never conceded."
Todd Bodine locked up the
Craftsman Truck Series cham·
pionship with a 21"-place fin·
ish, and thete wasn't anything
vaguely resembling drama in
the Busch Series, where Kevin
Harvick entered the final race

with an 844-point bulge and
ended up winning by 824.

••
Fear and loathing - Next
year, when NASCAR begins implementation of the Car of Tomorrow (increasingly referred
to as COT), teams will have to
build two completely different
chassis designs, and the dread
here is pervasive.
As Elliott Sadler noted, "It's
going to be very tough on all
the teams next year. It's going
to be very expensive on all the
teams because the things that
work on our regular car don't
work on the COT. It's going to
be a different mindset every·
week. The things that work on
one don't work on the other, so
it's going to be hard on the
team director, hard on the driver. We've all got to learn to
adapt."
The reason Sadler said "team
director" instead of "crew
chief" is that his owner, Ray

Evernham, no longer believes Johnson could lose no .more
than 156 points in this race,
in crew.c~iefs .
which meant that his illustriNo advice - Juan Pablo
ous teammate, four-time cham· Montoya will replace Casey
pion Jeff Gordon, saw his title Mears next year and drove a
In a way, it's weird - Yes, hopes expire when the green- Dodge with a similar paint
scheme here. Some hurt feelHomestead-Miami Speedway is flag dropped.
It was Gordon who cham pi· ings surfaced when Mears exan intermediate track, but the
1.5-mile .track is unique, thanks oned Johnson's cause to owner · pressed disappointment that
Montoya had not been interestto its so-called "pure-oval" Rick Hendrick.
"! cim take credit for talking ed·in any advice about the adshape and its graduated banking. It's in its third configura- Rick into hiring Jimmie, but justment from open-wheel to
Rick is the guy who provides stock cars.
·
tion since opening in 1995.
us
with
great
leadership
and
all
"I've
given
him
all
the
advice
"It's now a very oddly built
race track," said Jeff Burton. the tools needed to win," said I can when I can," said Mears .
"It has a really fast exit to the Gordon. ''I'm still a racer and "I've let him know that he can
corners but one of the slowest would prefer to be battling ask me anything he wants at
entries on the circuit. You have Jimmie for the championship, any time. I think he's used to
to drive Homestead differently but, since we're not in con· being 'the guy,' and I don't
than any other track we go to. tention, we're hoping our team- think he's used to asking other
"The mindset of a driver has mate wins it for Hendrick Mo· people for advice much.
"f talked to him quite a bit at
to be open to try things, so you torsports.
"Our season isn't over yet. Talladega, trying to help him
have to go be careful .... not to
go in with too tight of a box on We still have an opportunity to understand the draft and also
your (chassis) · setup. Your move up in the sta!ldings. ... 'at the test here at Homestead.
mindset as a driver needs to be We've run well here recently, Any time I can , I've tried to
open to different options be· and our intermediate program help hi)ll. I've told Chip (Ganascause it's such a different has definitely improved since si) I'll do anything I can to help
last year."
him get up to speed quicker .
track."
In reverse order, Gordon's but there 's not as much comlast four Homestead finishes munication. If I was in his posihad been ninth, third, fifth and tion, there would be more communication."
No cigar, again - Jimmie fifth.

•

•

'M

'

.

�Friday, November 24, 2006

www.mydallysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 24, 2006
Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Nolice

Public Notice

The tanda, lots and
part Df lots returned

Working
tntareot
Floyd Rou 12 Land
0wtw ....,..KJ2503
..
• ..1.03
OI.Q0201.002
VIUgMnJ-M
&amp;/Or
Gwendoten
Hope Froctlon 36 T3
R13W 640A Out Of
3 46A .640. ..12 18
01·00562 000
Vaughan Jomea M
1/0r
Gwendoten
Hope
Sect 15·21,
Frac.36,T 3N,R13W,S
w Cor 1.01A Out Of
64.271 01~ .. 1269.98
01.00190 000
Whllley Cllflonl A
Sacl17 N Pert 0117A
Nw
1/4
2 SOA
... ..... ... ..•• 1819
01.Q0412 000
Whllley Clition!
Alan &amp;lOr Whitley

80 OOA -7.A..286.25
03.Q0120.000
Wh-ch Ttmott1y M
&amp;/Or
Sllelta
A
Sact 5 (640) E Port Of
Ne 1,. Ex 30A E
2.37tA. .............111.18
03.Q0835 003 Wood
Rodney L Sect 17 T3
R12 1 547A Out Of
13 375A
I 547A
......................... .892.21

delinquent

by the

CDUnly T...IUNr Of
Meigs County, with

the taxes, ••-•·
manti, intereat ond
penallies, charged
lheraupon II!J!Mible
to 18w, .,.. contained
and dncrlbod In the
following fillS
(Name, Description,

Acres, Total Taxes,
Assessments,
lntorest
and
Penalties)
OI·Bodford
Township
Meigs LSD
Ot-00878 001
Bauman Daniel F
1/0r CharloUe A
Sec 30 T3N R13W
300A Out 011562A
3 OOA.. ..... ... 135.26
01-G0066 002
Burson
Mark
0
Sect 18 T3N R13 Sl/2
Of The Nwt/4 16.37A
Out 0131.14A 16.37A
602,73
...........,.......
01-ooo82 001
Bush Kathy S Fr7 T3N
R13W O.OOSOA Out Of
14 72A&lt;. .... ... .0.40
01-ooo85 001
Bush Kathy S Fr1 T3N
R13W 2.0537A Out Of
25 50A
91.73
01.01181.000
Bush Kanna RoyaHy
Interest 1Had Energy
Corp Of Wva Inc
PennHII964
• 4 64
01-00068.000
Bush Kanna H 1/0r
Kathy Sect 15 w Part
Of Nw 112 W End Ex.
8 86A ... •
21214
01.Q0069.000
Bush Kenna H I/Or
Kathy Sact 15 Nw
Cor
Ex
48A·
30 80A
• 1310 90
01.01379.000
Bush, Kenna RoyaHy
Interest
Tried
Resources, Inc Bush
12
Land
Owner
Permltt 1965 ..4 64
01-00873.002
Chalfin Charles c/o
Judy A. Chaffins
Sect 34 T3 R13 2 001 A
Out
Of
21.496A
2 OOIA.. ... • 92 82
01.00376.006
Escue Aarcn &amp;/Or
Hayley Fraction 33
T3N R13W Lot 16
Fraley'S Subdivision
3 410A.. ... ...54.18
01.00376.007 Escue
Aaron 1/0r Hayley
Fraction
33
T3N
R13W Loti7Fraley'S
Subdivision 3 217A
...................5114
01.Q0569.007 Groen
William
E
&amp;/Or
Christine A Fr2 T3N
RI3W 0 0930A Out Of
83.17A
0.0930A
·~-·~· .231 .31
01.00510 008
Hawley Patricia K
c1o Patr1cla Powell
Sect30T3R132.466A
Out
Of
2090A
2..466A........173 52
OI.Q0039 006
Klnnoson Francis
Leonard
Jr
Sect 29 T3N R13W
3.3542A
Out
Of
45.3371 A
3 3542A
•
15685
01.00151.001
McD- Carl W
&amp;/Or Robin D C/o
Home Q Sect 22 Fr18
T3N R13W 6 57A Out
01 20 OOA
6 57A
u

-·

•

"·:·::·:"'"""''""''"""789 29
01.00290 003 Moon
Phillip A Sect 18 T3
R13 10 075A Out Of
24.136A
10.075A
•
588 41
01·00893.000
Noland Char1es 0111
Jr&amp;UaaK
LOt St-22 5610A Of
60 70A All Lands Of
Twp
Rd
5 348A
Ex.159A
5.189A
96839
01-00810.002 Reuter
Teny R Fraction 3 Tn
R13W 1.0778A Out
Of 2 7406A I 0778A
-93316
01-00818 000
Sisson FrederiCk W
&amp;lOr
Carmel
M
Lot Sect 8 8 9853A
Out 01 125 Ac
8.9853A .... 1600 05
01-00742 000
Stegall
Arch•e
Sect35
Sw
Part
18S OOA Ex 88 782A
99 218A ... ..693.23
01.Q0456 000 510118
Char1es L &amp;/Or Terry
Lot 31 &amp; 32
76 52
01-G0457 .000 StoUs
Choiles L &amp;/Or Terry
lot13
1S96
01.Q0458.000 stons
Char1es l 1/0r Terry
Lot 9-IQ-11-12·15·1611·18-19-20 1 44A Ex
0 0109A
I 4291 A
10800
OI-G0459 000 Stons
Charles L &amp;/Or Terry
Lot 29-3D-33·34·35·
1 1OA
36·37·38
21 97
01.Q0460 000 stons
Charles L &amp;/Or Terry
Sec 13·21-22 Ne Of R1
680 Of 70A E Of nA
Ex
VIII
3 48A
Ex3 032A
0 448
.872
01-G0460 001 Stons
Char1as L &amp;/Or Terry
Sec 13 ·21·22 Fr IS
24 47A Out Of 27 95A
2447A Ex 141906A
92794A .
117527
01-G0461 000 StOUs
Charles L &amp;/Or Terry
Lot14
61S98
01.01127 000
Tried
Corporation Of West
VIrgin••
Working
Interest F. Ross 11
Land Owner Pennrt
1S 97
12585
01-01364 000
Triad
Energy
Corp

s

Troy

S
Sect 171n Sw Part Of

Nw 114 .25A .. 4 91
01·00413 000
Whitley Clifford Alan
&amp;/Or Whitley Troy S
Sect 17 Part Of 90A
Lot W Of Sw 114 94A
...... ............ 160.25
OI.Q0414 000
Whitley Cllltonl AI_,
&amp;/Or Whllley Troy S
Sect 17 Part Of
Heyas Lot N Of Rd
05A... • ... ... .113
OI.Q0415 000
Whitley Cllllonl Alan
I/Or Whlaey Troy S
E Side Sr 33
.05A
....... ... ... . 113
03-Chester
Townahlp
Eastam LSD
0~2

003 Bailey
Brtan Sact 18 T3 R12
Nw Cor Of 1 06A
7 3399A
Out
Of
12.82A
7.3399A
on"""~""'''''"""""""" o 966 25
03.00328 001 Bailey
Roy L II I/Or Crystal
J Sac 13 T4N R12W
t.OOA Out Of 3 80A
•
..13024
I OOA
OJ.Q0328 002 Bailey
Roy Leo I/Or Crystal
J Sec 13 T4N R12W
0.54A Out Of 2.80A
054A ..... 1092
03.Q1097 000
Bell
Douglas
B
&amp;/Or
Theresa B Sect. H
(262) Naor Cen Frac
13 ItA • 1346.30
03.Q0008 000
Bing
Mi!:hael L c/o Binga
Auto
Repair
Block 2 Back Of 13 •
14.
.. 5.08
03.Q0009.000
Bing
Michaat L c/o Binga
Auto
Repair
Lotl3 Block 2 52 112'
Ex 20' ... • 663 75
03-00010.000
Bing
Mlchaal L c/o Binga
Auto
Repair
Lot 14 Block 2 Spt
tOT U T o Ex PI Sold To Harper
.. .1642
03.Q0011.000
Bing
Micheel L c/o Binga
Auto
Repair
Lot 14 Block 2 7 112'
•• .. ... • 6.26
03-00463.001
Dill
Ryon E I/Or Amende
V Sec 6 T2N R13W
1.700A
Out
Of
36 694A •
1 700A
................794.60
0341870.000
Dill
R
&amp;/Or
Steven
Joanne c/o Steve DIU
Sect 12 R12 (640) T3
Sw Of Cr Sa1/4 &amp; 1·
112A E Of Swt/4 4516
•
•
• 4588.12
03.Q0871.000
Dill
Steven
R
I/Or
Joanne c/o Steve Dill
Sect II (640) T3 R12
-Ne Part Of Nel/4 &amp; W
PI Of Net/4 133A
... .. ... .. 2325 78
03-0048S 000
Edwards Dav1d A &amp;
Debra l Sect 34 (640)
Sw 1/4 Of Sa 114 Of
44.93A 1 42A.1262.16
03-00516 003
Guthne Laura
M
Fr 31 T4 R12 Sect 21
1.253A
Out
Of
24 2504A
1 253A
.. ....... 144610
03.Q0585.000
Holsinger Russell R
Sect.(19)T.4 R 12 E Of
R &amp; Cr Sw 114 Of 35A
Ex. 25A E Sd
lA
... .. ..... 138 04
03-00853 001
Me•ga AcquiSitions
Inc Fr 34 RI2W T3N
1.59A Out Of 20 66A
1 59A
• 198 72
03-00853 002
Me1gs Acquisitions
Inc c/o Meigs Memory
GardensFract 34 T3
R12 1201A Out Of
25.1SAI2.01A 583.10
03-01435 000
Me1gs Acquisitions
Inc Sect.2S(282)Sw
Cor Ex 4 22A
Sw
Cor.Ex
4 22A
Of
26.38A 5.30A2246 04
03.Q0989 003
Newland Grant A
&amp;/Or
Linda
S
Sect7 T3N R12W
49.6041A Ex.8.310A
Ex6 756A Ex7 073A
Ext 50A
13 2731A
72343
03-00981.000 Partrer
James E &amp;/Or Bobbie
Jean Sect 25 Ne
Of Nw114 3A
•
573 96
03.Q1312 000
Proff1U Roy W
Sect 12-3 (640) 2.50A
Out Of Ne Cor 017A
2 50A
985.65
03-00810.001
Rlchonl Iva Renee
1/0r
Johnston
Lawrence Grant Jr
Sact19 T4 R14 Part
Of Sw 1/4 1 50A Out
013 30A .. 1132.00
03.Q0276 002
Ruaaall John &amp;/Or
Brenda Sect 26 T4N
R12W 9957A Out Of

c_..

•

~34000

Wood

Rodney
Lee
Sact 17,T2N, R12W, W
Of Secor 30A Out Of
34.213A
Ex
112
Minerals
30A
..... ....... ..... 43111

04-Chaster
Township
llelg1LSD

04.Q0030 000 Fr1and
Shlrtay J Lot 16
178'Frcn! 85.4'Bsck X
270' Deep
75A
......................99 58
04.Q0031 000 Fr1and
Shlr1ey J Out Of
Parcel 12 On R1 133
To The Center Or
Smiths Rdwy •74A
15 52
•
04.Q0065.000 Manis
Eloise Sect 12 ·16
(262) S Pert Of 9A
Parcel .34A .......7.16
04-oo066 000 Morris
Eloiaa Sacl 16 E Part
Of Frac. 4
S 65A
• 30616
04.00014.000
Spencer Er1c I/Or
Karen Sect 12 Out Of
NeCO&lt;MrWOIRd
3 62A •
1261 85
05· Columbta
Townahlp
Alexander LSD
05.00198.000
Ankenrnsn TherH8 J
19 2Nd. Add. -8' E
Side .............10 67
06-00199 000
Ankenmon TherH8 J
Lot 20 ... . • 383 88
05.oo382 015 Bayha
Wayne. Sect 7 T9 R15
Pa""'l 15 I 0 668A
Out Of 132.044A
10 668A.. .. 238 92
05.Q0597.000
Brennan Guy T P
Sect 7 N Of Sw 1/4 &amp;
S Of Nw 114 Ex Coal
78 43A.... ... 1138 07
05-G0254 001
Conawoy Kenneth E
I/Or
Marilyn
J
Sect 23 TIN R15W
Out
Of
5 2172A
84 OOA Ex 2.6004A
2.6168A........2128 01
06-00132 000
Crabtree Cindy Jo
&amp;/Or Glndlesberger
Dawn M Sect 18 Ne
Cor.Sacll8 2A Out Of
6A 1.5952A •.35 83
06-00133.000
CrabltM Cindy Jo
&amp;l(k

GJndiMbl.,..,

Dawn M Sect 18
6.01A Out Of 5l!A
Ex .. 882A Ex.3 737A
1.391A ........1138.58
05.00128 000
Crabtree Kevin L
Sect 15-23 w 1/4 Of
Sa 114 PI 01120A Ex.
40A 79 60A Ex 508A
79 092. .. .. 8529.22
05.Q0254 002
c.......ns Steven v
Sec 23 T8 R15 E 1/2
Of Ne 1/4 3 5085A Out
Of 78 7828A 1.7542A
.......................577.82
05.Q0685 004
Daniela Mlkl A &amp;/Or

Jennie Y Fr33 T9N
RI5W 5 OOA Out Of
51.51A 5 OOA•.218.S7
05-G0245 0111
Darat
M.aryrou Sect 34
Et/2 Of Sw114 Ex M
Vein Coal 15 30A Out
Of 41.9655A 15.30A
- ........ 42749
05.Q0024 001 Goins
Glen Roy Jr &amp;lOr
Lou
Wanda
Sact 3 T8 Rt5 Se Of
NwtH 8 788 Out Of
16 935A 8 788A Ex
0.320A
8.488A
•
... ... 1238 54
05.Q0528.000
Hamon Gary D I/Or
Carol E 1 2Nd Add.,
........................ 3751
05.Q0531 1100
Ha.- Gory D I/Or
carol E Sect 4 Pert
Of Sw 1/4 82.61A
.........1295 55
05.Q0532 000
Hamon Gory D &amp;/Or
carol E Sect 10 Se
Corner 31A.....12.77
DS«l534 000
Hamon Gory D &amp;/Or
carol E.. Sect 9-10 Fr
12 Ne Part 28 568A
Out
Of
34.88A
6 312A .. • 94.25
05-G0535.001
Hamon Gory D I/Or
Carol E Sect tO Fr 4
7 92A
Sa Part
....................... 410 35
05.00023.003 Henry
Kothy 6 Larry R
Sect 3T8 R15 S 112 Of
Sw 1/4 20 008A Out
Of 59 15A 20 008A
........... 34039
05.Q0352 006
Howery
Derqn
SectO Frac4 T8N R15
8.3094A
Out
Of
10.10A
8.3094A
............ 116279
05.Q0351 1100
HC&gt;WOry Rodney &amp;/Or
Marilyn Sec tOW Of E
111AW Ry Fr5 Ex
67 OIA 4.20A .2516
05.Q0352 000
Howery Rodney I/Or
Marilyn Sect o Frec4
T8N R15 W Prt Of E
120A W Ry 10 10A
Ex S 3094A 1 7906A
.. • ........1886 79
05.Q0383 1100
Hudnell Roger &amp;/Or
Sharon Sect 35 W
Pari Of Sw114 5 75A

s

346.67'
05.00148 001
Lemastet
Anglea

Public Notice
&amp;lOr

Robert
A
Fr1811N FI15W 7.00A
Out 01157 OOA 7 OOA

..........................104.45

os-oosn.llll2 PerTt

Mlcheet &amp;/Or Perry
Heney Sec 36 T8 R15
5 56A Ex
1.78A
3.78A .............340 . .
05.Q0570 000
Perry
Oronna Sect 36 T8
R15 Se Pert Of Nw 1/4
W Of Cr ISOOA Ex
5.09A UtA..... 14.13
05.Q0571.000
Perry
Orenne Sect 36 Nw
IH Of Se 1/4 Pert Of
58A 12.50A Ex 47A
9.22A...............197.18
05.Q0572 000
Perry
Oranns Sect 36 E
Part Of Sw 1/4 Ex lA
Ex 50A Ex 2 004A
30.6198A ....... .31 98
Peny
05.Q0574000
Oronno Sacl 36 Se
Pert Of Nw 112
Of
Cr 59 90A. .. 67 81
05.Q0823.001
Sanders Ronald L
I/Or
Audrey
J
Sect 20 Frac 25 E Pert
188A Out Of 22 SOA
188A.................4.24
05-00873 001

w

Sheell Bobby L &amp;lOr
Rebecca M Secl17 T9
R15 5 014A Out Of
88.71A
5.014A
........... 170.56
~non

Township
Eostam LSD
06-00155.000 Devls
Dor1a Pepper c/o
Rosolee D Dovls
Sect. 27 Coal 136.50A
..........136.08

06-00076.005

Hollar

Gorden W I/Or Cerr1e
D Sect 33 '1"3 R11
5.723A
Out
Of
219 OOA5.723A .....

....... ................. 950.19
06.Q0009 001 - 1
Estherta M c/o WHbur
VonCooney Sect 27
T3N R11W 1 OOA Out
Of 28.75A t.OOA
·- 74.17
07-l.eblnon
Township
Southern LSD
07.00182 001
Adema
Anthony
Sec 36 T2N R11W
I 50A Out Of 20.005
1 SOA... ..... ... 88.43
07-GI103.000 Batley
Peul G &amp;/Or Mllchd E
Sect 26 Sw Cor Of Nw
1/4 Ex 1.60A Ex
10 25A Ex I.OOA
21.75A ·-· ....234.07
07.Q0872.003

Dowell Jellray s I/Or
Erica Sec29 T2N

R11W 3.234A Out Of
25.78A 3.234A 125 18
ONI0461.000
Hamlin Norman D
Sect. 11-211 Na PI 01
W 29A Ex Coel
10 15A..............57.33
07-0D462.000
Hamlin Norman D
Sacl 28 W End Of
70A Lot Ex. C~
6 78A ........... 38.35
07-G0483.000
Hamlin Norman D
Sect
22·28
Nw
Comer
Ex.
Coel
3.22A.. ... .... 195.85
07-at644.001
Hamlin Normon D
Sect25 T3N Rlt W
53.97A Out Of 57.00A
53.!17A ... •.. 305.28
07-0083t.ooo Nuner
Atan c/o Rick Sellenl
Secl23 160A Lot
11188 lA Of N PI Of
48 32A Ex Mlna I A
..........................94.90
07.Q0542.000
Pickens
Eber
t
Sect22·28 (1 00-201)
On N Line Nr Mid N Of
Rd
18116A
ExU537A 16.1623
... • ... • .. •.. 198 77
07.Q0544.000
Pickens Eber I clo
Eber W
Pickens
IOOA Lot 201 T2N
RIW
28 258A
Ex.3.0483A 25.212A
385.01
07.00163.001 Rouah
Dennl• L I/Or Suten
L c/o Dennis Roush
Sect 11 T2N R11W
I 6272A
Out
Of
14.90A
I 6272A
• .... ..... ... 645 71
07.00773.000
Agnas
Setlera
Sect 23 (160-1171) E
End Of Wt/2 Ex Coat
28 16A
... 604 49
07.00766.000
Sellera Danell Lee
Sect 22 (7Q-190) Ex
lA Nw Ex
All
MineraiL
• 1374 74
07.00770 001
Sallera Gregory A
Sect 23 160A Lot
1171 T2 Rtl 5.00A
Out Of 44 84A 5.00A
..... •.............225.46
07.00111 004
Sellers Robert &amp;lOr
Tria Sect 30 T2 Rtl
6 036A Out Of 14 25A
6 036A.............219.62
07-0D505 000
Sallera Robert li/Or
Tria A Sect 19 lA Out
Of Nw Corner Of 9A
lA .................. 180.08
07.00059 000
vancooney Wilbur
Sect It Of Sw Cor Of
43 16A Ex .28A .82A
................. 33095
07.Q0979.002
Vanneat RDJ L &amp;/Or
Petr1cia L Sect 18 T2
R11 Sl/2
22 5SA
................ 18413
07-00981 000 Wolle
Richard Keith Etal
Sect 11 ·191A Out Of
39A Ne Comer 1A
44900
08-Letarl
Township
Southern LSD
08.00199 000 Banon

Public Notice

Public Notice

Oonnll J Sect. 11-311
(10N18) E.. 2A On
End
2A

ee..

.........................234.55

011-00414 004
Btankenshlp Arnold

&amp;/Or

Dorothy

IOOA Lo1220 &amp; 221 T1

Rlt .81112A &amp; .0008A
For A TOIIII Of 1 OOA

·, • Public Notice

Sect t S PI 21.16A W
PUllS 112 5A Out Pel
ft 5 OOA Ex UOA
3.40A. ..,. ..... 12686
08-G0105.000
Banh1g11 EIIDbeth
Sect1Prt012116AW
Pit
St/2 8.2057A
New Sunoey ... 134 44
09-00011.000

or

.343A Out Of t.56A
343A ... ..... 1.83
09.{)0747.000
Putman aBeo111ljal!l mmilinn w
110r
~
E
Sect15T4N fUIW Sw
Cor 2700A Ex·S.OOA
22.00A ...........834 30
09.QO II&amp; 001
Randolph,_ A &amp;
Tommy A Fr S2 T4 R11
2 516A Out 0125.00A
2 516A Ex 0.500A
2.016A ...
... 94.54
09.{)0107 002

........................215.01

flertimua Hervey &amp;/Or

08-G01311 000

carot s Sect 17 Se

lltrltns M.at•'tM Ed &amp;

20A Ne Of SetH Ex
2.00A
5.256A New
Survey
5.256A
.................. •.. 478 60 '
Richa~ Robert
09-00013 000
D 100Aiol1165 T4N
Bartlmua Hervey &amp;/Or RIIW 0.217A Out Of
Carol S ~ Of 20A 2 45A 0.217A.142.25
Et/2 Of Se 1/4 Of ~.001
Sat/4 3.587A New
Rlchonlson Robert D
Survey
3 587A 160A Lot 1165 T4N
.......................... 156.47 RIIW 0.384A Out Of
CMM)OSII 001
Hobo 36 881 A
0 384A
Bernard Sect 28 T4 • ........... 7573
R l 1 - Mid On W OH0896.000
Line 1A Out Of
Howanl &amp;lOr
15.65A
1 OOA Margaret Lot 114
.. .... 1623.22 Arbaugha
2Nd
09.Q015l!.OOO
8obo Subdivision 100' X
Bernord FSact. 29 140' ..... .. ••4340 62
09.Q0697 000
Part Of 27A Neer Mid
Line E Of Cem SA Ruseett Howonl &amp;lOr
.. .... .. • 2519.17 M.arv-Sect 36 Out
09-00290.000 Boyce Of Ne Cor Of S Of Sw
Margaret &amp;/Or Terry Pit Of Swt/4 5 50A
c/o
Portfolio
.........4152 98
Recovery
Asooc 09-00873.000
Lot 33 Mcd &amp; Tor
Rusaell John R &amp;/Or
Add ................. 58.04 B.-18 Sec (IOQ-104)
OH0291 1100 Boyce Sw Cor Dtv.M Reod E
Margaret &amp;/Or Terry St 8 OOA Ex 2.573A
c/o
Portfolio 5427A.... .... .35 58
Recovery
Asooc 09-00875 000
Lot 32 Mcd. &amp; Tor. Russell John A &amp;/Or
Add • ... ..37829 Brenda W End Dtv Of
09-G0283.000 Boyce M Rood Eat 8.75A &amp;
Margaret &amp;/Or Terry 1.33A 10.08A Ex
c/o
Portfolio 9222A 0858A 1401
Recovery
Aasoc 09-00677.000
Lot 31 E 1/3.. ..58 04 Rusaell John R I/Or
09-00294.000 Boyce BrendaSec 4 WEnd
Msrgoret I/Or Terry Dtv. M. Rood Est 9A &amp;
c/o
Portfolio 1.68A 10.88A Ex
Recovery
A1ooc 8.729A 1.951A
Lot 34 Mcd. &amp; Tor
... .. ........... 31 48
Add. Ex. 12' Off S 09-00680 000
Side............. .. ..49 18 Runett John R I/Or
09-006011.1100
Brenda Sec 3 Se End
BushOng James R Dlv.M Rood E.. 8.75A
&amp;/Or
Shoron
B &amp; 0 87A 8.62A Ex
Sect 19 9A Out 01 6.627A
2 993A ..
68A Pari6.60A Ex lA .........................50.17
560A... ·-· 1352.11
09-00683.1100
09.Q0661.000
Cole Runetl John R I/Or
Gregory
lot
15 Brenda IOOA Lot 104
Arbaugh'S
2Nd T4N R11W 18 43A Ex
Subdivision t.SHA 16 835A Ex
IOO'X140'... ..154 94
9 994
6 841A
OH1014.000
............. 568.29
Collins
Chor1ene 09-01432.1100
Sact. 30 w Part Of s Semet~Mger Connie
Part Of Wt/4 12A K Sect. 32 In Nw Part
..... .... 64.58
Of W Of Sl/2 I.IOA
OH1017.000
.... .... .....88416
Collins
Charlene 09-01873.000
Sect 30 Mid On S Shlngelton
Hoy
Line N Of Rd. 6A Royally I n - Car1
... ... .... .. 281.17
E Smllh Petrotaum
CIH2041.000
Inc Welt 11192 Penni! II
Cowdery Ide M c/o 1886 .....................3 38
Clement
CDwdery 09-01271.000 Smith
RoyaHy lnllte.. Eog LouiM L Sect 15 Sw
Reaources, Part Ex I 112A W Part
lncJCowdery
Unit .314A.. ........52.67
13/PI 3504...........4 57 09.Q0869.000
09-G0160.000 Glllilln Spurlock Gary E &amp;/Or
Jernml &amp;/Or Tara Debra L Sect 36 .81A
Lot 19 Arbaugh'S Of 94.77A
.81A
3Rd
Subdtv
... ·- .... 669.97
IOO'X200' • .. .83V 41
OH1221.000 Troglta
09.Q0750.000
Louis P &amp; Benedlcl J
Groene Lindsey &amp;lOr c/o Louis P Tregho
Wilier Sect 9 T 4N Sect 10 6.55A Out Of
R IIW SPit Of Nel/2 7 55A Out Of 7 55
Near Mid N Line 6.55A............ •.. 53.22
15 67A...
• 450 81
09-01227.000 Treglia
09.Q0751.000
Louis P &amp; Benedict J
Groene Lindsey I/Or c/o Louis P Treglia
Wilier Sect 9 (10D- Sect 10 Nw 01 Of
tl66) E Pert Of Sl/2 160A Lot 1164 40A
12A
.. .67 66
.... 32400
•
•
09-G0748.000 Griffin 09-012211 000 Troglta
Marl&lt; A &amp;/Or Tonya M Louis P &amp; Benadlct J
Lot
8
Arbaughs c/o Louis P Treglia
Subdivision
(4Th) Sect 9 N Part Of 40A
Sect 36 • ... 747 47 1.89A... ..... 1562
09.Q0086 000 Harris OHI229 000 Troglta
Keith
c/o
Lisa Louis P &amp; Benedict J
Vogelaong Sect 3 -10 c/o Loula P Treglia
Sa Cor Of W .37A Ex Sect 10 Mid &amp; N Pit
96A 1 14A • 811 99 Ex Mid &amp; N Prt Ex lOA
09-00087.000 Herr1a Sw Cor 30A 242 99
Keith
c/o
Lisa 09-01230.000 Treglia
Vogelsong Sacl (100) Louis P &amp; Benedict J
Dlv M Roed Eet. clo Louis P Treglia
1 44A. ... -· .29.19
Sect tOW Part Ex 56A
W 37A ... 29969
09.Q0447 000
Cher1ea W &amp;lOr R!!lh OHI231.1100 lhlgtta
E Sect (100·1161) Louis p .. Benedict J
Bet. Rd. &amp; Rl- 60A c/o Louis P Treglia
.. 80317
Sect 11 Of Sel/4 Of
Swt/4 20A. .161 99
09.Q0449.000
Cher1es W &amp;lOr Ruth 09.{)0292 000 lhlgtta
E Sect 34 ·9 -10 (160- Louis P &amp; Treglia
1161~30A Of .75A E
Benedict JSect I 0 w
Prt Of 17 25A E 30A Pert Ex 8A W 37A
• ... ... 108.02
19912
09-G0735.002
09-01440 002 Weich
Johnson
K..hern Michaal A Aka Walch
160A Lot 1155 T4N Mike
&amp;/Or
lisa
R11W 5 408A Out 01 Sect23T4R111AOut
61 7090A
5.408A Of
22 76A
S.OI
..................847.04
Delacruz
1 OOA
09-01266 002
................... 1110.96
Lawson Jason S &amp;/Or 09-00605 002
T&lt;!llya Sect 14 Fr 32
Westfall Roger A
T4 Rll 1 OOA Out Of &amp;lOr Sheila ASecl 23
27.25A t.OOA 141 18
T4 Rtl
Sw Cor
09-01266 008
1.037A
Out
Of
Lawson Jason S &amp;lOr 21 662A1 037A
Tonya Section 14
.............4522 97
Fraction 32 T4 Rtl
2 8650A
Out
Of
tO-Orange
18 4038A
2 8650A
Township
......................5804
Eastern LSD
~11100
Meys
Donald
Ray ID-00020 001
Avis
Sact 4 ·10 N Of Rd Prt Rlchard M &amp;/Or Anile
Of 316A Ne Of Rd June Sect 35 T4N
1 29A. .......... 131.75
R12W 5 OOA Out Of
09-G0841 004
22200A SOOA
McCrady
Ronald ......, .....,...
• 90342
Char1ea I/Or Virginia 10-00440 1100
Rose.528A In SOA Lot Barring« Mitchell D
120 &amp; .472A In 30A &amp;/Or Dnggs L1sa R
Lot 121 T·3 R·ll
Lot Sact 15 Ne Part Of
1 OOA.. .. .....211.81
30 Ac N Part Of S 100
09.Q0564.000
Nell Ac 1 474A 1601.27
James
B 1O.Q0020 002
Sect 30 Naor Mid Of Bruner
Land
Nl/2 Of Rd
lA Compony Inc An Ohio
•
7419
Corporation c/o Larry
09.Q0565.000
Neal eonve'rsa
Sect ss
James
B R12W T4N 18.384A
Sect 11-30 Ne Of St/2 Out Of 219 92511 Lot
Of Nel/4
15 25A f1 16.384A .. 106.64
..........................294 06
ID-00020 005
09.Q0689.000 Nuttor Bruner
Land
James T &amp;/Or Shirley Company Inc An Ohio
M Sect 8 42A Out Of Corporation c/o Larry
88A W End 42A Converse
Sect 35
"""":·:·:::"':.':·: .... 211 87 R12W T4N 5.057 A Out
09.01152.001 Nuttor Of 219 925A Lot t4
James T &amp;/Or Shirley 5 057A..
.. 73 14
M Sect 8, T4, R11 , 10.00105 000 Burl&lt;e

Burge Sharon
E
Sect 12-36 Na Cor
Of Hlghwoy Ex 112
Min Of 55 75A 1 116A
New
Survey
. ..................2512
08-G0140.001
lllevtne Met diM Ed &amp;
Burge Shoron
E
Sect ~ Lot 218
1.203A Out 0111.57A
1.203A ....135676
08-00811 000 Burris
David Lot 16 NW Cor
Joining Parsonage
.12A..... .. ·-· 42.50
08.Q0135.001
Eltas
Janet K t60A Loi
1190 T2 Rll 36.289A
Out Of 108.867A
36.289A
..333.69
08-00418.000 Epting
Bryon &amp;/Or BoUlos
Ketlly Sect 26 Of
1 80A N Of Rd .036A

w

. .. ....

.169

08-00419.000 Epling
Bryon &amp;lOr Bantes
Klllhy Sect 26 W Side
1 1/2 &amp; .50 Troct .20A
............... ... 51319
08-00420.000 Epling
Bryon &amp;lOr BoUlos
Kathy Sect 26 .105A
Of 1.78A 4A N Of Rd
.105A ........ 328
08·0023&amp; 000
Gloeckner
David
Erwin &amp;/Or Sally
Sect. 35 (220) R.11T 1
W Part Of All E Sayre
Line 20A......... 843.49
08.Q0241.000
Gloeckner
David
Erwin &amp;/Or Sally A
Sect.17
(254·
2555)29A E End 4tA
L1 254 &amp; W End 49A
L.ol255 29A.....235.21
OH0243000
Gloectmer
Dovld
Erwin &amp;/Or Sally A
Sect. 4-S (235) N End
4A .. .... .... ...405
08-G0237.000
Gloeckner Devid
Erwin &amp;lOr Sally Ann
Sect. 5 (200) Port Of
27A 2A. .......81 00
oti.Q0238.000
Gloeckner
David
Erwin &amp;/Or Sally Ann

Sect. 6 (227) Se Of
Mid.

1/3

1 SOA

···-· ......................2.02
08.Q0239 000
Gloeckner
David
Erwin &amp;lOr Sally Ann

Sect. 5 (220)

w End

t2A....................17.01
0M0240000
Gloeckner
David
Erwin &amp;/Or SeiiJ Ann

5 (220) w End
..............................35.84

SeCt.

08.Q024t 000

GNMe llobll Lot 17·
23-32 W End E Of
Alex I/2A IOOA Ll
(247) 8075 Sf .23A
... ... .. .... 1.72
08.Q0280 000
Haymon
Kelly
Sect 31 (160-1190) Sa
PI Of Se 1/4 .45A
.... ...
• ..185.9&amp;
08-00319 OliO
Holalnger
Noncy
Sec 8 N PI Of Ne Cor
Of ISA Ex.17A Ex
335A
Ex5.9827A
Ex SOIA
4.7113A
......................26.71
08.Q0061 000
MlldoWI Ruuell E l
Lawoon Robert F
Sect 16 (640)10Q-141
25A Of 4A Lot Sw
Side Of lOA Loi .25A
.., -· .... 212.23
08-00893.000
MIOSte141 Trull VII c/o
Noeh Runyon, Shar1
Copr
Sect
6 N Of Rd Lot 222
1.25A..... •........ 558.83
08-00458.001
Montgomery Robert
Kollh &amp;/Or ltnde K
IOOA Lot 246 I OOA
Out Of 7.00A E Of
Vlltage Lots W End
1.00.................1433.88
08.Q0456 000
Ritlle
Anthony &amp;/Or Gerri M
Lot ................308.66
08-00460 000 Ritlle

Anthony &amp;lOr Gerrl M

Lot 12 • ... .... 70.88
08-00595 000 Roush
Roy Junior ... &amp;lOr
EllraMea
Secl 11·2 (1~1211)
W PI 29 50A Sw Cor
Ex Coal 50A ••9 16
08•00255.000
S181naker Kermit E
&amp;/Or Bl'llnda J c/o
«ermlt
Stolnaker
Lot 6 Burns Add.
... ·- .... .... .4049
08.Q0256.000
Stalnaker Kermit E
1/0r Brenda J c/o
Karmn
Stalnaker
Lot 5 Bums Add
........... ,..,....,....... 24.30
08.{)0462.000
Wooctyord James H
Sect 35 (220) E End
Ex 1.24A Highway Ex
14 OIA Ex
I 30A
10.70Aex
3.164
• • ... 505.05
~live

Township
EaatemLSD
09-00305 003
Adams Chor1ea I/Or
Kllhy lea Sect 11 T4
R11 2.290A Out Of
82 357A
2 290A
...........................536 66
09.Q0103 000
Barnnger Elltabeth
Sect 9 S PI Of 21 16A
W PI Of S 112 10 SIA
Ex 340A
711A
.... 9572
09.Q01 04 000
Berringer Elizabeth

s

I

Mlcheet T Sect 27 S
End Ex 17.2M 58.5tA
Ex 55 48A 111A
..... .. .............1.55
1CHI0057 000
Cl_,., Aonlld R M
Lot Sect (15) Nl/2

&amp; G Land OWner
J e - Drehel t'S
1895,1110 &amp; 1. .

..................... 7 48
11-GI032.000 Foully
_,.... c LGit Sect.

-21 On

s Line w 01

.. .32.32

10 75A lA .....22.29
11-DIOSS.OOO Foully

Clampitt Ronald A I
lot Sect _. E tt4 &amp;

Aa\lmond C Lot Sect.
-21 Swc- Frw:
36 2.33.A............51.73

..... -

...

IO.Q0058.000

or

N 01 tiS .ISA ..13.01
ICI-00315 002 Curtis 11-D1034.000 Foully
Larry 0 Fr &amp; RI2W R1ymond C lot Sect.
T4N 2 537A Out Of -21 E Cor Out 01
1413A
2.637A 130.32A r.tld On Rd.
2A. .....................44.17
...............1284.51
11-DIOSS.OOO Foully
ID-00158 011
E-rda Kennetl'l G Royll1ond lot Sect.
&amp;/Or
Barlllra
C -21 Se Cor Frlc. 30
Section 30 R12W T4N 10 73A.. ....... ..1663
11-D0613.000
7 564A
Out ~
GlllllON
Gory
&amp;/Or
153.152A
Lot 111
Emily J E181 Sacl 32
7 .564A. ... •....175.92
Se Corner Ex. M vein
1&lt;HI0329 000
Gruesar Jon &amp;JOt Cool 10.82A•.106 07
Angle Lot Sact ·15 Ne 11-DOSI3.000 Gloyd
Ex lOA Nw 31.22A Wnttam H Jr Etel
.......... .2267.9t Lot Sect 9 In Ne Prt
Of Frac 12 S Of Rd
I D-00330.000
76A Of 2 25A 76A
Grueser Jon I/Or
.... ...................1354.51
Angle Lot Sect-15 ·21
E Pit Of 120.0SA Ne 11.Q0385 000 Hally
Prt S Of Rd .28A Dwight Jr &amp;Jer Hally
• .. .2 33 Mork Sr Lot Sect -t
Out Of 3.91A 3.75A
I Q-00331.000
Grueeor Jon &amp;/Or ........................548.10
Angle Lot Sect ·15 11-ooo90 000 Hyeetl
Gerald
Nw Of 120A
lOA Jamal
E"*oo.1 Lol14-7 Npt
·c·:·:·"·:·:· 105 44
ID-00394 001 Harrta Of 11.22A In E Pert Of
W
Jr Nwt/4 Ex Coal 4.52A
Dennla
...
114.63
Sect 33 T4N RI2W
11.Q0091
000
Hyeetl
3 OOA Out Of 45.00A
J1maa
Gerold
..... ... ...
125 31
1Q-00435.000 a.- Emerson Sect 7 N
Gary L &amp;lOr TherH8 Part Of 6-112A In Mid
Of
line Of Nwl/4
L Sectl2 A 12T4
5 63A. .........877.95
6.94A .. ......187.82
tt-oosoo.ooo Hyoen
I O.Q0624.000
Gonlld
Sharpe William B Jamaa
&amp;/Or S h - lot S14 Emerson Lot Sect.·
15 E End Nl/2 11 463 14-7 In Ne PI Of Sec
Out Of 34.21 11 463A &amp; Nw PI Of Sac. I
................. ·~· 288 81 4.50A ................731.40
10·00770 000 11.Q0875 001 Hyaall
N
Jr
Spencer Kenneth E Ronlld
Sect
13
T6
R14
Mid
&amp;/Or
Sandra
S
Lot 5 Ne Cor W Of Rd On w Line 3 427A Out
Of 116.16A 3.427A
.788A............ 11547
1 0·00513 000 • ............. ... 8982
Sponcer Kenny &amp;lOr 11.01656.000 Hyeetl
Sandy Lot Sect _. Nw Roneid N Jr Sect 13
Cor Ex Cool S.OOA T6 R14 Mid On W Une
I 624A ............ 244.67
...... ....... .... •..895.85
M.aah
ID-00746 000 While tt-ooau.ooo
Robert S &amp;lOr Dove J - L I/Or Norene
Lot Sact 12-35 Npl Of C Lot Sect ·2 Sw Prt
Brown'S 45A
Nw Cor Ex 32-1/2A W Of
3.15A ... .......79.67
20A..................189.81
1D-00747 000 While 11.Q0880.000 Mesh
Robert S &amp;/Or Dove James L I/Or Norana
Loi Sect 36 w Side Of C Lot Sect ·2 21 15A
Sw1/4
44.23A Of 25A 3 Tracts Of
....................1886.76 Geo Mcculree 21 15A
......................197.90
M.aah
tt-D0691 ooo
11-Rutllnd
James L &amp;lOr Non!na
Township
lot Sect ·2 Prt Of
M.algs LSD
27 95A Mid Of W 112
11-DI265.000 Barnes Ex Coel .29A..... t.08
Mash
John F &amp; Kimberly K 11-D0692 000
James
L
I/Or
Norene
Sect 2 Sw Pit 1.33A
••
• ...157 94 C Lot Sect ·2 Lot
11-00828.000
Barr 150X66' Of Sw Prt Of
Duone R Sect. 25 Sw 15.50A .23Aoi16.60A
P1 Nw 114 &amp; Nw PI Of .23A ............ 338;69
Mash
Swt/4 Ex.M Vein Coal 11.{)0893 000
JernesL&amp;/OrN49 05A .. • 287 64
Barr C lot Sect -2 Sw Pit
11.Q0829.000
27 .OSA Mid Of W
Duone R Sect 26 N PI
28112A Sa PI Nwt/4 112 Ex Coal 15.27A
... • .. .. .. 109.21
Ex. M Vein Cool 13A
.. .. 12895 tt.at711.000 MHier
11-00830.000
Barr George w Aero Sect •
Pit Of 48.42A s
Duone R Sect 26 6
Neer Mid. Along Cr. Of Rd I A.... .324.24
11.at712 1100 Miller
Ex. f4 Vein Coal
George
Sect 6 w
5 37A.
•
• 63.23
139A In E Prt
11-00831.000
Barr Prt
Duone RSect. 26 Neer 1 061A ... ....22.41
Sw Cor. Of Nw 114 11.00186.001
Mitchell Edward l
.75A ....................4.61
11~2000
Birr Fr 24 T6N Rt4W Sw
1.3137A Out
Duono R Sect 32 Na
1 3137A
Of Set/4 Ex•.25A Nw 6 OOA
.......................1136.15
Rd I 76A.
10 48
II.Q0833.000
Barr 11-otl835.003
Du- R Sect 1 Se P1 Multtna Ronald I/Or
Of 53.03A Ex M Vein Piggy Frectlorl 17T8
Coal .50A............5.85 Rl4 I 5432A Out Of
1.5432~
11.Q0834.000
Barr 38 lOA
Duone R. Sect. 26 On ................ 228.67
11.01324.001
W Line Neor Mid
Nationwide
Reol
W112 Ex. M Vein Coel
Eatotelnc Sec 26 T6N
20A ..................140.69
R14W 0.07A Out Of
11.Q0868 1100
llolyllrd Vonda June 0 34A 0.07A ... 198.35
Lot Sect ·18 Sw Cor II-D0273.002 Pierce
Of 55 75A Se &amp; Sel/4 Marlin A &amp;lOr Belva
Fract 36 T6 Rl4
2.99A .............16.82
15 408A
Out
Of
11.00119 000
15 406A
BurcheU Bill &amp;/Or 12 39A
• .... ... .. 185 72
Florence Sect 33
(640) N Of Sw Comer 11.01131 000
Ex t4 Vein Coal 50A Ramlburg Richerd A
......................... 77.64 &amp;/Or Cerot J Sect 24
S Port Of Wl/2 5.03A
11.00120 000
BurcheU Bill I/Or .. .... .... .....30263
Florence Sect 33 11-00316.002
Rllhbum Chortes E
Near Mid Sel/4 Ex 114
Vein
Coel
2A &amp;/Or Starcher Tammy
Sect 24 T6 R14
..............
113 65 J
2.005A
Out
Of
11.01177 008
2 005A
Capehart Wllllem R 129 98A
Helen
M .........................168.97
&amp;/Or
Sect 12T5 R141.0D6A 11.Q0323 000
Out 014.346A t.ODBA Runyon Jerry L &amp;/Or
.. ... .. ..136 90 Vanneooa L Sect. 14-S
S Part Of E 112 120A
11.Q0875 002
Clel«nd Floyd &amp;/Or ..... ..... .......2238.31
11-G0324.000
Elberta c/o Floyd
Cleland Sect 13 T6 Runyon Jerry L I/Or
R14 Mid On W Line V1nne111 L Sect. 5
SA OUt Of 112.733A - M i d OIEUne
I.OOA •
.. 11 59
SOOA
..
67856
11.Q0976.000
II-G0419003
Clemente Cindy S Shoemoker Huel A
Sec 6 T5N RI4W Etal Lot Sect 27,28 S
t.OOA Out Of 27 JISA Part Of Frac 34 &amp; N P1
Of Frac 24 1.70A
1 OOA. ..
9125
..................... 13.19
11.Q0965 000
Colmer Jerry W &amp;/Or 11.00138 000
Stearns Charles J
Blrllara M Lot Sect. •
17 Ne PI Of SW 1/4 Secl18 T6 R14 Rd 14'
1 50A
. .807.53 Wd In Line Abou1200'
Deep .................1.20
11.01028000
CoUerlll Raymond R 11.00139 000
Stearns Chertas J
til &amp;/Or Jessica l
Lot Secl ·21 Ne Cor. Sect. 18 T.8 R.14 PI Of
Of 4 75A Ne Free 31 N114 Ex 20A E 80A
...................... 367.04
2.94A ... .. 117 66
11·00210 000
11.00734.000
Sleema Charles J
Davktoon Allen E It
&amp;/Or
Tracy
L Sect 18 Mid. &amp; Se
Part Of Nl/2 78 85A
Lot Sect 32 E Of Sa
.................811487
1/4 76.25A Ex 56 SOA
11-G0211 000
19 75A.... .... .291 35
Stearns Charles J
11.01630 000 Drehel
Sect 18 In
Pert Of
James
Royalty
Sel/4 54 47A 63 23
Interest Herald 011
And Gas C::O Parmi! 1 11.00212.000
Stearns Charla• J
1896 ............4.47
Secl 18 Nl/2 Of 40A
11.01371 000 Orehel
James
&amp;
Frank E Side Of Sat/4 20A
.............. 1964
Royalty lnt Herald 0

c

er

w

w

c

or

w

or

w

eor

or

w

11-G0813 000

1'l1lcar- f &amp;/Or
Herahberger Glen E
Sect II In s Part Of
76.85A
892A

"·:·~·:~·::·

94 71
11-G1740 000
1l1ld
Reeources,
Inc
Working
lntereat
Johneon t 6 Land
Owrw Penni! • 2246
. .. ... • .. .29 58
11-411168.000 Vonce
Mlcheet
T
Etal
lot Sect 13 Mid Sec
Of W Cr Ex Minerals
Ex
II 2813A
73 4083A ...... tan.&amp;3
11.01315000
Woddetl Helen Etal
Lot Sect._. Cool &amp;A
........ ..
-697
11-D1195.000 Warner
John Henry Jr c/o
Bowen Enterp11ses
Sect 9 w End Of
62 37A In N Prt Ex
56A 69A..... ... 29.76
11.0Q087 001
Williams Robert D
Jr I/Or Teresa l
Sect S T6 Rl4 Mid Of
Nw114 .975A Out Of
1.475A .975A 697 06
1HIOtl53.001
Wltliomaon Cherleo
Brian &amp;lOr Kathie Lee
Section 24 T6N R14W
1.2000A
Out
Of
29.18A
1 2000A
1857.94
12-Ruttand
Vlltage
Meigs LSD
12.0Q082 000
Ashley Dwight D &amp;/Or
Wanda L c/o Aptll
Burke Sect. S (640) In
Sw Cor. Of Nwt/4 E Of
Rd
Appoox
48A
..... .... ..... .749.69
12-G0372 000
Bing
Randy E &amp;/Or Emily M
Sect 8 (640) On 51 Rd
S Of Powers
17A

...................... .850.73
12.00111 00 Hudson
Kevin
Lot
19
Rathbum Add 19
..
• 1262 40
12-G0047 001
Kennedy Robart K
Sect 8 T6 R14 51A
Out Of 10 70A .51 A
001
26605
12.Q0336 000
Lntle
Cindy A &amp;/Or Steven
L Sect 14 ·15 (262)
3X8Rda W Of Sw Cor
Of Lot 38
ISA
70285
12.00337.000
Lntle
Cindy A &amp;/Or Steven
L Sect 14 ·1518 213'1n
Sw Cor Ex .253A
057A.. .... • 12.98
12.Q0291.000 Ratcliff
Peggy Ann Searls
5 S Ruttand 5 25A
................ 106 66
12.00292.000 Ratcliff
Peggy Ann Searls
Lot 6 25A.
46.24
13·Salem
T-nBhlp
Meigs LSD
13-00209.004
Anthony Chrlatopher
C Etal Sec11 T8N
R15W 8.968A Out Of
34 318A
6 966A
.... .... ..... ...170 37
13-00832.001 Bailey
Larry L &amp;/Or Sandra
A
Fraction 24 T8
R15W 45 137A Out
Of 93 53A 45137A
.............. 1342.59
13-G0445 000
Boss
Steven John &amp;/Or
Emily
Ruth
lot 1.
.. ... 25 01
13.Q0446 000
Bass
Steven John 1/0r
Emily Ruth Lot 2 Ex
18' N Side .. 29 69
13-D0447 000
Bass
Sleven John &amp;/Or
Emily Ruth Lot 2
Longstreth Add 16'N
Side.... ....
7 78
13.Q0142 001
DIVIS
Edwin H &amp; Sons
Sect 13 TaN R15W
0 961A Out 0110 OOA
0.961 A. • ..... ....19.55
13-G0157 001
Davis
Peullne c/o
1tonscont1nental Title
Sect 5, T8N, RISW,
118A Out Of 8S16A
......... ..
51593
13.Q0423 000 DeVIS
Robert E &amp;lOr Hazel
E Sect 18 Sw Of N
200A Ex. 14 Vein Coal
.992A Of ISA .992A
..
318 44
13-G0157 003 DaVIS
Ronllid l'dward &amp;/Or
Pauline Fern c/o
Transcontinental THie
Sec 5 W PI Of Nw114
7 OSA Ex 2 664A Ex
1.157SA Ex 2 515A
ns2A •
1718
13-G0159 000
Denney Waller L c/o
Kenneth
Kephart
Sect 4 .lOA Out Of
104A Ne Part 01104A
lOA... ..... ... .8 21
13.00164 000
Dunkle
Beny
Sect 23 Mid Of W 112
N Of Rd Ex 3 4859A
17.1441A
Ex
7A
10.1441A .. 16018
13.Q0164 002
Dunkle Dav1d Jr &amp;/Or
Penny Sect 23 TS R15
Sw Cor Of 3 4859A
Tract 7 A Out Of
171441A'
700A
........, ..,.,...... 171 15
13.Q0170.000
Ellis H Jenn•ngs c/o
Kimberly EIHs Sact30
T7 R 15 Swt/2 or
NWI/4 21A
303 01
13-G0712.004
Enterlina Douglas L
Sect2 TaN R15W
3.608A
Out
Of
106 43A
3 608A
... • • .. ..... .. .122 41
13.00712 005
Enterline Douglas L
Sect2 TIN RISW
3167A
Out
01
3 167A
106 43A
•
10714
13.00712 006

Public Notice

En1ertlne Douglas L
Sact2 TaN RISW
3 889A
Out
Of
106 43A
3 889A
.. ... ..
131 28
13.00712 007
Enterline Douglas l
Sact2 TSN R15W
Out
Of
3 991A
106 43A
3 991 A

~=·;:::;."·:::·: .... 135 31
13-0D396 000
Gilmore Gary
&amp;/Or
Emily
J
Elll
Sect 2 T8N R 15W
34A
Out
Of
127 5546Ac
3 4Ac
.... 3713
13.Q0210 000 Goble
Shannon
F
Sect 15 ·36 W Of
Nw/14 Ex 14 Vein
Coal Ex 7.64A 4 2SA
............................179 63
13.Q0353 1100 Goble
Shawn Sect 26 Sw
Cor Ex t4 Vein Coal
4A Out Of 8A Ex .35A
365A
19690
13.Q0405 000
Goodman B1lly J 6
Antonia
M Sect
25,T 8,R IS Nw Cor
Of Ne114 3 061A Of
40A 3 061A ... 41711
13-00406 000
Goodman Billy J &amp;
M Sect
Antonta
25,T8N,R 15W,2 55A
Out Of 30 87$A 2 55A
107 91
......,......
13.Q0454 001
Grigsby David J &amp;/Or
Teresa D Sect 35
1 149A New Survey
........................... 127 57
13.00272.000
Hanners Barbara L
Sact 23 Ne 114 or
47.23A 2A ... 109.43
13.00209 000
Harmon Candy Etal
c/o Carrie Harmon
Sect 11 Ne Part Of Nw
1/4 Ex 14 Ve1n Coal
200A
Ex
1 OOA
1 OOA ... ... 301.25
13-oo&amp;95.000
, Harmon Cendy Jo
Lot 24 Longstreth
Add St/2
1210
13.00283 000
Hert
Dale - L &amp;lOr Sally
Sect 6 (640) Ne Of
Swt/4 Ex t4 Vem Coal
72 75A ..
515 82
13-GOm ooo Heyea
Theodore P Sect. 18
T8 R 15 Near Mid On
N Line Out Of 94 06A
5 03A
103 54
13-00327 001 Jarrell
Terry M Sect 7T8 RIS
40A Out Of 75 75A
40A.. .....
827 71
13.00712 001
Landers Charles &amp;/Or
Diana Secl•on 2 T8N
R15W 5 005A Out Of
124.15A
5 005A
·::··::·:·:·:~..,.,., ....178 19
13-G0417 000
Love
Karon Ilene Sect 5 Sa
Of Lot 16 Bel Cr &amp;
Rd .25A .. ... 508
13-D0418 000
Love
Karen
Ilene
Lot 1610' •
3 13
13.Q0419 000
Love
Karan Ilene Lot 16 15'
OIL0116
548
13.00732.001
McCloud
Damck
Net/4 Of tiwl/4 Of
Sect 25, TaN, R15W,
4A Out Of 28 329A
4 OOA... ... 1410.05
13.Q0420.000
McDonald David E Jr
&amp; Amy J Sect18 Sw
Of N 200A Ex t4 Ve1n
Coal 2 60A . 656 98
13.Q0095.001
McDonald Davtd E
Jr &amp;/Or Amy Jo
Sec 18 T8N RI5W
3 OOA Out Of 41 OOA
300A...... .. .116 45
13.Q0439 000
McQuaid Lawrence
William Sect 12 Cen
Of Sect 12 N Of Rd
Ex 1 70A .30A 78 12
13.Q0440 000
McQuaid Lawrence
Wilham Sect 15-t-12
W Of Cr Rr Ex t4
Vem Coal lA. 15 27
13.()0441 000
McQuaid Lawrence
Wilham SacttS-8·12
Mid s Cen Ln Public
Rd T27
2683A
•
•
480 01
13-G0701 001 Ogdln
Del L &amp;/Or Lmda C
Sect 18 T7 R15 M11i
On W Line 1.565A
Out Of 74A I 565A
.,.,,., ...: ·::·:·:·: ..:220S 62
13.00559.000
Richard
Peyton
sect 5 S..t'l Of Swt/4
I 50A.
63.62
13.0055S 000
Peyton R1chard A
Sact 5 On W L1ne Of
Net/4 1 SOA 1569.10
13.Q046S 000 Varney
Les1a L Lascelles
Sect 24 S Of Nw 114 &amp;
N Of Sw 1/4 Ex t4
Ve1n Coal 96 OOA Ex
1062 49
81A

w

14-Sallsbury
Township
Meigs LSD
14.01384 000
Blankenship Kathy L
Sect 30 (262) Wt/2 Nw
Prl 01160 Of Rd 25A
.................. ,... ,.... 399 OS
14-ll01S5 000 Blazer
Oeborah S Sact 24
(640) Nw Of Sat/4
48.255Ac
746 19
14.00134 000
Brodenck Franc1s
1/0r
Linda
Sect 17,T2N,R 13W,
Sw Corner 83A Of
11600A 83A 10002
14 0~647 002
Brodenck FranciS P
Sact 23 (640) Mid On
E Line Ex Coal Ex
12A
Ex
2433A
2 433A
48 49
14-G02S7 000 Brooks
Dorothy Jane &amp;/Or
Thomas P St 34 T 1
R 13 (100-370)0n E
Une Near M1d Of
19 56A 87A
93 60
14.{)1342 002

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.com
Public Notice
Brooks Thomoa P
IOOA Lot 383 TIN
fi13W 583A Oul Of
1.532A
583A
•
11 36
14.Q1418 000
Brooks Thom1a P
Sec 33 (1110-309-383)
Mid Bet Rr &amp; Public
Rd 27A.
63 71
14.QI453 001
Clrpetller Randall R
Jr Sect 29 T1 R13 Pel
12 61A Lot 157 &amp; 24A
Lot 313 .94A. 316 37
14.Q0283 000 Delong
Jellrey A Sect 21 ·27
(262) Nw P1rt Of
96 32A Mid &amp; E Part
3 70A. ..........227.91
14.00296 000 Dixon
Donald F I/Or Judith
D Sect 31 (640) Nw
Cor Of 2 48A 25A
• ... ... .. .1411.2S
14.Q0297 000 DIXon
Donald F &amp;/Or Judith
D 5131 Lot6400nW
Line Of St 31 On
Nw114 Of 2.48A .28A
............................65 54
14.01324 000 Eakins
Larry F Sac 8 (640)
Lot E Of Arnold W Of
Rd 50 X170
.20A
.............................•6191
14.00778.000
Ellis
Charles D &amp;/Or Laura
L
Sect 8 (640) Nw
Par1 Of Nwt/4 Near Cr
Ex 38A EX 3 015A
2735A
..16853
14.Q0097 .D03 Fam•ly
Homes Inc Sac16 T2N
R13W 23A Out Of
46 3395A 23A 4.56
14-00805 000 Family
Homes Inc Sect 26
(640) Se PI Of 40 75A
W Of Rd New Survey
I 459A
4425 76
14.01455 000 Family
Homes Inc Sect 8
(640) On Athens Rd In
17 Radford 24A Ex
126A 114A
4 70
14.01456 000 Family
Homes Inc Sect
(640) E Of St N Of Mill
Lot
80A Ex .42SA
372A
• 15423
14-G0498 000 Family
Homes Inc An OhiO
Corp Se 1/4 Of Sw
1/4 Ex Coat I 80A
20 20A Ex 12 964A
7 236A .
... 198 07
14-G047e 000
Goeglein Daniel Etal
Sect 16 (640) Sa Par1
Ex Coal Ex 10 13A
Tract 7 4.931A
..89S40
14.01684 001
Hawley Norman E
Sect 18 T2 Rl3
S 545A Out Of 29.17A
8 545A
1401 08
14.Q0882 000
Landers Hoby M
Sact 8 (640) Sw Part
Of 1 57A Tract 54A
• .. ....... 13412
14.Q0683 000 Landers
Hoby M Sact 8 (640)
Nw Part
1 03A
.................7.58
14.Q2272 000
Little
Donald
&amp;
Lola
RoyaHy lnt Her1kl 011
&amp; Gas Baahem-Little
tl L 0 Permit 3116
..., ...,.,., ......,.,.
.4 02
14.Q107t 000 MuaReva Sect 26(640) T 2
R 13 E PI Of Wol
CrOff 26 07A .55A
•
.72500
14.01072.000 Musser
Reva
Sac
26
(640)Near Mid On
Line E Of Rd 6.00A Ex
3.5121A Ex 1 0095
14784
225 49
14.01073.000 Musser
' Reva Sect. 26 (640)
T.2 R 13 Se 0t 52 14A
EPIWOfCr
50A
•
• 20 38
t4-Gt085 001 Neece
Edward
D
&amp;/Or
Rhonda F Sect 36
IOOA Lot 315 2A Out
Of 517A &amp; 3A Out Of
S 83A 5 OOA 1091.16
14.Q1087 000 Nelson
Eddie Lee Sect -16
(640) Se Part Of Ne
114 Of Swt/4
2A
• ... ...
.244.29
14.00185 001
Ohlinger Jeffrey c/o
Jeffrey Ohlinger and

Public Notice

PubliC Notice

Star&lt;:her April Etet
Sect 13 -30 (100-310.
311) E Prt lA 1159
Penny Surv
.25A

5011100' ....... 481 72
15-«1084.000

4.91
14.Q0097 000 SIGttll
cathel hl8 Sec16 T2N
R13W Mid On N Line
Of Sl/2 Of Nwt/4
46.3395A
Ex0.23A
46.1095.... 1349.78
14-01629000
Terman
David
A
St 30 1:1 R.l3 (IOQ-

308) S PI Of 2.88A t3
Panny Surv .292A
............... 624 52
14.Q1792.000
Woddell- C Etel
Sec 35 4 112A Coat
Und 37 112A In Sec 35
t8 Vein Coal 4.50A
........ .. .............508
14-00690 000 Walker
Shannon Sact. 8 (640)
Ne Of Wl/2 Of Nw1/4
On WHile Hill 1.13A
.. ...... ... .. ..99.54
14.Q0935.000

Public Notice

Phlllipe Jack E &amp;lOr
Vivian H lot 482 Pom
N 1/201 N 112 40 X50"
.................1434
15-01575 000
-Shelby M
Loi 136 Booworth
Add.
• 168 99
15-01382.000
Smith Penny Lot 11
Probst Add .....344.72
15-01363.000
Smith Penny lot 9
Probst Add......71.42
15-01309 1100
s-.rt Mary M c/o
Ralph and Chrlstlno

Stawart

Lot

158 37X38' Sw Cor Of
1158 Bosworth Add
... ..... ....... 44.33
15-01343 000
Taylor John L Etal
Lot 24 Behan 2Nd
Add ... ......... 81.90
15-01344 000 Teylor
John L Elll Lot S
CIIVIyn Sue Betian lSI Add. St/2
..
185.89
Payne Sect 36 Sw
Part 20 25A 309 92
15-G0642.000
14-00936 000
Ulbrich Martha &amp;
Donald
Wee- Carolyn Sue Lyons
PeyneSact.36SwPI Lot 82 N 112 PI
Behan'S 2Nd 34 X95'
Set/4 All W Of Rd
Ne Cor .... .... 205.09
157A Tr Ex. 9.30A
15-01212 000
11481
I 63A
Vukson
Dor1s
IS~Iddleport
Lot 89 P Jones 3Rd
Add
22539
Village
• 15.01319.000
MatgsLSD
WII!Jner
Robin
15,01477000
Baer c/o Sheila Partlow
Bulldera
&amp; Pert Of Lot 2·1/4 Dlv
Developers
Ltd Jones ESl 35'X80' Ne
Lot 29 .06A PI Of Cor... .... ... 36045
Brick Yonl Lot Of 15-00021 000
Bock St 06A .2 67
werry Mary K
Lot 80 Palmer'S 1St
1S.Ot478 ooo
•
. 1194 85
Add.
Builders
&amp;
15-00837.000
Developers
Ltd
Lot 29 12' E Side 58' W1se Bony Lot 413
Pom Add 25'
112
Park St •
324 93
14442
15-00112.000 B1rcn
Julie A Lot (70)
16-Pomeroy
Behan 2Nd Add Ex 20
VIUigll
Ft N.
344.84
Meigs LSD
15.Q1218 000
Brewer James Jr
Lot (13) Probst 13- 16-02060 000
A-ion Jonl Lot 121
Sciuth Side
12 On lynn S1 &amp; 2'
..........,, ...: .......,533 16
15.01473 000
On E Side.. ..... 80.35
Broder1ck FrollCIS P 16-02081 000
Averlon Jon1 Lot 122
&amp;/Or
Linda
S
Lot 114112 25'X60'
10X10' Sa Cor W 213
.. ,....,.,..::·o·...,.,.......16 86 ·::..:·:·:·:·:""::·:·· 7S1 62
15.01474 000
16.02082 000
Broclenck Francia P Avenon
Jom
&amp;/Or
Linda
S Lot 96 20'X67' Sw Cor
Lot 114 P. Jones 3Rd Of Frcnt &amp; Lynn St
421 20
•
Add
29056
16-02063 000
15-00400 000
Cerpentar Randall R Aver.on
Jom
Lot 96 All Ex 20'X67
&amp;/Or Peggy
Ann
Dlv Jones Est 21 Ex On Lynn... ..... 90 09
16-00031 000
Boar
Strip Joining Cem 2A
Builders
&amp;
Est..
, .92 21
Developers
Ltd
15-o0401 000
Carpenter Randall R Lot 452 Sub 3112
&amp;/Or Peggy
Ann 40'X150' .......134912
Boar
Dlv Jones Eat 22 W 16-00032 000
Builders
&amp;
Side..
• • 442 76
Developers
Ltd
15.Q1063 000
Clsc1 Ronald P I/Or lot 452 Sub 11/2-2112
Anne~ L0117
-· ...................147 57
Baer
Behan
1St
Add 16.Q0820 000
&amp;
• ...... .. ........456.69 Builders
Ltd
Developers
15.Q1599 000
Clifford Judy K &amp;/Or lot 98 .... • 246 51
Baer
Birchfield Mary L 16-00821 000
&amp;
Lot 68 W 24' Ex S 6" Bu1ldera
Parcel
24 'X49-112' Developers
Ltd
Lol99
6155
:""::::""""""'90.21
16-00087.000
15-«1680 000
Baumgard- John
Darst Jeffrey R &amp;lOr
c/o
William
KIUie S c/o Ginger Etot
Simms Lot 142 P. Baumgardner
Sact 8 Lot 255 Sub
Jones 3Rd Add Et/2
•
• 237.37 19112 ........ 71.37
16-00148.000
15.QI221.000
Edwards Marvin R Bowles Robert &amp;/Or
Lot
66 Coalport Mary A Lot 262·18 2
17/100 A Sub 16112 S
:·:::::..::·
55.29
Part 217A ... 108 34
15.Q1222 000
Edwards Marvin R 16.Q0932 000 Bunch
Wells
Lot
66C
10'X90' Joaeph1ne
..... ... .. .... 12.24 Lot 588 Part Of 588
5.12A
16228
15-oo440.000
Geranl Char1es Paul 16-00988 000 Bunch
Wells
Lot (46) Coalport 46 Josephine
6910
35' Off E
Side Lot 402
16-01969 000 Casto
... . ... .. .456 31
Donald E 1/0r Peggy
15.01498.000
Glbba Angeta Lot 119 S Lot 258 On E Line
Boswor1h Add 62' W Of Park St 60A
17634
End..
..149.29
16.02613 000 Casto
15.00529 000
Gilkey R1chanl D &amp;/Or Donald E &amp;/Or Peggy
Karen K Lot (45) t45 • S Sect 13 -2 On W
23X45' W End ....2 54 L1ne S Of Parker 40A
924
15-oo530 000
Jonathon
Dickens Gilkey Rlchanl D &amp;/Or 16.00274 000 eaton
Sect 24 T2N, R13W, Karen Klot (45) t45 Kathleen &amp;/Or Jervis
c/o
Diana
1 7746A Out 01 50A 45X90' N S1de 398 48 Diana
Carman
Lot
..., ..: ..... ,......:·:·:'"""S9 80 15.01074 000
14·00843 OOOPersons Hart Amle M Lot 171 83 Neylora Run w Of
Fisher &amp; Loc~st St
Pamela Sect
33 Dlv Jones Est .290 20
..........................229 40
15.01472.000
21882A • .. 140.94
Am1e
M 16-00276 000 Caton
14.Qn68 000
Price Hart
MarjOrie Sact 8 (640) Lot 172 Jones Add. MIChael &amp;/Or Mar1or1e
Lot 262 -18 Sa Cor Of
•
91 60
26 Radford Surv 25A
Farm
75A • • 36 28
15.Q0092
000
...,..,.,.... ~..~:·:·:· """"" :4 47
P 16.Q0417 000
14.01117 000
Price Hysell Wilham
Chapman Mitchell D
Norman Jr Sact 8 In Part Lo1427 40'X 70'
&amp;/Or
Anne
M
..... 36294
Nw Cor Of Wt/2 Of
Lot 189 Sub 16
Nt/2 2.70A .. 53 80 15-DI229 000
Add
14.02289 000 Riddle L1Uie Dale R &amp;/Or Burnap
Grover And Priscilla Shern R Lot 20 ........................... 366 79
Acres 16.{)1 011.000
Royalty lnt Herald 011 Riverview
Cleland Michael A
&amp; Gas Co Samuel Subdivision. ..879. 73
&amp;/Or
D1ana
L
Simonds L 0 Permit 15.Q0335 000
#3063
S78 MII!J8nahalll Sharath Lot 25S Ne Cor 44A
.20 85
•
Lot
103
14.Q0566 000 Riddle Desa•
16.Q0668 000
Grover
L
&amp;/Or Palmer'S 1St Add 26
Compton Ramona
Priscilla R Sect 36 S Side .. .. .. 205.32
Lot 189 Piece Bet
Sw Part
21 24A 15.02036 000
•
225 44 Maganahalh Sharath Hllllop Sl &amp; 516
14.01398 000 Riddle Desai Vacalld Atley .........................465 89
16-00869 000
1520
&amp;/Or 75'X100
Grover
L
Compton
Ramona
PriSCilla R Sac 36 Sw 15-D0288 000
Mash Conme N1cole Lot 516 Tri Sa Cor Ex
Prt Of Se1/4 All W Of
Trl On Nw End
Lot 175
.. 39 01
Rd 01 157A Tr
3557
15-002S9 000
Ex9 30A
11 58A
Mash Connie NICOle 16.QOS70 000
.464 39
Compton
Ramona
Lot 175 112. ...346.26
14.Q0446 000
518
14'7"
Along
Lot
15.00175.000
Larry
Jr
Sailers
3 95
McGu1911n Judith A Lincoln Rd....
Sect 13 -s (640) Sw Ot
16-00S71 000
Nw 114 SOA 333 73 Lot (49) f49 • 81169'
Compton
Ramona
Nw Par1
25 44
14.00449 000
Lot 188 45' W S1de
Larry
Jr 15.01192 001
Sailers
Nor1hup Shannon T
Sact 13 .a (540) t9
....u·:·:·::c"""C"C':· .... I6 25
Tina
M t6.QOS72 000
Radford Surv
lA &amp;/Or
Ramona
...................:·: .... 194 00 632 S 2Nd St West Compton
Part Behan Add 40 X Lot 189 15 Off S Side
14.01364 000
27S82
Shoemaker Phillip M 85913928 X 8671 S
16-00873 000
Murrey Lot • .146 79
Sac 33 (100-3S9) Se
Compton
Ramona
15.00207 000
Prt Of 2 20A 01 Rd
Lot 354 Ex 40'X40 Off
Norton Michael Alan
2 179A Ex 1 559A
Lot (601 Behan Add Rear Ex 45'X '45
187 80
62A
2 21
Nw
1/4
33XI 00
14-ll121S 000
16-00874 OQO
..
• .. .. 289,97
Starcher Apnl Etal
Compton
Ramona
15-00083 000
Sact 13 30 (100-310)
Lot355
Ex
1
0
X60' Sw
Phillips
Jack
E
&amp;/Or
Se Prt 4A 158 Penny
V1v1an H Lot459 Pom Pl'rl 23'X57 5' Rear Ex
Surv 25A
6 45
2 21
N 112 or N 1/2 20 X45
14.{)1219 000

s

w..-

a-

w

18-D0392.000 Davis
Lady Dawn E181 c/o
Ronneo
Hudson
Lot 291 N Cilll Ex
Lola Sold.......17.69
16-00393 1100 Oevis
Lady Dawn Etot c/o
Ronnea
Hudson
Lot 292 N Of Cilll Ex
Lola Sold - ..17.69
16-00394 000 Devis
Lady Dewn Etal c/o
Ronneo
Hudson
Lot 283 N Of Cliff Ex.
Lots Sold
25.23
16-00395 000 Davis
Lady Dawn Etal c/o
Ronneo
Hudson
Lot 294 N Of Cliff Ex
Lots Sold - 117 07
16-00396 000 Davis
Lady Dawn Etot c/o
Hudson
Ronnea
Lot 1295 N Of Cliff
Ex
lots
Sold
.. ............ 9.98
16-00397 1100 Davis
Lady Dawn Etal c/o
Ronnoa
Hudson
Lot 295 N Of Cliff Ex
Lots Sold. • .7 25
16.01950 000
Edwards Marvin Jr
Lot 262·17 Sub 438
314 .17AW Part01173
N Of Rinehart .17A
...... ,..................232 74
16-00882.000
Follrod John Philip
Lot 2D-21-22 Ex 15'
Off N Side.. ...34.69
16-00863.000
Follrod John Ph1hp
Lot 23 Neyors Run 15'
N Side • • .... .. 14.49

Public Notice
11965A
0.0831A
...............................1319
16-01582.000
Landers Chor1ea A
lot 125 To 129 Inc •
Tn E Side 130 H ' D
.. .. .. ..187 99
16-016831100

Public Notice
Townsend
Helen
Lot 186 10' S Side
... .... .... .... 48 08
16-01900 1100
VIIIIV.-In ScoU &amp;
Sandie c/o
VllnVrankln Lot 517
67'X78'X78' Out Of
1517 Survey
.. .... ....... 391 59
16-00422000 While
Richenl Alanlot 438
.., ... .......... 311.52
16-00423 000 While
Richanl
Alon
Lot 438 112 N Of 438
.............. 30.2S

PubliC Notice
05176A Of 11 34A
05976A ........1.20

17.Q0494 000
Koatlvol Jan M a./Or
T1111ore
Lynn
Lot Sect -23 (640) ""
1/4 S Of Rd N Part Of
Sel/4 108A. 4355 69
17-G04ts 000
L..-s ~A
KoSllvat Jen M &amp;/Or
Lot 128-112 H &amp; 0 Add
Tamora
lynn
40'X80' ... ... 302 76
Lot
Sec
23
(640)N
16.Q0866.000
Part 01 Net/4 N Of Rd
Landera Char1es 0 &amp;
88 Ooa Ex 1 798A
Cllr-lle Lot 258
86.202A ... 1996.24
104'X160' N Sub
17-G04tl5 001
3028
931.2
Kollllvol Jln M &amp;lOr
16.Q0865 000
Tomaro Lynn Sec 23
Landera Cher1es 0
T71'1 R14 1 798A Out
&amp;/Or
Clarabelle
17-SclpiO
Of
88 OOA
I 798A
Lot258Sub 93112Ex.
Townsh•P
• • •........ 133001
74'X80 X65'
Tn
Meigs LSD
17-1003
... .... ..
... 6019
Koattvat Jan M &amp;/Or
17-00324 002
16-01308.000
lenders Charles 0
Anderson John H Tlmarll Lynn Sec 17
&amp;/Or
Clarabelle &amp;lOr Gretchen G T7N R14 0.16724A
Of
13 196A
Lot 258 Sub tS2 Sect8T7N R14 15 OOA Out
0 40
.... .... .... ... 93.95
Out
Of
343 73A 0 16724A
17.Q0961.000
16.Q0999 000
15 OOA
2112 08
Koat1vll Jon Mlchaat
Landers Chas Olho &amp; 17.00129 000
Tamara
Lynn
Clarabelle Lot 258 Sa
Anderson Wilham G &amp;
Of Sub 92 &amp; N Of Sub &amp;/Or Linda June Sec 17 (640) Nw Cor
82. ... ... • .130 89
Lot Sect 21 Ne Sec 32 105 79A Ex 87.573 Ex
16.01000 000
32A Of 59A T7 R 14 5021A Ex 0.16724
13 02876A
382 33
Landers Chea Otho 30A .... .. ... 576.11
11.Q0926.001
Lee
17.Q0646 000
&amp; Clar-lle Lot 258
Sub92
n30 Andrus Gerald A Jr Fred c/o frederick 0
16-01005 000
&amp;/Or
Tammy
R Lee Sac6 T7N R14
l-anders Hoby M &amp; Sect 17 (640) In N Part 3.49A Out Of ~ 2 50A
•
58.86
Landers Marl&lt; A c/o Of Swt/4
22A 3 49A
17-Q0927 001
Lee
Hoby
Landers ""C"""""""''""":·:"""""4Q9 82
Lot 255 Myers Add
17-110090.000 Bailey Fred c/o Frederick D
18'X 150' .......... 615 Lao D 1101 Kar1a J Lee Sac6 T7N Rf4W
16-01006 000
Lot Sac -23 (640) Sa 6 51 A Out Of 12 82A
9129
Landers Hoby M &amp; Prt 60A Ex 32.50A 651A
17.00285.1100
15414
Landers Mark A c/o 27 50A •
Mclain George v
1600864 000
Hoby
Landers 17-ooo90.001 Batley
Claudia
Follrod John Philip
Lot 3 Myers Add Ex 8' Lao D I/Or Kar1a J &amp;/Or
Lot 24 Neylors Run Off
S
Side Sec 23 T7 R14 Shepherd Lot Sact -3
Ne
corner
Ex 15' Off N Side
... .. ...... 103 78
32 50A Out Of 60 OOA (640)
40.50A Ex 37 .9t78A
... .... .. ....641 38
16.Q1007 000
3250A
25943
2 5022A
701 04
16-01586 000
Landers Hoby M &amp; 17.Q0307 002
Freeman Charles A Landers Marl&lt; A c/o Barnhart RIChard A 17-G0544 000 Mltard
clo
linda
Mills Hcby
Landers Fr 13 T7N R14W Joshua R Sec 12 57
Lot 434 12A N Of Lot 3 S' Off S Side D.950A Out Of 2 09A R 14 Ne Cor 435AOI
97 67A 4.35A• .428.72
Union Ave W Of ·::..:·:·:·:·:..:·:·:.........7 01
0 950A
91 29
17.Q0545 000 Miller
Peacock
Coal
17.Q0096 001
16-01008.000
Mary
K c/o Robert C
Brickle&amp;
Roy
A
I/Or
Hoby
M
&amp;
Landers
••., ...:·:::'"""":·:·: .. ·• 75 54
16-00571 000 Fnley
Landers Mark A c/o Char1oUe Section IS Miller Sac 30 21 383A
Charles E Jr Etol c/o Hoby
Landers ' T7 R14 2 OOA Out Of or 34 OSA 21 383A
• ... ... .... 181 38
Mary
Sheets Lot2
37 34
16.75A 2 OOA 169 00
17-00810 000
Lot 255 Sub 15 112 16-()1009.000
17.00170 000
Landers Hoby M &amp; CoUerltl Denver R Phelps Stanley &amp;/Or
·:.. ·:·o·:·:·:..,... 293 54
16-D1684 000
Landers Mark A c/o Lot Sect ·26 Cntr Of Sue Sect 36 2A Out
Gar!o!ls Vonda K &amp;/Or Hoby
Landers Sl/2 Of Sec 26 SA 0125A 2A ..110.10
17.Q0205 000 Praeat
Harry Delbert Jr c/o Lot 1 N 25 On Nye
·::·:::·:::·:..:·:·:... 126 76
Rog« Jason &amp;/Or
Harry
Gornes Ave.. .. .. .22 41
17.00171.001
Lot 326 4 •
3V6 32
16.{)(1469 000
CoUetlll Denver R
~:;~Sect 4 ~~.;.
16-01688.000
l.audermiH Sheula A Sect 26 T7 R14 Nw
Garnes Vonda K &amp;/Or Lot 262·17 100'X125' Cor Of Sa 114 I 142A 17.Q0543.003
Harry Deibert J r On
St Out 0114 25A I 142A Radcliffe Tonia K
Osborne
Sect 12 T7 Rl4
Lot 505 &amp; Tri On Nw
.. . .. ... 1658 01
. .. .. ..528.95
4876A
Out
Of
Side Ex Trl Sa Cor
16-01645 1100
17.00178 000
.. • . .. ......4437
Laudermill Sheula A Conerlll Steven D 69 052A 4 876A
.. .... .... ... 23496
16-01767 000 Haley
Barbara
C
Lot 262·17 83'X90' Of &amp;/Or
17.Q0254
000
Rudd
Mark A &amp; Sherri A Riggs
Lot
(10)
1386
08
Sub
12
J B Sect 34 (640) N
lot 66 Naylor&amp; Run
.... • ...........63 49 17.00179 000
122.92
CoUerlll Steven D S1de Of W 1/2 Ex
16-00207 000
16-01768.000 Haley
Lemley Karret David &amp;/Or
Barbara
C 18 0193A New Survey
.. .... ...123.31
Mark A &amp; Sham A Lot 469 2S 112' Side W Lot (9) .. ... 83 90
17.00254 004
Rudd
Lot 66 25' S Of Lot ·:·: ...o·:·:·c:·:"":C"" 480 48 17.00180 000
Bet
Spring
St 16.00208 000
CoUerlll Sloven D J B Sact 34 T7N R14W
Out
Of
2447
Lemley Karrel David &amp;/Or
Barbara
C 2 3650A
2 3650A
16-01527 000
Lot 464 Piece 14' W Lot Sac ·16 (640) Ne 24 68A
• ......... 133.73 '
Haning Donna
D Side &amp; 45' E Side Of Nwt/4 Ex 16A Ex
17-Q0916 000 Wyant
Lot
605
1 25A
SA
Ex
I
526A
3.474A
·:"""·:·:·:·:·:·"·:·
. 4 56
•
628 47
..................201.22 MilfOrd C Jr &amp;/Or
16-00209.000
Betty p St 30 92A Of
16-00720.1100
Lemley !Carrel David 17.Q0929 000
33 75A W Side Of
Hartung Donald A
Lot
Sact
Daniels
Jonl
Lot 485 Ex 35'X25112'
Nwl/4
&amp; Nw PI Of
Lot
(119)
Flood
~
Near
Cntr
Of
Sec
"."C"""":""·o"""":":·:......... 9 06
Sw114
92A
Rd.l119 H&amp;D Add
12.50A • ...1561.08
16.00210.000
.. 448 43
5112 Of N 40' Sub
Dye
Lamley Katrel Devld 17.00787 001
119112.. .... ... 33.53
Lot 470 16' E Side Wilham J &amp;/Or Linda
18-Sutton
16.00721 000
.. ... .... .... 3900 K Sec 3 T7N R14
Townshtp
Hartung Donald A
Out
Of
16-00056.000
Loer 2 624A
Southern LSO
Lot (119) 1119 H &amp; D Carey L &amp; Lisa D 152 OOA
2.624A
Add N. 20' Sub 119 Lot 210 Sa 45' :~·::·:"~=·::·::·....153 99
18.Q0516.001
314 .. ....,...... •... 33.53
17-GI278 000
"""~"·:··:·"":· ..., ........ 106 Sl
16-00722 000
16.00775.000
Loer Fanning Debra J Haines Nathan Jr
Hartung Donald A Carey L 6 LISa D Lot Sect 30 R 14 T7 T2 R13 IOOA Lot 299
Lot (120) 1120 H &amp; D Lot 201
15' On (640)
Sw Corner 1 95A Out Of 5 58A
1 95A.... ... . ..86.43
Add •
433 75
89641
Bunernut
St 8212A
18-DI157 002
Kiser
16-00723 000
17.00554
000
Foley
'""~""'~"""""''"~"""~""""""""'""'43 69
Hartung Donald A
16.00776.000
Loer Cmdy J Sact 2 Nw Pr1 Dav1d E &amp;/Or Brendo
Lot
(121)
1121
54A L Section 7 T3 R12
Carey L &amp; Lisa D Of Sw 114
4891A
Out
Of
.. .. • • • 33 53
Lot 202 25' On
..934.06
81 996A &amp; 5109A Out
16.01112 000
Bunernut
St 17.00766 000
I OOA
Hendrix Leroy &amp;lOr
......... ,........, .........209 80 Gambill Ralph Fred Of 2SA
1099 69
Judy E Lot 49 E 1/2 16-01283.000
Lot t14 E Of Cr. N Of
18.01353 000
2283
Milliron
James C P Chu OSA 3583
Landers Charles • 0
16-D1113 000
Lot 41 Sub 5 &amp; 6 17.00767 000
Clarabelle
Hendrix Leroy &amp;lOr
... • 423 87 Gambill Ralph Fred &amp;/Or
LoiS
I
Sub
B Reor 56'
Judy E Lot 50 Sub 3W
Sact
-14
70
Off
S
Lot
16-0IS97 000
.06A
35'
•
61 03
191A 27A.. ..93 70 X 49'
Ohlinger Phillip &amp;
16.Q0882 000 James cand1 Lot 12 Noylors 17-110485 000
·:·:""""""""7 33
John Jr &amp; Hammond Run60Xt13 .. 43298
Geddes Terry &amp;lOr 18.Q0478 000
Lawson Robert L Jr
Tommy c/o John and
Bonn10 Sect 7 (640)
16.01284.000
Deborah
K
Barbara
James Ohlinger
4A Out Or SA 4A 6/0r
Rosa
Lot 262·18 out or
.. • .. ..
.749 66 Sect 3 R 12 T.2 E End
Lot 492... • • .59 35
Of 6 63A
26 69A Tract 1 56A
17.00747 000 Gibbs 1 S73A
16-01285 000
728 26
1
873A
80.71
Wilham
E
&amp;lOr
Ohlinger
Rosa
16.Q0917 000
Melmda Lot Sect -7 IS-00802.000
Lot 492112 Sh1p 78'W
Lawson Robert L Jr
Johnson Jessie &amp; Side &amp; 18' S Of Lot (640) M1d Of Sl/2 Of
Deborah
K
Bertha c/o Sol and
Swt/4 24A
2n 89 &amp;/Or
.. ... .... .
701
Sect 3 s Comer Ex
Lealer
Johnson
17.Q0342 000
16-01994 000
Lot 35 V B Horton'S Penlue
Earthal Hamon Gary D I/Or Coal 160A Lot 1208
92.63
Add
33 81
Carole E St 33 1 467 A lA .. ....
Lot 268
3196
Of 38 79A Sw Cor Of 18.01073 000
16-G0918 000
16.01995 000
Johnson Jessie 8t Penlue
Earthel Nw114 Of Sw114 Of Neulzllng Edwin &amp;
lOr Nancy Sect 2 tt 17
Bertha c/o Sol and
Sact 33
1586 63
Lot269
74 78
On E Lme Near Mid
Johnson
17.Q0076 000
Leaier
16.01996 000
1286 30
Lots 26 -27 2S 48 32
Penlue
Earthel Hannah Ke•th A I/Or 1 30A
16-Q0919 000
Lot 277 10' E Side Meleah J Sect 26 T 7 18.00399 000
R14Ea011725A 3A Rowan Cecil W I/Or
Johnson Jess•e &amp;
24 61
Bertha c/o Sol anc
•
789.54 Corone Sect 3 W End
16.01619 000
40A Ex
Laaler
Johnson
Ramsburg Melody R 17.00366 000 Hayes Ex Coal
37 509A
Lot 36 V B Horton'S c/o
Melody Theodore P Sact 1 T-7 2 491 OA
213 38
Add. ....
.14 05
R-14 210 Out Of
Bumgardner Lot 425
18-00400
000
6640
16-D0920 000
Welle Add Sub 2 S123 21A
Rowan Cec1l W &amp;/Or
Johnson Jess•e &amp;
17.00368 000
......... ,.................561 39
Herdman Pnsc111a clo Corene Sac 1OOA
Bertha c/o Sol and
16-01881 000 Roush
Johnson
Riddle 1209 ·3 13A Out Of
Lealer
Stephanie
P11ce Priscilla
Lot 34 V B Hor1on'S Lot 37 Naylors Run
Lot Sect 21 Ac Out Of 40A Swt/4 S Of Rd
23 25A lA
10410 13A Ex 5 42A 7 58A
Add,
33 81
............. :, ...,.:·:··· .. 252 76
16-Q0921 000
17-00840 000
HICks ......:·:·: ...: ..:·:·:·.... 130 03
16-00741 000
Sha1n
Lot
16 1S.Q0399 001
Johnson Jessie 6
Schwendeman Cynth1a
Samuel
160A
Lot
Bertha c/o Sol and
Jellrey P &amp; carole L ""C"".:·:·:·:·:..:·:·:·.....30 85
RI2W
HICkS 1209 T2N
Lealer
Johnson
Lot 262·25 7S 35A All 17.Q0641 000
Lot
15 2 4910A Out Of 40A
Lot 29 6 30 90'X1 00
E Of Rd 01 64 OS7A Cynthia
936.54
......
.....................
550
10 2 4910A
.................. '
10 54
25 264A
5017 03
H1ll 1S.00384 000
16-01833 000
16.01107 000 Saarls 17-00372 001
Terry
Johnson Terry L II &amp;
Earley W &amp;/Or Laura J Sheets
M
a
r
k
Sac1ST2N
RI2W
N Of
Sect
23
T7N
R14
Melissa clo Melissa
Lot591 112
Of
Nel/4
Out
Of Nl/2
Johnson
Lot
90068 48 540A
1837A
48 540A Ex
12
915 50
16.01533 000
See 92 OOA
16-01S34 000
Kenneth
Dav1d
'
1292 27 Ex17571A 28794A
161514
Hyatt
Johnson Terry L II &amp;
Lol162 Ex 27' N &amp; Ex 17-G0415 000
1S.Q0384
005
!.!Or
Marilyn
Troy
Melissa c/o Melissa
40 Lot Size 25' Front
Terry
Sheets
Johnson
Lot
X
150'
Length Sac36 T7N R14 N Mid
T2N
R12
Sae18
v~
out
or
40A
303 Out Of Lot 303 25
·:c ..:·:c':.:·::cc·'"·"305 00
Out
Of
17
571
A
Ex
3
49A
Ex
3
49A
Wide X 94 X 103' 5"
16.01879 000
17 571A
46 5973A
1022 32
054A
.2 73
St1mmel James R 9 325A
16.01196 000
Kle1n
17.00180 001 Jones ............................ 167 85
&amp;/Or St1mmei Jeffrey
1S.011S5 002 Smith
Susan
Lyn
Dav1d !;tal c/o Dav1d
A c/o Joyce Ward
Kle1n Lot 100 1306· Lot t380 55112 OlfW Sec 16 T7N R14W James H Sac 19 T3N
1 526A Out Of 5 OOA R12W 2 OOA Out Of
307 1A E Of Hopkins
Side. • .. • 527 37
30 142A 2 OOA
lA
122 44
1 526A
137 62
16.01571 000 Therss
111 24
16.01710 001
Kiem , Matthew &amp; Jennifer 17-00861 002
1S.Q0265.000
Kostival
Jan
M
&amp;/Or
Kenneth
Ke1th
Lot 262-25 45A Se
Don
SacS T2N RI3W Lot
Part Of snckyard Lot Tamara L Sac 17 T7N Stephenson
17,
2S9 0.1301A Out Of
45A R14 5 021A Out Of Andrew Sect
185 112
2N,
R
12W,
Se
T
18217A
5021A
0 2504A
0 1301A
....................703 56
Comer t 15A Out Of
71S
.21 08
•
16.01948 000
2 29A 1 ISA 106 74
16.01993 001
Kle•n
Townsend
Helen 17.Q0037 000
Kenneth
Keith
Lot 185 35 N Side Kostival Jan M &amp;/Or 18.{)0484 000
SacS T2N R13W Lot
314 80 Tamara Lynn Sac 17 Stewart Roille D &amp;
•
C
Etal
T 7N R 14W Nwl/4 Shirley
288 0 OS31A Out Of
16.01949 000

scon

�Friday, Nol'elllber 24, 2006

www.mydailysenlinel.com

Page B6 • The Dilly Sentinel

'f:rtday, November 24, 2006

Chiefs, Dolphins winners on turkey day· National Scoreboard
KANSAS CITY, Mo.
(AP) - NA.. rushing leader
Larry Johnson made the
Denver Broncos' fifth ranked run defense look
ordinary.
Jol\nson ran for I 57 yards,
Lawrence 'JYnes kicked four
field goals and Kansas City
inaugurated the league's
new Thanksgiving tripleheader with a 19- 10 victory
over the Broncos on
Thursday night . · .
The Chiefs (74) charged
into a second-place tie with
Denver in the AFC West and
gave the Broncos (7-4) their
first two-game losing streak
since late in 2004.
Johnson·,
raising
his
league-leading rushing total
to 1,202 yards, consistently
burned the Broncos with 8.and 10-yard gains, using his
usual assortment of power
moves and start-a(ld-stop
elusiveness. The Broncos
came in giving up a shade
better than 90 yards per

Cheifs 19, Broncos 10

Dolphins 27, Lions 10

game on the ground.
Johnson
scored
the
Chiefs' only touchdown on a
! -yard vault late in the second quarter following a crucial mistake by the Broncos'
Ebenezer Ekuban, who was
called for roughing the passer on a failed third-and-4
play from the 9.
'JYnes hit from 24, 34, 29
and 21 yards for the Chiefs,
who ·have put themselves in

a strong playoff position by
shaking off a host of injuries
and winning five ofthelf last
six .
Dolphins 27, Lions 10
DETROIT (AP) - Joey
Harrington
played
on
Thanksgivi_ng in Detroit f?r
the fifth 11me. He had h•s
best game on the holida~,
pemaps because he doesn t
play for the Lions anymore.
Harrington threw three
touchdown passes to help
the Miami D9lphins erase a
10-point deficit and roll to a
27-10 victOI)' over Detroit.
The quarterback was
drafted third overall in 2002
by the Lions, who traded
h1m in May for a conditional
draft pick that could be a
fifth-rounder. ·
·
Harrington entered the
game 1-3 on Thanksgiving
with no TDs, five interceptions and an average of 153
· yards passing. In the first
half alone against his former
team, he threw for two

scores, an interception and
I 54 yards. Hanington finished 19 of 29 for a
Thanksgiving-high
213
yards, three TDs and an
mterceptlon.
Miami (5-6) has won four
strai~ht · doubling
Hamngton 's longest winning streak in any of his four
seasons in Detroit. The
Lions (2-9) dropped their
third straight in a game that
ended mu ch differently from
the way it began.
Detroit went ahead 10-0
on its first two drives and
held the Dolphins to 6 yards
on their first vossession.
· Harrington s second TD
pass put Miami ahead with
2:37 left in the first half and
his third made it 24-10 late
in the third.
Detroi t's Roy Williams
had five catches - all for
first downs - for II 0 yards
in the first quarter, then didn' t have another reception
until early in the fourth.

PRo FOOTBALL

-

N.eta • Foo4belll.M~Ue

Canes

Public: Notlc:e

Public NOtice

Public Notice

Lat6t............. 1111.35
1UOOIII.OOO
Sturgeon Dwight E
a/Or
Terri
L
Lot zs.............t603.0S

R12W .3891A Out Of
5.n5A .38!11A.253.37
1.00111.000
Phllllpa
~
E
15......... ~ ...........65.27

:liSA T2 R12 1.2631.
OUI Of 3.076A 1.2631.
...........................61.50
20-00.211.003 . Roush
RMidall TIOOA Lot m

worked to its detriment.
Boston College took a 7-0
lead midway through the
first quarter on Callender's
5•yard touchdown nin, and
the Hurricanes marched 64
yards on I 0 plays on the
Facing
ensuing . drive.
fourth-and - !
from
the
Boston College 12 - and in
·chip-shot range for kic.ker
Jon Peattie - Coker decided to keep his offense on the
field.
Most of the crowd 23,308, the smallest in
Miami's 44 home games
since Dec. 4, 1999 cheered the decision. They
booed the result, when
Freeman's screen pass to
James fell incqmplete and
Boston College took over
on downs.
More trouble awaited
Freeman later in the half,
when Tribble intercepted
him
on
consecutive
attempts deep in Miami ter~
ritory. The Hurricanes
escaped the first 'unscathed,
stopping Boston College in
four plays. but Tribble ran
the second back 22 yards
for a touchdown and a 14-3
Eagles lead with I :36 left
before halftime.
But Boston College ·s
double-digit lead was shortlived. The Hurricanes con-

nected on a rarity for them
this season - a big play.
Freeman found Ryan Moore
with a 49-yard pass, the
longest of Moore's career,
to set up a 7-yard scoring
toss to Lance Leggett with
I 0 seconds left that pulled
Miami to 14-10.
It was Miami's first home
game .since defensive lineman Bryan Pata was shot
and killed outside his apartment complex earlier this
month . The Hurricanes
introduced their senior.s
before the game, announcing Pata's name last - as
his white No. 95 jersey was
hoisted by two relatives on
the field and some team- .
mates pointed to a bann.e r
displaymg a photo of Pat:~
in the west end zone.
Boston College paid tribute·, too •. wearing Pata 's
number on the back Of their
gold helmets.
After the game, the
Hurricanes grabbed the Pata
banner, knelt around it at
midfield in prayer, then carried it off. Coker lingered ·
behind, hugging his seniors
and posing with them for
photos. Then he walked off
the field, stopping for a few
handshakes along the way
and slapping hands· with a
fan as he entered the tunnel.

NewEnglaM
N.Y. Jets

Miami

W
7
5
5

Help Wantlel

Pet PF PI'.
.700 236 131
.500 177 217
.455 197198
6 0 .400 164 201

4
South

Buffalo

W L T Pel PF PI'.

lndianapotis
Jad&lt;sonville
Tennessee

Houston

Cincinnati
Pittsoorgh
ClevelaM

Eat
W L T Pd

Philadelphia
Washington

Carolina

New Orleans
Atlanta

Tampa Bay

6 ~ 0 .600
6 4 0 .600
5 5 0 .500
. 3 7 0 .300

-

W
6
6
5

PF PI'.
224 208
27t 188
246 194

162237

T

Pet

PF PI'.

1 0 .900 282 120

4 6 0 .400 185 252

-

4

6 0 .400 "167 182

2

9 0 .182 195266

PF PI'.
203 219
182 265
202 236
t61 233

Sundoy'oa-to
Houston at N .Y. Jets. 1 p.m.
Arizona at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
New Orleans at Atlanta , 1 p.m.
Carolina at Washington. 1 p.m.
Pittsburgh et Balllmore, 1 p.m.
San Francisco at St. Louis, 1 p.m.
Jacksonvilte at Buftak), 1 p.m.
Cincinnati at Cleveland, 1 p.m.
Oakland at San Dlegv, 4 :05p.m.
N .Y. Giants at Tennessee. • :15 p.m.
Chicago at Now England, 4 :15p.m.
Philadelphia at Indianapolis, 8 :15p.m.

llonclor'o Gomo

National-~ Aoooclollon

EASTERN CONFERENCE

--wL

8

4

4
4
4

5
7
7
8

:i

Pet
.667
.&lt;W4

.364
.364

.273

Cennllllvtolon
WLPct
ClovelaM
8 4 .667
Detroit
7 5 .583
Indiana
6 6 .500
Milwaukee
4 8 .333
Chicago
3 8
.273

--ion

WESTERN CONFERENCE

1 tl2
1 112
2 112

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rI '=
Found·

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Fr~~~~~;;;;;!~ MECHI'.NICAL DESIGNER
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Huntington, wv .,..
Center
R&amp;D contractor seeks to
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poshions:
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clear background and US
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citizenship required. Email
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optnill&amp; in tb~ .ruil room.

bo•er

w/cho!«tr collar, Owl Hollow
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Friday
17th,
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2115. Sue's Greenhouse.
FOUND: Female Siamese
cat. very friendly on Sa ndhill
GIVFAWAV
Ad. (304)675-3035

1'\!:1 'loltof.

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(304)937 3348

r

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Free ,' mixed breed puppies

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10 weeks old.
Good
natured. 740-992-5275.
~

YARDSI.u:

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Phoenix at Minnesota, 2 p.m .
Pittsl&gt;Jrgh at N.Y. Iaiande"'· 2 p.m.
New Jel'98y at Anaheim, 4 p.m.
Toronto at Washington, 7 p.m.
StLouis at Detroit, 7:30p.m .
onawa at Aoridl.. 7:30 p.m .
Montreal at Buffalo, 8 p.m.
Allanla at Tampa Bay, 8 p.m .
Los Angeles at oanas, 8:30p.m.
Chicago at Edmorrton. 9 p.m .

a-

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3 female house trained cats, LOST: Border Collie, New
declawed &amp; liner t~alned . To Haven area. Answers to
good homes only (304)882· Tipper. Reward. ·{304)882·

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12 8 1 25 63 56
, 11 1 23 54 62
10 8 2 22 55 46
10 10 2 22 67 64
15 2 6

Oaliy ln&lt;olumn: L:OO. p.m.
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WESTERN CONFEIIENCE

Vanoower

PRo BASKETBALL

e

Gallia
County
OH

OMolon
WL OTPtsGFGA

Minnesota

at Seattle. 8:30 p.m.

AtlantiC Dlvlakln
W L
Pet
New Jersey
5 6 .455
4 7
.364
Boston
Philadelphia
4 7 .364
New York
4 9
308
Tqronto
3
.273

aa ;

.727
.000
.583
.500
.455

WL OTPtsGFGA

Miami 27, IJetro+t 10
Tampa Bay at Dallas, 4:15 p.m.
Kansas City 19. Denver 10

Charlotte

~

Pet

PRo HocKEY

Thumoy'o Gomoa

Orlando
Atlanta
Miami
Washington

Wl
8 3
6 4
7 5
5. 5
5 6

6

5 112
5 112

F&lt;ldaf'o -

L T Pet PF PI'.
4 0 .600 176173

W L T Pet
6 4 0 .800
Seattle
Sen Francisco 5 5 0 .500
4 6 0 .400
St. Louis
2 6 0 .. 200
Arizona

Green Bay

4 6

4

.411:!
.411:!
.400

Toronto at Mlanta. 7:30p.m .
Orlando at Miar"i. 7:30 p.m .
. Now Yor1&lt; at Boston, 7:30 p.m .
1 Cllicago at Philadelphia, 7:30 p.m.
I Dallas at San l'.ntonlo, 8 p.m .
Washington at Memphis. 8 p.m .
C - n d at IndianA. 8 p.m.
Char1otte at Detroit, 8 p.m .
Minnesot'""" New Orleans. 8 p.m .
LA. Lakars at Utah, 9 p .m.
Golden State at Denver, 9 p .m.
. New Jorsey at Phoenix, 10:30 p.m .
Sacramento at~ 10:30 p.m .

4 0 600 2&lt;5 228
5 0 .500 190205
3 7 0 .300 132214

9

Chicago
Green Bay
Minnesota
Detroit

Seatlle
Mmnesota

o .soo

W L T Pet • PF PI'.
8 2 0 .800 332 202
San Diego
7 4 0 .636 229 205
Kansas City
7 4 0 .636 195 165
Denver
QakiAM
2 8 0 .200 118 196
NA110NAL ~RENCE

Dallas

-6 7
6 7

CLASSI-FIE·D

GB

.eoo

6 4

-

N.V.Giants

9
.182
NNuo
...
l-otltWL
Pd
1, 1
Jll7

, 0 .900 263 210
4 0 .600 211 137
3 7 0 .300 177256 . LA l.8ioMS
3 7 0 .300 165 230 L.A. Clippers
Golden State
W L T Pet PF PI'.
Sacromento
2
222 t47 Phoenbo
5 5 0 .500 247 233

4 6 0 .400 239 227
3 7 0 .300 170 208

2
2
2 1/2
7 1/2

.fl/67

2

9
6

a

SattlmOre

Utah
DenYef
Portland

.667
.636

.833

4

tltrtbune - Sentinel-

GB

Applicant must haw •
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8l~ Third A'Yeftut.
Gallipolis, Ollio •~.Jl

POST OFFICE NOW

HIRING
Avg. Pay S20Jhr_or
$57K annually
·
Including Federal Benefits
and OT,Paid Training,
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Ret. #P8923

Unit Manager Position

Help Wanted

BLOOD BANK
SEOlON

~

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3 0
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Mempllis

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· For fast results. advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

1a-otl070.000
19-40310.000
R12 1.538A Out Of ;=~===:;;;=====~
Sturgeon Dwight E Phllllpa
E T2
1.813A
1.538A
Wr
TerTI
L Lot22. .............. 537.13 ............................75.47
Lot :1.6 Ex 11' E ..19.33 1.00113.002
20-«&lt;S40.000 Roush
1a-otl071.000
Shut.r-., E Wr Randall T Lot 2N
Slurgeon Dwight E Ruth
G 25X147' Of .42A W Line
&amp;/Or
Terri
L 100A Lat. t278 T2 R12 Of Millon I Sarah
Lot a .....:...........21.o1
l'k:Dt• Eat. .SOA Out Roush ·
.oeA
u-c ~ n
1 I • 0 1 3 1 8 . 0 0 0 Of &amp;.4151A
.50A .............................3.74
lu:JUI
Wlcldlnti Sheila J .......................3218.68
21H10542.000
Rouah
Sac!. I, T.2,R.12, Nw
Randall
T1.o1 293 Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
Cor. Of 2IIOA lalt1215
20-SyracuM
70X100' OU1 Of .42A
seeking a full time Blood Bank Section
&amp;A Of 75A
&amp;A
VIllage
.16.\..................373.77
Soulhem LSD
2Q.00543.000
Rouah Head. Three year.; experience preferred.
........................1678.56
1HOIOIOOt Young
-Tloi291PIOI Bachelor.; degree in Medical Technology.
Glen
F
Jr 20-00130.000
1.541. 5 Of Blairs Ex WV License, Holidays, health insurance
Sac! &amp;T2 R12160A Lot Darin 1.215 50' Sq. S Of Parcel
Sold
single/family plan, dental plan, life
t1117 1A Out Of 1 To 102
.o&amp;A ..........................311.75
8......................162.00 . .............................2.78
»00541.000
Roush insurance, vacation, long term disability
)O-G013t.OOO
. , _ Randall T. Lot 2N and retirement
19 Rllclne
O.rln L Lot 102 Being Pan Of .67 N Send resumes to:
VHitlge
......... ,................ 188.84 .25A..................263.79
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Soulhem LSD
20-G0443.000
20-00118.000
C/o Human Resources
Compton Ramona K Sheppllld AniUI K
1M0044.000
213 Se PM1 0U1 Of 2N
.256A
2520 Valley Drive
Collins
Joann
L 3.578A EM! 1121.561A .......................1..1.51
Point Pleasan~ WV 25?50
10 H. Add. ........737.50 Ex
.778A' - 7 9.000
Or
fa•:
1HOOII.OOO
.713A .............. 1774.25
Whlllock Delores F
304-675-6975
G - Bruce H IIOr 20-00140.000
Ell8p 41 6' N End ........52.40
J Cttar1ea 110r Clwlel• -71.000
Dobra
Or apply online at:
40 301'1. fall • End Lot 3 Bamngan Add Whl11ock Deloroa F
www.pvalley.org
..........................298.34 ............................63.30' 56........................42.92
1.00138.000
20-00t41.000
Ell-.. - 7 2.000
G - Bluce H IIOr Cllariel &amp;/Or Charlene . Whl11ock Delores F
AA/EOE
Debra
J Lot
37 57 .......................17.60
31 Ek. 22' Off S Side ........................ 1to5.18
...........................31.29 20-00142.000
Ell-.. And notice Is hereby
1H0156.000
Cttar1ea IJOr Charlene given - ! h e - of
~ Bluce H IIOr 37
25X50'
S such - a l tracls,
J End .....................32.67 or parts of lois,
Dobra
Landing In Front 1129 - - 0 0 0
Eslep will be certHied for
..............................3.56 Challes IIOr Charlene fo.reclooure by the
1.00157.000
38 Barringer'S Add. county Auditor pur·
.G - Bruce H· ~ ..........................233.42 - t o law, forfel1·
Debr1l
J 2CHJ0518.000
eel, to !he State, unless
accepted untll4:311 pm
40 All Ercepl 311' E Hu,... John Ray IIOr the laxes, assess- PUBLIC NOTICE
End. ..................156.91 v 1 o
1 a
t menlo, and penal1iea The Board of Trustees on November 311, 2006.
of Letart Township, Supervisory
and/or
1.00158.000
Lot 297 75X100' E Part -paid.
will
Meigs
County,
medic
background
G - Bruce H IIOr Se
Of
E
Jones IMary T. Byer-HNI
Full-time
Debra
. J .17A..................903.6t Auditor
of
Meigs occept sealed bids on preferred.
Ford
Oump
Truck
11188
position.
Salary
com29 Tri. W Part Of 28' 2CHJ05V3,DOO
KimeS County, Ohio
until
5:00
pm
at
office
mensurate
with
experiN.
I
60' Scon 0 ~r Lori L (11) 17, 24
FIOitl
of Clerk . at Joyce ence and quallflca........................... 12.12
Lot 111...............47.42
r--=,---. ·White,
49916 Manuel llons. Please .send
11-00579.000
2CH105M.OOO
Klrnea
~
Rd. on Dec. 4, 2006. At resume to:
. . _ Bruce H IIOr Scon D &amp;/Or Lori L
which tlme bids will be Meigs
County
Debra J Part Of Lot...., Lot112. .............287.15
opened.
Truck
will
be
Commissioners
62'
E
End
Ex 2CH10595.000
KIIMI
sold as Is, Trustees Court House
30' .......................45.65 Scou D &amp;/Or Lori L
reserve the right to 100 East
Second
1H0248.000
. Hart Lot t13...............55.57
acc,pt
and/or
reject
3111
Street,
Suite
Paula L lot 79 42' S 2CHJCMI5.000
any and all bids.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Slde:.................522.54 Lowery Alan Thqmas
247-3125
EOE
1H0241.000
&amp;/Or
Deborah
A
(11) 17, 21 , 24
(11) 17, 21 , 22, 24
Harl
Pauls
L Lot 56 10' On W End Of
Lot ao S 112... :.. .26.23 · Lot 56 C.rleton 2Nd
11-00014.000
Add. ............12.&amp;6
Public Notice
Lellaalar C.rlie D ~.000
23 E 1/2............ 124.79 Lowery Alan Thornu
PUBLIC 'NOTICE
t 8-00252.000
&amp;/or
Deborah
A
... THE
EMSOirector
McFann
Kenneth Lot 57 C.rleton 2Nd
NEw.s"R4P£R
The Meigs County
Brackan (640) l 0.47A Add .................1455.80
HAS
Commissioners
are
W PI t4 Racine Ex.Lots 2CHJCM97.000
SQMETHING
accepting appiiealions
4.35A .396A Of 6.63A Lowery Alan Thomas
FOR YOU!!
for the position of
.
3
9
6
A 1/0r
Deborah
A
Director
of
Meigs
Lot 58 C.rletons 2Nd
.........................332.00
County
Emergency
1~ .002 .
AdcL .................63.23
medical
Syalems.
McFann
Kenneth 20-00219.002 . Rouah
Appllcalions
will be
Bracken Sect 16 T2 Randall Tl OOA Lot

or

-

A11ENCAH &lt;:&lt;IIIRIIENCE

W L

And the Eagles could
have used another one of his
storybook finishes . But
Boston College quarterback
fromPageBl
Matt Ryan was intercepted
by Glenn Sharpe w1th 2: I 9
clearing brawl and a litany left, and Miami held on.
of injuries, something final Coker insisted he was
ly went Coker's way.
happiest for his players DeJuan Tribble had three especially the seniors.
Interceptions, returning one
·~This wasn' t anything for
for a touchdown for Boston me, this was for them. It's
College (9-3, 5-3)- which been a very emotional
saw its hopes of winning the roller-coaster at times,"
ACC championship end. Coker said. "We'll talk after
The Eagles' loss means the the season and ·we' II get a
of
Saturday's state-of-the-program and
winner
Maryland-Wake
Forest then we 'II go from there."
game will meet Georgia
Miami rallied from a 14-3
Tech on Dec. 2 in the deficit, held the Eagles to 25
league's title' game.
yards rushing on 24
Andre Callender had a 5- attempts and beat a ranked
yard touchdown run for the foe for the first time in six
Eagles, who were ·denied tries this year.
their first 10-win regular
James had 20 carries for
season in 66 years.
45 yards, including the
It was Boston College's plunge that put Miami up
15th straight loss in the. · 17-14 midway through the
series; its last win coming third quarter and gave the
exactly 22 years earlier Hurricanes their first lead in
when Doug Flutie's miracle nearly four full games - a ·
pass was caught by Gerard span of 231 minutes, 53 secPhelan as time expired and onds dating to the Georgia
the Eagles escaped the Tech game ori Oct. 28.
Orange Bowl with a 47-45 · The Hurricanes' offense
win.
sputtered· from there - but
Flutie was back at the sta- it didn't matter.
dium Thursday for the first
Miami canied a nothingtime, part of the broadcast to-lose attitude into the
crew.
game -. which, at times,

~"!""io
j~
~·

Wl
10 2

The DMiy Sentinel • Page 87

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Announcement ............................................ 030
Anliquea ....................................................... 530
Aparlments for Rent .. .. ............................... 440
Auction .nd Flea Morket... ..........................080
Auto Parts I Acceseorles .......................... 760
, Auto Repllr .................................................. no
Autos lor Sale .............................................. 710
Boola I Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Building Suppllea ........................................ 550
11v11ness ond Bvlldings ............................. 340
Opporlunlty.................................210
Business Training ............... ,....................... 140
C.mpen I Motor Homes ........................... 790
Cemplng Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Thlnlca ..........................................01 0
Child/Elderly C.re ....................................... 190

au..._,

ElectrlciiiRelrlgeratlon ....... .................:...... 840
Equipment for Renl ................... ,.................480
Excavlllng ................................................... 830
Fll'lll Equlpment ..... ..................................... 610
· f81'1ft8 tor Rent. ............................................ 430
Forma torSale ............................................. 330

" Fort...--..................................................... 410
ForSale ........................................................ 585
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590

FnAIUII Vagetablu ..................... :............... 580
Fumlahed Roorna ........................................ 450
Ganeral Haullng........................................... 850

Gtveaway .....................................:................ 040
Happy Ada.................................................... 050
Hay I Gnoln .. ................................................640
Help Wonled ................................................. 110
Home lmpro.-1111...................................810
Homes for Sale ............................................310
HouMhold Gooda ....................................... 510
Houses for Renl ....;..................................... 410
In ~m ................................................ 020
lnluronoe ..................................................... 130
&amp; Garden Equipment ......:.................. 660

uwn

L l - k ......................................................630
Lost and Found,.......................................... 060
Lotsl~ ............................................350
M~neous .............................................. 170
Ml-llaneoua Men:tt.and ....;....................540
Mobile Home Repalr....................................880
MobNe Homes tor Rent ............................... 420
Moblla Hornealor Sale ................................320
Money IO loan ............................................. 220
Molorcyclu &amp; 4 Whaelera .......................... 740
Mualclllnllrumenta ................................... 570
Parsonoio ..................................................... 005
Pals lor Solo ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Hoatlng .................................... 820
Prot.alonll Servlclo ................................. 2311
""""'TY &amp; CB a-•lr
.............................
:.160
~,
~
.
360
Real Ellllta wanted .....................................
Schoolllnotructlon.....................................150
Seed , Plant I FertiliZer .. ,........................... 650
Slw.tlonl wanled ....................................... 120
SpKe for Renl ............................................. 460
Spor1lng Qoodo ........................................... 520
SUV'o
Sall.............................................. 720
Trucks for Sale ............................. ,.............. 715
Uph01~ ................................................... 870
For Sale ..............................................730
Wanted lo Buy ............................................. 090
Wan1ed to Buy- fll'lll Supplies .................. 620
Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
Wanted to Rent ............................................470
Yanl Sale- Gelllpol'-....................................072
Yard Sale Pon•oy/Middle ......................... 074
Vald Sale-Pl. P.....nt ................................ 07&amp;

for

· v.n.

Cross Creek Auction BuffalO
Auction Saturday Chustma s
Sa le Toys. CraftSman Tools.
A.lr Compresso r. Generators
&amp; Much More. Building is full
as always. Door Prizes.
Seating lor 200 Visa and
Master Card (304) 550·

1616

~~~~;;--,

t..------_.1
..,

Materials provided.
Free Information pkg. 24Hr. .
801-428-4649
-------An E~ecellent way to earn
money. The New Avon .
Call Marilyn 304~882-2645

EOE

-------Computer instructor needed. Must be MS word ;
Excel , and PowerPoint
knowledge8Qie and possess
a bachelor's degree in relatAVON! All Areas! To Buy or ed field. E-mail resume to
'rl
•~304
eII . Sh I ey ~rs .
. jdanickiCgallipolisca reer~
6_7_5_·1-429_
. - - - - . . , - co llege.com or fa~~: to 740·

s

44 &amp;1f 124

CASE MANAGER needed in
Mason
County,
WeatVirglnla
provide
case
manage-' _ _ _FE
_ DE
_ R
_A_L__

10

Absolute Top Dollar : U.S. men! services, imake and
Silver and Gold Colks, assessment, develop action
Proofsets. Gold Rings, Pre- plal'lS. classroom Instruction
1935
U.S
Currency, and workshops , follow-up
M.t .S.
d da
t
p r8Yious
·
Solll.l·re D'amonds·
,
an
Ia en ry.
Coin Shop, 151 Second case ma'nagement
Avenue, Gallipolis, 74().4416- ence and a SA required In
2842.
Human Services or relatad
, - --..,-::--:-..,--:- fiel d
Plea se submit
Buying Junk Cars, Trucks &amp; resume with cover letter and
Wred&lt;s , Pay Cash J D sal ar y requirements to
Salvage
(304)773·5343 bmonterossgO rpfud ea rn·

e~~:perl·

a

~

POSTAL JOBS
$15 .67~$26 . 19/hr., now hlr·
lng. For application and tree
j·• .
II
governement vu In1o, ca
American Assoc. of Labor 1·
913-599-804.2 , 24/hrs. emp.
serv

"I H\ I• t ..

LEARN
TO DRIVE
· ~'ULL·TIME C.ASSEs•
• COL TR~NING"
• ~~~~~~NCING ,I,VAIL.AtlLE"
• JOB l&gt;l,ACEIJEt.'T' '

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR·TA~IL[A

TRA NING CENTERS

1-800-334-1203
Dommo's Plzta Now H1nng
Sate
Drivers
Pom!
Pleasant,
GelhCOiiS
&amp;
Pomeroy locations App l~ 1n
Pe rson

•Uniform Allowance
.
•Health/Dental/Lite Ins.
•Disability Insurance
•HolidayNacatiOn Pay
•401k (afle r 1 yoar)
Please stop by and see
C
us at 380
Olonial
Drive, 8 1dwell, Ohio or

~~ ~:~a~h~~~·~

Oirec1or

of

~:~~'::oo~

Human
call at

alii package (pay based on
average of five hour5 per
day $12..77 to $1580 per
hour) and substitute posi·
lions {$55 .00 · p~r day) wllh
the Galli&amp; County Soard of
MA/DD
transporting
enrol lees
who
attend
GUiding Hand School andGallco
Workshop.
Qualifications· Current bus
dr1ve,r physical , abstract
COL with Class B enoorse·
ment background ched(
and SOhool bJS certification
certificate. Applications are
available at the Guiding
, Hand School. 8323 North
SR 7, Cheshire , Ohio
45620. The Game County
BoardofMA/DD1sanEqual
· E t
0 pporl unity
mp oyer

'Ainufacturer hit 1
potnion lr\laltable tor
Onltn
Engineer.
Muld have 81 lent 2
years er.pt~rlencl In
menutoclurlng doolgn
1ni knowlldvNble In
Auto Cod. A)ll&gt;ly In
peraon lit:

SfS Truc:l&lt; SNI
2150 Eastern Ave
Gallipolis, OH

R&amp;J TRUCKING
Leading The Way

729·25.
45769

Pomei'Oy

Oh

Help wanted at Darst Group
Home, work.tng w!th elderly,
heavy lifting uwolved 740·
992·5023

COMUctlng the Gallla SWCD
conservation education and
public information programs
as directed· by the Board of
Supervisors.

Will do House Cleaning a
coupie days a
Good
References (304)675-2208

Week.

Will take care of the Elder1y
In their home, have 11 ~ears

Minimum qualifications are CICperience ca ll (30 4)675 an Associate degree In such 3264

1

tields as Interpretation. r:1'l0:;:"~~~--CARE':':"
· _..,.;..~··.,,
Fores1ry, Wildlife. Natural
Resources or Educat1on.
Basic computer skills are
required. E~~:cellenl oral and Overnight with elderly Lady.
written commumcation st&lt;ills Call 740-992-2334
ere r&amp;.(lUired.

riO

The Educollon ~...
position will be located in
Gallia
SOil
&amp; Wate r
Conservation District Office
tn Gallipolis, Ohio. St~ rting
salary depends upon educa·
tlon and eiCperlence. Benefit
pad&lt;age Included.

A valid driver's license is
req uired .
A background
check and security clearance will be required. A
more detailed Job descriplion and application are
available upon request.
Questions may be directed

~

OPPotm._,'T\.m '

1,~--iiliiiiiiiiiiiil...r'

Ear Stapling &amp; Tralnlitg for
Weight LOI$, O&amp;c. 1 In

Gallipolis By appointment.

Call (931 )728-4438

•NOTIC E•
OHIO VALLEY PU BLI SH·
lN G CO. recommends
that you do business with
people you know. and
NOT to send money
throUgt11he mail until you
have investigatee! the

F.

----"'11

,a

Ianoe. We

.i

Equal Opportunity
Employer

l!;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;!;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;tl
LABORERS
Outdoor Fencing Profec1
Up to

51

51hr

LabOrers will be required to
lift up to 100 lbs. and worK
outside
during
winter
months for th1s pro ject. This
Is a temporary project ;
e~~:pecte(j to last apprC»ci·
mately 3 months start1ng In
December. Candidates wittl.
prior construction work
experience
preferred .
SJno+ting is prohib~ed 11 this
works~&amp;. CMI&gt;ar background
arld US citizenship requ•red
Call to reques1 appliCAtion.

rr;:=:;==:::::=.=.=:::;t

10. Otil'f Sen1inel PQ b

Conservation DistriCt cur·
rently has a posit1on avail· U SAVE heating, cooling &amp;
able
for
Education water heaters. Will woric: on
all models 15 years experiCoordinator.
ence . 24 hf_service, will beat
This position is to prcwide anyone's price (740)388leadership in developing and 9039

Terminal . For Regional
to Jennifer Hamson, District 'oll
;••:in:g:;~===~
Manager, at 446·6173.
1!!:
Hauls-Dump Div. 1 year
OTA
Mo"H
Gompleted application and
loAN
ve rifiable exp
10
Call 1-800-462-9365 ask for resume wittl references · - - - - - - ·
must tle received at the
Kent
Distnct Office at 111 . .- -...
Jackson Pike. Su~a 1569.
**~OTIC::E**
RN UNIT SUPERVISOR . Gallipolis, OH 45631 : by
ROCKSPRINGS REHABILI - December 6, 2006 at 4.30 Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio DIVISion Of
TATION C ENTER. is a lead- P.M.
Financial
Institution's
ing provider of sub-acute,
Office
ol
COnsumer
rehabilitative. shorHerm.
and long-term healthcare: We have 550 acres in Pt Affa1rs BEFORE you refi·
Aocicsprings Rehabilitation Pleasant area, need some nance your home or
is currently accepting appli· land clearing, (bush hog) . obtain a loan. BEWARE
cations tor eKperlenced Mus1 have four wheel drive . of requesls for any large
R
d
advance payments of
N's
to
ad
our Appradmately .one months
Management Team. We are wort&lt;. Call between 9 to 5 to fees or insuranCe. Call the
looking for taNI'nted-indlvidu-- 1_.. at job l'"')n6.5656
Oftice
of
Consumer
uun
oAr"!
Affa irs toll free at 1·8S6·
als who have good team·
~
----·~ "
building, slrong clinical and
...,
~
278-0003 to learn if the
system skills, and 8 sincere .1 . . . .l!iii!'!'!iiiillRiiiliCTJOiiiii-N0..-1 mortgage broker or
commitment to perforiT)ance ...,
lender
is
properly
· Improvement and e~ecel- COncealed ·Pistol Class Dec. licensed. (This Is a publtc
arE:~ offering all 9, 2006, Christmas Special.' service annQuncement
8!Wellent salary .and benefit $50.00.
9·00sm. VFW from the Onio Valley
pack age to Individuals wt1o
Ma1100 WV. (740)843·5555.
have a demons1rated record 740-416·3329
of success. Interested can·

AlOe . Must have a knowl·
edge of basiC off1oe prooeciJres, wlthacompassiOr.ale
phone manf18r, also having
a knowledge of elder care
and programs available.
Gellla County Council on
Ag ln;l Senior Resource
Cemer ls currently accepting
applications br the position
of STNA. CNA, HHA. Must
have valid drivers license
and be and insurable risk.
Gallla COunty Couneil on
UTAON- AshtM . WV
Aging I•, an EOE . Apply866-231-2476
Senior Resource Center,
1165 State Route 160.
Gallipolis.
01-1
45631 .
LOCIII m•nut.cturlng
Phone : 740-«6-7000 .
company haa a poet·
r-:-:
H-::an::ds:-:on~W:::Otk:::::l:-ng:;-,
tton
evellable
ror
f n d u atr I a I
Manager
Na l nttnance .
Previous 01' current man·
·agement
experience
App~leant must po•
required. Local restaurant.
salary &amp; benefns equal to
e•periBOCe. Send reil.lrne

A&amp;J Trucking now Hiring at
our New Haven. WV

Nurs~ , 13yrs. will g1va hOme
care to you or your loved
one, In your home M~F, 9aThe Gallla Soil and Water 4p. Coli i740)388-1828.

:;Pu~b=lish
;ln:g:C:om:p:a:ny=)=~

i.ng,.gun.

au.

I \ 11'111\ \ 11 '\I

•Ae~tular rate increase

Gallla County Counc1I on
Resource
Aging/SeniOr

E(lual Cemer is currently accep11ng
~-'----::--::c-c::- Opportun ity/Program
- applications for the position
YOUNG FARM FAMILY Auxiliary 4ids and Services of Nutrition I"\'ld eI !"ilea
u
I
WITH 14YAS GRAZING
M ha
lid
are 81\18ilable upon request: Transporter. u5l ve va
EXPERIENCE wanting to Voice and T.Y.Y. l·B00-639- drivers lloanse and be an
buy 1SO+ acres o1 open
insurable risk. Needs to
3777
ground to continue a grazing
assist In food preparation.
clean up and be a daily meal
livestock operation, prefer·
ably in the athens/me1gs co.
Certified
Driver
driver.
•
area. House &amp; bulldln~ not
Gallia County Council on
necessary. EKcellent finan· Applications
are be ing Aging/ Senior f4esource
c1alloperatlonal references accepted lor Certifiecl Bus Center Is currently accepting
available. Pleas contact Bill Drivers tor a full-time 9 applicetiOns for the positiOn
Krusling (740)634-2732.
montl'l position with full Den· of $enior Support/ Resource
(30ol)674-1 374

lf yo~ are interested in
joining our Resident
Centered Nursing Team
we have a fun time
opening for a Unit
Manager. We are a 70
bed long term care
nursing facility located
about halt a mile from
Holzer Medical Center
in
Gallipol is
Unit
M a n -a g e r
Requirements: AN with
one year of geriatriC
expenenee preferred.
we offer competitive
wages and Employment
benefits Including:
•Experience pay

VACANCY

ANNOUNCEMENT

.... good mechlnleal
and electrical tklllt.
Appty In ~n at:

SFS Truct&lt; SNt

2150 E8ltem Avt
Genlpoll:s, OH

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
'---'------'

~AI .

dida\es should apply 10 : Golllpalll Co- Colllgl
(Careers Dose To Home) ..._
.x.K" n...~
Aoctc;springs Rehabilitation
Center, 36759 R""".,nnngs Call Today! 740-446-4367.
......._,...
1-800-214·0452
TURNED DOWN ON
Road ,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
._,g~~lkpOIIIcr!r"rcol•,com
SECURITY /S$11
SOCIAL
45769. Extendicare Health
Acct.Oitlld M•mbtlr ~credHing
No Fee Unless We Wlnl
Sarv1C8S If'(:. MJF DN
Council tor ind&amp;ptnolnl Coi~DQM
1-886·58.2·3345
al'ld Schoo~~ 1a7•B
1.: I \ I I "' I \ II
Rockspr ings rehabilitation tc.me prl'lllta and group
Center provides reSidents lnatructlon. Booka, unl·
HoMES
with outstanding nursing fonnt , aupplln,
Don
FORS.oJ.E
cafe ana rehabilitation servo · Blntanga'a Martial Ai1t
ices helping them return to a Center,
(7C0)992·5715
1 1f2 story Cape Cod 4
life of mdependence at Open Dilly
home. We currently have ..:__ _. : _ _ _ _ _ years Old. 3 bedr Ooms. 2
opportunities for LPN'S at Nursing Assistant Classes t/2 baths large tront porctl
our faci lity located in beginning Novemoer 27th . apprOJ: 5 acres located on
Pomeroy. Ohio We off e 2006. If you enjoy elderly Flatwoods Rd. , Pomeroy
competitive salary scale. arr people and want to become Dtl o
Asl&lt;lng 5160,000
BKcellent benefit pacto:age a membe' of our health care 7 40·9~2·41 96
and 8 suppon1118 work envi· team . please stop b~
rornem.
Interested candi· Aoclc:spr 1ngs Rehabilitat ion 1997 b1· tevel house 2 car
et
36759 garage 7 acres. 3 B1. 2
dates should apply to Center
~ockspnngs Rehabilitation Rocksprings
Road bath. 40X20 pole barn
Center, 36759 Rocksprings Pomeroy, Ohio 4-5769 and fill 12X20 deck oon haat pu'Tlp
Road.
Pomeroy,
Ohio out af) application tor the mergsl Galh~ iine S, 40,00C
4b769. Extendicare Heahh
Services, Inc Is an equal
opportunity employer that
encourages
workplace
diversl1y. MIF ON

classes
EJCtend1car~
Heahh Services. Inc. 15 an
equal opportunity employe r
that encourages workplace
c:HverM~ MIF DN

, - - - - - - - - - ltii
Super 8 Motel now hrnng for
a part time brealcfast bar
attendanl Must be an early
mornmg person with BKcel,
lent custo mer servtcfl skills
Please appty ,, person No
Phone Celts

W\~'I'ID

Aal•tK Living In "'W
Homellllrtlng at
S25.00 per day.
(7.ta.-.ot 111

200~

Skyl•ne ~or 2ba
H·acrt! LR 1FR , K•tchen
Dm1ng Room Must Sel l
ASA P
onll
S65 000·

1 ·13041593·0852

---Tiio-Doiilo-.-1

1,.

Call 740 · " 42 · 11~

3 bedroorr home tor sale on
laM con:ra.ct
740 1388
8228

- - - - , -- - -

3 Btotdroorri
"lou~r I'
Pomerc, Atve r .,,ev.. Oft
rna1n read S26 000 Land
contreC! p~sstOie ...,·rm dowr
Wei,.. needed tor
Elderly Care expertenced paymem. t740)992-2593
local mant..tiiiCturer.
and rete rlences. 9pm to
Muat apply In pemm . Sam. Sunday !hru Friday. Beautiful Home Ofl Ceaar St
Wrsp-around porch 3BFI
01:
call Mary 1740)985·4282 ,
1 SBa. turmshed lo:itchen
SFSTiuct&lt;S..
OR L R Den. FP ou1·bu~d·
Eastern
Ave
Geor~·s
Portable
Sawmill.
2150
dol"!~ tlaul vour Logt; to the 1ng $• lS ,O:JQ ('41))44 64639
. . . . GI.IN·po-llo
.
..
. O.H. . M'IIJuSI ca11304-675 1957

�www.mydailysentinel.toni

The Daily Sentinel • Page 89

frlay, November 24, 2006

NEA Cro81word Puzzle

BRIDGE
2003 161&lt;80, Flee1wood.
3BR, 2BA, vinyl siding, shingle roof, central air lnctuded.
nice Kome. Ca!l for pricing.
Day11me
1"0)388-0000,
Even1ng
1740)388-8017,
•53 Roush ln. Cheshire, Ce11 1740)645.S150 6, 14 &amp;
16 wtde's to choOSe from
ONo.

3 Bedroom. 1.5 Bath, living,
Otnlng, l&lt;ilchen, Laundry,
Utility, Sunroom, 1 Car
au.chla &amp; 161&lt;24 garage,
, 10K16 buiktlng. Call for more
' lntomlati9fl. (740)367-7411.

i..oclj """""'"~' alforlng "NO
DOWN I¥.VIAENr pro·
grams tor you to buy ,our •2&amp;S bedrOOm ap~nments
t10m0 Instead or renting.
•Gentl'all hMt &amp; AIC
• 1OO'Ib financing
-.p
• Loss lhan potlocl etedl1

·-dryef

--

·~~- ovo111ging

accopted
• Payment could be the

3 bedroom, 2 bath, with fire- QeluMe 3 BR, 2 bath mobile same as rent
plaol, 40rii0 barn. RIO home with commerctel type Mortgage

Reg. -

•CMner PIYS w.ter, IMtfef,
Locators.

Phillip

CKC Bauot Hound puppies, 3 mo. old, shots &amp;
wormed
$150.
CKC
Breeding polr $300. CKC
lomaie 10 mo. $150. CKC
black Pug 2 y1S Old 1150.
Call tor mor. lflformatlon
(740)SIINS27.

EHmvtew
Afwibuentl

Alcter·

Norih

'R&lt;Moll 3 rod·

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONmLY OXYGEN VISITS ·.

-(740)31&amp;-2439.
- · 12 ..... $200.

Grande area. On 8 t~t aces. building in Crown Ctty. (740)367-()000
(31MJI82-3017
$120,000. 1740)709-1 166
(740)25€Hl753.
Shlrplo puppies, no popors,
Clean &amp; Nice 2dr. COntrol
$200, 741HK12-91 05 or
"' rental houses "For Sale. For sale 1990 traMer 14 X Heat.
Efficient,
(740)992-8070
Good income producing 70, 2 bedroom, 2 batl'l, all Co1W8nlentty located . Ref...
properties. Great location! naw applla1Ces. kf1chen Dep., No Pets. (304)675·
Price(S) are · N'egotiable. cabinets. water heater &amp; 5162 .
·
Uotl~ated
Seiter'
In carpet Front and be~
-------. GallipOlis. Call Wayne porches, gas furnace , • ir For Rent: Beautiful O!J1Ctl
(-404~56-3802 .
conditioned. Price lnclur:les Colonial
House,
Pt.
washer
and
dryer. Pleasant, 7 rooms, 2 tull
5 Room House with Battt 2
·
tla1hs, stove. refrigerator,
$15,000.00 Call 740-949·
lots, $28 ,000 Leon area
forced•lr furnace, air-oondi·
Phone (304)674·0132
~ 305 ·.
tioned. $650/mbnth call

e

Pomercry

near High School.
3
Bedroom, $325.00 rnon11l, Twin Rivers Tower Is oocopt·
deposit '740-992-417:11740- lng appllca11ons l&lt;ir wsltfng
992-2458.
list for Hud·subsiZed, 1- br,
675-6679
Nk:e 3BR. t bmh, oentOllalr, apartment.
E
Housi call""""
,,
1
Slovelrelrlg turn .. 1 yr lease, qua
ng v..,.nun,,,_

r

u..
'

f

REAwi:~TF.

I
"::~

.

oath HUOI 4"k dn, 30 yrs. 0
acto. For listings 800·559·
4109 ext. 1709

All reel estate advertising

In thl1 newspaper Is
IUbtect 10 the Fedentt
Fair Houalng Act of 1968

wtwch make• It Illegal to
advertise "any

preterence.llmltation or
dltcrlmimltion based

Of'l

race, COlor, religion, ~~~
famllt.l 118tus or national

origin, or •ny intentkm to
rnttl:e 1ny such
pn!ference, limitation or
dl.crimln~~tion ."

-ngly-

lbla MWapapet will not

......,.....,..torreel
..... Whk:lh tt 1ft
vJolatlon of the law. Our
~ .,.

herwby

Informed rnat all
d..Ulngs advelflsed in
this

new~~p11par ar11

neillble on an equal
opporlunlty ba....

~Br~k

Ranch

style Home, setting on 2 t/2
Must see to
Appreciate. Reduced Price
tor quick Sale. Moving out of
Sta1e.(304)675-4235

acres.

$182/ino! 4 Bedroom. 2.5
bath HU01 4% down, 30
years @ 8%. For listings
800-559-4109 ex1 F254
1 . bedroom $275/mo plus
deposit &amp; utilities. In
Gallipolis. Call (740)256·
666 1.

I bedroom in Gallipolis.
$225 month/$1 00 dePosit.

No pets. Call Wayne
(404}456·3802 tor informa tion.

acres.
Ref!Oep,
no inside
or
3br. 2bs,
Garden
1Ub, .33
large pets. non smoking
$450 month '13041576-2296
Accepting applications, 1
bedroom, furn.ished with
cover&amp;d porch, Bxe storage
buikling, completely remode.led. suitable tor 1 adult,
$385/mo. $215 deposit
includes
washer/dryer,
water/traSh, you pay electric.
0 ilion Road, Ga llipolis,
~17_:40::,:1.::256
::..·1:..:1.::06: : : · - - - Bidwell area, Clean 2br,
includes
$400fmonth,
water/sewer.
Aet/Dep.
required. No Pe1S 1304)5764037

'

'

740-985-4180
message

'

&amp;11M
.,_
_ __

10%

. . ,.

ril

"Mid,...., art's Ollly
Self..stor. .•

Lea••

ll_J!~!!.~:M._J

"""':=' '

'financing- 36 Mos.
available now on John
Deere Z Treklloro 'IUma &amp;
Ul% Fbood Rala nn John
Deere Q1tDr.1 C.rmlctlael
Equlpmer&lt; _(740)446-2412.
-------1994 Blsoo Gooseneci&lt; ·
S1od&lt; Trailer (304)675-7044
or (304)674-oD07

~

rl1ll
....... ~

"'I I

~ ll

I

Se:·

YOUNG 'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

""'1 ""'

d~ l~

-GaOlld-_,.

29670 Bashan Road·

~
Also available
u..a

Room Addlttons &amp;

45771 '
740-94&amp;-2217

p-

~ten. "------~~~
5.1% on

"·,

t

AP~TS

4292.

Cash, c~eck &amp; credit cards
i!Ccepted.
OPERATION SANTA
to support our deployed troops
Thursday, November 30
Final Date to leave donations at
the foll()w1ng drop-off points:
. Sunny 93 FM
(State Rt. 141 Portsmouth Rd.)
Bossard Memorial Library
(First Ave , Gallipolis)
WBYG "B1g Country" 99.5 FM
(Viand St 1r. Pt. Pleasant)
WYVK 92 FM The Frog·
(Bradbury Rd. Middleport)
or Monetary donations may be
g1ven to Manne Corps Family
Support Community (MCFSC)
Ouest1ons? Call 740-245-5589
or 740-441 ·7454

~lmrrnimmmiitrmimmmiiiiimmm~fr

E

I 1l-IOUGHT 'VCU
GOI\I\lA M.U
ME WlF

..,....,..,.!'!"!"'!!'!"..,.'!'"0

Riel&lt; Joh,_ Jr.·Ownor
10

~

6 rooms &amp; Bath, Range &amp;
Refrigerator Furnished, Very
clean, 1st floor, S4001mo
plus utilities. $400 deposit.
1740)441·0596

AUNT
LOWEEZ'I'

TH'~N'

740.446.9200

ONE, lWO, THREE- -ONE, ThJC,
'll-IREE--CHURN THAT
SUTTER NOW, SING J'
... WIF ME !!
-': ,...;,:,
· ·__.~

CCMtN',

'-'lJGHAID !!

2A!l9 St. Rt. 160 • Galtlpolls

F• E~tMMtM

PIMIM: (T40/441-a7

Locall
.Maid

Carmichael
(740)446·2~ t 2

New John Deere Compacts

~

and 500b Series Utility 1rac·
tors OO'M. Fliced for 36
months through John Deere
Credlit.
Carmichael 1"'~~-~~-_,
Equipment (740)446·2~12
Oakwood Hotnol8

Alfordable·
Dependable
&amp;AD CREDIT?
Fully Insured
NO CREDIT?
&amp; Bonded
811nk1'Up1Cy?
Daily, Weekly, or
9 Black Angus, 3 bulls, 6
We c.n Help!
MonlhJy·Pians
h
,._
Available
elfers, (740)742·2880
""'"Credit Hotline
l·?4fl.99 l-(jl!l6
Black &amp; WMe Paint S1alk&gt;n, L...:J.7~40~U!!6:!3~570r2,._J L,...:,;;;,;::~;;:::~-J

r~

Pll£W! !'It\~~ .

New Homes • Decks • Roofing
Siding • Foundations
Sidewalks
Lowest Prices No Job Too Small
1·740-698.()890

l'AAt~~ ~~~?

t WMJ(f.t) OVFJe.

1-lAA\ WORKOUT 7 .,
IT WI-.!&gt; Tfl,e:. (;:LO!iE:.ST
P~~&lt;.. Sl'O\ l COULD
c.E.TTO T\\E. AALL,
TOt&gt;fi..Y 1

WORI&lt;.OUT,(.,().,I)'l'S!

TWO fo\11,.£.!&gt; 1

r:

FOil~

We Deliver To You!
~

MAPLE
WOOD LAI(E

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Helios System
~ ...'!I,)fl:"i"''i'-!ij'P.!!I§"':IIIi•

Skinned • Cut
Wrapped

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Deer Processing

We buy,-.&amp; ......
-&amp;u..dltwmal
Lda "" -rtf11ngl

'"'--l

STOP IN AND

lOIII'

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim

Apartment lor rant, 1-2 Asking $50. 1304)576·2926
Bdrm., remodeled, new car· 8 yr old male COCkatoo,
pet stove &amp; trig., water. w/cage. to good home .only
semr, trash pd . Micid!eport. $500 (304)882- 3719
$42&amp;.00. No pets. Ref.
reQuired . 740.643·5264.
· AKC Boxer puppies, born
10/18106, 3 rsverse Brindle,'
BANK FORECLOSURES! 3 1 female , 2 msle, 2 Brindle 1
bedroom, 2 bath. $155/mo. • female, ~ male, ~SO,
bedroom, $225/mo 4% dn, (740)992-0805, 740-41630 yrs 0 8%. For liStings 1453, No calls alter 9:30pm
800·559-4 109 ext Ft44 .
BEIWTIFUL
AI¥.AT· AKC reg . Beegle pups, all tri
·MENTS
AT
BUDGET colored , wormed. Shots
$100. Steve Stapleton
PRICES AT JACKSON (7 40)446 _41 72 , 17401256 _
E~To\TES , 52 Weslwood
1619_
Dnve !rom $349 to $448.
•
Wall!; to shop &amp; mov1es Ca~ AKC Registered Shih Tzu,
740·446·2568
Equal Bnndle male. Bor11 9!15/06,
Hous1ng Opportunlry.
1st shotS/ wormed. $350.

- ~~!;~..SS~:g;:s:

9099
'
..;_;.:..._ _ _ _ __
2000 Sunfire, Auto", Sharp.
1996
Cavalier,
Auto
(740)388-8228
:-..:..______
2002 Chevy Cavalier, 2
door, ~Sport padtage, bright
yeII ow w.."h A·R· wh ee 1s,
ground effscts, spoiler, automailc. Asking S3800. Phone
1740)256-1253

:__.:.:.;:::.,.=:.____

1

AND TWO TI-IUM65 ..
'

i

I
I

446~7

Cornerstone
Construction
Residential • Commercial • General Contracting
Painling • Doors • Window!i • Deck!.
• Siding • Roofing • Room Additions • Remodeling
WV 031112
• Plumbing • Electrical 7.ta47-41Mot
OH
Accoustic Ceiling
740-331-3412

mu

SUNSHINE CLUB

•

All y.,.. RMdy Fpr Tilt N11tt Power Ou!lfM?
llrlggo &amp; Stmton Automollc Stondby Generators
10-12 &amp; ISKW

30Yrs. E.xp. •Ins. OWner: lOnnie Jones

Service

~;====~=~~::=====~

i

4x4

1,--·F·OII·S·/I.·U--.,J

OH

wv

2oo0 Jeep Cherokee 4x4,
l!lutofalr, CD player, $2.700
080. (740)256-1652.
--------:~002 Jeep Liberty 4x4
~5.000 miles, CO/cassette
I
•5
Payer
• ,950 . 17 40)256 ·
1618.

pJ!I~~----~

I

[«14 ~~~=1
tTIV£ol.A'.---,

2003 Ford Taurus, CD,
75,000 miles. $5900 OBO.
2001
1740)256·1618

.5
'1ft..-...
. a"~
L---FORililiiS,w;iliiill'--"

AND ONE NOSE,AND TWO
E'{E5, AND ONE MOUTJ.l,
AND TW 0 EAR$.:..·:.;;..
-- __.-

SURE, I CAN COUNT .
I SEE E16J.IT 1=1N6ER5

• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

A Hidden Treasure. Larges1 6 week old, long haired ~9·;, .:00p.;::..m;.:._ _ _ _ __

13041674-6362
eve')'thing,
S1aning
a1 are
$425.
Call
today betore
rhOy
all $150 escl1. 1304)773-5180. Best Offer
8
~one." - Laurel Commons week old Siberian Husky 2000 Foid Escort ZX2, Auto,
puppies, 4 Females, 2
Apartmentsl304)273·:l344 males, Beige markings, loaded, Sharp, Runs grea1,

PEANUTS

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

test drive.

1991 Volvo, 9o'Q SE Tulbo, 4
d
tl
oof
5 month old eke Registered r., au1o. a power, IWnr ,
all leather, good ccndltion,
Miniature Dachshund, 2
166,000
miles,
white,
males, 1 red, &amp; ~ black &amp;
(740)992,5181 after 5pm
tan. ·asking $200 1304)593·
3820
1996 Chevy Cavaier Z24.
Power
Wlndowsllocks,
6 week old Great Pyrenees Sunroof, CO player. Good
puppies , Females only, condttion, $~,BOO. Call
$200. 1740)245·9142
S:30pm·
17401367 _0122

•

Vamaha Wolverine

4x4, lOOks and runs good.

Still has original !Ires on N
with good tread, Asking '
$2900. Phone (7 40)256·
1253

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- ( 740)256·6556 leave mes· 1985 Chevy B&lt;&gt;o&lt;-Truck 12'
ED 1 AFFORDABLE!
sa~
box-wrth lift tailgate· n1ce - - , - - - - - Townhouse
apartments, AKC, 1 female' Yorkshire. targe· sleeper with T.V NCR 2002 '(amaha TIR 125,
andlor sm$11 houses FOR lferrier pup~ ; AKC. 2 male · microwave, heat lights, excellent condition. $1.500
(740)596·8038 leave mes·
RENT. Call (740)441 · 1111 Dachshund. puppies: AKC
sage.
for application &amp;information. Miniature Plflscher, 1 male like new. 740 _54 t. 1 131 or
blackllan: CKC Chihuahua
_ _
740 541 2792
I mmacufate 2 bedroom
puppies, 2 males, small; all - - - - - - - aNpeawnmcaenr~tn &amp;1hecacob~nne1:sy ~tet che~ed ,. and some 1995 Ford Ranger XlT.
~
,..· Shots. {7.$0)696-1085
...............
treshry .pa1nfed &amp; decorated, - - ' - - - ' - - - - - - E~ttended cab, bucket seats '""'""'""""'liii-lii'EMENiii:::Om;ii
';.J
WID fl()()lt;.up 8eall1ilul coun- Beaut~ul Black &amp; Tan leat::up plus 2 fold·ckwm cab seats. . . .,
BASEMENT
try sett1ng Must see 10 Chihuahu a male. extremely b cytinder. 2 wheel dnve
WATERPROOFING
appre~ate S399tmo No tnendly. IOWts kids. s monthS AutomatiC transmission,
pets. (61 4)595-7773 or ~- old . (740)256-t375
ACIAMIFMitape playe r, 2 UnconditiOnal liletHT16. guar·
800-798-4686
- - ' - - - ' - - - - - - new tires plus 2 almost~ new antee local re!erenoos fur·
CKC West H1ghland White t1res. Towing hoolr;·up Truck nished Established t9 75
Large
One
Bedroom Terriers. 9 'Ntts. Vet ck.l st bed t1ke new, over- all excel· Call 24 Hrs 17401 4-l-6·
· Apartment 10 P'01nt Pleasant shots,
wormed
Pnce lent condrt:1on Forest g1een 0870. Rogers Basement
S495/month InClUdeS all reduced , to $350 (740)388· 96 .000 ffiJ/e!) 7&gt;10-446·8400 W;,rurproot1ng
Uttlll1e:. {304~675·581 9
9451 '·

.,

GRANPMA NAME!:' IT AF'I"ER
1'1-tE CI-IICKEN WWO
·
IN&amp;PIREP rr

NO AU.TTrDI
WHAT YniJ'PI
STYLE. ••

I

OAIZZWELLS

..

Lull Campos
_,""'"'._... by,_...,_,

.

EJC'tlletler !n lhll c:iphlr stlncls far II'IOiher.

Tod.ly's 00.: Z oqusls P

"TV WNXVH WFHPTFVY Nll VRFO BTV
WCHB PTNGWFLII ITFLIIH FL BTV
JCGOI."- HOIINL NLHZNPT, CY UNPX
LFPTCOHCL
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Ret111Q vratltude and not expressing h ~ ll&lt;e
wraj)f)ing a present and not giving n. - W~liam Arthur Ward

'lbur'llrthdi!Y:

A~D

ONE 816

SIST~R~

group that you find Intriguing, though you
might wonder how you'll lit ln. Keep yourself visible and available and, before you
know it, you'll automatically becol'fle pari
of it.
l)AGITIAAIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . 21) Things might come ioo easily for you,
giving you cause lo be caught off guard
when you encounter a few obstacles.
Keep v isualizing ar, working toward
success. and you' \I be all right.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·J.a n. 19) A
friendship's flexibility may be tested
When a pal sells you something at what
you think is a good price - only lo find
out you could have got1en h cheaper
almost everyplace else.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - You
should be able to accomplish your materia \ objectives,. even though In the
process you might ruffle some feathers.
It it was Inadvertent on your part, all will
woOl. out in the long run
PISCES {Feb. 20-March 20)- If someone goos oul ot hiS or her way to be helplui to you. be sure to be appreciative and
acknowledge this person's efforts on
your behalf. A lad&lt; ol gratitude wtlt discourage future help.
.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)- You may
have to dsat with someone whose tactics
are off base and disturbing. However, i1
yout impatience doesn't impel you to
operate on his or her wav81ength, you'll
come out great.
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) -There's· ·a
strong chance you may have to operate
In close proximity with others under
some rather erratic conditions. Be a good
team pla9er, and you'll be able to achlevs
your purpose
GEMINI (May -21-June 201- This Is a
good da11 to get thlng9 out In the open
with a co-worker "In order to reach an
understanding enabling you to work.
together. Keep a aool head , and don't
lose your temper:
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- Vou can
suctesslully promote something impor·
tant, provided you are tonhrlght with your
prospect Point out limitations etong with
the advantage of that wh ich you're trying
to advocate.
LEO (Juty :23-Au;. 22) Instead ot
assuming a atory 11 tactual beCIIIJII
someooe you oonaldar a lrlend tel!• you
.o, cheok It out yourself before pa ..lng
on the tntormatlon. There 's 1 1/t(ellhood
your pat II wrong.
VIRGO (A,ug . 2~·Sapt. 22) - E11en It II
appeara that 1omeone with whom you're
•~lied haa your belt lnterelt at hean, giYI
youra81f an out. AI thlnga unfold. events
could tell an entl,.ly dlnt,.nt story.
,
liBRA (Sept. 23-0ct . 23)- Vou could be
f"llther fortunate In b1 tng able to add to
your rtlouro.s . Convertely. however,
you ma11 take thla •• a reason to be a trl - ·
lie extra11aga.nt and lou all that you had
gained.
SCORPIO (001. 24-NOV. 22) - II you
ahould h1111 a mtaunderatandlng with a
friend after aha ring a111ry nloe day. make
..,.ry efltln to rectify thing• Immediately.
Unanended, th ings might be dttflcu~ to

~T

fovr Krontbled -rll bt·
lew 10 form four simple wcrd.l.

l

FLENUG

WR A B N

I I' I

r
~

TIDOI

I I Is 1
6

.

~

Wltilc guing into a dcpartmCnl
store 11indow, my friend smiled
And Rid, "What !like about the
~~vfas~~ons is that lhey won't

I

G)

Complete lho chudd~ Quoted
~Y tilling ill the f'l'liSSI"' words
YOtl dev•lop !rom slop No. 3 btlo•,

e ~:~;~:F~MO[[ I()RI liLII I. I 1·I
SCRAMLm 1112.1106
AroUst - Canal- rayon - Outlaw - OUR OWN.

We should be thankful to those who keep us
so busy listening lo lheir troubles that we
haven't lime to dwell on OUR OWN.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

l"i:::":""-----==,,
. . . ._
a
we

\'laD \P~

I ~ Gal"f
CDU&lt;D
PIIIY,. ITS CUD •pllf oN
1Hf:. Mot+: Wi'114 ile Sl'uPtll

f'nt\\'\&amp;S?

Hat:..

••'

WOlD
T~~:t,~' S©R~}A-l!E~s·
tlMI
fdilo&lt;l
CLAY I. fOLLAN _,;,..._ _ __
O~tOttOOO• le11ors of iho

SOUPTONUTZ

G~A..S.

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

___ ,..... _

CELEBRITY CIPHER

fiiiOive later.

tb'lb\1~

~Cx: ~~~~t!il:s~~:~

r10

GARFIELD

S.rvloe

~

Graph

You could be exposed ·to a new social

Stop &amp; Compare

O..'fiiMr 1, 2t/tJIIJ!

A~tro­

Seturday, Nov. 25, 2006
Bv Bern lett Beet• Osol

Athens

...._

apartments in the area. Chihuahuas, 2 Femate, 1 :;-997 Jeep Grand Cherokee,
Newly renovated, brand new Mile, First shots/wormed. needS transmission wor1o:.

'

• New Homes .
• Garages
•.Complete
Remodeling

·-----_.1

'Wha1 Is your pian?
After an intervening weak jump owrcafl ,
responder,· with support for opener's
major, bids one level higher than he
would have done without the Intervention. So, wllh a single raise, he bids three
spades. With a game·invnatlonal hand,
he lumps to four spades. And wl!h gameforcing values, he cue-bids four clubs.
·The original Declarer won the first trick
and immediately played a trump. East
took the trick and returned a club. West
won with his nine and accurately shifted
to the heart_ queen. Declarer duct&lt;ed,
won 1he next heart, played a spade to
the board's king, and took the diamond
finesse. When it los.t, the defenders
cashed a hean trick for down one.
That would be the correct play In four
spades, but not in three. Instead, Immediately lead the diamond jei:k (or queen)
from yOur hand, (If you play the ace and
another diamond, West's heart shift .will
te~ve you beached on the· bOard.) It
West Ducks, you lose only one spade,
two hearts and one club. So let's assume
that West wins with his king, cashes the
club •jai:k, and switc11es to hiS heart
queen. You win on the board end "take
you r two diamond. honors, discarding a
heart from the dummy. Now you lose
only one trick In each suit

O

aiGNATE

ro

/1.11 pus

•

irs

roorel304)6:~-4235

Eut

SOren Klelilegeard wrote. "Most men
pursue pleasure with such breathless
haS1e that \hey hurry paoli!." Few bridge
players, because they are sitting doWn,
be6ome breathless, but most - women
· and men - select their cards far too

BARNEY

'

ACE ME SERVICE
~:~

Nortll

!ol•

quli:kl~

·r

3 rooms &amp; bath, stove,
refrigerator. utilities paid.
0 ownstairs, 46 Olive St.
$450 mon1h • no pets.
3945
·
17•'01''6
~ ·

(304) 675-4340
Ext. 1326

'

West

s olo

This deal IS a good exar1'4'le. You ara
South, in three spades. We&amp;t leads tho
club queen and Ea&amp;l plays- tho king.

'
'

Racine. No pets. 740-247· 1:11"---='---~ 0366 for more details and a

Thursday, Feb.22,2007to
Saturday, February 24, 2007
$200/person (Double occupancy)
$250/person (single occupancy)
Private jet from Charleston,
WV Harrah's Casino &amp; Resort
· Must be 21 years of age
LIMITED SEATS!
To make reservations piE!ase
PVH Community Rel,atio11s

3 BR•.2 Ia. from $66,000
2 BR. 1Ia. $59,800
100% financing W.A.C.

.

~..;::'~~:,-;;,~

Exercising
Equipment, 3
old (304)675&lt;1130
Mobile Home for Rem locat· Electronic Treadmill, loaded,
2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, Newly ed oft Sandhill Rd., Pt. used 1wlce, Cell (740)387· Keifer Built- Valtoy· BisonrMnOdeled.
In
town. Pielalnt Depoalt requlred 7328
Horse
and
Uveslocll;
$500/mo plus Sec. Deposit. call (304 )675-3423
uMolaiDIDI!I:• ··~TrlllersLoadrnax{740}446-4555
=:..:::::.c.::;.::..::..:::.::___
J.n.""A:.u.~
Gocisenecil., Dumps, &amp;
1 Utility· Atuma Aluminum
Mobile Home latin Jonnson
3 Bedroom Ranch, 2 Baths, Mobile Hoine Park in
lnl..,.- B&amp;W Goosenecl&lt; ·
2 car garage. hardwood Gallipolis, ·OH. Phone 2 Ton Gas Furnace with Air Hitches.
Carmichael
floor kitchen, Jenn Air Appl.. (740)«6·2003 or (740)4 46· Conditioner
Unit Equipment (740)446-241~
Sun Room, 1 acre, Nice 1409.
Guaranteed to run. $400.
Neighborhood, Close 10 _:..:::::_:______ (740)446-9780
Young billy goa1S, $30 eacl1 .
Nice 141170 3 Bedroom, 2
s
It
·sso
hospi1al. $850fmo. (740)446·
- - - - - - - - orne adu nannys,
7443
Bath
home .
Located Hobart dishwasher w!staln· each.
Free
rooaters .
between
Athens
and less steel tables &amp; stnks. (7-40).256-1399
3BA home-·SR 554. Bidwe.ll· Pomeroy. $ 365 ·00 per Walk-In-cooter
7'xS'M10,
$575/mo- sec. dep. refer- montt1. Call (740)385·9948. Hobar1 80·quar1 #mixer &amp;
ences, aU elec. (740)446·
.
_
3644.
-------3BR, 2 bath home- Plants
AERATION MOTORS
SubD1v. $850fmo plus sec. 1 and 2 bedroom apart- Repaired, New &amp; Rebulft In (2) 2000 Cavaliers $3,000
depOsit.
NO
PETS. ments, furnished and unfur· S_
toc*.. Call Roo Evans, 1- oso (7.t.0)256-6tB9.
1740)446·3644
niShed, security deposit 800-537-9528.
1989 Honda Accord OX, 4
required, no pets. 74Q-9924 Bedroom House located 2218.
NEW AND USED Sll!El door, autome11c, lair condi1.5 mites tram HoiZEu. - - - - - - - - Sleel Beams, Pipe - r tion, KBB- $1180, Sell~
Security
Deposit
&amp; 2 bedroom Apt. avsilable in For
Concrete,
Angle, OBQ. (740)794-ll231.
References
Required. Syracuse. $200.00 deposit Channel, Flat Bar, Steel _ _:_.:.__ _ __
(740)388-9101
$350.00 per month rent. Grating
For
Drains, 1990 Mercury Marquis GS.
Rent includes water, sewer, Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L tour door sedan, good t!res.
trash. No pets. &amp;rl'ficient Scrap Metals Open Monday, no rus1, Interior in good conincome needed 10 QualifY- Tuesday. Wednesday &amp; dkk&gt;n, 111,665 miles. very
740·378-61 1t .
Good Condl1ion, lot&amp; of new
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
- Not
...
thl
Thursda•,
Saturday
&amp; P8·~msny ~" 1n 8
2 Br . $295.00 per M. plus
'
condl11on. Asking price
dep. and u1il~ies. 3rd St., Sunday. 1740 144&amp;-7300
$19~5.00. Call (740)508·

Great Christmas Gift!
Atlantic City Getaway

New Homes

SlcHng I Painting

'

s4

Play in haste,
lose at leisure

Chuck Wolfe
Owner

\' C Y L)II N G 'II

- - B&amp;W Gooseneck
Hitches.
Equipment

~

WV03672S

ll:;]!!!!!:!JI
Jl

nalattbor

17 Hl.a

Opening lead: • Q

Rooflng&amp;Gunw.

Vln~

Keifer Built- Valley· Bison·
Horse
and
U118stock
Trill•·
LoadmaxGoosene~. Dumps, &amp;
Utility· Aluma Aluminum

3 Remington 1100 12ga..
shotguns,
s•oo each;
Remlngtoo 1100 Lt 20ga.
·choke tube brl. $500:
Remington 870 Express
1208 wtttl 2 brts, $275:
Remlng1on ·- 1187 12ga
8-~h
.,......,, bore slug brl with
rifled choke tube, $150•,
Mossberg 500 12ga pump
with 2 brls, $250; Ruger
GP100 357 mag, 6" brl,
stainless, $425; Rossi
357mag 6~ br1, stainless.
$350. (740)446-2905

~

Eieclt1call Plumbing

Hay· Equipment All
rates thru John Deere
Credit.
Carmichael
Equipment 1740)446-2412.

f~:~i~E:J

South
1•

(740) 992-0496

K 10 8 6

Dealer: South'
Vulnerable: East-West

70 Pi'lle Street • Gallipolis
'740-446-0007 Toll Free 8'77-669-ooo'7

WOIIE
CONSTRUCTION

•

16 Ken.

t A QJ
olo A S

Remodeling .

Racine, Ohio

Financing as low as 0%- 36
Mos. on John Deere 7
Series &lt;tJc:.o4, ""Jc:S &amp; Sx4
Round ~ Ser6es ·

iiiiiiO.-P

$176/mo.! Buy 3 bedroom, 2

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L--•AiiiiOIEAGE:iliii
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10x10x10x20
991-3194
or992-66J5

Interior Only

: • .•
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• 7

MlcldlepOit. Ott

"'like the pain' out
paintiag-lel us do It
for 'you"

$600/mo + deposit, reler·
SPACE
ences, no smoking InSide,
·POll lbNr
no pets. 105 Bastian/. .._
~
Attention'
lms &amp;
(740)446-3667.
Commercial building 'For
• Local company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENr pro· "
Pretty 3BA House for Rent. Rent~ 1600 square feet, off
, grams for you to buy your Mobile Homt Lot tor rent Cedar Str. Central Heatlalr, street parting. Great locanear Vinton . Call (740)441· FP. SS95+Utfl and dep. Cell tlonl 749 Third Avenue In
· home Instead of renting.
GaHipotlo. 'Rent 'Negotiable'
~ 1OO"'o financing
t111
(740)446-4639.
.
:
• • Less" than pertect ~redil
I,
'
\
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accep1ed
_
• • Payment could be the __
IV"I.:.u
• .._
• ii;r~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
: same as rent
HouHioul
Mortgage
Locators Need to sell your home? 1 br Trailer In Letan tur-Goons
: (740)367-0000
. Late on paymems, divorce. ntshed, utll~ies pa[d, $350 .,,_ _ _
job transfar or a death? I a · month 7 miles from
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
can .buy your hOme. All cash Mountaineer
Plant
Repalr-675-7388. For ssle,
and Quii:k closing. 7~0·416- 1304)882·2858
re..COndiHoned automatic
3130
2 bedroom, AJC, porch &amp; washers &amp; ct!;)'Br$, refrigera·
awning. Very, 118ry niCe, no tors, gas and electric
3 bed
pe1S. In Gatllpotl~&gt; 1740)446- ranges. air conditioners. and
2003, 1740)446-1409 or wringer washers. Will do
on major brands in
(740)446-2692 '

r
r

Beech Sbeet

97

No Pets. (304)743..a584
House for rent

Easl

&amp; MEDICAL ·EQUIPMENT

Great used 38R home only ::1304~1::67:.;5:.:-2::3:,:19:.__ __
3. t 00+ SQ. ft. Hardwood 59 995. Will help wrth dellv· Home for Rent in GlernNood.
floors. fireplace , deck. 2-car ery Call (740)385·7671 .
3br, S400/montf'l +deposit.
garage. LA. Family , room , New 14x70. 3 Bedroom, 2
many extras. 2.5 acres near
Matgs
High
School Bath set up between Athens
$1•9.000. 740-416-4765.
anr:l P'omeroy Ready for
lmmed1ate occupancy. Only
Abou1 S3000 down. 812 S. $199.67 per month Call
3rd. Ave, Middlepor1. To1ally 1740)385-4367.
remodeled . 3 bedrooms, 1 - - - -- - - be.th. Perlect credit not New 2006 Clayton sin·
, reQuired ' Payment $525. Qlewides starting at $199.84
· Appraised $70,000. 74P- per month. Trade·lns wei·
367·7129.
comes. Cell 1740)385·2434.

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Friday, November 24, 2006

www .mydai Iysentinel .com

Page B 10 • The Daily Sentinel

ALONG THE RIVER

Diles Hearing Center

Diwali: Community, campus
·join in Festival of Lights, C1

Diane M&lt;Vey - M.A., CCC-A, Owner &amp; Audiologist

GALLIPOLIS

JACKSON

ATHENS

43! 111 Second Avenut

l:.U Huron St.

17! Wett Ul!lkM'I St.

(740) 446-76t9

(740) Z86-t430

(740) 594·357t

days til Christmas

,

I
Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
tHllt \ \ .111~' l'uhil ... llltl;..:.t ,,

SPORTS
• Another title contender

falls. See Page 81

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• '••\c!lllwr 'h ·•ooh

Enhanced wireless 9~1-1 in Gallia wins funding
BY MICHEUE MilLER

Gallia County's county- the caller's location.
wide enhanced 9-1-1 plan,
House Bill 361, signed into
filed on Nov. 3, included the law by Gov. Bob Taft on Feb.
GALLIPOLIS - Release signatures of all approving I , 2005, provides enhanced
of funds from the Wireless entities.
9-1-1 service capabilities for
9-1-1
Government
Gallia County expects to wireless phone users in Ohio.
Assistance Fund has been · implement Phase I and
Enhanced wireless 9-1-1
authorized by the Public Phase II wireless 9-1-1 ser- service routes emergency
Utilities Commission of vice within six months.
wireless calls to the appro·
Ohio for the establishment
Phase I wireless 9-1-1 ser- ·priate
Public
Safety
and delivery of the county- vice I)rovides the tower Answering Point (PSAP)
wide wireless enhanced 9-1- information and the caller's and provides a mobile
1 service in Gallia County.
contact number. Phase II pro- directory number for callThe funds will be disbursed vides the Phase I information back information as well as
and the latitude/longitude of the location information.
monthly to the county.
MMILLEROMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

In order to fund the
enhanced wireless 9-1 . J
capabilities, ~ireless customers in Ohio pay a 32·
cent surcharge per .wireless
line each month . Wireless
service providers remit the
funds collected from the surcharge to the PUCO and the
funds are deposited into the
Wireless 9-1-1 Government
Assistance Fund.
This fund may be utilized
by the counties to cover" any
costs of designing, upgrad-

IN FULL FORCE
I

,._

ing, purchasing, leasing,
programming, installing,
testing or mainl!lining the
necessary data, hardware,
software, · · trunking and
training required for the
PSAPs to provide wireless
enhanced 9-1-1 service.
Gallia County must submit
a quarterly status report of its
implementation efforts to the
Ohio 9-1-1 coordinator until
the county has implemented
Phase II wireless enhanced
9·1·1 services.

G-MPost
names top
trooper,
dispatcher

..

STAFf REPORT
NEWS!l!MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

0:8ITUARIES
Page AS
• Robert E. Bums
• Catherine Daniels
• MiChael W. Doyte
• Ruth E. Ervin
. • Ralph Fisher Sr.
· • Eileen Lanore Halley
• Mary Holland
• Nina J. Petroff
• Marie Amberger Rea
• Ruth M. Rejonis
• Charlene M. Wetb
• Charles W. Wilson

INSIDE

Joy Kocmoud/photo

· • Voinovich staff
plan visit to Gallipolis.
SeePageA2
• 4-H club receives AEP
donation. See Page A3

Despite a thick l_ayer of fog that blanketed the area early Friday, an eager flock of early birds kicked off the holi(jay shop.
ping season welf before sunrise on what is acknowledged to b,e the busiest shopping day of the year. Hoping to take advantage of special deals, consumers were filling their carts with gifts as early as 5 a.m. Here, every checkout lane at K-Mart
in Gallipolis bustles with activity as shoppers line the aisles in search of sales.

Supercenter east of Cincinnati at 5 a.m.
after she and her sister-in-law left their
northern Kentucky homes at. I0:30
CINCINNATI - Hardy shoppers p.m. to start shopping at midnight at
started early Friday, some going outlet stores in Jeffersonville, Ohio.
without sleep and others planning to
She also picked up a V-Rocker audio
make a full day of store hopping to game chair but said her shopping
snap up deals on electronics and toys would probably be limited this year.
as the holiday shopping "season
"''m not spending very much because
swung into full force.
I'm going to Las Vegas," she said.
"I came to Wai-Mart for a portable .
Monica Midkiff, a 27-year-old homeDVD player that costs $49. It usually maker from Peebles, Ohio, said she got
goes for around $80," said April up at 3:30 a.m. to go to the same WalTheide, who arrived at a Wal-Mart Mart for a VTech game system.
.,
. BY TERRY KINNEY

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

• Flag presentation:

"They usually cost about $60, but
this was on sale for $30. That's a
deal," she said.
Midkiff said her next stops would be
KB Toys and Toys "R" Us ,while her
husband took care of the couple's five
children.
Clint Stapleton. 20. a construction ·
worker from Mount Orab, said he
was happy with the deal he got on one
of Wai-Mart 's featured items, a 32·
inch LCD TV. He said he paid $630

..

SeePage AS

Pluse see Shoppers, Al

Bv JuuE CARR SMmi

AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

BY Bmt SERGENT
BSERGENT@IMYDAilYSENnNEL.COM

INDEX
Buck~ye Edition

Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics

CHEVROLET • CADILLAC • PONTIAC • BUICK • GMC
201 East Main • 1-740-992-6614 or 1-800-837-1094 • Pomeroy, OH
Hours: Mon.•Fri.·
,,

• Sat. 9-4· Sun. 12-4 •
'·

PAGES •

A3

.Around Town

. B6

C4
D3-5
insert

Editorials ·

A4

Movies

Cs

. Obituaries

As

Regional

A2

~ports

Weather

B Section
A6

ij;) a006 Ohio Volley Puhlishi"8 Co.

!

•

Pleese see Post. Al

Ohio 124 slip repair Birth certificates slowly going. digital
us
to
bed
2007
P

WEATIIER

4 SECTIONS .- 24

GALLIPOLIS -· The
trooper and dispatcher of
th.e year at the State
Highway Patol's GalliaMeigs Post have been
announced.
, D. Jesse Howard has been
selected 2006 Trooper of the
Year at the G-M Post. The
.selection of Howard, 37, is
in recognition of outstanding
service during 2006.
Fellow officers stationed
at Gallipolis chose Howard
based on leadership abilities,
·
professional
ethics, courteous treatment of others, enthusi·
astic work
attitude and
cooperation
with .supervisors, peers
and the public.
Howard is
now ih coniention for
the · district
and
state
Trooper of ·
the
Year
awards, to be
Brett D.
announced at
Hutchinson a later date.
Howard
joined the patrol in 2000 as a
member of the !35th
Academy Class and has
served his entire care.er at the
Athens and Gallipolis posts.

REEDSVILLE
Although
the
Ohio
Department
. of
Transportation (ODOT) had
anticipated
temporarily
closing Ohio 124 near the
Meigs!Athc;ns county line
this month for slip repairs,
that project will now likely
be sold in February 2007
with construction following
later that year.
The change is due in part
to coordination between
other nearby ODOT construction projects to keep
roads open to traffic, avoid·
ing multiple closures· and
re-evaluating the project's
design, which may save
money with an "equally
effective" alternative .
The section of . 124 in
Olive Township was tern·
porarily closed in January
2005 following flooding
and sunken barges at the
Belleville Locks and Dam
which closed the locks.
Sections of 124 in Meigs

,,
'

County and Ohio 144 in
Athens County suffered
subsequent .flood damage
and area slips. The Meigs
section of road reopened
later that spring after ·
ODOT made temporary
repairs' until a permanent
fix could be made.
The · repairs in Olive
Township are tied to the '
Hockingport area slip repair
project
that
includes
upgrading county rol!ds 59
and 62 in· Athens County.
This recent · upgrading
resulted in the transformation of CR 59 into the new·
Ohio 144, bypassing the
worst part of the slip in that
area. Finishing )Vork on CR
59 and the work on CR 62
(Youba Ridge) will begin
next spring.
"In order to best serve the
residents of the area, ODOT
needs to have the new Ohio
144 open to allow unrestricted access for motorists,
emergency personnel and
school transportation," said

PIHH see Repelr. Al

COLUMBUS - David
May. newly 18 and planning
his first European trip,
needed his birth certificate
to get a passpo.rt. Lovelle
Scott, a young mother with
two children, needed hers to
apply for government help.
Dennis Anderson, an out-ofwork truck driver, needed
his to find a job.
In America, your birth
certi fi cate is the footing on
whicli your identification is
built. Yet, for decades, getting a copy has required ·a
weeks-long wait for the ·
mail or a personal visit to
the vital statistics office, as
was the case recently for
May, Scott and Anderson .
That may soon change, as
vital
statistics
offices
around the country try to
automate the centuries-old
practice of keeping birth
records. The shorter wait
likely will mean a higher
cost to consumer,.
In Ohio , for example, the
cost of a certified copy of a
birth certificate has risen
from $10 to $16.50 in the
past two years. Fees in some

:

.

AP photo

Workers at the Registration unit of Ohio Department of
Health Vital Statistics process birth certificates once each
application 'is scanned into the computer system Tuesday,
Oct. 25 in Columbus.
coun ti es, where various to make it easier to retrieve a
charges can be added, have copy in an era of heightened
reached $25.
national security, expanded
"It's a little pricey for a voter identification man·
piece of paper, especially dates, a national immigration
since I'm here in Ohio, .. debate and upcoming 'federal
said Scott, as she enter- 10 requirements. The transitained Aliciah, 2, and tion al,o will streamline a
Jer ' monie, 7 month&gt; .
growing number of govern·
States are increasing the mem processes that rely on
fees to raise money needed to birth certifica1e information.
convert .their birth certificate
Texa; was among states
.archives from dusty &gt;tacks of able to take advantage of
paper and microfilm to elec·
tronic databases. The idea is
Ple•se see Dlpt.l, Al

~· I

. '

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