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86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, December 11, 2006

Cincinnati increases playoff chances with win

Tomlinson
breaks
TD record

NFL Standings
: AMERICAN CONFERENCE

BY JOE KAY

EMI

ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI - Only a
month ago, the Cincinnati
Bengals looked like they
were on the verge of imploding. The defending AFC
Nonh champs were openly
pouting and regularly losing.
Look at them now.
Carson Pal mer threw tor a
pair of touchdowns and Rudi
Johnson ran for two more -on
Sunday, setting up a wellrounded 27 -I 0 victory over
the Oakland Raidei.;; that
strengthened Cincinnati's
playoff chances.
"We're peaking at the right
time." receiver Chad Johnson
proclaimed.
The Bengal s (8-5) ha,·e
won four in 'a row. moving to
the forefront of the AFC wild
card race. At the moment.
. Cincinnati is positioned for
one of the two spots. with
pivotal games coming up the
next
two
weeks
at
Indianapolis and Denver.
If s all coming together for
.
AP photo
a team that's pilin!,l,. up franchise records on orrense and Cincinnati Bengals receive r Chris Henry (15) catches a touchdown pass from Carson
·defense these ~ays .
Palmer in front of Oakland Raiders defenders Stuart Schweigert (30) and Kirk Morrison
They had a pair of I00-yard (5 2) in the first ouarter of a NFL football ·game Sunday 111 Cincmnati.
receivers and a I00-yard new.
Thl' Bengals didn't play want to do."
rusher Sunday, a combination
"We
need
a
win
baulv."
their
best game on offenseBy contrast. Oakland is still
they 've never had before .
coach
An
Shell
sai,L
"I
k:ep
the~
had
four
tumovers
in
all
at a loss for what to do.
And, the defense had another
sayi
ng
that
every
week
.
hut
won
going
away
The . Raiders hit their low
record-setti n~ performance
They're
trying.
We're
just
not
'
agai
nst
a
defense
that
likes
to
point a week ago, a 23;14loss
- Cincinnati has given up
play man-to-man coverage .. to Houston that featured three
only 17 points in the last three getting it done.''
Oakland has lost "x in a They didn' t even have to fumbles, two interceptions
games, another first.
row,
failing to score more · punt.
and three missed field goal~;.
They've come a long way
than
14
points
in
any
game
.
"We
knew
if
they
were
They were at it again Sunday,
from that 4-5 start that le1t
them with no margin for TI1e Raiders were simply out· goi ng to play man-to-man, looking like the old Bungles
classed in th is one.
we were gllitig to move the - or, the recent Raiders error.
Carson
Palmer
threw
a
&lt;oeahall a Jot." Hou;hmand1adeh with every miscue.
"We' ve been in this posiSebastian
Janikowski
tion for the last month." said son-high three intercepti ons. said. "Minus the tumover&gt;.
Rudi Johnson, who ran for but did more lhan en,lugh to we'd have prohahl} l1ad 200 missed three field goal
117 yards. "Our backs have get the win. His touchdown (yards) eacl1 ...
attempts against the Texans
Oakland
dropped
its - two of. them off the left
been against the walL We 've passes of 8 yards to Cluis
been coming out fighting and Henry and 20 yard' to Tl. ,afeties ittto deep coverage upright - and hit the left
clawing. We definitely under- Houshmandzadeh helped the mor~ than usual. but still uptight again Sunday on his
stand our situation ...
Bcngals rolled ahead 27-J in nmiJn't kcer up.
first try.
The Raiders (2- 11) under- the third quaner.
"That offense is loaded,"
Aaron Brooks' 5-yard
stand theirs, too.
Hou shmandzadeh
had said cornerback Nnamdi touchdown pass lo Ronald
It keeps getting ·worse.
eight catches for II X yards Asomugha. who had· two Cuny in the fourth quarter
The defense keeps them in agaitbt the. NFL's top-ranked interceptions. "When you call amounted to a breakthrough:
games, and the offense gi vcs pass defense. Chad Johnson a man-to-man defense, they l11e Raiders hadn 't scored in
them away. Oakland's first had five catches for I 0 I stat1 throwin g the hall all-over the founh qua11er of their last
three drives ended this way: yards, setting a Bcngals the place. And the right side eight games. The offense now
fumble, missed field goal. career 'l'cconl with his 21st of that line is just a bunch of has 17 points in the final
interception. None ·of it was triple-digit game.
heasts. TI1cy ~nnw what they quarter all season.

WLTPctPFPA
9 4 0 .692 281 186
7 6 0 .538 254 269
6 7 o .&lt;462 2.t3 262

New England
N.Y. Jets
Buffalo
Miami
6 7 0 .462 228 222

South

,

WLTPCIPFPA
Indianapolis 10 3 0 769 3-02 295
Jadtsonville 8 5 0 .615 303 191
Tennessee 6 7 0 .462 247 3t4
Houston
4 9 0 .308 219 296

Baltimore
Cincinnati
Pltts~ rgh

Cleveland

-

W LTPCIPFPA
10 3 0 .769 276 170
8 5
.615 317 250
6 7 • 0 .462 286 264
4 9 0 .308 208 293

o

Weot
WLTPCIPFPA
11:-San Diego 11 2 0 .846 425 257
Kansas City 7 s o .538 267 256
Denver
7 6 0 .538 235 236
Oakland ·2 110 .154 156269

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East

W
Dallas
8
N.Y. GiantS 7
Philadelphia 7
Washington 4

L
5
6
8
9

T
0
0
0
0

Pet
.615
.538
.538
.308

PF
349
292
315
232

.

PA
260
268
282
295

South
WLTPctPFPA
New Orleans 9 4 0 .692 352 26S ,
7 6 0 .538 244 256
Atlanta
Carolina
6 7 0 .462 226 244
Tampa Bay 3 100 .231 151 289

Norttl
x-GhK:ago
Minnesota
Green Bay
Detroit

WLTPctPFPA
10 2 0 .833 318 150
6 7 0 .482 241 251
5 8
.385 249 343
2 110 .154 236324

o

Weat
Seattle

St. Louis
San Fran.
A~izona

WLTPctPFPA
8 5 0 .615 281 290
5 7 0 .417 242 287
5 8 0 385 228 349
4 9 0 308 248 305

x-cllnched division
Thurwday'l Gamu
Pittsburgh 27, Cleveland 7
Sunday's Gamee
Minnesota 30, Detro it 20
Tennessee 26, Houston 20, OT
Miami 21 ; New England 0
Cincinnati 27, Oakland 10
Philadelphia 21, Washington 19
Baltimore 20, Kansas City 10
Atlanta 17, Tampa Bay 6
N.Y. Giants 27, Carolina 13
Jacksonville 44 , Indianapolis 17
Green Bay 30, San Francisco .19
Arizona 27. Seattle 21
Buffalo 31, N.Y. Jets 13
San Diego 48, Denver 20
New Orleans 42, Dallas 17
MOndll)''l

Game

Chicago at St. Lou1s, 8:30p.m.
Thuraday, Dec. 14
San Francisco at Seattle, 8 p.m.
saturday's Gamel
Dallas at Atlanta, 8 p.m.
Sunday, Dec. 17
Miam1at Buff;.tlo. 1 p.m. '
N.Y. Jets at Minnes'ota, 1 p.m.
Detroit at Green Bay, 1 p.m.
Tampa .Bay at Chicago, 1 p.m.
Jad&lt;sonVille at Tennessee, 1 p..m.
Cleveland- at Baltimore, 1 p.m

Washington at New Orleans, 1 p.rrl.
Houston at New. England, 1 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Carolina. , p.m.
Denver at Ari:!"'na. 4:05p.m
Philadelphia at NY Giants. 4:15p.m.
St.louis at Oakland, 4:,5 p.m.
Kansas City at San Diego. 8:15p. m.
Monday, Dec:. 18
Cincinnati at Indianapolis, 8:30p.m.

SAN DIEGO (AP) With chants of "L.T! L.T!"
pouring from the stands,
LaDainian Tomlinson delivered a record and a divi sion
· title for San Diego.
Tomlinson scored three
touchdowns
Sunday,
including the final two in a
span of 47 seconds late in
the game, to break the NFL
single-season record with
29 TDs. He led the Chargers
to a 48-20 win over the
Denver Broncos on Sunday.
Tomlinson had three scores
,. overall.
The victory, coupled with
Kansas qty's 20-10 loss to
Baltimore, .· gave
the
Chargers ( 11-2) their second division title in three
seasons.
The
Chargers
also
grabbed the inside track to .
home-field
advantage
throughout the AFC playoffs when Indianapolis lost
44-17 at Jacksoiwille to fall
into a tie with Baltimore at
10-3.
But this game was all
about Tomlinson, who has'
become the MVP frontrunner by scoring 26 touchdowns in. the last nine
games.
Tomlinson tied Shaun
Alexander's record of 28.
set in 2005, when he scored
on a 6-yard run with 3:57
left. He got hit at the 3, but
spun right and scored.
The Chargers got the ball
back
when
Shawne
Merriman recovered a fumble- at the Denver 7. On the ·
next play, with the crowd at
full throat, Tomlinson ran to
his left and scored.
He was mobbed in the end
zone by his teammates, who
hoisted him on their shoulders . He held up the ball and
waved the index finger of
his other hand.
Denver . (7-6) lost its
founh straight game.

Cavaliers hammer Pacers·
BY TOM WITHERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

NBA Standings

EASTERN CONFERENCE
CLEVELAND - Stephen
Atlllntk: Dlvislon
WLPctGS
Jackson .didn't last until halfNew Jersey
7 12 .368 time. By then, the Indiana Now
Vol!&lt;
8 14 .364 '&gt;
Pacers·were done anyway.
Toronto
7 13 .350 \~
6 13 3,6 t
LeBron James scored 24 Boston
~iladelphia
5 14 .263 2
points mostly with
Southeast Division
WLPctGB
Jackson trying to guard him
15 1
.682 - in the first half and fin- 011ando
Washington
9
11 .450 5
ished with 27 to lead the · Atloola
8 1i .421 5';
8 11 .421 5\
Cleveland Cavaliers to a Miami
Charlotte
5 t 5 250 9
107-75 win over the tlusCentral Division
WLPctGB
tered Pacers on Saturday
Detro~
t3 7
650 night.
12 7
.632 '•, .
Cleveland
Indiana's ugly loss was Indiana
11 11 .500 3
10 10 .500 3
Chicago
compounded by an incident . MiiWIJukee
8 12 400 5
in the first half involvin~
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Jackson, who was kicked otf
Southwest Division
the Pacers' bench by coach Sen Antonio WLPctGB
15 5
750 Rick Carlisle.
Dallas
14 e
.700 1
14 6
.700 1
Late in the second quaner, Houston
Orleans
9 10 474 5',
Jackson was pulled by New
Memphis
5 t 5 250 1o
Carlisle and the two had
Northwest Division
WLPctGB
words. Carlisle then pointed Utah
15 5
750 for Jack$On to leave the Denver
11 7
611 3
TO 9
526 4 ,
bench area, banishing the Minnesota
Seat'le
, 10 11 476 5·,
fiery guard to the locker Portland
8
14 364 8
room for the remainder of
Pacffic DtVIsion
WL
PctGB
the game.
L.A . Lakers
ta
e
684 "!-substituted for him. He Phoenhc:
13 6
684 came to the bench and an L.A. Clippers 10 ~ .526 3
Slate
10 1, 476 4
exchange ensued that I Golden
g .10 .474 4
Sacramento
thought was inappropriate
and detrimental to the team."
C:1rlisle said he hau nol yet
Carlisle said. "So I made a spoken with .I:Kk'IH1. and at
decision to remove him from this JXlint no further di" ithe bench.
plin•: wa' planned.
"These games are difficult.
"A ' of right n\111. thi' is :1
If you don't have e1•eryhody one-g ame ..."iwatit)Jl and if
with a laser-like locus on one that change, 'I ·11 · Jet \llll
task. which is playi ng like a know." Carli,fc said .· "I
team and competing hard, it ~xpcct this is an tncident
gets even more difficult."
that's isolated and will he
It \ the latest controversy dealt with :1' ' nch
•
'urrou nding Jackson. The
"I i&lt;Wcd the v.:1\' .l:tck
28-year-old-is facing charges
of firing a gun during a fight played the last tll'll ~ amc' .
out side a strip club in He w:1' a leader and he ll:h
Indianapo lis on Oct. 6. He focused. H~ had a · gre:1t
could go to trial in February. Uemeanor and he·.,. ont? of
T"'o year' ago. Jackson our hctk'r ria) crs :!lld th;lt \
went into the stHnds and what 11e e\fX'CI r,,,m hi n,fought Detroit fan;, during C\ery night . But \\hen :-.l lll lCthe Pacers · infamous brawL thing like this happen'. it h;,,
Following the game. to he :Jddn'"ed ...
.ladson ' teammate&gt; , had
Jackson was on his way out
lillie
to say :tl'tcrwarJ.
of Quicken Loans Arena.
"Oh. n&lt;&gt;... said fo rw ard /\I
esconed by t"'o securi1y perHatTingtnn.
"Hear no c,·il.
sonnel. when Pacers a&gt;sissee
no
e1
il."
tant coach Chuck Per"m
lame' had se1 en rebound,.
;,ummoned to h;,1·e him
"i'
~1"''-l"h and :-.pent lhL~
brought hack to the locker
~nt1re
tuurthl1u.1r1 cr r•-21!1\ in.\2
room.
Jackson went n"ide for a on the hcnc'/1 I h~ C11 alicr,
moment before leav ing hitilt a 14-ponlt Jc:HJ Ill ·the
again. On lm 11a~ out. fiN half and n':J-tcd tn thetr
Jack'&gt;on declined an inter: mmt lop&gt;id,·d v,·in thi' 'eaview request.
\Oil .
"No ... he 'aid. --r m cooL ..
Zydru nr1" ll pau-.~~'" h;1d 1&lt;

points and Donycll Marshall
added a season-high 17
rebounds for the ~ Cavs.
Cleveland
outrcbounded
Indiana 57-34.
Dan·ell AnmtrotH! had 13
points and Danny' Granger
I 2 I( lr the Pacer;.
1\gauskas scored just two
points on onl y two shots
when the team s-met on Nov.
24 - a I0-poinl 11 in by
Indiana. But the 7-foot-3
center was ahle to ma neuver
inside '" the Pacers were
withou t forward .lcnnaine
O ' Neal. who missed his second &gt;traight gam~ with a
'trained left hamstring.
Leading b~ 14 at halftime.
the Cavaliers outscored
Indian a 28-13 to open an 8455 lead entering the fourth.
l ame,, II ho went I0-of·ll
from the floor in the first
ld r. 11 as repl:•ccd with 20
seconds to ~n in the third and

Logan receives
· award,A:J

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.- o\
)

I '\IS • \ol ..-) h . '\., " "

• Eastern easily
defeats River VaHey.
SeePageB1

wish, seleL1 one of the following FREE verses below to
1acron1pat1y yoor tribute.

David c, Andre1Nli
July 10, 1961-May S, 1980

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you
throughout time.

IHCS.

'"!'Ill Iilli VCf) ~ood al ...,i ttinQ. hut it was ~nod.'' lames

said. "We dtd' :1 ~ood . job
jumpin g on a team and not
letting up. It 11a' great 10
fin all} get a blo11 out."
l.:~tT) Hu~hes, 11 ho nmsed
Clc,cland's prCI i&lt;lU .' ' 10
game' 11 ith a 'prained right
ankle. "'nrcd eight points in

Always in our hearts,
John and Mona Andrews and
lamily

t. We hold you in our !hough" and memories forever.
2. May God cradle you in Hi&gt;arms. no• and forever.
·J. Forever missed, never forgonen. May God hold yoo in the palm of
His hand.
4. Thank you for lhe wonderful days we shared mgelhcr. My prayers
will be with you until we meet again.
5. The days we sh8.red were sweet. I long 10 see~ ou again in G(x1·~

hcav&lt;nly glory.
6. Your courage and bravery still inspire us all, and the memory of yo~r
smile filLs us •·ith jo) and laughter.
7. Thoughout Of sight, you'll forever be in my heart a.nd mind.
8. The days may rome and go. hut 1he times we shared will always rcma1n.
9. \1 ay tl1e light (lj' pCacc sl1inc ()n your face t·or eternity.

.

12. May God\ graw shineover you

for all time.

1.1. You arc in our lhoughts and prayers from morning 10 night and from
year to year.
14. We send this mc~f\age with a loving kiss for eternal rest and happiness.

INSIDE
. • British investigators
in Moscow question
key Russian witness
in Litvinenko case.
See Page A2
• Meetings set to
plan mentoring
program expansion.
See Page A3
• Mason United
Methodist Church to
present children's
musical. See Page ·A5
~ Fot the Aeoord.
See Page AS

WEATHER

1 Pru;l '""'''"m,·lwrc--------------- - - - - - - - - - - l

Editorials

. J'lw \',i l'CI,. lhnll~h. LUI I()
pt,int-- PI! &lt; 'k\cl,md" lcdd

I
I
I ·lddr"' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Phone numbec'--------l

Obituaries

lX-Ll'ar-olcl

in the lmal 2.Hl :111d ,taneJ a
14-..J run"' lndt:m ,tl'lo,~d tn
"-h--1' 'i!

'1 1 ,] l l l''ll'

FiU ont th(' form below and dro11 off to:
Th(' Daily Sentin('l
With Fondl'SI ~ll'mories
Ill Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45 769

Ir------------------------~------------,
Plea.&gt;c puhli&gt;h mv trihutc in the spcetal Memory Page onFriday. December 22.
I
I
I
I \'.mw &lt;'l d,,:,J,cdl--------,--'----------~-------'
I
.
I
I Relntion,hip lo me
Number of ;elected verse ____ I
I
'
I
I Date of hmh
Date of pa;sin'"---- - - - 1
I
I

INDEX
2 SF.qlONS -12 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox

c

l

Cm - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - State--'--- Zi()-- - 1
1
Make Check Payable to THE DAILY SE:JIITINIL
1

· L----~----------------•---------------~
•

un&lt;l.nt"•·ntind .•"'"

.

loan for a job estimated to to the infrastructure of approved other adjustments
cost around $239,000. Lincoln Hill that would be to· the 2006 appropriations,
Village Administrator John very expensive to fix ."
adjustments that will help
Anderson worlced to secure
Anderson added the the. village "just meet" paythe loan after it appeared the money would be available roll for the end of the year.
village may be turned down after July I, 2007 with a · These adjustments were
agaip for grant money in monthly payment of rough- · prepared by Clerk Treasurer
regards to the project. .
·Jy $660. The estimated · Kathy Hys.e ll . with the
•'This is a. project we've completion time is one ye'ar ;~pproval of the village
been 1rying to get done for a after the money becomes finance committee.
number of years," Anderson available.
Chief Rick Blaennar of the
told council. ••A couple
Council passed resolution Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
more main breaks in the 26.06 which transferred Depanment
discussed
wrong part of Lincoln Hill $5,000 from the general to changing the model and
and we could have damage the
street fund and brand of the department's

new ladder truck after the
original, verbal quote from a
vendor changed. Blaettnar
said the departm!!nt wanted
to TJOW go with an American
Lefrance model for $624,665
which Blaettnar said was a
better truck and better buy.
The new truck will be purchased with various grant
monies already secured by
the fire department at no cost
to the village,

Pleue see Lon. AS

.

BY BRIAN J. REED

Lord ble&gt;&gt; you • ilh His graces and wann. loving hean.

DEADLINE: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, NOON

"""

BREEOOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND g8,00 PER LISTING • $12 IF PICTURE INCLUDED

'

'

1 -'. :.! O O h

Smoking ban
no threat
without
enforcement
procedure

llowewr. Hu~hes' return
11 "' tempered h} the In" lif
C1Ys fo rwa rd Drew Gooden.
11lw injured his left groin
Ln• inu
10
dunk durin~.,.
c
c
pregame \\ Jrn~up .....
With no O'Nl'al to block
nr impede their way, the
C11 alier' drme to the ha;,ket
:11 wi ll i1\ the first half for
l:t) Ulh and of L'Ou"e. a few
Junk' Ill J:nn,'s.
( le1dand led '" f.S in ihc
fir, I quarter and cxtcndeJ its
lead hi 24 when Jame s hl cbted do11 n the left ,icfe for a
IJ) up ·11 ith :&lt;:20 to· go hcfnre
halftime The buckel incned
a chant of "You ra n't stnp
htm ... from tan' in lhc. upper
derk ,II ahnut the "'111'' ttme
Jad ,nn '"" hc111c \;Inked
lw CarJ i,k.
' the

POMEROY - .Pomeroy
Village Council approved
the offer of a ~ year, zero
percent interest loan from
the Ohio Public Works
Commission to overhaul
water mains, branches of
water lines and hydrants on
Lincoln Hill.
The decision was mude at
last night's council meeting
to take advantage of the

tO. May Grofs angcls'gmdc youand protect you throughout li me.
II. You w~re a light in our life that hum ~ rorever in our hearts.

15. Ma)lhe

~-.l minut~ ....

•\rnNron ~ 'L'OI'Cd lfl JlOIIlh

BSERGENTOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Page AS
• William H. Hoback, _
83
• Drusilla House, 91
• Maxine Walters, 88

~ot ~omc ._rare re~t on the •
bench in the final 12 min-

a'

BY BET1I SIRei!IT

.. ,

On Friday. December 22, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
forgotten. They will be similar to the.sample below:

Ill&lt; I \11\1 H

Loan for Lincoln Hill water improvement project
approved
.

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

We remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.

I t I Sll\\

'•Calendars
Classifieds
Comics

Sports
Weather

A3 ·
A3 ·
B3-4

Bs
A4
As
B Section

As

© 2006 Ohio Volley Publbihlng Co.

...

POMEROY -Ohio's
smoking · ban went into
effect last week, but most
local restaurant and bar
owners are waiting until
the law is ' enforced before
they remove ashtrays from
thetr tables.
Last month, Ohio voters
approved a new 'state law
that prohibits smoking in
public businesses and work
places. There are some
·-e~ptimis

to

they are rare.
.
Bars and. restaur.tht ate
now smoke-free in Ohio at least under the state
statute. Most local restau·
rants were already smokefree, but in bars and taverns,. cigarette smoking has
been permitted, . if not
encouraged by placement
of ashtrays and matches on
bars and tables.
As part of the new law,
those business owners were
required, on Dec. 8, to
remove all ashtrays and
smoking implements from
their premises and to post
Charlene H-h/pllo!DI
state-approved "no smok- George Wright and Bill Quickel were guides for one of three groups on Pomeroy's church walking tour.
ing" signs. Those signs
must include reference to
the Ohio Revised Code section and a toll-free number
for reporting violations.
Business ·owners will
BY CIWIUNE HOEFUCII
' HOEACHOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM
likely get most of the fines .
when the law is enforced,
POMEROY - Nearly 300
PI....... IH.AS
Bend area residents came
together late Sunday afternoon
for a walking tour of Pomeroy
visiting · seven churches, all
marked with entrance .luminaries, presenting mini-programs of
church history, hohday music,
·
stories, and displays.
The tour tag¥,ed "Christmas
Along the River' offered a look
at faith, past and present, in the
historic churches of Pomeroy, all
but one more than a century old.
BY BETH SERGENT
Attired in decorated top hats and
BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
carrying lanterns guides led
groups from one church to
POMEROY- Although another, pausing pan way
nearly 20 churches located through for refreshments in the
in Upper Sandusky will be Bethany building.
giving away more than
The churches visited were
goodwill this weekend to Pomeroy ·· Baptist,
Grace
the citizens of Meigs Episcopal, St. Paul Lutheran,
County, goodwill is at the Trinity,
United .
Pomeroy
heart of their delivery.
Methodist,
Sacred
Heart
That delivery will arrive Catholic and Pomeroy 'Church of
sometime after l:l a.m. on Christ. It was a holiday event
Saturday morning at the planned by the Pomeroy
Mulberry
Community Mjfrchants Association and
Center and will include a chaired by Sandee Mills.
semi-truck and trailer as
"It' turned out great, the
well as pickup trucks full of churches and everyone involved
everythmg from furniture, did a fabulous job," commented
appliances, clothing, toys Mills following the tour, a "first"
and over I 00 boxed, nonthe.Merchants Association.
perishable
meals
that forProceeds
will be used for
include a small Christmas beautilication projects in downham . Eligibility for these town Pomeroy and holiday
items is as simple as showto disadvantaged
'
ing up with no proof of assistance
,'
Meigs County families. The
income required though Merchants Association has des.,
those that show up early ignated a portion of the proceeds
and help unload the items
the
Meigs
County
will have first · pick. The for
Cooperative Parish's food basket The nearly 300 Bend residents on the walking tour of churches paused for refresh·
ments at the Bethany Building part way through the tour.
Ple!IH ... GoodwilL AS and toy giveaway.

f!oliday cht•rcb tour a success

Churches of
Upper Sandusky
providing
goodwill
and giveaway

..

..

�•
•

_PageA2

WoRLD
Holocaust·. deniers gather in Iran for
conference casting doubt on Nazi geriocide
NATION·•

The Daily Sentinel
.

Taee1ey, December 1a, aoo6

Thesday, Dec. I 2
POMEROY - Bedford
Township Trustees. 7 p.m..
town hall.
POME~OY Meigs
County Board of Elections,
8:30 a.m. at the office.

of the Holocaust is
thrown into doubt, then
the identity and nature of
Israel will be thrown into
doubt," said Mottaki,
whose ministry put together the conference. "And if,
during this review, it is
proved that the Holocaust
was a historical realiry, then
what is the reason for the
Muslim people of the region
and the Palestinians. havin~
to pay the cost of the Nazis

TEHRAN. Iran -

Iran
hosted Holocaust deniers
from around the world
Monday at a conference
examinmg whether the Nazi
genocide took J?lace, a
meeting Israel's pnrne minister condemned as a "sick
phenomenon."
The 67 participants from
30 countries included former Ku Klux Klan leader
David Duke and Holocaust
skeptics who have been
prosecuted in Europe for
!luestioning whether 6 milbon Jews were killed by the
Nazis or whether gas chambers were ever used.
"The number of victims at
the Auschwitz concentration
camp could be about 2,007 ,"
Australian Frederick Toben
told the conference, according to a Farsi translation of
his remarks. "The railroad to
the camp did not have
enough capaciry to transfer
large numbers of Jews," said
Toben, who was jailed in
1999 in Germany for casting
doubt on the Holocaust.
The two-day conference
was initiated by President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in
an apparent attempt to burnish his status as a tough
opponent of Israel. The
hard-line president has
described the Holocaust as a
"myth" and called f9r Israel
to be wiped off the map.
Earlier this year, his government backed an exhibition
of anti-Israel cartoons in a
.show of defiance after
Danish ·cartoons caricaturing . Islam's
Prophet
Muhamrrtad were published
in Europe, raising an outcry
among Muslims ..
Organizers and participants touted the conference
as a scholarly gathering
aimed. at discussing the
Holocaust away from
Western taboos and the
restrictions imposed on
scholars in Europe. In
Germany, Austria and

Community Calendar
Public meetings

Clubs and
organizations
Thesday, Dec. U
HARRISONVILLE
. Harrisonville Chapter 255,
· O.E.S. will have its
Christmas meeting, $5 gift
.exchange, take non-perish. able food for pantry. Dues
payable. Dress in Christmas
' attire. Refreshments.
Wednesday, Dec. 13
CHESTER - Middleport
Liternry Club, I p.m. at the
·Chester Courthouse. Eastern
Bell Choir to provide progrd111.
Each member to take cookies.
Thursday, Dec. 14
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 453 meeting
and installation of officers,
7:30p.m. All Master Masons
invited. Refreshments.
SYRACUSE
Wildwood Garden Club will
meet at 5 p.m. at the home
of Joy Bentley. Members
are asked to prepare a dozen
. cookies and take items for
the Senior Citizens Center.
RACINE Sonshine
Circle, 7 p.m. at the Dorcas
Bethany Church. $10 gift
exchange.
POMEROY -Alpha Iota
Masters Christmas luncheon, I p.m. home of Carol
· McCullough.
·
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW 9053, 7 p.m. at the
hall in Tuppers Plains. Meal
at 6:30p.m.

crimes?~~

Al'~to

Iranian Foreign Minister. ll.. .&gt;nouchehr Mottaki, left, shakes hands with Rabbi Yisroel David Weiss. who is a member of
Jews United Against Zionism. as Yisroel Feldman, second left, and Ahron Kohen, look on at a conference on the Holocaust,
in Tehran, Iran. Iran on Monday opened a conference that it said would examine whether the Holocaust took place, claiming the meeting was an opportunity to discuss the World War II genocide in ari atmosphere free of what it termed western
taboos. EVen before it opened, the gathering was condemned by Germany, the United States and Israel.
France, it is illegal to deny
aspects of the Holocaust.
Duke, a former Louisiana
state representative. praised
Ahmadinejad
for
his
"courage" in holding a conference "to offer free speech
for the world's most
repressed idea: Holocaust
revisionism."
"In Europe, you can
freely question; ridicule an\1
deny Jesus Christ. The same
is true for the Prophet
Muhammad, and nothing
will happen to you," Duke
said. "But offer a single
question of the smallest part
of the Holocaust and ' you
face prison."
·
Also among participants
were two rabbis and four

other members of the group
Jews
United
Against
Zionism, who were dressed
in the traditional long black
coats and black hats of
ultra-Orthodox Jews. The
group rejects the creation of
Israel on the grounds that it
violates Jewish law.
Rabbi Abron Kohen urged
. participants not to deny the
Holocaust. ·"If we say that
this crime did not happen, it
is a humiliation and insult to
the victims," he · said.
according to a translation of
his remarks.
But he added that Zloni~ts
ltave used the Holocaust to
"give legitimacy to their
illegitimate project," the
creation of Israel.

British investigators in Moscow question
key Russian witness in Litvinenko case
ing by British and Russian investigating Kovtun· on
investigators lasted three suspicion that he may have
illegally handled radioachours.
MOSCOW - A key wit"I gave testimony exclu- tive material.
ness in the poisoning death sively as a witness. I was
Lugovoi, Kovtun and a
of a former Russian security · officially informed of that third associate who was in
agent was questioned before the · interrogation,'.' .London with them on the
Monday by British investi- !TAR-Tass quoted him as weekend of Nov. I,
gators at the Moscow hospi- saying. "They made no Vyacheslav .. Sokolenko,
have denied involvement in
tal where he was undergo- charges against me ." ·
ing tests for radiation conta- . Lugovoi said the results Litvinenko's death.
an exLitvinenko mination.
of his medical tests would
The witness, Andrei be known later this week Russian agent who was a
Lugovoi, a former security but added he was unlikely fierce Kremlin critic- died
Nov. 23 of poisoning from
agent turned businessman, to make them public.
met
with
Alexander · Lugovoi .told the . RIA polonium-210 after blaming
Litvinenko at a London Novosti news agency that Russian President Vladimir
hotel on Nov. I, the day Kovtun, who was inter- Putin, also a former intelliLitvinenko was believed viewed by British and gence officer, for the poipoisoned with the radioac- Russian investigators last · soning.
Deputy
Kremlin
tive isotope polonium-21 0.
week, was "feeling normal."
Another former officer
Traces of polonium-210 spokesman Dmitry Peskov
who took part in the meet- have now been confirmed in told
the
British
ing, Dmitry Kovtun, has a Hamburg · apartment of Broadcasting
Corp.'s
been diagnosed with radia- Kovtun's ex-wife, where he "Newsnight" program that
tion poisoning and is spent two nights, and the car it was "unthinkable that the
believed to be at the same that picked him up from the Russian govenunent can be
hospital, which once treated Hamburg airport when he behind any killing."
victims of the Chernobyl arrived from Moscow.
Peskov reaffirmed that
nuclear disaster. Traces of
On Monday, police said Scotland Yard investigators
polonium-2 10 have been that the ex-wife, her partner in Russia were not allowed
found
in
Hamburg, and two small children to question witnesses face
Germany, which Kovtun showed no signs of external to face and had to rely on
visited ahead of the meet- contamination but would their Russian counterparts
ing, but it remained undergo further tests. They for assistance. ·
you
imagine
unknown whether he was might have been contami- · "Can
involved in the poisoning or nated, for instance, by eat- Russia's agents coming to
ing with the ~arne cutlery or London here, and questiona victim of it.
drinking
from the same ing anyone they want? It's
Lugovoi told the !TARunimaginable,"
Peskov
Tass and Interfax news .glass.
Gennan prosecutors are said.
agencies that his question-

Bv JUDITH INGRAM
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Announce Youe

Holiday Worship Service
Christmas Church Service ads
will publish Friday,
December 15th ·
and Friday December 22nd
Deadline December 13, 2006
•

Call Dave or Brenda
at 740-992-2155
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part1c1pant, ence ."a sick phenomenon."
Another
German
Parliament
Rebert Faurisson, has been
convicted five times in President Norbert Lammert
France for denying crimes protested the conference in
against humanity - most . a letter to Ahmadinejad ,
recently last · month, when calling it anti-Semitit: prohe was fined for denying in paganda "under the pretext
an interview with Iranian of scientific freedom."
· Israel's official Holocaust
TV that the Nazis meant to
memorial,
Yad Vashem, said
exterminate Jews'.
Faurisson, a retired uni- the Tehran · conference .was
versity professor, has regu- "an· effort to. mainstream
larly caused outrage in Holocaust · denial" and
France, claiming that no gas "paint (an) extremist agenda
chambers were used in Nazi with a scholarly brush."
Iranian Foreign Minister
concentration camps.
The gatherina brought Manouchehr Mottaki disquick condemnation from missed the criticism as ''preIsrael and Germany. Israeli dictable," telling delegates
Prime Minister Bhud Olmen there was "no logical reason
called on the world to for opposing this conference."
"If the official v'ersion
protest, terming the confer-

A
statement
from
Ahmadinejad was expected
to be read to delegates
Tuesday.
The conference fit in with
Ahmadinejad's policy of
seeking . to ,cast Iran as an
alternative power to the West
- in politics, science aild
academics. His anti-Israeli
and anti-U.S. stances have
brought out crowds of SUJ?·
porters during visits to Asta
and Africa in recent years,
and he has used those themes
to rally supPort at home.
Ahmadinejad has said the
Nazi genocide during World
War II was a "myth" and
"exaggerated." He has also
repeatedly said Palestinians
bad to pay the price for .
European guilt over the
Holocaust.
The . Tehran gathering
coincided with an independently convened academic
on · the
conference
Holocaust in Berlin, where
historians affirmed the
accuracy of the Nazi genoci'de data and questioned the
motives of those behind the
· Tehran forum .
Wolfgang Benz, head of
the Center for Research on
Anti-Semitism at Berlin's
Technical Universiry, said
people who deny the
Holocaust "know perfectly
well what happened."
''1bey want to usc what
happened- through denying
it - to effect sorncthini else,
to articulate the crude old
anti-Semitism against Israel.'~
he said. "It's about politics ...
not about scholarship."

l

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Friday, Dec. 15
RACINE -Live nativity, 6-9 J?.m., Racine United
Methodtst Church. refreshments in basen1ent.
'Saturday, Dec. 16
MIDDLEPORT
·Birthday party for Jesus,
community celebration, 2-5
p.m .. Rejoicing Life Church.
PORTLAND
- Free
Christmas
dinner
at
Stiver~ville
Community
Church. I p.m. Public.invited.
Sunday, Dec. 17
RACINE
Church
musical festival and morn- .
ing service. II a.m., Racine
United Methodist CIJurch.
LONG BOTTOM
Christmas program at the
United
Long
Bottom
Methodist Church, 6:30p.m.
RACINE - Christmas
cantata "His Name is Jesus,"
7 p.m., First Bapiist Church
of Racine, nursery provided.
RACINE
- Carmel - .
Sutton Church Christmas
program, "I'll Be Home for
Christmas," 7 p.m., Carmel
Fellowship Center. Adult
choir and God's Kidz II featured.
. POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Church of Christ
and Enterprise United
Methodist Church·will have
a family pight program 7
p.m. with a Christmas party
following. On Christmas
Eve, 7 p.m., the choir will
present the cantata, "0
Night Divine." Both events
will take place ·at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ
on West Main St.

Wife should give it her best shot
BY KAntY MtTCHEI.L
AND MARCY SuGAR

Dear Annie: My husband
and I are both in our 40s.
We have always had a good
marriage and have been
blessed with three wonderful children.
Last weekend, while
searching for some important papers, I was shocked
to find my husband's se.cret
collection of women's fashion catalogs. There was no
pornography, but after looking at some of the pictures
he had clipped, it became
obvious that he has a fetish
for women wearing leather,
high-heeled boOts and other
provocative outfits.
· Initially, I was angry and
hun, but I cooled off. I confronted my husband, and he
apologized. He got rid of the
pictures and assured me he
loves only me. He even sent
me flowers the next day.
However, I just received a
rather large package in the
mail. I was shocked to find
inside a black leather
miniskirt, satin camisole,
thigh-high boots and fishnet
stockings, accompanied by a
rather suggestive note from
my husband. I told him I
could never wear anything ·
like this, and he responded,

lessly despite all my desperate attempts to escape.
If your friends screen
your calls or don't call you
back, perhaps you are trapping them on the phone too
long. If people avoid having
a conversation with you,
maybe you talk too much. If
you are the only one talking
after a while, be quiet! No
one enjoys being engulfed
by
verbal
diarrllea.
Consuming your friends '
time with no resp~ct for
their priorities is inconsiderate. - Broken Ear in
California
Dear Broken
Ear:
Believe it or not, some peopie don't mind this. but it
can be a major ordeal for
others. The. trick to getting
off the phone is to be pleasant and guick. "It's been
great talkmg, but I don 't
want to keep you. Bye."
. And hang up. ·
Dear Annie: You recently
printed a letter from Dr.
Henry Lynch about the
importance . of women
knowing their risk for breast
cancer. I was disappointed
that he failed to mention
that men, too, can be victims of breast cancer.
I went to my doctor for a
minor cold and mentioned
that my breast was tender

and I had noticed secretions
from my nipple. He immediately did a breast exam
and discovered a lump. It
was surgically removed,
and thankfully, it wasn' t
cancerous.
Annie, please inforin your
readers that men can al so be ·
' victims of invasive breast
lumps, both cancerous and
noncancerous .
A
Surprised Male Reader
Dear Surprised: You are
correct. Allhough not as
common, men· also can be
diagnosed with breast cancer, mosr often between the
ages of 60 and 70. All men
should have their breasts
checked regularly, and if
you notice any unu sual
lumps or discharge, inform
your doctor immediately.
Annie's Mailbox is writ- .
ten by Katl!y Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Amr Landers
column. Please e-mail your ·
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, lL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

Meetings set to plan mentoring program expansion

ATHENS - A meeting
will be held Thursday, Dec.
14, to inform schools, nonprofits, and faith-bastd
organizations
· in
Appalachian Ohio and West
V1rginia about the opponunity to create and expand
mentoring programs for
young people.
Friday, Dec. 15
The Corporation for
POMEROY - Mildred National and Community
Satu~day, Dec. 16
POMEROY -Breakfast Schaefer Perry will observe Service has awarded Big
with Santa, 9 a.m., Pomeroy her 84th ·birthday on Dec. Brothers Big Sisters of
Library, free picture taken, 15. Cards may be sent to her · Athens, Inc. a one-year
free g1ft-wrapped book for at Room 124A, Rocksprings planning grant to develop a
Rehabilitation
Center, regional program that will
children.
TUPPERS PLAINS 367 59 Rocksprings Road, place teams of two or more
Holiday .concert at Eastern Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
·full-time AmeriCorps members in local schools, nonprofits, and faith-based
organizations to develop
and implement site-based
mentoring
programs.
Partner organizations are
now being sought to host
these Members.
Big Brothers Big Sisters
of Athens County, in partnership with their long-term
collaborator, Sojournc:rs,
has initiated this program in
an effort to spread the positive benefits of mentoring
across rural Appalachia:
"We believe in the power
of mentoring relationships
as a means to positive
impact in the lives of young
people,"
stated
Amy
Reinhardt, Big Brothers Big
Sisters of Athens Executive
Director, "That's where this
AmeriCorps ·
program
comes in. Our desire to
· serve more kids through
mentoring programs is a
great fit with AmeriCorps'
goal to recruit volunteers to
Submitted pllolo
serve communities in meanAngie Logan. office assistant in the Athens Branch office of ingful ways.''
Big Brothers Big Sisters
· . the ,Auditor of State, was recently presented a distinguished
of
Athens began its 20th
service award for her dedication and commitment by Betty D.
Montgomery, Auditor of State .. She and her husband. Darin year of service in Athens
Logan, and sons , Bradley and Conner, reside in Middleport. County in October. Partner

Birthdays

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"Just wear it in the bedroom ."
I want to fulfill my busband's sexual needs, but I
worry he will be disappointed when he sees me wearing
such a revealing outfit. I' m
not as svelte as I once was.
What should I do? - A
Self-Conscious Wife
Dear Wife; Wear it anyway. Your husband is giving
you the chance to fulfill his
fant.asies. He wants to see
the woman he loves in the
get-up of his dreams. To
him. you are sexy, and
dressed in those clothes,
you would be irresistible.
We say, tum down the lights
and give it your best shot.
Dear Annie: Once again
I've been trapped for an
hour on the telephone by a
dear friend who thinks my
time is all hers to mindlessly chatter away about her
hfe, despite all attempts to
politely extricate myself.
Why do people think that
when I answer the phone, I
have nothing else to do with
my time and want be imprisoned by a one-sided narrative? I always precede my
conversations with, "Is this
a convenient time to talk?"
and then· keep it short, But I
am constantly amazed by
those who chatter away end-

former foster care youth to mentoring in order to see if
· serve as AmeriCorps mem- we are a good match for
bers. In addition to receiv- support," encouraged Amy
ing all of the training and Reinhardt.
An informational meeting
support ·normally provided
to AmeriCorps members, will be held Thursday. Dec.
this Corps' members will 14. at · the Schoenbaum
receive comprehensive sup- Family Enrichment Center
port to help them prepare for (1701 W. 5th Street, #5) in
and be successful in college Charleston, W.Va. To register
call 740-594-3395 or e-mail
after their term of service.
"We'd love to talk with bbbsathensdirector@yahoo.c
organizations interested in om.

organizations will benefit
from the knowledge and
best practices developed by
Big Brothers Big Sisters of
. America, the national
authority on mentoring.
Sojourners is a youth
development organization
committed to helping foster
c~ youth successfully transition into adulthood. One
unique aspect of this program will be the targeting of

Logan receives award

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Church events

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

ANNIE'S 'MAILBOX

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OPINION
Tuesday,Dece!:~~~~
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:The Daily Sentinel

Partisan fights likely over health care in '07

The Daily Sentinel

Partisan wrangling over
health care could be as rau(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
cous in the new Congress as
www.mydallysentlnel.com
the sparring over Iraq, but in
the longer run, there's reato hope for consensus.
son
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
The Bush administration
and
the new Democratic
Dan Goodrich
Congress almost certainly
Publisher
will be at odds over the
Medicare prescription-drug
Charlene Hoeflich
program, stem-cell research
General Manager-News Editor
and funding for the State
Children's Health Insurance
Program.
The administration will get
nowhereonce again- if it
Ctmgress shall make no law respecting an
proposes medical malpractice
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
award ceilings to a Congress
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of in which the trial lawyer
speech, or of the press; or the right of the peo- lobby has gained influence.
And Democrats detest health
ple peaceably to assemble, and to petition the savings accounts, the GOP
device to make individuals
Government for a redress of grievances.
responsible for contro.lling
'
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution healthcure costs.
But it's possible - not
likely, but possible - that
an agreement could · be
reached to expand children's health coverage.
It's also possible that
Congress could help accelerate impressive Bush administration initiatives on
"value-driven" health care
- based on computerizing
all medical records and providing accurate data on treatment outcomes - and "payDear Editor:
For years, I have enjoyed Christmas shopping in the local for-performance" medicine.
And because of leadership
malls. The lights were always beautiful and the decorations
by
presidential candidate
were amazing. The Christmas music had always helped and Massachusetts
Gov. Mitt
usher me into the Christmas spirit.
Romney
(R),
the
plight
of 47
Sadly, this year is different. There is a local store from a
million
uninsured
Americans
national chain that is displaying pornographic ornaments
that they are call in~ "pornaments.' These orn11ments are of finally may get the attention
, very bad taste and 11 saddens me that displaying and selling it deserves in 2008.
In April, Romney signed
them is evidently acceptable in this area.
mto
law a bipartisan proI yearn for Christmas "days of old" when we could take
our children to the mall and let them freely and secretly gram that mandates that all
residents
Christmas .shop for those they care about. With these por- Massachusetts
have
health
insurance
\1/hile
naments available for even the very yo11ngest to see and
providing
subsidies
for'
the
. buy, "safe family" shopping is no longer an option.
Terri Bartee
. low-income uninsured. The
Democratic
state
Long Bottom
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

READERS'

VIEWS

Safe no more
'Pomaments' are distutbing

Veterans Administration as a rent funding levels, however,
model for providing drastic only 6 million have SCHIP
drug
savings.
But coverage, and 600,000 chii Republicans counter that the dren may lose coverage this
VA provides what amounts to year because Congress has
socialized medicine, requir- not increased the budget.
ing veterans to see only VA- Covering a116 million would
employed doctors at VA facil- cost from $30 billion to $40
ities and using VA pharrna- billion over five years.
cies to acquire VA-approved
The .Bush administration is
drugs, limiting choices in a not expected to recommend.
· Legislature also imposed a way that Medicare beneficia- . increases. but Democrats
may. "I don 't see it in their
fee for employers who do ries would never accept.
merely
'first I 00 hours' agenda,
Democrats
might
not .provide insurance for
repeal the noninterference though," said Bruce Lesley,
their workers.
·
clause.
But Leavitt has said president of First . Focus, a
The top item on the
he
will
not
authorize negoti- children's advocacy group.
Democrats' 2007 health
If
the
Hou se were to "And,'' he added, "they have
ations.
agenda- repeal of the noninterference clause that pre- pass a bill compelling nego- promised 'pay as you go'
•vents the federal govern- tiations, it likely would be budgeting and have a lot of
ment from negotiating drug filibustered in the Senate. demands for money. So, we
prices for Medicare recipi- And if it passed, it almost have a lot of work to do."
_Some help is being
ents - will set off a furiou s certainly w.ould be vetoed.
One
vanat10n
ts
a
plan
oltered
by the health-insurpartisan battle.
proposed
by
Durbin
and
ance
·
lobby America' s
Democrats are ignoring
Rep
.
Rahm
Emanuel,
D-111.,
Health
Insurance . Plans,
polling evidence that seniors
approve overwhelmingly of to create a government-run which is. calling for fuJI
the Medicare Part D drug . drug plan to compete with SCHIP funding and a tax
program and the fact that pri vate in surance plans. credit designed to cover all
private health insurance Insurance lobbyists note 8.3 million uninsured chilplans have negotiated ·sav- that Durbin 's bill set a pre- dren - a down payment on
mgs that make the-program mium ceiling at $35 a covering the nation 's 47
far less costly than expected. month - but that the actual million uninsured .
The Bush administration
Democratic leaders such average cost of private
$27
a
month.
·
has
been using Medicare ·
plans
is
just
as incoming Sp_eaker Nancy
As
part
of
Democratic.presand
executive
authority to
Pelosi (Calif.), Senate
Majority Whip Dick Durbin sun: on. pharmaceutical com- advance the cause of pay(Ill.) and the prospective pames, Rep. Henry Waxman, for-performance medicine,
chairmen of health-related D-Calif., the incoming chair- but Congress could advance
committees and subcommit- man of the .Governmen( it by pushing for a single
tees aU favor expanded gov- Reform Comrrunee, can be standard - or interoperexpected to hold hearings on ability ~ of health in formaernment authority.
On the administration side, drug pricing, profits and mar- tion technology systems.
A recent Gallup Poll
Health and Human Services keting techniques. A move
Secretary Michael Leavitt also will be' mounted to create showed that 71 percent of
told The New York Times a generic market 'for biologic Americans think that U.S.
that "government negotiation drugs to parallel the one that health care either has
of drug prices does not v.~,ork now exists for chemical phar- "major problems" or is in "a
state of crisis." And 69 perunless you have a program maceuticals.
Another priority for next cent think it's up to the fedcompletely run by the government. Democrats say they year is reauthorization of era! government to fix it.
·want the ~overnment to SCHIP meant to benefit 12 That's a mandate.
negotiate pnces. What they million low-income children
(Morton Kondracke is
really want is government- whose parents lack health executive editor of Roll
run health care."
·
insurance and are ' not · Call, the ne wspaper of
Democrats often cite the enrolled in Medicaid. At cur- Capitol HilL)

Gone
Message to a thitf
Dear Editor:

·· To the person or persons who took the angel that I placed
· on my "Sweetie's" grave at Sand Hill Cemetery, Long
' Bottom, this is to let you know I have replaced it with
· another angel. · .
·
. Please feel free .to take this one, too: Now you can have a
. ·matched set to enJOY over the upcommg hohday.
• Don't worry about tomorrow and what your fate might
be, for by the time tomorrow comes, today 's but a memory. Don't spend your time wondering if hap~iness will last,
think about your life today for all too .soon tt's past.
" Sometimes sadness comes along and we seldom realize
that it was really happiness, wrapped up in disguise. So
'·don't fret when skies are gray, because in just the blink of
"an eye, tomorrow is ::testerday. .
:

' Ellen M. Darby
Bidwell

Bringing back the Constitution?

·

Now that the Republican
one-party rule of Congress is
about to end for at least two
years, there are signs that the
Military Commissions Act
LETTERS TO THE
of 2006 - which further
EDITOR
expanded the unilateral
Letters to the editor are .welcome. They should be less executive ppwers that the
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be president prizes - may be
signed, and include address mzd telephone number. No subject to revisions more in
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in line with the Constitution's
:·good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of separation of powers, which
:;thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- have been an endangered
species for the past six years.
~: ed for publication.
Connecticut's Democratic
,.
Sen. Christopher Dodd ·hilS
authored the Effective
Terrorists Prosecution Act ~
r.
which he will reintroduce in
(USPS 21 3-960)
Reader Services
the
new Congress - that
Ohio Valley Publishing
''
amends the rampant constituCo.
'
Correction Polley
tional defects in the Military
Published
e11ery
aftemoon, Monday
' Our main concern in all stories is to
Commissions
Act that the
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
' be accurate. If you know of an error
president
was
very
pleased to
Pomeroy, . Ohio,
Second-class
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
sign in October. Since global
homicidal terrorism is far
992·2156.
Member: The Associated Press. and
'
from abating, Dodd makes
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
.
Poatmaeter: Send address Correcthe obligatory point:
'
Our main number Is
tlons
to
The
Daily
Sentinel,
111
Court
"It's cle&amp;r that the people
..
(740) 992-2156.
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who perpetrated these hor.'
Department extensions are:
rendous crimes agaitist our
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(but) at the same
Dally
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protecting
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means to be America ... if
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we are to uphold the values
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of
equal j ustice that are codAdvertising
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&lt;lruct to the Daily Sen~nel. No sub·
Ified
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Outoldo Salea: Dave Harris, Ext. 15 scription by mail pennilted in areas
Accordingly, hi's legisla' Outside Sales: Brenda Davis, Ed16 where home carrier ~ rvice is avail'
tion
· would restore to
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able.
detainees
suspected of ter'
'
rori
sm
their
rights to habeas
Mall Subscription
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General Manager
corpus the core of
tnalde Metga County
'
American due process Charl ene Hoeflich, Ext 12
13 Weeks
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stripped out of the 2006
'
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127.11
52
Weeks
Military Commi ssion s Act,
E·mall :
•
even though the Supreme
news@ mydailysenlinel.com
Outalde Meigs County
Court in 2004 and 2006
·13 Weeks
'53.55
rul ed that these prisoners
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petition our tederal court s,

The Daily Sentinel

.

.

~

.
~

.

~

~

Nat

Hentoff

including their conditions of
confinement. .
The Dodd bill would also
amend
the startlingly
expanded definition of
"unlawful enemy combatant" in the MCA law that
allows the. president to hold
detainees, so designated by
him, indefinitely - including those loosely accused of
"purpo,sely and materially
supporting" the enemy.
(Permanent legal aliens in
the United States could also
be swept _up as enemy combatants for contributing to
charities they didn 't know
were linked to terrorists.)
Dodd would narrow th is
definition of enemy combatants "to individuals who
directly participate in hostilitie s against tlie United
States."
Under the 2006 MCA, trials of enemy combatants can
include evidence obtained
from "coercive" interrogations. a term proved in the
past to sometime s be a
euphemism for torture. The
Dodd bill excludes such evidence as well as unreliable
hearsay evidence - from
sources the defendants are
not able to confront.
The bi U the president
signed into law las t October
also gives him, and l1i&gt; successors, the au th ori ty to
interpret the mea ning ami

application of the Geneva
Conventions on the treatment of prisoners. This
country ,is a signatory to
those conventions, and the
Supreme Court- in Hamdi
v..Ruinsfeld (2006) - mandated that we adhere to the
Geneva Conventions.
Rather than allowing the
. president the power to decide
. the spirit and letter of the
Geneva Conventions, Dodd's
amendments would clearly
subject th:it interpretation by
the president to congressional
and judicial oversight.
And,
the
EtTecti ve
Terrori sts Prosecution Act, if
passed by the new Congress,
would call for "expedited
judicial revie w of the
Military Commissions Act of
2006 to detem1ine the constitutionality of its provisions."
A good many members of
Congress who voted for that
act, very much including
those who did so reluctantly, did expect tht: Supreme
Court to have the final word
on its constitutionality. "Let
tht: Supreme Court clean it
up," said Republican Sen.
Arlen Specter, who voted
for .that legi slati on even
after publicly and passionately declaring unconstitutiona I the stripping of meaningful habeas-corpus rights
from the detaine~s .
The High Court, of course,
will decide for itself how
expeditiously it will review
MCA 2006, but its members
~ ill bear in mind !hat the law
Signed by the prestdent essentially overrules two previous
Supreme Court decisions.·
In speaking against MCA
2006, Dodd struck a powerful
personal note: "My father,
Thomas Dodd, worked along-

· side Justite Robert Jackson in
prosecuting (the war crimes)
trials at Nuremberg. He
viewed Nuremberg. as one of
·· the most pivotal moment~ in
our history - where America
chose to uphold the rule of
law rather than succumb to the
rule of the mob.''
Then Christopher Dodd
made a 11ivotal constitutiona! point that eluded the president and Congre ssional
supporters of MCA 2006:
"These (Nazi) enemies of
the United States (on trial at
Nuremlierg) were not given
the opportunity to walk away
from their crimes. Rather, they
were given the tight to face
their accuser, the right to contiunt evidence against them
and the right to a fair trial."
Those rights that defin e·.
our rule of law have beetr
emasculated in MCA 2006
- di shonoring who we are
as'Americans.
"Underlyin g (America 's
. role at Nuremberg)," Dodd
continued, "was the con viction that th is nation mu st
not tailor its most fundament al princ ipl es to the
contlict of the moment and the recognition that, if
we did, we would be walking in the very footsteps of
the enemy we despised."
I hope other warriors for
the Constitution will sign on
to
Dodd 's . Effective
Terrorists Prosecution Act to
· show we can be safe without
forgetting who we are.
(Na r Hemnff is a national/y re•wwned arllh orif)• on 1he
First Amendmem cmd th e
Bill of Rig/us and author of
many books, includi•zg "The
War o n the Bill of Rights and
th e Gathering Resistance"
(Seven Stories Press. 2004).

'

'IUesday, December 12, 2006

Obituaries

,.lam

H. HoiJack

. RACINE
Pastor
William Harold Hoback, 83
Racine, went home to ~
with his Lord having fought
a good fight and having finished the course at 11 a.m.,
Friday, Dec. 8, 2006 at his
Hog Hollow home.
Born Oct. I, 1923 in the
Rolandus community · of
Meigs County, he was the
son of the late Ethel
Easterday Hoback and J.D .
Hoback. A long time. resident of the area and a WWll
veteran, he served his country in the Soulh Pacific on
the
submarine,
USS
WIUiam H. Hoback
Bumper. He retired from the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers after 30 years of employment. Most recently he pastored the Racine Pentecostal
Assembly for 33 years. He served on the board of God's
NET in Pomeroy.
·
He is survived by his wife of 60 years, Joyce Codner
Hoback; daughters, Janice Dav1 s, Albany, Nancy
(Chuck) Johnston , Anchorage, Alaska, Candy (Ro~er)
Scaggs, Beaver and Mickey (Dave) Kucsma, Racme;
grandchildren, Nicole Davis, John Bill (iennifer)
Hoback, Larry Bill (Charlie) Davis, Charlie Bill
(Cl;u:ice) Johnston, Jonathon Johnston, Aaron Hoback,
Troy Hoback, Cry stal (Rob) Erickson, James (Maria)
Scaggs and Ryan Scaggs; twelve great grandchildren ; a
sister, Audrey Boichyn, St. Clair Shores, Mich.; a brother. Charle s (Irene) Hoback , Syracuse; and several
nieces, nephews and cousins.
In additioR to his parents, he was preceded in death by his
son, William Steven Hoback; grandson, Vernon Johnston;
sisters, Sarah Hoback and Lucille Burke: brothers, George ·
Hoback, W&amp;rd Hoback, Dwight Hoback, Mark Hoback,
Kelly Hoback and Dwight Hoback.
Funeral services will be at II a.m., Tuesday, Dec. 12,
2006 m the Cremeens Funeral Chapel, Racine. Officiating
will be Pastor Jim Stewart. Internment will be in the
Greenwood Cemetery. Friends may call from ~-4 p.m. and
6-9 p.m. on Monday at the funeral home. Casketbearers are
, John Hoback, Aaron Hoback, Sgt. James Scaggs, Ryan
Scaggs, Michael Codner and Church Baker. Military grave·side services will be conducted by Racine American Legion
. Post 602 and flippers Plains VFW Post 9053. In lieu of
tlowers, the family wishes that memorial contributions be
made to God's NET, c/o P.O. Box 323, Racine, 45771, The
Gideons or Holzer Hospice. Envelopes will be provided at
the funeral home.
·

The Daily Sentinel· . . . As

Mason United Methodist Church
to present children's musical

aorewamer- 17.64
CENX-44.23

Champion - 7.19
Charmii'C Shops 14.03
City Holdii'C- 39.98
Col-61.45
DG -15.18
DuPont- 47.42
Federal MOIUI - .44

USB-34

llutlmltted plloto

The Mason United Methodist Church will be presenting its children's musical program, "A
King is Coming to Town," on Sunday; Dec. 17, at 6 p.m., in the church's sanctuary.
Participants are Valerie Wolfe, Zachary Test, Jenna Marshall, Baylee Hoffman, Ryan
Harbour, Braden Gray, Bryton Grate, Brennan Grate, Jolisha Ervin, Alyssa Cremeans,
Whittney Council, Madison Council, and Jordon Arnold. Mason United Methodist Church is
located on Main Street In Mason.

Local Briefs

Local Weather

Merchants craft contest
set .for Saturday

Tuesday...Partly cloudy in the morning ...Then mostly cloudy with a slight
chance of rain showers in the afternoon.
Highs in the lower 60s. South winds I 0 to
15 mph with gusts up to 25 mph. Chance of
rain 20 percent.
.
.
Tuesday night ... Showers in the
evening ... Then showers likely after midnight. Not as cool with lows around 40.
South winds 5 to I0 mph. Chance of rain
80 percent.
.
Wednesc;Jay...Mostly cloudy with a 20
percent chance of showers. Highs in the
lower 50s. Southwest winds 5 to 10 mph.
Wednesday night... Mostly cloudy.
Lows in the upper 30s. Southwest winds
around 5 mph.
Thursday...Mostly cloudy with a 30 per-·
cent chance of showers. Highs around 50.

Ban

Goodwill

Pomeroy through a network
of volunteers.
"We don't know when we
could be in that position
ourselves," Hogan said of
people in need and the reason for the giveaway.
"We 're all brothers and sisters in the Lord and even
for those nonbeliev.ers you
still go and help however
you can. I've already met
them (people in Meigs
County) just through the
spirit of giving."

·Loan

~·

POMEROY - Sheriff Robert Beegle reported the arrest
and return of Terry Gilpsie of Chillicothe on a probation
violalion c harge.

Gannett - 60.22
General Electric 35.22
GKNLY- 5.60
Harley Davidson 69.09
.
JPM -47.55
Kroger - 23.71
Ltd.- 30.46
NSC- 50.95
Oak Hill Financial 28.83
OVB- 25.15
BBT- 43.87
Peoples ...:.... 29.82
Pepsico - 62.76
Premier - 13.95 ·
Rockwell - 62.16
Rocky Boots 15.95
Sears - 176.14
Wai-Mart - 46
Wendy's - 34.33
Worthington - 18.60
Dally stock reports
are the 4 p.m. closIng quotes of the previous day's transactions, provided by
Smith Financial
Advisors of Hlnlard
Lyon• In Galllpolll.
until the enforcement mech·
anism is in place.
Enforcement is expected
to begin on June 8; me110-.
. while, reports of violations
to a toll-free number at the
state health department will
be followed up with violation notices, Baird said. The
law, as enacted, calls for a
maximum fine of $2,500 for
business owners who permit
smoking on their premises.
Meigs County voters supported the is!lle by a margin
of 700 votes.

Stewart, who is also on the
safety ·cotrimlttee, reported
MIDDLEPORT - Maxin'e Filson Walters, 88, passed
the committee has been
away at 8: 10a.m. Saturday, Dec. 9. 2006, at 600 Grant St.
from PageM
addro;:_ssing the village's
in Middleport .
safety manual with suggesShe was preceded in death by her parents, Vern and Lola
tions
to add accident reportRay
McComas
of
Kinders
Filson, her husband, Tom Walters; a sister, Gertrude
· Martin; and a brother, Frank "Buddy" Filson.
· Insurance presented the vil- ing requirements and follow
She is survived by a son , David (Sandy) Walters of lage with their renewal lia- ups on those accidents.
The meeting adjourned
Nokomis, Fla.; a daughter, Carol (James) Mourning of bility insurance policy
Middleport ; grandchildren, Dale Mourning of Columbus, which decreased by $1 ,500
J uli Mourning of Middleport, Michael Mourning of ~oint thanks to a building and
Pfeasant; Chad Mourning of Athens, Chris (Caroline) truck being removed from
Walters of Supply, N.C., and Amy (Jay) Stevens of the policy. The new policy
Richmond, Va.; great-grandchildren, Nicolas Dailey, Dylan will have an annual renewal
Dailey, Amanda Maxine Dailey of Middleport, and Jillian cost of $31.,471 .00
Councilman
George
Mourning of Stanley, N.C. , David Andrew Walters of
Supply, and Laren Schwab of Supply.
·
In lieu of flowers, the family w1shes that memorial contributions be made to Christ Episcopal Church, 804, Main
St., Point Pleasant.
Arrangements will be conducted by the Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home in Point Pleasant. Visitation will be held
from 6-8 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral home, with Father
12/15 WYBG Big Country
Ray Hage of Christ Episcopal Church conducting services
Cl&amp;iUml:i Sbaw
at the funeral home at II a.m. Wednesday. Burial will be in
l2ll6 C~i&amp;IU I'~DbDD:i:t
12/l?RVHS
· Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
HDiidi)! ~idCi): Sbg~

Arrested

AEP-42.20
A..lczo - 59.83
Ashland - 88.27
Bob EV8M- 33.94

Drusilla House

For the Record

ACI-34.89

BIG- 23.88

POMEROY -The third and final holiday contest of the Pomeroy Merchants
Association will be held Saturday at
Farmers Bank.
.
The contest is for crafis wnich are currently being accepted at the bank for display in the lobby until Saturday when
JUdging will take place at noon. Cards giving the creator's name, address and telephone number must be attached to the craft
displayed. Winners will be notified once
the judgin~ is completed.
Three pnzes will be awarded, a $200 savBALTIMORE - Drusilla (Drucy) Smith House, 91,
ings bond for first, $1 00 bond for second, and
passed away on Dec. 9, 2006.
·
She was born Jan. 18, 1915 .to Ralph and Jessie Roush $50 bond for third, all provided by the bank,
Neigler in Letart Township, Meigs County. She graduated
frorn.aacine High School, Racine, and she retired from The
he said, "but I don't have· Commissioner
L~
Harmony House Hallmark Shop, Northern Lights
Marshall
said
last
month
1t
any choice. I'm not happy,
· Shopping Center, Columbus.
.
appears the local health
l,l~ it's the law."
Sne was a member of the Christ United Methodist
will be responsidepartment
Bar
owners
are
also
confrom
PageA1
Church, Baltimore and the Red Hat Society.
ble
for
enforcing
the new
cerned about the effect · the
She is survived by her sons, James F. (Louise) Smith of
Baltimore and Dale F. (Bonnie) Smith of Columbus; grand- but some establishments are smoking ban will have on law. He said there are several
children, Marsha Smith Hennick of Pataskala, Sheila still permitting smoking, at business- especially when steps that must be followed
(John) Vereb of Galloway, Melissa (Michael) Bader of least as long as there is no bars across the river in before the new law can be
Baltimore, Dale A. Smith of Edison, andMartin (Angela) enforcement. One local bar Mason County, W.Va. still enforced, including estabSmith of Baltimore; 15 great-grandchildren, one great- owner said he planned to . permit smoking on · the lishment of a penalty strucgreat-granddaughter; brother: Ralph Neigler, Jr., R~cine, prohibit smoking in his premises. There are also · ture and due process issues.
brother-in-law; Jack Sprecher, Richmond, Calif.; sisters-in- business, but only when he questions about how busiJ. Nick Baird, M.D., direclaw, Wanda Neigler, Middleport, Sara Neigler, Racine, and felt · threatened by the ness owners are t.o handle tor of the Ohio Department
Elsie Smith, Pomeroy; nieces, nephews, and friends, Judith prospect of a fine.
customers who light up of Health; said yesterday the
A. Gandee, Columbus, and Julia Ash, Pleasantville.
ban is now in effect, but the
"There are a lot of unan- despite the state law.
She was preceded in death by her parents; husbands, swered questions about it," · Meigs County Health state is unable to levy fines
Wade (Bud) Dale Smith in May 1945 and Bert House in
August I 962; brothers : Carroll, Forrest, and Arthur
Neigler; sisters: Dorothy Harden Yates and Ian Sprecher;
Juanita Hogan of the meet the basics of what peosisters-in-law Edna and Gertrude Neigler, brothers-in-law
Apostolic Gospel Church in ple might need.''
Morris Harden and Earl Yates.
One of those basics which
Upper Sandusky helped to
A celebration of life will be held Wednesday ·Dec. 13,
.. prganize this year's give-· are the meals have been
from
PageA1
2006 at 11 :30 a.m. at Christ United Methodist Church, 700
away after founder and boxed up and in addition to
South Main Street, Baltimore. The family will receive
event is open to ·the public organizer Andrea Culley of the ham include canned
callers one hour before the service.
vegetables,
potatoes,
A committal service will be held in the Chapel at Letart and it is first come first- the Andrew John Stewart canned fruit and Bisquick.
served in regards to avail- United Methodist Church
Falls Cemetery, Letart Falls, at 4 p.m. on Dec. 13.
had to step down this year In fact all items, including
The family thanks the staff of He.artl and Fairfield ability of items.
clothing and toys are boxed
This is the eighth year that due to a family illness. ·.
Rehabilitation Center for their loving care of our mother. ·
"We ' re brining nothing and ready for deli very.
Memorials may be given in her memory to the Christ churches of all denomina•
The churches of Upper
but
good items down to
United Methodist Church, 700 South Main Street, tions in Upper Sandusky
Baltimore, Ohio 43105 or to the Hospice Memorial Fund, have collected items to send these people," Hogan said. Sandusky have been colc/o HCR Manor Care Foundation, P.O. Box I0086, Toledo, to strangers they've. never "We're making sure all the . lecting items since October
met and probably will never items are in workable shape and also banded together to
Ohio 43699-0086.
Arrangements were · completed by Johnson-Smith meet all in the Christian . and nice. We're trying to raise the gas money to
bring items that pretty much deliver the items to
spirit of giving.
Funeral Home, Baltimore.
. ·
·

Maxine Filson Walters

Stocks

'Visit Our Scholastic Book
Fair"
Auditions:
"The Diary of Anne Frank"
lUlZ ~:.i ik 1Ulll6-5
New Years Eve Gala
Dinner &amp; Dancing
Make Reservations by 12/19

into executive session once
to discuss personnel matters,
specifically
disciplinary
matters in the police department. Present ,in the executive · session were council,
Hysell, Pomeroy Chief of
Police Mark Proffitt and
Mayor John Musser.

Ladies,
you tell us.
We'll tell bini.
Do )'OK haw a spedal pica of~
,.,.. hof&gt;e h4 ,..,.prisa ::101' widtl Stop in
t:lnd ll!t'. fill ""' )'OUT """' • wish lise. ~'U genu, let IVm ,.,_, how 10
maU 'lOtl'l wish com. mote.

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Trent Roush
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

740-992-3875

The Ariel-Dater Hall
428 Sec. Ave. Gallipolis, OH
740-446-ARTS (2787)

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PageA6

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The,Daily Sentinel

December, 12, 2006

www.mydailysentinel .com

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Eastern beats
River Valley.

'POMEROY r- A ad'1edtM d ~ co1aQe
o:llool v"""Y ......, &lt;&gt;vo1v1ng
teems frOm GaDia and ~ oourrtles.

and...,

Tuttdty'• CIIJDJII
BoyaBoa-.11
Eastern at Nelsonville..York, 6:30p.m.
South Gallla at Southern, 6 p.m.
aves at Wahama, 7:30p.m.

. Glrla Buk-11 ·

Grace at OVCS. 7 p.m.
WNIHing
.

BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN&lt;ii&gt;MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

River Valley at Trimble Tri, 6 p.m.

Thul'lll.ly'w g•mn
GlrloBuk-11
River Valley at SOuth Point, 6 p.m.
Southern at Water1ord, 6 p.m.
Metgs at Belpre, 6 p.m.
Eastern ~~ Miller, 6 p.m.

WV304-

friday'•=

BoyaBM~I
Meigs at Wellston, 6:30p.m.

Mon-Frla-5 Sal8·12 ."' , . ...
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College Boak-1
Bluefield at Rio 'Grande, 7:30 p.m.

~~~-:a:~:rr:,

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2a4"" $2. S32t

Eastern at Soulhern, 6:30p.m.
Gallia Academy at Chillicothe, .6 p.m .
Coal Grove at River Valley,

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SltUrdiJ.'I Qlmtf

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BoyaBook-11

River Valley vs. · Uberty Union (at Rio

Grande). 5 p.m.
Glrlo Bukotboll
Chillicothe at Gallla Academy, 5:30p.m .

Wrntllng
River Valley, Gallla Academy, Meigs at

Warren Tournament, 10 a.m.
COIIegeBookollloll

M$7 $6.21

Unkm vs. Rio Grande, 3 p.m.

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River Valley at Vinton County Tri, 6 p.m.

Women'o COllege Bookotboll
Ohio Valley at Alo Grande, 7 p.m.

INSIDE

Meigs successful
over.Southern
.

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River Valley at Polrrt Pleasant, 5:45 p.m.
Alexander at Southern, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Meigs, 6 p.m.
South Gallla at. Ironton St. Joe. 6 p.m. ·

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• HornelS sting Cavs
See Page 82
• Rb Baskelball
See Page 82

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OYP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 o.m.l
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Brad Sherman, Sports Editor

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Scon WOLFE

quickness of point guard
Catie Wolfe, Meills breezed
to a, 10-6 first penod ad vanROCK SPRINGS ·
tage. Wolfe notched six
Outscoring Southern 16-9 in points in the stint, while
the third round, the Meigs Amber Burton added two
Marauders of coach Carl and Meghan Clelland two.
Wolfe held on to defeat the Kasey Turley led Southern
Southern Lady Tc;&gt;rnadoes with four to keep the Lady
42-35 Monday night during Tornadoes close.
girls Tri-Valley Conference
Jv!eigs' defense held superInter-divisional basketpall fresh Kasey Turley scoreaction at Larry R. Morrison · less in the second round, but
gymnasium.
Whitney Wolfe-Riffle (four
Virginia
Meigs is now 4-3, while points) • and
Southern drops to 3-3 .
Brickles (three points) took
Catie Wolfe, the talented control in a 9-6 Southern
sophomore and daughter of scoring offset that brought
Coach Carl Wolfe led the the Tornadoes to within one
Lady Marauders with 17 point at the half 16-15.
points, including seven Southern put forth a huge
points going down the defensive stand in containstretch. Amy Barr had a ing Wolfe to one field goal
great third period surge to and two free throws, while
tally 13 . points, while Barr scored the only other
Meghan Clelland added two Meigs points.
four, 31)d Cayla Lee, Amber
Southern concentrated on
Bunon, Brittany Preast, and containing the Wolfe peneMelissa Grueser each added tration in the third round and
two points.
was very much successful.
Southern was led by fresh- Wolfe and her teammates,
man standout Kasey Turley however, found Amy Barr in
with 13 points, including a the wake of an eight point
perfect 5-5 at the line . scoring barrage that led the
Whitney Wolfe-Riffle had a hosts to a 32-24 third-period
great floor game and nine advantage.
points,
while Virginia
Wolfe, Lee, Preast, and
Brickles added nine, Sarah Grueser each added to in
Eddy two, and Rachael support of their newfound
·
Pickens two.
Behind the speed and Pluse see SuccessfuL B1
BY

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SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

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TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern shot layups, while
River Valley just· couldn't
get anything to fall. As a
result, the two teams continued to go on their very differt(nt paths.
·
Erin Weber had a doubledouble and Jenna Hupp also
reached double figures as
Eastern won for the fourth
sliaight time, easily defeating visiting River Valley 5429 during a girls high school
basketball game on Monday.
.Weber scored 19 points
and hauled in 14 rebounds
as her Eagles improved their
overall mark to 4-1 on the
season. Hupp nailed a pair
of three-pointers on her way
. to a dozen points. The Lady
Eagles jumped out to a 12-0
lead and was never challenged.
Much of Eastern's success
stemmed from its ability to
get to the basket. Coach
Dave Weber's girls shot
copious layups and also controlled the offensive boards
Brad Sherman/photo by a 14-5 count. Weber had
Eastern 's Jenna Hupp shoots over River V&lt;;~lley's Brooke Taylor in Monday night's high- 10 offensive boards by herself.
school girls basketball game. The Eagles won by a score of 54-29.

(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
bshermanOmydallytribune.com

Larry Crum, Sporta Writer
1740) 446-2342. ext. 33
Ierum @mydailyreglster.com

Aahley Shaw, Sports Writer
(740)446·2342, ext. 23
sponsOmydailytribune .c;om

...

Larry
Crum/photo

Ravenswood holds on for win
BY lARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

MASON, W.Va ..- Who says you need a
bench?
With just tive. Ravenswood (3-0) players
dressed for Monday nighl's meeting against
Wahama (1-3), the Devilettes ·showed just
what five deiermined players can do as they
held on for a hard fought 48-43 victory in
Mason despite the di sadvantage.
In contrast, Wahama dressed 14 players
Monday night, but that didn't matter
because no matter how many players you
dress, only five can play at a time. And for
those five players on the Ravenswood roster
- it was all business.
Using fa st breaks and forcing numerous
turnovers, the Devilettes outhu&amp;tled the
Lady Falcons with multiple quick scores
and second .c hance opportuJJities to take a

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Affiliated with Pleasant

Please see Eastern, B1

Wahama's
Tyler
Hussell
dribbles
past Point
Pleasents
defenders
enroute to
4843 victory
Monday
night in a
girls bask!!.tball ,
game

P.l

ENTI

River Valley, which made
just eight fie ld goals on the
eve ning, was .led by'
Courtney Circle with nine
and Rachel Walburn with
seven. The Lady Raiders fell
to 1-4 overall.
The score stood 13-5 after
one quarter and Eastern used
a big 14-3 scori ng edge in
the second to take a commanding 19-point advantage
into intermission, Eastern
scored the tirst nine points
of the second half to build ·
its bi gges t lead of the night
at 36-8.
River Valley, sparked by
the play of Walburn, was
able to mount an offensive
and scored the final I 0
points to close out the third
period. Walburn scored six .
straight, including a threepoint play, while Courtney
Circle had a steal and layup
and Brooke Taylor stroked
two free throws to pull their
club to within 36-18 after
three quarters.
The fourth stan·za again
belonged to Eastern, though,
as the Green and White
coasted to the 25-point win.
Amber Willbarger scored

14."881111~

wv 2~

·----- · - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - -----"----'- - - -- - - -

close 30-25 halftime lead and extend that
lead to I 0 near the end of the third quarter.
From there Ravesnwood stepped up its
defensive play and limited Wahama to just
one poim in the tirst seven and a half minutes of the fourth quarter, eventually holding on for the five point victory.
Rave nswood's Ashley Prince led the
defensive charge, grabbi ng nine steals and
adding six rebounds and 12 points on the
night, while teammate Kylie Wolfe posted
16 poinls to go along with eight rebou nds
and three steals.
Amy Atkinson chipped iii II points and
three rebounds, Rebekah Samples posted
nine points and seven rebounds and Ryan
Dormagen had three rebounds in the victory.
Wahama did show signs of life early. as

Please see Win, B1

�www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Thesday, December 12, 2006

·Tuesday, December 12,2006

~rtbune

Hornets gain victory over Cleveland by six
BY MuRRY EvANS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
OKLAHOMA CITY
The New Orleans Hornets
held a promotion Monday
night to encourage their fans
to vote for Chris Paul as an
All-Star starter, even having
Paul take the microphone at
the Ford Center before the
game to ask for support.
His performance against
the Cleveland Cavaliers
proved a more eloquent
argument than anything
Paul , or anyone else, might
say. Last season's NBA
Rookie of the Year scored
30 points · and added II
assists and the Hornets
overcarhe recent offensive
woes to beat the Cavaliers
95-89.
"Chris Paul gave us 30
reasons" . why he should be
considered as an All-Star,
Hornets coach Byron Scott
said.
"That is pretty good. I
have been saying this all
along,' that he is one of the
best point guards in this
league. There is no doubt
about it, and this is· just his
second year," Scott said.
"He is the main reason that
we are .500 right now with
all of the guys we have
missing. ...He is carrying
the load right now, and that
is tough."
.After starting the season
8-3, the Hornets - who are
without three of their top six
players . because of injuries
- had lost seven of their
last eight games and had
scored 80 points or fewer in

defense for much of the
four of those losses.
But they shot a season- game by the Hornets'
best 54.7 percent from the Desmond Mason, finished
field - only the second with 15 points on 7-of-18
time this season they·ve shooting - well below his
exceeded 50 percent - and . season average . of 27.3
took advantage of a 4 1/2- points per game - and did
minute fourth-quarter score- not score in the fourth quarless stretch by the Cavaliers. ter, ,mi ssing all four of his
Cle,·eland led for much of shots.
James had averaged 35.7
the first three quarters and
"POints
in his last three
was up 73-72 .entering the
fourth before the teams games against the Hornets.
"'l;'hey made me pass the
swapped the lead nine times
ball so I just needed to find
in a 3 112-minute stretch.
The Cavaliers didn't score the open man ," James said.
from the 9:08 mark until "You just have to take what
4:24 remained. misfiring on the defense gives you. I'm
six straight possessions and not going to force tt."
Scott was more effusive
allowing New Orleans to
build a 7-point lead. Two 3- in his pra1se of Mason.
"As soon as the game was
pointers by rookie Daniel
Gibson helped Cleveland tie ower I told htm. (Mason) that
the 'score at 89-89 with 2:36 he did an unbelievable job,"
Scott said. "It is hard to
left.
Cleveland had a chance to keep a great player like that
take the lead, but the from scoring in the fourth
Hornets ' Tv son Chandler quarter, especially as much
blocked a driving shot by aS' he is going to have the
LeBron James, and Paul ball."
Cleveland, led by 17
scored at the other end with
from
Anderson
I:45 left to put New Orleans points
ahead for good. After a Varejao. fell to 4-2 this seaagainst
Western
Cleveland miss, Jannero son
Conference
teams.
They
had
Pargo added a runner in the
won
seven
straight
games
lane at I :02 and Paul made
two insurance free throws against the Hornets, dating
to Dec. 23, 2003.
with 19.2 seconds left.
Cleveland led for most of
The Cavaliers mi ssed
· three 3-point shots in the the first half and took their
largest lead to that point on
final minute.
"We have got to ftgure out a 3-pointer by Gibson that
the next time we play these made it 48-4 I. The Hornets
guys how to stop a guy like closed the half on a I0-3
Chris Paul from creating run and tied the game at 5 Ilike he did tomght for h1s 51 on a jumper by Paul with
teammates,"
Cleveland 31 seconds left.
The pattern continued in
coach Mike Brown said.
on the third quarter. The
James,
hounded

At ~rorers expense, county
to reimburse Bengals for turf

'
CINCINNATI
The
Cincinnati Bengal s are
invoking a provision in their
lease that forces Hamilton
County to reimburse the
team for Paul Brown
Stadium's artitictal turf.
The lease says the county,
which owns the stadium.
must pay· for the turf if it
also has been installed at
seven of the other publicly
funded stadiums in the

The Bengals added the
FieldTurf before the 2004
season. The same surfflce is
now used at publicly funded
stadiums in East Rutherford,
N.J .; Seattle, Atlanta, New
Orleans, St. Louis, Buffalo
and Minneapolis.
'
The clause in the lease
will cost Hamilton County
taxpayers about $900,000.
"This is another example
of how unfair this (lease) is

•
County,"
Commissioner
Phil Heimlich said. "There's
no limit to the number of
gadgets they can buy and
charge to the taxpayer."
Commissioners
are
expected to approve paying
the Bengals in three annual
payments.
The team failed in several
attempts to grow suitable
natural grass at Paul Brown
Stadium, which opened in

National Football League.

to the taxpayers of Hamilton 2000.

Redwomen upset at Wilberforce
changes. Wilberforce forward LaToya
Graham, who had been held in check for
most of .the game, came through wllh a
. WILBERFORCE -For the third year jumper to put the Bulldogs up 57-55 with
m a row, the Umverstty ot R10 Grande 20 seconds left and sealed the game with
women's basketball team fell victim to an · a put back off a missed free throw to
upset on the road at Wilberforce. Rill make the score 60-57.
could not hold an 11-point lead in dropRio emkd up w1th three players in douping a 62-60 loss on Saturday aft~rnoon ble ligures led by sophomore forward
Sarah Drabinski with 13 points. Ferguson
at the Alumm Multiplex.
Rio Grande (8-5, 2-2 AMCS) gained added II points, five rebounds and five
control ot the game early and looked as assists and Walker tossed in I 0 points
tf they would score a runaway wm . The and pulled down f1ve boards.
. Redwomen led 9-2 after live mmutes had
Sophomore center Erin Kume provided
a big lift off the bench with seven points
elapsed 111 the game.
Wilberforce (3-7, 1-3 AMCS ) weathered and 10 rebounds.
the early storm by Rio and got back in
Wtlberforce used a balanced attack with
the game getting to within one point on five players in double figures. Tamarra
three separate occastons (Il-l 0, 15-1 4 Moss paced the Bulldogs with 14 points.
and 17 -16) in the tirst half.
She also collected live rebounds. Thomas
Leading by a 17-16 score the scored 12 points, all on three-pointers,
Redwomen went on an I 1-1 run to grab a including the tV.!) crucial daggers that
28- I 7 lead on a lay-up by JUillOI guard brought Wilberforce all the way back.
Britney Walker with 3:03 remaining the Keisha McLarty added I I points and
tirst half.
-::~even rebounds off the bench.
Rio would not score again the first half,
Janicia Anderson chipped in I0 points
but still carried a 2~-2 I lead ln halftime. and nine rebounds. Graham notched 10
Both teams had good stretches and bad points. scoring eight in the second half
stretches in the second half. Rill led until and tour down the stretch.
the 6:06 mark when Wilberforce senior
With the loss. Rio falls back to the
guard Shamarah Thomas nailed a three- middle ol the pack and is now two full
peinter to tie the game at 48-48. games behind the leaders in the American
Thomas put the Bullodgs up for the first Mideast Conference South Division.
time at the 5:38 mark when she buried
The season series is tied at 1-1 with the
another three, 51-48.
.
rubber match coming, January 27 at the
Rio rallied with a 5-0 run to take a 53- Newt Oliver Arena.
51 advantage at the 3:54 mark on a trey
Rio gets some time olf to reflect and
from senior center Candace Ferguson.
recharge the batteries. Rio returns home
The game went bl!ck and forth over the to face Ohio Valley Umversity, January
final 3:30 with two ties and two lead 18 at 7 p.m.
BY MARK WtWAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

Successful
from Page 81

'

leader Barr and Meigs was
off
and
running.
Meanwhile, Meigs did a
decent defensive job on
Southern , yet Turley was
able to escape with five
points in the frame.
Meigs held the fourth
quarter edge but did not
capitalize at the line where
it could have sealed the
game early.
The hosts
went just 4- I7 at the line
the last period. gtving
Southern 'orne hope that
the 2ame was still within
'·

-

grasp. On the flip-side
Southern hit 4-7 at the line
where Turley went 4-4
down the stretch.
Meigs held on for the 4235 win.
Southern hit 12-39 for
30 percent, hitting 1-3
three's, and I 0-1 ~ at the
.
· h 31
b
d
lIOe
Wtt '
re oun S
(Turley 12, Pickens 8).
Southern had 17 turnovers,
5 Steals, one assist and 20
fouls. Metgs hit 18 for 36
.
percent f Or So percent. hllling no three's, and JU'l 623 at the line with 22
rebounds (Barr 8, Grueser
5).
Meigs had 10
tUrnoverS, I] Steah. IWO
aS, lll'. and I 9 foub

Meig' won the reserve
VanMeter,
game I 0-9 .
Barnes, Patterson, Smith,
and Bissell each had two.
Emma Hunter led Southern
with four. Breanna Taylor
three, &lt;1nd Lindsay Teaford
two.
SOUTHERN (351
Mallory Hill 0 0"0 0 Whitney Wolle·
RIHle 3 2·2 9. Sarah Eddy 1 0·2 2.
Rachael Pickens o 2·5 2. Kasey
Turley 4 5·5 13, V1rg1nia Brickles 4 1·3
9, GoorgoUa B"cklos 0 0·1 0, Breanna
Taylor o O·O o To1a1s- 12 10·18 35.
MEIGS (42)
Coyla Leo 10·0 2. Meghan Clelland t
2·4 4 Jonnolor Smoth 0 0·0 0. C&amp;IIO
Wolle 7 l·10 17 Amber Bunon 1 0·0
2 Amy Barr 6 1·1 13. Bnnany Preas! 1
0·4 2. Who1noy Smo1h 0 0·4 0 Mohssa
Gruesor 1 0·0 2 Tolals- 18 6·23
42
, Three Pom1 Goals- Wl11!ney WolfeRdlle 1

Hornets Jed for 40 seconds
before Cleveland jumped
back ahead. The Cavaliers'
largest lead came with 4:45
left, when a drive and basket by James made it 69-62.
Paul almost singlehanded!y kept New Orleans close
with II third-quar-ter points,
including a buzzer-beating
20'footer.
Pargo came otf the bench
to $COre 15 points for the
'Hornets, and Marc Jackson
added 14 points. Zydrunas '
llgauskas added I 5 points
for Cleveland.
NOTES: Hornets owner
George Shinn reaffirmed
before the game his plans to
return the team full-time to
New Orleans next season, ·
saying it was "the right
thing to do." ... During his
pre-game speech, Paul also
encouraged Hornets fans to
vote for three of his team- ,
mates on the All-Star ballot
- Peja Stojakovic, David
West and Chandler. .. . The
Hornets announced the
attendance as 19,164, the
fifth sell-out of the season
for. the team and the fourth
in Oklahoma City, although
small pockets of empty
seats were visible · in the
arena. ... West (right forearm strain), Stojakovio .
(back spasms) and· Bobby ·
Jackson (cracked rib) didn't •
AP photo
play for the Hornets, while
Drew Gooden (strained left Clevelanl;f Cavaliers forward Anderson Varejao (17) of Brazil
groin)
was
out
for shoots the !:&gt;all over New Orleans Hornets center Tyson
Cleveland and is listed as Chandler (6) m the first half of an NBA basketball game
Monday, In Oklahoma City.
day-to-day.

WILBERFORCE - The
University of Rio Grande
men's basketball team was
sick of moral victories. They
were sick of hearing "when
are you guys going to get
that first road win?"
The Redmen were able to
put all that to bed on
Saturday with a hard fought
70-69
victory
at
Wilberforce.
The
win

side able to gain the measure of the other. Freshman
guard, Marcus Manns put ,the
Redmen up 46-42 by sinking a deep three-pointer at
14:55 mark. That lead· was
short-lived as the Bulldogs
came to tie the score at 4848 .
Wilberforce then took its
turn with the lead, going up
four at 54-SO. With the game
teetenng on getting away
from them, the Redmen
made some key stops and

Wilberforce, who won
two one-point games from
Rio last year, had one final
chance, but was denied
when Mike Menchaca's shot
·missed and the rebound
went into the arms of
Manns, securing the victory
for the Redmen.
Manns led the Redmen
with 16 points and eight
assists. Sophomore center
Will Norwell responded off
the bench with a huge game,
scoring 14 points and

Division mark at 2-2.
This _game was a thriller.
There were seven ties and
numerous lead changes
throughout the 40-minutes. ·
After Wilberforce (3-2, ·22 AMCS) scored the game's
first four points, Rio Grande
(5-7, 2-2 AMCS) forged
ahead by scores of 8-4 and
15-9.
Rio gained some momen·tum late in the first half
when it went on·an 11-0 run
to take the largest lead of the
game at 38-30. The final
five points of the run were
scored by senior guard Chris
Dinwiddie.
Rio led by five (38-33) at
the half.
The second half was more
of the same, wtth neither

lead at 56-54. Sophomore
guard
Kory
Valentine
notched his only points of
the game with a three to
give the Redmen the lead.
Down the stretch, the
game was still up for grabs;
the score was tied twice at
56-56
and
58-58.
Sophomore guard Brett
Beucler put the Redmen 6361 with 4:34 remaining with
a three ball.
Wilberforce battled to tie
the score once more at 6767.
Trailing 69-67 with the
ball and less than a minute
to play the Redmen went to
Beucler and he responded
with a dagger from deep to
give the Redmen a 70-6\l
lead.

Seucler added II points,
including the game-winning
three.
Wilberforce was led by
Rawlston Charles, who
posted a game-high, 19
points. He also corralled six
rebounds. Menchaca added
17 points and Dwight Cass
was on . the verge of double
figures with nine points. He
also managed six rebounds.
Rio will return home for
the annual Newt Oliver
Classic on Friday and
Saturday. Rio will face
Bluefield College (VA) at
7:30 p.m. Shawnee State
will play Union College
(KY) at 5:30 p,m.
Stretch Internet will coverage of the Rio game
beginning at 7 p.m.

-'

Gallla
County;
OH

E-mail
classified@ mydailytribune.com

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Offtee llo(q'~

"

from PageBl
six for Eastern. Katie
Hayman had five while
Morgan Werry and Jilhan
Brannon both chipped in
four.
Kaylee
Milam,
Georgana Koblentz rounded
mil the scoring with a buck-

Win
from PageBl
freshman sensation Tylor
Hysell put up 12 first quarter points, dominating the
post to help Wahama tie the
game twice and hold a narrow lead early in the second
quarter.
· But when Ravenswood
started doubling up Hysell,
the Lady Falcons were
forced to find another path
with little success, as the
Devilettes broke a 23-23 tie
with I :4 7 left in the second
quarter to take the lead and
once they went ahead, they
never looked back.
The Lady Falcons tried to
close the gap as Amber
Tully hit on t;our triples in
the game. three in the sec-

ond quarter alone. but poor
shooting by Wahama while
the Devi1ettes controlled the
clock allowed Ravenswood
to take the victory.
Hysell ended the evening
with I 5 points while adding
seven rebounds and three
assists, with most of her
scoring came early. Tully
added 14 points and five
rebounds
and
Airael
Derifield posted I I points
and eight rebounds.
Michaela Davis chipped
in two points and Kayanna
Sayre added a point, five
rebounds and three steals .
Mary Kehler also contributed on the defensive
end. coming down with
three rebounds. two steals
and two assists.
Despite a mong showing
by Wahama. · the youth of
the Lady Falcon' could be
seen at times a' thcy _rushed

RIVER VALLEY (29)

2-2 6, Fraley 0 (}.{)
29

EASTERN (54)

a. Totals -

8 12·20

HOW IQ WRITE AM AD
Succeuful Ads
Should Include These Items
· To Help Get Response•••
\'\\!11 \1 I \ II \ I "&gt;

Ohio Valley
PubHshlng reaervea
the right to edH,
~torcenc•l•ny

edatanytlme.
I&gt;Erm''" Mult
on the

r

ANNouNm1oos

5 wk old Lab/Golden
Retrlever pupptes. Great
Chrtstmas giftl Call
t740144t·1417 leave mes·
sage.
Half black lab pupp1as to
good horne. Call (7401256·
9250.

t

Brown/white Jack Russell
Terrrer round at Eastern Ave
Marathon Station. Call
t740)446-1688

;________

Lost In Bidwell, small black.
dog wl green collar Please
:ca::ll~t7:..4::01::38::8:..·7~56:.1::....,__
LOST. Large black &amp;-white
cat Belly hange down.
Name:Fat Cat Oshel Rd.
Reward (3041593.1708

CLASSIFIED INDEX

s

4 X4 '1 For ate .............................................. 725

Announcsment. ...........................................030
Antlques ....................................................... 530
Apatrtments for Rent ................................... 440
AucIt on and Flea Mar ket............................. 080
Auto Plrtl &amp; Accessories .......................... 760

AAut,oRiepaSir.l., ............................................... 777100
U 01 or 8 &amp; ...........................:.. ................

BOidl &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750

Building Suppllea ........................................ SSO

BuItn• II In d Bulldlngs............................. 340
BullnHI Opportunlty ................................. 210
BullnHITralnlng ....................................... 140
Campera &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790

Cemplng Equipment ................................... 780

010

g~:;.:..~~:,;·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: 190
Electrlcai/Rafrlgeratlon ...............................840
Equipment for Rtnt ..................................... 480

farms for Slle ............................................. 330

For L..ae ..................................................... 490
ForSIIt.:.........................,............................S85
For Sale or Trade .........................................590

Fruita I Vegetablta ..................................... SBO

Furnllhecl Rooma ........................................450

o-o

Koblenlz 1 0·1 2 , Weber 7 5-8 19, Hupp

5 ()-{) 12. Totals 2t t0·21 54.
Three-point goals - Circle 1, Hupp 2

shots and made some bad
passes while Ravenswood
played 'very sound basketball.
Now sitting at 1-3 on the
season, the young Lady
Falcons will next travel to the
Hoops Classic Wednesday.
RAVENSWOOD (48)
Dormagen 0 o-o·o. Atkinson 3 5·8 11 ,
Pnnce 4 4·6 12, Wolle 4 7·8 16,
Samples 4 0·2 9 TOTALS t5 t6·24 48
WAHAMA (43)
Deem 0 0-1l 0, Davis 1 0-1l 2, De1lfleld 4
2·2 t1 , Ohlinger 0 0·0 0, Gabrltoch 0 0·
o 0, Tully 4 2·4 t4, Polera 0 ()-{) 0,
t4l:ebler 00·0 0, Hysell 7 1 ·3 15, Curfman
o o-o o. Sayre o t·2 t, Sleelh o O·O o.
Wallen 0 o-o o, Lalner o o-o o. TOTALS
t66·tt43.
Three poml goals -:- Ravenswood 2
(Samples, Wolfe 1). Wahama 5 (Tully
41 . Rebounds- Ravenswood 27 (Waite
81, Wahama 30 tDerlllold 8) AsolsiO Ravenswood 2 (Atkinson, Prince 1),
Wahama 5 (Hysell 3) . S10als Ravenswood 14 (Prince 9), Wahama 7
(Sayre 3). Blocks - Ravenswood 0,
Wahama 1 (Hysell 1). Fouls
Ravenswood 11. Wahama 17.

•

Olvtaway ......................................................040

Happy Ada ....................................................050
Hay l Graln ..................................................640
Help Wanted ................................................. 110
Homelmprovtment• .............................. ~.... 810

Homea for Sale ............................................310
Houaehold Goodl ....................................... 510
Houaea for Rent .......................................... 410
In Memorlam ................................................ 020
lneurance ................................................:.... 130
• • wn l ""'rUIIilln
~- ~ Equ 1pment........................ 660
....
Llvutock ......................................................630

Loat and Found ..................:........................ 060

Lots &amp; Acreege ............................................ 350

Ml KB IIaneoua ............................. ,................ 170
Ml~eellaneoua Merchandlae ....................... 540
Mobile Home Rapalr.................................... 860

Mobile Hornet lor Rent..
•- ............................. 420

320
Mobile Homea tor Sa
Money to Loan ............................................. 272040

IV................................

MotorcyciH l 4 Wheelera..........................
Mualcal tneiNmonta ................................... 570

Peraonela ........................... :......................... OOS
Pets for Sale ................................................ 560

Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
Pro!HIIonal Services................................. 230
Rillito, TV l CB Repair ............................... 160
R•l Eo- Wanted .................................&gt;... 360
SChOOll tnatNctlon .............,. ...................... 150
Sellll , Plent lr Fertilizer .............................. 650
Snuatlonl Wanted ..........................:............ 120
Space for Rent ............................................. 460
Sportlng Goods ........................................... 520
SUV'alor Sale ..............................................720
. Truckt lor Sale ............................................ 715
Upholotery ................................................... 870
Van• For Sate...............................................730
W.nted to Buy ............................................. 090
wanted to Buy- Farm Suppltes .................. 620
Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
Wanted to Rent.. .......................................... 470
Yard Sale- Galllpotlo ....................................072
Yard s.Je-Pomeroy/Mid&lt;lte .........................074"
Yard Sale-Pl. Pteaunt.. .............................. 076
•

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2
Bu•lne•• Df'y• Prior To

Publication

Sunday Dl•play: 1:00
Thuraday for Sundaya

• All ada must be prepaid'

~o:

I

POLICIES:

Pultlllhln;

Ol'llo Valley
rnerve• the right to tdlt, rtjeet, Of cancel any ad It any time. Errors muat be reponed on the tlrlt day of
Tribun.s.ntlnii·Rtgllttr will bt mponalblt for no more than the coet of the apace
by thl error and onl~ the rrrtt lnaerUon. We ahall
any lou Of
ttwt ruulta from
or
ol
wtll be
Box
are elweya
! •
nile Clrd appll... • All rMI
1dvertlaemants ere aul)lect
Federal Fair Housing
1S6(1. • This
-.:eepta only
wanted ada rnMtlng I!OE
We
I
ot the

••!*'•

confident..
help

occupied
the publiCation omluiOn 1n advertisement. Correction
mad• In tM first 1VIIIIb1• edition. •
Current
11t1t•
to the
Act ot
standards will not
violation
lew.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
W &gt;-Vo:r A Po6\ I S
'(,.11 I.!~ I l'l C. WB E&gt;N 1-\"S"
CA1'CI-\&amp;'$ A, f'"-g1Sl%:G':

t.,ll50-oi1NsJRuiiScllooiiiiiii
.CTIONiitsli i,_.l

kltnclrlyleGcomcaat .net

·-PRoiSi i O~i i~i ivti i L~i i ·ioAt•••

Gallipolis Career Collage
(Careers Close To Horne)

TURNED DOWN ON

SOCI4l. SECURITY ISSI?

Call Todayl740~ 446-4367.

No

1-800·214·0452

Fee Unless We Win!
1-898·582·3345

WWWW~IIIpcllscateercol'egecom

Accredlled Member Accredrling
eo~a1 tor lndepef1dent eo•egos
and Scnools 12748
Profeatonal Karate
lnstruc11on
All ages Books, umforms,
supplies Open Dally
Bltanga's Martial Arts
Center (740)992-5715

..,,__.._ _ _ _ _.,
~riO
H

Lo.------.,J
OMFS

FOR SALE

~.,;~.-...~~

r ...,jm·"-~.SALE---,.1
"'•10•
.

Ranch style home on 2 6
acres overloo41.ing the beautrful Oh10 A1ver 1n Long
Bottom Ohio located at
61818 SA 124 ThiS six
room house Includes 2 5
bedrooms, one lull bath,
and a three quarter bath
1421 square feet of living
space w1th a full finished
basement and attached two
car garage. Also includes a
32' X 40 heated metal out·
stde bulldmg with concrete
floor Home ts equipped with
heating, cooltng. water and
all electnc utilities Some
kitchen appliances are
mcluded For more inforn1alion ~an 740-985-3315 (daytime) or 740-992-2071
(evenmg)
Pnce
$ 1SO,OOO 00

·89 Acre. 3 Br.. Krt. , Liv.R..
Din., laundry, balh, Tuppers
Pla1ns water, A C, comes
With 4 lot•, large porch
River tront Bucklown Road,
170 MJs&lt;..l.:LIANEOUS I Le_ta_rt_F_al_ls_74_0_
·9-49-·2_2_53_.
1
3 bedroom, 1 3/4 baths,
kitchen,
ltvmg room, family
Seasoned f1re wood, Oak room. heat
deck.
and Htckory spltl. You haul 16x24 storage pump.
buildmg, 2 13
or Ihaui· Take CAA&amp; HEAP acres. located about , mile
740·949·2038
from new Galltpolts City
WAN!ID
High School on Chns lane -:oi:~"'!"'-....~-..,
Reward. Spike- Lost dog
Ask1ng $145,000. Ph ~i
To Do
between TeMas Rd &amp; Bob
t7401245·59o9.
M~8~n:s 1
McCorml~ Ad Red collar,
large scar Lt hmd leg,
,,_ · tlElderly Care I have refer· 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath. -we1ghs 251'. 14 yrs old Stck
?A.~
ences and experience, Call Basement, Large Deck, 14x70 mobtle home furneeds attentton. $500 f.i..¥1.l~
Beverly at (304)675·1084 Double Garage $63 000 niShed $7,600 (740)256·
Donna Cratgo, Elsie Craigo
@ 2006 by NEA, Inc.
www.comlcs .com
_an.:.yt_'m_e______ Firm t7401992·2571
9247
(7401446·1668.
(740)645·
-------- 3ll53 .t 7401339.2730 _
p r o f a s ., o n a 1
------11!1!1!"------,
Offtce/Housecleantng. 4 rental houses '·For Sale" Good used 1989 14x70
11110 HEI.PWANTFll 11110 Hai'WANfEll 111,0 liEtJ'WAN!ID References (304)075-2208 IIn.4_04_Gallipolis.
Call Wayne Front Kitchen 2 bedroom· 1
YARD SAl£
14_5_6_·3_80_2____ bath Only 58,99500 W1ll
~====::==:·
4BR, Home, 2 acres, New help wlln delivery. Call 740·
38_5_·96_2_1_____
"•RDS"E·
FEDERAL
Ray
&amp; Son's Haven area 5148,000 _
G
•·r: ••..::; m
MECHANICAL DESIGNER Rocksprings Rehabilitation
{304 )674 _5921 or (304 ,593_
Lw--~~~---_.1
POSTAL JOBS
Huntington, WV area
Center provides residenf&lt;ij
Great used 3BA home only
8871
~
$t 567.$26.19/hr., nr:tN h~r·
with outstanding nur.,ng
Complete Car
- - - - - - - - 59.995 Will help w11h dehv·
Final moving sale Furn 1lure, ing For application and free R&amp;D contractor seeks to care and rehabthtatioo serv·
Cleaning
5 Br. 3 5 Ba ranch house ery Call (740)385-7671
washer &amp; dryer. Fn Dec. 15 govemement Job 1nfo. call h1re Sktlled, tnnovattve and ices helping them return lo 8
w1th full finished basement
in today I New 2007 3
&amp; 16, 57 Buhl Morton Ad. Amencan Assoc. of Labor 1. outgoi ng P{Oiesslonals fo1 life · of mdepandence at
3,000 + sq tt 2 11v1ng rooms. Move
bedroom 2 bath Only
spn.ng Valley Green Apt 913·599-8042, 24/hrs emp F!T employmenl Ettect1ve home. We curren11y have
WE HAVE GIFT
2 k.ltchens, hardwood floors $199 86 per month. Set up
serv.
oral and wntten communlca· opportunities for AN's . ai"KI
CERTIFICATES
Crew road 740-416·4765 m1nutes from Athens and
703
149.000 _
ready for 1mmed1ate occuAU!CI10N""~r:::,
·~ ~--~-~--'Iii
1ence
1on IS With
a mustAutoCAD
Vast expert·
S atOh10.
our We
fac tltty
m
$
IIi'
Free NRA
and LPN'
Pomeroy,
offer 1
Ft.~lnJUU\1'. 1 ,
-Membtrshlpl
Mechanical0esktop,6+yrs COMPETIVITE SALARY 26151/2JacksonAve 5 Plus Acres, 2 Br. K1t , pancy Call 74Q-385 4367
recent related oxpenence. SCALE. an excellent bene·
Pt f.~easenl. WV
Din., Front Am , Full base , - . . - - - - - -....
Auct1ons- Sat Dec 2, 9 16 Start your new career a1 clear b""kground
and US Itt pacKage and a supportive L.-.1.(l3~04:,.Jt.:6~7~5-:_,73~7;:;5._.J story end 1/2, AC s1ngle
'·~ &amp;
"').'
IA-'
6pm., Henderson Com tnfoCISion and earn up citizenship required. Email work
environment u SAVE heating, cooltng &amp; garagef20 X 20 sllop L,__.:;AiiCREAilll
-liliGEilt'-.,.1
Cenler Merchandise for
to $8.SOI'hour.
cover letter and resume to Interested
candidates water heate~ . Wtll work on Rac1ne, Route 124 740· ,
ChnstmaSil, 2 dealers ever Plus It you make calo ujobs@utronlnc.corn or fa~~: should
apply
to all models 15 years expen· -949-·2_2_53_____ Mobile Ho- Lot lor rent
week, Jim JC C-·an
auc·
lo 1·866·231·2567 .
Rockspnnns Rehabilitation
......
to recru• and renew
t1
wv 1674 .......
36759 R k · R d ence, 24 hr serv1ce wtll beat About $3000 down 812 S near vmton. Call (740)441oneer.
membershi ps on beha"" Ohio Valley Home Health. Pomeroy,oc OhiO
spnngs 45769.
oa · an~~one's
price.
(7401388·
t
111
3
3rd Ave . Middleport Totally IC:!"-~-~--..,
WA!mDB .
oflheNRAyouwlll
Inc. hiring AN's , CNA, Exlendlcaro
Haallh 90 9
remodeled 3 bedrooms, 1
o~ .. fst:·•n;
TO lJY
receive a flit NRA
b th
P rt t
d1
t
""""'
n
memberahlp
STNA , CHHA,
PCA Serv1ces, Inc. 1s an equal ,i) Cml.rwEWERLY
a 1 d ePee ere 155 ~~ ~.,.__W_ANfEIJ
_ _ __.
u
Competitive Wages and opportunity employer that 1
Cmv
rApequ re $7e0ym00e0n1 740 ·
1
5.
Absolute
Dollar:Coins,
Benefits including health encourages
workplace ,
. ,ouu:.
•
. ·
· Need to sell your home?
Sliver andTop Gold
We also offer: paid
367pra1sed
7129
p fs
training, paid vacationS Insurance and Mileage. diverSity. MIF DN
--·----~- Late on payments dtvorce
roo als, Gold RCings. Pr&amp;andpeldholld-s.
Applyst1480JacklonPII&lt;e, - - - - - - - - Wanted to care for eldeny
•MIIntlonl
]Ob transler or a dealh? I
1935 U.S.
urrency,
..,
Gallipolis or 2415 Jackson Roekspnngs Rehabilliatlon person In their home, 24 hrs
"'u
Solitaire Diamonds· MTS.
Full benefits package Avenul, Point PIHBant, WV Center is looking for dedicat· 5 days wtc
·9034 local company offenng "NO can buy your home All cash
and 401·K.
DOWN PAYMENT" pro· and Quick clo~ng . 74tJ.416·
Coin Shop, 151 Second
or phone toll free 1·866-4&lt;'1· ed compassionate State
;~~ue. Gallipolis, 740-446· Make calls you believe 1393.
6~s~:~~~~:~~~ge~.~~::~~
~~es~~~;e~~uo/~e·~~~g your 3130 1 ~ 1'\l\1 '
In, eam up to
Part time Semi drtver. and dental ben&amp;llts, and
o·~
* 100% ltnanctng
~;:::;::::::~
Buying Junk Cars,Trucks &amp; $8 50Jhour, and become January thru April COL 40tK avallab6e. we take
()ppo~
• Less than perlect credit 1!:
Wrecks, Pay Cash J D a proud member of the required (304)757-6577 pride In our facUlty and res!· ~--iioiiiiiiiiiiiiioii-'· accepted
Hous~
Salvage (304)773-5343
NRA.
(evenlngsl
. dents and need greal toom ,
. Paymen1 could bs tho
FUR RENT
t3o41674·t374
pltqers 10 jc;n us. 11 you Earn $2,000·$4,000 per same as ren1
·------·
lnfoCision. Irs Better
Part-time teacher needed for haw these qualifications weekend renttng poker Mortgage
Locators $1 82/mo.l Buy 4 bedroom,
Old books &amp; old oil palnt·
Herel
the Meigs County A.du ll please . apply
to: equipment in your local (740)367-0000
HUOI 4% dn, 30
lngs Will pay $100 1872
1-&amp;n-463-1247
Basic Education progl'am at
area $15,000 tnvestment ---~---- 2yrs5 bath
@ 8% For I1SI1ngs B00copy of "Nuggets and Dust"
ext 2311
our Bradbury Center. ~ockspr~; R~=illtatlon required secured by inven· Beaut1ful Home or Cedar S1
by Dod Gr~le, (740)593-891 5 www.lnfoclllon.com Applicant must 1'1811&amp; a enter, 59
sp~ngs tory Call Fred Meyers 1· Wrap-around porch 3BR, 559-4109 ext 1709
manh8t1 Oohlo.edu
(all applicants will
teaching cenWlcate/llcanse Road, Pomeroy. H ~ 10 800·242·4557 or 513·884- 15Ba. lurn1shed kitchen. ---~---receive 8 free NRA 1• from the Ohio Department of 45769· Exteodicare ea th 3458
DR, LR, Den, F~ out·bu1ld· $98/mo 1 3 Bedroom, bath
Wanted female Silky Call
shirt)
EducatiOn and be Willing 10 Serv1ces. Inc. 1s an equal ·-·-~~!'!!""--. tng s118 000 u 4o) 44 s. HUD HOME! 4% down. 30
Larenzo {740)645·6781
k opportunity employer that
4639
years 0 8%. For lisflnns
work 3 eventngs per wee · encourages
workplace
•NOTICE•
800-559·4109 eld F254
l'osnion is grant funded for dM&gt;rslty. MIF ON
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
20 hours per week lor 50 - - - - - - - - lNG co recommends
2 bedroom house 59
weeks per year. Letter ol SR. MECHANICAL F.NGI· that you do bus1ness with .
Garlield $450 rent, $500
1116
Interest and resume with NEER
people you l&lt;now and
depos1t.
references
HEI..PWANTED ·
three references must be Huntinaton, \\'V 8 re 11
NOT to send money
(7401441·0583. (740)256·
recetved by 3·30 PM. on
through the matl unt1t you
6718
All real ealate advertising
100 WORKERS NEEDED
December 20, 2006. Submit UTRON ~~ :m :~.ward-winning have trwestigated the
In tnls newspaper Is
to . Carol Brewer at the R&amp;D com]""'· with an exrm· o"errn .
·
2 or 3 Br house no pets,
Assemble crafts.
subject to the Federal 740·992·5858
Athens-Me1gs Educational plqry hlslory nf pro\l(h ng "
.
Fait Housing Act of 1968
wood ~ems.
Service Center, P.O. Box achanceu techm,lugil:~tl 111
M
which makes it Illegal to 2·3 Bedroom Duplex
To$4BO/wk
684, 320 1/2 East Mam valmns 10 NASA. HMDO.
ONH'
advertise "any
$420/mo plus depos1t &amp; utili·
provided
Street.
45769 DoE. I' SF. Ann.''· N~'l' and ~==·=·m:Lo:\:N:': ; preference,
limitat•on or ties m Downtown Galllpolts
FreeMatenals
information
pkg 24Hr
Th e AIPomerov.
hens· MeiQS
· OHESC
ts other 018 am 7111100 ~ The sr
diiCtimlneuon based on No Pets (740}446·0332
801 ·428·4649
an equal opportumty Mechamcal Engmcer w1\l
race, color, religion, HX
Aprovider of support seriiiC·
emplover/prcvlder.
Design mechamcul and c:ltttro**1\'0TI C F.**
!amlllei status or national 8am-5pm Mon-Sat
-' S)l~
origin, or any intention lo 3 bedroom house conven·
es toIndividuals, yvlth MRIDD
POST OFFICE NOW
m«. han1ca1rn&gt;(1ucls anu
in Gallipolis, OH w111 be hirtern( t'ly de\dl'f'ling and testmp Bouow Smart Contact
make any such
locatiOn No pets
preference, limitation or •ent
ing a PAN/casual LPN.
Avg ~~I$20NGJhr or
'pe'dficat rnm and melhn1s ii"IT the Oh10 D•viSIOn ot
l740}446
1162
contact Ang1e MCMI
.. 11tan
· a1
·•
discrimination.··
devtlopmc=nt ol ad\an,·cd Ftnanctal
InstitUtiOn's
$57Kannua11Y
wtapon ~~· ~!em~ for the ~pl of Off1ce
of Consumer
3 bedroom on Brentwocxl
17401446 -71 48 o~ you ma;
Including Federal Benefits !)dense 111 Ul lWN :. JOU ..ere Atta1rs BEFORE you reltTh is newspaper will not
Ot Full basement. 2 car
8
knowingly accept
~2 ~ cV:I~ O~~~~.~~:etoan
end OTPa!d Trammg.
range
nance your home or
$675 month plus
advertisements tor rat! garage,
Eslates
Vacalk&gt;ns·FTIPT
obta1n a loan BEWARE
depoSit
1
740)446·4051
estate
which
Ia
in
1·80().584·1775 USWA 10 )ear~ related and re.:en1 of requests for any large
violation of the law. Our 3 bedroom. 2 bath, E11ans
An Excellent W"'' to earn
Rei •P8923
hand~·on
.,..ork expenenct advance payments of
readers ere·hereby
money "Fhe New Avon
He1gl'lts garage. C/A
mcluJrng hard\lo"8tt tle~1gn fees or msurance Call the
Informed .1hat all
Call Manlyn 304·882·2645
dwellings ~vertlsed In $550/mo plus depos•t Call
SerV1ceMaster has a full and/or proJec-t mana~ emenr Office ol Consumer
(614)975-0769
this newspaper are
t1me Janitorial positions in tle-sm.:J Clear baLkrrrtunll Atta1rs ton free at 1·866·
AVONI All Areasl To Buy or
nam Jnd l'S ClttZcn~hlp 278-0003 to learn tf the
available on an,equal
the
Apple
Grove
area
Call
Selh Shtrley Spears, 3043BR home· SR 554, Bloweltopp~;&gt;nunlty bas ..
requlftod ~end CCli Cr lcner !lllll mortgage
broker or
1888)305-7378
675·1429
S575'mo· sec' dep relerrr,urllt' 10 UJilh\@ ulmniOl u'"l. lender
1s properl)
ences, all elec (740)446licensed (Th1s IS a public
Sales
People wanted orfll\toSM" ~-'1 · ~~~7
Ca1e-grver need 1mmed1ale·
Fr11me. 1 story older 3644
servrce announcement White
t740)441·9711
ly In P1 PIMsant. tO Sit Wtlh·
Home La·ge Ga1age Large -----~-­
hom tl'ie Ol"\10 Valley lot
Mental Patient. Call-after Part-time ReceptioniSt, must ;....:...-------Prrced to Buy (740)446- 3BR 2 bath hOme- Plants
Publlshmg ComparryJ
5pm (3041675·•954 Good be personable, have tele·
0626
SubD1v $850/mo plus sec
Pay
phone skills. able to deal
depos1t
NO PETS
with the publ1c and handle
1
740]446·3644
Guarding Angels Child Care
off1ce dulles
Center is nOw accept1ng general
Pomeroy area
Da11y
4 bedroom house $375
applications For more mfo. Sentinel P 0 Box 729·15.
mol"'lh &amp; deposn Call
callt7401388·8454 &amp;ask fof Pomeroy. Oh10 45 769
(740]446-0924
No pels
Oama or Becky

-,r------., ......------. II'TI1"'"-----.,

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SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ i

~

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(.~
I'm
Borders$3.00/perad
f!ii4
Graphics soc for small
S1.00 for large

Display Ads

In Next Day'a Paper

LOST: Blacl&lt; and while male
Border Collie wllh bluEt col~
lar. Apple Grove area. last
seen on Hereford Rd. and
V1lla Lane 12nl06 Reward
of $200 lor h1s return or
where abouls Call (304)
576 _2324 or bnng to 1295
Hereford Rd. The House on
the Road, No Questions
asked Thanks

GlVFAWAY

·

Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
l'rllda•Y .For Sundaya Paper

• Ad• Should Run 7 Days

rI

Oearlliir~

Dally ln•Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for lnaertlon

Include Complete
Delcrlptlon. • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed

Chnstmas Wreaths &amp; Grave
Blanlet,..$5·$25, (7401949·
2115, 740·949·3151, Sue's
Greenhouse
-------Need Oonat1on of electric
wheelchair tor large woman
Anyone who can help
please call(740)379·2961 .

r

Ads

• ltlrt Your Ac11 With A Keyword •

O.neral Haullng...........................................850

Hayman 1 1-2 5, Milal"{l1
2, DaVIs o
o-o o, W1llbarger 2 2-4 6, Newland 0 Q-Q
o, Werr; 2 o-o 4, Brannon 1 2-6 4,

Word

Monday thru Friday
S:OO .a.m. to 5:00

Fwm Equlpment .......................................... &amp;tO
Fllnlll lor Rent. ............................................ 430

Hager 0 2-2 2, Walburn 1 5·9 7, C1rcle 3
2·2 9. CorflaS 2 t·3 5, Carter 0 0-1) 0,
Sm1!h 0 0·2 0, Cluxton 0 0·0 0, Taylor 2

Websltes:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

4o)

EXCIV1tlng ................................................... 830

Eastern

._...~

l\egtgter·
To Place
~rtbune
Sentinel
Your Ad, (7
446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or Fax To 446-3008
or Fax To (740) 992·2157,

~~~:;t !~~;~ren~:e£~~~~ ;f~~te~~pa~ ~~O r~~~ininth~ f~~i~~ ~~cw:rf~~~~~~d}.ds

et apiece.
River Valley's Taylor finished With six points , lliana
Corfias had five, and
Amanda Hager two.
Eastern is at Miller on
Thursday in Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking action.
River Valley also returns. to
league play in the OhioValley
Con terence on
Thursday at South Point.

ister

- Sentinel -

C L A·S S I F I E D

Redmen get road win
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydallysentlnel.com

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FIND AJOB OR ANEW CAREER
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

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�'.
Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

,

:

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A Hlddtn Ttaeaure. Largest
apartments In the area.
Newly renovated, brand new
everything. starting at $425.
Call today before they are all

r

tar

(740)446·" 72, (740)256·
1619.
-------AKC Aoglotorod Golden
Retrlevtra, Parents have
had DNAIOFA apj)roved.
Fernola, $450, Mole, $400.
(740)388-8965
:---:-:--:-:Border Collie pups 4/sate
(304)895-3328 after 6pm

ACROSS

Nortll

2002 Monte Carico Pace car.
YeHow &amp; Silwr, leather Int.,
CKC Cocker Spaniol pup- e&lt;cellent condltion $12,000.
pies, buff with white mark· (740)448-6783.
lngs on feet, chest and
head. $500 lor femalo, $450 2003 Hyundal T~ron GTS
45,000
miles
$6,000.
lor males (304)875-4243
(740)44 t ·1 Ot 3.
CKC registered Great D~ne
You'll be pleased to
pupplos, bom Oct. 23rd. 92 S-10 S1588
97
GMC
K·2500
4&lt;4
$4399
know Mary Kay offers
shots &amp; wormed, black &amp;
~7 F-150 4x4 $4595
whle, (740)949·3069
products everyone will
95 Dakota 4x4 $1999
love. From lhe latest
Great white Pyrenees pup- 92 F·250 Ax4 $3188
looks to advanced
pies $175. (740)256-9247
93 F-150 $2388
akin care.
03 Neon $4388
00 Neon $3089
. Ask rne abo~t our
94 Grend Am $1888
exciting product line
92 Grand Am $1488
today!
Hvster Acustk: 6 string guitar 87 LeBaron $995
with case. Washburn 5 98 Cavalier $2999
Juanita Grueser
·string banjo with case. 740. 97 cavalier Z24 $3089
740-949·3027
949,2253. ·
99 Daowoo $2188
www.marykay.com/jgruser
95 Riwria $2899
g4Taurus St 899
95 Eclipae $2388
F
00 Windstar, loaded. leather
Commercial building ~ or $4388
Sate" 1500 square feet. oH
f.
dr'esel, 4, 4 $2 2688
street parking. Great loca· 00 350
tion. Call Wayne (404)456- 05 Ram 2500 diesel, 4 dr,
29670 Bashan Road
3802.
4x4 $28999
Racine, Ohio
05 P•'ari
700
S
t
VI
s
. par sman
45771
65 miles $5888
74().949-2217
98 Windstar $,850

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f..Qu!PMENr

Hill's Self
Storage

.

•
O% Financing- 36 Mos.
available now on John
Deere Z Trak Zero Tuma &amp;
5.91% Fixed Rate on John
Deere Gatora Carmichael
Equipment (740)446·2412.

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

lea1her seats, air, auto;
$1800 080. (740)256·1852.

•

•lEn
SElF STORliE
97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

10x10x10x20
991·3194
or 991·6635
"Middleport's only
S.H-Storase•

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Addition• I
A• modeling

TRUCKS

FOR SALE

I'
lr

1994 S-1 0 4x4 e~:tended
cab, . Vsix, aut. 2900.

111

11

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(740)446·8172.

Com- Trae Care

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Top •1tkri ~CHit Atlnoval
c~,.

·""'"'ll'- on.,.,

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SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

Oeaning
Service
Affordable
Dependable

Variety &amp;
Store
We buy, Mil, &amp; trade .
New &amp; UHd llomal
Loto of overythlngl

Spring Valley, All electric, ·(740)256-9247.

STOP IN AND

HUOIPRC vouchers accept· Thompsons Appliance &amp;
, ed, W/0 hook-ups. Can Repair-675-7388. For sale,
' (l40)44S-oBJ4 or &lt;740 )64 5- te-conditioned automatic

_48:...4:...6·------1 rm effec. apt. all utilities
paid $300 mo.
· 1st fl . 6 rms &amp; bath. Very
, clean $400 mo. plus dep &amp;
utilities. Quiet, off st. parking.
(740)441.0596.
1BR upstairs garage apt.
besi&lt;le Washington school.
$525/mo + 1/mo. dep, all util
pd. 1 small pet allowed .
(678)485-6397.

washers &amp; dryers, refrigera·
tors. gas an~ electric
ranges, air conditioners, and
wringer washers. Will do
repairs on major brands in
shop or at your home.

HelpWented
We s l e r 0

La d

100% Financing W.A.C.

TOI&gt;AY. .

_;
12 2

BARNEY

Hardnod CMlnei1 And rurnuure

YA DID A REAL NICE JOB MAKIN'
THOSE CORNHUSK DOLLS, LO !!

.........-~-

ACTION

FI~S

!!

SMM !!

JONES' ·

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim

· THE BORN LOSER

• Stump Winding

Bucket Truck

f'We:. fo.\E. f...\ t&gt;..IJE.G.E.Tf&gt;..R\~ ~

0

HOW WI&gt;O \T?

~SI'(l..IJR~T L~T ~\G.I\T!

·

t 1-\N&gt; "'Vfl.J..f&gt;..rt.L.!

\T Wto FI\L.-f&gt;...WrUL!

•

0

Monthly Plans

Available
1-740-992-6196

ROIEIT
BISSEll
IOIISTIIIDIN
• New Homes
·Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

J40-992-1m

f'LEI'&gt;SE DON'T

TELL 11E' YOU

WROTE AaoUT
THE DisNEY
CHARACTER.

IMPORTS

Athena

Stop &amp; Compare

We Deliver To You!'
Deer Processing

MAPLE '
WOOD LAKE
Skinned '

Cut
Wrapped

w.-.._
~,..,

t I l \ t 1.: I II

li)\'-. l ld l 1111"\
Concrete Removal
. and Raplacamant

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Hometill System
• Helios System

PEANUTS

I HAVE TO READ A
BOOK DURING C~RISTMA5
VACATIOt-1 ..

~ •"':!'o"':"I'-1J1'!3':t"':'llto•
&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

fR'( Ti-115 ONE .. ITrS

l I-lATE TURNIN6 PAGES

A REAL PAGE-TURNER

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007

Cornerstone
Construction
• General Contracting

• Decks
Additlons •

• Electrical

SUNSHINE CLUB

AII~Of ..
,ConCrete )YoriC

26 Years Experience

All You llHttv For Tlrf Nut Power OUf«gt?

David Lewis
740-992-6971

Brlggo &amp; Stnotton Automatic Standby GOnonoto!W
11)-12 &amp; t5KW
Sales &amp; Warranty Service

lnaured

The
Village
of
Middleport
Pollee
Department 11 taking
sealed bkla lor a t998
Dodge Dakota Club
Cab Truck, 4x4; 5.2LT
VB, minimum bid of
$2800.00. Bids must be
rec:elvacl by December
20th, 2006 at 4 p.m . .at

below has not requeetad a hserlng.
After reviewing the
records In these cases,
the
Superlntandent
finds that.
f. Each of the lndlvlduala list below Is
licensed In this alate
aa an lnaurance agent.
2. Each of the lndlvkluala llatacl below failed
to comply with the
continuing education
requi!Wmenta of sectlon 3905.481 of the
Reviled code lor the
2003-2004 compliance
period.
,
H Ia Therefo111 ordered
lhat pursuant to aeclion 3905.482 of the
Revlaed Code , the
Ohio Insurance llcanae
of each Individual llatad below be 1nd hereby Is revoked. The rovocatlon shell be effecllva October 6, 2006.
Kallam, Billy N DOB:
03110/t978 3471 settle
Bridge Road Stoneville
NC 27048
A copy of this Order
may be obtained from
Stephen C. Hombech,
Ohio Department of
Insurance, 2100 Stella
Court, Columbus, OH
43215·1067.
AI eel forth In O.R.C.
119.1~, an appeal of
this Order may be

taken by filing a notice
of appe~l with the
Department
of
Insurance. A copy of
the notice of appeal
shall also be Iliad with
appropriate court
of common pleas.
Such notices of appeal
shall be filed w~hln IHteen (15) days of the
third date of publicatlon of this notice and
Order. Each Individual
listed
above
may
appeal to the court of
common pleaa of the
county In which hl1 or
her buslnesalalocatacl
or the county In which
he or she Is a realdent.
H he or aha Is not a
resident of and hal no
place of business In
Ohio, he or aha may
appeal to tt.. Court of
common
Pleas
of
Franklin County. The
notice of appeal 1hall .
set forth the order
appeahid from and lhe
grounds of the appeal.
This· Order Ia hereby
entered in lhe Journal
of
the
Ohio
Department
of
Insurance. Ann Womer
B e n j e m I n ,
Superlnlendent
of
Insurance
(12)5, 12, 19

th'

bCIIIII Collltnlclloa ud
&amp;eatral Caalractiag
Mike W. Marcum, Owner
Additions
Roofing
Dec;ks

Garages
Vinyl Siding
Porches

.
Residential &amp; Commercial
740-985-4141 Office
740-416-1834

LOO'king For-,
ANew Home?

Generac RV Generators ·
Warren
Sela1 &amp; Service
Generec Guardian ·
Big Bend Generators
740-418'5494, Pomeroy, OH
1-304-nl-5390, Mason, wv
-Fonnerly Terry's Engines
15 Y•rs Driggs &amp; Str.ttan Warr•nty Servk:8 Exptr'-nce

GARFIELD

Manley's
Recycling
5111-St •IW1..11.114SIII
J48-112-31M

... llllllltMIIII:tl•lotl..

.......l:ll.u. ..
PIYI·T· PllCIS M

. . . . . 1:111•1 1 .......
CIIIIIIICCIIUII•I •CIIIIr
RIUnllll ....

. • ,. ..,.urtclll

TrY the
C.lassifieds!!

GRIZZWELLS

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55

manila

Eur. airline
56 Made haste
57 Dongeroua 10 Corrldl

·

58 Explosive
letters

Kill

DOWN

Waaker, a1

1 Splolch

IRIICUie

2 Bring up
3· Crawling

27 Swamp

crltlera

30 Currlar'l

Nonh

Eosl

l 6

Pass

4•

AU pass

t•

~~.rd

3t

need
34 Top rating

• 10

5
6

7

35 Dlatent past 8

come in twos

13 Relieve
19Bthrough
21 Golden •
Rule word
.24 lllumlnalad
25 Sta.
26 What's

cool&lt;lng

36 Ma.
Bombeck
36 Teeaacl
39 Homel ·.
41 PCIC,..;

42=....

piiiQI)&amp;

43 At the apex
44 HHthe

4 Pamphlal

36 Icicle locale
37 Auto Import
38 Equipped

shouts

wllh

32 Rowboat

9

27 Hindu
ceiling .
. 46 Auto-bOCiy
Remove
teacher
Kind
28 Wander
of ayalam
29 Reecue
47
Like Erie
31 Stinging
48 Toward
Insects
111nr111
33 Rainbow
Roman poet
band
51 FIBIRY
Ch.-totteSign up for, 35 Adventure
aaa claae
tale

&amp;roblem
.:t

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'

Robert Benchley's Law ol Distinction is:
-There are two kinds· of people in the
world, those who believe there are two
kinds of people in the world and those
who don't."
•
·
We often say things come in threes, but
after toda~'s column I am planning to
.stop this theme at two. You are South,
the declarer In four spaqes. West leads
the dub 10 to dummy's king. How would
you plan the play? What was West's
more effecit.oe opening salvo?
North judged that a slam was unlikely, so
bid what he thought his partner could

·

You have nine top tricks: five spades, two
hearts and two clubs. You must establish
a diamond trick. After winning the open- .
lng lead In dummy, play a low diamond
-do not cross to hand "with a heart first.
(Here, you can start trumps, but it risks a
telling heart shift.) East wins with his
queen and shifts to the heart queen. Win
in hand and run the diamond 10 to
East's ace, Take the heart continuation,
cross to dummy's club ace. discard the
heart five on the diamond king, and
claim, conceding a trick to the spade
ace.
To end. something for experts. North
might have taken the auction slower,
starting with a two-club cue-bid. Then,
what would a double by East signify?
It couldr be a strong hand short in
spai:tes, the opponents'·suil. But that is a
IQW-percentage choice. Some play that it
demands a club lead. But partner will
normally lead a club. I prefer to treat the
double as asking partner to lead some·
thing other th_an a club. Then West might
open whh the heart six, which would kill
the contract

·AstroGraph

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Ce1i1tJt1 ~ ayptcgramsn aealed hC"ITIQUOIIIilns by hlrTM people, pl3l an:! pr83Bit
EadllltiiJ In tM ~ ltlllds b" lllllhlr.
Todayi cl.re: Y01111110 M

"EGLIWZLEHPI . HW LE RXWE Ll
XKBP." •

AGXLY."- NPGSX ZJHW _RPGSXW
PREVIOUS SOLUTION -'Since then, we've changed lheltxiks." - Scranton
mayor Jamas McNulty, aHer Con King was given lhe keys to tt1e crty

r::~~;~' $@R~)'\-Llt~s·

WOlD
'AilE

0 four
R10rn:tngo loPou of tho
scrambled words be·

low to form lour simplo words.

Wedneeday, Dec. 13,·2008
By Bttrnlce Bede Oaol
Your leadership qualities will be elevated
to the point where you can take direct
control to constructively achieve what
you want ..You may place yourself in the
forefront of something both exciting and
importanl.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Enterprises or ventures that you personally conc8ive and completely control
have fantastic chances for success during 'this period. Back your own horse
instead of someone else's.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) Althqugh you might not be aware of it.
several people are pulling for you who
are in the position to make things hap·
pen. It'll be that lucky break you've been
looking for.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Make
your hopes realities while the trends are
fortunate for you. Stop sitting on your
dreams alid e~~:pectations, and start
going to wOrk lo make something positille take place now.
PISCES (Feb. 20· March 20) - When it
comes to commercial negotiations, don 't
be reluctant to ask for the moon.
Although you're likely to fall short, it'll
place the bargaining proceM at a higher
level.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll19)- It may be
time to start looking a1 an important
arrangement in which you're involved
from a different direction. A fresh perspecti~~e could reveal hidden benelits ·
you·ve overlooked.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Important
changes are In the making, and this
could haw a beneficial "street on your
work or career. Probe the new influences
for better ways and means lo achi911e
your goals.
·GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) - You could
be quite a bit luckter in your partnership
arrangements. Although one in particular
might be important to you, several cards
are still to be played, so take advantage
of them all.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Nothing
special may be going on with your social
affairs, but you could be rema rkably
lucKy when i1 comes to your material
affairs. Each is operating in its own
sphere.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)- Personal inter-"
ests could be advanced if you are bold
and assertive in moving on them. Once
you get thlng:s started. Dame Fortune will
jump in and mak,e goociiMings even bettee
VIRGO (Aug. 23-SepL 22)- Your mate·
rial prospects look quite fortuitous, especially in arrangements shared witn oth·
ers. All will be lucky tor one another. and
all will double what each might yield
strictly on their own,
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct . :i!3)- The timing is
better tnan uaual for taCkling aomathlng
big you've bean wanting to do but reluc·
tant to attempt You're in a period when
you could be lucky, especially with larger
luuu.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2~ - Nov. 22} - If tomething in which you're pr111n11y lnvolvtd 11
proc•adlng in an upward f1.1h lon, don't
alter your game plan. 11peclally at thll
point In tim •. Lady Luck will be behind
yoU all the way.

'

"-VGHEHIS

14Ho4 ~~ ClAY l. rOILAN - - - - -

qju ... Uolo;r:

.., l'llti'!Ots a•• ,..;,~
~ tow fa.o~i'le. .1:
'lll.eaT- . fi!:.Tzei.Jl a..,
MiLl&lt; ta~~'r bo

SXPGSX RPGGPV

HW IPEBHIS YPGX EBLI L SJHAXA

BAG ELM

DR A R A
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r~IN l !&lt;UMBERED LEiml IN
1H£SE SOVA~ES

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ANSW!~

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SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS 12/liiOG
Clever -· Afoot ·

Granl - Writer-

FOREVER

. "Lies." ~ramps ttS&lt;·d Ill tel! nw. "wi II hav~ a shon ~nd
troubled life, huithc tntth lim on FOREVER."

ARLO &amp; J~NIS

We'i&lt;t aLL O&lt;l1'\"Q
~o~·,~k: I GoT R
ll\~1 OF IT...

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UN~RAM6lE ABOY[ tfllm

. 10 Gfl

SOUPTO NUTZ

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54 Cornpoa

oortiiCikln

24

West

Q

BIG NATE

IWMI
53 Old rultr

grlde
23

SOulb

make.

THAR C0RNHUSK

ELVINEY !!

&amp; Bonded
Dally, Weel!-ly, or

FroeEotlmo

0
111jt Middleport Pollee
•
.
Semces, Inc., an Oil Department, 237 Race
and Gas Brokerage Street. Vehicle can be
at
the
2 bed~oom apartment avail- · St:rvice Company, viewed .
Pollee
able 1.n Syracuse. $200 seek s
dedicated, ·Middleport
We
deposit $3~0 per month . ambitious
and Department.
rent. Rent Includes water,
.
.
· d·
reaerve the right to
sewer, trash. No pets. c?nsc1en1J ou_s _111 I· accept or reject any
Sufficient income needed to v1d~al s to as.s1st m the and all bids.
quality. 740-378-6111.
developm ent
of (12) 5, 7, 12, 14
projects in Southca!lt
2 .bedroom apt. Stove, Ohi o.· Candidates
relrlg .,
washer/dryer
Public Notice
!'hould po!!M:SS !)trong
hookup, water paid, close to
communications
Holzer on Centenary Road.
AND
skill s. basic L·ompult'r FINDINGS
No pets. (7 40\446-9442.
ORDER
OF
REVOCA·
skills
and
the
2 bedroom furnished garage willingness to learn . liON
The Superintendent of
apt. Not HUD approved
,Ohio cenlficate uf
lnauranca IIIUacl a
Water· provided, no pets.
Notary Public a plus . Notice of Opportunity
References
reqUired
We
offer above for Hearing to eech of
$400/mo w/$200 deposit
average
earning~ wilh the lndlvlduala llated
(740)446-117.1 before 5pm
the opportunity for beloW. The Notice waa
3 rooms &amp; batt"!, stove, advancement. If y ou served on eech lndl·
refrigerator. ut1littes pa1d
are interested in being vidual pursuant to aec·Downstairs. 46 Olive St
a pan of th e exciting tlon 119.07 of tha
$450 month, no pets.
and fa&gt;t -paced life of Revised code. More
(740)446·3945.
t he Oil &amp; G o; than thlrty(30) daya
663 Jrd. untumished, car- industry. please call have elapsed from the
peted. washer hookup. auf- Dan or Frank at 740- date of service or from
side st ora ge. $350/IT\o. plus 446-6800 to \C hedulc lhe last date of publl·
cation and each of the
ut1llhes Leave message at
an iruavicw.
Individuals
listed
(740)245-9595

•

~~

LOOIC LIICe

FuUy Insured

I I \\ I"

()pM!ng

Publk Netim in Ntt!!llljll!!.l
Yoor Rijl to Know, ll!lin!H Rigbt to Your lil~r.l

Ttie~rE's tilS MUG
StiOT ANI&gt; TtiiS 2i
IS A C::OMPUTtlr· ~l
/ 6eNEirATel&gt;
U
IMAGe Of WtiAT ~~
tie MIGtiT
;I

fltiOnl: (740) 441·arr

1·740-949-2734

o.c.mbtlr ,, 20061

· 1 Bedroom Apartment in New llv.ing room suite $300.

New Homes
3 BR. 2 Ia. from $66,000
2 BR. 1 B~. $59,800

.

Locally
Maid

22 Average

rFR_A_NK_·&amp;_E_A_RN_E~ST-r=====u======~~~--~----~-,ThethemeS

Owner

52 Work--

curve

leathers

Opening lead:

Chuck Wolfe

20Y•raEx~

B.

1989 Honde Acoord ox, 4
door, automatic, fair condl·
lion, KBB· $1180, SaN-$700
OBO. (740)794-0231

~2Y~l!f.
(740) 992-0496

49 "L'-, c'•t

20 Soft

Vulnerable: North-South

Rick Johnoon Jr.· Qwnor

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

neighbor
17 Adml111
1a:_rea

Dealer: East

7 40-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

171Rind StfMI•GIItlpollt, ott

INSUR"ED

4 A
• Q J 10 •
t AQ1
.Q7652

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

,.,•

ACE TREE SERVICE

East

54 3
6 4
9 8 6 5
10 9 8 3

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Ill

"

West
•
•
•
•

• 10 2
• J 4

llh1&lt;1
f ' I1

15 Lummox
16 Bunna

r1iQJ1087Z

Rooting &amp; Outten

YOUNG

lhlped

• A K5

9Yl ll ..1 1 '1

j

FOR SALE

r]ami/1J l•l)1ijJ:I

New·G•r•SJM
Electriclll &amp; Plumbing

V.C

Shlmu

14 Almond·

Soul•

WV036725

Financing as low as 0%· 36 2001 Toyota Tacoma 4x4,
Mos. on John Deere 7 good condition. 90k mileS.
Series 4x4, 4x5 &amp; 5x4 $9,200/0BO (304)276·2970
· 14~e70 trailer for rent,
Round Belera/500 Series· 2003 Chev. ouramax diesel
Honeysuckle
Hills
BUIUJING
; $450/mo, $450 dapos~. Call
MoCoiiSquare
Belera. crew cab, 4 door, low miles
Apartments
now
accepting
L---SUP!&gt;Im;----.-1
' (740)367·7762.
Also
avaii.Bble
5.9%
on $24,995. (740)446·7529,
applications tor 2BA apts. ...,
Hay Equipment. All (740)446·6748.
-1BR_wr
__
_th_s_to_ve_.-re-l-rige-ra-to-r, No rental assistance avail- 24X32X10 Painted steel Ul8d
rates thru John Deere
dinette, washer/dryer, cov· able at this time. Rent starts sides and roof, ·1-entry. 2· Credit.
Carmichael 2005 Dodge Ram 1500
ered p ~rch out building, 112 .at ~340 month. Eq~al 10XB overhead doors 12· Equipment (740)446-2412. truck, 2 wheel drtve, 8ft bed,
acre lot. nicely remodeled, Hous1ng
Opportunity. overhang all insulated 2-win·
39,000 miles. $12,500.
·au cherry wood flooring, no (740)446·3344.
dews wfshutters, seamless Keifer Buih· Valley-· Bison· (740)446-7665.
and
Uvestoek . -~-'""!!'~--..;,
carpet, includQs water &amp; In Gallipolis, clean, upstairs, gutter. Concrete floor and Horse
LoadmaxSUVs
trash, you pay electric. Oep. 2 bedrooms, 2' bath, dish· 10' approach. Erected price Trailer.·
$13,889.00.
30'X40'X10'
Goosoneck,
·
Dumps,
&amp;
FOR
SALE
$215, rent $385, off washer, WID hOOkup. $500,
Raccoon Rd., Gallipolis deposit,
references. Painted steel sides and roof Utility- Aluma Aluminum
1-entry, 14'X10' sliding doc?r Tralltfl· B&amp;W Gooseneck 2001 Ford E~&lt;pedillon Eddie . West Shade Barber StlOP
(7_40)256·1106.
(740)446·9209.
lnsul. roof seBmless gutter HitChes.
Carmichael Bauer. loaded, sun roof,
Owned &amp; uperatec.l by
2 bedroom mobile home in Middleport N 3f"d Ave.·: 1 &amp; 2 erected price: $10,350.00, Equipment (740)446·2412
leather, red/tan, 77,000
Chris P.Jrkcr
· Middleport, $300 per month. Br. furnished apts., no pets, 740·742-4011 or 800~369·
miles. Asking $17.000 aBO.
$300 deposit, years lease,
.
New JOOn Deere Compacts 740 441 1417
17 yrs. exr rience.
11 1
3026 _ No Wva. Calls
previous ren 8 re erence.
and 5000 Series Ulilily trac- '-;a~~-~~-~--.,
Fr'rs·1
· Bar' ··r Shop on
no pels, no calls after 9pm, 740 992 0165
t;
u'"
(7_40_1_99_2_-5_0_39____ --·- · - · ---l'1rrs
tors 00% Fixed for &gt;6
4x4
Texas Road oiT Route 7
MOVE·IN SPECIAL! Save
tl)R SALE
months through John Deere
FOR SALE
740-985-3616
2 bedroom mobile home. on tst month's rent. 2 "---iiiittiiiijiiioo_.l Credit.
Carmichael ·--iiiiiiiiiii-_.1 .________.
Gas heat, 3 miles from town. Bedroom Apartments 6 a week old Great Pyrenees Equipment (740)446·2412
1994 Toyota. Truckm 4x4,
No pets. (740)446-7275.
miles from Holzer. Water. pup,
Females,
$200.
237,000, 24,000 miles on
2 bedroom trailer tor rent on Sewer, Trash paid. (740)682· (740)245-9142
L1m10CK
rebuilt engine. Runs great
$4,000 (304)675-2219
term. Call (540)729·1331 or 9243 or (740)986-6130.
L·------.-1
.
AKC B01cer Puppies
7 ...,
(740)645-5595.
New 2BA apartments. weeks old. · Brindle and Boar goat ~ds, champion &amp; 2001 Ford F150, V8, 4
2 .bedroom. NC. porch &amp; Washer/dryer
hookup. A.Brindle. 2 female, 3 male. enabled bloodlines $175. wheel drive,. XLT package,
awning, No pets. In stove/refrigerator included
740-992·0805.
(740)256·9247.
89,000/miles, E:ccellent con·
Gallipolis. (740)446·2003, Also, units on SA 160. Pets
.
dition. Askir:'IQ $13 ,000 call
Welcome I (740)441.(}194.
AKC Boxer puppies, shots &amp;
1740)446·1409 or (740}446·
wormed, parents ori premis· Duro~ boar, 2 year old, (304)675-6338 after 6pm
National Class winner.
2692
Twin Rivers Tower is a~ept· as $400 each. (740)379- (740)441-10.13.
VANS
2 bedroom, no pets, dep &amp; ing applications for waiting 2668.
.,-e
list for Hud~subsized, 1· br. - -- - - - - - Keifer Buih· Valley· Bison· ~--oif:iiORiiiitiiSiiALEiiir-.,J
reI. $325 month. (7401 .:ro7·
AKC Golden Retriever pupHorse
and
Livestock
0632
apartment, call 675·6679
·
Equal Housing Opportunity pies $300. (740)256·1686.
Trllltrl·
Loadmax- 1985 Chell)' 3/4 ton cargo
van. 62,600 miles, new
2BR located approx. 3 miies
AKC Golden ~etriever Goossneck, Dumps, &amp;
from town. in Green Twp. No
SPAO:
Puppys. Red or Cream, Vel Utility- Aluma Aluminum transmission, tires, exhaust
Excellent work
pets, reference &amp; deposit ·--FORiiiiiRooiiitiio-.,1 checked shots. M. and F. Troliorl· B&amp;W Goosenect&lt;
Csrmichae1
required $450/mo. (740}446$350.00!
AKC Doberman Hitches.
Oakwood Homea
6565.
Commercial building •For Pinsch&amp;r Puppys 1 M, t F, Equipment (740)446·2412
BAD CREDIT?
- - - - - - - - Aenr 1600 square feet , off lack and Rust $400 001
NO CREDIT?
3 bO&lt;lroom bath and · ha~
·
·
Quarter Horses. Paint
mobile home in the country. street parking. Great loca· AKC Bichone Frish puppys Horses Half Uinger Horse.
Bankruptcy?
Males only.
1 ~pos't
$4SO.oo month and deposit. 1ionl 749 Third Avenue in lak'ng
~
1 s.
Broke &amp; Traffic sale to. Drive
We
Can Helpl
• •
_
Gallipolis. Rent $475/mo. $300.001. 740-696·10851
740 843 5196
and-Aide (304)576·2324
Call
CraciH
Hotline
-:--:---:--:--....,-- Call Wayne (404)4.56·3802
BASEMENT
3Br. Aolrldg &amp; Stove, Washer
AKC Lab puppies $300. 'rorkshire Pigs for sale weigh
740-44lh1570
WATERPROOFING
Office ...,...
~ace for rent down· (740)256-1686
&amp;. Dryer inctuded. Section 8
;_...:__ _ _. - - - - appf01&lt; . . 1251bs. (304)576· Unconditional lifetime guar·
423
approwd (304)576-2934
town Gallipolis,
Sac. AKC Pomeranian pupa. 12 2324
antee. Local references furAve. Call for more Info.
nished. Established 1975.
Mobile Home Lot in Johnson . (740)446.-4383.
wks old, 2 female, 1 male: 5
·month old pup~ 2 mala, 1
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
Mobile Home Park in
female $350. (740)388·
0870, Rogers Basement
10
Galllpr&gt;is,
OH. Phone
::.
· ------ [
Auros
6642:...
Waterproofing.
AKC
c puppies for sell, most
wtli ba ready for Christmas.
Blchons, Mini Schnauzers,
Boxers, Dobermans. Also
CKC t~ ~-"' -s. 740·767·
..., nlUUftll
4875

MONTY

Pllllo lnd Porch Deoka

·

12·11.(11

.AK

I

42 Kind
ot biology
45 Rough

mol"
ttlommant
t2 Willy or
50 Tromplacl

• K 9 6
• 8 73 2
• K J 43

VInyl Siding &amp; Painting

New inventory daily!
Roms Auto Sale (740)441·
9544 ·
[ 15
..,

-nd

4 Charge
7 Dogrnoz
t1 FloMr

I

2000 Chrysler Clrrus 4 door,

40 Comic-strip

prince
1 Wintertime · 41 "Big Blue"

Phillip
Alder

nice 2100; 1998 Ford Escort
4 dr, blacl&lt;, aut, 4 cyl, $2100
nke m111ny more to chose
!rom. Buy hera, pey hera 112
down. (!40)446-8172.

&amp;r;;~lor--~---.,
FARM
I

I

~-to-•H•OUSFJIOIJ)iiiiiiiiii-_.1

NEA Crossword Puzzle
BRIDGE

Ellm V i e w r
iir"'"'!F!!'OR~S-ALE-....,
Apartments

1409.
Gooffi
(7-40-)«6---200_3_o_r_(7_4_0)446_·
Trailer for rent: 2 br. 2 ba,
14x70. $450 ·rent &amp; dep req. Like new 2 year old Oak
A .h
d d' .
(740)446-2422.
m1s rna e 1n1ng room
APi
set. Table, 6 chairs, 2 leafs,
~
china cabinet benCh seat.
FOR Roo
~
$1 .500 firm . (740)388-0115
or (740)388·9053. ·
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
menta, furnished and unfur· Mollohan Carpet, 76 Vine
nlshed, security deposit St,reet, Gallipolis. Berber,
required, no pets, 740·992· S5.95Jyd, Call for free quote.
(740)446·7444
2218.

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

'

Used furniture store, 130 AKC reg. Beagto pupe, all tri 1995 Ford Mustang GT V8,
Bula.ville Pike. Electric gas colored , wormed, sho1s, aut, nice, 4200: 1994
ranges, refrigerators, chest, $100. Steve Stapleton Pontiac Bonneville 4 dr, V6

couch, dinettes, recliners,
·
much more. Stop out
~ • 100% financing
gone.
Laurel Commons (740)«6·4782 Gallipolis,
• • Lass than perfect credit Apanments (304)273-3344 OH Hrs 1t~ (M·S)
·accepted
.
· • Payment could be the Apartment for rent, 1·2
-' aame as rent.
Bdrm .. remodeled, new car:.. Mortgage
Locators. pet, stove &amp; !rig., water,
: (740)367-oootl
sewer, trash pd. Mlddtepon.
- - - - - - - - $425.00. No pets. Ref. Lil&lt;o new Colt AA·15 A!lle,
223 caliber. $1, tOO flrm
FurniShed beauliful 3 bed· required , 740-843·5264.
room 2 bath , will rent weekly
or monthly; also 2 bedroom BEAUTIFUL
APARTtraHar, in Syracuse, 740- MENTS
AT
BUDGET
418-6950·
PRICES AT JACKSON
- - - . . . . , - - - - - ESTATES, 52 WestwoO&lt;l
Home tor Aerit in Glenwood. Drive from $349 to $448. Assortment of wedding dac3br, $400/montt'! + deposit. Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call orations. Center pieces, dec·
No Pets. (304)743-8584 .
740·446·2568.
Equal oratlve · vines, lights, 2
Housing Opportunity.
pedestals &amp; lots, lots more
HUD HOMESI3 bedroom, 2 -~------ $250 for at!. (740)388·0115
bath, $141fmo. 4 bedroom. Construction workers. One or (740)388-9053.
$193/mo. 4% dn, 30 yrs @ bedroom In a 2 bd.room apt.
8%. For listings 800-~59· $100.00 week 304·773· · Hot Tub Outlet, Red Tag
4109 el&lt;l. F144.
9161 or 304-773-5040.
sale. Top quality, warranly,
--------'delivery &amp; Installation. Call
In Pomeroy. 3 Br.. 2 bath. CONVENIENTLY LOC'AT· (606)326-0777 anytlma.
newly remodeled. 740-643· EO a AFFORDABLE!
5264.
Townhouse
apartments,
JET
and/or small houses FOR
AERATION MOTORS
Nice3BR, 1 bath. central air, RENT Call (7401441 •1111 Repaired, New &amp; Aebul~ In
stovelrefrig.turn., 1 yr lease, lor application &amp; information. Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·
$600/mo + deposit, refer·
800-537·9528.
ences, no smoking inside,
no pets. 105 Bastiani,
.
-N-EW.;__A_N_D_U-SE_D_S_Tl!_E_L
• (740)446-3667.
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
Concrete,
Angle,
: Nice, Clean, Economical, •2&amp;3 bedroom apartments For
· ·
2br, w/basement. central •Central heat &amp; AJC
Channel, Flat. Bar. Steel
Mat. Reg, Dep No Pets •Washer/dryer hookup
Grating
For
Orainsl
• (304)675-5162
•AU electric- averaging
ScDrirvewaa
MyestaJ&amp; WOapelkwnaMyos.ndL&amp;sy
P
s
Pretty 3BR House for Rent. $50-$60/month
Tuesday,
Wedriesday
&amp;'
Cedar Str. Central Heavair, •Owner pays water, sewer,
trash
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
, FP. $695+Util and dep. Call
(740)«6-4639.
(304)882·3017 Tshurdasday(7.401~~s-turnd%
un Y·
.,....
• Small one bedroom house in
o 8k f
od f
1
Middleport.
Relerences
lrewo
or sa e.
•
Delivered
&amp;
pickup.
(740)441·0941, (740)645, required. 304-576-2000.
While Ave 2BR house
5S46. CAA HEAP accepted.
·• $425/mo + 1/mo. dep. water - - - - - - - : - ' - Sony Playstation 3, 60 gigs.
, paid, renter pays gas &amp; elec- Gracious living. 1 and" 2 bed· New in box, $1200 080.
trlc.
1 small' pet ok, room apartments at Village Call (740)709-7863.
' (678)485-6397.
Menor
and
Riverside
·
Apartments in Middleport. Wooden bunk bed wlfull size
MOIIFORH.Enf!~
From $295·$444. Cali 740· on boHom, wfladder, boHom
IU.I'II
• 992·5064. Equal Housing drawer, excellent condition
Opportunltie~
$475/0BO (304)773-5379

:c

www.mydallysentinel.com

ALLEYOOP

It

.

Atton11ont
Local company offering ' NO
DOWN PAYMENr pro"ams tor you to buy your
home Instead ot renting.

Tuesday, DecBI'nber 12, 2ooa

Tuesday, December 12,2006

www.mydallysentlnel.com

�-

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com
'

I

_______ ·-

--- - - ________..,...
.

-

Holiday Coloring Book
inside today's Sentinel

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Advertisers visit Gizmosads.com and see how we can work for you !

Sponsored by:

jfisiJ er .

.:lfunerul j!)omr

•

Gizmos

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.)0 ( I '\ I S • \ 'ol. .) h, '\". q

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1

'""' "' Hl.n I"''"',"' 1 , , ,·,

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Middleport seeks brownfield funds for Park Street site

SPORTS

CHRISTMAS
TREE DECORATOH
.
.
.
Hopper dispensing
valve timed with wheel
assembly ----.~~...

IIIIOSIIS.COI

WEM:

J. REED

·aREEO@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

MIDDLEPORT - The
Village of Middleport will
pursue state funding for the
redevelopment' of the Park
Street sl:hool site, but must
sell the property for devel·
opment in order to qualify.
Meeting Monday night,
village council authorized
Buckeye
Hills/Hocking
Valley
. Regional
Development District to
apply on the village's behalf

0

0

Ornament dis1pen1sir)~
holes

ADVERTISERS VISIT:

BY BRIAN

• Southam drops
heartbreaker to
South Gallia.
See PageB1

Why can't a
reindeer do
·this job?
'10 ~ In tbilllpllCe
call
.
The Daily Sentinel

360"spool
for even lights

for Phase I funding through
the . Ohio Department of
Development's Clean Ohio
fund.
Mayor Sandy lannarelli
said the village has a potential buyer for the site if it
can be cleaned up; and said
the village could use proceeds from the sale to relo-,
cate the street and public
works departments to a new
facility near the village
water hauling area.
The school, closed for
decades, sits adjacent to the

village garage. It has been
used by fhe village as astorage facility, but has been
· deemed unsafe to occupy.
The village also believes fhe
soil on the site has been contaminated with oil and -oilier
materials , which would
qualify it as a brownfield.
Melissa
Zoller
of
Buckeye Hills outlined
requirements under the
Clean Ohio program, which
makes fundmg available to
identify and revitalize
brownfJeld sites. The vii·

lage applied for funding environmental engineering
another time, but the appli- firm. The second phase
cation filed by Floyd makes funds available for a
Browne Group, the village's search for hazardous or conformer engineering firm, taminant 111aterials, and the
did not identify its use as a third phase, which · would
village garage facility, require a match, involves
Zoller said.
removal and replacement of
The program includes contaminated soil
and
three phases for revitaliza- demolition 'of buildings .
tion of a brownfield site.
In other business, council
The first phase, for which approved a $25,000 conthe village could receive up
tract with the engineering
to $8,000 in grant funding ,
firm URS for development
would involve a history of
the use of the property by an
Ple•se see Funds, A5

Truck stolen
in Portland
used in
Athens theft

_.. .................. . .

~2155

m. underlllll

this

Modern convenience with traditional charm! Simply
mount your tree to the center axisG);flll the hopper with
G&amp;G brand super stick ornaments@, attach.lights@ and
·garlands@from wrap around spools, and off you go ,! by the
time you get home you'll .flave a fully decorated tree •.

. Baffle panels ·
redistribute ornaments
that fail to:catch on first pass

BY BRIAN

0BITUARIFS
LESSON 023

Page AS
• Jill Johnson, 44

HAIR

'INSIDE"""'"' '

.. ·~tocatModem
Woodmen reach out to
rieedy. See Page A3 ·
• Felman rebirth marries
Christmas for workers.
I''

'

'See Page AS
.

If you have a clear understanding of the hair on
your character, as three dimensional, adding it to
the turned views is easy. ·
Keep in mind you are seeing parts of the head that
were hidden in the staight on view. Don't be afraid
to add the hair hidden by the ears.

Charlene Hoatllchfphotos

Rosanna Manley presents "The Mitten" for the story hour for Head Start Chiidren wearing ihe colorful scarves crocheted
or knitted by senior citizens at a party hosted by Peop :es Bank.

Christmas is ... remembering others
BY CHARLENE

HOEFUCH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Of course there are many other hair styles, and some

Can you help Gadget find the cheese, :
two flags and her glassses ?
•

are more difficultly seen as 3D. The more you can
· break it
into
the easier it will be.

Whe'n the crank is turned will
the sign move left@or right@?

• Dave's American Grill
now open for business.

See Page A6

WEATHER

o.tallo

•••
u
now that's
the christmas
spirit

Each column,
and square must use #s 1,7,4,&amp; 2,plus the
'ldiabonals must add up to the #'s shown.(diagonals can repeat

~ooe

••

eoa®oao
.•

oe •o~
{!lfSlOO®·~

OOOfSl

®0

0~~~·
D

®oe
su• ®oe

a~o~u•~

•

on POCe A6

happy
holidays
to all !

POMEROY - 'Tis the
season to be giving and
again this year the Meigs
County Senior Citizens
Center is in the business· of
remembering others - not
just the elderly, but those
many years younger.
Following a tradition of
several Years, 20 seniors citizens, assisted by a few others, got their needles and
yam out to knit or crochet
285 scarves for pre-schoolers enrolled 'in the Meigs
County Head Start Program .
Their creations came in
vivid and pastel colors, in
. stripes and solids, others in
unusual design, some with
fringe and others without.
Each child received a scarf
of choice. Any remaining
will be di stributed through
other programs.
Last week Peoples . Bank

Plene see Christmas. AS

INDEX
Calendars

A3
A3

Classifieds

82-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

•

Weather

B Section
A6

© aoo6 Ohio Volley Puhtishi113 Co.

•

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSE~TINEL.COM

RACINE
Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources Environmental
Specialist Scott Stillier confirmed a coal mining permit
filed with his agency by
Gatling Ohio Mining, LLC
is for "room and pillar"
underground coa l mining in
the R~ine area on and
around Yellowbush Road.
Officials with Gatling
were in Racine Monday
along with Stitli~r and rep-

POMEROY -A truck
allegedly stolen from a
Portland man was used in the
theft of an automated teller
machine from Athens County
and· a subsequent chase
between two Columbus men
and Athens County law
enforcement officers.
Sheriff Robert Beegle
reported that charges will be
filed against the men , who
are now in custody on
charges in Athens ·County.
The Athens County Sheriff
identified tbe men as
Antonio Chavez, 29, and
Steven Browning, 23.
Beegle said his office
received a call at 4:30 a.m.
M,Qnday from the Athens
Sh~riff's o!Tice about the
ATM . allegedly stolen in
Guysville . The truck had
turned onto Ohio 143, and
shortly after, collided with a
cruiser. The subjects then
fled on foot and were quickly apprehended.
The truck was identified
as belonging to · John
Henderson of Portland. At
first.
Henderson
said
nobody had hi s truck. but
when he looked in his
garage. the truck was missing, Beegle sa id .
Brian Smeck of Racine
reported that someone had
entered his vehicle and apparently tried to · steal it. The
steering column had been
damaged. It is not known,
Beegle said, if lhe incident
mi ght be connected wifh the,
theft of the Henderson truck.

Committee to
study village
refuse service
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Yellowbush Road. no"
Ohio 124 and end up at the
Ohio River bank where coal
would be loaded onto
barges for transport to avoid
large trucks on the 10wnship
and village roads.
Stitlier said the application
is in the preliminary review
process and if no "glaring
omissions" are found on the
application Gatling will
move onto the next step
which wi ll be registering
their mining application at

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Mayor , Sandy
lannare lli appointed a committee Monday evening to
exami ne the possibility of a
vi llage-operated residemial
refuse service.
. Middleport
Village
Council voted Monday
evening to increase the customer cost of refuse service
through Rumpke of Ohio. a
dollar increase to $17.25 per
month. The cost for senior
citizens was increased by
$1.25. to $15 per month. ·
Those fees are tiilled with the
monthly public works bill.
-Last
month. counci l
:-.igned a new cnntracl \\'ith
the Wellston refuse company.' at a cost of $13.4R and
$12 . 13. The fee increase,
approved lvlonday night
allow the \'illage to collect
cosh ahovc the refuse ser\ ice fee to cmer billing and

Please see Permit. AS

Please see Service, AS

Leona Cleland. Barbara Gheen and Rosanna Manley, left to right, are among the 20 senior
citizens in the RSVP program who made 285 colorful scarves for the Head Start children
of Meigs county.

Gatling mining permit for 'room and pillar' extraction

2 SF.CllONS- 12 PAG"-"

Annie's Mailbox

®El~

J. REED

BREEO@~YDAILYSENTINELCOM

resentatives from the US
Army Corps of Engineers
investigating
possible
impacts, if any, the proposed mine may have on
wetlands or streams.
" Room and pillar" underground mining is described
by the Unitep Mine Workers
of America as a method of
extracting coal that involves
"rooms" cut into the coal
bed leaving a series of pillars. or columns of coal. to
help suppon the mine roof
and control the !low of air.
Generally, rooms are 20 to

30 feet wide and the pillars
up 'to I 00 feet wide and as
mining advances a grid· like
pattern of rooms and pillars
is formed.
Stillier added the pern1it
is for mining 1,894.9 acres ·
of underground coal while
the surface operation is estimated to expand over 80.8
acres. Alfhough not included in-the permit, Stillier said
he ·had the impression
Gatling may apply for a permit to in&gt;tall a conveyor
belt that would travel from
the mining operation on

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