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                  <text>Page BS ~ 'I]:te Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.~om

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Wednesday, September 7, 2005

Valentin helps lift Reds past.Brewers, 2-1
CINCINNATI (AP)
Javier Valentin got a rare start
against a left-hander on
Sunday in Atlanta., He made it
pay off against the Milwaukee
Brewers two -days later.
The switch-hitting . catcher.
who went into. Tuesday's
game hilling only .143 as a
right-hander. had an RBI sin· ~'le in the bottom of the IOtli
tnning to give the Cincinnati
Reds a. 2- 1 victory over the
Brewers.
Adam Dunn singled with
one out off left-hander Jorge
De La Rosa (2-2) and mtiVcd
to third on Sean Casey's sharp
single to right that just got
under the . glove of second
baseman Richie Weeks. Reds
interim manager Jerry Narron
eleued to stick with Valentin.
who followed with a line tlrive
over drawn -i n center fielder
Brady C lark on the lirst pitch.
" I' m starting to feel cum- .
fortable after gett in g four at bats Suildav... Valentin said.
"'M y sw ing . iS st;jrting to feel
better. My manager told me to
look fo r one pitch to drive out
of the infield. and he m;Hk
one.
"The only thin g I wa.&lt; trying
to do was put the h;tll in play.

play. I knew as soon as I hit
the hall that they weren 't
goi ng to throw him out at the
plate, because he had to go
hack on the hall."
Narron said , "Javy' s been
coming up big for us all year.
I was jLtst happy to see him get
the opportunity to swing the
bat." '
The Reds have won two of
their last three games, both in
extra innings. after a five g am~ losi ng streak. They
i mpruved to 4- 1 in extra-

inning games this se.ason and

staved off elimination from
the Cen tral Division' race·.
They are 23 112 games behlrid
ti rst-place St. Louis with 24 to
play.
.
Milwaukee went 3-for-13
with ruTincrs in scoring positi on, with just one of the hits
driving in ·a run. tq fall to 3-7
in extra-inning game~. The
Brewers missed an opportuniHe gave me a l:hangcup righ r tY for their 32 nd road win of
down the middle. and that 's a th e season. whi ch would be
pitch yoit have tu put into one more than they won last

Ohio not gettbig Katrina
evacuees, for now, As

The Reds tied it in the seventh. Jacob Cruz drew ll oneout walk from Justin Lehr and·
Ray Olmedo was sent in as a
pinch runner. After Ryan Freel
flied out, Olmedo moved 'to
third on Rich Aurilia's sharp
single throu~h the hole into
left. Matt Wtse relieved Lehr
and gave up a game-tying single to Felipe Lopez that
glanced off the glove of diving ·
shortstop Bill H&lt;!ll ard rolled
·
into left tield.
Rick Helling's start was hi s
Notes: Freel's start was his
third
since
joining
Milwaukee's rotation on Aug. first sin ce Aug. 15, the day
27 , but he still hasn ' t earned a before he went on the di sabled
decision as a starter since list with torn cartilage in his
going 7 _8 in 24 starts for right knee and a sore right
naltimore in 2003. He left the . quadriceps. He had arthroscopic surgery on his knee
game for a pinch hitter in the Aug. 18 and was activated
sixth with a 1-0 lead after Monday. ... Freel's thirdallowing four hits and a walk inning stolen base was his
·with .four strikeouts in five 30th of the. season, making
innings.
.
him. the first Reds player with
Reds starter Aaron Harang consecutive 30-steal seasons .
gave up one run and eight hits since Barty Larkin stole 51 in
with three walks and seven 1995 and 36 in 1996.... Lee
strikeouts in 6 2,3 innings.
extended his hitting streak to
Geoff Jenkins, who tied his nine games, one · short of
career hi gh with live hits on matching his season-high . ...
Monday, ga\e the -Brewers .a The attendance of 13,351 was
1-0 lead in the fourth on the lowest of the season for
AP photo
Tuesday. After Lyle Overbay's the Reds at home. The figure
Cincinnati
Reds'
Javier
Valentin
(17)
is
congratulated
after he
leadoff walk and Carlos Lee's did not include 315 members
single, Jenkins hit a line drive of the military and their imrne- · drove in.the winning run with a hit off ty1ilwaukee Brewers pitchthat one-hopped the right field di'ate families, "who were er Jorge De La Rosa in t~e bottom of the 10th .inning Tuesday
in Cincinnati. Cincinnati won 2-1.
wall for a run-scoring double. admitted free.
season, and their 69th win
overall, which would be the
most of Ned Yost's three seasons as manager.
"We just didn't execute
offensively," Yost. said. "We
had a lot of opportunities. We
just didn't get the big hit to
tack on extra runs. If we're
go ing to get over the · hump,
we have to get better at that.
It's an attitude that we will get
th e run in."

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;,o CENTS • Vul. ;;;,. :'1/u. , ~

AP photo

Cleveland Indians' ·coco Crisp. right. taps Grady Sizemore on .
his helmet after Crisp hit a two-run homer off of Detroit Tigers
starter Jason Johnson to score the pair in the third inning
Tuesday in Detroit.

Indians win, pull within
half-game of.New York

players and staff that, considering what is going \ln in
New Orleans and along the
Gulf Coast, any complaining
about their temporary home
will ring hollow ..
. "I think when you feel
sorry for yourselves, you go
upstairs and watch TV and
that kind of goes away."
Haslett said. "We're kind of
crammed into some quarters
_ we're short a copying
machine and I've got a coupie of coaches sleeping at the
Alamodome _ but we're not
behind at all in our preparations. It's not gain~ to hurt us
one or another bemg here at
all."
Even the . Saints' media
relations office is making do.
Daily news ,· releases are
copied onto plain paper _ the
team letterhead was left
behind, so more is being
printed.
With each day, things are
increasingly returning to normal _ or at least whatever
normal is, considering the cir.cumstances.
Quarterback Aaron Brooks
and his wife were among
· many families spending•
Tuesday's day off trying to
rent a home in San Antoni?.
Rece.tve~ Joe Hom satd he s
constdenng buymg a place.
•·unfortunately, it's our

new home , temporarily."
Brooks said. "We ' re going to
have to accept that and be as
comfortable as possible and
get into a normal schedule for
the regular season.''
In a way. temporary living
arrangements are similar to .
what players face when they
switch teams during the sea- ·
son.
"The players want an automobile and a place to live,'.'
Haslett said. ''O nce they get
that, they have a place where
you can drive over to work
and go home and lay dowfl.
That's all you really need in
thi s business."
General manager Mi ckey
Loomis said the team is planning to practice in San
Antonio for the remainder of
the season. They may, even
end up playing one or more
home games in the city's
Aiamodorne .
The Saints' lirst choice is
moving to LSU 's Tiger
Stadium in Baton Rouge, La..
and the league is still exploring all options. including ha&lt;Jing them play all 16 games on
the road.
The team's practice facility
in Metairie, La., is dry. But i\
has been used by the Federal
Emergency
. Management
,Agency to help in the disaster
relief.
'

• Meigs preps for Raider
invasion.
Page 81

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

see

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Fiscal Year 1999 to FY05
was a positive despite the fact
that it was an increase .
Salaries in FY 1999 were
$2,486,476 while 1a1&lt;1ries in
FYOS are estimated at
$2,574,844.
Ohio
Department
of
.. Education Consultant Nancy
Burbacher, who compiled the
data, clarified that the 3.5
percertt came about by utili zing other funds:
Wolfe responded that the
cost was still. "nominal" to
.
the general fund. ·
Another positive according
to Wolfe was the reduction in
pay fringes for the di strict.

Page AS
• Anna Lou Roush, 78
'

INSIDE
• Using the threat of
force, police step up
efforts to clear holdouts
from New Orleans.
See Page A2
• Doll·and bear shows to
be held. See Page A3
·• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• Pomeroy Court News.
Page AS
• American hostage
freed after 10 months; ·
bombings kill four U.S.
security agents and 16
others. See Page A6
• Hospitals say Medicaid
·cuts would increase .
emergency room wa~s.
See Page AS
• Peace mom's
supporters visit Ohio.
See Page A7

see

9/11 memorial
service set
for Sunday

'.

Details on Page II 7

INDEX
16 PAGES

© 2005 Ohio Valle,: Publishin,: Co.
•

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - A patriotic service in !Jenera!
UMCOR also plans to · Hartinger Park on Sunday wil.l
coordinate long-term volunteer tea ms in the weeks honor those who died on Sept.
and months ahead. Rader II. 2001, and the sold iers now
sa id .
serving in the nation 's ongoThe United Methodist in g war on terror.
Churches of Meigs County
A new 30-foot llagpole
have been asked to collect and
fla g. donated
by
special offerings next week- Middleport native Rich
end for UMCOR, Rader Hay s.
Ohio
Fraternal
Coordinator
of
the
said, and Sacred Heart Woodmen of the[ World Life
Catholic Church in Pomeroy
will collect for Catholic . Insurance Society. will be
Charities USA the weekend marked with a spec ial comof Sept. 17. Sacred Heart memorative plaque and dedPastor Rev. Walter Heinz icated at the service. which
said those who wish to con- begin s at 2 p.m . Hays. who
tribute to the Catholic now lives in Grove City. has
Charities USA fund drive provided several flag s for
may do so by mailing or public places in Middleport
delivering a check to the
Siate Rep. Jimmy Stewart,
Sacred Heart Rectory. 161 R-Aibany, and · representaMulberry Ave .. Pomeroy.
tives of other elected olfi.Those who wi$h 10 make c'ials are expected to make
: contributions online to any of ·remarks at the ceremony.
...__................a=-~7'.-n-:-J. Reed/photo the three suggested charities
Units of the local volunteer
h
If
f
h
1
Ch
f
may
do
so
at
www.methodisfire
departments
. police
. f
The U.S. and Ohio ft ags ft y at a -mast in honor o t e ate te
departments,
EMS
units.
1
h . . .• d
.
d h
Justice William Rehnquist and for victims of Hurricane Katrina. tre 1e .org. www.1sss.org. or
11
an ot
d
d ers
h
Here. Elaine Stewart of the Pomeroy Postmaster Iowers the Www'catllolt..cchar· t.tt' esus·a.org. s en s eputtes
fl
t
h
If
t'l
S
t
20
Rader
sat'd
th
e
Meigs
.
are
expecte
to
atten
.
t
· t he
flags there. They wtll continue o y a a -mast un 1 ep .
.
· h
·
Ministerial Association plans · ceremony tn onor o 1 t e
sealed in a one-gallon ·plastic where they are needed. Rader a prayer se rvice on the public safety personnel who .
. Pomeroy. levee 10 remember died in attacks on the World
bag with a zipper closure . said.
Those items will he tran s- . The parish is also collect- hurricane victims and 10 pray Trade Center in New York.
ported from Pomeroy to ing new and like-new' blan- for survivors'. safety, next N.Y. and the Pentagon in
Athens, and Columbus, then ket s for distribution to hurri- week , . with details to be Washington. D .C .
on to Louisi&lt;1na communities
cane victims.
announced.
Please see Memorial. AS
.

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ified , · best Euro Car, be st .
motorcycle, best interior..
Concessions will be sold
RACINE - Saturday will and the event will take place
be busy in Racine with the rain or shine. There will be
Racine Fall Festival and the dash plaques given out while
"Cruisin" Saturday Night" supplies last and prize drawcar show celebrating the 50th ings will be held.
anhiversary of the Ford
Across the street from the
car show Raci ne Postmaster
Thunderbl'rd.
.,.
The car show is sponsored Bonnie Brown will be unveilby Hill 's Automotive Classic . ing a new stamp collection
Car Restoration and Parts , entitled ''Cars.of the SO's" a!
and Racine Home National 7 p.m.
Bank. All proceeds from the
The postal service has also .
event will benefit the Racine commissioned a cancellation
Community stamp of a 1955 Thunderbird
Area
Organization's Scholarship for the event. There will be a
temporary postal station set
Fund.
.
Entries into the show are up at the event for those
nor limited to Thunderbirds. wishing to send their mail '
In fact, all makes, models and with the one ·time only stamp
ye;trs of cars are eligible as designed by local resident
are motorcycles.
Melody McKay.
Many award winning clasRegistration begins at 4
p.m. and the cost is $10. The sic cars have spe nt time in
show is from 4 p.m. to 9 Racine at Hill's Automotive
p.m. on Home National Classic Car Re storations and
Bank's parking lot. Judging Parts. Owners Marvin and
begins at 6 p.m. and awa_rds• Jan Hill ha ve also assisted in
will be a nn oun ced at "8:30 orgamzmg and judging
p.m.
nationally recognized car
There will be 33 trophies show s.
For more information congive n out in the following
categories: best original, \Jest c~rn in g the car show call
Foild, best Chevy. best 949-2217 from 7 a.m. to 4
Mopar, best classic , best p.m .. or 949-4072 or 949,
truck; best project, best mod- 2 144 ~fter 5 p.m.
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

'

Calendars
A3
dassifieds
B4-6
Comics
B7
[)ear Abby
A3
Editorials ·
A4
NASCAR
B8
Obituaries
As
AS
Places. to go
. B Section
Sports
Weather
A7

''It's important that people
ask where the items they
donate arc goin g before they
donate,"
Rader
said.
"Organizations are collec ting relief donations without
any plan to get them to tho se
in need."

Please see Soutl!em. AS

Car show Saturday night RACINE FALL FESTIVAL COURT

WEAmER

2 SEf:TIONS -

'"' " ·"')clail)"'"lind.o·o u"

Meigs churches plan hurricane relief efforts
POMEROY - · The Meigs
United
Methodist
Cooperative Parish will coordinate monetary support for
victims of Hurricane Katrina
through three denominational
charities, and is collecting
materials to assist in llood
clean-up.
Rev. Keith Rader said
Wednesday ihe county-wide
ecumenical parish encourages monetary donations to
United Methodist Committee
on 'Relief, Lutheran Social
Services,
and
C(\tholic
Charities USA. all of 'which
have esiablished special
funds to help victims of last
month's hurricane.
Rader said the Mulberry
Community Center will provide llood buckets and mate- .
rials for health kits , which
will be transported through
the United Methodist Church
to Baldwi~ . La. communities
hext week. The deadline for
providing those materials is
noon on Sept.. l4. Rader .said
the cooperative parish has a
stock of 200 llood buckets,
and encouraged local resi dents to contribute health
kits. which contain one hand
towel , one wash cloth, a nail
file or ·c lipper (no emery
boards or toenail clippers), a
bar of soap, wrapped adultsize toothbrush, toothpaste
and six adhesive bandage·s.
Those items should be

OBITUARIES

.

l\11H.R X, :!em;,

ha s a st udent body nf 741,
up from 739 . last year. The
num ber of 's tall in the district has remaitied the same
as last year.
Gruescr also expressed his
co ncern about having on ly
one spare bus for the bus lleet
as well· as Hou se · Bi~l 66
which he said may deny
Southern a two to th ree percent increase in state funding.
Southern is joined on this list
by over 200 other school districts in Ohio.
Grueser informed the commissio n of the permanent
improvement levy on the

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL:COM

We'll deliver all the local happenings right to your home . Stop by our office
and subscribe to the Daily Sentinel for 3 months for only $30.19 and receive
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ID

su•·n

"The ratio of fring es to new ideas." ' he said about
salary was the highest in the Southern High School's new
state," Wolfe contended..
principal Mark ·Mil·ler. " He
New commission member ha s the stall involved in deciPaul Marshall made a coun- sion mak ing and · has made
terpoint by commenting on subtle changes to managin g
the relatively low sa larie s the student body."
driving up the . fringes.
Grueser admitted that the
Marshall comes from the district's sfudent body at
Ohio Office of Budget and large has lost 25 students this
Management ,
·repla~ing year due to open enrollment.
· He es timated · the financial
member Kyle Gephart.
Southern Local Schools loss to the district to be
,Robert $100,000 because of this.
Superintendent
Grueser began his comments
"That loss is damaging to
about the .new school year the distri ct," Wolfe said .
with what he called a "sl?irit . · "Open enrollment is a punof optimism in the di strict."
ishing thing here."
"Mr. Miller has brought
At thi s point th e di strict

RACINE - At yesterday's
meeting of the Financial
Planning and Supervision
·Commission for Southern
Local School Di strict, Bill
Wolfe, co mmisSion presidellt, described the district's
financial situation as "creeping toward improvement."
Wolfe 's comment stemmed
from ' 1energy notes" being
paid off which annually cost
the di strict $75,000. ·
Wolfe also felt that the 3.5
percentage of change in
salaries when comparing

"It doesn't seem like we'll
be able to return to New
Orleans in the near future,"
Loomis said. " We've got
(players and staff) that have
kids that ne ed to go to school
and a lot of other .issues wi\h
families. We think it \ f~ir to
them that we establish a base
here."
.
Saints part-ownerlexec utive Rita Benson LeBlanc, the.
granddaught er of owner Tom
Bmson. said children of players. coaches and staff mem hers that are mak ing the tiip
to Texas with their fathers are
being · enrolled in local
sc hools.
Offensive lineman Jerm ane
Mayberry, who grew up in
nearby Floresville, said many
players have approached him
and asked if he knows about
good places to live .
On the football side, players have wondered where
other necessiti es will be
located . The team is operating without a weight room,
though Haslett said the equipment soon willo.be in place.
The Saints have rented
hydraulic lifts to record overhead views of practice. To
watch the video, they're
using
meeting
rooms
equipped with large-screen
video displays inside the
city\ convention center.

DETROIT (APl - The ami seco nd with two outs.
Cleveland Indians score a lot after Rodriguez reached on an
of runs for Cliff Lee. He did- error by Boone at third base.
n't need the support Tuesday
But Lee struck out Craig
ni ght.
Monroe l.o oking to end that
Lee allowed four hits over threat and retired the next
eight shutqut innings and three batters after Polanco 's
Cleveland beat the Detro it single in the eighth.
Tigers 6-1 on Tuesday night
Jason Johnson (7-12) gave
to move to wjthin a half-game up two runs and live hits in
of ·the New York Yankees in
six innings, walking two and
the AL wild-card race.
striking out two.
Grady Sizemore. Coco
"I don't know if we're runCrisp and Aaron Boone
homered to account f(lr all of ning· out of gas. I can't
Cleveland's runs. Crisp IJad. explain it," Johnson said. "It's
just one of those things where
three hits and sto le a base.
Detroit scored in the ninth. we're kind of in a rut right
its fir&gt;t run in 27 innings. to now. Our starters had a rough
avoid its third str;iight • couple weeks, and I feel like
shutout. The Tiger~ have lost our starters arc real'ly starting
to come back and pitch well
six strai ght.
''It 's time for the troops to again. The hitters are having a
di g a little deeper here. We little rough week now, too."
get to find out what we're
The Tigers scored in the •
·made of," Tigers mana~er ninth when Brandon lnge
Alan Trammell smd. "We ve tripled off David Riske with
hit pretty much a low point in one out to score Young, who
the seaso n for me. and there's had walked and moved to secno pity party."
ond on a passed ball .
Lee ( 15-.:1) won his sixth
Crisp pot Cleveland ahead
straig ht decision. walking two ~ - 0 in the third with his two- .
and striking out four as he had
out. two-run horner. hi s II th
the Tigers off balance
of the season.
.throughou t the game.
"Coco has been really ste'p"Things went pretty good
for me ... Lee said "They did- ping up in big situations,''
n't score and I can't complain Indians manager ,Eric Wedge
•
'aid. ". :. He has no fear."
·
atiout that."
Boone led off the seventh
Detroit cou ld only manage
with
his 13th homer · of. the
two hits hy Magglio OnJonet ..
a two-out single in the liN season. off Franklin German.
and a leadoff double in the to make it 3-0.
Sizemore added a three-run
fourth. a single by Dmitri
Young in the 'sixth and a sin - homer in the eighth. off Craig
gle by Placido Polanco lead- Dingman. his 17th of the seaing off the eighth.
son .
" I located my fastball ," Lee
"That's what you play for,"
said. · ''I didn't have a good Silernore &gt;aid of the wildgrip on it. but I was locating it card race. ··You play all year
well. They started looking for in a lot of games. This is .the
l h~ve not been a ~ub~cTibcr ;n the pasl 30 days. Enclosed is my p3.ymem of S30.19 fm :3 month:-- of ihe Daify St'r~rirwl.
the ,fastball and I st-arted spot you play for."
throwing changeup~ ...
Notes: Rodriguez's walk in
.
Ordone7·s first-inning sinthe first inning was only hi s'
I currently subscribe 10 the Dail~; S~milltl. Enclosed is my payment of $59.15 for a 6 mmuh .;;uh~criplion .
.,
gle followed a walk to Ivan
&gt;eve nth of the season and fir&gt;t
Rodriguez and gave the
July 26 .... Cleveland
since
Tigers runners on lirst and
second with two outs. But 28 Ronnie Belliard got his
Lee got Young to foul out I&lt;• lir&lt;t triple of the season in the
"'l_'Lnnd inning . .... Ordonez is
end the inning .
7-for12 lifetime against Lee.
Lee retired the ne., t three
Expiration Date_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-,-- Card #
0Visa
...
Ho
me plate umpire Bill
batters
after . Onlonet \
Hohn ejected two fans during ·~
fourth-inning double .
·~
Youn£\ single in the· sixth the eighth inning for swearing
.~
·
·~
oavc
Dctmit runners on liN at Trammell.
......................................
0
.

1'111 ' I{Sil ,\ \ ,

Southern finances 'creeping' toward improvement

SPORTS

Saints in San Antonio: A logistical quandary
SAN ANTONIO (AP) Signs posted throughout the
New Orleans Saints' hotel
direct players to the place
where they can get their
ankles taped. Other signs
guide them on a quarter-mile
path to a foot bridge, over the
Riverwalk and across a busy
street to the building where
team meetings are held.
In the makeshift headquarters. right past a uniformed
San Antonio police officer
who serves as a security
guard, players come to a
handwritten board that points
them in different directions_
the offense · going one way,
the defense another.
And when meetings end _
sometimes interrupted by a
ringing telephone because the
rooms double as coaches.'
offices _ the team piles onto
, buses for a 10-ininute drive to
the high school lields that
have turned into their practice
facility.
Such is the new life for the
Saints as they try getting
ready for the NFL season
after being driven from their
home by Hurricane Katrina.
The team moved into San
Antonio last weekend and
began practicing Monday for
the regular-season opener
Sunday at Carolina. Coach
Jim Haslett has reminded his

Racine ready for annual
Fall Festival, AS

.

_ __ _

·--- - - - _,.,_

-

The Rac ine Fall
Festival ·s court of
queen candidates
has been chosen
a.t Southern H tgh .
!School. Each Of the
five candidates will
. .
I
parttctpate tn
Saturday's parade
with the winner
being crowned at
noon at Star Mill
Par-k. Th ts year's
cand idates are. sit·
ting (from left)
Jenny Warner,
daughter of Mike
and Sheifa Warner;
Chelsea Smith.
daughter of MegGuinthflr; Kristiina
Will iams. daughter
' of Debbie Williams;
standing (from left)
Bethany Riffle.
· daughter of James
and Barbara Riffle;
Andrea Parsons.
daughter of Jim
and Debbie
Parsons.
Beth S.rcont/ photo

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The Daily Sentinel

NATION

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Thursday, September 8,

Using the threat of force-, P.olice step up
efforts to clear holdouts from New Orleans
Bv SHARON COHEN

2005

Iran offers 20. ··
million barrels
of oil to U.S.
in
'
Katrina gesture
Bv ALl AKBAR DAREINI

AP NATIONAL WRITER

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEW ORLEANS· Using
the unmistakable threat of
force. police and &gt;oldiers
w~nt
house to house
Wednesday to try to coax the
last I0,000 or so stubborn
holdouts to leave storm-shat tered New Orleans hecause
or the risk of disease froni the
putrid, sewage-laden tloodwaters.
·
'"A Iaroe
of •VOLIIH!...
e- ...~roun
t'
armed men i•rmed with l\l16s just arrived at my door
and told .me that I !1avc to
leave." said Pattil'k .McCarty.
who owns several buildings
and livl'S in . Ollt: of lhem in
the \:itv·s Lower Garden
Distri.:t.' "While nPt s&lt;~vit\~
they would arrest you.' the
inference i:-, clear...
A fraii , Jnokii)Q ~6 + ' l'ar-o iJ
Anthony Charb~•t1nei grum bled as he locked his rront
door and wa lked slowly
backward down the steps of
the house where he had lived
since 1955 .
''I ha ven·! lert my hou sc' in
my life." he said as so ldiers
took him to a helicopter. " I
don't wa'lll 10 Jca I C, ..
Mayor C. Ray Nagin
ordered law oiTi.:ers &lt;1nd the
military lat&lt;: Tuesday to eva&lt;:uate all holdouts - by force
if nec~ssary. He warn~d that
the c·ombination of fetid .
water. fires and natural gas
leaks after Hurri,·ane Kalrin'l
made it too dangerous to stay.
In fact. the ofirst ~o-vern­
ment
teqs
cot1firmed
Wednesday' that ·the am&lt;lunt
of sewage-re lated bacteria in
the !loud waters is at least I0
times higher than acceptable
safety levels. Dr. Julie
Gerberding. chief of the
Centers lilr Di sease Control
and Prevention. warned
stragglers nut to even touch
the water and pleaded: "If
yuu haven ·, left the city' yet,
you must do so.''
As of midday. there were
nu reports of anyone 'being
removed by force . And it was
not clear how the order
would be carri'ed out.
· Active-military troops said
they had . no plan' to use
force . National Guard nfl1cer&gt; said thev do not t&lt;tke
orders ·from the mayor. And
even the police said they
were not ready to use force
just yet. It appeared that the
mere threat of force would be .
the first option.
"We have thousands of
r.eople who witnt to voluntarIly evacuate at this time."

AP Photo/The Dalla&amp; Morning Newa, Barbara Davidson

National Guardsman Don Davis of Ada. Okla .. conducts a ·search and rescue mission in New Orleans Wednesday. Using the
unmistakable threat of fo rce, police and soldiers went house to house Wednesday to try to coax the last 10.000 or so stuDborn holdouts to leave storm-shattered New Orleans because of the risk of disease from the putrid, sewage-laden floodwaters.
Police Chief Eddie Compass people on the street fight now
said. "Otll'e they are all mil , and I think that we are bringthen we'll concen trate our ing it under control. Eight
fo rces ()Jl mandatory evacua- _day&gt; ago thi s was a mess.
tion ."
.
· Every day is getting a little
Mindful of the bad publici- bit better."
tv that could · resu lt from
The police chief boasted
iinage~ of weary residents that 7.000 more military,
draggeJ out of their homes nt police and other law offi'cers
gtmpoint. Compass s&lt;~id lh&lt;~t on. the streets had made New
when his of!'icers start using Orleans "probably the safest
force. it will be the minimum city in America right now.''
amoulllne.:essarv.
Across miles of ravaged
"If you are soittebod y who neighborhoods of clapboard
is 350 pounds. it will' obvi- houses, grand estates and
ously take more forc e to housing projects , .workers
move you than if you are ISO struggled to lind and count
pounds." the chief said.
, corpses sniffed out by cadaver
The stepped-ttp evacuution dogs in the 90-degree heat.
came a' \Vorkers 'tr)dng to get The mayor has said New
into the city to re,Utrt essential Orleans· death toll could reach
services cam~ under sn.iper 10.000. Already, a temporary
fire. More than 100 ofticers warehouse morgue in rural St.
ami sewn armored personnel Gabriel that had been prepared
carriers captured a suspert in a to take 1,000 bodies was being
housing project who had been readied to handle 5,000.
!iring on workers trying to
Bob
Johannes sen.
resto re cell ·phone tower's, spokesman for the state
authorities said.
Department of Health and
"These cell teams are get- Hospitals, said the Federal
ting fire on almost a daily Emergency
Management
basis, so we needed to get in Agency has 25,000 body
here and clean this thing up," bags on hand in Louisiana.
said Capt. Jeff Winn, comAsked if authorities expectmander of the police· SWAT ed as many as 25,000 bodies,
team. "We' re putting a lot of he · said: "We don't know

wbat to expect."
" It means we're prepared,"
Johanne s~se n said.
The enormity of the disaster came ever-clearer in
neighboring St. Bernard
Parish. which was hit by a
levee break that brought a
wall of water up to' 20 feet
hi gh. State Rep. Nita Hutter
said 30 people died at a
flooded nursing home in
Chalmene when the starr left
the elderly ·residents behind
in their beds. And Rep.
Charlie Melancon said more
than · I00 people ·died lit a
dockside warehouse while
they waited for · rescuers to
ferry them to safety.
The floodwaters continued
to recede , though slowly,
with only 23 of the city's normal contingent of 148 pumps
in ·.operation, along with three
portable pumps. The water in
St. Bernard Parish had fallen
5 feet.
John Hall, a spokesman for
the U.S. Army Corps · of
Engineers. said it was not
clear how long it would be
before all the pumps were
running.
"There's a long way to go.
We need to get a lot more

capatily cin line to make a
real difference," he said:
B.ecause of the standing
water. doctors were being
urged tu w~tlch for diarrheal
illnesses caused by such
things as E. coli bacteria, certain viruses. and a type of
cholera-like bitcteria common
a)ong the warm Gulf Coast.
Given the ex tent of the
misery, Louisiana's two U.S.
senators - Democrat Mary
Landrieu and Republican
David Viuer - wrote a letter
to Senate leaders Wednesday
urging them to put aside partisan bickering in assigning
blame over the federal
response and focus .on providing for victims.
. "Please do nut make the
·citizens of Louisiana a victim
once again by allowing our
immediate needs to be
delayed by partisanship, "
they wrote.
Patricia Kelly was driven
out of her home by flooding
in the low-lying Ninth Ward
and took up ·residence under a
tattered, dirty green-anj;lwhite-striped patio umbrella
in front of an abandoned bar- .
ber shop. Despite the warnings, she refused to leave.

TEHRAN , .Iran - Iran
offered to send the United
States· 20 million barrels of
crude oil in the aftermath of
Hurricane
Katrina
if
Washington waived · trade·
sanctions, but . a State
Department official said
Wednesday that offer was
rejected.
In a gesture that mirrors
American aid offers. after a
devastating 2003 earthquake
in Iran, Tehran's envoy to
, of
the
Organization
Petroleum
Exportmg
Countries said his government would ship up to 20
million barrels of oil, state
radio reported late Tuesday.
"If U.S. sanctions are lifted,
Iran is prepared to send that
quantity of oil to America,"
the radio quoted Hossein
Kazempour as saying.
In Washington, the State
Department's executive sec. ~tary, Harry K. Thomas. Jr.,
said the offer was rejected
because it was ConditionaL
Last week, the Iranian
Foreign_ Ministry offered to
send relief supplies to the
American Red Cross; Iranian
newspapers reported that no
response had been received.
Iran's offers reciprocates
the goodwill that the United
States displayed after an
earthquake . llauened the
southeastern Iranian city uf
Bam in 2003, killing more
than 26,000 people. The
United States flew in emergency supplies, which were
gratefully unloaded at an
Iranian airport.
The Bam gesture did not.
however, lead to an improvement in relations.
The United States and Iran
have had no dipl omatic relations since militants stormed
the U.S . Embassy in Tehran
and held its occupants
h9stage in 1979. Washington
·then imposed a range of sanctions on Iran.
The United States accuses
Iran of sponsoring terrorism
and secretly trying to build
nuclear bombs.
Hurricane Katrina has
severely disrupted U.S. oil
rigs in the G1.1If of Mexico
and reduced the country's
refining capacity by more
than I01 percent.
Thomas sald the United
States has accepted offers of
nearly $1 billion in assistance
from some 95 countries after
Hurricane Katrina.

Rehnquist given final farewell in
funeral service, Arlington burial
Bv GINA HOLLAND
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON - Chief
William
H.
Justice
Rehnqui st
was
buried
Wednesday as President
Bu sh led the nation in bidding farewell to !he man
who ordtestruted " dnunatk
states rights power shift in a
third uf a .:enturv on the
Supreme Court. mid senled
the acrimonious 2000 ele&lt;:tion in Bush\ favor.
With more laughs than
tears, famil}' and friend s
poignantly
nf
spoke
Rehnquist\ final days when he cracked jokes in the
face of death -. and proudly
of the imprint of his 33 years
on the hi~h court.
"We re~nember the integrity and the sense of duty that
he brought to every task
before him," Bush told the
funeral audience during a
two-hour service at hi storic
St. Manhew·s Cathedral.
Rehnqui sl was a steady, g uid ~
ing presence on the ·court,
Bush said of the nation's 16th
chief justice whu died 'Ius!
Saturday at 80.
The . servtcc
drew
Washington ·s power eli te.
including the ei~ht Supreme
Court justices and John
Roberts, a former Rehnqui&gt;t
law clerk whom Bush has
named to succeed !tim.
Rehnquist. a vqeran of the
Army Air Forces in World
War II , was buried in a private ceremony in Arlington
National Cemetery in a gra ve
not far from those o'f several
other justices. His headstone

was not yet engraved. From
the ~rave site. where his wife
was' buried i ti 1991.. 1he
Capitol is visible.
Despite ballling thyroid
cancer. Rehn4uist managed
to attend Bush's se,und inattguration in January -

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ture the president recalled
with appreciation. "Many
will nevN rorget the si~ht of
thi&lt; man. we7tkened by ill nc". rise to his fu ll height
and say in .a strong voice.
·Raise your right hand. Mr.
President. and repeat arter
me .... Bush said.
.The chief justice. ·a solid
conservative. was leader of
!he "Rchnquist fi ve" who
often favu(cd states rights
over federal' oovernmcnt
.
"
power. and
in a biller-5-4
vote
handed Bush the 2000 election . There was on ly passing
mention of that dwing the
service. as well a&gt; hi s duties
presiding over President
Clinton \ impeachmelll trial
in 1999.
Instead, friends and fami ly.
talked about his penchant for
wagers, joke-.;, sporl'l. geography, history, tennis. and &lt;;utrlpetition of any type.
" If you v&lt;tlued your
money, you would -be carefu l
abou t belling with the chief.
He usually won." said
Sandra
Day
Justice
o·connor.
who
dated
Rehnquist when both were
in law school together in the
1950s. "I think the chief bet
he cou ld li vc out another
term despite his illness. He
lost that bet , as did all of us,
but he won all the pri7,cs for
a li fe wel l lived."
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BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 8,

2005

Couples keep their marriage ·together by sleeping apart Community Calendar
DEAR ABBY: I was glad
to see your reply to
"Frustrated in Florida," wh&lt;J.
doesn't share a bedroom with
her husband and is gelling
heat about it from her parents
and in-laws. You said there is
no law that demands couples
have to.
My husband and I also
. sleep in separate rooms. We
are embarrassed to let people
know we don't sleep together
because the'y automatically
assume we're not gelling
along. We sti ll have a very
close relationship and always
wilL - HAPPY WITH SEPARATE
BEDROOMS ,
GURNEE, ILL
DEAR HAPPY: That letter
broughtin bushels more from
couples who also sleep better
apart. It seems the practice
isn't as unusual ·as some
l)1ight think. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: My husband
and I haven't shared a bed for
15 of the 20 years we've been
married. It saved our marriage. He's a night owl; I'm
an early-to-bed, early-to-rise
type who sleeps very Jightly.
Snaring a bedroom is not a
part of the marriage. vows.

marriage. For years, we
forced ourselves to share the
same bed. I finally got mad
and slept in the g~est room
one night. We both woke up
the next morning relatively
De~r
sane! The only one who has a
Abby
hard time with this is the
family dog, who nuw must
rotate between bedrooms. We
have no problem arranging
It's what~ver works best for "together time.'' As for famithe couple - and nobody ly members, it's none of their
else's business . - · SLEEP- business. - NO LONGER
LAKE
ING SOLO, PENDLETON, FRUSTRATED,
WORTH, FlA.
IND.
DEAR ABBY: It took our
DEAR · ABBY: After 25
to almost fail before
marriage
years or marriage, we use
separate bedrooms. too. I we realized we just needed to
have insomnia and am going sleep apart. Our physical
through menopause. My relationship improved after
cowboy sleeps with a lot of we used separate bedrooms
GOvcrs and . is always cold. because we were better rested
We 'tell anyone who ques- . aQd not so irritable with each
tions our arrangement that other.
We have never told our
sharing a bed doesn't guaranfamilie
s about it. If you print
tee sex all the time. With us, I
ask my t:owboy, "S hould I go this, please do not reveal my
to the Holiday Inn ur Best name or location. They still
Western tonight?" It works don't know. - HAPPY IN
for us, and we sleep great. DREAI'yiLAND
.
RESTED
IN · MOUNT
DEAR ABBY: I'm a mornPULASKI, ILL.
ing person, in bed by 10:30
DEAR ABBY: Sleeping in p.m. My husband usually
. separate rooms: saved my stays up till I a.m. Having

separate bedrooms works
beautifully for us. When I
. retire at night. he rubs my feet
with cream. In the morning, I
bring him his coffee in bed.
Everyone needs time to
themselves. I have my alone
time in the morning; he has
his at night. We're always
happy to see each other after
our alone time. For 45 years,
this has worked perfectly for
us . When anyone acts surprised that we have separate
bedrooms, we always say,
"Oh, but we have plenty of
visitation'" That gets 'em. SLEEPING SOUNDLY IN
HAWAII
DEAR ABBY: Silence is
· golden, I 'ay. And that goes
for telling marriage secrets
outside the home. Where they
sleep is nobody's business
but their own! - BETHES. DA ~LEEPER
DMr Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and wa.~ founded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.

Public meetings
Friday, Sept. 9
POMEROY . - Mei gs
County Commissioners meet
at I p.m. Friday at the oftice,
rather than Thursday, due to a
scheduling c0nflict.

Thursday, Sept. 15
RACINE - Ohio River
Producers. 7 p.m., Southern
Vo-Ag room.

Church events

Friday, Sept. 9
LONG
BOTTOM
Hymn Sing at Faith Full
Gospel Churd1. 7 p.m ., with
Jim Blair and the Gospelaircs
~rganizations
of Mariella.
. Saturday, S~pt. 10
Thursday, Sept. 8
.
PORTER
- Brother Bob
CHESTER -Shade River
Thompson
will prea ch at
Lodge 453, 7:30p.m .. at hall.
Clark
Chapel
Freewill
Refreshments.
Baptist
Church,
with
Jeff and
RACINE
Bethany
Cathy
.
Dennison
&gt;inging.
Dorcas Son shine Circle, 7·.
start at 6:30p.m.
p.m.,
Bethany
Dorcas . Services
'
Sunday,
Sept. II ..
Church. AIL women welcome.
RACINE
Annual
TUPPERS PLAINS Harvest Festival at St. John
VFW Post 9053. 7 p.m., at Lutheran
Church , Racine.
hall. Dinner at 6:30 p.m.
Worship at I 0 a.m .. special
Friday, Sept. 9
music presentation. II ·a .m.
MASON,
W.Va .
an9 potluck dinner &lt;ll ·noon.
Widow's Fellowship, noon,
COOLVILLE
Bob Evans Restaurant in Evangelist Ken Greene. whu
Mason , W. Va.
operates in the gift of healing.
POMEROY - OH-KAN at Faith Harvest Church . 10
Coin Club will have an exhib- , a.m. and 7 p.m. on Sunday
it at Farmers Bank and and 7 p.m. on Sert. 12 and
Savings Co., Pomeroy lobhy. 13. Informat ion at667-697J
The club will offer free
appraisals of coins and cutTen- .
cy, and displays of bank memorabilia, including local Meigs
. Saturday, Sept. I 0
County bank notes and tokens.
POMEROY
Samuel
Door prizes of uncirculated
1935 and 1957 $1 silver cer- Allen Eblin reunion. 4 p.m ..
Park
near
tificates will be given away Waterworks
Minersv
ille
.
Brine
food.
and free Ocean View nickels.
drinks and lawn chair.
POMEROY
Sunday, Sept. II
Evangeline Chapter # 172,
RACINE
- Kerwood- Hill
Order of Eastern Star, is
Reunion.
curry-in
uinncr. I
merging with Harrisonville
Chapter #255. All members p.m. at Star Mill Park.
are urged to attend a meeting
at 7:30 p.m. Bring covered
dish for put luck.
Monday, Sept. l2
Friday, Sept. 9
POMEROY
Meigs
MIDI)LEPORT - Parish
County
Tobacco Nurse Lenora Leifheit will Pre ven 1ion/Cardiovascular take blood pressures from
Health Coalition , II :30 a.m .. I 0 a.m. to noon at
Pomeroy Library.
.Hometown Market.

Clubs and

Reunions -

Doll and bear shows to be held

Doll and bear.shows will
be held from 10 a.m. -to 4
p.m . on Saturday. Sept.
10 and 17; and from 1
p.m. to 4 p.m. on Sunday,
·Sept. 11 and 18 at the
Our House Museum on
First Avenue. The show
will feature local collectors and dealers. A drawing to win an Ohio River
Bear, Lloyd Middleton Doll
and also a Lee Middleton
Doll will be held. Lunch
. will be available from
11:30 a.m. to ' 1:30 p.m.
on Sept. 10 in the court·
yard kitchen. The show is
free. At right is Shirley
Arrowood at the 2004 doll
and bear show.

. ·other events

Submitted photo

•

Grange hears
rice presentation

Thomas family gathers for reunion

THURMAN - Twentynine descendants of Abraham
HEMLOCK GROVE Kim Romine presented a pro- and· Elizabeth Thomas .plus
gram about rice in observance . three guests met at Tyn Rhos
of September as National Rice Aug.11 for the 75th reunion.
Month at the recent meeting · Bonnie Thomas Cargo gave
grace bt;fore the noon meaL
of Hemlock Grange.
.
Rice, Rom in said, has been Bill Thomas pre sided over the
feeding mankind for more meeting ·in the church. Ruth
than 5,000 years. By 1700, Jones read minutes of last
rice was established as a mre ling. a correction was
major crop for the colonists. made and then approved.
Belly Junes Rces gave the
Rice farming is credited·with
having started the plantation l~easurer's report ai1d it was
era of the southern states, approved.
and 'Louisiana and California ' Births during the year
became major rice-produc- included a son, William
ing states.
Thomas, to Susan and
Today, Arkansas is the Tommy Locke in Reno, Nev.,
· major rice-producing state: May 26, 2005, grandson of
Rice ranks lifth in production Bill Thomas.
value . of U.S. food crops.
Marriages were: Jesse
There are six types of rice Harris and Meredith Carnley
long grain. medium grain,
short grain, sweet rice, aromatic rice and U.S. Arborio.
Rice is a perennial. If properly cared for, it can last 20
years . U.S . farmers harvest.
approximately three million
acres, annually.
Master Rosalie Story conducted the meeting. Members
discussed the .recent fair
booth exhibit. and suggestions for the exhibit area in
the
, Thompson-Roush
Building next year.
A cancer awareness wall
hanging was made by Rosalie
Johnson and quilted by the
Hemlock Quilter&gt;. Pl ~ns
were made to serve three auctions in the next month. Any
member of friend of the
Grange willing to h~ lp may
ca11992-2338 or 992-5919.
Story ~nstalled all newly'elected members ·of the
Grange. It was reported that
Joann Kautz and Howard
Frank were ilL
The October meeting will
be preceded by a pizza party
and cider and do~ghnuts .
.'

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on June I, 2005, in Aruba, son
uf Jim and Becky Harris, and
Sara Thomas Yost and
Leonard Hall on June 2 I ,
2005, at Put In Bay, daughter
of Bill Thomas.
A video of Edwin Thomas
receiving his 75th Masonic
pin was shown by Bill
Thomas.
After the video, all returned
to the shelterhouse for more
visiting before returning , to

Ginger ahd Holly Canaday,
Tom and Martha Phillips.
Tom and Elaine Robinson,
Dan and Pat Thomas. Terry.
Kelly and Justin May. Bill
Thomas, Nick and Ben Yost,
Don and Joyce Smith, Scott,
· Andrea and Zac Canaday,
Kate Holsinger, Dave Rees,
Justin Caldwell, Morgan
Young and Susan Foster.

PROUD TO BE ADART

their
Thehomes.
next reu)lion will be ·
ft\
Aug. 20, 2006.
Those in auendance were
,
Jim and Becky Harris of
.Texas, and Trenton May of
The Daily Sentinel
Pennsylvania. Others, all . Subscribe today • 992-2155
from Ohio, were: Bonnie
wliw.mydailysentinel.com
Thomas Cargo. Belly Rees,
Ruth Jones, Pat. Betsy.

OF YOUR LIFE

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Pediatrician, Jared Sheets, MD
Joins Holzer Clinic AthensDr. Sheets is Board Certified in both Pediatrics and Internal
Medicine. He treats children and adults of all ages

Medical Excellence.
Loca/Caring: ,
To schedule an appointment call

HOLZER CLINI.C

740-589-3100

. Athens
www .holzerclinic.com

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OPINION

.The Daily Sentinel

·r he Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Haetl;ch
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of spee~h, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Go11ernment for a redress of grie11ances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
'
Today is Thursday. Sept. 8, the 251 st day of 2005. There are
11 4 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 8. 1930. the comic strip "Blondie," created by
Chic Young. was first published. Also on this day, Scotch cellophalie tape made its debut as a sample of the tape, invented
by Richard Drew of 3M. was shipped to a Chicago tirm which
' pec·ialit.ed in wrapping bakery goods in cellophane.
On this date:
In I664. the Dutch surrendered New Amsterdam to the
Briti, h. who renamed it New York.
.
In 1900. Galveston. Texas, was struck by a hurricane that
ki lled ;tbout 6.000 people.
In 1921. Margaret Gorman of Washington D.C. was
n ow ned the first Miss America in Atlantic City, N.J.
In 19J4, 134 people lo~t their lives in a fire aboard the liner
Mom&gt; Castle off the New Jersey coast.
In 1945. Bess Myerson of New York was crowned ''Miss
America" in Atlantic City, New Jersey, becoming the tlrst
Jewish contestant to ·win the title.
In 1951. 'a peace treaty with Japan was signed by 48 other
nations in San Francisco.
In 1974. President Ford granted an unconditional pardon to
former President Nixon.
In 1975, Boston's public schools began their court-ondered
ci tywide busing program amid scattered incidents of violence.
In 1994, a U.S Air Boeing 737 ·Crashed into a ravine as it
was approaching Pittsburgh International Airport, killing all
I 32 people on board.
Ten years ago: Bosnia's warring sides reached a compro. mise in Geneva, agreeing to divide the nation into two states:
one for the rebel Serbs and another for the Muslims and
Croats.
.
Pi ve years ago: World leaders ended the United Nations
Millennium Summit with a pledge to so lve humankind's problems. including poverty,' war, AIDS, pollution ' and human
rights abuses. The head of the Bureau of Indian Affairs apologized for the federal agency's "legacy of racism anti inhumanity" that included massacres, forced relocations of tribes
and attempts to wipe out Indian cultures ..
One year ago: CBS' "60 Minutes Wednesday" .aired a. report
questioning President Bush's National Guard service; however. CBS News ended up apologizing for a "mistake in judgnfent" after memos featured in the report were challenged as
forgeries. The Genesis space capsule, which had orbited the
sun for three years, crashed to Earth when its parachutes failed
to deploy. Richard G. Butler, founder of the Aryan Nations,
wa., found dead in his bed in Hayden, Idaho; he was 86.
Today's Birthdays: Co.median Sid Caesar is 83. Ventriloquist
Willie Tvler is 65. Actor Alan Feinstein is 64. Author Ann
Bei1ttie i's .58. Musician Will Lee ("Late Show with David
Lettmnan") is 53 , Actress Heather Thomas is 48. Pop musician
David Steele (Fine Young Cannibals) is 45. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Marc Gurdon (Levert) is 41. Actor Martin Freeman·is 34.
Actor Henry Thomas is 34. Actor David Arquette is 34. Actor
Larenz Tate is 30. Rhythm-and-blues singer Pink is 26. Actor
Jonathan Taylor Thomas is 24.
Thought for Today: "Censorship is the height of vanity." -.
Manha Graham, American modem dance pioneer (1893·1991).

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EDITOR
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Thursday, September 8,

Katrina a bloiv to US.

econom~

2005

lesson to us

thing New 'orleans and other criticized for not responding or more per gallon in many
besieged communities will quickly enough last week, he areas· on fears Of oil shorteffort ages and a decline in refinWASHINGTON - The need are construction crews mobilized a . recovery
'
.
devastation and death that to restore bridges, repave by Wednesday that mcluded ery production .
One possibility: A tempoHurricane Katrina left in it s roads, and repair and rein- a dozen departments and
rary
cut or suspension in fedforce
levies
breached
agencies
from
by
the
the
wake once agam tests
America' s
inexhaustible storm. That' s going to Pentagon to the Federal eral gas ta~es that would
Management help beleagured drivers cope
ability to quickly recover require an army of workers Emergency
with rising prices until all
including engineers. electri- Agency.
from catastrophe.
A big emergency assis- the oil rigs and refineries in
That's happening in New cian s, ' telecommunications
Orlean s. La., and the other workers. · reclamation com- .tance bill is also in the works the . Gulf region are fully
'
Gulf Coast regions lhat have · panics of all sorts, carpen- on Capitol Hill that promises operational.
But
after
all
is
said
and
plumbing
contractors,
to
.
pump
hundreds
of
mil·
ters,
been laid waste by a storm of
previously
unimaginable health-care professionals lions of dollars into rebuild- d'one, some fundamental
ing projects and operational things will not change. New
destmction, which led to the · and many others.
population's exodus to high·
The Big Easy is one of the aid to cities and towns to Orleans will still be below
er ground and shut down key most . exciting .cities in cope with the recovery costs. 'Sea level and vulnerable to
pans of our energy industry. America, with a ' large House Speaker Dennis future storms, which could
As bleak and chaotic as . tourism industry. Bur it has Hasten, R-111. , and Senate be even more powerful than
things may look across the had a troubleq history of Majority Leader Bill Frist, Katrina. This mearis that the
shattered coastal states, thi s massive poverty and one of R-Tenn.. put out a joint infrastructure of this region
Wednesday has to be reinforced . with
is a region that is gohtg to be the highest crime rates in the statement ,
hit by an even greater force country, as we saw in the promising "swift action" on stronger sea walls and levies
than Katrina: the power of hundreds of looters who rav- a massive ·aid package that and more sophisticated
will zip through Congress drainage systems.
an $ 11 trillion econemy to ished downtown stores.
Stricter building developBut this city and other right after Labor Day.
rebuild, repair and .reclaim
areas
will . But there wer~ even bigger ment regulations will have to
what was lost and tlestroyed. devastated
An early sign of what is to become cinployment central ·economic problems at stake be imposed as welL All
come was evident on Wall in the weeks and months to as a result of the Gulf disas- those homes, casinos and
Street last week in the imme- come as a wave of business- ter, prin cipally the ·shut other developments that
diate aftermath of the storm. es move in to take advantage down of Gulf oil rigs and oil were foolishly built along
· when stocks were tanking of an explosi011 in private pipelines and refineries in the coast took the full brunt · .
(before Wednesday's rally), and government construe- . the region. Forecasters say of the storm and were
that this and other col lateral demolished. Snore zones
but construct ion company . tion projects.
The region is a,l so going to economic interruptions in , have to be off limits for new
stocks were tlyjng high.
lhvestors knew that one.of benefit from significant fed- . commun ications, railroad building.
The path hurricanes take .
the economic benefits of nat· era! spending as welL "As and interstate trucking will
ur.al disasters is the explo- much as it takes," Michael slow the nation's economic are often unpredictable. But
Homeland growth. But that remains to one thing we can be sure of
sion of insurance claims , ChertotT,
is that the Gulf will spawn
Security
secretary,
said last be seen.
reclamation projects anti
Bush has correctly tapped more of them in the future.
reconstruction spending that week. Even as he spoke. the
into
government
was
moving
an
the Strategic Petroleum and it's a good bet that one
over time will total in the
tens of billions of dollars.
armada of equipment, per- Reserve to keep oil supplies of them could make Katrina
As the waters recede and sonnel and relief supplies to at exist ing levels. But that seem mild by comparison.
The time to better prepare
didn't prevent the price of
the massive clean up and the affected regions.
rebuilding begins, the one · While President Bush was gas from shooting up to $3 . for that event is now.

BY

DoNALD lAMBRD

I

GEE ...

THIN65 COUlD

BE WOR~
HERE...

~Thursday,

September 8,

Obituaries

OHIO NOT GETTING KATRINA EVACUEES, FOR NOW
BY CONNIE MABIN

Anna Lou Roush

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

SYRACUSE -Anna Lou Roush, 78, of College Street.
Syracuse, died Tuesday. Sept. 6, 2005, at her residence .
She was born June 2, 1927. in Racine, daughter of the late
James and Crystal Coe Stobart. She was a homemaker and a
member of . Smith-Capel'iart American Legion Post 140
Ladies Auxilary.
B~sides her parents, she was preceded in death by her sister,
Dons Mtller, and brothers, Owen Stobart and Sidnev Stobart.
Surviving are her husband, Walter Floyd Roush of
S~racuse; her daughters and sons-in-law: Sharon and Tom
Diddle of Portersville. Pa. , Linda and Larr~ Fields of
Syracuse. Debbie and Pat Gress of Granger. Ind.; grandchildren : Steven Diddle. Holly (Doug) Panazza. Andy (Arnie)
Ftelds, Kevin (Betsy) Fields , Benjamin Gress. Joseph Gress.
Johnnie Gress. Will Gress, great grandchildren: Sarah Diddle,
Nathan Ditldle, Brayden Panazza, Mainey Panazza, Brody
Panazza. Trevor Fields, and Maycee Fields; a sister, Isabelle
Couch , of Ravenswood . .w.Va. , sisters and brothers-in-law:
Dorothy and Milton Caldwell of Fostoria, Phyllis Johnson of
Clifton. W.Va .. brothers and sisters-in-law: Joe (Earlene)
Stobart of Ponland. Tommy (Phylli~ ) Stobart of New York.
Funerahvill be I I a.m : on Saturday; Sept. 10. 2005, at
Letart Falls Chapel , with Pastor Mike Finnicum officiating.
Friends may call from 5 to 8 p.m. on Fri&lt;;Iay at Fogleson$. Thcker Funeral Home in Mason, W.Va., and the body will he
in state an hour prior to the service.
e·mail
condolence s
to
Friends
may
· foglesongtucker@myway.com.
"

CLEVELAND - About
I ,000 Hurricane Katrina victims who were supposed tQ
be sent to Ohio are no longer
coming to the state - at least
for now. the Ohio Emergency
Management Agency told
The Associated Press on
Wedne sday.
•
OEMA spokesman Fred
Stratmann said the Federal
Emergency
Management
Agency on Wednesday halted
evacuation . flights out of
Texas, including those scheduled to arrive in Ohio on
Thursday. The state had
ex]lected to get victims who
were . being temporarily ·
housed at the Astrodome in
Houston, whc;re more than
250,000 evacuees are taking
shelter.
. "As of right now we are no
longer getting any evacuees
in Ohio," Stratmann said. He
said the hurricane victims
expected here oid not want
to go so far away from
home.
"Their goal is to return
home when the rebuilding
and the recovery process is
complete. and it's apparently
a lot easier to do that from
Texas than ''in Ohio."
Stratmann said.
But the state and city officials have.been told to remain
on standby in case ev'lcuees
might be sent to Ohio later.
'·We' re keeping our plans
in place. Preparations are still
there but they are on hold."
Stratmann said. ·
Tile OEMA told Cleveland
city oftlcials Wednesday that
flights from Texas have been
·suspended.
"The evacuees who have
m&lt;lde it to Texas don't want
to go any further away from
home,"
Mayor
Jane
Campbell said .
Ohio is not on Thursday's
flight list for evacuees coming out of New Orleans. she
said, adding that Cleveland
will remain on standby
through the weekend in case
evacuees are sent to the city.

Local.Briefs
Collecting supplies·
TUPPERS PLAINS -Eastern High School National
Honor Society wi il conduct a supplies drive to assist victims
of Hurricane Katrina. Items collected will be used in clean-up
efforts. Items requested are bottled water, mops, buckets.
paper towels, bleach, rubber gloves, brushes. disinfectant and
other cleaning supplies. diapers. bug spray and baby wipes.
Donations will be accepto;d at the high school during regular school hours and will conclude on Sept. 15. Information is
available from Carman Mitchell at 985 -3329. or e-mail at
crnitchell @maiLeLk 12oh.us.

Plan Christmas auction
RACIJ'!E - Southern Charge United Methodist Men will be
hosting their tifth annual Christmas auction to help needy children this Christmas at 10 a.m. on Oct. 8, at the Larry Circle Farm.
The group is seeking donations of items to sell and will be
accepting items on consignment.The consignment percentages will be 20 percent for items up to $500 and I0 percent for
items over $500.
Items will be picked up Oct. 6 and 7 or by appointment by
calling Cirde at 949-2021. Dale Hart at 949-2656, Keith White.
247-4601, Dick Sterrett, 949-0032. or Garry Smith. 949-5304.

Fun Day at the Dill Farm
RUTLf\ND- The I Oth Annual Fun Day at the Dili Farm in
Rutland begins at noon on Sept. 17. All money raised will go to
St. Jude Children 's Research Hospital. There will be prize draw·
i[lgS for a saddle, bridle. breast strap, blanket and Longaberger
Basket. The drawings will be held and hot dogs served after the
ride. Ribbons and prizes for the top three money collectors will
be awarded. Information is available at 742-2849.
I

Deadline for MCRT scholarship

'.

Feckless ideology has a.terrible·cost
be uninhabitable fur weeks Francisco earthquake. and a
At a time like this, many
New
.. . perhaps longer .. . All hurricane hitting
feel an instinctive wish to
wood-framed, low-rising Orleans. For years, the New
rise above politics. With
apartment buildings will be Orleans Times-Picayune and
bodies still emerging from
destroyed ... Power outages other local media have pubthe wreckage left by
will last for weeks ... Water lished veritable encyclopeHurricane Katrina, partisan
Gene
shortages
will make human dias of expert warnings that
bickering ought to be the
Lyons
suffering. incredible by mod- ·a Category · 4 or 5 storm
last •thing on anybody's
em standards ...
mind . But acknowledging
would cause a calamity of
· And still the president' Biblical proportion.
our common humanity
played golf and strummed a
After the I 995 flooding,
shouldn't blind us to the
reality that much of the dev- Picayune reported. rescue · guitar. the Pentagon di4 little Congr~s authorized the
astation wrought by the 'helicopters were grounded or nothing, and the Federal Southeast Louisiana Flood
Management Control Project to bolster
storm is as much a conse- for hours to protect his safe- · Emergency
Agency (FEMA) dithered. levees, but Bush repeatedly
quence of human folly as ty.
nature's wrath. It does no
By Monday, Sept. 5, the · In 2004. ·when less-intense slashed funding to the point
threatened that construction was halted
honor to the dead to pretend usual anonymous "senior hurricanes
Bush official" ' in the White Flqrida, a swing state gov- and a hiring freeze put in
otherwise.
·
.
For more than a ,genera- House confided to rhe crnetl by his brother in an place in 2004. Louisiana
tion, pretty much all we've Washington Post that the election year, the president politicians argued in vain
heard from Republican (and almost unimaginable fail- was Georgie-on-the-spot. that as the nation's single
some Democratic) · politi- ures' of the Bush administra- FEMA acted so decisively most important port. New
cians in Loui siana, Aiabama. tion to act in the wake of it's still under. investigation Orleans' safety was a nationMississippi and elsewhere 'is catastrophic flooding in for disbursing more than $30 al security issue. ·
how the federal government New Orleans were, actually million of "disaster relief' in
Instead, the Bush adminiswas the source of all domes- the fault of local Democrats. Miami-Dade County, I 00 tration allocated $100 miltic ills. Grover Norqui st, the
Louisiana Gov. Kathleen miles from rhe nearest gale lion in 2005 to the "Garden
Washing10n political opera- Blanco, the newspaper. force winds - including six of Eden Wetlands" restorative widely credited with reported, had failed to claims of ''ice and snow tion at the mouth of the
·
devising the GOP's winning declare a state of emergency damage."
Tigri s and Euphrates rivers
strategy. famou sly stated empowering the federal govOn the morning of his t1rst in Iraq.
that he didn ' t want to abol- ernment to take over. visit to the ·Gulf Coast,. Bush
Nobody
knows
if
ish the nati onal government . . Newsweek ohligingly added told ABC's Diane Sawyer. Hurricane Katrina would
but shrink it ·'down to the that Blanco "seemed uncer- "I don 't think anvone antici- have breached New Orleans'
size where you coultl drown tain and sluggi sh. hesitant to pated the breach· of the · lev- levees hao experts ' been ·
it in a bathtub.'"
declare m11rtiallaw or slnte ees." Days later, Homeland · heeded and the projects
Although he spared us that of emergency. which would Security chief Michael compl eted. But if ·there's a
unfonunate metaphor. under have opened the · door to Chertoff, whose previous les,&gt;on here, it's this: Facts
Norqui st's g uidan c~ the more Pentagon help."
claim to fame was as chief and ideas do matter. .
Republican
National
In fact , hi , tory records GOP inqui sitor in the Chousing feckless leaders
Committee act uall y e- that Gov. Blanco Jeclared a · Senate 's
farcical who advertise their mistrust
mailcd party activi &gt;ts on ' tate of emergency on "Whitewater" investigation. of government and disdain
Sept. I urging the abolition Friday. Aug. 26 with lamented the faifure of for science, and who habituof the so-called '~death tax" Hurricane Katrina ~; till two experts to predict the inun- ally reward loyalty over
preventing America's multi- da ys from landfall , a dation bf New Orlean s· lev- competence
can
have
millionaire inheritors from Cat egory S storm with 175 ees. He called the flooding appalling
con sequences
pocketing eve ry dime of mph wind s. (The Post print- "breathtakin g in its sur- when things go wrong .
Daddy 's money. Greal tim- ed a bland retract ion .) p~i s e . "
(Ark ansas
Denlocrar Intlced. whether Bush knew
ing. ri ght '&gt;
In reality, the New Orleans Ga ~e rre colllmllisr Gene
That was the same day it, hi s oftl ce declared a fed· di saster wa, pe rhap' tire Lyun,· is a natiOnal nwgaPresident Bush ended hi ' eral state of emergency on most widely forecast in ::.int&gt; award winner and coAm erican hi , tory. A FEMA . author of " Tir e Hu111i11g of
live-week vacati on with a • Shturda)', Aug. 17. ·
That morning. the normal - re port written before 9/ 11 rlw President .. (St. Mart ill's
has til y arran ged vi sit' to
scenes of devastation on the ly tlry Nation ,,: Weather 'aid the three likeliest U.S . Press. 2000). You ca11 e-mail
Gulf Coast. during which. Servi ce briefin g warned ca t~ s r,roph cs were a terrori st Lrons al gen elyons @sbc)lhe New ·orlean s Times- that : "Mo,t of the area will , attack in New York. a San glo!Jcl!.Ill' I. /
I

a

•

'·

Ihe.Dail:¥.-SentineLoJ'age.As _

.:.. www.mydailysentinel.com~

2005

POMEROY - Application deadline for the Meigs County
Retired Teachers' scholarship is Sept. 30. Applicants must be a
residenl of Meigs County and a j unior or ·senior currently
enrolled in a college, majoring in education (teacher training)
with at least a 2.5 grade point average. Applicants must include
a current college transcript showing the two previous years of
credits and grades; a resume of activities (work and· volunteer)
and career objectives. listing at least three references with one
being an instructor; current photograph for publicity; name and
address of college attending. All applicants will be evaluated
on grade point average and compliance of requirements, with
consideration of extra curricular activities of career objectives.
Mail to MCRT Schofarship .Committee c/o Joan Corder. 297
Wright Street, Pomeroy, 45769.

Board to meet
~MEROY - Meigs County Board of Health will meet at 5
p.m. on Sept. 16 at the conference room of the health department.

Racine testing planned
RACINE - The Racine Volunteer Fire Depanment will be
flushing hydrants and conducting flow tests this Saturday and
Sunday. Water. may be discolored for a short period of time.
Direc! any questi?ns to 949-2296 or 949·2920..

AP Photo/ The Plain Dealer, Chris Stephens

Red Cross volunteer Hal German stands among a sea of cbts set up in the Cleveland Convent1on
Center for victims of Hurricane Katrina, Wednesday. Oh10 Emergency Management Agency
spokesman Fred Stratmann said the Federal Emergency Management Agency on Wednesday
halted evacuation flights out of Texas. including those schedu led to arrive •n Ohio on Th ursday.
Campbell said that Chicago coming to .City Hall on
was told Tuesday that it was- Wedne sday evening to disn't getting evacuees then got cuss plans to· "adopt" possitwo' hours' notice that hun- blc evacuees to. help them
dreds of victims were on · adjust to the new .communitheir way.
. !y. Campbell said .
Col umbu s, Cincinnati and·
Cots were set up at the
Cleveland
had been pre pardowntown Cleveland con·vention center and the ing to get 300 to 400 evaceach
beginning
American Red Cross and uecs
other groups readied volun· Thursday and house them at
teers, who were preparing to temporary shelters at coit help evacuees get regis- vention centers and air
tered, find health care and bases before helping them
get into permanent housing
look for work.
"They have asked us to and find jobs.
"We stand ready." sa id
continue our preparations
and I wiint to say ' that the Mike Brown, sp.okesman· for
preparations have been a Columbus Mayor Michael
phenomenal
community- Co leman. "We've made it
wide effort." Campbell said very clear to the EMA and
before listing off several the Red Cross that our com·
. acronyms of local, state and munity has its arms open."
Officials are also working
federal offices that have
been meeting in Cleveland to help those who have
made it to Co lumb us
since Tuesday.
already.
most of whom are
"Everybody who's got an
alphabet has been here with staying with family or
us as well as an incredible friends. Co lum bus Red
group of citizen leaders ," Cross officials said they
she said. About 50 "clergy have met with 50 families
from local churches were wno have traveled there.

Another 50 familie.s ha&lt; c
been aided by the ReJ Cro."
in Cle veland anu at Ica, t fi &lt;c·
chilcjren ha ve been enrulk J
in Cle\'elantl school s.
One
W&lt;Hnan
fro m
Mississippi showed up with
her baby at City H;tll afi n her
family couldn't take them in.
Campb&gt;ll said.
"We have taken · c';lrc nf
her." Camphdl said . "She i'
well she'ltered lnnighL",
The D;l)'t&lt;lll ch;, pter' ,,r th e
Red CroS&gt; did ' not knnw
how manv of th e 1.000
evac~ees · it might ha1·e
received.' but wa s prepared .
However. 1he fa c1 that th e
evacuees weren '1 comin g
didn't cau se anv ilKonwnience . .
s p~kl' s wum;,n
Elizabeth Long sa iu.
Campbell said the prcparalions cost all the age ncies
involved and 1hat she hoped
the Feder;,!
Emergen cy
· Management A gc nc ~ would
reimhurse them .
A .,wci(lted Pres ., •·riter
Joe 1111/icia in C/e1·e/and
colllribttted to tlris fl'port.

Hospitals say Medicaid cuts would increase emergency room waits
Wednesday.
Hospitals. intent and goal of . the chroni c d i sease~ from gettin g
which already are absorbing Medicaitl program. .. he worse. eventually will lead to
$ 140 million in Medicaid said .
more hospita lization&gt; and
COLUMBUS- Hospitals ~ ut s under the two-year state
Ohio Medicaid Director more expense. he saiu.
say they will have to cut budget that took effect in Barbara Edwards disagreed.
.. We take our rok ~en · in g
staff, reduce free clinic hours July, would have to raise saying the proposed changes the poor and necJy l' l'r\' seri and force all patients to wait · rates for patients who pay are based on cost information
ou sly. anti we c·erwinly dlll( l
longer in emergency rooms privately or cut 3,000 jobs. supplied by the · hospitals
want tn ~ee the ~~ ~It~ hal' k
themselves.
because of proposed cuts iil the trade group said.
· the government insurance
"J'he hospitals are trying to off.'' Reber said.
A l 0-member' House·
The rate changes would cut
program for 1he poor and Senate . committee is to con- act as if they've got some
disabled. ·
sider the proposed rate guaranteed revenue stream about $3 .6 million for ~1 o unl
The Ohio Department of changes Monday. The panel from · the public.'' Edwards Carme l Heallh Sv &gt;tem in
Job and Family Services says . can't change rules proposed said.
Columbus. S.f. I milli on for
The reduction would mean MetroHealth Svs rem 111
it must adjust what Medicaid by·· state agencies. and can
pay s for hospital stays to be a reject onl y those that exceed fewe r services such as free Cleveland. S.l5 milli on for
better steward of taxpayer legal authority, violate the clinic hours and !ow-cost University Hospi tab Healtlt
intent of the law or conflict drug progranis at St. Rita ·s System in Cleveland 111
dollars.
Medical Center in Lima. northeast Ohio . and 5-+ milProposed changes to a for- with another rule.
Medicaid is meant to pro- president and chief executive
mula setting payments for
lion for Forum Health ho,pidifferent inpatient proce- vide equal access to doctors James Reber said. The protals
in Youngstown . ~ll·~.,·orJ ­
dljres would cut $ I 68 mil- and medical services for the posal would cut about
lion in state and federal poor, said John Callende'r, · $925 ,000 - about 20 of the ing to letters the IHb pital&lt;
sent the Department of Joh
money statewide·, the Ohio the association's senior vice hospital's 300 jobs.
•
Reducing those extra ser- . and Family Ser\'iccs. which
Hospital Association testi- president. "This rule clearly
fied in a public hearing jeopardizes the underlying vices. which' help prevent oversees Medicaid .

BY CARRIE SPENCER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Plannin u and
Absent from the meeting Finan r ial
payroll account had a bank
Supen·ision
C o mmi "'
:-.~ i tl ll ~~
was
,
'commission
member
balance of $16,539.41 as of
Susan Oliver.
at I 0:30 a. m. on No\'. 9 at
Sept. I.
The next meeting of the Southern High.School.
from PageA1
Hill said that he and Debra
Michael from the Southern
HEMLOCK GROVE - In a recent photo of the Hemlock November ballot which he Local Treasurer's Office had
Grove Quilters Rosalie Johnson was incorrectly identified as said will annually raise recently balanced June 30;
Rosalie Story. .
·
$103,000 for the school dis- balanced fisca l year 2004-05;
trict. He said that a home-· completed the 4502 report;
owner with a hou se valued at , competed the temporary bud$50,000 would · pay $24 a · get; completed the amended
Certificate.
RACINE - Homecoming will be held at Mt. Moriah ye1r.
Interim
Treasurer
Dennie
In other new business the
Church of God. Mill Hill Road , on Sept. I 8, with .dinner at
noon, and preaching by Rev. Herman Stewart of Oak Hill. Hill gave a general report on · commission also accepted an
Special singing will follow.
the fiscal operation and pay- amended certificate of esti'
roll and personnel changes mated resources as approved
by budget commission. and
from the prior year.
Hill reported that the dis. accepted temporary FY06
trict's account s payable had a . appropriations as approved
bunk balance of $948,518.85 by Southern Local Board of
POMEROY - Village Magistrate Lin'da Warner recently and
Russe ll Stove r
were .Education.
Serving you since 1946 with Candy
that . there
processed the following cases in Pomeroy . Mayor's Court:·
The meeting was called
quality prescription service
Lora Cleland, Pomeroy. theft. $500 plus cost. $250 suspend- , $171.948.44 in out warrants
into
executive
session
once
to
as
of
Sept.
I.
ed; Herbert Rose, Middleport. speed. $39 plus cos!; Debra
at competitive prices.
' Greeting Cards
·
discuss
negotiations
.
Hill
also
reported
that
the
Craig, Racine, possession . $100 P.lus cost ; Lawrence Brydte,
Nam·e Bra nd Colognes
Pomeroy, trash. $1 00 plus cost; Wtll iam Chevalier, Middleport . .
.
We honor most third
disorderly after wanting. $250 plus cost, $100 suspended.
Roger
Williams.
will
Full Line of Medical
party prescription plans.
peform.
Supplie s
"I hope everyone in the
· from Page A1
community will take time to
Kelly Miller. ·Letart. W.Va .. speed, $49 plus cost; Donald
attend the service, and pay
Smith, Pomeroy, posses'sion. $100 plus cost; Tina Neig(or.
The choir of Sa~-red Heart honor to the heroes and vic-,
Racine, expired tags. $6Jplus cost; Nathan Cozan, Coolville,
tims of the attacks on our·
speed, $45 plus cost; Cindy McGuire. Rutland. exptred tags. Catholic Church in Pomeroy
$63 plus cost ; Judy Walker. Rutland, iml'roper backing. $50 will sing at the service, country four years ago,"
plus cost; John Helgesen II, Tuppers Plams. speed, $48 plus Mayor Sandy lannarelli said, Hays said. "It is also imporcost; Hai'Iee Cline, Reedsville, expired tags, $63 plus cost; a·nd the Meigs Community tant to remember those lightJohn EhJl)an. speed, $56.plus cost.
1 Band, under direction of ing the war on terror todll)l."

Southern

Correction

.Plan homecoming

Pomeroy Court News

Memorial

Bonds Forfeited

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The Daily Sentinel

PageA6

ARouND~ THE WORLD
In Egypt, a historic vote for president; ·
Thursday, September 8, 2005

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but balloting marred by fraud charges:

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The mother. center. brother. left. and another relative of inured Iraqi Jafaar Ali, 14. react outs ide a hospital after an explosion in Karradah distri.ct in downtown Baghdad. Wednesday. A car
bomb detonated killing fou r civilians and injuring six.

American hostage freed after 10
months;. bombings kill four U.S.
security agents and 16 others
'

Bv STEVEN R. HURST
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

'

Wesr mi nster. Cali f.. ho me.
·· He got 10 say he was sorry.
and I gu t to say I loved him.
We g.ot- to say things we
newr lhou ~ht we would be

f:IAGHDAD. Iraq -· The
U.S. mili la ry. ac un g on a tip.
raided an isolated farmh ouse able lO sav."
mttsiJc
the
capitaf
Hidlums. for merl y of
· Wedncsdav and rescued an Newport Beach, Calif., was
American' husinessnian hciJ kidnapped at gun point from
hostage for I() 1i1orlllls. The . hi s office in the Mansour diskidnappns. who had kept . lricl of Baghdad on Nov. I.
the ir capt ive bound and 2004. At .the time. he was
gaggcli. escaped without a working for the Saudi
gu nballle.
·
Arabia1i
Trading
a nd
· . The rescue came on a day Construction Co. supplying
that " '"' two deadly bomb- food to the Iraqi army.
ings aroum.llhe sOLithern city
An Iraqi guard &lt;ind one
of Basra, fueling fe&lt;Jrs the attacker were killed in the
bloody insurgency was lak- attack. The kidnappers ·also
i ng deeper roo t outside seized a Filipino, a Nepalese
Sunni-duminaled terri(ory. A and three Iraqis , but later
roadside bomb killed four freed them.
American security agents.
"Considering what he's
And ;\n Interior Minislrv offi - been 'through. I understan&lt;)
cia l sa id I 6 people· were he's in good condition." said
killed and 21 were injured in Hallum s' ex -wife. Susan
a car bombing in a re.s taurant . Hallums. 53 , of Corona.
in a centra l mar ket.
Calif.
Roy Hallums. 57. was "i n
The family Web site was
good condition and is receiv - topped with a headline;: Roy
ing med ica l care," a military IS FREE!!IIIIIJI7/05.
statement said after U.S.
Susan Hallums and her
forces freed him and an husband of 30 years divorced
unidentified Iraqi from the a few years ago but remained
farmhouse 15 miles south of good friends. she said . They
Baghdad.
have a second daughter.
Lt. Col. Steven A. Boylan. Amanda Hallums . 26. of
a military spokesman, said Tennessee.
the tipster whose mformation
Hallums had been bound
led to Hallums' release was and gagged for much of his
captured just a few hours time in captivity. but doctors
· before the operation .
gave him a "clean bill of
Hallums called hi s daugh- health .. after the rescue ,
ter early Wedne sday from Cooper said. Hallums told his
Iraq with news·or his rescue. fa,mily
the
kidnappers
and apologized for causing escaped and that he planned
her so much grief and pain.
to return 10 the United States
"He apologized to me for within days.
putting me through any hard"I've been waiting for this
ship." hi s eldest daughter. day, hoping for this day for a
Carrie Anne Cooper. 29. said long time," Cooper said.
,by te lephone from her
More than 200 foreigners

have been · abducted in Iraq
since the war began in March
2003; more than 30 have
been ki lied .
Wednesday 's
roadside
bombing. which killed the
four sec urit y agents. was
noteworthy because attad s
again st Americans around

Basra. Iraq's second-largest
city. are rare. The U.S. has
only a minimal presence in
the area. Al so. Shiites. who
are the dominant population
in the south, have found
themselves the political winners as new government
structures !&lt;Ike shape after the
U.S.-Ied inv&gt;hion.
In a statement posted on a
Web site known a.s a clearing
house of Jllilitam claims, alQaida in Iraq claimed responsibility for the allack.
The bomb , !'lipped the
Americans· SUV onto its roof
in a ravine alongside a high-

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feace mom's supporters_visit Ohio
Mit chell, a co-founder with
Sheehan of Gold Star
Families for Peace, said his
"' CINCINNATI
so n. Army Sgt. Michael
'Supporters of a so ldier's 1imth· Mitchell, was killed in action
er who kept a vigil outside · s d c 1
A ·1 4
-President Bush's ranch . were 111 ' a r tty, raq, on pn '
2004, along with Sheehml 's
greeted with applause and
24
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pcup Ie at a Cmcmna11 ra y
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Wednesday night.
eggy
ogue, 63 , o1
:·. Cindy Sheehan, the woman . Lebanon , Ohio, said she the
who led the anti-war protest speakers impressed her
'h'ear Bush's ranch in enough lo join them at slops
'Crawford. Texas, for nearly a in the state later this week.
··month , did not attend the
"As one of the speakers
Cincinnati rally. But relatives said tonight, our g uard is not
of other fall en troops took an international guard; it's a
:J:1rt in the event.
National Guard, and we need
..., "I don't want any more of our troops here at · home,"
::Ur young men and women to said Logue, whose son,
::die in thi s war." said Bill Lance Cpl. Michael Logue. is
:11/!itchell, 54, of Atascadero, stationed in Iraq now with the
:Calif., who lost his son in Marine
Reserve s'
3rd
:Iraq. "It was a had war from Battalion. 2:Sth Marines.
~e start, and it's a bad war
The peace activists' three,
:;r.tow. It was based on lies." . week bus tour to variou s
" Bv LISA CORNWELL

ASSOCIATED PRESS WR ITER

1) Health Questionnaire: You may fill out the health qu.estionnaire online

al our website, www.cBhealthproject.org. This is the lastest and easiesl w~ to ·initiate
lhe process. If you don't have the ability lo complete the questionnaire online, you
may pick up a copy either at lhe Brookmar office at 417 Grand Park Drive ' Suile
201 1n Vienna, or al one of our testing sites. You may then take the queslionnaire
home, fill it out, and drop it off at the tesling stte nearest you or the Brookmar office.
'

.

.

'

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2) Appointment Scheduling: After you have submitted your completed
sur_vey, either on our website or by dropping tt off al one of our locations, you

w111 be contacted by a Brookmar representative to set up an
appointment for you at one of our testing sites. Do not call us
for an appointment, we will call you. · · · ·
'

3).Validation of ,eligibility: You are responsible for validating your
ehg1b1hty by bnng1ng offtc1al documentation proving your residence/water usage for at
least one calendar year. For example, bring a utility bill from January of 2002 and
January of 2003, or bring a 2003 Tax statement. You must prcive that you

consumed water from public or private sources within the six
affected water districts for at least one calendar year PRIOR TO
December 3, 2004.

.4) On-site review: When you come lo your appointmenl al a mo~ile testing
srte •. a nurse w1ll rev1ew your quest1onna11e with you·and verify your eli!;!ibility to
·
partiCipate. When you successfully complete this step, you are eligible to be paid $150.

5) Blood Testing: Once your on-site review is complete; yow may choose to
have your blood tesled,. You will not be tested. lor drug use, HIV, or sexually transmitted.
d1seases. Your pnvacy w1lt be stnctly guarded throughout the information and blood
screening process. After having your blood drawn, yqu will be paid $400 - ($150 is ·
for the heafth questionnaire and $250 is for blood testing.) Absolutely no blood

testing will be done on children ages 2 and under, and testing on
ages 6 and under is strongly dis~ouraged.
.
·

rmamm
Route 95 South.
behind Tebay Dairy.

Belpre-Little Hocking
Stone Rd., off Washington Blvd.,
behind Cornerstone Healthcare.

Now Open!

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Lubeck

Conducted by:
~

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Tuppers Plains·
Che.ster

Mason County

92 Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy, OH.

326 Ohio River Road
Rt 62 North
(next Ia Exxon)
Point Pleasant, WV

Now Open!

Opens Sept. 8th

BRQOKMAR, INC.'

Heom f.~ CoorliretJP.; ~ M task~ COiec.'mQ r.tlill'1ll'1lormlt1011 o1rlCl bloO(I~
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~tate

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Bv ANDREW
WELSH·HUGGINS

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85'1 58'

cities is sc heduled · to go
through
Columbus
on
Thursday and Cleveland on
Friday. Activists plan to end
their tour Sept. ·.24 with a
march in Washington. ·
Sheehan. ·of Vacavi lle .
Calif., held her vigil in an
unsucce ssful altempllo question Bush about tire war.
Earlier Wednesday. sisters
of an Army sergeant killed in
Iraq urged continuing sllpport
for troops and their operation
in Iraq al a counter rally in
Columbus. ·
"The troops need to know
that we are i tanding strong,
but also the terrorists;'' said
Deni'se Grannen , 46, a suburban Cincinnati homemaker.
About 20 people allended
that event sponsored by
Families United for Our
Troops and Their Mission.

Wolllher Ur&lt;lortJOU1d • AP

Thursday... Mostly sunny.
Higl1s in the mid 80s. South
winds
around
5
mph .. . Becoming west around
5 mph in the afternoon.
Thursday night ... Partly
cloudy with a 20 percelll
chance of showers. Lows in
the upper 50s. Northwest
5
winds
around
mph ... Becoming north after
mi dnight.
Friday... Parlly i:luudy with
a 30 percent chance of showers. Highs in the lower 80s.
Light
and .
variable

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winds ... Beco ming northeast
around 5 mph in the afternoon .

Friday night ... Parll y cloudy
with a slight chance of showers in the evenin g ... Then
mostly clear after midnight.
Lows in the upper 50~.
Northeast winds around 5 mph
in

1he even ing ... Becoming

ligh( and variable. Chance of
ra in 20 percent.
Saturday
through
Wednesday ... Mostly . clea r.
Highs in the mid 80s. Lows in
the lower 60s.

2005

Local Stocks
ACI-62.66
•
AEP- 38.20
Akzo - 41.79
Ashland Inc. - 6.0 .38
AT&amp;T- 1.9.53
BLI-11.58
Bob Evans - 24.08
BorgWarner - 58.48
Champion - 4.26 ·
Charming Shops 12.08
City Holding- 36 .90
Col- 47.80
DG -18.87
DuPont - 39.78
Federal Mogul - .42
USB- 29.85
Gannett- 73.52
General Electric - 34.01
GKNLY - 5 .40
Harley Davidson - 49.30
JPM- 34.89
Kroger-· 19.95
ltd.- 21.36
NSC- 36.03
Oak Hill Financial 30.40
OVB- 25
BBT- 40.82
Peoples - 29.05
Pepsico - 55.45
Premier- 14.52
Rockwell - 53.23
Rocky Boots - 30.21
RD Shell - 64.42
SBC - · 24.08
Sel!IS - 134.85
Wai-Mart - 45.86
W!!ndy' s - 48.55
Worthington - 18.60

Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day's
transactions, ·provided by
Smith Partners at Advest
Inc. of Gallipolis.

DON'T MISS IT!
View An Impressive Display of
Coins, Paper Money &amp; Memorabilia

fires former workers' comp.investments chief

menl was missing.
Up until that time, the
~ AP S1'ATE,HOUSE CORRESPONDENT
agency was considered a success story. Conrad was hailed
•• COLUMBUS -The state as
the man who . turned
~ nsurance fund for injured around a bureaucracy dubbed
:Workers tired its top invesl- by former Gov. George
:'menls manager Wednesday · Voinovich a "silent killer of
~or poor performance, the lat- jobs" because of ·problems
:t:sl . allempt · by . the once helping injured workers and
)!steemed agency to fix prob- the high premiums that
'ems that led to $300 million employers paid.
McLean's firing came two
'n investment losses.
: Chief investments officer weeks after the bureau
•James McLean had been on released lellers showing the
~aid leave since June as Securities and . Exchange
•Increasing finuncial losses Commission had . twice
~ere di scovered at the Ohio warned the slate, in 2002 and
:Sureau
of
Workers 2004, that it might be paying
:k:ompensa1ion.
brokers too much for han·
: McLean's leadership of the dling routine investments.
:i nvestment
department,
Kielmeyer bel ieves man ;)'esponsible for handling the agers must be accountable for
;)Jureau's $14 billion portfo- their department 's actions .
~ io . did 1lot meet expecla- said department spokesman
·
' ion s, agency interim admin- Jeremy Jackson .
"Clearly over the last cou-istrator Tina Kielmeyer said
~ n a leuer to Mclean .
ple of months a variety of
: "Your lack of effectiv eness, se rious issues have been
:and poor decision making has brought to li ght." he said .
:Only led me to conclude that "Ultimately. it's manage.I t is now time to move the ment' s respon s ib.ility to
:investment operations at effectiveJy lead a department
:SWC in a new direction with - in this case she didn ' t feel
;.)lew leadership,'.' Kielmeyer this was happening ."
lh the past, the bureau's top
. ~aid in the letter.
.
~ McLean ,. 51, was hired as
administrator hired the
investments' chief. Under a
~ nvestment s chief in July
:;2003 . He made $ 115,000 . A .state Ia"' passed this spring in
,:message was left seeking response to workers' comp·
problems, that authority goes .
"':ommenl.
~ The . agency's invesln)enl to a five-member oversight
lJOiicies came under scrutiny commiuee.
The commitl\:e may wail
~eginning in April when The
'(Toledo) Bl ~de reported the months 'lo hire someone to
McLean.
said
~orkers' comp bureau 's $50 replace ·
:fnillion dollar investment in William Sopko. chairman of
the Workers ' Compen sation
..-are cmns,
Oversight
Commission.
: Since then. the agency has
The commission expects to
~c knowledged losses ·o f more
::than $300 million·, including hire an investments consul ::$215 million in a hedge fund. tant by November and will
:bnd numerous other problems want that firm ' s input on'
replacing McLean, Sopko. a
~ ith its investments.
: In May, Gov. Bob TafJ Cleveland businessman. said
:forced out the · agency's for- Wednesday,
After McLem1 was placed
:)ner director. Jame s Conrad,
)fter coin dealer Tern. Noe on leave, the workers' comp
)cknowledged up lo $13 agency moved qt~ickly toter,illion of the coin , invest- minate poorly perform in ~ .
:.;.
:-·

*Colurnbut
85'1 62' '

t:..;,.)

AP Photo

Patty Harkleroad, center, with .her sisters Joy Kiser, left, and Denise Giannen speaks during a
news conference at the Statehouse in Columbus. The sisters, who lost their brother Army Staff
'Sgt. Charles A. Kiser in the war in Iraq, were speaking on behalf of the group Fami lies United
for Our Troops and Thei r Mission.
·

"

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YoungltOWn •
79'156'

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There are two distinct components of the project:
the health questionnaire and the blood survey.

City/Region
High 1Low temps

Forecut for Thur8d1y, Slpl. 8

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How to Participate in
the C8 Health Proiect

1

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Thursday, September 8,

Local Weather

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CAIRO. Egypt - tour the
first lime Egyptian voters had
a choice of candidates for
president Wednesday in an
election the United Stales
hopes wi)l be a key step
toward democracy across the
Middle East.
But the ballot was marred
by charges of fraud and. the ·
near-certainty the vote would
give
longtime
merely
· President Hosni Mubarak
another six years of power.
Opposition p;uty members.
AP Photo
human rights monitors and citizens told The Associated An Egyptian policeman shows the way out for a female vote'r
Press that election worker.&gt; at after ·She cast her vote in the port city of Alexandria as Egypt
polling places in Luxor and · goes to the polls for presidential electfons Wednesday.
other towns instmcted . voters
to choose Mubarak. ln Cairo groups said they thought vows to block protests. Twll
and Alexandria, supporters of turnout was low, contrary ·to demon strators were beaten
the rulin~ National Democratic government predictions of by government supporters. .
Until · now, the 77-year-old
Pany promised food or money hi gh lUFIIOUt. The number of
to poor people if they voted for voters might indicate whether Mubarak has been re-electe\1
recen t calls for reform have in referendums in which he
Mubarak , voters said.
shaken
Egyptians out of an was the only candidate and
The lead ing opposition
candidate . Ayman Nour, apathy generated by years of voters could' only choosf
"yes" or "no" to his continu:
charged the elections "are riot stag nation ..
in g in power.
In
Wa
shington.
State
fair at all," and · vowed to
The gove rnment said the
Department spokesman Sean
reject rigged results.
decision
to 4llow challengers
McCormack
sa
id
the
U.S.
However, a lop official in
signals
·a · move toward
government
was
following
another major opposition
party, EI-Sayed ei-Badawy, the election closely and greater democracy in a counsaid that while fraud and called the vote ·'a beginning." try that has seen only author"These elections really itarian rule· for more than , a
intimidation were apparent.
:
"This is the first time for a mark a historic departure for half-ce ntury.
Opponents dismissed the
pre sident to reach out to the Egypt. in the fact that you
citizens and ask for their sup- have multicandidate presi- reform claims as a sham, notport. This is a positive thing. " dential elections. l think it's ing that Mubarak's party con Osama Attawiya, spokesman safe to say that Egyptians trols must of the government,
the .election
for the country's election com- have nut seen a presidential including
mission, said the panel had election like the one they process, and lhal re strictio06
received no major complaints have just seen in their life· make it diffi cult for oppolimes," he told reporters.
nent s to gain ground. The
· or repons of problems. .
In one clear sign of the country's . 'biggest Islamic
Nine candidates ran against .
the
Muslim
Mubarak this time , but only changes sweeping Egypt, group ,
two were considered signifi- more than 3,000 people Brotherhood, is bann~p
cant - Nour of the ai-Ghad marched through downtown entirely.
,
Party and Noaman Gomaa of Cairo at midaflernoon to.
Many E;gyptians say wh&lt;it
the Wafd - and the president protes! against Muqarak they really hope for is change
was expected to win handily. by far the largest crowd ever witho.ut disruption, crisis or
Final results were not due drawn by the group Kifaya, violence. leading to better
until Saturday.
or "Enough'' in Arabic. jobs and more opportunitie's
EI-Badawy and seveml Pulice watched from a dis- in the economically ailing
. independent
monitoring· lance despite government country of 72 million people.

center that is under the control of Britain's 8,500-strung
contingent.
Stale
Department
spokesman Sean McCormack
said tl1 e fo ur men were
employees of Triple Canopy,
Inc.. a Herndon. Va.-based
security company doing con- .
tract work !()!' the· Bureau of
Diplomatic Sec'urity. which is
responsible for protectin g
U.S. diplomats at home and
abroad. The service also protects foreign diplomats in the
United States.
Alan Ptak. senior vice president forthe company, identitled the four men as: Ronald
Hyall of Calera. Ala.: Robert
McCoy of Refugio, Texas; .
Robert Pole' of Miller Place,
N.Y.; and Ryan Young of,
Lewisburg. Tenn.

l'lt

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;

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

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OHIO·

'-

}he Daily Sentinel

money managers, records •
show.
The agency fired six funds
from June 21 through Aug. 4
for poor performance, and
those six did not include
three other fi red fund s that
may have gone beyond the
scope of a contract.
That includes the $50 million investment in rare coins
by Noe, a prominent GOP
contributor now under state
and federal investigation.
By contrast. under Mclean
it took the workers' comp
buremi from August 2003
through April of this year to
fire six funds.
Scrutiny · of Noe\ .sta te
cunlmcls led to Taft 's conviclion last month on charges he
failetl to report golf outings
for which others picked up
the tab . .

Friday, September 9th
Farmers Bank of Pomeroy
Mint.2oos \\Westward Jouney"
Nickels to be given away while
supplies last!
Register to win uncirculated
US Silver Certificates!
Sponsored by the Oh-Kan Coin Club

[F' Ill Farmers Bank
Member FDIC

Welcome to Our Team
~

Steven G. Carin Jr.. D.O .. R.K . Giri. M.D.. and
Audrius Ruksenas, M.D., are now scheduling
appointments.
Gastroente

dlcal

cfintc

and Internal Medicine

Ste.ven G. Carin Jr., D.O.
Geriatric and Internal Medicine

R.K. Giri. M.D.
ln1ernal Medicine
Audrius Ruksenas, M.D.
Obstetric~ and

Jane

E. Broecker, M.D.

Adolescent and Pediat.rk Gynecology

Michael J. Clark, D.O.
jack M. Ramey, D.O.

R.K. Giri . M.D .

Podi

Gai,llnt 1lr.fi,mt
Jmau.d .1/cdmur

Ea~l

and Podiatric

~tncn G. Carih Jr., D.O.

Audri u.,

Ru ko.;L'n.,~.

f11rn IIlii .\ hA11 im·

M0

( ;,/~1/.l('llr/'fll/,.,g l'

/nltrrr,r/

\)ctfilrlft"

L. Driggs. D.P.H.
•

For an appoi.ntme.nt can

(740) 992-9'158.

!ll Eui lletnorial Driri, S!Hie A. Pomeroy, ohio

�'

The Daily Sentinel

The Extra Point, Page 82
OVP Football Leaders, Page 82
Meigs County golf roundup, Page B3
Southern netters defeat South Gallia; Page 84

Page AS • The Daily Sentinel

-

Thursday, September 8, ~005

u " a,..

CJ,f'lO

Southeastern Ohio Edltio.n

A look at the top football teams In
Ohio's Southeast District as voted
by the Ohio Valley Publishing
sports staff. (First-place votes In
parenthesis)

Team

Piev. Votet
1. Ironton (3)
1 57
2. Gallia Acad~my (21 3 54
3, Logan Elm
· 7 35
3. Nelsonville-York
6 35
5. Valley
8 29
6. Wheelersburg
2 . 21
7. Logan
NR 20
7. Miami Trace (11
5 20

9. Trimble

9

15

Hillsboro
NR
10. Portsmouth West NR

8
8

io.

Others racelvtlill votes: Zane
Trace 7, Sheridan 6, Jackson 5,
Meigs 2, Portsmouth 2. Rock Hill
2. Unloto 2, Piketon 1. South

Galtla 1.

· CNP Sci tsduiE
. GALLIPOLI S - A schedule ol upcommg col·
lege and high school varsity sporting events
involving teams -from Gallla, Mei gs and Milson
co unties

'

Dlyrsday's QBrDQB
Volleyball
Southern at Eastern, 5:55 p.m
Alexander a1 Metgs, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Chesapeake, 5:30p.m.
South Galia at Hannan, 5:30p.m.
logan at GaiHa Academy, S:J 5 p.m. ,

Soccer
South Point-at Ohio Valley Christian, 5 p.m
Gh11 Soccer
Point Pleasant at Winfield, 7 p.m.

Goll

Ohio Valley Symphony season opens Sept. 17 Multi-cultural artist to travel many miles to present
each concert.
Funding for the symphony is
provided by the. Ann Carson
Dater Endowment. Corporate
sponsor of this concert is the
Holzer Medical Center; it is
also supported by the Ohio
Arts Council. The Ohio Arts
Council is a state agency that
.. funds and supports quality
exreriences to strengthen
Ohio communities culturally,
educationally and economically.
·.
·
The concert is at 8 p.m. in
the Morris and Dorothy
Haskins Ariel Theatre located
in the newly named Ariel Ann
Carson Dater Performing Arts
Centre at 426 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis. Tickets can be purchased at the box office
Monday-Friday from II a.m.
to ·2 p.m. and Tuesdays and
Thursdays, 5 to 8 p.m. or by
calling ,
740-446-ARTS
(2787.).
'
Season tickets for the five
2005-06 concerts are $100 for
adults; $90 for seniors and $50
for students. An entire family
can attend the concert series
for $275 . Individual titkets
also are available for each concert. ,_
Four additional concerts of
the season are: Nov. 5, featuring Scott Michal's world premiere of "A Decidedly Divine
Dance Suite";· Dec. 3, '"Twas
the Night before Christmas";
March II, "Broadway and
Bizet," with bass baritone
John Shuffle; and April 22,
"G uitar Classics" with guitarist Tim Berens.

arts

Richard Glazier

The 2005-06 season will ation of the Ohio Valley
mark the 16th year that Symphony.
Maestro Ray Fowler has
Following the concert,
presided 'at the podium . In members of the audience will
addition to leading the local be welcomed to a reception at
symphony, Fowler is artistic Claudia Miller' s histone home
director of the Bay View at 626 Second Ave. The event
Music Festival in Michigan. will provide an opportunity to
His expertise and energy are · personally m ~er the maestro
key ingredients in the perpetu- and musicians, many of whom

Museum expands its hours
GREEN BOTTOM. W.Va,
-·
The hi storic Jenkin s
Plantation Museum, located
in the Green Bottom Wildlife
Management Area of Cabell
Co11nty, is ewanding its operating hours to I0 a.m . to 4
p.m.,
Tuesday
through
Saturday. effective immediately.
·
The museum is closed on

Sunday and Monday. ·
A facility of .the West
Virginia Division of Culture
and History, the museum is
the
former
home
of
Confederate arigadier Gen.
Albert Gallatin Jenkins and
also interprets· the large slave
plantation operated by the
Jenkins family.
The 1835 house, built in

the tradition of Tidewater
Virginia, is. noteworthy for
· its architecture and was built
by slaves between 1830 and
1835 for Jenkins's father,
William- It is listed in the
National Regi ster of Historic
PI aces and on the Ci vi I War
Discovery Trail. The museum is located on W.Va. 2,
between Huntington and

'

Thursday, September 8, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

.., MIII!J' r

GALLIPOLIS - The Ohio
Valley Symphony season will
open Saturday. Sept. 17. with a
concert that will delight devotees of both classical and popular music. The "Rhapsody in
Blue" program will feat ure
pianist Richard Glazier, who is
considered the performing ,
artist most closely associated
with the music of George and
Ira Gershwin.
Glazier "has Gershwin in his
soul," said noted pianist ·
Michael Feinstein. In his
childhood, Glazier wrote a fan
letter to Ira Gershwin. Thi s
began a three-year correspondence with the lyricist and culminated in an invitation to his
.
Beverly Hills home.
"This meeti ng literally
changed the course of my life.
and it gives me enormous pleasure to tell their stories and
play their music t:or audiences
everywhere." said Glazier.
Glazier, one of today's foremost interpreters of the
American Popular Songbook,
earned bachelors' and master's
degrees in piano performance
from Indiana University
School of Mu sic and a doctorate of musical arts from the
Cleveland Institute of Music.
"Porgy and Bess'' and
"Rhapsody in Blue" are the
first two program se lections.
Other music thin will follow
include : Rimsky -Korsakov
"Procession of the Nobles,"
the Khachaturian Sabre Dance
from the "Gayane" Ballet
Suite, Gade's "Jalousie," and
Rossini 's widely recognized
"William Tell Overture."

Bl·

Point Pleasant.
The West Virginia Division
of Culture
, and History, an
agency of the West Virginia
Department of Education and
·
t he Arts, brmgs
together the
'
·
state s past, presen,t an d f uture
through programs and services in the areas of archives
and history, the arts, historic
preservation and museums.

'
••
Come on over to Bob's
..

the bes~ · tasting, freshest
produce in town... at
.reasonable prices,
satisfaction

take stage at Fur Peace
POMEROY
Tish
singerHinojosa, a bi-lingual
songwriter from Texas. will
bring her multi-cultural music
to the Fur Peace Station on
St. Clair Road in Pomeroy on
Saturday. The show will also
feature Mary Gauthier.
Hinojosa is touring in support of her latest release, "A
Heart Wide Open," her first
studio album in five years.
The disc features an· all-star
lineup including Ray Benson
and Cindy Ashdollar of
Asleep at the Wheel , Flaco
Jimenez and her longtime
collaborator, guitarist and
mandolinist Marvin Dykhui s,
who will be joining her on
this tour.
·
G(!tes at the Fur Peace
Station will open at 7 p.m.
with showtime at 8 p.m.
Tickets are $I 8 in advance
and $20 the day of the show.
Tickets can be ordered .by
calling (740) 992-2498.

Hinojosa 's career· highlights
h~ve included a performance
for President and Mrs. Bill Clinton at the White Hou se,
many performances at presidential and gubernatorial
inauguration events, numerous television appearances
.stateside and abroad. She is
extensively involved in
humanitarian
acttv1t1es
including ·Spokesperson for
the
National
L.atino
Children's Agenda, . the
National Association of
Bilingual Education, and the
United Farm Workers of
America.
Of Mexican
heritage.
Hinojosa is known for her
di stin ct ive
cross-cultural
music gained from her back:
ground and association with
artists in the contemporary
Latin and folk scene. She
embraces in performance
pop. rock, tejano and international styles of music.

South Gallia at Point Pleasant (Hidden
VaJ~) . 4:30 p.m.
·
Galfia Academy at Portsroouth, 4:30 p.m.
TVC Ohio at Hictlen HiNs, 4:30p.m.
TVC Hocking at BrasS Atng. 4:30 p.m
Friday's MmeJ
Football
Ironton at Gallia Aca~

Wahama at Eastern
River Valley at Meigs
Magnolia at Point Pleasant

Soccer
Cross lanes Christian at Ov'CS, 6 p.m.
Yolloyball .

Cross lanes Christian at Ov'CS, 5 p.m.
Collego5occer
Rio Grande at Trinity International. 7 p.m

Saturday'•

Southern at So.rth Gal~a
Bishop Donahue at Hannan

Vo&lt;loyboll
River Valley at Athens Tournamenl, 9 a.m.

Soccer
Gallia Academy at Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.

Cross COuntry
River Valley at Athens Invitational, 10 a.m.

Contact Information
Fai. -1-740-446-3008
E-mail -

sports@mydailysentinel.com
.'
.. Spqrls Stll.H

.

Brad Sherman, Sports Edllor
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33
bsherma n @ mydailyt ri bun~ . com

Bryan Walters, Sports Wrtlar
(740) 446-2342, ext. 23
bwalters@ mydailytribune:com

Larry Crum, Sparta Wrltar
(304) 675-1333. ext 19
Ierum@ mydailyregister.com

Kid's Day at Bob Evans
of charge.
· Craft Barn · staff will also ·
assist children with foam art
projects for $2; painted cats,
bats and ghosts for $1: and
ghost lollipops for 50 cents.
·1n addition, the first 50 chi ldren at Kid's Day will receive .
a free pencil and all children
will receive a ticket for free
admission to the 35th annual
Bob Evans Farm Festival,
which will be held Oct. 14. I~
aod 16
·
For more
· 1r·
b t
111 orma 1on a ou
K d' D
h
i s ayEor ot er events &lt;It
the Bob vans Farm, tho~
interested should call the farm
on Ohio 588 in Rio Grande.
The Craft Barn . features a
large assortment of fine folk
art and one-of-a-kind items.

Two Convenient Locations:
1/4 Mile North Pomeroy/Mason Bridge Mason, WV
Phone (304) na-5323
·2400 Eastern Ave.
(Across from KMart) Galllpolils,

Prep Football -

.
Week 3

South Gallia braces for Tornadoes' storm
BY

Sco.TT

WOLFE

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT '

MERCERVILLE -This Saturday
night the South Gallia Rebel s (2-0)
will face the Southern Tornadoes (02) in a non-league footbail contest at
Mercerville.
·
South Gallia and Coach Justy
Burleson are off to the best start in
school history, and have been working hard this past week to sure up any
weaknesses that Southern could
attack. Additionally, the Rebels have

a little bit of
reve nge on their
minds:.
Last, season,
one
of
two
Southern wins
came at the hands
of the Rebels, a 12-9 victory that
broke Southern's 27-game losing
weak. Many Rebels remember that
long awaited Southern victory celebration in Racine, a well deserved
fete for the hometown Southerners
who had long endured too many losing seasons.

The Rebels will
also be ·playing for .
some addi tional
pride' as they will
be honoring the
I
9
8
0
Southwestern
Highlanderfootball team, the SVAC
championship team of Coach Jack
James. (See related story )
Hungry and. improving weekly, the
Southern club of Coach Bob Grueser
will be out to prove a point, and jump
start what many hope can still be a
productive season for the Tornadoes.

One · common opponent lies
between the two dubs. Southern fell
0-7 to Green in the season opener and
last week South Gallia defeated
Green 20-7 at · Franklin Furnace.
Southern fell 28-6 to Symmes Valley
last week, while South Gallia
drubbed Eastern 54-35 in the season
opener. .
· Coach Grueser explained. "We fe lt
we should have won the game against
Green. If we ,had played like we did
against Symmes Valley we would

Please see Southern, Bl

Eastern opens home season withWahama Meigs
Bv GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

TUPPERS PLAINS - ·
A neighboring rivalry
between two cross-river
football
opponents ,
resumes at
7:30 p.m.
Friday
N i g h t
when the
Wahama
W h i t e
Falcons
travel to
neighboring Meigs
County to
engage in
a gri'diron
battle with
the Eastern. Eagles.
Wahama, at 1-1 on the
young 2005 season, forced
five turnovers at Federal
Hocking last week in posting a hard fought 14-7 win
over the Lancers. The v.ictory enabled the White
Falcons to bounce back
from a 24-17 season opening loss to Williamstown.
· Eastern, at 0-2 on the
year, has struggled defensively in dropping consecutive road contests at
South Gallia (54-35) in a
shootoui and Zane Trace
(67-0). The Friday night
clash with Wahama will be
the 2005 home opener for
Coach Pat Newland's
Eagle .football II.
Wahama has experienced difficulties with its
offensive production totals
Bryan Walters/photo
throughout its first two
Eastern
fullback
Chadd
Whitlatch
looks
down
in
disappointment
during
Friday's
67-0 loss to
outings this season. The
Zane .Trace in Kinnikinnick . The Eagles (0-2) took to improve their fortunes this Friday at East
Please see Eastern. Bl Shade River Stadium when they host Wahama.

preps for
Raiders'
•

•

IDV3SIOD
'

BY BRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

POMEROY - A. pair of
similar style s will clash ·this
Friday at Bob Roberts Field
as River Valley travels east
along
.the
Ohio River tO
take
on
Meigs in a ·
Week Three
battle of .500
teams.
. Both the
Raiders and
h 0
s t
Marauders
a·re I - I on the
young season, and each
ha s . used an
efficient ground attack to
yield success.
The Silver and Black has
amassed 499 rushing yards
on 105 carries (4. 75 yards per
carry lin its'two contests. with
Chri s
senior . tailbad
Edwards leading the way, and ·
the Ohio Valley Publishing
.co verage area. with 45
attempts for 257 yards and
·
three scores.
·conversely, the Maroon
and Gold has tallied 475
yards on 83 totes (5.72 ypc)
and has used more of a two-

Please see Meigs, Bl

PLEAS~NT V~LLEV HosPITAL ANNUAL FALL ScR~MBLE

Fann is Saturday
RIO GRANDE - Craft
projects.
entertainment.
games and activities are
planned . for children during
Kid's. Day at the Bob Evans
Farm Craft Barn on Saturday.
Free activities and "make
and take crafts" will be part of
the' celebration from II a.m.
to 2 p.m.
.
Activitie s
include
an
appearance by ventriloquist
Debbie Walker of Vinton ai
1:30 p.m. Face painting , tractor-drawn wagon rides, yard
games _ including hula
..hoop. bean bag toss. basketball, bubbles, J·ump rope and
chalk draw1'ng, the Bossard
Memorial · Library Book
Mobile, and tours of the
Homestead Museum · - will
all be offered for children free

;arnu

Football

.

All proceeds go to the Pleasant Valley Hospital Fopndation ·

'

r-------------------,

• Sunday, September 18, 2005

I

• Riverside Golf Course (Mason, WV) · Soft spike faCility

1

I
I

• Four·person,best ball scramble · Shotgun start at 10 a.m.

:

• S60/player for advance registration or S65/ player for same day registration -

I

• Platinum, gold, silver and bron1e lev~ sponsorships available
• For more information please call, (304) 675-4340, ht. 1326

'.

.

....I

t Golfer A:

., '

J

t Har.Scap:

,

I
I
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'j ,' tGolferD:
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I
•
I 'I (
) Denation
I' ··
t
·
1 . I GRAND T:OTAL:
I

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Make all checks payable to the •
Pleasant Valley Hospital Foundaiion. lI t (
) .~ole Sponsorship :'" $100
.
'
J .1: --: HowwiltlldJI()U like to he li.stedtltlsigmgt?
Please complete form,, detach 1 •
and send with payment to: &lt;11·,: ·.. L
I ' ··* ,
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
&lt;;:OMMUNITY RELATIONS
ANNUALFALLSCRAMBLE
2520VALLEYDRIVE .
POINT PLEASANT, WV 25550

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Minimum ream fwildit?ap of 40.
01111' o11e piaver al!oll'ed •rirh a handicap 1111der I 0.

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L----------~------ --· ~

�.'
Page B2 • J!le Daily Sentinel

www.myd.aiJysentinel.com

Thursd.ay, September 8, 2005.

•

Thursclay, September~ 2005

WW\Y.mydailysentine].com

Ironton 'coming to ·Gallia Academy
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMANOMYDAILVTRIBUNE.COM

,
GALLrPOLIS - It's a situ·
h
atton muc like a pitcher's in
an all-star game - you strike
our Willie Mayes, but then
you get Hank Aaron.
Similarl.):. there is no rest for
Gallia Academy, which is
entering phase three of a ferocious non-league football
schedule.
The Blue Devils, fresh off
their thrilling come-frombehind win over powerful
Wheelersburg, welcome an
even heavier hitter to
M orial F'1 ld th' F 'd
em
~
• ts n aythe Ironton Ftghtmg T1gers.
Both teams are 2-0, but
Ironton enters as a sizable
favorite, havin won the last
10 meetihgs a~d 37-of-48 in
the all-time series.
"Like I've told our kids, we
want to flay our best foottlall
game o the season and see
what happens," said Gallia
Academy
coach
Matt
Bokovitz.
"If they're better than us, so
be it but Jet's go down and
play 'our best football game
that night and see -how ·good
we are and how good they are.
Maybe we can have a break or
two and come out on top."
Gallia. Academy ,last beat
Ironton in 1984, but since
then, the Lawrence County
power has won by an average
of 17.4 points each meeting .
However, Galli a Academy,
one of the most explosive
teams in southeastern Ohio,
hopes to tum the tables this
year.
"We're going to see if we
can impose our will on them
this year instead of the other
way around," Bokovitz stated.
The fourth-year mentor
admitted, through, the key ·to

0 UR •.EI PERTS'. B" EAK 0 0 WN THI S WEEK' S HI GH SCH0 0 l F0 0 TBAll GAMES

Brran Walters

l ar ry Crum

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\pn rh \\"rn l'T

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Rn·DrJ; 1Y-1
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OVP

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St.JtfWml'r
H.eCl)nl: I (• --I
L,1,t ~h· k : 9- I
( \\ lllllt'r~ tn bold)

Charlie Sh epherd

H,J\'t'r \ '. i\]e,-

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Dave Harris

Tim Maloney

R in Grande AD

R e-cord : 12-.H

ll.,l'ro rd : lf- 1 I

R ecord: 11 - 11

Last Wt"t'k. (J-4

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(11 in m·rs in h2ld)

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Sh uth Gnll ia

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South Ga l!ja

Waha ma

Wa hama

Wahama

Waha rna

Wahama

,Wahama

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1r I .1' ' ,: r 11

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Pojni Pleasant

Point Pleasant
Bishop Donahue

l,.,,m

lron tu u ,!!
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Previous Champions- 200 I: Butch Cooper--- 2002 : Butch Cooper --- 2003: Brad Sherman --- 2004: Brad Sherman.

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2110 iutem lvanua (II. Rt. 7) • Galllpalll, Dhlo

(740) 448-9777. (740) 441-2484
..

Eastern

score for the Mason County
team . Clay Rou sh recovered a pair of fumble s with
Kamcron Sayre and Kri s
Gibbs comin g up with one
loose ball apiece. Sayre
and junior Nathan Stafford
have been the Fal con s
defensive leaders · through
the first two weeks of the
2005 football season .
Wahama is expect ed to
start junior Brenton Clark
(6-0. 155 ) at quarterback
with senior Brandon Fowl er
15- 10. 170). junior Kri s
Gibbs (6-0, 165 ) arid
sophomore Derek Veazy (5 7. 145) in the backfield.
Junior Nathan Stafford al so
fi gures to gail) a great deal
of playing time totin g the
pigskin after a mong performance against Fede ral
Hocking.
The wide receiver will be
se nior Cha se Ord (5-11 .
1-lO) wi th senior Kameron
Sayre 16-1. 190) at tight
end. The interior line is
ex pe cted to be se ni ors Clay
Roush (6- 1 225 ). Nathan
Dingey (6--1. 23 1). Ju s tin
Bell (5-9 , 240)· and . Cndy
Herdman (6-0, 195 ) along
with juni or Jordan Rou sh
(5-8. 220).

from Page Bl
running game has been particularly troublesome for
Coach Ed Cromley \ charges
while catching the football
has al so plagued the Bend
Area offense. WHS averages
just over 100 yards per game
on the ground while throwing
for nearly 150 yarcb . Junior
quarterback Brenton Clark
lead s the Falcons offense
with 66 rushing yards and.
281 yards through the air.
Junior Kri s Gibbs has run for
61 yards with ' enior wide
receiver Chase Ord anti
senior running hack Brandon
Fowler being the : top
receivers with 116 and 72
yards respectably ..
Defen sively the Wahama
gridders are gi ving up 15 .5
points per game while lim iting it s opponent; to fewer
than 200 yard s in total
offen se per game. The
Whit e Falcon s forced fiv e
turnover s again st Federal
Hocking with Chase .Ord
picking off three Lancer
passes and returnin g one for
what became the winning

Rushing
Yards
257

Att .
45

Ber nie Fulks (SG)
Jare d Ca sey (M)

237
226

28
40

3

Dave Poole (M) Curl Waugh (SG)

190

21

2

190
163

28
20

2

152

I

127

29
22
22

Jayrne Haggerry (GA)

126

18

A lan Dye (H)
Se th Haner (GM
Aaron Story (M}
Brenton ClarK (W)

109
78
69
66

28
13
11
10

Derrick Beaver (SG t'
TraVIS Ritll e (PP )
Sco tt Hunt (AVJ

65
65
63

52
13
21

Kris Gtbbs (W)

61

15

Jesse McKn1ght (S)

51
51

16
16

13 1

Jarro cl Stouffer (PP)

Weekday

I

o.
.1
0

2
0
0
0

Jeff Golden (GA)
Brenton Clark (W)

281

16

48

1

1

228
156
150

I&gt;
9
8

26
17
22

3
2
0

3
0
0
1

Aaron Story (M)

826

9

1

BrandOn Warner (PP )
Jamea Caato (PP)
Ryan Chapman (S)
Chrlt Edwards (RV)

70
4
43
4
26
6
201

10
11
12

1
0
1
0
0
3
00

2

e

2
3
3
2
2

49
42
41

4
2
3

37
30
30
25
24
20

4
3
2
2
2
1
1

Jared Cuey (M)
Otrllt Young (E)

Sttaphen Robinson (GA )
Jultln saunders (GA)
Bryan Corde ll (AV J
Kam Sayre (WJ

I

17

I

5
'

2
0
1

'

It will also be their final
non-league meeting for the
foreseeable future as Ironton
is one offour teams set to join
Ohio
the
Southeastern
Athletic League beginning
next season. The Devils ·and
Tigers will continue to face
each ·other every year as both
will· be members of the South
Division.
Kickoff is slated for 7:30
p.m.

and 157 more through the air. ·
For the ye&lt;\r, MHS has
given up 724 total yards of
offense. while the Raiders
have allowed 709 yards
defensively.
The Raiders have been
outscored on the year by a
clip of 64-36, while Meigs
has been more competitive
with a 55-53 deficit.
·Turnovers will also· play an
important part in Friday's
gridiron contest.
Meigs enters Week Three
with a turnover ratio of -4,
while. RVHS comes in with
half that total at -2.
Tile final area to watch in
this rivalry matchup is penalties.
The Marauders have been
penalized seven times for 65
yards during 2005. while
River Valley has been
!lagged II times for 70 yards.
Meigs will also be looking
to improve its home record to
I-I this Friday, while River
Valley will be making its
road debut for 2005.
Kickoff at Bob Robert·s
Field is slated for 7:30 p.rr;r.

$89·.50

$17.55

$71.60

Sunday

$26.85

2 Col . .x 2"

Weekday

0

$23.40

0

2

Sunday
Haggerty
Borders and Artwork
f

...

.PrEp Golf -

TVC Hocking

Trimble edges 'DoeS on tiebreaker
Bv

BRAD SHERMAN

BSHERMAN@MYDAILVTAIBUNE,COM

GLOUSTER
Julie
Trace and Brian Metcalf
were Trimble's fourth or fifth
be st golfers Tuesday at
Forest Hills.
Why · is that important ?
They were the reason the
Tomcats kept their lead atop
the Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division standings.
Trimble and Southern were
tied at 151 after four· golfers,
so· it went to tifth place for
the tie break. Trace and
Metcalf each ' hot 41 , while
Southern 's five-man Alex
Hawley carded a 46.
,
The Tomcats were protecting a slim one point lead in
the standings when the day
began, but padded that cushion · to two, 14- 12, over

PrEp Golf

~

Johnaon

De , p i t e
f ini s hin g
fourth in the
m a t c h .
E as t e rn
remained in
third place iti
the
standmgs,
now
wi th
nme
poi nt s. Evan
Dunn . and _
Mi c ha e l
Owen s each &gt;hOt 41 for' the
Eagles. foll owed by Jacob
Warner \ 42 and a 43 by
~yan Nave.
In ·local 'core' tha t did not
count toward the fin al tallies.
Southern's John Bentz shot
47, while Kyle Edwards and
Nathan Carroll tini , hed with
45 and 46 scores respectively. .
,
The TVC Hockin g scene
shifts to Qxbow on Tuc&gt;day.

Southern.
Miller
scored 166
on Tuesday,
g o o d
enough for
third, edging
Eastern at
] 6 7· .
Waierford
tired a 178 ' - - and Federal
Harris
Hockin~ ,

which has finished .last 111
every match this season , did
so a~ain with a robust 21 3.
Tnmble 's. Tyler Barrett
won medalist honors with a
34. Joel Barrett and Adam
Mulford each added 38"s for
the winners.
Patrick Johnson and Bryan
Harris each shot two-over par
36 's to lead Southern. Brad
Crouch had a round of '37 and
Josh Smith a 42.

TVC Ohio

Meigs third at latest Ohio match
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTR IBUNE.COM

. JACKSON
Belpre
pulled to within two points of
Meigs in the Tri-Valley
Conference Ohio Division
golf title chase Tuesday with a
four-stroke victory over
Wellston at Franklin Valley
Golf Course.
The Golden Eagles tightened the Marauders· season
lead to 22-20 with a team
score of 157, led by Travi s'
Hayton ·s one-over-par 35,
The runner-up Rockets
ended the day with 161 points
and pulled to within four
points of MHS for the league
race, as Alex Milliken fired a
34 to claim medalist honors on

the day.
T h e
Maroon and
Gold
tinished
10
shots back of
Belpre with a
167 and were
ledbySteven
Stewart with
a 39.
Stewart
·D a n
B·o okman
was next for Meigs with a 41,
followed by Josh Venoy with a
43 . Jake Venoy rounded out
the team score with 44.
Dru Reed tired a 45 and
Cody Davidson shot 48 to end
the Marauders' day.
Alexander linished with a
team score of 197, edging ou,t

host Vinton
County(201 )
for
fourth
p I a c e .
Nelsonvi lleYork agu in
fini shed last
with a 226.
O v erall .
v i n t o ·n
County sits in
Bookman . fourth with
nine point s
on the season, while th e
Spanans are ahead of the
Buckeyes by four points fo r
fifth position.
Meigs will return to TVC
Ohio action today when it
travels to · Hidden Hills
(Alexander) for a 4::10 p.m.
· tee-off.

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\:.Pe

t

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SALEbration
Saturday, Sept~mbe.r 10, 2005
9:00am - 9:00pm

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Southern ·

Sunday

2 Col.~ 3"
Weekday $35.1 0
...Sunday $53.70

1

f

Weekday

,
----------------4

1
0

1
1
0
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Sunday

I .·' .

2
0

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1 Col. x 3" -

. I

I '( •

TO

Rec .
8

$58.50

$46.80

I

Golden

Receiving

Bralidon Fowler (WI
Cody Gtrlac" lEI
Michael Cordell (RV)
Ttavla Riffle (PP I
Krll Glbba (W) .
Terry Dural (E)
Joth Buzzard (M)
Will Slono (PP)
Demclt Beaver (SQ)

Others
receiving
votes:
Ravenswood 7, South Cha~eston
5, Matewan 2, Parkersburg
Catholic 2. Calhoun County 1.

Weekday

$17.90
3 . 1

11 5

9

Weekday

Sunday

Edwards

28

103
77
74
72
B3
82
57
53

5
NR

9

2 Col.x 4"

$11.20

I
1

12

Cutt11i McCombl (SOJ
Bryce Honaker (E)
Ryen Henry (!W)

50
·36
35
34
31

26
.18
13

2 Col.·x 5"
1 Col. x 2" -

331

C"a .. Ord (W)

6. Williamstown

7. Ripley
B. Herbert Hoover
9. Capital
10. St. Albans

2
7
8
6
4
NR

Here are some of the most popular "Thank You" ad sizes.

I

Ylrclt
270

Prev. Votes
1 59

1. Parkersburg (5)
2. Wayne (1)
3. Parkersburg South
4. Nitro
5. Buffalo

area."

.

3
0
3

TO Int.

Player
Jayma Haggerty (GA)

parenthesis)

SHOW
APPRECIATION TO YOUR FAIR BUYER ...
.

r---------------~

2

Yards Comp . An.

· Bryan Morrow (RV)

A took at the top football teams
ln Western West Virginia as voted
by the Ohio Valley Publishing
sports staff. (First-place votes In

Meigs County Fair "Thank You" Ads

I

Passing

Seth Williamson {SG)

West Virginia Edition

3

Player
Jordan Pierce (E)

Meigs

0

Team

Tiger running game.
"'They' re going to want to
get real physical and want to
pound on us and control the
game with their power running game," Bokovi!z said.
Lewis, who will run at
Marshall University beginning next season, has 263
yards and five touchdowns
through two wins. Throw in
fullback Jared Murphy and 'it
gives the Tigers a powerful 12 punch .
"As a taltdem, they kind of
present problems, they can hit
you in so many different areas
at the line of scrimmage,"
Bokovitz explained.
·
Another weaP.on is quarterback Chad M1ller, who like
Wheelerburg signal caller
John Storey, is able to run the
football. Storey burned the
Devils for 145 yards in the
first half last week on quarterback keepers.
Miller may be even more
dangerous, according to
Bokovitz.
"That quarterback is a scary
individual on the keeper," he
said, " you saw what
Wheelersburg did to us last
week on that fake and keep this kid is faster and a better
athlete than the kid we saw at
quarterback last week.
"Our kids are going to have
to stay put and play their

attempt s. Story's efforts have
also produced a touchdown
and an interception during his
live-plus quarters of action .
from Page Bl
In the receiving depart!Tient,.River
Valley has a pair
headed monster approach tn
big-play
threats in Ryan
of
the rushing department to
claim the third and fourth Henry and Mic~ael Cordell.
Henry \eai:ls RVHS with four
spots on that same OVP list.
for 74 yards from hi s
catches
Senior tailback Jar~ Casey ·
fullback
spot, while Cordell
currently sits third in the
region with 40 carries for 226 has hauled in three grabs for
, yards, while fullback David 62 yards. Neither has a score,
Poole is one position back so far, this season .
The Maratlders· main tarwith 190 yards on 21
get
in the passing game is
attempts .
Josh
Buzzard, who has two
With a talented trio of work
horses in those respective catches for 42 yards. Both ·
backfields, freeing up run- receptions have resulted in
ning room will also take on a touchdowns.
Since both teams possess a
significant importance during
talented
blend of otlensive .
thi s week's match up:
options
,
defen se wi II · also
RVHS junior quarterback
Bryan Morrow has complet- play another key factor in the
ed 8-of-22 passes for 150 outcome of this contest.
Meigs has allowed 432
yards this season. Story has
yet to throw a touchd"own rushing yards on 74 tries
pass or an interception.
· (5.84 ypc) thi's season and
MHS sophomore signal another 292 yards through
caller Aaron Story has tilled the air. while t)le visitors
in nicely during his tirst sea- from Galli a County have sur.son under center with · 82 rendered 552 yards on 63
yards passing on 6-of-9 rushing attempts (8.76 ypc)

TD

Ctms Edwards IAV)

Brandon Warne r (PP)
Butch Marnhout (S)
Duslin Wtnlers (GA}
Terry Durst (E)

Ohio Valley Pullllshl1!9 Poll

Please see Dave or Brenda at the The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
or call 992-2155 fpr details. Ads must be paid for in advance.

OVP Leaders (thru Week 2)
Player

Eastern
ha s
labored . mu st be replaced.
Durst , Honaker and Pierce .
mightily on th e defensive
During the 2005 cam- Durst is the leading ground
side or the football to date paign the Eagles feature a gainer for Eastc:rn with 127
in allowing 60.5 points ,and pair of returning starters in ru shing
yards
while
over 425 yard s per game in the backfield as well as a Honaker is the leading
total offense to the opposi- couple of leaders among the receiver with 77 yards.
tion . The Eagles suffered a interior
The receivers are expectline. Bruising
54-35 loss to South Gallia senior fullback Terry Durst ed to be juniors Cody
after the Rebel s scored 28 (6-1 . 230) and senior run- Gerlach (5-9 , 148) and
unan swered points to erase ning mate Bryce Honaker Derek Young (5-9 , 150)
a 19-12 Eastern advanta~ (5- 10, 195) return along with
sophomore
Kyle
on the road in its season with senior linemen Lucas Gordon . (5-8. 130) also
opener. Against Zane Trace Grueser (5-I 0, 200) and catching a pass on the seathe Mei gs Count y team Brandon Batey (6-7 , 300) son. Joining Grueser and
allowed three first period as the leaders for . the Batey on the line will be
touchdown s on a 54-yard Eastern II.
senior Levi Clegg (5-11.
run , · an interception return
Sophomore Jordan ·Pierce . 220) along with sophoof 37 yards and a punt (5 - I ,0 155) has appa~entfy mores Zach Newell (5-I 0.
return of 61 yards from captured the quarterback 200) and Daniel Buckley
which the Eagles never role and has performed very (5-I 0, 200).
re covered .
well with 228 yards passing · Wahama owns a 17-6.
Couch .Pat Newland . in with three touchdowns and edge in the ·series against
hi s fourth season at the East three interceptions ·on the Eastern with the two neighMeigs School , lost only a year. Junior
Chadd boring school s splitting the
handful of starters from last Whitlatch (5-9, 170) is also past six ou'tings. Kickoff
years 7-3 squad but among expected to be found time for the Eagles home
those departures was ·s&lt;lll1e amoQg the Eagle starters in opener is scheduled "' for
c&gt;Lils tanding athlete s that the backfield along with 7:30p.m.

victory will be
the OUtside
- where the
Blue devils can
take advantage
of their speed
and athleticism.
"Our athletes
need to block their athletes out
on the perimeter when we do
stuff to the outside," he said.
"In the past, that.'s been a .very
big . problem for us, we 're a
spread team and we have to
block on the perimeter.''
Ironton's main concern will
be stopping the · versatile
Jayme Haggeny, who has 396
total yards from scrimmage
and five touchdowns.
While Haggerty will likely
.
1tne up under center c&lt;Or a few
. senes . Fnday. he WIH not
exclus1vely play there ltke last
season, when Ironton held the
bl~e and whtte to 112 yards of
total offense dunng a 30-0
victory.
,
Instead, they_II have to
gam~ plan for htm at flanker.
-run~mg back and quarterback.
!twill also be the first ttme the.
T1gers see sophomore Jeff
Golden, as he took over . in
week seven last year.
Golden has thrown for 331
yards and three scores m wm'
over
Me1gs
and
Wheelersburg, . connectmg
w1th Haggerty twtce on touchdown passe~ of 60-plus yards.
Dustm W1nters, who had ,a
huge game m last Fnday s
· v1ctory wtth I 08 yard~ and
three touchdowns, will be the
Devils' big running threat.
Ironton 's stable of runners
need no introduction to Gallia
Academy fans. as they paved
t~e way to more than 400
yards of total offense in last
year 's game.
Darius Lewis leads a tr:rdem"ark Bob Lutz smash mouth
011

The Daily SenBne.l • Page 83

Southern su stained al) 80yard drive that was completed with a two-yard Marnhout
run. Marnhout and McKnight
from PageBl
were the set-up men on the
drive, along with ten yard
have won. Our offense is pass
completion
from
improving daily. The bottom Chapman
to
Ryan
line is. we are improving and Donaldson.
we are looking for a 'W' this
Southern's Mike Brown
week."
and Buddy Young had sacks,
Southern's bright spot last while Matt Lehew and Teddy
Friday came in the (arm of an Brown had. fumble recover·improving offense that was ies.
Darin
Teaford,
led by Butch Mamhout, who McKnight, and Weston
cracked the I00-yard mark Counts had . several big
with a 17 -for-10 I yard game. defensive play s for th e
Additionally, Marnhout had · Tornadoes.
I 04 yards on kick-off qr puitt
While South Gallia 's ~ y es
returns, pushing him over the will be on Marnhout and
200-yard mark for the game McKnight . Southern finds
in overall yardage.
itself up against a gaggle of
Jesse McKnight hammered talented Rebel backs. 'In the
.out 36 yards on 10 carries. last two games they have
Ryan Donaldson caught a arnassed 432 yards and 296
pass for ten yards, and Josh yards total offense.
Pape caught three passes for
Struggling · the first night
ten yards. Ryan Chapman did ·out, Rebel quarterback Seth
Williamson broke into the
the passing for Southern.Untimely mistakes · left ozone layer with an awesome
Southern ih the hole much of 8-of-14 passi ng night la&gt;l
the game.Two times an inter- week, passing for \43 yards
ception and fumble insid~ its and two tou chdown s. The
20 took away posstble Rebels had 15:1 yards on the
Southern scores, a fumble set ground led by Bern ie Fulks
· up Symmes Valley in scoring with an even 100 yards on II
position, and a penalty . took carries, and Curt Waugh ( 12-·
away a Tornado score. 44). Williamson , Derek
Another ill-timed roughing . Beaver. and Dewey Cantrell
the kicker (punter) on 4th and also mix it up in the bac ~­
31 gave Symmes a tirst down field.
In th e receiving departand led to a score.
ment,
Southern has had. to
Coach Grueser indicated
that his team has ,worked on .beef up it s secondary to stop
improving mental toughness the likes of Dustin McCombs
and worked diligently to who grabbed I03 yards on
avoid mistakes like those last five catche s last week as
Williamson's t:1vorite target.
Friday.
l~ate in the game last week . Beaver caugl11 . two · carc hes

for 24 yards.
McCombs and Beaver
caught touchdown passes and
Fulks had a 24 yard run to
account for the Rebel scoring
last week .
In the first game both
Waugh ( 146) and Fulks ( 13 7)
had one ~hundred yard games
for an e~plosive Rebel
offense.
Obviously. the Rebel s have
many weapons and Burleson
has placed much confidence
in his teamfs athletic abilities .
With so many offensive
options SG is hard to stop .
Southern, however, has put a
solid defense on the field.
Green had· 16 first downs and
196 yards against South
Gallia, while in comparison
·Green had just nine first
down s and 194 total yards
against Southern.
like Southern, the . Rebel
defense has been called upon
to take a goal line stand .
Both defensive units have ·
heen relied upon heavily.
Giving credit where credit is
due, Southern's defense gave ·
up 2R points last week and a
hefty amount of turf, but
· offensive mistakes and penalties gave Symmes Valley second t·hances they otherwise
would not have had.
Throw out the records. This
game is going to be a good
one and go right down to the
wire. Over the years.. ,i sense
of rivalry · has developed
between these two schools,
making for a fun , compet1tive
atmosphere . Saturday will be
no different. G:1me time is

n oP m

Plb OUT

ON USI

Plg Roast

a.t 2:00p.m.
\

SO% off· Rocky Worksman Clothing and Selected Boots

30% off All Walls Clothing
20% off All S~entbl~cker and Scentlock
. .Clothing
20% off All Rocky Boots
20% off .All Carhan Clothing
20% off All Gun Safes (ask about special deals)
lO% off All KOLPIN 4-Wheeler Accessories

10% off Store Wide Savings (except for gun, bows. and sale items)

Buy any Bow instock and get $30.00 in free bow ac(:essories
(While Supplies Last)

REGISTER to WIN:

'Directions:
Take 1-77 to Fairplain Exit 132
Behind 84 Lumber

(304) 373-0400

-.:.-==--=~=====·::.::'==:=..::.___. : ._______..:. _•-·.;,=--- 1---___;,---~~--------~--------·-

�Page B4 • Th'e Daily Sentinel

Southeaetern Ohio Athletic League
SEOAL
PF
000
000

o-o

Gallia Academy
Jackson

0-0

W·L
2-0
1-1

PF
65
30

PA
36
11

0-0

000 000

1-1

29

30

Athens
Mariana
Warren

0-0
0-0
0-0

000
000
000

o-2
0-2
0-2

48
20
21

86

'---

S~uthern

ALL
PA
000
000

logan

000
000
000

BY

7J

Ohio Valley Conference
ovc
Coal Gro\le

PF

0-0

000 000

0{}

000
000
000
000

ALL
W·L· PF
PA
1· 1 42
60
H
36
64
1·1
62
2t
1·1
28
68
0·2 26
71
0·2 20
82

PA

o.o ·ooo ooo

River Valley

· Rock Hill
South Point
Chesapeake
Fai rland

1).0

0·0
1).0

000
000
000
000

Fotday'o gamoo

Lott woet&lt;
W~r.:s

Chesapeake at Symines Valley
Falrtand at Sheldon Clark
RM!r Valley at Meigs
Rock Hill at Oak Hill
WeHston a1 South Po1nt
Coal Grove is tOLE

44, Chesapeake 6

Coal Grove 28. FaiNiew 24
Winfield 34, Fairland 14
Nelsonville 44, River Valley 6
Rod&lt;. Hill 40. Vinton CQunty 14
hanlon 62, South Poiot.7

Tri-Valley Conferenc;e .
Ohio Division
I
TVC
W·L PF PA
0·0 000 000
1).0 000 000

Nelsonvil le -York
Belpre

Alexa nder
Meigs

0·0

All
W•L
2·0
2·0
1·1
1-1
1· 1
0·2

000 000

o-o ooo ooo ·
0·0 000 000
1).0 000 000
Hocking OIVIIIO!"
W·L PF PA
0·0 000 000

Wel ls ton

Vi[lfon County
Trimble
Waterford
Eastern
Federal Hocking
Miller
Southern

0-0
0-0

000 000
000 000

()..0

000

0.0

000 000

o-o

W·L
2·0
1- t

0-2
0-2
0-2
0.2

ooo ooo
000

PF
83
1
32

s

53

20
20
PF
59
39
35
t3

,2
S

PA
27
28
26

5s

29

61
PA

6
53
.121
46
39
35

Friday's gameo
Laet week
Athens at Ale.xender
Trimble 26, Alexander 6
Belpre at Williamstown
Meigs 47, Athens 27
River Valley at Meigs
Nelsonville 44, River Valley 6
Nelsonville-York at Fairfield Union
Rock Hlll40, Vinton County 14
Jack.son at Vinton County
Wellston 20, Minford 15
Wellston at South Point
Zane Trace 67, Easlern 0
Wallama at Eastern
Wahama 14, Federal Hocking 7
Newscomerstown 13. Miller 12 OT Park . C?tholic at F9deral Hocking
. Miller at Green
Symmes Valley 28, ~ e rn 6
Trimble at Soutneastern
Watsr1ord 21, Frontier 20
Col. Harvest at Waterford
Belpre 41. Fort Frye 21
Southern at South Gallia (Sat)

Cardinal Conference
CARDINAL
W·L ·PF PA
t -0 21
6
t -0 19 0
0·0 0
p
0·0 0
0
0·0 0
0
0·0 0
0
0·? 6 " 40

Poca
Pt. Pleasant
Herbert Hoover
Wayne
Logan.
Winfield
Sissonville

Laet weetc.

...•••

ALL

1·1
1·1

PF
31
31
75
71
52
34

0·2

6

W.L

2{}
2{}

PA

20
31
25

6
79
24
40

Fotday'o 98"'"'

o

Poin t-Pleasant 19, ·sissonvme
Herbert Hoover 46. Roane Co. 6
Johnson Central 69. LOgan 40
Wayne 44, Chesapeake 6
Winfield 34, Fair1and 14
Ravenswood 14. Poca 10

Magnolia at Point Pleasant
Ww:yne at Herbert Hoove r
Poca at Logan
Sissonville at Wlnfiek:t

J.

South Gallla
Wahama
Hannan
'

' ALL
PF
74
31

0-2

6

•
PA
42
31
94

'

.

Subscribe today:

Fo1day'ogamoo

lall week
Wahama 14, Federa l Hcx:king 7
South Gallia 20, Green 7
Montcalm 54, Hannan 6

ScoTT WOLFE

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE
LOCAL FOLKS.
.

Non-League
W·L
2-0
, _,

\!Cribune - Sentinel - 1\e
-C L A S S I F I E D

defeats South Gallia in four games

ME RCERVILLE - The Southern
Lad y. Tornadoes (4-2) defeated the
·South Ga ll ia Lady Rebe ls ( 1-5) in four
sets Wed nesday nigl)t afte r Sout h
Ga llia. clai med the
opening game of lhe ·
ma lc h du ri ng loca l
gi rl s' hi gh sc hool va rsi ty vo lleyball aclion.
L~dy
Re be ls
The
o pened with th e 26-24
win , th e n · South ern
e nded
wilh
th ree
st raigh t vic tori es 25 ·
14. 25- 13, and 25 -1 3.
Whit ney
Wolfe·
Roble
Riffle led th e Lad y
Torn ad oes wi th 2 4
po ints, tin d Be;tha ny
Rifll e had 18 po int s.
Both also contributed
wi th great tloor ga mes.
In th e fi rst ga me of the
South e rn ' s
matc h,
Kri stiina
Will iam s
became · il l and had to
leave ttJe ga me and did
not re llt1'n for lhe 'other
Wolfe-Riffle three ~ ames of th e
match.
.
1
Coac h Ron'la Sayre said, · 1 think thi s
'(W.illi aii)S leaving the 'ga me) threw us
off at fir st, but the girl s adjusted and
started to play well toge th er. Thi s was
Bryan WaHers/photo
another good team win ."
'
Eylem Gurbuzer had te n kill s for the Southe rn 's Jenny Warner, far left , spike s the ball past South Gallia blocker Niki Fulks,
Tornadoes, Ashl ey Robi e . had e ight, right, during Wednesday's 24-26. 25·14, 25·13. 2 5-1 3 win in Mercerville . Southern 's
and Je nn y Warner fi ve . Amber Hill As hley .Robie (11) looks on in the foreground.
and Adelle Ri ce did a good j ob off the
The second game wa s sparke d by the good teams we play in the future·
bench.
Gurbuzer, who had most of her ten we will have to se rve ben er. We
Jill Swain and Che lsea Canaday eac h
kill s in lhe set, dominatil)g th e net with haven' t bee n ge tting th ose points, and
had I 3 poi nts fo r ·the Rebels. Can aday five booming spikes. Robie ha&lt;l gopd to continue to be successful we have to
al so had six kill s, an d three dinks in a spi king games throughout the eve nin g, improve the serve."
, ni ce overa ll game .. G le nn a Wri g ht bu t was th ~ bi ggest fa c tor in
Southern won the reserve game 27add ed el e ve n po ints, whil e s ·wain South ern 's success in the third round. 25, 22-2 5, 15-8 in three sets over
norched th ree kill s and three blocks .
Although the score in th e fin a le Souih Galii a. South Gallia was. led by
Sou thern we nt up 5- l in· the first appears one-sided, the ga me started Kelsey Wells w ho had 20 po in1 s overgame and started to build momentum, o ut ve ry tig ht. The fo urth and final all and eight serv ice points.
·
raising. Ihe bar to 10-4. Then Southe rn game was cJose in lhe early stages,
Southe rn goes to Eas tern Thursda y
spullere&lt;;l and about the same tim e then Ade ll e Ri ce he lped break open an for the Tri -Valley Co nference season
Swain started to show her presence at 8-6 sco re with a co upl e good serves . o pe ner.
the ne l. Swain and Canaday ga ve Eyl e m Gurbuzen nd Robi e controlled
Southern a one-two punch, and Wri ght the net wi th several assi'sts from th e
chipped in a couple service poin ts, Ri ffl e- Riffl e combin ation . Southe rn
allowing South Gallia to co me bac k to pull ed away o n a string of Wolfe,Rifll e
lead 16- 15. The gam e tee te red around serves and Southern cla imed the 25- I 3
a one point margin as South Galli a win and the match.
pushed to 23-24, then after a missed
"We played better at limes· toni ght,
'
Southern return. the Rebels pulled off but we still lacked con sistency," said ' '
the 26-24 win .
South Gallia Coach Amy Shriver.
SoUihern preny mu ch pull ed away in
South ern 's Coac h Sayre co ntinued,
the middle two games of the match . ''Ou r serv ing still needs work . To beat

Warren at Fort Frye
Manetta at Canton G~ (Sat.)

W·L

www.rny.dallysentlnel.cotn

60

Foidly'o-

1 Athens

Thursday, September 8, 2005

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

at AkDtandel'
loootoo at Gsllia Academy
Jad&lt;son at V111too County
Pld&lt;enngton Nor1h at Logan

Meigs 47, Athens V
GaJiia ~ 37, ~ 30
Wawrty 17, Jaci&lt;son t6
Logan 29, Chillicothe 23
Cambridge 41 , Marietta 13
Philo 40. VncentWarren 14

2005

Pr~p Vol/~yba/1

Expanded Glance
W.L

Thursday,.S eptemb!!r 8,

www.mydailysentinel.com

992-2155

Wahama at Eastem

Bishop Donahue at Hannan (Sat,.)
Southern at South Gal l~ (Sat.)

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

C•lll.o Count)', OH

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

..
/

(.

..

l\egister
~ribune
Sentinel
·Your Ad,
(7 40) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675~1333
Call TOday... ' or Fax To 446·3008
or Fax To (740) 992-2157
To Place

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

SHERIFF SALES
' CASE
NUMBER
05CV051
WELLS FARGO BANK
Plaintiff VS
Billy J . Trout etal
Defendant
Court o f

BINGO

, _fence

to

Wm .

G.

Castor's line, thence

West

to Wm. · G.

Casltor's

corner;

thence Sou!h to the
pace of b6glnning,

·
Common

containing 14 acres,
mora or tess.

Pleas, Meigs· County,

PARCEL 3: Beginning
al the S.W. corner of a
I 4 acre lot owned by
Wm. G. Castor In eeid

Ohio
,
In pur suance of an
order of sale ·to me
directed from said
court In the above

entitled acllon, I will
expose to sale at public. auction on .the
front steps of the

Mefgs County Court
House on Friday,
October 7, 2005 at 10

Section 33, running
South 5 rode ; thence

East 80 rods to the
line between H.R.
Litle and JL. Westfall,

lherice

8

rods

along

Uld line to the S.E.
cotner of.said Wm. G.
Casltor;s

appraised value 10%
down on day of sale,

cash or certified
check, balance due
on

Lerner,

corner of Section 33·,
. thenc e North. to the

Fraction
33,
In
Seclion 27, town 9,

middle of Section 33,

Range . 15, Ohio
Company's Purchaae.
Parcel 4 being ume

said

Morris'. lot;

thence

west to 8 lot
forme rly owned by G .
G. M cl a in ~ · thence
. south on an agreed

line to the section
line; thence East on

said se ction line to
the plac e of beginning , c ontaining 66

acres more or less.

PARCEL2; Beginning
at the middle of the
West line of the S.E.
quar t er
of
said ·
S ec t ion 33, th e nce
r unnlog Ea s t to the

fence, the
line
belween H.R. Laile
(sic) and Rueben
Walburn ;
thence
North a lo ng
and

real estate

conveyed

by We"slsy A. Gregory
and wife to Margare'
Gregory by deed of
June 16, 1928, of
record Deed Book 134

Page 358, said Meigs
County
Deed
Records.
Curre,nl Owner: Billy
J. Trout
Property AI: 39070 St.
Rt. 689
Albany, Ohio 45710
PP, 05-00282, 05·
00283, 05-0D284
Prior

Deed

References : Volume

143, Page 825
A'pproisad
$130,000.00

at

4007

513·241·3100
(9) 1, a, t5

Announcements

Public Notice

be sold fro lass than

of

LEGAL NOTICE
The Meigs County ·
Council on Aging,
inc:., P.O. Box 722 , 112
E.

Memorial

Drive,

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
will accepl btda for
the following: 1996
Dodge High Top Yen,
11·paasangar

with

wheelchair lilt. sealed
bids will be accepted
until
Friday,
Saptember 16, '2005.
l'lie Meigs County
Council on Aging, Inc,
reserves the right lo
reject any
and all blda. For more
lnformalion call 740accept or

American
Legion
Posl467
All you can eat
and drink for
$7.00
Where:
· R~tland . OH
" 'When :
Sept. 9th 2005'
Time:

992·2161 .
(9) 6, 8

Public Notice
The folloWing mobile
home will be offered
at public sale on
Friday, September 16,
21105 1:110 p.m. at 57
Ayero Blvd., Belpre
Salos Center, 45714
1997 Oakwood 28 x
80
Serial
IHONC02232775AB
minimum
bid
$47,900.00. Terms
caeh to the hlghaat
bidder.

on

SAVINGS

(9) 8

Terms of Sale: Cannot

2/3rds

Sampson,

Thinking of yo u
Brenda Tatterson
2- t'5-51· 9·8,01
WE MISS YOU
Love ,
Lisa, Kelli
Brandon &amp;

14 acre lot;

!hence W9sl 80 rods
following described
to the place of begin·
nlng, existing 4 acres.
• real esta te .
Legal Description:
Parcels 1, 2 and 3
Situated In the State being same real
of OH , County \ bf estate conveyed by W.
B. Gregory and .wile
Meigs and in t~e
Columbia
of to Margaret Gregory·
Township
by deed of May 27,
PARCEL 1: Being In 1942, of record Deed
Section 33, Town 9, Book 151 page 64, of
Range 15, Ohio the Melg' County
Company's Purchase ,
Deed Recorda.
Columbia Township, PARCEL4: Wast forty
Meigs
County. acres of land in the
Beginning at the R.E . Soul~ eighty acres of

S outh to the c orner of

ot

&amp;Rothfuss
P.O. Box 5480
120 E. 4th Street, 8th
Floor
Cincinnati, OH 45202 ·

am, of said day, the

thence West lh lands
for m e rly O'!/ned by
Wm . Morris ; thence

confirmation

sate.
Robert E. Beagle,
Meigs County Shariff
Attorney for the
Plaintiff

the

Shop
Ctassifieds!

50% off Storewide!
Acquisitions
Fine Jewelry

Friday Night Special
3 packs for$20
Start of new progressive
Saturday Nile Special
' $5 PACKS '

Fri- Sat- Sun

$1000 COVERALL
$500 BLOCK OF NINE
$500 4 Leaf Clover
(13) $100 GAMES

Sept. 9-10-11
French 500
Flea Market

Doors open 4 pm
Early Birds 5:15 pm
Reg. Session 6:30 pm
124 Highland Ave.
Point Ple a sant, WV

Now through 9/13

Gallia County Fairgrounds
Dealers Welcome

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

Dally .. In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

All Dl•play: 12 Noon :1

Monday-Friday for ln-rtlon

Bu•lne•• Day• Prior To

In Next Day•• Paper

Publication ·

Sunday In-Column : 1:00 p . m .
For Sunday• Paper
'
.

sunday Dl•play: 1:00
Thur'eday for Sunday•

Items

• Include Phone Number And Addreas When Needed
• Ada Should Run 7 D•v•

ePo=Y~

\\"\fl\ \(I \II \ I._,

-------_.1I

GIVEAWAY

r

i

;'ERsoNAU;

L

I Lr___Los'I.FOUND_
.AND
_ _,..,I

Free La rge ye llow1 tong
haired male cal. Has been
Att ractive SWF looking for nutered. Loves people-no!
attracti11e
SWM
for other cat s. 740 -992-6856
Frien dship an d possible ....
more. Reply to PO Box 3,
AND
Firaziers Bottom ,
25082

Garage Sale. 322 17 Lasher
Road, Rutland. Assorted
Items, appliances. Fri. &amp;
Sat. , 9-Ei PM, follow signs.

Lost: Ca lico adult cat, mostly
ye llow wlblack &amp;While face,
· · a nswets to
sma I 1n s1ze.
·11 e
BeII e. L ost ·1n Add av1
Found all black Siamese cat school area . Fam ily pet.
with cream &amp; brown kitten (740)367- 7547.
·
w1th
per1ect
markin gs.
;3pring Vall ey. (740)446·
YARDSAJ..E

Huge 6 fa mily yard sale.
Sept.
thru
17t h.
R d
Kl
Rocks prin gs oa at
ng
Residence

l...uiT
FOUND

SWM Middle aged Non
Smoker1 Drug. Alcohol Free.
Se eking SWF 40·50 honest
caring Petite w/ same
Morals. Smoker Ok, no
-Head Games . Send P11oto, 4488 .
Phone-Number to OJ Rt2
Box 940 Point Pte8sant, WV
25550

ANNouNt·.:~

9

Mah r an d Smith yard sal e.
965 Ash St reet, Middleport,
Se p t .9th - S e pt .1 0th -?
Long aberger. Home Interior,
clothes, Li ttl e Tyke and
more . cloth ing for girls and
boys.

r'

r

Y.u~o SAu:GALLIPOilS

Awesome
Yard
Sale,
September ·1Oth &amp; 11th,
9am- 5pm, Wilkesville Park.
Hu nting, fishing supplies.
tools, clothes, furn iture, boat
motor, smo kers~ more

1

I will not be Responsible lor
any debts oth er than my
own.
Jennifer Fowler
Brinker

Fri &amp; Sat., Sept. 9 &amp; 10:
Multi-family yard sale, 554
Jay Dr., Spring Valley. A ll
sizes cloth ing infant &amp; adult.
Large variety of Items
linen s/curtains, glassware
kitchenware. bOoks. Col·

Seeking information on
great"''
grandparents,
BenJamin Lowe and Nancy
:nester. Please can Shirley ·
(74 0)44~747
'

r

GI\'FAW
AY

lectibles, very o ld dresser
Lost dog- black poodle, lost with mirror &amp; desk
9am·
around New Lima Rd.,
Spm
2 Female Kittens to good Rutland, if found please cau
• Home only (304 )882·2623 (740)742-2776, $50 reward. Friday .·&amp; . Satu rday, mise
leave message
items, bikes , toys, exercise
mach ine, baby . bed/items ,
Free Kittens . Call: 740-949·
furnit ure. 2208 SR 588.
2188
Frid ay/Saturday 10am-5pm .
VCR storage cabinet, compuler desk , child piCn ic
4x4's For Ssle ..............................................725 table, riding mower. car
Announcement ....................... .... ,......... ,.....,030 seat, toys, clothes &amp; much
Antiques ....................................................... 530 more. 92 Dog wood Dr.
Apartments for Rent.. ................................. 440 .(7 40)379-92 11 .
Garage Sale Fri. Sept. 9th,
Auction and Flea Market.. .................,.........
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ........................,. 760 Sat. Sept tOi h. 8:00am5:00pm, 1149 8 u Iaville Pike.
Auto Repair ..................................................

Shop Classifieds

Autos for Sale ..............................................710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sste .............................750
Building Supplles ...................................... :.. 550
Business and Buildings .......................,..... 340
Business Opportunlty ...............................~. 210
Business Training ..........................,. ............ 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Thanks .......:.................................. 01 0
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
ElectrlcaVRefrlgerallon ............................... 840
Equ lpmenl for Rent.. ................................... 480
Excavating ....................,.............................. 830
Farm Equlpment... ....................................... 610
Farms for Rent............................................. 430
Farms for Ssle ............................................. 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490
For Sale ....................... ................................. 585
For Sale or Trade ......................................... S90
Fruits &amp; Vegetables..................................... 580
Furnished Rooms ........................................450
Gonot'll Ha ullng............ ............................... BSO
Glveeway ......................................................040
Happy Ada ....................................................050
Hay &amp; Grain ..................................................640
Help Wanted ..................................... :...........11 o
Home Improvement• ...................................a1o
Hames for Sale ............................................ 31 0
Haueehold Goods ....................................... 51 o
Houees for Rant .......................................... 41 o
In Memoriam .. ,, ............................................020
lnsurance ............. .............................. ......... . 130

Garden Equipment .......................:660
Llvestock......................................................630
Lost and Found ........................ :.................. 060
LotS &amp; Acreage ................... ,,., .....................350
Miscellaneous..... :........................................ 170
Miscellaneous Merchandlse .......................540
Mobile Ho.me Repair ....................................860
Mobile Homes for Rent ...............................420
Mobile Homes lor Sale ................................320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp;4 Wheelers ................... :......740
Musical Instruments .......................;........... 570
Piraonals .......................... :.......................... ODS
Pats for Sale ................................, ............... 560
Plumbing &amp; Healing .................................... 820
Profeaslonal Sarvlces ................................. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair.. .........................:... 160
Real E~tate Wanted .....................................360
Schools Instruction ..................................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Slluatlona Wanted ....................................... 120
Space for Rant .............................................480
Sporting Gooda .......................:................... 520
SUV's for Ssle................ .............................. 720
Trucks for Sale ............................................ 715
Upholstery ......... :....................................... ·' 870
Vans For Sslo..........:.................................... 730
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplles .................. 620
Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
Wanted to Rani ............................................ 470
Yard Sale- Gallipolis.................... ................072
Yard 5Bie-Pomeroy/Middla ......................... 074
Ya {~ Sale-pt. Pleasant ................................ 076

Lawn &amp;

•

l li.·o-·Hw&gt;-·W·ANIID--·
..

Lost: Bl ack fema le Germer.
Shepard in Pleasanl V.alley
area, fam ily pet . (740)2459502
·

r---!"""--....., ---------

WV

r

~

Something for everyone.
Garage Sale. 69 Perch St.,
Kan.ug.. Ad. ul t mach,'nes,
poker table, jukebo)t, baby
items. fumace, mower, toddler tied, bunk -beds, &amp; lots
more. Fri &amp; Sat 9am. 6pm

Garage Salel Ba~ Sale
Fundraiser for GAHS Color
Guard. Saturday. September
10- 7:00-3:00 . 3719 Sl. At.
160, jLJst past Holzer
Ho spi!al
Something tor
everyone
Large 4-tamily, Saturday
09/10105, aam -4pm, St AT
554, Kyger, OH . Beside the
Lodge Hall
Large
Var ie ty
Sale.
Ewing1on Chu rch oft, SA
signs. Fnday
160, look ~,
•u
and Saturday, 9am-7
Moving-Tools, antiques, furniture, linens. for sale. Many
clean. useful lovely items.
At. 7s at Crown City slgn.
Sept. 9th-10th.
Multl·famlly yard sale. Sept.
9 &amp; 1ci Ff'i . &amp; Sat. Sam-?
Rain or St1ine! Located on
Lovers lane In the Township
building. NewOOm-ST, boyS
&amp; girls clothes·, guns, misc.
Sept. 9_10. 2 119 ChestnUt
Ave . Clot hing- au sizes,
glassware, gfft items . lots of
misc.
,
Yard . sate 9, 10,11 . Knick
knacks, aquarium &amp; stand .
Off Evemreen
to Hemlock
·w
Rd.
·
Yard Sale. Sept 9th '&amp; 101h ,
9am -4pm , Some · bcand
names. 4371 Cherry Ridge
Ad
·
YardfGaranA 5 ..18, 1/2 mile
off Rou1e
on Bulavil!e
Pike. Sept8th· 10th, 10am·
?, Everything 20"/ootl.

"1so

r
4

3 family yard sale- 91· 1Oth1lth, time 9-. where Mile Hill
Ad ., Aacme , k.ids clothes,
Foose Ball table . bows &amp;
other misc. rtems, pt1one•
740-949-1042
5 family --Sept . Bth &amp; 9th.
341 .
Rutlan€1
Street,
Mictdleport. Cheap prices
something tor everyone.
Ra in or Sh1ne
'

r '

£'

RACO Scholarship Fund at
Star Mill Park , Racine
September 13th &amp; 14th fro m
9 to ·1. Thursday all' Items
one-half price and clothing
$1.00 a bag. Organ, sewing
machines. bicycles, linens,
shelves , L ittl e Tyk.e Toys,
door, swing, coffee table,
and of clothing, purses. haspltal bed , baskets, shoes,
glassware, dishes, toys, hoilday decorations and mi sc.
Thanlui lor your sUpport.
Sept 8t.h &amp;9th , 23 Fam.ily,
371 87 Vance Road, signss
will be posted , en tertainment center, typewriter, teen
girls name b rand , win ter
items, to ol s &amp; misc. 740·
992·6833
Sept. 9- 10. full bedroom suit
with mattress &amp; box springs,
1 chest of drawers, oak
china
Cabinet.
Warm
Morning gas stove, maga·
zine table w1th tamp, lots of
craft books, electric weigh
scal e, electric typewriter.
bed clothing, x-mas item.S
and lots more. at Drew
Fist1er
residence
, go a~nd
to
Racine Locks
&amp; Dam

~~'.io-HELP--W·ANIID---"11'~,.·o_HEL_·.p·W·AN-flll_ _.lr~,.·6-·o·!o·u·s ~;EN;--·1 ~===m="R;():s~:E.:~'E=~

AMERICA'S NUMBER ONE
HOME BUILDER is see king
a career minded, organized
and energetic person to sell
high-ticket products and
services. ~rseverance and
strong work ethi c are our
keys to making $75K or
more in th e first full year. Full
benefits including matching
401 K.
Fax con fidentia l
resume 10 Sales Positi on at
(740)446-3599 .

LI CENSED SOCIAL
WORKER
Overbrook
Rehabilitation
Center is now accepting
resumes fo r the position of
Director of Social Servi ces
Til e qualified can didate
must be a LSW possessing
strong verba l and written
communication
skills.
Medicaid , Medicare and
MDS knowledge. Long term
care expe rience preferred
but not required. _Qualified
An Excellent way to earn candidates
may send
mon ey. The New Avon.
resumes to: Charla · BrownCall Marilyn 304-882-2645
McGuire.
AN
LNHA,

Are you lookin g for a change
In your nursing? Full -time or
Pari -lime AN nee ded for
growing
home
health
agen cy. Fiexible schedul ing,
competitive wages with beneli1s. Call toll free 1-866·
368 • 1100 _
A rmed,
and
Unar med
Secui-ity Officers Needed to
travel to Areas Affected by
the Hurricane Katr ina. Up 10
$1 ,200 per week . Travel and
lodging expenses paid. 6-9
mon1hs' assignments. . All
applicants must have a
clean cr iminal record and a
High School diploma/GE D.
Applicants inust show proof
of eligibility to work. in the
US.
Security experien ce
an d armed lice·nse pre !erred . Pl ease 'apply at the·
wacken hu t ·Cor porat1on,
Ct1 arteston, wv
bra ne t) ,
between 9:30 am and 4:30
pm, beginning Sept. 6, 2005.
Address 63 9 Olde f\Aain
P18za. St . Albans,
25 177
Or call For more
information· (304)727-4608.
"P rofession alism
with
1ntegn·ty" EOE All We ....
~ ome.

wv

•NOTICE.•

house cleaning, caregiver, 2
afte rnoons per week, $7/hr.
Leave msg. (740)446·3460.

HIO VALLn PUBLISH
lNG CO. recommends tha
ou do business wtth peo

- -- - - - -- Paramedics
&amp;
EMT's

~en:~~~~wy· ~~~~uNg ~~~

needed . Ap ply at 1354
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis

ail until you have 1nvest1
ated the offerin

All real estate advertising
In this newspaper Is

I

su bject to th e Feder al
Fair Mousing Act ol 1968
which makes It illegal to
adverti se " any

I
.I

preferen ce, lim itation or
di scrimination baaed o n
race, col or, religio n, aa11:
lamlllal status or natioflal
origin, or any intention to

Administrator 333 Page
St reet , Midd leport , Ohio The Meigs County Board ol
Mental Retafdation and
45760 · EOE
Deve lopmental Dis8bilities
se eks a Health Ser vices
L:ICENSED SOCIAL
Coo rdinator to work. three
WORKER
Rehabilitation days a week , wi th studen ts
Overbrook
Center is now accepting and adults with developmen·
res umes lor the position of tal disabilities. irripleinen ti ng
Director of Social Services a compret1ens1ve health and
The qua lified candidate delegated nursing program.
must be a LSW possessing Must be a registe red nurse
st rong \le rtlal and written curren tly licensed in the
communica1ion
skil ls. State of 01'1io. Preferred
Medicaid , Medicar e and qualifications: exper ience' in
MD$ k.nowtedge. Long term public health nursing. e~~:pe·
care experien ce pr~lerred rience working with children'
but not required. Qualified and adul ts with developmencandidate s
may
send tal disabiliti es. Send resume
resumes to : Charla Brown- by September 16, 2005 to:
McGu ire:
AN
LNHA, MCBMR DD. 1310 Carleton
Administ rator 333 Page Street, P.O. Box 307,
Street, ·M idd leport, Ohi o Syracuse. Ohio 45779.
4576 0, E6E
TURNED DOWN ON
- - - - - - - - - Truck
Drivers
Needed ~
SOCIAL
SECURITY /SSI?
Looking for a I'MIW career? Hend~;~ rson.
based carr iNo Fee Unless We Win !
er looking for experienced
1-888-582-3345
We have lua.t whit you are Cl ass A COL Dnvers ,
IU\1
1._,1\11
tookf.,g fo&lt; l
Inte reste d
par ties
call

WV

( 304 )~75 - 7 434

-Lip to $Sihour
•Both full an d part time- day
and evening shifts available
· ·
hoI'd
• p a1·d t ram1ng,
1 ays,

G:t
=

..

·--~!"!!!'!!'-

Need responsible person for

150

10

SCHOOLS

Hom:s
lllR SALE

L'ISTROCTION

make any such
preference, limitation or
discrimination ...
This newspaper wi ll not
knowingly accept

advertisements fo r real
estate which is in
violation of the law . Our
nea ders arv hereby
in formed tha i a ll
dwellings advertised In

t hi s newspaper are
av ail able on an equ al
opportu nil~

bases.

Monn .&gt;: lim n·:-;
H&gt;K SAI.E
12x65 3BA mobtle home
53.200 0 80. {740)379-2486
or (740)379·2923

5 Homes . under S I 0 000
Will deliver_ (740i3B5·7671
CLEAN SWEEP SA LE: Lot
model cl earance . All rema tnlng 200s·s rnuSt go to make
room lor new homes under
co nstruction. SAVE! SAVEl
SAVE ' OAKWOOD HOMES.
GALLIPOUS Call (740)4 463093.

Stree t 3 Great Used ,
112
994 14 x70 3
follow signs.
AVON I All Areas! To Buy or vacations
~~1!1:1:: ~~:S~o ~~~::)• Bedroom . 1 112 Baths Bedroom. 2 Bath Incl udes
Sell. Shir;ley Spears, 304- •Full benefits package
Call Today I 740-446 -4367. Family Room. Dtnlng Room . heat pump. Ca ll (740)385Thurs.-Sept8th 9;00AM Ia 67• 1429.
Full Basemen!. Storage • 2434 .
• Professional atmosphere
a1-800· 214-0452
Bldg Garage. New Centra l
·
4 :00PM.
Washer-Dryer,
www. gatl!pOIIscareerrollege.~om Air Cond .. New Wtndo ws . MObil e Home 2002 Pat ••ot
,
Hutch. A ntique D resser, Case Aide/Parent Educator. Give us a call and sta rt your Accredtlea Member Acc roal\lng
4034
WOOden TV Trays. Cha irs, · Min. A.A.· deg ree with 2 yrs
new ca reer today !
cou ~il lor hlOII~riOVn t College$ 13041675
_·_ __· _ _ _ _ _ _ Spec tar EoiliO.n
16XBO
Little Boys Clothes, lots at exp. working witt1 home less
and Schools 12746.
Cedar
Sl v1nyl stdmg ·sh•n gled root.
1401
Misc . Teafords-· Tyree Blvd .. PoJlulalion. AFT wlbenefits. 1-Bn-463-6247 eKl2454
Meadowbrook
Add
3 heat pump. ntce screenea
Racine.
Team Member for Govenor's
www.lnfoclllon.com
J\.hn:U .ANF.OUS
Bedroom,1 112 Bath .Corner front porcn. Se a tor pay ott -...........,.,.-~--~ sale &amp; Drug Free After
•
•
$28.000 00 74D-949-2543
lot. new Roof. move-in con·
YARD SALE•
school program .
Min LPN
neede d, Iull-trme.
or 740-416-1251
n... ~ ...
·
otRECT TV 3 room with ctition. new Carpet and
L•..,;ro.o.;;·iiriiiiiuit.CASANI'iiiliiiit-'
HS/G ED with 3 yrs exp. Monday-Friday. day shill, no
·
- - - - -- - - ·0ays. Tivo FREE 145 channels
Floor1ng. Storage 8 u1ldtng. Ne.... 3 BA Home Only /
worki ng in after school set- wee kends, no hOI1
..
Garage Sale 112 Mile abo~~t~ tin g with youth. Va lid driver's Apply at 936 St. At. 160, only $39.00 per month . Ask Fenced In
Back Yard $189/mo InCludes a1c. de ltv·
Lakin Valley Brook Lane Fri. license a must -AFT wlben- Gallipolis. (740)446-9620. : how 10 get FR E~ H.BO. (304 ) 773-5254 or (304 )593 . ery and· se't up 17JOi385·
&amp; Sal
efits.
·
MA X. and home entertain- _•_'3:::5_ _ _ _ _ _ _ 4367
are
. Call B00-523- 3BR· 2 Bath home, 219 _out· - - - - - - - - 0:.0,::::...-:~---~~ - PT Team Member with min. LPN···Appllcations
WANnD
HSJGED and exp. working being accepted for a PT
bu ildings on 2 acres. Cal l NICe
Used
1-h-64
2
ID BUY
wit h homeles s popu latiOn. LPN
&amp;
1 FT
LPN
aher 6:00pm. ( 740 )446- Bedroom_ On l)t S-4995 Call
Competit ive Starting Pay.
(740)385.-0698
20 hrs_wk.
9759 _
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. Request application ! rom Paid Vacation, Pard Meals,
r,n;;;e,~e&lt;,;e::.:,;,
Mro=m
• •'""""
H&lt;o"m"'"
e.
Sil11er and Gold Coins, SCAC·H RD, ' 540
Fi ..
Discoun ts,
Insurances
4 Sale 9 Am . Hom e on 1 BR . 28 , , LR KiiChen.
11 t1
Art of Color intenorl eitenor
Proolsets, Gold Rings, Pre· Av~ln ue, Hunti ngton , wv Avail able , .
In tereste d
acre wtgarage. near AKZO ioeck.&amp;Bu lld tngs .A.Ir See ·a
M
A 1y
·1y "house painting. Free esti· S 000 13041675 5026
1935
U.S.
Curre ncy, 25701 and submit w/resume Applican 1s . BY PP 0 al
95,
76 Oshel Rd
SOlitaire Diamonds- M.T.S. and 3 ref. ltrs. Open tit!_9.9- 9-&lt;4, Ravenswood Care mates.- Call (740)388·9950.
Attention!
STATE ROUTE 554. BID·
Coin Shop, 151 Seco.nd 5 EOE
Center, 1113 Wash ington - - - - - - - - LoCal company offering "NO WELL: New 4 tledmom 2
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-446· . , - - , - - -- - - - - Street, Ravenswood , WV. Computer
Aepa1r
and
2642.
Cook Needed
(304)273·9236
FAX. Troubleshoot Web Design , DOWN PAYMENT" pro- ba lh manutactureo home
References Required.
Networking. Programm1ng grams f9r you to buy _your Features llvmg room !am11y
room W1th firep lace ana
Reai·Ettate WantecHocal 6 Hours per day. Monday·
Build New Sy st ems. Restore hOme 1nsteao of renttng
"BONUS" roorn Corn er lof
person lOOking tor a llome to Friday. day Shill Onfy, no Medical
Win dows. Vtr us Removal . • 100co fina ncing
buy. All cash. Meigs or evenings or weekends. Paid Independen t,
medically Phonelf:740-992 -7903 • Less than pertect credrt Above gro una poor With pool
a·aiH a . No &lt;lDu "'....e·WI·oe or bene fits include vac8.ti on, trained personnel needed to http :l/www.geoclties .com/ho accepted
house Ready for move-tn
modular. 740--4 16-3 130
sick
&amp;
holiday
pay. complete insurimce exams tdamn3293 4 / Emiiil :h01 - • Payment could be lhe PRICED
UNDER
Experience helpful or we will in Mason County wv and damn 32934 oyahoO.C&lt;!,m
same as rent .
APPRAISAL'
0 40)446·
Locators 3218
tfain :,.Ou. Apply in person to Gallia and Meigs Counties in - - - , - - - - - - - Mortgage
Ruth Rice or call (304)675- Ohio. Must be pt11ebotomy Fall is Near . Let us help you :1_
74_:0:..136_7·..,
0000
_ _ _ _ _ - - -- - - -- 2369. Mason Coun ty Action certified and have reliable DHK
Clean~ng
&amp; Bt-level hOuse 4bdr m. 3bth THEISS ROAD. VINTON ;
lhlJt WANlll&gt;
Group, Jnc. (Pt . Pleasant trans·p ortation.
Flexible Powerwashing. We]l clean - LA. FA, kitchen. DR . with 'g Brand new 3 Dea·oom 2
Senior Center ) 101 2nd hours. F8JI resume to 866- er-up &amp; Get -A-Done. Call: acres , large patro &amp; deck 1., baH' ma n~; lac t ured home
Street. Pl. Pleasant WV.
366- 1037 or e-mail resume 7 4 o. 9 a 5. 3 6 3 g , 9 B 5 . count ry
5125 _000 Compl etely Sfll and rea
EOE.MIF.AfA.
to lisa .cunninghamOexam- J633/74Q. 41 6-1823
(740)742_31 ·42 _
lor move- •n Featur es 11v1ng
----'--:-:-,----:--- one.com
room ta mtly roo m ano
Driven Needed:
- - -- - - - - - Two - -2- -Do--4--U Newly remodeled . 3 or 4 beaut 1lul sky 111 kitc hen
LEARN
COL Drivers willing to drive Mictdleton Estates a leading
bedrooms. central atr. fu ll OAA STICALL y REDUCED '
Dependable.
Honest.
TO
for local ready-mi•-wncrete provider of suppor1 se rvices
basement. hardwood floors. Ca 11 ( ..,..:OJ"'--46-3570 •
is
to individuals wi1h mental Discrete, and Excellent
Exper'ence
company.
I
Aeleren'ces . Homes anct aetached garage. large covDRIVE
preferred but not 1'\&amp;Cessary. retardation and Cjevelopered pat 1o. te nc ed o.,c"'
Lm~&amp;
.1
d
k
Offices.
Mary (740-992Driver must be willing Ia o mental disabi11tes
Is loa ing
yard , close to schools Po1 nt
ACRt: ll ,I.
Pleasant .
pre-maintenance on truckS for 2 Full Time Home 741 4 )
56 9. 500
I
' NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
i. eQUipmen
.- I, yar"-~... work &amp; uperv1sors . An EquaJ
• FULL·TIME clASSES
(74 0)i09· 1382
2 65 acres 3 tOO
s~ ft
· CDi. TRAININ G
Other miscellanebuS Chores Opportunity
Employer
bar n. .:-1t ~· water. e t ~I I I C
\ Flt.!,O,NCING AVAIL.A8l.E
Experience operating equip· FIM/ON.
Applications will
Bl~'E$
At 2 N 3bf FtJ ii SIZB septiC ctty sc t&gt;ools 2 mrle s
'J09 PL..ACi:MENl
~ ·"'II · h as.....,
, _ taken "MU
·nday through
Qnrorurn111o.Trrt."
Basement all Br1ck . 1 Car
'ENRDLLtNONOW
men1 &amp; el\lra~ssuc
m-- • ~' "• •
south of Gall po: s on R1
welding a plus
Friday 8:008m-4:00pm · at
Garage
2Hl Pr•me localton . wo n't
Call (304)937 -3410
the facllikl,
8204 Carta OrNe.
3 1:11. 2 Oa_, Smg1e Ca r
7
last
sss 000
&amp;er1ous
Establi shed Busmess for
ALLIANCE
No phone calls please.
Garage. Camp Conley Area n"!Q ulrtes on lv
1740144,
·
TRACTOR-TRAILER
EMT position s available in
sale by Owner Debb1e 's (304)Sg 5. 3129
7333
TRAINING CENTERS
Huntington ,
WV •area. Middleton Estates a leading Rowers-N·More , 722 2nd
PI easant

liro

I

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r

1.-------_.J :. _: _______

1110

a.,

i

s

.

r·o

"

I

YARD SAUPoME;Rol'hdmor...E·

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your Classified ads
~~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
. ·
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

POLICIES: Ohio Vallty Publlahlng r...,-vn the right to edtt. rtjtct, or e~~nctl any ad t t any tlmt . Errors mull be reported on the firal day gf
Trlbun.-S.ntlnei-ReglaNr will be re8p0nelbit for no more theft the cost ol the epace occupied by the error and only the flrat lnnrtlon. We
not be
tny to" or ••ptnH that rHultt from the publlt:ttlon or oml..lon of an advartlaement. Correct ion will bt mtdaln the fi rst availab le edition. • Box ~;,;b~ .-•.i.• l
tre alweyt confidential. • Current ratt card applltt. • All ret.l eetate advertiHmentt are aubjlld to the Federal Fa ir Houalng Act ol 1968. • Th is 'oow''""" '
accepta I
wanted tdt meeting EOE tltndar'da. We wtll not kncwlngly M:cep,t any advart lalng In violation of the law.

• St.rt Your Ada With A ICeyword • Include Complete
Description • ln~;lude A Price • Avald Abbreviation•

oao
no

WY Jobs Foundation

Display Ads

• All ads must be prepaid'

CLASSIFIED INDEX

PUBLIC

Oeacllfiru

WYTHE\IILLE. IIA

1·800·334· 1203
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts .
wood items.
To S480f-Nk.
Materials provided.
Free information pkg . 24HL.
801-428-4649

FT/ PT.
Starting . pay
$8.50/hr.
Contact Mike
Matheny at (304)526·5780
or (304)526-5936

provider 01 support services
10 individuals with mental
retardation and developmental disabilities is looking
LPN'
It!
·
s In e
For. l'.mt· t~ ,,·me maka ..,,..... tor 2 pan tuno
cv
""-'7D Gallipois
'
• . A n Equ11
"I
area
selling Avon. Call (740)4-4?0pportunlty
Employer
335ft
FfMION. Applicatrons will
Hirin g: Bun's Party Barn-- be taken Monday through
delildrtve-thrulcarry
out. Friday 8 :00am-4:00pm at
Must be at least 19 yrs. old. the faCJ ir1y. 8204 Carla DriV8.
Pick l4l _Bpphcabon M-F. 8-&lt;4. No phone ca!ts please.

Street, Mason. WV across
from City Nat1onal Bank.
Sinc6re buyers on ly Contact
(304 )773·5503 Detore Spm
after 5 ca ll (304)882-3279
P&lt;J'
_J Negottable

House tor Sale l;lv Ow ner
By Appomrment Only 2612
Jackson Ave (30-l !736-5320
or (304 )453-3388 .
~·o

IU ' I \I ~

Hot~t~

FOI&lt; RtS I
No ao wn paymefl" appr
2000 sq· ft c a &amp; t'l eat 3-4
bedrooms 1n Pomeroy 740· 2BR cottage nea ' Por ter
For Sale 'Lease
Beau~y 949. 7004
S350 &lt;cteP S~ 50 rent rete rSalon/Merle Norman Stud10,
ence n&amp; eded Wate r Hash
doWf!town Gatltpolts "Pr1ce Foreclosure 7BR 581\ only pa1d No pels Call (740)l88Orast 1cally
Reduced" S18 000 For llstm;JS ca l· t1DO
(740)245·9294
800-391 ·5='28 e't F2 54
~

·~

·-

�•

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Page 86 • ·-The DailySentinel

. ,t.~-·FOR•"•(•~•----,JI r
6

HOU'ii'HOUl
Goons
•

2BA, 18.4., 541 Roush laM, CONVENIENTLY LOCAT•
Ches~ire Oh1o. No pets. ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
5450/mo. $450 deposit Townhouse
apartments,
(740)367· 7412 leave mas· and/or small houses FOR
sage.
RENT. Call (740)44 1- 111 t
tor application &amp; mimmation .
3 BA- 1 bath, $400 rGnt
$400 dep. t54 Second. No
Furn1shed upstairs, 3 rooms
pets. (740)446-4949.
&amp; bath . Clean, re f &amp; dep.
3 BD~M. 1 Bath House 1n reqwred . No pets (740)446·
•
the County. No Pets $400 1519

. Deposit,

$425

Month

'(304)675-2708
3 bedroom. 2 lull bath, 2 liv-

ingrooms.

dmmg.

large

kitchen, basement. ' •large
fenced backyard , Southern

School Olstnct, Available
Oct. 1st , 740-416 -1687,

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed· '
room apartments at Village
Manor
and
Atvers ide
Apartments m Middleport .
From $295-$444 . Call 74D992·5064 . Equal Hous1ng
Opportun1t1es.

---------

(740)753-2595

It

Washer and Dryer $35
each, apartment size wash·
er and dryer $150. bunk
beds $25, queen size· bed
$20, pickup truck tool ooxes
$20 each. Phone (740)446·
1268

r

1\~TIQUI-S

LIVEWOCK

I

For sale· Reg . Angi.JS
heifers. (740)44 1·5449.

JET
·1987 Chevrolet $300 good
Local company offering "NO
AERATION MOTORS
running condition (304)675Ne'o'i big 2 bed room apt.
DOWN PAYMENT" pro- Private locat1on cl os e to Repaired . New &amp; Requilt In 5077
grams for you to buy your
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1•
hospital . .
Water1sewer
600-537-9528.
1nCiucled . No pets. Qeposit
reqwed .
$69 5/.month
{740)441·1184 .
Juki comrnercial sewing
mu chine like new, runs
Pleasant Valley Apartment g1eat. $400. (740)446-3438 .
Are now taking Applications
fo r 28R, 3BA &amp; 48R. , Klaus 33 Bulb Tanning Bed
Applications are
tak en $700 00. 740-247·2727.

1991 Buick" Skyhawk. 4dr.
4cyl . auto. ai'r. tilt, 97k new
tires/ brakes
$1.050.
(740)446-4999 or (740)4466352.

Monday thru l=riday, from NEW AND USED STEEL
9 ·00 A.M ·4 PM Offtce is Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
located at 1151 Evergreen Fo r
Concrete ,
Angle,
Dnve Point Pleasant. WV Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Phone No 1s (304}675·
House tor R'ent ·Pt . Pleasant
·
Grating
For
Drains.
5806. E.H.O
D
&amp; W lkw
l&amp;l
$375. {304)675-5540 o r
nveways
a ays .
Townhouse Scrap Melals Open Monday.
(304}675-4024, ask tor Tara
Nancy. Homet;;tead Realty .Apa rtments, Very Spacious,· Tu~sday, Vo!ednesday &amp;
Broker
., B
CI A 1 1/2 Fr iday, Bam-4 :30pm. Closed
...
e rooms,
·
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
House- 3BR. 1 bath . LA Bath . Adult Pool 8 Bal;ly , Sunda . 1740)446- 7300
:o:""~y~~-,.-,.--,
w/ FP, carport, gas heat. Pool. Pat1o. Start $3851Mo.
8UJt..0tN(J
CAC, city schools.- $550 mo No Pets. Lease Plus

$2,200 080. (740)441 ·
.0914_
-:-:-:-------1996 Ford Taurus aL!tO. air,
power sea ts . powers win·
dows. power door locks.
$t,850 . {740)446-1104.

&amp; $550 sec dep You pay Secunty Deposit Required .
utilities .
References (740)367-7086.
required . Call _(740)446Tw1n R1vers Tower 1s accept3644
Ing applications for wartmg
Small 2 Bd . hOuse near list tor Hud-subs1zed. 1- br,
Tuppers . Pla ins
Non apartment , call 675-6679
S(Tloker. No Pets. $400 .00 EHO
M. Plus Deposit , Uhhlif.is, &amp;
Lease. 740·985-3504 .
·
SPACE
1
lUll RENT

autom atic. 27mpg, 72,000
miles . good cond1t1on . $800

a

~

Moun£ HoM~~

ir.::l\"--"!'!"---·,. ,
...__ _ _ _ _•

1\IR RENT

Downtown Ot11ce Sp~ce· 5
room su1te $650/mo: 1 room
2 bedroom mob1le home 1n office- $225/mo.: 2 room
P011er Wate1 ~ trash . sewer SUite $250/ mo. Security
pa1d. no pets. $4 50lrent . dcpGSII required You pay
$450/ deposit
(740)388· ulil1t1es. All spaces -very ruGe.
9325m
Elevator. Call {740)446·3644
for appomtmen1.
2 Bedroom mob1le home 1n
Rqcme . S355 00 Month .
For Lease: Office or retai l
$355 oo depos1t.
1 year
spaces 1n very Qoop condi·
tease. No pets. No call s
liOn. Downtown Gallipolis
atter 9PM. 740-992·5039
Appro)i . 1600 sq. ft . each. 1
2 bedroom on private lot. or 2 ba1hS. Lease price
$350 plus deposit. Stove negQtlable to encourage
Cal(
business.
relr igeiator, gas heat. no new
(740)446-4425 or (7 40)446pets. 1740)446-3553.
3936 .
2BR Green schOol d1slr1Ct.
no pets Relerenc'e &amp; dep Galltpofls Aetail/Ott.ce buitd1ng. bea utiful country ser$325 (740)367 -0632.

SUI'PU~:S

Block, brick, sewer JJiP6s.
windows, lintels etc_Claude
Winters. Rio Grande. OH
Call740-245-512 1.
DAVIDSON METAL
ROORNG
" t 8 Colors
"30yr. warranty in writing
' Prolessional Installation
• Free Estimates
740-596·2909

r

1996 Chell'!. Beretta , V6.
automatic, AJC ,. runs. looks
good. good gas mileage,

2001 Chevy Cavalier. 2 dr. 4
cyL
5/sp
grea t mog .24,60DK . blac k. c lea n.
$3,950 . (740)3N·2748.
2001 Dodge Neon, automat·
ic, air conditioning , 82.000
miles.
$2,400
080.
(740)256- 1652

'

s

• Metal,
• Appliances,
• Cars',
• Garage Metal
Call

1986 Ford 4x4. lift k1t. 300 6
cyl.. manual sllift. Good
truck Trade lor 4 ·wheeler
(740)338-0436
1996 Ford Explorer. 2 Wheel
Drive. Grent Shape $2,900
1
(304)675-7n3

740-742-2455

• Repairs
• Parts
-• Service

r

FoR S. II .F

1964 Chevy P1ckup , 4x4 .
eng1ne and transmissicn
good , ,body rough. St200.
(740 446-2 8t5

VAN.~
.._ _ _FoioiiRioiSiii.'liillii,Eiii
' _.,.

_____.

2 bedroo m garage apa rt ment washer &amp; aryer Rea1
21 Locust St , new!.)' pa11'1ted
and c arpet ed
1740)446 16 52 . before
4 OQpm .
(74 0)446-04 15 aft ~ r 4 OOpm

1998 Dodge Grand Caravan
FllLTIS '&amp;
ES . While . Tan lf!alher, quad
Vu:t~IMIJ-S
seats. rear AIC. Ne:w tires .
loaded.
S610 0
OBO.
Home Grown Tomatoes.
1 13_5_ _ _ _
_,_
Field Run , sa per bvdcet or cF_•_o_)44

2 bedroonl. 1 oath. water
pa 1~. S350 month . S350
sec ..m ty
dep osn
Call
\740)4.46-31..81
3 &amp; 2 BR aj:t::. Close to
Holzer
hOSPI121
W0
hookups
wat.;.r,:s'ewer
mc:ude\l
St.:-.r~or ~
?t
S4~C /t"l('l nt~•
1 ... p~,s1•
1equ1red NC' pets {74 0;44 1·
1184 .

----

Moltol1 an Carpet. 202 Clar.k
Ch apel Road Porter. Qf1jo
t~.R\1
(740)446 -'1444 1-877-830 E 111'\t•:.vr
9162 Free Esttmates. Easy
hnanc•ng 90 days sa'Tie as D% Flnanclng for up to 36
c ash. V+sa, M et:ster Card morJ tns· on Joh n Dee re
Dr1ve - a-jittle save alot
CCtmpact and 5000 Series
·Tr actors wit h Jo hn Dee re
Thompsons Appl ance &amp; Cred1t approval Check !hem
Repa• r-67 5-7388 For sale
c.ut 1 Carmichael Equipment
re ·c::Jndtt•oned . automat 1&lt;. Inc !7 40 )446·2412
washers &amp; dry~ ;s. refr ,ge·CJ·
tors, gas and erectr 1c John Dee1e t 0 It No T•l Onll
-ilnges. ai r canr:11ti0rers anCI lor
P. f: nt
Carmich ael
,...nr-gFr .Yil5herc,. Will oo Equtpment ( 7 ~ 0)4 46 ·241 2
rer aus on maror bmnds 1n
shop or at yo~r "Jorre
Jotln Deere Commercial
Worktite
Pro&lt;lucts
Used Fu;nllure &amp; AppM.nce , Compact_ Excavato•s/Sk 10
Store, 130 Butaville Pike S teer~Tr9cto r
Loade r
Gallipolis. OH 40~ o off a ll BacKhoe m stOdt Cnedl out
k1ng menress sets Hrs 11 -3 our rE!nlal rates Grea t
M-S (740)446-4782
1mancmg
ava•lab le
C,u mJChael EQuipment Inc
Washer S1 25. Dryer S ~ 25 17401446-241 2

BEAUTIFUL
APARTMENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTAlES, 52 Wes.ty.'ood
Onve from $34.4 to S442
Wa·k to tih0p &amp; lll:lv1e!t Calf
740 446 2508
EQ~cil eledr -c range S125 retnger;&gt;;pr S150 .::hP~ I ltoeler·
S t t.~
Wh•rJpoo l
Cl~a" 2 r-OO.-vot"1 ap ~ ~tcve.
"'asher
dr,.-er
se
t S2SG
refrto ... ater. trasn •11clu :l~
OO LJCI" S125 rocker recl.ne•
Rent SJOO depos+1 reQwed
(7 40~ 44 6-7620
(7 40) 441 - S75 loveseat $50, table &amp;
cha1rs $125. table &amp; .CI'Ialr!&gt;
9672
$40
lamps SlO each
Moder'"' 1 OFdroom ap Sk a ~XJs Appt+a"'Ce s 76 Vrne
~~ ; 740)44S· 7J~P

POLE BUILDINGS
'Any Style
' /lr:y 3• ze
' Cus:orn 9J 11 !.; h! ,our
n.:&gt;E'ds
' FREE ESI1nates
7 .JO· 596·2909
Your ProStar Tra 1ler Dealer
Carmrcnae-: EQUipment Jnc
/740,4.jf.2412

Equipment~

• Sp,·ciall y • Clutches
• Brakes

State Auto offers
sonwt hi ng spt•t·ial
il 's the Auto/Home Discoun t wilh special
reduced n les if both car and ho1,ne are
insured·with State Auto, Find oul how
much your savings can be.

·

The \.Vi seman Agency. Inc.
45 1 Second Avenue

-o_

1999 · Chevrolet Venture
htended Van; blue 82.000
mtles. great cond11IOn; one
owner : $8 500· (740 )367·
7435. 1740)339-3955

••

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

PiWIIOUAID

25 Years Experience
David Lewis
740-992-6971

740-446-9777

High and Dry
Phone

60 A no 1'.1~" &amp;
A! HX'iORII·~

LAWN CARE DIVISION

l

WOW!! YO'RE

GooD!!

~

:

!

.
~Co mm ercial_ and _
Residential )
.. . :
Mowing. Tnmm1n g, Tree Tnmmmg, Aeratio n, Fer!llizat1on,,
Spraying of fen ce lines, Leaf Removal , as well as small ,
land scaping jobs such as planting and mulching.
j

l

!

FREE f.STIMAnS • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRIC:ES ""'

j

WINDOW SUPER SAl-E :
Vmyl Double Hung

'""'"'""' r
•
.....__---'--~--' A ~:L.....I..l

$219

: ~""'so If\ I\t 'S W~OI t IOU::&gt;

P"i'l-\ N'f'Ait&gt; Tf\/\1 OPPORI'UNI\7

\1-\( 1--l~ITE.R, to
BR,I ~c, 1"\Y CI-\E(J(

W/o::&gt; LO:'&gt;i Sf.'lt.RI\L
C&gt; I GR(~ \Ot--IS f&gt;l,O I

I

I

(;ent Arms/Owner·
* Week ly Trash Sen·icc
4 yrs llf Rr liable St.'rvicc

• Prompt &amp; quality

LKeen Yuur M•mcy L.lo:llll

«;&amp;R s.\NITATION
3.1561 B aile y Run Rd ..
Pnmero ', OH

work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Eslimates

MANlEY'S
SElF STORAGE

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

"Insured"

Call Gary Stanley
740·742·2293

. • Room Ad&lt;tltiont I

• Leave a m essage

• Roofi"(( I Guntrt
• Vlnyt Slclng a P1lnUng
• Patio snd Porch Oecb

We do it all ex~l
lumo&lt;e worl&lt;

· V.C. YOUNG Ill

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

992--6215 WV OJ6725
Pomeroy, Ohio

45771
7 4.6-949-2217

25Y.,..Loca1Ea

' '

~·SI~ IIl'

.

Hours
7:00AM· 8:00PM
111411 mo pd

I

... ,ll\1( 1 ...
Ho~IE
1\U'Rfl\'.:'11·~

• FOR AU YOUR ·
ELECTRICAL NEEDS,
• MOBILE HOME
REPAIRS
• CARPENTRY

ANP I
TO THE. WATER..

f,..RK. MY

scouT TROOP '
t-U~.D

DETA I L

A .

1

-------'--~

·-~-r.\Jb l

PEANUTS

Cfnlh ·I-. t..IG-!fll

17411)416-7611

ma... Sind

WELL. f

ATHENS

APPRECIATE

l7lllftlv.;.Sind

TI-lE 1-lELP
YOU' VE
GIVEN ME

JACKSON

,II..'{Q&gt;P\o ... TUfrMt.l
~Jw...Wtt, IiiB.t»5Ja

{7411)lll6-llll

"Middleport's only

ONLY IF YOU DON'T MIND
I GUESS FIRST
OPINIONS
ARE
MY BEATING 'I'OU OVER
TI-IOU61-1, IF I .
PRETTV GOOD..
1 TI-lE I-lEAD WI TI-l THAT STOOL
SI-IOULD GET A
..~OU'RE
.
51TTIN6
ON
!
SECOND OPINION...
(
---,-r----1!
1 WAS WONDERING,

f

I

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTIUmiM
• New Homes

·Complete
Remodeling

740-992-l&amp;n
Stop &amp; Compare

coet of

17·.17·17 •$275ton (bulk only)
12% Triumph 12% sweet horse feed
$5,50/50 lb. bag

48% Soybean Meal113,25/100 lb bag

Cob Meal with lM. SaH
$6.50/100 II) bag
Mushroom compost (Bulk only)

Shade River AG SerVice, Inc
3SS37 S1 Rl7 N

¥ Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

• ROOF • PAINT
OHIO LICENSE # 38244

140·367·0544
740.367-0536
Pieose adopt from !tit

we'Re COMPLETELY
OU1" 0F POTATO CHIPS

Meigs~ ~OIIId
!lldMt dritnd or lift.

740-992·3

HOW UNFORTUNATe AND
HOW 50 VeRY STRANGe

\

· Nooog"' elkhOIIId
-Yellow Ob! &amp;rdritvtr
..

mixtS

-Germon shtpord &amp;collie

ADVERTISE

mixes

-Walker coon hound
-B&lt;ago_m"es
MANY CVTE 1'IJPI'IES!

·IN THIS SPACE .
FOR $52 PER MONTH
Now Available At

WOLF£

r

WV G35087
OH 35928

-

:: WllA.i t:b 'll:tl MtA~ ,'lbU

A"D 1 CAWi·

:: ~~·i 601\oltS

HOM£

Chuck WoHe

Owner

(740) 992-0167

¥

J08 7 54

5 Mag. execs

28 C:hair part

twilights

begins

6 Pool's

29 AlomcenlsrS 7 Itemizes

Pass

Pass

Obi.

,.

1¥

2+

4•

Allpass

North

East

36 Online

12

39 Entree
choice

+5

It is an unfortunate fa ct thai 11 you bid
and do not win the aiJction , you have
probably beilefiled lh'e oppos1ng declarer. Agreed, you might .help partner to find
the lethal opemng lead o~ push the oppo nents into the; wrong spot. But it is more
likely that you wil l assist their declareras in this deal, which occurred at the
Summer Nationals in Allanta last Ju ly.
Sitling North and Soutll were Enc Leang
of Oakland, Calif.. and Mark ltabash t ol
Murietta, Calil. North 's jump to lour
hearts was aggress1ve, but West's be!at·
eel two-diamond raise marked South with
sllortage there. And the relative Silence of
the opponents suggested that Soi.Jth
would have some honor cards.
East took the first trick with the diamond
king, Then, nervous that declarer would
get di scards on dummy's clubs, East continued witrt a low diamond. He was gambling thal West held the queen and hoping that he also had tile spade queen
Th e gamble was realized, but the hope
was not. On · West's tnck·th ree spade
shi11, declarer put up dumrny·s king . East
won with the ace and returned a Spade to
Soulh's queen.
•
Now tta bashi had to play the trump suit
without loss. Did West have king-double·
ton ? Unlikely. II West had the heart king
and diamond queen , pro bably he would
nave bid on the hrst round. And if Easl
had th'e hear! king , there was only one
cllance . SolJth led a low heart to
dUmmy's ace. dropp tng the single ton
king . Declarer cashed two of dummy's
clubs, ruffed a c lub winner in his lland,
and played a heart to dummy's nine to
rak~ in 10 tricks and a near-lop:

Dim inish

invention

50 - Moines

51

let1er

Sweater

29 OEA agent
30, Dog_days

letter
52 Is. to Fritz

32 Pleased

53 PC "brain "
54 Violin part '

tn OtJon

16 To's

opposlle

sigh

18 Teahouse

-Gance

colo rs

49 Vortex

neighbor
27 Sorority

in

45 Madonna ex

·47 Warm-up
48 Neutral

25 Wis.

Intensity

40 Mine output
44

24 Cousteau

category

auction

Pass

degrees
skirt, maybe 41 NBA
22 Mild
hoopster
rejoinder
43 Like rich
23 Kind
so !I

of cassetle

8 "-~ Pan "
33 Fully grown 9 O'Hare's
34 Laughed
code
10 Humorist
heartily
35 Corduroy
Bill ridge It Pop music
31 Yogalype

Scorpion Tractor$
" Taki~rg

Tltt Sti1rg Out Of
Hard Work!'"
Mid - ~ize 4Wheel Drive Tractor

with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubo l.a Engines

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

f\'ti.D M.'( 1\700

:: ~~1..

'.

.;: Tot¥.'1' '1'

AstroGraph
-.r&lt;JIIrt~:

.. AND SPEAKI NG OF
EXCRI.JC IA.TINIS DETAIL,
LET'S OPEN O UR.
T EXT&amp;OOKS. r--~-

GAUNJS

435'1,Smlll A.,_

10x10x10x20
992·3194
or 992-6635

!11';:--------, ' MAIWTE.WAWCE.
ComDiete HOOle Repairs
DitchingfTrenching
&amp; Remodeling

Service
4x4 CommerCtjll o :tch-Wt!Ch
w1th SiX·wa,y" blade. Drgg•ng·
16. Amer.can Racrng rrms &amp; Dept h up to 5'6'. Ga s,
t1•es S250 1740t3£Hn39 Wate r. Cable , ElectriC &amp;
or (7J0t709·690'~
Ord;n t .f"'es (30 4\578·9005

A WEEK,

f~.A.NC IS

I SAID · r TRUST YOLI
HAD A GOOD S utiME-R."
I: t&gt;tDN'T ASK yo,; TO
_llc$CRl8E YOUR SU MMER IN EXCRUCIATI N G

DILES HEARI\G CE\TER

97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

• ·Garages

Coraentane
Electrical
Senrlce

,tq JO'

CAM P

"(Ol.l A.LL HA.D

sell-storoce·

Remodetlng
•NtwGarsgn
• Eleetrk:sll Plumbing

Hill's Self
Storage

TRU ST

I\ GOOD SU MMER

IMPORTS
Athens

Operator 740-992-.1174

Qu7 2

·

Bob

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMINC &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING

19 Conlldenl
23 " Jus1 - 1hough11"
26 Afrikaner

•

Marshall

attire'

34 Grain crop
37

Fiberglass

20 Beyond lhe
bundles .
lim II
38 University

Two- BR

units

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnty Ctpller cryp1og1ams are CJ!!alel:l 11om qumauons b~ lamous people pas1arlO present
Each lettet mtre Clphef slands 10!' ano!Tleo

Today·'s due.: 6 equals L

. zu

XWK

EBU

ES

c uw0

...

EB

ET J

LOJWAD U

V 0 BC,

W

HZU

ES

C U W HZ

" KAEHHN "

J U WD

BOLEN .

DUEBWJC

HZU

LWB ,

F W L UK

CEEZWB

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- 'I'm a kid Irom Texa s wh o learned ho w to nde a

Danny 740-590-3702

J•nct Jeffers
.\3795 Hiland Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

1994 Honda Shadow 1100
BASEMENT
Drag pipPs Pr:ra chrome
WATERPROOANG
1.2 .500 m1fes (740 1·U1Unconrtniona l ilfetl(ne guar1501 afler S:OO
:.;ntee local referPnces ft.Jr2002 HO So1t a11 Deuce. n1_shed Established 1975
many e11tras Including w1de ·c all
24 Hrs (740 ) 446tue , chrome. Python PiPes 0870 Roger..s Baseme nt
7.~ m1.es (740)446 ·2815
Waterproohng
2004 Honda Forernan 450.
niy 195 hours ycllowlbtack
~~ ~ e
nev,• $4395 OBO.
' 7401245-9294

WASH INC

(Commercial and Residential)
Mobile Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks, Driveways, }
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Deg;easing of
...
Equipment, Boats, Campers, Tractor Trailers.
Dump Trucks, painting or stailiin_g of your deck
1
.
or lo g home, Aluminum brightening.
j
Special rates to Trucking and Dump Trucking Companies.

can

IOxJO

(304 !4~· 1886

,

Dozer - Skidsteer
Mini Excavator Work

(740) 992-5232
SxiO, IOxiO,
IOxiS, lllx20,

A K3 2

... 9 6 3 2

-

3 Lelt
4 Where Asia 21 Shonen a

42 Director

K&amp;K EXCAVATING

Storage

10

,. ,, J5 3

¥ K

Use their bidding
to place their cards

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.
1-BOD-291·5600 740.992-4119
www.qualitywindowsystems.com

O»AC»...,

lnslirt'd

CAMPERS&amp;

10 6 4

:JrRANK &amp; EARNEST

Office: (740) 992·2804 Cell: (740) 517·688~

Optional Upgradtl AvaUable;
AfgonGas &amp; Heat MirrOf'

wlthoul
grub
17. CategOrize
16 Go

J ,6 3
QIOi5

Opening lead:

1 Ms. Miles
2 TV lawyer

ol plywood

East

Dealer: East
Vulnerable: Both

TRI -STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

to 101 Ul

A KQJ

DOWN

15 Sheet

.. 8;)

Free Estimates

~ER

•

{i

• J •

Jones

Owner: Jeff Stethem

9 8

West

foal (hyph .~
58 Wanderer '

palaces

•

t

57 Driving-teal

14 Next lo

South

INSTALLED

Free Estimate.-.:

MmORHOMES

Servic~
Top • Removal • Trim
· Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

30 Yrs. Exp, • .Ins. Owner: Ronnie

way
12 Bird house
13 Sports

K 8

... 10 7 4

Tree

2150 Eastern·Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Concrete WOij[4

r

•

•
. t

JO

Sales • Parts • Service

AU Typlli'G,/'

. 1m .

41800 SR #7
Plains, OH
1••~t!~Tu~ppers
45783
Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Roll overs • Major Med ;,
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident
:
.. '

·JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT, INC.

2005 Cherokee, L1te 28FT
1990 Hohda 250 \ XA Dirt Campe' 2 ShOes. used 4
Brke
All or!fi 1nal! Runs t1me s Excelle nt ConditiOn
great Ask1ng S950.00. 740- Sl 5 300
(304)882-3 922
416·54 ,10
,
even1ngs

080

..,.. NolfO'

=;::::

. Ph: HOO-JQ2- 1209 nr 7-HI-44fl-Jtl43'
w ww. wi s.cmanagcm: ~'.l'l •m

1999 L•m,taa To'wn &amp; 1999 Star Craft Soft Side
Coun try Good co nditiOn 13FT, Truck Camper. Self
$5,000 Call (740,245 - ~7'. Contained, Furnace Sleeps
89 ForO Van 300 6cyl. AJC. 4. Cl ean . GOOd Concsitio'n
!JOOd co nd1tipn, _good tnes $5.000 (304)675-4082
Askmg S2600
(740)245 2004
Jayco
Camper.
9J53
29FBS, Excellent ConditiOn.
Super Slide-out, dlJCted.
«&gt; MmnRCI'OJ:-;/
ACIHeat ~»:}675 - 1938
• -J WHIILF.RS

1992 Harley OaoJidson Ultra
Cl aSSIC w ma!ch1ng Tr a+ler.
&amp; many Extr as $12 .900

~·

P.O. Box .159
Gal lipolis, OH 456~ l - 0~59 -..,

•

AI'AKD-tt::VJS

1 and 2 bedroom apart·
ments, furnished and unfurWarehouse·
nished, secunty deposit
required . no pets, 740·002 1n Henderson. WV. Pre· You p1ck S5 per bucket
2218.
owned applteanes starling at 740J379-9 110
1BR WID hooh:uo. electric or $75 &amp; up all under. warranty.
fON. SALE
gas . no pet s $290 plu s we do service work on all
OepOSit.
(740 )339-0362 Make and Models (304 )675 7999
......
(740)441 -1 184 .
F1re wood mostly ' oak
2
bed room
apartmenl
S35 GO load season slab
K1t by G6 2000 sweeper
.. Porter. OH WID hook-up
Lo ad
CoJf
1p
S20.00
RUns great all attachmert ts
Wa ter, sewer. tra sh pd
1ncl ud1ng sh ampoo attach$4 00
(740) 367-7015
ment $200. (740)367·7630.
( 740)446-4 734

No lawn To Small
Call 742-2595
Rlder-Push-Weedeating
Owner Operated

Trucks Dozers

4x4

r·o
'-

'Appliance

HARMON
LAWN CARE

6 Rocker
55 Quaking
- John
trees
11 Say another 56 Edits

09 OH 05

Wesi

South

Equipment
LLC.

for f:;_trm

•

46 Chose
51 Speeder's
"reward"
54 Float locale

1 Fashion
maga'ilne

¥ A Q9 2

740-667-0700 1·888-HUPP2J4

Morris

1999 Ford Ranger, QOod
condi Tion $3,200 {~ )6756986

t 994 Chevy Lumina van . 7
seater, runs good , looks
good. Ask1no suoo oao
4686.
ADORABLE Oog (304)593- Two L1tters Beagl~ Pups, (740)441-0488.
320i please leave voice some reg 1stere&lt;l . some not,
Mobile home Sites m mail.
some Lemon&amp;While Good . 1995 N1ssar. QUest vim.
Country Homes. Shade
Hunting Bloodfine P04)675· $2,500 080 (304)576-2934
$130 mo (740)385 -401 9
3508
1997
Plymouth
Grand
Trailer lot . 2.5 m•les Out .
HOUSDIOIJ&gt;
Voyager . White 2 sl. drs ..
Would
like
to
buy
a
purebred
Neighborhood
Ad
Call
~
Dachshund 6mo-2yrs old. good cond.. r uns good.
(740)446· 1685.
already spayed 8 housetlro· S3,500 OBO Call {740 }441 0712
ken , 1740)416· 1251

IUR R El'IT

Designed lo Heat Your Home
and Your. Hot Wa1er!

1n brakes. filters . tires, belts
etc. tuneup. Wilf lake trade .
AskiDg
$4300
080.
(740)441-9378.

95 Cadillac Eldorado ETC.
Northstar , low miles.
99 Suburban, 2WD, LS
AKC
Registered pack?~ e (740)446- 1810
Porheran1an
&amp; seve ral
,
Chihuahua's
98 Satu~n SC2, auto, 74.000
(304)882-2872
miles, red, loaded. $5,000
Negotiable
740-992-518 1
10 Week old AKC Cocker after 5 PM
Spaniel Puppies·
bi.Jii,
black .
bull&amp;white, For Sale: 1991 ·Dodge
whlte&amp;btack ,
bulf&amp;black. Dyn asty $1 .400 or best
'Mother and Father on prop- otfer. (740)388-9149.
etty
Shots, wormid,
15
TIIOCI;s
declawed
$350 .00 firm
fiJI! SAI .I:
740-9!:.2- 7371 .

fO

OUTSIDE
WOODBURNING
FURNACE

c2000
-:-:--K-Ia-::S-ep_h_la___4_d-oo-r,

mRS.\1 £

o s. ·

Rocky Hupp Insurance
a,..d Financial ServiCes

1998 Otds EIB. !oadeq. g·ood
gas
mileage,
$3300.
(740)682 75 2 (
..
·a
. 1 evemngs
weekends)

Pns

AKC Reg . Beagles. Lemon
3 bedroom tra1ler. Kanauga . ling: 4.000 sqJt. (limshed); Patch, $150, 7 wks old.
QH .
Water, trash pd . heat and water 1ncluded.$ (304)576·2241
•
(740)367-70 15, (7 4 144
negot1able. (740)367·7435.
AKC
Registered
Adult
4734
Pnme Commewal Space at female Bassett Hound and
Beaut1ful river • v1ew 1n ~pnng Valley Plaza. 3.000 5m th
old
pupp1es,
Kanauga. Ideal for 1· 2 peo- sq tt Call (740)446-3481
$100/each. Must se ll, family
No' pets. please
ple
hardships . {740)256-1879
W.\l'oTill·
Apphcat1ons be tng taJ..e n
AKC Reg rstered Yorkshi~
'IU RE~T
Call (740)441-0181
Terner. Female Spayed, 4
For rent m New H8ven
Professional, Young mai'ried 112 yrs old, House Tralned
newly remodeled 3 bedroom
(304)882·3922
couple seel(s house on land $250
mob1le home ak fullv furcontract or long term lease ovenmgs
nished. 1nctudes dts'lwa sh·
er. w/d. m1cro &amp; TV. cable 1n WV Prefer country se11ing Full blooded Pit Bull puphookups in all bedrooms. all but close to Gallipolis pies. 75 each. (7401388 .
6901 or (740)388-8596 .
.Utilities, paid mcllll:1mg cable. Peace/Quiet a must .
Mf.CES.S.ITIES.:..SAFE
area,
$115 each per week tor 2
all
electnc.
CIA. Male Yorkl8 CKC 7 months
ren ters. $100 each per week
Closets . Storage , aid $500 . Call (740)441 tar 3 renters. (330) 33 6-5 708 TIJb/Showcr WID Hook -up, . 8841 after 5:00pm,
or 330-464·9424
1-3 Bedrooms· Garage/Ca r
Ra nch .
Perfect Toy Rat . Terrier pupp,es. 12
Immaculate 2BA 2 bath Port .
mob1le hom e lor ront 1n the References. stable JObs. weeks, female . CKC, shots
Relngenuor!StoVe. &amp; wormed
$75 each.
country
S4001m on tll Own
(614)595·7773 or (800)798· Have one Sib well 1ra1ned (740)256-3168.

North

740· 742·2595

Anenlion!

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

16 Charlois Cows. 1 Reg.
Chariots Bull 740-742-2274
Qr 740-742-3065

1\uro;
tuRSAIJ-;

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

BRI.DGE

'

Polled Hereford Cow &amp; Call, •
pairs
&amp; 3 Heifers $4.500 all
Buy or sell. Riverine
Anti~ues. tt24 East Main or Will Jieparate (304)458on SA 124 E. Pomeroy. 740- 1615
992-2526. Russ Moore.
I \\\"\,, (, \IIIII "\ I ' I II'
owner.
$500 Demons1ratlon BonusJ\1.1Sf_'Eil..A'lEOI,:S
L9t us demo a John Deere Z
MERCllANDLr.:f:
Trak or X Series All-Wheel
~--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_.l . Steer on your lawn and
Antique Dini11 g Room Se1 receive an e11tra $500 off our
fable ·s 'Ch cms." Ch ina already discounted prices.
c ao1net and Bullet $3000 Limited
time
offer.
(304 )675-21 57 leave mes - Carrrnchael Equipment Inc.

Homes
l rorr,
$7 .000
Fo reclo'suras. VA , HUD For
lis tings 800-39 1·5228 B)if.
1709.

www.mydailysentinel.com

12 Silkle Roosters tor sale
$2 each 080 (3040937·
3346 or (304)937-2705

Middle poll North FoiJrlh
3 Br. house 1n PomerOy. gas Avenue . 2 room elliciency.
heat, $375 a Month. $400 no pets. Depos1! &amp; prev1ous
reflt al feterences. utilitieS
deposit. 740·698-6783
paid 740.992·01135
s~ ge
3BR , 1.5BA, 2slory ' remodeled house. Excellent loca - New 2BR apt s 1n town All Full Bed. head boards·S35.
tion in town . Cl~se to electriC. water/sewer/ trash Tr1m mower -"$40 . MTD
schools. No pets·. (740}446- lfJcluded . S525 rent plus Shred lt·$75, Sears Chipper
1162 .
depOsit No pelS (740)44 1- Vac-$75 . (740)446-754 1
1 184

· home 1nstead ot renlu'1g
• 100% financ1ny
' Less than perlec t credit
accepted
' Payme nt could be the
same as rent .
MortgageLocators .
(740)367-000U

;Thursday, September 8, 2005
.~LLEYOOP

www.mydailysenlinel.com

AI-IY-».\tRE

Friday, Sept. 9, 2005
By Bernice Bede O so l
Opportunities which rnl!ty h ave previous ly been denied you in your field o l
endeavor cou ld spr ing loose lor you in
!he year a head It isn·t lik ely you 'll le t
them slip by unnoticed and you 'll do
i:\11 th a t you can to make the most of
them .
VIRGO (Aug . 23 -Sept. 2 2) You
~ave !h e tl bilily to sway others to your
way of think ing today regard 1ng .
issues about which you teel strong ly
W hen you behave emphalrcatt'y in
somethlhg . you'll s ell with cor tainty.
LIBRA (Sept. · 23-0ct. 23) - Follow
your in stinc ts l oday and you 'll
Increase your chances for personal
acquisition greatly. But what w1U really
put you over the top 1s 11 you totally
believe that you're fo"ln !he right track
SCOAP I!)

(Oot.

24-Nov.

22)

-

Concentrate on maners today that
can help -advan ce your persona l salt inte res ts. II won ·t be se lh sh o f you .
because you 'll kno w how to do so
without stepping on Ilia toes ol anyone e lse.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23 -Doc. 2 1) Your possibilities for solving problems
especially ones that call tor deep concentration , will be greatly enhanced
today if you are able to gel o ff bY your·
self where you can sort lhir)QS out
CAPA!CORN (Doc . 22-Jan. 19) Qon't be hesitant today abou t making
major c hanges. even w1 th procedures
you have th ought out thoroughly '' thor;1
methods you have been uSing are not
producing results lot w h 1c h yo u
hoped
AQUAR IUS (Jan . 20 -Fob . 19) The,e ·s no need to view yourself as
!he underdog when you t1nd you rse lf
m a competit ive match -up today. You
might even sur pnse yourself a s to
how 'well you'll do when cha ll enged .
PISCES (Fob. 20-Mmch 20) - Thoso
you enco urver today will see much to
adm ire 1n you todAy It you t ruly believe
in yoursetl. All you Mve to remember
1s to ~ttep foremost m your mind the
words . "Yes. 1 c an and I will! "
ARIES (M arch 21 -Aprit 19) - Your
commoi'cial 1nvo1voments could . tako
an 'Advaniageous turn .today if you are
wllhng to go along wrth the ChAnges
happenmg around you. Slay on top o t
wha t is potentially profitable
TAURUS (April. 20· May 20) - Wilen it
comes to ,your Important one-o n-one
relationshipS today. ma~ei an OK!ra
efforr to be cooperative when catted
tor_ II you are agreeab~ . tho se w ith
whom you deal w111 be as welt
GEMINI \ ' (May' 21 ·J une 20) Al!hough sometimes as a cuneUs
Gammi you can scaHer your forces a
b it, today you're not apt to spend your
time trlvolousty. You'll sense that
industriousness is the rlghl course to
tallow.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - It Isn't
likely that you will do thing• In fits and
•tart• today. evan II you're Involved In
tun . sociAl pur•ultA. Whatever you , ·
decide to engage In , you 'll plunge In
all the way with full fOroa .
LEO (July 2,3•Aug . 22) - -Nothing will
mean more to you today than th• con·
carne of your lar(llly. With that mind
sat, you'll be amazed at how mu c h
you'll accomp lish when It coma• to
the Objactl..,.a you sat.

bike last and overcame

a ll!e-threaten1ng illness ..
. (c)2005

by NEA. Inc

- Lance A1 mstr ong
9-8

ruzmo S©\\~N\...;~£~s· UMI
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SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

'- ' · "

t 'r.;mal- 11!.5;,, - Ho!Jby - (;'Iffy · LOS r 1:
(;ranny says that t11e funny lh1ng ahout hun;,l'iY ,.,
JUSfl he nunule you llu'lk you have

1t you'y e LOST ITI

ARLO &amp; JANIS

~~~~ 1'0 WOR%, THMJ
W~~\l WE WWT TO ~lot!&gt;

SOUP TO NUTZ
MOM SIIYS I CaN BE
I l.olaNT 1b

ao~1!i1Na

Be:

WHEN

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--~------------------------ --~----------------------------------------------------~- =~------

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�•
•

'

The Daily ~ntipel • Page 88

Congress passes $51.8
billion relief bill for
Katrina .victims, A2

.AP Exclusive: Airport
shop, spa,·dentist among
Ohio's 9/ttloans, AS

~ If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, r::/o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1893, Gastonia, NC 28053
CUA•· ISM/\N llfliCI\

Race: Chevy Rock ·n· Roll
400
·
Whore: RIChmond (Va.) International Raceway (.75 miles),
400 laps/ 300 miles.
When: Saturday, Sept. 10

came the youngest driver ever
to win a race in NASCAR's premier senes. Busch, whose
older brother Kurt is the reigning Cup champion. fulfilled the
promise first displayed in a

Last year's winner: Jeremy

pair of second-place finishes.

Race: Emerson Radio 250
Where: Richmond (Va.) International Raceway (. 75
· miles), 250 laps/187 miles.
When: Friday, Sept. 9
Last year's winner: Robby
Gordon

;,u Ct ·: NTS • Vnl, ;,;;, Nn. IH

Quallfyln&amp; rocord : Kyle
Busch, Chevrolet, 129.348
mph, May 14,2004.
Race record: Dale Jarrett,
Ford, 104.928 mph, Sept. 8,
1995.
Last week: Carl Edwards, in
a Ford, won the Ameriques!
300 at California Speedway. ·
It was his fourth victory of

grave
Quallfyln&amp; reconl: Jamie MeMurray, Dodge , 125.436
mph, Sept. 9, 2904.
Race record: Bob Keselowski, Dodge, 104 .1 ~7 mph ,
Sept. 4, 1997.
last race: Mike Skinner, in a
Toyota, won the O'Reilly 200
at Bristol. It marked Skin·

Kenseth and Tony Stewart.
who tried in vain to chase him

the season.

~

_
ner's first series victory in almost nine years.

• Eastern wins important
TVC opener. See Page 81

KE'i'IN HARVICK

·

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

NExTEL CuP SERIES·

No.

29 GM

FEUD OF THE WEEK

·

v

GOODWRENCH CHEVROLET

E
R

s
r· S(ll1. •
• ~Tony Stewart's summer of suc. cess won't be of much use In
' the race-offs. That's bec'ause his
considerable point lead will be
all but erased by the Chase format, and lOth place will be only
45 points behind.
~i;lichmond International RaceWay, one of the most significant
' tracks in the Craftsman Truck
'' Series' history, won't be on the
2006 schedule. The .75-mile
track ·is bowi_ng out in favor of
Talladega Superspeedway, which
will hOst the trucks for the first
time.
~Ryan Newman's string of three

u

l

consecutive Busch Series victo-

ries came to an end · with a
whimper. Newman didn't com-

pete in the race at California
Speedway.
~ Even while rumors were
spreading that Kevin Ha rvick
might replace Jamie M.cMurray

at Chip Ganassi's team, the
owner who signed McMurray to
a contract for 2007, Jack
Roush, said it would suit him
flne to walt a year before putting
McMurray In one of p1s Fords.
~ Elllon Sadler defended h•s
teammate, Dale Jarrett. for intentionally wrecking Newman at
Bristol. ' I think Dale is just upset that we're all trying to rijce
to get Into the Chase and he's
, l'fO\ going to take it anymore,
' ·: and I'm not either; Sadler said.
. •I&gt;·Gr~g Biffle's second-place fin" lallln California's Busch Series
race was his fifth of the season.

W~lO ' S HOl
ANI&gt; WHO ' S NOT

r, •· WlliD'I hot -

Man Ken seth's
who has miraculously
;,:, iivol'l\e~
. way into . the
there's still that
rolling alo~g with
finishes .'

Roush

s

Chip

Ganassl

JackRoulh
va; .Chip GanaPI

Season's final races may prove crucial to Harvick's future at RCR
'

available, that wou ld mean I'd have
to make' new arrangements. and right
now we're all set," said Roush.

NASCAR This Week's Monte Dutton gives his take: "It's hard to believe Roush would keep Mark Martin
1n the fold another year if he could secu re McMurray, not because Martin

can't do a great job - he can - but
because Martin doesn't want to."
LEGENDS ANO LORE

NASCAR already hal one
Hall of Fame In S.C.

what was originally known. as ttle Joe--

Weatherly Stock Car Racing Museum . The latest inductees, recently
elected by the NMPA membership,
are track owners Bruton Smith and

Paul Sawyer and driver Butch Lindley.
Lindley, before his untimely death in
1990, won two National Sportsman
(now Busch Series) championships.
FA'N TIPS

Wayan1 brothers looking
Into forming race team
Forfner Oakland Raiders receiver
Tim Brown held a news conference in

· Fontami. Calif .. updating repDlters· on
the status of his ownership of a
NASCAR team. Some of the Wayans
brothers followed Brown with a new
confl:!rence that was had more frivol.ity than

substance.
Keenan Ivory, Shawn and Marion
told a group of reporters they were .
looking to field a Cup team in 2006
with the help of Star Motorsports, an

POMEROY - The jury
Even though the New England trial of a Rutland man
Patriots and Oakland Raiders. accused of multiple drug
opened up the NFL season · counts and ihe thefts of a
tractor and camper has been
on television last night, footcontinued until later th is
ball fans in Pomeroy watched month.
·the real thing when the Meigs
Martin "Marty" Pierce. 44.
Middle School eighth grade
was scheduled to go before a
football team took on the
jury in Meigs County
Gallia Academy Blue Devils at Common Pleas Court on
home. Here the team takes a Thursday, but Judge Fred W.
huddle in-between quarters
Crow Ill ~ranted a lastwhile on the sidelines cheerminute continuance requestleaders taught this "Lil'
ed by Pierce's attorney,'
Marauder" how to cheer on
Charles · Knight,
with
the team.
prospective jurors in the
Beth Sergent/photoa
courtroom . Knight has fi led a
motion to suppress evidence
seized from Pierce's property
in March. claiming there was
no probable cause for lhe
search, and a motion to di smis s lhe case based on
speedy trial limitations.
Crow 'continued the trial
until Sept. 22. and set a hearing on all pending motions in
the case on Sept. 16.
'

Pomeroy,·
Police beat

WEATHER

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

· r

Details on Page AS

ace.ColdB••
Av•Dalde far car-ry-oa-t!
,

'

Please see Pierce, AS

sify auto racing.
' Hopefully we will have it together
by next season, even if we have to
put Marion behind the wheel,"

BEFORE THE RACE, STOP IN AND
VISrr OUR DELl OR HOT STUFF PIZZA!

Sec~nd Ave. • Middleport, OH

• Family Medicine.
See Page A3 .
• Bailey renion held.
See Page A3
•. Coffill joins Peoples
Financial Advisors.
See Page A3
• Local musicians join
for relief benefit concert.
See Page AS
• Ohio could get up
to 500 hurricane
evacuees this weekend.
See Page AS
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• For the Record.
See Page AS
• AHunger For More.
See Page A6.
• The Blessed Life:
Humility. See Page A6
• Local Church Briefs.
See Page A6

BY BRIAN J. REED

BREED®MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

upstart company that wants to diver-

&amp; Supply

;06 ~orth

INSIDE

'

The current attention devoted to
the site of a new NASCAR Hall of
Fame overlooks the fact that the
sport has had a Hall of Fame since
the 1960s. Administered by the National Motorsports Press Associa'
tion, the Hall of Fame is housed on
the grounds of Darlington Raceway in

Keenan Ivory said.

'

Please.see Volunteers, AS

Pierce
granted
last-minute
continuance

Are you
ready for
some
football?

anated from Roush, who said he did·
n't want McMurray' ne_xt year. "If
Jamie came to me and said he was

' The rest. of the season is crucial to ·
the career of Kevin Harvick, the 29year-old who has competed for
Richard Childress Racing in each of
the 167 races that comprise his Cup
career.
. Harvick, from Bakersfield, Calif. , is
considering a move to another team,
and tensions have been rising in recent weeks.
"I'm checking things out ;md really
just trying to see how it all goes," said
Harvick. "We'll race to the end of the
year anil see what happens. I think
I'm just taking my time and just trying to make sure that things are going
in the right direction. I don't want to
be there and have us all run poorly.
We want to run good. You know, there
are a lot of things going on and I just
want to see how it all·goes.
"I just want to see some improvement in the whole organization."
The most recent of Harvick's five ·
career victories occurred on April3 at
Bristol (Tenn.) Motor.Speedway. When
the Nextel Cup Series visited Bristol
for a second time, Harvick limped
home in 37th place after getting tan·
gled up in a crash.
With only one race remaining in the
regular season, Harvick has only the
faintesi chance of making the Chase
for the Nextel Cup. He also failed to
qualify for the race-offs in 2004.
"You don't go out and race any different," he said. "You go out and race
hard every week. You don't worry
about whether you're in the Chase or
John ClarkjNASCAR This Week
out of the Chase and run as hard as
you can. The chips fall where they Kevin Harvick has won just once this season and is currently not In the running for the
fall. You cah't control whether you'll 'Chase for the Championship: He also missed the 'Chase' last season.
be either in or out."
When the season began, Harvick. eight weeks. All those good r.uns we crash on the final lap of the 2001 Dayhad, we didn't capitalize on. You know, tona. Harvick responded almost imhad high hopes.
"We started out the year. good and when you don't capitalize on the good mediately,winning for the first time
just made a ton of mistakes," he said. days, your bad days are worse."
at Atlanta Motor Speedway on March
"You know, that's what happened all
Harvick's arrival occurred under 11 of that year.
through the first half of the season. the worst of circumstances. He re·
It's starting to catch up wiih us now. placed Dale Earnhardt, when tbe sevContact Monte Dutton at
We haven't run well in the last six or en-time champion was killed in a
. hmduttonSO@aol.com

.

with three campers, food,
Eddie Baer, Pastor Dan water, generators , cook
Wellman, Derrick St. Clair, stoves, chain saws; building
John Davis, John Moore and supplies and what they
Mike Thompson ..
described as "the hope of
The team of men set out Jesus Christ."

Roush for 2007. Roush has Kurt
Busch for next year but is losing-him
in 2007. The latest mind game em'

'By Monte Dutton
NASCAR Th;s 'v)leek

-·

houses for families to live in
and creating temporary hous·
ing and facilities for the
·
homeless.
The volunteers are Pastor

Many of the s~pplies as
well as money were donated
by businesses and individuals
in Meigs Coun1y.
Baer's organization, Team
Jesus Ministries, has set up a
Hurricane Relief account at
Peopl es Bank branches for
their rebuilding efforts in
Wavelane. Accordi.ng 10 a
Team Je sus representative
all donation s are I 00 perce nt
tax deductible and wi ll be
· used "I 00 percent . toward
helping Ihe . people of
Waveland."
Donations can be mailed to
Team Jesus Ministries, 43845
Harlinger Road, Pomeroy.
45769.
More volunteers are also
needed along with supplies
which can be dropped off at
Rejoicing Life Church in
Middleport.
·

Ganassi has Jamie McMurray fo·r

.

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

Local volunteers from Meigs
County lett t heir homes and
jobs this week to rebuild a
Mississippi town devastated
by· Hurricane Katrina.
Volunteers.are pictured 1n
Waveland, Miss. and are
(from left) Eddie Baer, Derrick
St. Clair, John Davis, John
Moore and Mike Thompson.
They were supplied with
money and building materials
by local businesses in Meigs
' County.
.
Submitted p~oto

next year. McMurray has signed with

'

Co.

v.wv..m)-daiiJ-"'IIIino.-l.c·Hcn

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSEN.TINELCOM

POMEROY - With most
of the emphasis being placed
on- New Orleans in 'the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina,
other states like Mississippi
have been somewhat ignored
despite sustaining storm
damage.
Mississippi is no longer
being ignored by six volunteers from Meigs County
who this week ventured to
Waveland, Miss. to rebuild
two houses that were left
standing in the community.
One of the
houses
belonged to a local pastor
who took in congregalion
members into their church
during the storm. The church
was destroyed but no lives
were lost.
Meigs County volunteers
are rebuilding those two

down in the Sony HD 500 at
California Speedway. He be- 1952.

• ·

I'!Uilt\Y, SEJFI'FI\1BEI{ &lt;) , :.11111;,

Locals volunteering in Mississippi,_more needed

SPORTS

Last year's winner: Ted ~us-

Mayfield
in his hometown of Las VeQuallfyln&amp; record: Brian Vick· gas. Nev .. in March and in
ers, Chevrolet. 1129.983 Dover, Del., in June. It was
mph, May 14, 2004.
only the 31st start of Busch's
Race record : Dale Jarrett. career as he became the
Ford, 109.047 mDh, Sept. 6, 168th driver to win a race In
1997.
NASCAR 's premier series.
Last race: Kyle Busch. all of Donald Thomas, whose older
20 years old; dusted off a · brother (Herb) was also a
cou ple of ex-champions, Matt champion. was four days older
than Busch now when he won
a race at the La~ewood track
near Atlanta on Nov. 16,

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Race: Cheerios Beny Crocker
200
'
Where: Richmond (Va.) International Raceway (. 75
miles), 200 laps/150 miles.
When: Thursday, Sept. 8 1

..,

. r

,....::...;·,.--..,

INDEX ·
2 SECTIONS- 16 PAGES

Buckeye Edition
· Calendars

83

A3

Classifieds

B4-6

Comics
Dear Abby

B7

Editorials
Faith • Values
Movies
Sports
Weather

A3
A4
A6-7

As
B Section

AB

© aoos Ohio Valle)' Publishing Co.

· POMEROY - Pomeroy
Police Chief Mark E. Proffitt
recently released infonnation
regarding cases of obtaining
prescriplion drugs under false
pretenses and lheft.
Within two davs of each
other ihe Pomero"y P.D. was
called to Swisher and Lohse
Pharmacy where two separate individual s in separate
incidents allegedly anempied
to obtain prescrip1ion drugs
under false pretenses.
On Aug. 24 Timothy
Neville. ·n. Gallipolis,
allegedly called Swisher and
Danielle Egnor, 25. and Lohse and identitled himself
Brenda Kay Davis. 42. both as an employee of Dr. Edward
of Bidwell. Ohio. were indict- H. Ayers of Pleasant Valley
ed on one counl each of Hospital. Sgt. Ronald Spaun
attempting to operate a clan- reported that Neville requestdestine drug laboratory. ed a prescription for 120 pills
attempting to manufacture a . of Norco at I0 milligrams.
subs1ance
controlled
Police said Neville later
(methamphetamine) and con- admilted to calling in a fal~
spiracy lo commit a felony.
prescription .
Columb. Egnor and Davis
Neville " 'as taken into cuswere aJTestcd by the P,oint tody ·by Spaun and Assistant
Pleasant Police Department Police Chief Jne Kirby Jr. and

Mason County grand jury indicts 25. area residents
Bv DIANE PonoRFF
DPOITORFF@MYOAILYREGISTER.COM
- - -- - - - - - - POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- , A Mason County grand
jury returned true bills against
25 defendants Tuesday.
·Cases• include a man
accused of sexual abuse with
family members, a man who
'allegedly broke into his doc·
tor's oftice and three people
who allegedly attempted to
make a methamphetamine lab.
Bernard Lee Jordan, 68, of

Gallipolis Ferry was indicted
on tWO counts of first-degree
' sexual assault, two counts oi'
incest, two. counts of sexual
abuse by a custodian, two
counts first-degree sexual
abuse and two counts of sexual abuse by a custodian.
On May 20, troopers with
the
Mason '
County
Detachment of the West
Virginia State Police arrested
Jordan . Troopers said the
abuse allegedly had been happening over several years.

Benjamin Douglas Carroll,
49, of- Portland, Ohio, was
indicted for breaking and
entering and grand larcen:,:.
Carroll was taken into custody by the Mason County
Sheriff's Department July 28.
He had been the suspect in the
breaking and enterin~ of Dr.
Danny Westmoreland s office
· in Mason. Carroll also was a
patient of Westmoreland's at
the time of the arrest.
Andrew Merrill Columb,
43. ·of Gallipolis, Alesha

Please see Indicts, AS

Please see Pollee, AS

'

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