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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

..

.

www .mydailysentim!i.com

Monday;'October 3, 2005

.Red Sox, Astros ·wrap up wild Bengals beaten up, but un~~aten
cards; playoff matchups··ate set

Bush chooses la-wyer
· Harriet ·Miers to
replace O'Connor,~

'

Bv JOE KAY

ASSOCIATED PRESS

BY MIKE FITZPATRICK
ASSOCIATED PRESS

DIVISION SERIES

American l.Hgue
Ch!eaao " ' Baston
Tuetday, Oct 4
Boston (Clement 13·6) at Cl1icago
ontreras 15·7), 4:09p.m. (ESPN)
Wednesday, OCI. 5
Boston ·. (Wells 15·7) at Chicago
(Buehrle 16-8), 7:09p.m. (ESPN)
Friday, Oct 7
Chica~o (Garland 18-10) at Boston
(Wakel1eld 16-12), 4:19p.m. (ESPN2)

Just when it looked '"
!hough the playoff picture
might remain muddled for
days. everything was &gt;etlleckun'
the fuml afternoon of the regu.lar season.
..
Oct 8
The Boston Red Sox and Chicago atSaturday,
Boston {Schlll!ng 8-8), if
Houston Astros wrapped up necessary
Sunday, Oct. 9
the wild cards Sumlay, clinch- Boston at Chicago,
if necessary
ing the final two major league
LO§ Angela• ys New York
playoft· spots. All tl1e matchups
Ocl4
were set for the 2005 postsea- New YorK Tuesday,
(Musslna 13-B) at Los
son. starting Tuesday with the Angsles (Colon.21-B)·, 8:19p.m. (FOX)
·
WedneSday, OCt 5
Nl. West champion San Diego. New
York {Chacon 7-3) at Los
Padres playing in St. Louis al Angeles (lackey 14·5), 10;09 p.m.
IESPN)
·
I :09 p.m. EDT.•
Fr1dl)', OcL 7
Houston
will
open Los Angeles (WashDurn 8·8) at New
Wednesday in Atlanla agamst York (Johnson 17·8), 8:19p.m. (F9X)
Oct 8
the NL East chm11pion Braves, · Los AngelesSaturday,
at New York. it necessary
coming off !heir 14th consecuSunday, Oct. 9
tive division title. It's a rematch New York at Los AngeiEis, if necessary
of their first-round series last
Nations• League
St Lgu!s ys, San Q!m
year. won by Ro$er Clemens
Oct~
and the Astros in nve gmJJes. · San DiegoTuesday,
(Peavy i 3· 7) at St. Loois
"''m very thankfuL It was {Carpenter 21·5), 1:09 p.m. (ESPN)
Oct 6
some rocky roads, roller-coast- . San DiegoThul)ilday;
(Aitacio 4·2) at Sl. Louis
er rides throughout the sea- (Mulder 16·8), 4:09 p.m. (ESPN2)
Saturday, Oct. 8
son," pitcher Andy Pettitte said St.Louis (Marris
14·10) at san Diego
after a 6-4 'victory over the (Eaton 11-5)
.
·
Oct. 9
Cubs allowed Houston to fin- St louis at Sund~,
San Otego, If necessary
ish one game ahead of
Monday, Oct. t 0
San Diego at St. Louis, if necessary
Philadelphia.
'\
The Phillies did all they
Atlanta vs. Houston
could to . force a tiebreaker
. wec~nesdar, Oct 5
Houston {Peltitle 7·9) at Atlanta
playoff, bealing Washington 9- (Smaltz
14·7), 4;09 p.m. (ESPN)
3 for a weekend sweep. but slill
' Thursday, DeL 8
Houston (Clemens 13-8) at Atlanta
fell short.
.
(Hudson 14·9)J 8: 1'9 p.m. (FOX)
Curt Schilling. Manny
Saturday, Oct. 8
Ramirez and the Red Sox Atlanta {Sosa 13·3) at Houston
earned the AL wild-card berth (Oswalt 20.12)
Sunday. Ool. 9
· for the •third consecutive sea- Atlanta at Houston
Oc:t. 10
son, .the same spot that started ' Houstoo atMonday,
Atlanta. if necessary
them toward their first World
Series championship in 86 "We came up one game short.
years. In fact, a wild-card temri But the guvs should be very
has won the past three titles.
proud of what they've accomThe defending champs plished."
clinched when Cleveland, the
Boston's first -round series
only other team that had a shot against
the AL Central ctiampi·
at the wild card. lost 3-1 at
on
White
Sox start.s Tuesday at
home to the White Sox, who
swept · the three-game series. 4:09p.m. in Chicago. They finThe defeat concluded a cmsh- ished with the best record in tl1e
ing final week for the young league at 99-63 and will be tryIndians (93-69). who dropped ing to win their tirst po~tseason
six of their last seven gmnes. · series since· the 1917 World
"We ended like we started.'' Series.
"We are playing against the
closer Bob Wickman said in a
somber Cleveland clubhouse. best. They are the champions

CINCINNATI Carson
and they know how to play in
mer's shoulder bore a nasty
the playofls," White Sox manserape. Bload trickled from
, a~er Ozzie Guillen said. "We
ch-long ga~h on the bridge
d1dn 't face them during the · of Willie Anderson's nose. Chad
season when we were ~itchi1.1g Johnson wore a bm1dage above
well. 'Nnw, we .are. That s adrfhis skinned knee.
ference."
. These Bengals were beaten
The New York Yankees, who up, but still unbeaten.
dinched their eighth straight
TI1e Bcngals improve- I to 4-0
.AL East title &lt;'n Saturday_, at
for the first time s1~ellJS8 Fenway . Park. travel · to the last they made 1e Super
Anaheim to play the AL West
Bowl - , w1th a ~ 6-1 victory
chmnpion Los Angeles Angels
Sunday over the Houston
Texans. wlm couldn't take
beginning Tuesday night at
advanta~e of their penalties or
8:19 p,m. The Angels beat tl1e
their
patn.
. .
Yankees in the 2002 division
series en route to thei~ on-ly
"Everybody was going with
World Series championsnip.
some _type of injury,' said
Anderson, a Pro Bowl righl
The Angels earned hometackle who threw his back out
field advantage in the series by
before the kickoff and hurt his
virtue of a 7-4 victory in Texas
nose during the game. "That's
on Sundny and New York's 101 loss in Boston. Los Angeles the type of character this team
has now."
and New York both finished
Four wins will do thiu.
95-67, and the Angels won the
. The Bengals had 14 penalties
season series . between the
lor 117 yards - one of them
teams.
wiped · . out
TJ.
"!,.think . we accomplished
AP photo
Houshmandzadeh
's
touchdown
wlmt we wanted to by getting
Cincinnati Bengals receiver T.J . Houshmandzadeh (84) runs
guys rested' and getting home catch - and lost both of their past Houston Texans defender Dunta Robinson (23) in the firsl
vetcnm centers to knee injuries
field," Angels manager Mike
half. Sunday in Cincinnati. Houshmandzadeh caught eight
in
the se&lt;.-ond quarter.
Sciascia said. "Everything had
They absorbed the penalties, · passes for 105 yards in the Bengats 16-10 win.
to fall in place perfectly, and it
shuffled the line and gritted it
looks like it did.''
going forward. so it should have exotic coverages that they might
All firsl-round series are a out.
"We
had
some·
dumb
misbeen an mcomplete pass.
have drawn up in the dirt."
. best-ot~ tive .
lakes,"
Palmer
said.
"We're
not
"We
all
thought
it
was
going
The Texans'.. offense ran
After Boston's win over the
always
perfect."
to
be
overtumed,"
1ight
tackle
smoother
under a new offensive
Yankees at Fenway, the outBut
so
far,
3~ enough.
Todd
Wade
said.
"That's why coordinator. They tired Chris
fiekl score~oards posted
· Houshman deh, who refus- we stayed on. the tielil . . Palmer during their bye week:
matching messages; one cones-to dan&lt;.-e atier a touchdown. Apparently, they saw it other- and promoted line coach Joe
gratulating the ·Yankees and
kept the Bengals in their best Wise.".
Pendry, hoping to stop the del·
one congratulating tbe Red
start since the days of the lckey
Takmg advantage of the uge of mistakes that hmited 'the
Sox.
Shuffle. He caught eight passes gmne's only turnover, Grdham offense to two touchdowns in
Turned ·out, there was no for 105 yards. steadyin,g .u1 kicked another tield goal from two games.
need for a tiebreaker- or two, offense that had to grind 11 out 46 yards. Si« plays later. Carr
TI1ere were fewer mistakes
for that matter.
for the first time all season.·
was sacked on what was sup- but the result wa~ tl1e same _,'
Just a day l:lefore. the AL
Shayne Graham's 27 -yard posed lo be_.a desreration throw only one touchdown again. Carl
field eoal with 5:041eft broke a from trudfield as ume ran out.
wa&gt; 17-ot~26 for 174 yards with
pennm1t race was so jumbled
I
0-aJr
tie,
m1d
David
Carr's
disHoushmandzadeh
kept
the
·
seven
sacks. ·
that it looked as though the first
puted
fumble
with
3:14
10
go·
offense
moving
on
a'
day
when
"I
felt
like we~er;eplayingto
double tiebreaker playoff in
sent
the
Texans
to
their
tirst
0-3
the
TeXm1s
made
sure
that
h•s
our
potential
t&lt;Xray,' satd Carr,
major league history might be
start in their four seasons.'
showy . ~eammate · wouldn't who was sacked eight times in
necessary.
Carr was hit by Justin Smitti dance:Johnsondidajigatlerhis his last gwme. "I jus! wish we
"I think it's what a lot of peowhile his aim was cocked, and touchdown a .week earlier-and had a win to ~o along with that
ple cxpecled at the be~a·nning
the
ball slip'out of his hand ~she promised a new end zone eele- feeling. But I ·m happy that our
of the season, us and oston
started
an awkward throwing ~ration agam.st tbe Texans.
guys are playing with some conback in the playoffs," ankees
..
molion.
John
Thornton
fell
on
"They
weren't
going
to
give
fidenee."
·'
captain Derek Jeter said.
the ball, and ·· referee Larry me anything this week," saip · By contmst, Palmer went 25NeDJmers upheld the call on · Johnson. who had seven catches of-34 for 276 yards and a touchAP Sports Writer Tom
_
r_eview.
costing the Texans their . for 67 yards. "I had double cov- down in an offense that had to
Withers in C/eveltmd COil:
hnal
t1meout.
erage, a couple of times u·iple ~dju~l on the ny because of
tributed ro this srmy
-· Houston th£ught his arm wa&gt; coverage. It was ridiculous. IIIJUfles.

,·

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

:;o CENTS • Vol. 55, 'No. 35

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 2005

""'"·mydailyS&lt;•nlin..I.mm

Water treatment plant moves toward ·November groundbreaki~g

SPORTS

· phmr' s electrical
wMk
remained uilresolvcd.
The project's engineer
RACINE - Last night . Barbara Atiderson recomRacine Council' awarded the m~ndcd council not award
construction of the ' actual ·any work under division D as
water treatment plant facility the bid exceeded the engineer
.which is referred to as divi- estimate by Y8 percent.
sion . C
to
Downing COLmcil took Anderson's recComtruction.
Council made their deci' ommendation and did not
sion after meeting with the award " bid for ihc electrical
village's engineering firm work . .
Division D will receive a
yesterday which also recomchange
order that will be figmended
Dvwn i ng
ured
in
to the general conConstruction receive the
award after the y had !he row struction of the plant. MJyor
J. Scott Hill did not anticipate
bid of $1 .086,0(KJ.
Although council felt that this slowing down the project.
Since Sept. 6. counci l has
· all issues concerning the division C award were resolved, 60 days to sign all the ·approdivision D. which is the priate contracts with the conBY BETH SERGENT

• Browns-looking to get
even. See Page 81

8SERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

tractors for a groundbreaki ng
on the plant tentatively scheduled for the first or second
week of November.
Council agreed to accept
Strand and Associates·bid for
5_40.000 for resident•. engineering support. This support
includes a principal engineer
that will spend 10 hours of
time on the project. a project
engi neer that will spend 60
hours on the project. an ass istant cngim·cr that will spe nd
360 hours llll the project , all

over a nine month construe- . expenses.

tion period.
The motion received one
"no" vote from Councilm'an
Greg Taylor who feilfed , lia-·
bility issues after tl1e con-

• The STAG gran! money
has not been received which
was one of the reasons why
the village -agreed to borrow
the $1, 5:.1 ,5~9.44 so as not to

slow the project due to lack of
funding on their part. Once
the STAG money is received .
the $500,000 will go back
towards paying-on the loan. ·
Hill emphasized that the
village may not need the
S1.251.559A4. The figure is
purpoo;ely intlated to cover
any unexpected costs the project may have. keeping the
village from taking out a secnnd loan for the same project.
The water treatmenl facili ty . " exp~ctcd to · cost
$2,583.559.44.
Also at the meeting was
Street Commissioner Jon
Holman, Councilman Duke
Bentz was absent due to
health reasons.

of the assault. The · Wards
were accused of supplying
the- girl with Jrugs. and
POMEROY - Terri Ward Raymond~ard is charged
of Rutland was sentenced to with engag 1ng in oral sex
five years of community con- with the then-underage girl.
trot for her rQie in one of the
A jury· deadlocked in the
sexual abuse cases involving June trial ot· Raymon d ward
her husband, Raymond.
on those charges, and a new
After completion of a post· jury will consider the charges
sentence mvesllgatton and a next month . He also faces
VlCtlm •mpact statement . . similar . charges in Athens
Tern Ward entered a guilty C 1 ,
plea to charges ot endangeroun.) ·
.
ing . children. a first·degre&lt;;:&gt; Ra)mond Ward wa~: · !lei!•
misdemeanor, and corrupting lenced Fnday to 54 ~ears rn
another with drugs, a fourth· pn son .on SIX counts ol :ape
degree felony. She was sen- mvolvmg lw_o other mrnor
tenced Friday to a five-year female V1.Ct1ms. He _ was
period of supervised proba- acquitted on four other rape
tion under the community char~es and a count of corcorrections program, She was ruptmg another with drugs.
also ordered to complete drug . . In add1t1on to her prob~. treatment through the TASC . tlonary sentence, . Ward s
sublnttted photo program, and to con1plete 200 operator's license was sub·
Nearly 300 motorcyclists vis1ted the Syracuse Church of the Nazarene for the church's fi'rst-ever hours of community service. JCCted to a f~ur- year retroacBiker Sunday. A special service was offered by Pastor Steve Combs of Leave a Mark Ministry,
Ward had · admitted to tive suspension. beginning
special music was performed and a hog· roast was served by members of the congregation.
involve men! in her husband's Dec.· I, 200,0, and she was
1998 sexual assault of her ordered to complete her GED
niece, who was IS at the time in 12 months.

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

· OBITUARIES
p·age AS
•..Helen L. Smith
• Betty Foley

•

BG 55 Blower

95

Ourrmost popular model for homeowners.
Lightweight,. powerful, starts easily!
•,

·Local agencies preparing to
help with heating assistance
· BY BETH SERGENT.
8SERGENT@MYDAILYSENT1NEL.COM

WEATHER

..

, participating retlli/e,rs.l
At

Submitted. p~oto

Chester

.struction period .
Council voted to borrow
$ 1,251,559.44 from the Ohio
Water and Development
Authority at one and one half
percent interest for 30 years
for their share of the water
treatment plant ex penses.
The village is waiting for a
grant from the United States
Environmental
Protection
Agency known as a . State
Tribal
Assistant
Grant
(STAG) in the amount of
$500,000 to go towards.those

Biker Sunday revvs up Syracuse Woman sentenced
for role in rape case

A.JAvestigators: Passengers slid to one side
before boat flipped over.
See Page A2
• Meigs residents to
participate in farm festival.
See Page A3
• Hackett to challenge
DeWine as Miers'
confirmation begi~s.
See Page AS
• Court sets t;Jate for
spme provisions of
,
abortion law to take effect.
SeePage,AS
· • State Supreme Court to
hear eminent domain case.
See Page AS
· • Federal judge allows
state to move death row
to Youngstown.
See Page AS
• Ohio woman among ·
dead in boat accident
or New York lake.
See Pag~A8

______

at

e

carrying
case &amp; hat with the purcllase
of any Easy2Stan'" chain saw.

$159

Marine battalion
that suffered 48
deaths in Iraq, AS ·
'

INSIDE

FREE

Ch~ney welcomes

Chester firemen wilt host an open house at the fire department Oct. 16. Here they pose beside
their new fire truck, left to·right. front, Bruce D. Myers. Danny Bissell, Larry Cleland, V1ctor Bahr.
Pearl .6dwards, Bob Wood. and Harold Newell.' honorary members; second row, Marvin Taylor.
Keith Aeiker, Eric Brooks. La rry Lee. Leonard Koenig, Roger Leach.. Becky Taylor. Russ Wells.
and third row. Dell Pullins, Charles Radford, Leonard Myers, Elmer Newell. Lowell Riaenour,
Bruce A. Myers. Dave Edwards, John Edwards. and Roy Bailey. Absent was John Ridenour.

Pomeroy

Baulnlumber Inc. Dettwiller Lumber

there ·is less than I0 days supply of fuel Community
Action can forward money to
a utility company. Other stip,:_
ulations sometimes apply for
qtmlification of thi s service.
On a state level, etforls are
underway to use surplus
Temporary Assistance for
Needy Families funds for
heating assi .stance.
Ryan Lippe. spoke5person
for the Office of . Ohio
Con&gt;tuner's Council which is
an aJvocate for utilities' consumcrs sa id his organization
is working to include what is
referred to · as the "working
. poor" in the assistance. The
"working poor" n.ormally

POMEROY - With the
federal government projecting natural gas prices to spike
70 percent this winter, local
agencies like Gallia-Meigs
· Community Action and the
Meigs County Senior Center
arc preparing to help reS!dent s obta in hearing assistance..
·
That assi, tance is not in the
form of cash handouts but
•·ather assisting rcsidems in
filling out applicalions to
· receive federal · and siate
a1sistance. and hel p wilh winterizing their homes.
In ext reme cases whe re
utilities are in disconnect or if . . Please see Heating. AS

..

46384 State ·Route 248 . 634 East Main Street
74(}-985-3301
.740-992-5500

·Chester firemen get new P.umper
Details on Page A6

INDEX

; I

2 SECTIONS- 16 PM.a:s

STIHL ·
..

Calendars

A3

Classitleds

B4-6

Comics

B7

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As
B Section

Sports
Weather
1.1''

.

A6

:wna Ohio Vi:alll'} Publi!ohing Cn.

BY CHARLENE HoEFLICH
the years wa.s its food booth
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTlNEL.COM at ihe Meigs County Fair.
For 38 years the department
CHESTER
The wi lh ·help fro m the commuChester Fire Department\ nit y operated a booth · next
new 2005 Freightline E-One to th e senior fair building .
pumper truck wil l be mi It took three shifts with 12
display at an open house set volunteer&gt; each to . handle
for 2 to 4 p.m . Oil Sund"Y· the business. Meanwhile
O~t. 16 at the firehouse .
many of the firemen's
The new truck replaced a wives and other residents err
1967 model truck which has the Cheste r comml!nity
no w been sold. It was purchased with money acc'umu- ·were in their kitchens b;ik lated over a long period of mg' all the pies. and cakes
time from a variety of fund which 1he firemen served.
raisers. ··we didn't applo/ In 2004 it was de~idcd it
for imy grant money .ro help w.as just too much and tlwt
with the cost." sa id Elmer the time had come to gi1c
Newell . '' It was jusi money up the fair booth.
we raiSed ...
Through · the years they
One of the depimment's . used the money they made
bigge;t money makers oyer. at the
. fair_to purchase need ·

.

ed ·equ ip..nent and supplies,
but alway' put some · asicle
111 an ticipatio n of buying a
new pumper to replace the
old one.
'
In March the $ 14 X.OOO
truck arrived and according
to Newell within hou..- it
w~1~

put

into servil..'e.

He

sa id they decided recently it
wa"' time to have an open
'hmiSC anJ let the public ;cc
the ir new truck.
·
A&gt; a part of getti ng ready
for the npen house. the firemen. · both active and
retir~d-

po,cd for a pii.:lurc

be&gt;ide the new 1rul'k they
had · \vailc&lt;l-fur ..,o lon g and
\Vorkcd -;o hard to geL

Refreshmcllls will he
se rved at the open hou&gt;e .

Charlene Hoeftlch/phato

The duck 'purchased by Jackie Harsh of Pomeroy. center,
crossed the finish line first i~ the annual duck derby held at
Pomeroy's Stelnwheet Riverfest . As the winner she was presented $1.000 in Chamber bucks by the Pomeroy Merchants
Association , sponsors of the &lt;\Vent. Here she receives her
prize frpm Peggy Barton. event'challman. and John Musser.
Association pr~sident.

\

'

1
•

�..
I

The Daily Sentinel

'

.N ATION

·BusH CHOOSES LAWYER

•
&gt;

WORLD

...

PageA2
Tuesday, October 4,

The Daily Sentinel

2005

BY DAVID ESPO

•

•
'•

!

WASHINGTON
Prestdent Bush named Whtte
House counsel Hamel Miers
to a Supreme Court in transttion Monday, turning to a
longtime ·loyalist without
experience as a Judge or publicly known views on abortion to s u~c eed Ju stice
Sandra Day O'Connor.
Miers "will strictly mtetpret our Constitution and
laws. She wtll not leg islate
from the bench." the pres tdent said as the 60-year-old
,former pn vate attorney and
keeper of campaign secrets
stood nearby in the Oval
Oftice.
Mi~rs.' was Bush's second
Se lectton tn three months for
vacancres on a htgh court
long drviiled on key issues.
The announcement came
shortly before the presrdent
attended a ceremony marking John Roberts' new tenure
as the nation 's 17th chid justice.
''The wisdom or those who
drafted our Constttution and
conceived our natton c~s
·functioning wtth three strong
and independent branches
has proven truly remarkable," Miers sa td at the
White House before depart·
ing for the Capitol and a confirmation campaign already
taking shape in the Senate.
MaJority Leader Btll Fnst ,
!:{-Tenn., said through hts
spokesman he wanted a convote
by
firmati(m
Thanksgivmg, a compressed,
seven-week timetable by
'recent historical .~ tandard s .
Sen. Arlen Specter, chatrman
of the Judtctary Commtttee ,
pledged thoroughne ss.
"There needs to be, obvtously, a very thorough
inquiry into 1 ~er background
as a lawyer "ltnd her activities, people who wtll know
her on the issues of character
;i'nd mtegrity, whtch we wtll

l

I

BY CHRIS CAROLA
ASSOCIATED PRE SS WRITER

.

•

•

- - - - -- - - --

2005

Teen. should get to work using her own two feet
Church events

Other events

Meigs residents to participate in farm festival

Meigs County court·news

( f:;,"';:

Proud to be apart of ·,
· your life.·
=z:e,..

.,

Tuesday, October 4,

Clubs and

Rus'sian spacecraft docks at
international space station
with American ·space traveler

LAKE GEORGE. N.Y. The passen gers aboard a
Bv MIKE ECKEL
applauded as the capsule's
tour boat that capstzed on
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
docktng was announced at
Lake George, ktlling 20
in
Mts sion
Control
·people, were sittmg on long
· KOROLYOV, Russra 'Korolyov outside Moscow.
benches and slid sharply to
American millionaire space
"He's never felt better," "'
one side of the \'essel just
traveler Gregory Ol se n said Krista Dibsie, Olsen 's
before tl fhpped over,
floated into the tnternattonal 3 1-year-old daughter.
authorities said Monday.
space station Monday, welAs her 4-year-old son
.: Wayne Bennett, State
comed by the outpost's two- · Justtn sat on her lap, holding
::Poltce superintendent, said
man crew with the tradition- crayon drawings of rockets,
lhat investigators do not
al Russian greetmg at bread she said: "I can't wait to see
·know what initially caused
and salt.
.
him back on Earth."
the Ethan Allen to tip . But
Two days after blasting
The docking was conduct~e said passengers etther
off from Kazakhstan, a ed automattcally. Technical
shd or were thrown to one
Soyuz capsule carrying the ptoblem s have forced some
side of the boat after it
New Jersey scienttst, as well previous capsule )1ilots to
began lurching .
as American astronaut dock manually, a tense pro. "And that , of course,
William McArthur and cedure that risks damaging
.would automatically mean
Russian cosmonaut Valery the statton.
an even bigger shift of
Tokarev, hooked up wuh the
weight," Bennett satd
statwn 250 mtles above the
: The captain or the 40-foot
Earth ·at I: 27 a.m. EDT,
glass-enclosed boat told ·
abou
t five mmutes ahead of
AP Photo
authorities it was htt by A Lake George Manne Patrol offtcer putts ltfe preservers from the water as th e Ethan Allen, left , schedule.
waves from at least one
With the ar rival , Olsen
other vesse l and turned over IS brought to the surface of Lake George , N.Y. , Monday. The passengers aboan;t a tour boat that became the third private citas he tried to steer out of capstzed on Lake George. killing 20 people, were sitttng on long benches and slid sharply to one ize n to visit the orbtttng starhem, authoriues sa id earlt- stde of the vessel JUSt before tt fltpped over, authorities satd Monday. The ca pta111 of the 40-foot tion, havmg pard $2h mil- '
er Monday. The boat (12-meter) glass-enclosed·boat told authonttes tt wqs hit by waves from at least one other vessel lion to become what he call s
flipped SO fast that none or and turned over as he tned to steer out of them, authonties satd earlter.Monday.
a "space flight.rarqcipant."
• lnslanl Messa91ng Keep your buddy llall
the 47 passe nge rs - all
Olsen's relattves and U.S.
• 10 11-mall addruses with Webmalll
senior citizens, mo st · or out on that lake." Rosenker pended while the investtga- cause the boat. to rol l." and Russian space .officials
•· FREE TechniCal Support
• Custom Start Page Nows, Weatho~ &amp; morel
them fro1,11 Mi cht ga n said
tton continues. He and oth- Chambers sa.td
could put on a ilfc tacket.
The
boa t's
capta in .· et s, however. satd people
.
.
Chambers said he uho
There was no immetlrate Rt chard Paris. was the on lv should no,t drdw an y co ncl u6X fasterf_J
ex pected investt gators . to
/US/13 mOtV
confirmatiOn that anoth er crew member aboard. but srons about the oper.llor.
look
inio
whether
there
were
Slqn Up OnUntt www.Loc•INtt com
boat that co uld ha ve state rules al low lor tU St
"I do not believe there ts
churned up waves was in one qrewm an for up to 50 .any crimtnaj culpabtlit y on any mod tltcatl ons to the
'Cett Tode'p' &amp; sa~el
the area, and survivors were rassengers
Also . Nev. any of the pdrtics we have CJaft, ' uch as the ,tddi tiun of .t
740-992-6260
Subscribe today • 992-2155
!living. investigators dtffcr- York state reg ulati ons spoken with." s;ud · Shenff canopy, that might have made
Reliable Int ernet A r.cP.ss Smce 1994
wg versions of what hap- re4uire thut ltle Jackets be Larry CleveJand.
the boat less stable.
pened before the boat went made avathtble for every
A survtvor. 76-year-old
down tn calm, sunn y weath - person on a boat. but peo- old Jeane St ier ot Tremon ,
er, authorities satd
pie do not have to wear Mich., &gt;a td that she saw a
ARE YOU A RESIDENT OF MEIGS COUNTY?
'
Eight people were hospt- them.
wake com ing and that the
Earlier 111 the day, hoa t turned tnto it She said
taltzed with shortness of
In order to vote in the November 1!, 2005 General Election you must be
breath. broken bones and Bennett sa td the seats were she stood up and was ~it lte r
registered by October 11, 2005.
not secure d to deck But thrown or jumped. tnto the
other mjuries.
Vote at your new precinct and avoid long lines at the board on Election
- On Monday afternoon , later, Stat e Police said tha t water. where she round hercrews using intlatable bags was incorrect.
self surrounded by other
Day hy changing your address (if you have moved within the county) or if
raised the sunken vessel 70
Rep. John Sweeney, R.- pa sse ngers Sh e suffered
you chan,ged your name, by updating your registration by October ll,
feet to the surface. They N.Y., satd tnvesttgatOt s are broken bones in her spine, a
2005.
planned to pump it out and "look in g at whe th er there b10ken ftnger and bumps on
tow it to shore. National was too mu ch we ight on het head.
The Hoard of Elections will be open from 8:30am until 9:00 pm
Transportatton
Safety board the boat , eve n thoug h
Virg i I Chdmbet s, exec uon Thesday October Jl , 2005.
dtrector
(J f th o
Board inve suga tors will th e vesse l was just below tive
You may also register at the following· locations: Meigs County
its capacity ,of 50 people . Na~tonal Safe Boa tin g
then examme the wreck.
Mark Rosenkcr, NTSB He said the Coast Guard Cou nctl. an organtzat ton
Department of Human Services, Meigs County WIC Orfic~, I,..icense
acting chairman . satd mves- · assumes a wetght of ! 50 for recreatiOnal boaters,
Bureau, Board of MRIDD, Pomeroy Public Library, Middleport Public
tigators would focus on pound s per person in calcu - said investigators woulu
Library, Eastern Library, Meigs County Treasurers Ol'lice and all the
such thin gs as the' history of lating a vesse l" s c.tpac ity probably exa min e how
the boat, th e pilot' ' record , - an as sumption he satd weight Wds distributed
area high schools.
whether the boat had may have• been oil the wtthin the bo.tt.
For any additional information, call 992-2697, or s top by our office
" If all th e people were
enough -crew member&gt;. and mark .
located at 117 E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Qhio, Meigs County
Gov. George Patakt v~ltld on one side. maybe to look
whether the numbet of passen~ers played a role 111 the licen&gt;es for two ot her boats
at so methtng. untl rf the
Courthouse Annex.
operated by the Ethan operatot were to take the
acc tdent.
Office located behind Holzer Clinic, Meigs Branch
_ " It's much too edrly to Allen's owner. Shoreline boat over a wave at a pardeterm ine what q;tppencd Cruises, have been sus- ltqJ.tt,tr angle . it cou ld
•
•

PageA3

DEAR ABBY: I just tinso n for dnving him to ' and
tshed remhng the letter· from
Ma so nic
Temple.
from work, not because I need
"Standing on Pn nctple." w~Q
Refres hment s.
the money but because he
thtnks she should get $5 a
CHESTER
Chester
needs to understand that the ~e
Tuesday, Oct. 4
Wednesday, Oct. 5
week fur tlnvi ng her 17-yearDaughter's
of
Co
uncil
,
are
costs assoc tated with
RUT!'.AND Rutl and
MIDDLEPORT - Revival uld ntece to work hall a mtle
Masontc
Amenca,
7
p
m.,
transportution
He earn s a reaVilla ge'.~ounci r wtll meet at
servtces at 1\ ';ddleport Ch ur~h away. Because tl " such a
Oear • sonable wage..and
butldtng.
Annual
in
spection
the amount
6:30 p m in coun cil quarters
of the Nazarene, Ge neral short distance. that gtrl sho uld
Abby
will
be
held
.
Membe
rs
are
I
expect
is
JUSt
suffrcient
in the Civic C~ nter
·
Hartinger Parkway through WALK to work!
reminded to wear whtte.
enough to let hini know that
Our nation is growing f,ltter
POMEROY
Drev. Sunday R ~v H1trold Massey
nothmg is ftee, and th erefore
Wednesday; Oct. 5
Webster Post 39, American evangelist Servtces at 7 p.m and latter, more and more out
he should. plan ht s expenses
ALFRED .Orange
Wednesday through Saturday. of shape physically. because
Legion
,
regular
meetin
g
carefu
ll y My tune is va luTownshtp Trustees will meet
9:30a.m . Sunday school , I0:30 of less ,tnd ,less exerc ise and
DEAR ABBY. With re ~ard
wtth dmoer at 7 p m
able,
but
I gtve it willingly.
.
"'
at 7:30 p.m. at the home of
a.m morning worshtp and 6:30 active plaY,, and more and to "Stund tng on Principle tn
MIDDLEPORT
mece
should underThat
the clerk, Oste Follrod.
Middleport
Co mmunit y p.m Sunday eve ning servtce.
more com put er and vtdeo Knoxville." who " needs" a stand that $5: is less than a
CHESTER .-Chester Association, 8:30 a.m ..
games. I am a regiStered nurse ride to v.ork every day. I thmk taxi, and certllmly more conTown ship Trustees regular Peoples Bank
Friday, Oct. 7
who sees a lot of people tn til a couple of points are in order. vemen t rhan a bus - MARC
monthly mee tmg, 7 p.m.,
RACI NE - A weekend health . I know that a m&lt;qor
Frrst, tt' s not unreasonable
L . CLEARWATER, FLA .
meeting wtll be held Fnday
Chester Town Hall.
Wednesday Oct 5
portton ol thattll health coul d I'm that gtrl to pay for gas
DEAR ABBY. There.'s
through Sunday at the Red be .tvotded or tmpro ved by She ts earmng a few bucks, I
TUPPERS PLAINS MIDDLEPORT
. another
way to look at that
Eastern Loca l · School,. Middleport Ltterary Club Brush Church of Chnst on eatin g a healthy diet, being • expect. But if she 's going a situatton. Years ago, our local ·
mile a day five days a week.
Board spect al sess to~ , 6 will meet at 2 p.m. at the Bashan Roc1d. Meettngs on ac(ive and losmg v.etght.
eve
n an SUV would make a ch&lt;~mber of commerce sent I0
p.m ., to approve negottated home of Leah Ord. Gay Friday ,and Saturday will be
I LfndeNand th at for some profit on $5. How about $5 a underpri,v rl eged kids to two
contract wtth OAPSE
Perrin will re,iew ·'The held m 7 p.m. and on Sundav at people Jt \ hdl'd to get 111 that
weeks of overnight ca mp
Ki te Runn er" by Khaled I0 a.m. and 6 apm. Spe&lt;tker mmd-se t Dut it's a stmpler, month''
My other pomt is reall y the Ftve of them patd $5 and five
Thursday, Oct. 6
wtll be Guy Mallory of Winter
Hosse mt.
far
le«
expenstve
solution
to
reason for thi s letter· Wh y patti nothmg.
Garden. Fla.
PAGEVILLE -::- Scipio
he,il
th
care
thari
medtcattons,
Upon thetr return . we
does that kid need a ride''
Town ship Trustees, 6:30
Thursday, Oct. 6
and
more
tests,
and
fretests
received
fi,e thank-you note s
Unless she lives in the worst
Sundll}, Oct. &lt;).
p.m,., Pageville Town Hall.
TUPPERS PLAINS
quent
doctor/hospital
vtstts,
from
the
one s who paid . We
neighbothood tn all ol
RUTLAND
The VFW Ladies Auxiliary
to
say
nothtng
of
a
poor
'JUalheard
nothmg
from those who
Maryland, she could easily
Thesday, Oct. 11
of 9053 will, meet at 7 p.m. Homecommg wtll be held at it y of life
walk - and it would do het attended for free. I think peothe Rutland Church of Ghrist
POMEROY
The at the hall
Adults
need
to
thtnk
&lt;Jbout
some
serious good to do so. ple only put a va lue on things
with worshtp servtce at 10·10
Bedtor.d Township Trustees
thi
s,
not
onlv
for
themse
lves
I'm
older
than dtrt and had a that cost th em something -.
a.m , a cwry-m dinner at noon
will meet at 7, p.m. at the
Friday, Oct. 7
but
also
tor
ihetr
children
coronary bypass mne months PENNY C., PARADISE
town hall
POMEROY
- Met gs wtth meat. drinks and t~blc­ who ar~ at increased danger ago, and I walk a couple of VALLEY, ARIZ.
County Chapter #74, PERl , ware provtdea, and an alter- of dtabetes, etc. because of miles every morning wtthout
Dear Abby is writte11 by
I I :45 a.m.' luncheon meet, noon service at 2 p.m. v.t~l poor ltlcs'tyle habits - · A latl. If I can do tt, wh y can't Abigail Va11 Burell, also
ing, Metgs County Senior musrc by Dayspring.
VERMONT NURSE
WALKING ON k11ow11 as Jea11ne Phillips,
she? ·~rgani~ations Center. State Rep. Jimmy
DEAR
VERMONT PRIN CIPLE IN SAN JOSE
and wal founded by lrer ·
Stewart and State Senator
.NURSE: Ybu are not th e only
DEAR WALKING ON mother, Pauline Phillips.
Thesday, Oct. 4
Joy Padgett are speakers.
r~ader who was 4ui ck to pomt PRINCIPLE: That's a good Write
Dear Abby ' at
TUPPERS PLAINS
Call 992 -2161 for lunch
Thesday, Oct. 4
out that a hal f- mile walk isn 't 4uestion - and one that only www.DearAbby.corn or P.O.
Public meetmg at 6 p.m. at reservation s by Oct. 6.
POMEROY
Metgs a hardshtp. The face with t11e" the young lady can answer.
Box 694411, l..os Angeles, CA
the Tuppers Plains fireCounty Health Depw1ment egg on it is mine. Read on
DEAR ABBY I charge my 90069.
)louse . Officers for the
Saturday, Oct. 8
evening hams 4 · to 6 p.m
Tuppers Plains baseball
COOLVILLE
Childhood
immumzations,
and so ftball program for Octoberfe st at Coolvtlle blood pressure and blood sugar
the 2006 season- will be Volunteer Fire Department. checks and assessments, WIC
MIDDLEPORT - Sharon mustc. They also show crafts, the fes tt"ll , feature s
di scu ssed and officers Food,
entertainment, questions. prenatal services,
elected.
,Chinese auction, drawing s head hce screenmgs, ehvu on- Stewart of Middl eport and manv different breeds of musical entertainment , farrn
MIDDLEPORT
contests
Vendors are wel co me mental health questions. vttal the Horse men of Prectston horses and educate the demonstration s,
·Middleport Lodge 363; Parade at 10 a. m Contact statistics available concern- Ente rtatnment (H 0 P.E) crowd about the ho rses. and chtltlren 's act ivtties.
eq uine drill team based 111 Therr shows are at I I a.m.
F&amp;AM , 7.30 p.m. at the Lee Washburn , 667-6891.
Demonstrati ons and activ ing birth , de,lth certi ficates
Pomeroy. wtll participate m and 2 p.m daily at the ities in clude country, gos pel.
the It adttt onal · art s. enter- event.
jazz and blueg rass mustc ;
. ' ta in ment anu farm demonMore than 100 tradttion- cloggers and hne dancers;
stration s offered at the 35th al craftspeople wtll be on an equine -mounted drill
POMEROY
Meigs $2~ and costs, probation , seat belt violation ; David S. annual Bob Evans Farm hand at the festival to team; a Jumber.tack shov. ;
County Court Judge Steven · fatlure ' to control; Jarrod McDaniel , Pomeroy, $250, Fes ttval tn Ri o Grande, demonstrate and sell a w'ide tractor square dancmg, feed
L Story reeently processed Holman, Rutland,. $30 and I80 days in jail. suspended, Ohio, Oct. I 4 through Oct variety of items, many made sack races, a corn shelling
.
with tools and techniques contest and other uniqu e
the following cases:
costs, seat belt violation; probation , theft; Jonath,m J 16.
will
demonstrate
·
nearly
· forgo tten today. events
,
·
Stewatt
Ronald L. Fulk, Somerset, Robert S. Horvat. Long McDaniel , Racine. $20 and
pamtmg
Crafts
on
display
include
decorative
acrylic
Open from 9 a m to 5
· $30 and cost s, speeding ; Bo\tom , $200 and costs, 30 costs, unreaso nable speed tor
vanety
of
sutlaces.
weaving,
soap
makmg
,
on
a
p.m.
daily, admt ssmn is $5
Russell
T.
Garber, days in jail, 27 suspended, cond.;
Ttmothy
M
in
cludtng
metal
,
wood
and
wooden
toys,
leaded
'and
for
adults
, $3 for chtldren
Worthmgton, 530 and costs, probatton, dnvmg under McDamel , Chcshtre , $20 and
slate
It
is
her
third
yea
r
as
stain
ed
glass,
sprnnrng
,
ages
stx
to
twelve 1ii!d free
speeding, Chandra S. Gard, susp./revoc. , $30 and costs, costs, failure to transfer owna
crafter
at
th
e
fest
tval.
leatherwork
,
blacksmithing
.
for
those
ages
five and
Racine, $35 and costs, three probation, seat belt violatiOn: . etship, Michael D. McGrew.
H.O.P.E.
mounted
ba
sketry
and
other
demonTh
e
und er. School groups are
days in jail, suspended, pro- James H. Hou ~k. Carroll, $20 Ptckerington. $30 and costs,
equine
dnll
team
is
one
of
strattons
and
ttems.
free Primttive tent
admitted
bation, passing bad checks, and costs, drvrded roadways. seat belt violation, Mircea
th
e
most
popular
entertamWith
30.000
people
RV
camptng tor the
and
$350 and oosts, 30 days in
Pamela L. Hutchinson , Melnicius, Humble , Texas,
at
th
e
fesm
al
expected
to
vtsit
during
the
ment
acts
weekend
is
available' at the
Jail 27 suspended, probation , Belpre, $30 and costs, speed- $30 and costs, speedin g:
stxth
three:day
festival,
the
Bob
Appea
rin
g
for
their
farm. For mformation about
DUJ; John W. Gibbs, tn,\l; Shannon M. Imboden , Brittany J Mill er, Racine,
year,
riders
of
all
ages
Evans
Farm
Festival
has
the
fe stival , visnors ma y
Millwood,. W.Va . $30 and Mtddleport, $25, tmlurc to $150 and costs, tO days in
tn
c
k
nding,
been
called
"a
weekend
of
demonstrate
call
I -800-994-FARM or
costs, speeding ; Willis M. reg t~ter; Dallas M Jarrell , Jatl , suspended, probation, no
prec
tstun
ridm
g
and
dnll
fun
for
fri
ends
and
family
ot
the web site at
vistt
Goody, Gallipolis, $30 and Racme, $25 and costs, praba- driver ltcense, Stephen D
tea
m
flla
neu
ve
rs
pu
t
to
alt·dges
."
In
additton
to
the
www.bob,evans.com
· cost s, speedin g; Carol J. tlon , cnmmal trespass; Ltsa Mrller, Racine, $30 · and
;
Goosman,
Washington, B Jordan , Greensboro, N.C., costs,. ·seat belt violatton:
W.Va., $30 and costs, speed- $17 and costs, speeding; Bryan J. Mtrgon, Lancaster,
ing, Sherry B. Gorman, Jesstca L. Justtcc, Pomeroy, $50 and costs. speedmg; John
R;wenswood, W.Va., $30 and $20 and costs, stop stgn ; J Morbitzer. Tuppers Plums.
costs, speeding; Angela K. Matthew Keaton, Coolville, $30 and costs, speedtng, $50.
Gray, Racine, $30 and costs, $20 and costs, fat lure to con- 10 day s in jail, suspended,
.seat belt violation; Thomas trol; Matthew A. Keaton , probati on, no 0 L. ; Carrie E.
R. Green, Galloway, $30 and Angola, Ind ., $30 and costs, Myers, Langsv tlle, $30 and
costs, speeding; Kathleen s~eedmg; Brad A. Km g. costs, 's peedih~ ; Thad T.
Gregg, Sycamore. Mo .. $50 Prckenngwn •. $150 and costs, Napper, Langs vtlle , $350 and
and costs, speeding;· Rodney 30 ~ays tn Jatl. suspended. costs, 10 days in Jatl , seven
A. Grue se r, Rutland, $30, probation, reckl ess &lt;;&gt;perattOn , suspended, probatton, DUI ;
seat belt violatiOn; Rammy Marlene Krrby, Mtddleport , Matthe w D. Neigler, Racin e.
·M. Jaija, Prosser, W.Va., $30 ~50 and costs, three days Ill $350 and costs, 30 da ys m
and costs. speedmg; Mark A. Jatl, suspended, probation , jail 27 suspended. probatton.
Haley, Pomeroy, $150 and passmg bad .checks; Joseph DU,I, $ 100 and costs, probaLocdted '" the O'B ieness Med1cal Park the Castrop Center represents the O'B ieness Healt h System's
costs, 30 days in Jatl. sus- A. Knopp, Coo":·ille •. $100 tton , speedtn g; Dent se D.
commttment to progressiVe canng for our commulllty The largest smgte protect of a four-phase
pended , probation , dism derly and costs, t~ree days III.JUtl. Nitz, Middleport , S25 and
expa~s1on plan, the Castrop Center prov1des conven1ent access to a vane1y of med~al serv1ces
conduct .
suspended, probanon, clrsor- costs, no 0 L.. Jeffery A.
Lowell
D.
Halfhill , derly &lt;;onduct, $20, seat belt- Noutz , Albany. $30 and
First Floor
Third Floor
Bidwell, $25.. equipment passenger, Cmdy L. Lambert, costs, speed ing; Ugocukwu
• Athens Surg£&gt;ry Center
• Athens Pathology
mtsue , . Melame D. Hall , $50. probatton . dtsorderl y s. Nwoke Blacklt ck $50
Scott A Jenk1nson. D0
Pomeroy. $20 and costs. tmf· · conduct, Peggy J. Lambert.
d
'
d'
_,'
L
• Eye Physicians imd Surgeons of Athens, Inc.
· ; Jason L. crown c11y, $30 an d cos 1s. OJ
an cos 1N
s, specH· 111 ~, ,w
aray. .
. con.t dev. stgns
Nili Uneh, D 0
ftC
Cra1g H Dodrill , MD
Harm a~. Bowling Green, $30 seat belt violation ; Jason M
tv~r, . cw, s ,~v e n, v· '~ ·
Jeffrey F McAdoo. M D
" Lung Diseases, Sleep Med1cme
and costs. speeding; John C. Lanham, Pomeroy. $30 and $30 .rnd ~ost · ·eat belt tol,tChnstopher 5 Ryckman, MD. FC C P
"O'Bfeness Laboratory SateUite
tton.
Harmon, syracuse, $ 50 an d costs, speeding; Branden G
William
D. 0 b
" Family Medicine
" O'Bieness Patrent Registrat1on Satellite .
cost·s, speedmg, $30 and Larkins, Pomeroy, $30 and Nashville. · Tenn . $JO ~~~:~
Ltnda B Tome, D 0
• O'Bieness Radiology and Imaging Services
costs, seat belt violation; costs, seat belt vJOiatton;
.
" General Surgery
Bone Denstty
Ronald J. Harmon , $250 and Arcillia N.
Laudenntlt. cos ts, speedtn g; John A
Neal J Nesb1tt, MD , FA CS
CT,Scdn
costs, 189 days in jail, sus- Parkersburg, W, Va .,, $20 and ? ttmat) , P.ortland. $30 and
Mammogrilphy
•
Infectious
Dis~ses. Internal Medkine
pended , probation, theft: Sara costs, . di splay plates 1 valid - cm ts, se.at . be l~ - vtol.rtt~n ,
MRI
And rew R Mu rry M D '
M. Harris, Racme, $30 and sucker; Don K. Layton, Point G~egory A . Par~ e t . T~pp"rs
• O'Bieness Rehabilitation Center
• lnteriJal Med;cine
costs, speedmg ; Mark L. Pleasant, w.Va., $30 and PJ ,un s, $30 and costs, speedPl1y~ICJI TberJpy
Paul E Cadamagnan•. D 0
Hart. Pomeroy, $25, parking . costs, speeding; Andrew J mg, Charl es E. Parsley.
Speech
1
herapy
"MidOhio Cardiology and Vas):uJar Consultants
on · highways; Vtckie , L. Leach, Elkview, W.Va., $30 Pomeroy. $30 and costs. seat
Lucy ld Perna, D 0, R VT
Hartm an, Prince George, Va , and costs, speeding; Linda belt vtolatJOn; Elmer B.
Dav1d R Richards. D 0 . F AC C . FA S E
$50 and costs, speedin g; Eric M. Lee, Athens, $30 and Parsons , Racme , $25 and
Second Floor
Mitchell J S1 lver. D0. F AC c
B. Henkel , Munroe Fall s, $30 costs, speedtng: Peter A. Lee, costs, probatton , no motorcy• American Cancer Society Patient Navigator
John
F·Tugaoe n MD. F AC C
and costs, speedtng ; Lee A. GallipQiis, $3 10 and costs. cle endorseme nt, $25 .md
Coleen Y D1etsch-Krubl
Herbert. Columbus, $50 and overload; Eugene G. Long. costs, probation, failure to
"Neuro/Qgy
" Internal Medidne, GastroenterologY
eosts, speeding; Johnny R. Long Bottom. $20 and costs. · contro l. Arthur E. Pearsall.
Gart E Cord•ngley, M0 , Ph D . FA A N
Steven G Cartn Jr, D 0
Herdm an. Pomeroy, $30 a·nd trafftc cont. dev. 1 signs, Cara Lancaster. $30 and costs,
•
O'Bieness
Dermatology Clinic
• Mountain V1ew Bone and Joint Clinic
costs, seat belt violation; M. Magoon , Hampton , Va .. specdmg. Mtchael J•• Pe\e t,,
John
P Hib ler, 0 0
Steven M Miller, MD
Jesse
W.
Hershman . $20 .a nd costs, scat belt-pas- Portland . $25 and costs: lail·
ly 0 Hdnson, 0 0 , Resrdent
•
River
Rose Obstetfl cs &amp; Gynecology
Pomeroy, $50 and costs, 10 senger; MJJiii S a Martmez. urc to ~o n tw l : Roy L Ptet cc .
J MIChael Holstnger D 0 , Resrdent
Jane E Broecker M D
day s in jail, suspended, pro- Gallipoli:JF""''25 and costs. Rc~c me. $30 and costs, sp~ed­
•
Otorhinolaryngology
(Ear. Nose. and Throat)
M&gt;chael J Cla rk. D 0
bation, no driver licen se, ass ured clear di stance.
tn g,
Dak A
Poltng.
Mrchael W Tome , D 0
Jack M Ramey, D 0
$ 150 and costs, 30 days 111
Anissa
M.
Mathias, Nelsonville, $30 and cmts,
• Podiatry
jail, suspended. probation, Newman, Ga .• $30 and costs. seat belt vtolatt on; Mt chael
Earl L Dnggs DPM
reck less operation of vehicle, speeding,
William
J. E. Pooler. Racme. $70. tratftc
Ashlee M Hill , Racine, $30 Mauermann, Charl ottesville. cont . dcv. I stgns . Joshua N
Coming in September!
aAd costs. speed ing: Dallas Va., $30 and costs, speed ing: Pnce. Pl~meruy. $20 and
A Hill , Ra ctne , $20 and T. B. Maynard, Mtllrteld. cost&gt;. failure to co ntt ol.
• Athens Cancer Center- Radiation Oncofogy
• Oncology Hematology Consultants
costs. fatlu re to control. $30 and costs, speedrng: M,uthew L Price . M,JSsillon.
Aaron 0 William~. MD
of Southeastern Ohio
..
'
Lewi s E. hltlton , Syracuse, Amy L. McBride. Lancaster. $30 and co,ts, seal belt violaUtpal BhanJa MD and Hu satn Rasheed , MD
$ 150 .. 10 days in Jail , sus- $30 and costs, speeding; Dak uon : George C R am~y.
pended . probation. no drtv cr R. McCarthy, Point Pleasa llt, Ractne. $90. dtsorderly conlicense ,
Ru sse ll
W. W.Va .. $25 and costs, proba- duct : Anthony W. Randolph .
Holbrook, Hilliard, $150 and ti on. failure to cont ro l: $ 100 atid co.\ts. 10 days 111
costs. 10 days 111 jai l. sus- Laure n
M.
McComas . p il , suspended. probatton. no
pended. probatiou. no 0 L. , Proctorsville , $30, and costs , O.L .

Public meetings

her overall qualifications for
to Florida.
While her loyalty to Bush th e court
They also· wondered about
ts unquestioned, Democrats
publtcly and Re publicans Mrers ' $ I ,000 donations AI
privately wonder~d about her Gore 's I988 presidential bid,
quallficatton s for th·~ hi gh and to Democrati c ,Sen.
Lloyd Bentsen \ re:election
COUll.
"The president has selected campaign the same year. She
a Joyal political ally wtthout also has don ated money to
a judicial record to stt on the BusH and other Republicans.
highest court m the land ,"
Abortion has overshadsaid Sen. Barbara Boxer, D- owed all over rss ues in
Supreine Court nominations
Callf.
.
At th'e same time, several in recent years - and to the
senators, Reid and Specter consternation of conserva'among them , satd they would ti ves, Mters has scant public.
be pleased to have a justice record on the tssue . .
As prcstde nt of the Texas
wtth no prior JUdicial experience. and the Whtte House Statella r in 1993, Miers was
moved to fend off any charge a leatlct 111 .m un successful
that Bush was merely ptck- fight to persuade the
American Bar Associatton to
mg a lon ~ time associate
The
administration reco nstder tts pro-abortion .
released matenal showtn g ri ghts stance by submitting it
that I0 . of the 34 JUSttces to a nattonv ide referendum.
appointed since I933 had
At the trme. $he questioned
worked for the president who whether th e group should
pi cked them. The list mcl ud- ''be trymg to speak for the
ed th e late Chief Ju siice entire legal community" on
Wt.Jitam H Rehnqu lst, tirst an issue that she satd "has
\
,
AP Photo
Supreme Court nominee.(1arnet Miers listens as Senate Minonty Leader Harry' Reid , D-Nev., tapped for the court by brought on (remendous dtvitalks to reporters dunng a news conference on Capttot Hill Monday tn Washington , fottowmg Rrchard M. Ntxon, and stveness" withm the organiher nomtnatlon by President Bush Bush nomtnated Mters to the Supreme Court on Monday, Byron White, named by John zation.
F. Kennedy.
While Miers evidently did
turntng to a lawyer who has never been a judge to re place Sandra Day O'Connor and help
Republican concerns tend- not publicly state a view on.
·•
·
resh ape the natton' s JUdtctary.
ed to b~ more muted. Sen. the issue of abortion at the
,'
Sam Brownbac k, R-Kan., a time, one conservattve cited
I ind out.'' he satd.
with Congress sa td that Sen. maJ brtty in the Senate, with. strong foe 'of abortton , pomt· the events to support her
In conference calls and Harry RCtd of Nevada, the one mdependent. Barnng a . edly declined to tssue a state- nommation.
tnterviews. th e Whtte House Democratic leatle'r. had rec- · frhbuster, they can confirm ment resl?onding to the nom "It took a degree of
worked aggresstvely during ommended that he consider Mters on the strength ot'thetr 1nat 1on.
.
courage for ·Harriet to be
the day to tamp down con- Miers for the vac&lt;i'ncy. In a votes alone.
FtrsHer m
Sen.
John in,olved in that," said
cern among conserval(v es written statement, Reid
Mters has 'et ved. as an Thune, R-S.D., satd he was Leonard
Leo
of
the
determmed - as Bush h,rs praised the Dallas native as a adviser to Bush fot more re,erving judgment. " It has Federalist Society. "The
pledged - to turn the court ·'trailblazer for women as than a decade, 111 positions as been my expectatiOn that ABA ts a place where there
rn a new direction
managing partner of a major varied as private attQrney, President Bush would nomi- was an awful lot of liberal
Desptte crtttcism, initial Dallas Jaw firm"' and said h~ chairwoman of the Te.xas nat~ someone in the mold of activism, so it took some
reaction suggested Bu sh had would be glad ro have a for- Lottery Commission and in ·Justices Scalia and Thomas coUJage for a woman to take
managed to sattsfy many of mer' practtcmg anomey on the White House. '
ani! it ts my hope that Harriet the position she did."
the ~onservatives who helped the court.
,
·
When Bush 'dectded to run Miers wtll prove to be such a
Bush apparently di scerned
confirm Roberts - without ' Fri st greeted Mters by for governor of Texas in the person," he ·sat d. Both jus- stmtlar personal qt(flltles in
inflamtng Democ rats who telling her, "We're so proud early 1990s. he turned to tices have voted to overturn Mters long ago.
·
repeated ly wmned against of you." Sen.
Mitch Mters to research. hi s own the 1973 abortion ntling
In 1996. Bush called her a
the selectton of .111 extreme McConnell, 'R-Ky.,· the sec- background for mfor\flalton·
Official s said state and pit b~ll in size 6 shoe s.
conservat ive to succeed ond-ran]&lt;ing Republica.n in that his opponents mtght try · local GOP leaders peppered "When it comes to a crossO'Connor, who has voted 'to the Senate, issued a sta.te- t~ use against him: When let•- the Whtte House, with ques- exammation, she can fillet
uphold abortton ri ghts an&lt;:) men\ .saytng he _iooked "f&amp;ri. •'rorists struck the United tions \luring a con,ferenpe better than Mrs . Paul," he
preserve afllrmative acl!on . • y,ard to Ms. Miers' cotifir- States ' in 2001, she ,was. with call; raising concerns about a satd on another · occasion;
Several offtctals famtliar mation."
'
him as staff secretaty _o n Jack of a documented Miers refernng to a frozen ftsh
wJt h Bush's consultati ons
'Republicans. hold a 55.-44 what had been a routine trip record on abortion and about company.

Investigators: Passengers slid td one side before boat jllpped over

BYTHEBEND

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free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
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people peaceably to assemble, ·and to petition
tile ' Go~ernmentfor a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today ts Tuesday, Oct.' 4, the 277th day of 2005 There are
88 days lett m the year.
Today's H1ghlight in History
On Oct. 4. 1957, the Space Age began as the Sov1et Umon
launched Sputn1k, the first man-made satellite, into orbit.
On th1s date:
In 1777, George Washmgton's troops launched an assault
on the Bnllsh at Germantown, Pa , result1ng m heavy
Amencan casualt1es.
In 1822, the 19th president of the Umted Stales, Rutherford
B Hayes. v.~s bom in Delaware, Ohio.
In 1931, the comic strip "Dick Tracy," created by Chester
Gould, made ItS debut.
In 1940, Adolf Hnler and Bemto Mussohm conferred at
Brenner Pass 111 the Alps, where the Nazi leader sought Italy's
help m tlghtmg the Bnllsh
In 1957, the te)evlSlon senes "Leave It to Beaver" premiered im CBS.
•
In 1965, Pope Paul VI became the first reigning pontiff to
visit the Western Hemisphere as he addressed the U.N
General Assembly
In 19.70, rock smger Janis Jophn, 27, was found dead m her
Hollywood hotel room
In 1978, funeral s~rv1ces were held at the Vallcan for Pope
John Paul I
· In I~80, some 520 people were forced to abandof\ the crmse
ship Pnsendam in t)le .Gulf of Alaska after the Dutch luxury
lmer caught f1re- no deaths or serious injury resulted ..
In 1985, l'laJ!lic Jihad 1ssued a statement saying 1t had
k1lled Amencan hostage Wilham Buckley. (Fellow hostage
Da,Jd Jacobsen, however, later said he beheved Buckley had
d.1ed ol torture mjunes four months earlier.)
F1ve years ago Am1d fresh bloodshed in the West Bank and
Gaza. Secretary of State Madeleme Albright brought Israeli
Pnme Minister Ehud Barak and Palestinian leader Yasser
Arafat together for talks in Pans. In an apparent attempt to
buy t1me for Slobodan M1losevtc, Yugoslavia's highest court
mvalidated parts of the presidential election after thousands of
opr.os1t1on supporters forced police to back ojf from seizing a
stnkebound mine.
- Today's Birthdays Comed1an Jan Murray is 88 Actor
Charlton Heston 1s 82: Country singer Leroy Van Dyke 1s 76
A.ctress Felicw Farr is 73. Actor Eddie Applegate is 70
Author Anne R1ce 1s 64 Actress Lon Saunders ("Petticoat
JunctiOn") 1s 64 Actor Chfton Dav1s 1s 60. Actress Susan
~arandon 1s 59. Playwnght Lee Blessing is 56. Actor Arnnand
Assante is 56 Actor ~ian Rosenberg is 55. Producer Russell
Simmons 1s 48 Musician Chris Lowe (The Pet Shop Boys) is
46 Country mus1cian Gregg "Hobie" Hubbard (Sawyer
Brown) 1s 45. Actor Dav1d W. Harper is 44. Singer Jon Secada
~~ 44. TV personality John Melendez ("The Tomght Show") 1s
40. Actor Liev Schreiber 1s 38 Actor Abraham Benrub1 is 36.
C&lt;&gt;untry smger-musicmn He1d1 Newfield (Trick Pony) IS 35.
Rock musician Andy Parle is 35. Actre,;, Alicia Silverstone is
29 Actor Phillip Glasser 1s 27 Actress Rachael Leigh Cook i~
26 Actor. J1mmy Workman is 25 Rhythm-and-blues singer
Jessica Benson (31w) 1s 18. Actor M1chael Charles Roman 1s
18.
.
. Thought for Today: "Knowledge 1s like a garden: tf 1t IS not
cultivated, it cannot be harvested"- Gumean saying.

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Pagei\4

Dem$· do plan to
Democrats have an answer
to the questmn, ··oK, what's
your alternative to the Bush
polic.Jes you constqntly cntiClze?" It 1s: "We're working
on It."

When 11 emerges, 111 a
form yet to be determined,
1t's likely to ulclude proposals for tax reform, health
mstJrance, energy mdependence, nallonal security and
retirement reform
1
Both House and Senate
Democ'rats. plus outs 1de
consultants and thmk tank
operatives, say that the party
should have a full-blown
alternative agenda to take
mto the 2006 elections _
but that i( !1oesn't neep one

~o

Tuesday, October 4,

2005

positive'- but not until 2006
Morton
Kondrack

e

M10onty Leader Nancy
Pelosi, D-Cahf.. hasn't said
so, "I can't 1magme us not"
producing a contract-style
agenda somet1me 10 2006
"There's no doubt that we
are gomg to lay out an agen·
da that meets the challenges
that Amenca faces," said
Rep Rahm Emanuel (Ill.),
chairman of the Democratic
yebemocrats thmk tha.t 2006 Congressional Campaign
could be _ 111 the words of Committee and author of
Democracy Corps, the hber- proposals on tax reform, lob·
al polling group_ "a major bying reform ' and lmportachange election." like 1994 , ,t1on of pharmaceuticals.
House Mmonty Whtp
when Republicans gamed 52 Steny Hoyer, D-M1l., who's
House seats and nine Senate
already
issued
a
National
seats and took control of "Democratic
Congress for the first time in Security Strategy for the
40 years.
21st Century" w1th 15 modThey th10k that 1994 hap- eratc colleagues, told me
pened to them because of that "what we needed to do
negat1ve campa1gning by 10 the first year of th1s
Republicans agamst then- Congress is to pomt out how
President Bill Clinton, the administration has failed
defeat of his s1gnature health
"And, of course, the
care imllative and perce1ved administration has helped us
corruption in the Democratic on that. And then next year
Congress.
we have to contmue to talk
Duphcat10g the 1994 pat- about how they've fa1led
tern, Democrats have been If we don't have some posirelentlesW-, pummeling tive things t'o say, Americans
Presidep{ Bush on Iraq. gas may still vote for us because
pnces an\1 hurricane lapses they 're angry, but I don' t
and JUSt-indicted House think we should rely on
Majority
Leader Tom that."
Delay, R-Texas, for alleged
House
and
Senate
'
Democrats are delighted
"corruption."
They. po10t out. that the with the apparent defeat of
Republicans' positive agen- Bush's Social Security "prida, the famous "Contract " vatization" plan -the pohtWlth Ame~1ca," wasn't ical eqmvalent, they thmk,
unveiled until Sept 27, of the Chnton 1994 health
1994. According to Fox debacle - 'and Senate
News correspondent Major Democrats are planning to
Garrett. who wrote a book replicate the tactics and
on the subject, 11 had 1ts on. structure of that campaign
gins in a February 1993 on other 1ssues for 2006.
House GOP decision to
As Roll Call.:&gt; recently
assemble a budget to counter reported, Senate Democratic
Clinton's.
leaders have assigned Sen
House Democrats already Maria Cantwell (Wash.) and
produce counter-budgets her chief of ·staff to work on
this year's is silent on tax "energy independence by
mcreases - and one key 2020,"
Sen
Edward
House leader smd that ~h1le Kennedy (Mass.) to work up

a h~ahh agenda and Sen
Jack Reed (R I) to draft
national secunty messages,
while Sen Max Baucus
(Mont) continues to serve as
the.point man on retirement
1ssues. Another Senator,
identity unknown,· wtll lead
on "government reform and
correcting this' Republican
culture of corruptiOn," a
leadership mde said.
On Sept. 27, the lith
anmversary of the GOP
Contract w1th America and the day before DeLay's
indictment
House
Democratic leaders held a
press
conference
to
denounce GOP "corruption
and cronytsm." Emanuel
charged that GOP leaders
who prom1sed
reform
''should be sued for breach
of contract."
One key outside consultant told me he once thought
Democrats needed to come
forward wllh pos1ti ve messages Immediately, but that
he's changed his mind. ,
• "The Republican numbers
are bad now, bad across the
board," he sa1d. "So, we
have lime Let them stew m
their juices a bit longer
They perfected this in '94
and 1t workeo for them.
What's the one thmg we've
done? We've held the line on
Social Security. Did we do
anythmg else? Not that I can
·tell "
This consultant acknowledged, though, that while
··we're not hurt," the
Democratic Party's "numbers are not any better than
theirs."
Accordmg to the latest
Democracy Corps · poll,
Democrats now enjoy a 9point advantage in a generic
CongressiOnal preference
pol Land are runnmg stronger
in umdentified seat-by-seat
match ups.
Yet the poll found that the
public's general opimon of
Democrats IS no better than
it is of Republicans, that
"feelings about Democrats
are at a 2.5-year low" and
that Democrats receive only
48 percent of the 2006 preference ballot - the same as
their 2004 showing.
Th1s
should
tell

Democrats that they ought to
start talking about what they
stand for - and make it '
good.
In an interv1ew Monday
with Roll Call editors and .
reporters, House Majority
Whip Roy Blunt, R-Mo.,
claimed to "feel pretty good
about the majonty.'
"lfPhad to guess today I'd
say we're in a plus- or
minus-two environment," he
sa1d, when Democrats need
to p1ck up 16 seats to take
,over the House.
"I thmk the problem our
friends on the other s1de
have is that they can't win
without ideas and they can't
win with the ideas they have.
II they don't come forward
with the kind of proposals
that Republicans broughl to
the public arena in 1994,
they're not gomg to win the
majority. And the kind of
1deas that Leader Pelosi will
come up with· are not likely
to be the kind of 1deas that
will appeal to the country.''
Maybe. Or maybe not.
Various Democrats and
allied think tanks such as the
Center
for
American
Progress are crafting pohcy
pmposals that could have
appeal, s5,h as Hoyer's
"Manhattan ProJect" for
energy mdependence and
Emanuel's plans to Simplify
V\lrtOus tax benefit provisions for the middle class
and make mortgage-interest
deductwns available to taxpayers who don't itemize.
The CAP think tank agenda, which I'll discuss at
greater length m another column, 1s Imaginative but also
expensive and mvolves significant tax increases for
those making more than
$120,000 a year. The GOP is
just waiting for Democrats
to ra1se taxes.
The good news is that
.Democrats know they have
to be posittve eventually. I
think it would be to their .
advantage to speed up the
process
(Morton Kondracke zs
executive edrtor of Roll Call,
the newspaper of Cap1tol
Hzll.)

A missing element·in the Supreme Court
With one or more
Ch1cago · hotel Commg to
Supreme Court nominees
the m1crophone, Waller smd
due before the Senate
to the nation: "I wonder
Jud1ciary Committee, and
what the poor people are
then the full Senate, during
domg tomght.''
the president's fmal term,
The Supreme Court justice
Nat
there 1s a pertment qualificaI most admtre was Loms
Hentoff
tion to consider that hardly
Brandeis. He grew up 111
came up dunng John
comfortable circumstances
Roberts' hearings - or in
and attended Harvard Law
most of the bristling media
School, where he rece1ved
commentaries, pro or con. be able to take that mto the h1ghest grades ever
As legal analyst Stuart account.''
awarded there But in pnTaylor noted 111 the
And
when
Justice vate practice, he became
September issue ot Atlantic, Thurgood Marshall died, the known as "the people's
"The Court's steady homog- tributes to him by a number lawyer," and his ·"Brandeis
enization by p10fessional of the Justices who had been bnefs" revealed abundant
background has gone largely h1s colleagues told how he details of the shoals and
unremarked."
had educated them because snares of the same "real
Taylor, who wntes 'for the of h1s considerable experi- world" that most Amencans
Natmnal Law Journal and ence in the trenches as a trial know And Brandeis' 1891
Legal T1mes, asked· "Now lawyer, mcluding during his legal article, "The Right to
that Sandra Day O'Connor long march to the Supreme Privacy" -an area expertly
has announced her rellre- Court 1tself. and hts v1ctory evaded by John Roberts 111
ment, how many remaming (long-smce attenuated) m hts hearings- was serumal
JUStices have ever held elect- Brown
of
v
Board
Presidents who nominate
ed office? How many have Education.
future Supreme Court juspreviously served at the
John Roberts certainly tices - and the. senators
highest levels of the execu- showed his mastery of the who give advice and perhaps
tive branch of government? language of the law during consent - would benefit the
How many have argued big- h1s heanngs, but h1s gleam- nation 1f they paid heed to
time commercial lawsuits ing resume mdicated little · Stuart Taylor's advice:
w1thm the past ' 35 years? experience m life outs1de the
"The Supreme Court 1s
How many have ever been law. Born 111to a wealthy suppo~ed to sit above pohe1ther crimmal defense fam1ly, he attended pnvate !ICS and apart from popular
lawyers or tnal prosecutors'' school,
Harvard
and whims But when a large
How many have presided Harvard
Law
School, majonty of the Court's jusover even a single criminal clerked for both a federal tices have never cross-examor Civil trial ?" (David appeals judge and U.S. •ined a lying cop or a slipSouter, Taylor smd. was the Supreme Court Justice pery CEO, never faced a
except1on.)
W1lharn Rehnquist (who JUry, never slogged through
I knew a New York Judge, became h1s mentor), served the swamps of the modern
Burton Roberts, who had h1gh up 111 the Just1ce discove ry process, somebeen a prosecutor and then Department in twp admims- thmg has gone wrong As
had pres1ded over cnminal trations, practiced law m a the Court has lost touch with
trials. When the first rigid promment Washington law the real-world ramifications
sentencmg gu1dehnes went firm. and then became a of its deciSions, our JUdiCial
mto effect. th1s JUdge was judge in the most mtluentlal system has clearly suffered.''
resistant, although he was of the federal circuit courts.
I know a former JUdge,
Somehow, that seamless Andrew Napolitano, now a
known a' a law-and-order
jurist "While the cnmes background reminded me of senior judic1al analyst for
may be the same," Burton when I was a kid, listening the Fox News Channel,
Roberts told me, "the mdJ- on the radio dunng the so- where he occasiOnally tries
Vldual defendants may be called Great Depression to to mform Bill O'Re1lly. on
s1gmficantly d1fferent, and Jazz pianist-singer "Fats" the a1r, of the meaning and
!he sentencing judge should Waller from a posh club at a historical origms ot the Blil

of Rights In his book,
"Constitutional
Chaos"
(Nelson Current, 2004)',
Judge Napolitano tells that,
before he went to the
Supenor Court of New
Jersey, he was a strong supporter of Richard Nixon's
law-and-order, pro-police
presidential campaign.
But dunng his eight years
on the bench, Napolitano
writes, he became "a bornagain individualist, after ·
witnessing first -hand how
the criminal justice system
works to subvert and shred
the Constitution. You think
you' ve got nghts that are
guaranteed? Well, thmk
again. Because the governmeht breaks the law and
denies it, the government is
not your friend.'' One of hts
rulings forbade New Jersey
police from stoppmg cars on
a whim, or for conjectures
,the
Fourth
outside
Amendment (the right
against unreasonable searches and setzures). Napolitano,
using "the exclusionary
rule," dJd not allow such
"evidence" at trial.
.If Judge Napolitano· was
nommated to the U.S.
Supreme Court, he would
giv~ the senators and the
nation a much deeper understanding of their protections
·under !he Const1tut10n than
John Roberts did.
It's a p1ty that fierce critics
of Fox News- who seldom
watch it, it seems - don't
get the benefit of Judge
Andrew Napohtan,o. John
Roberts should also tune 111.
(Nat Hemoff is a nation·
ally renowned auliwnty on
the Frrst Amendment and the
Bill of Rzght' and author of
many bcJOks, mcludmg "The
War on the Btl/ of R1ghts and
the Gathermg Res1stance"
(Seven Stories Press, 2003 ). )

Tuesday, October 4, 2005

Obituaries
DUNDEE, N.Y.- Helen L Smith. 67, of Dundee, N Y d1ed
Sunday Oct. 2. 2005 at Strong Memonal Hospual. Roche&gt;ter.
N.Y.
.
Friends are inv1ted to call from 5-8 p.m. Thursday, Oct 6 at the
Brurd Funeral Home, 36 Water Street. Dundee. N .0 Funeral services Will be private
In lieu ot !lowers memorial· contnbut1ons can be made to the
Dundee Area Youth Center 15 Main St , the Dundee Emergency
Squad, 12 Umon St , Dundee, 14837 or the chanty of the donor·s
chmce.
Helen was born Feb. 16, 1938 m Antiquity, Oh1o, the daughter
of the late Edward and Emma Russell Stobart. She has hved
locally smce 1978 previOusly of the m1d-west. She has worked
for over 17 years at Dundee Central School, most recently as
head n1ght custodian She was a past secretary of the C.S E. A.
Local # 862 and former member of the Dundee Bowling
League She was an avtd NASCAR and football tan . loved
Oscar Mayer hot dogs, and was an up t() the mmute weather
expert.
A lovmg mother and grandmother she 1s surv1ved and v.1ll be
missed-by a son Harley ,D. (Stacey C1ganek) Mossman Jr. of Old
Fort, Tenn, two daughters Denise R Hill w1th v.hom she made
her home, and D1anna L (Peter) Salarnendra ol Dundee, three
brothers Charles (June) Stoban OflArizona, Wilham (Sondra)
Stoban, and Paul Pullms both of Oh1"; a s1ster Janet (Pete)
Jordan of West V1rgmm; 12 grandchildren, three great grandchildren, several meces and nephews
Bes1des her parents she was pre-deceased by a step-father
· Hubert Pulhns, a daughter Shem Ann Mossman, and a brother
Edwanl Stobart

Betty Foley
POMEROY - Betty Foley, 69 of Pomeroy passed away
Monday Oct. J, 2005 at her residence following an extended 111ness
.
She was born June 8, 1936 in Jodi, w Va to the late Dennis
Adkms and Gatha Mullins Adkins Alvarado Betty worked tor
eight years at McDonalds in Pomeroy She has been a memQer ol
the FlfSt Southern Baptist Church for several years. Besides her
parents she IS preceded 10 death by her step-lather Dommgo
Alvarado, a brother Bob Adkms, SISter Bonny Allen and a Sisterin- law Mary Adkins
She is survived by sons Marty (Maura) Foley, Houston, Tex.,
Gary Foley Jr, Apple Grove, w Va, Bill ( Becky) Foley and ,
Dennis Foley of Pomeroy, and daughters, Sandra Schreiber of
WJsconsm, and Robm and Cindy Foley of Pomeroy; 16 grandchi)dren, brothers, Lendon (Sharon) Adkms ot Vancouver, Wa~h. ,
Raymond (Suz1e) Adkins of M1ddlepon, Roger (Tammy) Adkms
Cumming. Ga., Eugene Adkms and Wayne Adkms of Portland,
Randy Adkins of Pomeroy, and M1chael Adkins of Wisconsin.
sisters. Hallie (Chnton) Good of R1pley, W.Va., Brenda Richards
of New Haven, W Va .. and Linda Adkins of Pomeroy. She is'aJso·
survived by numerous meces and nephews, many fnends, mcluding her best fnend Many R1ggs, and a large church family.
Services wlil be held at I p.m. Thursday Oct. 6, 2005 at Ftrst
Southern Bapt1st Church m Pomeroy With Lamar O'Bryant offictattng. Bunal w1ll follow at Rockspnngs Cemetery m Pomeroy.
Friends may call at the church from II a.m. llll the time of the
sefVlce on Thursday In lieu of flowers donations may be made
to Fisher Funeral Home, PO Box 151 , Middlepon, to help with
funeral expenses or given to Suzie or Lmda Adkins
On·line condolences may be made to www.fisherfuneralhomes com.

Heating
from PageA1
make too much to qualify for
government assistance but
still fall below certam poverty levels
Apphcatmns for the Oh1o
Department
of
Development's Home Energy
Assistance Program (HEAP)
are currently availal:lle· at
locations such as Communlly
Actiof! in Middleport, the
local
hbranes,
MCJgs
Department of Jobs and
Fam1ly Serv1ces and the
Meigs County Senior Center
Those who received th1s
assistance last year with auto·
matically rece1ve applications in the mall th1s year.
Me1gs County Senior
Center Social Wor~er Kathy
Goble can assist seniors in
filhng out applications for
HEAP free of charge. Goble
can only help With f1lhng out
the apphcatmns &amp;nd has
~othmg to do w1th dJstnbution of ass1stance. Joy
Matthews at the Senwr
Center will also be helpmg
wtth apphcatwns. Call 9922161.
Appomtments can be
made
at
Galha-Meigs
Commumty Action for help
with flljing out HEAP,

Chamber
Community
Recognition
Dinner

The event will last until 8
p m.. preregistratiOn 1s a
must
Call
Chamber
Coord10ator Enn Roush at
992 ·5005 Reg1stratmn 1s
$10 for Chamber members,
$15
for · non.members.
Chamber me,mMIDDLEPORT The Surrounding
bershlps
will
be honored.
Me1g·s County Chamber of
Commerce
Community
Recogmllon Dumer w1ll be
held at 6 p.m. on Tuesday,
Nov I at the M1dJieport
Family Life Center Dinner
wi ll
be
catered
by
Hometown Market and Dr
POMEROY ·_ The Me1gs
Rodenck
McDavis ,
President ot Ohm Un1verslly, County Health Department
wlil be the keynote speaker will be closed on Monday,
Oct · I 0 in observance of
at the 15th annual event.
The Chamber will be pre- Columbus Day. Normal
s~nting II awards. Tickets business hours will resume
are ava1lable for $25 each on Tuesday. Oct II
Corporate table uckets are
avmlable as are sponsorships
,md advertiSing opportum.
t1es. See a Chamber board of
d1rector or coord10ato1 Enn
POMEROY - The Me1gs
Roush tor more information County TB Clin1c w1ll be
or to purchase a ticket Call open until 6 p m today No
992·5{)05.
TB skm tests will be g1ven
th1s Fnday The clinic will be
closed on Monday. Oct I0 in
•
observance of Columbus
Day

Health
Department
closed

TB ·clinic hours

Rapid business
networking

POMEROY - A rapid
nctwork tng session Will take
place at 6 p.m on Thursday
at the Pomeroy Library The
sess1on ts sponsored by the
Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce and guarantees
20 bus mess contacts, five
minute one·on-one meetings
wuh potenual new clients an
customers and appetiZers.

MeiQS
· Coun t y
Biker's toy run
POMEROY -The Meigs
County B1ker's Assoc1a11on
will hold 1ts 20th Annual
Toy Run th1s Sqturday Lme
up at II a.m on the.
Pomeroy Parkmg Lot with

departure at noon The nde
wlil end at Jordan's
Campgrounds on Laurel
R,_oad where a hog roast and
entertainment will be fea·
tured Included in the festlV ·
111es w1ll be the Route 33
Band, b1ke games, concesSIOns. 'an auctiOn. drawmgs
Camp1ng
avaliablc
Everyone welcome. motorcycle 1S not necessary The
cost to pamctp,lt e 10 the run
IS $10 per person The event
ra 1ses money to purchase
Ch11stmd s g1fts lor the needy
ch ildren of Me1g s County.

Carleton School
Cop1munity
Olympics
SYRACUSE - The third
Carleton
annual
Schooi/Me1gs
lndustnes
Community Olympics w1ll
be held from 8·10 am to 4
p m on Saturday, Oct 22 at
the school Events are trom
9 am. to 3 p.m To register a
team of co-workers. fncnds
or fam1ly members c&lt;~ll 9926681 Teams can be from
live to 10 people . The. cost
to sponsor a team is $200
Medals and a trophy &lt;lwarded Events mclude the hula
hoop spi n, obstacle course.
off1ce antics. basketball free
throv. , tug of war, fmbee
golf,
volleyball, three·
legged race and more The
lam! IV onented event 1s a
fundraiser lor playground
equ1pment for Carleton
School Registration dead-

l10e

IS

Oct. 12

Art and
bluegrass·
festival planned
SHADE
The fmt
Jerseyville Art and Bluegrass
Festival will be held 9 am to
5 p m · Saturday at the Shade
Commumty Center There w1ll
a craft ,md UJ1tsan sale. hay
wagon ru.les, antittue farm
equipment d1splay. ami mus1c
by Steve Burson at I0 a m and
3:30p.m. the Rocky Mountam
Bluegrass at I0:30 d.m. and 4
p m . the Athens Harmom~a
Cluh at noon, and the Federal
Valley Cloggers at I p n1

Fall color
poker run set
.GLOUSl'tR - The Burr
o"ak State Park IS hostmg a fall
color tour/poker run of the
Burr Oak reg1on on Oct 15 to
mclude Burr Oak, Strouds
Run, and Forked Run State
Parks
·
It will begm at I 0 30 am at
dock 4 at Burr Oak. w1th the
last b1ke out at noon and w1ll
end at Burr Oak lodge w1th th«
last b1ke m at 5 ~0 p m.
F1rst , second and third place
pnzes w1ll be awarded
AdmiSSIOn IS tree There wtll
be lots of door pnzes. lree ch1h
.md hot dogs Legal beverage'
only ,lfe -pernutted For more
mformat1on contact Burr Oak
State Park. 740-767-3570.

------.,-----------------~---=----------------

Hackett to challenge DeWt'ne as Mt'ers' confirrmatt'on begt'ns
Bv DA~ID HAMMER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Schm1dt
and
other
Republicans have said that a
summertime specml election
shouldn't be considered as a
bellwether.
,
Also
Monday,
Rep
Sherrod Brown's office said
he is again considenng a· run
at DeWirre. ,
"He is re,iewmg h1s imtial
deciSion not to run," Brown
spokeswoman
Joanna
Kuebler sa1d.
Brown, a Democrat from
Lorain, was imtially cons1dering a run for Ohio governor, but ' then mled out both
gubernatonal and senatorial
campa1grrs in favor of
defendmg his US House
scat.
Denny White, chairman .of
the Oh10 Democratic .Party,
said DeWine, a Republican
seek111g a th1rd term in 2006,
IS vulnerable to challenges
from Brown or Hackett.
DeW me's spokesman, )eff
Sadosky. has smd DeWme 1s
prepared to run a tough crace
regardless of whom the
Democrats pick.
DeWme's abihty to defend
h1s seat against suddenly
compet1t1vc Democrats may
depend on his positmn on
the
Senate
Jud1C1ary
Committee, which puts him
at the center of the latest
Supreme Court nommat1on
process
.
DeWme and h1s~omm1ttee mates will h61 confmnat10n hearings fo
hite
House counsel
Harriet
M1ers, announced Monday
by Pres1dent Bush as h1 s
nommee to replace retmng
Ju st1ce
Sandra
Day
O'Connor on the nation's
h1ghest court.

WASHINGTON - Paul
Hackett, the Iraq War veteran from Cmcmnall who was
hmled by natwnat Democrats
for his narrow loss tlus summer m a heav1ly Republican
House distnct, has qu1ckly
moved up m rank to chatlenge M1ke De Wine for U.S
Senate 111 2006.
"Paul Hackett 1s runnmg
lor US. Senate," sa1d
spokesman Dav1d Woodruff,
who served as Hackett's
campmgn manager 111 h1s
special elect1on campaign for
the 2nd District House seat
agamst Rep Jean Schm1dt
Hackett 1s planmng to offi·
of the last two years, while
CJally
announce h1s dec1sion
Cuyahoga County 's number
on
Oct
24 111 Cmcmnat1 and
was about 60 each year;
then
begm
a statew1de bus
Ham11ton County had 64 in
tour. Woodruff said Monday.•
2003 and 57 last year
Hackett wasn't immediate·
About 25 percent of the
ly
ava1lable for comment He
Columbus-area crashes th1s
was
tl~1ng
back from
year were on frfe way s Washmgton
Monday evenmg
Some of those were due to alter meetmg with Senate
wrong-way dnvers so state Democratic leader Harry
offlc1als are mstall ng more Re1d of Nevada, Woodruff
.
warmng Signs at exi t ramps sa1d.
A Columbus police offiReid's
spokeswoman,
cial blames mcreased traffic Tessa Hefen, would not conand b1gger trucks trymg to firm the meetmg took place,
merge thr.ough a comphcat- but Woodruff later smd Reid
ed senes of ramps down- gave Hackett the cenf1dence
to run.
town .
··He found overwhelming
"In our area- and partie·
support from the leaders of
ularly m the cuy limits our freeways are overused the Democratic Party, cam·
01gamzatmns and
and somewhat antiquated," paign
staff,'' Woodruff said
Lt. Jeff Blackwell sa1d
Hackett drew natwnal
'
attenllon by eam111g 48 perHEAP Emergency or Income cent of the yote Aug 2 m the
Payment Plan apphcat1ons southern Ohm d1stnct that
for htiaung assistance Call voted 64 percent for
992-6629 or 367·7341.
Galha-Me1gs Commumty Preside nt Bush last year
Achon helps people that not ------------~-----------only have natural gas for .
heating but wood , coal, fuel
ml, electric and propane
Tom Reed ot the local
Commumty Act1on orfice 111
force dunng the appeal
Bv LISA CORNWELL
Middleport stresses wmtenzASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER '
Alphonse Gerhardstem, the
mg homes to cut down on
attorney
representing the
fuel bills. Community Action
CINCINNATI -A federal chmc, sa1d he was disapwinterizes homes everyday appeals court on Monday
for those who quahfy for the ordered that some prov1s10ns pointed the court dec1ded to
Home
• Weathenzauon ot Oh10 's abonmn law can 1mplement part of the statute
"It's good that they are not
Assistance Program . More
take
effect
111 one week while
allowing one part to be
on th1s program w11l follow
Judges
cons1der
whether
the
Implemented , but We will
in another ed1tion of The
Jaw
IS
COllStllUIIOnaJ
contmue
our appeal and hope
Dally Sentinel
''Th1s
IS a \ICtory for the
that
the
court
eventually will
Reed also suggests people
unborn
but
the
tight
IS
not
hold
all
of
the
law
unconslltupay attentton to the1r heaung
over
...
Oh
1
0
Attorney
General
tional ," he said
b1ll s ;md tfthey see a sp1ke 111
J111'
1
Petro
s:ud
m
a
statement
Gerhardstem said he may
costs he ·recommends that
The
6th
V
S
Clrcun
Court
ask
the court to recons1der'
they have the1r furnac e
of
Appeals
1
s
considenng
a
Monday's order.
checked L1ppe suggests conThe pro~i s ions that can go
sumers cons1der getung on a Cmc111nat1 chntc 's appeal of
gas bud~et and rem10ded that U S D1stnct Judge San&lt;;!ra mto effect next week reqw re
the Olftce of the Oh10 Beckwith's Sept 8 ruhng that women seeking an abortion
Consumers Counc1l website · the 1998 law sett10g new to receive counseling lrom a
has budgets listed for most reqmrements tor women and doctor at least 24 hours 111
maJor utiht y compan1es 111 mmors seekmg abortions 1s advaw:e and mmors seekmg ·
Ohio
,
'
conslltullonal. The appeals abortrons 10 have the consent
Remember that to quahfy coun on Sept 22 put the law, of at least one parent before
for most healing assistance wh1ch has never gone uno an abort1on can be pertorn1ed.
programs mcome ehglblilly ·effect, on hold wh1le it conThe appeals court sa1d that
is reqmred Be p1epared to Siders the appeal. •
·the plamt1ff, Cmcmnall
report your annual income
On Monday. the court sa1d Women 's Serv1ces. has not
and number of people liv10g all but one proviSion of the shown a strong hkehhood of
in your home when mqumng 1.1w could take effect at 5 succeedmg 111 1ts challenges
about the programs.
•
p m on Oct I0 and remain 111 to those proviSIOns

Fran$lin again in running to
lead state in deadly crashes

have the highest fataluy
rates wh1le deadly crashes
have declined 10 rural areas
for the past two years. So
far, there have been 42 fatal
crashts
10
Hamilton
Coun/y, 39 tn Montgomery
County and 38 10 Cuyahoga
County.
Franklin County had more
than 70 fatal crashes m each

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

local Briefs

Helen L Smith

COLUMBUS (AP) Franklin County is on track
to lead the state agam in the
number of deadly traffic
acc1dents.
As of Thursday. Franklin
County had 61 fatal crashes
-as many as there were in
Cuyahoga County in all of 2004, according to state
Department of
Pubhc
Safety figures.
The state's urban areas

www.myd;\ilysentinel.com

Court sets date for some provisions
of abortion law to take q[ect

"Whenever a leg1slatm can
show leadership and mtluence m somethmg as s1gnificant as a Supreme Court
nommat1on, 11 certamly has
to' offer h1m credibility m reelectiOn,"
sa1d
Tom
W1seman, a polit1cal science
instructor at Bowling Green
State Univemty and the former mayor of Defwnce m
northwest Ohm.
Whtte 1sn't so sure that
voters wlil focus on the
nominat1on process because
of the investment and ethics
scandal s mvolving- Ohio's
Republican·controlled state
government
"At th1s lime, (the
Supreme Court) 1s not dnvlllg the polillcal arena
here,'' White sa1d
"It
depends on hov. he votes on
the nominee and the decis1ons (M1ers and recently
conlirmed Ch1ef Jus11ce John
Roberts) make as Supreme
Court justices If they start
getting into people's personal hves and freedoms, I'm
sure 1t's gomg to affect Sen
DeWme."
In an lntervtew Monday
w1th The Assm;wted Press
soon after the nommat1on
was announced, DeWme
gave M1ers a strong endorsement.
"She's a good p1ck. The
tact that she w1ll brmg d1versity to the court, m that she's
opt a Slttmg JUdge: 1s a good
thing," DeWme said "Most
of the members on the court
today have pretty much the
same background It 's better
to have someone wnh a d1flerent path. a d1flerent background. Some of our more .
d1stmgmshed Supreme Court

Uushces) came from a different backgtound "
Most recently. the late
Ch1ef
Justice
Will1am
Rehnqmst had not served as
a JUdge bet ore Pres1dent
N1xon put h1m on the
Supreme Court m 1972. and
Ju stice Byron Wh1te played
pro football and served as
deputy attorney ge neral
before Prestdent Kennedy
named h1m to the h1gh colin
111 1962. In all, 20 Supreme
Court jusllces had never
sef'ed as judges before
DeWme sa1d 11 was too
early to say 1f M1ers' confirmauon process would go
smoothly, but he added. "I
~hmk she w1ll be confirmed"
De Wine would hke to
believe he gained so me
poht1cal capllal by servmg
last spring as one of 14
Senate peacemakers who
helped avmd a busme ss-hattmg
showdown
over
President Bush's other federal judge nominatiOns
''I'm proud of what I've
done on the Jud1C1ary
Committee." DeW111e smd
"We certa111ly pla)ed a role
m keepmg the process movmg. and I thmk the Roberts ·
nommat1on was set up very
well by the agreement made
by the 14 members ot the
Senate."
The less .contentious conf1rma11on of Roberts hkely
offered DeWme a measure
of protectiOn against . a
Democratic challenge next
year, W1 se man sa1d
"By and large, the public
sees the nommauon process
as a - healthy process and
wants to see less hostl llly,"
he said

EmaH engagement wedding or anniversary
announcements and photos
to news@mydailysentinelcom! :

Pregnancy and Chiropractic
From the desk of. ..
Kelsey M. Henry D. C.
ChJrupraL·tors have been pcllormJng sp111 .tl ,JdJU'tments on
pregn.mt women for O\oeJ a hund1ed )e.u" In th1 s tim e they
have noted that whe n undc1 c.1rc the pregnant wom.m o l\l!n ha ~
less back pam and less vom1t1ng dunng pregn.mc y. It has also

been lound that correct1ve spmal care may help ma1nt&lt;un prcg·
nancy and allow caster delivery ot full lcrm mtants Spmal
adjustments are vcry "satc lor both mother .md baby Th t:.~ care
1S speCifically taylorcd to the mother-to-be M.v1y women. are

now realiZin g the benef1ts ot Ch1ropract1c.: Care an9 consult
the1r Chiropractor as soon as the y become pregnant

1065 South Second Street
Mason, WV 25260
(304) 773-5773
Office Hours: M W &amp; Fn a.OO am · 5 00 pm
Other tune s by 'ppomtment only

�'

·.

.

I
&lt;

...

LOCAL • STATE
:Garden club members hear. For the Record
Marriag·e
about regional meeting plans licenses

The Daily. Sentinel

i.

.RUT(AND ,- Plans for
the regional meeting: to he
held Oc1. 22 at Grace United
Church
in
MethQdist
Galliipolis were announced
when the Rutland Garden
Club met recently at the
· home of Pauline Atkins.
A letter from the regina!
director asked e'ich g,)rden
club to furnish a bird feeder
decorated with a fall theme
to be sold by si lent auction
at the meeting. The rnorning.
program will be presented hy
Hal Kneen. Meigs County
Extension educator. on the
topic, "Fall Beauty." and the
afternoon program will be on
arrangements . by
Myra
Condray. The luncheon is
$15.
.
It was reponed the !lower
beds at the park an the upper
end of Rutland have been
cleaned off by Donna
Jenkins. announced was the
county meeting to be held
Oct. ' 17 at the library in
Pomeroy with the Rutland
·club to · have 'a pinigram on
pilants that clean the air, and
the Rutland FrieDdly gardeners to serve refreshments.
"Fall Weather'' was rhe
theme of the program ..
Marjorie Rice talked about

cosmos noting that it once
wsas a wild !lower splashing
Mexico and the southern
United States. with orange,
yellow and pmk blossoms.
She smd the· flower whrch rs
a member of the aster family,
ptpeals to all kmds of seedeau ng btrds from cardmals
tn doves.
Her suggestion was to
plant cosmos m a mass m ful
sun: _preferable n!"ar a window where the btrds can be
s~en. feedin!\ on the seedheads all wmter long; She
suggested collcctmg cosr;nos
stems after the frost arnves
and the flowers go to seed
and use them .in outdoor
wreaths for the brrd.
Skewered suet as discussed
by Betty Lowery. She suggested filling Rilastic uyogurt
cups with . bacon g_rease or
meat dnppmgs, puttmg them
in a freezer and then removing them when ready to hang
Ot[tside.
·
When ready for use, she
said to trim off the extra part
of t.he cups leaving an inch
above ot the frozen suer.
Bend a piece of wire into a
hanger insening it through
both sides of the cup, twist·
ing it to hold in in place.

Then to provide ·. a stable
perch push the pointed end
of a wooden. skewer all the
way t.hrough the fat and· the
bottom of the cup.
Also presented at the meet.. ing as a program on evergreens, tbose giant Chritmas
trees in many front yards
which become a favoriet
roosting . pace for birds at
dusk and in winter, and a
place of prmection cats as
well as snow and rain.
Him for the month per~
tained to raccoons . To put a
halt to their robbing fruit
trees,. place. some sliippery
black raipe arund rhe trunk .
Atkins displayed. a dahlia
arrangement.
Devotions
included scripture and redings by Atkins an Rice. For
roll call tnembers told how
they are• winding up their
summer. members were
reminded thadt it is time to
pay both county and state
dues with the county dues to
be sent to Sheila Cunis.
The traveling prize fur·
oished by Betty Lowery was
won by Rice .. The October
prize is to be furnished by
Rice and the October meet·
ing will be held at the home
of Joy Combs Ocr. 31.

GCC releases achievement list winners
GALLIPOLIS · Gallipolis Jennifer Smallwood, Angela 3.0 or bener grade point
Rachel average mclude Pamela
Career College has released Stewart,
the list or students named Stolzenburg, Kathy Stump, Adkins, . Cynthia Aeiker,
to the achievement list for · Shirley Thacker, Kristina Michelle Browning, Mildred
summer . quaner 2005.
Villars, Joyce Ward, and C&lt;ide, Karen Cox, Alice
Cremeans, Bessie Crmi1p.
Those students ·obtaining Julie Williams.
a perfect 4.0 grade point
Students achieving a 3.5 Brandy Dillard, Veronica
average
were
Medina or better grade point 'aver- Flemings, Wendy GatewOOd,
Angel , Crystal Chapman. age include Angela Collins, Cecilia Goett, Nick Harden,
Tim Clendenen. Natasha Terese Cordell,
Tiffany Christie Johnson, Michelle
Daniels, Pamela Davis, Fred Culpepper, Jessica Davis, King, William Kropf, Kevin
Dougherty, Mary Ezeonu, Stefanic Deem, Roy Evans, · Kuhn, Nicole Lambert,
David Facemire, Denise Kevin Gilchrist, Xanthe Sonja Lee, Misty Masters,
Gibeaut. Nyoka Hairston, Glassburn, Sheila. Hatfield, Amanda McFann, Stephanie
Brian
Hartman. Angela Charity Howell, Brandy McKenzie, Chatel Myers,
Hatcher, Cathy Hesson, Kasee,
Megan
Kropf, Keisha Oldaker, Melissa
Rainey,
Kimberly Jones, .Teresa Charles
Mash,
Donita Owens Angela
Kidd,
Amanda
King, McClintic, Chris Robinson, Leslie . Richard, Anginette
Amanda Langdon, Phil Lee, Jessica Sharp, John Spencer, . Rippey, Pansy Robinson,
Jay
Mitchem,
Chandra Miranda Summers, Lindsay Wanda.
Rupe,
Alicia
Moon , · Misty
Murphy, ,Taylor, Erica Thornton, Simpkins, Teresa Spencer,
Melanie
Quall s,
Kelly Angela
Shaffer,
Nancy Lori Taylor, Elan~ Tyree,
Jennifer l!o Walton, Seth Weaver,
Rebecca, Patsy Robinson, Vanderberg,
Roush ,
Brietta Wolford, and Trina Young. Judy -·Wolcoxen , Aimee
Jessica
Seagraves; Linda Sibley,
Students who achieved a Conklin, and Amy Young.

POMEROY - Marriage
licenses were issued in Meigs
County Probate Court 10
Kevin Olwen Stanley, 34, and
Angela Nicole Gheen, 30,
Middlepon; Justin Michael
Mays. 24, Parkersburg. W.Va.
and Amanda Leigh Northrup.
22, Long Bottom; William
Charles Sutton, 48. Racine.
and Tina Loui se Sutton, 39,
Racine; Christopher Michel
Slef II , 23, Pomeroy. and
Amanda Jeanne Priddy, 19.
Langsville; and James Arthm
Myers. 35. Reedsville, and
Lynette Renee White , 24.
Long Bottom ..

Civil suits
POMEROY - A foreclosure action was filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Coun
by Home National Bank,

Tuesday, October 4. 2003

PageA6

.

Tuesday,

Oct~,Jber

4,

2005 .

.

NEWS ABOUT
SENIOR CITIZENS IN MEIGS COUNTY

Church to
observe
176 years

.

Racin~ . against Gregory T
Hayman. Long Bottom; and
others, alleging default on a
mortgage agreemenl
of
$239,602.30, and $11.12947.
A personal injury lawsuit
RUTLAND
The
was filed by Terri K.
Church
.of
christ
will
Rutland
Lehman; Racine . against
celebrate
its
!76th
anniverAFB Distributors. Inc.,
sary with a homecoming
Athens, and others.
Sunday. Worshp ·and communion will take place at 10:30
a.m. followed by a carry-in
dinner at noon. Meat, drinks
POMEROY - A divorce and tableware will be
action was filed 'in Meigs proviced. The afternoon ser·
County Common Pleas Cliun I vice wil begi n at 2 p.m. with
by
Debra
Hartley. special music by the gospel
Middleport, agait\st Rick group Dayspring.
Hartley, Glouster.

Activity Schedule
The Meigs Mul.tipurpose
Center is open Monday
through Friday from 8 a.m.
until 4:30 p.m. Regularly
scheduled activities held
throughout the week include
sewing. · quilting, bingo,
c.heckers and games.
Dance team practice is
held each Monday at I p.m.
Cost is $1 per session attend- ·
cd. The Knitting Circle
meets on Wednesday from 10
a.m. until noon.
.All ages are invited to
attend the activities sched·
uled. Lunch is served daily at
II ;45 a.m. The suggested
donation for .the noon meal is
$2 for those 60 or older.

'

POMtROY
Dissolutions were gmnted in
Meigs County · Ctl.mmon
Pleas Court to · Stacy Mae
Jeffers and John Leon Jeffers,
and Alvena D. Harris and
Doug A Harris.
'

Federal judge allows state to
mov.e death row to Youngstown
COLUMBUS (AP) - A housed
at . Mansfield
federal judge ruled Monday Correctional Facility.
that the state can . move death·
The Ohio State Penitentiary
row to its supermax facility in in Youngstown is designed to
Youngstown, while cautioning .hold the state's most dangerous
that he will be monitoring prisoners who have poor conprison officials' efforts to make duct records. Except for an
promised changes to the prison. hour a day, inmates are kept in
. Opponents of the move, pro- 80-square-foor cells built to
posed by the state to save prevent them from communi·
money, did nor prove that the eating with each other.
'
tmnsfer "wm1ld create an atypThe state said de.arh row
ical or significant hardship," inmates would nor be subjected
U.S. District . Coun Judge to the same restrictions that tl1e
James Gwin of Cleveland said supenmax ··s other inmates ·
in his ruling.
experience.
The American Civil Libenies · Gwin said he wa~ concerned
Union had argued that the about death · row inmates'
move would deny inmates· access to lawyers at the superconstitutional due process max. In Mansfield, inmates can
~ghts because a prior coun rulmeet with· lawyers in a private
ing blocked inmates from conference room, he noted.
being sent to the Youngstown
By contrast, meetings w.ith
prison unless they prove to be a · lawyers at the superrnax take
security risk.
·
place in open booths that allow
Death row inmates are others to hear the conversation.

Revival
services
announced ·

Social Security

MIDDLEPORT
Revival services will be
held at 7 p.m. Oct. 10-14 at
the Middleport First Baptist,
South Sixth Avenue.
Preaching ~~ the services
will be Rev. Gilbert Craig of
Mt.
Moriah
Church,
Middleport on Monday ;
Rev. Joe Rife Qf Gallipolis
on Tuesday ; Rev .. Billy
Zuspan on .Wedn esday ;
Pastor David Rahamut of.
Rio Grande on Thur'sday;
and Rev. Dav id Wi se man of
Rutland on Friday. There
will be special . music each
evening.

is that the child's previous
shot records be . presented
.before · immunizations are
received.
If a child has not had
chicken pox, the child can
get the chicken pox vaccine.
CompliCations from
chicken pox increases the
older the child is when
he/she gets the disease.
Other scheduled clinics
included one to be held at
Howe's Grove Park in
Belpire, 108 a.m. to 11;30
a.m.
' parents who hav·e a high
schoQI senior who will be
· living in a college'\ dormito-

ry next years should consider have their child vaccinated for meningococcal. That
vacc.ine is now available
through the CHIP program
for a fee of $115 on a firstcome, first-served basis.
The clinics ·are provided
by OU-COM Childhood
Immunization
Program's
community mobile health
and
the
Ohio
unit
Department of ·Health ift
cooperation
with
local
health depanments and site
sponsors. For more information about the immunization program · call toll free
1-800-844-2654.

State Supreme Court to hear eminent domain case
BvANDREW

· ment group can build the com- ruling. alSo noted that states
mercia! propeny, which could have the ability to pa~s laws
WELS~UGG!NS
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT
produce more tax revenue for with stronger protection if they
the city.
·
want following rhe ruling,
COLUMBUS - The Ohio
The state Supreme Coun is named for Connecticut resident
Supreme Coun will decide already weighing a related case Susette Kelo.
whether homeowners have concerning the ability of the
Because Ohio is one of the
more rights under tho state or city to bulldoze the homes tirst states with a major court
federal constitutions when while the families are appeal- case ·pending. many other state
:fighting .inunlcipalities trying ing. A decision is expected this courts will watch the outcome
to rake thetr propeny for eco- fall.
.
closely. said Bert Gall. an attor·
nomic development.
The propeny owners say the ney for the Washington, D:c.. ·
The U.S. Supreme Coun last city has wrongly declared the based Institute for Justice,
·summer gave the government neighborhood blighted and is which i• representing the fami:broad powers to take land misusing its pqwer of eminent lies in · their lawsuit against
:under the U.S. Constitution, domain, the authority to buy Norwood.
:even . wl)en property is not and take private property for
Ohio lawmakers also are
·bligHted or deteriomring.
public projects such a~ high- pushing a bill that would freeze
The Ohio case, involving ways.
any eminent domain actions
families battlmg Norwood in.
The city and the developer that would give private develsuburban Cmcmnall, 1s one ot contend that Norwood had the opers control of the propeny
~he first i~ the country to test _right to use eminent domain to through 2006 until a committee ·
.propeny nghts Iinder state.,.la\'\1" acquire the property and .tum it can study the issue. The Senate
:following. the U.S. Supreme over to a private developer as State and Local Govemment
. :Coun deciSion;
part of urban renewal. They Committee "CaS expected ro
The state Supreme Coun on also argue that eminent domain approve-the measure Tuesday.
Monday agreed to hear the applied not because the area is
A ruling in favor of the prop.appeal of families trying · to "blighted," but ·is "deteriomt- eny owners could end the issue
save their homes from a devel- ing."
·
in Ohio, while a decision backopment of s hops and offices..
In the ·u.s. Supreme Court ing the city would likely mean
·The Isr Ohto Dtsrnct Court ot . ca~, Jusr,ice John Paul S"vens more calls for changes to Ohio
Appeals upheld the cny of · satd that New London, Conn., ·law or the state constitution.
Norwood's right to take the could pursue private develop'There very clearly is a polit• property last spnng.
ment ,under the
Fifth ical will thar really is showing
Joy and Carl Gamble and Amendment, whtch allows . _up all ~cross the country, in red
Carol and Joe Hom~y are chal- govern ments to take private states and blue states, against
:lcngmg Norwood s plan to propeny 11 the land I S for pub~ what the perceived result of the
demohsh thetr homes and oth- lie use.
Kelo case is," James Durham.
ers nearby so that the
But Stevens, author of the a University of Dayton law
Rookwood Partners \jevelil'p- "?ajority decision in the 54 professor. said Monday.

-

OnSSU
dean's list
PORTSMOUTH
Suzanna Henderson of
Pomeroy was named to the
dean's list at Shawnee State
University fm: the summer
term, earning a grade point
avemge of 3.5 or better on a
4.0 grading scale:

....

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· I·z·· .
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It/ ·

,. l:
' ,'

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......,1

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·.t' • ••,

J

';eettet~tt~t;

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t ·...

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• Don't leave bill payments '
in your mailbox. Those little
red flags sticking up are invitations to thieves.
• Desiroy credit card receipts
and destroy offers· of pre·
approved credit cards. A shredder is your· best protection. ·
• Check your monthly bills
and statements for suspiciqus
charges.
• Stop ~livery of junk
maiL To do this write: Direct
Marketing Association, Mail
Preference Service. Box 643,
C~nnel, NY 10512.
If you become a victim of
ID theft:
I . Call the credit bureau
2. Call and ·cancel your
credit cards
3. Call your bank
4. File a police repon
5. Call the FTC (877-438·
4338). They . will tell you
what to do to clear up your
accounts
6. Acting quickly saves you
time and money

Representatives from the
Athens Social
Security
Office will be at the Meigs
Senior Cemer to assist people ,
with Social Security prob·
Make your own
!ems and to provide information. The· dates are October
Christmas wreath
12 and 26. from I 0-11 a.m.
No appointment is needed.
You can make your own
Please register at the recep· Christmas wreath during a
tionist desk.
class that will be held at the
Center. Craig Matheny will
be the instructor for the class
Supoort Groups
and
will provide all of the
..
supplie$.
. .J'
· The Caring and Sharing
The cost for the class is $25.
Support Group meets each
month · at
the
Meigs This is less than most wreaths
Multipurpose Center at I cost already complete. This
p.m. The meeting dare is way you can design your own
October 27. Lenora Leifheit to suit your style and can say,
is the coordinator for the "I did it myself."
The class stans at I p.m . on
group and can be contacted
November
3. You must regisby calling 992-9919 or 992ter
with
Debbie
Jones by call7400.
ing
992-2161.
Hope to see
Tile Stroke Support
Group will meet from 1-2:3? you there.
.
p.m. on Octobe~ II . Lea
Tipton ,
Occupational
Plant Exchange
Therapist,
Holzer
Rehabilitation Center, is the
The Annual Fall Plant
Exchange
will be held on .
coordinator.
October 13 at II a.m. at the
Center. Hal Kneen and the
Identity Theft
Master Gardeners will present
a_ program and answer
· Mike Hart, Security Officer
your
questions. Bring any
from the Ohio Valley Bank,
will be here at the Center to plants you would like to
talk ·on "Identity Theft and share with others .
Check Fraud ." Mr. Hart will.
start speaking at II a.m. on
Thank Youl
October 4.
We appreciate the financial
support
received from the
Identity Theft Is on the
following
churches, organi·
Rise -:- Protect Yourself
zations, and individuals: .
• Racine Baptist Sunday
The
Federal
Trade
School#4
Commission reported in
• Racine United Methodist
January 2004 that . Identity
Women
Theft - stealing someone's.
• Tuppers Plains Church of
personal infot!nation for perChrist
.&gt;'!~mal gain - was, for the
fourth year in a row, the most
PERl Meeting
common
complaint
it
received. It accounted for
The regular meeting of PERJ
42% of all complaints, up
will
be held on Friday, October
from 40% the previous year.
the Meigs Multipurpose
7
at
·· Identity thieves prey on
Senior
Center. Lunch will be
senior citizens and retirees
becau.se they typically have served at·ll :45 a.m.
paid off their home mortga~e
PACE Class
and have excellent .credit.
Here are a few simple ways
to . protect yourself and
The PACE (Persons with
reduce the . risk of identity . Arthritis Can Exercise) Class
rheti by mail. It's easy and will .continue every Tuesday
it's important.
.
and Thursday from 10:15-1 I
• Don't have checks sent to ·a.m. These exercises are done
your mailbox.
·
from a chair. and Bryan
• Consider direct deposit, Hoffman, Wellness Director,
or have checks mailed to a makes exercising fun .
Join us for PACE and have
secure box ~I · your local post
a friend come with you.
office.

Mobile clinic brings free immunization clinics
REEDSVILE
The
Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine (OUCOM)
Childhood
Program
Immunization
(CHIP), will be bringing its
mobile health program to
the Meigs Library Eastern
Branch in Eastern high
School on Route 7, 3 to 4
p.m. on F~
· day.
Free ro ine immunizaarea c.hildren.
lions for ·
from binh 1 ough I R years
of ·age will be given. The
service is available to fami.lies of all incomes - even
those with msurance . cover· age. The only requirement

~

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Divorce

Dissolutions

The .Daily Sentinel• Page A7

www.mydailysentinel.bom

I

Drive Thru/Carry Out/Wine Shop
Great Selection of Imported &amp; Domestic Beer &amp; Wine
Carry out Beer &amp; Wine sold at state minimum priees

"
2nd .A[tnua(

· Deli/Bakery

~Kcq¢;:~~~~~~ CJ)~l

·Donuts, Cookies, P~stries/Fresh cut meats and cheeses

Patio Dining
Hot and Cold Sandwiches
Bucket specials every Friday and Saturday
I

Meigs County Council on Aging , Inc:
"Meigs Senior Center"
'
1 12 Eost Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio

Coming Soon .
Ivy Hill Gift Baskets
Specialty Gift Baskets for all occasions

October 22, 2005
10:00 AM
0 · I • I · 0

.·

If you would Iike to make a donation of good
. clean items (no clothing) or for more
information contact us at (740) 992-2 I 61.
Proceeds go towards the local share
of a new Meals o Wheels Truck and
needed senior services.

C\Vhat we do makes a 'H.fJerence!

. '.

October 2005 Calendar of Events
Monday

Tuesdav

3

Wedneadav
5
10:00 Knitting/Crochet

4
10:15 Pace Class
11 :00 Ohio Valley BanK on
Identity &amp;Check Fraud
12:30 Hoti&lt;lay Cr:afts

1:00 Dance Group (F)
6:00 Yoga (F)

.,

Thursday

10:00 Senior Bible Study

10 15 Pace Class
11 .00 Linda King

with Maxine and Bill Lirtle

j 6'00· 7:30 Carrng

11

~

17

18

1:00 Dance Group (F)
6:00 Yoga (F)

10:00-11 :30 HolZer Assisted
Living of Gallipolis Bingo
12:30-1 :30 Holiday Crafts
4 30-7:00 TOPS Meeting

'"'·

1:00 Dance Group (F)
6:00 Yoga Class (F)

9:30*11 ·00 BlOOd pressure
10:00 Euchre

.

, 1:30 Choir Practice

I 6:00-7:30 Canng Friends

! Suooort Grouo

27 Halloween Party and
E!lrthday Party
10:00 Euchre
1 11·00 Ceramics with Ruth
1· Ward
· ·
! 12 30·1 30 Holiday Crans
· ~ :00 Canng and Sharfng

class

10: oo Social securily
10: 00 Senior Bible Studi

Sunnort Group

.

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SAKEO SWEET POTATOES

WITH MAASHMALLOWS

SPICED APPlEsAUCE

I

MUSHROOM STEAK
MASHED ~OTATDES
COOKED CARROTS
FROSTED .PUMPKIN CAKE
WHEAT DINNER ROLLS

.

WITH SPAGHETTI

CORN CHOWDER

POTATO CHEESE PUFFS

GARDEN SALAD

APPLES. CABBAGE &amp; RAISIN

PEARS IN A RASPBERRY SAUCE
OATMEAL MUFFIN

SCAU:OP

;

.

..

PlUMS

CO~NSReAO

1~

13

.ROAST BEEF WIGAAW
OVEN BROWNED POTATOES
CAULIFLOWER WI CHEESE

. MACARONI AND CHEESE
CORN CHOWDER
TROPICAL FRUIT
BRDWNIE PUODING

BERRY CRISP
~EAT

,.

WHEAT BREAD

ROMT PORK WI GRAVY
PARS!Ef POTATOES
ACOIV&lt; SQUASH

.

v

PINEAPI'LE CHUNKS
COLESLAW

NAVY BEAN SOUP

.Z&lt;

MIXED VEGETABLES

SALAD

, CRANBERRY SLICE GARNI'~i
S~ETPOT.t.TOESIAPPL.E

BREAD

20

21

SMOTHERED CHICKEN
BROCCOLI N CHEESE

SPINACH
PICKLED BEETS

BAKEDZITTI
TOSSED SALAD
GARLIC BREAO .

BAKED APPLE SliCES .
RICE PILAf

LEMON PUDDING

STRAWBERRY CHIFFON PIE
WITH STRAWBERRIES ON TOP

SPICED .MUFFIN SQUARE

PRUNE JUICE

COLO HAM N cHEESE ON BUN

12

,.

• OATMEAl

Menu Is Subject to Change

CHICKt;N PARMESAN

BAKEDHM&lt;

17
SCRMIEILED EGOS
SMJSA.GE PATTY
OVEN BROWNED POTATOES

__ _ j

7
TANJ3Y BAKED CHICKEN WI BBQ

11
OVEN FRIED CHICI&lt;EN
BAKED POTATOES
GREEN !lEANS
FRES!i ORANGE
BISCUIT

.,

\ iFi • fe-:. fo

FRENCH BREAD

CRANBERRY JUICE

.10

·-,-·

Differenc e Day
·[ Auction
i October 22. at 10;00

6

EMERAL.O ISL.o\ND $Al.A.D

PEAS

TOMATO JUICE

'1 2"'rAnn.ual Mak') A -

5

4
BAKED TURKEY WI GRAVY

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M&amp;nua prepared by linda Myers R.D. L.D.

Debl Williams or Sharon Matson

3

!

I

Oct. 2005

.

(\ISCl)IT &amp; HA.RO eOtL.ED EGG

1 9:00 _Pa1nt Class !F)

.

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR NUTRITION PROGRAM
The Senior Nutrition Meal Is s~rved Daily at 11·45

SAUSAGE GAAVY

28
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For more lnformStion call
Debbio Jones. Activities
Director 740-9S2·2161

'

•,'

Dana Johnson

.

For lftGr«&lt;l•nt lnkll'matlon conCIIct

Paint Cia ss Cancelled

1.30 ChOir Praclice
6 00 ?:OQ Canng Friends

OONATIONS ARE ACCEPTED AND APPRECIATED

I

.

12.30·1 30 Holiday Crafts

'

1:00 Dance Group (F)
8:00 Yoga Class (F)

21

10:30.Diabetes SuppON

Group with Maxine and 13111
Little

31

~ LU

i 11:00 Pa in Management with

10:00 Knitting and Crochet
1

l

----·

20

26

12:30-1-30 Holiday Crafts
4:30· 7:00 TOPS Meeting

9:00 to11 :00
j 1:00 to 3:00
HEALT11 .r AIR A:· ~
SHQTS

.

I

I

11:00 Rocksprings Bingo

"'14-·----·

\

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(I I

'

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19
10: 00 Knitting and Crochet
Cla$s
10:00 Senior Bible Study
Group with Maxine and Bill
Uttte
1:00 BlOOdmobile

.

~nen ds

1 10 DO Euchre
·
] 11:00 Plant Exchange

10:00 Social Security
t 0: 00 Senior Bible Study
with Maxine and Bill little

oo Pa ,rit C!a:.s ; F;

!

Support Gr.'®'_.. __
1 13

12
10: 00 Knitting and Crochet
Class

10:1 5 Pace Class
I 1:00 Library Girls
12 30 Holiday Crafts
1:00 S!rQke Support
4:30-7:00 TOPS Meeting
4:()()..8:00 Wellness Center
Oo&amp;n House
·

25

.9
1

12 30· 1 30 Holiday Crafts

4:30 7:00 TOPS Mootina

24

7

tO :OO Euchre

ceramics

10
1:oo Dance Group (F)
6:00 Yoga (F)

-··--···

6

ae

2l

28

'

21

HU~WI GOULASH

BAI&lt;EC PORK CHOPS

SCALLOPED POTATOES AND

COLD llJRKEY AND CHEESE

MEATLOAF WITH BtlQ TOPPINil.

GREEN BEANS

APPI.f sucEs

LIMA BEANS

SANOWICH ON A BUN

AU GRATIN POTATOES

FRI!NCH BREAD

BAJ&lt;EO SWEET POTATOES

COTTAGE CHEESE AND

WAXEOBEANS

PEACHES

CALICO MACARONI SMAD

APRICOTS

FROSTED llANANA CAI&lt;E

CORNBREAD
OAANGE JUICE

PICKLE SLICES

WHEAT DINNER ROLLS

2 SUGAA COOKIES

-

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CALIFORNIA BLEND

. CREAM OF BROCCOLI SOUP

.

31

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Thank You For Your Oon. .n

BEEF SHORT RIBS

MASHED POTATOES

.Suggettltd Oon.Uont Ptr MMW

.

COOKED CABBAGE
PUMPKIN PIE

I• $2.00. For lnarechnt
Information, Contact

O.bi WHU•m• or

WHt;AT DINNER ROLL.S

Sharon Matson

Pen pals
·Do you like to write let·
ters? Have you ever had a
pen pal? Maybe you aren't
able to get out of the house
and volunteer anymore, but
you still want to do some·
thing.
.
I am interested ··in finding
volunteers who would enjoy
being a pen pal to children in
the local grade schools. The
letters would be senf one time

per month. I would collect p.m . ro . prepare for the
the leuers from the children Christmas Program. Debbie
and make sure they would be Finlaw is our piani st" and
delivered to the volunteers Shirley Hamm is the director.
they are matched with. Call Bring a friend ·with you; the ·
Diana Coates at 992-2161 if more the merrier! Call
Debbie Jones i11992-2 161 for
interested.
more information .
Choir practice
Leadership Volunteers
If y'ou enjoy singing, we
Do you have organization ·
would like to invite you to
join our choir. Practice is a!, oftice or telephone skills?
held every Thursday at I :30 If you do, I invite you to con-

tact, me about being a
Leadership Volunteer. You
would be on a team that
would contact volunteers
about possible volunteer
opportunities. turning in
timesheets , recruitment of
volunt .ers for · t~e RSVP
Progra and assisting with
office .d ·es.
Please contact
Diana
Coates. RS P Director. at
992 -2161 as soon as p(Jssiblc
to schedule an appointment

HEAP
.

.

The Home Energy Assistance Program (HEAP), is one of several programs
offcn:d by the Ohio Depanmcnt of!Jcvelopmcnl (0000) to hdpJow·income
Ohioans pay their utility bill s. Households may be eligible for assistance if the
household 's income is at or below the ISO% feder.al povcny guidelines.
Below arc guidelines for the 2005·2006 HEAP program:
Tolal Gross Household Income
' up to S 14,355

Size ofllouschold

I

2
l

Up tO S 19,245
up'to $ 24,135

4

5

loS 29,025
• upupto$33,915

6
7
8

up to$ 38,805
up to S 43.695
up to$ 48.S85

• Home Oxygen
• Hospital Beds
• CPAP Machines • Wheelchairs
• Nebulizers
• Oximetry
JCAHO Accredited

•

..

For households wilh more than 8 members. addS 4,890 per member.

If you need more information aboUl the I lEAP Program, contac.( Jo) Mauhcws
or ~athy Goble a1 the Meigs Multipurpose Senior Center ar 740-99-:-2161 . 1r :-ou
need asSIStance with completing a HEAP application. please call to schedule an
appointment. Kathy is also available to make home visi1 s for indi..,idunls that arc
di~hled or 'homebound.
'

24Hour Emergei1cy Service • Free Delivery
'

-

··.·

1.-800-458-6844
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7283 286-7484 594-21
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765 E. Main St. 540 w..Union
•

.

�Page AS

Hio·

The Daily Sentinel
.

Tuesday, October 4,

-

Cheney·welcomes Maririe battalion
that suffered 48 deaths in- Iraq
Bv ESTES THOMPSON
ASSOCIATED PR ESS WRITER

CAMP LEJEUNE. N.C.
Vice Pre • idcm Dick
Cheney · on Monday told
member of a Marine Corps
un it that I 'I 48' of its mem bers in Iraq hat th e Uni ted
States wi ll h nor the dead
by ''compl tii1g the mission.'·

·

"All of you are part of a
team that continues to make
historv." he t6hl abou t 4.500
Mari1ies. many from the
Ohiu-based 3rd Baualion,
25th Marines.
The banalion's 48 deaths
included 14 Marines killed
in back -to-back anucks
within a week over the summer. Another 150 members
of the unit were wounded.
"The loss to our country is
irreplaceable.'' Cheney told
the crowd before awarding
Purple He.arts to five
Marines, including two from
the 25th. "We will honor
their memory forever and
we will honor their sacrifi ce
by. completing the mission."
The vice president was
tlan ked by two 155mm canqons and a pair of ligh tarmored vehicles, with
Marine s from the 2nd Light
Armored Recon naissa nce
Banalion sining atop them.
After Cheney:s speech , Lt.
Gen . James Amos - commander of the 2nd Marine
Expeditionary Force - led
the Marines in a loud mi-li tary cheer of ''Oo-rah ."
Gunnery Sgt. Shawn
Delgado , 36. of Pataskala,
Ohio, listened to .Cheney
while sitting on the gra&gt;s
under bright sun .
"We put everything on the
line 10 'support our nation."
Delgado said. 'To have the
vice president of the United
States come to thank us
means everythin$ .

2005

Local stocks
ACt- 69.08
AEP-40.21
Akzo -43.91
Ashland Inc. - 56.07
AT&amp;T -19.84
BLI-10.99
Bob Evans- 22.90
BorgWarner - 56.67
CENX- 22.13
Champion - 4.23
Charming Shops - 10.88
City Holding - 35;86
Cof- 48
DG -18.63
:
DuPont - 38.84
Federal Mogul - .65
USB- 27.87
Gannett - 68.62
General Electric - · 33.23
GKNLY- 5.15
Harley Davidson - 48.31
JPM- 34.12

f' ~

Kroger - 20.55
ltd.- 20.29
NSC- 40.65
Oak Hill Financial - 30
OVB- 25.15
BBT- 39.19
Peoples - 27.61
Pepsico - 56.51
Premier - 13.25
Rockwell - 53.60 · ·
Rocky Boots ,.... 28.31
RD Shell - 62.80
SBC- 23.96
Sears - 125.10
Wai·Mart - 43.76
Wendy's - 46.81
Worthington - 21.05
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the
previous day's transactions,
provided by'Smlth Partners
at Advest Inc. of Gallipolis.

Local weather
AP photo

Vice Pres ident Dick Cheney addresses the II Marine Expeditionary Force marines and sailors in
· front of the Julian C. Smith Hall on Monday at Camp Lejune. NC. The units recently -returned
from deployment In support of Operations Enduring and Iraqi Freedom, as well as those from
rescue and relief efforts with Hu'rricane Katrina and Rita.
" It's definitely the best
homecomi]1g I' ve ever had .
So often ·you get caught up
in the fi ght, but to feel the
sac ri fices we've made have
-been noted ... that's what I
need to hear."
·
After C heney spoke, he
shook hands with MarineS
near th e podium before
go ing to lunch in a field
kitchen under a camoutlage
mess tent.
"It's a big deal for me,"
said Lance Cpl. Andrew
Rice , 2 1, of Columbus,
Ohio. "Ju st goin g over there
and him backing it up made
me fee l special '' .
Most of the battalion's
900 troops arrived at Camp
Lejeune in waves last week
and are eager for their
ex pected returns home this

week . The · battalion has
companies in Ohio , West
Virginia and New York',
where more welco mes will
be held.
'·Everyb ody is missing
their familie s. their . kids ."
said Sgt. Brian Kroon, 35 .
of Cuyahoga Falls , Ohio.
"'They want to get back to
normal life - Taco Bell and
speaking English."
He was one of th e
Marines assigned to catalog
the personal items that
belonged to hi s dead ·colleag ue s.

·

·

·

" We had to read thei r J et~
ters and diaries and look at
their pictures," he said. "It
-was a liHie closer relation ~
ship with them and it was .a
job I wish I hadn't had."
Marines who served in

either units in Iraq and oth ers,who returned from help"
ing recovery effort s ill the ·
Gulf .Coast after Hurricane
Katrina also took part in the
events Monday.
The base will have a
closed. memorial service
Tuesday (or the 48 Marines
from the 25th who died in
Iraq.
"I'm reall y impresse d
with how stro ng these guys
are. I know everybody has
been worried abo ut them ,"
said Navy' Lt. ·Ri chard
Malmstrom, 38, the banal ion chaplain for the 25th
and an assistant pastor at
Zion Lutheran Church in
Fort
Wayne ,
Ind.
"Obviou sly it hurts; but that
goes with going into combat."

71u•·d ay ... Mostly sunny in
the morning.. .Then hecoming partly cloudy. Highs in
the upper 80s. South winds
armmd 5 mph.
Tuesday
night ... Partl y
cloudy. Lows in the lower
60s.
Somhea st
winds
around 5 mph m the
light
even ing .. .Becoming
and variable.
Wed11esday ... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the mid , 80s.
South winds 5 to 10 mph .
Wednesday

1'/wr.&lt;day ... Mostl y cloudy
with a 30 percent chance of
showers. Not as wanp with
hi ghs in the lower 70s.
Tlwrsday night .. . Mostly
cloudy and cooler with
lows in the upper 40s.
Friday
and
Friday
nighL.Pan ly cloudy. Highs

in the mid 60s. Lows in
the lower 40s.
Saturday
Sunday ... Mostly_

thro11gh

c'Joudy. Lows in the lower Lilyvs in the mid 40s.

Ohio woman m:nong dead zn
boat accident on New York lake

THE GRASS 01011 GROW THIS
ER
SUPER DEAlS ON All TORO RIDERS tND ZERO

forward to this trip," herdaughq;r .said. "She wanted to see ··
Some beautiful fall colors and
take a train ride." ·
Three others killed , Sunday
al so were members of the
Bedford Seniors Citizens
Center in Michigan, just nonh
of Toledo.
" LeJeune .enjoycd volunteering and helping others, said
Randall, the youngest of three
siblings. l-Jer husband died a
year ago, Randall said.

OVER STOCKED!
IN STOCK!!!

I

OVP Schedule
GALLIPOLIS - A schedule of upcommg college
llrld high school varsity sporltng events in\IOhtlflQ
teams fram Gallla , Me:gs and Mason : Ollntlas .

IYilloy'I.Jiomjj
Volleyball
Water1ord at Southern, 5:55 p.m.
Miller at Eastem, 6 p.m
Meigs at Wellston. 6 p m..
Jackson at Rive1Valloy, 5: 15pm.
South Gallla at Grace Christian, 5:30 p.m.
Fairland_at Ohio Valley Christian, 5:30p.m
ACSI Sectionals, TBA

•

sOccer

Gallia Academy at Logan, 5 p.m
R:lint Pleasant at Winfield , 6:30p.m.
ACSI Sect1onals, TBA
Girts Soccer
Point Pleasant at Herbert Hoover, 6 p.m.
College VolleybaM
Rio G~nde at SMWnee S1ate. 7 p.m.

Women's College Soccer
Salam International at Rio GranQe. 4:30p.m.
Thursday's aames

VOlleyball
South Gallia at OVCS, 5:30 p.m. '
Gallia Academy at Logan, 5:15p.m
Coal Grove at RIVer Valley, 5 :30p.m.
Belpre at Meigs. 6 p.m.
Soutl1ern at Miller, ~:55 p.m
Eastern at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.

Soccer

OVCS at Gallia Academy. 5:30 p,m
Point PleQsant at Spring Va lley, 5 p.m.

Coltege Volleyball
R ~ G1ande at Central Stale. 7 p.m.

clear

night...Partl y Highs in the upper 60s .

TOLEDO (AP) -. An Ohio
woman wtcs among the 20 people killed when a boat capsized
on take Geof1!e in upstate New
York, her family said Tuesday.
Wilma LeJeu ne, 78, of
Toledo. joined a tour ·group
from a' Michigan senior citizens center, wllich included
two . frie11ds she had traveled
with before, said her daughter.
Nancy Randall. All three died,
she said.
·
"She was very much looking

'

Tuesday, October 4, 2005

Wednesday's aames
Volleyball
Hannan at Sherman. 6 p.nl.
College Soccer
Rio Grande at Charleston, 7 p.m.

60s .

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Carolina roars past Green Bay, Page 82
MLB playoff glance, Page 83
Reds, Indians notes, Page 84
Stoudemire signs live-year extension, Pagf 88

Unbeaten Bengals..have beat-up offensive line
rq;.-,. -..,
...

CINCINNATI (AP)- The
offensive line is in pain. The
penalties are a problem. And
th e sched ule is . taking an
unmistakable turn.
'
If they're going to suiy
unbeaten much longer, the
Bengals have a few things 10
fix - and fast. '
A 16~ 10 victory Sunday
ovcr·the Hliuston Texan s kept
the Benga ls (4-0) one of only
four undefeated teams in the
NFL. It also highlighted· the
two problems that .could keep.
· them from staying that way
much longer..
They're , beat up. a nd
they're beating themselves
up way too niuch .·
"We' re doing a good job,
but we want to eliminate

penali zed 45 times, second to
s l a r l Jot since I got here."
Pro Bow l right tackle Oakland for ~he NFL lead.
again st Lhc

..

'

Notebook

Jaguars, hi s
f ·i r s I
appearan ce
in the NFL.
And,
it
w o u I d

co mtt in a

Sun'day

ni ght

game

national television -

on
no

pressure there.
"In · college, I played real
hyped up and it didn't really
work for me,'' GhiaCiuc said
Monday. "I started cal ming
down a lilli e bit so 1. could
play belter football that way.
I try to maintain that
approach as much as I can. J·
thin k I'm ready. I think I'm
very tapab le. I've learned a

Willie Ander.son also is limit- The· Bengals set. a franchise
ed by a sore back that went record with 17 pen'lhies in a
into spasms before Sunday 's wi n over Minnesota. and had
game and nearl y forced him those 14 for a season-high
to sit out.
, 11 7 yards agamst the Texans.
"I really didn 't know if 1 They've had touchdowns
would be able to go until w.1ped out by penalltes m the
warmups for the ki ckoff," he last two games, an ommous
said
development.
','Are we undisciplined?"
. The line sh uffl e was a fac tor in a ragged performance. said
, rc~c J vcr
T;J.
The · offense had II of' the HoushnMnd zadeh. who had /
, .
..
.
touchdown catches wtpe&lt;!J;!u{
Ben~als 14 penalties - lour by penalties in eac hA1f the
lor fal se starrs, two _l or hold- last two ga~ ,;We' ll
mg, one for an tllegal forma- address the penalties. Some
uon, o~e tor del ~y, _n ne tor of theiT&gt;are hurting us. We' re
groundmg, two lor 1nterfer- overcoming them. You don't
ence.
.
want to have a · penalty beat
That's the other are_!l of
concern. Cincinnatj)las been
Please see Bengali, Bl
'•

Brow~s
'

Lady Rebels
slam Rock Hill

those mistakes," defensive
end JuStin Sh1ith said . '·We
don 't want to keep clin]bing
out of holes.''
First, they have lu do something about the offensive line.
Their two veteran centers ,
suffered significant knee
injuries in the second fjuarter
Sunday, forcing guard Eric
S\einbach to play the position
for the first time in his career.
Starter Rich Braham was li sted as questionable Monday
for the next ga me at
Jackso nville because of u
sprai ned knee . Backup Larry
Moore went on injured
reserve with a di slocated
knee.
Fourth-round draft pick
Eric Ghiaciuc might have tu

look to get ba~k to
'

/

·
lronladies
.500 · rally p~t
Meigs

BEREA (AP) - The
.Browns say they don ' t
want to look too far ahead ,
but a glimpse at their next
five games ·s hows they
STAFF REPORT
MERCERVILLE - South
SPORTS@MYDAILYSEtmNEL.COM
have the chance to build
Gallia improved its volley momentum against some
ball record to 6-10 following
JACKSON -· Meigs fell
struggling teams.
Monday' s
below .500 for tfle season foilAfter
losi ng
to
impress ive 9-25,
wing its four-game 26-28, 25Cincinnati
mid
25-21, 25-15.
18, 18-25, '
Indianapolis, both unde. 25~ 13 r· victory
19-25 non·
feated. the Browns are
over Ohio Valley
league vol&lt;'oming up on the softest
' Conference
leyball setpart of their schedule.
member Rock
back
to
Beginning thi s Sunday,
Hill .
Jackson
Cleveland .[aces fi ve teams
The Lady Rebel s had three ·
Monday in
- ChicagQ, Baltimore.
players with double-di git
the
Appl~
Detroit , Houston and
City.
points, Jed by Niki Fulks with
Tennessee - with a comThe Lady
16, and receivedd a gamebined 4- 12 record.
Marauders
high 16 kills and three blocks
· Coach Romeo Crcnncl
•
(7 -8) rail ied
from Jill Swain. .
said he's not. looking past
Cole
back to tie the
Glenna Wright and Chelsea
- any opponents to see
match
at one
Canaday each had 12 points,
who's coming up on the
apiece
folwith Wri ght chipping in a
schedule.
lowing
a
team-high eight··accs.
''Anything can happen
heart-breakJe ssica Cantrell had 17
in the NFL," Crennel said
ing Joss in the
assists for SGHS, 12 bf
Monday. "San Diego goes
·
o
pener, but
which led to kills. J;,u lks
·into New England and
the
, host
added five kills and Megan
they
put
41
points
up
on
Iron
I
adi
es
Delaney had a kill and a
(12-6)
New
England."
counblock.
tered
with
A win against C hicago
South Gallia re turns to
two consisgets
the
Browns
back
to
action today when it travel s
tent closing
.500 in a rebuilding season
to Grace Christian for a 5:30
Haning
games . to
in which few thought they
p.m. contest ·
secure the tricould be competiti ve.
.
'•
umph.
"Just . to get to .500,
Amy Barr Jed MHS with II
that' s very important
points.
while Sam Cole led the
because I feel like if we
,
net
attack
with 16 kills, eight
ge t to .500, we're 0-0 and
blocks
and
seven pomts.
we're starting fresh," safe·
Briuany
Hysell followed
GALLIPOLIS Ohio
ty Chris Crocker said. "To
.with
10
points,
seven kills and
Valley Christian celebrated
get to .500 and then go in
two
blocks.
.
Senior Night in style with a
and play Baltimore. That's
Joey Haning had 29 assists
co n vi ncing
huge. "
·
and
eight points for . the
25~6, 25- 10.
One
thing
the
Browns
.
Maroon and Gold.
25~ 19 v ictohave goi ng for them is
MHS was 78-of-86 at the
ry Monda y
they
'
ve
been
relatively
service
line.
over Ironton ,
es
pecially
comhealth
y.
BriHany
Logan
paced
St. Joseph.
pared
with
past
injury-ridwith
13
kills,
and
Jackson
Lady ·
dled
seasons.
Jennilynn
Mattin
chipped
in
De fen-der s
The
bye
week
came
at
a
35
assists
and
16
digs
in,
the
clainwd their
good time for quarterback
victory.
'
12th consecMeigs
salvaged
a'Split with a
Trent
Dilfer.
He
wasn't
utive
win
2514,
27-29,
1511
v)ctory in
sacked in the first two
·oavls
thi s seaso n
AP photo
the junior xarsity contest
games. but was banged up
a
n
d
Cleveland
Browns
coach
Romeo·
Crennel
yells
into
his
headset
during
the
Browns
opening
Meigs heads back to Jackson
by the Colts, including a
improved to
day
game
against
the
Cincinnati
Bengals
in
Cleveland.
Crennel's
attitude
has
rubbed
off
on
County
today for a Tri-Valley
low shot that left him
15- 1 overall.
Cbnfcrence
Ohio Division
his
players
,
whose
performance
through
three
weeks
has
been
better
than
many
anticipatsli.ghtly limping.
Seniors
match up with Wellston. Game
ed,
show1
ng
signs
that
Crennel
and
general
manager
Phil
Savage's'
plan
to
revive
the
down-·
Kri sti Davis
Pleue see Browns, Bl
time is' slated for 6 p.m.
trodden Br.owns could be working.
.•
and Sarah
Burleson
co mbi ned
for 2) points
in the vic tory.
with
.
.
Davis and
·break&lt;
dow
n
a
defense as well as . I spoke n mu ch about the future
Burleson ·Juli e l;lussell
"'
this
uniform
f&lt;i
r
a
CLEVELAND (AP) - Looks like
o
,.
OK
''"
·
can,
and
a
·guy
like Damon Jones beyo nd. thi s se ason , ll ga uskas is.conI
one 1me.
. .
~
leading the
Le Bron · James -worked on his
who
can
shoot
it
from
halfcourt, and fid ent Jame s will stay in Cleveland
That i"ue temway with 14 points apiece .
defense this summer. He's even
porari ly out of the a guy li ke Donyell Marshall , who as lung as' it take s io win an NBA
and
Kalee
Burleson
.swaHing away rumors.
way. Jame s spent can play the three: four or fiv e and championship .
Ed monds both had nine
Like the one about him demanding
the majority of hi s rebound the ball .... h's unbelievabl e
points eac h, and Me gan ·
a trade to New York so he ,can save
''From what I've see n, he loves
· being here," ll gausk&lt;ts said . "I don't
gro
up inlcrview s~s­ what ou r potentia l can be.
Sheets chipped in three.
the Knicks and light up Broadway.
"There shou ld be no excuses fo r us know wha t's going to hap pen in the ..
sion
praising
Heather Wagner, Mary
Or the one where he's bolting for
not
to get to the playoffs with the future . But all of us would like to see
Cleveland 's front
Sheets and Cara Sandell a ll
Los Angele s to join the Lakcrs and
offi ce for spe nding guys that we've added.'"
had one point in the win.
sign a movie dea l. And the piece of
Wh ile the Cavalie rs we re•disitHc- No . 23 hanging in the rafters, and I
mi ll ion :-, lhi :-, sumOhi o Valley Christian · gos;ip about him leaving for Miami
e that."
James
mer on a supporting grating late last season, James, who think we'll se_
returns to action today when
to huo k up with Shaq and open a
is
under
co
ntract
for
at
least
three
'
Befote
be111
g taken away for
.cast
that
should
help
it hllilS Fairland. Game time
nightclub on South Beach.
more
seasons
in
Cleve
land.
showed
numerous
photo
shoots. James said
h s lated for 5:]0 p.m.
Heck. he's been linked to every- him and the Cavalier&gt; get to the
signs
of
fr
u
s
tr~t(ion
as
his
first
tfip
to
lhe
never-e
nd
in
g
guessing ga me
NBA playoffs aft er na rrow ly mis'one but Paris Hil ton.-"
'
the play off&gt; slipped away. He criti, about where he ' ll play has become
James. thou gh, in sists none of ing them last season .
Contact IJ1formation
cizcd
teammates: and sto rmed off annoyi ng.
The
Cavs.
who
t'o
l_
i&lt;lp'ed
down
the
them are true . And on Monday,
Fax- .1-740-446-300B
the
tloor
111 Detron bare-chested, np" It bgthers me . of co urse .'' he said.
stretch
and
fin
ished
42-40
losing
while being bombarded wi th ques•,
tions at the Cavaliers'' media day, the a tiebreaker for the No . R ' pot to ping off hi s jcrse~ after a tot&lt;gh loss. "I ne~ er gave any indi cation of leavE-mail- sports@mydailysenllnet.com
llgauskas d1dn I blame James for ing Cleveland . I've been in Akron
All -Star forw ard addressed his New Jersey - after leadi ng the
Sports Staf1
fut ure before it was even btoughl up . Cen.tral Di vision for u chunk of tbe b~J,ng u pset..
my whole li fe. My lam ily loves to
Brad Sherman. Sports Editor
"For the reco rd ," James said, &gt;ea&gt;on. signed free agent guards
I knew tha t ~e Bron needed to gel come see me play 41 oames. It b0 tti(740) 446-2342, ext. 33
,
. . , .
.
" ,·
sla mmin g hi ; han d on the tat)le. "For Larry Hu ghe' and Danton Jones . lo the playn tfs, the 7- loot -3 center
bsher man@myda1lyt nbune.com
said
.
·'
I
wanted
him
get
that
taste.
ers
n~
e
a
IIH!c
bit.
but
I
m
here.
I
m
10
the reco rd . I am ntH goi ng anywhere. forward Donyell Marshall and reHe did everythin g he cou ld and we weanng a Cleveland Ca ~ alters JerI keep hearing these stor ies about signed ..:en ter Zydruna" ll gauo,;ka~ .
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
let
him down. "
·
scy and I 111 having lun .
;" It \ ' ·goi ng to be unbclievahlc
(740) -446 -~ 342 . ext 23
LeBron James i' , not happ y in
, bwallers@mydallytnbune.com
Jlgauskas
has
played
with
James
"I can' t ~redi ~ tth e fu wre. I don't
Cleve land . I don't und e r&gt;~and where what th is tea m can do."' James ,a id ,
crac.:ki ng a :-, mil e. ·"It' ' like hi gh for two sea,ons. long enough 10 know wh~l 'going to happen before
these keep comin g from.
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
''I'm , very happy in the Cava liers school for me again. Now that I gill appreciate the 20-year-old 's compel- I sign my nex t contract. Bu.t now my
(304) 675 -1333 eMt . 19
lcr.um@ mydailyregister corn
uniform t.~nd I'm fnoinno to be wCarinue a guy like Larry Hu ghes . who can iti\'eness. Although they have n' t focus is on being a-C avalier. "
I
.
\

OVCS win streak
reaches a dozen

OHV engine by, K&amp;WII811Jd®
wHh cruise cdntrol
42" to lj2'l qut
tiller or·bagger·
on frame and axle

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•.5 gallon gaa 1111\k ;-,,
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;
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The

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16-38xi. LAWN TRACTOR

38"CUT

CLOSE .O UT PRICEI
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• Fou• mowlt)g deck&amp; from 36~ to 48" cut.
• Add b8gglr, anovi blade, ano~ throww l&gt;r lltiOf
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"
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• 5-year Wort&lt;~ Warranty• on lranie llfld axle •

'

BAUMLUMBER
St. Rt. 248 • -Chester, OH • (740) 985·3301

US.N

.James shoots down never-ending rumorS

"

�·'

Page B2 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

-

Tuesday, October 4

2005

Tuesday, October 4

'

- Vick apologizes for
obscene gestur,e to fans
'
'

'

'

CHARLOTTE. N.C (AP)
- Brett Favre stood alone at
midfield , watching in frustrated disbelief. as the
Carolina Panthers celebrated
th'e end of his improbable
rally. It was vintage. Favre,
but despite his best efforts,
the Green Bay Packers are
off to their-worst start in I 7
years.
Favre. threw fou i touchdown passes Monday night
· but couldn't overcome two
early turnovers that the
Panthers used to build a big
lead, and Carolina held on
for a 32-29 victory.
The Packers fell to 0-4 for
the first time since rns.
"It 's hard to express in
words bow disappointed I
am , I·left it all on the field."
Favre said . '"I've never been
· 0-4, but it's a hand. we've
been dealt."
Rallying Green Bay fwm
a I9-point deficit in the third
quarter, Favre threw two
touchdown passes and two
2-point conversions in the
fourth quarter and had the
Packers in position to win
the game on their final drive.
But with running back
Ahman Green sidelined by
an inj11red knee and no timeouts, Favre had to do it all
on hi s own when G(een Bay
got the ball back with I :58
to play. He completed two
passes before Carolina (2-2)
stopped the Packers on a
fourth-and-2 .
Favre threw the ball to
Donald Driver past the first
. down line, but Chris Gamble
knocked the ball out of his
hands and it fell incomplete .
"You definitely don ' t want
to be in that situation with
Brett Favre;" said Carolina
safety Mike Minter. "Once
you give them a chance to
get back in their rhythm,
Brett Favre will be Brett
Favre."
:
Favre, a 15-year veteran
and .future Hall of l'amer
who is possibly playing hi s
final season, stood alone on
the field as the Panthefs eelebrated.
One by one, the Panthers
approached him in .a show of
respect. Among them was
Mike Wahle, the Jefl. guard
who spent seven seasons
protecting Favre before
signing with Carolina. The
·two embraced.
· "You'.re never safe - .No.
4 can do . some amazing.

•

team and do th ings the right
way."

Vick said he would have no
further comment.
"In the heat'of the moment,
he i11ade a mistake," said Billy
Hite . an as;ociate head coach
for th~ Hokies. " Marcus
knows he can't react like
that."

Browns

penalties that cost Dennis
Northcutt two touchdowns
on punt returns.
"You have only ll few
fromPageBl
opportunities maybe a year to
Dilfer doWnplayed any lin- get them and when they pregering problems from the sent themselves you have to
get them," Northcutt said of
blow.
teams.touchdowns.
special
"I was a little sore, but I
Cleveland
and Chicago
feel good," Dilfer said, "I got
a little rest last week and. find themselves in a similar
worked out a lot and feel situation with I ·2 , records
stronger and will be ready to and coming oil a bye week.
Defense has been the
go ·this week."
Allowing Dilfer to rest was Bears' strength, while ro6kie
no . different from what the quarterback Kyle Orton is
. team did with other veterans trying to put his five-interception performance against
on the team, Crennel said.
. "We rested him a little bit Cincinnati behind him .
"He's throwing picks to
last week because he's one qf
the elderly statesmen that we everybody, so we're trying tO
have on this team," Crennel get interceptions," Crocker
· said. "When he goes in there said. "We'.re going to play
: today, we· II see what he can him just like · we play every· do . .[ expect him be able to go body else. We're going to try
out there and practice. If he to get turnover5 and get pressure· in his !'ace."
can't, I'll let you know."
Crennel said they'll defend
,Linebacker Matt Stewart
and kickoff returner Joshua· ~im differently than Peyton
· Cribb~ also had some time to Manning, but it doesn ' t mean
: recover from knee injuries. they'll take him lightly.
"When we faced him in the
They were expected to practice this week for tlie first preseason the first pass .he
.time since they were hurt in threw on us was a 47-yard
the
opener
against completion, so I'm not taking
anything for granted about
Cincinnati.
Cleveland worked during this guy," he said. "He 's an
the bye week to eliminate NFL quarterback and we're
mistakes, like the careless going to treat him as such."
•,

gave the'm what .seemed ·to
be an insurmountable lead.
But after a Packers punt,
Delhomme fumbled, Green
Bay recovered and Favre
made . the Panthers pay for it
{)ne play later with a 16-yard
scoring strike to Donald
Lee.
His finest work, · though,
came on the Packers' next
drive. Favre was 8-of- I 2 on .
a 90-yard march. hitting
Antonio Chatrrmn on a 4yard touchdown in the back
of toe end zone.
Favre threw the 2-point
to
Robert
conversion
.Ferguson to make it· 32-29
with .3: 07 to play.
. But in the end, it was
Favre's two early turnovers
that he couldn't overcome.
He was sacked on the third ·
play of the game,· fumbling
the ball away on Green
Bay 's 7-yard line . It took the
Panthers three plays to turn
that misc ue into a touchdowil, with Delhcimme
throwing a 2-yard TD pass
to Kri s Mangum for a 7-0
lead.
Favre shook off the misAP photo take with a I0-play drive,
Carolina panthers qu;Jrterback Jake Delhomme (17) throws tying the score on a 21-yard
the ball as he is hit by Green Bay Packers' Kabeer Gbaja- TD to David Martin. ·
Biainila (94) during the first quarter in Charlotte, N.C.
Favre's second costly mi·s '
Monday.
· take right before the half as
,
.
. Green Bay was driv.ing. His
things back there," Wahle over Carohna last . season, pa ss to FerPu son wasn't
said. " I've seen him do it was .held to 36 yards. before ' strong enougl~ arid Carolina
many times."
leavm,g the game wrth the corner Ken Lucas ripped it
Jake Del hom me threw two leg tojury to the thlfd quar- away for an interception.
touchdown passes and ter.
The Packers were hit with
Stephen Davis ran for two
Trailing 26-7 midway two personal fouls on the
more as the Panthers built an through the thrrd quarter, play that pushed the ball to
early lead and put them- Favre turned II u~ a lev~). the Green Bay 32. Davi s
-selves in position to ride out ~nd suddenl.y looked ag~m scored two plays later on an
. an easy win.
hke he was ha~mg fun domg 11-yard run that pOt the
Perhaps that's just where rt. He led by eKample on an Panthers up 23 _7. . .
Favre wanted them.
.
.
80-yard seonng dn ve, . · .. , .
sprinting
up
the
middle
for
a
.
Kasay
s
38-y:lrd
fteld
goal
"I wasjust praying for our
1
2-yard
gain
on
third-and-8
to
the
thtrd
.
quarter
made
rt
defense to get a Stop,"
,
Delhomme said. "He was and finishing it off with a 26-7. ..
Notes. , Wahle was made
awesome tonight. J'm just 26-yard TD pass to Driver.
Favre finished 28cof-47 an honorary captam before
honored to be on the same
for
303 yards and four the game because ol hts
fie~ with him."
touchdowns
_ his 19th Packers t1es.... Mtke Rucker
Delhomme was 17-of-24
for 206 yards and Davis car- game of four or more ·touch- set Carolina's all-time sacks
ried 19 times for 51 yards. down passes, second 10 Dan record with a first quarter
Steve Smith, Who scored Marino' s 'record 21. The takedown of Favre . He has
three touchdowns last week pass to Driver was, Favre's 42 , breaking the mark ·of
against Mi&lt;1mi, caught only 50th touchdown pass on 4 I .5 set by Ke~m Greene ....
Monday Night Football, sec- Green Bay. defenSIVe tackle
two passes ·for ·I 2 yards.
'They tried to take Steve ond only to Marino's 7,4, and Cullen Jenktns blocked a
Smith out of the game, it cut Carolina's lead to 26- PAT. recovered a fumble and
had ·three. tackles . He is the
which they did a bit, but that 13.
opened up things for other
The Panthers pushed it to younger brother of Carolina
people," Delhomme said.
32-13 on Davis' second DT Kri s Jenkins, who is out
Green, who ran for I 19 score of the ganie, a I-yard for the year with a knee
yards and three TDs in a win run with 14:44 to play that injury.

.
.
AP photo
Chicago White Sox pitcher Mark Buehrle relaxes 1n the outfield during a workout at U.S. ce·llular
Field in Chicago Monday. The White Sox will face the defending World Champion Boston Red
Sox in the first game of an American League Divis ion game in Chicago Tuesday.

MLB Playoff Match-ups
AL

Reaeh 3 Counties

••
••

the majors host the defending Wo~d
Series champion Boston Red Sox.

F.:( tt-l)

sv
ERRORS

.

.

••

photo
·Cincinnati Bengals head coach Marvin Lewis, center, encour:ages left tackle Levi Jones, left, and right tackle Willie •
Anderson, right, as they leave the field during their 16-10 win
over Houston Sunday in Cincinnati. The 4-0 Bengals have a
beat-up offensive line heading into their biggest test so far •'·
with a game at Jacksonville this Sunday.
· .1 .
AP

I

Bengals

'

••

I

'

••

•
•

•

I
I

•

54

is most dangerous late in the

94

game.

BOS. CHI.

BATTING

.282 .291

3636

12t5

d Ud
BA

Runs

4

~

SB

HR

PITCHING

:a
-16

4

iit~
i ERA

26

SO

BB

cast-to-coast,

· SMwdMI

t

-#i... .,•' .. j

The Yankees, who won t6 of their last 20

"

games to capture their eight straight division

''·:.
1

RECORD
•
AVG
RUNS(GM)
HR
ERA

' 95·.67
.276
886 (5.5)
229
' 4.52
46
95

sv
· ERRORS

.L ..

'

·.t..\

1

tu

KEY HITS

fll..t.~.l

The Angels must get Chane
Figgins to run havoc on the ·
bases (62 SBs) . If Bartolo Colon

95-67
.'2.70
761 (4 .7)
t47
3.68
54"
87

is on, caulk up two wins this
series.
If the Yankees can get to the
• late innings with the lead. its
- lights out with Mariano Rivera.
AleK Rodriguez Is showing why
he is a top MVP candida~e.

Head·lo·head
·•

The Angels gave the Yankees fits much of the year winning six of 10

games.

NY •

BATilNG

.271 .278

49 51

17

LAA •.

PITCHING

23

55 63

4.85 3 91

i
UU , Li : ~, ~ ISOI ii
' ERA
BA

l!uns. '

HR

D I V I 'S I. 0 N

N l

BB

' C$@.1

S E A I E. S

Slacking lhe deck
San Diego, who captured their division wijh
.82 wins faces St. Louis and their deep
rotation anchored by Cy Young Award
candidate 'Chris Carpenter.

•

j

i
i

Ortiz and Manny Ramirez have
292 ABis between them. Ortiz·

The White Sox took the season series over the Red Sox four games
to three.

•

•

.

The Whhe Sox playoff starters,
the basic strength of the team,
have a 1.57 ERA in their last
eight CQmbined S1arts .,..
The Red SOx tandem of David

99-63
.252
741 (4.6)
200
3.61

Head-to-head

•

I
I
I
I
I

KEY HITS

95-67
.281
910 (5.6)
199 ..
4.74 '
38
109
flj

RECORD
AVG
RUNS(GM)
HR
ERA

•

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register, or
Daily Sentinel, And,It Will Run For FREE In
i
The Tri-County Marketplace!

SERIES

Chicago White Sox who fmished the

••

i
i
i
.i.

DIVISION

season with the second-best record in

I

I

I&lt;.EY HITS

•' .... RECORD
AVG
"RUNS (GM)
HR
ERA

82-1!0
.257
684 (4.2)

100·62
.210
805 (5.0)

1~

170

4 .13
45
109

3.49
48
100

sv
ERRORS

The Cardinals have more
offense from MVP candidate
Albert Pujols on down . Cards
have more,experience in thE!
postseason than the
Padres.The Padres' Jake
Peavy needs to set the tone

with a dominant performance
in Game 1.

Head·to·head
Padre s wen four of

ma)ors.

1n the
295

seven games against the team with the best recOrd

2:•
u. I i ;._.
BA

BATI!NG '

SD, •

STL •

PITCHING

6.24

6 10

~

_ ,..
32 28 '· 45 36·

. .3

HR

SB

BB ; SO

ERA

Runs .

. FamHiar foes
For the fifth time in nine years, the Atlanta
Braves; who captured their 14th straight
division crown and the Houston Astros, are

••

meeting in ~e NL Division Senes.
KEY HITS

RECORD
AVG
RUNS(GM)
HR
ERA

sv
ERRORS

90·72
.265
769 (4 7)
184
3 .98
38
86

89·73
.256
693 (4.3)
161
3 .51

45
89

Pitching usually prevails and
the Aatros have three of th e
· best starters going for them in "

Clemens, Pettitte and Oswalt.
The Braves dominated the
Padres during the regular
season, and have home-field

advantage and the best home
record In the league.

Head·to·head
The- Braves won five of six meetings with the Astros this season .·

!~alltpolt~ ~atlp lribu~e The Daily Sentinel ~oint ·~rea~ant l\egt~ter!

L-~·-·~~~:.~~·-. - . . ;_. . -.\~2.~:.~.~. .- ..- ..~~~..m.:~~·-. v ..i
'

•
AP phoio
San Diego Padres' Woody Williams, who formerly played for the St. Louis Cardinals, stretches
before the team··s workout in St. Louis Monday. The Cardinals will face the San Diego Padres
in the first _game of the National League Division series in St. Louis Tuesday.
·

I.!Zs

b

BA

Runs

42 BATTING

.310

U.

t3

ATl. HOU.

10

C •~
HR

;

SB

SI"'UACE. Elias Spor1s Bureau

'

'

-·--- ·-- -

~~

----

-

13 12

BB

Bv MIKE FITZPATRICK
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Chicago White Sox
into the playoll's looking
for their tirst World Series title
in 88 years . . The Yankees
haven't won it all since 2000 and that's way too long as far as
they 're concerned.
Slow start this season, so
what? October expectations arc
just as high as always for New
York.
"It\ pres~ure, sure,·· manager
Joe Torre said Monday as his
team prepare,d for. its tirstround series against the Angels.
"But it's a good pressure,
because George Stetnhrenner
certainly puts his money where
his mouth is. He certainly
spends money to put players in
the clubhouse.':
Trying to end a much longer
drought, Chicago need only
look across the fietd to lind
hope.
After all. the Red Sox finally
won their rings last year. Why
not the White Sox now?
"It would be compamble if
we could ever pull this thing
off. it would be a Jot of pan~ lei
lines to what they have done,"
slugger Paul Konerko said.
. .
'
AP photo
Shoeless Joe Jackson , Happy New York Yankees manager Joe Torre t&lt;jlks about his pitching
Felsch and Eddie Cicotte led rotation and not having home field advantage at ·a news conChicago to its last champi- terence Monday in Anaheim, Calif. The Yankees face the Los
on ship in I9 I7.ju•t a few years Angeles Angels in an American League Division Series beginbefore the famou s Black Sox ning Tuesday.
,
scandal ended their major
league careers.
what we're going to focus on." round three seasons in a rowAs these White Sox got ready - Houston won the NL wild all with ·Game 5 defeats at
for their playoff opener against cm·d for the second yew· in a home. Their only World Series
~ Boston, other team,s were row .and also gets a ftrst-round crown during the currenT streak
thinking big. too.
rematch. with Atlanta. The of 14 ·consecutive division
The St. Louis Cardinals want Astros beat the Braves in five championships came I0 long
to make up for last year's wipe- games last s&lt;;jlsou and are still years ago.
out in the World Series, and the built !O win in the postseason
The only team in the majors
Atlanta Braves are tired of their thanks to their pitching to win I00 games, the
annual postseason flops.
prowess. .
Cardinals are favored to take
In the American League,
Andy Pcttittc ( 17-9) will start their second consecutive NL
Derek Jeter and the Yankees Game I on Wednesday, fol overcame an I I- I9 start to win lowed in the rotation by Roger pennant, thanks in part io their
another division title - but Clemens and Roy Oswalt. lirst:round opponent. The
they must open the playoffs on Then there's closer Brad Lidge, · Padres (82-80) nearly became
the road. Los Angeles has a one of the best in the business the first division winner in a
non-strike year to enter the
bullpen good enough to stymie coming out of the bullpen.
New York and ~o deep into
"We obviously know who playoffs with a losing record.
But Jake P.eavy is a tonnidaOctober, while t~e Red Sox they ·have in their rotation, so
hope, to repeat after winning it's important that we get an ble. ·young ace, and Trevor
their lirst title sit1ce 191X.
early lead and build some kind Hoffman anchors · a stout
Boston is the AL wild card of moment1im." Braves pitcher bullpen, so maybe S&lt;m Diego
for the third straight season .lohn Smnltz said. " It should be can surprise some people.
and that might be the perfect ,ifj exciting series. but I don't
"The bottom line is we're
spot in these 'playpt'fs, which foresee a lot of runs being here. we're excited to be here.
were set to begin Tuesday after- scored.''
and we expect to win," Peavy
noon 'with the NL West chamThe Braves have several con- said.
.
pion San Diego Padres playing ccms. actuall y- and Smaltz is
The Citrdinals were swept in
tn St. Louis.
one of them. His ailing shoui- the 2004 World Series by
The last three World. Series der is expected to push him Boston and ar.e missing star
champions have bee n wild back to a Game 2 stan at Turner third baseman Scott Rolen.
cards. includit]g the A11gels in Field,. Star slugger Andruw who had season-ending shoul2002. They upset New York Jones arid · rookie Jeff der surgery in August. But their
that year and are looking lor- Francoeur are slumping, and pitching is better than last year,
ward to starting the re match at reliever Blaine Boyer cou ld be
home Tuesday nighi. ·
· left off the postseason roster with leading Cy Young Aw,ard
. "I don't think whai happened because of a .sore shoulder, a candidate Chris Carpenter (2 Iin 2002 is going to affect wl1at major blow to. the shaky 5) set to stait the opener. followed by Mark Mul~er. .
will happen in this series.'' bullpen.
"These guys are goin_g to '
Angels manager Mike Sciascia
"If we can't get ourselves
have
to step up and be the
said after his team's workout. together,' ' Marcus Giles said,
pitchers
they were the majority
"That 's long go ne. They're a "we'll be looking at the same
of the season for us to have a
terri lie ballclub and we've got results as last year."
challenges. We're playing at a
Most · years. actually. The successful postseason," pitch-'
· high level"right now, and that's Brave; have lost in . the first ing coach Dave Duncan said.
com~

sox ora dilerem colOr

~

·Jacksonville , at Tenn·essee
and home against Pitt sburgh. ·
a stretch that amounts ·to a
measuring sti ck.
fromPageBl
How ·good are these guys?
Notes: The Bcngals got a
you, because you can control one-week roster exemption
a lot of the penalties you . for DE Duane Clemons,' who
completed a four-game sus·get."
.
' Penalties weren't a big pension for violating the
.problem in coach Marvin league 's substance abuse pol icy. He can resume practicing
Lewis' first two seasons they averaged 6.4 per game with the team on Wednesday ..
tast year, for instance. He Lewi s was noncommittal
doesn't ·know why they've about when he might play.
started piling up at a club- "We have a week exemption
·record pace during the 4-0 with him, so we'll see where
we are at the end of the week,
.start.
· · "I don 't have any idea," he but don't hOld your breath,"
said Monday. "It looks like Lewis said. Clemons thinks
they're up around the league, he 's ready. "I play on pure
from what I can tell . At this . emotion," Clemons said
point, we're fortunate to still Monday. "I've been training
. overcome them and keep hard . I've been doin g more
going."'
than my. fair share gf weight
Starting this weekend, it lifting and conditioning.'' ...
gets tougher to keep going. Houshmandzadeh was listed
The Bengals' first four oppo- as questiomible ·with brui sed
nents are a combined 3-1 0. hand, hun late in Sunday's
The next three games are at fame.
;

\·

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

•te Sox seek first·title ·since 1917

r-.. . - . _. _. _. _._. _. _. . _. ,_. _. ,_.:_. _. _. -:--.. _. _. _1

•

www .mydailysentinel.com

Carolina roars past Packers, 32-29

College F,ootball

BLACKSBURG. Va. (AP)
. - Virginia Tech quarterback
· -Marcus Vick apologized for
:.Uaking· an obscene gesture to .
fans during Tech's 3 1·- I 7 win
Saturday at West Virginia.
Early in the third quarter,
the younger brother' of Atlanta
Falcons ·quarterback Michael
'Vick was· caught on camera
quic~Jy extending his middle
finger toward the stands after
he was r,un out of bounds.
"I apologize for. letting my
emotions ~et the best of me
Saturday.''-Vick said in a statement issued Sunday by
. Virginia Tech. "What I did
was wrong and I am sorry. My
goal is io be a leader of this

2005

PITCHING

31 47

,II.
; so

6 79

2:J .
; ERA

·•

AP

Postseason Baseball
At A Glance
DIVISIOI+ SERIES • ·

. (llelt-of·5)
American League
Cblcno VI Botton

:.

1\Jelday, Oct. 4

.

Boston (Clement 13--6) a1 Chicago
(Conlreras15·7), 4:09p.m. (ESPN)

Wedneadav, Oct 5
Boston (Wells 15-7) at Chicago
(Buehrle 16·8), 7:09 p.m. (ESPN)

Friday, Oct. 7
Chicagq (Garcia 14-8) at Boston
!Wakefield 18·12}, 4:19p.m. (ESPN2} '
Saturday, OCt. B
Chicago (Garland 16·10) tl Boston
{Schilling 8·8), If necessary
· Sunday, Oct. 9
Boston a_l Chicago, II necessary
Los Anp•ln Yl New York
• Tuesday, Oct. •
NeW York (Mussina i 3-8) at Los

Angeles (Colon 21'-8). 8:19p.m. (FOX)·
Wodnea&lt;lay. Oct. 5
New York {Wang 8·5) at Los Angele!l
(Lackey 14-5), 10:09 p.m. iESPN}
.
Frkfay, Oel 1.
loS Angeles (Byrd 12·11) at New York

(Johnson 17·6}, 8:19p.m. tESPN}
_
Saturday, Ocl. 8
·
Los Angeles (Washburn 8·8) at New

York (Chacon 7-3), If necessary
· Sunday, Oct. 9
~
New York at Los Angeles, if ~ecessary

National League
St. Loul1 y1. San Dltgo
Tuelday, oct. 4 ·
San Diego (Peavy 13·7Y al St. Louis
IC8rpenter 21·5}. 1:09 p.m.(ESPN)
ThUI'Idly, 0el6
San 'O!ego (Astacio 4·2) at St. Louis
(Mulder 16-a), 4:09p.m. JESPN2}

•

:

SarunJay, Oct. e

Sl. Louis (Morris 14·10) at San Diego
(Eaton 11 ·5)
Sund~,

.

Del. 9

Sl. Louis' at San DI&amp;QO, if necessary

'

Mond.,, Oct. 10

San Diego at St. Louis, ff nece66ary
Atlanta VI. HQUIIQD

•

Wodnoa&lt;lay, Oct. 5
•
Houston (Pettitte 17-9) at Atlanta

(Hudson 14-9}, 4 :09p.m. (ESPN}
Thu,.day, Oct. 6
Houston (Clemens 13o8) at Allanl4
(Smaltz 14-7), 8:19p.m. (FOX)

Saturdlll', Del. 8
Atlanta (Sosa
(OSwaH 20.12)

13-3)

at Housto"
'

Sllfldlll', Oct. 9
AUanta at Houston, If necessary
'
Mo,.,.,, Del. 10
Houston at Atlanta, If necessary
LEAGUE

·

•'

...

C~~::.~~~HIP SEAfE~

American League

. ru.,day. Oct. 11

at higher percentaga, 8:20 p.m.
Wadne,day, Oct 12
at higher percentago, 8:20 p.m.

...
•
,,;

pe:~:.?~~·~~~

at tower
card, 8:1li:
p.m.
•
·
Saturday, OCt. 15
..
at lower percentage or wild card, 8:1$
p.m.
•
Sunday, Oct 16
•
at lower percentage or wild card, &lt;4:31:
p.m., II necessary
•

TUesday, Oct. 18

.

al higher percentage, 8:20 p.m., if neO-·

essary

Wednesday, oct.11

at higher percentage. 8:20p.m., ir nec-

essary
National League
Wednetdty, Oct. 12
at higher per~entage, 8:20 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 13
at higher percentage, 6:20 p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 15
al.lower percentage or wild card, 4:25
p.m.
~ Sunday, Oct. 16
at loweJ percentage or wild card, 8:11!

p.m.

Monday, Ocl. 17

':

at lower percentage or wild card, 8:2Q

p.m., if necessary
Wedneldey, Dct.19
a1 hiQher percentage, 4:20p.m., If nee·

essary

Thurodey, O.t. 24l
at htgher percentege•. 8:20 p.m., If necessary
WORLD SERIES

(Beat-ol-71
Slturday, Oct. 22

National league al American League,
·
Sunday, Oet. 23
NL at AL, 8:10p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 25
AL at Nl, 8:30p.m.
.
Wednaaday1 Ocl. 28
AL at NL, 8:25p.m.

a p.m. .

Thursday, Oct. 27

AL at NL. if nece68ary, 8:25 p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 28
NL at AL if necKsary. 7:55p.m .
Sundey. Oct 30
NL at :AL if necessary, 7:55 p.m. EST

I

�.,

'
I

•

· Page 84 • The U;illy Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.coin

Tuesday, October 4.

'

2005

the fmal week. Over the last
seven games, Cleveland's line·
up averaged 2.8 runs in the six
CLEVELAND - At first, losses and went 7-for-56 (.125)
there was a collective groan witb runners in scoiing posifollowed by stunned silence. tion.
.
Then, something unexpected
The "what ifs" will haunt the
happened at Jacobs Field fol- Indians all winter.
lowmg the la~t out of an unexWhat if they lllid just hit betpeeled season for
the ter.
Cleveland Indians.
What if they had only beaten
Seconds after a 3-1 loss to Tampa Bay one more ume m
the Chicago White Sox in their final homestand.
Sunday's home finale, most of ;What if they hadn' t gotten
the Indians trudged back to the off to a 9-14 stan in April.
clubhouse to shower, pack up
Wh11t if they hadn't wasted a
2005 and head home. season in which their pitching
Cleveland fans, though, didn't staff led the AL in ERA and aU
budge.
five staners made at least 30
They stayed at their seats, stans.
stood and applauded a team no · "We were so close," said~
one anticipated winning 93 third baseman Aaron Boone,
games or dreamed could make "and we realize how tough it is
the AL playoffs.
to get so close. It ain't easy to
''I loved that," White Sox do what we did."
manager Ozzie Guillen said.
Shapiro,.who dismantled the
"You don't see that ·every Indians in 2002, made good on
place. That shows that they his promise that Indians would
knew Cleveland had a great return to contention in '05.
season."
They did, right until the last
But a hard one to swallow.
out.
The Indians, baseball's best
Manager Eric Wedge refused
team for most of the final two to accept that his players, many
months and the season's feel- of whom had never expengood comeback story, flopped enced a playoff race, folded
at the fmish. In control of their under the weigljt of postseapostseason destiny with one son's lure.
week left in the regular season,
"I don't think there was too
the Indians went 1-6 down the much ·pressure at all," said
stretch, losing five games at Wedge, whose steady approach
home - four by one run.
ke_pt the Indians focused. ~·1
After climbing back from a think they'll be better experi15-game deficit to pull within I enced the next time around.
1/2 games of the White Sox They were in uncharted waters
with seven to play, the Indians, since the day we took over the
rebuilt by general manager wild-card lead.
Mark Shapiro with a relatively
''They should feel good
meager .$42 million payroll, about how far they've come.
crumbled.
They played their tails off for
"I don't know what hap- 162 games. We just had trouble
pened,'' designated hitter finishing it off.'
Travis Hafner said. "I thought
The good news- and it may
we were good to go. I thought take awhile for heanbroken
we'd be in the playoffs. I Cleveland fans to realize itthou~ht we could win the divi- is that the Indians don't have to
sion. '
stan from scratch. Their roster
ln a season of surprises, the will return nearly intact next
biggest one came at the end. season.
Senous October baseball will
The club has already locked
proceed Without the Indians.
up Hafner (33 homers, 108
'The sad !fti~*·" closer ~ob RBis) and catcher Vic~or
Wtckman srud, ts seasons like Martinez (.305 average) With
this don't come around every long-term deals, and the
year. You ·never know when . Indians may do the same with
you will get another shot."
young stars Grady Sizemore
The Indians were doomed (.289, 22 homers and 81 RBis),
down the stretch by an offense Jhonny Peralta (.292, 24
that staned slowly, hit its stride homers) and Cliff Lee (18-5,
by midseason, and choked in 3.79 ERA) before next season.

AP photo

.

Reds·
face another uncertain offseason
·.
BY JOE KAY

ASSOCIATED PRESS

: CINCINNATI - Players
were killing time Ill the clubbouse before one of the Reds'
final home games. munchm_g
on hamburgers and Cincinnaustyle chtli wh1le making small
talk.
: ' Ken Griffey Jr. dectded to
~vcn thmgs up.
.
: "Maybe I' II go to the winter
~leering.~." Gritl'ey mused,
referring to the place where
trJdes are made.
That got the jokes rollm¥.
''You · should wear a For
Sale' sign," pinch-hiner Jacob
Eruz teased.
· Is Griffey for sale coming
off his renaissance season'?
Probably not, though nothing
can be ruled out. The Reds
have a lot of unknowns heading into the offseason - an
annual predicament for a franchise that can't find its way.
"That's become kind of normal here,'' first baseman Sean
Otsey said. ''Things happen
and we go into an offseason of
un~ertainty."
.
It's become standard ope rating procedure m Cincinnati.
The team has another disappointing season
five
strdlght losing ones now, their
longest such streak in 50 years
- then heads into the offseason with a lot of unknowns.
In the past five years, the
Reds have changed managers,
general managers and operatmg philosophies. They've
bumped the payroll, slashed
th.e payroll, bumped it back up

again. They've tried to rebuild,
and tried to win now.'
The constant change is part
of the problem. Winning franchises have a stability that's
missing in Cincmnati.
"It's important anywhere,"
outfielder Austin Keams saip.
"The winning organizations,
that's what they have. They
have a plan and stick with it.
Everybody knows what's
going on and knows what io
expect. That's what we're
stnving to get to, I guess."
The Reds removed a little
uncenainty last week by
extending manager Jerry
Narron's contract, but only
through 2006. Narron took
over when Dave Miley was
fired in June and led the Reds
to a 46-46 record the rest of the
way.
1\vo big questions remain:
Will ownership change? And
will the Reds finally be able to
get some pitching?
Three limited partners are
selling their shares in the Reds,
which could affect how the
team is run. Controlling partner Carl Lindner has said he
plans to remain in charge, but
he could change his mind and
let a new ownership group take
over.
That would change everything.
The Reds are still facing a
problem that has· bedeviled
them during that five-year run
of losinjl:. They can't get
enough pitching to go with one
of the major leagues' most formidable offenses.
.
The Reds lost 89 games this

season even though they led
the league in runs, doubles and
homers, sening a club ~d
with 222 homers. On avel~
they scored five runs per game
- more than enough to win
most of them.
All it got them was fitih
place.
"You win games with pitching," Narron satd.
As ~ood as the offense was,
the pitching was worse. The
Reds' staff finished last in the
NL with a 5.15 earned run
average, giving up the most
runs, hits and homers (219). It
also had the f\!west saves in the
league, which is more of a
reflection of the staning rotation.
The Reds spent a lot of
money trying to overhaul the
rotation last offseason, bnnging in left-bander Eric Milton
($8 million in 2005) and righthan(!er Ramon Ortiz ($3.55
million). They gave up 74
homers, the most ever by a pair
of Reds pitchers.
Overall, the rotation had a
5.38 ERA, worst in the NL.
Burned by the acquisition of
Milton, the Reds aren't likely
to spend a lot of money on ·a
free agent pitcher this time
around. So, they' re.facing the
same conundrum: How do
they get enough pitching to
make them competitive?
·
"I think we're close," Casey
said. "You almost wish we
could get.that front-line starter,
somebody that's always on
everybody's No. I wish list
Gettmg that one more staner is
a big deal."

They have an abundance of
outfielders with Griffey,
Keams, Adam Dunn and Wily
Mo Pena. The Chicago White
Sox were interested in Griffey
at midseason, but ownershtp
wasn't interested in trading the
franchise's biggest draw.
At age 35, Griffey had his
best season since he arrived in
2000, batting .301 with 35
homers and 92 RBis in 128
games. A strained foot ended
his season early, and he had
minor surgery to clean out his
knee. For the first time in five
years, the oft-injured outfielder
has a chance to stan spring
training fully healthy.
"I can have a normal offseason for a change," Griffey said.
"That's probably what I'm
looking forward to, being able
to .enjoy an offseason rather
than going to rehab three or
four Urnes a week for four
months and not having any
idea wlllit I'm going to look
like commg into spring training."
Wnh ·Dunn, Keams and
Pena among eight players eligible for arbitration, the Reds
have some major financial
decisions to make. Players are
wondering whether the front
office will try to keep the core
intact and get some pitching to
go w1th it, or go in a different
direction.
Same old question.
"I think we've been a couple
of players away for a while."
Dunn said. "I think we're still
a couple of players· away from
not /·ust being good, but being
real y good."

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Card of Thanks

Card of Thanks

God saw

..

always.

•

11o matter where

9

•

sorry for all the

yougo,

•

•
•

disapointmeniS. •
awake •

When I'm

your always on •

•
•

mymind
and when I'm
sleeping J•m

•
.•

•

dreaming

•

ofyou.

•

•••••••
Public Notice

PROBATE ,COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN RE; CHANGE OF
NAME OF FLOYD
LEONARD PRICE. TO
F-LOYD
LEONARD
BURNEY, JR.
NoTICE OF HEARING
ON
CHANGE
OF
NAME
Applicant
hereby

road was getting rough
The hills were hard to climb
He gently closttd her loving eyes
And whispered "Peace be Thine"
Her weary hours In days or pain
Her weary nights are past
Her ever patient worn-out frame
Has found sweet peace at last.
Peacefully sleeping-resting at last
The world weary, trouble and trials
'
are past.
In silence she suffered, in patience
she bore
God called her home to suffer
no more.

· Written by her sister Betty Fraizer
The family of Clara Krider wishes
to thank everyone who helped us
during our loss of our wife
and mother.
Marvin, Vernon, Avis, Deloris,
Nancy, Carol, Betty, Maxine
&amp; Robtrt

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

CLASSIFIED INDEX

0

PHARMACIST
&lt;Full- Time)
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
acceptmg resumes for a Fuli~Tune
Pharmac1 sl. BS . Pharmacy, Ph arm. D.
Pharmacy or Ph . D. Pharm acy lrom
accred1ted college or university WV· State
Pharmacist Licensure . Two years pharmacist

expenence. preferred: Hospnal experience
preferred.
Excellenl salary, holidays. hea lth
msurance sing le/family plan , dental plan,
life msurance, vacation. long-term disability
and retirement.
Send resumes to:

Pleasant Valley Hospital
do Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV·2SSSO.

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1414.
,
www.pvalley org
AA/EOE

FIND A JOB
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS
0

gives notice to all
interested
persons
that the applicant has
filed an Application for

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
www.comics.com

lwrlght@!ic.net

Change of Name In the

Probate Court ol
Meigs County, Ohio,
requesting the change
of name of Floyd
leonard Price to Floyd
Leonard Burney, Jr.

The hearing on the
a~pllcation
will be
held on the 5th day or
November, 2005 at
-t;30 o'clock p.m., In
the Probate Court of
Meigs County, located
at tOO East Second
Street, Courthouse,
2nd Floor, Pomeroy,
OH 45769.
Floyd Leonard Price

32781

us 33

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(10) 4

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BARGAINS

urrtbune - Sentinel- ~e ister
CLAS·SIFIE·D

ASSOCIATED PREss

• ' fielders and may
· trade m the off seaspn. Pitcher Ramon
Ort1z IS seated at
left.

22nd Anninrsary.
I'll love you •

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

BY TOM WITHERS

• Reds
have four out,

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

Sudden, sad ending
spoils Indians' season

· :Cincinnati Reds out.
fielders Wily Mo
Pena;left, and Austin
Kearns, watch from
. the dugout, Monday
m Cincinnati. The

Happy Ad

Tuesday, October 4, 2005

MEIGS COUNTY
FARM BUREAU
ANNUAL MEETING
Tues. , Oct. .18
7:09pm
at Masonic Lodge, Middleport.
Reservations must be made by
October 5.
Adults $11.00 Child $8.00
Entertainment Mark Kuhn,
Door Prizes

0

c

0
p

4x4's For Sale ....................... , ...................... 725
Announcement ............................................ 030
Antiques ....................................................... 530
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
Auction arid Flea Market .................. ,.......... 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ....... ................... 760
Auto Repair ................... ..................... .......... 770
Autos for Sale .............................................. 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles ................, ....................... sso
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Business Oppo!:_\ul]~ty ...... - ..... ................... : 210
Business Training ..................................., ... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ................. .......... 790
Camping Equipment ..... , ............................. 780
Cards of Thanks .................... : ..................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Electrical/Refrigeration ...................... .-........ 840
Equipment for Rent ..................................... 480
Excavating ...................................... .............. 930
Farm Equipment ............ : ............................. 61 0
Farms for Rent ............................................. 430
Farms for Sale ...........................,-................. 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490
For Sale .. : ..................................................... 595
For Sale or Trade: ................................... ..... 590
Fruita &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
Furnished Rooms ........................................ 450
Gener'!JI Haullng ... : .............................. ... ...... 850
Giveaway ...................................................... 040
Happy Acr. ... .'................................................ 050
Hay &amp; Gra)n .................................................. 640
Help Wanted ... ... ........................................ ... 110
Home lmprovements ................................... 810
Homes for Sale ............................................ 310
Household Goods ....................................... 510
Houses for Rent .......................................... 410
ID Memoriam ................................................ 020
Insurance ...................................... ............... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ... ...... ............... 660
Llvastoc k ...................................................... 630
Lost and Found ........................................... oeo
l:..ots &amp; Acreage ............................................ 360
Miscellaneous .............................................. 170
Miscellaneous Merchandlee............. : ......... 540
Mobile Home Repalr .................................... 860
Mobile Homes for Rer;~t ............................... 420
Mobile Homes for Sale................................ 320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .......................... 740
Musical Instruments .. , ................................ 570
Personals ................. , ............ ; ...................... 005
Pets for Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng ................: ................... 820
Professional Servlces ................................. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr ............................... 160
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 380 .
Schools lnstructlon ..................................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Situations Wanted ....................: .................. 120
Space for Rent ............................................. 460
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
SUV's for Sale .............................................. 720
Trucks tor Sale ............................................ 715
Upholstery .............. ........... ....... ................... 870
Vans For Sala ....................................: . ......... 730
Wanted to Buy, ............................................ 090
wanted to ,Buy- Farm Supptles .................. 620
Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
I Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
Yard Sate- Galllpolls ............... : .................... 0'72
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middte ......................... 074
Yard s,&amp;le-Pt. Pleasant ................................ 07~

· In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE'
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For a limtted ttme make 50° o
sellinQ Avon. Call (740\446·
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Ad ult, children &amp; baby
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Home lntenor, treadmt ll,
toys &amp; lots of mtsc

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Large yard sale Oct 5Ul thru
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4
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e' 9
H h
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astern
19
c 00
Aldtng mower, lawn sweep·
ar, refrtgerator Butck Sta~on
Wagon.
Beauty
S op
Equtp, snow blade and
blower lots of clothes. baby
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Chtld·Care needeelm Apple
.Grove area
Prefer Non·
Smoktng tndtvtdual to come
Days
10 my Ae~·dence
hours wtl l vary
Call
(304) 576 _2915 or (304) 688 .
5955 ask tor Raven
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&amp;
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Ass1stants
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CNA &amp; Res 1dent Asststant
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:::an~;~~ ~/~~a7u~

bed , e~~;erc 1 se eqUip , end
tables coffee tables f1g·
unne s. lamps. baskets, lots
ol mtsc bicycles: linens.
half ol proceedi ..goes to
Edtson Brace Memonat
SchOiarshtp Fund
Large Yard Sale
Monday,
Tuesday. and Wednesday
Behtnel Masomc Lodge tn
Racme. Clothmg, house·
hold , m1sc, lots of plus stze
and boys

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seektng mot1vateel person
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Send
i 113 Washington Street. resume to Da tly Senltpel.
Aa\lenswood . WV (Across PO Bo~ 729·3 Pomeroy
10_4_5_.l6_9...c.._ _ __
BiKb.i§. Bridge Rt 2 North. 0
__h_
Last Bustness On R1ght) LPN Carreer Oppor1unity
References ReqUired
Make a dtfference and JOin a
carmg
ream•
Echomg
---~----­
Cook needed. Apply tn per· Meadows 1S an MRDD tactll·
son at the H oltel~ Inn. ty oflenng res tdents outGathpohs No phone calls. standtng nurstng care We
cu!rently ha\le an LPN
please evemng position available
Is there anyone m the Wages start at $13.50 per
Apply 10 person
Pomeroy/Middleport area hour
looking for .lull t ime work? Echomg Meadows, 319 W
Are you Jooktng for better Uruon, Athens, Ohio 45701
m1n1mum 740-594-3541
than

New Haven Hts , New
Haven .
Yard
Sale,
October6th, Thursday
10
Nice Guns
Stone Jars,
anttque
(urOIIure ,
lots
Gnswald and Wagner, old
cookie jars lots of too ls, and
wages?Prlmary schedule tS
15 OUihs
Monday·Fnday Sam-Spm
October 3 and 4. Corner ol Must have valid dnvers
Tornado Road and Bashan hcense and dependable
Road , Racine 9AM·5.PM
vehtcle Must be 1~m111ar with
Meigs County.
Rutland 1 112 miles N on
Send resumes •nclud1ng
New Lima Ad., somethtng
references to CLA Bo~ 2
tor everyone, Oct 3rd &amp; 41t1
c/o Pomeroy Datly Senttn&amp;i,
9-7
PO Box 729,
Pomeroy. OH 45769 .
YARU Si\l.E·

r

Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.

Pr. PU:ASANf

' Yard Sale Frtelay
4 Family
October 7th North of Mason .
W&gt;/ at F1elds Tratler Park
Communily·Sale Gunvtlle
R1dge Oct 7-8 From Potnt
Pleasant At2-North to Rt87
go ~dtllles Follow s•gns

L.::!.~'!!:.:.~~:::!:_j

Thursday for Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid"

POUCIES Oh1o Valley Publlthing reHn~n the dght to edh, rej.ct, or cancel any ad
time. Errore mutt be reported on the flrat day of
Trlb~Sentlnei·Register w1ll be respontlbltlor no more then the colt of lhe tpllce occupied by the error end only the first lnnrtlon We 1h11J not
any to.. or hpense that mutts from the publlcldion or om!leion of In advertieement. Cvrreetlon wiH be made in the flrtt avellable edit1on . • Bolt

ere tlwaya confident'-! • Current rete cerd appllel. • AI! real utate tdvertla.ementt '" aubltcl to the Federel Feir Housing Act of 1968. • Thle M,,..,,..,,.
accept• only help wanted ade mHIIng EOE ttandarda. We Will not knowJngly eccept any adv.rtlslog In 'ollolalion of the law

1riO IIELPWAIIDD 1r~.=;:u;1~;iE;Y:;1 riO
Aockspnngs Aehabtlltat•on
Center provtdes resu::lents
••NOTICE**
w1th outstand1ng nurstng
care and rehabiltlatton sarv·
~orrow Smart Contac
tees hetpmg them return to a
he OhiO DIVISIOn 0
ltfe ol mdependence at
inanctal
InstitUtion
home We currently have p_tt•ce of
Consume
opportunitieS for AN 's at our ;Affairs BEFO~E you refl
faciltty located 10 Pomeroy
ance your home o
Ohto
btam a loan. BEWAR
We offer a COMPETITIVE
I requests tor any largE
SALARY SCALE, and excel·
d\lan ce payments o
tent beneftt package and a
ees or 1nsur,ance Cal
support1\le work envtron·
he Otftce of Consume
ment Interested candidates
A"atrs toll free at 1·866
PLEASE CALL SHELLEY
78..()()()3 to learn 11 thE
MECUM AT 740·992·6606
mortQaye
broker o
ExtendtCare
• Health
ender
ts
proper!
Servtees. Inc •s an equal
ICensed (ThiS IS a publi
Ohro Valley Home' Health. opportl.lntty employer that
ervlce announcemen
Inc hmng Full and Part Ttme encourages
workplace
ro m the Ohto Valle
AN s Competit ive wages. dtverstty M!F DN
Publcsntno Companvl
mtleage and benef1ts •nclud'ng health tnsurance Apply
SauJLS
at 1480 Jackson P1ke.
Galltpolts or phone toll free ...-oiiNsmiiiiiiiUiiClliiiiiONiii'w
1-866-441·1393
Concealed Ptstot Class
Ohto Valley Wireless tS October 8 9 00 am VFW
TURNED DOWN ON
seeking enthusmstlc sales- Mason WV Ph (740)843· SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Wtnl
perso ns that enJoy workmg 5555, Cell (740)419·3329
1·688·582·3345
w•th people 1n the communi- ,
Wages Gallipolis Career College
cat ton tnduslry.,
Nl \1 t '-1 t \II
tnclude salary plus sate s
(Careers Close To Home)
based commtsston Please Call Today! 740·446·4367,
HOMES
to
call
740·508·02 11
·1·800·214·0452
lOR SALE
arrange an lntervtew
.l.ccrect•led Member Accredl t•nQ
Paramed tcs
&amp;
EMT s Coune~ tor tndaoenoe!11 ColleQGs 112 Pleasant Street 3
Bedroom t 112 Baths.
needed Apply at 1354 Bnd Sct•ools 12746!
Famtly Room Dlntn g Room,
Jackson Ptke Gallipolis
1170
.
Full Basement. Storage
PART-TIME
HEALTH"' .
ML'&gt;CEll.ANEOI.!; • Bldg, Garage, New Central
COOACINATOR- RN
lor
Air Con!!, New Wtndows
Me1gs County Board of DIRECT TV 3 room w1th (304)675-4034
Menta! Retardatton a(ld TIVO FREE 145 channels ::._...:.__ _ _ _ _ __
Developmental Dtsabtllltes Or"lly $39 00 per month Ask. 1995 Ooublew1de 3br, 2ba
Weekends and Holidays ofll how to get FREE ' HBIU w/attached
Garage
Part· t1me JOb w1th fuiHtme MAX. and home entertain· Breezeway. &amp; Barn. 1 56
Oanel!ts 1ncludtng hOspttal· ment system Call 800·523· acres Sandhill Ad $72 000
1Zat1on denta l vtslon and 7556 for detatls
(304)895-3068
l1le W011\ three week days
111
WA.JVIll&gt;
3BA double garage
(8arp-4pm) per week w•th
1
Do
ul•lcly
bldg
71
ecce
stUdents and adults w1th
Syracuse new root $85 000
developmental dtsablltttes.
1mp1emiinting a comprehen After Ltfe···lapTop Sales ~ {740)992·6317 or (740)41 6·
s1ve hearth and delegated Servtce PC &amp; Mac Aepatr &amp; 2786

I

rso

r I'Rr~~L

I

.

nursmg program Must be a
Regtsle!ed Nurse currently
ltcensed ,n the State ot
On1o
Prefer red qualiftca·
!Ions e,.;pertem;e tn public
health nursmg. e11penence
work tng v.tth • c~tldren and
adults wtth developmental
Cltsabdtttes Send resume by
October 12
2005 to
MCBMRDO, t310 Car leton
Street
PO Box 307
Syracuse Oh10 45779
Posttton Qpenmg- Chntcal
ASSIStants
fo r
CriSIS
Stab1lizat1&lt;*'t Untt located tn
Galltpolls OH Must be able
to work shift wo rk week·
ends and holidays Htgh
School graduate or GED
reqUired: Valtd
Dnver's
ltcense wtlh the abl1ity to be
covered on Agency's Fleet
Insurance plan: Ftrst Atd and
CPA reqUired
POSitiOn
reqUired direct ca·re of
clients $6 67 per hour Send
re sumes to Manager of
Human
Resources.
Woodland Centers 3086
State Rout e 160. Gallipolis
OhtO 45631
Rockspnngs Aehabthtat ion
Center ts looktng lor Cled1cat·
ed compassionate State
Tested Nurs1ng Ass1stants.
CompetitiVe wages health
and dental benefits. alld
40 t K ava1 Ia bl e We Iak e

To

bloc~

servtce 740·992·1525

IUKS~

Now accepttng begmmnQ
Ptano Students call at
(304)675·1559
between
9am · 2 30pm Mon-Fn
l l \ \ \ tl\1
~;;;;;;;;;~_;;-----.

riO

Bl.NOO~

OPPOR11Jr111Y

·-oiiiiioiliiiOiiii.iiio;.,..
Make FREE Phone Calls to
any phone and make b•g
money Q)ytng away Free
Long
D•stance
Phone
Ser\IICei -VISII
www MyAdCalls com/2 1550
and
www AdCalls com/21550

•NOTICE•
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends tha
u do bus tness w1th pea
le you know, and NOT t
end money thiough th
at I unII
• you ..• ave 1nves,.•

-:':'ed::lh:•:o;ff;er~cn~.~~~
·r

FIND
AJQB
JN THE
cLASSifiEDS

IURRFNI·

1996 doublewtde 24x52 on
112 acre 3BR 2 bath large
LR. new carpeVIinoleum
new 50 yr old roof 3 large
storage buildtng
many
amentt1es to hst Must see to
apprectate
Located 10
Fatrland or Galha Co school
diStriCt $97.500 (740)256·
1426

Attenllonl
Local company ofterlng "NO
DOWN PAYMENr pro·
grams tor you to buy your
home Instead ol rentmg
• t OOQ o tmanctng
· Less than perfect cradtt
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as ren t
Locato~s
Mortgage
2000 14X70 Oakwood 3bd .l (740)367 -0000
2ba CIA can rent lot or
move (740)388-8513 (days) For rent 1 bedroom 1 bath
(740)388·8017 {eventngs)
fully renovated all appliances.
S500/monlh
2000 Clayton 16~~;80 3BR
$500/deposrt Call (740)446·
vtnyUshtngje. $17,500 Ouatl
3481
Creek Park Call (304)3722179 or 1·800·439·2179
kollse lor Rent Pt Pleasant

?oo

All rul estate advertising
In thlt newa~ Ia
eubject !g the Federal
Fair Houelng Act ot.1968
which makes It illegal to
advertlae "11nr
pret..-ence, limitation or .
dlacrlmlnatlon baaed on
race, color, religion, sex
familial at.tus or national
grlgln, or any l"temion to
make any such
~ence , limitation or
discrimination.
ft

Thla newspaper will not
knowingly accept
adv.rt11ament• tor raal
estate which l• In
violation of the law. Our
readers are hereby
lnlormed thai all
ctwelling&amp; advertised In
this newspaper are
available on •n equal
opportunity baaea.

2000. 1 6~~;60 Oakwood $375 (304)675·5 540 or
ask lor
Many extras 3BR 28A, (304)675·4024
NanCy Homestead Realty
$26,000. (740)446-2570
Broker
5 Homes under $10.000
Wtll deliver {7 40)385·7671
Ntc&amp;. clean 3BA, HUD
approved in pt Pit Dep and
82 Fleetwood mobtle home. Ref
req'd
No
pets.
14x70 Must be mo\l&amp;cl (7 40 )446 _9358
$8 000, (7401256·6496
. -------Great Used 1994 14~~:70 . 3 Stop renttng Buy 4 bedroom
Bedroom . 2 Bath Includes home SIS 000 For llstmgs
Foreclosu re· 48A. only heat pump Call (740)385- 8()()-391·5228 ext 1709
$15 000 For ltstmgs call 2434.
•
Three Bed Room House for
Soo-391·5228 ext F254
Will accept HUD
New 3 8R Home Only Rent
$475
00.
Cal1··740·388·
$189/mo Includes ale deh\1·
Horse
lovers
paradtse ery and set up (740)385· 0435
appro~1mately
70 acres 4367
Totally remode~
w/new log hOme 3br 2ba
N1ce
Used
14x64. 2
Interior!
•
16x32 mground pool 24~~;40
Bedroom Only $4995 Call 3 bedroom house ceritr(l
garage, 156x66 horse barn,
heat &amp; atr, washer/dr'f81'
(740)365-0698
42x80 barn w/40x 100 shed,
hook-up. fenced ya rd. stor28x50 barn wl all new fence Schultz L1m1ted Addttton age bldg $4
75 per month
Approxtmate mcome of 1989 In e~~;cellen t condt!IOn: rent (
7401441 _1111
$10 000 per month on a fully furn(shed
Movt ng
StAt . $463,000 (740)645· $22 000 Call (740)446·
M0111u: HOlliE.-.;
0870
6743 after 6pm
--Rt:NT
.

i

New all bnck 2BR 2BA. 2
car garage 1n A10 Grande
Call
(740)446·2927
or
(74b)339·0365
NEW BANK REPOS
ONLY 3 b..EFT
ASSUME LOW MONTHLY
PAYMENTS

OWNER FINANCING

Aepatr
and
Computer
Troubleshoot Web Destgn,
Networktng Programming , .
/
Butl d New Systems, Restore
Wtndows
Vtrus Removal ~
Certtfted Phone#740·992·
4 year old Cotontal on 3
2395
acres Approx 1,900 sq It 3
Expenenced CNA w1th good bedroom 2 baths 2 ca r
Relerences wtll take care ot garage Master bedroom ts
Elderly Calf for more details 28x24 wtth a jacuZZI tub
(304)895·3918
$120,000 (7 40)446· 7029

Houst-s

MOBILE HOME;

HOII1£S
fUKSALl

frE

Medt Home Health Agency,
tnt: seektng a ful!-ttme AN
Patient Care Coordtnator for
Galltpolts Ohto and sur·
round1ng
area
Duttas
mclude establishmg and
mamtalntng_ open lines of
communicalton wtth area
phys1c1ans and health care
facilities tn the deli~ery of
Home Health Serv tces We
offer a compettt l\le sa lary
a!)d benefit package tor lull
ttme E 0 E Please send
resume to Audrey Farley.
Cltn 1cal
Manager
352
Second Avenue Gallipolis,
OH 45631

pr1de 1n our lactltty and res•·
dents ancl need great team
players to JOin us If you have
these~ qualtltcat•ons please
10
Aocksp.,ngs
apply
LPN
needed.
full·t!me Rehab•litahon Center. 36759
Road,
Monday-Friday day shift no Rocksprtngs
weekends
no holtdays ~mmoy Ohto 45769
Health
Apply at 936 St. At 160 ExtendiCare
Servtces Inc IS an equal
Gallipol ts (740)446 9620
opportuntly employer that
workplace
We are look1ng for an outgo· encourages
tng. energeltc. person to d1verstly MIF DN
work pan ttme m Ollr busy
ch tropracttc chn1C Please
t'1and·dellver
resumes
between 9am and 5pm
- - , Tuesday through Thursday
BacK To Health Ch~ropracttc
750 Fnst A\lenue Galhpolls
Phone (740)446-7460
Substttute Early Eclucil!lon
Statton Preschool Program
Send Resume to . 2122
Jefferson Ave, P1 Pleasant

Publication

For Sundays Paper

• Ads Should Run 7 D•ys

WM'llill
roBm

-fir.

Now you con have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
Jm
Borders$3.00/perad
t!!
Graphics 50¢ for small
Sl .OOforlarge

Display Ails

Sunday ln-c!olumn: 1:00 R.m .

To Help Get Response ...

Ir

OeatltirU'

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Buslne•• Days Prior To

Succes$ful Ads

\\\111 \(I \11 \I..,

5

{7~?a~ To99~:~~ ~6 (304) 675-1333

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m .
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper

• Start Your Ads With A keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Indude Phone Number And Address When Needed

Should Include These Items

l\egister

Trailer t01 Sale
2000
Clayton 16 X 70 3 bed·
room ·2 bath--ce ntral au-·
porches $23.000 74D-992·
5972

r

f,\.R\IS

mRSill'

2002 Concess1on Tratlar
Double Basket Deep-fryer.
Tub Style Deep Fryer lor
Funnel Cakes makes 8 at
once
LarQe Gnddle.
w/16~32
mground pool
Freezer, Refndg AJC , 3
24)(40 garage on appro11 1 5
complete Stnks plus Hand
acres $269.000 (7401645·
wash Statton
E)(cellent
oa_7_o_ ___.__ _ __
Condttton 304 675 4092
No Down Payment less
L&lt;m&amp;
than perfect cred tt 0 K Ftve
ACRI·:AGE
m1nutes
from
Holzer
Hospttal Three Bedrooms·
-One Bath Level lot Newly 9 t /2 acres wtth 28~~;32 barn
5 acres wtth (2) trailer hook
remodeled 740-416·3130
ucs Ca ll (740)256 ·1 922
OAKWOOD HOMES OF
Jl60 RJ.:AL F.SrAIT
NITRO,WV
WANJTD
SUPERSTORE
AVAILABLE
304 7,~5-5566

-N-ew--lo-gn-o~m:..e_3_B_c_-2-Ba.

nm

I

1 Bedroom house New~
remodeled mstde &amp; out All
ultlittes patd $450 00 per
month Also Newer 2 b4ld·
room !.faller wtth elecUtc
central ileal &amp; atr $425.tl0
per month Cell 74D-2i1·
5811
14x?O new carp&amp;!, JUSt
remodeled $425 month
$425 depos1t (740)367·
7762 ,
(740)446-406o
(740)367-7272
l
- --b-e-dr o_o_m_ _ _A_It~
2
porch/awntnQ very mce. tn
Galhpolts No pats Call
(740)446·2003 or (740)446
t409
38r Relndg &amp; Stove.Washer
&amp; Dryer tncluded (304 )576·
29~

Beauttfu l rt~er v1ew m
Kanauga Ideal tor 1·2 peo·
pie
No pets. please
OFFERING CLAYTON
Apphcattons bemg take!']
Attention!
~LEETWOOO, GILES MHE Raai· Estate Wanted Lt!~cal Call (740)441-0t8t
Local company offenng ~No
person looktng lor a home to
AND OAKWOOD
DOWN PAYMENr pto·
~etgs or FOr rent 2 bedroom mobtle
LOWEST PRICES· BEST buy All cash
grams tor you to buy your
SERVICE GUARANTEED Galha No double·wtde or home at 402 Polecat Rd
home tnstead ol rent1ng
$425/month 5425/depostt
DRIVE A UTILE · SAVE A modular 740--.4t6·3130
• 100% flrlanctng
Rt \ t \I..,
LOT •
reference
reqUired
• Less than pt,?rtect credtt
(740)446·4 107
304·755·5665
accepted
·
• Payment could be the Three Bedroom. Two bath
Hot.SI-:S
Immaculate 2~R . 2 bath
same as rent
wttt'1 two large Porches we[l
mR RENT
mobtle nome for rent 1n the
Mortgage
Locators
mamta1ned Home. Heat
country
5400/month
(740)367·0000
Pump (304)882·3346
'
-(614)595·7773 or (800)79EI.
1 Br House and 3 Br House 4686
Beaultful. new 4 bedroom. Two House's One wtth full for Rent call (304)675·2441 _;_ __ __:__ __
pl'lvate locatton. walk 1n clos· s•ze basement &amp; 3 car between 9?m·2pm
Mobtl e home s1tes tn
ets. mB.ster bath . garden tub. garage Garage has 1 stall I - - - - ' - - - - - - Country Homes. •shad e
sKylight, ftreplace. pantry, t•tt w1th mechantc ptl
Other 2 bedroom house. 1 5 bath. $130 mo (740)385·4019
thermal wtndows 2x6 walls house Rental house w1th tn town Uttl1t1eS Included tn
N•ce 2 bl 2 bath wl app lt·
fancy woodwork . 2 34 mtles large i.Jed All natural gas ren t (740)379 -2303
fro(Tl Holzer (740)388 -8228. can 1ra1a• r Appro,.; 5 acres
ances &amp; new carpet . $375
or
bedroom
house
also
2 3
41 4 4
ultll!les 3 br 2 batf)
~(7_:4_:01:::4_
:._·:._1::2:..~--- All cleared wtth white pine &amp; Bustnesslofftce space. ph , plus
garden
tub wid hookup,
Bl -level house 4bdrm 3bth , bluespruceptnes Plus2out 740 . 416 . 5547 . (740 )99 2
$450 plus utllrttes &amp; security
LA . FR. kitchen. DR. wtth 9 butld tngs
Ail $135 000 3702
(740)992-7680 or 740·416·
acres, tar'ge pat•O &amp; deck 1n 740·378-6325
•
·
:kbedroom house tor renl 3 3311 cell
country
$125 000 32ll ' '101!" L ' Hn''"~
u..t:.
v. ~r...::~
acres on nver, ntce hOuse.
AJ',\Rl'\ti-:NTS
~17_4::0 :..17_42_'3:..1_4_2 _·_ _ _ _ L _ _ _m_R_SIIALEiiiii-.-J Clock tor Mats St 000
fl)R RENT
Three Re nt al Properties for month
S 1 000 depOSit
Sale Duplex. each wtth 3 1971, 12x65 Redm8n . 38A, (740)367-7762 (740)446·
BIA UR 0 IA . Kttchen, bath 1 bath , $2.000 (740)388· 4060. (740)367-7272 ·
&amp;
2
BA
apt
1
1
&amp; porch. House· 3 BIR. UR, 8449.
lo
Wate r sewer trash
pd
3 Bedroom house r sell· S325,month &amp; S40Qtmonth
Kttchen. Bath Conage·f:II R
Kttchen. Ba th
Rental 1987 2bel. 1
Clayton Will rent month 10 month Ufl!tl - f'740l446-47J4 or (740)387·
tncome tor all three·Approx mob1le home, very good !~d 5485 ' mo (7401446 · 7746 or 1740):367·7015 ·

I

r10

L.------·.,.t

,,.

ba,

S 1 000/per month PriCe lor
all thrae··S70.000 Locate·
t04 -t06 7th Street Potnt
Pleasant
(304)675·2495
after 7 00 pm
NEW 3 BRD'M $1299
OOWN
$229 00 MONTH
ONLY AT OAK'NOOD
HOMES
NI TRO. V'N 304·755·5885

3

condttton well matntame&lt;t.
SB 900 OBO {740)446- 5 rooms &amp; batt'1. stove &amp;
3423
refrigerato r no pels s'o
Oli~e
St 5350 month
1996, 16x80 SKyline Spruce ( 740 ) 446~ 3945 ,
J;.
R1dge Supreme, 38R 2BA
vmyj SICMg, sh 1ngled roof. Large 3br House •n Po1nt
ana heat pump Al l kitchen Pleasant
1yr Lease 'No
a~ltances mcluded 'very Pets ~· Secur tty·Deposlt &amp;
N
lmmedate Possesston Reterences
req utred
need ·mo\led Call 740· 5450/ll)Onlh (304)675·40Jq
441·5862 leave message
9·5
-

1 and 2 badroom apall·
manls turn1st1ed and unlurntsheel , secur tty depo!it
requtred . no pets 740·992·
2218
1 bedroom apartment by •
Wai ·Mart
m Gallipol ts
S425tmonth. utthttes mclud·
ed, S150i depost1 (740)245· 1
5555
\

�I

•

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydai lysentinel.com

It
1BFI WI D hookup, electnc or
qa,s. no pets $290 plus
deposit.
(·740)441 .- 1184, ~
(740)441-0194

Appliance

-2 Bedroom apt. S295.00 per

•

Warehouse

Carvin. 2yrs old, 12 Channel
powered mixer, w/sp·eaker
stallds, 4 speakers, 2 monitors. 3 mikes, and assorted
$1100
firm.
cables,
740 742-1900

Phillip
Alder

North

•

OEAUTIFUl
MENTS
AT

APART- re-conditioned automatic
BUDGET washers &amp; dryers, refrigerators, gas · and electric
PRICES AT JACKSON ranges, a1r conditioners,
.
an d
S
E TATES, 52 Westwood wringer washers. Wilt do
I
$
D
S442
.Walk
shop &amp;
mo\lies.
. nVe 10rom
344
to Call. repairs on ma1or brands in
'740-445-2568 .
Equal shop or at yow home
:HoustnQ Opportunity.
--------~
Used Furniture Store, 130
·t;ONVENIENTlY _lOCAT1D &amp; AFFORDABlE! .
TownhOuse
apartments,
and/or small' houses FOR
.RENT. Call (740)44 1-111 1
·forapphcation&amp; lnformation.

Bulaville Pike_ Washers,
$100.
Dryers
$100,
Relrigerators $100- $150 .
All guaranteed. Couches,
dinettes, chests and more.
•
24'x32' 3 stall garage for
rent- sto rage only, $ 1501 mo
·For rent 1 bedroom Apt. on Oil State Route 7 _(740 )446 _
2nd ltoor in Point Pleasant. 4762 Gallipolis, OH. J.trs. 11 •
·CaU (3040675-8880 after 3 (M-S)

~m

r

ANnQUES

Kanauga $425 per mo. $425 • •~--------'
deposit relerence reqUired
(7401446-4107
Buy or
sell. Riverine
Antiques, 1124 East Main
·Furnished upstairs, 3 rooms on SA 124 E · Pomer~
-,, 740•
&amp; bath. Clean. ref. &amp; dep. 992·2526. Russ Moore.
required . No pets. (740)446· i:iow:;:n~e~r~-----.,
~'":.1..:9::..·_ _ _ _ _ _ _
~1IscF::LJANt.:ous
Gracious li\ling. 1 and .2 bfidroom apartmenls at Village
and
Riverside
Ma nor
Apartments in Middleport
.. . Call 740·
From $295 ·$4 .....
992-5064. Equal Housing
Opportunities.
Middleport

North

Fourth

Avenue, .2 room efficiency,
no pels. Deposit &amp; p.revious
rental r"elerences. utililies
paid 740-992-0165

Nt3w 2BR apts. in town . All
electric, water/sewerfl rash
inCluded, CIA. $525 reflt
plus deposit
No pets
(740)441-11 84, (740)441·
0194

New Oig 2 bedroom apl.
Private IQcalion close to
hospital.
Water/sewer
included. No pets. Deposit
required
$595/month.
(740)441 -1184, (740)4410194

r

TOWNHOUSEIAPTS
NOW LEASING!
SPACIOUS
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;
TOWNHOUSES
AVAILABLE

WALL ELECTRIC
'CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
'STOVE, REF ,
"DISHWASHER
'GARBAGE DISPOSAL
"WIND BLINDS
'CEILING FANS
~ 'WATER , SEWAGE, &amp;
·. 'TRASH INCLUDED
PETS CONDITIONAL
(304)882-3017

""

(...... '''''"'''II Cl&lt;o&lt;ufu•"V

Pleasant Valley Apartment

Are now taking Applications
for 2BA, 38R &amp; 48R.,
Applications are taken
Monday t.hru Friday, from
9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Office is
Located at 1151 Evergreen

E dF b .
ill ,n a riCS
Machine Quilting
M
OH

~

Downtown Office Space- 5
room sui te $650/mo; 1 room
office- $225/mo., 2 room
suite $250/mo. Security
Cleposit required . You pay
~t1 1ilies. All spaces very nice.
Elevator. Call (740)~6-3644
(or appointment

For Lease: Office or retail
sp'aces in very good condition . Downtown Gallipolis.
A~prox. 1600 sq. tt each. I

-New. sh ipmen t

Undergmund,
war

&amp;

of .

riegotiable to encourage
new
business.
Call
(7401446·4425 or 1740)446·
3936.

Gallipolis RetaiiiOIIice buildinQ, beaulilul country setling: 4,000 sq.ft . (finished) ;
haat and water included.$
11egotlable; (740~367 - 7435

t

PF.ni
ffiRSALE

t

AKC
A'egistered
Lab
Chocolate &amp;
Puppies
Black . . F~rst
Shots
&amp;
wormed, Parents on Site.
$200 each (304)576-2222

'II!{( II\ \Ill"' I

.

J'••u
....... d s··, o,k'.

2~16tea\le mess~ge

9·.00 AM· 12·.00

IJJil!. ihliJI Jr.
l.k!!Mfuttnil

For m·are Info. call

1m

740.985 .. 4372

Cmrw .\W! u.1-.1

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

mll~l~

.

TRUCKS

1

~

{j)-

LINCOLN

i

·
---

FoR~1\1.£

~

1995 Ford
E350 "Bus"

. $2995

$10,995

FJO

Blgh Md Dry

~

$'"ftlll"!!lft8

2002 Kia Sedona , Van,
loaded, all power, sunroof,
warranty. 50 ·025 mi, new
tires, excellent reduced to
$11,9001080
(304)675·
52 53
~il:l!'""~----'""!".,

I

·F40

Fo~~~

IU•alf
Phone

...

-U..IOCil !

Wi~Cmun Al;ency, Inc. ~·

.-r.·.-no-

•

ttoon

~~

r~e

Pass

Pass

3•

Pass

Pa&amp;!&lt;i

Pass

34 Ancient
oin1ment
38 Sub- .
(secrelly)
39 Calendar

A

TH' SMIF CLAN IS HERE TO STA'l'.SUT
WORR'l', LOWEEZ'l',

COME EMPTY-HANDED!!

2001 Grizzly 600, aula.
green, less than 300 mites,
$4,50~, (740)742-4011

1

4 Wheeler. Like New. Great
Condit1on. • Low Hours-(mnage)
740·992·7522.
$2,700.00
2004 H.D. Supergtide, fuel
injected, only 2300 miles·
$12,000. Daytime (740)446·'
9416, evening (740)4411724.
----,-----2005
'Harley
Dyna
Supergtide tow miles, lots of
chrome and extras. $12000.
740-949-8010 alt. 5 pm
95 KaWasaki Lakota 300 CC
ATV, low hours, gun rae&lt;k.
Excellent condition . $2000.

740-992-7557

ALJfO PARTS &amp;
A(.'(.l...'W&gt;RIES

I

CAMPERS &amp;

M01011 Hoh•~

~

~

Lb~~==~ ·~~~~~

Ali'types-.or ·

Rocky·"RJ

~oncrett!Work
25 Years Experience

~

Dayid Lewis ·
740-992-6971
Insured
d. 1 mo: Free Estimates

Athens

Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

r'==;:;·;"~i';';'m:':·:pd~
YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

(740)441-7632.

• Roollng 1 GuHera
• VInyl Siding 1 Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks
We do It all except
furnace work

~NewGitrege•
• Electrical I Plumbing

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 wv 036725
Pomeroy; Ohio

25 Years Local Ex rtem:e

HO!\otE
IMPROVE!\·IENTS

Beech Street
Middleport, OH
10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992-6635

97

Gemologist
(740) 446-3283

•••

•••

Dione McVev
-•
..::.Ai ~::;:.,..

JACKSON

ATHENS

l!l.Huroo Stree~

275Wrst l11lon Strtet

IM:\i,.ftly,t.~Tilmjlt ~ld,.l

(J;I:nMc ~. · fti . t.m-lpm

Optn Tuti..ll'fd. Tt.IIIX ll:.li&gt;li"'

{1411) llf6.14JO

L.IJ-L..L..,-----......JJ

PEANUTS

r.1&lt;miilaoPuol(llf.cl

i&lt;.EMEM6ER ME7 M'&lt; NAME
15 CORMAC ... I HAVE THE
P,ESK RIGHi BEHIND

s~u:Uy b)" .~Pfl'iliiWIII
~411) 594-.!571

r------l---'----1

MA'&lt; I JOIN
I ONLY
I'M NOT
'(OU FOR
EAT LUNCH WITH 'I'OUR
LUNCI-1?
MY SWEET
Si~PID
BAli800!!

~e's A VERY
CONFUSED PERSON

Gene Arms/Owner·
Opcralor 1411-992-3174
"'Week ly Trush Se!'vicc
'4 yrs of Reliahlc Scn·iee
( Kc~p Your 1\.·! uo;.·~· U.l\:a! I
G&amp;R SANITATION
3356 I Bailey Run Rd ..
Pomeroy, OH

ROBERT
BISSEll
CINSTRUCTIOIII
·New

Homes

• Garages

Cornerstone
Eleclrlcai Sarvlce
• FoR ALL YOUR
ELECTRICAL

. • Complete
~emodeling

140-992-1611
Stop ~ Compare

you

17·17·17 • $275 ton {bulk only)
12% Triumph 12% sweel horse feed

$5.50150 lb. bag
48% Soybean Meal #13.25/100 lb bag
,Cob Meal with T.M. Sail
$6.50/1 OO.Ib bag
Mushroom compost {Bulk only)

SUNSHINE CLUB

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 SJ

Rl7

N ¥Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

NEEDS,

• MOBILE HOME

REPAIRS
• CARPENTRY
• ROOF • PAINT
OHIO LICENSE # 38244

740-367·0544
140-367-0536
Please adopt from the

Me~gs County DagPa111d
and make afr~end fbr life.

740-992-3779

· Narwegion elk hound
·Yellow obs &amp;retriever
mixes
· Walker caan hound

· Beai&lt;_mixes

MANY CUTE PUPPIES!

llauliug
aut!
Erca, ·atiug

~\ick .\

Bulldu1t·r ,\ 1\ad,hol' •'1rud,in~ S1·n in"'
.'w plir S.\:..11'1 11
t.r ..LJtl:•lillrl, l .onul
ll·arin!!. /'owh . llnll ll'
..,i ,, ·~.

D•·iu·" '"·

].illU' ,(O III', lt l";l\11.

lop'lril. I· ill di r l
i!ll d lll\01"1'
IIH 1: 1· "\TI\1 \IT\
1I -lU I 'J'I 2-.\-170

-;01 1U I.

l'u ml 'l"ll\ . ( •h iu

Croll B.D. Consl.
for all your horne
repair needs, roofin)!:,

siding, 8dd·ons,
remodeling· de .•
free a:slimate.,.:
1740) 992-2979

leave messa

A!!!t;!s~

'

The Ariel - Dater Hall
?/® '?~ 'P~ Sw.u!
Cousin Ed's Farm. Puppel Show, Nov 13
The Ma2ic of the Capplingers Jan. 21

GARFIELD
THA1''s WHf.RE I'M PI..AC.iN&amp;
THE. BI..AMf., ANYWAY

Cartuun Ht:udquartcrs Rclurn'i. March. 18
Rainlnm Fish Sta~l! Mu~i~.:1ll for Kids May 13
Box Offire Hrs 11-2 M-1' Also 5-K Tuc~ &amp; Thurs
426 2nd Ave. Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS

I
.I,
•

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

I

P

GRIZZWELLS
Now

Available AI

BA UM LUMBER
Scorpion Tractors
Eastern Ave.
(Across from KMart)
2400

740-992·2621 or
740-416·4902 -1"~

.c.:_____, II:L.----'--"" ,.

c,u Mia -Thirl. t!() lVl
(1411) 446-7119

5ell-5torago•

MYIIS TilE IEHICE

~;;;;,:

.csv, Secotd A~aue

"Middleport's 'only

lnsure/;1
Free Estimates
Senior' Citizen ~scount
30 Yrs . Experience

LON(,!

~ ~~

GALUPOUS

mixes
·German shepord &amp;call"

MANlEY'S
SHFSTOIAGE

CLASS

~;/;:

740-742-2293

Sizes S'l(101' :
' 10 1(!'*311'' $,
l&amp;f..biir,:,:·: ;!;~w ue. ::0'· d~¥;*_1

!:.HE'S GOT HER HANP
IN THE AIR "LL

DILES HEARING CE~TER

Call Gary Stanley

29670 Bashan Road
.Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

ON EVERY QUESTION!

IMPORTS

"Insured"

Hill's Self
Storage

SHE'' so I&gt;ESI' E RATE
TO SHOW E.VERYONE
HOW SMART SHE IS '
SHE RAISES HER HANI&gt;.

l;iupp
,,"

Gallipolis , Ohio 45!J31
(740) 446·1711
114 Mile North
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge
Mason, WV 25260

"Taking Tile Sting Out Of
Hard Work!"
Miu-Siz&lt;' 4Whc~l Drive Tra~lor
with 3011p &lt;'!&lt; 4Uhp Kubota Engines

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

.
'

PIV 'lbU

7~ 1\tt r.'PIIE' .

'6RoUHlll1o6 00'?

1\lAI WA&lt;;

HfA"''

65

66

43 Help-walled

14 Arlene

Once

abbr.

ot old lilms

named

19 Mr. Craven 45 Business

Hedge

21 1·70
VIPS
. 22 lnducemenl 46 One
23 Jay-oiTV
lor the- ·
24 Eye part
47 Benefit
25 Reddish
50 Bedding

shrubs

DOWN

1 Chatter
mineral
2 Geisha's tie 29 Flirting
3 Army off.·
(2 wds.)
4 Included
3:0 Genetic
S Casta ballot
laHars
6 Bond rating 32 Asphall
7 Feeder
position

9 Fragrant

abbr.

shrub

10 Linguine

..

Small
whirlpool

53 " Fish
Magic"

artist

35 Swit co-slar
· 36 Muddy ·
Jhe welers
37 Wildllle

8 Nautical

.

now

56 Belore
58 Floor
59 VisHed
60 Tummy

muscles

refuges

42 Pitcher

topper

~~~~

plant
52

handle

~~-

~~~

~normal"

clubs.
West ted the diamond ace, East playing
the two. Since it was unlikely that East
had a singleton diamond, West next tried
the spade ace, East care lessly s1gnaling
with the six. This persuaded West-to cash
th·e diamond king and shift to a heart, but
declarer drew trumps and claimed.
Wilh lhe spade king, Easl should have
dropped the jack at trick two.
Make your signals as clear-cut as possible.

(GJAstro, Graph
~

'~

BIG NATE

1
'

'_;_ ..

• Free Estimates

• Room AddiUona &amp;
Remodeling

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

~

Available

1995 Starcralt lightweight
truck camper. Used 4 times,
.$4,500. (740)245-9 109 or

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondilional !iletime guaranlee. Local references fur- .
nished. Established 1975.
Call
24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing

~

work·

• Leave a message

~(&gt;..II{ ...

•

£EWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING lr
GENERAL
CONTRAOING

u

iimr;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

let me do 1! for youl

~:::;;;;;;:;;:;;:::~

Lw-iiriiiriiiiiiriiiiiiiii=iiiirrrrl

89 Pace Arrow 32' 454
Chevy engine. fully loaded,
basement model, mint condhlon. 43k m'es $16,900
(740)446·1977.

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

33795 Hiland Road
Pomeroy. Ohio

' Affordable Rates
• References

GOI'tE UP

-,

f&gt;'AN~.B~RKE 740-698-6809

10x3Q

2002 Yellow' Honda 300 EX

~"'TfiE: COST OF LIVING J.l.l\5 ""l

and Your Hot Waler!

Janel JefTe.rs

,.
• Prompt &amp; quality

...----.

Designed lo Hea'l Your Home

5x10, IOxlO,
lOxlS, JOx20,

2002 Honda Recon ES
250cc. ATV, excellen1 condl·
lion $2200 13134)675-1444

S\GI-\

64 Foxy

40 Soolhing
plant

CELEBRITY CIP.HER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher C"fplogrms ar~ C'l'eal&amp;d I10m QUOialic ns by IEit'llous paojje. pest a!"l'l plQ;jejjl. ·
Eac:n lf!Mr in \11e c1ptler SlaMs ICY another
Today's c!ue· F equa!S Y

c:;....u&amp;.....C"---'--.LI,;.;.,..:....L..---"-' ·for South to see, so he competed to four

THE BORN LOSER

dispatchers
61 Slide
62 Bauxite, e.g. ·
63 0-Tip

raise spades. South also had some
potential for five clubs, but anlicipaling
losing two spades and a minor-sua Irick,
he settled for a quiet three clubs. When
this was passed around to East. he contested with tl1ree spades because he
knew that his side had at least nine
spades, and on partscore deals a conclu-

[Commercial illld Res1denlial)
Trimming, Tree Trimmi ngt Aelation, Ferlilization,
of fence li nes, Leal Removal, as well as small

OUTSIDE
WOODBURNING
FURNACE

ss Hair goop
57 ShuHie

that sort out the experts from the near·
exp~rts. But Occasionally some bids or
plays are just pl~in careless, earning bad
results that should have been avoided.
After West's one-spade openi ng, North
used the Unusl.lal No-Trump to show his
rr\inor two-suiter. South wondered if four
hearts might be makable, partner having
a suitable 0·3·5·5 or 1·2·5·5 distribution,
but·that seemed unlikely 'when East didn't

BARNEY

We

28 Scheduled

4•

F.ast
Pass

54 Interstate

word
31 Tektbook

.

49 Fiery gems
51 Rule
53 Parrot

things, you will get some 80 percent of
deals correcl; it is the other 20 percent

Office: (740) 992-2804
(74,0) 517-6883
POWER WASHING

LAWN CARE DIVISION

degree
48 Diver's
need

8 Zurich peak
11 Still
snoozing
12 Boat
Implement
13 Deceived
15 Genlle
16 Mai17 Mo\lle
lioness
18 Wool g!ver
20 Save
your-!
22 Baseball
fllSneuver
25 Prolect
26 Mountain
pass
27 Pricing

34

North
2NT

If - the big "if" - you do the

PA~IlOT1 ·

(Commercial and Reside11tial)·
Mobi le Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks, Driveways,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Oegreasing of
Equipment, Boats, Campers, Ttactm Trailers,
Dump Trucks, painting or staining of your deck
or log home, Aluminum brightening.
Special rates to Trucking and Dump Trucking Companies.

45 Exec's

Basically, bridge is not that touQh a game.

f/lOM

St'IIP/

A PI/lATE'S

pracJice

5 Container

division
33 Thai,
In Tltuana

West
l•

Signal as clearly
as partner needs

A ,llll&gt; TtiAT

/

'"- ~~r.O.J::..,

{/lOSS 'AN
OWL wiTtl

••

Point

(740) 992 ..5232

MaroRCvcu)V'
4 WllliELERS
.

~~~ ~~~ ~:~~~a~~· ~u~~i

r

t"urml

45 I Sc~ullll A\JCIIUC
P.O. Bux ~59
·
;:,:;.~::
Gallipolis, OH 45011 -0359 -.... ..
Ph : H00- 192-1209 nr 7-lO--l-ltl-Jf&gt;43 •

.#IURCURY

1994 Chevy
Astro ·

1990 Ford F150, 4x4, NC, Lw--iiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiirrrorl
'
standard cab, long bed ." fair For Sale 350 Turbo, newly
condition, $2500. (740)742- rebuilt, w/tork convert. &amp; 750
1900
R41ong tail, good condition.
both Transmissions (3041
7
675 · 3000 lea\le messa

99 Ford F·350 XLT, 6x4, 7.3
liter power stroke diesel, 6
speed, manual transmls·
sian. regular cab, loaded
with all opltons, gooseneck
hitch , reese hitch, alum.
rims, alum. toolbox. exhaust
brakes on motor, to many
extras to list, too,ood miles,
excellent shape, S17,000,
(74 0159 1•8975

Wt'IAT DO YOtJ
~~T wt'l~N YOtJ

Sam F11nU

It 's lhe Auto/Home D.iscount with speci,al
reduced rates if both car ~md home are
insured with Slale Au1o .. Find oul how
much your savings can be.

7 40-446·9800

IF60

see. 17401742 . 3020 , 740 .
992 . 3394
-------19Q8 Explorer, Eddie Bauer,
loaded, runs &amp; looks great.
Books $6,200 will sell
$
2f!O
4,000/0Bp (304)5767

IIIII SrniE)

7 fi

Opening lead: t

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

..

j

Dc&lt;J.ler: West
Vulnerable: East-West

Tree Service

c~
mt S!mq~

8

"'Q 74 3

. JONES'

I"• StOber

c-

W~iim cllomlv
litC!Ill Fm~ ·

Galllpollrs,_,O=h;;,:io:.__..,.....,

condition (304)895-3825

1970 Chevy truck 26ft. steel
lilt bed, with wench, equipment • hauler. $1 ;500. 740256·1 227, 937-362-4775,
937-605-3581

•

~·

5 3 2

41 Nighl lllghl
(hyph.)
44 Rackel

1 GurU's

sion from the Law of Total Tricks is to bid
as high as the partnership's combined
numb9r of trumps. Three spades can be
defeated by two tricks , but that was hard

Classic,' low miles. excellent

01 green Ford F150 XLT 4dr,
auto, 2wd, 5.4L, V8, Oedcov·
er, 6CD player, sunroof,
good condition. 69,900
miles,
$14,50Q
OBO.
(304)288·3335

al hl!!ll hlttitlt

The

"' "

¥ AK

www .wi~emanagcn.:y.L\llll

02 Harley Davidson , Ultra

•'OR SALE

ld!U ~tlr"'

State Auto offers
something special

',
www. h0[zerc {'lnlc.com

•
SouLh
• 7 2

Pleasant, wi;
{304) 675-2630 §l EJ t::'l

HOLZER CLINIC

f..AKIO

... .J 9 .

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med

And l11tegrity C11me 1i1getiJer"

Clll F..lt9tl
Ct&lt;M.

1101 Jefferson Blvd.

.

Medical Excellence.
Local Caring'"

MONTY

Soultl

Quality;Cmnpa.~si4m

Cl!l""

• ~ J 9 s· 4
.AK 1065
West
t:O:sl
411AQ9 54
A KJ 10 6
.. ·J 7 :t
¥ Ill 9 !i 2

740-667·0700'. 740-84:5-5264

uow-Hussell
Funeral Home, Inc.

p

"Where

41800 SR #7
1 ~;!~Tu~ppers Plains, OH
1~
45783

·

t'1f~

Rillrt L. PilllM l ,

MEIGS CO.
FAIRGROU.NDS,
OCT. 8, -2:005

civil

mites, 2 owners, good condi-

AKC
RegiStered
Lab's
Yellow &amp; Black (304)675- ~---.iiiii.iiiiiliiiooo.-1
7652
Goons
1998 Dodge Grand Caravan
ES. While, Tan' leather, quad
Rat Terrier miK puppies. 6
HOt Potnl hea\ly duty
seals, rear AJC, New 'tires,
Wks , 3F, 1M. $50 each.
Washer &amp; Dryer. like new
loaded,
$4,900
OBO.
(740)379-9098 , (740)379·
(304)675·9138
(740)441-0 135

Hous.:llow

AT THE

List!

tion , $2,800 firm. (740)368·
8128.
--------1997 saturn SL2, 4 door, 5
speed, leather, power, atuminum wheels, 86,000
mites. \lery good condition.
$2850. 740-992-7584.

2002 Chevrolet Trail Blazer,
UILDING
4x4, 52,000 mites, PW, POl,
SuP'PlJI&lt;li
cruise/tilt, AM/Ff.NCD/ cas sene. power sunroof. axe.
Block . Orick, sewer pipes, condition .
$15,900.
window~. lintels, etc. Ci~ude (740)446-6157 after6pm.
Winlers, Rio Grande, OH
2004 F-150 Lariat crew cab,
Call 740-245-5121 .
black with chrome, 4X4,
. leather, Toneau cover, low
DAVIDSON METAL
miles, loaded, extra clean,
ROOFING
too much to list. $28,000.
'18 co'lors
(614)595 -7773 or 1-800"30yr. warranty in writing
798-4686.
"Profe SSIOnal lnslallation

m 2 baths. Lease price.

OF BOATS,
CAMPERS ETC.

granrue

·

To

10·04 -0-'&gt;

8:1

••

Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

Rac1ne, OH
7 40-949- 1183

Colors

=
s yo
" '"• iii
.it. a~
I
nA•n::.

tleece Jlancls &amp; I00%
1cotton 45"
for the yuilts.

V8, 59,000 mites, all
options, leather, new tires,
maroon.
$5,000
firm.
17_4_0)-'6'-45_·_06_2_6_
. _ ___.._
1994 B.ulck LesaOre. Hinh
"'
miles, loadE!d, leather, great
condition, runs great. Asking
$2,000 080. (740)3880140.

B

• M:ree Eslimales
740-596-2909

·n, Many ?0447 ~ornado Rd.

Ill I ~n

740~ 992~3673

C
.
Listing
548 . 800·391-5227 Ext
--------.1993 Cadillac DeV•'IIe, 4.9· ·

Pole Barns Blowout
30ll50x10Ft only $6,995
Painted Metal, Slider Free
delivery, call (937)789-0293 1985 Ford lruck F150 6
cylinder, au tomatic, gqod
SportscraftTX350Treadmill, body, runs . $900. l 740 l 446•
with
Putse rCalorie/ 9742 ·
Time/Speed and Distance. ---~----Use&lt;hery little, in ellcellent 1998 Chevy Z71, extended
condition, has rubber anti- Cab, w/thlrd door. fully
static mat, cost over $300, loaded, Tahoe co\ler and
will sell for $150. also have spray in liner. $11 ·500 call
41_7_5_1·_7_37
a Treadle Singer Sewing _
13_0_
_'_ _ _ _
Machine in excellent condi •
93 Nlssan Truck 4X4, 5
tion, bell is broken butt have
speed, Air, 150K, runs extol.
it so you can find the right $2900.00 740·742-2662 '
replat:ement . Old school
desk, the, kind with the seal
44

r FO ""'" .Ir

&lt;.Red &lt;.Rose sreenlwuse

wliitiiY~ii

iddleport,

..,
$5001
Police impounds
cars/trucks from
$500.

j115

Drive Point Pleasant. WV
Phone No. is (304}675in front of desk, this desk
,;e06 EH 0
came from . the old Letart
Tara
Townhouse G ra d e Sc h ao 1· 1n grea 1
Apartments, Very Spacious, shape, with some etching on
2 Bedrooms, CI A, 1 ·1/2 the top from former stt.lBcith, Adult Pool &amp; Baby dents. Calt (740)256·6198
Pool, Patio, Start $385/Mo. attar 5pm, Mon-Fri.
No Pets, lease Plus - - - - - - - - Security Deposit Required. Two year old Waler Softener.
(740)367:70a6.
Original cosl was $aOO. Will
sell for $200.00. Waier ProT'wln Aivtirs Tower is acceptlng appllc~llons lor walling made In lhe USA. 740·992·
list tor Hud-subsized , 1· br, 3636.
apartm,ent, call 675-6679 - -- - -- -- I!HO
Wood stove &amp; pipe $250.
~
(740)367·7762, (740)446·
4060, 1740)36 7·7272
SR~\~:~

10

M

FOR SALE
t..--~:.0:::::0~-,J

1
-· 2000 Kia Sephia. 4 door,
automatic, .27mpg, 72,000
10'x16'x7' Green House.
.
miles, good condition. '$800
white plastic sides, clear on
in brakes, filters, tires, belts
root, exhaust fan &amp; some
etc. tuneup. Will taka trade.
electric, $1 .BOO, (740)742·
0
Asking
$3,600
BO.
4011
• (740)441·937a.
_ _ _.:.__ _ _ __
Brand new pool heater, 2001 Cavalier 2 dr Z-24.
250.000BTU. New cost Cold air, auto, full power
$1,695, sell for $1,350. Call 7B,OOO miles, $2,500 080.
{740)446·2927 or (740)339· 93 Chevy S-20 Conversion
0365.
van. TV,IVCA, auto. looks
perfect, • runs
·perfect
For Sale Refinished Anllque 107,000 miles $2,500 080.
Table, Caplion Chair, four (740)446·0171.
side Chairs, $200 firm , - - - - - - - - (304)675-1765
88 white Sundance, 65,000
- - - - - - - - - · miles, runs good, AJC,
Good Seasoned ·Firewood $ 1.000. (740)256·165~ .
for Sale (740)742 .7004
95 Camero Z-2a, 350, aulo,
T-Tops, leather, great shape,
JET
$5.500; 92 Corsica, V·6,
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, NeW &amp; Rebuilt In auto, 4dr, tots of new parts,
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1· nice car, '$1 ,600; (740)7424011
800·537·9528

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrele,
Ang le,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300

Mums 4-$10.00 or $3.00 Each

405 Pearl Slreel• Middleport, OH
Phone (740) 992-3471
Fax (740) 992~5976
;!:::::=::==~~=~;~;:;;:~

MERCHANDISE

NEW ELLM VIEW

~ing

and Financial Services

Deli f,. FuU SeNice
Catering Selections

~~~~----~ -----------~
1996 Nissan Sentra 135,000

For renl 2 bedroom apt. in

Rocky Hupp Insurance

Hometown Market

AUIUi

I

Hometown

•

Puzzle

Crossword

'

ACROSS

$10,000, new in 2002. Sate
$7,000
133
hours.
(740 )388-0062.
--------POLE BUILDINGS
'Any Style
'Any Size
'Custom Buill to lit your
needs.
'FREE Estiniates
740-596-2909

V16

NEA

BRIDGE

3 rooms and bath. All utilities Moving sale- Washers $95: Kubota BX2200. Power
paid. Downstairs, no pets, dryers S95: GE electrit: steering; 4 WO, diesel, Cost

s

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

INSI1WMElVIN

ov 10

St. range $125 ; Frigidaire refrigerator almond in color $150:
Kenmore upright freezer
A"partment available now $1? 5: chest freezer $ 175 :
Aiverbend Apts. New Haven couch $7ti; table &amp; chairs
'('V. Now accepting applica· $100. table &amp; chairs $40.
·~ d ,
1.IOns for Hu d- ubSowle
Skaggs Appliances
as of Ocl. 1
one Bedroom Ap!s. Utilities
included. Based or,31f% of
1216 Eastern A\le .
adjuSted Income. V Call
(740)446-7398.
(304}882-3121 available for - - - - - - - - Senior and DisaOled People. Thompsons Appliance &amp;
•E~.H..:· .:o_ _ _ _ __ _ · Repair-675·7368. For sate,

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALLEY QOP

M~lCAL

' mbnlh , ·plus ut11illeS1 plus
Fllurrs&amp;
'd9posit , and references
VEGIITABLI&gt;'S
reQu ired .
Third Street, in Henderson. WV. Preowned apphcanes starting at
Racine . 740-247-4292.
$75 &amp; up all under warranty, Home Grown Tomatoes.
~A
gara,ge
apt
in we do service wor~ on all Field Run you pick $5 per
~allipohs. WD hookup, win - Make and Models (304)675- ~
'
dow A/C, no pets. Ref &amp; 7999
1 \In! " '1 '1'1 11 ...
deposit (740)446·2 143.
.\ I 1\ 1\IOC I'
For Sale- Table &amp; 4 Chairs.
3 &amp; 2 SA apts. Close to
General Etecliic Side
~r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.._.,
.Holzer
hosp11a1.
W/D
Side Freezer &amp; Aefrigator,
FARM
hookups,
water/ sewer
General
Electric
Range
a
t..-..:EQu~~l:;:PII,;:IENT~;.,.,I
included.
Start ing
al
Maytag . Heavy Duty Dryer ..,
$450/month.
deposit
and Kenmore Washer. 740·
reqwed ., No pets. (740)441·
992 -3354.
1184, (740)441 ·0194

$450/ mo. 46 Olive
(740)446-3945.

Tuesday,October4,2005

Tuesday, October 4, 2005

ir.M

DA\1~'!&gt; 10·~

"obur'lllrlh&lt;IIIY:

Wedneeday, Ocl. 5, 2005
By Bernice Bade Oeof
tn the year ahead, you wiU have some
eKcellent chances for important lasting
achle\/Gments. provided you share your
good luck with others_ In realily, helpillQ
companions to succeed as well is what
will conlrlbute to your own success .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23 ~ - Unless you
wisely stl-ucture your day well in advance
today there is a strong probability you will
end up wasting your lime. money and
energy in spinning your wheels and going
nowhere.
SCORPIO {Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Try not to
do anything out of character today or els~
you could cause companions who now
hold you in fligh es1eem 10 begin questioning if their judgment about you wa.s
correct in the lii"st place.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov., 23-Dec. 21) I.Jsually your Instincts and hunches are
worthy of consideration. but today they
could be full of wishll!,l1 thinking and lead
you down e, dead end slreet. However,
logic is an efiective substitute.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) - Today
may be one· ot those dRys when you'd be
better off dding' business with strangers
rather than friends. rr you or your pal thinks
he/she has gonen a raw doal, the r_elationship will be gone.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - It's your
prerogative to change your mind as often
as yOu'd like, but today n you abuse this
privilege. it C?Uid cause associates to
throw LJP their hands in sheer eKhauslion
and d1smay
PISCES (Feb. 20-Merch 20) - If you do
not show the pn::lper appreciation to persons who have gone out of !heir way to be
helpful to you today, there's a good chance
t11ey will not be' available it you need them
again .
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Risky fin an·
cial ventures are a no-no today regardless
of how appeahng they appear 10 be. Do
lots ot homework first to Study whether or
not it is really as porentlally prolltable as
predu;ted.
TAURUS (April 2D-May 20~ - Be mindlut
ot your mara's needs and wishes today so
the! you do not unthinkingly do something
that seems trivial to you , Out is very upset·
ling to him/her. Care first and all will be
well .
'
GEMINI (May 21\June 20) - "Guard
against tendencies today to take on more
assignments than you can C&lt;1mfortably
manage. Broaden your comprehensJon
about the tasks yo~ take on before you get
caughl up in a logjam.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) - Spending
lots of money on a social happMing is no
assurance that you 'll have a good time
today. In fact. pleasurable pursuits with
tiny priCe tags are apt to turn ou1 ro be the
most fun
LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22)- Be mindful about
now you handle a delicate issue today in
your Involvements with family members.
in-laws or relatives. A lack of tact or sensitivity could trigger ll.lt&amp; of tears.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Be carelut
what you tell Others today even il you
pledge therri to keep It conlldential. tf !he
Info should leak out. it will be traced beck
to )IOU .

SOUP TO NUTZ
6E L-ike THe FIPwER
1&gt;1aT PERR.&gt;Me"' THE
VER~ HaND THaT
CR\JSHE.S IT

" T

X

NA

D8 J Z J

UZKKZD

MD A Y

N8 J

YXG,

XGJTZDZC ."

W D X F Z o ~·

N8 J

WDX F Z 0

SZADSZ

8.J

YZOZC8KN

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - .'The lype ol player we're .privileged 10 have, noi.
only on this team but in baseball." - Mike Sc1oscia. on Vladimir Guerrero

tiiAT DAILY Q (11;1 '0 j) '\.. ' - f) 'C· ~ Q. e WOU
P.VIILU 01,!;1 J.""ll ~). (b P({' 0 tAll

_;_ __.:;;.,.;;; Nlltd

CLAY l POUAN

~r

'

0 four Kromb~d -d•of ba·
Reorronve

low to form

lo11111

fht ·

four tlmp~ words.

I

UHL .LIS

U I 1I I .
2

M0 L BI
J

ARURL

''A vacanl mind a vacant lot," a
teacher told his class in earnest,
"both will collect--·."

4 l
...---------,

KJ\TBES
7

!()/4/()f '

,· O Comp~lt

L...J......I.-.L...J......J.......J

lhe c~ucklt quoltd
by flllln~ In lhe mlui"'J
you dtvtlop from ~tp
J btlow. .

1

t:l. PRINT NUMBERED tEllERS
er IN THESE SQuARES

1:'1 UNSCRAMBlE lETTERS TO
1:.1 GEl ANSWER

I

I

•

No.

IS

WOtdl

I'

I 1· I I I , I I

.

SCIWILITI ANIWIRI 1013105
Egoism- Swiim- Ooioo- Jlodily- OOINO NQW .
Somewhere down lbe nied you will ~ sadly wishing
You had done the -

you llrCil't DOING NOW.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

t.E1"5 GO!!
r
'

tiT' \ \ \

�.•

'
Page BS • The Daily ~tine!

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, October 4. 2005

.

'

Extra weight may
be factor in fatal
boat crash, A2

Bulls send -Curry to Knicks _Stoudemire signs five-year extension

DEERFIELD. Ill. (AP) -. Curry to miss the final 13 games
Eddy Curry refused tn take a of the regular &gt;eason and the
DNA test to determine if he has a playo ffs. ~
serious heart problem, sn the
Several prominent ca rdioloChicago Bulls· cut ties . with the gists cleared Curry to play, but
center and seni him to the New Barry Maron, a world-reJ\QWned
York Knick s.
specialist in hypertroph ic car.The Bulls ·also dealt veteran diomyopathy, s~gested the
center Antonio Davi s to the DNA test.
· Knic ks for forward s Tim
"Think about · what's ·at s take~
Thomas, .Michael Sweetney and here." Alan Milstein , Curry's
Jermaine Jackso n Oti Monday attorney, told the Associated
ni ght. Several draft picks were Pr~ss recently. '·A s far ~s DNA
also involved in the trade , te sting. we're jost at the beginaccording
to an
Eas.lern ning ·o f that universe. Pretty
Conference executive who spoke soon. t_hough . we'll know
on the coJ)dition of anonymity.
whether someone is predisposed
Bulls general manager John to cancer. alcoholism, obesity,
Paxson. had warned I 0 days ear- baldness and who knows what ·
lier that a showdown with Curry else. ·
was looming , and he didn't hide
"Hand that information to an
his frustration Monday.
employer." he added. ''and imagIn making the announcement. ine the implications. If the NBA
Paxson didn't specify· what were to get away with it, what
Chicago got in return and did not about everyone else in this cotmfield questions. Bt1t the trade was try looki'ng for a job."
expected to be finali zed Tu esday.
Paxson, speaking to reporters
"All we can say right now is dt1ring the team 's media day,'said
we traded Eddy to the Knicks," he resents the notion that the
Bulls public re lati ons director Bull s had an ulterior motive ;
Sebrina Brewster · said- Monday they simply did not want a situation sirrilar to those of former
night.
Knicks spokesman Jonat han Bosto[\1 Ce ltics guard Reggie
Supranowitz said · the team · Lewis or Loyola Mary mount star
declined comment on Paxson's Hank Gathers - players with
hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
announcement.
. The B'uHs had insisted that who collapsed and died .
Paxson said the Bulls had
Curry take a DNA test to determine whet-her he's susceptible to offered Curry $400,000 annually
a P-Otentially fatal heart problem. for the next 50 vears if he failed
cu'rl\y, who missed the final 13 the g~netic 'test."There have been a lot of
g~mes of the regular season and
the playoffs after experiencing th ings that have been said and
an irreg.ular heartbeat; balked. implied about me and 'this ·organization and how we've tried to
saying it violated his privacy.
"I would never put a player on handle Eddy 's situation," Paxson
the floor in a Chicago Bulls uni- ' sa id. "I take great offense to
form if I didn't do everything in many of the points of view that
my power to find out- all the have been out there.''
information that was available,"
Curry's agent Leon Rose did
Paxson said. "You can debate , not return call s seeking comment
genetic testing 'til you ' re blue in Monday.
the face. But from what I know, Curry played a major role as
from what I've learned over the the Bulls won 47 games and
last six months, that test could reached the playoffs for the first
have helped us determine the time since 1998
when
best course of action.'·
Mi chael Jordan and Scottie
The 22-year-o\d Curry, drafted Pippen led them to their sixth
out of Thornwood High School NBA title . .
in South Holland, Ill., averaged a
"I)'s tough ," said power forcareer-high 16.1 points in his ward Tyson Chandler, who refourth NBA season.
· signed with the Bulls .for six
The standoff stemmed from a· years during the offseason. "''m
benign arrhythmia that caused sad to sec him go."

PHOENIX (AP)- ~month shy of
his. 23rd binhday. Amare Stoudemire
has achieved the wealth that goes to
the few ·at the very top of their sp011.
Now he's out prove that he's worth it.
Ama£ingly agile, with a sweet
jumper to go with his monster jams,
Stoudemire signed a live-year conI ract extension with the Phoenix Suns
on Mond;ty. The deal is worth about
$73 million. \~comes shortly'after he
-inked a lucrative endorsement contraot with Nike.
'
''I' ve just been working . on my
game the whole summer to try to take
t'f, to the top." Stoudemire sa id . "This
has been a $ 100 million summer for
me, so I'm very pruudofthat. I'm just
looking forward to .bringing the
championship home ri ght here in
Phoenix ."
·
The dear is the maximum allowed
under the NBA collective barg'aining
agreement for the forward who
jurnpeu from high school .to stardom.
The exact ligures won't be known
until next year's salary cap is set,
Suns president Bryan Colangelo said.
The extension kicks in after this
season and has an opt-out clause after
the 2009- I 0 season.
"What I' vc achie ved now is something .that I always figured I would as
a kid," Stoudemire s;ud. ''I've had that
type of determination since 1 was a
youngster playing ·around the playgrounds, getting dirty after school."
He signed the contract as the Suns ·
gathereu for media day preceding the
start of their training camp in Tucson
on Tuesday.
The 6-foot-1 0, 245-pound power
forward played ot!l of position at center and dominated opponents last season tor the high-scoring, fast-breaking Suns.
Stoudemire averaged 26 points per
game,' fi ftlj-best in the league, as a key
member of a Phoenix team that won
an NBA-best 62 games.
"It's huge tor the franchise," said
Steve Nash, Stoudemire's teammate
and last season's MVP. "He's the cornerstone ofthis franchise."
Stoudemire, tl1e No. 9 pick in the
2002 draft, won the Rookie of the
Year award over Yao Ming il!' 200203 and ~as i1nproved each-season. He
averaged just under 30 points a game
in last year's playoffs - 37 ;lgainst
Tim Duncan in the Western
Conference finals.
The Suns never have won an NBA
title.
Stoudemire is one 'of basketball's

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 55, No. :J6

WEDNESDAY. OCTO HER 5, 2005

www.myd:oil)st' ntinl'l .&lt;·om

Flu vaccinations delayed, senior health fair canceled. for-now

SPORTS

"

ics and health fair will both
be rescheduled as ,~oon as the
tlu · immunizations
are
POMEROY -The Meigs received by the health departCounty Health Department '~ ment from ODH.
flu shot clinics and the Meig.&gt;
'·'There is no .reason to be
County Senior Center's panicked,"
ODH
health fair has been canceled Spokesperson
Kristopher
due to a delay in the shipment Weiss said. "We don't have
of flu vaccinations to the any reason to believe that
Ohio Department of Health we ' re nut going to get what
(ODH).
we ordered."
·
· However, the flu shot clinODH has ordered 240,000
BY BETH SERGENT
8SERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

• Southern on to state.
SeePageB1
AP photo
Phoenix Suns forward Amare Stoodemire grins as he answers a reporters'
question during a news conference announcing his signing a five-year contract extensiion with the team on Monday in Phoenix.

great success stories. He was 12 when
his father died, and his mother was in
and out of jail. His older brother is in
federitl prison. But Stoudemire never
has been in trouble.
"My main thing is I just stay ·
focused on my all-time goals, and
that's to become a rule model for my
fami ly and also become the best basketball player I can be," he said.
Moments after he saw the then \9year-o\d work out before the 2002
draft, Suns chairman Jerry Colangelo
told fellow team officials "this is our
guy."
,"Someone asked me a shon time
ago, 'You know, Amare 's accomplished so much. What do you think
his upside is?"' the elder Colangelo
said Monday. "And I said, 'If xou recognize how far he's come in hJS game,
you combine God-given talent with a
work ethic that is terrific and a hean
to be the very best, I don' t know how
liigh is high."'
.
The long-term contract should keep
him in Phoenix at least five more
years.
Stoudemire said he's a better player
now than he was at the end of last season "as far as understanding the game
of basketball, opening up and just

MODEL LT 1042

$159'
, 9* '

working on differ~nt ski lls on the
offensive end and being more focused
on defense."
Someone asked about repons he
has developed a 3-point shot.
"We're ~oing to keep that a secret
right now, ' he said with a big smile.
"We're trying to surprise guys with
that. You ' re ·trying to put our arsenal
out. '~'

·

Stoudemire was given input into the
changes the team made, and he likes
them, especially the acquisition of
K.un Thomas from the New York
Knicks to help on the defensive load
inside. He believes the team will be
better, despite the departure of Joe
Johnson and Quentin Richardson ..
"We have guys that can score and
still put up the same amount of points
we put up last year, and also defend a
lot better;" Stoudemire said.
Coach Mike D' Antoni expects the
big contract to have no effeCt on
Stdudemire's work ethic or-attitude.
"I think he really wants to be the
best player to ever play the game,"
D' Antoni .said.' "He set that goal for
himself maybe when he was 10 years
old. I don't know. But he came in with
that attitude ~ and whatever we've
asked as coaches, he's done." ··

• .19 HP Kohler• Courage..
engine

• 42" twin-blade deck
• 'ServiCII[!B~Ie hydrostatic
transmtsston

V1 s1' yo ur oca lreta1ler today

. MODEL GT 2554

• 23 HP' Kohler' Command'

$3,999*

• 54" triple-blade deck
• Heavy-duty shaft drive

Y.·Twin OHV engine

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Robert Banks, 52

INSIDE
• Festival plans moving
_ ~head. See Page A3
• Foothills Art Festival
to be held in Jackson.
See Page A3
• Family Medicine.
See Page A3
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• For the Record.
See Page AS .
• Law You Can Use.
See Page AS

V1s1t your local reta1ler today

$3,599*
TANK" M60·KH

WIDE TRACK

$7,499*

• 20 HP' Kahler' Command'
V-Twin OHV engine

WEATHER

cutting deck

V-Twin OHV engine

• 60" Command Cut Syslem·
• 3-year limited watranty'!i"*."'

Details on P-.ge AB

SPECIAL FINANCING AVAILABLE.
See your reta 1er for deta1ls

INDEX
2 SEcrtONS -

A3 r

Classifieds

B4·6 .

8880 UNITED LANE
.ATHENS, OH 45701
(740) 593-:3279 I (800) 710-1917 (TOLL FREE)

1830 OLD LOGAN RD SE
LANCASTER; OH 43130
(7fl0) 653-2827 I (800) 710.:~921 (TOLL FREE)

plex has undergone extensive
renovation. New central heating and cooling eq uipment
have been installed, the interior has been redesigned to

accomnlodate the business accessible from the rear
offices and there is plenty of where the main entrance is
storage space for school now located. All of the. parkrecord s.
Please see Salisbury, AS
The building is handicap

Association·
donates to local
.
.
hurricane volunteer effort

GIANT TUBERS

Members voted to donate $250
'toward the cost of personal
hygiene kits containing toothbrushes, wasi1cloths and other
items, which were .. assembled by
Ferman and Rae Moore and Jean
Craig. An additional $·250 from
the fund was set aside for additional kits in the event they are
needed.
· The . l\Ssociation also donated
$500 toWard efforts of Team Jesus,
a local group of C hristi~n volunteers, for building materials. Team
Jes.us, made up of Meigs County

MIDDLEPORT - A new
program b~ginning later this
month at the- Unjversity of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College Meigs
Center will allow students to
earn their business degree by
attending class just one day a
week. ·
The Weekend Col\ege program' to be offered at the
Meigs Center, in Piketon and
on the main campus at Rio
Grande, is designed to assist
students over the ' age of 23
earn an associate or bachelor
. degree in business management without ·a long trip 10
the college campus, and without spending hours a week in
the traditional classroom.
An open house informational session about the
Weekend College program
will 6e offered at 7 p.m.
Thursday at the center, on
Mill -Street in Middleport.
According to Gina Pines,
director of the Meigs Center,
the program will allow stl)·
Please see Rio Meigs, A~

Man claims he was
robbed by gang
.STAFF REPORT·
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

APPLE GROVE - A
Leiart Township man told
Sheriff Rubert Beegle he was
robbed Monday evening by a
gang of young men wearing
pillowpses over their heads. ·
Please see Donates, AS
. Beegle said he and deputies
are continuing an investigation into a complaint tiled by
Lester Shultz. of Ohio 124,
sole owners of the business at 195
Racine. Shultz reported he
Upper River Ro~d in Gallipolis.
was approached by a young
"We think we can make a differ- ·
male at hi s re sidence early
ence with this move," Sang s;;id.
Monday evening, who said
"We think our custoiners will be
he had run out of ga,s while
very happy."
riding a four wheeler ·near
Phy s i~a\ changes, such as new
Apple Grove .
Shultz said he drove the
signage, is going up this week at
the dealership, which began as a
man
to his four wheeler, and
Charlene Hoeftlchjphoto
when
the man returned (o the
Volkswagen agency under Don Now that's one big sweet potato. It's a Carol ina
Watts' ownership in July 1970..
. Ruby grown in the garden of Bill and Minnie Thornton vehicle after retrieiving the
The decision to own the dealer- on their Danville farm . This one weighed 3.66 key to hi s four wheeler, he '
pounds, enough to feed a large family.
Please see Owners, AS ·"
Please see Rc;'bbery, AS

Sang family now dealership's sole owners
Bv KEVIN KELLY
KKELLY@MYDAILYTRI8UNE .COM

B7

GALLiPOLIS - What had been
a long-cherished .goal for John.
Sang and his family has become
. Editorials
A4 reality.
.
Effective Sept. 1•. Turnpike of
Obituaries()
As Gallipolis, the tri-county area's
B Section Ford Motor Co. dealership,
Sports
became John Sang Ford-LincolnAS Mercury. Sang bought out his partWeather
. ners in the Turopike venture.
© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing C~. allowing he and his family to be

Dear Abby

Cha~ene ·Hoeftlch/photo

,

New windows are going in at the Salisbury building as the renovation finishes up a!'id Meigs
Local School District administrative staff prepares to move in.

16 PAGES

Calendars
Comics

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

'

BY BRIAN J. REED
8REED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
- Mon~y
donated to. a hurricane relief fund
establi shed · by
Middleport
Con;ununity Association is alreaay
at '~fOrk .helping those who · lost
everything f'n Hurricane Katrina.
At Tuesday's monthly meeting
of the association, Sally Lambert,
who is coordinating the fundraising efforts on behalf of the group,
reported a balance of $1 ,950 in the
relief fund . Donations into the
· account are sti ll being accepted at
any Peoples Bank location.

'• 'l7 HP' Kohler• Comma~

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

POMEROY . - The last
phase of the $432,000 renovation. of the old Salisbury
Elementary School into
administrative offices for the
Meigs Local School District
is nearing completion and a
move into the building has
tentatively been set for the
weekend of Oct. 14.
Within a week all 34 of the
windows in the building will
have been replaced, a move
to conserve heating and cooling. All of the interior work
as well as necessary exterior
changes has been completed.
The entire ~project has
been paid' for with the bal-.
ance of funds generated by
the permanent improvements levy which went off
the tax ballot last December.
For many years the district
has operated from rented
second-floor offices in the
Pomeroy
Municipal
Building paying $500 a
month rent plus utilities.
The move into a district-'
owned building became an
option when the Salisbury
building was vac~ted as stu- .
dents went to the new elementary .school near Rutland.
The new district office com-

BY BRIAN J, REED
8REED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

• 44" side discharae

You'll reap t~e rewards of owning a versatile, hardworking Cub Cadet• tractor, while
your wallet benefits from a ter.rific deal. But that's only if you take advantage qf
this limited-time offer while it lasts. For more information, ca111-B77-CUB-TOUGH.

offers
Weekend ..
College
·program

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
. HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ZERO INTEREST AND ZERO PAYMENTS FOR o MONTHS"

Z·FORCE" 44

tlu vaccinations (rom a priWei\s said that local health and vacdnate crowds at the
vate manufacturer. So far ·departments that purcha.se health fairs and those consid- ·
ODH has received approxi- their · vaccinations through erect "at high risk."
mately ~ quarter of thQse ODH were informed of !he
Jl:leigs County has ~o far
240,000 vaccinations .· •
delay to allow them lime 'to . received none of its 1000 flu
Weiss said the problem lays reschedule health fairs tnat · ·vaccinations t'rorh ODH
on the manufacturer's end a~ often held in. conju,nction ·. according to Sherry Weese,
but what that problem is wnh flu va~c.1natton s.
• Meigs
County
Health .
exactly remains to be se,en.
Wetss satd ODH wanted to Department's director of
He added that a statement be able to· send the health nursing.
about the situation is current- departm~nt thm full 01der ot
After receiving ODH's
ly being drafted to local vaccrnatton s as opposed to a
'
health departments.
panial
order
to
accommodate
Please
see Delayed, AS .·
..

Sal.isbury building renovation·nears completion Rio Meigs

...

ZERO INTEREST AND ZERO PAYMENTS FORo MONTHS "

•

Foundation celebrates
milestones with
governor, guests, A6 ·

A3

.'

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Holzer Clinic is Close to You~ ..

"
t as rated byeng1ne mar·o~ 1 ac t urt&gt;r CU 4588 21-57856~12

Athens Charleston Gallipolis Jackson Lawrence Meigs Point Pleasant

...

'J

•

.

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