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                  <text>Drug Awareness
special edition inside
today's Sentinel

Weight management
a feature of
HEARTfest, AS

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,;o ( ' 1-:'\TS • \'ol. ;;:; . No. :;t

..

\\'EDNESDAY, OCTOBER :!h, 2005

"""

Meigs High gets.state recognition as a 'School of Promise'

SPORTS
• White Sox battle Astros
in game three of World
Series. See Page 81

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Meigs High
School has been selected as
an honoree of the State
Superintendent's Schools of
Promise recogniti on program
based on student achievement in reading.
.
Superintendent William
Buckley made the announcement at Tuesday night's meeting of the Meigs Local Board
of Education and read a letter

of congratulations from ogni ze yo ur sc hool's sue- banners are being produced
Susan Tave Zelman, superin- cess. but alw to show what for the "Sc hools of Promise"
tendent of public instmction . can be accomplished," said and that Qne will be prese nted
"You are one of the II 3 Ze lman in her lette r.
to Meigs High School before
school s ac ross the state that
She went on to say that "all !he end of October.
has met or exceeded the ri g- Ohioans sho1tld be pleased
In other business ;, t
orou·s se lection criteria. that we are finding these Tuesday ni ght 's meeting, the
Your ability to meet th ese • promisin g school s in rural firs! held in the new Meigs
criteria mean s your sc hool Appalachia, in our major Local School Di strict adminhas a high percentage of stu- urban centers, and in areas all istration building. formerly
dents achieving academic across the state where stu- the Salisbury Elementary
success and that all popula- dents are beating the demo- School , the board accepted a .
tion s of students are well graphic odds."
Was hington
State
se rved . Thi s award was
The superintendent of Co mmunity College Tech
established, not only to rec- plibic instruction noted that · Prep State Support Grant for

Rediscovered Kibble portrait is Reedsville mystery
By BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

OBITUARIES
'

Page AS
• Gamet Roush, 87
· • Audra L Well, 96

INSIDE
• Chester Academy
benefits from pancak~
breakfast. See Page A3
• OVCS parents
recognized as V.I.P.s.
See. Page A3
• For the Record.
See Page AS
• Meigs County Court
News. See Page A6
• Trick-or-treat
sched.ules for Meigs
County. See Page AB
• Theatre classes begin
at Ariel. See Page AB

WEATHER

INDEX
SECTIONS -

16 PAGF..S

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B4-6

Comics
Dear Abby

87
A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries
Sports

As

Weather

.

Brian J. Reed/photo

Anna Lois Everly looks at the portrait of her mother, Edythe Wi lliams Kibble, recently discovered
in the attic of the Williams family's old boarding house. Merle and Gail Parsons, who recently
purchased the house and are restoring It, gave the portrait to Anna Lois during her weekend
visit to Reedsville.

,

B Section

AB

© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

REEDSVILLE
- The
story reads like an old Nancy
Drew mystery : a painting.
found between the insulation
and atti c rafters of a rambling
old house , covered in dust,
the suhject and arti st at first
unknown .
When Merle Parsons of
Reedsville found the canvas
lucked between the rafters of
the home he and hi s wife,
Gail, arc restoring, they had
no idea how happy the di scovery would make one family with connectfons to the
woman portrayed in the
painting, or the mystery that
would unfold .
The couple purchased the .
home on Ohio 124, at the
imersection of Ohio 68 1. last
summer. In the Kibble family
for many years .. the house
was in poor repair, long shuttered and neglected.
li was one of three· homes
Charles Williams built adjacent to one another in the earliest days of the 20th century.
Please see Portrait. AS

Pomeroy Merchants plan historic walk as holiday kickoff
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

..

. .
POMEROY - Did you
know that high · sulfur coal
w,as once marketed by
Pomeroy's indu striali sts to
cities to be burned in barrels
on street corners to create
smoke which they said would
fend off disease?
This and many other fascinating
pieces .
of
Pomeroy's history will be
included in Mike Gerlach 's
story of the founding and
industrializing of the village
in a historical walk to be
held on Nov. 12.
The walk, planned by the
Pomeroy
Merchants
Associati on and led by
Middleport's Gerlach, a history buff, will ·give residents
a peek at the interesting past
of the village and its social
and in.dustrial leaders during
those early years.
During the walk about ·
town, Gerlach witl tell the
Chartene Hoeftlch/ photo
of
fascinating
story
Pomeroy's fo unding- and its Joh n Musser listens. intently as Mike Gerlach relates the story
ri se in bu siness and popula- of Pomeroy 's founding and development during a preview for
tion which peaked in the the historic walk scheduled fo r 2 p.m. on Nov. 12. The walk is
1880.s. He will talk about sponsored by the Pomeroy Merchants Association.
Ervin. the first setller, who
Hi s commen tary will they got here and their lead
lived at the mouth of
include
hi stories on the lives ro le in developing the area.
Naylor 's. Run, and tell how
that Run , as well as and careers of early settlers. He will note that Horton
Nyesville and Monkey Run , Valentine P. . Horton and introduced. the age of using
got their names.
Samuel Wyllis Pomeroy, how the river for commerce. and

·r·

Details on Page A8

2

rnHI .ul"'' "l""'l.'·' ""

went on lo building steamboats here .
It was during ·a slump · in
demand for high sulfur co;1l
that Horton deCided to promote the sulfur in the coal as
a method of warding off disease. Thi s lead, according to
Gerlach, to Pomeroy becoming the country 's largest salt
and, coal producer.
Gerlach will comment ·on
the fire of th e IX50s, its devastation to the village, and
the rebuilding. He will
describe the inlluence of the
German influ·x to the area.
the architecture of the buildings they constructed, and
their business practices, and
will include comments on
Meigs County' s contributi on
in soldiers to the Civi l War.
Then he wi II note the two
thin gs for which Pomeroy
has become well known no cross streets and a court house three stories hi gh with
eac\1 story opening onto
grou nd level.
These things and man y
more told in an entertaining, ye t detailed fa .,h ion.
will be related by Gerlach
"' he tak es the touring
group down Main Stree t
and onto Seco nd in a 45 minut e walk .
The walk has been planned
Please see Merchants, AS

$7,642, voted to pay the Ohio
Department of Jobs and
Family Services, $3,373 for a
medi ca l claims settlement,.
and heard details from Mark
Rhonemus on the financial
situation of the district.
Personnel approved during
the meeting included parent
volunteers for the Meigs
Primary School including
Rhonda Foster, Jody Lilly,
Tabitha Ohler, Remalee
Please see MHS, AS

Committee
ranks Issue
II projects
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYOAI LYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY
Meig&amp;
County's Issue II committee
chose a half-million dollar
county paving project as first
priority among four local road .
and bridge repair projects
vying for Issue II funding.
Meeting Tuesday morning,
·the committee. made up of
Meigs County Commissioner
Mick Davenport, Middleport
Mayor Sandy lannarelli,
Engineer Eugene Triplett;
.Bedford Township Trustee
Bob Hawk and Scipio
Township Tru stee Randy
Butcher. selected a countywide paving project as the
top pri ority for state Issue II
grant funding for next year.
Projects proposed under the
lssue II program are assigned
points on a number of criteria.
including readiness to proceed
and other factors. Their ranking at the county level results
in additional points being
assig ned . Once the county
committee ranks ·the projects;
they are submitted to a regional committee at Buckeye HillsHocking Valley Regional
Development Di strict , where
Please see Issue II, AS

Halloween safety
tips, community
trick-or-treat times
BY BETH SERGENT
·asERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL,COM

POMEROY Leaves,
rain and temperatures are
falling. reminding everyone
that Halloween is jus't around
the corner while the Pomeroy
Police
[)epartment
is
reminding everyone to have
a safe h o lid ~y.
Pomeroy Police Chief
Mark E. Proffitt and staff
ha ve been encouraging · parents and children to follow
some simple lips ro· keep
enjoying
eve ryone
Halloween for years to come.
"We want everyone to
enjoy the holiday and at the
same time stay safe,"
Proffitt said.
Some Hal loween. safety
tips include;
. • Never trick-or-treat alone.
Always use the buddy system.
Please SH Safety, AS

Holzer Clinic is Close to You.
Athens Charleston Gallipolis Jackson Lawrence Meig!l Point Pleasant
•

'

.

I! •

�:PageA2

NATION

The Daily Sentinel

~The

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 26, 2005

Panel approves $10
billion cut in Medicare~
Medicaid spending
"We are not cutting health
care services to the benefi&lt;:ia.c
ries," said
Sen:
Rick
WASHINGTON
A Santorum, R- Pa. "We have
Republican-led effort to slow squeezed some fraud out. We
spending on health care pro- have squeezed providers."
grams for the poor, elderly
The legislation . reflected
and disabled survived a stern the difficult balancing act
facjng the committee 's chair,
test in the Senate Tuesday.
That chamber's Finance man, Sen. Charles Grassley.
Committee, voting along R-lowa.
party lines, approved legislaGrassley had to maintaiir
tion that would trim overall · support from all II commitspending on Medicare and tee Republican to ensure the
Medicaid by about $10 bil- measure's passage. But some
lion over five years. The wanted more significant
committee's II Republicans reductions in Medicaid thail
·supported the legislation. The others were willing to accep1.
In the end, the legislation
committee's nine Democrats
the panel approved Tuesday
opposed it.
In doing so, Democrats would reduce Medicare
cited what they believed was spending by about $5.8 bilinadequate assistance for vic- lion over five years and
. tims of Hurricane Kat~ina . In Medicaid by about $4.3 bilparticular, Democrats wanted lion during that time.
to
temporarily
extend
Even with those reductions.
Medicaid coverage to thou- however, the Congressional
. sands of people currently· Budget Office projects that
ineligible for the program financing of the two programs
even though they have lost would grow substantially
over the coming five years.
their jobs and their"home.
The
"Eight weeks ago yesterday,
CBO
predicts
Katrina made landfall. Eight Medicaid spending will .
weeks ago today, the levees increase from about $1'92 bil- .
broke. And-eight weeks later, I lion in 2006 to about $260
cannot in good conscience billion in 20 I0. Medicare
join in cutting health care, spending will increase from
when Congress has left the about $385 billion in the
health care needs of Katrina's coming year to about $525
·victims unaddressed," said billion in 2010. The increases
Sen. Max Baucus of Montana, reflect growing health &lt;:are
the top Democrat on the costs and a growing number
Finance Committee.
of people becoming eligible
·Republicans said they for the programs . .
weren't thrilled with the bill,
This week, several commiteither, mainly because they tees in both chambers are
said it did not go far ·enough considering legislation that
to overhaul Medicaid. the would rcd~ce . spending on
nation's health insurance pro- programs over which they
gram for the poor. But they have jurisdiction. Their conrejected the notion that bene- tribution will be made part of
ficiaries would get a reduced an overall bi II that would
level of care as a result of the reflect a congressional budchanges they approved.
get blueprint passed in April.

BY THE BEND

.

AP

IN WILMA'S AFTERMATH,
RECOVERY BEGINS FOR MILLIONS
Bv ALLEN BREED
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

counties. Damage estimates
ranged up to $I 0 billion.
·Tomorrow's going to be
FORT 'LAUDERDALE , better than today," .Gov. Jeb
Fla . ~ Repair crews across Bush said.
Florida struggled Tuesday to
Some of the worst damage
restore electl'icity to up to 6 was in downtown Fort
million people. reopen the Lauderdale, where Wilma was
region's airports and · replace the strongest hunicane to strike
countless windows blown out since I 950. Winds of more
of downtown "high-rises dur- . than I00 mph blew out wining
Hurricane
Wi Jm a 's dows in high-rises, many built
ruinous dash across the state. before Florida enacted tougher
Officials said it could take construction &lt;:odes following
weeks for Florida's most Hunicane Andrew in I992.
heavily populated region ~
The school district's 14the Miami, Fort Lauderdale story headquarters - known
and West Palm Beach area~ ·as the "Crystal Palace"- was
to return to normal.
stripped of nearly its entire
Water and gas became pre- glass facade on one side.
cious commodities, and peo,
"We're going to have to fix
pie waited for hours for free it in a way that is stronger,"
water, ice and food. Lines schools superintendent Frank
stretched for blocks at the Till said.
few gas stations with the
Government officials and
electricity needed to pump business executives scramfuel, and arguments broke out bled to repair buildings and
when motorists tried to cut in . find other places to work .
line. More than 500 people Broward County court offiwaited outside one store for cials were trying to determine
cleanup supplies.
whether sessions could be
But barely 24 hours after held at the damaged courtthe Category 3 storm struck, house in coming days.
there were signs of recovery.
Some schools and courts
"We have power! We have closed for the week. Orders
power!" several resident s of to boil water were issued in
Miami Lakes ~:han ted as they many locations. Miamiran out their back doors when Dade , Broward and Monroe
. the lights carne on.
counties imposed overnight
The quantity of debri s was curfews.
daunting: Pieces or roofs.
At Miami International , the
trees, signs, awnin gs, fences, busiest U.S . hub for Latin
billboards and pool sn ccns American travel , the first
were scattered across several plane to land since the hurri-

cane arrived Tuesday from . dealt with Hurricane Katrina,
Brazil, and domestic flights the governor praised the early
were to resume Wednesday response to Wilma.
morning. Airports at Fort
But not everyone was so
Lauderdale and West Palm pleased. Thousands of people
Beach remained closed to reportedly stood in line for up
commercial traffic but emer- to I0 hours in North Miami,
gency aircraft were coming waiting for relief supplies
into both facilities .
that did not arrive until early
At least 2,000 domestic and evening.
international flights were dis"Pretty sad," said Douglas
rupted by the storm, affecting Riley, shaking his head after
hundreds of thousands of waiting 7 112 hours for two ·
fliers, when Wilma knocked bags of ice. "It's very disapout electricity and damaged pointing for the amount of
roofs, towers, fences and stuff we got. But I'm grateful."
other equiement.
Trucks carrying bags of ice
Bv LIBBY QUAID
plicated when food is
Agriculture officials said and cases of water were late to
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
damage to their industry a number of distribution areas.
processed. To'·~ke blueberries into jam, for ~ample, or
would be in the hundreds of
· ~we know the assets are
WASHINGTON
milk into yogurt, thickening
millions of dollars. The great- there. Now it's just a matter
Organic
food
is
a
multibilusually requires pectin. Pectin
.est losses were believed to be of getting the product to the
to the winter vegetable crop, people," Miami-Dade Mayor , lion-dollar industry with comes from fruit peels, but
growing pains it wants because of how it's made, it's
which provides more than Carlos Alvarez said.
considered synthetic.
half of the · nation's supply
FEMA
spokeswoman Congress to help soothe.
At
issue
is
whether
small
That is why, over the years,
from November to February. Frances
Marine
urged
of
non-organic
amounts
the ~overnment has allowed
Also ~urt were sugar cane. patience. "We can't wave a
should
be pectm and dozens of other
fields and ornamental-plant magic wand and clear roads ingredients
nurseries.
and fix damage that was done allowed in food bearing the non-organic or synthetic
ingredients into processed
The 2 Ist stonm in the worst ·by nature in a day," she said, "USDA Organic" seal.
An
appeals
court
decid~d
food.
Food labeled "organic"
Atlantic hurricane season on
Distribution went more
earlier
this
year
that
none
of
must
have
at least 95 percent
record, Wilma was blamed smoothly elsewhere. At Key
those
things
belongs
in
food
organic ingredients; excepfor at least five deaths West High School, th~ food
labeled
as
organic. . tions for pectin and other
statewide. Before hitting the even included Key lime pie.
United States, it killed at least
And many storm-savvy Lawmakers could decide as ingredients apply to the oth~r
· six people in Mexico, one in Floridians coped with good early as Tuesday whether they 5 percent.
At New Hampshire-based
Jamaica and 12 in Haiti as it humor, their mood lifted in want to override the ruling.
The dispute started with Stonyfield Farm, the biggest
swirled across the Caribbean. · part by spectacular weather
" It will be days or weeks in the wake of Wilma: cloud- Arthur Harvey, an organic organic yogurt maker. the
farmer
from court ruling jeopardizes 90
before we are back to nor- less skies 'and unseasonably blueberry
the
gov- .percent of the company \
Maine.
Harv.
e
y
sued
mal ," Miami-Dade Mayor low
temperatures
that
for
allowing
ernment'in
2002
products,
said
Nancy
Carlos Alvarez said.
dropped into the 50s about
products
&lt;:Onll!ining
synthetic
Hirshberg, a company vice
In the wake of complaints dawn Tuesday and were in
ingredients to be sold as president. If the ruling stands,
over the way the government the mid-70s during the day.
organic, among other things.
she said, Stony field will have·
"The basic principle of the to replace the organic seal
law .is that anything iabeled with the phrase "made with
organic has to be 95 percent organic ingredients," a less
Dean told the jury. "Tbey had gone back to the van rental organic and 100 percent nat- marketable claim.
"Consumers aren't interestfive separate reports 7saying company to try to get his unil. I think Jhat's a pretty
simple
principle,"
Harvey
ed,"
Hirshberg said. "If we
this garage was dangerous. $400 deposit back after he
in
an
interview.
said
can't call it organic - and that
What did they do? Th~y did- used the van to blow up the
The
idea
may
be
simple
for
means also charge the organic .
n't do anything."
tntde center. That's how Harvey and farmers like him premium ~ can we reallr
Kasowitz said the 'garage police caught him ."
to follow, but it's more com- afford to make it as organic?'
stayed open only because the
reports suid the public garage
was a " l.ow risk" site fpr a car
bomb. ''The Port Authority
broke even, at best, on money
from the garage,"·he said.
He also said hi s clients
acted responsibly in light of
what they knew, and nothing
would have kept the perpetrators from their des tru ctive
Holzer Clinic of West Virginia on
goal.
.
· Dean called the terrorists
Jackson Avenue in Point Pleasant
"stupid, noting that one had

Organic industry asks Congress-to reject
tougher standards set by appeals court

Jury to deliberate question of negligence in 1993 WTC bombing civil case
Bv SAMUEL MAULL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
NEW YORK ~ An attorney for victims of the I99 3
World Trade Cen(er bombing
closed his \'USe Tuesday saying the building's own ers
fail ed to.take steps to thwart a
poss ible terrorist assault.
Lawyer Dav id J Dean represents more tlmn 400 people
who say the Port Authorit y.
which own ed · and operated
·the trade center. neg lige mly
failed to heed its own senlrity officers who warned that
the 400-car public parking
garage under the I I0-story
twin towers wasn·t secure.
' Marc Kasowitz. a lawyer
for the Port Authorit y, said
that nothin g wo uld have
deterred resourceful. deter-

mined terrorists. from findin g
a way to unleash an attack.
The bombing killed six
people and injured mor~ than
1,000 on Feb. 26, 1993. when
terrorists detonated nearly
1,500 pounds of explosi ves
in a rented van.
If the Port Authority is
found liable, separate trial s
will be held to determine
money damages.
Dean said the center ' s
executives refused to close
the garage becau se th at
would have inconvenienced
tenants and lost money.
"It 's the Port Authority 's
fuu lt when they knew the vulnerability of the garage,"

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•

•

Wednesday, October 26,

2005

GRANDPARENTS.HONORED AT OVCS Community Calendar
Public meetings
Thursday, Oct. 27
Mei gs Soil
and Water Conservation
Distri ct. I I :30 a.m. at th e
Meigs SWCD offi ce. 33 IOJ
Hiland Road.
Monday, Oct. 31
PORTLAND ~ U:banon
Township Trustees will meet at
R a.m. at the trustees building.
POMEROY ~

Bv KEVIN FREKING
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Residents carry water and ice being distributed by the C1ty of Miami as they leave the Orange Bowl Tuesday in Miami.

PageA:3

Clubs-and
organizations

POMEROY ~ Al coholic s
Anonymous open discussion ,
7 p.m., Sacred Heart Church .'
AJ-Anon al so meets.
Thcsday, Nov. 2
CHESTER
Che ster
Council,
Daughters of
America, will meet at 7 p.m.
at the Masoni c Hall. The
meeting time was changed
due to Election Day.

Reunions

Saturday, Oct. 29
HARRISONVILLE
Reunion .of Walter FrJnklin
Wednesday, Oct. 26
Gilmore family, I I a.m ..
POMEROY ~ Republican . Scipio Fire Department.
bean dinner with serving to Lunch at noon .
begin at 6 p.m. at the Senior
Citize~s Center. Bean and vegetable soup, chili , and hotdogs:
POMEROY ~
· Narcotics
Thursday, Od. 27
Anonymous open discussion,
POMEROY ~ Caring and
7 p.m., Sacred Heart Church.
Submitted photo
RACINE ~ Auxiliary of sharing support group, I
Mr. and Mrs. Herschel McClure of Pomeroy enjoy lunch with their granddaughter, Samantha Racine American Legion p.m. , Meigs Multipurpose
Senior Center. Linda King on
McClure, at the Ohio Valley Christian School onGrandparents Day. The grandparents v'is it- .602, 7 p.m., hall .
family nutrition.
ed the classrooms and were recognized fsr their role as a pos itive influence in the lives of
Th.ursday, Oct. 27
,
their grandch ildren.
- POMEROY
Meig s
County American Cancer
·Society Taskforce regul ar
meeting, noon. basement
Friday, Oct. 27
conference room of the
LONG BOTTOM ~ lnzy
Pomeroy Library. Call 992- Newell will observe her 80th
GALLIPOLIS ~ Parents
6626 for more information.
birihday Oct. 27. Cards may
:and guardians of students at
POINT .
PLEASANT, be sent to her at 44545 S.R.
'the Ohio Valley Christian .
W.Va. ~ Alpha Iota Masters. · 24ll, Long Bottom , 45743.
I 1:15 a.m., Bennigans.
School were recognized durMonday, Oct. 31
TUPPERS PLAINS ~
ing the recent observance of
POMEROY
Mary
VFW
9053
will
meet
at
7
Wingett of Syracuse will be
V.l.P.
(Very
Important
p.m. at the hall in Tuppers 95 on Oct. 3 I . Cards may be
Parents) in grade 4-6.
Plains.
sent to her at the Rock
· Special programs were
-held,' a luncheon as service,
-and there was an afternoon
·of activities . Musical and
academic programs were
CHESTER ~
.
Projects to breakfast in cooperation with
presented for the parents to
raise funds for the renovation Chester Council, Daughters
.emphasize the learning skills
of the I840 Chester Academy of America, and the Chester
of the students.
continue as plans are com- Fire Department.
' The fourth grade class
pleted for a pancake breakfast
A goal of $1 ,250 has been
'taught by Gina Tillis had a
to be served from 8 to I I a.m. set_. According to Dale
sign language program ,
.
Submitted photo on· Saturday at the Chester Colburn all proceeds raised
Carolyn Cox's class did a Justin Watts, Cole Parenti, TG Miller, Jon Kostival, Bethany Fire House.
from the project will be
:choral reading on the pledge Beaver. and Morgan Brusmfield, fourth grade students of Gina
The Modern Woodmen of matched by the home office
of allegiance, and the sixth Tillis , signed the ABC 's and a scripture verse during V.I.P. day. America, Camp 4798, of of Modern Woodmen of
grade class of Cheryl Jarvi s
Athen s is spon soring the America up to $1,250. He
recited math facts, rules, ents made pancakes tested allows parents the opportuni- matching
fund
pancake also noted that the amount
prime numbers and quoted natural syrup to modern ty to see what is going on in ·
syrup as they studied the style their child's classroom and it
Matthew 5:3-7.
of
the story, "If you Give a gives students a chance lo
Student self-portraits were
di splayed for identification Mouse a Cookie ."
show parents how important
by the parents, and the parTillis' said "the experience they, are to them."

Support groups

-Birthdays

OVCS parents recognized as V.I.P.s

Springs Rehab Center. 3675\1
Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy.
45769.
Wednesday, Nov. 2
MASON
Vi olet
Millhone, retired Tuppers
Plains Eleme ntary Schoo l
teacher, now re siding with
her dau ghter in Mason , W.
Va .. will celebrate her \15th
birthday on Nov. 2. Cards
may be sent to at Box 287.
Mason, W. ~- 25260.

Church events
Wednesday, Oct. 26
POMEROY
Community prayer meetin g.
7 p.m.. Pomeroy Chu rch of .
Christ
Friday, Oct. 28
POMEROY ~ Rosary and
Benediction , 7 p.m., Sacred
Heart Chur&lt;:h.
MIDDLEPORT - Annual
Harvest Celebration, 6:30 to
9 p.m.. Rejoicing Life
Church. Free famil y eve nt.
with games and food. No costumes.
Sunday, Oct. 20
POMEROY ~ Holy Hour,
4 p.m .. Sacred Heart Church.
Monday, Oct. 31
POMEROY ~ Enterprise
United Methodist Church and
Pomeroy Church of Christ
three-night revival through
Nov. 2. Rev. James Corbitt as
guest speaker. Services will
be held at the Church of
Christ, 7 p.m. each night.
Special music .

Chester Academy benefits from pancake breakfast

'Boyfriend's big plans take
:.woman 'sfather by surprise
DEAR ABBY: Just before
' my daughter returned to col)ege, my wife and I took her
and ~er boyfriend, "Justin,"
out to dinner. It was the first
:rime we'd met him, although
Dear ·
they have been going out for
Abby
about six months. They
attend colleges a good dis·tance apart , and see each
, other about once a month but
.talk daily . .
As the dinner conversation Abby ? ~ NOT READY TO
.progressed, I asked Justin RETIRE IN N.Y.
DEAR NOT READY TO
what his major was and what
he plans to do after college. RETIRE: I' ll say thi s for
l:le said l)e wants to be in the . Justin, he has youth and
-film industry. I asked what enthusiasm going for him; he
.he planned to do if it didn ' t speaks hi s mind and his con· work out. He responded, "Go tingency plan shows he has an
into the family business." I eye to the future . Your wife is
telling you to let it drop in the
·asked what business Justin's
that the romance will go
.family was in. He responded hope
nowhere . However, on the
that his family didn't have a chance that it will go forward,
business, that he had meant you'd be doing the young
· our family business. Then he man a favor to bring him back
said, by the way, he would to planet Earth regarding your
;change how we were running business.
.
:it to produce more cash by
P.S . If I were you, I'd think
: slowipg down our expansion long and hard before decidplans. ! was speechless. My ing to welcome him into it.
daughter told us later that she
DEAR ABBY: I am 19, and
: and Justin had never dis- six months pregnant by a 28·cussed it before.
ye~r-old man . My pregnancy
: · My wife and I are in our was a shock. At the time I
:4os. We don ' t plan on retirin g became pregnant I had a job,
·soon, or letting any of -our but three month s ago the
:own kids take over runnin g business dow_n sized and I
· the business. My wife says was laid off.
:we should drop it. I think we
My boyfriend is in jail and
:should make it clear to Justin will be for the next two
:that our family business years. He has promised that
:should noi lie his backup we ' ll be together when he
: plan . If he did marry our gets out, but I' m not sure if I
·daughter and wanted to come beli eve him . He has tw o
: to work for the family busi- other kids with two other
: ness. he might be welcome. women, and he didn ' t stay
· However, he certainly would with either of them .
My aunt has been paying
: not have the control he thinks
: he would . What are your my rent for me or I wou Jd be
: thoughts on thi s matter, out on the street. I'm afraid;

because I don 't know how I
. can . survive and support
another Jiving person. I had
considered going to college,
but how &lt;:an I work, go to
school and take care of a
baby all by myself?
I don't want to have to
depend on rny aunt for everythin g. She says I should
place my baby for adoption,
but I'm not sure she's right.!
took the re sponsibility of
making this baby. so 1
believe it's my responsibility
to face the consequences of
niisi~g it until the day I, die.
Can you help me decide what
to do? I guess you could say
my life is one big mess, and I
don 't know how to get out of
it. ~ SCARED IN THE
MIDWEST
DEAR SCARED: A baby
is supposed to be a blessing.
not a "consequence." You are
an intelligent young woman,
and yotl are asking the ri ght
que stions . Your aunt may
have th e right idea. Sit down
with a pencil and paper and
ask yourself, "What can I
give to this baby'?" Then ask
yourself what a couple who
wants a child but is unable to
have one of their own could
do for it. It is possible that
the most lovin g gift you
could give you r baby is a
family who would Jove it and
provide for it in a way 'that
you cannot.
· Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Va11 Buren, also
kuown as Jean11e Phillips,
a11d was founded by her
mother, Pauline Phillip.!.
Write
Dear Abby at
http ://www.DearAbby.com
or P. 0. Box 69440, Los
A11geles~ CA 90069.

rai sed will qualify as the
required match for rel ease of
funds
from
the
Save
America's Treasures federal
grant awarded last y e&lt;~r.
Coleman reminded re sidents that donation s of $500
or more to be used on projects like window s or other
work at the Academ y can be
counted for
additional
m~tch money.

FAMILY.
HOMES
Invites you to

MAKE PLANS .NOW
to attend our

OPEN HOUSE
FRIDAY • SATURDAY • SUNDAY
OCT. 28th -OCT. 29th -OCT. 30th
1-&amp;pm
lother hours bV appointmenu
lor this recentlv completed
~·~NEWHO E

2 Story Construction 1605 s.f.
w/300 s.l. Unfinished Bonus room ,
Full Poured Concrete Basement. 3
Large Bedrooms. 2 Full Baths and
112 Bath, Spacious Owner Suite
w/Private Bath . Large Living Room.
Kitchen w/Merrillat Oak Cabinetry,
2-High Eff. Elect. Heat Pumps
w/AC, Country Style Wrap Around
Porch, Nice Rear Deck off Patio
Ooor &amp; 2B'x24' Attached Garage.

Stop Bv Familv Homes Todav
lor more details
St. Rt. 1 BVPISS • Pomerov, 01

740·992·5635

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

· Congress shallmake .no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise· theretif; or abridging the freedom
o.f speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
tire Gov~rnment for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Todav is Wednesday. Oct. 26. the 299th day of 2005. There
arc 66 Ziays left in the year.
·
.'
')(&gt;day\ Highlight in History: On Oc.t. 26, 1881 , the
··Gunti~ht at the OK Corral" took place in Tombstone, Ariz., as
\\') all Earp. his two brothers ltnd "Doc" Holliday confronted
I'" Cl.antun's gang. Three members of Clamon's ,gang were
b lkd : Earp's brothers were wounded.
On this date: In 1774; the First Continental Congress
"dj(&gt;urned in Philad~ lph ia:
·
In .IH25. the Erie Canal opened in upstate New York, conm·t·tin~ Lake Erie and the Hudson River.
In IY.'\7. the Soviet Union announced that defense minister
\1"r' l"' l Georgi Zhukov had been relieved of his duties.
In 105S. Pmi American Airways flew its tirst Boeing 707 jetliner frnrn New York to Paris in eight hours and 41 minutes.
In 1'167. the Shah of Iran crowned himself and his queen
"Iter 26 yea rs on the Peacock Throne.
In 1972. national security adviser Henry Kissinger declared,
··Peace.is at hand'' in Vietnam.
In 1975. Anwar Sadat became the first Egyptian president to
i'"Y "n officii1l visit to the United States.
In 1977. the experimental space shuttle Enterprise glided to a
humpy but successfu l landing at Edwards Air Force Base in
Cdifurn ia .
Ten years ago: The House passed, 227-203, a Republic3n
ba l"nced-budget bill aimed at shrinking the federal govemmcnt. cutting taxes and returning power to the states. Islamic
J iltau leader Fathi Shakaki was shot to ·death on the
~ kui te rranean island of Malta in a killing his . supporters
blamed on IsraeL The Cleveland Indians won their second
~:une of the World Series by defeating the Atlanta Braves, 5-4,
in Game 5.
Five years ago: The New York Yankees became the first team
in more than a quaner-century to win three straight World
St·ri es chalVpionships, beating ·the New York Mets 4-2 in game
li ve of their "Subway Series." (The Yankees matched the
Oakland Athletics' three in a row from 1972-74, and won their
fourth title in tive years.)
One year ago: The Federal Communications Commission
gave its ·approvalto Cingular Wireless LLC's $41 billion acqui' ition of AT&amp;T Wireless Services Inc. Israel's parliament
approved Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's plan for withdrawing
from the Gaza Strip and parts of the West Bank. The final vote
count in the Afghan presidential election gave a sounding victory to interim leader Hamid Karzai. The Boston Red Sox won
game three ·of the World Series in St. Louis, defeating the
Cardinals 4-1.
Thought for Today: "In the time of your life, live - so that ·
in that wondrous time you shall not add to the misery and sorrow of the world, but shall smile to the infinite variety and myste ry of it.'. - William Saroyan, American author (1908-1981).

PageA4
Wednesday, October 26,2005

Divorce is no party for the children
A bizarre, damaging trend
in love a(ld marriage (or hate
and divorce) is currently
being glorified by the media,
needlessly sending out harmful messages about marriage
- playing with children's
emotions in a poisonous
way.
As recently ·seen on "The
Today Show" and "Good
Morning America," "divorce
parties" are all the rage. Was
. your marriage 011 the rocks?
Well, the di~orce papers are
signed and it's now ti111t' to
play "pin the blame on the
ex" and "throw the wedding
ring in the toilet" games or so it is if you talk to the
likes of the author of "The
Woman's Book of Divorce:
101 Ways to · Make Him
Suffer Forever and Ever''
(Citadel,
200 I).
Unfortunately besides celebrating the end of our most
precious cultural institution,
when there are kids involved
it's also making light of the
fracturing of families -· a
potential developmental disaster for children.
· I hate to be a pany pooper,
but divorce has consequences. And to anyone who
would like to pretend it's not
a scarring event - it may
not be you: but they are out
there - author Elizabeih
Marquardt has one thing to
say: There'sactually no such
thing as a "good divorce."
That's the message· in her
new book, "Between Two
Worlds: The Inner Lives of
Children
of
Divorce"
(Crown).
Marquardt, who herself
"grew up divorced.': focuses

Kathryn
Lopez

on children. who are, as the
title points out, often split
between two worlds: mom ·s
and dad's. Marquardt studied
1,500 Americans ages 18-35 ,
who grew up in families
with both married and
divorced parents. The differences are startling.
Children
of divorce,
Marquardt found, have a
level of discomfort that kids
with a married mom and dad
just don' t have. Sixty-nine
percem of children in twoparent families -reported
·going to one or both of their
parents for comfort, while
only 33 percent of children
. sought help while living in a
divorced family.
Children of divorce are
also less like Iy to feel pro,
tected by their parents, feel
less safe at home, and are
less likely to attend religious
servi ces. Obviously, this
shakes out in different ways
and to varying degrees, but
it's certainly a developmental burden on kids.
The aforementioned laundry list is not intended to
make parents feel bad. But
it's a caution and a bit of a
cultural wake-up call. "Most
parents take the decision to
divorce ·quite seriously, but I

urge parents to think harder · A few weeks later, a 13still," Marquardt writes. year-old girl responded via
Sometimes, of course. the column to " ... Tired of
divorce really is what has to Being a Wi~" with the signhappen. Sometimes the mar- off "Feeling Sad and·
wrote:
riage is ended by one spouse, Betrayed."· She
"Guess
what,
if
you
are
not a
leaving the other to cope with no real way for the happy person, moving out
. other to have prevented it. -isn't going to magically
And, in the end, as make you happy. In fact, it
Marquardt notes, it's th~ will make you more lonely
arid sad. It will make everycouple's business.
one
sad. This lady needs to
But divorce is not always
the on ly option. Marquardt work on the problem instead
reports that two-thirds of all of blowing up her kids' lives.
divorces end " low-conflict It is her job to take care of
marri&amp;ges." Instead of infi- them, first and foremost.
delity or ·violence - real Their trust of her is on the,
line."
reasons to end a marriage Marriage, as people vow
the catalyst may be boreon
the big day, is through the
dom. In which case, we are
. definitely taking divorce too good times and the bad .
That's not always easy. but
casually.
it's
not meant to be easy. If
Recently. · "Ask Amy"
. newspaper-advice columnist you find yourself browsing
took a question from a through a divorce-party
woman in one of these mar- planner, you might want to
look to your family instead
riages:
"He's not abusive in any and see what you can do to
way, to the kids or me; I just make it work. Man and wife
don't know if I love him and children will all be betanymore, and I can't stop ter off if mom and dad stick
scanning the 'apartments for it out together.
And if you've got to go
lease' section in the paper."
through
with the big divorce
The single-parent columnist
wasn't going to let "Good . - splitting up kids or notMom But Tired of Being a please don't get a pany stanWife" get away with casual- ed. Not only for the children,
divorce daydreams. "Ask but· for the message it sends
the rest of us about ble.ssed
Amy" responded:
"Divorce - amicable and .and arduous thing call marotherwise - stinks; and riage.
Children often take a
though I believe that most
amicably divorced families divorce the hardest
work things out quite well,
(Kathryn Lopez is the ediit's hard, hard, hard. Unless tor of National . Review
(www.nationalrethere is clear abuse or Online
neglect involved. children view.com). She can be conprefer for their parents to be tacted at klopez@nationalretogether."
·
vh•w.com .) ·

THE HARRIET MIERS EFFE:CT CATCHES ON ..•

SlAHLER ·.

@liE &lt;1JL~81l.r DIS'PAtrft-

~TI~

'2/XS·

VERY .

LOYAL.

·Election letter advisory
Leflers to the editor dealing with issues on the Nov. 8. elechullot 11·il/ be accepted until 5 p.m. on Monday, Oct. 31.
No ll'lter.i· 011 the election will be published after Wednesday,
/Vol'. 2.

Letters 111 the editor are welcome. They should be less than
300 11 ords. All lel/ers are subject to editing. must be signed,
and iuclude address and telephone number- No unsigned letIns ,;.;// he published Letters should · be in good taste,
addressing issues. not per.wnalities. Letters of thanks to orgaui:atiou .\ mul ii/(Ji,·iduals will not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

! Our mai n concern- in all stories is lobe

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2005

Obituaries
----'-----------,.---------

Bv MARY DALRYMPLE
AP TAX WRITER

Audra LWell

WASHINGTO N
Thousands of people have
SHADE - Audra L. Well :
money sitting at the Internal
96, Shade, passed away on
Revenue Service that could
Monday, Oct. 24. 2005, at
be
claimed if they would just
O'Bienes~
Hospital
in
tell the tax collectors where
Athens.
they live.
She was born on Sept 4,
The IRS said Tuesday that
1909 in East Li verr.ool, .
$73
million in tax refunds that
daughter of the late Wtlbert
were
sent to taxpayers this
and May Brown Willard. She
year did not reach the destinawas raised l?Y her aunt and
tion. In most cases, the post .
uncle, the late Maggie and
office! returned the checks as
Harvey Chaney. She was . a
undeliverable because the
graduate of Shade · High
taxpayers had moved.
School, class of 1929, and
The money belongs to more
was employed for 16 years
••
l'
than 84,000 taxpayers, some
·by Ohio University in food
•'
of whom have more than one
service and also worked for
check
waiting to be claimed.
the
former
Stiffler\
Audra L. Well
Checking on the status of a
Department
Store
in
Pomeroy.
. refund. - by calling I-R00Mrs. Well was a 4-H Club leader, previously belonged to 829A477 or visiting IRS Web
the Home Demonstration Council, was a member of site at http://www.irs.gov Harrisonville Order of Eastern Star #255, Fraternal Order of
Eagles Auxiliary, Walk In Garden Club, and ·an Officer in
Bedford Youth Center, and was instrumental in starting
Bedford Township scholarships. She was also a member of
the PTA, a Union Steward at Ohio University, a member of
from PageA1
the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center, Public Employees
Retirement Inc. and was a . life-long member of Meigs
County Democratic Party.
Franckowiak, Donna Corsi,
In addition to her parents, and her aunt and uncle she Dreama
Smith,
Karen
was preceded by her husband, Vern "Dutch" Well in 1990 ; Mullins, Barbie Musser, Steve
two sons, Denver and Boyd Well , and a granddaughter, Musser, Angela Morris, Traci
Ak~a%11.
.
.
. Chapman. Bobbi Newland,
She is survived by a daughtder, Donna (Guy) Morris, Dawn Kopec. Sherri Brunton.
Pomeroy; and sons, Vernal · (Louise) Well of Shade, Larry
(Judy) Well of Shade, Richard "Dick" (Chris) Well of Donna Gorslene, "Kristi
Fredericktown Ohio, and Jerry (Susan) Well of Shade; and Powell , Michelle Willard,
grandchildren, W~yne Well, Patti Gaul, Jeffrey Morris, James Kristi Roush, and Michelle
Morris, Bonnie Brown, Jack Well, Jill Well, Judy Jackson, Vanaman.
.Amanda Stanley, Jody Custer, Amy Krownapple, Whitney ·
Ansel, Ashley Well, Ryan Well, and Ross Well; and se~era l
great-grandchldren; two brothers, two half-sisters, and special
friends, Kenneth and Dorothy Chaney of Shade.
Services will be held at II a.m. on Thursday, Oct. 27,
from PageA1
2005, at the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home.
Officiating will be Pastor John Elswick and burial will be in
• Young children shou ld
Burlingham Cemetery. Friends may call on Wednesday, Oct
26; from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. at the funeral home . Eastern always be accompanied by an
· Star Services will be conducted at 8 p.m. by Harrisonville adult while trick -or-treating.
• Only visit houses where
Lodge #255 .
In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to the the lights' are on.
Meig s County S.en ior Citizens Center, 112 East Memorial . • Accept treats only in the
Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769; or Harrisonville Eastern Star door way. Never go inside a
#255, C/0 Clara Mae Hysell, 28 1/2 Palmer St., Athens , house.
• Walk, don ' t run. on sideOhio 45701 ,
·
On-line condolences may ·-be sent to www.tisherfuneral- walks and driveways. not
people's yards.
.
homes.com
• Check all treats before
eating.
• Dress according to the
weather wearing good walkRACINE - Garnet V Roush, 87, of Racine, passed away at ing shoes and warm clothing.
7 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 23, 2005. at Harborside· Health Care of · • Plan costumes with reflecFlorence, Ky.
tor strips for better visibility.
Born Oct. 15, 1918, in Por!land, she was the daughter ofth~ · • Be sure all costume matelate Joseph and Estella Pease Cozart. She was a homemaker rials are non-flammable.
and member of the Racine First Baptist Church. She retired as
• Remind children to be
an aide for Holzer Medical Center.
polite and always say, "thank
Surviving are her dau ghter and son-in-law, Wanda and you."
Steven Jacobs of Florence, Ky.; two grandchildren, Terol
Don't make yourself sick
(Donald) Lieberum of Florence, Ky. and Jeffrey (Kathy) by• eating
too much too fast.
Jacobs of Merritt Island, Fla.; seven great-grandchildren:
communiMeigs
County
Jennifer, Joe, Julie. Korey, and Kaylie Jacos and David and
ties
having
trick-or,treat
from
Christopher Lieperum; a sister. Elizabeth Wolford of Racine;
6
p.m.
to
7
p.m.
on
Thursday
and several nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her for- are Harrisonville/Pageville,
Pomeroy,
mer husband of 26 years, Ray Roush; a son, Jerry Roush; sis- Mid\:lleport,
Syracuse,
Rutland,
Portland,
ters, Audra M. Nice and Vera VanMeter; brothers: Clint
Wofle
Pen.
Both
Chester
and
Cozart. Hoban Cozan, Edwin "Bill" Cozart. Roscoe Cozart, Racine will observe trick-orAlfred Cozart and Gyrtha Cozart.
.
Services will be held at I p.m. on Friday, Oct 28, 2005, at treat from 6 p.m. 10 7 p.m. on
Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine with Rev. Rick Rule offi- Mondar
ciating. Burial will foll'ow at Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. on Thursday at the
funeral home.

MHS

could be worth $871 to the
average taxpayer \lue an
unclaimed refund.
"Our goal is to get this
money back in the hamb of
the people it belongs to." IRS
Commi ssioner
Mark
Everson said.
Refund checks can bounce
tiack to the IRS for a variety
of reasons. Most often a taxpayer moves, but sometimes
the aduress is incomplete.
Taxpayers who change. their
names after a marriage or
divorce can sometimes
encounter problems with
mailed refunds.
This · year, dislocation s
caused bv Hurricane Katrina
may have caused some refund
checks go astray. The IRS
said it will speed up searches
for missing refunds owed to
Gulf Coast residents and issue
new refund check when the

a

Web site or by calling 1-800original cannot be found.
Those 1axpayers can use the TAX-FORM .
Taxpayers without access
special toll-free IRS hot line
- 1-866-562-5227 - that the to the Internet can call the
IRS set up for Katrina victims IRS toll-free at 1-800-!129to track down a missing check. 1040 to claim a ref uno that
Others should first check never arrived.
In most cases, a taJ&lt;payer
their records to make sure an
expected refund never arrived. only has to provide current
A feature on the IRS Web site address. In some cases, if a
allows taxpayers to check the check got lost and never .gpt
status of a refund and, in some returned to the IRS, the taxcases, resolve the problem payer might have to go
that prevented its delivery. ·
through a claims process.
The tool called "Where 's Those problems are handled
My Refund 0" asks taxpayers case by case, sometimes over
for some information. includ- the phone or someiimes with
ing Social Security number. additiemal paperwork.
Refunds returned to the IRS
refund amount and filing status.' such as sing le, head of are not stored. The checks are
household or married couple. destroyed, but the amount due
who
have remains
on
taxpayers'
Taxpayers
moved and want to make sure accounts. When the taxpayer
the IRS has the correct · claims the refund and proaddress can fi II out Form vides a current : address, the
8822, available on the IRS · new check is printed.

LaDonna Steward and Lisa
Schenkleburg were hired as
intervention tutors at the
Meigs Primary at the rate of
$75 a day. Clyde Gaus was
hired as a substitute bus driver, Tammy Zirkle as a substitute secretary, and John
Gomez as a substitute custodian to be used on an asneeded basis.
Employed as substitute
cooks were Deborah McCoy.
Robin Glass, and Bonnie
Cleland~ Given supplemental
.contracts were Chris Shank,

seventh grade boys basketball ; Ty Ault, volunteer assistant seventh grade bon basketball: Kevin McLaughlin,
middle school wrestling:
Dani Gregg , eighth grade
basketball: . Maria
girl s
Drenner, seventh grade girls
basketball; Dennis Flaherty,
girls ' JV basketball; Della
Wolfe. girls varsity assistant
baskeuball volunteer, and
Cliff Kennedy, eighth grade
boys basketbalL
Added to the substitute
teacher li st were Grant

1 have two pair, kings and
are before the kids · have $1,200 problem right after I
nines. All the other players
even thought of them.
sell it. Smells funny because
have folded except -the two
I've got my finger on the · girlfriend's baby puked . in
right across from me.· Did
pulse of the world. If there's the back seat a few months
he · hit that straight on the
something whoa ago. Not a very good deal."
river, a 10? If he didn't have
what's this? There's that · I think I'll pass on the
Jim
a 10, what was he betting
boat I want for sale on boat.
Mullen
on? The flop was king, 9, 3
Traig's List. .- I wonder if I
"Don' t make me come up
- giving me two pair. The ·
can afford it? It sounds nice, there."
turn card was . no help to
but buying something from
"Is that you?"
anyone, ·a 6. I bet the two ·
"No, it's local cat tiurglar.
·a classified ad on the
pair, the others called. They What did we do . before lnternet 0 That's scary. Can I - The one who runs the vacudidn' t raise. If one them t1ad Google0 My dictionary and trust thein? Can you. trust um cleaner before he robs
caught a straight, why didn't encyclopedia and books of any of them?
you. Idiot." ·
he raise? The highest possi- quote.s sit on the shelf gath1 always wondered what
The more I think about it,
ble hand I could have would ering dust: Look up a word , classified ads would sound having an office at ·home
be three kings. Am 1 being tn the diCtiOnary? You mean like if the people writing may have been a bad idea.
suckered here?
actually get up and walk them were perfectly honest. There are just too many disSue calls up from down- . over to the bookshelf, pick
"Miodle-aged;
out-of- tractions: 1 can't get anystairs.
up that btg hulk of a thtng shape man with pot belly thing done. I'm not saying
"The lawn isn't going to and waste my prectous lime and comb-over seeks beauti- it's Sue's fault. I'm saying '
mqw itself. you know." I hit 01ppmg pages 0 When tt's so · ful , big-busted woman he - wait a minute, let me
the save button and the much faster to do things on can cheat on his wife with ." check my e-mail. Here's a
poker game disappears from a computer'!
"Unemployed, deadbeat good one. It wants to laiow
my computer screen.
"I'm still waiting," Sue dad saw you at Casey's bar if I suffer from CAADD,
I have got to stop wasting yells up. Whoops'
last Tuesday. You : Knocking Computer Aided Altention
time playing with the comDtd . I JUSt waste. another back teyuila shooters with Deficit Disorder.
puter and get to work. It's 45 mtnutes surfmg the an twerweight, grey-haired
I guess we can throw that
such a distraction. What I 'Net? Ye~h , but it's not like Hell's Angel. Me: Losing at into the junk mail folder and
need to do is just think . I was dotng ~omethmg use- pool and then getting in get back to the poker game.
Stick to the task at hand. less. hke watchtng soap fight with bartender."
I say this guy is bluffing
Stories don ' t just write operas all oay. I'~ inv&lt;;Jived.
"Finally admitting I was aboui having a straight. Yes,
themselves, you know. But I am connected . I m wtred . I wrong about _that Y2K he was. He had trip threes.
first I' II take a quick look at know what's happening in thing. Selling generator, 40
(}im Mullen is the author
Google News for a few India and Japan . I can get cases of groats, tons of dried of "It Take.- a Village /dim:
minutes to see if there's an the crtcket scores from milk, lots of Pampers."
Cnmplicating the Simple
idea there. No, there isn' t. Australta.lhe weather report
"Gas hog of a car with Life" and " Baby :, First
Maybe I'll Google myself. for Vladivostok. I know transmission about to go. Tattoo." You can reach him
No, that's too depressing. what the new slang words Will probably develop a at jim_mul/en@mywarcom)

a

Safety

from Page /!.1

-Gamet Roush

Beth Sergent;photo

Pomeroy Police Chief Mark E. Proffitt (left) and Pomeroy
Assistant Chief Joe Kirby, Jr. along with the staff of the police
department are. reminding everyone to have a happy and safe
Halloween by following safety tips such as never trick·Or·treat
alone and check all treats before eating. ·

covery . in the house. Several
copies of · the Saturday
Evening Post and an old
1920's newspaper were di'from PageA1
covered under the Hoorboards.
the
After
contacting
Williams and his wife. Jen.
Blennerhassel
Historical
operated ·a boardfng house
from the largest of the three. Society in Parkersburg.
providing lodging and home- W.Va. for advice, the Parson s
spent the better part of a day
POMEROY -A foreclosure action was tiled in Meigs cooked meals to men who carefully cleaning the canvas ·
County Common Pleas Court by Irene M. Dill. Racine. began buildi~g old Lock 20 with a cotton swab and ·rubjust upriver from Reedsville
against Mary Jo Wolfe, Pomeroy, and others.
in 1911, as well as the sales- bing alcohoL Slowly, the canmen, or "drummers" who vis- vas began revealing an
ited the two stores then locat- impressionist-style portrait of
ed across the "main road" a somber woman. bearing the
POMEROY - David R. "Richie" Long, was sentenced to a from the boarding house.
signature of "Jenkins" and
year in prison · in Meigs County Common Pleas Court on a
It was in the dusty attic of the year, 1939.
charge of attempted aggravated assault, a fifth -degree felony. this seven-bedroom boarding
When the Parsons took the
Long and co-defendants were ordered to pay $10,582.80. in house, while work.ing on its portrait to their neighbor, Ruth
restitution to the victim.
restoration, that Merle found Ann Balderson. a Williams
Terry S. Browning was sentenced to two I8-month sen- the painting, almost unrecog- before her marriage and a
tences on counts of gross sexual imposition, fourth-degree nizable because of the years of great-niece to the home's
felonies. He was given credit for 28 days served.
dirt and grime that coyered it. builder, she first identified the
Browning is also required, upon release, to register as a ~ex­ It was not the first surprise dis- portrait as the Williams' .
ually-oriented offender.

Foreclosure

Sentenced

Dissolutions
POMEROY - Dissolutions were granted in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court to Clifford S. Thomas and Michelle D.
Thomas and to Brenda Kae Ncutzling and Michael A.
Neutzling.

Divorces
POMEROY - Divorces were granted in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court to Janet E. Latta from .Jeffrey A. Latta.
and Brenda Kay Wooten from Daniel Greg Wooten.

Merchants
l

from PageA1

by
the
Merchants
Association as a kickoff to
holiday festivities .
· To further enhance the
walk about town, merchants
will feature window displays

of pictures and articles telling
al)out their buildings . and
businesses. Special interest
photos will also be included
in the displays.
The walk will commence at
Trinity Church at 2 p.m.
While there is no charge
donations will be accepted
for continuation of downtown beautification projects.

· ~p111a

C:A,PIT, I~O.NT CA&amp;PIT, ,
ftACitLHI ~UPIT, ltiA8- CAD1!1rLEVIt
L~Ot COf~T ••• ICULJI.!U&amp;ID. CUPt:r.
f .

•

•..

1

~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . lutill&amp;viN

.· '

•

r ' · 1" •

.w·.!. pet.

· : , • :·

catJ~.. Oi:·ac.t Ia.· ··
We'Uu. . te)oarll•lli•lllid.....-e

/

Abbott, Wendy Blackwood,
LaDonna Stewart, Carrie ·
Ann
Wood,
Elizabeth
Yeager, and Beverly Davis.
The resignation of Jesse Vail
as eighth grade football
coach effective at the end of
the season was accepted by
the board.
Attending the meeting
were Buckley, Rhonemus.
and board members, Scott
Walton,
Victor
Young,
Norman Humphreys, Ron
Logan, and Roger Abbott .

Issue II

For the Record .

Have you finished your homework yet?

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

·IRS says thousands of taxpayers due $73 million in unclaimed refunds . ·

Portrait

llo•l

.LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Wednesday, October 26,

r.r .............tloll. ......

'

.

granddaughter, Anna Lois
Kibble, but then realized, by
the date in the comer, that the
portrait must have been that of
mother, · Edythe
Anna ·s
Williams Kibble.
· Anna Lois Everly. now
who now makes her home in
Nashville, Tenn .. identified
the portrait during a visit with
the
Parsons
and
her
Reedsville · relatives last
weekend, and was touched
when the Parsons .gave the
portrait to her.
.
But while the portrait is
now "back home" with the
Kibble family. its di scovery

projects from · counties in the
district are ranked again and
sent to the state for selection.
Middleport's
$237,037
paving project, which includes
various streets and alleys in
the village, entered the countylevel ranking ptoject wjth the
highest score, 405 points.
According to Commissioner
Jim Sheets, the village's application benefitted from the village's high debt, which qualifies the project for additional
points. The county paving project was second. with 374
points. the proposed replacement of a bridge on Mal loon's
Run Road in ·salem Township,
a $185.,000 project. ranked
third, with 355 points. A
$248,000 paving and water
line extension project submitted by the Village of Pomeroy
had 345 points going into the
county-level evaluation.
In the past, projects with at
least 3Rfl points have received
ultimate funding, Sheets said.
The county's first-priority
project, which involves
paving of several county
roads and streets in the community of Tuppers Plains, is
estimated to cost $579,668.
raises questions: Did Edythe
Williams Kibble pose for the
portrait. or was it painted
from a photograph? Who is
the artist. Jenkins'' Was he a
boarder at the Wi II iams house
when Edythe was growing
up? How did it come to be
lost in the dusty attic of the
ramjlling house?
It is likely that Anna Lois
Everly and Merle and Gail
Parsons will never know the
answers to the many ques- .
tions the discovery poses, but
for 81 year-old Everly. its
discovery and return to her
family is treasure enough.

-------~

'1he .Me4fs County Chamber
of Commerce
cordially invites you to the
J\nnual &lt;:Recognition 'Dinner
'luesday. ':November 1St, 200 '5
Social 61J&gt;...M 'Dinner 6:30 IJ&gt; ..M
suest Spealter
Ohio 'University ']&gt;resident
'Dr. ~oderick .Mc'Dauis
.Middleport Church of Christ
Jamily ..cife Center
'J&gt;ublic !Js 'Welcome 'lo J\ttend
'licltets J\ uailable at the
Chamber Office
2 38 'West vltain St.. IJ&gt;omeroy. O'll
'ltelp &lt;lJs Celebrate I') }!ears .
of
'1he ..lteigs County Chamber of
Commerce
Limited Lick£ts are available $Z'iOO per person.

�LOCAL • STATE

The Daily Sentinel

Meigs County Court News
POMEROY
- Meigs tion, no O.L; Robert E. Lee.
County Court Judge Steven Middkport. $200. 30 days in
L. Story recently processed jail, 27 suspended, probation,
no O.L.; Thomas B. Lester,
the followin~ cases:
Thomas E~ BaiL Pomeroy, Mas011, W.Va., $20 and costs,
$20 anu costs. st9p sign: improper passing; Summer D.
Christie
A.
Barcus, Lopez, Portland. $200 and
Middleport , $30 and . costs. costs. 30 days in jail, suspendspeeding; Roger D. Barnhart, ed, probation,
wrongful
Williamston, W.Va., $30 and entrustment; George C.
costs, speeding, $30 and costs, MacDonald, Reedsville, $30,
seat bell violation; John T. · seat belt violation; $50, use of
lkadnell, Norfolk, Va.. $30 unauthorized plates, $25, trafand costs, spee.ding; Craig A. fie cont. dev. /.signs.
Belcher, Middleport, $20 and
Joseph A. Manfanello ,
costs, tratlic cont. dev. I signs; Pittsburgh. Pa., $30 and costs,
B.
Benford. speeding; Jerry C. Matthew,
Adam
Ravenswood, W.Va., $10 and Gallipolis, $30 and costs, seat
costs. littering; Menifee E. belt violation; Herbert M.
Blevins, Racine. $30 . and Mcintyre, Racine, $270 and
overload;
Curtis
costs, littering; Melissa E. &lt;:osts,
Booker, Pickerington, $50 Mitchell. Jersey City, N.J.,
and costs, specdi ng; Thaddeus $30 and costs, seat belt violaR. Bumgardner, Athens, $20 tion; Christopher A Myers,
and costs, assured clear dis· Pomeroy, $30 and costs,
tance; Kelli H. Capobianco. speedinr; Greg P. Myers, '
Wilmington, N.C., $30 and Little Hocking, $30 and costs,
costs, · speeding; David A. speeding; Robert Northup,
Chrisman. Smoot. W.Va .. $50 Pomeroy, $20 and costs, fatl and costs, speeding; James P. ure to control; Tony A Nutter,
Clifford, Long Bottom, $30 Canton, $30 and costs, seat
and costs, speeding; Lori K. belt violation; Austin D. Orr,
Coen, Gallipolis, $30 and Huntington, W.Va., $20 and
costs, seat bell violation: costs, improper passing; Jodi
Justin S. Collins, Rutland, $20 M. Pollock, Apex; N.C., $30
and costs. equipment misuse; and costs, speeding; Misty K.
Derrick
J.
Cooper, Porter, Racine, $20 and costs,
Rockbridge, $30 and costs, right-of-way I public highspeeding; Ryan M. Covey, way; Jared L. Ridenour,
Columbus. $50 and costs, Fleming, $30 and costs, seat
speeding; Austin B. Cross, belt violation ; Krisa A Riley,
Reedsville, $30 and wsts, seat Franklin Furnace, $50 and
bell violation; James G. costs, speeding; Randal B.
Davis, Beckley, W.Va., $30 Roll, Zanesville, $30 and ·
and costs, speeding; Robert A. costs, speeding; Lawrence E.
Davis, Nelsonville, $30 and Rose, Racine, $200, 30 days
.costs, speeding; Michael L. in jail, 27 suspended, probaDempsey. Erie. Pa., $30 and tion. driving under fra. susp.;
costs, speeding.
Phoebe E. Roy, Johnson City,
Lauren R. Dulay. Fairview Ind., $30 and costs, speeding;
Park, $100 and costs. dwg Jay C. Ruffing, j\1arietta, $30
abuse. $30 and costs, seat belt and costs, speeding; Danny L
violation; Brian E. Dtl1'ham, Sams, Stewart, $20 and costs,
Racine. $30 and costs. seat traffic cont. dev. signs;
belt violation, $20 and costs, Branden W. Sexton, Oak Hill,
left of center; Kevin ·A. $30. seat belt violation.
Ebright. Pickerington , $30
Frank A. Shamblin, Racine,
and costs, speeding; Drew E. $30 and costs, seat belt violaEggleston, Logan, $75 and tion; Anna L. Smith, Athens,
costs. probation, speeding, $30 and costs, · speeding;
$200 and costs, 30 days in jail, Johnlhan L. Smith, Pomeroy,
suspended, probation, no . $30, seat belt violation; Sonia
O.L.; Caleb
Z.
Ellis, S. Stone, Pomeroy, $30 and
Middleport, $30 and costs; costs, seat belt violation; john
seat belt violation; Nellie M. D. Sturgeon, Pomeroy, $350,
Esque. Mason, $30 and costs, 30 days in jail, 27 suspended,
seeding; Russell Fitzpatrick, probation, DUI , $200, 30
Rutland, $200. 30 days in jail, days in jail, 27 suspended,
27 suspended, probation , no probation, driv ing under susp.
OL; Annie L. Frank, Poland, I revoc .. $25, probation, left
$30 and costs, speeding; of center; Travis L. Swartz,
Rayma L George, Memphis, Gallipolis. $20 and costs, faiiTenn., $30 and costs, speed- ure to control; Mariann
ing; Randy L. Gerber, Swords, Pickerington, $30
Columbus, $350 and costs, 60 and costs, speeding; James D.
days in jail, 57 suspended, Thomas, Elizabeth, W.Va.,
probation, DUI , $150 and $20 and costs, assured dear
costs, 30 days in jail, suspend- distance;
Michael · T.
ed, probation, driving under Thompson, Jacksonville, Fla.,
fra. suspension; Richard L $50 and costs, speeding;
Grady, Pomeroy, $75, drug Sarah E. Underwood, St.
abuse; Walter J. Haggy, Clairsville, $30 and costs,
Rutland, $30 and costs, speed- seat belt violation: Benjamin
· ing: Alex M. .Hall, Ripley, F. Upton. Reedsville, $30 and
W.Va., $30 and costs, speed- • costs, seat belt violation;
ing; Jackie R Hall, Hamden, Leonard
L.
Vanmeter,
$30 and· costs. seat belt viola- Pomeroy, $500 and costs, drition; John D. Hill, Pomeroy, ving under influence; Todd S.
:$30 and.costs, speeding.
Varney, Long Bottom, $30
Angela E. Hughes. Eleanor, and costs, seat belt violation:
W.Va., $30 and costs. speed- . Jame~ I. Walker, Millfield,
: ing; Jason L. Hughes, Apple $20 and costs, left of center:
'Grove, W.Va .. $30 and costs, James L. Watkins, Newark,
; speeding; Steven M. James, $30 and costs, speeding;
· Racine, $30 and costs, seat Phillip S. · Weakley. Lewis
belt violation; Dallas Jarrel, Center, $30 and costs, speed: Racine, $30 and cosis, seat ing; Winton L. Westberry,
;belt violation; Greg E. Jeffries, Chillicothe, S30 and costs,
·Coolville, $200, 30 days in speeding; Carl J. White,
'jail, 27 suspended. probation, Sheperdsville, Ky., $30 and
;driving under susp./revoc.: costs, speeding; Natalie Y.
·Curtis L. Jeffers, Pomeroy, Williams, Athens, $30 and
:$20andcosts: trafticcont. dev. costs, speeding; · William
:1 signs; 'Michael D. Johnson, Wireman, Wellston, $20 and
· Racine, $20 and costs, traflic costs. no hut. sticker; Jason
cont. dev./signs; Tiffany B. M. Wittig , Pomeroy, $200, 30
Johnson, Elkview. W.Va., $30 days in jail, 27 suspended,
and costs, speeding; Kelly T. probation, driving under fra.
.Johnston. Langsville, $2() and susp.,$30, probation, seat belt
·costs, failure to control ~ James violation; Jesse J. Wood,
:E. Kennedy, Pomeroy. $50, Pomeroy. $200 and costs. 30
:dri•g abuse; Vincent M. King, days in jail, 27 S!JSpended,
:Pomeroy. $200, 30 days in jail, . proration, driving under susp.
·27 suspended, probation, dri· I revoc. ; Troy M. Yankums,
: ving under susp. I revoc.; Pomeroy, $75, disorderly
:Samantha
D.
Lambert, while intoxicated; Daniel B.
;Thurman,. $100, 10 days in Zacks. Columbus, $100 and
:jail, seven suspended, proba- costs, no O.L.
·

~r..t~el~ IK. \)~lil~

\Qii\l!~~R~g£\Oll
•1\t·upu ~hll'\:

.W ednesday, October 26,

.

AP

tion, is expected to slash jobs
&lt;md wages and close many of
its 31 U.S. plants as part of its
reorganization.

About 13,000 of Delphi's
50.000 U.S. worker~ are in
Ohio. In addition to the 6,000
in the Dayton area, there are

DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY,
AT A NEW LOW PRICE

'?

·\ .. • ...J . Hey

NewTonk

IMPUCH BUSH

SAY
.NO
TO

WAR

Health officials: Southeast Asian poultry
farms first line of defense against flu pandemic
Bv BETH DUFF-BROWN

~

OTTAWA Mexico's
health minister urged wealthy
nations to help provide flu
drugs to · the developing
world, saying Tuesday that
the divide between the rich
.. and the· poor would be catastrophic in the event of a
global bird flu pandemic.
"I think the ethical, the
political, the future security
Implications of the situation
where only the wealthy countries have access to vaccines
and drugs would be unimaginable," Julio Frenk told The
. Associated Press on the sidelines of a conference to prepare for a global flu pandemIC.' ··u .would ·be as harmfuL
· or even more harmful, than
the pandemic itself.' '
Frenk, attending the twoday conference with 30
health ministers and the
heads of the World Health
Organization and the U.N .
Food
and
Agriculture
Organization , put forward a
proposal to devote a percentage of antivirals and future
vaccines for dev eloping
nations. While earlier reports
had said he would wggest I0

5, I00 in Warren, I, I00 in
Sandusky and 850 in
Columbus.
In Dayton, there are I ,600
brake workers and 640 at a
plant that produces engine
mounts and ball joints. In
Kettering ,' I ,000 worke·rs
produce struts and suspen·
sions; in Moraine , I ,000
workers make compressors; .
and in Vandalia, 200 workers produce air , bags and
door panels.
After arriving at the union·
hall, the group was addressed
by union leaders and govern·
ment officials, including
Dayton Mayor Rhine McLin.
· " We've lost a lot of jobs in
the Dayton area, and it's time
to stand up for our jobs," said
De.lphi
worker
Tony
Henderson, 53, of Dayton.
"I'm not a person who likes a
lot of trinkets and things, but
we're not going to be able to
survive.''

'\
·.
.f

f

N:lllL) BrmJc ri.:k_ RN
Jill

Ravenswood, WV

•

I

B LI~c.! .

Mana~cr

the technique of maki Ill) it.
not the geographical origm.
"Our efforts have been
crowned . by success. The
European Court issued a his·
toric decision, declaring finally
and irrevocably that the feta is
not for comm·on usage and is
exclusively Greek," a jubilant
Greek Agriculture Minister
Evangelos Basiakos said.
Danish producers were out·
raged.
. "The ruling is grotesque and
political," said Hans Bender

of the Danish Dairy Board.
"W\lat will be next? Will the
Italians demand thai pizza
become a protected r.roduct
.that no one can make?'
.
Name changes, though,
will be inevitable.
"Our feta production will
continue. However, we will
sell under other names," said
Astrid Gacte Nielsen, spokeswoman for Aria Foods, a
Danish company that produces 25,000 tons of the
cheese a year.

,._,, Mike ,,..,..,
I Re/lllt:lllf £11• t:hlllt:b
lnrtlts JIIU to their
llnnuaiBIII'fl•t ClllebratiDII
"No

Costumes
Please

Friday October 28th
· 6:30-9:00 pm
· At Rejoicing Life Church
Middleport, OH
'Games

Lithotripsy uses the technique of
locused shock waves to lragment astone.

Please support our TB 'Levy
with a "YES" vote on
November 8th
Carol L111 lc. Onkc

people to prepare, not to
Bv RAF CASERT
pamc," Leavitt said. "What
ASSOCIATED
PRESS WRITER
we do know is that there will
likely be another pandemic;
BRUSSELS, Belgium ~
whether the H5N I virus will
The
European Union's highbe the spark that establishes
that is unknown to us. Our est court finally settled the
objective is to prepare for the fate of feta cheese on
Tuesday, decreeing it a tradishort and long term."
Bird flu has swept tional Greek product deservthrough poultry populations ing protection throughout the
across Asia sin~e 2003, 25-nation blocin a ruling that
re sulting in the deaths or went against other European
destruction of 140 million · producers.
Germany and Denmark,
chickens and ducks.
by France and
backed
Sixty-two people have died
in Southeast Asia from avian Britain, had challenged the
tlu, mostly in Vietnam and designation of origin for the
Thailand. Though human salty, crumbly cheese and
cases have been linked to turned it into a gastronomic
contact with sick birds, fight lasting almost two
experts fear the virus could decades and involving lobby·
the · Et1ropean
mutate into a form that is ists,
easily transmitted from per- Commission and. finally, the
son to person, possibly caus- European Cotut of JLISti ce.
"The court uphold s the
ing a pandemi.c that could
name 'feta' as a protected
kill millions.
Dr. Lee Jong-wook., direc- designation of origi n for
tor g~ neral of the World Greece," the Luxembourg·
Health Organization, said based court said in its ruling.
Danish and German pro·
early detection. containment
and compensation for the ducers had hoped to be ab le
impoverished poultry farm- to continue producing such
ers who reveal their cases of cheese and call it feta to
bird tlu were crucial compo- maintain the r.roduct's mar·
nents to preventing a global kctability. They argued that
what m:(de !'eta -specific was
pandemic.

option for patients suHering_from kidney stones.

The Meigs County TB Clin.tc
operates on its own Levy????

~

EU;s top court gives Greece exclusive
rights to market feta cheese

Pleasant Valley Hospital offers a lithotripsy

t~e

\.. • .) And Did you Know;..

20 )f'S cx~ricn.:t

percent, Frenk said he did not
present a specific figure.
Ministers hedged any commitment, however, to set
aside antivirals or future vaccines and said the World
Health Organization should
be the repository of any pandemic drugs. They added that
the industrialized nations
were workin~ on a plan to
assist WHO m the case of a
pandemic and deploy to
developing nations to help
them contain any outbr~aks.
"There was an alternative
approach that we discussed as
w.ell, that WHO should be the
first line for defense," said
Canada 's Health Minister
Uijal Dosanjh. "We should
come to terms on a protocol
among those countries that
can help. have the assets to
deploy in a very strategic
fashion fo contain the virus if
and when it starts."
U.S. Secretary of Health
and Human Services Mike
Leavitt said it was crucial
that the public no·t panic , but
educate itself about a potential bird flu pandemic.
"Our jobs . as mit1isters of
health secretaries is to lind
the balance between informing and intlaming. to inspire

command spokesman Lt.
Col. Steve Boylan said media
attention on the 2.000 figure
was n1isguided and "set by
individuals or groups with
specific agendas and ulterior
motives."
He descriped the grim statistic as an "artificial mark on
the wall" and · urged news
organizations to focus more
on the accomplishments of the
U.S. militaty mission in Iraq.
For example, Iraqi officials
an~ounced Tuesday that voters had approved a new constitution in the Oct. 15 referendum, laying the foundation
for constitutional, democratic
Iraqi
government
after
decades of Saddam's tyranny.
"I ask that when you report
on the events, take a moment
to think about the effects on
the families and those serv·
ing in Iraq," Boylan wrote.
"The 2,000 service members
killed in Iraq supporting
Operation Iraqi Freedom is
not a milestone."
&gt; Boylan said the 2,000th service member to die in Iraq "is
just as important as the tirst
that died and will be just as
important as the last to die in
this war against terrorism and
to ensure freedom for a people
who have ndt known freedom
in over two generations."
H~ complained that the true
milestones of the war were
"rarely covered or discussed." including the troops
who had volunteered to
serve. the families of those
that have been deployed for a
year or more. and the Iraqis
who have sought at great risk
to restore normalcy to their
COUntry.
I
··'Celebrate the daily milestones, the accomplishments
they have secured and look to
the future of a free and democratic Iraq and to the day that
all of our troops return home
to the heroes welcome they
deserve," Boylan wrote.

'.

Did you .know...

It's almost. #me_ to go to
polls again on
November 8th!!!!!!!/l,

ln8ur.un·~

nSt

BAGHDAD, Iraq - The
American military death toll
in the Iraq war reached 2,000
Tuesday with the announce.ments of three more deaths,
including an Army sergeant ·
who died of wounds at a military hospital in Texas and
two Marines killed last week
in fighting west of Baghdad.
The 2,000 mark was reached
amid growing doubts among .
the Am~rican public about the
Iraq contlict, launched in
March 2003 to destroy
Saddam Hussein 's alleged
weapons of mass destmction.
None was ever found.
.•
. In !Vashi1igton, the U.S.
Senate obsei'Ved a moment of
silence in honor of the fallen
2,000. "We owe them. a deep
debt of gratitude for their
courage, for their valor, for.
their strength, for their commitment to our country," said
Republican Majority Leader
l"
'
Bill Frist.
t
"
Critics of the war also
acknowledged the sacrifice,
even as they questioned .the
policies of those who lead it.
"Our armed forces are serving ably in Iraq under enormously difficult circumstances, and the policy of our
government must be worthy
AP Photo
of
their
sacrifice. People protest the war in Iraq on Tuesday on a downtown corner in Nashville, Tenn. Demonstrators gathered during rush hour
Unfortunately, it is not, and after news came out that the U.S. death toll for the war in Iraq reached 2,000.
the American peOple know it,"
said Sen. Edward Kennedy, ask more ·questions about Otlicers Wives' luncheon in Alexander Jr., 34, of Killeen, Associated Press.
what the future holds in Washington·.
Texas. died Saturday in San
the Massachusetts Democrat.
It was unclear who was the
Sen. Robert Byrd, a veteran Iraq," Byrd said.
As a sign of those chal - Antonio of wounds suffered 2,000th service member to
We st · President Bush warned the lenges, ·one of Iraq's most Oct. 17 in a blast in Samarra, die in Iraq since the U.S. mil·
Democrat
from
Virginia, said · Americans U.S. public to brace for more ruthless terror groups - al · a· city 60 miles north of the itary often delays dealh
should expect . " many more casualties in the fight agaiflst Qaida in fray - claimed Iraqi capital.
announcements until families
"as bmtal an enemy as we responsibility for Monday' s
· ·losses to come ."
Earlier Tuesday. the U.S. are notified. On Monday. for ·
. "More than 135,000 U.S . . have ever faced, uncon- suicide attacks against hotels mi litary announced the example, the U.S. command
troops remain in Iraq. They strained by any notion 'of housing Western journalists deaths of two unidentified announced that an unidenti·
·did not ask to be sent to war, common humanity and by the and contractors in Baghdad, Marines in lighting last week fied Marine was killed in
btH each day, they carry out rules of warfare ."
as well as suicide bombings in a village 25 miles west of action the day before - atler
" No one should underesti- Tuesday in northern Iraq.
their duty while risking their
Baghdad. Those announce- the deaths of the three service
Jives. It. is only reasonable mate the ditliculties ahead,"·
In the latest casualty ments brought the U.S. death members reported Tuesday.
that the American people, and Bush said in a speech Tuesday reports, the Pentagon said toll to 2,000, according to
In an e·mail statement to
their elected representatives, before the Joint Armed For~es Staff Sgt.
George
T. figures compiled by The Baghdad·based journalists.

Delphi workers march, rally to save plants

lavenswoad
Chiropractic Ctnter
316 Washln

Bv ROBERT H: REID

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Delphi Corp, workers and supporters gather at the Vietnam
Veterans Memorial in Dayton Tuesday before a march to rally
support for their concerns with Delphi and the future of
Dayton. Delphi, which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protec·
tion this month, employs about 6,000 workers in the area. The
auto, suppler, being squeezed by foreign competition, is
expected to slash jobs and wages and close many of its 31
U.S. ·plants as part of its reorganization'.

Wednesday, October 26,2005

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS- The light
hair on the frozen body of a
World War l1 airman gives
Jeanne Pyle hope that the
well~preserved
remains ·
found this month in a Sierra
Nevada glacier belong to
her brother.
Pyle, 85, remembers her
brother. Cadet Ernest Munn,
of St. Clairsville, Ohio, as a
handsome, 6-foot-4 man with
blond hair and blue eyes. He
was among four airmen who
died when their nav.igational
training plane crashed in
November 1942. None of the
members· of that !light · were
ever found.
Confirmation that the body
is her brother would end a
painful mystery that has lasted 63 years, said Pyle, who
still lives near St. Clairsville
AP Photo
about II 0 miles east of
. Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command service members carry the flag·draped coffin containing
Columbus.
''lt would be exciting. in a the remains of an un identified World War II airman into the forensics lab at Hickam Airforce
sad way," said Pyle, who . Base in Honolulu, where they wi ll attempt to identify the airman Monday. The body in an Army
recalled last seeing her broth- uniform was discovered earlier this nionth mostly encased in a glacier in Kings Canyon National
since last week at the coroner's office in Fresno County, Calif.
er at a party on his 21st birth- Park. It had been thawing
.
'
day, days before he enlisted
muscle, as well as the man's. family on a small farm near ing his decision," said Pyle,
in the Army. ."We've been
sun-bleached
hair and his St. Clairsville, across the Ohio who keeps lett~rs from her
living with an empty feelirig
green uniform.
River from Wheeling, W.Va.
brother boxed up in her
for so long. It would be nice
A
search
team
also
recovgarage.
"It
meant
so
much
to
us
to
"He died doing what
to finally resolve this."
small
notebook.
have
an
older
brother,"
said
he
wanted
to do."
ered
a
pen,
But for now, Pyle is still in
The youngest sister, 81the dark. No one trom the comb and coins from inside Sarah Zeyer. 83. the middle
the
airm~n's
Army
uniform.
year-old
Lois Shriver, lives in
the
family
who
daughter
of
U.S. military has contacted
A
badly
corroded
name
also lives ,in the St. Clairsville Pittsburgh. Pyle said.
the family, and all she knows
badge
·
on
the
uniform
also
area.
Zeyer described her
Also on board his plane
about the frozen airman is
will
be
examined.
brotl1er
as
a
man
with
an
were
pilot 2nd Lt. William A.
what she's seen on TV and
Military
officials
said
the
engaging personality who Gamber, 23. of Fayette, Ohio,
read in new·spapers.
identification
process
would
had a girlfriend from and aviation Cadets John
Mountain climbers found
of
weeks.
take
a
minimum
Wheeling
whom he wanted Mortenson, 25, of Moscow,
the airman's head and arm
Idaho; and Leo M. Mustonen,
jutting out of the solid ice of possibly months. They also to marry someday.
cautioned
that
the
·
airman
Pyle,
the
oldest
sister.
said
22,
of Brainerd, Minn.
the receding gla~ier · in
all
and
might
not
be
blond
at
brother's
death
was
hard
her
Ed
Gamber said he knew
California's Kings Canyon
National Park on Oct. 16. that his hair could have been on the whole family, but very little about .the young
esp~cially their moth-cr. who pilot who was his father's
The body was tlown Monday discolored by the sun.
is
her
brother,
rode a train to Sacramento, wusin. Everyone else has
If
the
.
a
irman
to Hickam Air Force Base on
Oahu, Hawaii, where it is Pyle said the Mt1nn family Calif., to attend a memorial passed away, said Gamber,
being examined at the Joint would like the military to fly service after military person- . who lives in Wauseon in
POW-MIA
Accounting his body back to Ohio for nel suspended a search for northwest Ohio.
the crew in 1942.
Command, which identifies burial in a family plot.
He remembered that his
Munn, who would have
Munn worked at an invest· father told him about the trainthe remains of lost soldiers.
Forensic anthropologists been 87 now. was the oldest ment firm in Wheeling before ing accident but little else.
there said they have a lot to child of Jowph and Sadie enlisling.
Associated Press writer
work with. The ice pre" Munn. The couple also had
"I don 't remember any- John Seewer in Toledo conserved the body's skin and three daughters and raised the body , in the t'amily question- tributed to thi&gt; report.

DAYTON (AP)- Fueled
by a fear of plant-closings,
about 70 Delphi Corp. workers, union leaders and city
officials marched and rallied
Tuesday to voice the economic importance of the
Delphi plants to the area.
Led by a police escort and
honor guard, the sign-carrying group marched 1.5 miles
from a park to a rally at the
.union hall · of United Auto
Workers Local 696.
"This is our future," said
Wayne Johnson, a 49-yearold suburban Trotwood man
who has worked at Delphi
for 30 years . "We're an
industrial city, and without
an industrial base, we .can't
survive."
Delphi, which filed for
Chapter II bankruptcy, protection this month, employs
about 6,000 workers in the
area. The auto suppl.er, being
squeezed by foreign competi-

AROUND THE WORLD

PageA7

U.S. MRITARY DEATH TOLL IN IRAQ REACHES 2,000

Bv MATT LEINGANG

Chirtlpl".tctor of the year J 9',18.
v.r W\' Chirt,l'lK'Iic Socicly
Mtn1~r of Arncri~l Boord of

304-273-5321

The Daily Sentinel

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

• .S.arutd:ll) Dpp! .

~·.

2005

SISTERS OF MISSING WWII AIRMAN.
HOPE FROZEN BODY IS 1HEIR BROTHER

Mtmlx.'r ri American Acatk-m}·
of MediW~I Acupmellll't

Auto Accidenls Workers'
Compensation
• Spons Injuries
• ~1~tca.rc
· • MU\1

PageA6

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

Pa id fur by ·Meigs Coum y
Tubcrulu~i~

le vy Comminee

Clerk

2520 Vallel' Drive •Point Pleasant, WV • 304-675-4340
,i

...

••

j

""' ' "

....

'Food

�Page AS

COMMUNO'Y

The Daily Sentinel

M.1naging Your Weight

'-

&gt;\.,

r

· Harrtsonvllle/P.,eyllll
I

f
I

'"

Wednesday, October 26,2005

observed from 6 to 7 p.m. on Thursday

in Rutland.
.

·

·wOR_ JID

•

,

"

, Middleport

WOLFE PEN- Wolfe Pen commu-"
trick-or-treat
"MIDDLEPORT "-Tri~k;or-tteai~ ~ ·· nity 'will : have
Middleport will be held from 6 to 7 , at ~ . P·!D· on Thursday. Thos_e
p.m. on Thursday.
,parttctpatmg should turn on thetr
. . · porch lights.

•

,J

Pomeroy
.

'

"

'

Submitted photo

Barbara Nakanishi, O'Bieness' registered dietitian, will present a program about the importance of weight management in keeping heart healthy at HEARTiest, an event sponsored by
O'Bieness this Saturday from 9 a.m. to noon.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio high school football standings, Page 82
!\;lara dead ~t 89, Page 83
BCS a puzzle, Page 83
ML8 lacking diversity, Page 88

'

HARRISONVILLE ...1. Trick-or, treat will be obser,ved from 6. to 7 p.m.
Syracuse
on· ·-Thursday ·m Pagevllle and
Harrisonville. The fire sire~ will.sound
SYRACUSE _ Trick-or-treat will
to start · ~nd t:nd tnck-or-treat. be observed -from 6 to 7 p.m. on
Costumes will bej~ge~ and re~~~~- Thursday in. Syracuse.
, me)lts held at the: fn-e station after tn:c~ , · .· ·
, .
.
or treat.
·
•
·
· ·
lfe P

I

.

2005

Triok-er::treat schedules
for ·Melgl County

"'

R!Cucc Your Ri;ktor Heart Discas(bJ

Wednesday, OCtober 26,

INSIDE

Racine

POMEROY- Trick-or-treat will be
observed from 6 to 7 p.m. on Thursday , RACINE - Trick-or-treat will be
·in Pomeroy.
. .
r .
·
Qbset'v~d from 6 to, 7 p.m. on Oct. 31:
'
The fire siren will soul)d to start and
'

.'

CNP Sci: et:JuiE
GALLIPOLIS- A schedule of upcoming College
and high school vafsity 6port1ng events invot11ing

teams from Gallla. Meigs and Mascn counties.

Wadnuday'l MfDH

College Socc&lt;lr
Shawnee State vs. Rio Grande (at Alumni
StadiLm, Jackson), 7 p.m.
Women's College Soccer
Rio Grande at Trffin, 3 p.m.
Ihu!'ldly'l Qlmtl

Tournament Volleyball
•
Eastern vs. Clay (at Wellston High School),
6p.m
. College Volleyball
Mt. Vernon Nazarene at AiO Grande, 1 p.m.

Frldly'• gamn
Football

Gallia Academy at Marietta
South Gallia at Sciotoville
Chesapeake at River Valley.
Meigs at Belpre ·
Herbert Hoover at Point Pleasant

Parkersbi.Jrg CathoHc ai Wahama
Hanna!) at Big Creek
College Croos COuntry
Aio Grande Home M~. 4:30p.m.

Redwomen are winless in AMC no more
BY MARK WILLIAMS

~

Rio

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

------ Volleyball-~

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
Redwomen
volleyball
team have won two
straight matches for the
first time this season as
they defeated Shawnee
State Tuesday night at the
Newt Oliver Arena in
come-from-behind fashion, 22-30, 30-24, 16-30.
30-24 and 16-14.
With the win, Rio

Grande
(7-23.
1-12
AMCS) co ll ect s its ' first
conference victory of the
season.
The Redwomen received
a hu ge ni ght from th ei r
fro ntline as all three hitters
up front notch ed double
figures in kill s. Senior outside
hitter
Lynnette
Kiesling led the offensive
attack for Rio with 23

2005 World Series -

kills. Freshman middle hitter Jess.ica Rodgers added
19 kills and junior out side
hitter Lindsay Urton tal lied 12 kills.
Freshman
Amanda
Stevens paced the defense
with 38 digs. Sophomore
Iibera Jodi Smith added 34
digs as did Rodgers. Junior
sette r
Jess ic-a
Veach
recorded 21 digs and handed out 56 assists while
freshman Stephanie Lapp
and Kiesl.ing also posted
double figures in digs with
13 and I0 respectively.

Shawnee State ( 13-l R, 112 AMCSJ· grabbed the
lead in the opening game
and was ne.ver headed in '
the 30-22 win .
Rio was ab le to get the
momentum in the second
game. scoring four lman swered points after a 6-6
tie. The RedwomeQ huilt
the lead to as high as seven
points (27-20) before tying
the match at a game each
with a 30-24 win . Three
missed serves by Shawnee

Ple•se see Rio, 88

WEIGHf MANAGEMENT
A FEATURE OF HEARTFEST
ATHENS
Barbara
Nakanishi, a registered
dietitian
for
O ' Bleness
Memorial Hospital, will present a program about the
importance Of weight management in keeping heart
healthy at HEARTfest, an
event
sponsored · by
O'Bieness; 9 a.m. to noon
Saturday.
Nakanishi's presentation
will · provide
lips
and
resources for setting realistic
goals for weight management.
"Carrying extra. body fat can
lead to cardiovascular disease," Nakanishi said. "The
risk increases with a waist
measurement of over 40 inch· es for men and over 35 inches
for women. Nakanishi's 30minute . program will be at
10:30 a.m.
Additional thirty-minute
presentations and demonstralions will include information
about diabetes and ·heart disease, preventing heart disease, CPR and the Heimlich

maneuver. Visitors are invited test, exercise and fitness pro:
to SeniorBEAT's exercise for · grams, smoking cessation,
seniors session.
'
nutrition and body mass
Also
featured
al index, prescription discount
HEARTfest will be free programs for seniors . and
screenings, including blood emergency information kits.
sugar, blo.od pressure, pulse Heart bingo games will be
and blood oxygen, as well as played in the O'Bieness'
information about nutrition, lobby from 9 a.m. to noon.
exercise, rehabilitation .and O'Bieness' cafeteria will fealifestyle choices.
ture a heart-healthy lunch
A limited number of certifi- menu items.
cates for FREE cholesterol
"Our
goals
for
the
screening (a compleie lipid HEARTfest event are to make
panel) will be available at the learning about being heart
event. Colon-rectal screening healthy · fun , to increase
kits will be distributed to par- awareness of the benefits of
ticipants interested in the free being heart healthy and to
home cancer-testing kit. Plus, encourage all to take advanvisitors at HEARTfest will tage of the many health and
receive a FREE T-shin while fitness programs offered in
supplies last.
Athens County,"· said Susan
Ronald McDonald will per- Wakefield; R.N., B.S.N .,
form two thirty-minute pro- community health promotion
grams, "Get Moving with coordinator.
Ronald McDonald." A num"
For more information
ber of informational di'spll!,Ys · about HEARTfest, contact
will include · Life Line O'Bieness' community relaScreening,
O ' Bleness' tions department at 592Coronary Calcium Scoring 9300.

Chester Fire

artment volunteers recognized

•
•

&lt;
Submitted photo

The Chester Shade Historical Association serves dinner to the Chester Fire Department volunteers In appreciation of their work. This is the fourth year of recognition of the firemen .

Local Stocks
ACI-77.67
AEP-36.98
Akzo-43.26
Ashland Inc. - 51.46
AT&amp;T-19.60
BLI- U.37
Bob Evans - 22.24
BorgWamer- 56.96
CENX- 22.75
Champion - 4.25
Charming Shops 11.28
City. Holding - 35.91
Col- 47.61
DG -19.27
DuPont - 40.80
Federal Mogul - .45 ·
USB- 28.•98
Gannett - 62.76
General Electric - 33.91 OKNLY -4.80
Harley Davidson - 49.51
JPM -35.72
Kroger - 19.80
Ltd. -19.39

NSC -40.40
Oak Hill Financial ......: .
30.45
OVB-25
BBT-41.43
Peoples- 27.83
Pepsico- 58
Premier - 13.04
Rockwell - 53.40
Rocky Boots - 24.46
RD Shell - 62.80
SBC -23.69

.Sears - 121.84
Wai-Mart - 45.39
Wendy's- 47.89
Worthington- 19.92
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day's
transactiQns, provided by
Smith Partners at Advest
'
Inc. of Gallipolis.

'·

~·

- ' The Chester commu- · ,
ft; pt•serve trick-or-treat night
on Monday. The fire·
the siren to begin and ..,

Theatre classes Local Weather
begin at Ariel

Tollats Forecast

GALLIPOLIS
The
City/Region
Ariel-Ann Carson Dater
High I Low tefll'S
Performing Arts Centrewill
begin it's second session of
performing arts classes
Monday.
Acting classes, taught by
Joseph · Wright and Kim
Vanco, will be offered for
Youngatown •
students grades 2-6, and for
46'137'
students in grades 7-12-.
Each class meets twice
49'135'
weekly.
Classes are $84 for six
weeks of classes, or $7 per
clas~. Students must register
Columbue •.. ~
for the full 6-weeks in order
. 50' 140~
~
to participate.
Instructors have planned
acti,vities foc1,1sing on performance skills, such as vocal
and physical communication,
vocal and physical expression, voice projection, physical animation, character
study, and more. Each class
has many opportunities for
performance.
~ Croudy •
~~;·. F~UrOOB ~ . 100
Additional classes offered
at The Ariel are; String Class
Partly ~ ' '
~ .Rain. ~
"•" ~
Clouttf
Showere ~
~ Snow • ••••
with Scott Michal and
Deborah Wood, Dance with
Weather Underground • AP
Sarah Roush, and Stage
Wednesday... Mostly cloudy Chance of rain 60 percent.
Makeup with Kim Vanco.
Thursday night... Mostly
Joseph Wright, director, with a 20 percent chance of
says "Our Performing Arts rain. Highs around 50. West cloudy with a chance of
classes encourage young par- winds 5 to 10 mph.
showers in the evening ... Then
ticipants to lind many ways
Wednesday . night... Parcly partly cloudy with a slight
to express themselves cre- cloudy. A slight chance of chance of showers after mid- ·
atively in a welcoming, nur- showers after midnight. Cold night. Cold · with lows in the
turing environment." He con- with lows in the mid 30s. mid 30s. Northwest' winds
tinues, "We celebrate creative Northwest winds around 5 around 5 mph. Chance of rain
expression at the Ariel, which mph
·
in
the 30 percent.
develops strong self-esteem evening ... Becoming Jight and · Friday
and
Friday
in our students."
.
variable .. Chance of rain 20 night... Partly cloudy. Highs
For more infonnation on percent.
around 50. Lows in the lower
Ariel-Dater
Hall's
The
Thursday... Rain showers 30s.
Performing Arts Classes, likely. Highs in the mid 40s .
Saturday and Saturday
please call 740-.446-ARTS.
. West winds 5 to 10 mph . night... Mostly clear.

llanaflekl•~

~

Chicago 7, Houston 5

COLUMBUS - When the
coach of No. 12 Ohio State
take s hi s team to play
Minnesota on Saturday, he
doesn't anticipate the Golden
Gophers varying "from what
they ' ve done so far: run· the
ball. run it some more and
then follow· up by running it
even more .
,
At the same time, Jim
Tressel doesn 't believe his
team will change it's philosophy of stopping the run first
. and then worrying about
other modes of attack ·later.
"A ll good teams, and
Minnesota 's a very good .
team. do what they do best,"
Tressel said Tuesday.
Minnesota (5-2, 2-2 Big
Ten) leads the nation in rushing , averaging nearly 300
yards per game. The Golden
Gophers have put up startling
rushing totals agamst good
teams : 301 . yards against
Tulsa, 355 against Colorado
State, 301 against Purdue,

F-11
Eastern at Southern

College .Soccer
Tiffin at Rio Grande. 1 p.m.
College Volleyball
Rio Grande at Tiffin, 4 p.m.

Sports Briefs

Winter prep
schedules needed
Area cpaches and athletic~
directors should send their
varsity basketball and/or
wrestling schedules to Ohio
Valley Publishing as soon
as possible .
You can fax them to (740) ·
446-3008; · email
sports@ mydai Iytri bune .co
m; or drop them off at out
Gallipolis, Pomeroy or
Point Pleasant office.
Also, if you have a picture day scheduled ·. please include that informlion as well.

The Meigs Medical Clinic
113 East Memorial Dr.,

Our
provide care for girls and
women childhood through menopause.
We accept most health insurance and
offer a sliding scale based on income.

Call For Appointment
'Wo

740-992-9158

Athletes keep
season alive
despite hurricane
c

•

BY JOE MtLICIA
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Prep Football
Coaches Reminder
Varsity football coaches are
reminded to send us their season football Slats and recommendations for OVP 25 and
'district teams as soon as the
regular season is completed.
You may e-mail · them to
sports@ m ydai Iytribune.com,
fax them to 446-3008 or drop
them off at our Gallipolis
office on Third Ave. Deadline
. is 5 p.m., Nov. 7.

AP.photo

Chicago White Sox's Geoff Blum hits a solo home run off Houston Astros reliever Ezequiel Astacio in !he top of the 14th
inning in. Game 3 of the World Series early Wednesday morning in Houston.

White s·ox one win away
after edging Houston at home
BY RoNALO BLUM
ASSOCIATED PRESS

-

Over 22,000 to see
prep football game
CANTON (AP) - A sellout crowd of about 22,360 is
expected for a high school
football game Saturday
between
Mas sillon
Washington and Canton
McKinley.
McKinley's ticket office
announced Monday that all
of the tickets for the much
anticipated game between the
two undefeated teams in
Canton's Fawcett Stadium
had been sold.
Officials said they were
getting requests from across
the state for tickets to the Iat, est gaf(le in the storied rival~
ry.
Mindi Stoner of Massillon
got the Iast four re served
seats. They were · single
reserved seats scattered
throughout the east end zone.
1 She and her friends won't, ·
sit next ·to each other, and
may not even be able to see
each other from their respective seats.
"I don't care where they
are," said Stoner. "Just get
me in the gate."

Contact Information
E·mall- sportsOmyctailysentlnel.com
Sports Staff

Brad Sherman, Sparta Editor
(740) «6-2342, OK!. 33
bshermanOmydailytribune.oom

Bryan Waltera. Sportt Writer
(740) 446-2342. e&gt;&lt;t. 23
bwahersCmydallytribune.com
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(304) 675-1333, ext. f9
lcrurt~'@myda l lyregister. com

'.

Please see Buckeyes, B1

*

F8K- (740) 446·3008

Now Welcomi"9 New PatientS at

·By RusTY MtLLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Satyrday'a games

Chesttr

No. 1 rushing
team meets
No.1 defense
against the run

•

HOUSTON (AP) -Ten,
II, 12, 13 innings. No one
could break through.
Not the .White Sox. who
waited 46 years to get back
to the World Series. Not th e
Astros, who've never been
·here before.
Finally, in the 14th inning,
Geoff Blum won the longest
game in World Series hi story with a tiebreaking, two:
out
solo
homer, and
Chicago beat Houston 7-5
Wednesday mornin g to
move within a win of a
Series sweep and its first
title since 1917.
'
Long after Chicago over-

. Astacio allowed Chicago
to load the bases on two singles and a walk, then forced
in a run by walking Chris
Widger on a 3-2 pitch.
Houston put runners at the
corners in the bottom half
when Orlando Palmeiro
walked with one out and

Park : Blum sent a 2~0 pitch
from Aslacio down the
right-field line, und the ball
sailed over the wall. As the
former Astro circled the

•

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•
•
•
:
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:
•
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.
•
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~~~fs·a~~~:tus
~
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:
stool in· the dugout.
•

The White Sox picked up
Blum from San Diego on
July 31, right before the
trading deadline. A starter
with Houston in 2002-03,

:
•
:
•
•

he' s been mostly a backup :
since then and entered the •
game in the 13th as ')Jart of •

adoubk-switch.~

new teams.
The Salmen Spartans were
preparing fo r th ei r season
opener and looking for their
15th straight trip to the play- ·
offs when Katrina hit, flooding parts of Slidell, La., and
de stroying the high school.
For quarterback Derrek
Sander, wide receiver Ryan
Eden and punter Kyle
Hopton, it was more than the
loss of their senior year. The
devastation hindered their
dreams of landing a spot in a
college program.

Please see Series. 88

Please see Alive, Bl

• •••••• • • • • • •••••• •• •• ••• •• • • • • • • • • • • •• •• • • •••••• ••• • •••••••••• • •••••
•
,

a II

-=.'
•

came a 4-0 deficit with five •
runs in the fifth inning :
against Roy Oswalt and •
.JasonLanehitatyingdoub le for Houston in the
eighth
otT
Dustin
Hermanson, Blum batted
for the first time in a World
Series with two outs in the
14th and fa ced Ezequiel
Astacio, Houston's seventh
pitcher.
With nearly all the seats
still full in Minute Maid

Brad Ausmus reached when
shortstop Juan Uribe misplayed hi s two-out grou nder
for an error.
Mark
Buehrle. · who
pitched seven inning s in
Game 2 on Sunday ni ght.
came in, Chicago's ninth
pitche~ and the 17th of th-e

game, both Series records.
Adam
Everett
then
popped to shortstop for the
final out at. I :20 a.m. local
tim e. At 5 hours. 41 min utes , it was the longest ga me
by time in Series hi story. It
mat c hed the longest by
· innin gs, a Babe Ruth com'
plete game for the Boston
Red Sox aga in st Brooklyn
in 1914.
Houston. which got only
one hit after the fourth
innin g and stranded 15 runners , left the potential winning run at third base in the

ASHLAND
Three
tee nager s left behind the
flood-ravaged street s of suburban New Orleans for a
sloppy, rain-soaked football
field in Ohio.
Looking to salvage a season wiped out by Hurricane.
Katr ina , thev have found
new teammaies at Ashland
' High School. They are
among :12 athlet es in Ohio
and many others nationwide .
who have started over with

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For infonnatiell:
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�· Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

OHSAA computer ratings
COLUMBUS (AP) - Here are the sixth
weekly football computer ratings from the
Oh10 H1gh School Athletic Association.
Raungs are by division and region with
record_ and averag.e bi-level Nlints per game
(top e1ght teams 10 -each region advance to
regional quarterfinals):
·
·
DIVISION I
A.egion 1-1, Lakewood St. Edward (~·0) 28.7320. 2, SOlon (9·
0) 27.8388. 3, Cle .. Glanville (9..0) 26.2888. 4, Lyndhurst Brush
(6-3) 19.om: 5. Nor1h Olmsted (7-2) 17.8055. 6, Euclid (6-3)
16.7214. 7, Cle. St. Ignatius (S-4) 15.6487. 8, Cle. Kennedy (7-2)
14.8383. 9, Strongsville (6-3) 14.4000. 10, Shaker HIS. (5-4) ·
11.9637.
Region 2-1, Mass. Washington .(9-Q) 27.0397. 2, Cant.
McKinley (9-0) 25.5818. 3, Findlay (8-1) 24.8217. 4, Tot 51.
John's {8-1) 23.4611 . 5, Elyria (7-2) 20.2555. 6, Hudson (7-2)
19.6055. 7, Sylvania North\liew (7-2) 18.&amp;277. 8, Green (6-3)
16.6722. 9, Amherst Steele (7-2) 16.5944. 10, Brunswick (8·1)
Hl.2222.
·
,Region J.-.:-1, Hilliard Davidson (9-0) 28.5944. 2, Gahanna
L•ncoln (6-3) 22.7944. 3, Grove City (e-3) 20.72n. 4, Lancaster
(6-3) 20.2444. 5, Worthington Kilboume (6-3) 19.7833. 6,
Newark (7·2J 17.9055. 7 , Westerville South (7-2) 17.7555. 8,
Cols. Brookhaven (8-1) 17 6444 9, Upper Arlington (5-4)
n. 1777. 10. Logan (7-2) 168166
Reg1on 4-1, C1n St Xavier (9.fl) 33.8106 2. Huber His
Wayne (8- 1) 28.4277. 3, Centerville (B-1 ) 24.7722. 4. Cin. Glan
Este (8- 1) 22.9555. 5, Cin. Moeller {6-3) 22.3582. 6, Cin. LaSalle
(7-2) 20.8944. 7, Cin. Colerain"(8·1) .20.6762. 8, Liberty Twp.
lakola E. (7·2) 20.2666. 9. Fairfield (7·2) 19.2111.10, Clayton
Northmont (7-2) 19.1833.
DIVISION II
Region 5- 1, Tallmadge (9-0) 29.6444 . 2. Maple Hts. (9·0)
26.5055. 3. Willoughby SOU1h (9;0) 23.8888. 4, Coplay (7-2)
19.8111. 5, Olmsted Fans (8·1) 19.7555, 6, Parma Normandy
(7-2) 18 6444. 7, Akron Hoban (7·2) 17.0166. 8, Chardon (6-3}
15.2722. 9, Chagrin Fans·Kenston (&amp;-3) 15.1388. 10, Bedford (63) 15.om. .
Region 6-1, Avon Lake (9.0)30.7888. 2, Tol. Cent. Cath. (8·1)
21.9055. 3, Olenlangy Ub;erty (S.1) 19:2611. 4, Sylvania
Southview (7-2) 16.0833. 5, Lewis Center Olentangy (7·2)
17.7833. 6, Tot. Rogers (6-3) 15.5833. 7, Mans. Madison (8-3~
15.1000. 8, Piqua (5-4) 15.0222. 9, Lodl Cloverlear (6-3)
•
14.8166. 10, Tiffin Columbian (7·2) 13.7000.
Region 7-1, Louisville {9·0) 29.1·222. 2, Canfield (9.())
26.2285, 3, Co is. Watterson (8· 1) 21 .9382. 4, New Philadelphia
(8·1) 18.2m. 5. Cots. Marion Fmnklln {8-1) 17.7012. 6, Dublin
Scioto (6-3) 17.6388. 7, Dublin Jerome (6·3) 16.7222. 8, Cots.
Baechcroft (7-2) t5.3n7. 9, Young. Aayen (7·2) 13.7858. 10.
Crils. Mifflin (6-3) 12.9222.
· ·
Fleglon 8-1; Springboro (9·0) 27.3722. 2. Cin. M1. Healthy {90) 23.3333. 3, Wash. CH Miami Trace {7·2) 20.01ee. 4, Kings
Mms Kings (8·1) 18.1166. 5, Bellbrook (7-2) 15.6666. 6,
•
Wilmington (6·3) 15.4134. 7, West Carrollton (5-4/14.5388. 8,
Trenton Edgewood (8-1) 14.3333. 9, Day. Carroft 7-2) 13.6388.
·
10, MI. Crab Westem Brown (7-2) 13.0555.
DIVISION Ill

R~lon 9-1, Mentor Lake Cath. (8·1) 26.5098. 2, Aurora (8·1)

21.1388. 3, Parma Hts. Holy Name (8·1) 20.4888. 4, Akron
Buchtel (7•2) 18.4222. 5, Young. Liberty (9-0) 17.1555. 6, Cle. ·
Benedictine (4·4) 15.8675. 7. Cuya. Falls Walsh Jesuit (5-4)
15.4138. 8, Ravenna SE (8·1) 15.0888. 9, Richfield Revere (5-4)
14.0611.1(), Niles McKinley (5-4) 12.4283.
Region 10--1 , Clyde (8-1) 23.7~. 2, Spring. Shawnee(8·11
21 .3578. 3, NapOleon (8·1) 19.9277. 4. Day. Cham·JuNenne (63) 17.6763. 5, Ken10n (7-2) 16 9944. 6, Tipp Cily Tlppecenoe (72) 16.6002. 7, Sl. Marys Memorial (7·2) 15.9055. 8, Archbishop
Alter (7·2) 15.7888. 9, Eaton (7-2) 14.9722. tO, Grah~;~m Local
(6·3) 11.8026.
Region 11 - 1, Steubenville {9·0) 28.5346. 2, Newark UckinQ ·
Valley (9·0) 23.8277. 3, Medina Buckeye (9-0) 21.4088. 4, Ganal
Fulton N.W. (7-2) 21 .0333. 5, New Concord John Glenn (7·2)
18.1611 . 6, Cambfidge (8·1)17.9385. 7, Dover (7·2) 17.3666. 8,
L.,isbon Beaver (7·2) 14.5 150. 9, Sa!em (6·3) 13.5353.10,
Shelby (7-2) 13.0'l88.
Region 12-1 , Cin. Indian Hill (9-0) 20.7944. 2, New Albany (90) 19,5111. 3. Gall. Gallla Acad. (7-2) 17.om. 4, Thornville
Sheridan (7·2) 16.7333. 5, St. Bernard Roger Bacon (6·3)

Associa~

COLUMBUS (AP)- With one week
remaining in the 2005 season. Cincinnati St.
Xavier, Avon Lake, Steubenville, Coldwater,
Hamler Patrick Henry and Dola Hardin
Northem lead the pack in the seventh weeklv
Associated Press state high school football ·
poll released Tuesday.
Champions of the 59th annual AP poll,
determined in balloting by sports wri ters and
broadcasters around Ohio. will be announced
next Tuesday.
·
There were no changes in the top spots for
the first time this season, with most of the
No. I teams solidifying their leads.
Here's the latest balloting, broken down bv
OHSAA divisions. with won-lost record and
total points and tirst-place votes in· parentheses:
9-o
9-{)
9-{)
9-o
8-{)
9-{)
8-1
9-{)
8-1
8-1

297
260
227
221
215
133
129
11 3
69
27

Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 . Findlay 26.

DIVISION II
1. Avon Lake (24)
2. Tallmadge (1)
3, Louisville (2)
4, Canfield
5, Springboro (3)
6. Maple Hts . t 1)
7, Cols. Watterson (1)
8, Cin. M1. Healthy
9. Willoughby South
10. Trenlo[l Edgewpod

9-0
9-0
9-0
9-0
9-0
9-0
8-1
9-0
9-0

8-1

Others receiving 12 or more

NEW YORK - Nick Zito
is in low-profi le mode heading into Saturday's Breeders'
Cup.
Thoroughbred racing's oneday. eighl-mce, $14 million
extravaganza at Belmont Park
may be a high-profile event,
but Zito doesn't seem too
worked ~p over iL
Cou!&amp; be he doesn't have
the horses - outsiders Sun
King and Sir Shackleton in
the $4 million Classic, In the
Gold in the $2 million Distaff
and Super1ly in the $1.5 million Juvenile - or could be
the Hall of Fame trainer- is
.already plotting how to win
his third Kentucky Derby; still
seven months away:
'.'We're lucky enough to be
· hanging in for the Breeders'
AP photo
Cup, and that"s just tine," Zito Borrego, ooe of the favorites in the Breeder's Cup Classic, is
said Monday. "They're all walked in his barn at Belmont Park in Elmont, New York by
long shots, but they're all Andy Durnin on Monday. Borrego won his his last two starts
good horses."
Zito will get an idea - the Pacific Classic and the Jockey Club Gold .Cup .
whether he 's got himself a one of the best seasons of his
"1 can handle it,'' he said.
Derby
prospect
when 30-plus year career. and is After the Derby, "when the&gt;:
Superfly ·takes on undefeated sixth nationally in trainer stuck a microphone in front of
First Samurai and Henny earnings with more than $7.5 me, I walked down and saiq,
Hughes again. The son of million.
'When ~ou think what hap2000 Derby winner Fusaichi
Among his big wins this pens in hfe, this is not so bad.'
Pegasus finished third behind year? Bellamy Road romped That was before the earththose two in the Champagne m the Wood Memorial by an quake, before Rita and now
on Oct. 8.
incredible 17 1/2 len!lths; Wilma. That's · how I
"Right now, First Samurai · High Fly took the Fountam of approach it."
looks terrific," Zito .said. Youth and Florida Derby ; Zito may not be the talk of
"We'll see who develops. Commentator won
the the backstretch this week, but
That's what I'm hoping for." Whitney Handicap ·over he can't be counted out even
Last year, Sun King fin- Classic favorite Saint Liarn; if he's won only · one
ished third in the Jl!venile, and Sun King · took the Breeders' Cup race - the
became a lop Derby con- Pennsylvania Derby. Some 1996 Juvenile with Storm
tender but ended up finishing didn't win, but collected hefty Song.
15th in the Run for. the Roses runner-up checks in the
Superfly worked five fuias one of a record five horses Belmont
(Andromeda's longs Monday morning, and
sent out by Zito.
Hero); rne Travers (Bellamy Zi to expects · a strong effort
Monday morning's chat Road); the Haskell (Sun from h1s colt. In the Gold
with a single visitor outside King); and the Florida Derby comes into the Distaff off a 2
his barn was very different (Noble Causeway).
.
1/4-Jength win in the Gazelle
from the Derby scene a few
On Sunday, Zito was at Belmont. The 3-year-old
months ago al Churchill reminded again how quickly filly takes on older horses fur
Downs. During Derby week, racing fortunes can change.
the first time, including likely
hundreds gathered outside
High Fly, preJ?aring for the favorite Ashado. .
Zito's barn, peppering him $1 million Spnnt, fractured
"She's been very consis- ·
with questions from behind a his right front leg during a tent, a sweetheart," Zito said.
makeshift fence.
weekend workout and was In the Gold has never been off
"That was once in a life- scheduled to have two screws the board in eight starts thL~
time," Zito said. ·
inserted Monday at the New year with three wins, three
Far from the spotlight, Zito Jersey Equine Center.
seconds and two thirds.
is hapJ?y lo be competing,
"It was tough yesterday. '1 His Classic horses - Sun
even w1th long shots.
· just had to leave really early. King and Sir Shackleton - ·
"We're still here, and these It all just got to me with High are coming up to the mce in
horses are healthy,'' Zito said. Fly," Zito said. '·'I've got a good shape. Sun King was
But it's not like Zito is hav- headache right now just talk- third in the Jockey Club Gold
ing a bad year because his ing about 11. But that's the Cup and Sir Shackleton wa-s
horses went 0-for-11 in the way it goes."
second in the Woodward.
Triple Crown. The 57 -yearIn the big picture, though,
"You've got to take a shot,:·
Zi\D said.
·
old New Yorker is enjoying racing setbacks are nothing.

f·

DIVISION VI
Aeglon 21-1, Columbiana (9-Q) 19.5277. 2, Cia. Cuya. Hta.
(8-1) 14.2111. 3, Sleub Ca1h. C.nt(6-3) 13.0098. 4, Mineral
Ridge (7-2) 11 ,9833. 5, De~on (5-4) 10.am. 6, Thompson
Ledgemont (8-11 10.4222. 7, Mogadore(ll-3) 9.0668. a.
McDonald (6·3)8.5833 9, Lowe!Mile (5-4) 8 2611. 10. Vienna
Malhews (6·3) 8.1888.
Region 22-1, Baaoo:m Hopewell-loudon (9-D) 17.7-m. 2,
Liberty Ctr. (8-1) 17.6222. 3, Norwalk Sl. Peul(7-2) 15.3388. 4,
MonrGEWitle (5·3) 13.1611 . 5, Sycamore Mohawk (7·2) 12.1388.
6, Tol. Ottawa Hllle (7·2) 10.83Sa. 7, StMary Central Catholic (5·
4) 10.7388. ~. Creetllne(7-2) 10.4500. 9, Arlington (7-2) 9.0722.
10, Columbus Grove {7·2) 8.5500.
Region 23-1 , lane. Fisher Cath. (8-1) 15.0444. 2, Hannibal
. River (7-2) 13.4544. 3, Newark Calh.(6-3) 10.7555. 4, Caldwell
(6-3) 9.9480 5, Shadyside (7·2) 8.9735. 6, Willow WoorJ
Symmes Vall!')' (6·3) 8.8800. 7. Straoburv-Fran~ln (6-3) 8.2444.
8, Milford Ct(t=alrbank.S {7·2) 8.2317. 9, Beallsville (6-3) 8.2183.
10, Crown Clly S. Gallla(&amp;-4) 7.41&amp;0.
Regibn 24--1 , Mechanicsburg (9-0) 19.6458~ 2, Spring. Cath.
Cent. (8-1) 15.7111. 3, Dola Hardin Northern (9·0) 14.5500. 4,
Covington (8·1) 14.4944. 5, Delphos St. Jo.hn's (8·1) 12.2888. 6, .
Waynesfield-Goshen (8·1) 12.1921. 7, Maria Stein Marion Local
(6·3)7.8444. 8, Cin. Counlry Dey (8-3)8.3123. 9, DeGraff
· .
Riverside (8·3) 6.0193. 10, Ansonia (4-5) 5.1166.

poin~s:

303
262
236
193
1BD
166
98

88
79
60

11 . Tol. Cenl. Cath. 28.

DIVISION Ill
1. Steubenville (25)
2, Newarl!; LIC~MQ Valley (3)
3, Cin. lnd1an Hill (1)

Buckeyes
from Page Bl
264 ·against Michigan and
411 against Wisconsin.
"They're the best rushing
team in America,'' Tressel
said.
Meanwhile, the Buckeyes
(5-2, 3-1) have the nation 's
best defense against the run,
allowing only 63 yards a
game .
. But Tressel doesn't expect
Minnesota to be awed or
intimidated by Ohio State's
defense against -the run.
"They don't turn on the
film and say, 'Oh, gosh, you
know. look at these statistics.
We 'd better not do that,'"' he
said. ·'Jn fact, I'm sure the
way they' ve become so good
is they've taken great ~ride in
the fact that so-and-so s leading the nation {but) 'they
· haven't played us yet. "
They've got a special offensive grqup.""
The game harkens back to
a simpler time in the Big Ten
f when Woody Haye s' Ohio

9-0
9-0
9-0

298
267
219

186
174
128
115
71
57
47

Others reCei\IJng 12 or more points: 11 , Spring. Shawnee 42. 12
(lie), Dover, Canal Fulton NW 25. 14, Kettering Alter 17. 15,
Youngs. Liberty 12.

DIVISION IV
1, Coldwater (25)
2, Bellaire (6)
3, Youngs. Mooney
4, Ironton
'
5, Ottawa-Giandort
6, Germantown Valley V1ew
7, Akr. Manchester {1)
8, Huron
9, Tontogany Otsego
1o, Zoarville Tuscarawas Valley

9-0
9-0 .
9-0
8-1
9-0
8-1

8-1
8-1
8-1
8-1

298
279
238
183
152
136
82
81
74
64 .

Others rec:elvlng 12 or more points: 11 , Clarksville ClintonMassle 31 . 12 (tie), Plain City Jonathan Alder, Leman-Monrae 29.
14, Manon Elgirf 19. 15. Garrett~ville Garlield 12.

DIVISIONV
1, Hamler Pa1rick Henry (22)
2. N. Lim·a S. Ran~e {2)
3, Findlay Liberty- anton
3, Versailles (4)
5, Bucyrus Wynlord
6, C1n. Hills (1)
7, Cots. Ready (1)
8, Sm1thvilie
'
9, Anna
10, Howard E. Knox

.

9-{)
9-{)
9-{)
8- 1
9-0
9-{)
8-1
8-1
8-1
8-1

287
249
190
190
170
146
127
91
57
39

Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, W. Salem NW (2) 35
12, Lima Cen1. Cath. 29 ..13. Barnesville 26. 14, Arcanum 21. 15.
Haviland Wayna Trace 18. 16. W. Lafayette Ridgewood 17. 17.
Cols. Grandview His. 16. 18, Warren JFK 14.
DIVISION VI

1, Dola Hardin Northern t17)
2, Meohanicsburg (8)
3, Columbiana (2)
4, Delphos St. John's {2)
5, Bascom Hopewell-Loudon (1)
6. Spring. Cath. Cent.
7, Uberty Center
8, Lancaster F1sher Ca1h.
9, Cle. Cuyahoga Hts. (1)
10, Covington

9-o
9-o
9-{)

8-1

9-0
B-1

8-1
8-1
8-1
8-1

285
256
2 18
208
195
137
126
111
86
28

Others receiving 12 or more pointa: 11 . Maria Stein Marion
Local 20. 12, Newark Calh. 15. 13 (lie). Norwalk St. Paul , Dalton
13 t 5, Steubenville Cath. Cent 12

State teams didn't rely on
trickery - or even the forward pass, for that matter.
They ran the ball , repeatedly.
and forced an opponent. to
either stop them -or submit to
them.
Minnesota -coach Glen
Ma$on, who played at Ohio
State under Hayes, may not
be a chip off the block of
granite, but he's a firm
believer that whomever wins
the rushing battle will likely
win the game.
He's also fully aware of
what h.is team will confront,
particularly when it comes to
the Buckeyes linebacking
corps of A.J. Hawk, Anthony
and
Bobby
Schlegel
Carpenter.
"The.y have had some great
linebackers there, obviously,"
Mason said. "But I don "t
know when they've had a
group like they have. That
might be the difference. The
guys up front are pretty big,
fast and physical , too."
Minnesota is Jed by a bruising front wall featuring center Greg Eslinger that opens
.,holes for tailback Laurence

Maroney. first in the Big Ten
and third in the country at
162 yards rushing per game.
"Their running game is
tremendous," said Ohio State
defensive tackle Mike Kudla.
"You know they definitely
want to run. Stopping the run,
that's our goal but how can
you really stop a team that
rushes for 300 yards a game?
For us, it's going to be, let's
limit the big ·plays from their
grea~ offe.nse. You know
they re gomg to gel some
yards. We just want to limit
what they can do."
Tressel calls Maroney the
best running back in the
country. He said the
Buckeyes can't really pattern
themselves after Pen·n State,
which locked down the
Minnesota rushing game to
just 113 yards in a 44- 14 victory on Oct. I in State
College, Pa.
He said Minnesota is much
more formidable at home in
the 1\:'letrodome.
Ohio State is coming off a
41-10 win at Indiana after
losing five of its previous six
Big Ten .road games.
I
.

BY

DAVE GOLDBERG

ASSOCIATED PRESS

DIVISIONV
Region 17-1, Barnesville (7·2) 18.2575. 2, N. LimaS. Range
(9·0) 17.9277. 3. Wallen Kennedy (8·1) 16.0396. 4, w. Salem
NW (8·1) 15.8611. 5. Smithville (8·1) 15.5500. 6. W. lafayette
Ridgewood {8·1) 15.5444. 7, Colull)biana Crestview (8·1 )
14.2388. 8, Rittman (7·2) 12.6686. 9, Labrae (4-5) 11.3444. 10,
New Middletown Springfield (7·2) 10.0944.
Aeglort 18-1 , Hamler Patrick Henry (9·0) 17.5451. 2, Bucyrus
•Wynford (9·0) 16.2333. 3, Findlay liberf)I·Ben10n (9-Q) 15.5500 •.
4, Hav11and Wayne Trace (9.()) 13.7833. 5, Bloomdale Elmwood
{7·2) 13.4343. 6, Convoy Crestview (8·1) 11.7888. 7, Gates Mills
Gilmour Acad. (7-2) 11 .4590. 8, Collins Western Reserve (7-2)
11 .2555. 9, Sherwood Fairview (7~2) 11 .1310. 10, Rocky Al\113f
Luth. W. (7·2) 10.9593Region 19-1. Cots. Ready (8-1) 20.1055. 21 Howard Knox
(8·1) 17.7555. 3, Wheelersburg (7-21 17.6410. 4, Grand¥~ Hts.
(8-1) 16.8254. 5, Lucasville Valley (8·1) 15.4890. 6, Fnribrt
Adena(6-3) 12.9888. 7, Cenlorburg (7·2) 12 7688. 8, '
Nelsonville-York (6-3) 12.3555. 9, SISWart Federal Hocking 17·2)
12.2804. 10, Gloueter Trimble (8-1) 11.53()(),
Region 20-1, Qin. Hills Christian Acad. (~} 17.9234. 2, Uma
C.nt Cath.(B·1) 17.e833. 3, Lees Creek E. Clinton (7-2) ·
16.6055. 4, Harmony Community School (8-1) 18.4037. "! ,
Arca"'m (8-1) 15.9444. ~. VersaJUes (8·1) 15.1m. 7, Anna(8'
1) 14.3333. 8, Marion Pleasant (7-2) 13.om. 9, Blulfton (7-2)
12.3055. 10, Weynesvllle (5-4) 10.9500.

8-1
9-0
9-0
8-1
8-1
8-1
8-1

•

ASSOCIATED PRESS

DIVISION IV
Region 13-1, Young. Mooney (8-1) 21.3831. 2, Zoarville Tusc.
Valley (8-1) 17.8380. 3, Garrettsville Garfield (8· i) 15.0111 . 4,
Orrville (5-4) 14.7833. 5, Akron Manchester (8-1) 14.5500. 6,
Akron Sl. Vinoont-St.Mary (5-4) 13.7444. 7, Cant. Cent. Cath. (6·
3) t 1.2388. 8, Cadiz Harrison Cent. (6-3} 9.6058. 9, Cuya. Falls
Cu&gt;ja. Valley Christian (6·2) 9.0415. 10, Beachwood (6·3)
8.7611.
.
Region 14-1, Ottawa-Glandorf (8-1) 20.5500. 2 , Coldwater
(9·0) 20.0555. 3, Huron (8·1) 17.6555. 4, Marion Elgin \8-1)
·
17.2222 . 5, W, M1llon M1lton-Union (7-2) 17.1444. 6, Belville
Clear Fo1k (6-3) 18.9277. 7, Tontogany Otsego (8-1 ) 16.2321. B.
Elyria Catha!ic (7·2) 14.9555. 9, Wauseon (7-2) 14.6963. 10,
Rossford (6·3) 14.2570.
·
Region 15--1, Bellaire (9·0) 27.0960. 2, lron(on (8-1) 25.4222.
3, Williamsport Westfall (7·2} 17.0000. 4. New Lexington (7·2)
16.9222. 5, Zanes. W. Muskingum (7·2) 15.7222. 6, Ironton Rock
Hill (8·1) 14.6458. 7, Heath (7-2) 141.4222.8, Cols. Hartley (7-2)
13.9847. 9, ChMI. Zane Trace (8·1) 13.92.22. 10, St Clairsville (72) 13.6283.
'
'
Region 16-1 , Germantown Valley View {8-1) 20.5886. 2,
Monroe Lemon-Monroe (8-1) 17.6722. 3, Clarksville ClintonMassle (8·1) 16 6055.4, Cin. Wyoming (7·2) 16.0000. 5, Plain
City Jonathon Alder (8-1} 15.5705. 6, Blanchester (7·2) 13.0000.
7, Cln. Mariemont (6·3J 11.6000. 8. Cin. Madeira (5-4) 10.1388.
9, Cin. N. College Hill (7·2) 9.2658. 10, Ham. Badin (4-5)
8.811 1.

4, Mentor Lake Cath . (1)
5, New Albany
5, Medina Buckeye (2)
7, Parma Hts. Holy Name
B. Aurora
9, Clyde
10, Napoleon

Wellington
Mara,
NFL's
senior
owner,
dies
at
89
.
.

BY RICHARD ROSENBLATT

15.7722. 6, Co~. DeSales (5-4) 14.8888. 7, Cin. Taft(7-2)
14.8635. 8, Hillsboro (7-2) 14.4611 . 9, Lane. Fairfield Union {6-3)
13.9555. 10, Jackson (6·3) 13.0833

....•

---·• . .-•

-·
......••

••

··. photo of
i'· your ·
·· favorite
•
et
and
••••
...
hey
•
••
might
be--~~~~
•••
•• voted into our
1·
••

•r

•

2006

•••

••
••

•

....

Pet Calendar!

•

•.

Deadline for entries is: November 30, 2005

....

The winning pets will be featured in this
unique calendar. .
The winner will be highlighted on the cover.

··:

r---.-----.. -----------...... ----... -... -----------

, Name of pet:
• : Your Name:
,: Address:

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Please send or bring this entry form along with your photo to

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{IPallipolis: 1!9atlp
':
arribune

t)leas:ant
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:

"Pet calendar"
"Pet Calendar"
•' 825 Third Avenue
200 Main st.
C, Gallipolis, OH 4S631 Pt Pleasant. wv 2S5SO

"Pet Calendarn I
111 Court St.
••
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.-.•· ---... -,..\ --.. --.te-.-...... .··---...··. ----.··.--- -...e':.·---. -:- .....e,
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•

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• .~•

~1f~tt~!-~J~~~~h~uprrtriarch ~~~~e~t~;~e~~~~e~~~ii~~~: :~oun~hJg~nGi~~!~ 'f7~m onE I~

;

•

•

~-

.·.__ _.___J

Manning to Amani Toomer
with 5 seconds left In the
locker room after the game,
the players chanted "Duke.
Duke. Duke:" Mara's nickname.
Manning later said he had
been told by one of Mara's
grandsons that the owner
awakened in time to see· the
winning play, then smiled and
went back to sleep.
.
Two other Giants stars, Tiki
Barber and Jeremy Shockey.
went to Mara's home , on
Monday. "We were able to say
a prayer and say goodbye, and
AP photo
that meant a lot to me,'' Barber Wellington Mara, owner of the New York Giants, smiles alongside his Pro Football Hall of
said.
Fame bronze bust, after being inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, July 26, 1997, in
Mara always repaid his play- Canton, Ohio. Mara. one of the NFL's most influential owners for more than a half century
ers _ once a Giant, you were . and the last of the league 's founding generation, died Tuesday. He was 89.
a Giant for life. :
stars as Frank · Gifford. Y.A. Groh. Charlie Weis, Romeo players alter every game When
former
players Tittle, Sam Huff and Roosevelt Crennel and Ray Handley.
win or Jose - !lashing a shy
became ill, Mara would lind Brown and a coaching staff
Parcells left after that season ·smile at stars and scrubs alike.
them doctors, pay their med- . that included Tom Landry and
the Giants slipped into the
"My wife said it best when
ical expenses .and arrange help Vince Lombardi as assistants. and
middle of the pack.
we
talked about Mr. Mara,'"
for their families. Many oldBut after losing to Chicago
They
made
the
Super
Bowl
said.
Simms, the quarterback
t1mers were on the payroll as ·m the 1963 NFL champ1ons
· h'1p.
again
after
the
2000
season,
on the Giants Super Bowl
scouts or advisers. Even in this game, the Giants began a long
era of sophisticated scouting. it slide. failing to make the play- losing to the Baltimore teams and now a television
wasn't unusual for Young or off's again until 1981 as Ravens, owned by Art Modell, analyst. "S he said, "There are
Accorsi to get a call from ·a Wellington and Tim. by then Mara"s close friend and long- so few icons left.' That's what
time partner in league matters. Mr. Mara was. He was from an
former player recommending the co-owner. feuded.
the Giants look at ~om e
In 1979. on the commission- Mara never openly criticized era where there were certain
move
from
Modell"s
prospect
·
er's
re~ommcndation, the Cleveland and they celebrated men who handled themselves
The team was almost always
Maras agreed to hire Young as getting to the Super Bowl differently than everybody
well aware of the prospect, but general
else. I don't know if you can
manager and the team together.
Mara never dropoed any of
.
\,
agam
hecarnc
apower.
.
In 1991, Tim Mara and his be that person anymore in this
those old "scouts ' from the
payroll.
It won Super Bowls in 1986 family sold their share of the day and age. I don't know if
Mara always considered and · 1990 with Bill Parcells team to Robert Tisch. Tisch society would let you be like
himse lf a football than first, coaching a team that starred and Wellington Mara were him."
Mara is survived by wife
running the on-field' operations Lawrence Taylor and · Phil officially co-owners and Tisch
through the 1950s until 1979 Simms and stolll defenses. The ran much of the business Ann, II children ard 40 grandwhile Jack and then Jack's son 1990 team featured one of the affairs. But it was always clear children. The fun eral Mass
Tim ran the business end. The best coac hing staffs assem- this was Wellington's team.
will be Friday morning at St.
team was successful during the bled: future head coaches
Still, he was never an Patricks Cathedral in New
'50s and early '60s with such Coughlin. Bill fl~lichick. AI authoritarian. He would greet York.
~~----------------------------------------~

~.N:;::::::;rrt-~oM;:;;nt::;:::::o1: : : :;: ~=-- Honor Our

·BcS is puzzled, but there's no
confusion about USC being No..1

•

i·· Send us a

and remains in place today.
playoffs. The next day he was
"Wellington Mara was a tn1e 111 the coaches ' meeting room,
pioneer who understood what and he went from coach to
It took to make the National coach, shaking everybody' s
Football League great," said hand . In 1989 we were in the
G
ene Upshaw. executive playoffs and the next year we
director of the NFL Players won the Super Bowl. We never
Association. "History will ·saw him at that time. He didn't
show that his vision, integrity have to be there. He was there
and willingness to share with when he was needed. He
small market clubs paved the · always said and did the right
way for economic success."'
thing."
In 1989, Mara and group of · Before last Sunday's game
older owners wanted Rozelle's agamst
· Den ver, Coug hi.m to ld
successorto be Jim Finks, then h1s players of Mara's condi-

• f th NFL
then a lea~ ue lawyer. Mam
.LI 'Jr e fi
• a man who was thought the league should be
.:.V 1 mg or more_than 40 yeru:s run by a football man.
,to split the millions 111 te!ev1But Mara and several other
·SIOn revenues he_ c~uld have "old-guard" owners finally
,made Ill the nation s largest agreed to break a stalemate of
;market With the Green Bays four months by throwing their
;and Plttsburghs at the league._ ·votes to Tagliabue. Mara
It put \he NFL at the top ot became one of the new coin.ATenca s sports hl~rarchy. · missioner 's staunchest supHe sha)led nearly every porters. a man Tagliabue oflen
rule and philosophy w~ ha~e leaned on for advice.
m ~ur league today. said
Mara became a Giants' ballE~me Ac~orsl,_,rhe G1ant~ f.en- boy at age 9 on Oct. 18. 1925
era! manager. Most ot a! , he after his father, Timothy J.
J.Vas th~ moral co~scten?e . of Mara, bought the team. He
,the NaMn~l Football League. stayed fully involved in New
He now JOtns the pantheon of York's operation for almost 80
mcred1ble men who made !~IS years, except for the three
league w~at It has become.
years he served in the Navy
, Sa.ld coTm1ss1oner Paul during World War 11. Until he
:Taghabue: Wellington Mara became ill last spring, he
-~resented the heart and soul attended most practices and
o the Natoonal Football every game.
·Leag~e: He was a man of deep In 1930, at 14, his father
.conVICll'?n who stood as l! bea- made him co-owner with older
~n of tmtedgntty. Whekn Wtell broiher Jack.
00 . 0 spea
a a
He ran the club until several
J aara s
t
th
e gue mee mg, . e room years ago, when his son John
·wou_Jd become. Silent wtth took over day-to-day operaantiCipatiOn because all of us tions . But from 1979 on, while
-knew we. were gomg to hear the team was run by general
profound mstghts born &lt;?f elg~! managers George Young and
·decades of league exp~nence. Accorsi, Mara had final. say on
. The last of the NFL s found- football deciSions. He was the
ng generatJOn, Mara, e1ec ted. one who decided to fire Jim
I
to the . Pro Football
ol. Fassel after the 2003 season
. ofHall
Fame
m
1997
dted
cancer
·
.
.•
.
. and replace him with Tom
at • h1s home 1n Rye • the team
•
Coughhn.
Said.
,
Coughlin remembered Mara
One of Maras ~reates.t con- as an owner who stayed away
tnbutlons · came 111 the early from the coaches .- except
1960s when he and brother when he was needed .
·Jack agreed to share television
'T il never forget when l was
·revenue on a league w1de baSIS here as an assistant in 1988,"'
soon after Pet~ Rozelle- he said. "We lost the last game
became comm1ss1oner. That of the year to the New York
deal allowed the NFL to thnve Jets and didn"t go into the

ASSOCIATED PRESS

.'!'A

Pet
Calendar
1006~
••
••

•

•
- NEW YORK
-Every NFL
fan owes a huge debt to
-Wellington Mara, who died
:1\Jesday at 89.
: So does every owner, execu-.
-tive and player.
: Mara, who joined the New
~ k G
b
• or
lants as a a1lboy the
;datY his father purchdasb·ed the
• earn 80 years
an ecame
!co-owner
as aago
teenager,
was
:the face of the franchise for

BY TtM DAHLBERG

i·
•••

••••

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www .mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, October 26, 2005

Zito has low prorile for Breeders' Cup

Press-High School Football Poll

DIVISION I
1, Gin. St. Xavier (20)
2, Cle. Glenville (5)
3, Massillon Washington (3)
4, Can. McKinley (3)
5, Lakewood St. Edward
6. Solon
7, Cin. Colerain
8, Hilliard Davidson
9, Huber His Wayne (I )
10. Tol. St. John's

Wednesday, October 26, 2005

www .mydailysentinel.com

_Malt Leinart picked up the
:phone the other day and gave
:a shout out to Vince Youn~.
The two weren't trading
'team secrets,jtist pleasantries.
Things figure to be a little
,more serious when they meet
:in person. They' ll likely
'spend some time together in
-Manhattan in December,
:where they give away a cer:tain bronze statue every year.
: And on Jan. 4 they figure to
;get together again
in
,Pasadena because, no matter
goofy the Bowl
:how
:Championship Series is. even
11 blind Trojan horse could get
-this one right.
' At least that was the pre:vailing thought before the
'wizards of the BCS fed a
:bunch of information into
:their computers this week,
::Pressed "enter" and waited
,for the smoke to clear.
: When it did, college fool.ball somehow had a new king.
The Texas Longhorns have
•always been No. I in the
Jtearts of most of the 23 mil :1ion or so who call that foot'!Jall-crazed state ho1ne .
' But No. I in the country?
' Explain how that happens
'when to get to the top• they
_had to pass a Southern
-California team that is aver.aging just under 50 points a
:game, might soon have two
'Heisman winners in the back:field, and hasn't lost in more
.
'than two years.
• No, wait. Don't bother. That
would involve another mind:numbing explanation of rank:ings, power ratings, mathe:matical calculations, and
~omputer computations that
-would make the eyes of even
.the nerdiest geek glaze over.
: There are people whose
:very livelihood is at stake
·.With the BCS and even they
:l:an"t figure it out.
' "I still don ' t know how the
. BCS rankings really work.
:except that computers are
oinvolved," USC coach Pete
:carroll said. "And I don't
:]&lt;.now how you get mad al a
computer."'
Carroll has more rea,on
than most to wish a nast y

virus or two on the co.mpulers
that have so much say in who
will play for a multimilliondollar payout and the BCS
title at the Rose Bowl.
The same machines, you
might recall , cost his Trojans
a spot in the BCS national
championship game after the
2003 regular ·season even
though USC was No. I in The
Associated Press. media poll
and USA Today coaches' poll.
The Trojans are still atop
both polls. yet somehow second in the BCS. This comes
even after the BCS tweaked
the way it adds in the six computer ran kings for part of the
magical equation .that never
seems to work right.
BCS. experts (yes there are
people who actually analyze
thi s gibberish) say it doesn't
really matter that Texas and
USC flip-flopped places in
the latest rankings because
both are still comfortabli
ahead of third-place Virginia
Tech.
And it does give people in
Texas something to brag
about other than the price or
oil , so maybe a little controversy over who is really No. I
isn't all that bad.
But we're talking ·about
fairness here. and it seems
only fair that a team thllt has
won 29 straight games and
outscored opponents by an
average of four touchdowns a
game while playing five of its
first seven on the road shouldn"t be ranked No.2 by a1iyone
or any computer.
If you don't buy that, let's
find out from the real experts
who is really No. I.
Toss out the computers and
shred the polls. Sorry, NCAA.
but you've forced our hands
because you refuse to give us
a national football ' playoff.
We· re asking the bOokies
who the best football team in
the coumrx really is . They
should know because, unlike
the pollsters or the geeks, they
have to back their opinions
with money.
Sorry Longhorns. It 's the
Trojans who are No. I where
it really matters - and it' s not
even that close.
Offshore sports books are
already ·offeri ng action on a

•·

possible national ~hampi­
onship meeting between
Texas and USC at the Rose
BowL The matchup may be
hypothetical , but there's nothing hypothetical about the
money you can bet on it right
now with just a few clicks of
the mous~.
USC is favored over Texas
by nearly a touchdown at
Sportsbook.com. while the
Trojans are a 5 112-point pick
at
PinnacleSports.wm.
Should Texas faller and allow
Virginia Tech into the game.
USC is a 7 112-point pick over
the Hokies.
. Bookies, of course, use
computers, too. Somehow,
though, they've tigured out a
way to get it right.
So have the voters in the AP
and coaches' polls, who may
not know what a megabyte is
but recognize a dymrsly in the
making when they see one.
Right now, it'sjusl for bragging rights because unless
both teams win out. the question is moot. Assuming they
do , this Rose Bowl really
could be the Grandaddy of
Them AIL
No. I vs. No. 2.
Leinart and Young.
ll.eggie Bush running wild.
Even the _BCS will have
trouble screwing this one up.

BCS Standings

OIJiliiiU.VI~ \TJn'S

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of men and women who have proudly served their country during times of
crises and peace.
This Veteran's Day, the Daily Sentinel will publish a very special tribute
honoring area veterans. You . can join in our salute by including the
veteran in your life, living or deceased, who have served or is currently
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Wednesday, October 26, 2005

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Wednesday, October 26, 2005

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r

C oth ng G ve Away
Free
C oth ng G ve away at the

WANrnJ

II 1'&gt;,
I Nf31::'b

TOB!J\

y'ouTo MA~
Me Pil~R

Absolute Top Dollar U S
Stiver and Gold Co ns
Proofsels Gold A ngs Pre
US
Currency
1935
Soltatre
D
amonds
MTS
(740)992 5039
Con Shop 151 Second
Ful blooded Co 1e &amp; pup 10
good coun y home Cal Lost 2 Female Beag es 1 Avenue Ga polls 740 446
(740)74.: 0703
wh te w th blacJ&lt; spots and 1 2842
brown w th black saddle
Buyrng black wa nuts 12¢
ca 740 742 2925
per pound after hullmg call
(740)698 6060 bu y ng unttl
Nov 15th

F st Chu ch of God Second
&amp; Apple Streets Syracuse Te,;as Small reddish brown
Th ursday Octobe r 27th from part Dachshund red collar
OOam 1200 Noon
answers to name B Ball

YARD S ALE
GALUPOIJS

Garage and

I buy Junlt Cars {304 )n3
5004
I \11'1 0\ \II\ I

'11{\111"

lab Male seems healthy Yard Sale 593 Debb e Dr Fr
ad \e ll 1 a 1cd Souths de &amp; Sat Household clothing
are a 1304 67:J 5382
profess ona keyboard auto
harp mise
Foun d Puppy Shepherd/
Col e m x Hannan T ace
Rd S an Ceek Rd aea
Ca I (740)256 1668

www com1ca com

LEARN

TO

"o___
_ _.ll"o
IJFJP W&lt;\NTEO_.~ -Ltlo_
HELrWAN"lll&gt;
..
L

.._

Drivers COL A w/1 yr
LICENSED SOC IAL
tanker or 2 yr TT exp
WORKER
Reg anal runs have great Overb rook Reh ab htat on
NOEXPE A ENGE NECESSAAV
pay
benef1ts bonu ses Center s now acce ptmg
FULL T t.IE ClASSES
B1ggest Yar d Sale Yet
home t met &amp;66 293 7435
esumes for tile postt on ol
Los t
Male
Go den
COL TAA1N NG
Havens Hts New Haven
D1rector ol Soctal Serv1ces
F NANC NG AVA LAB E
Retr eve
Answers
to
En ve ope stlJffers ea n The qua itied candtdate
W Va Oct 28th and 29th
JOB PLACEMENT
S mar He s wear ng an
ENRO l NG NOW
money work ng at home must be a LSW possesstng
12 au Its 17 guns log cab n
orange nylon collar
Last
~all 24 hr tor deta Is 972
cook stove old cookm ars
strong verbal and wr tten
seen Thu sday on Long
504 2690
clo tll es old lamps bealJt lui
commun
cat on
sk Us
I-to ow Ad Letart Ch ldren s
ALLIANCE
p e safe old cab net and 2
Pe Ple ase ca ll (304)895
Established tanntng and hau Med ca d Med care and
TRACTOR
TRAILER
n ce wr t ng desks
30a3 o (304)a95 3163
TRAIN IN G CENTERS
salon looktng to an expen MDS knowledge Long term
WYTHEVILLE VA
enced Cosmotologtst and care ellpenen ce preferred
Natn Tech Benefits tnclud but not requtred Ou alif ed
1 BOO 334 1203 ed Send resumes to CLA cand dates may send
Box 555 c/o Gall po s resumes to Charla Brown
4x4 s For Sale ....................... ... .............. ....
725
AN
LNH A
Tr bune PO BoJC 469 McG u re
Announcement ..•..... : ........ .....•...........•• ..•. .•••.• •030
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Admtnt
strator
333
Page
Gallipolis OH 4563 1
Antiq ues
530
Assemble crafts
Street Middleport 01'1 o
Apartments for Rent
44Q
wood terns
FTIPT CURVES
45760 EOE
Au c t1 o n and Flea Market
OBO
To $480/wk
Worl d S" Ia gest
f !ness
Auto Parts &amp; Accessones
760
Mater als provtded
orga11 zatto n look ng fo r LPN Career Opportun ty
Aulo Re pair
770
Fee mlorma110n pkg 24Hr Manager Tra nee If you are Make a d fference and JO n a
Autos for Sale
710
801 428 4649
ener getic se I mottvated ca r ng learn t
Echo ng
B oats &amp; Motors for Sale
750
have an o1.1tgo ng personal Mea dows IS an MADD lac 1
Bu1l d1ng Supplies
550
An EJCcellent way to earn tv and love l o work With peo
ty olferm g rest dents out
B usmess and Buildings
340
money The New Avon
pie drop oft esume and standtng nurs1 ng care We
Bu smess Opportunity
210
Ca Marilyn 304 882 2645
camp ete an application at c urrently have an LPN
Bu si n ess Tra~ning
140
432 Silver B tdge Plaza even ng pos thon ava lab e
AVONI All Areas To Buy or
Cam pers &amp; Molor Homes
790
Knowledge ot hea thlnutr Wages start at $13050 per
Sell
Sh1rley Spears 304
Cam p mg Equ1pment
780
ton/fitness or sales eJCper hour
Apply n pe son
675 1429
Cards of Thanks
010
ance a plus
Echotng Meadows 319 W
Child/Elde rly Care
190
Ba tender/Wa tress Tratnrng
Home Health Care ol Unton Ath ens- Oh 45701
Elect rlca i/Refnge ratlon
840
Ava ilable Apply at JenchO
Southeast Ohto IS currenUy 740 594 3541
Equipment for Re nl
480
Inn (304)675-41 67
hlnng
atdes and Aegtstered
Excavatin g
830
lui I me
Nurses
Fu 1 T me Part LPN needed
CAPTAINS CHOICE
Far m Equipmen t
610
Monday Fnday day sh It no
Dtem
Tme
Per
Yo u have a truc k and wanna
Farrn s for Ren l
430
no holidays
weekends
make more Lets go door to CompetitiVe wages flmub e Apply at 936 St At ~60
Farms for Sal e
330
scheduling
Ca
toll
free
1
door Call the Capta n today
For Lease
490
Gallipolis (740)446-9620
lor that g eat pay A so look 888- 368 1100
For Sale
585
mg tor mot vated saleman
For Sale or Trade
590
M1dd eton Estates a lead ng
In Home Caregivers
Guaranteed ob $150 $300 In home serVIces agency s prov der ol support serv ces
Fru1ts &amp; Vegetables
580
day once tratned (740}645 currently
accep t ng to IndiVIduals w1th menta
Furnish ed Rooms
450
EZMEAT
Caregivers for the Pt reta rdat ton and develop
General Hau ling
850

DRIVE

CLASSIFIED INDEX

G1veaway
Happy Ad s
Hay &amp; G rain
Help Wanted
Ho me Im p ro vements
Homes f o r Sale
Household Goods
Housesfor Aent
In Memonam
Insuran ce
La wn &amp; Ga rden Equipment
L1vestock
Lost and Fo und
Lots &amp; A creage
Miscellan e o us
Mtscellaneous Merc~andise
Mob1le H o me Repair
Mob1Je Home s for Renl
Mobile Homes for Sale
Money Jo Loan
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers
Mus1callnstrum e nts
Person als
Pets for Sale
Plumbmg &amp; Heating
Professional Services
RadiO TV &amp; CB Repair
Real Estate Wanted
Schools Instru c t ion
Seed Plant &amp; Fertilizer
snuat1ons Wanted
Space for Ren t
Sportmg Good s
SUV s f o r Sale
Trucks for Sale
Upho ls tery
Vans For Sale
Wanted to B uy
Wanted Jo Buy· Farm Supplies
Wan ted To Oo
Wanted 10 RenJ
Yard Sale· Gallipolis
Yard Sale Pomeroy /Middle
Yard Sale Pt Plea sant

SECURITY
PROFESSIONALS
N a~onal secur ty I rm seeks
full ttme SUPERVISOR for
the App e Grove WV area
Qual fed appt cants must
be at least 21 yea s old HS
d ploma/GED no cr m na
eco d &amp; pass drug test
P or secur ty SlJperv sor
eJCpe ence requ red or else
taw enlocrementlm l1ta ry
WE OFFER
Exce lent pay
FREE Healthcare
Ltfe nsu ance
Matching 401(k)
Free unlo ms
Tuit on s assistance
Awa rdslbonuses
Ca ll 8663254150
betwee n 9AM &amp; 5PM M F
or fax esume to 412 325
4154
EOE

mov ng sa e

Foun d Back male Lab
9 14 Kemper Hollo.,.. Ad 9 ?
green col a around the
10!26 10127 Coats baby
Gobal Plan! (304)B82 2161
clothes tools lurmture toys
msc Ra n or sh ne

040
050

640
110

810

310
510

410
020
130
660
630
060
350
170
540
StiO
420
320
220
740

570
005
560
820
230
160

360
150
650
120
460

520
720
715
8 70
730

090
620
180
470
072
074
076

II"CU &amp;tlOD

Sales Manager
esponsibll tes mclud
ecrwt ng and tralnrng o
arners custome serve
nd meet ng sales goals I
ou have a poslhve an1
ude are a sell starter
nd a team p ayer w
ould ke to ta k to you
ust be dependable an
ave rei able transports
on F'os111tm oilers al
ompany benefits tnclud
ng Malth dema v s1on
ndlfe nsura nce 40 1k
ad vacatton and person
days Please sen
esume to
Paul Barklt'
Circulation Manager
Ohio Valley Publl1hing
825 Third Ava
Galllpolla Ohio 45631
Or amall to
pbarker 0 mydatlytri
bune com
Orl vert NMd.cl
COL Or vers w tllng to drive
for local ready m x-concrete
company Experience IS
preferred but n&lt;ll necessary
Dr ver mus t be w lllng to do
pre matntenance on trucks
&amp; equ pmenr yard work &amp;
olher mrscel aneous chores
Exper ence operating equ p
ment &amp; extra sk.lls euctl as
welding a pus
Call (304)937 3410

Pleasant Glenwood New
Haven and Mason area
CPR and Fu st Ad training a
plus You can apply n per
son @ Mason County Act on
Group
Inc
In Home
Serv ces 221 Man Street
PO Box 44 1 PI Pleasant
WV
25550 or phone
(304)675 3300
Mondey
through Fr day 8 00 am to
4 00 pm EOE ~IF AlA

mental dtsabtllt es tS look ng
to r drrect care employees
An
Equal
Opportun ty
Employer
F MION
App l cat ons w II be taken
Monday through Fnday
a OOam 4 OOpm at the lac It
ty 8204 Carta Dnve No
phone calls please

Now hlnng full and pa t t1me
McCh.Jres Restaurants n
M ddleporl and Galllpol s
Is there anyone n the Apply between 10 10 30am
Pomeroy/Mtddleport area
oak ng for full time wo k?
Are you looking for better
than min mum wages?
Pnmary
schedule
s
Monday fnday Bam Spm OverbrOOk Center s current
Must have valtd dr vers ly accept ng appllcat ens for
cense and dependab e Nurstng Ass stan! Classes
veh cle Must be !ami ar w th The classes w1 be October
Metgs County
25 November 13 Classes
Send resumes nolud ng
w be he d dur ng the day
references to CLA Box 2
w1th some classes du mg
C/o Pomeroy Oa ly Senl tnel the evenmg hours
Class
PO Box 729
days w11t vary Monday
POmeroy OH 45769
Sunday A schedule wtll be
Jan tarat servtce has tmme ava1lable at the front oflice
dlate opemng
n the Space 1S 1m ted AI nter
Gal polls
area
Ca ested app icat on at 333
Page Street M ddleport
(8001988 7847
OH NO Pllone CALLS
PLEASE!
Owner- Operator
Local Haul ng Wellston Area
Work around your schedule
Mcmday Saturday
S450 S1500 month y part
Your Truck our Tanker
ttme $2000 $4500 lull hme
Full t me- Shan Team
(303)292 9960
Call 800-548-8694
www h0me303 com
Fa Deta Is ask tor H R
Depl

Work @ home Earn $450
For a 1m1ted time make 50% Make up to 50"/o w th The $1 500 monthly part tune
selling A\IOn Cal (740)446 New Avon Call Les e $2 000 $4 500 full t me
3358
(740)985 3362
www OurAnswe com

Hu.P WANlHJ

Overbrook Center 1s current
ly accepting appl1cat1ons to
a Full T1me AN Supervisor
Th s s a 7PM to 7AM shtft
All nterested applicants
should pick up an appllca
I on at 333 Page Str eet
M dd aport Oh Fo r add1
I anal mformatlon please
contact Holl e Bumgarn er
Overbroo k
Staff
Development Coord nator at
992 6472
Paramedfcs
&amp;
EMT s
needed Apply at 1354
Jackson P ke Gall pol s

ntroducto ry penod EMT s
make
up to
$ 10/hr
Parame d cs up to $12/hr
100°o me dtca msurance
prescript on ca rd patd days
off &amp; vacat on ret rement
patd tra n ng AI ve hicles ow
mtleage new equ pment
Informal on
For
more
www pair otems co m o eal l
(740)532 2222
Political Fund raising
Do you I ke to talk on
the phone?
La d off? Aetl ed?
Need a change?
Come work n our
professional ca ll center
mak ng calls fo r the NRA
and other Poll cal
organ zat1ons
M ed~eaV DentaV4 01 K
Vacat on every 6 month s
Full and Part t me ava table
Up to $8 an hour plus you
could earn an add1t onal
5 1/hour wrth our
Attendance Bonus
1-877 -463 6247 ext 2304
Reg sterad Nursell~eensed
Soctal Wo rker
Mason
Coun ty
Aclton
Group
Inc
In home
Serv1ces
IS
accept ng
resumes lor a Reg stared
Nurse or L censed Soc al
Worker for a case manage
ment pos1t on on a per d em
bas1s Must have current
WV I cense Strong verbal
and wr tten commun eel on
ski lls a must Quai l ad can
dtdates may send resume to
Mason
County
Action
Group
Inc
In Home
Serv ces 221 Man Street
PO Box 44 1 pt Pleasant
WV 25550
Fo add1t anal
InformatiOn please contact
Jennller Thomas AN or l sa
Templeton AN @675 3300
EOE MI F AlA

FIND
AJOB
IN
THE
CLASSIFIEDS

SECURITY
PROFESSIONALS
Nat anal secur ty f1rm seeks
lui t me S UPERVISO R lor
the Apple Grove WV area
Qual lied applicants must be
at least 2 1 years old HS
dtploma/GED no cr tm nal
record &amp; pass drug test
Pro sec ur tv superv so
expe ence requtred or else
aw enforcement/ln I tary
WE OFFER
Excellent Pay
FREE healthca e
Ltfa Insurance
Match ng 4 01 (k)
Free un forms
Tu t on assistance
AwardS/bonuses
Cal
1866325 4 150
between 9am &amp; 5pm M F
or else lax resume to 412
325 4154
EOE

Serv1ce Techn lchm and
Tralneea local growmg
company established n
1954 s seek ng serv1ce
tecnmctans and tra nees
Compel vttes wages and
benef Is wtt h advancement
opporlun I es lor mollvated
nd Vlduals
A va r ety of
pos1t ons and different sk II
leve s are needed Des red
quahl catlo ns nc ude C D l
I canse m echan cal apt
tude elect rontc apttt ude
computer sk I s we ldtng and
culttng sk1lls Please send
resume to PO Box 569
Poca WV 25159 or FAX to
(304i755 3169 EEO

Work tor • Cause you
Believe lnl
Help recru I vo lunteers
for Orgamzattons like
The American Cancer.
Society
~nd the
American Heart
AaaocJallon
We are currently offering
Full t me and Pan t1me
sh fts earn1ng up to
$Bihour lnloC lion offers
a ProfessiOnal Work
EnV1 onment and a Great
Benehts Package!
Start now to earn an

extra $1/hour wUh our
ew AHendance Bonu s!
Call Now!
1 877-463 6247 X1941

DIRECT TV 3 room wtth
T vo FREE t 45 cnannels
on y $39 00 pe month Ask
how to get FREE HBO
MAX and home enttlrtam
ment system Call 800 523
7556 for data s

1180

1166
~;:::::~::===~
- - ------- ~
10
Huust-~
1997 Clayton mob le home
14x50 tncludes washer
•lJK RJ.NT
dryer &amp; !urn ture $9 500
Phone (740)256 1734
1 Br House and 3 Br House
2002 Clayton only $142 per for Rent call (304)675 244 1
month Will dehvar (740)3a5 between 9am 2pm
4367
Great used 99 SKyl ne 11 6 South Park Dr ve
requ red
16x80 VInyl/s hingle 2x6 Refe rences
(304)675
7806
walls glamour batn Call

~~~TRliCJlON

3 BR 2 1 2 Balh B1 Level 2
Car Garage Barn Approx
2 acres $1 20 000 (304)882
8227 or (304 )882 2890
7BR 5BA Forec losure only
$1 8 000 For I slings call
800 391 5228 ext F254

280 house all e ectr c
New 16 w de only $190 par depost $400/month no
month v ny s d ng Shmgle pets 15 m es so uth on A
Root &amp; Delvery (740)385 7 {740)441 19l7
767 1
3BA 28A 3 acres on r ve
New 16x76 3 bedroom/2 w th dock Ia boats Very
bath M nutes !rom Athens mce $800 dep $800
Must se I Move tn today Ca I (740)367 7762 (740)446
4060 (740)367 7272
(740)385 2434

WANIID

To Do
J.,•••liiiiiiiiio•_.l
Alter L fe - LapTop Sales &amp;
Ser v ce PC &amp; Mac Repa r &amp;
Servce 740 992 t 525
Babysttttng or housekeepmg
anyti me Racine or Pomeroy
area cal Juan Ia 1n Racme
(740)949 2188
Ch ld
Care
Days/Even ngs
5273

Attention!
Local company offer ng ~No
DOWN PAYMEN T" pro
grams lor yo u to buy your
home nstead or rent1ng
• 10CY'ID I nancmg
• Less than perfect credit
accepted
• Paym ent could be the
same as en!
Mortgage
Locators
(740)367 0000

Mason
(304)773- Charmtn g brick ranch Rio
Grande Ouamt fnendly
neighborhood 3 bl ocks from
Computer
Repa1r
and URG Custom-built tn 2002
Troubleshoot Web Design lnteno r open an d atry
N etworking Programming Tradttlonai natural oak
Budd New Systems Restore
wood wo k throughout 3
Wtndows V1 us Removal be drooms 2 full baths
Ce rt1hed Ph one#740 992 Large kttchen witl'1 d1n1ng
2395
pantry disposal m crowave
Great room des gn with
MagiC Years Day Ca e
vaulted ce I ng and gas f r&amp;
Presch ool 7 30 5 30
place w1th oak mantle On
Putt ng Ch ildren Ftrsr
hill w th front porch overlook
Ages 2 12 I m ted ~pull up"
ng woods Maste r suite wltl"l
sp aces ava lab e
State
his/her balh lncf whirlpool
Lt censed l nk Appr oved
tub shower 2 walk 1n clos
Exce llent Skills
Spaces
ets 2 car garage landscBp.
ava iable for all ages
mg All new appiiEinces
II\\\( 1\1
mcluded Low-co st heat1ng/
coo ng
1692
sq
ft
$17 9 900 (740)379 261 5

~Get Pad to
Hunt &amp; F shiiiJ!I!
your pas s on nlo
Call J

•NOTICE•
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
NG CO recommen ds tl1 a
ou do bus ness wtth peo
le yalJ know and NOT t
end money th rough 111
atl unt1l you have 1nvest
ated the offerln

r

MoNEY

TO LoAN

arrow Smart Contac
he OhiO D VISIOn 0
mane al
lnst1tu t on
fflca ol Consume
ffatr s BEFORE you rei
ance your home o
bta n a can BEWAA
f requests lor any larg
dvance payments o
ees or msurance Cal
he Ofltce of Consume
ffaus loll lree at 1 866
78-0003 to learn I th
ortgage broker o
en der
s
proper
lcensed (ThiS s a publ
ervlce announcemen
rom the Ohio Va le
Publlshm Co

r
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Wtnl
1 888 582 3345

m,~~--Sc~~-00--JS---,r~t•O--·ro·"-~-~~----~

All real estate advertising
In thll newspapt~r 11
subject lo the Federal
Fair Hou1ing Act ol 1968
whlct1 makes. it Illegal to
ltdv.rtlse any
preference limitation or
discrimination bated on
rece c:otor religion sex
tamlHal status or national
origin or any Intention lo
make any auch
preference limitation or
dlacrlmlnellon h
Th is newtpaper will not
knowingly accept
advei11Mmllnla tor. raal
estate which Ia In
violation of the law Our
readera are herBy
Informed that all
dwelling• edvertlaed In
this newap~per are
avallabla on an equal
opportunity btiMI
Co1.1 ntry setttn g In Ga tlla
Counlyl 3 bedrooms 2
baths fireplace $89 000
(740)709 11 66
House lor Sa le 3 bedroom
full s ze dry basem ent
Great Nvtghborhood corner
lot rtgl'1 t n town Take a look
1001 Kenny cr (nght behind
Jr High School) Shown by
Appt $84 500 (3040675
3123 or {304)675 0032
Newly remodeled 3 or 4
bedrooms central a fu
basement hardwood lloors
detached g a ra~e large cov
erect patio fenced back
yard c ose to schools Point
P easant
$69 500
(740)709 1382

~
1 ac e wllh 2 bedroom stngle
Gallipolis Career Colleg e story home In country 116
(Careers Close To Home) Po ndeJCter Road off Johns
Creek Road (304)576 2247
Ca I Today 740 446 4367
$39 500
1 800 214 0452
wwwga I pol scareerco 1e~e ccm
Accrec led Membe Ace ed 1ng 1995 Doublewlde 3br 2ba
Counc~ lor ndependonl COl egos wlanached
Ga age
~nd Scttoos 1274B
BreezeWay &amp; Barn
1 56
acres Sandh II Ad $72 000 No Down Payment Less
(304)895 3068
than perfect erect t 0 K F ve
mmutes
from
Holzer
3 Bedroom 2 Bath w 11'1 Hospital Three Bedrooms
Char e Hawk w11l be at
F replace n Rio Grande 8 One Bath Leve l lot Newly
Hawk Ad
Junk Store
acres m/1 40x60 ba n remOdeled 740 4,6 3130
Athens
several
$125 000 (740)709 1186
Wednesdays 12 6 also
Syracuse 38R Attached
Pomeroy Barn beh nd. Ewmg
3 Bedroom 2 bath Split ObiGar New Root Viny
Funeral Home
several
level Home
Ve_ry n ce Sid ng Block Utility Butld ng
Fndays 2-6 (740)378 6262
Netghbo hood
S145 000 S85000 740949 1082 or
or 740 4t2 5349
(304)675 n1o
740 416 27B6

I

'

r

(740)385 9621

Mov ng Sele Fr Oct 28tt1&amp;
Sat Oct 29th 301 Capehart
Place (Haven Heights) to
Numero1.1 s to Mentton

puppies to good homes only
Need oom to run (740)441
1417 alter 5pm

~

E!'4

FOUND

7 wk old sol d black 3/4 Lab

r

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
S. ~
.m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

losT AND

..,r.10_..,;,miiHR;;,
Ol!SE
OiRENTs ;.._.JI

bath Tra ler to Sale
2000 5 rooms &amp; bath stove &amp;
W th Clayton 16 X 70 3 bed efr gerator no pets 50
from oom 2 bath -cen tra l a r Olive St $350 month
appr porches S23 000 740 992 (740)446 3945
;:,972
6 rooms &amp; bath stove
elng S400/mo No pets
M OBD.E HOM~
L.ms &amp;
Recent y emodeted 644
RJRSALE
;\CIU:&lt;GE
Second Ave (740)446 0332
Bam 5pm
1965 14x70 Schultz tra ler 84 5 aces 6 m les south ol
w!factory 6x20 expando Oak H t Wayne Nat1onal
Anentlon l
3BR 2BA 3 ton central atr Fore st borders I on 3 s des Local company offer ng NO
porches new carpet good 740 6fl2 731a after 6 m
DOWN PAY MENT" pro
condthon (740)367 7133
grams lor you to buy your
R EAl E'-lT \I'l
home nstead of rent ng
W Ar&lt;rm
~94 Clayton 14ll72 3BR
100° c hnanc ng
2BA CIA w/heatpump very
Less than pertect cred t
clean excellent co ndtllon Need to sell your home?
accepted
Must be moved $~ 2 900 Late on oaymen ts d vorce
Paymen t could be the
(7401379 26 17 or (7401379 JOb transfer or a death? 1
same as rent
948 9 leave message
can buy your home All cash
Mortgage
Locators
andquckcosng 740416
1996 Skyl ne 28x6 0 38 R
1740)367 0000
3 t 30
2BA f rep ace cathedra l
I~ I '\ I \I S
ceiling $35 000 (740)709
Ava lable Nov 15th 3 bed

Ga)l ~ Co11n1y O H

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The Datly Senhnel • Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.com

c

NOTICES
NOTICE TO TAXPAY
ERS
Reference
5715 17
Ohio Revised Code
The Meigs County
Board of Revision has
completed Its work of
equalization The tax
returns lor laiC year
2005
have
been
revised and the valua
tlons completed and
are open for publtc
Inspection
In
the
office of the Meigs
County
Auditor,
Second
Floor,
Courthouse Second
Slreat,
Pomeroy
Ohio
Complaints against
the valuations
as
established for tax
year 2005 must be tn
accordance
with
Secllon 571519ofthe
Ohio Ravlsad Coda
These
complaints
must be filed m the
County
Auditor s
Office on or before
the 31st day of March
2006 All complaints
flied
with
Counly
Auditor will be heard
by the Board of
Revision In the man
ner
provided
by
Secllon 5715 19 of the
Ohio Rev1sed Code
Nancy Parker Grueser
Meigs County Auditor
OS01522
(10)
26,27,28 30 21 ,
(11)1,2 3 4,6

37 mmutes east 239
feet lhence North 33
deg 20 monutas west
154 feat Jo the South
lme of Logan s lot,
thence Soulh 56 deg
37 minutes West 239
feet along sa1d hne to
the place of begm
ning contaming 0 80
acres
Property
Address
33058 Ststa Route 33
* 2 15 Pomeroy OH
45769 Parcel Number
14.01203 000 Current
Owner John E &amp; Lori
A Miller 33058 St Rt
33 Pomeroy Ohio
PP# 1401203 Prior
Deed
References
Volume 301
Page
313, Appraised at
$ 50,000 00 Terms of
sale Cannot be sold
for less than 213rds of
the appraised value
10% down on day of
sale, cash or certified
check balance due
on confirmation of
sale The appraisal
did not mclude an
mtenor examination
of the house Robert
E
Beagle
Meigs
County
Sher1ff
Attorney
for
the
Plalnllff Stephen D
Miles Attn 18 W
Monument
Ave
Dayton Ohio 45402
(937) 461 1900
(10) 26 (11) 2 9

Public Not1ce
Public Notice
Sheriff
Sale Case
Number
04CV169
United
Slates
of
America Plaintiff VS
John E &amp; Lori A Miller
Defendants Court of
Common
Pleas
Meigs County Ohio
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me
directed from sa1d
court In the above
entllled action I w111
expose to sale al pub·
lie a uction on the
Front Steps of the
Meigs County Court
House
on
Friday
December 2 2005 at
10 AM of ssld day
the
following
described
Real
Estate Exhibit
A
Description of Real
Property Situated In
the
Township
of
Salisbury, County of
Meigs and SJale of
Ohio, Beginning on
the Easterly edge of
the black top surfac e
of Stale Route 3 3,
Soulh 33 degrees 20
minutes East 241 5
feat
along
Jhe
Easterly edge of sa1d
aurtace
from
the
North
end
of a
Headwall of a culvert
near a mine opening
Jhe place of begin·
ntng
being
Jhe
Southwaat corner of
Dwight Logan Jot
recorded
In
Dee d
Book 192, Page 507
Deed Records of
Meigs County Ohio
thence
aouth
33
degrees 20 m inutes
east 154 feet along
the Easterly edge of
aald surface 10 teet
from the c enter of
uld State Route 33
thence North 56 deg

Sheriff Sales Case
Number
05CV056
NaJional
City
Mortgage Co Plamllff
VS Chad McKibben et
al Defendants Court
of Common Pleas
Me1gs Counly OhiO
In pursuance of an
orde r of sale to me
directed from said
court 1n the above
entitled action I will
expose to sale at
Public Auction on the
front steps of the
Me1gs County Court
House on Friday, Dec
2 2005 at 10 am of
s old day Jhe follow
lng des cribed real
e s tate
Situated
m
the
Towns hip
of
Columbia Counly of
Me 1gs and .Slate ot
Ohio, and deacrlbed
as follows PARCEL
NO 1
Being Jhe
Southeast Quarter of
the
Northwest
Quarter of Section 1
of Town, County and
State -aforesaid estl
mat ed at 40 ac res
more o r less
EXCEPTING from the
above described real
estate 3 9418 ac res as
conveyed by Aaa D
Stansbury
and
Golden
Faye
Stansbury to Wande
Lou Ox ley by deed
recorded m Volume
247 page 637 Deed
Rec ords
Meigs
County Oh io
FURTHER EXCEPT
1NG
the following
Being situated In the
Southeast quarter of
the Northwest quarter
o f se ct1on 1 of the
Townshi p
County
and Slate a foresa id
a nd I&amp; desc ribed as

t'o

1r

IIOIJSJ-:~

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;\PARTMINI"S

House lor Rent $400 a 2 Bedroom Apartment W!D
month plus ut It es Oepos t Hook up
Water
Trash
Relerences
No Pets Sewe
Pa1d
$375/mo
1304)675 4B74
{ 740)3~7 7746
(740)367
7015
House rn Rutland no pets
call (740)742 2661
2BA
apt
lor
rent
$425 depos11 $425/re nt plus
M ne sv lie area 2 bedroom
utlt es
In
Kana uga
washe /dryer
e ectr c
(740)446-4107 or (740}44 1
$400 00 a month and
2707
$400 00 depos t
Accept
pets 740-992 2557
3 rooms and bath A I ut t es
pad
Downsta rs no pels
Small 2 Bedroom no pe ts
WID hookup
$350 00 5450/mo 46 01 ve Sl
month
$300 00 depos t
304 773 9192

(7401446 3945
Apartment available now
Rrverbefld Apts New Haven
WV Now accept ng appllce
tons tor Hud Subs1d zed
one Bedroom Apts Ut I I es
Included Based on 30% ol
adJusted Income
Ca I
(304)882 3121 ava labte for
Senter end D sao ed People
EHO

Stop rent ng Buy 4 bedroom
foreclosure $15 000 For I st
ngs BOO 391 5228 eJCt 1709

Tolally remodeled
mtenarl
3 bedroom house central
heat &amp;. a
washer dryer
room house turmshed no hook up lanced yard sto
pets prater non smokers
$775 00 per month plus ut I age bldg $475 per month Beaut lui 2 story townhOuse
rent (740)44t 11t l
ties $750 00 per month pus
ovo look ng Gal pols c ty
utthtles $750 00 depos t
M OBJI.E HOM~
park K !chen DR LR
Telephone 740 992 5421
RE!Ir
study 2 baths laundry area
Rele ences requ ed secur
Ava fable Nov 151h 2 bed
room house kitchen fur 14x70 2BR At 35 new car rv depos t no pets S900 mo
$425 dep
$425 Ca I (740)446 2325 or
111shed no pets prefe r non pet
(740)367 7762 0 (740)446 (740)446 4425
k
$475
00
th
smo ers
per mon
1 u 1 1es a nd $450 oo 4060 or (7 40)367 7272
Pus
BEAUTIFUL
APART
depos 1 ",eIep hone 740
AT
BUDGET
2 bedroom n Porter Water MENTS
992 5421
trash
sewage
pa d PRICES AT JACKSON
no pets ESTATES 52 Westwood
For rent 2 bedroom I bath Washer/drye r
$450/mo
$450/dep Dr ve tram $344 to $442
llJI y renova ted a appl
Wa lk to shop &amp; moves Call
ances
$475/month {740)388 9325
740 446 2568
Equel
$475/d epostt Ca 1 (740)446 2BR mob le home to ren t
3481
S3251depos I $325/renl plus
ut I t es On Polecat Ad Beauhfu! "P: bedroom 1600
For rent 2 story home 3BR
(740)446 41 07 or (740)44 1 sq It restored and decorat
AJC $500/month S500
ed 2nd floor apartment 57
2707
depOSit {740)446 346 1
Court St
n Gall pots
2BA mob le home lor rent Spacous vng &amp; dnng
$325 depos I $325/rent plus cams New appl ances 1
ut lt1es On Polecat Ad 1/2 baths storage space
(7401446 4 107 or (740)441 rear deck to
sunn 11g
2707
HVAC $600 per month plus
ut1l t es Secur ty and Key
3 bedrooms 517 Burdette
depos
t
No
pes
Street A I electriC depos I
Refe rences
requ red
and elerence requ red No
(740)446-4425 or~740)446
Pets (304)675 5402
3936
Beaut lu r ve r v ew In
Kanauga Ideal fo r t 2 pee Beect) St eet M ddteoort 2
pie
No pets
plaase bed com lurntshed apart
Townshtp
County
Appl cat ons bemg taken ment depoSit &amp; prev ous
and
State , as Is
renta references no pets
Call (740)441 0 1a1
described as follows
(740)992 0 165
Beginning at a stake Mob le Home for Rent
In lhe West corner of Loca ted
n
Mason CONVENIENT'-Y LOCAT
$375/mo
$375/
depostt
No EO &amp; AFFORDABLE I
land
owned
by
apa tments
Thomas Price and outs de pets References Townho lJ se
and/or
sma
houses
FOR
Delbert
Turner, requ red Call (304)675 3423
RENT Call (740)4-4 1 1111
thence North along
Mobtl e hOme sttes
n for appl cation &amp; nforma!IOn
said lme of land
Coun tr y Homes
Shade
owned by Thomas
$ 130 mo (740)385 4019
Price 450 feet to the
base
Southeast corner of N ce 3BR mob le home Ia
pad
the land conveyed by en! $400/dap $550/mo
Fer y
deed from thelmore Nee d 3 references Call
Stansbury and Minnie (740)446 360 1 or (740)441
Stansbury to Asa Oak 5899
Stansbury
and
T ale wth addon Room&amp;
Golden Stansbury his
Ut hty Room Crab Creek
wife , thence West
Rd Rent $250/month plus
along said 11na 250
ut titles
Refe re nces Grac oust v ng 1 and 2 bed
leet to a stake thence
requ red No Pets (304)675 room apartments at V lage
South 570 feet to a
Manor
and
A vers de
1206
stake In the center of
Apa tments m M ddleport
Jhe
Dysvllla
APARJMEIIII'S
From $295 $444 Call 740
(Carpewater) Road
RENT
992 5064 Equal Ho1.1s ng
Thence East by North
Opportun ttes
280 feel Jo place of
1 and 2 bedroom aparl
beginning containing ments !urn shed and unfur Modern 1 bedroom apt
2 64 acres more or n shed secur ty de post! (740)446-0390

roR

r

Jess

FURTHER EXCEPT
lNG 0 348 acres con
veyed to the Trustees
of
Columbia
Township
Meigs
County Ohio for the
benef1l of Rawling s
Cemetery
PARCEL NO TWO
Alao the following
ptece or parcel of
land lying and being
m the County of
Meigs and State of
Oh10 and In Columbia
Township
and
described as follows
Beginning In the cen
ter of the road leading
from
Dyeaville to
School Lot 15 rods
South of the North
Una of the Northwest
quarter of Section 1
and about 31 rods
and 20 links East of
the West line of aa1d
quarter sectton run
nlng
thence
East
about 22 roda, thence
South 67 rods thence
West about 4.0 rods to
the center of the road
leadi ng
from
Dyesvllle to School
lot
thence
North
along the center of
said road to place of
beginning conta ining
aboul 6 acres and 22
rods , be the
same
more or leas Current
owner
Chad
McKibben
et
al
Property at
38676
Stahearl
Rd,
Pomeroy, Ohio PPf
05·00667 000
Prior
Deed
References
Volume 167 Pagel
651
Appraised
al
$130 000 00 Term a of
Sale Cannot be sold
for less than 213rds of
the appraised value
10% down on day of
sale cash or c ertified
chec k balance due
on conflrmallon of
sale
The appraisal
did Include an Interior
examination o f the
house
Robert E
Beegle Meigs County
Sheriff
Attorney for
the Plaintiff Learner
Sampson &amp; Rothluss
~0
Box
5480
Cinc i nnati
Ohio
45201·5460 (51 3 )2 41 ·
3100
(10) 2 6 ( 11 ) 2 9

roR

requ red no pel$ 740 992
2218
large
Bedroom
Apartment Bath K tchen
L v ng Room on qwet
P tvate pa k ng
Stree t
Construct on worker p e
le red
1 person 5300
month plus utilities 2 per
son s $625 no ut1htles
(3041773 5054
1 BR apa rtment ups tatrs
720
Second
Ave
Washer/drye r
hookup
Water/sewer/! ash pad No
pets Aefe ence $325/mo
$325 depOSit
(740)645
2~ 92 day
(740)446 010 1
even ngs

2 bedroom apartmen

Ia ~

ent n Syracu se S200
depostt $335 per month
r:tnt must have sull cent
ncome to qualify (740)378
611 1
bed room
apartment
2
Rae ne very ntce clean
$425 per mon tt1 p us
deposit no pets references
requred
74044 1 0110
(740i992 5174

2 bedroom 2 bath apart
ment $600 No pet s Located
downtown Call (740)441
1124
Help Wanted

NEW ELLM VIEW
TOWNH OUSE/APTS
NOW LEASING
SPAC IOUS
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;
TOWNHOUSES
AVAILABLE
ALL ELECTRIC
CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
STOVE REF
DISHWASHER
GARB AGE DI SPOSAL
W NO BLINDS
CEI LIN G FANS
WATER SEWAGE &amp;
TRASH INCLUDED
PETS CONDITIONAL
1304)882 3017

•

__

APAR1111f:NTI
m RRB&lt;r

FORRmr

!

..__1\ii~iiS&lt;.ili~ili:owLAiii'iN:i;'osi i~si-' ~.,r L•'•v•'".' ~.ucK_rll

r

Reg ste ed An.gus bulls and
JET
he1ters 40 years of A I
AERATION MOTORS
F.lepa red New &amp; Rebut! In breed ng Slate Run Farm
Slack Call Ron Evans 1 www slate unla m com
800 537 952a
(740)286 5395

98 Ford Exp orer XLT 4d
4x4 auto AIC t It CD
c use
172 DOOn es
$3 Soot m 740 245 5033

Tara
To wnhouse
Apa tments Very Spac ous
2 Bedrooms CIA 1 1/2
Bath
Adu t Pool &amp; Baby
Pool Pat1o Start $385/Mo
No Pets
Lease Plus
Secunty Depost Req1..1 ret!
(740)367 7086

r\___

Vent F. ee 3 Plaque
Gas Heate
(Propane or Natu al)
Manua Coni ot $ 143 95
Alum num Ftoerated Pant
{Great for Mob le Homes)
5 gal Bucket $29 95
We now have candy melts
tn stock lor your
no 1day bak ng
Pa nt P us Hardware
675 4084

can be used for s1orage of
car campe boa .$300 per
month (30 4)675-6259

r

\IIIH II \\IH"il
HOLSEHOW

GooJJ!;
Dnng room tabe and 6
cha rs hke new $350 Cur o
cabmet $200 Call (740)44 1
8299

1993 GMC Truck heavy half
4 wheel dnve 4 3 V6 auto
mat c transm ss on Runs
excellent tranny rebu It
motor has low m1 es dual
exhaus t toolboll W II sa e
1989 C1'1ev 8 etta Run lor $4 000 or best offer n
1991 cash Call 1740]441 9378
good S500 OBO
Bon v e ~300 080 needs leave message
fue pump 740 992 3457

r

V.w;

FoR S ALF.

1993 Plymouth Voyager 7
van
Good
passenger
shape 25 mpg $2 000
080 (740)441 1417 alt~1
5pm

1993 Cad1tlac DeVtlle 4 9
Grand
P ymoulh
\ 8
59 000 m11es
all 1997
opt ons leathe new t res voyager Wh te 2 s drs
maroon
$5 000
r rm good co nd runs good
$3 500 0 80 Call (740)441
(740)645 06;6
0712
1993 Chevy Camara LT1
$4 300 1990 Chevy short 1999 C1'1evrotet Ventu re
bed steps de 2WD S3 BOO Extended Van b ue 82 000
m les great cond han one
(740)645 6008
owner sa 500 (740 )367
7435
(740)339 3955
994 Bu ck Lesabre H gh
miles loaded leatller g ea t
cond lion runs great Ask ng
52 000 OBO (740)388
Ot 40

Plush fu ll s ze 1993 lullury
van
Great
con dlt on
Meehan c owned Buil t n
soar ecl'1arg ng system
Block br ck se wer p pes
77 400 m les Must see
w ndows I ntels etc Claude 1998 Blazer 20 4K4 999 $5 995 Call John (740)446
W nters Rro G ande OH Salw n 3D 1999 &amp; 199a
9961
Ca 740 245 512 1
Sunl res t 999 Voyager SE
Van Two 19a9 and one ~40 M(ITORCYO.' lll/
1\:n;
1979 Chevy trucks 3
4 WH EEl Fl!S
IUR S Al I
months/3 000 m le wa rranty
Others n stock
2000 Honda CBR 929RR
2 AKC mate Beagles $75
COOK MOTORS
r dden
M eron
adu
t
each (304)882 2972
(740)446 0 103
System power commande r
32a Jackson P ke
Set or trade for ca or p ck
AKC 6 month o d Pek ngese
black mask al shots 1999 M01 te Car a 31 V6 up $3 BOD (740)4 46 0746
Unable to care for $ 50 90 000 m les a I power
2003 Suzuk 4WO V nson
nclud ng cage (740)388 b acto: elCcel ent con d1110n
500 ATV w th 34 mtles
9824
500 (740)379 9038
S4900
CARM ICHA EL
EOU PMENT
(740)446
Jack Russel pupp es $125
2000 L nco n LS While all 241 2
Ia rna es $150 lor emaes
Options $10 800 (304}675
(740)742 2192
2004 Kawasak1 700 Pratne
7565
ATV Automat c 68 m tes
LABS 7 ""ks Choc &amp; B k
cond lion
AKC 1st shot $200 $300 2001 Chevy Caval er Z24 exce tent
304)20B 1039
79 000 mtles runs like new (304 )576 29t4 or {304)674
oaks great 52 200 OBO 2044
M n Schnaug e
pu pp es (740 )446 0171
Attention deer hunters
AKC 2 n ales blackls lver 1
Get $800 off our already low
black
ma e
$400
1 2002 Honda Accord EX pr ce on new John Deere
Yorksh re r~ er AKC mae Sedan 40 Estate Ve l'1 cle Buck ATV s Cal for data Is
3 lbs $600 part cream only 14 000/m les Loaded Carm chael Equ pment Inc
Po me an pl1ppy rna e S ve r l eather Moonrool 6 (740)446 24 12
AKC, $350 (740)696 1085 0 sk CD Changer &amp; Mo e
SIS 000 NADA s $17 900
70
Mt"lCAL
See at Casey Law Off ces
6 11 V and Street ear or
I"-~ Jl&lt;U\1~1&lt;1&gt;
can (304)675 3999
17 1 2 ft V Hu I Seastar
A to Saxophone Bundy II
F be glass
boat
65HP
85
Chevy
Caval
er
lor
sale
Salmen Company good
Chrysler motor cover new
pads eJCcellent cond ton (304)675 1506
Ira !e
$2720 {7 40)44t
740 949 2575 days or 740
9282
949 2293 n ghls $300 00 93 Toyota Camry $600 Cars
t om ssoo L st ng aoo 391
OBO
CA.\ II'I'RS &amp;
1
5227 Ext C54B
MaroRHOMFS
Upr ght Plano $200 or Free
to Church or Non Prolt
2000 Dutchmen Class C
Organtzat on call lor nlor
Fully self con ta ned Sleeps
mat on (304)669 020 1
6 to 8 3407 Jackson Ave
I \1(\J\1 1'1'1 II..,
.\ 11\1 ... 11)( h

BUtLIJLN(
SUPPJJF.S

r

Ke nmore Washer $125
Maytag Drye :575 Kenmo e
Ae tr ge ator Ia r y new $100
1 Green Mach ne Weed
Ea ter
w b ades
$100 (304)773 5930
Tllompsons Appl ance &amp;
Aepa r 675 73BB For sale
re condt t oned automat c
washers &amp; d yers relr ge a
to s
gas and electr c
anges a r con d to ars and
Wf nger washers W I do
epa rs on ma1o brands n
shop or at your home
Warm Morn ng Wood burner
stove $125 Call (740)256
1424

r

1993 F1 50 4)14 6 cy 5Spd
1ft kit 33 1res on Ame 1can
Aacmg
ms
$3 500
(740)446 2350

1972 Mach 1 Mustang
Cobra Jet 3 51 Cleveland
C6 transm ss on 3 out of 4
Car
all numbers match
S10 500 or trade and cash
(304)773 5054

1989 Ford Club Wagon XLT
89K m les well ma nta nee!
$2 830 995 Ford Crown
Seasoned F r&gt;wood mostly V ctor a LX 130K m les
Oak $40 cad (304)576 good cond 1on
S2430
(740)44 1 92B2
2634

For Rent 2 arge s ngle bays
m a well prolected ga ege

Storage Aenta s tor Boats
Campers Cars Mason Co
Fa rgrounds At 62 S8 a foot
(304)675 8463

4x4
FoR SAil

I R \'\''I'( )I{ I \1 U 1'\

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams P pe Rebar
For
Concrete
Angle
Channe Flat Bar Steel
Grat ng
For
Dra ns
apartment
Dr veways &amp; Walkways l&amp;l
EHO
Scrap Metals Open Monday
~:--....- - - . . . . , Tu esday
Wednesday &amp;
S
iiiPiii'li
CE
- -_.1 F day Bam 4 30pm Closed
fUR REI\T
Thu rsday
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday (740)446 7300
Downtown Off ce Space 5
room su te $65Qimo 1 room Rem ngton 870 12 ga 30
all ce $225/mo 2 room lull ear y mode w th sma!
su te $250/ mo Setur ty groved forend wltll add ton
depos t requ red You pa y al Rem ngton r lie s gh(ed
ut I t es All spaces very n ce s ug barrel lui box at shells
Elevator Call (740)446-3644 w th purcllase looks new
99° o $500 (740)533 3870
Ia appo ntment
sp aces n very good cond
I on Downtown Gall pols
App rox 1600 sq It each 1
or 2 batn s Lease p ce
negotiable to encourage
new
bus ness
Call
(740) 446 4425 or {740)446
3936

SUVs
m H S•u

SPORTING

Gooo;

Zap Tou namenl grade pant
bal s 2 000 per boJC $25
740 441 1417 alter 5 m

ANTIQU~
Buy o
sell
Atver ne
Ant ques 1124 Easl Marn
on SA 124 E Pomeroy 740
992 2526 Russ Moo e
owner

M ISCEUANEOUS
M EHt..lHNI&gt;JSE

ss

r

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond tiona! I let me guar
antee Local references fur
n shed Esta bl shed 1975
1974 Ford Ranger pc~ up Call 24 Hrs (740) 446
$600 as s (304)675 7388
OB70 Rogers Basement
Waterproof ng
1965 Ford lruck F150 6
cyl nde automettc good
Now s tl'1e I me to buy a new bOdy uns $900 (740)446
door sta nless steel runs John Deere 0% Fixed 9742
on
l ke new $500 f rm
Financing ava lable now a
GMC
78
000
mtles
1992
Electr cal plumb ng hot Carmtchael Equ prnent on
wale heater &amp; HVAC parts new Compact Ul hly &amp; 5000 oaded automat c ext cab
$3 500 O BO
ventless natural gas heater Seres John Deere !rae ors no rust
(7
40)446
2098
One BA apt quet prvate (740)44 t 1236 atte 6pm to 36 months (740)446
2412
locatton close to ttosp tal Mon Fr
1995 FT 900 Tandem Ford
ret &amp; depo s t requ red
Log Tuck onl y 17 000 m les
(740)446 2957
IJH:NJOC K
S26 000
1998 Eager
areas
Pleasant VaOey Apa tment
Beaver 10 Ton Tra ler $6 000
Are now tak ng App cat ons
Baby donkeys Ma es &amp; (304)8a2 2567
to r 2BA 3BR &amp; 4BR Four church pews 15 It female (740)446 t158
2001 Dodge Ram 1500
A.pp cat ons are taken
long each red padded
4X4 Oued Cab 8 Bed
Monday lh fi.J Fr day from
Club
ca
f
lo
r
sate
Sired
by
seats Good cond 1on S300
54 000 miles new l tres
900 AM 4 PM Offce s
Jazz
Angus
bull
tor
sale
Oak pulp t S200 very good
eJCtended lactory warl"anty
located at 1151 E ve rgr~en
condit on P ano good con Phon e ~740)446 6157 atte
loaded $15 000 oo 740
Dr ve Po nt Pleasant WV
6
OOpm
d t on $ 100 (740 )682 7624
Phone No s (304 )675
992 2459 or 740 591 2635
Inside Also 1994 F150 Ext Cab
Board ng
5806EHO
New and Used Furnaces Horse
avatlab e Ad ng A ng &amp; Pastu e 8FT Bed 162 300 m tes
tns tallat on
$2000 00
{304)773 508 1 8\'en ngs
(740)441 2667
Help Wanted

Get A Jump

SAVINGS

r

Shop the

Classifieds!

0

•

MLT/ MT
Pl easant Vall e y H os p1 ta l

a non prof 11

h e alth care fac1hty cun en t ly h as an o p en
p os1t 10n f or th e f o llo wing

I·

Full t1m e MLT/MT f or Even~ngs / N1ghts.

Baccalaurea t e d eg ree 1n M ediCa l Techn·
o logy or re la ted l 1eld plu s e hg 1bd1ty fo o
ASC P

a nd /o r

applie d SCien ce

A s so Ci ate s

or

D eg r ee

1n
I ron G ate P re sent s

re lated l1eld p lus eh g 1·

H a lloween Cos tu m e Contest

b d1ty for ce rtifiCatiOn by ASCP Th ree yea rs
or great er sta ff t ech exp en e n ce po e f eore d .
M u st h ave or b e 1mm ed 1at eiy eh g1ble l or

Sal Oct 29th a t 6 0 0 pm
Costume Judg1ng at

9 00 pm

Spec1al door pnzes every 1/2

WV h cense

1st place $ 125

Sen d r esum e t o
Plea sant Valley Hospital

c/o Human

Reso urces

2520 Valley Dnve
Po 1nt Ple asa nt

(304)

WV 25550

4340 Ext 1414
304 675 6975
www pvalley org
675

Fax

.

'

AAIEOE

2nd place $$75
3rd p lace $50
Sam S1ephens p lay1ng
Fr

&amp; Sal7

?

&amp; Dnnk Specials
Come 1n &amp; part1c1pate

Food

675 7030 or 675 2200

Rifle Shoot
Rac1ne Gun Club

Oct 30th 2005
at 1 00 PM
Public Invited

�'
Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, October 26, 2005
Wednesday, October 26, 2005
ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword. Puzzle

.)I..)EtT CA/..1- M£

BRIDGE

..~" .' 1'""" suR£
l').IE'r""L..L

PUBLIC

NOTICES
NOTICE 'OF ELEC·
TtON ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revised
Code,
Sactlons 3501 .11 (GI,
5705.19, 5705.25
NOTICE is hereby
given that In pursuance
of
a
Re;iolutlon of the
Village
of
the
Pomeroy , Pomeroy,
Ohio, passed on the
25th day of July, 2005,
there will be submitted to a vote of the
people of said subdivision at a General
Election to be held In
of
the
Village
Pomeroy Ohio, at the
regular places of votlng therein, on the 8th
day of November,
2,0 05, the question of
levying a tax, In
excess of the ten mill
limitation, forthe ben·
eflt
of
Pomeroy
Village for tho pur·
poae
of
Fire
Protection. Said tax
belng: A renewal of a
tax of 2 mills at a rate
oot exceeding 2 (two)
Mills for each one
dollar ~f valuation ,
which amounts to
twenty cents {$.20)
tor each one hundred

SCXJN,

ee.

J1EAE.

DEAR.~

.ACROSS.

Public NotictS In Nt.:spa~"'
\our Right to KnOll, llelim«i Right tov,.,. t~•

Phillip
Alder

•

remain open until
7:30 o'clock P.M . of
said day. By order of
lhe
Board
of
Eleclions of Meigs
Counly, Ohio. John
N. lhle, Chairperson.
Rita
D.
Smith,
Director. Dated Sept.
5, 2005
(10) 12,19, 26 &amp; Nov.2

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

www.mydailysentinel.com

northerly line
of
SGctlon 24 Intersects

Hometown
Catering

with the center of Old
State Highway No. 1,
thence South 18' 55'
West 261 feet along
the center of said
highway ;
th8nce

No rth
A A K 5
• Q9 3

Rocky Hupp Insurance

by

und Financial Services

Hometown Market

South 24' 55' West
302 feet along the
center of said high·
way to the center of a
culvert across the
405 Pearl Street • Middleport, OH'
Public Notice
said highway; thence
Phone (740) 992-3471
·
South 76" 10' East306
Notice of Election on feet; thence North 26'
Fux (740) 992-5976
Tax Levy in Excess ol
East 657 faet to the
the Ten Mill Limitation
north line of Section
Revised
Code, 24; thence West 370
Sections 3501 .11 (G), feet to the place of
5705.19,
5705.25. beginning containing
Notice
Is
hereby
4 .8 acres, more or
Dauld R. Deal
given that In pur- less.. Excepting two
Director/licensee In Charge
suance
of
a
acres heretofQre conResolution of the veyed to the said
Charlie Huber, Director.
Village Council of the John L.R. Gillian and
Josh
Village of Rutland Mary M. Gillian by ·
"FAMILY OWNED"
Rutland,
Ohio , deed recorded In
David, Donna &amp; Brad Deal
passed on the 27th Volume 186, page
day of Juno, 2005, 473, Meigs County
• Caring • Professional
there will be submit· · Deed
Records.
Affordable Services
ted to a vote of the
Parcall No; 03.00453
(304) 675-6000
people of said subdi- Current
owner
vision at a General Thomas Buckley Jr.
1401 Kanawha St. Pt. Pleasant
Election to be held in
Property at: 36998
the Village of Rutland, Sumner Rd, Pomeroy
Ohio, at the regular
Ohio,
PPf
. 03·
Mill End Fabrics
places
ol
voting 00453.000 Prior Dead
Machine Quilting
therein, on the 8th References: Volume
Middleport, OH
day of November,
217
Page
337
2005, the question of
at
Appraised
Phone
740-992-3673
dollars ol valuation,
revylng a tax, In
$45,000.00 terms of
New
shi pmcm of
(740) 992-5232
for five (5) yaara.
excess of the ten milt Sale: Cannot be. sold
fleece panels &amp; I00%
The Polls for said
limitation, for the ben· for less than 213rds of
SxiO, 10xl0,
Election will open at
eflt of Rutland Village the Appraised Value.
wlton 45'"
IOJL15, 10x20,
6:30 o'clock a.m. and
for the purpose of 10% down on Day Of 11
for the uuilts
remain open until
current
e:xpenses.
Sale ,
Cash
or
10x30
Underground, civil
· 7:30 o'clock PM of · ·Said tax being ; a Certified
Check,
Janel
Jeffers
war &amp; grannie
aald day.
·
renewal of a tax of 2 Balance
Due
on
By order of the Board
mills at a rate ·not Confirmation of Sale.
33795 Hiland Road
feed sack!
Of Elections of Meigs exceeding 2 (two) The appraisal did
Cnm e Jee !H.'
Pomeroy,
Olllo
mills for each one Include an Interior
County, Qhio.
John
N.
lhle
dollar of valuation,
examination of the
Chairperson
which amounts to house.
D.
Smith,
twenty eentS ($0.201 Robert E. Beegle,
Rita
Director
fOr each one hundred Meigs County SheriH
dollars of valuation, Attorney
Dated Sept. 5, 2005
for
the
(10) 12,.19, 26, (11) 2
for five (5) years. The Plaintiff
Learner
29670 Bashan Road
Polls for said Election · Sampson &amp; Rothfuss,
Racine , Ohio
will open · at 6 ;30 P.O.
5480,
97 Beech Street
. Box
Public Notice
45771
o'clock A.M. and Cincinnati,
Ohio
Middleport, OH
740·949·2217
remain open until 45201·5'408, 120 &amp; 4th
Notice · of Election on
7:30 o'clock P.M. of Street
8th
floor
10x10x10x20
TaX levy in Excess of
Ohio
ssld day. By order of Cincinnati,
the Ten Mill Limitation
the
Board
of 45202-4007, ,(513)241·
' 992•!194
Revised
Code, Elections, of Meigs 3100.
or 992-66!5
Sections 3501 .11 (G),
County, Ohio. . John (10) 26, (11) 2, 9
5705.19,
5705 .25.
N. lhle , Chalrprson.
"Middleport's only
Rita
D.
Notice is hereby
Smith,
Self·Storage•
given that In pur·
Director. Doled Sept
Public Notli:e
suance
of
a 5, 2005.
Resolution of the
(10) 12, 19, 26, (11) 2
Sheriff Salas
Public Notice
STANLEY TREE
Village of Pomeroy,
Case
Number
TRIMMING &amp;
deed
to
transfer
the
Ohio passed on the
05CV050
GENERAL
west
one-half
of
the
Public Notice
25th day of July, 2005,
Paoples Bank
CONTRACTING
parcel
of
real
estate
Plaintiff
there will . be submit·
described in dead · • Prompt II. quality .
tod to a vote of the
PUBLIC NOTICE · .
vs
recorded
In volume
work
•
people of said subd·
Alan Stone Company, David Hysell et al
290, Page 739, Meigs
• Affordable Rates
vision at a General
Inc. has submitted an defendants
County ·
Deed
• References
Election to be held In
Industrial Minerals
Court of Common
Records.
.
Reference
111e
Village · of
Permit Pleas, Meigs County,
Mining
Available
Deed: Volume 321 ,
Pomeroy Qhlo, at the
Application #1 0291 to Ohio.
.
•
Free Estimates
Page 535 and Volume
regular. places of vat· the Ohio Department
In pursuance· of an
"Insured" ·
290,
Page
739
Meigs
ing therein, on the 8th
of Natural Resources, order of sale to me
Call Gary Stanley
Deed
day of November, · Division of Mineral directed from said County
740· 742·2293
2005, the question of · Aesource" s court Jn the above Records.
Parcel
levying a tax, in
Management.
entitled action, I will Auditor's
Leave
a message
12·
excess of the ten mill
The proposed permit expose to sale at pub- Number:
limitation, for the ben· application area Is lic auction on the 00188 .001 . Property
ell!
of
Pomeroy
comprised of
10 front steps of· the Address: 24 Main ·
Public Notice
Street, Rutland, OH
Village for the pur'
acres and Is loCated Meigs County Court
pose of current In Meigs County In House on Friday, 45775 to make ttle Ttle Farmers Bank
Savings
expenses Said tax
Soctlon(s) NIA, Lot December 2, 2005 at sums as hereinabove and
set out, judgment
Company, Pomeroy,
being (2) a renewal of 178,
VMS
NlA, 10 A.M. of said Day,
wilh the said interest Ohio, rest:trves the
a tax of 1 mill at a rate
Lebanon Township. the
following
right to bid at Sale,
not exceeding 1 (one) . The proposed · appll· described
Real thereon , and costs
aforesaid
;
and
that
and to withdraw the
mills for each one calion area Is located Estate:
above collateral .prlor
you
also
pay
the
cost
dollar of valuation,
on the Ravenswood 7 Parcel One;
which amounts to ten
112 minute USGS Situate In the Vlllaga of this writ, and all to s!le. Further, The
Farmers Bank and
cents ($0.1 0) for each
Quadrangle
map, of Rutland, County of Increase an accruing
and
the Savings
Company
one hundred dollars approximately 3 miles Melga and State of costs:
residue,
If
any
there
reserves
the
right to
of valuation, for live
South of Portland on ,Ohio:
ba, yo~ bring Into this reject any or all bids .
(5) yeara. The Polls for
S.R. 124.
Being In Section No.
said Election will The application is on 8, Town No. 6, Range Court to abide the fur- submlned.
open at 6;30 o'clock
file at the Ohio No. ·14 of the Ohio ther order · of the Tho above described
A.M. and remain open Dapal'\ment
of Compa!Jy's Purchase. Court, and that you collateral will be sold
make return of your " as Is-where Is", with
untll7:30 o'clock P.M.
Natural Resources, Beginning 65 rods
or
. of said day. By order . Division of Mineral and 13 links South proceeding to our no expressed
said
Court
within
implied
warranty
. of the Board of
Resources and'2 rods. East of the
Elections, of Meigs Management District North East corner of sixty days from this given.
County, Ohio. John
office located at: 34 Fraction No. 7; thence· date, and have you For further Informafor
an
N. lhle, Chairperson . Portsmouth
St., South 89 degrees then and there this tion, or
appointment
to
R!ta
D.
Smith , Jackson, Ohio 45640 East 213 1/2 feet; · writ.
Current
Owner
David,
inspect
collateral,
Director Dated Sept.
thence South 11
11 8
Hysell et at Property prior to sale Hate con5, 2005
degrees East 55 feet;
·
(10) 12,19, 26
comments or obJec- thence South 87 112 At 24 Main Stroot tact Cyndle, Stacy, or
Rutland, Ohio. PP # Randy at 992·2136 .
tions concerning this
dagrae West 229 feel
12·00188.000 &amp; 12· DS012B5 (10) 26, 27,
application may be and 1 Inch ; thence
Prior Deed 28.
00188.001
sent to the Chief of North 4 degrees West
Public Notice
tha Ohio Department 66 feet to the place of RefeFences : Volume ·
Notice of Election on
of Natural Resources,
beginning. EXCEPT 338, Page 521, Volume - - - - - - - Public' No1ice
Tax Levy In Excess of
Division of Mineral .14 acres previously 321, Page 535; and
Volume
290
,
Page
the Ten Mill Limitation
Resources conveyed to David W.
739, Meigs ·c ounty GRANT
APPLICA·
Revised
Code , M~nagement , 2045 Hysell and Penny K.
Records. TION
AVAILABLE
Sactions 3501 .11 (G), Morse Road Building Hysell
by
deed Deed
Appraised
st FOR REVIEW
5705.19,
5705.25.
H·3, Columbus, Ohio recorded in Volume
The
Notice is hereby 43221·6693
within 321, Page 535 of the $70,000.00 Terms of CHESHIRE,
sale;
Cannot
be
sold
Community
Services
given that in pur~
thirty (30) days of the Meigs County Deed
for leas than 2/3rds of Blclck Grant applicasua nee of a · resolu-· last date of publica· Records.
tho
appraised value. tion lor 2006, pretlon of the Board of lion of this notice.
Reference
Dead:
10%
down on Day of par•d by the Galtla·
Education of the (10)19,26,(11)2,9
Volume 338, Page
Community
Southern
Local
521 , Meigs County Sale, Cash or cartl· Meigs
fled
Check,
Balance
Acllon
Agency,
will
School
District,
Deed
Records.
oue
on
Confirmation
be
available
for
Racine, Ohio, passed
Auditor
's
parcel
Pub Iic Notice
of sale . The appraisal review
between
on the 27th day of
Number:
12·
dl~ not Include an
Monday, October 31 ,
June, 2005, there will
Sheriff Sales
00188.000
be submitted to a . Case Number. 05CV PARCEL
TWO; Interior examination 2005 through Friday,
of the house. Robert November 11. 2005.
vote of the people of 005
Situated in the VIllage
aald subdivision al a Morlgage Electronic of Rutland, County of E. Beagle, Meigs Acopy of the applies·
lion can be reviewed
General Eleclion to Registration
Sys. Meigs and State of County Sheriff.
for
the at the C.A.A. offlee In
be held In the county
Plaintiff
Ohio:
Being
In Attorney
Plaintiff Little, Sheets Cheshire. The C.A.A.
of Meigs Ohio, at the
VS
SeCtion No. a, Town
and
Warner 213 E should receive comregular places of votThomas Buckley Jr. No. 6, Range No. 14 of
Sacond
St., Pomeroy, · ments on the appliIng therein, on the 8th
at al
tho Ohio Company's
Ohio
4576~ (740)992·
cation no later than
day of November,
defendants
Purchasa. Beginning
November 11 , 2005.
2005, lhe question of Court of Common 65 rods and 13 links 6689.
The comments will be
levying a lax , in Pleas, Meigs county, South and 2 rods (10) 26, (11) 2, 9
forwarded .t o the Ohio
excess of the ten mill ~ Ohio. In pursuance of East of the North East
Department
of
flmltatlon , for the benan order of sale to me
corner of Fraction No.
Public Notice
Development's Office
efit of Southern Local directed from said 7; thence South 89
of
Community
School Dlslrl,ct for tho
court In the above degrees East 106.75
PUBLIC
NOTICE
Services.
purpose of General entiUad action, I will reel; thence South 11
Gallla-Melgs
Permanent expose to sale at pub- degrees to the South NOTICE; Is hereby The
glvan
that
on
·
C.A.A.
admlnlstara
Improvements. Said lic aur;tion on the line of the parcel .of
tax being ; an addi - front steps of the real eslate described Saturday, October 29, the block grant for
tional tax of 1.5 mills,
Meigs County Court in deed recorded In 2005, at 10;00 a.m., a Galtia and Meigs
public sale will bs Counlles.The grant
at a rate not exceed- House on Friday. Dec. Volume 290, Page
held at 211 W. Second provides funding for
Ing 1.5 mills for each
2, 2005 at 10 a.m. of 739, Meigs County
St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio.· numerpus services to
dollar of valuation , said day, the follow- Deed
Records ;
ing described Real thence South 87 112 The Farmers Bank low income residents.
which amounts to
Savings DS01312 (10) 26.
one and five-lenths Estate: Situated in the degrees West 114.55 and
for each one hundred
State of OH , County feet ; thence North 4 Company Is selling
dollars of valuation
of Meigs and in the degrees Wast 66 feet for cash in hand or
for three {3) years. Township of Chester. to the place of begin- certified cheCk the
The Polls for said Beginning at a point ning , containing .14 following collateral:
1991
REDMAN
Election will open at
on the North line of acres, more or less.
RIVERMAN MOBILE
&amp;:30 o'clock A.M. and
Section 24 where the
II is the intent of lhls
HOME 11237745

B ox 189

Dell &amp;. Full Service

Middl eport, OH

Catering Selections

High and Dry

Storage

Hill's Self
Storage

MANLEY'S
SELF STORAGE

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

-------------·--·------

.

West

MONTY

•

Eust
.. 6 3

,J 9 7

¥ ,J::;1

• Q

45760 ,

I.

•

a:~·

.

K 7 .', 4

¥

bargain

K 10 !l ii:.!

'

18 Hangar
occupant
21 Beje rest
. food
•
23 PC button

AQ 1fl86

·+

A 7
i\K.J 974

Dealer : :-Jorth
Vul nerable: Ne ither
South

Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home, Inc.
itiJrnLJ""'"II

C.tl~utr

nd~l!{brgr

ud FII!Ir.J!Aooiil

-

.\dtil Fil~.,

l'onI.Swilli&lt;r

l'tH:h!lr

Y•oo•S•olfr

[iHhllll

(~I'll'

ill!lStmurj

aOOSmb~

~

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Tri111
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

li

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

MAl&gt;~ SNOw WtitTt
MAl&gt; TtiiS TIM~1.

Point Pleasant, WV
(304)675-2630 §l
~J

J!Oflt

~fTHISTALL
'TOEN't£~

a

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

(E~N(

POWER WASHING
Mobile Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks, Dr iveways,

Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Degreasing of
Equipmen t, Boats, Car'np'er!., Trador Trail ers.

Dump Tr ucks, painting or staining of your deck
or log home, Alu minum brightening.
Special rates to Trucking and Dump Trucking Companies.

24hr Emergency
Service
Licensed &amp; Insured
Over 30 years
.experience

Ed Dill/owner
(740)591-4348
Chuck 'Wolfc/Mgr.
(740) 416-4604

LAWN

CARE DIVISION

(Com mercial and Resider'1t1al)
Mowing, Trimming, Tree Trim ming, Aeration, Fertilization,
Spraying of fence lines, leaf Removal, as well as small

landscaping jobs such as planting and mulching.
FREE E5nMATES • GUARANTEED LOW£5T PRICES

BARNEY
I S'POSE EV'RY FAM'L Y
IN TH' HOLLER'S GOT
THAR Li'L
.
SECRETS,
ELVINEY !!

AN' IF I CAN ..lEST GIT ONE'A TH'
MULROONYS AN' ONE'A TH' FINCHES TO
CRACK, WE'LL
KNOW

YOU BET
THEY

DO!!

'EM

THE BORN LOSER
Medical Excellence.
Local Caring•M

Wi-\"-1'~ iAAI 'iOU'\Q"''

frenchcityhomes.com

-u-~ D\!.I~Kit-167

Jeff

Barry

II DOE.-;t'¥i LOOK"''
LIKEC.OfTli.l

1-JE:. WE.i&lt;:.( 0\J\ "'l
Of COffEL I

Hamm

let me do 1t for youl

£EWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION

\

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

liNDI'S'PAimNG . . 4:U 1YPes ~fj

11401985-4180
After 6pm '1. "!Jf;i%
~
J

CQiiqete Work

YOlJ'L L
MI\KE
us 1\

NE16H ·
BO~HOoD

~ELA'K,

NA.TE !
I WOO{T GIVE
OUT

ONLY

Dl&lt;tED
APRICOTS '

SEEDS AND MAKE
LITTLE BAC,UIE'S
OF TRAIL MIX!

LAU&lt;:PHING· t-~'Yit1

SToCK!

W£&gt;M~FEI%._
Chuck Wolfe

Owner
• Additions • Remodeling
• Roofing/Siding
• ·plumbing/Electrical

Licensed &amp; Insured

~

BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes

Pomeroy, OH

• Garages '

Cornerstone
Electrical
Service
• FOR AlL YOUR

·Complete
Remodeling

140·992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare ·

ELirrRICAL NEEDS.
• MOBILE HOME

1995
F-150414

1. . . . . ..
......

llliii.OOIIIIIII

.....

FIREWOOD

OHIO LICENSE # 38244

CUT &amp; SPLI T
$40 A_LOAD
CALL

740-367-0544
740·367-0536

740-949-2038

Wirl'fEII

YOUNG'S

OF BOATS,
CAMPERS ETC .
AT THE
MEIGS CO.
FAIRGROUNDS

Nov. 12, 2005
g ;OO AM· 11 :00
For more info. call

7 41)-985-4372

PEANUTS
TllESE ARE PAMPHlETS
ABOUT

THE ''GREAT
I

GOOD AFTERNOON
MA'AM .. i'D LIKE .

AND YOU WANT ME
TO 60 FROM DOOR
TO DOOR AND GiVE
Ti-l EM TO PEOPLE?

TO 611/E 'I'OU THIS
PAMPHLET ABOUT
THE ''GREAT bR~oPE

High coat of fertilizer got you worried?

·Whole Com $6.351100

·Cracked Corn $7.351100
-Triumph 12% Sweet Horse Feed

$5.50/50

-12% Cattle Feed 57.30/100
·Black Oil Sunflower Seed $13.75

SUNSHINE CLUB

Why Drive Anywhere Else?

1 Ga.S-; SH&amp;S DJr

Of PRI&lt;£11.J loX».! / ~~--...

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 St Rt 7 N ¥Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
.
740-985-3831

SEASONED HARD

REPAIRS
• CARPENTRY
• ROOF • PAINT

STORAGE

.I!UilCURY'

7 40-446-9800

ROBERT

*Weekly Tras h Serv ice ·
4 yr' nt: Rclillhk Service
{Kecrl Yuur M•mcy Local )
G&amp;H SANITATION
33% 1 13Ltiley Ru11 Rtl..

LINCOLN

Gallipolis, Ohio

(740) 992-0167
Gem.&gt; Arms/OwnerOperator 740-992-3174

$-

CARPENTER
SERVI'E

• Room Addl1ione &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• El.ctrlcal &amp; Plumbing

Advertise
·· in this
space for $1 04
per month.

GARFIELD
'!'HE RUFFL.ES ARE

!'lORRY . 11' JUST

•

ALL WRONG

t&gt;OE!3N 'T WORK

• Roofing I Guttere
• Vinyl Siding I Painting
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dummy and eventually rutting his heart
sev~n on ihe board. On a heart le ad,
though , the contract must fail. Th e winning spot is s1x diamonds by North, which
cannot be beaten .
At one table. East opened one heart in
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the heart four to defeat the cont ract
(Dec larer played low from the dummy at
!Tick. one. but East correctly inserted lhe
eiQht. Sou'th won . drew two . rounds of
trumps. anct started on the spades. but
Wesf rutted the .fourth round and led
another heart to his partner's king.) ·

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Six diamonds is a good contract. II
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mend queen is singleton , you'll be all
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Wilh the actual layout. on a nonheart
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~HOLZER CLINIC

Ta~e

Pass

legend
53 Orchid-like

Next, stu dy that E_ast hand. After a pass
on your right, what would you do?
This deal was played 32 times on the e·
bridge network. At24 ollhe tables, South
ended in three spades after th~1s uncon·
tested sequence: pass • one diamond ·
one no-trump · two spades · three. dia·
mends · th ree spades - pass. North
passed a forcing bid, despite having 10
points· anct six cards in hiS partner's tong
suits

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Alii ever wanted was tor somebody to publish
Harry (Pol1er) so I could go to bookshops and see 11 • - J.K. Aowling

-.r 'lllrlhday:

Thursday, Oct. 27, 2005
By Bernice Bede Oaol
Aestr1CI1ons wi'11Ch have l;leen 1mped1ng
· your progress may finally be eliminated i11 ·
tile yea r ahead. With a cleared path you
w11t be able to maKe some lresh starts on
· severa l prOjects you've want9d to launch
SCORPIO (Oc!. 24·No~J_ 22) - You'll get
others to mora read1ly go along with your
ideas today 11 you are hones! and don' t try
10 oversell whal you ha11e to offer in
exchange. Play your p1tch tow-keyed.
S,AGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) - This is
a day to use more out of your head ·than
you do out ot your wallel, Fipd ways to
stretch your dollar s and when you do make
a purchaSE. don't buy things you can'l get
on your terms.
CAPRI CORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19)- You are
the only one who is likely to be impressed
'?Y your grandiose ideas today. so keep
that in m1nd betore you start IOOMg your
own horn about now great E;!Verything you
plan to do witt be ..
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) - It is not 1n
your best interests loday lo count on funds
that you do not already have 1n hAnd . The
· time table you establish lor your5ell may
, not be compat1ble w1th your actual cash
flow.
PISCES (Feb. 20·Marcl'1 20) - Your JU dg·
ment m1ghl be a bit questionable in respect
to the present cou rse of act1 on you tns1st
on takmg Ieday If you K1d yourself. you w1ll
have 10 dump everything and retrace your
steps
AR IES (MMcll21·Aprll19)- Don't vol~n·
leer to do somethmg today unless you are
s1ncere abOut fol lowing through on !he
comm11mant. Others Will take you al your
word and expect you to do wha t you said
you would
TAURUS jAprii20-May 20) - Your tnlnkmg
on an enterpr1se that you are toymg w1th
takmg on may be so mewhat unreahSI)C
and u1llated . However. thiS doesn't mean
that you should completely discard the
idea today.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) - It shopp1ng
lor a maJor item today. don't pay the l1rst
pnce that 1s quoled 10 you . Do some com ·
panson pr1c1ng w1tl'1 other merch ants l1rst,
because chances are you 'll lind better
terms .
CANCER (June' 21·July 22)- Be the lirst
to r:a ll p.nen11on to any m1stakes you·m1ght
make today. II you are honest aboul yo ur
errors, Olhers witt step up and llelp you
clear lllings up rather than 11mbarrass you
over thel'n
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - Your budget may
, nol be as. elastic as you are hop1ng 11 is at
this time. so put a hold on excessi'le
spendmg today. Reverse your tll ink1ng and
figure out ways to add to your resourc es.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) - II you Intend
to be th11 spokssperson fo r one of your
groups today, you /lad bfiiller be preper11d
for all contingencies that m1~ht pop up.
Unless you 're wall coord,(laled . th ings may
get out of hand .
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct 23) - Although others may promise to be of aSSIStance to you
today, you'd be WI!B not to bank too heall·
ily upon the ir support There's a good
chance one or more could unexpectedly
back out.

ACORO

I PI

"The prober use of today,• the
leeturer rtlated, "is the best

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an of diplomacy My ndghbor sa~·:o: thnr diplnmary

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simr lv o::ayin~ no!.bi ng NICElY

ARLO &amp; JANIS
fOM fVWTUALL.Y DIW iiJ

A/J AL.LtY, 6TAIMUG:
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SOUPTONUTZ
WEl&lt;T oN HalLOWeeN
CHIL~R THeaToR ..

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Gi&lt;INT CR&lt;lBS ::

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�Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, October 26, 2005

Changing diversity: Astros first Series team in half-century without black player
BY BEN WALKER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

HOUSTON - Joe Morgan
· worries about the face of
basebalL Watching the World
Series, the Hall of Farner is
troubled by what he sees.
His old team, the Houston
Astros, is down 2-0 to the
Chicago White Sox. but it' s
not their lineup that concerns
Morgan. It's their makeup.
The Astros are the first
World Series team in more
than a half-century with a rosIer that doesn't include a si ngle black player.
"Of course I noticed it. How
could you not?" Morgan said
while the Astros took batting
practice before the opener in
Chicago. "But they're not the
only ones. There are two or

Series
fromPageBl
ninth and at second base in
, the lOth and II th. The Astros
escaped a two-on, two-out s
jam in the lith when Chad
Qualls retired pinch-hitter
Timo Perez on a groundout
and eliminated possible trouble in the 13th when Scott
Podsednik bunted into a double play with no outs. Paul
Konerko grounded into a
double play just before
Blum's homer.
Freddy Garcia tries to
complete the sweep for
Chicago on · Wednesday
night, opposed by Brandon
Backe. No team has ever
overcome a 3-0 World Series
deficit, and only one major
league team has done it in
any round of the postseason
- the Boston Red Sox in last
· year's AL championship
series against the New York
Yankees.
In the first World Series
game played in the state of
Texas. a sellout crowd of
42,848 filled Minute Maid
Park with plenty of noise but less than the Astros had

Rio
fromPageBl

three teams tha( didn't have
any African-American pi ayers
this year."
Morgan said it 's a predicament and a challenge for
Major League Baseball.
While more players from
around the world are making
it . to the majors -· Japan;
Korea, for example - the
number of blacks is declining.
"It's a daunting task to get
African-American kids inro
baseball , and l don't see the
trend changing," he said.
The last World Series team
without a black player was the
1953 ~ew York Yankees. It
wasn't until 1955 - eight
years after. Jackie Robinson
broke the color barrier in
1947 - that Elston Howard
became the first black in
Yankee pinstripes.
Black players accounted for

the NCAA, taken during the
2003~04 season, showed that
only 6 percent of Division I
baseball players were black.
Half of the men's basketball
players were black, as were
44 percent of football players.
Houston has a half-dozen
Hispanic players- it was the
first team to open a baseball
academy in Venezuela, about
a dozen years · ago. Bench
coac h Cecil Cooper i•: 11lack:
Outfielders C)larles Gipson
and Charlton Jimerson, both
black, played for the Astros
during the regular season.
The White Sox have three
black players op their Series
roster: Jermaine Dye, Carl
Everett and Willie Harris,
along with coac hes Tim
Raines and Harold Baines.
They also have eight
Hispanic
players
·and

hoped for, Against the wi shes
of the home team, Major
League Baseball ordered the
retractable roof open for the
game because the skies were
cloudless and the temperature a comfortable 61
degre.es at game time.
Houston wanted the roof
closed, to increase the decibels.
Oswalt, 3-0 in the postseason coming in, couldn't hold
the 4-0 lead, allowing five
runs in a 46-pitch fifth' inning
the most pitches he's
thrown in an inning in his
·career, according to STATS
In c. He gave up five runs,
eight hits .and five walks in
six-plus innings, the most
runs he's allowed at home
srnce the season opener
against St. Louis on April 5.
After giving up three runs
in the first four innings, Jon
Garland pitched shutout ball
for the next four. But for the
second
straight
game,
Chicago's bullpen faltered.
Cliff
Politte
walked
Morgan Ensberg with two
outs in the eighth, and leftbander Neal Cotts came in
and walked Mike Lamb.
Instead of bringing in
Bobby )enks to face Lane,
overwhelmed by the closer

as he struck out in the ninth sue of tightness in his neck.
inning of Saturday's opener.
Chicago had two on with
Chicago manager Ozzie two outs in · the lith after
Guillen
summoned Podsednik's leadoff single
Hermanson, his former clos- and stolen base, but pincher, for his first appearance of hitter Timo Perez grounded
the postseason.
out, and Houston had two on
Lane drove a . l -2 pitch with two outs in the bottom
over the first-base bag for a half when Jenks, who came
tying double that put the . ·in to start . the inning, retired
potential go-ahead run on Palmeiro on a grounder.
third. Hermanso n then got
Joe Crede led off the fifth
Ausmus to take a called third with his fourth postseason
home run, a drive to right.
strike.
Houston had · a chance to Singles by Uribe, Podsednik
win it · in the ninth when and Tadahito Iguchi proChris Burke walked with one duced another run, and
out
against
Orlando Jermaine Dye reached down
Hernandez, took third as El for a low and outside 3-2
Duque threw away a pickoff pitch, lofting it into short
attempt for an error and stole center for an RBI single that
third on the next pitch. But cut Houston's lead to4-3.
Hernandez struck out Willy
A.J. Pierzynski, 5-for-8
Taveras,
intentionally against Oswalt in his career
walked Lance Berkman, then coming in, came up with two
struck out Ensberg. to send outs and two on, and he
the game mto extra mnmgs.
drove the ball to deep rightLuis Vizcaino, in his first center, where it rolled up
appearance since the regular- Tal's Hill, the l 0-degree
season finale on Oct. 2, came ·slope built as an homage to
in when Hernandez appeared Cincinnati's old Crosley .
to get hurt while walking Field.
Aaron Rowand walked and
Palmeiro, a pinch hitter,
leading off the lOth. After a Crede - having the chance
two-out walk - Houston 's to become the first player to
fifth in two innings, Burke homer twice in a Series
hit an inning-ending come- inning- was plunked in the
backer. Hernandez left beca- ribs by a pi_tch. By then, plate

over Shawnee State since
October 29; 2002.
" It was a super win," said
Rio Grande head coach
Patsy Fields. "That's the
first time that we beat
Shawnee since I couldn't
tell you when."
"We just didn ' t quit,"
Fields added. "Everybody
hustled, everybody hustled
for us and that was the
thing, they just did not let

Could the Redwomen
take this momentum of two
wins in a row and build on
it? "It depends upon which
team shows up ," Fields
said. "Hopefully the team
will comeback, they are
excited about the win
tonight."
"We play with everybody
but can beat nobody, so
now that we've won and
they got that feeling of win. ning so maybe they'll want
to keep it, I don't know,"
Fields said. ,
Rio will host Mount
Vernon
Nazarene
on
Thursday night. MVNU ha s ·
defeated Rio twice .this seaso n, . the fir st occurred
Labor Day weekend in a
tournament at Houghton in ·
which the Redwomen took
them to four games and latter was at Mount Vernon,
October l .
Game time is set for 7
p.m.

State were key factors tn
the game.
The Lady Bears controlled the third game after
breaking open a 6-6 tie.
SSU would build the lead
throughout in cruising to
the 30-16 victory and seem- down ."
ingly gaining control of the
Fields complimented her
match .
players for their effort.
· The Redwomen however, "Urton really had a good
.w ere . not to be outdone on game for us, Lynnette
this night as they forced a again , Rodgers had some
fifth and deciding game key hit s also at times, our
with a 30-24 win in the big people played well for
fourth game.
us and our small people in
Shawnee State had a the back just played super
chance to close out the final defense," Fields said. "Jodi
game, holding leads of 10-6 (Smith) and little Amanda
and
13-l 0,
but
the Stevens and I'll you who
Redwomen rallied for a else played hard, was
thrilling 16-14 triumph , Stephanie Lapp, she played
:giving them their first w\n hard for us tonight."

Alive

just about 9 percent of big
league rosters this season.
"We know that we have to
work to do," Commissioner
Bud Selig said Tuesday.
"We' ll continue to intensify
our efforts. I'm very aware,
I'm extremely sensi.tive about
it, and I feel badly about it.
But we need to get to work to
change things."
Astros general manager
Tim Purpura agrees.
"I think it's a huge, huge
problem for baseball," he
.said. "The , pool of AfricanAmerican players just isn 't
there. And as baseball
becomes more college-oriented ·in its draft,. there aren't a
lot of players to pick.
African-American
"The
athletes are going into other
span s, "he sat'd .
.
The most recellt survey by

quarterback, came in for a
play and threw a 42-yard
completion to Eden, •who
fromPageBI
pulled in the ball as he fell to
the ground.
.
"I .wanted to play some'They brought excitement.
where. 1 had to play. 1 They came from a different
:worked so hard in the sum- style of play," .running back
mer and the offseason, not to Dan lcenhou~ said. "Ashland
:sit at home and not play," is known for being a powerSander said. .
house team, running the ball.
"It didn't matter where," That's what we like to do.
Eden added.
They come from a team
•
1 f b 11
that's all spread offense.
"I ve got to Pay oat a to They like to throw the ball."
get into college. That's what
Icenhour and other team! want to do - play football mates say the three fit right
in college," Sander said.
· . in at school and even attendThey found their chance to ed homecoming shortly after
display their skills 840 miles arriving.
·
north in Ashland, a rural
" It's a credit to our kids for
community halfway between being able to accept them,
Cleveland and Columbus.
and a credit to them,"
"It's different. A little cold- Ashland
coach
Scott
Valentine said. "They 've
er," Sander said.
Autumn had been mild in come in and picked up things
Ohio until last week when and helped our team."
temperatures dipped into the
Valentine is gathering film
upper 40s. A chilly wind to send to colleges of the
blew across Ashland's field three. Sander has gotte n
Friday night and cold rain some interest from Alabama.
fell, numbing toes and finHopton
rattled
off
gertips.
Cincinnati,
Southern
"Probably the . coldest Mississippi,
Alabama,
gatne I've ever played in · Louisiana-Monroe and Utah
. tonight," Hopton said.
as the school s interested in
All three of "The Bayou him.
Boys," as their teammates
" Any school you can think
call
them,
contrib uted of," teased Eden, who said
though. Hopton booted a 45- he wants to play at Virginia
yard punt in the slick condi- Tech.
tions and Sander, the backup . Eden had the roughest hur-

ricane . experience of the
three, staying with hi s uncles
in a two- story house where
flood waters climbed 13
steps but never reached the
second lloor.
" My adrenaline was too
high to be scared," said
Eden, who has . three touchdowns for Ashland.
"Should be more, but I
don't get the ball enough."
The three are staying with
Hopton's uncle and aunt,
who have received $600
from the Ashland Football
Parents Association for food
and clothing.
"All three of us in one
room," Sander said. "There's
days we have our little
fights."·
Home-cooked meals and
gift cards to local stores are
among the other generous
donations they've received.
"Anybody and everybody
you can think of does stuff
for us ," Hopton said.
"There's always somebody
there to help you out."
Ashland suffered a tough
20-0 loss to Clear Fork in the
driving rain Friday, dropping·
their record to 4-5 and ending any hope of reaching the
playoffs.
But like the Louisiana
teammates, Ashland will try
to salvage the season Friday
with one last win.

Japanese second baseman unships. In 1976, along with
Tadahito Iguchi.
fellow black teammates Ken
"We're diverse because Griffey, George Foster and
we're looking for the best in Dan Driessen, the Big Red
talent and character," general Machine swept a Yankees
manager Ken Williams said team that had lO black players
before the Series started. "It on its roster.
just happened that way. I
Just 10 years ago, Atlanta
could care less what the and Cleveland each had five
makeup of the club is as long black players when they met
as it works as a whole,"
in the World Series.
Williams is the only black
In 2003, Derek Jeter and the
ge nera l manager in the Yankees lost to Florida.
majors. A former big league Jeter's father is black and his
outfielder, he joined the White mother is white; the All-Star
Sox in 1992 as a scout , confi- shortstop has said he considdent ·he could lind players in ers himself both black and
the inner cities. After a year of white.
trying, Williams felt as if he'd
"There's
a perception
among
African-American
failed.
Morgan is disturbed by kids that they're not welcome
what he's found, too.
here, that baseball is not for
A two-time NL MVP, ·. inner-city kids," Morgan said.
Morgan helped Cincinnati "It's not true, and I hate that
win two straight cham pi- .the perception is out there."
umpire Jerry Layne had
heard enough complaining
from
the dugouts
by
Chicago's Carl Everett and
Garner, and he told both
benches to knock off the
whining. Uribe followed
with an inning-ending flyout.
Garland retired l 0 straight
after Lane's homer leading
off the fourth, then walked
Ausmus leading off the seventh, then escaped trouble in
the seventh when pinch. hitter Jeff Bagwell popped with
one out and a runner on second. and Craig Biggo took a
called third strike.
Right' from the start, the
· Astros had the joint jumping
in their first home World
Series game since the franchise joined the National
League in 1962. Some fans
wore the bright horizontally
striped jerseys that the Astros
used from 1975-86. ·
Biggio doubled leading off
the botto1,11 of the first and
scored on a single by
Berkman, his sixth RBI of
the Series. Houston made it
3-0 with two unearned runs
in the third ·after . Adam
Everett' was cau¥hl in a rundown when Chtcago called
for a pitchout on his steal
attempt, and Uribe's throw

hit Everett for an error that
· allowed the runner to get
back to first. Biggio had an
RBI single, advanced on
Berkman 's two ~o ut single
and scored on Ensberg's single- it was the first time in
the postseason that the White
Sox allowed four hits in an
inning.
Lane hit a long home run
to left-center in the fourth,
and fireworks went off
beyond the train tracks .high
above the field. But when the
smoke cleared, the White
Sox came back.
· Notes: Chicago is trying to
match the 1999 New York
Yankees as the only teams to
go through the postseason
with just one loss since the
extra round of playoffs was
added in 1995. ·... Hall of
Farner Nolan Ryan threw out
the ceremonial first pitch.... ·
Houston's Roger Clemens, :
who left Saturday's opener
after two innings because of
a left hamstring injury,
remains "penciled in" to start
Game 5 Thursday. ... There
was a double play in each of
th~ first four half innings ....
Osawlt's five walks m'a tched
his career high.

Holzer Clinic is Close to You . .
With Mf 100 board cerled phyalciln&amp;.
atorWWJ~~nt ~ and a medical
epeelaMee. Holzw Clnlc Ia cbt to you.
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