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                  <text>The Daily Sentinel • Page 88

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, November 10, 2005

China reports new bird
flu outbreaks, raising
fears of fak~ vaccines, AS

.

. County officials
embaiTassed by slow

count,Alo

.

~ If you have a question or a comment,.write: NASCAR Th is Week , cjo The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1893, Gastonia, NC 28053
I_I IJ6uli Sf-HIE&amp;

Race: .Checker Auto Parts
500

ry of career on March 20 of

this year, now has reeled off
Where: Phoenix International four victories. No one exRaceway, Avondale, Ariz. (1.0 pects him to win the champi·
miles). 312 laps/miles.
onship, but Edwards has
When: Sunday, Nov. 13
proved so adept at defying
Last year's winner: Dale the odds that it's almost as if
Earnhardt Jr.
he's destiny·~ child, roaring
Quatlfylnl record: Ryan New- up into third place with two
man. Dodge, 135,854 mph, races to go after consecutive
· Nov. 5, 2004.
victories at Atlanta and
Race record : Tony Stewart, Texas. Stewart, who would

·

Race: Busch 200

Where: Phoenix International
Raceway, Avondale, Ariz. (1.0
miles), 200 laps/miles.
When: Saturday, Nov. 12
Last year's winner: Jam1e
McMurray
Qualifying record: Kyle
Busch, Chevrolet, 133.819
mph, Nov. 4, 2004.
Race record: Jeff Burton,
Ford, 115.145 mph, Nov. 4,

Pontiac, 118.132 mph, Nov. now lead Edwards by 644 · 2000.
7,1999,
points if the championship Last week : Kevin Harvick
last week: Carl Edwards be- were based on an entire sea- won for the fourth time this
came the second driver to

Me-..:
his

:to )qin
·l!liVing
to mqve
South a

son and not 10 race s,

season, driving his Chevrolet

win consecutive races with a passed all the tests once

victory at Texas Motor Speed-

to a rather comfortable victo-

again, finishing sixth and

wards, who got the first victo-

spitting out another top-10,
his 18th in a span of 20
races.

ry in the O'Reill y Challenge,
a 300-miler at Texas Motor
SpeedwaY'

way. Tony Stewart has performed the feat twice, Ed-

,

BRIAN VICKERS

CRAfTSMAN li&lt;U&lt;IK

Raceway. Avondale. Ariz. (1.0
miles).150 laps/miles,
When: Friday, Nov, 11

25

No.

;,u CENTS • Vol. ;,5, No. I&gt;:J

last year's winner: David
Starr

. BY BETH SERGENT

• Carpenter wins NL
Cy Young Award.
SeePage 81

Race record: Kevin Harvick,

Chevrolet, 108,014 mph,
Nov. 8, 2002,
last week: Todd Bodine, in a

BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Yesterday
'two se parate fire s heavily
damaged two homes, one in
Middleport and the other in
the Five Points area of
Pomeroy.
The fire at Five Points
began late yesterday morning
at the home of Randall Gibbs,
34404
Brown
Drive,
Pomeroy.
The Chester Volunteer Fire
Department was alerted of
the fire at II :27 a.m. and
responded with i 2 firefighters. The Bashan Volunteer
Fire
Department
also
responded with six firefighters and manpower assisfance
was provided by the Pomeroy
Volunteer Fire Department.
Chester Fire Chief Larry
Cleland said that the fire
began in the garage and
quickly spread to the house.

Toyota, won at Texas Motor

Speedway for the second
year in a row. It was his third
victory of the season and

fifth of his career.

+

f-ElJf) Of !HI: WH~

v

GMAC/DITECH.COM CHEVROLET

E
R

mad It official
that he was leaving
He could be ·
McMurray's successor or a re., placement for Scott Wimmer. No
.' WOld yet.

:: ~It's lolng to take 'some getting '
· uslid to when a driver named
· Busch is driving a Dojlge sponsored by Miller.
~Also official: Mark Martin will
Indeed be back for one more
. year, vmh Truck Series regu lar
Todd Kluever taking over in
Roush's No. 6 Ford for 2007.
~ R)&amp;n Newman qualified first but
had to start last at Texas. That's
" because he totaled his Dodge in
the second qualifying lap after
winning the pole on his first. GoIng to a backup·car means giving
up the starting spot.
~In NASCAR, when the pole win- ·
ner goes to the back, the runner. up doesn't move to the pole. ln~ed. as a means of simplifying

the recanfiguration of the lineup,
the rows move up. As a result,

the driver on the Inside of the
second row, Matt Ken seth, start,f!d the Dickies 500 up front.
1&gt; OffiCially, though. Newman was
the pole winner, meaning that he
has won 35 poles In 150 career
· races. He has .already clinched
the award for most poles this
season. By winning both poles at

Atlanta Motor Speedway, he became the only dnver to sweep the
poles at one traCk this season.
1&gt; TeJ&lt;as offered the largest purse
of the 10 Chase races and also
boasted the largest crowd and
was held In the largest market.
·on the other hand, Texas won a
_place ill the Chase. indirectly, at
the expense of Darlington, a track
considered by many to have been
the best In the 2004 Chase.

I

WltU ~» I ltH
ANt• Wt1U ::1 NlJI

:'l ..,\

; I&gt;WIIo'a' hot '
' L -:Who
else? Carl
' Edwards has

w:won .two .
It ·races In ·a
t·. 1~ :· ·and .
.................:, ,
~·~~ 9V'' .......'!."'....
f) .otten hlmt.l' self back in

'' Championship contention ....
··-1 Meanwhile, Tony Stewart has
, fl~lshed In the top 10 in 18
~;~ of 20 races.
-

t..~iw!io.. jiol- ~~my Mayfield
l![i-~ lost ~7 points to Stewart
~' 'elnee the Chase· began ....
RUII)' Wallace has 'dropped
3jlfi points and Is back In

......
'·~ "'Ll,l'

'

'

.

.

s•

omorrow's ews
Vickers, one of NASCAR's rising stars, tested the 'Car of Tomorrow'
· By Monte Dutton

-~

s

Martin

Tony Stewart
va. Mark Martin
It was, for once, a friendly feud.
Martin drove into Stewart during the

late stages of the Dickies 500 and
quickly apologized afterward, leading
Stewart to say: 'Most of the guys in

has the guts to come up to you, and
that's the end of it. That's why I re- spect him more than anyone else out
here." Martin said: ~After he got done
blessing at nie, I said, 'I messed up,
man.' I think Tony has too much re·
gard for my ability. I make too many
mistakes for an old man.~

NASCAR . This Week's Monte
DuHon gives his take: "Martin Is too
modest. Actually he make's very few
mis takes. He is, quite simply, the

Texas thriYI,.. at expan11i
of Wllkelboro, Rocld...,._m
Indirectly, Texa_s Motor Speedway '
played a role in t~e demise of two
significant tracks. In 1996, Bruton Smith and Bob Bahre each bought
half of North Wilkesboro Speedway,
thus enabling Smith to take one of
the track's Cup dates to Texas and
Bahre to move the other to his track
in 'New Hampshrre. Eight years later,
a court settlement put in motion a
se-ries of events that led Smith, the

CEO of Speedway Motorsports. to
purchase North Carolina Speedway
in Rockingham. That purchase made
room for Texas getting a second spot
John ClarkfNASCAR This Week

In just his·second full season in NASCAR's major circuit, Brian Vickers is 16th in the points
standings.
•

The new car - its design will be shield isn'tlaid back as far with the
standard in all areas except the nose, new car. You can see everything out of
which will be different from make to the front of the windshield. I felt like I
make - is wider, higher and generally could see the moon, the stars and the
has a more upright look. The most no- . spotters on top of the spotters' stand.
ticeable difference is in the enlarged That can easily be fixed by applying
driver compartment.
more black paint to the top of the
"The seat has been moved closer to windshield, which helps to keep the
the center of the car, but only by a sun out of our eyes."
couple of inches (actually about four
Let's see. Vickers said he could see
and a half)," Vickers said. "For me, the moon and stars but needed somewhen you go off into the corner at 200 thing to keep the sun out of his eyes.
miles an hour, it's the least of my conFor the record, the tests were held
cerns and you don't even notice it.
in the daytime.
. "The most noticeable difference is
how high the roof is and how tall the
Contact Monte Dutton
car looks in general. The front windat hmdutton50@aol.com

on the Nextel Cup schedule and put
Rockingham out of business.

YOUR 'I' UHN
I.Hif HS FROM OUH HloADERS

Does dlaaater at LMS fall
on Wheeler'llhoulden?

L

owe's Motor Speedway is sup-

posed to be just that, not a
wrecking yard. NASCAR should
tell Mr. (Humpy) Wheeler to get his

Clelan&lt;l a&lt;lde&lt;l that the fire
was declared electrical in
nalure and that the home was
heavily damaged.
No one was home at the

time af the Five Points fire
and flo firefighters _wen:
injured.
The Middleport Volunteer
Fire Department was called

Middleport and Pomeroy Volunteer Firefighters put out this
chimney fire yesterday afternoon at the home of George .Sauer
in Middleport
out at 12:43 p.m. to respond
to a house fire at 39 Rutland
Street in Middleport at th e
home of George Sauer.
Sauer was home at the time
of the fire hut was not injured
nor were any firefi ghters.

OBITUARIES
Page A5
• Robert Harper, 79
• Eldred Parsons, 82

Middleport Fire Chief Jeff
Darst said that the fire began
in the chimney.
The M i&lt;ldleport Volunieer
Fire Department was assisted
in the call by the Pomeroy
Volunteer Fire D~partment.

County to sbare
state forestry
proceeds with
Olive, Eastern
Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INSIDE

most admired drl'v'er on the tracK."

Ll:Gl NIJS AND L Ollie.

Submitted photos

Chester, Bashan and Pomeroy Volunteer Firefighters were
called to the scene of an electrical .fire that began in the
garage but spread to the home of Rahdall Gibbs in the F1ve
Points area of Pomeroy.

HONORING OUR VETERANS

this sport would've headed for the
hauler and not said a word until they
ca lled you a day or two later. Ma"rk

NASCAR This Week
Brian Vickers has been considered
one of NASCAR's stars of tomorrow
since he earned a ride with Hendrick
Motorsports and won the Busch Series
championship at age,20 in 2003.
Now in his second season with Hen- ·
drick in Nextel Cup, Vickers has
shown considerable improvement in
the latter half of the current campaign, improving his average finishing position from nearly 23rd in the
first half to about J41h. He finished a
career-best second at Pocono in June .
and subsequently finished third at
both Indianapolis and California.
More recently Vickers, who is from
Thomasville, N.C., was one of six drivers chosen to test the "Car of Tomorrow" at Atlanta Motor Speedway.
NASCAR officials plan to debut the
new design in the fall of 2006 at Tal- ·
ladega and make it standard in 2007.
"It looks more like a 19SS Chevy, or
a New York taxicab from years ago,"
said Vickers. "Not much to look at, but
it's still a race car."
Fans of the old BelAir might take
exception to that remark, but more importantly, how does the new car drive?
"It's riot that far off from the Cup
cars we have now," said Vickers.
"Once you get the balance right, it
doesn't matter what kind of car you're
in. It's still a race car, and you're still
searching for a balanced feel, a neutral feel, or whatever you prefer as a
driver. You notice a lack of total downforce and loss of grip, but more aerodynamic drag down the straightaways.
"In traffic, there was a big difference. The car was affected quite a bit
with other cars around it: There's
some work to do there. I don't think
it's exactly what everyone wanted. All
in all, I think it was a great test. I applaud NASCAR for what they're trying to do. They're trying to cr~ate a
safer, more economieally friendly car,
and they're also trying to create a better car from a competition standpoint.
There's still some work to do, but we
can get there."

u
Stewart

"~'w.mydaityscntincl.com

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, :.mus

Fires damage homes in Middleport and at Five Points

SPORTS

Qualifying record: ·Jack
Sprague, Chevrolet, 131.186
mph, Nov. 5, 2004,

IN '1'1-11=. SPOTLIGHT ··

NEXTEL CUP SERIES

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Race: Chevy Silverado 150
Where: Phoenix International

• A Hunger' For More.
See Page A2
• Local Church Briefs.
See Page A2
• Religion News in Brief.
See Page A2 .
• Election brings new
member to fair board.
See Page A5
• Local Briefs.
See Page A5
• For the Record.
See Page A5
• Point Pleasant radio
stalion sets Christmas
shoebox drive.
. See Page A6
• College admission
consultants grow in
popularity. See Page A6
• Arctic drilling plan
dropped from House
budgel bill. See Page A7

go

house in order or we'll
somewhere
else, i.e., Darlington andjor another
one-date track. It's pretty bad when

the cars don't average at least 140150 mph for a 500-mile race on a superspeedway,

POMEROY Meigs
County, Olive Township and
the Eastern Local School
District have received $8,497
in revenue from· the sale of
timber this year at Shade
River State Forest.
David Glass. forest manager for the Hocking State
Forest Division of Forestry,
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources, presented Meigs
County Commissioners with
a check Thursday, represent- ing proceeds from timber
management projects on tl)e
state land. Commissioners
will keep $2, 124 of those
funds , the township, $2,124, ·
and Eastern Local $4,248.75,
through the state's "Trees to
Textbooks" program.
Statewide, ODNR will distribute $484,369 in 12 counties from the program. State
forestry exp'erts use 'forest ·
management projects · to
improve the health and diversity of state forests, with an
eye to their value for recreational opportunities, soil and
water conservation and ·
wildlife habitat~ Glass said.
Brian J. Reed/photo
When selected trees or
Meigs County Commissioners Jim Sheets and Mick Davenport and Health Commissioner Larry Marshall hang the American Flag
. areas of wood land are barfrom the third floor balcony of the Meigs County Courthouse in preparation for Friday's Veterans Day service on the courthouse
Please see Forestry, AS
steps, which begins at 11 a.m.

Pomeroy Post Office honors Veterans

David Ugg!ns

El Centro, Calif.

ThanKs for writing. There's plenty of
blame to go around concerning the
UAW-GM Quality 500, and all of it
shouldn't be dumped on the track
president's shoulders: Mo'st of the
cr4sfles were caused by tire failures.

'.

&amp; Supply

Co. -

Details on Page A10

INDEX

Charlene Hoefllchjphoto

Susan Clark of Clark's Jewelry Store prepares a display of pictures and other memorabilia of Pomeroy businesses and happenings. Included is a history of her store which was founded
in 1882 by August Goessler.

2 SECTIONS- 20 PAGES

Buckeye Edition
Calendars
Classifiedis
Comics

B10

A3
B9

Dear Abby
A3
Editorials
A4
Faith • Values
A2-3
Movies
As
Obituaries
As
8 Section
Sports
Weather
A10
© :wos Ohio Vn.lley Puhlishh1g Co .

•

Pomeroy's historic walking tour
kicks off holiday activities

84-6

BY CHARLENE HOEFI.ICH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

,

Charlene Hoeftlch/ photo

Pomeroy Postmaster Tom Sanders. left, presents certificates to veterans Jim Pullins. crty route
carrier, center, and Paul Card, rural route earner. dunng a ceremony honoring veterans in conjunction with the unvei ling and dedication of the "Distinguished Marines" postage stamps
Thursday. The commemorative postage stamps saluting the bravery and distinction of four legendary Marines are now available for purchase at post offices.

POMEROY - Not only
are holiday decoration' in
place hllt pictures and histo- ries of bllsinesses operating
in century-old buildings lining Main and Second Streets
fill display windows for
Saturday\ historic walking

tour of Pomeroy.
The journey into the past is
a kickolfto holiday activities,
sponsored by the Pomeroy
Mercl1:111ts Association. It
will take place at 10 a.m.
beginning at Trinity Church,
corner of Lynn and Second.
A&gt;
participants
walk

Please see Tour, AS

�FAITH
A Hunger For More

The Daily Sentinel

As we wound down our day
this past week. my wJfe and I
faithfully completing our
nightly ritual of "Little Rascal
Roundup," I found my 8-yearold son bent over our dining
room table, meticulously writing something on a deep blue
piece of paper. I cautiou sly
peered over his shoulder to
see what might be there and,
to my surprise, observed a
series of mus1c notes carefull y
drawn out and arranged on
hand-drawn music paper.
Now in h1s second year of
piano lessons. he already
knows more than do I regarding music theory. so his handiwork was alreadv riddled
with mystery for me, along
with the v.ork of his older
brother (who IS now m h1 s
fourth )ear of piano l e~So n s).
., What was (and is) parucularly interesting to me, though,
were the lyric s that he was
writing out, carefully placing
them with corresponding
notes. I suddenly percc1vcd
that he was clearly writing
more than just musical notes
for his amusement. He was
doing more than seeking to
demonstrate h1s musical giftedness. He was v.riting a
song from hi s heart , the
words of which told the story
of a budding yet very real and
deep love for God He gave
me permission to share with
you the piece that he's wntten, entitled, "I Love God."
"Oh, my God, You are
mighty' Lord, You're my
God; Oh, M1ghty One, You
·are mighty. I lo ve You. God.
You are mighty! Lord, oh,
You're mighty, my Lord!"
Unsolicited, yet intentional and focused pra1sed from
the heart , mind, hands, and
lips of an 8-year-old. How
sweet and unassummg such
praise is to the father' How
uncomplicated and pure
such adoration'
It reminds me of where it IS
written, "My heart is steadfast, 0 God; I w1ll smg and
make mus1c w1th all my soul.
Awake, harp and lyre! I will
awaken the dawn! I will
praise You, 0 LORD, among
the natiOns; I will sing of you
among the peoples. For great
is Your love, higher than the
heavens; Your faithfulness
reaches to the skies" (Psalm
108: !A NIV).
If ever one wonders what
constitutes "real" worship in
the mind of God or perhaps
finds it difficult to visualize

Pastor
Thorn
Mollohan

what such worship may look
hke. he or she needs only to
see a young child who has n't
yet gotten "caught up" m the
patterns of worldly thinking
that have lloode'd every single form of communication
that we use (even having
infiltrated the ranks of the
ch urch). We may learn a lot
from a young boy or gi rl who
simply hasn ' t yet become
convinced that the opinions
of others are all that i mportant and JUSt wants to tell God
how great He is.
My son wrote his song
because a song was in hi s
heart. He wrote the song so
that he could go back, time
and lime again. to reflect on
God's goodness. He wrote it
so that he could be refreshed
in his walk with the Lord by
reminiscing on the joy that
God had sent him . He wrote
it because he really loves
God and it doesn' t occur to
him to not enjoy the fact that
God loves hun, too.
" Pra1se the name of the
LORD. Prmsc the name of
the LORD: praise Him , you
servants ot the LORD , you
who minister in the house of
the LORD, in the courts of
the house of our God. Praise
the LORD, for the LORD is
good: sing praise to H1 s
name, for that is pleasam ... I
know that the LORD 1s great,
that our LORD is greater than
all 'gods' ... The idol s of the
nations are silver and gold,
made by the hands of men.
They have mouths, but cannot speak, eyes, but they cannot see, they have ears but
they cannot hear, nor is there
breath in their mouths Those
who make them will be like
them, and so will all who
trust in them ... I know that
the LORD is great, that our
LORD is greater than all
'gods.' The LORD does
whatever pleases Him, in the
heavens and on the earth, in
seas and in their depths. He
makes clouds rise from the
ends of the earth; He sends
lightning with the rain and

PageA2:

• VALUES

Friday, November u,

· Friday, Nove"'ber 11, 2005

. (Thom Mollohan and his
family have ministered in
southern Ohio the past 10
years. He is the pastor of
Pathway
Community
Church and may be reached
for comments or questions
by
e-mail
at
pastorthom @path waygallipolis.com).

Proud to be apqrt of your'life.
The Daily Sentinel • Subscribe today • 992-2l55 • www:mydailysentlnel.com

100th
anniversary to
be observed
POMEROY
Trinity
Congregational Church will
celebrate the !DOth anniversary of the bUilding of the
present church during the
10:30 a.m. worship service .

'

Fellowship
Apostolfc

A fellowship dinner for members and friends will be
served following the service.

Church.
Rev.
Phillip
Scarberry will provide special music.

Revival set

Delivered
to sing

REEDSVILLE
Weekend rev.ival serv ices
v.ill be held at 7 p.m., Friday
through Sunday, at the
Reedsville United Methodist

Church of Jesus Chrlsl Aposutlic
VanZandt and Ward Rd, Pasror: James
Miller, Su nday School - 10·30 am.,
Evening · 7 30 p m

CHARLOITE, N.C. (AP)
- Though ·long-assumed, the
Billy Graham Evangelistic
Association has given its tirst
official word that the ailing
evangelist would no longer
hold crusades.
The association said in a
news release that Graham is
enjoying qUJet time at his
home in Montreat, where he
turned 87 on Monday. His
most recent crusade was in
New York in June.
"Ruth and I have enjoyed
our time together these last
few months, and we both feel
at peace about the dec1sion to
have the New York meetings
be our last," Graham said in
the release. "We know that
God can still use us to reach
people with the Gospel message in other ways, and we
look forward to seeing how
he will do so."
The assocmtion said that
while the crusade phase of
his evangelistic ministry may
be over, Graham still finds
plenty to do.
He participated in the
recent groundbreaking and
dedication ceremonies at the
Billy Graham Evangelistic
Association headquarters in
his hometown of Charlotte
and still serves as a chairman
of the association's board,
attending meetings as his
health permits.
The Grahams offered their
old home as a shelter to a
family from New Orleans
who was left homeless after
Hurricane Katrina hit the
Gulf Coast.
Graham also has been
working on a book and
"determining the best use of
his remaining years," the
release said.
Graham suffers from fluid
on the brain, prostate cancer
and Parkinson's disease. He

PORTLAND - A hymn
sing with "Delivered" will be
held at 7 p.m. Saturday at the
Stiversville Church.

~

16 1 Mulberry Av~ .. Puntcmy, 992-5891!,
Pastor Re v Walter E Hem7 . Sat Con
445-SISpm. Mau- 510 pm . Su11
Con -8.45-9.15 am., Sun Mass· 9·JO
a m , Dat ly Mass-I! JUa m

Emmanuel Apostolic T11.bernacl~ lm:.
Loop Rd off New Ltma Rd • Rutland,
Serv tCl'S" Sun 10.00 a 111 &amp; 7 30 p.m 1
Thurs 7{10 p m, Pastor MartyR Hutton

Church of Christ

Assembly of God

Asked whether recent huruses a walker due to a pelvic
fracture and is largely con- ricanes, earthquakes, landslides and wars point to the
fined to hts home.
His' wife, Ruth Bell end of the world as foretold
Graham, 85, was hospitalized . in the Bible, 17 percent said
several times in 2002 for definitely, 34 percent possihealth problems, including bly and 33 percent no.
A 35 percent plurality
pneumonia, and remains in ill
thought the disasters were
health.
coincidences, not "acts of
while 29 percent
Southern Baptists' God,"
believed they were directly
10.5 million
caused by God, 22 percent
maybe and 14 percent
emergency meals sa,id
were uncertain.
The October random sambreaks a record
ple of I ,000 was polled by
ALPHAREITA. Ga. (BP) Synovate market research
- Southern Baptist Disaster with a margin of error of plus
Relief announced that church or minus about 4 percentage
volunteers ~erved more than points.
I0.5 million meals so far 'this
year, a record number boostConservative
ed largely by response to
chosen to
Hurricane Katrina.
The previous annual record
lead Canadian
was last year's 3.5 million
Anglican province
meals served.
The agency of the GeorgiaRICHMOND, B.C. (AP)
based
North
American
Anglican Church of
Mission Board sa1d more than
Canada
electors
chose
9,000 volunteers from 41
staunchly
conservative
states joined efforts following
Hurricanes Katrina, Rita and Bishop Terrence Buckle of
Wilma and provided 121 ,283 · the Yukon as the metropolitan
worker days. Donations and archbishop to head one
of .the denomination's four
topped $18 million.
Even now, 365 Baptist provinces.
Buckle's new responsibiliteams are preparing meals
and handling cleanup and ties include discipline of
recovery
in
Florida, bishops in hi s region of
Louisiana, Mississippi and British Columbm and the •
Yukon.
Texas.
A
losing
candidate,
Vancouver's liberal Bishop
Poll: Teens
Michael Ingham, provoked
an international uproar in
say hurricanes
2002 by authorizing blessing
and disasters
ceremonies for same-sex
couples.
do not affect
Vancouver parishes that
faith in God
spurned Ingham's action
asked Buckle to be their subNEW YORK (AP)
stitute bishop and he agreed.
Three-fourths of teens say After Ingham barred Buckle
disasters such as Hurricane and the now-retired metroKatrina did not affect · their politan threatened Buckle
faith in God and those who with disciplinary action, he
were affected overwhelming- w1thdrew.
ly report their faith became
The Anglican Church of
stronger, according to an Canada faces a 2007 showAmerican Bible Society poll. down on gay policies.

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
26 years in local business
Roofing &amp; Building Work
Somt w;n••
young and had

novor t.rt tht

Pomeroy, OH
I ,

740-992-6215

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
Located Jess than 30 mmutes from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg
l-740-667-3156
"Still small enough to care"

aocurlty of home.

Liberty Assembly of God
PO BOK 467, Duddmg Lane, M~on,
W Va , Pastor Netl Tennant, Sunday
Servtee~- 10 00 am and 7 p m

Baptist
Carpenrtr Baptist Churth
Sunday School • 9 ~Oam, Preachmg
Servtce 10:30am. E' emng Servtcc
7:00pm. Wednesday Athie Study 7 00 pm,
Interim Preacher· Floyd Ross
Cheshire Baptist Churth
Pastor. Ste\'C Lutle. Sunday School· '} 30
am, Mommg Worshtp· 10·30 am.
Wednesda) Bible Study 6·30pm: chot r
practice 7,30, youth and Btble Buddtes
6.30 p.m. Thurs 1 pm book study
Hupe Buplbt Church !Soulbern)

510 Grant St . Middleport. Sunday school
. 9.30 a.m., Worshtp . I I am and 6 p m.
Wcdnc~d .t} Se rvtct: · 7 p.m Pastor Gary
ElliS
Rutland 1&lt;1rst Bapllst Churcl1
Sunday School · 9 JO a. m., WorS hip •
IU4.'iam.
Pomeroy First Baptht
Pastor Jon Brockert, East Mam St.,
Sunday Worshtp • 10 00 a.m., Wed Btble
Stud} 6·30 pm
First Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Ptke, Pastor : E Lamar
O'Bryunt, Sunday School · 9·10 am,
Worsh1p · 8· I ~ am , 9 45 am &amp; 7 00 p m ,
Wedne~day Servtces · 7·00 p m

Fint Baptist Church
Pastor· 6th and Palmer St , Middlcpon.
Sunday School · 9·15 ~.m., Worship ·
10:15 a.m. 700 p.m. Wednesday
Service.' 7:00p.m

Racine First Bapdst
Pastor· • Sunday School · 9 30 a.m,
Worship . 10 40 a.m., 7.00 p.m.,
Wednesday Serviceti 7:00 p.m
Silver Run Bapli~t
Pastor John Swanson. Sunday School ·
!Oa.m, Worship · l l:t m, 7 00 p.m
,Wedne~ day Servtces- 7.00 p.m.
Mt. Union B~tpllst
Pastor Drmd Wtscman . Sunday School9 45 a m , Even111g · 6 30 p m ,
Wednesday Serv1ces · 6 30p m
Bethlehem Baptist Church
Great Bend, Route 124. Racme, OH,
Pasto r . Damel Mecea, Sunday Sc hon] ·
9 30 a m , Sunday Worship • Ill 30 a m ,
Wednesday l:ltble Study. 6 ()(J p m
OICI Bethel Fr!l' Will Baptist Church
2860 1 St Rt 7, Middl eport, Sunday
Serv 1cc · 10 am , 6·00 p m , Tue'iday
Serv1ces -6· 00
Hillside Baptlsl Chun:h
St. Rt. 143 JUSt off Rt 7 Pastor · Rev
James R t\crec. Sr . Sunday Umftcd
Service, Worship . 10 30 am, 6 p m,
Wednesday Servtces 7 p.m

Others w11re older,
raising famllln

and engaged In
establlsl!ed
occ:uptiltona. But.

thly Ill had

209 Third

Dair11
Queen
Brazier

700 N. 2nd St.

Ra~lne,
&lt;;•

Middleport, OH

somlllhlngln

common,th...
brave men and

"A Home Bank for
Home People"

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

them, left

,
P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

Jives to •erve our
country and
protac1 our freedom.
Each ttme we cast our baltot ...tvery weak •• w• worship
fretly ... When.vtr W1l uprou a potttioat opinion without lear of
raprisal, Itt us remember tht months and yoare ucrlflced by our
vetarana as they cMitnded tht right&amp; whicll w. enjoy todoy.
This Vt18ran'a Day, may w. honor tho Mlflooo men and women
who have plld with a poltlon ol their llvulhat ours might be free .

740-949·221 0
Hills Self Storage

women. Thoy put
a haij to their llvn ·
aolhoy ~now
fomiHarity behind,
and traveled to
foreign thorn.
They rtaked lhtlr

OH

499 Richland Avenue. Athens
740-S94.(i333
t -800-451-9806

The ftppliance man
740·985·3561
992-1550
Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Young

740-949·2217
SIZes available

5x1 0 to 10 x 20

If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done unto you.
Joh11 15:7

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(740) 992-3279
To! Free 1-877-583-2433

F11ith Baptist Church
Ra1lroad St., Mason, Sunday School 10
a.m . Worship - II a.m , 6 p.m.
Wednesday Semces . 7 p m

Michael L: Crites
Director of Family &amp;
Community Services
Overbrook
Rehabilitation Or.
"A Celebration of Life"
333 Page Street
(740) 992-6472
Middtenort OH Fax 1740\ 992-7406

Fom~t

Run Baptist
Pastor : Anus Hurt, Sunduy School · 10
am , Worshtp-11 a.m

C

Mt, Moriah Bapdsc
Fuurt,h &amp; Main SL, Mtddleport. Pastor.
Rev. Gi lbert Craig, Jr .. Sund&lt;~y School
9.30 a.m., Wursh1p · 10 45 a.m
Antiquity Baptist
Sunday School . 9 30 11 m., Wonhtp ·
10.45 am., Sunday Evenmg · 6 &lt;M) p m,
Pastor. Don Walker

Hours

Warm F ltflluill
Armmpltere ·

6am -8 pm

· :Miffie's 'l{estaurant

Rutland Free Will Baptist
Salem St , Pastor Jam1c Fonner, Sunday
Sc hool - 10 am, Evenmg · 7 p m ,

Open 7 days a week

Portable Toilet Rentals
Jack's Septic Tank &amp;
Portable Toilet Service
(In Darwin)
39825 Gold R1dge Road.· Pomeroy. OH

You r #2

Bu~itU'\ \' t'i m1r

#I BusineH

Phone 01 Fax 740-992-7 119
Owners: David &amp; Edith Bnckles

BUSINESS SERVICES
Au Accouuti11g &amp;
Filiallcial Services Firm
618 E. Main Str'-:Cl • Pomeroy
(740) 992-7270

- - - - - -·----------'---- --- - -- -·---

Church of t.od or l'rophl'9

!() ~0

0 J Whtte Rd nit St Rt J r-.11. l'a•tor P J
Ch:tpman Suml,ty St.:hnol · 10 ;~ m.

pIll

Wt1rsh1p · II am Wcd nc'd''' Scr' IL'-''. 7
pm

Tup,~r~i-l 1 luin~ St. Puul
p,,,tur Jane lkJIIJc. SunrJ&gt;~y S~o:hunl · 9
·I 111, Wor,htp - IU ~Ill, lue~da) St: r vt;;c~

Congregational

Episcopal
Gnu·t' t:pJscujmll.'huHh
3::!(1 E MaUl St. Po m ~r\&gt;y , Su11Ja} Sdtt&gt;ol
und HniJ. 1-:IILhan•l I I Ill.) am Rc\
[dw.trJ P.l)nc

Holiness

Keno Church of Chr1sl
Worsh tp · 9 3U am. Su nJ.ty S(.]lool ·
l[J 3U am , Pustor-Jdtrcy W~I! .K:c, I ~~ and
3rd Sunda}
BearwaUow Ridge t"hurrh uf Chmt
Pastor·Hruce Terry Sunda) Sthnltl -9 ~0
om
Worship • 10 JO ~ m (J ltl r m
V..ednesday SerVIlCll . n 30 pIll
Zion Church of Christ
Pomerny, Harrmmvtlle Rd !RI 1-1"1)
PMior· Ro ger Wa1 son, Sundoty Sdw&lt; d 930 am. Worshtp
1[)10 um . 70fl
p m , Wedne ~day Ser\K es 7 p m
Thppen Plain Church of Christ
In strumental. Worship s~rV lC C ') ol)n .
Communton · 10 .1111 Sund.ty SL hnol
10.15 a.m. Youth· 5 30 pm Sundily Bthlc
Study Wednesday 7 pm
Bradbury Church of Christ
Mimster Tom Runyon . .19551! Brudbury
Road, M1ddlcpo n Sund11y Sc hon] 9 10

•m

Worsh1p

'

I0

~0 ~

m

Rutland Chun:h of Christ
Sunday Sdmol · 9 30 ~- 111 , Wursl11p ;.md
Com mun10n · 10 30 am. BuD J WetJ)'.
Mm1ster
Bradford &lt;.:burch of Christ
Corner of St Rt Jf4 &amp; Bt11Jbur)' Rd,
Mm1 stcr Doug Shamblin, Youth Mumlcr:
1:1!11 Amberger, Su nday School - 9 30 am.
Worshtp · 8 UO am . I 0 ~0 am , 7 ()U
p m ,Wednesday Serv1ces · 7 00 p m
Hickory Hills Churrh of Christ
Tuppers Plams PMior Mtke Moore, Bible
class, 9 am Sunday: worsh1p 10 a m
Su nday; worshtp 6 lO pm Sunday; Btbk
class 7 pm Wed
Rudnille Church of Christ
Phihp Sturm Sunday Schnol 9 ~0
am Wnr~h•r Scrvtce 10·30 n m. B1hle
S tud ~·. Wednc~fltt}. 6 ~0 p 111
Pa ~ tor

De):ter Chu~h of Christ
Sunday schuol '} 30 am. Suntlny wnrshtp
10"30 am
Chun:h of Christ
Intersecti on 7 and 124 W. F.\lmgclt!i t
Denms Sargcm. Sunday Bth lc Stutly ·
930am, Wors hip.I 010am and6~U
p m . Wednesday Bthlc Study - 7 p m

Christian Union
Hartford Chun:h of Christ in
Christi110 Union
Hartford, W.Va .. Pa ~tor· DH v tU Greer.
Sunda)' Schon] · !) 30 a m . Wmshtp
10 30 a.m. 7.110 p m. WcJm:srJ~y
Servtces 7 tiO p m

Church of God
Mt. Mori11h Church or God·
Md e- H11l Rd. Raltne. Pa~l&lt;.lr hmes
S,tUcrhdd. Sunduy Slhool · &lt;;14'\ .1m.
Evenmg . 6 p m . WcJnesd.1y Scnu.:o.:~ · 7

'CIVJ~C

I "t•ntr.al &lt;.:luster
'\~hUI) tSyra~u&lt;;ct Pl.l~lor

Bnh RohmMlll,
SunrJ,,y\ciiiJH I '! 4 ~ a 111 Wohh1p · II
a Ill, W~·Jne'lki} Scf\ ICC~ 7 "'pIll

Other Churches
AmaztnM

tlul"oods
K\"1\h Nm.lcJ , Su 11d;~y Sdn.1ul

Commumty Churt"b
Dunlap. St;~t ~ Rt 6111
Tuppers Pknn~. Sun Wm,hlp 10 am &amp;
0 lO pm.• TIIUrsduy Bthlc SiuoJy 7· ou p m
Oasl"i Christian fello\\sh1p
INun-dcnumin.tll\m~J lcllu~~.~hlJ&gt;l

IU

.t m , _\\.ur~htp-llam

lht.n\ illr Hnliness ( "hurch
l iOC.7 Stat ~ Rout~ J1". I ung~\llc l'.t,l&lt;&gt;t
Vtunr Roush Sunda; ,dttlol - lJ ~~~ am
Sund~!' wur,htr
10 '1() .11n &amp; 7 p 111.
Wcdnc,day pr.tycr &gt;&lt;'r\ itc 7 p m

f-orest Mun
B"ll N"hmwn Sund.ty S\ houl · )()
.1m 'Wor\hlp- lJ am
l'~ 'ln r

llt:alb IMtddleportl
l'.tstclr I:Jrwn IJunham SunoJa) Sdmol .

'
Mmers,ille
R,lh Rubm~on. Sunda} Sl hlloJI .IJ
ol lll Woli,]Hp · Ill a Ill

Harrt~on~ il lc

Ruse ur Sharon llnlinl'SS Church
L~.1dutg (\cd; RJ .. Rutl:uitJ P.btor Rl'\
Dco.~.cy Km g Suntl.i:&gt; 'll. hllnl ':ll.ll .1111.
Sttnd.tl
v.t•t~lup 7 p111
\\c,lne~du:o
J' l.t ycr mt:&lt;.:ltn~ - 7 p m
l'in~

Gnne Dible Holiness (.'burch
1/2 1mlu oll Rt .l~'- l'a&gt;tur Rev 0 Dell
M&lt;.t llk}. Stua l.t v Sdtnul · I) ~0 am.
Wi'f'lup · 10 10 .1111, il.O lllll,
Wcdti~,,J,t\ Sen ll C· i ~0 p 111
W~sle~ an II11JI~ llulin~s Chun:h
7.'i Pe.trl S1. fl.ltdtlklk'rt P.t::.lm Rtd;
BtltiTIJe , Sulll.!&lt;.~) Sdtut•l · IO a 111 Wtu~lu p
- li iA"i p.111 Sumi. L) E~~ 7 ()() I' Ill,
Wcdi1C"d.t} SeJVRe 7 lOp m

ll~!;di Run Communi!~ Church
P.t , h•l hl.c' Ltrry Lemley. Sund"y Sdl\lnl
- ~ I() .1111. Wur,hlp · 10 45 am, "/ p 111,
I hUJ sd,i) l:h]lk: Study olll d Youth 7 p 111

luurel Cliff fr'!c Mdhodist Church
Ptl't"r Glenn R"'H". Sund.1~ Sdwul ·
9 "' ,, m , Wur~h1p
lfl lOam .tnd h
pIll Wednc~day ScrVIll! . 7 ()(!rIll

Latter-Day Saints
The Chunoh or Jrsu~
Christ of Lutter-llay Saint~
S t Rt lOll -141!·6247 or 446 -74X h.
Sun1h1~ Sdmn l Ill ~0 II a m , Rehel
Soctcly/f'nc sthuod 11 U5 - J2 ·UO noun
S,u.:r~mcn t
Sen tee IJ 10 15 a .m .
Homenmkm~ mectmg. 1st Tlwr~ - 7 p m.

l&gt;rarl Ch1tpcl
Sumby Scll!Mll · 9 am. Wnr..h1p . 10 am
Pnmenly
Brmn Dunham Wnr shtp · 'J
Sunday Sl: hno l 10 1~ 11m

P,1~w r

a 111

]0

Rock Springs
P.Nur. Keuh RarJcr SunJ.1y Sd)()o\ 9 I~
.!m,;worshtp
10 .tm, Yuu th
felluV.;' hip . Sunday 6 p.111
Rutlund
R1lk I:Journc, Sund.ty Sc hool
•J '0" 111., Wm,lu p. IU Jll ,1m Thursd.ty
Se1\ 1~b · 7 p Jll
Salem Ct"ntcr
P.i,hu William K M.t r, h;~ll, Sum.luy
Sdtri\J I . IU 15 u m. WoJSIIIp · 9 15 a.m.,
Btlllc Study MonUay 7 ~ KJ pm
Snmnillc
Sund.ty s ~ hool · IU am .. Wor,lup · Y a.m
P.t~l&lt; 1 r ,

Bethany
P,tshJr" J,lhn Gilmore, Sunday School - IU
.1 Ill , Worsh1p · 9 ,, m, W.:d ncsday
Scnll'Cs · 10 am
Carmti-Sutton
lnrme l &amp; B,tshan Rcl.s Ractnc. Ohto,
Ptl~t!lr John Gtlmore. Su nduy S~,;hou l ·
') \{)am Worshtp . 10 4~ a m fl1 hlc
Study Wed 7 flOp m
MomingStar
Paswr Jnh n Gtlmnre. Suncla} Schnol · II
a.m, 'Wnrshtp 10 ,, m

Lutheran

East Letart
Pit~lul IJtll Mur~hall Sum.l.1y Sdtuol 9a m , WNShtp · iU ~ n1, 1~1 Sundit)
c~e1v month cvenmg se rVIle") 00 p m,
Wcdne~1lay · 7 p m

St. John l.utheran Church
Pmc Grtl\C, Wor~h1p · ':1 (}I) a.m , Sumlay
Sdu.1ul . !0 00 u m Pa ~•~·r J.un ~s P
Brady

H11dt1e
1-'n~tor Kerf) Wood, Sunday Sdlotl) · 10
a 111 , Wor ~ lup . II a m

Our Sll' IO'Ur l.uthcran Church
Walnut and Hcnt y St l. R:.ncnswt&gt;Dd
WV,t , P.t~lot D.1 11U Ru ~~c ll Suml,t y
' ~l up · 11 .tm
S~.: honl . 10 !KJ a 111. Wot
St. Paul tutlwran Chorda
Corner Syc.1mo re &amp; Sl'Cfln U St. Pumero)',
Sun ~l ) S~ houl · Y4~ &lt;~t n. Wm•htp · I I
.! Ill

United Methodist
Graham Umted \Mhodtst
Wu!"!.hlp . 11 a 111 l'~'t"r Ktd!.ml N~.l'&lt;"
Rt'thtell intll'fl l\lt'thodt'it
Nc\.\ 11.1vc n l{tLIJ &lt;~rd NL 1,, P.t,tnr
Sund.1y wor~h1p 'I lll .t m ru (~ (1 11!
pr.1y1 r md Bthl~ Slllliy
1\!t. Olht• Unittd i\lcthudist
011 I~4 llch mtl \\oll'k c~1 tile, f'Nnr Ht'l
Kalph Sp uc ~. SunLI.ty Stlwol \1 \0 um,
Wtu~ h!Jl
10 '( I am. 7 p m Thur'&gt;d.t)
Scn i!.C' 7 p m
~lcig~

Cmtperathc l)uri~h
C lu,ler. Altr~d P.1'1"r J.tlll
)k.tll iC Sund.ty SdtPnl · 9·10 .1111.
W1 Jr!ih1p llam,O JO Jllll

Coolwille Unikd Methodist P-arish
1-'.l,tor l lekn Khnr Cuolvilk C hur ~h.
M.un &amp; F1flh St . Sunday Schnp] · I"
ol m . Worship . I) a Ill ' The~di~ Se rVICe~
1r m
Bethtl Church
fm&lt;.n~hiJ' Rd -+fiKC"~ Sunday School ·II
.1 rn
¥.m~h1p
10 .1m , Wcdnc~d:l)
s .. r\ l l~s - lt lalt1
Hocklngporl Chun•h
Gt.uld Strcc l. Su ud;~y School 1)· \0 &lt;~ m
Wurc; lur 10 .t m Pa ~ 1o1 Phtlltp Bell

:m

Torch Church
Co Hd 63. Suml&lt;.tv Sdwol · 9 lO am ,
W!II'Ju p- 10. ~0 a 111

Nazarene
Middlc!JOrll:bun:h of lhe Naurene
Pa ~w r Alle n M1dcap. Sunday School •
Y Ul ,• m . w~,r~ lup - 10 3Ua 111 .6 30 p m,
W.:Jnc~J ~y Sen tee&gt; · 7 p m , Pa stur.
4. 11cn Mtdl.•P

Nonh c.1~l

t:heslet
l'.t~t1 1r l.mc Hc .tJin• Wor~hiJ'
4 .1 Ill ,
lhuNI.ty
Sunday Slhno l · 10 ,1 m
s~·n h:l'' ."7

r rn

rm
Rutland Chun:h of God
Ron Hc.tth , SL!ndll) Wor ~ hip · Ill
.t 111 6
p 111 W~rl nc"'-l ay Servtccs 7
pm

Joppa
P.tStllf Bub R,Jn oJ.,!ph \.\nr,htp
.1 lll Sundil~ Sd1~~~~ - Ill 'II .1111

S)racuse l&lt;'int Church of God

tun~:

Y lll

Reeds\illt' Fellowship
Churd1 ul .the NMarenc , P.1stnr Jamtc
P&lt;! lllt. Sund.i) Slhool .lj 10 .1m. Worsh tp
. 10 -~~.I Ill 7 r 111 Wc dn ~~d .l)' Sen tee~
• 7 pIll
SyriiCUSC f'hurrh or lht Nazarene
Pastnr M1Lc Adktns SunrJay Schnol 'J 30
am . Vmr~h•p
tO W .1m. !l p m.
W~d,ll~ sday Scr&gt;ll&lt;!~ 7 p 111
l'unl{'ruy t;hun.:h of the Nalarene
P~st1•r. J;~ n L~~cnoJcr. Sund.1y So.: hoo l ·

Hnllum

Mcdmg i11 Ihe uld Amen~o:Jn Lc~mn Hall
South Fnunh 1\ ven ue Mtddlcpnrt
PJ sh u Out~ St~w.trt lil IXJ,tm SunJn y
Oth er me~·ung~ 111 home~
Commumt' oft'hr~l
Pnnland-Hacm.: Rd . Pa &lt;;lt\f Jtm Proflitt,
Sund.ty Slh&lt;lo] - Y IU ol lll , Wpr~ htp .
10 10 a m \1/cdnesda} Sc r vt~c~ . 7 lXl

pm

PL~I!ll"

Cnhury l'ilgrim C'huprl
J{,,,td
P.htor ( hMic,
M ~ Kcn11c. SuniJ,t) Sdl\ 1ol 'J 111 a m .
W!lr~ht p
ll .t Jll 7 (KI (J m. Wl'dllc•tl.t y
Se rv!&lt;. e 7 0() J1 nt

(;rHc~

Pa~t or Wa~n~

Entt&gt;rprlst&gt;
P,t,tut Arl.md 1\mg. Sunda~ School
Ill JO ,, m., w,,r~l11p . IJ J(J .1m B1blc
Siu d} Wl'l.i 7 J()
Pa ~lor.

Comhlllllll) Churt·h
P.l'lnt
Sr,·vc Tumd: ,\1~111 Stt ..·d
Rutl.md Sun da) w,, J ~htp- llt lll l ,, m
Su mlny Sen H.:~ - 7 p m

Middleport Chun:h of Christ
5th and Moun, P~~l or AI H.lrl ' "ll· Yout h
Mmt~tcr Josh Ulm. Su11da} S•
ul · ':110
!l!ll., Wut~ lup - 11 15,10 311 utn, 7 pm.
Wednesda) Serv1 ~ c~ · 7 p m

Chester Church of the Nazarent
Pa ~ tur Re\ 1-terbert Grlltr Sunday SchiMII
- I) .\0 am. Wor~htp . II am. n p m.
Wc dn~stlay Sen kes 7 p m '
Rutllmd t:hun·h of the l"ll:t:arene
SunrJa) Sdmnl 4 30 a.m Woro,htp
10 10 a m, 6 10 p m, Wednesday
SCf\ "e~ · 7 p m Rev Mtke Clark

71Upm

Trinh) Church
ScumrJ &amp; Lynn. Pu m ~roy. Pa~lllr lk \
JonatiMII Nobk WoHhtp 10 2' .1111
Sunday Sd1ool '} 15 .1111

Hemlock Gron Christian Chun:h

Pomeroy Westside Chun:h of Christ
33126 Children's Home Rd ., Sunday
School II am Worshtp - lOa 111 , fl p. m,
Wednesday Se rvt ~es- 7 p m

Rt'eds\ ille
· 9 30 ;1 lit . Sund:~} Schnnl ·
am hr&lt;,l Sund'-~) nl Mnnth 7 00

\1/m~htp

MtnJstcr Larr)' Dwwn, Worshtp • II 10
am Sundar Sl·hool . JO ·JO am Bthlt'
Study-?pm
Pomeroy Church of Chrl~t
112 W M;tm St, Sunday Sc hmll · 9..\0
a m Worsh1p - 1ri 10 a m.• 6 p rn .
Wednesday Scrvtces · 7 p m

J()~Oam.

Worship · 7 p ltJl
Whitr's Chapel \\'t'sll'\an
Cool\tlle Roa d. Pa~wr. R~1 Pl11llrp
R1dcnour. Sund~y Scht&gt;t•l · II .\U .1 111
Worshtp- IU·Wa m, WcrJu~-.tl.t y s~·t\llC
- 7 I&gt;Ill
hirv1e~ Bible Church
lcturt, WVa . Rt. I, PJ ~Iu l llnan MJ\.
Sunday Sch&lt;.k•l - 9 ~U am, W1•r~lup 7 LKI
pm , Wcdn~·~dity Btllk Sw&lt;.ty • 7 01} r m
Faith l&lt;'t'Jiowshtp C1usad e ror Christ
P,t;;fnr Kn I rankl1n "nt~.h·n, Sa lt ~"l'
l·nday. 7 p m

Calvary Riblt' Church
Ptkc Cn Rd . Pa~t,,r Rev
Hlad.W&lt;M ld Sunday S"chool \J ~0 .1111
Wm~h•p
10 \0 ~ 111
i 10 p 111
V.t&gt;dne,duy ServK'e · 7 30 p 111

PMu cru~

Stin·~vllle

Community o\po~tolit•
Church
P,"mr Wa~n\· R Jewe ll . Sund~y \\or~lup
· (! 110 p 111. WcoJne.Jay · 6 00 p m. HJhltS!uJ)
Rejoicin~

l.lfe Church
2nd A\'c , Mtddlc]l(Jrt P.t, IOJI
Mtk e f,r~IUJII , PaliiOr . Emo.:ntu,
Lawn: n~e F.1rcm an, Won.h1p-- I0 lMJ &lt;~Ill
Wcdn ~· .du) Ser v11.e~ · 7 p m

50U N

r,.ethel Worship C.~nter
3971!2 S R 7. Rccdsvttle OH 4~772, 112
mile north ul b"h:rn Schoob nn SM I A
Full Gu~pcl Churd1 Pa o; tor Knb Harbl'r
A &gt;~nc ml~ Pu~ttlr K.tryn Dn v1~
Y\IUth
J'a~lor Suzt~ fr~n~l' Suml:t) sc rvtlC S
I0 00 am y,ursh1p. 6 00 pm t:.tmtly Ltfc
Cla~ scs, W~d Humc Cell G roup ~ 7 ·00
p 111 , Outer ltmn s Cell Group at th~
dlllrdt 6 10 pm 111 ~ .\0 pm
Ash St~d l:hun:h
39~ A ~h St, Mtddlcpon-Pustur Jt:tt Smitli
Sund.IV Slhuol • I) JO a.m, Mnrmng
Wor shtp · 10 ~ 0 ~ m &amp; (diJ pm.
\vcJ~esday Ser\ti. C · fJ lU p m, Y&lt;)uth
Scrv1cr· 6 JO p m
Ag"pe Life Center
""Fuii·Gt.1spcl Church"" Jlastoro; John &amp;
Patty Wude , bfn Scu·md Ave Mawn 77_1.
~0 1 7, Servtl:C t11ne Sunda; 10 ~~~ .t m
W.:dflt'&gt;tluy 7 pm

( "ltflon Tabernacle Churt·h
CldttHl \\ Va, ~u n oJ ay SrhLJnl Ill .1111
Wnr•htp · I r 111 \\ocdnl'•d.t)" Sent~~ 7
pm

l'iew Lift' Vlrtor) Cenll'r
37i \George~ Cu~ck Roud, G.tlltplllt ~. 01 1
Pa ~ Wr 81!1 Staten. Sunda y Sen · t ~e~
I0
a 01 &amp; 7 p 111 Wcduesd~)' 7 p m &amp;
Ynuth 7 rm
run (,o5pd Church
of th~ th·ln11 Savior
Rt ~ ~K. AIHtq mty, Paswr. J e~-~ Morrt \,
Scn tll'' Saturday 2 IXJ p m
Salem Community Chuilh
ut Wi:~l Columht.t, W Vu um Lt~\ wg
Ro,ttl , P,t.,lt•r Chatlcs RN1 'h UIJ-1! C. 7~ ­
!2KX, Suntla} :ilhoul ':1 311 .1111, \uttd.&lt;.)
CVCJIIIlg 'erVIt.e 7 uu Pill Uihly S!U,t\
Wcdn.:soJa) ~en ILe 7 no rm
l:lu~.:k

Abundanl Graci' R.F. I.
S. Timd St M1rJtllcpon PasltlrTcrc sll
Dli\IS, Sunday sc rvtcc, Ill am.
V..cdncsdoy se rv1ce. 7 p m.

92~

Faith Full Gospel Chun:h
Long Butwm, Pa~Hlf" Steve Reed , Sunday
Sehoul 9 30 a m, Worship 9 30 am
a11d 7 p m, Wednc~da) 7 p m • Frtday ·
felluw~ lup ~c r V I le 7 p m

Hobwn Christian FelloY~sh•p !'=hul"('h
p,,s(ur Her•chcl Whttc. Su nda) Scho,ll ·
10 mn SundAy Churc h scn.tCl" · 6 \0 pm
Wedne sday 7 pm

Harrison,ille Conui1unily Chun:h
Pa~ lnr Tho.:mn Durlmm Sund~y · IJ
a 111 . and 7 p m, Wednesday . 7 p m.

4.n6~

~0

Middleport Communil!" Church
57"i Pea rl S t . Mtddlcpot1 , J&gt;iistur Sun1
Anderson. Sunday School 10 am,
Evcn mg · 7 ~U p m , Wcdnc,Ja} Servile 1 10 r m

Fallh Valley Tabernacll' Church
lillll.:y Run Rootl . Pasrur Rc\ Emmett
Ra~~.~on. Sunday Fve ntnl! 7 p m
Thursd.ty Sen tee · 7 p m
Syracuse Mission
1411 Bndgc man St .. S}racusc. Sunday
School
10 a rn. Eveni ng
6 pm,
Wedne&amp;day Sm•tcc 7 p m.
Hazel Communily Church
Ed~el Han Sunday
S~houl. 9.JO u m , Wurl&gt;'lllp · 10 30 u m ,
1 ~or m
Off Rt 124, Pastor

Dy~li"lllr Community Chun;h
Sunday SdJ&lt;.M)I · Y 30 am , Worsh1p .
10.30 a.m , 7 p.m

(bllpl'l Church
Su ndu)' S(hoo! · 10 am. V..or~h1p ·
.1m Wcdnc~day Scrv1cc. 7 p m
Mor~e

II

Faith Gos(lCI Chun·h
L.mg Bullum, Sunda) Schuol IJ ~0 am
Wonh1p . 10 4~ am
7 10 p m .
Wcdr1esday 7 J() p m.
l\11. 011\ e Community Chun:h
Pastor Lawrence Bush , SunJay Sc hnol
9 30 a Ill ' E\'CIIIII!l . 6 ~0 r m., Wedneday
Servt~e 7 p m
Full Gospt'll.ighthouse
HdanJ Ruad. Pomeroy. Pa~ lur. Roy
Hunter. Suml;~y Sdu&gt;ul · 10 am. E\cmng
7 ~() p m, Tue,day &amp; T hUJ~rJ,, y · 7 ~0
Jllll
H04~

South Bethel Community Church
Stiver RtrJgc Pa~lm lmda DamewooJ.
Sunr.lay School · 9 am, Worshtp Serv1ce
I0 3 m 2nd and ~th Suml.ty
C11rMon

Restomtion Christian Fel~owshtp
Hooper Ruud Athen~ p~,lnr
L0nnie Coat~. Sunday wnr,hl]1 10 t)(t lllll.
Wednesday. 7 pm

Langsville Chrlslion Chun.:h
full G!ls pel. Paswr Rohe n Musser,
Su nd.ty Slhool ':1 30 am , Wnrsh1p 10 J()
am · 7 otl pm, Wetluesday Sen J ~l' 7 00
pm

Pentecostal
Pentl!~:ostll Assemh l)
Sl Rt t:!4. K;~unc P ~~ h•r Wllliolm
Hubnlk SunJay Sdl(llll
til am.
Evcnmg · 7 p m , Wednc-.Jny ScntL\'' . 7
pm

Presbyterian

Syra.cu~r

Fint llnitl'd l'rt'sh)terwn

Harrlson\llle Pmhytcrian Churl'h
JlastQr Rolh!ti Cro\\ w, lrshtp '} d m
l\liddlepurt Presbyterian
Pustor · hmcs Snytl~ r Sund;1_11 s~ h (lol 10
;1m .. wnr&gt;htp scn• t~o:~ II .tm

Seventh-Day Adventist
Se\enth-Da) Adventist
Mulberry Ht s Rd , Pomerny, P:1st11r
Bennett luckt c~ h. SuturrJay Sen"~'
Sabbutlr St.:hool · 2 p m , Wur\lup · 3 p m

United Brethren
Mt. Hermon Unilt'd Brcthr~n
in Christ Church
Tcxus Comm untty J64 t I Wtd:h~ t n Rtl .
Pa~tor l'ch'r ManmoJ.tk SunJu\ Slht,ol ·
Q ~0 :1 111
Wor ~h1p · 10 )I) am
7 1111
pIll , WednesdAY Scrv tcl· ~ - 7 OtJ Jl m
Ynuth grnup mcc tmg ~nd &amp; 41h Sunda)'~
7 pIll
Edl'n United Brtthn'n in Christ
Swtc Route 124. I'Letwccn ReedH!II~ &amp;
~ltx:J.:tn~pon. Sun da} Scho(l]
Ill .1m .
Stmd:ty Wor ~h1p · 11 .00 am WcoJn~ sd .t~
s~rvto.:cs . 7 1.10 p Ill . P;!Shlr \f Adam
Wtll

r:::xlttend SAarclt

lntrrd~nominatiunal

Church
Ru.tt.l . Puslur Rt~b~ rt Vam:c,
Sund&lt;l} S~llnul · 9 10 .1.111, Wouh tp
ServiCe I0 :w a 111 , E\&lt;Clllllg Sen 1cc 6
Kutg ~htlr)

p.m

l&lt;'n.oedom Gospel Mis.~ion
Hald Knob, on l n Rt.l J I. Pastm · Rev
Ruger Wllllurd. Su nday Sehoul · 9 JU am

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10 00, Sun munung Btbl&lt;: study,
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Wed btble stud y 7 pm

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Apo.stulk Worship Cemer, 873 S Jrd
Ave., Mtddleport. Kevm Konkle, Pastor
Wednesday, 7.00
Sunday, 10 30 am
pm ; Youthfn 7.30pm

Vlctol')' Baptisllndependent
525 N. 2nd St Mtddlcpon. Pastor· James
E Keesee, Worshtp . l Oa m.. 7 p m,
Wednesday Servtces 7 p.m

Young's Carpenter Seruice

Wednesday SenJl'e~ 7 p m
Sttond Baptist Churrh
Ravenswood. WV, Sunday Schon! 10 um, Mum mg worship I I :tm Evcmng . 7 pm,
Wednesday 7 p m

Sacrt!d H~art Catholic Chun.-h

Religion News in Brief
Billy Graham
association
says no more
crusades

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK.

2005

Local Church Briefs

brings out the wind from His
storehouses'" (Psalm 135: 1-3,
5, 13-18. 5-7 NIV).
So . what "song" are you
"s inging'' today and what
"melody" can others discern
in your life? Can they see
that you're not si mply walking along through life l)Jerely to the beat of any old'"different drum," but have a
whole new "dance" to give
to your Savior?
'
And what "poems" are you
inking onto the parchment of
each ·new day? Is the LORD
your Ambition and your
Hope, as well as your Help?
Are you free on the inside of
your thoughts. your hopes.
drea ms, and anibitions so
that you can REALLY worship God''
Worship doesn' t have to do
with our trying to "appease"
God, but it isn't about our
gett111g our own way either.
Instead, it is really about
prai se, serv1ce and surrender
to the will of the heavenly
Father. Worship is only a
phantom of what it should be
when it is merely an exercise
or activity that we do because
it is our weekly obligation.
And when our "worship" is
merely about keeping up an
appearance or is a chance for
us to benefit materiallv. or
any other way superficiaily, it
becomes a mockery.
Let our worship be unassumingly genuine anq simple . Let our praise be the
"real thing," sincerely directed to the One to Whom 11
belongs. Genuine praise of
the Lord is perhaps one of the
most genuinely beautiful
things in the world. As imperfect as one m1ght feel tn
regard to the supposed "quality" of his or her worship, the
·'microphone" by which
he/she broadcasts is walking
through both adversity and
blessing with hope in his
heart, a song of worship on
his lips, and an offering of
thankfulness and obedience
for each new day. Let us then
walk obediently singing our
songs to the One Who always
has time to listen.

www.mydailysentlnel.com

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Blessed are the pure "So I strive always to keep
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shall see God.
Acts24:16
Matthew 5.

good works and glorify your
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Marthew 5: I 6

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�OPINION

The Daily·Sentinel

.The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
·General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no larv respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances:
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, Nov. II, the 315th day of 2005. There are
50 days left in the year. This is Veterans Day in the U.S ..
Remembrm.1ce Day in Canada.
Today's Highlight in History:
·
·
On Nov. II , 1918, fighting in World War I came to an end
with the sig ning of an armistice between the Allies and
Germanv.
· On thi"s date:
In 1620, 41 ·Pilgrims aboard the Mayflower, anchored off
Massachusetts, signed a compact calling for a "body politiCk."
In 1831, former slave Nat Turner, who'd led a violent insurrection, was executed in Jerusalem, Va.
In 1889, Washington became the 42nd state.
In 1921, President Harding dedicated the Tomb of the
Unknown Soldier in Arlington National Cemetery.
In 1938. Kate Smith first sang Irving Berlin's "God Bless
· America" on network radio.
In 1942, during World War ll, Germany completed its occupation of France .
In 1966. Gemini 12 blasted off from Cape Kennedy, Fla ..
with astronauts James A. Lovell and Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin Jr.
aboard..
·
In 1984, the Rev. Martin Luther King Sr. - father of slain
civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.-. died in Atlanta at
age 84.
.
In 1993, a bronze statue honoring the more than II ,000
American women who'd served in the Vietnam War was dedicated in Washington, D.C.
Five years ago: Republicans went to court, seeking an order
to block manual recounts from continuing in Florida's razorthin presidential election. A cable car crammed with skiers
and snowboarders caught fire while being pulled through an
Alpine tunnel in Austria, killing 155 people. Lennox Lewis
won a unanimous 12-round decision over David Tua in Las
Vegas to retain his WBC and IBF heavyweight titles.
One year ago: Palestinians at home and abroad wept, waved
flags and burned tires in an eruption of grief at the death of
Yasser Arafat in Paris at age 75. President Bush expressed
hope that Arafat's death would clear the way for successful
Mideast peace negotiations with new Palestinian leaders.
Today's Birthdays: Former Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis.,
is 90. Author Kurt Vonnegut Jr. is 83. Dancer-choreographer
Nicholas Royce is 80. Comedian Jonathan Winters is 80. Jazz
singer-musician Mose Allison is 78. Author Carlos Fuentes is
77. Country singerNarvel Felts is 67. Sen. Barbara Boxer, DCalif.. is 65. Rock singer-musician Vince Martell (Vanilla
Fudge) is 60. Golfer Fuzzy Zoeller is 54. Pop singer-musician
Paul Cowsill (The Cowsills) is 53. Rock singer-musician
Andy Partridge (XTC) is 52. Singer Marshal) Crenshaw is 51.
Rock singer Dave Alvin is 50. Rock musician lan Craig
Marsh (Human League; Heaven 17) is 49. Actor Stanley
Tucci is 45. Actress Demi Moore is 43. Actress Calista
Flockhart is 41. Actor Philip McKeon is 41. Rock musician
Scott Mercado is 41. TV personality Carson Kressley is 38.
Actor David DeLuise is 34. Actor Leonardo DiCaprio is 31.
Thought for Today: "A religion that is small enough for our
understanding would not be large enough for our needs ." Arthur Balfour, the First Earl of Balfour, English statesman
( 184R-1930)

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR ·
urters to the editor are welcome .. They should be less than
300 word&gt;. All letters are subject to editing, must be signed,
and include addre.&lt;s and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. utters should be in good taste.
addressing issues, not personalities. utters of thanks to or~:a­
nizations and individuals will not be accepted for pub/icarion.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

(UsPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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Friday, November u,

PageA4
Friday, November 11, 2005

Obituaries

What happened to being·nice?
Wilen we were children
and we would tease and torment each otller, my parents
would intervene and say "Be
nice." l don't. recall thai it
did any good. but at least we
grew up knowing what was
expected of us. We were to
''be nice."'
We don't revere niceness
today. Not only don't we
consider it a virtue ·in others,
we don't want to be thought
·
of as "nice" ourselves.
I once played a little personalit y quiz with some·
frie nds. Players were asked
to li st three adjectives
describing 1heir ideal pet.
Participants gave answers
such as friendly, frisky, cuddly. playful , intelligent and
responsive. The qualities
players named, as they were
told later, represented qualities they saw in the.mselves.
Players were then asked to
think of their favorite colors
and to write down an adjective describing tllos_e colors.
In the game I was playing, .
somebody picked yellow as
her color and wrote "bright"
for the adjective describing
that color. Another chose
green and used "cool" to

American letters, who died
that same year, was losing
his memory and cou ldn 't
remember
Longfellow's
name on this occasion but
he remarked that he had U·
George
"nice fa~:e." ·
Plagenz
"That remark characterized Longfellow," said
Lucius Beebe in his book on
Boston. "Everything about
describe it. Your answers him was nice: his manners,
were said to indicate traits his taste, his Brattle Streel
you think others see in you. house in Cambridge. Mass..
Other colors chosen by.some and most of his verses."
We don't con sider ''nice" a
people were red (exciting)
word in this century.
strong
and black (stu nning).
Often
we
associate it wi1h
The interesting thing is
dLJIIness.
Even
Beebe couldthat "nice" didn't show up
n't
resist
the
urge to say,
on anybody's lists, leading
to the conclusion th.at per- "Longfellow was a good
haps "nice'' isn't how we see man -good and frequently
ourselves or how we want · dull with the dullness of too
abundant virtue."
others to sec us.
Maybe. But niceness is
The .American critic Van
Wyck .Brooks remarked that what this world needs and is
the 19th century poet Henry missing in abUndance . We
Wadsworth
Longfellow have given up one nice thin g
"was the brightest of the after another in our society.
sons of the New England Our speech and manners are
mornirig and the largest in un speakably uncoulh. We
hi's golden sweetness."
have turned into a nation of
Fellow poet Ralph Waldo slobs lacking class and eleat gance. For many people.
Emerson
spoke
Longfellow's funeral in profanity and anger consti'1882. The famous man of tute !heir vocabulary and

Election brings new member to fair board
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Eldred Parsons

mannerisms.
According to preacher
Theodore Ferris on the state
of modern American culture:
''Modern music is, on the
whole, discordant and hard
to li sten to. Modern poetry
is harsh. The lines are
gnarled. They seldom sing.
Nothing sings.
"Modern theater is brutal
and vulgar. Modern architecture .- at least much of it is angular and grace less.
Modern painting by and
large is violent and distorted
and conveys the sense of the
utter meaningless of life, the
fact that the world is going
to pieces and nobody knows
what to do about it.
Nothing is nice anymore.
Om we bring niceness back
to I he . age of Longfellow?
Only if we want to, and that ·
is in doubt. Today's society
seems to embrace . the
famous quote from Leu
Durocher, the scrappy oldtime baseball player and
manager whose philosophy
was, "Nice guys finish last"'
(George Plagenz is an
ordained minister and veteran newsmwr based m
Columbus; Ohio.)
·

HQEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
.

MIDDLEPORT- Eldred Gale Parsons. 82, Cortland, formerly of Middleport, passed away on Wednesday, Nov. 9;
2005. at his home, following an extended illness.
He was born in Oak Grove, Athens County, on Sept. 25,
1923, son of the late Jesse Monroe and Flora Elma Howard
Parsons. He was an Army Sergeant Quartermaster serving in
Belgium during World War II. He was ~mployed as an AEP
District Manager for the tri-county area of Pickaway, Ross,
and Pike counties. He was past president of the Circleville
Rotary Club, member of the International Rotary, Active Free
Mason for over 50 years, and was very active in the Junior
Acl)ievement Program of Pickaway County.
·
He was a .former member of the Walnut United Methodist
Church in Chillicothe and a member of the First
Presbyterian Church of Middleport where be served as a
trustee and an elder.
Besides his parents. be was preceded in death by his first
. wife, Dorothy Ann Persinger Parsons in 1990. and brothers.
Hubert Clair Parsons and Orville Monroe Parsons.
He is surv ived by hi s wife. Betsy H. Parsons, Cortland;
daughters, Lisa Ann Parsons (William M. McCall) ,
Chillicothe, Amy Gail (Henry M. Ill) Stanley, Chillicothe;
granddaughters: Natalie Gail (Josh) Pate and Leslie Ann
Stanley; stepdaughters: Sheila (Karel) Cubick, Canfield, Janet
. (Kevin) Kohls, Bucyrus; and step granc!children: Sabrina and
Bridget Kohls and Christopher Cubick.
·
. Services will be held at 2 p.m. .on Sunday, Nov. 13, 2005,at
. the Middleport Cha.pel of Fisher Funeral Home with Rev. Bob
. Robinson officiating. Burial will be in Greenlawn Cemetery
in Nelsonville.
Friends may call from I p.m. until the time of service on
Sunday. Memorial contributions may be made to Forum
Health Hospice , 8747 Squires Lane NE, Warren, Ohio 44484.
On-line condolences may be sent . to www.fisheJfuneralhomcs.com.
·
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,.

Deaths

TERRORIS-T'

Divorces

IS TOO VIOLENT
FOR THE KIDS?

Boil advisory
lifted ·
POMEROY -A boil
advisory issued by Leading
Creek Conservancy District
for customer~ on Ohio 124
has been lifted.

Craft show
POMEROY - The "Winter
Wonderland of Crafts" craft
show will take place from 9
a.m, to 3 p.m. on Nov. 19 at the
Meigs Senior Center. A wide
variety of crafts made from
!peal craft vendors as well as
crafts made at the .Center will
be for sale. Baked goods and

BY

For the Record

· 'TORTURE tJte,

14; Melissa Jones. 4; Ronald
Hensley,
26;
Betsy
Nicodemus, 19; Don Smith,
15; and Keith Wood, 27.
Only holders of membership tickets qualified to vote
in the election which took
place Monday night in the
Coonhunters building on the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
Jennings Beegle, who has
served .on the board many

years and whose term
expired this year did not file
for re-election.
Other members of the board
are Ed Holler, Wes Karr, Jim .
Watson. Buddy Ervin. David
Burt, Tom Pullins, Janie Fitch,
Karen Werry, and Brent Rose.
The board will organize
and elect officers lor 2005 on
Nov. 28 in a meeting at the
Coonhunters building.

Local Briefs

DAVID HAMMER

. ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COOLVILLE - Robert Harper, 79, Coolville. passed
away on Wednesday, Nov. 9 at O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital. Athens.
He is survived by his wife Shirley Ater Harper.
Graveside services will be held at 4 p.rn. on Saturday, Nov.
! • : the Vanderhoff Cemetery, Coolville. Friends lllay call on
~ Jrday. from I p.m. to 3 p.m. at White-Schwarzel Funeral
I' .·•e, Coolville. Masonic services conducted at 3 p.m.

THIS NEWVIDE06AME,

POMEROY . - One new
member has been elected and
four others re-elected to three
year terms on the Meigs
County
Agricultural
Society 's Board of Directors
which manages lhe annual
Meigs County Fair.
The new member elected to

the board was Steve Swatzel.
well known among horse racing enthusiasts. Swatzel
received 29 votes. Re-elected
to the board were Robert
Calaway with 72 votes, Mike
Parker with 50, Kenneth
Buckley with 47, and David
Watson with 35
Other candidates and the
number. of votes they
received were Renee Carson,

concessions will be tor· sale. from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m at the
Call992-2161 for more infor- · Syracuse Community Center.
mation.
Residents are asked to· drop
off their contributions at the
b~zaar Center. For pickup call 9922268 or 992-2170. The food
RACINE - Racine United will be given to the Meigs
Methodist Church's "Holiday Cooperative Parish.
Bazaar" . will take place from
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Nov. 19 at
the church. Handmade crafts,
quilts . gift items, baked
goods, lunch available.
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Bikers Association
will accept applications for
Christmas toy s beginning at 8
a.m. on Monday at the Meigs
SYRACUSE- Junior Girl County Health Department. A
Scout Troop 1204 will have limit of 100 children will be
its annual food drive Monday assisted, and applications will

Holiday

Accepting toy
applications

Girl Scouts
doing food drive

be accepted only until the
limit is reached.
Verification of income b
required.

Immunization
clinic planned
POMEROY
- Meig ,
County Heald1 Department wil l
conduct a childhood immunization clinic from9 to II a.m. and
l to 3 p.m. on Tuesday. The
child's shot records and med:
ical cards must be provided.
and children must be accompanied by a parent or leg'il
guardian. A $5 donation is
accepted bul nol req uired.

Appalachian Regional Commission avoids budget cuts
Robert Harper

DO YOU THINK

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2005

POMEROY- A divorce action was filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Lindsey K. Tolley, Shade, against
George A. Tolley, Albany.
A divorce was granted to Robert E. Bishop from Stacy J.
Bishop.
·
His commentary will take
participants on a journey from
the early days when Valentine
!&gt;. Horton and Samuel Wyllis
from PageA1
Pomeroy brought industry to
valley, to the 1850s when
through town, Middleport his-. athetire
wrought devastation, to
torian Mike Gerlach will the .rebuilding of a vibrant
relate stories of the founding dowmown busi·ness section.
and industrializing of the vilHe will describe the
lage. He will give information German intluence in the
on the early businesses and architecture, the rise and fall
the buildings they occupied. of population over the years,
and will tell of the influence and point to the Courthouse
and impact of the early set· lawn where stands a Civil War
tiers, those who contributed to monument inscribed with the
the fortune and fame as well names of Meigs County solas those who only brought diers who fought in that war.
The 45 minute walk is free.
shame to the Bend area.

Tour

WASHINGTON - The
House has voted to restore
fundin~ for a commission
that drstributes money to
Appalachian communities in
13 states to improve .the
region's roads, sanitation,
telecommunications
and
touri sm.
Wednesday's 399-17 vote
the
Appalachian
gives
Regional Commission $66
million for 2006, which is
what President Bu sh had
requested and matches the

agency's funding for 2005.
ARC's mi ssion ."
Advocates for the Delta
The funding proposal still
The letter was signed by 35 Regional Authority - a fivemust" be approved by the · other congressmen from the year-old authority for the
Senate and the president.
region and credited the com- Mississippi Delta region The House had originally mission with reducing pover- marched on Washington in
ignored Bush's request and ty by 60 percent in its 40 May and received $12 milproposed spending $38.5 years of extstence.
lion from the House. double
million on the Appalachian
The region covers all of what Bush had asked for and
commtss1on.
West Virginia and parts of four times its 2005 budget.
A letter from Reps. Bob Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky,
But one House cut did go
Ney, R-Ohio , and Ted Maryland, Missi ssippi, New
through:
the
Denali
Strickland, D-Ohio, to York, North Carolina, South
House Energy and Water Carolina,
· Ohio, . Commission in Alaska lost 25
Subcommittee
chairman Pennsylvania, Tennessee and percent of its funding. from
$67 million io $50 million .
David Hobson, R-Ohio, Virginia.
warned that the House 's
There are two other conplan to cut funding by 41 gressional commissions for
percent "would cripple the nation's poorest regions.
SPRifJG 'JALI FY
J)(

1 lc

l[llill llli

~

'· , 1 If

&gt; 1r

stitutional jurisprude nce she It contain s plenty of .eviwas almosl an anti-Roberts . . dence that Alita is a superb
And simply as a personality. lawyer and a meticulous
she was unimpressive. But . judge, but above all i\ testiher record as a practicing fies that he is a rock-ribbed
lawyer had an appeal of its judicial conservative. As 'a
William
own, and it was far from result. all of the leftist pres- .
Rusher
clear ihat Reid wouldn't per- sure groups have declared
suade most (or at leas I war on his confirmation ,
· enough) of · hi s fellow . and they will almost surely
Democrats to give her a sway more Democratic senpass . Worse yet, no other . ators than voted against
pointed straight at Harriet conservative in America had Roberts.
Miers.
Bush's long experience in
That suits the conservaWhat he overlooked. how- dellling with her. and they tives to a "T." They wanted
ever, was the mood of his therefore lacked his sublime an all-out war on behalf of a
conservative base. It had confidence in her conser- nominee
conservative
raised and set aside well valism.
beyond dispute. and now
over $25 million to finance a
So the lotig pent-up they've got it. The $25 milbattle over the next vacancy impulse to battle broke lion is already assuming the
on the Supreme Court through the levees of form of TV commercial s
(which, Lord knows, was Republican discipline and beginning to flood the airimportant· enough to warrant flooded the conservative . waves. The liberals, who
it). only to have the presi- movement. Bese1 with prob- have been accumulating
dent nominate John Roberts lems on half a dozen other their own huge kitty for thi s
- first to the O'Connor froms, Bush wasted no time fight, will respond in kind.
vacancy, and then to the in ' giving way. Miers with- The season·of the year that
chief justiceship .when drew her name, and Bush used to be dedicated to the
William Rehnquist died . nominated Samuel A. Alita Prince of Peace will , in
Roberts turned out to be so Jr. in her stead.
2005, be a gory mess.
coruscatingly brilliant in his
Alito is probably the perOne caution: The conservhearings before the Judiciary son Bush wou ld have nom- atives had better win this
Committee, and so devoid of inated if someone or some- fight. With the Senate
a damaging "paper trail." thing (maybe Reid) hadn't Republican by 55 to 45, it
that only 22 of the Senate 's given him what must have seems likely that they will.
Democrars could bring . srruck him as the brilliant But they must be prepared to
themselves to vote against in spiralion
10 · choose meet any lhreat of a filihim. The long-expected bat- Harriet Miers instead. Alita buster with the "nuclear
tle never occurred.
has _ accumulated, in his oplion" and keep their
When Bush then nominal- many years on the bench. a majority in line . .Too much is
ed Miers for the O'Connor paper trail so long th at Sen. at stake to lose .
seat, her qualifications (as Arlen ·Specter. R-Pa .. has
(William Rusher is a
described above J seemect to given his colleagues on the Distill!(llishal Fellmv of the
threaten a simi lar result . She Judici&lt;try Commillee two Oaremom ll1stitwe for the
was no Roberts; indeed. in whole months to go over it, St11dr u( Statesmanship and
her · unfamiliarity with con- before hearings even begin. Political Philosoph\'.)

•

•

-

J. Rood/photoo

David Glass. forest manager for ODNR, presents a check for
$8.497.49, representing proceeds from the sale of timber at
Shade River State Forest. The funds will be divided among the
county, Olive Township and Eastern Local School Di~trict.

Forestry
from PageA1
n· ,ted. projeciS are com.petitil d y bid with requirements
for sound management practices. All work is conducted
by certillcd master loggers
· under strict 111011itoring.
Other business
Commissioners
sig ned
proclamations submitted by
Holzer Home Care and Extra
Care and Hol1.er Hospice ,
Pkasant
Valley .
and
\' 'ita l's lin me Health,
Ii

, ,.( L

.1 1 .~~

/'n\·a k'

Duty

proclaiming
November· tiS National Home
Care and Hospice Month in
Meigs County.
a g~m:i c ~ .

Members of the Meigs
County Tobacco Coalition
submitted a proclamation
approved by commissioners
in observance of the
American Cancer Society's
Great American Smokeout,
Nov. 17 .
Dog Warden ·Tom Proffitt
acknowledged a $160 donation from Carol Orr of the
Parkersburg, W.Va. Humane
Society, which will be used
to purchase a digital camera
fur the dog pound. Proffitt
said photos of the most
adoptable dogs in the pound
will be posted on a website,
petfinder.com. in hopes of
increasing the adoption of
~tray dogs.
Present
were
Commissioners
Mick
Davenport and Jim Sheets.

II~\

f

7

12:30 PM FOR Sat &amp; Sun
ACI- 70.13
AEP-36.53
Akzo- 43.61
Ashland Inc.- 53.95
AT&amp;T-19.84
BU -12.94
Bob Evans - 22.24
BorgWarner - 58.45
CENX- 20.76
Champion - 4.39
Charming Shops - 13.16
City Holding - 36.81
Col- 44.73
DG-19.34
DuPont - 42.26
Federal Mogul - .42
USB-30.19
Gannett - 65.85
General Electric - 34.50
GKNLY -4.95
Harley Davidson - 53.31
JPM -38.82

Kroger - 19.14
Ltd.- 21.45
N5C -42.10
Oak Hill Financial - 32
OVB- 25.15
BBT- 43.38
Peoples- 30
Pepsico - 58.89
Premier ..,... 13.80
Rockwell - 56.20
Rocky Boots - 25.03
RD Shell- 60.74
SBC- 23.89
Sears - 118.28
Wai·Mart - 49.04
Wendy's - 48.48
Worthlncton - 19.59
Dally stock report&amp; are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the previous day't transactions, provided by Smith Partners at
Advest Inc. .of Gallipolis.

MATINEES

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIP~tENT

UUNQW SHOWING....

ZATHURA

• Home OxYge·n

• Portable Oxygen
• Nebulizers

Electric Beds
Wheelchaln
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We do the billing locally .

740-4:46·0007
Toll Free 877-669·0007
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

1:20, 3:20,
9:20
REMODELING HAS BEGUN!
We now have theater seats

with cup holders, lor sale @
· $10 Each. II you are
lntereoted In purchasing
used theater seats, please

conlacl the manager, during
regular business hours, lor

OW/led. l-\-(o

..'··

B~an

\'1

Local Stocks ·

They want to fight
President Bush probably
thou ght that, in nominating
Harriet Miers for the
Supreme Court. he had hit
on . a parlicularly clever
solution to the problem of
whom to choose. He was,
no doubt . after their I 0
years of close contact,
absolutely sure of her devotion to the cause of co l1serv ative jurisprudence. The
mistake made bv his father
in nominating Justice David
Souter must rankle deep in
the Bush family. and it 's a
safe bet that George W. was
certain he wasn't taking any
chances in that regard.
In addition, she was a
woman. and the seat she was
named to was that of Sandra
Day O 'Connor, the first
woman ever to sit on the
Supreme Court. ~ What's
more, Miers had u distinguished record as a practicing lawyer, appearing on all
sorts of lists of the "I 00
most" thises and thats, and
ascending to the presidency
of the Texas State Bar
Association. She would thus
bring to rhe Court, which is
full
of . double-domed
experts in constitutional
jurisprudence, a refreshing
whil'f of practicality. Finally,
the Senale's Democratic
leader. Harry Reid. had, in a
carel.ess moment , inciLJded
·her name on a list of recommendations for the vacancy.
If ever the stars seemed
aligned in someone's favor.
Bush must have thought they

I

Meigs County Commissioners Jim Sheets, left, arid Mick
Davenport, right, are pictured with Health Commissioner Larry
Marshall for the signing of a proclamation observing Nov. 17
as the Great American Smokeout. Representing the Meigs
County Tot&gt;acco Prevention Coalition are Andrew Brumfield,
cardiovascular coordi nator for Meigs County Health
Department, Raina Garver of Holzer Medical Center"s Tot&gt;acco
Prevention program. Lora Rawson of the HMC Tobacco
Prevention program, and Kyle Ord of the Health Department.

l.ooklng 1/jack ...
-

i!!:hr i)omrro)' ~rrcbant'~ ~ sson.lt ton
multr! ll)r rommunltJ• lo ti)L'fn st
bi&amp;torir walkiua tour of onr bowntoliln
gulbrb b!' lorn! 1)1ston.111
1-flil;r IBrt:l.HI I.
f)lr.J5r lOili Ull for ti)IG . f,lS[IIl .ltliiU llJ.lll;
on &amp;aturbar . .f}ourmbcr.I211J
at 10:00 ~.Jfl .
1iJcginnma 111 .i!!:rnutr 1Churcl1 ,
ll)'nn i&gt;trw.
tl:omr &amp; 3Iom n~ for ,1 brl)tnb IIJc
!lrtnr!l ulrUJ of i)omrrpt• 'G'fl•1Sl.

Meigs Cou nty Commis sioners Jim Sheets and Mick Davenport
sign a proclamation declaring Novemt&gt;er National Home Care
and Hospice Month in Meigs County, with memt&gt;ers of the
hOme health and hospice staff memt&gt;ers from Pleasant Valley
Hospital and Holzer Medical Center.

�Community Calendar
Public meetings
Monday, Nov. 14
CHAUNCEY - Region
14 Youth Council, 9 a.m. ,
Athens County DJFS.
Thursday, Nov. J7
MARIETTA - District 18
Executive Committee meets
at I0 a.m., Holiday Inn.
Purpose to recommend projects · for Round 20 funding
under Ohio Public Wprks
Commission State Capital
lmprove!llent and Local
Trasnportation Improvement
Programs.

Clubs and
organizations
Saturday, Nov. 12
POMEROY - AA closed
Big Book study, 8 p.m.,
Sacred Heart Church.
CHESTER
Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
DAR will meeting at I p.m.
at the Chester Courthouse.
Sheriff Bub Beegle will be
the speaker. Mary . Lew
Johnson will be recognized.
Monday, Nov. 14
RACINE - The Meigs
County Republican Party

PageA6

LOCAL • STATE

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 11,

PreseNing their letters is one way to honor our vets

DEAR READERS: Seven
advantage and became a doc'
years
ago.
I
told
you
about
a
tor. You saved countless lives .
will meet at 7:30· p.m. at the Rev. Phillip Scarberry pronew
program
called
the
You are the reason lam in the
American Legion Hall in viding special music .
Legacy
Project
that
had
been
Army today. You instilled in
Racine.
created to honor American
me the values that you
Saturday, Nov. 12
by
preserving
their
.
learned
during your service,
veterans
Tuesday, Nov. 16
PORTLAND
-Hymn
letters.
1
asked
you
Dear
and
it
has
made me. a better
wartime
MIDDLEPORT - Special sing with "Delivered" at
to
send
a
photocopy
of
a
Abby
,
soldier.
Most
important, it has
meeting of Middleport Lodge Stiversville Church, 7 p.m.
favorite war letter that you or
made me a better person . #363, F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m.
a
loved
one
had
written.
Love,
Justin"
·
l;'ractice in Master Mason
Sunday, Nov. 13
The
response
was
overREADERS:
If
you
would
degree.
POMEROY Trinity
like to read more letters like
whelming. Since its inception
Congregational Church, cele- in
1998,
the
Legacy
Project
teams
that
represent
the
lOth
this
one, and learn more
Thursday, Nov. 17
bration of IOOth anniversary has received an estimated Mountain Division.
about the Legacy Project,
. POMEROY - Diabetes of the building of the present
"Since I've never been to a please visit its Web sit at
Support Group, 10:30 a.m., church, 10:30 a.m. service. 75,000 never-before-seen letters from every ,conflict in our funeral before, 1did not know www.WarLetters.com.
Meigs Senior Center.
Fellowship dinner will fol- nation's history - including what to expect. There were
DEAR ABBY: A long tim.e
POMEROY - The Meigs low.
1
s
from
Iraq
and
times
that
had
to
try
not
to
ago
- many years. for sure
e-mail
County American Cancer
Afghanistan
.
cry
after
seeing
the
family
go
you
had a definition .o f
Society Taskforce, regular ·
through
the
mrmoi
I
that
death
meeting, noon, in the baseI thought you' d like to brings. These emotions were "maturity" that I kept and
ment of the Pomeroy Library.
know that ·the Legacy Project new to me and were h~rd to liked a lot. l can 't·find it. Can
Call Courtney S im for more
Friday, Nov. II
has just announced that the take at t1rst. What really got . you dig it up, please? information, 992-6626.
RACINE
. Enduring entire collection will be me was that there were guys MOTHER IN OSCEOLA,
Freedom Support Group ·and donated to the prestigious who were. not U.S. citizens ARK .
Friday, Nov. 18
RACO host "Honor the Gilder Lehrman Institute in but were fighting for our
DJ;:AR
MOTHER :
POMEROY - The Meigs Veterans" ,program at 7 p.m . New York City, where the let- country. 1 might never have Consider · it .dug. It ·was
County Cancer Initiative, at American Legion Hall Post ters will be archived for pos- met these soldiers, but they penned by my mother:
.
regular meeting, 3:30p.m. in 602: Rep. Jimmy Stewart and tenty.
This is maturity: To be able
.
. are all my brothers and sisters
. the conference room of the local soldier Charles Wolfe
In honor ot Veterans Day, I in arms. We will forever, even :to stick with a job until it's
Meigs
County
Health speakers, songs by Craig will share w1th you one of the in death, be bound to each finished; to do one's duty
Defartment. For information Harrison. Refreshments.
letters from the collect1on. It other by our service to our without being supervised; to
992-6626.
cal Courtney Sim,
was . handwntten by a young country.
be able to carry money with.
Thursday, Nov. 17
soldier named Justm Merholf,
"This whole experience has out spending it; and to be able
POMEROY - Diabete s who currently . serves 111 the helped me better understand to bear an injustice without
Support Group, I0:30 a.m. at U.S. Army and wlil .soon be what happened during World wanting to get even.
the Meigs Senior Center, deployed to Afghanistan. It War II, Korea and Vietnam , Dear Abby is written by
Friday, Nov. II
collaborative effort with was addressed to his grandfa- and the sacrifices made by Abigail Van Buren, alw
REEDSVILLE
Weekend revival, 7 p.m, Pleasant Valley Hospital. ther, Hugh Merhoff:
those who served honorably known as Jeanne Phillips,
through Sunday, Reedsville Held every third Thursday of
"Dear Gramps: .[ want to - and · by their families . l at!d was founded by her
United Methodist Church. each month.
write you and let you know know that you say you do not mother, Pauline Phillips.
what l am doing these days. I consider yourself a veteran Write
Dear Abby at
found out that my unit was because you were drafted and www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
responsible for manning five did not see action. You used Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
of the : 22 funeral honors · the time you served to your 90069.
..

Other events

.

Church events

aves students participate
in reading program

Report: Adoption
rules don't
protect kids from College a.dmission consultants grow in popularity
unsafe conditions . CLEVELAND (AP) - hired college admission con- time · to read volumes of

COLUMBUS (AP) - TI1e
state's rules for adoptions
don't protect children from
being placed in homes with
too many kids or unsafe conditions, according to a report.
The Ohio Department of
Job and Family Services outlined the shortcomings after·
examining more than 1,000
documents related to case of a
Huron
County
couple
accused of caging some of
their II adopted children.
Authorities in September
removed the children from
Michael and Sharen Gravelle.
Submitted photo . who live near Wakeman in a
Each year the Kindergarten class of Ohio Valley Christian . mostly rural area 60 miles
School does a reading preparation program early in the year southwest of Cleveland.
called the Teddy Bear Program. Mrs. Sue Murray recently
Huron County authorities
kicked off the Teddy Bear Program. Parents came to watch the say the Gravelles placed
students perform a program of song and recitation with a cen- some of the children in cages
tral theme around Teddy Bears. Mrs. Christy Perkins, the at night and as punishment
music teacher. prepared and led the children in the program. during the day. The Gravelles,
who have not been charged
Mrs. Murray explained the story telling and reading prepara- with a crime, have said they
tion portions of how the program worked and the. students all adopted children with special
showed off their teddy bears, which can be seen ·in the back- needs who pOtentially could
ground. Shown doing the gestures ~o one of the songs, "I'm harm themselves.
Gonna Catch a Bear Today," are Austin Sherrill, Katie Westfal l,
A custody hearing in juveAaron Price; and MacKenzie Byus.
nile court is scheduled for
Dec.6.
Also Wednesday, the children's pri vale social worker, ·
Elaine Thompson, of Elyria,
said she expects to be indict'
ed for not reporting the
POINT PLEASANT - ject !lives people right here arrangements at the home.
The department report
Area residents are preparing in th1s community a chance
to bring joy to a hurting to bring a smile to the face found that social service
world this Chris'tmas by of a child very far away agencies - public and pripacking and collecting shoe from them," said Mary vate - place children at
box gifts forhurting children Damron,
Operation homes without consulting
around the world through Christmas
Child
West other agencies that put chilOperation Christmas Child. Virginia regional director. dren in the same home.
Administrative rules govWBYG-WPCN,
303 ·~By taking the time to pack
Eighth St .. will be open to these gifts and pray over erning adoption are · applied
receive gift-filled shoe them as we drop them off to inconsistently and legal defiboxes
for
Operation be sent around the world, we nitions of child abuse and
Christmas Child during the want to show hurting chit- neglect are inconsistent and
project 's National Col-lection · dren that they are loved, and allow counties to dec ide
Week. Nov. 14-21. Local that they are not forgotten ." themselves what needs to be
Operation Christmas Child investigated, according to the
hours of operation will be
Monday -Monday. 8 a.m.-5 is the world's largest inter- report.
p.m.
·
national
children's
The department is recomproject. Gift- mending that a new home
This is the station's fourth Christmas
year as a drclp-off site for filled shoe boxes have been study be . conducted before
Operation Christmas Child, a source of hope and joy to every adoption. It also says
a project that encourages children suffering from state law should be changed
children, families, churches some of life 's hardest cir-· to make a large-family assessand groups to fil l empty cumstances:· those living ment mandatory whenever a
shoe boxes with toys, schoo l among civil war in 'th e family wants to adopt' more
supplies, hygiene ite'ms. Darfur region of western than five children.
photos and personal letters, Sudan, children who surThe report also recomthen hand-delivers them to vived last September's ter- mends expanding access. to a
children worldwide suffer- rorist · aitack in Beslan, state database of child-~buse
ing from poverty, war, dis- Russia. those recovering and neglect investigations.
ease. natural disaster and from war in Kosovo and Public and private social serterrorism .
Bosnia, and children whose . vice agencies aren't allowed
The station hopes to cui- lives were changed forever to use the database, which can
lect at least 25 0 gift-filled hy la st December's tsunami increase children's risk, the
boxes from the Tri-County in India, Sri Lanka and report said.
area. More than 7.4 million Indonesia.
Thompson's
attorney.
Operation
Christmas Marilu Laubenthal , said
gift-filled shoe boxes were
collected wor ldwide last Chi ld ·is a project of Huron County· Prosecutor
year, and distributed to chi!- Samaritan 's Purse. an inter- Russ Leffler told her Monday
dren in more than 90 coun- national Christi an relief and that he will seek charges
tries. This year's in1erna- evangelism ministry headed against her client.
tiona! goal is to collect and by Franklin Graham. For
Leffler declined to comdistribute 7.8 million shoe more information abo ut ment about the possible
box gifts . Packed with love WBYG -WPCN's participa- charges Thursday.
and sent with prayer, tion in Operation Christmas
Thompson has coun seled
Operation Christmas Chi ld Chi ld . call 675 -2763. For the children in the Gravelles'
shne· box gifts have bright- more information about home since 2003 but she said
encd the lives of more than Operation Christmas Child, she didn ' t know about cnclo- ·
3M million children since or to receive free material s, sures built around the beds
1993.
call 1-800-353-5949 or visit until after they were con"Thi' ' irnple and fun pro- www.samaritanspurse.org.
structed.

Rising education costs aren't su ltant Barbara Pasalis to
stopping
parents
from navigate the process.
spending additional money
For their $2,000, l'asalis
on consultants to navigate has suggested community
the college application service and activities to beef
process for their children .
up Spooner 's high school
Five years ago. · there were resume. Next year, she'll
about 500 independent col- help fine-tune h.er . sopholege consultants, mostly on more electives. Come junior
the East and West coasts, and senior years, the search
according to the Independent kicks into overdrive, from
Consultants college test prep through
Educational
Association. Today, the thinning a list of schools
industry has swelled to hand-picked to match the
3.000 to 4,000 as parents ·student's interests, abilities
lean on experts to manage and personality.
what can be a stressful and
"To me it's a bargain, for
time-consuming task.
,peace of inind," sa id
High school freshman Spooner's mother, Jan, of
Alexis Spooner's parents Rocky River. "I don't have

(college admission) books."
College consultants are
carv ing out a . business
because getting into schools
has become more competitive, especi-ally at coveted
institutions.
· Consultants provide a
valuable service, but. generally, parents don't. need to ·
hire one if they've got a
solid high school guidance'
department, said Jennifer
Delahunty Britz. dean of
admissions and financial aid
at Kenyon College.
Hiring a consultant isn't as
easy as dropping a teenager
and all the paperwork in her
lap.

KICK OFF
THE

HOLIDAY

Point Pleasant radio station
sets Christmas shoebox drive

.,,

2005

SEASOH!
With your business
advertised in the lffirmrmm~;;.,

Dail Sentinel
Wednesday, N9vember 23rd

Reach Over

5.000
ttouseholds
In Meigs
CountyI

Friday, November 11,

Bv DOUGLASS K. DANIEL

"The world must be made
safe for democracy." Wil son
said.
More than 10 million
troops died before the · war
ended with Gennany's surrender. Of the U.S. troops,
more than I J 6.000 died and
more than 200,000 were
wounded.
.
Long-lived veterans are
common among America's
warriors. The last veteran to
fig ht . in the American ·
Revolution died at age 109·
in 1869, · according to
Defense Department statistics.
Other wars and the ages of
their last veterans the year
they died: the War of 181 2.
I05, 1905; the Indian Wars.
101, 1973; the Mexican War.
98, 1929; the Civil War,
11 2, 1958 ; and the SpanishAmerican War, I06, 1992.
The ranks of all World
War I veterans grow thinner
as the months pass. One of
France's seven remaining
ve terans died two weeks
ago, and the last Australian .
to serve in a war zone died a
week earlier.
In the U.S .. the last known
American veteran wounded
in the war died at 108 in
January
2004.
West
Virginia' s
last · veteran
passed away in October
2004, and Iowa lost its only
remaining Great War veteran
two months later. An
Alabama veteran of the war
died last March at II 0.
WitH each death, wh~;~t was
called "the war to end all
wars" fades in American
memory.
"It's a war that's out of

' ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON - Lloyd
Brown remembers Armistice
Day in 191 8 as few- ever
so few - veterans. can.
"For the servicemen there
were lots of hugs and kisses," recalls Brown , of
Charlotte Hall. Md.. a
teenage seaman aboard the
battleship
USS
New
Hampshire, in port stateside
when the fighting stopped.
"We were ·so happy that the
w.ar was over."
·Now I04, Brown adds.
· "There's not too many of us
around any more."
No one knows exactly
how many of America's
World War I veterans will
celebrate Veterans · Day,
which marks the armistice
of Nov. II , 1918, that ended
w.hat then was considered
the Great War. An estimated
2. million Americans served
in Europe after the U.S.
entered the war in 1917.
,Today, the Veterans Affairs
Department lists just eight
veterans as receiving disabilit¥ benefits or pension compensation from service in
World War l. It says a few
dozen other veterans of the
w,ai probably are alive, too,
but the government does not
keep a comprehensive list.
The
Census
Bureau
stopped aski~g for data
about those veterans years
ago. Using a report of
65,000 ali've in 1990 as a
baseline, the VA estimates
that no more than 50
re_main, perhaps as few as

30.

AP Photo

Lloyd Brown, a 104-year-old World War I veteran smiles as he recounts why he enlisted in the
Navy at the age of 16 at his home in Charlotte Hall . Md. Brown remembers Armistice Day in
1918 as few, ever so few, veterans can. "For the servicemen there were lo\s of hugs and kisses," he recalls Brown, a teenage seaman aboard the battleship USS New Hampshire when the
fighting ·stopped. "We were so happy that the war was over." Brown adds, "There's not too
many of us around any more. " No one knows exactly how many of America's World Wart veterans will celebrate Veterans Day, which marks the armistice of Nov. 11, 1918, that ended what
then was considered the Great War. An estimated 2 million Americans served in Europe after
the U.S. entered the war in 1917. Today, just eight veterans as receiving disability benefits or
pension compensation from service in World War 1:
·
World War l, fueled by
intense nationalism and contlicting economic and colonial interests, began in the
Balkans in 1914 and quickly
spread
across
Europe
because
of
military

alliances. The major allied even as Germany threatened
powers we.re Great Britain. its shipping and as antiFrance and Russia, and they German sentiment grew
were opposed by Germany, among Americans. Congress
Austria-Hungary and a few declared war on Germany in
April 1917 at the urging of
others.
The U.S. remained neutral · President Woodrow Wilson.

Arctic drilling plan dropped from House budget bill
BY ANDREW TAYLOR
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON- A nearly two-decade effort to open
the Arctic National Wildlife
R~fuge to oil drilling suffered
a ,severe setback at the hands
of
moderate
House
Republicans just as Congress
·. was about to deliver it to
President Bush as his top
erlergy priority.
. GOP leaders scrapped the
dtilling plan in a search for
jtfst enough votes to pass
another of Bush's priorities, a
$5 1 billion deficit-reduction
program culling s[iending on
t&lt;iod stamps. Medicaid, child
sitpport enforcement and
o~her domestic programs
ttlrough the rest of the decade.
Also axed was another conservative priority, a plan
allowing states to lift a moratqrium on oil drilling off the
Atlantic and Pacitic Coasts.
;Despite those two actions
late
Wednesday
night,
R:epublican leaders still
appeared to lack the votes
llfey needed for the budget
measure , postponing the
opening of debate Thursday·
a~ they leaned on more wavering GOP lawmakers.
:,As the chamber went into a
lengthy recess and Speaker
Dennis Hastcrt, R-Ill., worked
tu assemble support for the
bill , the Capitol wa.&gt; abuzz
with rumors that further
changes were being consideted, such as easing cuts to the
~edicaid health care program
fqr the poor and di.sabled.
•Removing ANWR reduced
tlie size of the package from
$$4 billion to $51 billion, the
$3 billion difference being
royailies the federal governnient could expect from oil
p9mped from the Alaskan
ptJ!in.
.
·Many .of the same moderates opposed to the drilling
pl.an remain opposed to the
bill 's provisions curbing
Medicaid's growth, tightening
eflgibility for food stamps and
cutting student loan subsidies.
~"I have to represent my district ," said Rep. Tim Johnson,

decade. ,

effects will be modest to pro:
The decision to drop the
grams like the Medicaid ANWR drilling language
health system for the poor and came after GOP moderates
disabled. It will still grow said they would oppose the
much faster than inflation budget if that language
even after beneficiaries face remained.
increased copayments and the
Protection of the Alaska
likely loss of some benefits.
refuge from oil companies has
"We ·are not cutting been championed by environMedicaid for those truly in mentalists for years. The
need," said Rep. David House
repeatedly
has
Dreier, R-Calif.
approved drilling in the refuge
Top Republicans such as as part of broad energy legi sBudget Committee Chainnan lation. only to see the effort
Jim Nussle, R-lowa, and blocked each time by the
Majority Leader Roy Blunt, threat of a filibuster in the
R-Mo., worked· into the night Senate.
Wednesday refining the bill in
The budget bill is immune
an attempt to bring uneasy from filibuster, but drilling
lawmakers on board. Florida proponents suddenly found it
Republicans were especially hard to get the measure
active, helping kill the off- accepted by a majority of the
shore drilling plan and loosen- House.
That's
because
ing proposed restrictions on Democrats 'oppose the overall
food stamp benefits for legal budget bill, giving House
immigrants.
GOP opponents of drilling in
The decision on the Arctic the Arcuc enough leverage to
refuge was a big setback for have the matter killed.
those who have tried for years
Twenty-five Republicans,
to open a coastal strip of the Jed by Rep. Charles Bass of
Arctic National Wildlife New Hampshire, signed a letRefuge, or ANWR, to oil ter aski!lg GOP leaders to
development. It was a victory strike the Alaskan drilling
for environmentalists, who provision from the broader
have lobbied hard against . $54 billion budget cut bill.
·drilling. Bush has rriade
The moderates knew they
drilling in the Alaska refuge had leverage, given the nar· one of his top energy priori· row margin of GOP control of
ties.
the House. It only takes 14
White House press secre- Republican defections to seuttary Scott McClellan said tie a bill, assuming. every
Thursday the president was Democrat opposes it.
pleased that Congress was
Still, removing the Arctic
moving forward with deficit- oil drilling provision may
reduction packages, but that incite a· backlash from lawhe still strongly supports . makers who strongly favor it,
opening up a small portion of which is a big majority of
ANWR to environmentally Republicans. House and
responsible exploration.
Senate GOP leaders are likely
"We continue to urge pas- to push hard for the final
sage of that initiative," House-Senate version of the
McClellan said. "It's vital to bill to include it.
helping us reduce our depenThe food stamps change
dence on. foreign sources of was the only concession to
energy and helping to reduce lawmakers upset with a spate
high energy prices."
of cuts to social programs.
The
House
Rules GOP leaders bowed to presCommittee formalized the wre . from Cuban-American
change late· Wednesday by lawmakers from the Miami
issuing the terms of the debate area to loosen new restrictions
when the House takes up the on food stamps benefits for
budget package Thursday.
legal immigrants.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ·• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

2005

0

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appetite~suppressing
BY LAURAN NEERGAARD
AP MEDICAL WRITER

WASHINGTON
Scientists have discovered a
biological brake for a hunger
hormone: a competing barmone that seems to counter
the urge to eat.
The substance. named
obestatin, has been tested just
in laboratory rats so far. But if
it pans out, the discovery of
~he dueling hormones could
lead not only to a new
appetite suppressant, but also
help unravel the complex
ways that the body regulates
weight.
It tums oui .that the same
gene sparks production ofthe
two opposing hormones.
Stanford
University
researchers say in Friday's
edition of the journal Science.
"It is an unexpected but
very, very intriguing finding,"
said Matthias Tschop of the.
University of Cincinnati, who
reviewed the work. "It seems
counterintuitive that Mother
Nature would press on the
brake and gas pedal at the
same time."
Years of additional research ·
lie ahead to see whether
obestatin might work as an
appetite · suppressor. Other
weight-related
hormone s
announced to great fanfare,
such as leptin, have yet to
lead to obesity treatments.
and scientists now know that
dozens of hormones probably
are involved in the balancing
act of weight gain and loss.
B.ut with one-third of
American adults obese and
only a few prescription drugs
providing modest weight-loss
help, every new clue generates intense interest.
"Obese patients shouldn 't
get their hopes up yet,"
Tschop said.
Among the crucial ques- .
lions •to be answered is
whether obestatin made the
•••••••••••••••••
o

TH.E
· G' 1FT OF.clfti"
.&amp; DJN.G :
o

Arc you interested in becoming a volunteer? Why not giw a gift of caring?
· Valley Hospital needs volunteers to assist in mc.eting the needs of.
Pleasant
families facing terminal illness.
If you would like to become a Hospice volunteer please contact the PVH
d.
B k
k
675 7400
coor mator, ec Y Pee , (304)
.

PLEASANT VALLEY

mind," says Sean Flynn .
who teaches World War I
history at Dakota Wesleyan
University in Mitchell , S.D.
"The U.S . entered it late and
we have no real connection
to it."

Unlike the wars that followed, World War 1 doesn't
have the visual record so
important to becoming part
of American •.con&gt;ciousness,
Flynn says. Yet its impact
can he linked to many problems facing the world today,
including conflict in the
Balkans and the rise of Arab
nationalism that · occurred ·
after th e collap se of the
Ottoman Empire.
"We learn about war
through
television
and
through film," Flynn says.
"There's jusi not a lot of
moving-picture footage of
World War I. There's no
visuai image there for the
public to identify with."
Lloyd Brown spends little
time thinking about the days
his ship escorted convoys in
Nort'h Atlantic ·waters threatened by German submarines. Living alone in a
house in southern Maryland,
just a few blocks from his
daughter, Nancy, he does not
believe that his war has been
forgotten and feels satisfied
with the attention paid to its
veterans over the years.
"You
can ' t celebrate
World War 1 year after year
after year, because there are
other events taking place,"
says Brown, who watches
the news each day to keep
up with the world. · "You
have to honor them."

Dl ET: Scientists discover

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'The House plan cuts more !
Home Health • Hospice •. Private Duty
•
deeply across a broader range · •
•
o~ social services, though !
!
Republicu~ leaders say the • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • '• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ~ •

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PageA7

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TIME IS CATClllNG UP WITH 1HE HANDRJL OF WoRI.I) WAR I VETERANS ALIVE TODAY

University of lllinois campus,
which is upset about cuts to
student loans. "At this "point, l
mil very, very skeptical."
The overall bill is a top
R'epublican priority. The
Senate last week passed a
milder version of the bill to
CQrb the automatic growth of
federal spending by $35 billion throughthe end of the

\

,.

NATION

The Daily Sentinel

~~~~e~~~~~~;~~e~~~~:~~;
p~yments as well as the

Advertising Deadline
Monday, November 21st
Call Dave or Brenda
992-2155

0

rats eat Jess not because it
directly suppressed their
appetite but because it made
them feel ill.
. People should not read too
much into the new hormone's
.name. It's not a "statin" like
\hat well-known class of cholesterol-lowering
drugs.
Instead, the name combines
the Latin words for devour
and suppression .
The latest discovery stems
from the hunger hormone
called ghrelin. Produced in
the stomach, it boosts
appetite. The theory is that
ghrelin helped early humans
survive famine by fattening
them up during times when
food was plentiful, a mechanism that can backfire in
today's culture of plenty.
Obestatin is a sister hormone to ghrel in and is produced in the gut, too, Stanford
endocrinologist Aaron Hsueh
and colleagues discovered.
It might be better dubbed
the anti-ghrelin.
Hsueh 's team was scouring
databases of genes from
humans and other organisms
in a quest to discover types of
hormones that could be
turned into drugs fairly easily.

hormone
They narrowed their hunt to
stretches of ge nes conserved
through millions of years of
evolution in far-ranging
spec ies. a sign that those
sequences may be of particular biological importance.
The genetic sequence that
leads to ghrelin had an extra
protein hanging on the endobestatin. It was present in
humans and at least 10 other
mammal species.
"It was really extraordinary
to think the hormone had
been sitting there in plain
sight," Science deputy editor
Katrina Kelner said.
Hsueh then created a synthetic version of the hormone
and set out to see what it does.
Surprisingly,
normalweight rats injected with
obestatin cut their food intake
in half', leading to a 20 percent
drop in weight over eight
days.
That is not a big weight
loss, but these were not fat
rats: they would have gotten
sick had they lost too much.
So Hsueh 's next step is to test
whether obestatin suppresses
appetite and leads to more
weight loss in obese rats.

Tha11k You for your support.
I will co11tinue to work for you,
toward the improvement of ·
Pomeroy.

JIM SISSON

Pomerov VIllage Council ·.
Pd rvr by the candidate .

THANK YOU
.Lebanon Township for
giving The notspot the
opportunity to get back
some of the tax money
we have been missing out
on over the years:
fOil YOUR TOWNSniP
THANKS 4641N
TH[ HOTSPOT
Paid lor by Christopher T. Wolie
Hollow Rd . •
. OH

48580 Blind

====

�Thesday, November 11,2005

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily' Sentinel • Page A9

PageAU

AROUND THE WORLD

Friday, November n,
•

-

2005:

CHINA REPORTS NEW BIRD FLU OU'IBREAKS, Liberia poised to have 4frica -s
first-ever elected female president.,
RAISING FEARS OF FAKE VACCINES
Bv TODD PITMAN

Sirlcaf's favor, d•a• ~c' her .
campaign deni~tl .
~
Bv JOE McDONALD
On Thursda y. Weal1 met
~SSOCIATED PR ESS WRITER
MONROVIA, Liberia - A with Alan Doss , wlw heads
former finance minister and the
15 ,000 -st ron ~
LLN .
BEIJING
China
Harvard graduate claimed peacekeeping 111 ission in
rt·ported two new bird tlu
victory Thursday ·in Liberia's Liberia, and said he W(&gt;ulcl
outbreaks
in
poultry
presidential election, a win press his 'formal compl ai nt
Thursday and quarantinee
that, if certified, would make with
the
EICUions
116 people. ·while Kuwait
her the first elected female Commission.
"
..:onfirmed the first bown
leader ever in Africa.
are
seekin
~
til
e
atlv
i&lt;:e
"We
,·ases in the Persian Gulf.
With just over 90 percent of of the internationa l cul llllll llllin an imponed peacock and
the
ballots counted; Ellen ty and all the people th;lt ;d e
a wild nilmingo.
Johnson-Sirleaf
had 59 per- involved to see if neryl,ody
The
World
Health
cent of the vote and former can arrest thi ~ sit 1wti on. "
Organization said it wa s
international soccer star Weah said. "W hi lc we ar e
sending expem to southern
Weah near! y 41 per- preparing oursch·c , for the
George
China to help inve stigate
cent,
the
National Elections legal side, we arc also &lt;Lskin g
whether bird tlu killed a
Commission said.
our people to be ve •y c·&lt;~I I I L ..
12-year-uld girl last month ~
"It's
clear
that
the
Liberian
.
Weah 's supponc rs include
Chinese authoritie s quarpeople have expressed confi- many former wa rl ords. l'l'hd
antined 116 p~oplc after
dence in me," Johnson-Sirleaf leaders and young ul ell who
the latest outbreaks Sunday
told The Associated Press: fought in Liberia 's 1·1-ycar
of the deadly H5N I strain
"They
have elected me to civil war th&lt;~t kill ed up to
of the viru s killed I , 100 ·
lead
the
team that will bring 200,000 people ;n1d plll llg,·d
chickens 111 Fuxin and
reform
to
the country' and that the country 's 3 million re si Jinzhou , cities in northeastwill deliver development."
dents into abject poverty.
ern Liaoning province. the
added
that
she
would
She
While
international·
Agriculture Ministry said.
lead
"a
government
of
incluobservers
who
monilurcd
tl 1e·
A case there two weeks
AP Photo
ago prompted officials to A vendor carries ducks in a poultry market in Xiangfan in central China's Hubei province sion" and said she would poll said prelim inary li ndinp s_
destroy more than 6 mil- Thursday. Officials expressed alarm Thursday over the spread of bird flu after China reported otl'er Weah a post in govern- indicated i't was liti r. Uoss.
lion birds.
two new outbreaks among chickens in its northeastern province of Liaoning, bringing the total ment- perhaps the Ministry said the fraud a ll e~; ll inn s
of Youth and Sports.
were being taken seriously.
China earlier warned that number of reported outbreaks in the past month to six.
'We hope that Mr. Weah
counterfeit vaccines were
"Any allegati on of any
will get over his disappoint- fraud is serious ami we do1t 't · ,
bein g sold in Liaoning, ground where dead chick- disposal.
among people, possibly ment that has led to his reject- want allegations of fr&lt;illd 10
raising the poss ibility that ens were buried . Others · "We have to mobilize all triggering a pandemic.
ing the results, and that ultimillions of chickens. ducks sprayed disinfectant on car possible resources and all
In China's latest cases, mately he' ll accept it and mar the election." hc .saitl .
·Johnson-Sirl enf 's can1p&lt;1i~ n
and other birds. which tires and roads.
possible measures to fight Xinhua identified the infecwe'll
find
a
way
·
forward
vigorously
denied
the.
China has also reported the epidemic," the Thanh tion source as "wild ani farmers th ink arc inoculattogether,"
she
said.
charges.
ed. might still be suscepti- outbreaks in poultry in the Nien (Young People) I1ews· mals" possibly wild
Weah's camp gave no
"It's all lies." &gt;;lid Jcmi1113
ble.
Inner Mongolia region in paper quoted Nguyen Tan birds.
·
immediate
word
on
whether
Caulcrick, a top (&gt;lli c·ial ~&gt; f
China su ffers from ram- the north, and in the Dung as telling offil:ials.
An outbreak in China's
Unit y
pant counterfeiting of food provinces of Anhui in the "We must do our utmost to northwest that !)egan in he was conceding defeat in Johnson-Sirleaf 's
the
vote
·
Liberia's
first
Party.
"They
just
don't
want
a
and medicines.
east and Hunan in central fight the epidemic at what- May killed more than
since
the
end
of
a
1989-2003
woman to be president io
"Quite dearly, there's a China.
ever cost, even (if we) 6.000 migratory wild gulls
civil war and subsequent for- Africa. But she shall he."
No human case has been have to adjust our national and other birds.
major problem in Liaoning,
mation of a transitional govand it .seems from what the reported, but expert s say growth."
Max van den Berg, hL·ad L&gt;f
The government is issua 50-member Europ c&lt;~ n
Chinese are saying this has it's inevitable if China
Bird flu outbreaks in ing a notice warning ernment.
Earlier, oflicials called for Union observer mi ssion. s;lid
to do with using shoddy, can't stop outbreaks in poultry have been reported China's millions of farmers
calm
amid Weah 's . accusa- the vote was "wcll -mhllill i';inferi'or or maybe fake val:- poultry.
in at ·Jeast six provinces in to report sick or dead birds
cines for poultry," , said a
In Kuwait, a senim offi- Vietnam in the past month, immediately and not to try tions that poll workers stuffed tered in a peaceful. lr; ln s p&lt;~r­
· WHO spokesman, Peter cia! said the country had killing or prompting the to treat cases themselves , ballot boxes in Johnson- ent and orderly llHllllll' r. "
Cording ley, in comments found two cases of bird · flu destruction of more than state TV said.
broadcast by Hong Kong 's but · was · still
testing 130,000 birds, officials
WHO is sending experts
whether they Were the said Thursday.
Cable TV.
to . Hunan to help investi ·
"A nd what we have now, deadly HSN I · strain or a
H5N I first appeared in gate whether . bird · flu
almost certainly, we think, weaker variation.
Hong Kong in 1997 but
caused a 12-year-old girl's
To everyone in the
is sick chickens who are
The first case was ·an ·· was curbed when authori- death and two illnesses in
showing no symptoms, and imported bird found at the ties destroyed all poultry in an area hit by an outbreak ·
Meigs Local School District
that is very, very bad. They · Kuwait City airport, while the territory. It re-emerged in poultry last month, said
are silent carriers of the the second was a migrating in December 2003, and has
who supported and voted for rne .
Roy Wadia, a spokesman in
virus," he said.
wild fowl found on a recently spread ·from Asia Beijing for the agency.
The latest outbreaks beach , said Sheik Fahd to Europe.
Chinese officials earlier
Experts fear . the virus said those three people
raised to six the number Salem AI-Aii AI Sabah, the
Paid for by the Candidate ·
Rcn Logan, 555 Grant Street, Middleport, Ohio
reported in China in the chairman
of
Kuwai.t's could mutate into a new
tested negative for · the
Authority
for strain that passes . easily v.iru s.
past month. It usually takes Public
the government several Agriculture and Fisheries.
'
· days to confirm the cause
Dr.
Mohammed
alof death in birds.
·
Mihana of the Public
Authorities in Liaoning Authority said tests indicatdestroyed 670,000 birds ed the strain was H5, but it
after the outbreak on farms was
not
determined
near Fuxin and Jinzhou, ihe . whether it was N I or N2.
official
Xinhua
News The
H5N2 . strain, is
Agency reported.
believed to cause little illNational evening news ne ss.
The virus has killed at
on state TV showed government workers in white least 63 people in ~sia.
protective suits and masks Harde st hit has been
spraying disinfectant on Vietn'am, whose deputy
chicken coops and farm prime minister vowed in
buildings.
comments
published
One man was shown Thursday to fight the dispouring . a bag of chalky, ease with every resource at
.,
white di sinfect on the the impoverished country's
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

in Loving Memory
E3
Kevin Lee Crady
1991-1995
3664 Army National
Guard

In Honor Of
Howard Birchfield
Coxan
1943-1946
Navy
2nd World War

In Memory Of
Dallas V. Hill
1942-1945
Army
World War II

In Honor Of
Spec 4
Paul L. Grady
1966-1972
Army JOist Airborne
Vietnam 1966-1967

Love,
Paul, Cathy,
Mom &amp; Dad

Love,
Your Wife
Marie

Love,
Donna, Debbie, Jan,
Art &amp; Dean

Love,
· vourWife
Cathy

'

'

1hanks ·

Ron Logan

•.

' ~

In Honor Of
Spec 4
Steven E. Grady
1989-2004
Navy 1989-1993
Armv National Guard
•
2004
Gulf War
Love,
Paul, Cathy
Mom &amp; Dad'

In Honor Of
Edgar B. Taylor
.1942-1945
Staff Sargeant
World WarU
European Conflict
Love,
Your Wife
Lucy Taylor

In Memory Of
M. SGT.
David Yost
1941-1945
Army
WWII .
Love,
Your Family

In Honor Of
Lt. J.G.
Chad E. Hanson
Feb. 2004-Present
US Coast Guard
Iraq
Love,
Mom, Brent
Lauren &amp; Sarah
Mom&amp;Dad

In Memory Of
•
M. SGT.
Roy F. Rime
1954-1971
Army
Korea War
Vietnam
Love Your Wife
&amp; Family

,_

· In Honor Of
Brent W. Hanson
Feb. 2001- Present
US Army
Iraq

In Memory Of
SGT.
Robert C. Beaver
1941-1945
US Army
WWII

In Honor Of
Spec4
Jerry Six
1966-1969
Army
Vietnam

'Love,
Mom, Chad

Love,
Lowell (Nephew)

Love,
Your Wife,
Patricia

In Memory Of
. Basilio Girolam
Genna Casci
Paul Casci
Bob Casci
Bruno Casci
Renzo Menchlnl
John Strickland
Lyle Hysell
Love,
Guido, Lily &amp;
The Casci

In Honor Of ·
SGT.
Nathan P. Biggs
1941-1945
Army
War II

cwz

Lauren &amp; Sarah

In Honor Of
SGT.
Erik Metheney
2000-Active
Army
Iraq
Love,
Your Family

Love,
Your Family

&gt;
',,_

'

.

In Honor Of
CPL.
Kenneth H. Micharl
1946-1948
1953 Reserves
Army
War
Love,
Virginia- Wife
&amp; Family
-1:

In Honor Of
Lan~e Corporal
Wayne Owen Leib
1961-1966
·us Marine Corps
Vietnam
Love,
Pattie Leib

In Honor Of
SPC.
Jacob Ridenour
Jan. 21, 2005-Present
US Army
Iraq
Love,
Paw, Maw, Janet &amp;.Josh
Ridenour

j

Jn Honor Of
Private
Brittany Powers
2005-2006
Iraqi Freedom
Army
L.o ve, ·
Mom, Pete and Brody

In Honor Of
SA
Charles M. Canter
1972-1975
Navy- Vietnam
Love,
Jennie, Wife
Ruth, Mother

In Memory Of
Carroll L. Teaford
G.M. 3/C Gunner Mate
1943-1945
Navy

In Honor Of
Edward "Rick"
Patterson, Sgt.
1986-1992
Army
Desert Storm
Love,
Pam and Girls:

In Honor Of
PFC
John Stanley
!1-04-Present
US ARMY

WWII
Love,
Your Family

.

Love,
Mom, Dad &amp; Bnlthers

In HonorOI'
SGT.
. Nicholas R. lhle
1973-1975
USAF
Vietnam
Love,
Diana,

I

Mother &amp;

--

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-- ---·- ··-·---

-

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�The Daily Sentinel

PageAto

OHIO

Friday, November 11,

2005

'

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

THURSDAY's SCORES
No games on schedule

(OUNIY OmaAIS EMBARRASSED BY SLOW COUNf
Bv TERRY KINNEY

do." said Bob Urosevich,
Diebold's director of stmtegic planning. "It was a surCINCINNATI - Election prise to us that it went so
boards in some Ohio counties poorly."
arc irate and cmbarra&gt;sed by
David Keeler, president of
vote-counting delays that Dayton Legal Blank, said
held up results for hours, and five other counties
state ufficials said Thursday Brown,' Crawford, Jackson,
they will try to find out what Jefferson and Marion - had
went wrong.
diftlculties with abse111ee balMachine problems were lots. He said the difference in
blamed in some counties,. the width of the ballot that
lack of tra.ni ng in others as caused the problems was
44 of Ohio's 88 cmmties used about four human hairs and it
touch sc reen or optical scan was a result of human error.
systems for the first time.
Dayton Legal Blank sup· "II doesn 't seem , to have plies ballots · and services 85
been a disaster, but clearly of Ohio's 88 counties. All 41
there were some problems," of the new touch-screen syssaid Daniel Tokajt, an Ohio tems, and Scioto's optical
State University expert on scan machines, were from
election law and voting Diebold.
machine law.
Two optical scan systems
"With any transition, there are from Omaha, Neb.-based
are going to be some glitch- · Election
Systems
&amp;
es. The message I really want Software.
to send is we need to rely on
A few counties reported
careful analysis rather than minor problems in a mostly
seat-of-the-pants judgments·." smooth election.
In Scioto County, counting
In Wood County, which
wasn't tinished until about didn' t post .final re sults until
4:30 a.m. Wednesday.
6:23 a.m., deputy director
"When things go as poorly Debbie Hazard satd workers
as they did, the board of elec- at four polling places inadtions will face a lot of criti- vertently chose the wrong
cism, and in this case !think option on the machines, preit's unfair," board chairman venting votin·g machine
Steve Mowery told the memory cards from being
Portsmouth Daily Times.
automatically uploaded.
He said. some machines
In Montgomery · County,
were not tested sufficiently; where final results were
and some absentee ballots reponed at 6:43 a.m., some
were too wide 10 process and poll workers said they did not
had to be trimmed with scis- know how to tabulate the
sors.
memory cards. Some board
North
Canton-based employees had to be rousted
Diebold Inc., which made the · from bed at 4 a.m. to return
machines, and Dayton- Le~al to the polling places and
Blank Inc., which supphed retrieve the missing cards.
the ballots, accepted blame
Lucas County was last in
for the delays.
reporting, releasing final
"We want .to make sure we results about 9 a.m.
understand the problems and
"The problem in' Toledo
the process as well as you was after the polls closed,"
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

said
Carlo
LoParo,
spokesman for .Secretary of
State Kenneth Blackwell. ''It
wasn't the voting process."
Instead of having each
precinct hand deliver the
machine cartridges to the
board of elections, the county
used rovers who picked up
from several precincts, cau sing delays.
.
"The votes were tabulated
correctly. The problems were
simple management issues,"
LoParo said, such as disseminating results. "They appar.ently didn't test their election
night Web site until election
night, and when they turned
it on, it didn't work."
LoParo said the Lucas
board has had several leadership changes and has been on
administrative oversight . the
past four years.

Friday, November 11, 2005

Walters wins OVP Extra .Point
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

AP Photo/The Blade, Madalyn Ruggiero

Ken Cousino, left. a rover, drops off results to Board of Elections official Dennis Lang, second
from left, late Tuesday night in Toledo. Plies of returns from around Lucas County line the floor
waiting to be counted after 11:00 p.m. Lucas County was last in reporting, releasing final
results about 9 a.m. "The problem in Toledo was after the polls closed," said Carlo LoParo,
spokesman for Secretary of State Kenneth Blackwell. "It wasn't the voting process." Instead
of having each precinct hand de liver the·machine cartridges to the board of elections, the coun:
ty used rovers who picked up from several precincts, causing delays.

LocAL SCHEDULE
' GALLIPOLIS..;.._ A sch9dule ot upcoming college
and high school varsity sporting events in110lving
teams lr(lJJl Gallia, Meigs and Mason C(] Untles .

frldav's gam11

College Soccer
TBA at Rio Grande, 11 a.m.
Collega .Basketball

Point Park at Rio Grande, 8 p·.m.
Women's College Basketball
Saint Vincent at Rio Grande, 6 p.m.

\

Satyrday'a qamea

GALLIPOLIS - Ten participants,
· I 10 football games, one simple goal
- To be the most accurate high
school pigskin predictor in the Ohio
Valley Publi shing coverage area.
After II weekS of battle, there is a
new champion in the annual OVP
Extra Point selection poll.
Second-year OVP Sports Writer
Bryan Walters was crowned champion
for the 2005 season following an
impressive 93-17 record.
Walters took a three-game lead after
the third week and never looked back ,
winning the contest by eight games.

lan McNemar finished second with
an 85-25 record , while both Larry
Crum ;111d Dave Harris fini shed tied
for 1hi rd with an 84-26 mark.
OVP Sports Editor and two-t ime
defending champio n Brad Sherman
sl ipped into a · fifth-place tie with ·
Charlie Shepherd with an ·8 1-29
effort.
Tim Maloney finished 80-30, placing him 'se venth in the event.
Staccv Brewer, who fini shed 77-33,
edged out Jeff Lanham (76-34) by one
win . for eighth place. Brewer posted
the best record of all pick ers over the
final three weeks with a 26-4 mark.
Brian Billings finished I Oth with a
67-43 record. ·

Walters was the only picker with
multiple I0-0 weeks. Walters accompli shed the feat twi ce, while Harri s
and Sherman each posted one perfect
week.
Collectively. the group fini shed
with a record of 808-2'12, a winning.·
percentage of just over 73 percent.
I.
2.
IJ .
13.
15.
15.
7.
8.
9.
10.

Bryan Wa lters

93-17

ian McNemar
Larry Crum
Dave Harris
Charlie Shepherd
Brad Sher.man
Tim Maloney
Stacey Brewe r
Jeff lanh am
Brian Btlllng s

85·25
84·26
84-26

Total&amp;

808·292

73 .45 percent

81·29
81-29

BD·30
77·33
76-34
67-43

·8
·9
·9
·12
-12
-13
-16
-17

·26

College Basketball

Point Park at Rio Grande Tourn'ament
Women's College Basketball
Seton Hill at Rio Grande, ·6 p.m .

Major League Baseball- NL Cy Young Award

Bv USA CORNWELL
CINCINNATI Nobel
Prize winner Desmond Tutu
says the. election of a black
mayor in Cincinnati is a good
. sign for the future of a city
· that four years ago was torn
by race riots. ·
"It's a very auspicious time
to · come to Cincinnati ,
because on previous occasions your city has ljad a fair
degree of racial tension,"
said Tutu, the 1984 Nobel
Peace Prize winner and a:
retired Anglican archbishop
of Cape Town, South Africa.
Tutu,
in
Cincinnati
Thursday for a convention of
the Episcopal Diocese of
Southern Ohio, said at a
news conference that he was
encouraged by the wide spread support for state Sen.
Mark Mallory, a Democrat
who became Cincinnati's
first directly elected black
mayor on Tuesday.
Tutu, who has urged racial
tolerance and spent decades
challenging South Africa's
apartheid regime, said his
advice for Mallory would be
to keep working to draw the
people of Cincinnati together.
Three days of rioting broke
out in 200 I after an unarmed
black man was shot and
killed by a white police officer trying to make an arrest.
The ·man, who ·was fleeing
police, was wanted on misdemeanor charges. The officer
was cleared at trial.
Tutu also praised longtime
friend and colleague the Rev.
Herbert Thompson Jr., leader
of the southern Ohio diocese.
and his efforts to combat
racism in the city, including

the 1994 Summit. on Racism
that Tutu participated in by
teleconference.
Thompson called the summit to study race and reconciliation issues after the Ku
Klux Klan erected a cross on
Cincinnati's
downtown
square.
.
"Perhaps what we have
seen in the election of the
mayor is one of the good
fruits of the initiatives of the
bishop," said Tutu, attending
the convention · to honor
Thompson.
The Cincinnati bishop,
re.tiring at the end of the year
after 17 years of leading the
diocese , · said he plans to
remain in the city and continue to work for racial tolerance.
'This city has the possibility of being a model city for
the 11ation," he said.
Tutu also praised U.S. sup-.
port through the years for
freedom
and
against
apartheid and said its citizens
· are among the "most wonderful and generous people in
the world."
But Tutu , a critic of the war
in Iraq, was surpr.ised by the ·
lack of outrage in the U.S.
over the war.
"I can't just understand
you,~· he said.' "Some of the
things you do are pretty
weird, given who you are."
· Tutu said everything that
has happened since the war
began has confirmed that it
• was a war that should not
have happened.
·
"The casualties are numbing and we pray that a solution will be found ultimately
that will bring stability to that
country, but I don't see it
happening very soon,"

Rio Grande vs. William Wood s (at
Georgetown Classic), 6 p.m.

lie beat out Florida lefty
Dontrclle Willis. becoming
the fi rst Cmdinals pitcher to
claim the honor since Hall of
Famer Bob Gibson in 1970.
•·1 can't believe I won,"
Clrpenter said . "My son did
a little dance for i11c and my
wife gave me a big hug . We
were really excited about it ."
Willis, who was 22- 1o·
with ll 2.63 ERA, was listed
first on I I baliots. second on
18 and third 011three for 112
points. Seven-time winner

Another fall sports season
is in the books, and what a
2005 season it was.
With I0 high schools and
39 sports to cover, the sports
writers here at Ohio Valley
Publishing are constantly trying to capture as many team
and individual accomplishments as possible throughout
the course of the year.
As l personally looked
back on the lit!! campaign, it
occured to me that the tricounty area has had a pretty
go?d start to the 2005-06 athletic season.
Rather it be a school first, a
school record or simply a
night to be proud of your
school, 2005 will go down as
one of the most . celebrated
and accomplished fall seaso ns ever, · wllectively,
betweerl Gallia, Meigs and
Mason counties.
I rellected on the past 12
weeks and made notes of all
of the great things that had
happened over that time.
After realizing what all had
happened. I decided to compose a top- !0 .list of the best
stories to come out of the
OVP coverage area .
And here they are.
10.' Hannan ends 29-game
iosin~ streak in fnotbaii.Week 8 proved to be one of
the most memorable. Frid~y·s
during the fall season. Gallia
Academy held senior night,
while
Point
Pleasant,
Southern and' Meigs each had
homecoming.
And then there was
Hannan , losers of 29 straight
football games. hosting ·
Greater Beck ley Christian in
a straight-up reg ular season
matchup.
GBCS was in its · second
· football season of existence,
and already had a win earlier
in 2005. A second win would
have been a sc hool record,
and would have also extended Hannan' s skid to three
seasons without a win.
Fortunately for the hosts,
all things come to an end.
Hannan
played . hard,
surged out to a 12-point lead ·
and held a 12-6 halftime

Please see Award, 84

Please see Fall, Bl

INSIDE

• NASCAR sets car cap to
four. See Page B2
• OSU, Wildcats have a lot
at stake. See Page 83
.• LeBron towers over
Cleveland on billboard. See
Page B4

'

Brand New 2006 Pontiac G6 Sedan

WVU men's hoops
signs six recruits

Brand New 20_
0 6 Chevy Silverado 4WD

Local weather ·
Veterans
Day ... SunnY,
Highs in the mid 50s.
Southwest winds 5 to I0 mph.
Friday night...Clear. Cold
with lows in the mid 30s.
Southwest winds around 5
mph.Saturday... Mostly sun ny.
Not as cool with highs in the
mid 60s. Southwest winds 5
to 10 mph.
Saturday night...Mostly
clear in the evening ... Then
becoming partly cloudy. Not
as cool with lows in the mid
40s. South winds 5 to 10
mp~.

Sunday and
Sunday
.night...Mostly cloudy with a
40 percent chance of showers.
Highs in the lower 60s. Lows

in the lower 40s.
~onday
and ~onday
nighl...Partly cloudy. Highs
in the upper 50s. Lows in the
lower 40s.
· Tuesday ... Partly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the upper
50s.
Tuesday night...Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers in the evening .. .Then
partly cloudy with a chance
of showers after midnight.
Lows in the upper 30s,
Chance of rain 40 percent.
VVednesday
through
Thursday ... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the mid 40s. Lows in
the upper 20s.

Brand New 2008 Chevy Tahoe 4WD
." Joxes, Jags, Tide Fees eKira. fellate induded in sale prtce of new vebide lilted where opplicoble. On OPPfoved credit.
On sei1Kted models. Not responsible lor typographical erro~. Prtcas good November lOth through Novembw 13th..

visit us enlln• et www.huyeilen.....
•

'

.

'

'

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II
....
Certl11et1• ;

.

MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
(AP) - West Virginia basketball coach John Beilein
announced Thursday the
signing of six player.s to
national letters of intent.
Devan Bawinkel, Desean
Butler, Jacob Green, Joe
Mazzulla, Wellington Smith
and Cam Thoroughman will
join Butler transfer Jamie
Smalligan for the 2006-2007
season.
The 6-foot-5 Bawinkel
averaged 20.5 points , 8.1
rebounds and 4.5 assists as a
junior at Winnebago (Ill.)
High. The 6-7 Butler averaged 15.7 points per game as
a junior at Bloomfield Tech
(N.J.) High while the 6-9
Green averaged live points
and five rebounds at Gonzaga
High in Washington, D.C.
The 6-2 Mazzulla averaged
18 points, seven rebounds
and two steals last year and
led Bishop Hendricken to
two Rhode Island state titles
as a sophomore and junior.
Smith averaged 21 points,
12 rebounds and four blocks
per game for Summit (N.J.)
High last season. The 6-7
Smith is attending Blair
Academy this season.
The 6-7 Thoroughman
averaged 22.3 points per
game as a junior at Clay Hi gh
in Portsmouth.

AP photo

St. Louis Cardinals' Chris Carpenter pitches to Pittsburgh Pirates' Ty Wiggington in the second inning of the Cardinals' 8~
3 win in Pittsburgh', in this Aug. 24, 2005 photo. Carpenter won the NL Cy Young Award on Thursday capping a satisfying
comeback from shoulder surgery that jeopard ized his career only a few years ago.

Carpenter wins NL Cy Young Award
Bv

MtKE Fnz;PATRtCK

.

ASSOCIATED PRESS .

NEW YORK (AP)
Chris Carpenter was ready
to call it quits .
Toiling in Double-A two
years ago, trying to ·work
hi s way back from shoul der surgery, he pitched a
game in Tennessee just
before the All-Star break
and couldn't even play
catch afterward beca use
his rig ht arm hurt so
much.
Carpenter knew some-

thing was wrong again. even
thollgh the doctors didn 't
think so. He hadn't seen hi s
infant son in about a month,
and all he wanted to do was
'go home to New Hampsl1ire
with his wife. Alyson. ·
"I' ll never forget the ni ght
we sat here llnti I about 3
o'c lock in the mornin g cry ing and talking ahmtt . my
career," Carpenter said . ''I
was ready to be done . And
she didn 't think I \vas. that I
would regret it if I didn't
take that one more step and
try to come back again. And

COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio's 2004 Mr. Foot ball and
Northwestern tai lback Tyrell
Sutton has a message for
Ohio State , which didn ' t
recruit him despi te a 'tate
hi gh school rushin g record .
"Come look at me now. If
you don ·t want me. I'm goi ng
to make you wish yo u did
want me." said Sutton, a.
product of Akron\ lJoban
Hi gh School who was di scounted by ~omc rcL"ruiters as

tou "na II at ~ - foo t -'J and 190
pmmd.l.
S utton , i~ dete rmined to
-;how ~v hat lil:' can do again :-.t
Ohio State. but it' , no t per-

1-7 40-446-2342 ext 33

Fax - 1-740-446-Jooa

~uttal .

E-mail- sports@mydallysenttnet.com

" I' m not ~oi n ~ into the
ga me \'flth &lt;.1 Per~l~lal venLietta.'· Sutton .,aid. "It 's the same
as meet ing lm\ta or Northern
II I inoi, ...
While he set a ., iatc ru shin g
record wt th '1..126 ya rd ' and
scored 117 career touchdowns
at Hoba n. the only other Big
Ten school to offer 'him a

$Q.91t.t .SJ~!.ff

r.- 1-71 b

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor,
ft.iltVfi\IRPI.J, I~

lnllt"lwlriOI

.... 1l2 j 1..... """~ ~~'" ~ 11

DloMf!BfHJ, • 3 ...... OB ltll

the next thing yo u know. I
got my s,cond surgery and
here we are today. And I
know that if it wasn't for her
I wouldn't he here ."
A II that hard work and
patience was rewarded wheu
Carpemer won the NL Cy
Yvung Award vn Thursday.
Arter going 21 -5 with a
2X1 ERA for the St. Lollis
Card inals. he received 19 of
32 first-place votes and finished with 132 points in ballvting by the Baseball
Writers' Association of
America .

Saturday's game with OSU on Wildcat freshman's mind

CONTACfS
Phone -

(740) 446-2342. ed "33
bs herman@mydailytribune.corn
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342. e.:t . 23
bwa lters@ mydallytribun e.com

AP photo
Larry Crum, Sports Wriler
(304) 675--1333, e•t. 19
Ierum@ mydallyregt§ler.com

Fall's
top-10
moments
(Editor 's Nore: The following is the first part of a twopart srr;es.)

Friday November 18
Women's Colleg8 Basketball

Tutu encouraged by election
of black mayor in Cincinnati
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

AROUND THE BEND

Northwestern's Tyrell Sutton runs past Michigan's Tim Jamison
in the second quarter Saturday Oct. 29 in Evanston, Ill.

s·c hoI a r ship was
Illinoi s.
D i d
Ohio State
show any
recruitin g
interest 0
"No. none ... Sutton said.
"To get passed up by your
home-state college. it doesn't
make any sense." Sutton said. ·
"Thev had an opponunity for
four "yea" to try and pursue
me .
"Of course I got letters, bu t
they were letters they send to
eve ry prospect across the
country. Nothing from Jim
Tressel or a coach ."
.
Northwestern coach Randy
Walker hope' Sutton keeps it
impe"onal against Ohio
State.
" I hope he· doesn't get tno
carried away with it," Walker
,a id . "I don 't think anything
outsi de the normal framewor'
of emotion' is t"ually good ."
No. 10 Ohio State (7 -2. 5-11

hosts No . 25 Northwestern (63, 4-2) on Saturday. · ·
Sulton ranks sixth in the
nation in scoring with 102
points ( 17 touchdowns) and is
tied for seventh in rushing
with 120.6 yards per game.
Totaling 1.085 yards with
two games remaining, Sutton
has recorded five ga mes with
at least !(X) yards and two
with 200. including his
career-he't 2-14 y;irds on 29
carrie ' and ·three scores
ag ainst Wi sconsin.
"Again'! Ohio !University)
he made two co nsecutive spin
move &gt;. I don ' t think either
guy got wi thin three yards of
him." Non hwe.,tern quaner·
back Brett Basanez 'aid.
"He's the human highlight
film ."
For tts class of 2005, Ohio
State pursued running backs
Jason Gwaltney (6- 1. 230
pounds) from :'-lorth Babylon,
N.Y.. and Maurice Wells (5Please see Wildcat. 83

�I

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, November u,

NASCAR sets cap on cars.at four, fivecar Roush team has until .'09 to comply
BY JENNA FRYER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHARLOTTE. N.C.
Big- money teams will be
allowed to field only four car&gt;
under a cap limit set by
NASCAR on Thursday, a
move that -infuria ted the fivecar Roush Racing organization .
The lim'it goes into effect
next season. but NASCAR
· said it would work to set a
timeline for compliance for
teams with more than four
entries. Jack Roush is the.only
owner with five teams. all of
which are in the I O-man
Chase for the championship
that crowns the Nextel Cup
champion.
"It is hard for Jac)&lt; not to
believe that there is a laser
bulls-eye_ on his forehead,"
Roush Racing president Geoff
Smith said.
The move had b.&gt;en expe~t. ed since last month, when
NASCAR chairman Brian
France said he was looking to
limit the amount of cars one
owner can
have. The
announcement caught Roush
by surprise, and his organization has complained it was
being singled out.
Until Thursday's announceM-~
ment, no one was certain what Multi-car owner Jac k Roush. right. talks to a member of Carl
Edwards crew on p1t row at the start of the Bass Pro Shops
the cap would be. ·
Smith said Roush officials MBNA 500 at' Atlanta Motor Speedway in Hampton, Ga.,
were told in a recent private Sunday.
meeting with NASCAR that a have to g~t there."
pete, and the concept of hav"grandfather clause" would
The top teams in NASCAR ing to have five teams, three
be included to allow them to are currently multi-~ ar opera- teams," France said. "That
keep their five teams at least tions with budgets that could means the opportunities aren't
through the 2009 season. All be soon closing in on $1 00 there for young drivers. It
of their current contracts with million a year. It \ nearly means opportunities ·aren 't
sponsors and drivers at least impossible for single-car there to create the next Rick
_. run through then. but what teams to compete against the Hendrick and have the suehappens when those deal s . big-money groups, which cess.
.
expire remains . somewhat pool resources to gain addi''It ultimately means that we
murky.
·
tional tests, ·information shar- don't field as many competi"Our impression is if every ing
, multiple sponsorships. tive cars as we'd like to field."
one of those sponsors· wants
The numbers back France
to continue past '09, they and, sometimes, on-track
can," .Smith said. " If some of ·cooperation among team· up.
- Roush has won the past
the sponso'rs don't wam to mateS.
But in arguing for the cap, two championships with Mall
continue on but every driver
wants to continue past '09, France said the big teams are Kenseth and Kurt Busch and
·that would be OK, too. But its an obstacle to owners contem- he got all five of his drivers
very unlikely that all of that plating coming into the sport. into the Chase.
"We don't like the fact that
will happen.
- Hendrick has a four-man
the
independent
teams.
or
in
team
that includes Jimmie
"But the bottom line is we
will have to go to four. It particular a new owner look- Johnson, who is second .in the
\VOn't be next year, it won't be ing at coming in the door, points with two races remainfor a few years, but we will have a daunting task 'to com- ing, and four-time series

.

,.,,

West Virginia Class A state Conference ba~k in the fall
competition.
of 2002, and since that seaFive of those six players son, there has only been
will likely return in 2006.
one champion in volleyball
from PageBl
7. Meigs golf wins TVC and boys cross country.
Ohio crown by double
The Raiders.
.
advantage. Out of (he break, digits.
For the fourth consecu.
· HHS extended its lead to 18Rarely does one team · tive season, the Silver and
6.
dominate a league s-o easi- Black claimed league titles
GBCS rallied back to . ly, but Mei·gs golf was in both volleyball and cross
within 18-13 and was dri- clearly the toast of the Tri- country. and did so in
ving for another score, but a Valley Conference Ohio impre ssive ways.
late interception allowed Divisron.
The Lady Raiders com,
Hannan to walk away with a
The Marauders won eight pl eted 2005 with a I 0-0
five-point victory.
of I 0 league _co ntests in league mark, the program_'s
9. Southern volleyball 2005 and had tour of thetr thrrd undefeated trtle rn
wins share of TVC seven roster members make four years.
Hocking title.
all-league.
The RVHS netters also
At the beginning of the
Meigs posted 47 season extended its current winyear, Southern volley,ball points out of a possible 50. ning streak to 29 over OVC
coach Roma Sayre was opti- · defeatin g two-trme defend- competition and i_mproved
mistic about how her team 's ing champion Belpre by it s overall league mark to
season could end up.
double digits. The Golden 39-1 in conference action ,
With five letter-winning Eagles t·inished second
Cross country also won
seniors back and 20 players with 37 points.
.
its fourth straight OVC
on the varsity and junior
Five of the seven team team title, this lime by 16.
members
will be buck in points, and had all five of
varsity roster overall , Sayre
rts placing runners finish in
knew that 'this .could have 2006 .
6. River Valley domi- the top I0, including
been a year to establish
Ohio
Valley efforts of second, third and
Lady ' Doe s volleyball as a nates
Conrerence again.
fourth overall. The Raiders
growing force in the area.
River Valley High School also made another appearAnd then came a German
exchange ;t uuent named joi ned the Ohio Valley &lt;rnce in the regional meet.
Eylem, and the res t i&gt;
Southern history.
The Purple and Gold finished 17-5, earned a firstround bye in the sectior1al
tournament and posted a
thrilling five-game home
victory over Eastern to
· claim a share of the · TriValley Conference Hocking
Division champion;hip.
SHS finished Hock in g
play with a 9- 1 record .
. Tuesday, November 15, 2005 .
8, Waliama golf makes
state 'tournament.
Pomeroy Public Library
With only six players and
6:00 pm - 7:30 pm
one senior, mo~t coa~hes
wouldn't expect a lot out of
a season.
, Wahama golf coach Bob
Ble ssing is not one of those
coaches .
Only half of the roster had
Topic:
varsity · experience, but
Stress and Weight
Blessing sti II belreved that
hi s squad had the potenual
Management
to make the state tourna- .
and Healthy Holiday
men!.
He also knew that it would
Cooking Tips
.
take an entire season to prepare for that goal.
It took a lot of hard work,
but Blessing and the White
Ohioans
........ ,.....
Falcons made their goal a
reality by qualfying for the

Fall

Holiday Survival
Seminar

Door Prizes
Refreshments

2005 State Football Playoff Pairings
DIVISION I
All Games saturday, 7 p.m., vnlus oth·
fHWise n019d
•
Rtgjon1

At Clev~and Brown• Stadium

~

...
-...••...

••

(1) Lakewood $1. Edward t1().()) VS. (5)
Lyndhurst Brush (8·3), 1 p.m.
(2) Solon (1 Hl) vs. (3) Cle. Glenville (11·
0). 5 p.m • •
BM!on 2

At Ptorma Byeno Field
,
(1) Can. McKinley (11-Q) VI!. (5) Elyria (9-

2)

At Ma~ Senior Min Field
(2) Findlay (10·t) vs. (3) Massillon
Washington (10.1)
·

(1) Vo1,1ngs. Mooney (9·2) vs . (4) Akr.

MancheSter (1 D·1)

At GrMn JHmorlal Stadium
(7) Can. Cent. Cath. (8·3) vs. (6) Akr.
SVSM (7..)
Region 14

At Tiffin National Field at Froet~
Kalnow Stadium
(1) Ortawa-Giandort (10-1) vs. (4) Huron
(10-1)
At Kenton Aobln.an Fktld
(2) Coldwaler (11·0) vs. (3) Bellville
Clear Fork (8·3)

Region 3

Regjgn 15

At Byeavllle Meadowbrook Colt

Stadlu"'

(1) Bellaire (12·0) vs. (5) COlo. H•rUey (9·
2)

At Jackaon Alumni Stldlum
(2) lronlon (9-2) vs. (6) Williamsport
Wasflall (9,2)

BM!pn 4

~~

Beglgn 18

At Cincinnati Plut Brown Stadium
(1) Cln. St. Xavier (11-Q) vs. (5) Cin.
Colerain (10.1), 6 p.m.
(2) Huber H1s. Wayne .(10.1) vs. (3)
Comerville (tG-t), 2 p.m.

(t)
(4)
·
(2)

At Middletown Bamltz Stadium
Ge1mantown Valley View (1G-t) vs. ,
Clarksville Clinton-Massie (9--2)
At Xtnla Cox Stadium
Lemon-Monroe ( 10·1) vs. (3) Plain '

Cit( Jocathan Alder (10.1)

DIVISION II
All Oamfi Frklay, 7:30p.m.
Region 5
At Borborton Rudy Shlltcey Stadium
!4) Copley t9-2) vs. (1) Tallmadge (11.Q)
At Bedfor&lt;l Stewart Field at Baercat

Stadium

DIVISIONV
All GamBS FrldtJy. 7:30p.m.
A&amp;gkm 17

At Salem Reilly Stadium
{5) Columbiana Crest\liew (10.1) ve. (1)
N. Lima S. Range (11-0)

t6) Akr. Hoban (9·2) ve. (2) Willoughby S.
t11.Q)

At Stow-Monroe Folio Bulldog

AMigo 6

(7)_ W. Salam NW (9·2) vs. (3) Warren

&lt;

AtFremont RO.. Hannon Ftold at

Paul Stadium·
t4Y Powell Oienrangy Uberty (1().1) vs.
t1) Avon Lako t1Hl)
AI nffln National Fl~d at Fro1t·
Kalnow Stadium
t6) Mansfield Madison (8-3) vs. (2) Tol.
Cont. Ca111. (10.1)
.

.

Jl'l&lt; (10·1)

Stadium

.
.,

Begjon 18

.

At Doltonco Fred Brown Stodlum .
(4) Haviland Wayne TraO&lt;l (11·0) ••· (t)
·Hamler Patrick Henry (11.0)
At Merion Harding Stadium
(3) Findlay Liber1y·Benron t10·1) vs. t2)
Bucyrus Wynlord t11·0)

Btgtnn 1

Regjon 19 .

At t..xtngton
linutomon Field
(4) Dubltn 'Sclo1o (8-3) 110. (1) Louisville
(11.Q)
'
At M..alllon Paul B~n Stadium
(3) Cots. Waflerson (10·1) vs. (2)
Canfretd(11·0) .
•
Rtglon 8

At crrorevltle Logan Elm Bravea Field
(4) Lucaevllle Valley (10·1) vs. (1) Cols.

· At Cincinnati Pttnceton Mancueo
Field

(4) Washington C.H. Miami irace (9·2)
VS. (1) Sprtngbo•o (11.Q)
- '
At OIY(on W.lcome S-m
(7) W. Carro111on (7-4) Vf1:·(6) Day. Carroll
(9-2)
•
DIVISION IU
All Gam9B Friday. 7:30 p.m.
Btgton 9

AI Bolon Stewart Ftold
(5) Youngs.llberly (11.Q) ve.{f) Monlor
Like Cath. (1D-t) ·
•
At TwlnobUra Tiger Slodtum
(3) JIJ&lt;r. Buch1ei (9·2) vo. (2) Aurora (10·
1)

At Mount Vemon yellow Jacket
Stadium
(6) Centerburg (9·2) via. (2)Howaro E..Knox (10.1)
'
.
· Field
.
(5) Arcanum (10·1) vs. (1) ern. Hins
Chris1ian (11-Q)
At Piqua Alexander Stedlurn/Purk
Field
(7) ~noa (10·1) vs. (3) Lima Cont Ca1h.
(10·1)

"

Stadium

~r

s:r~:.':~~~~:::~~~' Memorial
(6) Now Conoord John
(2) Newark Licking Valley
-aoo!gn

12

(9·2) vs.
1.Q)

At Sprlngfttld North Panther Stadium
She~dan (6·3) vs. ttl Cin.
Indian Hill (11-Q)
At Qahtni'MI Llnaoln Stadium
(3) Cots. · DoSalas (7..) vs. t2J New
Albany (1().1) .

(5) Tl)ornllllie

••

•
(1) Columbiana (1~1) vs .'~4) Mineral .:
Ridge (9·2)
.•
• At Dover CrNr Stldlum~ ~ , ,
(7) Mogadore (8·3) vs. (3) Sloubt~llllle
Calh. Cent 18-3)
· t·

AI Foetorlo Memo~ol StodiUnJ ···• , .
(1) Bdscom Hopewaii-Loudon (tt-.0
. )vs: •
(5) Toi..Ottawa Hills (9·2) .
,_, • ' .,
At Bellevue Athlodo Flfld'
'
(7) Sandusky St. Mary (7:4);,'V.. (3)
Norwalk Sl. Paul (9·2) '
&gt;.&gt;t
BSfilgD 23
. '

At Lencu• f'llrtfeJd Union Falcon
StadiUm
1
(1) Lancaster Fisher Calh. (111·1) vs. (5)
Newark Ca1h. (8·3) '
·
At Stout&gt;tnvUto Rtcl Dolltl Field
(2) Hannibal River (8-3) Vi; (3)
Shady91do (9·2)
Aegjqn 24

At Sidney Memorial Sttc:Uum
(8} Marla Stein Marion local (8,3) v&amp;. (5). , ;
DelphoG St. John's (9-2)
-

At Wapakoneta Harmon Flald
· blvJBIOIIIV

All Gam•• Sahlrdl~ 7 p.m.

(2) Cola Hardin Northern (11-0) vs. (3). "

Spring. Cath. Cent (10·1)

...... ..

••

i·Pet
••

. ..
!'A
' .

•••

•

i'· Send us a

··. · photo of
i·· your
.. favorite
•
•••• pet and
•••
they
_
•
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••• might be---=:~~~~
••
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•·
••

•

2006

•

•

.
...
.
...
••
....
•
t· .. -......................... ---------.--....... .:

•

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.

••

Name of pet:
• : Your Name:
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Pet Calendar!·

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Wildcats ' close calls.'
COLUMBUS (AP) - Every . team
"No matter what your
wants to have goals heading into the
final game or two.
lead might be, they
"You do not want to be counting the
can· come back real
days until we can put the equipment
quickly."
away," is how Northwestern coach ·
Northwe stern has
Randy Walker puts it.
the No.
passing
. hI B.
...
k
Fortunately for his 25th-ranked
attac · rn t e tg .en
Wildcats and No. 10 Ohio State, they and is sevenrn in the nation in total
have a lot riding on · Saturday's show- offense. Brett Basanez is contributing
down at Ohio Stadium.
352 yards a game while averaging 316
Ohio State (7-2, 5-1 Big Ten) is riding passing yards. ·Freshman tailback Tyrell
a four-game winning streak heading into Sutton - still miffed that the Buckeyes
its final home game of the season. The didn't recruit him hard even though he
Buckeyes need to beat Northwestern and holds the Ohio prep record with 9,426
Michigan to stake a claim to at least a career rushing yards - has energized
share of the conference title.
the running game with 109 yards per
Northwestern (6-3, 4-2) isn't out of the contest, fourth best in the conference.
race yet, either.. If the Wildcats beat the
"They had that great passing game and
Buckeyes arid Illinois in their final two now they've got a great back to pick up
scheduled games, and if Penn State yards for them, so it's kind of like that
should lose at Michigan State a week two-headed snake," Ohio State de fenfro!I) Saturday, they would get a piece of sive lineman Mike Kudla said. "You've
the championship.
got to be real careful."
"They're not afraid of anybody and
Ohio State is no slouch on defense ,
they always hang . around," offensive however, surrendering just 77 yards on
guard Rob Sims said. "We've got to be the ground and 280 total yards per
worried about that."
·
game. Linebacker A.J . H.awk is averThe Wildcats are 4-1 in games decided aging I0 tackles a game and his .runby five or fewer points, including last ning mate. Bobby Carpenter, is second
week's magic act when they won 28-27 in the Big Ten in sacks.
despite trailing Wisconsin by 13 points
"We always like to peak toward the
with less than 4 minutes left.
end, and the last couple of years we've
"The last few years we'ye found ways done a decent job of doing that,"
to win some games," Walker said. "It's a Hawk said. "We just have to make
lot like a frght. We have to make sure it sure that we keep that going. Playing a
goes 15 rounds. Nobody wins if you get team like Northwestern, you have to
knocked out in the first round. If they be at your be st or you're going to get
knock you out in the first round, they do beat."
not let you come back and keep fighting., The Buckeyes have finally founu
We have to make sure the game goes their stride on offense as well , topping
four quarters." . · · .
40 points in each game of their current
·
The only time it wasn't the Wildcats win streak.
who surged at the finish was when they
"I don't think they're a pushover
gave up a late touchdown in a 34-29loss defense but I think it's really all abollt
to Penn State that now looms large in the us·, what we do," Sims said, referring
Big Ten and BCS standings.
to the Buckeyes ' offense. "Nobody
"You see that and you see you're going .can stop us when we db what we do.''
Ohio State will bid farewell to 16
to have to play fo~ 60 minutes," Ohio
seniors
playing' their final ga me at.
State center Nick Mangold said of the

~-:::,.,:---o:11:---:-... --::--:------,

Big en full of big talkers,
partjcularly on the line

··~I . Phone:~-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

-~

~. ~

~~y
,..~

•

···--·----·-------------··-·---- ----

••

'

on Saturday.
score midway through the
That simmering anxiety second quarter. He came back
might have been one reason to catch an underthrown pa~&gt;
Carpenter turned a simple trap from Pinegar, shaking oil a
play into a 67-yard score on defender who commilled pa"
the second play from scrim- interference, then stiff-armed
mage, just 47 seconds after and eventually flun g safety
the opening kickoff. But Marty Tadman to the ground
Fresno State calmly replied during the long run to hi s secwith a 74-yard scoring drive, ond score.
After two short field goals
including a clutch third-down
pass by Pinegar and a 15-yard by backup kicker Kyle
TO run by Mathis.
Zimmerman, the Bulldogs got
Pinegar,
who became a standing ovation when
Fresno State's career leader in Pinegar led them up the run•
touchdown passes while way to the locker room at
going 22-of-36. decisively halftime with a 20-point lead.
outplayed Zabransky. In preThe Broncos had won seven
vious years, the schovls' quar- straight since opening the seaterback s were polar opposites: son with non-conference road
Pinegar and predecessor losses to Georgia and Oregon
David Carr struggled against State. Boi se Stale wore neonBoi se State, while Zabransky orange uniform pants for just
and former s.tar Ryan the second time - but just as
Dinwiddie carved up Fresno in their debut between the
State's defenses.
·
hedges, the pants didn't deter
Not this · time. With a a bunch of Bulldogs. ·
smooth 29-yard TD pass to Fresno State will make a
Williams on the first play of nothing-to-lose trip to face
the sewnd quarter. Pinegar top-ranked
Southern
passed Carr's career record California next weekend,
with his 7 I st scoring pass at while Boise State still has a
good shot at making the MPC
Fresno State.
The game turned on ·Computers Bowl in its home
Williams' electric 98-yard stadium. ·

SHANGHAI, China (AP)
- Tiger Woods bogeyeq his
last hole after hitting a tee
shot into a bunker, costing
him a share of the first-round
lead Thursday in the $5 million HSBC Champions.
Scotland's Paul Lawrie, the
1999 British Open winner;
England' s Nick Dougherty
Peter
and
Australia's
0' Malley led at 8-under-par
· 64. Woods was at 65 with
England's David Howell, the
Netherlands'
Robert-Jan
Derksen and South Korea's
K.J. Choi.
The European Tour opened
its season with Asia's most
lucrative tournament, one
sanctioned by four tours. Play
began under mostly overcast

skies, but hard rain came
when Woods was playing his
last hole and 0' Malley was
on his ne~t-to-last.
U.S.
Open champion
Michael
Campbell
and
Kenneth Ferrie were at 66. a
shot ahead of an eight-player
group featuring Vijay Singh .
Colin Montgomerie, who won
the European money title,
opened with a 74 that inducted a double-bogey on his last
hole.
Woods mixed 10 birdies,
including five in a row, with
three bogey s. The last bogey
came when he hit a 3-wood
into a lar~e fairway bunker on
No. 9, wllh the ball plugging
deep in the sand.
,:I've never seen anything

Wildcat
fromPageBI
I0, 185) from Jacksonville,
Fla. Gwaltnex opted for West
Virginia, whtlc Well s is trying to establish himself as
No. 2 at Ohio State behind
Antonio Pittman.
Tresse l said Tue sday that
rt wasn't a matter of Sulton
not fitting in the Buckeyes'
system .
"Tyrell Sutton would be a
good fit in anyone's sys-

All-AMC South team
BY MARK WrWAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

COLUMBUS (AP)- What's brewing today with the 2005 Ohio State
Buc keyes ...
BUCKEYE BUZZ: According to
OG Rob Sims, there are a Jot-af trashtalkers around the Big Ten.
"In the Big Ten, everybody talks,"
Sims said. "Northwestern is one of the
teams that runs its mouth some. That's
cool. We run our mouths too sometimes."
In case you're wondering what is
said, Sims said he couldn't repeat it for
a family audience. But he ·did reveal
that there are two sides to the ,conversation.
"Especially on the Jines, we're just
going back and forth- 'I beat you last
play' or 'You ·beat me last play,' that
kind of thing. It's all fun and games,"
Sims said. "It's still a handshake afterwards, or ·a hug ·and congratulations.
That's just the way it is in the trenches."
·
HONORARY CAPTAIN: Former
Ohio State defensive end Will Smi~h. a
first-round pick of the New Orleans
Saints a year UlJ;O. is the team's b6horary captain th1s week. The Saints (27) have a bye week. ,
TRACK RECORD: This year's
senior class has won 40 of 47 games,
.took the national championship as.
freshmen in 2002, and has led the way
to four bowl games.
·
·
Ohio Stadium .. They won a national
championship as freshmen, and can
ease the pain of two close losses to
Texas and Penn State earlier this year
with a solid finish.
"We definitely think we belong up
there with the elite teams in the ~ation
if you maybe take aw'ay a few plays,"
safety Nate Salley said. "That's how it
goes sometimes."

like it," Woods said. "] did
well to get it out of there. I
think. I played really well
overall. even though I had
thre'e . bogeys. I think I0
birdies usually offsets that."
Starting at No. I 0, Woods
was 5 under at the turn and 7
under after II holes following
a run of birdies from No·. 16 to
2
N~o~s twice had to check
his swing and ask spectators
to stop takin g photos while he
was pl&lt;!ying the ball. His cad·
die had asked the same thing
during each of the lirst eight
holes.
" It was a bit of a di straction.''
Woods
said .
"Obviously, they ' re not used ·
to seei ng a lot of golf here, so

I can understand ."
· Because of heavy overnight
rain , the tournament allowed
lift and place rules, permiuing
players to pick up and clean
ball s without penalty ' from
closely mown areas through
the green .
Dougherty, who won his
only European Tour title at
the Singapore Masters in
January, closed with.an eagle
at the par-5 18th.
0 ' Malley got the most
recent of his three European
titles at the 2001 English
Open. He last won this year at
the New Zealand PGA.
There is no cut for this tour·nament, meaning all 73 players earn money.

I

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·.

•.

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.

Fresno State won for . the
14th time in 15 games since '
losing to the Broncos last season. Bulldog Stadium's sellout crowd, which cheered
through a steady rain for the
first three quarters, roared
when coaches Pat Hi II and
Dan Hawkins hugged at midfield after a scoreless second
half.
Jared Zabransky was 15-of32 for 190 yards with two
interceptions for Boise State,
which finally ran out of offensive ingenuity after winning
every WAC game since a loss
to Louisiana Tech on Nov. 3,
2001.
Boise State lost just two of
its first 37 games in league
play, but Zabransky's errorprone unit never resembled
AP photo
the sublime offensive teams
of past years in this cold, Fresno State's Paul Williams runs for yardage in the first half
against Boise State Thursday in Fresno, Calif.
unfriendly stadium.
The schools .have dominated the WAC since Boise State Hill's tenure ..
the Broncos beat then-No. 8
joined, going a combined 64Hill made no attempt to Fresno State 35-30 to end the
12. Though two tough confer- · minimize the · meeting's Bulldogs' unbeaten season
ence games remain for a importan ce, calling it the and Bowl Championship
school accustomed to midsea- · biggest game at Bulldog Series aspirations.
son letdowns, Fresno· State Stadium in hi s nine seasons.
"They came in and took
finally ..is in prime position for Hill has been haunted by something from us, and we've
its first outnght WAC title in Boise State since 2001, when never got it back," Hill said

Tiger. Woods one shot back in Shanghai

•

••••

The Daily sEntinel • Page 83

www .mydailysentinel.com

Buckeyes, Wildcats still have a lot at stake Rio's Rodgers lands·on

20
.
At Monroe Lemon•Monrot Homet
Begjon

DIV..IONVI
An Gan169 Saturday, 7 p.m.
B~n21
.
At Youngotown O.Rirnan ~· .

FRESNO, Calif. (AP) Four years of frustration
flowed out of every heavy hit
and every pinpoint pass when
Fresno State finally ended
Boise State's domination of
the Bulldogs and the entire
Western Athletic Conference.
Paul Pinegar passed for 307
yards and hit Paul Williams
for two long touchdowns, and
the. 20th-ranked Bulldogs
dectstvely snapped Boise
State's 31-game conference
winning streak with a 27-7
victory Thursday night.
'· Williams scored on a 98yard play, while Wendell
Mathis ran for 121 yards and
a score for Fresno State (8-1,
6-0 WAC) in its first victory
over the three-time defending
' league champions since Boise
State joined !he conference in
2001 and promptly began· the
longest perfect run in WAC
history.
,
The Bulldogs' blowout win
was years in the making: They
controlled the ball for more
than 40 minutes, racked up
513 yards and shut out Boise
State (7-3, 5-I) after Jeff
Carpenter's 67-yard TO run in
the opening seconds.
'

Rea~y (9·2)

Repton 22

,,

'

Beo!go 13
At Uniontown Like Blue Struk
Stadium

At Upper Mlngton Moorhead
MtmoMI Stadium
(1) Hilliard Oavklaon (1 1..0) vs. '4) Gro11e
Cily (8·3)
At Dubtln COffqtan RoCke Stadium
(7) WorthiOiliOn Kilbourne (8-3) va. (3)
Gahanna Lln«&lt;ln (7-4)

2005

_Fresno State snaps Bronco's conference winning streak

'

'

champion Jeff Gordon, the
winningest driver outside the
Chase with four victories:
- Combined, Roush and
Hen(! rick drivers have won 23
of 33 races this season.
- All 10 drivers in the
Chpse are from multi-car
teams.
·_ At 21st in the standings,
Ricky Rudd is the highest
ranked driver from a singlecar team .
Not all multi-car team own.
ers disliked the cap.
"l think it will be good for
the sport," Richard Childress,
who fields three teams, said in
the
NASCAR
release.
"Personally, I could ');ver
have gouen into the sport the way it is today - like I
did when I got in as a drivercar owner many years ago."
And single-car owners have
long been in favor of a cap.
"As it relates to me personally, I'm in favor of it. As it
relates to making this a beller·
sport, I'm in favor of it," said
Cal Wells, owner of PPI
Motorsports, which fields a
car for Bobby Hamilton Jr. "I
think it's going to be very
good for the garage area, very
good for the sponsors, very
good for NASCAR .
"What if Jack had all 43
cars? I know that's probably
an extreme, but where does it
stop? Five cars? Seven? Ten?
Twelve?"
ln other rule changes
announced for next season,
NASCAR said it was limiting
the number of tests a team can
participate in and a tire-leasrng program.
NASCAR will set a schedule for on-track tests, and
those will be the only tests at
tracks which host Nextel Cup
races. There will be six test
locations: · Lowe's Motor
Speedway,
. Daytona
· International Speedway, Las
Vegas Motor Speedway,
Richmond
International
Raceway, Homestead-Miami
Speedway and Indianapolis
Motor Speedway.
Tests at non-Nextel Cup
tracks will continue to be permitted. ·
NASCAR did not reveal
any details about its tire-leasing program.

...

Friday. November u,

~005

tern ," T resse I sa1'd . ""
ne .IS game) and has allowed only Maroney (25 carries for 127
tough , competiiive, 'and one I 00-yard rusher - · yards. nine carries for 13
everyone has seen what he's Minne sota 's
Laurence ya rd s in the second half).
done . Every team would
love to have a guy like
' ."
h rm
Thank You
Asked if it came down to
for electing me
Sutton's size, Tre sse'i said:
"I would say hi s was more
to Pomeroy Council·
of a timing issue than anyI will strive to serve the
thing. You have to tip your
Pomeroy to the Best
cap to Northwestern. They
were early; they did a good
job,'' Tressel said.
Ohio State has the
nation 's · third-best rushing
defense' (76.6 yards per

CEDARVILLE - The
All-American
Mideast
Conference
volley.ball
teams
have
been
announced and University
of Rio Grande freshman
outside/middle
hitter
Jessica
Rodgers
wa s
tabbed
Honorable
Mention Ali-AMC South
Division. ·
Rodgers had an outstanding start to her college career when she registered 17 kills in her first
game. The Williamsport
native
was
steady
throughout the season and
was at or near the top of
the key statistical categori~s for the Redwomen
team.

She averased
3.1
ktlls
per
ganic and
4.6 digs per
game as an
all -aro und .
pi ayer.
·
· The 5-11
Rodgers
was
a
bright spot
111
whal
was
a
rebuilding
year for the
proRto
"-":._---~ gram. She
Rodgers
has establi shed herself as one of the cornerstones for the future.
Rio fini shed the season
7-27 and 1-15 in th e AMC
South Division .

Owners sell football
team on eBay
WHEELING, W.Va. (AP) asset s was $135,000. Details
- The owners of an indoor on the selling price were not
football team, pressured by disclosed
thursday.
other business commit- However, Kellas and Stein
ments, have found a buyer said the deal has been final that will keep the franchise ized . .
alive,
· "The most important thing.
George Kellas, the manag- is that the team is staying
ing ·general partner of the here," Kellas said Thursday
Ohio Valley Greyhounds, · during a news conference
last week put the team up for announcing . the learn's sale.
sale on eBay, saying that if a "And that was always the
buyer was not found by Nov. most
important
thing.
15 .. the franchise .would Money was not the issue .''
cease to exist.
The Greyhounds won
When Lou Stdn of back-to-back league titles in
Wheeling read about the the National Indoor Football
sale, it prompted the long- League in 2002 and 2003
time fan to purchase the and advanced to the conferteam himself.
ence championship games in
"I have a passion for tl)e 2001 and 2004. But the
Ohio Valley and ... I truly team, which was founded as
have a passion for the Ohio the Steel Valley Smash in
Valley · Greyhounds," Stein 1999, struggled this year
said.
after moving to the United
Kellas has said the asking Indoor Football Association,
price for the team and its ending the season 6-11 .

Attention All Veterans

Thank You for our freedom!

·Danny Harmon
Air Force Retired. .Candidate of Congress
Paid For By Harmon for C0ngres ~

t»&gt;.r.•lKt~l\J ''· JJ~A~
.~Jl~~ll~§f@B.

0!1f'llJifl k'IOr uf I ~'

~Cl !f

JWS

\"r.\\ \" fllii11M'tk.'ll f \(x l l'l ~
\kmlxr vf Ank:w.:;m lk~trd rl

20 } rs ,·~rl:ri,:nt~·
~kmt-.r ,I( Ann.·ric&lt;~n A~a..km~

Auto Accidents Workers'
Compensatio11

(1(

~1elhl; tl A' t ~lllOClllh'

• Sp.-ms i1tiurir1&gt;
• Me&lt;:hcan:
• Acupuncwrc

• Mt"'l hmlroncd
• &amp;lmt' di!y appt

aavenswood
r:t:: ~ ,.q.letic Center

=.304-273-5321

316 Washln ton St.

~
Ravenswood, WV

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November u,

www .mydailysentinel.coin

•.

Friday, November 11, 2005

2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

LeBron James towers over Cleveland on shoe billboard
CLEVELAND (AP) -Already fans have the opportunity to say
the cny's most famous Citizen, that we are watching the grow th
LeBron James has never been btg- and development of LeBron and
ger in Cleveland. He's 10-stories the Cavaliers, and not just on the
tall.
court but in the community," said
As a way of acknowledging the company spokesman Rodney
All-Star forward's impact·, Nike Knox. "We are v.atching LeBron
has hung a billboard of James on and this team grow and grow."
the s1de of a building near
The photo used for the billboard
Qui cken Loans Arena, home of the was taken on Nov. 15, 2003 It
NBA's Cavahers. that is 110 feet captures James in mid-tlight on a
htgh and 212 feet wtde.
breakaway in a game again st the
On the massive mesh banner. Phtladelphia 76ers.
'
James soars toward an unseen basIn only two seasons as a pro.
ket with his nght arm extended James has blossomed into one of
over his head. ready to deliver one the game 's best players while
of his signature slam dunks. Next becoming a global marketing •con,
to the sprawling reproduction of following in the shoes of Jordan.
the photograph taken during hts the 20-year-old's boyhood 1dol
rookie season are the words: "WE
Knox said the billboard, which
ARE ALL WITNESSES."
features
the omnipresent Nike
1
"It's stmple, but it says it all," swoosh, is not tied to a marketing
said Chris Marsh of Avon Lake, campaign for James new sneaker
one of several people to pause and line, Zoom LeBron III. which Will
look at the banner, which has hit stores later this month
quickly become Cleveland's
As motorists t raned their necks
newest tourist attraction. "Just like and pedestrians stopped to view
with Michael Jordan, we are wit- the 2,700-pound banner, Victor
nessing the same thmg, JUSt in a Darby s\ood below giving direcdifferent era. It's awesome."
tions over a cellphone to h1s
Nike's intent was to oonor fnend, Tyler Newell , who was
James for hi s work on and off the about to drive back to Washington,
D.C.
floor.
"The idea was to let Cleveland
"I told him, ·Man, you got to

come back and see . this,"' Darby
said ...
Moments later, Newell pulled
up, got out of ht s truck and soaked
in the larger- than-hfe LeBron. .
"Whoa," Newell said. "No w
that's big. It should be. He's the
Ktng."
When James was a rookie, Nike
promoted his first sneaker by placmg a four-story billboard of his
likeness on Seventh Avenue just a
block from Madi son Square
Garden. The apparel giant had
been looking for the right location
111 Cleveland, and settled on the
Landmark Building next to
Terminal Tower, the city's best
known butldmg.
When he was still a senior at
Akron's St Vincent-St. Mary
H•gh School, James signed a
seven-year $90 milliOn endorsement contract with Nike, the richest initial shoe deal offered 10 an
athlete.
As of Thursday afternoon ,
James had still not seen the giant
billboard
"Where's it at?" he said, peering
AP photo
through a wmdow outside the
A
man
crosses
the
street
m
front
of
a
large
banner
featuring
Cleveland
Cavaliers
'
club's practice cou~t. "I'm' going
LeBron
James
on
the
side
of
a
downtown
building
Thursday.
The
mesh
banner
to drive oyer and take a look at it
weighs 2, 700 pounds and is 110 feet ta ll and 212 feet wide. ·
I heard it's pretty big."

m:rthune- Sentinel - ll\e liter
CLASSIFIED

Galh•

Award
from PageBl
Roger Clemens got the other
two ftrst-place votes and
came in a distant third at age
43.
The Rocket led the majors
with a I .87 ERA, but a lack
of run support from his NL
champion Houston Astros
limlled Clemens to a 13-8
record, whtch surely cost
htm votes.
Balloting for all BBWAA
awards is conducted at the
end of the regular season
and excludes the playoffs,
when Carpenter went 2-0
with a 2.14 ERA in three
starts. St. Louis was eliminated by the Astros in the
NL championship series.
Carpenter began his career
with Toronto on a late 1990s
staff that eventually wclud- ed three other Cy Young
Award winners : Clemens,
Roy Halladay and Pat
Hentge n.
After compiling a 49-50
record in his first six seasons, Carpenter had surgery
in September 2002 to repair
a tear in his pitching shoul der, and the Blue Jays wanted to send him back to the
minors. He refu sed the
asstgnment and chose to
become a free agent before
signing with St. Louis.
Carpenter missed the 2003
season while rehabilitatmg
his shoulder, and was forced
to have another operation in
July to remove scar ti ssue .
The Cardinals were determined to remain patient. Yet
at that powt, who knew if
thex would ever get much
from him ?
"I really felt that there was
more w there," Carpenter
said. "When I came back
last year, I knew I wasn't
going to take anything for
gra nted ... . Mentally, I grew
up a lot."
Finally healthy in 2004.
Carpenter went 15-5 with a
3.46 ERA to earn NL comeback player of the year honors from his peers. But he

steroids. Period." On May 4, he
failed a Major League Ba~eball
drug test. commg up positive
for an anabolic steroid. In
August, shortly after baseball
suspended Palmeiro for I0
days, Davis 'said Congress
would look into whether the
player committed petjury.
"We have a responsibility, an
obligation, to investigate it, and
that's what we've done," Davis
satd during a news conference
in the same hearing r.oom
where Palmeiro had testified.
Davis said the steroid for
which Palmeiro tested positive
is detectable for three to four
weeks, shorter' than the -gap
between his failed test and
Capitol Hill appearance, and
therefore "could not have been
in his system the day he testified."
"We were not concerned
with why he tested positive or
how he tested positive except
for how that related to his testimony," Davis added.
mi ssed the postseason
because of a biceps injury,
and St. Louis was swept in
the World Series by Boston.
Carpenter won 13 straight
deci sions this year from
1une 14 throug.l:t Sept. 8,
helping the Cardinals to the
best record in baseball (10062). He threw 241 2-3
innings, struck out 213 batters and got the best of several other ace s around the
league.
Carpenter beat Clemens in
both of their matchups. He
also topped Roy Oswalt,
Carlos Zambrano , Andy
Pettine, A.J. Burnett and
Willis.
"I was locked in mentally
for a very long period of
time," Carpenter said. "Next
thing you know, your teammates are behind you saying, 'Wow! Look at this guy ·
go."'

He and Willi s led the NL
with seve n complete games
apiece. Willi s had five
shutouts to Carpenter's four
Carpenter admitted losing
focus a b!l in September
once St. Louis secured a
postseason spot, and he
struggled in his 'final three
starts of the regular season .
Some tho.ught that might
gtve Willis the openmg he
needed to win.
But those outings were
really nothing more than
playoff
tuneups
for
Carpenter - he had a 2.31
ERA when the Cardinal&gt;
.clinched the NL Central.
" It 's a great feeling,"
Carpenter said dunng a conference call from his New
Hampshire home. ·'There's
not a lot of people that come
from thi s area, never mind
play m the big leagues."
Bartolo Colon of the Los
Angeles Angels won the AL
Cy Young Award on
Tuesday. The next award to
be handed out is the AL
MVP on Monday.
Gibson is the only other
St. Louis winner, takmg the
honor in 1968 and · 70
Carpenter ge ts a $50.000
bonus for winning the
award, and Clemens gets
$25.000 for finishmg third.
r

S h or t I y 'test : a-taitlted vial of liquid Bafter
the 12 given to him by a teammate.
r e o r t . s Orioles -shortstop Miguel
r e e a s e , TeJada later acknowledged he
P a I m c 1 r o ,was the teammate.
issued a stateThe -report I S based on mterment.
views w1th Palmeiro. his wife,
, "I _ am Tejada and other players, an
pleas~d that Orioles phystctan and tramer,
after 11 thor- and documents turned over by
ough investi- baseball related to Palmetro's
Palmelro
galion - one drug tests and the arbitration
in which I hcanng about his suspension.
Among the findings:
cooperated fully - the committee has chosen to drop this
-Palmeiro took a polygraph
matter," he said. "I want to test June 13 ahead of his arbiexpress my gratitude to the · tration hearing but never was
committee for the fairness and asked whether he took stermds.
professiOnalism wtth which Asked by committee staff why
they conducted their business. I that wasn't raised, Palmeiro
have never intentionally taken said, "I'm not sure. I dtd not set
steroids and I strongly oppose it up."
the illegal use of steroids by
-When Palmeiro initially
was told he failed a steroid test.
athletes or anyone else."
Palmeiro issued his first he was asked by the players'
detatled public comments on union if there was a substance
the case Wednesday, including he might have taken by accia possible explanal!on for why dent. Palmeiro didn't mention
he might have failed the steroid the B-12.

r

- Palmeiro said his wife,
Lynn, mjected him with the B12, explmmng she knew how
to use a syringe because she
gave the fam1ly dogs allergy
shots.
-Questioned by committee
staff about whether he believed
the 'vitamin shot caused the
positive test result, Palmeiro
said: "Now, I may be wrong. It
could be something else. But if
I have to guess, if I have to pinpoint something, that is the
logical thing."
Two other current
Orioles, identified in the report
as Player A and Player B. also
were given B-12 by Tejada
"The committee d1d lind substantial
inconsistencies
between Mr. Tejada's account
and the accounts of Players A
and B," D'avis said. "While
these mconsistenctes were
curious to us. we did not -pursue them."
Palmeiro is one of four players in baseball history with 500

homers and 3,000 hits. The
timing of his positive test
meant Palmeiro )mew he faced
a sus~nsion as he approached
the hit milestone last summer.
His case has been ctted as
one of the reasons lawmakers
have continue(i to pursue legislation to require tougher rules
for steroid testing an(i harsher
penalties lor positive tests in
l)aseball and other major professional sports leagues.
A bill calling for a half-season ban for a first steroid
offense, a full-season ban for a
second offense, and a lifetime
ban for a third reached the floor
of the Senate. But a spokesman
for one of the btll's sponsors,
Sen. Jim Bunning, R-Ky., said
Wednesday that an unidentified senator placed a hold on
the bill , meaning it's stalled
mdefinitely.
The House also is consider..
ing legislation and Davis said
he thinks a bill will pass this
year

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Dnnk
Adul1s $6 50 Chrldlll:lrl $J 50 Garryouls Avarl

Help Meigs Co. Bikers raise
money for Toys by com•ng
to the Mizway Sat., Nov. 12
50/50 Drawing, Auction
Band AM IX 9-1

Racine Gun Club
Sunday,
November 13th
12:00
Slug Shoot -Any
Gauge
Bring shells
Everyone Welcome

CRAFT SHOW
Sponsored by the HMC
Employee Activity Association

Sat. Nov, 12th

.'
'

8AM-7PM
HMC Education &amp;
Conference Center (Ground
Floor)
(park in the rear of the facility,
enter through the ASU
Entrance) A variety of crafters
will be on hand selling their
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•

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Auction and Flea Market.............................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories •......................... 760
Auto Repalr .................................................. 770
Autos for Sate .............................................. 71 0
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles ........................................ 550
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportunity ................................. 21 0
Business Tralntng ......................._, ............. 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Thanks ........................, ................. 010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... t90
Etectrl cat/Aefrlge•ation ............................... 840
Equipment far Rent.. ................................... 4BO
Excavating •., ................................................ 830
Farm EquipmenL ....................................... 610
Farms for Rent... ......................................... .430
Farms for Sale ............................................. 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490
For Sate ........................................................ 585
For Sate or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
Fumlahed Roams ..........................c............. 450
Gene•al Haullng ...........................................B50
Giveaway ......................................................040
Happy Ads ....................................................050
Hay &amp; G•ain ..................................................640
Help Wanted ................................................. ttO
Home tmprovements ................ ...................8t0
Hame.s far Sate ....................... .-.................... 3t0
Household Goods ....................................... 610
Houses for Rent .......................................... 410
In Memoriam ................................................ 020
lnsurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment... ..................... 660
Llvestock ................·..................... ., ...............630
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
Mlscettaneous .......................................,...... 170
Miscellaneous Marchandlse .......................540
Mobile Homo Aepatr .................................... 860
Mobile Homes for Rent ............................... 420
Mobile Homes for Saie................................320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ..........................740
Muslcallnalruments .....•........... ,...•............. 570
Personals ........................ .............................005
Pots lor Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating .................................... 820
Professional Servlces .... ............................. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Rapai• ............................... 160
Real Estate Waptoct ..................................... 360
Schools tnstruclion ..................................... t50
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Situations Wanted ....................................... t20
Space for Rent .............................................460
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
SUV's for Sale .............................................720
Trucks for Sate ............................................ 715
Upholster-y ................................................... 870
Vans For Sale ............................................... 730
Wonted to Buy ............................................ 090 ·
te d to Buy · Farm Suppties .................. 620
Wanted To Do .............................. ................ I BO
Wanted to Ront ............................................ 470
Yard Sate- Gallipalls .................................... 072
Yard Sate-Pomeroy/Middto ......................... 074
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Great ioca t1on.
great staff. $350 s1gn-on
bonus L1m1ted T1me Only
Please send resumes to
CLA Box 571, c/o Gallipolis
Dally Tnbune, PO Box 469,
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Ncov=l..:5..:'h-- , - - - - - AVON ' All Areasl To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears. 3041 buy Junk Cars (304)m- 675 .~ 429
5004
Full T1me Bookkeeper and
I \11'1 0\ \II\ I
ParVFulf Tlma labor and
"'IIHU I "
sales
Agnculture background a plus Send resume
110
to PO 80)( 73, Chester,
.
HEU'WAN!lW
1
Oh10 45720

LEARN

TO

&lt;C&gt; 2005

www.comtcs.com

"o .

l -•HE•LP-W•ANTED
_ _,

lito

L.,.

,,_II
~
by NEA,tnc.

Borrow Smart. Contac
he Ohio DIVISIOn 0
Fmanc1al
Institution'
lf1ce of Consume
t1a1rs BEFORE you refi
ance your home o
btam a loan . BEWAR

HEJ..P WANTED

0

Insurance olf1ce seekmg a
qualified Customer Service
Representative The candl·
date must have good custome r serv1ce and computer
sk 1lls Insurance e,~~;penence
very helpful Please send
resume and referenc es to .
Dally Sentinel, PO Box 7296, Pomeroy, Oh 45769

WANTED Positions avail·
able to ass1st mdhtiduals
with mental retardation at
two group homes 1n Bidwell
1) 40hrs. 3·11p Sun 3 30·
11 p MfTufW'tTh
2) 35h rs . 8a-5p Sun , 2·10
M!Tu!W
3) 35hrs 1 1p·8·30a Th/F,
Sat 7p-9a Sun
LPN needed, futl·tlme , 4 ) 35hrs· 3 30-9 30p ·Th, 3·
Monday -Fnday day sh1h. no 10p F. 9a·6p Sat, 9a-8p Sun
weekends, no holidays High schoot d1ploma/GED,
Apply al 936 St AI 160, vahd dnver s license and
three years good drivmg
Gallipolis (740)446-9620
elCper1ence
reqwed
Management pos1110n ava1l· $7 25/hr Pre-amploymenl
able 1n the Gallipolis area . Drug Testmg Send resume
Management
expenence to
Buc~eye Commumly
required Please lalC resume Serv1ces, PO Box 604.
to (614}851-5948
Jackson, OH 45640 or e·
ma1l
to·
Mad1 Home Health Agency,
beyecserv@yahoo com.
Inc 1s seek1ng lull-t1me and
Deadline for applicants
pari-time
RNs 1n the
11 /15/0 5, please .spec1fy
Gallipolis. OH araa Must be
pos1t10n of 1nterest . Equal
11censad m both Oh10 and
Opportumty E,mployer
West V1rg1n1a . We offer a
compe t1t1ve salary antt benWork @ home. Earn $450·
efit package for tull·hme
$1 ,500 monthly part t1ma,
emplo')lees E 0 E Pl ease
$2,000·$4,500 full 11me
send resume to 352 Second
www OurAnswer com
Avenue,
Gall1pol1s,
OH
45631 . Ann . V1ck1 Chadw1ck
Mec:l1 Home Health Agency,
Inc IS seek1ng a PAN AN 1n
the . Jackson County, WV Gallipolis Career College
{Careers Close To Home)
area Must be licensed 1n
West V1rg1n1a We oHar a Call Today! 740·446-4367,
1·800-2 I 4·0452
compehllve salary E.O.E
Please send resume to 4245
WNW gaMi pollscar&amp;er~ollege ~;om
State Route 34, Hurricane , A~;r; ladltt~d Member A~;c red1ting
WV 25526
Attn ViCki Gcunc:ll lor lndePf'lndenl Colleges
and Sctoools 12748
ChadWICk.
r.~=:::,.::;;.;:::

___.,

l

1170

DRIVE

Mlst."t:LL.ANWIJS
Now hmng lull and part lime
McCiuros Restaurants m
Middlepor t and Galllpolls WANTED
' NO EliPEAIENCE NECESSARY
Responsible
• FULL TIME CLASSES
Apply between 10-10 30am party to take on small
" COL TRAINING
·FINANCING &lt;WAIL.AeLE
Help Wanted
Equ1pment Paremed•cs
&amp;
EMT"s monthly payments on High
"JOB PlACE~ENl
Person.
CDL
Class
Delivery
needed Apply at 1354 OelmJIIOn Big Screen TV 1·
" ENROLLING NOW
800-398·3970
A Aequ ~red ElCperience in Jac~son P1ke, Galhpohs.
r,:;r:;;;;;.~~
heaVy equ1pment mamtence
1110
WANIID
Treatment
a Plus Call Gheen Rentals Residential
ALLIANCE
.
1
To
Fae111ty tak1ng applicatiOns
at 740·992·1438
TRACTOR-TRAILER
lor
youth'
worker
Pay
based
TRAINING CENTERS
WVTHEVILLE . IIA.
on
expenence
Paid Assisted llv1ng ca re 1n my
INSTALLER· SERVICE
TECHNICIAN
Insurance Call between home lor Elderly Pnvate
For alarm systems. closed 9 OOam-3 OOpm Monda')/ · room , bath, 3 hot meals
L..:!!C
-"'-!:''!!"!lS~o"'~"'""'""''"""'"'-"--' cncu1t T.V., phone systems Fr_od_ayc_'.:.(7_40_;1_37_9_·908_3__ (740)388·0118 .
and Homa Automation Must 100WORKERS NEEDED
t1me posit1on C
d
De honest. dependable and ~Secretary-Full
.
omputer
Aepa1r
an
Assemble crafts
and
excel
aole to work unsupervised Mlcrosott
Troubleshool Web Des1gn
wood 1tems.
requ ired . Need a person
Prev1ous
tra 1mng
or
Networkln!j , ProQramm1ng
To $480Jwk
who 1s capable, has in1t1aExpenence m low voltage
Build New Systems, Restore
Matenals prov1ded
Pay Wlndowli
VIrus Removal
w1nng, mdustnal ma.1nte· t1ve. and has sK1IIs
Free Information pkg 24Hr
based
on
experience
and
Certified
Phonell
nance 1s a plus. W1ll lram the
740 _992 •
801·428·4649
ab1llty. !="ax resume 740·698·
2395
Right candidate
0821
-------An Excellent way to earn
:c
S-om
_ e_o_n_e_e_x_pe
_rc,e-nc_e_d_ IO Georges Portable Sawm111,
money The New Avon
Respond With resume to
'nglcool don't haul your Logs to the
mao'nlenenca hea1 1
Call Mar1tyn 304·882·2645
CONSOLIDATED
•
•
ng , pi Umbong , eecrca
1 1 1 1. Mill JuSt call 304 ·675·1957
$ECUAITY SERVICES.
Patnot EMS seek1ng FT/PT
IN~
pamt1ng, etc A'pp!y in perHealth Care Prov1der. N1ght
EMT's &amp; Paramedics After
240 UPPER RIVER AD
son
at
Holiday
Inn , Shift 9 00 PM·-6 00 AM
mtroductory penod EMT's
GALLIPOLIS OHIO
Galli~lls No phone calls References . Call 740·985·
ma~e
up
to
$10/hr., - - - - - - -4282
Pa ramediCS up to $12/hr Oh1o Valley Home Health please
1nterv1ewer . - - - - - - : : - - - - : : - tOO% med1ca1 msurance , Inc h1Mg RN's CNA , Telephone
Mag1cYearsOay Care
prescnpt10n card . paid days STNA. CHHA Full and Part e~~.cellent computer &amp; comPreschool 7 30.5.30
ott &amp; vacatiOn, retirement . T1me pos1t1ons Competitive mun1ca110n SkillS. full-t1me
"Pun1ng Children Ftrsf
paid tram1ng All vehicles low Wages, Mileage and bene· no benefitS, $10 per hour
m11eage , new equipment l1ts Including health 1nsur· after 4 weeks training. $8 Ages 2·12 State Licensed ,
For
more
1nlormat1on ance Apply at 1480 Jackson per hour dunng tra1nmg , 1n link Approved , Excellent
www patriotems com or call P1ke Gallipolis or phone toll Pomeroy, start 1mmed1ately, S~1Hs Spaces available for
call Mark 800·556· 3583
all ages (304)675·5847
{740)532·2222
free 1·866·441-1393

....--.,

·------,..t
Do

1-800-334-1203

O

Oakwood mobile
home 16lCBO V1nyllsh1ngfe, 4
bedroom. 2 bath, CIA
(740)245-0001
Mus! be
moved

advertlee "'an~

preference, limitation or
discrimination band on
race, calor, religion, aex
lamillalatatua or national
artgln, or any Intention to

2002 Clayton only $142 per
month. w1ll dehver (740)3854367

make any aueh
preference, Umltallon or

Great used 99 S~yllne
16lC80 Vmyl/ shmgle, 2x6
walls, glamour bath Ca ll
(740)385·9621

dlacrlmlnallon"

MONEY

Thla newapaper will not
knowingly accept
advertfaarnente for real
estate which Ia In
viOlation or thlllaw. Our
readara era hereby
Informed that all
dwellings adverttiNd in
thla newspaper are
avallebta on an equal

New"16 w1de only $~90 per
fnonth V1nyl Siding, Shingle
Roof &amp; Delivery (740)385·
7671

New 16~~:76 3 bedroom /2
bath Minutes from Athens
Must sell. Move 1n today Call
L....;O;:;P:;;PD;;,rt.,;u;;ni;,:1Y.,;bou;.,;;,;;'·-~ (740)385-2 434

r

Lw--iiiSEiiR;;,ViiiCiii:ESiiir-,1
TURNED DOWN ON

SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fae Unless We WinI.
1·888·582-3345
I

House lor Sale 3 bedroom
full SIZe dry basement
Great Neighborhood. corner
lot t~ght Jn town Ta~e a look
1001 Kenny Ct. (nght behind
Jr H1g1'1 School) Shown by
Appt $84,500 (304)875·
3123 or (304)675·0032

Ill \ I I ' I \II

HoME&gt;
RJRSAU
112 Pleasant Street. 3·
Bedrooms, 1· 1/2 Bath&amp;,
New Cent ral/Air Cond, New
Wmdows
Gas Budget
$65/month (304)6'15·4034
-------2 bedroo m &amp; bath upstairS ,
~l iche n dinmgroom, llvingroom &amp; bath downstairs on
la rge lot. 328 Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy, call belore 9pm,
(740)367·0861,
pnced
under 515,000

Newly remodeled home In
Pt Pleasant 34 bedroom.
cen1ral air, full basement.
hardwood floors. detached
garage, large covered pat1o.
a fenced backyard, close to
schools $69,500 For more
1nformat1on and/or view1ng
(740)709· 1362
No Down Payment

Less

trom
Holz er
ment
w/gar
Racine minutes
Across !rom Park. 57,000 Hospital Three BedroomsOne Bath Le~Jet lot. Newly
below appr 740-949-1372
remodeled 740-416·3 130
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath with Syracuse 3 Br . attached
F~reptace 1n A1o Grande. ,8 Obi. Garage , New root on
acres mil. 40~~;60 barn. acre Block uhfllles bU1Id1ng
$125,000 (740)709-1166
$85 00
740-949-1082 or
740·416·2786
3 bedroom , 2 bath . V1ne
Street, Rac1ne , on 3 lots
new carpet throughout. new
roof. new detached 28x32
garage, naat well main·
ta1ned home (740)949-4019

?

Mortgage
1740)367·0000

Locators

Beaut1lut Fully Customized
Aellovated 3BR, 1-Bath
Home w/1-acre, m Pomt
Pleasant WIU Be Open for
Voewlnn Fro 11- &amp; Sol 121h
w
"'
10am-Spm Th1s Homo has
to any AmenitieS to 1·· 1 I PU)
tt 1s reasonable ,ti1L€(J
$59 .900 lor a l1m1"L 1 t1me
only
Must see
to
Appreciate Ta~e 24th St by
Wendy's to Monroe Ave
Follow lhe s1gns to 2309
Monroe Ave

WANtlW

Need to sell your home?
Lale on payments. d1vorce.
job transfer or a dea th? I
can buy your home All cash
and qUick closmg 740-4163130
Rl '\I \I-.

2 sto1y Colonial home JBR
1BA $500 month. $500 sec
deposit No 1ndoor pets
(740)446·348 I
2BA house on Graham
SchOol Rd $400Imonth
$200/dePOSit, tra shlwat Pr
mcluded (740)256 6702

3 Dedroom, 1 bath , lull Dase· than perfect credit 0 K FIVe

4BA. Foreclosure 1 only
$14,900 For hstmgs call
800·391 ·5228 elCI F254
----:----:-- : - - Attenltonl
Local company otler~ng 'NO
DOWN PAYMENr pro·
grams tor you to buy your
home 1nstead of rent1ng
• 100% lm anc1ng
• less than perfect cred1t
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent.

t.,--rii i i i i '!""-'
REAl. E.~o,Ji\11:

For sale by owner 3BA
ranch w1!h 10+ acres,
Add1son/Chesh1re,
large
24)138 garage . 2 full baths
5128,500. (7401367-0944
after Spm

.-

Lats&amp;

For SAle 2 Bd., 1 112 Batll,
AcREA«iE
large liv1ng room/lneplace L,-------,1
w1th full basement house 1 ·
car garage on 1 112 acres 9 acres w1th 28x32 barn 5
By Appt onl')l Call740-985- acres with 21ra11er hook ups.
4166
In QUiet country Call 740 256-1922
ne1ghborhood

PRorn;stONAL

FOR SALE

:woo

Fair Houelng Act ot 1966
which mekealt Illegal to

TO loAN

MOB!Ul HOMES
2000
Oakwood
14x70
mob1le home. 2 bedroom 2
bath, very good condition .
vmyl s1dmg, shingle roof,
under skirting, total alectr~c
CtA $16,000 (74~446 0773· (740)446·9543

aubject to the Federal ,

~~~~~~~~ Must have reliable trans-

Absolute Top Dollar· U S
S1lver and Gold Coins.
Proofsets, Gold R1ngs, Pre1935
U.S
Currency.
Sol1taire Diamonds- M T S
Coln Shop, 151 Second
Avenue , Gallipolis, 740-4462842 .
- - - - - - -Buy1ng black walnuts, 12e
per pound after hulling , call
(740)698-6060, buy1ng unt1l

1

n

All real asta-. adllertlalng
In thle nawapeper le

1"0

t.,--·---·

r

I l\ \ \( I \I

tractor outdoor fur niture, 2
lift cha 1rs, personal and
househOld miSC ·too much
to hst
Sportsman 48
Kitchen laundry and off1ce
1tems. F1ve days. Wed. (Nov
9)-Sun 9amto4pm
Large Yard Sale 1st lime.
Addison beh1nd gas station

r

..

Will do Ad ul t care 1n my
Home Alzheomer's welcome.
(304)675·6781

2004 300EX, Guns, baby
1tems.
e~Cerclse
equip,
HELP WANfED
house etc . Fn -Sat
-------Thursday·Saturday
1044
Krauss-Beck Ad Furmture, Are you interested m a
ret1red Longaberger, boys rewarding pos111on? PAIS Is
currently accepting appllca·
tools,
knick
knacks
crafts,
clothes
(mfant-3T) &amp; mise
: Found Small browmsh red
11ons for part-t1me d1rect care
... dog, Nov 7, 1st Ave area Xmas 1tems, Home Interior.
4
candles, toys, etc
Y.'\Ril SAI.Jo;.
positions the Mason County,
• Call (740)446-2255
PoMEROY/MIDDLE WV arel\_s providing restden ·
11aVcommunlly sk1ll tra1nlng
Huge Garage Sale on Sat w1th IndiVIduals w1th MR/00
12th 8ashan Ad. Racine H1gh school diploma or GED
4x4's For Sate .............................................. 725
Tons of baby clothes like requ1red
No 'elCpenence
Announcement ............................................ 030
new and many 01her baby necessary Cnm1nal back_ Antiques .......................................................530
supplies. Clothmg tor boys· ground chec~ requJred
Apartments for Rent.. ................................. 440

-

ads must be prepaid"

;;::------.,
70

Yard sale Nov 10 , 11 , 12
Found Female Choc. lab 1n Rug s. desk tables. toys,
clothes. etc Burnett Ad
the PPMS Area 11 /8/05
(304 )675·6108 or (304)875·
Garage sa le 638 Jay Drive,
0586
Fn-Sun' Bam- 2pm Much
Found.' Boller on Sp1res Ad more stutl Baby stutf &amp; baby
&amp; 325 Brown male w1th accessones, brand name
- white
spot
on
neck kids
clothes,
womens
: (740)742·8716
clothes. lots new w1th tags,

-

tJ;.

Now you -can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
-Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Display Ads

Estate Sale Today
Lost Dog Lost at Gnmms
Ru th Butler Farm
Landmg , Wh1te male With
11005 StAt 7 GallipOliS
Brown head &amp; ears answers
W1lly Part bird-dog pointer,
OH
Family Pet $500 Reward tor 2.5 m11es N of Byrd Locks
Sale Return or Info on his
where abouts (304)642· EXQUISIIB VICtonan InClUding
6043 or locally (304)458- large V1ctonan dresser w/
carved bust above m1rror.
1721
armo1re 3 marble top tables.
lost· black/tan Miniature brass twin bed, blanket
Pmscher, 1118 on State chest. early cherry empue
Route
~8.
Reward, and blanke t chests 2 blind
(740)985-4149 Marsha or cupboards, pewter cup·
board f1ne art, crocks qu11ts
Tom
glass, chma, Sienko, lmens
lost· Chocolate Lab, Horner French 3 pc llvmg room set.
Hill /143 area , Reward , sofa. chairS, lamps 6 pc
(740)992·0080, answers to wicker, p1e safe. freezer
'Toby"
refng, several sets of wood
t:ir
cha1rs, signed books, lawn
YARD SALE
and gara9e tools, JD lawn

r
I

Greyhound 1 112 yrs old
needs Room to run , to good
Home (304)675·7217

Lone Oak Farm
44391 Yost Rd., Racine
Saturday, November 12th,

Mail or drop oW thil c011pon along

,

GtVF.AWAY

2 month old puppies 112
Rotwe1ler. 1/2 P1l Bull free to
good home (740)446-8603
or (740)578-1055

&amp; Traders Day

Thanksgiving Dinner
Nov. 13th 2005

Address _ _~-----

011~ Val~y

t.,

Tuppers Plams VFW Lad1es Aux.

Subscnber's Name ~--~-

Phone _ _ _ _ _ _ __

r
I

r-------,1

•

r••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Cily/State/Z;p _ __ _ __

7

Word Ads

HOW TO WRITE AN AD

3Register

Sentinel

(304) 675-1333
2
7
99
6
&lt; !~~ To~7~~~!~~ &lt; !~~ To ~:~~s~

ca~r;~::v...

-

. If so, you qualify for a

Senior Discount*

m:rthune

To Place

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Are·you 65
or older?

OH

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

•

Congress: Not enough evidence for perjury charges against Palmeiro
WASHINGTON (AP) Baseball star Rafael Palmeiro
will not be prosecuted on perjury charges after lawmakers
said Thursday there isn't
enough evidence to prove he
lied when he told Congress
under oath that he had "never
used steroids" - six weeks
before fwhng a steroid test.
The investigation did not
conclude whether the former
Baltimore Orioles slugger had
actually ever used performance-enhancing substances
pnor to his testimony before
the
House
Government
Reform Committee.
"We couldn't lind :my evidence of steroid use prior to his
testimony,'' Chairman Tom
Davis, R- Va., said in releasing
a 44-page report. 'That's not a
finding of innocence, but it's a
finding that we could not substantiate perjury."
At issue was Palmeiro's
statement at a March 17 hearing: "I have never used

Cou nt~.

2BR 18A Central Heat A1r
Stove
turn1shed
WID
hookup $450/month plus
Ut11111es
References
requ1red. No Pats (4 12)427·
.69:..:1..:
7-------,-3 bdrm. 1 bth, LA, DA Kit
Utif Am. 2 car garage w/220
hookup N1 ce front yard
Green Twp Water &amp; trash
mcluded Kitchen furn1shed
$750 mth plus $500 r:lep
Ref req (740)446·0969

3 bedroOm bnc!l . lull s1ze
basement, large lot. located
at LeGra nde Blvd Ava1tabte
1211105 (614)575·1813
3 bedroom house Jock.s o&lt;~
P1ke ctose to hosp1101
$675/m o, secunty depos1t
requ~red (740)446-4051

3bdrm-1 5 bath home , close
to hosp1tal otl Jackson P1ke
$600 mo rent , $600 sec
dept· you pay ut1h!les
References required Call
Sy ra cuse 3BR. attached dbl (740)446·3644 for applies garage . new root. 7acre. hon.
block
util1!y
bu1ld 1ng
$85,000 (740)949- 1082 or 4·5 bedroom, 2 1!2 bath.
(740)416·2786
hardwood lloors. $6001mo
lt"s a steall (7 40)446·7425

Mootu

Hmtt:-;

6 rooms &amp; bath , stove
refng S400/rn o
No pets
Recently remodeled 644
1976 12x60 2 bed room 1 $econd Ave (740)446-0332
bath In very good cond1· 8am-5pm
lion
Buyer must move
Attention!
Must sell $6 ,500 Interested
please call (304)1575-5422 Local company otlenng "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" proleave message
grams for vou to buy your
1987
Oakwood mob1le home Instead ol rent1ng
home lor sa le Excellent · i 00% l1nancing
COndition. excellent loca11on • Less than perlect crad1t
(Galt1pol1s) New 1ntenor accepted
throughout (740)645·1968
• Paymert could be the
same as rent
1989 14x70 2·3 bedroom Mor tgage
Locators
heat pump porch must be 1740)367 ·0000
rlO..,~CI $11 000 (740)388
Avmla blo Dec 15th 3 bed8375 attm 7pm.
room house lu rn1shed , no
1996 Oakwood 14x70 2 pets·preter non -smoke rs
bedroom 2 bath , very clean $775 00 per month plus ut1l·
(740)388·8513 or (740)388- 1t1es
$750 00 depOSit
Telephone 740·992 5421
8017 (even ings)

S

L.....F·U·R--A·I·.L--~
-,

�Friday, November 11, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 11 , 2005
Card of Th11nka
Ava!able Nov 15th 2 bed
room house Kitchen tur
n shed no pets prefer non
smoKers S475 00 per month

(740)441

From 5295 $444 Cat 740

0194
- - - - - - - - 992 5064 Equal Hous ng
N1ce 2 bedroom duplex OpportunrtLes
near Ha nsonvLIIe
$425
NEW ELLM VIEW
month y p us uhl ILes
No

TOWNHOUSE!APTS
NOW LEASINGL
SPACIOUS
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;
TOWNHOUSES

smok:Lng no pets DepoSits
equLred 742 3033

Stop rent ng Buy 4 bedroom

foreclosure $15 000 For hst
ngs 800 391 5228 ext

I would hke to
extend my smcere
(304)576 2597
thanks to our fam1ly
members. fnends
Buy or sell Riverine
and ne1ghbors for
Antrques 1124 East MaLn
on SA 124 E Pomeroy 740.
there phone calls
992 2526 Russ Moore
V
ISits cards food
owner
fl owers and prayers
Doug Shambhn I\ I
]';~
~OIANDISE
1 Hartson for there
words of comfort
16FT TraLier Dual Axles tit ed
du nng Dem er s
and censed $650 trrm
Illness and hiS
(304)675 1165
Robert
A mmey
serv1ce Br 1dford
-------and Mi ddleport
8 Valley poo table one
p1see s1a1e $700 (304)675
Church ul Chn&lt;l lor
3388
the dehc1ous meal
they sen ed alter the
FLrewood to sa e Seasoned
oak &amp; hLckory (7 40)245
servtce Holzer
9162
Metl1 c tl Center
Gold s Gym we1ght machLne
doctors and nurses

Let me de 1\ for ycul

Rocky Hupp Insurance

UIDfS PIIITIII

and Fmanc1al Services

11401 985-4110

Midld lc]~On, OH 45760

never been used Pad SSOO
will se ll tor $300 Ca ll
(740)446 6757

on tho 4th noor w

High and Dry

JET
AER ATION MOTORS

spoke on Denver s
hi e md F1sher
Funeral Home

AVAI LABLE

1709
Very nice 3+ bed oom 2
bath full basement 2 car

STOVE REF

DISHWASHER
GARBAGE DISPOSAL
WI ND BLINDS
CEILING FANS
WATER SEWAGE &amp;
TRASH INCLUDED

!;larage n ce yard On SA
143 near Harr sonv lie $650
monthly plus utLht es No
smokLng no pets Depos ts
requ red 742 3033

PETS CONDITIONAL
(304)882 3017

(740) 992-5232

SxlO, lOxlO,
IOxlS, 10x20,

Al!ll:li

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION

P sasant Valley Apartme nt Steel Beams Ptpe Rebar 1993 CadLIIac DeVLIIe 4 9
A e now takLng ApplicatiOns For

Concrete

Angle

VS
59 000 miles
all
optiOns leather new ILres
maroon
$5 000
I rm
(740)645 0626

-------~ tor 2B A 3BA &amp; 4BR Channel Flat Bar Steel
1989 14x70 2 3 bedroom App 1catlons are taken Gratmg
For
DraLns
RenV$400 Dep/$500 Ned Monday thru Fnday from D tveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
credL t report ref Call after 9 00 AM 4 P M OffLce LS Scrap Metals Opef'l Monday
7pm (740)388 8375
Located at 1151 Evergreen Tuesday Wedn esday &amp;

Concrete Removal
and Replacement
r !t\Jt.I)pes Of ,
()n~cQ!tiJ Work

1995 Dodge Caravan V6
runs
080
(740)256- 1652
1996Stratus 106000m les
5spd AJC runs great
$1 300 OBO (740)256
9031

Dnve Po tnt Pleasant wv FrLday 8am 4 30pm Closed auto power seats
PhOne No 18 {304)675 TI1Ursday
Saturday
&amp; great
S1 BOO

2 bedroom $275 month
$'100 depoSit wa ter Lnclud
ed no pets (740)367 0102

5806 E H o

Sunday (740)446-7300

Pomeroy 2{3 BR apt
Nay ors Run WID hookup
LG pa!IOfyard S&amp;R Call
740 992 6886

3 bedroom mobLie home n
the Shade area Wa ler
sewer trash 1ncluded $325
a month p us depoSLI No
pets a lowed (7 40)365
4019

Orgmal Star Wars Empire
Str kes Back act on F gures
Hoth AT AT and much
more Call (304)675 6578
$500 for all

Small Apt SLJ table tor t
adult Full bath Washer
SPAS SPAS SPAS
dryer hook up Aefr gator
0 11er 30 In Stock
3Bdrms 2 Bath 5t 7 Burdette No Pets
References RATLIFF POOL CENTER
Street A eectrLc depost required
Call 740 992
{740)4466579
and reference reqwred No 6396
1 800 894 6997
Pets (304)675 5402
www bul frogspas com
---'----'-------:- Tara
Townhouse
MobLi e Home tor Rent Apartments Very Spac1ous
Vent Free 3 Plaque
Located
n
Mason 2 Bedrooms CIA 1 1/2
Gas Heater
$375/mo $375/ depos t No Bath Adult Pool &amp; Baby
(Propane or Natural)
outsLde pets References Pool Patio Start $3B5/Mo
Manual Control $143 95
reqwred Cal (304)675 342,3 No Pets Lease Plus AlumLnum F berated Pa1nt
Secunty Deposit AequLred
(Great for MobLie Homes)
MobLie home spaces m (740)367 7086
!).gal Bucket $29 95
Country Mob le Home Pa r~
We now have candy melts
(740)385 4019
Tw n Avers Tower LS accept
m stock tor your
1\,g app!LcatLons for wa t1ng
holiday bak1ng
N ce 38A mob1le home for list for Hud subsLzed 1 br
Pa 1nt Plus Hardware
rent $400/dep $550/mo apartment call 675 6679
675 4084
Need 3 re ferences Call EHO
~t::::ll"-~;...;..._ _~
(740)446 3601 or (740)441
Very
new 2 BA apt
5699
---~---- w/attached garage OeJK)Sit ~~--..iiiiiiioiiiiiiiiiio-.,J
&amp; rei required (740)446
Block brLck sewer p pes
28 0 1
CIA pnvate country settmg ~:~:---~.,...--., wLndows hntels etc Claude
W nters A10 Grande OH
depos t
refere nces
Sl'ACE
req1,1 red (740)245 5893
FOR RENT
Call 740 245 5121

r

n~ce

r

r

Downtown Of!Lce Space 5
room su te $650/mo 1 room
offLce $225/mo 2 room
suLte $250/mo Secunty
depos t reqwred You pay
ull Liles All spaces 11ery n ce
Elevator Ca 1(740)446 3644
for appomtment
----.,------,
For Lease Off1ce or rata I
spaces Ln very good con dL
t1on Downtown Gathpol s
Apprmc 1600 sq "11 each 1
or 2 baths Lease pr ce
negotLabte to encourage
new
busmess
Cal
(7401446 4425 or (7401446
3936

1 and 2 bedroom apart
ments furnLshed and unfur
n shed secunty depos1t
requLred no pets 740-992
221S
-:-:---,-----.,-t BR meal y furmshed apt
Qu et area suttable for 1
adult
pr vale dnveway
WID
w/carport
new
(740)446 4782
2 bedroom apartment
Aa~ ne very mce c ean
S425 per month pl us
deposLt no pets references
requred
740441 011 0
(740)992 5174

iLw--iiiiiiiiiOiiii;.,_..l
PEAs
FOR SAI....E

CKC Lab pupp es Chocolate
&amp; black. Vet checked shots
worm ed
$200
OBO
(740)379 2697
-..---:---------:Jack Russell pupp1es for
~~ 1: 5125 eac h (740 )742

2
-------Mm ature PLnchers 2 male

11emale b ackl tan $300
Ready 1 H1 0105 Taking
deposts (740)388 81 24
ShusuLe Dog $ 100 00
House trained Jack Russell
for $75 00 (740)992 3457

\IIIH II \'\111"'1

r10

2BA apt 4 rent W/D hookup
water sewer trash pd $400
mo
{740)367 7746
(740)367 7015 (740)446
4734

,

H()tN0110W

Goooo

I
.

~=

I \H\1-.,11'1' 111'
·' 11\1 ... 1()1"

r°
1

FARM

"~-·~~

r

tors gas and elec1r c
ranges aLr conditioners and
wr 1nger was hers WLII do
epaLrs on maJOr brands n
shop or at your home

BEAUTIFUL
APART
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood
Dnve lrom $344 to $442
Wa k to shop &amp; movLes Call
740 446 2568
E qual
Hou61ng Oppor1un ty
Beech St eel Middleport 2
bedroom !urn shed apart
men! depOSit &amp; preVIOUS
renlal relerences no pets
(740)992 0165
Brand new 2BA apt m
Gall polLs $450/month
2BR apt SA 160 past Holzer
h0sp1tal $375/month
2BR
apt
8 dwell
$400/month (740)441 1184
(740)441 0194

(740)441 5507

Reg sterad Angus bulls and
heLfers 40 years of A I
breedmg Slate Run Farm
=c.::..::.=..::.:=-- www slate run farm com
Used Furmture Store 130 (7 40)286 5395
Bulav11 e P1ke Appli ances
couches dmettes chests Seven crossbred cows WLih
bunkbeds grave markers Angus SLred Fall caves at
{740~446 4782 Gall pols Side $7 200 for group
OH Hrs 11 3 M 5
Vollborn Farm (740)446
_ _ ___...____ 8997 evenLngs
Used washers &amp; dryers $80
and up Gas sto11e $50
(740)245 5946 after 5pm
Al!ll:li

25 Years Exper1ence

2004 Toyota Corolla excel
lant cond1t on 25 500 mLies
39mpg S12 500 (304)882

I

MANLEY'S
SELF STORAGE

Owner Jeff Stethem

Office (740) 992·2804 Cell. (740) 517·6883
POWER WASHING
(Commerc a and Res ide nhal)

Mob le Homes Houses log Homes Decks Dn11eways
Sidewalk§. Gas Stat1on Awn1ngs Degreasmg of
EquLpment Boa ts Ca mpers Tractor TraLiers
Dum p Trucks pambng or sta1n1ng of your deck
or log home Alum1num bnghten ng
Spec1al rates to Trucking and Dump Truck1ng Compame5

*Heating &amp; Cooling
24hr Emergency

Chuck Wolfe/Mgr.
(740)992-0496

expenence

(Comme1c al an ~ Res1deobal)

~HOLZER CLINIC

97 Beech Street

www. ho/zerclmtc com

Mtddleport, OH

River Rd. • Gallipolis, OH

1Dx10x1Dx2D

~ti·934U

992-3194

1-800.231-4467

Med1r;al Excellence
Local Carmg'"

or 992-6635
Sell-Storage"

rJJea[ J'unera[ Jfome
Dauld R. Deal
Director/licensee In Charge
Charlie Huber, Director
Josh Billings Assoc.
FAMILY OWNED

Dav1d, Donna &amp; Brad Deal
• Can ng • P rofe ss1o.nal
Affordable Serv1ces

500 ATV w lh 34 m,,.,
$4900
CARMICHAE L
EQUIPM ENT
(7 40)446
241 2
2004 Hentage Solta1l
13 000 mile $ 16500 call
740 992 6520 9 00 5 00
2005 Harley DavLdson
Electra Ghde $17 000 can
(740)446 6369
AIJI'O PAifl ~ &amp;

ACC&amp;'&gt;';C)RifN

MAINTENANCE

Chuck Wolfe
Owner

Home Repairs Remodeling
1 Additions 1 New Homes

1

1

STANLEY TREE

Hill's Self
Storage

TRIMMING&amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
work

• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates

29670 Bashan Road
Aac1 ne Oh10
45771
740·949-2217

Insured
Lic en sed

&amp;

Call Gary Stanley

In sured

(7 40) 992-0496

740· 742·2293

:::;;~;:r.~i~~;-;:;;:::::~
Gene Arms/Owner·
Opl.'rator 740 992 H74
*' W~:~.:k ) 11 1sh Sen L&lt;..e

4vrs ofRc lltbl eS~r\l t:e
K((r y, r Mu ~v l.o..:aiJ
&lt;_,&amp;R S \ NII \liON
·n~6 1 B Lie) Run Rd
Pomcrt

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Ga•ages
·Complete
Remodeling

OH

Corn entone
Elecblcal
Service

740-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

FOR ALL YOUR
ELECJ'RICAL NEEDS
1 MOBILE HOME
REPAIRS
• CARPENTRY
I ROOF I pAINT
OHIO LICENSE # 38244
I

SEASONED HARD
FIREWOOD
CUT &amp; SPLIT
$40 ALOAD
CALL

740· 367-0544
740· 367-0536

740 949 2038

• Leave a message

·12% Cattle $7.75
·Econo Beef $6.85
·Whole Corn $6.25/Bag
·Cra(:ked Corn $7.25/Bag
Mix $8.75/Bag
Why
Anywhere Else?

Shade Rtver AG Servtce, Inc
35537 St Rt 7 N

~

@

OhiO 45769

L IN CO L N

.MilCUIY

Gallipolis, Ohio
YOUNG'S

WINY ILk

CARPENTER
SERVICE

SYOIIl~l:
OF BOATS,
CAMPERS ETC
AT THE
MEIGS CO
FAIRGROUNDS
Nov 12, 2005
900AM 1100
For more Info call

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling

740·985·4372

Pomeroy Ohio
25 Year• l ocal Ex rience

• NewG1rages

•n

11195
19M- 1111•
F-150414
lltiUII..
JUIIIIIS
7 40-446-9800

• Electrlc•l &amp; Plumbing
• FloohnliJ &amp; Guttet'S

• VInyl Sld•ng &amp; Painting
• Pallo and Porch Decks

We do It all except
furnace work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

Wllo:len5

HOME PlANTING-~

5

1988 Chevy Astro van runs
good Pr1ce reduced $800
(740)446 8997

IMPOm
Athena

(304) 675·6000
1401 Kanawha 51
PI Pleasant

WgM~fE4

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH
Now Available At

BAlJM LlJMBER
Scorpion Tractors
"Takrng Th e Strng Out Of
Hard Work '"
Mtd Stze 4Wheel Dnve Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota E ngmes

1993 Plymou th Voyager 7
passenger van
Good
shape 25 mpg $2 000
OBO (i40)441 1417 after
5pm

Shop
Classlfleds!

County,

03 CHESTER TWP
EASTERN LSD

with 03-q0022 002
taxes
assessments Baer Edward T &amp;/Or
Interest and penalties Patricia D SECT 4 T2
charged
thereupon R13 4 725A OUT OF
agreeable to law, are 71 725A 4 725A
contained
and "" ........, ..............1912 68
described In the fol- 03~1099 000
lowing lists
Bauer Robert Michael
9Name
Desc ription &amp;/Or Carrie A c/o R
A~res
Total Taxas Michael Bauer SECT
Assessments, Interest 32 (640) SE PT OF NE
and Penalties)
1/4 41 OOA EX 9 3846A
31 61 54A
255 78
01 BEDFORD TWP
03 00989 007
LSD
Carpenler Randall R Sr
&amp;/Or Peggy
A
01 00238000
SEC 17 T3N R12W
Cogar Tericia L SECT 7 073A
OUT
OF
13·20 OUT OF 16 50A 283861A 7073A
1 25A
328 00 " " ..... .................... 367 61
01-()0239 000
03~271 000
Cogar Terlc1a L
Clifford
Calhy
c/o
SECT
13(262)·20 Kennelh D Davis SECT
STRIP N &amp; STRIP THRU 18 (640) OUT OF 70A
MID 1 25A
136 54 TRACTW OF CEM 2A
01-D0304 002
350 72
.............. ~
Collins Kevin &amp;/Or 0~088 000
Lyons Amber SECT 31 Clifford
Cathy
D
T3 R13 588A OUT OF BLOCK 1 RT 248 PART
30A &amp; 627 A OUT OF 104A 3 4 STEAD SURV
1 50A TOTAL 1 21 5A 110A
741 89
... .. ..... .. . :c·"::: ... 1796 98 03-D1127 000
01.00172 000
Curtis CozartLindaSSECT 4
Albert L SECT 15 SE OUT OF E SIDE OF 4A
PART OF N 112 N OF ON N LINE OF NE 1/4
RD 2A
4026 50A
1016
01 ·00173 000
03-D1128 000
Curtis Albert L SEC 9· Cozart Linda S SECT
15 NW EX QUIMBY 13-4 (640) ON NE 1/4
LOT EX 47 86A OFF E OF RD lA
20 73
SiDE 10 14A EX I06A 03-D1257 000
10 034A 60110
Cozarl Linda S SECT 4
01 ·00174 000
Curtis (640) ON N LINE OF NE
Albert L SECT 15 SE 1/4 350A
112279
PART N 112 N OF RD 0~866 001
21 86 Davis John M 1/0r
1 09A
01 00175 000
Leanna L SECT32 T4
CurtiS Alberl L SECT R12 1 594A OUT OF
1$ NE COR OF S 1/2 148 26A 1 594A 159 81
OF FR 75A
15 33 03 00489 000
01 00867 003
Deem Anthony W &amp;/Or
Firsl
National Wendy R LOT (262)
Apc eptance Company 5 7 A OF 67 05A NW 1/4
clo Ronald Sheppard EX 1 001A EX 1 007A
S~CT 33 T3 R13 lOA 3 632A
1842 46
OUT
OF
21 295A 03~0463 001
tO OOA
313 58 Dill Ryan E 1/0r
01.00207 000
Amanda V SEC 6 T2N
Gilkey Tony E &amp;/Or R13W 1 700A OUT OF
Cbrlsllne SECT 22 W 36 694A 1 700A 987 44
PT OF 111 45A WEND 03.00146 000
EX210A 92A 16823 Foster Joe Allen SECT
0\-00208 000
12·16 (640) E PRT EX
Gilkey Tqny E &amp;/Or 30A S lA
180 73
C~ristlne SECT 23 T3 03-oD360 000
RJ3 E PT OF 31 75A W Foster Joe Allan c/o
END EX 37A 1 73A
Bertha Foster LOT
, ......................... 921 44 SECT -16(640) MID ON
0~-()0510 008
E LINE OF SE 1/4
H•wley
Patricia K 1 33A
91 37
SlECT 30T3 R13 2 466A 03 00366 000
OUT
OF
20 90A Foster Joe Allen c/o
2 &lt;466A
175 62 Bertha Foster SECT 10
ot-oo3s3
FRAC 4 T3N R12W
Hazelton Michael A 40A OF 119 75A 40A
&amp;/pr Shirley L LOT " " ""'''''"~":'
219 01
SECT 11 (840) OUT OF 03~397 000
SW COR OF 20A E OF Frost
Richard
L
Rll 2A
116 87 BLOCK #1 ROUTE
01.00495 000
#248 PART OF #5 22A
Mp1er Eugene &amp;/Or ~~ · ~::::·;·:~··; .....·431 08
Dorothy SECT 19W 1/3 03~921 001
OF 61A OF NW 114 GrllflnTonyaMSECT&amp;
20.33A
155 95 T~ R12 Nl/2 ()F SWI/4
01~496 000
66A OUT OF 2117A
Maler Eugene &amp;:/Or 66A
113.69
~rothy SECT 19 NW 03-()0516 003
CllR OF SW 1/4 24A Guthrie Laure M FR 31
333 07 T4 R12 SECT 211 253A
;
OUT OF 24 2504A
01-00224 000
M~ler J Eugene &amp; 1 253A
751 79
Dorothy J SECT 19 SW 03~516 002
'
CORNER OF SW 1/4 Hawthorne Timothy D
2' SOA
160 90 FR 31T4 R12 E END OF
01.00558 000
S 1/211436A OUT OF
Ojlell Timothy K &amp; 25 394A 1 1436A
Carole
SECT21 .... .......... .............. 1878 09
F!IAC 30 T3N R 13W S 03 00525 000
VI COR 5 38A OUT OF Hawthorne Timothy D
2jA 5 38A
72 09 FRAC 31 T4N R12W
0 -()0649000
1 09A OF 29A 1 09A
Otiven Dante M Etal " "'" "::::·cc:"'"'237 50
SI:CT 10 MID ON N 03-oD855 000
PfiT 61A
467 74 Hysell Donald G SECT
36 2 62A OUT OF
Oliven Dante M Etal 64 92A NW COR 2 62A
LI&gt;T SECT 11 MID ON S
....., ..., .,.•, ..........895 99
1223 03 03-()0538 001
L(NE 85A
Jones William Michael
01·00851 000
h
Ohven Da nta M Elal &amp;/Or Debora
LOT SECT 13 11 SW SECT 5 T2N Rt3W N
C ~R 59A
452 32 OF NW 1/4 3 OOA OUT
OF 20 49A
3 OOA
01-D0583 000
Proffitt James J LOT :c·::·::·: :·:c:: ...3401 98
SECT -31 W SIDE EX 03-()0818 000
3 DBA OUT OF 120A Kauff Richard A &amp;
3 DBA
EX 2 9539A Kimberly J SECT 16
1~1A
9 60 2 037A OUT OF 36 25A
239 67
2 037A
0?-00302 000
RUnyon Jason &amp;lOr 03~711 000
P&lt;!nny
LOT
SECT Klaiber Carl c/oVickle
1:i-32 18A OUT OF 39A Klaiber E SECT 23
N~W SURVEY 20 673A (640) E SIDE OF St/2
•
244 55 779A OUT OF 69 25A
779A
26 29
0 ~00455 000
Runyon Ja son &amp;/Or 03~712000
LOT 13 32 W Klaiber CarlE SECT 17
P&lt;!nny
OF NW 1/4 EX 20A S (640) SWI/4 13 379A
2fA
561 23 OUT OF 72A 13 379A
01-()0770 000
cc·::~:::·.., .,.,...3208 47
S9aw Lynn D &amp;/Or 03~737001
Mary Elizabeth S LOT Krautter Darrell L 1/0r
S~CT 17 W PT OF Arlene SECT 35 T3N
71 72A E PT OF NWI/4 R12W 622A OUT OF
EbFRO 16A
076 822A 622A 44115
0~746 000
01.00771 000
Siaw Lynn D &amp;/Or LaudermiltCheryi Ann
M~ry Elizabeth S LOT SECT 28 W PRT OF
S~C ·17 NW PT EX lA FRAC 24 55A 77 43
Sfi:HOOL LOT 56 39A 03~748 000
Leudermilt Cheryl Ann
EX 20 469A 35 921 A
...,............ ............ 738 89 SECT 28 FRAC 24 42A
OF159A 42A 7119
01-D0870 001
Sheeler Gary &amp;/Or 03-D0943 000
Rebecca A SECT 18 T3 Parker George SECT
R 13
24A OUT OF 26 (640) SE CORNER
61 43
47 90A '24 OOA 532 69 52A
Of -DOBIS 000
0~944 000
Stsson Freder ick W Parker George SECT
&amp;/Pr Carmel M LOT 19 (640) MID ON N
1917
SECT 8 8 9853A OUT LINE 20
0~945000
Of t 25 AC 8 9653A
1619 56 Parker George SECT
01-D07 22 000
19 (640) 41 07AW SIDE
Sm1lh Rebecca c/o OF RD OUT OF 61 07A
41 07A
EX
38 988
R' becca Johnst on
24 23
LOT SECT 27 MID ON E &amp; 907
L IN E EX 12A NW PT 03~945 001
1J 4A
1395 90 Parker George SEC 19
T4N R12W
38 988A
Ol-oD569 010
OF
41 07A
Stake Ginger L c/o OUT
Ginger L Grange FR2 38 988A
EX 1 66A
51 24
T~ R13
1 011A OUT 37 328A
72 5526A 03~945 002
OF
1p11A
167852 Parker George SECT
01-00853 006
19 T4N R12W W SlOE
W)·n te Jeffrey A &amp;/Or OF ROAD 907A OUT
OF 2 08A 907A 18 77
Wtu te Debora Jeffers
S ~CT23 T3N
R13W 03~946 000
8 67 A OUT OF 34 454A Parker George SECT
8 P7A
386 59 12 25 (640) NE COR
01-()0 180 000
NER N OF CR 8A
Williams David SECT 10 9403-00947 000
13 NW ES 54A 128A
Parker George SECT
.... ........................625 40 10 (262) lOA W SIDE

ooo

"Middleport's only

on
SAVINGS

..

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

Mowmg. Tnmmmg Tree Tnmm ng Aeration FertLhza!IOn
Spray ng of fence hnes l eaf Removal as well as small
landscap1ng JObs such as plantmg and mulchmg
FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

~

2000 Grande Caravan V6
rear heat and a1r child
seats 69 000 IImas Sell for
payoH (740)379 2723

Esttma tes

(740)9'J2-4100

ADVERTISE YOUR
BUSINESS

992-2155

a ]::']

Licensed &amp; Insured

i

The Daily Sentinel

~

o, er 30 years

1982 F 250 Ford t uck
$350 00
Also 1991 Am rae ng whee s F1ts Ford
BonnevLIIe $300 00 74Q- Mustang GT $200 Ike new
{740)446 2815 or (740)446
992 3457
2673
1985 Ford truck F150 6
cyhnder automatLc good Reese 5th whee hLict1 slid
body runs $900 {740)446 ng 15kw $300 (740)2 45
5946 after 5pm
9742

IL.~--oifii'OiiiKiiSiii'ALE,;;;;;.,_..!

• Ins Owner: Ronnie Jones

Point l'leasant WV

FOflf ~EMON~
Hf'fl4Nf&amp;M

~~~.:~95T~~c~ (,;,;.~~7~0

1974 Ford Ranger pLck up
$600 as Is (304)675 7388

cHo"'b'

740-992-6971

s

01 green F.ord F1 50 XLT 4dr
au1o 54L VB bedcov er
6CD player sunroof good
cond1tLon 71 000 mLies
18/2 1mpg S1 4 000 0 80
{304)288 3335

IIIII Stut!Jn

Ed Ddllow ner

85 Che11y Cavalier for sale 2001 SuzukL Katana Yosh
(304)675 1506
exhaust new high pertorm
ance EVC clutch &amp; spnngs
85 Mercury Marqu s 1 w/pro lrLctLon dLSC black
owner hght blue w/whlte 12 000 mLies recently serv
VInyl top approx 80 000 LCed garage kept HJC hel
m1tes S700 (304)675 3537
met w/tLnted visor 3 000
OBO
or trade for 4 wheeler
93 Toyota Camry $600 Cars
740 508 0650
from $500 lLst ng 800 391
5227 Ext C548
2002 HD Soft taLl Deuce
:-..----c:-..---:--: Alot of extras $15 000 fLrm
95 Monle Carlo Z 24 Low m11es 11ke new must
130 000 m1les NC PW PL se~
(740) 446 2815
keyless entry lilt cruse CD (740}446 2673
player looks good run s ; _ - ' - - - - - - great $3000 OBO 740 2003 Harley Davdson 100
508-0650
Anmversar y Road Kmg
3000 m les $7 000 worth of
9? Ford Explorer EddLe Extra Chrome .$16 000
Bauer Edn on $3 BOO 94 call
740 992 6520
Ford Taurus 69 000 mL es between 9 00 5 00
2003 Suzuki 4WD VInson

·~

II'UUll 'r11l.rmw

(3041 675-2630

great excellent cond Mn 1995 Honda Four Trax 200
bee Garage kept $3 600 1ype 11 reverse 1 000
(304)773 5182
(740)245 5946 alter Spm

FOR Su E

C!J.Omr

1701 Jefferson Blvd

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3486 or (304)773-5684
71 Dodge Dart Swinger 1977 650 Spec1al Yamaha
new TLres&amp;Brakes runs $600 (304)675 3388

5815 or (304)593 5354

Cam...,
CO.O.~tr

(&amp;ilJnlf
nd ILl'fM-IMbarg

4 WHEELERS

F'O

ON THIS PAGE FOR
AS LOW AS
$26.00 PER MONTH!

Robrrt Lhllllloo II

Top • Removal • Tr1m
• Stump Gr1ftd1ng
Bucket Truck

Tugetlrer

Serv1cc

CAMI~ItS &amp;
1993 GMC TrLJck heavy half
MO'roK
H OME'&lt;
4 whee! drLve 4 3 V6 auto
mat c transmiSSIOn RLJns
excellent tranny rebuLit 2000 Dutchman Class C
motor has low miles dual Motor Home Sleeps 8
exhaust toolbo)C W II sale 3407
Jackson
A11e
for $3 BOO or best offer m
cash Call (740)441 9378
leave message
10
SMRTING
90 S 1o ext-cab 4 wheel
L.---Gocn;iiiiiiiiii,__,., '
dnve automatic transmLs
'
1990 Bwck Reatta excellent sLon 4 3 1001 box $1 300
BASEMENT
AemLngton 50 ca n 1ne cond1t1on 63 000 miles (304)576 2753
WATERPROOFING
muzz e loader With scope $7 000 (304)675 3388
Uncond tlonal life! me guar
Call (740)446 3Ba2
4x4
antee Local references tur
FoKSAI£
nLshed Estab LShed 1975
02 Dodge Dually 1 ton Call 24 Hrs (740) 446
0870 Aoge s Basement
ex tended
cab
4~~:4
CummLns Turbo diesel Wat!YJ)rooflng
21 ooo m las excellent con ~'Get"A1Lin1D~
d 1100 garage kept $25 ooo 1
I rm 740 286 0257

i

U htre Qualrtv CtlnllfflS\/Ofl A11d lnte,; rdy C1 me

Tree Service

David Lewis
ln su~d

2002 K1a ALO 4cyl 4 door
auto 35mpg 65 000 mLies
S3 250 (3040675 1192

JONES'

p

LAWN (ARE DIVISION

Free Estimate."

1998 Honda Odyssey van
87K loaded $5 995 1999
Avenger 68K $4 995 2000
Pl ymouth Breeze $3 895
1998 Blazer 4x4 $4 995 3
months/3 000 m1le warranty
1989 Newyorker $995 1996
Saturn $1 495 1997 Dodge
Ca avan $2 395 Others In
stock
COOK MOTORS
328 Jackson P ke
(740)446 0103

IF15

Close out on Bat of Furn al
~"- 1 "1Ll,.
Mollohans
200
Clark
Chapel Ad (740)388-0173 Loo kmg Ior a corn pLcker Ior
Per's New Ide. Mod 323
3 rooms and bath All ul hiLes
Couch and Lo\leseat for 740 6913 644B
paid Downsta rs no pets
Sa e Reclmers m both
$450/mo 46 Ohve St
LIVESIOCK
pieces Blue Plmd made by
(740)446 3945
___
England Less than 3 years
BeautLiul 2 slory townhouse old bought at BLg Sandy for
ove rlookLng Galhpohs c ty $1 800 Excellent cond1ti0n Arab an mare WLth tack Call
5pm 9pm
park K tchen Of:l LA Se lmg lor $800 (304)882 between
(740)388 9841
study 2 baths laundry area 3570 after 5PM
References reqwred secun Thompsons Appliance &amp; Butcher lambs Available
ty deposit no pets S900 mo
Repa r 675 7388 For sale November 14th $3 per lb
Call (740)446 2325 or e condLtLoned automat c hang1ng we1ght plus butcher
(740)446 4425
washers &amp; dryers refngera cost (740)441 9814 or

Crow-Hussell
t~
Funeral Home, Inc.
lllom

Janet Jellers
33795 Hiland Road
Pomeroy, Oh10

Whu.:h wuy s yo ur nest egg gomg?
NOT SURE' CALL TODAY

AV~

'

10x30

FOR SALE

NEW AND USED STEEL

815 Clark Chapel Ad
$450/month $500fdepos t
{740)367 7187

Phone

Sadly m1ssed by hiS
v. 1l e of 57 years
Nora Son W1lh am
and Brother Chester
(Sylvia) RICC

New and Used Furnaces
lnstallaiLOn
avail able
(740}441 2667

16x80 3 bedroom 2 bath

Storage

quartet lhosc thal

Nasca r Bedroom Decor
P1llow Sheets Bedspread
Curta1ns Wall Plaques
Ntghtstand
Bean bag &amp;
Lamp (304)675 5258

Box 189

191111 liASTEIII\

the Mason Leg1on

Aepa~r e d New &amp; RebuLII In
Stock Call Ron Evans 1
800 537 9528

All ELECTRIC
CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT

Ue the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

BAUM LUMBER
St . Rt 124 C h este r

985-3301

•

ol-oosso ooo

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

ota an

County Treasurer of
Meigs

r

Newly remodeled house Ln
GaiiLpotrs
$ 4 SS/month GracLous hvLng 1 and 2 bed
Brand new 2BR house n oom apartments at V1Hage
Manor
and
R vers de
Gall polLs
$495/month
Apa tments Ln Mrddleport

an s

parts of lots returned
delinquent by
the

1920 Hoos1er Cupboard
Anllque Server BIJffet sev
era! other Ant que 1tems

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments

and/or small hoLJses FOR
piLJS uhlltes and $45000 RENT Call (740)441 1111
deposLI
Te ephone 740 for appl cahon &amp; nformatLon
992 5421
Fum shed 3 rooms &amp; bath
For ant 2 story home 3BR downsta rs su table for 1
AIC $5001monlh $500 person 919 Second Ave
$295/mo utll t es paLd
depos t (740)446 348 1
(740)446 3945
House for Rent $250 a ::....::;_..:...,.___
mor th p us utLI !LEIS Depos t
References
No Pets
(304)675 4874

(740)441 1184

a

532A

03~0947 001

Parker George SECT
19 T4N R12W 9 468A
OUT
OF
10 OOA
9 468A
102 48
03~948 000
Parker George SECT
20 (262) W END EX
16A &amp; 19 4A N 88 09A
110989
03~949 000
Parker George SECT
20 W CENTRLA PART
OF FRAC 19 2 OOA
346 48
03~950 000
Parker George SECT
20 (262) IN MIDDLE
OUTOF7888A3663A
49 67
03~518000

Ridgway Crystal D
SECT 19 (640) SW PRT
OF 3 BOA N OF RO
50A
1245 99
03~1114 000
Short
Herbert
&amp;
Martella c/o Frederick
&amp; Sally Gerlach SECT 8
(640) SW OF NWI/4 &amp;
NW OF SWI/4 W OF CR
4 31A
302 80
03-()0616 001
Smith Richard &amp;/Or
GeorgiaSECT3T3R12
NW CORNER 1 SOA
OUT OF 10 41A 1 50
13768
03-D1232 000
Starcher Coy B S4
(640)T2R13265AOUT
OF 51 93A JOINING
114A liSA
715 30
0~834 000
Wood Rodney Lee
SECT 17T2N, R12W
W OF SECOR 30A OUT
OF 34213A EX 1/2
MINERALS
30A
253 28
04 CHESTER TWP
MEIGS LSD
04~042 000

u ne
SIDE: ccc ·:·:·c·"""'
05 00382 013
Morgan Kathleen Anne
6 Calhoun Alan J
SECT 7 T9 R15 PAR·
CEL 13 5 618A OUT
OF 132 044A 5 618A
2098 88
05~119 000
Morris Linda S Elal
SECT8SWOFNW1/4
&amp; NW OF SW 1/4 EX
&amp;A 7310A
97 80
05~120 000
Morris L inda S Elal
SECT 8 8 NW COR OF
NW 1/4 19 82A EX
5 525A 14 295A 155 23
05-()0121 000
Morris Linda S Elal
SECT 14 FR 7 E END
92A
11128
05-()0122 000
Morris L inda S Elal
SECT 1415 FR 1 SE
COR SE CR 42A
44 08
05~103 000
Oliveri Dante &amp;/Or
Cynthia SEC 3 SW OF
NW 1/4 &amp; NW OF SW
1/4 EX lOA W 30 OOA
EX 12 504A 17 496A
381 36
05-()0462 015
Patel Dlnesh K &amp;/Or
Panna D SECT 18 T9N
R15W
LOT 811
CHESTNUT
RIDGE
SUBDIVISION 34139A
376 59
0~626000

Ray John G SECT 20 •
21 FR 31 S PART OF W
112 5X40 6 50A 36 20
05~827 000
Ray
JohnGSECT20FR25
W PART 169 OOA EX
430350A 1259650A
•
1329 39
05-oo&amp;22 001
Sanders Ronald L &amp;fRo
Audrey J SECT 20
FRAC 19 N PART
6 794A OUT OF 88A
6 79A
5962 46
05~738 003
Shaulis Gerald P &amp;/Or
Cathy L SECT 32 T9N
R14W W PART OF
SEI/4 EX #4 VEIN
COAL 4312A 910 67
05~736 004
Shaulis Gerald P &amp;/Or
Cathy L SECT 31 NE
PART 1688A OUT OF
68 04A EX f4 VEIN
COAL 16 88A 128 48
05~736 005
Shaulis Gerald P &amp;/Or
Cathy L SECT 32 T 9 R
15 NW 1/4 OF SE 1/4
2 48A OUT OF 13 739A
2 48A
54 56
0~831 001
Tolley Dennis Wayne
SEC4T9R15 5387A
OUT
OF
40 21A
5.387A
79 36
05~831 002
Tolley Dennis Wayne
SEC 4 T9 RIS 0 434A
OUT
OF
40 21 A
0 434A
9 66

Chadwell Paul SECT 10
T2 R 13 FAIRVIEW
HGTS SUBDIV L,OT 88
855A
975 64
04-oo058 000
Grueser James E &amp;/Or
Barbara J c/o Randall
Hawley SECT 10 (262)
W 112 &amp; 10 NW OF E 1/2
lA
7728
04-ooo&amp;O 000
Grueaer James E &amp;/Or
Barbara J SECT 10
46A OUT OF 141A
46A
63.27
04-D0028 021
Whitlatch Crystal &amp;
Kautz William
D
FR4 T2N R13W 1 986A
OUT
0
67 6355A
1986A
4164
04-oo028 018
Whitlatch Crystal &amp;/Or
Kautz William
D
FRACTION 4 T2N R13W
4 9477 OUT OF 75 4473
4 9477
2640 38
04-()0112 000
Yonker Ray L SECT 11
(640) S PART OF 06LEBANONTW~
60 84A N PART OF NW EASTERN LSD
1/4 16 tBA
1228 34
06-D0036 000
05 COLUMBIA TWP Boggs Troy Eugene
ALEXANDER LSD
1/0r Styer Christop
her M SECT 28 E SIDE
05~382 015
OF NW 1/4 EX 25A NE
Bayha Wayne SECT 7 45 OOA
EX 2 269A
T9 R15 PARCEL 15 42 731A
378 32
10 668A
OUT
OF 06-D0036 001
132 044A 10 668A
Boggs Troy Eugene
11546 &amp;/OrTammy Lynn
05-()0634 000
SECT 28 T3N R11W E
Bennett Monlka L 1/0r SIDE OF NW 1/4 2 269A
Robb·Chapman Rl t a OUT OF 45 OOA 186 34
MSECT 16 NE COR 06-DOOJO.OOO
25,1\
971 54 Harter Ronald E SECT
05-D0085 001
28 SW PART N OF
Caldwell Bruce Jr &amp;/Or SE1/2 EX 3A 4A 150 00
Cindy S SECT 5 T9N 06~124 000
R15W 1 747A OUT OF Price Natasha Rhae
17 OOA 1 747A 135 48 SECT 27 SW PART OF
05 00462 008
NW114 EX COAL &amp;
campbell Douglas K 6 OTHER MIN 25 50A
Chen L SECT 18 T9N
13910
R15W LOT #2 CHEST· 06-D0078 000
NUT RIDGE SUBDIYI· Sellars James E I
SION 4 2139A 832 84 Crystal I SECT 21 T3
05-D0462 011
R11 1 38A OUT OF
Campbell Douglaa K &amp; 129 887 1 38A 964 78
Cheri L SECT 18 T9N
R15W LOT #7 CHEST·
07 LEBANONTWP
NUT RIDGE SUBDIVI·
SOUTHERN LSD
SION 2 8387A 74615
05-D0462 013
07-D0885 000
Campbell Douglas K I Bailey Gregory 0 &amp;
Cheri L SECT 18 T9N Kandlko Kathleen A
R15W LOT#9CHEST· Nka Bailey Kathleen
NUT RIDGE SUBDIVI SECT 13 S PRT OF SA
SION 4 7979A 87713 WEND 1 33A 127 05
05~134 000
07.01370 000
Craig Jean SECT 10 Bogard
Jerry
&amp;
NE&amp;JOININGLOTN37 MarilyntOOA LOT 140
CAPR 2ND ADD 02A T3N R11W
3 SOA
186 14 TRACT N3
40 13
05~685 000
07-D0366 001
Daniels Jennie Y &amp;/Or Filch Thomas Steven
Mike A SECT 27 FR33 SEC 25 T3N RttW
N END EX COAL EX 45 2 532A
OUT
OF
213A
EX
53 82A 12 959A 2 532A 10519
11 52A
1828 36 07~61 000
0~271 002
Hamlin
Norman D
Go1n Dayna FRACTION SECT 11 28 NE PT OF
32T9 R151494A OUT W 29A EX COAL
OF 31 53A 1 494A
10 15A
5813
..................... ... ...1199 83 07~62 000
05~271 004
Hamlin
Norman D
poln Dayna FR 32 T9 SECT 28 W END OF
Rt5
347A OUT OF 70A LOT EX COAL
25343A
347A 806 678A
3687
0~432 000
07-oo463 000
Jordan Dan L SECT 26 Hamlin
Norman D
TOWN 9N R15W 5 768 SECT 22·28 NW COR
OUT OF 76A 5 768A
NER EX COAL 3 22A
" :·::·,·::::·: :·,., .... 165 00
415 07
05~33 000
07-oo&amp;44 001
Jordan Dan L &amp; Kim Hamlin NormanD
SECT -27 FR 32 T9 SECT25 T3N R11W
Rt5 SW COR 5973 5397AOUTOF5700A
OUT OF 179A 5 973A 53 97A
309 46
" "·: :·::·:··:·:::""1136 54 07~226 007
Lee
0~73 000
Frederick A LOT 7
Lovell Mary C SECT 23 IOOA LOTS 180&amp;179
W PT OF Nt/4 EX 54A T2N R11W 05A OUT
065A OUT OF 128 46A OF 52A &amp; 95A OUT OF
065A
1 68 IOOA
143 26
05'~152 000
07~757 000
Maccombs Rex H &amp;/Or Sellera Darrell Lee c/o
Beth
E c/o
Sam Rebecca Rains SECT
Hudnell7
22 24 23 (160.1171) E t/2 OF
0~153 000
21 A W EX ALL MIN
Maccombs Rex H I!JOr 42 873A EX 5 944A
Beth
E c/o
Sam 38 929A
1234 75
Hudnell 6 20 W SIDE 07-DOOBO 000
OF N 112
17 62 Turner Kelly J SECT 11
05~t54 000
OF SW COR OF 23A
Maccombs Rex H &amp;/Or TRACT 1 &amp;OA 1962 30
Beth
E c/o
Sam 07-()0562 001
Hudnell5
22 24 Tyson -Drummer Teresa
0~155 000
M 100A LOTS 164 6
Meccomba Rax H &amp;/Or 185 34A OUT OF
Beth
E c/o
Sam 36 571A I 6 039A OUT

'

07-oo&amp;62 007
Tyson-Drummer Teresa
M tOOA LOTS 194 &amp;
185 4 060A OUT 38 571
&amp; 447 OUT 58 67A
4 507A
1686 79
07-oD240 001
Warner Arthur T &amp;
Janet M SEC 34 T2
R11 16SOA OUT OF
20A EX 4 824A EX
2 51 SA EX 1 SOIA
7 36A
709 76
07-oD913 001
Warner Arthur T &amp;
Janel M SEC 28 T2N
R11W 4097A OUT OF
42 50A
4097A
EX
0106A
03037A
1220 72
08 LETART TWP
SOUTHERN LSD
08-()0103 000
Dllcher Jeffrey L SECT
6 12 18 E END EX
COAL &amp; 3/10 OIL I
GAS &amp;A
350 95
08-()0143 002
Dllcher Jenme L I
Dllcher Chelsa SEC·
TION 16 TIN R12W
1 355A OUT OF 2714A
1355A
44218
08·00626,000
Harleos Jack E SECT 2
T2 R 12 lOT 1212
SECT (160· 1212 75A
OF 2A 75A
8 02
08-()0627000
Harleos Jack E SECT 2
(160) T 2 R 12 (1212)
SW PT 1 25A
27 09
08.00431 000
HarperBrendaASECT
12 ·1 7 MID OF RD EX
COAL 2658A 15271
08-()0432 000
Harper Brenda A SECT
12 ·1 ·7 ON N LINE E
OF RD EX COAL
4 90A
909 93
08~0315 001
Hill Paul Jr &amp;/Or Carol
IOOA LOT 249 T2 R12
lA OUT OF 2 OSA lA
2775 54
08~295 000
Hill Peggy S SECT 12·
17 (100· 255) Nt/2 OF
50 50A
EX
CEM
EX 17 201A 459A
681 :;n
08~296000

.s

Hill
Peggy
SECT 17(1 OD-255) S t/2
OF 50 50A 97A 430$7
08~445 000
Hubbard Kalil R LOT 19
BURNS ADD
53 09
08~514 000
Plichta
Kathryn
Virginia Etal LOT 6 12
18 (260) WEND 7A
10057
08~891 000
Proffitt Mark c/o Stave
Hill
LOT
#640
006A
4 74
08~072 000
Smack Brian K &amp; Linda
J LOT 14 STRIP N
PRT OF RD ONE LINE
06A
46586
08-oo073 000
Smack Brian K &amp; Linda
J LOT 9 14 ·15 (274)
ON S LINE OF SAYRE
1 SOA
118 65
08-00723 000
Wolle Rhonda R SECT
31 (212) SE COR EX
26A 1 74A
409 31
0~724 000
Wolle Willard Beryl
SECT 36 (214) NEAR
NE COR 11 A
2 48
0~725 000
Wolle Willard Beryl
SECT 36 (214) Nl/2 OF
Nl/2 OF NE COR OF
El/2 OF Et/2 24 72A
261 53
0~944000

Wolfe Willard Beryl
SECT 36 T2 R11 LOT
(214) NE 1/2 50A tO 67
09 OLIVE TW~
EASTERN LSD
09-00552 002
Aldridge Dana J &amp;/Or
Patricia L SEC 28 FR36
T4N R11W
LOT #1
8 536A
OUT
OF
93637A8536A 18997
09-oo077 000
Barber James Jr SECT
15 N PT EX 2A EX 6A
EX 15A 615A 265 90
09-00108000
Barringer Dorsel &amp;/Or
Mary Lou SECT 10 SW
COR
EX
50A
&amp;
EX 1 20A OUT
OF
830A 75A
775
09-00106 000
Barringer Dorsel R
&amp;/Or Mary Lou SECT
19 SW COR OUT OF
IOASWCOR SOA
65 75
09-oo050 001
Barringer Teresa 160A
LOT 1164 T4N R11W
02611A OUT OF 1 20A
02611A
6966
09-00110 000
Bartimus Harvey &amp;/Or
Carole SECT 17 SE OF
20A NE OF SEI/4 Rtt
T4 1A
91210
09-00511001
Bobo Bernard SECT 29
T4 R11 NEAR MID ON
W LINE 1 A OUT OF
15 85A 1 OOA 1719 55
09-00152 000
Bobo Bernard F SECT
29 PART OF 27A NEAR
MID LINE E OF CEM
SA
181862
09-0011!6 000
Boston Dale Allen
SECT 35 T4 R 11 MID
OF S PT OF SWI/4 9F
30 565A 5 019A 971 29
o9-o1117 000
Brucker James W &amp;/Or
Tina M SECT 30 S
PART OF SA N PART
lA
618 80
09-00358 000
Buchanan Gregory E
SECT 36 lA OUT OF
98 28A OUT OF SE
COR OF SECT lA
745 63
09-D0078 000
Buchanan Patricia A
c/o Patricia Buchanan
&amp; Terry L Barber SECT
11 Nl/2 OF SEI/4 OF
SWI/ 4 EX &amp;A 14A
132 74

Carter Ja ell F &amp;/Or
VIrginia
51
T4
R11 NE
RT OF
30 75ATRACT E OF RD
1 SOA
441 86
09~28 000
Church
George
K
SECT 4 10 IN SW COR
&amp; PART OF BOA 30A
"c··:·:·:·:·:·.. ·:·c"""162 52
09~430000
Church George K
SECT 9 N PART 26A
""":·:· :·:·: ..: ·:·:"""140 85
09~32 000
Church George K SEC
9 NW COR OF 4DA
NEt/4 EX 2 29A EX
0 299A 36 881A EX
0394A36497A 19774
09-00451 000
Church
George
K
SECT 11 3 9W1/2 OF
41 A N PRT EX 26A W
20 50A
111 07
09-00107 004
Church Kendall &amp;/Or
Rachel
t60A
LOT
#1165
T4N
R11W
1 204A OUT OF t 652A
1 204A
24 40
09.01361 000
Cline Dav1d LOT 30
MID ON E LINE OF
SEI/4 OF RIVER EX
63AHWY1 95A 15477
09-()0429 001
Cossin Sheila SECT 9
T4 R11 , 160A LOT
1166 443A OUT OF
11 35A 4 43A
71 99
09~31 001
Cossin Sheila 160A
LOT 1165 SECT 9 R11
T4 19 77A OUT OF
40 OOA 19 77A 359 48
09.00434000
Cossin Sheila SECT 9
PART OF 40A SW 1/4
1 06A
B 51
09 00346 000
Dailey Leonard Jr &amp;/Or
Jennl SECT 33 Wt/2
OF SE 100A EX 7 OOA
18 OOA
194 52
09~346 001
Dailey Leonard Jr &amp;/Or
Jenni SECT 33 FR32
T4W R11W 7A OUT OF
25A 7 OOA
879 50
09~374 000
Diamond Samuel A
SECT 15 ISA OUT OF
23 SOA 15A
198 36
09·00375 000
Diamond Samuel A
SECT 15 OUT OF SE
COR OF 26A W OF ST
RT 681 2 50A 1971 28
09·00966 002
Gabbert Timothy L
&amp;/Or Sharon Cia n a
c/o Timothy Gabbert
FRACTION 32 T4N
R11W 2 902A OUT OF
22 484A 2 902A 58 82
09~78002

Gillilan Mark A 20 YDS
W OF THE NE COR
37 69A OUT OF 47 69A
37 69A
516 94
09~0181 000
Glover David W &amp;/Or
Amber DON S LINE W
OF RD 50A
12 77
09~163000

Glover David W &amp;/Or
Amber D
LOT
3·9 DBA OF 46A ON S
LINE W RD EX 21/2 RO
SO SW COR 08A
637 29
09~162 000
Glover Davis W &amp;/Or
Amber D LOT 3·9 2112
RDS S OF SW COR
04A
0 76
09-00050000
Harris Charles Larry Jr
SEC 11 10 SW COR OF
9 SA SW COR EX SOA
1 20A
EX 0 2611A
0 9389A
283 42
09-00961 000
Harris Charles Larry Jr
SECT 10 SW COR EX
50A EX t 20A EX 6 SSA
100A LOT 164 1 OOA
275 66
09-00229 024
Harris Edward D &amp;/Or
Linda L 30A LOT 120
T3N R11W LOT 2 WEIS
SUBDIVISION 1368A
OUT OF 1 037A 81 27
09~229 025
Harris Edward D &amp;/Or
Linda L 30A LOT 120
T3 R11W LOT 3 WEIS
SUBDIVISION 1368A
OUT OF 1 037A 81 27
09~2013 000
Hayman GregoryT
30A LOT 121 T3 All
1190A OUT OF 30A
LOT 121 1190A 221 58
09~284 000
Hayman Patricia K
SECT 30 T4 R11 S
PART
OF
SWI/4
1 5496A
652 39
09-()0747 001
King John M &amp; Brenda
SECT15 FR27 T4N
R11 W 5 OOA OUT OF
27 OOA 5 OOA
81 27
09~025 000
Mld· Stala Trusl IV c/o
Tom B1shop SECT 11
39 MID ON W LINE
BET RO 96A
::".'""'''''"''''"""·490 58
09-D0096 001
Mugrage Todd A &amp;/Or
Brittney FR 35 SECT 21
&amp; 27 T4 Rll 19 OOA
OUT
OF
3900A
19 OOA
102 94
09~000

Mundry Chester &amp;/Or
Ethel LOT 7 MCD &amp;
TOR ADD
4784
09~344000

09~940000

Newlun Mary A LOT 24
N END OF 2 1/2 A SW
lA
58 42
09~941 000
Newlun Mary A LOT
(23) MCKEE AOD 14 32
09~942000

Newlun Mary A LOT
(24) MCKEE ADD 15 68
09~943000

Newlun Mary A LOT
(122) E SIDE OF MILL
1/2A
S
LOT
EX
5DA(SEC 24) 50A
1008
09 00944 000
Newlun Mary A LOT
(123) S 1/2 OF lA E
SIDE MILL LOT SOA
SOA
10 08
09~1054 000
Putman J1m &amp;lOr Ruth
SECT 24 NW CORNER
SA
1172 01
09 01210 000
Roush Donald Jeffery
SECT 24 Et/2 OF
SWI/4 EX 20A NW 75A
OF 9A NW COR 9A
75A
332 39
09.01150 000
Rucker James &amp;/Or
Connie SECT 6 SW
PART OF NEI/4 1 25A
: "":·c·c·c·,...: C"'""" 25 54
09·0 1156 000
Rucker James &amp;/Or
Connie SW PART 37A
7 75
09-00242 001
Runyon Jason Lee
SECT 23 T4 R11 NE
CORNER 1 OOAC OUT
OF 17 82AC t DDA
"""~~~ ·~~··: :·;:""" 425 65
09-D0352 001
Smith April D SECT 30
T3 R11 SE COR OF
15 25A TRACT 7 60A
OUT OF 29 69A 7 60A
""·::·:::0::::" ""255 86
09~1277 000
Sm1th Linda K SECT 7
9 OUT OF 31 56A S OF
RD EX 12A 50A 68 44
09-61061 000
Smith Linda Kay &amp;/Or
Donald E SECT 3 9 10
NPT OF 25 25A SW
PART 160A LOT 1161
1212A
6579
09 01062 000
Smllh Linda Kay &amp;/Ro
Donald E
SECT 11·3·9· 10 MID OF
S PART 160A LOT 1161
22A
119 t8
09~1290000

Smith Verdle W &amp;
Elizabeth K C/o Ruth
Ann Smith SECT 9
CHURCH LOT U B
3823A
76 82
09.01380 000
Vansickle Deborah A I
Williams Tim K c/o
Deborah Smith SECT 8
R11T46AOUTOFW
PART OF 24A &amp;A 162 9
09 00915 000
Webster Robert A &amp;/Or
Sue M IOOA LOT 127 S
1/2 22 2604A EX 5 OOA
EX 1 6477A 15 6127A
.................................29 80
09-DD917 000
Webster Robert A &amp;/Or
Sue M IOOA LOT 128 S
END
20 3903A
EX 5 OOA EX 1 7150A
EX 11 6937A 1 9816A
c·:":·:·c·· .................... 3 89
09~918000

Websler Robart A &amp;/Or
Sue M SECT18 S END
20 8885A
EX 5 OOA
EX 3 3523A 12 5362A
................... 23 60
09~1414000

Wells David R c/o Jaso
Wells LOT 16
564 t8
09~05002

Westfall Roger A &amp;/Or
Sheila A SECT 23 T4
R11 SW COR 1 037A
OUT
OF
21 662A
I 037A
3764 28
09~1478000

Westfall Sheila SECT
29 6475A OUT OF
10 365A 6475A t 60 59
09.01474 000
Wigal Ralph W 80 25A
.. .. ............................768 89
09~1475000

Wigal Relph LOT 3
SOA
86 31
09~1476000

Wigal Ralph LOT 2
: :·::·:·:: .·:::.......115 31
09.01477 000
Wigal Ralph LOT 4 EX
CHURCH LOT SOA
115 31
ORANGETWP
EASTERN LSD
ID-00020 01 5
Collins Keith 6/0r
Marjorie L SECT 35
R12W T4N 6 848A OUT
OF 219 925A LOT #14
6 848A
142 89
10-D0020 013
Coiii~S Keith A &amp;/Or
Marjorie L
SECT 35 R12W T4N
OUT
OF
6 067A
219 925A
LOTI12
6 067A":" :· :·c"'"' 10515
10-()0020 014
Collins Keith A &amp;/Or
MarJorie L SECT 35
R12W T4N 3 283A OUT
OF 219 925A LO:r 113
3 283A
524 65
10-D0t69 000
Dietz Bruce C LOT
SECT-12~ NE OF SE
1/4 EX 3 15A 7 44A
....... ., .....,., ............. 161 95
1O-D0171 000
Dietz Bruce C LOT
SECT -6 NE PRT OF SE
1/4 06A
116
10-D0172 000
Dietz Bruce C LOT
SECT 12T4 R 12 315A
OF 10 59A IN SW COR
315A
175260
10-D0280 000
Fessel Michsel SECT
36 T4 R 12 NW COR
25 77A OF 70A 25 77A
·::·,,., ...,., ....,.,...... 139 84
1 D-00441 000

Murphy Ricky L &amp;/Or
Connie S S36 NW COR
S OF RD EX COAL
NE114 NEI/4 2 30A
OUT OF NPT 2 30A
...................... ...... •576 62
09~871 000
Myers Keith &amp;/Or Judy
SECT 19 OF 37A IN WN
COR OF 70A
1120
2 OOA
EX
675A
1 325A
83 98
09-()0937 000
Newlun Mary A LOT 24
SW PRT OFt 17A E OF
SWAINS 6 6A 25A
""·::·::::·: ..:·:"""""13 57 Grate Herbert L &amp;/Or
09~938000
Helen Ruth LOT SECT
Newlun Mary A LOT 24 4 6 AC OUT OF 15 AC
SW PRT OF 4 50A ON OFF SE COR 5 53A
W LINE OF SWAIN ..._......, .,., .............. 3410 46
SOA
29 40 10-oo&amp;21 000
Hicks Randal E &amp;/Or
09-00939 000
Newlun Mary A LOT Jennifer R LOT S5 SOA
(139) SE COR BELOW OUT 20 SOA E OF ST

Koemg Ruth Frances
SECT15 E END N 112
22 75A
EX 8 406A
14 341A
140 72
10-()0436 000
Lodwick James R &amp;/Or
Karen L c/o James R
Lodwick LOT 3 399 61
10-D0471 004
Ritchie Charles A Sr
&amp;/Or Kathy A SECT 6
T4 R12 845A OUT OF
26847A 845A 16422
10-D0542 000
Shields
Ronald
Randall &amp;/O r Pamea
SueLOT (9) 174 X 48
112 SW PRT
31
10 00543 000
Shields
Ronald
Ran dall &amp;/Or Pamela
Sue LOT (10) EX 8 X
264
332 43
10.00770 000
Spencer Kenneth E
&amp;/Or Sandra S LOT 5
NE COR W OF RD
7S8A
82S 16
RUTLANDTWP
MEIGS LSD
11-()0747 oot
Anderson Joseph A
SECT 32 T6N R14W
9173A OUT OF 20 70A
9173A
272 50
11 00425 000
Barley Donna Faye
LOT SECT 36 T6 Rt4 E
PART OF r!E 1/4 SA OF
11A EX 1 89A 611A EX
4 7236
1115 55
1H1357 002
Black Ronald E &amp; Hart
Warren D c/o Ronald
BlackS 7-8 E OF LAND
OWNED BY ROGER &amp;
BLACK
DAWANA
2 33A OUT OF 4 54A
233A
1569
11~0147 001
Bnckles Da~ny A &amp;/Or
Peggy J SECT 2 T6N
SW
COR
R14W
14 723A
OUT
OF
16 50A 14 723 115 00
11-D014S 000
Bricklos Danny A &amp;/Or
Peggy J LOT SECT 14
2 SW CORNER EX
4557A 13 3443A
" """" ........ .......... ! 00 02
11.00981 000
Brickles Danny A &amp;/Or
Peggy J LOT 64 1OA
OF 81 20A ALL E SIDE
HAPPY HOLLOW RD
SECT 2 EX 12 70A
57A
211838
11 00940 004
Burns Paula M FRI
T&amp;N R14W 11146A
OUT OF
14 3128A
11146A
113 80
11 00732 001

SURVEY
11.00 703 000
Meis ter Ralph LOT
SECT 21 SW COR OF
20 04A NEAR MID ON
W LINE 33A
6 05
11-()0634 001
Painter Vlclor Ralph
SECT
1 T6
R14
3 8505A
1261 09
11 00273 004
Pierce Jeremy &amp;lO r
Pierce Martin PART OF
FRACTION 36 T&amp;N
R14W 2 724A OUT OF
39 185A
2 724A
.............., ....., ....... 134 65
11-()0029 000
Priddy David J LOT
SECT 14 15 NE PART
OF47A1A
22621
11~865000

Ramsbu rg
Earl
Emanuel &amp;/Or Mabel
LOT SECT 24 S PART
OF Wl/2 5 62A OUT OF
198 60A 5 62A 876 94
11-()0906 000

Robinson

Rebecca

Sue LOT SEC T · 1 S
PRT OF 30 47A S OF
RD EX 70A HWY
13 85A
3320 08
11-()0422 000
Searles Mark A LOT
#17
HUTCHINSON
SUBDIV
114
64X11002'
158961
1H1017 000
Smith Robert E Sr
LOT SECT 2 NEAR
MID OF SEI/4 3 25A
.............................,632 03
11~155 000
Smith Rolland E &amp;/Or
Karen D SECT 2 E
PART OF 2 DBA EX
RIGHT OF WAY 1 12A

·:·:":·:·:·:·'""''" " ""231 34
11 01249000
Swanson Johnny Paul
LOTW SIDE OF 40A 1/4
EX 4 75A NE EX 28 73A
127A
1520
11-01190000
Wamsley Samuel SECT
18 MID ON S LINE EX
~ 12A
74 26A
EX
20 7816A 53 478A
.............. ..............1031 59
11 01018 000
Ward Raymond J &amp;/Or
Terri Jo LOT SECT ·2 W
PT 28A NEAR MID OF
Nt/2 97A
435 37
11 01236 000
Williams Robert D Jr
ST 14 6 MID OF NW 1/4
EX 30A E PRT EX
1 30A EX 2 016A EX
477A 30 084A 756 58
11-01237 000
Williams Robart D Jr
ST 14·6 MID OF NW114
EX 30A E PRT 541A
OF 2 016A 541A 26 67
11-DOOB&amp; 000
Williams Robert D Jr
Chandler
Teresa &amp;/OrTeresa
L
Louise FR33 T6N R14 SECT&amp; OUT OF 3215A
OUT
OF NE END OUT OF 3110
2 5336A
2 6527 A 2 5~36A
SMA
4962
1418
11 00733 003
RUTLAND VILLAGE
Chandler
Teresa MEIGS LSD
Louise FR24 T6 R14
9 4326A
OUT
OF 12~444 001
21159A
9 4326A Black Ronald E &amp;/Or
·:·: ·:·:·:::": : ·:·.. .. .. .:53 45 Hart Warren 0 c/o
11~1192 000
Ronald
Black
c/o
Citizens
Bank
01 Jeffrey Tllli SECT 6 T8
Logan SECT 10 S OF R14 471A OUT OF
MIDWOFRO 3A
3988A 471A 87S77
'." :".:·: ·:·:·:..:·:·:"""1 46 03 12-D0076 000
11.01193 000
Dudding W H 2 FAL·
Citizens
Bank
01 LONS ADD 2 TRI W
Logan SECT 8 NE SlOE 10 N END TO PT
CORNER 4A
6S 04 AT S END
42 35
11.01196 000
12~188 000
Bank
01 Hysell David W &amp;/Or
Citizens
Logan SECT 9 PART Penny K ON W LINE S
OF 125A WEND OF OF NE CHURCH LOT
62 37A 56A
11 74 El/2 EX 14A 16A
11~1197 000
~·"·::~~,=~· :::·;""""'30 47
Clhzons
Bank
01 12-()0188 001
Logan SECT 14 ·9 SW Hysell David W &amp;/Or
PART OF NE 30A S OF Penny K ON W LINE S
RD 16A
3 23 OF NE CHURCH LOT
11-()0159 000
Wt/2 OF LOT 14A OUT
Cleland
Connie OF 30A 14A 416t75
Darlene
SECT
19 12-DOOBI 000
TOWN 6 R 14 LOT 1 lA Hysell Donald G 8
OUT 35 07 lA 1389 91 SECT 8 75A 724 51
11-D0256 002
12-()0264 000
Cleland James W &amp;/Or Justice Matlhew A
Stephanie G SECTION &amp;/Or Amanda t 5 FAL·
3 T&amp;N R14W 2 OOA OUT LONS ADD 15 53111
OF 16 266A 2 OOA
12-D0066 000
............................:906 13 Stanley Dennis &amp;/Or
11-D0313 000
Paula 21 EX FALLONS
Dust Lisa Ann &amp; Warth ADD 21
344 78
Melissa Lynn SECT 12 12-D0067 000
SE COR OF SW 1/4 Stanley Denms &amp;/Or
21 75A
429 60 Paula 21 FALLONS
ADD 21
EX 19
11.01317 000
Eblin James A SECT 1 SQ RDS 36X 115 SW
(640) APPROX lA OUT COR
8749
OF 6A PARCEL MID ON 12-()0068 000
N LINE 1A
655 t 4 Stanley Dennis &amp;/Or
Paula
21 FALLONS
11.01357 008
21 19
Eblin James A SECT 1 ADD LOT
T&amp;N R14W 1 021A OUT SQ RDS SW COR EX
OF 6 38A OLD RAIL· 36X115
263 77
ROAD 1 021A 21 88 12 00037 000
11~806 000
Strupe
Pollyanna
Elias Kathy J SECT 33 SECT 14 S (640) N
NE CORNER OF SE 1/4 LINE NWI/4 E OF RD
1 041A
2694 28 50A
31 90
11.01141 001
12-D0038 000
Fi sher David 1/0r Sirupe
Pollyanna
Cheryl Ann FRACTION SECT 9 (262) E OF RD
4 T6N R14W 2 993A ON S LINE 47A 390 71
OUT
OF
46 34A 12 00001 000
2 993A
32810 VIllage
Rutland
11-()0845000
SECTS T 6 R 14 SW
Franklin Esther Mao COR LOT #17 0 402A
Eta I
c/o
Bowers OF 14 669A 0 402A
Enterprises SECT 9
311 74
MUTCHLER ADD t6 12 00052 000
42A
8 9 Village 01 Rutland
1 1 - 6 000
SECTS (640) NEAR NW
Franklin Esthar Mae SWI /4 BET RD I CR
Etal
c/o
Bowers OUT OF 60A 15A
Enterprises SECT 9
83 34
MUTCHLER ADD #5 12-60054 000
42A
164 16 V1llage 01 Rutland
1H1194000
SEC TS (640) NR NW
Franklin Esth er Mae OF SWI /4 BET RD &amp;
Elal
c/o
Bo wers CR 45A
441 17
Enterprises SECT 9 NO 12 00070 001
DESC SOA
10 52 V1ll ag e 01 Rutland
11.01111001
SECT 8T6 R14 042A
Hysell Paul A SECT 19 OUT 057 A 05311 OUT
T6N R14W 1 237 A OUT OF 12A 7 644A OUT
OF 80 OOA 1 237A
OF 24 67A
905 27
........:·:·:::··:·:·::· .... 313 38 12.00092 000
11-DOOSS 001
Village 01 Rutland
Hy sell
Terry
&amp;/Or SECT 8 18A OF 72A N
Shalla SECT&amp; T6 N PRT OF 85A S OF
R14W 5 83A OUT OF PWRS OFF N PT 18A
33 20
...,., ..,., .., ...... 367 62
18 56A 5 83A
11~78 2 000
1 2~ 1 24 000
Imboden Robert LOT Village 01 Rullan d
SECT 8 (640)
lA
(7) LUH S ADD -4
564 34
356 20
12 00142 000
11-D0453 000
Rutland SEC
Keesee James Ell LOT Village
SECT 13 N OF MID ON B (640) OF 2 DBA MID

or

or

�Page BB • The Daily Sentinel
ON WLINE .251

www.mydailysentinel.com

EX COAL 2.05A ... 11.11 SHAW .............. 3825.74 1S:00133.000

........................... 391 .25
12-410159.000
VIllage 01 Rutland
SECT 14 (262) N PAT
OF .SOA N OF HSE LOT
IN SECT 8 6143A EX
.1860A ...•.......... 151 76
12-410160.000
VIllage 01 Rutland
SECT 14 (262) NEAR
MID OF S 1/4 1 2272A
EX 1.0921A .1351A
•···••········ ............106.06
12-410178.000
VIllage 01 Rutland
LOT .25A .......255.42
12-410196.000
VIllage 01 Rutland LOT
13............ ... ....346.79
12-410197.000
VIllage 01 Rutland
SECT 8 (640) W OF LOT
13 PAT OF 22 112A
.33A .................. 13710
12-410203.000
Village 0 1 Rutland
SECT 8 (640) S PAT OF
3.34A N OF BEAN N OF
CR .27 A............392.13
12..()(1204.000
Village 01 Rutland
SECT 14 -8 (640) E OF
ST AD N OF BEAN
.14A........ ...... ..... 8.89
12..()(1259.000
.
VIllage 01 Rutland
SECT. 8 (640) NEAR
NW COli. OF SW 114
.75A .. ..... .......... 556.76
12..()(1283.000
Village 01 Rutland
LOT 1 .36A ........325.71
12..()(1300.000
VIllage 01 Rutland
SECT. 8 (640) IN NW
CORNER OF SW114 E
OF RD. .20A. ...380.82
12..()(1344.000
Village 01 Rutland
SECT 14 -8 (640) NW
COR W OF BRIDGE EX
.1214A .4586A .. 247.24
12..()(1344.001
Village 01 Rutland
SECT 8 T6 R14 1214A
OUT OF .5BA .1214A
........................... 125.09
12..()(1421 .000
VIllage or Rutland
SECT. 8 R.14 T.6 (640)
RT.124
RUTLAND
STRIP 20' WD FA AD
.03A .................... 443.41

Donna b C/o Margaret Uzzle C/o Roy &amp; Ruth Anthony Paul b SrI OF4.39A 1.0849A

14·01226.000
15-410850.000
Rentals Unlimited c/o Robinson LOT 300
Clifford James W Jr Bell Drama D
LOT Mike Jones LOT 26 RIGHT OF WAY 5'WIDI!
SECT 36 (319·100) E 3 WEBB &amp; EARNSHAW BEHAN EX 6' X96' E THROUGH MIDDLE OF
END EX COAL EX EX
11 '
OFF
W PART................... 183.83 LOT 300................ 14.61
.021A 4.579A ....... 24.53 SIDE ................... .80.23 15-111267.000
16-00013.000
14-01045 000
15-410163.000
Slack Lenore S LOT Chapman Anna M
0111 Roberla E SECT. 8 Boyles Linda L LOT 309 .97A OUT OF 2.18A LOT 524 ............3184.31
(640)
112
PENNY (159 PALMER'S 3RD COR OF N 3AD AVE &amp; 16..()(1111.000
SURV. 1.50A ......468.57 ADD #159 N PART ON RUTLAND ST .. 2793.93 Chapman Anna M
14·01046 000
MILL STREET... 1559.12 15-410922.001
LOT 187............ 3117.98
0111 Roberta E SECT. 8 15·00564.000
Smith Larry M SEC- 16-410532.000
(640) #11 RADFORD Boyles Linda L LOT TION 29 TIN R13W Chapman Anna M LOT
SURV. EX COAL 8A
157 PALMER'S 3RD S 0.054A OUT OF .25A 524 E PART OF LOT
.......... .............. 141 .31 50' OF 65'S END .. 47.47 0.054A ....................5.61 524 ......................537.99
14-01456.001
15·00565.000
15-111083 000
16-112047.000
Family Homes Inc Boyles , Linda L LOT Smith Lorry M SECT 29 Chapman Anna M LOT
'SECT B, T2N, R13W, 158 PALMER'S 3RD S .33A N OF PAGE ST S 103
18'X42'
COR
.20A OUT OF 1 OOA"
50' OFF 55' S END
OF AD .33A .... 1018.42 COURT ST &amp; FRONT
................... 347.28 ............................319.73 15-110443.001
ST......................28n.43
14·00447.000
15-00295 000
StClair Myrtle Louise 16-410278.000 '
Jenkins Darrell G Jr Coates Cel&amp;sta C LOT PART OF LOT #2 10' Chapman Anna Marie
&amp;/Or Lois Ann SECT 32 412 POM H412 W 1/2
OFF W SIDE 10' X110'
LOT
2 LOT
520
(640) E PART OF N ............................730.58 .............................. 22.72 5385.5116-110279.000
140A EX 20A
1A. 15-410514.000
15-111451.000
Chapman Anna Marie
. ................. ......142 86 Cundiff Tim R &amp;/Or Strauss Arthur LOT LOT 189 SUB 4
14·00644.000
Debbie L LOT (449) (24) W 112 ........... 285.22 ......... ................6578.37
Lavender William A POMEROY'S ADD.
15-111328.000
16-110280.000
&amp;/Or Tamml SECT. 16 ............................950.88 Strauss Arthur J LOT Chapman Anna Marie
(640) S PT SW114 &amp; SE 15-00515.000
22
SHEFFIELD W LOT 206 25 112'X57 112'
PT SW EX.24A T.2 R.13 Cundiff Tim R &amp;/Or PART...................688.82 SW COR .. ........... 429.46
SA ....... ...............638.55 Debbie L
LOT 15-111~29 . 000
16-02058.000
14·00973.000
(446)
POMEROY ' S Strauss Arthur J LOT Chapman Anna Marie
Madden Kenneth W Jr ADD 446 ............ 200.00 22 SHEFFIELD 33'X56- LOT 206 EX 25-1/2 X
SECT. 34 (100·330) ON 15-01487.000
112'MID N 112........ 92.19 57·112 FT SW COR
CO LINE S OF RD. · Darst Jeffrey &amp;/Or 15-111212.000
........ ................ 2242.91
50A ................. 129.61 KitlyLOT 111 P. JONES Vukson Doris LOT 89 P 16-111366.000
14-110974.000
3RD. ADD.......... 1736.78 JONES 3RD ADD
Dodson Kathryn J LOT
MaddenKannethWJr 15-00682.000
............................231.15 54 NAYLOR'S RUN
SECT. 34 (200·330_ Darst Jeffrey R &amp;/Or 15-111977.000
........ ..................... 83.89
47A OF 1.60A ON N Kittle S LOT 143 P. Wandling Landis K 16-01370.000
LINE OF 100A LOT JONES 3RD ADD. &amp;/Or Agnes ST 29 T1 Eaton R1ck &amp;/Or Carry
.47A... ..... .. .... 303.24 NW114................... 32.49 R13 (640) PT N OF LOT 23 ................ 61.86
14-00210.000
15-00353.000
LEADING CR W OF 16·01371.000
Madden Kenneth W Jr Darsl Linn K LOT 97 P MID EX .488A 2.042A Eaton Rick &amp;/Or Carry
&amp;/Or Edna Jane
JONES 3RD ADD N97
.............................. 46.28 LOT 31 ......... ,........31.98
SECT 34 (100·330) ON ............. ............ 1417.27 15-410553.000
16-112401.001
N LINE tOOA LOT EX 15-111004.000
Wright Charles C LOT Eaton Rick &amp;/Or Carry
.033A EX .4A .697A
Davis Jacob S &amp;/Or 36 BEHAN'S 2ND. ADD. SEC 8 T2N R13W
...... ..... ... 118.94 Debby A LT 159 28.79' 10' E SIDE EX. 80' PART OF LOT #279
14..()(1971 .000
FRONT ON WILLIAMS LONG .................... 15.56 0.055A ................ 131 .66
Madden Kennelh W Jr ST BACK 62.9' THE 15-00554.000
16-02402.000
&amp;/Or Edna Jane SECT. 29.87' ........... .......371 .41 Wright Charles C LOT Eaton
Rick
&amp;/Or
34 .033A0.76
15-01019.001
34N PART BEHAN'S Carry.LOT 280 80' ON
14-00972.000
Davis Jacob S &amp;/Or 2ND. ADD ........... .. ..3.15 SOUTH SIDE
NEW
Madden Kenneth W Jr Debby A PART OF LOT 15-410555.000
SURVEY 0.095A
&amp;/Or Edna Jane SECT. 159 PALMERS THIRD Wrlghl Charles C LOT ............'................ 126.70
34 4A ...............304 48 ADDITION 0.022A OUT 33 BEHAN'S 2ND ADD. 16-112403.000
14-111239.000
OF 0.094A 0.022A
..............................74.45 Eaton RICk &amp;/Or Carry
Oliveri Dante N &amp;/Or ............................ .14.35 15-410727.000
LOT 281 LOT S SIDE
Cynthia S Et at SECT 15-01154.000
Wrlghl Charles C LOT 80' ON W &amp; 210' ON E
24 (640) N 112 OF SW Dav1s John M LOT 49 36 EIEHAN'S 2ND ADD. SIDE EX NEW SUR·
114 85A..........1065.22 COALPORT 30' E END ABOUT 40'X80' .... 69.03 VEY 0.053A ........382.94
14·00437.001
............................202.02
16-111459.000
Pullins G William &amp;/Or 15-00183.000
POMEROY VILLAGE
Ebers bach Ell Ill &amp;/Or
SALEMTWP.
Linda
FRACT 2 T2 Dav1s John M &amp;/Or MEIGS LSD
Barbara LOT 411 405
MEIGS LSD
R13 2.424A OUT OF Leanna L
LOT
1/2 #411 45'X80' ... 83.92
58.67A 2.424A .. 48.72 (48) COALPORT 48 X 16-410382.000
·16-lj0460.000
13-410781 .000
14-110140.001
N112 .. ................ 29.86 Baer
Builders
&amp; Edwards Vernard c/o
Dull Melvin R &amp;/Or Pullins Linda S FRAC- 15-01573.000
Developers Ltd LOT Jo~n David Edwards
Robin LOT 5. ....302.62 TON 2 T2N R13W Davis John M &amp;/Or 203 ........................ 68.33 LOl' 425
45'X100'
13-410209.000
6.7879A · OUT
OF Leanna L LOT 50 16-111827.000
' COR. UNION AVE.
Harmon Candy Etai 61 21A 6.7879A
COALPORT.. ...... 392.07 Baer
Builders
&amp; ............................704.56
SECT 11 NE PART OF ... . .................. 1491.38 15-111817.000
File Developers Ltd LOT 32 16-410527.000
File
NW 114 EX #4 VEIN 14·00140.000
Robert D C/0 VIrginia 4' E SIDE NAYLOR'S Robert D c/o Virginia
COAL 2.00A EX 1.00A Pullins
Sieve Pennington LOT 68 RUN .............,........ 11.11 Pennington LOT 256
1.00A .................. 203.72 SEC9(262)MID
PT BEHAN 2ND ADD 50' 16-111828.000
.45A OUT OF SUB. 2112
13..()(1639.000
223.50 MID PT EX .75A NE SIDE..............974.44 Boer
Bullders
&amp; S PART .45A .......19.16
Johnston Cecil E &amp;/Or W SIDE EX6.7879 15·00451 .000
File Developers Ltd LOT 33 16·01287.000
Rebecca J ST 15-27 EX0.870A 53.5521
Robert D &amp; Eileen c/o NAYLOR'S RUN
Flora Paul L LOT 407
SW COR EX SCH LOT ........................... 611.67 Virginia Pennongton ............................ 218.27 112 SECOR. ........ 98.92
30 45A
EX
.554A 14-111393.001
LOT (69) BEHAN 2ND 16-112320.000
16.()1258.000
29.896A ............ 2298.41t Pullins Stev.e SEC 9 FA ADD ·11' OFF N SIDE
Beer
Builders
&amp; Flora Priscillla LOT 406
13-00349.000
2 &amp; 6 T2N R13W .............................. 93.09 Developers Ltd LOT 1.2 58'XBO' W OF
Lambert Harold D &amp;/Or 1.19BA OUT OF 2.23A 15-110452.000
File 189 BURNAP ADD. YOUNGS . ............225.3
Sheryl Ann SECT 31 1.198A..................13.02 Robert D &amp; Eileen c/o SUB. 43 56' ON BUT· 16-111599.000
OUT OF NW COR OF 14-111187.000
Virginia Pennington TERNUT ST........314.35 Formyduval Timothy L
82.33A .25A
7.60 Quails BerUe SEC 8 W LOT (68) BEHAN 2ND 16.01341.000
LOT 18 SUB 4 CHERRY
13..()(1350.000
OF WILLIS HILL IN SE ADD 18' OFF S SIDE
Boer Edward T &amp;/Or ST 26'X60' ............ 88.00
Lamber1 Harold D &amp;/Or PRT 1.61A .......... 55.51 ............................736.17 Patricia D LOT 49 NAY· 16.()0368.000
Sheryl Ann SECT 31 14-111188.000
15-111235.000
Fox LORS RUN ......... 561.49 Gheen Bryan C LOT
NEAR NW PT OF SEC Quails Bertie SECT 8 Larry R LOT 467 EAST 16-111401.000
594 EX 35' E SIDE
1.10A..................634.27 SW PAT OF 40A SE HALF OF LOT 467
Baer Edward T &amp;/Or 167'X200' ............884.25
13-410351.001
PAT 1.97A...........67.87 ..........................2409.70 Patricia D LOT 425 16-00634.000
Lambert Harold D &amp;/Or 14-111189.000
15-410812.000
SUB 9 3 3/4X17' NEAR Gloeckner Elizabeth
Sheryl Ann SECT 31 T8 Qualls James E SECT Galloway Samuel R MID E PAT ALSO SUB LOT 3n E PART EX
R15 S OF NW1/4 2.50A 36 (100) MID OF E PAT &amp;/Or Joyce A LOT 14 8 50' X100' ......324.18
SCOTI LOT.. ...... 460.77
OUTOF9.00A 2.50A
0FW40A 4.06A
HORTON
&amp; 16-111474.000
16·00635.000
............................64 .06 . ....... ............ 1800.09 BOSWORTH ADD N14 Baer Edward T &amp;/Or Gloeckner Elizabeth
13-410354.000
14-111190.poo
............................6117.57 Palrlcla D LOT 425 LOT 584 BACK OF LOT
Lambert Harold D &amp;/Or Quails James E SECT 15-00521 .000
SUB 10...............387.15 3n ........................49.93
Sheryl Ann ST 31 .43A ;J5 (315) W PAT OF Gheen Franklin D &amp; 16-111476.000
16-111070.000
OF 3.90A ALONG N 21 .36A 5.BOA...... 77.85 Donne L.LOT PT. (157) Baer Edward T &amp;/Or Hendrix Leroy &amp;/Or
LINEOF1.10AWEND 14-111191 .000
E112LOT#15730' 0N PatrlclaDLOT427
JudyE SPARTV-221
84.68A .43A ..... .. 11.34 Qualls James E SECT GRANT ST W OF MOR· ............................ 597.82 P-423 .2101A .2421.13
13-410555.000
13 ·35 (100) SPAT OF ROW..................... 95.45 16-111885.000
16· 01867.000
Peyton Richerd A Etal 7A LOT E OF AD 15-00522.000
Baer Edward T &amp;/Or Jackson Michael &amp;
SECT 11 E OF NE1/4 4.09A ................... 65.96 Gheen Franklin L &amp;/Or Palrlcla D LOT 77 EX. VIctoria LOT 55 LIN·
EX 34A NE EX #4 VEIN 14-01276.001
Donna L
LOT SECOR ...............10.97 COLN HEIGHTS ADD.
COAL 9.05A ....1012.57 Quails Marcia E &amp;/Or (157) #157 45' FRONT 16-111886.000
.......................... 1326.69
13..()(1556.000
James E (100·215) SE SW
OF
HAYMAN Baer Edward T &amp;/Or 16-111495.000
Peyton Richard A Etal CORNER OF 2.225A ........................... 585.08 Patricia D LOT 50 NAY· Johnson David Gary
SECT 5 ON W LINE OF TRACT 3.005A OUT OF 15.00581.000
. LORS RUN ......... 625.24 &amp;/Or Tammy Elizabeth
NE114 EX #4 VEIN 8.52A 3.005A ..... 813.58 Haggerty Lucille PT 16.01887.000
FR 25 T2N R13W LOT
COAL 4.84A ........67.61 14·01221.000
LOT t414 75' N SIDE Baer Edward T &amp;/Or 262 NEW · SURVEY
13..()(1557.000
RldgwayJefleryL&amp;/Or OLIVES'r&amp;85'NPAR· Patricia D LOT 48 S 1.06A.............. .. 1427.16
Peyton Richard A Etal Bettina Renee SECT 8 ALLEL WITH BEECH PART OF LOT 48.12.34 16..()(1070.000
SECT 11 SW PART AT #7 OFF W SIDE N ST.. ...................... 192.61 16-410072.000
Mcgovern Jane Ellen &amp;
NE114 9.05A SW EX #4 OF HIGHWAY 1.35A
15·00582.000
~ arnhouse Edith
Wood Allen c/o Kelly
VEIN COAL 40.16A
..........................861 67 Haggerty Lucille M 'l:UNSQ H &amp; D ADD.
Klein
CLOT 262·17
............................726.41 14-111421 .002
LOT
428
POM. •............ .!..... .. ..... 24.15 SUB. 434 .27A ..492.85
13-110638.000
Roush Thomas E &amp;/Or 59'X125' ................93.93 16-410073.000
16..()(1071.000
ShulerBeulahSECT27 ConnleL.SEC 24 LOT 15-005$3.000
Barnhouse Edith LOT McgovernJaneEIIen&amp;
S CENTRAL PAT OF 305T1N R13W 0.235A Haggerty Lucille M
160 H &amp; D ADD...... 6.68 Wood Allan c/o Kelly
SECT N SIDE OF #124 OUT
OF
0.482A LOT 429 POM 50'X100' 16-00074.000
Klein
CLOT 262·17
EX MINERALS 1A
0.235A .................. 4.60 N PART EX 26'X50' S Barnhouse Edith LOT SUB. 434 .23A... 108.28
............................ 377.69 14-111421 .001
PART...................84.57 PART 161 H &amp; D ADD. 16-111093.000
13-410161 .010
Roush Tom E &amp;/Or 15.()0585.000
25'X40' ON N SIDE6.22 Mckenzie Bruce L Etal
Walker Debra A S 1/2 Connie L "SECT 24 Haggerty LucllleY
16·00075.000
c/o Kelly McKenzie
OF SW 1/4 SECT 25 LOT #305 R13W, TIN LOT 414 POM. E PT. Barnhouse Edith LOT LOT 262 ·18 N OF E
T8N R15W 5.00A OUT 1.50A OUT OF 1.982A" 96'X109 112' OFF S 100·306 #100 306· BAUER &amp; W OF
OF 12.00A 5.00A
..........................1427.91 END..... ........... .758.29 1.50A S OF 157·158- SEDORE EX COAL
.........................845 40 14-112410.000
15-110669.000
159·160 D ADD. 1.50A 5.52A ...... ..........783.73
13-410196.000
Roush Tom E &amp;/Or Herman Riel C &amp;/Or ............................. 17.77 16-01809.000
White
Gary
C/0 Connie L 100A LOT 304 Vonda S LOT
70 16-410076.000
Newland Giant A &amp;/Or
Christine Estes SECT &amp; 305 T1 R13 .456A COALPORT 70 SE Barnhouse Edith LOT Linda S LOT 488 112
318AOUTOF5585AS OUT OF LOT 304 &amp; PARTEX. 50'X60'SE
157H&amp;DADD.... 15.96 59' 0FFSSIDE
COR OF NE1/4 8A
.983 OUT OF LOT 305
........................... 593.94 16.01548.000
............................210.76
...................... 376 00 ........................... 29.15 15.()0089.000
Barlon Joey LOT 426 S 16-111810.000
14-410493.000
Lewis Peggy LOT (47) SIDE OF LOT 426 Newland Grant A &amp;/Or
14 SALISBURY TWP
Runyon Jerry &amp;/Or SHEFFIELD 47·S1/2
64'X183'X42.7' .22A
Linda S LOT 489 .17A
MEIGS LSD
Vannessa SECT 35 ............................ 246.49 ............................ 901.52 ON WETZGALL ST
~OriDS~0-~~:~ ~~- l~ 15.()0090.000
16.01549.000
(REAR) 44'X100' .17A
14-ll0011 .000
Lewis Peggy LOT (33) Barton Joey &amp; Seyler ............ .. ..............3.99
Archer Avon 0 &amp; leona 14..()(1494.000
SHEFFIELD 33-S 112
Michael
LOT
257 16-111811 .000
E SECT.25 (640) A Runyon Jerry &amp;/Or .........................2926.27 40' X50' BACK OF 59 Newland Grant A &amp;/Or
NOT TAKEN BY DEED Vannessa SECT 35 15-110959.000
.18A......................28.39 Linda SLOT 488 STRIP
FOR AT/WAY NEW (640) W PART OF Maynard Claude &amp;/Or 16.02410.000
6' W SIDE.............5.31
RT#7 1.505A .......30.28 43.56A E PART OF W Lena Mae LOT 66 Barton Joey &amp; Seyler 16-111812.000
14-111330.000
100A OUT OF 24A SA BEHAN 3X 10' E END &amp; Michael. LOT 37-53 RT Newland Grant A &amp;/Or
Baer Edward T &amp;/Or ............................149.18 50' W END.......... 36.49 #124 APPROX 1.55A Linda 5 LOT 489112
Patricia D SECT 8 14-111060.000
15-110960.000
EX .094A 1.456A
............................. 16.40
(64b)
NW
OF Smith Malthew &amp;/Or Maynard Claude &amp;/Or ............................ 462.67 16-00098.001
WILLIAMSON 4 1/2A Lisa SECT. 32 (640) NW Lena Mae LOT 65 16-111478.000
Norman Laurie L &amp;/Or
MID S .25A ..........285.45 EX. 10A E EX. COAL B~HAN ADD W 60' E Barton Joey J &amp;/Or Mark F 40'X112' N
14..()(1407.000
38A ....................829.27 70 ....................... 135.04 Peggy PLOT 426 STRIP PORTION OF ABAN·
Basham Gary G &amp;/Or 14-111469.000
15-111024.000
24'X181 'X2 213' ON N CONED BEECH 6.33
Braley Raelynn SECT Wickersham Jeffrey C Moiler James A LOT 66 SIDE.................. 30 96 16-00099.001
26 NE PART OF NE 114 SECT 30 T.2 R 13 (640) BEHAN ADD Wl/2 EX 16.01479.000
Noltnan ~a urle L &amp;/Or
OF SW 114 1A.1259.58 N PT OF NWt/4 EX 30A 161/2' N SIDE 49'X100' Barton Joey J &amp;/Or Mark F " PT OF LOTS
14-410218.000
.
54.25A ..... ....... 1461 54 ..........................182.34 Peggy P
LOT 6,7,8,9, &amp; 10 LASLEY
Bell Tarry L &amp;/Or Rita K 14·01106.000
15-111025.000
426 SUB LOT #3 LOT ADD" ................ 1398.75
SECT 24 -30 (100) NW Wilson Christina SECT. Miller James A BEHAN #426
66
213' 16·00107.001
PART OF 3.30A N56 8 (640) NE COR. OF ADD 60' X11 0' S OF FRONTAGE X 175'
Norman Laurie L &amp;/Or
PENNY SURV .50A
Wl/2 N4 A OF SURV. LOT660N3RD1191 .57 ............................ 149.82 MarkF LOT 25 (262)
............................604.00 .25A ................. 189.98 15-110985.000
16-01477.000
MID OF 12ATRACT ON
14-111223.000
Moiler Marilyn Jean
" Barton, Joey J &amp;/Or BEECH ST .09A OUT
Clifford James W Jr
15 MIDDLEPORT VIL- LOT 327 LOWER POM Peggy P" LOT 426 -li6 OF 74A .09A ...... 3.19
SECT 36 (31 B) E END LAGE
.............. .......... 3306.16 213X179 ' SW LOT 2
16-111368.000
EX COAL 3.10A.. 33 35
MEIGS LSD
15-410250.000
.. ......................... 542.97. Qualls James E LOT 6
14-111224.000
Phalin Keith D &amp;/Or 16-00015.000
NYE ADD EX 10'X75' 1N
Clifford James W Jr 15.()1352.001
Brenda LOT
4 Bentley Jerry L &amp;/Or ST E COR 1O'X75' ON N
SECT 30 (1 00) #4 Baer Builders And HOI;IART ADD 14
Donna D c/o Margaret OF5 50'X150' .......51.45
PENNY
SURV
EX Developers Inc PT LOT ...........................728.43. Robinson LOT 173 S 16-111369 000
COAL 23.14A ...464 04 30
SE
12.56 'X30' 15..()(1132.000
PART OF 173 EX. Qualls James Edward
14-111 225.000
37.44'X37.30' .. .288.92 Rentals Unlimited c/o CHURCH PARCEL
LOT 256 TRAINS ADD
Clifford James W Jr 15..()(1849.000
Mike Jones LOT 25 ,............................ 27.70 W 28' .................. 112.62
SECT 30 (100) ON W Bell Orema 0
SHEFFIELD SW1/4
16..()(1016.000
• 16-111380.000
LINES OF THOMAS CR LOT 2 WEBB &amp; EARN· ............................ 768.25 Bentley Jerry L &amp;/01 Rathburn Chas S &amp;

a

3

Friday, November 11, 2005
Greene LOT 1 1.86A NE
PAT OF FRAC 10 N OF
AD EX 161/2 1.88A
.............................. 43.47
16-111381.000
Rathburn Chao S &amp;
Lizzie c/o Roy &amp; Ruth
Greene LOT 262 ·18 1A
S PAT OF 3A W OF
CROUGH &amp; FRAC 10
1A.........................23.52
16-111069.000
Rentals Unllmlled An
Ohio Partner c/o Mike
Jones
hlp LOT 2 50'
ON W SIDE SPRING
ST........................ 973.22
16-410290.000
Rentals Unllmlled An
Ohio Partner c/o Mike
Jones
ship
LOT
17 BURNAP ADD NE
COR ....................204.86
16-410291 .000
Rentals Unlimited An
Ohio Partner c/o Mike
Jones
ship LOT 199
N COR S OF SUB 17
BURNAP ADD ........ 6.43
16-410292.000
Renlals Unllmlled An
Ohio Partner c/o Mike
Jones
ship LOT 17
BURNAP ADD .... 390.89
16-110450.000
Rentals Unlimited An
Ohio Partner c/o Mike
Jones
ship
LOT
311 20' E SIDE...714 .23
16-110603.000
Rentals Unlimited An
Ohio Partner c/o Mike
Jones
ship LOT 511
.70A APPROX .....n5.47
16-410742.000
Rentals Unlimiled An
Ohio Partner c/o Mike
Jones
ship LOT 425
WEHE ADD. SUB. 16
............................103.07
16-410743.000
Rentals Unlimited An
Oh1o Partner c/o Mike
Jones
ship LOT 425
SUB. 17............... 602.21
16-112605.000
Rentals Unlimited An
Ohio Partner c/o Mike
Jones
ship
PART
OF LOT 2 W. SIDE
SPRING AVENUE 4.7-1 '
X 80' ............... ........ 7'.21

Castle Mildred V LOT ......................... 1556.73
(5) ........................347.78 18·00973.000
17.()0198.000
Hood Stephen Todd c/o
Black James &amp;/Or Clayton Shane &amp; Stacy
TraciSECT 2 (640) MID Mills
SECT 36 NW
OF S 1/2 ON N LINE OF COR OF 5.52A ON W
W OF RD 6A ....1481 .71 LINE S OF RISING
17..()(1740.000
.96A ...................302.35
Brooks Dennis &amp; Tina 1B-ll0251.000
SECT.-15
NE
OF Leamond James SECT.
PAGEVILLE .4011A
16 ABOUT 6'X49 ADS.
........................... 759.41 WEND 2A ......1124.56
17-410741.000
18-110804.000
Brooks Dennis &amp; Tina Mcclintock John F Sr
SECT. · 15 NE OF &amp;/Or Mcclintock John
PAGEVILLE 3.3489A
F II .
SECT 23 N
.......................... 1805.72 PT EX 20A N SIDE OF
17-410011.000
W 75A 69.76A EX
Cochran Charles W lv 64.6132A 5.1468A
LOT (10) 1.039A N PRT ....................., .....299,97
OF 4.7069A 1.039A EX 18-00805.000
.08A .959A ..... 5670.60 Mcclintock John F Sr
17-410352.000
&amp;/Or Mccllnlock John
Cochran Charles W lv F II
SECT 12·23 E
LOT 10 2.4369A OUT END EX COAL 7 EX
OF 4.7069A EX 1.137A .38A TO ST RY 49.76A
1.2999A .............. 793.51 EX 49.4124A .3476A
17-ooo21 .000
Dill .............................. 10.89
Lisa M LOT SECT ·14 18·00282.000
6A OUT OF 134.48A SE Miller Robert L SECT.
COR 6A ............. 613.47 11 NE OF NE 114
17·00022.000
EXCEPT 26.1055AC.
Gaines George E &amp;/Or 3.8945A ..............715.89
Melinda SLOT SECT 1 18·01193.000
Nl/2 OF NEI/4 EX Smith Paul Michael
11 .25A 73 .25A ... 415.55 SECT 10 ·PART OF
17-410746.000
18.52A SE OF 111A OF
Gibbs William E &amp;/Or NW112 EX 3AW SlOE
Melinda c/o Melinda 3A ..................... 1896.19
,Gibbs
SECT.
14·7 18.()0015.001
(650) $1/2 OF SW1/4 Smith Timmy J &amp;/Or
EX. 5.07A 50.93A
Tammy S .418A IN
......................... 1438.98 100A LOT 286 &amp; 1.576A
17-00747.000
IN SECT 29 FOR A
Gibbs William E &amp;/Or TOTAL 1.994A 5935.46
Melinda c/o Melinda 18.00189.000
Gibbs
LOT SECT.-7 Thacker Anthony W
(640) MID. OF S1/2 OF &amp;/Or Tonya A SECT. 12·
SW114 24A ......... 136.08 16 S PT OF 17.72A W
17-410345.001
OF CR. EX. COAL
Haning Lyle Bruce .64A.................. .. 429.26
SECT 30 T7 R14 18-110429.001
5.865A OUT OF 31 .42A Wilson Charles D Jr
5.865A ................ 224.78 &amp;/Or Powell Wilma L
17-00252.002
100A LOT 282 T2 R12
Hoff James Lloyd &amp;/Or 1.0701A
OUT
OF
Barbara M FR36 T7N 2.2613A 1.0701A
R14W
28.289A OUT ........................1757.49
OF 54.51A. 28.289A
............................320.78 RACINE VILLAGE
17-110543.001
SOUTHERN LSD
Howard Gerald W &amp;/Or
~6-111153.000
Barbara A SECT 12 T7 19-410159.000
Ritchie Charles A &amp;/Or R14 1.24A OUT OF Dettloff Barbara
61
Kathy A LOT
1224 93.32A 1.24A.... 270.17 .............................. 77.85
.28A E OF FElGER &amp; 17-00576.000
19-00161.000
MERRICK EX. COAL Lawhorn Arleen LOT Dettloff Barbara 67 #67
.28A...................... 94.54 (20) NORTHERLY SIDE ........................... 137.38
16-111259,000
OF LINE OF NW COR 19-410180.000
Russell Randall S &amp;/Or OF LOT #20 ............ 3.63 Johnson Teresa L
Cynthia L
LOT 17-00579.000
SECT.12·16 (640) IN #5
1 BIDDLE SUB ...182.79 Lawhorn Arleen LOT W112 OF REYNOLDS
16-111260.000
SECT -14 E PART OF LOT ON S LINE .21A
Russell Randall S &amp;/Or LOT
#14
HAR· .......................... 502.65
Cynthia L LOT 2 BID- RISONVILLE 1.12A
19-410255.000
DLE SUB .......... 1008.47 .............................. 59.07 Layne Lee &amp;/Or Anna
16-01261.000
17-410737.000
Lee SECT. 16 (640) IN #5
Russell Randall S &amp;/Or Thomas L &amp;/Or Janet BET. POM. &amp; FT BEND
Cynthia L LOT 3 BID· LSECT. 17 S OF RD. RD•• 55A ............860.38
DLE SUB. POM.#546 &amp; OUT OF 26.82A EX. 2A 19-110524.000
547 BIDD).E SUB. 8A .........................48.97 Rose Leah R LOT 48
CONV.SMALLER LOTS 17-410738.000
Lee ,62' FRONTAGE LESS
............................ 109.05 Thomas L &amp;/Or Janet 16.30' LEAVING 45.70'
16-111533.000
See tSECT. 11 (640) W OF ..........................2378.22
Kenneth David LOT NW114 OUT OF 73.30A
162 EX 27' N &amp; EX 40' 22.864A .............. 179.62
LOT SIZE 25' FRONT X 17-410854.000
150' LENGTH .....149.25 Napper Darrell &amp;/Or
16-112281.001
Bonnie SE OF
N
Seyler Michael M
tOOA 36.50A .. 1102.04
LOT 230 4.5'X20' SW 17·00610.000
CORNER ...............3 93 Phelps Stanley &amp;/Or
16-112282.000
Sue
SECT 36 2A
Seyler Michael M LOT OUTOF25A 2A 111.38
231 5' S S1DE ........ 25.64 17-410340.000
16-02283.001
Preast Wesley 0 &amp;/Or
Seyler Michael M ' LOT Christina LOTSECT -3
232 15.49'X85.94' &amp; E END OF S112 OF
15'X85.30' NW COR
NE1/2 1/4 EX 14 415 A
..............................41 .39 14.60A ............. :.165.65
16-02411 .000
17-410341 .000
Seyler Michael M LOT Preasl Wesley 0 &amp;/Or
230 171/2'X 45' NW Christina
COR EX 13'X45' ... 21.69 SECT 3 T.7 R.14 5.40A
16-112412.000
............................ 368.95
Seyler Michael M LOt 17-00677.001
231 7 112' X 45' E END Richards
Steven
.. ............................36.48 Daniel .SECT 30 T7
16-02413.000
R14 3.049A OUT OF
Seyler ..,lchael M LOT 9.70A 3.049A 200.64
231 5 112' E END ..32.05 17-ll0051.000
16.02414.000
Romuno Dan &amp;/Or
Seyler Michael M LOT Romuno Sue &amp;/Or
231 45' X 871/2'
Romun o Franc o
........ .................. 1050.44 SECT 26 NE CORNER
16-112578.000
2.623A .................. 55.90
Seyler Michael M MAS· 17-410052.000
TER CARD 5.84A EX Romuno Dan &amp;/Or
.115A 5.725A .......B9.13, Romuno Sue &amp;/Or A
16-01637.000
omun
o Franc o
Snider Randy P &amp;/Or SECT 21 -22 SW COR
Janet SLOT 262·17 EX STRIPS EX 12A
.17A SUB 483 314 SUB .924A .................. ,.10.54
11 .17A................. 31 .94 17..()(1804.000
16-410809.000
Sllsher David L SECT.
Taylor Dale E LOT 255 17 W PART OF SE1/4 S
120' ON POM. ATHENS PART OF MID. LOT 4A
RD ..................... 1007.72 ............................ 278.38
16.()0374
17-410736.000
Wellington Steven E Stanley Allee SECT. 29
LOT 592 .............. 430.73 2A OUT OF 56.73A
16-01845.000
OUT OF N SIDE 2A
Welllnglon Steven E ............................185.19
LOT
41
SUB. 17-110696.005
2.7...96.4516-111010.000 Trout John W &amp;/Or
Wells Don W &amp;/Or Carolyn J SECT32T7
Laura J LOT 259 SE R14 5.027A OUT OF
COR .22A ................ 5.31 63.067A
5.027A
16-111881.000
........................... 849.30
Werry James M Sr Etal 17-410848.000
LOT 37 NAYLORS RUN Welsh
Leroy &amp;/Or
............................ 255.38 AnnaSECT 27 -28 SW
16-111762.000
PART OF 93 1/2A W
Werry Mark K LOT 20 17.53A................ 238.14
LINCOLN
HEIGHTS 11·00851 .000
ADD .................... 525.88 Welsh Leroy &amp;/Or
16-111930.000
Will AnnaSECT 27·28 SE
Carl Edwin &amp; Marlel PART OF 931/2A W
Jean LOT 237 STRIP END 7A ................79.40
66' WIDE BACK OF LOT 17-110856.000
253 ........................ 43.03 Welsh Leroy &amp;/Or
16-111931 .000
Will AnnaSECT 27 NW COR
Carl Edwin &amp; Marie! 50A.................... 663 .85
Jean
LOT 253
17.00855.000
.......................... 1362.76 Welsh Michael &amp;/Or
16-110698.000
Johnnl SECT 27 SW
Wilson Joseph A &amp;/Or OF
AD
38 .00A
Hennessy Maureen
EX:5.00A 33.00A •
E c/o Maureen E .......................... 309.88
Hennessy LOT 556
SUB. 1....................5.78
SUTIONTWP
16-410699.000
SOUTHERN LSD
Wilson Joseph A &amp;/Or
Hennessy Maureen
1 8..()(1264.000
E c/o Maureen E Adkins
Becky
K
Hennessy LOT 262·17 " SECT. 17,T.2N, R.12W,
S SIDE NEXT TO SUB. 1.13A OUT OF 3.42A
2 OF 556 1.15A.. 325 .69 1.13A" .............. 1730.03
16-110700.000
18·00124.000
Wilson Joseph A &amp;/Or Brlnager Timothy D
Hennessy Maureen
SECT 10 NE COR OF
E c/o Maureen E SW 114 1.5521 A OF
HennessyLOT 556 5.78 13.87A 1.5521A NEW
SURVEY...........5187.47
18.()0863.005
SCIPIO TWP
MEIGS LSD
Davis Jaffrey L &amp;/Or
Brenda J SEC 36 1OOA
17-410141 .000
LOT 296 1.0849A OUT

Friday, November 11, 2005
ALLEY OOP

The Dail y Sentinel • Page B9

www.mydailysentinel.com

SYRACUSE
VILLAG E
SOUTHERN LSD

BRIDGE

20-410237.000
Bear Builders And
Developers Ltd LOT 19
............ ... . . 44 94
20-410238.000
Bear Builders And
Developers Ltd LOT 11
........... .. . .... 459 06
20·00104.000
Cottrill Sharon S LO'[
&amp;...................... 751 41
20-00744.000
Cottrill Sharon S lOT 9
EX. COAL. ..... t 54 37
20·00132.000

Phillip
Alder

ACROSS

North

And notice is her..ebj' :
given that th whole ol
such severa l trac t s~ '
lots or parts of rots , '
will be certified for'
foreclo su re by th!l
county Aud1tor pur-·
suant to
law, ol'
forefelted , to the State,
unless
th e I Rx.e s ,

10 A 5 3

+

• J IU4 2
.. 9 7 4

Souih
.
•

+

Q J !07 S
76 4
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... A II 2

Dealer North
Vulnerable Both

WtiAT IS Sti~ 1··· i~t
SO/ll&gt;~ll PATilOL 1!

JEST TAKE ONE

MY EAR!

!
;'

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•

THE BORN LOSER
p--i Dl\)\--\'\ \'-.1-\0W '{OU W ei!£ ""'i
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N-orth

East

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....

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TI-\IS PLAAT
TO (,I&lt;:Q\o-,1 I

E&gt;Ot-ISI\1I

popular But tn addition to games these
s1tes have message boards where players may pose problems and quenes
Th1s declarer play bra1n-teaser was posted on the MSN Bndge Club by
PnorKnD'Ivledge whose real name IS
Elliot ltk1n of Lovettsville Va In four
spades the play begms w1th a d1amond
to dummy's ace. the spade k1ng to East's
ace. the d1amond k1ng cashed, and a
trump back to the queen, West follow1ng
P-low should you, South, continue?
With five pOlnled·SUI! Winners you need
e1ther three hearts and two clubs or two
hearts and three clubs So maybe you
planned to take two rounded-su1t !messes But there IS an extra chance At tnck
f1ve, lead a heart to the board's ace,
shunmng the tmesse Return to hand With
a trump and play a heart toward the
board If dummy s Jack w1ns, lead a club
to your ace and play your rema1n1ng heart
toward the queen If West has the k1ng .
you get three heart tn c~s
If the heart jack loses to East's kmg and a
heart comes back. you fmd out 11the su1t
IS d1v1d1ng 3-3 If East start~d w1th four
hearts you Will. need the club fmesse (or
to guess to drop East's doubleton queen
when he started w~h 2-4-5·2 diStnbu·
l1on) The extra chance anses w1th the
g1ven d1stnbutton Alter tak1n g th e second
heart tnck w1th h1s kmg, East 1s endplayed He must e1th er lead a club away
from h1s queen mto dummy s kmg-Ja c~ or
concede a ruff- and-sluff
Watch out for "pract1ce f1nesses.~ where
the f1nesse ca nnot ga1n a tnck and m1ght
lose one

SEEolol&amp;

HE!':. HAlf!. UNDEI':. THE

PEANUTS
l SEE TI-lE FLYING ACE
IS ON 1415 WAY TO BILL
MAULDIN'S 1-lOUSE TO
QVAFF A FEW R.OOT BEERS

BILL MAULDIN WAS
GREATEST CARTOONIST
OF WOI{L.D WARn: ..

T~E

1-lE DREW
GREAT MUD

SUNSHINE CLUB

AIJD

(}l(AP

/

GARFIELD
NEX'f, ON "M051'

AMAZING~ POL-ICE CH,I'ISE:!'L. I ~

7"Uifi'UIIsllailp ~ri~ttlll'
(740) 446·2342

The Daily Sentinel
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........ 'lllrthday:

AH , IT MUST BE
VETERANS DAY .

35 Bolted
37 Pmpotnt
"Key
40 Big
Largo"
pitchers
actress
41 Kimono
At the stem
fastener
Led)l's
42 Fruitstand
honorHtc
buy
Clean water 43 Regions
org.
45 Tracking
Homo
system
saptens
46 Flyleaf
admission

CELEBRITY CIPHER

AstroGraph
n ·s TRUE !

Gain

PlaytnQ bndge onlme has become very

BARNEY
UNCLE SNUFFY, WANNA
SEE ME DO A
MAGIC TRICI&lt; ? SHORE

South

A problem from
an Internet site

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

(11)11 , 18

(304) 675-1 333

A A !I
• K 9
KQ9 7 5
... Q 10 6 j

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Nancy Parker Grueser
Auditor
of
Meig'J
County, Ohm

. .~,~ .... '" ~ leasant !\ rgt s1rr

llll 05

.. K J 3
East

West

assessm ents,
and
penalties are paid.

(740) 992-2155

42 Rain forest
parrot
1 Ripen
44 Regal
4 --II flick
emblem
46 Brew,
7 Trial VIPS
1D Gator Bowl
as coffee
47 Cream puffs
st
11 Knot
51 Toward
sheller
13 Qu•lt
stuffing
52 Highway
14 Gun the
53 Hod a picnic
engine
55 Spur on
15 Revival
56 Baja Ms.
shout
57 OuHit
16 Burn
58 USN oHicer
soother
59 "- Rosen17 -and
kavalier"
12
dearest
60 Joule
19 Quiet
fraction
13
20 Sitcom
wattress
DOWN
21 PC
1 Kenya's lac. 18
message
2 H1dden
22
(hyph.)
23 Throw off
valley
heat
3 Roof
23
overhang
26 Untamed
28 Felt boot
4 Trafftc
24
29 P.O. service
tie-up
30 Siren
5 Happen
25
34 Wrist
as planned 27
opposite
(2 wds.)
29
36 Murky
6 time
38 Mekong
to beware 31
native
7 - lame
32
39 Listens to
8 Lagoon
41 Toasl
maker
33
1opper
9 Quell

4 K 64 3
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Counts VJctor A 1 EX.

HIGHWAY &amp; COAL LO r
1 CROOKS 1ST ADD.
............... . . . t31 08J
20..()(11 33.000
Counts Victor R 3
85X59X94X32' LOT 3
CROOKS 1ST ADD
.......... ......... ' .96 9 1
20..()(1134.000
Counts V1c tor R 2
75X50X ~5X32 ' LOT 2
CROOKS 1ST ADD.
............. ....
96 94
20·00268.000
Davis Mark Allan &amp;/Or
Mary Ann LOT 298 NE
OF
#10
SPRING .
GREEN .12A ... 15 57
20·00263.000
Davis Mark Allan &amp;/Or ·
Mary An n LOT 9 50 E
END N 1/2 . 45 A 2 0 •
00264.000
Davis Mark Allc:m &amp;/Or
Mary Ann LOT 10
.... . .... ...
216 81
20..()(1266.000
Davis Mark Allan &amp;/Or.
Mary An n LOT 297 NE
OF
#1 0
SPRING
GREEN .21A ... 25.72
20·00267 .000
Davis Mark All an &amp;lOr
Mary Ann LOT 298 r4
t10 ........... .. 466 06
20..()(1066.000
Wood Robert A &amp;/Or 1
Catherine A .35A OU r
OF 11 23A PART OF '
9.60A .35A .... 13 51.53
20-00284.000
Wood Robert R &amp;/Or '
Catherine A LOT 295 ,
SI!CT36 R12T.2 OU r ·
OF 4.743A 168A
,
............. ..
.. 289.91 .

NEA Crossword Puzzle

Saturday, Nov. 12, 2005
By Bernice Beda Oaol
The year ahel!ld co uld tu rn ou t to be an
eKc1t1ng , busy one tor you bol h soc1ally and
career-wiS e where yo u may learn some
creat1ve new ways o f ex press1ng your talents and attnbutes to the1r best advan tage
You'll use th 1s knowledge effectively
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) - T hai conscientious effor1 you ve recently exe rted
should begm to boar fru 1t startmg today If
the !ounda110ns you ve tald are slrong
healthy and worl hy your causes will be
elevated
SAGITTA RIU S (Nov 23-0ec 2 1) - Your
nal ural w1t warmth and charm are your
greatest assets I eday and they are the very
ones that w1ll attnbute to makmg others
wa nt to do n1ce th1ngs lor you Sm1te and
be a mea pa r~ton
CAP RICOR N roec 22-Jan 19) - You
have the ab1l1ty to help someone you love
today by show1ng th1s person how 1o make
the most ol hfsfher personal resou rces You
are able to see modes of e&gt;&lt;prosston thiS
parson can I
AQ UARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19) - In com
merc1al arrangeme nt s to(jay a11gn yoursell
with e.llpene nced lnd1111duals They can be
Instrum ental m helptng you deal wtth the
here and now so that the ltJture can take
ca re of 1lsell
PISCES (Feb 20-M arch 20)- Yo1.1r opportunl ltas lor mater1al accumulat1on look tar
balleT today than they normall y do Once
yo u get tile cha nce spr1ng open those new
chan nels you know cou ld strengthen your
f1nances
ARIES {March 21-Apnl 19) - This is an
excellent day to make anolher e llen to try
to work out an arrangement wi th an Important indiVIdual who hasn I been l ao cooperalive lalely Improvemen ts are possible
now
TAURUS (Apnl 20- May 20) - It appears
!hat you could rocetve some assistance
today pertaining to a matter where you
have fall totally alo11e and deserted up unlll
now A oonstruchve ~n lerventlon Will turn
llllngs aroun d
GEM INI (May 21 -June 201 - You may get
an opportunlly today to lift somo heavy
responstl:llllty ott a pals shoulder whiCh
you II take The way you hand le 11 Will now
sow seeds tor true camaraderie down t11e
line
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22)- The realization ol several Important obtechves Is a
strong possibility lor you today Don t be
alr a1d to set some goals for yourself that
are shghtl y larger than you usually handle
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) - YOu have power·
lui leadership quaht1es today, bul they are
likely to remain dormant unless they are
cllallenged by developments Once they
aro however your assertiveness will
emerge
VI AGO (Aug 23-Sepl 22) ~ Because you
w1ll be endowed with clear lns1~ht today
whiCil otllers may lack you should have no
troul:lle being able to stJCceed In handling a
serious problem with which another can t
cope
LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23) - Today you mBy
have reason to sort out some lessons
you've learned lrom others Through
restructuring your Ideas you shou ld be acle
to tlnd mora prac11ea1 avenues ol eKpresSion

•he

lo•terJ o'
fcv· wom ~led wcrdJ be·
ieo•tOIIQ I

low lo fo·m four s1mplt worc s

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It

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ARLO &amp; JANIS
JUST AIJ OLD POOP
W~ O HA':&gt; TO PAY
FOR E.Vt.~Y 11-H IJ&amp; I

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The Daily Senrinel • Page B I0

www.mydailysentinel.com

.

Friday, November II , 2005

ALONG 'IllE RIVER

LIVING

Mom and pop shops: Family is 'relative'
for Middleport businesses, Cl

House of the Week: Traditional home
with options to grow on, 01

u·n a

An inside look at this week's game
BIG TEN STANDINGS
Big Ten

Overall

Teams
W l Pel. W l Pel.
Penn State 6 1 .85 7 91 .900
Ohio State 5
Wisconsin 5
Michigan 4
N'westem 4

1 .833

7 2 .778
2 .7 14 8 2 .800

2

63
2 .667 6 3
Minnesota 3 3 .500 6 3
Iowa
· 3 3 .500 54
Mich. State 2 4 .333 54
Indiana
1 5 .167 4 5
Purdue
1 5 .167 3 6
Illinois
0 6 .000 2 7

.667
.667
.667 '
.556

.~7

.556

.444
.333
.222

.:AROUND THE BIG TEN
Iowa at
No.19 Wisconsin
Wisconsin (8-2, 5-2 BigTen) sa)S .
goodbye to retiring coach Bany Alvarez in his fina l home game at
Camp Randall Stadium.
Iowa (5-4, 3-3 Big Ten) could be
saying goodbye to rts bowl chances.
The Hawkeyes need to win this
game or beat Minnesota next week
to become bowl eligible. ·
AWisconsin connpany has put up
31 billboards around Madison to
celebrate Alvarez's 16 seasons as
the Badgers coach.

Indiana at
The Wo~rines (6-3, 4-2 Big Ten)
tu~e up for next week's showdown
against Ohio State with Indiana (45, 1-5 Big Ten).
The Hoosiers have lost four in a
row and haven't' won at Michigan
since 1967. The Wolverines still
have a chance to get a share of the
Big Ten title. · ·
Michigan has been helped by the
return of its best offensive lineman
Jake long the last two games. He
suffered a preaseascn ankle injury
Other games
Michigan State at Minnescta
Illinois at Purdue
Penn State bye.

OSU TEAM I FADERS
Passing Yards
Smith 1,563 .
Rushing Yards
Pittman 978

lntercepUons
Whitner
2
Tackles
Hawk.
94
Tackles
fOr
loss
Receptlqns
Holmes 39/732 Carpenter 11
Touchdowl\s
sacks
Holmes
9 Carpenter
8

OSU SCHEDULE
Miami (Ohio) W34-14
Texas
L 25·22
San Diego St.
W27-6
Iowa
w31-6
BYE WEEK
@PennSt.
L17-10
Michigan St.
W35-24
@Indiana
W41-10
@Minnesota W45-31
Illinois
W40-2

SATURDAY NORTHWESTERN NOON

Nov. 19

@ Michigan

Guessing Ohio State's bowl
destinatiop might get easier
in a week or two. But right
now it's anybody's guess
where the Buckeyes will play.
With two regular-season
games to play, Ohio State's possibilities cover a broad spec·
trum of postseason locales.
If everything goes right, No.
10 Ohio State (7-2, 5-1 Big
Ten) could be invited to one of
the Bowl Championship Series
games- the Fiesta Bowl, OrangB Bowl or Sugar BowL
But if the Buckeyes lose to

Alamo Bowl.
SCS bid because of their 17If Ohio State wins its last
10 \vin over the Buckeyes. If
Jim
two regular-season games,
Ohio State wins twice and
Naveau
the worst it could do would be Penn State is upset, the autoa
trip to the Capital One Bowl malic bid would belong to the
The Lima News
in
Orlando. .
Buckeyes.
jnaveau@limanews.com
A BCS bowl is possible even ·' An outright title might set
. 419-993-2087
if the Buckeyes have to share OSU up for an invitation to
Northwestern on Saturday,
the Orange Bowl, a game it
the Big T':'n title with Penn
then lose at Michigan next · State, wh1ch needs only to
hasn't played in since 1976.
week, they could find thembeat Michigan State to clinch
At 9·2, even without an
selves at a mid- or lowera title tie.
undisputed title, Ohio Stare
level bowl. In that worst-case
If Ohio State and Penn
might fire the imagination of a
·scenario they could even find State tie for the Big Ten title, BCS bowl committee dreaming
themselves opening a second the Nittany Lions would get
of matching Notre Dame
straight invitation to the
the conference's automatic
. against a high-profile team

1 p.m. ,

caught the game-v.;nner against Iowa last
Northwestern (6-3, 4-2 Big Ten) and No:
week.
10 Ohio State (7 ·2, 5-1 Big Ten) on Sat·
OSU fans should enjoy Santonio Holmes
urday at Ohio Stadium:
(39 catches, nine touchdowns) now because he will probably be &lt;n the NFL
Quarterbacks
next season. Ted Ginn Jr. had a 73-yard
In his last four games, Troy Smith has
touchdown catch and ariother reception
completed 64 percent of his passes for an for 52 yarc;ts against Illinois.
average of 251 yards a game. He has
Advantage: Even
thrown 10 touchdown passes with one Interception in that stretch.
Afew doubters persist and point out he
_has done this against Michigan State
(90th nationally in defense), Indiana (No.
88). Minnesota (No. 65) anc Illinois (No.
114). Even if they're right, he's facing the
·No. 117 defense this week.
Northwestern's Brett Basanez is a nearly
ideal fit for the Wildcats' spread offense.
The four-year starter has hit 64 percent of
h1s passes for 2,845 yards and 16 touchdowns. Both quarterbacks are good runners.
Advantage: Even

Do you remember the first tim~
you went to an Ohio State-Michi·
gan game? Do you have an interesting story about the first time
you saw the big game or how you ,
got your tickets?
If you are an Ohio State fan or a
Michigan fan who does, call
sportswriter Jim Naveau at 419·
993-2087,ore-mail him at
jnaveau@limanews.com.

"Co!&gt;\fight (C) 2005 The uma Nev.s.

Re-

production of all or any portion of this matenal is prohibited without express consent."

Bannai did not attend and · forward al l information about
answeretl questions by way the plant for a proposed sale,
of teleconferencing, accord- which is to he approved by
CHARLESTON. W.Va. ing to R. Michael Shaw, a Binson . Shaw said the case is
Global Indu stries' New Point Pleasant attorney who moving forward and th e
Haven plant may be put on · is representing Jacob Binson judge has continued the con~
the market for sale.
and Itzhak Bannai , the com- tempt order.
·
A hearing took place pany's other owners.
"Jacob has the right to
Thursday in federal court i•r
"Boris said he was having review, recruit a buyer or
CharleslOn on contempt visa problems which is why make an upsel bid ," he said.
charge s agai nst Global he was nol in the country."
There is a potemi al buyer
Industries · primary owner, Shaw said. "The court has in Europe willing to . pay
Boris Bannai , and lo convert ordered that he submit to a $10 million for th e pi am ,
Shaw said . '
the bankruptcy status from depo~ition on Nov. 20."
Chapter ll to Chapter 7.
Bannai has been ortlered to
" lt is a global company," he
BY DIANE POTTORFF
DPOTTORFF@MYDAILYREGISTER .C0\1

QB-Troy
Smith

Smith connected
on 13 of 21 passes
tor a career-best
298 yards and
three touchdowns
in a 40-2 w1n over
Illinois. He hit his
final10 passes
after starting 3 of
13. He also rushed
tor 55 yands on
seven cannes.

. GALLIPOLIS -They served in
Germany,
Korea,
Vietnam,
Afghanistan, Iraq and in countless
other theaters.
_
They did whal was asked of them
in trenches dug into the ground, on
ships that were tossed back and
forth on rough seas and high above ·
the clouds in the sky.
Some came home alive, Some
came home in flag -draped
coffins. Still others were buried
in foreign soil.
No matter where, or in what
capacity they served, those who
have worn the ui1iforms of the
United States military were honored in Gallipolis Friday during the
annual Velerans Day parade and
ceremony in the City Park.
"If it weren't for these veterans,
we couldn't be doing t~ to&lt;jay,"
said one passerby duri.ng tlii: parade.

-~·

Ohio State is tied with Penn State for the Big
Ten lead in quarterback sacks with 36 and
ranks third in the country in fewest rushing yards
allowed (76.6 a game).
Northwestern gives up 494 yard~ a game
overall and 199 on the ground. The Wildcats
have gotten only eight quarterback sacks iri nine
games.
·
Advantage: Ohio State
Unebackers
Ohio State could be at less than full strength if Bobby
Carpenter 1s hobbled by injuries, including a sore knee,
for the second week in a row. Carpenter leads OSU with
eight quarterback sacks and fellow linebacker A.J. Hawk
has 61)2.
Middle linebacker Tim McGarigie leads Northwestern
in tackles (122) and sacks (two).
Advantage: Ohio State

.
! De,ensive backs

Where are the turnovers? The Buckeyes' regular starting defensive backs have not had a pass interception in
the last five games. Dente Whitner leads the team with
two but his last pick came against Iowa on Sept. 24.
Ohio State is 10th in the Big Ten with 10 turnovers
forced. Northwestern is f1rst with 24 (15 interceptions and
nine fumble recoveries).
The bottom l1ne, though, is Ohio State is first in the Big · ·
Ten 1n pass defense and Northwestern is 10th.
Advantage: Ohio State

$1.;)0 • \'ol. ;l') , No . .f:!

said of the potential buyer. the industry and the buyer is.
" But we have to fine tune the ready to go," Lampl said.
conditions of the sale,"
Court officials said the first
Bannai 's attorney Robert priority is to allow operalions
0. Lampl said Ukraine' s at lhe plant to resume.
Privat Group is the potential
"The situation is dire at Ibis
buyer. Privat would be able to point," said Debra Wertman,
settle the plant's env ironmen- as assistant U.S. trustee. "I
tal problems quickly. refur- think it 's imperative that we
bish its furnaces and co uld get this plant operating again."
more than double the most
Should a sale be completrecent work (orce leve ls to
ed,
Global would be ordered
300 workers, Lampl said.
by
the
court to use the pro"The buyer does not need
financing ; the buyer know s
Please see Global, A1

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Vera Darlene Ross

INSIDE

The parade was led by color
guards from local veterans organ izations. They were f&lt;?llowed by the
South Gallia and Gallia Academy
high school marching bands, members of the Gallipolis Model-A
Club and, of course, fire trucks .
William Cargo was this year 's
parade marshal. The parade started
at Spruce Street and traveled south
on Sec01id Avenue to the park.
The parade then circled the park
and ended at the Doughboy
Monument, where a ceremony
hosted by the Veterans Service
Commission.
Commis sion
President R. Keith Jeffers was the
masler of ceremonies.
In addition to serving as parade
mars)lal, Cargo also was this year's
guest speaker. A retired U.S.
.Marine Corps lieutenant colonel,
Cargo spoke about the hislory of
Velerans. Day.

Please see Veterans, Al

,-.--,---,...or---~...,

• Generations of veterans.
See PageA3
• Tutoring programs for
· preschoolers growing in
popularity. See P'age AS
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• Clinic raises relief
funding. See Page A6 .
• Ex-RVHS student killed
in Fla. craSh. See Page A6

Special teams _

Ohio State senior
linebacker Bobby
Carpenter leads tihe
team in sacks with 8.

OSU kicker Josh Huston was one of 20 semifinalists
for the Groza Award announced this week. He is 14 of
17 on field goals and has not had a kickoff returned in
the last two games. Northwestern's Joel Howells is 9
of 16 on field goals and is 3 of 10 on kicks of 30
yards or longer.
Northwestern's defensive problems show up in
the fact it has returned only 12 punts all season.
Ohio State has returned 28 and Penn State 35.
Advantage: Ohio State

''·~!'!""'"'""''

OSU VS MICHIGAN

• Bevo Francis Classic.
See Page 82-3

Defensive line

Receivers

Jim Naveau's
Player of the Week

·•

l'nmt'l'fl) • :\1iddlt·pm·l • Callipnli, • 1\m&lt;"mlwt· l;l. :wo;,

BY PAUL DARsT
PDARST@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM

Left tackle Doug Datish was Ohio State's offensive lineman of the week in the Illinois game.
Right tackle Kirk Barton returned to action parttime after missing three games with a knee injury. Freshman Alex Boone was a solid replacement when Barton was out.
Zach Stnef, a 6-7, 335-pound tackle,
·
leads a Northwestern line that has produced
508 yards a game on offense and has allowed only seven quarterback sacks.
Advantage: Even

Maybe the question of the week
should be how the city of Akron produces so many good running
backs.
Northwestern freshman Tyrell
Sutton (1,085 yards) IS from
Akron Hoban High School and
OSU sophomore Antonio
Pittman (978 yards) 1s from
Akron Buchtel. Sutton, l1step
at 5-foot-9, 190 pounds, is
an elusive-type back. Pittman
has more power in his game
but his teammates say his
speed IS underrated.
Pittman has run for 100
yards or more in four of his last
six games and had 96 yards
against Illinois last week. Sutton
has been held to 50 and 65
yards the last two weeks.
·
Advantage: Even

1

Court orders Bannai to prepare to sell Global

SPORTS

Offensive line

Running backs

I '

AREA CITIZENS CELEBRATE·VETERANS DAY

"\"' lrolff4 MI &amp;~~a -~-"

•

Ohio\ ali&lt;') l'uhli,hin~ ('o.

on'

Northwestern's Shaun Herbert has
66 catches to lead the Wildcats and
three other receivers have 31 or more.
Herbert (five touchdowns) and
Shaun Phil more (four TDs) are
the ones who get to the end
zone. But freshman Ross
Lane (13 catches)

......

with a huge following.
Notre Dame is expected to
get one of the BCS's two·atlarge bids if it wins the rest
. of its games.
Five teams still have a
chance to win at lllllBt a share
· of the Big Ten title. Penn
State and Ohio State both
have one loss arid Wisconsin,
Michigan and Northwestern
all have two losses.
So, the Buckeyes are hardly
alone in not knowing where
they will be going for a bowl
game.

I

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

THIS WEEK'S OPPONENT: NORTHWESTERN

A look at the match ups between No. 25

No. 21 Michigan

Sept. 3
Sept. 10.
Sept. 17
Sept. 24
Oct. 1
Oct.8
.Oct 15
Oct.22
Oct. 29
Nov. 5

Buckeyes' bowl picture still coming into focus:

l\'

l~'m'
' ' ! t .'

'

Weekly Buckeye
Brain Busters

Say what?

Many Ohio State fans know fo mner coach John
Cooper was 2-10-1 against Michigan. What was his
record in games played the week before Michigan?
This week's opponent, Northwestern, ircludes two
unsuccessful Democratit nominees for preSident
among its alumni. Who are they?

"I'll have to look at
the schedule."

Michigan vs. · .
Ohio State ·

Brian J. Reed/photo

• American Sign
Language gains popularity
as foreign language.
See PageA6

BY CHARLENE HDEFUCH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

DefeJi.sivt= end

.\li ke Kudla ,
· when a

reponcr asked

BY BRIAN J. REED
8REED@MYDAILY$ENTIN EL.COM

him who Ohio

~: 1.

N() rthwestern

11 wins, 11oss, 1 uc 2. Adlai Stevenson
(1952, 1956) and George McGovern (1972) 3. 36

days until kickoff

DOWNING CHlLDS
MULLENFARMMUSSER
INSURANCE
• HOME • BUSINES$
LIFE • BONDS • MOBILE HOMES • HOSPITALIZATION
196 EAST SECOND ST. • POMEROY, OH

Paul Danttphoto
Member? of local veterans organizations took part in the Veterans Day Parade and
ceremony in Gallipolis City Park Friday.

AEPbuy Veterans Day features dedication of VFW monument
gets nod
from state

WEATIIER

St:Ht' pl :ws next
week afteJ

How many boWl games has
Ohio State played in?

Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, and other veterans organizations
sponsored a Veterans Day remembrance ceremony in front of the Meigs
County Courthouse on Friday. The Southern High School Band performed,
and Jerry White, director of Americanism for the Ohio American Legion, was
the guest speaker.
·

Around Town ,
A3
Celebrations
Classi fieds
D Section
Comics
insert
Editorials
A4
Obituaries
A.5
Regional
A2
Sports
B Section
Weather
A6

REEDSVILLE . The
Public Utilities c ·ommission
of Ohio has approved
American Electric Power 's
plans to purchase Allegheny
Energy's Ohio service territory for $45 million. inclutling custom ers in Eastern
Meigs County.
Allegheny serves 29,000
customers in six southeastern
Ohio counties, including
Meigs. The ·communities of
Reedsville , Tuppers Plains
and Coolville are amon g
those served by Allegheny
Energy's
Monongahela
Power division.
ln addilion lo purchasing
Mon Power 's territory anll
tmnsmission and di stribution

© :01005 Ohio Va1le~· Publishing Co.

Please see AEP, A2

Details on Page A6

INDEX
4 SECfiONS ~ 24 PAGES

G4

•

. CHESTER - "Today we
reme mber all veterans, those
who gave some and those
who gave their all to preserve
the peace, freedom and prosperity we enjoy," said the
Rev. Dr. Barry Walker.
Walker, a retired army
chaplain , now serving as state
chaplain for th e Veterans of
Foreign Wars. was speaking
at Friday's dedi cation of the
VFW monument erected in
Chester near lhe restored
l R2J Chester Courthouse.
"This is th e day World War
I ended so many years ago. lt
was given it"s · name ·
"Veterans Day.'' py Dwight
Eisenhower because he felt
veterans of all wars should be
remembered for their role in
defending democracy."
Wal ker spo~e of the sacrifice; of those who go to war,
including those in Iraq and
today. and called
'Afghanistan
Charlene Hoeftlchf photo
for
a
deep
appreciation for
The Rev. Dr. Barry Wa l ~er. VFVI chaplain for the State of Ohio. speaks at the Veterans Day dedication ceremony of the VFVI monument in Chester.
Please see Monument. A1

'

'

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