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                  <text>Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 17. 2005

www .mydallysentinel.com

Special teams play big role
in OSU-Michigan game
Bv RUSTY MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Big to
Notebook

More times than not , the
Ohio State-Michigan game is
decided by a split-second decisiori by a player on special
Terry Hoeppner will be oppoteams.
. · Maybe it's because the old nents for the first time this
rivals know each other so well weekend when they play for
and mirror each other on the Old Oaken Bucket. But it's
offense and defense. A field not the lirst time the two have
goal, a burst of ·speed or a mer.
When Hoeppner was an
blocked kick seem to tip the
assistant
at Franklin College in
balan~-e in an otherwise even
central
Indiana,
he was a regugame.
lar
at
the
Boilermakers
cm1ches
· "It's a one-play series," Ohio
clinics.
One
year.
Hoeppner
State coach Jtm Tressel said of
special teams. "On offense. if was assigned to help Purdue's
yo·u throw an incompletion on defensive line coach - Tiller.
"I remember driving him
first down, you've . got two
home
to the· feed the dog,"
more tries. On spectal teams,
you'd better do it right on that Hoeppner said. "I must not
have tlone a very good job,
play."
· .
. Overlooked outside line- though, because I don't think
backer Jim Laughlin blocked a coach Tiller remembers it very
punt with 4 ininutes to go and well."
Todd Bell swooped in to retum
The next year, Hoeppner,
the ball 18 yards for a touch- who was not paid, was
down to give unbeaten and No. assigned
to
help
lhe
2·ranked Ohio State an 18-15 Boilermakers defensive backs
win over No. 13 Michigan in coach. At dinner, Hoeppner
'979.
'
found himself in the unusual
· Desmond Howard caught predicament of wearing Purdue
134 passes and scored 37 apparel to a . dinner and was
touchdowns.in his .UM career, give~ a giti for his assistance.
but the image seared into the
"I think it was a set of John
minds of most fans is when he Purdue glasses," he said. "I
struck the Heisman pose after
returning a punt for a touch- probably still have them somedown in the Wolverines' 31-3 where."
win in 1991.
In 1997, Charles Woodson
NOT THINKING PlNK:
- like Howard, a native Much has been made about the
Ohioan - had a 78-yard punt pink paint in the visitors locker
· return to ~ive Michigan a criti- room at Iowa, but Minnesota
cal score m a 20-14 win.
coach Glen Mason says he's
Just last year, the Buckeyes looking forward to it.
were clutching a 20-14 lead in
" I .like the color pink ,"
the third quaner when fresh- Mason said. " In the spring, I
man Te~ Ginn Jr. ~athered a can't wait to we~ my blue suit
punt at hts own 18, sidestepped . with my pmk shirt. A woman at
a tackler and then jetted for the a restaurant told me. 'It takes a
touchdown that paved the way man with a lot of confidence to
to a 37-21 victory.
wear a pink shirt.' I took that as
Gmn returned four punts for a compliment."
touchdowns a year ago to set
A better bowl game awaits
school and Big Ten records. the winner of the Minnesota·
Thts year, he has been held m Iowa clash.
check for the most part. sconng
"I'm not worried about the
once whtle averagmg 12.2 1· k 1 k
,.. M
·d
ards per return. Teammate P. ~ oc er room,
ason sat. ·
~antomo Holmes is averaging I m w?med abo~; the guys m
14.7 yards a return.
the black helmets.
"I can' t imagine anybody
· h~ving better· special teams · JOE'S 0: Remember all .the
than they do," Mtchigan coach squawking a year ago that Joe .
Patenio didn't understand modLloyd Carr said.
The Wolverines have their ern offense and that the garne
own return threat in Steve had passed him by?
With Penn State ranked fifth
~reaston, who is averaging
in
the nation at 9-1 and needing
12.9 yards on punt returns and
a
win at Michigan State to
26.9 on kickoffs. After a slow
clinch
at least a share of the Big
start, he's been coming on. He
Ten
title,
Paterno has handed a
had 201 all-purpose yards in
the first half of last week's rout lot of autonomy to offensive
coordinator Galen Hall and his
of Indiana.
· "If you look at the dynamics son. . quarterbacks coach Jay
of college football , every spe- Paterno, after last year's 4-7
cial-teams blunder or m1stake, ni¥,htmare.
'This year, Joe is laid back.
it ends up hurting the team dramatically," Michigan special- He pretty much lets Galen and
teamer and receiver Carl Tabb Jay call all the games and do
said. "You can have a fumbled what they have to do," standout
punt, mishandled snap, you can quanerback Michael Robinson
·
qave a missed field . goal or said.
Paterno, 78 , said he also
extra point and each of those
relies on his staff to make more
cases can cost you a game."
On a chilly Saturday in The halftime adjustments.
"They come in at haltiime
Big House, we may see why
they call them "special" teams. and I don't even bug them," he
said. "Years ago, .I used to be in
DOG DAYS: Purdue coach .: tl1ere on the board yelling and
JC&gt;e Tiller and Indiana coach screaming and shouting."

QUICK-HITIERS: A Penn
State win gives the Nittany
Lions the conference's BCS
bowl berth, while Ohio Stale
can tie for the title with a win
against Michigan .... Michigan
State junior Drew Stanton
needs one more TD pass to
eclipse Jeff Smoker's school
mark of 21 in a season .... The
Big Ten players of the week
were Minnesota's Amir Pinnix
(32 carries. 206 yards, I TD).
Iowa's Mitch King (two sacks,
3.5 tackles for minus yardage),
Michigan's Breaston (47-yard
kickoff return, three punt
returns for 78 yards) and
Purdue's. Dave Brytus (three
punts inside 20) .... Since 1951 ,
the Ohio State-Michigan series
is deadlocked 26-26-2.

: BEREA (AP) - With
starting cornerback Dayton
McCutcheon
nursing
a
bruised . abdomen,
the
Cleveland Browns signed
defensive
back
James
Thornton to the practice
squad on Wednesday.
: Thornton , who also has
been with Chicago and
Atlanta, gives the Browns
some depth if McCutcheon
can't play on Sunday against
Miami. Cleveland already is
.without cornerback Gary
Baxter. who sustained a season-ending chest injury.
McCutcheon badly bruised
his stomach in Sunday night 's
loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers
when wide receiver Hines
Ward accit.lentally slammed
hi s knee into him as thev
(ought for a pass in the end
zo.~~·
. .
I. ve had the wmd kn?cke?,
out
of
me
belore .
McCutcheon said . 'This was
.
way worse than that."
McCutcheon satd he's tee!ing better every day. and 1hat
if he does play he probably
will wear a rib protector or
flak jacket.
Thornton was originally
signed by the Bears as a free
agent in 2003. The Falcons
waived him on Sept. 3.

;;o

('I:~TS

• \'ol. ;;;; , No. hi{

• Smith has tough act
to follow. See Page B1

urday, November 1
8 am to 8 pm
OBITUARIES

"Come browse thru A beautiful
Winter Wonderland while you
....,..·vleet the perfect gift for your
loved one or the perfect
decorations for your home!"

Page AS
• Denzil Proctor, 72
• Olga Pullins, 89

INSIDE
• AHunger For More.
See Page A2
• Suffering for
righteousness sake.
See Page A2
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• Group pushes
statewide smoking ban,
bar owners object.
See Page AS
• Southem honor roll.
See Page AS
• Senate passes $60
billion.tax bill extending
iax cuts, raises taxes
on oil companies.
See Page AS
• Meigs Honor Roll.
See Page A6
• Housing construction
tumbles, adding more
evidence that boom is
cooling. See Page A7

Over 30
Decorated
Themed . Over

75
Decoia .,.L&gt;.,...
·Wreaths
Over 20 styles
·· of Artificial
Trees ·
3 ft. to 10 ft.
Available
I.

Burlap Trees

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
former Cleveland Browns
employee and a ticket agency
owner must spend six months
under house arrest for their
roles in a scam to illegally sell
tickets, a judge said.
John Tironi, 32, who was
fired as .the team's ticket manager, admitted in court to funnet ing season tickets to
Amazing Tickets in suburban
Beachwood ahead of fans on a
waiting list. Mark Klang, 29,
owner of the agency, paid
Tironi $123,000 in return.
"I made some very, very
foolish decisions," Tironi told
u.s. Di stnct Judge Ann
Aldnch at · hi s sentencing
Tuesday. Tironi. formerly of
eLakewood now li ves in
Florida. '
Both men had pleaded guilty
in June to a si ngle conspiracy
count.
The two plotted to divert personal seat licenses and tickets
lO Klang in exc hange for
$5.000 a month. prosecutors
said. Prosecutors say between
2002 and 2003 the scheme netted more than $ 194,000.

. "En joy at Christmas
and plant for year
round enjoyment"

Bob's Market &amp; Greenhouses.
Inc.
•

~,,.

Delallo on Page AS

INDEX

from advertising, $2.500 from
contract repairs and $6,650
from janitor salaries, into the
POMEROY Meigs prisoners housing line. The
County
Commissioners transfers will allow for the
approved $11,860 in funds payment of an $8,0 I 0 October
transfers to pay the latest bill from the Southeastern
bills for housing of cou nty Ohio Regional Jail m
prison.ers durin g Thursday's Nelsonville, and a $3.850
regular meeting.
September bill from the
Commissioners approved Washington County Jail.
transfers of $1,800 from their
Commissioners have conlegal counsel line item, $1 ,000 tracts for negotiated hous ing

Bv BETH SERGENT
the fact that hi s council term
BSERGENT@MYDAiLYSENTiNEL.COM will soo n end.
"I'm worried we might ·not
POMEROY - · Pomeroy make it," Hystll said.
Village Council approved the
"We
will," Me Angus
Chri&gt;&lt;mas bonu ses for village responded.
employees as well as raised · Councilman Jim Sisson
them despite the fiscal con- inquired as to when the parkcerns of Clerk-Treasurer ing lot wall will be repaired
Kathy Hysell at last night's with Mayor John Musser sayregular meeting.
ing the repairs will begin
Hysell agreed with council Monday.
Sisson also inquired about
that the employees deserved a
raise but she wasn't sure saving on the village's gasowhere the bonus money line bill which this month was
would come from, particular- over $3,000. Village departly in the street department.
ments each have a Marathon
Hysell was concerned gas card they use at Riverside
about making four payrolls Marathon on West Main
by the end of the year, Street. Sisson asked Hysell if
including three paid holidays she would check into seeing if
for Thanksgiving, the day the village employees could
after · Thanksgiving. and use the gas card at Pomeroy
Chnstmas. Hysell said she Food Shop, another Marathon
was worned that the general station that he believed had
fund might .run out of money··- cheaper gas.
b~ the end of the year even
Council accepted a bid of
Without factonng m the $5 500 from Ron and
. D~rothy Scheer for the sale of
increase in bonuses;
In fact, Thursday s council one-quarter acre of village
voted to transfer $7,000 from real estate located at East
the gener:atto the street fund. Main and Kerr Streets.
Councilwoman
. Mary
Council agreed to purchase
. McAngus made a motion that an insulated garage duor in
t~e Chnstmas bonuses (offl- January for the village's new
cially referred to as one tune garage at a cost of $2,420
wage mcreases) be ra1sed instead . of an uninsulated
from $100 to .~ 150 for full door approved at a previous
lime employees ~nd from $50 meeting.
to $75 for part lime employ- . Council · passed a motion
ees.. CounCil passed the allowing Dettwiller Lumber
motton With Counctlman
George Wright abstaining due
Please see Pomeroy. A5

·.
.· .~

Wellston revitalization goals
similar to Middleport's ·
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAiLYSENTiNEL.COM

16 PAGES

Buckeye Edition
82
Calendars
AB
Classifieds
84-6
Comics
87
Dear A:bby
A6
Editorials
A4
Faith • Values
A2-3
Movies
As
Obituaries
As
Sports
B Section
Weather
AB
© 2005 Ohio Valley Publl..hing Co. ·

•

MVW.IIl)dait ysentind.cmn

rate s with both faciliti es. and
are res.ponsible , by law. for
the housing, food and medical costs associated with
county inmates.
Commis sioners
also
approved the following other
transfers: $1,228 for Sheriff
Robert Beegle for gas and oil.
$8 ,229.29 for insurance and
employee sa laries, from
Beegle's contract repairs line .
$98,446.26 for Engineer.

Eugene Triplett. $3,000 for from Home National Bank
dog warden, $1,000 and $800 and Return Jonathan Meigs
for auditor, and $1,015 .34 for Chapter, DAR.
tax map office.
• Set next week's meeting
Commissi~ners approved for 10 a.m. on Wednesday due
appropriation incre ases for to the Thanksgiving holiday.
the MRIDD board. in the
• Recessed until II a.m ,
amount of $13.200. and $500 on Frit.lay for the payment
for commissioners supplies of bills.
line item.
Commissioners
Mi ck
Commissioners also:
Davenport and Jim Sheets
• Acknowledged donations ant.! Clerk Gloria Kloes
for the sheriff's radio fund were pre~ent.

Aspiring.magician~
attend magic worliShop
Last night several
aspiring magicians
arrived at the
Pomeroy Library to
experience a magic
workshop with real
magician Tom
Phoolery from
Youngstown. The
magic workshop was
sponsored by the
Meigs County District
Public Library and
Ohio Reads Grant
and coincided with
today's release o~
the latest Harry
Potter movie installment, "Harry Potter
and the Goblet of
Fire." The children
learned how to perform magic tricks
and even received a
free magic kit.
a.l h sergentjphoto•

Well.s ton's downtown coordinator, Boats West. left, and
Attorney Shannon Weber. presented information about the
community's revitalization program at a breakfast meeting ir
Middleport ·on Thursday morning. ·

. 2 SEctiONS -

(740) 446-1711

:.!005

Brian J. Aeedjphoto

• Cat's Meow LOcal Pieces
• McCall's Candles
• Christmas Flags and Design Posts
• Collegiate Ornaments and
r•.
'
Gift Items

Gallipolis Garden Center
1 Jenkins Lane* Gallipolis,.OH

tl{ ,

WEATHER

Gift Ideas:

Balled~

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@_MYOAiLYSENTINEL.COM

Pomeroy votes to raise
employee Christmas bonuses

Gallipolis Garden c=enter

Live
Holiday
Garland
and
Wreaths

I'IH!l:\Y , N0\'1•,1\IBI·. I(

Commissioners approv~ transfers for prisoner housing

SPORTS

AP photo
Ohio State's Santonlo Holmes (4), right, runs as his teammate Vernon Gholston (50), left,
blocks Northwestern's Deante Battle (22) in the third quarter Saturday at the Ohio Stadium in
Columbus. For a series which has featured so many All-Americans. the Ohio State-Michigan
game frequently has been decided by bit players on special teams. Ohio State will pt.ay
Michigan this Saturday in Ann Arbor, Mich,

tioliday Open Ho\.A.'0

Ex-Bt::nWns ticket
manager placed .
under house arrest

I

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

•

Browns sign CB

Evangelist l~ads
religious, political effort in
battleground Ohio, AS

Scout troop
distributes bears,
books, blankets, A6

MIDDLEPORT The
biggest obstacle in the revitali zation of downtown
Wellston was changing the
hearts and minds of the people who live there, the community 's downtown coordinator said Thursday.
Boats West, who was hired
by the City of Wellston to
· coordinate downtown development
anti
Wellston
Attorney Shannon Weber met
with 28 people representing
the Middleport Development
Group, retail business owners
and residents to discuss the
progress on that community's
downtown redevelopment

efforts. The breakfast meeting, held at the Middleport
Church of Christ Family Life
Center. was sponsored by
Farmers Bank and Savings
Co. and Hometown Market.
When starting two years
ago. the Wellston busines•s ·
community h&lt;id many of the
same prioritie s that the
Middleport group has identified : Filling vacant storefronts with viable retail
business, creation of jobs in ,
the downtown shopping district, and attracting tourists
to the area.
.
According to West , the
Wellston Central Business
District Commission has been
Please see Goals, A5

LEGIONNAIRES HONORED
Post Commander Ron
Eastman. center, was honored by Feeney-Bennett
Post 128; American .Legion.
of Middleport. as .the
Legionnaire of the Year.
duri ng the post's Veterans
Day and Thanksgiving
Dinner on Tuesday. Bob
Hoiland . fourth from left.
accepted the award for Ron
Jividen. Legionnaire of the
Decade . Patricia Thompson
was honored as Auxiliary
Member of the Year.
Making the presentations
were ·Adjutant Roscoe Wise
and Myron Duffield.
Brtan J . RHd/ photo

�PageA2 -

FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 18,

Friday, November 18,2005

r

come through the mists of
doubt and fmally see "the
other end of the rainbow" of
each of Hi s promi ses
"I will remember the deeds
of the LORD: yes, I will
remember Your miracle s of
long ·ago. I wtll medttate on
all Your w01 ks and consider
all· Your migh ty deeds. Your
ways, 0 God,- are holy. What
·god' is so great as our God 0
You are the God Who pertonus miracles; You dtsplay
Your power among the peopl es ... The waters saw You ,
0 God, the waters saw You
and WI ithed; the very depths
were convu lsed The clouds
poured down water, the skies
resounded wtth thunder;
Your arrows !lashed back
and forth. Your thunder was
hc.1rd m the whirlwind. Your
lightning In up the world ;
the earth trembled and
quaked Your path led
through the sea, Your way
through the mighty waters,
though Your footprints were
not seen" (Psalm 77 11-14,
16-\9 NIV).
Are you strugglmg wtth
doubt? Do you wrestle wtth
di scouragement? Have your
feet faltered and your shoulders become weighed do" n
with a load of resentment or
bttterncss? If so, hft up your
eyes and remember your
rainbow Walk once more
through the rams of tnal and
tribulatton, knowing that
these will pass m time and
that the sun wtll shme again
Though· you mtght wade
through pools of regret or
shame, trust God to forgive
and wash· you from sm and
past mistakes. Trust Htm to
remember you even if you've
forgotten Him in the past.
"Do you not know? Have
you not heard ? The LORD
is the everlasting God , the
Creator of the ends of the
earth He will not grow tired
or weary. and Hi s understanding no one can fathom.
He gives strength to the
weary and increa ses the
power of the weak. Even
youths grow t1red and
weary, and young men
stumble and fall, but those
who hope in the LORD 'will
renew their strength They
will soar on wmgs like
eagles; they will run and not
grow weary, they will walk
and not famt" (Isaiah 40:2831 NIV).
(Thom Mollohan and his
family have ministered in
southern Ohio the past ten
and a half years. He is the
of
Pathway
pastor
Community Church and
may be reached for comments or questions by e-mail
at pastorthom@pathwaygal/ipolis.com).

Pastor

Thorn
Mollohan

placed a stgn ol Ht s detenmnatwn to lead us through the
muck and nme of our selfish
preoccupauons.
"And God s.ud, 'Thi s "
the sign of the covenant I am
making: between Me and
you. a covenant for all generatJOhs to come: I have set
My rambow 111 the clouds.
,md tt wifl be the stgn of the
cO\ enant between Me and
the eat th. Whene ver I bnng
cloud s over the earth and the
rainhow appears 111 clouds, I
wtll remembet My covenant
between Me and you and all
livin g crea wres ot every
kmd Never again will .the
waters become a flood to
destroy all l1fe. Whenever
the nunbow appears ·m the
cloud s. I wtll see i.t and
remember the everlasting
covenant between God and
all \iv1ng credture9' of every
ktnd an earth· So God satd
to Noah. 'This ts the sign of
the co\'enant I have estabJi , hed between Me and all
ltte on earth ' '' (Gene sis
9.12-17 NIV)
And though floods have
come and submerged lhffcrent parts of the earth smce
then, still they are merely
tamt echoes of the destrucuon and Judgment of the
Great Flood of Noah's day.
Never again wtll He submerge the whole of our planet under water in order to
puntsh all life for the great
wickedness of which humanity ts capable (see Genesis
6:5-7). How do we know'?
Because He promised.
When troubles come, we
may lose sight of the rainbow
·of Hts promtscs for those
who have been saved. We
may forget His unfailing love
and wonder why bother with
being faithful followers of
Christ In our times of discouragement, our hearts may
cry out, "Wtll the Lord reject
forever" Will He never show
His favor agam? Has H1s
unfailing love vanished forever? Has His promis~ failed
for all ltme 0 " (Psalm 77:7-8
NIV).
But if we'll simp]~ cling to
His promises of fatthfulness
to us, His promises to tum
"evil" (or painful circumstances) around for good, and
Hts promises of eternal hope
and everlasting life, we'll

r

r

i'

·i'

r

·r

·r

i'

r

·r

The story is told about a
Chnstian businesswoman
who was havmg dtfftculty at
work and really suffering at
least some verbal and emotional persecut ion tor her
fauh . She went to an evangeltst currently vtstttng her
town, confided in hun , and
told him she was ready to
"throw in the towel" and quu
"Well, tell me. if you
would," the evangelist said
"Where do we put lights?"
The woman was taken back
by the questiOn and a bit puzzled Seeing the bewilderment
on her t:ace, the evangelist
answered ht s own questton ,
"We put light s in dark places."
In a moment she saw his
meanmg and realized God
had put her m those dtfficul\
surroundings to be a light, as
it were, 111 an otherwise dark
environment ... and bemg
that ktnd of light IS never an
easy task
Remember our Lord satd.
"Thi s, then. ts the JUdgment.
the light has come into the
world, and people loved
darkness rather than the hght
because thetr deeds were
evtl." And. of course. as St.
Paul wrote tn hts letter to the
Ephesians, "theJruit of hght
ts found m all that ts good
and night and true."
So shin111g as a light for
Christ m dark and oltenllmes
frightening world can be very
difficult and even lead to persecution. After all, the first
chapter of John indtcates that
darkness tnes to overcome
light, whtch is the same as to
say there is opposition and
resistance. Darkness does not
like the light because. obviously, hght scatters darkness
and runs it off. It really eradtcates darkness
Thts, however, IS prcctscly
what we are called to do, to
be sacred light s for Chnst in
the mtdst ot darkness, whtch
is the same as to say to live in
righteousness And what does
this mean, except to hve the

Fellowship
Apostolic

Two thousand years ago.
humanity was bhnd and the
world was shrouded 111 darkness, yet the eternally begotten Son of God, through
whom all things were made, .
lett the glory of heaven, steppmg into hi story m human
flesh. But more than this, He
entrusted Htm self to the care
ot a poor, young virgin girl
and an equally poor but older
carpenter 1n a remote comer
of the earth.
· From that Celestial City,
where it (s said the streets
are pav ed wtth gold, the
Lord forsook invaluably
eternal nc hcs to live meekly
as a man. an impoverished
and desp1sed Galilean . He
healed the stck, ratsed the
dead. ted the hungry, taught
the tgnorant and offered a
supremely better way of life
to people who were more
ltke the walking dead than
creatures made in the image
of God .. and for all that, He
suffered and died.
He suffered at the hands of
cruel humamty to witness the
everlasting love of God; He
died on a lonely cross to
overcome death itself and
offer hfe eternal to all who
believe. It should be no surprise, then, that when we
choose to follow this
Nazarene, we wtll also be
desptsed and often downtrodden But if ·•we suffer Wl\h
him:' we will "also be glorified wtth him in the kingdom
of heaven, and mdeed our
reward is great "
We have this comfortmg
and div111e assurance, our
Lord's promi se "Blessed are
you when people revile you
and persecute you and utter
all kmds of evtl against you
on my account. Rej01ce and
be glad, for your reward is
great in heaven .. . "Our task is
to be as certa111 as possible
that when people do revile
and· persec ute us , tt is for
Chnst. that .vhen we do suffer: we truly suffer for righteousness' sake as we live this
bl essed ltfe

Scripture: Matthew 5.1-12

Rev.
Jonathan
Noble
PASTOR
TRINITY CHURCH

very blessed hfe Jesus has
just described in verses three
through mne'? Remember we
have said all along that one
beatitude really bmlds on the
ones before; well. thts last
one ts the cuhmnation of the
bl essed life, then .
Now. of course , this may
not seem to be a \'ery ni ce
feature of the blessed li fe . In
fact, we are apt to think of
undergomg persecution as
anything
but
ble ssed.
Nevertheless, St. Peter teaches us, "Even tf you do suffer
for righteousness' sake, you
wtll be blessed. Have no fear
of them. who persecute you,
nor be troubled, but m your
hearts reverence Christ as
Lord.. For 11 ts better to suffer fo1 doing ri ght , if that
should be God's will, than for
domg wrong."
The key is not suffering,
you see. but suffering for
nghteousness I sake. there is
a very real difference, too,
because many people suffer
tor vartous and sundry reasons. And some reople may
suffer due to thetr owu stuptdity and fooli shness (And
so me of us know this better
than others from very painful ,
personal expenence.)
But suffering for nghteousness · sake, this ts the really
very natural result of trying to
hve the truly blessed life ol
which out Lord speaks m a
world in rebellion against
God . "Blessed are those who
suffer for righteousness I
sake." Blessed are those who
are persecuted for hvmg these
beatitudes, fell trying to walk
in holiness and serve God
always m every area of life.

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) Two old &lt;jnd rare copies of the
Book of Mormon have been
reported stolen at thC'!nstttute
of Rehgion .at the Umversity
of Utah.
In the past two weeks, an
1840 Nauvoo editiOn and an
1841 Liverpool editiOn were
stolen from the institute, operated by The Church of Jesus
Chnst of 'Latter-day Saints.
The books have an esttmated
value of $20,000 each.
Institute director Allan

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VanZandl and Ward tl.d , P•• ~ tur Jiinll.''
E~emng-

Old Idea...

26 years in local business
Roofing &amp; Building Work

Pomeroy, OH
740-992-6215

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
Located les' than 30 mmutes from
Athens. Pomeroy or Parkersburg
1-740-667-3156
"Still small e11ough to care"

iti!!D!!..._. 209 Third St.
~ Raclna,OH

Queen
Brazier

SYAACUSE

;.•

700 N. 2nd 51. Middleport, OH
740-992-3322
uardrall, Fence &amp;

(7-101992-6-!5 1

s1gn erect1on

740-949-221 0
"A Home Bank for
Home People"

ftai

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH
PO Box 683
Pomero , Oh1o 45769·0683

740-949-2217
SIZes ava1lable SxtO to tO x 20

Thurs 7 00 p m. Pa~tor Marty R Hutt on

Cnlli ~C I

Ltbtrty Assembly uf God
P.O Bux 467 Duddmg Lane, Mason
WVa, Pastor Nc1l Tennant Sunda)
Serv1ccs- \0 00 am and 7 p m

Baptist

740 4-11 - 1290 Sundu} murntng
10 UO. Su n murn lllg B1 blc st udy.
fn llo-... tng wm shtp. Sun eve 6 00 pm.
W~ d btblc study 7 pm
Hemlock Gro~e Christian Churrh
Mumter L&lt;1ny B1own, Wnr~htp - 9 ~0
a m Sun day Sdmol 10 30 ;.t m , Btble
Swd y 7 pm

Cllr!&gt;('nter Baptist Churt:h
Sunda~

Serv tcc

School

-

9 3Uam,

I0 30am,

Eve nmg

Prcachmg

ScrvH:e

7 OOpm \\\:dnesday B1b lc Study 7 00 pm

lntenrn Pt c~,;h~r • Ao)'d Ross
Cheshire Baptist Chun:h
Pastor S1eve Lmlc. Sunda} S.:hool 9 3U
am. Mommg Wor.;ht p
10 30 am.
W~dnl~ &gt;d~y Rt hle Study 6 30pm: chmr
practu.: c 7,10, youth und Btblc Buddtes
6 30 p m Thurs I rm hook ~ Indy
Hope Baptist Church !Southern)
&lt;i7U Grum s,t ' Mtddlcport , Sunday SL hool
-930a m , Worshtp - 11 a m nnd6 pm ,
Wr.:ducsJ~y Sct vtcc
7 p m Paotur Uary
Elhs
Rutland Fir.-;t Baptist Chun:h
Sunday• Sc hool - 9.30 am, Wurshtp
10 4~ am
Pomero) FlrstBapllst
Pa~tor Jon Rrockcn. East M::nn S1.
Sund.ty Worsht(\ · tO 00 fl m , Wed Hthle
Study 610 pm
First Southern Bapttsl
41H72 Pomero y P1ke, Pastor E Lunar
O'Bryant. Su11da y Sdtoul - Y 30 am
Wor~htp - 8 IS am, 94S am &amp; 7.0&lt;)p 111.
Wednesd:t) Serv•lcs - 7 ()(] p m
First Baptist Church
Paswr 6th and Palmer St , Mtddlepon,
Sunday School · 9 I ~ am , Wor.; h1p
!0 15 .tm , 70 0 pm , Wednesday
ServLCI..'- 7 00 p 111
karme Flrst Daplist
Pastut . Sundoy School - 9 30 ~ m •
Wursh1 p - 10 40 am, 7 00 p m .
Wednesd ay Sl!'rvlf.:es · 7 UO p m
Sil\er Run Buptlst
Jo hn Swanson. Sunday Schllol lOam. Worshtp - 1Ia m 7 00 p m
,Wcdnc~ay Scrv1ces 7·00 p m
Pa~ t or

Mt. Union Baptist
Pastor
Sunday Scho t~l- 9 45 .1m ,
E~cnmg - 6 3U p m, Wcdncsd.ty Services
-6 30pm
Bethlehem Haptlst Church
Great Bl!'nd. Route 124, Racme, OH
Pastor Dame] Meu:a, Suml~y Schuvl 9 30 a.m . Sunday Wnrshtp - 10 30 a n1 ,
Wednesday Btble Study - 6.00 p m
Old Bethel Free WUI Baptist Churt!h
2860 1 St Rt 7, M1ddlc po rt Sundny
Scrvtce. 10 am , 6 00 p m , Tuesday

Scrvtces -6 00
Hillside Baptist Church
St Rt 143 JUSt off Rt 7, Pastor Re v
James R Acree. Sr Sunday Un•ln:d
Servtce. Worshtp - 10 30 am , 6 p m ,
Wednesday Serv1ccs 7 p.m

Forest Run Baptist
Pastnr · Anus Hun, Sunday Schoo l . 10
am , V.orsh•p - 11 am
Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Mam •St, Middleport. Pa stnr
Rev Gtlbert Cratg, Jr . Su nday Schuol 9 JO am, \'i.•orshtp • 10 45 am

(740)992 6472
Fax 1740t992·7406

Anhquit} Baptist
Sunday School · Q 30 am , Wor.;h1p ·
10 45 am, SundJ y Evenmg - 6 00 p m ,
Pastor Don Walker

Hours
6 am· 8 pm

··ree

Rutland
Will Baptist
Salem St . Ptt smr. Jamtc Fortner. Suml.ty
School
IU am E vemng - 7 p m,

Homemade Desserts Made Da1ty
Home (oolied ~teals&amp;: Doily Specials
Open 7 &lt;.lays a v.eek
740-992-7713

Ku,scll Sunday Schllol and 'WorshtJl· 10
a 111 EHrn ng ScrH c~~ 6 lQ p m,
Wednesday Servtte:- 6 30 p m
Church nfCod of Prophecy
UJ Whtt c RJ uti St Rt 160 Pastor. PJ
Chnpman Su nday Schoo l - Ill o. m..
Wor.-htp II ;1111 , Wcdn ~~d.ty S~rvtcc s 7
pm

Congregational
Tnm1y Chur('h
l't•meroy PaslM RC\'
Jo n.tth.UL r-.;,1h lc. Wor,htp JO·:!!i am
Sunda) Scho'llll 9 IS .1111
Sc~:nm! &amp;

Wesl!iidc t..:hun;h of Chnst
33226 Chtldrc n" Home Rd Pome n• Y, OH

Victory Baptist Independent
525 N 2ad S! Mtddleport. Pastor Jam e~
E Kee see. Wors h1p , lOa 111 7 p m ,
Wednesdi.Jy Servt ccs · 7 p 111

Pomeroy Church of ( hrlsl
211 W M:un Sl Sunda y S,;huo l - 9 ~0
,a m \\'(Jr~ h lr· IIJ JO am . 6 pm
Wedncsda) Se nll.:~s- 7 r m
Jluml!ru} \\oests1de l.:hurrh of Chrtst

33226 ChiiJtcn 's Humc Rd. Sun tl.ty
Sr;hllol !I a 111 . Wurslup lOam . 6 p m
Wcdnesda) Sc rv t ce~ 7 p 111
Mlddlcpnrl Church 11f ( hrlsl
&lt;ith an d Mam PMtor AI Harl' 111 Youth
Mtm ~ 1er Jo~h Ulm Sund,.y S
,11 - Q 10
am. Wor~h1p- X 15 HI ~0 1 m 7 p m
Wc d ne •d&lt;~~ Scn1(e' 7 [' 111
Keno l.:hurch uf Chrtsl

W111shq'
J(l ~n

s~

\i lO am. Sund ay

,, m . P1 1~tor Jdfre1

W,dl ~lc,

houl
I ~ ~ .mi.l

Jrd Stmday
Bearuallow Ridge Chunh or Christ
Pas10r Bruce lerr). Su nd.t} Schm1l I) 10
am
l(l ~n 1 m. fi 10 r m
V.cdnesday Sr.:rllCes - t1 30 r Ill

L)n n,

Episcopal
(-;race Episcopal Church
Ct. I:'. M ~ m S1 , Pom~ toy. Su nday School
and Holy h\ hanst II OU 11m Rev
I:.J\Ia1 d P&lt;~ y n~:

Holiness
Cummunit) Chur£h
Pa~tur
St\·vc Toml.'k . Matn Stret.•t,
Rutland Sunday Wnr.. htp- 10 00 a m .
SundaY S!'rvtce- 7 p 111
Danville lloline:ss Church
3 10&lt;i7 St.tlc Route l:!S. Langwllc P,lstor
V1d •u l{ou ~h . Sund&lt;ty s~ hool - 9 1() am .
Sund.tv -...ur~htp - 10 JU am &amp; 7 p m ,
W~·dn csJ, ty prayet ~Cr V I\.:1' · 7 Jl Ill
C.:ulvary Pilgrim Chupel
Harn•mll'lll c Road P::tswr Charl c&gt;
MLKI' n..-1 1', Sunday Schonl 9 ~{) am .
Won.h1p - l l ,, m 7 tlO p m , Wcdnesrl.ty
ScrvtLe - 7 00 p 111
1-/.o~

of Sharon llolmes~ Church
Lcadmg Cu:c\.; Rd, Rutland l';~ sto r R~: v
l)c~,~c~ Km ~ SumJ~y ~chl)(ll - 9 30 am .
Sunday worshtp 7 p m Wedm:,day
pr.1ycr meettn¥ 7 p m
Pine Grove Dible Holiness Churth
112 111t1c ulf Rt 1~S Puswr Rev O'De ll
Manle y Suntlu y Schnol - 9 ~() u m
Wor.h1p · 10 ~0 .t m , 710 pm
Wcdn ~stJ IY SL r\ ICC- 7 30 p 111
Wesleyan U1ble Holmes~ Churrh
Mtddleport P.llitor R1d.
Bourne. Sund t~y School • 10 a 111 \\\lfslup
- 104~ J) ll\, Suni.lty Eve
700 pm,
Wct..l lll'stl.iy Setv i ~~·- 7 10 p m

7"'- Pearl St

Z10n Church ofChml
Pmucroy. HMn son\tllc l&lt;.U (]{[ 14lJ
Paslut Rogc1 Voiat~ou. Sund;~y Sdmol
9 10 a 111 Wurs h1p - 10 JO am . 7 ()()
p 111

, W~:dm; l\ll,ty Sct v ll ~:~

7p

111

Tuppers Plain Church or Christ
lnstrttmen tal , Worship Servtce - 9 am.
Cmnmumon - 10 am. Sunday School
10 15 !I m , Youth- ~-J O pm SundRy. l31 hl e
S tud~ Wr dnc ~day

7 pm

Bradbury Churrh of Chnst
Mm1skr l pm Munyon , 1Y55S Hr&lt;l llhur y
Ro&lt;~d. M1ddk port Sunduy School • Y 10
&lt;1111
Wor-1;h1p 10 ~ U :.~ m
Rutbmd Church of Christ
Sund,ty S(h oul · \i 10 .1m , Wmshtp ~nd
Commumnn 10 ~0 u 111 Boh J. Wc r r~.
Mmtstr.:r
Bradford Church of Christ
Cower of St 1{1 124 &amp; Hr,ttlhury Rct .
Mmt stl'r D{lug Shamhlm Ylluth Mmt ~lcr
Hill Amberger Sun&lt;.la) SLhool · 9 10 am
Wor~ l11p - li Oil am . 10 l(J am. 7 00
p m ,WcJne,day Sen 11.""C~ - 7 UU p m
H•ckur) H11ls Churcli of ChriSt
Tuppers Pl.nns, Pastllr ~hkc Moore, 81blc
cl.t s~. 9 a m Sunday. wurshtp 10 am
Suntl .ty. wor ship 6 ~0 pm Sunday. Btblc
l h1ss 7 pm ~cd
Reedsville Church of Chr~t
P.t ~to• Ph1l1p Sturm Sund.•r s~hool Y 30
a 111 Wur~h1p' Sen ICe [(I lOa m . ll1hk
SIUd}. Wednc,Jay fllO p m
De);tcr Churrh ofChnst
Sunday ~ch oollJ •o .1111.. Sunday wor~lu p
- lO ~O am

('burch of Christ
lntehl'Li ton 7 ,md 12-1 W Ev.m ge h ~ t
Oc111us Snrgl' nl Sundn y ~tl•l ~ Stud~
I) '0 . 1 m Wor ~h•p W '(I 11111 .utJ 6 10
p 111 Wcdn ~-.d.ty B1hll- Stud~ - 7 Jl m

Christian Union
Hartford Churth ofChnst in
Chnstum Umon
Hart! ord. W Va . P:t ~ t ur D.1v1d G r~:c1,
Su nda} Se houl 1J ~0 a n1. Wu• ~ hlll
HJ ~0 a m . 7 UO p m . W.:dne~J~)
Serv1ces - 7 ()(l p m

Church of God
MI. 1\lnriah Church IIH;od
M1lc H1 ll Rd R.t~ 1 n c Pus111r J.un cs
Sauerf1cl&lt;.l. Sunda y s~huo l . I) -l&lt;i ,, m
E\cmng • 6 p rn Wednc-.da} Sc r v 1~ c~- 7

H)s~ll H.un Community Church
P::t stur RL' \ Ltrr ) Lemky Sunday Se houl
- '.1 1lJ a m . Wnrshtp- 10 4:'\ am , 7 pm.
Thursdn) Rth1 e Study .111d Yotllh 7 p m

Laun-1 Chff Free Method1st Church
P.1s!or Glenn Ro\I C S und.t~ S~hno l ·
~ ~0 am. Worstup
10 lU .1 nt and 6
p m Wcdn..:~&lt;.lav Serv1ce - 7 OU p n1

Latter-Day Saints
The Chun:h uf Jesus
Christ of LaUer-Oay Snint~
St Rt 1f1U 446 6:!47 or 446-74R6
Sund.t) S~ h110l Hl 20 II .t m . Relief
St"ICI C !) / Prt e~! huod
I I 0~ - 12 (Xl noo n
San~ml'lll
Scrv1le 'J l [) 15 a m
Hnmcm,1 kmg mec1111 g. I~11lmrs 7 p m

Syraeuse First Churth n(Gud

•
•

•
••

Gold R1J ge Road Pumr.:ru}'· OH

.

"Let your light so shine before
men , that they may see
good works and glonfy

K&amp; C JEWELERS
212 E. Main Street
Po'm eroy

Father in heaven ...

Y01u· #2 BWW1l'H H ()llr #I Brmn l! \ 1

499 Richland Avenue. Athens
740-594-fi33J

--

nmAAY

I ll

t tl

-"

.,

t-800-451-9806

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

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

507 Mulberry Height~
Pomeroy, Ohio ~5769 ~
(740) 992-3279
~
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

'

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N Second St.

•
•

Matthew 5 I

992-3785

•

Middleport OH

740-992-6128
Local source for trophies,
Ia ues t-shirts and more

•
•

•
•

KEHLER
BUSINESS SERVICES
.4u Accou111iug &amp;

Financial Services Firm
61X E M am S1rect • Pom~ro\
17~01992-7 ~ 70
-

Church or the Nazarem
P:.t~to r Re v Herbert Grute. Sunday s~hool
- 930am .Wurshtp - l! am, 6 pm
Wednesday Servu:es 7 p m
Rutland Chul'(!h or the Nazal'fne
Sunday School 9 30 a m Worshl f'l
10 10 om. 6 10 p m Wed ncsdlt}
Servtces - 7 p m Rc1. M1kc C"lmk

iitrvl~e

ThpJK!rs Plains St. Paul
Jane Hca111c Sund&lt;Jy Sc hool . 9
a m, Wor~ lup l0 a m , Tu e~day Sen. ICC '
1 30 p m
Central Cluster
Aobury IS ) rucu&gt;e l Pasl()r Bnh Ruh1n son,
Sumlay S~hoo l - 9 45 am Wnrshtp - I I
o.111. Wednesday Sen t ee~ . 7 10 p m
P~stor

Other Churches
Amazing {;race Community Chul'('h
Pastor Wayne Dunl ,tp. State Rt 681
Tup[)Crs Plams Sun Worshtp 10 am &amp;
6 JO pm, Tiwr-.day Bl tok- Stud} 7 UU p m

1-: nlcrpriSl'
Pttstor Arland Kmg, Sun day School 10 30 am , Wor~h.tp - 9 30 a m Htbk
Stud y V.Cd 7 ~0
Flatwoods
Pastor Kc1\h Rader, Sunday School - 10
am,Worshtp · ll am

Pa~tur

a n1

Oam Chnstian 1-' ellowshtp
(Nnn dcnommm1ona l f~llow~htp)
Mectm g m the vld Arneman Lcgton Ho.ll
South Fourt h Avenue. M•ddlcrnrt
Pastvr Chns Stewart I0 00 am Sunday
Other mechn g~ m home s

Forest Run
Bub R o hm~on, Sunday Schoo l - l 0

Wor~hlp -9 um

United Methodist
(;ruham Umled Methochst
Worsh1p - II am Pa.,tnr R1dwd Ne ase
llmhtel United Methudisl
Ne-... Ha\ en Rtl h.trd Nease, Paslor
Sun day Y. {lr~ h lp ') 10 am lu es 6 ~()
pr.tycr and ll•hlc Stu dy

lkthd Wurshtp Center

Minersville
Pu~tm Bob Robm son Sunday School - 9
::~ m , Worsht p - Ill a m
Pearl Chapel
Sunday S~houl 9 am, Worship · 10 am
Pomeroy
Paster Brtan Dunham Worshtp - 9 30
3 m Sunday School- 10 3 ~ am

Rock SprinW~
PJs tof Kc1th Radcr Sunda y S(hool IJ 15
a m Wor sht p - 10 a m . Youth
Fclluwshtp, Sundav- 6 p 111
Rutland
P~ s tu r Rtck Bourne, Sunda) School
9 30 a m Wurshtp l 0 30 a m , Thursday
Sermes 7 p m
Salem Ccnler
Pa~lor WtlhJm K Manhall
Sunday
Schnol - 10 IS ,, m , Worshtp -19 15 a m ,
lltbl~ Study Monday 7 00 pm
Snowville
Sunduv School - 10 am Wor~b1p . &lt;.J a 111
Bethany
Pastor John G1hnure, Sunday Schuvl - 10
am, Worshtp · Q am, Wednesda y
Serv1ces - I0 a m
Carmel-Sutton
Carmel &amp; Rashan Rcts Racme. Oh1 0
Paslor Joh n Gtlmorc Sunday School 9 10 J m, Worship - ,10 45 3m • R1hlc
Sruliy Wed 7 00 p m
MurnmgStar
P.l ..tiH John Gllmot'c Sunday s ... hool - II
.1m , Worslup - lOam

(oolulle Unittd Methodtst rarlsh
Pastor Hele n Khne. Coolvtlle Church,
Mam &amp; F1fth St ., Suu day s~hool - 10
a 111 ', Worsh1p • 9 am, Tue~duy- Services7prn
Bethel Church
Tuwn~h1p R,d , 46HC. Sunday School 9
~ m. Worshtp . 10 am. Wer.lnesdsy
ServH:es- I0 El m
llockingpor-t Chun-h
Grand Street. Sunday School - 9 30 a m .
Worship · 10 30 11m Pastor Ph1lhp Bell

Co Rd 61.

rorch Church
Sdmul - 9 10

Sunda~

&lt;t

m,

Wl •r~ h1Jl ·l ll 3 0.1m

Mt. Oh~e Un1fed Methodist
Otf 124 l)~ huul Wtlk es\ lllc. PJsln r Rev
R. ,tlp h Sptn'' Sunda) S... hnnl - 9 ~n am
\.V.;orshtp - I0 H1 J m . 7 p m lllllrsday
Sen •~~~ 7 p m .
Meigs Cooperative Pari.'lh
Alfred Pa~IDr Jan~
Rl' :t. llt~' Sund.ty Schoo l · 9 30 a m ,
Worshtp II am 6 ){)p m

Nazarene
Middleport Ch~n:h of the Nazarue
Pa stor. All en Mtdlap. Sunday Sehoul
f) '0a m Worship l010 a m . 630pm ,
w~ dn csday Se rll CCS - 7 p Ill . Paswr
Allen M1dc ap

Joppa
tl vb Randolph, Wprs h1p - 9 10
u m Suml.l) S... h\.11.•1- 10 30 ~ Ill
l' a~ \llr

l.lm~

Holtom

19782 S R 7. Kc&lt;:•.h YIIle. OH 4S772 112
nul e north Ill EMtcrn St.:h,-.nls nn SR., A
Full Gn ~ pd Chur~.;h, Pa~ !ut R1Jb H:t rbcl.
ASSO(Illlt' Pa ~ 1 ur Kur}n Da l' h Ynulh
Pa•tor SuJ.t,; F wn~1s Sun d:.t~ ~cn t n·~
10 00 am worsh1p. 6110 pm Fn nHl v Lt k
Clas:-;e,, W~ d Ho me Cell G ruu1• ~ i \/(1
p m , Outer l tmlt' Cell Grnllp at the
l hurlh f. \0 pm to X 10 pn1
Ash Strt!et Chureh
39B Ash St . Mlddle pcrt -Past&lt;&gt;r Jeff Smtih
Sunduy Sc hool - 'J 10 a 111 M"rnm !!
Worship - 10 30 am &amp; {l 30 11111
Wedn e5d~ y Servtce - 6 30 p m
Youth
Scrvtcl!'- 6 30 p m
"Full-Gospel Chut ch' , P;~ s tur s Juhn &amp;
Patty Wad~ . 603 Second Ave Ma ~ nn. 7n
501/ Scrvtce trmc Sunday 10 10 am,
Wednesda} 7 pm
Abundant Grace R.F. I
92 ~ S Thtrd Sl . M1ddlcpoi1 P·..t~tnr Tere s.~
Da\ts, Sunday scn•tcc. 10 .tm ,
Wednesday serv~ee 7 p rn
Faith ..-un Gospel Church
Long Bottom, Pastor St~ve Reed , Sund.ty
Schon] 9 ~0 ~ m. Worsh1p · 9 30 ~ m
and 7 p m , Wednesday - 7 p m , Fnday
fellowshtp service 7 p m

1-"Mirvie" Riblf Chur ~ h
Letart W Va Rl l. Puslor B11U11 /l.t:.t)
Sunda}Sch w l iJJO~m.Wutslup -7()! 1
p m . We&lt;.lnc'&gt;l.l:i)' Bthlc Study 7 (K) p m
F11lth Frllo" ship C rusu.dc fur ('hrht •
Pa~tllr Rc1 Frank ltn Ot d~ n ~ Sai'IU.'
Fnday, 7 p m
Calvary Rlhle ( humh
P tk ~ C 11 Rd
l}a~ tor Re\'
Alad:-... u"d Sm1d.1y Se houl · 9 ~fl .1 111
Wo rsl11p 10·10 .t 111 . 7 W pIll
W~ Jne ,d uy Servtce - 7 10 r m
Pnmero~

Slntn;vtlle l'ommumty t\poslohc
Church
P&lt;tstur Wu) nc R h10. cll . Sum.l,t) 1\\JJ ~I up
- 6 00 p m . Wedne~day 6 ~ J p 111 lhhk
• Study

Rcedsv1lle 1-' tllowshlp
Church ot th l!' Nazarene, Paslor • Jam te
Pcntt, Sunday Sc hool - 9 .)0 a m . Wor.;htp
• lU 45 a 111, 7 p m, Wednesday Serv1,;es
~ 7 p lJI
S~riiL-use

Church of the Nazarene
Pa stm Mtke Adkms, Su nduy S~;hoo l - 9 30
am. Worshtp
10 30 am, 6 p m ,
Wcdn~sday Ser.tces 7 p m
Pomeroy Church or the Nlll.artne
Pa&gt;tnr Jan La\·cnder, Sunday School -

Kejolcln~

Lire Chur£h

Mt ddle pon P,,., ,.. r
Mtke For~ m un
Pasi iJr bncrlllh
l.awrenl c roln m,lll Wnr~htp- [{I !Hl .1111
Wcdnesd,t ~ Sef\ llC' - 7 P, m
N 2nd t\ vc

Chfton lahunacle lhun.- h
Clil hlll w v~. Su nd.ty Sdwol 11 1 J
V..ut , IJip 7 Jllll Wc dn~'o&lt;.lay S~f\ K l

m
I

pm

' Ntw Ltfe \tdur~ Ct-nh:r
1771 George' (rec k Ko.u.l. Gull1p1'h' OH
P-.~~tqr H'1ll Stut~n . Su nd.i) Sl'l \lll''
10
,, m &amp; 7 p 111 \\ cdn c~ tl.t}
7 p 11 1 &amp;
Youth 7 p m

full Go~pel ChuiTh
' of the l.hhiR Savior
Rt '1M. ,\nttqtll t\' l' u~ l or Jl'&gt;sc M nrrt ~
S e r~I CC&gt; S.llltrd.uy ~ 0() r Ill
Sal~m Cmnmun1t\ ( lmrch
H.1ck 11 ] V.t·~ tlnlumh l t W V,1 11111 L1~11 11g
Ruad P.t, tm Chuil e' l&lt; ou'h 4 \04; (,7&lt;;.
22!1!1 Sun d ~y ~Lhn "l 'J ~U . 11 11 Sund ay
('\emn~ ' O:rlllC 7 00 r m Hthl y StwJ y
Wcdn..: ~ da~ sc r~~~~

7 ~~l

rm

Hub.wn l:hristian 1-cllo"slnp (hur(h
P.tstnr Haschcl Wh11c Suml ty S,hnnl
10 am. Sunday Chu rd1hen 1~e 0 \tl pm
Wednesday 7 pm

Harrison1-ille Cllmmunlty Church
l'a ~ tor Theron Durhant, Sunday - 9 \()
am and?pm Wcdne~da} · 7r m

Restoration Chrtstian 1-ellnushtp
916'1 Hoop er Rnad •A th ~n~ P.t&lt;;IM
L11n01( Cout~. Suml.ty Wnr~l up Ill 00 .uu
Wcd nesd.1y I pm

Middleport Community Church
575 Pearl St, Mtddl epurl , Pas10r Snm
Ander~on, Sund&lt;~ y School 10 am .
Evcnmg • 7 30 pIll • Wed ncsd~y ~ervtcc 7 30 pIll

Lanplllle Christian Chun-h
f"ull Gospl'l Paqvr Rt•hen Mu ,~~ r,
SunJ&lt;1y School 9 ~0 .1m . W"rdu p 10 JO
am- 7 00 pm, W~ Jn~M.I.I) Scr11ee 7 00
p11 1

Fa1th Vallty T11bernade Chun:h
Batley Run Road. P::tstor Rev Emmell
RaY. son, Sunday E\cn mg 7 p m ,
Thursday Scrvtce 7 p 1n
,
Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman .St Syracuse Suntl:t }
Sch ool - 10 11 m, Fvenmg
fi p m
WednesdayScn.1ce -7 p m.
llazel Communi!} Churth
Off Rt 124, Pastor Edsl!'l H.trt, Sunday
SchiXll • 9 JU am . Worsh1p · 10 ] ()am,
7 30 p m
Dy~villt Community Church
Sunday School 9 30 ::t m , Wo rsh1p -

Pentecostal
l'enterushll &lt;\sst!mbly
I H Ra~mc P.t~ t ot \Vtllt.tm
H uba~o k Sunda y Sehoul
I 0 a tn •
E11~ mn g 7 p m , Wedn c~duy Slt"'-ICL'' 7

St

Rt

11111

Presbyterian

Syracuse First United Pn..~ hytertnn
Pa~tur Robert Crow, Wor.,lup I I H 10
Harnsonvllle Presbyti'rlan Chureh
Pastor Rubert Cww. Worsh1p - 1J

1111

MtddlcporiPresh}lerian
P.tslllr J,un&lt;: ~ Sn yd~r SunJ,tv SdnHd 10
am, IMlrs!n p ser YJH II &lt;till

1030a~l.lpm

Seventh-Day .Adventist

Mol'5e Ch11pel Church
Sundny school - I 0 am , Worship - II
n Ill ' Wcdncsdtly Sen.' ICC - 7 r m

Snenth· lluy ,\dvl'nllst
Mulberr y H1 ~ Rd Pom cru~ P.1stor
Rcnncll Luckll''ih Saturd.1y SCIII'C'
Snhhu1h Schml 2 p Ill. Wut sh tp 1 rIll

United Brethren

Faith Go.&lt;~pel Churrh
Mt ll..rmun l lmtrd Hrelhrcn
Lon g B11Uom. Sundlty School • 9 l O u m
m Chnlit Chun-h
Wonh1p - 10 45 am 7 30 p m
lcxll'
Commu
ntl ) JMII WKkham RJ
Wednesday 7 30 p m
PJI[ Ur r~tcr M.trtmd,tlt.: !;und,n ScltnQI Ml. Olne Community Chun:h
g 14) a m , w,1r.,l11p . 1Lt 10 ,, n1 7 110
P~stor. Lawrence Bush Sunday Sch lHll - •
l' m , Wcdn c~d ~y Scr v 1\ ~' • 7 ()() p 111
9 30 am E\entng 6 ~0 I' m . Wcdr~ d ay
YP utb I!I~' UP mc~ 1 111g 2nd &amp; -lth Sun d a v~
Servtcc - 7 p m
7 p rn

Full Gospel Lighthouse
33045 Hiland RGad, Pom eroy, Pi.lstllr Rn)
Hunte r Su nday Sdtool l 0 a 111 Evcnmg
7 30 p m . Tuesday &amp; Th ur ..day 7 ltl
pm

N~lrlbc.ht Clu ~ l~ r.

Chester
Pn stnr Jan ~ BcJI\Ie, Worsh1p - 9 am .
Su ncl.1y S... hnn l - 10 am . Thni"Sd,Jy
Sen tees ·? p m

Wh11e's Chapel We~lt"~an
Cool VIlle Road Pa,tnr lh 1 Phil lll'
l·l:!dcnour, Sunday Sc hoo.•l , lJ ~II .1 111
Wor~lup . l0 10 ~ m • W~·dne,J,11 ',c n h. c
- 7 Jllll

~00

pm

Radne
Paslor. Kerry Wood Sunctay School - 10
.1111 Worship · !I am

St Prwl Lutheran Church
Comer Sye••mo r~ &amp; Second St r t11ncroy,
Sundu y Sd1001 - 'J 4S .1m. Wor~ h1p - 11
11111

uf Christ

Rd, P&lt;tstt•r J11n Pruftiu.

Wo rsh1p- 7 p m

SundaY S,;hvnl - Y 30 am . Wur~hip
10 ~0 u m , Wednesday Sl!'r\'t(Cs 7 00

Heath I Middleport)
Pustllr Bmt.n Dunham, Su nday Schnol
9 ~0~m Wcmh1p l! OOttm

St. John Luthl•ran Chun.h
, l'me Un11e, Wor sh1p · 9 UO ~ m , Sunday
Sduml - 10 00 &lt;1m Pa ~ tot J~me~ P
Hr,u..lv

Our S1niour l.utheran Chun:h
Wa lnut and Hcn r} Sts, R:tH:nswo1uJ
\\oVa . Pastor Da\ ld Russdl Sunday
School _, l0 00 11 m Worsh1p 11 a m

Com~nunity
Po rtland - Ra~•ne

Lutheran

...
..,..........

:ft&amp;bu :funrral •omt
............ mz L•

.......................
JU 112-1141

141111. . .

•

If ye abide i11 Me, and My
words abide in you, ye shall
a;·k what ye will, a11d it shall
be done unto you.
John 15:7

rm

and~

Che~ter

East Ltturl
Pasrm Btll Marshall SumJay Sehoul lJa 111 , Wor sh•p - 10 am, hi Sunday
every momh everung serv1cc 7 00 p m .
Wednesdny . 7 p m

pm

Kulland Church oflJod
P.tstor Ron Heath. Sun Uay W01 ~h1r- 10
,, m , 6 p m , w~um:s d.•y Ser v tL I,'~ - 7
pm

Y 30 ~ m, Worshtp -~1 0 30 am
p m , Wednesday Se rv1ces. 7 p 111

Sund.1y Sd10ol - \i 30 am Wur shtp •
10 10 am
Reed~ ville
Wur&lt;;h1p - 9 JO ~ 111 Sunday School 10 3U a m . F1r~t Sunda) 11f Mol!th 7 00

South llfthel Community Church
Sliver R•i.lgc Paslllr Lmda Damewuud,
Sunday S( hool - 9 :t m , Wop;hip Serl'1n·
I 0 a m 2m! &gt;~nd 4th Sunday

Eden United Hrtthren In Christ
St:tte Rout e 124 h~twc e n Re ~ d~\ ilk &amp;
Hnd-ungpnn Sund.ty Sdtuol 10 Jill
Sund.t) Worsh1p - II CHI ,\Ill Wed nc\d;~ y
Servt ... es - 7 00 p m , Pa,tnr M Adum
W1ll

cxlttend C5Aawlt

Carleton Interdenominational Chun:h
K tngs h ur~ Road. Pas1or Robert Van~e.
Sunday Schnol
9 lO a m , Worship
Servile ]() lO am , E\cmng Service t.
pm

Fl'ffitom Gospel Mission
Ibid Knoh' on Co Rd 31, P.1stor

I

Portable Toilet Rentals
Jack's Septic Tank &amp;
Portable Toilet Service
tin Darwin)
Phone or Fax N0-992·7 119
Owner~ Da\ 1d &amp; Edllh Bnc kl e~

Church of Christ

Scrvtccs Su n 10 UO a m &amp; 7 10 p m

Assembly of God

!Jvfi[[ie's 1(estaurant

,N8~5

~ rtl

Emmanuel Apostolic Tabcrmtcle Inc
ntl Nrw L1m,1 Rd Rutland

.
C

Hills Self Storage

rm

Stt£rt:d Hearll.'athohc t..:hurrh
16 1 Mulbe rry A\e. Pomeroy 1)92-'i1:19K
P.tsltJr Rev W,iltcr 1:. H em~. ~.tt Ct•n
.J 45-5 15p Ill. M.I SS· !i 1() r m ' Sun
Con -K45-9 l!i am .. Sun Ma ss- ~ :\0
am Da1l} M o.~' KJOa m

Loo p Rd

Michael L. Crites
Director of Family &amp;
Communi!) Services
Overbrook
Rehabilitation Or.
"A Celebration of Life ..

Almmpht'll '

7

Catholic

h•th Baptist Chun:h
Ra1lroad St, M &lt;~~on , Sund,ty School - 10
a 111 , Worshtp • II a m , 6 p m,
Wcdne~ da} Scrv t ~e~ · 7 p m

333 Page Street
M1ddleoort OH

Wcdn c~d.ty

10 p m

A\e, Mn.ldlepurt Kcvm Konkle, Pastnr
Su rn.luy, 10 30 am
Wetlncsda) 7 00
pm . YotHhfn 730pm

·i'

Wann Frwrdl\

Dairq

i

, Kivu Vulley
Apostolic Wondup C~mcr K71 S

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
Young's Carpenter Service

Sen tee-; - 7 p m
Raptlst Church
R ul ~ n~Y. (l()f l , WV, Sunday Schnol 10 amMormng -... or;;hlp II am Evcmng- 7 pm.
SCi'ond

M11Jer Sunda) Sc hool • 10 30 am

wasn' i sure when was the last
ttme the books were known to
have been seen.
There were no stgns of
forced entry and Gunnerson
satd no other items were
taken.
"However, I don't know if
they would have known what
was in that safe," he said.
Gunnerson said very few
people knew the books were
111 the safe. He said only a few
mstructors ever use them for
teaching.

Gunnerson satd the safe that
held the books Y.as dtscovmtssmg
Tue sday.
ered
Pohce estimate it could have
been stolen as far back as
Oct. 24.
"It's one of two safes. It's
one we don 't use all the
time," Gunnerson satd. "It's
m a secre,ary 's office. It was
in a cab met."
The secretary who works 111
that office had been out of
town for a couple of weeks.
Gunnerson satd the institute

Wed nc~ ay

Chun:h of Jesus ChriJt Apostolic

Two rare copies of Book of Mormon reported stolen

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

~· WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

2005

Suffering for righteousness sake
Silver beams of dawn were
piercing the torn remnants of
glowering storm douds that
· were tleetl y soaring overhead as I pursue~· my en ands
this past Tue sday mornmg.
Passmg through curtains of
ram that kept abruptly starting and ending as if someone
were fli ckmg a water f.wce t
on and ott. I followed the
course of the road as tt
veered westW&lt;ll d As l dtd
so, a vividly colorful leg of a
rainbow came tnto my line
of sight. leapi ng upward into
the sky, fadmg into the hangmg mists.
As that glad stght greeted
me , the gloom of the dreary
mornmg seemed to momentarily surrender to the cheer
and hope that the rainbow
promised. Bu t then. new
waves of ram cascaded
down onto my c,tr and hid
the rambow from my eyes.
But even though the shower
was brief. lasting only a
matter ot seconds. I could
no longer see the ratnbow
when I had passed through
to the other side: The ramhow seemed gone.
I stghed and dtove on.
resigning myself to having
''lost the rainbow" and my
mind soon pressed forward
again to all the variettes of
acttvtlles and responstbtlities
that lay before me. But. just
when I had all but forgotten
abour the rambow. betorc me
sprang up the other leg of the
rainbow, serenelv sure of
itself amid all the squalls ragmg around 11.
Even so, God's promises
made to us, who dwell 111 the
Valley of Sorrow and Stnfe.
are lifelines of hope and
beaming rays of encouragefuent. We see those promi ses.
reading them m the Bible. We
hear them , as they are
preached to us from the pulptt. We know them, by choosmg to trust them while· ploddmg along the path of hfe.
Yet, we stumble when
clouds of worry obscure our
blues sktes of opllmtsm. We
fret when the rams of conflict
and dtfficulty relentlessly
pour down upon us and erode
our hope. And we often
despair when the floodwaters
of grief and tragedy rise and
threaten to drown us in misery and defeat.
But God did not create us
in order to drown us in futility and defeat. He did not send
His Son mto the world to
redeem us from sin's awful
power just so we could dwell
fore-.;er in the stagnant waters
of worldly confusion. After
the flood waters had finally
dissipated after the Great
Flood (chapters 6 and 7 of
Genesis), the Lord Himself

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992-een

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Matthew 5:8
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Matthew 5·16

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�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make tro law respecting a11 .
establishment of religiotr, or prohibiting tile
free exercise thereof; or abridgitrg the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the rigl1t of the
people peaceably to assemble, a11d to petition
the Goverument for a redress .of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, Nov. 18·, the 322nd day of 2005. There are
43 day s left in the year.
·
Today 's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 18, 1903. the United States and Panama signed a
treaty granting the U.S. rights to build the Panama CanaL
On this date:
In 1820, U.S . Navy Captain Nathaniel B. Palmer discovered
the frozen continent of Antarctica.
·
In 1883, the United States and Canada adopted a sysiem of
Standard Time zones.
In 1966, U.S. Roman Catholic bishops did away with the
rule against eating meat on Fridays.
In 1978, California Congressman Leo J. Ryan and four
other people were killed in Jonestown, Guyana, by members
of the Peoples Temple; the killings were foll owed by a ni ght
of mass murder and suicide by 912 cult members.
In 1987, the congressional Iran-Contra committees issued
their final repon. saying President Reagan bore "ultimate
responsibility" for wrongdoing by his aides.
In 1999, 12 people were killed when a bonfire under con:
struction ·at Texas A&amp;M University collapsed .'
In 2003, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled, 43, that the state constitution guaran teed gay couples the right
to marry.
Ten years ago: With no relief in sight from a budget impasse
that forced a panial federal shutdown, the Hou se rebelled
against Republican leaders during a raucous Satui·day session
and voted to oppose formally adjourning the chamber until
Monday. (GOP leaders put the chamber into recess anyway.)
Five years ago: George W Bush' s campliign fiercely
attacked the hand-recounting of vote.s in Florida's presidential
election, depicting a process riddled with human error and
Democratic bias; AI Gore\ lawyers defended the effort in
pape" tiled with the state Supreme Court.
One year ago: Former President Clinton 's library opened in
Little Rock, Ark.; in attendance were President Bush, former
President Bush and former President Carter. Former Ku Klux
Klansman Bobby Frank Cherry, who was convicted of killing
four black girls in a racially motivated bombing of a
Birmingham, Ala., church in 1963, died in prison at age 74.
Britain outlawed fox hunting in England and Wales.
Composer Cy Coleman died in New York at age 75.
Today 's Binhdays: Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Aiaska. is 82. Actor
Brad Sullivan is 74. Actress Brenda Vaccaro is 66. Actress
· Linda Evans is 63. Actress Susan Sullivan is 61. Country
singer Jacky Ward is 59. Actor Jameson Parker is 58. Actresssinger Andrea Marcovicci is 57. Rock musician Herman
Rarebell is 56. Singer Graham Parker is 55. Actor Delroy
Lindo is 51 Comedian Kevin Nealon is 52. Actress Elizabeth
Perkins is 45. Singer Kim Wilde is 45 . Rock musician Kirk
Hammett (Metallica) is 43. Rock singer Tim Delaughter is
40. Actor Owen Wilson is 37. Singer Duncan Sheik is 36.
Actress Peta Wilson is 35. Actress Chloe Sevigny is 31.
Country ·singer Jessi Alexander is 29. Rapper Fabulous is 26.
Rapper Mike Jones is 25 .
Thought for Today: " If an his torian were to relate tru thfull y
all the crimes, weaknesses and disorders of mankind, his readers would take his work for satire rather than for history."-·
. Pierre Bayle, French philosopher and critic (1647- 1706)

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Lerters to the editor are welcome. They should he less than
300 words. All leiters are .&gt;ubject ro editing. must be signed,
and include address and telephone number. No wHigned letters will be published. Letters should be in · gpod taste,
addressing i.uues, not personalities. Lerters of thanks to organi:atiuns and individual.&gt;. willtwt be accepted for publication.

.

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Correction Polley
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accurate. If you know of an error in a

story, cell! the newsroom at (740) 99221!56.

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Inside Meigs County

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Friday, November 18, 2005

Let's talk turkey
Talking turkey can't hold
a drumstick to sitting down
on Thanksgiving Day to an
honest-to-goodness dinner
of stuffing. mashed potatoes. gravy. eranberry sauce.
pumpkin pie - and all the
turkey you can eat.
But "talking turkey." can
(&gt;!range as it seems) ge t our
mollth:, watering and even
satisfy our appetites.
I know a man who was a
POW in World War II who
says that whenever the Gls
in his unit were at the point
of starvation, they would sit
in a circle and talk for a long ·
time about their fav orite
foods and favo ri te reci pes.
''Hard as it may be to
believe,'' he says. "that
helped quite a bit to get rid
of the gnawing hunger."
When I was a radio newsma n in Boston, I always
ended mv Noontime News
program by reading the produce rnarket report. It wash' I
my idea. I was told to do it.
I felt it spoi led the program. Once I ment'ioned thi s
to Lou Webster, who broadcast our early morn ing farm
program .
·'There aren't more than a
handful uf people who care
about the produce repon ," I·
· said . ''It loses li steners fo r
the program.''
" I think you're wrong,"
said Lou. ''Even people whu
aren't the least bit interested
in the market report like to
hear words like green beans,
fresh eggs, pea s, broccoli
and swee1 corn."

Olga Pullins

(George Plagenz is an
orda;ned minister and veter-

newsman

based

lll

Co lumbus. Ohio.)

I

MOVE WE ESTABI.I~H

~C&lt;J\D

ADATt BY WHICH
ALL 'TROOPS AAE.

'!HE
MOTION.

wrrnDR.AWN ...

NOW

SOCitTY

The Democratic game plan
The Democratic game plan
for bringi ng down George
Bush and his administration
is now dear- and it is quite
a plan . ·
The name of the game is
Iraq. Voters ,Lisually vote
thcir pocketbooks, but the
economy is _inconveniently
robust, and even gasoline
· prices arc far below their
summer peak. It is the situation in Iraq , and how we got
there , that understandabl y
distresses the American peopie. So the Democrats are ·
well into Act I of their threepan drama, and its th eme is
simple: "George Bush lied us
into the war in Iraq,"
The charge is simplicity ·
itself: Bush tricked . us into
supponing his invasion of
Iraq by ~lleging that Saddam
Hussein had weapon s of
mass destruction (WMD),
when in fact Saddam 'had
none, and Bush knew it.
The trouble with this
charge is that every major
Democrat in the Cl inton
administration, including
Ciinton himself, al leged
exactly the same thing, again
and again. Thus Clinton, in
199R: " If Saddam .rejects
peace and we have to use ·
force, our purpose is dear.
We want to seriously dim inish the threat posed by Iraq 's
weapon s-&lt;&gt;f-mass-dcstru c-

William
Rusher

tion program."
Only space limitations prevent me from quoting equally ex plicit statements by
Secretary of State Albright,
National Security Adviser
Berger. and Sen. Carl Levin
&lt;t nd John Kerry, among a
dozen others. And they kept
repeatin g their · warnings
right into the Bush adrninistration . Here was Sen.
Hillary Clinton, in October
2002: "In the four years
since the inspectors left,
intelli ge nce re ports show
tha t Saddam Hussein has
worked'to rebui ld hi s chemical and biological weapons
stocks, his missile-delivery
capability. and his nuclear
program. He has also given
aid, comfort, and sanctuary
to terrorists. including AI
Qaeda members."
And these Democratic
assenions were backed up by
the firm assurances of every
major intellige nce service in
the Western wor ld. beginning with CIA Director

George Tenet, who told Bush House could zero in on any
that Saddam's possession of doubts that existed in the
weapons of mass destruction intelligence community in
was "a slam dunk.': raced the years up to 2003, and
with' such assurances. Bu sh · issue reports "confirming'' .
accepted ll\em. He would that George Bush deliberatehave been deeply irresponsi- ly "hyped" the evidence to
ble if he hadn't.
deceive the American peoDespite this, the charge ple, even if he believed in its.
that "Bush lied us into war" basic truth.
has had a surprisingly long
Thus the stage will be rerun . But the Democrats
set
for Act Ill, the drama's
know very well that it can' t
last forever, and they are culmination, in 2007 and
accordingly looking forward 2008: .The impeachment of
to Act II of their game plan. George W. Bush.
Some readers may think
This will involve conceding
that
such a development is
.that maybe Bush was simply
wrong (no t lying) about implausi ble. But they underSaddam 's possession of estimate the hatred the
Democrats feel for Bush, and
WMDs, but that he "cherrytheir
desperation at the curpicked" among confljcting
. intelligence
assessments, rent low estate of their pany.
moreover
ignoring ,those that doubted Impeachment ,
the ruling assumption and (which is constitutionally the
hi ghlighting those that rein- function of the House),
forced it, in order to justi fy · strikes many Democrats as
the invasion. That will simply a condign payback
. require them to emphas ize for what the Republicans did
cautionary footnotes in the to Clinton. If they capture the
intelligence assessments and Senate as well as the House
minimize the major conclu- in 2006, Bush's trial and
sions. .
. removal may well res ult.
Fasten your seatbehs,
But the Democrats look-for
fur1her suppon if they cap- ladies and gentlemen. There
ture
the
House
of is turbulence ahead.
Representati ves in next
(William R!isher is a
year 's Congressional elec- Distillgui&gt;hed Fellow of the
tions. Armed with the sub- C/aremom Institute for th e
poena power, Democrat-con- Study of Statesmamhip and
trolled committees of the Political Philosophy.)

BY CARRIE
SPENCER GHOSE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

POMEROY -Olga Virginia Pullins, 89, of Rocksprings
Road, Pomeroy, died on Wed nesday, Nov. 16,2005-. at Hblzer
Med1 cal Center m Gallipolis.
Ser~ices will be held at II a.m. on Saturday, Nov. 19, 2005,
at Ewmg Funeral Home 111 Pomeroy. Friends may call from 6
to 8 p.m. on Friday. .

COLUMBUS - An antismoking group argues a
statewide smoking ban in
workplaces would be more
fair to restaurant and bar
owners than scattered municipal bans that send smoking
patrons to the suburbs: A
group of bar owners with a
competing
plan isn' t buying
MIDDLEPORT - Denzil LeRoy 'Proctor, 72, Middlepon,
the
argument
.
passed away on Wednesday. Nov. 16, 2005 , at Holzer Medical
SmokeFreeOhio submitted
Center in· Gallipolis.
165,000 petition signaabout
He was born on April 14. 1933, in Middlefork, W.Va., son
tures
on
Thursday in a frrst
of the late Ernest Howard Proctor'and Lucie Mullins Proctor.
step
toward
getting the ban
He was employed by Southern Ohio Coal Co. American
on
the
November
2006 ballot.
Electric Power for over 40 years and was the General Mine
It
would
apply
to
any estabForeman for United Mine Workers District 17. He was a
. member of the VFW West Virginia Auxiliary. He attended lishment with employees
except stores with at least 80
the Victory Baptist Church. ·
.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by a step- percent of their sales from
tobacco and no liquor license.
daughter, Rhonda Lynn Hawley Roush .
If it's enacted, Ohio would
Survivin g are his wife, Bonnie Mae · "Pat" Proctor.
Middlepon: chi ldren: Debra Ann Taylor, Campbell Creek, be.:ome the IOth state with a
W Va., Danny K. Proctor, Charleston, W.Va., and C:harles (Lola ban that includes bars,
Faye) Whittington, Jr.. Pomeroy; a brother, Damon (Rosemary) according to the National
· of
State
Proctor, Ripl ey, W.Va., grandchildren: Rachel Proctor, Sarah Conference
Proctor, Patricia L Roush, Michelle (Greg) Duvall, Tommy Legislatures. Wash in,gton 's
Roush, Barbara L Day; great grandchildren, Billy Duvall, ban takes effect next month.
Six other states ban restaurant
Trenton Duvall, Brock Denzil Roush, Halley Tayengco. ·
Services will be held at II a.m. on Saturday, Nov. 19, 2005, smoking but exempt bars.
A group of bar owners and
at Fisher Funeral Home. Middleport Chapel with Rev. James
!(eesee officiating. Burial will be in Gravel Hill Cemetery. · industry trade groups saiq
Friends may call from 5 to 8 p.m. on Friday at the funeral they · would work with the
home, and may send on-line condolences to www.fishcrfuner- Legi slature for a statewide
ban exempli ng bars.
alhomes.corn.
· "There will be a statewide
policy," said Jacob Evans,
lobbyi st for the Ohio
Licen sed
Beverage
Association . "The question is
what will that be?''
A Cleveland restaurant
owner said businesses would
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer be · surprised at economic
District is accepting app lications for an unexpired volunteer benefits from a ban.
Gary' Richmond said he
board vacancy.
made his Johnny Mango
Those interested should submit their names and addresses.
Applicants must be a property owner and reside with.in the World Cafe and Bar smokedi strict or a bu siness owner within the district and be sub- free a year ago, and business
scri bers in good standing. A limit of two business owners .can went up 9 percent in the tirst
six months compared with
sit on the board at one time,
Application s sho uld be mailed to Tuppers Plain s the same period a year
Regional Sewer Di strict, P.O. Box 175 , Tuppers Plains, before. For the first time he
had to develop a kids menu
Ohio 45783-0175 .
for the restaurant's ethnic
health food .
What works for a restaurant won't work for a bar
POMEROY - A catfish caught by Terry George of Rutland where children don ' t go, tavweighed 54 pounds and was 55 inche s long.
ern owners said.

Denzil Proctor

Local Briefs

·Accepting board applications

Correction

Pomeroy
GITUSOUT

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Group pushes statewide smoking ban, bar owners object
'

would have gone from the
table hungry ? Remind me to
tell · you sometime how
things turned out at thi s
church dinner. (Or · let me
know how you would have
solved this problem without
bloodshed.)
But we don' t have to sit
down to a sumptuous
Thanksgiving dinner in
order to enjoy the holiday
that has become America's
favorite - · . free from the ·
commercialism and frenzy
of a holi&lt;)ay like Christmas.
In her book, "Gift From
the Sea," written shortly
after the end of World War
II, Anne Morrow Lindbergh
said. "Europeans are enjoying the present moment even
if it means merely a walk in
the country on Sunday or
·Sipping a cup of black coffee
at a sidewalk cafe."
Lindbergh explains this by
saying, "The good past is so
far away and the near past is
so horrible and the future so
perilous that the present has
a chance to expand into a
glorious eternity.';
She is saying that true
thanksgiving includes gratitude for a moment at the
breakfast table with a pot of
colfee, tqast and marmalade
"or a walk in the country on
Sunday" as much as for
good fortune, good health
and a bountiful table on
Thanksgiving Day.
an

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

with all the fixings

and orange cake."
You might infe r from thi s
that food was a big thing in
the life of our family. Well,
it was and it wasn't We
liked to eat but we ate what
George
was put in front of us . We
Plagenz
were not allowed to criticize
our mother's cookin g. If we
didn't like it, we went without.
I think he is right. I have
As much as 111e enjoy eatchanged my mind. When I ing, food can become too
became church editor of a important in our lives. It is
daily paper, I would li st all probably true that, in a
the church suppers in the world where so many are
city - with the complete starv ing, we eat, as one
menu s.
writer says, "too much , too
If St.. Monica's parish was eagerly, too expensively and
having a chicken dinner, the wi th too much of a fuss."
church pages would say
One church brought this
·'Old-fashioned chic ken din- poi nt home when it adverner, family-style. Country.- tised that everyone in the
fried c hicken with gravy, congregation was in vi ted to
mashed potatoes, buttered a parish supper. "Roast beef
corn, tOssed salad , relishes. will be served," said the
homemade pie."
announcement. " Bring a
I wou ld ge t hun gry just good appetite." That's just
typing up the menu for the what 150 people did . Roast
printers to set in type. They, beef was served - to 15 of
too. were probably licking the assembled and hungry
the ir chops as they set the guests. The rest got rice
type at the lumbering lino- soup.
type machines (yes, that's
The idea was .to give the .
how we di d it in those days). people who got the rice so up
My . fa ther kept a dail y a taste of something they
diary from 1908 to 1970, weren 't prepared fur - a
and he often mentipned taste of hunger. the kind of
what he had to eat. For sup- hunger millions in the world
per on May 23 , 1924. ex perience every day.
according ro my father's
It was interesting to watch
diary, my mother served a the reaction of people who
"seve n-pound pork shoul- got the thick, juicy slice of
der. mashed potatoes. gravy, roast beef. Should they eat it
celery, olives, radi shes, or share it with the other
salad . of chopped nuts , nine people at their table apples and celery ... peaches in which case everybody

~Rh~oot:

Friday, November 18, 2005

AP Photo

Memt&gt;ers of SmokeFreeOhio , an anti-smoking group, unload t&gt;oxes of signatures from Ohio vot·
ers at the Ohio Secretary of State's office Thursday in Columt&gt;us. The group sut&gt;mitted at&gt;out
165,000 petition signatures on Thursday in a firs t step toward getting the t&gt;an on the Novemt&gt;er
2006 ballot. It would apply to any establ is hment with employees except stores with at least 80
perc~nt of their sales from tobacco and no liquor license.
·
Nonsmokers promised they
would . go to bars before
Toledo banned smoking, said
Chuck Cassis, but he lost 40
percent of his business at
Chuck 's Sports · Bar until the
city again allowed smoking
in bars. He would lose money
again if a statewide bar ban
passed, he said.
" I'm a half-mile from
Michigan," he said.
Bob Vanderhule, owner of
the Buckhorn . Tavern in
Dayton, said a ban would kill
his business. He allows smoking in the bar but has a smokefree restaurant portion_
"The hi gh pnce of gasoline
is already hurting · res tau·
rants,".he said.
SmokeFreeOhio chose not
to try for a constitutional
amendment, whic h it could
take direc.tly to the ballot.
This round of signatures puts
its bill before the Legislature.
If lawmakers don't act on it

by May, SmokeFreeOhio
must gather at least 97.000
new signatures to get the proposed law on th e ballot.
The group asked lawrnakers to let the measure go to
the ballot without weakening
it. House Speaker Jon Husted
said he was \v illing, but
Senate President Bill Harris
said he must study the issue.
City bans that passed by
two-thirds margins in recent
elections
have
raised
SmokeFreeOhio's
hopes,
spokeswoman Tracy Sabetta
said. The group counts 21
Ohio municipalities with bans.
Desirae Boda, 27, who bar-.
rowed a cigarette as she waited for a bus downtown, said
she was irritated wit h th e
months-old Columbus srnoking ban at first but now supports a statewide ban.
"I don ' t smoke in my house
because of my kids," she
said. "If I' m in an establish-

ment and there's other people's kids, why would I
smoke around them?"
Matt Buck, a 25-year-old
Lakewood resident taking a
smoke break in Cleveland.
said he prefers smoke-free
bars but believes a ban would
take away the right s' of bu siness owners.

Smoker Nathan Thomas.
20. or Ci ncinnati . said he
would ·vole against a ban
becau se hi s non smoking
·
father owns a bar.
" I gues., I understand the
reason behind it in theory,"
he said. "But that is whv a lot
of public pl aces have ·l!esig.nated area&gt; f(Jr smokers ami
nonsmokers - 'so people can
do what thcv want."
As.\'ociateil Press Writers
Lisa· Con~ well ';n Cinchmati,
Th omas .f. Sheaan in
Cleveland
and
·lam n
Hwuwh ,. in Duyton contri!JIIted to this report.

.SOUTHERN .HONOR ROLL

from PageA1
RACINE
Southern
to put up a business sign near Local School Di strict recent ly
the intersection on. State released its honor roll for the
first nine weeks of the school
Route 833 near Minersville.
Council agreed to accept year.
Southern High School:
the weather siren offered by
• Seniors , all A's, John
Meigs ·County Emergency
Management
Agency Bentz, Brad Crouch, Chelsea
Warner,
Jenny
Director Robert Byer at the Smith ,
Kristiina
Williams.
last meeting. The siren is I00
• Seniors. A and B honor
percent paid for by the
United States Depanment of roll. Ryan Amberger. Dustin
John
Fisher,
Homeland Security. The vil - Brinager,
Kourtney
Fisher,
Wes
lage .will pay for the electricHarmon
~
Shane
Hayman,
ity to run it. ·
Counc il agreed to allow Kevin Hill, Amber Holsinger,
Maddox, Nicole
Pomeroy Police Chief Mark Alisha
David Myers, Josh
McDaniel,
E. Proffitt to hire part-time
Pape,
Andrew
Parsons, Ernie
dispatcher Misty Clay to
Selena
Spencer,
Sellers
,
keep from paying overtime to
existing dispatchers, saving Nicole Writesel.
· the village money.
Resident Steve Lantz
· brought up general propeny
condi tions in the vi ll age, ·
Lantz spoke about drains that · · BY MARY DALRYMPLE
AP TAX WRITER
were not capped off on
Condor Street and ordinances
WASHINGTON - The
concerning a mobi lc home
that had been moved onto Senate passed a $60 billion
Condor Street.
bill ~arty Friday that would
Council also increased the extend expiring tax cuts and
2005 annual appropriations prevent roughly 14 million
by $14,000·. Council also . familie s from paying higher
increased the utilities fund by taxes through the alternative
$2,949.18.
minimum tax. ·
Joining council were
It drew a presidential veto
Proffitt
and
Street threat for raising taxes on oil
Superintendent Jack Krautter. companies .
Absent from the meeting was
Much of the bill, passed
Councilman Jackie Welker.
64-33 after midnight, pre-

• Juniors. all A's, Eyhim
Gurbuzer, Mallory Hill,
Miranda McKelvey, Jes se
McKnight , Adam Phillips,
Bethany Vance, Rachel Wood.
• Juniors, A and B honor
roll, Chance Collins, Randy
. Collins, Ryan Donaldson,
Amber Hill, Jacob Hunter,
Adelle Rice, Tameka Yates.
• Sophomores, all A's,
Bonnie
Allen,
Morgan
Brown , Lindsey · Buzzard,
Erin Chapman, Stephanie
Cundiff, Heather Cundiff,
·Sarah El Dabaja, Courtney
Ginther, Whitney Riffle,
Kaylyn Spradling.
• Sophomores, A and B honor
roll, Chris Burkhamer, Ryan ·
Chapman, TYler Circle, Kasey

Doucet, Ivy Dunn, Jessica 'Southern Elementary:
Durham, Chelsea Freeman,
• Grade 5, all A's, Kody
Bri\tany Hill, Abigail Jenkin~. Wolfe.
Krystle Marler, Hannah Miller,
• Grade 5, A and B honor roll,
Amber Norville: Amy Norville, Jamal Lee, Des tany Doucet,
Ashley Robie, Talan Rou sh, Timothy
Elam,
Jennifer
Anthony Shamblin , Deidra McCoy, Shelby Pickens,
Sprouse, !real Strom, Ashley Brittany
Cogar,
Maggie
Weddle.
Cummins, Au stin Johnson,
• Freshmen, all A~s. Kyle Megan McGee. Jaclyn Mees,
Goode, Bryan Harris, Chris Stefanic Pyles, CodyTaylor.
Holter, Drew Hoover, Emma
• Grade 6. all A's, Tiffany
Hunter, Tosha Jones, Chelsea Francis. Emma Powell, Hope
Pape, Samantha Patterso n·. Teaford .
Rachel
Picken s.
Jaime · • Grade 6, A and 8 honor
Warner.
roll. Martina Arms, Katelyn
• Freshmen, A and B honor Hill, Andrew Roseberry,
roll , Ra shell Boso, Rusty · Olivia Searls, Blake Crow,
Carnahan,: Brody Flint , Alex Amber Hayman,
Abbie
Hawley, Gabe · Hill, Johnna Williams , Ali son Brown,
Travaille.
Andrew Guinther, Chel~ea

Holter, Liu.ie Sprouse.
• Grade 7. all ·A's. Katev
Patterson. Eric Buzzard.
• Grade 7, A and B honor.
roll , Kim Deaver, Melissa
Myers, Zachary Manuel, TYler
Wolfe, Trevor Flint , Mickale
Hill, Charley Pyles, Anthony
Sturgeon, Braxton Thorla .
• Grade 8, all A's, Lynzee
Tucker, Michael Manuel.
• Grade 8, A and B honor
roll. Patri ci a Cla rk. Nate
McBane, Logan Huddleston,
Du stin
Salser.
Breanna
Taylor, John Powell . Mac
Wood, Katie Woods.
,· Grade 9, all A's, Tracy
Smith.
Grade 9, A &lt;md B honor rol,
Charles Cook, Raben McCany.

Senate passes $60 billion tax bill extending tax cuts, raises taxes on oil CQmpanies

" Million s of Americans
serves tax cuts approved in
previous years that are set to · have benefited from these
expire unless lawmakers · important tax policies either
keep them alive. "I call this directly through lower taxes
bill the 'Tax Increase or indirectly through new and
Prevention Act,"' said Sen. better jobs and greater ecoRick Santorurn, R-Pa.
nomic security for families,"
Senate
GOP
leaders said Treasury Secretary John
pledged that when the bill Snow.'
·
returns to the Senate for final
Democrats roundly oppose
approval , it will also extend extending tax cuts for invest- ·
the life of reduced tax rates ment income. Senate leaders
for capital gains and divi- dropped an extension from
dends, scheduled 10 end their bill because a key modwhen the calendar flips 10 erate Republican balked at its
inclusion .
2009.
The bill would stop a tax
~----------~-------------'-,-------~~~ increase on about 14 million
interest loan program through
"We realized that Wellston families in line to pay the
a local bank.
wasn't quite as dead as peo- alternative minimum tax next
Middleport has completed pie were saying it was, and year. Originally a levy to prefrom PageA1
a similar market-based sur- you may find the same to be vent the wealthy from avoidvey, with ass istance · from true about Middleport ," ing taxation, Inflation causes ·
formed from an original ad- ,.ILGARD. It identities restau- . West said.
· the alternative minimum tax
hoc conunittee much like that ' rants, a deli/bakery, a barber
West said the We ll ston
formed
last
year
in shop and a movie cinema community has focused on
Middlepon, which. has. now among busmesses the. corn- monthly events designed to
"ecorne the Middlepon • mumty would most like to draw visitors, with cooperaDevelopment Group. Like see . In .Wellston, the needs lion between the CBD
Middleport 's, that group we1e d1!fercnt, ol course . Commission and 15 civic
worked with a facilitator from Resrdent s there 1d'cntrfted a and fraternal organizations.
HELlOS
the Institute for Local need for a ph~rmacy, a pro- He said the groups are workPERSONAL
Government Administration fesswnal off1ce su1te and a ing to improve-communicaOXYGEN SYSTfM
and ~ural Development to weight-loss center.
.
lions among those organizaHELiOS. • Easy ta c_arry. . ,
complcte a market-based retail
When West began w?rkmg lions .and to promote events
... _,_........ • Cool, qUiet operation.
• Weighs just 3.61bs. I
study a1id to secure funding as the · proJeCt coordmator, ·in advance .
Requires no electricity or bat1eries.
for facade improvements and there ~ere 70 available storeWest and Weber also comLasts up to 10 hours at a setting of 2.
other infrastmcture.
fronts 111 the targeted area, 13 mended Middleport 's group,
T.lkes about 40 seconds to fin.
Operates upright on its back or in any
The Wellston project has of which were vacant. 1l1ere and said they will be taking
position inberween.
bee n fu nd ~d throug h a 1 are now nine vacant store- their own les;ons from the
~ 225 .000 gra nt from the
fron ts. All togerher, Wellston ye,terday's meeting. In par740-446~0007
Ohio
Department
uf ha s seen the creation of eight . ticular, Weber comm ended
Toll Free 877-669-9007
Development, whil e capi tal new retail businesses and sig- the 'sirong attendance at the
improve ments have been nificant retail growth since breakfast and the community
70 Pine Street• Gallipolis
. Wl' care
funded, in part, by a low- the project began.
cross section represented.

Goals

..

to reach into the pockets of
more familie s every year.
Lawmakers regulqrly enact
wall s to hold it back.
Senate Republicans beat
back Democratic attempts to
use the bill to pinch oil and
energy companies that have
been reponing record profits
while consumers pay high
gasoline prices, effons that
reflected sensitivity on
Capitol Hill to high gasoline
'prices and fears of skyrocketing horne heating costs this
winter.
The largest oil companies,
· nevertheless, would be hit
with about $4.3 billion in
taxes· throu gh a change in

'HARRY POTTER &amp;
THE GOBLET (PG13)

account in g methods. That
provision drew a veto threat
from the White House and
upset
some
Western
Republicans, who deemed it
an unfair and political attack
on the energy industry.
"Is it a windfall tax by
another name?" said Sen .
Larry Craig, R-ldaho.

Vinyl Flooring s59),
, Starting At

· .

yd .

Berber Carpet $6~?.
Staning At

y~.

�BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

PageA6
Friday, November 18, 2005·

Zookeeper cringes at parents
passing misinformation to kids·

Submitted photo

Members of Girl Scout Troop 1120 presented blankets to residents of Darst's Adult Care during thei r Make a Oifference Day Tour.

Scout troop distributes bears, books, blankets
RACINE
- Southern
Brownie Troo'p 1120 had a
decision to make: Attend a
Girl Seoul fun event or spend
Oct. 22 making a difference.
The girls chose to take part in
National Make A Ditference .
Day.
·
· ·
·
They agreed that the prqjecr
Bears, Books and Blankies,
Black Diamond Council's
own program, was what they
wanted to do. It was decided
to help the people in our
county who make a ditl'erence
every day : the staff and volunteef' of Meigs County
Sheriff's Department, Darst's
Adult
Care,
Meigs
Emergency Medical Services,
and Holzer Meigs Clinic.
The girls decided to spend
the money they would have
spent on a fun day to buy soft,
warm blankets for the resi-

dents of Darst's Adult ·Care
and for the EMS office to use
011 their emergency vehicles.
They agreed to select
favorite stuffed animals and
books from home to give to
deputies, squad personnel and
firemen to give to children to
help make bad situations a little · less scary. The Girl
Scouts' little brothers, who
have formed a group called
the Reptiles, wanted to help
their big sisters in this. etlort. ·
They donated favorite books
and stuffed toys also.
The items were collected,
cleaned,
sterilized
and
wrapped in protective covers.
A small card was attached to
each bear and blanket and a
sticker placed in each book
which reaq "Service from the
Heart Troop 1120."
Members of both groups

assembled with parents to
tour the facilities and present
their gifts. All the children"
truly gave from the heart with
75 toys, '25 blankets and
approximately 150 book s
being distributed on October
22.
As the children were leaving Holzer Clinic, they ·were
thrilled to notice their books
making a difference already.
Each child sitting in the waiting room held a book in his or
her hands.
·
Girls presen ting that day
were: Ashley and Susan
Buchanan, Lauren, Larry,
Logan and Patti Dunn, Haley,
Hannah and Dawn Hill, Abbie
and Terrie Houser, McKenzie
and Susie Pierce, Cassie and
Tina Roush, Aaliyah Turner
and Debi King, co-leader of
Troop 1120.

DEAR ABBY: I work at a
large zoo, in the chi ldren's
. zoo department. I can not
co unt the number of times I
have heard parents, o ut of
ignorance or impatience, lie
Dear
to their child abo ut the an imals th ey are observin g.
Abby
In an enclosure with several species of animal, for
example, they will tell their
child that pygmy speci es
(smaller than non-pygmy selves in front of friends or
when full -grown} are actual- in tbe c lassroom , where
ly babies of large animals. I they ' ll feel like idiots when
have also seen them give it 's pointed out thin they are
incorrect information about wrong.
I! seems that one of the
animal behavior, diet and
habitat.
most difficult phrases in the
1 want to ask these parents English language for people
for somethin g: Respect your to uuer is, " I don't know."
child enough to admit that Perhaps that 's because they
you· sometimes don't know are afraid it will make them
the answer to their question. appea r stupid , so they try to
If you don't know the fill the vacuum by saying
answer, ask a keeper. We are something - a mistake . A
usually on hand and neve r more constructive approach
mind talking about the ani- is to say, " I don't know, but
mals we love and interact I'll help you get the
, with daily. We enjoy show- answer," espeCially when
ing people how amazing and talking to a child. Nobody
fulfilling these animals can knows everything, and
be, and it pains us to hear learning is most fun · when
parents provi de misinforma- it's a shared endeavor.
·
tion to children. -A KE EP·
Zoos were created for the
ER IN THE EAST
purpose .of education, conDEAR KEEPER : You versation, recreation and
have rattled the right cage. research . When visitin~ a
My assistant, Sherry, who is zoo, if you hav.e a questiOn,
a docent ' at the Los Angele s yo u should ask a zookeeper
Zoo, informs me that your or a docent, if one is provid·complaint is all too common ed.
among staff at zoos.
DEAR ABBY: I am a 30,. It does a child a grave di s-. year-old woman, married to
service to give him or he!' a man in his mid-50s.
misinformation. Children "A ndre" and I have an 8are little vessels. If you fill year-old daughter together,
their heads with nonse nse, and he has three grown sons
they ' ll pour it forth at a later · I helped him raise over the
date - embarrassing them- last I 0 years.

Meigs Honor Roll

My problem is I feel deep
inside that I'm missing out
on what is supposed to be
my "real" life . I know I was
meant to have more chil· dren, but Andre had a vasectomy and doesn't want any
more. I would like to return
to college and get my
degree, but Andre doesn't
support that, either. I'd like .
to work with children or in a ,
helping profes sion; Andre
refuses to listen.
I have tried to ignore my
feelings. I have . been to
counselors, and on and off
anti-depressants for years. I
don ' t think I love my husband anymore, and I- feel in
my heart that this marriage .
isn't healthy for me or our
child. But I can't seem to
make myself leave because
of our daughter. (Not to
mention that Andre . tells me
all the t'ime how · much he
loves me.)
.
Bottom line : At what point ·
is it OK to make a decision
you know will hurt someone
else just for yourself? UNHAPPY IN NEBRASKA
DEAR
UNHAPPY:
Because counseling and
medication haven' t helped,
the time is now, while your
husband can still find a
woman whose values are
· more similar to his own than
yours are.

Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also.
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was founded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles,
CA 90069,

Birth
announced

POMEROY - Students in Braden Baker, Rachel Bauer, Sindle, Cayelynn Smith, Annisha · Kopec, Heather Lacey
Barnette, Nathan
the Meigs Local School Matthew Casci, Raeven Heather Stewart, Travi s Lascelles, Erin Patterson, Becker, Miranda Beha, Stacy
Distri ct making a B or above Clampitt, Alyssa Cremeans, Tackett,
Ryan
Taylor, · Jennifer
Payne,Maranda Black,
Joshua
Bolin ,
RACINE
Rebecca
in all their subjects to be list- Robbie Dillon, Billy DuVall, Sharaya White, David Wittig, Rig gs,
Ashley
Smith, Sherman Buckley, Christy Wolfe and Charles Sampson
ed on the honor roll were Megan Dyer, Tyier Eblin, Victoria Wolfe.
Cassandra Smith, Latricia Capehart,
Jared
Casey, announce the birth of a son,
Grade 7: Jordan Anderson , Smith, Terry Smith, Cayla Samantha Cole, Bryce Davis, Bradon, born Sept. 15 at the
announced today by William Codey Fink, Kacy Fink,
Buckley,
superintendent. Delilah Fish, Chris Folmer, Alain e
Arnold,
Shellie . Taylor, Zachary Whitlatch .
Valerie Diddle, James Ellis, Holzer Medical Centr. He
They are as follow s:
Erika Fox, Harley Fox, Shana Bailey, Ashley Bateman-lee,
Meigs .High School
Kay Ia Fetty, Weston Fife, weighed 7 pounds, one
Meigs Intermediate
Gorslene, Makenzie Greene, Olivia Bevan, Came.ron
Freshman - Jamie Bailey, James Fife, Carita Gardner, ounce. He has a brother, Isaac
School
Michelle
Henry,
Justin Bolin, Kabrien Brothwoick, Clayton Bolin, Megan Bush, Ty son
George,
Adam Wolfe.
Grade ~: Brook Andrus, Hettinger, Chris Jones.• Corey Brianna Buffinton , Suretta Le ' Anna Davis, Jennifer Fife, Grossnickle,
Anna
Jordyn Arnold, Sammy Ash, King, Hannah King, Ronnie Cade, Hannah ·Cleek, Valerie Amanda Gilkey, Amber Hartenbach, Cody Hysell,
Mckayla Barrett, Destinee Lavender, A. J. McCollum, Conde, Terrence Conlin, Hockman, Lian Hoffman, Matthew Imboden, Brittney
Blackwell, Tyra E!oothe, Kirsten McGuire, Brandon Frederick Wil Crow, Nicole Jessica Holliday. Matthew Jacks, Kevin Jarvis, Nat)lan
Jacob Braley, Sariah Brinker, McKinney, Tyler McVay, Davi s, Heatlj Dettwiller, Hosken, Lilly Jacks, Morgan Jetlers, lilian Jenkins, Joshua
·;·:
Alexis Coleman, Christopher Jessi · Meadows,
Jordan Taylor Dowler, Nathaniel Lentes, Jahnna Lydic, Erin Kennedy, Jacob Kennedy,
Cox, Hannah Cremeans, Meadows, Jacob Mulholland, Eblin, Joshua Fetty, William Perkins, Ripley Raubenolt. Robert Kinnan, laryn Lentes,
Amber Davidson, Bruce Kasey Napper, Shawnella Folmer, Nathaniel Gilkey, Calee Reeves, Megan Smith. Meghan
Leslie,
Laura
Davis, John Davis, Michael Patterson , Rachel Payne, Miranda Grueser, . Hope Caitlin Swartz, Kimberly. Marcum, Kayla McCarthy,
Davis, Jordan Dean, Emily Emma Perrin, Tess Phelps, Hajivandi , Morgan . Howard, Swisher, Eric Tolar, J,ames Autumn McLaughlin, Kelly
Deem, Marisella Espinoza- Ashley Phoenix, McKay Ia Shelby Johnson, Kassandra Welsh Catie Wolfe
Napper, Brooke 0' Bryant,
Cruz, Matthew Foster, Gage Powell, Tyler Price, Nakayla Johnso n, Kyle Johnso n,
SophomoreNatane , Sabrina Oldaker, Courtney
'
Gilh~,
Zyon
Gilmore, Ratliff, Keanna Robinson, Angela . Keesee,
Teirsa Adams, Michael Ball, Am y. Parsons, Rebecca Rader,
Marissa Hall, Orville Hill , Kaitlin Russell, Ashleigh Kopczinsky,
Shannon Barr, Tali sha Beha, Emily ' Vmda Ratchff, Don~van
Mitchell Howard, Kelsey Sayre, Kenzie Shuler, Maggie McLaughlin, Tyson Morris, Davis .Rebecca Hanstine Rtchmond, Angel Rtley,
The Daily Sentinel
Hudson, Haley Kennedy, Smith, Kyrie Swann, Dustin · Charles Nolandlll, Chelsea Alice' He ss, Seth Johnson: Jordan Shank, Joshua Smith,
Cody · Kinzel, Dylan King, .Ulbrich, Jesse Vaughan, Gage Patterson, Bo-Dara Powell, Bradley
Jones,
Kay lee Stephanie ~nider, Abby
Subscnpe today
Abbygail Lambert, Dylan Weisenmuller, Haley Will , Braden Prater, Garrett Riftle, Kennedy. Kirk Legar, Shane Stewart, Whitney Thoene,
. 992-2155
Lavender, Jack Lemley, Augusta Wright, Zachary Aaron Roberts, Kasey Roush, Milhoan, Chelsey Noel. Scott Tobtn , Enc VanMeter,
Nathan
McClintock, Yeauger.
Kyle Russell , Austin Sayre', Brittany
Preast,
Lesley Chnstopher VanReeth, Jacob
Heavenlee McGuire, Bre
Meigs Middle School
Carlee .. Smith,
Brenton Preece , Tiffany Simpson, Venoy, Joshu.a Venoy, Adam
Mitchell , Lindsay Patterson ,
Grade · 6:
Cheyenne Southern, Katel yn Stacy, Molly Smith Sleven Stewart Wtl son, Mtranda Young,
Ty Phelps. Paige Phillips, · Beaver, Darienne Betzing, Chandra Stanley, Connor James Story.' Alexa Yenoy ' Sheila Zeigler
Bruno Swartz, Tanner Tackett,
Junior- Zachary Arms, · ..: • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • :..
Cody R9binson. Courtney Carly Carpenter,
Robinson ,
DeShawna Casci, Olivia Cleek, Dan.ielle Melanie Taylor, Michelle Clayton Blackston, Michael
• • • • • • • •T•T• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • '
Robinson, Jason Robinson, Cullums, Kimberly Curl, Unbankes, Paula Vanmeter, Blaettnar, Daniel Bookman, ::
Hailey
Rou sh,
Angel Michael
Davis, Wesley Tabatha Wells , Carrie White, Cory Dill, Dane Eichinger, •
•.
Sanders, Ryan Schenkelberg, Davis, Jonathan Donohue, Jose' Whitlatch, Christian Sarah Engle, Jessica fi sher, '
Matthew
Smallwood, Tyler Dunham, Chelsey Eads, Woods.
Kayla
Grover,
Amber '
,:
Breahna Thompson, Zachary Rachael Eakins, James Andy
Grade 8: Tyler Andrews, Haning, Brittany Haning,
39080 Hobson Drive
•,
Test, Tanner Vanaman, Fairchild, Jazzman Fish, Jeremy Ash, Lauren Barnes, Jennifer Hendricks, Steven
•,
Victoria
Walker,
Issac Emalee Glass, Karl Guellig, Dawn
Bissell.
Joseph Hudson, Keilah Jacks, Sarah ! ;
Middleport, Oh 45760
: ,·
Watson, Kacie Welsh. Austin Paige Gusler, Cody Hanning, Blackston, Chelsea Breuer, Jeffers, Katherine Kibbl e, • ,
(740) 992-6173
•.
Wolfe, Collen Young.
Savanna Henry, Michalle Tyler
Brothers,
Ian Bethany Kin g, Sarah Lantz, '
Grade 4: Stephen Batey, Hilyard, Stephanie Hoalcraft, . Bullington, Ashely Carey, Chalsie Manley, Christina ' •
I
Shandi Beave r. Josiah Beha, Marlee
Hoffman, Cassi Justin Cotterill, Kristine Miller. David Poole. Robert
•
,
Bre Bonnet, Tis he a Boothe, Hood, William Cody Hysell, Davi s, Caleb Davis. Megan Reed, Ashley Riley, Jennifer •
Cody Bracken , Rocco Casci, Taylor Jones, Jeffrey K1mes, Dunfee, Trav is Dunham, Smith, Krysta Stitt, Ashley
Kayla Austin King, Jon Macknight, Jacob Dunn, Dustin Eads, Taylor, Amber York, Ashley : ,
9-5 Monday thru Friday, 9-2 Saturday
,;
Hannah
Conley,
Conlin, Olivia Cremeans, Steve n
Mahr,
Tanisha Autumn Ebersbach, Dale Zielinski
·~· • -~-~-~- •••• -~· •• ·~· ••• ·~· •••• -~· ,
Kimberly
Cunningham, McKinney, Misty Morrison, Ellis, Contessa Fish, Joshua
SeniorWesley
Ault, "' • • • • •T•T• • • • •T•T•T• • •T• • • • • ~ • • • • • • "'
Michaela Davidson, Trenton Kassandra Mullins, Brady Frederick, Kay la Graham,
Deem, Alyson Dettwiller, Norville, Timothy Parsons, Alyss
Green,
Veronica
Devan
Dugan,
Brittany Ben Reed, Jennifer Robinson, Grimm, Megann Halle y,
Durst, Jarret Durst, Patrick Dilaun Robinson, Nathan Breana Hemsley, Benjamin
219 Washington St.,
Evans,
Bradley Helton, Rothgeb, Je(frey Roush, Hood, Benjamin Jacks, Jamie
Ravenswood, WV 26164
Taylor Hood, Abbie Houser, Zachary Sayre, Kayla .Shane, Jeffers, Ryan Jeffers. Scott
Damon Jones, Sara Klein, A. Zachary Sheets, Evelyne Kennedy, Trinity Kimes,
Ph: 304-868-2088
J. Kopec, Erin Korn, Garrett
Lascelles. Brandon Mahr,
0Umpnx.11 ~r cl1t.: }C&lt;lr 1m
Andrea
McGrath, Brett
V P. WV ChiT'Of4'actic Socict~
Milhoan, Taylor Mitchell,
Mrntbtruf An-.,-ia~n &amp;.md 11[
Josh Mye rs, Bl aine Perry,
Trenton Prater, Autumn
20 }rl t!XJX.'ficrlC.\!
Preast, Cassidy Rose, Kaylee
Mcrnbn of Anll.'fl'"'ll ACill.lcmy
Auto Accidents Workers'
Rowe, Taylor Rowe, Morgan
of Medical Al'llflUI'K.1111f
Russell ,
Jessica
Ryder,
Compensation
Briana Sm ith , Eric Smith ,
• Spool&gt; lnjiJriC...,
Saturda~-Cl'\..
Megan Snodgrass. Samantha
• Mr:,hca!'\':
• M1m Jn,tnned
Spires , Katlynn Stanley,
• A'"upunctun: • Sam~ dii)' aWf.
Carolann Stewart, Carly
Taylor, Brandon Thompson,
Morgan Tucker, Anthony
Select ·From Distinctive Gifts
Vance,
Nikkie
Walker,
Add To Someone's Collection
Shannon
Walker, Jamie
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Choose A Gift Of Nostalgia
Nikki Wayland, Cody White,
Darrin Will, Valerie Wolfe.
Ravenswood, WV
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Grade 5: Casi Arnold. 316 Washi

Keeping
Meigs
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informed

MEIGS .CARPET
: :·
&amp; DECORATING .CENTER ••

Carpet and Vinyl

REMNANT SALE '• '··'• ·

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!;

'l;he Daily Sentinel

NAT ON • WORLD

jURY CONVICTS MECHANIC OF KILLING
11-YEAR-OLD GIRL IN FLORIDA
Bv MIKE SCHNEIDER
ASSOCIATED PhESS WRI TER

-sARASOTA, Fla. - A
mechanic with a long criminal
record
was
convicted
'fl!ursday of kidnapping, raping and strangling an 11-yearold girl whose abdu,tion was·
captured by a car-wash securi ty camera.
Joseph Smith, 39, could get
the death penalty.
·
'.The jury took· about ftve
hours to find him guilty in the
slaying of Carlie Brucia,
.whose half-naked body wa&gt;
found outside .a church more
than four days after the sixthdisappeared
in
grader
February 2004 while walking
home from a fri end's house.
Smith was arrested after
being identified as the burly,
tattooed man seen taking the
girl away by the arm in a
fuzzy video that was broadcast nationwide during the
search for the kill er.
'
~~
Prosecutors built their case Defendant Joseph Smith, center, sits with his public defender, Adam Tebrugge, prior to waiving
ori the footage, the testimony their closing argument, during the prosecution's closing arguments on the seventh day of
of Smith's friends and co- Smith's trial at the Sarasota County Judicial Center in Sarasota , Fla .. Wednesday. Smith is
workers who said they recog- charged in the abduction, rap'e and killing of 11-year-o ld Carlie Brucia in February 2004.
.
ni zed Smith in the video,
DNA and hair-analysis evi- When he meets hi s maker." .
house conversations Smith He also served 17 months in
dence, and the word of lhe
Carlie 's killing sptirred the made with his brother and oth· prison on dmg possession and
defendant's brother, who said introduction of federal and ers in which Smith talked of fraud charges.
Smith confessed.
After the slaying, Rep.
Smith, who did not take the state legislation to crack down being on drugs while committin
g
the
crimes.·
Katheri
ne Harri s, R-Fla.,
stand, showed no emotion on probation violators.
An
FBI
code
breaker
trans·
introduced
legislation, named
when the verdict was read.
At the time of the slaying,
lated
an
encrypted
letter
Smith
Carlie 's Law, that would
·The jury will return for th~ Smith was in violation of the
sentencing phase on Nov. 28.
terms of hi s probation on a wrote his sibling saying he expand the reasons that could
Carlie's mother, Susan cocaine charge because he had left Carlie's clothes and get a .convicted criminal 01~
Schorpen, wept softly with her fa iled to pay $4 11 in fines and backpack in fou r trash bins.
federal probation sent back to
head bowed when the verdict comt costs. But a judge · Also, DNA analysis .con· ·prison, A version limited to
was read, and the girl\ father, declined to put him. in jail, nected him to a semen stain sex offenders ultimately
Joe Brucia, nodded when each saying Rorida does not have a on Carlie's shirt, and strands passed. Smith· had not ~ec n
of hair t'rom Smith 's vehiCle coiwicted of sex offenses
· of the three convictions was "debtor's pri son."
announced. As he left court,
At the trial , Smith's lawyers were found to match the girl's before Carlie's death.
he said only that he was happy raised questions about the reli - hair.
Earl ier this year, following
Before Carlie 's slaying,
with the verdict.
·
ability of the FBI lab where
the slaying of another Rorida
"I can never hold her again. the evidence w~s analyzed Smith had been arrested at girl, allegedly by a convicted
Where's
the
closure?" and challenged the motives of least 13 times sim:e 1993. sex offender. Florida passed a
Schorpen said outside the Smith's brother, John, sug- mostly on drug offenses. In
law establishing a mandatory
co.urthouse . "I've lost one of gesting he was interested in one case, he was charged with
sentence
uf 25 years to life
kidnapping a 20-year-old
the most precious thin gs to me the reward money.
in my life because of an aniThe brother told the jury woman, but was acquitted_ He behind bars for people con·
mal, a di sgusting, perverted Smtth had confessed tu having pleaded no contest in another victed ·of cenain sex crimes
aBimal."
"rough sex" wtth the girl and case in which a woman said against children 11 .and
-When asked if she was sat· killing her, and told him he hit her in the face with a you nger, with litetime track·
isfied with the verdict. she ' where the body was. motorcycle helmet. He was ing by satellite afte r they are
responded: "When he's dead. Prosecutors played taped jail- · sentenced to 60 days in jail. freed. .
'

~I.S.

warns Iraqi authorities to keep
$hiite militias out of security services
•

' Bv ROBERT H. REID
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

••BAGHDAD,

Iraq - The
Iraqi
government
has
promised to investigate
detention facilities across
the
.
ceuntry to ensure pnsoners
aie not tortured, the United ·
Slates said Thursday, sharply
w:Urning
Iraqi
official s
a~ainst allowing Shiite militi~s a role in the security services followin g allegations of
iorture of Sunni Arabs.
·
·The Interior Minister, who
i~; in charge of the facilities
and security forces, said torHire claims were exaggerated.
· ;sectarian rhetoric sharpened four days after u.s .
trl&gt;ops found up to 173 malnourished detainees - some
sbowing signs of torture in an Interior Ministry' building in the capital's Jadri yah

.

district. Most were believed
to be Sunni Arabs, the main
group in the insurgency.
A leader of a major Sunni
party, Tariq al-Hashimi, told
Iraq's Sharqiyah television
that his group had submitted
50 complaints of pri soner
abuse to the government,
''but we did not receive a
timely response."
Interior Minister Bayn Jabr,
a Shiite, brushed aside the
complaints, denied sectarian
bias and claimed th at "every
time" al-Hashirrii has differences wit-h him "he exet:ts
press ure on me through the
U.S. Embassy."
"I reject torture and I will
puni sh ·those who perform
torture," Jabr said. "No one
was beheaded, no one was
killed"- a clear reference to
the beheadings of foreign and
Iraqi hostages by insurgents,

including ·ai-Qaida's Iraq
wing.
He also said "those who
are supporting terrorism are
making the exaggerations"
about torture and th at only
seven detainees showed signs
of abuse.
"They have described the
Interior Minister's office as a
place of execution," Jabr
said. "Let him come to show
me if there is an execution
place in this shelter.'' ·
But Voice of America
re ported on its Web site
Thursday that Jabr's remarks
about the number of abuse\1
prisoners contrad icted what it
witnessed Monday night ,
when U.S. troops moved the
men from the Interior
Ministry detention center to
Abu
the
American-run
Ghraib prison fo r medical
care.

1?.~ *

t8, 2005

Housing construction tumbles, adding :
more evidence that boom is cooling
existing homes were up 14.7
percent in the tt)ird quaner
compared with a year ago.
WASHINGTON- Housing
Analysts said as sales slow,
construction and new building double-digit price increases are .
permits were down sharply in likely to be a th ing of the past as :
October, providing fresh evi- the Federal Reserve keeps
dence that rising mortgage rates pushing interest rates higher to
are beginning to cool tl1e five- combat inflation pressures.
year housing boom.
Freddie
Mac
reported
The Commerce Depanmem Thursday that the 30-year mon- . :
reponed Thursday that con- gage rose to 6.37 percenr this •
stmction of new homes and week, the highest le vel in more : ·
apanments tell by 5.6 percent than Iwo years and we II above,;
last month. the biggest decline this year's low of 5.53 percent ·
in seven inonths. Applications set in June.
tor new huilding permits, a
In addition to the big drop in . :
good sign of future activity." tell constmction starts in O&lt;:tober, :
by 6.7 perce nt, the biggest the National Association or :·
decline in six years.
Home Builders said a new sur-:
Analysts said these weaker- vey showed builder optimism "
than-expected ligu res, l:Om· lell in November by the largest
bined with evidence homes me amount si nce right after the
slaying on the market longer, Sept. II. 200 I ten·orist attacks.
indicate lhe hot real estate marDavid Seiders, chief econo- .
ket is coolin ~ off.
mistlt)f the home builders, said
''We are likely In see a steady he believes s;~es of both new ·
downward trend in housing
and existing homes, while stilj
activity over the next few
months all tied to rising mon- settin ~ records lor a tifth consecutive year in 2005, will be
gage rates." said Nariman
Bchravesh. chief economist at down by around 5 percent next
Global Insight, a Lex ington. year, representing "an orderly
simmerin g down process.''
Mass., forem,ting lirm.
But he cautioned that there
The lear is that home values
were
risks that the drop-off in
have soared to such high levels
activitv
could be more severe.
that a slowing in detmmd could
cause those prices to drop He said one of the biggest risks
sharply, rais~lg risks to recent is if housing purchased by specpurcha,ers who could end up ulators stat1s be ing dumped on
with mongage burdens that are the market. causing a glut that ·
higher than the falling values of wi ll sharply depress prices.
In other economic news, the
their homes.
Federal
Reserve reponed that
Bchravesh doesn't see that
industrial
output posted a solid ·
happening, saying higher manrebound
of
0.9 percent last
gage rates "should serve to cool
the market down without pre· month, retlecting the end of a
cipitating &lt;my kind of-nasty sce- strike. at aircrah maker Boeing
and the resumption ol' factory ·
nario.''
On Wall Street, stocks surged acti vity along the ravaged Gulf ,
·
Thursday
with
investors Coast.
cheered as oil prices fell to tlteir . In September, industrial prolowest levels in live months. duction had fallen by 1.5 perThe Dow Jones industrial aver- cent. the biggest drop in more
age mse 45 .46 points to close at than two decades.
In another sign that the econ- ;
10,720.22.
omy
is recovering from the hur- .
The National Association of
ricancs,
the Labor Depanment
Realtors reponed Tuesday that
said
stornt-related
job losses
69 cities around lhe country
saw double-digit price gains edged down last week to
during the July-September 19,000, lctr below the high of
quaner, compared with the I08,000 hunicane-related layswne lj"riod a year ago. led by olfs recorded the third week of ·
a 55·- percent surge m the September. Over the past II ·
Phoenix area w1d a 44.8 percent weeks, the number of jobs lost ·.
jump in home prices in Fan becau.se of hunicanes Katrina,
Ritn and Wilma totaled
Myers, Ha. .
Nationally, median prices for 561.400.
BY MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP ECONOMICS WRITER

TttE

HOLIDAY
SEASO"!
With your business~~
, . advertised in the 'r

5
Dail Sentinel

~~
I

I

•

Wednesday, November 23rd

Reach Over

5.000
Households
In Meigs
County!·

Open CHouse

{

Friday, November

KICK OFF

Soin &lt;Us (J'or Our

·

PageA7

ovem&amp;u 19
Cl'loon-2

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

*

*

"' "

•--

�·community Calendar
Public meetings

Tuesday, Nov. 22
POMEROY - A free lecture on eating disorders presented by specialist Jeff
Bryson, IMFT of Crossroads
Counseling
Center
of
Albany, · 7 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Library. The lecture
includes treatment -approaches and a self, screening test.
MIDDLEPORT- Special
meeting of Mid'd leport
Lodge 363 F&amp;AM, 7:30
p.m., work in master mason
degree. Refreshments.

Wednesday, Nov. 23
POMEROY
Meigs
County Commissioners, II
a.m., due to Thanksgiving.

Clubs and
organizations
PORTLAND- Revival at
the Freedom Gospel Mission,
7 p.m . through Sunday. Rev.
Roger Willford, evangelist,
special singers.

Other events

Saturday, Nov, 19
POMEROY - Narcotics
Anonymous. 7 p.m., open
discussion, Sacred ·Heart
Church.
SYRACUSE Meigs
County Christmas flower
show at the Carleton School
· in Syracuse Saturday and
Sunday. Viewing hours, I to
5 p.m on Saturday; I to 4
p.m. on Sunday.

Saturday, Nov. ·19
SYRACUSE -Free food
anct clothing giveaway, 5 to 6
p.m., Syracuse First Church
of God.
Sunday, Nov. 20
LONG BOTTOM
Hymn sing, Long Bottom
United Methodist Church, 7
p.m. Take canned food item.

Birthdays

Monday, Nov. 21
POMEROY- Seminar on
Chronic
Obstructive
Pulmonary Disease (COPD),
regular meeting, I p.m. to 3
p.m.
at
Mulberry
Community Center in God's
NET.
Speaker
Lenora
,Leifheit,
RN ,
Herbert
Carson, pharmacist.
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Right to Life, 7:30
..p.m.Pomeroy Library.

Saturday, Nov. 19
POMEROY
Qpen
house celebration honoring
Guido Girolami on his 80th
birthday will be held from 2
to 5 p.m. at the Pomeroy Gun
Club. It has been requested
that those attending not bringgifts. Cards may be sent to
him
at 43221 · SmithGoeglein Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

Local stocks
ACI-70.02
AEP-36.49
Akzo -45.20
Ashland Inc. - 54.74
AT&amp;T- 20.08
BLI-12.54
Bob Evans - 24.92
BorgWamer- 58.91
CENX -20.89
Champion - 4.32
Charming Shops - 12.94
City Holding- 36.78
Col-44.85
DG-19
DuPont - 42.26
Federal Mogul - .40
USB- 29.97
Gannett - 62.77
General Electric - 34.66
. GKNLY - 4.85
Harley Davidson - 53.49
JPM -37.93

Page AS.

·· OHIO

The Daily Sentinel ·

Kroger - 19.49
Ltd.- 21.91
NSC -42.78
Oak Hill Financial - 32.78
OVB-25
BBT- 42.98
Peoples - 29.4 7
Pepsico - 58.24
Premier - 13.70
. Rockwell - 57.39
Rocky Boots - 24.20
RD Shell - 61.17
SBC- 24.17
Sears - 119.50
Wa~Mart - 49.24
Wendy's- 48.77
Worthington - 20.50
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the
previous day's transactions,
provided by Smith Partners
at Advest Inc. of Gallipolis.

Local weather .
Today's Forecast
Forecast for Friday, Nov. 18

city/Region
High I Low tamps

Youngetown •
35" I 20" . · G:'/9

.

fi-' r,·'!if?'
~t

r

•

Friday, November iS, 2005

EVANGELIST.LEADS RELIGIOUS, POLID~
EFFORT IN BAITLEGROUND OHIO
COLUMBUS - On one
side of the street, a handful of
liberal ministers pleaded for
tolerance of gay rights and
respect for Islam. On the other
side, hundreds of people
cheered as evangelist Rod
Parsley called on the crowd to
"lock and load" for "a Holy
. Ghost invasion."
The preacher's rally represented the newest wrinkle in
politics in Ohio, the state that
put President Bush back in the
White House and is engulfed
in a p&lt;ilitical scandal that has
given hope to Democrats trying to break . a 10-year-old
GOP stranglehold on state
offices. · ·
The man behind it - head
of a 12,000-member suburban
church. vocal opponent of gay
marriage and critic of Islam
- is the most high-profile
conservative pastor to date to
enter the political arena in this
battleground state.
The goal of what he calls
Reformation Ohio: convert I
million people to Christianity,
help the poor and register
400.000. new voters.
"We just seek· to be a voice
in the public arena," said
Parsley, who has a TV ministry seen arouml the country.
"For some reason it has
become chic to say that every,
body should have a voice in
that public square, but when
born again or evangelical
Christians begin to lift up their
voice, everyone gets nervous."
While . ministers of all
stripes have long taken stands .
op social issues and registered
voters, Parsley 's political
activities worry Democrats
and more liberal churches.
His critics say it's impossible to separate the goals of
Reformation Ohio from
Parsley's work on a successful
election campaign to ban gay
manriage and his ties to
Secretary of State Kenneth
Blackwell, a conservative
leading many polls in his run
for governor next year.
In his new book, Parsley
thanks Blackwell for his support, and Blackwell spoke
briefly at the Statehouse rally.
"If you're not interested in
influencing politics, you don' t
hold a major rally on the steps
of the Statehouse," said Rev.
Mike Schuenemeyer, a member of the national staff of the
Cleveland-based and left-leaning United Church of Christ,
In his book, . "Silent No
More," Parsley questi(ms the
biological basis for homosex-uality and argues that the gay
lifestyle is morally and physi-

BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

~~~~Fast~

l...ocAL ScHEDULE
GALUPOLIS- A schedule of upcoming college

and high scl1ool varsity sporting events involving
team5 from GaiWa, Meigs and Mason counties.

Friday's games
WorMn'a College SBaketball
Rio Grande vs. William Woods (at
G.eorgetown Classic), 6 p.m.
Satyrdav'a gamas ·
·Collage Soccer
Rio Grande at National Tournament
(Daytona Beach), 7:30p.m.
Women'a College Basketball
Rio Grande vs. Siena Heights (at
Georgetown Classic), 2 p.m.

Thunder·
~ storms
Partly
'''''
L__) Showers . , ,~ , , Cloudy

~

~

~
·
"'
Rain

Flurries

0"-....

~

.

~~

Suburban Columbus min ister, the Rev. Rod Parsley of World Harvest Church. left, announce$
the launch of .Reformation Ohio Friday in Columbus. Parsley, 48, head of a 12,000·member
suburban church, vocal opponent of gay marriage and ·critic of Islam. is the most high-profilt;
conservative pastor to date to enter the political arena in this battleground state. His goal is
to convert 1 million to Christianity. to help the poor and .to register 400.000 new voters.
cally damaging to homosex u- program for ministers als.
tucked between fields and
He calls Islam an "anti- new .subdivisions.
Christ religion" that intends to
Last year he founded a cenuse violence to conquer the ter that helps mobilize churchworld and writes that Allah is es on political issues. His teledemon spirit.
vision show, "Breakthrough."
" I don't know how on is broadcast on 1,400 TV staSunday you can say one thing tions and cable aftiliates.
and on Monday you can say
Parslev still lives in
another," said Rep. Joyce Pickerington, a f&lt;(st-growing
Beatty, a Democrat who spoke suburb not far from his
at last month's tiny opposition church, in a $1 mill"ion home
rally.
with his wife. Joni, and their
Though not a political son and daughter.
group,
Parsley
says,
He draws thousands to
Reformation Ohio originated racially mixed Sunday momwith his 2003 invitation to ing and evening services in his
President Bush's signing of a auditorium-style church where
he strolls back and forth
late-term abortion ban.
Parsley decided he needed before the congregation in a
to be more vocal about soda! trademark dark suit; Bible in
issues and what he saw as the hand •. preaching with a mild
under-representaticn\ ' of evan- twang courtesy of his
.gelical Christians at the polls. · Kentucky upbringing and just
"I felt led at that point.- that · · a hint of gravel.
God was saying, 'Thi s is a
His Web site is a mixture of
time to present the gospel to charity promotions - . war
people whose values are victims in Sudan and Katrina
reflective of biblical values survivors - promotion of his
and to present the gospel to church, college .and TV show,
them in a major way,"' he and fu ndraising: an initial $54
said.
donation enrolls contributors
Parsley, 48, got his start as "Breakthrough Covenant"
preaching in the backyard of partners eligible for a 37-inch
his parents' home in suburban polished-steel
"Covenant.
Columbus as a teenager. At Panner. Sword of the King." .
29, he built the 5,200-seat
Parsley's style ran~es from
World Harves t Church that the casual - "Now I m going
anchors a large complex of to freak you out," he said durbrick buildings - including . ing a recent telethon on Trinity ·
two schools and an outreach Broadcasting
Network's

a

''Praise the Lord" show - to
the impassioned.
"Sound an alarm .. A Holy
Ghost invasion is taking
place," Parsley shouted at the
Statehouse rally, to enthusiastic applause. "Man your battle
stations, ready your weapons-,
lock and load."
A new member of Parsley's
church, Wade Stotts, says the
scale of Reformation Ohio is
new but not its goals.
·
"Getting somebody regis,
tered to vote is, I believe, out
American right and a moral
standard," said Stotts, who
moved here from Topeka,
Kan., while his wife,
Mischelle, attends World
Harvest Bible College. "It's
notjust OK but mandatory." .
Parsley appears to be siak,
ing out a higher national" pro'
file, recently hiring the same
Dallas public relations finn
that represents the Rev. Billy
Graham and megachurch pastor Rick Warren, author of
"The Purpose Driven Life." .
The Rev. Doug Shriner,
head of a large, suburban
Methodist church, agreed to
join Reformation Ohio's
board despite concerns about
Parsley's politics. Ministers at
other Methodist churches;
considered
mainline
Protestant churches thai aren't
as conservaii ve as evangelicals, are among Parsley's criti~.
.

.

Ice

•

Snow

5.97

•••••

Weather Underground •

Friday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the upper 30s.
Southwest winds around 5
mph.
Friday
night... Part! y
cloudy in the evening ... Then
clearing. Cold with lows in
the mid 20s. South winds
around 5 mph.
·
Saturday.. ,Mostly sunny.
Not as cool with highs in
the lower 50s. Southwest
winds 5 to I0 mph.
Saturday night... Mostly
clear in the ev~ning ... Then
partly cloudy with a slight
chance of min &gt;howers after
midnight. Cold with lows in
the lower 30s. South winds
around 5 mph. Chance .of
rain 20 percent.
Sunday
through
cloudy.
Monday... Partly
Highs in the mid 40s. Lows
in the lower 30s.
Monday
11ight... Partly
cloudy. A chimce of snow
showers after midnight. Cold

Interest Rate
with lows in the lower 30s.
Chance of snow 30 percent.
Tuesday a11d Tuesday
night... Mostly cloudy with a
chance of rain and snow
showers. Highs in the mid
40s. Lows in the mid - 20s.
Chance of precipitation 30
percent.
Wednesday ... Mostly
cloudy in the morning ... Then
panly cloudy with a chance
of rain and snow showers in
the afternoon. Highs in the
mid 30s. Chance of precipi- .
tation 30 percent.
Wednesday night... Partly
cloudy in the evening ... Then
becoming mostly cloudy. A
40 percent chan~e of snow
showers. Cold with fows in
the lower ;20s.
Thank.~giving Day... Partly
cloudy. A chance of snow
showers in the morning.
Highs in the upper 30s.
Chance of snow 30 percent.

Annual Percentage Rate

Rate fixed for FIVE years!
Applies to purcbase or raftnance of
single-family hoi 1aesl

Fn Farmers Bank
.We're
Your B•k For Ufe!
..0.. IC!\IaiMOUIMIII ·
L.::1
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"t' • • • t

Men ber I'OIC

Salyrrtay. Noyambtr 26
Girls Basketball
Meigs at River Valley, 6 p.m
Symmes Valley at South Gallia, 7:30p.m.
College Basketball
Kentucky Christian at Rio Gr~nde, 7:30
p.m:

773.UOO

••

Gallipolis
.~·

t

'

441.2215

-Tuppers
117.311,

Brown

Frosh Euan Purcell
registered the go-a head
goal in the 78th minute .
Ryan Baxter dropped a
pass back to Purce ll.
whose shot deflected
off a Bethel defender
and found the left side
of the net.
Rio then put the contest away when classmate Frank Brown, off
a cross pass from Guy

Please see Soccer, 88

vs.

MICHIGAN

Smith has tough act to follow
BY

MIAMI (AP) - A repentant . Kurt Busch said he
regrets becoming "argumentative" with an officer during
a traffic stop· last week in
Phoenix, but insists that alcohol played no part in his
behavior.
"When I was asked by the
officer if I had been drinking,
I explained to them I had one
drink during dinner, but I was
certainly not intoxicated,"
Busch said in an exclusive
telephone interview with The
Associated Press from his
Charlotte,
N.C.,
office
Thursday night.
The reigning N ASCAR
. Nextel Cup champion was
pulled over for driving 60
mph in a 45 mph zqne,
swerving to avoid a car and
running a stop sign last
Friday night on his way back
to Phoenix International
Raceway. He said he was
returning from dinner with
his fiance.
The police report said the
deputy smelled alcohol on
Busch, and the driver became
belligerent.
"You're only doing this
because you're a-Jeff Gordon
fan," Busch was quoted as
saying to the officer in the
police report, released earlier
Thursday in Phoenix.
He was eventually issued a
misdemeanor citation for
reckless driving.
"I admit I became a bit
argumentative with the offi. cer when he continuously ·
insisted that I submit to a
field sobriety test and a
breath test, which I ultimately did," Busch said. "I later
learned my · (preliminary
breathalyzer) test was .0 17.
That's consistent with an
individual my size having
one drink. That's brought us
to this point.
"I regret that my actions,
including saying some disrespectful things to the officer,
made the situation worse. I
have apologized for this and I
want to reiterate this apology
to the officer and to the
Maricopa County Sheriff's
Department."
The officer, responding to
Bu sch's comment about ·
Gordon, said did not follow
NASCAR and is a fan of neither Gordon nor Busch. He
eventually called a supervisor
to the scene.

Please see Busch, 88

CONTACfS
Phone - 1·140-446·2342 ext. 33
E·mall- sports@mydailysentlnel.com
SpoJl~lU•ff.

Brad Sh1rman, Sport&amp; EdHor
(740) 446-2342 ..... 33

bsherman 0 mydailytribu ne .com

Bryan Walttrt, Sport• Writer
(740) 446-2342 .•,, 23

bwaltersOmydallytribune.com
Lllrry Crum, Sport&amp; Writer
(740) 446·2342. e&gt;&lt;t. 33

Ierum 0 myel! ltyregister .com

•

RUSTY MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Busch regrets
actions, ready to
take over new ride

Fox- 1·740·446·3006

Mason

Rio Grqnde for the second time this sea&gt;on.
bows out with a 12-7-6
mark.
Last seasoo, Rio
Grande . was upset in
the second round by
Evergreen
State.
Likewi se, Bethel was
able to give the No. I
team in the county a
Purcell
scare
but two
Redmen
freshmen
scored within the final 12 minutes to
quell the ~pset bid.

OHIO STATE

Collage Basketball
Rio Grande at Urbana, 7:30p.m.
Women'a College Basketball
Rio Gran~e at Urbana, 5:30p.m.

0"-...
.:.:. · ~
~~
•

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. - Two
late goals helped top-seeded Rio
Grande avoid another early exit.
The Redmen scored twice late to
break a halftime deadlock, and beat
Bethel (Ind.) 3-1 in the second round of
the NAJA National Soccer Tournament
Thursdl\y.
Rio Grande (20-0-0) advances to the
quarterfinal round on Saturday, when it
will face the No. 8 Park versus No. 9
Hastings winner.. Bethel, which .lost to

Tugday Ngyember 22

T NEW MORTGAGE
.TE FROM FARMERS BANK!
~

Friday, November 18, 2005

No. 1 Redmen bounce Bethel

Cincinnati

Cloudy

Rio Grande 3, Bethel 1

AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

37" I 14"

L__:)

College Soccer

Bv ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

*Columbus

1":?--..

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

THURSDAY'S SCORES

AP photo

Ohio State quarterback Troy Smith (10) throws a pa~s against Northwestern in the first quarter Saturday at the Ohio Stadium in Columbus. Troy Smith has started JUSt one game against
· Michigan and has already learned that if you play well against Ohio State's' arch rival a lot is
forgiven. "If you do have a good. game against Michigan, everything is OK for you," Smith
said after the Buckeyes win last week over Northwestern. As it turns out, Smith ha.d much
more than a good game against the Wolverines a year ago. He put up numbers that had people reaching for the record book. and can raise a player to a new leve l in the eyes of-the fans
who build their world around the rivalry.

COLUMBUS
Troy
Smith has started just one
game against Michigan and
already has learned that if you
play well against Ohio State's
archrival a lot is forgiven.
"If you do have a good
game against Michigan,
everything is OK for you,"
Smith said after the Buckeyes
win
last
week
over
Northwestern.
As it turns out. Smith had·
much more than a good game
again st the Wolverines ·a year
ago. He put up numbers that
had people reaching for the
record book, and can raise a
player to a new level in the
eyes of the fans who build
their world around the rivalry.
That great game is not only
the most important thing on
his resume, it's also a tough
act to follow as the No. 9
Buckeyes prepare to take on
17th-ranked · Michigan on
Saturday at The Big House.
Smith's 145 yards rushing
on 18 attempts. including a
touchdown, was the secondhighest total for an Ohio State
quarterback . He also completed 13-of-23 passes for 241 ·
yards and two more scores
while leading the unranked
Buckeyes to a 37-21 upset of
No.7 Michigan.
Instantly.. the sophomore
from
Cleveland
was
acclaimed as the Buckeyes'
next star. But that star fell out
of orbit not long after the
postgame celebration ended.
Less than a month after his
best game, Smith was suspended by Ohio State foF
accepting $500 from an Ohio
State booster six months ear· lier. Smith, who acknowledged he accepted the money,

.

.

Buck Notes

Bucks have not
spent any time
on Michigan
until this week
COLUMBUS (AP) - What's brewing
today with the 2005 Ohio State
Buckeyes ..
BUCKEYE BUZZ: Leglnd has It that
Woody Hayes wo uld .ha11e the
Buckeyes practice on Michigan a 11Hie
bit every week, despite the upcoming
opponent or how many weeks it was
until The Game.
Jim Tressel was an assistant under
Earle Bruce and has been the Ohio
State head coach for five years.
Despite the imponaoce of the rivalry,
Tressel said he's never seen anyone
look that far ahead.
"The only team I worry about Is ours
and the only· team I evaluate Is ·Ours
until we get ready to play someone,'"
said Tressel, who has seen video on
Michigan three times When it played
against an Ohio State opponent. "The
folklore about practicing for this game
or studying this game !or weeks on end
prior to the game - I've never experl·
anced that."
NOTEWORTHY: Since the 1992 tie
that Ohio State President Gordon Gee
heralded as ~our greatest victory," the
team ranked higher in The Associated
Press poll has lost eight of the 12 meetings. Ohio State is No. 9, Michigan No.·
17 in the most recent wire poll.
·
LEAVES ENVY: The guys who own
the most buckeye-leaves stickers have
the highest status on the Ohio State
foo tball team .
"You go through the year and see how
they buil,d up,M defensive end Mike
Kudla said. ~ auys are like : 'Hey, I've got
·more than youl' ... After a loss,. nothing
happens. Everytlllng stays neutral. If
you know you're gelling tea11es on
there, you know good things are happening. The more leaves, the bener.~

was not permitted to travel
with the team to its bowl
game, and then was suspended for the 2005 opener.
The booster was bani shed
from the program. Ohio State
has a hearing in December at
which time it will learn if the
NCAA will levy any addition-

. Please see Smith, B8
.

.

Michigan's Carr dodges questions about Tressel and critics
BY LARRY LAGE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

ANN ARBOR, Mich .
Michigan coach Lloyd Carr
looked and sounded relaxed
in his office while discussing
hi s leadership
philosophies, favorite books
and the .rewards and challenge s of his job.
But when the conversation turned to his I '3 record
against Ohio State coach
Jim Tre sse l and his critics.
including the one who ereated a Web site to push for
hi s firing , Carr dodged the
topics like a juking running
back.
Does Carr think those
who point out hi s rough
start against Tre·ssel should
also note he is 6-4 overall
against the Buckeyes heading into Saturday's matchtip
at Michigan Stadium?
"-The most .important
thing is the game right in
front of you," Carr said in
an interview with The
Associated Press.
What is Carr's reaction to
the Web site that advocates
Michigan fire him?
"Benjamin Disraeli . a
great prime minister of
England, used to have a box

on his desk and he would
always • Write down the
names of his enemies,'' he
said following a long pause
after trying to avoid the
question twice. " His observation 'was, years later, he
would look back and those
people had either died, or
·failed in their live s. or
destroyed themselves , in
their attempts to hurt other
people."
·
During Carr's II seasons
as head coach at Michigan
- and 26 years with the·
program - · he knows as
well as anyone that being
the face of th e Wolverines
has its plusses and minuses.
On one hand, the school
annually atlracts quality
players who . can also survive at one of the finest academic institutions, and that
makes excellence possible.
On the other hand, . some
think the sky is falling in
A111i Arbor after every loss .
Through it all , Carr
almost always appears levelheaded in public, and
chooses to let his record
speak for itself.
• Carr led Michigan to the
1997 Associated Press
national championship, nine
straight New Year's Day

LLOYD

CARR

bowls - a st reak that might
end ·with a loss Saturday and is 15-5 against Top- I0
teams.
He is 102-32 with a .761
winning percentage that
trails just four Division 1-A
coaches. He is 68-19 in the
Big Ten, with five conference champion ships in the
past eight years. including
the past two.
Senior defensive tackle
Pat Massey said it's "unbelievable" that Carr has harsh
critics.
" I would like to sit down
with some of those people
and JUSt talk to them. "

Massey said. "Coach Carr is
what Michigan is all about.
and I think there shouldn't
be any que stion about it."
Piling up victories at powerhouses such as Michigan
is expected, but how coaches fare · in rivalry games
goes a long way toward
defining their legacies .
That has always been true
in what is commonly called
"The Game" at Michigan
and Ohio State.
John Cooper' won 71.5
percent of his games with
the Buckeyes , but his 2-101 record against Carr, Gary
Moeller
and
B"o
Schembcchler led to him
being replaced by Tressel.
Two legendary coaches Schembechler and Woody
Haye s - were the focus of
the rivalry from 1969-78 in
what is known as "The I0Year War," Schembechler
going 5-4-1 against his
mentor.
Tressel wasted no time
letting Ohio State fans
know where hi s focus was
when he was introduced as
the storied program' s coach
on Jan . 18, 200 I. Four hours
at'ter
being
formally
announced as Cooper's successor, Tressel sent the

crowd at a Michigan-Ohio
State basketball game into· a
.frenzy.
" I can assure you that
you·· II be proud of our
young people in the classroom, in the community and especially in 310 days
in Ann Arbor. Michigan ,"
Tressel said.
He was ri ght.
Buckey es
beat
The
Michigan 26-20 on the road
ill. Tressel's debut season,
then prevailed 14-9 the following year on thci~ way to
the nat10nal champ10nsh1p.
The Wolverinc.s prevailed
35-2 1 in 200.1 hut Ohio
State won I a&gt;~ year"s ga me .
37-21.
Despite hi s success in one
of sport 's .gre;.ttest rivalries.
Tressel is pusl1ing for more.
Ohio State sen iqr safety
Nate Salley. whose record
against Michigan is 2-1.
said Tressel has made sure
his players arc not sati sfied .
"I was on my way to the
team meeting room and we
were walking side by side,"
Salley recalled earlier this
week. "And he sa id :
'Remember what I told you.
There 's a big difference
berwecn being 2-2 and
being J- 1. ...

�.

Friday, November 18,2005
www.mydai Iysent i nel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B2

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, November 18. 2005 •

\J!ribune - Sentinel ·- l\egister
CLASSIFIED

•
•
•

•
••
•

•
••
••
•

An inside look at this week's game

G •lll.o Cn ~ nt), 011

•

.

One play can make or break a season

BIG TEN STANDINGS
Big Ten ·
Teams
W L Pet.
Penn State 6 1 .857
Ohio State 6 1 .857
MIChigan 5 2 ,714
Wiscons1n 5 3 .625
Minnesota 4 3 .571
N'western 4 3 .571
Iowa
4 3 .571
Mich. State 2 5 .286
Purdue
2 5 .286
Indiana
1 6 .143
Illinois
0 7 .000

Overall
W L Pet.
9 1 .900

It probably still rings in the
ears of football player s even if
they haven't worn a uniform
myears.
"You can't take a play ofT,"
coaches will say. "You·can't
take a play off."
But Michigan has demonstrated that you can turn that
old exhortatjon around. The
Wolverines have proved t hat
one play can be a booster
rocket that makes you take off.
No.9 Ohio State (8-2, 6-1
Big Ten) will go into its annual football showdown with
Michigan on Saturday on a

7 3 .700
8 3 .727
7 3 .700
6 4 .600
6 4 .600
55 .500
4 6 .400
4 6 .400
2 8 .200

AROIJND THE BIG TEN
No. 5 Penn State
at Michigan State
Penn State can win at least a
share of the Big Ten title and get a
trip to a Bowl Championship Series
game by beating the slumping
Spartans, losers of fiVe of their last
six games.
Penn State 19·1, 6-1 Big Ten)
wasn't even in the Top 25 at the end
of September. Michigan State (5-5,
2-5 81gTen) was ranked No. 11 at
the end of September after starting
4-0.
Butkus Award finalist linebacker
Paul Posluszny leads a Penn State
de~nse that gives up 15.9-pol nts
a game. Quarterback Michae l
Robinson needs only eight passing
yards to become the first Penn
State player ever to throw for 2,000
yards and run for 500 yards in the
same season.
MSU coach John L. Smith 1sn't
worried ·about his job security. He
has three years remaimng ori a SIX·
year contract. .

Northwestern at Illinois
Purdue at Indiana
Wisconsin bye

-OSU TEAM lEADERS
Pittman 1,110
Receptions
Holmes 42/781
Touchdowns

Sacks

1.640

Rushing Yards .

Smith

10

Carpenter

8

UM.TEAM WDERS
Passing Yards

Interceptions

Henne 2,033
Rushing Yards
Hart
573
Receptions
Avant · 701900
Touchdowns
7
Avant

Four t1ed with 2
Tackles
Two t1ed with 72
Tackles for loss
Woodley
14
Sacks
Woodley
5

Jim Naveau's
Player of the Week

OSU SCHEDULE
Sept 3
Sept 10
Sept 17
Sept 24
Oct 1
Oct. 8
Oct 15
Oct. 22
Oct. 29
Nov. 5
Nov. 12
SATURDAY

Miami (Ohio)
Texas
San Diego St
Iowa
BYE WEEK
@ Penn .st
Michigan St
@Indiana
@ Minnesota
lllino1s
Northwestern
@MICHIGAN

son," he said.
Even though Ohio State
has a chance to win at least a
share of the Big Ten title and
maybe a trip to a Bowl Championship Series bowl, the
Buckeyes have had to change
their goals since close losses

to Texas and Penn State.
The national championship
OSU talked so much about
disappeared for lack of a key
play here orther e.
"I still say to this day we can
be the best team in the nation
but we've got two losoes," Ohio
State offensive lineman Rob
Sims said. "If we had played a
little better or done things a
little better, we might be
singing a different tune. We
might be looking at a whole

different situation.". ·
That's why you Cllll't take a
playoff.

•
"

To Place

•

Call Today•••

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w48-7
1 P.M.

--·-------···-····-· ··--·

LB- A.J.

"C0pyrig)1t (c) 2005 The Uma Nev.;: Re- .

production of all or any portiOn of th1s material is pro,hlttrted wrthout express conseot. "

Hawk scored a
touchdov.n on a
blocked punt and
caused a fumble 1n
a 48-7 win over
Northwestern. He
was named one of
four finalists for the
Butkus Award earlier th1s week.

Hawk

."It's tradition. It's
what you come here
for. It can't get any
bigger than this."

What was the first year the Ohio StateMichigan game drew more than
100,000 fans at Michigan Stadium?

:
:

•
•

L 1957 2. 2002 3. lloyd Carr spent
eight years as a high school coach,

~=

day until kickoff

~~=·C£~
0 BUCKS

228 West Main St. • Pomeroy, OH 992-5432

FARM • HOME • BUSINESS
LIFE • BONDS • MOBILE HOMES • HOSPITALIZATION

. .!!!!1..!

Yaurparrrrcr/llprmeciton

188 EAST SECOND ST•• POMEROY, 01 . E;,!-;:-:3?&gt;

982•3381

:,::,00000

asked. Willy is a male long
legged, slender part short

$5-$25,
(740)949-21 15 any info. on Witlys whereSue's GreenhOuse
abouts please call 304-636·
6047 or/ 304-642·6043.

r

~

GM:AWAV

I

.. r
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~-----

•

lry. (740)4&lt;6·25!5.

Beautiful 10wK old solid
black male, 3/4 Lab puppies.
First shots/wo rmed. Need '
room to run. (740 )441 -1417
after 5pm
Free to good horTie, female
mixed breed pup (German
Shepherd and ??). had first
shots, mrmed. 740-446·
1305
Free to good home. (7) 6
week old kittens, very pretty.

Call (740)388-0436.
Poodle
· to
(304)675·72 45

giveaway

-.· · ·

LEARN

TO
DRIVE
'NO E ~ PEA I E N C E NECESSNW
' FUll- TIME ClASSES
' COL TRAINING
• FINANCING AVAILABLE
' JOB PLACEMENT
. " ENROLLING NOW

y

s

ARD AH:-

GALUPOLIS

t.__..;;;::;:o:--_.J

Dally In-·column: 1:00 p . m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Ne x t Oily's Paper

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

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR -TRAILER

TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE. VA

~~~~hZ!~:t~~,/ ~by

r

2 part-lime workers wanted·
Kennel Cleaners. 1 for dogs.
1 for cats. Must be 2 1 yrs or
older, with drivers license
Call MCAWL at (304)6756458.
AVON I AU Areasl To Buy or

Puppy I mon th, 15 days old
to giveaway. Call {740)446Sell. Shirley Spears, 304·
I buy Junk Cars (304)7732170.
675 1429
5004
•
·
Tyger Lilies. Call after
CNA'S
&amp;
Resident
I \ 11 '1 0\ \II \I
12:00pm (740)4&lt;6·3789.
Assistant s Interviews Are
...,llnH 1...,
Now Being Conducted For
lniTAND
CNA &amp; Re sident Assistant
FOUND
110
Positions. 11 You Are A
.1
IIELP WANrnD
Caring,
Enthusiastic,
Lost: Blue Bass Drum in
Dependable Person, Then
black case, between Spring
An Excellent way to earn We Want You To Join Our
Valley and Meig s High
r eam. Come On Over &amp;
money. The New Avon.
School, (740)441-9059.
· Call Marilyn 304-862-2645
Check Us Out! Competitive
CNA
Wages.
Paid
vacations , Paid Meals.
Home Health Care of Many
Other
Benefits.
Southeast OhiO is currently Rav enswood Care CenteT,
hiring ho~ aides and regiS- 111 3 Wa shington Street,
tered nurses. Full time, part Ravenswood, WV (Across
lime, per-diem. Competitive Ritch ie Bridge, At. 2 North,
wages, fleXible scheduli ng.
Last Busine ss .On Righi)
Call Toll Free 1-866-368- References Required .
1t00.

r

Antlquea ....................................................... 530
Apartments for Renl ................................... 440
Aucllon and Flea Market. ............................ OBO
Auto Parte &amp; Acceaaorlea .......................... 760
Auto Repalr .................................................. no
Autos for Sale ........... ................................... 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Building _Supplies ............ .,, ... , ...... ,... ,...... ,.. 550
Bualneaa and Bulldlnga ............................. 340
Buelness Opportunlty ..... .......... .................. 210
Bualneae Tralnlng ................... .................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ;.......................... 790
Camping Equipment ........... .... .................. .. 780
Carda ofThanks ..................... .... ... ........... ... 010
Chlld/Eiderly Care ......................................: 190
Elaclrlcai/Re1rlgeratlon ............................... 840
Equipment for Rent .......................... ........... 480
Excavating ................ ... ........... .................. ... 830
Farm Equlpmenl .......................................... 61 0
Farms for Rent.............................................430
Farm a for Sale ............. ......................... ....... 330 .
For Lease ........... ... .............. ......................... 490
For Sale ......................................................... 585
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruita &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
Furnished Rooma ........................................ 450
· General Haullng ...........................................B50
Qlveaway ......................................................040
Happy Ada ..................... ,... ........................... 050
Hay &amp; Graln ................ .............. .................... 640
Help Wanted ....... .... ............... ;................ ...... 110
Home lmprovementa ..............: ...... .............. 810
HOff'les for Sale ............................................ 310
HoUsehold Gooda ........................,...... .........510
Houses for Rent ...................................... .... 410
In Memorlam ........... .. :.................................. 020
lnaurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ 660
LIVIIIOCk ......................................................630
Loat and Found ........................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ...... ... ................................... 350
Mlscellanaoua .............................................. 170
Mlei:::ellaneous Merchandlse...... ................. 540
MObile Home Repalr .... ................................860
Mobile Homes for Rent .......................... ..... 420
Mobile Homes for Sale ................................ 320
Money to Loan ............................ ................. 220
Molorcyclea &amp; 4 Wheelera .......................... 740
Musical Instruments ........................... ........ 570
Peraonals ..................................................... OOS
Pets for Sale ............................................:... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
Proreselonal Servlces ...................... .... ....... 230
Rodlo,'Tv &amp;"CB Repair: ..............•..........•...: 160
Real Estate Wanted ......................... l., ......... 360
Schoolelnstructlon .................. .'..................150
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Situations Wanted ... .. ....................... ........... 120
Space for Rent ............................................. 460
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
SUV'a for Sale ............ ,................................. 720
Trucks lor Sale ............................................ 715
Upholstery ..... ....... ..................... .. .. .............. 870
1Vans For Sale ............................................... 730
1 Wa r1 ted to Buy ............................................. 090
w anted to Buy- Farm Supplles ..................620
Wanted To ~0 ............................ .................. 180
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
Yard Sale- Galllpolia ....................................072
Yard Sale·Pomeroy/Middle ... ... ................... 074
Yard Sale-Pl. Pleasant ............................ .... 076

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Bu!lllness Day• Prlo-: To
Publlclilltlon
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m .
Thursday for Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid"

Patriot EMS seeking FT/PT
EMT's &amp; Pa ramedics. After
introductory period I::MT's
make
up
to
$ 10/hr. ,
Paramedics up lo $t2/hr.
100% medical. insurance,
prescription card, paid days
off &amp; vacation. retirement,
paid training . All vehic les low
mileage, new equipment.
For
mo re
information
www.patriotems.com or call
(740)532-2222.

Magic Years Day Care
Preschool 7:30-5 :30
"Putting Children Firs!"
Ages 2- 12 Stale Licensed ,
Link Approved, Excellent
Skill s. 'SPaces aVailable for
all ages. (304)675·5847

HoMFS

MOBILE HOMFS

ffiRSALE

HJRSALE

Brick home 4BA, 3BA,
garage, basement; fireplace,
nice lot with storage bldg.,
carport, patio, poo.l and
fenced backyard. Excellent
location on Jackson Pike.
(740)446·7903
cell
(740)441·7098.

Great used 99 SKyl ine
f 6x80. ,Vinyl/shingle, 2K6
walls, glamour bath. Call
(740)385-9621 .

Openings (2) Elderly Mobile,
NOn Smol&lt;ers, Drlnl&lt;ers.
Christian Home 3 meals &amp;
Snacks. . St :
Ce rtified
Decem ber 1st.
·2005,

t..--iiFOROiloOiRmriillii.'_.J

~~;:::·•:o:l..o:A:N:;;

advertise " any

The Southern Local District

Concealed Pts tol Class Dec.
10
2005 , Christmas
Special. $50.00. 9:00 am .
VFW Mason WV. Ph.
(740)843-5555,

Council tor lndep6f1dsnt ColleQes

Time positions. C o mp et1trve ~nd ScttooiEi 1271a.
Wages. Mileage aud bene- ;;:,;;::.::;:,;;.:::;._ ___,
f1ts including health insur· ~~~ ,
WAN'ffin

anee. Apply at t 480 Jackson L---ol'~'.:ioioiDo~iili_.J

Pike, GollipohJt/gr phone toll
free 1-866-44 t' -1393.
Comp uter
Repair
'and
shoot.
Web
Design,
Trouble
Pa ramedics
&amp;
EMT's
needed. Apply at 1354 Networking. Programming,
Build New System s. Restore
Jackso n Pik e.. Gallipolis.
Wind ows Virus Removal.
Part T1me Regi stered Nurse. Certified- Phone#740 ·992 ~
Mn son County Heallh Dept. 2395
call (304 )675-3050
- - - - - -. , - - Health Care Pr ovrdEir. ' Night
POSTAL JOBS
Sh;H
9:00 PM··S 00 AM .
St 5.94 -$22.561hr., now h1 r· Aefe re [l~es. Call 740-98 5·
1ng . For app1rcat1on and free 4282
gov ernement job 1nfo, call
American Assoc. of Labo r 1· Looking to take care of eld91 3- 59S.8220. 24/hrs. emp. erly or handi capped. Please
call (740)446-6743.

N 3rd Ave. M iddleport.
Br fumished Apt. Deposi t
and previous rental reler·
ence s. No Pets. 7~0-992 0165 . .

r

i

Galllpclis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367,
1-800-214-0452
Oh10 Valley Home Health,
jn c. hinng AN 's, CNA , www . g~ 'h po liscarecreon ~g e .C() m
STNA, CHHA. Ful l and Part Accrcd•tl;id M ~ mb e r Accred •t•og

..

3 bed room mobil e home, all
electric, in Middleport, $400
· plus deposit. 740-416-1354
or (740)992 -3194

r10

Sc..liOOI..S
IN..&gt;;fRUl.TION

I'ORRmf

i~~----------,.l _58_99_·--~------

r•o

1~

APARIMFNI'S

nJRRENT

RE M Options in St. Albans.
WV is currently looking for a STNA wants to do Home
D1rect Service. Employee to Health Care call (304)675- Charming brick ranch. Rio
Grande. Quaint, fr iendly
provide t on 1 service to 8634
i~ ~:~n~~n~a~~o~ th~o:O~~; _W_H_I _d_
o_b_a_b-ys-;1-tin-g; nrny
- neighborhood, 3 blocks from
UAG . Custom-buill in 2002.
area.
.Expenence with home any shil l. CPR Cert. lnlerior open ahd ~iry
MA/DD and Autism pre· (740)441·9744 ask for Anita . Traditional
natural
oak
11\\\~ I \I
woodwork throughout. 3
!erred.
Pl ease contact
Jennifer Da niel or Crista Hill ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; bedrooms, 2 full baths
Large kitchen with dining ,
at (304)768-5575 tor more
BUilNIS'i
pantry, disposal, microwave.
information. Will also accept ~==0:PI'O;R11JNITV;::::
resume, cover letter and 3
Great room design wllh
vauHed ceiling and gas fireletters of references mai led
to REM Options 6404
•NOTICE•
place with oak mantle ., On
MacCorkle Ave. , St. Albans, PHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
hillwithtrontporchoverlook·
wv 25 177 or !a)(ed to lNG CO. recommend stha ing woods. Master suite with
(304)768-7748,
Attn,
ou do business with peo
hislh er bath, incl . whirlpool ~;==;;::===:,
Jennifer Daniel
le you know, and NOT 1
tub, shower, 2 walk-In clos·
-------end mon ey through thE
ets. 2-car garage, tandscepH~
Re sidential
Treatment ~all until you tlave lnvesl i
ing . All new appliances
Facility taking applications
ated the offerino.
included. Low-cost heating/
cooling
1692
sq. 11 ..,
for youth worker. Pay based
2 story Colonial nome 3BR
$179,900. (740) 379·:2615.
CKPllJience .
Paid
on
Insurance. Call between
MONEY
1BA. $500 month. $500 sec.
deposit. No ' indoor pe ts.
9:ooam-3:0opm Monday(740)446-3481 .
Friday, (740 )379-9083
- - - -- - - - 3 bdrm, 1 bth, LR , DR, Kit ..
So meone eKperienced in
**NOTJCt~**
Util. Am. 2 car garage w/220
maintenance. heating/coothookup. Nice tre nt yard .
ing, plumbing , electrical,
All re1lealale 1dvertlalng
Green Twp. Wat er &amp; trash
In tAll new1p1per Ia
painting, etc. Apply in perincluded. Kilchen lurnished .
subject to the Federal
son
at
Holiday
Inn ,
$750 mth plus $500 dep.
Fair Houaln9 Act of 1968
Gallip oli s. No phone calls
Ref.
req . (740 )446-0969.
which
m1k"
11
Uteg
..
ro
please.

1S taking applications for !he
position
of
treasurer.
Qualifications
include:
Bachelor's degree (B.A.) or
equivalent from a four-year
college or university. Five to
te n years related experience. Appropriate State of
Ohio Cer tifica tion/license.
For a limited time make 50% Such alternatives to the
selling Avon . Call (740)446· above qualifications as the
3358
Board of Education may find
appropriate. Interested candidates may send a letter of
interest. resume. and a copy
150·$300 day. Local mea ot their lic ense to Bob
istribu1or looking for inde Grueser, Sup erintendent .
920 Elm Street, Racine,
endent R out~ Manage
ith reliable pickup trucks. 'Ohi o 45771 The Sou.thern
o truck, no problem. Wha Local School District is an
re you waiting for, callth equal opportun ity employer.
sptain Now (740)645
Upcoming certilied nursing
E2MEAT.
assistant class . Must have a
Lineman
telephone
&amp; high school diploma or GED
tiberoptic cable. Must have to appl~ . Applications may
COL and prefe rably 3 yrs be p1cked up at Lakiri
thru
exp. $20/hr. (937)604·5526 . Hospi tal, Monday
Friday, 8:00 am-4 .00 pm.
LPN
needed, full·t ime, Applications must be turned
MondaY-Friday, day shift. no in no later that 11130/05 at
weekends. no holidays. close of business. E.O.E
Apply at 93e St. Rt. 160,
Work @ hOme. Earn $450Gallipolis. (740)446-9620.
$1 ,500 monthly part time ;
Now hiring full and parttima $2.000·$4,500 full lime .
McCiu res Restaurants in www.OurAnswer.com
Middleport and Gallipoli s.
Apply between 10-1 0:30am . Work around yow schedule.
$450-$1500 monthly part·
Nursing Assistant Classes time: $2000 _$ 4500 full-trme.
Beginnmg November 28th,
2005. 11 you enjoy elderly { 3 0 3 ) 2 9 2 - 9 9 6 0 ·
www.OurAnswer.com
people and want to become ,,...;.;...,.;.;,;.;,;.,__~
a member ol our health care
team , please stop by
Rock springs Rehabilitation
Center
at
36759
Rocksprings
Road ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 and fill
out an· application for the
classes. E)(tendicare Health
Services, Inc. is an equa l
opportunity employer that
encourages
workplace
diversity. MfF DN.

20 MomLE HOMF.~

New 16 wid e only $~90 per Mobile HomE! in Counlry 2br,
month Vinyl Siding,· Shingle 2ba, total Electric, (304)882- New &amp; clean efficiency
Roof &amp; Delivery (740)385- 253_7
apartment re f. &amp; dep.req . no
7671
pet s 304-675-5162
M obile home spaces i[i
New 16)(76 3 bedroom/2 Country Mobile Home Park :
NEW ELLM VIEW
bath . Minutes from Athens. (740)385-4019. .
TOWNHOUSE/APTS
Mu st .sell. Move in today. Cell
NOW .LEASING!
Nice 38A mobile !lome lor
(740)385·2434.
.
SPAC IOUS
rent.' $400/dep.. $550/ma .
' 2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
loTs &amp;
Need 3 references . C'al l
BOTH FLATS &amp;
ACREAGE
(740)446-3601 or (740)44 tTOWNHOUSES
AVAILABLE
6 Acres lor Sale in Pomeroy Ta~ing applications 3 bed'ALL ELECTRIC
Area will sell on land con- roo m t4x70 mobile home,
'CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
tract. 740·992·5858
'STOVE, REF,
CIA, pr ivate country setting .
'D ISHWASHER
deposit.
references
'GARBAGE DISPOSAL
required . (740)245·5893.
'WIND BLINDS
Taking applicat ionS for 2
'CEILIN.G FANS
Need to sell your home ? bedroom mobil e home. No
'WATER . SEWAGE , &amp;
Late on payments, divofc e, pets. $275fmonth inc ludes
'TRASH INCLUDED
job transfer or a death? 1 water $200fde posi t. Call
, PETS CONDITIONAL
can buy your home. All cash (740)446-36t7.
(304)882-3017
and quick closing. 740-416- ~r~:..~A--,R't-111EN1. -~--,
31 30.
FORr
'" 0 ., ...,... ~

(304 )Bil2·3880

1-800-334-1203
Garage sale: Jay Drive. Rain
or shine. Thurs-Sat. 12pm- l--'"~"&gt;;"-:!!"'"'idr':!!"':O:'""''"~":!!aii(I!!C'::!
"::C"'­
4pm firm . More of every100 WORKERS NEEDED
thing , knick-knacks. wornAssemble crafts.
wood items.
·&amp; kids
To $480/w~
~~=-·~.,.,.---...,
Materials provided.
WANfED
~---10iiiliiBuiliiv-_.J Free information pkg. 24Hr
801-428·4649
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Silver and Gold Coin s,
Proolsets. Gold Rings, Pre1935
U.S.
Curren cy,
Solit81re Diamonds· M.T.S.
Coin Shop, 15 1 Second
Avenue , Gallipolis. 740..446·
2842.

o;.

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added toyourci(ISSifled ads
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

DlsDiav Ads

YARD SAl£

Adu!t ~ale Aottwei lerllab. ~:::::;::::~
Loves kids. good watch dog, Ill:!
needs fenced yard or coun-

Ohio State
linebacker A.J. ,,
Hawk tackles
'
Michigan receiver Braylon
· Edwards dur·
ing last
year's game.

Am o niu
Pium:m about
pht y•ng
Michiga n

992-2157

WANTED
To Do

Reward lor safe return no ?

4x4's For Sale ................,............................. 725
Announcament ..................... ....................... 030

l:ti lhac k

;;

r ~mnms I

haired Pointer, he is White W
I Brown ,head &amp; ears, last
seen in Grimms Landing
Wre aths &amp; Grave Bl ankets Mason County. it you have

"

Word Ads

lniTAND .

CLASSIFIED lf-IDEX

What was the fi~ year the Ohio
State-MIChigan garhl&gt; drew rnore than
100,000 fans at Ohio Stadium?
Which coach, J1m Tressel or Lloyd Carr,
. began his career as a b1gh school coach?

r

\'\ '\ Ul \{I \ II \ l "i

.,--.,.,

Michigan vs.
Ohio State

Or Fax To

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

r

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Special teams

.r~
··
,.;;;ll-'
.'~·~··

l\egi1)ter

Sentinel

(7 40) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Otffee llo~.s-

No Trespassing, No Hunting,
ATV's
and
not
No
ResPonsible tor accidents
on Jean Leport's Property

It's hard to imagne a team that can match
the kick return game Ohio State has with
Ginn (SIX career kick returns for touchdov.ns)
and Holmes. But Michigan can come close
with Breaston, who is second all-time in career punt return yards in the Big Ten.
Oh1o State kicker Josh Huston (16 of 19
on field gpals) and punter A.J. Trapasso
140.9) are both slightly ahead of Michigan's·kicker Garrett Rivas (17 of 23 on
field goals) and punter Ross Ryan 138.6).
Advantage: Ohio state

utribune

•

the Buckeyes ahead of only IllinOIS in the
Big Ten.
Michigan camelback Grant Mason is tied
for the team lead 1n tackles with 72 and has
tv.o Interceptions. The other cornerback Leon
Hall has two Interceptions and tv.o sacks.
Safety Willis Barringer also has two intercep.
lions. Dante Whitner's two interceptions lead
OSU. Ashton 'rouboty got his first p;ck of the
season against Northwestern. ·
Advantage: Even

Say what?

Weekly Buckeye
Brain Busters

Your Ad,

:,;,g

OSU linebackers A.J. Hawk, Anthony
have been plays of 20 yards or more. He
also ~ves Ohio State another excellent kick Schlegel and Bobby Carpenter hav~
combined for 29 tackles for losses and
returner to go with Ted Ginn Jr.
17 sacks.
Advantage: Even
Ted Harris (72 tackles, five for losses)
Offensivelne
Quartemacks
and Prescott Burgess (67 tackles, four for
Even in some of Its best years, like the
Michigan quarterback Chad Henne
_losses) lead Michiga,n's linebackers.
national championship season in 2002
12.033 yards passing, 19 TDs, seven interAdvantage: Ohio state
and 2003, Ohio State.ranked closer to the
ceptions) has been labeled as ha;ing a
Defensive baCks
sophomore slump season, but only because bottorn of the national rush ing statistics
No Michigan or Ohio State defensive back
than tci the top. This year, it is 25th in
of the freshman season he had 12,743
has
intercepted more than tv.o-passes this
NCAA
Division
1
-A
in
rushing
offense
and
yards, 25 touchdov.ns, 12 interceptions).
has allowed only 16 sacks. With j&lt;jrl&lt; Bar- season. But the Buckeyes rank No. 1 in the
Ohio State's Troy Smith had a career
Big Ten in pass defense (198 yards a game)
ton's return, the line is at full strength.
game w1th 386 yards total offense, two
and Michigpn is second (202 yards a game).
Tackle Adam Stenavich and guard Matt
touchdowns pass1ng and another running·
The Wolverines
against Michigan in a 37-21 win last year. Lentz have been the standouts on the
Michigan line. Tackle Jake LOng, one of
have 10 intercepSmith (1,640 yards passing, 508 yards
tions. Ohio State
the Wolverines' best lineman , returned
rushing) has reduced his turnovers and
has six, which
from preseason ankle surgel)l against
has done a good job of getting the ball to
Northwestern
but
left
last
week's
game
ranks
h1s receivers during the frve-game winning
against Indiana early.
streak OSU is riding.
Only three Big Ten teams average fewer
Advantage: Mlchilflln
yards
per c&lt;mY than Michigan, The WoiverRunning backs
ines have allowed 19 sacks.
Antonio Pittman (1, 110 yards rushing) -has
Advantage: Ohio state
run for 100 yards or more in five of hiS last
IJefensive lne
seven games. llle sophomore ~ Ohio
Michigan's Gabe Watson, a 331·
State Its best running threat since Maufice
pound nose·tackle, could go high in
Claret! was healtl1y in 2002.
When Michigan's M1ke Hart is healtl1y, he
the NFL draft. He has three quarteris one of the B1gTen's best runners. But Hart back sacks this season. End
1573 yards, four touchdowns) has battled in- LaMarr Woodley has 14 tackuries most of the season. He was rested in a les for losses and five sacks.
41-14 rout of Indiana last week. The last
Pat Massey has been a
tirne he played was on Oct. 22 against Iowa
steady perfomner at tackle.
Ohio State limited Northwhen he gained 17 yards. Maybe Hart's
most amazing statistic is that he has fumbled western's high-scoring offense
to 251 yards total offense in a
onrt once 1n his college earee'
48-7 win last Saturday, less
Jerome Jackson (105 yards agai~st
Northwestern) and Kevin Grady (94 yards
than ha~ of the 508 yards it
against Indiana) have provided depth late
was getting coming into the
in the season.
game. End Mike Kudla has
6 1!2 sacks, third on the
Advantage: Michigan
team . He also leads OSU's
Receivers
defensive linemen in tack- ·
Steve Breaston was projected as Michi· les with 32.
gan's top receiver before the season
Advantage: Even
began but Jason Avant (70 catches, 900
Linebackers
yards. seven touchdowns) is 52 catches
and five touchdowns ahead of him.-FreshA.J. Hawk is one of
man Mano Manningham, who caught the four finalists for the
game-winmng pass against Penn State, IS Butkus Award,
second on the team with 20 catches for
which goes to
341 yards and five TDs.
the player
Santonio Holmes might be under six feet voted the top
tall but he ISdefinitely a big-play receiver
linebacker in
tor Oh10 State. Eighteen of his 39 catches
college football.
A look at the matchups between No. 9
Ohio State (8-2, 6-1 Big Ten) and No.17
Michigan (7-3, 5-2 B1gTen) when they play
on Saturday at Mich1gan Stadium:

Other games

Smith

the right direction," Michigan
coach Lloyd Carr said earlier
this week about the end of the
Penn State game.
Offensive lineman Adam
Stenavichsaid that single play
"turned it around" for the
Wolverines. " I 'd have to say
that's what changed our sea-

•
•
••

Stakes higb for The Game

Iowa 16-4, 4·3 81g Ten) and Minnesota (7-3, 4-3 B1gTen) v.ll be tJying to improve their bowl destinations. Wherever the Hawkeyes gp,
it will be a drop from the last three
seasons when they ranked in the
Top 10.
The strength of Minnesota's of·
. fensive line showed through in a
41-18 win over Michigan State.
Wh.en 1njunes sidelined the top two
tailbacks, Laurence Maroney and
Gary Russell, No. 3 tailback Amir
Pinnix ran for 206 yards. Minnesota
leads the countJy in rushing at 295
yards a game and ran for 337
aga1nst Iowa last season.

lnten:eptions
Whitner
2
Tackles
Hawk
102
Tackles for loss
Hawk
12

beat Penn State, turned
around Michigan's season.
Jim
Without that play, Michigan
would have fallen to 3-4. Four
Naveau
losses by mid-October in Ann
The lima News
Arbor or Columbus means the
jna~eau@limanews.com
sky i s falling, the rivers are
419·993·2087
filled with fire and plagues of
fiv&lt;:-game winning streak. No: Ioclists have been spotted on
17 Michigan (7-3, 5-2 Big Ten) the outskirts of town.
will bring a four-game win- Instead, Michigan could
ning streak into the game.
win a shi!fe of the Big Ten
It's probably not exaggerattitle if it beats Ohio State and
ing too much to say one play, a Michig,ill State upset s Penn
10-yard touchdown pass from
State on Saturday.
Chad Henne to Mario Man" The way w e won that game,
nin~am as time ran out to
that certainly got us going in

••

THIS WEEK'S OPPONENT: MICHIGAN

Minnesota
at Iowa

Passing Yards

\

.

8 2 .800

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

·

•

3-4 bedroom, 2 bath, Central
heat &amp; air, natural gas. In
Point Plea sant $650/rent,
$650/deposlt. 1 month rent
&amp; deposit in advance. No
pe ts. (740)446-9585 .

prefltfence, limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon baaed on
race, color, religion, aaX
f1mlllat stetua or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any ·auch
preference, lfmltellon or
dlacrlmlnatkm."

3bdrm·1 .5 bath home, close
to hOspital off Jackson Pike.
$600 mo. rent. $600 sec .
dept· you pay utilities.
Reference s required . Call
(740)446 -3644 to r aPplication .

This newspaper will not
knowlnsfy accept
advartitements for ra11
eatate which Is In
vlolallon ol the lew. Our
readers are hereby
Informed that 111
dwellings advertised In
this newepaper are

avallab.. on 1n equal
opportunity basea.
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?

No Fee Unless We Win!
1·888·582·3345
Rl\11..,1\11

HOMF.~
IUHSALE
t 12 Pleasant Street , 3Bedroonis, 1-112 Baths,
New Centrat!Air Cond., New
Windows
Gas Budget
$65/month (304)675-4034

House for sale· no down
payment, appro)(. 2000 sq.
II. , c/a &amp; heat ." 3-4 bed·
rooms, in Pomeroy, shown
by appointment, (740)949-

7004

.

n.L!"" t

I and 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and unfurnished, security deposit
requi red. no pets. 740·992·
2218.
- -- - - -- 1201 Ohio Street.
Bedroom Apartment' for
Rent. Water &amp; Sewer paid.

(304)678·6668

""

~"""''*-"-"' 'II O,.,:.~•"M'I

Pleasant Valley Apartment
Are now taking Applrcations
for 2BR, 3BA &amp; . ·48R. ,
Applications
are taken
Monday thru Friday, from
9:00 A M.-4 P.M. Office is
Located a! t t5 J Evergreen
Drive Point Pleasant. WV
Phone No. is (304)675 5806. E.H.O
.

1BA nicely turnished apt
Qu iet area. Suitable for 1.
adult. Private
driveway
wlcarport.
New
WID.
(740)446·4782.

Tara
Townhouse
Apartment s..Very Spacious.
2 Bedrooms. CIA. t 112
Bath, Adull Pool &amp; Baby
Pool. , Patio, Sta rt $385/Mo.
lbr, Garage Apartment , fur- No Pets, Lease PluS
nished, Open Immediately Security Deposit Required,
$275 + util itlas (304)773· (740)367 -7086.
5054 .
Twin Rivers Tower is accept1BA, washer, dryer hookup. ing applications f01 wai t1 ng
Close to hos pit al. 740-441- list for Hud-subsi.zed, t - br,
0117
apartment. call 675·6679
2 bedroom apartment Me1gs
County, very nice, c le an ,
$425 per mo nth plus
deposit, no pets, references
required , (740)992·5174

2BR apt. 4 ren t WJD hookup,
water, sewer, trash pd. $400
3br Brick House w/full size mo.
(740)367 -7746 . ·
Basement,
Single
Car (740)367·7015, (740)446Garag e . North on AI 2, 4734
$550/l)lonth (304)895-3129
3 rooms and bath. All utlllties
AHentlonl .
·paid. Downs tairs no pets
Local compa ny offormg "NO $450/mo. 46 Ouve st :
DOWN PAYMENT" pro· (740)446·3945.
grams tor you to buy your
Beautiful 2-story townhouse
hOme instead of renting
overlooking Gallipolis city
• 100% financing
• Le ~s than perfect cre dit park. Kitchen, DR . LA,
study, 2 baths, laund ry area .
accepted
• Payment could be th e References required . securi·
ty deposit, no pets. $900 mo
same as rent.
(740)446-2325 or
Locators. Call
Morlgage
{740)44 6-4425 .
(740)367-0000

"E"'H"'O--.,..----,
SPAU:
HJH Rt-N I'

t..-------,.1
Downtown Otfice Space- 5
room suite $650/mo. I room
office - $225/mo.: 2 room
suite 5250/ mo Security
dep osr t requ ired . You pay
uti li ties. All spaces very nice
Elevator. Ca lf (740)446-3644
lor appointment.
Far Lease : Office or reta'il
spaces in very good condition. Down!own Ga ll ipolis.
Approx. 1600 sq. ft . each 1
or 2 baths. Lea se price
n6got1able to encourage
new
business.
Call
(740)446·4425 or {740)4.46·

No Down Pavment. Less
3936
than perfect credit O.K. Five
minutes
!rom
Holzer
Trail er Lot for Rent in
Hospilal. Three Bedrooms·
BEAUTIFUL
APART· - 'M iddleport. 74'0-992-6849.
-one Bath . Level lot. Newly Buy 7Btlrm. Sba, loreclo\11 Hill\ '\ 1)1 .., 1
AT
BUDGET
remodeled. 740·4 t 6·3130. sure. $18,000, For listings MENTS
PRICES
·
AT
JACKSON
800-391 -5228 ext. 1709.
ESTATES, 52 Westwood f510
HOU'&lt;t:HOI.tl
MOBU.EHOMES
--•';;•;::lR~SALE;i:
':;:,::;,
·
For rent 2 story hOtTJ.e, 38 A, Drive from $344 to $442
Goous
AfC, $500/monlh, $500 Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
deposit. {740)446-3481
740·446-2568 .
Equal
14.:70 , 3 bedroom 1 112
Kitchen Aid wash er &amp; dryer
Housing
Opportunity.
baths, wheels, aKies &amp; House for Rent $250 a
$500. Three yea rs old, like

iL,

I

1995 Doublewide 3br, 2ba
w/attached
Garage ,
Breezeway, &amp; Barn, 1.56
acres, Sandhill Ad. price
reduced $67,000 (304)8953068
blocks' $7,500. (740)388· month plus utilities Deposit
~:..__ _ _ _ _ 8978.
References.
N.o Pets
3 Bedroom House. near
(304)675·4874
Point Pleasant with approlt . 1987 Oakwood 14x70, 2
2 .200 sq H o1 L'1vmg
· Space bedroom, 2 bath , 1 car Newly remodeled house in
Gallipolis ,
$495/month
on 112 acres, additional 2- garage, 8x20 enclosed
Brand
.
new
2BA
house in
porch
,
set
up
on
lot.
Ready
acres available (304)675·
$495/month
_15_3_6_ _ _ _ _ __ to move in. Lot rent Gallipolis .
Call
Gean (740)441·1164: {740)44 1$ 125/mo
3 bedroom. 1 bath, fu ll base· (740)645-1968 or Allan 0194.
menl .
wlgar.
Racine . (740)645·3440.
Small 2 Bedroom, no pets,
Across from Park. 57,000
WID hooKup.
$350.00
below appr. 740-949·1372. 1994 Clayton 14x72, 3BA, month. $300.00 deposil.
2BA, CIA. wlheatp ump, very
3 bed room, 2 bath, Vine clean . e)(cellent condition . 3:C0'-4-·7:.:7::.3·.:.9.c19'-2-- - - Street, Racine , on 3 lots, Needs moved . $12,900. Wanted :
3·4
bedroom
new carpel throughout, new (740)245·0052, {740)24 5- house. allow 5 lb. dog.
roof, new detac hed 28x32 0048 leave message.
$500/monlh or less, Call
garage , neat well main (740)446·7823.
tained home , {740)949-40 1 ~ 1996 Oakwood 14l&lt;:70 2
bedroom, 2 ~ lh . very clean.
MODII.E HO~If:S
3-4 bedroom home in New (740)388-85.13 or (740)388·
I'OH Rfl&lt;r
Haven 11/2 ba .. totally 8017 (evenrngs) .
remodeled . everything new - - - - - ' - -- inside &amp; out $87,000. 304- 2000 Oakwood mobile 16x80 3 bedroom , 2 bath,
. 815 Clark Chapel __ Ad .
882·313 1
~~·home 18K80 vinyl/shingle, 4 $450/month . $SOOfdeposit.
bed room , 2 bath . C/A.
48A. Foreclosure, only (740 )245 .000 ,_ Must be (740)367-7187.
$14,900. For listings can moved.
2 bedroom , I bath , very
800-391 -5228 SKI. F254 .
---:c-:::---:-.,..-:- clean, in country $300/mo.
2001 14)(50 Clayton. 2 bed- $200 deposit, 2 references
Att8!ntionl
room, 2 bath, e)(cetlent con- reQuired . (740)256-6202.
Local company offering "NO dition . Call (740)245-9497.
DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
2tlr Mobile Home $375
grams tor you to t&gt;uy your 2002 Clayton only $142 per
month , $375 deposit , No
home instead of renting.
month, will deliver (740)385Pets (304 )674-4633
• 100% linancing
4367.
• Loss than perfect credit - - - -- - - - 3 bedroom mobil e "home 1n
For sale or rent 1969 14K70 the Shade ar ea. Wate r,
accepted
heatpump, sewer, trash included, $325
' Paymen t could be the 2· 3bedroom
porch . musl be moved a month plus deposit. No
. same as rent
allowed. (740)365·
~740)388· 8375 pets
Mortgage
Locators . S11 ,000.
4019.
a1ter 7pm.
(740)367-0000

-.,J

Beech Stree t. Middleport, 2 new. Purchase pn ce $1,.000 .
bedroom furnished apart- (740)446·1282.
ment. deposit &amp; previous
Thompsons Appliance . &amp;
rental references. no pets,
Repair-675·7 388. For sale,
(740)992·0165
re -condilroned
a utomatic
Brand new 2BR apt in washe rs &amp; dryer s. refngera·
Gallipolis, $450tmonth
tors. ga s and electric
2BA apt SA t 60 past Holzer range s. a1r co ndiliOners, and
hospital, $375/montll .
wrmge1 wa she rs . Will do
2BR
apt
Bidwell. repairs on major brands in
$400/month. (740)441 -t184 : shop 01 at your home.
(740)441-0194

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
'ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!

r

TOW(lhou.se
apartments. Buy or sell
Aiverrn e
and/or small houses FOR AntiQues. 1124 EaSt Mmn
RENT Calf (740)441 -1 t11 0'1 SA 124 E. Pome roy. 740 tor application &amp; information.
992· 2526 Ru ~s Moore,

0

EXTRA ' N.ICE 2BR. t car ow::c~e~'~----.....,
garage, quiet neighborhood . 1540 1\·ILI)ll-:U .A:"'IEOUS
$425 + dep &amp; ref. (740)446·
MERCIIANDL\IE
2801 .

3

Furn ished rooms &amp; bath ,
downstairs, suitable tor t
person, 9t9 Second Ave.
$295 /mo
utilitie s
pa1d.
'(740)446 ·3945
:.._....:..._ _ _ _ __
Furnished upstairs, 3 rooms
&amp; bath . Clean , re f. &amp; dep
requ ired . No pets (74 0)44 6-

4 p1ece Naugahyde living
room su1te. coffee table and
end table· $150 tor all or
OBO. Old k1tchen tab le w1 th
2 cha rrs- $10. 8 foot cafete rra ta ble- $10. Call 740·992·
3710
Beddmg tor full·srze·bed. lg .

c'::.
51:.:9:..·- . . - -- - - b~rd cage, household 11ems.
Gracious li ving t and 2 be d·

IQ rugs. baby

roo m apartmems at V1ltage
Manor
and
A1 ve rstdo
Apartmen ts rn Middleport
Fro m $295-$444 . Call 740992 -5064 . Equal H ousing
Opportunttres

-'"-'"....:...
13_0:.:
41_67_5_
· 2_8_0:.]_ __

ttems &amp; furni-

Body Mat Tack le Box lull
740 _985 _4 t 68
_c.__:__:_:__ _ __
For sa le.: Hosp1tol bed w rt h
trapeze b&lt;Jr (74 0)446-2037

�- Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
~ ~l
""'-"'-"""'......._ .
r
Dual recliner couch teal
$175 bu n~ beds no mat
tress $50 Ch ilds Kettcar
(pedal car) SSO Smart
Crunch $15 (740)367 0157

in Memory

In Memory

~~~
........~~~
c:::::r'
Me 111 o ry of

CARL M. GORBY

JET
AERATION MOTORS

rou r ye,trs h.l\e passed "'IIK'C that Sad
day ( II · I 9-0 I) When one we loved
\\,1'\ L.II led .nv.Iy, God 10nk h1m home
It \.\as hts wtll wJth m our hearts he
IO\eth stili We can not brong the old
days hack. when we were ali together
bul seuet tt• ctr~ ,md h.J\ mg Lhoughts
wil l II\ ~! \\ llh us fotcvct

Repa1red New &amp; Rebu It In
Stoc~ Call Ron Evans 1
800 537 9528
N ew and Used Furnaces
Install ation
available

(740)441 2667

De(/ If, J_,~,l ~d mul S'(ittl\ M1 \\f"d

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams P1pe Rebar

Wijt l)wdwe Gmln
Son Ron Gorin

For

Concrete
Angle
Channel Flat Bar Steel
Glt~l/(/\o/1 Clur\topfrer Gmb\
For
Ora ns
Grat1ng
Onveways &amp; Walkwa~s L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday
TRUCKS
Tuesday Wednesday &amp;
I'ORS&lt;LE
FORSALF
.
Fnday 8am·4 30pm Closed
&amp; 1995 Dodge Caravan V6 94 Dodge tr uck 2WD VB
Thu rsday
Saturday
Sunday (740)446-7300
auto power seats runs auto
$2 000
080
600
OBO
great
$
1
(740)256·1652
or
(740)256
Orgma l Star Wars Emp1re
1233
Strikes Back act1on F1gures (740)256 1652
1996
Stratus
106
000
m
les
Hoth AT AT and much
more Call (304)675 6578 Sspd NC runs great
$1 300 080 (7 40)256
$500 for all
FoR SALE

~l..t•o-..;,iiAiioiJliiliiol!;iiiio-,.11 L
~ts
L

r

9031

SPAS

SPAS

SPAS
Over 30 In Stock
RATLIFF POOL CENTER

(740)446 6579
1 800 894 6997

www bulllrogspas com
Vent Free 3 Plaque
Gas Heater
(Propane or Natural)
Manual Control $1 43 95
Atum1num Flberated Pa1nt
(Great for Mob le Homes)
S·gal Bucket $29 95
We now have candy melts
1n stock tor your
holtday ba~mg
Pam! Plus Hardware

6754084

9031
1999 Monte Ca rlo 31 V6
black rea r spo•ler all power
90 000
m1les gareged
eKcellent cond1 1ion $5 000

(740)379 9038

r

992 3394

2002 yellow Lancer OZ
auto matic 28 000 m11es
30+ mpg $5 900 OBO
(740 1256 1618 or (740)256

2002 Chev rol et Tra 11 Blazer

Block bnc~ sewer p1pes (740)245 9,42
w1ndows lintels etc Claude
89 Cavalier Z24 2 8 auto
W nters R10 Grande OH multi port fuel InJected
Call 74Q-245 5121

080
shape
$S 000
(740)245 9142
-------99 4 dr GMC 4 wheel dr

cc--::-~-::---condoloon

(304}675 7345

r

week. 304·675-4088

l0xl5, 10x20,
l0x30

740 992 6520 9 00 5 00

Pomeroy, Ohio

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION

-90-V0-1\00-2-40-DL- no-ru-so'

and Replacement

080

tlncond1110nal hfet me guar
an lee Local refe re nces tur·
nl shed Estabhshed 1975
Call
24 Hrs (740) 446

Rogers Basemen!

~l.n '!)'pes Of
rJ.i. 1
Ufo~&gt; .;l~~
7

;

VMS

Get A n1rnn
on
SAVINGS

r ear heat and a1r ch1ld
seaos 89000 limes Sell1or

25 \1 E '
ears xpenence
David Lewis

Middleport. OH

STANLEY TREE

TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL

• Prompt &amp; quality
work

• Affordable Rates
• References
Avaolabie
• Free Estomates

Shop the
Classifieds!

"Insured"

Call Gary Stanley
740·742·2293
• Leave a message

I \t(\l\1 1'1'1 II..,
,\11\l\111(1-.

r

LIVI'lmX.'K

7 month old Polled Hereford
b\Jil calf Also 1 Polled
Hereford cow (7 40)256·
13B5
Angus bull tor sale Phone
: (740)446 6157
after
600pm
M1ntature yearling
Colt
$350 13 yr Mare S700 20 yr
Geldmg $400 (740)367·

r
0018

Hw &amp;
GRAIN

ay
neve
et 11rst cutt1ng Orchar
rass!Tlmothy m ll $2 0
ale 740 949 2660
Square bales of hay for
Sale $2 50 a Bale 740.
742 1516
I \11\,\(,\IHII-..Iillll'
Check out our Year End
Dlscounla on Lawn Tractors
&amp; Z Trak Zero Turns Buy
now and get 6 Months No
Payment
No
Interest
Carm1chael
Equipment

1989 Chev 4)(4 Z71 new
motor $3 495 1995 Suzuki
S1dek1Ck 4d 4)(4 $1 495
1996 Neon 2d 52 495 1991
Ranger
$1 295
1999
Sunf1re 2d $3 995 o thers 1n
stock
Cook Motor•
328 Jac~son P1k&amp;

oodS!moo~

Retored Longaberger
Baskets, Pottery, Ltners,
Protectors, Totes, Purses,
Accessones

1 Day Only
Salurday,
November 19th at

Broad Run Gun Club
Sunday, November 20th
Stock Shot Gun &amp; Slug
12 Noon

BIG MOVING

SALE
Racone , Ohoo

BINGO

18 &amp; 19

9-5

Amencan Lagoo n Moddleport
N ovember 19
Early Bord Games Start at Sp,m
6 Regular Bongo and 5 Quockoes
Guaranteed $40 DO a game
Forst 80 are eli goble fo r door proze
Startong at 6 30 pm Bongo
1st pack $10 00 ali after 1 sl os
$5 00 each
Guaranteed $80 00 a Game

Lawn. mowers - tools·
Furnoture· TV's· Yard
Furnoture· Chnstmas decora·
lions and much morel

106 Elm

Slreet
Behtnd Cremeens Funeral H ome
949·1936

Washington DC Getaway
May 4, 2006 to May 7, 2006
4·Day/3-Nights
$460/person
Based on doubl e occupancy
Includes Rotmdtrop motorcoach
transportatoon, Hotel accommo·
datoons, Tourmoboie locket
Please conlact PVH Commun oly
Relations to make reservations,
304·675·4340 Exl 1326 or
1492 Cash , check and credo I
gards gladly accepted
if purchasong as a Chrostmas
goft· we can supply a
certofocale for presentatoon

Mozway Tavern
Karaoke Wed &amp; Fn
Sat 2- Bands South Bound
and U nlikely Kond
Sunday Cholo Cookoff

5 00

WV Jobs Foundation

BINGO
"NOW PLAYING"
EVERY FRIDAY &amp; TUESD AY

t

TODAY'

JONES'

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

Bucket Truck

r:Ofl2 (fMON(

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

Hfef44Nf"'-

Office: (740) 992-2804 Cell: (740) 517·6883
POWER WASHING

Owner Jeff Stethem

(Commerctal and Restdenltal)
Mobile Home5 Houses, Log Homes, Oecks, Dnveways
S1dewalks Gas Stat1on Awmngs, Oegreasmg of
Equipment, Boats, Campers Tractor Tra1lers,
Dump Trucks parnt1ng or sta1n1n1 of your deck
or log home, Alum1num bnghtenmg
Spec1al rates to Tru£klng and Dump Trucking Compames

*Heating &amp; Cooling
24hr Emergency
Service

Ed Dill/owner

(740)992-4100
Chuck Wolfe!Mgr.

(740)992-0496

LAWN CARE DIVISION
(Commerml and Restde nl~&lt;'ll)
Mow1ng. Tnmmmg. Tree Tnmmmg, Aerat1on Fer11l1zahon,
Spraymg of fence lmes Leaf Remo11al, as well as small
landscaping JObs such as plantmg and mulchmg.

FREE ESTIMATES • (jUARANT£ED LOWEST PRICES

HOLZER CLINIC
www.holzerclmic.com
Med1cal Excellence.
Local Carmg'M

TONIGHT'S
COVERALL
PROGRESSIVE
JACKPOT PAYS

304-675-3877

....

Barry

Jeff

Dauld R. Deal
Director/licensee In Charge
Charlie Huber, Director
Josh Billings Hssoc.
"FAMILY OWNED"

David, Donna &amp; Brad Deal
• Caring • Professoonal
Affordable Servoces

IMPORTS
Athens

(304) 675·6000
1401 Kanawha St.
Pt. Pleasant

Chuck Wolfe

HAWKINS
TAXIDERMY
137 S. 5th Avenue

Owner

Middleport, OH

• Home Repairs • Remodeling
• Additions • New Homes

(740) 992-7533
.fl OveT 17 Yean
.{/ Experier1r:e

L1censed &amp; Insured

Awan:t Winnmg

TaxidermiSt

(740) 992-0496
ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCnON
• New Homes
·Garages

Cornerstone
Electrical
Service
• FOR ALL YOUR
ELECTRJ[AL NEEDS.
• MOBILE HOME
REPAIRS
• CAI!PENTRY
• ROOF • PAINT

OHIO liCENSE II 38244

740-367-0544
740-367-0536

WirtYIH
SYOHAGI
OF BOATS,
CAMPERS ETC.
AT THE
MEIGS CO.
FAIRGROUNDS
Nov. 12, 2005
9:00 AM-11 :00
For more Info can

740-985-4372

• Complete

Remodeling

741-992-1671
Stop &amp; Compare

SEASONED HARD
FIRE WOOD
CUT &amp; SPLIT
$40ALOAD
CALL
7 40·949·2038

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addllitlnl &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing

• Roofing &amp;Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• P1tlo end Porch Deck•

We do H all except
furnace work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

\WOJ6725

Pomeroy, Ohto
25 Ye1r1 local E• rtence

$2000
(1st G out)
Guaranteed Payoutsl
Doors Open 4 00 pm
Early Bords 5 15 pm
Regula r Sess1on 6 30 pm
124 Highland Ave P t Pleasant WV

frenchcityhomes.com

Vea{ ![unera{J-fome

Slug shoot-Any Gauge

November

SUR E ' C~LL

-

Alligator Jacks Indoor
Flea Market

Bring Shells
Pubhc Welcome

NOT

1701jefferson Blvd
Point l'leasant WV
(304) 675-2630 !!i!l El 1='3

MAINTENANCE

Racine Gun Club
Sunday,
November 20th
12:00

Winch way 1s }Our nest egg gmng'l

~ fullfil

wgM~~EJ%.

Shih Tzu Dog $1 00 oo
House tra1ned Jack Russell
for S75 00 (740)992 3457

able
el
Carmichael
Eqwpment
Compact
Excavators/
S~1d
Steers/Tractor
Loader
Backhoes (740)446 2412

DSm!oo

10x10x10X20
992-3194
Or 992-6635

CONTRACTING

Rental Equlpmant ave11

~

wU...I""'r

C.O...
11Hotoi \ -

\r"" Smn
C.O.or

"Middleport's only
Sell-Storage"

FARM
F.Quu&gt;;\IENT

45760

97 Beech Street

Van aula stereo 40 000
m1les excellent condtl1on 3
Sawm ill
Dog
Fnc k
1981 Chevy Deluxe Dump wJMmneapol1s Molin e gas
True~ new tues and battery power umt (740)949 2115
runs good (304 )675 7961
otO MmoRC\'l1.EY
PM (304)458 1069 days
4 WHF.F.LERS

for a corn p1c~er for
parts New Idee Mod 323
740·698·6448

l~ou hi1moa

!.;:==:::::===========~
r ~

MANLEY'S
SELF STORAGE

97 Super Cargo F 250 Ford

Loo~1ng

Clll FSmn

Licensed &amp; Insured
Insured
Over 30 years
~~·~l~m~
o ~F;r&lt;,.~E~sl~on~•a;les; ' expenence

payoff (740)379 2723

John
Deere
Mower
Cond1!1oners end balers 0%
Fmanc1ng tor 48 Monlhs
Carmichael
Eqwpment
(740)446·24 12

949-2734

!"-JOJK:m,e 1'•Uf,K ,

I

189

Made
SR 124 between
Racmc &amp; Syracu se

740..992-6971

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

runs greao ootaooy rehable
FOR SAU
5 month old Pomeral'l1an 25mpg
$3 000
080
reg1stered Call (740 )388- (74Q)245 9142
2000 Grande Caravan V6

8309

Concrete Removal

w/electnc anchor 4 5 gaso
line Mercury engme new

LSD

loo•A 1111!11 Jo

Janel Jeffers
33795 Holand Road

lklA]]; &amp; MmoRS
HlR SAl r.

Box

Moddleport , OH

Summer Scw~ag e

R"'" Ll'lltrlllll

c.o..,

01 BEDFORD TWP.

and Fmanctal Servtces

&amp;

Where Qualuv.Cn,,pa u um And lt~tegnty Co m' Togd her'

(740) 992-5232
SxlO, lOx!O,

Rocky Hupp Insurance

Wrapped

Ciow·Hussell
Funeral Home, Inc.

Storage

Hentage
So1ta11
13 000 mtle $16 500 call

Waterproohng

Skinned, Cut

»~i'i~~

High and Dry

2004

S1 soo beSI offer over S3500 for 1 0870

PROCESSING

contained
and
described in the lol·
lowing lists:
(Name,
Doacription,
Acree, Total Taxes.
Assessments, Interest
end Penalties)

~DEER{9

1114/1 mo pd

Phone

.

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohto
45771
740·949-2217

Hours
7:00AM· 8:00PM

4WHEELERS

95 F250 4&gt;4 Supercab .._...iiiiiiiioiOoiiiiiiooioiiioor'

~J ~J)

~

'10 I\101UKL1 Cl!Y

$2 300

Hill's Self
Storage

~llto~.-:~~

'-'=""'----Heavy Duty New transmls
gooseneck towmg
51 on
package 79 000 miles Great

r

Let me :lo 1\ for youl

BID FOR SCHOOL
BUS
50008
State
Route 681 , Reeds voile,
Ohio 45n2
(11) 18,25

4&gt;4 54 000 moles.PW POL batoery

as Mercedes Benz 260E
looks runs dnves great
25mP{l too much new to list

geM

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

080 {740)742 3020 740 2 Man Bass Boat new

ec-ce-------

SuP!&gt;LJEs

agreeable to law, are

Treasurer's Off1ee

crUiseltllt AM/ FM/CDt cas ~
Waslo by Cadence treadmill 6200
sette ~ower sunroof exc ~
hke new cost over $400 W1ll - - - - - - - - COMIIIOn
(740)446 6157
I
Ht~1f
sacnfice to r $150 (740}446 85 Chevy Cavalier for sale alter Spm
{304)675 1sos
lMPROVB\tF.Nls
8627 (740)645·0971

RUD.JlL'IG

perle of lots retumed
delinquent by the
County Treasurer of
Meigs County, with
taxes, aaseasmenta,
interesJ and penalties,
charga'd
thereupon

Bid for Bus
Eastern Local School
District, 50008 State
Route 681, Reedsville,
Ohio 45772 is accept·
ing bids for two 71
passenger
school
buses. Specofications
for buses can be
obtained by calling tho
s u pe rl n ten dent ' s
offoce at 740·667-6079.
Bids will be opened 1n
the treasurer's office
at noon on Thursday,
December 1, 2005 Tho
board reserves the
r~ght to reject any or
any part of the bid
Bids
should
be
labeled
" Bid
for
School Bus" and
mailed to · Eastern
Local School Oostrict,

1995 Dodge d esel SL.T
auto
e)(tremely
clean
163 000 mlle"s
$10 500

Cattle $7.75

c:,.nnn Beef $6.85

Corn $6.25/Bag
·Craccked Corn $7.25/Bag
·16% Hog Mix $8.75/Bag
Why Drive Anywhere Else?

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 St Rt 7 N •

Ohio 45769

~ ~ LINCOl~ .MUCURV
Gallipolis, Ohio

....

1111
--·IRflll
f-158414 '
\
lltiUII . . . . . . . . .

7 40-446-9800

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

BAUM LUMBER
Scorpion Tractors
2400 Eastern Ave
(Across lrom KMart)
Gallopolos, Ohoo 45631
(740) 446·1711

"Takwg Tile Sting Out Of
Hard Work!"
Mtd-St ze 4Wheei Dnvc Tractor

wt th 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engmes

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

(740)446.{) 103

'

'

•

Friday, November 18, 2005
The Ianda, Iota and 1/4 41 OOA Ex 9 3846A OF FRAC 19 2OOA

B g d1scounts on John
Deere ATVs $800 Off our
low
pnces
1988 Ford F 150 300 6 already
Equ pment
cylinde r
Runs
Great Carmichael
(740)446·2412
$160000 740 992 56 17

(740)256

Friday, November 18, 2005

Public Notice

4x4

1996
Chevy
Lum na 02 Dodge Dually 1 ton
alttended
cab
4x4
$2 750 740 992 6154
Cummms Turbo d1esel
1996
Dodge
Strauss 2 1 000 m les exr:elte nt con
110 000 m1les cold air runs d1t10n ga rage kepi $25 000
great 5speed $1 100080 f rm (740)286 0257

(740)256 1233

'

www.mydailysentinel.com

l

01.oo304.002
Collins Kevin &amp;/Or
Lyons Ambar SECT 31
T3 R13 588A OUl' OF
30A &amp; 627A OUT OF
1.50A TOTAL 1 215A
........................ 1798.98
01·00172 000 Curtis
Albert L SECT. 15 SE
PART OF N 112 N OF
AD 2A .............. .40.26
01.00173.000
Curtis Albart L SEC 9·
15 NW EX QUIMBY
LOT EX 47.86A OFF E
SIDE 10 14A EX 106A
10.034A.. 601.10
01-&lt;10174 000 Curtos
Albert L SECT 15 SE
PART N 112 N OF RD
21 86
1.09A......... ....
01.00175.000
Curtis AI bart L SECT
15 NE COR OF S 112
OF FR. 75A.
15 33
01.()0867 003
First
National
Acceptance Company
c/o Ronald Sheppard
SECT 33 T3 R13 lOA
OUT
OF
21 295A
IO.OOA.. .. .. 313.58
01.00207 000
Gilkey Tony E &amp;/Or
Christine SECT 22 W
PT OF I 11 45A W ENO
EX 210A 92A 168 23
01.00208.000
Gilkey Tony E &amp;/Or
Chriatlne SECT 23 T3
R13 E PT OF 31 75A W
END EX .37A 1 73A
.921 44
01.00510.008
Hawley Patricia
K
SECT 30T3 R13 2.466A
OUT
OF
20 90A
2..466A.... ..... 175 62
01..00353 000
Hazelton Michael A
&amp;/Or Shirley L LOT
SECT. 11 (640) OUT OF
SW COR OF 20A E OF
RD 2A.. .... ..116.87
01.00495.000
Maier Eugene &amp;/Or
Dorothy SECT 19W1/3
OF 61A OF NW 114
20.33A • . . . 155 95
01.oo496.000
Maier Eugene &amp;/Or
Dorothy SECT. 19 NW
COR OF SW 114 24A
333 07
01.00224 000
Malar J Eugene &amp;
Dorothy J SECT 19 SW
CORNER OF SW 114
21.50A. .. ... 160 90
01·00558.000
Odell Timothy K &amp;
Carole " S E CT. 2 1
FRAC.30,T 3N,R 13W,S
W COR 5.38A OUT OF
21A 5.38A" .. 72.09
01.00849.000
Oliveri Dante M Etal
SECT 10 MID ON N

31 .6154A .. . 255 78
03.()(]989 007
Carpenter Randall R Sr
&amp;/Or Peggy
A
SEC 17 T3N R12W
7 073A
OUT
OF
28 3861A 7 073A
. 367.61
03.00271.000
Clifford Cathy c/o
Kenneth D Davis SECT
18 (640) OUT OF 70A
TRACT W OF CEM 2A
..
. .... 350.72
03.()0088.000
Cllflord
Cathy
0
BLOCK 1 RT 248 PART
I 04A 3 4 STEAD SURV
I lOA.....
.. 741 89
03.01127 000
Cozart Londo S SECT 4
OUT OF E SIDE OF 4A
ON N LINE OF NE 114
SOA
....... 10 16
03.01128.000
Cozart Linda S SECT.
13-4 (640) ON NE 1/4
OF RD lA ...... .20.73
03.01257.000
Cozart Linda S SECT 4
(640) ON N LINE OF NE
114 3 50A .... 1122.79
03.00866.001
Davia John M &amp;/Or
Leanna L SECT32 T4
Rl2 1 594A OUT OF
148 26A 1 594A 159 81
03·00489.000
Deem Anthony W &amp;/Or
Wendy R LOT (262)
5. 7A OF 87 05A NW 114
EX 1.001 A EX 1.007 A
3 632A.
1842 46
03.00463.001
Dill Ryan E &amp;/Or
Amanda V SEC 6 T2N
RI3W I 700A OUT OF
36 694A 1 700A 987 44
03.00146.000
Foster Joe Allen SECT
12-16 (640) E PAT EX
30A S lA.. . ... 180 73
03·00360.000
Foster Joe Allen c/o
Bertha Foster LOT
SECT ·16(640) MID ON
E LINE OF SE 114
1 33A . .... .. ......91 37
03·00366.000
Foot~ Joe Alien c/o
I!Qrlli'a Foster SECT 10
FRAC 4 T.3N R 12W
40A OF 119.7SA 40A
.
..... ............ 219.01
03·00397.000
Frost
Richard
L
BLOCK #I ROUTE
t248 PART OF #5 .22A
.
.
431.08
03·00921.001
Grlttln Tanya M SECT 6
T3 R12 Nl/2 OF SW1/4
66A OUT OF 2117A
66A . . ... . ..83 69
03·00516 003
Guthrie Laura M FR 31
T4 R12SECT211253A
OUT OF 24.2504A
1 253A.. .. .751 79
03.00516.002
Hawthorne Timothy D
FR 31T4 R12 E END OF
S 112 11436A OUT OF
25 394A 1 1436A
..
. . ..1878 09
03.00525.000
Hawthorne Timothy 0
FRAC 31 T4N R12W
I 09A OF 29A 1.09A
.. .. 237.50
03.00855 000
Hysell Donald G SECT
36 2.62A OUT OF
64 92A NW COR 2 62A
• 895 99
03.00538.001
Jones Wolloam Mochael

~f~o=~~OOo. 4~7.74 ~E~TD~~~
Oliveri Dante M Etal
LOT SECT 11 MID ON S
LINE 85A .......1223 03
01..00851.000
Oliveri Dante M Etal
LOT SECT ·13 ·II SW
COR 59A ..... . ...452 32
01..00583 000
Proffitt James J LOT
SECT ·31 W SIDE EX
3.08A OUT OF 120A
3.08A EX
2 9539A
.1261A..... ....... ...9.60
01..00302 000
Runyon Jason &amp;/Or
Penny LOT SECT.
13-3218A OUT OF 39A
NEW SURVEY 20 673A
.................... .... 244.55
01.00455.000
Runyon Jason &amp;/Or
Penny LOT 13 32 W
OF NW 1/4 EX 20A S
21A.
.561 23
01.00770.000
Shaw Lynn 0 &amp;/Or
Mary Eiizabath S LOT
SECT·17 W PT OF
77 72A E PT OF NWI/4
E OF RD .16A
0 76
01..00n1.000
Shaw Lynn D &amp;/Or
Mary Ellzabath S LOT
SEC ·17 NW PT EX lA
SCHOOL LOT 56 39A
EX 20.469A 35 921 A
.. . ... . .. . .... 738.89
01..00870 001
Sheeler Gary &amp;/Or
Rebacca A SECT 18 T3
Rl3
24A OUT OF
47.80A 24 OOA 532 69
01..00818.000
Sisaon Fredorock W
&amp;/Or Carmel M LOT
SECT 8 8.9853A OUT
OF 125 AC 8.9853A
..... . ... .... 1619 58
01..00569.010
Stake Ginger L c/o
Ginger L. Grange FR2
T3 R13
1.011A OUT
OF
72 5526A
t.OIIA . . . 1678 52
01..00853.006
While JoHrey A &amp;/Or
White Debora Jolters
SECT23 T3N R13W
8.87A OUT OF 34 454A
8.87A •
.. ...386 59
01.()0180.000
Williams David SECT.
13 NW ES. 54A 128A
.... ...... 625.40
03 CHESTER TWP
EASTERN LSD
03.oo022 002
Beer Edward T &amp;/Or
Patricia D SECT 4 T~
R13 4 725A OUT OF
71 725A 4 725A
1912 68
03.()1 099 000
Bauer Robert Michael
&amp;lOr Carrie A c/o R.
Michael Bauer SECT
32 (840) SE PT OF NE

R13; N
OF NW 1/4 3 OOA OUT
OF 20.49A
3 OOA
..
.. ..3401.98
03.00818 000
KauH Richard A &amp;
Kimberly J SECT. 16
2 037A OUT OF 36.25A
2 037A. . ..
239 67
03·00711 000
Klaober Carl, clo Vickie
Klaiber E SECT 23
(640) E SIDE OF Sl/2
.n9A OUT OF 69.25A
.779A .... ... .. 26 29
03.00712.000
Klaiber CarlE SECT 17
(640) SWI/4 13 379A
OUT OF 72A 13 379A
.3208 47
03.00737.001
Krautter Darrell L &amp;/Or
Arlene SECT 35 T3N
R12W 622A OUT OF
.822A 622A . .44115
03.00746.000
Laudermoll Cheryl Ann
SECT 28 W PAT OF
FRAC24 SSA. n43
03.00748 000
Laudermilt Cheryl Ann
SECT 28 FRAC 24 42A
OF 1 59A .42A 7119
03.00943.000
Parker George SECT
26 (640) SE CORNER
52A
. .. 61 43
03.()0944 000
Parker George SECT
19 (640) MID ON N
LINE 20...
..1917
03.()(]945 000
Parker George SECT
19 (640)41 07AW SIDE
OF RO OUT OF 61.07A
41 07A EX
38988
&amp;.907.......... ...... 24 23
03.oo945.001
Parker George SEC 19
T4N R12W
38 988A
OUT
OF
41 .07A
38 988A EX
1 66A
37 328A ..... .... 51.24
03-ll0945.002
Parker George SECT
19 T4N RI2W W SIDE
OF ROAD 907A OUT
OF 2 OBA 907A.18 77
03.00946.000
Parker George SECT
12·25 (640) NE COR·
NER N OF CR BA
10 9403.oo947 000
Parker George SECT
10 (262) lOA W SIDE
OF RD EX 9 468A
532A .
•
10 94
03.00947.001
Parker George SECT
19 T4N RI2W 9 468A
OUT
OF
10 OOA
9 468A
• ...102.48
03.00948000
Parker George SECT
20 (262) W END EX
16A &amp; 19 4A N 88 09A
.. ,.....,., ...... 1109 89
03.00949 000
Parker George SECT
20 W CENTRLA PART

www.mydailysentinel.com

Morris Linda s Etol
.346.48 SECT 8 8 NW COR OF
03.00950 000
NW 114 19 82A EX
Parker George SECT. 5 525A 14 295A 155 23
20 (262) IN MIDDLE 05.00121 .000
OUT OF 78.88A 38.63A Morris Linda S Etal
.49 67 SECT 14 FR 7 E END
03.00518 000
92A .
. . 111 .28
Ridgway Crystal D
05.00122.000
SECT 19 (640) SW PAT Morris Linda S Etal
OF 3 BOA N OF RD SECT 14·15 FR 1 SE
50A .. ... ..... 1245.99 COR SE CR 42A
03.()1114 000
44 08
Short
Herbert
&amp; 05.00103 000
Martella c/o Frederick Oliveri Dante &amp;/Or
&amp; Selly Gerlach SECT 8 Cynthia SEC 3 SW OF
(640) SW OF NWI/4 &amp; NW 114 &amp; NW OF SW
NW OF SWt/4 W OF CR 114 EX .lOA W 30 OOA
4 31 A. ...
. 3'02.80 EX 12.504A 17 496A
03.00616.001
.... ...381.38
Smith Richard &amp;/Or 05.()8462 015
Georgia SECT 3 T3 R12 Patel Dlneah K &amp;/Or
NW CORNER 1 SOA Panna 0 SECT 18 T9N
OUT OF 10 41A 1.50
R15W
LOT
~11
......... .. ....
137 68 CHESTNUT
RIDGE
03.()1232 000
SUBDIVISION 3.4139A
Starcher Coy B S4
..376.59
(640)T2 R13 2 85AOUT 05.00626.000
OF 51.93A JOINING Ray John G SECT 20 •
114A 118A . 715.30 21 FR.31 S PART OF W
03.00834 000
112 5X40' 6 SOA. 38.20
Wood Rodney Lee
05.oo&amp;27.000
Ray
"SECT 17,T2N, R12W, John G SECT 20 FA 25
W OF SECOR 30A OUT W PART 169.00A EX
OF 34 213A EX 112 43 0350A 125.9650A
MINERALS
30A" .• . ...... ...... ... 1329.39
.... . ....
253 28 05.()()622 001
Sanders Ronald L &amp;/Ro
04 CHESTER TWP.
Audrey J SECT 20
MEIGS LSD
FRAC 19 N PART
6.794A OUT OF 88A
04-00042 000
6.79A . .
.. 5962 46
Chadwell Paul SECT 10 05.00736 003
T 2 R 13 FAIRVIEW Shaulis Gerald P &amp;/Or
HGTS SUBDIV LOT ~8 Cathy L SECT 32 T9N
855A
.
975 64 R14W W PART OF
04.()0058.000
SE114 EX J4 VEIN
Grueser James E &amp;/Or COAL 43.12A .910.67
Barbara J clo Randall OS.00736 004
Hawley SECT 10 (262) Shaulis Gerald P &amp;/Or
Wt/2 &amp; 10 NWOF E 112 Cathy L SECT 31 NE
tA ..
n.2s PART 16.68A OUT OF
04.00060.000
88 04A EX 14 VEIN
Grueser James E &amp;lOr COAL 16 68A .128.48
Barbara J SECT 10 05.00736.005
46A OUT OF 141A Shaulis Gerald P &amp;/Or
46A ................ 63.27 Cathy L SECT 32 T 9 R
04·00028 021
15 NW 1/4 OF SE 114
Whitlatch Crystal &amp; 2.49A OUT OF 13 739A
Kautz William
D
.54.56
2 48A ..
FR4 T2N R1 3W 1.986A 05.00831.001
OUT
0
67 6355A Tolley Dennis Wayne
1.986A ............41.64 SEC 4 T9 RIS 5 387A
04·00028 018
40.21A
OUT
OF
WhiHatch Crystal &amp;/Or 5 387A . . ..........79.36
Kautz William
D
05.00831 002
FRACTION 4 T2N R13W Tolley Dennis Wayne
4 94n OUT OF 75 4473 SEC 4 T9 Rl 5 0 434A
4.94n ..... ..... .2640.38 OUT
OF
40 21 A
04.00112 000
0 434A
... 9 66
Yonker Ray L SECT. 11
(640) S PART OF 06 LEBANON TWP.
60.84A N PART OF NW EASTERN LSD
1/4 1618A
1228 34
06.00036.000
05 COLUMBIA TWP. Boggs Troy Eugene
ALEXANDER LSD
&amp;/Or Styer Chrlstop
her M SECT 28 E SIDE
OF NW 114 EX 25A NE
OS.00382 015
Bayha Wayne SECT 7 45 OOA EX 2 269A
T9 R15 PARCEL 15 42 731 A.......... ..378.32
10 668A
OUT
OF 06.00036.001
132.044A 10 668A
Boggs Troy Eugene
.115 46 &amp;/Or Tammy Lynn
05.()0634 000
SECT 28 T3N R11W E
Bennett Monlka L &amp;lOr SIDE OF NW 114 2 269A
Robb-Chapman Ail a OUT OF 45.00A .. 186.34
MSECT 16 NE COR. 06.00030.000
25A............... 971.54 Harter Ronald E SECT •
05.00085 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
17.00A 1 747A 135 48 SECT 27 SW PART OF
05.oo462.006
NWI/4 EX COAL &amp;
Campbell Douglas K &amp; OTHER MIN 25 SOA
Cheri L SECT 18 T9N .................. 139 10
RISW LOT t2 CHEST· 06.00078 000
Sellers James E &amp;
Crystal I SECT 21 T3
05.00462 011
R11 1.38A OUT OF
Campbell Douglas K &amp; 129.687 1 38A ...964.78
Chari L SECT 18 T9N
RISW LOT #7 CHEST·
07 LEBANON TWP
NUT RIDGE SUBDIVI·
SOUTHERN LSD
SION 2 9387A .74615
05.00462.013
07.00685.000
Campbell Douglas K &amp; Baoley Gregory 0 &amp;
Cheri L SECT 18 T9N Kandiko Kathleen A
RISW LOT J9 CHEST· Nka Bailey Kathleen
NUT RIDGE SUBOIVI· SECT 13 SPAT OF SA
SION 4 7979A Bn 13 WEND 1 33A.. 127 OS
OS.00134.000
07-111370.000
Craog Jean SECT 10 Bogard
Jerry
&amp;
NE &amp; JOINING LOT 437 MariiyntOOA LOT 140
CAPR 2ND ADD 02A T3N RIIW
3 50A
..... ..... . .. ...18614 TRACT ~3 ....... 4013
05.()0685 000
07.00386 001
Daniels Jennie Y &amp;/Or Fitch Thomas Steven
Mike A SECT 27 FR33 SEC 25 T3N RIIW
N END EX COAL EX 45 2 532A
OUT
OF
213A
EX
53.82A 12 959A 2 532A 10519
11.52A
.. 1828 36 07.oo461 000
OS.00271 002
Hamlin Norman D
Goin Dayna FRACTION SECT 11·28 NE PT OF
32 T9 RIS I 494A OUT W 29A EX COAL
OF 31.53A 1494A
10 15A
.. 58.13
.119983 07.00462000
OS.00271 .004
Hamlin Norman D
Goln Dayna FA 32 T9 SECT 28 W END OF
RIS
347A OUT OF 70A LOT EX COAL
25 343A
347A. 8 06 8 78A
........ 38.87
05.oo432.000
07.oo463 000
Jordan Dan L SECT 26 Hamlin Norman 0
TOWN 9N R15W 5.768 SECT. 22-28 NW COR·
OUT OF 76A 5 788A
NER EX COAL 3 22A
.... ..... .... 165.00
..
.. 415 07
05.oo433 000
07.oo&amp;44 001
Jordan Dan L &amp; Kim Hamlin Norman 0
SECT ·27 FR 32 T 9 SECT25 T3N R11W
R 15 SW COR. 5.973 53 97A OUT OF 57.00A
OUT OF 179A 5 973A 53 97A ...... ..309.48
. ..1136.54 07.00226 007
Lee
05.oo473 000
Frederick A LOT 7
LoveiiMaryCSECT 23 IOOA LOTS 180&amp;179
W PT OF Nl/4 EX 54A T2N R11W .05A OUT
065A OUT OF 128 46A OF 52A &amp; 95A OUT OF
06SA .................. 1 68 IOOA. . . ... ..143.26
OS.00152 000
07.00757 000
Maccombs Rex H &amp;/Or Sellers Darrell Leo clo
Beth E clo Sam Rebacca Rains SECT
Hudnell7............ 22.24 23 (16D-1171) E 112 OF
OS.00153 000
21A W EX ALL MIN
Maccombs Rex H &amp;/Or 42.873A EX 5.944A
Beth E c/o Sam 36.929A
1234 75
Hudnell 6 ·20 W SIDE 07-00080 000
OF N 112 .
...17 62 Turnar Kelly J SECT 11
OS.00154 000
OF SW COR OF 23A
Maccombs Rex H &amp;/Or TRACT 1 60A 1962 30
Both E c/o Sam 07.00562 001
Hudnell 5
22 24 Tyson-Drummer Teresa
OS.00155 000
M IOOA LOTS 184 &amp;
Maccombs Rex H &amp;/Or 185 .34A OUT OF
l!oth E c/o Sam 38 571A &amp; 6 039A OUT
Hudnell 6 30'X100' E OF 58 67A 6.379A
SIDE
• 34 00
.. 357 47
OS.00382.013
07.00562 007
Morgan Kathleen Anne Tyson-OrummerTereaa
&amp; Calhoun Alan J M IOOA LOTS 184 &amp;
SECT 7 T9 R15 PAR· 185 4 060A OUT 38 571
CEL 13 5 618A OUT &amp; .447 OUT 58 67A
OF132044A 5818A
4507A
188679
. ..2098 68 07.00240 001
05.00119 000
Warner Arthur T &amp;
Morros Londo S Etal Janet M SEC 34 T2
SECT 8 SW OF NW 114 R11 16 SOA OUT OF
&amp; NW OF SW 114 EX 20A EX 4 824A EX
SA 7310A..... 97 80 2.615A EX 1.801A
05.00120 000
7 36A .
709.76

~~TN ~-~~3~ASU8~~~~·

07000913 001
Warner Arthur T &amp;
Janet M SEC 28 T2N
R11W 4097A OUT OF
42.50A
4097 A EX
0 106A
0 3037A
.. ............. .... 1220 72
08 LETART TWP •
SOUTHERN LSD
08.00103 000
Ollcher Jettrey L SECT
6 · 12 ·18 E END EX
COAL &amp; 3/10 OIL &amp;
GAS 6A .... ...350.95
08.00143 002
Ollcher Jennie L &amp;
Dllcher Cheloa SEC·
TION 16 TIN R12W
1 355A OUT OF 27 14A
1.355A
...442.18
08.()0626 000
Harless Jack E SECT 2
T2 .R 12 LOT 1212
SECT. (16()..1212_ .75A
OF 2A 75A ... 8.02
08.()0627 000
Harless Jack E SECT 2
(160) T.2 R.l2 (1212)
SW PT I 25A .. 27.09
08.oo431 000
Harper Brenda A SECT
12 ·1 ·7 MID OF RD EX
COAL 26 58A .. 152.71
08.00432 000
Harper Brenda A SECT
12 ·1 ·7 ON N LINE E
OF RD EX COAL
4.90A ................ 909.93
08.00315 001
Hill Paul Jr &amp;/Or Carol
1004 LOT 249 T2 Rl2
lA OUT OF 2.05A lA
. 2n5 54
08.00295 000
Hill Peggy S SECT 12·
17 (IOD-255) N112 OF
50.50A
EX
CEM
EX 17 201 A 459A
881 n
08.00296.000
Hill
Peggy
S
SECT.17(100·255) S 112
OF 50.50A 97A 430 67
08.oo445 000
Hubbard Kalil R LOT 19
BURNS ADD .... 53.09
OS.00514 000
Plichta
Kathryn
VIrginia Elal LOT 6 ·12 •
18 (260) WEND 7A
100 57
08.00891 000
Proffitt Mark c/o Steve
Hill
LOT
t640
006A ..
4 74
OS.00072 000
Smock Brian K &amp; Linda
J LOT 14 STRIP N
PAT OF RO ON E LINE
Q6A
.. . 465 86
OS.00073.000
Smock Brian K &amp; Londo
J LOT 9 ·14 ·15 (274)
ON S LINE OF SAYRE
1.50A...... ...... 118 65
OS.00723 000
Wolle R~onda R SECT
31 (212) SE COR EX
.26A 1.74A .... 409.31
OS.00724 000
Wolfe Willard Beryl
SECT 36 (214) NEAR
NECOR 11A......248
OS.00725.000
Wolfe Willard Beryl
SECT 36 (214) Nt/2 OF
Nl/2 OF NE COR OF
Et/2 OF Et/2 24 72A
. .......... . ............ 261.53
08-00944 000
Wolfe Willard Beryl
SECT 36 T2 R11 LOT
(214) NE 112 .SOA 10 67
09 OLIVE TWP.
EASTERN LSD
09-00552.002
Aldridge Dana J &amp;/Or
Patricia L SEC 28 FR36
T4N R11W
LOT t1
8.536A
OUT
OF
93.637 A 8 536A 189 97

og.ooon.ooo

Barbar Jamas Jr SECT.
15 N PT EX 2A EX 6A
EX.15A 6.15A 265.90
09-00108.000
Barringer Dorsal &amp;/Or
Mary Lou SECT 10 SW
COR. EX. 50A &amp;
EX.1.20A OUT OF
8.3'0A .75A .......7 75
09-00106 000
Berringer Dorsal R
&amp;/Or Mary Lou SECT.
19 SW COR OUT OF
1OA SW COR. SOA
. 65 75
09-00050.001
Barringer Teresa 160A
LOT 1164 T4N R11W
0 2611A OUT OF 120A
02611A.
.. 6966
OS.00110.000
Bartimus Harvey &amp;lOr
Carole SECT 17 SE OF
20A NE OF SEI/4 Rl1
T4 lA... .... :91210
09.00511 001
Bobo Bernard SECT 29
T4 Rlt NEAR MID ON
W LINE lA OUT OF
16.65A t.OOA .. 1719.55
09-00152.000
Bobo Bernard.F SECT.
29 PART OF 27 A NEAR
MID. LINE E OF CEM.
SA. ..
.. 1818 62
09.oo166.000
Boston Dale Allen
SECT. 35 T4 R.11 MID.
OF S PT OF SWI/4 OF
30.565A 5.019A.971 29
09-01117.000
Brucker James W &amp;lOr
Tina M SECT. 30 S
PART OF SA N PART
1A. . .
.... 61880
09-00358.000
Buchanan Gregory E
SECT 36 1A OUT OF
98 28A OUT OF SE
COR OF SECT 1A
.
..
745 63
09.()()()78.000
Buchanan Patricia A
clo Patricia Buchanan
&amp; Terry L Barber SECT
11 Nt/2 OF SEI/4 OF
SWI/4 EX 6A 14A
...... ... ..
... 132.74
09.oo428.000
Church
George
K
SECT. 4·10 IN SW COR.
&amp; PART OF BOA 30A
.... • .... . .... . . .162.52
09-00430.000
Church George K
SECT 9 N PART 26A
.
•
140 85
09.oo432.000
Church George K SEC
9 NW COR OF 40A
NEI/4 EX 2 29A EX
0.299A 36.881A EX
0.384A 36 497A 197 74

09000451 ooo

Church
George
K
SECT 11 ·3 ·9W112 OF
41A N PRT EX 26A W
20 SOA .. .
111 07
09.00107.004
Church Kendall &amp;/Or
Rachel
160A LOT
t1165
T4N
R11W
1.204A OUT OF 1.652A
1 204A .. .
24 40
09-01361.000
Cline David LOT 30
MID ON E LINE OF
SEI/4 OF RIVER EX
63A HWY 1 95A 154 77
09.oo429 001
Cossin Sheila "SECT 9
T4, R11 , 160A LOT
1166 443A OUT OF
11 35A 4 43A..... 71.99
09.oo431 001
Cosaon Sheila 160A
LOT 1165 SECT 9 R11
T4 19 77A OUT OF
40 OOA 19.77A 359 48
09.oo434 000
Cossin Shalla SECT 9
PART OF 40A SW 114
I 06A...........
6 51
09-00346 000
Dailey Leonard Jr &amp;/Or
Jonni SECT 33 Wl/2
OF SE IOOA EX 7.00A
18 OOA. ...
. 194 52
09.00346.001
Dailey Leonard Jr &amp;/Or
Jennl SECT 33 FR32
T4W RIIW 7A OUT OF
25A 7.00A ... ....879.50
09.00374 000
Diamond Samuel A
SECT 15 15A OUT OF
23.50A 1SA.. ..198.36
09.oo375.000
Diamond Samuel A
SECT 15 OUT OF SE
COR OF 26A W OF ST
RT. 681 2 50A 1971 28
09.oo966.002
Gabbert Timothy L
&amp;/Or Sharon Die n a
c/o Timothy Gabbert
FRACTION 32 T4N
R11W 2 902A OUT OF
22 484A 2.902A .. 58.82
09.00478 002
Gillilan Mark A 20 YDS
W OF THE NE COR
37 69A OUT OF 47.69A
37 69A.
. .. 516.94
09.00161.000
Glover David W &amp;/Or
Ambar DONS LINE W
OF RD .SOA.... 12 77
09.oo163.000
Glover David W &amp;/Or
Amber D
LOT
3·9 OSA OF 46A ON S
LINE W AD EX 2112 RO
SQ SW COR OBA
.
..
637 29
09.()(]162.000
Glover Davis W &amp;/Or
Amber 0 LOT 3·9 2112
ADS S OF SW COR
.04A. ................. 0.76
09.()(]050 000
Harris Charles Larry Jr
SEC 11-10 SW COR OF
9 SA SW COR EX SOA
I 20A EX 0.2611 A
0 9389A .... ,...283.42
09.()(]961 .000
Harris Charles Larry Jr
SECT 10 SW COR EX
SOA EX 1 20A EX 6.55A
IOOA 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
09.00229 025
Harros EdWard D &amp;/Or
Linda L 30A LOT 120
T3 Rl1 W LOT 3 WEIS
SUBDIVISION f388A
OUT OF 1.037A .. 81.27
09-02013 000
Hayman Gregory T
30A LOT 121 T3 R11
1.190A OUT OF 30A
LOT 121 1190A 221 58
09.00284 000
Hayman Patricia K
SECT 30 T4 R11 S
PART
OF
SWI/4
1.5496A ..... .... 652.39
09.00747 001
King John M &amp; Brenda
SECT15 FR27 T4N
R11W 5 OOA OUT OF
27 OOA 5.00A .. 81.27
09.00025 000
Mld~State Truat lv c/o
Tom Bishop SECT 11·
39 MID ON W LINE
BET. RD 96A
. ... .... .. 490 58
09.00096 001
Mugrage Todd A &amp;/Or
Brlnney FR 35 SECT 21
&amp; 27 T4 R11 19 OOA
OUT
OF
39 OOA
19 OOA........... 102.94
09.00902 000
Mundry Chaster &amp;/Or
Ethel LOT 7 MCD &amp;
TOR ADO ..
..47 84
09.00344 000
Murphy Ricky L &amp;/Or
Connie S S36 NW COR
S OF RD EX COAL
NEI/4 NEI/4 2 30A
OUT OF NPT 2 30A
576.62
09-00871.000
Myers Keith &amp;/Or Judy
SECT 19 OF 37A IN WN
COR OF 70A 1120
2 OOA
EX
675A
1 325A
83 98
09.oo937 000
Newlun Mary A LOT 24
SWPRTOF117AEOF
SWAINS 6 6A 25A
. ...... .... ..
13 57
09.oo938 000
Newlun Mary A LOT 24
SW PAT OF 4.50A ON
W LINE OF SWAIN
SOA
.. . ...29 40
09.()(]939 000
Newlun Mary A LOT
(139) SE COR BELOW
GUYAN RO 42 42A
421.72
. '
09.oo940.000
Newlun Mary A LOT 24
N END OF 2 1/2 A SW
lA ' .
.. 5842
09.00941 .000
Newlun Mary A LOT
(23) MCKEE ADO 14 32
09.00942.000
Newlun Mary A LOT
(24) MCKEE AD0.15 88
09.00943 000
Newlun Mary A LOT
(122) E SIDE OF MILL
LOT
EX
112A
S
SOA(SEC 24) SOA
. ..... ... ...... .10 08
09.00944 000
Newlun Mary A LOT
(123) S 112 OF lA E

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85
sloe MILL LOT SOA 10:00543006

OFW112s62Ao0ToF

SOA.
10.08
09.01054 000
Putman Jim &amp;/Or Ruth
SECT. 24 NW CORNER
SA . ... ....... 1172.ot
09.01210 000
Roush Donald Jettery
SECT 24 El/2 OF
SW114 EX 20A NW .75A
OF 9A NW COR 9A
.75A.... .. .. .... 332.39
09.01150000
Rucker James lo/Or
Connie SECT 6 SW
PART OF NEt/4 1 25A
. . . 25 54
09·01156 000
Rucker James &amp;/Or
ConnleSW PART 37A
..
.
7 75
09.()0242 001
Runyon Jason Leo
.. SECT 23 , T4 , R11 , NE
CORNER I OOAC OUT
OF 17 B2AC 1 OOA..
...
.
425 65
09.00352 001
Smith April 0 SECT 30
T3 R11 SE COR OF
15.25A TRACT 7 &amp;OA
OUT OF 29 69A 7 60A
.... .... • .. .255 86
09 01277 000
Smith Linda K SECT7.
9 OUT OF 31 56A S OF
RD EX 12A .SOA 68.44
09.01061 000
Smith Linda Kay &amp;/Or
Donald E SECT 3·9·10
NPT OF 25 25A SW
PART 160A LOT 1161
1212A
65 79
09.()1 062.000
SmHh Linda Kay &amp;/Ro
Donald E
SECT 11· 3·9-10 MID OF
S PART 160A LOT 1161
22A •
119 18
09.()1290 000
Smith Verdie W &amp;
Ellzabalh K Cia Ruth
Ann Smith SECT 9
CHURCH LOT U B
3823A..
.
..76 82
09-01380.000
Vansickle Deborah A &amp;
Williams Tim K clo
Deborah Smith SECT. 8
R 11 T.4 SA OUT OF W
PART OF 24A 6A 162.9
09.oo915.000
Webster Robart A &amp;/Or
Sue M 100A LOT 127 S
112 22 2604A EX 5 OOA
EX.1.64nA 15.6127A
.
..
29 80
09-00917 000
Webster Robert A &amp;/Or
Sue M IOOA LOT 128 S
END
20.3903A
EX 5 OOA EX:1.7150A
EX. I 1 8937A 1 9818A
3.89
09.()0918 000
Webster Robert A &amp;lOr
Sue M SECT18 S END
20 8885A
EX ·s OOA
EX 3 3523A 12 5362A
23.60
09.()1414.000
Wells David R c/o Jaso
Wells LOT 16.. 564 18
09.()0605 002
WesHall Roger A &amp;lOr
Sheila A SECT 23 T4
All SW COR 1.037A
OUT
OF
21.662A
1.037A.... .. .. 3764 28
09·01478 000
Westfall Shalla SECT.
29 647SA OUT OF
10 365A 6475A .. 160 59
09.()1474000
Wogal Ralph W 80' .25A
. . 768 89
09.01475 000
Wigal Ralph LOT 3
.SOA...... .... . ... 86 31
09·01476 000
Wigal Ralph LOT 2
... 115 31
09-0t4n 000
Wigal Ralph LOT 4 EX
CHURCH LOT .50A
. 115.31

198 60A 5 62A 876 94
11.00906000
Robinson
Rebecca
Sue LOT SECT ·1 S
PRT OF 30.47A S OF
RD EX 70A HWY
13.85A . . .. 3320 08
11.00422 000
Searles Mark A LOT
117
HUTCHINSON
SUBDIV
114
64'X11002- . 156961
11-()1017.000

ORANGE TWP.
EASTERN LSD
tD-00020 015
Collins Keith &amp;/Or
Marjorie L SECT 35
R12WT4N 6 848A OUT
OF 219 925A LOT t14
6.848A .
142:89
1D-00020 013 •
Collins Keith A &amp;/Or
Marjorie L
SECT 35 R12W T4N
6 067 A
OUT
OF
219 925A
L0Tf12
6.067A. .
.
I OS 15
1()..00020.014
Collins Keith A &amp;/Or
Marjorie L SECT 35
R12W T4N 3 283A OUT
OF 219 925A LOT ~13
3.283A
524 65
ID-00169.000
Dietz Bruce C LOT
SECT·12-6 NE OF SE
114 E-X 3 1SA 7 44A
.... ..161 95
10.00171 000
Dietz Bruce C LOT
SECT-6NEPRTOFSE
114 06A ...... . .... 116
ID-00172 000
Dootz Bruce C LOT
SECT 12 T.4 R 12 315A
OF 10.59A IN SW COR
3 1SA
. 1752 60
ID-00280 000
Feasel Michael SECT
36 T4 R 12 NW COR
25.nA OF 70A 25.77A
.. .139 84
10.00441 000
Grate Herbart L &amp;/Or
Helen Ruth LOT SECT
4 6 AC OUT OF 15 AC
OFF SECOR 5.53A
..
. 3410 46
!D-00621 000
Hocks Randal E &amp;/Or
Jennifer R LOT SS SOA
OUT 20.50A E OF ST
AT 7 EPT OF 130A E
OF Nl/2 SOA ... 68 39
10.00432 000
Koenig Ruth Frances
SECT15 E END N 112
22 75A
EX·S 408A
14.341A.
.. 140 72
1()..00436.000
LodWick James R &amp;/Or
Karen L clo James R
LodWick LOT 3 399 61
t()-00471.004
Ritchie Charles A Sr
&amp;/Or Kathy A SECT 6
T4 R12 845A OUT OF
26.847A 845A 164 22
ID-00542.000
Shields
Ronald
Rendell &amp;/Or Pamea
SueLOT (9) 174 X 48
1/2 SW PAT
31

Shields
Ronald
Randall &amp;/Or Pamela
Suo LOT (10) EX 8 X
264'.
.. .. 332.43
to-oono.OOO
Spencer Kenneth E
&amp;/Or Sandra S LOT 5
NE COR W OF RD
768A ....... ... 828.16
RUTLAND TWP.
MEIGS LSD
11.()0747 001
Anderoon Joseph A
SECT 32 T6N R14W
9173A OUT OF 20 70A
9173A .
.. 272 50
11.oo425 000
Barley Donna Faye
LOT SECT 36 T6 R14 E
PART OF NE 114 SA OF
11A EX 1.89A 6.11A EX
47236,
111555
11.()1357 002
Black Ronald E &amp; Hart
Warren D c/o Ronald
Black S 7·8 E OF LAND
OWNED BY ROGER &amp;
DAWANA
BLACK
2 33A OUT OF 4 54A
2.33A ....... ...... 156 9
11.00147 001
Brlcklea Danny A &amp;/Or
Peggy J SECT 2 T6N
R14W
SW
COR
14 723A
OUT
OF
16 SOA 14.723 .. 115.00
11.00148 000
Brickles Danny A &amp;/Or
Peggy J LOT SECT 14
2 SW CORNER EX
4557A 13 3443A
.......10002
11.00981 000
Brickles Danny A &amp;/Or
Peggy J LOT 6410A
OF 81 20A ALL E SIDE
HAPPY HOLLOW RD
SECT 2 EX 12 70A
57A ........ 211838
11.00940 004
Burns Paula M FR1
T6N R14W 11 146A
OUT OF 14 3128A
11 146A
113 80
11.()0732.001
Chandler
Teresa
Louise FR33 T6N R14
2 5336A
OUT
OF
2 6527 A 2.5336A.
1418
11.00733.003
Chandler
Teresa
Louise FR24 T6 R14
9 4326A
OUT
OF
21 .159A
9.4326A
.
.
5345
11.()1192000
Citizens
Bank
Of
Logan SECT 10 S OF
MIDW OF RD 3A
. ..... ..... .. 146 03
11.()1193 000
Citizens
Bank
Ol
Logan SECT 8 NE
CORNER 4A
68 04
11.()1196.000
Bank
Of
Cotlzens
Logan SECT 9 PART
OF 1 25A W END OF
62 37A 56A..
11 74
11.()1197 000
Citizens
Bank
Of
Logan SECT 14 9 SW
PART OF NE 30A S OF
RD 16A.
.. 3 23
11.00159.000
Cleland
Conn le
Darlene
SECT
19
TOWN 6R 14 LOT ItA
OUT 35 07 lA 1389 91
11.()0256 002
Cleland James W &amp;/Or
Stephanie G SECTION
3 T6N R14W 2 OOA OUT
OF 16 266A 2.00A
.... , ...... .. .. 906.13
11-00313 000
Oust Lisa Ann &amp; Warth
Melissa Lynn SECT 12
SE COR OF SW 114
21 75A
429 60
11.()1317 000
Eblin James A SECT 1
(640) APPROX 1A OUT
OF SA PARCEL MID ON
N LINE lA . ..655 14
11.()1357.008
Eblin Jamea A SECT 1
TBN R14W 1.021A OUT
OF 6.38A OLD RAIL·
ROAD 1 021A 2188
11.00808.000
Elias Kathy J SECT 33
NE CORNER OF SE 114
1.041A.......... 2694 28
11.01141.001
Fisher David &amp;/Or
Charyl Ann FRACnON
4 TBN R14W 2 993A
OUT
OF
46 34A
2.993A. .. ....... .. 328 10
ll.oo&amp;45000
Franklin Esther Mae
Etal
c/o
Bowora
Enterprises SECT 9
MUTCHLER ADD t8
.42A ..... .............. 8 9
11.00846 000
Franklin Esther Mae
Eta I
c/o
Bowers
Enterprises SECT 9
MUTCHLER ADO t5
42A ..
.....164 18
11.01194000
Franklin Esther Mao
Etal
c/o
Bowers
Enterprises SECT8 NO
DESC SOA .... 10 52
11.01111.001
Hysell Paul A SECT 19
T6N R14W 1 237A OUT
OF 90.00A 1.237A
.. .... .
.... 313.38
11.00782.000
imboden Robart LOT
(7) LUH'S ADD -4
.. ... . .... 564 34
11.oo453.000
Keesee James Ell LOT
SECT·13NOFMIOON
E LINE 6 14A NEW
SURVEY........ 2402 29
11.00703 000
Melller Rolph 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;/Or
Pierce Martin PART OF
FRACTION 36 T6N
R14W 2 724A OUT OF
39 185A
2 724A
•
134 65
11 ·00029 000
Proddy David J LOT
SECT 14·t5 NE PART
OF J7A 1A
22fi 21
11.()0865 000
Ramsburg
Earl
Emanuel &amp;/Or Mabel
LOT SECT 24 S PART

Sm1th 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 09A EX
RIGHT OF WAY 112A
.. .
..231 34
11.()1249.000
Swanson Johnny Paul

LOTW SIDE OF 40A 1/4
EX 4 75A NE EX 28 73A
1.27A ...... ...... ...15 20
11.()1190 000
Wamsley Samuel SECT
18 MID ON S LINE EX
7.12A
74.26A
EX
20 7816A 53 478A
.. •......... ....103t 59
11.()1018.000
Ward Raymond J &amp;/Or
Terri Jo LOT SECT ·2 W
PT 28A NEAR MID OF
Nl/2 .97A. . 435 37
11.()1236.000
Wllliama Robert 0 Jr
ST 14-6 MID OF NW 1/4
EX 30A E PAT EX
I 30A EX 2.016A EX
477A 30 084A 756 58
11-01237.000
Wolliams Robart 0 Jr
ST 14-6 MID OF NWI/4
EX 30A E PRT 541A
OF 2.016A .541A 26 67
11-00086 000
Williams Robart D Jr
&amp;/Or Teresa
L
SECTS OUT OF 32 !SA
NE END OUT OF 31 10
539A
'
49 62
RUTLAND VILLAGE
MEIGS LSD
12·00444 001
Bfack Ronald E &amp;/Or
Hart Warren D c/o
Ronald
Black
c/o
Jettrey Tllli SECT 8 T6
R14 471A OUT OF
3 988A 471 A.. 878.77
12-00076 000
Duddong W H 2 FAL·
LONS ADD 2 TRI W
SIDE 10' N END TO PT
AT SEND
42 35
12-ll01 88 000
Hysell David W &amp;/Or
Penny K ON W LINE S
OF NE CHURCH LOT
El/2 EX 14A 16A
30 47
12·00188 001
Hysell Dav1d W &amp;/Or
Penny K ON W LINE S
OF NE CHURCH LOT
Wl/2 OF LOT 14A OUT
OF 30A 14A 4161 75
12.()(]081 000
Hysell Donald G 8
SECT 8 75A 724 51
, 2.()0264.000
Justice Matthew A
&amp;/Or Amanda 15 FAL·
LONS ADO 15 53111
12·00066.000
Stanley Dennis &amp;/Or
Paula 21 EX FALLONS
ADD 21
344 78
12·00067 000
Stanley Dennis &amp;/Or
Paula 21 FALLONS
AOD.21
EX 19
SQ ROS36X115' SW
COR
87 49.
12.00068.000
Stanley Dennis &amp;/Or
Paula
21 FALLONS
ADD LOT
21·19
SQ ADS SW COR. EX.
36X115
263 77
12.00037 000
Strupe
Pollyanna
SECT 14·8 (640) N
LINE NW114 E OF RD
SOA
.31 90
12.()(]038.000
Strupe
Pollyanna
SECT 9 (262) E OF RD.
ON S LINE 47A 390 71
12.00001.000
Village Of Rutland
"SECT.&amp;, T 6,R 14 SW
COR LOT 117 0 402A
OF 14 669A 0.402A
.............. . . 311 74
12.00052.000
VIllage Of Rutland
SECT.&amp; (640) NEAR NW
SWI/4 BET RO &amp; CR.
OUT OF .SOA .15A
8334
12.00054.000
VIllage Of Rutland
SECT.B (640) NR NW
OF SWI/4 BET RD &amp;
CR. 45A ...... 441.17
12.00070 001
VIllage Of Rutland
..SECT 8T6 R14 042A
OUT .OS7A, 053A OUT
OF 12A, 7 644A OUT
OF 24.67A" .. .905 27
12.ooo92 000
Village Of Rutland
SECT 8 18A OF 72A N
PRT OF 85A S OF
PWRS OFF N PT 18A
.... ........ . 367 62
12.00124 000
VIllage Of Rutland
SECT 8 (640)
lA
..
.
356 20
12.00142 000
Village Of Rutland SEC
8 (640) OF 208A MID
ON W LINE 25A
.. 391 25
12.00159 000
VIllage Of Rutland
SECT 14 (282) N PRT
OF 50A N OF HSE LOT
IN SECT 8 6143A EX
1860A
. 151 76
12-00160.000
Vollage Of Rutland
SECT 14 (262) NEAR
MID OF S 1/4 1.2272A
EX 1 0921A .1351A
106 06
12·00178 000
Voiiagc Of Rutland
LOT 3 25A .. ..255 42
t2.0Q196 000
Voflage Of Rutland LOT
13
346 79
12 00 197 000
Vollage 01 Rutland
SECT 8 (640) W OF LOT
13 PAT OF 22 112A
33A
137 10
12·00203 000

�Page

86 •

of

Friday, November

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

18, 2005

F 'r iday, November

POMEROY's strauss Aiiliur J LOT chapman Anna Me ill! Ohio Partner C/o Mike 17:00022.000
' &amp;/Or Powell Wilma L eounto victor R 1 EX.
village
Rutland
SECT 8 (640) S PRT OF Madden Kenneth W Jr ADD. 446 ............200.00 22 SHEFFIELD 33'X56· LOT 206 EX 25-112 X Jonea ahlp LOT 17 Gaines George E &amp;/Or IOOA LOT 282 T2 R12 HIGHWAY &amp; COAL LOT
1/2' MID N 112........92.19 57·112 FT SW COR
BURNAP ADD....390.89 Melinda SLOT SECT 1 1.0701A
OUT
OF 1 CROOKS 1ST ADD.
3.34A N OF BEAN N OF SECT. 34 (ID0-330) ON 15-01487.000
.... ......................2242.91 16-00450.000
Nl/2 OF NEI/4 EX 2.2613A 1.0701A
.......................... 1310.S3
CR .27A............392.13 CO LINE S OF RD. Dar~! JeHrey &amp;/Or 15.01212.000
.50A .................... 129.61 KlttyLOT 111 P. JONES Vukaon Doria LOT 89 P 16.01366.000
Rentals Unlimited An 11 .25A 73.25A... 415.55 .........................1757.49 2G-tl0133.000
12-tl0204.000
3RD. ADD .......... 1736.78 JONES 3RD ADD
Dodoon Kathryn J LOT Ohio Partner c/o Mike 17.00746.000
Counts VIctor R 3
Vlllaga Ot Rutland 14-tl0974.000
............................231.15 54 NAYLOR'S R\JN
Jones
ahlp
LOT Gibbs William E &amp;/Or RACINE VILLAGE
85X59X94X32' .LOT 3
SECT 14 -8 (640) E OF Madden Kenneth W Jr 15-00682.000
SECT.
34
(200.330_
Daral
JoHray
R
&amp;/Or
15.01977.000
..............................
83.89
311
20'
E
SIDE
...
714.23
Msllnda
c/o
Melinda
SOUTHERN
LSD
CROOKS
1ST AbO.
ST RD N OF BEAN
18-110603.000
Glbba
SECT. 14·7
..............................98.94
.14A........................8.89 .47A OF 1.60A ON N Kittle S LOT 143 P. Wandling Landis K 18-111370.000
LINE OF IOOA LOT JONES 3RD ADD. &amp;/Or Agnoe ST 29 Tl Eaton Rick &amp;/Or Carry Rentals Unlimited An (650) Sl/2 OF SW114 19.00159.000
2G-tl0134.000
12.00259.000
DelilaH Barbera
61 Counto VIctor R 2
VIllage 01 Rutland .47A .................... 303.24 NWI/4...................32.49 Rl3 (640) PT N OF LOT 23 .................61.86 Ohio Partner c/o Mike EX. 5.07A 50.93A
t5-tl0353.000
LEADING CR W OF 16-111371.000
Jones
ship LOT 511 .................. ....... 1438.98 ..............................77.85 75X50X85X32 ' LOT 2
SECT. 8 (640) NEAR 14.00210.000
Madden
Konnell1
W
Jr
Darst
Linn
K
LOT
97
P
MID
EX
.488A
2.042A
Eaton
Rick
&amp;/Or
Carry
.70A
APPROX
.....775.47 17-110747.000
19.00161.000
CROOKS 1ST ADD.
NW COR. OF SW 114
JONES 3RD ADD 1197
.............................. 46.28 LOT 31..................31.98 16-110742.000
Glbba William E &amp;/Or Dettloff Barbara 671167 ..............................116.94
.75A ...................556.76 &amp;fOr Edna Jane
SECT 34 (ID0-330) ON .......................... 1417.27 15.00553.000
16-112401.001
Rentals Unlimited An Melinda c/o Melinda ...........................137.38 2o-oo268.000
12.00283.000
N LINE tOOA LOT EX 15·01004.000
Wright Charles C LOT !:alan RICk &amp;/Or Carry Ohio Partner clo Mike Gibbs
LOT SECT.-7 19-110180.000
Davis Mark AHan &amp;/Or
Vllloge 01 Rutland
Davis Jacob S &amp;/Or 36 BEHAN'S 2ND. ADD. SEC 8 T2N RI3W Jones
ship LOT 425 (640) MID. OF S1/2 OF Johnson Teresa L Mary Ann LOT 298 NE
LOT I .36A ........325.71 .033A EX .4A .697A
............................ 116.94 Debby A LT 159 28.79' 10' E SIDE EX. 80' PART OF LOT f279 WEHE ADD. SUB.16
SWI/4 24A .........136.08 SECT.12·16 (640) IN f5 OF
t10
SPRING
12.00300.000
14·00971 .000
FRONT ON WILLIAMS LONG ....................15.56 0.055A................ 131.66 ............................ 103.D7 17.00345.001
Wl/2 OF REYNOLDS GREEI't .12A ...... 15.S7
VIllage Of Rutland
16-112402.000
16-110743.000
Haning Lyle Bruce LOT ON S LINE .21A
2G-tl0263.000
SECT. 8 (640) IN NW Madden Kenneth W Jr ST BACK 62.9' THE 15.00554.000
Rick
&amp;/Or Rentals Unlimited An SECT 30 T7 R14 ........................... 502.65 Davis Mark Allan &amp;/Or ~
CORNER OF SWI/4 E &amp;/Or Edna Jane SECT. 29.87' ................ .371.41 Wright Charles C LOT Eaton
15·01019.001
34N PART BEHAN 'S Carry.LOT 280 80' ON Ohio Partner c/o Mike 5.S65A OUT OF 31 .42A 19.00255.000
Mary Ann LOT 9 50 E
OF RD..20A ...... 380.82 34 .033A0.76
14.00972.000
Davis Jacob S &amp;/Or 2ND. ADD ...............3.15 SOUTH SIDE
NEW Jones
ship LOT 425 5.865A ............. :..224.78 Layne Lao &amp;/Or Anna END N 1/2.......45.6 2 0 ·
12.00344.000
Madden Kenneth W Jr Debby A PART OF LOT 15·00555.000
SURVEY 0.095A
SUB. 17 ..............602.21 17·00252.002
SECT. 16 (640) IN 115 00264.000
VIllage Of Rutland
' Hall James Lloyd &amp;/Or BET. POM . &amp; FT BEND Davis Mark Allan &amp;/Or
SECT 14 ·8 (640) NW &amp;/Or Edna Jane SECT. 159 PALMERS THIRD Wright Charles C LOT ............................ 126.70 16-112605.000
Rentals Unlimited An Barbara M FR36 T7N RD. .55A ............ 660.38 Mary Ann LOT 10
COR W OF BRIDGE EX 34 .4A ................ 304.48 ADDITION 0.022A OUT 33 BEHAN'S 2ND ADD. 16·02403.000
14·01239.000
OF
0.094A
0.022A
......................
,
........
74.45
Eaton
Rick
&amp;/Or
Carry
Ohio
Partner c/o Mike R14W
28.289A OUT 19.00524.000
............................ 216.81
.1214A .4586A .. 247.24
Oliveri Dante N &amp;lOr ..............................14.35 15-tl0727.000
LOT 281 LOT S SIDE Jones
ship
PART OF 54.51A. 28.289A
Rose Leah R LOT 48 20-110268.000
12-110344.001
Wright Charles C LOT 80' ON W l!o 210' ON E OF LOT 2 W. SIDE ............................320.78 62' FRONTAGE LESS Davis Mark Allan &amp;/Or
VIllage Of Rutland Cynthia S El al SECT 15-111154.000
NEW SUR· SPRING AVENUE 4.71' 17.00543.001
16.30' LEAVING 45.70' Mary Ann LOT 297 NE
SECT 8 T6 R14 .1214A 24 (840) N 112 OF SW Davis John M LOT 49 36 BEHAN'S 2ND ADD. SIDE EX
114 85A............ 1065 22 COALPORT 30' E END ABOUT 40'X80' ....69.03 VEY 0.053A ........ 382.94 X 80' .......................7.21 Howard Gerald W &amp;/Or ..........................2378.22 OF
flO
SPRING
OUT OF .58A .1214A
............................202.02
16-111459.000
16-111153.000
Barbara A SECT 12 T7
GREEN .21A .......25.72
........................... 125.09 14-110437.001
Pullins G William &amp;/Or 15-tl0183.000
POMEROY VILLAGE
Eberebach Ell Ill &amp;/Or Ritchie Charles A &amp;/Or R14 1.24A OUT OF SYRACUSE
20.00267.000
12-110421 .000
Linda
FRACT
2
T2
Davis
John
M
&amp;/Or
MEIGS
LSD
Barbara
LOT
411
405
Kathy
A
LOT
1224
93.32A
1.24A
....
270.17
VILLAGE
Davia
Mark Allan &amp;/Or
VIllage Of R~tland
LOT
112 11411 45'X80' ...83.92 .28A E OF FElGER &amp; 17-110576.000
SOUTHERN LSD
Mary Ann LOT 298 N.
SECT. 8 R.14 T.&amp; (640) R13 2.424A OUT OF Leanna L
16·00460.000
MERRICK EX. COAL Lawhorn Arleen LOT
1110..................... 466.06
RT.124
RUTlAND 58.67A 2.424A .. 48.72 (48) COALPORT 48 X 16·00382.000
Nl/2 ......................29.86 Boer
Builders
&amp; Edwards Vernard c/o .28A .............. ........94 .54 (20) NORTHERLY SIDE 20-110237.000
20-110066.000
STRIP 20' WD FR RD 14-110140.001
Developers Ltd LOT John David Edwards 16-01259.000
OF LINE OF NW COR Boar Builders And Wood Robert R &amp;/Or
.03A...................443.41 Pullins Linda S FRAC· 15-01573.000
TON 2 T2N R13W Davis John M &amp;/Or 203 ........................68.33 LOT 425
4S' X100' Russell Randall S &amp;/Or OF LOT 1120............3.63 Developers Ltd LOT 19 Catherine A .35A OUT '
6.7879A
OUT
OF Leanna L LOT 50 !6-01827.000
COR. UNION AVE.
Cynthia L
LOT 17·00579.000
.............................44.94 OF 11.23A PART OF
SALEMTWP
61 .21A 6.7879A
COALPORT........392.07 Boer
Builders
&amp; ............................704.56 1 BIDDLE SUB ... 182.79 Lawhorn Arleen LOT 20-110238.000
9.60A .35A ..... 1354.53
MEIGS LSD
.. ......................1491.38 15-111617.000
Fife Develoi&gt;ers Ltd LOT 32 16-00527.000
Fife 16-01260.000
SECT ·14 E PART OF Bear Builders And 20.00294.000
13.00781 .000
14·00140.000
Robert D C/0 VIrginia 4' E SIDE NAYLOR'S Robert D c/o VIrginia Russell Randell S &amp;/Or LOT
1114
HAR· Developera Ltd LOT 11 Wood Robert R &amp;/Or
DuN Melvin R &amp;/Or Pullins
Stove Pennington LOT 68 RUN ...................... I1 .11 Pennington LOT 256 Cynthia L LOT 2 BID· RISONVILLE 1.12A
...........................459.06 Calhorlne A LOT 295
Robin LOT 5...... 302.62 SEC9(262)MID
PT BEHAN 2ND ADD 50' 16-111828.000
.45A OUT OF SUB. 2112 OLE SUB.......... 1008.47 .............................. 59.07 20·00104.000
SECT 36 R.12 T.2 OUT
13-110209.000
223.50 MID PT EX .75A NE SIDE ..............974.44 Boer
Builders
&amp; S PART .45A....... 19.16 16-111261.000
11·00737.000
Lee Cottrill Sharon S LOT OF 4.743A .168A
Harmon candy Elal W SIDE
EX6.7879 15-00451 .000
Fife Davelopars Ltd LOT 33 16-111287.000
Russell Randall S &amp;/Or Thomas L &amp;/Or Janel 8.........................751.41 ...........................289.91
SECT 11 NE PART OF EX0.870A 53.5521
Robart D &amp; Eileen c/o NAYLOR'S RUN
Flora Paul L LOT 407 Cynthia L LOT 3 BID· LSECT. 17 S OF RD. 20.00744.000
NW 114 EX 114 ·VEIN . ......................... 611.67 VIrginia Pennington ............................218.27 112 SECOR .........98.92 OLE SUB. POM .#546 &amp; OUT OF 26.82A EX. 2A Cottrill Sharon SLOT 9 And notice Is hereby
COAL 2.00A EX t .OOA 14-111393.001
LOT (69) BEHAN 2ND 16-(12320.000
16-111258.000
547
BIDDLE SUB. 8A .........................48.97 EX. COAL ...........154.37 given 111at 111e whole of .
t.OOA .................. 203.72 Pullins Steve SEC 9 FR ADD ·11' OFF N SIDE ' Boor
Builders
&amp; Flora Prlsclllla LOT 406 CONV.SMALLER LOTS 17-00738.000
Lee 20-110132.000
such saverol tracts,
13.00349.000
2 &amp; 6 T2N R13W ..............................93.09 Developers Ltd LOT 1.2 58 'X80' W OF ............................ 109.05 Thomas L &amp;/Or Janet - - - - - - - lots or parts of lots,
Lambert Harold D &amp;/Or 1198A OUT OF 2.23A 15.00452.000
Fife 189 BURNAP ADD. YOUNGS ............. 225.3 16-111533.000
See LSECT. 11 (640) W OF
Help Wanted
will ba cartlfled for
Sheryl Ann SECT 31 1.198A.................. 13.02 Robert D &amp; Eileen c/o SUB. 43 56' ON BUT· 16-111599.000
Kenneth David LOT NWI/4 OUT OF 73.30A -=======~ foreclooure by the
OUT OF NW COR OF 14-111187.000
VIrginia Pannlngton TERNUT ST........314.35 Formyduval Timothy L 162 EX 27' N &amp; EX 40' 22.864A ..............179.62 1
County Auditor pur·
82.33A .25A
7.60 Quails Bertie SEC 8 W LOT (68) BEHAN 2ND 16-111341.000
LOT 18 SUB 4 CHERRY LOT SIZE 25' FRONT X 17·00854.000
(
suanl to law, or
13-110350.000 · .
OF WILLIS HILL IN SE ADD 18' OFF S SIDE
Boer Edward T &amp;/Or ST 26'X60' ............88.00 150' LENGTH ..... 149.25 Napper ~rroll &amp;/Or
forefaltod,IO 111e State,
Lambert Harold D &amp;/Or PRT 1.61A...........55.51 ............................736.17 Patricia 0 LOT 49 NAY· 16·00368.000
16·02281.001
Bonnie SE OF N
in Coolville
unleSI the
taxes,
Sheryl Ann SECT 31 14-111188.000
15.01235.000
Fox LORS RUN ......... 561.49 Gheen Bryan C LOT Seyler Michael M
100A 36.50A .. 1102.04
assosomonls,
and
NEAR NW PT OF SEC Oualls Bertie SECT 8 Lorry R LOT 467 EAST 16-01401.000
594 EX 35' E SIDE LOT 230 4.5'X20' SW 17·00610.000
HELP
penalllos are paid.
1.10A..................634.27 SW PRT OF 40A SE HALF OF ~OT 487
Boer Edward T &amp;/Or 167'X200' ............ 894.25 CORNER ...............3.93 Phelps Stanley &amp;/Or
W'ANJEO
Nancy Parker Gruaser
13.00351.001
PRT 1.97A........... 67.87 ..........................2409.70 Patricia D LOT 425 16·00634.000 '
16-tl2282.000
Sue
SECT 36 2A
n
Auditor
of
Meigs
Lambart Harold D &amp;:/Or 14.01189.000
15-110812.000
SUB 9 3 3/4X17' NEAR Gloeckner Elizabeth Seyler Michael M LOT OUT OF 25A 2A 111 .38
FUEL DESK
County, Ohio
(11) 11, 18
..._
Sheryl Ann SECT 31T8 Quails James E SECT Galloway Samuel R MID E PRT ALSO SUB LOT 377 E PART EX 231 5' S SIDE ........ 25 .64 17-110340.000
R15 S OF NW114 2.50A 36 (100) MID OF E PRT &amp;/Or Joyce A LOT 14 8 5D'X100'......324.18
SCOTT LOT........ 460.77 16·02283.001
Proast Wesley 0 &amp;/Or
CASHIER
OUT OF 9.00A 2.50A
OF W 4DA 4.06A
HORTON
&amp; 16-111474.000
16-00635.000
Seyler Michael M LOT Christina LOT SECT ·3
Midnight to 8
.............................64.06 .........................1800.09 BOSWORTH ADD #14 Boer Edward T &amp;/Or Gloeckner Elizabeth 232 15.49'X85.94' &amp; E END OF Sl/2 OF
Public Notice
13.00354.000
14.01190.000
............................697.57 Patricia D LOT 425 LOT 594 BACK OF LOT 15'X85.30' NW COR
NEI/2 1/4 EX 14 415 A
shift
Three (3) buildings on
Lambarl Harold D &amp;/Or Quails James E SECT 15-110521.000
SUB 10 ...............387.15 377 ........................ 49.93 ..............................41 .39 14.60A ...............165.65
SERVER
lhe Corner of N. 2nd &amp;
Sheryl Ann ST 31 .43A 35 (315) W PRT OF Ghoan Franklin D &amp; 16-111476.000
16-111070.000
16-(12411.000
17-110341.000 .
Mill St. In downtown
'OF 3.90A ALONG N 21 .36A 5.80A ......77.85 Donna L.LOT PT. (157) Boer Edward T &amp;/Or Hendrix Leroy &amp;/Or Seyler Michael M LOT Preas! Wesley 0 &amp;/Or
3 pm to 11 pm
Middleport hava to bo ,
LINE OF 1.10A WEND 14-111191 .000
E 112 LOT #157 30' ON Patricia D LOT 427
Judy E S PART V-221 230 17 1/2'X 45 ' NW Christina
shift
torn down. Addreoae•
84.68A .43A........ 11.34 Quails Jameo E SECT GRANT STW OF MOR· ............................597.82 P-423 .2101A .2421.13 COR EX 13'X45'...21 .69 SECT 3T.7 R.14 5.40A
are 20 N. 2nd, 30 N.
13-110555.000
13 ·35 (100) S PRT OF ROW.....................95.45 16-111985.000
16-(11867.000
16·02412.000
............................368.95
COOK
2nd,10 N 2nd
Peyton Richard A Etal 7A LOT E OF RD 15.00522.000
Boer Edward T &amp;/Or Jackson Michael &amp; Seyler Michael M LOT 17-110677.001
Thosa
bulldlngo
SECT 11 E OF NE114 4.09A...................65.98 Gheen Franklin L &amp;/Or Patricia D LOT 77 EX. VIctoria LOT 55 LIN· 231 7 112' X 45' E END Richards
Sloven
POSITION
have been condemned
EX 34A NE EX #4 VEIN 14-111276.001
Donna L
LOT SECOR. .............. 10.97 COLN HEIGHTS ADD. .............................. 36.48 Daniel SECT 30 T7
3 pm to 11 pm
and will bo taken
COAL 9.05A .... 1012.57 Quails Marcia E &amp;/Or (157) #157 45' FRONT 16·01886.000
..........................1326.69 16·02413.000
R14 3.049A OUT OF
down. The owners have
shift
13-110556.000
James E (ID0-215) SE SW
OF
HAYMAN Boer Edward T &amp;/Or 16-tl1495.000
Seyler Michael M LOT 9.70A 3.049A 200.64
60
days to file an
Payton Richard A Etal CORNER OF 2.225A ............................ 585.08 Patricia D LOT 50 NAY· Johnson David Gary 231 5 112' E END.. 32.05 17-110051 .000
Applications
appoel. VIllage Council ;
SECT 5 ON W LINE OF TRACT 3.005A OUT OF 15.00581.000
LORS RUN ......... 625.24 &amp;/Or Tammy Elizabeth 16-112414.000
Rom uno Dan &amp;/Or
available
ohall act as the Appeal
NE114 EX #4 VEIN 8.52A 3.005A .....613.58 Haggerty Lucille PT 16-(11887.000
FR 25 T2N R13W LOT Seyler Michael M LOT Romuno Sua &amp;/Or
Board.
COAL 4.84A........67.61 14·01221.000
LOT #414 75' N SIDE Boer Edward T &amp;/Or 262 NEW SURVEY 231 45' X 87112'
·Romun o Franc o
at
lannarelll ,
13.00557.000
RldgwayJefteryL&amp;/Or OLIVEST&amp;85' NPAR· Patricia D LOT 48 S 1.06A................ 1427.16 .......................... 1050.44 SECT 26 NE CORNER
San&lt;f\1
Mayor
Payton Richard A Elal Bettina Renee SECT 8 ALLEL WITH BEECH PART OF LOT 48.12.34 16-tl0070.000
16-(12578.000
2.623A .................. 55.90
VIllage of Middleport
SECT 11 SW PART RT f7 OFF W SIDE N ST........................ I92.6.1 16.00072.000
Mcgovern Jane Ellen &amp; Seyler Michael M MAS· 17-110052.000
Coolville, Ohio
(11) 16, 17, 18, 21, 23, '
NE114 9.05A SW EX f4 OF HIGHWAY 1.35A
15·00582.000
Barnhouae Edlll1
Wood Allen c/o Kelly TER CARD 5.94A EX Romuno Dan &amp;/Or
No phone calls please 25
VEIN COAL 40.16A
............................ 861.67 Haggerty Lucille M
LOT 159 H &amp; D ADD.
Klein
CLOT 262·17 .liSA 5.725A .......89.13 Romuno Sue &amp;/OrR
............................726.41 14-111421 .002
LOT
428
POM ...............................24.15 SUB. 434 .27A... 482.85 16·01637.000
omun
o Franc 0
~=~
13-110638.000
Roush Thomas E &amp;/Or 59'X125' ................93.93 16.00073.000
16.00071.000
·
Snld~r Randy P &amp;/Or SECT 21-22 SW COR
Announcement~
Shuler Beulah SECT27 Connie L .SEC 24 LOT 15.00563.000
Bernhouae Edith LOT Mcgovern Jeno Ellen &amp; Janel S LOT 262-17 EX STRIP S EX 12A
S CENTRAL PRT OF 305T1N R13W 0.235A Haggerty Lucille M
160 H &amp; D A0D ......6.68 Wood Allan c/o Kelly .17A SUB 483 3/4 SUB .924A ....................10.54
SECT N SlOE OF #124 OUT
OF
0.482A LOT 429 POM 50'X100' 16-110074.000
Klein
CLOT 262·17 11 .17A.................31.94 17-(10804.000
EX MINERALS lA
0.235A...................4.60 N PART EX 26'X50' S Barnhouse Edith LOT SUB. 434 .23A ...108.28 16-110809.000
Sllsher David L SECT.
............................ 377.69 .14-111421.001
PART..................... 84.57 PART 161 H &amp; D ADD. 16-111093.000
Taylor Dale E LOT 255 17 W PART OF SE114 S
13-110161.010
Roush Tom E &amp;/Or 15-00565.000
25'X40' ON N SIDE6.22 Mckenzie Bruce L Elal 120' ON POM. ATHENS PART OF MID. LOT 4A
· 1s having
Walker Debra A S 1/2 Connla L "SECT 24 Haggerty LucllleY
16-110075.000
c/o Kelly McKenzie RD.....................1007.72 ............................278.38
CUSTOMER
APPRECIATION DAYS
OF SW 114 SECT 25 LOT t305 R13W, TIN LOT 414 POM. E PT. Barnhouae Edith LOT LOT 262 ·18 N OF E 16·00374
17-110736.000
for the remainder of 2005.
T8N R15W S.OOA OUT 1.5DA OUT OF 1.982A" 96'X109 112' OFF S IDo-306 f100 306· BAUE!I &amp; W OF Wellington Sleven E Stanley Allee SECT. 29
OF 12.00A S.OOA
.......................... 1427.91 END....................758.29 1.50A S OF 157·158· SEDORE EX COAL LOT 592 .............. 430.73 2A OUT OF 56.73A
We will pay 57¢ a pound for
...........................845.40 14-112410.000
15-(10669.000
159·160 D ADD. 1.50A 5.52A.................. 783 .73 16-tll845.000
OUT OF N SIDE 2A
aluminum cans- also top dollar for
13-110196.000
Roush Tom E &amp;/Or Herman Riel C &amp;/Or ..............................17.77 16-tl1809.000
Wellington Steven E ....................: .......185.19
catalytic converters, aluminum
White
Gary
C/0 Connie L 100A LOT 304 Vonda S LOT
70 16-110076.000
Newlapd Grant A &amp;/Or LOT
41
SUB. 17-110696.005
Chrlotlne Estes SECT &amp; 305 T1 R13 .456A COALPORT 70 SE Barnhouse Edith LOT Linda S LOT 468 112 2.7 ...96.4516-111010.000 Trout John W &amp;/Or
wheels, #1 &amp; #2 copper, as well as,
318A OUT OF 55.85A S OUT OF LOT 304 &amp; PART EX. 50'X60' SE
157 H l!o D ADD.... 15.96 59' OFF S SIDE
Wells Don W &amp;/Or Carolyn J SECT 32 T7
cast aluminum &amp; aluminum sheet.
COR OF NEI/4 8A
.983 OUT OF LOT 305 ............................593.94 16-tl1548.000
............................210.76 Laura J LOT 259 SE R14 5.027A OUT OF
...........................376.00 ..............................29.15 15-00089.000
Barton Joay LOT 426 S 16-111810.000
COR .22A ................5.31 63 .067A
5.027A
14-110493.000
Lewis Peggy LOT (47) SIDE OF LOT 426 Newland Grant A &amp;/Or 16-111981.000
........................... 849.30
14 SALISBURYTWP.
Runyon Jerry &amp;/Or SHEFFIELD 47·S112
64'X183'X42.7' .22A
Linda S LOT 489 .17A Worry James M Sr Elol 17-110948.000
Located at the corner of
MEIGS LSD
Vannessa SECT 35 ............................246 .49 ............................901 .52 ON WETZGALL ST LOT 37 NAYLOR$ RUN Welsh Leroy &amp;/Or
(640) SW PART OF W 15.00090.000
16-111549.000
(REAR) 44'X100' .17A ............................255.38 AnnaSECT 27 ·28 SW
St. Rt. #7 and St. Rt. #143
14-110011.000
OF RD 30.32A 1310.38 Lewlo Peggy LOT (33) Barton Joey &amp; Sayler ................................3.99 16-111762.000
PART OF 93 112A W
SHEFFIELD 33·S 112
Michael
LOT
257 16-111811.000
Werry Mark K LOT 20 17.53A ................238.14
Archer Avon D &amp; Leona 14-00494.000
Pomeroy, Ohio
E SECT.25 (640) A Runyon Jerry &amp;/Or ..........................2926.27 40'X50' BACK OF 59 Newland Grant A &amp;lOr LINCOLN
HEIGHTS 17-110851 .000
740-992-5114
NOT TAKEN BY DEED Vannoosa SECT 35 15-tl0959.000
.18A...................... 28.39 Linda SLOT 488 STRIP ADD....................525.98 Welsh Leroy &amp;/Or
Hours: M·F 9·6, Sat 9·4:30
FOR RTIWAY NEW (640) W PART OF Maynard Claude &amp;/Or 16-112410.000
6'W SIDE ...............5.31 16-111930.000
Will AnnaSECT 27· 28 SE
RTI7 1.505A.......30.28 43.56A E PART OF W Lena Mae LOT 66 Barton Joey &amp; Sayler 16-tl1812.000
Carl Edwin &amp; Mariel PART OF 931/2A W
14-111330.000
100A OUT OF 24A SA BEHAN 3X 10' E END &amp; Michael. LOT 37-53 RT Newland Grant A &amp;lOr Jean LOT 237 STRIP END 7A ................79.40
Boor Edward T &amp;/Or ............................149.18 50'W END............36.49 #124 APPROX 1.55A Linda S LOT 4891/2 66'WIDE BACK OF LOT 17-110856.000
Help Wanted
• Help Wanted
Patricia D SECT 8 14-111060.000
15-110960.000
EX .094A 1.456A
.............................. 16.40 253........................ 43.03 Welsh Leroy &amp;/Or
(640)
NW
OF Smith Matthew &amp;/Or Maynard Claude &amp;/Or ............................ 462.67 16-00098.001
16-111931.000
Will AnnaSECT 27 NW COR
WANTED: Two
part - time
WILLIAMSON 4 112A Lisa SECT. 32 (640) NW Lena Mao LOT 65 16-111478.000
Norman Laurie L &amp;/Or Carl Edwin &amp; Martel 50A.................... 663.85
MIDS.25A .......... 285.45 EX. IDA E EX. COAL BEHAN ADD W 60' E Barton Joey J &amp;/Or Mark F 40'X112' N Jean
LOT253
17-110855.000
po sition s available to a ssist an
14-tl0407.000
38A .....................829.27 70' .......................135.04 Peggy PLOT 426 STRIP PORTION OF ABAN· ..........................1362.76 Welsh Michael &amp;/Or
Basham Gary G &amp;/Or 14-111469.000
15-111024.000
24'X181 'X2 213' ON N DONED BEECH 6.33 16-110698.000
Johnnl SECT 27 SW individual with mental retardation
Braley Raelynn SECT Wickersham JeHrey C Miller James A LOT 66 SIDE..................... 3Q.96 16-110099.001
Wilson Joseph A &amp;/Or OF
RD
38.00A in Meigs County :
26 NE PART OF NE 114 SECT 30 T.2 R.13 (640) BEHAN ' ADD Wl/2 EX 16-111479.000
Norman Laurie L &amp;/Or Hennessy Maureen
EX:S.OOA 33.00A
I) 23 hrs/wk: Th/Fr/Sat
OF SW 114 1A.1259.58 N PT OF NW1/4 EX 30A 161/2' N SIDE 49'XIOO' Barton Joey J &amp;/Or Mark F " PT OF LOTS E c/o Maureen E ...........................309.86
2) 27 hrs/wk: Sun- Wed
14-110218.000
54.25A .............. 1461.54 ............................182.34 Peggy P
LOT 6,7,8,9, &amp; 10 LASLEY Hennessy LOT 556
Bell Terry L &amp;/Or Rlta K 14-111106.000
15-111025.000
426 SUB LOT 113 LOT ADD" ................1398.75 SUB. 1..................... 5.78
SUTTON TWP ·
Must have htgh school diploma or
SECT 24 ·30 (100) NW WI) son Christina SECT. Miller Jamoe A BEHAN 11426
66
213' 16.00107.001
16.00699.000
SOUTHERN LSD
GED, valid driver's license, three
PART OF 3.30A #56 8 (640) NE COR. OF ADD 60'X110' S OF FRONTAGE X 175'
Norman Laurie L &amp;/Or Wilson Joseph A &amp;/Or
PENNY SURV .50A
W1/2 #4 R OF SURV. LOT S6 ON 3RD1191.57 ............................ 149.82 Mark F LOT 25 (262) Hennessy Maureen
18-110264.000
years g ood driving experience and
............................604.00 .25A.................... 189.98 15.00985.000
16-111477.000
MID OF 12ATRACT ON E c/o Maureen E Adkins · Becky
K
adequate
automo bile ins urance . •
14-111223.000
Miller Marilyn Jean
"Barton, Joey J &amp;/Or BEECH ST .09A OUT Hennessy LOT 262-17 " SECT. 17,T.2N, R.12W,
CIIHord James W Jr
15 MIDDLEPORT VIL· LOT 327 LOWER POM Peggy P" LOT 426 -66 OF .74A .09A ........3.19 S SIDE NEXT TO SUB. 1.13A OUT OF 3.42A $7 .25/hr. Send re sume to: Buckeye
SECT 36 (318) E END LAGE
..........................3306.16 2/3X179' SW LOT 2
16-111368.000
2 OF 556 1.15A..325.69 1.13A" .............. 1730.03
Community Services , P.O . Box
EX COAL 3.10A.. 33.35
MEIGS LSD
15.00250.000
...........................542.97. Quails James E LOT 6 16-110700.000
18-110124.000
14-111224.000
Phalln Keith D &amp;/Or 16-110015.000
NYE ADD EX 10'X75' IN Wilson Joseph A &amp;/Or Brlnager Timothy D 604, Jack son, OH 45640 or e-mail
Cllftord James W Jr 15-01352.001
Brenda LOT
4 Bentley Jerry L &amp;/Or ST E COR IO'X75' ON N Hennessy Maureen
SECT 10 NE COR OF lo: beyecserv @yahoo.com .
SECT 30 (100) 114 Boer Builders And HOBART ADD #4
Donna D c/o Margaret OF5 50'X150' ........51 .45 E c/o Maureen E SW 114 1.5521A OF
PENNY
SURV
EX Developers Inc PT LOT ...........................728.43. Robinson LOT 173 S 16-111369.000
HennessyLOT 556 5.78 13.87A 1.5521A NEW Deadline for applicants: 11125/05.
COAL 23 .14A....464.04 30
SE
12.56' X30' 15-tl0132.000
PART OF 173 EX . Quells James Edward
SURVEY........... 5187.47
Pre-employment drug te sting.
14-111225.000
37.44'X37.30' .....298.92 Rentals Unlimited c/o CHURCH PARCEL
LOT 256 TRAINS ADD SCIPIO TWP
18.00863.005
CliNard James W Jr 15.00849.000
· Mike Jones LOT 25 ............................. 27.70 W 28'.................. 112.62 MEIGS LSD
Davis JeHrey L &amp;/Or Equal Opportunity Employer.
SECT 30 (100) ON W Bell Drema D
SHEFFIELD SWI/4
16-110016.000
16-111380.000
Brenda J SEC 36100A
LINES OF THOMAS CR LOT 2 WEBB &amp; EARN· ............................768.25 Bentley Jerry L &amp;/Or Rathburn Chas S &amp; 17-110141 .000
LOT 296 1.0849A OUT
REGISTERED DIETICIAN
EX COAL 2.05A ...11 .11 SHAW...............3825.74 15-110133.000
Donna D c/o Margaret Louie c/o Roy &amp; Ruth Anthony Paul D Sr &amp; OF 4.39A 1.0849A
14-111226.000
15.00850.000
Rentals Unlimited c/o Roblneon LOT 300 GreeneLOT1.1.86ANE Castle Mildred V LOT ......................... 1556.73
E x tendicare Health Services, inc . i s
CIIHord James W Jr Bell Drema D
LOT Mike Jones LOT 26 RIGHT OF WAY S' WIDE PRT OF FRAC 10 N OF (5) ........................ 347.78 18-110973.000
seekmg an experienced Registered
SECT 36 (319·100) E 3 WEBB &amp; EARNSHAW BEHAN EX 6'X96' E THROUGH MIDDLE OF RD EX 16 1/2 t .S&amp;A
17-110198.000
Hood Stephen Todd c/o
END EX COAL EX EX
11 '
OFF
W' PART................... 183.83 LOT300................14.61 ............................ ..43.47 Black James &amp;/Or ClaytonShano&amp;Stacy Dieti cian to provide clinical nutritional
.021A · 4.579A ....... 24.53 SIDE .....................80.23 15-111267.000
16-110013.000
16-111381 .000
TracoSECT 2 (640) MID Mills
SECT 36 NW
assessm ents and care plans to our
14-111045.000
15-110163.000
Slack Lenore S LOT Chapman Anna M
Rathburn Chas S &amp; OF S 112 ON N LINE OF COR OF 5.52A ON W
diver
se p atient population. Will work
Dill Roberta E SECT. 8 Boyles Linda L LOT 309 .97A OUT OF 2.18A LOT 524 ............3194,31 Lizzie c/o Roy &amp; Ruth W OF RD 6A .... 1481.71 LINE S OF RISING
(640)
f12
PENNY (159 PALMER'S 3RD COR OF N 3RD AVE &amp; 16.00111.000
Greene LOT 262 · 181A 17.00740.000
.96A...................302.35
betw een Arbors at G alli poli s and
SURV. 1.50A...... 468.57 ADD f159 N PART ON RUTLAND ST .. 2793.93 Chapman Anna M
S PRT OF 3A W OF Brooks Dennis &amp;Tina 18-110251.000
Rock spri ngs Rehabilitation sktlled
14-111046.000
MILL STREET... 1559.12 15-00922.001
LOT 187............3117.98 CROUGH &amp; FRAC 10 SECT.-15
NE
OF Leamond James SECT.
nursm g centers therefore trav el i s
Dill Robarts E SECT. 8 15-110564.000
Smith Larry M SEC· 16-110532.000
.
'tA ......................... 23.52 PAGEVILLE .4011A
16 ABOUT 6'X49 ROS.
(640) #11 RADFORD Boyle&amp; Linda L LOT TION 29 TIN R13W Chapman Anna M LOT 16.01069.000
........................... 759.41 WEND 2A ...... 1124.56
required . The ideal c andid ate will have
SURV. EX. COAL 8A
157 PALMER'S 3RD S 0.054A OUT OF .25A 524 E PART OF LOT Rentals Unlimited An 17.00741.000
18-110282.000
expenence with ge neral long-term
............................141.31 50' OF 65'S END .. 47.47 0.054A....................5.61 524 ...................... 537.99 Ohio POrtner c/o Mike Brooks Dennis &amp; Tina Miller Robert L SECT.
c
are , sub-acute, and skilled facility
14-111456.001
15-110565.000
15-01083.000
16-112047.000
Jones
hip LOT 2 50' SECT. ·15 NE OF 11 NE OF NE 114
Family Homeo Inc Boyles Llnda'L LOT SmlthLarryMSECT29 ChapmanAnnaMLOT ON W SIDE SPRING PAGEVILLE 3.3489A
EXCEPT - 26 .1055AC.
doc umentation sy stem ; and be
" SECT 8, T2N, R13W, 158 PALMER'S 3RD S ·.33A N OF PAGE ST S 103
18'X42'
COR ST.. :.....................973.22 ..........................1805.72 3.8945A ..............715.89
proac
ti v e in providing educatio n to
.20A OUT OF I .OOA"
50' OFF 55' 5 END
OF RD .33A ....1018.42 COURT ST l!o FRONT 16-110290.000
17-110011 .000
18-110015.001
...........................347.28 ............................319.73 15-tl0443.001
ST...................... 2877.43 Rentals Unlimited An Cochran Charles W lv Smith Timmy J &amp;/Or staff, resident s and familie s. Enj oy our
14-00447.000
15-110295.000
StClair Myrtia Louisa 16.00278.000
Ohio Partner c/o Mike LOT (10) 1.039A N PRT Tammy S .418A IN
ex cellent wages and benefits!
Jenklno Darrell G Jr Coates Celosia C LOT PART OF LOT f2 10' Chapman Anna Marla Janos
ship
LOT OF 4.7069A 1.039A EX IOOA LOT2S6 &amp;1.576A
&amp;lOr Lois Ann SECT 32 412 POM *412 W 112
OFFW SIDE 10'X110'
LOT 2 LOT 520 17 BURNAP ADD NE .08A .959A .....5670.60 IN SECT 29 FOR A Intere sted candidate s c ontac t:
Tanya Bate he, Area D ir ec tor of
(840) E PART OF N ............................730.~8 .............................. 22.72 5385.5116-110279.000
COR.................... 204.86 17-110352.000
TOTAL 1.994A 5935.46
140A EX 20A
lA. 15-110514.000
15-111457.000
Chapman Anna Marla 16-110291 .000
Cochran Charleo W lv 18-110189.000
Nutritio nal Serv ices
............................142.86 Cundiff Tim R &amp;/Or Streuos Arthur LOT LOT 189 SUB 4
Rentals Unlimited An LOT 10 2.4369A OUT Thacker Anthony W
14-00644.000
Debbie L LOT (449) (24)W 112 ...........285.22 ........ , ................6578.37 Ohio Partner c/o Mike OF 4.7069A EX 1.137A &amp;/OrTonya R SECT. 12· E -Mail :tba[che@extendic are.com
Lavender William R POMEROY'S ADD.
15·01328.000
16-110280.000
Jones
ship LOT 199 1.2999A..............793 .51 16 S PT OF 17.72A W Fax: 414-90 8-7395
&amp;lOr Tamml SECT. 16 ............................950.98 Strause Arthur J LOT Chapman Anna Marie N COR S OF SUB 17 17-110021 .000
Dill OF CR. EX. COAL E xtendic are H ealth Servi ces, inc . 1s an
22
SHEFFIELD W LOT 206 251/2'X571/2' BURNAP ADD ........6.43 Lisa M LOT SECT · 14 .64A ....................429.26
(640) S PT SW114 &amp; SE 15-tl0515.000
equal o pponunity employer that
PT SW EX.24A T.2 R.13 Cundiff Tim R &amp;/Or PART...................688.82 SW COR ......, .... 429.46 16-110292.000
6A OUT OF 134.4BA SE 18-110429.001
5A .......................638.55 Dabble L
LOT 15-111329.000
16-(12058.000
Rentals Unlimited An COR 6A............. 513.47 Wilson Charles D Jr
encour ages workplace diversity.

14000973.000

(446)

00

18, 2005

ALLEY OOP

NEA
ACROSS

~-

...

..

.... ..

I

.

.

~l-_

11 · 18 05

West

East

•

•

7 ti 4 2

•

7 '

•

\0 3 2

A K 10 Y IH

t

15 TV set

60 Gourmet

appetizer

J I0 G 2

A K Q J 10 9 4
• s1 a3'

counterpart 61 SCout
17 Beach treat

I. 5'"'.
1 &gt;4&gt;

Pa:;s
Pass

Pass

lair

cheese

2 Demeanor
3 Outback

questions
29 Hail,
to Caesar
30 Y•-endtune
32 Pair of oxen
34 Hop, skip,
or jump
36 Tropical tree
38 Wabash lac.
39 Fem~le
relatives
41 Comes
sshore
43 Catch some
rays
44 Sort

marsupial
4 Starbuck&amp;
order
5 " Forgot Ill"
(hyph.)
6 Kind
of story
7 Carrion
feeders
8 Build an
appetite
9 Depose
I 0 Online
auction
11 Boombox
platters

East

p,.,

Pass

Pass
Pass

&amp;

Bridge from lands
Down Under

EARNEST

Australtan Bndge tS a btmonthly largepage-format magaztne It atms at the
tournament player, and you wtll see lots
of tnterestmg aucttons because far more ·
btddtng systems are permttted tn Oz than
here
Publisher and edttor Paul Marston gave

18 Nerve cell 37 Mme.'s
daughter
part
40 Drive-In
20 Help a
amployee
hoodlum
22 Sprawl out 42 Japanese
canines
23 Dallas
44 Angry
eager
45 Frlok about
24 Koln
25 Hatcher or 46 Greet
Lakes port
Garr
47 Ice lloe
26 Tender
48 Dart about
pods
49 Trail mix
27 Horse
50 -cowl
stopper
51 Sugar Ray
28 Desert

1 Gourmet

23 Slogan
26 Tough

Openong lead • A
FRANK

DOWN

19 Dapper
21 Hack
22 Chemist's

"' 7
Dealer North
Vulnerable. Ruth

West :'llorth

56 First space

16 NASA

•

Suu th

52 Raw metal

12 Shoutlrom
station
tho bridge 57 Leave out
13 Center
58 Woody's son
14 Believe
59 VIolin knob

Sou th
• Q

stat

terrain .
31 Store sign

54 Tllui11W1

of "Gattaca"

33 JAMA
readers
35 Phi Kappa

b--1--+-+-

tilts tnstruchve defenstve deal Look at
the West and North hands South, tgnor-

mg your one-spade overcall , powers mlo
stx hearts You lead the spade ace three,
stx, queen What would you do at lnck
two?

spot

~ -

auto

i\JYIIti5

• 8 3
• Q'
&gt;4&gt; K Q 4

48 Cargo

ol history

1\urth
.. J 3
• li .'i
t AK 4

J

-- --

Puzzle

4 Jungle-like 53 Island
8 Alasl
dance
11 Muse
55 Caplured

/

Soutl'1 overbid Although he had seven
wtnners, why would par tner produce ftve
when he showed a mtntmum openmg by
rebidding only two cl ubs? I prefer the
plan of mltlally res pondmg two hearts, a
strong JUmp sh1fl, and follow1ng w1th a
four-heart rebid, wh1ch shows a completely solid sUit Where are my po1nts?
Well, a strong jump shift ought to conta1n
about 13-1 6 high-card po1nts I would add
a pomt or two tor the seventh heart W1th
17-plus po1nts, start slowly and learn
about partners hand before decld1ng how
high to go.
Try1ng to cash the spade k1ng cannot be
_r 1g ~ t. unless you think South IS the
world's bes t bluij1ng poker player Were
you tempted to shift to the club k1ng? II
South has two clubs. the contract IS g
always falling The risk Is that South has
two black-SUit s1ngletons Then he m1ght
establiSh dummys club su1t To stop that,
you must shift to a diamond. removmg
one ol the board's v1tal entnes (If South
has the d1amond Jack, you cannot dO
anyth1ng ) Well-done 1! you found this farSighted play
Full details are available at www austrahanbndge com

THE BORN LOSER

F'f1-11S 11£.M\t-\\)~ /II£ 01'

'N~(.l-1 w€"

WE.I':E.t&gt;r&gt;-i lt-IG, Glr&gt;-t&gt;'&lt;~ I

"ir YOV COUU&gt;GO t\MX, IS

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WOULD
CW\NGE:.? ~-~-.---

i

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebl'rty Cipher crypt og r ~rns are cr~aled lmm ql!Utabons b~ famoos people past and present.

Each 1ener rn the cpher s1ar»s for anattiel

Today'sclue E equals D

" VL

VCE

CGRKSX
DLZENS ,

E NS

THNEKXKNOM

RVKM

LSLHXF

ICM

KR

XH L C R

V K P ."

IKRV

HLPKSKMGKSX

DOS

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CYNOR

CECPM

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "I would never do a one-woman show because
that' s bonng for Chlta I live to see oth er people's work • - Chlta Rivera

~Astro- .

~~:i:~~;~ 'iYnR~~-~t.~S·

~~!!!:

r~ i l•lll ~ y

Olou•
hoHor~o• let!ers ol
scral!lblt d word!

Saturday, Nov. 19, 2005
By Bernoce Bode Osol

WOlD
GlMI

CLAY • ,OLLAN

th•
be·

low to fo·m 'ovr lrmplt were•

Your career prospects could bnghten con-

Siderably on the year ahead. The posolove

changes may be slow 1n com1ng, however;
so be pat1ent Your endurance w1ll be
rewarded

SCORPIO (Ocl 24·Nov 22)- Your promISes w111 nng true today Be careful what

you wosh lor II yoo don'l keep lhem, thongs
may lurn out badly Be honesl and uplronl
SAGITIARI US (Nov 23·Deo, 21 ) - Your
reputation for ~andhng fmanc1al s1tuat1ons
may be seooously challenged today A

P!EANUTS

: SO 11M IN Ti-lE GROCER'{

:STORE

WIT~

M'&lt; MOM ...

LAD'{ A5K5 ME I-lOW
OLD I AM ... I TELL 1-!ER.
I'M A HUNDRED AND FIFT'&lt; ..
TI-llS

EVEIN TIME I RIDE ON T~E
13ACK OF M'&lt; MOMS 131CYCLE .
I AGE TWENW YEARS!

fnend or acquamtance could cost yoi.J
through hoslher recl&lt;lessness
CAPRICORN (Doc 22-Jan 19) - Thos
should be a fun day, as long as you select
companiOns w1th s1m1lar 1nterests The
edge wm be dulled. however, If you're nol

u M r s o·

Gr;;1nny alwa) s told

u~ f(.J

be

\1 "" of lho'c rcopk who ~cern
Cr• ~.nov. tnn muth cspcc1al l)• if

II IS-------·
·..--1Y -J-~-U-L---, litHo&lt;

mharmony w1th your colleague

r:===::=--.:==:::;===..

~·

Crossword

87

45 Concrete

1 Yuppie's

Alder

If it's aluminum, we pay
top dollar for it!

..... __ , ..--..... ...

Sentin el • Page

reinforcer

Phillip

TRI-COUNTY RECYCLING

·~·-

Daily

BRIDGE

Coolspot #1

-··

T he

www.mydailysentinel.com

AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19) - Thos could
turn be a fortunate day at work, but not
due to your efforts alone Be sure to cred1t
lhe ondovodual(s) onvolved
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)- Am1d small
talk w1th fnends, you w1ll fmd tidbits of
SUNSHINE CLUB

, 'THE.Y DONT WRITE. MUSK.
• fD&lt; US AIVYMOR£., FRiW

GARFIELD
PE:OPL.E: W11'H PeTS
'fENP 1'0 I.-IV!!. 1.-0NG-ER

0
0

GRIZZWELLS

SCRAMLI!TS

9'

Facial-l'ausc- Quota - P&lt;mama - Sl \ "CAL~1

Our new hos5 seemed ven confident m her abil1t1cs A

valuable lnformat1 on L1sten attentively- do

cui lca~ue remarked lloai, .-:,_nyonc can ha11dic the helm 1f

not m1ss any ol these gems.

1hc SEA " C Al \&gt;1 ..

ARIE S (March 21-Ap1111 9)- You may gel
discouraged 11 a project 1sn't com1ng
logelheoquiCkly Don'l upsellhe appleoarl.
thmgs w1ll get rolling soon
TAURUS (Aplll 20·May 20) - Tiy nol lo
condescend lo others loday Treal all peo·
pie as equals whether you th1nK they are
or not
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- Your earnong
capacoty IS excellent loday Bul how you
spend the mQney 1s another story You may
squander your hard-won dollars ·
CANCER (June 2 1 ·Ju~ 22) -You are
normally completely al ease on soc1al solu·
aloons. Today. though. you may be on an
Introverted mood - wh1ch could be
restnct1ve
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) - Someone
already spoken lor could flarter you loday,
but th1s person IS merely revealing a lack
olloyally Keep 1llllrtali0us Go no further
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sepl 22) • One lroend IS
not more Important than another today
Resost lhe templalton lo 'catalog" - you
m1ght slight someone who matters most
LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct 23)- Conduct your·
self respec~ully around a less lortunate
person today Don't put h1mlher 11:1 an
embarraSSing SIIU81190

ARLO

&amp; JANIS

SOUP TO NUTZ

l'f&lt;E '1bu l&lt;iC&gt;DiNG7 Wo-W,
I &lt;OEE' a CouPLa F&lt;l oRoes

NOW

..

II I'

~

�Page B8 • The Daily ~tine!

.

www.mydallysentinel.com

Friday, November 18,2005
\

.,

Soccer
fromPageBl
Heywood, headed the ball in
during the 85th minute for his
fifth goal of the year.
The Redmen outshot
Bethel 21-8 and owned a 123 edge in shots on goal.
Rio's Paul Nicholson
scored the first goa l just
I :52 into the inatch when hi s
shot, like Purcell 's, deflected off a Bethel defender and
past
goalkeeper
Matt
Carroll.
Carroll made seven saves
while Andy Moore stopped
two, including a key save
with 4: 14 left in the game,
for the winners.
Bethel's lone goal came in
the 7th minute when Raul
Barillas found a streaking
Alberto Sanchis, who snuck
behind the Rio defense and
struck a bender past Moore.
No. 4Auburn
Montgomery 5,
No. 20 McKendree 0
Magnus Olafssori scored
two of No. 4 seed Auburn
University Montgomery's
(Ala.) three second-half
goals to put the match out of
· reach as the Senators prevailed 5-0 against No. 20
seed McKendree College
(Ill.) to advance to the quarterfinals Thursday morning.
McKendree, which upset
No. 13-seed Grand View
(Iowa) 4-1 on Wednesday,
had an uphill battle with a 20 halftime deficit and got
further in the hole in the
54th minute when AUM's
Olafsson scored hi s II th
marker of the season.
The win boosts the
Senators record to 23-1,
while McKendree ends its
season 15-6-3 overall.
McKendree's day didn't
begin well after AUM's
Hjortur Hjartarsson hard
work led to an own goal to .
open the scoring as his hard
10-foot blast deflected off
two McKendree defenders
and found the back corner of
the Senators net to give
AUMa 1-0ieadatthe 18:21
mark.
In the 26th minute
Hjartarsson once again came
through for the Senators as
he buried a penalty kick
after being fouled'by an MC
defender inside the penalty
box to put ' the Auburn
Montgomery ahead 2-0 at
the intermission.
Tebasto Mllnyama ~lased

Smith
fromPageBl

·.·

al penalties. '
After Smith returned from
exile, the offense moved the
ball in fits and starts. It took
Smith four games to find his
rhythm. In the meantime, the
Buckeyes lost close games to
Texas and Penn State. frittering away numerous scoring
opportunities.
The Buckeyes are on a
five-game winning streak
since then heading into the
102nd meeting 'with their
rivals.
"He made mislakes and it
cost us opportunities," wide
receiver Santonio Holmes
said of Smith. "But we have
to forget about what happened in the past. We have
him now, so we just .have to
look forward ."
Ohio State has scored 35 or
more points in live games in
a row, the first time that's
happened since 1974. Smith
directs an attack that seems to
be in lockstep - the line has
been protecting him and
opening holes, tailback
Antonio Pittman is over
1,100 rushing yards, and ·
wide-outs Holmes, Ted Ginn
and Anthony Gonzalez are
threats to score every time
they touch the ball.
Coach Jim Tressel did not
aUow Smith to talk to
reporters this week about the
M1chigan game. After the
win · over Northwestern,
which put Ohio State in a
position to clinch at least a
share of the Big Ten title if it
wins this week, Smith looked
back fondly on last year-'s
victory.
"Against Michigan, every
yard is golden," Smith said.
"Every one yard is worth
two, every two is. worth
four."
Smith also said, "I'm much
more mature than I was ·a
year ago. But last year doesn't mean anything now."
If Smith hasn't been talk-

and scored his 20th goal of
the season.
The Raiders added two
more goals with Nathaniel
Jafta's seve nth on the year
and Ryan Stewart's 18th
marker this season.
The Eagles lone goal of
the contest came in the 77th
minute
when
Gareth
Thornley delivered a bomb
from 30 yards out over the
No, 3 Southern
Nazarene I, No. 14 Lee 0 head of LWC goalkeeper
Glenn Fox .
Jeffrey Dark wah's second- . Judson ends its .season
half goal was all the third- with a 19-4- 1 overall record,
Lindsey
Wilson
seed Southern Nazaerene while
Crimson Storm needed to advances to the quarterfinals
post a r,o victory against on Saturday, Nov. 19 at 5
·No. 14 Lee in second-round p.m. and will face the winner
of
No.
7-seed
action on Thursday.
10-5-4)
and
Lindenwood
(
The match was closely
No.
10-seed
Oklahoma
contested through the first
half wiih SNU edging the Baptist ( 15-5-2):
Flames 4-3 in shots and Lee
(Sportswriters Brittan ~y
recording the only corner
Miller
and Allison Smalling
kick of the half. But neither
team was able to find the in Daytona Beach, Fla. connet, resulting in a scoreless tributed to this report.)
tie at halftime.
Tlie Crimson Storm finally broke the deadlock with a
goal in the 72nd minute.
Sean Williams ' hall from the
midfield
stripe
found
Darkwah, who broke the
Flames' offside trap and
rifled a left-footed shot into
the far side netting to give
SNU the 1-0 win.
Southern Nazarene (18-1l) advances to a 2:30 p.m.
quarterfinal on Saturday,
whey th'ey will face the winner of Friday's second- ·
round match between No. 5
Simon Fraser and No. II
Notre Dame.
The loss brings Lee's season to -an end, as the Flames
finish 20-5 overall.
out the scoring for the
Senators slamming home a
five-yard ~ass from teammate Sigurjon Jon sson.
Auburn Montgomery will
next take the field on
Saturday at noon where it
will face the winner of No.5
seed Azusa Pacific and No.
12 seed Graceland match set
for Friday.

Busch
from PageBl
According to the police
report, Busch called the
deputies "a joke," crowded
an officer- and asked "Do
you know who I am?" at
various points while he was
detained.
"I resen t him making
derogatory remarks aboL~t
our sl1eriffs.'' said Maricopa
County Sl:eriff Joe . ,rpaio.
Even though an official
alcohol breath mo,·hine had
malfunctioned. Arpaio said
there was no point to have
Busch take th&lt;il test because
the preliminary results
showell he wasn ' t intoxicated.
Busch, who was wrapping
up his contract !his year with
Roush Racing, previously
signed to drive for Penske
Racing South beginning in

2006. On Satur&lt;)ay, Roush
team owner Jack Roush initially said he would take no
action against the driver
because "it's somebody
else's problem now."
But Rou sh sus pended
Busch from the final two
races Sunday, after consulting with his sponsors,
including Diageo, the manufacturer of Crown Royal
whiskey.
Busch ha~ had several runins with other drivers and
· NASI · ·\R officials during
hi s l•. , )ears with the Roush

team and, in announcinj; the
suspension. team prestdent
Geoff Smith said, "It's the
last straw for Roush Racing.
We' re officially retiring as
Kurt Busch's apologists,
effective today.''
Busch said he has not
talked with either Smith or
Roush since hi s suspension.
"Roush owns the team and
has every right to handle the
situations as he does,

.

Y(&lt;; 170 11sor•ea """··family caring for yours."

whether it's for him, tM
team or for the sponsors:~
Busch said.
;
"I spent five years wltl)
Roush Racing. I loved it
there . 1 loved the guys," h~
added. "I wanted desperat~j
ly to finish off the season ilj
style, not only for myself as
a champion, but for the te:i'in
as well.
.
"I'm very proud of th~
accomplishments at RouSlt,
The team was great for It)§
and they gave me a wondex;
ful opportunity. But 'I
broughl something .to th~
table, too. That was a I00
percent commitment to
excellence, both on and off
the track."
.{
Busch won 14 Cup race~
for Roush, including the&amp;
this year. Now he moves :ro
Roger Penske' s team tq
· replace
retiring
Rusty
Wallace in the No. 2 Dodge,
sponsored
by
Mille{
Brewing Company's Milfe~
Lite brand.

'

ing ·much, others certainly ·
have been speaking about
him.
"He's got fhe same athletic
ability. He 's got the same
great arm," Michigan coach
Lloyd Carr said. "He's been
in a lot of big . games where
he has played extremely
"
we II ..
,.
Asked if it would be difficult for Smith to live up to his
performance from a year ago,
Holmes said, "Not at all. The
way he's been playing these
last couple of games is going
to carry right over to this
one."
"No doubt he's the fastest
play
quarterback we'll
against !his year," Michigan
inside linebacker David
Harris said. "He's a great
scrambler, he's capable of
making any _play, he's got a
strong arm, he 's a great
leader: ... He's their man." ·
Tressel values Smith more
for what he hasn't been doing
- turning the ball over.
''Troy made a lot of good
decisions," Tressel said,
reflecting on last year's win
over Michigan. "We always
say if you start with making
good decisions, then usually
those other things that we
really need to happen have a
good chance of coming true."
Smith got off to a rocky
star! afte r sitting out the
opener, turning the ball over
at least once in his first five
games. Over the last four,
he's thrown 75 passes with
only two interceptions and
hasn' llost a fumble.
Considered a run-first,
pass-second
quarterback
when he first took over midway through last season,_
Smith leads the Big Ten in
pass . efticiency, and has 13
TO passes and only four
interceptions.
"Man, r m not sure what
they're going to do to try to
stop him ," offensive guard
Rob Sims said. "I know he's
going to be a hard one to
stop. He gets up for this
game. he plays hard in this
game."

Skilled Nursing &amp; Rehabilitation Center

No place like home:
Agencies ensure care comes to clients, Cl

740-446-7112
' .
OH 4563pays tJI Chnstmas

170 Pinecrest Drive

...
Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
Ohio\ alit·~ Publishing ( 'o,

SPORTS
• AII-OVP football team
announced. See Page 81

Ponwro~ • ~1iddlt•pur1• (;allipolis • Nmt•mlwr :.!O • .200:)

S1.;;o • \'ol. ;{(). ~o . ..t:~

Homelessness: Unseen problem plagues region
of the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs said . With the exception of
Continuum
of
Care Serenity House, there are no
Committee.
shelters in the area for
GALLIPOLIS - They are
"They aren't really hidden home less people. Serenity ·
·not always easy to tlnd, but or invi sible, but they are a House is for abused or
they are out there.
whole lot harder to tlnd than homeless women.
Some stay with relatives . in a big city," she said.
Another issue that affects
Some live in abandoned
The Continuum of Care homelessness , in our area is
buildings.
Many .
are Committee was organized poverty. Even when housing·
teenagers who stay with a in the fall of 2004. Last is available, those who are .
different friend every night.
week, the committee con- homeless often cannot afford
Although the homeless are· ducted its quarterly meeting to pay the rent and utilities
not as easy to spot here as at Woodland Centers to fur- and sti ll buy food and other
they are in big cities, they do ther develop a plan of necessities, Frank said.
live in our area.
actipn to help deal with the
There is some assistance
And .those who have dedi- problem of homelessncss in available from the state, but
caled themselves to h'e!ping our area.
many who are homeless do
them face difficult chal"There are issues that exac- not qualify to receive it, said
lenges unique to a rural area, erbate homelessness here," Hilda Stotts, director of
said Mary Jo Frank, compli- Frank said.
Serenity House and board
ance .director at Woodland
One such issue is the lack member.
Centers Inc., and facilitator of homeless shelters, she • "A lot of state assistance is
BY P4UL DARST
PDARST@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

tied to chi loren," she said. "If homeless count · on Jan. 25,
you don't have children, then 2005 , there were 127 kids in
you ' re not eligible."
the Meigs school' districts
Such rules often send con- that are considered to be
flicting messages to those homeless, Wayland said. An
seeking assistance, said additional 173 were at risk of
Laurie Wayland, outreach becoming homeless.
coordinator for the Meigs · "Our biggest demographic
County School Districts.
is teens who have been on
" It sends them mixed mes- their own for years,"
sages," she said . "A lot of · Wayland said.
them are turned away from
Part of Wayland's job is
shelters because thev have informing area education
no kids."
officials about some of the
Every day, Wayland sees 1
k
·
f
first hand that the homeless- · esser- nown reqUirements 0
the federal No Chil&lt;l Left
f h
·
ness problem here is not con- B h' d A 0
tlnedlo adults. Children are a
e !n
ct. ne 0 t ose IS
that children cannot be
major part ·of the homeless denied admission to school
population in the area, .
Wayland said.
because they lack paperwork
Please su Homeless, Al
According to the last

Fire

VISIT US ONLINI If

No. 2 Linsey Wilson 4,
No. 15 Judson 1
Second-seed and six-time
national champion Lindsey
Wilson
College
(Ky.)
upended No. 15-seed Judson
College (Ill.) on Thursday 41 to advance to the NAJA
National
Tournament
Quarterfinals.
Three minutes into the
match, LWC struck early as
Adam Howard delivered a
text book touch pass to ·
Fausey' Rodriguez who
found the back corner of an
empty Eagle net to give the
Raiders a 1-0 advantage. ·
In the 43rd minute , ·
Mkhokheli
Dube gave
Lindsey Wilson a two-goal
cushion after accepting a
Tiyiselan Shipalane pass
past JC goalie, Rob Luck ,

ARBORS AT GALLIPOLIS

r

'-

Pending
charges
against
Ward
dismissed

OBITUARIES
Page A6
• Shirley L Baker
• Dorothy E. Creech
• Sarah Edith Fellure
• John 'Jack' Kauff
• James Thomas Knight
• Marilyn Jc;~~ [llutt~r
oljri\'otliy C Oldaker
• Helen Mae Russell
• Georgia Mae Shelton
• Robert E. Wallace

TO MAliC
Brand New 2006 P.o ntiac Vibe

• 7 Speaker
Monsoon Audio
System

-·,

INSIDE
• L6cal Briefs.
See PageA2
• Marshall seeks
public input in planning.
SeePageA2
• Promoter says he was
duped into fake Bemie
Mac show. See Page A2
• Holiday Home Tour
· set for Dec. 2-3.
See PageA3
• In China, Bush gets
good news on trade,
presses Beijing to expand
religious freedom..
See Page AS
• Museum to feature
'Ralph Stanley Story.'
See PageA6
• Radio City orchestra
returns after strike.
See PageA6

..

Brand New 2006 Chevy Silverado Ext. Cab 4WD
..

WEATHER -

~

Detail• on Pace AI

Brand New 2006 Chevy .Tahoe 4WD

INDEX

• Toxll5, Tags, Tide fa111 ax-a. lebale lnduded in sola price of new vehide l~led where appli&lt;oble. On approved oadll.
On selected modak. Mal r111ponsible lor lypOJiraphical errors. lrices good November 171h lhrough November 201h.

Ylllt

........ ..

w enllne at www.teMpHen.eea - (.(·rtlfkd

.

.

:

.

4 SECTIONS -

Around Town
Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Regional
Sports
Weather

"t.• 1 ~7 11:1 fflllll? fAIRPIAIN l'"'"''ll.ongl
..U \312"1 1111'11 N9llll &lt;mAt !I
~. . . . 3~011~

.

28 PAGES

3
C4-5
D Section
insert

A4

Ap
A2
B Section
A8

© 2005 Oh.io Valley Publishing Co.

'

-

-·--

......

••

BY BRIAN J. REEl&gt;
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

r

POMEROY -Remaining
charges of rape and corrupting another with drugs
against a Rutland man now in
prison on similar charges will
not go to trial.
·
Raymond Ward was convicted and imprisoned on
charges he used marijuana ·
and drugs to entice several
minor female victims into
sexual ~ituations. At least one
victim was identitled as a relative. The charges go back as
far as 1992.
Gallia County Commoq
Pleas Court Judge D. Dean
Evans tiled a nolle prosequi
entry in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court last ·
week, effectively dismissing
five remaining charges
against Ward. Those charges
.
remained pending after' a jury
B~an J. Reed/photo
in . June. Ward
deadlocked
Firefighters from Middleport ~nd Pomeroy responded to the scene of a fire in second-story apartments on the corner of Coal
was
to
have
been
re-tried on
Street and North Second Avenue in Middleport late Friday afternoon. The cause and extent of the fire were not yet apparent
at press time.
Please see Ward. Al

Organization offers money Prescription drug plan confusing for Meigs' seniors
.C.
• ts
tOr commuru•ty projeC

pletely voluntary and they are sites, www.medicare.gov or
not required to choose a pre- www.ohioinsurance.gov.
scription drug plan under
Leifheit recommends that
''Some groups might be
POMEROY - . Medicare's Medicare Part D. especially if seniors compare prices and
just a 'few hundred short of new prescription drug plan, they already have a private shop around for the best deal
being able to do a project," also known as Pan D, has left pre scription drug plan that by remembering to consider
he said.
seniors in Meigs County with they are happy with at this the msurance. company:s
And, fu'nding from Keep more question s than answers time. However, ·it is unclear monthly premiUm fee and 1f
Gallia Beautiful might help during the plan's open enroll- whether
pharmaceutical the company has a yearly
them secure other dollars, ment period that began on assistance programs from deductible and how these fac,
said Sandy Saxon, hoard Nov. 15 and becomes effec- Medicare will continue once tors would effect thetr budget.
member.
tive Jan. 1.
Medicare Part D begins.
While shopping around for
"They · could use it for
An "enrollment event" for
Last week Meigs County thetr plan semors should also
matching funds for a grant," Medicare Part D will take Parish Nurse and Ohio Senior wnte down all thelf medtcashe said.'
place from 9 a.m. to noon on . Health Insurance Information lions and how much they cost
The original deadline for Nov. 30 at the Meigs County Program (OSH.IIP) volunteer a month, then add that halsubmitting proposals to the Senior Center where assis- Lenora Leifheit RNC held ance to the tnsurance compagroup was this month, tance and information will be an informatio~al m~eting ny's monthly_ pre':nium and
Simpkins said. The board available. Seniors can also be with se niors to familiarize yearly deductible (1f apphcavoted last week to extend it to enrolled in a program that them with thei r options under ble) to g1ve themselves an
1dea of what they can afford.
Jan. 15, 2006.
day if they choose though the new drug plan.
Seniors
in
Ohio
have
17
HI S also, tm~.ortant to check
Members will conduct their there is still time to make a
wtth
potentml msurance
next meeting on Jan . 18, at . . decision about what plan is private insurance companies
to be sure that speagencies
which time they will review right for them.
approved by Medicare that .
ci
fic
medications
are covered
the proposals. After decisions
Open enrollment ends on they can choose from for
have been made·, gro ups that May 15 . After May 15 their Part D prescription drug under thei r prescription drug
will receive funding will seniors cannot enroll in the plan. Leifheil has a list of program. There ' is a strong
have February and March . to program until November these companies, their toll possibility that all medicaprepare to do their projects 2006 and then they will be free phone numbers, monthly tions will not be covered
when spri ng weather arrives. charged a six percent late premiums and deductibles if which is why · comparing
insurance
The board will consider all penalty which amounts to applicable. Leifheit can be prices · and
is
important.
providers
projects, regardless of size, one percent per month, these reached at the Mulberry
If a medication is not covSimpkins said.
penalties arc accessed each Community Center at 9~
ered
under an insurance
"No project is too small," month after th.e May 15 7400 or call Kathy · Goble,
provider's
ask that
she said.
deadline . Medicare can LSW, at the Meigs County provider if a·plan,
generic
version
Project proposals may be charge up to a 24 percent late Senior Center, 992-2161.
of the medication is covered
sent to Keep Gallia Beautiful, enrollment penalty dependThis information and more instead.
.
P.O. Box I095, Gallipolis, ing on when a senior enrolls can also be obtained by phonWhile shopping around for
Ohio 45631 , or emailed to in the program .
ing OSHIIP toll free at 1-800- the best plan seniors should
keepgalliabeautiful@hot Seniors should realize that 686-1578. or by going onto
mail.com.
the new drug plan !S com- the following Internet weh- Please see DNI pl•n, Al
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDA ILYSENTINEL.COM

BY PAUL DARST
PDARST@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS
One
local group wants to help
area civic organizations with
their projects, and it has some
money to do so.
Keep Gallia Beautiful will
accept project proposals until
mid-January and encourages
civic orgamzations to submit
their ideas.
"We're poping t!~at service
organizatio·ns, civic groups
and non-profits will submit
beautification projects to us,"
said Jill Simpkins, board
member. "They need to submit !heir plan and any budget
information to us in as much
detail as possible."
Despite running newspaper
ads. the group has received
only one project l?roposal so·
far. They would like to have
more from which to choose.
"We may not be able to
help with all of them, but
we d like to help as many as
possible as much as possible," she said.
The organization would
be unable to completely
fund larger projects, but still
might be able to lend a
hand , said Roger Walker,
Gallia County treasurer and
board member.

•

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