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                  <text>www.mydail ysentine l.com

Page B6 _• The Dail y Senti ne l

Tuesday, October 23,2007

Emergency Guide
.inside today's Sentinel

OHIO VALLEY
BANK.

nil Seta Ava.
Glif{;Gk. Cit 4SSS1

~&amp;\~ C ST
'lilt n11'\,(}tl ~

Inside Foodland

236

se&lt;:ond Ava.

--··

(14(tWJtWl

~--

Inside Walmart

fm.S38.7674

Pomeroy

· .... C. lire• Dec . . . . . . . OJJI ..... ~

441-3575

2145 Eaatom.o.ve. ---

w. Main St ········-------

992-2357

Week7
Winner

-

'""'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Kaylene ErrPtt-:
/.. Pt. Pleasant,

~

.)O CI ·.:\'TS • \ 'ol. :;~. '\lo. h .)

wv
r!

"\OL R PlCh.S''

..

"l:~h. /IS ,.,_~

t

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1..___________________
'

HOLZER CUNIC

2.__________.._________

We"N Everywhere You An!

•"

'

700 E. main

Street

Pomeroy.OH

Open Sun-Sat 7am-10pm
(740) 992-5252

• OSU heads to Happy
Valley. See Page 81

BY BRtAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT A
community participating in
the
National
· Flood
Insurance Program must at
least enforce minimum
standards to avoid sanctions
and suspension from the
program, a representative
from the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources said
Monday evening.
The Village of Middleport
has adopted those minimum
standards, but must be vigilant in enforcing them,

Pharmacy
Open m-F9am-7pm
sat 9ilm-1 pm
Closed SundiiY
(740) 992:-1536

IWIWIW. f"oodf"alrmk.com

4.'------------~-----

5.·----------------~-

7.·------------~------8·------~-----------

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

9.,___________________
10.'-------,-----------~
.

OBITUARIES

. 12 . ____.,--_____________

Page A5• SFC Harry J. Carry, .1.0
• Patricia Lawrence, 61

13.·------~---------

&lt;

INSIDE

14 •.__~,~-------------

;

.

· "TIE BREAKER'·' .
c'•'

'

,·, '

-

'

' .Totai'Points in tlie Mondfly ~Ute ;
· · Footb,~.t .G11m~r&lt;
Green
Bay ® ~nv.~r ' ·
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··c:-- ·•• • ·· : -,·

,;,;

NAME:. ______________.ADDRESS: _____________
PHONE: __~-----

'

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I

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.

•.

PLEASANT.

VALLEY
HOSPITAL
%1311"" "·-34U·--•
.,.IIOi........_.
675-434t
TJ. r..f tj A t ·ttl

I

Each Tuesday through Dec. 11, a numbered game will
appear in each participating merchant's ad.
Indicate your pick of winners and write it beside the
corresponding number.
Entries must be dropped ofT at the:
Gallipolis Dally 'frlbune or mailed to:
Football Smackdown
r:/o Gallipolis Dally Tribune
82! 3rd Avenue
GaiUpoUs, OH 45631
Entries must be postmarked by Thursday to qualify
for that week's contest. The prize will be awarded .
' weekly on the basis of mOlt winners selected cornell)'
and In case of ties, winner will be determined by bU_nd
draw. You must be 16 years of age or older to enter.
Only one entry per person per week.

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INC.

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• Locally Owned and Operated
• 24hr. Emergency Service
• Free Delivery
,_stop By Our Showroom
• Many More Items
70 Pine Street ·Gallipolis, OH

7 40- 446-0007 .

Christopher Thoms of
ODNR 's
Floodplain
Management Program said.
Thoms met with Middleport
Village Council at a special
meeting Monday, to answer
questions arising from councit's d~cis,ion on Oct. 15 to
deny a lfloodplain variance.
Most questions came
from tjle public about
floodplain regulations, but
Thoms also discussed the
importance of local governments being aware of
the reasons behind the
standards and enforcing
them closely.

Matt Lyons, the owner of
the property in question,
requested a variance allowing Betty Gilkey to place a
new manufactured home on
a lot located on Ash Street,
which is in the 100-year
floodplain.
Building
Inspector Randall Mullins
denied the application.
Lyons
un successfully
appealed the matter to the
variance committee, which
has authority to issue variances, or exceptions, allowing some construction activity in the floodplain.
Council refused to override

the variance committee's
decision, and Thoms, in a
letter dated Oct. 18, upheld
council's decision.
Enforcing tlie minimum
floodplain
standards ,
Thoms said, not only protects lives and property, but
also ensures that flood
insurance policies purchas~d by property owners
remam m effect.
When an audit conducted·
by Thoms' office determines that a community is
not in compliance with the
minimum standards - for
example, when a communi-

Bartrum
to speak at Pumpkin ·
chamber Picassos ,_
..
dinner

6. ___________________

11..___________________

All Regular Cab GMC Sierras.

'

•

-

'

Ill

'·l.-"'t'

,

Thoms: Floodplain management requires vigilance

SPORTS

3. _____________________

.. .

:. V:..,.,..:my~taii;;;,,rt;~cl.com

\\ ' EilNESD.\Y, OCTOBER 24. 2007

, •

,,

'
'

••

446-2168

www.ovbc.com

~

.

700

Girl scouts
donate supplies~ A6

MIDDLEPORT - This
year's 17th Annual Meigs
County
Chamber
of
Commerce
Annual
Recognition Dinne.r' will
feature guest speaker Mike
Bartrum.
This year 's theme is
"Touchdowns for Meigs
County."
Social hour be$ins at 6
·p.m. with dinner bemg served
at 6:30p.m. on Thesday, Nov.
13 at the
Middleport
:i&gt;J(ht~.;
Family Life
~,;
Center .
- ~;;· .
Tickets are
Iff.· · ,,. . $25 each and
_ ;~~·J/.'
corporate
sponsorships
"!...are available
Mike
by
calling
Bartrum
c h a in b e r
Director Michelle Donovan
at 992-5005. Limited seating
is available.
"Mike was chosen as our
speaker bl:cause he is a local
person who has been successful iri his career and he
· is seen as a -cmnmunity
leader
and
mentor,"
Donovan said, promising
Bartrum 's speech will focus
on being a successful person
in both business and life.
Bartrum, a graduate of
Meigs High School and

September
jobless data
·mixed bag
BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLY® MYDAILYTR IBUNE.COM

What do you get when you
take around 90 pumpkins,
90 kids and some non-toxic
paint? A fun mess. This
week the Pomeroy Library
was packed with kids for its
annual pumpkin painting
event. Future Jack-olanterns were donated by
Morris Family Farm, Bob's
Market and Greenhouses
and Powell's Food Fair
while the library supplle9
,J.Ile wa.sha.b1e Plilrit,:J;Ile
patents provided the clean·.
up afterwards.

'.....;

Beth &amp;ercent/photoo

·1.. -. · ,.I.
,'

• Firefighters all but
concede defeat to raging
California wildfires;
flames too big, too fast.
See Page A2
• Family Medicine:
Time for nearly
everyone to get vaccine.
See Page A3 '
• CHS Foundation
offElrs scholarships.
See Page A3
• For the Record.
See Page AS
• 4-Hers taking part in
'Make a Difference Day.'
See Page A6
• Trick or treat.
See Page A6

•

-

..'·

Pluse see Chamber, A$ , L-._ _ _...,..

ty issue s excess ive vari ances to properties in highrisk areas - FEMA can
issue sanctions, including a
$60 annu al surcharge for
. policy holders, and twoyear period of close examination· of compliance.
If, after a one- to twoyear probation ary period. a
communit y is sti'Jl deemed
to be in non -compliance ,
policies expire, and some
banks will call in mortgages becau se the properties secured are
not
insured against tlooding ,
Thoms said.

GALLIPOLIS . - An upand-down pattern of unemployment data was offered
for southern Ohio during
September, with some counties eKperiencing a decline
in jobless ness and others
seeing their levels.rise .
The Ohio Department of
Job and Family Services
released its county-by-founty unemployment figures for
last month on Tuesday, .with
Gallia County seeing a drop
in its jobless rate and Meigs
County's ris ing over its
August figures.
·
Gallia saw 6 percent of its
workforce unemployed in
September, a drop of twotenths of a percent from
August's 6 .2 percent, ODJFS
reported. Meigs, which had
been at 8.9 percent unemployment in August, rose
three-tenths of a percent to
9 .2 for September. .
Athens County's unemployment increased twotenths of a percent. from 6.2
in August to 6.4 the following month. Jackson ·county
jumped six-tenths of a percent in its jobless rate , from
6 .6 to 7.2 in September.
Lawrence County's unemployment was up two-tenths
of a percent last month ,
from 5.2 to 5.4 .
Vinton County eKperienced a seven-tenths of a

Please see Data, AS

Scouts dedicate Kiashuta's new swinging bridge

WEATHER

Bv CHARLENE

HoEFLICH

HOEFUCH@MYDAILY SENTINEL.COM

CHESTER - Nearly I00
parents and leaders
came out Sunda~ to Camp
Kiashuta located JUSt outside
Chester for the' dedication of
the new 125 foot swinging
bridge over Shade River.
The original bridge, built
in the 1930s, was destroyed
about five years ago by
flood waters from the Shade
River, according to H. Ray
Franks, scouting executive
of the Tri-State Area
CounciL This isolated some
of the favorite · camp sites
and a program sheltet from
use by boy scouts, girl
scouts and others who use
the camp, he said.
Speaking at the dedication, Franks thanked the
local community for supponing th.e boy ~couts and
their efforts in Meigs
County. He said Horace
Karr provided the material s
and labor to restore the
bridge allowing the scouts
to again cross the river and
use the facilities on the
other side . Al so dedi cated at
Sunday 's program were ~ ix
new picruc tabl es and a new
~couts ,

·-•n For Sixty Months
Until October 31, 2007

GIIC
Detatto on Pa&amp;e AS

INl&gt;EX
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAOFS

Calendars

A3
A3

Classifieds

. B2-4

Annie's Mailbox

Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

Bs
A4
As
B Section
A6

© 2007 Ohio Valley Publishing Co .

..

•

Submlll,ed photoo Ray Franks, scout executive of the Tri-State Area Council, preDr. Erik Aanestad, Troop 235 scoutmaster, welcomes every- sents Horace Karr with a pewter statue in appreciation of his
one to the bridge dedication ceremony.
financial support toward improvements to the scout camp.

roof on the program shelter
at those camp sites.
Karr credited his interest
in sc'outing and what it doe s
for the development of
youth to having watched.l!i.s
brother, Paul Karr, become
an Eagle Scout in Troop 249
in Pomeroy. " We need more
people to get involved in
supporting the scouting program and he lping young

people develop positive val ues," said Karr.
On the Saturday before the
dedication, over 50 Scouts
and leade~ gathered at Camp
Kiashuta to clean up the
cabin and grounds so everything would look good for
Sunday's bridge dedication.
Those attending the dedication saw the progress on
the shower and new bath-

rooms with flush toilets that
are being put in the back section of the cabin. This project
is being handled by Valerie
and Jeff Nottingham of the
local cub scout pack with the
help of several laborers. By
addin g those facilities the
camp can be approved for
use by cub scouts for
overnight family campin g as
well as day camps.

Refreshments for tho se
working at the camp sit on
Saturday were provided by
Alligator Jacks Flea Market.
There with the scouts from
Troop 235 were lea ders
including camp ranger Don
Frymye r and scout le aders
Erj k Aanestad and · Jeff
Nottingham.

Please see Scouts, AS

�The Daily Sentinel

NATION · WORLD
In this photo released by the
U.S. Army, Maj. Gen. Rick
Lynch, commander of the U.S.
army's Third Infantry Division,
second left, speaks with Sunni
Sheik Emad Ghurtar.i, right. in
Haswah, Iraq Thursday, Oct. 18.
October is on course to record
the second steep decline in
U.S. military and Iraqi civilian
deaths in as many months, a
testament, American commanders say. to the U.S. troop
increase and Iraqi disgust with
. ai-Qaida and Shiite militia
extremists. Maj. Gen. Rick
Lynch points proudly to What
the military calls ·Concerned
Citizens," Iraqis, both Shiite
ancl Sunni, who have joined the
Americans to fight militants .. He
·says he's signed up 20,000 of
them in the last four months.

usrooa

including powerful al-Qaida
in Iraq cells.
Keaveny attributes the
BAGHDAD - October startling decline to a
is on course to record the decrease in attacks by milisecond consecutive decline tants who are being rounded
in U.S. military and Iraqi up in big numbers on inforcivilian
deaths
and mation provided by the citiAmericans commanders say zen force - which has literthey know why: the U.S: ally ·ctoubled the number of
troop increase and an lraqt eyes and ears available to
groundswell · against al- the military.
. Qaida and Shiite militia
The efforts to recruit
extremists.
local partners began taking
• Maj. Gen. Rick Lynch shape earlier this year in
. points to what the military the western province of
· calls "Concerned Citizens" Anbar, which had become
· - both Shiite:; and Sunnis the virtual heartland for
who have · joined . the Sunni insurgents and alAmerican fight He says Qaida bands. The early
he's si~ne&lt;j up 20,000 of successes in An bar- comthem tn the past four ing alongside a boost of
months.
30,000 U.S. forces il)tO the
" I've never been more Baghdad area - led to
optimistic than I am right similar alliances in other
now with the progress parts of Iraq.
we've made in Iraq. The
"People are fed up with
only people who are going fear. intimidation and being
to win this counterinsur- brutalized. Oneil they hit
. gency project are the people that tipping point, they're
· of Iraq. We ' ve said that all fed up, they come to real along. And now they're ized we truly do provide
• coming forward in masses," them better hope f6r the
Lynch said in a recent inter- future. What we're seeing
view at a U.S. base deep in 'now · is the beginning of a
hostile territory south of snowball," said Keaveny,
: Baghdad. Outgoing artillery whose forces operate out of
· thundered as he spoke.
Forward Operating Base
Lynch, who commands Kalsu, about 35 miles south
the 3rd Infantry Division of Bajlhdad.
·
: ·and once served as the milWhtle U.S. death figures
. itary
spokesman
in appear to be in sharp
·. Baghdad, is a tireless cheer- decline, the number of Iraqi
leader of the American ' civilians and security forces
effort in Iraq. But the death show a Jess dramattc drop.
toll over the past two And any significant attack
months appears to reinforce -by insurgents or civilians
his optimism. The question, caught in the crossfire 6f course: Will it last?
could quickly wipe out the
As of Tuesday. the downward trend.
Pentagon reported 28 U.S.
The current pace of civil.military deaths in October. ian deaths would put
That"s an average of about October at less than 900.
1.2 deaths a day. The toll on The figure last month was
U.S troops hasn't been this 1.023 · ·and for August,
low since March 2006, 1,956, according to figures
when 31 soldiers died - an . compiled
by
The
average of one death a day.
Associated Press.
In September, 65 U.S. solThe AP tally is compiled
.
diers died in Iraq.
from hospital, police and
Part of the trend can be military officials, as well as
· seen in a volatile and vio- accounts from reporters and
lent band of lush agricultur- photographers. Insurgent
alland on Baghdad's south- deaths are not included.
em border.
Other c'ounts differ and
The commander of the some have given higher
battle zone - · Lt. Col. Val civilian death tolls.
Keaveny, 3rd Ba\talion,
While the decline in
509th Infantry (Airborne) deaths is notable, it is only
- said his unit has lost only one of many measures of
one soldier in the past four potential progress in Iraq,
months despite intensified said Anthony Cordesman, a
: operations against both -~ former Pentagon analyst
Shiite and Sunni extremists, now with the private Center
BY

STEVEN R. HURST

ASSOCI ATED PRESS WRITER

=t:JJ

w-

·PageA2
Wednesday, October 24,2007

Firefighters all but concede
defeafto raging California
wildfires; flames too big, too fast
Bv GILLIAN FLACCUS
~S SOCIATED

PRE SS WRITER

SAN DIEGO - Faced
with unrelenting winds
whipping wildfires into a
frenzy across Southern
California, firefighters conceded defeat on many fronts
Tuesday to an unstoppable
force that ·has chased more
than 500,000 people away.
Unless the shrieking
Santa Ana winds subside,
and that's not expected for
at least another day, fire
crews say they can do little
more than try to wait it out
AI' photo
and react - tamping out
. spot fires and ·chasing ribbons of airborne embers to
keep new fires from flaring .
"If it's this big and blowing with as much wind as
it's got, it'll go all the way
to the ocean before it
for
Strategic
and lunch one day, responded stops," said San Diego Fire
International Studies in with striking eloquence.
Capt. Kirk Humphries. "We
Washington.
" Because of what the can save some stuff but we
Cordesman said a more American forces have can't stop it. "
balanced picture needs to accompli shed, instead of
Tentacles
of
unpreinclude factors such as us moving step by step dictable, shifting flame have
· wounded civilians and sol- we're going to start run- burned across nearly 600
diers and the number of ning toward the enemy ... square miles, killing one
people fleeing their homes. Instead of walking, we're person, destroying more
The U.N. refugee agency going to start running now. than I ,800 homes and
said Tuesday that between We just need the weapons prompting the. biggest evac1,000 and 2,000 .Iraqis still and
ammunition," uation in California history,
. leave their homes each day Ghurtani said .
from north of Los Angeles,
for safer havens in the counThe guard force at the through San Diego to the
try or in neighboring checkpoint changed during Mexican border.
nations. "It's just been the conversation. Three
Gov.
.Arnold
going up slowly," said U.N. young men barely out of Schwarzenegger said the
High .Commissioner for their
teens,
ancient" flames were threatening
Refugees
spokeswoman Kalashnikovs in hand, 68,000 more homes.
·
Astrid van Genderen Start strolled town the dirt road
"We have had an unfortuin Geneva.
that led back into Ghurtani nate situation that we've
"The numbers we're territory. Their U.S.-provid- had three things come
dealing with here are only ed uniforms are a vest with . together: very dry areas,
major acts of violence, the a refle'cti ve orange band. very hot weather and then a
number of times people are akin to what road crews lot
of
wind,"
killed," said Cordesman. wear in the United States.
Schwarzenegger said. "And
"This is certainly progress · Ghurtani complained they so this makes the perfect
... but it has to be put in hadn't been paid the $100 a storm for a fire."
perspective."
month the Americans had
In Rancho Santa Fe. a
Lynch's missiOn also promised.
suburb north of San Diego,
"If 1 get some of the houses burned just yards
shows the slow pace of
reclaiming areas from mili- money they need I can get from where fire crews
tants. His troops and their them shoes, some vests and fought to contain flames
new local allies. must work some ammunition. If they engulfing other properties.
town by town, village by can find me cheap weapons, In the mountain community
we can start getting these of Lake Arrowhead, cabins
village..
.
Sunm . . She1k
Emad men ready. God willing in and vacation homes went
Ghurtam tS among those the next few days," the up in flames with no fire
helpmg.
h "k ·d
crews in sight.
"Honestly, I'm not goin~ · s et sat ·
to hide this from you,'
Ghurtani told Lynch as the
two stood talking at a newly
established tribal check
point near Haswa, a village
JUSt north .o f the Kalsu base.
"There is some ai-Qaida
here in this area. But, God
willing, we will liet rid of
them. ... The cittzens are
coming out. They're not
afraid any more," the tall
and handsome tribal leader
said. Three scruffy young
men watched, AK-47s
slung over their shoulders,
in the sandbag bunker at
the check point.
Lynch, hatless on the
balmy
autumn
day,
answered in staccato sentences.
"What we really need is
information . . You know
where al-Qaida i's. You
know who they are. You
have to tell us. We can use
all our capabilities to -take
out the enemy. B1,1t you have
to tell us where they are;
because you know. You've
got our total support."
The sheik, who made
Lynch promise to return for

NOVEMBER LINE UP
Nov. 3rd - B.ad Habit
10th- NN
17th - Reloaded

"These winds are so
strong, we 're not trying to
fight this fire," said firefighter Jim Gelrud, an engineer from Vista, Cal if.
"We' re just trying to save
the buildings."
·
More than a dozen wildfires
blowing
·across
Southern California since
Sunday have also injured
more than 45 people,
including 21 firefighters.
The U.S. Forest Service earlier reported a fire death in
Los Angeles County's Santa
Clarita area, but officials
said Tuesday that information was erroneous.
In San . Diego County,
authorities placed evacuation calls to more than
. 346,000 homes, said Luis
Monteagud9, a spokesman
for the county's emergency
effort. Based on census and
other county data, 560,000
people were ordered to
leave, said Ron Roberts,
chairman of the San Diego
Board of Supervisors.
"It's basically a mass
migration here ~n San Diego
County. The numbers we're
seeing are staggering," said
Luis · Monteagudo,
a
spokesman for the county's
emergency effort.
By Tuesday evening,
some 50,000 people in San
Diego were being, allowed
to return homes near the
ocean. as well as portions of
the city of Poway, Roberts
said. No homes were lost in
these neighborhoods.
President Bush, who
planned to visit the region
Thursday, declared a federal
emergency for seven counties, a move that will speed
disaster-relief efforts.
The sweeping devastation
was reminiscent of blazes
that tore through Southern
California four years ago,
killing 22 and destroying
3.640 homes.
The ferocity of the Santa
Ana winds in 2003 forced
crews to discard their traditional strategy .and focus on
keeping up with the fire and
·putting out spot blazes that
threatened homes.

_,--------------------------.,.

BY THE BEND

The Daily 'Sentinel

PageA3
Wednesday, October 24, 2007

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

FAMILY MEDICINE

Can't write out a will on a napkin

Time for nearly
everyone to get vaccine

BY KATHY MITCHELl.
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: My husband
and I have been married for
17 years, and we have a
blended family. For a long
time, I have suggested we
make out legal wills to provide for each other. He
always has a reason not to do
it. I even bought will kits for
both of us in order to make it
easy. His is still sitting on his
desk, right where I put it.
·
My stepchildren are all
adults now. Not long ago,
they told me (they didn't
ask) what they want from
our house when their dad •.
dies. Some of those items
are my family heirlooms,
intended for my daughter.
This made me nervous. ·
Consequently, I asked my
· .husband to make uta will.
so I would be protecte&lt;l
legally. He insi sts we don ' t
have to waste money on
.attorneys fees because we
live in Oregon, a community property state. and all we
have to do is write our wishes down on a piece of paper
and sign it.
· Is that true ': I support us
because my husband is disabled, though his Social
Security supplements our

in~ome. We have little savings and ·no · real property. .
We have a few financial
investments, but they don ' t
amount to much. Our personal possessions make up
most of the estate.
I feel insecure without a
legal will, especially when
his children are already actil)g like they are entitled to
whatever they wan:. I don't
trust them. The last time I
asked him about this, we got
into an argument and I told
him if he wouldn't protect
me, I wanted a divorce. I' II
happily eat a plate of crow if
it is legally binding to write
down your wishes on a
piece of paper and sign it.
- Insecure in Oregon
Dear Oregon: No crow
for you. Your husband is
wrong. According to the
Oregon Attorney General's
Office, Oregon is NOT a
community property state.
And although your husband
can write a will on a napkin,
it must be signed, witnessed
and notarized in order to be,
legal. Please contact an
estate attorney immediately
lo be sure both of you are
protected.
Dear Annie: My mom and
dad were married for 46
years ~md divorced two years

Community Calendar .
Public meetings
Thursday, Oct. 25
RACINE
Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency hearing, accept
comments, on American
Municipal Power-Ohio's
Draft Air Pollution Control
Permit, 6:30 p.m., Southern
Elementary School cafetorium.
Thesday, Nov. 6
REEDSVILLE -Olive
Township Trustees, 7:30p.m.,
Olive Township Garage.

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Oct. 25
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053 meets at
7:30p.m.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville
Senior
Citizens meeting, II a.m.
Blood pressure s taken,
·potluck luncheon .
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters,
II :30
a.m.

Thursday, Pizza Hut.
RACINE
Racine
American .Legion Auxiliary,
regular meeting, 7:15 p.m.,
the Girl's State Basket will
be at the meeting. ·
'Friday, Oct. 26
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Chapter 255,
Order of the Eastern Star,
annual installation of officers, 7:30p .m. Members to
furnish potluck.
Sunday, Oct. 28
RACINE
. Pomeroy/Racine · Lodge
#164
to
host
Awards/Friendship afternoon at lodge in Racine.
Open to Masons, their family and friends, interested
public. Refreshments.

Reunions
Saturday, Oct. 27
RACINE- The John Dill
and Grace Bumgardner family will have a reunion at the
home of Buddy and Sally
Ervin, 29549 Oak Grove
Rd, Racine. There will be a

ago. My parents mostly your ·phone number. Would
avoid each other. Dad never you want some pervert
Question: Every year tected environment , you
badmouths my mom, nor doing this to gain access to
about
this time you write a should gel the shot instead
does he date. Mom has gone your family?
column
on flu shots . Is there of the intranasal vaccine.
out a few times, but she
Another thing that bothers
anything
new on them?
The
vaccine
supply
doesn't like any of the men me is when newspapers run
she's met. Her favorite say- pictures of kids and print the Should I get a flu shot again should be plentiful this year,
ing is, "Who needs them?" child's full name. All news- this year? My daughter says as has not always been the
She is a bitter person.
. papers should stop this prac- my grandktds had their case in recent years. Now,
I'd like to fix up my dad tice immediately for the kid's shots last week to keep me while you are thinking about
with a woman r work with. safety. - A Concerned from getting sick. I didn't it, would be a good time to
know kids got flu shots. I call your family physician or ·
She's his age and )lad an Parent and Grandpa
guess
they are for every - local health department and
emotionally abusive marDear Parent: How unforone?
What
about the nasal arrange to get immunized
riage. My dad loves to have tunate that our ·world has
against tile flu.
a good time and has a great become such a frightening spray to prevent flu?
Answer:
Yes,
this
time
of
If, de spite my sage
personality. What do you place. Store personnel often
year
is
flu
vaccination
time.
advice,
you do end up
think?-Sam
request a phone number, but
It
takes
about
two
weeks
putting it off and then
Dear Sam: It's sweet that you are not obligated to proto
after
you
get
a
flu
shot
remember in a month or so,
you want Dad to .be happy, vide it. And we agree that
develop
antibodies
to
the
don't
make the common
but you run a real risk of printing the full names of
flu,
and
the
vaccine
lasts
for
mistake
of thinking that it's
infuriating your mother. It's children in the newspaper
about
four
months.
January
too late. Flu shots can be
also possible that if things can create unanticipated
is
typically
the
peak
month
given
up to and even into
don't work out, your co- problems. How sad.
.
for
influenza,
so
late
fall
is
January
in many parts of
worker will be less thari corAnnie's Mailbox is writusually
the
right
time
for
the
country.
dial to you. But if you think ten by Kathy Mitchell and
There are no new recomneither woman will mind Marcy Sugar, longtime edi- your vaccination.
For
the
record,
though,
mendations
about flu vac(or you don't care that she tors of the Ann Landers
the
peak
of
flu
season
does
cine
this
year,
but · public
does), by all means set Dad column. Please e-mail your
to
year.
vary
from
year
he&lt;~lth
officials
are
putting
up and hope for the best.
· questions to anniesmailCenters
According
to
the
renewed emphasis .on its
Dear Annie: I discovered box@comcast.net, or write
for
Disease
Control
and
importance.
They are stressthat the "reverse phone to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
(CDC),
it
·
can
Prevention
ing
the
need
for nearly
Qjrectory" feature · allows Box 118190, Chicago, JL
·
occur
anywhere.
from
late
everyone
over
six
months of
anyone to put your phone 60611. To find out more
December
through
March.
age to get immunized. This
number in the computer and about Annie's Mailbox,
Last
year,
for
example,
we
is especially important for
get your complete name and and read features by other
had
one
of
these
atypical
·
people
with chronic disaddress, including a map to Creators Syndicate writers
years.
In
2006,
the
flu
seaeases
like
diabetes.
your home. All someone has and cartoonists, visit the
son
didn't
peak
until
the
end
If we all get our flu vacto do is stand in line behind Creators Syndicate Web
of
March,
a
time
when
it
is
cine,
it will help to reduce
you at a store and remember page at www.creators.com.
usually winding down.
the number of infections,
Just about everyone hospitalizations, and deaths
should get a flu shot. There from this disease. As a note
are, however, a few groups to myself and other healthof people · who should not · care· workers, the CDC recget one. A flu shot should ommends that we be among
not be given to people who the first in line for a flu shot.
carry-in dinner at I p.m. All Union Church. Guest singer, are . allergic to eggs. It The main reason for ' this is
relatives and friends are Jim Edens of Charleston. should !llso not be given to to help protect our patients.
welcome. For more infor- For more information call indi victuals who are moder- It's part of the National
mation, call 949-2136.
Paul Anderson, 742-2832.
ately ill and running a Patient Safety effort.
Monday, Oct. 29
CARPENTER
fever. These folks should
Family Medicine® is a
CHESTER
Shade Community Fellowship, 6- wait until they are better .to weekly column. To submit
River Lodge 453, special 8 p.m., Carpenter Baptist get a shot. Another group questions, write to Martha
meeting, 7 p.m. for purpose Church. Hog roast. Gaspe I that's usu~lly not given tlu A. Simpson, D.O., M.B.A.,
of. conferring the Master group, "Five Mile Pickers." shots are babies under six Ohio University College of
Mason degree on one candi- Open to all in community. months of age.
. Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
date. Evening designated as Contact Pastor Whitt Akers
As an alternative to flu Box 110, Athens, Ohio
Past
Masters
night. at 591-1236.
shots, there is an intranasal 45701, or via e-mail to
Refreshments.
influenza vaccine that's readerquestions ®familyavailable. This vaccine is medicinenews.org. Medical
administered by spraying information in this column
live - but weakened - flu is provided as an educaSaturday, Oct. 27
Friday, October 26
POMEROY - Margaret virus into the nose. There tional service only. It does
MIDDLEPORT- A free Andrews, formerly
of are,' however, more restric- not replace the judgment of
community dinner will be Pomeroy, will observe her tions on its use. It is current- your personal ·physician,
served from 4:30 to 6:15 90th birthday on Oct. 29. A ly only recommended for who should be relied on to
p.m. at the Middleport surprise open house will be people between the ages of diagnose and recommend
Church of Christ Family held on Oct. 27 from 2 to 4 five and 49 that are healthy. treatment for any medical
Life Center. Corner of Fifth p.m. at Carleton School Also, if you are a family conditions. Past columns
and Main in Middleport. gymnasium in Syracuse. member or close contact of are available online at
Soup beans and cornbread, Cards may be sent to her at an immunocompromised w ww.familymedicine. along with hot dogs with 37094 New Hope Road, person who requires a pro- news.org.
sauce and dessert will be Long Bottom, Ohio 457 43.
served. Everyone is welMIDDLEPORT. - lnzy
come.
Newell will be 82 on Oct.
Sunday, Oct. 28,
27 . Cards may be sent to her
CARPENTER - Gospel at 333 Page St., Middleport,
sing 6:30 p.m. at the Mt. Ohio 45760.

Church events

Birthdays

~~;;!~---Bear &amp; Basket Bingo

CHS Foundation offers scholarships

WOMEN·s

The Gll 1irnlis nrily TribJrE

Faint .Pl93Sarlt REgister
&amp; The

Win a bear in every

Daily Sentinel

presents

THE WOMEN OF
THE TRI- COUNTY

This special section, publishing October ~I st, is an excellent opportunity
for local businesswomen to tell their story, promote their business and
give their tips for success.
Not just for women who own their own business, but for all the women
who are the back bone of local successful businesses.
(Each ad will have lhe same layout to give everyone equal opportunity to tell their story.)
'

Contact your
Representative Today!

ST. PAUL, Minn. First-year agricultural students at two-year colleges
are invited to apply for one
of SO $150 scholarships
from the CHS Foundation,
the major giving entity of
CHS Inc., a leading energy
and gr~in - based foods company with a stewardship
focus on building vibrant
communities.
"Many
leaders
in
agribusiness, cooperatives·
and production agriculture
receive excellent training
from ·our nation's two-year
educational institutions,"
says Williarn J. Nelson,
CHS Foundation president.
"We're proud to offer this
scholarship program and ·
help plant seeds for a strong
future in the agriculture
industry."
For 2008, scholarships will
be awarded to agricultural
students from - or attending
- two-year colleges in the
following states: Colorado,
Idaho, Illinois, Indiana,
Iowa, Kan sas, Michigan,
Missouri,_
Minnesota,
Montana, Nebraska, North
Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, .
Oregon, South Dakota,
Texas , Utah, Washington,
Wisconsin and Wyoming.
Students must apply
before March I during their
first year of study. Funds

Dean's list

Gallipolis Daily Tribune 446-2342
Point Pleasant Register 675-1333
The Daily Sentinel 992-2155

ATHENS
- Ashley
Johnson of Coolville and
of
Elizabeth
Wilfong
Middleport were named to
the dean 's list at Ohio
University for the summer
.. '
term .

•

will be applied to their sec- "tiona! experiences.
ond-year costs. An indepen· The CHS Foundation
dent, external committee (www.chsfoundation.org) is
will select scholarship the major giving entity of
recipients based on essays, CHS
Inc.
transcripts and reference (www.chsinc.com), a diverletters. Students should visit sified energy, grains and
www.chsfoundation.org for foods Fortune 200 company
application forms and full committed to providing the
details.
essential resources that
Scholarship winners also enrich lives. With more than
have the opportunity to $28 million in · endowed
learn about valuable oppor- assets, the CHS Foundation
tunities su~h as internships, ·annually distributes $1.7
professional or leadership million ' through grants,
development
programs , scholarships and educationcareer openings and interna- al support.

Nov: 1st at 6:00 p.m.
Middleport Fire Station

!

Sponsored by the Middleport Community Association
Proceeds benefit the Community Holiday Celebrations.

15 games- 4 special games- $20.00

~~~~
IIIII

2nd chance drawing
50/50 drawing
Bear raffle
Advance ticket drawing
·

Door prizes

Advance tickets available at Ohio River Bear Co.,
Peoples Bank of Middleport &amp;
Meigs Co. Chamber of Commerce

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�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

·The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co ..
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

Gener().l Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exerdse thereof; or abridging the freedom
. of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
:people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
th~ Government for a redress ofgrievances.
-The First Am~ndmentto the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
·:Today is Wednesday, Oct. 24, the 297th day of 2007.
There are 68 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History :
On Oct. 24, 1945, the United Nations officially came into
existence as its charter took effect.
· On this date:
.In 1537, Jane Seymour, the third wife of England's King
Henry VIll, died 12 days after giving binh to Prince
Edward, later King Edward VI.
·: In 1648, the Peace of Westphalia ended the Thiny Years
War and effectively destroyed the Holy Roman Empire.
)n 1861 , the first transcontinental telegraph message was
~ent as Chief Justice Stephen J. Field of California transriiitted a telegram to President Abraham Lincoln.
In 190 I. widow Anna Edson Taylor became the first pers'on to go o' :: Niagara Falls in a barrel.
· 1n 1939, nylon stockings were sold publicly for the first
time, in Wilmington, Del.
:·In 1940, the 40-hour work week went into effect under
tbe Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938.
,' In 1952, Republican presidential candidate Dwight D.
Eisenhower declared in Detroit, "I shall go to Korea" as he
promised to end the conflict. (He made the visit over a
month later.)
·
,. In 1987, 30 years after it was expelled, the Teamsters
union was welcomed back into the AFL-CIO. (However,
the Teamsters disafilliated themselves from the AFL-CIO
in 2005.) .
·
Ten years ago: Setting the stage for an upcoming summit,
President Bill Clinton rejected calls for a confrontational
approach to China, arguing that isolating the Chinese
would be "potentially dangerous.'' In Arlington, Va., former
NBC sponscaster Marv Alben was spared a jail sentence
after a grudging counroom apology to the woman he'd bitten during a sexual romp.
·
··· ·Five years ago: Authorities arrested Army veteran John
Allen Muhammad and teenager Lee Boyd Malvo near
Myersville, Md., in connection with the Washington-area
s11~per attacks. (Malvo was later sentenced to life in prison
without the possibility of parole in Virginia and Maryland;
Muhammad was sentenced to death in Virginia, and to life
iif prison in Maryland.) The San Francisco Giants defeated
the Anaheim Angels, 16-4, to take a 3-games-to-2 lead in
the World Series.
··
:One year ago: American officials unveiled a tim.eline for
Iraq's Shiite-led government to take specific steps to calm .
~aghdad and said more U.S. troops might 'be needed to
quell the bloodshed. The St. Louis Cardinals gained a 2-to. l World Series edge as they defeated the Detroit Tigers 50. (Before Game 3 began, baseball players and owners
finalized a live-year collective bargaimng agreement.)
: Thought for Today: "Seek not the favor of the multitude;
It is seldom got by honest and lawful means. But seek the
lestimony of the few; ·and number not voices, but weigh
them ." - Immanuel Kant, German philosopher (17241804).

: Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
ihan 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
'Unsigned letters will, be published. Letter!· should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals. will not be accept'fd for publication.

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Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Cheney 2008
Rudy ?
Fred?
Mitt?
McCain?
How
about
Cheney?
Lynne Cheney, that is.
The beloved wife, mother
and grandmother is an •
accomplished historian and
the author of more than I0
books, several of them best
sellers. As a former
National Endowment for
the Humanities chairman
and current
American
Enterprise Institute fellow,
Mrs. Cheney has also been
married to a White House
chief of staff, defense secretary and vice president .giving her intimate knowledge of the ins and outs of
Washingtbn. She seems to
know her way .around the
media as well.
Recently, · Mrs. Cheney
has been touring to ptomote
her new book, "Blue Skies,
No Fences: A Memoir of
Childhood and Family"
(Pocket Books), going on
nearly every talking"head
show, including the hosiile
"The Daily Show.': Having
no fear going on Jon
Stewart's patronizing comedy news show is quite a feat
but should be no surprise.
Mrs. Cheney is a woman
who knows how to make

Kathryn

Lopez

herself heard.
Recall that in a 2004
debate, Sen. John Kerry, DMass., tried to use the
Cheneys ' daughier, who is
gay, against President Bush,
who supports a federal
amendment to protect traditional marriage. Lynne
Cheney shot back the next
day, calling it "a cheap and
tawdry political trick" and
that Kerry "is not a good
man" for lowering himself.
Or lind more proof in that
mu.ch-viewed YouTube of
her having at Wolf Blitzt:r
when he decided to grill her
on U.S. ' torture policy
instead of her children's
book. She not only ably
defended the administration, but also turned the
tables on the veteran n·ewsman, scolding CNN for airing enemy propaganda qu,ite unconventional and

daring, as Mrs. Cheney used
co-host
CNN's
to
"Crossfi re." Mrs. Cheney
breaks the political mold in
every situation she is presented.
Rather than join the conventional chorus that venerates former Democratic
presidents, Mrs. .C heney
bridled when asked about
Jimmy Caner's description
of her husband as a "militant." " I really los! respect
for Jimmy Caner in 1991. ...
He didn ' t like the idea that
we were going to get a
United Nations resolution to
kick Saddam Hussein out of
Kuwait. And so, he, as a for- .
mer president, took it upon
himself to write heads of
. state, urging them not to let
their representatives in the
United Nations vote for the
resolution, supporting the·
action in Kuwait. You know
that - he really has crossed
some kind of line here.''
Lynne Cheney loves her
country and won't let anyone tear it down - TV network or former president.
And while I don) agree
with her on every policy
issue- she's against a federal amendment to protect
traditional m11rriage - I

'64.20

Outalde Meigs County
13 Weeks
'53.55
26 Weeks
' 107. 10
52 Weeks
'21 4.21

Wednesday, October 24,2007

find her demeanor and
approach to life overwhelmingly refreshing. Unlike so
many female pols, she goes
after whar she wants. It's
natural for her. "Blue Skies"
is a delightful memoir of
·more innocent days, reaffirming that there's no gender-victimization whining
with Mrs. Cheney. ·
She writes: "It never
occurred to me that my
chances of doing this were
diminished because I was a
girl. ... My first-grade readers might show mothers at
home and fathers off at
work, but I saw my mother
working and my grand~nother, too."
The best reason to back
Lynne Cheney for president,
though, is the sheer fun of
it: She would shake up the
race, and she would make
watching it a treat. The
woman k·nows what she
wants to say and says it
well. I think we have a candidate.
(Kathryn Lopez is the editor of National Review
Online (www.nationalreview.com). She can be contacted at klopez@nationa/review. com.)

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

For the Record

. PORTLAND Patricia Ann "Patty" Dailey
Gluesencamp Lawrence, 61, of Portland, went home to be
with the Lord on Monday, Oct. 22, 2007.
Patty was born Aug. 9, 1946, in Ponland. She was the
daughter of the late James and Icy Congo Dailey. Besides
her parents, she was preceded in death by her ftrst husband
of 19 years, Lawrence R. Gluesencamp, Jr.; two brothers,
James, ~umor and Johnnie Dailey; a sister, Betty Ward; her
fathers-m-law and mother-in-law, Lawrence R. and Albina
Gluesencamp Sr., and Clarence G. Lawrence; brothers-inlaw, Cliff Connolly and Julius "Bud" Gluesencamp; grandparents, Ofa and E~ther Dailey and Dudley and Sara Congo.
Sh~ leaves behmd a husband of 24 years, c:Iarence
Melvm Lawrence; sisters, Barbara Connolly, Ponland, and
Max me (Thomas) White, Chester; and brother, Melvin
(Judy) Dailey, Long Bottom.
Also surviving are her mother-in-law, . Iva Lawrence,
Ponland; brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law: James "Gene"
Ward, Ponland, James (Barbara) Lawrence, Syracuse,
Brenda (Joe) Johnson, Ponland, and Bryan (Annie)
Lawrence, Ponland; stepson Jeremy (April) Lawrence,
Che.ster; and stepdaughter, Melody .(Dut.chie) McKay,
Racme; granddaughters, Kristin McKay and Shauna Clark;
great grand daughter Addisyn Riley Clark; 19 nieces and
nephews; .several great nieces and ,nephews and special
fnends: Lmda Ward, Jane Rigsby, Cheyenne McMeeken,
Adalrne Summers and Gracie Hill.
Patty was a homemaker, friend and neighbor to many
people. She fought a long and hard battle with cancer.
Many will miss her.
Funeral will be at 2 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 25, 2007, at
Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine, with Pastor David
Datley officiating. Burial will follow at the Browning
·
·
Cemetery m Ponland.
• Friends may call from 5-8 p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2007
at the funeral home. Expressions of sympathy may be sent to
the family by visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.

Marriage
licenses
POMEROY - Marriage
licenses were issued in
Meigs County Probate Court
to: Ryan Keith Marshall, 22,
and Cheray Chrisfine Dunn,
24, Middlepon, and Stephen
Adam Jenkins, 28, and
Tosha Nichol Shiltz, 24,
Pomeroy.

.Foreclosures
POMEROY - Actions
for foreclosure were filed in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Coun hy Deutsche
Bank National Trust Co.,
Irvine,
Calif.,
against
Melissa Fields, · Syracuse;
Lasalle Bank, Pittsburgh,
Pa., against John M. Spires,

Edu~ation

MY MIND...
1 DON'T WANT TO

&amp;E DUMBlEDORE

FOR HAlLOWEEN.

Rutland, and others; and by
Beneficial Ohio, Inc .,
Elmhurst, Ill., against Roger
A. Westfall, Reedsville , and
others.

Civil suits
POMEROY
- -Civi l
actions were filed in Meigs
County Common .Pleas
Court ,by James K. Dailey,
Athens, against Richard L.
Dailey, Guysville, and
Franklin ·
T.
Love,
Cleveland, and others,
against Tommy W. Adams,
Madison, N.C., and others.

Sentenced
POMEROY -The following were sentenced · in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Coun:

• Danny L Morgan, on a
motion to revoke community control , 18 months for
vandalism, 18 months for
grand theft, to be served
consecutively to 18 month
sentence on charge of
unlawful sex ual co nduct
with a minor.
• Victor Counts, 18 months
for forgery, one year for
theft, to be served consecutively. Sentences were suspended and defendant was
placed on community corrections program. Ordered to
pay $26,910.85 restitution to
the Ohio Depanment of
Natural Resources· Division
of Watercraft.
• Ronald J. Harmon , one
year each on counts of
receiving stolen property
and forgery, suspended.
Ordered
to
complete
SEPTA program and terms

Bv JULIE CARR SMYTH
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

COLUMBUS - School
superintendents, and even
prosecutors, are failing to
repon teacher misconduct
to the state and should be
penalized, Ohio · education
officials told a legislative
panel Tuesday.
The lack of teeth in a new
law aimed at cracking down
on misbehaving teachers
was one of the explanations
they gave members of the
House
Education
Committee for a pattern of
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- SFC Harry J. Carry, U.S. unchecked
disciplinary
Army Ret., 70, of Wilmington, N:c. and formerly of Point problems recently reponed
Pleasant, W.Va. died Sunday, Oct. 21,2007, at Lower Cape by The Columbus Dispatch.
Fear Hospice Center in Wilmington.
. "I take the work of protectHe was the husband of Eva Graham Carry.
ing children and creating safe
Funeral will be held at I p.m., Friday, Oct. 26, 2007; at classrooms very seriously, as
the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, with does the state Board of
Roben L. Patterson, II., officiating. Burial will (ollow: in Education," said Susan Tave
Kirkland Memorial Gardens near Point Pleasant.
Zelman, superintendent 'of
Friends may call the funeral home from 2 until 4 and 6
public instruction in Ohio.
until 8, Thursday at the funeral home. Memorial contribu- ·
tions may be made to a hospice of choice.
.
Online condolences may be expressed to the family at
crowhussell@ suddenlinkmail.com.

Deaths

"One child put in harm's way
is one too many."
· The newspaper reported
widespread
disciplinary
problems, including abuse
of children, assault and
theft, among working teachers'. It also revealed that
Zelman's department was
aware of fewer than 22 percent of the 189 disciplinary
investigations conducted
last year by , Ohio's I 0
largest school districts.
An i nvestigution published
later by The
Associated Press found
more than 2,500 sexual misconduct cases nationwide
over five years in which
educators were. punished for
actions from bizarre to
sadistic. That number represents a smull fraction of the
3 million public school
teachers nationwide, but
sti II apds up to three cases
for every school day. · •

Adrian Allison, executive
director of urban policy at the
Ohio
Depanment
of
Education, said law enforcers
and local sc hool districts are
riot always reponing teacher
misconduct as they should.
In addition , other laws
play a role in the 'problem,
he said.
One Ohio law identifies
criminal offenses that disqualify people fn~m teaching - but dQesn't apply
those prohibitions to teachers currently in the classroom. Another law specifically prohibits public di sclosure of teacher disciplinary files. A third makes it a
crime for instances of child
abuse to be revealed.
"We recognize that everyone has a stake in this issue
and intend to do everything
we can, within the confines
of the law, to ensure transparency," he said.

Let~

take a·holiday from the holidays

Each year the retailers
bars, we'd hit two or three
stan pushing the holidays
times. I would visit first as a
on us earlier and earlier.
ghost with an old sheet over
This year, the ad~ started
my head, then as a .Roman
showing up in September.
senator in a sheet toga, and
for a third time as Lawrence
The kids are already talking
Jim
of Arabia with the sheet
about what they want to get,
Mullen
secured . to my head
parents are already putting
Bedouin-style with a belt.
up outside lights and decorations and planning big
Halloween was the one
dinners
and
spending
day of the year when chiiThe way I remember it, dren could act like little
money like there's no
tomorrow. Of course, I am we carved a pumpkin the devils and go around blacktalking about the biggest weekend before. A big mailing adults into giving
holiday of the year - · toothy thing, obviously them treats, which is pretty
done by enthusiastic but much what we did every
Halloween.
children, not
Who doesn't fondly unskilled
something that looks like other day of the year, but
remember their parents Martha Stewart spent a without, the costumes. .
spending hours hanging up week on it. Hanging spooky , I don t want to s?und hke
fancy, expensive outdoor holiday decorations in the the ghost of Halloween
Halloween lights, address- trees outside our house P~st, but when dtd thts fun,
ing aild mailing their never occurred to us. And mmor hohday get ~lown up
Halloween cards, and buy- when we went trick-or- mto New Year s . Eve,
ing "Lord of the Rings"- treating you were lucky if Christmas
,
and
quality costumes for all you got two or three candy Thanksg!ving combined?. If
their kids . Who doesn't bars the whole night. 1 think the greetmg-card compantes
recall with a warm glow my mother gave out candy and the retailers can do it to
jack-o '- corn one year - one kernel Halloween , they can do it to
downloading
lantern paitern s off the per child. I don ' t remember any hohday.
,
Internet and then having the anyone complaining.
How long before we have
images of Freddy Kruger
Not that my brothers and to start buying our kids prephoto engraved onto their sisters were there to see her sents for the Summer
pumpkins? Who ca·nnot dole it out; we were all long Solstice? How are you decremember Mom buying gone trying to score as orating your house 'this year
bags of $2 candy bars for much swag as we could. for Arbor Day? You say you
the neighborhood ghouls?
The good houses, the ones don't have the time? Well, I
Yeah, 11Je neither.
that gave away e ntire candy don 't have the time, either. I

make the time.
How many people have
you invited to your
"People's Choice Awards"
night feast? Have you sent
out your Cinco de Mayo
cards yet? What's the matter
with you? It's only seven
months away. Better get
cracking.
And don't forget, if retailers have their way, you'll
have to buy presents · for
every one of these holidays.
Not just for your children,
but for your spouse, for
your siblings, for your inlaws, for your co-workers
and your boss. Not j1,1st any
old present, but something
you had to obsess over for
weeks and weeks.
If you give your siste~ the
waffle iron for Groundhog
Day instead of the neck
massager she's been asking
for, it coo ld cause bad feeling for years. And isn't that
the point of most holidays?
Face it, if it's not stressful,
is it really a holiday.
(lim Mullen is the aut/tor
of ''It Takes a Village Idiot:
Complicating tire Simple
Life " and "Baby's First
Tattoo. " You can reach him
at jim_mullen@myway.com.)

Chamber
from PageA1
Marshall University, retired
from the NFL after the 2006
season and was considered
one of the best long snappers in the NFL. He r.layed
!3 years with teams hke the
Kansas City Chiefs, Green
Bay Packers, New England
Patriots and Philadelphia
·Eagles. At Marshall, he was
a two-year starter and threeyear letterman earning allSouthern Conference honors as a senior and helping
lead Marshall to the
Division 1-AA national
championship in 1992.

Data
from PageA1
percent increase in unemployment, from 7 percent in
August to 7. 7 in September.
Washington County was the
only other area county to
see the rate drop, from 5 . I
percent in August to 4.8 the
following month, a decrease
of three-tenths of a percent.
The state said that Ohio's
unemployment rate was 5.9
percent ·i n September, up
from 5.7 percent in August.
The number of workers

POMEROY - Divorces
were granted m Meigs
County Common Pleas
Cou·n to Floyd K. Holliday
from Diana L. Holliday,
Jacki Linda Day from
Jeffrey Allen Day, and to
Robert L. Barnhart from
Margaret A. Barnhart.

Grand jury
POMEROY
-Meigs
County Grand Jury will
conve.ne on Nov. 14.

Zelman, Allison and Staie
School Board member
Virgil Brown emphasized
that the teachers in the
Dispatch repon are a small
minority of the total.
"Please bear in mind th&amp;t
thi s number ·represents
very small number of Ohio's
155 ,000 teachers currently
in classrooms," Zelman
said. "The overwhelming
majority of Ohio's teacher~
are dedicated professionals
and they do an excellent jo,b
mentoring and educating
Ohio's students."
Zelman said the state will
make some immediate
changes to address the problem, including posting a calendar of disciplinary hearings, revamping its Web site
for easier public access, ar;tcj
reporting all discipline cases,
not just revoked and· su~­
pended teaching ·licenses, to
federal education ofticials.

a

from PageA1
Frymyer noted that the
trail at Camp Kiashuta ·is
open year round free of
char15e. Camping at the.
facihty is also available foc
a nominal fee by contacting
Fry111yer at 696-1285.
.
Scout executive Franks
noted that the Tri-State ArelJ
Council, BSA, serves 6,000
youth in I 0 counties in .
Kentucky, Ohio and West
Virginia through 2,000 volunteers. For infC)rmation OJ!
Camp Kiashuta and how to
become involved in scouting, call 304-523-3408.

'A't

~·

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:

~

i..

.·

....

~~-

\

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0

-~ ~
.....

;;

I'F.RFOil' liS4; ~RTSC'E.\l"llt

Submitted photo

Some of the scouts and cubs pose on the swinging bridge fo llowing Sunday's dedication .

Haunted Theater
Oct. 25 • 31st

I'lartrum recently received Camp which helps raise which will now include
Portland, Chester, the Long
the Distinguished Alumni funds for local charities.
In addition to Bartrum's Bottom-Reeds vi lie
area
Award during Alumni
Plains.
Tuppers
Weekend at Marshall.
speech, the recognition and
Locally, Banrum has been dinner will feature the pre- Township trustees will
active in the Meigs Local sentation
of
several chose the recipients for
Alumni Association and the awards, including · the those areas which are not
Meigs Local Enrichment Community ·
Service incorporated villages.
Foundation, the latter of Awards whose recipients
The chamber membership
which hopes to develop a are chosen by mayors or votes on the Best First
Impression ,
Economic
multi-purpose complex at other local officials.
the Meigs Local campus in . In previous year the J·mpact and Entrepreneur of
Rocksprings that will create ' chamber only presented the Year Awards. These balopponunities for enhanced these awards to people ·in lots should be submitted to
academic and extra-curricu- the incorporated villages Donovan by Oct. 29. The
lar programs for students such
as . Middleport, Chamber's board members
Pomeroy, Rutland, Racine will vote on the David P.
and the community.
Bartrum has also been and Syracuse . However, Baker Award. All awards
involved in a youth flag this year Donovan said she will be presented at the
football league held in thought it would be a good . recognition dinner. ·
Meigs County and the annu- idea to recognize more peo- . Sponsorship opponunities
al Banrum Brown Football ple from more communities for the dinner include the
unemployed in Ohio in
September was 355,000, up
from 337,000 in August and
328,000 a year ago.
.
The September unemployment rate for Ohio was
up ·from 5.5 percent in
September 2006.
State Job · and Family
Services Director Helen
Jones-Kelley says hiring
remained
sluggish
in
September. She says a small
gain in goods-producing
employment in September
was offset by declines in the
service sector.
(The Associated .Press
contributed to this story.)

Divorces

Scouts

After 27 years, couple
surprised with wedding·photos
MANSFIELD (AP) - A cried and cried and hugg~d
couple won't mark their him," Cline said afterward,
27th anniversary until . tearing up again.
Thursday, but they've
She recalled bein~ a new
already received the [;lfrfect bride at 18 and admiring the
gift: the wedding ptctures pictures,, but feeling heartthey couldn't afford ~hen sick because she and her
husband, Mark, who was 19
they married as teenagers.
Their
photographer at the time, didn't have
showed up last week at the $150 to pay for them.
All these years, the Clines
diner where Karen Cline
works and surprised her have had just one wedding
with a photo album from picture that someone else
·
her big dav in 1980.
took, of her walking down
"Abr , ' " month ago, I the aisle.
wHs iL• ' 1, •ning out some
Wagner said he was able
&gt;1 111y old thit.gs and I found to track down Karen Cline
,,., said photographer Jim after running into her stepWagner, who 's now 80. "I father a few weeks ago.
When the photographer
knew she didn ' t have any
showed
up in the diner, she
money back then, and I just
thought she might like to wrote him a check for the
long-awaited $150 - and
have it."
that's
when he cried, she said.
"I just stood there a11d

of probation. Restitution of
$4 , 69~ . 08
to
Home
National Bank..
• April Counts, 18 .months
for forgery, one year f~r
theft, suspended. Five yeaFs
Community Corrections.

officials want better reporting of teacher misconduct

Harry J. Carry

I1VE CHANGED

The Daily Sentinel• Page A5

'

Patricia •Patt( Lawrence

-

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

~ Reader Services

PageA4

4 miles off
-12 miles east of Athena on Co. Rd
At Stewart, OH • Owner Billy Jarrell
Race Day Ph: 740'662-4111 Week Day Ph: 304·542~-83;!2

Saturdav. Oct 27, 2007
Late Models
$1,500 to win, $175 to start
410 Winged Sprints
$1,500 to win , $200 to start
All other classes- AMRA Modlfleds, Pure Stock,
Outlaw Streets, Mini-Wedges, Four Cylinders

General Admission $15· Pits $30
· Racing Sat. Nov. 3rd 2007 - Weather PermiHing
Gates Open at 4- Warm-ups 6pm- Racing at 7 pm
RACING TIL THE SNOW FLIES SAT NIGHTS IN 2007
Call before you come· aher 10-27-07
I

silver level,.$200, eight dinner tickets, name in the program; gold level, $300, two
dinner tickets, name in program, banner displayed;
platinum level, $400, two
dinner tickets, name in program, banner displayed ,
e)(po table at the event.

Ohio Valley ..
Symphony .
November3
8:00pm
Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH (740) 44S.ARTS

"Pumpkinport" 2007
Saturday, October 27
Dave Diles Park

Middleport, Ohio

Co s-tu !VIe

Judging

Halloween pictures
(Courtesy of
Peoples Bank)

2:00 • 7:00 pm ·Arts &amp; Crafts Show .
3:00 -7:00 pm· Sponge Bob Inflatable House
4:00 pm· Donna Wilson w/ghost stories
6:00 pm • Big Bend Cloggers
pm • Carved pumpkin &amp; costume judging
7:30pm· Announcement of Winners

..

�•

PageA6

LOCAL • STATH
Girl scouts donate supplies Local Weather

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 24,

Forecast for Wedneaday, Oct. 24

city/Region
High I Low temps

.,

Dayton•~

. 58" t 42"

~

.

I
I
!

~

t:_____:)

locAL SCHEDULE

7.32
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 36.74
Collins (NYSE) - 74.31
DuPont (NYSE) - 46.81
US Bank (NYSE) - 31.70
Gannett (NYSE) - 42.33
General Electric (NYSE) -

PA

t:____:)

*ColumbUs
59" t 43"

t:.._____:)

56° 144°

f'

40.48
Ha~ey-Davldoon

( NYSE) -

48.77
Cincinnati
•63" 146'"' .

•'

JP Morgan (NYSE) - 45.94 .
Kroger ( NYSE) - 28.41
Limited Brands ( NYSE) - 21.76
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) - 54
Qak Hill Financial (NASDAQ) -

'•

29.42
SubmHted photo

Brownie and girl scout troops of Meigs County contributed to the Make a Difference Day
program of the Senior Citizens Center. Presenting school supplies to Diana Coates, RSVP
director. nght, were from th e left,' front. were Elena Musser and Kaleigh Scott, representIng Meigs Brown1e Troop 5878, and Ashley Buchanan, representing Syracuse Brownie
troop 58 79: and back. Hailey Wilson from Southern Junior Troop 1204, Brittany Cogar and
Ashley Deem representing Big Bend CadettejSenior Troop 1 208, and Abbie Houser from
Southern Ju111or Troop 1204, Southern Brownie Troop 1037 also donated items.

4-Hers taking .part in 'Make a Difference Day'
POMEROY Meigs
County's4rH youth will be
JOining people everywhere
s-aturday doing projects
geared to making their communities a little better, all as
a part of the national obserof "Make
a
vance
Difference Day."
. The 4-H Fashion Board,
4: H Teen Leaders and other
4-H youth will be making a
difference by constructing
blankets, hats, and scarves

to be distributed to Meigs fleece (at least I yard
Countians.
pieces) are being collected
The corru1,nmity is invited at the Extension ot'tice.
to join the 4-Hers in making a
This program is being
difference in Meigs County. supported hy the Richard
The program will begin at 9 and Nancy Stahl Family 4a.m. on Saturday and go until 1-1 Endowment Fund with
12:30 p.in. at,OSU Extension the Ohio 4-H Foundation
Office lo.;ated in the County and the Meigs County 4-H
Annex building next to the Committee.
·
Holzer Medical Clinic.
For more it~f"ormutiun
For those who cann'ot contact Cassie Turner.
attend Saturday but would Meigs
County . 4-H
like to he! p, donations of ·Educator, at 992-6696.

.Holzer Clinic announces Access Clinic opening
GALLIPOLIS - The ,
goal of the Access Clinic is
to make it easy for residents
iu the Gallia and surrounding counties to establish with
a primary care physician.
Many fami lies in the area
r¢Jy on Urgent Care and the
E,plergency Roo.m to prov.~de .primary care services
which are more expensive
aii.d lack continuity of care.

The Access Clinic can and what type of primary care
will help.
physician would most suitThe Access Clinic is ably meet the needs of the
staffed by a cert.illed nurse patient. The patient does not
practitioner, Jda Evans, and have the hassle of trying to
in most cases patients can be llnd their own physician.
seen within a couple of days.
The Access Clinic is locaiThis concept offers people a ed adjacent from Family
chance to be evaluated and Practice clinic on the first
treatment started. Once the ·floor of the main clinic in
evaluation is complete, a Gallipolis. Phone 441,3296
determination is made as to for an appointment

Police: Teen -calm after arrest
in mother's .death, father's injury
BY M.R. KROPKO
ASSOCIATED PRES S WR1TER

:wELLINGTON- A 16year-old boy accused of
tll.urder and attempted murder in the shootings of his
parents remained calm when
speaking with investigators,
expressing sorrow but otherwise showi ng almost no
emotion, a law enforcement
official said Tuesday.
·
·'We've talked to him a
couple of times," said
I.;orain County Sheriff's
Capt. Rich Resendez. "He's
been cooperative in relaying
(letails. It seem s like he ' s

~Tric k

trying to tie up some loose
ends, at least in his mind.
He said he was sorry, and he
did request we pass on his
concern to his family, and
we did that."
Daniel Petrie was arrested
Saturday after his mother,
Sue Petrie, 43, was shot and
killed in her home in the
small rural community of
Brighton Township, about
40 miles southwest of
Cleveland.
The boy's father, the Rev.
Mark Petrie, 45, is pastor of
New Life Assembly of God
in Wellington, a few miles
from his home. Petrie was

...,

or treat

CHESTER - Trick or treat will be held in Chester from 6
to 7 p.m. on Oct. 30.

•
Trick or Treat will be from 6-7 p.m. on _

MIDDLEPORT Qct. 25 in Middleport.

POMEROY - Trick or treat will be froin 6-7 p.m. , Oct. 25.
SYRACUSE - Trick or treat will be from 6-7 p.m ., Oct.
25. Residential streets will be closed to through traffic
ttiough Ohio 124 will remain open .
R.ACINE -' Trick or treat will be from 6-7 p.m., Oct. 25.

~UTLAND - Tricker treat will be {rom 6-7 p.m .. Oct. 25 .
PORTLAND -

p.m., Oct. 25.

Trick or treat will be held"from 6-7:30

'fETART FALLS - Tric k or treat wiil be held from 6-7
p.m.,
Oct. ?_s.

.

tjARRISONVILLF. - Trick or treat has. heen set for 6-7
j)!1l1., Thursday, Oct. 25 fo r the Paigeville, Harrisonville
a:iea. The lire signal fro m the Scipio Township Fire
Oepanment will signal the start and end of trick or treat.
Q:&gt;stume JUdging will follow after trick or treat at the fire
Clepanme nt.
'"

...

WOLF PEN - Trick or treat has been set for 6-7 p.m :,
J'tlesday, Ocl. 30 .
.

-..

I&gt;ANVIL.LE - Trick or trcm has been set for 6-7 . p.m..
Monday, Ocl. 2&lt;!.
·

shot in the face and remained
in critical condition Tuesday
at MetroHealth Medical
Center in Cleveland.
A bullet remained ln the
clergyman's lower: jaw,
Resendez said.
Sheriff's deputies found
Mark Petrie's 9 mm semi au·
tomatic pistol at the Petrie _
home. The weapon is being
examined as part of the
investigation.
Resendez said the boy has
been calm and easy to speak
with.

weather Underground • AP

Wednesday••• Rain in the
morning ... Then rain likely
in the afternoon. Cooler
with highs in the upper 50s.
North winds 5 to 10 mph.
Chance of rain 80 percent.
Wednesday night. .. Mostly
cloudy. A slight chance of
showers in the evening. Lows
in the upper 40s. Northeast
winds 5 to I 0 mph. Chance of

..

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Champion (NASDAQ) - 5.96
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) -

58° 142"

56" I 41 "

OHSAA football ratings, Page BZ

•

57.24

Toledo•
Youngstown •

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

AEP ( NYSE) - 46.29
Aluo (NASDAQ)- 83
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 61.48
Big Lots ( NYSE)- 26.33
Bob Evans (NASDAQ[ - 28.65
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 95.67
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) -

r,1,tCrl,,

Mansfield •

Inside

Local Stocks

Today's Forecast

}.

2007

•

rain 20 percent.
Thursday ••. Mostly
cloudy with a 20 percent
9hance of showers. Highs in
the mid 60s. Northeast
winds 5 to .10 mph.
Friday and Friday
night .•• Showers
likely.
Highs in the mid 60s. Lows
in the mid 50s: Chance of
rain 60 percent.

£oplag

.

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. ( NASDAQ) -25
BBT ( NYSE) - 36. 77
Peoptvs (NASDAQ)- 25.79
Pepsico (NYSE) - 71.53
Premier (NASDAQ) - 14.45
Rockwell (NYSE) - 67.40
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 6.83
Royal Dutch Shell - 83.72
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) -

136.30
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 43.93
Wendy'a !NYSE) - 33.80
Worthington ( NYSEJ - 24.58
Dally stock repOrta are the 4
p.m. ET closing quoteo of tran&amp;- •
actions lor Oct. 23, 2007, provided by Edward Jones ftnanclal
advisors laaac Milia In Galllpollo
at ( 740) 441-9441 Md Leatay
Marrero In Point Pleasant at
(304) 674-0174. Member StPC.

Grief

lharbtg The BoUdays
• Silt "Melt PI'4PWD ~ fkgil•t~ Nowmber 6, 2007
· ·'fllcsda)' ~
• ,.. .... Wlcy lbpilll Mc:Ncill Coafama: Room

• $:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.
• L.i&amp;t*Wt-..as will be serfild
• FREE to dtte plblic

•l.tewi·- ·-

• PI tn ...UI'te1nd ~ R~ (lOot) 67$.'11400

•

81n 111h• ,.,,,.
.~,"'-Grief''~ '\\u ~

.,.c.Qf~~~

··~-~. . Oib..

• .~~0.

·~ ~ lb!Wf 'f\lilklWWfla\GMfl% Ntw
•~11tfllM•l'lr•Al«l..fi

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPICE
unt VWSJa«t•"*"'mn., wv.(304) 675-7400

POMEROY - A schedule of upcoming high
school varsity spon lng events invol'o'mg
1eams from Meigs County.

Today'• game
District Tournament Volleyball
11) Eas1em versus (4) Whiteoak at
Wellston High School, 6 p.m.

Friday October 26

Football
Meigs at Belpre
PQ;rkersburg Catholic (WV) at Wahama
(WV)
Sgtyrday. October

21

Football
Eastern at Southern
Volleyball
Division 111 District Finals
{3) River · valle~ versus (1) Adena at
A!hens High School, 3 p.m.
Crou COUntry

Divisions ll and Ill regional meet at
Pickerington Central High School, 10

a.m.

Thermo Fisher
Scientific chosen for
role in Olympics
doping tests

Buffalo seeking NFL approval to play games in Canada
PHILADELPHIA (AP) The Buffalo Bills have asked
the NFL owners to .approve a
plan under which they would
play one game in Canada for
each of the next five years.
While that plan hasn't been
approved yet, commissioner
Roger Goodell said it seemed
to have general acceptance.·
"It sounds like something
that will work well," said.
Pittsburgh . own6r
Dan
Rooney, who added that .his
team also drew fans from
Canada.
There was little action actu-

ally taken during the meetings.
1be one move was to speed
up its draft, cuni ng the time
between picks in the Jirst
round from 15 minutes to 10
to help speed up a round that
went a record 6 hours, 8 minutes last April. It also moved
the starting time of the draft
from noon EDT to 3 p.m. and
limited the first day to two
rounds instead of three, as it
has customarily been.
1be issue that could have
the biggest impact involves
Buffalo's games in Toronto.
1be1Jroposal would involve

the Bills playing one home
game per season there for the
next five years to help the
team expand out its diminishing market in western New
York into Canada's largest
metropolitall area. While the
Bills have marketed in Canada
for years, this would be the
first time they pl&lt;!yed regularseason home games there.
1bey also would play exhibitions there in 2008, 2010
and 2012 in an effort to generate revenue unavailable in
western New York, where the
economy has been shrinking.

"It helps expand our market
in Buffalo," team owner Ralph
Wilson said. "It gives us a
major metropolitan area to
expand our base."
,
Two years ago, the Dallas
Cowboys
ahd Arizona
Cardinals met in Mexico City
in the first regular-season NFL
game played outside the
United States. This Sunday,
the New York Giants and
Miami Dolphins will meet in
London in the second. ·
Goodell said at a news conference that he thought the
changes in the draft would go

a long way to streamlining the .
process, which in recent years
ha~ become an endurance test.
The change also applied to
the second round, which will
go from 10 minutes to seven
between choices for next
year's draft, which will be
held April 26-27 at Radio City
Music Hall in New York.
In recent years, teams have
often used most of the 15 minutes in the first round, entertaining trade offers or making
them.

Please see NFL Bl

Nittany Lions fans will be stoked when Buckeyes come to town
RusTY MILLER

helmet or on the back. You
have to keep your cool right
then and there. You don't
WALTHAM, Mass. (AP)
COLUMBUS Ohio ever want to give your focus
- Thermo Fisher Scientific State cornerback Malcolm up to somebody by the conInc. said Tuesday it has been · Jenkins will never forget his cession stand as you go out
chosen to supply instruments first White Out.
to prepare for such a big
Besides, it may help him game.'
and software to test athletes
Still, getting to the field
for doping at the 2008 get ready for his second one,
coming up Saturday night at was the easy part in 2005.
Beijing Summer Olympics.
Then Ohio State had to play
The China Doping Control Penn State.
The
memory
is
still
vivid
the Nittany Li(Jns and ended
Center, the organization
accredited to conduct testing from two years later: around up with a 17-10 loss .
This weekend's game will
at the games, selected . the 21,000 fans in the Nittany
Lions
student
section
wearbe
the Buckeyes' fourth
company, said Thermo
ing
blindingly
white
shirts,
night
game of the season.
Fisher, a Waltham-based
maker of scientific instru- stomping their feet, roaring Coach Jim Tressel said there
are several reasons why fans
ments and laboratory sup- until they were hoarse.
Even
before
the
sixthseem
to be more volatile,
Jllies. Terms of the agreeranked
Buckeyes
could
louder
and more jacked up
ment were noi disclosed .
"With many thousands of warm up for No. 16 Penn for the football version of
samples to run and a long list State, the Buckeyes knew Saturday night live.
"I think they make a day
of banned substances to they were in for a long
of it. They begin their enthupotentially identify, the night.
"The
craziest
thing
was
siasm and it just grows," he
COCC placed a high priority
that
they
had
fans
lined
up
said, a smile playing on his
on acquiring automated sysfrom
our
locker
room
to
the
lips
he hinted that some
tl!ms that provide high accu- field," Jenkins said Tuesday, fans asmight
be drinking
racy, sensitivity and through- shaking his head at the rec- something stronger than
put," Thermo Fisher said.
ollection.."That's probably root beer to 'get ·up for the
Dick Pound, president of t~e first ttme - the only , game. "By 8 o'clock, their
World Anti-Doping Agency, lime - that's ever hap-· enthusiasm is overflowing.
said recently that China's pened.... People cursmg you Perhaps they sit in the tailcommitment to stringent a~d sp.itting ~~ you, and gate lots and watch the
doping controls leads him to thmgs hke that.
games and !let excited about
believe next year's Gaines
One fan singled out the compelition on TV and
could be the cleanest yet
Jenkins and reminded him all that stuff.''
Thermo Fisher's cus- of a punt he'd fumbled sev~ittany Lions coach Joe
tomers include pharmaceuti- eral weeks before. Others Paterno said the 8 p.m. start
cal companies, government screamed at the Buckeyes, wasn't a big adjustment for
research labs, hospitals and while others. seemed far his players. But he added
more threatemng. ·
that the late start gave fans
.universities.(
Tyler Whaley, a backup plenty of time to, uh, get
fullback for the current top- 'fired up.
ranked Buckeyes (8-0, 4-0
"It is nol really a big
CoNTACT
Big Ten), said it was like deal " he said. "Jt is for the
running
a gauntlet. He said fans: I think the fans, the
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
he expect~ more of the same tailgaters and all that stuff,
FIK- 1-740-446-3008
when Ohw State plays the they tailgate a little longer
):·mall- spons@mydaitysentinel.com
24th-ranked N1ttany Lwns with 8 o'clock and probably
pports Staff
(6-2, 3-2}on Saturday mght. I won't get into that."
AP photo
"They're going to be right
As novel - and successBryan Walters, Sports WrHer
Ohio
State
head
coach
Jim
Tressel,
left,
and
Penn
State
head
coach
Joe
Paterno
meet
on
in
your
face
and
they're
fu
l
as
that
first
White
Out
1740) 446-2342, ••t 33
bwalters @ mydallytribune .com
going to he tempting . you," was two years ago, it's got- the field in this Sept. 23, 2006 file photo, atOhio Stadium, before a college foo,tba ll ga-me
Whaley said of the N1ttany ten to be almost old hat for in Columbus. Since Penn State joined the Big Ten, Ohio State has won just two of its seven
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
Lions'
feverish fans. ' ~You
games at State College. The Buckeyes will need to change that trend if they want to remain
(740) 446-2342, ••t. 33
Please see OSU, Bl
might get 'a smack on the
Ierum@mydaHyregister.com
No. 1 and stay in the thick of the national championship race.
BY

AP SPORTS WRITER

US

Prep Volleyball -

D-Ill district semifinals

.Raiders beat South Point, advance
to first district rmal since 1998.
BY BRYAN WALTERS

Pam.per Yourself.••
for Protec·ting

w·o~~~~

';:

~,

.,

'L 'il

,4

',
:!'

· BWALTERS®MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

THE PLAINS - Was the
third time the charm? You
better believe it.
. Twice before when River
Valley defeated South Point
this year in volleyball, it
helped the Lady Raiders
~linch their sixth · consecutive
Ohio
Valley
Conference championship
since joining. the league
)lack in 2002.
· . Jn the second rematch
held Tuesday at Athens
ljigh School during the
Division IJI district semifiri&amp;ls, River Valley's fourga!l'e 25 -18, 23-25, 25-22,
25-14 vidory over the Lady
Pointers led to so much
)nore.
The Silver and Black
advanced to their first disiticl championship final
since 1998 and also established themselves as one 'of
· tile final 32 volleyball teams
left playing in Ohio this fall
jn Division Ill . More importimtly, the Lady Raiders
have the opportunity to
improve on their postseason
~uccess this Saturday when
they take on Adena for a

: . Please see Raiders, Bl

+lldividulb vdlo pt111eir mw.,.,..w p!:l'fumtcd at
ft

mYale)• Ill'illl ill Ocdennt IIIIDmaricaU)

fbr••••-·
Alon tllld .rill prizes.

er aced'- Mekly~

ail~- adler If I

ot .At f'e · u Velley tbpi.a ·we ...... imovltM
1

~-~--the pain MID)' \\'Oiftell
I!Cpll f PI:' 1lileft tltey pt&amp;llWllftl08illll. This fulm

cuhioa.aled thew......... MlmMihd,
-·~~~to 4he cQmpmsioll .... ofdie MlllUIIO&amp;rttphY
~W.~aiOAer, Wll'MCtftiiiiiiiiOtram.

.+ fl)r MOlt ialbrzsuiOII phm call the 6liJiel'$ ill
·~· SeMc:es, (304) 67s..o.eo. E1L 1183

B,Yan Walters/photo

River Valley's Mackenzie Cluxton, ·left, and lliana Corfias celebrate winning a point during Tuesday's Division 111 district
semifinal volleyball matchup against South Point held at
Athens High School in The Plains.

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
.f~ /,.f.t,c_(/11( t:t fk b",d ;'JHt'.i•('(//11(

�'
Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

NFL
from Page 81
The lime between ptcks
wtll stay at five mmutes for
the last five rounds. whtch
will take place on Sunday
That sesston wtll stan at I0
am IOstead of II as 11 has m
the past Both days Will be
televtsed by ESPN and the
NFL Network
Dunng the
meetmg.
Goodell remforced hts position that electrontc spymg
wtll not be tolerated In
September. he fi ned New
England coach Btll Behchtck
$500.000 and the Patnots
$250.000 after tapes of New

osu

York Jets defenstve stgnals
were confiscated from one of
thelf employees on the Sidehne
"I emphastzed that n has a
huge eftect on -the mtegnty
of the game," he said
On other tssues
- Goodell satd the owners sttll are constdenng
changmg the date and sne of
the Pro Bowl, although no
' vote was taken The game,
now played 10 Hawau the
week after the Super Bowl ,
could be changed to a stte m
the contmental U S the
week before the game
- The cmmmsstoner and
Dallas owner Jerry Jones
emphaSIZed that they are
commttted to the NFL
Network even though a

long-runmng dtspute wllh
three of the nation's btggest
cable company has IIm!led
!ls reac h to 35 mtiiion
homes mstead of the 50 million that the league e)[pected
at this pomt m Its existence
The dtspute has mtenstfied smce last season, when
the network started showmg late-season games
Jones, the chairman of the
NFL Network committee,
satd he had been gettmg
numerous calls from areas
whtch will not be able to
see the Cowboys' Nov. 29
game wllh Green Bay, a
contest between two of the
NFC' s top teams, because
the cable compames in
thetr areas don't get the
network

Valley smce top-ranked Notre
D,une beat Penn State 34-23
State) game," Jenkins satd m 1989
"Now we've seen so many
That sea of whtte will be
from Page 81
'dtfferent-colored-outs'
I revved up and rearing to go.
. don 't thmk n'll affect us
Tressel satd those who
the Buckeyes Purdue trted much"
were at State College tv.o
an alternate verswn Penn State officmls are years wtll try to prepare the
weanng black (a school hopmg tt does On Fnday others tor what they'll see and
color) shtrts mste,td of mght, there' ll be a "Rally m hear - or not hear
wh1te - when Oh1o State the Valley" pep rally. Coach
"It's loud There's no quescame to town on Oct 6 The Joe Paterno, members of the uon If you are expecting to
Buckeyes rolled to a 23-7 football team, the Penn State hear, forget tt," he srud "We,
wm
cheerleaders, Ltonettes dance want to take some of that
Iowa tned somethmg Sim- team, the Blue Band, and the energy and use tt for our benilar last season , and the Nmany L10n mascot wtll all efit But on the other hand
Buckeyes won that one, 38- be there, stoking the fires.
you've got to be calm and
17.
Twenty-four hours later, you've got to be pOised and
Maybe the Buckeyes are Oh10 State becomes the flrst you've got to keep your focus
No I team to play m Happy on the task at hand "
gettmg used to tl all
" It was pretty dtstracung at
the begmnmg ot the (Penn

Raiders
from Page 81
reg10nal berth
The Lady Ratders (16-8)
have gone 58-2 tn ave
play dunng thetr 6-year history m the league, losmg
only to SPHS over that
span And desptte wmnmg
the OVC in each of those
previous five seasons, never
had River Valley won a secIlona! crown until last
weekend
Wtth her team contmumg
to reach new hetghts this
season - more particularly
th1s postseason - RVHS
coach Sharon Vannoy was
very proud of thts group and
what they've accomplished
She was also Impressed
w1 th how they accomplished 11

Wednesday, October 24.

www .mydailysentinel.com

"We told them that we
were playing for the hardware tomght and now we
are guaranteed to come
away from tl)ts expenence
w1th some medals and a trophy for playmg m the dtstrict final. The kids are very
exctted about that," Vannoy
commented "The ktds JUSt
stepped 1t up and really htt
the ball well We still have
some thmgs we need to
work on, but overall I was
very pleased With our total
effort."
River Valley started well
m game one, establishmg an
early 10-6 advantage South
Pomt rallied back to tJe
thmgs at J0, then took leads
of 11-10 and 14-13 before
RVHS retaliated to tie
things at 14 The Lady
Ratders closed out the opener on an 11-4 run for the
seven-pomt tnumph
The Lady Pomters coun-

tered that momentum 10
game two, estabiishmg
early leads of 4-0 and 13-9
Rt ver Valley answered With
four stmtght pomts to tte
thmgs at 13, then both
teams traded pomts to
remam tied at 16-all.
The Stiver and Black
busted out for a 21-17 lead
m game two, but the Blue
and Gold responded wtth 62 run to knot thmgs up at
23 The home team won the
final two points, allowmg
SPHS to lie the match at
one game apiece.
Rtver Valley led by as
many as three pomts early
on m game three, but the
Lady Pomters battled
through seven lies and
seven lead changes before
finding themselves tted with
RVRS at 21-all. The guests
closed out the contest on a
4-1 run, giVIng the Lady
Ratders a three-pomt vtcto-

2007

COLUMBUS (AP) - Hart are the
sixth weeklv football computer ratings
from the Ohio High Sohool Athletlo
Association A,Hnga oro Ill' dMoiOn
and region with rooonl and ...,age
bl·-1 polnla per game (tap eight
teama In each. reglon ad~nee tQ
regional RU&amp;rterflnoll)

DIVISION II

c-

DIVISION Ill

~t .

Rooky River (9·0)

2416tt 2 Cuya. FaliBWalshJesui1(71j 22 2695 3, Montor l.al&lt;e C8lh (6-3)
214055 4 Aurata (8-1) t9 7055 5,
Cortland ·Lakavlew (7-2) 18,21t1 6,
A_... (7-2) t7 8944 7, Mogadore
Field (8-1) te 2m 8, Hubllord (8-3)
15 2944 9 Cha(!fo~ Falls (B-3) t5 06t1
10, ChllrdorJ No-qathfdral .Latin (5-4)
t4t006
Atgiorl-1()-t, SUnbury Big Wlilnul (9.0) 2U666 2, lWCity ~ (90) 23'0166 3, Botlolontlli,. (IM.l
l!l 7186 4, N~ (8-1) 21 ~ S,
'-shelbY (7-2) 207444 a, Clyde (6-1)
11.5555 7 Urbona(8'1)15~8, S1.
Marys Memorial (8-3) t~ 4333 11,
l..OwlaJown Indian Lilkil (~) 14.:1066
10,
Shawnee (7-1!) 13.~ ; '
Aealon 11 - 1, Calla! Ful1on N.W.lll-0)
30.tit1 2, N....rl&lt; Llddi\QValley 8-t)
2144t7 3, Bolo~ Weal BrtJICtl (T-2)
t5 iJ9.44 4, Cant South (5-4) 15.0833.
6, D&lt;Mir (8-3) 14,0188 $, ~·J!!!B­
\11 1U94t 1, Poland Saol*tar\IJ 'i2)
t3 3333 8, Naw ConoolihJohn
(NI) t3 0444 9, Alllanoe MottlnQ1011 (63) 13 Ot88 tO ~ • .(..t-3)
117264
\
•

uma

'

DIVISI(JN IV

'

'

The Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company,
Ohio,
Pomeroy,
reserves the right to
bid at this sale, and to
withdraw the above
collateral proor to sale.
Further, The Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company reserves the
roght to retect any or all
bods submitted
The above descrobed
collateral woll be sold
"as Is-where Is", woth

no

expressed

omphed

or

warranty

g1ven
For further Information, or for an appointment to Inspect collat-

eral, prior to sale date
contact Cyndle or Ken
at 992-2136.
(1 D) 23, 24, 25
Public Notice
Advertisement for Bids
TUPPERS PLAINS CHESTER WATEA CISTRICT (TPCWO)
38581 BAR 30 ROAD,
REEDSVILLE,
OHIO
45n2
Separate aaaled Blda
lor tho construction of
tht
Phaae
VI
tmprovamanto Pro)ocl
which lncludoa two
Contracts Phase VI
Waterline EKtenalona
&amp; Stewart Control
Statlono , and Stewart
Tank &amp; Flow Control
Station Telemetry will
be received by TPCWD,
at their District Office ,
located at 39561 Bar 30
Road, Reedsville, Ohio
45n2 until 1t 00 a m.
(Local Time) Thursdey,
November 8, 2007, and
then al aaid office publlcfy opened and read

Public Notice
_.;....;:.:..;...;_;,..:..;..;__
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Rtvtltd
Coda,
Bocttona 3501 11 (G),
5705.1tl, 5705 25
NOTI(:Eia hereby given
that In purtuanct of 1
i'leoolutlon
of
tho
VIllage Council of the
Vlllogo of Pomeroy,
Ohio, paaoed on tho
13th day of Auguat,
2007, there will be oubmltted to a vote of the
people of aald aubdlvlaton at a General
ELECTION to be held
In tha Village of
Pomeroy, Ohio, at the
regular places of votong therein, on the 6th
day of November, 07,
the question of levying
a ta•, In excess of the

I

tan mill limitation, lor
the benefit ol Pomeroy
VIllage lor the purpose
of fire protection. Said
tax being: A renewal of
a tax of 1 mill at a rate
not exceeding 1 (One)
molls lor each one doltar of valuation, which
amounts to tan cents
($0 I 0) for each one
hundred dolla(S of valuatlon, for five (5)
years. The Polls for
saod Electoon will open
at 6•30 o'clock a.m.
and rsmaln open unlit
7:30 o'clock pm of aald
day
By order of the Board
of Elections, ol Meigs
County, Ohio
John N. thte
Chaorperson
Rota D Smoth
Do rector
Dated Sept 5, 07
(10) 24, 31

aald Election will open
at 8:30 o'clock a.m.
and remain open until
7.30 o'clock pm of said
day.
By order of the Board
of Elections, of Meigs
County, Ohio.
John N lhle
Chslrperton
IIIII D. Smtth
Director
Dated Sopt 5, 07
(10) 24, 31

Raglc)n 13-'-1, \tung !AoqMV (~
331t27 2. Cant. Ctnt. Cath,(8-t)
251944 3 Al&lt;ll&gt;n St Vlnc8nt-SLM,jry
(8-t) 24 6010 4, Steubenville I~
23 0448 5, Porry (8-t) 2t7055 6,

ry m game three and a 2-1
edge overall.
The fmale was lied at
four before RVHS JUmped
out to a commandmg 18-10
lead. Rtver Valley closed
thmgs out on a 7-4 run,
completing the threegames-to-one tnumph
The Lady Ratders had a
well -balanced attack m the
dectston , wtth Ktrsten
Carter leadmg the servmg
charge wnh 16 pomts
Brooke Taylor was ne)[t
w1th 14 pomts, followed by
Mackenzte Cluxton wtth a
dozen and Kan McFann
wtth etght servtce pomts
Samantha Stmmons and
Ihana Corfias also contnbuted seven points and
one pomt, respectively, to
the wmnmg cause
Taylor led the net attack
wtth 19 ktlls on 32-of-40
hJttmg, whtle Corftas
chipped m 10 ktlls on 17-

------Public Notice
_ _..;...;__;.._..:..;...:..;._
NOTICE OF ELECnON
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revised
Code,
Sections 3501.11 (CI),
5705.19, 5705 25
NOTICEis hereby given
that In pursuance of a
Resolution
of the
Board of Township
Trustees
of
the
Public Notice
Township of Olive,
Aeedsvllla,
Ohio,
NOTICE OF ELECTION pusad on lha 2nd day
ON TAX LEVY IN ofJuly,2007,therewlll
EXCESS OF THE TEN be submitted to a vote
MILL LIMITATION
of the people of said
Revised
Code, subdivision
at
a
Sections 350111 (G), Ganerel ELECTION to
5705.19, 5705.25
be
held
In
the
NOTICEia hereby given Township of Olive,
that In pursuance of a Ohio, at the regular
Resolution
of
the places of voting therePomeroy, Ohio, pesoacl In, on the 6th day of
on the 13th day of November, 07, the
Auguat, 2007, there will queotlon of levying a
be oubmltted to a vote In, In oxcesa of the
of tha people of oald tan mill llmhatlon, lor
aubdlvlolon
at
a the benefit of Olivo
Ganaral E~ECTJON to Townlhlp lor the purbe htld In tha Village ol poH of rotd mtlnt..
Pomeroy, Ohio, at the nence Said tax being
regular pfacea of vot- additional tax of 2.8
lng thoraln, on tha 8th milia at a rate not
day of November, 07, oxcaacllng 2.8 milia lor
lha question of levying each ana dollar of vatua tax, In exc- .of the all on, which amounta
ten mill limitation, lor to twenty-eight conta
the benaflt of Pomeroy lor tach one hundred
VIllage lor the purpoH dollars of valuation, lor
of currant expenseo . flve (5) yeart The Polla
Said tax being A lor said Election will
renewal of a te• ol 1 9 open at 6 30 o 'clock
milia at a rate not am and remain open
exceeding 1.9 mills for untii7·3D o'clock pm of
each one dollar of valu- said day
atlon, which amounta By order of the Board
to nineteen
cents of Elections, of Meigs
($0 .19) for each one County, Ohio
hundred dollars of val- John N. lhle
uation, lor live (5) Chairperson
yaars The Polls for Alta D Smith

(

Dlremor
Dated Sept. 5, 07
(10) 24, 31
Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revised
Code,
Sections 350111 (G),
5705.19, 5705.25
NOTICEis hereby given
that In punsuanca of a
Resolution
ol
tho
Board of Townahlp
Trustees
of
the
Township of Rutland,
Ohio, paased on the
27th day of July, 2007,
there will be submitted
to a vote of the people
olsald oubdlvlliorut a
General ELECTION to
be
held
In
tho
Township of Rutlalltl,
Ohio, at the regular
pisces of voting thereIn, on the 6th day of
November, 07, tho
question of levying a
ta•, In a•cesa of the
ten mill limitation, lor
the benefit of Rutland
Townahlp lor the purpoaa of road malntanance Said tax being:
addltlonal tax of 2 18
milia at a rate not
excsedlng 2 16 milia
lor ooch one doll.or of
valuation,
which
amounts to Two and
olxtaan hundrerltha lor
each one hundred dollara of valuation, lor
llva (6) y11ra. The Polla
lor atld Election will
opan at 8:30 o'clock
a.m. and ramaln open
unt117:30 o'clock pm of
aald day
By order of the Board
ot Electlona, of Malga
County, Ohio.
John N. lhl'
Chalrporadn
Rite D. Smith
Director
Dated Sept 5, 07
(tO) 24, 3t
- -- -- - - Public Notice

of-20 htttmg Jacqueltne
Jacobs was also a perfect
16-of- 16 off the bench for
etght ktlls, wnh Mcfann
and Stmmons each adding
two ktlls. Carter also had
one kill for the Lady
Ratders.
Cluxton led the passmg
game wtth 12 asststs, fol lowed by Taylor with etght
assists Corfias also had a
team-htgh five blocks
Mallory Kelley led the
Lady Pomters wtth 12 servtce pomts 10 the seasonendmg setback
Adena - ranked II th m
the ftnal DIVI SIOn III
coaches poll
also
advanced to Saturday's dtstnct fmal wtth a 25-5, 2513, 25-23 wm over
Mmtord
The
Lady
Wamors (21 -3) are traditionally constdered one of
the best programs in the
state of Ohio due to thetr

The Home National
Bank will auction the
Item on
following
Saturday, October 27,

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

contmued success tn the
postseason . Adena was the
team that knocked oft
Eastern last year m the
Dtvt ston IV reg10nals on Hs
way to the &gt;tate final four
Vannoy knows that het
squad faces a very tall task
thts weekend, but she also
knows that regardless of
what happens tht s Saturday
- nobody can take away
from what the se Lady
Ratders have done m the
past two weeks
"The gtrls have been
talkmg about gettmg to
thts potnt all week and I'm
sure they are pretty happy
to be where they are nght
now," Vannoy smd "We
are JUSt gomg to come m
and gtve tt our be st shot on
Saturday and see what we
can do "
The
di stnct
fmal
Saturday wtll start tn The
Platn s at 3 p m

Help

Help Wanted

Wanted

Heartland Pubhcatoons LLC, a fast growong
newspaper pul&gt;hshmg &lt;ompany, woth a regoon al

accounung office m Galhpohs, Oh1o •s seekmg
the posttiOOS or Accountant, Collections
Supervisor. and Account Specmhst lor
1mmed1ate employment
Accountant: A successful cand1date w1ll have
a degree m accountmg and w1ll be proficient m
Excel and Word software RespensibiiiiJes will
mclude creatmg and postmg JOurnal entnes,
calculatmg mventones, and prepanng month-

Pleasant Valley Hospnal curremly has an
opemng lor a lull tome MLT/MT Baccalaorcale
degree m Medocal Technology or reiaoed licld
plus ehgol&gt;olny for cen olicauon by ASCP MuS!
be able to work all shoft s

Send resumes to

end and year-end financial statements Three

Pleasant Valley Hosp1tat

years of general ledger and month end closmg

cio Human Resources

cxpcncnce preferred

2520 Valley Drhe
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
or fax to (304) 675-6975
or appty onhne at:
www pvalley.org

Collections
Supervilior:
A success ful
candodate wtll have three years of cxpencncc
collectmg accounts and woll be proficoent m
Excel and Word software Responsobtlnles woll
mclude contactmg customers d1rectly to resolve

1ssues eoncemmg delinquent accounts
Account Specllllist: A successful candodate

wdl have three years of accounung expenence
and woll be proficoent m Excel and Word

AAIEOE

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

software Responsobohtoes wotl mctude bdhng,

accounts rece1vable, cash apphcauon, and
account reconc1hauons
Succe\isfui applicants must be people onented
and have good organiZatoonal skitls Posouons
offer at! company benefits, oncludmg health
and hfe msurance, 40 t (k), and patd vacatoon

For arnmed1a1e consaderauon, send your resume
and references to
dkhoii @heanlandpybhcauons com, fax to 740441 -0578 , ormaolto
Dtane Hot!
Heartland Pubhcabons
825 Thord Avenue
Galhpohs, OH 4563 t

Public Notice

Public Notice

o·oo

2007 at 1
a.m. at
the Bank'a parking lot.
11199 Chav~ Cavalier
ICI1JC1247X7209313

For an appolnt11111nt to
- . Call 94t-2210, aok
lor Shalla
(10 24, 25,28

t995
Jeep Lorado
Grand r·
Cherokee
1J4GZ58SXSC530544
Tha Home National
Bank

reserves

- Sentinel - l\eglster

CLASSIFIED

the

right to retecf any and
all bids. All vehicles
are sold, asia where Ia,
with no warranties
~·pressed or Implied.

Gallia
County
OH

E-mail
classlfted@mydatlytnbune com

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

Pleasant

Valley Hospllal Hnme Health os

currentl y acceptmg resumes for a Phys1ca\
Therapost
Hohdays,

Full tom e. M F schedule No
No
weekends.
compeutlve

pay/benefits and mlieage reimbursement State
PT hcensure, graduate ol an approved school
of PT or graduate of accredned college or

un1verslty with a certi fic ate m PT Current
BCLS (CPR) certolicauon Current WV and/or
Ohoo hcense preferred Dual hcense requored
wtJhtn 30 days of employment
Apply at
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valle) Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
or apply onUne at:
www.pvalle) .org
AAIEOE

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

m:rlbune

To Place

c:.r;:.::v...

Webs!les,
www myda1lytnbune com
www mydailysenttnel com
www mydatlyreg1ster com

l\eglster

Sentinel

(7!2~ To446~~~2 (7~2~ To99~;~~~6 (304) 675-1333

----------------~~~

Word Ads

Frid~y

Monday thru

Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the rlghl1o odll,
reject or c;:ancel any
ad at any- time
Errors Must B
ported on the firs
ay of pubtlcaUon a
he Trlbuno-5en11nel
191tter will b
oponolble for n
ore than the cost o
he space occupla
y the error and onl
he flral Insertion W
hall not be lloble fo

\ \ \ I l l \ { I \II\ I\

r•.

c·Eio·IENl-·'S_.~l

ANNouN
___

Oee'd ed

T1meshare

Ocld number years

• All ada must

t

G!VFAWA\

I

stll use this year

llement In viotatlo
I the low

Thursday for sund•y•

be prepeld•

kltncarlyle@tcomcast net

6 month old bl•ck lem•'•

Serv1ceMaster has [2 )
Jamtonal pos•t•ons ava•lable
1n the Apple Grove area
Full t1me hours M F Call

labs Call 446 4645

304 529-1378
~-------

spayed Golden
retnever Male black Chow
Phone 740 446 4316 after Lab miK neutered 441 ·
S pm •
1014
Frrewood 2yrs atr·-dned cut
and split 98'%oak 2% hiCko
ry you haul or I haul
OH HEAP Vender 949·2038

•

GIVeaway
1112 yr Old female Golden
retnever very lnendly
304 743-5753
Ktttens 1 blacklwhite M &amp; 2
black F appr~ 6 mo old
have been f1xed rabtes
shots/liner trwned 446 3210

t

l..&lt;mAND
FOUND

~:;:; B~~~ow

Ad Call

riO

IIEr.PWANfED

------

4 BW k11tens 3 male 1
female wlbrown spot on h e~
nose sllots/wormed 7wks
old ready to go 304-273
2698

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4's For Sale........ ... .
725
Announcement......
030
Antlquoo ....
.... • • ..
.. 530
Apartments for Rent.. ,
440
Auction and Flea Market.. ............ ........ 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories..... . • .. ... •760
Auto Repair ...... ............ ' . ..
. . 770
Autos for sate . ..........
• 71 D
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ....
750
Building Supplies....... ...
....... 550
Business and Buildings ........ .... .......... 340
Buolnesa Opportunity......
...... 210
Business Training..........
140
Camper• • Motor Homes ... ... . ..... 790
Camping Equipment ......
...... 780
Carda of Thanks. ........... ............... ........010
Child/Elderly Cans ............................ ......... 190
~lectrlcai/Rafrlgeratlon.... .............. .. ..... 840
Equipment lor Rent..........
..... 480
Excavating....
.. . 830
Farm Equipment ...... ..
............
.610
Farms lor Rent.
.. ........... .....430
Fafmslor Sale .. ............ ............ ....... 330
Far Le..e......... .............. .. ...........
... 490
For Sale............ ...............
..... 585
For Sale or Trade . .... . .
. 590
Fruita I Vegetables .. .
. ... 580
Furnlahacl Rooms ............................. ...450
General Hauling. .... .. ........ ..... .
..850
Giveaway .. ........ ..
040
Happy Ads.... .. ..
050
Hay &amp; Grain ...
..640
Help Wanted
. • • .. ....
110
Home lmprovemei'Us ............ ............ .. . 810
Homes lor Sale... ...... .... .
•
.. 3t0
Household Goods ...... ..
510
Houses for Rent
410
In Memoriam. .
• .. .. ..... 020
Insurance
. ............... ............ .... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment .. .. . . .....
.. 660
Llveotock..... ......... ....
630
Lost and Found
. 060
Lots &amp; Acraage .
350
Mlacellaneous .
•
. ...........
..170
Miscellaneous Marchandloe. .. ..
..... • 540
Mobile Home Repair....
860
Mobile Homea lor llant . .. .. .
420
Mobile Homes lor Sale
320
Maney to Loan . ...
.
. .
.220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ... ...... ...... . 740
Musical Instruments. .
. 570
Personals .... ..............
005
Pets for Sale ...... .. .. .
560
Plumbing • Heating.
820
Professional Sorvlces.
230
Radio, TV • CB Repair... ............. ....... 160
Real Estate Wanted .........
..... 360
Schools lnatructlon.......
.. .150
SMd , Plant • Fertilizer
650
SHulllono Wanted. . ...
....... 120
Space lor Rent .. ... ..... ............. ........460
Sparling Gaoda...............
520
SUV'alor sate..................
...... 720
TRH:ko for sate..... . .
7;6
Upholotary·.
. ,. .....
. ... . 8
vano For Sate..
.. ......... . ...... 730
Wanted to Buy .............. ............ ..... 090
Wonted to Buy· Farm Supplies. •
.620
Wantod To Do. .............
. . 180
Wanted to Rent ...........
.. .......... .. ...... 470
Yllrd Salt- Galllpolla. .. .. .. .................072
Yard Sate-Pomeroy/Middle ...:........... ..... 074
Yard Sate-Pt. Pleoaant ..... .............. ........ 076

MISSING sonce 10 22·07,
male
Boxer
brown,
wh•te/black face
while
socks REWARD! can 740·
645 2096
Foster Parents &amp; Respite
Prov1ders Needed hom es
needed 1n Me1gs &amp; Galtla
county for youth o thru 18
OhiO provides the tra1nmg
you recewe reembursment
of $30 to $40 a day paid

Absolute Top Dollar U S
Sliver and Gold Coms
Proofsets Gold R•ngs Pre·
1935
US
Currency,
Sohta1re DIAmonds M T S
Com Shop 151 Second resp1te, and support for
Avenue Galltpohs 740-446- youth placed m your home
2842
Tramtng beg•ns 0 cto be r
27,2007 at Albany, call
Walit to buy Junk Cars call
Oas•s Fostercare toll free 1
74Q-388·0884
87_7_3_2_
5 _15_5_8_--''--_
We Buy Cars That Need A Fre•ght Broker Hiring Now
Lillie Work Or Not Nelli work from Home
Earn
Door To McDonalds 740· excellent mcome
Call
.:.44;,;8-.;7,;27;,;8~--"'!'!!""',.. 1304 )722 2184
MF
•
8 30am 4pm
WE Buy USED

MOBILE HOMES

Home Health Care of SEO 1s
currently accephng apphca
L,.;,;;;;;;;;,;,;.;.;~,;,;-..1 ttons tor LPN s Full t1me part
t1me per d1em Competitive
wages
I \ ll'll t\ \ 11 \I
1 866 368 11 00
toll tree
" I H' II I -.
Adam (740)828.2750

;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

116
Hlill WANTED
1
L,.-----..0..,1

Lad1es would you hke to be
1n busmess tor your self?
Make btg money We wtll
show you how Smalllll\lest
Acc epting resumes for m9nt of less than $50 00
machtne operators and gen Call 740 367 7886
erel labor Start $8 00/hr
Send resumes to PO 8011 Licensed Soc1al Workers
176 A10 Grande, OH 4~674 Fam•ly Opt1ons Provk:Jel"$ •s
- -- - - - -currently seek•ng to contract
Licensed
Social
Admin1stratlw Position avail w1th
able In the Galltpohs area Work9{§) •n Jackson &amp;
You
Excellent MS Word/Ex cel Mason Counttes
Skolls M·F Bam 5pm $7 50 should have a desire to work
hr CaHfax resumes to 740 with chtldren and famM•es
reliable transpqrtatlon and
353 2913
proof of automobile lntur·
AIDE NEEDED for Elderly ance
Family Opttons
Lady NON SMOKER, dutoes Providers oHers ftex• ble
1nctude personal care some hours low caseloacls and
hghl housekeeping lifting tht best contract pay In the
reqUired For tnteri1119W call area
Interested Soctal
740-256 6305 ask tor Jane Workers should submit the1r
resume and cover letter
An Excellent way to earn tdenttfymg county (s) of
money The New Avon
Interest by fax al 304 254·
Call Mar !yn 304-882·2645 9099
or
email
to
ha ro1 d@ tarot ! \1 o ptton :
AVON• A,ll Areas! To Buy or ~sp~rlll
oy~od":'e~
rs~CQ!J)~---Sell Sh1rley Spears, 304 NEEDED IMMEDIATELY
675 1429
Outgo1ng and assertive md1
vtduals to make presenta
Dnvers
Take back your home lime tlons to area churches
Flex1ble hours and great
100% Pa1d Heahh +
mcome potent•al for very
Great Pay Bonusesl
rewarding work You wtll be
A8QI0118I Runs
1yr Tractor Trlr w/Hazma1 workmg out ollocal newspa·
per ofhce Interested? Cell
&amp; Tank
toll free 1 866 288 490 1 or
Martin Ti'ansport
B66·29a 7435
919·6 10 2121

.

,.,!"'"______,

Ill

FOUND Pale Yellow Mate
10wk olc;t male k1t1en 112 Cal with Ptnk Collar Found
Htmalayan i /2 S1amese: al GaiMpolls Pool Office CaR
304·675·1589 call aHer 709 1816

6pm

Substitutes needed to work
at Carleton School &amp; Me1gs
Industries Teachers class
room Bides van dnvers and
adult serv1ce workers to
work with ch1ldren and
adults With developmental
d•sab11it1es H1gh School
d1ploma
or
GED
E11penenced preferred but
train ng IS available Submit
appl•cahon or resume to
Carleton
Schooi/Me1gs
lndustm~s 1310 Carleton
Street, PO Box 307
Syracuse Oh•o 45n9
Teacher needed Preschool
Spectal Educatmn Must
have
current
Qh 1o
Department of EducatiOn
lo&gt;-~~
certlficat!onfl lcensure and
have or be eligible to obtain
Early Childhood InterventiOn
Spec1ahst
validat 1on
® 2007 by N EA, Inc.
Bene1•ts 1ndude lite health
vision and dental insurance
Send resume and copy of
tO Hw&gt;WANTFD 11110 Hl:LPWAm-ED teaching ltcense by October
26th to Carleton School
1310 Carleton Street PO
Boll 307, Syracuse Oh
Mechanical Serv1ces Co 45779, (740)992-6681
spec1allz1ng m the repa~r of
coal processtng equip tor The
Athens·Metgs
tile Power lndustcy has an Educational Service Center
opemng for a mechan•c has two .Antletpaled
Bas•c mechamcal sldlls and pos111on open•ngs tor Early
Education
Looking tor an employer knowledge of hand pneu- Childhood
lhat will work WrTH you? matic &amp; hydraulic tools req d Teachers 1n Metgs County
Health plan vac 401 K lor the 2007 2008 School
$8 50/hr FT+
S$300 Hiring Bonus$$ Wage commensurate w/exp Year Applicants must hold a
Call 740-446-3145 or fax vahd Pre K 3 License or eh·
resume 10 740 446 3153
g1ble
to
obta1n
a
Take lnboundiCuslomer
Supplemootal
L•cense
Service cans for a vanety of Ohio Valley Phys 1ctans •s Salary wttl be based on
Chrasttan mtntstrles Also lookmg to f•ll 2 full tlnl&amp; pos1 expenence and cert1f1ca
make Outbound calls for liOns for CMA certified tlon/hcensure accordmg to
vartous non profit
Med•cal Ass•stant or LPN tor salary schedule Submit let
orgamzat1ons.
our offtce at 420 Sliver ter ot Interest resume an
Ftrst &amp; Second Shift
Bridge Plaza Gallipolis OH references to John 0
sclledules ava1lable1
45631 Appl•cants wtll be Costanzo Supenntendent
Schedule your Interview reqUired to show credentials Athens-Meigs Educat•onal
TODAY!
1f otter extended to them Serv1ce Center, P0 Box
1-88.-MC·PAVU
Contact Brenda Lanaeta at 684 Pomeroy Oh•o 45769
Job Ext 1931
740 395 8404 or Stacey Shy .App11catton
must
be
www lnfoclalan cam
at 304·523.0266
rece1ved
by
Fnday
November 2 2007 12 oo
lnfoctslon'has-been ranked Overbrook Center Localed p m The AM ESC JS an
Sl Mtddleport
m the Top Ten Best Places @ 333 Pane
=Equal
Opportumty
to Work In Ohto!
Oh•o IS pleased to Employer/Pr0'.'1der
Announce we will be holding
Mach1nlst and Welders an STNA Class. scheduled The
Athens Metgs
Less than 4 yrs experience lor November hours w1ll be Educational Servtce Center
need not Apply Ambrosta Bam-4 30pm If you are has two Anticipated pos1t1on
Mach•ne Inc 304-675-1722 mterested In JOining our openmgs tor Preschool
::.M.::
on::.·:..:Fr:..:•7:..:3::0:..:·4:..:00:..:____ fnendly and dedicated staff EducatiOnal Aides 1n Me1gs
please Slop by our lront Counly lor lhe 2007-2008
offtce Mon Fn
9am 5pm School Year Applteants
and fill ou1 an app1•cat•on must meet parapro1esstonal
full time and part 11me posi· requirements
and
be
t•ons available to those qual· licensed by the Oh•o
1fied tndiVIduals completmg Department of EducatiOn
the class applicant must be Applicants must also have
MANAGEMENT
dependable (attendance ts a the abil ~ to work well w1th
OPPORTUNITIES
must) team players with pas stall students and the pub
we seek career oriented ittve anltudes to join us 1n he, and must provide own
Individuals who w111 slnve to proVIding outstandmg, qual•- transportation Salary w111 be
achieve the MBest" m
ty care to our residents
based on quilhf1ca11ons and
Customer Sat•slactton and If you have any questions expenence Subm•t letter of
team work If you have a contact Hollie Bumgarner •nterest, resume and refer
des~re to succeed wtth a
LPN staff development ences to John 0 Costanzo
goal driven learn oriented coordinator (740)992 6472 Supenntendent
Athens
and growmg company we Overbrook center •s an Me1gs Educattonal Serv1ce
oner
E 0 E and a partiCIP.ant of Center PO Box 684
Health dental and life
the Drug Free Workplace Pomeroy Ollto 45769
Insurance prescnplion
Program
Appli cation
must
be
card bonus program, paid
rece•ved
by
Fnday
vacalton management
Medt Home Health Care November 2 2007 i2 00
apparel advancement from now accepting applications p m The AMESC 1s an
Wllhtn
tor dependable STNA CNA Equal
Opportumty
Apply tn person at the
CHHA PCA for more •nfor Employar!Provtder
Burger K1ng Restaurant
malton please contact Laura -'-'--- --,-......-...,--65 Upper A1ver Road or
at740 446 4148
The Oh10 Valley Pub1tsh1ng
mall resume to
Co 1s seekmg a Sports
Wnter to add to 1ts stall covSatelltle Installers
Burger King
PO Box 2407
Beoome a part of our
enng local athletiC events
mstallat•on team for D•sh The positiOn •s a full t me 40
Huntington WV 25725
Network FfT benefitS tram hOurs a week wlth a benli"t1ts
., or fax resume to
1ng, co truck and the work and 401k pla n avatl able
740·446 3400 or
304·529 0055
are supplied Strong work Newspaper page layout
EOE
e1htc, posit ve an•tude w111 skills are deSired but not
tngness to learn Is
necessary Must be w1llmg to
Manpower IS now h1nng for required must pass driving learn and be people fnendly
the foll ow1ng pos•tlons badtground clleck and drug Send resumes to Kevm
Au tomobile
Produtlbn test Call tor more Into Call Kelly Managmg Ed 1tor Ohio
866-866·8626 Option B Valley Pubt1Sh1ng Co 825
Workers In the Buffalo WV
M F 8 30 5 30PM
Thord Ave Gellopohs Oh
Area Benef1ts ava•lable Call
Today 304 757 3338
45631
POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
The Mid OhiO Valley Health
Part ttme Pollee Off1cer poSi
Avg Pay $20o1lr or
Depl has an operung for a
bon open1ng tor the Town of
$57K annually
Nutnt•omst m our WIC
New Haven WV. All appll
Requores a
cants Interested should stop lnoludong Federal Benelots Program
andOTPaodTrolnlng
Bachelors degreel12 credo!
by the City Bulldong at 218
Vacations FTIPT
hrs n Nutntion Contact
F1fth Sl The New Haven IS
an Equal Opportumty
1·866 542·1531
Lynne Peters 304 485 1489
USWA
EOE
Employer

~

www comtcs com

FOUND Pa1r of Ray Ban
glasses at beginning or r.I'P.I"'"_ _ _ _ __,

Gt\EAWAY

(.:r_

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

$11 000 sell lor $6 000

ar
ubJect to lhe Fodera
air Housing Act o
1168

Publication
Sunday Dleplay: 1:00

Now you can have borders and oraphics
~
added to your classified ads
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
&amp;!iii~
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for lai'C)e

POLtCII!!S Ohio Valley Publlehlng reM!'~~" thl right to edit, ret-cl, or e~~nc.l any ad at any tl~ Enora muat be reportld on ttlellrat day of
I
ltlbunHi•tUnet-Regltter will bt fHPOIIIIbft fOf no more thin the coet ot tilt apace occupied bY thltnor lnd only tht flrll ln11rtion We alwll not bt II
In) lou cw u:penu ttm l'ft4.11tai rrom the publicetlon or omlaaion of an tdvtrtiHmenl Correction will be made In the tlr1t available edition
"'::,,"~:.~':~.':.:1
are alwllyt confldentlal • Cun.nt rtte card t.,plln • All reel 11tate adYiftiMment• are
lo lht Federal hlr Housing Act of 1968 • Thll

Can
Pa1d Female

Estat

accept any adver

Bu•lne•• Day• P'rlor To

at

dverllsemanfs

We will not tmowlng

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2

Monday-Friday tor Jnaertlon
In Next Day•e l'aper
For Sunday• Paper

FOUND Gray &amp; While cat
with collar Auto Zone part&lt;lng, lot very tnendly 304
532-6707 or 304 675 2B97

nowspape
~copto only hel
anted 1d1 meetln
OE otandardo

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

Westgate Smokey Mountam Blue T1ck Coonhound 2yrs
Resort In GatUnsburg.. -Tenn old Gray Tabby male cat,
2 Bedroom Indoor water neutered and declawed all
park
all taxes are patd shots ms1de 304 675·2634

ubllcatlon or omls
lon ot an advertls
ent Corrections wll
modo In the ftra
valloblt edHion

Thlo

Display Ads

• start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Dacrtptlon • Include A Prtce • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ada Should Run 7 Dart

Items

*POLICIES*

Oeat:lliirec

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

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

(~{111Jsf.:/=ua~=l

FIND A'JOB OR A NEW CAREER
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS
aloud.
The
Contract
Documents may be
examined altha followlng locations
Dodge
Reports:
Buoldars
Exchange,
Ohio, M-E Companies,
and TPCWD's Office in
Reedsville, Ohio
Copoes of the Contract
Documents may be
obtained atthe Issuing
Of11ce,
M-E
Companies, Inc localed at 4085 Tile Plant
Rd , New Lexington,
OH 43764 upon paymont of $75 lor Phase
VI
Waterline
EK!enslons &amp; Stewart
Control Station, $60 lor
Stewart Tank • Flow
Control
Station
Telemetry.
The Engineer's astlmate lor Phase VI
Waterline Extensions
&amp; Stewart Control
Station Is $172,000,
Stewart Tank &amp; Flow
Control
Statton
Telemetry Is $28,000
Byordarofthal\Jppera
Plains- Cheater Water
District, 39561 Bar 30
Road, lleadsvllla, Ohio
County
ol
45772,
Malgs, this 18th day of
October, 2007.
(10) 17, 24

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

-·ille

f1eglon 7- 1, Cola O.Satoa (9-i))
25 8222. 2, LoulsviRt (7-2) 24t55!1 3,
Cola. Marliln- (8-t) 21.!1056 4,
Logan (B-1) 2t 2055 5. DINdon 111VaileY (9-0) 20.5222 8,
(&amp;-tl
18.9!i00 7 Zanaavlle (7-2) 186005 8,
Cots Wafl8&lt;50n (6-3) 18 1333 9 ,
~nlontown Lake (6-3) t5 7368. 10
Dublin Jerome (6-3) 14 6500

Rot~ton

2'.oaMIIo 1'1Jsc. Valley (7-2) 174811 7, t9 t t36 2, Old Wash Buokoye Thlll tllCoahocton (B-3) 18 2500 8 Cuya. Falls 0) t a 2888 3, Wheelersburg (6-3)
Cuya Valley Chrllllan (8-H t5 8833 9 t6 22 t8 4 Johnstown Monro&lt;&gt; (7-2,1
CleW&gt;. VA-St Jcoeph (1).4) 12 7500 10 t4 3t86 5, Frederlcklown (7•2)
13.41 1t 6 Minford (7-2) t3 3688 7,
Girard (5-4) 12 0500
Raglon t-4---1 , Marion Pleasant (8-t ) Belpre (7-2) t 2 8727 8, Cool GrOWl
t9.2277 2,
Eastwood (8-t ) Dawson Bryant (6-2) t2 8t25 9 W
t8 7844. 3, Ook- (8-1) 18 4000 l.JOfayette RidgeWOOd (8-1) t2 4000 tO,
4 Highland {8-1) t8 zm 5, Folltorta Frankfort Adena (6-3) 10 8388
Reg100 2G- t , Marla S1elri Marion
(7-2) t8.0333. 8 Clenoa Ar84 (8-t )
Local (9-0) t 1 0500. 2, WeB! Jalforaon
~74722 7, Huron (B-3) t5 7166 8,
Elyria Catholic (7-2) 14 9388 9. Oltawa- (9-0) t5 7333 3, Cln Doer Par1&lt; (7-2)
Giandorl (7)1!1 t3.0944 10, Lo(lrsngo t3 8888 4. Weo1 UbertY-Salem (8-t)
tt 9ttt ~. Waynesyolle (8-3) t18368
t&lt;ayalone (7-2) 13 5277 &lt;
Region t~1. St Clol,.vHio (9.0) 8, Cass1own Moami E (7-2) t t - 7,
21 1205 2, WUIIamsport w..ttall (9-0) Aocl&lt;ford Parkway (7-2) t 1 8333 8, Cln
21 tOOO 3, Waverly (8-1) 20 Ot66 4 Hills Christian Aced ('H) 10 6760 9,
Licking Hetgntll (9-0) t9 7555 5 Anna (6 3) 105444. 10. W Alexandria
Portsmouth (7-2) 17 55,00 8, Belmont 1\von ValleyS (7-2) 9 9500
Unl&lt;ln Local (8-1) 17 2276 7, New
Lexington (7-2) t2.7521 8, Ironton
DIVISION VI
Rod&lt; Hill (1-2) 1217t3 9 Ironton {6·4)
Aeg1on 21-1 , Bascom Hopewell·
t1 3633 10, Ainon&lt;la-ctearoreek (5-4) Loudon (9.0) t 7 86e6 2, Norwall&lt; St
Paul (8-1) t5t333 3, Mogadnre (B-1)
104277
'
Rogmn 18-1, Archbishop Aller (9-0) 14 9777 4 Columbiana (7·2) t3 8500
23 3000 2, W Mitton MoHon Union (8-1) 5 Warren Kennedy (7-2) 13 6362 6,
22 1000, 3 Plain CitY JOnathon Alder McDonald (8·1) 12 403t 7 Monroeville
(&amp;•) 21131!8 4, Cln Wyoming (8-1) (B-3) 10 0555 8 Dakon (5-4) 9 2277 9
171166 5, Coldwater (8-t ) 184000 6. tlflm Calvert (B-3) 87-444 10, Leetonia
Brookville (7-2) 16 2666 7, Clarksville (8-3) 8 7368
Regoon 22-1, Me Comb (6 t)
Cllnton-Masslo (8-t) 157555 8 Cln N
College Hill (8-t) t4 538&amp; 9 Daytoo 14 861t 2, Ada (8-3) t2 0055 3 Cansy
Oakwood (6-3) t3 5168 10, Cln (7-2) 10 4833 4, w Unity Hllllap (7-2)
10 4083 5 Arlongton (7-2) to 1722 6
FIMaytOWn (B-3) 9 8944
Antwerp (8-3) 9 8888 7, Del Ayanwllle
(6-3) 9 9444 8, Tot Christian (7·2)
I)IVISION V
9 t054 9, OOa Hardin Northam {fl-3)
Raglpn 17- t , N Lima S Aan~(ll-0) B ~3 10, Con~ Crestview (4·5)
t97500.2, Apple Creek Wayhedale (7- 78111
2) t6 7366 -3, Bedford Chanol (6-3)
Aeglon 23-t , Newark Oath (7·2)
153277 4 Klflland (7·2) t49166. 5, 17 9000 2. Shadyside (8 1) 17 1947. 3
Gatee Mills Gilmour 1\cad ~7-tl Hannibal Rover (8-1) 16 5008 4
14 6640 8, Voung Ursuline 7-2
Matvorn (7-2) 12 9833 5, OarNme (8-3)
14.8277. 7, Ct..,. Cuyo Hta. 8-1
t28668 6 Beallsville (9-0) 1t 4180 7,
t4,0368 8, Vleooa Matllewa 9-0 Steub.
Oath Cant. (7-2) 106217. 8,
t3.4466 9, w. Salam NW (8-1
Grove Berne Union (5·4)
,131!155 tO, Mineral llld~ 17·2)
9, Lano Flehor ' Colh 15-4)
13.1000
'
Aaglon 18-t, 'Hamler Patriot&lt; tolenry tO 1111 tO, Waterford (8-1) sam
2+--1 . Spring. Oath Cant (llbii'O) 18~66.2, Sherwood Falr'liew (ll- 0)Region
t6 5444 2, Covlqgton !9-0lt5 om
3, Sclo1ovllle Community 9-0 13.4283
t5A1444 51~L~~ Cent, Cath (8-1) 4, Lockland (&amp;-3) 10 8022 5,
t47368 8, '-""'flY Ctr (7-2) 12 8833 7, Mechanicsburg (B-3) 10 36l t 8. Sidney
DelPhos Jllfterson (7-2) t~ 68t 3 8, t.8hman (B-3) 103490 7, Cln Country
Day (6·3) 9 3000 8, Waynesfield•
Jt~vtile Hllladole (8-1) t2t500 9
Northwood (7-M1t 7768 tO, Del Goshen (B-1) 8 916e 9 Porte Notre
Dame (B-3) 8 7428 tO, Fort Loramie (7·
Tlnola (7 ·2J 11
'
F!eglon t~ , COlo Roady (8-t) 2) 7 7116

www.mydailysentinel.com

~rlbune

SIXTH WEEKLY OHSAA
COMPUI'ER RATINGs
-

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Ia hereby
given that on Saturday,
October 27, 2007 at
10:00 a.m., a public
sale will be held at 211
W.
Second
St ,
Pomeroy, Ohoo. The
Farmers Bank and
Savongs Company Is
selling for cash In
hand or certlfoed check
the following collateral ·
2004 Arctic Cat ATV

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

IT'll1"""------,

Athens-Me•gs Vacancy Announcement
EducatiOnal SerVIce Center Engmeenng Tecllmclan
has a pos1110n openmg lor f ull T1me · 40 hrs per wk
Attersch ool
Educatton Benef ts mclude State
Coordinator at the Eastern Ae t ~rement pa1d vacation
Elementary
School after 1 year pa1d Sick leave
Bachelors
Degree
m Medt ca l~ dental VISion •nsur
Education or related l1et d ance available Salary con
requ1red Coo1d1nators w~l t1ngent on knowledge and
be respons•ble tor •mple- expenence Must hold valid
mentmg an afterschool1nter dnver's license and be w11l
vent1on and enncllment pro mg to subm t to Federal
gram
Respon s1b1ht1es Secunty Clearance Must be
1nclude workmg with ram• reg •stered w th SCOT I
ltes teachers and admm1s (www scott ohio gov) sys
trators to Identity and d91Jel tern Submit resume With
op Innovative hand-on learn cover letter to
Oh1o
•ng actiVIties 1n aU academ•c Department of Job and
areas ass 1stlng 1n plann1ng Fam1ly Serv1ces 848 Third
&amp; development of program, Ave Gall pohs OH 45631
1nctud•ng contracting for We
are
an
Equal
seiV1ces that meet •denhf•ed Oppo r t u mt~
Employer
Tec ~ m c 1a n
learnmg needs work•ng Engmee nng
wtth•n a specifted budget Reqwrements 1 Make stte
assfst1ng wtlh recruitment tn'lesllgallons preltmtnary
hiring and supervtslon of engmeenng surveys and so•l
program staff &amp; volunteers 1nventory and evaluation 2
and other admm•strat•ve Layout and superv•se coo
dut1es and repo rt s as struc11on 3 Prof1c1ent 1n
reqUired Th1s Is a TANF usmg surveymg toots 4
grant funded poS1t10n ($22 Survey deSign layout
per hr ) with no benefits supeMse and Inspect con
Letter of Interest re sume s1ruct1on pract1ces 1n refer
to
Engmeenng
and reterences must be ence
Authonty
Approval
chart 5
recetved
by
Fnday
November 2 2007 at 12 00 Must be able to work out
Subm1t to
John 0 s1de 6 Call Oi.JPS fo r
Costanzo Supermlendent des•gn tocatton of utilities 7
Athens-Me•gs EduceiiOnat Asstst landowners 1n Sj3lect
Servtce Center PO Box 1ng eng1neenng pract1ces
684 Pomeroy OH 45769 a Interpret aenat photo
Equal
Opportuntty graphs so11s maps topo
Employer/Prov•der
maps etc 9 Become prof•
- -- - - - - - c1ent at know1ng the con
The Athens Metgs ESC has tests of NAGS Tech Gu•de
an ant•ctpated pos1t1on standards &amp; spec1f1cat•ons
open•ng 1n Me~gs County as as work Will meet the mm1
a Part-Time Early Ch ldhood mum cntefiB req u ~red 10
Education Goordmalor tor Proficie nt w1th computer 11
the 2007 2008 School Year Needs to become proflctent
Applicants sllould have crf3; m technical and personal
dent•als
as
follows relat on aspects ol program
Cert•hcattonSJLicensure tllat mplementabon
\\'Ould allow them to super
v1se preschool operations
ScHOOLS
Masters Degree tn Early
INsrRUCilON
Chtldhood Educat•on or
Elementary
Prmc1pal s
license preterred Salary Will Galllpofls Career College
be based on credentials and (Careers Close To Home)
expertence Subm1t a letter Call Today t 740 4-«i-4367
1 800·214 0452
of Interest resume and rei·
erences to
John D ~ galllpoi15Ci118ttrcol lege com
Accredlled Member Accredit ng
Costanzo, Supe:nntende nt Counc:11 lor ln'Oependenl Coll99es
Athens Me1gs ESC PO Box and Schoos 121"a
684 Pomeroy OhiO 45769
WAll-rEil
ApplicatiOn Deadline Fnday
To
November 2 2007 12 00
p m The AM ESC IS an
equal
opporfumty House &amp; Otftce Cleamngl
Call l orn 1·479·970·6328
Employer/Provider

The

Do

Truck Onvers COL Class A
Requtred min mum of 5
years
dnvmg
exp
EKpenence
on
OverdetmensiOnal loads
Must 1 have good dnvmg
record Earn up to $2 000
we ekly For apphcat•on Call
(304)722 2184
M·F
8 30am-4pm
e are ga ng rea y
lor the elections and
we needYOU 1
Help us make calls on
behall ot conservahve
Poh11ca1 orgamzattons
candtdates and causes

t

Earn up to $8 50/hour
$300 Hiring ~onus
Fl'll benefits package
• Full and part t1me
schedules
t Pa d hoi davs

+
+

Start dmng wor~ you can
be proud of Start do•ng
work that makes a
difference
Start your new career
today•

can today!
1-ln-4&amp;3-62 47

~=~E=xt~23~2~t==~

r

FIND
A JOB
0 R A NEW

CAREER
IN THE

CLASSIFIEDS

SMITH Plumbing repa1r
servtce-- 24 hrs Totlets
smks showers &amp; tubs 740
517 9132

~
0J&gt;roRJUNfrY

•NOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO recommends
thai you do busmess wtth
people you know and
NOT to send money
through the ma•l unt•l you
have mvesllgated the
offenng

r
Borrow Sma1t Contact
th e Oh10 D1v s1on of
Ftnanc•al
lnslltulton s
Othae of Consumer
Atfa1rs BEFORE you rell
na nce your home or
obtrun a loan BEWARE
of requests lor any large
advance payments of
fees or msur'"ance Call the
Othce ot Consumer
.AfiBirs toll free at 1·866278.()1)()3 to learn 11 the
mor tgage broker or
lender
IS properly
licensed (Th •s 1s a public
serv1ce announcement
from the Oh10 Valle~
Publ•sh•ng Company)

�'
Page B4 •

Daily

The

Sentinel

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Daily Se!'tinel •

The

Page

B~

ALLEYOOP.

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?

For Sale by owner, Nice,
3BR, 2BA, Briel&lt; &amp; Siding
Ranch with una ttached
garage on 10.5 acres. 24·
above ground pool wldeck,
loce1ed JUS! minutes !rom
Gallipolis city, south off

: -,._,o Fee Unless We Winl
1·888·582·3345
1&lt;1\11 .... 1 \11

HoM»;

FOR SAlE

Nice 312 singlewides
From $,1.800 down
payment
Adam (740) 928-2750

For sale by owner. 3BA
Ranch, 1 bath , Family
Room , Stove/Fridge, WID
included. Asking $70,000.
3 bdr., 1 ba., Ranch· in catt.740-709·6339
S~racuse, Oh. carport plus 1
car garage &amp; shed. 740·992·
\
3141 or (7 40)442- 1261

=:..:...::.:.::.=:___

c

3BR. 2BA. Ranch Style
h'ouse over 2.000 sq ft.
·Huge kitchen, lots. of cabinet
space, LA, DR , Laundry
Room , on 1 acre of land,
For Sale: 5BA , 2 BA, 2,600
Gallia Co Schools, Asking sq
h home located on
1 11 5,000 OBO (7401441 · Raccoon Creek in Gallipolis,
7842
1.3 acre yard Wllh large
- - - - - - - - detached, pole garage lor
Anentlonl
car/boat slorage and paved
L
I
ff · "NO u-shaped driveway. Access
oca company 0 ermg
DOWN PAYMENr
pro- to boat rarrip. Wrap-around
grams Ior you. I 0 buy your deck and .hot tub. Many
home instead ol renting.
extras. call (740 )441 •8257
• 100% financing
• Less than pertecl credit House for sale in Racine
accepted
area. Approx . 4 acres, all
~ Payment co uld be the professionally landscaped.
same as rent.
Ranch style house with 4
Mortgage
Locators. bedrooms. living room. din·
~740)367-0000
ing room, kitchen. large tamil~ roqm , central air, gas heat
Beautiful. 31 00+ Sq. Ft. 5BA, · and 1 fireplace. Addition ot a
JaA, 2 kitchens, 2 LA's, 2
Cl!r garage wi workshop, oak
t7lm, doors &amp; hardwood
floors throughout upstairs. 2
miles from SA 33 &amp; Meigs
t"i .•s .u Jr.High. 2.5 acres+
$145,000 FIRM. 416·4765

All 1'8111 estate advertising
• In this newspaper Is
subt.ct to the Federal
F1lr Housing Act of 1968
which makes It Illegal to
advertiae "any
preference, limitation or
dl.crlmln1don b..ed on
race, color, religion, sex
f1mlllll status cr nalional
origin, cr any Intention Ia
make any such
prete,.nc•, llmlt.tlon or
dlacrimlnatlon.''
This newspaper wilt .nol
knowingly accept
advertisements for real
estat1 which Is In
violation of the law. Our
reader• ere hereby
Informed that ell
dwelling• 1dvertl1ed In
this newspaper are
•v•llabt• on •n equal
opportunlt," bts••·

·
Custom buill, all brick, ma1nti(mance free home located
in Syracuse. 3 BR ...&amp; 2 112
8.4., 2,800 sq fl ot finished
living space. 40 year dimen siOnat shingles, natural gas
heat. This mutli-level. home
is in immaculate condition
and has oak hardwood trim
throughout. The basement is
partially finished and could
be used as a 4th bedroom,
workout room or a childre n's
plev room. Large family
room with 40' cabinets. aU
built in appliances and
ceramic tile lloor, also laundry room with 6' of cabinets.
Master bedroom with walk ·
in closet, master bath with

New Haven, WV $34,500
304-n3-5881
.:..:________
MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
RENT, 1031 Georges Creek

h-..

1 and 2 bedroom apart·
ments, furnished and unfur·
nished. and houses in
Pomernv and Middleport,
~,
securily deposit required, no.
pets, 740·992-2218.

Ad , 441 · 1111

:;=~~===~

Apar-tment

c

for

rent, 1-2 446-3936

For sale on land contract,
2BR trailer &amp; lot on Bear
Run Rd. 740-256-1389 or
?56-8132

XI:,':'"

=i;;..~~;;....;;._

_,

lfOusEHoi.J)
Gcx&gt;ns

Flat screen HDTV for sale.
T:ake on sman monthly pay·
l•
ments. 1·800-398·3970

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

FARM
F..Qliii'I\1FM

lilil

3644
---.---Attention!
Local company offering "NO
DOWN P~YMENr programs. for you to ~Y your
home 1nsteed of renting.
• 100% financing
• Less then perfect credit
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent.
Mortgage
locators.
(74o)367-0000
:..__;__ _ _ _ _ _
Pomeroy, 2·3 br. apt. or
hau se • part1'all Y furnished•
HUD appro ed naer park
v ·•
•
no pets, (740}992-6886
·
Taking applications for 3 br.
home in Middleport, references required, $400 ptus
deposit, (304)576-2000

Great used 2005 3 bedroom
16x80 with vinyl/shingle.
double bowl vanity, ceramic Must sell, Only $25,995 with
delivery. Call (740)385·4367
t1le ltoor and marble showef.
Bedrooms 2 &amp; 3 have large New 3 Bedroom homes from
Clos.ls. main bath has a 7' $214.36 per month . Includes
vanily, marble bathtub, sep' - many upgrades, delivery &amp;
.arate shower and linen clos- set-up. (740)385-2434
et. Two Covered porches and New Fleetwood Mobile
'a brick paver patio. The 2 1/2 Home , 14x48, $18.000. Call
"car garage has attfc storage, 740-446-1617 after 7pm,
MOBFORILE.IbMHOM»i
cement driveway with plenty keep trymg
. 1
.1no answer.
of parking . Must see to
appreciate all amenities. Nice used 3 bedroom home Trailer for rent, 38R, 2 BA.
Southern local Schools. vinyl/shingle. Will help wllh Call367-7762 or 4-1-6-4060
Call 740·441·5171
delivery. 740·365-4367

c

$325/mo. (614)595-7n3 or
1·800·798·4686.
.:...:::.:.:.:.:~=--­
Immaculate 2 bedroom
apartment New carpet &amp;
cabinets. freshly painted &amp;
decorated, W/0 hookup.
Beautiful country setting.
Must see to appreciate.
$400/mo. (614)595-7n3 or
1·800·798-4~.
.:...:::.:.:.:.:~=--Middleport. 1 &amp;" 2 br. furniahed apartments, no pets,
deposit
&amp; references,
,(7._:.40~1.:99::2:..:·0:.:1.:65:..__ _ _
-Modern f"Bedroom apt. CBII
446•0390
Modern' 1 BR Apt. Cal1 4463736
·Racine,OH,AptJBr., 1&amp;1/ 2ba
th ,W/D hookup,front&amp;back
p0rches,includes:H20, trash,
sewage.$475M.,
$300
deposit. ALS0,2Br.,1bath
trailer,new carpet &amp; paint,
$350M-$35QOep.,utilities
not inCluded. No Pets.740·
949·0145 or 304-273·2152.

I

Office of
Ed Ayers, MD
PVH Medical

Office

Building

• Complete

t AQ5

740-992-1611
Stop &amp;Compare

• I

'
South

~ii""i:!-1144_1·9-162;;...._ _..,

Iron bed w/ rails, walnul
wash stand, store tea bin,
store flour bin, C&amp;O Rwy
can, Cobblers kit, wood
churn, cutter quilts, call740·
·

I I~\

\"'1'111&lt;1 \ IIC

ANI'XXIS

MOWER

..

Hardwood labinMry And Fur!Uiure

.........

JUGHAID PAINT
THEM WINDOWS LIKE
I· TOL' HIM TO ?

MTD,Briggs

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channe.I Fl a1 Bar, Sl ee I
G ·
F
D ·
rating
or
ra1ns,
Driveways &amp; Walkways.l&amp;~
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
•
c
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. lased
Thursda~. Saturday &amp;
Sunday. (740)..46-7300

~~ty

J&amp;L

10 Years

Construction
• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
74Q-949-2217

• Roofing

• Decks
• Garages

II, '(OU
BUNC.I-\ OF
I"COMI't-TE:I'IT
t-IINCOto\I'OOP:&gt;!

Owner:

JameeKeneell

:5::4,

7.3

&amp; Tanger Outlet

for

October 25
Mall

Christmas

Shopping
Cherokee, North Carolina

9 a.m. to

David Lewis

12'Vo All Stock
Feed

740-992-6971
a:''"

:~

I 11111 111

Why drive a nywh e re e ls e

C:.•11. V, lil- .,

Shade River Ag. Service

P l: .rllf·lt l

i ,; h

11:111

35'; 37 51. Rt. 7 North

740-992 · 2036
740·367 ·77 10

St~m ley

1,------_.j
4x4
FOKS.W:

2002 Jeep Wrangler Sport. 6
cyl, 5 speed. air, cruise, runs
and looks good. 740·2561731
.

.F riday, November

30, 2007 to

Legal guardian must

------=- rib

;:_l_!.o~--

r

j,;o,;;;;;..;;;;;;,...---,

present for minors

$195/person (double occupancy)

For more information

$250/person (single occupancy)
Staying at Hampton Inn

I0·2'f

~~~·""1-\(R(.~'( !Q:.\.i'IJI.A.VI

ro rrn "'"''v ....)I

1\Kt&gt; IF Tfl.t&gt;-I DOESt-1'1 1-\f.LP
I ti\I'RO'J( 11-\\NC.~,
Tl-\t~ ~TNU'\~

At-It&gt; E:\11::~ 0~

TOI'\O~ROW,

l\'~~0~

RE:00\~1)

N--1

11\R. NICE. GUY!

Trimming

&amp; Removal

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

* Prompl and Quality
Work

*Reasonable Rates
*lnsured
*Experienced

PEANUTS
Plllo and

Decka

wv 036725

References Available'

V . C . YOUNG

Call Gary Stanley @

740-742-2293

Ill

982-621 ~
f'nnH'I(lV
.~ 1

1 ~LI,t, ll

I·

As he turned to leave,
he paused, and said,

Oi'm

"Toodle-oo, Caribou!
In a while. Crocodile!
Stay loose, Monqoose!

"Please," she said,
"Just leave·!"

It's been neat,farakeet!"

l~p~nC!n C'

COW and BOY

SWEET

ADVERTISE
IN THIS
SPACE FOR
$120 PER
MONTH

NIRVANA.

WHOA.

--.__)

~t~~~ ~~ ~~

--~~ ~~
-~~~------~~
...
..·-:

Manley's
Recycling
111•11t.•

.

SO N!Cf OF YOO'T"O
'.JOIN ME FOR I'INNE:R,
MYP!i.M

..... . ............
~

~~

. . . . . . . . .12:....

PIYIIITW PIICES ,_
Ill, ................

llllllllc Cllartirl .....
lllllbiMIIInl
·ICIIIr.Cirrtlll'l1clll

please call,

ltiiDf

INC . .\11

GRIZZWELLS

675-6015

LWt&lt;, PIERI'b\1{1', iT l~t-I'T YoU .

Gladly accept cash. check,
credit cards and money orders

IWME

Please make all checks

Allpass

"" A

coming • prepare
Poel and aclress Maya Angelou wrOie,

To make r~servations please
call PVH Community
Relations, (304) 675-4340,

Ext. 1492·

~'Y~~ '3':~lL"
•

'

l

41 Follow an

may ring a
1 Fosaey
friend
2 Tool&lt; the 11-

19

~w

20
22
23

3
shape
4 House part
5 Long
-lasting
6 DC coneumer ad-

24
25

vocate

r~e

32 Sand mandala builder
33 Parachu1e
part (2 wde.)
38 Bluesman
- Redd!ng
37 Utmost
degree

28
30

7 Ma.
Bombeck
8 Delhi

order
43 Raspberry:
stem
45 Grease gun

target

.

46 Gave food
47 loa loa's
48

slater
"Mad Max"

Gibson
50 Archltec:1'1

wing
51 Muolcal

greea

note

34 Back 10

honorHic
9
10
12
13

bell
Have
lhough1s
Let
Pines for
Far East
temple
Doled on
Preven1ed,
with off
- -1ac-1oe
College de-

52 Duel

nonnal

number

Blacken
35 Mummy,
Tha1 girl
maybe
Bit of gllner 40 Conon
Phony
pods

'l'mgolngtosnow. lfyouhaveonabiki·
ni and no snowshoes, that's Iough. I am
going lo snow anyway."
You are the declarer in four spades,
Wesl ha~ng overcalled in clubs. Wesl
slarts lhe defense wilh lhe ace and king
of clubs. Whal would be your plan?lle
warned - the cards show no mercy.

Opposite
weak
North's
jump
to fouryour
spades
wastwo·bid,
agg-essive.
The
call did make life lougher lor East ,
though. No1e that it takes good de~nse
(North must duck the first round of
heai1S) to get 500 from five ·dubs doubled.
You have three sure losers: a heart, the
diamond ace. and the club ace. But if
West has the ace and queen of diamonds and East gets on lead. a diamond shift will give West two tricks in the
suit and defeat your contrac1. East is
what we call the danger hand.
It you ruff the club king at trick two, draw
trumps, and play on hearts, East gets in
and makes the damaging diamond
switch.
You must discard a heart at trick two.
ThiS ensures that East never gets the
lead. Suppose West shifts tO a trump.
Win in your hand, pia~ a heart to
dummy's ace, ruff a heart, lead a trump
to dummy's queen, and ruff a heart. Th is
ilstablishes the suit, so play a 1rump to
dummy's ace and cash the hearts; dis·
carding three diamond losers.
This is a tough example ot a loser-on·
loser play. However, if you consider both
the danger hand and the inherent risk to
your contract, you might think of the discard, whether bikini-clad Or more warm -

WJ.It,l, 1"11ANK YOU
FOR HIIVINr:. Mf.,
MR. COUN1"

aer:. .

PARPON?

1"HE Pl-01"
1"HICKISNS ...

Thursday, Oct. 25, 2007
By Bemlce Bede Olol
In the year ahead, you are likely to fare
bener in enterprises or activities where
you can function independently from oth·
ers. You won't be particularly happy if you
enter an alliance where your .liberty .is
curtailed.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24- Nov. 22) - EYen If
you are the most knowledgeable about
something, don't assume the authority if
you're not sanctioned for that role by your
peers. You could Come off as appearing
bossy or tyrannical.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21)- Your
peers may not see you as fascinating as,
you see yourself . You could stand a
chance pf someone puncturing your ego,
especia lly if you don't start Ia show a little humility.
CAPR ICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) - Take
precautions that you do not stray out of
your own spher~. of influence because, if
you attempt to project authority In someone elSe's domain, you'll be operating
totally out of bo!.!nds.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - It's
important to . show tolerance to tt1ose
who do not act in accordance with your
ideas, because they are as entitled to
doing things their way as you are yours.
Be more broad-m inded.
.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Today
could be one of those times when past
extravagance catches up with you, and
you won't be able Ia partlclpa,te in something with friends because· of lack of
funds. Learn from it.
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19) Unfortunately, the one person who can
advise you on an important matter Isn't
always thai reliable with his or her -facts.
Be prepared to make changes as you
move on
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20)- Try to keep
others out ol your affairs, because they
could complicate things for you and pul
you in the position of having to work
under pressure. You need to regulate
your own agenda.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) An .
acquaintance could quote you out ol
conie.xt, simply to make him/herself look
good In the eyes of others. Don't hesi tate
to defend yourself if you hear you've
been maligned.
CANCER (JUne 21-Juty 22)- You could
easily be the initiator o~ a domestic
squabble It you tell one person one way
to do something and give totally different
instructions to another. Be consistent in
your. orders.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - A philosophy
that has always proven "to be benetic1ai
for you may not be ·equally as ef1octi ve
for other5, so keep your own counse l and
permit friends to follow what has worked
best for them .
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) ,___ BuS)ness
deallnQS may turn out to be tar more
complicated · than they Initially had
appeared. Be prepared to make edju.stments or you could have to switch fro m
black to red Ink.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0 ct. 23) _.Bend over
backwarda to be talr In all 111ue.t1ons
Where you, ahare a vested Interest with
othera. If You come ott as Stlf-aerving 1n
any wily, you could easily Implode the
relationships.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

by Luis Campos
CM!bntv Opher cl)ftogram~ we cree.ltld from qootahons by hrno.Js peopl~ . pasl .11'd prewll
Each le!ler 1n lhe Cipher Slands lor anolher
Today's clue: Uequals K

" V AHTFOH RZIPBN
SHOOTRTIJ

IW

TGVLTJVFTIJ

ZVMO

FZO

V SIOF VJN
IW

FZO

V ROTOJFTRF."

- MBVNTGTH JVYIUIM
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "People who dnnk to drown their sorrow should b&lt;i
Iold that sorrow knows how to swim.· - Ann Landers
·

TUTOAILT Q~1l J'\"\. f- /)"() ~Q.e WOlD :
PUZZLII PI!::! I."''U ~). c.tl pq• p UMI •
Llfltd ~r ClioY I, POlLAN

.

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Roorranga illllrs of lllt
0 fovr
scrambled word• below Ia fotm four slmplo word1.

I

LUCYOD

Ii III
2

l

E MP I L

I was taught as a kid lhat if
you tty to buy friendship
you know not!ting about lhe

l""_,I_G~l6!"""1Rir:;7o,l_olr-ll .,--i;~~~~: i~h·th:~~i~g~::
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TH ESE SQUARES

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UNSCRAMBLE LETIERS TO
ANSWER

GET

I

12 p 14
I I I

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SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 1 0• 2 3' 0 7
Aspect- Mummy- Assay- Thrush- MUST PASS
"if you do not forgive," the mom lectured ber sOD, "you wm
break the bridge over which you MUST PASS."
ARLO&amp;JANIS

I Tt!.L YOU I REALLY DOfJ'f
MY DIIOAM!!! RUifJI~
AllY OF /l.lfJE..'

. WHAT WOULD st. ~E. POtiST

OF 7HATr.'

\

SOUP TO NUTZ

w&lt;fl

LIMITED SPACES!

18 His name

' Nalurehasnomercyalai!CNaturesays,

A GocO
To ~
NaMeS IS lb liteLQt! Cl ~
To.q.j(! cf' THoiR lio'ITvl&lt;'es ...

payable to PVH Foundation

DOWN

=:f:n-

28

V~!P!,

Pom e roy. O H

Tree-

word

seed
21 Cus1omer
23 Handle
roughly
26 Lemon
cooler
27 Rumor,

ly anir~!

GARFIELD

be

Sunday, December 2, 2007

'(OUR U.Jl'IIC.I-\ BRU&gt;.K. I~

$24,000 new..$19,600. Call , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
740·367·7129.

&amp; older

information

~

740 - 985 - 383 1

•=-------.,
j

'on both days. Accepting

Transportation

~R

BIG NATE

I )() I (], I , (:I "IIII I• I I

· 1 :00 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.

Chartered Coach

!i; t

Me. rawcel1

14 - - 49 Least atric1
15 View wilh
53 Smoo1hl~
appt'Oval
54 Enoue
16 On~i11&lt;1 Info 55 Wide
11 Mauna valleys
18 Orange
56 Parrot's

~Astro-

$10.50/100

•f ' l

11:30 a.m. AND

Please bring insurance

...

. ·~

I'

BeTwee-N
POINTS.

1-\0URL~TE: !

II

Experience

&amp; November 1

patients 6 months

~I,

SUT NEXT TIME,
TELL HIM TO STOP
WHEN HE GITS
TO TH' GLASS!!

TO W()I&lt;:J&lt;.

dleael, 5 speed with ahop
" I I ~\ I I I ".
1yr old male Ollchshund, bed $3 ooo 304-675-7340 If
chocolate &amp; black, great with no ans:,..er leave m.aaage 11'111""-~~--....,
other pels &amp; paople $150·
304·593-6040
96 Dodge Dakola, 2WD, V6,
JMrlWVMW'IIO
5spd slandard: $2500 060.
AKC male Shih~Tsu, 4 740·256· 1233.
months old with papers,
· BASEMENT
crate
trained,
$200,
SUVs
WATERPROOFING
(7401985-3563
~
FOR SAIE
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references furCKC Miniature Pincher 01 Dodge Durerlgo. Heated nished. Established 1975.
Pups. Tails docked &amp; leather seats. 4WD, dark Call · 24 Hrs. (7401 446·
wormed. $150.00 each. Call blue. 99500 ml $9000 OBO.
0870, Rogers Basement
740-388-8788
.
740-992·3639 aves only.
Waterproofing.

-~.

'

\.,..1&gt;-v~:"f

1:&gt;

742·2332

Ford Ranger, 4 cyl, auto
$1400,
96
Plymoulh
Vayager $2200, 99 Chevy
Moole Carlo $2500, 86
Toyota Plcl&lt;up 4x4 $1!;00. ·
740·446-8172
02 73 Harley Spqrtster, 2
seater. New windShield &amp;
328
COOK
MOTORS
exhaust. $4200 Call 441Jackson ~Ike . 2 Rangers, 3
0243
S-10's, Full size GMC, Ford
&amp; Dodge . Trucks. Focus, 2000 Polaris Trail~azer new
Cavalier. Suntire , Stratus, top end, after market pipe
Lesabre &amp; Others priced to new rear ti res, new battery,
sell. Stop by or call 446· dutch kit, good condition
0103. 3 month - 3,000 mile $1,200 740·416-8584
warranty

Fo(d

T~E S'~Oifr!:~T
l&gt;I ~'PJJNC" ·

THE BORN LOSER

Tl-\~T t:&gt;OC~

• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions

=:::::.:..:.::.:::..:____

191

i
~· ~ ~
'

Hill 's Self
Storage

Seasoned Firewood, Picked·
up or delivered. OH HEAP
&amp;LAA, wv LEAP accepted.
Call Melvin Clagg. 740-441- ;;;;~~-----.
2006 Honda Gold Wing
0941 or 740·645-5946
[5
TRuCKS
$4,000 in accessories. Paid

FllR~

wAS At,.L

&amp; SlrtJIIOII

er. Asking $3200. Call 740·
_
.:-

JET

~

~C. OOL.

IN

H-Honest

709 339
..:.:...v...:..:.
______

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuin: In
Stock. , Call Ron Evans, 1· 1951 Pontiac 4DA Sed8n,
$3200 or lrade. Also, 400
600·537 ·9528.
small blocl&lt; Chevy motor,
Laptop (notebook) comput- best offer. 740-256·1445
er, Pd $600., sell lor $400.
New still in box. Lighted 1989 BMW - 5251. 1995
China cabinet with hutch, Chevy lumina LS. 18 toot
pull behind camper. Priced
gooQ
condition,
$300,
to sell. 740-367-0625
Serious inq.Jiries only. -740·
441-1000 Leave message
96 Chevy lumina $1500, 92

1he sum
43 Male swan
44 Memorable
time
46 Chorus girt

13

Answer to Previoul Puzzle

~~~~~~~~~;~~~§~~~!;~:,.---!:!!~!.,~~~J ·

D!D

~~-

01
Hyundai
Accer'lt
Hatchback. 5 speed trans,
65,310 miles, good condi·

06 Mazda 6. Retail $16,800
19000 miles. Factory warranty • 4 yrs or 50,000 miles.
Price $15,000 FIRM. Call
446-1759
.

If

T~AT ~m
fOOLI5~ TAL~ A,OIJT ~~t

7

BARNJ;Y

:R~
L~----=0::.-.J

02 Buick: Century, excellenl
condition, 127,000 miles ·
V6, $3995. Call 441-7534
Can be seen at 1403
Eastern Ave .

M
T~tlfl:

./~

J04.882-J194

ro

Can 740·446·0827
-------Arch
Steel
B.uildingsCanceled Orders &amp; Repos.
Only 3 Buildings Left!
25'x34' &amp; 30'x32'. Pay only
the balance. Call Now 866·
352·0469

tMTtl&gt; titO H y

1J

t~~~!!l~::::! ~-='IE

Suite 118
Casino

.......... l.

304-77J.5861

26

44

&amp; EARNEST

TyiO

~\

01 Red Neon, 4 cyl, AJC.
90,000 miles, automatic.
S2800 080. 740·256·1652
:o;.:r2::56:.:...:-1.:23::3:..__ _ __

East

Opening lead:

ADVERTISE IN THIS ·
SPACE FOR S60
PER MONTH

Sel'l'icing

Add on Wood burner with
blower ' and 1hermostal that
hooks up to the furnace duct
work . Used 3 years. $150.

3•

North

Inclement weather is

f:]~~~~a_;
· ~~ tion.needscatal~icconvert·
1SC"1i'l

' West

24

FRANK

Puzzle

CQmpule

42

Wlldl~e

6

fare (hyph.)
29 Fragranf
garden
p(anf
31 1939 Lugooi

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

Craft•man,

Whirlpool bath tub, 2 venilies, 2 commodes, Maytag
dishwasher, stove top &amp;
build in oven. Priced to sell.

•KJ10987
• 72
t K J 10 8

~~r::r.S~'I.J I =

P8ir of good work Mules with,
harness. Weight approx.
8001bs. $600,
Quarter
Horse, Mere &amp; Colt $400
304-576-2247
.:..:._ _ _ _ _ __
Registered Yearling
Et
Angus Bulls &amp; . Heifers.
Double J Angus. 'robacco
Eligible 740·379·2769

" K Q5
• 7 6 3 2
• 6 5 3 2

South

740..416·1698

Insured &amp; Bonded
3 ';9;
6 5;7;~
~;;7;4;o-;6;5:

UYUIIUL.I\.

• 4 2

.AK10987

15 yrs. Ex.p. Free Estimates

Mowers, Till#rs,
MMrray,

t
FLU SHOT
CLINIC.

• Garages

• 6 3
• 10 9

Remodeling

ID-24-07

• A Q5
"AJ864 3
.• 9 I
• QJ
,East

West

MONTY

740-992~5929

!Awn Tmctors,

~rAmlQwl

1

· .New Homes

Owner- Rick Wise

Guttering
Seamless Gutters
Roofi ng, Siding, Gutters

I

, --·

CDimiCTIDII

Wise Concrete

H&amp;H

Finishing Mowers Starting
At $899.00, Get Your Rear
Blade Now While Prices Are
Low Before The Snow.
Come On In And Get The
Best Deals Now On
Anything In Stock!!ll While
The Selection Is StiH Good.

North

ROBERT
BISSEll

Alllypes of concrele

Local Contractor
740· 367·0544
Free Estimates
740-367·0536

BIG FALL SALE
.
JIM'S FARM
EQU IPMENT INC.

r

Oil Changes,
Brake Svc, Tune
Up,A/C Svc,
Engin e Work,
Shocks Struts
All work
guaranteed
Certified Mechanic
Bumper To
Bumper Service.

L--•:..;;&lt;"""";:;;;;.;,._,:::;;;;;.._..1

::::::..::=-----

I!

740-992-1 030
Mon-Fri 9-5

, ln...- •free leti!IINe
T40-UI4ll7

I

Gallipolis. Rent $300/mo.
11

A-One Auto Repair
99 Beech Street
Middleport , OH

CGmf&gt;lott Tree Caro

2150 Easter'n Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
HoUSES
pet, stove &amp; frig ., water.
FORSP~&lt;!- ..
740-446-9777
FOR Roo'
sewer, trash pd . ·Middleport
RU'II
•
Round Bale Feeders
L,._..;iiiiiiiiiii;..r $425.00. No pels. Ref
Slarting al$125.00. Rolo
required . 740-843·5264. ,..- Commercial building MFor
Tillers 4', 5' &amp; 6', Bush
2-Story house· 2BA. 1 bath, Apt. tor Rent. No Pets. 740· Renr 1800 square teet, off Hogs 5' &amp; 6' All Have Been
_
street parking. Great toea- · Marked Down. End Of The
CIA, lrg basement. Available
_
992 5858
Nov.1
No pets
1638
tion! 749 Third Avenue in
Season Sate On

rm

a

trophy

sponge
Johnson's Tree
Service ·

Bci'm .• remodeled, new car- ~=-;;;..;;;...~---..,

p~rlially

o- s-

nished. 2nd floor, attractive
apartments, corner Second
and
Pine. Water/trash
t
included.
No
pe 5 ·
·1
References and secun Y
· d · $275-300
deposit· require
per month. Call446-4425 or

1 Give out

ohel1era
11 Like a

::.::=:::_::.:..:::..____

Chalham Ave. Gallipolis. Beautiful Apt&amp;. 81 JACkson
446-4234 or 74 0·208786 1
Ellatea. 52 Westwood
Drive, from $365 'to $560.
2BA. tBA on SA 160• 4 740·446·2566.
Equal
miles North of Holzer. Housing Opportunity. This
$430/mo + sec.dep. and ref.
institu1ion is an Equal
No pets. Call 740"379 "2923 Opportunity Provider and
or 740..446-6865
Employer.
3 bedroom home at 3408
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
Mossman Avenue. Point ~D &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Pleasanl. WV $400/month,
Townhouse
apartments,
$400 damage deposit 304· and/or small houses FOR
New home in Gallip01is . 576-2247
RENT. Call (740)441-1111
2BR, 2BA, 3 acres Mfl.
for application &amp; information.
S82,500. Call 740-446-7029 3 Bedroom House in
Syracuse. $500/month +
Ellm View
Price redUced Brick Ranch deposit No Pets. (304)675Home 213br, 2ba, 2 car 5332 weekends 740-591Apartments
garage, all electric. Visit pic- 0265
tures at www.orvtl.com COde - - - - - - - - - - ' - •2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
3 BedRoom house, 3 •Central heat &amp; AJC
7137 or call304-675·4235
BedRoom apartment, 2
Racine/ranch home 1500 BedRoom apartment. $450 •Washer/dcyer hookup
sq. tt.. 3/2, seller assisted each plus utilities. Cal! 740· •Tenant pays electric
financing, (740)416-3977, 379·9887
(304)882·3017
.
740-222·5570.
3 BA house In Gallipolis,
WID connection, $475/mo.
$250/dep. CaR Wayne 404·
456·3802 for info. '
1975, 14 X 70 Governor. 3 - -- - - - - - _ __ ; _ _ _ _ _ _
Bd., 1 112 bath. 740-247- 3BA, 1 1!2 BA, 2 car garage . Furnished upstairs 3 rooms
0402.
wl fenced yard in family ori- and bath. Clean, no pets,
entad neighborhood, 5 mil8s deposit req. 740-446·1519
2.9 acres, 1989 2BRI2BA from town Would consider
1
2
furnished Gracloua Living
and
MoblleH0me.$38,000. Near renting
Rio Grande. Leave mes· with utilities 1o construction Bedroom Apts. at VIllage
ork
k
k Manor end Riverside Apts. in
sag. 740 288 -4 502
·
w ers on a wee 10 wee Middleport. from $327 ' to
x
o,
R,
BA.
Lots
basis.
Avail
.
Dec.1.
Cal1740E
2000 14 7 38 2
446-873 1
$592. 740·992-5064. qual
of up grades , on rented lot. - - - - - - - - ..
Ho::u::•:::.in:!g.:Op:!:!::po:.rt::u.:
nily:!.._;__
34
Kraus-Beck
Rd. 3BA, 1 beth, 2-story older Gallipolis. 3 miles from farm hOuse on SA 554 - Honeymoon conage, 2 br.,
counlry setting, w/d hookup,
GallipoI.IS off SR 5·88 · 446• BidwellfRV
schools
no pets, $..00 plus utilities
~89:;3::5_ _ _ _ _ _~ $575/mo plus sec dep. F'els deposil required, (74019922000 Schult 16X80; 1 under 15 lbs wf$575 pet 4119 _
Owner; Beautiful 3BR, 2BA; deposit. Available 10-13-07.
Vin~l siding and windows; Cell 446-3644 for apphca· ImmacUlate 1 bedroom
Shingle roof; Large step- tion.
apartment New carpet &amp;
cabinets, fresh!~ painted ·&amp;
down kitchen; Lots of extras: 69 Garfield • 2BR, 1BA
on rented lo1. Must see to
decorated, WID hookup.
$460/month + sec. dep. Beautiful country setting.
appreciate. Call 304 "675 • You pay aU utilities. Call446- Must see to appreciate.

4459.
2004 16x80 Clayton 3Bed
. 2 aath
16 x80.
2002
Oakw~od 3Bed 2 Bath, 3
More lSxao and 2 More
14x7o to choose from . Days
740 _388 _0000 Eves 740 _
388 _8017 or 74 24 9213

Alder

---------

large Florida room completely cedar opens onto
patio &amp; pool area . Healed in
ground pool enclosed by pri·
vacy fencing and land. · h d 2 a
scape d · Fm•s e
c r
garage attached to house
and finished &amp; heated 3 car
garage
unattached.
E ll.nt Cond .,I.IOn ready to
xce
move in. $255,000.00, Call :
(7401949-2217

r M~u::uOM»i

Phillip

j
I
lw--AIOiiCRiiiEiiiAiiGEiiio-rl

(740)44 1-0448

38 Poor grlde
39 Zoo staffer
40 - nova

ACROSS

per month plus utilities. 740· large kitchen-dining area claws
removed,
vB1
446-8172 or 256-6251
with all now appliances &amp; · checked. $350 each . cash

cupboards . 3BR, laundry only. 740-388·9824
2BR trailer, No peltS, area, 2 1/2 baths. $900 per
Full blooded Choc. Lab
';;:=::;:=::;:=~ Addison Twp. Call 740-448- month. Call -446-4425, 441 - pups.
Parents on premises.
1!1
, 0722
5539 or 446·2325
4 males. 2 females . $126.
Lors &amp;
2BA, AIC, porch, storage Tara
Townhouse 448-7913 or 545.0141
bldg. No Pets. Very nice In
·
• Gallipolis. Call 4-46·2003 or Apartments, Very Spacious, labra&lt;loodle puppies, 8 wks.
62
Bedrooms.
CIA,
1 112 ·old, vet checked, 1st shots&amp;
44 1409
Approx. 2 acres w/ existing :..:::...:..:.:.:..._____ Bath, A~uh Pool &amp; Baby wormed, asking $200, call
28x60 house foun dation. Nice Trailer tor Rent Tuppers Pool, Patio. Start $425/Mo. (304)674 •5070
Also 24~~:40 finished garage Plains area. $250 dep.,$350 No Pets, Lease Plus
Has water, elec 7 sewer Rent NO Pets Inside. 740- Securfty Deposit Required, Miniature Plncher Pups, 2
Located in centenary on 667-3083.
(740)446-3481
Black/Tan females, $300
Herman Ad. Asking $55.000 ;.;;;,.;;;;;;;;•· ---.~-~-.,
each. 8
weeks
old.
Please catl740-208-6704
ru-..um"ml"'"
Twin Rivers Tower is accept- (740)388·8124
--·FOiiliRioRFNriiiiiil
. ;.,_.1 ing applicallons lor walling
Approx. 3.2 acres, private. L
list tor Hud-subsized. 1- br, Toy poodles- 1 female,
Six miles from Hospital. 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments apartment,for
the Choc., $400; 1 bla~ male.
Elec. septic. water. $301&lt; for Rent, Meigs· Cou nty, In elderly/disabled call 675- $350, CKC Reg ., Tails
080. 740-446-9478
town, No Pets, Deposit 6679
Equal
Housing docked, (740)446·1672
Required. (740)992·5174 or Opportunity
I \II' I "' 1 1'1'1 11 "
Green Acres (10), Farm
-------,\II' I "'ICHh.
Uvin', Fresh Air, 3 miles from (740)441 -0110.
Two, 1 bedroom, unfur-

Neighborhood
Ad,
$127,500. Call for Appt.

0 down payment 4 bed·
ropms. Large yard. Covered
deck. Attached garage. 740367-7129.

~~i~~

2 BedRoom
On State Spadous second-floor apt. CKC reg. Min. Dachshund
Route 7, Middlepon, Ohio overlooking Gallipolis .City puppies, 6 112 wks old.
across from sawmill . $300 Park and river. L.A.' den, Wormed &amp; first shots. Dew

OWNER FINANCING

NEA Crossword
BRIDGE

iS

CHaTr¥, CIJVO&lt;.,

•'-'~"'" Micl&lt;~ ·I s

IT?

WH&lt;lTS THST SMeLLj"

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Ingels Carpet
175 North 2nd Avenue
Middleport, Ohio

BAUM LUMBER.

Shoe Place
.

'

ST.RI. 248

N·. 2nd Ave.

Middleport _

992-5627

985-3301

· WARNER~

.-eSERVICES~
'

.

.

(HESTER

• Ppmeroy, OH ..
• • 92.:.6687 . .; .'
.

Ingels Electron·ics
Jewelry &amp; Picture Gallery
106 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

740-992-2635

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
992-2955 • Pomeroy, OH

CROW&amp;CROW
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
992.;.6059 · • Pomeroy, OH
IMeigs Emergency

Downing-Childs
Mullen•Musser
Agency

Services ••.•..•••••• 2
IGallia &amp; Mason
Emergency
Services ............3

.

-

IRnrno •••••••••••••••••••4

SATURDAY MORNING SPORTS CLINICS .

992-3381 • Pomeroy, OH
Toothache ............7

Fisher Funeral Homes
2645 2nd Ave
Middleport, OH
740-992-5141

590 E. Main
Pomeroy, OH
740-992-5444 .

Tradition • Service • Value

-Pleasant
Valley
Hospital
'

228 West Main • Pomeroy, OH

740-992-5432

VALLEY
LUMBER
992-6611 • Middleport, OH

HOME NATIONAL
FDii BANK ~
---949-2210 • Racine, OH
992-6333 • Syracuse~ OH

The Vaughan Agency ·
Providing a world of choice In Insurance
Property and Casualty Insurance
Homeowners • Auto • Business
Health afld Life Insurance
Health Plans • Life • Dentai/Vison .

740-992-9784
'
Or toll free 1- 877 - 992- 9784

Heat Exposure .... 7
Bleeding •••..••••••••••8

...••..........•... 13
Choking ............. 14

PROVIDING FOR YOUR ATHLETES NEEDS
October 24, 2007
Printed and Distributed

by:
ltaUipolii llailp tlribunr
825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 456~ 1
(740)446-2342

Joint tlltaiant f.tgiittr
200 Main Street
Point Pleasan~ WV 25550
. (304) 675-1333

The Dally Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
(740) 992:2156

HOLZER
CLINIC

740-446-5818

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