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Page '86 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

Martin might not be done driving, after all
BY JENNA fRYER

ASSOCIATED PRESS
CHARLOTTE, N.C.
With zero titles in an otherwise storied career, Mark
Martin again heads into the
Chase for the championship
as the sentimental favorite.
This is supposed to be his
final full-time season, his
last chance to make a desperate grab at an elusive
NASCAR crown .
But just like last year.
when he allowed car owner
Jack Roush to talk him into
extending his farewell tour.
Martin is again wavering.
There are cracks in his previously steadfast desire to
scale back, making it difficult .to believe this really is
Martin's final run.
Consider:
- Martin said he didn'l
want to run a Nextel Cup
schedule this season , but
here he is, back for a 19th
year in the No. 6 Ford.
- He was adamant in May
that he would never consider
a partial Cup schedule
because part-time rides
aren't capable of winning.
Now he admits he'd be
interested in running about a
dozen races next year.
-Martin said a report that
he would drive the No. 88
Ford in 2007 was absolutely
not true, and he's had zero
discussions with Robert
Yates Racing officials about
it. He also insists he doesn't
want to be a team owner. But
ir\ virtually the same breath,
Martin admits anything can
change with a simple phone
call.

both needs. He's a big
enough name to satisfy a
sponsor and could be an
excellent mentor. But he
claims he doesn't want to
Behind
Driver
·drive
more than 12 races
1. Matt Ken seth ...
... Leader
2 Jimmie Johnson
. .·5
next year.
.. - 1Q
3. Kevin Harvick
Would the Yateses even be
4. Kyle Busch ..... . ... -15
interested in that small of a
. -20
5 Denny Hamlin .
.. -25
6. Date Earnhardt Jr..
commitment?
7. Mark Marlin ...
.. ·30
"Absolu'tely," Doug Yates
. . -35
8. Jell Burton
.-40
9. Jel1 Gordon .
said. "Who wouldn't want
.... -45
10. Kasey Kahne
Mark Martin for whatever
you can get him for?"
Martin knows how all this
So, itmi~ht not be that farwaffling makes him look. so fetched of a plan for the
he's careful about what he Yates· to put together a
says these days. ,
. .
patchwork lineup to fit! their
:'Look at me, I m dnv1nf . flagship ride. They've also
this year and 1 sal?, It w~sn I got an interest in Ward
~omg_ to happen. he. smd. Burton (out of racing the
"So I m trymg not to do a past two seasons) and Ricky
whole bunch more of_ that I Rudd (in semiretirement) uon't want a reputation tor and they just might be willyou not bemg able \o count ing to work out a three-man
on what I say- that s some- schedule with Martin.
thin.~ that is important to
Or, they might be able to
me.
.
gui lt Martin into driving
. So the most pressmg ques- their car the same way
uon m NAS&lt;;AR nght no:" Roush did a year ago.
IS tht s: What IS Mark rarttn Despite Martin's repeated
gomg to do next year·
. protests that he wants cut
II would seem no one back, it's becoming increasnot even Martm htmself - ingly clear that deep inside
knows the answer.
his racing blood he doesn't
L1ke everyone else, he really want to.
sees the pressmg need RYR
Martin a racer down to his
has wi~h the _No. 88. Dale very cor~. is scared to leave
Jarrett 1s leavmg at the end competition behind. It's why
of the season . and. takmg , he ptcked. up a deal to run in
sponsor UPS w1th h1m, and the Truck Series, and
car owners Doug and Robert planned to make its 25-race
Yates need to deliver some- schedule his 2007 hobby.
one btg to gam the money ll
But it's proved not to be
w1ll take to keep that team not nearly enough for the 47
afloat. RYR has newcomer year old Martin, who has
Dav1d G!lhland m lis second already won four of the eight
car, and desperately need to race s he's entered thi s year
g1ve htm a veteran teammate and five of 11 overall. So
to helph1m find h1s way..
now he 's open to adding the
Martin, of course, ftlls 12 Cup companion races to

Nextel Cup
Chase Drivers

keep the juices flowing.
He's also eligible to cOm·
pete in Cup's All-Star race,
so he might as well add that
to the schedule, too. Then
throw in any event run at
Lowe's Motor Speedway or
in Dover, Del., because
those are his favorite tracks
and it would kill him not to
be there.
Why stop there? He's a
four-time Michigan winner.
so he should probably continue to race there, and he's a
four-time winner on the road
courses, so he should continue there, too.
But here's the problem
with Martin - he gives 100
percent to everything he
does, and will never be the
guy content to drive in second gear. And after nearly
two decades of giving every
ounce of energy and intensi '
ty he has, Martin is running
out of steam.
Oh, his fit 47-year-old
body can handle it. It's his
mind that can't.
Not running well eats
away ·at Martin, and when
his car isn't up with the leaders, it's devastating. This
year is no exception.
He 's in the Chase, but
barely. He doesu't have a
win, hasn't · contended for
many, and is a long shot to
win the title this year. He
knows it and he's accepted
it, but it still drives him
crazy.
It's not at all the way
Martin wanted to go out. Yet
he doesn't regret coming
ba.ck this year.
"I don't, but I do regret
getting so intense,"
.. he said.

Pomeroy OES awards
· scholarships, A2

ne
Middleport • ·Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o (

BY EDDIE PELLS

The attorney for Tour de
France winner Floyd Landis
submitted a motion to dismiss doping charges against
the cyclist Monday, claiming
Landis' positive testosterone
tests were flawed and did
. not meet standards set by the
World Anti-Doping Agency
for a doping offense.
In a letter sent to the U.S.
Anti-Doping Agency, attorney Howard Jacobs disputed
the accuracy of the carbon
isotope ratio tests performed
on Landis' urine sample at a
lab in France.
Jacobs said three . of the

four testosterone metabolite
in
differentials
tested
Landis' sample came out
negative. when taking into
account the margin of error.
The negative results included the metabolite that,
according to Jacobs,. has
been identified as the best
indicator of testosterone use.
Jacobs also claimed that the
only metabolite that came up
positive "resulted ·from an
unknown laboratory error
and is not the result of
testosterone usage."
Jacobs also claimed that
the analysis of a different
test,
the
testosterone· epitestosterone analysis, "is
replete with fundamental,

gross errors," including mismatched sample code numbers that don't belong to
Landis. Jacobs said the
alleged confirmed data .on
the 'B' sample came from a
sample number not assigned
to Landis.
Both Landis and USADA
had representatives at the
testing of the 'B' sample.
USADA general counsel
Travis Tygart said the doping agency couldn't comment on specific cases. but
noted it is not unusual for
athletes and their attorneys
to seek dismissal of cases.
"Our standard· process
allows all athletes to make a
submission to the USADA

review board, and those submissions are seriously considered prior to any case
going forward ," Tygart said.
A review board is expected to issue a recommendation on Landis' case sometime in the next week. That
process could be delayed if
USADA responds directly to
Jacobs' letter.
If the review board recommends sanctions against
Landis, he is expected to
appeal that and ask for an
arbitration hearing. Jacobs
has said he would seek a
public hearing, and USADA
has said it would agree to
one if sought.
Landis issued a statement

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. West Virginia is open for business, even in places nobody
dreamed it wa~ possible.
Late last year. the lerro-alloy
plant near New Haven, which
had gone through a litany of
ownership and name changes,
had been given up for dead. All
three furnaces lay in ruin, the
plant abandoned in shambles,
the owner bankrupt.
Then, a funny thing happened. An investment group
from the Ukraine stepped forward in tederal bankruptcy
court and offered $20 million for
the rusted-out plant. Creditors of
the previous owner quickly

photo
Reusch Racing driver Mark Martin, right, talks with teammate and NASCAR Nextel Cup points leader Matt Kenseth
prior to the Chevy-Rock &amp; Roll 400 auto race at Richmond
International Raceway in Richmond, Va. Saturday.

reasserting his innocence.
"I did not take testosterone
or any other performance
enhancing substance and
I'm very happy that the science is confirming my innocence," he said. "I was
relieved, but not surprised,
when I learned that scientifiC experts found problems
with the test."
Jacobs, who did not imme-

And that might be what
.leads Martin back for a 20th
year. All he wants to do is go
out on his terms - racing
hard and racing for · wins.
Until he's able to do that,
Martin will never be free to
make a clean break.

0BITUARIFS
Page AS
• Virginia Blazewicz
• Janet VanVranken
Megahey
• Mary Virginia
Easterday
• Milton Bruce Cleland

Gra d Slam.' Because yo~
hav
to first win the
Au: alian Open, and then see
w at happens at the French."
ederer said, "Before having
won those two. no point in
talking about it.''
He has yet to conquer
Roland Garros. But, still only
25, he 's won Wimbledon the
past four years, the U.S. Open
the past three, anu . the
Australian Open twice for a
total of nine majors - five
shy of Pete Sampras' record.
.It's a pursuit thatmerits as
close attention as Tiger
Woous · chase of Jack
Nicklaus' record of 18 golf
Grand Slam titles. Woods
owns 12, although unlike
Federer, he can boast of a
career Grand Slam.
Woods has done something
else Federer hasn't: win four
majors in a row. He did it
from the 2000 U.S Open in
June through the 200 I
Masters in Apri 1. And Woods,
too, knows what it's like to
fall a tad short of a true Grand
Slam: In 2005, he won two
majors and finished a total of
four shots out in the other

NEW YORK - Two sets.
In the end. OILRaper. that's
all that separatctl Ro~e.
Federer from a true""l:Jrilnd
Slam thi s year.
1\vo sets.
And as he lived it up into
the wee hours of Monday
with his inner circle at a bistro
in
Manhattan's
trendy
Meatpacking District, celebrating the U.S. Open title
that gave him three major
championships in 2006,
Federer took a moment to
ponder what could have been.
"It hit me last night, you
know, when 1 actually realized that I've . been in all
major finals in the same year:
· ·
I was so cIose to wmnmg
a
Grand Slam," Federer said
Monday during a 20-minute
interview with a small group
of reporters at a .Midtown
hotel. "But I'm very happy
with three, of course."
'
As well he should be:
Federer went 27-1 at tennis' four premier tournaments, winning the Australian 1
0 pen and Wimbledon be eoore V/0.
The two superstars met
his triumph at Flushing Sunday, chatting before a_nd
Meadows. The lone blemish? sharing champagne after
A four-set loss to No. 2 Federer beat Andy Roddick
Rafael Nadal in the French 6-2, 4-6, 7-5, 6-1 in the U.S.
Ope n tina!. Remarkable as 0 pen f'ma1. Woo ds an d
his year was, it's worth con- Federer began text-messagsidering that if Federer had · ing a few months ago, but
won three sets instead of one their schedules never allowed
on that 90-degree day in June, for a face-to-face conversahe would have become the tion.
first man since Rod Laver in
"! arrived in the States and
-1969 to complete a &lt;:alendar- everybody was again talking
year Grand Slam.
about us," Federer said
"I knew that I had an Monday, referring to comparopportunity. But it's so fm·- isons made between his suefetched that you don't want to cess in tennis and Woods' in
put yourself under pre&gt;sure. golf. "I was like, ' Wow. TI1is
I'm never going to say open- IS quite interesting.' J don't
ly, ' l'.m going to go for the mind talking about Tiger,
. .

because I'm a big fan of his
and everything. And then I
thought, 'I'd like to finally
meet him. not only just talk
about him, like some stranger
or something, because I feel
so close and yet so far."' .
They arc represented by the
same agency, and Federer
sent word he'd like something arranged. Woods sent
word back. before the U.S.
Open, that he'd show up for
the tina!.
·
How's that for pressure?
Well, Federer kept his end of
the bargain, and Woods did,
too, sitting in the front row of
Federer's guest box Sunday.
In golf and tennis, greatness is measured at Grand
Slams, though Federer does
quite well elsewhere, too.
He's 70"5 this year, with a
tour-leading eight titles from
I3 tournaments. Since replac·ing Roddick at No. I in
February 2004, Federer has
stayed on top, a 137-week run
that's the third longest
Jimmy
Connors,
now
Roddick's adviser, holds the·
record of 160.
"Obviously, he's the guy
everybody's
chasing,"
Connors said. "Certainly,
Federer's record the last
three, four years lias been
incredible."
And yet, Federer made the
sort of admission Monday
that one doesn't hear from
Woods: "Doubt is always
there for me."
"I get doubts once in a
while, and early on in the
tournament, they're always
there," said Federer, who
called his· U.S. Open quarterfinal against James Blake the
toughest test of the two
weeks. "But it doesn't mean
I'm going to play bad. It's
just, like, all of a sudden. you

have · these five minutes
where you think, 'Maybe I'm
not going to win this thing.'
Because maybe I just don't
feel quite right or maybe the
other guys are playing very
well. It's just about . turning
that corner at the right
moment and telling yourself,
' Well, I think you can do it
again.' And that's what 1did."
Simple as that.
,
He's won nine of the last 14
majors, but it's fascinating to
look back and realize that
Federer lost in the first round
three times in a span of five
Grand Slam tournaments
right before his streak began.
The last of those early exits
came to the unheralded Luis
Homa of Peru at the 2003
French Open. In retrospect,
Federer said, it was an upset
that helped shape the champion he's become. 1
"I remember going into the
tournament feeling so confident, going like, '.1 could win
this thing. I'm playing so well
at the moment.' I lost the first
set and thought, 'There's rio
chance I'm coming back in
this match. And if 1- do, seven
matches to play, there's no
way I'm going to win the
French Open.' All of a sudden, within 45 minutes,' my
whole dreams were shattered.
I was so weak mentally,"
Federer recalled.
.
"When I lost the match,
there was no need to explain
what happened because 1
knew exactly what was
wrong. 1 had to toughen up a
bit, you know? It was just one
of those moments when I
tinally realized I have to still
change a few things because I
thought I had everything figured out by then. But I didn't."

He certainly dt)I!S now.

diately return messages left
at his office by The
Associated . Press, did not
reveal in his news release
the identity of the experts
Who found problems with
the test. Nor did he explain
the "unknown laboratory
error" that resulted in the
poslttve on the single
metabolite in the carbon isotope ratio test.
,.

INSIDE
• Riffle turns 6.
See PageA2
• Brokers reject plea
deal in state scandal.
See Page A2
• Woman charged in
crash that killed family of
4. See Page A2
• Report: Mistakes led to
escape of suspect in
officer's killing.
See PageA2
• Holzer offers free
prostate screenings.
See PageA2
• UM members hear
about globalization.
See Page AS
• PPA offers seniors
info on prescription.
See Page AS
• Ohio House committee
votes to accelerate·
.income-tax cuts. ·
See PageA6

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

Roger Fede er, Tiger Woods on a major chase
ASSOCIATED PRESS

8Y TIM MAloNEY
TIMLONEY@MYDAILYREGISTEA.COM

AP

"I didn 't mean to, but that 's
just me. I wish I hadn 't got
so intense, but I thought I
could make a difference and
at the end I got frustrated
because I wasn't able to
make the difference that I
·hoped 1 might be able to."

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Sports
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A6

©-2006 Ohio Val1e)· Publishing Cor

accepted,andthedealwasdone. Highlander Alloys plant," the
Since
then,
Felman govemor said.
Pnxluction Inc., a subsidiary of
"We
thank
Felman
the Privat Intertmding Group in Production for its investment
the Ukraine, has spent$ I 2 mil- · and welcome the company to
lion to rebuild the plant.
our community."
Gov. Joe Mimchin flew in by
Ukminian company officials
helicopter Tuesday morning for said the business climate created
a dedication
ceremony. under Manchin's "open for
Surrounding the tent under business" motto had a lot to do
which a large gathering of offi- with their uecision to come to
cials sat to hear his remarks were Mason County.
dozens of meri in yellow hard
"We chose to work in West
hats, the workers who have Vrrginiabecauseofthecornmitcome back to jobs they surely ment the government has to to
thought were gone.
supporting new business and
"Felman PrOduction has their development," said Sergey
made an extraordinary contri- Maximenko, vice-chairman of
bution to Ma'\On County and to Privat Intertrading and chief of
West Vuginia by purchasing the ferro-alloys division. ''The
and restoring the furnaces and state has a good location and
structure of the former investment climate."

That climate will be put to a
real test just a few hundred yards
away from the new Felman
Production, at American
Electric Power's Mountaineer
Plant. where negotiations currently are underway concerning
cost recovery as AEP consider&gt;
building · a new Integrated
Gasification Combined Cycle
plant. If West Vrrgima offers
costrecoveryatabetterratethan
neighboring Ohio, the first
IGCC plant could very well be
built in M_ason ~ounty. .
Manchin srud he cons1ders
Mike Monis,AEPchiefexecutive officer, a personal friend.
"At first he said, 'I'm going to
build the plant in Ohio,' and I
said, 'Mike, that's the wrong
place,"' he said.

The governor also saiu he\
cnmmilled to seeing coal Iique· faction plants bui It in West
Virginia. which woulu conven
coal into motor fuel. He is headed to Wyoming tl1is week todis&lt;:uss that state\ ellc&gt;nto con\'CI1 ·
coal into fuel. and other mining
issues.
Tuesday momi ng \plant lieuication begm1 with a prayer of
thm1ks by Pastor Brian May of
the Fail'\iew Bible Church.
"We come with JOY because
we've watched tllis plant transformed." he said.
State Sen. Chru·b Lanham
(R-Mason), who served as
emcee of the event. said the
opening of the Felman plam
Please see Felman, A5

DPOTTORFF@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

BY BmrSERGEN't'
BSERGENT@MYOAJLYSENTINEL.COM
PORTLAND
The
Racine Southern FFA chose to
give back to the commuriity
this year by honoring the Civil
Wat history in the Southern
Local School District, building areplica of a Civil War cannon that was then donated to
the Portland Community
Center I Buffington Island
Civil War Museum.
The cannon was on display
last weekend at the gathering
for Morgan's Raid II, an event
in which Southern FFA members volunteered to work at.
The cannon was built
through donations and a portion of a $1,500 Building Our
American
Communities
(BOAC) gnmt awarded to the
Racine chapter by the Ohio
FFA Foundation. The remainder of the grant money will be
used to complete a concrete
and steel monument at
Portland depicting a Civil War
officer's tent.
As for the cannon, Racine
Southern FFA Teacher Butch
Mitchell said his students
worked for around three solid
weeks constructing the cannon, including the hand carved
wheels made from hickory
donated by Bill Maynard. The
cannon'saluminum barrel was
made by Bill Gilmore of Fort
Ohio who made cannons for
the .Civil War films Gods and
Generals and Gettysburg as
Please see FFA, AS

BY BRIAN J. REED

I

""" "" ,;,,h "' "liood.&lt;""'

2110(•

BY DIANE POTTORFF

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

~unba!' tEime~ -6entinel

1-:I&gt;NES!Ii\ Y, SEI'TEMBER t;J,

Police find $1 0, 000 in
SOUTHERN FF A BUILDS AND
DONATES CIVIL WAR CANNON marijuana in Mason home

Middleport to
consider income
tax contractor

WEATHER

cfJalbpolili llail!' Qtribune
Joint ,Diealiant Reut~ter
The Daily Sentinel

1
I

\\

_Governor welcomes-Felman Production to W.Va.

• Eastem swats Miller.
See Page 81

.

BY HOWARD fENDRICH

' 1-.~ ' 1 S • \ ol. ;;h . """ · :.! h

SPORTS

Floyd Landis attorney seeks dismissal of .doping case
ASSOCIArED PRESS

Once powerful
GOP fundraiser gets
prison for illegal
Bush donations, A6

MASON, W.Va.-· A Mason couple was arrested Tuesday
after officers searched their home and found about $1 0.000
of marijuana and other drug paraphernalia.
. On Sunday, a search warrant was executed on the residence
of Tom and Stella O'.Bryan, Chief Derrick Taylor said.
Officers with the Mason Police Department. with the assistance of the Mason County Sheriff's Department and New
Haven Police Department, searched th~ home located at 189 .
Front St., Mason.
Officers found and took possession of approximately
$I 0,000 worth of marijuana and other items LJSed for its distribution, Taylor said. The O'Bryans were arrested Tuesday
on a charge of possession with intent to ueliver a controlled
substance.
·
The couple was arrested after a warrant was obtai ned from
the Mason County Magistrate's office by Patrolman Rob
Wilson of the Mason Police Department. Taylor said .
Wilson is the lead investigator in the ,·ase.
"Patrolman Wilson is a good officer ancll am very proud to
have him on this department," Taylor said. "He has made a
good addition to this department. ..
Following the arrest, the O'Bryans were taken before
Please see Anest. A5

Couple pitches senior
living on school property
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Beth Selg&amp;nt/photo

Racine Southern FFA students recently constructed and
donated a Civil War cannon to the Portland Community
Center 1 Buffington Island Civil War Museum. Some of the
students that worked on the cannon are (sitting) Ashley
Krider, second row (from left) Miranda McKelvey, Mikayla
Krider, third row (from left) Beau Diddle, Butcfl Mitchell (FFA
teacher), Tom Porter. Smaller collector's cannons are also
now on sale at the museum.

Jvferchants Association
plans Christmas festivities
BY-CHARLENE HOEFLICH

pastors and members of participating churches to discuss anangements.
II
"Everyone was rea Y
enthused and cooperative
about this," said Mills. "It
gives them an opportunity 10
share fellows~ip as well as
h h'
d b 1 0f
I e !story an
eau Y
their churches." Another
meeting with . church representatives to tinalize plans
will take place at II a.m. on
Oct. 2 at Trinity Church.
Mills noted that several of
the churches volunteered
vehicles or vans to transport
· ht t"'md 1t
· d'f'
those who m1g
1ficult to walk from church to
church. Each church also
volunteered to prepare luminaries to mark entrances.
Tickets for the Christmas
church tour will be .$5 for
adults and $1 for children
under 12, and are expected
to go on sale early next
month . Refreshments will
be served to the participants
. at the finale of the tour.

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
MIDDLEPORT
POME ROY_ Christmas
Farming out operation .of
the income tax department festivities, ranging from a
could save the Village of walking church tour to ereMiddleport tens of thou- alive. contests, to expanded
in downtown
sands of dollars a "year, but decorations
Pomeroy, are being planned
the income tax administrator
said Monday evening it for this year's holiday seawould affect the level of ser- son by the Pomeroy
Merchants Association.
_vice to the public.
Plans for the church tour,
Charles Hawk of the
a
/first
for the Association,
Regional
Income
Tax
Agency presented informa- were discussed by Sandee
tion to village council about Mills, chair. The tour has
for Sunday,
the service it offers to 129 been scheduled
·
·
D
10
be
ec. , gmnmg at 4 p.m.
Ohio villages and cities in 41
counties. RITA administers, and willlnclude either stx or
collects ana enforces local seven Pomeroy churches
income · tax collections for decorated for the holiday
season. At each of the
those municipalities.
Hawk estimated the cost to churches there will be a
Middleport at between musical, 'drama or other pro$12,000 and $13,000 per gram, along with a presentayear if it contntcts with tion of the church history, to
RITA, and said towns that last 20 minutes.
Participants will be led by
sign on "generally increase
lantern
light from one
revenue" from income tax
church to the other singing
carols along the way. Earlier
Please see Tax, A5
this week Mills met with Please see Festivities, A5

...

,.

MIDDLEPORT - A Middlepon coupk is ready tu close a
deal on purchasing the Middlepon High School and Central
Building, and plan to conven the propeny inlo a "senior living
campus."
Dan and Beth James, who divide their · time between
Middleport and Detroit, Mich., met wilh Middlepon Village
Council Monday evening to outline plan.s for convening the
two abanuoned school buildings into senior living qucu1crs and
a facility to be shared with the community.
Dan James said they would like to build apanment units for
seniors in the high school building. provide assisteu living
facilities and services in the central buildin~ and renovate the
auditorium and gymnasium for t1se by resiuents and the generPiease see Property, AS

,

,_

·.

BCI to do meth presentation
·By BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY
The
scourge of · methamphetamine in rural America will be
the topic of a presentation
from Scott Duff of the Ohio
Bureau
of
Criminal
Identi fication
and
Investigation at tomorrow's
meetingoftheMeigsCounty
Community
Coalition
(MCCC).
The meeting begins at 7
p.m. at the Mulberry
Community Center.
The
Meigs
County
Community Coalitiqn is a
grass roots movement of
local people attempting to
fight juvenile drug abuse and
educate the public about the
problem as well as any solutions. As alway s the meeting
is open to students·, parents.
Jaw enforcement officials.
church leaders. educators.
health recovery specialists
and basically anyone that

feels a need to attenu. The
meetings abo provide organizations and individuals
·
With an opportunity to network :tbout the juvenile drug
I ·oh0 I problen1 ,·n the
1 "&lt;:
'11d
county and subsequent
resource' to com hat it. ·
MCCC member Fenton
T 1 d
·b 1 D J"t··
ay or escn ec u s prescmmion on meth as
"tremendous." According to
Ohio BCI statist ics met'llabs
in Oliiu increased from 4.1
busts in 2000 to 400 busts in
2005.
One reason why the
meth problem has extended
into some portions of rural
Ohio is the use of anhydrous
ammonia. a cheap nitrogen
fertili7er used for crops and
cooking met h.
According to Taylor
MCCC re(entlv received
state funding in ·the ammmt
of $-+.000 thanks to the help
or Ron Adkins or the Gallial'ackson-Meigs 8'oard of
Please see Meth, A5

�The Daily Sentinel

REGIONAL

Holzer offers free
prostate screenings

Page.A2

Rfflle turns 6

Community Calendar

NEW HAVEN - Skylar
Riffle celebrated her sixth
birthday on Aug. 8 at her
home in New Haven with
family and friends .
Those helping her cele brate were her parents, Matt
and Wendi Riffle; Lisa,
Rodney. Brady and Bailee
Bumgarner; maternal grandparents. ,Rick and Joyce
King; paternal grandparents,
Vicki Cundiff and Jimmy
Riftle; great-grandma. Pat
Marcinko; great-grandma,
Ruth Riffle; Lindsey Barlar;
Soles :
Cindv
Monika
Buzzard; Brian , Jennife r,
Jaeda and Jaylyn Pagel;
Gary, Brenda and Kristi
Short: Mark, Ginger and
Michael MacKnight: Gail.
Richard
and
Lorin
McCullough ; Ammie and
Dalton Jordan; Melissa
Hoffman; Eiaine Chandler:
Rosanna
and
Ralph
McCune: Erica and ·Garrett
Curnutte: and Eric Swartz.
Those sending gifts were

Public meetings

GALLIPOLIS
In the National Comprehensive
nbservance of Prostate Cancer Network do believe
Health Month, a free that the majority of available
pro,tate screening clinic is evidence. though not conbeing sponsored by the . elusive, 'upports the view
Holzer · Medical Center that prostate cancer screenCommunity Health and ing can ~ave lives.
Wellness
Department.
Men who are 50 vears of
Holzer Clinic, the Holze r age or over should- receive
Center for Cancer Care , and an annual prostate examinathe
American
Cancer tion . which includes a digi Society.
. tal rectal examination and a
Submitted photo
It will be conducted from prostate specific antigen Scholarships were presented to Whitney Thoene , left, and
8 to I I :30 a.m. at the blood test. Men who have a Elizabeth Well by Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of the
Urology Department on the family history of prostate Eastern Star.
Skylar Riffle
Second Floor of Holzer cancer or who are AfricanClinic located on Jackson American should initiate
great-grandparents, Maddy
and Bill Roush; greatPi~e in Gallipolis.
annual screenings at the age
grandma. Fran Frye: greatPhysicians who will con- of 40.
duct the screenings include
Those interested in pargrandpa, Jim Riftle; greatgrandpa, Bud Cundiff;
Henry Fooks, Jr., MD, ticipating in Holzer's free
Diane and Brian Riffle; Pam
Nicolette
Jones.
MD, screen ing must have no per.
Lane: John Arnott; Teddy,
Shrikant K. Vaidya. MD. sonal history of prostate
POMEROY - Pomeroy Ruby Vaughan. all of
and Lawrence Yodlowski, cancer; have no prostate
Angie and Ashlee Swartz:
MD. Assisting will be She! surgery within one year; and Chapter I 86, Order of the Middleport. a student at
Joey, Bethany. Jessica and
recently Ohio University perusing a
Dawson , MSN, CUNP. be 50 years of age or older. Eastern Star,
Barb Riffle: and great-greatawarded
three
$500
schol - degree in Political Science
Certified Urology Nurse Additional qualifications
grandma, Sis Cundiff.
after which she plans to
Practitioner
at
Holzer could include individuals 40 arships.
Scholarships are awarded attend Jaw sehoul.
or older with the following
Clinic.
Danielle Webster, daughProstate cancer is a malig- risk factors: family history every year to deserving
ter
of Jacqueline Carsey
or
gra
ndchildren
chilqren
nant tumor that most often of prostate cancer: African
Webster
and granddaughter
of
a
member
of
Pomeroy
begins in the outer part of American : or previous
the prostate and niay spread abnormal prostate exam or OES . The winners are cho- of Jack Carsey, who will
sen using a judging criteria pursue her higher education
to the inner pa11. This type PSA blood test.
of
GPA, extracurricular in Performing Arts and
of cancer is the most comTo schedule an appointO'Neil.
BY ANDREW
activities,
community Music at Otterbein College.
moo cancer among men and · ment for a free screening,
The
charges
a~ainst
Whitney and Elizabeth
WELS!i-HUGGINS
the second leading cause of call Susan Morgan at Holzer involvement, and a written
O'Neil
and
broker
Mtchael
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
presented
their
cancer death in men. Medical Center, at (740) essay stating their future were
Lewis are part of a yearlong
·
plans.
awards
prior
to
a
recent
Among African Amcric·ans. 446-505 I, Monday through
political
scandal that has
COLUMBUS
The
state
meeting
of
Chosen
to
receive
the
Pomeroy
OES
the disease· is more preva- Friday. 9 a.m. - 4 p.m.
shaken
the
state's
insurance
fund
for
injured
lent. In this year alone, Registration is limited to the scholarships for 2006 were: with family and friends in
Whitney Thoene, daugh- attendance. Danielle was workers continued eft&lt;ins to . Republican-dominated gov40,000 men will die from first 100 eligible men. and
of Nancy and · Dale unable to attend. Punch and reduce soaring medical costs ernment.
ter
prostate cancer. Fortunately, the registration deadline is
O'Neil, 54, of Chesterland,
of Pomeroy, who is cookies were served to Tuesday, meeti11g with comThoene
it can often be cured wht!n Thursday at 4 pm.
Fur
panies
the
agency
says
must
·
and
Lewis,
7 I,
.of
detected early and effective- more information on the attending the University of those attending.
The scholarships were brace for lower payments for Willoughby. have pleaded
ly treated during its screening, call Bonnie Rio Grande majoring in
not guilty to federal charges
made
possible by a bequest managing medical· claims.
secondary
education.
advanced stages.
McFarland , RN , BSN,
that
they biibed Terrence
the
estate
of
Pomeroy
Payments
to
those
compafrom
Well,
daughter
Elizabeth
Treatment options for Director, HMC Community
the former chief
Gasper,
prostate cancer include Health and. Wellness at of Zandra Courtney and OES member, Sue Beaver . nies jumped more than 40
percent since the arrange- financial officer of t.he Ohio
watchful waiting, hormonal (740) 446-5679. or Jog onto granddaughter of Dick and Margulas.
ment
began in 1998, though Bureau
of
Workers'
therapy,
radiation, HMC's
website
at
·
Compensation.
the
state
is
seeing
about
half
brachytherapy, and surgery. www.holzer.org.
as many · claims. The state
Gasper pleaded guilty in
Prostate health can be mainFor general information
paid about $171 million to June to federal and state
tained with re~ular check- regarding prostate cancer,
26 managed care companies charges that he accepted
AmeriCan
ups. healthy lifestyle and contact
the
bribes in exchange for doling
in
2005, the bureau said.
dtetary supplements.
Foundation for Urological
Employers pick the com- out agency business. He's
The American Cancer Disease at I-888-237·9004,
panies
to oversee claims filed expected to testify against
Society,
the American or Jog onto www.afud.org,
CHARDON (APl - A front axle. The truck was
O'Neil and Lewis.
by
their
injured workers.
Urological Association, and or www.proslatehealth.com. prosecutor said he was knocked out of control and
"If
we
are
·
to
reach
our
The two brokers managed
unlikely to pursue jail time skidded into the piuh of a
for an 80-year-old woman sport utility vehicle. The goal of efficient and cost- stock investments for the $15
who au1horities say caused a Munson Township family in effective operations, we need billion insurance fund for
crash that killed a family of the SUV - Paul and Kelly to assure that the services we injured· workers while workCorrigan, b9th 32, and their purchase are of value," Bill ing at firms that received
four.
Mabe, administrator of the hundreds of thousands of
Viola Folwarczny, of 8- and 5-year-old sons Ohio Bureau of Workers' dollars in commissions from
CHILLICOTHE (AP) -·
Ross County .Sherif!' Ron Bainbridge Township in were killed.
said in a the agency.
Folwarczny and the truck Compensation,
Jail guards allowed a suspect l'/ichols said he's reviewing Geauga County, could lose
news release.
Also Tuesday, t.he former
in a police officer's killing to t.he repon before deciding her license for up to eight driver were treated at a hosIn a related development. chief investment ofticer at
move around without shack- whether to punish the offi- years on four misdemeanor pital and released the same two investment brokers the workers' camp bureau
counts
of
vehicular day.
les and to use a recreation cers.
accused of bribing a former defended his ties to a bureau
Each
vehicular state workers' compensation broker . including shared
"There's nothing confusing man slaughter, said Jim
area despite a direct order
that he remain inside, a report about the rules and regula- Gillette, Chardon police manslaughter charge carries official have rejected plea meals described in newly
on his escape concluded.
tions, the policies and proce- prosecutor. The charges a maximum 90-day jail sen- deals oft'ered by federal pros- released e-mail s.
No guard was watching dures," Nichols said Tuesday. were filed Monday in tence and $750 fine, and ecutors.
. James Mclean exchanged
Folwarczny could lose her
inmates in the recreation area "There's nothing cloudy Chardon Municipal Court.
"We intend to go to trial in frequent personal e-mails
The State Highway Patrol license for two years on each this matter. There will be no with Chicago broker Robert
the day John Parsons escaped about the order that was
from Ross County Jail in the given that he be shackled."
said Folwarczny turned into count. Folwarczny, who was plea," attorney William Rogoz, even thanking him
middle of the day using a · Nichols said he's creating a traffic on Aug : 5 and struck not arrested, is scheduled to Beyer said Thesday. He rep- for a night out, The
rope of bed sheets, according full-time job to inspect cells a tractor-trailer, breaking its appear in court Sept. 25.
resents•
broker
Daniel Columbus Dispatch reported .
to the external repo11 released and watch the recreation
area. He's also raiSing . the
Tuesday.
No prisoner reported the area's chain link fence all the
July 29 escape: and the first way to the roof and installing
word Parsons was gone came a tamper proof camera.
The escape by Parsons
45 minutes later from the
SHOW APPRECIATION TO YOUR FAIR BUYER WITH A
mother of another inmate from the downtown jail
who called the jail after hear- shocked residents of this
THANK YOU AD IN THE DAILY SENTINEL ••
ing of the escape from her south-central Ohio city sti II
recovering from the April
son.
Here are some of the most popular "Thank You'' ad sizes.
The repo11 portrays a jail 2005 slaying of Larry Cox, a
See Dave or Brenda at the ...
operation with a significant . well-liked officer who was
gap between what the rules otl'-duty when he was shot in
The Daily Sentinel
on the book said and how the neck. Cox, 44, was walkthey were followed.
ing home. from visiting his
111 Court Street, Pomeroy; OH
"I ain't ever seen a place pmenls when he joined a
• Ads must be paid for in advance.
run like this," one inmate told ' chase of a bank robbery susinvestigators.
pect in hi s leafy neighborParsons remains on the hood of lmge houses.
loose, last seen two days after
He died a few houses away
his escape several miles out- from his parents' home.
side of town. Police failed to
In his interview with inves'
.
lind him after searching the tigators. Hawkins comr---------------~
2 Col. x 4"
• heavily wooded and hilly plained about a heavy work' ThankS
.·
load. "We was behind un our
: ·area for several days.
A $40.000 reward has been rec schedule because they
offered, and the escape keep piling more and more
-· inspired an episode on work, and it just takes so
"America's Must Wanted" much time to get everything
that aired Saturday.
done," he said.
'
The report. 'by the
Large
defended
hei ·
Montgomery
County actions. "I've been here for
1 Col. x 2"
said I0 years and was not doing
Sheriff's
Office,
deputies Michael Hawkins anything dift'erent than I nor• and Melissa Large failed to mally do," she said.
• follow jail orders specificall y
Messages were left for
regru·ding Parsons and gener- Large and ·Hawkins at the
1' Col. x 3"
ally about watching the sheriff's office. Hawkins has
recreation area. It does not an unlisted home number; a
- recommend specific disci - message was left at Large's
\
· ·
residence.
• plinc.

PomeroyOES
awards scholarships

Brokers reject plea
deal in state scandal

Woman charged in crash
that killed family of 4

Report: Mistakes led to escape
ofsuspee( in officers kiUing

Don't f&lt;lrget to say "Thanks"

Sincere thanks

-.

.

rtl:\ANK YO{]

.

.

2 Col. x 2"

Wednesday, Sept. 13
SYRACUSE
•Syrac1.1se Village Council,
special meeting. 7 p.m ..
village hall.
Tuesday, Sept. 19
RUTLAND - Rutland
Village Council, regular
meeting, 7 p.m. , Rutland
Civic Center.

Saturday, Sept. 16
SALEM CENTER Star Grange #778 and Star
Junior Grange #878 annual
.hayride and wiener roast at
the Grange Hall on County
Road I, three miles north
of Salem Center. Grange
will provide hot dogs and
buns. Bring snacks. Final
plans for the Chicken BBQ
to .be held un October I
will be made.

Sunday, Sept. 16
POMEROY
Alcoholics Anonymous.
I 2-step study. 7 p.m ..
Sacred Heart Church.
Wednesday, Sept. 13
POMEROY - Big Bend
POMEROY - Meigs Farm Antique Club, tractor
County Board of Health, 5 pull, I p.m. Ruck Springs
p.m., conference · room Fairgrounds.
· Begining
Meigs County · Health with 9000 piund cla&gt;S. No
Department.
"
. admission charge . Food
available. For more inforThursday, Sept. 14
mation. call 992-1079 or
CHESTER - · Shade 742-3020.
River Lodge 453 will hold
POMEROY - 'Return
its monthly meeting 7:30 Jonathan Meig s Chapter,
p.m. Refreshments .
DAR , noon luncheo n.
RACINE Sonshine Wi'Jdhorse Cafe .
Circle will meet at 7 p.m.
at the Dorcas-Bethany
Church.
SYRACUSE
Sunday, Sept. 16
Wildwood Garden Club, 6 · POMEROY _ Reunion .
p.m. at · the Syracuse
of Veterans Memorial
Commuplty
Center.
·
Hospital employees, 1 to 5
Members are to take an p.m.
, Meigs Senior Center.
herbal
piotluck
dish. Bring finger foods, photos
Shirley Hamm will have and memorabilia. Anyone
program on herbs.
POMEROY - Alipha associated with hospital
Iota Masters. II :30 a.m. invited to attend.
MASON, W. VA. St. Paul Lutheran Church.
Norma Custer, Ann Rupe, Bailey family reunion, 4
and Jeanne Werry host- p.m. Mason City Park.
esses. Carol Adams to Take covered dish.
present program on breast
Sunday, Sept. 17
cancer.
RACINE
Gideon
POMEROY
Roush
reunion
will
be held
Alcoholics Anonymous
open discussion, 7 p.m., at I p.m. at Star Mill Park,
Racine. Take a covered
Sacred Heart Church.
dish.
TUPPERS PLAINS RACINE- Oscar ReedVFW Post 9053, 7 p.m. at
the hall. Meal at 6:30 Charles Hy sell reunion , I
p.m Sunday, Star Mill
p.m.
Park. Take covered dish
MIDDLEPORT
Eleanor Circle, United and dessert. White eleMethodist Women of phant auction to be held.
Health Church will meet
at 7 p.m . at the cnurch.
All women invited.
l&lt;' riday, Sept. 15
Friday, Sept. 15
STIVERS VILLE
MASON, W. VA.
Children's video at 6 p.m.
VFW Ladies Auxiliary of at .
the
Stiversville
Post 9926, Mason , will Community Church.
host a POW/MIA candlelight ceremony at 8:30
Saturday, Sept. 16
p.m.
at the
Senior
MIDDLEPORT - "His
Citizens
Building
111 Own" of Ashland, Ky. will
Mason in observance of be singing at 7 p.m . at the
National
POW/MIA Middleport. Church of the
Recognition Day.
Nazarene. Refreshments
will follow.

Clubs and
.organizations

Reunions

Church events

.,

,.

POMEROY - . Meigs
Countians who qualify for
prescription
coverage
through
Medicare can
obtain access information
and assistance with the
cost of drugs through a
growing f!ational program
called the Partnership for
Prescription
Assistance
(PPA).
The traveling educational
center called " Help is
Here Express" will be in
Athens 2 to 3 ' p.m.
Thursday, Sept. I4, at the

Family
Health
Care
Center, 88 North Plains
Road, The Plains, which is
next to McDonalds.
The traveling education
center is making its way
across the country to raise
awareness and educate the
public about patient assistance programs.
Anyone having difficulty
with affording their prescription medicines or
have other questions are
invited to stop in for
information or assistance.

·ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Ex-boyfriend displays stalker behnvior
BY KATHY MtTCHEU
Dear Abused: When you of such indolent behaviut.
Sunday, Sept. 17
run into your ex in public, Plus. fighting over thi' will
RACINE
foND MARCY SuGAR
do not engage him in con- surely create a lot of aniHomecoming for Mount
Dear Annie: I am an I 8- versation or re,pond to his mo,ity. and you won't win .
Moriah Church of God,
Sunday sc hool service year-old college freshman. remarks. Simply walk away Choo&gt;e your battle; carefulbegins at 10 a.m. followed In high school, I was in an as if you didn't notice him. ly.
Dear Annie: I read the
by regular service, lunch ~nhealthy relationship fur Do not reply to his e-mails.
but
save
them
in
a
separate
·letter
from "A Reader."
and special singing; Tiki nearly two years. My exfile
as
a
record
ot:
how
often
whose
daughter bought
the clown will be present' boyfriend was verbally and
emotionally abusive, and he tries to contact you . If he Mom a winning louery tickfor children.
POMEROY
The I'm still working through doesn 't 'top, you may need et and then insi\lcd that
Miller Famly, a bluegrass the pain he caused me. I am to report his stalking behav- Mom gtve her half the
go5pel group, will be in now in another relationship, ior to the police. As for your money or she couldn't see
concert, I0:30a.m. Sunday and my new boyfriend is so-called friend. consider the grandchildren. I thought,
distancing yourself a bit. this takes the cake.
morning worship service at very understanding· and sup- She
does not have your best
If paying the "53.000 ranthe Laurel Cliff Free portive.
interests
at
heart.
som"
is the only way the
Afte·r my ex and I broke
Methodist Church. For
Dear Annie: We have a couple will sec their grandmore information, call . up, I told him I no longer small conflict concerning kids. here's my suggestion:
wanted to have&gt; anything to
304-773-~559.
do
with him again. When he our two teenage sons and She should take that money
VINTON -Special serand divide it between the
their grandparents. ·
vices, 7 p.m. at the Spring graduated a year before I
It seems every time we let grandchildren and· buy
Baptist Church. Southern did, l thought l could put the our sons spend the weekend bonds or open a custodial
gospel singers, Rev. Gary entire episode behind me. or summer vacation at their sav ings account for them.
Griffith . preaching , Pastor However, he is sti II trying to grandparents' house. the Under no circumstances
Clyde Ferrell welcomes remain in contact. I've boys have total freedom to would I give the money to
everyone. For more infor- blocked him from my e- eat whatever junk they wi sh that greedy daughter and
mation, call 740-388-8075 . mail, but he creates new and go to bed whenever they son-in-Jaw.
Another
POMEROY - Marvin accounts under new names. want. They'll sleep until late Reader
Whiteman will be in con- His messages are infrequent, afternoon and never get out
Dear A.R.: Many readers
but whenever I receive
were incensed that thi~
cert at the Bradford Church them, I am greatly bothered of their pajamas.
We've told the grandpar- daughter would get a dime
of Christ, Bradbury Road, and don't know how to
ents
we don't like thi s and uf Mom's winnings, but we
Pomeroy, 7 p.m.
respond.
have
asked for a com pro- think your solution is a good
POMEROY
Zion
My ex is aware of my mise, but the· folks say they one. It allows Mom to be
Church of Christ ho.me- feelings, but persists in trycommg w1th prog~am from ing to ''mend" our relation- don't have to follow our ge nerous with her grand in their hou se. Are we children. without rewarding
.1,0 to. I I a.m .. teatunn?, ship and reconcile. We live rules
wrong to he upset over this? Miss Greedy in the process .
~orf1ven . A gam Trw,
in the same town and he - Old School
Annie's· Mailbox is writZton s cho1r and other spe- : attends my church, so there
Dear Old School: How ten by Kathy Mitchell and
eta) mustc. Memorabtlta are occasions when I run often do the boys go 10 their Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
dtsplay. Potluck meal at into him. Even worse, one ~randparents' house ? If it's tors of the Ann Landers
12: I 5 p.m.
of my friends refuses to mfrequent or during vaca- column. Please e-mail your
believe my side of the story tion, you should let things questions to anniesmailand thinks my ex is a great be. Grandma and Grandpa · box@comcast.net, or write
guy. She brought him to want the boys to enjoy visll- to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
prom last year, and I worry ing them, and the laxness is Box 118190, Chicago, IL
Saturday, Sept. 16
that
he may show up at her a bribe. How late they sleep 606ll. To find out more
POMEROY Meigs
Daisy Scout Troop meet- birthday party. She would and what they eat. is "minor about Annie's Mailbox, and
ing, I 0:30 to noon organi- never tell me in advance. spoilage" and won't hurt read features .by other
zational time at the · How do I handle any further them if it doesn't happen all Creators Syndicate writers
messages
or the time, and your sons are and cartoonists, visit the
Pomeroy Library activity e-mails,
with
this
person?
encounters
old enough to take responsi- Creators Syndicate Web
room. Open to kinder-Abused
Ex
bility for the consequences page at www.creators.com.
garten girls. For more
i nformaton
con tact
Heather Humphreys 992910 l.
.

Youth events

Community Assodation plans autumn events
BY BRIAN

Birthdays

J.

REED

8REED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

1\tesday, Sept. 19
POMEROY - George·
Horak will observe his
90th birthday on Sept. I 9.
Cards may be sent to him
at 198 Union · Terrace,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Wednesday, Sept. 20
HEATH - Jake Gaul
will observe his 85th birthday Sept. 20. Cards may be
sent to him at 716 Windsor
Lane, Heath , Ohio, 43056.
The Gauls are former residents of Meigs County.

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
CommUJiity'
Association finalized plans
Tuesday for ;m · upcoming
Bear Basket Bingo game on
Oct. 24 and the annual
Pumpkinport
Halloween
street festival on Oct. 30.
The bingo game will be
held at 6 p.m. at the firehouse, with proceeds to
benefit holiday events in
downtown
Middleport.
There will be I 8 bingo
games with a Longaberger
basket and a specially-made

third annual Ohio River
Bear Co. "Snow Bear,'' to
be given away m each
game. Doors will open at
4·30
. p. m .
Other games and drawings will be held in conjunction with the event.
. Among the prizes to be
given away will be items
donated for the association's
July 4 prize drawing, which
was canceled due to bad
weather. Other items from
that fundraiser will be given
away during the Christmas
shopping season.
The Pumpkinport event
on Oct. 30 will include a

Since its launch in
April 2005, · the national
progran1 -- sponsored by
America's pharmaceutical
research companies working with doctors, pharmacists, health care providers
and community groups -has matched more than· 2.6
million patients nationally
to programs that offer free
or discounted medicine.
For more · infonnation.
please call Teri Kirk at .
(614) 232-8309 or (614)
378-8817.

TUPPERS PLAINS - A
program on "Globalization Women and War" by Terri
Soulsby was presented at the
recent meeting of the
Tuppers Plain s United
Methodist Women.
The program also included
information on women and
water and was given after a
prayer led by Anna Rice\ and
the litany of the United
Methodist piurpose.
Plans were made during
the meeting for a farewell
recepton for Pastor Jane and

merchants' moonlight madness sales event, and a
pumpkin decorating contest
. for children through fifth
·
grade. pnzes
o t' cas h, savings bonds and gift certificates will be awarded to the
winner in each age category.
and a new bicycle will he
given tq the winner in the
people's choice category.
This year. the association
is inviting organizations to
set up bake sale tables in
the shopping district and
encourages those attending
to wear costumes. Free
refreshments will be served
at the Pumpkinport event.

Dave Beattie ou Seipt. 24 . We't Ohio Confrence for
Sharon Louks read an article becoming a silver unit iti
from the Response Magazine 2005.
on Epworth Village Serving
Plans were discussed for a
Kids in Heartl and. A birth- piancake and sausage breakday card was sent to Virginia fast with a bargain table on
Sue Canafax of Atlanta, Ga. Nov. I I. 7:30 to I I a.m. h1r a
after selecton of her name dnnatoin . The group alsu
from the Prayer Calender agreed to sponsor the youth
with a donation for Carboard
magazine .
JoAnna
Weaver
and City. 1',ttending were were
Teresia Lemons donated' Betty Cheviler. Sharon
some new books for the Louks, Judy Kennedy, Anna
Church Lending Library. · Rice, Terri Soulsby. Connie
The unit was recognized and Mary Rankin, and
with certificates from the JoAnna Weaver.

Local Briefs
SEPTA receives accreditation by ACA
NELSONVILLE - SEPTA Correctional Facility of
Nelsonville. which serves I0 southeastern counties including Meigs, has been awarded a three-year accreditation by
the American Correctional Association (ACA).
The award is the result. of a professional peer review
process b&lt;ised on national standards of he&lt;tlth care. phy;ical
plant, prngram and quality of life issues . SEPTA received
a 100% compliunce rating for adherence to 250 standards.
The accreditation award was presented to Monda H.
DeWee·se, Executive Director and Kathy Guinther.
Accreditation ,Manager, August 14th at the I36th Congress
of Correction in Charlotte, North Carolina .
SEPTA has served over 2000 adult . male felony offenders ~ in ce opening in I 990. SEPTA serves Athens.
Fairfield, G,d)ia, Hocking. Jack&gt;on. Meigs, Morgan , Perry,
Vinton and Washington Counties. SEPTA offers urea
Common Pleas Cou11 Judges a sentencing sanction that
blends incarceration and treatment programming which
includes counseling, chemical dependency treatment , work
release, education. and community service. SEPTA initial ly was accredited in I997. with consequent re-accreditation
awards in 2000, 2003 and 2006.

MIDDLEPORT - Campaign signs are not permitted in
the Village of Middleport more than 30 days befor~
· Election Day, according to Mayor Sandy lannarelli . Those
with camp:tign yard signs in place now are subject to fines ,
·
she said.

•

VVednesday,Septernbert3,2006

PPA offers seniors info on prescription UM members hear about globalization

No signs
Borders and Artwork may vary.

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

VVednesday,Septernbert3,2006

The Daily Sentinel

CoRNWELL CENTER
for Cardiovascular and Diabetes Care
Community Open House
Celebrating the opening of the progressive new Cornwell Center
Sunday, September 17 from I :00 to 4:00 p.m.
Enjoy tours, free health screenings, entertainment by
The Bob Stewart Band and refreshments.

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailyse~tlnel .com

•.

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

Congress sl1all ·make 110 law respecting an
· establislllm:nt of.religiou, or prohibitiug the
free exercise thereof; or abridging tire freedom of
speeclr, or of the press; or tire right of the people peaceabl}' to ·assemble, and to petitiou the
Gor,crnment for ~a redress o_j"grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

VIEW

Policy
Job ·loss part· ifpfiln

VVednesday,Sepie~ert3,2006

PageA4
Wednesday, September 13, 2006

Obituaries .

Pro-lifo arguments find new medium
"Nipffuck" is one of the
because anyone\ ~ured it.
most risque shows on teleFor a long time abortion
vision. The cable drama has been taboo on nld-fa&gt;habout the escapades of two
ioned daytime soap operas.
Miami plastic surgeons·An article not long ago in
has it all: beautiful people,
Soap
Opera Digest noted
Kathryn
pretty much every deadly
that at that point , after six
Lopez
sin and vice. But in one
decades, ·"a genre known
main storyline in its season
- and often lauded for premiere earlier this month,
tackling controversial sodal
"Nipffuck" was positively
issues first (had featured)
dichotorilous,
positively fidence of his he.st friend exactly six ahortions ... The
pro-life.
and business partner he article\ author put this in
When the pregnant Julia admits that had. he known sudsy pcr,pcctive: "There
is told her baby faces a earlier, he woulu have were more character' who
heightened risk of deformi- wanted to abort the child. came back from the dead in
ty she doesn ' t tell her hus- As he makes this admis- this year alone." There's a
band, figuring they didn't sion, the pain is evident in reaso n for that: People are
need any · more drama his whole body; his shame uncomfortable with aborthey had recently broken clear.
'tion. People feel the pain.
up. gotten back together,
It might be the un.likeliest and want to be kind to
and experienced other soap- ·forum for a pro-life debate, those who find themselves
operatic complications. She as the show has long been in tough, frighteni1ig situarelies on her hopes that the target (for good reason) tions but most don't
everything will be fine.
of conservative scom for ·desire or instinctively Slip·
But then everything isn't. the what founder of Media port ' abortion.
She learns that their unborn Research Center L. Brent
For that reason, I .can't
son has ectrodactyly Bozell calls, "utter depravi- imagine ··N ipffuck" .playhe ' II have malformed hands ty of its sensationali sm." in~ a s turylin~ like thi s- any
and/or feet. By the time she But this particular episode other way than pro-life. A
tells the baby's father, she offers an opportunity to L"tl~mti. Lhoughtless ahorLion
has already decided she's consider the under-reported would have turned otT the
having her baby. Sean, after fact that some 85 percent of audience. a natural revul getting over the shock that An1erican unborn-children sion . And by showing this
the information had been with Down Syndrome are reticence, "N ip/Tuck'' withheld from him, gives believed to be aborted. whether its writers intended
her and their unborn son his Down syndronie is certain- it or not - has done a public
full support. Yet in the con- ly disappearing, but it's not service. It speaks to those

Janet VanVranken Megahey

READY TO Bt

FFA

GASOLINE.

.Mary Virginia Easte1"CIIy

-

Ot

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, Sept: 13, the 256th day of 2006.
There are 109 days left in the year.
Today\ Highlight in History :
On Sept. 13. I 78H. the Congress of the Confederation
authorized the first .national election, and declared New
Yor~ City the temporary national capi tal.
On this date:
In 1759. during the final French and Indian War, the
British defeated the French on the Plains of Abraham overlooking Quebec City.
In 1803, Commodore John Barry. considered by many
the father of the American Navy, died in Philadelphia. In I X51. Amcri&lt;.:an medical pioneer Walter Reed was
born in Gloucester County, Va.
Thought for Today: "Revolt and terror pay a price. Order
and law have a cost" ~ Carl Sandburg. American poet a11d
author (I g78-1967 ).

Milton Bnace Cleland
WEST PALM BEACH, FLA.- Bruce Cleland, 58, of West
Palm Beach, Fla., fonnerly of Racine, died at West Palm Beach
Hospital in Florida. Saturday. Sept. 2. 2006, following a brief
battle with cancer.
He is survived by his wife. Patricia, daughter. Missy, and
grandson, Nathaniyl. along with six brothers, Allen of
Wheeling, W. Va., George of Ashley, Ohio. David of Coolville,
Ohio, John of Vienna, W.Va., Earl of Dupont. Ind.·; and Carroll
of Ashland. Ky.
He was preceded in death by his pm-ents. Walter m1d Mae
Cleland of Racine and a sister, Mary Slater.
Memorial services will be held 4 p.m. Sept. 17 at West P1~111
Beach, Fla.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

thanks to oJ~I.(an;;aJhms and iudivhhwls H.•ifl nor he accept~

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ed{i1r puhlimtiun

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'Living will' crush your spirit
The nurse asked me if I
had a living will. "Yes, I do."
"'Did you bring it with
you?"
"Nol I didn·t."
"Why not?"
"Well, I'm only h~re to
have my teeth cleaned. I didn't really think I'd need it."
I could see if I was having
a tilling, or a wisdom tooth
pulled. but a cleaning? Was
it really that life threatening'
There was much consternation behind the counter.
Could they proceed at all
without the. living will? Do I
really look that old' Is it that
annoying teenager who
always gives me the Senior
Discount down at the Shop
and Spend on Tuesdays a
character witness? I want to
tell her she's just given me a
15-percent discount for
being prematurely gray. But
I just take it and shut up .
I can't even remember·
what . the provisions of my
living will are. Did I tell Sue
tq pull the plug the day I
couldn't remember what's in
my living will, or did I tell
her to keep me alive until I
was smaller than the tubes
coming out of me?
I can't even remember
where it is. Where do you
put something like that? Oii

"-money for fill ing out a few
fmms of law yer mumbo
jumbo."
'· I plan the estates for the
half that didn't get di.vorl'cu.
And
it's notju't a little form;
Jim
there's a lot involved.'' said
Mullen
Mumbo Jumbo. Esq. "For
example. do you haw a
HealthCare Proxy'"'
"Of course not. I'm marthe refrigerator door' In my ried. Besides, at my age ... "
home office? I can't find the
"Proxy. Not Doxy. you
phone b,ill in my home pathetic old goat. Turn up .
oftice. Or the phone. I don't the hearing aid, wm1ld you?
need a living will, I need a Do you have a will''" ·
live-in filing clerk.
"I don't think I need one.
I do reme1nber meeting Everything's held jointly."
with my law yer and drawing
'·Yeah. but what if you
up the papers. He said, "You _hoth die . in a plane crash'!
should have a living will so Wl1ere's your 1noney go
that if you're incapacitated then?'"
your wishes will be carried
"You're just trying to
out.'·'
cheer me up. aren't you'?"
"My main wish is "that I
"Say you both die in a
shouldn't be incapacitated." !laming car crush'! Who .gets
"You should have thought your estate then'' I get this
about that before you decid- stuff all the time. If some of
ed to eat right and exercise. my clients on ly knew what
If you had listened lo me happeneli to 'their estates
you would have been dead after they uied. they would
by now, not having to worry be turning o\·er in their
about all this. Half my busi- graves ."
ness i:~ estate planning. The
''Have you ever thought of
other half is divorces."
. becoming a motivational
"You mean people still speaker''"
have estates after they
"So let\ talk about your
divorce? That's a '-'om fort. It living will. For example ,
must be nice, getting all that you're completely · con-

sciou~ hul you can·t move.

Arrest

Would you w.ml tlll'lll to
take extraordinary means to
keep you alive·!"
"No. I'd want them to take
extraordinury mean~
make me muv~. ··

from PageA1
Mason County Magistrate
Gail Roush for anaignment.
Roush set bond at $10.000
for each.
Both were then taken ·to
the Western Regional Jail in
Barboursville.
This is just one of several
drug arrested by a Mason
County law enforcement
agency.
Earlier this year. Mason
County SheriiT\ deputies
made several drug arrests·

to

"Sorrv. that's not on the
form. I'.~t 's say sllmC&lt;,Jlle has
to cook all your food. constant ly dean up bchinu you.
run all the errands and do.all
the chores while you sit in
bed all day and watch televi sion be~ausc you can' t. do
the simple,t things by yourself'' Would you wanl them
to take cxtmoruinary means
to keep ynu alive·&gt;
'·Excepl for the go II'. that's
pretty much how I live
now.··
·'Yeah . that ·, what Sue
told me. She wants to pull
the plug. but I told hc1 it's

RAVENSWOOD
CHIROPRACTIC CENTER

Dr.l(elly It Jol1&lt;5 &amp;ukks
'CHIROPRAQOR

y our decis-ion .' '

"When It's this mu&lt;.:h fun,
no wonder so m:my people
put oil "riling a will until
the lcJSt minute .'·
(.lim M111/en is !he mllhor
o( "It ·n,k&lt;'' " Villllge !dim:
Cmnf1/icmi11g The !)imple
".Bllhr \ First
1Lije" Will
Totton." }im cw1 reach him

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•

including one for $10.000 of
crack cocaine.
"Not only myself. but
Mason County Sheriff Scott
Simms and Sgt. E.B.
. Starcher of the West Virginia
State Police are taking a hard
line on the se lling and using
drugs here in Mason
County," Taylor sa id. "I
encourage .the public to call
in any tips on suspected drug
use or se lling here in Mason.
Any and all tips will be
investigated by my officers
here in this department."
To give a tip. ca ll tile
Mason Police Department at
773-5201.

Ravenswood, WV

· ; hould be completed by the
end of the lTIOnth. She a&gt;ked
that the village clean up the
park. repair the fence and
remove an old sign from the
park prior to an open house at
the depot next month.
Craig noted that a vi II age
ordinance requires underpinning of trailer; within 30 days
of moving them into the village, and asked that Roger
Manley, owner of Economy
Auto Sales. be forced to com·ply with the ordinance.
Manley said the ordinance
does not apply to his mobile
office trailer and said the
underpinning cannot be
installed due to a pending permit process.
Mayor Sandy lannarelli
commended Brian Wilcox
and Tim Smith for their work
in planting flowers, donated
by Mitch Meadows, at the
entrance to town at Hobson.
lannarelli reponed that the
village's paving project is
nearing completion, and that
village crews are now preparing to sweep and clean the
streets before they are striped.
Council also:
·
o Approved the payment of
bills in the amount of

al public.
The village set a minimum
sale price of $300,000 for the
two buildings and real estate
' adjacent to them, but had no
potential buyers in a January
sale attempt. James -~;aid
Monday night that minimum
price "is not excessive," and
said they have preliminary
plans for financing and
"background ·support," or
investors, who would help
fund their proposed project.
Beth James said the couple
will not rely Qn Section ~ or
other funding through the
Department of Housing and
Urban
Development to
linance their enterprise.
· Council asked the Jameses
· to return with a business plan
&lt;md more detailed plans for
the project, but in a show of
hands showed their suppo1t of
their plan. Sale of the property has taken top priority,
because proceeds from a sale
would help make up a projected budget dcticit of over
$100,000 next year.
"Council as a whole should
support this plan." Council
member Jean Craig said.
Dan James said if a sale
could be tinalized right away,
they could be "very ready for
action" sometime next year.
Council will meet with ,
Solicitor Jennifer Sheets to
determine how to proceed
with the sale.
Other business
Mary Wise reported to
council on a citizen comm ittee's work on restoring the
freight depot in Dave Diles
Park. She said the project

BEDFORD, KY. - Janet VanVranken ·Megahey, 46, of
Bedford. Ky. died Sept. 7, 2006 at home.
Born on Dec. 25, 1959 in Lincoln. Neb., she was the daughter of June and Harvey VanVranken of Pomeroy. She wa~ a
member of the Campbellsburg Apostolic Penecostal Church.
She attended Meigs High School, graduated from Hocking
Technical College in Nelsonville, &lt;md worked as a counselor to
recovering female addicts.
In addition to her parents, she is survived by her longtime
companion, Dan Robbins, Sr., of Bedford, Ky.; a son Clay
(Christine) VanVranken of The Plains; and a daughter, Ashley
Walcott of LaGrange, Ky.; three grandchildren, Alexis,
Angelina, and Jeremiah; and brother, Scott (Sandie)_
VanVranken of Pomeroy and Matthew VanVranken of
from PageA1
Bradonton, Fla., a niece and a great-niece, two nephews, and an
uncle, Dr. Phillip VanVranken of Silver Point, Tenn.
Funeral services were held in Campbellsburg, Ky. Sunday. well as the film The Last
Samurai. Gilmore also conBurial was in Campbellsburg.
structed small collector's cannons for the Buffington Island
Civil War Museum now on
sale.
RACINE- Mary Virginia Easterday, 89, of Racine, passed
The FFA cannon, which is
away on Tuesday, Sept. 12, 2006, 2 a.m., at the Rocksprings based on the mountain how.
Rehabilitation Center.
itzer design made from 1849·
Born on Dec. 15, I9i6 in Sutton Township, Meigs County, 1890, is II 1/2 inches wide at .
she was the daughter of the late Carl J. and Lela Smith .the carriage, 54 inches high at
Easterday. She was a retired cook from the Racine Schools, a the top of the wheels and the
member .of the Racine Grange, and a member of the Racine cannon's barrel is three feet
United Methodist Church.
long. Attached to the cannon
Mary is survived by her brother. Marion "Curly" Easterday are two !lags, the American
.of Racine; two sisters, Myrtle Holter and Emma Adams of llag which represents the
Racine, and a very special nephew, RiChard Holter, whom she attempt to keep the Union
called "My Boy."
together and the FFA flag
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her which symbolizes the Civil
brother, Col. David M. fiasterday.
War era militias made up of
Funeral services will be held at I I a.m. Friday, Sept. 15, at farmers that fought the war. ·
the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine, with Pastor Kerry Wood
"This was a way to encour..
officiating. Friends may call trom 6 to 8 p.m. on Thursday. age kids to be a part of their
Sept. 14. Interment will be at the Oak Grove Cemetery.
community," Mitchell said.

rcl'iew.cnm.)

IT 15 ALMOST

Jeff Fields
Syracuse

LeTTas to The ediTor are li 'elcome. Ther should be less
tl11m 300 ll'lll'ds. A/f..lelter.l· are ~ubjecr To. edirinx. must be
signNI. and include address and Teleplume number. No
unsigned le11er.1 11 ill he puhlished. Leuers should be in
good taste.' addressing issw:s, ~tot personalities. Letters of

from PageA1

. POMEROY - Virginia Victoria Bla7ewicz, 89, of Pon)eroy.
d1ed on Sept. 9, 2006. at HolLer A;sisted Living in Gallipolis.
She was bom May 25. 1917, in Meigs County. daughter of
the late Edgar Nehon and Effie Louella (Fin law) Arnold. She
was employed a' a secretarv ·for the M.L. French Coal
Company following her higli s~hool graduation. She later
work~d us a secretary at Batelle Institute in Columbus.
Jem1e; as she was usually called, married her high school
sweetheart, Dr. Selim J. Blazewicz on April 26, 1942. Her
brother Rev. Walter W. Arnold pcrfonned the ceremony.
In addition to being a homemaker and a dedicated wife and
mother, she was u member of the Enterprise United Methodist
Church and United Methodist Women, a 4-H Club leader, a
Girl Scout Leader, a member of the- Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
and of the "Nifty Stitchers" Sewing Cltlb. She was an accomplished seamstress and sewed for many of her family.
She also served on the regional Mental Health Board m1d
was a member of the Meigs County Board of Elections and the
Meigs County Democrat Club. Jeane also enjoyed gardening,
collecting antiques and retlnishing fumiture.
She is survived by a sister. M&lt;uy (Madge) Smith of Jupiter.
Ra.; four sisters-in-law: Ruth Arnold of Torch, Lorena Arnold
of Pomeroy, Sophia Stephenson of Delaware, and Lily Sullivan
of Los Alamos, N.M. Many nieces and nephews and greatnieces and great-nephews survive their Aunt Jeane.
Besides her pm·ems, she was preceded in death by.her husband, Dr. Selim Blazewicz; two daughters, Phyllis Louise and
Eflie Rowena Blazewicz; li ve brothers: Carl, Ralph, Smnuel.
Walter and Edgar Arnold; and two sisters, Bernice Evans and
Nancy Clm'k.
Service will be held at I p.m. on Saturday. Sept. 16. 2006, at
the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home with Rev. Arland
King. Burial will be in Beech Grove Cemete1y.
Friends may call from noon Saturday until the time of service
at the funeral home.

in pain: it makes ·the normal
feel narmal. And it reflects
wliere we are better than
mo\t pol itin1l .speeches ever
could.
The United States has
neither a decided pro-life
nor a pro-choice majority,
but folks are leaning toward
wanting ~omc restrictions
c• n abortiPn. There's room
for wmpromise - for persua\ JOn
and
co mmon
ground. But there is also "
place for 'hamc. Shame
that come' I rom the fact
that the majorit y of Down
Syndrome children are
abmted. "Nipffuck" gives
a stat like that some
humanity.
As painful as lile with
iu.lversity will be for Julia
and Sean's son and for
tl1osc who love him. he is
someone ·s chilo worthy of
protection. who possesses
great potential and gifts to
give like the rc~t of us. and
deserves love.
( Karlrryn LOfl&lt;'~ i~ the
editor of National Review
011 Ii 11 e ( H'll •H'.l w rion a Irel'inl'.rom )..)~h f! nm hf! r·onTacted at klof'e~ ({jlnatirmal­

Dear Editor:
A 'few comments regarding the Sept. 5 help wanted ad
from the Steelworkers who are seeking a politician who
will stop tl1e job loss and begin enforcing the trade laws.
Such a politician. if he gained enough political clout to
chalknge the prevailing orthodoxy, would be risking his
. life. The Establishment takes a dim view of those who rock
the boat. .
As I have explained in the past, no major act or policy of
this nation can be viewed in iso lati on. One cannot see the
forest by focusing on individual trees. Free trade/oneworldism is the core initiative around wh.ich all else must
be viewed.
Several years ago, one of my letters carried the caption,
"U.S. is .a drone." It explained that the plan for the U.S. is
to slow ly dissolve and die. It also pointed out that the plan
calls for gathering all the world's countries into regional
blol'ks to be presided over by a self-appoi nted elite.
Have I been proven right'' Consider a CNN correspondent's recent statement about CAFTA (far worse than
NAFTA): "This means the eventual end of the U.S. as we
have known it.'' The extinc tio n of borders is at the heart of
U.S. _Eolicy.

Property

Virginia Blazewia

•

The Daily Sentinel• Page A5

www.mytj\ailysentinel.com

Meth.
from Page A1 .
Alcohol , Drug Addiction,
Mental Hea lth Services.
MCCC used some of this
money to print up literat ure
about the group and tshirts
with the group\ name that

$~2.908.01
o Approved the mayor's
report of fines and fees collected in August in the
amount of $9.677.
• Approved
monthly
reports from the . tax office,
refuse and public works
depm'tments and finance
committee.
• Approved appropriations
adjustments as requested by
Fiscal Officer Susan Baker.
Also present were Council
members Stephen Houchins,
Ferman
Moore.
Sandy
Brown, .left· Peckham and
Bob Robinson .

Felman
from PageA1
~ddcd rc&lt;~ l'redence to the governor's "open for business'' &gt;logan.
"This plant has gone through
a lot of transitions and it"s really
great to see these people back to
work," he said.
Curren~y, there are 135 people working at Felman, with
plans for 220 to be on the payroll bytheendof2007. All three
furnaces will be in full operation by the end of October.
Mason
County
Commissioner Bob Baird said
he had not seen the plant for a
while and was pleasantly
shocked at its improved condition.
" It looks great," Baird said.
'This is truly a great day for
Mason County."
For years, Baird said.
Mason County has suffered

Festivities

lighted wreaths and swags
of greenery on the .posts
from funds raised through
from Page A1
the sale of bulbs depicting
the 1928 Pomeroy-Mason
Holiday activities will Bridge and a sketch of the
kick-off Sunday. Nov. 26. new brit.lge no\v under conwith the traditional parade struction.
·
chaired by Toney Dingess
Some1hing else new proand an ·open house by busi- posed for the . season to
nesses. Again this year en hance the downtown was
there will be an emphasis to decorate the gazebos and
on getting downtown mer- sta ge · on the parking.
chants to outline their Churches will be asked to
buildings with white lights. volunteer to se lect a site
Plans were also discussed and dec01·aie i1.
for putting electrical outlet s
Again this year the
on the downtown period Merchants and local banks
light posts and in the vil- will
sponsor
three
lage mini-park. Merchants Christmas contests wilh
and business organizations prizes going to the winners.
will be asked for a $25 They are a cookie contest. a
donation
toward
the candy contest. and a handrequired electrical on the · made toy and creative craft
posts in front of their bui !d- contest. Details including
ings.
The
Merchants dates for the contests will
Association will pay for . be announced later.

"The project has really helped
kids take more price in that
community and allows them
an understanding of their local
history and where they came
from. They're already talking
about what project they're
going to do next to give back to
from PageA1
the community."
In fact two of the Racine
Southern FFA members, collection. Middleport now
Ashley and Mikayla Krider collects one percent from all
who work or live in the vil~ot a dose of history discoverlage
approximately
til~ that their descendants, the
$200,000
per
year, at a cost
M1ddleswart family, owned
property where by.Gen. John of $50,000 to the village.
Tax Admininstrator Carol
Hunt Morgan setup camp durCantrell, who helped
Howe
ing his famous raid.
·
the
village
set up its income
Racine Southern FFA is
thriving with nearly I 70 stu- tax department 18 years ago,
dents in a school of less than said the income tax department is ·"the most officient
300.
in the village,"
department
"It's
very
popular,"
and
said
council
must conMitchell explained, listing
classes like pre-vet biotech- sider convenience to the taxnology, electriciry, agriculture payer.
"What's being proposed
leadership, horticulture and
by
RITA is already being
agriculture business currently
· done locally," Cantrell said,
offered to students.
after Hawk's presentation.
"Contracting with RfTA
were distributed at the Meigs would make tax collections
County Fair.
more burdensome for the
Other topics of discussion village, and would be an
at !\)morrow's meeting will .injustice to me· and the vilbe how to get involved in the lage taxpayer."
schools to promote MCCC
Cantrell poi'nted out that
anu its networking services she. too, pays Middleport
for juveniles and their par- taxes on her income. and
ents. If you have any iaeas on uses a local printer and other
how to do this or would like local businesses in her
to volunteer you're urged to department's operations. She
attend the meeting.
also pointed to her work as
the village's insurance coordinator, overseeing workers
compensation, . liability and
health insurance plans.
"This is wrong." Cantrell
said. " It's taking income tax
revenue out of the village."
Council President Stephen
MIDDLEPORT
Houchins said he feels the
Middleport Police Chief income tax department is
Bru&lt;.:e Swift ,:epol.teli 33 tmftic "running well." but Jean
cases, JR misdemeanor cases. Craig and Ferman Moore
15 County Court cases. six said the village mu;t cons iLl·
auto accidents and 10 incident er any means to cut operatreports investigated by the ing costs. in view of a pro·
clepw1ment in Augu.st.
jected $ 120.000 deticit next
The department tlscd 358 year. Houchins said he feels

Tax

For the Record
Fire report
MIDDLEPORT
Middlepo1't Fire Chief David
Hoffman issued his August
report of tire depcutment activities to Middleport Village
Council. The depanmenl
answered II calls in August.
Vehicles were driven 228.8
miles. 40 man hours in train·
inn
.
0 were louued
1:;::1;&gt;
, and -'fi man .
hours on equipment maintenance.
Calls included live mutual
aid calls. one suuclllrc tire.

through high unemployment
needlc,sly.
"Down through the years,
it\ like we've been jinxed for
&gt;ome reason." he 'aid. "But
that·,. all about to change .
We're like the Jefferson\ .
We'removingon up."
New Haven Mayor Steve
Smith \aid he doubted company oflicial' knew his history with the plant when they
invited him to speak. He's
worked there a' an electrician ·
and truck dri vcr.
"]" ve had many jobs over
the years. but none so enjoyable '" working with the
friendly men and women of
this plant." he 'a id. ·
Congresswoman Shelley
Moore Capito (R-W.Va.)
welcomed the oflkials of the
Ukrainian company to West
Virginia.
"I
thank
Felman
Production for your investment in West Virginia," she
said. "You'll never be sorry.''

Police report

the deficit projection is exaggerated. but said the sale of
school properties will be
necessary if the village is to
remain solvent next year. ·
(See related story.)
Hawk said a local contact
would be necessary if RITA
were to assume responsibili- .
ty for administering the tax ,
department. That local contact, in many cases, is the
village fiscal ofticer. Using
the fiscal officer to handle
public contact at the local
level
would
eliminate
Cantrell's position.
"This could eliminate the
income tax deartment and its
cost to the village," Moore
said.
Fi sca l Officer Susan
Baker. who would like ly
assume much of the local
responsibility for the tax
department if the village
hire' RITA. said village and ·
city officials she contacted .
spoke in positive . terms
about the ir experiences with.
RITA.
· "Everything l"ve heard
has been positi,e." Baker
~aid.

J\RIEL
ESTABLISHED 1895
On Sale :-.low! .

The Jungle Book
Se(!tember 23 &amp; 24·
Scholastic Book Fair
Sept. 21-24
Ariel Jr. Idol Talent

Competition Begins
Sept. 25
$250 First Pi-i1e
Sign t:p 'low!
The Ariel-Dater Hall
428 Sec. Ave. Gallipolis, OH
. 740-446-ARTS (2787)

gaJlons of gasoline.

According to Swift, letters
sent 10 residents in reference to
high grass and weeds ~md.
inup.;mtive vehic les and vebi-.
two hazardou~ condit ion s. a cles without cun-ent registration resulted in compliance.
false alam1 and two rescues.

West Shade Barber Shop

TAVERN

\
Chris Parker

Charlie Lilly
&amp; The Poor Side Band

Welcome.\' You Back
upon my absence I have enjoyed time
with my 3 children who are in school now
Thank You For Y()ur Support
Walk-Ins Welcome
Hours: Tues-Friday 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-12:00

saturday. SeJ&gt;remher 1mh
npm-Iam
s:·WO Single $5.00 Couple

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~

llllil~

1:17 .'\ 2n&lt;l Ave. • ~ti&lt;l&lt;lk·port. 011
H0-992 ·!lAA-1-

s,._,

�.

PageA6

OHIO

VVednesday,Scptcrnbcrt3,2006

ONCE POWERFUL GOP FUNDRAISER

Ohio House committee votes
GElS . to accelerate income-tax cuts

The Daily Sentinel

PRISON FOR llLEGAL BUSH DONATIONS
BY

JOHN SEEWER

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

TOLEDO - Tom Noe, a
· GOP fundraiser whose donations made him a powerful
political figure, playfully
waved his umbrella to shield
his race from photographers
outside the federal ·court l:!ouse, then stepped inside
with a smile.
His mood turned somber
when he was reminded j ust
how far he had fallen.
Noe was sentenced to two
years and three months in
prison Tuesday for funneling
$45,000 to President Bush's
re-election campaign.
U.S. District Judge David
Katz told Noe that he had
made "a tremendous fall
from power and prestige."
The judge said Noc had
"risen in the .past to positions
of respect and power and he
violated the trust ·of those
who placed him in those
positions."
Starting out as a littleknown rare coin dealer, Noe
became
a
prodigious
fundraiser and friend of
Republicans in the state and
national parties. His work
allowed hitn to meet with the
president during several of
Bush's visits to Ohio, and he
and his wife attended an inaugural ball in 2005.
Noe also. won political
appointments to state boards
·!hat oversee Ohio's turnpike
and its public universities.
, Noe promised in. 2003 to
generate $50,000 for a presidential fundraiser. So he gave
$45,000 directly or indirectly
to 24 friends and associates,
.who made the contributions
in their own names, allowing
Noe to skirt the $2,000 limit
for individual donations.
"I knew it was wrong to do
so," Noe said in court. "I
alone accept responsibility."
· Federal prosecutors suggested that Noe came up with
the scheme because he wanted perks such as invitations to
the White House and the
president's ranch in Texas,
and he wanted to impress
various state officials.
Noe said he did it because

AP Photo

Tom Noe declines to answer questions from the med1a while leaving federal court Tuesday
in Toledo, where a JUdge sentenced the GOP fund raiser at ,the center of an Ohio political
scandal to two years and three months io prison for illegally funneling $45,000 to President
Bush's re-election campaign.
''in 2003 I was pressured by
Bush-Cheney otficials to
become a Pioneer," a name
the campaign gives to people
who raise $100,000.
The Republican · National
Committee dismissed his ·
claim. "I would refute the
c.lairn th&lt;!t the Bush-Cheney
campaign pressured anybody
to support the president's reelection," RNC spokesman
Aaron McLear said.
Authorities said Bush's
campaign committee was
unaware of the alleged contribution scheme and unknowingly submitted a false campaign report to the Federal
Election Commission.
Noe personally contribu.ted
more than $105,000 to
Republicans including Bush
and Taft during the 2004
campaign. The Bush-Cheney
campaign donated $6,000 it
received from Noe and his
·wife, · Bernadette, to charity.
The rest of the money donatec\ at the Bush fundraiser
remains with the Republican
Party.
Sue Metzger, who worked
with Noe at his coin shop in
suburban Toledo, was one of

those received money from
Noe for the fundraiser. She
said she had no idea what he
was doing was illegal and
that she had doubts about
whether he was really pressured by the Bush campaign.
She said her former boss'
actions violated the public's
trust in the election process.
"There is a victim and that's
the voter," she said.
The campaign moneylaundering scheme was the
largest prosecuted under the
2002 campaign finance
reform law, which set limits
IJn donations, prosecutors
said last October.
Noe pleaded guilty to three
charges, including exceeding
federal campaign contribution limits.
Craig Morford, first assistant U.S. attorney for the
Northern District of Ohio,
said Tuesday that prosecutors
were satisfied with the sentence.
"He's going to jail for the
next two-3Jld;a-quart~r years,
plus facing the additional
charges for his other conduct," said Morford, whose
office prosecuted.the case.
'

Local stocks
ACI- 28.23
AEP --as.ps
Akzo- 59.02
BIG- 19.73
Bob Evans - 29.81
BorgWamer - 56.70
CENX- 32.15
champion '-- 6. 76
Channing Shops - 13.95
City Holding - 38.28

Local
weather·
Wednesday,..Rain in the
morning ... Then
showers
likely
with
a
slight
chance of thunderstorms
in the afternoon. Highs in
the lower · 70s. South
winds 5 . to 10 mph.
Chance of rain 90 percent.
Wednesday
night ... Mostly
c.loudy.
ShO\yers likely with a
slight chance of thunderstorms
in
·the
evening ... Then a chance
of showers after midnight.
Lows in the upper 50s.
South winds 5 to I 0
mph. Chance of rain 60
percent.
Thursday ... Mostly
cloudy with a 20 percent
chance of showers. Highs
in the mid 70s. West
winds around 5 mph.
Thursday . night... Partly
cloudy. Low s in the mid
50s.
Northwest
winds
around 5 mph.
Friday
through
Sunday
night... Mostly
clear. Highs around 80.
Lows in the upper 50s.
. Monday ... Pa~tly cloudy.
Highs in the up'per 70s.
Monday night...Partly
cloudy .with a chance of
showers. Lows in the mid
5.0s. Chance of rain 30
percent.
Tuesday ... Mostly cloudy
with a 30 percent chance
of showers. Highs in the
mid 70s.

Col- 53.59

{)G -13:43
DuPont - 40.18
Federal Mogul - .38
USB- 32.85
Gannett - 54.99
General Electric --a4.67
GKNLY- 5.35
Harley Davidson - 61.40
JPM- 46.01
Kroger- 22.75

ltd. -

26.94.

NSC- 42.64
Oak HIU Financial -

24.75

.

OVB- 25.15

BBT- 43.13
Peoples - 29.19
Pepsico - 65.20
Premier 15.09
Rockwelr ~ 56.59
Rocky Boots - 11
Sears - 155.84
Wei-Mart - 48.07
Wendy's- 63.90
Worthington - 18.35
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day's
transactions, provided by
Smith Financial Advisors of
Hilliard Lyons In Gallipolis.

Bv JUUE CARR SMYTH
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

COLUMBUS - A committee of the Republican-controlled Ohio House voted
Tuesday to accelerate incometax ClltS to Ohioans. while
abandoning a plan to cut capital gains taxes that liberal
groups had attacked as mostly
bcncliting the wealthy.
The new House pl;m, which
cleared the House Ways &amp;
Means Conunittee by a 17-1.
yote, calls for accelerating
Gov. Bob Tart 's 21-percent
income-tax reduction over
four years rather than the
scheduled tive.
The original plan saved
Ohioans 4:2 percent on their
taxes this year, and the effect
of speeding up the cut will add
a 2 percent savings to that
amount on 2006 remms and
1. I percent a year for 2007 and
2008. Legislative analysts estimate the state would lose $ 192
million in revenue with the
change. ·

Husted called the tax cuts
affordable for the state, and
said he considers them a dividend to the taxpayers of Ohio.
"Thi' is consistent with
what we've been trying to do
with tax reform - putting
more money back in the hands
of Ohioans so that · they can
spend and save· on their priorities," he said.
TI1e tax cuts are still far from
pa~sage. Neither House nor
Senate votes are planned
hefore the election.
Hou'e Democratic Leader
.Ioyce lleatty called the move a
desperate ploy to gain media
attention for Republicans who control every branch of
Ohio govemment and lag in
many polls this year amid a
statewide investment scandal
and growing doubts about the
Iraq wm·.
.
"It's something to get people
off topic - to not talk about
the change that people want, to
not talk about the loss of jobs
or what's happening to middle,
class famities," she said.

Sponsored by:

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6.385o/()APR

3. 90o/oRare 3. 92'01

•
·. /QAPR
Annual Percentage Rate &amp; Inter~! Rate
for 6 Month Construction Loan Period

Locked In For Three Years!
Construction.or Major Renovation
Available For Purchase or Refinance ·
On Primary Residences
On Primary Residences!
PR is Annual Peramt11ge Rate and rate ie lubJ&amp;Ct to c~ange a~er comum- •APR 11 Annual Percentage Rate Advertised Ra~e ind APR etftc!IVO onl~
dunng the s1x (6) month CO(!SiruCIJon loan penod. and be fmanced ~ Farmmation. APR based on S100.000 00 ~nat 5 75% initial rate ·6.365% APR,
puled on 360 montl'la repaymenlttrm. monthly payment of $58397. ; era to change to othtw adjustable or luted rate and term that you c~e
otalfinance ei'1&amp;rge of $1?5,567.11 . wh•ch lncrudes $1$4 00 prepaid finJ~ ~ basad on faclors of loan Yaluea and undarwn1iOQ 5-tandards. "APR. i$ based
arge NoMa! CICtStng costt are estlmalt&lt;l at 5039 00 Purct\ase reQUJrta ' oo 1081'1 amount of $100,000 for 6 monthe . $1100 liM of Loan Flood Cl\arg.e,
0% down payment. Loan to 'Value of 80% LOin ra1et available only 10 1 fln&amp;rKt cha[Qe of $1 ,146.60, lnttf'W PliUd monlh1y Loan rate IVI!Iable ooty
imary re1K1ence: motule nomes do noT apply RallS are kU~ 1n for 45 1 lo prif:nary residence ownar occupt9d. Some reetrk;llon&amp; apj;lly. property
ayt from dale ot application Other adju1table and luted rate. and Ierma I in11.1rance rttquired AM ~:tgedivv borr~r1 may oot q1.111lity a5 fm.e~ncmg
11 ttulljld tO crldr1 approval Offer for 11m1tl!d time rates au~ to 011anQe
v81 la~ d$pendn1g on lOan ~aluts and und4WWrllinQ .!ltan&lt;Jatds Al1 prospeelve bofrOW"trs mty not Quallly as flnanor1g 11 wt:Jjtct to crt1:1rt approval : dally
.Offer fgr !lm1t$d hme riles $Vb!ect to ch~KlQe da•ly

POMEROY - A scl1edule of vpcomrog ~lttge
and high scl1ool varsity sporting tweots (1vot.ing
teams from Gal~a. Meigs and Mason coomles.

Marauder girls fmisb third at ~thens Invitational
STAFF

Wednesday's gimts
Volleyball
Galli a Academy at Meigs, 5:30 p.m.
Eastem at Vinton County, 6 p.m.
Golf
Poca at Point Pleasan1, 4:30p.m.
TVC Ohio at Franklin Valley, 4:30p.m.

Thursday's games
Volleyball
Rock Hill at River Valley, 5:30 p.m.
Belpre at Meigs, 6 p.m. ,
Eastern at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Southern at Miller, 6 p.m.
Ironton St. Joe at OVCS, 5:30 p.m.
Portsmouth at Gallla Acad ., 5:15p.m.
Soccer
S.Point at Gallia Academy, 5:30p.m.
Point Pleasant at Winfield, 7 p.m.
Golf
TVC Hocking at Waterford, 4:30p.m.
River Valley at Ironton, 4 p.m.
Gama Acad. at Portsmouth , 4:30p.m.
·
CoUege Volleyball
Rio Grande at Central State, 7 p.m.
Friday's games
Fcotball
Gallla Academy at Chillicothe, 7:30p.m.
Meigs at Point Pleasant, 7:30p.m.
South Gallla at Wahama, 7:30 p.m.
River Valley at Alexander, 7:30p.m.
Southern at Hannan, 7:30p.m.
St. Mary's at Eastern, 7:30p.m.
·
Volleyball
Teays Valley at OVCS, 5 p.m.
Soccer
Teays Valley at OVCS, 5:30 p.m.
· College Soccer
Notre Dame ai Rio Grande, 5 p.m.
College Volleyball
Rio Grande at Cumberland ln_vite, TBA

REPORT

SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ATHENS - Devan Soulsby finished third overall, and three of her
teammates broke the top 20, as Meigs
finished third at the Athens
Invitational cross country meet this
past weekend.
Soulsby finished in a time of 22:09
and Meigs amassed 70 points as a
time. Warren won the team title over
Alexander in a tiebreaker. Both had 55
points, but Warren's sixth-place runner had the better race. ·
Athens was fourth, Trimble fifth
and River Valley sixth.
Meigs' Kimi Swisher was seventh

overall
(22:29). 22:27. She was followed by Tara
Teammates Je ssica Workman (2Ist, 24:47), Samantha
Holliday
(17th, Larson (35th, 27:57), Brooke Dean
23:52), · Meghan (45th, 31: 12) and Brianna Frash (50th,
Clelland
(I Sth, 33:31 ).
23:59) and Cecilia
Unioto won the boys team title with
Core (41st, 29:28) 31 points, edging runner-up Warren.
· also counted toward with 36. Athens (80) was third folthe team score. lowed by Vinton County ( 128),
Nicole Adams was Trimble ·(129), River Valley ( 138).
· 44th (30:45). · '
Alexander (176) and Meigs (216).
Soulsby
Eastem did not
Eastem's Michael Owen was the
fi~ld a full team, but top local finish in third overall in a
its only two runners, Alyssa Newland time of 16:55. His teanunates Aaron
(4th, 22:22) and Kaylee Milam (5th, Martindale and Keith Aeiker were
22:25) had very strong races.
12th (18:46) and 40th (21 :33) respecAshley Fitch led River Valley with a . lively.
sixth-place overall finish in a time of · South Gallia's Steven Call was 13th

overall. Fellow Rebel Jacob Wabon
took 53rd (23:45).
Vince Weaiherstei n paced the
Raiders, finishing ninth overall
( 18:31 ). He was fo llowed by Tyler
Young in 30th place 120:3 1). David
Householder (37th. 21 13). Brandon
Kirby (41st. 21 :33). Jon P011er (64th,
25: 19), Yout Anukoolikaan (66th,
25:28) and James Porter (73rd, 27: 15).
Meigs' top tinishcr was Andrew
0' Bryant. who took 43rd (2 1:43) in
the field. Also running for the
Marauders were Darby Gilmore
(65th, 25:26). Morgan Kenne(ly (67th,
25:35), Jacob Riftle !68th, 25:42). Ian
Bullington (69th. 25:591 and Keith
Williams (70th. 2o:2o).

HIGH SCHOOL VOUEYBAU

Meigs
downs
Wellston

Eagles
rollover
Falcons
BY lARRY CRUM

LCRUM@MYOAILYREGISTER.COM

POMEROY
The
Meigs
High . Athletic
Boosters, along with Pepsi,
will hold their fifth annual
Punt, Pass and Kick competition at Bob Roberts
Field in Pomeroy on
Sunday, Sept. 24 at noon.
The competition is open
to boys and girls ages 8 to
15 and is free of charge.
Age groups are determined
by the age of the contestant
as of December 31 of the
current year.
A copy of your birth certificate is reyuired and . no
football cleats are allowed,
contestants must wear tennis shoes. Footballs and
kicking tees are provided.
For more information
contact Jimmer So~lsby at
· 992-672S,

Riverside golfers
compete in
Pipestem Invite

LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

WELLSTON - Despite
falling behind early, Meigs
showed how tough it could
play.
Wellston (1-1) took a 3129 victory in game one, but
the Lady Marauders (2-2)
rebounded and took the next
two very closely played contests before winning game
foui in convincing fashion to
take a. 3-1 victory over the
Lady Rockets Tuesday at
Wellston High School.
The Lady Rockets took a
tightly played game one 3129 and looked early like ·they
may have something to
prove on their home court.
But Meigs responded in the
second matchup with a hard
fought 25-21 game two and a
25-20 game three. Meigs
then stepped up play and put
the contest away with a dominating 25-10 game four.
Lesley Preece had a strong
game going a J)!:rfect 24-for24 serving wtth three kills,
one assist and one block.
Amy Barr added 24 assists
with three kills while going
13-for-15 serving and Amber
Burton hanunered 20 kills
while going 8-for-9 serving.
Catie Wolfe added nine
kills on 17-for-19 serving, as
Pattie Vining went 21-for-22
serv·ing with one kill and two
assists. Talisha Beha went 3- ·
for-4 serving · and Cassi
Whan was 7-for-9 serving in
the contest to help push
Meigs to victory.
·In junior varsity action,
Meigs won close game 25-20
and 25-23.
·
The Lady Marauders will
now return to action today at
Larry Crumlpho1o
home
against
Gallia
Academy. Game time is slat- Eastern's Erin Weber (24) goes for the block during a high school volleyball match Tuesday
ed for 5:30p.m.
in Tuppers Plains.

MASON,
W.Va.
Several local golfers made
the annual fall trip to
Pipestem Resort in southern West Virginia for an
annual tournament featuring golfers from all over
the eastern United States.
This year's tourney was
the 36th installment and
Riverside
Golf
Club
owner, Gary Roush , had
played in all the evems.
The tournament has a
field of 144 players in ·the
men's division and 80 in
the . ladies. This year.'s
Bv ScoTT WoLFE
younger, almost entirely difchampion was Beckley
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
ferent line-up on the court in
golfer Mike Mays , ·who
2006.
.
shot a four-under par 212
RACINE - ln a rematch
For
Waterford,
Tiffany
for the 54 hole tourna from ihe sectional tourna- .Wallace had 16 points and
ment.
ment from last fall, the I 0 assists, Jessi Drayer had
, Riverside golfers also
defending sectional champi- 16 points, was 20-for-21
fared well . Mitch Roush on Waterford Lady Wildcats
setting, and had nine assists;
was seventp in the champi- earned the same result with
and Kaitlyn Stewart . had
onship fltght and Gary a hard-fought. three-game eight
points.
Bethany
Roush finished third in the .. rnatcll over the Southern Amrine hac,! a great fltlor
super senior division. Pat Lady Tornadoes, 25-23, 25- game.
0' Brien won the first 2.1 and 25-13.
Southern (1-3) was led by
flight
and
. James
Last fall Waterford upset. a Whitney Wolfe-Riffle with a
McKnight was third in senior-dominated Southern 21-for-23 passing night,
second flight.
.
squad.
With
several three assists, and six dinks.
Norma Stanley finished holdovers from that team, Wolfe-Riftle had eight servsecond in the ladies fourth Waterford gained early ing . points with one ace.
!light and Teresa Roush momentum to defeat a Sarah Eddy had nine points,
won the ladies fifth !light.
Tor,n ado t~am that has a ·two aces and a 12-for-15

TUPPERS PLAINS -Using strong play from
Katie Hayman and Erin
Weber, the Eastern Lady ·
Eagles contimied to roll on
the season with an easy
win in three game~ over
Miller.
Eastefn defeated Miller
25-8, 25-8 and 25-14 during Tuesday's action at
Eastern High S&lt;.:hool and
continued to dominate
teams .on the seaso n.
Miller never really got
rolling in the contest as
Eastern came out with a
strong start in games one
and two en rout to the easy
wins and put down .any
threat by Miller in game
three with another big win.·
Hayman led the learn in
points Tuesday with 17
while going 20/20 at the
service line with four kills.
Weber · added nine poirits
with 11/11 serving and six
kills. Kelsey Holter was
just behind with eight
points and two kills, followed
by
Darcy·
Winebrenner with
six
poinb. lillian Brannon and
Megan Rroderick with five
points. Ryan Davis with
three poinh and Geurgana
Koblentz and Brittany
Bissell with one point
each.
In junior varsiiy action.
Eastern triumphed over
Miller in two games 25-3
and 25-18 to take the win.
Tl]e Lad y Eagles will
return to acJion 6 p.m.
today when they travel to
Vinton County.

Watetford sweeps Lady Tornadoes in three

w~A

5•75o/oRare

LocAL SCHEDULE

Punt, pass and
kick coming
to Pomeroy

Lli1 H?L~E~
rt!/
CLINIC

Fal'mers Bank'
Construction· Loan Speeial

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

SPORTS BRIEFS

BuHd ltr
.
. Adiustatlle Rate Mbrtga~e Spocial

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

HMC Golf Tournamenl, Page 86

By lARRY CRUM

I(,V~H~ ..
Farmers Sank

Inside

&lt;!

Farmers Bank
Home Equ1ty Line of Credit

3.900/o

Annual Percentage Rate &amp;Interest Rate
Discount for 6 Months

. No Closing Costs!
No First-Year Annual Fee!
No clos1nQ costs O!fttr avarl{;lb!&amp; for ll01T11111qurty loan products of min1mum
$20 000 or 100"ease rn·exrsling FB Home Equrty Lnsn Rate wrll·oe a dr$(:0\Jfll.
3 90%APR for 6 months, suba&amp;quent rata wrll be Wall S1reet JoL.KTlfiPrlfllf.l:
subject to Chan~ daily Call tor Rates artd APR As Cff 00112/00 WSJP
AnniJII P$!"Cefllal1' Rate {APR) and rate was 7 'T~% Md could change dail~ .
Term' are tor 10 years Payment opi1Qn5 are monthJy payment of rnlerast
cinty, balloon payment may result at and of ten year term APR will not 611.eted
18% or go below 5 50% AnntJal m&amp;mb&amp;rsl"!rp tee ~~~~ be war11ed for the trrst ~
y&amp;ar $50 per year thereaft&amp;t oo annrversary ln~r.al rnrJ'llmum advance
.$5,000 Ott CIG!rnQ, $300 rntn1mum ildvomco thurealltr, tr$nsacl1on tee of 110 ,•.·
me11C$U. of 5 advanceJ per rnonlh Ma~ ~rnwm loan to Value 15 SO% Prcpany 1
lnsuranet~ w1ll be requnKL loans subj~ to ti&amp;Otl approval Please COil$ult
your tax ad'ti50r regarding deduct1t1111ty of 1nterast AIt prcspf!ctrve bol1'0Wert 1
may not qu:.My as ltnancmg is sub11!1C:l to c'&amp;d;t appro~al Of/61' lor !1m1te:d

or

t1me rat~s ·tubJE!Cl to c/lange dt~llt·,

·

CoNTAcrUs
OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 a.m.}
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33

Brad ,Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446·2342. exl. 33
bsherman @mydailytribune .com

Pomeroy 992.2136- Tuppers Plains 98,~-3385
Gallipolis 446.2265- Mason 773.6400- Point Pleasant 674-8200

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342. ext 33
Ierum @mydailyregister.com

•

.BY BRAD SHE!IMAN

Fax- 1·740·446·3008
Soorts Stan

·

Drayer spotted four points
for the winning Wildcats.
then after a missed Southern
serve. Wallace served up
game point for the 25-23
Wildcat wi·n.
The second game was
nearly
as
exciting.
Waterford led 19-for-17 in
the waning moments. then
Hill added one and after a
side-out Hunter served up a
pair for a 20-20 tie. Tied
again at 21-21 the game .
swayed toward Waterford's
side of the net, when
Drayer added three points
and Harra and Ashleigh
added the last two for. the
win, 25-21.

The
finale
was all
Wa!erford. The visitors
went up 15 -5. then blasted
to the 25- 13 win mainly
behi·nd the scoring of
Wallace.
Stewart,
and
Harra .
Waterford
won
the
r.e~erve ga me after lo sing
the opener 25-14.
The
Wildklllen s e&lt;1mc back with
25-19 and 25-1 S wins-.
Breanna .
Taylor
led
Southern with 14 . points,
Samantha Patterson added
si.x, and Kasey Turley added
mne . Waterford was ·led by
B: Dailey With fourteen
points. 1
Southern goes to M iII er
on Thursday.

South Point ends River Valley's long OVC win streak
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

E-mail- sports@mydailysenlinel.com

passing night. Amtier I·Hil
had three points and a 12for-16 passing night witb a
dink, Emma Hunter had six
points, an ace, 6-for-6 passing, two kills, and three
assists; Stephanie Cmidiff
was 16-for-26 passing with
two points and two kills,
and Rashell Boso had a kill
and a dink.
The first game of the night.
was wild and ' exciting. No
team led by more than four
points. Waterford led 18-14
before Sarah Eddy scoring
· four points to give SHS a
19-18 lead. Britany Brown
tied the score, then Amber
Hill gave SHS a 22-19 lead.

SOUTH POINT - A changing of
the guard?
For now, at least, as South Point
defeated four-time defending Ohio
Valley Conference volleyb~lt: champion River Valley in straight games
on Tuesd~y. It ended the Lady
Raiders' 32-game winning streak in

the OVC .
It was.n 't even close, either, as the
Lady Pointers won by scores of 2521, 25-13 and 25-20.
'
It was only the second-ever conference loss for River Valley, which
joined in 2002. That other defeat
was also at the hands of the Lady
Pointers.
This season, River Valley fell to 4-

4 overall and 3-1 in the ovc:
Ashley Porter scored 19 points
and Erica Lighty added nine for
South Point. .
Kirsten Carter, Kari Mcfann and
Brooke Taylor each scored six service points in the setback. ·
Taylor led the way hitting with 13
kills followed by Kayla Smith with
six, five from Carter and Carmen

Waugh chipped in two. ·
· The Junior Varsity Lady Raiders
(5-2, 3-1 OVC) ~on the reserve
·contest 25-20. 25-18. Elizabeth
Hamilton led the Lady Raiders with
14 points and Krystal.StiltiJI'r scored
I 0.
River Valley will try to rebound
Thursday when Rock Hill visits
Cheshire.

�•

Wednesday, September 13,2006

www.mydallysentjnel.com

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

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rI.-~~~,---.

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• Start Your Ads With A keyword • lndude Complete
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Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response •

~
k
1amy
11 room 1\...Cirge
lichen
dnlng room 2 full bath
rooms total B closets total 2
car garage Concrete dr ve
way Heat pump with central
a 1 Fenced'" back yard
with large deck Approx 2
New
112 acras of land
A 1
Improvements
pp 1ances
1nd uded Appro• 3 m les
from Po1nt PI easant on Rt
62 S Mov ng f rom area
M 1
t
us see o apprec 1a1e111
$160 000 080
Cal for
appomtment
(304)675
4235 or (3041675 593 3220

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KIT &amp; CARLYLE

l!ll CHIID'ELilERil

YARDSALE

ANNOUNCEMENTS

~

Formmg Rock/Metal Band
Call 740 992 9904 or 740
4161090
local 011 and gas land com
pany seektng any nforma
ton regardmg the hers of
Jesse S Mossman and/or
Elmore S Mossman Jes&amp;le
S Mossman d ed 1n the year
of 1956 as a res dent of
Mason County leaving sur
v•v ng her a son Elmore S
Mossman
E more S
Mossman married Thelma
Lo1s Johlison If you have
any Jnformalion regardmg
th1s matter please contact
H L Lamberl al 1304)549
7349

r

r

CARE

k•tncarlyle@comcast net
Independent Contractors
Wanted Earn tram $ 800

YARD SALE-

GAllJPOUS

t\"~ A C.~~AG.li DI4\'~L. l"f'S
'"\"~ ONe~ "ft-IING&lt; f&gt;i ~l \)oJ;&lt;,N 1
jOt"'u% 1o ft A"f rltR Cool"-1~6..

107 &amp; 56 H1da Dr Thur Sat
Antique Jars, bean e baby
baseba cards brand name
clothes o 14 Cheap
--------3 fam1ly yard sale Friday
9/8/06 Sa tu rday 9/9/06
9am 5pm 777 Jackson P1kS
acros~
from
McC ures
Restau ant Furmture &amp;
m1sc nems

0

-

0

"

0

4 fam ly sale Clay Twp 8 d
At 7 Aa1n or sh ne
Something for everyone
Thurs 9f7 Fn 9/8 9 5

0

4 tam) y yard sale 9/8106

r

4x4 s For Sale .....•..................•..........•.....•••••... 725
Announcement
030
Antiques
530
Apartments for Rent
440
Auctton and Flea Market
080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
760
Auto Repair
Autos lor Sale
71 D
Boats II, Motors lor Sale
750
Building Supplies
•
550
Busmess and Buildings
340
Business Opportunrty
210
Business Tratnlng
140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
790
Campmg Equipment
780
Cards of Thanks
010
Child/Elderly Care
190
ElectrlcaURelngerat•on
840
Equipment for Rent
480
Excavatmg
830
Farm Equtpment
610
Farms for Rent
430
Farms for Sale
330
For Lease
490
For Sale
585
For Sale or Trade
590
580
Fru1ts &amp; Vegetables
Furnished Rooms
450
General Hauhng
850
Giveaway
040
Happy Ads
050
Hay &amp; Gram
640
Help Wanted
11 D
Home Improvements
810
Homes lor Sale
310
Household Goods
510
HousesforRent
410
In Memoriam
020
lnsurahce
130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment
660
Llveatock
630
Lost and Found
060
Lots &amp; Acreage
350
Miscellaneous
170
Miscellaneous Merchandise
540
Mobile Home Repair
860
Mobile Homes tor Rent
420
Mobile Homes lor Sale
320
Money to Loan
220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers
740
Muslcallnstruments
570
Personals
ODS
Pola for Sale
560
Plumbing &amp; Heating
820
Proltlllonal Servlcao
230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
160
Real Eatata Wanted
360
Schools Instruction
150
Ssed Plant &amp; Fertilizer
8~0
Sltuatlono Wonted
120
SpacttorRonl
460
Sporting Goodo
520
SUV alar Sale
720
Truckalor Solo
715
Upholatory
870
730
Vano For Sale
Wanted to Buy
090
Wanted to Buy Farm Suppllll
820
Wanted To Do
180
Wanted to Rent
470
072
Yard Sale Gallipolis
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle
074
076
Yard Sale Pt Pleasant

no

fill'~

YARD SALE
I'OMEROY/Mn&gt;nu:

Garage Sale
Satu day
September 9 a 30 5 00
DeLong s on SA 143
Pomeroy 1 m le off SA 7 on
the r ght Clothes shoes
tools houseware 1tems lug
gage furniture

rro

YARD SALE-

L.,~-oiPEoiiii'LEAsiiiiiliiiANf-_.1
Yard Sale 2110 Lincoln

Huge yard sale 9am 5pm
Sept 8 &amp; 9 1/2 m le past
The Korner toward Cheshire
on Route 554 Easter
Residence Mens womens
teens brand name cloth ng
m1crowave comforter set
Nascar Sega Genests &amp;
much more

r

"--------,.1

more
Fnday Saturday
9 OOam 810 Maple Sfree t Absolute Top Dollar U S
M ddleport near Ove brook S lve and Gold Coms
Prqpfsets Gold A1ngs Pre
M le Road Yard Sates Three
t9:f5
US
Currency
m1les North of Chester off
Solita re Diamonds M T S
At 7 Several houses sev
eral fam11 es
Clothes Co n Shop 1 51 Second
Avenue Gallipo 1s 740 446
household goods lots of
2842
•stuff
penennals and
houseplants
Saturday Want to buy Junk Cars
Sept 9th
(304)773 5004

MOVING SALE Sept 7th
8th 9th and Oct 4th and
5th Furniture home 1nterror
lawn furniture
Lots of
Wood
Huge ya d sale Sept household m1sc
burning
lu
nace
double
walt
8th &amp;91h
9am 5pm
32
Henkle
Ave
Sew ng p1pe Turn oft At 7 onto 143
machme b cycle exerc1se go 2m Corne1 of 143 and
eq cha rs toys d•shes Ba11ey Run Road
cloth ng books small appli
Mull! tam ly Thurs Frt
a.nces much more
Sal?
Beh nd Masomc
Rescheduled from last Lodge n Racme
Boys
weekend Sept 8 9 00 3 00 men sm and plus s•ze
Some
and Sept 9 9 oo-1 00 902 women s cloth ng
Vanco Ad Bar stoo s cos name brands lots of m sc
tume
Jewelry
Galha Also selhng Nascar col
Academy ogo Items hoi dil.y lectlbles Star! at 9 00 740
decoratiOns and much more 949 2671
Yard sale 1 2 m les out RACO Yard Sa e Sta1 M II
route 218 Sept 4th thru 9th Park
Tuesday
and
Heaters mowers tr mmers Wednesday September 12
Yard sale 4866 SA 850 9/8 13 lrom 900 to 4 00
9/9 9 5 Queen s ze bM Thursday September 14
from 9 00 to 2 00 All terns
clothes lots of other terns
on Thursday are one half
Yard sale 64 Sycamore St pnce clothmg $1 00 per
bag All proceeds benelit
Thur Fr Sat
scholarsh p lund Thanks for
Yard Sale Clothes trundle Your Support
bed some furniture m sc
household 1tems Thursday Yard and Sake Sale long
Fr1de.y and Saturday Sept Bottom
Com
Bldg
7th Btll 9th Sam 5pm 184 Thursday and Frday Sept
White Rd.
7th and 8th 9 OOam ??
Sweepers chan youth bed
'"~ YARD SALEframe etc

PoMEROYIMmDLE

8th and 9th Fr day and
Saturday Too s clothes
guns Collector Items 611 S
Second Ava
Middleport
8AM-4PM
--------3 Residant Yard Sale 9 00
???
Rockspr ngs and
Flatwoods area
Name
Brand clothes Pay Stallon
something for everyone
7 8 9 Rl 143 Holday
cretts Fenton clothes lots
of atutl 9 to 5
8 and p Friday and
Saturday Tools
clothes
guns collecto Items 611
S Second Ava M ddleport
Oho B00400pm

of Bus ness an d Typ ng
Please lax your resume to
740 446 41 24 or email
1dan1ck1@ galllpollscareer

Yard Sale Sept 8 9 (8 00 to
4 00)
County 371 In
Portland 112 mile before
Ravenswood Bridge on the
r gl'lt Kitchen table/chairs
Iuton
computer
kids
clDthes womens clothes
weight bench and Mise

Mason County EMS 1s
acceptmg appl cat1ons for
FT and PT paramedms
starling salary $34 900 per
year
plus
benet Is
Appl cat1ons
may
be
obtatned
from
Mason
H \"
County EMS 2309 Jackson
--E-LP-•A•NTil-IJl_.l
Avenue Potnt Pleasant WV
25550
or you
can
call{304)675 6134

IUO
t.,.

Avenue Fr day September
8th SaturDay September
9th Everything

Yard Sale Sept 9 2006 9 ?
C othmg
mov1es
toys
----~---­ household 1tems everything
Large Indoor Sale Ra1n or m good cond t1on 830 3oth
Shme
Antiques col Sl
Garage sale 588 Kerr Rc:t lectibles furmture changing ~::;:--~':':""----,
WANrED
Sep 7 8 9am Spm large table b ke baby buggy toys
kids adult clothtng golf and
10 Buv
vanety of Items
Garage sale Fn &amp; Sat 9 ?
Locust Street longaberger
computer mon•to 4 1 game
table v1deo game lmens
toys b g mens &amp; kids
clothes

~:~1 't~~~~~~~yol~t~~~~~::

Laundry
Service
Assistant Arcad•a Nurs ng
Center •s looking lor a part
t1me laundry ass1stant
1'1flernoon sh fl Come JOn
our car1ng teaml
Please
call Judy Brunty 740 667
3156

9/9/06

To good home rna e lnsh tools
household terns
Setter Good w1th k1ds name brand cloth ng and
needs
room
to
run more 9 5
1740)446 2141
~~__:___ _ _ __
Fr Sat 8 00 ? 571 Jay Dr
Lo\TANU
F1retruck bed $100 hand
FOUND
made terns toys many
s•zes of clothes
Chihuahua found m the
Camp Conley area Monday Garage sale 1675 Co a M11
Ad Fn/Sat 918 9/9 9 4
call (304)773 9188
Bakers rack lamps books
d1shes clothmg tools &amp;
much more

GallipoliS Career Col ege

l&lt;JC:o~ll!lJ!ag~e':'oom~':_____

9am Spm 2370
Clark Chapel Rd 2 m11es off
SA 160 Clothmg of all s1zes
GIVEAWAY
Jeans forma l wear 2
hay spear ant1ques butcher
Free Grey killen female block act armoire computer
approx 10 weeks old desk llorse tra•!er lad1es 15
1740)446-0656
speed bike
household
1tems com c bOOks
Gray female k1nen w/whlte
feet (304)675 0021

CLASSIFIED INDEX ,

10 $1 500 Gross per
Month
Delivermg The
Da•ly Sent nel For more
"
1 nformat1on ca J Steve at
740 992 2155
·
Instructors
Needed

Zuspan Metal Salvage Now
buymg JUnk cars buses
p1pe I beam t n etc
Mason WV 304 593 1904

I· \\1'1 0\ \II\ I
"I In II I"
"t"'lo.--------,

Hl::l.J' WANTED
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts
wood terns
To $480/wk
Mater als p OVlded
Free •nformatton pkg 24Hr
801-428 4649

Abstractors/landman want
ed Full or part t1me
Compensat on based upon
expenence Send Resume
to C E Hellmann Land
Serv ces LT O PO Box 235
Evans WV 25241 304 372
9336
::..:::::...._ _ _ _ _ _
AcquJsll ons noo accepting
resumes for part I me sales
151 Second Ave Gallipol s
No phone calls pease
-------An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Call Marilyn 304 882 2645
-------Are you looking lor 8
stable Job?
Give us a calli
You could earn up to
$8/hour p us bonuses
We also offer patd tra mng
hoi days and vacations
Full or part time day and
evening shifts ave. lable
Can tOdayl
1-877-4!3-1247
txt 2"55

NO E)(PERIENCE NECESSARY
FULL TIME CLASSES
COL THAN NO
FINoi.NCING AVoi.ILABLE
JOB PLACEMENT
ENROLL NQ NOW

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS

WYTHEVILLE VA

1-800-334-1203
, __ a ant:~~! acto aHe com
L-.:::::.o:""''""'""""""--'

Needed
Tramers/Superv1sors
for
adult male homeless shelter
All ShiftS needed Contact
Brad (740)581 0906 Paul
(740)581 0198

R&amp;J TRUCKING
Leading The Way
R&amp;J Truck ng now Hlr ng at
our New Haven WV
Termmal For Reg1ona
Hauls Dump 0 v .. 1 year
OTR
ver f1able exp
Ca ll 1 BOO 462 9365 ask for
Kent

Country band look•ng for a
lead gu tar player Call
(740)388 1566
between
5 OOpm 9 OOpm
Equipment delivery technl
c1an Ful hme Apply m per
son at Fam ly Oxygen 540
West Umon Street Athens
Ohio

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS
$15 67$26 19/llr now h r
ng For application and free
gove nement JOb nfo call
Amer can Assoc of Labo 1
913 599 8042 24/hrs emp
serv
Hardware c erk needed
Knowledge of plumb ng &amp;
electncal he pful
Send
resu me to CLA Box 575 c/o
Gall polls Dal y Tnbune PO
Box 469 Gall polls OH
45631
-------Help wanted wth construe
ton and e ect JC expenence
Must have expenence and
tools. Pease call 740 992
1628
-------HOME HEALTH AIDES
SIGN ON BONUS Home
Health Care at SE Oh1o s
cu rrently hlrtng home a des
com peUt ve wages
Call
740 662 1224
HVAC PoSitiOns Ava able
W1th A Well Estab shed
Athens Area Contractor

AN NURSES
Pleasant Val ey Hosp tal
IS currently accepting
resumes lor Fu I tune
Reg sterad Nurses
AppliCants must have a
current WV license
Flex ble scheduling
excellent sala y hoi
days health nsurance
s nglelfamdy plan den
tal pan life nsurance
vacatiOn long lerm d s
ab I ty and retirement
Send resumes to
Pleasant Valley
Hospital
cJo Human Resources
2!520 Valley Drive
Pt Pleasant wv
25550
AAIEOE
·-------·

Rocksp~ ngs

s seeking a
regtsfered nurse to f I an
assistant d11ector of nursmg
pos t1on Qua flcat1ons must
mclude 5 years long term
care ~)(per ence and super
v sory exper ence The per
son must be a team player
wining to work long hours Is
able to pnont za and have
excellent commumcat1on
and assessment skills
If
lnte ested send your resume
to Rocksprings Nursing and
Ae~abl tatJon Center 3€i759
Rockspnnge Road 45769
attention
Dlrecfor
of
Nursing Extendlcare Health
Service&amp; Inc Is an equa
opportunity amp oyer that
encourac es
workplace
dlvers1ty M/F ON

Rocksp mgs Rehab I tatiOn
Center prov des res dents
w th outstanding nurs1ng
care and rehab htat on serv

youth n a staff secure res• ~;:======~
dentla enVIronment Must ~
pass a phys ca Ira nmg
PROFESSIONAL
requ•rement Pa1d benet Is
SER\ JCI:'S
Ca I between Sam 3pm
Mon Fn to apply (7 40)379
TURNED DOWN ON
9083
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We W n
!50
ScHOOlS
I 888 582 3345
IN~"fRUCfiON
Rl \I I ..., I \II
Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Horne)
Call Today 740 446 4367
18002140452

10

Ho~m;
H&gt;RSAI£

www gal po 31;a ee oo lege com

14 1 acreswth2900sq ft
ed ad Membe Ac~ed ng home
V1ew
al
CounC1 lo lnd&lt;ap(!! cia 1 Col eges
www orvb com
code It
and Schools 1274B
7156 Call (740)441 1559
Ate

Sholokan Ka ate classes at - - - - - - - - Carleton School Syracuse 4 bedroom 2 bath double
garage poo
2 acres
6 00 p m to 7 00 p m Eastern School D strict
s;~~~n~v:::~~~~~:;~h2u~:t 740 992 3465 after 5 OOPM
For moremfo ca ll 378 6144 - - - - - - - - or 667 3039
4 rental houses For Sale
;;;,;;;;;..;;;;;;;;_ _ _ __, GOQd mcome productng

1'70

MISCEI.LANEOlS

I propert1es

Great locatJonl
, Pr ce(s) are Negotiable
Mouvated
Serer
In
lazy T Roya Chaparral Ga l 1pohs
Call Wayne
Family Resort Campground (404)456 3802
membershtp
for
sale
(304)372 6569
Atttnllonl
Local company offer ng NO
DOWN PAYMENT' pro
Male tenor needed for new
grams for you to buy your
Southern Gospel Trm Call
home nstead ot renting
740 215 0812 or 740 682
• 100% financing
7429 If no answer leave
Less than perlect credit
message
accepted
Payment could be the
New lower Pr ces on same as rent
Limestone at Rodney Stone Mortgage
Locators
(1401245 5316 River Graval 1740)387 0000
&amp; Sand also available

•

NO DOWN PAYMENT even
with lass than perfect credit
tS ava lable on th1s 3 bed
room 1 bath home tn
M ddleport Corner 101 vinyl
siding flrep ace In living
room g ~d carpet tile floor
In kitchen French doors
open to master bedroom
lacuzz tub off street park
lng Payment around $550
per month 740 367 7129

10

Great used 3BR home only
Attention!
$9 995 W1ll help with deliv local company oflenng "NO
e y Call (740)385-7671
DOWN PAYMENr pro
grams for you to buy your
Mob le Home for Sale home mstead o1renting
14X70 3 Bdrm mob1le lOO% fnanc 1ng
home All electnc on rented
Less than pertect credit
lot In M ddleport $4 000 00

a~e:;~~nt

In Syracuse 2 800 sq ft
qualty bultmull1 evel bnck
home maintenance free
Nice qu et neighborhood ~
4 bedrooms 2 bath w th
hardwOOd tnm throughout
U shaped kitchen w1th 40 of
cabinets Wood burn1ng ftre
place 2 car detached
garage Nice\u1 landscaped
60 acre lot Immaculate
cond1t1on
l.ow utI t1es
Selling prce 5249000 Call
b
740 441 5171 Sh
own Y
appt only

740 416 1354
could be the
N
cr 1
same as rent
2006
ew
ay on sm
glewJdesstarllngat$19984 Mortgage
Locator&amp;
per month Trade ms wei {7 40)367 0000
comes Cat (740)385 2434
Fu ly carpeted
Lors &amp;
basement w1th W/0 hookup
ACR£o\GE
1 5 bath kitchen appliances
ncludea Crty schools Ntce
A"ent on Hunte s &amp; Farmers qu et ne ghborhood $650
mo 1300 daposrt , ulltlt es
160 acres Barlon Chapel
p
,
Rd 20 m•-·tas from 164 water pad hone 1740 446
n '"'
Mrllon exrl Crty water Foro.0_2_•_______
mformaton (304)937 4127
H
Md
ouse 1n
disport 1or rent

j

For Sale! 84 acres with
water tap pond t/2 wOOds
H d
an yman spec a1 comes 112meadow 3yearodbarn
Cape Cod home tocaled on Wit h 2 lots c ose to schools w th concrete f oar 30X60
2 acre lot close to Pomeroy Pont Pleasant 12 4 9 00 Greal Hunt1ng
Road
and Meigs Jr High and High _17_4_0_)7_09_13_8_2____ Frontage S2 000 an acre
School
Excellent ne1gh Home For Sale Outs de Between Pomeroy and
bars
Attached 2 car
Albany Oh10 Call740 992
Rae ne Ohm Ranch Style 5616
ga age central AJC and 2600 sq ft 4 bdr arge
heat
2 400 sq feet 3 master bdr w/walk n closet FS 25 aces letart area
bdrms 3 baths 740 992
2 full baths v1ng room tam Roll ng pasture &amp; crop and
2795 New Crew Road
1ly room larnA cedar sun Beaut lui Home sites Call
•·
room openmg onto pat o cl304_):._6_75_6c_64_1- - - d mng room k !chen u111 ty Mobile Home Lot for rant
room part al basement
Attached large 2 car garage naar Vnton Call (740)441
1111
w/bwll n cab nets unat .:..:_:.:..:__ _ _ _ _ _
ta ched 3 car heated garage Mob le Home lot tn Johnson
In ground pool br c~ paliO Mob• e Home Park m
professionally landscaped Gall polls
OH
Phone
Pr1ce $275 000 00 Call 740 (740)446 2003 01 (740)446
949 2217
1409
garage
covered pat1o Must Sell ASAP Pr1me loca Trailer lot for Rent
lot
fenced back yard newly 110n 1+acre 1500 Sq Ft 100x100 $100 a month
remodeled 3 or 4 bed
Tnple AAA Home
hvmg ~(3 0~4;.)6.75~48•7•4.,..--...,
rooms c ose to schoo s
room tam y room d1mng
REAL Esn.TF.
Po nt Pleasant $69 500 room &amp; extras $65 000
(740)709 1382
(304)593 0852
WANTF.D

i:i11

All real eatate advertlalng
In thla newapeJ)4Jir Ia
aubject to the Federal
Fair Houaing Act of 1968
which makes ltlllegallo
advertiJe any
preference limitation or
dlacrlmlnetlon baaed on
race color religion aax
familial statua or national
origin or any Intention lo
make any auch
preference limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon

0 der Country Home on
over 2 acres Approx 1200
SqFt 2bt' large hv•ng dlmng
&amp; k tchen mslde laundry
314 mt les from Hartford
$48 500 {304]882 2655

Tha

BIG One

4 Bedroom 2 Bath

su,m

Need to sell your home?
Late on payments d vorce
ob transfe r or a death? 1
can buy your homu All cash
and qu1ck clostng 740 416
3130
10 \I II .,
~r::.IO~-~----.

H()I,~I:S
FORRE!I'r

·--iliiloiiiiiii0.-,1
Bedroom

Tr Level

mymldweslhome com

(740)828-2750

Thla newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real
estate whlcn Ia In
violation ollhe law Our
reader' are hereby
Informed lhat all
dwelllnga.edvertiNd In
this newapaper are
available on an equal
opportunity basea

r

To Do

•

Care for your loved one
Pnvate 100m and bath 3 hot
meals and snacks crafts
(740)388 0118

1ces help ng them return to a - - - - - - - - hie of ndependence al Jenny s Home Ha r Care
homa Wa currently ha·~
Y&lt;&gt;
For D1sabled Shut Ins Call
opportunt1es for ANs and 740 378 6482
LPN s located m Pomeroy
Oh o
We otter a COM Wtl do Babysitting n my
PETITIVE SALARY SCALE
hOme All shifts and every
and excellent benefit pad&lt; other weekend
C ean
age and a supportive work home meals provided Fdr
env ro nment
Interested
more 1nfo
Contact Lor
cand dates should apply to Crane 740 416 0835
Rocksp mgs Rehab•l tat on
II\\\( 1\1
Center 36759 Rockspr ngs
Road
Pomeroy
Oh1o
Bus~
45769 E•tendlcare Health
serv ces Inc s an equal
0PI'ORTUNITY
opportunity employer that
encourages
workplace Forrentor saa 17600sqft
d1vers1ty MIF DN
warehouse on AI 2 w1th 3
acres fenced 1n &amp; gated
parking
ot
Rocksprmgs Rehabll tat on blacktop
center s look1ng tor dedtcat (304 )937 4127
ed compassionate State
Tes ted Nursmg Asststants
•NOTICE•
forour200pm to1000pm
OHIO VAL LEY PUBLISH
sh f1
Compel 11ve wages
NG CO recommends
health and dental benet ts
that you do bus•ness w1th
and 401 K ave lable We take peop e you know and
pnde 1n our facd ty and rest
NOT to send money
dents and need great team through the mall until you
players to JOin us If you have mvestJgated the
have these quahl cat ons otlerlng
please
apply
to
Rockspnngs RehabJitat on
MONJ..'Y
Center 36759 Aockspnngs
TO loAN
Road
Pomeroy
Oh1o
45769 E)(tend ca re health
SerVIces nc s an equal
opportunity employe that
••NOTICE**
wo kplace
encourages
dtverSity M/F DN
Borrow Smart Contact
the OhiO D1v s1on of
Fmanc1al
lnst tut1on s
I ruck Umus
Off1ce of Consume
A.Ha rs BEFORE you ref
l l\! I DONE DRIVER
nance
your home or
S all lr ckng frnra'
obta1n a loan BEWARE
I uuk g I r 1 ~lliJ I I &gt;ule
of requests for any large
d vu s wllh Jla bed ex per cncc
l'ay 1 g JO~o ol glOSS 0
r advance payments of
fees or Insurance Call the
&lt;~vcmg~ s S600 00 to $!J"no tiO
Consumer
tako.: hu ne all~ tax ~ II me Off ce of
Affa rs loll free at 1 866
~VCJ) week end and som
o.:~k
278 0003 to learn If the
d~\ S del\ nn~ n Oh KY \A
mortgage broker
or
WV IN 330 )"7 1789
lender
s
p operly
I censed (Th1s IS a pubhc
serv ce announcement
Wanted D1rect Superv1s1on from the Ohto Va lley
Employees to ove see male Publlshtng Company)

We Have Openings for a
Serv ce Techn Clan and an
lnstalle Muet have 3 Years
Experience and Clean
Drlvmg Record SO% of
Work In Atheos Area
Excellent Wages Based on
Experience Send Data led
Re&amp;ume To
Veterinary Assistant need
YARD SALE·
ed
Exper1ence preferred
WAmr:n
Pr.l'LFA&amp;~\T
but wll tram PT/FT some
AVON! All Areas To Buy or
Witekends
required
Sell
Sh r ey Spears 304
Mtmmum
wage
Send Georges Portab e Sawm 11
675 1429
resume to French Town don I haul your logs to the
Veterlna y Cbn c 360 SR Mill JUSt call 304 675 1957
160 Ga Upol s or fa)(
(140)449 4101
Sat 919106 Clothes sate
Small home repa1r and yard
New haven Park Do your
Fit 35 Adult Book Store need service 20 yrs exp Call
SChOOl shopptngl BAM ? Cosmetologlsl needed Call
M dnlght C ark Full t rna 1740)446 3692
Call
Rain Dare 9/16/06
(740)446 7425
(304)937 4900 Drug Test
1740)646 8943

r

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Two Bedroom
740 843 5264

$425 00

"'__r

AP_FOR_&gt;\Kil\_Rmr_IINI"S_-'1

tBR

StudiO

Apartment

rnust~:~ar::ly ~~~~~~~
Gallpol s aero&amp; !rom park
2 d II
13
n
oar
60 month
water and trash InCluded All
Wood Floors naw ceramic
cook top stove new rafnger
ator AJC and heat Low
monthly
ut1ht1es
Cal
(740)709 1690
2 bedroom Apartment avail
able In Syracuse $200 DO
deposit $350 00 per month
Rent Rent nctudes water
sewer t ash
No pets
Sufflden11ncome needed to
quail"· 740 378 6111
·r
Centenary
2 Bedroom A~
t"
Road
appl ances
washer/dyer hookup no
pets (740) 446 9442 after

Pomeroy e.g 4 Bedroom/2
Full Baths Newly remod
e ed $750 00 740-843
5264
-------Totally remode ed New out
s de s1dmg 2 bedrooms
bat h kite hen n ce neg
I hbo
hood Call (740)446 7425

Apt for rent 2 or 3 Br
Pets 740 992 5858

'!_D!ID'

1
•

FOR SAU

accepted Call (740)446 Reference
required electr c memory typewnte
0834 or (740)645 4846 $800/mo (740)441 0110 or F shmg lures and tack e
1ce111
(740)992 5174
(740)446 9635

pa1d $350 montll $350
security
deposit
Call
17401446 3481
,________

JU..'u

SUVs

FOR JID.T

IBR apt In Spnng Valley Large 3BR apt Hardwood Canon EOS 35mm zoom Commercial bu1ldmg

Gall pohs $550/mo renter
pay utilities {7401379 2280
17401709 9005
---------

MOFOBIRLE0

APARJMIJIITS

No

BEAUTIFUl.
APART
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 5 2 Westwood
"
Dnve Irom $349 to ...
..,.......,
Walk to shop &amp; movtes Call
740 446 2568
Equal
_Ho_u_s_n_g_O_PP_o_rt_,n_tly'---

M1ddlepor1 N 4th Ave 2 Dining room
bedroom lurmshed or unfur
nlshed apartment depoalt &amp;
prevtous rental references
no 1"\AfS (740)992 0165
"~
Ntce 2br Apartment located
n Pt
Pleasant
with
refr dg/cookmg
range
forced air heat AJC washer
&amp; dryer hook up
$ 300
month + $200 deposit

vs

Shawn Earls
Detandants
Court
o1
Common
Pleaa Meigs County
Ohio
In purauance of an
order of aala to me
directed from said
court In the above anti·
tied action
I will
expose to sale at public auction on the Front
Steps of the Meigs
County Court House
on Friday Oct 20 2006
at ID AM ot said day
the
lollowll\g
described Real Estate
The
following
described real ealata
situated
In
Salem
Township
Meigs
County, In tho State of
Ohio,
Section
2,
Township 8, Range 15
of the Ohio Company
Purchase and being a

a point 4) North 87
degrees 02 minutes 34
seconds East a dla
tance of 281 84 feat to
a point 5) North 82
degrsea 35 minutes 49
seconds Eaot a dis
tanca of 27 20 teet to a
point, said point being
tho true point of beginnlng tor the parcel of
real
astata
herein
described
Thence leaving the
centerline of State
Route 124 along a Una
created by th is survey
North 05 degreaa 28
minutes 45 seconds
East a distance of
1170 341eat to an Iron
pin aet by this survey
passing an Iron pin sot
lor reference by this
survey at 30 77 feat
Thence along a line
created by lhla survey
South 79 degrees 30
minutes 59 seconds
Eaot a distance of
197 61 feat to an Iron
pin set by this survey
Thence along a line
created by this survay
South 05 degrees 28
minutes 45 seconds
West a distance of
884 88 feet to an ~ron
pm set by this survey
Thence along a ltne
created by this survey
South 30 degrees DO
minutes DO seconds
Eaat a dlslanca of
164 44 feet to a point In
lhe centerline ot Ohio
Stale Route 124 pass
lng an Iron pin sat for

lance of 85 72 teet to..a
point, 3) South 67
degreea 29 mlnutao 57
seconda Weot a dislanes of 82 05 leal to s
point, 4) South 75
degreea 34 minutes 39
second• West a dla·
tance ol68 67 laet to a
point 5) South 82
dagraas 35 minutes 48
seconds Wtat a dislance of 74 81 fHI to
the point ot beginning
containing
5 3357
acres mora or loss
Sublect to all legal
easements The above
description was made

table w/6

~~:~s s~:~~ln~ac~u~~h
s

Dodge Dura ngo
Cond liOn
al
street park1ng Great loca leather DVD entertainment
lion! 749 Thtrd Avenue m center remote sta 1 al
Galllpol s P •ce NeQohab e power (740)446 9395
New roof! Mot vated Seller
2003 Chevrolet Tr81 blaze
EXT LT 4WD Th rd row
I \R\1 "' \'1'111...,
seat Garage kepi l ke nev.
,\ II\ 1 " 10( h.
cond1t on
S16 500
(740)446 7484 or (740)44
r10
FARM
7411
1999

1 bedroom upsta1rs unfur
mshed apartment With
range refr d1sposar and
garage 136 F rst Ave rear
DepoSit and reference
(740)446 2561

L.-.:F.Qt.:~O:Il'!\:;:;.:I~E'IT
,;,;._.J

e

r

rL.---·DS--,.JI i

1 bedroom unfurmshed
garage apartment w1th
range &amp; refrtgerator at 35
112 V ne Stree t Rent $325
plus depos t references No
pets (740)446 1214

:;==;===:;

"KIEFER BUILT "VALLEY
' BISON "HORSE &amp; LIVE
STOCK TRAILERS LOAD
MAX
"GOOSENECK
DUMPS
&amp;
UTILITY
Nice 28R apt for rent No
JET
ALUMINUM
'ALUMA
TRAILERS B&amp;W GOOSE
pets Available Sept 1
AERATION MOTORS
HITCHES
(419)3591768 o (419)308 Repared New/!. RebUJI! In NECK
Stock Call Ron Evans 1 Carmichael
9740
Equipment
--------•
900 5~7 9528
(740)446-2412
ROOMS FOR RENT
Construction Workers l arge
NEW AND USED STEEl. John Deere i 0 't NoT I Dr II
new y remodeled furnished
Steel Beams Pipe Reba fo
rent
Carm chae
apartment n Middleport
$125 00 each person per Fo
Concrete
Angle Equ pment (740)446 2412
week Call 740 441 5171
Channel Flat Bar Steel
Gratmg
For
Ora ns
Twin Avers Tower IS accept Dnveways &amp; Walkways l&amp;l Skd Steers Carrnchae
Scrap Metals Open Monday
ng app 1callons for wa1t ng
Equ pment (740)446 2412
list for Hud-subs zed , br Tuesday Wednesday &amp;
apartment call 675 679 Fnday Bam 4 30pm Closed New John Deere Compacts
Thu sday
Saturday
&amp;
and 5000 SeHes Ut I ty trac
Equa Housing Opportunity
Sunday (740)446-7300
tors @0% Fixed for 36
~~--":!!'"----, ------~- months through John
SPACE
Smokeys Vacation Bargain Deere Credit Carmichael
FOR RENT
S
ept 15 22 deluxe condo EqUipment (740)446 2412
Stocked kitchen WID 10
Commercial bu dtng ~For poo s acuzzl Half Pr ce Qua ly John Deere Hay
1740)446 9555 Equlpment lor less round
Rent 1600 Squ'r' leal off $599
balers square bale s &amp;
street parking Great IMa
(740)446
3644
""'
mower cond111one s @4 7%
lion! 749 Third Avenue n - - - - - - - vent
Free
3-Plaque
p
opane
F1•ed
for 48 months lhrougll
GallipoliS Rent Negotiable
Gas
Heate
(Manual
John
~ Dee•e
Credit
Call Wayne 1404)456 3802
Control) Reg $143 95 Sale Carm chae l
E,qu1pment
Downtown
Commercial $,22 36 Save ,5% on all (740)446 2412
Retai l space tor Rent $4001 other Gas and Electric
{sale
IIVJo:sTOC'K
month
Upsta1rs Office Heaters tn atock
Su1tes fol" Rent $1251 month ends Sept 16) Save $4 00 ___
you pay the Ullt es Call to $6 00 per gal on select
(703)528 06 17
PittSburgh Pa1nt w th mall n "KIEFER BUILT "VALLEY
rebate We now have our •BISON •HORSE &amp; LIVE
\II W II \\l)hl
Fall Mums 1n stock
STOCK TRAILERS l.OADr.=;=~====;;;;
Paint Plus Hardware
MAX
"GOOSENECK
iO
HUIJSEHOW
{304)675 4084
DUMPS
&amp;
UTILITY
Goo
"ALUMA
ALUMINUM

Brand new 2 Bedroom
14x70 3 bd m 2btll coun Apartmenls Washe /dryer
try sell ng m Centenary hookup stove/refrigerator
$400/month (740)446 4323 ncluded
arte Spm
Also ava1lable units State
Route 160 Call for detals
2 bedroom AJC porch &amp; (740)441 0194 or (740)441
awnmg Very very n ce no 11B4
pets In Gal 1pohs (740]446
Clean very n1ce 1 bedroom
2003 or (740)446 1409
lurn shed Apartment $325 +
2 BR tra ler n Mercerville Depos t (304)675 2970
PETs
For Sale Doublew1de Teens
FOR SALE
CONVENIENTLY
LOCAT
Run pass bl e land contact
--smal
down
paymenl ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhou
se
apartments
tO Week
(740)256 8132 1740)256
Appliance
and/or small houses FOR
1389
Obedience Classes
RENT Cal (740)44 111t1
YOU CAN ACHIEVE CGC
2BR 1 ba no pets c ean m tor application &amp; 1nformat on
&amp; Therapy Title
Warehouse
country $300 plus depoSit
4 H Invited
reference
requtred
call
m Henderson WV
Pre
(740)256 6202
1304!675-2113
owned Appliances starting
at s--s &amp; up all under 2
male
Mm alure
Warrl:lnty also have recon Dachshund pupp es
1
d1t10ned 819 Screen TV s shortha r red &amp; 1 longha r
by Ron's TV {304)675 black/tan vet checked
1304)593 3820
7999

1 and 2 bedroom apart
ments !urn shed and untur
nlshed sacur ty deposit
requ red no pets 740 992
2218

Sheriff Sales
Case Number 05CV095
Herbert Wallman
Plaintiff

su 118

elactr c 100 Br~dat
81nner
•
gown sze 9 pnncess lme
w/accessor es $100 1tems
n excellent
condttmn
(740)446 1543
-------F berglass bed covyr fo
Ford F 150 short bed
I 6
(304)675-6893
c30:c...;4l:.:..,75=:7'-'6:.:2:.:8_____ - - - - - - - - -

COUNTRY LIVING

NOTICES

For

WID hookups HUD/PRC floor5 WID hookup No pets lens camera Smith Corona Sale 1600 square feet off E•cellent

Log cab1n beautifu l country
sett ng 3 bedroom 2 bath
font &amp; bacj.; porch beauti
fu ly andscaped rock pond
fu I basement appl an(;es 5 OOpm
ncluded 20 minutes from - - - - - - - A 0 Granda/ Oak Hill/ 2 bedroom 1 bath wate r

i

r

Used Furniture Store 130
Bulav Ue P1ke E ectrlc gas
range s bunk beds chests
dJnettes couches used
manresses
Grave
Monuments (740)446-4782
Gallipolis OH Hrs 11 5 (M
S)

r
~

MISCELlANEOUS

MERCHANDISE

I
.

a

"r;,.;.;..;.;;,...;;;.____,

99 Chevrolet Suburban
loaded w th ealher nterlor
new t res good condition
$4 800 1740)446 6323
For sale 1996 Chevrolel
Blazer Good cond1t on low
m leage
loaded
Call
1740)245 9183

r

2002 Chevy Blazer 4wd 2
door automallc trans 55 000
mtles
AC power locks
powe
wmdows
amlfm
ad10 cd player n great con
dton SlO 500 740 645
36
__0_ _ _ _ _ __
2002 Ford F250 Super Duty
Super Cab 7 3l d esel
4x4 Excellent condttiOn
$20 000
(740)379 2280
09
900
~171.:4~0 1:7;,;.
;;.,;.
~5_ _ __

~30

\A.~

•L--.;FiiOiiiRiiiSiiiALEiiii;,..2000 Astra M1n1 Van
$7500 00 740 667 3655

&amp;40 MOTORC\ CLFSI

I

4 WHEEUll'i

2002 Honda Recon 250
needs ebu1lt $500 OBO
(740)794 0219 (740)794
0231 leave message 1f no
answe
A 2005 Harley Dav dson
FHT wttll lots of extras for
S16500wth8000mles n
e•cellent
shape
Call
(740)245 9494

TRAILERS "B&amp;W GOOSE
NECK
HITCHES
Cerm•chael
Equipment

BoAlS &amp; MOTORS
.URSALI

~0~62412

•Mi.tiP"Aii 111+

1998 F she marsh Hawk
180 1Bh Bass Boat 40 ho
Auros
Mercury o I m)ected 0 B
I"OR SAil
new M nnkota trolling motor
new balle 1es 2 f sh ltnders
1961 Cad Jlac convert1b e 2 1ve wells tackle storage
Very good condtt on leather rod locke 2 coole s always
ext
con
ntenor c ass c (740)245 covered
$7 0001080 1304)773 5958
9142
l
2000 Chrysle r Seb ng
Convert ble l1m ted Cloth
top leather lntlnty sound
system
Garage
kepi
30mpg New ttres $7 500
{740)446 7484 or 1740)441
741 1

Older Model Range Bass
Boat 115 Johnson t alley
motor &amp;hsh f nder $3 500
1304)675 8859

2002 Mercury Mounta neer
8 week old Boxer fawn 1n Loaded w1th only 48 000
color $150 (740)367 7630 m es
or [740)645 0798
2002 Ford L1ghtng F150
pck up 30000 m les Call
AKC Black lab puppies 5 1740)256 1245
even ngs
weeks old
Males and and weekends
females
$300
Call
15
TRUCKS
(304)882 2687
mR SALE
AKC
reg
German
Shorthaire d Po nter Vet 1984 Ford Ranger 4 cyl nder
checked 1st shots Call 4 spet~d $800 1994 Fad
1740)388 9338
Exp orer 6 cyl nde{ auto
matte
4x4
S1 200
Rat Te(ner puppies Ta1ls (740)446 3398
docked 1st shots Mal8s
$125 femae $150 Call 1990 Chev olet 45485 truck
(740)379 9515 or (740)645 blac~ w th many ext as
6857
sharp clean garage kept
-------~ 740 742 2404 after 4 00
Reg stared
M1matu re p m or anyt me weekends
Pinschers
Ma es
and
females
$200
each 1990 Dodge Dakota 4
(740)398 8788
wheal d 1ve good work truck
13d4)675 6893

2005 2811 Dutchmen N/stde
out bunk and extras Sill
under warranty $14 500

r

FRUITS &amp;

Above ground pool slide
VEGETABU.S
h1gh
pump/filter
Ca I
&amp;
Kennebec
(740)446 8263 leave mes Pontiac
Potatoes $20 for 100 b B K
saca 1f no answer
Farms {304)982 2567

67 Ford lariat
F 150
Automat c V 8 4X4 Duel
Tanks Good Body and n ce
Inter or Make ol1er 740

992 4025

CA~U~:R~&amp;

MmoRIIOMES

~

10

HOME
hiPROVEM!WfS

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondlt onal ifet me gua
antee local eierences lu
ntshed Estab shed 1975
Ca I 24 Hrs 740) 446
0870 Rogers Basement
Waterprooftng

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

CI .ASSIFIEDS
EMPLOYMENT

Tuppers Pla1ns
VFW #9053
Fnday Nights ...

Doors Open at 5 pm
,..,n,,r starts at 7 pm

Twin R1vers Fall Open
Sunday, Sept 17, 2006
Gallipolis Launch Ramp
Reg1strat1on 5 am - 6 30 am
F1sh 7 am - 4 pm
Matl Entnes to
Tw1n R1vers Manna
412 St Rt 7 North
Gallipolis OH 45631
$500 Big Bass from Benn1gans
$500 Bass Pro Products from
Twtn R1vers
1st $1 200 2nd $730
3rd $400 4th $320 5th $160
Take off drawn at random
Pay out based on 40 boats

I

L.,.;.~~~~--,.J

In accordance wtth an

actual survey conduct
ed under the suparvl
"Sian of Eugene Triplett
S 6766
conduclad
March 16 and 17 1999
Bearings are assumed
and
are
used to
express
angular
measurements only
Auditors Parcel I 13
00623 002
Current owner Shawn
Earls
Property
at
new parcel created out
31150
SR
124
of the Herbert L
Langsville Ohio PPI
Wellman
property
13 00623 002
Pnor
(Meigs County Official
Deed
References
Recorda Vol 78 Pg
VOlume 129, Page 533
381) bounded and
Appraised at $8 DDO DO
described as follows
Terms o1 Sale Cannot
Commencing at the
be sold lor less than
Intersection ol the
213rds
of
the
West line of Salem
Appralsad value 10%
Townahlp Section 2
down on day of sale,
and the centerline of
cash
or
certified
Ohio State Route 124
check balance due on
Thence along the con
confirmation of sale
terllna of Ohio Slate
The
appralaal
did
Route 124 tho follow
lng live calls I) South reference by this sur Include an Interior
examination of the
85 dagrses 50 minutes vey &amp;1136 &amp;Sleet,
Robert
E
55 seconds East a dis· 'Thence along the cen house
lance ot 118 n feet to lerllne ot State Route Beegle Meigs County
a polnl , 2) South 88 124 the following live Shariff Attorney lor
1) South 59 the plaintiff Crow &amp;
degrees 50 minutes 55 calla
seconds East a dis- degrees 40 minutes 02 Crow 11 D W Second
tance of 118 77 feat to seconds Wast a dis- Pomeroy Ohio 740
a point 3) North 89 tanca ol13 761eet loa 992-6058
degrees 01 minutes 40 point, 2) South 61 (9) 13 20 27
seconds East a dis degrees 40 mlnutea 30
tanca of 134 36 feel to aeconda Wast a dis

4x4
FoR SALE

qe \9alltpoli• l)aflp 11t-ribune
U:fJe t)otn.t~(e•nt 1\e~j;t5ter

The O•fly Sentinel

--------------

�Wednesday, September 13, 2006

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 13, 2006
ALLEY OOP

The paily Sentinel • Page BS

www.mydailysentinel.com

NEA Crossword Puzzle

'

BRIDGE

UEILIC
5

ACROSS

Public Not.lcea In Newspaperl!ll.
Your Rl&amp;ht to Kno~. Delivered Rlaht to Your Dcw.r.

Phillip
Alder

Sherin' So leo
Michael L. Wlory, Attn Situated lnSectlon 33, llcre tract Ia tho p!Ro Sune 210
Accounto and vouchCite Number 05CY118 Law olflcto af John D. T.3,' R. 13, Bodford of boglnnlng, .contain- Cincinnati, Ohio 45248 ora of 1ho following
Mortgage Electronic Clunk
Twp., Malgo County, lng 1.8 ecreo, moro or 513·489-0829
named fiduciary hoe
Roglotratton
5601 Hudoon Drive, OH, and being 1 part of ltao.
(9) 13, 20,27
bHn flied In the
Plaintiff
Suite 400
89.5 acre tract 11 Parcel Number; t 4Probate Court, Molgo
VS
Hudton, OH 44236
dllcrlbod In Volume 00767.000
County,
Ohio
for
I
164 page 513 Molgo Commonly Known Ao:
Public Notice
approval and oettleJohn Barnes ot al 330-342·8203
Defondants
(9) 6, 13, 20
County Deed Recordl 34115 Willow CrHk
mont.
Court ot Cammon
and being more partie- Drlvo, Pomeroy, Ohio
SHERIFF SALES
ESTATENO. 31592· The
Pleas, Meigs County,
utarly described 11 fo~ March 9, 2000
CASE
NUMBER 5th and 8th Accounts
Public Notice
Iowa:
Current OWner: Eoter 06CV042
ol William Milhoan,
Ohio
In pursuance of an
Beginning at an Iron L. DeMoss et al
Bank of New York
Guardian or Wayne ''Take the pain out
order ot sale to me Meigs County Sheriff's pin set at the north- Property at: 34115 Plaintiff
Milhoan, an lncompepliinting-let us do it
dlrected from said Office
west corner of Soctlon Willow Creek Drive
vs
tent person.
for you''
court In the above ontl- Shariff
Robert
E. 33; thence along tho Pomeroy, Ohio
Matthew Thelaa et al
.Unless axceptlona ora
Interior
Only
North line of said PP* 14-00767.000
Delandants
tiled thereto, said
tied action, 1 will Beegle
refer- Court of Common account will ba sat for
expose to sale at pub- 104 East second Streal Section, N. 84' 25' 33" Prior' deed
&amp;
7411-985-41110
lie auction on the front Pomeroy, OH 45769
Eaat 1393.43 feet to a ences:Volume
104, Pleas, _Meigs County, hearing before said
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
twin while oak (19ron Page 34
Ohio
Court on tho 13th day
steps of the Meigs Sheriff Salea
Leave mL-ssage
740-446-0007
Toll Free K77-669-0007
County Court House Case Number 06CV014 pin set at base); thence Appraised at $40,000 In pursuance of an of October, 2006, at
herore 6 PM
on Friday, Oct. 13,2006 First National Bank of olong former grantor's terms of sale: Cannot order of sale to me which
time
said
at 10:00 a.m., ol said America,
east ~lne, S. 05' 06' 19" be sold for le11 than directed from . said account will be conoidI I II I ~
STANLEY TREE
East 1319.88 leal to a 213a of tho appraised Court In the above ered and continued
day, the following Plaintiff
(
()'\(
1!1 11
TR~MMING &amp;
described reill estate:' VS
point In Townshlproad value. 10% down on entitled action, I will from day to day until
GENERAL
The . following real Douglas Carr et al 256, passing an Iron day of sala, cash or expose to sale at finally disposed of,
I 11'\S I IH ( 110'\
estate situate in tho Datendants
pin set thence S. 41' certified check, bal- Public Auction on tho Any person interested
CONTRACT!
NG
Concrete Removal
County ol Meigs and Court af Common 59' 18" West 134.32 leal anco due on confirms- front stops of tho may file written oxcep•
Prompt
&amp; quality
and Replacement
Stato of Ohio and In Pleas, Meigs County, to a paint; thence lion of sale.
Meigs County Court lion to said account or
97 Beech Street
work .
tho Village of Pomeroy Ohio .
South, along said The appraisal did not House
on • Friday, to matters perJalnlng ~'All.'lfpe$ of"
• Affordable Rates
Middleport, OH
and being two lots on In pursuance of an Section llna to the can- Include an Interior October 20, ·2006 at ta the execution of the
•
References
ijtqriq:ett
WQrk
Union
Avenue, order of sale to me terline of County road examination of the 10:00 arri, ol said day, trust, not less than five
10x10x10x20
Available
the
fallowing days prior to the date 26 Years Experience
Described as follows, directed from said 14 (also known as house.
•
Free
Estimates
to wit:
court In the above entl- Whlta Oak Road) the Robert E. Beegle, described real estate: sol lor hearing.
992·3194
David Lewis
"Insured"
One lot being 85 112 tied action , I will true place of beginning Meigs County Sheriff
The following real J. S. Powell
or 992-6635
feat on Union Avenue expose to sale at pub· for this parcel:
Attorney
for
the estate situated In the Judge
Call Gary Stanley
740-992-6971
and running back at lie auction on tho front Thence leaving said Plaintiff
County of Meigs, In the Common Pleas Court,
740-742-2293
"Middleport's only
Insured
this width tOO teet and steps af the Meigs road N. 65' 47' 59" west Shapiro &amp; Felty, LLP · State of Ohio, and In 'Probate Division
Self-Stora1e"
•
Leave
a
message
the other lot being on County Court House 338.90 feet to an Iron 1500WeotThlrd 'Street, theVIIIageafPomeroy. MelgsCounty,Ohlo
the easterly side of the on Friday, Oct. 13,2006 pin set at 15.0 feet: Suite 400
Situated In Fraction 25, (9) 13
first described lot at to a.m., of said day, thence S. 29' 37' 08" Cleveland, OH 44113 · Section 20, Town 2,
Public Notice
following west 588.94 feat Ia an 216-621-1530
Range. 13 of the Ohio
herein and being 40 the
feat on Union Avenue described real estate: Iron pin set: thence 49' (9)6, 13,20
company's purchase.
Public Notice
ice five days a weak.
and running back at Situated in the State of 24'28"West668.4Bieat
Beginning at a fence
For various activities
post on the west side The Home National including transportathat width 100 foot and Ohio, County of Meigs to an Iron pin 14
lor further description and In the Township of to Township Road 256
Public Notice
of Sugar Run Road, Bank will auction the lion
to
medical
known
as
near the foot af the following Items on appointments, adult
reference Is hereby Bedford. Being in {also
had to the plats of the Section t 6, Town 3 Landaker
Road); Sheriff Sales
Beech Grove Cemetery Saturday, ·September day sei'Yice, rehablllta- .
City of Pomeroy in the North, Range 13 West thence continuing ·;n a Case Number 06cv054 Hill, corner to A. 16, 2006 at 10:00 a.m. tlon clinics, mental
Recorder's Office of of the Ohio Company's southeast direction lol- Wilmington Savings Leifheit and the Old at the Bank's parking haallH services, shopBrickyard Lot thence lot:
·
· ping, nutrition site,
said Meigs County, Purchase and being lowing the meander- Fund Soc
www~~benr~ekcablr•etr)'.coat
Ohio, being the same described as follows: lngs of County Road Plaintiff
N. 46 deg. W. along the 1997 Jeep Cherokee recreation facilities,
west side of the road, S
p
o
r
t and
socialization .
property
formerly Beginnihg at the inter- 14 to tho South line of vs
owned by Jackson section of the East line lands now or formerly Timothy
&amp; Pamela 105.5 fool to an Iron 1J4FJ68S3VL595149
woodland Centers, Inc.
pin; thence S. 62 112 2001 Dodge Durango Invites comments and
Hysell, now deceased of Section 16 and the owned by Ernest Wood Bentz
1A59 St. Rt. 160 ·Gallipolis
and sold and conveyed centerline of State and
Maudle Ethel Defendants
deg. W. 343 feat to an 1B4HS28N21F509933
proposals from all
LL FOR FREE
IMAT
by Mary Ann Hysell, et Route 681; thence Wood; thence west to Court of common Iran pin In the line af Tho Home National Interested public, prial, the window and South 36' 06'22" West the west line of Section Pleas,
the Bridkyard Lot and Bank reserves the vate and paratranslt
tho Lasley land, thence right to reject any and operators Including
heirs at law of said 124.431 feel along the 33; thence north along Meigs County, Ohio
Jackson Hysell to B.E centerline of said State the west line of Section In pursuance of an S. 36 1/4 deg. E. along all bids. All vehicles taxi operations, for tho
Biggs by deed dated Route 681 to a point: 33 ta the point of order of sale to ma the
Lasley
and are sold, asls where is, provision of transNovember 29, 1899, thence South 31 ' 41'50' beginning and contain- directed ·from said Brickyard Lot line, with no warranties portation services to
and
recorded
in West 99.014 feet along lng approximately 10 court lnthoabovoent~ 101.3 feet to fence expressed ar Implied. the elderly and disVolume 85, Pages 334 the centerline of said acres, more or less.
tied action, I will po.st, corner of. the For an appointment to abled in our service
and 335 ol the records Stale Route 681 to a Said real.estate Is sub- axpooe to sale at pub-. Brickyard
and
A. see, call 949-2210, ask area. Operators who
• New Homes
are Interested In offerof Deed of Meigs point; thence North joel to all oil and gas lie auction on the front Leifheit's lots; thence for ~heila.
• Garages
steps of the Meigs N 62 1/2 · deg. E. 360 (9) 13,14,15
ing proposals to pro'
County, Ohio, also the 24'53'39"Wost ~64.886 loasa right of record.
·Complete
following descr1bed feet to an iron pin set, Reference is made to County Court House feet to the place of
vide service should
Remodeling
real estate situa1e in passing an Iron pin sat deed
recorde.d In on Friday, Oct. 20, 2006 beginning, being a stlp
contact Stan Jones,
Public Notice
En vi ron mont a 1
said county of Meigs, at 36.0 feel for refer- Volume 312 page 263 at 10:00 a.m., of said of land 100 feet wide
State of Ohio, and in ence: thence North Malgs County Deed day, the following off the southeasterly
Services Supervisor, at
the Village of Pomeroy, 11 '51 '07" East 627.125 Records. Parcel No. 01- described raal estafe: side of the Brickyard LEGAL NOTICE
Woodland Centers, Inc, .
Stop &amp; Compare
ta wit:
feet to an lr¢n pin set 00867.003
EXHIBIT "A"
Lot, containing a trifle The
undersigned· 3086 State Route 160,
A piece of parcel of along an old fence line Property
Address: legal Description
over 8110 of an acre, offers for sale an unim· Gallipolis, OH 45631, to
land 29 1/2 feet wide on the North line of 39524 Lendaker Road, Situated In Section saving and excepting proved tract of real obtain full details of
and running at the Pickett's ParCel as Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
j16, Town #2, and the coal and minerals estate consisting of 38 the type of transports·
width the full depth of described in the Meigs Current owner: Flrlf Range #12 In Sutton therein and the right to acres, more or less sit- tion service that is
the lot, or 101 feet and .County Deed Records: National Acceptance Township of Meigs mine the same without uated In Town 7, Range· needed prior to preparbelng off the west side Volume 302, Page 519; Company but property County, Ohio and encumbrance to the 14, Ohio Company's ing a proposal. WriUen
of
the
following thence
South Is encumbered by a beginning on the West surface and right of Purchase and being a comments or propos·
Installment line of tho road which way along any mineral part of Fractlo~ No. 32, als must be submiUed
described premises, to 88' 03'11" Eest 192.350 Land
wit: Beginning at the feel along the North Contract, which Is the runs parallel to . the seams are reserved.
Section No. 27, Scipio within 30 days to the
Meigs agency · at the above
northwest corner ol a line of the aaid Pickett subject of the loreclo- South line of original Except the west and Township,
lot which formerly Parcel to an Iron pin sure action, held by La! ns at a point a dis- heretofore said to County,
Ohio, address with a copy to
William lance of 22 feat, more George Lelfhlet, Jr. and described In Volume the Department of
belonged to George set at the Northeast Ronald
Stone on the street Corner of the said Shepard and Mary or losa, East af the Anna. K. Lelfhlat, by 239, Page 349, Meigs Transportation, Office
Official of Transit, 1980 West
known
as
Union Parcel and on tho East Patricia Shepard and Southaast corner of deed dated February County
Avenue; thence north line of said Section 16; recorded at Instrument A.C. Coopers Lot or 19, 1906, and recorded Records,
being Broad
Street,
78 3/4 dog. west 79 112 thence South 844.138 No. 200000004288 OR what uaed to be the In Volume 94, Page ,Auditor's
Parcel Columbus, OH 43223;
fael ar the northeast feet along the East line Book 117, Page 123, of same; thence West on 533, Racord of Deeds Number 17-0D453.000. A 1 1 e n 1 i o n :
93 Columbus Rd.
The real estate Is Administration.
corner of a lot formerly of the said Section to the Mlegs County, Ohl the line parallel to the of
East line of Cooper's Meigs County, Ohio, to owned by Kim B. Neal, {9) t 3
owned by Frederick the point of beginning, Records of Deeds.
Elberfield;
thence passing an Iron pipe Appraised at $18,000 Lot a distance of 413 which reference Is Kit R. Neal and Jeffrey ---~---south 16 dog. west 85 found at 43.3 feet for Tenns of Sale:Cannot feel, mare ar leas, to hereby made.
Lae Naal, a one -sixth
Public Notice
foot to Tyler's lot, reference and an Iron be sold for tass than . the West line of the Except alao an aase- share each and by
thence In a southeast- pin set at 793.2 feet for 213rds of the appraised Section; thence North ment and right of way David Jenkins, an PUBLIC NOTICE
~
orly direction along the reference, containing value. 10% down on on said West line a dis- 12 feat In width across undtvldad
one-half NOTICE: is hereby
line of Tyler's lot 91 feat 5.486 acres, more or the day of sale, cash oi tance of 400 feet, more the north side of said interest. The real estate given that on Saturday,
29670 Bashan Road
to the lot formerly less. Bearings are certified check, bal- or leas, to the south- 8110 acre lot, which fronts on Stata Route September t6, 2006 at
Racine, Ohio
owned by George assurned and are for ance due on contlrma- west corner' of what Is right of way was 143.
tO:OO a.m., a public
45771
All iypes ot rooting:
Stone, thence along angle measurements lion of sale. Robert E. or was William Burri: heratofore sold and Offers for the real sale will be held at 211
740-94&amp;-2217
New or Repair
The
above Boogie, Meigs County thence on tho line par- conveyed to Gaorge estate will be received W.
said Stone's lot 101 only.
Second
St.,
Seamless Gutter
feet to the pisco of dascrlptlon Is based Sheriff
aNel to the Weal line LeHhell, Jr. and Anna by Kit R. Neal .at Route Pomeroy, Ohio. The
~·~o· '1~
Downspout
beginning, being the on an actual survey an Attorney for Ptatntlff, aforesaid, ta the West K. Leifheit, which said t, Box 24, Letart, WV Farmers Bank and
I'&gt;
to10'l!30'
I
same real estate sold April 30, 1995 by Christopher J. Klym, line of the above men- way mu~t be . at all 25253 and whose Savings Company Is
FREE
and
conveyed
to Robert R. Eason, Ohio 24441 Detroit Rd., !toned road at the Burri limos kept cloaed by phone number Ia 304- selling for cash In
ESTIMATES
Hours
Bonjamln F. Biggs by P.S .. No. 7033 . The Wastlake, Ohio 44145 or what uaad ta be gates and the oxpenae 882-3190.
hand or certlflad chock
Burke Hysell by deed above described real (440) 871·81 11
Burri's aoutheaat cor- of maintaining said Bide will be recelvtid the following collater7:00AM. 8:00PM
(740) 949 1405
dated November 30, estate Is . a part of a (9) 6, 13, 20
ner; thence weal on tho galea to be born equal- until September 20, al:
•
""'
'""' mo pd
':"U::'I.!a.!:la.L19.!:'1S:I!a!:'U!!:!~::
1900, and recorded in tract of real estate that
west line of the said ly by the said Lelfhelta, 2006 at 12:00 o'clock 1999 Ford F250 Super
Volume 87 pages 71 has been assigned
road to tho place of their
heirs
and noon.
D
u
t
. y
~
and 72 of tho Records Auditor's Parcel No. 01
Public Notice
beginning. The afore- assigns,
and
the Th~t owners reserve t FTNX21 SOXED02527
af Deeds of Meigs 00572003
Property
said described real grantees heroin, their tho right to reject any 2002 Chevrolet S-10
estate being located heirs and assigns.
or all bids.
County, Ohio. The ports address: 42138 State Sheriff Salas
t GCCT19W4281 t 0278
Residential• Commercial • GentrUI Cunlnn·ting
of
lots
hereby Route 681 , Pomeroy, Case Number 05cv084 wHhln the boundaries Excepting and raserv- Kit R. Neal
Painting • Doun • Wimlow)o. • lkd.:"
1992
Olds
98
• Siding • Roofing • Rnorn Addili ~m~ • Remuck ling
described being 118 OH 45769 Current Union Plantere Bank
of the Incorporated lng unto the grantor, (9) 13, 14, 15, 17, 18,19 1G3CX53LSN4309670
feet fronting on Union owner: Douglas Carr et Plaintiff
Village of Raclna, Myrtle Slaaon, an
The Farmers Bank and WV 038992 • Plumbing • Ele.:trit&lt;~l 740-387..(1544
• A~·cnu&lt;;tic Ceiling
740-339-3412
Meigs County, Ohio. estate for and during
Avenue and running al, Property At: 42138 vs
Savings
Company, OH 38244
Public Nollce
Parcel 119-00091
her natural lifetime.
back the depth tOO St. Rt. 681 , Pomeroy, Ester L.DeMossotal
Pomaroy,
Ohio,
All of the oil, gas and Thl$ estate shall be
fool, and being the OH. PPn 01-00572.003 Defendanta
reserve&amp; tha right to
same premises con- ·Prior Deed References: Court of Common other minerals . are personal unto the Public Notice
bid at this sale, and to
Cont0 rs, withdrew the above
veyed to Alta Tracy by Volume 302, Page 519. Pleas,
r-rved ta the Sate&lt;&gt;! grantor and shall not Woodland
at Meigs County, Ohio
Ohio under the provl- be asalgnable, trans- Inc., which 'Is a private, collateral prior to sale.
Benjamin F. Biggs and · Appraised
Annie E. Biggs, his 565,000.00 Terms of In pursuance of an slons of the law gov- ferable nor encum- nonprofit corporation, Further, The Farmer's
wifo, by deed Dated Sale: Cannot be sold order of sale to me ornlng tho sale by the bored during the life- Intends Ia submit an Bank and Savings
Top • Removal • Trim
August 13, 1904 and tor less than 213rds of directed from said State of Ohio of the time of the grantor. application for a capt· Company reserves the
this tal grant under the pro- right to reject any or all
recorded in Volume 92, the appraised value. court In the abov~ entl- school land and leas- Furthermore,
• Stump Grinding
page 301 of the daed 10% down on day af tied action, I will ea. Reference Ia made eatate shall not be con- vision of 49 USC 5310 bids submitted.
Bucket Truck
records
of
Meigs sale, cash or certified expose to sale at pub- to val. 163, at paga 436 verted Into cash nor of the Federal Transit The above described
Act to provide trans- collateral will be sold
County, Ohio, and chock, balance duo on lie auction on the front of the deed records of any other asset.
steps of the Meigs Meigs County, Ohio."
Parcel No. 16-01571- portation service for "as is-where Is", with
thereatter conveyed by confirmation of sale.
elderly and/or disabled no
Aita Tracy and J.E. The apprals~l did County Court House Tho real estate abova 000
expressed
or
Tracy, the husband to include an interior on Friday, October 13, described Ia subject to Commonly known as In Meigs County. The implied
warranty
Centers Qlven.
Elle Parfitt (or Ella e•aminatlon of tho 2006 at 10:00 a.m. of all leases, easements 290 Mulberry Avenue, Woodland
appll~allon
will For further informaParflll) by Oeod dated house.
said day, the following and rights of way of Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
October 2, 1916. and Robert E. . Beegle, described real estate, record.
Appraised
at request one standard tion, or for an appoint·
mini van, 1 driver and 6 mont to Inspect collatParcel Number: 19· $49,000.00
recorded in Book 113, Meigs County Sheriff EXHIBIT A
at Page 609. of said Allorney
tor · tho Situated
In
the 00091
Terms of sate: Cannot passengers. it Is pro- eral, prior lo sale date
deed records.
.. Plaintiff,
Township of Salisbury, Commonly known aa: be sold for less than jected that 26 elderly contact Cyndle or
Parcel No. 16-013-00- Christopher J. Klym, County of Meigs and 111 Croao St., Racine, 2/3rds ofthe appraised and/or disabled per- Randy at 992-2136.
000, 16-01299.000 &amp; 16- 24441 Detroit Road, State of Ohio, and Ohio 45771
value. 10% down on aons will usa this serv- (9) 13,14, 15
01301 .000
Wastlake, Ohio 44145 described as follows: Current
Owner: day of sale, cash or
50311HI St• MlddiiiiOft. IH 45180
Commonly known as (440)·871'8111.
., Being In Section No. Timothy &amp; Pamela certified chock, bal·
740-992-3194
227 Union Avenue, (9) 6, t 3, 20
16, town 2, Range12 of . Bantz
once due on conftrma.I. . IIWDIIHIII111r'-11Ftlllllff• UIW
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
the Ohio Company'a Property et: 111 Croas lion of sale.
MrCist•ra.
Current Owner: John
Purchase and begin- Street
The appraisal did not
Public Nollce
·nlng at the Northeaat Racine, Ohio 45771
Include an Interior
Barnes Etat
ltt•.,.•"""tfiii:Dtllhi:Gio•
Property at 227 Union
corner of a 1 acre par- PPI 19-00091
examination of the
lllorfiJI:DD •·1tGio•
Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio
Sheriff Sales
eel as set out and Prior Deed References: house.
PRICES
PP* 16-01300.000, 16- Casa Number05cv068 described In a deed Voluma18, page 317
Robert E. Beegle,
llaiiii.. IIII•AIIMIII.Wllttll
01299.000
&amp;
16· First
i'latlonal from Esta L. David, et Appraised
st Meigs County Sheriff
llllll'jUclll..,.,.•lonor
01301 .000
Acceptance Co.
al, to Guy Cola, at al, $17,000.00 Terms of Attorney
for
the
recorded In Volume 155 Sale: Cannot be said Plaintiff
Prior Deed References: Plaintiff
tCtll .. c••••• "tcli•
Volul1)a113, Page 609 vs
at page 104 of the tor less than 213rds of Michael Wlery Alt.
Volume 92, Page 301
Ronald Shepar~ Et al Meigs County Daod the appraised value. John D. Clunk
Appraised
at Defendants
recorda, which placoof 10% clown on day of 5601 Hudsqn Drive
YOUNG'S
$27,000.00 Terms of Court of Common beginning Ia also 180 aote, cash or certified Sulta 400
Sale: Cannot be sold Pleas
foot North of the rood chock, balance due on Hudson, OH 44236
for loss than 2/3rds of Meigs County, Ohio
which runs East and confirmation of aale.
330-342-8203
the appraised value. In pursuance of an West; !honea North The appraisal did not (9) 13,20,27
Room Addllions &amp;
10% down on day ot order of sale to me along Willow Creek Include an Interior - - - - - - - Remc;~del ing
sale, cash or certified directed from said Road 216 feat more or examination of tho
Public Notice
New Garages
check, balance due on Court in the above less, thence West , 283 house.
-------Elecnlcal &amp; Plumbing
confirmation of sale.
entitled action, I will feet more or less to the Robert E. Beegle, IN THE
COMMON
RoQfing &amp; Gutters
The appraisal did not expose to sale at pub- Western boundary of Malgs County Sheriff
PLEAS COURT, PROVinyl Siding &amp; Pt~l11t ing
Patio and Porch Decks
Include an interior lie auction on the front Soctlon No. 16, thence AUorney lor the plain- BATE DIVISION MEIGS
wv 036725
1
examination of the steps of tho Meigs South 216 feat to the tiffs
COUNTY, OHIO
house.
County Court House Northwest corner of Johnathan
Matson, . IN THE MATTER OF
To Subscribe Call
V.C. YOUNG Ill
Robert E. · Beegle, on Friday, October 13, said above referenced Attn
.
SETTLEMENT
OF
992·6215
The
Sentinel
Meigs County Sheriff
2006 at 10:00 a.m., of t aero tract; thence Mason, Schilling &amp; ACCOUNTS, PROBATE
Pu nmrov OhiO
AHorney
for
the said day, the following Easterly along the Mason
COURT MEIGS COUN·
25 Vears local Ex!)(1 nence
992-2155
Plaintiff ,
described real estate: North bou,ndary of aold t 1340 Montomery Rd.. TY, OHIO
Tf '

RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

•I

" r
North
• J 7 3
•

West
• 62
• Q 95
tt09764

MONTY

•

South

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
~Ow LONG vJIL£. Ttl~

OF Tl'l~
. SAnLt.ln 'f l&gt;fLAY~l&gt;? IT StiOIJLl&gt; ,~ UP · ~1'

T,.O....-~/

~ANI&gt;

~~·

AllOlJNl&gt; IN

riO TIM~/

~~
D'

,,

~;

BARNEY
~IN'T NO
ANIMAL THAT
GIVES MILl&lt;, MIZ
PRUNELLY !!

YOU GOTTA

WORK MITEY
HARD TO TAKE
IT FROM 'EM

THE BORN LOSER
I'"'Of\,600!&gt;1E! YOU 1\LWI\Y5

f"'flt&gt;-PPY Bl R.\1-\1&gt;,._'(,

~

:'&gt;E.LE..C.\Tf\€. PE.R.FE.c.T,
MOST \f\0\X:&gt;I\TfUL -.~-""'
FOR 11\E. ...

/&lt;\Y t:&gt;HR !

740-992-1611

l!oUT WHY WASTE YOU!&gt;.
TIME BEIN6 NICE TO
~MEONE WHO CAN'T
S.TANJ&gt; YOll? WHAT 'S
llP WITH THIIT?

00? 1 HOLP
ON~

"

PEANUTS
1

I LL RUN DOWN T14E
FIEL~ MARCIE. AND

AFTER YOU RAN

'IOU Tf\1\0W ME
THE 6ALL ..

SUDDENLY FELT
VEl\'( LONELY

DOWN

ENTERTAINMENT

CARPENTER
SERVICE

and more ...

Into

OneI

Daily

I

SUNSHINE CLUB
W t::CDOR Sf:M 11-lAT l Si-lCU.D
SfAI&lt;T RIDII0G A· ~1&lt;£- 1D l.DS£
WtiGI-ff

'\.

GARFIELD
Wt;L-1., 1'HAT
COUN1'5 AS

I HAVE 50ME1'HING1'0 DO! ,----'

DOING

OOME1'HING

JOI

Advertise

in this

space
for
54 p.er

All
lallld

T~E FIEL~

Cornerstone
Construction

-~~~-·-1

month

Pass
Pass

2•
4•

Pass
All pass

Malaclypse the Younger wrote, "'Tis an ill
wmd that blows no minds."
In bndge. a c,ard may be blowing in the
w1nd - it is unsupported. so that a lead
through it threatens· to make that card
valueless. There is one in this deal ....:..
which? And how. would you protect its
worth? The contract is tour spades. West
leads a lc;;w hear1, and East puts up the
king. What would be your line of play?
North has an easy single raise of his
partner's one"spade overcall. Now South
wishes to inv1te game. The best way to
do this, when having lenglh in both
minors. is to bid the weaker minor. This
help·SUII game·try asks partner to look
primarily at his holding in that suit. Here,
with king-doubleton, North jumps to
game.
After that auction, perhaps West should
have·lound the deadly diamond lead. But
we all fear not' leading our partner's suit.
If we lead something else and .it backfires, we feel so eiT]barrassed.
Soulh has I0 tricks (five spades, one
heart and lour clubs), but he also has
four potential losers: one heart, two diamonds {dummy's king is blowing in the
w1nd because surely East has tho ace)
and one club (verily East has lhe king).
For East to collect two diamond tricKs,
!hough, West must lead the su11 through
North's king. To protect that king, duc!c. at
trick one. Win East's heart continuation,
draw trump'S, and run the club queen.
Note that if you win the first trick, when
£ast gets in with his club king, he will
. return a heart to West's queen tor that
lelhal diamond shift.

l'IXI QAAIIIILD to 2M42

GRIZZWELLS
HE~E·~ A\lo'T\1~
Tl P. 1\lCI&lt;S~ .
'lb\1 c.AI\ 6~T
A~Y\1\ l'rl.61
)I:&gt;U ~AI\T

IF '!bl.l

~y

Graph

'1bur 'llll'thdof:

While you might spend considerable
time and effort striving for ambitious
goals, if you haven't decided what you
truly want out of life. you may never·
theless end up feeling unsatisfied .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- Strive to
keep a balance between doing what is
right and doing what your sell -serving
inclinations dictate. It's OK to gratify
your ambitious urges. but not at the ,
expense of others.
LIBRA
(Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
Controversy seems to be the order of
the day. and those you thought were
sympathetic to your cause may line up
with the opposition , Try to make your
points another day.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - lf you
are conducting -your commercial activ"
itios In Unfamiliar territory. be on guard
at all times. You cou ld find yourself
swimm ing with sharks that know how
to squoeze you Into a trap.
·
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) What you consider important might
not be as sigmlican t to your mate, so
in order to avoid a misunderstanding,
don't take it upon yourself to act on
behalf of him or her.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - A
longtime neglected responsibility may
catch you ofl guard and demand
immediate attention. You might have to
give up somo of your leisure lime to
attend to it.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2_0-Feb. 19)- You
like everybody. but you are extremely
selectiVe about those you hang out
wilh . However. you might be thrown
together with someone who could
6xhaust your tolerance early on.
PISCES (Feb. 20"March' 20) - Under
most conditions, you 're an easygoing
individual who merely wants to get
along with everybody.• However, you
might not tolerate someone who is
boorish or rude.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Pointedly avo1d associates who have a
tendency to ba confrontational, especially if you see them itchi.\g tor a hght.
They are looking for a target and don 't
ca re who it is.
TAURUS .(April 20·May 20) - The
temptation to overextend yourself
financially may be too much tor you to
handle, especially when you see
something you really like. So don't go
.near any shops that can weaken your
resolve.
GEMINI (May 2t·June 20) - It's a
rare day when you can 't find a way to
get along with anyone you encounter,
but people's moods might be too much
for even you to handle. Keep your
cool .
CANCER (June 21-Ju ly 22) Although current annoyances might
nat be entirely your fault, you could be
accused of being an Instigator by an
associate who causes a brouhaha and
tl'len blames you for the disruption. _.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - Instead -ol
managing others In your custoi'T\ary
Qood-naturad way, your actions could
make you lOok like a dissenter. Try to
be more tactical wl1h ygur deportment.

! WANTA
1-\~W

P\6\TAI-

CAIII'i.'AA

13 Removes
43
information
!rom
45
19 More snugly 47
warm
20 Goupagail&amp;t 48
22 Andes
· 49
ruminant
24 Final words 50
25 Hitthe sack 52
26 Luau entertalnment
53
27 Grate upon 54
28 Mosquito or
gnat
29 Pit or stone
34. Wrn nanowly
(2wds)
36 Leafed out
42 Tough
question

Slackjawed

Besides
Where to .
earn a dog.
Cui-de-Skiing
instructor
Oola's guy
EMT
technique
A Kennedy
Mr. in
Bombay

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebntv C1pher Cl)'ti:ograms are ~reato&lt;llrom (t.Joraaons by 111'!100s peope, oast and pre;enl
EactJ lener 1n me crpner stands tor anomer

Todsy's clue: Cequals L

"RWOIO

BIO

. . . R WT P 0

RVT

FHZXP

TA

JOT .JCO

y·w T X T Z ' R F Z T Y B Z X

R W T 'p ' 0

Y WT X T Z ' R F Z T Y R W0 0 X T Z ' R ·

FZTY."

-

ITLOIR

L . IOHEW

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "It is diHiculllo live in the p'resen1, ridiculous to live
and impossible to live in 1he past."- J1m Btshop

1n the future

T~~:t;~' S©\l4tl~-LG£~~·
0 Rearrcr.gt leneu ol !he
four ac:rombled
be-.

::!:

- - - - - - !jlloo ty CLAY .R. POllAN - - - - - word1

low ~o form fcur tirnplt words .

By Bernice Bede Osol

"

CURRENT EVENTS .

COMICS SPORTS

North , East

Answer to Previous Puzzle

Thursday, Sept, 14, 2006

WECL , SOME PEOPLE . .

Storage

PlYING TOP

1.

West

When an honor is
blowing in the wind

•

BIG NATE

COUPONS

TECHNOLOGY

A 10
8 5 3
QJ 8

As.tro-

it~wrriiS8f'l Hill 's Self

.Manley's ~
Recycling · ,

• AQJ

Opening lead: • 5

CONSmUCTION

Tree Service

8 54
KJ832

Dealer: East
Vulnerable: East-West

ROBERT
BISSEll ·

JONES'

¥

ol&gt; K 3
•
•

740.446.9200

!I ··ii

•

South
• A K Q 10 9

Hardwood Cabinetry And furniture

, . size•

East .

"" 5 4 2

MANlEY'S
SElF STORAGE

~A'd

7 6 4

t K2
oi&gt;A1 0976

rJamihJ
•·&gt;:rma:•
MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

r andSans

09 13 06

41 Home tel.
42 Hippie's
1 Robustnooa
digs
43 Maturo
6 Suffuses
I 2 City map
44 Holi&gt;'Wanted
line
abbr.
t 4 Lsb
46 Grooved on
glassware 48 Sewing-kit
15 Edgier
nemo
16 Uses
51 Puts"*&gt; law
tho door
55 SUr up
17 That
56 The Big muchacha 57 Flying
18 Bonfire
machine
remains - 58 Operf
t 9 Peppery
composer
21 Well-known
uncle
DOWN
23 Above, to
Tennyson
1 Huge
26 Jump
container
27 Shinto or
2 - been
Zen (abbr.)
had!
28 Conduits
3 Pentagon
30 Game
VIP
official
4 Day one
31 Cleopatra's 5 Is sorry
snake
about
32 Chosan low 6 Glrder(hyph.)
33 Veldt
7 Type of
prowlers
wear
35 ~· 8 ~scent
pride
(2 wds.)
37 Be supine
9 Banjo
38 Fable wrijer
cousin
39 Sliced
t 0 Always,
40 CaiHornia's
to Whitman
Fort 11 Almost.grods

SOUP TO NUTZ
T~aT Ro&lt;lll&lt;l~

NOT'Z.
ThaT Ro&lt;l""" NUrz.
I Do NOT l.ll&lt;e ·HIM

He's SIJCf1

a Pu ...

GR0 I R
~------------,~

z A L H E· i
I' I I I

One stylish w01nan to
another, "One fashion craze

~

.___._I_.__.___.__..,
r--------,

must by dying down. Women
arc wearing sensible shoes

f---T.~~,;-;AI~Ni-I..:.I-TIZ;;_...:.llr-11 Q-~~mplele t~e

chucklo qooled

by fi ilmg in rhl!! mis,ing wo1d1
L....t.......l~..l----l-.1.-..J yo~o~ develop from step No. 3 belo.,.,.
.

8
ft

V

.

P~INI

.

.

.

.

NUMB!RED tE11ERI IN

IHESE SQUARES
UI~SCRAMI!t[

ABOVE l.E tiER 5

10 GEl ANSWER
SCMIILm ANSWI!RS !llll/06

Zodiac - Drift - Clove- Motive ·CIVILIZED
· A repairman arrived lo fix my microwave. My teenager
exclaimed, "Finally, we can live as though we were
CIVILIZED!"

ARLO &amp; JANIS

~

~·
[)AD.' DAD? YO OO.D!
' I
~arth to OAD ....

�Wednesday, September 13. 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel .

I

· Gunman slays 1,
wormds 19 at Montreal
college before being
killed by police, A2

Reds beats Padres in 11 innings
BvJoE

KAY

ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI - Jason
LaRue's
meaningful
moments have been few and
far-between this season. The
timing on his latest wa&gt; perfect.
·
LaRue's one-out homer in
the lith inning sent the
Cincinnati Reds to a 5-4 victory over the San 'Diego
Padres on Tuesday night :md
tightened the NL playoff
race.
When it .looked like
Cincinnati was about to fade
away. LaRue provided a win
that kept the Reds thinking
there's still enough time to
elbow their way back to the
front of the pack of contenders.
"It' s been that way all
year," manager Jerry Narron
said. "Every time the wheels
start to fall off, we come
back and win a couple. This
is a league of runs, and
we're capable of putting
together a solid run. "
Cincinnati won for only
the fifth time in its last 16
games, moving 2 1/2 games
behind San Diego for the NL
wild card. Four teams are
AP photo
now bunched within 2 1/2 Cincinnati Reds Jason LaRue hits a solo home run off San
games of the Padres.
Diego Padres pitcher Doug Brocail in the bottom of the 11\h
"You'd figure ;n this point inning to win their baset&gt;all game, 5·4 Tuesday in Cincinnati.
you'd _be getting some clear . the year, but it's not going to Terrmd Sledge's pinch-hit
scenan~s _for some team~; mean anything if we win the single off Rhea! Cormier
but that s JUSt ~ot t.he case, series and then (self- completed the three-run
sa1d San D1eg_o s Mike destruct) the rest of the rally that put the Padres
P1azza, ..who . h1t a solo way," LaRue said.
ahead.
Both starters were out of
Sc9tt Linebrink gave up a
homer. .We JUSt have to
h~ng in there. Teams can the game after five innings, tying run in the eighth,
p1ck up _ground or lose leaving it up to the bullpens. when Edwin Encarnacion
ground qmckly."
Padres right-hander Chris scored from third while the
LaRue haq an aWkward Young got a no-decision,' Padres futilely tried to turn a
swmg-and-mtss on the first that · preserved his unbeaten double play on Brandon
pitch from Doug Brocail (2- streak on the road. Young Phillips' .
grounder.
2), then connected on the left for a pinch-hitter during Encarnacion stole third base
ne.xt pitch for his eighth a three-run rally that put San to set up the run, barely
homer. LaRue, batting only Diego up 4-3 in the sixth.
beating the thrnw.
.180, got into the 3-hour, 34Rich Aurilia hit a three"That was a bold move,
minute game in the late run hoi11er off Young, who is and it was a turning point in
innings.
6-0 with a 2.69 ERA in I 3 the game," manager Bruce
Scott Schoeneweis (1-0) road starts this season . . Bochy said. "I thought we
escaped a thre~t in the IOth Young, obtained in an off- had him . Obviously, we didto get the win.
season trade with Texas, n't. It was a real dose play
· Sensing the importance of hasn't lost in his last 22 road and he just got in there."
the seric;s, the Reds o.ffered starts, the longest such
Padres
reliever
Cal
half-price tickets and $1 hot streak in the majors since Meredith escaped a basesdogs; hoping to draw big Greg Maddux went 22 with- loaded threat in the sixth
and extended an impressive
crowds. They sold only out a loss in I997-98.
15,820 tickets for the openReds starter Eric Milton streak of his own. The righter, which started on time left because of a stiff left hander hasn't been scored
elbow. For the third time in upon in his last 28 appear- ·.
after a day long rai~.
"People talk about how his last five starts, the ances spanning 33 2-3
this is the biggest series of bullpen cost him a victory. innings, a club record.

How a state panel of sports writers and
broadcasters rates Ohio high schOol
football teams In the first weekly
Associated Press poll of 2006, by
OHSAA divisions, with won-lost record

and .total points (first-place votes in
parentheses):
. ~
DIVISION I
1,
2.
3,
4.

Cln. St. Xa11ier (20) 3-0
Can.' McKinley (2) 3·0
Cin. Colerain 3·0
Lakewood St. Edward 2-1

4, Mentor (2) 3·0

241
139
138
111
11,

6. Cin. Elder 3-0
73
7, Westerville s. 3-Q
67
8. Clayton Northmont (, ) 3-0
59
9, Massillon Washinglon p)
49
10. Lancaster 3-0
43
Cin. Moeller 2-1
43
Others receiving 12 or more points:

2-,

12, Cle . Glenvi lle 42 . 13. Cle . St .
Ignatius 36 . 14, Fremont Ross 33 15,
l:uclid 30. 16 (tie ). Hilliard Davidson,
Troy 25 . 18, Elyria 22. 19, w_ Chester
Laka.ta W. 20. 20. Solon 19. 21,
Brunswick 18. 22. Centerville 17. 23,
Cin . Glen Este 12.

DIVISION II
1, Tal . Cent. Cath. (13) 3·0
183
2, Macedonia Nordonia (5) 3-0
l61
3, Plckenngton Central (1) 3-Q
83
4, Cin. Turpin 3-0
77
5, Maple Hts. 3·0
71
6, C1n. Winton Woods 2-1
67
7, Powell Olentangy Liberty 3·0
64
8. Day. Carroll (1) 3-0
61
9, Parma Padua 3·0
51
10, New Philadelphia (2) 3-0
50
Ott:te~'~ receiving 12 or more points : 11 ,
Untontown Lake (1) 49 12. Gals.
Watterson 43. 13, Lewis Center Olenlangy
42. 14. Akr. Hoban 38. 15 (tie),
Wapakoneta, Ashland 34. 17, Cots. St.
Charles (1) 33. 18, New Carlisle Tecumseh
28. 19 (tie), Pataskala Watkins Memorial,
Day. Col. White. Trotwood-Madison 23. 22
(tie), Piqua. Sylvania Southview {1) 22. 24.
Olmsted Falls 19. 25, Ce.nfiekl (1) 16. 26,
Barber1on 14. 27 (tie). Avon LaKe,
Tallmadge 12. ,
·
DIVISION Ill
1, Kenering Alter (5) 3-0
2 , Gals. DeSales (6) 3·0
3 , Sleub&amp;nville (7) 3-0
4, Sunbury B1g Walnut 3-0
5, Cin. lnd1an Hill (2) 3-0
6, Dover { 1) 3-0
7, Cambridge 3-0
8 , Niles McKinley (1) 3·0
9 , Napoleon 3-0
10, New Albany 3·0

151
141
135
125
106

99
74
73

67
59

6thert rec.lvlng 12 or more polnta: 11 .

Belo~ W. Branch (1) 58. 12. CuyahOga
Falls Walsh Jesuit (1) 50. 13, Youngs.
Uberty 29. 14 (tie), Mitlersburg W. Holmes
27. C~e 27. 16. Sandusky Perkins (1)
24. H , Eaton 22 . 18, Mentor Lake Cath .
21 . 19 (lte) . St. Marys Memorial. Delaware

Buckeye Valley, Cin . McNicholas 19. 22
(tie) , Gallipolis Gallla , Urbana {1) 15.
DIVISION IV
1, Youngs. Mooney (8) 3-0
175
2. Coldwater (10) 3·0
174
3. Jonathan Alder (1) 3-0
132
4, Youngs. Ursuline {2) 3·0
127
5. Bellaire (3) 3-0
124
6. Oak Harbor (1) 3-0
73
7, Huron 3·0
68
B. Clarksville Clinton-Massie 3-Q 53
9, Williamsport Wesllall 3-0 .
47
1o. Milton-Union 3-0
42
Others receiving 12 or more potnts: 11 ,
Lemon-Monroe 41 . 12. Garfiekj His. Trinity
(1) 39. 13, Sparta Highland 38. 14, New
Lexington 30 15. Cin. Wyoming 29. 16
(tie). Akr. SVSM. Perry 28. 18 (tie) , Martins
Ferry, MassillOn Tuslaw 16. 20 (tie) , Ironton,
Brookfield 14. 22. Brookville 13.
DIVISIDN V
1. St. Henry (8) 3-o
2 , Hamler Patrick Henry (5) 3..0
3. Amanda·Ciearcreek (2) 3·0
4, Columbiana Crestview (3) 3-0

5, Smithville 3-0
6. N . Uma S. Ra nge (1) 3·0
7, Reading 3·0
·
8. Sherwood Fairview 3·0
9, Cols. Ready 3-0
10, W. Salem NW (I ) 3-0

CLEVELAND (AP) Kansas
City
pitcher
Runelvys Hernandez and
catcher
John
Buck
exchanged punches in the
dugout Tuesday night, but
the Royals regrouped for a
5-3 'victory over the
Cleveland Indians in the
I,OOOth game at Jacobs
Field.
c
After striking out Ryan
Garko with two runners on
to end the third inning,
Hernandez (6-9) jogged · to
. the dugout, pointed at Buck
and began yelling. The players charged each other and
began throwing punches
before being separated hy
teammates and coaches.
Both players remained in

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
Submitted photos

From left are John McGoff, Jason King, Mike Roe 'and Dean Siciliano.

HMC Golf Tournament held
STAFF REPORT

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Medical Center's 2006
Annual Go If Tournament
was recently held. at
Cliffside Golf Course in
Gallipolis.
According to Sandy
Moore, member of HMC's
Golf
Tournament
Committee, 88 players participated in this year's tournament. Participants had
an enjoyable time with
splendid weather, and
afterward, enjoyed a steak
dinner and awards ceremony.
The first-place team consisted of Ja son King, John
McGoff. Mike Roe and
Dean Siciliano. Second
place went to Dave
Belville, Mike Haynes,
Justin Miller and Brandon
Saunders, while third was
awarded to Tom Childs,
Rodney Morgan, John
Stevens and Jason Thomas.
The top raffle of the day
went to Chris Toler, who
won a set of Taylor Made
irons.
Volunteers that assisted at
the tournament with food
service, dispiay set-up, registration and clean-up were
Carol Bush, Debbie Clark,
Larry
Camden, Willa
Camden, Jenni Dovyak,
Steve Forgey, Sharon
Gouckenour, ·
Dawn
Hal stead, Linda JeffersLester, Missy Mason, Pam
Roach, Cindy Saunders,
Rosemary
Snell
and
Carolyn Trader.

strategy

3rd place- From left are Rodney Morgan. Jason Thomas.

J

'

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'

DIVISION VI
1, Oola Hardin Northern (6) 3-0 174
2. Delphos St. John's (4) 2·1
147
138
3, Hopewell-Loudon (3) 3·0
4. Lancaster FisherCath. (1 ) 3-0 122
5, Columbiana 3·0
100
6. Spring. Cath. Cent. (4) 3·0
95
7 , Cle . Cuyahoga Hts . (2) 3·0
72
8, Covington (1) 3-0
60
9. Mogadore 2·1
53
10, Steubenville Cath . Cent 2-1 51
Othen recelvlng12 or mora polnta:
11 , Berlin Center Western Reserve (2)
39. 12, N. Lewisburg Triad 37. 13 (tie),
Monroe'llille , Shadyside ( 1) 34. 15,
Sycamore Mohawk (1) 33
16,
Beallsville 30. 17 (lie), Old Washington
Buckeye Trai l, Fremont S~. Joseph ( 1),
Maria Stein Marion Local 20: 20 (tie),
Lucas , Sandusky St. Mary 19. 22 ,
Newark Calh . 16. 23 (tie ), Norwalk St
Paul , Antwerp 13.

Page AS
• Delmar Hamm, 84
• Albert Peterson, 69

INSIDE
• White House, GOP
senators clash over
terrorism legislation.
See Page A2
• Gardeners hold
mini flower show.
See Page A3
• Star Grange plans
events. See Page A3
• Stroke support group
to hear neurologist.
See Page AS
• Local briefs.
See Page A5

WEATHER

~:

·1'

..

77

Versailles (1) 39. 16. Barnesville 35. 17,
Mario n Pleasant 29. 18, W. Lafayene
Ridgewood (1) 27. 19, Attica Seneca _E.
19. 20 . Lucasville Valley 17. · 21 {lte),
Lisbon David Anderson, Howard E. Knox.
W. Jefferson, Lafayette Allen E. 16. 25,
Findlay Liberty~Benton ,5. 26, Bucyrus
Wynford (1) 14. 27 (lie). Cin. Hills.
Haviland Wayne Trace, Defiance
Ayersville 13.

...·\

.-1.

61
59
47
44

Cent. Cattl. 42. 14, Warr~n JFK (1 ) 40. 15,

before being called up on
June 24. The four runs
Tuesday were the most he
yielded in any of his 10
starts since July 22 .. During
that time. he went 6-1 with a
2.33 ERA.
Grudzielanek and Buck
had RBI singles in the first
inning to put the Royals
ahead 2-0.
In the second, Garko .was
hit in the left elbow by a
pitch from Hernandez, but
plate umpire Gary Darling
did not award him first base.
Darting called the pitch a
ball, saying Garko didn't try
tn get nut of the way. Garko
.eventually walked and later
scored on a single by Jhonny
Peralta to make it 2-1.

OBITUARIES

K

. •,

•

DILES

. ...

HEARING
CENTER

~

GALLIPOLIS

(740) 446-2933

Vllh 1111 Till Will .At

Dotallo on Page AS

i-16 Second Avenue

&lt;..all opo lb, OH 45631

INDEX ,

CLJQ( ON TH£ LJNKS
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2 SECI10NS- 12 PAGES

~

TO W$,$fONSORS ·

r;

f 5 IF

The Daily
Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2155

. AD/W£BSITES
,

telephone line in the county, allow commissioners to tap issue cumpletely becau se of
opposed the issue ..
Commissioners admitted w[th proceeds to go toward into a $29,000 reserve for its ballot position.
yesterday they had taken no the operation and mainte- E-911 service col lected
Coontnissioner
Mick
significant action to encour- nance of a new 911 emer- from Meigs County cellular Davenport said commisage passage of the issue last gency dispatch service.
telephone customers and sione'rs hope the 911 system
year, and said voters, as a
Meigs County is the only now being held in escrow can be implemented by late
result, may not have under- county in the ·state without by the state.
nexl year if voters approve
stood what was being con- concrete plans for a 911 sysCommissioner Jim Sheets the funding mechanism for
sidered. They hope the levy tem. Commissioners have said there were 'everalon at- it. He &gt;aid the money being
committee will. help inform based their proposal on the ters which might have con- held at the state level will be
the voters about the propos- 911 system in Vinton tributed to the issue's defeat . available for the purchase of
al's cost and effect.
County, which operates for a year ago. Aside from the equipment and other set-up
The committee. in partic- approximately 527,000 per fact that they did not pro- cost,. and said funding
ular, discussed the need to year using specially-trained mole it, Sheets said many might also be available
inform voters of the rela- deputy dispatchers working voters said, after the fact, through the .Governor's
tively low cost of the pro- from the sheriff's office.
they had been confused Office of Appalachia, the
posal - $6 per year for resThe 50-cent telephone because commissioners had Appalachian
Regional
idents with one telephone line charge would generate also considered proposing Commission, &lt;ind the state
line. The telephone line fee approximately $37,000 in an additional sales tax . capital budget for those setwould be collected on every Meigs County, and would Others, he said, skipped the up costs. ·
·

Free pro rams for newborns,
medically andicapped children
·.

BY. CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Tom Childs and John Stevens.
For more information on
Monies collected as registration to the tournament the annual Holzer Medical
were donated to the Holzer Center Golf Tournament
Hospital Foundation for that is held each year durthe new Holzer Center for ing the month of July, call
Moore at (740) 446-5919.
Cancer Care.

Annie's Mailbox
Calendars

I

'

Cl.assifieds
Comics

PLEAS£ SUPPORTTHES£ LOCAL

IJl1SlNES5ES WHO SUPPORT

OUR HOMETOWN NEWSPAI'tRI

~:)o t n t ~J ira£i ,lllt

t\ rutstr r
•
'

200 Main Street
Point Pleasant, WV
304-675- t 333

Editmials
Obituaries
Places to go
Sports
Weather

"""·m~dail~"· 11 ti 11 d . 1 • 11111

!.!OO(l

1rf

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Dave.Harris (740) · 992~2155· ..
Brenda Davis·(740) 992..2155 -·:: , ·

I '

REED

reduction

'

·~

J.

School board
discusses tax

or l\1ore Informa~iou about ~ebslte advertisingcollltliC

'

BY BRIAN

BREEO@MYDAI,YSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY- An ad-hoc
committee appointed to promote the county's proposed
telephone line charge for
911 service met Wednesday
to discuss how to educate
voters about the issue.
Meigs
Count¥
Commissioners first proposed the 50-cent monthly
fee in last November's
general election, but voters defeated it by a 56-percent margin - 724 votes.
The committee and commissioners discussed why
the public may have

Mike Haynes and Dave Belville.

the game, and Hernandez (.074) streak.
allowed three runs over five
Joe Nelson pitcHed the
innings to earn the win. He ninth for his seventh save as
helped Kans-as City snap an the Royal s got their 23rd
11-game losing streak at road win, surpassing last
Jacobs Field, where the year's
total.
Mark
Indians are 570-430 since Grudziel:mek drove in two
the ballpark opened in 1994. runs and Buck hit an RBI
The Royals had not won in single.
Cleveland since July 20,
Indians starter Jere my
2005.
Sowers (7-4) gave up four
Esteban German went 4- runs and seven hits over five
for-4 and scored three times innings in his first loss since
for the Royals. He doubled July 16 and final start of the
leading off the ninth, went to season. The 23-ye&lt;tr-old
third on a foul out and rookie is being shut down to
scored on a throwing error avoid too much work after
by right fielder Shin-Soo pitching a combined 185 2'3
mnings between Triple~A
Choo to make it 5-3.
German is batting .35 1 · Buffalo and Cleveland.
The left-hander went 9-1
(39-for-1 11) in his last 43
games followin~ a 2-for-27 with a 1.39 ERA at Buffalo

·'

TIIURSUA Y, SJ·: PTEM 1\ER t4,

Conimittee to focus on voter education for 911 proposal

SPORTS

2nd place- From left ar.e Justin Miller. Brandon Saunders.

78

Others receiving i2 or more points: 11
(tie). Delta. Bedford Chanel (1 ), Ltma

:;o ( 'J•. N IS • \ 'ol. .;6, :'1/o. !.!-

• Meigs gets big win over
Gallipolis. See Page 81

SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

•'
168
153
106
B6

Senior league
golfers, A3

,.
a1

AP football poll released Royals slug their way past Cleveland, 5-3
COLUMBUS (AP) - Cincinnati St. Xavier, Toledo
. Central Catholic, Kettering Alter, Youngstown Mooney, St.
l:fenry and Dola Hardin Northern lead the pa_ck after the
first week of balloting in the 60th Associated Press Ohio
high school football poll.
·
With 146 teams unbeaten through the opening three
weeks, the rankings were close throughout - although St.
Xavier amassed a 102-point advantage over No.2 Canton
McKinley in Division f.
Mooney leads Coldwater by just one point in Division IV,
while Alter has a 10-poinr lead on Columbus DeSales in 1II
and St. Henry is ahead of Hamler Patrick Henry by 15
points in V.
The poll will continue for eight weeks. with state champions crowned on Oct. 31 just before the start of the playoffs.

•

A3
A3
B2-4

Bs
A4
As
A6

B Section

As

© 2006 Ohio VaHey Puhlbthing Co.

POMEROY- Taxpayers
in the Meigs Local School
District could see a reduction in the taxes they pay for
schools if a plan goes
through to refinance the district's bonds sold to raise
the local share of money for
the construction of the new
schools.
The process to sell
replacement bonds at a
lesser interest rate than the
original bonds carry was
discussed by Treasurer ·
Mark Rhonemus
and
Superintendent William
Buckley at a Board of
Education
meeting
Tuesday night.
According to Rhonemus
there is potential for saving the Meigs Local taxpayers about $305,000 in
intere st over the life of the
bonds which pity out on
Dec. I, 2022.
'The original bonds have
an interest rate at a low of
4.35 up to 6.55 percent,"
explained
Rhonemus,
"while under the proposal
the new bonds issued would
have an interest rate of 3.5 at
the low end and 4.5 percent
at the high end, creating a
sizable savings on the interest paid to retire the bonds."
He said that the process
would be for a broker to sell
the new bonds at the lesser
interest rate, and then to
call in the higher interest
old bonds.
He further noted that the
district can only collect
enough taxes each year
needed to pay the required
amount on the bond retirement. Therefore, if the district succeeds in selling new
bonds at a lower rate , and
the property values stay the
same or increase. then it
would mean less tax dollars
would have to be collected
to make the required payment toward the l)ond
retirement. This would
allow the county auditor to
adjust the tax rate, he said.
The plan is to have a resolution ·authorizing the treasurer and superintendent to
proceed with the sale of
new bonds come before the
Board of Education at its
Sept. 26 meeting. The goal,
Rhonemus said, is to resell
the bonds Oct. I.
He emphasized that the
•"saving reduction will be to
the taxpayers and not to the
school district." He further
said that it will be necessary
to "convince the bond insurance company that we have
the means to pay the amount
that's due on the bonds as
we go along." He said it is
just "due diligence" to try to

Please see Board, AS

, , l

BY BETH SEFIGENT

BSERGENT@ MYDAILYS~TINEL . COM

POMEROY- "I love it,"
T.C. Ervin, RN, BSN, said

about her job at the Meigs
County Health Department
'
which is putting newborns
and children with medical
handicaps first.
Ervin. an Eastern gradu·
ate who lives in Racine,
recently returned to the
MCHD where she 'd previously worked from 1989- .
2002. She is currently the ·
assistant nursing director at
the MCHD and also works
with Help Me Grow's
Newborn Home Visiting
Nurse Program and the
Bureau for Children with
. Medical
Handicaps
Program (BCMH).
Ervin feels the free
BCMH program is one of
the best kept secrets in
Meigs County, helping ch ildren from birth to 21 years.
The program allows Ervin
fo identify children with
special health care needs,
refer children to appropriate
doctors. help families with
difficult and co nfusing
medical paperwork, and
assist fami lies in learning
how to deal with their
child's illness, growth and
deve lopment.
The BCMH program is
available to those with or
without insurance and can
cover up to three months of
medi cal tesling to determine if a medical problem
exists with the child. Some
chronic conditions lhat may
qualify children for this
program are diabetes, cereBeth Sargent/ photo
bral
palsy, seizures.
A familiar face, T.C. Ervin , RN , BSN, has returned to the nursing staff at the Meigs County
The
second program close
Health Department to oversee programs for new mothers and children with medical hand·
to Ervin's heart is the
icaps. Ervin is jofned by perfectly healthy and smiling one-year old Hannah Deemer, daugh· Newborn Home Visiting
ter of Christi and Kevin Deemer of Syracuse. Deemer was at the health department to get
Please see Programs, AS
her immunization shots.

I

Chamber inforqled on new voting procedure
' Several of these new regulations are a direct.result of
the 2000 controver~ia l
POMEROY - We use it Presidential election.
to drive. to get on airplanes,
Smith told the Chamber
to make purchases and now that those voters that arrive at
voters across the country the polls without identifica·
will be using some form of Lion will .be required to sub·
identificarion to vote in the mit the last four digits o(
November election.
their Social Security number.
· Rita Smith, director of the These voters would then cast
Meigs County Board of a provisional ballot and
Elections recently spoke to prove identification before
the Meigs County Chamber those provisional ballots are
of Commerce about the counted. Those who cast
new ·regulation. Smith said absentee ballots are required
voters will be required to tn submit either a valid Ohio
show proof of identity driver's license number or ·
b~ore voting by using a
the last four digits of their
valid photo identification social security number.
card, military identifica- Smith said the deadline to
tion, copy of utility bill, register to vote in the upcombank statement, paycheck, ing election is May (0. For
government check or gov· those who work during the
ernment dncumenl showing ho~rs the Meigs County
Board nf Elections is open,
name and currenl address.
BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYOAI LYSENTINEL .C OM

I

they can register at the Meigs
County Library which has
evening homs. Working the
polls this year will be around
110 poll \vorkers helping
voters with the M-1 00 opti cal scan machines used successfully in the primary.
"Every vote does count,"
Smith told the Chamber.
explaining how slie 's seen
levies fail due to one vote in
her 25 . years at the board of
elections. She also added
that in other countries people are getting sh01 at just to
have the rights that we have
to go to the polls peat efully
and cast our ballots, saying
we ate ''blessed" to he able
to do so.
·
Chamber announcements
included the
Board nf

River:· Sept. 21-23: Coffee,
Commerce
and
Conver~l.ltions,

8 a.m .. everv

Friday. Chamber office:
O'Bleness Cornwell Center
Open · Hou se. 1-4 p.m. ,
Sept. I7. tours_ free health
screening-., , entertainment by
The Bob Stewan Band,
rcfrcshmctm: PET (scanner)
npen house, 12:30 p.m..
Sept. 18. Pleasant Valley
Hospi.tal with refreshn.1ents.
Al su attending the meetin g was Debbie Phillips.
democratic candidate for the
92ml House District seat.
and Mark Porter of Mark
Porter GM Supercelller who
announced he and his wife
had moved to Meigs County
pern~&lt;~ncntly over the Labor·
Day weekend.
Lunch was provided by
Dir~ctur 's meeting . 8 a.m ..
re staurant
of
Sept.
26:
Stcrnwhcc I Subway
Riverfest "Rally by the Pomeroy.

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