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iunbap lime~ -ienttntl ·

GARDENING

PageD6
Sunday, October 23, 2005

Hurricane Wilma
speeds toward Florida
'like a rocket', A2

PROTEcr YOUR PEST-VULNERABLE FLOWERING BUlBS
Bv DEAN FOSDICK
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

Nursery folk are fond of
saying "the . best spri ng
flower gardens begin in the
fall," but try telling that to the
squirrels and other wild
things foraging in your yard.
Squirrels are Public Enemy
No. I to many flower bulb
growers. That includes Scott
Kunst, head gardener and
owner of Old House Garoens
in Ann Arbor. Mich. Kun st
specializes in the sale of rare
and unusual heirloom bulbs.
"Squirrels are the bane of
my existence," he says. "All
wildlife increasingly are a
problem for gardeners."
The leaves of certain flow·
ers are delectable to animals.
Given a choice, they ' II seek
those out first.
Daffodils are naturally protected because they contain
. compounds that irritate the
mouths of hungry animal s.
But that doesn't mean freshly
planted daffodil bulbs are
unmune to wildlife damage.
"One things squirrels do is
just dig things up," Kunst
says. "They'll dig up daffodil s,
· too. They won't eat th em,
they'll just dig them up."
Gardeners are learning to
cover their bulbs immediately
after . planting because many
animals - including your
favorite housecat arc
attracted to freshly turned
earth. Plastic netting or chicken wire placed j ust below the
ground's surface is an effective remedy. " It's virtually
invisible on the ground."
Kunst says. "After two weeks
or so, the flowerbed kind of
goes back to what it was and
they'll· leave it alone."
Some other nontoxic remc. dies for use against squirrels,
rabbits, deer ;mo similar garden grazers:
• Try planting bulbs animals don't like. That includes

AP Photo

Squ irrels are Public Enemy No. 1 to many flower bulb growers. They seem to enjoy digging newly planted bulbs from the
grou nd .. But there are bulb varieties distasteful to foragi~g animals. Placing netting over the freshly turned soil also. disco ur·
ages the digging.
the Croc:us Tommasinianus.
It's one of th e earliest croctiSes, blooming in late winter
and earl y spring. It thrives in
full sun or partial shade and
is an excellent naturalin r,
sa)4! Sally Ferguson. with the
Netherlands Flower Bulb
Information Center. Animals
rarely bother narcissus bulbs.
Other seldom eaten bulbs
include .crown imperials.
snowdrops. Spanish bluehell s, grape hyacinths, silver
bells and Scilla, Kunst says.
• Clean up loose bulb
tuni cs and other ]Jianting

debris when you've finished.
Their scent is a guioe to
, where the new bulbs lie,
Ferguson says.
• Many gardeners advise
feedi ng sq uirrel s peanuts or
corn in tree feeders during
the fall nut-gathering and
bulb- planti~g period. l·n theory, this offers squirrels some
easy pickings and discourages them from digging for
harder-to-find nourishment,
like bulbs.
• If animals persist in di ggi ng up your newly planted ·
bulbs - including the ones ·

they won ' t eat, like daffodils
and Tummies - try lining
the planting holes with wire
mesh or planting them in
wire mesh boxes. You might
also place bulbs inside pots
covered with squares of
chicken wire atid then plant
the entire package.
• Sprinkle some blood meal
around the plants if animals
are eating the spring growth,
build fences or spray the
emerging tlowers with a bitter, nontoxic chemical available at many garden centers.
Dipping bulbs in such a mix-

lure may help, too.
Americans plant an estimated 1.5 million tlower bulbs a
year, primarily in the fall for
!lowering in the spring. Some
bulb gardeners favor themes~
like planting a variety of cultivars in differing shades of
blue. Others plant their bulbs
en masse; creating floral
"waves" or "drifts." Still others throw a few bulb vari eties
randomly over their shoulders
and plant them where , they
fall·, giving their spring gardens a natural look.
A good rule of thumb is to

plant bulbs about three inches
deep, with their points uppermost. Augment each planting
hole with a dash of bone meal
or compost. Spread a layer of
straw, shredded leaves o'r
mulch over the top of the
bulb beds if your winters tend
to run bitter cold. Rake it off
in spring when the danger
posed by th e last killing frost
has passeo or when the bulbs
start poking through the soil.
Loosen the ground so mewhat , being careful not to
injure the tender plants.
Most bulbs "naturalize" or
spread over time, tilling gaps
or expanding beyond the
perimeter of the original garden. Bulbs al so have a habit
of growing into thick clumps
every few years. producing
fewer blooms or blooms of
lesser quality. These bulb
clumps should be dug up and
divided. Plant the new bulblets in different locations.
Some fall -planted bulbs do
well when planted early.
Others prefer going into the
ground late . ','It depends upon
where you I ive and what
you ' re planting," Kunst says.
" In all cases, you should put
them in before the soil
freezes."

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;;o I'J ·. NTS. \ ol. ;,:;. No. 4'J

• Swisher, Davis advance
to regional. See Page 81

For more information
about plcmting and protecting flower bulbs, rry rhe
Netherlands Flower Bulb
Information Center Web site:
hllp ://www.bulb.com; click
on "public," c/ickfurther on
"The Facrs About Fall

Plamir.Ig."
See also the Old House
'Gardens
Web
site:
http: !lwww.o ld house gardens.com ; then click on Fall

OBITUARIES

•••

w""·mJdaiiJSL'ntim•l.cum

' BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY J. D.
Britton
of the Ohio
Historical Society called
the Sunday afternoon dedication of the Howard and
Geneva Nolan Annex td
the Museum the "beginning of a new chapter for
Meig s
County
the
Histori ca l Society."
Speaking to the 50 or . so
peopl e' gathered in · the
large
meeting · room,
including several relatives
·of Geneva Nolan in who se
memory Howard Nolan
contributed to the new
building, Britton emphasized the importance of
preserving the past for
future generations.
"People really do care
about hi story, they want
their children to know
about the past, where we
came from and who we
are . They want the memo-

ry of. the community and
the people who called this
place home, to live on ,"
said the director of the
OHS Local History Office .
He
complimented
Margaret Parker, · Museum
director, on her leadership,
and commended all of the
volunteers on their accompli shments.
The memory of the
annex benefactor came
alive as T. Dwain Sayre of
McCJutchenville detailed
Nolan 's 'life as a youpgster
in a family struggling to
survive, his determination
to get an education, his
many years of teaching,
and the influence he had
on those he taught. Sayre
who went into vocational
education was a student of
Nolan in the
Racine
schools.
Cha~ene Hoentch/ photo
Just a few days before.
J. D. Britton, director, Local history office, Ohio Historica l Society, speaks at the Meigs Museum
Mr. Nolan died , he asked
Annex dedication Sunday afternoon : Here he compliments Margaret Parker, Museum director
Please see Annex. A5
and president of the Meigs County Historical Society, on her leadership . . ·

''Turtle Lady'' visits library; pumpkin painting Tuesday Eastern board

Page AS
• John William Call

Planred Bulbs.

MONDAY, OCTOBER 24,21105

Museum Annex ·dedicated in Sunday ceremony

SPORTS

On the Net:

You

North Toledo residents
at forum blame
poverty for riot, A6

call COIItact Dean

Fosdick

takes personnel
action

ai

deatlfosdick@netscape.tlet.

INSIDE

1 •

• Top charities saw 11.6
percent rise in donations
last year. See Page A2
• Scout food drive
underw~y. See Page A3
• Cincinnati-area Marine
killed in Iraq.
See Page AS .
• OU trustee contributes to
Appalachian Scholars
program. See Page A6
· • Second Harvest to
benefit from OU
creative writing program.
See PageA6

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTIN ELCOM

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Eastern Local Board of
Education approved substitute
teachers and coaching staff at
Wednesday 's regular meeting.
Wendy .
Blackwood,
Mi chael T Stntble , Carrie
·Ann Wood and Elizabeth
Yeager were approved as
substi lut e teachers for the
remainder of the 2005-2006
school year, pendin g certification. Martie Baum. Julie
Spaun, Nancy Circle, Mildred
Wilson and Lom· Hill were
approved as Stibstitllte t~ac hers
for the aftcr-sc:hool intervention program .
Eric Smith was approved as
the assistant varsity boys basketball coach, and Robbi e
Cross and Adam Dillard were
approved ;ts co-asSistan.t varsity boys basketball coaches,
pending certification. The
board accepted the resignation
of Rebecca Evans as varsity
assistant girls basketball coach.

WEATHER

Larry

Details on Page A8

INDEX
2 SFCllONS- 12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

Bs
A3
A4
As

S'-tmpso n

Dio you know turtles are ticklish? If you'd been at the
Pomeroy Library for the most recent visit of Columbus'
"Turtle Lady" you would have learned everything there was to
know about turtles ihcluding that boy turtles have red eyes
and girl turtles have brown eyes. Chilelren were allowed to
get up close and personal with both ,turtles and snakes
including this corn snake that the children were allowed to
touch. The visit was funded by an Ohio Reads Grant. Meigs
District Publ ic Library's Children's Services Coordinator Emily
Sanders hopes to have monthly events aimed at getting kids
and families involved with the library. The next event is pumpkin painting at 6 p.m. Tuesday at the Pomeroy Library for
kids of all ages, Including their parents as part of a family
craft night. The pumpkins were donated by local businesses.
Wear your painting clothes.
Beth Sergent/ photoo

BSection
A6

Please see Eastern. A5

© aoos Ohio VaUcy PubliShing Co.

You've Got The Cutest Baby Face!
EPA ESTIMATED
34MPG
HIGHWAY!«

A
LfAsuoR S238;Mo.36 Mos.
CASH BACK
FROM TOYOTA' .W 81998 DUE AT SIGNING"

DUEAT SIGNING INClUDES: 51360 DOWN PAYMENT +SO SECURITY DEPOSIT+ 5239 lSI MONTH PAYMENT t 5400 ACOUISinON FEE. TAX, TAGS ANO INSURANCE ARE EXTRA.

. Baby Fair •Saturday, October 22, 2005 ·10 a.m. to 2 p.m.• •Krodel Clubhouse
'infant, maternity &amp; child fashion show

3101 EAST SEVENTH SIRED
PARKERSBURG, WV • 304·424·5122

'PURCHASERSCAN RECEIVE CASH BACK FROM TOYOTA OR APPLY CASH BACK TO DOWN PAYMENT. "CAMRY BASED ON MODEL 2514 MSRP $19,815. CUSTOMER IS RESPONSIBLE FOR EXCESS WEAR AND TEAR AND EXCESS MILEAGE CHARGES THAT WILL YARY BASED ON
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was ·

appro veo as a substitute cus10dian , ano Shcrri Sisson as
su hstitute secretary.
Volunt eers . were approved
l or the elememary sc hool .
The board also:
• Approved · finan cial
reports for September and
approveo th e five-year forecast for October submi ssion
to the Ohi o Department of
Education.
'
• Approved an amendment to
certi fie ation in the mnount of
$I5.0(X) and cenitied additional'
revenue to the coun ty auditor.
. • A]lproved advert ising for
two new school bu ses . .
• Approvco a contract with
Health Recovery Services for
fne ntoring ~en' i ces for elementary students and provide
financia l support for transportnti on costs for the program .

'

'

~
'

featur~d presentations by PVH professionals&amp;' members ofthemedical stalf.
~nfonnational booths &amp; demonstrations of child satety products

-Door prizes, refreshmepts &amp; much more !

·~

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
,.

'

�N ATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 24, 2005

Community Calendar

HURRICANE WILMA SPEEDS TOWARD FLORIDA 'LIKE. A ROCKET'
Bv DAVID ROYSE
ASS OCIATED PRESS WRITER

I

' ~
'

I'

KEY WEST. Fla .
Hurricane Wilma accelerated
toward stomt-weary Florida
on Sunday and grew ~ tronger,
.threatening . res ident s wi th
II 0-mph wind s, tornad oe~
and a surge of seawater that
could tlood the Keys and the
state's south west coast. .
After · crawling slow ly
through the Caribbean for
several days. Wilma pulled
away from Mexico's Yucatan
Peninsula as u Category 2
siorm and. forecasters said.
began picking up speed "like ·
a rocket'' as it l1eaded toward
the U.S. mainland. The storm
was expected to make landfall arotind dawn Monday.
The southern half of the
state was under a hun·icane
warning, and an estimated
160,000 residents were told to
evacuate, although many in
the low-lying Ke ys island
· chain decided to stay.
"I cannot
emphasize
enough to the f(Jiks that live
in the. Florida Key s: A hurricane is coming." Gov. Jeb
Bush said. "Perhaps people
are saying, '1'111 going to hunker down .' They shouldn' t do
that. They should evacuate,
and there's very little time left ·
to do so."
At 8 p.m. EDT on Sunday,
Wilma's II 0 mph winds were
· just I mph shy of Category 3
status. As the storm crossed
the Gulf of Mexico. forecasters said they saw no cvtdcncc
of wind shear that they hoped
. would reduce the hu rricane's
intensit y before it makes
landfall in south west Florida.
'Wilma had battered the
AP Pho.t o
Mexican coastline with how l- A rowboat transports people along the streets flooded in Guanimar. Cuba, Sunday. Cuban civil
. ing winds and torrential rains defense officials said more than 500,000 people fled their hbmes in l?w-lying areas on the island.
before moving back out 10
sea. At least th ree people Atlantic ·coast cities such as Florida, and the hurricane's gerous storms. Ray Price took
were killed in Mexico. fol- Miami and Fort Lauderdale outer bands began lashing his usual stroll down Duval
lowing the deaths of 13 in . were likely to face hurricane- coastal areas in Wilma's path . Street to check out the ocean .
Jamaica ami Haiti .
Jorce winds nearly as stron g A waterspout was spotted off
"Another day in paradise,"
Forecasters expected llood- as those on the Gulf Coast, Key West.
Price said.
ing. from a storm surge of up fore.:astcrs said.
It was markedly different
Some people shared that
to 17· feet on Florida\ &lt;outhWilma
would
mark than conditions Sunday attitude on the mainland. At a
west coast and 8 feet' in the Florida's eighth hurricane morning in -the Key s, when
Keys. Tornadoes were possi- since August 2004 and the sun shine beckoned boaters
ble in some areas th roL•gh fou rth evacuation of the Keys onto the water and many resiMonday.
.
this year.
dents went about their normal
Max Mayfield, director of
F~ we r than 10 percent of
routines.
the
Nafional
Hurricane the Keys' 78,000 residents
"We were born and raised
Center in Miami, predicted evacuated , Monroe County with storms, so we never
Wilma would dramatically Sheriff Richard Roth said.
leave," Ann Ferguson· said
pick up speed as .it
"I'm di sappointed, but l from her front porch in Key
approached Florida. ·
understand it," Roth said. West. "What happens, hap"It's really going to take off "They' re tired of leaving pens. If you believe in the
·like a rocket," he said . "It 's because of the limited dam- Lord, y.ou don' t have no fear."
goiilg to start moving like 20 age they sustained during the
Some 1.00· Key West parishmph."
'
last three hurricanes."
ioners attended Mass at a .
.
Because the storm was
By Sunday evening, torna: · Catholic church where a grotexpected to mo v.e so swiftl y do warnings were already to built in the 1920s is said to
across Florida, residents of posted for parts of southwest provide protection from dan-·

Top charities saw 11.6 percent rise in donations last year
Bv MADLEN READ
AP BUSINESS WRITER

NEW YORK - Americans
gave more money to charity in
2004 than the year before, and
it looks like that generosi ty is
still growing.
The 400 larges t U.S. charities saw donations rise II .6
percent last year from 2003.
according-to tile Chronicle of
Philanthropy, a new&gt;paper
that tracks philanthropy and
charitable organi zations. The
United Way of America was
the top fund -rai si ng group in
2004, the Chronicle said.
publication 's
The
Philanthropy 400 list. re leased

Monday, ranks the nation 's
biggest nonprotit groups by
private donations. Money
given -to the top 400 organizations accounted for more than
a quarter of the $248.5 billion
rai sed in the United States last
year, the Chronicle said.
Charitable giving has seen a
· turnaround since 2002, when
donations declined for the tirst
time since the list debuted in
1990.
"People are more conlident
about the econom y," said
Stacy Palmer, editor in chief
of
the
Chroni cle
of
Philanthropy. She added that
charitie.&lt;· have been aggressively seeking out larger
•

•

donations from wealthier
donors.
Nearly 80 charities on the
list ate already reporting figures for 2005, most of which
take into account the surges in
donations after the Asian
tsunamis of last December
and after Hurricane Katrina,
whi ch struck the Gulf Coast in
August. Those charities are
showing a median rise of 7.3
percent, the Chronicle reported.
·
The · United Way took in
$3.9 billion , the Chronicle
said. The Salvation Army was
No. 2 'With $1.5 billion, and
Feed .the Children , raising
$888 million, came in third .

Saturday, October
9 AM -12 Noon

~9

Marshall University's
Mid-Ohio Valley Center
in Point Pleasant, WV

park for recreational vehicles
At 8 p.m. EDT on Sunday,
in Fort Myers Beach, Leonard Wilma was centered about .
Hasbrouck stood bare-chest- 170 miles west-southwest of
ed as a fire truck rolled by · Key West and moving northblaring a warning .
east at about 15 mph .
" Mandatory evacuation," a Hurricane-force wind of at'
firefighter shouted into a least 74 mph extended up to
loudspeaker. "You are hereby 85 miles from the center and
ordered to leave your resi- wind blowing at tropical
dence by the board of county storm-force reached outward
of · Lee up to 230 miles, the hurricane
commi ssioners
center said.
County, Fla."
"They came by yesterday," . Weary fo recasters also
Hasbrouck said. "I told them; monitored'
Tropical
'I'm not going to ask you to Depression Alpha, which
rescue me."'
formed Saturday off the
Tropical storm-force winds Dominican Republic and was
of at least 39. mph were briefly a tropical storm, the
expected to begin late . record 22nd named storm for
Sunday, and the core of the the Atiantic season . It was the
hurricane was forecast · to first time the hurricane center.
slice across the peninsula exhausted the regular list of
· -Monday, . speeding northeast names and had to tum to the
at up to 25 mph.
• Greek alphabet.
Gov. Bush wrote his broth\
Alpha was 110t considered a
er, President Bush , asking threat to the·United States.
that the state be granted a
On Florida's Gulf Coast,
major disaster declaration for evacuation orders covered
14 counties ahead of the barrier islands and coastal
storm. Many of the areas areas in Collier and Lee counbracing for Wilma were hit' by 1tes,
·
sue h as For1 Myers
some of. the state's previous Beach, Marco Island, Sanibel
hurricanes.
The governor said state and parts of Naples.
officials expected heavy rain
Visitors crossing the bridge
and widespread power out- into Marco Island . Sunday
ages. The National Guard was were greeted by im electric
on .a·Iert, and state and federal sign that flashed, "EVACUofficials had trucks of ice and ATE, EVACUATE."
. food ready to deploy.
About 3,500 people were in
The Federal Emergency shelters across the state,
Management Agency was including roughly 850 people
poised to send in dozens of at the Germain Arena near
military helicopters and 13.2 Fort Myers, where evacuees
million ready·to-eat meals if pitched tents and placed mats
needed, spokesman Butch on the ice rink where a minorKinerney said.
league hockey team plays.
"We ' re ready for Wilma Cots and sleeping bags lined
and, whatever the storm hallways outside the rink.
brings, we're set to go,"
David Bright sat nearby on
Kinerney said.
.
a chair, a Bible beside him.
George Delgado of Miami He's old enough to remember
was still covering the win- plenty of other hurricanes.
dows of his house with ply- including destructive Donna
wood Sunday. He said he in 1960.
waited until the last minute to
"''m just domg a lot of
make sure the hours of work praying that things will work
were necessary.
out," he said. ''I'm born and
"I was hoping it would tum raised right here in Fort
some other way," Delg~do Myers, Fla., and just know
said.
you don't play with them."

Public meetings

Tuesday, Oct. 25
R_,CINE - Racine Board
of Public Affairs. regular
meeting, 4: 30p.m. , municipal building.

.

Wednesday, Oct. 26
Republican
bean dinner with serving to
beg in at 6 p.m. at the Senior
Citizens Center. Bean and
vegetable soup, chili, .and hot
dogs.
POMEROY ~

,

:
~

:
-

POMEROY
- Meigs
County Recorder Kay Hill
reported the following transfe rs in 'real estate:
Bank of New York,
Equi"edit Corp. , to Pamela
Bentz, Timothy Bentz, judgement release, Village of
Pomeroy.
Peo ples Bank, Peoples
Banking and Trust Co., to
Thomas L. Caplinger, Sherri
P. Caplinger, release of mortgage .
Peoples Bank to Nancy A.
Burn s. release of mortgage.
Ohio Valley Bank Co. to
Je rry L. Marcum, Patricia
Marcum. release of mortgage.
Hocking Valley Bank to
Danny Lee Phillips, Lesley
Jeanne Phillips, release of
mortgage, Salisbury.
Clarence A. Lambert, Sally
J. Lambert , to Fifth-Third
Mortgage Co., mortgage,
Salisbury.
·
Gerald R. Thompson, Alice
K.
Thompson,
Fulton
Thompson
Tractor,
Associated Fabricators, lt1c.,
Robert Thompson, to Village
of Pomeroy, deed, V:illage of
Pomerov.
Village of Pomeroy to
Gerald R. Thompson, Alice
K. Thompson, mortgage,
Village of Pomeroy.
Roy L. Pierce, Sharon S.
Pierce, to Home National
Bank, mortgage, Letart.
Lawrence R. Gluesencamp
to Jacqueline Shoemaker,
Barbara Martin, certificate of
transfer, Lebanon.
City National Bank to
Henry E. Cleland III, Angela
M. Cleland, release of mort-

screenings

(e~cept

water). May take mediCation.

For more information, please call {740) 446-5679.
•

gage.
gage release.
Jeremy Casto, Sheena
City
National
Bank,
Casto, to Tuppers Plains- Peoples Bank, to Larry W.
Chester Water District, right Rupe, Beverly S. Rupe,
of way, Chester.
release of mortgage.
City
National
Bank,
Jeffery L. Jackson to TPCWD, right of way, Sutton.
Peoples Bank, to Larry W.
Jon Ulbrich to TP-CWD, Rupe, Beverly S. Rupe,
right of way, Chester.
release of mortgage.
'
Kenneth Rizer, Sr., Paula
City National Bank to
Rizer, to TP-CWD, right of Shirley S. Sayre, Aaron L.
way, Lebanon.
Sayre, release of mortgage.
Joseph R. Turner, Hazel M.
Robert S. Shain, Ruth E.
Shain, to TP-CWD, right of Turner, to Peoples Bank,
way, Letart.
mortgage, Orange.
Cynthia J. Glaze, Timothy
City National Bank to
R. Glaze, James R. Sheets, Betty L. Marsh, release of
Jennifer L. Sheets, · to mortgage.
Harold Hager, Sue E.
Timothy R. Glaze, Cynthia J.
Glaze, Salisbury.
Hager, to TP-CWD, right of
Howard Davis Hively, way, Sutton.
Howard D. Hively, Cathy
Harold Hager, Sue E.
Hively, to Marty R. Wyant, Hager, Kimberly Jo Follrod,
Carron H. Wyant, deed, to TP-CWD, right of way,
Sutton.
·
Scipio (re-record).
Paul A. Haynes, Janice S. . William Lawson, Margie
Haynes, to Farmers Bank and Lawson, to TP-CWD, right of
Savings Co.. mortgage, way, Chester.
Bedford...
Jeremy Hupp, Kimberly
Meigs 'County Agricultural Sayre, to Columbus Southern
Society to Farmers Bank and Power, easement, Lebanon.
Savings Co. , mortgage,
Freda Marie · Durham to
Salisbury.
Joyce Ann Atkinson, deed,
Bank of New York to Rutland.
Arthur Eugene Bradshaw,
Donald
E.
Vaughan,
Pamela L. Vaughan, to
judgment release.
Heath Hill to Don R. Hill, Farmers Bank and Savings
Mary E. Hill, deed, Letart.
. Co., mortgage, Village of
David Carsey, Terri L. Pomeroy.
Carsey, to Roscoe Mills,
Sandra J. Mills, land contract,
Sutton.
Ryan B. Mahr, Carol A.
Mahr, to Peoples Bank, N.A.,
mortgage, Rutland.
City
National
Bank,
Peoples Bank, to Lirry A.
Rupe, Beverly S. Rupe, mort-

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Scout food drive underway
POMEROY - Saturday . This year's Scouting For plies are expe.:ted to be at
the Boy Scouts began dis- Food Campaign funded by all time lows. Food supplies
tributing S.:outing For Food the Gannett Foundation is have been decreasing for
Bags to the front porches of especially important .because several years. That makes
citizens Jiving in the ten so much of the surplus food
counties of Kentucky, Ohio, is being redirected to the this year 's Boy Scout food
and West Virginia served by gulf coast states for hurri- drive even more importani ·
the Tri-State Area Council, cane relief. This year region - f&lt;,1r the community to supBSA .
al · food banks that local port than ever before , said a
Next Saturday the same pantries turn to for food sup- Tri-State Area executive .
Scouts wi II return in hopes of tr"""""""""""""""""".._""'""""""""""""""""""====-~~o.
finding the .Scouting For
Please Vote and
Food Bag placed back on the
fro!lt porch but this time
Elect
filled with cans and other
non perishable food items.
The Scouts hope to collect
30,000 pounds of food to distribute to local food pantrie s. ·
Each Scout unit participating
will select a pantry in their
"/ will be a Full Time Trustee"
community where the food is
Paid for by Candidate ·
collected to distribute the
JJ870 T.R. 205, Pomeory, Ohio 45769
items collected.

Oscar T. Smith
Salisbury Township Trustee

SCOft WAL,.OI
To

Meigs Local Board .
Of Education
"Continuing to work toward
progressive education"

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RE-ELECT

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Do no/ eat or drink tor lhtf 10 hours prior to your scheduled

Church events

father. George was very
remorseful , and we decide d
to save our marriage. He
promi sed he would never
see the woman again, nor
would he have a relationship
Dear
with the child, who is now
Abby
4. (He pay s .:hi ld support
through the woman 's attor- ·
ney.)
Recently, she has begun
breakin g her part of the
are, talk to them. and get ag reement by sending phoexamples.
tos of the boy, with occaIt might be better if you sional letters about hi s
and .your husband approach progress. Abby; if our maryour mother together. Tell riage is to s ~rvi ve thi s affair,
her you are very concerned there must be absolutel y no
about her mental and phy.si- contact. I don ' t want my
cal health - and give her · children to know. about thts
chapter and verse about child. or my famtly to sufl er
why. Then offer to go with further. What should I d o ~
her to her doctor for a com- - ANONYMOUS ' WIFE IN
plete physical and neurolog- THE. EAST
teal checkup . If she refuses,
DEAR WIFE : I underremember that -you have an stand your feelings. but I am
important bargaining chip not sure they're re ali stic : It
- your son . Under no. cir- may not be posstble to keep
cumstances should he spend knowledge about this halfun supervised time with hi s sibling from your children
grandmother unless you are indefinitely because there is
absolutely certain that it's no guarantee he won ' t show
safe for him to do so.
up one day . asking for
DEAR ABBY: My hus · answers - whi ch he is entiband, "George," and I have tied to.
been married 22 years. We
Has it occurred to you that
have four teenagers. Five the real "victim'' in thi s
years ago, we decided to mess is the child. and not ·
leave the West Coast and you ',' You may no( want to ·
move ba.:k east to be closer hear thi s, but my advice to
to family.
you is to open your heart,
George · moved first. The recognize that the boy is a
children and I stayed behind reality that should not be
until our house was sold and ignored, ~tid relent.
the school year had ended .
Dear Abby is written by
We wmmuted as often as Abigail Van Burell, also
pos stble. but commuter mar- known as Jeanne Phillips,
nages are never easy. .
and was founded by her
Dunng our separatiOn, mother, Pauline Phillips.
George had an affa.ir with a Write
Dear Abby at
woman , and ~ he became http://www.DearAbby.com
pregnant. A" patermty test or P..O. Box 69440 Los
confirmea that he is the Angeles, CA 90069. '

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Non-Fasting Cholesterol and Glucose
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Screening Includes a10-Hour Fast Beforehand

Thursd!ly, Oct. 27
POMEROY- Meigs
County American Cancer
Society Taskforce regular
meeting, noon, basement
conference room of the
Pomeroy Library. Call9926626 for more information.
POINT PLEASANT,
Friday, Oct. 27
W.Va ..- Alpha Iota Masters
LONG
BOTTOM - Inzy
will m~et at Bennigan 's in
Newell
observe her 80th
Point Pleasant at II: 15 a.m .
· birthday Oct. 27. Cards may be
for lunch .
POMEROY - Alcoholics sent to her at44545 S.R. 248,
Long Bottom, 45743.
Anonymous open dis cussion, 7 p.m., Sacred Heart
Monday, Oct. 31 ·
Church. AI-Anbn also meets.
POMEROY - Mal}:
. Wingett of Syracuse wtll be 95
on Oct. 31 . Cards may be sent
to her at the Rock Springs
Monday, Oct. 31
Rehab Center, 36759
POMEROY
The Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy,
Enterprise United Methodist 45769.
Chu"h and the Pomeroy
Church of Chri st will hold a
Wednesday, Nov. 2
three-night revival Oct. 31.
MASON - Violet Millhone,
Nov. I and Nov. 2 with the retired Tuppers Plains
Rev. James Corbitt as guest Elementary School teacher,
speaker. Services will be held now residing with her daughter
at the Church of Christ on in Mason, W. Va., will celebrate
West Main Street in Pomeroy · her 95th birthday on Nov. 2.
starting at 7 p.m. each night. Cards may be sent to at Box
There will be special music.
287, Mason, W. Va. 25260.

DEAR ABBY: Today was
my son 's fourth birthday. I
gave him a party. Some of
the children who came were
dropped off by their parents.
One of the boys started
grabbing my son 's gifts and
opening them . But the real
trouble began when my
mother grabbed him by the
arm and pulled him roughly
away. Thi s happened twi ce
before my hu sband could
make it acro&lt;S the room and
tell Mother to stop it immediately.
I am very worried about
my mother. She 's 64 and
seems to be losing her mind.
Her displays of nervous and
strange
behavior · are
increasing . Her mother, my
grandmother, was a paranoid schi zophrenic. and I
have often believed my
mother might have some
type of psychiatric condition.
How do I tell her she
need~ to talk to . someone
before thi s esc alates further? I allow her to baby-sit
my s?n for short stints only,
and .now I' m questioning
any further "alone time" at
all for them. She calls me
constantly, insisting that she
wants to see him. Is there an
easy way to tell your own
mother that you think she is
close to "losing it"? If I'm
·going to gear up for the conversation, I want her to take
me seriously. Thank you for
your input. - WORRIED
DAUGHTER IN DENVER
DEAR DAUGHTER: No,
there is no "easy way." Do
you have siblings? Does
your mother? Does she have
any close friends who also
might have noticed her
bizarre behavior? If there

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For this special screening... .
You M1lSI pre-register by calling (740) 446-5055.
Call today· space Is limited! '

2005

'
Coming Thu~ay. in the Sentinel...
·
. .

Free screenings will be conducted by

(pre-registration is reqUired)
Measuring
Total Cholesterol · HDL (Good Cholesterol)
LDL (Bad Cholesterol) • Triglycerides

Saturday, Oct. 29
HARRISONVILLE- The
family of Walter Franklin
Gilmore will have a reunion at ·
the Scipio Fire Department
headquarters. The reunion will
begin at II a.m. and the group
will eat at noon.
·

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Reunions

will

Thesday, Oct. 25
MIDDLEPORT - Special
meeting of Middleport
Lodge #363 F&amp;AM, 7:30
· p.m ., for work in the Entered
. Apprentice degree . All
Musons welcome.
Refreshments .
RACIN E- Racine Area
Community Organization,
6:30 p.m. , Star Mill Park
building. Potluck.

Monday, October 24,

Daughter begins to doubt mother's grip on sanity

Birthdays

Clubs and
organizations

:
.

• 22 HP, 3-C.ylinder l iq uid-Cooled Diesel Engin e

POMEROY - Narcotics.
Anonymous open discussion, 7 p.m., Sacred Heart
Church.

Monday, Oct. 24
RACINE - Southern
Local Board of Education
reg ular meeting, 8:30p.m. at
the school.

:
:

KUBOTA

BY THE BEND

Page A3

'

�OPINION .

The "Dmly Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, Oct. 24, the 297th day of 2005. There are
68 days left in the year.
,
Today\ Highlight in History: On Oct. 24, 1945, the United
Nations officially came into existence as its chaner took
effect.
On this date: In 1537, Jane Seymour, the third wife of
England's King Henry VIII, died 12 days after giving binh to
Prince Edward, later King Edward VI. ·
In 1861 , the t1rst transcontinental tele!lraph message was
sent as Justice Stephen J. Field of California transm'itted a
telegram to President Lincoln.
In 190 I, Anna Edson Taylor. a 43·year-old widow, became
the first person to survive going over Niagara Falls in a barrel.
In 1931, the George Washington Bridge, connecting New
York and New Jersey. opened to trafnc.
In 1939. nylon stockings were sold publicly for the first
time. in Wilmington, Del.
In 1940, the 40-hour work week went into effect under the
f:air Labor Standards Act of 1938.
·
In I'!52. Republican presidential candidate Dwight D.
:Eisenhower declared, "I shail go to Korea" as he promised to
·end the conflict. (He made the visit over a month later.)
In 1980, the merchant freighter SS Poet departed
Philadelphia bound for Port Said, Egypt, with a crew of 34
:and a cargo ofgrain; it disappeared en route.
In 2002, authorities arrested Army veteran· John Allen
Muhammad and teenager Lee Boyd Malvo in connecti&lt;:m with
the Washington-area sniper attacks.
Ten years ago: President Clinton and Chinese President
Jiang Zemin met in New York , trying to stabilize relations
shaken by disputes over human rights, trade and Taiwan. The
Cleveland Indians got their 11rst victory in the World Series,
defeating the Atlanta Braves 7-6 in Game 3.
Five years ago: Secretary of State Madeleine Albright ended
two days of historic talks with Nonh Korea's Kim long II,
with the Communist leader indicating a willingness to restrain
his country's long-range missile program.
One year ago: A plane owned by top NASCAR team
Hendrick Motorsports crashed near Martinsville, Va., killing
all 10 people aboard. A Russian-U.S. crew aboard a Soyuz
capsule returned to Earth from the international space station
in a pinpoint landing in Kazakhstan. Cardinal James A.
Hickey, former archbishop of Washington, D.C., died at age
84. The Boston Red Sox beat the St. Louis Cardinals 6-2 for
a 2-0 World Series lead. Arizona's Emmitt Smith broke Walter
Payton's NFL record ~or 100-yardgames rushing with his
78ili.
•
Thought for Today: "Vanity, vanity, all is vanity/ That's any
fun at all for hum~nity."- Ogden Nash, American·author and
humorist (1902-1971 ).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR .
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be ·tess rhan
300 words. All letters are mbjecr to editing, must be signed,
and include address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will he published Letters should be in good taste,
addressing i.lsues, nor personalities. Letters of thanks to orga· ·
nizations and indi1&gt;iduals will 11ot be accepted for publicatiOn.

Election letter advisory
Letters to the editor dealing with issues on the Nov. 8, e/ec·
lion ballot will be arcepted until 5 p.m. on Monday, Oct, 3/.
No letters on the election will be published after Wednesday.
Nov. 2.
.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Pottcy
Our mam concern In all slories is 10 be

accurate. If you know of an error in a
story. call t~e newsroom at (740) 992·

21S6.

Our main number is
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Department extensions are:

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, E~~:t. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13

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through Friday, 11 1 Court Sheet,
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PageA4,
Monday, October 24,

Monday, October 24, 2005

2005

Obituaries

Shelf-denial at the White House
Big week for Uncle Sam.
First, there was the referendum on the new Iraqi constitution, which, by the way,
contains all provisions nee·
essary for a Sharia-ruled
Diana
state. Then, at,the president's
West
by-now annual Ramadan
dinner, Bush announced ,
"For the first time in our
nation's history, we have
,
added a Koran to the White moment.
Is it just me. or does the .
House Library."
Anything wrong with this president's gesture of inclu·
undoubtedly historic pic· sion sock the rest of us in the
ture' Freedom marches on in head'l Peaceful Muslims
Iraq, and tolerance expands aside, the Koran is indis·
its reach at home, or so they . putabl y the favorite book to
say. But I would put it this twist for the extremist ag~n ­
way: Democracy marches on das for Osam~ bin Laden,
in Iraq, ·and the Koran Abu Musab ai-Zarqawi , the
killers of Daniel Pearl ,
expands its reach at home.
bus
bombers,
Same tl)ing? Not at all. But Hamas
Underground
no one is supposed to con· London
bombers;
and
anyone who
sider the difference. So what
has
ever
hidden
an
if Anicle 2 in the Iraqi con·
Explosive·
stitution states; "no law that Improvised
Device
(lED)
on
an Iraqi
contradicts .the established
road
to
kill
or
maim
an
provisions of Islam may be
established"? IF. people par- American soldier - none of
ticipate in an election for ' which is the best recommenanything
including dation for White ·House hon·
ors.
Sharia, including Hamas But maybe the president
it's the Spirit of '76 all over
meant
he would now be
again, or so our leaders say.
Never mind that worried reading the Koran. He could
Iraqi Christians, concerned start with Chapter 5, Verse
for religious freedom, say 32, which he's taken to quotthey're likely to ask Pope ing as, well; chapter'.andBenedict XVI to intervene. verse evidence of Islam's
Meanwhile, according to the . aversion to bloodshed "Bush
Happy
Face always skipping the fatal
Doctrine," if any religious exception. Bush will say:
book goes onto the White Killing an innocent human is
House shelf, including one like killing all of humanity.
that's· uniquely venomous and then leave it at that. My
toward "int1del" non-believ- translation of the Koran
ers. it's a Hallelujah says: " ... whosoever •kills a

human being, except (as
punishment~ for murder or
for spreading corruption in
the land, it shall be like
killing all humanity." Easy
guess that . among Bush 's
Ramadan guests were a few
who consider Americans
guilty of murder, Israelis
innocent of nothing, and
both, as non-Muslims, complicit in "spreading corruption in the land" -and thu s
deserving death, dismember·
ment and banishment as outlined in Chapter 5, Verse 33.
But back to Bush's jan·ing
gesture of inclusion, one
unlikely to be reciprocated
in Islamic countries such as
Saudi Arabia where Bibles
are verboten. What does it
mean? Nq known religious
hook besides the Koran
seemingly inspires a religious vision of world political domination - which, of
course. includes America.
Daniel Pipes. writing in
Commentary magazine in
200 I, reponed on specific
Muslim efforts to turn
America into a Sharia-mled
caliphate. More recently, the
Middle East Media Research
Institute (MEMRI) tells us,
Ahmad Dewidar, the prominent imam of the Islamic
Center in New York ·and a
lecturer
·at
Manhattan
University, referred in an
interview to mosque-talk of
how the White House "through the domination of
Islam and its ideas" would become the "Muslim
House." Bush has begun to
acknowledge such designs,

John William call

that

Officials map out plan to promote Local Briefs
historic shipwreck sites

KELLEYS ISLAND (AP)
- When state officials tried
LONG BOT[OM - John. William "Happy" Call Jr.. 80. to mark several Lake Erie
Long Bottom, di~d on Saturday, Oct. 22, 2005, at his resi- shipwreck sites as preserves
.
two years ago, they tousled
dence after an extended illness.
He was born on De&lt;:. 2. 1924, in Middleport, son of the late with prop~rty owners over
John William and Margaret Cook Call. He was employed as land rights.
a brakeman fur the railroad for 40 years. He was a 1942 gradNow the state, lake historiuate of Middleport High School.
ans.and underwater archenloHe is survived by his wife, Selma Call, Long Botlom: suns gists are hoping to mark four
and daughters-in-law, John Edward· (Candace) Call, of the lake's zones as "underSummerfield, Fla ., and William Richard Call, Long Bonom; water trailways." The routes
daughters and sons· in-law : Margaret Ellen Miller of Long would guide divers to historic
Bottom , and Lmda Lee (Dale) of Rollins, Miss.; seven grand- shipwrecks without parceling
chtldren a~d seven great-grandchildren; special niece. Cindi off propenies.
Colhns Rice ut Jacksonville, Fla., and several nieces and
'The !railways idea is to
nephews.
.·
promote Lake Erie, hopefully
In addition to his parents, he was preceded by a son, Jackie without
making people
Rae Call, a daughter, Karen Sue Call .• and a grandson, uncomfortable,"
said
Christopher Todd Call; brothers, James Edger Call, Norman Constance Livchak, supervi·
Delbert CalL and Woodrow William Call; and sisters. Ruth sor of the Divi sion of
Criner, Hazel Gilmore, Nellie Frye, and Dorothy Gilmore.
Geologic Survey with the
In .lieu of tlowers doil3tions may be made to Holzer Hospice Ohio Department of Natu,ral
· Resources. "Jt's not a bound(Meigs Branch) I00 Jackson Pike. Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Services will be held at I p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 25, 2005 . ary; where there's a box. A
at FisherFuneral Home in Pomeroy. Officiating will be Rev. trailway is more of a guide
Boh Robmson and burial will follow in Riverview Cemetery. from one shipwreck to the
Friends may call on Monday, Oct. 24, 2005 from 6 to 9 p.m. next."
at the funeral home.
Lake Erie has at least I ,500
Online Condolences may be sent lo www.fisherfuncral· shipwrecks. many dating
back to the late 1800s and
homes.com.
early 1900s when shipping
traffic there was heavier.
About 600 of those wrecks
CINCINNATI (AP) - A
to
the are in Ohio, said · Chris
According
suburban Cincinnati Marine Department of Defe nse , Gillchrist, executive director
who was killed in Iraq was Rick Pummill and two of the Great Lakes Historical
a recruiter who' requested other Marines were killed Society.
ODNR is vying for a three·
combat duty when the ·war Thursday by an explosive
year, $220.000 grant from the
began, his mother said .
device during combat oper- National
Oceanic
and
Lynn · Pummill said her ations near Nasser Wa Atmospheric Administration
son, Staff ·Sgt. Rick Salaam, Iraq.
to kick off the mapping plan.
Pummill, 27. had been sta·
Pummill
joined
the If the grant goes through, the
tioned at Camp Lejeun~ in Marines aft~r graduating state will add $63,000 to the
North Carolina. He was from
Anderson
High project's budget.
the
2nd School
in
suburban
assigned to
The leader on the project is
Battalion. · 2nd Marine Anderson Township in Dave Kelch, an associate proRegiment. 2nd Marine 1996. He had been in Iraq fessor and district specialist
II
Marine since July.
Division.
with Ohio State University's
Expeditionary Force.
Pummill 's wife live s Sea Grant Extension pro·
"I keep waiting . for the Camp
Lejeune
111
gram.
Marine s to call me and tell Jack so nville, N.C. His
He said he hopes to publish
me th~y made a mistake three-year·old son lives in a 16· 10 20-page guide to
Va..
· wi.th shipwrecks in four Lake Erie
and · that he 's· still ul.ive, " . Norfolk,
7.ones. The brochure wil.l
Pummill said Friday.
Pummill's first wife .

as when in a recent speech
he mentioned jihadists' goal
of "totalitarian empire.'' But
the president is still distorting history, both recent and
ancient, by denying links
bc;tween jihad war and
Islamic teachings. derived in
large pan from the Koran
After 9/ II, Bush declared
"Islam is peace." Now. he
insists

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

"extremists''

a

"distort the idea of jihad·'
into a rationale for terrorism.
Maybe Bush will read hi•
new Koran and discover that
the idea of jihad is itself
extreme. Better still, maybe
Bush will go so far as to add
another book to the White
House collection: . ''The
Legacy
of
Jihad''
(Prometheus Books, 2005)
by Andrew G. Bostom, MD.
This extraordinary compendium of primary and secondary source material,
much of it translated into
English for the first time,
eluCidates the theory and
practice of jihad over I ;400
years. With its chronological
span across the centuries,
"The Legacy of Jihad" goes
a long way toward bridging
the void in Western understanding of the institutional
role of jihad within Islam.
The White . House ·may
have its own Koran now, but
the president's re'ckoning
with the legacy of jihad is
still overdtie.

Cincinnati-area Marine killed in Iraq

( Diana 'Wesr is a columnist
for The Washington 71nws.
She can be contacted via
dianawest@ verizon.net.)

include photographs, historical details and coordinates
that will allow divers to
locate the 'sites with global
positioning equipment.
He also wants to set up a
Web site with virtual dives
for surfers who don't want to
get their feel wet.
The· pl an is based on a
Wisconsin program that maps
out dozens of shipwrecks · in
Lakes
Michi gan
and
Superior.
"There \ a lot of support
and a Jot of interest in the
maritime history of the Great
Lakes,"
said
Keith
Meverden, a Wisconsin
underwater archaeologist.
The expense of documenting each shipwreck's location
and remains is high, said
Gillchrist. so putting together
an exhaustive database would
be nearly impossible.
"What we're striving for is
a representation of the diversity of boats," he said, "so
that . as people go through
these trails, they understand
that passenger boats and
other. work boats were SLibject . to the same forces of
nature."

The Divi sion of Geologic
Survey is using sonar equip·
ment to learn more about
Ohio's wreck sites, said
Livchak during an exploration of a 1911 shipwreck
off of Kelleys Island.

Annex

)299

from PageA1

m

his attorney Bernard Ftiitz
to convey to the Historical
Society how deeply he
appreciated its work and
how pleased he was to be
a contributor to its suc-

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Set trick or treat

HARRISONVILLE - Trick or treat will be observed from
6 to 7 p.m. on Thursday in Pageville and Harrisonville. The
fire siren wi II sound to start and end trick or treat.. Costumes
will be judged and refreshments held at the fire station after
trick or treat.

Kid's cruise
POMEROY - The Kid's "Cruise to Nowhere" on Rubel's
Sternwheeler will depart the Pomeroy. Levee.at noon and last
until 2 p.m. Oil Oct. 30. There will be cost~mejudging, games
and prizes. Tickets are $5 for 12 and under, $7.50 for 13 and
older. Call the Meigs County Tourism Office at 992·2239.

Murder mystery dinner cruise
. .POMEROY- A murder mystery dinner cruise will depan
the Pomeroy Amphitheater .at 7 p.m. on Friday. The cruise is
presented by the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce and
the River City Players. Presented on the cruise will be the
audience participation mystery. "The Haunting." Call the
Chamber office for tickets, 992 -5005 .

Eastern
from PageA1
• Approved an arrangement
with Gary Freemen for technical assistance and sample
testing of the wastewater
treatment system.
• Set the next regular meeting for 6:30 p.m. on Nov. 22
at the elementary library conference room.
·

Keeping
Meigs County
informed
The Daily Sentinel
Subscnbe today

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In notes dictated to Fu ltz
and read by Hal Kneen at
the dedication ceremony
Mr. Nolan expressed his
deep devotion to his late
wife, their courtship and
marriage in 1943, and her
career which included 25
years as a Meigs County
extension agent. He con·
eluded his statement with
the words, "I am . justly
proud to have contributed
tn her honor."
Rae
Reyno lds
read
excerpts from a letter by
C. E. Blakeslee detailing
the positive impact of
Mrs. Nolan's work with
families while an exten·
sion agen.t in Meigs
Cha~ene Hoaftich/photo
County. Also speaking Dwain Sayre of McCtutchenvilte, ·formerly of Meigs County,
briefly were Bob Wingett and his wife admire the plaque noting· Howard Nolan's contriand Ferman Moore. who bution for the annex given .in memory of his wife, Geneva.
chaired the annex con)
struction as trustees of the 0' Bryant giving the invo- Powell and Bob Robinson ,
Meigs County Historical cation.
. member of Middleport
.Among those recognized Village· Council. The Rev.
Society.
The program opened by Margaret Parker in her William Middleswarth read
with Boy Scouts of Troop welcoming remarks. were a poem in remembrance of
299 rai sing the flag , Mick Christi Mash on behalf of departed love ones. · and
Williams of Drew Webster U.S. Repre sentative Ted Hal Kneen sang "America,
Post 39, American Legion Strickland,
Ohio the Beautiful." A reception
conducting a flag dedica- Representative
Jimmy was held following the
tion, and the Rev. Lamar Stewart,
Judge
Scott dedication ceremony.

Americans still seek the authentic
There is no shortage of
evidence to support the argument that Americans are
dumber than ever. We tune
into "Fear Factor" and
"Maury" and "EiimiDATE.
"We voted into the White
House a man whose populist
appeal included a declaration that he didn't read
newspapers. We gobble up
new· issues of "Us" and
"People" like buttered pop·
corn (I certainly do).
So I was struck when I
read about the throngs that
mobbed the new de Young
Museum in San Francisco on
opening day Saturday people jostling for position
in line, hunching against the
morning fog, waiting for the
doo" to open. You' d have
thpught the place was handing out free video games and
Big Macs.
But they arrived by· the
thousands to look at paintings and sculptures that
aren't animated, edible or
dating Paris Hilton.
"Half of San Francisco
showing up at a museum
opening is not quite a
shock."
said
Richard
Lachmann, a profe"or at
State Universny of New
York at Albany who studies
American culture and sociology.
Fair
enough. . San
Francisco has a hi~h­
income, educated pop~a­
tion. And one .also could
argue that people showed up
because attending the opening day of anything in San
Francisco validates one's
hipness.
But we're not as dull as
our consumption of popular
culture suggests. Americans
are hungrier than ever for the
beautiful and the authentic,
for experiences that chal -

Americans are patromzmg
their own museums.
"I think what people are
looking for is the personal,
the custom, the authentic,
the unique," said Harry
Joan
Parker, director of the de
Ryan
. Young. The paintings aren't
replicas. The building isn't a
Disney reimagination of
something real. The muselenge what we know, for um's intent in drawing visiideas that show· us the world tbrs isn' t to sell them bob,
ble-head da Vincis and $15
from a new angle.
It's not just San Francisco, hot dogs (though gift shops
and not just new museums, and cafes have become stanthat draw sell-out · crowds. dard fundraisers) .
He told the story of how
People are packing cultural
even
, his I~ I /2-year-old
exhibits that years ago
would have attracted only daughter was instinctively
the intellectual and social drawn to the art. On a recent
vi sit, she saw the 2-foot-high
elite.
In New York, for example, . sculpture of a shiny, gornearly 7,000 people a day geous apple in the de
. streamed
through
the Young's garden. On her
Metropolitan Museum of Art wobbly legs. she ran to it
for an El Greco show last and, without hesitation,
year. At the Guggenheim. a pressed her mouth agaillst it
retrospective last year of to take a big bite. Parker
James Rosenquest - not an loved the metaphor.
"The whole culture is
anist on the tip of everyone ·s
tongue- still drew an aver- being commodified," he
age of 3,346 vbitors a day said. "All of us have to t1ght
l'or more than two months, hard for poetry, spon, art, as
according to a report from an antidote to the second· the Association of Art hand experience .... Part of
what is attractive, I ·lhilik, is
Museum Directors.
,When the Los Angeles that (the museum) is not
County Museum of An, fur dumbed-down. These are
example, announced it was objects that speak from a dif·
staying open for 63 consecu- J'crcnt time. They have an
tive hours during a 1999 van authenticity that so many of
Gogh ex hibit, art observers our experiences don't have.
scoffed . But lower-priced People respond because it's
showings at 3. 4, 5 and 6 reaL It's not packaged. We
a.m. so ld out. mostly to peo- don't stand there and tell you
ple who couldn't score lick· what to think about it."
Beauty and authenticity
ets during conventional
hours, or couldn't afford to used to be more a part of our
everyday lives. You cou ld
pay full price.
Unlike Europe, where RO find them in the art and
to 90 percent of museum vis· architecture of churches and
itors are ·tourists. in the · homes, commercial build·
United States, only about 30 ings and town squares. But
percent are. In other words,. wit h suburban sprawl, we've

traded magnificence for effi.
ciency, low prices and ample
parking.
"Our stores have become
cheap. window less, concrete
boxes that offer the viewer
nothing of value," said
Dolores Hayden, professor
of American studies and
architecture at Yale and
author of "A Field Guide tu
Sprawl'' (W.W. Norton &amp;
Co. , 2004). She said great
architecture, Iike other great
ait, is enhanced by people
experiencing it together in a
public place, as visitors .to
the de Young do.
"It's panlx about sharing
the pleasure of something
done well," she said, pointing to the tragic and bungled
aftermath of Katrina as !he
most recent example of why
we seem to be hungrier than
ever for great art and books
and buildings. "Would t\1&lt;11
(sharing the pleasure uf
something done well) would
happen every day."
Book sales seem to under·
score this hunger. Americans
bought SQS million books
last year, a figure that does
not include textbooks. It's as
if the consui'nption of art and
literature is a counterweight
to the consumption of "f-ear
Factor" and "Us." It's the
craving
of
something
exquisite after a Twinkicsand-Doritos's binge.
Junk culture, like junk
food, has its pleasures, !leaven knows. But there's 'onl y
so much I think the human
soul can take before it goes
running off for a bite of a
shiny. go rgeo us apple.

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�LOCAL • STATE

The Daily Sentinel

PageA6
Monday, October 24, 2005

school districts in the state students also will receive
ATHENS- Three critical- University. His stories and BA from Cornell University,
who demonstrate enthusi- funding
to
attend
an
asm. motivation to succeed, approved professional con- ly applauded local writers essays have appeared in and her PhD from Duke
academic achievement and ference in their junior years, . will share their work at a numerous magazines and Univ.ersity.. She has published
financial need. All six Ohio internship opponunities and benefit reading hosted by anthologies, inclu&lt;iing The a diverse range of work,
Unive rsity campuses will technology and research Ohio University's Program in Sun, Inkwell. and Natural including Giving Birth : a
participate in this program.
training.
Ohio University Creative Writing at 7:30 Bridge, an,d his shO!t story Journey into the World of
"The Appalachian Scholars alumni will mentor students p.m., Thursday, in Irvine "Fireflies" won this year's Mothers and Midwives,
·
Third Coast Fiction Contest.' which won the Lamaze Birth
Program i' a renewed com- tl\roughout their academic Auditorium.
The
Writers
Harvest
beneHi s short story collection Advocate Award in 2003.
mitment to widening · the careers.
fit
reading
has
been
a
fall
traErratics,
published by Texas She has also published magadoor~ to an Ohio University
To apply for the program,
dition
at
Ohio
University
for
Review
Press , won the zine articles and book
education for students from students must be admitted to
Appalachia who demonstrate Ohio URiversity and demon- over a decade. All proceeds George Garrett 'Prize in 2000. reviews in Premiere. Rolling
Hiram. Ohio, native David Stone, and New York
enthusiasm. motivation to Strate financial need by COm- from the $3 admission donation
will
go
to
the
.
Sanilers,
director of the Ohio Woman, and her poems have
SUCceed. academic achieve- pletmg the Free Application
Sout~eas~ern
Ohio
Food
University
Press
and been published in Crock and
ment, and financial need.'' for Federal Student Aid
McDavis said in a press c01i- (FAFSA) by Feb. I, 2006. Bank s Second Harvest, a Swallow Press since 1996. ABQarts. She is currently
fe rencing announcing the The President's Office for food distribution program received his BFA in creative working on essay and interprogram e~rlier this month. University Diversity will serving Athens, Hocking, writing from Bowling Green view projects concerning
Vmton, Jackson, and his MFA frmn the apartheid-era and contempo- .
'' By creat1n g greater access contact eligible students, Perry.
to ed ucational opportunities. who· should then complete Gallta, Metgs, Morgan, and University of Arkansas.' His rary South Africa.
poetry has been published in
Tickets for Writers Harvest
Ohio University can make a an application packet includ- ·Washington counties.
This
year's
featured
writa
variety
of
journals
includmay
be purchased at the door
profound' difference in the mg an es.say and two letters
ers
are
poet
David
Sanders,
ing
The
Hudson
Review
of
Irvine
Auditorium beginquality of life and economic of recommendation. Eligible
fiction
writer
Roger
Hart,
and
Kansas
Quarterly,
and
Th~
ning at 7 p.m. A book signing
future for children of students will participate in
nonfiction
writer
Catherine
Southern
Review.
His
work
and
reception will follow the .
Appalachia."
an interview with member of
Taylor.
has
also
been
collected
in
event.
Those unable to attend
The goal is to enroll the the selection committee.
Hart,
a
recipient
of
an
Ohio
two
chapbooks,
Time
in
can
send
monetary donations
initial . class . of
I 0 Other factors included in the
Individual
Artist
Fellowship
Transit
and
Nearer
to
Town.
directly to Second Harvest
Appalachian Scholars for fall review process are grade
awarded
by
the
Ohio
Arts
Catherine
Taylor,
a
profesFood Bank of Southeastern
2006 and eventually enroll point average·. class rank and
Council,
received
his
MFA
in
sor
of
creative
writing
.
at
Ohio,
1005 · CIC Dr., Logan,
40 students from the 29 standardized test scores.
tiction
from
Minnesota
State
Ohio
University,
received
her
Ohio,
43138.
county-region in Oh.io identiThe 29 Appalachia Ohio
fied by the Appalachian countte s. include Adams
Regional Commission as . Athens, Belmont, Brown:
Clermont,
being part of Appalachia . . Carroll,
Already, scholarships for the Columbiana,
Coshocton
The
Akron
Beacon Dealer wrote in support of
first
five
Appalachian Gallia, Guernsey, Harrison: Journal
on
Sunda.y Issue 2.
Scholars have been secured. Highland, Hocking, Holmes, endorsed state Issue 4, an
Issue 3 would reduce the
For each ~tudent selected, Jackson,
Jefferson, elections reform measure, cap on individual campaign
- The Sons of
the program mcludes a four- Lawrence, Meigs, . Monroe, while Th~ (Cleveland) contributions from $1 O,()OO thePOMEROY
American
Revolution
year renewable scholarship, Morgan, Muskingum, Noble, Plain Dealer encouraged its to $2,000 for a statewide (SARJ, Ewing Chapter
of
an annual book sttpend. and Perry, Pike , Ross, Scioto, readers to vote against it.
candidate and $1,000 for a Athens and Meigs Counties
partici pation in an annual Tuscarawas, Vinton and
Issue 4 on the Nov. 8 legislative candidate. Issue will hold its annual awards
leadership seminar. Those Washi.ngton.
ballot would take redis- 5 would shift oversight of dinner at 6 p.m. Thursday at
tricting powers away from elections from the secre- _the American Legion Post 64
state legislators and turn tary of state and to a bipar- at Eighth and Wooster Streets
them over to a commission. tisan, nine-member board.
ih Marietta. .
The
Akron
Beacon
Reform Ohio Now, a
Participants 'will include the
Journal called the plan Democratic-leaning group~ Marietta Daughters · of. the
"substantially better than is pushing the four elec- American Revolution and
the current system" while tion s iss ues while a Society of Colonial Dames
The Plain Dealer said it Republican-leaning group Chapters as well as the currentisn ' t convinced it will called Ohio First opposes ly t(lrming Marietta Chapter of
make for better redistrict- the measures.
the Ohio Society SAR.
ing .
The
Akron
Beacon
Members of. area patriotic
The
!'lain
Dealer Journal:.
which
has organizations and interested
. endorsed state Issue 2, endorsed Jssue 2 and parties are i'nvited to attend and
which would allow voters declined to support Issue 3, · take part in the evening's
·
to request an absentee bal- ·also said no on Issue 5 on events.
lot for any reason, and said Sunday. Th,e paper called it
Cost of the Dinner is $12 per
no on Issue 3 and Issue 5. "an overreaction to issues person, including gratuity. For
"We have no problem that could be resolved by reservations or information
with embedding absentee passing a law restricting contact Dale Colburn at 1-740voting language in the state the campaign activities of ~92-5661 or Roy Fluharty 1740-374-0445
.
Constitution," The Plain the secretary of state."

Papers differ on state issue stances

North Toledo residents at
forum blame poverty for riot
TOLEDO (AP)- Residents
at . a sometimes testy forum
named poverty. above other
causes, as the kindlinj&gt; for a riot
earlier this month sparked by a
demonstration by neo-Nazis. ·
A c.rowd of about 150.
diverse in race aod age, voice!!
a slew of concerns at city offt,
cials, including Mayor laf:k
Font.. who. hAd tried to defuse
the uprising a week earlier.
"Whether they're black,
white or brown, poverty is the
reason," said north Toledo resident Albert McCiusker, 37.
one of three dozen people who
addressed the room Saturday's
meeting.
Violence broke out Oct. 15
after and rioters turned their
anger toward police because
they felt officers were protecting the neo-Nazis and did nothing to stop their phm to walk
through their neighborhood.
The white supremacists' march
was called off.
Vehicles and business were
vandalized, a comer bar was
looted and torched and an officer in a cruiser was hit in the
head by a chunk of concrete.
The unrest la~ted about four
hours. Police arrested 114 people, mostly teenagers and
young men, on charges including assault, arson, vandalism
and failure to obey police.
"Everybody knows what the
problem is: The youth - they
need direction. We need the
money for programs to give
the youths something to do,"
said · Saeeda Hunter of
Redeeming Temple Church. ·
Ford took notes during the
meeting and told those in attendance that he had compiled a
list of 35 of their complaints to

Monday, October 24, 2005

rNP Schedule
GAL~IPO LI S-

A S~? hedule ol upcoming college

and high school varsity sport1ng 9vents involvin11
teamli from Gall1a. Meigs and Mason counties

]'"d'Y'I gamu
College Volleyball
Shawnee State at Akl Grande, 7 p.m.,
Wednndav'e games

· College Soccer
Shawnee State vs. Rio Grande (at Alllmni
Stadil.m, Jackson), 7 p.m.
Women's College Soccer
Rio Gra!lde at Tiffill. 3 p.m.

aama•

Thyl'l&lt;tav'a
Tournament Volleyball
Eastern vs. Clay (at Wellston High School),
6p.m
College Volleyball
Mt. Vernon Nazarene at Rio Grande, 7 p.m.
frldav'l games
Football
Gallia. Academy at Marietta
South Gallia at Sciotovllle
Chesapeake at River Valley
Meigs at Belpre
·
Hert?ert Hoover at Point Pleasant
Parkersburg Catholic at Wahama
Hannan at Big Creek
College Cross Country .
Rio Grande Home Meet, 4:30 p.m.
Saturday's ga!DQI
Football
Eastern at Sollthern
College Soccer
Tiffin at Rio Grande, 1 p.m.
College Volleyball
Rio Grande at Tiflin, 4 p.m.

Buckeyes beat
Indiana,·41-10
·BLOOMINGTON. Ind .
(AP) - Troy Smith ran for
two touchdowns and threw
for another, Ohio State had
240 yards rushing and
another strong defensive
effort led the 14th-ranked
Buckeyes to their most lopsided victory of the season,
41-10 over . Indiana on
Saturday.
.
For the Buckeyes (5-2, 31 Big Ten), there was one
major change: They won a
conference road game for
only the second time · in
. seven games dating to
November 2003- albeit in
a friendly environment that
appeared to have more
Buckeyes
fans · than
Hoosiers supporteFs. ·
Indiana (4-3, 1-3) lost its
13th straight i'n the series
ana still hasn't beaten the
Buckeyes at home since
1988.

.Eastern wins
lOth straight
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

THE PLAINS - By claiming two
championships over its last two matches, Eastern kept ------...,~
some impres- DIVISION
sivc volleyball
streaks intact.
SECTIONAL
The
Lady
Eagles,
who
won their ninth straight league title
more than a week ago, weren't bothL....._ _ __ , ered by .a nine-day layoff during
Saturday's Division IV sectional volWeber
leyball championship. Eastern won its
IOth consecutive sectional title by
sweeping Miller in three games.
Coach Howie Caldwell's club won
easily 25-11 and 25-12 in the tirst two
games, then held on to also take the
third 25-23.
Eastern ( 20-3) advances to Southeast ,
District tournament at Wellston High ·
School and will face Portsmouth Clay 6
"---~--"' p.m. on Thursday. Clay punched its

IV

Winebrenner

Please see Eastem. Bl

High School Cross Country -

Bryan Wattora/pholo

Pictured are members of the Eastern volleyball team. The Lady Eagles won their 10th straight sectional vo(leyball title by defeating Miller Saturday.

Southeast District Meet

Swisher, Davis advance to regional
BY lARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

RIO GRANDE - What
began 'as a dreary. cold ·
Saturday afternoon quickly
brightened for the Galli.a
Academy girls and River
Valley boys teams as each
advanced a full team to next
week's Division II regional
cross country meet.
The Blue Angels caP.tured the Southeast District championship while the Raiders
were third on the boys side.
Also advancing on the afternoon were individual runners
Chris Davis of Eastern in the
Division Ill boys race and
Kimberly Swisher· of Meigs·
in ttie Division ll girls race.
Gallia Academy took home
the win via a one-two-three
tinish froill Lauren Adkins
(I st, 19:54), Lee Ann
Town .~end (2nd, 20:53) and
.Carol. Fahmy (3rd, 21 :29),
with Andre? Wiseman (7th.
21 :59) and Aarika Stanley
(12th, 22:26) finishing just
behind to round out the scoring in a dominant win, finishing 33 points ahead of second
place Zane Trace. Logan Elm
and Fairfield Union rounded
out the advancing teams in
the first Division II girls race.
Also finishing for the Blue
Devils during the. girls race
wer.e Hannah Roush (38th,
26:53) and Brittyn Saunders
(45th, 27:48).
River Valley made its state- .
ment in the tirst Division II
boys race, finishing third
behind advancing teams

Sports Briefs
AP Photo/The Blade, Allan Detrich

Mike Rose, a North Toledo resident for his 'whole life, express
his anger on Saturday towards Rep. Marcy Kaptur, D-Ohio, in
the foreground, and city officials who let neo-Nazis rally 111 his
neighborhood one week earlier. That rally led to riots that left
three business damageq and dozens of residents arres.ted.
address.
'Residents have questioned
why ofticials initially allowed
the demonstration by the Nazi
group, which intended to walk
along the neighborhood's side"
walks.
"Throwing rocks? This is the
north end. You're so lucky
that's all that · happened,"
shouted Michael Rose, a 32year-old who said he used to be
m a gang.
"Violence only breeds violence. We should have never
let them come into our neighborhoocj."
Ford has said the city couldn't stop the ~wup because no
street closures or marching permit were required.

Residents also have cited
tensions between police and
youth in the area as an accelerant to the riot. Authorities, in
tum. have blamed gang members.
Earlier this year, the Toledo
Police Department changed the
approach it takes to controlling
gang activity. Four uniformed
officers and a federal agent
respond to complaints and
wor~ trouble spots - public
scHools letting out for the day,
for instance. ·
That group of officers has
replaced a 15-year gang task
force that used plainclothes
detectiyes to interview ,intormants and monitor gratfiti.
.among other tactics.

Local weather
Monday ... Cloudy
with
scattered showers. Colder.
Highs in the mid 40s. West
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
of rain 50 percent.
.
Monday night...Cloudy. A
chance of showers in the
evening ... Then a
slight
chance of showers after midnight. Lows in the upper 30s.
Northwest winds 5 to I 0
mph. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Thesday ... Most ly cloudy
with a 30 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the upper
40s. Northwest winds 5 to I0
mph.
Thesday
night .. . Mostly
cloudy with a chanCe of
showers in the evenin~ ... Then
partly cloudy with ~ sllght
chance of showers after midni¥ht. Cold with low s in the
mtd 30s. Northwest winds
around I0 mph. Chance of
rain 30 percent.

SARplans
awards dinner

Wednesday
through
nighLPartly
Thursday
cloudy. Highs in the lower
50s. Lows in the mid 30s.
Friday ... Mostly
sunny.
High s in the mid 50s.

Friday night through,
Saturday
night .. . Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid 30s.
Highs in the mid 50s.
Sunday ... Mostly sunny.
Hi ghs in the upper 50s.
Chin,JIOCIInl•hc yl'&lt;lr tm
V.P. WV Chimproctic SocietY
MrmW uf A~ri~n !k(ltd ~

h:rcnsk lhlessicflills
20 Yri C\periCt'(\'
Mcr:nh:r of Anl\.-riam 1\ct~demy
Q!' MNk~ll AL'UpUOC'lUrt'

Auto Accidents Workers'
CompensaJion
• Spo.ll'b IIIJUrtt ~

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

Winter prep
schedules needed
Area coaches and athletics
directors should send their varsity basketball and/or wrestling
schedules to Ohio · Valley
Publishing as soon as possible.
You can fax them to (740)
446-3008;
email
- ··
sports@mydailytribune.com;
or drop them off at out
Gallipolis, Pomeroy or Point
Plea&lt;;ant office.
Also, if you have a picture
day scheduled please
include that informtion as well.

Contact Information
Fax- {740) 446-3008
E~mall-

• M~\ht'&lt;ln:

• Moslln~ur.uw:t&lt;i

• A~.:u'p!.illCIWC

• Stwnt: da)' appl .

Sports Staff

Chiropractic Center

=·

304-273-5321 7

316 Washln

n St.

sportsOmydailysentinel.com

Bred Sherman, Sporta Editor
(740) 446-2342, ext. J3
bsherman@mydallytribuna.com

!tavenswood

Ravenswood, WV

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE:
Gilrdon wins, Page 82
8engals, Browns lose, Page 82
World Series, Page B6

Bryan Waitt"· Spona Writer
{740) 446-2342, ext. 23
bwahers@mydallytrlbune.com
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
{304) 675-1333, ext. 19
lcrumCmydaltyreglster.com

Please see DIStrict. Bl
Larry Crum/pllolos

Meigs' Kimberly Swisher, left, and Eastern's Chris Davis, right, run during their respective races on Saturday at the University of Rio Grande. Swisher finished
15th in one Division II race to earn a individual spot in the regional meet next Saturday. Davis also advanced as an indy by taking 11th in one of the Division
Ill boys races

Waterford upsets .Lady Tornadoes in five ·
.

BY SCOTT WOLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

THE
PLAINS
Momentum is detined as an
impelling force or strength .
All sports in some way are
games
of
momentum .
Saturday's Sectional volleyball tournament championship contest between the
Southern Lady Tornadoes
(17-5) and the Waterford
Wildcats (Il-l 0) was no different
Midway through the third
~arne of the set, Southern lost
tts momentum and never
recovered as the Wildcats
upset the Tornadoes to claim
the
Southeast
District
Sectional volleyball championship.

will
play
Waterford
Portsmouth Notre Dame next
Thursday at Wellston High
School at 7 p.m.
Southern had hopes of
defending its Sectional championship from 2004.
Waterford had " Hope"
throughout the game - 6foot-1 &gt;piker Hope King, that
is. King had 15 kills, eight
blocks and six dinks to go
along with a tine effort from
Tiffany Wallace, who had 12
kills, 6 blocks, and five dinks.
Especially going down the
stretch, those two players
made a huge difference in the
game.
Southern's
Eylem
Gurbuzer had 16 kills in a 32for-42
spiking
night.
Kristiina Williams was 17-of-

•

four games were lilled with
fierce competi tioti, Southern
responded to Waterford's
challenges anu came from
behind several times to wiil
22 serving with three aces the tirst two games. only to
and went 28-for-14 spiking lose the last three games and
with six kills. Ashley Robie the match . Southern won 2.'\was 32-for-36 spikin g ·with 19, 25-23 , then lost 21-25:
five kills; Whitney -Wolfe . 15-25, and 8-15.
Riffle was 60-for-65 setting
Southern says so long to
with nine · sets for kill s. and seniors Bethany Riffle.
Spencer, Jenny
18-of-19 serving with an ace. Selena
Jenny Warner was 22-for-28 Warner,
Kasie
Sellers,
spiking with six kills and 40- Kristiimi Williams. and most
junior'
foreign
of-53 passing. Kasie Sellers likely
was 8-of-8 serving with one exchange' student Eylem
block and a kill, while Gurbuzer. T.he senior team
Selena Spencer was 17 -of-19 members have enjoyed fi nc
serving; and 'Bethany Riffle careers and ended their
was 41-of-44 passing and 76- careers with one of the better
of-76 setting.
records in school history, also
Although all of the first winning part of the Tri-.Yalley

DIVISION IV
SECTIONAL

Conference Championship.
Coach Ronm Sayre was
proud of her team for the
effort they gave this season.
an&lt;.l wanted tc! point out all
the pc&gt;sitive' this team has
enjn:.cd throu ghout the season. ·

A releivcd . . even pcrhap·s
dismavcd. Waterford Coach
Leam1e Cline said. "Whew.
thi s is ju&gt;t the way our season
ha' gone. We've played bad
this· season like we did the
first two games. then turned it
around and played very well
like ""did in the last thr~e. I
guess playing well at the
right. times to!!ight was
what s Important.
Southern took a I0-6 lead

Please see Upset. Bl

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, October 24.

Gordon
Steelers drop Bengals, Browns fall
wins at
Martinsville
CINCINNATI' (AP) Not )Ct. Beng,lls Not qu1te
yet
Ben
Ruethhsberger
th1ew two touchdown p,m
es 111 hiS 1eturn I! om a knee
IIIJUI) ,md the P1ttsburgh
SteeleJS proved they're still
the team to beat 111 the AFC
North by beatmg upstart
Cmcmna11
27-13
on
Sunday
The
Steelers
(4-2)
h.tven't lost their knack for
Wlnmng Aough game m
rough places They domln,ned the second halt 111
tront ot a Cincum.tt1-record
crowd of 66, I 04. sett1ng .t
Jr,m~h!Se record wnh their
I Oth stra1ght ro,lcl VICtory
In the end, It was H mes
Ward - not Chad John son
- getting the last dance
For the hrst t1me m the1r
stadium's "x- year h 1story,
the Bengals (5-2) had the
tans on theu SJde tor a
home game agamst the
Steelers There was m01e
orange than yellow m the
crowd that turned out on a
raw, ramy day - the kmd
the Steelers usually dom1-

MARTINSVILLE, Va (AP)
- Jeft Go1dun held on m "
three-lap d,"h "Jth Tonv
Stewart. who sti ll "rahhed a
15·po10t lead over thlfd-pl&lt;~ce
fimsher J unm1e Johnson 111 the
Chase tor the chmnp1onsh1p
Sundav
,11
MartmsvJile
Speedwa)
Gordon. a tow-11me champion who d1dn 't q11,1hty tor the
10-race, Nextel Cup pl,tyoft.
completed a sweep ot the se"son's two races on the 526mJle speedw"y - the oldest
shortest and lightest run 111
NASCAR 's prem1er stock cm
senes
As he d1d 10 Apul, Gordon
srud he was dedJCatm~ !he VICtory at the Subway 5w to the
10 people killed a year ago
when a Hendnck Motorsports
plane crashed on the v.ay to
the track
"It's been awh1le," Gordon
srud m V1ctory Lane alter Iu s
73rd career v1ctory. fourth tlu s
year and first smce May I at
Talladega

Upset
from Page Bl
m the f1rst game , then
Waterford 's
Hannah
Cunn10gham reeled off live
stra1ght SCI VICe pOIIltS th,Jl
saw consecutive boommg
k1lls f10111 Kmg and Wall,lce
Southern c.1mc back on kill s
b) Wh1tney R1ffle, Knstnna
Wilham~ and a dmk from
KaSJe Sellers Tradmg po111t s
for the next several serves
the ga me stood lied at 15-15
Then
entered
Eylem
Gurbuzer ott the benc h
Instantly. on three stratght
thundenng
kills
from
Gurbuzer. Southern zoomed
to a 20-15 advantage Selena
Spencer scored ftve pomt s
from the serv1ce hne as a
result of Gurbuzer's outstanding front !me pl"y A
Kmg k1ll stopped the dnve
and SHS led 20-17 Then
three rrlore Gurbuzcr k1lls
and a Warner dmk gave SHS
a 24-17 ddv,mtage
Waterford called t1me ,
regamed the serve, and
scored two p01nts before

Gurbuzer dropped a dmk m
to clann the wm Game over
- 25- 19 Southern.
Waterford broke a 4-4 t1e
m the second contest when
TJ!Iany Wallace came ahve
Her on court leadersh1p
rubbed off on her teammates
and Waterford clawed to a
I 0-7 advantage
WolfeRiffle scored f1ve serv1ce
pomts and Williams had two
111 a 7-2 run that gdve SHS a
14-12 advantage
The enure Southern team
responded w1th Bethany
Rtftle
gammg
several
ass1sts. whtle Jenny Warner,
W!lhams , Ashley Rob1e,
Gurbuzer, and Wolfe-Rtftle
had k11ls m a clos10g dnve
that tended off the KmgWallace combmatwn across
the net Breaking a 23-23 tie,
Wolfe-Rtffle,
around
a
Waterford t1me out, served
up the last two pomts for a
25-23 SHS WID
Leadmg two games to
none, Southern was m the
dnver 's seat
The
GWG
combo
(Gurbuzer-WllliamsGurbuzer) gave Southern a
10-7 edge 111 the th1rd game

Detroit L10ns to a 13-10
wm over the careless
Browns
After mtssmg Detrott' s
fmt f1ve games wnh a broken
left
leg,
Garcta
returned to praCI!ce tht s
week and the 35-year-old
got the start mg nod before
the game from Lwns coach
Steve Manucct, who has
run out of patience w!lh an
meflecll\e Harnngton
Garc1a, whose one season m Cleveland was
marred by Hlcons1stent
play. a feud w1th offens1ve
coordmator Terry Robtsktc
Lions 13, Browns 10
and personal 1ssues, had a
1-yard TD run m the ftrst
CLEVELAND (AP) half and Hanson ktcked a
K1cked out of town after 50-yard held early m the
one tumultuous season,
fourth quarter as the L1ons
Jeft Garcia came back to
(3-3) hung on
Cleveland and got some
Followmg the game.
pdyback
agamst
the
Garcta
strutted off the f1eld
Browns
Garc1a, makmg hts flrst and !lashed a thumbs -up
start th1s season m place of SJgn to cheenng Lions fans
Joey Harrmgton , ran for a near the team's tunnel
Garc1a fimshed 22-of-34
touchdown
and
Jason
Hanson k1cked two field for 210 yards and dtdn't
goals Sunday to lead the turn the ball over

nate w1th defense and runs.
They d1d agam
Willie Parker's 39-yard
touchdown run h1ghhghted
,, 221-ya1d performance by
Pmsburgh 's runnmg game
Parker ran lor 131 yards
over,lll, and InJury -s lowed
Jerome BettiS even got 10 a
few hcks on a defense that
gives up 4 9 yards per try
Ward's 4-yard touchdown catch on the fmal
play of the third quarter
made 11 24-6 and ~ave htm
a chance to rub 11 10 w1th a
httl e R1vcrdance-style eel·
eb1 "t 1on 111 the end zone.

Kmg, Wallace, and Ashletgh
Tornes gamed the glory on
the Water-ford s1de ol the net
and pushed the W1ldcats to a
13-12 advantage.
Rob1e and Wolfe- R1ft1e
ga~e SHS a 16-13 edge w1th
two k1lls and a W1lhams ace
The game was then t1ed five
times before Waterford took
the lead for good at 22-20 on
a pmr of dmks by Wallace. It
was at th1s pomt Waterford
responded to the1r crowd's
cheers and the momentum
began to shtft m a monumental way. Wnh great sets
from Haley Drayer, Kmg.
Kn sten
Sampson,
and
Wallace responded m a b1g
way to claim the 25-21 wm
Southern mtscues as well
as Waterford excellence
compounded a Waterford
surge to 20-8 m the fourth
game. The momentum was
all m Waterford's hallcoun
Southern's Williams had
four serv1ce pomts and a
couple k1lls gomg down the
stretch that saved some face
for Southern. but Waterford
soundly put the game away
25-15.
Lookmg enthusmsllc and

refreshed, Waterford had
reJeuventated Even Tornado
fans could feel the pressure
of the finale Angu1sh viSibly
hngered Ill the Tornado
camf Waterford asserted
ttsel early after a Wilhams'
ace gave Southern !ls only
lead of 2·1 m the finale
Haley Drayer had five servtce pomts, mcludmg an ace
m a stnng of volleys that
sav. Kmg hterally hammer
two ktlls oft Tornado
defende1 s SHS called time
and Eylem Gurbuzer entered
the game, poundmg a ktll to
stop the Waterford dnve, the
score now 7-3.
Waterford pushed to leads
ol 10-4, 11-5, and 12-6m
trade-offs
w1th
the
Tornadoes
Bethany R1ffie
served up a patr of serves to
pull SHS close at 12-8, but
Waterford closed out the
sconng for the 15-8 upset
win
Southern closed out its
season, not m the fashwn it
enviswned, but nevertheless
enJoymg a great season.
Waterford plays m the
Dtstnct
semtftnal
at
Wellston Thursday

Eastern
fromPageBl
llcket by defeatmg Wh1teoak
En n Weber scored 17
pomts to go along wtth four
kills and three blocks for
Eastern
Jilhan Brannon
added 13 pomts to the attack,
whtle Darcy Wmebrenner led
the way sptkmg wtth ll ktlls
Kelsey Holter had mne

District
fromPageBl
Umoto and Athens P1keton
also advanced m the race
wtth a fourth place finish
The Ra1ders were paced by
Chr1s Lester m 14th w1th a
ttme of 18:08, but not far
behmd were a pack of R1ver
Valley hnishers m Vmce
Weatherstein (17th, 18 25),
Jonathan Casto (18th, 18:30),
Kyle Hively (19th, 18 33)
and Dame) Htll (23rd, 18 53)
to round out the sconng Matt
Ntbert (33rd, 19.44) and
Tyler You.ng (57th, 21 38)
rounded out the Rtver Valley
fimshers in the race.
In the same race, Me1gs
and Galha Academy posted
ftmshers with Marauder
Adam Pmes (29th, 19.20)
and Blue Devtl Chns Canady
(30th, 19:22) leading the
way for their respecl! ve
teams.
Galha Academy posted a
mnth place ftmsh m the race
Wltb Tyler Counts (46th,
20·35), Shane Plantz (48th,
20 47), T1mmy Huffman
(62nd, 22 29) and Dallas
Craft (64th, 22.49) roundmg
out the scorers Also ftmshmg for the Blue Devils was
Greg Baker (69th, 24:51 ). •
The second Division II
gtrls
race
produced
a
Regwnal
qualifier
m
Ktmberly
Swtsher from
Me1gs, who finished in 15th
wtth a lime of 22:42 to pace
the Marauders who fimshed
with a fifth place te~m score
just behind advancing te~ms
Warren, Ctrclev!lle, Sardtma
Eastern and Washmgton
Court House.
Meghan Clelland (25th,
24 13), Jesstca Holhday
(30th, 24.33), Ashley Savage
(36th, 25 OEl) and Ashley
Samar (37th, 25:03) all combmed to push Me1gs to the

fifth place fmtsh Also fmtsbing for the Mauraders was
Cec1lha Core (56th. 28 58)
Me1gs County produced
another Reg1onal quahlter Ill
Eastern's Chns Davts in the
DIVIsiOn Ill boy s race earher
m the day w1th an II th place
timsh on a ume of 17:59
Eastern did not have a team
score, but the team s ot
Wilhamsport, Wheelers~urg ,
South Webster and West
Umon all advanced 111 the
race ,
The Eagles posted one
other fimsher m the race wtth
Aaron Martmdale bringing
home a 59th place limsh on a
lime of 20 23
In the same race, Southern
produced a quartet of runners
led by Bradley Brown (I 16th,
25 05) , Chns Burkhamer
(I 19th,
25 06),
Weston
Roberts (!20th, 25 07) and
Chns Holter (!30th, 27:22).
The one race on the day
whtch dtd not advance four
teams and 16 mdiVIduals to
the
Regtonals was the
DIVISIOn III gtrls race whtch
began the day. Only four run·
ners and one team advanced
m the race with the Rtver
Valley g1rls commg up JUSt
short wtth a second place tmtsh , the1r first trophy m the
dtviswnal meet. Lucasville
Valley won the event and
advanced to the Regwnal
The Lady Raiders were
paced by Ashley F1tch wah a
15th place fimsh on a time of
23 I 0
Stephame Gnffith
(24th,
24 0 I) ,
Elaine
Householder (25th, 24.0 I),
Tara Work:man (46th, 25 23)
and Tiffany Otler (68th,
27 33) rounded out the scormg for Rtver Valley Beth
Hysell (71st, 27 54) and
Samantha Forsythe (94th,
33 05) rounded out the runners tor the Lady Ratders
Advancmg teams and indiViduals Will meet next week
m P1keton for the Regtonal
meet

•

Notice of Election on

Tax Levy In Excess of
the Ten Mill Lem1tat1on

Revised
Code,
Sections 3501.11 (G),
5705.19,
5705.25
Notice Is hereby
given that rn

suance

pur-

of

Resolution

a

of the

Board of Township
Trustees

of

the

Township
of
Columbia, Albany,
Ohio, passed on the
6th day of June, 2QD5,
there will be submitted to a vote of the
people of said subd•-

omt ~lea~ant l\egi~ter
(304) 675-1333

(

ell!
of
Rutland
Township lor the pur·
pose
of
Fire
Protection said th
being A replacement
of a tax of 1 mill at a
rate not exceeding 1
(one) mills lor each
one dollar of valuation, which amounts
to ton cents ($0.1o)
for each one hundred
dollars of valuation
lor live (5) years The
polls lor sold ElaciiOn
will open at 6:30
oclock A.M
and
remain open until
7·30 o'clock P.M. of
said day. By order of
the
Board
of
Elections, of Meigs
County, Ohio John N.
lhle, chairperson, Rita
D Sm1th Director,
dated Sept. 5, 2005.
(10)10, t7,24,31

7·30 o;clock P.M of
said day. By order of
the
Board
of
Etect1ons, of Meigs
County, Ohio. John
N lhte, Chairperson.
Rita
D.
Smith
Director. Dated Sept.
5, 2005.
(10) tO, 17, 24,31

acre, more or leas
ThiS property Is bast
described In a war·
ranty deed rec,orded
In Voluma 226 Page
29 and Volume 226,
Page 33
Sealed btda shall be
accepted until t2:DD
pm
on
Friday,
October 28, 2005. All
bids should be seated
and clearly marked
Real Estate Btd on
the outside of the
envelope and submllted to the Village
Clerk, 320 Eaat Main
Street, Pomeroy, OH
45769.
(9) 30, (10) 6, 12, 18,
24

pose of mamtaimng

not exceeding 1 (one)

mills lor each one
dollar of valuation,

"

lng therein, on the 8th
day of November,

r

2005, the question of
levying a tax, In
excess of the ten mill
limitation, for the ben·
efll of Columbia
township for the pur·
pose
of
Fere
Protecteon Saed tax

will

(740) 992-2155

day of May, 2005,
there will be submit·
ted to a vote by the
people of said subdiVIson at a General
Election to be held In
the Township of
Lebanon Ohio, at the
regular places of vot·
1ng therein, on the 8th
day of November,
2005, the question of
levymg a tax, In
excess of the ten mill
limitation, lor the benefit
of
Lebanon
Township for the pur-

regular places of vot·

being · a replacement

The Daily Sentinel

Public Notice

of

township

of a tax of 1 mill at a
rate not exceedmg 1
(one) m11Js for each
one dollar of valuation, which amounts
to ten cents (SO t 0)
for each one hundred
dollars of valuation,
for live (5) years. The
Polls lor said Election

(740) 446-2342

Public Notice

Columbia OhiO, at the

Elecllon to be held 1n

the

IDatlp lribune

Public Notice

and operatmg cemeterieS Sa1d tax be.ng
(2) a replacement of
a tax of 1 mell at a rate

vlsion at a General

~" ....,... li~

Public Notice

open

at

6·30

whech amounts to ten
cents (SO t D) lor each

one hundred dollars
of valuation for five
(51 years The polls
far sa1d Election will
open at 6·30 o'clock
a.m and remain open
untii7.3D o'clock PM.
of said day. !ly order
of the Board of
Elections, of Meigs
County, Oh10. John
N lhle Chairperson
D.
Sm1th,
Rita
Director Dated Sept
5, 2005
(tO) 10, 17, 24,31

o clock

AM

and

Nottce of Electeon on

open

until

Tax levy en Excess of

5,2005

(10) 10, t7, 24, 31
Public Notice
Notice of Election on
Tax Levy In Excess of
the Tan Mill Limitation
Ravlaad
Code,
Sections 3501.11 (G)
5705 t 9,
5705 25
Notice Is hereby
given that in pur·
suance
of
a
Reaolutlon of the
Board of Townahlp
of
the
TrUstees
Township of Lebanon
Portland,
Ohio,
passed on the 28th

the Ten Mill Limitation
Revised

Not1co of Etoctlon on
Tax levy In ~xcesa of
the Ten Mill Limitation
Revised
Code,
Sections 3501.11 (G),
5705.19,
5705.25
Notice is hereby
given that In pur·
suance
of
a
Resolution of tho
Vlllege Council of the
Village of Racine,
Racine, Ohio, passed
on the 20th day of
June, 2005, there will

Public Notice

remain

7 30 o'clock PM. of
sa1d day
By the
order of the Board of
Elections, of Meigs
County, Ohio John N
lhle,
Chairperson.
Rlla
D.
Smith,
Dlr&lt;~ctor. Dated Sept

Public Notice

Code,

Sections 3501 .11 (G)
5705.19,
5705 25
Notice Is hereby
given that In pur·
suanca
of
a
Resolution of the
Board of Township
Trustee&amp;
of
tho
Township of Rutland,
Rutland,
Ohio,
peuod on tho 6th day
of June, 2005, thoro
will be submiHod to a
vola of the people of
said subdivision at a
General Election to
bo hold in the
Townahtp of Rutland
Ohio, at the regular
places of voting
!herein, on the 8th
day of November,
2005, the question of
levying a tax, in
excess of the ten mill
limitation. lor tho ben·
I

b,e submitted to a
vote of the people of
said subdivision at a
General Election to
be held In the Village
of Racine Ohio, at the
regular places of votIng ther&lt;~ln, on tho 8th
day of November,
2005, tho 'question of
levying a tllx, In
excess of the ton mill
llmitallon, lor the ben·
alll of Raclno Village
lor tho purpo11 of
Current Expenaea.
Said lax baing: A
replacement of a tax
of 2 milia at a rata not
axcoadlng 2 (two)
mills for each one
dollar of valuation,
which amounts to
twenty cants ($0.20)
for each one hundred
dollars of valuation
tor ltve (5) yeara. The
Poll a lor said Eloctlon
will open at 6 30
o'clock A.M. and
remain open until

Public Notice
PUBLic; NOTICE
The
Vlllaga
of
Pomeroy desires to
sell certain real
estate, located near
East Main Street and
Kerr Street situated In
the
Incorporated
Village. Tho property
lor sate Is described
as parcel numbers
06,075, 076, 077,078,

079 and 080, containing approximately t/4
Hetp Wanted

Help Wanted

As Notris Nartltup Dodge continues Its
lr8mendoul growlll, we strive to offer
the finest auto dealership from an
emplorae's Bland point 1f you are burned

SHOP THE
CLASSIFIEDSI
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

0

MLT/MT
Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal, a non-profit
healthcare fac1hty, currently has an open
pos1t1on for the following:
Full-t1me MLT/MT for Evemngs /N1ghts
Baccalaureate degree 1n Med1cal Techn ology or related f1eld plus ehg1b1hty for
ASCP and/or Associates Degree in
applied sc1ence or related f1eld plus ehg1b1hty for cert!flcat!Oil by ASCP. Three years
or greater staff tech expenence preferred.
Must have or be 1mmed1ately ehg1ble for
WV licens~
·
Send resume to ·
Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Dnve
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
(304)'675·4340 Ext. 1414
Fax 304-675-6975
www.pvalley org
AA/EOE

...
...............'llall!-' ....
._
IIIII I

Please apply in person

Sponsored by
Me1gs County Health Dept.
&amp; Middleport/Pomeroy Rotary
Club
Tuesday, October 25th
5·7pm

Portland Community Center
Portland,

252 Upper River Rd. •

OH .45631

Your Ad,

Ohto

Sentinel

ll\.egister

992-2156
Call Today••• (740) 446-2342 (740)
Or Fax To
992·2157

(304) 675-1333

•

Ocffroe l(otif'~

Now you can have borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
.(.,~
~
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50CI for small
S 1.00 for large

~

Monday t:hru Friday
8:00 a.m. t:o 5:00 p.m.
\'\'\Ol '\t I \11 \.I\

r

r
I

GIVEAWAY

FOUND

home

100 WORKERS NEEDED

while w1th black spots and 1

Assemble crafts
wood Items
To S480iwk
Mai8Jials provided
Fre~ Information pkg 24Hr
801-428-4649

brown w1th black saddle
(740)388· call .. 740·742·2925

25 mch floor model Zenrth
TV
Needs
repa1red
(740[446 8192

~

r
r

"~;::;;::::~
~

%~

male k'ttens approx 7-8
week old Grey/white
yel "~-------pi
low/white
black/white
Absolute Top Dollar US
(740)256·1 092
Silver and Gold Coms
30 gallon gas water heater ProOisets Gold R1ngs, Pre·
U5
Currency
Works I ne In good cond1 1935
Sohta1re
Diamonds·
MT S
lion (740)245 9782 alter
Com Shop 151 Second
Bpm
Avenue Gallipolis 740 446·
4 puppies about 2 montlls 2842
112 Red Healer 112 Lab - - - - - - - Buymg black walnuts 12¢
(304)675·2023
per pound after hulling, call
Beautiful long 1'1a1r cat (740)698-6060 buy1ng until
Young adult female Calico Nov 15th
Call (740)441 0145
I buy Junk Cars (304 )773
Free to gOOd home female 5004
Beagle fnendly spayed
I \11'1 11\\11 \I
vacCinated good With cl'1ll.., I I~\ ll I ..,
dren Please call (740)245
5186
3

Walnuts call afte r 12 OOpm
(740)446·3789
Young female cat tortoise
shell spayed declawed lov·
able good with other am·
mals (740)698 9252

r

LEARN

TO
DRIVE
• NO E)(PER ENCE NECESSARY
• FULL TI'-'E CLASSES

'COL

I..o6'1 ANU
FOUND

TRAINING

• FINANCING AVAILABLE
• JOB PLACEMENl
' ENROLLING NON

Female Beagle found by
' Oh1o Valley Bank 1n Sprmg
Valle~ Fnendly Please call
(740)245 5186

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRAILER

TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE VA

Found Black male lab
green collar around lhe
Global Planl (304)882 2161

1·800·334·1203
www.allanct~nrale com

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4's For Sale .
........ .... 725
Announcement.............. .. ....................... 030
Antiques..
.... ••• . ••.
530
Apartments lor Rent ................................ .'440
Auction and Flea Market.... ... . ... 9...080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories...... ..... ....... 760
Auto Repa1r . .............. . .•. ......... ...........no
Autos lor Sate.... ..... .... ........ .... .710
Boats &amp; Motors tor Sale ............................ 750
Bultd1ng Supplies .. .. . ... ..... .. .550
Business and Buildings ............................ 340
Business Opportunity ....
..210
Bus1ness Training .........................~ ............ 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ..... ................ 790
Camping Equipment... ......... ..... ....... 780
Cards of Thanks..
... . . .• . 010
190
Child/Elderly Care. ....
Electricai/Refrlgerallon ...... .....................840
Equipment lor Rent..... .... . .. . .... .480
Excavating
... . .... ... 830
Farm Equipment
..... . . .....610
Farms for Rent. .................. ...................430
Farms lor Sale .•• .
.•• . .... . ... 330
For Lease... .. ........................................ 490
For Sale .
.... .. . . .. ... .. .. . 585
For Sale or Trade... ......... ... .. ................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetablos....... . .. . ..... .. .... .. .. 580
Furntshed Rooms. ..• . .•..
450
General flaullng .......................................850
Giveaway. . . ....
.040
Happy Ads ............................................050
Hay &amp; Grain
.. . .... ... .. ...... ...640
Help Wanted...... ........ ........ ...................... t 1D
Home Improvements..
....................810
Homes lor Sate....
.
•. . ..... ... 310
Household Gooda ................................. 510
Houses lor Rent ... .
.... .. .. 410
In Memoriam . . ......... ........................... 020
Insurance. . .... .... . . .•• . ............. 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment..... ..... .... 660
.. •

.....

lwrlghf4!11c net

Lost 2 Female Beagles--1

(2) 10 week old k1ttens to a

lovmg
9325

It

L&lt;liTAND

~

Personals

Outreach lmmunizalton
Clinic

'&lt;Eribun·e

To Place

.•..

..........630

Lost and Found...... ...... ....... ..... .•.. 060
Lots &amp; Acreage... ....
... .. ................. 350
Miscellaneous... . .... . .•.. ....... ..... ..170
Miscellaneous Merchandlae .......................540
Mobile Home Repair
.............. 860
Mobile Homes lor Rent......... .. ...... .. •.. .420
Mobile Homes tof Sale . .. ........ ..........320
Money to Loao..... ........ . ..... .. ... ... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers... ....................740
Muslcatlnstrumants .....
.... 570

both peraonai)J and financially, we may
be looking lor JOU. Come let UB sflow you
why we are the pnmlum 1ulo dealer
In lhe Trt·Siatll area.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

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

Livestock

out 1n your cunent job Of looking to gain

llflrwwiiWIIII
lllllllllllltl . . . . p k ....
I lflr 11111111111- I -

www.mydallysentlnel.com

'&lt;Eribune - Sentinel - l\.e !iter
CLASSIFIED

pomts and two kills and Kat1e
Hayman had tour ktlls and
po1nts each Setter Bnttany
B 1ssell scored three pomts
m additiOn to leadmg the
way Ill llSSISlS With 18
Eastern was 70-of-?'l
servmg as a team
It was the Lady Eagles'
th1rd v1ctory over M11ler
th1s year, as they took two
earher meel!ng s dunng TnValley Conference Hockmg
play

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Public Notice

Monday, October 24, 2005

2005

.... .. ................................. 005

Pets tor Sale .. .. ..... .... ..... ..... 580
- Pl~mblng &amp; Heating .......................... 820
- Prolesatonal Services.. ... . ................ 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair . ..•
... .•. .t6D
Real Estate Wanted ................ , ............... 360
School&amp; Instruction... ... .. ..... ..... .t&amp;D
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer ........................... 650
Situations Wanted .. .. ......................... 120
Space lor Rent................. ...
.......... 460
Sporting Goods .
.. ......................... 520
- SUV's lor Sale... •••
. . . •. 720
Trucks lor Sale ... ................................. 715
Upholstery
.... . .. . ....... 870
vans For Sale... ...... . .......
.... ..730
Wanted to Buy
. ................. 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Suppltea .... . .... 620
wanted To Do
.. . .. ......................... 160
Wanted to Rent... . .... . .....
470
Yard Sale- Gallipolis . ....... ...... ... . ..072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle
.. . ....... 074
Yard Sale-PI Pleasant... . ....... . .. . .. 076

, 1'1'\Ai'S

e.e"cAvS6
A DOt!

IS Jli)l A

An Eltcellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304·882·2645

WS'tl\AN
Wllrt
fl-of&gt;f'V

AVON! All Areas' To Buy or
Sell Shirley Spears 304
675·1429

t:PtR-4.

BarlenderiWaltress Training
Available Apply at Jericho
Inn (304)675·4167
Beaut1c1an
HAIR STYLIST
Wanted lor our Jackson
Salon Hourly plus upscale
commiSSIOn Chnsllne s Hair
&amp; Tannmg 1·800.488·5n7
(740) 288·3249

=
I• zf

CAPTAINS CHOICE
You have a truck and you
www com1ca.com
wanna make morel lets go
door to doorl Call the
Captain today fo r the great
1:'::~------.,
pay Also look•ng lor sales 1110
11 110
partners
(740)645· ~.
EZMEAT
~
as 1er wt exper.ence
HOLZER SENIOR CARE Is there anyone 1n the
pply m person Thorn
CENTER
Pomeroy/Middleport area
Do It Ce~ter GallipOliS CAREER OPPORTUNITY lookmg lor full t1me work?
H
IN HEALTHCARE
Are you look•ng lor bener
than mmlmum wages?
Due lo mternal promotions Pnmary schedule
1s
Holzer
Senter
Care
Center
Monday
Friday
Sam
5pm
Sales Manager
a lull-t1me pos1tton open Must have valid dnvers
espons1btl11es 1nclud has
for Director of Nurs1ng
lice nse and dependable
ecrU1!1ng and tra1nmg o Must be a graduate ot an vehicle Must be fam1har w1th
arners customer servtc accred ted school of reg1s· Metgs County
nd meetmg sales goals I tered nursmg preferably a Send resumes 1nclud1ng
ou have a pos hve alii BSN Requ1res prev1ous references to CLA Bolt 2
ude are a sell slarter Skilled Nurs1ng Faci11ty c/o Pomeroy Da1ly Sentinel
nd a team player w experience as an Ass1stant
PO Bo)( 729
uld like to talk to you D1rector of Nursmg or duec
Pomeroy,
OH 45769
ust be dependable an tor ol Nursing In a long term - - - - ,--ave reliable transpor1a care lac1hty
LICENSED SOCIAL
10n POSIIIOn offers al
WORKER
ompany beneiiiS 1nclud We off compel1bve wages Overbrook Rehab1htat10n
ng health dental v1s1on and employment benehts Center IS now accepting
ndllle msurance 401k Including
resumes for the poSIIton of
a1d vacatiOn and person
01rector of Social Servtees
I days Please sen Health lnsura'nce
The qualified candidate
8SUIJle to
must be a LSW possess1ng
Dental Insurance
Paul Barker
strong verbal al"'d wntten
l1fe
lnsur&lt;\nce
Circulation Manager
commun•cat1on
skills
401K Plan
Ohio Valhty Publishing S1'10rHerm D1sab ltty
Mechcatd Med1care and
825 Th1rd Ave
MDS knowledge Long term
Regular Rate Increases
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
care B)(penence preferred
t,Jntform Allowance
Or email to
but not requ.red Qualified
Vacaton
pbarker@mydallytrlcandidates may send
Patd In ServiCes
bunecom
resumes to Charla BrownJury Duty Pay
McGuire
RN LNHA
Expenence
Pay
Drivers Needed
Admm1strator 333 Page
Holiday
Pay
CDL Onvers Willing to dnve
Street Middleport Oh1o
for local ready·m•x-concrete
If you are a person who val 45760 EOE
company Expenence IS
preferred but not necessary ues mak•ng a difference 1n -Loc_a_l-oe-n-la-l-off-.,-.-.-ae-k_m_g
Driver must be w1lhng to do lha lives or others and wanl an enthus1ast1c Individual to
pre maintenance on trucks to be a member of a caring train as a cliniCal dental
dedicated &amp; committed ass1stanl Must have gener
&amp; equ pn1ent yard work &amp;
other m•scellaneous chores team stop by and see Phyllis al oHice SkillS, computer
Exper1ence operating equ1p Can1rell AN BSN DON or skillS and a des1re to devel·
men! &amp; extra sk11is such as Teresa Remy MHA LNHA op denial knowledge
BSN AN Holzer System Please send a hand written
weld1ng a plus
Adm1n1strator at 380
Call (304)937-3410
Colonial Dnve Bidwell OH note md•cating your mterest
and resume 1o P 0 bo.w. 704
Envelope stulfers earn or g1ve us a call at (740)446· Pomeroy Oh•o 45769
money workmg a1 homa 5001
LPN needed full11me
Call 24 hr for details 972
Monday Friday day st11ft, no
504 2690
weekends no holidays
Established 1anmng and ha r
Apply at 936 Sl At 160
salon lookmg for an expen
Gallipolis (740)446 9620
anced Cosmotologlsl and
Middleport Pol1ce Depl Is
Naln Tech BenefitS mclud·
accept1ng applicatiOn! for a
ed Send resumes to CLA
Box 555 c/o Gallipolis - - - - - - - - pollee off1cer Call Ch1el
Tnbune PO Bolt 469 Home Heal11'1 Care of Bruce Sw11t at 740 992 6424
Gallipolis OH 45631
Southeast OhiO IS currentty for mformahOn
h1nng a1des and Reg1s1ered - - - - - - - For a lim1ted t1me make 50% Nurses Full T1me Part Now h~r~ng lull and part time
selling Avon Call (740)446 T1me
Per-01em McCiures Restaura nts m
3358
Compet111va wages llex1ble Middleport and Galhpohs
scheduling Call 1011 frM 1 Apply between 10-10 30am
888 368 1100
Work for a Cause you
Now H1rlng Safe Onyers
Believe In I
Apply 111 Person at your local
Dommo s Must be over 18
In-Home Careg1vers
Help recrull volunteers
In-home serv1ces agency Is Overbrook Center Is currentlor Orgamzat1ons ll~e
currently
acceplmg ly ecceptinn• apphcatloris lor
Caregivers
lor
the Pt Nursmg Assistant Classes
The American Cancer
Pleasant Glenwood New The classes Will be October
Society
Haven aM Mason area 25 Novem ber 13 Cta.sses
and the
CPR and F1rst Aid tra•nlng a will be held dunng tl'1e day
American Heart
plus You can apply In per with some classes dudng
Alaoclatlon
son 0 Mason County Action the evemng hours Class
ln·Home days Will vary Monday ·
We are currently otter~ng Group Inc
Serv1ces
221
Ma1n
Street Sunday Aschedule will be
Full t1me and Part time
PO Bo• 441 Pt Pt8aaant available at the tron1 oft1ee
sl'1tfts earn1ng up to
25550 or phone Space IS limited All Inter$9/hour lnfoCISIOn offers WV
(304)675 3300
Monday este d appII cat Ion al 333
a ProfesSional Work
through
Fr
day
8
00
am to Page Street Middleport
Environment and a Great
4 00 pm EOE. MIF AJA
OH NO Phone CALL.S
Benefits Package•
PLEASE!
-:--.,----:----:Start now to earn an
LPN Career Opportunity Overbrook Centar 19 current
extra S11hour wHh our Make a difference and JIM a 1y accepting applications for
ew Anendance Bonus canng team • Echoing a Full Ttme RN Superv1sor
Meadows IS an MRDO fadll Tl'11s 15 a 7PM to 7AM shift
Call Now!
ty offering res1dants out All 1nterested applicants
1-Sn-453-6247 X1941
stand1ng nursmg care We should pick up an appllca·
currently have an LPN 110n s.t 333 Page Street,
Part time floor teen positton 8\lemng posttlon available Middleport, Oh For add•available Approx 25 30 Wages start at $13050 per tlonet mlormallon please
hours per week Please hour Apply 1n person contact HOllie Bumgarner,
apply at SceniC Hlis Nursmg Echoing Meadows 319 W Overbrook
Staff
Cenler 311 81Jck Ridge Umon Atl'1ens Oh 45701 Development Coordinator at
Road Bidwell Ohio
740-594 3541
992·6472

~

r.':::"------.,

--HELP--W.•ANTED--_.1..

2005 by NEA, Inc

'
Owner-Operator
Local Hauling Wellston Area
Monday-Saturday
Your Truck our Tanker
Full time· Short Team
Call ~548-8694
For DeiBIIS ask tor HA
Dept
-------ParamediCS &amp; EMT s
needed Apply al 1354
Jackson P ke Gallipolis
-

- - - - - - - -.

Patnot EMS seeking FT/PT
EMT's &amp; Paramed•cs After
ntroductory period EMrs
make up to $1 011'1r
ParamediCS up 10 $12/hr
100"'o medical msurance
prescnpt1on card pa1d days
off &amp; vacation retirement
pa1d tra1n1ng All vehicles low
mileage new eqUipment
For more 1nformat1on
www patnotems com or call
(740)532 2222
_ _ _ _ _ _ __
Political Fundrllllng
Do you like to talk on
the phone?
Lad olf? Retired?
Need a change?
Come work In our
prolessmnal call center
makmg calls for IM NAA
and other Political
organ•zatlons
Med1CaVOentaV401K
Vacat1on every 6 months
Full and Part lime ava !able
Up to $8 an hour plus you
could earn an additional
$1/hour with our
Attendance Bonus
1-877-46:).6247 ext 2304
--------Reg1stered Nursell consed
Soc al Worker
Mason County Action
Group
Inc
In home
Servtces IS accepting
resumes for a Reg1stered
Nurse or Licensed Soc1al
Worker tor a case managemenl pos1t1on on a per d1em
bas1s Must have current
WI/ license Strong verbal
and written commun•catlan
sk•lls a must Qualified candidates may send resume to
Mason County Achon
Group Inc
In Home
Serv1ces 221 Matn Street
PO Box 441 Pt Pleasant
WV 25550 For additional
InformatiOn please conlacl
JenmferTI'lomas, AN or Lisa
Templeton AN @675-3300
EOE M!F
-----~-- .

IVA

SECURITY

PROFESSIONALS
National secunly f1rm seeks
lullltme SUPERVISOR tor
lhe Apple Grove WV area
Oualll1ed applicants must
be at least 21 years old HS
dlplt&gt;ma/GED no criminal
record &amp; pass drug test
Prior secunty superv150 r
expenence reqUired or else
law enfocremenUmlhtary
WE OFFER
E"cellent
pay
"
FREE Healthcare
L1fe Insurance
·Matching 401 (k)
-Free un,lorms
-TUitionS asslslance
-Awardsll:xmuses
Call1·866-325 4150
between 9AM &amp; 5PM MF
or fax resume to 412·325·
4154
EOE
Work around your schedule
$·50·$1500 monthly part
time $2000·$4500 full·tlme
( 3 0 3 ) 2 9 2 "9 9 6 0
www home303 com

MONF"'
lUWAN

SECURITY
PROFESSIONALS
National secunty f1rm seeks
full t1me SUPERVISOR for
arrow Smart Contac
the Apple Grove Wll area
he OhiO DIVIS on o
Qualified apphcanls must be Financial lnst•lu110n'~
at laast 21 years old HS Prt1ca of Consume
diploma/GED, no cnmmal
tfa1rs BEFORE you ref1
record &amp; pass drug test
ance your home o
Prior secunty suparv1sor
blain a loan BEWARE
expenence required or else
f req1.1ests for any tar~
law enlorcamenVmilitary
dvance payments o
WE OFFER
ees or •nsurance Cal
·E)(cellent Pay
he Office of Consume
FREE healtl'1care
ffatrs loll free at 1 966
Lfe Insurance
78-0003 to learn If tht
1 Match1ng 401 (k)
~ortgage
broker o
Free uniforms
ender
s
properl
·TUition ass1stance
1censed {ThiS 1s a publl
·Awards/bonuses
ervlca announcemen
Call
1-866·325-4 1so rom the 01'11o Valle
between 9am &amp; 5pm M F Publishing Company)
or else lax resume to 412
'325·4154
EOE
PR&lt;Wmi~ONAL
----~------~~~
Work 0 home Earn $450 --$1 500 monthly part t1me
TURNED DOWN ON
$ 2 000 $4 500 lull "me
SOCIAL SECURITY /SS!?
www OurAnswer com
No Fee Unless We W1n1
150
ScHooLS
1·888·582-3345

i

Newly remodeled 3 or 4
bedrooms central a1r lull
basemen1 hardwooct floors
detached garage large cov·
ered pat o tenced back
yard close lo schools Pomt
Pleasanl
$69 500
(740J709'13B2

No Down Payment Less
than pertec1 cred•t 0 K F ve
m1nutes from
Holzer
HOSpital Three BedroomsOne Bath Le11ellol Newly
remodeled 740 416·3130
Three Bedroom 11 /2 balh
lull basement v1nyl s ding 4
car garage $85 000 00
258 Roush Lane 740·3677698

Th ree Bedroom one bath
lull basement Garage W11h
1
..__aiiNsnrucniiiiiiiiiiliiiONiiia_.l
appliances Across tram
~
l'lT.!"--:":-";.;;;;;;;;;;;, Park $57 000 below appr
Concealed PIStol Class Nov
HOMDi
740 949-1372
5 2005 9 oo am VFW L.~--,;,roiiiRiioiiSiO&lt;\LiiiE-_.1 I""' MOBil.!: HoM~.li
Mason WV Ph (740)843- ·
5555
1995 Doublew1de 3br 2ba ·--fii'ORiiiiSiiAiiil.iiiE-_.1 .
- - - - - - - -· w/attached
Garage
Gallipolis Career College Breezeway &amp; Barn 1 56 1994 Clayton 14k72 3BR
(Careers Close To Home) acres Sandh~l Ad $72 000 28A CIA wfheatpump very
Call Today! 740·446·4367 {304)895 3068
clean e11cellent condition
1 BOO 214 0452
Must be moved $12 900
,_ gaiiii)OI acareercoll&amp;ge c0111 3 Bedroom 2 Bath wth (740)379-2617 or (740)379
Accntd!led Member Accredtl ng F1replace m R1o Grande 8 9489 lea11e message
CouncM lor 1noependent Collage!!
acres mil 401160 barn
='",;';;."""";;.;;.;.'.;".;."_;";..__ __, $125
000 (740)709-1166
1995161180 Fleetwood 3bd
r:
EOUS
2ba
on 1 3 acres 815 Clark
ll'JJ.':'JLr..l.LJ'lrlj
1
1 3 Bedroom 2 bath Spill Chapel Ad Call (740)367·
Level Home Very n•ce 7187
Neighborhood $145 000 - - -- - - - Charlie Hawk w111 be at (304)675
n1o
1996 Skyline 28x60 3BR
Hawk Ad Junk Store
2BA fireplace ca1hedral
Athens
several 3 BR, 21/2 Bath, 81 Level, 2 ce1l1ng $35 000 (740)709
Wednesdays 12 6 also Car Garage, Barn Apprmc 1166
Pomeroy Barn behind Ewing 2 acres $120 000 (304)882
1997 Clayton mobile home
Funeral Home se11eral 8227 or (304)882·289()
14)(50 Includes washer
Fndays 12-6 {740)378·6262
7BR, 5BA Foreclosure only dryer &amp; lurmture $9 500
or 740 412·5349
$18 000 For llslmgs call PhOne (740)256 1734
DIRECT TV 3 room witl'1 800·391·5228 ext F254
T1vo FREE 145 channels
2002 Clayton only $142 per
only $39 00 per month -.. Ask
Attention!
month w•ll deliver (740)385
how to gel FREE HBO Local company offering "NO 4367
MAX and home enterta1n DOWN PAYMENT" pro- . , - - - - - - - rams for you to buy your Greal used 99 Skyline
men! system Call BOO 523 ghome lnslead of ren11ng
•6
1e 2)( 6
' xII80 Ivmy 11shmg
7556 lor detailS
b
lh
• 100% flnanc•ng
wa s g amour a CaII
100
WANrnl
• Less !han perlect credll :..(7_40_.:&gt;_38:-5_962
-:'--.,..-1
L.---'J:iloil.iiDoiilo-_.1 accepled
New 16 w1de only $190 per
.,
• Payment could be the month V1nyl S1d ng Sh1ngle
Roof &amp; Delivery {740)385
Attar Life lapTop Sales &amp; same as rent
Locators 7671
Serv1ce PC &amp; Mac Repa•r &amp; Mortgage
(740)387 .()()()()
Servce 740-992 1525
New 16x76 3 bedroom/2
balh Mmutes from Athens
Child
Care
Mason
Must sell Move mloday Call
Days/Evemngs {304)773·
(740)385·2434
5273 "
Trailer for Sale
2000
Computer Repau and
C1ay1on 16 X 70 3 bed
Troubleshoot Web Destgn All rtlletiAIII• ed~ertlslng ropm--2 balh central a1r-·
In thll new1paper Ia
Natworkmg Programmmg
porches $23 000 740 992
aubjectlo thl Federel
Build New Systems Restore
5972
Fair Housing Act of 1968
Windows V1rus Removal
whlch makaa llllleg•l to
Certlf•ed Pl'1one#740-992
advertiae anv
2395
preference llmlhttloh or
discrimination beaed on
84 5 acres 6 m1le!': south of
riC. C(llor, religion eex
Magic Years Day Care
Oak Hill Wayne NaliOnar
f•mlllalst•tut
or
national
Preschool 7 30 5 JOt
origin, or any lntenllon to Forest borders 11 on 3 s des
"Putting Children F•rst"
m11ke any euch
740 682 7318 after 6 m
Ages 2 12 limited "pull up·
preference, llmUallon or
spaces available Slate
Rl:Al f.';"rAl'E
dlscrlmlnallon'
Licensed lmk Approved
WANI&gt;lJ
Excellent Skills Spaces
Thl• newspa~r will not
ava•lable for all ages
knowingly ecc:ept
Need to sell your home?
ed'olertl~emente for reel
Late on paymenls d vorce
nlete which 11 In
)ob transfer or a death? t
..,.--,------, vtot=r:~!:-.:;:.,~ur can buy your home All cash
and QUICk clOSing 740 416•
BtrsiNl.."tS
lnformMi that all
3130
OPPotnuNm
dwelling• 8dvertlaed in
IH "\I..,
·-------lhll newspaper are
avlllable on an equal
C;=::;;:===~
':::op:p:ort:'"'::"Y:bo::":"::~

r•o

rro "',. _. . . __ •...

r

itO

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

~ Gel Pa1d 1o
....,._.

Hunt &amp; Flsh!llllll
urn your paSSIOn Into
uslness
Call J•
304 516 2707
•NOTICE•
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
NG CO recommends tha
....... ;
...... ._
'"'w do business Wlfh p....le you know and NOT t
-~nd money through til
,,all unt1l you have •nvestl
~ated lhe offenna:
Of

c

r16

HotJSE)S

1
G II
~~ n - sett ng m a 18 ~---··~"';o;;""•-•
c ountry
oun1Y1 3 bed rooms 2
b lh
t
1
$89
000
a s •rep ace
1 Br House and 3 Br House
(740)709 f f66
•
tor Rent call (304)67;1·2441
between gam 2pm
House for Sale 3 bedroom
lull s ze dry basemenl f16 South Park Drive
Greet Nelghborl'1ood corner References
required
lol nght In town Take a look (3041675.7808
1001 Kenny Cl (r1ght beh no
Jr H1gh School) Shown by 2 story 3 Bedroom 1 Bath
Appl $84 500 (3040675 Ktchen
with
3123 or (304)675-(1()32
Aefrlneralor!Srove
LA
OR
•
ut 11ity Room LP Gas Heat
New all bnck 2BA 2BA 2 Approx 7 m11es oul L•-"ln
''""'
car gara!;je m R1o Grande Pike s 4oatmo Includes
Call (740)446 2927 or water
$400 depos•t
(7401339 0365
References
Acqu1red
Three Rental Properl•es for (740)256 1106 or (740)645·
Sale Ouplelt each w1lh 3 :65::7::3-:----::--:-:BIA UR D/R Kitchen bath 28 D house all elec1rlc
&amp; porch House- 3 B!R liR deposll 5400/monlh no
Kitchen Bath Cot1age BIR pets 15 m1les soull'l on Rt
KitChen Bath
Aenlal 7 (740) 441 , 1917
1ncome for all tllrae-Appro)';
$1 OOOiper monlh Price for 3BR 2BA 3 acres on river
all thraa -$70 000 locate· with dock for boats Very
104·106 71h Street Pomt nice $800 dep $800
Pleasant (304)675 2495 (7 40)367 7762 (740)4•6·
after 7 00 pm
4060 (740)367 7272

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, October 24, 2005
Monday, October 24, 2005

~.,t.'o--~-~
..RE-~;.:"-.-JI L,r__Ae.: m-•R•Rf.~:;s__l Lr.'o-·H·~~-O:.IJ)-.-J
APART~

AT
BUDGET
refrigerator, no pets. 50 MENTS
Olive St. !350 montll.' PRICES AT JACKSON
(740}446-3945
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344 to $442.
6 rooms &amp; bath , stove , WalK to shop &amp; movies. Call
refrig $400/mo No pets. 740-446-~568
Equal
Recently remodeled . 644 Housing Opportunity.
Second Ave. (740)446·0332

ACROSS

wringer washers. Will do
repairs on major brands in

Hometown
(atefIng

L---liUUUU&gt;iili0:0:..-.,1

~t~~~~~ ~~:u~ttym~~~~ p~~~
6

L--··

_.~

r

Russ

termg·

Phone (740) 992·3471
Fax
992_5976

I

tor application &amp; information. , 18x26

(740)992-0165

,

metal
garage
w/garage door. must be
1 900 7401379
moved. $ '
' (
"
2617 or (7.A0)379-9489,
leave message
·

AJC,
GallipOlis
Ferry.
{740)4 46. 3481 ,
Small 2 Bedroom, no pets,
Beautiful 3 piece Antique
WID t10okup .
$350.00 Furnished upstairs, 3 roOms Bedroom Suile, Full sizE,
month
$300.00 deposit. &amp; bath. Clean, ref. &amp; dep. Ca11(304)575-mo $5oo
304-773-9192.
required . No pets. (740)446Commercial refrigerator 2
Stop renting Buy 4 bedroom 1519.
door, stainless steel, runs
foreclosure $15,000. For list· - - - - - - - - like
new, $soo firm .
ings 800-391·5228 ell!. 1709 Gracious livi ng. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Village Electrical, plumping, hot
Totally remodeled
Manor
and
Riverside water healer &amp; 1-tVAC parts,
Interior!
Apartments in Middleport ventless natural gas heater.
3 bedroom house, central From $295-$444. Call 740- ~:~!;r:H 236 after 6 pm,
heat &amp;. air, ~asner/dryer 992-5064. Equal Housing
hook-I.Jp, lanced yard, star- 0-'p'po_r_Tu_n_
itie
_s_.- - - age bldg. $475 pEr month Firewood for Sale (304)675·
rent. (7 40)441 . 1111 .· ·
Modern 1 bedroom apt. 4475
{740)446·0390,
--'----'~--"Two &amp; three bedroom in - - - - - - - - - Four church pews, 15 ft.
Pomeroy and Syracuse N. 3rd Ave ., Middleport, 2 long, each, red padded
(740)992-3702 or 416-SS4?. bedroom unfurnished apart- seats. Good condition, $300.
ment, no pEtS , deposit &amp; Oak pulpit. $200. very good
l\1081LE HQ!\.1l:S
previous rental references , condition. Piano, good con·
mK Rmr
1740I992-0t65
dilion, $100. (740)682-7624'.

"F.''M!LY OWNED"
~

David, Donna &amp; Brad Deal
• Caring •

Affordable Services

(J04) 67 S·IiDOO

1401 Kanawha St.

view

TOWNHOUSE/APT$
NOW LEASING!
SPACIOUS

New and Used Furnaces
Installation
available
(740)44 t ·2667,

BOTH FLATS &amp;
TOW NHOUSES
AVAILABLE
'ALL ELECTRIC
'CE NTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
"STOVE, REF,
"DISHWASHER
"GARBAGE DISPOSAL
"WIND BLINDS
'CEILING FANS

2BR mobile home for rent
$325/deposit, '$325/rent plus
utilities. On Polecat Rd.
(74())446·41 07 &lt;lr (740}44 12707.
river

- - - - - - -- -

2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM

2BR mobile home lor rent
$325/deposit, $325/rent plus
utilities. On Polecat Ad.
(740)446-4107 or (740)441·
2707.

Beautiful

NEW ELLM VIEW

'WATEA, SEWAGE; &amp;
"TRASH INCLUDED
PETS CONDITIONAL
( 304 )882 _3017

in

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
AngiE ,
For
Concrete.
Channel, Flat Ba,r, Steel
Grating
For
Dra ins,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, aam·4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
Sunday. (740)446-7300

&amp;

Kanauga. Ideal for 1·Z peoSeasoned Firewood mostly
pte. No pets. please
Oak $40 load (304}576·
ApplicaiiO ns being taken.
2634
Call (740)44t-0181
~
',.
o
BlJILDING
Mobile Honie tor AE!nl
Located
in
Mason.
S375Jmo., $375/ depos1t. No One BR apt. quiet. priv8te
oulsit:le pets. References location , close to hOspital, Block, brick, sewer pipes,
reqwed Can (304)675-3423 ref. &amp; deposit required. windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, OH
(740}446·2957.
Mob1le home sitEs in :..__:__ _ _ _~-- C"a:;.II,::74;::0-:;:2;:4~5;;;
·5~t2:;_1:,;.._ __,
Country Homes, Shade· Pleasant Valley ApartmEnt
PEJs
$t30 mo. (740)385-4019.
Are now ta~ing Applications·
FOR SALE
APo\RTMENTS
lor 2BR , 3BR &amp; 4BR .. L
____
Applications
are
taken
I''OR RFNf
Monday thru Friday, from 2 AKC male Beagles $75
9:00 A.M.-4 RM . OfficE is each (304)882·2972
1 and 2 bedroom aparr- Located at 1151 · Evergreen
ments, furn1shed and unfur· Drive Point Pleasant. wv Full blooded Lab puppies,
nlshed , security deposit Phone No. is (304)675- no papers, parents on prem· ises $50 (304)576-2634
required. no pets. 740-992· 5806. E.H,O

j

_'_'_"'"_"'_"'"'_""_""---~ L---SuwliiliiOiii''ill'l;;iii.-.,1

r
0

2218.

18R WID hookup, electric or
gas, no pets. $290 plu s
deposit.
(740)441 -1t84,
(740}441-0194
2 bedroom apartment for
rent in Syracuse. $200
deposit, $335 per month
rent. must have sufficient
income to qualify, (740)378·
61t1

,_

lilt..

2
bedroom
apartmEnt
Racme . very nice, clean,
$425 per month • pluS
deposit, no pets, references
reQuired.
740-441-0110,
(740)992·5174

2 Bet:lroom Apartment. WI D
Hook-up, Water, Trash ,
Sewer
Paid.
$375/mo.
{740)367·7746, (740)367·
7015
2 BR, washer dryer hookup.
heat pumpiAC.
1 BR cabin. heat pump, also
storage building.
)
_
1740 286
2240 or (740 )441 -0117·
2BR
apt.
lor
rent
$425/deposit. $425Jrent plus
utlllt1es.
In
Kanauga .
(740)446·4107 or (740)441·
2707 .
3 &amp; 2 BR apts. Close to
Holzer
hospitaL
WID
hookups.
water/sewer

·

'

rio

i

SPACE
FOR Rf;NT

Alto Sa~eophone Bundy 11.
Selman Co;mpany, good
.
pads, excellent condition.
Downtown Office Space- 5 740-949-2~75 days or· 740room suite $650tmo: 1 room 949·2293 nights. $300.00
offiCe- $225.1mo .: 2 room OBO
suite $250/mo . Security
deposit required. You pay Upnght Piano $ 200 or Free
utilities. All spaces very nice. 10 Church or Non-Profit
Elevator. Call (740)446·3644 Organization ' call for intor:
tor appointment
mation [~04)669·0201
For Lease: Otfice or retail
spaces ,, very good cond 1
·
•
tion Downto n Gall' I'
App.rox t600wsq It achiPO IS,.
v£DU
·
· ·e
I'!'U'ln
or 2 baths. Lease prlce
EQull'I\IENT
negotiable to encourage
new·
business.
Call John Dnre Commercial
(740)44&amp;4425 or (740)446· Workslte
Products.
3936.
Compact Excavators/Skid
Steers/Tractor
loader
Pomeroy-Office or Retai l
Backhoe
''
stock
.
~hock
·
Space, newly remodeled.
"'
(740)992-3702 or ~16-5547 out our rental rateal Great
financing
available.
Storage Rentals lor Boats, Carmichael Equipment, tnc.
Campers, Cars. Mason Co. {740)446·2412 .
Fairgrounds At 62 $8 a loot
(304)675·8463
Now's the t1me to buy a new
John Deerel 0% Fixed
Financing a\lailabl8 now at
Carmichael Equipment on

t.,--i.iiiioiiltliit.""'P

l'o-Oilltr

odFinmllo«iitt

C..O.Ifl'
.OOS&lt;ntir)

W.tHill'lilfr,
LirOIHfor&lt;rll
lhloc

llilli11LIIml01

Lll\~HOIII

""""Foori,

S!mfunl

i&lt;mtli)

experience

(740) 416·4604

457•71

740·949·2217

97 Beech

Ed DiiVowner

·

Stre~t

STANLEY TREE

"jf"to.--....,A....,_...;;;;;;;;;
I
FOR~.E

TRIMMING I

GENERAL
CONTRACTING

·--iiiiitiiiiiiii;.,_.l

t987 Volvo $1 ,500, 1995
Chevy $4,500 very good
condition (304)675-7217
1989 Chev. Bretfa. Run
good. $500 OBO; 19!;11
Boniviile $300 OBO needs
fuEl pump .. 740-992·3457.
1989 Ford Club Wagon XLT,
89K miles, WEll maintained.
$2830. 1995 Ford Crown
Victoria LX, 130K miles.
good conditio n. $2430.
(740)441'-92S2
'-::-:-:'--:-:--::-::--1993 Cadillac DeVille, 4.9VB, . 59,000
miles, all
options, leather. new · iires,
maroon.
$5,000
firm .
(740)645·0626.
--------1994 Bu1ck Lesabre. High

2001 Chevy Cavalier z2 4 .
79.000 miles, runs like new.
looks great. $2,200 080.
(740)446·0171
85 Chevy Cava lier lor sale
(304)675-1506
93 Toyota Camry $600. Cars
from 5oo. Listing 800 _391 _
5227 Ext. C548 _
:.....:....:.....::.:..::____
95 Park Ave. Good condition
(tires , body, AJC) Good gas
mileage.
$2.000
firm .
(740)446·4336 anytime.

s

~ 15

TRUCKS
FOR SALE

• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates

-------_.1

s

InCluded.
Starting
at
5450 /month.
deposit - - - - - - - - required. No pets. (740)441· D1nmg room table and 6
1184, {740)441 ·0194
chairs. like new $350. Curio
cabinet $200. Ca11!740)441·
3 rooms and bath. All utilities 8299 _
paid. Downstairs, no pets.
$450/ mo. 46 Olive St Kenmore Washer $125 ,
(740)446·3945.
Maytag Dryer $75. Kenmore
Refr igerato1 fa1rty new $100,
Apartment available now
1 Green Machine Weed Riverbend Apts. NEw Haven Ealer
w/bla des
WV. Now accepting apphca· $100,(304)773-5930
tiorts lor Hud-Subs1d1zed ,
one Bedroom Apls. Utilihes Queen
size
softslde
included. Based on 30% of waterbed mal1ress and foun·
adjusted Income.
Call datiOn , quilted mat1r9ss is
(304)882-3121 available lor waveless nas two bladders
Semor and D1sabled PeoplE . w1th individual heaters,
E.HO
$150 (740)992-5887

------~--

(Commercial and Residen lial)
Mowin_g, Trimming, Tree Trimming, Aerillion, Fertilization,
Spraytng ol fence hnes, Leaf Removal, as well as smaU
landscaping jobs such as planting and mulching.

FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED lOWEST PRICES

\(ANS

·--·FiiOiiiRiiSiiALEiiii;.,-'
1999 Chevrolet Venture
Extended Van : blue 82,000
miles: great condition : one
owner; $8,500; {740)367·
7435: (740)339-3955
Plush. full size t99 3 luxury
van .
Great
condi tion.
Mechanic owned. Built-in
solar recha rging system ,
77,400 miles. Must SEE!.
$5 ,995. Call John (740)4469961
40

01 green Ford F150 XLT 4dr,

4 \\'HF.FJ:.ER~

Let me do it for ycul

r ..

0,.p;;...______,

·-------,J
M~oRSll

992-2459
or 740·591·2635. Fiberglass
boat.
BSHP
Also 1994 Fl 5 0 Ext.Cab, Chrysler motor, cover, n~wBaby donkeys- Males &amp; 8FT. Bed. 162 ,300 miles trailer, $2720. (740)441"$1'12000ii"_.oo
_~:----, 9282
female. {740)446-1158. "
11
..,ttn It 1...,
VANS
Horse Boarding close to
10
town. lnsicte riding . CaN Ron
HO:\IE
Sheets (740}441-9531 .
1993 Plymouth Voyager, 7 ·--·~iiliii'RiiiOIOV.i.iii
'll-iillFiil'miioil";.,.l
passenge r ,van.
Good
Horse Boarding
Inside shape, 25 mpg, 52.000
BASEMENT
Riding Ring &amp; Pasture. 080. (740 )441 -1 417 alter
WATERPROOFING
(304)773-5081 evenings
5pm.
U~cond1t1onal lifetime guarantee. Local rE!Ierences furRegistered Angus bulls and 1997
Plymo uth
Grand nished. Established 1975.
heifers, 40 years of A.l. Voyager. Wh ite 2 sl. drs .. Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
breeding _ Slate Run Farm, good col)tl., runs good. 0870, Rogers Base ment
www . stateru nfarm .com $3,500 OBO. Call {740)44t- Waterproof1ng
0712.
{740)286-5395, •
uvr.;,JU\.,n

r

L---FiiOiiiRiiSIIAiiili.E;.,.,J

3+
4....

Palls
Pass

3.
s•

·~·· 'ty·

Dlt&gt; '(OU ~\J\:.R W~\C.f.\ TI-l. E.
C.~I--WL 1--Hf.\~ &amp;OTIOfol\ Of
n\~

SC.o:E.E.r-1 Ot-.1
(.1-\/&gt;o,l\lt-.\E.l. ,.

Qt7~

:Coil~~~~~j
r

/&gt;o.

1'-IE..WS

•

!'

!
i

j

•

•

I~
.I f
!~

~

....

~

~'""~&gt;o,t-~t&gt; 1-1.1&gt;..\IE:. 1\t-11\t:M &lt;:1'\\U-1,

Bu\ WI-I.E.~ \\I.E.'( (.C)fol£ 5/&gt;o.c.K
FROfol\ Tf\( C.Ot&lt;\fol\t~I/&gt;.L,\1\E'.
C.!&lt;:AWL IS 00 /&gt;., Dlfft.Rrnl
\IEofol\, ~0 '(0\) 1-\t.\Jt.R KNOW
Tf\E. C.OtKWSIOt-l
'(0\.111, 11€)1\!

'(OUR-I r-ITE.~~~. OOL'&lt; \0
1-\"-111:..11 1\'ITt.l'!rof\&lt;.D B't' /&gt;..

COMI:.RC.IN,. "'!

BIG NATE

L~wis

lnsund
Free Esllmates

you DtDN'r SI\Y "CANDY "'
AT tV\LLOWEEN You
lXJN'T !SUY T~EATS.
YOU

&amp;UY

CANI&gt;'f:

YOU I) It&gt; , DtDN'T YoU
l)lo.D ~ YOU BOUGHT.

CANP.Y ?

WgM~FE4
MAINTENANCE

Chuck Wolfe
Owner

• Additions • Remodeling
• Roofing/Siding
• Plumbing/Electrical

Licensed &amp; Insured

(740) 992-0167
Gene Arms/OwnerOperiltor 740-992-3174
* Wceklv Trash Service
4 yrs uf Reliable Service
t Keep Yuur Muncy Ltll"lll 1

G&amp;R SANITATION
:U:% 1 Bailey Run Rd ..
Pornew , OH

L-.:..:::::::;:::~~:.:..-.J

CarnarsiORB

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages

• Complete

Elacblcal

Remodeling

Service

740-992-1m

• FOR ALL YOUR
ELECTRICAL NEEDS.

Stop &amp; Compare

'~

$-

~

'

LtNC.OLN

1185

111411C .......

. F-150414

.. . . .

llt&amp;l......

ll.llllles
7 40-446-9800

High

~ost

L___-4-s~~~----~~:J !

.MUCURY

Gallipolis, Ohio

PEANUTS
HALLOWEEN 15
ALMOST HERE,
ISN'T IT?

I SUPPOSE YOU'LL 6E
WAITING FOR T14E
•' GREAT GRAPE" TO PUMPKIN!
COME AGAIN, ~UH?

OH. SORR'(.J 6UE'55
IT WOULD BE HARD TO
CARVE A SCARY FACE ON
A GRAPE, WOULDN'T IT?

of fertilizer got you worried?

·Whole Corn $6.351100
·Cracked Corn $7.351100
·Triumph 12% Sweet Horse Feed
.
$5,50/50
•. ·12% Cattle Feed $7,301100
·Black Oil Sunllower Seed $13.75
Why Drive Anywhere Else?

SUNSHINE CLUB

Shade RiverAG Service, Inc
35537 St Rl 7 N ¥ romeroy. Ohio 45769
7411-985·3831

MOBILE HOME

REPAIRS
• CARPENTRY
•
NT

Roo·F . PAl
.

I

i

The Ariel- Dater Hall

!

~"'"'9 &amp;.-u:

YOUNG'S
·

CARPENTER
SERVICE

• Room Addition• &amp;

, Pwight Icenhower. Oct. 23
The Haunled Ariel Thealre. Ocl, 27 ·31
Ohio Valley Symohony, Nov. 5

, ::C:~':.
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing

:~:~ :~~nPgo~c~J;~~:

ADVERTISE

• R~ing &amp; Gutter~

We do It all except
furnace work

V C YOUNG Ill
•

•

992·6215 wvOOGm

740..985.. 4372
Pomeroy, Ohio
~~~C~~~~~~~2S~V~e~ar~a~L..,~I~E~•=r=ten=co~

GARFIELD

Boll: Office Hrs Il -l M-F Also 5-K 'l'ue.'i &amp; Thurs

426 2nd A•·e. Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-A RTS

IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH...
Now Available AI

BAUM LUMBER
Scorpion Tractors
'"Taki11g The Sti11g Out Of

GRIZZWELLS
1-\0'Il.Yoi.\'1/E ·4='T To LEAI&lt;:.\4 1b
~A 6&lt;=00~

~DAA %111'\t
'Wtl\ 16\\\..~

Hard Work!"'

A&amp;IL\..'T' ~AI&lt;\E

Mid-Size 4Whed Drive Traclor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

cf C\\tct&lt;t.\:6!

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985·3301

All

pa ~s

41 Lamb's '

C'Mot-11'1" I\.\~ MAI::t~~
l-UCKY I'¥Nt

Doctrine

55 Teat venue
56 Dog days In
Dijon
57 Above,
to Tennyson
58 7, on a
phone

OOWN
1 - Dawn
2
3

4
5

6
7

8
9

20
Choog
22
Pol\te
cough
23
-a h\kel
24
Kind oi jazz
Declare
!rankly·
-25
Tulip color 26
27
Clap
ol thunder 28
Gumbo
,
Ingredient 29
Say It's

not so
11 Rock

31

bottom

35

42 Diminish

12 Send,

45 Some
sweaters
(hyJ!h .)

as money
18 Helm
poslllon

HaLlPween&lt;'

41 Gain
admission

42 Candy·
s!ripar
43 Match
44 Klein of
fashion
45 Wind
Indicator
46 Seaweed
47 Blacken

50 Zodiac algn
52 Many oz.

by Luis Campos

,

Olr.lla!too5 !1)' famous peopl~. P11S1 and present
Eacr1 1ener 111he CIPher startm; tor anamer

'

"HCG
H

Todlly's c}ue: \I equals B

ABPIFLW

VHPPLW

PWBLR

NFJ

HCT

PJ

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PFWJNR

HP

TLZBVLWHPLZG

FY ,WP

IJEEYCBRP . "

FBE

BR

HZSBC

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THWU

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ·we (Hollywood people) are the.croupiers in
crooked gambling house." - Screenwriter Samuel Ho.ffens1ein

a

....
·.;.;.; •~r'. ; ,;.m'_; S;. .; @ R~~ ~ It£ !/J S' '"'

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ALDDY

"H•i-t ymi ever' ~" my
·~islcr mused, ''thai hajtpy !*Pie
don 'I think about being happy,

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IMWS

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lw H\liiiQ in 1ho milllnJI words
•
you d"•lc? froM lltP No. l below.

O Compl11o

SCRAMLI!TS ANSWI!RS 10121/0S
Richly- Greek - Ultra - Indict- TACKY
"Why i• It,'' my 11-iend moaned. cloth;Ds store~ aiWI)'S
have mirmrs tltal ma.ke your own clothes look
TACKY?"

ARLO &amp; JANIS
I &gt;JE.~D AWTU Q()IE.T
Ti/o\E. f.XJW AfJD f~W,

0
0

SOUP TO NUTZ
-f~

nice

Lop oil
Beat
" Eva-"
(Allende
book)
Mr, Slkcnky
Sour
Farm unit
Chestnut or
bay
Penicillin
source
Rustle
lodgings
Energy
cartel
Set afire
Highly
skilled

""'""'""',.....,-

I

Be

39 Awfu\ly

Cele~ity C~ C11'!ll011rams 11r~ ~rttaled from

Tuesday, Oct. 25, 2005
By Bernice Bede Oaol
A personality change could be in the off1ng
In the year ahead as you become mo re
gregarious and outgomg than you've ever
been in the past. The new you and your
new ways will win the approval ol all you
encounter.
SCORPIO {Oct . 24·Nov. 22) - Vou know
better than most that major achievements
are always possible without having to lower
your standards because you've done so
many tim es. Don't change your ways today
for anyone.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- 0ec. 21) ln s1ead of searching for rea sons why .
!loQmething won' t work, use the same ener·
gy to take action, wh 1ch will prove that It
wilt. It's all in the a"i lude you have Which
will make lhe dil1erence.
CAPRICORN ~Dec . 22-Jan. 19) - Vour
possibilities tor persona! gain in' a number
of different areas are exceptionally st rong
today. However, you'll be extremely t:llsap poinled if you expect somellling to which
you're not entitled.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb 19) - Things will
go very well for you today if you make it a
poin1 to go out of your WilY to reciprocate in
an equal measure to someone who wen1
out of hls/har way to be helpful to you.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20} -Others are
likely to have more respect and appreciation lor your talents and abilities than you
do for yours elf today. There Isn't any rea·
son 10 doubt tho sincerity of their praises.
ARIES (March 21 ; April 19)- BecausE of
being somewhat uncertain about your
worth today, you could find yourself switch·
ing back and forth, 10«1ing O\ler others to
feeling inferior when you're with a dynamic
individual.
TAURUS ~Apri l 20-May 20) -You can be
very successf~l today regarding serious
matters you hope to bring 10 favo rable conclusions. The trouble IS you may not trust
your abilities and qwt be lore .you reach
your goals.
·
GEMINI (May 21-JuQe 20) -Your first
!I")Oughts are likely to be your very best
ones today, so give them credence and put
them to the test belore re;ecting them. Too
much deliberation may cause you to be
ineffective.
CANCER tJune 21-JtJly 22)- Be doubly
lair In enuattons today that call lor dividing
up What was co llec!IVE!Iy achieved . Take no
more than that to which you're entitled and
give others that which is rightly due them .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)- Be pleasant and
friendly to all you encounter today. but. by
the same to ken, don't bring persons into
tun activities who you know from past
experience usually put a damper on things
VIRGO {Aug. 23-Sept. 22} .:- Talk .lreely
and openly to persons you love and trust ,
but when i1 comes to all others, 11 might be
smart to be discerning and tig h1-tlpped
What you say could be misconstrued and
misquoted.
LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct. 23)- I! you're smart
you won't put your sell-discipline to a neEd·
len teat today by dellbere.1ely placing
temptation jn your path concerning things
you know you have a difficult time 11an·
dllng

So WHaT~ \CO Gct&lt;l'la

37
38

Pet shop
sound

CELEBRITY CIPHER

....... 'lllrth&lt;lllf:

IMPORTS
Athens

740-992-6971

Pa ss
Pa ss

AstroGraph

25 Years Experience

David

Pass

When we are, thinking about bidding a
game, we concentrate first on our combined point-count. II we have lots of
points, we bid game, not worrying about
where the tricKs will come from . On this
deal, played on the a-bridge online net·
work, how would you and your partner
bkllhe North-South hands?
When North opens one diamond, South
would usually respond two clubs. North
would raise to three clubs, a ~light under·
bid. South would try for game with three
diarhonds, and North . would continue ·
with 'thre~ spades, showing his spade
stopper and denying a heart stopper.
South would senle fo r four clubs, and
probably North should pass, anticipating
three losers. But most players would
raise to game. (On e·bridge, everyone
got to game.) Pairs wl1o use two-overonE game-force might respond with . a
game-invitational three clubs. Nor th
.might pass, but would probably push
toward game. You will have noticEd that
North and South have tl1ree top losers if
tl1ey play in either minor suit.
Many North players would open cne notrump. South would respond three notrump, East would lead tilE heart seven,
and the defenders would presumably
taKe the first six tricks. Now, though,
mentally transmute South's spade three
into the heari three . Suddenly three ~a­
trump would almost certain ly make. How
can any pair bid one way when South
has 10-third of hearts and another WfJt
opposite tO-doubleton? It is impossible,
so do not worry about it. Bid game and
hope for the best. At le ast if you are right,
your .upslde is good : a game bonus. And
lhey might misdefend.

Concrete Removal
i

W'N""""ili

BoA~

a•

and Replacement

a

.

I

1t

II

~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~A~--~--~~~~~~0~·2~~

740-367-0544
740-367-0536

s

AFTER ALL
THESE YEARS
'(A CAN STIL.L.
CRACK ME
UP, DEAR !!

TO TH' STORE

HEE •• HEE • • HEE

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING\

•

MmoRCVLi.K'i/

TO RUN TO
TH' STORE .
FER ME,
HONEYPOT!!

RUN

~

Medical Excellence.
Local Caring'"

740·741·2293
' Leave a message

r

i

!I HA!.! WAW

I NEED YA

~.

Call Gary Stanley

Advertise
in this
space
for
$52 per
month

:·BARNEY

THE BORN LOSER

"Insured"

;._..;,..,;:::o:;.:,_,J

c

Chuck Wolfe/Mgr.

LAWN CARE DIVISION

Self-Storage•
I \110\

/'1~1Gt4IO#l5.

Jeff Stethem

"Middleport"s only

\'ii'OI~

1'105Y

/

www. holze rc linic. com

Middleport. OH
992·l194
or 992-6635

IH\

Tt4~

fOil

~HOLZER CLINIC

auto, 5.4L, VB, bedcover.
BCD plarer, sunroof, good
condition, 71,000 miles . 2003 Suzuki 4WD Vinson
OHIO LICENSE# 38244
1e12 1mpg, $ 14 .000 OBO. 500 ATV with 34 miles.
{304)288-3335.
$4900 .
CARMICHAEL
EQUIPMENT.
(740)446·
1985 Dodge 0 -50 70,000 .2412.
~::::::::::::::::;
miles, new t1res, runs great. - - - - - - - - 2004
Kawasaki
700
PrairiE
.
1 000 17401 44 93
' '
1-0 1.
ATV, AutOmatic, 68 miles,
I I E.O
1985 Ford truck F150 6 Excellent
condition
cylinder. automatic, good (304)575-2914 or (304)674~Yiti.UIIIf. 'it:"
body. runs . 5900. (740 )446 _ 2044
.CJ 1 UOAUIE.
9742.
OF BOATS
Attention deer hunter•·
'
1992 GMC 78,000 miles, Gel $800 cH our already tow
CAMPERS ETC.
loaded, automStic, eKI. cab. pnc&amp; on nEw John Deere
AT THE
no rust. $3,500 'oeo. Buck ATV"s. Call for details
MEIGS CO.
(_7-:c4:-0_I&lt;..,
4_6·_20_9_B_,- - - - Carmichael Equipment, Inc.
v~-~(740)446-24t2
FAIRGROUNDS
G&lt;X&gt;OS
new ompact Utility &amp; 5000 2001 Dodge Ram 1500 _ ~~..;.;;.;.~~--..,
L
Series John Deere tractors 4x 4. Quad Cab, S'Bed. (75(1
&amp;
Nov. 12, 2005
lor 36 months I' (740)446·
r·,,,
v•
9:00A. M- 11:00
Crosley washer/dryer set
.
54 ,000 m1les, new tires.
fOR SALE
2412
e11.tended factory warranty,
For more Info. call
100 for both. {7401379 .
2930.
~......
loaded. $15.000.00 . 740- 7 112 ft . V·Hull Seastar

Hnr~t.u"'&gt;l...

~XC~PT

(Commerda! and Residential)
Mobile Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks, Driveways,
Sidewalks, G~s Station Awnings, Degreasing of
Equipment, BOats, Campers, Tractor Trailers,
Dump Trucks, painling or slclining of your deck
or· log home, Alum1num brightening.
Special rates to Trucking and Dump Trucking Compani~s.

24hr Emergency

Pass

Points do not
always make tricks

IT'S A NIC~ PLAC~ TO /.IV~.

10x10x10x20

r10

r.o

Bucket Truck

OWner~

*Heating &amp; Cooling

2•

Ea!'!.t

54

parent

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

HE'HMJI'4L

Nnrlh
It

Opening lead: • 4

TRI- STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

((~ON(

West

Top • ~moval • Trim
• Stump Grinding

Point Pleasant, WV
(304) 675-2630 ~ E3 r:::3

FOlie

f&gt;iouth .

companions

1701 jefferson Blvd.

Cmn1' :.·ee us.'

Racine. Ohio

Tree Serr.vice

Fm

·Pomeroy, Ohio

SELF STORAGE

JONES'

.\smk

[lill{1l{

(740)591-4348

9 o,ooo mites, all power,
black, excellent condition.
$5 ,500 . 17401379_9038 .

LEase

(l)o{t11nw

111""""&gt;(1'1'

\'tOON~lOO
Cil-OIIDtr
OIJS!rnu~

Licensed &amp; Insured
Over 30 years

Plus AKC, 2 mates black/silvEr, 1
bf k
1
$ 0
Security Deposit Required,
ac
mae.
4 0;
1
(740}367·7086.
Yorkstiire Terrier, AKC, male,
c.__:__ _ _~-~- 3 lbs, $6 oo: parti cream
Twin Rivers Tower is accept- Pomerlain puppy, male,
ing applications lor waiting AKC. $350, (740)696-1085
list lor ~Ud·SUbSIZed, 1- br,
apartment, call 675 -66 79
MUSICAL
EHO
iNsrR.UMENTS

Pets,

Ad~~n'""

Cdf,lqiiT

war &amp; ~rannie
feed sack!

milEs, loaded, leather, great
condition, runs great. Asking
$2,000 OBO. (740)3880140.
- .-,-v-'
·,9-99-M-o-nt_a_C_a_rl-o,-3
6,

No

Rtt.rtL~~""Il

"' '

7 3
10 6
K J 8
A Q J I 0 .8 3

Dealer~ North
Vulnerable: Neither

"Wht&gt;rf' Quality.Compauio" AmJ lnlef{rity Come Together"

Janet Jeffers
33795 Hiland Road

29670 Bashan Road

•

Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home, Inc.

Service

MANLEY'S

+

I

New shipment of
llcccc panels &amp; 100%
cotton 45"
for the quilts.

Hill's Self
Storage

•
•

1900 EASTERN AI'E. • GAUl POLIS.

740~992-3673

Underground, civil

South

I I I II

'

I

Phone
(740) 992·5232
5x10, lOxlO,
10~15, 10x20,
IOxJO

LABS. 7 wks. Choc &amp; Blk,
AKC, 1st shot, $200-$300
(304)208-1039
--------Min-Schnauger
pupp ies,

Tara
,
Townhouse
1 Bedro9m. NicEly furnished Apartments, Very Spacious,
apartment, qu le.t area, 1 2 Bedrooms, CIA , 1 112
adUU. $500/mo (740)446· Bath, AdtJII Pool &amp; Baby
Pool. Patio. Start $385/Mo.
4782
1BR apartment. upsta1rs.
720
Second
Ave .
...
Was,1 er/dryer
. hookup.
Water/sewer/trash paid. No
pets. Reterence. $325/mo ..
$325/de posil.
{740)64521!12 day, (740)446,0101
even1ngs

.iiiliiiilliilil._.l

Pt. Pleasant

~;;~;;;::;;-::::::;:::;::::~
High and Dry Mill End Fabrics
~~·
h' Q
aDI8f8 MMiddleport,
ac me uilting
oli

New 2BR apts. in town. All
JET
14x70 2BR. Rt . 35. new car- . electric, wAter/sewer/trash
AERATION MOlORS
pet, $ 4 25
dep. $ 4 25. included, CIA, $525 rent
(740)367-7762 or (740)446 - plus deposil
No pets Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
4060or(740)367·7272.
(740)441-1184 , (740)441- Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1·
800-537-9528.
2 bedroom m Porter. Water, _o_t_94_ _ _ _ _ __
tr.ash,
sewage
paid.
Washer/dryer,
no pets.
$450/mo,
$450/dep.
(740)388~9325 .

Professional

I

¥ .K9874
• 9 • 2

.7 6

'

I ,1\,

: illI

Dauld R. Deal
1 /ll
1 Ch

reC Of CeDSee n arge
Chrlle Huber, Director
Josh 8llllngs ftSSOC.

'

'

:vea ,.Jrtunera {.:.nome
Dl

•

East
• A 10 9 8

... 9 6'

843-St64

405 Pearl Street • Middleport, OH

Moore.

Wesl
. Q 6 542
• A G3 2

. MONTY

lv!i.dd:ep:m. OH 45769

tiOnS

.,~oiiw::;ne::;r·~------ :=::::::;:;::::::~
MlscEuANEous
,-n
{
nI

For rent: Condo w/river view
3BR, 2BA. finished basement , water/sewer pal·d ,

Box 189

Dell &amp;.
Service
(a
. Fun
SeJec

ances,
$475/month, bedroom 1urnished apart$475/deposil. Cal l (740)446· ment, deposit &amp; previous
·
rental references, no pets. ~ 1\b:ROIANDISE
348 1.
(740)992-ot 55
_
,
For rent 2 story home, 38R, : _ _ . : _ _ _ _ _ _ _
AJC, $500/month, $500 CONVENIENTLY LOCAl· 16FT Trailer Dual Axles tillEd
deposH. (740)446-348 1.
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
end licensed $700 firm
• Townhouse
apartments, {304)675-t 165
Robert
House in Rulland , no pets, and/or small houses FOR Rimmey
call (740)742-2661
RENT. Call (740)441-ttt t
Middleport 701 Beech St., 2
, h d
b e d room
un furms e
house. deposit, prEvious
rental references. no pets, ,

and ~ctal Services

Hometown IV\arket

Answer·lo Previous Puzzle

49 Dish
51 Sushi fish
53 Pester for
payment

11' When pigs fly
13 llan!ly get 17;
, 14 Mouse alert
15 House
16 Aleta's son
17 Asld
19 Borneo's
archipelago
21 Cup edge
22 "Aye, aye"
fol\ower
23 Circular
26 Nolin proloct
(2wdo.)
30 ~ast sled
31 Here, In Paris
32 Murmur
33 The Plastic
- Band
34 Pinch
35 Spoken
36 Wreath
39 Shell out
40 Ego

North
• K J
• QJ
+AQIO .i3
4 K. 7 54

Rooky Hupp I mUiaroe

by

·ANn-·Q,;,UES
__
accepted
• Payment could be the deposit.
No
pets.
same as rent
ReferenCes
requ ired
Mortgage
Locators.
Buy
or
sell.
Riverir:te
740 446
46 4425
~~~~~ or (
1
- Antiques , 1124 East Main
(740}367-0000
For rent: 2 be&amp;oom, 1 bath, -----~--..::!~on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 7 40fully renovated , all appti- Beech Street. Middleport. 2 992-2526 .

1 Cal's prey
4 Keep out
7 Engine
housing

10 So!

j

'

48 Physico
particle

Phillip
Alder

ranges, air conditioners, and

sq. ft. restored and decoratSPoR1lNG
ed 2nd lloor apartmen t, 57
ro~
Local company olt~ ring "NO Court St., in Gallipolis.
DOWN PAYMENT" proSpacious living &amp; dining
grams for you 10 buy your rooms.
New appliances: 1 Zap Tournament grade paint
home instead of rentmg
112 baths: storage space; balls. 2,000 per boll., $25.
• 100o4financing
740 441-1417 after 5 m.
• Less than perloct credit rear deck tor sunning.
Attentlonl

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ThompsonS Appliance &amp;
Repair-675-7388. For sale,
re-conditioned a~Jtomatic
washers &amp; dryers, relrigerators . gas and electric

shop or at your home. ·
Beautiful, 2 bedroom. 1600 .,.,...-.,.,..-----.

8am·5pm

· The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

ALLEY OOP

...

5 rooms &amp; bath, stove &amp; BEAUTIFUL

www.mydailysentinel.com

J:M

Goifol' as THe kiNG oF

EviL,,TI-le i"'aSTeR OF aLL

r----

T~aT is ViLe,.TI-\e PRiNCe
OF DaRKNeSS ,,

�,.

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

'.

•'

'.

'

Hurricane Wilma
races across·
Florida, knocking out
power to 6 million, A2

Memorial Caricer
Symposium set
·for Saturday,,A6

'

Bv RONALD BLUM
ASSOCI.A.TEO PR ESS

. Middleport o Pomeroy, Ohio

.-,o t'FNTS
.
• \ 'ttl . .-1. ' No . .-.,
r::&gt;

• Redmen hitting road for
home game. See Page B1
AP photo

Chicago White Sox's Scott Podsednik, center, is embraced by teammates after hiitting a gamewinning walk .off home run to beat the Houston .Astros (-6 in Game 2 of the World Series
Sunday in· Chicago.
Pierzynski to third. Uribe
popped to short right on the
following pitch, and the ball
bounced off the glove of second baseman Craig Biggio
and dropped. Pierzynski
scored on the fielder's choice
as right fielder Jason Lane
threw to second for a forceout.
· Willy Taveras tripled into

the right-field corner in the
third and made it 2-2 on
Berkman's sacrifice fly.
Ensberg saved a run in the
bottom half when he dived to
stop Carl Everett's two-out
grounder with a runner on
third. In the fourth, Pettitte
pitched Houston's first 1-2-3
inning of the Series.

Notes: Florida's Alex
Gonzalez hit the previous
game-ending Series homer in
Game 4 two years ago .... It
was the first rain delay at the
start of a Series game since
1993 . at
Game 3 in
Philadelphia began 1:12 late.
... Commissioner Bud Selig
didn 't take his front-row seat
until after the first inning.

----------------5.\ ihl
lA\ ©:§&gt; iMl
:RI il 1'W

$22995

'"'" ·"')tlai!)"'"tim·l ,.,,

211115

that are very encouraging for
our economic development,"
Roush said, adding that as an
POMEROY- Dr. Roderick · OU alumnus she is especially
J. McDavis, Ohio University's excited to have President
20th president will be · the McDavis deliver the keynote
keynote speaker at the Meigs speech. .
County
Chamber
of
McDavis is a 1970 graduate
Commerce's 15th Annual of OU and received a bacheCommunity
Recognition lor's degree in social sciences
Dinner at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, in secondary education. A
Nov. I at the Middleport native of Dayton, he also
Family Life Center.
received a master's degree in
Chamber Coordinator Erin · student personnel administraRoush said she is extremely tion from the University of
pleased to ' have McDavis Dayton in 1971 , and a doctor. attend the event.
ate in counselor cdut"!!tion and
"So far he has done such higher education administrawonderful things .for the region tion from the University of
BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Toledo
1974.

in Arkansas.
Under McDavis' leadership
·. OU has attempted to reach out
McDavis is to school climict s to better
only
the serve students. including those
second uni, in the Southern Local School
v .e r s i t y District. Southen) is the first
alumnus to district in Southeastern Ohio to
lead the uni- partner with OU and Apex
versity as online learning services to offer
president
online cuniculum to students.
Dr. Roderick
Social hour for the dinner
J. McDavls
McDavis will begin at 6 p.m. with enterhas
also tainment provided Jly violinist
served in various administra- Debra Wood. Dinner will be
tive positions at the Virginia served at 6:30 p.m. and be
Commonwealth University . in catered by Hometown Market
Richmond, Va., the University of Middleport.
of Florida and the University of
Besides the speech by

Pomeroy discusses
stifety trainingfor PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL DONAlES
workers, sets
TO SENIOR cmzEN WELLNESS CENTER
trick-or-treat

~ I1!J [!:,
jlj) I1!J
U'lruil©~ :9)~ 1'M~£ 1'
AT
ROCKSPRINGS REHABILITATION CENTER
CO-SPONSORED BY POWELL'S FOODFAIR

MS 180 EZSTIHL MiniBoss™

TlTSD\Y, OCTOBER:!!';.

)

OV's President to speak at Community Recognition Dinner

SPORTS

BY BETH

SER~ENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTtNEL.COM

Tuesday, October 25th at 7:00 p.m.
until the candy runs out!

OBITUARIES

Hot Dogs and Baked Goods Sale
Page A5
• Ralph McCune
• Gamet Roush

LIMITED TIME OFFER!

• Rosa Parks, civil rights
pioneer, dies at 92.
See Page A2.
• O'Bieness invites the
public to HEARTiest event.
See Page A3
• Board of trustees
approved Center for
Sports administration.
See Page A3
• Lydia Council discusses
holiday plans.
SeePage AS
• Genealogy fair held.
See Page AS
• More jobs, fewer polili·
cians; Issue campaign
rejects 2003 tactics.
SeePage AS
• DAR honors Skinner.
SeePage AS
o County steps up
deportation efforts with
trespass proposal.
See Page AS

WEATIIER

Great for homeowners! Now features
the STIHL Easy2Start'M System.

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Details on Pap A6
At partic!fpating retaiJers.

INDEX
Chester

Pomeroy

Baum Lumber Inc.

Dettwiller Lumber
634 East Main Street
740-992-5500

McDavis. the program will
include the presentation of
community service awards for
Pomeroy,
Middleport,
Syracuse. Racine and Rutland;
Chamber business awards for
landscaping.
commercial
economic
development. ·
impact, touri sm impact, entrepreneur and cultural impact, as .
well as the commumty commitment award and the David
P. Baker Award for outstanding
individual contribution to
Meigs County. .
Tickets arc $25 each and are
still available at the Chamber
office. Call 992-500~ for more
·inf&lt;Jrmation.

School sale
to be
announced
this weekend
TBY BRIAN

INSIDE

46384 State Route 248
740-985-3301

I

Monday, October 24 2005

Podsednik's walk-off homer gives Sox 2~0 lead
but it was j ust as damagi·ng.
1998.
Podscdnik lofted the ball to
"That was the second-best
right -cemer field , and players feeling I've had all week," he
CHICAGO
Scott and fans craned to see said. "Had the baby born,
Podsednik made it two elec- Whether it would clear the that was first. "
trifying home runs for the fence . When it did, Chicago
Rain started during batting
White Sox - and two World players poured out of the practice, and it stopped and
Series wins.
dugout to greet Podsednik lit started throughout the game.
Podsednik 's home run off the plate.
The first pitch was delayed 7
Brad Lidge in the ninth
When the Series resumes in minutes -- the first rain
inning gave Chicago a Hou ston on Tue sday night, delay at the beginning of a
· thrilling 7-6 vidory' over the Roy ·\)swalt pitches for the Series game since 1993 Houston Astros on Sundav Astros against Jon Garland.
and Pettitte repeatedly kicked
night and put the White Sox
"Well, we're n01 in a good the pitching rubber to knock
halfway to their first World spot,'' ·Houston manager PMI mud out of his spikes.
Series title in 88 years.
Garner said . "We had a
It was 45 degrees when the
"I don't think anyone in the chance to win this ballgame. game began , weather more
ballpark was thinking about We have to go home and suited to football than baseme hitting the ball out of the regroup. We'll make a series ball . While rain held off in
ballpark," Podsednik said.
our of thi s.' '
• the early going, it began
After yet another questionAndy Pettitte had put his again in the fifth, just before
able umpiring call , Paul hometown team in position Berkman doubled down the
Konerko capped a momen- for its first World Series win, left-field line to break a 2-2
tous week with a s~venth ­ leaving after six innings with tie. For the rest of the game,
inning grand slam on reliever a 4-2 lead built by Lance many fans wore slickers and
Chad Qualls' first pitch , giv- Berkman's three RBis and held up umbrellas in an
ing the White Sox a 6-4 lead Morgan
En s berg 's . solo attempt to stay dry.
and sparking the. crowd of homer.
Making his record 34th
41,432 to ·life on a drizzly,
Chicago pressured reliever postseason start, Pettitte
dreary night.
Dan Wheeler on Joan Uribe's needed 54 pitches to get
Closer Bobby Jenks, who one-out double and Tadahito through the n,st three innings
earned the Game I save after Iguchi ' s walk, and the. White and allowed two runs in the
not pitching for 15 days. Sox loaded the bases when second, but those were the
couldn't work his magic two Jermaine Dye was awarded only runs he gave up.
nights in a row.
first base on a 3-2 pitch that
Ensberg Jed off the second
Jose Vizcaino, pinch-hit- umpires fllled hit his hand . with his first homer since
ting for Adam Everett with Houston disputed the call and Sept. 20 at Pittsburgh, and
two outs in the ninth, reached replays appeared to show the gave Houston its first lead of
the burly reliever for a two- ball striking his bat.
the Series.
run, opposite-field single to
If it had been ruled a foul
Chicago went ahead 2-1 in
left af!d Chris Burke just beat ball , the count would have the bottom of the inning with
Podsednik's on-target throw remained full on Dye. But he the .help of some . odd
to score. the tying run, slap- took first. Qualls relieved bounces. Aaron Rowand hit a
ping the plate with his hand. and he left his first pitch over one-hopper that Ensberg
Podsednik was perhaps the the plate. Konerko turned on couldn't come up with at
most unlikely hero.
it and sent it deep into the third and bounced into left
He didn 't have any home left-field bleachers .
for a single.
runs in 507 regular-season at''I'm not going to tell him I
A.J. Pierzynski hit a ball to
bats, hitting his first of the fouled it oH.'' Dye said. "Just left that sliced away from
year the division series open- go to first and. hopefully, we Burke, a relatively inexperier against Boston.
get a big hit and we did.'' . enced outfielder who didn't
He, came up with one out in
A week earlier, Konerko start the opener. While the
the ninth against Lidge, who was selected MVP of the AL ball was catchable, it
hadn 't pitched since losing championship series win bounced off the wall at
Game 5 of the NL champi- over the Los Angeles Angels. Burke's side, but Pierzynski
onship series against St. Two days later, his wife gave was held to a single because
Louis, when he gave up a birth to their first child, Rowand went back to tag up
mammoth three-run homer to Nicholas.
and only &lt;eached second.
Albert Pujols in the ninth that
It was Konerko's fifth postJoe Crede hit an oppositeteammates joked rose to air- . season homer and the first field bloop single to right on
plane cruising altitude.
Series slam since the the. next pitch for his lOth
This one wasn't as long, Yankees' Tino Martinez in postseason · RBI, sending

I

2 SECTIONS -

l2 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-6

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY -The safety
of water department workers
in confined spaces was once
again addressed at Pomeroy
Vi II age Council last night
with counql deciding to send
at least one of the water
department employees to
contined space training.
Councilwoman
Ruth
Spaun said that Michael
Drakulich, safety and health
Public
consultant
wtth
Employees. Risk Reduction
recently viSited the vtllage to
inspect working · conditions
and will eventually submit a
report on What he encountered.
'
·
Drakulich recommended
to Spaun that village workers
attend the confined space
training in Pickerington on
Nov. 29-30. Spaun · said
Village Administrator John
Anderson told her that all but
one of his employees in the
water department had had the
training.
Spaun recommended each
of the water department
employees go to the confined
spaces class which is given
by the Bureau of Worker 's
Compensation Division of
Safety and Hygiene. She suggested sending two to the
training and then others to
follow. Another option was to
have Drakulich come to the
village to give a similar class
to.workers free of charge but
there was no confirmed date
on that training and Spaun
said she was told it would not
be as "intense" as the class in
Pickerington.
Other members of council
voiced concern s about having
a reduced staff from the water
department in the village if
an emergency should occur
and employees were at the
training in Pickerington .
Council eventually voted
to send Shannon Spaun from
the water department to the
free training, agreeing to pay
him for 16 hours of work
over the two day period .
Council will also pay Mr.
Spaun 35 cents a . mile in
mileage.
.
.
Meigs County Emergency
Management
Agency
Director Robert Byer also
approac~ed council with a
proposal for a village siren
that would warn the public in
the event of a weather related
Byer
h~d
emergency.
received $12,000 in grant
the
US
money
from
Department of Homeland
Security for the siren which
would only cost the village
the electricity to run to it. The
village would own and operate the siren .
Byer said he must know by
the end of December if the
village wants the siren so that
he can determine a site where
it could be placed. Byer rec-

Please see Pomeroy, AS

•

J.

REED

BREEO@MYDAtYSENTINEL.COM

Charlene Hoefllchfphoto

MIDDLEPORT
The
sale of Middleport High
School and the central build. ing behind it will be advertised beginning this weekend,
Mayor Sandy lannarelli told
Middleport Village Council
on Mondav, but bids will not
be solicited at this time.
The pet\ding sale will .be
announced in The Daily
Sentinel and several Ohio
metro n·ewspapers, and
online, lannarelh said. Bid
packets are expected to be
completed and the sale finalized early in the new year. It
has been · delayed several
iimes as bid specifications
are prepared and title work
.completed on the property.
. At least one developer has
expressed interest in purchasing the property for conversion into apartments .

Pleasant Valley Hospital made a $1,500 donation toward the purchase of a new treadmill for
the Wellness Center at the Meigs Senior Citizens Center Monday. Here Bryan Hoffman, director of the Wellness Center, accepts the check from Amy Leach. right, of Pleasant Valley.
Realizing the importance of exercise to the ·large population of older adults in Meigs County,
Leach said the hospital plans to partner with the Wellness Center and prov1de speakers, proCo unci I approved ordigramming, and other assistance. Beth Shaver. left, is executive director of the Meigs County nances prohibiting fireworks
Council on Aging.
in village cemeteries and
requiring dog owners to c.J ean
up over their pets, following
their third reading at council s meeting. and approval
by
council
members.
Councilman Shawn Rice
voted again st the prohibition
of fireworks in cemeteries.
Mayor Sandy lannarelli
BY BRIAN J. REED
said Wildlife Officer Keith
BREED@MYDA ILYSENTtNEL .COM
Wood provided inforn1ation
forthe elimination of pigeons
POMEROY
- Meigs
in the village. Residents have
County Prosecuting Attorney
complained ·of pigeon s in the
Pat Story has laid off his only
downtown shopping district,
assistant prosecutor and ·will
the l'ark Street school buildface a deficit in his employee
ing, .and in residential areas.
salary line item when he subTraps are the only practical
mits payroll at.thc end of th1s
mean&gt; of eliminating the
we·ek.
birds, lannarelli said, but
Story issued a layoff to
plans for the eventual demoAssistant Prosecutor Richard
lition of the scliool building
Hedges, effective Oct. 20.
on Park Street will help alleThe layoff not qnly pl'aces the
viate the problem.
responsibility for all in-court
lannarclli said advertisework on Story, but also crements ior refuse service for
ates a problem' for him in the
2006 has been prepared, and
handling of Meigs County
the bids will be approved on
Court cases, where hi s brothDec. 12.
er, Judge Steven L. Story,
lannarclli commended the
serves on the bench.
University of Rio Grande/Rio
Hedges worked as a fullGrande Community College
time attbrneJ! in Story 's
Crossroads program for prooffice, handling criminal
viding assistance in street
,cases in both Meigs County
cleaning in the downtown
Court and Common Pleas
shopping district. The proCourt . Story's predeceSsor,
gram is now paying a partJohn Lenu: s, employed two
time worker to devote time to
part-time attorneys as assisstreet s\\ eeping and other
tants, but Story said a fullclean-up.
time attorney saved costs.
Jannarclli said rules about
Prosecutor Story 's salaries
bicvclcs in the village will be
line item riow has a balance
publi cized through the police
of $205.22, after the Oct. 18
department and enforced. in
payroll. That line item pays
order to avoid serious acciCharlene Hoeftlchf photo
salanes of a full-ttme secredents and injuries as a result
tary and two t:ull-time inve ~­ It's no fish story. This 43-inch long, 50-pound flathead catfish of unsafe bicycle use. She
tigators. Story s salary 1s patd was ·pulled from the Ohio River Monday morning by Tony M. said bikers are required to
Quille n of Pomeroy. tn Qui llen 's struggle to get the flathead out have reflectiw material or
from a separate fund .
The current two-week pay- of the water. it bent his #4 hook and s plit the pole which ·was li ghts on their bicycles and a ·
roll period ends Friday, and sa id to handle up to 65 pounds. Qu illen was fishing on the ' bell when ridin g after dark.
river off West Main Street across from the dental offices of Dr.
Please see Defldt. AS
Please see Sale, AS
Harold Brown .

Other business

Prosecutor
now facing ·

What a catch!

payroll deficit

•

'·

.•

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