<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3285" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/3285?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-21T18:06:28+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="13197">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/de9fd3fc082686f7ce3ca218236300dd.pdf</src>
      <authentication>d04fcbbef07379dc2613ee1e77355530</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="11875">
                  <text>'Buckets of Hope' for
Haitian families, A3

•
l'rintcd on 100%·,

R(•c)clCd

.Page AS
• Mary L. Drummond
• Rose Hackett Tribble

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTNIELCOM

POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Police Department
i!'. investigating the theft of
two vehicles. one of which
was recovered in Alabama.
Back in February, a 2002
Jeep Liberty was reported
stolen from Mark's Auto
Sales on West Main Street.
This vehicle wa~ allegedly
connected to crimes still
under inve~t1gating
in

Former
Mason Co. I
9.11 center
Wispatcher
arrested

Gallia Count). Tennessee
and Alabama where it was
ultimately reco\ered after a
pursuit. Three suspects in
the Jeep were arrested.
though only two were
charged. Joe Vance and
Shane Anthony Stewart,
hoth of tv1eigs Count). were
apprehended along with the
Jeep by Auburn. Ala. police
with a third female arrested
but ultimatelv released.
The
Pori1eroy
Pol ice
Dcpa11ment was told Stewart

was charged with class two
theft. misdemeanor fleeing.
misdemeanor reckless operation: Vance was charged
with class two theft. As of
last week. the Auburn, Ala .
police department reported
both men were still in custody. This week the Libc11y
\vas released back to Mark's
Auto Sales.
Earlier this month. a 1997
gold, Ford Ran~er was
stolen from
Rl\:ervicw
Motors in Pomeroy. The

vehicle was loaned out for a
test drive and was ne\er
returned. The subject, who
was v..earing a green hoody
and jeans, was described .f!S
a young male, 5- feet. 8inches tall. approximately
200 pounds With black hair.
When last seen, the truck
had an Ohio dealer tag on it
marked "D6KY." If anyone
has any information about
this case, call Sgt. Brandy
Kmg at the Pomeroy Police
Depmtmcnt at 992-6411 .

Bv DELYSSA HUFFMAN
OHUFFMAN@MYDAILYREGISTER COM

1

1

POMEROY -

Calendars

The humane touch
Thrift shop opeils in new location

.

sifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4

Sports

B Section

&lt;C&gt; 2010 Ohio Valle} Publishing Co.

.(IJJIJ,I !I! 1.!1!11

Meigs County

Bv BETH SERGENT

Other business:
Commissioners approYed a bid
from Ace Trucking Co .. Zanesville.

along with money from the Meigs
Count) t.:nited Fund or personal
donation:-. often 'ia estate:- arc the
only sources of fundmg the sodet)
receives. One of the main services
the humane ~ociety helps fund is a
humane officer for the county.
Sa) re pointed out anyone can call
the humane officer to rep011 animal
abuse and can be anonymous. That
number to call is 992-6060. A
machine will record \OUr mcssa2e
which should be detailed, particuJarlv \\hen gi\'inl! directions to the
site-of alleged animal abuse.

open until 6 p.m . though it is open
Monday-Saturday.
.
Dixie Sayre of the Meigs County
Humane Society smd the extended
hours arc for not only those who
might want to shop but those who
''ish to drop off donations that keep
the ~hop open. Since I 00 percent of
the labor at the shop is \'olunteer.
this means donations dropped off
and money spent at the store go
exclusi\cly to help needy animals
in ~1eigs County, of which there are
plenty.
The Meigs County Humane
Society receives no county funding.
The proceeds from the thrift shop

Please see Contract. AS

Quarter-million
energy award
latest stimulus
B Y BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMLROY - o, er a quartermillion dollars m federal stm1Ulus
money has been awarded to Meigs
Count) for upgrade:- to the heating
and air conditioning sYstems in
count) -owned builclu'igs.'
~
~1eigs and .Mahonin2 counties.
Athen~. ~tarietta and Steubenville
re~eived SIS million total in
Energ)
Efficiency
and
Con:-ervation
bloc!grants
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
through the American Recovery
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM
, and Rein,·estmcnt Act. Governor
~ Ted Stnckland announced funding
POMEROY - While the \'ariety of youth
' for 28 Ohio project awards
programming continues at God's N .E.T. a
through ARRA totalinc over $25
budget report on f~nding shows an expected
milli()n.
~
income shortfall ot about S I,R.894 thts.year.
U.S. Rep. Charlie Wilson. DThat is the rcpo11 from Ron Vance, dtrector
Steubcn' ille. voted for the
of God's N.E.T. (Neighborhood Escape for
RL'CO\ er) Act. which ''as s1!lncd
Teens) in the Man.:h newsletter. "The facc.s of
into hm in Februarv. :!OOQ He
those in need are growing.'' he said. "We need
announced th~ a\\ ards' for the S1\th
your help. We are asking our pat1ners to prayCongrcs~tonal District Thursda~
fullv consider increasing their tinancial gift~."
~leigs Count) and the City of
V.lllCC said that ir God's N .E.T. docs not
A then" "il.l rccei\ e funds for cncrreceive more funding the program will fall
ov dficienc\ retrofits. Tom
short of its 20 I 0 budget "This may force us
~\nderson. pre;ident of the board of
to be open less days. With the needs greater
commissioners. said the board had
than ever, now is not the time to limit needrequested Grants Administrator
ed ministry," he cnmmentl.!d.
.kan Tru~sell inwstigate possible
Vance shows an estimated income for
Charlene Hoeflich/photo
Gods N.E.T. of $-lO,.W5 with anticipated Teens visiting God's N.E.T. can enjoy a variety of study and recre- funding to~,, aluate the HVA(' S) sll' Ills in &lt;&gt;l'Yeral ~ount) -0\\lh.:d
expenses of $59,280 for tht: yc.u.
ational activities as well as a hot meal. Here staff member Kim
Please see Stimulus, AS
Hupp assists in serving supper after school.
Please see God's N.E.T., AS

Please see Shop, AS

God's N.E.T.
short on funding

A3

REED

Countv Jail for most of 1ts "overflow" 'housing needs. v. ith renewal
of a contract v. ith commissioners
there for a negotiated jail rate.
ivteetmg Thursday, ~1eigs County
Commissioners approved an annual
contract w1th Washington County
for space in the Washington County
Jail, at a rate of $60 per day for
housing prisoners. charged with
both felonies and mbdemeanors.
a\\aitin!! trial or sen•in!! sentences
imposed by the courts. ~
Sheriff Robert Beegle relies
heavih on the t\ilarietta facilit\ to
house 'prisoners he cannot house in
his o"' n jail. including female
inmates and men who present possible security rish or other prob• lems in the local facility.
Beth Sergent/photo r
Commissioners noted the rate for
Pictured are volunteers with the Meigs County Humane Society in their new thrift shop on Second Ave. in . the nev... contract year remains the
Middleport, including: Ed and Carol Kennedy, Frances Alh1re, Lynn Werner, Dee Hysell, Sea Wood, Sharon Birch. same as 1t was _last year. The contract
Kathy McDaniel, Kathleen Morris, Diane Young, Dixie Sayre with Shaggy. The shop is always 1n need of donated J does not r~qlllre. the county to pay
items which are sold to benefit needy animals.
~or space 1t does not use: Under a
j tormer
contract
w1th
the
Southeastern Ohio Re2ional Jail. the
county was required to pay for beds
I1 \\ hether they were occupied by
Mei!!s County inmates or not. That
cont~act has been discontinued .

cares for those who can't care for
themselves and the ~leigs County
Humane Society's Thrift Shop
funds this effort for needy animals.
The thrift shop recently moved
into its new home at 217 North
Second ~treet. t~~) doors up f~o1r it~
old rc~1dencc. I he shop, lui ol
clothe!&gt;, glasses. dishes, books and
other treasures. will .be open for
extended hours beginning tvtonda).
Monday-Thursday. the store will be

2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

J.

will continue to use the Washington

MIDDLEPORT- It's been said

INDEX

commissioners
ok Washington
jail contract
at '09 rate
BY BRIAN

a societY is measured by how it

High: Lower 60s.
Low: Mid 30s.

Also under investigation :
Charlotte Rowley. Ironton.
reported a bench was missing
from the Murray/Rowley lot
at Beech Grove Cemetery.
Rowley last sav. the bench on
March I 0 . The bench is
described as one and one-half
feet wide. four feet long. two
feet high with a three to four
inch thick seat. It's made out
of concrete and ri\er rock.
and was anchored in the
ground with rebar. The bench
had been there 16 years.

BREED @MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

. .EATHER

-a
D.,- •

Pomeroy cops investigate car thefts

OBITUARIES

POINT
PLEASANT.
W.Va.- Charles R. ··c.R.'"
Blake II v. as arrested
Tuesday by the West
Virginia State Police on
char~es of po~session of
manJuana.
Blake, a former dispatcher
tu the Mason County 911
Center
in
P o i n t
Pleasant.
was caught
on Sunda).
March
14
with
less
than
15
grams of the
C.R. Blake dru~ in hh.
veh1cle while
uty. He consented to a
·h of his vehicle. Blake
•
resigned from 911 on
Monday, March 15 the day
following the incident.
The arrest came after a
tip was called in to law
enforcement. Blake , 32,
Mason, was released on a
$500 personal
recognizance bond.
Trp. A.D. Wootton was
the lead investigator on
the case and Sgt. E.B.
Starcher made the arrest
Tuesday.
The West Virginia State
Police made another arrest
on Tuesda).
Daniel C. Aills. 31.
Evans, was also arrested by
S.tarcher. His charge was
domestic batter) and he was
released on a $5.000 property bond.

~C\\~print

I

•
)

�-

-

--

~--~~------------------------,_

.......

-~----~

PageA2

LOCAL • STATE

The Daily Sentinel

________

Thursday, March 25,2010

Officer: Stirig at Ohio governor's home kept quiet Hospital to Home
Bv JULIE

CARR SMYTH

ASSOCIATED PRESS

C
OLUMBUS - A former State Highway Patrol
officer :-.ays public safety
official:-. calkd off a drug
sting at the Ohio e''0\ crnor's
residence to a\oid attention,
not for safety reason~.
Mnj, Robert Booker, who
. was relieved of his dutic" in
late Januar) and ha!-. since
retired, told a Senate committcc on Wcdncsd,ty that
authonties had ckared the
operation, and that it wa)',
called off "to keep things
quiet.''
State ofliciab say a
woman planned to hide contraband behmd the mans10n
Jan . 9 for pick up by her
husband, an inmate on work
detail at the residence,
Officials chose to warn the
\\Oman and not stage a bust,
attributing the decision pat1ly to concern for Gov. Ted
Strickland's safety. They
found out the woman's
plans in an e-ma1l intercepted b) the prison.
Booker told the committee the contraband was
dmgs, not tobacco as officmb have said.
"ll was dru£!s. There was
no doubt,'' Booker said.

_ In a _dramati&lt;: conl:ro~ltatton. ~v1th Sena~e Cnmu~al
JudH:twy Chamnan Ttm
~rendell, ~ernocrats on the
panel ~tOt me_d out bcf?re
~&lt;?nket~ s test•.mony, saym~
1t u_Herleres w1th an unestt·
g'ttton
_• _
~C)f_ tl1'
c ,'11a tte r bY th c
1
tat·
\"·t
·I
·
s • c ~&lt;~ l: luog. .
_
State Sen. Nma 1 ~1rncr.
who led the protest. ~a1d she
u~1d her colleague_:-. want to
:~)',pect lnsp~ctot General
lom Ch.arles request that
the. hc~nngs be suspended
unt1l hts probe of the matter
can ~ake place. The governor IS a _Democrat and the
Senate. 1)'. . controlled by
RC:_PL!hltcans ..
.
. If the c~a1rma!1 IS real!)
tnterested 111 ~ettmg to the
bottom of th1s, he should
allow t~1c _ lnsp,~ctor Gen~ral
to do h1s JOb, furner sa1d.
Booker told GgP Ia\\·make_rs that a detatled plan
"''&lt;~s 111 place b) 5 p.~l. on
Fnda), Jan. 8. Accordmg to
mtcrnal e-mail. the woman
was to be allowed to make
her drop and \H1u_ld then be
foll.owed by pla1n clothes
off1cers. Trooper~ on the
scene ;vould verify the co~tent~ "a:- contraband and, 1f
so. she \\Ould be stopped by
a m~rked car.
Lmdsay
Komlanc, a

spokeswoman
for
the the actions of his division,
D~partment of Public Safety, and the director of public
smd :1uthonttes were never 6afety is responsible for
ccrtai~ the package was to actions in any of the (public
contatn drugs. as opposed to safety) divisions," Kornlanc
tobacco. and contraband said. "So the fact they had
tobacco has since been input in this l&gt;lan was not
t·ounu
·1 a_t th_e restdence.
·
inappropriate. This was a
She ms1sts safety was a uniaue case regarding prokey concern.
tecting a person we're statu"We have been on the torily obligated to protect."
record in. thi~ case from the
During
the
hearing.
very. begmmng that all the Grendell pointed to an econsideration included offi- · mail Collins-Taylor sent to
cers · safety, the governor's her chief of staff, Michael
safety, and the safety of the McCann, at 9:40 p.m. the
public at large," she said.
mght · before the operation
Booker called that "an was to take place. She said
insult
to
troopers Terry Collins, state prisons
statewidet whom he said director at the time, was
handle s1rnllar operations "totally fine" with warning
safely every day.
off the woman with the conBooker was asked by traband. His department was
GrendC:II to characterize the increasingly persuaded the
a~out-face by Public Safety package contained tobacco.
D1rector Cathy Collins"Terry c had concerns
Taylor and Highway Patrol about the level it was being
Supt. Da\ id Dicken.
ramped up to also and the
"I've never seen this kind embanissment to the boss."
of interfer~nce with a crimi- she wrote. The Stricklands
nal
investigation, sir," were planning a gathering
Booker said.
of about a dozen people that
Kumlanc :,aitiLbat Di&lt;.:ken Saturday.
and Collins-Taylor were not
Booker said when he
int~rf~ring, they were doing asked why plans had been
the1r JObs.
changed. he was told
''The superintendent of ''because 1t's the governor's
thp Highway Patrol is the residence and we have to
one who is responsible for keep this quiet.''

State not on the hook if rail project falls through
By

spokesman with the Federal
Rail Administration. said
that's not the case. thou!!h
COLUMBUS Ohio any engineering studfes
wouldn't have to repa' :;&gt;25 paid for with the money
million in Stimulus money If would have to be completthe state decides to scrap ed. Ohio has until Sept. 30.
plans for passenger train 2017, to spend the entire
service between Cle\ eland $400 million or forfeit the
and Cincinnati, the Federal balance, he said.
Rail Administration said
"Our intent, obviously. is
Wednesday.
to see the project through to
The answer was in construction and operaresponse
to
Senate tion," Paustcnbach said.
President Bill Harris. a
It was unclear if the
Republican \\hose support response was enough to
of the project is needed to sway Harris. \\ ho 's been
release the fiN part of a skeptical of the project. A
$400 m1llion federal grant message seeking comment
awarded to Ohio m Januarv. was left· Wednesday for his
Harris had questioned spokeswoman.
whether the $25 million,
If Republicans derail the
which is needed to com- plan. it '' ould be one of the
plete engineering and most dramatic refusals of
design work, \\Ould have federal stimulus money in
to be repaid if the state the nation. The money is
later backs out of purchas- part of $8 billion in stimulus
ing trains and finishing the grants that President Barack
project.
Obama set aside for passenMark Paustenbach. a ger rail projects.
MATT LEINGANG

ASSOCIATED PRE.SS

Ohio's plan calb for a
startup, 79-mph service
connecting
Cleveland.
Columbus. Dayton and
Cincinnati. h would lav the
foundation for a faster.
higher-speed service with
branches connecting to
Chicago and the East Coast.
Gov. Ted Strickland. a
Democrat, has called it a
significant economic development project. Forest City
Enterprises Inc., a real
estate company based in
Cle\eland, is alreadv working on a plan for a m!w commercial distnct around a
proposed train station in
Riverside. an intermediate
stop on the route near
Dayton.
Yet Harris has questioned whether the rail service would draw enough
riders. Early estimates.
based ·on an Amtrak study
last fall. predict 478.000
riders in the first year of
operations.

Around Ohio
Boehner, GOP
urge Ohio to
fight health
care law
WASH INGTON (AP) lJ.S.
House
Minority
Leader John Boehner and
other Republican members
of Congress from Ohio are
urging that the state jom a
lawsuit against the new federal health care law.
In a letter dated Tuesdav,
the lawmakers "ay tell Ohio
Attorney General Richard
Cordray he should Join h1s
counterparts from 13 other
states in challenging the
constitutionality of the massive health care o\·erhaul.
Boehner savs in a statement that the iaw will mean
higher costs. lost jobs and
fewer freedoms. He says
Cordray should oppose the
mca~ure on behalf of Ohio
middle-class families and
small businesse)'..
Democrat Cordray has
portrayed lawsuits seeking
to overturn the law as
groundless and wasteful.

Tuesda} ... ays the proposal
announced in January is
arbitrary and not based on
scientific evidence.
The state had said previously that all the more than
30 Ohio counties with air
quality monitors would
violate the tighter standards. Counties could be
forced to clamp down on
emissions from industry
and automobile:-. or face
government
sanctions.
most likely the loss of federal highway dollars.
A final decision on the
new rules is expected this
summer.

250,000 hens
put down after
egg farm fire

MARSEILLES (AP)
than 250,000 hens
have been put down due to
power loss at a major Ohio
egg farm where a "'arehouse fire burned for several hours.
Ohio Fre&lt;.h Eggs spokes\\"oman Hinda Mitchell says
nearly 500,000 eggs were
also destroyed.
The tire broke out around
II p.m. Tuesday 'at the farm
in Marseilles, about 55
northwest
or
miles
Columhus. l•1retighters continued to address hot spots
Wednesday
afternoon
Twenty-six
departments
COLUMBUS (APl
Oh10 officials say stricter were called to help out.
No wjuries have been
clean air standards proposed
by the Ohama administra- reported.
The cause of the fire is
tion would be too expenunknown.
Marion County
sive, especially in light of
Emergency Management
the current economy.
'I11c Ohio Environmental Director I larry Burdick says
Protection Agency also tells the warehouse held cardthe federal EPA it opp&lt;lses · board egg cartons and
the new smog ntlcs h~.·causc wooden pallets.
Mitchell savs the hens
there's no reason Ior the
change&amp;. A letter released euthanizcd we're in two of

Ohio EPA
opposes tighter
clean air
standards

..

~lore

the s1te 's barns and that hens
in another 14 barns are safe.

State law requires at least
a 5-2 vote of the Controlling
Board to release the stimulus money, including the
first $25 million. The law
also requires that one of two
Senate Republicans on the
panel vote yes.
recognize
and.
''We
respect the fact that we cannot proceed further with this
project until we have
Controllin£!
Board
approval.''~ said Jolene
Molitoris, director of the
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation.
About 6 million people
live along the 255-mile
Ohio train route. making it
one of the most heavily
populated corridors without rail service in the
Midwest. Amtrak says the
corridor has the demographics needed for successful operations, mcluding population density and
a concentration of colleges
and universities.

program provides
~enior support
are unable to prepare m~
for themselves can rec
five home delivered me ls
a week for up to four
weeks. At the end of four
weeks, if the patients are
still unable to care for
themselves.
a
second
assessment will be performed and ~ new care plan
developed.
The AAA8 Hospital to
Home Program begins with
a call to AAA8 • for an
assessment
(Long-Term
Care Consultation) conducted for individuals who
could require in-home
assistance with day-today
activities when returning
home - whether it is shortterm or long-term in need.
The
Long-Term
Care
Consultation
provides
options and education about
types of care, how to pay
for it and other factors in
making long-term care
decisions.
To refer a loved one.
is being discharged fr
hospital or nursing faci 1 y,
or for more information on
Hospital to Home and other
AAA8 services call (800)
331-2644.

SENTINEL STAFF
MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MARIETTA - Helpmg
patients transition from ''inpatient" to "in-home" is the
goal of a free short-term
home delivered meal program made possible through
The American Recovery
and
Reinvestment Act
( ARRA) nutrition funding.
The Hospital to Horne
program admnistered by
the Area Agency on Aging
(AAA8)
which
serves
Meigs County is designed
to provide a smooth transition and nutrition a'&gt;sistance
for seniors from the hospital
to their own homes. It is a
"warm hand-off' from one
level of care to another with
the goal of preventing rehospitalizations.
ARRA funding for Senior
Nutrition Programs through
the Older Americans ~ Act
allows AAA8 to partner
with local hospitals and
pilot this short-term hornedelivered meal program.
Individuals who are 60+
years of age and recently
discharged from the hospital or nursing facility and

Lawmakers want more e-textbooks
COLUMBUS (AP) - A ' Columbus.
group of Ohio lawmakers
Democratic state Rep.
s;1ys college students would Matt Lundy of Elyria says
save money if they could the cost of textbooks. some
buy electronic textbooks with hundred-dollar price
instead of traditional bound tags. can contribute to huge
college debts.
copies.
The publishing industry
A bill that would require
publishers to offer more says
e-textbooks
are
textbooks as e-books was increasingly available as a
outlined
Tuesday
m low-cost alternative.

Meigs County Forecast

i'.t

Thursday... Panly sunny
Saturda) ...Sunny.
with a slight chance of show- cool with highs in the 1
ers in the mornin~ ...Then 60s.
cloudy with showers likely in
Saturday night ...Mostly
the afternoon. High'&gt; in the clear in the evening ...Then
lower 60s. South winds 5 to becoming partly cloudy.
10 mph. Chance of rain 70 Not as cool with lows in the
percent.
upper 30s.
Thursday night ... Rain.
Sunda)' ...Partlv ~unnv.
Lows in the mid 30s. West Showers ·likely.. :MainJy In
wind:5
to
10 the afternoon. Highs around
mph ...Becoming north 10 to 60. Chance of rain 60 per15 mph with gusts up to 25 cent.
mph after midnight. Chance
Sunda)
night
and
of rain near I 00 percent.
Monda\ ...Showers likelv.
Friday...Mostly cloudy Lows around 40. Highs In
pleas encourage plea bar- with rain with a chance of the mid 50s. Chance of rain
gaining and remove any sno\\ showers in the rnorn- 60 percent.
Monday night ...Mosth
civil consequences of a plea. ing .. .Then mostly sunny in
the afternoon. Cooler with cloudy with a 30 percent
highs in the lower 50s -'iorth chance of showers. Lows m
winds 10 to 15 mph \\ ith the mid 30s.
gusts up to 25 mph. Chance
Tuesday ...Mostly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 50s
of precipitation &lt;)() percent.
. Tuesday
night
and
Friday
night. ..Mostly
clear. Cold with lows in the Wednesdav...Partlv cloudv.
AKROJ\j (AP) - One of [ upper 20s. Northeast winds Lows in the mid 30s. Highs
in the lower 60s.
..
Ohio's largest power corn- 5 to 10 mph.
panics has filed a new rate ; - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - proposal that a state utiht)
watchdog says could raise
rates by hundreds of millions of dollars in corning
years.
AEP (NYSE) - 33.99
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASThe plan submitted to Akzo (NASDAQ) - 54.80
DAQ) - 23.61
Ohio regulators by Akron- Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 53.43
BBT (NYSE) - 32.12
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 16.74
based FirstEnergy- Corp. on Big Lots (NYSE) - 37.24
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 31.62
Pepsico (NYSE) - 66.26
Tuesday would allo'W the BorgWarner
(NYSE)- 37.85
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.85
company to adjust rates Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
Rockwell (NYSE) - 55.82
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 9.51
each quarter to pa) for - 15.27
Royal Dutch Shell - 57.69
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.24
upgrades to \vires, substa- Charming
Shops (NASDAQ) Sears Holding (NASDAQ) hons and other equipment. 6.63
108.44
Ohio Consumers' Counsel City Holding (NASDAQ)- 33.75 Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 55.58
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.88
Janine Migden-Ostrander Collins (NYSE) - 62.54
DuPont (NYSE)- 38.77
WesBanco (NYSE)- 16.25
says that could prove US
Bank (NYSE) - 26.19
Worthington (NYSE) - 17.29
expensive for FirstEnerg) General Electric (NYSE) - 18.45 D.ally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transcustomers. particularly as Harley-Davldson.(NYSE) actions for March 24, 2010, prothe power company shifts 27.80
Morgan (NYSE) - 44.94
vided by Edward Jones financontrol of its hnes from a JP
cial advisors Isaac Mills In
Kroger (NYSE) - 21.25
Midwestem grid manager to Limited Brands (NYSE) - 24.98 Gallipolis at (740) 441·9441 and
Lesley Marrero In Point Pleasant
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) one in the East.
at (304) 674·0174. Member SIPC.
FirstEnergy maintains it 54.66
will absorb any costs related
to the project and not put a
burden on consumers.

Court says plea
FirstEnergy,
can't be used
advocate clash
in civil case
OVer rate plan
COLUMBUS . (AP)
Ohio's Supreme Court says
a restaurant owner's no cont~:sl pleas to arson and insurance fraud can't be used
against the eatery in a related civil case.
The
owner
of
O'Fiaherty's in Fremont in
northern Ohio entered the
pleas nine years ago. An
insurance company then
asked a judge to force the
restaurant to pay the company damages and return a
$30.000 payment.
The state Supreme Court
ruled Wednesday in a 6-1
decision that the owner's
criminal convictions are not
admissible in the civil case.
A no contest plea is not an
admission of guilt. but
states that the defendant
will offer no defense, allowing denial of the same
charge in other legal proceedings.
Judith
Justice
Ann
Lanzinger says no contest

Buried in
Credit Card Debt?
We can get you out of debt quickly
and help you avoiq bankruptcy

CALL CREDIT CARD RELIEF

for your FREE consultation

877-264-8031

Local Stocks

Dining with Diabetes
What:

Dining with Diabetes Classes
Learn about how nutrition affects diabetes,
cooking demonstrations, Receive diabetic recipes.

When:April8,13,15

Who

should attend:
All diabetics and their family

Time:s.spm
Cost: FREE
Location:courthouse Annex
Pomeroy, o\-1

Contact Andrew Brumfield
at 740-992-6626
for more information.

�PageA:J

Th e Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March

Biggs celebrates 'Buckets
90th birthday

'

25, 2010

tif Hope' for Haitian families

cl

Submitted photo

Nathan B1gg Me1gs County's most decorated World War II soldier, celebrated hiS 90th birthday w1th a party at McDonald's
on March 7. H1s cake was decorated with a flag and several of
the medals he was awarded dunng his years 1n serv1ce. For
the celebration he was Joined by fam1ly and fnends.

ASK DR. . BR.()THEH.. S

Visiting gr·andparents
lLelp avoid stereot)pes
B Y D R. JOYCE BROTHERS

Dr. Brother : M)
rc m retm::ment .tnd
n ~on,1denng mo'
t the randch1l
\ h1ch \\OUid be m)
I h.t.,en 't hdd much
to get together '' ith
... mce m) ch1ldren \\Cre
• nd noy; the) are
pre chool age and toddler:..
and I thmk 1t \vould be .t
ood d 1f the:y got to kno\\
p.rrento; On the
th I nd I \\Onder 1f the)
m ht be \.onfused b) bemg
round old people \\ ho don t
ha\ e all the same c.tpabllttlc" as \\C do.- C.l.
Dear C.l.: I don't kno\\ tf
) our children\\ 11l find it confusing to knmv their gmndparents, but m general it 1s a
good idea for them to be
exposed to all types of people
when they arc young. It is
\Cry easy lor stcrcOt)peS to
dc\elop \\hen \\C don' t have
a fir..thand kno\\ ledge of .111
the d1ITerent pcn;onahtte'&gt; and
complexions of those \\C
h.rre our \\ Orld \\ith. lf )OUr
kid are \CI) shy or fearful, it
\\Ould be C\ en more amportnnt to expose them to " \anely of people and thmgs o
that the) don't ee the \\Orld
.t caf) P.lace. Surcl) )OUr
•
rents "til be more than
happ) to handle the v1sit &lt;~n&gt;:
\\3) )OU want them to. until
the children get used to them.
Inside )OUr 0\\n faJlliJ) IS
an excellent place to teach
)OUr children about older
people .md their C&lt;~l&gt;.thilltJcs.
Stuche' ha\e shown that kids
\\ ho arc exposed to grandparent age people hme fewer
prcjuchce" about them . for
this reason ,,lone, it would be
•' good ide.1 to let )OUr kids
~t.lrt to oak up some of the
,.,ic;dom and famil) stones
th.lt your parents ha' e to
ofler. The) can balance this
agmnst ull the ncgntio.c tcrco
t) pes the) undoubtedly see
about old folks in the \\orlds
of tele\i,ion, mmies. \ideo
game" and other media. It 1 a
shame that MICh prejudice sull
CXISI'&gt;, but )OU Can help )OUr
ch1ldrcn learn to di-.regard
:;orne 1f it by lcttmg them
mtemct \\ ith your parents ,md
olde1 ndult" \\hom you
. Let them get cxcllcd
about the new move.

think it's all that impo1t.mt.
e1ther. Ho\\ can I teach m)
k1ds to appreci.tte better role
models and learn to 'alu~.:
real. good people.,- P.~.
Dear P.:"l.: It .,
th t
k1d .tre e\po-.ed to tl k nd
of people m the cntert&lt;llll
ment and ~ports-centnc
\\orld of pop culture. Your
k1d~ nla) took up to a de ening teacher or coach, but the)
also look up to celebntie-.
and unfortanatel) the) m1ght
end up puttmg real and take
role modeb m the same cate
gof) m the1r mmds \\ h1le
some celebnue" take care to
sculpt their 1mage, knO\\ mg
that the) are potenual role
models for kids. other; seem
to be entireI) obli\ 1ous to the
f&lt;~ct that an)one who m1ght
be in any way impre siOllahle might be taking cue'
from their hfest) les.
It doesn't hurt to ask ) our
kids who the) look up to
You'll hkely get some
reo;ponc;es ) ou expect. but the
unexpected ones reall) hold
infonnation about \\hat's
trul) 1mpcrtant to )OUr k1ds.
It's true ) ou don't \\ant ) our
children tc gro'' up in a bubble. and for them to learn to
be independent thinker; and
good pe&lt;&gt;?le, the) need to
al o learn that there arc self
ash people out there. You can
help your kids compare then
plans and goals to their role
modele;, and see if actmg hkc
those people would help
them or hurt them Make sure
to point out when good. kmd.
rcspon~ibl~ people .,how up
in the nC\\S or on 'IV. and kt
your kids take in how these
people a~e re~pectcd and
prai&lt;&gt;ed. Highlight these qual
l!ies. and )Ou'll t1nd that )OUr
kids v.Jll \alue them.
(c) 2010 by King I ealllrr~

S) ndicau

Children of F1rst Southern Bapt1st Church pack food rnto buckets for Ha1t1 famil es under the direct1on of Joyce 0 Bryant,
left, and Mehnda Karschnrk. The Children m Act1on group at F1rst Southern Bapttst Church spearheaded a local dnve to
f1ll Buckets of Hope ford saster relief in Ha1t1 The Ha1t1 proJect 1s a national effort of the Southern Baptist D1saster Rei ef
program The chi dren at the local church packed mto the 15 buckets 150 pounds of rice, 60 pounds of beans 15 jars of
peanut butter, 30 pounds of spaghetti, 30 pounds of sugar, 15 bottles of cookmg 011, and 75 pounds of flour wh1ch IS
enough to feed 15 Ha1t1an families for a week

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Monday, March 29
POMEROY - Vetera'1s
Serv1ce CommiSSIOn, 9
am 117 Memonal Dr
SYRACUSE
Syracuse
V1llage Counc1
spec a
meet ng to n erv
p sb
mp e
o 2010
Londo
Po
aso
6
p m v. lage hall Monday
and Tuesday

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, March 25
POMEROY
The Me gs
County Ret red Teachers
Assoc1at10n noon at the
W1ld Horse Cafe Speaker
w1ll be the d1rector of coll'lmumcatlon serv1ce, State
Teachers
Retirement
Systems.
POMEROY
Ewing
Chapter, Sons of the
Amencan Revolution, 6:30
p.m. at Meigs Museum , 144
Butternut Ave , Pomeroy.
Dmner followed by speaker
Tom Romme of Athens
member of the Bngade of
the Amencan Revolution.
Romme to present Before
They
Were
Sold1ers,
Matenal
Culture
an
Everyday L1fe m the 18th
Century
lnv1ted Return
Jonathan Me1gs Chapter,
DAR members ancestors of
Amencan Revolution soldiers
POMEROY
Un1ted
Fund for Me1gs County
annual meeting. 6 p m
Pomeroy Library meet1ng
room . The pubhc 1s mvited to
attend.
POMEROY - Riverv1ew
Garden Club, 7:30 p m ..
horne of Nola Spears.
Tuesday, March 30
POMEROY
OH-Kan
Com Club, meetmg and
auction, 6:30 p m. at the
Pomeroy L1brary.

the Cross, noon, Sacred
Heart Church, w1th miniSters of Me1gs Min1stenal
Association ass1sting Rev.
Walter E. Heinz, pastor
Confessions heard at 1 p.m
POMEROY - Liturgy of
the Pass1on and Death of
Chnst, 7:30 p.m. Sacred
Heart Church

Other events
Thursday, March 26
PAGEVILLE
The
Me1gs
County
Health
Department w1ll offer a
H1N1 flu shot cl nrc from
10 a.m - 2 p.m on Fnday
March 26 at Pa v1lle
Grocery. Vaccmes are for
those s1x months and older
and are free, though donations are accepted.

~

FREE 24{1 Uve Technical Support
UnGmit.d Houn No Contracts
~ 10 E-mcul Address..
• FREE Spom Protect on
~ Invoke Bil rng Available
~ Reliable Access Srnce 1994
~

1-877-267-3266
www.core.com
Join us in the fight
to protect yourself &amp; your C011l11lUility

GfT YOUR HfNf FlU VACCINE NOW
Ptzreut'fi of clzildreu 6 months to 9 years old
Be ~ure to get their 2nd HJ.\ 1 fihot
for proper t·accinatiou
Free 'accinations open to the public
These yaccinations are no\\ open to anyone that "ould like a
second dose regardl~ss of age. because this could offer extra
protection in thee' ent of a second wa' e of
I11 ~I t) pe flu in the spring .

•• •

Dear lh'. Brothl·rs: I'm
wo•• ied thai 111) k1ds arc
lea1111ng to worship cclebnties like P.uis Hilton, and that
thi&lt;&gt; 1s going to teach them
ten 1blc \~dues and hfc goals.
~1) 6-)c.u~ old is obsessed
with H.um.1h Montana. and
C\en my 9 )C.trold knov.s
that Ti~er Woods cheated on
hts \\ 1fc. I don't want to cut
them ofl lrom pop culture,
but I do\)'1 want them to

p m each evenmg. More
mformahOn call 985-4220.
MIDDLEPORT - Rev1val,
Thursday, March 25
Hope Bapt1st Church, 570
POMEROY - Rev. Bnan
Grant St , Middleport, Rev.
Dunham to speak at Grace
Gary Elhs, pastor· Rev. Gary
Church, 7 p.m , as part of
Bowhn evangelist Sunday,
Meigs
M mstenal
March 28 11 a m. and 6 p.m.;
Assoc1at1on s comrrun ty
Ma ch 29 through March 31,
e ten program cont
p
even ng Nursery
Saturday March 27
More mformat1on,
POMER Y
G
334
ot g1ft cards to D
MIDD EPORT The
Genera for needy ch dren
M1dd
epa
t
F1rst
Baptist
noon-2
pm
Grace
Ep1scopa Crurch East Church Will observe Bring a
d Sunday" at the
Ma n S
c'l1ld must be F
10 15 a.m. serv1ce
prese
rece ve card
d by an Easter egg
refres
ts, hot dogs
hu t nd a luncheon. Easter
ava lab e
sunnse
serv1ce w11l be held
REEDSVILLE Ch I
cookoff and soup supper 5 at 6·30 a m on Apnl 3 w1th a
p.m
Reedsville Umted breakfast before Sunday
school and church service.
Methodist Church
Thursday, Aprll1
Sunday, March 28
POMEROY Mass of
POMEROY Revival,
Mt. Hermon Church, located the Lord's Supper, 7 30
followed
by
off Route 7 on Texas Road, p m.,
turn at 36411 Wickham Procession and Vis1ts to the
Road. Clifford B. Coleman, Repository from 9-11 a.m ..
evangelist,
Meetmgs Sacred Heart Church
Friday, April 2
Sunday, 10.30 a m. and 7
POMEROY - Stations of
p.m through March 31, 7

Church events

l lltiiHIIIOIIS :!ITt jlll'{ll

:M onda) - Friday 9:00 - 11:00 am
J :00 - 3:00 pm
Check out our" ehsite for additional clinics in your coinmunities
"" ".mcigscountyhcalth.com
cau 7 Days 8 week - Sam- 11 pm £ST Promo Code MB4a
~

ts~ftl-rilt

_ ..... &gt;CW ..

.... Ullhrhll*'**

\----..,I

Meigs County Health Department
Mulberry Heights • Pomeroy, OH • 740-992-6626
"

�PageJ\4

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, lVIarch

25, 2010

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Con&lt;cl!ress siUIII make uo f,w, respecting arr
t:st,lhlislml£'111 of reli.l!iou, or ]Jrollibitiug the fret'
e.\'t rcist• tllemif; or allridgiu.l! tile freedom of SJH'ecll,
M of the press; or the r((!llt of tile people peaceabl)'
to liSSWIMt, and to J'Nitiou the Government
for a redress ofgrier•auces.
1 he First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

T()J)AY IN HISTOR.Y
Today IS Thursday, March 25, the 84th day of 2010.

T~ere are 281 days left 1n the year.

Today s H1ghhght 111 History:
Or March 25. 1965, the Rev Martin Luther King Jr. led
25 000 marchers to the state capitol 1n Montgomery,
Ala , to protest the den1al of voting nghts to blacks.
On th1s date:
1'1 1634 English colonists sent by Lord Baltimore
drnved 1n present-day Maryland.
In 1865 dunng the C1v11 War Confederate forces
attacked Fort Stedman 1n V1rgm1a but were forced to
withdraw by counterattacking Umon troops
In 1894 Jacob S Coxey began leading an "army" of
unemployed from Mass1llon (MA -s1h-luhn) Oh1o, to
Was"lmgton D C to demand help from the federal government
In 1911 146 people mostly female 1mm1grants. were
k1l ed when f1re broke out at the Triangle Shirtwaist
Company n New York
In 1918 French composer Claude Debussy d1ed in
Pans
In 1947 a coal mtne exploston tn Centralia, Ill,
cla1med 111 hves
In 1957 the Treaty of Rome established the European
Econom1c Commun1ty
In 1960 the U S, Court of Appeals for the Second
n New York ruled that the 0 H. Lawrence novel
C
L y C tte ley s Lover" was not obscene and could be
th mat s Ray Charles recofded Georg a
p
of h s The Gemus H ts the Road

Ar
F
o Lostng st11l more legal appeals Tern
Sch
f ther Bob Sch1nd er. sa1d hts severely bra nda!11aged d ughter was down to her last hours" as she
ent red her second week wtthout the feeding tube that
had susta1ned her life for 15 years. An a1hng, silent Pope
John Paul II appeared to the faithful v1a v1deo for Good
Fnday serv,ces at the Vat1can.
One year ago P~rates setzed the Panama-registered,
Greek-owned N payta wtth 18 F.lipino crew members
and a Russ1t1n captatn off the Somali coastline. (The ship
and crew were released tn May 2009.) John Hope
F ank m a towenng scholar of African-American studies,
d1ed n Durham N C at age 94. Dan Seals, half of the
pop duo England Dan and John Ford Coley, later a top
country
ger ("You Still Move Me). died in Nashville at
age 61
Thought for Today: "It Is better to be hated for what

• you are than to be loved for something you are not."
• - Andre Glde (zheed), French author and critic
(1869-1951).

th
a •or should be 1tm1ted to 300 words. All letters a:-e
t ng Mu t bo s1gned and nclude address ana telephone
ur gned letters w I be published Letters should be In
good t t
ddr
1ng ISSJCS not personalitieS. Thank You" letters
w11 n • bo accepted for publication

The Daily Sentinel
ad r Serv1ces

cusPs 213-9so&gt;
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Publ r d Tuesday througt1 Fnda~ 111
Court Strc t Porreroy Ch o Secondc
postugo paid at Pomeroy
Member: The Assoc •ed Press and
the Oh10 Newspaper AssX~auon

Our main number Is
(740) 992-2156.

Department extensions ore:

News
Editor: C r !le Hoc! ch E-xt 12
Reporter: Br
Ac d Ext 14
Reporter: Beth Sero nt, Ext 13

Advertising

PostllUister: Sof'd address correc11011&amp; to The Daly Senti'lo PO Box
729 Poroc:-oy OhiO 45769

Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route
4 weeks .............."1 1.30
52 weeks ........... .'128.85
Dally .•..•....••..••.•.•50'
Senior Citizen rates
26 weeks ............ .'59.61
52 weeks ....•..•...•'116.90

AdverUslng Director: Par&gt;1 C:~ldwell,
740 446 2342 Ext 17
Subscnbers should remn tn advonoo
Retail: Matt Rodger r:xt 15
diroct to Tile Dally Sentmel. No sub·
Retail: Brenda Dav1s Ext 16
scrlpt1on by ma1l perm•tted In areas
ClossJCtrc.: Judy C ark Ext 10
where home c.arner scrv100 1s avo•labto

Circulation
Circulation

M:~nager:

740 446 2342

t.

General Manager
Char ene Ho '11cf'o Ext 12

www rrty

Web
y ent n I com

Moil Subscription
Inside Meigs County
12 Woeks
.'35.26
26 Weeks . .
.. . .'70.70
52 Weeks
. . '140 11
Outside Meigs County
12 Weeks
'56 55
26 Weeks
•tt3
52 Weeks
"227 21

60J

Mandate not an emetgenc}'
'"'a

Oh10
\Cl) d1\crsc state mterms
of hO\\ cmergcn~.:) mcd1cal sen ice-.
are prO\ ided from communit) to
communi!) In some ca&lt;,es. emergency calls arc fielded at the tO\\ nshtp or mun1c1pal IC\ cl. \\h1lc others
rei) on the county for these services.
But no matter \\ho re pond&lt;; 1n an
cmcrgenc) &lt;;Jtuatlon, Oh10ans \\ant
and need help as soon as humanly
possible
Ho\\e\er. the State Board of
Emcr •crH:\ Med1c.tl Serv1ce" (EMS)
rccentl) n·pprO\ cd ..1 rule th t could
1•m 1 anti) 111 p l.l the b I t
mer cr 1.:) m dt I c \\ m
areas to n:l:ntll nd ret m per.,om e
and respond to erne• cnc) qtuar,nn'
m an eft ICient mc~nner.
A fe\\ ) c.m. ago, I fought a ain"t a
policy proposed b~ the st. te E:\1S
board that \\Ould h \e requ1 d
emer en )
medl\.:• I te 111
{EM r) to be present before an o.~mbu­
lance \.:Ould re&lt;.pond to a c&lt;tll for help
I h1.., \\Ould ha\e caused problems for
man) of our local E:.MS department .
\\ h1ch sa1d that emergenc) response
time \\OUid be lengthened significant!) 1f the state board's rule \\hen into
effect. I he Legislatu1e \\as able to
cnac: ,, Ia\\ tl1.1t smd onl) one fir~t
responde1 hnd to be an E.\1T.
Wcll, a~ Yogi Berra once tamou-..ly
said, "It's deja' u all O\er agam." The
~tate I:~ IS bo.trd 'oted on Fcbru.H')
25 to mandate that all paramedic
training programs in Ohro become
nat10nall) .~ccrcdJtcd b) 2018. Also.
the te t recognized b) the I!MS board
for EMT certificatiOn m Oh10 \\ill be
administered
b)
the
.1110nal
Reg• tr) of Emergenc) Medical
Technictans. ll1is 1s .m unnece sar),
tunc-con ummg and co tJ) unfunded
mandate, \\hich \\111 rarse costs for
local bMS tmiml)g programs and

John
Carey

orne
)(}rdl
n
. \\ h1lh are nut t:lJU d nm'
Currt:ntl). man) ~:\1~ dtstm.:to, pa)
to tram paramed11.:' to "'"f\ e their
region of the st, te. but th1 poltc)
rna) change 1f these agenc1es arc
reqUJrcd to speno thou ....mds of dol
lar~
to upgrade the1r tr.unmg
resources to meet nation.tl .tc(;redllation standards. In particular. nUlll) of
the E~IS depm1ments in 111rnl Oh10.
\\ hich art: worJ..ing \\ ith limned
re~ources, ma) ha\ e to pass the e
.1dditional costs on to their students,
'&gt;C\t!rel) impacting our rcgmn's abllil) to recntit .md retam cmergenc)
medtcal personnel.
It i&lt;. fine if an indh idu.11 person or
department chooses to become
nationall) cen1f1ed. but 1t hould not
be a reqUirement for all E:.MT" "ho
"o.~nt to '' ork 111 Oh1o Mam states do
not reqUJre their cmergenc} medtcal
"orkers to meet nat1onnl .lccredrt.tuon st.mdard'&gt;. and I see no problem

\\ ith Oh10 ·s current EMT cen1ficat1on proces&lt;&gt;. It 1s challenging enough
for count1es. cities and IO\\ n !ups to
prO\ Ide local safet) sen ices \\ rthout
addmg unneces a!Y hurdles to JUmp

0\er.
A good compari ...on is the national
board certification process for teachers. Some educator~ in Ohio choose
to \\ ork to become certilied b) the
NatiOnal Board for Professional
·leaching Standard . but those who
don't are still quali lied to teach Ill
Oh10, .md do &lt;..o successfull). \\ hile
the o;t.tle encourages teacher to pur'&gt;ll"' natrona! board certificdtlon. ll i
not a mo.~ndate on educator' or school
d1str1cts.
•
J am currentl) '' orkmg \\ ith
EMS communit\ and other intercslt:
part1e~ to draft iegislation that ,.. ould
proh1b1t the state EMS board from
makmg a rule requinng nauonal
accredrtation for E:\1Ts m Oh10.
At a tune \\hen man) local communttieos are "trugghng "ith t1ght
resource' and are alread) ha\ ing a
dtfficult time rccru1ting EMS \ oltmteer • the state should not implement
rules that \\ill make it e'en hardcr to
attr.tct and train the ...e professionals.
:\lost 1mponantl). tim polic) could
1m pact the abilit) of man) to\\ n hips.
mumcipalitie~ and countre ... to pro' ide time I) emergenc) "en ICC~ for
Ohio.m' in need.
rf) ou ha\ e an&gt; que tion . thought
or concerns about a "tate is~uc. or 1f
)OU need as:-.i,tance \\Orking ''ith a
state gO\ emment agenc). plea e \\ nte
to me: Senator John A. Care). Ohio
Senate. Statehou,e. Columbus. Ohio
4 ~215 or call Ill) office at (614) 466156. I ar...o encourage ) ou to 'l'&gt;lt
Ill\ p~u!e on the Ohio Senate \\ cb"1.
m\\\\ ~ .ohiO,enate.gm JOhn-care).

,.

c

�Thursday, March

25, 2010

Deaths

Robert Culp, who starred in 'I Spy,' dead at 79

Mary Louise Drummond

BY B OB THOMAS

Mary Louise Drummond, 83, Gullip0lis. pa%ed av.ay on
Tuesday. March 23,2010, at Holzer Senior Care Center.
S~!" !ces will be held at .11 a.m., Snturday, March 27. 2010,
at \~ 1llts .Funeral H_?me with Pr.1~tor Alfred Holley officiating.
Dunal w1ll follow m Grmel H1ll Cemete!). Friends rna) c.11l
from 5-8 p.m .. Frida). March 26, 20 I 0. at the funeral home.
In lieu of flO\\ers, please con~1de1 contributions in Mar)
· \ memory to Hol1er Senior Care Center 380
oniul Drive, Bid\\Cil, OH 45614.
'
Pkase \ i:-it wwW,\\ illisfunernlhome com to send 1.!-mail
condolence....

LOS ANGELES Robert
Culp, the nctor who teamed
with Bill Cosby in the racially groundbreaking TV sene-;
"I Sp) '' and was Bob m the
critJcall) acclaimed ex comedy "Bob &amp; Carol &amp; Ted &amp;
Alice," died Wednec.;da)' after
collapsing
outside
his
I lolly wood home, hts m.magcr said. Culp was 7lJ.
Manager Hillard Elkms
s.1id the actor v. tts on a walk
when he fell. He wa taken to
a hospital and pronounced
de.1d JUSt before noon. The
actor's son was told he d1cd
of a heart attack, Elkins said.
though police \\ere unsure if
the fall \\as medically related
Los Angeles police Lt.
Rohett Binder said no foul
play v.as suspected. Binder
sa1d a jogger found Culp,
who app.trently fell and
struck his head.
"I Spy" greatly advanced
the careers of Culp and
Cosby and forged " lifelong
fnendsh1p. Cosb) satd
Wednesda) Culp was hke
an older brother to h1m.
'''l11e first bom in every
family is always dreaming
of the older brother or r;1stcr
he or she doesn't have, to
protect, to be the buffer, pro\ ide the v. isdom, shoulder
the biO\\ s and make things
nght," he said. "Bob v.as the
tlllS\\Cr tom) dre.1ms.
""io matter hov. man}
mistakes I made on '1 Spy.'
he was alwavs there to teach
and protect n1e," Cosb) snid.
Candace
Culp.
the
actor'&lt;&gt; cx-wtfe. said &lt;&gt;he

Rose Hackett Tribble
Ro e Hackett Tribble, 84. of St. Albans. W.Va. died
Monda), March 22.2010, nt home.
~1ass of ChriMian Burial v. ill be celebrated at 11 a.m.
Thursday, March- 25, at St. Francis of Assi~i Catholic
Church, St. Al~ans, with ~ather Patrick M. McDonough as
celebrant. Bunal will be 111 Cunmngham Memorial Park,
St. Alban.;;, W.Va.
Visitation will be from 10 to II a.m. Thursday at St.
Francis of Assisi Catholic Church, St. Albans.
In lieu of flower.... donation rna) be made to Hospice Care,
1606 Kanawha 81\d. W.,C'hrule ton. W.Va. 25312-2536
Condolences ma) be oftercd online at '' '' v. .bartlettchapmanfuneralhome .com.
Bartlett-Chapman Funeral Home. 409,6th A\ e .. St. Albans,
W.Va., (304) 727-4325 is in charge of arrangements.

For the Record

•

The Daily Sentinel ,. Page As

www.mydailysentincl.com

Marriage licenses

POMEROY - Mamage license~ were is ued in Meigo;
Count) Probate Court to: Steven Jo..,eph Timrman. 20, and
Samamtha Rachelle Ackerman. 20. Middleport; Kenneth
Ah ie Turle&gt;, 63, and Cind) Sue Koblentz. 53, Racine; and
Ro) Lee Z1mmerman. 39, Hockingport. and Cynthia Ann
Massie, 34. Tupper~ Plains.

Dissolutions
POMERO'l -Actions for d1 :.olutton of marriage \\ere
filed in Me1gs Count) Common Pleas Court b) Brandi H1ll,
Middleport. and Dallas Hill Ill, Racine; Chel)l D. Halle)
and Stephen B. Halley, Middleport, and Mat) StC\\art and
George Ste,,art. Jr.• Pomero).
A dissolution \\a~ granted to Tcff) 1!. H) sell and Sheila
c. H)sell.

Divorces
POMEROY- A complaint ford1\orce \\as filed in l\ie1gs
Count) Common Pleas Court b) Rhonda K. Carnahan. Long
Bottom gain t Da\ 1d L Cam. han Long Bottom
D \On:e.-. v.ere granted to Su an McBane from Paul
McB ne and Michele L Cund1ft from Gregory K. Cund1ft.

Foreclosure
P0~1EROY - A foreclosure decree was 1ssued m Metgs
County Common Pleas Court to BAC Home Loans
Servlcmg against William P1erct! and others.

Dismissed
P0!\1EROY

A crimmal acuon agamst Cand) Cal a'' U)

ASSOCIATED PRESS

was devastated.
"I le '' H'i a wonderftll, crcnti\c nMn who contributed
c;o much to his business, as
an actor. as a wntcr, ns a
director,'' she said.
Robert Culp lately had
been working on writing
c.;creenpla)s, Hkins ..aid
''I Spy," which aired from
I 965 to 1968, \\ u'\ a tele\ i'ilon m•lestone in more ways
than one. Its combination of
humor und adventure broke
new ground, and it wns the
f1rst Integrated tele\ is ion
show to feature a black actor
m a starring role.
Culp
played
Kell)
Robinson, a spy whose
cover was that of an ace tennis player. (Jn real life, Culp
actually was a top-notch tennis player who showed hi~
skills in numerous celebnty
tournaments.). Co5by was
fellow spy Alexander Scott,
whose cover was that of
Culp's trainer. The pair traveled the world in the en 1cc
of the U.S. government.
Culp followed "I SJ?.)" with
his most prestigrous him role,
in "Bob &amp; Carol &amp; Ted &amp;
Alice.'' The work of firsttime director Paul Mat.Ursky.
who also co-wrote the
screenplay. lampooned the
lifcsl) les of the sexual revo
luuon of the 1960 Bob ru1d
Carol (Culp and Natnlie
Wood) were the innocent
ones v. ho were introduced to
wife-sv.apping b) their best
friends. Ted and Allee (Elliott
Gould and Dyan Cannon)
Culp also had starring
roles in such films as "'I he
Castaway
Cowboy,"
"Golden Girl," "Turk 182!"

and ''Big Bad Mama II."
Hr!'&gt; teaming with Cosby,
however, was likely his best
remembered n;&gt;le.
Cosby won Emmys for
actor in a leading role all three
years that "I Spy" aired, and
Culp. who was nommated for
the same awdrd each )ear.
said he w.1s never Jealous
"1 was the proudest man
around,'' he said in a 1977
interview.
Both he and Coshy wen~
imolved in civil rights causes, and when Martin Luther
King Jr. was assassinated in
1968 the pair tra\!eled to
Memphis, Tenn .• to join the
striking garbage v. orkers
King had been organizing.
Culp and Cosby also
costnrred in the 1972 movie
"Hickey and Boggs,'' whtch
Culp also directed. This tune
they were hard-luck private
detectives who encountered
muluple deaths. Aud1cnces
who had cnJO)ed the lightheartedness of ··1 Spy" ''ere
disappointed. and the mo\ ie
flopped at the box office
"His proudest moments
were when he was v.riting
and directing 'I Sp)' and
'Hickey and Boggs,'"
Cosby said. "Bob was
meticulous and committed.''
After year.. of talking up the
idea. the) finally re-teamed in
1994 for a two-hour CBS
mov1e, "I Sp) Returns."
In h1s fir:-t mO\ ie role Culp
pla)ed one of John
Ken ned-. ·screw m "PT I09."
H1s first starring TV series,
"Trackdown" (1957-1959)
v.as a We.c;tem based partl)
on files of the Texas Rangers.
In toe 1980s. he starred as an

J·BI agent in the fantasy ''The
Greatest Amencan I Jero.''
He remained ncuvc in
movies and TV. Among his
notable Inter performances
was as a U.S. president in
1993's ''The Pelican Brief."
More recentl). he had a
recurring role a~ Pntncia
Heaton\ father in the sitcom "E'er) body Loves
Raymond" and appeared 111
such shows as "Robot
Chicken,'' "Chicago Hope''
and an episode of "Cosby."
Robert Martin Culp. born in
1930 in Oakland, led a peripatetic existence as a college
student. attending College of
the Paetfic in Stockton, Calif.•
Washmgton Uni\ersity in St.
Louis and San Francisco State
College before landing at the
Um\ ersity pf Wa5hington
drama school.
Then at age 21 . a semester
remo\ed from his degree,
he moved to New York.
where he began landing
roles in off-Broadway
pla)S. One of them '"as in
"He Who Gets Slapped.''
"I sav. it m college in
Seattle. and I sa1d, 'My
God: that's my part. that's
my part,"' he once told an
interviewer. After he \\On
the role in n Greenwich
Village production "the
floodgates opened,'' he said.
Good re\ iev.:. and an
Obie av.ard led to offers
from Hollywood.
Culp was m&lt;~rried five
times, to Nancy Ashe,
Eln) ne Wilner, France
Nu)cn. Sheila Sulhvan and
Candace Culp. He had four
children with Ashe and one
with Candate Culp.

Contract rrom Page AI
for purchase of t\\ o tandem
dump trucks. priced at
$64.695, each. B1ds were
opened lnst week from Ace
und
Southeastern
I qUlpment.
Comm1so;ioners tabled
ad ton on fi, c po '&gt;1111e bid'&gt;
for demolition of abJn
doned
properue
Jn
S)racu e. to be financed
through that \ 1llage·.,
recent C'ommuntt) Ot~trc"'
gtant. JetTer-; Exca\uttng
of Pomeroy submirted the
low bid at last v.cek's
meeting. but commtssion
cr ,.. 1ll not appro' e a b1d
until next v.eek's regular
meetmg. they said, pendlllg an opm10n fro111

Prosecuting
Attorney
Colleen S. Williams.
Brenda Barnhart of the
county's National Day of
Prayer Commtttee. met '' tth
COJ11miSSIOners tO dl'iCUS'i
use of the count) o t
hou e for the nnu 1 ()
Prmer 1"\ e
M
.md to 1 \ t "
to attend and pan
acll\ 1ttes scheduled tor t
w cck-long
ob~;en nncc
Barnhart
sn1d
Me1gs
Count) " Day of Pro} ..
ob~ .. n. n~e 1s still conr;1d
ered the o;econd largest m
OhiO, and i actually a
week-long ob enance.
She md the \\eek's e\ents
v.Jll begin. a~ always, w1th a

c1rcle of prnver around the
courthouse. 6n the Nat1onal
Da) of Prayer. alwa) s the
first Thursda) in May, public officials will be guest at
a prayer breakfast on the
Pornero) parkmg lot .. A
p ) e and prn1 e ~en 1ce
be
heduled on
) e\emng m the
lot.
Dur nJ the mam obser' unct: on Ma) 6. pra) er
be offered for elected
als and others in serto the community.
rt Street v. ill be blocked
ot1 for the en ice. v. h1ch
w1ll center around the courthouse steps. Sncrcd music
1 also part of the program.

Commi&lt;&gt;sioner approved
a proclamation of May 6 as
~ntional Oa) of Pra) er in
Meigs County and approved
use of the courthouse steps
for the program. President
Tom Anderson will read a
proclamation
of
the
ational Dn) of Prayer
from Go'. Ted Stnckland.
Commissioners
also
apprO\ ed a collaborath e
a2reement v. ith Heart of the
Valle) Head Start. at the
agency':s request.
Prc~cnt were Anderson
and Commissioners Mick
Da\'enport and .Michael
Bartrum. Davenport erved
as recorder in the ab ence of
the Clerk, Glona Kloes.

\\a d1 missed in ?\1e1gs Count) Common Pleas Court

Sentenced
POMEROY - Rick Hawley v.as sentenced in Meigs
Count) Common Pleas Court to I 8 months in pnson on a
charge of receiving stolen property.

God's N.E.T.rromPageAI
Attendance tigurcs for
2009 listed I ,255 youth and

many adults participating in
the program at God's NbT
\\here 8.059 hot meJls v.crc
sened.
In addition to meals
from Page AI
en ed at the center. 720
\\hen funds are a\mlable, the local humane societ) also were sent to young people
pro\ ides emergency care for stray animal-; who are hurt and at home. and hundred of
pa)s for some costs associated" ith spaymg and neutenng frozen single meal donnted
of cats and dogs. The society is ,1lso mongl) supporting the by Aelhsio were handed out
cause for a cat shelter for Nteigs Count) and is trying to through the program.
God's N.E.T. is an ecufind c;ome wa) to make that happen, including \Oicing that
menical
minis!!)' providmg
to local, county off1cials ..and encouraging others to
programs. facilities and a
1 so. The society also prmides a free stra\\ gi\eawa) for
'ariet) of good role models
bedding during the winter months.
to
encourage youth to li\e
The humane ~ociety's thrift shop is also often a place
\\here people are matched up with pets or adverti ...e pets to Christian lives.
A special e\ ent held b)
g1\eav.ay. Hov.evcr. the thnft shop doesn't have the space
the
youth recentI) '"as a
nnd is not equipped to take in animal but if)ou·re Jookmg
for a kitt) cat. the) can probably tell ) ou v. ho has one m dance to ra1se mone) for
Jlaih relief. Other recent
need of a home.
Last night new and seasoned volunteers gathered 111 the recreational activities have
ncv. thrift c.;hop. ready to learn hov. they can help those who included a St. Patnck's Day
oh...en anee with a princess
can't help themselves - nnunnlc;,
For those wishing to make hadlv needed donmions of for a day and a spring flmg.
Saturda) night there will
item~ or wsh. the thrift Jlzop can be reached at 992-6064.
be a Palm Sunda) obs~r-

Shop

\ ance; Tuesda). P&lt;~SM&gt;Vel
will be obsened: and
Wedncsdav, God's N.E.T.
"ill color· egg:-. and celebrate Easter.
April youth C\ ent v. ill
· mclude a remembrance of
the Holocau t. Earth Da).
Mother's Day '' ith cr.lft
making. and obsen ance of
the National Da) of Prayer.
A vanetv of fund ra1sers
take plaee· at lhc :O.Iulberry
Communi!\ Center mcluding Go..,pci bluegmss concerts on Saturday nights.
Coming on April 3 v. ill be
the Old Time Gospel Four
,md John Dolle) &amp; Bryce
Lo\ e offering are taken to
support the ministry.
Vance ... aid that God's
N .E.T. is al\\ aye; lookmg ~·or
\\a)s to partner \\lth
churches. organization:-. .111d
indh iduals. Funding 1s
through private indh idunls.
p.tnner:-., churches. grants

Stimulus from l)age AJ
bUildings, including the caurthou~e. herift's department
and mulu-purpose building v. hich houses the health depdrtment and other agencies.
.
.
Wibon ~aid Meigs Count)&gt; award of. $260,94.2 wtll
allow for upgrades to the heatmg, venulat1o~ and n•! conditioning systems in count) buildings, mclud1~g th~ mstallation of condensing water he.lters and hydromc boll~rs.
Anderson said the board hopes to C\ alua.te !he h~atmg or
air conditionmg ~yMems m all of the bmldmgs m hopes
can retrofitted for the sake of cnerfy efficiency.
s v.ill recehe $362.000 to replace eqUipment at the
v. ater treatment f,\cllity
. . . .
County has recehed nearly S9 .million 1!1 ~edcral
sti
funding in the pa!.t year. in~lud111g $3 milliOn fnr
water and sewer improvements in ~hddleport, m~J th~ C&lt;~n
struction of a new family health care center lor l•amtly
Health Care. Inc ., near Rocksprmgs.
To sec more newsphotos
from our photographers go to
W'"'\' .ntyduilyscntincl.corn
You can order reprints and
photo gitls ofyour favorite
photos there too.

4-week trial plus

$100 Offe

To get the offer, you MUST E'Oit&gt;r
thE' promo codE' p..rln..tm

W\YW.stamps.com/2009

und organization
like those \ olunteers arc a\ ailable to go out and speak to
Vnitcd Fund and Rotary.
Volunteers arc alwa\ s groups intere~ted in hearing
needed to \\ ork in the \ ari. about the ) auth ministl)
ous programs offered at takmg place at the ~lulbeff)'
God's · .E.T. Se\ em I of Communit) Center.

�PageA6

The Daily Sentin el

Th urs day, March

Obama issues low-key
order on abortions
WASHINGTON (AP)
Anything but jubilant,
Prf-' ; I nt H ll'lCk Obama
p

made It
enMll.: pa..,sagc of historic
health care legislation, pledg·
ing the administration would
not allow fed~.!I al funds to
pa) for ekcti\C abortions
CO\ered by prhate insurance.
Unlike Tuesda\. \\hen a
beaming Obama -signed the
health care hm in a nationall\
televised ccrcmon) mtcmrpted repeatedly by applause, the
White House refused to permit coverage of the event. It
occun·cd m the 0\ al Office in
the presence of a small group
of anti-abortion Democratic
lawmakers who had extracted
the commitment over the
weekend. The president supp&lt;lrts alx)rtion rights.
The political maneuvering
occwred . as the FBI
announced it was im e,..;tigating threats received b) about
10 Democratic lawmakers in
recent da).., in apparent· connection \\ ith the inten&lt;;ely
contro,ersial health care hm'.
"All threats and incidents
directed .tgainst members of
Congress arc taken seriously
uHd are being inve..,tigated,''
the bureau's Wm.hington field
office said in a statement.
At the same time. Senate
Democrats drove tO\'•ard
final pass.tge. of n '-.CCond
health care bill. drafted to
supplement the first by
sweetening benefits for
seniot"s "ith high prescription drug ~.:o~ts and for
low er-to-rniddle
income
familic" who cannot afford
the co"t of in-;urance.
Lackmg th~.: 'otcs to stop
it. Senate Republic.m leader
Mitch
McConnell
ot
Kentuck). vowed. ''We'll
conunuc to fight until tim
bill is repe&lt;tled and replaced
with commonsense idc.u; that
solve our problems v. ithout
dismantlin!! the health care
s.ystcm we ha\ c and "ithout
burying the American dream
nnder a mountain of debt."
That drew a swift rebuttal
from Majority I eader HaiT)
Reid, O-Ne\ .. who said the
legrsThtion Qb,tma signed
on Tuesday \\a.., a "wonderful bill'' that would help
millions with inadequate
coverage or none at all.
The follow-up bill before
the Senate included a second triumph for the admmistration on domestic polic).
It generally strips banks and
other pr! '·ate insur~r~ of
their abllrty to ongmate
loans to students. in favor of
direct ""oovcrnment .lending.
.
The government s ~avmgs
would raise the maximum
amount needy students could
receive in Pell Grants, and
pump about $2.6 billion over
a decade into historically
black and Hispanic colleges.
fhe changes would mean the
~

I

Family Medicine

loss of hi II ions t)f Jollars for
student lending gi,mt Sallte
\1ae .1s \\ell a.•·; large linan., •' ·, tntrons ~•Jch Hs
1..

1!•

1

25, 2010 ·

t-)\'lorgan ( ha~e

and B.mt.. ot Amen~:a
The hill passed the llou ...c
on Sunday and it appcar~d
Reid had a~ man) a'i 57 votes
in hand for its ;tppnwal, far
morethannceclcd.Among59
Senate D~mucrats. onlv Sens.
Blanche Lincoln of A1kmsas
nnd Ben Nebon of Nebra...,kn
announced in ad\ ance thcv
\\Ould Op[&gt;Ose it.
Far outnumbcre:l. Senate
Rcpubl icans sought votes
on politicalh-chargcd proposalc; that. ,\·hile potentially
troublesome
for
Democrat&lt;.. \\ere doomed to
defeat. The first, to roll back
the bill's ~1edicare cuts. was
jettisoned on a vc1te of 5642: the second, to strip out
..,pecial proJeCts, by 54-41.
Another proposal wa~ a call
b) Se11. i\ like Cmpo, R-ldaho.
to make sure none of the bill's
tax increa."c" '' ould ti11l on an
indi\ idual
with annual
income of les' than $2&lt;Xl.OOO
or a couple with'' ages of less
than $251),000 combined tnxpa)Crs whom the presrdcnt
has \Owed to shield. It failed
56-43.

see doctor

Dizziness most likely vertigo
Qut!stion: L:rtely I notice called the ''lahvrinth". is associated with other symp·
that when I move mv head located I he lal)yrmth can toms. For cxamplt.:. there
qUJ( ''. I gt-t a dill, fe~lbrcom~ intl,uncd (c••lkd
arc type.., of mipr unc
int
h1.., ~ecms to ha\ c l,tbyrinthltisJ due to .t bacte- headache~ that arc a~soct.lt
started last month right after nal or viral infecllon. like a ed with vertigo. Sometimes
I got over a had head cold. I head cold. Lahynnthitis can tumors grow in the tilller
feel line most of the time, be painless. although you car, which can cause ver1igo
and the diznnes~ has not )Ct mm al-,o notice some slight as well .~., hcanng loss.
, caused me to lose my b;,l- discomfort in your ear.
Decreased blood flow to the
ance or tall down. I am an
Another common form hr.tin. commonly as~ocwted
otherwise h!.!alth) college of vertigo is called benign with a stroke, can cause verstudent. so should I bl! wor- paroxysmal positional ver- tigo, vision problems, trouried, or can I just wait fnr it tigo (HPPV). BPPV also ble walking and headache ....
tP go away?
sounds verv similar to In short, vertigo may indi~
Answer: It sounds like what vou h~tve dcscnbed cate a serious medical emcr
.
\'erugo
.
.
1! you ha\ e vertigo.
1s
di'u iness a!-&gt;sociated gency.
~ most often described in one with sudden head moveBecause of this potential
I of two ways: either the men b. This common type danger, vertigo should
feeling that you are spin
of vertigo is easily treated always he evaluated b) a
ning in place
this i' with anti-diuines., med- physician. E\en BPPV can
calleu "subjective vertigo'' ication..,, some of which cause severe. debilitating
or the feeling that you can be purcha!'&gt;ed over the diuiness. to a degree that it
are standing still a'nd the counter. In fact, they are eventually requires a medwnrld 1s spinuing around the same medications used ical evaluation and prescrip
you - called "objective to treat and prevent motion tion medications .
\ertigo\" Most people who sickne~s. Seck emergency ,medical
cxpcrtcnce either of these
Another leading cause of attention if your vertigo
kmds of vertigo describe vertigo is Menicrc\ disease, S) mptom~ arc a-;sociated
the -;ensation as general but thift is more common in with double vision or fading
"di 11 iness ...
older people. Menicre's dis- vision, severe he~idachc&lt;,,
It ..,ccms very Iikely that case is also associated with
your head cold may have a ~udden onset of ringing in difficult) speaking. feeling
caused an mfcctwn of your the ears. called tinnitu.,, and
inner cur. which b one of hearing loss.
the most common causes of
As in the case of
vet1igo. 'I h~ inner car ts ~leniere's disease. mo'it
where your balance center. causes of vertigo will be

Seed Potatoes
including:
• Kennebec • Irish Cobbler
• Red Pontiac • Yukon Gol

faint or muscle weakness -especially 1f it's unique to
one side of the body.
fami/\ Medt&lt; ine® i~ a
ll'£ef...lv column. Gene1.
medtr~tl lflteStion ~ can
sent to Martha A. Simpson.
!J.O.,
,\4.B.A.,
Ohto
Uni\'l•rsity
College oj
0.\teopathi&lt;'
Medicine,
Communication
Office,
Athens, Ohio 45701, or
j amt 1''.111 edi cine@ o 11 cmn .o
hhm .edu. Plea.\e do not
\l'nd /etll'l'.\ asking Dr.
Simp:;on • to diagnose a
condition or suggest a
treatment plan. Medical
information in Family
Medicine® is provided as
an educational service
on/\ and does not replace
the. judf{ment fl your perwnal
phy\·ician. who
\hou/d he relied on to diagnose and recommend treatment for your medical conditio/H. Past columm are
available
on/me
at
w 11 w .fa m i I y 111 e d i cinenews .m;f?.

CLUf rOR
T«U~AY, IIARl!II2Etb. .

Don't Look North.
Don't Look ast!

Onion Sets
• Yellow • White • Red
Potted pr g Ian
• Tulips • Hyacinths
• Daffodils • Kalanchoes
•fu.lt

'*"" ~· •'-~J~tfratsmidMel
.,..lijtd.·faV:oulJJ :lll1lat•
II tlDIIIII!t/ t!IO)f1l "*

•Eu nlllllt1118 • 2400 Eastern .Ave. G allipoli
(740) 446-1711

THURSDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

ttl

•r. w111,.,• , . riimht uu • tddet
The Dally Sentinel
B-cW IIIgou~

Oood Luck

snd

h11va fun/

Let us

do the shopping for you.

ca11992·3381 or ~1s1t
www downing&lt;hi lds.com

�Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, .March 25, 2010

Thunderbird hope luck has changed a Ot)io tourney

A ach•Ciule I upcorr rg ~ogh
a ty spon ng event&amp; invorvong teame

Maso and Galtoa court oa
th.l.trsday,.Marc:h 2.5
Baseball
Cnaprrarvllle at Point P1casant, 6 30
P~

Softball
Wo.'" ='~&amp; at BuHalo. 5 JO p m

fliltii.Y. .t.imh.26
Baaebnll
H rbert Hoover at Po nt Pleasant 5 p rn
Softball

Scott 81 Po nt Pleasant 5 30 p rr
Girls Tennis

Scon at Potnt Pleasant 5 p m
Boys Tennis

Scott • Pl:»nt Pleasant 5 p m
Snlllrd.ay,JM.mhn
Baseball

Wrt Cour.~ at Waharra (DH)

1pm
msoo Burch 2 p rr
Softball
t Pleasant at Snerrranll berty, 3

Hannan at W

Po

pm
W rt Co~;r:ty at Waharra (01-1), 1 p m
Track and Flold
Pomt P•casarot at Ashland Relays 10
81'1

Eastern Gallia Academy at Warren. 10
81!'1

Girls Tennis
Po10t Pleasa-ot at Wolllomstown/St
Marys lOam
Boys Tonnls
Ploascnt at Willorrstown/St
• ~'I~ lOam

1

I

Lima Central Catholic will face
Chesapeake in D-3 semifinals
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)
Bob Seggerson has won
515 games during a stellar
coachmg career. He swears
he's not haunted by a handful of the 209 he's loc;t.
Scggerson, in his 32nd
year as a head coach, wtll
again bring Lima Central
Catholic to the state tournament Maybe things w11I be
d1fferent this time. Maybe
h1s Thunderbirds w1ll catch
a break. Maybe they'll be
the team liftmg the biggest
Di\ ision III trophy at the
end.
"Maybe the gods of basketball will :&gt;mile (on us)
tim, time,'' he said.
Seggerson
and
the
Thunderbirds are due, that's
for sure
They open the 88th annual

tournament on Thursday
morning when they meet
Chesapeake in a semifinal at
Ohio State's Value City
Arena. Both team'&gt; are 21-4.
"Go ahead, p1ck a dead
scab," Seggerson s&lt;tid with a
laugh when a~ked about the
toughest of his defeats at
past state tournaments.
Hut joking doesn't ernse
the pain of several ill-fated,
star-crossed losses that have
denied LCC' and Seggcrson
a state champton'&gt;hip.
"No, I have not forgotten
them. I try not to sit around
and think about it too much
but I think the thing that
people don't get about it is
that, they're really not nightmares ,•· he said. "Of the
games that we pluyed at
state, I \\OU!d sa) every one

of them we really played a rule -

since changed well. We \vere prepared, we requ1rcd that a bloodied
\\ere passionate. We got player had to leave the game
after it. We just didn't get until the next stoppage of
plays at the end, or didn't get play. Seggcrson had to send
a break at the end."
• m a cold kid from the bench
LCC lost the 1989 and and he missed the front end
1994 state champiOnship of the bonus situation. A
Greeneview
games by two points each. In Jamestown
the
1994 game. Mr. playerthen hit a jumper with
Basketball Aaron Hutchens. II seconds left and the
who would go on to a glitter- Thund.erbirds turned. it O\ er
in~ career at Marquette, on thctr final possessiOn, the
m1ssed several one-and-one late~t m a cries of heartsituations down the stretch. breaks.
In the 1993 semifinals. the
"I think \\Clost five games
Thunderbirds had a se' en- down there by a total of
point lead in the final minute ei~ht point&lt;;,'' Seggerson
and led by a point with 5 satd. "Well. th.tt\ tough. But
seconds left before a contro- it also means we're a tough
versial foul call resulted in a out. We get d&lt;l\\ n there and
loss to Berlin Hiland.
we play hard, we get after
In their most recent trip to people and that's what we're
the state's final four, LCC going to try to do this time.
led 50-49 with 18.1 seconds We're gotng to prepare.
left in the 2000 Division Ill \ve're going to come down
semifinals. But All-Ohioan and play well, and just hope
Adam Stolly had gashed his that that's enough."
knee while being fouled and
Orrville (20-5) meets

Columbus Ready ( 19-6) in
the other Division III semifinal.
After that. Dayton Dunbar
(23-3) takes on Cle'teland
Benedictine (22-4) and Port
Clinton
(25-0)
pia) s
Zanewille
(17-6)
in
D1vision II semifinab.
Friday's schedule finds
Newark Catholic (24-1)
tacklim! Toledo Ottawa Hills
(24-1) and Dayton Jefferson
(15-10) meeun~ Bedford
Chane) (14-11) m Division
IV. Mentor (23-3) meets
Cincinnati .Moeller (21-4)
and giant-killer Gahanna
Lincoln (26-0) - which
shocked defending champion and USA Today No. I
Columbus ~orthland in the
regional title game - takes
on Massillon Jackson (23-2)
in Division I.
Finals ar~ on Saturday.
Games all three days are at
10:45 a.m. and 2. 5:15 and
8:30p.m.

Matta enjoying busy NCAA run
COLL MBUS, Ohio (AP)
It's 10 o'clock on a
Monda) night in midMarch. the earl) NIT games
are O\ er and e\ en a\ id basketball fans across the country are about to call it ada).
That's when Ohio State
coa~h Thad Matta gets
.tround to answering his
stack of phonemes ages.
"I'm just sitting down to
dmner with my family.'' he
Sa)S.
Some. 14 hours into what
ic; .t day off for his players.
Matta 1s bone tired yet
exhilarated. He thinks of the
more than 300 Di\ is ion I
coaches out there \\ ho
.tren't bus) right nO\\, who
't have a game for which
ns look at Ohio State
und tts coach and think their
success - a 29-7 record, a
date v. ith l'ennessee in the
round of 16 on hida) night
in St. Louis
is a product
of recruiting, plain and simple. After all. don't the
Buckeyes have perhaps the
very best player in the
nation in Evan Turner?
And wasn't it Matta who
cajoled one of the great
recruiting classes ever,
dubbed The Thad Fiv~. to
come to Ohio State three
years ago? That group
mcluded 7-foot center Greg
Oden. coach-on-the-floor
Mike Conley Jr. and
superlath e shooter Daequan
Cook coming off the bench.
They all left for the NBA
after one season. taken in
the first round of the draft.
Asked if it grates him that
people cons1der hun a
ruiter fir t and .t coach
• ond, Matta laughed.
"No. it doec;n't bother
me," he said Tuesday. "I'm
one of those guys, J JUSt
\\akc up every da). go to
W'ork and do the best that I
can."
In his 10 years as a head
cqach - one at his alma
mater. Butler. three at
Xavier and the la'&gt;t six at
OhiO State - each of
Matta 's teams has won at
least 20 games. All three
:;ohool$ are still alive in the
rdund of 16.
Remember. as a freshman
Turner c;truggled and didn't
16ok anything like the player he ic; now. Unlike some
,, ho arc mJrked for the pros
before they learn to shave,
Turner had to grow mto his
talent.
"Once )OU get herc,n's so
tough." he satd of h1s maturauon under Matta. "M)
two months here, I didss the 3-point line. I
itely wasn't ready for
lege. I had the roughest
tifnc ever here. I wasn't sure
if J could play at this level.''
Yet 1\tatta has brought nut
tlie best in hun and his tc.un.
Ellen when Tumcr sat out
trlore than a month with bro·
k¢n boncc; in h1s back earlier
this season, the coach
helped the Buckeyes hang
on.
"\\'hen we started off 1-3
uf the B•g Ten. he really

Benny Sleu/MIIwaukee Journal SentlneVMCT

Xavrer's Dante Jackson waves a banner after beating Pittsburgh dunng the second round
of the NCAA Tournament at the Bradley Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on Sunday.
Ethan Hyman/Raleigh Nows &amp; Observer/Mer

Ohio State head coach Thad Matta yells instructions
from the sidelines during the first half of an NCAA tournament game.

stayed positive with us,"
Turner said of ~latta. ''He
was telling us that we need
to take it one game at a time
and come back and do v. hat
we need to do to try to finish
off strong And that's what
happened."
And it has been years in
the making.
When Matta took over in
2004. Jim O'Brien had been
fired after acknowledging
he had given money to a
recruit's family. and the
Buckeyes v.ere coming off a
14-16 season. Arid a month
into Matta's first season,
athletiC director Andy
Geiger announced Ohio
Stale would not go to any
postseason tournament to
mitigate penalties.
The next year. Ohio State
won the Big Ten regularsea~on title \\'ith a makeshift
team built around a toosmall center, Terence Dials.
Then came the most
acclaimed recruiting class at
Ohio State since Jerry
Lucas, John Havlicek and
Bob Knight came to tO\\ n in
1959. The 2006-7 Bucke)es
went 35-4, lost to Florida in
the national champiOnship
game and then lost Oden
and others to the NBA.
"You won't out-game plan
Thad Matta You won't outh1m."
said
coach
Tennessee's Bmce Pearl.
whose teams have faced the
Buckeyes three times with
Matta on the sideline. "He'll
do a very good job wllh his
team and the schemes that
they run."
With most of the stars
gone. Matta brought 111 a
highly acclaimed 7-footer,
Kosta Koufos, another one
and-done
recruit. The
Bucke) e:-. went 24-13,
missed the NC' AA 11eld but
won the NIT.

Turner. a whip-thin 6-7
point guard. came in the
next season but couldn't
find a position. David
Light). the last remaining
member of the Thad Five at
Ohio St.rte, broke his foot
seven games in and didn't
pia) the rest of the year.
Still. the Bucke)CS \\Cnt 22II and made it into the
NCAA tournament before
another blue-chip recruit, 7foot sub BJ. Mullens. left
for the NBA.
Lighty. one of the stars on
this year's B1g Ten regularseason and conference tournament chump. credi!s
.M~t~a for the program s
restltence.
"He allows yo~t to go out
and be yoursell und r!ay
basketball the \Va~)·nu h~e
!~) play ,hask.ctball, he sattl.
I don t thmk he restncts
)OU or tells you not to do
this, don't do that, out on
the court. It nutkes it fun for
you.''
Matta has been aged by
his profession. Although he
and his wife. Barbara, ha\e
two )Oung daughters, he
looks older than h1s 42
years. with a receding ha1rline and a slight limp that is
the result of back surgery
that d1dn 't come out right.
He no longer jumps into
practices to shO\\ his
charges some of the skills
he displayed as n Butkr
player.
. And it's dear he's relishing,another busy ,\larch.
"You've got to enjoy what
you're dnin~... he s:Jid.
"Coaching IS coaching.
There's always the next hattie to fight. You get into a
routme of preparation and
coaching your team. Don't
look bchmd, don't look
ahead. What do \\C June to
do right now?"

Xavier's NCAA excellence by design
CINCI:\'~ATI (AP)
Xavier bristles whenever
anyone suggests it's doing
quite well for a mid-major
school. Another trip to the
i'\CAA's round of 16 might
finally remove the hyphen.
There's no mid-anything
about the Jesuit "chool.
which is growing a reputa·
tiona ... a major player in college basketball.
The Mu..,keteers (26-8) are
in the ~CAA tournament's
round of 16 for the third
straight year. Only one other
school- Michigan State
can match that. And the
Musketeers· pre-eminence
has nothing to do with
March surprises or toumament upsets.
They drew it up that "ay.
They speQd that wav. The\
''in that way.
•
•
"Everything in our program is first-class - ho\\
\\C travel, how we recruit,
the use of charter planes. the
Cintas Center, hov. we
schedule." coach Chris
Mack said. in an interview.
There's a formula for winning in college basketball.
one that applies to progrnms
b1g and small. In the last
decade, Xavier ha gotten it
nght.
The Musk~teers are making their ninth NCAA tournament appearance in 10
years and their fifth in a rO\\.
set to pia) Kansas State in
l the regional ...emifinals on
1 Thursdav in Salt Lake 'Cit).
Onlv a do1en schools ha\C
made the NCAA toumament
each of the last fh c vears:
Xm ier. Duke, K:insa ....
Michigan State. Tcnncssl'L',
Pitbburgli,
~lurqUL'Ite,
GonLaga. Texas, Texas
A&amp;i\1.
Villano\ a
and
Wisconsin.
The small universit) 4.200 undergraduates
began emerging as tl regul:tr
~CAA tournament team 111
the 1980s. \\hen 1t pia) ed m

I

a .Midweo;tern Collegiate Florida, Tennessee, Kansas
Conference that was the def- State. ,;\1issouri . LSU.
mition of mid-major. As the l»diana, Virginia, Auburn,
acclaim grew, the school'~ • Virginia. Butler. Wake
admimstration decided the Forest. ~ 1arquette, Memphis
basketball program could and Creighton.
rai e its profile and ghe it a
"The double-edged ... word
is that you've got to be good
face ncros the countr).
It v. a n't going to be easy at it." Bobinski said. "If you
or cheap to become one of are going to put that out
the best.
front, it behoo' e' ) ou to be
"The formula 1s simple.'' succe,sful more often than
athletics director Mike not."
Bobmski said. in a phone
They've been succes,ful
in ten iew. "Being uccessful so often nO\\ that the) can't
isn't all that simple. If it \\a... help but v. ince ..., hen ..,omethnt ea ) . there v. ould be one suggest:&gt; the program i::.
more than ju t a couple of something le's than a maJor
teams advnncing deep in the succe~s.
tournament every year.''
"1 mean. I don't know a lot
X&lt;n ie1 ntU\CU up to till' of nud-majws that make
Atlantic IO ..... hichhadsome three con~ecu'tive S\\CCt
of the nation's top teams in 16s." said center Jason
Temple and ~1assachus~tts, Lo\e. the onl) ...enior on the
for the 2005-06 season. Fi\ c team. HSo 'ou can throw
) cars Iuter. it opened the that out o( the door right
state-of-the-art , Cintas 110\\ .''
Center on campus. which
The school has a knack
became a ..,pringbourJ to for hiring the right coach to
much bigger things.
take the program to the nc:xt
"If you v.ant to be sue- le\'el - Pete Gillen. Skip
cessful at a h1gh le\ el, ) our Pro, ...er, TI1ad :'.1atta. Sean
imestment and commitment ~tiller and nO\\ ~1ack. a
need to be at a high lc,el," Cincinnati prep ... tar \\ ho
Bobinski smd. "You can't pia) ed at Xn' ier and has
ha\ e one \\ ithout the other." v. atched the program outIn terms of facilities and grow the mid-major label.
''It gets under our kin,"
finances. Xm 1er had left the
mid-maJor ranks. It was Mack said. "I gue:-.' 1 JUst
competmg \\ ith the big ha\ e a hard time defining
bo):-.. Soon. it \\Ould be that label. There's nothing
beating them. too.
in our program that '' e feel
Since the 10.250-seat isn't high-major, from how
arena opened. Xa\ler has \\ c recruit to the tra' el to
v.on or shared six A-10 reg- the facilit) to the nonconf&lt;.·rular-~en ... on titles. including ence schedule to the :\'BA
the
last
f~mr.
The
,\!u ...keteers h:nl.! been a reg- player:- (from Xa\ler). 1
ular in tl1l' national rnnkings, think it all speaks to .1 highmaking it up to Nn. 7 Iast maJ'or program ·
s~.t ... nn. And at tnumaml'nt
With each '\C \ \ ({lllrna.
ment win, the \tu ... ket•'•'rs
ttme.
the) '\·e exec 11el1,
""
A big part of the equation make their point
io; Xa\ ier's '' ilhngness to
''I would sa\ all 'ott ha\'c
pl.ty the nation's bc ... t in the to do i' Ia\ O~lt our accomnonconfcrencc schedule. In pli ... hmcnt~ on
paper,"
the pa t three sca...ons, that Bobin..,J..j said. "The la~t 10
schedule has
included ) ear........ peak for themschools uch a:-. Duke. sc:-h es.

�--------~---- ~----

-- -

~

.......-...............

.....

-·~--------.----

Page B2 •1hc Dail) Scntmel

~..-.

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

www.mydailysentinel.com

'I hur:.day, March 25.2010

.FI
MIDWEST REGION
ARSTROUND t13d•1:uJMIW•1
REGIONALS
March 20

NCAA
SWEET SIXTEEN

March 25-28

Kansas 67
N. lowa

2

0

1

EAST REGION
REGIONALS
ti!dt) litI ;!tll!llt) FIRST ROUND
March 25-28

March 20

March 16
•
Kentucky
1 .!3
Kentucky 90 IE
St 16
~

if

Kentu

L---~Wake

0

BS

Texas
Forest 60

March 21

Forest 9

March 19

1iempe
Cornell 87---feomell
Cornell

_
5~

12 !i.

4~

WISCOnsin

~

rd

SEMIFINALS

Syracuse, N.Y.

SEMIFINALS

Aprl13

April3

March 20

z~

March 18

6:t:

Washin

~:.;.::.;;;.;;.;.;.;;...__....

2i

New Mex1co 3

j

lt!J~!QQ_64~ Montana
March 21

14 ~

March 19
Clemson
7 ,.:

z

Ohio St.

WEST

REGION

ARSTROUND ~'gfit):ltl ;It! I!:;.)
March 21

SOUTH

REGIONALS

REGIOHALS

March 25-28

March 25-28

REGION

~;~~·l:i•l;uliW•J ARSTROUND
March 21

Duke 68
Duke

California 53
March 21

Texas A&amp;M 61
Purdue

Indianapolis
AprilS

March 21
.:~=;__--.xavier

Houston

SaH Lake City

71

March 20

March 18 ;9
Notre Dame 6 .,a

Old Dom. 68 1old Oom

Xavier

..=~:..:.::.:.._

11

g

'1:

___:::3 Q

March 20

Kansas St.

St.

Kansas St. 4
I

02010MCT

~r&amp;fM~-tw
151 Second Ave, Gallipolis

446-2842

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

CHEVROLET • BUICK • GMC
308 East Main • Pomerov. Ohio
1-140-992-6614 or 1-800-831-1096

Elliott,s
CHEVROLET • BUICK • GMC APPliANCES • ElECTRONICS
308 East Main • Pomerov. Ohio
1-140-992-6614 or 1-800-831-1096

317 St. Rt. 7 • Gallipolis, OH
740-446-8051 • 1-800-377-2532
'

1058 State Route 7 South
Gallipolis, OH
(740) 441-0123

AB CONTRACTING
Modular Home Division

FIRE &amp;WATER RESTORATION

...t:'''ca"

1743 Centenarv Rd. Gallipolis. OB

Your lndtptndtnr Bu1lder

740-446-9585
740-446-9595
1-800-300-9585

SHADE RIVER
AG SERVICE'
'

4

Ahead in Sen•icc''

P 0 Box 7H he,tu, Olun 4 ~ 7 0

~ Nutrena·

"Winners Ne~·er Follow''

~~

437 Second Ave

Mike Sigler·

Sale~

Gallipolis, OH

5533 Ohio Rinr Rd. Pt Pleasant, WY

(740) 446-0404 (800) 689-5103

304-674-8022

D

Nationwide·
On Your Side·

BROWN
Jnsurance Agency
990 Stutl' Rt. 160 Gallipolis, 011

740-446-1960

. ONCE AGAIN
CONSIGNMENT
''Cute stufffor less"

330 2nd Ave Gallipolis, Ohio
441-9340

CORNEll

Acree Monument
Company
39728 S.R. 143

Pomeroy,OH
740-992-9922 7 40-416-3115

Flooring. Cabinets, Doors,
Windows, Siding &amp; More.
Hu~iness

Phone: 30~-882-2343
Fa\: 304-882-3399

405 5th Street

"e'" HaHn, W\'

�Thursday, March 25, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

l\egi~ter

Sentinel CLASSIFIED
{[;ribtttte -

Meigs County, OH

Websltes.
In One Week With Us
www rnyda1lytrlbune.com
mydallysentinel.com
IIKitdosslfied~~!}!llytribunc.corn REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS www
www myda1lyregister.com
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
\!Cribtttte
Sentinel
31\egi~ter
c:.f~~::v... (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Or Fax To (740) 446-3008

Oear/11ir~

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW TO WRI TE AN AD
Successful Ad s
Sh ould I n cl ude T h ese Items
To Help Get Response...

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Dis play Ads

D aily I n -Columna $1:00 a,rn.
Mond ay F aldny f o~ :rnsc~t ion
In N ext D a y's Pape a
S unda y I n -Col umn: 9a00 a. n&gt; .
F r id ay Fo~ S und aya Papc ~

A ll Dl~p laya 1 2 Noon 2
Business Days P r ior To
Publicatio n
Sunday Dlsp l n y a 1 : 0 0 p . rn .
T h u asday to~ S und aye&gt; Pa per

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Start Your Ada W ith A Ke yword • I nclude Complete
Description • l ndude A ~Ice • Avoid Abbre\'iataons
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ada Should Ru n 7 Days

VISA

Or Fax To (304) 675·5234

Or Fax To (740) 992·2167

tJ!tftu 1ft,~

--

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
;~
"""
Borders $3 .00/ per ad
~
•~
Graphics 50¢ for small
~
$1 .00 for large

..Si

\Ia!.,

POLICI 8 Ot'lo
PubU"'I~ ,.._... tho rlghl to ~II. reject &lt;K c;oncelarrj IICiat any I; me. ErrOr. mull be report~ en tho ttrs1 .,., ol pW~Icatton and ~no
Trlb...S.r« nef-Roghllor will be reapo,.,.lble lor no moreltlen tho~ ollhl space occup*d by tho enor and only lhl llrctiMet!lol\ We chill 001 be Uable 1o&lt;
any leu or ~that resvtta from lhe po.:bll-=-tlon or omlsafon ot an acl¥811 aoment. C~neCI on w1 be mad• In lhl lirll avenable -"'liOn. • Box numbel'll&lt;ll
are a waya conlldent L • C~rent rill a care npp a&amp; • All roo c=tlllc odtenleementa are wbjeel to lho F~erol Fair Housing Act cl 1G68 • This .__per
accepts only help Wllnl~ am mMII~ EOE a:!ndarda. We Will not k'ION!ngly accept any IC!vert!Slng In via ation cl tho • - W II no1 tKo rHpcnalble IO&lt;
orro,.l11 1111 od taken OYer the phOro

200
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
Must

Announcements

lost &amp; Found
Lost· Reward tal'llly pol
Honey &amp; While Beagle
dog call304-674·3085
Notices

Notices
Pictures that
have been
placed in ads at
the Gallipolis
Dally Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
Any pictures
PUBLISHING CO rec·
that are not
ommends that yo
do
picked up will be
bus ress w th people you
know. :-~d NOT to send . .__ d-isiiiiciii
aio
rdiiaeiiidiioi._ _.
ll'oney througl' •he .-,ail
urll you tJave :wost1gat·
Personals
1ng the o~ :1ng

send resu e by M ct&gt;
26. 2010 to f:.arty E.duca
lion Stat10r 817 10th
Street Pt P
WV
25550

RV
Sc:v1ce at
Tra ers
740-446·3825

Co mputers

Free Rent Special !I!
2&amp;3BR apts S395 and
T•a lers up Cent•al A • WID
f-tookup.
tenant
pays
e ectnc
Ca 1 between
Motorcydes
the .,ours of 6A·8P
EHO
Ellm View Apts.
(304)682·3017

GUABAN___IE.EO.
GQNSUMER
Own a new computer
for as little as $29.99
per weeki No credit
check ! Guaranteed
Consumer Funding.
1·888-282·3535

94 H~ ey DavldSOJ'I Soft
Ia I
446·9585
or
446·9595

Burled In Cred t Card

WANTED TO DO sll'all
home repair re!'lodcllng
&amp; comp_•e lawn serviCe
74().446 3682
GUN SHOW GALUPO· .;..;.;;;..;.;;;..;;;;;;.;:....--LIS Hobday nn Apn 10
300
Services
&amp; tt Adm
5400 6"
TBLS $25 74().667..0412

FIND
EVERYTHING
YOU WANT
OR NEED
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Bunding Materials
Quality Steel Arch
Buildings
Clearance
Blowout! We are offerhuge
dis·
Ing
counts on a l ew
sizes 16x20, 20x24
30x44 lim tted In·
venlory call now
866·352·0469.

1J..SA

Basement
Waterproofing
Uncond t•or I hlct me
g~.arantoo Loca rotor·
ences ful"'l1St1ed Estab·
(ISI'ed Hl7~ Call 24 H s
740-446.0870 Rogers
Basement Wat :proof ng

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legols ........................................................... 100
Announcements........... •............................ 200
B irthday/Anniversary .................................205
Happy Ads ...................................................210
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notices ........................................................ 225
Personals .................................................230
Wanted ..................._..................- ...........: •• 235
Services ..................................................... 300
anniiJ~n''" Servfce ........................................ 302
b.utnrnn11ivA ................................................. 304
ldmg Materlals ....................................... 306
Buslness ...................................................... 308
Catering .......................................................310
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 312
Computers ............""" ................................ 314
Contractors ..................................................316
Domestics/Janitorial .................................. 316
Electr ical ...................'"'"'"'' ....................... 320
Flnancla1 ....................................................... 322
Hoalth ........................................................... 326
Heoting &amp; Cooling ...................................... 326
Home Improvements 330
Insurance ................................................. 332
Lawn Serv1ce .............................................. 334
Music/Dance/Drama ...................................336
Other Services ............................................. 338
Plumblng!Eiectrical .....................................340
Professional Services ................................. 342
Ropairs ......................................................... 344
Roofin g ........................................................346
Secunty ........................................................ 348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
TraveVEntertainment ..................................352
Financial ......................................~...............400
Financial Services .......................................405
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money t o Lend ............................'"'""'"'""'415
Education ..................................................... 500
Business &amp; Trade School ........................... 505
Instruction &amp; Tralning ................................. 510
Lesson s ........................................................ 515
Personal ....................................................... 520
Animals ........................................................ 600
Animal Supplles .......................................... 605
Horses ................................................... ...... 610
Livestock ......................................................615
Pets ...............................................................620
Want to buy ..................................................625
...................................................700
Eq~Jiprnerlt ...........................................705
roduce ....................................... 710
Hay, Feed, Seed. Grain ............................... 715
Hunting &amp; Land .......................................... 720
Want to buy .................................................. 725
Merchandise ................................................ 900
Antiques ....................................................... 905
Appllan ce ..................................................... 910
Auction s .......................................................915
Bargain Basement ......................................-920
Collectibles .................................................. 925
Computers ................................................... 930
Equlpment/Supplies ....................................935
Flea Markets ................................................ 940
Fuel Ofl Coal/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport ....................................955
Kid's Corner ................................................960
Mlscellaneous ..............................................965
Wont to buy ..................................................970
Yard Sale ..................................................... 975

Lawn Service

.SETTLEMENT

Home Improvements

Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Bicycles.....................................................1010
Boats/Accessories .................................... 1015
Camper/RVs &amp; Trailers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Other ...................... _..................................1030
Want to buy ............................................... 1035
Automotive ............................................... 2000
Auto RentaVlease .....................................2005
Autos .......................................................... 2010
Classic/Antiques ....................................... 20t5
Commercial/Industrial .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessories ..................................2025
Sports Utillty .............................................. 2030
Trucks .........................................................2035
Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Vans ............................................................ 2045
Want to buy ............................................... 2050
Real Estate Sales •.: ................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Commerclal ................................................3010
Condomlniums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner.....................................3020
Houses for Sale ......................................... 3025
Land (Acreage) ..........................................3030
Lots .... .......................................................3035
Want to buy................................................ 3040
Real Estate Rentals ................................... 3500
Apartments/Townhou ses ......................... 3505
Commerclal ................................................3510
Condomlnlums .......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
Storage....................................................... 3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Housing .....•.........•...•••...... 4000
Lots .............................................................4005
Movers ........................................................4010
Rentals ....................................................... 4015
Sales...........................................................4020
Supplies ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ..•.. :......................................... 4030
Resort Property ......................................... 5000
Resort Property for sale .......................... 5025
Resort Property for rent .......................... 5050
Employment........................................... ...6000
Accounting/Financial ................................6002
Admlnistrallve/Professlonal .....................6004
Cashier/Cierk ................ u ••••.. ••• .....u••••·······6006
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6006
Clerical ....................................................... 6010
Construction .............................................601 2
Drivers &amp; Dellvery ..................................... 6014
Education ................................................... 6016
Electrical Plumblng ................................... 6018
Employment Agen cles ..............................6020
Entertainment ........................................... 6022
Food Servlces............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted· General .................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ............................ 6032
Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanics ...................................." ........... 6036
Medfcal ....................................................... 6036
Musical ...................................................... 6040
Part· Time· Temporaries............. •........... 604 2
Restaurants ........................................... 6044
Sales ......................................................... 6046
Technical Trodes ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory ......................................... 6052

Twm R vers .rower s ac·
cept rg appl cahors for
waJtJng tSI tor HUD sub·
s•d zed 1·BR apartr'1ent
lor the eld :1y diSab ed
can 675-6679

!!)

BeecP St

2000

QfJIT
We solve debt
problems !
If you have over
S12,000 In debt
C ALLNOWI
1·8n-266-0261

C.:m~·

-200
_ 5_H
_a_n_ey_ D_yn
_a_ S_u-pe-r
G de 9500 m w th ex·
t.ras
59000
Call
446-1655

BELIEF
Debt?
Call Cred1t Card
Relief for your free
consultations.
1-877·264-8031

CONVENIENTLY
LO·
CATED
&amp;
AFFORDABLE ToWl"l'ouse atx:-1·
srra
"''ents
and/or
llouses lor rerr.
Ca
CarrT'ICI"ael 740-441·ttt1 tor appl,.
cauon &amp; tnformatiOn
at

CBEOII CABf.

g new con
struct on moblle llol'les
Call
74()-853 1230 or
304·593 6386

Apartments/
Townhou•es

Campers/ RVs &amp;
Trailers

Finoncial

Free G-Room DISH
NETWORK
Satel·
lite System I
Free
HD·DVRt
$19.99/ mo. 12~
digital channels
( for 1 year) Cell
Now • $400 Signup
Bonus!
1-877-467..0535.

Recreational
Vehicles

1000

DIBECTV
For the best TV
experience, upgrade
• from cable t o
DlrecTV today I
Packages start at
$29.99
1-866-541-0834

DISI:iJNETWQBK
Save up to 40% off
your cable bill! Call
dish Network t oday!
1-877-274·2471

Lifelock
Are You Protected?
An identity Is stolen
every 3 second s.
Call Llfelock now to
protect your family
free for 30·days!
1·877·481-4882
Promocode:
FREE MONTH

VQNAG_E
Unlimited local
and long
distance calling
for only $24.99
per month.
Get reliable phone
serv ce frol"1 Vonage
Call Today!
1-877-673·3136
Professional Services
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee Un ess We W rl
1 888·582 334S
SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gal a Co
OH
and
Maso
Co WV Ron
Evans
Jackson
OH
800·537·9526
Security

AQI
Free Home Security
S850 Value
with purchase of
alarm monltonng
services from ADT
Security Servi ces.
Call 1 888-274-3888

AMERICAN TAX
BE.biEF
Settle IRS Taxes for
a fraction of what
you owe. If you owe
over S15.000 In ba ck
taxes call now for a
free consultation.
1·877-258·5142

400

Automotive

Rnanclal

Autos
========
2000
Ford
W ndstar
Money To Lend
at Auto A'C runs looks
Borrow Smart
EO com
C.:·· good
asking
S2 tOO
Equpl'lel'l OBO Call 740-446·4'22
e 0
Dv·
or 339-0636
of Fir rc
lnsttu· 74()-4 46-2412
ns Off ce o Consumer
Aff
BEFORE yo ref1- ~
,--~--~-- 98 Seb11ng Convert be
87 M ts~.obtSh 05 N n a
nee your l'omo or otr
636
•a n a oan. BEWARE of
740-446- 1768 'V msg
requests for any large
advance
payf'lerls of
Oua ty Cars &amp; Trucks
fees or nsurarce Ca
w/warrarty al priCed to
t'l
Of'ice of Co~s~.omer STIHL Sa os &amp; Service se 15 yrs 1n bus ness
Now
Ava
ab
e
al
Ct.:mr
Aff1ars
toll
free
al
COOK Motors 328 Jack·
Equ pment son Prke.
1·886·278·0003 to earn chaol
OH
f th
ongage broker or '!':
74~0.~44
~
6-~
24~1~2=~~= Ga po s
lcrdor IS propcr'y I~ Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain 740-446-0103
cersed (Th s IS a pubhc
scrviCe
announcement M1xed rou:1d bales for
Vans
from the Oh10 Val ry sa e
4x4 and 4x5 ~==;;;;;;;;==~=
Put&gt; sh ng Company)
74C-446·2412
2008
DodQ€
G-and
Caravan s VN 6 cy
I ke 'lew to much car for
500
Education
900
Merchandise G annv 740.949 2202

M dd epor' 2
fum shed apt
ut
pd No Pets dep &amp; ref
74D-992..()t65
br.

N 4th Ave Mlddlepo:t
2 br tu:n shed ap• dep
&amp;
ref
No
pets
740.992·0165
N 3rd Ave Mddleport
1 br fu red ap• No
Pets
dep
&amp;
ref
740.992·0t65
A~rtme 1 sva able row
Rweroerd Ap~
~ew
!-Iaven WV Now accept·
1ng
app teat ons
lor
HUD·subs d Ze&lt;l
O:'le
Bedroom Apts U~ es
nctucled Based Ol"' 30'l
of ad usted :1come Ca
304·882-3t21
eva ble
'or ~niOr and 0 sahled
people

Want To Buy

Busineu &amp; Trade
School

Equipment / Supplies

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home
Ca Today! 740.446-4367
t-8()().2'4.0452
ga ipoilscareerco lege edu

NoW's the best llr!"e to
buy a Rotor Til er 4
5 6 &amp; 7 3 pt tJitch
Jms
FarrT'
Equp11' :1t 740-446·9777

Accred led M be Accred I
lng Counc; lor
Colleges and Sc

600

Animals

Pets
1 ll'ale $500
5550 Yorksh re
740.965·3852

female
Terror

AKC M1n ature Schnauzers :? partt male .vhtle
chocalate
1 chocalate
M 1 ct&gt;oca~ate F- white
on rhost &amp; back feet
parents
on
prem1ses.
takm&gt;g deposits Call to
see 740·441 1657 Also
stud &amp; groom ng serv·
ICeS.
St ped orange cat to
giVeaway to good ho
or lp m Good w children
740·446-3248
700

Agriculture

=~=~~~=~

Farm Equipment
EBY,
INTEGRITY.
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLE'Y
HORSE/LIVE
STOCK
TRAIJ..ERS
LOAD
MAX
E'QUIP
MENT
TRA,J..ERS
CARGO EXPRE'SS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CONCESS,ON
TRAILE"'S
B+W
GOOSP-JECI( FLATBED
$3999 VIEW OUR E'N
TIRE' TRAILER INVE"l·
TORY AT
WWW CARMICHAEL·
TRAILERS COM
740 446·3625

Beau111ul Apts. at Jack·
son Estates. 52 West·
Want to buy Junk Cars wood Dr fro 5411 to
call 740-388.0884
$606
74()..446-"..,68
Equal Hou~ rg Opportu·
Real Estate n!!y ThiS ns tut or ~ f'
3000
Sales f:.qu:: Oppoou ty Pro·
vlder ard Emp;oyer

106 Mabc re o· Gal •
po:tS 2BR
tBA, Fu I
Basement
Remodeled
Kitchen 1 Car Garage
Cent a • All app. stay
$95,500 740-645·7965

~ I ~ Doll•· lndtan Gold
Con. 1909 5260, Also
1899 Pia n Morijan S I·
ver
Do a
Looks
Jordan Landing Apart·
B.U ·$175.
12 Unit Apt. Complex ments
740.533·3870
446-0390.
3 br ava ble all e ec~
~J-et_A_e_r-at-lo_n_M.-ot-o-rst c r pets
Ask Abo
Houses For Sale
Our Re t SpecjB
repaired , new &amp; rebuilt
or detatS 304·67 4
In stock. Call Ron
•
•
Evans •
House for sae '13 4th or304 6100776
1 800 537 9528
Ave Below $30 000
Model"'l 1BR apt Ca
FREE 12 X 20 molal med•ate possessiOn. Ph 740-446.()390
bdg
1n exchango lor 1740)441·5165
New 2 BR apt WD
clegn up eft r removed
-;;;;l;a;n;d;(A=cr;e;agi:;;e;;;)=• HOOKUP
R ~JackSOf1
740.446·9490
-------- area S525Jrrto + dep
Free Harrrrond Con· Wooded
acreage
•or Ca 1740•645. 1236
corde Senes organ Call residential or commerc1al
lor dela• s 740-446 4403
dave opment
N1co 2 BR 1BA A so 1
BR house Dcpos • &amp; 1st
ront.
Cal
SWtll'll' ng pool Above 80 acres of land com· mo.
grcund 4 yrs old Very pr sed of .,all 11'1 ol road 740·645·5786
ood cond 5750 Call frontage rura1 water ard N1ce 2BR completo y fu •
J88·1t22 fo more rfo
approx
30 acres of ntshed S600 + e ect
woods
ocated
or $600 dep 44f-OSC&lt;:. or
Want To Buy
Jones Rd at Vinton OH 446-9595
Abso ute Top DOllar • s • F-or
1nfo
contact Spnng
Va y
G een
_. 01 god
cons.
ar&gt;y ::,
5~
13;.;
·8:;;;5;.;
6·.;;
9.;.
74;;.;3;;...._ __
Apanments 1 BR
1
10K t4K!•6K gold rw
Real Estate $395+2 BR at $470
3500
elry. dental gold, pre
Rentals Monlh 740-446·1599
1935
US
Cu1rercy
Houses For Rent
p oof 11' nt
sels
d•a·
mends MTS Con Shop
Apartments/
2 br r Pt P easant w~
151 2nd Avenue Galh·
Townhouses
1er S tr ~h ncluded ca I
po s 446 2842
between
10.:...., 5pm
1 and 2 bedroon ap~
Bu(mg Sllhl Cl"a nsaws fumtshed
ard
\lnlur· 304·675-3952
any Kind fo pans &amp; re· mshed. ard houses 11 ··
3-b-r~nNo_w_H_a_
ve_\_W
_
pair. runntng or not Pol'leroy and Middleport 5400 00
a
mon
+
740.794 1t68
srcunty deposit reqwcd 5400 00 dep '10 pets
Yard Sale
no pets. 740·99:?·2218
304·882·3652
-;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ....,.--...........--~ ~...;..;.;;..;..;;.;;.;...._ __
~
2BR APT Close to Hoi· 4 Rms + Ba Stove &amp;
BargJn Centor yard salo
SR 60
Msrch 26th 8. 27 th 482 zer Hosp tal on
1
lndge 50 Oltve St No
Horto:1 St Mason WV
C A (740) 441·0194
pets $450 rno + dep
1 BR and batt&gt; I rst 446-3945
Garago &amp; Yard s to months rent &amp; depos t
Mar 26&amp;27 Sl AI 588 references required No
R•o Grande OH Some Pets
and
clear'
thing lor everyore
740·441 0245

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

4000

.

Manufactured
Housing

local Trucking Co look·
1rg lor M tor Mochamc,
xp •eq ContaC1 Job &amp;
Fam ry S Moes 848 3rd
Av
uck Dt1ver Wanted
Roq 2 yrs cxp
C ssA COL
R m w'3 Wo KRet
Send to
T

Rentals

Thursday, March 25, 2010

STNAs
Arbors at Gal pots 170
P1necrest Drive Ga po
hs
Seek1ng canng and com·
pass10nate providers of
great servtoe
Current STNA 11censo re·
qwred
Apply at center or ema I
to
lvlar@extendtcare com
www.extendtcare.com
EOE

YOUNG'S

Construction
9000
PhlebotomiSt P :1· Tlmo
"Mommum 2 Year$ Phi
botomy Exp1once
' Must be Cortifoed
• Must ~lave own trans
portalion
•p :1 1me pos tJon
3
hours per day
' Must be ava ble lor
sam s• :1
• Expo oonce In a l1osp •
tal or
bor lOf}' pre
lorred
Em
resume
to
janet Cod ab net
Fax
267 525-2488 Job IS located n We l Columbl8
Mason County

1n th s fun and rowardmg
career then eMail a resume to pneacoOcon·
rotSSeurrnedta.com
Se
r'ous lnQumes only E:x·
porence IS prelerroo b~ot
not requored
Connols
seur Media 1s an equal
opportunity employer

Dtrectory

Get A Jump

on
SAVINGS

Unlimited Earning Po·
tentlal!l!
101 5 Bob FM IS look ng
lor the nght persoo to
JC)tn our sa es team A
J)C;sQr' that IS Interested
a career that af!ords
the opportunity to give
yourse
a ra se every
rnorrth a career where
yoo re requ red 10 ae1ua got out ol the of! ce
and nto the publlc a ca
reer m the exettirg and
1nterestmg field ol radiO - - - - - - - - If you lh nK you have
Help Wanted
wt1 1 11 takes to succeed

Servi~ I Bus.

• V1ny1 Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
·Decks
· Garages
·Pole Buildings
• Room Additions

MCJgs lndustnes Inc Is
h nng p::l1 tJme crewleaders lor J8l1 •onal and lawn
ma tenance
positiOnS
expenence
n
JBfllO at custodat
worl\
preferred Me gs Indus·
trles provides seMOCS
lor adutts wrth developrr tal disatM ues Must
have a v_ 10 Ohio d vers

Commercial &amp; Residential
• Hoom additions • Roofing • c;arages
• t:l•nernl Hemodding • l'ulc &amp; Horse
Burns • \in} I &amp; \\ood l tnring
Foundalioth
MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
740-985·4141
740·416-1834
Fully insun&gt;d
Free estimates· 25+ ~ears experience

Room Addlllona &amp;
Romodollng

NcwGarogae

Electrlcnl &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Guttere
VInyl Siding &amp; Palnling
Patio •nd Porc h Docks

1!\;ot ulllliattd wleh Mike Marcum Roofing&amp;. R~mtod&lt;linJtl

'-========

0

Help Wanted

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

Maintenonce /
Domestic

eaft Marcum Construction

CARPENTER
SERVICE

.(

MT SECTION HEAD
Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal currently has
openings for a full time MT Section
Head. Three years experience in
Microbiology. WV license required. Must
be able to work all shifts, holidays and
weekends.
Please send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Dr., Pl. Pleasant, WV 25550
or Fax to (304) 675-6975 or
apply on-line at www~valley.org

rcense and Ngh school ~~~
, ~··~.i.J'":.l''"""'iUI""""""iU!I.LLL"""iUI.u.t."""LLLI~
d ploma or GED Send
:"'le to Me gs IndUS·
tiles Inc PO Box 307
Syracuse Ohio 45779

Roofmg Stdmg
Paintmg- Gu tt~n.
Delb I tc
fo lr Fast Courkous
Sctvice 1-t~c
L sumatco; &amp;
&lt;..ffordable Pncco;,
Call Dennis Bo)d
740-992-2029

SUNS£1'
CoNsrnucrroN
Remodeling,
Roofs, Garages,
Pole Buildings,
Siding, Decks,
Drywall, Additions
and New Homes.
Insured- Free

Great coverage and
superior service

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

(that's easy on your wallet)
Hometown Insurance Center
toresaOhomotownlnsunlncec:enter.com

·New Homes
·Garages
·Complete
Remodelmg

304-773-1111

740-992-1671
Stop &amp; Compare

Replacement
\\indrm s and
\in) I Siding
Spt·cinlist , Ll'l)
(740) 742-2563
• iding • \

Total Construction
One Call to Do It All
1

Pole B am~ Metul Roofs
ftre &amp; \\ ater Damage
Df) y.a}J Repatr

lll\ I

\\ md o\\ ~ • \I ctal
and Shmgle Roof

~c~

• n ecks • ddltion~
•Ill ctricul

Estimates

740-742-3411

A'nON,LLC
Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

Room Attendart C The
Ho day Inn, Gall1po IS,
OH Apply 1n perso" ro
phone cal p ase

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

Cell: 740·416-5047
email;
jrshadfrm@aol.com

Medical

Rl . Hollon
Trucking
U mp Truck

s

f \1

\\c d

740-856-2609

PUBLIC
NOTICES

..

~1Ustomer Service

We ha\ c an opening for a fulltime customer
po!iition .
.tpplicant must be
people oriented. pleasant
telephone etiquette. professional
and dependable. Must hme
expenem::c in computers. and
enjoy working with numbers.
Position otters all company
be nefits including health and life
insurance, 40 I K, paid vacation
and personal days.
For employment consideration,
send resume to:
Pam Caldwell
c/o Gallipolis Daily tribune
825 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

PubliC \ tices tn l'imp~rs.
\our R~ght to Kno11,1ltlnmd Righi to \ our Door.

charge of $15.00 by contractor must pro·
~0\\ Selling
faxing 11 request to tele- vide their own lnsur·
• I ord &amp; Motorcmft
phone (614) 297·2455. once Cemetery must
Parh • l·ngmes,
Please make checks be maintained 2 to 3
Tr:&lt;nsfer C ses &amp;
payable to the Ohio times per month In wet
lmn~m1s' ns
periods and 1 to 2
Historical Society.
• Aflermar!.et
Direct all questions to times a month In dry
Repl cemc1 t Sheet
Contractor
Mr. Fred Smith, OHS periods.
Metal &amp; C'omponen•,
Project Architect at will be paid on comple\ ~
\
(614) 297·2446 or fax tion of each complete
R c nc,Oh10
questions to (614) 297· mowing and with the
7.a0-949-l956
satisfaction
of
2455.
A pre-bid conference Pomeroy Council .
will be held at 11 :00 AM Council reserves the
MICHAEL'S
on March 25, 2010 at right to accept or reJect
SERVICE CE~~flo~ R
Buffington Island State any or all bids.
J555 N\1~ A\·e.
Memorial, S. R. 124, Kathy Hysell
PomeroY. 011
Portland, Ohio. OHS ClerkfTreasurer
• 011 &amp; hlterch n •e
urges bidders to attend (3) 18, 25 (4) 1
• Tune l P"
the conference for on
• Brake Sen 1~:.:
overview of the project,
Public Notice
• AC' Rechar e
scope, content, admln·
lstrotlve procedures
• Mmor exh.lUst
and an opportunity to ADVERTISEMENT FOR
n:pa r • Tire Rep.ur
BIDS
v1ew tho proJect alto.
• Trnn~m ~ton Fthcr
Tho anticipated project Separate sealed Bids
&amp; FlUid Ch.tn c
cost range is $50,000 to for the painting of our
• Gener.!ll\leth:um.
500.000 gallon elevated
$110,000.
\\or!.
A Bid Guaranty and storage tank on Sue·
17-'0l 99~·0910
Contract Bond are re· cess Road will be re·
qulred as defined in the celved by the Tuppers
Contract Documents. Plalns·Chester Water
Prevailing wage rates District at the office
for Meigs County as conference room lo·
determined by tho cated at 39561 Bar 30
State of OhiO, Depart· Road, Reedsville, Ohio
mont of Commerce, Dl· 45772, until 11 :00 o'·
vision of Labor and clock a .m . (local time)
Safety will be applies· April 8, 2010, and then
at said office publicly
ble to this Work.
No bids may be with· opened and read aloud.
drown within nlnoty A copy ol the specifica(90) days after the Bid tions may be obtained
Opening. Tho Owner from :
reserves the right to Tuppers Plalns.Chester
waive Irregularities and Water District
39561 Bar 30 Road
to reJect any or all bids.
Hill
Reedsville,
OH
6200 Rockslde Woods (3) 11 , 18, 25
45772
Blvd# 310
(740) 985-3315
Cleveland, OH 44131
The Tuppers Plains·
Public Notice
F.W. Dodge/Builders
- - - - - - - - Chester Water District
Exchange
reserves the right torePublic Notice
1175 Dublin Road
Columbus, Ohio 43215 The Village of Pomeroy Ject any and all Bids or
be
accepting to Increase or decrease
F.W. Dodge· McGraw sill
ground maintenance or omit any Item or
Hill
proposals for Beech Items and/or award to
7265 Kenwood road
Grove Cemetery. All the lowest and best
Cincinnati, OH 45236
Each pro·
Bid Documents will be proposala must be re· BIDDER.
available electronically calved by 12:00 PM on posal must contain the
and as hardcopy Ofl April 12, 2010 In the full name of every per·
clerk's office, 660 East son or company inter·
March 15,2010.
Obtain electronic ver· Main Street, Pomeroy, ested in the same. The
The mainte- Tuppers Plolns.Chester
slons by registering on OH.
the plan holders list nance season begins Water District reserves
and downloading doc· In the lost part of April tho right to waive any
uments from the OHS through mid Septem· informalltlos or lrregu·
website at: www.ohlo- ber 2010. This will in· larltlcs In the Bidding.
history.orgfsntllsfs.htm elude mowing, weed By resolution of the
eating, etc., with the Tuppers Plains-Chester
I.
Hardcopies of the Con· contractor providing Water District Board of
tract Documents may their own equipment Directors
Also (3) 25, 28, (4) 1
be obtained for 11 and supplies.

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed Bids will be re·
ceived at:
The Ohio Historical So·
clety
Historic Sites and Fa·
cillties Division
1982 Velma Avenue,
lnfoC
off rs
Columbus, Ohio 43211
P
onalWo:X E~
until April 8 , 2010 at
2:00 PM local time
(Owner's clock) and
h
opened Immediately
6000
Employment
~·
thereafter, for provld·
lng the material and
labor for the completion of:
t Call and Schedule Your OHS
Project
No.
Interview:
CP0906
1-888-IMC·PAYU ext.
Buffmgton Island State
2331
Memorial Exhibit Kiosk
http:/IJobs lntoclslon.c
Portland,
Meigs
om
County, Ohio
In accordance with the
bartenders Contract Documents
Can· prepared under the dl·
rectlon of George M.
Kane Jr., Architect.
The project will be
awarded to one sue·
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
cessful Bidder. The In·
structions to Bidders,
Bid Form, Form of Con·
tract, Drawings, Speci·
lications, and other
contract
documents
may be examined at
the following locations:
Historic Sites and Fa·
clllties
The Ohio H1storical Society
~en ice
1982 Velma Avenue
Columbus,
Ohio
Succe~~ful
43211
F. W. Dodge • McGraw
Great Company, Great
Causes, Great Career!
M ko ca s tor the con·
servatve po Ileal organ
zatiOns that are mean
ngfullo you'

Cell

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacem t

\lll)pco;Of

Concrete \\ork
29 'H·ar. I· xperlencc

Dm id Le'' is
740-992-6971

~

•• conslrutti

Ql\

Pole Barns, Garages.
New Construction, Room Add.,
Roofing, Shingles, Metal, Rubber.

Concrete Work,
Any Type remodeUng, Decks
Phone:7~7~16

Cell 746-447-3642
35 yrs exp. Free Est. FuUy Insured

Owners:

tim Cremeans &amp; Boger Sellars

Hill's Self
Storage
29625 Bast&gt;ftn Road
Rae :1e OH 45771

740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x so·

I

(&gt;(."lll (

ontrnctor

740-367-0544

Hours

l'ree E 'timntl"

7:00am • 8:00 pm

740-367-0536

\t'K Constrllction and
Replacement \ inyl \HndoK ~

CONTRACTOR WINDOW SUPPlY
&amp; MANUFACTURING, llC
AND SIDING INSTAllATION
1 n w/r ~ In Rtpltl&lt; mem \\uui&lt; 11 s
f 1 Oltlcr H m ' ,( Tml/(1,

, ..f1.6h7·11Jtlto
Ju"\: 7..1).(&gt;67.UJ2'l
I'olllt &lt;'&lt;': S77-428-1il96

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Rooll' \dd,uon,, Remodehng. tel &amp;.
Shmglc Rook 1'\ c\\ Home~. S1dmg. Dc:d.
H throom Rcn oddm Ltcen,td &amp; ln,urcd
Rick Price· 17) r,, I· ;o,pcrien('l'
WV10409S4 Ce ll740-416-2960 740.992..()730

�..............................

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

Thursday, March 25, 201 0

•

www.mydallysentinel.com

BLOND IE

Dean Young!Denis Lebrun

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS JOSEPH

ETLE BAILEY

ACROSS
1 Its about
a foot
5 Tolk10n s
nng
bearer
1 0 Robust
11 Mason's
tool
12 At the
d rop of

Mort W alker

2 Poarl
Harb r
sottmg
3 Highlands
group
4 Burger
topper
5 Currency
replaced
by the

euro

18 Auction

6 Unf1nlsh ed

bids
13 earned
19 Tiny flier
14 Snacker's 7 S y mbol o f 20 Stnke
act1v1ty
w1sdom
21 L1ma's
16 Slouch8 R uby of
land
er·s
f1lm
22 Forecast
act1v1ty
9 Hackword
20 Let out of
neyed
25 Brass
Jail
11 A rticle
mgredtent
23 Oxford
15 Ouest
26 Bra1n1ac
VIP
17 Goofmg
28 Had
24 Bounded
off
supper
25 F. Scott's
wife
27 'Exodus"
hero
28 Take m
29 Boxer's
act1v1ty
32 Eater's
acttvity
361n excess
39 Jacob's
tw in
40 O n the
boat
41 - mater
42 Annoying
43 Judge

STOP THEM! THE
MEATBALLS ARE
ESCAPING!!

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

30 Garment
31 Step on it
33 Map dot
34 Resume
head1ng
35 "Where
Amenca's
Day
Begms'
36 Ravtne
37 Tad's dad
38 Aiamos

DOWN
1 Bogus

THELOCKHORNS
HI &amp; LOIS

William Hoest

Brian and Greg Walker
'/OI)'r? 6e1TER 6eHAVe OR '101..1 I.L

Gel Ct.JI OIJI OF MOM ANI?
r?AI?5 V\IIL.L

I

Patrick McDonnell

" LORETTA IS BECOMING INCREASINGLY JUDGMENTAL."

ZITS

GEE, MOOCH, I'VE
BE. E.N AS\..EEP FOR

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

TWREE MONTHS !

I HAVE A l.OT
To CATCH UP

ot-.1 •r

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

a'
~

+-

·~

1--

•

;9
I

3

5
9

" No, I'm n ot the oldest in the
f amily - Daddy Is."

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Sl £

•W"t:N I GEl SIG AN' i&gt;O M'/ OWN COOKI!'-J',
l'M GONNj). ~AVE HOil'OGS fOR EVCR'f MEAL..''

l.e\cl

***

6

I~

·-f--

8

3

3

~

I!

r3

- - f-

7

8

1
Oiff..::u

r-

4

1

9

~

4

2

4

- ·-·

5
4~

IJ
I~

l,t-

9

'

li

0

I~
l.

i:

l.f...
~

2

u

''"~
.....

I~A:YJ

&lt;II ~JIJJIQ

6 9 G9 ~ 9 v £
9 £ 9 v 6 ~ 9 L
9 9 L £ G6 9
8 Bv 9 9 z
~ G 9 L £ 6
L 6 9 v B ~
v 9 G6 L 9
9 ~ L £ Gv
6 £ 9 9 ~ 9

HAPP't BIR1HDA'i torThursda\, March 25 2010:
*** Feel romfort.lble taking o.~ backse t With all
This yror, e\ ents ofterl wtdl you off guard Kno''
the .-.trong pel'lOI'lLhes and opzmoos, this lltltude
that e\ en if you are surp~ 'ou are ropable of h.m\\OTks. Your creati\ ity bubbles up in a COO\"ei"Sation
dling \\ hate\'er romes up You are m the last ye.u of,,
Otoose the right moment for) our feedback. and ) ou'll
12 year cyde. Often people let go of\\ rut doesn t work
get the reaction you desrre TOnight Get &lt;;O:ne extra
m !herr lh es. Stell.u hapjX'lUilgS might help io;o te
sleep
these areas If_you are sm~e. romance can be P• SJOnale
U BRA Sept. 23-0I..t 22
and excitmg. tnjo), but ta"ke \our tim making lOll;
*'*"'*'*"'*' 'lou could be O\ rn' helmed b) a frtend's
1 determmabon tlllght 1t not be ea.;rer to let this pason
term comrrutmenls. It ) ou are attached '&gt;hare your
challenges .md dem-es more often \\1th your ~amt
ha\ e hi&lt;; or her \\'a\ ~ Difficulties oo.:rur \\hen there are
other The friendslup lx.'h\et'l'l ~'00 kf\ LEO d p~
po\' er pia\ s. Let others e&gt;..preo.-- thetn5eh~ their idros
p.lSSlon
and thetr cUrection. Toru9ht C&gt;rU) what you \\anl
Stms &lt;;Ill tlre Kmd Duv ) 71 H. ~ 5-flltr,.
, SCORPIO O..t 23--"\o,. 21
4-Posltwc: 'J. A -crage; 2 So- 1 Difii I
*'*** Demands push 'ou into action The quesARIES Nard\ 21·Aprill9)
tion n.om.nns; When t&lt;; enough enough? \ou will'' ant
*"'*'** * Though ) OU might be hesit.mt, t.:p JniO
to analyze more of your dire..ilons and m l~ If
your unusual aeativit\ and dynamic
\\'!).1 you
\ ou re .1 boss. \"'U could be a lot harder on \our
belle\ e IS \\ orkdhle might not be desp1te .ill eff rt
employ\;'("; than you realize Tonight Bliii'Illlg the ron)our resour~fulness oould make or break o.~ sltuiltion
die at roth ends
fonight On top of your g:une
SAGIITARIUS (1'\o\ ::2-Dec. 21)
TAURUS (April2~Ma} 20)
'iou keep~ to see the bzg p1cture.
* ** St..ly l't'ntered and dirtrl m) our dl:alin,l;s You
Whether you can ai.ii1e\ e th.1t goal rem.un.s to be seen.
oould be on top of) our game, desp1te some person.11
rin;mci.ll pre&lt;;Sure push~ }OU to find an e\perl Stop
upl'(k1r and a need to re-i!X&lt;~mme an tssue. Focus on
b)"~"&amp; to soh e the problem on \'OUr mm Torught·lct
1\0rk. A mO\e or change oould be slated 'ou \\Onder
) our tmagu1&lt;11:10n dloose.
about the possibibties ahead. lbrught Relax at home
CAPRICOR:"Ii (~- 22·Jan. 19)
Gl"M l~l (Mil) 21-June 20)
•
**·*"'*' De.61g mth ,, demanding &lt;L'iSOOdte rould
test your p.ttienl't' and eftecti, me.-s. Back off .md
***** Your stvle .md way ofh.mdhnq o~~
emerges. State your'case \\1th the full know~ of
apprwm the -»tuation .~g.un \\1th a ne" attitude. More
what )OU wanllmestigale !le\\ posstbdtties "1th an
otten th.m not, \ ou] disro' er thJt \\hat has \\ orked for
open nund. LISten to feedback from otheNut a mffi
'ou an the p.lSl no longer dlx&gt;s. Go \\1thJn befon&gt; l&lt;lklng
mg Pressure buildc; w1thin a p.trtnt&gt;r'ihlp lo 'lbhl
M} aCtiOn Tonight Togethe~' IS the theme
H.mg out \\1th a fnend
AQUARIUS ~an .2V-Feb 18)
CANCER 0;me 21 Juh 22)
You M\ e vour hands fu s another pen:on
... ,..,.. Be ~;enc;Ithe WJth )OUT lin.mcul dt lu..g 'tou
'-""}'
hJS or her oprruons m no Un&lt;'Crl:.lin tt-rms. 'lou
rrught ft.'el a"'k"ard and roc'i.i a change 'iou rould be
might \\ant or r1t.'ed to stt&gt;p b.1ck &lt;;Ome ~1"-'cialh if )'00
.w feelmg hurt or put upon Refu&lt;e to t..lke a Sltuabon
0\l~rwhelmed by \\rut IS
0 \\ ,Jhm a partner
ship. You are rettling and rru l need to re\-amp " propt.'T"'nalh Tonigh Listening to a ~ggecotion doesn t
mt&gt;.m th.1t \'00 mu;t take 1l
~&gt;ct more to another's liking l.llllght Tn&gt;at) oo~fl on
PISCES (Ft'b 1Q..~1arch :l.Ol
the "a\ home
LEO (Jul) 2.3-Aug. 22)
*'*** Othersdm'ea hardb.lrg.un. M.m\ people
you Je.\1 \\1th nght no\' "ant a lol fro:n \'l.'ltl Stop
*** ** )our enetb" could make yuu ~\ e to
JX mt \\here others St&gt;e ) ou a., ~shy Don t bt' ,;a t lh
11unk .lhout \our;elf What c:m you h.mdle and \\hat
too much? II \ ou c.m ehnunate !&gt;ln:'iS trom \our !I 1:-\
amt that )OU forget the ro ol clwrn, Ok' Re 17x
what L5 gomg on behind the SC\.&gt;neS. I t&gt;th,tps tht: lo."&gt;S
\II me.ms do Tonight Get some errands done
'lilld the be!.tt'r Tonight A&lt;; you like
\'lRC.O (Aug 23-Sept 22)

enerm

***"'*'

'*"* *"'*'

hape

�....................

..-----·----__..,._.---~--.....,_~~-

......

~~

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

Friday, March BB
li Saturday, March B7
7:00pm
Meigs High School
f'ickets $5.00
.

I

Dettwiller Lumber

INGELS ELECTRONICS

CARPET

634 E. Main Street
Pon1eroy, Ohio

106 N. 2nd Avenue

175 N. 2nd Ave. Middleport, OH

740-992-5500

740-992-2825

INGELS

740-992-7028

l\1iddleport, Ohio

® RadioShack
A Orvlslon ct Tandy Corporat.,..

BROGAN WARNER
INSURANCE
"Stop by or call for all your insurance needs!"
•

214 E. Main St. • Pomeroy, OH
7 40-992-2143 • 7 40-992-6687

J

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="567">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10018">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="11877">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="11876">
              <text>March 25, 2010</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="616">
      <name>drummond</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2581">
      <name>hackett</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3756">
      <name>tribble</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
