<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3653" 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/3653?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-06T17:11:48+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="13565">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/7e42f278f614d694f0ab4eedbc2a598c.pdf</src>
      <authentication>faf51bbec7bb1ca945fb942881d6b57f</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="13018">
                  <text>Fonner compliance officer settles
lawsuit with Marshall athletics
.

CHARLESTON. W.Va.
(AP) - A former athletic
compliance officer who
claims Marshall University
used him as a scapegoat
said Mondav he has settled
a lawsuit against the university and several officials
for an undisclosed amount.
The lawsuit filed by
David Ridpath was Sl'heduled to go to trial this week.
before U.S. District Judge
Chuck
Chambers
in
Huntington. But lawyers
notified the court Monday
of the pending settlement.
Ridpath · claimed he was
blarned after the university
was placed on four years
. probation and was stripped
of Some football and basketball
. scholarships.
Ridpath was demoted after
the sanctions were imposed
in 200 I and was fired in
2003.
The lawsuit had named
Marshall's
Board
of
governors. then-president
Dan Angel, then-football
coach Bob Pruett and genera! counsel F. Layton
Cottrill. It had sought $1
million in damages and
alleged fraud, breach of
contract and violations of
Ridpath's free speech and
due process rights.
·
. Ridpath , who now is an
assistant professor at Ohio
University, declined to
reveal the amount of the
settlement but called it
"fair." He . said the amount
will likely be released once

the settlement
is
completed
in the next
few days.
·• I • m
obviously
· reI i eve d
NorEBOOK that this
pain f u I
episode is over for me. my
family and for Marshall as
well," Ridpath told The
Associated
Press.
"It
enables both parties to
move on."
Charleston
attorney
Charles Bailey, who repre· sented Marshall in the lawsuit. and Chuck. Jones.
director of the state Board
of Ri sk · and Insurance
Management. the state's
liability insur.mce carrier,
said they had not seen a
signed agreement and
declined comment Monday.
Pruett's attorney. Edward
Kowal of Huntington, didn 't immediately return a
telephone message.
Ridpath was hired as
assistant athletic director in
charge compliance in 1997.
According to the lawsuit,
after he reported some academic violations to the
NCAA in 1999. he became
aware that some studentathletes were receiving
improper
employment
assistance at the McCorkle
Machine
Shop
in
Huntington,
which
is
owned by Marshall booster
Marshall Reynolds.

Reynolds was cited by
the NCAA in December
200 I . for providing extra
work benefits for Marshall
athletes. The school was
ordered to sever all ties
with the Huntington multimillionaire for at least five
years. Reynolds has said he
was wrongly saddled with
most of the blame by the
university
during
the
NCAA investigation.
Ridpath was reassigned
in 200 I to the position of
director of judicial programs and, according to the
lawsuit, . his position was
terminated two years later
allegedly because of negative comments he made
during the NCAA investigation.
·
As part of the settlement, ·
Marshall has agreed to clarify to the NCAA that
Ridpath was not involved
in major violations. A statement issued by Ridpath's
attorneys said Marshall will
send a letter to the NCAA
Committee on Infractions
stating that
Ridpath's
removal was "a separate
personnel decision by the
university predicated on his
conduct" at the Sept. 22,
2001, NCAA hearing."
"I
wish
Marshall
University the best of luck
in the future," Ridpath said.
"I loved my job when I was
there. It was important for
me to · get resolution to
this."

.S11ns Sllens
'

Ohio St. lineman Boone
arrested in California

AliSO VIFJO, Calif. (AP) ...:. Obio State
offensive lineman Alex Boone was arrested
after being subdued with a Taser during an
alleged drunken tirade. authorities said
Monday.
Boone. 21, was taken into custodv late
Sunday for investigation of resisting "arrest
after Or.mge County sheriff's deputies
respopded to a disturbJnce call outside of a
home in Aliso Viejo.
Wh,en they amved. the 6-foot-8. 312pound tackle had been jumping on caP
hoods. yanking on a tow truck cable and trying to break a window. said sheritrs
spokesman Jim Arnormino.
Boone ran away from deputies and was
found hiding underneath a patio. authorities
said. BP,One was combative·and uncooperative and had to be taken down with a stun
gun. Amormino said.
"He was yelling obscenities at deputies
and had a strom! smell of alcohol."
Amormino said. "His blood-alcohol level
was at least three times the legal amount." .
Boone was. taken to a hospital and then to
a jail medical ward, where he remained. He
•
had not been booked yet.
Boone. who was selected All-Big Ten this
year. could be selected in the NFL dr.1ft in
April.
.
Ohio State spokeswoman Shelly Hoffman
said Monday that she was unaware of the
arrest and could not comment.

Reds sign C Humberto
Cota to minor league deal

CINCINNATI (AP) - Catcher Humberto
COla agreed to a minor league contract
Monday with the Cincinnati Reds, who lost
another catcher to retirement. .
Ryan Jorgensen announced his retirement
after getting only 20 at-bats in the majors
during his career with florida. Cincinnati
and Minnesota.
The 29-year-old Jorgensen returned last
season after serving a 50-game suspension
for violating baseball's drug policy. He
signed a minor league deal with the Reds on
Nov. 19.
·
The 29-year-old Cota batted .233 with 12
, homers and 61 RBis in seven seasons with
which is the highest num- Pittsburgh. He was invited to spring training . .
ber of teams at any school
in the nation.
Ticket prices for football
and
men's
basketball
would be raised by $1 a
CINCINNATI (AP) - Xavier and Wak.e
game for the 2009-10 season. and a football ticket Forest have· agreed to a 10-year series that
·would cost $63 next fall. will be called the Skip Prosser Classic , honMen's basketball tickets
will go up to $27 per game
for the 2009, I 0 season.
Tickets will go up another dollar starting in the fall
of 2010. Smith said . .
The vast majority of
Ohio State's athletic revenue comes from football .
Smith said the Buckeyes
must play a minimum of
seven home games to support all of the school's
sports teams.
In 2010 and 2012, the
Buckeyes will play eight
homegames each season.
The athletic department
will also ask the trustees to
appr~:IVe an increase in golf
membership dues at the
university's Scarlet and
Gray Courses.
As for cutting sports
teams, "we're not even
thinking about that," Smith
said. "I don't anticipate
that during my tenure.
There 's so many other
things that we would cut
before we ' d get· to cutting
sports."

OSU AD says sports dept. in red
COLUMBUS (AP) -:The scarlet and ·gray will
soon be in the red .
·
Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith conrirmed
Sunday that for the first
time in his four-year
tenure, Buckeyes' athletic
department is expected to
lose money during the fiscal year ending June 30.
Smith said he dido 't
know how much the
department would fall
short of projections, but
revenues
are
down
between $300,000 and
$500,000 this year for the
winning men's basketball
team.
" May.be a couple hundred thousand," he said of
the possibl e total · losses.
"But it's hard to tell."
The athletic department
will raise ticket prices $1
per game in football and
men's basketball across the
board, except for students,
Smith said. He said the
school had already planned
to raise ticket prices three
years ago.
The university's board of
tr-ustees is expected to
approve the increases
when it meets later this
week.
The school is also paring
down costs by allowing
only essential personnel to

Tressel
fromPageBl
goes through the 20 12 season - has an . interesting
addition: If he .decides to
retire, the university can
keep him on as a professor
for up to five years.
That:s the first time
Tressel has ever acknowledged there might be a life
for him after he hangs up
his sweater vest.
Smith doesn't believe
Tressel will coach into his
80s like Penn State's Joe
Paterno or Florida State's
Bobby Bowden.
"He's driven by what he
does everyday for these
kids," Smith said. "He
wouldn't say, 'I'm going to
coach until whatever so I
can get that record.' No :
That's not him."
In the meantime, Tressel
busies himself with students
wearing football helmets .
. The Buckeyes appear to
haye another bumper crop
of quality recruits coming
aboard on Wednesday, the
first day they can sign let·
ters of intent. The Buckeyes
have bi~ holes to fill due to
graduatiOn and three juniors

Xavier, Wake Forest agree
to play each year

travel to road games and
cutting other personal
expenses for employees,
he said.
Ohio State, which has an
annual athletic budget of
more than $110 million ,
typically banks the excess
earned from ticket ·sales,
concessions, radio and TV
contracts and other revenue sources in its athletic
reserve fund.
''We're behind a little bit
on revenue in basketball
single-game tickets,
concessions,
revenue,"
Smith ·said . "Once the
economy started to shift,
somewhere in October. we
started to say, 'Hey, this is
going to ()it us, and it's hit
us in this sport in particular.' So we~re not hitting
·the single-game goals that
we hoped to achieve."
· Smith, who took over as
athletic director in 2005,
said Ohio State would not
cut any of its 36 sports,

moving to the NFL a year won three BCS bowl games
early. But there are plenty of in a: row.
talented players waiting in · In just his second year
the wings .
after moving from Division
After the Buckeyes' most I-AA to take over for the
recent loss, a last-minute fired John Cooper. Tressel
24-21 defeat to No. 3 Texas led Ohio State to its .first
in the Fiesta Bowl, there national championship in
were a number of caustic 34 years with a thrilling 31letters to the spons editor in · 24, double-overtime upset
The ColumbiJs Dispatch, of No. I Miami in the 2003
mostly attacking the play- Fiesta Bowl.
calling of Tressel and his
Despite the grousing
coordinators. Some said these days. it's not. as if the
they are way too conserva- Buckeyes have fallen on
live on offense: others said hard times. Their losses this
they took too many chances past season came to perenon defense. A local sports nial powerhouses USC,
caUcin show fielded numer- Penn State and Texas. They
ous complaints from fans also captured a share of
who said that Tressel has their fourth straight Big Ten
lost his touch in bi~ games. title while ending the season
Gee doesn't buy 11.
at No. 9 in The Associated
"I think that we are very Press Top 25 - the sixth
· fortunate to have his leader- time in the last seven years
ship," he said. "For those that they have finished in
who are a part of any (nega- the top 10 . . .
Smtih is aware of those
tive) undercurrent, they .
don ' t understand the value questioning Tressel's losses
of having a great football in marquee games.
coach."
"I always tell people, 'I
It wasn't long ago that know it's disheartening . We
Tressel seemed to win. every all want to win every game
game that mattered .
that we play,"' Smith said.
Before losin g their last "But I look at a lot more
three major bowl games than that. l don't listen to
in.cluding lopsided losses in that criticism as much as
the BCS national chainpi- people think I do. Because I
onship giVfleS in 2007 and keep my tocus on what we
200!! - the Buckeyes had hired him to do."

)

•
d~ t"''!

WVU's Mazzulla out for year
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) - West
Virginia guard Joe MazzuJia will undergo
season-ending surgery on his ailing left
shoulder this week.
Coach Bob Huggins said Monday that
surgery was the best option for Mazzulla,
who has not seen action since Dec. 9.
Huggino says Mazzulla is still experiencing
pain and hasn 'I sbown much improvement.
The junior averaged more than five
points. three assists and two rebounds in
seven ·starts this season.

PI" q
. ...., .... NewspriM

• Higl school baskelbal
action.~ P11r1e Bl

8v flluN J. REm
BREEOOM'IOAJLYSENTlNELCOM

POMEROY - The lights

are finally back on through-

out Meigs County - at
least in all houSeholds
served by American Electric
Power Ohio. (See related
stocy .) Some of those customers had been without
power for nearly a week.

CLEVELAND (AP) - Jawad W11liams
held on with the Cleveland Gavaliers as
long as he could.
·
The former Lakewood St. Edward star's
second 10-day contract ex.pired on Sunday
with the Cavs. whose only- option would be
to sign him lor the remainder of the season.
A player can only sign two 1.0-day deals, per
NBArules.
·
.
Williams . who won a national championship at North Carolina hut was not drafted. appeared in nine games for Cleveland.
The 25-year-old played in Japan and Israel
last year.

Buckeye
Rural

NEW YORK (AP) - An estimated 95.4
million people watched the PittsburghArizona Super Bowl. making it second only
to last year s game as the most popular ever.
NBC was blessed with a thrilhng finish.
and viewership peaked late in the fourth
quarter. accordtng to Nielsen Media
Research .
·
The 2008 game between the Giants and
the Patriots had a similar come-frombehind. last- minute score for the victory.
Two big markets and the novelty of a team
trying to go 19-0 kicked the 2008 game to
an audience of 97.4 million.

AS

• Most carmakers'
sales plunge.
.See Page A6

CHESHIRE- "AEPcustomers who are usual\y over
income for assistance with
other programs, may ·now be
eligible through the "crisis
response fund" sponsored
by AEP Ohio and adm in istered by the Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency.
Sandra
Edwards,
Emergency
Services

INDEX
a SEcriONS- ta PAGES

446-2342

~oint

tlrnsant l\rgistrt·

675-1333

The Dally Sentinel

992·2155

Calendars

A3
A3

Classifieds

83-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4

Sports

B Section

Weather

Advertising Deadline is Monday, February 9th

Middleport
to seek
clean energy
state grant ··
MIDDLEPORT - . The
Village of Middleport hopes
to secure funding through a
state job stimulus program
in order to install a new
solar stirring system for the
village's sewer. lagoon.
A spokesman for State .
Rep. Debbie Phillips. DAthens. said up to $150
million will be made available to local governments
for clean and advanced
energy products through
the state initiative. The projects to be funded must by
ready to go to bid ·- or, be
"spade ready" - no later
than July.
·
Earlier
this
month,
Middleport Village Council
met in reguhir session to
approve an engineering
study for the proposed project and will proceed with
the study through the engineering lirm ATS. Inc.
Mayor Michael Gerlach
said he has been told that
small towns are "very eligible" for toe funding through
the Ohio Jobs Stimulus program. but there is a necessity to proc-.ed quickly. The

Pleese SH Grant. AS

.

Living without
electricity
Bv

BETH SERGENT

BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POINT
ROCK
Flipping a light switch und
instantly brightening a room
is often taken for granted
though Meigs Countians
who spent a week i1i the
dark won't .soon take that
luxury for granted.
6 person hou se hold off notice?
A family , who is a cusAre you income eligible $49,701 . $56.800
. according to the schedule · For ea~h family unit with tomer of Buckeye Rural
more than six members add Electric Cooperative and
listed here?
·
wished to remain anony$7,200 for each member.
I person household
Edwards sald that other mous, gave their story to
$18,201. $20,800
criteria
for
eligibility· The Daily Sentinel about
2 person household
how they survived being
includes :
$24,501 . $28.000
• having the electric set-· without electricity from 7
3 person house.hold
vice in-the applicant's name a.m. last Wednesday until 2
$30 ,80 I - $3 5 ,200
(or the spouse if married) · p.m. yesterday.
4 person household
When a crisis hits. families
• must not have been pre$37,101-$42,400
viously
assisted
with gather together and for this
5 person household
fan1ily on Buck Run Roud in
Emergency HEAP.
$43,401 . $49,600
.
Columbia Township. two
grown children. one with a
spouse and child. went home
to stay with .mom lutd dad for
strong voice in economic County economic develop- nearly a week to .survive.
development, education, ment officials." Phillips During the day the family
health and alternative ener- said. "These committee heated with kerosene but dur. gy," Phillips said. "I am assignments put me in a ing the night they shut off the
already hard at work to strong position to represent kerosene because of fumes
and fears of carbon monoxide
grow our local economy our region."
and look forward to more
Rep. Phillips also will and kept a wood burning
chances to seek · out real serve on four other commit- stove going. The a(lults took
solutions to Ohio's major tees: Education; Health; turns spending the night feedissues right now.''
Economic Development; ing wood into the stove to
"This is a challenging and
Insurance.
The keep the house warm .
As for how they cooked'!
time. and yet a time filled Education committee is
Since
the stove und
with possibilities for great . especially important in the
wen: out of the
microwave
. progress in our region."
!28th General Assembly
question that didn't leave
"Bringing jobs to our due to the sweeping educamuch option but the coal
region is my top priority. To tion reforms proposed by
stove which was also used
that end, my first meeting in Governor Ted Strickland in
to supplement heat. Luckily.
Columbus . was held in . his Sutte of the State
PIMse
Llvlnc. AS
December with Meigs address. Phillips said.

New AEP program offers-electric bill assistance

Detalle on Page A5

Annie's Mailbox.

nize any power outage is an
inl.-oovenience and extended
outages during extreme winter l'Oilditions create additional harcis.hips for all."
The last 3500 customers
(emaining without electricity are expected to have
power re&gt;tored by midnight
tomorrow. They are in the
Wellston and Portsmouth
service areas.

BY BRIAN J. REED

. County with Buckeye Rural
Electric Cooperative as
their electricity provider
and as of yesterday afternoon 123 of those were still
without power a week after
last week's storm hit the
region.
Jeff Tackett , vice president. -of engineering and
operations for the cooperative said the company
hoped to have the bulk of .
those 123 back on the grid
before press time last night.
Tackett added there still
may be "one or two" individuals that may still be
temporarily without power
out of those 123.
Tackett said out of I ,313
customers in Meigs County,
nearly all of them were
affected by the storm with .
yesterday's total reflecting
13 percent still waiting on
restoration of their electricity. The bulk of those still
out are near the Meigs' border with Vinton and Athens
Counties. At one point the
Bowling Mills substation in
Meigs County was out (it
has since been restored) as
were substations in Athens
and a metering point in
McArthur.
Tackett said in addition to
their 18 linemen, the cooperative hired three outside
S.th Sergent/photo
contract crews and ·there
Yesterday
afternoon
these
Canadian
geese
took
a
rest
along
the
Pomeroy
Walking Path.
were eight crews from other
Alter foraging in the grass lor some food, perhaps they decided to take a walk along the
Pluse IH Power, A5
path to burn off those calories?
·

• River Blend Quartet. ·
See Page A3 .
• Iran claims first
launch of its own
sateiiHe. See Page A2
• He's still living his
childhood. See Page A3
• Local Briefs.
:see Page AS
• For the Record.
SeePage

.

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTlNEL.COM

POMEROY - There are

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

ilailp l!:rlbunr

Waddling path

I ,313 customers in Meigs

HOEFLICHOMYOAlLYSENTINEL.COM

~allipolis

moved on to the next !!)Cation. They will not return to
clean up debris resulting
from clearing trees and
limbs from lines. Removal
of tree debris is the property
owner's responsibihty.
~AEP Ohio appreciates the
patience and understanding of
our customeJS as we work to
get power rest!lled. We recog-

BY BETH SERGENT

WEATHER

Don't miss out on this great opportuhlty to
have your bu~iness included!

from electrical facilities and

BSERGENTOMYO&gt;\IL'ISENTINELOOM

INSIDE:-.

I

The · company reported restoration effons. In a
that the final 300-plus Meigs media advisory issued yesCounty customers without terday, AEP said their tree
power were restored late crews worked closely with
Monday. At the height of the . line repair crews to clear
outage, S,ln) Meigs County trees and limbs from electriAEP customers were with- cal facilities so that restor-dout service, after ice coated . tion efforts &lt;'OUid proceed.
trees and power lines. caus- Crews cut trees and limbs
ing downed lines.
only to the extent required
Now, many residents are to milke repairs.
·
facing cleanup from the
Crews only cleared trees

working
to restore
power to all

SB XLIII the 2nd best ever .

Special Edition
February 13, 2009

tl&gt;

IEP

SPORTS

Cavs release Jawad Williams

To

It's

Daschle out as health
nominee due to 'tax
problems, A6

Hay, fann equipment
de.;troyed in fire, As

orin11 their former coach.
1lle tirst game will be played next season
at Wake Forest. The schools wiU split home~ advantage during the series.
l'l"os.ser was"Wake FOrest's coach when be
died of an apparent heart attack on July 2~.
2007. at aoe 56. He was buned m
Cincinnati. -Zhere be maintained a home .
Prosser was at Xavier from 1985-2001. the
last seven as head l-oach. He went to Wake
Forest as head coach.
Wake Forest ( 17 -2) is r.mked No. 7 in the
latest poll. with Xavier ( 19-2) two spots
behind:
Prosser began his · coaching career in
Wheeling. W.Va .. &lt;utd led Wheeling Central
High School to a 1982 state cbarnptonsbip.

© au09 Ohio Valley Publl.ohlllll Co.

•

Division Director for CAA,
listed the criteria for assistance, and advised that for
all those who answer 'yes'
to all of the questions contact the Community Action
at (740) 367-7341 or 9926629 to make an appointment for assistance.
The questions are as fol lows:
Are you an AEP customer?
Have you received a shut-

Phillips to serve on alternative energy, other committees
STAFF REPORT
MDSNEWSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

COLUMBUS State
Rep. Debbie Phillips, DAthens, was named by
House . Speaker Armond
Budish. D-Columbus. to be
Vice Chairman of the
Alternative
Energy
Committee .
.The Alternative Energy
committee deals with the
many ways Ohio can incorporate alternative ·energy
Debbie Phillips
initiatives into its economy.
"1. am so pleased that committee assignments, and
Speaker Budish entrusted I will work hard to make
me with such important sure southeast Ohio has a

'

n.

�'

AROUND THE WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

'

The Daily Sentinel

'

Pagei\2

BYTiiEBEND
•

PageA3
Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Wednesday, February 4. 2009

hNNIE'S MAILBOX

BY N•SSER KAMa
AND
JASQt KEfSER
ASSOCIATED -.s5 WRITeRS

TEHRAN. Jr.m - Jr.m
sent its lirst domestically
made satellite into Qrbit.lhe
president
·announced
Tuesday: a key step for an
. atnbitious spal-e program.
that worries lhe U.S. and
other world powers because
the same rocket technology
used to launch satellites can
also deliver warheads.
For nearly a decade. Jr.m
has sought to develop a
national space progr.un. ereating unease among intemational leaders already con1.-erned about its nuclear and
. ballistic missile ~s. ·
: Till? telecornmumcations
· satelhte - \.'ailed Omid. or
hope, in Farsi _ was
launc~ late Monday after
President
Mahmoud
. Ahmadinejad gave the order
to proceed, a~:cording to a
: report on state rudio. State
: television showed footage
of what it said was the nighttime lift0 ff of the rocket tarrying the satellite at an
unidentified location in Iran.
. A U.S. COIIIIterprolifera: tion official wnfinned lhe
:launch and suggested the
: technology was not sophisticated. Speaking on oondition of anonymity to discuss
. intelligence ~athering . .the
: official suid 11 appeared it
. "isn ·1 too far removed from
: Sputnik." the first · Soviet
: orbiter launched in 1957.
· The TV report piujsed the
launch as part of festivities
marking the 30th anniversary ofthe 19791slamic revolution that toppled the u.S.. backed Shah and brought
hard-line clerics to power.
In a ~ear in which
AbmadineJad faces a tou!ih
elechon baule to stay 10
power. the launch provided
. a symbol of national .pride
, 10 hold up even as falling oil
· pr'res baUer the e 0 my
: an~ the hurd-line le:der's
·
.
1 ·
· popu aruy ·
.
. As 11 seeks to expand Its
mfluence m tl&gt;e Middle
~t. Iran touts s~ch techn~·
. log1cal successes a~ Signs 11
· can advance despite U:S.
:and U.N. ~chons over Its
· nuclear program.
The l~unch touched off
conrem m the Umted States,
. r:::uro~ and Israel about pos. s.1ble hnks between .ats satel: hte pro~s and 11s work
with nussiles' and nuclear
. technolo~y.
"There s almost always a
link between satellite programs like this and military
programs and there's almost
always a link between satellites and nuclear weapons.
It's the same delivery vehicle," said James Lewis. an
expert on defense technology at the' center . for
Strategic and International
Sludies in Washington.
White House spokesman
Robert Gibbs condemned
the launch. saying: "This
action does not convince us

that Iran is acting rrsnnnsi- need sdence for friendship.
bly to adva~L-e st:ir)iii.Y-or brolherbood and justice.~~
security in lhe region.told state television.
Department · The launch bas clear
State
. spot.esman Robert A. Wood political aims. said Lewis.
a~:cused iran of us.ing the ''You can say. 'I atn the
sp;K'e-launch prognun as a dominant power in the
tec-hnologi\.'al
stepping region and here's the proof.·
srooe to develop long-range That's what a space lauoch
ballistk missiles.
does ftll' you.~
"Iran ·s ongoing efforts to
The satellite was taken
develop its missile delivery into orbit by a Salir-2. or
\.'llpabilities remain a maner lllllba.ssador-2.
rocket.
of deep concern." Wood which was fust tested in
said. " lr.m 's development of August and has a range of
a spoce-launcb vehicle capa- 155 miles. lr.mian televible of putting a satellite into· sion said the satellite would
orbit establishes the techni- orbit at an altitude . of
cal basis from which Iran betwe~:n 155 and 250 miles.
could develop long-r.mge
State radio said it is
ballistic missile systems."
desislled to circle the Earth
Yifiah Shapir. a top Israeli 15 limeS during a 24-hour
.expert on till: Iranian space period and send reports to
prog~~· ~d the .launch the space center in Iran. It
1tsell doesn t reall) mean has two frequency bands
much . to ·Jsmel. we.. k.new and eight antennas for transa~t 11 ~f~~ h\llld ,. .
· mitting data.
The slgm.hcan\.'e IS m the
Abmadinejad said the
tech!K'logy Itself. They are satellite reac~ its orbit and
~mg progress and work- had made conta\.'t with
mg on a prog~ to spy on ground stations. though not
targets world~1de. But they all of its functions were active
are. d~cades ••away fro~ yet. He said Iran would now
ach1evmg that, ~.d Shap1r. seek to increase lhe ability of
who heads the m1htary :bul- its satellit«'lll'rier rockets to
ance pro_Jeel at the lnsll~te carry more weight.
for . Nallonal Secunty
Iran ·s space plans are lofty
S~dies •.a think tank at Tel and even hold out the goal
Av1v Umv~rslly.
.
of putting a man in orbit
The Umted States and within 10 years. though
some ?f 11s alhes accuse accomplishing that would
Iran of pursumg a covert be extremely expensive.
nuclear weapons program.
A domestic satellite pro~ran. demes the charg~. say- gram would put Iran m a
l!lg ·Its atom1c work 1s only growing club - more than
lor peaceful PUI'JlOSes, such 80 countries are building or
as power generation. .
planning to build their own
The announcement .~f .•ru: satellites. accordin¥ to
launch came as olhc1_~1s Lewis. But the abihty to
f~m. the U.S.. Russm. launch them is a much more
Bntam: France. Gem1any exclusive crowd; only nine
and Chma were set to .meet countries have done so.
Wednesday ne~ Franklurt to
In 2005, Iran launched its
talk about Iran s nuclelll' pro- ftrst oommercial satellite on a
gram. The group has off~red Russian rocket in a joint proIran .a package of mrent~ves jeel with Moscow. which is a
1f . 1t suspends . u~n~um partner in transfelTing space
ennchm~nt Wid enters mlo technology to Iran along with
talks on 11s nucle~ prog~. North Korea and China. That
The !J.N. Secunty ~ounc1l same yelll', the government
has 1mposed sanchons to said it had allocated $500 ·
press~re Iran to comply.
million lor spa~-e projects in
'Th1s lest underlines and the next five years.
illustrates our Sll(ious ronIran has said it wants to
cems about Iran's intentions," put its own satellites into
Britain's Middle East minister orbit to monitor natural disBill Rammell said Tuesday. asters in the earthquake"There 8re duw applications prone nation and improve
for satellite-lauoching tee)!- us
telecommunications.
nology in Iran's ballistic mis- Iranian officials also point
site program."
· to America's use of sateiAhmadinejad insisted the lites to monitor Afghanistan
launch was intended to be a and Iraq and say they need
message of peace and similar abilities for their
friendship to the world. "We security.

Dar A-±: I have been seem~ -Rob~ for over a
year. We have loads of fun together and genllinely
love each other. The problem is. Rob doesD 't seem
overly interested in moving in together, getting married or having lids. and~ knows that's a deal breaker for me.~ can undeiSiand his hesitation about marriage. He was married before and his wife bad Cbitdml from~ firsl marriage, but it didn't wod out
and they divorced years ago.
We each have our own homes. but Rob will not consider selling his so we could get a Place together. I
. tbint it's ·important for a couple to tind a place they
can bolh call home. His place is bigger, but it needs a
lot of work.lt's the home he grew up in. and it would
always be his; nol ours. Plus, his mom moved in with
him a few years black and is still living there. He's
been saying for.months that it's time for oo to find
~own place. but he won't discuss it with ~.And
she stilllllllkes his meals and does his laundry.
How can I mak.e him see that at this sta¥e in his life
~ should !mow what it's lili:e to live on h•s own or he
will never be able to figure out whether he wants to
have a life with someone else? I am not trying to force
our retatioosbip into marriage, but neither of us is get• ting any . younger. When is it time to move on? Nutcaw iD N.Y.
Dar N.Y.: YeSterday. This is a grown man. stillliv~
ing in his ehildhood home with his mother who cook.s
and cleans for him. He's made it clear that he's not
ready for marriage and may never want children. You
can ISSue an Ultimatum, since you'll have nothing to
lose by walking away. Otherwise, decide whether you
love him enou$b to stay in this situation indefinitely.
We can't pronuse there will he anything more.
Dar Annie: Many years ag1&gt;. my parents made his
wedding plans for me. but my fiance and I eloped
instead. Shortly after. I moved back to my home state
and went through another wedding reremony ~ause
I didn't have the courage to tell my parents I was.
. already mlllTied. Two years later, I divon:ed.
·
My question is, since l was legally married in two
states
divo~ in one, atn I stil! married
where I elo ? - Twice Married, One Divorce
Dear
: You don't have to divorce in the same
state in which you had your wedding ..There is usually a residency requirement to qualify for a divorce, so
· if you y.-ere legally divQICed m the stale. where you
and your ex-husband lived, it will be recognized
everywhere.
·
Dear Annie: I read the letter froni "Color Blind."
· whose mqther's husband disapproves of her adopting
.a child of another race. Thirty-five years ago, my
father forbade me to adopt. He said the children were
"somebody else's trash and trouble." We adopted a
daughter when she was 3 days old. He refused to call .
our child by her name until she was 5.
My mother adored the baby. but sadly, she di!ld when
our daughter was 18 months old. My father's mother
told Dad that he was wrong and any children of mine
were his grandchildren. Nine years later, we adopted
our serond duughter. When I made the ~nouncemenl
to my sister. her reply was, "Is it black or.white?" This
child bas a much more outgoing personality and spoke
directly to my father, which be bated.
·
Dad is now missing out on two great-grandchildren.
He wrote me out of his will to mak.e sure my children
will never inherit anything from him. All we ever .
wanted was his love. They say we can't pick. our relatives, but sometimes you get the privilege of choosing your family, which mak.es it precious. - Shato11
In Pennsylvania
Dear Sharon: It's unfort~ate your father can'!
open up his heart. because it creates a sad situation for
all of you. But he's the one who has lost out the most.

dent announced Tuesday,
claiming·a si'gnificant step in

an ambilioos space program:
that has worried many inter- :
national observe.rs.
APphoto

crews
• •
.

' I

. '~~-

I

and=nl

.•

!%~.

' ) .

.

An11~'s

'

.

.

....

n.,...~

lilli

'

I

4848 State Rt. 325 South
Rio Grande, OH
(740) 379-2025 ° tON\,hn~i '
www.buckeyerec.com ·

.

Mailbox is writt11s by Kathy Mitchell and
Man:y Sugar, wnglimt tditors of tht Ann Lalllhrs
col•mn. PIHst t·mail your q•tstions to tmnitsmaiiIHJuomcast.lltt, or writt to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL 60611. To find out mort
about A.nnit's Mailbox, and rtad features by oth~r
Crtators Syndir:att writtrs and cartoonists, visittht
Creators Syndicate Wtb page at www.cnators.com.

:Community Calendar
Public meetings

and elk* the blue button.

PLASTIC SURGERY SPECIAL ~
New State-of-the-Art t\trle
·Ambulatory Surg

Breast Enla
Tummy '11.1
Li
•
Eyelid .
Laser Facial
'-

. From March 2 through APII"IJ

*Must live in Athens~

The River Blend Quartet
will again this year be
delivering singing valentines in the Pomeroy
community. The Quartet
wiU deliver songs and a
rose to your significant
other, your wonderful
mother, some other person near i!nd dear, or

BY KAniY llnaaa.
AND MNICY &amp;IGM

domestically made satellite :
into orbit. the country's presi-:

Ckt)te

.HOLZER·
CLINIC

-

This photo released by lhe
Fars News Agency claims to
show an tra11ian satellite
.
launching rocket named
"Salir-2", translated in ,Englisl)
as "Ambassador-2", carrying ·
the satellite "'mid', or "Hope•
in English. photographed prior
to launch at an undisclosed :
location on Monday. Iran has:
successfully sent its liiSt
:

1:.

Smile! New you can own the picture ol that Ulitorg.ttablt
l"nnO'MM''1 Clptl.ir.:tln the n• p..,..., Pholoe become,~
when flamed or printed oo a mug or fTIOU8&amp; pad.

He's still living
his childhood

VVednesday,Feb.4
CHESTER - Chester
: Township Trustees, 7 p.m..
· Chester town hull.
PAGEVILLE :- Scipio
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m. at the Pageville Town
Hall.
: POMEROY - Meigs
: County Board of Health.
· regular meeting, 5 p.m.,
Meigs County Health
Department ..·
Thursday, Feb. S
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Council will meet at
7 p.m. at village hall.
Monday, Feb. 9
RUTLAND - Rutland
Township Trustees, 5 p.m ..
Rutland Fire Station. ·
Thesday, Feb. 10
REEDSVILLE - Olive
· Township Trustees meet in
: regular session, 6;30 p.m ..
· Olive Township garage.

Clubs and .
organizations
VVednesday,Feb.4
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Literary Club,
2 p.m .. Pomeroy Library.
Ohta Heighton to review
"Infidel" by Ayaan Hirsi
. . . ,..

Ali.
Hostess
Connie
Gilkey.
Thursday, Feb. S
CHESTER ..... Chester
Shade
Historical
Associaton, 7 p.m. ·ut the
Chester rourthouse. Final
planning for Academy and
events of this year.
Friday, Feb. 6
POMEROY - Meigs
County PERl meets at I
p.m., Mulberry Community
Center. Philip Roberts,
District 7 representative, to
speak on issues relating to
OPERS. Anyone who
receives OPERS check.
invited.
Saturday, Feb. 7
.SALEM CENTER
Star Grange #778 and Star
Junior Grange #878 meet in
regular
session,
with
potluck at 6:30 p.m .. followed by 7:30 meeting.
Monday, Feb. 9
CHAUNCEY - An Area
14 youth council meeting
will be held 9 a.m. ut the
Athens CDJFS-Chauncey.

Other events
Thursday, Feb. S
POMEROY - Parents
meeting for planning junior
prom, 6:30p.m. Meigs High
School, Room ,213.

your faithful secretary
on Feb. 13 and 14. lt
can be arranged by calling 992-6159 (Gerald
Kelly) or 992-2622
(Gerald Powell.) The
quartet. pictured here
with Governor Ted
Strickland. center. sang
lor the holiday open
house at the governor's
residence. Members
are. lett to right, Mike
.Edleman, baritone,
Kelly. lead; Vinton

Rankin, bass; and
Powell, tenor.
SubmiiiM..-

Mini ·heaJth.fair
POMEROY - A mini
health fair to be conducted
by students of the Ohio
. University 'College of
Osteopathic Medicine will
be held 9 to II :30 a.m. at
the Senior Citizens Center
on March 5.
Screenings include cholesterol, glucose, blood
pressure and glaucoma. ·
There is no fee for the services. Dr. Jatnes Schmoll
will assist with the glaucoma screening.

Birth announced
POMEROY - Beeami
and Clifford Thomas IU of
Pomeroy announce the birth
of a son, Clifford Scott
Thomas IV on Jan. 29 at the
O'Bleness
Memorial
Hospital. Athens.

For informalioa c:ontlict
the Adult Center at 740-24S-Sl34
Financial aid is available for those who qualify

Go Red for Women ·
February is National Heart Month and Friday.
symbol for women and heart disease awateness in
February 6, 2009, is National Wear Red Day-a day
2002 to deliver an urgent wake-up call to America'\
when Amencans nationwide will take women's heal1h women. The Red [)'ess reminds women of the need
to heart by wearing red to show their support for
· to protec:ll!'leir heart health, and inspires them to take
adion.
wanerfs heart ~sease awareness.
Join The Heelt Thllh on National Wear Red Day to
help spread the critical message that "Heart Disease
Doesn't care V\tlat You Wear-It's the #1 Killer of
W:lmen." Everyone can participate in the national
movement by wearing their favorite red dress. shirt ..
1ie, or Red Dress Pin on Friday.
February 6, 2009.

The Heart Truth partners indude: The Offtce on
'Mlmen's Health, DHH.S: ll'oOmenHeart: the National
Coalition for WOmen with Heart Disease: the
American Heart Association; and other organizations
canmitted to the health and well-being of women:
Whlt'a a Rad Dreaa Got to Do
With It?

The Haart Truth:.Haart Diaeaae
Ia the81 Killer of WOII) en

The Red Dress was designed to
build, awareness that wan en are
at risk lor heart disease. and
motivate them to take adion to
reduce their rtsk . The aeatlve
concept of a Red [)'ess tested
well with diverse women who cited
its ability to gel attention. convey
the seliousness of heart dis~ase,
and change the perception that It
is only a man·s Issue.

The Heart Truth Is thai one in lour
American women dies of heart
disease, and most fail to make
the connection between rtsk
fa~ch as high blood
pressure and high cholesteroland their personal tisk of
developing heart disease.

The Heart Truth,.campaign:
Serloua Maaaagaa about
Women's Heart Heahh

Making A Difference

. The Heart Truth is mtlldng
progress in the fight against heart
disease in women. More women
are aware that heart disease Is
t~eir leading cause of death. up
from 34 percent of women In 2000
. to 57 percent of women In 2006.. Women are
learning about the Red [)'ess as the national symbol
for women and heart disease-about 57 percent of
wanen were aware of the symbol in 2007. Mere
wanen are living looger. healthier lives. and fewer
are dying of heart disease. But challenges remain. ·
and many women still do not take heart ~lsease
seriously and personally The Heart Truth campaign
The Heart Truth campaign warns women about heart
will continue to build awareness among women and
disease and provides tools to help them take action
motivate them to take actioo for heart health.
against Its rtsk feelers. It is prtmarily targeted to ·
wan en ages 40 to 60, the time when a wanan's risk
Soun:e: NelioiWI HNII Lung etid Blood INIH&lt;h, US
of heart disease begins to increase. However. it's
Of1118llmenl d HNith en&lt;J Hwmm s~. N8llo1WIImlllu#N of
never too early-a- too late-to take action to prevent HNih
and Caltrol rtsk factOrs since heart disease develops
For more information, visit
over time and can start at a young age-even in the
--..
www.hearttruth.gov.
teen yen.

·The Heart Truth Is a national
awareness campaign for women
about heart disease sponsor!ld by
the National Heart, LU!'lg. and
Blood lnstltule (NHLBI), part of
the National Institutes of Health,
U.S. Department of Health and Human ~eJVices
(DHHS). Through the campaign, NHLBIIeads the
nation in a landmark heart health awareness
movement that Is being embraced by millions who
share the canmon goet or better heart health for 1111
wan en.

The campaign message Is paired with an arresting
visual-the Red Dress-designed to wam women
that heart disease Is their #1 killer. The He.art Truth
created and introduced the Red DresS as the national
Gellin Plant/Cheshire, Ohio

·'

�'

AROUND THE WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

'

The Daily Sentinel

'

Pagei\2

BYTiiEBEND
•

PageA3
Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Wednesday, February 4. 2009

hNNIE'S MAILBOX

BY N•SSER KAMa
AND
JASQt KEfSER
ASSOCIATED -.s5 WRITeRS

TEHRAN. Jr.m - Jr.m
sent its lirst domestically
made satellite into Qrbit.lhe
president
·announced
Tuesday: a key step for an
. atnbitious spal-e program.
that worries lhe U.S. and
other world powers because
the same rocket technology
used to launch satellites can
also deliver warheads.
For nearly a decade. Jr.m
has sought to develop a
national space progr.un. ereating unease among intemational leaders already con1.-erned about its nuclear and
. ballistic missile ~s. ·
: Till? telecornmumcations
· satelhte - \.'ailed Omid. or
hope, in Farsi _ was
launc~ late Monday after
President
Mahmoud
. Ahmadinejad gave the order
to proceed, a~:cording to a
: report on state rudio. State
: television showed footage
of what it said was the nighttime lift0 ff of the rocket tarrying the satellite at an
unidentified location in Iran.
. A U.S. COIIIIterprolifera: tion official wnfinned lhe
:launch and suggested the
: technology was not sophisticated. Speaking on oondition of anonymity to discuss
. intelligence ~athering . .the
: official suid 11 appeared it
. "isn ·1 too far removed from
: Sputnik." the first · Soviet
: orbiter launched in 1957.
· The TV report piujsed the
launch as part of festivities
marking the 30th anniversary ofthe 19791slamic revolution that toppled the u.S.. backed Shah and brought
hard-line clerics to power.
In a ~ear in which
AbmadineJad faces a tou!ih
elechon baule to stay 10
power. the launch provided
. a symbol of national .pride
, 10 hold up even as falling oil
· pr'res baUer the e 0 my
: an~ the hurd-line le:der's
·
.
1 ·
· popu aruy ·
.
. As 11 seeks to expand Its
mfluence m tl&gt;e Middle
~t. Iran touts s~ch techn~·
. log1cal successes a~ Signs 11
· can advance despite U:S.
:and U.N. ~chons over Its
· nuclear program.
The l~unch touched off
conrem m the Umted States,
. r:::uro~ and Israel about pos. s.1ble hnks between .ats satel: hte pro~s and 11s work
with nussiles' and nuclear
. technolo~y.
"There s almost always a
link between satellite programs like this and military
programs and there's almost
always a link between satellites and nuclear weapons.
It's the same delivery vehicle," said James Lewis. an
expert on defense technology at the' center . for
Strategic and International
Sludies in Washington.
White House spokesman
Robert Gibbs condemned
the launch. saying: "This
action does not convince us

that Iran is acting rrsnnnsi- need sdence for friendship.
bly to adva~L-e st:ir)iii.Y-or brolherbood and justice.~~
security in lhe region.told state television.
Department · The launch bas clear
State
. spot.esman Robert A. Wood political aims. said Lewis.
a~:cused iran of us.ing the ''You can say. 'I atn the
sp;K'e-launch prognun as a dominant power in the
tec-hnologi\.'al
stepping region and here's the proof.·
srooe to develop long-range That's what a space lauoch
ballistk missiles.
does ftll' you.~
"Iran ·s ongoing efforts to
The satellite was taken
develop its missile delivery into orbit by a Salir-2. or
\.'llpabilities remain a maner lllllba.ssador-2.
rocket.
of deep concern." Wood which was fust tested in
said. " lr.m 's development of August and has a range of
a spoce-launcb vehicle capa- 155 miles. lr.mian televible of putting a satellite into· sion said the satellite would
orbit establishes the techni- orbit at an altitude . of
cal basis from which Iran betwe~:n 155 and 250 miles.
could develop long-r.mge
State radio said it is
ballistic missile systems."
desislled to circle the Earth
Yifiah Shapir. a top Israeli 15 limeS during a 24-hour
.expert on till: Iranian space period and send reports to
prog~~· ~d the .launch the space center in Iran. It
1tsell doesn t reall) mean has two frequency bands
much . to ·Jsmel. we.. k.new and eight antennas for transa~t 11 ~f~~ h\llld ,. .
· mitting data.
The slgm.hcan\.'e IS m the
Abmadinejad said the
tech!K'logy Itself. They are satellite reac~ its orbit and
~mg progress and work- had made conta\.'t with
mg on a prog~ to spy on ground stations. though not
targets world~1de. But they all of its functions were active
are. d~cades ••away fro~ yet. He said Iran would now
ach1evmg that, ~.d Shap1r. seek to increase lhe ability of
who heads the m1htary :bul- its satellit«'lll'rier rockets to
ance pro_Jeel at the lnsll~te carry more weight.
for . Nallonal Secunty
Iran ·s space plans are lofty
S~dies •.a think tank at Tel and even hold out the goal
Av1v Umv~rslly.
.
of putting a man in orbit
The Umted States and within 10 years. though
some ?f 11s alhes accuse accomplishing that would
Iran of pursumg a covert be extremely expensive.
nuclear weapons program.
A domestic satellite pro~ran. demes the charg~. say- gram would put Iran m a
l!lg ·Its atom1c work 1s only growing club - more than
lor peaceful PUI'JlOSes, such 80 countries are building or
as power generation. .
planning to build their own
The announcement .~f .•ru: satellites. accordin¥ to
launch came as olhc1_~1s Lewis. But the abihty to
f~m. the U.S.. Russm. launch them is a much more
Bntam: France. Gem1any exclusive crowd; only nine
and Chma were set to .meet countries have done so.
Wednesday ne~ Franklurt to
In 2005, Iran launched its
talk about Iran s nuclelll' pro- ftrst oommercial satellite on a
gram. The group has off~red Russian rocket in a joint proIran .a package of mrent~ves jeel with Moscow. which is a
1f . 1t suspends . u~n~um partner in transfelTing space
ennchm~nt Wid enters mlo technology to Iran along with
talks on 11s nucle~ prog~. North Korea and China. That
The !J.N. Secunty ~ounc1l same yelll', the government
has 1mposed sanchons to said it had allocated $500 ·
press~re Iran to comply.
million lor spa~-e projects in
'Th1s lest underlines and the next five years.
illustrates our Sll(ious ronIran has said it wants to
cems about Iran's intentions," put its own satellites into
Britain's Middle East minister orbit to monitor natural disBill Rammell said Tuesday. asters in the earthquake"There 8re duw applications prone nation and improve
for satellite-lauoching tee)!- us
telecommunications.
nology in Iran's ballistic mis- Iranian officials also point
site program."
· to America's use of sateiAhmadinejad insisted the lites to monitor Afghanistan
launch was intended to be a and Iraq and say they need
message of peace and similar abilities for their
friendship to the world. "We security.

Dar A-±: I have been seem~ -Rob~ for over a
year. We have loads of fun together and genllinely
love each other. The problem is. Rob doesD 't seem
overly interested in moving in together, getting married or having lids. and~ knows that's a deal breaker for me.~ can undeiSiand his hesitation about marriage. He was married before and his wife bad Cbitdml from~ firsl marriage, but it didn't wod out
and they divorced years ago.
We each have our own homes. but Rob will not consider selling his so we could get a Place together. I
. tbint it's ·important for a couple to tind a place they
can bolh call home. His place is bigger, but it needs a
lot of work.lt's the home he grew up in. and it would
always be his; nol ours. Plus, his mom moved in with
him a few years black and is still living there. He's
been saying for.months that it's time for oo to find
~own place. but he won't discuss it with ~.And
she stilllllllkes his meals and does his laundry.
How can I mak.e him see that at this sta¥e in his life
~ should !mow what it's lili:e to live on h•s own or he
will never be able to figure out whether he wants to
have a life with someone else? I am not trying to force
our retatioosbip into marriage, but neither of us is get• ting any . younger. When is it time to move on? Nutcaw iD N.Y.
Dar N.Y.: YeSterday. This is a grown man. stillliv~
ing in his ehildhood home with his mother who cook.s
and cleans for him. He's made it clear that he's not
ready for marriage and may never want children. You
can ISSue an Ultimatum, since you'll have nothing to
lose by walking away. Otherwise, decide whether you
love him enou$b to stay in this situation indefinitely.
We can't pronuse there will he anything more.
Dar Annie: Many years ag1&gt;. my parents made his
wedding plans for me. but my fiance and I eloped
instead. Shortly after. I moved back to my home state
and went through another wedding reremony ~ause
I didn't have the courage to tell my parents I was.
. already mlllTied. Two years later, I divon:ed.
·
My question is, since l was legally married in two
states
divo~ in one, atn I stil! married
where I elo ? - Twice Married, One Divorce
Dear
: You don't have to divorce in the same
state in which you had your wedding ..There is usually a residency requirement to qualify for a divorce, so
· if you y.-ere legally divQICed m the stale. where you
and your ex-husband lived, it will be recognized
everywhere.
·
Dear Annie: I read the letter froni "Color Blind."
· whose mqther's husband disapproves of her adopting
.a child of another race. Thirty-five years ago, my
father forbade me to adopt. He said the children were
"somebody else's trash and trouble." We adopted a
daughter when she was 3 days old. He refused to call .
our child by her name until she was 5.
My mother adored the baby. but sadly, she di!ld when
our daughter was 18 months old. My father's mother
told Dad that he was wrong and any children of mine
were his grandchildren. Nine years later, we adopted
our serond duughter. When I made the ~nouncemenl
to my sister. her reply was, "Is it black or.white?" This
child bas a much more outgoing personality and spoke
directly to my father, which be bated.
·
Dad is now missing out on two great-grandchildren.
He wrote me out of his will to mak.e sure my children
will never inherit anything from him. All we ever .
wanted was his love. They say we can't pick. our relatives, but sometimes you get the privilege of choosing your family, which mak.es it precious. - Shato11
In Pennsylvania
Dear Sharon: It's unfort~ate your father can'!
open up his heart. because it creates a sad situation for
all of you. But he's the one who has lost out the most.

dent announced Tuesday,
claiming·a si'gnificant step in

an ambilioos space program:
that has worried many inter- :
national observe.rs.
APphoto

crews
• •
.

' I

. '~~-

I

and=nl

.•

!%~.

' ) .

.

An11~'s

'

.

.

....

n.,...~

lilli

'

I

4848 State Rt. 325 South
Rio Grande, OH
(740) 379-2025 ° tON\,hn~i '
www.buckeyerec.com ·

.

Mailbox is writt11s by Kathy Mitchell and
Man:y Sugar, wnglimt tditors of tht Ann Lalllhrs
col•mn. PIHst t·mail your q•tstions to tmnitsmaiiIHJuomcast.lltt, or writt to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL 60611. To find out mort
about A.nnit's Mailbox, and rtad features by oth~r
Crtators Syndir:att writtrs and cartoonists, visittht
Creators Syndicate Wtb page at www.cnators.com.

:Community Calendar
Public meetings

and elk* the blue button.

PLASTIC SURGERY SPECIAL ~
New State-of-the-Art t\trle
·Ambulatory Surg

Breast Enla
Tummy '11.1
Li
•
Eyelid .
Laser Facial
'-

. From March 2 through APII"IJ

*Must live in Athens~

The River Blend Quartet
will again this year be
delivering singing valentines in the Pomeroy
community. The Quartet
wiU deliver songs and a
rose to your significant
other, your wonderful
mother, some other person near i!nd dear, or

BY KAniY llnaaa.
AND MNICY &amp;IGM

domestically made satellite :
into orbit. the country's presi-:

Ckt)te

.HOLZER·
CLINIC

-

This photo released by lhe
Fars News Agency claims to
show an tra11ian satellite
.
launching rocket named
"Salir-2", translated in ,Englisl)
as "Ambassador-2", carrying ·
the satellite "'mid', or "Hope•
in English. photographed prior
to launch at an undisclosed :
location on Monday. Iran has:
successfully sent its liiSt
:

1:.

Smile! New you can own the picture ol that Ulitorg.ttablt
l"nnO'MM''1 Clptl.ir.:tln the n• p..,..., Pholoe become,~
when flamed or printed oo a mug or fTIOU8&amp; pad.

He's still living
his childhood

VVednesday,Feb.4
CHESTER - Chester
: Township Trustees, 7 p.m..
· Chester town hull.
PAGEVILLE :- Scipio
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m. at the Pageville Town
Hall.
: POMEROY - Meigs
: County Board of Health.
· regular meeting, 5 p.m.,
Meigs County Health
Department ..·
Thursday, Feb. S
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Council will meet at
7 p.m. at village hall.
Monday, Feb. 9
RUTLAND - Rutland
Township Trustees, 5 p.m ..
Rutland Fire Station. ·
Thesday, Feb. 10
REEDSVILLE - Olive
· Township Trustees meet in
: regular session, 6;30 p.m ..
· Olive Township garage.

Clubs and .
organizations
VVednesday,Feb.4
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Literary Club,
2 p.m .. Pomeroy Library.
Ohta Heighton to review
"Infidel" by Ayaan Hirsi
. . . ,..

Ali.
Hostess
Connie
Gilkey.
Thursday, Feb. S
CHESTER ..... Chester
Shade
Historical
Associaton, 7 p.m. ·ut the
Chester rourthouse. Final
planning for Academy and
events of this year.
Friday, Feb. 6
POMEROY - Meigs
County PERl meets at I
p.m., Mulberry Community
Center. Philip Roberts,
District 7 representative, to
speak on issues relating to
OPERS. Anyone who
receives OPERS check.
invited.
Saturday, Feb. 7
.SALEM CENTER
Star Grange #778 and Star
Junior Grange #878 meet in
regular
session,
with
potluck at 6:30 p.m .. followed by 7:30 meeting.
Monday, Feb. 9
CHAUNCEY - An Area
14 youth council meeting
will be held 9 a.m. ut the
Athens CDJFS-Chauncey.

Other events
Thursday, Feb. S
POMEROY - Parents
meeting for planning junior
prom, 6:30p.m. Meigs High
School, Room ,213.

your faithful secretary
on Feb. 13 and 14. lt
can be arranged by calling 992-6159 (Gerald
Kelly) or 992-2622
(Gerald Powell.) The
quartet. pictured here
with Governor Ted
Strickland. center. sang
lor the holiday open
house at the governor's
residence. Members
are. lett to right, Mike
.Edleman, baritone,
Kelly. lead; Vinton

Rankin, bass; and
Powell, tenor.
SubmiiiM..-

Mini ·heaJth.fair
POMEROY - A mini
health fair to be conducted
by students of the Ohio
. University 'College of
Osteopathic Medicine will
be held 9 to II :30 a.m. at
the Senior Citizens Center
on March 5.
Screenings include cholesterol, glucose, blood
pressure and glaucoma. ·
There is no fee for the services. Dr. Jatnes Schmoll
will assist with the glaucoma screening.

Birth announced
POMEROY - Beeami
and Clifford Thomas IU of
Pomeroy announce the birth
of a son, Clifford Scott
Thomas IV on Jan. 29 at the
O'Bleness
Memorial
Hospital. Athens.

For informalioa c:ontlict
the Adult Center at 740-24S-Sl34
Financial aid is available for those who qualify

Go Red for Women ·
February is National Heart Month and Friday.
symbol for women and heart disease awateness in
February 6, 2009, is National Wear Red Day-a day
2002 to deliver an urgent wake-up call to America'\
when Amencans nationwide will take women's heal1h women. The Red [)'ess reminds women of the need
to heart by wearing red to show their support for
· to protec:ll!'leir heart health, and inspires them to take
adion.
wanerfs heart ~sease awareness.
Join The Heelt Thllh on National Wear Red Day to
help spread the critical message that "Heart Disease
Doesn't care V\tlat You Wear-It's the #1 Killer of
W:lmen." Everyone can participate in the national
movement by wearing their favorite red dress. shirt ..
1ie, or Red Dress Pin on Friday.
February 6, 2009.

The Heart Truth partners indude: The Offtce on
'Mlmen's Health, DHH.S: ll'oOmenHeart: the National
Coalition for WOmen with Heart Disease: the
American Heart Association; and other organizations
canmitted to the health and well-being of women:
Whlt'a a Rad Dreaa Got to Do
With It?

The Haart Truth:.Haart Diaeaae
Ia the81 Killer of WOII) en

The Red Dress was designed to
build, awareness that wan en are
at risk lor heart disease. and
motivate them to take adion to
reduce their rtsk . The aeatlve
concept of a Red [)'ess tested
well with diverse women who cited
its ability to gel attention. convey
the seliousness of heart dis~ase,
and change the perception that It
is only a man·s Issue.

The Heart Truth Is thai one in lour
American women dies of heart
disease, and most fail to make
the connection between rtsk
fa~ch as high blood
pressure and high cholesteroland their personal tisk of
developing heart disease.

The Heart Truth,.campaign:
Serloua Maaaagaa about
Women's Heart Heahh

Making A Difference

. The Heart Truth is mtlldng
progress in the fight against heart
disease in women. More women
are aware that heart disease Is
t~eir leading cause of death. up
from 34 percent of women In 2000
. to 57 percent of women In 2006.. Women are
learning about the Red [)'ess as the national symbol
for women and heart disease-about 57 percent of
wanen were aware of the symbol in 2007. Mere
wanen are living looger. healthier lives. and fewer
are dying of heart disease. But challenges remain. ·
and many women still do not take heart ~lsease
seriously and personally The Heart Truth campaign
The Heart Truth campaign warns women about heart
will continue to build awareness among women and
disease and provides tools to help them take action
motivate them to take actioo for heart health.
against Its rtsk feelers. It is prtmarily targeted to ·
wan en ages 40 to 60, the time when a wanan's risk
Soun:e: NelioiWI HNII Lung etid Blood INIH&lt;h, US
of heart disease begins to increase. However. it's
Of1118llmenl d HNith en&lt;J Hwmm s~. N8llo1WIImlllu#N of
never too early-a- too late-to take action to prevent HNih
and Caltrol rtsk factOrs since heart disease develops
For more information, visit
over time and can start at a young age-even in the
--..
www.hearttruth.gov.
teen yen.

·The Heart Truth Is a national
awareness campaign for women
about heart disease sponsor!ld by
the National Heart, LU!'lg. and
Blood lnstltule (NHLBI), part of
the National Institutes of Health,
U.S. Department of Health and Human ~eJVices
(DHHS). Through the campaign, NHLBIIeads the
nation in a landmark heart health awareness
movement that Is being embraced by millions who
share the canmon goet or better heart health for 1111
wan en.

The campaign message Is paired with an arresting
visual-the Red Dress-designed to wam women
that heart disease Is their #1 killer. The He.art Truth
created and introduced the Red DresS as the national
Gellin Plant/Cheshire, Ohio

·'

�Page~

OPINION

.The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, February 4, ao09

Maligned Mexico City Policy .deserves afair shak~

Sometimes. change can
make you choke. That's
111 Court Sb~et • Pl:lmen)y, Ohio
been the experienn: of
(740) 992-2156 • FAX 1740) 992-2157
many ,upporters of the
www.my cl 1 'Cpentlnelcom
Me,.iw City Polky. re&lt;.·ently rescinded by Presi·'ent
"
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Barud; Obam:1 (th~ second
Democratic president in
MCP's 25-year history to do
Den Goodrich
~o). The Reagan- er~ manPublisher
date. derisively referred to
by its critics as the Global
Charlene ·Hoeflich
Ga"
Rule.
prevented
General Manager-News Editor
Ameerica from otlicially
el&lt;porting its liberal abortion policies overseas. It did
this in the most pra•·tical
Cngws.s .shall make no law rrspe€ting an
way possible, by refusing
fedemt U.S. dollars to proestt~bli.shment of rrligion, or prohibiting the
abortion groups operating in
jrft vcmise tlrcrriif; or abridging theftrcdom foreign
countries. . The
of ¥«h, or of the prrs.s; or the right of tht
United
States
spends
•
people pe11€tably to as.sem,le, 1111d to petition upwards of $-WO million on
family-planning assistam:e
the Gol,'mlment )or 11 ,rrdrrss ofgrim~nm.
annually in 53 .developing
•
nations. much ot the money
· - The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution going to nongovemmt'ntal
organizations (NGO) bused
in-country. Thanks to the
MCP. not I cent went
toward the anti"ht'e ~;ause.
Named for the locution of
the 1984 U.N. population
conference that tonnuluted
the pot icy, it stated:
"Governments art• ur!!ed ...
to take appropriat&lt;' sieps to
help women avoitl ubortion. which in no case
shollld be promoted :1s a
method of family planning.
and
whenever pt'lssible;
DMr Etlitor:
Co~~~:erning the following points in the Jan. 25 "Our provide for the humane
V~ew" column: Did Bush really allow the military to be treatment and &lt;:ounscling
used in 11 more effective manner'! Only if one considers cor- of women who have had
porate ~leering, atrocities by private arn1ies. and war on recourse to abortion ."
The polil'y presented
tillse pretense to be a plus. .
Huzzahs for Sept. I l? Who was el presidente on thm date ?
. Why did mqny of the world's intel servil."tlS get wind of tht•
'initiative and try to warn the U.S. power structure'1 They
didn't know it was an inside job. Re&lt;td the Pmjel'l l\1r a New
American Century.lt's the Rosetta Stone for what huppened
on Sept. U ; in addition to my nume~us letters on tile.
.
A new fonn of Medicare·) Let market forces take care ol
granny. Let dmg companies gouge. .
.
Predatory banks and tinam:e a plus'/ Let us prey ..
Finally, the Bush junta produced a n~m~r. o! phony
videos and presented them as the work. of legllumlle JOUrnalists. In one instum:e. a "news report" dealt with Bush's
.new Medicare progmm of 2004. which 79 percent of seniors
rightly opposed as a sweetheart deal for the drug kingpins.
This should fill any ethical journalist with white-hot rage.
Discovering positives ~n this miserdble record requires
.finding redeemmg value m the darkest of douds . The nec.essary consensus: a vigorous thumbs down followed by ••
:lungs-filled-to-capacity Boo Hiss!
Jeff Fields
1

VIEW

READER'S

.ti
.
·
,
Pos1 ves .•
·Not many in Bush reconJ

Kathryn
Lopez
'
overseas health organizations with a choice: They
could
uccept
feder;d
American cash •uld dis...'Ollf·
·a.ge abortion or thev oould
refuse the needed ru'fws u.nd
do as they wished. Thill's
surely far from dlaronian.
NGOs that opted out of the
Yankee bucks were still free
-· d
·
f
to so 1ICII ona1tons rom
symp&lt;lthetic private citizens
, and instirutions. And. contrary 10 a lot of what I've
been readin&lt;&gt; in the press
lat~,&gt;ly. the polky had little to
do with abstinence. edu~ation . and certainly nothing
to do with jailing or hurtinc
wnmt' n.
'
In short. the debate over·
tht' Mexico City Polky
d\'&lt;'sn 't haw to be a zerosum ,1tTair. As Republican
Chris Smith . the most
ardent anti-abortion advoc·att' in Congress. put tl
shortly ••fter Ol)t1ma 1ssued
an exel'utive order overturniug the policy : "T~ Mel\ico
Citv Policy represents com·
mo'n ground." In fac·t.
Demo.:rat Bart Stupak
joined Smith in un attempt
tn reinstate lht• policy.
But in ordeno muke renl

The Daily Sentinel • Pace As

Local Briefs

re&gt;•:in~etithe_MCP._m~ .

progress. honesty must. be
mtroduced to the de~ate.
alter a hmg absence from
the pl\lCeedmgs. Tuke the
&lt;.'&lt;ISC of Min Min Lama. In
1997. a relative raped this
. . gu
· 1.
l-1--year-old Nepakse
She bt.-came . pregnant and
was unk.nowmgly g1v_en .an
aborttun dmg by :1 fam1ly
member. When the. expelled
fetus was found dead. she
was sentenced to 12 years m
J.'ail as. abortion was .stLII
a1
h
11legal m Nep· at t atttme.
. There's nothing good
about the story. But then
another bad . ,-hapter was
wntten on Capttol Hill.
DemocratK Sen . Burba~a
Boxer ~as long us&lt;·d Lama s
harrowmg ordeal as an
f he h
the
el&lt;amp 1e o t . . ann
Mel&lt;l&lt;.'o C1ty. Pohcy could
do. In Bol\er. s telhng o.t the
t.tle . w~en :' group cuUed
the . Famtly
Planmng
Assoct&lt;~t1on of N~pal adv_ocated . tor Lamas relea.S~;.
Amenca used .the Mel\1'-'0
City Polll'Y to puntsh
FPAN. In out• speech. the
California senator said.
"The Global Gag Rule put
us on the side of a rapist. We
are not on the stde ot hunmn
ri¥hts .. . We are on ~e ..sidt.&lt;
ol pcopl~ who are ev1l.
Bo)(er s ..-ontenuons · be_g
to De challenged. Lamas
rape. ••borllon. •mpnsc)tlment tmll release from Jtlll
:1!1 happened dunng years
when . the Mex!co Ctty
Poh.:y was not m effect.
From 1993 to 2001. the
Clinton
wJministration

Boxers story nothing bu
sharnetul propag~. aflil'Furt~er . FPAN IS an , 11
at~ ot the lntemallooodnal
Planned
Parenth .
Feuerallon.
"
·
rvoaruzattOII
an -·e
that has long .advocated .f~
the b?erah~allon of Nepal s
abortion_ l.1ws. An~ whe~
the Me)( leo C1ty Pohcy was
actually remstat~d under
Prestdent Bush .m ~I,
FPAN opted to reluse teder1
t · d relymg 011
a mone~, ms ea .
d
supstanllal donatiOns an
tundmg from tis IPPF m~­
~~hlp so II ~ou~d CO!l~IDIJe'
11 s pro-abortion iJ.Cil~Ues ..
In t~ case ~~ Mm Min
L&lt;nna. mtcmat10nal ~trage
ulttmately resulted m ,her
p·rrdon and release in 1999
'
.
. '
t~ree ~,ears before abortion
\\,ls l~.,al1zed m ~epa! .
_
. ·' h.•p.pento bei_Ieve. ~bor
tton ~s a hu~an nghts t~ue
~ that 11 1s d gross v1olanon
ot. our .duty to protect hfe at
tts 1'!lost vulnen1ble. B~t you
don t have to agree Wid) me
to seeJhere has been somethmg wrong w1th how we're
thmkmg about the M~P
ISsue. The !"'ex1co Ct.ty
Poh..-y doesn .t d~serve tts
bad rep. I look .to~ard to
the day w~re 11 1snt tre~ted
as the ball m a partisan pmgpong g••me and we can ~ave
tm honest debate a~ut tt ..
(Kathryn Lf!fll'' ts the edt·
wr . of Nt~twnc•l .Rev•ew
O,nlrne (www.nallona/renew.wm). She can be_ contacred at klopez@natronairevie11·.com:)

11JPPERS PLAINS - The Eastern lady Eagles basket0011 team wilt sponsor at Sweetheart Fifth Grade Basketball
TOUI'1Wilent Feb. 13-15, with eight teams. aad three games
per team. The tournament will be held at Eastern
Elementary School. Tbe cost is $75.
Information is available from Coach John Burdette at
541 -7132, or 696-1201.

.MARIEJTA :.... Buckeye Hills-Hoctin~ Valle~ RegiOIIIII '
Development District Executive Conuruttee wtU meet at
·noon on Friday in the training room at Buckeye Hills, 1400
Pike St., Mariena.

..

Boil advisory lifted.

· MIDDLEPORT :... The boil adversary for the village of
.Middleport was lifted Tuesday afternoon.
.
·

Basket games set
SYRACUSE - Basket games will. be held Thursday at
Carleton School by a non-profit organization. Doors open
at 5 p.m. games begin at 6. .
.

.For the Rerord

POMEROY - Divorces were granted in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court to Deborah Ann Person from Harold
A. Person,.and Joseph M. Egan from Wendy C. Egan.

Foreclosures

..

POMEROY - Foreclosures were issued ·in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to Home National Bank
a~ainst Cecil Brinager, administrator of the estate of
T1mothy D. Brinager, and others, and USA against Marina·
Durham, deceased. and others.

.Judgment

: Today is Wednesduy. Feb. 4. the 35th day of 2009. There
:are 330 days left in the year.
: Today's Highlight in History : On Feb. 4. 1789. ele,·tors
chose George Washington to be the first president of the
United States. (However, the results of the balloting were
not counted in the U.S. Senate until two months later.)
On this date: In 1783. Britain dedared u formal .:essation
of hostilities with its former colonies. the United States of
America. ·
.
: In 1932, New York Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt opened
the Winter Olympic Games at Lake Placid.
: In I 941. the United Servil'e Organizations (USO) l'ame
into ellistence.
Thought for Today: "Life is doubt. and faith without
doubt is nothing but death." --' Miguel de Unamuno.
Spanish philosopher ( 1864- 1936).

POMEROY- A judgment was issued in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court to Unifund CCR Partners against
William E. Gibbs.

Sentenced ·
POMEROY - The following were sentenced in Meigs
·
County Common Pleas Court:
• Russell D. Sargent, one year in prison for receiving
stolen property, and 18 months for fatlure to appear after
recogmzance release. Credit for 25 days served.
• Stephanie Ditty, 18 months on two charges of theft of
.· dmgs. $2,500 restitution to Swisher &amp;' Lohse Pharmacy.
Sentence suspended, order to seek substance abuse treatment. 500 hours community corrections.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 32.53
Aklo (NASDAQ, - 36.75
Aahland tnc. (NYSE) - 7.27
Big Loto (NYSE) '- 13.98
Bob Evano (NASDAQ) - 17.97
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 17.67
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
-4.02

Champion (NASDAQ) - 2.92
Charming Shopo (NASDAQ) .68

Reader Services·

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing

Correction Polley

Co.

Published every afternoon. Monday
Our main concern in aU stories is to through Friday, 111 Cour t Streel.
be accurate. It .you know ot f)n error Pomeroy. Oh10. Second-class poslage

In

a story, calllho newsroom al (740)

992·2156.

pa id at Pomeroy

Member: The Associated Press and
the Oh1 0 Newspaper As socia llof'l.

Our main n.umber Ia
(740) 992-2156.

Department extensions are:

Po1tm11ter: Send ·address corrections to The Daily Sentinel. 111 Court

S1reet. F'omaroy. Ohio 45789.

Subscription Rates

News
Edllor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
. Reporter: Brian Aee~. Ext. 14
Reporter: Belh Sergent. Ext. 13

Advertising
Outolde S.loo:

By carrier or motor route

4 week• .... .. .. .. .. ·..'11.30
52 weeks ..... .. . . . .. '128.85

O.IIy ........ : .......... SO'
Senior Citizen ro1eo

26 w0eko ... . .... .. : . .'59.61
52 weeko ...... .... . .' 116.90
Subscribers should rern~ 111 adwnco

Dav&lt;~

Harris. Exl. 15 dirqct to th&amp; Point Pfeasant Register No
Outllda Saln: Brenda Davis. Ext 16 SUbscription by mail PEIIIllltted Ill RUJRS
where home carrier sel\lice Is eveilablo.
. .Clelo.!Ct"'.: Judy Clark. Ext 10

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich , Ext 12

E·malf:
mdsnewsOmydailysentmel.com

Wob:
www.mydailysentlnel.cQm

Mall Subscription
Inalde Moaon County
12 Weeks
26 Weeks . . .
52Weeks ..

... .. '35.26
. . ' 70.70
.. ' 140.11

Outolde Mason County
12 Weeks . . .

26 Wee&lt;s
52 Weeks

·

... ' 56.55
. ' 113.60
.... '227 .21

L-- - -- - - - - - - · - - - - - - -..

That thing that's going around
I've got thlll thing that's
going &lt;tl'l&gt;uml. And . l t:an 't
seem to shake it. It's been
weeks nnw. Coughing. sniffling . headaches . sore
throut. lll'hcs nil over. I hope
whoever gave il lo me still
has iLl Ld the punishment
fil tht• crime . Why can't
people stuy home when
they're si..-k und sullcr in
silcn..-e. like l (}(&gt;'! I'm so
considerate, I don't even go
to the office when I'm
healthy .
Everyone I talk to on the
phone tells me same thin~ :
· "You sound honible." They
aU give me suggestions and
udvicc . "Drink water." "Eat
..-hickcn soup." "Drink
t:humomile tcu.'' "Take a
decongestant. " · "Ta ke . a
pregnancy test ... What ?
The 011c thing no one ever
says. "Go sec u doctor."
Bec.1use '" we &lt;ill know.
there's no wrc for Ihe lOill ·
mon cold.
Whul ubnut an IIIKom,
mon cold? Th&lt;· on..- thllt ·

Jim
Mullen

stays in your body fnr six
weeks a1ld brings fri ends . It
seems there is no cure for
thai . either. II hus moved
from my head to my chest
and had. to my hc'&lt;tll.
What's that old S&lt;lying?
"Feed a C\&gt;ld. starve u
fewrT l Jon 't know whut .
that means . I ha ve a cold
and a fL•ver. What am l supposed tn do'! Eat a ·b1g
brcukrasl uml purge for the
rest of the duy'' It was 11
tuugh cl1oicc but ·1 del'ided
to fel'd it. No mult ~r how
miscrablc I felt, l made sure
I was never far from ll hag
of clwc.,c pulh or ~hips.
Sue had &lt;I few silly. New

•

Age. hippie-dippy health
suggestions that1 were so
off-thl'-wall it . was hard not
to laugh .
"You should watch what
you eat , lose some weight
and get s(•me el&lt;er..-ise out in
th&lt;.• fresh air. Th&lt;·n you
wouldn't !!Ct sick so often."
See . now' how dnes that
voodoo work? Where she
gets these crackpot ideus,
I'll nevcr know. I've got &lt;1
doset full of exercise Clluipment and it hasn 't done a
thing for me .
I'm (&gt;f the ·:more is bcttci"' sl'hool. If a bowl of
•·hil'kcn "soup is good for
you. wm1ldn't two bowls
he really good'! lf ornnge
jui~:c is full of vitamin C.
have two glasses. If one
glass of red wii1c a day is
good fm you. inwgine what
a ·whole hnttlc will do . If
ihc c uu~h 111edidnc says lo
take nnl' teaspoon every
fou r hours. th~n one Hlhlesponn every two hours has
~ PI In he hcttcr.

But I wus so sick, I could. n't keep the cough medicine. the wine.the soup, the
OJ and the puffs down. It
all .came up while I was
wut..-hing un autopsy on
"CSI." I felt even worse.
Muybe · I was getting a
touch of stomach tlu on top
of a cold. I was much too
skk to cleail it up.
lt 's not like I'm Howard
Hughes, but I try to ulj;e
precuutions in the winter. l
get the tlu shot. I use the
. germ-killing soap. I avoid
s.hookhildren, But sornetimcs nothing works. Like I
was .telling the guys when
we were drinking Jell-0
shots in · Bob's hot tub
bcJnre I cuught this thing. ·
sometimes you c1m do .
cvcrytlling right and still
get skk.
(.lim Mullen is the alllhor
o(. "It 1i1ke.\ o Villal(e Idiot:
tompli&lt;'atill!l the Simple
Lifi"' cmd "Baby$ Firsr
7illtrJo." Yrm call reach him
111 jim _m11 lll'll@ mvway.com .)

Bv OWE Put ION+

City Holding (NASDAQ) - 25.37
Colllna (NYBE) - 38.84
DuPont (NYSE) - 23.35
US Bank (NYSE)- 14.11
Gannett (NYSE) - 4.86
Ge,....l Electric (NYSE, - 11.37
Ha...,.O.vldaon.(NYSE) - 13.73
JP Morgan (NYSJ!) - 24.05
Kn~Qer (NYSE) - 22.811
Uml*l Branda (NYSE) - 7.81
Norfolk Southern
(NYSE) - 37.80
.
.

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS.
DAQ) -18.85
BBT (NYSE) - 18.31
P8oplea (NASDAQ) - 10.68
Papaleo (NYSE) - 51 .52
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.40 ·
Rockwell (NYSE) - 24.68
Rocky I!IQta (NASDAQ, - 3.53
floyal Dutch SIHIII - 51.CI8
Searl Hotcltng (NASDAQ) - 39.60
WIII·Mart (NYSE, - 47.81
Wandy'o (NYSE) - 5.37
W•Banco (NYSE) - 20.117
Worthington (NYSE) ..., 1D.21i
Dally atock reporto are tiHI 4
p.m. ET cloalng quotaa Oltrano·
actlono for Feb. 3, 2009, provided by Edward Joneo financial. .
advlaora IIUC Milia In Galllpolta
at (740) 441·8441 and L"ley ·
Marmo In Point PI•aantat
(304) 674-0174. Mamber StPC.

Farm on Carson Road in
Mason, W.Va., had been
putting up round bales of
hay and had Iuken a break
for lunch around noon when
he parked some farm equipment in an equipment shed
that also served as a stordge
area for hay and left for a
few minutes.
When he returned, he
found that the shed, along
with the fann equipment and
140 bales of hay, was on tire.

LA!t 10Fi'FOIIYOAII.VREGISTERCC1.1

MASON, W.Va.
Firefighters trom .four
departments were at a local
fann for several hours
Tuesday as they attempted
to extinguish seyerul bales
of hay that were on fire after
the building they were in
burned to the gTQund.
According to officials, an
employee at the Ed Carson

Arraigned

TODAY IN HISTOl:Z.Y

The Daily Sentinel

~ a iolalloss.
OW. P I t tfii\Ot att

'

Divorces

Letters to tire editor an! welcome. 7Jtel' should .bc• le.vs
than 300 •vords. All letters are subject fl ) nlitiiiR , mmt be
sig11ed. cmd include• culdress a11d tl'lt•phutw 1111mber. No
UIISigtted letters ll'ilt be publisllt'd. Lt'l/t•rs ;'/wuld Ill' in
goad Wsle. t~~ldressillg issues. 1101 per.wmalitin. Lettas of
thanks to orgwri:atiolls ami i11dil'idua/s will tfllt be acceptell j(1r publimtion.

where se~~eral
bales of hay ancl
some farm equipment were tisled

Exeeutive
1neeting
/

.HONE5TMISTAKE5

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Haven, Flatrock
and Middleport
were on the
scene of this
structure fire in
Mason Tuesday,

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Cblm:h cl Christ will bOld
.its. free c.orn_munity dinner 00 Feb. 27. Doors- will open at 4:30
p.m., and dinner wiU be served family Slyle at S p.m. OD)y.
The menu w1U be beans and bam,combread,anddessert.

HOW MANY

Syracuse

Fireligh~rs from
Mason. New

Free dinner

POMEROY - The following were arraigned on indictments in Meigs County Common Pleas Court:
• Michael G. White, two counts of burglary, theft of
motor vehicle. receiving stolen property. Christopher
Tenoglin was appointed counsel; $1.000 personal recognizance bOnd. $100 surety bond, $1,000 appearance bond .
Trial set for March 3.
• Keith J. Nakao, breaking and entering, forgery, theft.
Christopher Tenoglia appointed counsel; $1,000 personal·
recognizance bond, $1,000 appearance bond. $100 surety
bond. Trial set for March 3.

ARE Wt A(lGWED?

'

Basketball tournament

Power from Page At

Grant

coopemtives as well as 16 ly a week el\pressed frustratree cutting crews to help tion at seeing unidentified
get the I ~113 customers work crews meant IQ restore
back online in · Meigs power allegedly still in the
County as well as customers parking lot at Meigs High
in other ~-ounties.
School at 8 a.m., during
Tackett said one of the daylight hours.
problems with delays in getThe caller, who wished to
ting service restored was that remain anonymous. said she
"travel was hazardous for the understood workers have a
first few days" and '.'we had difficult job, she just didn't
to litemlly wait for the trees ,know why they weren't out
to . stop falling before ·we working while there was
could safely send crews in." daylight. When asked,
. A call into The Daily Tacketl said he didn't think.
Sentinel from a Buck.eye these were·crews associated
Rum! customer in Columbia with Buckeye Rural, saying
Township who had been typically their crews work
without electricity for near- from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. To be

fromPageAl
fair to the crews in the parking lot. it isn't known
study
is
whether they were on a engineering
required
for
the
village's
break from working that
grant application. ·
night and/or morning.
The study is expected to
Whatever the case, the sitcost
the village around
uation undersl'ored the
$4,000.
and the total project
absolute frustration many in
Meigs County have felt dur- is expected to cost around
ing a week of coping with $181.000. If approved. a
the cold and dark.. As for gmnt through the . program
Buckeye Rural customers would likely pay 90 percent
becoming frustrated with of the cost. and the village
the outage, Tackett ·said he would be required to pur a
20 percent match. Fundmg
understood.
"We know that they· re suf- for that match could also be
fering and we're doing every- ·funded through state funds ..
thing we can to get power
restored," Tackett said.

the family had a cistern for this wus a situation that also
water for themselves and required con~tnnt monitortheir farm animals.
ing. Then, throw in the fact
In addition to fumes from that just getting dressed for
kerosene, there were fumes work was made miserable
from a gas generator outside · because some rooms wen!
and propane tanks inside to barely above freezing .
run lights and one of the . Though they considered a
family members joked by motel, that was quickly out of
the end .o f the day they were the qlle'stion with many being
"higher than a kite. "
$70 a night which meant a
. There were also cords run- sill-night stay would've run
ning all over the house and the fllmily nearly $450.
with a small, active child
The adult daughter said

she didn't know what she'd
do if she didn't have "mountain people" when referring
to her parents who grew up
in West Vi~inia and learned
how to sumve with less and
in a crisis. It also taught her
mother just how to·cook on
that coal stove .
The daughter joked: "I
had to move out of my
(modem) house and go live
with the mountain people to .
survive."

..
LIVJDg from Page Al

Local Weather
Wednesday ... Cloudy
with scattered snow showers. Cold with highs in the
mid 20s. Nonhwest winds
lO 'to 15 mph. Chance of
snow 50 ~rcent.
Wednesday night .. .Mostly
cloudy with isolated snow
showers. Cold with lows
around 12. Nonhwest winds
I0 to I5 mph with gusts up to
25 mph. Chance of snow 20
percent.
Thursday.. .Mostly sunny .
Highs in the upper 20s. West
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Thursday night and
Friday...Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the lower 20s .
Highs in the lower 40s.
Friday
night
and
Saturday...Partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 30s.

: Meigs County Republican

liNCOlN DAY DINNER

**
**
*

**
*
February lOth • 6:30pm
*·
**
Meigs High School
*
Speaker: Jon Husted
*
.* Who will be running for Secretary of State **
:
Tickets available by contacting
!
* Bill Spaun - 992-3346 or Sandy Iannarelli- 992-2426 *
: ·
or any of our central committee members · · · :
* .
or township representatives
*

.VJSit us ·~.
·online at

www.m~ltytentlnel.com

Yo~ronline

source for news

1114irSOil '-ic~nuf

Highs in the mid 50s.
Saturday night ••.Mostly
· cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the mid 30s.
Sunday and Sunday
night.. .Mostly cloudy with a
40 percent chance Of showe.rs. Highs in the mid 50s.

**************************** **

:

Owners called 9 U, who dis- the farm equipment. A boat
patched the fire department. also was damaged during
Several members of the the ~laze.
Mason Volunteer Fire
Firelighters remained on
Depanment along with the scene for several hours
mutual aid station New puning but the hay OOJes that
Haven responded to put out were sti Uon tire and doing a
the fire. Firefighters also cleanup to prevent u rekindle.
received assistance from
·Also responding was an
Flatrock and . Middleport umbulance crew . with
because ·water had to be Mason County Emergency
transported to the scene.
Medical Services.
All of the hay was
The cause of the fire is
destroyed by the fire. as was under investigation .

'""

fUM'a( 'J/imw

·--·--··-···"···---···-·-··-- · -···-··-"'" '"

Adam JVI~Dnnlel
&amp; James Anderson
DIRECTORS

P•t CN..adoll A. Nliflbl•

• Fltll U/7 lfttmlcll II.NOrt
• 11'\llani'-I•UIIfll'l) • kMp fOUl~ lol tl
• 10 0! · 111&lt;1~ adolll~ Wllh WOM~Glll
• Ct.!ltlm Slar! Pag~~o • roww&lt;J . wtlth8r il nw • '

c;;;, ~::6X,(!.t~D
Sian U~! Oftllne! www.loeJINet.cr.m

Middleport Pomeroy
992-5141 992-5444
ww-w .a11der.soruncdan itl.c&amp;Dt

Overbrook Rehabilitation Center's
Management would like to thank the
following employees for their dedication
to our residents and for going the extra
mile during the snow and ice storm
this past week.
Dave Hoover, LPN
Vickie Frye, .LPN
Wendy Sizemore, LPN
Dorothy Hill, STNA
Leslie Greene, STNA
Linda Ihle, STNA
·Melissa Holley, RN

Robert Harmon, RN
Natasha Ogaz, LPN
Kerbi Buzzard, STNA
Erin Bradford, STNA
Shirley Tyree, STNA
Sarah Kloes, STNA
Jessica Sheets, STNA

We wpuld also like to thank all of our
employees that ,came in to work on ,their
scheduled days during this time.

.
*******************************
,...

'

•

�Page~

OPINION

.The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, February 4, ao09

Maligned Mexico City Policy .deserves afair shak~

Sometimes. change can
make you choke. That's
111 Court Sb~et • Pl:lmen)y, Ohio
been the experienn: of
(740) 992-2156 • FAX 1740) 992-2157
many ,upporters of the
www.my cl 1 'Cpentlnelcom
Me,.iw City Polky. re&lt;.·ently rescinded by Presi·'ent
"
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Barud; Obam:1 (th~ second
Democratic president in
MCP's 25-year history to do
Den Goodrich
~o). The Reagan- er~ manPublisher
date. derisively referred to
by its critics as the Global
Charlene ·Hoeflich
Ga"
Rule.
prevented
General Manager-News Editor
Ameerica from otlicially
el&lt;porting its liberal abortion policies overseas. It did
this in the most pra•·tical
Cngws.s .shall make no law rrspe€ting an
way possible, by refusing
fedemt U.S. dollars to proestt~bli.shment of rrligion, or prohibiting the
abortion groups operating in
jrft vcmise tlrcrriif; or abridging theftrcdom foreign
countries. . The
of ¥«h, or of the prrs.s; or the right of tht
United
States
spends
•
people pe11€tably to as.sem,le, 1111d to petition upwards of $-WO million on
family-planning assistam:e
the Gol,'mlment )or 11 ,rrdrrss ofgrim~nm.
annually in 53 .developing
•
nations. much ot the money
· - The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution going to nongovemmt'ntal
organizations (NGO) bused
in-country. Thanks to the
MCP. not I cent went
toward the anti"ht'e ~;ause.
Named for the locution of
the 1984 U.N. population
conference that tonnuluted
the pot icy, it stated:
"Governments art• ur!!ed ...
to take appropriat&lt;' sieps to
help women avoitl ubortion. which in no case
shollld be promoted :1s a
method of family planning.
and
whenever pt'lssible;
DMr Etlitor:
Co~~~:erning the following points in the Jan. 25 "Our provide for the humane
V~ew" column: Did Bush really allow the military to be treatment and &lt;:ounscling
used in 11 more effective manner'! Only if one considers cor- of women who have had
porate ~leering, atrocities by private arn1ies. and war on recourse to abortion ."
The polil'y presented
tillse pretense to be a plus. .
Huzzahs for Sept. I l? Who was el presidente on thm date ?
. Why did mqny of the world's intel servil."tlS get wind of tht•
'initiative and try to warn the U.S. power structure'1 They
didn't know it was an inside job. Re&lt;td the Pmjel'l l\1r a New
American Century.lt's the Rosetta Stone for what huppened
on Sept. U ; in addition to my nume~us letters on tile.
.
A new fonn of Medicare·) Let market forces take care ol
granny. Let dmg companies gouge. .
.
Predatory banks and tinam:e a plus'/ Let us prey ..
Finally, the Bush junta produced a n~m~r. o! phony
videos and presented them as the work. of legllumlle JOUrnalists. In one instum:e. a "news report" dealt with Bush's
.new Medicare progmm of 2004. which 79 percent of seniors
rightly opposed as a sweetheart deal for the drug kingpins.
This should fill any ethical journalist with white-hot rage.
Discovering positives ~n this miserdble record requires
.finding redeemmg value m the darkest of douds . The nec.essary consensus: a vigorous thumbs down followed by ••
:lungs-filled-to-capacity Boo Hiss!
Jeff Fields
1

VIEW

READER'S

.ti
.
·
,
Pos1 ves .•
·Not many in Bush reconJ

Kathryn
Lopez
'
overseas health organizations with a choice: They
could
uccept
feder;d
American cash •uld dis...'Ollf·
·a.ge abortion or thev oould
refuse the needed ru'fws u.nd
do as they wished. Thill's
surely far from dlaronian.
NGOs that opted out of the
Yankee bucks were still free
-· d
·
f
to so 1ICII ona1tons rom
symp&lt;lthetic private citizens
, and instirutions. And. contrary 10 a lot of what I've
been readin&lt;&gt; in the press
lat~,&gt;ly. the polky had little to
do with abstinence. edu~ation . and certainly nothing
to do with jailing or hurtinc
wnmt' n.
'
In short. the debate over·
tht' Mexico City Polky
d\'&lt;'sn 't haw to be a zerosum ,1tTair. As Republican
Chris Smith . the most
ardent anti-abortion advoc·att' in Congress. put tl
shortly ••fter Ol)t1ma 1ssued
an exel'utive order overturniug the policy : "T~ Mel\ico
Citv Policy represents com·
mo'n ground." In fac·t.
Demo.:rat Bart Stupak
joined Smith in un attempt
tn reinstate lht• policy.
But in ordeno muke renl

The Daily Sentinel • Pace As

Local Briefs

re&gt;•:in~etithe_MCP._m~ .

progress. honesty must. be
mtroduced to the de~ate.
alter a hmg absence from
the pl\lCeedmgs. Tuke the
&lt;.'&lt;ISC of Min Min Lama. In
1997. a relative raped this
. . gu
· 1.
l-1--year-old Nepakse
She bt.-came . pregnant and
was unk.nowmgly g1v_en .an
aborttun dmg by :1 fam1ly
member. When the. expelled
fetus was found dead. she
was sentenced to 12 years m
J.'ail as. abortion was .stLII
a1
h
11legal m Nep· at t atttme.
. There's nothing good
about the story. But then
another bad . ,-hapter was
wntten on Capttol Hill.
DemocratK Sen . Burba~a
Boxer ~as long us&lt;·d Lama s
harrowmg ordeal as an
f he h
the
el&lt;amp 1e o t . . ann
Mel&lt;l&lt;.'o C1ty. Pohcy could
do. In Bol\er. s telhng o.t the
t.tle . w~en :' group cuUed
the . Famtly
Planmng
Assoct&lt;~t1on of N~pal adv_ocated . tor Lamas relea.S~;.
Amenca used .the Mel\1'-'0
City Polll'Y to puntsh
FPAN. In out• speech. the
California senator said.
"The Global Gag Rule put
us on the side of a rapist. We
are not on the stde ot hunmn
ri¥hts .. . We are on ~e ..sidt.&lt;
ol pcopl~ who are ev1l.
Bo)(er s ..-ontenuons · be_g
to De challenged. Lamas
rape. ••borllon. •mpnsc)tlment tmll release from Jtlll
:1!1 happened dunng years
when . the Mex!co Ctty
Poh.:y was not m effect.
From 1993 to 2001. the
Clinton
wJministration

Boxers story nothing bu
sharnetul propag~. aflil'Furt~er . FPAN IS an , 11
at~ ot the lntemallooodnal
Planned
Parenth .
Feuerallon.
"
·
rvoaruzattOII
an -·e
that has long .advocated .f~
the b?erah~allon of Nepal s
abortion_ l.1ws. An~ whe~
the Me)( leo C1ty Pohcy was
actually remstat~d under
Prestdent Bush .m ~I,
FPAN opted to reluse teder1
t · d relymg 011
a mone~, ms ea .
d
supstanllal donatiOns an
tundmg from tis IPPF m~­
~~hlp so II ~ou~d CO!l~IDIJe'
11 s pro-abortion iJ.Cil~Ues ..
In t~ case ~~ Mm Min
L&lt;nna. mtcmat10nal ~trage
ulttmately resulted m ,her
p·rrdon and release in 1999
'
.
. '
t~ree ~,ears before abortion
\\,ls l~.,al1zed m ~epa! .
_
. ·' h.•p.pento bei_Ieve. ~bor
tton ~s a hu~an nghts t~ue
~ that 11 1s d gross v1olanon
ot. our .duty to protect hfe at
tts 1'!lost vulnen1ble. B~t you
don t have to agree Wid) me
to seeJhere has been somethmg wrong w1th how we're
thmkmg about the M~P
ISsue. The !"'ex1co Ct.ty
Poh..-y doesn .t d~serve tts
bad rep. I look .to~ard to
the day w~re 11 1snt tre~ted
as the ball m a partisan pmgpong g••me and we can ~ave
tm honest debate a~ut tt ..
(Kathryn Lf!fll'' ts the edt·
wr . of Nt~twnc•l .Rev•ew
O,nlrne (www.nallona/renew.wm). She can be_ contacred at klopez@natronairevie11·.com:)

11JPPERS PLAINS - The Eastern lady Eagles basket0011 team wilt sponsor at Sweetheart Fifth Grade Basketball
TOUI'1Wilent Feb. 13-15, with eight teams. aad three games
per team. The tournament will be held at Eastern
Elementary School. Tbe cost is $75.
Information is available from Coach John Burdette at
541 -7132, or 696-1201.

.MARIEJTA :.... Buckeye Hills-Hoctin~ Valle~ RegiOIIIII '
Development District Executive Conuruttee wtU meet at
·noon on Friday in the training room at Buckeye Hills, 1400
Pike St., Mariena.

..

Boil advisory lifted.

· MIDDLEPORT :... The boil adversary for the village of
.Middleport was lifted Tuesday afternoon.
.
·

Basket games set
SYRACUSE - Basket games will. be held Thursday at
Carleton School by a non-profit organization. Doors open
at 5 p.m. games begin at 6. .
.

.For the Rerord

POMEROY - Divorces were granted in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court to Deborah Ann Person from Harold
A. Person,.and Joseph M. Egan from Wendy C. Egan.

Foreclosures

..

POMEROY - Foreclosures were issued ·in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to Home National Bank
a~ainst Cecil Brinager, administrator of the estate of
T1mothy D. Brinager, and others, and USA against Marina·
Durham, deceased. and others.

.Judgment

: Today is Wednesduy. Feb. 4. the 35th day of 2009. There
:are 330 days left in the year.
: Today's Highlight in History : On Feb. 4. 1789. ele,·tors
chose George Washington to be the first president of the
United States. (However, the results of the balloting were
not counted in the U.S. Senate until two months later.)
On this date: In 1783. Britain dedared u formal .:essation
of hostilities with its former colonies. the United States of
America. ·
.
: In 1932, New York Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt opened
the Winter Olympic Games at Lake Placid.
: In I 941. the United Servil'e Organizations (USO) l'ame
into ellistence.
Thought for Today: "Life is doubt. and faith without
doubt is nothing but death." --' Miguel de Unamuno.
Spanish philosopher ( 1864- 1936).

POMEROY- A judgment was issued in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court to Unifund CCR Partners against
William E. Gibbs.

Sentenced ·
POMEROY - The following were sentenced in Meigs
·
County Common Pleas Court:
• Russell D. Sargent, one year in prison for receiving
stolen property, and 18 months for fatlure to appear after
recogmzance release. Credit for 25 days served.
• Stephanie Ditty, 18 months on two charges of theft of
.· dmgs. $2,500 restitution to Swisher &amp;' Lohse Pharmacy.
Sentence suspended, order to seek substance abuse treatment. 500 hours community corrections.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 32.53
Aklo (NASDAQ, - 36.75
Aahland tnc. (NYSE) - 7.27
Big Loto (NYSE) '- 13.98
Bob Evano (NASDAQ) - 17.97
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 17.67
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
-4.02

Champion (NASDAQ) - 2.92
Charming Shopo (NASDAQ) .68

Reader Services·

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing

Correction Polley

Co.

Published every afternoon. Monday
Our main concern in aU stories is to through Friday, 111 Cour t Streel.
be accurate. It .you know ot f)n error Pomeroy. Oh10. Second-class poslage

In

a story, calllho newsroom al (740)

992·2156.

pa id at Pomeroy

Member: The Associated Press and
the Oh1 0 Newspaper As socia llof'l.

Our main n.umber Ia
(740) 992-2156.

Department extensions are:

Po1tm11ter: Send ·address corrections to The Daily Sentinel. 111 Court

S1reet. F'omaroy. Ohio 45789.

Subscription Rates

News
Edllor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
. Reporter: Brian Aee~. Ext. 14
Reporter: Belh Sergent. Ext. 13

Advertising
Outolde S.loo:

By carrier or motor route

4 week• .... .. .. .. .. ·..'11.30
52 weeks ..... .. . . . .. '128.85

O.IIy ........ : .......... SO'
Senior Citizen ro1eo

26 w0eko ... . .... .. : . .'59.61
52 weeko ...... .... . .' 116.90
Subscribers should rern~ 111 adwnco

Dav&lt;~

Harris. Exl. 15 dirqct to th&amp; Point Pfeasant Register No
Outllda Saln: Brenda Davis. Ext 16 SUbscription by mail PEIIIllltted Ill RUJRS
where home carrier sel\lice Is eveilablo.
. .Clelo.!Ct"'.: Judy Clark. Ext 10

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich , Ext 12

E·malf:
mdsnewsOmydailysentmel.com

Wob:
www.mydailysentlnel.cQm

Mall Subscription
Inalde Moaon County
12 Weeks
26 Weeks . . .
52Weeks ..

... .. '35.26
. . ' 70.70
.. ' 140.11

Outolde Mason County
12 Weeks . . .

26 Wee&lt;s
52 Weeks

·

... ' 56.55
. ' 113.60
.... '227 .21

L-- - -- - - - - - - · - - - - - - -..

That thing that's going around
I've got thlll thing that's
going &lt;tl'l&gt;uml. And . l t:an 't
seem to shake it. It's been
weeks nnw. Coughing. sniffling . headaches . sore
throut. lll'hcs nil over. I hope
whoever gave il lo me still
has iLl Ld the punishment
fil tht• crime . Why can't
people stuy home when
they're si..-k und sullcr in
silcn..-e. like l (}(&gt;'! I'm so
considerate, I don't even go
to the office when I'm
healthy .
Everyone I talk to on the
phone tells me same thin~ :
· "You sound honible." They
aU give me suggestions and
udvicc . "Drink water." "Eat
..-hickcn soup." "Drink
t:humomile tcu.'' "Take a
decongestant. " · "Ta ke . a
pregnancy test ... What ?
The 011c thing no one ever
says. "Go sec u doctor."
Bec.1use '" we &lt;ill know.
there's no wrc for Ihe lOill ·
mon cold.
Whul ubnut an IIIKom,
mon cold? Th&lt;· on..- thllt ·

Jim
Mullen

stays in your body fnr six
weeks a1ld brings fri ends . It
seems there is no cure for
thai . either. II hus moved
from my head to my chest
and had. to my hc'&lt;tll.
What's that old S&lt;lying?
"Feed a C\&gt;ld. starve u
fewrT l Jon 't know whut .
that means . I ha ve a cold
and a fL•ver. What am l supposed tn do'! Eat a ·b1g
brcukrasl uml purge for the
rest of the duy'' It was 11
tuugh cl1oicc but ·1 del'ided
to fel'd it. No mult ~r how
miscrablc I felt, l made sure
I was never far from ll hag
of clwc.,c pulh or ~hips.
Sue had &lt;I few silly. New

•

Age. hippie-dippy health
suggestions that1 were so
off-thl'-wall it . was hard not
to laugh .
"You should watch what
you eat , lose some weight
and get s(•me el&lt;er..-ise out in
th&lt;.• fresh air. Th&lt;·n you
wouldn't !!Ct sick so often."
See . now' how dnes that
voodoo work? Where she
gets these crackpot ideus,
I'll nevcr know. I've got &lt;1
doset full of exercise Clluipment and it hasn 't done a
thing for me .
I'm (&gt;f the ·:more is bcttci"' sl'hool. If a bowl of
•·hil'kcn "soup is good for
you. wm1ldn't two bowls
he really good'! lf ornnge
jui~:c is full of vitamin C.
have two glasses. If one
glass of red wii1c a day is
good fm you. inwgine what
a ·whole hnttlc will do . If
ihc c uu~h 111edidnc says lo
take nnl' teaspoon every
fou r hours. th~n one Hlhlesponn every two hours has
~ PI In he hcttcr.

But I wus so sick, I could. n't keep the cough medicine. the wine.the soup, the
OJ and the puffs down. It
all .came up while I was
wut..-hing un autopsy on
"CSI." I felt even worse.
Muybe · I was getting a
touch of stomach tlu on top
of a cold. I was much too
skk to cleail it up.
lt 's not like I'm Howard
Hughes, but I try to ulj;e
precuutions in the winter. l
get the tlu shot. I use the
. germ-killing soap. I avoid
s.hookhildren, But sornetimcs nothing works. Like I
was .telling the guys when
we were drinking Jell-0
shots in · Bob's hot tub
bcJnre I cuught this thing. ·
sometimes you c1m do .
cvcrytlling right and still
get skk.
(.lim Mullen is the alllhor
o(. "It 1i1ke.\ o Villal(e Idiot:
tompli&lt;'atill!l the Simple
Lifi"' cmd "Baby$ Firsr
7illtrJo." Yrm call reach him
111 jim _m11 lll'll@ mvway.com .)

Bv OWE Put ION+

City Holding (NASDAQ) - 25.37
Colllna (NYBE) - 38.84
DuPont (NYSE) - 23.35
US Bank (NYSE)- 14.11
Gannett (NYSE) - 4.86
Ge,....l Electric (NYSE, - 11.37
Ha...,.O.vldaon.(NYSE) - 13.73
JP Morgan (NYSJ!) - 24.05
Kn~Qer (NYSE) - 22.811
Uml*l Branda (NYSE) - 7.81
Norfolk Southern
(NYSE) - 37.80
.
.

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS.
DAQ) -18.85
BBT (NYSE) - 18.31
P8oplea (NASDAQ) - 10.68
Papaleo (NYSE) - 51 .52
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.40 ·
Rockwell (NYSE) - 24.68
Rocky I!IQta (NASDAQ, - 3.53
floyal Dutch SIHIII - 51.CI8
Searl Hotcltng (NASDAQ) - 39.60
WIII·Mart (NYSE, - 47.81
Wandy'o (NYSE) - 5.37
W•Banco (NYSE) - 20.117
Worthington (NYSE) ..., 1D.21i
Dally atock reporto are tiHI 4
p.m. ET cloalng quotaa Oltrano·
actlono for Feb. 3, 2009, provided by Edward Joneo financial. .
advlaora IIUC Milia In Galllpolta
at (740) 441·8441 and L"ley ·
Marmo In Point PI•aantat
(304) 674-0174. Mamber StPC.

Farm on Carson Road in
Mason, W.Va., had been
putting up round bales of
hay and had Iuken a break
for lunch around noon when
he parked some farm equipment in an equipment shed
that also served as a stordge
area for hay and left for a
few minutes.
When he returned, he
found that the shed, along
with the fann equipment and
140 bales of hay, was on tire.

LA!t 10Fi'FOIIYOAII.VREGISTERCC1.1

MASON, W.Va.
Firefighters trom .four
departments were at a local
fann for several hours
Tuesday as they attempted
to extinguish seyerul bales
of hay that were on fire after
the building they were in
burned to the gTQund.
According to officials, an
employee at the Ed Carson

Arraigned

TODAY IN HISTOl:Z.Y

The Daily Sentinel

~ a iolalloss.
OW. P I t tfii\Ot att

'

Divorces

Letters to tire editor an! welcome. 7Jtel' should .bc• le.vs
than 300 •vords. All letters are subject fl ) nlitiiiR , mmt be
sig11ed. cmd include• culdress a11d tl'lt•phutw 1111mber. No
UIISigtted letters ll'ilt be publisllt'd. Lt'l/t•rs ;'/wuld Ill' in
goad Wsle. t~~ldressillg issues. 1101 per.wmalitin. Lettas of
thanks to orgwri:atiolls ami i11dil'idua/s will tfllt be acceptell j(1r publimtion.

where se~~eral
bales of hay ancl
some farm equipment were tisled

Exeeutive
1neeting
/

.HONE5TMISTAKE5

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Haven, Flatrock
and Middleport
were on the
scene of this
structure fire in
Mason Tuesday,

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Cblm:h cl Christ will bOld
.its. free c.orn_munity dinner 00 Feb. 27. Doors- will open at 4:30
p.m., and dinner wiU be served family Slyle at S p.m. OD)y.
The menu w1U be beans and bam,combread,anddessert.

HOW MANY

Syracuse

Fireligh~rs from
Mason. New

Free dinner

POMEROY - The following were arraigned on indictments in Meigs County Common Pleas Court:
• Michael G. White, two counts of burglary, theft of
motor vehicle. receiving stolen property. Christopher
Tenoglin was appointed counsel; $1.000 personal recognizance bOnd. $100 surety bond, $1,000 appearance bond .
Trial set for March 3.
• Keith J. Nakao, breaking and entering, forgery, theft.
Christopher Tenoglia appointed counsel; $1,000 personal·
recognizance bond, $1,000 appearance bond. $100 surety
bond. Trial set for March 3.

ARE Wt A(lGWED?

'

Basketball tournament

Power from Page At

Grant

coopemtives as well as 16 ly a week el\pressed frustratree cutting crews to help tion at seeing unidentified
get the I ~113 customers work crews meant IQ restore
back online in · Meigs power allegedly still in the
County as well as customers parking lot at Meigs High
in other ~-ounties.
School at 8 a.m., during
Tackett said one of the daylight hours.
problems with delays in getThe caller, who wished to
ting service restored was that remain anonymous. said she
"travel was hazardous for the understood workers have a
first few days" and '.'we had difficult job, she just didn't
to litemlly wait for the trees ,know why they weren't out
to . stop falling before ·we working while there was
could safely send crews in." daylight. When asked,
. A call into The Daily Tacketl said he didn't think.
Sentinel from a Buck.eye these were·crews associated
Rum! customer in Columbia with Buckeye Rural, saying
Township who had been typically their crews work
without electricity for near- from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. To be

fromPageAl
fair to the crews in the parking lot. it isn't known
study
is
whether they were on a engineering
required
for
the
village's
break from working that
grant application. ·
night and/or morning.
The study is expected to
Whatever the case, the sitcost
the village around
uation undersl'ored the
$4,000.
and the total project
absolute frustration many in
Meigs County have felt dur- is expected to cost around
ing a week of coping with $181.000. If approved. a
the cold and dark.. As for gmnt through the . program
Buckeye Rural customers would likely pay 90 percent
becoming frustrated with of the cost. and the village
the outage, Tackett ·said he would be required to pur a
20 percent match. Fundmg
understood.
"We know that they· re suf- for that match could also be
fering and we're doing every- ·funded through state funds ..
thing we can to get power
restored," Tackett said.

the family had a cistern for this wus a situation that also
water for themselves and required con~tnnt monitortheir farm animals.
ing. Then, throw in the fact
In addition to fumes from that just getting dressed for
kerosene, there were fumes work was made miserable
from a gas generator outside · because some rooms wen!
and propane tanks inside to barely above freezing .
run lights and one of the . Though they considered a
family members joked by motel, that was quickly out of
the end .o f the day they were the qlle'stion with many being
"higher than a kite. "
$70 a night which meant a
. There were also cords run- sill-night stay would've run
ning all over the house and the fllmily nearly $450.
with a small, active child
The adult daughter said

she didn't know what she'd
do if she didn't have "mountain people" when referring
to her parents who grew up
in West Vi~inia and learned
how to sumve with less and
in a crisis. It also taught her
mother just how to·cook on
that coal stove .
The daughter joked: "I
had to move out of my
(modem) house and go live
with the mountain people to .
survive."

..
LIVJDg from Page Al

Local Weather
Wednesday ... Cloudy
with scattered snow showers. Cold with highs in the
mid 20s. Nonhwest winds
lO 'to 15 mph. Chance of
snow 50 ~rcent.
Wednesday night .. .Mostly
cloudy with isolated snow
showers. Cold with lows
around 12. Nonhwest winds
I0 to I5 mph with gusts up to
25 mph. Chance of snow 20
percent.
Thursday.. .Mostly sunny .
Highs in the upper 20s. West
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Thursday night and
Friday...Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the lower 20s .
Highs in the lower 40s.
Friday
night
and
Saturday...Partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 30s.

: Meigs County Republican

liNCOlN DAY DINNER

**
**
*

**
*
February lOth • 6:30pm
*·
**
Meigs High School
*
Speaker: Jon Husted
*
.* Who will be running for Secretary of State **
:
Tickets available by contacting
!
* Bill Spaun - 992-3346 or Sandy Iannarelli- 992-2426 *
: ·
or any of our central committee members · · · :
* .
or township representatives
*

.VJSit us ·~.
·online at

www.m~ltytentlnel.com

Yo~ronline

source for news

1114irSOil '-ic~nuf

Highs in the mid 50s.
Saturday night ••.Mostly
· cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the mid 30s.
Sunday and Sunday
night.. .Mostly cloudy with a
40 percent chance Of showe.rs. Highs in the mid 50s.

**************************** **

:

Owners called 9 U, who dis- the farm equipment. A boat
patched the fire department. also was damaged during
Several members of the the ~laze.
Mason Volunteer Fire
Firelighters remained on
Depanment along with the scene for several hours
mutual aid station New puning but the hay OOJes that
Haven responded to put out were sti Uon tire and doing a
the fire. Firefighters also cleanup to prevent u rekindle.
received assistance from
·Also responding was an
Flatrock and . Middleport umbulance crew . with
because ·water had to be Mason County Emergency
transported to the scene.
Medical Services.
All of the hay was
The cause of the fire is
destroyed by the fire. as was under investigation .

'""

fUM'a( 'J/imw

·--·--··-···"···---···-·-··-- · -···-··-"'" '"

Adam JVI~Dnnlel
&amp; James Anderson
DIRECTORS

P•t CN..adoll A. Nliflbl•

• Fltll U/7 lfttmlcll II.NOrt
• 11'\llani'-I•UIIfll'l) • kMp fOUl~ lol tl
• 10 0! · 111&lt;1~ adolll~ Wllh WOM~Glll
• Ct.!ltlm Slar! Pag~~o • roww&lt;J . wtlth8r il nw • '

c;;;, ~::6X,(!.t~D
Sian U~! Oftllne! www.loeJINet.cr.m

Middleport Pomeroy
992-5141 992-5444
ww-w .a11der.soruncdan itl.c&amp;Dt

Overbrook Rehabilitation Center's
Management would like to thank the
following employees for their dedication
to our residents and for going the extra
mile during the snow and ice storm
this past week.
Dave Hoover, LPN
Vickie Frye, .LPN
Wendy Sizemore, LPN
Dorothy Hill, STNA
Leslie Greene, STNA
Linda Ihle, STNA
·Melissa Holley, RN

Robert Harmon, RN
Natasha Ogaz, LPN
Kerbi Buzzard, STNA
Erin Bradford, STNA
Shirley Tyree, STNA
Sarah Kloes, STNA
Jessica Sheets, STNA

We wpuld also like to thank all of our
employees that ,came in to work on ,their
scheduled days during this time.

.
*******************************
,...

'

•

�I

•

The Daily Sentinel

ACROSS .THE NATION

PageA6

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

· Wednesday, February4, 2009

osm

b•Pa 1 . . . . .

S4 ' sc:*'oa,P g II
8v KPEERl.Y S. Jail IS ON
AND 8R&amp; folluR

Wednesday, February 4. 2009

APAUTO-~

OETROlT - General
MOOJIS • U.S. vehicle sales
plunged 49 percent in
January while Ford's sales
dropped 40 percent. starting
2009 at an abysmal pace for
the whole auto industry as
lower sales to fleet buyers
like renlal car companies
weighed down the resulls.
Toyota's sales dove 32
percent for the moil&amp;b,
· Nissan 's dropped 30 percent
and Honda·s-fell28 percent,
putting the overall industry
on tract. for its. fourth
straight month in which
U.S. sales plunged 30 percent
or more.
Former Sen. Tom Daschle. Pres.ident Barc!Ck Obama's
But
bucked the
choice to head the Hearth and Human Services, speaks to . trend ofSubaru
declines
for a secthe media after a closed session meeting with ttie Senate ond month in a row.
posting,
Anance Committee on Capi.tol Hill, Monday In wasllington. an 8 percent sales increase, A GM sign sits in front ol a long line ol UMOid 2009 Escalades at a Cadillac dealership in
and Hyundai said its sales the southeast DerNer suburb ol Lone Tree, Colo.. on Sunday, De&lt;:. 7; 2008. Genelal
Motors' U.S. vehicle sales plunged 49 percent in January while Ford's sales dropped 40
jumped 14 percent.
Hyundai credited its percent, starting 2009 at an abysmal pace lor the auto whole industry as tower sates to
increase to its offer to cover fleet buyers rlke rental car companies weighed down the U.S. automakers' results.
a new vehicle's depreciation
•
if customers. return a car rises, consumer confidence and access . to credit
Analysts had expected
within 12 months because · weakens and many . people improves.
high-volume 11eet sales to be
they are unable to make the have a tougher time getting
Detroit-based GM sold down sharply in January. as
par,ments.
loans. General Motors C(Mp. 128J 98 light · vehicles in consumers and businesses
'This program gets to the and Chrysl~r LLC have January. while Ford's sales cut back on travel in the ecoroot cause of today 's eco- received $13.4 billion in total~ 93,060. Toyota nomic downturn and rental
BY JENNIFER LOVEN
.nomic concerns - fear o1 federal loims to stay ufloat. Motor Corp. sold 117,287 car companies hold onto
M' WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENT
job loss," Hyundai regional and they ~ to get more cars and trucks.
·their clll'rent cars longer.
aft
the
't
·
b'l'ty
The
utomake~
have
general
manager
Peter
11
Production cuts that have
WASHINGTON - Tom Daschle withdrew Tuesday as DiPersia said in a statement.
er Y su nu a vta 1 1
•,
idled
many U.S. factories
lan
to
the
government
by
rolled
out
hefty
incentive
President Barad: Obama's nominee to be health and human· Chrysler is set to release P
in
recent
months
in
an
for
several
weet.s have
offers
17
services secretary, dealing potential blows to both speedy its sales figures later Feb · · Ford Motor Co • has
compounded
the
problem.
health Cllll: reform and Obwna's hOJllls for a smooth start in Tuesday. The company's said it does not plan to use ~~!~m~l~a~~~~
Many fleet customers get
the White House.
sales chief. Steven Landry, government aid.
their
deliveries right after
"Now we must move forward," Obama said in a written told reporters earlier at a
GM said, earlier this average automaker incenroll
oft· the assembly
cars
·statement a~cepting "with sadness and regret" Daschle 's meeting with dealers that month it is planning its tum- tive at $2.714 per vehicle
request to be removed from consideration. A day earlier. u.s. industry sales eould around under the assumP.: sold in January. down 52 line, so when factories susObarna had said he "absolutely" stood by Daschle in the drop as much as 35 percent lion the entire industry w11l percent from December but pend production, those
face of problems over back taxes and potential conflicts of in January. The annualized . sell 105 million new vehi- . up 12.5 percent from deliveries come to a halt.
GM said its fleet sales fell
interest.
sales rate for the month cles in the U.S. this year. January 2008.
80
percent to just over
The stunning Daschle development came less than three could drop below 10 million Chrysler has said it's planJesse Toprak. the auto
13.000
vehicles in January,
hours after another Obama nominee also withdrew from for the ftrSt time in more ning on 11.1 million units, Web site's executive direc~:Qnsideration, and also over tax problems. Nancy Killefer, than 26 years, he said.
and Ford last week reduced tor of industry analysis, marking their lowest sales
nominated by Obama to be the ¥.overnment's first chief perAccording to Ward's its forecast to a range attrib~ted the . year-over- . level. since .1975. GM's
formance officer. said she didn t want her bungling of pay- AutolnfoBank. the last between 11.5 million and year mere~ to ~ greater retail sales fell 38 percent.
Dearborn-based Ford said
roll taxes on her household help to be a distraction.
.month in which the season- · 125 million. But few peo- number of hnge':'ng 2008
"They both recognized that you can't set an example of ally adjusted annual sales pie were expecting the model year ·vehicles. He January's drop in sales of
responsibility but accept a different standard of who rate dropped below 10 mil- automakers to start 2009 at noted that. 27 percent of a.ll Ford, Lincoln ond Mercury
$erves," said White House press secretary Robert Gibbs.
lion was August 1982, when such a pace.
new vehtcles sold th1s vehicles included a 27 perDaschle, the former Senate Democratic leader, a strong it hit 9.9 milliori as the · · · Jlllluary .i&amp;..-·typiclllly . a .... ~anuary were from the 2008 cent drop in retail sales and
and early backer of Obama 's presidential bid and a close nation was mired in a reces- slow sales mOhth, and ,many model year, up from 12 per- a 65 pen.-ent decline in fleet
Obama friend, said he would have been unable to operate sion.
sales.
automakers and analysts are cent a year ago.
;with the full faith of Congress and the American people."
Domesti~ and fprei$n expectin~ the market to
"I am not that leader. and will notbe a distraction" to automakers
have ~n stnig- · "teboulld tn ~· second half •
Obama 's agenda. he said.
gling as unemployment of the year as the economy
Obama had given Daschle two jobs - to be White House
health czar on top of the post leading the Health and
Human Services Department - and Daschle is relinquish-.
Hearing Aids and Audiology Services
ihg both. The developments called into question whether
Obama will be able to move as quickly as he has promised
A Sound Solution
on sweeping health cilre reform - one of the pillars of his
.ImJr~rovedCommunictJiion
first I 00 days ~genda and expected to be among the hardest to accomphsh.
For lhe estimated 26 million
· "It really sets us back a step," said Sen. Dick Durbin, Dchildron and adults in the United
Ill. "Because he was such a talent. I mean he understood
. . .lltllllll--0..11111111.
States who have a hearing loss,
Congress, ·serving in the House and Senate; he certainly
Whether
you've
just gotten married, had a baby, bought a new
selecting the most suitable
had the confidence of the president."
home or retired- big life changes can mean big tax changes.
hearing aids can be the critical
Said White House spokesman Gibbs: "We're looking for
H&amp;R
Block will help you maximize your refund by showing you
factor 1o enjoying life to its
a new nominee, but the problem has existed for quite some
tax
deductions
or credits you're entitled to. At H&amp;R Block if you
fullest.
time and the work toward a solution to make health care
don't get the maximum refund you're entilled to, your taxmore affordable won't stop or won't pause while we look
Call today for a ~EE hearing consultation.
preparation Is free.' When you'Ve got people, they're with you
for that nominee."
every step of the way.
Among those considered for the {lOSt before it went to
S94·6333or
Daschle was Howard Dean.the phystcian-turned-politician
l-800-451-9806
who ran for president in 2004 and recently left as head of
H&amp;R BLOCK
499 Rk:hl1111d Ave~
the Democratic National Committee.
Albens,
OH
45701
Asked re~atedly whether the White House soujlht
Daschle's wuhdrawal, Gibbs said it was Daschle's deciston
618 Ellt Main St. ·
Mon·Frt 9:00 • 6:00
alone. He "did not get a signal" from the White House to
Pomeroy, OH ·45768
Sat. 8:00 • 5:00
step aside, the spokesman said.
740-992-6674
Other Hours by Appointment
Daschle is the third high-profile Obama nominee to bow
It ~ Olscov.r 1n H&amp;R BIOtllllror on your rth.lm 11\al 1ntHIM ~ou to 1 llroamadltr
out. Obama tapped Bill Richardson to be Commerce secrelu lllibllltv) !han wt calculmd, wit'U r1lund your tax·pt~ratlon IN tor thlt return.
I
musl' be miG~ during lht caltndlr yur In which the It• reb.Jm le p!'~red. aooe HR8 Tax
tilry, .but th~ N~w ~exico governor withdrew amid .a gra~d
,Inc.
~ury mvesugauon mto a state contract awarded to hts pohttcal donors. Obama named Republican Sen. Judd Gregg of
New Hampshire to the position Tuesday. ·
Last week, the Senute confirmed Ttmothy Geithner as
treasury secretary. but only after days.of controversy over
the fact that he had only belatedly paid $34,000 in income
·
taxes.
Asked whether tax questions are going to arise with any
other nominees, Gibbs said only that ''the president has
confidence in the people he has chosen to serve in government." He also defended the administration's vetting
process.
· He added: "the president takes responsibility" for the
spate of nomination troubles.
The White House· dispatched senior adviser David
\
Axelrod to Capitol Hill to soothe Democrats whose nerves
l'
'
were frayed by the loss of Dltschle.
"
Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and Daschle 's former
.
Democratic colleagues had rallied to Daschle 's defense in
the wake of questions abouthis failure to fully pay his taxes
·from 2005 through 2007. Last month. he pa1d $128.203 in
.
.
.
back taxes and $11 .964 in interest.
"Tom made a mistake, which he has openly acknowledged.'' Obama said Tuesday, "He. has not excused it, nor
do I. But that mistake and this decision cannot diminish the
many contributions Tom has made to this country."
"I was a little stunned. I thought he was going to get confirmed," said Max Buucus, D-Monr.: chairman of the
Senate Finance Committee. the panel that would have
voted on Daschle's nomination. ';It's regrettable. He's a
very good man."
Daschle also was faqing questions about potential conflicts of interests related to speaking fees he accepted from
.\ '
health .care interests. He also provided advice to health
Pleasant~
insurers and hospitals through his post-Senate work at a
law firm .
The controversy has undercut Obama 's promise to run a .
more ethical. responsible and special interest-free ad minis- ·
tration . Republicans and major newspapers had been questioning Obama'.s decision to stick With.Daschle .

.... ..._

____

l..ocAL ScHEDULE

Marauders end eight-game slide

,__

~ - ·-"'-'""'

traMGI!k~.a .... ~

DC.....
1 ,_w•t
31 , .
; n.
n
- - GIIIIIP
· .-.
"30""'

-~~-·
'"'''""
01 Yoigs, e IP."'

-

........,.,0,...
,,,a r,,

-,...................
~'~lint
p.m.

ROCKSPRINGS - The
Meigs boys bas.t.etball
teom end¢ an eight-game
losing skid in convincing
fashion Tuesday night during a 74-SO thumping of
visiting Nelsonville-York
in a Tri-Valley Conference
Ohio Division matchup at
Morrison
Larry
R.
Gymnasium .
The Ma111u'ders (4-9, 3-4
TVC Ohio) led start to finish. stonning out to a 21" II
advantage after eight minutes of play. The hosts continued that hot start into the
second frame. going on a
19- 11 charge to take a 4022 cushion into the half.
The Buckeyes (6-7, 1-5)
never cut the lead to singledigits the rest of the night.
as the Maroon and Gold
closed the'third period on a
16-14 run for a 56-36 lead

n , •• -

c...nty. 7:30
GIIIIIE ' 3 tt

&amp;;.

-·
Wloll 'hlrn.
'p.m.6 p.m.
=~
·:::.
"""" II 1:30 p.m
- • E - . .. &amp;p.m.
ww.m. • HMnan. 1:-30 p.m.

·

AP..,_

Daschle ·out as
health nominee
due to tax problems

General, Cardiac, Vascular, ·
Esophageal, ·Thoracic Services
&amp; Anterior Spine Surgery Access

'

Office:

PVH Medical Office Building
Suite 113
Point
WV

Appointments:

Prt•ss writers Ron Foumier. Charles
Babill!l/011 an(/ Liz Sidoti comributed to rhis storv.
A~·soc iated

304.875.1888

Aeeeptlq

NEW patJent.•l·

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Tk ~AI'/~ ()I P~{eett()I({J~

's:;.;a:=z

GoliaAc-.yot-~. &amp;p.m.

l'llitll PteiiSIIlt ot Cilljlmotwillo. 1:30

p.m.

Glrta I II t ltinll
logon ot Galtia -.nv, 6 p.m.
Pike E&amp;Sieln ot SoutllGolllo. &amp; p.m.
l'lliot PIMsorlt 01 Wll!no. 7:30p.m.
-liE&amp;Sielft. 1p.m.

.-.-::!'\..1&lt;¥

Golia

Dono c - tAt~~ensl. TliA

BY .BRYAN WALTERS

..,.n

DIVISION I
226
221

ISO
147
136 .
127
110
77
44
2$

~ -

.. 12 01 ....... polftla:
II, K-Ing Falrmon124. 12, lbl. ~~
20. 13 (tie). Bea......,,..k, Can. McKinley
(1) 18." 15 (tit). Pickerington Cent ..
Dublin Scioto 14.

DIVISION II
I , Lima Bath (14) 15·0

240
206
~· Jlpp City Tlpptcenoe (I) 16•0 197
4, Tiffin Columbian 15-()
152
5. Chlllcotha Unklto (I) 15-()
134
6, Geneva (1) 15·0
96
7, Warsaw R!~er View 13·2
94
8. Ak1. Hoban (I) 12·2
76
9. Hathaway B"""' lo-4
39
10, Sp•lng. Kenton Ridge 13·2
38

2, l.(etltflng Alto• (7) 15·1

~

,....lvlng 12 01 more polnto:
11 . Canton South (1) 30. t2 . .Salam 19.
13, wapakoneta 18. 14, Menter Lake
Cath: 17. ·15. Cambridge 13·. 16 (~e).
Cln. Indian Hill, Cuyahoga Falls Walsh
Jeault 12.

DIVISION Ill
1. Marion Pleasant (14) 16·0
2. s ..eueNd Regina (11114·0
3, Smllhvllle 16.0
4, Oak Hlll13·1
5, Genoa Area 14.0
6. Findlay Llberty·Banton 13·1
7. Ml"bU~ Lake14·0
8. W. Uberty·S.Iem 14·1
9, Ml, Blanohoid Rlveidale 13·1
10. Pymatu~lng VOlley (1) 15·0

243
239
163
137
136
120
110
75
60
18

' ·,
0111111 .-vlnv 12 •• """" point.:
11, M\anda-Ciaa.roreak 12.

DIVISION IV
I , Convoy Cresl'liew (16) 14·0
2.Berlin Hiland (10) 12·1
3,-New Bremen 15·1
4, Delptios St John'o 12·2
5, F'I!Hiovllle 13-2
~. Colo. Alrlcentrlc 12·4
1, Canal Win. Harvest Prep 14·2
I . Shadyoldo 14-2
~. '1\oy ChiiOIIan 14·2
9. Now Fllagsl13·2

..

243
231
175
140
118
103
74
61
49
49

~

""living 12 ar more polnlo:
If. Watelfoid 34.'12. Leipsic 26. 13(tlel.
Carey. Cia. Hts. LuihOian E. 23. t5(tla),
.Ft. Rsco.,.ry. Ottoville 13.

CoNTACT US
1-740-446·2342

ext. 33 .

, •• - 1-74().446·3008
~..,..11 -

mduportaOmy&lt;lal~l lnttoom

~porla.SlaH

a,Y.n Walter8, Sportl Writer
(740) 446·2342, 0&lt;1. 33
bwaltersOmydallytrlbune.com

MOSSPOATSOMYDA.!LYSENTINEL.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS Good things come to those
who wait.
After droppin~ nine consecutive decistons since
defeating Hannan in the
seaSon opener. the Wahama
boys basketball team picked
ur its elusive second victory
o the season Tuesday night
during a hard-fought 63-.60
decision over host Eastern
in
a
non-conference
matchup in Mejgs County.
The White ·Falcons (2-9)
fell behind 18-7 just six
minutes into the contest, but
rallied with a 25-9 charge of
the final 10 minutes of the
first half to take a 32-27
cushion into the intermission. The Eagles (7-6) led
18-12 after the first period.
WHS extended its lead to
as much us 13 points (4633) with 3:15 left in the
third quarter. but the Green
and White retaliated with a
10-2 charge to pull their
de licit to 48-43 heading into
the finale.
The hosts managed to
recapture the lead briefly
(53-52) ut the four-minute
·murk, but the Red and
White recaptured the lead
45 seconds later to go ahead
55-53.
EHS tied things at 55 with
2: 15 left in reguhuion and
the score stayed that way
until the final 90 seconds when Wahlima took the lead
for good at 57-55. Eastern
was never closer the rest of
the even in~.
The While Falcons connected on 25-of-55 field
goal attem~ts for 45 percent. includmg 6-of-17 from
three-point territory for 35

Plus• •• Etist.m. 12
.

Blue Devils finish
third at Jimmy
Wood Invite
STAFF REPORT

.

How o stato panel ol spoilS wilteiS· and
biCadcaslers retes Olllo hlgll scllool
bovs baskatboll taoms In the fourth ol
~ Associated Plass poll$ ol
20Q9. by OHSAA divisions, with won·
loot 18C0id lnd total points (flisl-place
...,,.. In parentheoeo):

1, Cln. Mt. Notre Dame (18) 14·1
2. Dublin Coffman (6) t Nl
S. Cln. Winton Woods 14.0
4. W. Cheoto1 Lakota W. 13-2
5. o...den 'IIi-V..lley 18.()
6. Xenia (1) 15.0
7, De-re Hayes 1&amp;o
8. F'llnysburg H·O
9. Twinobu!g I 2·3
10. wa .... Howland t5-0

heading into the finale .
MHS outscored the
guests · t8-14 in the fourth.
Wf!lpping up the 24-point
triumph . Meigs' last win
also came against the
Orange and Brown during
a 67-58 decision back in
December, allowing MHS
to claim a regular season
sweep.
For the first time in a
month. the Marauders were
at full strength as both Clay
and Cameron Bolin made
their returns to the lineup.
The itnpact was definite.

BWALTERSOMVOAtLYTRIBUNE.COM

BASKETBALL POLL

.

Well

rallies ast Eagles, 63·&amp;1

at John

.AP GIRlS SfATE

'

Hutton

Meigs C\&gt;nnected on 26of-51 floor ·attempts tor 51
percent , .including S,of- 14
from three-point territory
for 57 percent. MHS also
had 37 rebounds. 14
turnovers. 14 assists. nine
steals and two blocks.
Eleven pl11yers scored in
the triumph. including four
with double figures . Corey
Hutton led the Marauders
with a game-high 14
points. while Jeremy
Smith . Gabe Hill .and Jacob
Well each contributed 13
markers.
Michael Barrick led
NYHS with 12 points, followed by Conner Bunting
with nine markers. The
Buckeyes also committed
13 turnovers in the setback.
Meigs returns to action
Friduy night when it hosts
Athens in another TVC
a..,.,w.~
Ohio matchup. The junior M4!igs' Cameron Bolin (14) goes in fl)ra layup attempt past
varsity game will ·begin at a Nelsonville-York defender during Tuesday night's TVC ·
Ohio boys basketball Qame in Rocksprings.
6 p.m.

Bryan Walteralphoto

Eastern's Kyle Connery (34) releases a short jumper over a trio of Watiama defenders during·the first half of Tuesday night's boys basketball game in Tuppers Plains.

NEW LEXINGTON The
Gallia
Academy
wrestling team fared well at
the 2009 Jimmy Wood
Invitational held at New
Lexington Hish School on
Saturday. brmging home
one individual championship · &lt;md placing thtrd
overall in the 21-team
event.
The Blue Devils - who
posted a team tally of 241
points - finished behind
New
only
champion
Lexington (320.5) and runner-up Johnstown Monroe
(266.5) overall. Martins
Ferry (202) and Marietta
( 197) rounded out the topfive.
Clint Saunders brought
home the lone title for the
Blue and White. placing
first in the 171-pound divi·
sion. Saunders went 5-0
overall - including four
wins by pinfall - and
defeated Colton Joyce of
Trimble in the championship match by a 17-8
majonty decision.
The Devils also had a pair
of runner-up efforts from
Kyle Buys ( 152) and Jared
Gravely (215) over the
weekend. Gravely lost u
close one in the championship by a 7-5 decision to
Ben Janas of Chippewa.
while Bays was pinned by
Zach VanWey of John
Glenn in the 152 final.
Mike Hackett ( 189). Cory
Mason . ( 160). Brandon·
Taylor ( 145) and Malt Watts
( 1.'10) all placed third in
their rcspeL·tive weight
classes . Matt Kerr ( 103) and
Cody
. Pt(llins ( 125) both

.
PIHSI SH Invite, 12

Ironton sweeps Blue Devils, 54-34
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSOMVOAILVTRIBUNE.COM

IRONTON
The
Gnllia Academy boys basketball team dropped its
second consecutive decision of the season Tuesday
night during a 54-34 setback to host Ironton during a Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League South
Division
matchup
in
Lawrence County.
The Blue Devils (9-7, 37 SEOAL) never led in the
contest, falling behind 179 after eight minutes of
pluy. The Fighting Tigers
( 11 -4. 6-2) increased their
lead to 29- 17 at the intermission, then went on 125 run in the third to tnke a
41-22 edge into the finale.
Gall.ia Academy closed
the. fourth quarter deficit
to 44-32 with 3:48 left in
regulation, but the hosts

Nibert

N. Mitchell

closed the game on a I0-2
run to secure the 2d-point
outcome.
GAHS - which lost to
Ironton 49-31 in the first
matchup in December was outscored 13 -12 in the
fourth.
allowing
the
Orange and Black to cluim
a regular season sweep . .
The Blue and White connected on 12-of-41 field
goal attempts for 29 percent. including just 2-of15 from three-point terri tory for 13 percent. The

guests also commftted 23
turnt&gt;Vers and were outrebounded 30-25 overall.
Kyle Mitchell led the
Devils with 10 points. fo.l- '
lowed by Quinton Nibert
with eight and Nick
Mitchell with seven markers.
IHS - which committed
just 13 turnovers - shot
18-of-45 from the field for
40 percent. including 1-of8 from three-point range
for 13 percent.
Michael Lamb - who
scored Ironton' s flrst
seven points - led' the
hosts with u game -high 14
points. followed by Tim
Kochcndoerfer with 13
markers.
Gallia Academy returns
to action Friday when it
travels to Log11n for &lt;mothPhoto courtesy ot Ironton Tribune
er SEOAL matchup . The Gallia Academy's Kyle' Mitchell hauls in an entry pass while
JV game will tip-off at being defended by an Ironton player Tuesday night during a
SEOAL boys basketball game in Ironton .
·
6:30p.m .

�I

•

The Daily Sentinel

ACROSS .THE NATION

PageA6

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

· Wednesday, February4, 2009

osm

b•Pa 1 . . . . .

S4 ' sc:*'oa,P g II
8v KPEERl.Y S. Jail IS ON
AND 8R&amp; folluR

Wednesday, February 4. 2009

APAUTO-~

OETROlT - General
MOOJIS • U.S. vehicle sales
plunged 49 percent in
January while Ford's sales
dropped 40 percent. starting
2009 at an abysmal pace for
the whole auto industry as
lower sales to fleet buyers
like renlal car companies
weighed down the resulls.
Toyota's sales dove 32
percent for the moil&amp;b,
· Nissan 's dropped 30 percent
and Honda·s-fell28 percent,
putting the overall industry
on tract. for its. fourth
straight month in which
U.S. sales plunged 30 percent
or more.
Former Sen. Tom Daschle. Pres.ident Barc!Ck Obama's
But
bucked the
choice to head the Hearth and Human Services, speaks to . trend ofSubaru
declines
for a secthe media after a closed session meeting with ttie Senate ond month in a row.
posting,
Anance Committee on Capi.tol Hill, Monday In wasllington. an 8 percent sales increase, A GM sign sits in front ol a long line ol UMOid 2009 Escalades at a Cadillac dealership in
and Hyundai said its sales the southeast DerNer suburb ol Lone Tree, Colo.. on Sunday, De&lt;:. 7; 2008. Genelal
Motors' U.S. vehicle sales plunged 49 percent in January while Ford's sales dropped 40
jumped 14 percent.
Hyundai credited its percent, starting 2009 at an abysmal pace lor the auto whole industry as tower sates to
increase to its offer to cover fleet buyers rlke rental car companies weighed down the U.S. automakers' results.
a new vehicle's depreciation
•
if customers. return a car rises, consumer confidence and access . to credit
Analysts had expected
within 12 months because · weakens and many . people improves.
high-volume 11eet sales to be
they are unable to make the have a tougher time getting
Detroit-based GM sold down sharply in January. as
par,ments.
loans. General Motors C(Mp. 128J 98 light · vehicles in consumers and businesses
'This program gets to the and Chrysl~r LLC have January. while Ford's sales cut back on travel in the ecoroot cause of today 's eco- received $13.4 billion in total~ 93,060. Toyota nomic downturn and rental
BY JENNIFER LOVEN
.nomic concerns - fear o1 federal loims to stay ufloat. Motor Corp. sold 117,287 car companies hold onto
M' WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENT
job loss," Hyundai regional and they ~ to get more cars and trucks.
·their clll'rent cars longer.
aft
the
't
·
b'l'ty
The
utomake~
have
general
manager
Peter
11
Production cuts that have
WASHINGTON - Tom Daschle withdrew Tuesday as DiPersia said in a statement.
er Y su nu a vta 1 1
•,
idled
many U.S. factories
lan
to
the
government
by
rolled
out
hefty
incentive
President Barad: Obama's nominee to be health and human· Chrysler is set to release P
in
recent
months
in
an
for
several
weet.s have
offers
17
services secretary, dealing potential blows to both speedy its sales figures later Feb · · Ford Motor Co • has
compounded
the
problem.
health Cllll: reform and Obwna's hOJllls for a smooth start in Tuesday. The company's said it does not plan to use ~~!~m~l~a~~~~
Many fleet customers get
the White House.
sales chief. Steven Landry, government aid.
their
deliveries right after
"Now we must move forward," Obama said in a written told reporters earlier at a
GM said, earlier this average automaker incenroll
oft· the assembly
cars
·statement a~cepting "with sadness and regret" Daschle 's meeting with dealers that month it is planning its tum- tive at $2.714 per vehicle
request to be removed from consideration. A day earlier. u.s. industry sales eould around under the assumP.: sold in January. down 52 line, so when factories susObarna had said he "absolutely" stood by Daschle in the drop as much as 35 percent lion the entire industry w11l percent from December but pend production, those
face of problems over back taxes and potential conflicts of in January. The annualized . sell 105 million new vehi- . up 12.5 percent from deliveries come to a halt.
GM said its fleet sales fell
interest.
sales rate for the month cles in the U.S. this year. January 2008.
80
percent to just over
The stunning Daschle development came less than three could drop below 10 million Chrysler has said it's planJesse Toprak. the auto
13.000
vehicles in January,
hours after another Obama nominee also withdrew from for the ftrSt time in more ning on 11.1 million units, Web site's executive direc~:Qnsideration, and also over tax problems. Nancy Killefer, than 26 years, he said.
and Ford last week reduced tor of industry analysis, marking their lowest sales
nominated by Obama to be the ¥.overnment's first chief perAccording to Ward's its forecast to a range attrib~ted the . year-over- . level. since .1975. GM's
formance officer. said she didn t want her bungling of pay- AutolnfoBank. the last between 11.5 million and year mere~ to ~ greater retail sales fell 38 percent.
Dearborn-based Ford said
roll taxes on her household help to be a distraction.
.month in which the season- · 125 million. But few peo- number of hnge':'ng 2008
"They both recognized that you can't set an example of ally adjusted annual sales pie were expecting the model year ·vehicles. He January's drop in sales of
responsibility but accept a different standard of who rate dropped below 10 mil- automakers to start 2009 at noted that. 27 percent of a.ll Ford, Lincoln ond Mercury
$erves," said White House press secretary Robert Gibbs.
lion was August 1982, when such a pace.
new vehtcles sold th1s vehicles included a 27 perDaschle, the former Senate Democratic leader, a strong it hit 9.9 milliori as the · · · Jlllluary .i&amp;..-·typiclllly . a .... ~anuary were from the 2008 cent drop in retail sales and
and early backer of Obama 's presidential bid and a close nation was mired in a reces- slow sales mOhth, and ,many model year, up from 12 per- a 65 pen.-ent decline in fleet
Obama friend, said he would have been unable to operate sion.
sales.
automakers and analysts are cent a year ago.
;with the full faith of Congress and the American people."
Domesti~ and fprei$n expectin~ the market to
"I am not that leader. and will notbe a distraction" to automakers
have ~n stnig- · "teboulld tn ~· second half •
Obama 's agenda. he said.
gling as unemployment of the year as the economy
Obama had given Daschle two jobs - to be White House
health czar on top of the post leading the Health and
Human Services Department - and Daschle is relinquish-.
Hearing Aids and Audiology Services
ihg both. The developments called into question whether
Obama will be able to move as quickly as he has promised
A Sound Solution
on sweeping health cilre reform - one of the pillars of his
.ImJr~rovedCommunictJiion
first I 00 days ~genda and expected to be among the hardest to accomphsh.
For lhe estimated 26 million
· "It really sets us back a step," said Sen. Dick Durbin, Dchildron and adults in the United
Ill. "Because he was such a talent. I mean he understood
. . .lltllllll--0..11111111.
States who have a hearing loss,
Congress, ·serving in the House and Senate; he certainly
Whether
you've
just gotten married, had a baby, bought a new
selecting the most suitable
had the confidence of the president."
home or retired- big life changes can mean big tax changes.
hearing aids can be the critical
Said White House spokesman Gibbs: "We're looking for
H&amp;R
Block will help you maximize your refund by showing you
factor 1o enjoying life to its
a new nominee, but the problem has existed for quite some
tax
deductions
or credits you're entitled to. At H&amp;R Block if you
fullest.
time and the work toward a solution to make health care
don't get the maximum refund you're entilled to, your taxmore affordable won't stop or won't pause while we look
Call today for a ~EE hearing consultation.
preparation Is free.' When you'Ve got people, they're with you
for that nominee."
every step of the way.
Among those considered for the {lOSt before it went to
S94·6333or
Daschle was Howard Dean.the phystcian-turned-politician
l-800-451-9806
who ran for president in 2004 and recently left as head of
H&amp;R BLOCK
499 Rk:hl1111d Ave~
the Democratic National Committee.
Albens,
OH
45701
Asked re~atedly whether the White House soujlht
Daschle's wuhdrawal, Gibbs said it was Daschle's deciston
618 Ellt Main St. ·
Mon·Frt 9:00 • 6:00
alone. He "did not get a signal" from the White House to
Pomeroy, OH ·45768
Sat. 8:00 • 5:00
step aside, the spokesman said.
740-992-6674
Other Hours by Appointment
Daschle is the third high-profile Obama nominee to bow
It ~ Olscov.r 1n H&amp;R BIOtllllror on your rth.lm 11\al 1ntHIM ~ou to 1 llroamadltr
out. Obama tapped Bill Richardson to be Commerce secrelu lllibllltv) !han wt calculmd, wit'U r1lund your tax·pt~ratlon IN tor thlt return.
I
musl' be miG~ during lht caltndlr yur In which the It• reb.Jm le p!'~red. aooe HR8 Tax
tilry, .but th~ N~w ~exico governor withdrew amid .a gra~d
,Inc.
~ury mvesugauon mto a state contract awarded to hts pohttcal donors. Obama named Republican Sen. Judd Gregg of
New Hampshire to the position Tuesday. ·
Last week, the Senute confirmed Ttmothy Geithner as
treasury secretary. but only after days.of controversy over
the fact that he had only belatedly paid $34,000 in income
·
taxes.
Asked whether tax questions are going to arise with any
other nominees, Gibbs said only that ''the president has
confidence in the people he has chosen to serve in government." He also defended the administration's vetting
process.
· He added: "the president takes responsibility" for the
spate of nomination troubles.
The White House· dispatched senior adviser David
\
Axelrod to Capitol Hill to soothe Democrats whose nerves
l'
'
were frayed by the loss of Dltschle.
"
Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and Daschle 's former
.
Democratic colleagues had rallied to Daschle 's defense in
the wake of questions abouthis failure to fully pay his taxes
·from 2005 through 2007. Last month. he pa1d $128.203 in
.
.
.
back taxes and $11 .964 in interest.
"Tom made a mistake, which he has openly acknowledged.'' Obama said Tuesday, "He. has not excused it, nor
do I. But that mistake and this decision cannot diminish the
many contributions Tom has made to this country."
"I was a little stunned. I thought he was going to get confirmed," said Max Buucus, D-Monr.: chairman of the
Senate Finance Committee. the panel that would have
voted on Daschle's nomination. ';It's regrettable. He's a
very good man."
Daschle also was faqing questions about potential conflicts of interests related to speaking fees he accepted from
.\ '
health .care interests. He also provided advice to health
Pleasant~
insurers and hospitals through his post-Senate work at a
law firm .
The controversy has undercut Obama 's promise to run a .
more ethical. responsible and special interest-free ad minis- ·
tration . Republicans and major newspapers had been questioning Obama'.s decision to stick With.Daschle .

.... ..._

____

l..ocAL ScHEDULE

Marauders end eight-game slide

,__

~ - ·-"'-'""'

traMGI!k~.a .... ~

DC.....
1 ,_w•t
31 , .
; n.
n
- - GIIIIIP
· .-.
"30""'

-~~-·
'"'''""
01 Yoigs, e IP."'

-

........,.,0,...
,,,a r,,

-,...................
~'~lint
p.m.

ROCKSPRINGS - The
Meigs boys bas.t.etball
teom end¢ an eight-game
losing skid in convincing
fashion Tuesday night during a 74-SO thumping of
visiting Nelsonville-York
in a Tri-Valley Conference
Ohio Division matchup at
Morrison
Larry
R.
Gymnasium .
The Ma111u'ders (4-9, 3-4
TVC Ohio) led start to finish. stonning out to a 21" II
advantage after eight minutes of play. The hosts continued that hot start into the
second frame. going on a
19- 11 charge to take a 4022 cushion into the half.
The Buckeyes (6-7, 1-5)
never cut the lead to singledigits the rest of the night.
as the Maroon and Gold
closed the'third period on a
16-14 run for a 56-36 lead

n , •• -

c...nty. 7:30
GIIIIIE ' 3 tt

&amp;;.

-·
Wloll 'hlrn.
'p.m.6 p.m.
=~
·:::.
"""" II 1:30 p.m
- • E - . .. &amp;p.m.
ww.m. • HMnan. 1:-30 p.m.

·

AP..,_

Daschle ·out as
health nominee
due to tax problems

General, Cardiac, Vascular, ·
Esophageal, ·Thoracic Services
&amp; Anterior Spine Surgery Access

'

Office:

PVH Medical Office Building
Suite 113
Point
WV

Appointments:

Prt•ss writers Ron Foumier. Charles
Babill!l/011 an(/ Liz Sidoti comributed to rhis storv.
A~·soc iated

304.875.1888

Aeeeptlq

NEW patJent.•l·

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Tk ~AI'/~ ()I P~{eett()I({J~

's:;.;a:=z

GoliaAc-.yot-~. &amp;p.m.

l'llitll PteiiSIIlt ot Cilljlmotwillo. 1:30

p.m.

Glrta I II t ltinll
logon ot Galtia -.nv, 6 p.m.
Pike E&amp;Sieln ot SoutllGolllo. &amp; p.m.
l'lliot PIMsorlt 01 Wll!no. 7:30p.m.
-liE&amp;Sielft. 1p.m.

.-.-::!'\..1&lt;¥

Golia

Dono c - tAt~~ensl. TliA

BY .BRYAN WALTERS

..,.n

DIVISION I
226
221

ISO
147
136 .
127
110
77
44
2$

~ -

.. 12 01 ....... polftla:
II, K-Ing Falrmon124. 12, lbl. ~~
20. 13 (tie). Bea......,,..k, Can. McKinley
(1) 18." 15 (tit). Pickerington Cent ..
Dublin Scioto 14.

DIVISION II
I , Lima Bath (14) 15·0

240
206
~· Jlpp City Tlpptcenoe (I) 16•0 197
4, Tiffin Columbian 15-()
152
5. Chlllcotha Unklto (I) 15-()
134
6, Geneva (1) 15·0
96
7, Warsaw R!~er View 13·2
94
8. Ak1. Hoban (I) 12·2
76
9. Hathaway B"""' lo-4
39
10, Sp•lng. Kenton Ridge 13·2
38

2, l.(etltflng Alto• (7) 15·1

~

,....lvlng 12 01 more polnto:
11 . Canton South (1) 30. t2 . .Salam 19.
13, wapakoneta 18. 14, Menter Lake
Cath: 17. ·15. Cambridge 13·. 16 (~e).
Cln. Indian Hill, Cuyahoga Falls Walsh
Jeault 12.

DIVISION Ill
1. Marion Pleasant (14) 16·0
2. s ..eueNd Regina (11114·0
3, Smllhvllle 16.0
4, Oak Hlll13·1
5, Genoa Area 14.0
6. Findlay Llberty·Banton 13·1
7. Ml"bU~ Lake14·0
8. W. Uberty·S.Iem 14·1
9, Ml, Blanohoid Rlveidale 13·1
10. Pymatu~lng VOlley (1) 15·0

243
239
163
137
136
120
110
75
60
18

' ·,
0111111 .-vlnv 12 •• """" point.:
11, M\anda-Ciaa.roreak 12.

DIVISION IV
I , Convoy Cresl'liew (16) 14·0
2.Berlin Hiland (10) 12·1
3,-New Bremen 15·1
4, Delptios St John'o 12·2
5, F'I!Hiovllle 13-2
~. Colo. Alrlcentrlc 12·4
1, Canal Win. Harvest Prep 14·2
I . Shadyoldo 14-2
~. '1\oy ChiiOIIan 14·2
9. Now Fllagsl13·2

..

243
231
175
140
118
103
74
61
49
49

~

""living 12 ar more polnlo:
If. Watelfoid 34.'12. Leipsic 26. 13(tlel.
Carey. Cia. Hts. LuihOian E. 23. t5(tla),
.Ft. Rsco.,.ry. Ottoville 13.

CoNTACT US
1-740-446·2342

ext. 33 .

, •• - 1-74().446·3008
~..,..11 -

mduportaOmy&lt;lal~l lnttoom

~porla.SlaH

a,Y.n Walter8, Sportl Writer
(740) 446·2342, 0&lt;1. 33
bwaltersOmydallytrlbune.com

MOSSPOATSOMYDA.!LYSENTINEL.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS Good things come to those
who wait.
After droppin~ nine consecutive decistons since
defeating Hannan in the
seaSon opener. the Wahama
boys basketball team picked
ur its elusive second victory
o the season Tuesday night
during a hard-fought 63-.60
decision over host Eastern
in
a
non-conference
matchup in Mejgs County.
The White ·Falcons (2-9)
fell behind 18-7 just six
minutes into the contest, but
rallied with a 25-9 charge of
the final 10 minutes of the
first half to take a 32-27
cushion into the intermission. The Eagles (7-6) led
18-12 after the first period.
WHS extended its lead to
as much us 13 points (4633) with 3:15 left in the
third quarter. but the Green
and White retaliated with a
10-2 charge to pull their
de licit to 48-43 heading into
the finale.
The hosts managed to
recapture the lead briefly
(53-52) ut the four-minute
·murk, but the Red and
White recaptured the lead
45 seconds later to go ahead
55-53.
EHS tied things at 55 with
2: 15 left in reguhuion and
the score stayed that way
until the final 90 seconds when Wahlima took the lead
for good at 57-55. Eastern
was never closer the rest of
the even in~.
The While Falcons connected on 25-of-55 field
goal attem~ts for 45 percent. includmg 6-of-17 from
three-point territory for 35

Plus• •• Etist.m. 12
.

Blue Devils finish
third at Jimmy
Wood Invite
STAFF REPORT

.

How o stato panel ol spoilS wilteiS· and
biCadcaslers retes Olllo hlgll scllool
bovs baskatboll taoms In the fourth ol
~ Associated Plass poll$ ol
20Q9. by OHSAA divisions, with won·
loot 18C0id lnd total points (flisl-place
...,,.. In parentheoeo):

1, Cln. Mt. Notre Dame (18) 14·1
2. Dublin Coffman (6) t Nl
S. Cln. Winton Woods 14.0
4. W. Cheoto1 Lakota W. 13-2
5. o...den 'IIi-V..lley 18.()
6. Xenia (1) 15.0
7, De-re Hayes 1&amp;o
8. F'llnysburg H·O
9. Twinobu!g I 2·3
10. wa .... Howland t5-0

heading into the finale .
MHS outscored the
guests · t8-14 in the fourth.
Wf!lpping up the 24-point
triumph . Meigs' last win
also came against the
Orange and Brown during
a 67-58 decision back in
December, allowing MHS
to claim a regular season
sweep.
For the first time in a
month. the Marauders were
at full strength as both Clay
and Cameron Bolin made
their returns to the lineup.
The itnpact was definite.

BWALTERSOMVOAtLYTRIBUNE.COM

BASKETBALL POLL

.

Well

rallies ast Eagles, 63·&amp;1

at John

.AP GIRlS SfATE

'

Hutton

Meigs C\&gt;nnected on 26of-51 floor ·attempts tor 51
percent , .including S,of- 14
from three-point territory
for 57 percent. MHS also
had 37 rebounds. 14
turnovers. 14 assists. nine
steals and two blocks.
Eleven pl11yers scored in
the triumph. including four
with double figures . Corey
Hutton led the Marauders
with a game-high 14
points. while Jeremy
Smith . Gabe Hill .and Jacob
Well each contributed 13
markers.
Michael Barrick led
NYHS with 12 points, followed by Conner Bunting
with nine markers. The
Buckeyes also committed
13 turnovers in the setback.
Meigs returns to action
Friduy night when it hosts
Athens in another TVC
a..,.,w.~
Ohio matchup. The junior M4!igs' Cameron Bolin (14) goes in fl)ra layup attempt past
varsity game will ·begin at a Nelsonville-York defender during Tuesday night's TVC ·
Ohio boys basketball Qame in Rocksprings.
6 p.m.

Bryan Walteralphoto

Eastern's Kyle Connery (34) releases a short jumper over a trio of Watiama defenders during·the first half of Tuesday night's boys basketball game in Tuppers Plains.

NEW LEXINGTON The
Gallia
Academy
wrestling team fared well at
the 2009 Jimmy Wood
Invitational held at New
Lexington Hish School on
Saturday. brmging home
one individual championship · &lt;md placing thtrd
overall in the 21-team
event.
The Blue Devils - who
posted a team tally of 241
points - finished behind
New
only
champion
Lexington (320.5) and runner-up Johnstown Monroe
(266.5) overall. Martins
Ferry (202) and Marietta
( 197) rounded out the topfive.
Clint Saunders brought
home the lone title for the
Blue and White. placing
first in the 171-pound divi·
sion. Saunders went 5-0
overall - including four
wins by pinfall - and
defeated Colton Joyce of
Trimble in the championship match by a 17-8
majonty decision.
The Devils also had a pair
of runner-up efforts from
Kyle Buys ( 152) and Jared
Gravely (215) over the
weekend. Gravely lost u
close one in the championship by a 7-5 decision to
Ben Janas of Chippewa.
while Bays was pinned by
Zach VanWey of John
Glenn in the 152 final.
Mike Hackett ( 189). Cory
Mason . ( 160). Brandon·
Taylor ( 145) and Malt Watts
( 1.'10) all placed third in
their rcspeL·tive weight
classes . Matt Kerr ( 103) and
Cody
. Pt(llins ( 125) both

.
PIHSI SH Invite, 12

Ironton sweeps Blue Devils, 54-34
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSOMVOAILVTRIBUNE.COM

IRONTON
The
Gnllia Academy boys basketball team dropped its
second consecutive decision of the season Tuesday
night during a 54-34 setback to host Ironton during a Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League South
Division
matchup
in
Lawrence County.
The Blue Devils (9-7, 37 SEOAL) never led in the
contest, falling behind 179 after eight minutes of
pluy. The Fighting Tigers
( 11 -4. 6-2) increased their
lead to 29- 17 at the intermission, then went on 125 run in the third to tnke a
41-22 edge into the finale.
Gall.ia Academy closed
the. fourth quarter deficit
to 44-32 with 3:48 left in
regulation, but the hosts

Nibert

N. Mitchell

closed the game on a I0-2
run to secure the 2d-point
outcome.
GAHS - which lost to
Ironton 49-31 in the first
matchup in December was outscored 13 -12 in the
fourth.
allowing
the
Orange and Black to cluim
a regular season sweep . .
The Blue and White connected on 12-of-41 field
goal attempts for 29 percent. including just 2-of15 from three-point terri tory for 13 percent. The

guests also commftted 23
turnt&gt;Vers and were outrebounded 30-25 overall.
Kyle Mitchell led the
Devils with 10 points. fo.l- '
lowed by Quinton Nibert
with eight and Nick
Mitchell with seven markers.
IHS - which committed
just 13 turnovers - shot
18-of-45 from the field for
40 percent. including 1-of8 from three-point range
for 13 percent.
Michael Lamb - who
scored Ironton' s flrst
seven points - led' the
hosts with u game -high 14
points. followed by Tim
Kochcndoerfer with 13
markers.
Gallia Academy returns
to action Friday when it
travels to Log11n for &lt;mothPhoto courtesy ot Ironton Tribune
er SEOAL matchup . The Gallia Academy's Kyle' Mitchell hauls in an entry pass while
JV game will tip-off at being defended by an Ironton player Tuesday night during a
SEOAL boys basketball game in Ironton .
·
6:30p.m .

�\

www.mydllllysentl,...com

PaF Ba • h Daily Sentinel

JV 1-

Local Box Scores
21

t9

16 18 -

Jo,.,.

C&lt;XII'

Laudarmilt .0 o-2 0. Jesse
t l&gt;l! 2. Seth Welts 1 I).Q 2. -~~~
Dottwlllor 0 f.l! l . TOTALS: 26 14-24 74.
'Thlft.l&gt;cint goals: 8 !Hilt 3. Well 3.
......,. Smittt 2).
:N sa&gt;re ~ Nolo·'lllrk 34. Meigs 23.
JV loaders- NY· Nalhan Doon 9, Joe
9&lt; M: Jesse Smilh 6.

WAHAMA
WBharna
Eastern

t6 15 16 17 -

Flo..,.. 1
2. Ryan Leo 1 2~ 4, lacl1
Whitlatch 7 4-6 21, Isaac LH 8 {).() 17.
Garren Underwood t 1·2 3. TOTALS: 25
7-10 63, Throe-point goals; 6 {Whillal&lt;:h
3. ZUspan 2. Leo).
EASTERN (H): Mike Johnson 5 a-&lt; 10,
Jake lyi'!Ch 4 ()..() lO. Kelly Winebrenner
S Q-0 11. BIO)!den Pratt 3 D- t 7. Titus
~ 3 I).Q 6. Jordan Kimes o o-o o.
Tyler - · 2 o-o 5. Kyle Connery o oo 0. zam Hendrbt 1 Q..O 2. OaYon Baum
3 3-4 9. TOTALS: 26 3-8
Thr~nt
goals: 5 (Lynch 2. Wlnebrei'l(ler. Pratt. T.
Hendrix~

JV score- Eastam 41. Wahama 37.
JV loaders - W: Btiee Clark 10; E:
Jonathan Barrett 20. 1
IRONTON

54,

GALLIA AcADEMY
Gallipolis
Ironton

9
8
17 12

34

s 12 12 13 -

34
54

GALLIA ACADEMY (9-7, 3-7 SEOAL):
Quinton Nibert 3 2-3 8. Ethan Moore 0 ()..
0 0. Chris Armstrong t 3-4 5, Kyle
Mitchell 5 0·0 tO, Jonn Troester 1 0-0 2,
Nick Mftchetl2 1-2 7. Evan Wood 00..0 0.
Beau Wholey 0 D-0 0. Chuck Cai'IOrt 0 DO 0: Jordan Cornwell 0 o-0 0. Zekt
Maher 0 0-0 0. Core~ Ebel'f:lard 0 2·2 2.
TOTALS: 12 8·11 34. Three-point goals; 2
(N. Mitchell 2).
.
IRONTON (11-4, 6·2 SEOAL): Malcolm
Morton 0 2-2 2. Tim Kocl'lendoerfer 3 7-7
13. Lukas Morris 2 o-o 4. Erin Edens 0 o0 0. Micha'el Lamb 5 3-5 14, Jon
SChwek:kart 3 J.S 9, Tommy Waglnger 2
1-1 5. Travis Elliott 1 ~ 2. ROb Webb 1
0-1 2. J.P. Tavlor 1 1-2 3. Jon Nonis 0 DO 0. l 'OTALS: 18 17-21 54. Thre..poinl
goats: 1 (Lamb).
JV sc:ore - Ironton 34, Gallla Academy

32.

43. aiuflton 20
Allr. East 60. Allr. 6t,Jchtol 58
J&gt;JM. Kannont
AJu. R,.....,. 53
-

63
Day. Cl'lnstian 56, Franklin Midcletown

n.

Akr.
tAnc;hester
49, Zoarville
-Va/ley35
i&gt;IM. Nor1h 60. /IJu. Ellel43
/&gt;JM. SVSM 65. W,.., HarQng. 63
Albany 70, Glws10t llitniMo
49
'
Andover Pymatuning, Valley 81 ,
Thornpoan Lec1gemoflt S5
Ashv1Ue Teays Vllley 10, C.nel
Wl~-60

Atwa19r Wotorloa 66. Akr. Sj&gt;ritglield 6t
Avon 53. FaiNMlw 41
Barberton 63, Wodswortll ~
Barnesville 52. Brkjgeport =l6
Bedford 61. Lorain Southviow 51
Bellbrook 65. ~57
~mont Union L.oc81 54.. Clld!z Harrison

·

·

Jac:kson Jad&lt;son-MIIton 40
Berlin Hiland 79. Tuscarawas Cent Catt'l.
76
Beveny Ft. Frya 53. Vlnoent Wo1nJn 50
etoorndale ElmWO&lt;XI59, Genoa. Area Sli,
30T '

'&lt;\(AHAMA (2·9): Kyle Zerkle 5 1).() 10.
William Zuspan 2 Q-0 6. Bramion

eo.

Modir1a 59. Cle. Rlto&lt;les 5li

Bolort w. Branch 46. Conollton 45 ·
Bertin Center Westem Reserve 76. N.

63
60

o-o

BOYS BASKETBALL

Cent. 32

63, EAsTERN 60

l2 20
18 9

Columbuli To,., Academy 56. Ohto. Onl
51
Cortland Lalcev18 56. Hubbard 53
Cortfand: Maplewood 65. Warren
Lorostown 33
COShocton 74, Warsaw River View 50
CuyahOga
Falls
CVCA
58,
Gnalionhutton lnd!an Valley 35
Cuyahoga His. 73. Cardlnol

OHIO

74 .

Columbtane S5. It Urna S. Range 53
Cotumbtlna Cmtv- &amp;5. -Ridge

33

Prep Srores

. NELSONVILLE·'IORK 1&amp;7. 1-5 TVC
Ol!io): loly&lt;:haJ Mitchell 1 1).() 2. Josh
llid&lt;eroon 1 ~~ 5. Dolton Stalling 1 3-4 6,
Terrane. R»t 3 0.0 6. Daotet Kline 2' IJ..2
4. 1jl1or Goodin 2 o-o s. ....,.., Barr&lt;:k 4
C)-(1 12\ Donok Arnold 0 1).() 0. Jolv1
Oc
ttonOQ.QO, Erik-QQ.
0 Q. Corwwllunting 4 ~~ 9. JoM 0 C)-(1 Q. K'VJe ~ 0 1-2 1. Joe Frozler
0 Q-0 0. J.Q OavioO MO. TOTAL.$; 18 7·
14 50. '"'-Point gaols: 7 {Bolricl&lt; 4,
Oit;M&lt;1Qn, Staling, GoQdn).
MEIGS {4-9, 3-4 TVC Qho~ Cia~~ !!olin
0 ... 4,
Sr)1ith5 t -3 13. Galle Hill
5 1).() 13. Joco11 w.11 5 Q. I 13, COrey
HWion eN 14. Jon McCorllly 1 1-2 3.
Calob Davls 2 N 6, Comeroo Bolin 0 3-

4 3.

-GA. Austtn Wilson 8: 1: J.P

Chnoliart 45
Day.
Oakwood
Greeneview 65

-n

Easl!!lm'&amp;
Kelly

Magnolia

Sand\!

nner,
right,

~khn'S7

94, W. LIIayone R~ 56

Manon Call&gt;. 61 . ~ Chriotian 4.2
Marion Pleasant 62, Gallon Nortl'vnot 35

dribble&amp;
pasta

McArthur VIntOn County 64, Athens 62
McllonaJd 70. SalirnNtllo Soulhem 54

Wahama
defender
during

Middlebury Hts. Mklpll!ll 46, "'""' Lalle
45
N. Ridgeville 54, Rocl(y River 48

New Albany 47. Cols. Franklin Hts. 42

-

Tuesday

Glenwood 67, Po~

-

nighfs
basket·

Notte Dam4t 62. OT

New Br9f'MI'I 63. Russia S2
New Caslle. Pa. !55, '!\lungs. Ursuline 54

Jamestown

New. CQncord
CrookSv•lte 55

John

DeGraff RJVerslde 55. W. U~em
47
Dover 67. ·uMcl:ls,.iiiEI Claymont 31
DreSden n1-Valley 52 ..Pnilo 49
Dublin Cottman 48. Hilliard Darby 36
Dublin Scioto 58, We~ille Cent. 45
E. Palestine 55. New Middletown ·Spring.
36
•

Newcomerstown

68.

72,

Winebre

Valley 63, Strosburg-

Glenn

ball
game in
Tupper&amp; ·
Plains.

57 ,

Bowerston

-·r

Broo-

Conotlon Voll!oy Sl

Falls 66.
25
Mt:Kinfoy 71, UsllOI't
66
ClrnoiBd Falls 78 . .Mtherst Slaelo 66
Oregon Stril!;l174.TQI. Eremanuel BIQtist
65
Poinoavilto H8Mr; 68, Kirtland 150

Fairport Harbor Harding. 64. Richmond

Panna 55.

H1S. 61

Parmo Hts. H&lt;&gt;ly Nome 45. Modlno

!=indlay 69. TaL Whitmer 51
Fostoria St. Wendelin 63. Old Fort 45

-yo44

Gahanna l rncoln 65. Pidwringtan fll 46

-..,..46

Ga~s Mills' Gilmour 66, Independence
60
Gates "-lis Hawken 63. Chesteriand W.
Geauga59
Gibsonburg 13, Kansas Lakota 60 .
Granville 55. Plain City Jonathan Alder
43.
.

Poninsula Woodridge 61 , Garrettsville
Garti&lt;tk144
·
Perry 58, Chardon NOCL37
Pomero~ Meigs 74. Nelsa:nviii&amp;-Vork SO
Ptlrtsmouth Clay 55, Beaver Eastem 50
Powell Olentangy Uberty 56. westervme

•

~-,.w,tribme.-.

PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

.
Ea$1W00d

65.

Eastern

Elmor• ·

N. 41

Green 48. Medina Highland 46·
R~noldsburg 66, lancaster 47
Greentield McClain 66. LynChburg~lay Rossford 65, Fostoria 63
S.. Charleston . Sf; 67, Miltotd Center
48
Greenville 49. St. Marys Memorial. 3t
Fairbanks 53
Bracksviltt-Broadvt&amp;w Hts. 57. Berea 52 Grove City 59. Newarll; 56
Sarahsville Shenandoah 49. Zanesville
l!ri$tol 65. N. llloomfiekl53
Gro~e City Christian 67. Northside
Rosecrans 43
· w.va. n; E. Uverpool71
cnristian 41
· Sebring McKinley 67. Wellsvme 59
Brcoklyn 55. Oberlin 51
Groveport-Madison fit . Ftickerington Sidn.B',' 68. MiamisbUrg 60
61. Orange 48
Cant. 58
SidnfJ'I Lehman 65. Waynesfield-Goshen
Cakhlell48, l!eallsville 47
Hannibal River 57. Lore Ci~ Buckeye 43
Combridge 7t, Byosville Moadowbrook
Trai143
Spar1a Higl'lland 70, Morral Ridgedale 59
49
.
Hanoverton. United 79. lisbon David Spring. Calli. Cent. 65. N. Lewisburg
Campbell Memorial 68. Warren
Anderson 51 .
Triad
ChampiQn 50 .
Hartville Lake Cente·r Christian S9, Akr. Spring. Emmanuel Christian 63, Sidney
Can. South 84, New Pl'\iladelphia 83
Coventry 49
·
Chri$tian 23
can. Tlmken 85. Massillon lllslaw 63
Heath 66. Cots. Horizon Science 2&lt;4
Spring.
Shawnee ss: Rl~;erslde Stebbins
Corliole SS. BrookviKa 47
Hilliard Oa11idson 57, Worthington 17
Chardon 54, Jeller$01'1 Area 52
KiU)ourne 47·
Springfleid 60, New ~artiste Tecumseh
Circleville 35. Cr,iH\cotl'le (Jnioto 32
Houston 45, Bol~ins 42
38
Circle'iil!e Logan Elm SO. Chillicolhe
Hudson
64.
Akr.
Garfisld
46
St. Clairsville 63. Bellaire 46
Z1ne Trace 33
HudSon WRA 62, Newbury 32 ·
Steubenville 57. Weir. W.Va. 47
Clayton Northmont 59. Xenia SO
Hunting Valley University 63, Aurora 35
Sunbury Big Walnut 54. Oelaware~Hayes
Cle. Colhnwood 80, Cle. Jolin Marshall
Ironton 54, G_allipolls Gallia 34
46
64
Jackson Center 41 . Ft. loramie 35
Sytvania Southview 79, Oregon Clay 64
Cle. E. Tech 81 , Cia JFK 67
Johnstown Norlhridge 46, H&lt;Jwatd E. Tallmadge 74. Lodi ClovE!fleaf 51
Cle. Glenville 72. Cli. John Adams 66
Knox 40
Thomas Worthing!Qn S2, Galloway
Cle Hay 66, Cle. Eaot 50
·
Joi'lnstoWn·Monroe 46, Danville 38
Wos~and 50
C/11. Hts. 65, 'Nirnmsvtlle Hts. -48
Kotterlng
Fairmont
50.
Fairborn
45
Thornville Sheridan 76·. McCOMelsvl»e
Clo. MLK 67. Cle. Mu HajjeS 36
Kingsway Christian 59·, Mansfiel~ Morgan 43
Cle. S. 72. Cle. Uncoln W 64
Christian 51
Tol. Ottawa Hills 43, Tot. Maumee Valley
Cle. St. Martin 0&amp; Porres 44. Lawrence
32 '
lakeside Danbury 74, Northwood 45
School26
Latham Western 54,
Chillicothe Tol. ~ogers 65, Fremont Ross 39
Cle. VASU 57, Elyria Colli. 35
Huntington SO
Tol. St Francis 66, Sylvania Norlllvlow 57
Cots. ~frieentric 59. Cots. Eastmoor 57
Cots. Beechcroft 95. · CciS. Linden lewis Center Otenlanoy 54. Dublin Tontogany Ot•ego 50, l.tllbufy Lake 30
Jerome 49
Toronto 78. Madonna, w.va. 74
McKinlay 78
.
lewis
Center
Olentangy
Orange
58.
Tree of Ufe 73, Pataskalallcltlng Hts. 46
Cots. Brookhawn 72, Cots. Mifflin 66
Pataskala Watkin&amp; Memorial 27 .
Trotwood-Madison 89. lebanon 44
Cots. DeSalos 76. Cots. Read\' 52
Woshlngton C. H. 57
'TWinsburg 55, Maytiekl43
Cois. East 72. CotS. Centennial 66
.1 London
london
Madison Plains 78. c.ctaritue 60 Utiea 59, Cen-rg 51
Cots. Hamltton Twp. 64. Sheldnah
Lorain Admiral King 72, Tot. Scott 63
Varn~llion 65, Bay VIllage Bay 60
Christian 52
Lorain Clearview 69, Roc:ky River Vienna Mathews 63. Klnaman Badger 54
Cots. Hartley 84. Cots. St Charles 62
Luthoran W. 63
Wahama, W.Va. 63, ;Reedsville Ea,$tem
Cots. Independence 83. ·Cats. South 4S
60
Cols. Merion-Franklin 103. Cols. Briggs Loudonville 38. Fraderlclt-. Sf
Louisville 68, Can. Cent. Colt\. 52
Warren Howland 58, Canfield 56
59
Lowellville 66·, leetonia 52
.
waterford 61 , Wood County Christian,
Cots. Northl81'1d 55, Cots. wnetslone 40
Willoughby S. 57. W.Va 36
Cots. Upper Arlington 57. Grove City Lyndhurst Brush
OT
Westerville s: 74, Marysville 5f;i
Cent. Crossing 53
Macedonia Nordonla 65, Kent Roosevatt . Westlake 46, N. Olmsted 43
Cots. Walnut Ridge 48, Cots. West 39
Windham 65, Manilla Crestwood 61
Cots. Wellington 78, Powell Village 55
MOjlnolia, W.Va. 71 , Woodsflekl Monroe Wintersville Indian Creek 67, Richmond
Academy 52
Cent 67
Edison~

Burton-..

eo

E r'

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

Be.a.oad 49

Pemberville

·

eo.

eo.

from Page Bl
. ·
pen:enl. The Eagles -:- who
had a lour-game wmmng
streak snapped - went 26of-73 from the 11oor for 36
percent. including just 5-of21 from three-pomt mnge
for 24 percent. .
Easlem wo11 the battle on
the boards by a 34-23 margin, includin~ a 17-9 on
· edge on the otfensive glass.
EHS also had 22 turnovers.
compared lo only 19 for the
. victors.
Zach Whitlatch
led
Wahama with a game-high
· 21 points. followed by Isaac

Invite
fromPageBl
placed eighth for GAHS.
Though Gallia Academy
had the best tinishes. it was
not the only area team al the
event. River Valley tinished
16th 'overall with a team
score of 71 points. while
Meigs tln\shed 18th overall
with 69.5 points.
The Raiders· top finisher
was Nick Walson, who
placed fourth in lhe 119pound
division .
The
Marauders· top effort came

Qtribune

Lee with 17 .and Kyle
Zerkle with 10. WHS was
7-of-10 al the free throw
line for 70 percent
Kelly Winebrenner pa=:l
· the hosts with II points,
while the duo of Mike
Johnson and Jake Lynch
.
·
k
· h
chipped m .10 mar ers eac ·
The Ea!?l~s were 3-of-8 at
the chanl) stnpe for 38 percent·
and
'
Both
Eastern
Wahama. return to actl~n
Fnday mghl. Easlem Will
host Waterford m a ptvotal
TVC Hocking contest,
while. WHS will travel to
Huntmgton to battle St.
Joseph Central. Both junior
varsity game will tip-off at
6 p.m.

'

Your Way -On February 13th

H.....

Wont Adlli

Monday thru Friday
a.m. t~ 5:00 p.m.

.2INCH AD ...$15.00
40 words)

... Dey"• ... _ .
._. . .Y JR.Calbl&amp;autt e100 adn.
Por8Mwd•ya.,....,

. . rlglllto ....
tljlct or Clftcel.,

from Ernie Welsh, who also
tinished fourth in lhe heavy·
weight class.
Meigs' Colby Hayes
placed sixth in the 21 Spound division, while teammates Cody Crook ( 140)
and Tyler Brothers ( 189)
had respective efforts of
sevenlh and eighth.
·
Trent Holcomb (160) and
Allen Shillington (285) also
placed seventh and eighth.
respectively . . for River
Valley.
Complete results of the
2009
Jimmy
Wood
Invitational are available on
the
web
at
www.baumspage .com

Ill .. . , .....
Enola llull
I ~ICII'IIcl an 1ltl

Found around Second
Avenue downtown Galli. polls, mixed Lab popPy.
Call740-645-09t9

$500 Reward lor lnlo.

SUMiay D ..play t 1taG

I

n .......y for ..........,.

.{1 ~

I!

-

placed in ads at
the Gallipolis
Dally Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures

Loving adutt cat will
make exeolent house
.P&amp;t. 740-446·2262 ·

Retrievers, MIF,
2 Cocker Spanktl BIIWh
F:
mini
Plns&lt;:OOr .
brown/tan,
U;
Blllan/Whlte
Chihuahua,

picked up will be
discarded.

.;!· t

1Golden

MoMyTol.ond

Nbfibb BOrrow SMart.
Contact the Ohio Divl·
ston of Financial lnstitutlons Office or Consumer
Attalrs BEFORE you reti·
nance your homo or olr
loin a 'loan, BEWARE of
~uesto tor any large
adVance · paymanto
ot
lees or insurance. Call
tho CHloe ot Consumer
AHian
toll
tree
at
1·800.278-ooo3 to leam
if the mortgage broker or

Tawmta .-

IIHUtHul Apia. 11 Jack·
52 West·
wood Or.. from $365 to
,$560.
74().446.2668.
securiry deposit required, Equal Housing Opportu·
no pots. 740-992·2218
nlty. ThiS institution io on
Equal Opportunity Pro1BR Apt, W/0 hookups, vider and Employer.
satellite TV incl. wlfent.
close to hospital. Call Groclouo Living 1 and 2
74.0.339-0362
Bedroom Apts. at Village
1bedroom apt. AD utilities Manor
and
_
Riverside
paid. Bidwell. area. No Apls. in Midd"Port. from
pats. No smoking. $600 $327
· to
$592.
per
month. 740-992·5064.
Equel
741)..441-5551
Housing Opportunity.
1 and 2 bedroom apts.,
furnished
and
unfur·
nished. and houses in
Pomeroy and Midd~rt.

Uncondllional llletime
guarantee. loCaf refer·
enees furniShed. EstabliShed 1975. Call24 Hrs.

lVIINI!D DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUIIITY SS1

Apo~to-t

• Apartments/
Tawrdaa Mt

Homo &amp; stole 9mm gun. Soplic pumping Goilla Free Lab mixed poppies
Ccntact Galtla Sllerltls Co. OH and Mason Co. an blad&lt; 4 Male 3 Fe·
Ottice
wv. Ron Evans Jack· male. 740·988·2707

M;
74 all
1085 AKC
696puppies

0..

•

~~

cc

www.cOmics.com ·

~og. :~~~~;;;

AKC Gorman Shep.pups
top. bloodline. both parents
on
. premises KIEFER BUILT,
$350.00 304-675-5724.
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE·
~~;...,~~~--: STOCK
TRAILERS,
Free to good homo. 4 LOAD
MAX
EQUIP·
·
k
puppies, LabiH us Y mtX. MENT
. TRAILERS.
3 monlhs old. Good na· CARGO
EXPRESS &amp;
:'":red=.7:4:0·:25=6-=604=1== HOMESTEADER
CAAGOICONCESSION
TRAILERS.
B+W
GOOSENECK . FLATBED
;;;~~~;;;;;; · $399Q. VIEW OUR EN·

~OH!
2009
tnc

T •·-

~;;;;;;W;;;ao:;nl;;;;;;oo:;~~~~~

2BR APT.Cioso to Hoi· Spacious
sacondilhlrd
zer Hospital on SR 160 floor
i1Pt.
overtoolc.ing
CIA. {740) 44 t-0194
. Gallipolis City Part&lt; and
Apartment available now River. L.R. den, lrg.
Aiverbend
Apts.
New Kitchen-dining area wilh ,
Haven WV. Now aCCept· all new appliances &amp;
ing
apphcations
for cupboards, 3 BR, 2
laundry
area.
HUD-subsidized,
one baths,
S900
per
month.
Call
Bedroom Apt~. Utilities
included. Based oo 30% 446·2325 or 446-442!

or adjusted income. Call
304·882·3121.
a.ailable
for Senior and Disabled
~ people.

IIIII

~~~;;~-~~

CONVENIENTLV .
LO·
CATEO
&amp;
AFFORD·
Want to buy Junk Cars, ABLE I Townhouse apart·
~
cal1740&lt;~8-0884
ments,
and'or
small
ATVa
houses tor rMt Call
740~• 4 l·l 111 1or appr•·
.5 HP Go cart like new
cation &amp; Information.

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

IGI'I ....._

:'!

::;$5!!00!!.!!7,!!40!!-3!!79~-2~31~7!!!!!~

Tara
Townhouse
ApartmanlS • . 2B~. 1.5
bath. back patio. pool,
playground, (trash, aaw·

age,
water
$4251rent.

pd.)

$425/sec.

::~;;;~;
CD~
dop. Coft 740.361-1)547

3 bay garage wi hOist,
bthnn . .tg storage area &amp;
oH~. -'me Pl . P~asanl
n.o;;~ ""'
1'11;1
location 304-675·4030.

ELLM VIEW APTS
and up. Central
HDUMS for Rent
Homo lor Sale by Owner Air. WID 'hookup, tenant ~~~~~~~:_;
4338 SA 141 . . 1 . mile pa.ys electric. EHO Elm !1'19/mo! .1 ht:d. ~ Nlth.
V1ew
.
Apts. Bank H.epo! l~!it dvwn . l!i
lrom
the
New High (304)8B2-3o 17
yt&gt;aN, Wk APR I for li~ ling s
Wt
School, Green Twp. Call ':;,;~~~~~~~ t&lt;t!0-6111·4~6 e:o. RnD
lender is properly II·
form !qulpmlnl
TIRE TRAILER
446·1210 or 339·3634 Twin Rivers Tower is ac- -:-~":""':!"'~:"""~~
8
seeks country gal censed. (This Is,
public
TORY AT
-::'~~:':"'~~:=::: tor more info and . pic· cepting appliCations IOf 3br . Gallipojis. Oep. ref.
between 65-74.
Send service
announcement Tractor 1950 Ford 8 N WWW.CA~MitHAEL·
:::
lures
go
10 walling liS! for HUO sub· NO PETS. 740 .446-n23
of the law.
Info. to: Bill, PO Box 722, from the Ohio Valley Milt cond./new $3200 tRAILERS.COM
RV' Seryice at Carmi• www.orvb.com
sldized, l ·BR apartment between 5pm &amp; 7pm fo r
Poca, WV 25159
Publishing Company)
245·5428
74D-446·3825
chael
Trailers
lor lhe elderly/disabled. more tnlonnatlon .'
~--~~-~- 740-446-3825
Hou111 For Sale
call675·.6679
Have ypu priced a John
Motorcydu
~~!~"~~~~-=~
2 bt'. house tor ·rent ·
CLASSIFI.E D INDEX
Deere
lately?
You'll
be
---:-~~~#;~;;;;
1182
Sandhill
Rd,
Pt.
Pomeroy.
· $350 Per mo.
a..gete ......................................, .................... 100 Rec...llonol V.hlciH ............................... 1000
Annou-'• .......................................... 200 ATV ............................................................. 1005
surprised! Check out our Honda rocc like new Pleasant, 3br, 2 balh. ~-~-~ili.:::o::"_.~ _74~0-·3':'39--~1~3-:4
0 ~~':::':~
111-y/Annlve....,y.................................. 205 lllcyolle ......... ,.... ,............................. ,......... 1010
usfKj
lnven1ory
at SQOO. NO-J79--2317
One Slo~. Hardwood immaculate 2BR apart.
bedroom, 1 bath, 450
Heppy Aile....................................................210 8011to/Acceeoorill .............. ,....•. ,.............. 1015
www.CAREQ.com.
Car· = = = = = = = = floors.
$153.999. MUst new ca rpet &amp; cabinets a month plus depos1t,
L011t6 Found ............................................... 215 Cemper/RVe a Trelllre ............................. 1020
michael
Equipment
See!
www.orvb.com freshly
painted
WID 740-992-2783
Memory/TIIank You .••••••..•••••••••••••••••• ~ ••••••••• 220 MotorclfCI................................................. 1025
740·446-2412
304-675-4860
hookup beaulilul country ,_-~~~--~
Noll................. " ...•.. ,;, ............................... 225 OIMr ....... '" ......... , ....:... '"'.'"' ........ ""' ........ t 030
selling 10 minutes trom 3br possible 4, bsmt. 1
...,,onole ............................................:••••••.. 230 Wont to buy ................................. .............. 1036
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain
3 Bed. 2 Bath! · Only town. Water &amp; trash paid. car
gar.
$525/mo
Wanted ........................................................ 231 Autoln0tlve ................................................ 2000
Autos
$19,900
for
listings Mus/ see to appreciate. $525/sec.
dep.
Call
llervl................, ......................................... 300 Auto Rentelr1.Aee ............... ,..................... 200li
Appllenctt Service ....................................... 302 Au too ...... ,................................................... 201 0 · For sale round ~ales
800·620·4946 ex R019
$425/mth. 614·595-7n3 .:.74..;0~-4~46,;,·~34~8~1--~~~
Alllomotlve .............................,.................... 304 Cleulc/Antlqu•• ....................................... 20t 5
of. hay $25.00 barn
OS Honda Civic 5 speed. EMC. location &amp; cond .. 2 ,o~r7~4~0·.;.64~5~-5~9~53~::-~ For Rent 3br, ttm. Brick
Building Mlltl~ele ....................................... 30e Commerclolllnduotrlel .............................. 2020
2dr. 79 ·000 k. $6600 · Call br. Lr, ba.,
kept339·0143 or
kil.
&amp; ieR lumtShed Apt sui!· Ranch AI 2 Nonh &amp; 3br.
Bu•ln..-...................................................... 301 P1rta a Acceaaorlea ..................................2025
-t743
740-256-9090
· dt'n. rm . ~mblned.
newly
h
304.675
Collrlng .................................................... .... 31 0 Spprle Ultlhy ........................................ ,..... 2030
"'
able tor 1 adult Private 1ba
AI
2
Nort
Chlld/Eidlriy Cera ..............................:••.•.••• 312 Trucke ...................................... ..... .............. 2035
:::::::-~=::--":""~:::' painted, new carpet in driveway
w/c arport. 304-895-3129
Computlra ...........·........................................ 314 Utility Troll era ........................... ,................ 2040
~F-or-sa"!'•·-ro_u_nd~b~al-es-.of 2006 Dodge 4 door, Br.. vinyl siding &amp; win- Aef/dep.
required. ,.,..---~-~--:"'
C!&gt;ntrectore .................................................. 318 Vone ............................................................2045
~
Sm. 4rm house, 1 bath,
hay $tart(nn
al $20 00 4WO · 314 ton, 36 ·000 dows, ~pdale d k.11 · cab.•· S375imo (740)446-4782
Do~lla.tJanltorl81 ...............................~ ••• 311 W•nt to buy ............................................... 20&amp;0
•
·
miles.
$13,800 OBO. nets. · appl .. screened in
stovelfrldge,
WID
304 6 7 5 57 24
IIICI~Q81 ................................................ ,..... 320
AMI E111tl So lea ...................................... 3000
also,
2001
Eclipse
Spi·
back
patio,
block
strge.
2
br.
apt.
$350
plus
dep
.
hookup,
No
smoking,
No
Ftnanctal ....................................................... 322 Cemellry Plole .......................................... 3005
dor $4200 OBO. also Old.
30H75-1238
or &amp;
u111111as.
3rd
St, pets. $350/mo $350/dep.
Health ............................... ............................ 321 Commerclat ................................................ 3010
2000
Cavalier
$2450 304·675·5596.
Racina. (740)247-4292
258 Stale St. 446·3667
HAting It Coollng ....................................... 328 Co.n domlnlume .........................................,3015
Home lmprOVIftltlnll 330 '
.
For Bale by 0WMr ..................................... 3020
OBO. 740·256·6169
~~~===== Beech Street, Middle'.l.lflUilclw··d
I111Urence ..................................................... 332 Houooelor S.Ja ......................................... 302S
1000
. port, 2 bedroom fur11nw,,,,q
Lawn S..VIctt ....................... :....................... L•nd (Ac ...gaj ....................... ................... 3030
fuel/ Oil/ Coal./
Vans
ntshed apartment, utili·
MUIIIciD•naeiDJ'IIIIIII .. ,.,H............................. 331 Lota ..................................... ,......................303&amp;
· WM/d Gaa
ties paid, no pats, de· ~
Olhlr 8ervl.................... :....... ............ :....... 338 Want to buy ................................................ 3040
~;;;;;~;.;.;:;.;;#~~ Do you haul the Ami sh ?
poslt
&amp;
references.
R•ntals
Plumblng/Electrlcal ..................................... 340 RHI Eelote Ronlele ................................... 3500
ProlwAionolllervlceo ................................. 342 Ap11rtmenttiiTownhoUNo ....................... .,3SOS
Seasoned .
Firewood Does vour church need a
Apartments/
(74 0)992·0165
~--=-~~--~
~epl11re .. ,...................,........................ ,......... 344
Comm.,.,loi .................. ,,,,,,;,,, ............. ....... 351D
Hardwood. 446·9204
12-15 seat passenger
Townhou111
For rent· 3br. all elec. all
Rootlng .......................................,.,,.,,,,,.,, ..... 341 Condomlnluma .......................................... 3115
van ? Call Am•J Carter at ·~;i;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Island View Motel has
~--..-=--~~':"
appf.\ included lg. deck &amp;
8acurlly ...................... ;................................. 3411 Houooalor Rctnt ......................................... 3520
Firewood · tor sate . $45. John
Sang
Ford Modern 1br apt. Call "Vacancies
$35.00/Night. big yard
.e 2.
.
304 1 7214
Taii/Accountlng ................. .......................... 350 L•nd {AcrHgaj ................. ,........................ 3525
Pick up load. 446·0151
740·446-9800.
740·446-3736
740·446·0406
Trevei/Entlrtelnmont .................................. 382 Slorap ............................................... ,....... 3535
Flnonclal ................... .,..................................400 Want to Rant .............................................. 3540
Milcellaneoua
Flnonclalllervlcn .......................................401 MenUiactuNd Houotng ............................. 4000
tnauranoe ...................................................... 10 Lota ...............................................·......... :....•oos
Jet Aeration Motors re·
Money to L.lnd .............................................415 Mo-a........................................................4010
paired, new &amp; rebuilt In
Eduoetlon ..................................................... 500 Ronllle ................... , ................................... 40t5
&amp;lock. Call Ron E11ans,
Buelneea TraH School ...........................505 8alae ...........................................................4020
lnotruotlon a Trelnlng ........ ,........................ S10 8uppllll ..•.••.• ,............................................ 4025
Hl00·537·9528.
......,no............................. :................. ......... S15 Want to lluy ............................................... 4030
...,10na;, .................. ....... .......................;..... 520 ~OIOrl Propl1rty ......................................... 5000
Troy/BUt
Briggs/Straton
Anlmal ....... ................... ...............................
Raaort Pra~rty tor ••la ........................... IJ025 .. 3550
watt
Anlmel&amp;upplln .......................................... eos ~eoorl Property lor ron\.. ......................... 5050
genera1or,never
used
Hor-.... ................................., ........,. ........... 810 Employment ...............................................aooo
$550 OBO. 367·0889
Ll-tock ......................................................815 Accounllngll'lnanclel ................................ a002
Pete ...............................................................e20 Admlnlatratlve1Prc&gt;,..alonat .................... 8004
While lawn tractor wi!h
Want to buy ..................................................828 Ceohlar/Ciet'k ............................................. eooe
Agriculture ................................................... 700 Chlldllitderly Care .....................................
snow blade LT 17.00
Farm Equlpmant ..........................................705 Clorlcai ....................... L ............................ 8010
$350
OBO 11';,,,.,).
Garden It Produca................................. .......710 Conotrucllon .............................................. 8012
740-367·0889.
•

Campen/ RVc &amp;
"":'!;;;;;;;;;;;;T;;;rat;;;U;;;era;;;;;;;;;;;;=
::
RV .
Service at Carmichael
Trailers
INVEN· 74D-446-3825

For Sale ay 0...

. 2&amp;3BR

..0.

W ..

3

~pecial

Edition
February 13, 2009

•

,
··

·'
,
•
•

ADS MUST BE RECEIVED
BY 5:00P.M•.

•
•

FEBRUARY 6, 2009
•

);;:;:=;:·-·-·--·---------------~----------,
Write your Message Below:
.
1

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

I

a

eoo

I

I
•

aooe

------------------------~----------1I

----------~-----------------------1
I
Mail Your Love Message and Total Amount Due To:
I
I

I
P.O. Box 729 or drop off at our office Ill Coun St .. Pomeroy. OH 45769
I
I
Name: ____________________~--------------------------I
Address: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - I
Size ofValenline:_._ _ _ _ _ _..;.._ _ _ _ _-:--------'--..;.. I
Tolal Amount Enclosed: _____..__________________ I

Don't miss out on this great opportunity to
have your business included! ·
~Jalllpolis

l9atlp Ql:ribune

446·2342

~oint _f3lrasanl

f.enistrr
875·1333

The Dally Sentinel
992·2155

Hay, FHCI, -.t, _
G rain ............................... 711

Orlvara a Delivery ..................................... 8014

Hunllng a Land ......... ,.. ,.............................. 720
want to buy ..................................................725
Merchendloo ................................................ IOO
Antlquee .......................................,...............to5

Educellon ................................................... 80t8
Electrloal Plumblng ..........................,........ 80t8
Employmant Agenclea ..............................8020
Entartllnmont ............................................ 8022

Appllance ..................................................... l10

Food Servlcei ............................................ B024

Auotlone ........................................:·.............. e15

Governmenll Fedarol Jobo .................... 8028
Help antlld· Oenerii ................................... I028

sarpln B•eement.................. ,....................l20
Collectlb........................ ..... .................... ,... t25
eomputera ... ........................ , ....................... e30
. Equlp,.,.nl/lluppllee .............................. :··---i31
FlU Mllrketo ................................................ ll40
Fuel 011 COIItiWaodiOeo ............................. 1145

Lew E.ntorcem•nt ....................................... 8030

Mllnl«&lt;anci/Domoetlo ....;........................ ao32
Manogemenl/llupervleory ........................ 8034
Machonlce .................................................. 8~38
Modtcel .......................................................8038

Furnllure ...................................................... 150

Muelc•l ....................................................... 8040

Hobby/Hunt a Sport ............;.......................ill&amp;

Per1·nm•Tompororloo .........................:... 8042

~ld'l

Advertising Deadline is Monday, February 9th

s

:=~-~=·::::::====

,

•

Friday

---

Bonlers$3.00/perad
Graphics SOC for small
Sl.OOfar larQe

i&amp;ll

b-

·

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

addedtoyourdasslftedads

-prooftl'l

leading to arrest ·a· cor\.
vicllon of person . .11\at I No Foe Unless We Wlnl
into Joltn Groen's
H!88·582·334S

•.

The Dally Sentinel

m

·
- - Da\N ..._To
PultU..tlon

74G-446-0870. Rogers

••

.

~

AHD~y•12-2

• AI llcllllllllt be preplld'

,t! .... -

~

-~------·

0 ASSIBED. LIHEAD
Mow you can heave borders and tniPhics

kitncer1yle4Jcomcost.nel

that are not

TO MY HONEY
Writing this love message
, gives me the opportunity ·
, to tell you just how much I ,
' love you and enjoy being :
your husband. I know I
sometimes don't show il
bull really do.
Happy Valentine's Day!

Happy Valenline·s Day
Cupid's arrow is straight
and true. In bringing this
though! of love to you. I'm
sorry 'about the other
night. When we had that
terrible fight.
ASenlinel love message
was a good tdea. To show
you just how much I love
you. Maria
MAY WE ALWAYS
HAVE A WONDERFUL ·,'
LIFE TOGETHER
·

-·•••Y'"*rW.V ,_Iris ctluft

-'812-2157

Dls.play Ads

Dally !a-Co~Mma• ttt00 •·""'

ONoMy

Examples of Sizes and Prices
{1\pproximutely 60 words)

l\e«iSter

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

With A Sentinel Love Message!3 INCH AD ...$21.00

Sentinel
.... C 7

It's Ti To

'

W.ebsitn;
·www.mydallytlibune.com
-mydailysenbl.com ·
-mydailyraglster.com

(740) 446-2342 .(740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

hlvebeen .

Tell Someone You Love Them
In A Special Way

• Page B3

Gtribune - Sentinel - l\e
CLASSIFIED

I

Tile liP ·scerellllrll

Taytor 13.

'IE!GS 74, NELs-VOfltC 50
Ni&amp;-'1ork
11 11 14 14 - so
Uttgs

www.mydailysentinel.com

Th~ Daily Sentinel

corner ................................................. HO

Reltaurenta ............................................... 8044

Mlecallaneouo ..............................................811S

Boll0 ...........................................................8048

want to buy ............................................ ~ .....l70

Yard Ball ..............1......................................i75

Technlcel Tr•dte .......... "'""····................... eoso

TaoUiae/Faolory ...................:..................... 8082

WaniTo

luy

Absolute Top Dollar • silver/gold
colns.
any
10Kit4K/16K gold l•w·
el~,
dental . gold, pre
1935
US
currency;
proollmlnt
sats.
dia·
monds. · MTS Coin Shop.
151 2nd Avenue. Galli·
polls. 446·2842 ·
8~:~y 1 ng larmhouse primitives,
stoneware,
pie
sates,
capinet
etc.
740-423' 5509

..

�\

www.mydllllysentl,...com

PaF Ba • h Daily Sentinel

JV 1-

Local Box Scores
21

t9

16 18 -

Jo,.,.

C&lt;XII'

Laudarmilt .0 o-2 0. Jesse
t l&gt;l! 2. Seth Welts 1 I).Q 2. -~~~
Dottwlllor 0 f.l! l . TOTALS: 26 14-24 74.
'Thlft.l&gt;cint goals: 8 !Hilt 3. Well 3.
......,. Smittt 2).
:N sa&gt;re ~ Nolo·'lllrk 34. Meigs 23.
JV loaders- NY· Nalhan Doon 9, Joe
9&lt; M: Jesse Smilh 6.

WAHAMA
WBharna
Eastern

t6 15 16 17 -

Flo..,.. 1
2. Ryan Leo 1 2~ 4, lacl1
Whitlatch 7 4-6 21, Isaac LH 8 {).() 17.
Garren Underwood t 1·2 3. TOTALS: 25
7-10 63, Throe-point goals; 6 {Whillal&lt;:h
3. ZUspan 2. Leo).
EASTERN (H): Mike Johnson 5 a-&lt; 10,
Jake lyi'!Ch 4 ()..() lO. Kelly Winebrenner
S Q-0 11. BIO)!den Pratt 3 D- t 7. Titus
~ 3 I).Q 6. Jordan Kimes o o-o o.
Tyler - · 2 o-o 5. Kyle Connery o oo 0. zam Hendrbt 1 Q..O 2. OaYon Baum
3 3-4 9. TOTALS: 26 3-8
Thr~nt
goals: 5 (Lynch 2. Wlnebrei'l(ler. Pratt. T.
Hendrix~

JV score- Eastam 41. Wahama 37.
JV loaders - W: Btiee Clark 10; E:
Jonathan Barrett 20. 1
IRONTON

54,

GALLIA AcADEMY
Gallipolis
Ironton

9
8
17 12

34

s 12 12 13 -

34
54

GALLIA ACADEMY (9-7, 3-7 SEOAL):
Quinton Nibert 3 2-3 8. Ethan Moore 0 ()..
0 0. Chris Armstrong t 3-4 5, Kyle
Mitchell 5 0·0 tO, Jonn Troester 1 0-0 2,
Nick Mftchetl2 1-2 7. Evan Wood 00..0 0.
Beau Wholey 0 D-0 0. Chuck Cai'IOrt 0 DO 0: Jordan Cornwell 0 o-0 0. Zekt
Maher 0 0-0 0. Core~ Ebel'f:lard 0 2·2 2.
TOTALS: 12 8·11 34. Three-point goals; 2
(N. Mitchell 2).
.
IRONTON (11-4, 6·2 SEOAL): Malcolm
Morton 0 2-2 2. Tim Kocl'lendoerfer 3 7-7
13. Lukas Morris 2 o-o 4. Erin Edens 0 o0 0. Micha'el Lamb 5 3-5 14, Jon
SChwek:kart 3 J.S 9, Tommy Waglnger 2
1-1 5. Travis Elliott 1 ~ 2. ROb Webb 1
0-1 2. J.P. Tavlor 1 1-2 3. Jon Nonis 0 DO 0. l 'OTALS: 18 17-21 54. Thre..poinl
goats: 1 (Lamb).
JV sc:ore - Ironton 34, Gallla Academy

32.

43. aiuflton 20
Allr. East 60. Allr. 6t,Jchtol 58
J&gt;JM. Kannont
AJu. R,.....,. 53
-

63
Day. Cl'lnstian 56, Franklin Midcletown

n.

Akr.
tAnc;hester
49, Zoarville
-Va/ley35
i&gt;IM. Nor1h 60. /IJu. Ellel43
/&gt;JM. SVSM 65. W,.., HarQng. 63
Albany 70, Glws10t llitniMo
49
'
Andover Pymatuning, Valley 81 ,
Thornpoan Lec1gemoflt S5
Ashv1Ue Teays Vllley 10, C.nel
Wl~-60

Atwa19r Wotorloa 66. Akr. Sj&gt;ritglield 6t
Avon 53. FaiNMlw 41
Barberton 63, Wodswortll ~
Barnesville 52. Brkjgeport =l6
Bedford 61. Lorain Southviow 51
Bellbrook 65. ~57
~mont Union L.oc81 54.. Clld!z Harrison

·

·

Jac:kson Jad&lt;son-MIIton 40
Berlin Hiland 79. Tuscarawas Cent Catt'l.
76
Beveny Ft. Frya 53. Vlnoent Wo1nJn 50
etoorndale ElmWO&lt;XI59, Genoa. Area Sli,
30T '

'&lt;\(AHAMA (2·9): Kyle Zerkle 5 1).() 10.
William Zuspan 2 Q-0 6. Bramion

eo.

Modir1a 59. Cle. Rlto&lt;les 5li

Bolort w. Branch 46. Conollton 45 ·
Bertin Center Westem Reserve 76. N.

63
60

o-o

BOYS BASKETBALL

Cent. 32

63, EAsTERN 60

l2 20
18 9

Columbuli To,., Academy 56. Ohto. Onl
51
Cortland Lalcev18 56. Hubbard 53
Cortfand: Maplewood 65. Warren
Lorostown 33
COShocton 74, Warsaw River View 50
CuyahOga
Falls
CVCA
58,
Gnalionhutton lnd!an Valley 35
Cuyahoga His. 73. Cardlnol

OHIO

74 .

Columbtane S5. It Urna S. Range 53
Cotumbtlna Cmtv- &amp;5. -Ridge

33

Prep Srores

. NELSONVILLE·'IORK 1&amp;7. 1-5 TVC
Ol!io): loly&lt;:haJ Mitchell 1 1).() 2. Josh
llid&lt;eroon 1 ~~ 5. Dolton Stalling 1 3-4 6,
Terrane. R»t 3 0.0 6. Daotet Kline 2' IJ..2
4. 1jl1or Goodin 2 o-o s. ....,.., Barr&lt;:k 4
C)-(1 12\ Donok Arnold 0 1).() 0. Jolv1
Oc
ttonOQ.QO, Erik-QQ.
0 Q. Corwwllunting 4 ~~ 9. JoM 0 C)-(1 Q. K'VJe ~ 0 1-2 1. Joe Frozler
0 Q-0 0. J.Q OavioO MO. TOTAL.$; 18 7·
14 50. '"'-Point gaols: 7 {Bolricl&lt; 4,
Oit;M&lt;1Qn, Staling, GoQdn).
MEIGS {4-9, 3-4 TVC Qho~ Cia~~ !!olin
0 ... 4,
Sr)1ith5 t -3 13. Galle Hill
5 1).() 13. Joco11 w.11 5 Q. I 13, COrey
HWion eN 14. Jon McCorllly 1 1-2 3.
Calob Davls 2 N 6, Comeroo Bolin 0 3-

4 3.

-GA. Austtn Wilson 8: 1: J.P

Chnoliart 45
Day.
Oakwood
Greeneview 65

-n

Easl!!lm'&amp;
Kelly

Magnolia

Sand\!

nner,
right,

~khn'S7

94, W. LIIayone R~ 56

Manon Call&gt;. 61 . ~ Chriotian 4.2
Marion Pleasant 62, Gallon Nortl'vnot 35

dribble&amp;
pasta

McArthur VIntOn County 64, Athens 62
McllonaJd 70. SalirnNtllo Soulhem 54

Wahama
defender
during

Middlebury Hts. Mklpll!ll 46, "'""' Lalle
45
N. Ridgeville 54, Rocl(y River 48

New Albany 47. Cols. Franklin Hts. 42

-

Tuesday

Glenwood 67, Po~

-

nighfs
basket·

Notte Dam4t 62. OT

New Br9f'MI'I 63. Russia S2
New Caslle. Pa. !55, '!\lungs. Ursuline 54

Jamestown

New. CQncord
CrookSv•lte 55

John

DeGraff RJVerslde 55. W. U~em
47
Dover 67. ·uMcl:ls,.iiiEI Claymont 31
DreSden n1-Valley 52 ..Pnilo 49
Dublin Cottman 48. Hilliard Darby 36
Dublin Scioto 58, We~ille Cent. 45
E. Palestine 55. New Middletown ·Spring.
36
•

Newcomerstown

68.

72,

Winebre

Valley 63, Strosburg-

Glenn

ball
game in
Tupper&amp; ·
Plains.

57 ,

Bowerston

-·r

Broo-

Conotlon Voll!oy Sl

Falls 66.
25
Mt:Kinfoy 71, UsllOI't
66
ClrnoiBd Falls 78 . .Mtherst Slaelo 66
Oregon Stril!;l174.TQI. Eremanuel BIQtist
65
Poinoavilto H8Mr; 68, Kirtland 150

Fairport Harbor Harding. 64. Richmond

Panna 55.

H1S. 61

Parmo Hts. H&lt;&gt;ly Nome 45. Modlno

!=indlay 69. TaL Whitmer 51
Fostoria St. Wendelin 63. Old Fort 45

-yo44

Gahanna l rncoln 65. Pidwringtan fll 46

-..,..46

Ga~s Mills' Gilmour 66, Independence
60
Gates "-lis Hawken 63. Chesteriand W.
Geauga59
Gibsonburg 13, Kansas Lakota 60 .
Granville 55. Plain City Jonathan Alder
43.
.

Poninsula Woodridge 61 , Garrettsville
Garti&lt;tk144
·
Perry 58, Chardon NOCL37
Pomero~ Meigs 74. Nelsa:nviii&amp;-Vork SO
Ptlrtsmouth Clay 55, Beaver Eastem 50
Powell Olentangy Uberty 56. westervme

•

~-,.w,tribme.-.

PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

.
Ea$1W00d

65.

Eastern

Elmor• ·

N. 41

Green 48. Medina Highland 46·
R~noldsburg 66, lancaster 47
Greentield McClain 66. LynChburg~lay Rossford 65, Fostoria 63
S.. Charleston . Sf; 67, Miltotd Center
48
Greenville 49. St. Marys Memorial. 3t
Fairbanks 53
Bracksviltt-Broadvt&amp;w Hts. 57. Berea 52 Grove City 59. Newarll; 56
Sarahsville Shenandoah 49. Zanesville
l!ri$tol 65. N. llloomfiekl53
Gro~e City Christian 67. Northside
Rosecrans 43
· w.va. n; E. Uverpool71
cnristian 41
· Sebring McKinley 67. Wellsvme 59
Brcoklyn 55. Oberlin 51
Groveport-Madison fit . Ftickerington Sidn.B',' 68. MiamisbUrg 60
61. Orange 48
Cant. 58
SidnfJ'I Lehman 65. Waynesfield-Goshen
Cakhlell48, l!eallsville 47
Hannibal River 57. Lore Ci~ Buckeye 43
Combridge 7t, Byosville Moadowbrook
Trai143
Spar1a Higl'lland 70, Morral Ridgedale 59
49
.
Hanoverton. United 79. lisbon David Spring. Calli. Cent. 65. N. Lewisburg
Campbell Memorial 68. Warren
Anderson 51 .
Triad
ChampiQn 50 .
Hartville Lake Cente·r Christian S9, Akr. Spring. Emmanuel Christian 63, Sidney
Can. South 84, New Pl'\iladelphia 83
Coventry 49
·
Chri$tian 23
can. Tlmken 85. Massillon lllslaw 63
Heath 66. Cots. Horizon Science 2&lt;4
Spring.
Shawnee ss: Rl~;erslde Stebbins
Corliole SS. BrookviKa 47
Hilliard Oa11idson 57, Worthington 17
Chardon 54, Jeller$01'1 Area 52
KiU)ourne 47·
Springfleid 60, New ~artiste Tecumseh
Circleville 35. Cr,iH\cotl'le (Jnioto 32
Houston 45, Bol~ins 42
38
Circle'iil!e Logan Elm SO. Chillicolhe
Hudson
64.
Akr.
Garfisld
46
St. Clairsville 63. Bellaire 46
Z1ne Trace 33
HudSon WRA 62, Newbury 32 ·
Steubenville 57. Weir. W.Va. 47
Clayton Northmont 59. Xenia SO
Hunting Valley University 63, Aurora 35
Sunbury Big Walnut 54. Oelaware~Hayes
Cle. Colhnwood 80, Cle. Jolin Marshall
Ironton 54, G_allipolls Gallia 34
46
64
Jackson Center 41 . Ft. loramie 35
Sytvania Southview 79, Oregon Clay 64
Cle. E. Tech 81 , Cia JFK 67
Johnstown Norlhridge 46, H&lt;Jwatd E. Tallmadge 74. Lodi ClovE!fleaf 51
Cle. Glenville 72. Cli. John Adams 66
Knox 40
Thomas Worthing!Qn S2, Galloway
Cle Hay 66, Cle. Eaot 50
·
Joi'lnstoWn·Monroe 46, Danville 38
Wos~and 50
C/11. Hts. 65, 'Nirnmsvtlle Hts. -48
Kotterlng
Fairmont
50.
Fairborn
45
Thornville Sheridan 76·. McCOMelsvl»e
Clo. MLK 67. Cle. Mu HajjeS 36
Kingsway Christian 59·, Mansfiel~ Morgan 43
Cle. S. 72. Cle. Uncoln W 64
Christian 51
Tol. Ottawa Hills 43, Tot. Maumee Valley
Cle. St. Martin 0&amp; Porres 44. Lawrence
32 '
lakeside Danbury 74, Northwood 45
School26
Latham Western 54,
Chillicothe Tol. ~ogers 65, Fremont Ross 39
Cle. VASU 57, Elyria Colli. 35
Huntington SO
Tol. St Francis 66, Sylvania Norlllvlow 57
Cots. ~frieentric 59. Cots. Eastmoor 57
Cots. Beechcroft 95. · CciS. Linden lewis Center Otenlanoy 54. Dublin Tontogany Ot•ego 50, l.tllbufy Lake 30
Jerome 49
Toronto 78. Madonna, w.va. 74
McKinlay 78
.
lewis
Center
Olentangy
Orange
58.
Tree of Ufe 73, Pataskalallcltlng Hts. 46
Cots. Brookhawn 72, Cots. Mifflin 66
Pataskala Watkin&amp; Memorial 27 .
Trotwood-Madison 89. lebanon 44
Cots. DeSalos 76. Cots. Read\' 52
Woshlngton C. H. 57
'TWinsburg 55, Maytiekl43
Cois. East 72. CotS. Centennial 66
.1 London
london
Madison Plains 78. c.ctaritue 60 Utiea 59, Cen-rg 51
Cots. Hamltton Twp. 64. Sheldnah
Lorain Admiral King 72, Tot. Scott 63
Varn~llion 65, Bay VIllage Bay 60
Christian 52
Lorain Clearview 69, Roc:ky River Vienna Mathews 63. Klnaman Badger 54
Cots. Hartley 84. Cots. St Charles 62
Luthoran W. 63
Wahama, W.Va. 63, ;Reedsville Ea,$tem
Cots. Independence 83. ·Cats. South 4S
60
Cols. Merion-Franklin 103. Cols. Briggs Loudonville 38. Fraderlclt-. Sf
Louisville 68, Can. Cent. Colt\. 52
Warren Howland 58, Canfield 56
59
Lowellville 66·, leetonia 52
.
waterford 61 , Wood County Christian,
Cots. Northl81'1d 55, Cots. wnetslone 40
Willoughby S. 57. W.Va 36
Cots. Upper Arlington 57. Grove City Lyndhurst Brush
OT
Westerville s: 74, Marysville 5f;i
Cent. Crossing 53
Macedonia Nordonla 65, Kent Roosevatt . Westlake 46, N. Olmsted 43
Cots. Walnut Ridge 48, Cots. West 39
Windham 65, Manilla Crestwood 61
Cots. Wellington 78, Powell Village 55
MOjlnolia, W.Va. 71 , Woodsflekl Monroe Wintersville Indian Creek 67, Richmond
Academy 52
Cent 67
Edison~

Burton-..

eo

E r'

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

Be.a.oad 49

Pemberville

·

eo.

eo.

from Page Bl
. ·
pen:enl. The Eagles -:- who
had a lour-game wmmng
streak snapped - went 26of-73 from the 11oor for 36
percent. including just 5-of21 from three-pomt mnge
for 24 percent. .
Easlem wo11 the battle on
the boards by a 34-23 margin, includin~ a 17-9 on
· edge on the otfensive glass.
EHS also had 22 turnovers.
compared lo only 19 for the
. victors.
Zach Whitlatch
led
Wahama with a game-high
· 21 points. followed by Isaac

Invite
fromPageBl
placed eighth for GAHS.
Though Gallia Academy
had the best tinishes. it was
not the only area team al the
event. River Valley tinished
16th 'overall with a team
score of 71 points. while
Meigs tln\shed 18th overall
with 69.5 points.
The Raiders· top finisher
was Nick Walson, who
placed fourth in lhe 119pound
division .
The
Marauders· top effort came

Qtribune

Lee with 17 .and Kyle
Zerkle with 10. WHS was
7-of-10 al the free throw
line for 70 percent
Kelly Winebrenner pa=:l
· the hosts with II points,
while the duo of Mike
Johnson and Jake Lynch
.
·
k
· h
chipped m .10 mar ers eac ·
The Ea!?l~s were 3-of-8 at
the chanl) stnpe for 38 percent·
and
'
Both
Eastern
Wahama. return to actl~n
Fnday mghl. Easlem Will
host Waterford m a ptvotal
TVC Hocking contest,
while. WHS will travel to
Huntmgton to battle St.
Joseph Central. Both junior
varsity game will tip-off at
6 p.m.

'

Your Way -On February 13th

H.....

Wont Adlli

Monday thru Friday
a.m. t~ 5:00 p.m.

.2INCH AD ...$15.00
40 words)

... Dey"• ... _ .
._. . .Y JR.Calbl&amp;autt e100 adn.
Por8Mwd•ya.,....,

. . rlglllto ....
tljlct or Clftcel.,

from Ernie Welsh, who also
tinished fourth in lhe heavy·
weight class.
Meigs' Colby Hayes
placed sixth in the 21 Spound division, while teammates Cody Crook ( 140)
and Tyler Brothers ( 189)
had respective efforts of
sevenlh and eighth.
·
Trent Holcomb (160) and
Allen Shillington (285) also
placed seventh and eighth.
respectively . . for River
Valley.
Complete results of the
2009
Jimmy
Wood
Invitational are available on
the
web
at
www.baumspage .com

Ill .. . , .....
Enola llull
I ~ICII'IIcl an 1ltl

Found around Second
Avenue downtown Galli. polls, mixed Lab popPy.
Call740-645-09t9

$500 Reward lor lnlo.

SUMiay D ..play t 1taG

I

n .......y for ..........,.

.{1 ~

I!

-

placed in ads at
the Gallipolis
Dally Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures

Loving adutt cat will
make exeolent house
.P&amp;t. 740-446·2262 ·

Retrievers, MIF,
2 Cocker Spanktl BIIWh
F:
mini
Plns&lt;:OOr .
brown/tan,
U;
Blllan/Whlte
Chihuahua,

picked up will be
discarded.

.;!· t

1Golden

MoMyTol.ond

Nbfibb BOrrow SMart.
Contact the Ohio Divl·
ston of Financial lnstitutlons Office or Consumer
Attalrs BEFORE you reti·
nance your homo or olr
loin a 'loan, BEWARE of
~uesto tor any large
adVance · paymanto
ot
lees or insurance. Call
tho CHloe ot Consumer
AHian
toll
tree
at
1·800.278-ooo3 to leam
if the mortgage broker or

Tawmta .-

IIHUtHul Apia. 11 Jack·
52 West·
wood Or.. from $365 to
,$560.
74().446.2668.
securiry deposit required, Equal Housing Opportu·
no pots. 740-992·2218
nlty. ThiS institution io on
Equal Opportunity Pro1BR Apt, W/0 hookups, vider and Employer.
satellite TV incl. wlfent.
close to hospital. Call Groclouo Living 1 and 2
74.0.339-0362
Bedroom Apts. at Village
1bedroom apt. AD utilities Manor
and
_
Riverside
paid. Bidwell. area. No Apls. in Midd"Port. from
pats. No smoking. $600 $327
· to
$592.
per
month. 740-992·5064.
Equel
741)..441-5551
Housing Opportunity.
1 and 2 bedroom apts.,
furnished
and
unfur·
nished. and houses in
Pomeroy and Midd~rt.

Uncondllional llletime
guarantee. loCaf refer·
enees furniShed. EstabliShed 1975. Call24 Hrs.

lVIINI!D DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUIIITY SS1

Apo~to-t

• Apartments/
Tawrdaa Mt

Homo &amp; stole 9mm gun. Soplic pumping Goilla Free Lab mixed poppies
Ccntact Galtla Sllerltls Co. OH and Mason Co. an blad&lt; 4 Male 3 Fe·
Ottice
wv. Ron Evans Jack· male. 740·988·2707

M;
74 all
1085 AKC
696puppies

0..

•

~~

cc

www.cOmics.com ·

~og. :~~~~;;;

AKC Gorman Shep.pups
top. bloodline. both parents
on
. premises KIEFER BUILT,
$350.00 304-675-5724.
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE·
~~;...,~~~--: STOCK
TRAILERS,
Free to good homo. 4 LOAD
MAX
EQUIP·
·
k
puppies, LabiH us Y mtX. MENT
. TRAILERS.
3 monlhs old. Good na· CARGO
EXPRESS &amp;
:'":red=.7:4:0·:25=6-=604=1== HOMESTEADER
CAAGOICONCESSION
TRAILERS.
B+W
GOOSENECK . FLATBED
;;;~~~;;;;;; · $399Q. VIEW OUR EN·

~OH!
2009
tnc

T •·-

~;;;;;;W;;;ao:;nl;;;;;;oo:;~~~~~

2BR APT.Cioso to Hoi· Spacious
sacondilhlrd
zer Hospital on SR 160 floor
i1Pt.
overtoolc.ing
CIA. {740) 44 t-0194
. Gallipolis City Part&lt; and
Apartment available now River. L.R. den, lrg.
Aiverbend
Apts.
New Kitchen-dining area wilh ,
Haven WV. Now aCCept· all new appliances &amp;
ing
apphcations
for cupboards, 3 BR, 2
laundry
area.
HUD-subsidized,
one baths,
S900
per
month.
Call
Bedroom Apt~. Utilities
included. Based oo 30% 446·2325 or 446-442!

or adjusted income. Call
304·882·3121.
a.ailable
for Senior and Disabled
~ people.

IIIII

~~~;;~-~~

CONVENIENTLV .
LO·
CATEO
&amp;
AFFORD·
Want to buy Junk Cars, ABLE I Townhouse apart·
~
cal1740&lt;~8-0884
ments,
and'or
small
ATVa
houses tor rMt Call
740~• 4 l·l 111 1or appr•·
.5 HP Go cart like new
cation &amp; Information.

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

IGI'I ....._

:'!

::;$5!!00!!.!!7,!!40!!-3!!79~-2~31~7!!!!!~

Tara
Townhouse
ApartmanlS • . 2B~. 1.5
bath. back patio. pool,
playground, (trash, aaw·

age,
water
$4251rent.

pd.)

$425/sec.

::~;;;~;
CD~
dop. Coft 740.361-1)547

3 bay garage wi hOist,
bthnn . .tg storage area &amp;
oH~. -'me Pl . P~asanl
n.o;;~ ""'
1'11;1
location 304-675·4030.

ELLM VIEW APTS
and up. Central
HDUMS for Rent
Homo lor Sale by Owner Air. WID 'hookup, tenant ~~~~~~~:_;
4338 SA 141 . . 1 . mile pa.ys electric. EHO Elm !1'19/mo! .1 ht:d. ~ Nlth.
V1ew
.
Apts. Bank H.epo! l~!it dvwn . l!i
lrom
the
New High (304)8B2-3o 17
yt&gt;aN, Wk APR I for li~ ling s
Wt
School, Green Twp. Call ':;,;~~~~~~~ t&lt;t!0-6111·4~6 e:o. RnD
lender is properly II·
form !qulpmlnl
TIRE TRAILER
446·1210 or 339·3634 Twin Rivers Tower is ac- -:-~":""':!"'~:"""~~
8
seeks country gal censed. (This Is,
public
TORY AT
-::'~~:':"'~~:=::: tor more info and . pic· cepting appliCations IOf 3br . Gallipojis. Oep. ref.
between 65-74.
Send service
announcement Tractor 1950 Ford 8 N WWW.CA~MitHAEL·
:::
lures
go
10 walling liS! for HUO sub· NO PETS. 740 .446-n23
of the law.
Info. to: Bill, PO Box 722, from the Ohio Valley Milt cond./new $3200 tRAILERS.COM
RV' Seryice at Carmi• www.orvb.com
sldized, l ·BR apartment between 5pm &amp; 7pm fo r
Poca, WV 25159
Publishing Company)
245·5428
74D-446·3825
chael
Trailers
lor lhe elderly/disabled. more tnlonnatlon .'
~--~~-~- 740-446-3825
Hou111 For Sale
call675·.6679
Have ypu priced a John
Motorcydu
~~!~"~~~~-=~
2 bt'. house tor ·rent ·
CLASSIFI.E D INDEX
Deere
lately?
You'll
be
---:-~~~#;~;;;;
1182
Sandhill
Rd,
Pt.
Pomeroy.
· $350 Per mo.
a..gete ......................................, .................... 100 Rec...llonol V.hlciH ............................... 1000
Annou-'• .......................................... 200 ATV ............................................................. 1005
surprised! Check out our Honda rocc like new Pleasant, 3br, 2 balh. ~-~-~ili.:::o::"_.~ _74~0-·3':'39--~1~3-:4
0 ~~':::':~
111-y/Annlve....,y.................................. 205 lllcyolle ......... ,.... ,............................. ,......... 1010
usfKj
lnven1ory
at SQOO. NO-J79--2317
One Slo~. Hardwood immaculate 2BR apart.
bedroom, 1 bath, 450
Heppy Aile....................................................210 8011to/Acceeoorill .............. ,....•. ,.............. 1015
www.CAREQ.com.
Car· = = = = = = = = floors.
$153.999. MUst new ca rpet &amp; cabinets a month plus depos1t,
L011t6 Found ............................................... 215 Cemper/RVe a Trelllre ............................. 1020
michael
Equipment
See!
www.orvb.com freshly
painted
WID 740-992-2783
Memory/TIIank You .••••••..•••••••••••••••••• ~ ••••••••• 220 MotorclfCI................................................. 1025
740·446-2412
304-675-4860
hookup beaulilul country ,_-~~~--~
Noll................. " ...•.. ,;, ............................... 225 OIMr ....... '" ......... , ....:... '"'.'"' ........ ""' ........ t 030
selling 10 minutes trom 3br possible 4, bsmt. 1
...,,onole ............................................:••••••.. 230 Wont to buy ................................. .............. 1036
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain
3 Bed. 2 Bath! · Only town. Water &amp; trash paid. car
gar.
$525/mo
Wanted ........................................................ 231 Autoln0tlve ................................................ 2000
Autos
$19,900
for
listings Mus/ see to appreciate. $525/sec.
dep.
Call
llervl................, ......................................... 300 Auto Rentelr1.Aee ............... ,..................... 200li
Appllenctt Service ....................................... 302 Au too ...... ,................................................... 201 0 · For sale round ~ales
800·620·4946 ex R019
$425/mth. 614·595-7n3 .:.74..;0~-4~46,;,·~34~8~1--~~~
Alllomotlve .............................,.................... 304 Cleulc/Antlqu•• ....................................... 20t 5
of. hay $25.00 barn
OS Honda Civic 5 speed. EMC. location &amp; cond .. 2 ,o~r7~4~0·.;.64~5~-5~9~53~::-~ For Rent 3br, ttm. Brick
Building Mlltl~ele ....................................... 30e Commerclolllnduotrlel .............................. 2020
2dr. 79 ·000 k. $6600 · Call br. Lr, ba.,
kept339·0143 or
kil.
&amp; ieR lumtShed Apt sui!· Ranch AI 2 Nonh &amp; 3br.
Bu•ln..-...................................................... 301 P1rta a Acceaaorlea ..................................2025
-t743
740-256-9090
· dt'n. rm . ~mblned.
newly
h
304.675
Collrlng .................................................... .... 31 0 Spprle Ultlhy ........................................ ,..... 2030
"'
able tor 1 adult Private 1ba
AI
2
Nort
Chlld/Eidlriy Cera ..............................:••.•.••• 312 Trucke ...................................... ..... .............. 2035
:::::::-~=::--":""~:::' painted, new carpet in driveway
w/c arport. 304-895-3129
Computlra ...........·........................................ 314 Utility Troll era ........................... ,................ 2040
~F-or-sa"!'•·-ro_u_nd~b~al-es-.of 2006 Dodge 4 door, Br.. vinyl siding &amp; win- Aef/dep.
required. ,.,..---~-~--:"'
C!&gt;ntrectore .................................................. 318 Vone ............................................................2045
~
Sm. 4rm house, 1 bath,
hay $tart(nn
al $20 00 4WO · 314 ton, 36 ·000 dows, ~pdale d k.11 · cab.•· S375imo (740)446-4782
Do~lla.tJanltorl81 ...............................~ ••• 311 W•nt to buy ............................................... 20&amp;0
•
·
miles.
$13,800 OBO. nets. · appl .. screened in
stovelfrldge,
WID
304 6 7 5 57 24
IIICI~Q81 ................................................ ,..... 320
AMI E111tl So lea ...................................... 3000
also,
2001
Eclipse
Spi·
back
patio,
block
strge.
2
br.
apt.
$350
plus
dep
.
hookup,
No
smoking,
No
Ftnanctal ....................................................... 322 Cemellry Plole .......................................... 3005
dor $4200 OBO. also Old.
30H75-1238
or &amp;
u111111as.
3rd
St, pets. $350/mo $350/dep.
Health ............................... ............................ 321 Commerclat ................................................ 3010
2000
Cavalier
$2450 304·675·5596.
Racina. (740)247-4292
258 Stale St. 446·3667
HAting It Coollng ....................................... 328 Co.n domlnlume .........................................,3015
Home lmprOVIftltlnll 330 '
.
For Bale by 0WMr ..................................... 3020
OBO. 740·256·6169
~~~===== Beech Street, Middle'.l.lflUilclw··d
I111Urence ..................................................... 332 Houooelor S.Ja ......................................... 302S
1000
. port, 2 bedroom fur11nw,,,,q
Lawn S..VIctt ....................... :....................... L•nd (Ac ...gaj ....................... ................... 3030
fuel/ Oil/ Coal./
Vans
ntshed apartment, utili·
MUIIIciD•naeiDJ'IIIIIII .. ,.,H............................. 331 Lota ..................................... ,......................303&amp;
· WM/d Gaa
ties paid, no pats, de· ~
Olhlr 8ervl.................... :....... ............ :....... 338 Want to buy ................................................ 3040
~;;;;;~;.;.;:;.;;#~~ Do you haul the Ami sh ?
poslt
&amp;
references.
R•ntals
Plumblng/Electrlcal ..................................... 340 RHI Eelote Ronlele ................................... 3500
ProlwAionolllervlceo ................................. 342 Ap11rtmenttiiTownhoUNo ....................... .,3SOS
Seasoned .
Firewood Does vour church need a
Apartments/
(74 0)992·0165
~--=-~~--~
~epl11re .. ,...................,........................ ,......... 344
Comm.,.,loi .................. ,,,,,,;,,, ............. ....... 351D
Hardwood. 446·9204
12-15 seat passenger
Townhou111
For rent· 3br. all elec. all
Rootlng .......................................,.,,.,,,,,.,, ..... 341 Condomlnluma .......................................... 3115
van ? Call Am•J Carter at ·~;i;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Island View Motel has
~--..-=--~~':"
appf.\ included lg. deck &amp;
8acurlly ...................... ;................................. 3411 Houooalor Rctnt ......................................... 3520
Firewood · tor sate . $45. John
Sang
Ford Modern 1br apt. Call "Vacancies
$35.00/Night. big yard
.e 2.
.
304 1 7214
Taii/Accountlng ................. .......................... 350 L•nd {AcrHgaj ................. ,........................ 3525
Pick up load. 446·0151
740·446-9800.
740·446-3736
740·446·0406
Trevei/Entlrtelnmont .................................. 382 Slorap ............................................... ,....... 3535
Flnonclal ................... .,..................................400 Want to Rant .............................................. 3540
Milcellaneoua
Flnonclalllervlcn .......................................401 MenUiactuNd Houotng ............................. 4000
tnauranoe ...................................................... 10 Lota ...............................................·......... :....•oos
Jet Aeration Motors re·
Money to L.lnd .............................................415 Mo-a........................................................4010
paired, new &amp; rebuilt In
Eduoetlon ..................................................... 500 Ronllle ................... , ................................... 40t5
&amp;lock. Call Ron E11ans,
Buelneea TraH School ...........................505 8alae ...........................................................4020
lnotruotlon a Trelnlng ........ ,........................ S10 8uppllll ..•.••.• ,............................................ 4025
Hl00·537·9528.
......,no............................. :................. ......... S15 Want to lluy ............................................... 4030
...,10na;, .................. ....... .......................;..... 520 ~OIOrl Propl1rty ......................................... 5000
Troy/BUt
Briggs/Straton
Anlmal ....... ................... ...............................
Raaort Pra~rty tor ••la ........................... IJ025 .. 3550
watt
Anlmel&amp;upplln .......................................... eos ~eoorl Property lor ron\.. ......................... 5050
genera1or,never
used
Hor-.... ................................., ........,. ........... 810 Employment ...............................................aooo
$550 OBO. 367·0889
Ll-tock ......................................................815 Accounllngll'lnanclel ................................ a002
Pete ...............................................................e20 Admlnlatratlve1Prc&gt;,..alonat .................... 8004
While lawn tractor wi!h
Want to buy ..................................................828 Ceohlar/Ciet'k ............................................. eooe
Agriculture ................................................... 700 Chlldllitderly Care .....................................
snow blade LT 17.00
Farm Equlpmant ..........................................705 Clorlcai ....................... L ............................ 8010
$350
OBO 11';,,,.,).
Garden It Produca................................. .......710 Conotrucllon .............................................. 8012
740-367·0889.
•

Campen/ RVc &amp;
"":'!;;;;;;;;;;;;T;;;rat;;;U;;;era;;;;;;;;;;;;=
::
RV .
Service at Carmichael
Trailers
INVEN· 74D-446-3825

For Sale ay 0...

. 2&amp;3BR

..0.

W ..

3

~pecial

Edition
February 13, 2009

•

,
··

·'
,
•
•

ADS MUST BE RECEIVED
BY 5:00P.M•.

•
•

FEBRUARY 6, 2009
•

);;:;:=;:·-·-·--·---------------~----------,
Write your Message Below:
.
1

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

I

a

eoo

I

I
•

aooe

------------------------~----------1I

----------~-----------------------1
I
Mail Your Love Message and Total Amount Due To:
I
I

I
P.O. Box 729 or drop off at our office Ill Coun St .. Pomeroy. OH 45769
I
I
Name: ____________________~--------------------------I
Address: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - I
Size ofValenline:_._ _ _ _ _ _..;.._ _ _ _ _-:--------'--..;.. I
Tolal Amount Enclosed: _____..__________________ I

Don't miss out on this great opportunity to
have your business included! ·
~Jalllpolis

l9atlp Ql:ribune

446·2342

~oint _f3lrasanl

f.enistrr
875·1333

The Dally Sentinel
992·2155

Hay, FHCI, -.t, _
G rain ............................... 711

Orlvara a Delivery ..................................... 8014

Hunllng a Land ......... ,.. ,.............................. 720
want to buy ..................................................725
Merchendloo ................................................ IOO
Antlquee .......................................,...............to5

Educellon ................................................... 80t8
Electrloal Plumblng ..........................,........ 80t8
Employmant Agenclea ..............................8020
Entartllnmont ............................................ 8022

Appllance ..................................................... l10

Food Servlcei ............................................ B024

Auotlone ........................................:·.............. e15

Governmenll Fedarol Jobo .................... 8028
Help antlld· Oenerii ................................... I028

sarpln B•eement.................. ,....................l20
Collectlb........................ ..... .................... ,... t25
eomputera ... ........................ , ....................... e30
. Equlp,.,.nl/lluppllee .............................. :··---i31
FlU Mllrketo ................................................ ll40
Fuel 011 COIItiWaodiOeo ............................. 1145

Lew E.ntorcem•nt ....................................... 8030

Mllnl«&lt;anci/Domoetlo ....;........................ ao32
Manogemenl/llupervleory ........................ 8034
Machonlce .................................................. 8~38
Modtcel .......................................................8038

Furnllure ...................................................... 150

Muelc•l ....................................................... 8040

Hobby/Hunt a Sport ............;.......................ill&amp;

Per1·nm•Tompororloo .........................:... 8042

~ld'l

Advertising Deadline is Monday, February 9th

s

:=~-~=·::::::====

,

•

Friday

---

Bonlers$3.00/perad
Graphics SOC for small
Sl.OOfar larQe

i&amp;ll

b-

·

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

addedtoyourdasslftedads

-prooftl'l

leading to arrest ·a· cor\.
vicllon of person . .11\at I No Foe Unless We Wlnl
into Joltn Groen's
H!88·582·334S

•.

The Dally Sentinel

m

·
- - Da\N ..._To
PultU..tlon

74G-446-0870. Rogers

••

.

~

AHD~y•12-2

• AI llcllllllllt be preplld'

,t! .... -

~

-~------·

0 ASSIBED. LIHEAD
Mow you can heave borders and tniPhics

kitncer1yle4Jcomcost.nel

that are not

TO MY HONEY
Writing this love message
, gives me the opportunity ·
, to tell you just how much I ,
' love you and enjoy being :
your husband. I know I
sometimes don't show il
bull really do.
Happy Valentine's Day!

Happy Valenline·s Day
Cupid's arrow is straight
and true. In bringing this
though! of love to you. I'm
sorry 'about the other
night. When we had that
terrible fight.
ASenlinel love message
was a good tdea. To show
you just how much I love
you. Maria
MAY WE ALWAYS
HAVE A WONDERFUL ·,'
LIFE TOGETHER
·

-·•••Y'"*rW.V ,_Iris ctluft

-'812-2157

Dls.play Ads

Dally !a-Co~Mma• ttt00 •·""'

ONoMy

Examples of Sizes and Prices
{1\pproximutely 60 words)

l\e«iSter

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

With A Sentinel Love Message!3 INCH AD ...$21.00

Sentinel
.... C 7

It's Ti To

'

W.ebsitn;
·www.mydallytlibune.com
-mydailysenbl.com ·
-mydailyraglster.com

(740) 446-2342 .(740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

hlvebeen .

Tell Someone You Love Them
In A Special Way

• Page B3

Gtribune - Sentinel - l\e
CLASSIFIED

I

Tile liP ·scerellllrll

Taytor 13.

'IE!GS 74, NELs-VOfltC 50
Ni&amp;-'1ork
11 11 14 14 - so
Uttgs

www.mydailysentinel.com

Th~ Daily Sentinel

corner ................................................. HO

Reltaurenta ............................................... 8044

Mlecallaneouo ..............................................811S

Boll0 ...........................................................8048

want to buy ............................................ ~ .....l70

Yard Ball ..............1......................................i75

Technlcel Tr•dte .......... "'""····................... eoso

TaoUiae/Faolory ...................:..................... 8082

WaniTo

luy

Absolute Top Dollar • silver/gold
colns.
any
10Kit4K/16K gold l•w·
el~,
dental . gold, pre
1935
US
currency;
proollmlnt
sats.
dia·
monds. · MTS Coin Shop.
151 2nd Avenue. Galli·
polls. 446·2842 ·
8~:~y 1 ng larmhouse primitives,
stoneware,
pie
sates,
capinet
etc.
740-423' 5509

..

�~~TheD:m~·~y~~f~ntinJ·~e~l~~~~~~~~:=~w~~l~~.miy~de~ily=~~t~inM~-~~~~~~~~ii~iiiiinW~~~~~~~~daii~i~iiiiii~i~iii

I

----

.-

~---

\If dna ~It~ 4, 2009
ALLFfOOP

..... Fllrlda ~ ...
..... "' Unot Ooolots.

;

REA Crossword Puaale

- ~·
ZERO
DOWN!-....,
WiH de

ontfils~

lmptov-.
... . NPICY &amp; Bad Cr&lt;odil
"at a. ~. • end 5 t~«~­
~

a'i'aJtable_

b -as low

'NO 4413384

alA on pnvaM lOt on

c. •• ,.

Ret, Range
~...
loJG tur- '

-

No

WiOQI5

BANKS

•

Pel$.

:oNSTRUCDONI

presents:
"Women &amp; Hun Di•

I

.Fot or Sale. t4x70
aw 2 boltl. Sale $1 s.ooo

-

+ SSOO'dep.
740-245-0096
or

24$-9491

llnir&gt;d -

actt~

in ?t.

OWNER Fl·
AVAILABLE .

11W1Ce

• Fl'ft' Estimates

&amp;p.m.

C'"ustum Hmut: tluiklin~

(740)443571)
~

M

living-

8A

on

011~.

oil
~,.-h.,tngd. si'ludl t"ngint"
repair.
We S.en ·il'e and
"inte-ritc t~.-...~ts MJ

Owner wiU Finance

C\orical

Cal to be Pre OualiHed
740-423-~728

Help Wanted· o.-..1

MCM.,fltm••/

·GcN't ft.nds
Sec· ;;;=..;;,;.=;;;;i;;=;;;;; L;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;:~;;;.:
h1 time buyens who .in Gallipolis seeks outgo- ond Ave. Gall. Oh10. ·Ap· Community Mgr. needed 11
own land Or family land ing custom.;tr service.._ per· ply in person Mqn-Fri. . 1or .32 unit !amity RD
.0: dwn no closing cost soh tor their growin~ 9am-3ptn
property located in Ga.Hi·

(7401 'J'll·Sl-14
Mnn·Fri
·~: liO am . 4:.)0 pm

your land is your . cr&amp;dil dental practice'. Respon- ~-.--:~....""":~~ polis.

Wt uppndatt .wur

877'i10.2577

slble

"The Proctor:ville
Oifterence•
$1 and a deed is all YO.U
noed to own.vour dream
home. Call .Now!

for

schedule.

multi-provider Local

new

patient

and

maintaining

all

accounts, payable re·
cords and assisting ac·
counting dept. and sales
staff. Must have high
school diploma and accounting
eMperlence.
Please send resume to
CLA Box t05. Ann.: AP
Cieri&lt;. P.O Box 469.

GaHipolis, Ohio 45631

on
SAVINGS

Home

Heatth

Noe

Hiring

marketing

prograrn and STAN's. CNA's, Home
reception duties. Must oe ·Health Aides. Will proorganized. dress prOtes- wide training. If inlerestoo

siooally. and posses ••·
cenent
oommunication
''"Is. ~ntal e•peli&lt;moe
~~~~~~== with Oentrilc preteried.
but not reqUired. Protes·
sional training prowided.
Interested parties should
e-mail their conlidential
res ume ' and references
to
kygerdd!;OiiYe .com.
Gallipolis company seek· No phone, fax, or in per·
ing individual for compil- son inlerruptioos please.

·~ng

A~ncy

call740-441· 1377
Satellite lnstaiiOfS Be·
come part 01 our installation team tor Dish Network . FIT. ·benefits. lr a•n'"9· 00 · truck &amp; work supplied. Strong worlc. ethiC
and willingness to learn
Is req'd. Must pass dri•·
ing &amp; drug test No tela·
nies. CaH 866-e66-862G
Option ·
8.
M-F

....,======.,
;
.•.=30-S!&gt;-o:m....~~~--

..;i;uci;i_ii;.;;;n;;;;;;;;lilili
..;;;;;;;;;iE;i;

Sponawriter

Prefer · prev1ous
property
. management
experience.
• prqterably
with a Rural o.tveloprnent property. Must 00
experienced w1th ottice COURT OF COMMON once a WMII; for tfvtl
oqu~ment, have relial&gt;le PLEAS
MEIGS conatcutlv. -'!1, or
transponahon. be de· COUNTY, OHIO
they might be denltd I

pend!lble and like work·
mg with the public.
Schedule has some 11ex1bllity and is part-time
needing somoone lor
24+ hours per week.
Company otter; competl·
'"e salary. health bone·
f1ts. paid vacation and
s&lt;:k loa.,. and 401 K.
compensatio&lt;1 can also
Include · hous'~ on-site 11
desired. P,.;;;:, conlacl:
740.384-6538 to schod·
ule ,an appointment or
submit rosurnes. to: .•

The Ohio Valley Publish·
Gallipolis Career College ing Co .. IS s&amp;eking rnoti1$ seeking part-time invated, people-orient&amp;d
structors in mathematics individual ti till a 11 acancy Commun ~y Manager
•• n . Mamv·
~- · in the news depr. as a • cio Sherry House
a,·!\,I• accounl1'1:w·
matics . candidates must
Sponswrfter. The sueWells Ma'nor Apartments
460 S. Michigan A•e.
h
Me t rs o~ree
"'" a
s•
••
cesstul candidate will
tn Mathematics. ACCOUnt· cower hi.gh school athlet- .:;W;;;e;;;llsi!to;;;n;;
. O!.h;;;k&gt;;,4;;;56;;;~;;;2...,,.,
~
10
lng
oandldates
must
s in the area tor the .
M--L·nico
have a Bachelors De- datly """'ilion ot the news·
M:nU
A
~
gree

In

ccounllng.

paper. as well as assist

Pleese e-mail resumes
with the prOduction ol.
to jdanickiOgaRi~lisca·
sports pages. Excellent
reercollege.edu or tax to · wr"ing and English skills,
4 41 4
46· 2 . No Phooe
p!lotography skills and
Calls Please.
know~ge ol desktop
publishing are sought
GooeniiMIII &amp; hdwal
The position is lull time.
40 hours a weak. wilh
Jollt
benelirs: lntarestod parties can send resumes to
POST OFFICE NOW
KOYin Kel~. Managing
HIRING a¥g. Pay $20hu Editor. Ohio Valley Pub·
or
$571&lt;/yr,
includes
lishlng Co., 825 Third
Fed.Ben. OT. Plaoe by
Ave .. Gaii!Jolls, Ohio
adSource, not affiliated
45631 "'kkellyOrny·
with USPS who hires .
dallytribune.C(Im. No
t ·866-403-2582
phone calls please.

S&amp;l"'llice TechniCian posi-

tlon a¥Ailable '"' dtesel
Experl·
enoe
neoessary.
Health/Rellrement
· &amp;
aanelils . Fax resume to
741J.446·9t04 or e·mail
to LLC@CAREQ COM
and , hydraulics.

Meclcal
Looal
Home
Health
Agency
now
hiring
STNA·s. CNA·s. Home
Health Aides and PCA·s
· tor Metgs and Albany ar. eas. It Interested please
call 740·592-2~44

CI dASSIFIEDS
EMPLOYMENT

US Bank National Aa·
soclatiOn, aa Trut...
for MASTR Attel
Betked
Securitlea Trust, 2006HE2

heerlng In thla ·
Lerntr. Sampaon 6.
Rothfuss
Attorneys for Plaintiff
P.O. Box 5480
Cincinnati, OH 45201·

CARrENHR
S[RVIC E

CAll /IS TOIMY
FOR RfT)(JCED
WfNTfR RATES
DEC. ·FEB

cio Wells Fargo Bank. 5480
Addlthmt •
N.A.
(513) 241-3100
Plaintiff,
attyemall@llarlew.com
•YI•
(1) 28, (2) 4, 11
Goldie A. Wolfe, et al.
Defendants.
Case No.: oBCV189
Public Notice
,
Judge: Fred W. Crow
Legal Notice In Suite The 2001 Annual Flnlnfor Foreclosure of clal' Report ol the VII·
Mortgage
llge of Middleport It
Edward B. Wolle,. Jr.. eve liable lor public In· ·
whose l11t knoWin ad· apectlon at the Fiscal
dress Ia 459 Adlmi Olllcer'a Glllc:e In City
StrHt, Nelsonville, OH Hell at 237 Race Stree~
"~
45764, 1nd the uno Middleport, .....lo 45760
known heirs, &lt;Mvl-t, bet- the houra ot 9
KepiU('l'Dil'nl
M d
W' d
d
legit-. executors. •m tnd 4 pm on •Y
111 ~tws un
ad m ·1n I 1 t r 1 tor 8, through Friday.
spouses end aatlgna 12) 4, 5, 8
Vinyl Siding
and the unknown
SpeciuHsts.I..~D
guardians of minor - - - - - - - (7411) 742·2563
and/or
Incompetent
Publ.l c Notice
heirs ol Edward . B. _:.:..:..:..;:.::...:.:......:..:..__
'Siding • Vi'IYI
Wolfe, Jr.. ell of whose PUBLIC NOTICE
·windows • Metal
residences ere un· NOTICE: Ia hereby
und Shingle Roofs
known tnd cannot by given that on Saturday,
, llt..:ks , Additions
reaaoneble diligence February .7, 2009 at
be ascertained, will 10:00 a.m., 1 public
•tJoctricul
t11ke notice that on the sale will beheld at 211
•l'lumbing
16th dey of December. W.
Second
St .. '
• Pole Hoirns
2008, us Bank National Pomeroy, Ohio. The .__ _ _ _ _ _..
Association, 11
Farmers Bank and Sav·
Trustee lor MASTR · lnga ·company Is sell·
Aaaet Backed Securl· lng for cash In t1and or
ties Tl'uat, 2006-HE2 c/o certified check the lol·
Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. lowing collateral :
flied Its Complaint In 2002 Mercury Sable
New Homes,
the Common Pleas 1MEFM50U02A641787
Remodeling,
Court ol Meigs County. 2,000 Pontiac Grand
Additions,
OhlolnCeseNo.P
r
I
•
08CV189,
on
the 1G2WJ52JWF291437 .
Garages, Pole
The Farmers Bank and
docket of
Buildings, Roofs,
the Court, and the ob· Savings
Company,
Siding and more.'
)eel and demand lorr• Pomeroy, Ohio, re·
lief of which pleading servea the right to bid
Is to foreclose the lien at this sallt, and to
·Drywall,
of plalntiH'a mortgaga withdraw tho above
recorded upon the lol, collateral prior to aale.
Kitchens, Baths
lowing described reel Further, Tha Farmaro
estele to wit:
·
Bank and Savings
Property
Address: Compeny rosarves the
2976 Third Street SR rlghtto reJect any or all
124, Syracuse, · OH bids submlttod.
45n9, end being more Tho above descrlbsd
particularly da 0crlbad collateral will be sold
In plalntiH's mortgage " aa Is-where Is", with
recorded In Mortgage no ••proaaod or lm·
•
Book 226, pago 617, of plied warranty given.
this County Recorder's For further Information,
We do driveways
or lor an appointment
Olllce.
The above named de· to Inspect collateral,
WeHaul ·
landant Is required to prior to aala data con·
answer within twenty· tact Cyndla or Ken at Limestone· Gravel
eight (28) days altar .992·21 36.
Dirt· Ag·Lime
last publication, which (2) 4, 5, 6
740-985·4421
shall be publlahad

·

1

Dealor: Soudt

Opening lead' • K

FRANKl EARNEST

Splinter bids:
the what and when
o.. or tilt most valuoble slam-bic;king
tools is tilt splint9f l&gt;id. · which was
by Oolottly 1luscott in 1964.
This IS 1t1 unusuaiiUIIIIIIIlot
a good Iii lot partner·s lasl-tlicl suit. at
least gamt 'II!Jes. and a ~nglel&lt;ln (O&lt;
voi&lt;ll in tilt Nl named But thel8 ••
some restric:li&lt;lns oo when 1')&lt;1, the
r~. rriWI make a splintet bicl. 'lllu
sh&lt;luld """ spltnt&amp;r with a singlel&lt;ln
king (partner migltt. not evaluate Ns
holding in tliat suit corr0011)'): Wid 100
$llOUid try to avoid doing so with a sir&gt;
9'tton ace (lot tho same reason). Have ·
your h9&gt; cards out.ide 100r $hort suit.
(Tomorrow, I will give~ lnlo&lt;·
motion on whiclt juoftp. 010 splintets.)
Todoy's deel highlightS the ~ or
splin,.,._ WSoOJtti knows North has lour
~ and • dtcenl hand. he willlet
filii potential loWs: one $lladt llhe
ace), one heart (the king), two dillff'IOtlds
(the ~ng and queen), and ooe c:lub (the
ace). However, wllen South loarns'lroni
Norlh's lour-diamond ~esponse that
CIPHER
North has a ~nglel&lt;ln (O&lt; voi&lt;l) diamond.
by lui$ Clmpos
South·s loser count goes down to three
Clltbnry 0~ ~W"S . . tttileCI.I!om MI!On3 Oy ~S DlllPII. Past n CfMII'It
because he oan run his &lt;:Iamond tows
E.:t~ itttt! 1n tr11 ~ strd$1Qr anQI1'It(
on the board. And two doses ol
rooay·s Giw: o 91M11s '
Blackwood Uncol'tf the $l)adt act, cluO
" WNKFBY PNI JNHV WXK TFIK DXB Fl,
aoe and heart ~ng. IRemembor, North
would not splinter with a ~ngleton dia·
rnonti king.) So South leaps to seven SFK OXB IIKIVCD NWH lUI XPW

""""""'*"

Ha!'d¥ood ~Mi'Y Aid Fll••
www.d · t aaci••tla b;

.740.446.9200

IT WUZN'T
N9f'IE OF
EM--

2459 St. Rt. 160 • C.allpnlk

· CELEBRITY

Racine, Ohio 740.247-2019
Owners:
Jon Van Meter 6
Paul Rowe

,.~,I. t&gt;IW'i.

Cell: 740-41 W047
email:
Jrthlldfrmiltaol.com

AA.E. Tll.t'{

,..toltlil.t.E.R-il.t.t'{'Rt il-lt~
~E ~ U..C.I.t. OTII.tR!

$tl8des

OL\:JalOR

The only danger is a 4.0 trump spl~ . To
be sale. South &lt;:ashes his ijng lirst,
ketplng tine honor in each hand to capo
lure the jack. When East discards,
declarer plays a $1)8de to dummy's nine,
takes the ace. leads oV..Io h1s king. Wid
dalm~
·

ZNGOIIWYII , NWH Ill KZY RVBO IJIICV

~Astro-

·I HAl DAILY C'. ~ "0
1{ - ft "C ~ C, ~ \YORO
PUULIR \:)~ ~QU ~'I'($J I.:.• &lt;.{' &gt;) GAMI
- - - - : - - - !di&gt;•d by CIA Y R. ?OU.~N

W~!f!,
til1'11'· "''"" rru~en. tRacb "''
Pm1

i~

t..,.

lOlled by them. When you take new .
roads. you will diSCOVilr all kinds of new

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb.

R.L. HOLLON

MIKE W. MARCUM, MIER

TRUCKING.
Dump truck

740-985-4141

*72~9

sore

'1'01.1 REALL'I' DON'T LOOK
'/Ell( COMFORTABLE, SilL

H&amp;
Guttering
Seamless Gutters
Roollng, Siding, Gutlers
tnwrod &amp; Bofided

Wflll ' t

drai11 ?
d

t

M8-811·11M

a twinkling ot an eye.

GEMINI (May 21·June 20) - When
operallng In an unfamiliar arena , get •
c!Qr understanding ol what is expect&amp;d

:cowandBOY

Advertise in
this space for

EVERYONE'S WAY
TOO SELF·A8SORB£P.

$35.00 per
month

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

ol you. lWo .thlngs could happen II you
don't: Vou could embarrass yourse«. 1nd
~ou

WE fiLL THINK WE'RE
THE CENTEJ! OF OUR
OWN UNIVERS£5. 00 IT
KEEPS US FROM EVER
FULLY VISUAUZING
THE REfit. WOill.D
AROUND US.

could make a major mistake.

CANCER (June 21.July 22) - Don't
make ahy major cJacislons on your own
until you've hadl a chance fo talk to the

ljt1or1 ol · th~

.f

lor.'!'l four s!mple worch

Q X T R·E C
1

1I r I I

f-.,-.;.,--,;--r-r-1
•

.

_

.

.

.._,,..__.....__,_,...~._.,_..;

Y 0 RE F

other people Involved. There's a strong
the facts
and yOur actions will be wrong.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)- Someone whO
has shown little gratitude tor what you did
tor" him or her previously miY make a
new request of you. Oo what you wanl,
hut don't expect a dlffe:rant em:llng
VIMO (Aug. 23,Sept. 22)- '!\lu·re gen·

A~1DON
"'~
t-"1':'-.,r'TI- .:

cauUou~

I

P~INI NUMBE~ ED
l!lftRS IN SQUAm ·

9

UNSCRAMI\t.E

rm

ARLO &amp;JANIS

t

Individual

Should

responses wltt\ln a rtlallonth lp and you
to

740-367-0544
Free Eallmlltl
740-367-0536

accommodate, dol'l'l get

stake. don't be awed by- 8lllerlor lrJpplng.s or by thol&amp; who roar the louaeat.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) - 'rour
generous nature can be a detriment If
you let yoursalt be lur«t Into a position
where you art txpected to give mort
than you can 1Hord, tt1htr emotionally or

TriRemoval
mming

Stanley Tree-

&amp;

' Prmnpl and Quulity
Wnrk

tlnanelanv. 8e 'rullstlc . •
CAPR ICORN (Ooo. 22-Jan. 1Q) Getting cooperation Cln be a problem,
but you can set 1n example and gain
need ed support. Conversely, It :;ou're ret ·
Jcent to make any comproml.. s. nothing
will be accompllthed.

•Reasonable Rates
&gt;~~Insured
' Experienced
References Available!
Cull Gary Stanley®
740-591·8044

SOUPTONUTZ

c

PWS me-~·.- a GeeD
Scui!Ce OF fl•eR···

~'f.\ 'A

Advertise
in this space for
$70 per month
I.

I

'

·---------·- -------.

l ,. ll

I' I

111111111

Agency - Covet - Eight - Shrimp - THfNG to MEET
Granny always told me that rt1oney was a horrid thing
to follow, but a ~harming TIUNG to MEET.

there bt some Intense emotional
fore~

I

SCRA!-1·LEr5 ANSWERS 213109

your blctc up over II. A rul breakup
could reSult.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. :?~) - Ju.!ll
because someone Ia •troog.wllled and
forcolul doesn't mean lf\Aithe Individual
Is right. 11 a serlou• conlkltrallon Is at

Local Con1r•ctor

rht chucklo quottd
by 11111"11 in the mtssing wor,J,
vou d.,oloc from ~•P No. 3 below

e

making any moves, yet you might take a
something you know .nothing '

feel

~~~;~~·
;
·
I
0

'11'111

chance on

:(;ARFIELD

is thai is ulways Stll!ts

MAYLR\~

ANSWE~

her friend, "Th~

niceslthing aboulthe future

'--'---'--'--'·--' N

.who thinks thlnga out thorough!)' Detore
about and lo...
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0Cl. 23) -

Culie to

\

possibil ity you don 't haw all

orally a reasonably

· ROQ!ing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
DOQrs, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

mess~t

no

TAURUS tAprll 20·May 211! - Nothing
will be gained by ftrguing with someone
whose opinions aro diametricallyopposed to yours; don't waste your time.
Nellher has the power to change anv·
thing anyway. so wnv bOther?

Fro• l&gt;'stlllltllts

Plcuse leave

supporth1e lr there 's

Respect ever)'O"e's part.

Cell: 740-416-I S34

1J+ y~nrs txperitnce

8VT IF THE CEILIN6 FALLS, I'LL
THE FIRST TO KNOW ..

thumb, be

harm In doing so.
ARIES (Marth 21· April 19) - Don't
come on as If ~r role IS superior to that
ol anyone else's In a c0ilec1ive endea110r.
or you wm qufctlly- turn supportel'8 Into
opponents In.

Riebel Roud, Long llottom, OH .

Fm nil your plumhlny
&amp; hcutin~ needs
2.5 yciu's L' ·" pc-riencc

..

"'-"I:WiA!.I)oiU!»Q,~ol.~~~....--.

to assist

There might be a person whO has simply
bten waiting to untoad •n unplosant
burden onto someone like you.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201 ComplleatHln5 generally occur when you ·
anemptto bu~ the will ot tne majority. so
unless yQU don't mind stldl.lng out like a ·

.PEANUTS

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
l'or: • Chnin Link Fencing &amp; Wood
Fcndng • Room Additions • Garages
• Vinyl and Wuod Siding • Roofing
• Pole Barns • Patio's. Porches and Decks
Cull:

Sc rv i~.:c

'

tt'l

19) - It's kind

rls to whom yoU volunteer

I ri - ( 'o tllll \
I\. til lu·n a11d
B.tth
Pron1p1. Courteous

....

%111.

to be helPful to others. but be selective

CIIK

f~ : ·' !,

)'' " 1~·· =-·-=•=

opportunities.

l'urum:~ wtm'ti~Kht?

.

*-

leow

some Changes over which you'll nave no
control in
year ah•n•d. Clo{J't b91ntlm-

Shillrncnts un:in: ~:very

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'There was never an age in w~icn u.SAI~ ~tiOWiedge
was rrore importanl than our own.· "Cyril Joad

lour seromblad words b•·

BytorniH-0001
Anhough you might b9 sublociOd to

N\lltilt'd Ill Mtvan~·t

XD KlV HIIRIIWV ." • TKZW JFt.IB

0 Rearrange

Thun.dl.y, Feb. 5, 2001

$10 per lh Cush only

S;,lk

'

9 .. :t

V\ilt&gt;eroble: Eut·\lfool

15548

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
' Dtckl
·Garegn
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
Jamos Keesee II
742·2332

The. Daily

•

• A l :S

E-mail: cap1blll65®yahoo.com ·
www.auctlonzlp.com

Construction

·x

-

9J tiiS
• tOtS t I

6KQ J

140-41&amp;-nac·

J&amp;L

.~···
t" .

., _

WA•

mo. pd

740~653-9657

;"".• I

-

·• KIIlt ts

cansarucuon

serv1ce

j

•tcliiJt
• 't

sunset•••

740·742·34n

:,-:c,iv.st~li

1t II •• 1

Sat. S:CO am · 12

YOUNG'S

.... .

6 t\lii~:S

• J lSS

RV 's.

SuperviJOry

available to Kyger Dental A
ssociates Duke cleaners 656

IIONTY

-r:
BRill
•.

W"· :11 :-:~)

~..· oinpl~;.·t~~ s~rvic:e

...

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

bU\" U~ Cii\'S.

~mo

• r; sa

~ICompon!

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM
t/1 ~1

...
.'
.~~.

. . 111~1111

Hours

do Ouel \. light

Country U11ing

---Remodeling

(~ l'vitltlo )
,~ Use&lt;! Ti1~s ..

ml.'\·hani"· "-Or.k.

$3.000

..... :

·C~

1..'\l!llP.,IIt'f Wilt.\.· I

30&lt;4Bt&lt;lroom28ath

'.

\1('11\:"talrtpair

~hgnn"ll'llt:!&lt;o .

080. 74().5911·4300
~ AA~

BuikJing, Remodeling

W~

~5-5774

' ~

·~

Stl:.'\·t Fr.utM.' Buildings

N&lt;w

Otdor 2 br.. 1 bath me. bill ~ . very Clean. m
pertact repair, serious in-

,,,

',

.Mew ttomes

l'lmwh\y. OH

N11ny ftoor plans! Eas'l
Rr 11nclngl We own the
boo1c.
Call
--vt

.qulrios

...

.

:::--' ·, .

.....,

P40)992~

I. &amp; Ll:n IIMrn·
444187 Wlppk Rd.

3-58A.
property.

.
.......,.
'

CO.
.........y,OIOO
CCIIMitl'dll .
• llfSiclelltial

&amp;Mt Speaker:
Agnes A. E. Slmon, MD
Febn.lery 18, 2009

Buxllltl C6nfe&lt;ell()e Room
Public is invited
For reservations.please call.
(304) 675-4340. Ext. 21104

3btd 2bath

on + ..natf
Ploo$anl

I l l"

Oiscu!;sion

ssoo

Coli

.._

�~~TheD:m~·~y~~f~ntinJ·~e~l~~~~~~~~:=~w~~l~~.miy~de~ily=~~t~inM~-~~~~~~~~ii~iiiiinW~~~~~~~~daii~i~iiiiii~i~iii

I

----

.-

~---

\If dna ~It~ 4, 2009
ALLFfOOP

..... Fllrlda ~ ...
..... "' Unot Ooolots.

;

REA Crossword Puaale

- ~·
ZERO
DOWN!-....,
WiH de

ontfils~

lmptov-.
... . NPICY &amp; Bad Cr&lt;odil
"at a. ~. • end 5 t~«~­
~

a'i'aJtable_

b -as low

'NO 4413384

alA on pnvaM lOt on

c. •• ,.

Ret, Range
~...
loJG tur- '

-

No

WiOQI5

BANKS

•

Pel$.

:oNSTRUCDONI

presents:
"Women &amp; Hun Di•

I

.Fot or Sale. t4x70
aw 2 boltl. Sale $1 s.ooo

-

+ SSOO'dep.
740-245-0096
or

24$-9491

llnir&gt;d -

actt~

in ?t.

OWNER Fl·
AVAILABLE .

11W1Ce

• Fl'ft' Estimates

&amp;p.m.

C'"ustum Hmut: tluiklin~

(740)443571)
~

M

living-

8A

on

011~.

oil
~,.-h.,tngd. si'ludl t"ngint"
repair.
We S.en ·il'e and
"inte-ritc t~.-...~ts MJ

Owner wiU Finance

C\orical

Cal to be Pre OualiHed
740-423-~728

Help Wanted· o.-..1

MCM.,fltm••/

·GcN't ft.nds
Sec· ;;;=..;;,;.=;;;;i;;=;;;;; L;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;:~;;;.:
h1 time buyens who .in Gallipolis seeks outgo- ond Ave. Gall. Oh10. ·Ap· Community Mgr. needed 11
own land Or family land ing custom.;tr service.._ per· ply in person Mqn-Fri. . 1or .32 unit !amity RD
.0: dwn no closing cost soh tor their growin~ 9am-3ptn
property located in Ga.Hi·

(7401 'J'll·Sl-14
Mnn·Fri
·~: liO am . 4:.)0 pm

your land is your . cr&amp;dil dental practice'. Respon- ~-.--:~....""":~~ polis.

Wt uppndatt .wur

877'i10.2577

slble

"The Proctor:ville
Oifterence•
$1 and a deed is all YO.U
noed to own.vour dream
home. Call .Now!

for

schedule.

multi-provider Local

new

patient

and

maintaining

all

accounts, payable re·
cords and assisting ac·
counting dept. and sales
staff. Must have high
school diploma and accounting
eMperlence.
Please send resume to
CLA Box t05. Ann.: AP
Cieri&lt;. P.O Box 469.

GaHipolis, Ohio 45631

on
SAVINGS

Home

Heatth

Noe

Hiring

marketing

prograrn and STAN's. CNA's, Home
reception duties. Must oe ·Health Aides. Will proorganized. dress prOtes- wide training. If inlerestoo

siooally. and posses ••·
cenent
oommunication
''"Is. ~ntal e•peli&lt;moe
~~~~~~== with Oentrilc preteried.
but not reqUired. Protes·
sional training prowided.
Interested parties should
e-mail their conlidential
res ume ' and references
to
kygerdd!;OiiYe .com.
Gallipolis company seek· No phone, fax, or in per·
ing individual for compil- son inlerruptioos please.

·~ng

A~ncy

call740-441· 1377
Satellite lnstaiiOfS Be·
come part 01 our installation team tor Dish Network . FIT. ·benefits. lr a•n'"9· 00 · truck &amp; work supplied. Strong worlc. ethiC
and willingness to learn
Is req'd. Must pass dri•·
ing &amp; drug test No tela·
nies. CaH 866-e66-862G
Option ·
8.
M-F

....,======.,
;
.•.=30-S!&gt;-o:m....~~~--

..;i;uci;i_ii;.;;;n;;;;;;;;lilili
..;;;;;;;;;iE;i;

Sponawriter

Prefer · prev1ous
property
. management
experience.
• prqterably
with a Rural o.tveloprnent property. Must 00
experienced w1th ottice COURT OF COMMON once a WMII; for tfvtl
oqu~ment, have relial&gt;le PLEAS
MEIGS conatcutlv. -'!1, or
transponahon. be de· COUNTY, OHIO
they might be denltd I

pend!lble and like work·
mg with the public.
Schedule has some 11ex1bllity and is part-time
needing somoone lor
24+ hours per week.
Company otter; competl·
'"e salary. health bone·
f1ts. paid vacation and
s&lt;:k loa.,. and 401 K.
compensatio&lt;1 can also
Include · hous'~ on-site 11
desired. P,.;;;:, conlacl:
740.384-6538 to schod·
ule ,an appointment or
submit rosurnes. to: .•

The Ohio Valley Publish·
Gallipolis Career College ing Co .. IS s&amp;eking rnoti1$ seeking part-time invated, people-orient&amp;d
structors in mathematics individual ti till a 11 acancy Commun ~y Manager
•• n . Mamv·
~- · in the news depr. as a • cio Sherry House
a,·!\,I• accounl1'1:w·
matics . candidates must
Sponswrfter. The sueWells Ma'nor Apartments
460 S. Michigan A•e.
h
Me t rs o~ree
"'" a
s•
••
cesstul candidate will
tn Mathematics. ACCOUnt· cower hi.gh school athlet- .:;W;;;e;;;llsi!to;;;n;;
. O!.h;;;k&gt;;,4;;;56;;;~;;;2...,,.,
~
10
lng
oandldates
must
s in the area tor the .
M--L·nico
have a Bachelors De- datly """'ilion ot the news·
M:nU
A
~
gree

In

ccounllng.

paper. as well as assist

Pleese e-mail resumes
with the prOduction ol.
to jdanickiOgaRi~lisca·
sports pages. Excellent
reercollege.edu or tax to · wr"ing and English skills,
4 41 4
46· 2 . No Phooe
p!lotography skills and
Calls Please.
know~ge ol desktop
publishing are sought
GooeniiMIII &amp; hdwal
The position is lull time.
40 hours a weak. wilh
Jollt
benelirs: lntarestod parties can send resumes to
POST OFFICE NOW
KOYin Kel~. Managing
HIRING a¥g. Pay $20hu Editor. Ohio Valley Pub·
or
$571&lt;/yr,
includes
lishlng Co., 825 Third
Fed.Ben. OT. Plaoe by
Ave .. Gaii!Jolls, Ohio
adSource, not affiliated
45631 "'kkellyOrny·
with USPS who hires .
dallytribune.C(Im. No
t ·866-403-2582
phone calls please.

S&amp;l"'llice TechniCian posi-

tlon a¥Ailable '"' dtesel
Experl·
enoe
neoessary.
Health/Rellrement
· &amp;
aanelils . Fax resume to
741J.446·9t04 or e·mail
to LLC@CAREQ COM
and , hydraulics.

Meclcal
Looal
Home
Health
Agency
now
hiring
STNA·s. CNA·s. Home
Health Aides and PCA·s
· tor Metgs and Albany ar. eas. It Interested please
call 740·592-2~44

CI dASSIFIEDS
EMPLOYMENT

US Bank National Aa·
soclatiOn, aa Trut...
for MASTR Attel
Betked
Securitlea Trust, 2006HE2

heerlng In thla ·
Lerntr. Sampaon 6.
Rothfuss
Attorneys for Plaintiff
P.O. Box 5480
Cincinnati, OH 45201·

CARrENHR
S[RVIC E

CAll /IS TOIMY
FOR RfT)(JCED
WfNTfR RATES
DEC. ·FEB

cio Wells Fargo Bank. 5480
Addlthmt •
N.A.
(513) 241-3100
Plaintiff,
attyemall@llarlew.com
•YI•
(1) 28, (2) 4, 11
Goldie A. Wolfe, et al.
Defendants.
Case No.: oBCV189
Public Notice
,
Judge: Fred W. Crow
Legal Notice In Suite The 2001 Annual Flnlnfor Foreclosure of clal' Report ol the VII·
Mortgage
llge of Middleport It
Edward B. Wolle,. Jr.. eve liable lor public In· ·
whose l11t knoWin ad· apectlon at the Fiscal
dress Ia 459 Adlmi Olllcer'a Glllc:e In City
StrHt, Nelsonville, OH Hell at 237 Race Stree~
"~
45764, 1nd the uno Middleport, .....lo 45760
known heirs, &lt;Mvl-t, bet- the houra ot 9
KepiU('l'Dil'nl
M d
W' d
d
legit-. executors. •m tnd 4 pm on •Y
111 ~tws un
ad m ·1n I 1 t r 1 tor 8, through Friday.
spouses end aatlgna 12) 4, 5, 8
Vinyl Siding
and the unknown
SpeciuHsts.I..~D
guardians of minor - - - - - - - (7411) 742·2563
and/or
Incompetent
Publ.l c Notice
heirs ol Edward . B. _:.:..:..:..;:.::...:.:......:..:..__
'Siding • Vi'IYI
Wolfe, Jr.. ell of whose PUBLIC NOTICE
·windows • Metal
residences ere un· NOTICE: Ia hereby
und Shingle Roofs
known tnd cannot by given that on Saturday,
, llt..:ks , Additions
reaaoneble diligence February .7, 2009 at
be ascertained, will 10:00 a.m., 1 public
•tJoctricul
t11ke notice that on the sale will beheld at 211
•l'lumbing
16th dey of December. W.
Second
St .. '
• Pole Hoirns
2008, us Bank National Pomeroy, Ohio. The .__ _ _ _ _ _..
Association, 11
Farmers Bank and Sav·
Trustee lor MASTR · lnga ·company Is sell·
Aaaet Backed Securl· lng for cash In t1and or
ties Tl'uat, 2006-HE2 c/o certified check the lol·
Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. lowing collateral :
flied Its Complaint In 2002 Mercury Sable
New Homes,
the Common Pleas 1MEFM50U02A641787
Remodeling,
Court ol Meigs County. 2,000 Pontiac Grand
Additions,
OhlolnCeseNo.P
r
I
•
08CV189,
on
the 1G2WJ52JWF291437 .
Garages, Pole
The Farmers Bank and
docket of
Buildings, Roofs,
the Court, and the ob· Savings
Company,
Siding and more.'
)eel and demand lorr• Pomeroy, Ohio, re·
lief of which pleading servea the right to bid
Is to foreclose the lien at this sallt, and to
·Drywall,
of plalntiH'a mortgaga withdraw tho above
recorded upon the lol, collateral prior to aale.
Kitchens, Baths
lowing described reel Further, Tha Farmaro
estele to wit:
·
Bank and Savings
Property
Address: Compeny rosarves the
2976 Third Street SR rlghtto reJect any or all
124, Syracuse, · OH bids submlttod.
45n9, end being more Tho above descrlbsd
particularly da 0crlbad collateral will be sold
In plalntiH's mortgage " aa Is-where Is", with
recorded In Mortgage no ••proaaod or lm·
•
Book 226, pago 617, of plied warranty given.
this County Recorder's For further Information,
We do driveways
or lor an appointment
Olllce.
The above named de· to Inspect collateral,
WeHaul ·
landant Is required to prior to aala data con·
answer within twenty· tact Cyndla or Ken at Limestone· Gravel
eight (28) days altar .992·21 36.
Dirt· Ag·Lime
last publication, which (2) 4, 5, 6
740-985·4421
shall be publlahad

·

1

Dealor: Soudt

Opening lead' • K

FRANKl EARNEST

Splinter bids:
the what and when
o.. or tilt most valuoble slam-bic;king
tools is tilt splint9f l&gt;id. · which was
by Oolottly 1luscott in 1964.
This IS 1t1 unusuaiiUIIIIIIIlot
a good Iii lot partner·s lasl-tlicl suit. at
least gamt 'II!Jes. and a ~nglel&lt;ln (O&lt;
voi&lt;ll in tilt Nl named But thel8 ••
some restric:li&lt;lns oo when 1')&lt;1, the
r~. rriWI make a splintet bicl. 'lllu
sh&lt;luld """ spltnt&amp;r with a singlel&lt;ln
king (partner migltt. not evaluate Ns
holding in tliat suit corr0011)'): Wid 100
$llOUid try to avoid doing so with a sir&gt;
9'tton ace (lot tho same reason). Have ·
your h9&gt; cards out.ide 100r $hort suit.
(Tomorrow, I will give~ lnlo&lt;·
motion on whiclt juoftp. 010 splintets.)
Todoy's deel highlightS the ~ or
splin,.,._ WSoOJtti knows North has lour
~ and • dtcenl hand. he willlet
filii potential loWs: one $lladt llhe
ace), one heart (the king), two dillff'IOtlds
(the ~ng and queen), and ooe c:lub (the
ace). However, wllen South loarns'lroni
Norlh's lour-diamond ~esponse that
CIPHER
North has a ~nglel&lt;ln (O&lt; voi&lt;l) diamond.
by lui$ Clmpos
South·s loser count goes down to three
Clltbnry 0~ ~W"S . . tttileCI.I!om MI!On3 Oy ~S DlllPII. Past n CfMII'It
because he oan run his &lt;:Iamond tows
E.:t~ itttt! 1n tr11 ~ strd$1Qr anQI1'It(
on the board. And two doses ol
rooay·s Giw: o 91M11s '
Blackwood Uncol'tf the $l)adt act, cluO
" WNKFBY PNI JNHV WXK TFIK DXB Fl,
aoe and heart ~ng. IRemembor, North
would not splinter with a ~ngleton dia·
rnonti king.) So South leaps to seven SFK OXB IIKIVCD NWH lUI XPW

""""""'*"

Ha!'d¥ood ~Mi'Y Aid Fll••
www.d · t aaci••tla b;

.740.446.9200

IT WUZN'T
N9f'IE OF
EM--

2459 St. Rt. 160 • C.allpnlk

· CELEBRITY

Racine, Ohio 740.247-2019
Owners:
Jon Van Meter 6
Paul Rowe

,.~,I. t&gt;IW'i.

Cell: 740-41 W047
email:
Jrthlldfrmiltaol.com

AA.E. Tll.t'{

,..toltlil.t.E.R-il.t.t'{'Rt il-lt~
~E ~ U..C.I.t. OTII.tR!

$tl8des

OL\:JalOR

The only danger is a 4.0 trump spl~ . To
be sale. South &lt;:ashes his ijng lirst,
ketplng tine honor in each hand to capo
lure the jack. When East discards,
declarer plays a $1)8de to dummy's nine,
takes the ace. leads oV..Io h1s king. Wid
dalm~
·

ZNGOIIWYII , NWH Ill KZY RVBO IJIICV

~Astro-

·I HAl DAILY C'. ~ "0
1{ - ft "C ~ C, ~ \YORO
PUULIR \:)~ ~QU ~'I'($J I.:.• &lt;.{' &gt;) GAMI
- - - - : - - - !di&gt;•d by CIA Y R. ?OU.~N

W~!f!,
til1'11'· "''"" rru~en. tRacb "''
Pm1

i~

t..,.

lOlled by them. When you take new .
roads. you will diSCOVilr all kinds of new

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb.

R.L. HOLLON

MIKE W. MARCUM, MIER

TRUCKING.
Dump truck

740-985-4141

*72~9

sore

'1'01.1 REALL'I' DON'T LOOK
'/Ell( COMFORTABLE, SilL

H&amp;
Guttering
Seamless Gutters
Roollng, Siding, Gutlers
tnwrod &amp; Bofided

Wflll ' t

drai11 ?
d

t

M8-811·11M

a twinkling ot an eye.

GEMINI (May 21·June 20) - When
operallng In an unfamiliar arena , get •
c!Qr understanding ol what is expect&amp;d

:cowandBOY

Advertise in
this space for

EVERYONE'S WAY
TOO SELF·A8SORB£P.

$35.00 per
month

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

ol you. lWo .thlngs could happen II you
don't: Vou could embarrass yourse«. 1nd
~ou

WE fiLL THINK WE'RE
THE CENTEJ! OF OUR
OWN UNIVERS£5. 00 IT
KEEPS US FROM EVER
FULLY VISUAUZING
THE REfit. WOill.D
AROUND US.

could make a major mistake.

CANCER (June 21.July 22) - Don't
make ahy major cJacislons on your own
until you've hadl a chance fo talk to the

ljt1or1 ol · th~

.f

lor.'!'l four s!mple worch

Q X T R·E C
1

1I r I I

f-.,-.;.,--,;--r-r-1
•

.

_

.

.

.._,,..__.....__,_,...~._.,_..;

Y 0 RE F

other people Involved. There's a strong
the facts
and yOur actions will be wrong.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)- Someone whO
has shown little gratitude tor what you did
tor" him or her previously miY make a
new request of you. Oo what you wanl,
hut don't expect a dlffe:rant em:llng
VIMO (Aug. 23,Sept. 22)- '!\lu·re gen·

A~1DON
"'~
t-"1':'-.,r'TI- .:

cauUou~

I

P~INI NUMBE~ ED
l!lftRS IN SQUAm ·

9

UNSCRAMI\t.E

rm

ARLO &amp;JANIS

t

Individual

Should

responses wltt\ln a rtlallonth lp and you
to

740-367-0544
Free Eallmlltl
740-367-0536

accommodate, dol'l'l get

stake. don't be awed by- 8lllerlor lrJpplng.s or by thol&amp; who roar the louaeat.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) - 'rour
generous nature can be a detriment If
you let yoursalt be lur«t Into a position
where you art txpected to give mort
than you can 1Hord, tt1htr emotionally or

TriRemoval
mming

Stanley Tree-

&amp;

' Prmnpl and Quulity
Wnrk

tlnanelanv. 8e 'rullstlc . •
CAPR ICORN (Ooo. 22-Jan. 1Q) Getting cooperation Cln be a problem,
but you can set 1n example and gain
need ed support. Conversely, It :;ou're ret ·
Jcent to make any comproml.. s. nothing
will be accompllthed.

•Reasonable Rates
&gt;~~Insured
' Experienced
References Available!
Cull Gary Stanley®
740-591·8044

SOUPTONUTZ

c

PWS me-~·.- a GeeD
Scui!Ce OF fl•eR···

~'f.\ 'A

Advertise
in this space for
$70 per month
I.

I

'

·---------·- -------.

l ,. ll

I' I

111111111

Agency - Covet - Eight - Shrimp - THfNG to MEET
Granny always told me that rt1oney was a horrid thing
to follow, but a ~harming TIUNG to MEET.

there bt some Intense emotional
fore~

I

SCRA!-1·LEr5 ANSWERS 213109

your blctc up over II. A rul breakup
could reSult.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. :?~) - Ju.!ll
because someone Ia •troog.wllled and
forcolul doesn't mean lf\Aithe Individual
Is right. 11 a serlou• conlkltrallon Is at

Local Con1r•ctor

rht chucklo quottd
by 11111"11 in the mtssing wor,J,
vou d.,oloc from ~•P No. 3 below

e

making any moves, yet you might take a
something you know .nothing '

feel

~~~;~~·
;
·
I
0

'11'111

chance on

:(;ARFIELD

is thai is ulways Stll!ts

MAYLR\~

ANSWE~

her friend, "Th~

niceslthing aboulthe future

'--'---'--'--'·--' N

.who thinks thlnga out thorough!)' Detore
about and lo...
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0Cl. 23) -

Culie to

\

possibil ity you don 't haw all

orally a reasonably

· ROQ!ing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
DOQrs, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

mess~t

no

TAURUS tAprll 20·May 211! - Nothing
will be gained by ftrguing with someone
whose opinions aro diametricallyopposed to yours; don't waste your time.
Nellher has the power to change anv·
thing anyway. so wnv bOther?

Fro• l&gt;'stlllltllts

Plcuse leave

supporth1e lr there 's

Respect ever)'O"e's part.

Cell: 740-416-I S34

1J+ y~nrs txperitnce

8VT IF THE CEILIN6 FALLS, I'LL
THE FIRST TO KNOW ..

thumb, be

harm In doing so.
ARIES (Marth 21· April 19) - Don't
come on as If ~r role IS superior to that
ol anyone else's In a c0ilec1ive endea110r.
or you wm qufctlly- turn supportel'8 Into
opponents In.

Riebel Roud, Long llottom, OH .

Fm nil your plumhlny
&amp; hcutin~ needs
2.5 yciu's L' ·" pc-riencc

..

"'-"I:WiA!.I)oiU!»Q,~ol.~~~....--.

to assist

There might be a person whO has simply
bten waiting to untoad •n unplosant
burden onto someone like you.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201 ComplleatHln5 generally occur when you ·
anemptto bu~ the will ot tne majority. so
unless yQU don't mind stldl.lng out like a ·

.PEANUTS

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
l'or: • Chnin Link Fencing &amp; Wood
Fcndng • Room Additions • Garages
• Vinyl and Wuod Siding • Roofing
• Pole Barns • Patio's. Porches and Decks
Cull:

Sc rv i~.:c

'

tt'l

19) - It's kind

rls to whom yoU volunteer

I ri - ( 'o tllll \
I\. til lu·n a11d
B.tth
Pron1p1. Courteous

....

%111.

to be helPful to others. but be selective

CIIK

f~ : ·' !,

)'' " 1~·· =-·-=•=

opportunities.

l'urum:~ wtm'ti~Kht?

.

*-

leow

some Changes over which you'll nave no
control in
year ah•n•d. Clo{J't b91ntlm-

Shillrncnts un:in: ~:very

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'There was never an age in w~icn u.SAI~ ~tiOWiedge
was rrore importanl than our own.· "Cyril Joad

lour seromblad words b•·

BytorniH-0001
Anhough you might b9 sublociOd to

N\lltilt'd Ill Mtvan~·t

XD KlV HIIRIIWV ." • TKZW JFt.IB

0 Rearrange

Thun.dl.y, Feb. 5, 2001

$10 per lh Cush only

S;,lk

'

9 .. :t

V\ilt&gt;eroble: Eut·\lfool

15548

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
' Dtckl
·Garegn
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
Jamos Keesee II
742·2332

The. Daily

•

• A l :S

E-mail: cap1blll65®yahoo.com ·
www.auctlonzlp.com

Construction

·x

-

9J tiiS
• tOtS t I

6KQ J

140-41&amp;-nac·

J&amp;L

.~···
t" .

., _

WA•

mo. pd

740~653-9657

;"".• I

-

·• KIIlt ts

cansarucuon

serv1ce

j

•tcliiJt
• 't

sunset•••

740·742·34n

:,-:c,iv.st~li

1t II •• 1

Sat. S:CO am · 12

YOUNG'S

.... .

6 t\lii~:S

• J lSS

RV 's.

SuperviJOry

available to Kyger Dental A
ssociates Duke cleaners 656

IIONTY

-r:
BRill
•.

W"· :11 :-:~)

~..· oinpl~;.·t~~ s~rvic:e

...

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

bU\" U~ Cii\'S.

~mo

• r; sa

~ICompon!

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM
t/1 ~1

...
.'
.~~.

. . 111~1111

Hours

do Ouel \. light

Country U11ing

---Remodeling

(~ l'vitltlo )
,~ Use&lt;! Ti1~s ..

ml.'\·hani"· "-Or.k.

$3.000

..... :

·C~

1..'\l!llP.,IIt'f Wilt.\.· I

30&lt;4Bt&lt;lroom28ath

'.

\1('11\:"talrtpair

~hgnn"ll'llt:!&lt;o .

080. 74().5911·4300
~ AA~

BuikJing, Remodeling

W~

~5-5774

' ~

·~

Stl:.'\·t Fr.utM.' Buildings

N&lt;w

Otdor 2 br.. 1 bath me. bill ~ . very Clean. m
pertact repair, serious in-

,,,

',

.Mew ttomes

l'lmwh\y. OH

N11ny ftoor plans! Eas'l
Rr 11nclngl We own the
boo1c.
Call
--vt

.qulrios

...

.

:::--' ·, .

.....,

P40)992~

I. &amp; Ll:n IIMrn·
444187 Wlppk Rd.

3-58A.
property.

.
.......,.
'

CO.
.........y,OIOO
CCIIMitl'dll .
• llfSiclelltial

&amp;Mt Speaker:
Agnes A. E. Slmon, MD
Febn.lery 18, 2009

Buxllltl C6nfe&lt;ell()e Room
Public is invited
For reservations.please call.
(304) 675-4340. Ext. 21104

3btd 2bath

on + ..natf
Ploo$anl

I l l"

Oiscu!;sion

ssoo

Coli

.._

�•

hat B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Wed&gt; e tlay, Febr. .ry 4 aoo9

OSU beats Purdue 80-72 in
COLUMBUS (AP) Purdue coach Matt Painter
wasn't mystified that . his
. team lost to Obio State. 8072 in ove~ on TUesday
night.
After all, the 12th-lllllked
Boilermakers didn't have
third-leading scorer Robbie
Hummel,
while
the
Buckeyes gor buge games
from Evan Turner and
William Buford.

I

''

Job's Daughters
install officers, A3

•

Membership drive
under way, As

•
•

.in~~!~~~~!

..,..._
Pittsburgh Stealers wide receiver and Super Bowl MVP Santonio Holmes, center, is introduced on stage .by linebacker Larry Foote, right. at a rally after their Super BoWl victory
ll&amp;rade in Pittsburgh on Tuesday,. The Stealers beat the Arizona Cardinals 27-23 to win
· lootball's Super BOwl in Tampa, Fla. on Sunday. ·

'~ixburgh' celebrates win -with

parade

PITTSBURGH (AP) - you guys."
expected 40,000 people and
Just for today. it's Sixburgh.
Steelers' owner Dan there were 40.000 people
: Thousands of Pittsburgh Rooney thanked the city for here by 10 o'clock. So we
SteelefS. fans lined down- . its support over the years- came early."
town streets TueSday cheer- arid said there is more histoAnnette Mowery, 47, of
Mars, came to the parade
ing and twirling Terrible ry to be made. .
Towels at a parade celebrat"Stay with us,» Rooney with her daughter Lexie, 12,
ing the team's victory over said. "Maybe we'll get the and son, Lucas, 10, who
the Arizona Cardinals in seventh ner.t year."
also both skipped school.
Sunday's Super Bowl. the
One by one, coaches and · "They have the Steeler
sixth for the storied fran- players spoke to the crowd. fever today," Mowery said.
chise.
Wide receiver Hines Ward,
Six local high . school
·Fans of all ages came MVPof Super Bowl XL. led bands were marching in the
from across the state. and the fans in a chant of "Here parade, one for each chamcountry. and one youngster we go Steelers, here we go," pionship won by the team.
The parade was planned
even brought alo~ u replica while other players danced
Vince Lombard• tro~hy and did an impromptu rap . along Grant Street and
made with tin foil. In bu1ldSteelers linebacker James Boulevard-of the Allies, two
ings along the parade route, Harrison, whose 100-yard of the widest streets downoffice workers cheered interception return for a town, instead of a narrower
through open windows. touchdown was the longesl route used . for most city
Dozens ' of people packed in Super Bowl history, pre- parades. About 150 police
the floors of a parking sented the Lombardi trophy were on hand to control the
. garage to get a better view to the crowd. About the crowd and barricades were
and some sheller from snow same· time. huge booms of set up in the streets because
showers and temperutures in colorful fireworks were the sidewalks were not wide
the 20s.
ex~loded over downtown's enough to accommodate the
"It's history in the mak· Pomt- State Park. at the con- overflow.
ing," said Chad McGown. · tluence of the iconic three
A huge black and fold
31. who staked out his place rivers.
banner hung in front o the
on the parade route hours
City officials prepared for City-County building, readearlier.
·
as many us .250,000 fans, an ing "Welcome to Steelers
Even the police got into estimate based on the num- Country Super Bowl XI,.III
the spirit. waving their own ber of fans at the 2006 Champions.'' The Cit&gt;"
Terrible Towels from atop parade ceJ·ebruting the Counc1l voted to symbohhorses as they le\1 the team's previous Super Bowl cally change the city's name
parade. Coach Mike Tomlin victory. Many fans showed to Si~tburgh for the day, as
followed behind in the back up hours before Thesday's the Steelers are the first
Qf a red convertible. while parade. including a handful team to win . si~t Super
players holding their . per- of hardy souls who were Bowls.
.
.
sonal
video
cameras camped out on the route
Down the street in front of
·cheered and waved from the before dawn.
the Art Institute of
back of pick'up trucks.
Shawn Sedonis. 40. and Pittsburgh, a dinosaur statue
Tomlin couldn't stop his son. Garrett. 8, arrived held a Super Bowl trophy in
~roiling as he was greeted about 8:30 a.m. Garrett was one hand and had red feathlm stage at the end of the · holding a cardboard sign ers protruding from its
parade route with thunder- saying. "Sorry Teach, I mouth, what was left from
pus applause.
Have Six burgh Fever" , to its "Cardinal snacks."
Die-hard fans t'ike 42· "What do ·you say to explain his absence from
Jhis?" Tomlin asked the Bufl'alo Elementary School year·old Becky Kimball
massive crowd. "Steeler in the suburb of Sarver.
drove up from Baltimore
Nation. you leave us all
"I was here for the lust just to help celebrate the big
speechless. man. we just parade and this is his first win.
appreciate the love. How parnde," the bearded Shawn
"We' re here to tell you us
about the Steelers? How Sedonis said. decked out in Baltimore girls love Hines
about the greatest funs in the a black·and·gold jester hat. Ward."
Kimball
said,
world? How about number !lame jersey and other team · tlanked by daughters Karlie,
six? Thank you. we love ttems . ."The last time they .12. and Elizabeth, 9.

Consolidate those
bills with help
.
from OVB!

guys
"It'sare
said. "You can't allow
Turner to get to the ~et
or the free throw line 14
times .. We did. But William
Buford w115 amazing. That
kid is good."
Turner scored . six of his
26 points in overtime to
help end the Boilermakers'
six-game winning streak
and p~event them from .
movin~ into a tie for first
place m the Big Ten with
Michigan State.
Buford had 22 points on ·
10-of-14 sbooring arid fellow msbman BJ. Mullens
added 17 points as the
lluckeyes ( 16-5, 6-4) won
their third straight.
"Turner got going. Buford
got going. Mullens bad 17
and eight rebounds," Painter
said. "When · you throw
those three ¥uys together.
having th.at kind of a night,
you're probably going to get

Prinloooo tOO%
Rrryctod Newsprint

• High school basketbal
action. See Page 81
•

which, has been hit haril by
the stumbling economy.
Centw:y blamed the closure
CHARLESTON, W.Va.-,. on slumping aluminum
Century Aluminum of West prices, whjch had prompted
Virginia's
Ravenswood It to idle one production line
· smelter is closing and a at the smelter already.
majority of its 651 remain"We dee~ly regret the
ing employees will be laid impact of th1s action on our
'off by Feb. 20, the compa- loyal employees and on the
ny 's Monterey. Calif.-based surrounding communities."
corporate parent said . plant
manager
Jim
Wednesday.
.
· !Chapman said in a stateThe shutdown is another ment. "The Ravenswood
blow 10 West Virginia's ail- smelter has been an integral
ing manufacturing sector, part of western West
BY TIM HUBER

.

AP BUSINESS WRITER

Sentenced
on drug,
theft charges
STAFF REPORT
MOSNEWSOMYDAILYSENTlNELCOM

V'll'ginia 's economy and culture for over 50 years . This
action, while unfortunate,
was not taken lightly."
Ravenswood Mayor Lucy
Harbert said the news is
devastating to her town of
4.100 and all of Jackson
County.
"It's going to be hard. It's.
just very disappointing and
sad to me because I really
had high hopes they could
work this out," she said.
"Most. of the peo~le that
live in this commumty have

either retired from this plant
or are still working -there ...
While the city relies on
the tax revenue and the local
businesses rely on the workers and their wages. Harbert
said the school board - the
largest local employer may suffer most.
· "It's going to hurt a lot of
. other (.lCOPle:" Harbert said.
. Busmess has already
slowed
down
in
Ravenswood. as it .has
around tlie country.
"Now with this. it's going

OBTIUARIES

INSIDE

see

Bv

Calendars
Classitieds

B3-4

Comics
Editorials '

Bs

t.tutmum l!lrm rl50 momhs and minimum naw toan amoont ol $5,000.00 available wlh cred• IPilfO'IIII.
(E&gt;alll11)1e: Amcurc ftnllnced SMOO00 at 7.75% · 80 manlllly PIIYmll'lla ot $103.99. Loan pme...~g lee
rl$159.00 · 9.08% A P.R.) A.P.R •Annual Percentage Rafa. RATE IS SUBJECTTO

CHANGE.

'!OHIO VALLEY BANK

•

'

1·800-468-6682
www.ovbc.com

Obituaries

A4
As

Places to go

A6

Sports
Weather

B Section

As

© aoo9 Ohio Vallo)' Publl•hlna Co.

•

POMEROY - "Once
upon a time" can be heard
practically every day of the
week at. branches of the
Meigs County District
Public Library during chil"
dren 's story time. a free
event otfered along with
several others this month.
The MCDPL's Winter I
Spring Story Time Sessions
run through April 23 and are
scheduled for the following
times and branches: 2 p.m ..
Mondays. Racine Library,
2:30
p.m.. Tuesdays.
Eastern Library, 2 p.m.,
Wednesdays. Pomeroy. 2
p.m..
Thursdays.
Middleport. Story time is
for children of all ages and
after each story. children
can participate in making a
free craft project.
Other free ewnts planned
for February:
Family Craft Night. 5
p.m., tonight. Eastern
Library and , 5 p.m.,
Tuesday. Racine Library.
Visitors can make their own
valentine box with all sup·
plies furnished.
A Weightloss Discussion
Group will be held at 6:30
p.m ., Feb . 19 at the
Pomeroy Library.
Family Movie Night is
scheduled for 6 p.m ..
Friday. Feb . 20 at 1 the
Pomeroy Libn\ry. The lilm
High School Musical 3 will
be presented and refresh·
·ments provided.
The MCDPL's Library
Book Club will next meet
at 6:30p.m .. Monday. Feb .
23 to review' the book
"Shure No Secrets" by

Please see Library, AS

Police seize $6,ooo.
worth of drugs .
NICOLE fiELDS

NFIELDSOMYDAILYREGISTER.COM

A3
A3

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENTOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

'

Deta 1 on Pig• AS

Annie's Mailbox

PIHH see Century, AS

events planned for February

POMEROY
A
Pomeroy woman was sen.tenced to a year in prison pn
a drug charge , . and a
Pomeroy man on a motion
Page AS
to revoke probation earlier
• Wilma N. Pratt, 90
this week.
·
·· The two appeared before
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill
Monday. according to
Prosecutin.g .
Attorney
Colleen W1lhams.
.
Tabatha
L.
Haning,
39,
• Meigs School District
. Pomeroy, was sentenced to
announces honor rolls.
one year in prison afer earli·
~ o...;.o ·.a..,
er pleudin~ guilty to a count .
-,w.t · . ~"": ~-.1~
of possess1on of Adderall, a
• Benefit dinner
Schedule II drug, a fifth·
Saturday.
Page A3
degree felony.
• Activities galore
Because of her felony
drug
conviction. Haning's
at Senior Center.
driver's license was sus·
See Pl!ge AS
pended for six months. and
she was placed under a life·
time lirearms disability.
Haning was remanded to
the custody of the sheriff to
be transported to prison to
begin her sentence.
James L. Eakins, 23.
Pomeroy, appeared before
Crow on · a motion to
revoke community control,
filed recently by the prosecutor. Eakins hud previously pleaded guilty to break·
ing and entering and theft
in connection ~ith a
January, 2008 crime, and
• For chills, Ariel
, was placed on community
Players w'll 'Wail Until : •; control.
Accordin~ to Williams ,
Dark.' See Page A6 ·"'·
Eakins adm1tted to violating
his community . control
terms. and his original sentence of one year on· each
WEAmER
charge was imposed. The
sentences will be served
consecuti vely, for a total
Beth Sergenl/pholo
term of two years in prison.
Eakins was also remand· Sometimes you've got to get serious about finding the right book. Just ask Lana
ed to the custody of the Anderson, 21 months old, as she crawls into the shelves of the Pomeroy Library looking
sheriff.
for a good story.

ll St:CTIONS- lll PAGES

to take everything they've
gol to make il :· §he said of
local men.·hants.
"I know these men are
going to get uneniployment.
but by the time-you pay uti I·
ities and groceries and
insurance - and I'm sure
these young people have ..
mortgages und children and
families - there's not much
left." . she said. "My heart
really m:hes for them. but
we'll do what we can 'to

It's story time!

Acoldjob

7.75%
9.08o/o
Interest Rate
A. P.R.

.

SPORTS

beat~"

Purdue (17,5. 6-3) had n~
permitted an opponent to
AP photo
shoOI better than 43 percent Ohio State's William Buford shoots as coach Thad Matta,
all season. The Buckeyes right, watches during the second hall of an NCAA basket·
shot 60 percent.
ball game against Purdue on Tuesday in Columbus.
Asked what was the secret
formula for the Buckeyes, Hummel, who has a hairline seven assists.
their coach Thad Matta fracture in his back. He was
In the overtime, Ohio
smiled.
cleared to play but never left' · State broke a 66-66 tie when
"Honestly,! wish 1 knew." the bench.
Turner was fouled and made
he said. "For the most part, I
"He just didn't look good both free throws. Purdue
thought we did a decent job (in a SatUrday win) against missed a shot before Jon
of gutting it out, toughing it Michigan to me," Painter Diebler put up a shot in traf•
out, on shot selection and said. "At times he looks like fie - while falling down moving the basketball." . he's making improvement, that went. in for a 70·66
The 7-foot Mullens, who then other days he doesn't." lead. Johnson countered
leads the Big Ten in shootWith Hummel out of the with two free throws to cut
.ing largely because most of lineup. the Buckeyes went the h~ad to two.
his baskeis are dunks, said big at times with Mullens
Turner slashed through
the
Buckeyes
were and 6-8 wide-body Dallas the lane and gingerly lofted
unselfish. ·
Lauderdale to control the a shot over a defender's
"We. had to get the ball boards. The Buckeyes dom- hand to make it 72-68. The
around," he said. "That's inated the glass 36-19.
Buckeyes then grabbed the
when we· play our best ·"They kicked us on the rebound of a Purdue miss
offensive game - when we glass," Painter said.
and hurried down, with
zip the l&gt;all around."
. With the score tied at 64 Buford dunkin!f to push the
Turner interrupted him to late in regulation, · Purdue lead to six pomts with 47·.
add, "And just execute our ran down the shot clock seconds remaining.
offense. Those screens that until Lewis Jackson drove
Turner hit two free throws
guys were setting, even our the lane. missin¥ a bank to end the run.
guards. We just e~tecuted shot . in traffic With 3 sec"They got in a groove and
our offense and made sure onds left. Turner got the we flat couldn't stop them,"
we screened and got guys rebound, but his shot from Painter said.
·
open. Pretty much with that, halfcourt was well off the
Purdue did early. The
you have to throw the first mark.
Buckeyes fell behind 10-2
punch."
The Buckeyes pulled in the opening 5 1/2 minJaJuan Johnson scored a away in the overtime with utes, prompting Matia to
career-high 30 points and an 8-0 run - four of the · call a quick timeout and
Keaton Grant added 14 for points from Turner, who point out the obvious to his
Purdue, which was without also had 12 rebounds and · charges.

tl)

NEW HAVEN. W.Va . Officials are culling it. the
largest drug bust of its kind
in the Town of New Haven.
Last week, law ·enforcement officers with the New
Haven Police Department
and
Mason
County
betachment of the West
Virginia State Police an-est·
ed a Columbus. Ohio. man
for delivery of a controlled
substance and possession
with intent to deliver.
New Haven Police Chief
Rich Gilkey said 28-year·
old Dustin Milhoan was
arresied Friday ut · 120
Howard St. in New Haven
after the pol ice department
.
Brian J. RMCllphoto and state polke were notiMen working from this bucket had qne of the coldest jobs in 'Pomeroy Wednesday, with fied ·of possible drug tmf·
wind whipping along West Main Street beneath the new Bridge of Honor. Cold tempera· ficking ut the residence.
lures are expected to stick around for at least another day - bad news for those work·
After executing a seurch
lng outside.
·
warrant. officers seized

•
.

.
.

$6.320 worth of drugs and
$920 in ~nsh . Among the
drugs found were marijualla. acid . ecstasy - which
Gi lkey said also is commonly known as the date
rape dmg - heroin and a
larg·e amount of nmu1tics.
Gilkey suid it was the
large st drug bust in the
municipality in lhe past
seven yeou·s and thai it's the
lmgest amount of ecstusy
that ever h;is been seized in
the town . However, he cau-.
tioned that this was a single
incident and that· Milhoan
had been staying at lhe residence less lhan a week,
&lt;tdding. that this type of drug
&lt;tctivity is not common in
New H&lt;tven. .
.
Milho&lt;tn was trun spor.ted
to the Western Regional
Jail in B&lt;trboursville. He
appeared before Magistrate

Please see Seize, AS ~

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="553">
    <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="10004">
                <text>02. February</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="13020">
            <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="13019">
              <text>February 4, 2009</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
