<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3659" 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/3659?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-06T11:49:09+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="13571">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/0126f6691d1cec267860431660232bd9.pdf</src>
      <authentication>2c805296fd2826de3f28e9e618b0f5e3</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="13036">
                  <text>&gt;

.... 86 ·lhe Daily Senfutel

~verybody's

a player in rough,
tough Big Ten championship hunt

'

$3 trillion! - Senate,

Partners in Care
anniversary, A3

. Fed, Treasury
attack crisis; A6

8¥ RIJim '0

I 1fR
AI' SI'OH IS WRITER

FaDS have learned several
lhiags from the Big Ten race
so far: No team is invincible.
tbtre are no soft touches.
there are plenty of hard fouls
ind the league is full of
quality teams.
It all makes for an interesting final month in the battle. tr:str:d Big Ten.
The standings prove the
point.
No. 9 Michigan State ( 194, 9-2) leads the way by two
games, with the next eight
teams separated by two
games in the los~ column.
No. 22 Illinois (19-5. 7-4)
and No. 24 Ohio State ( 17-5,
7-4) are tied for seeond with
No. 20 Purdue (17-6. 6-4) a
half-game back. Then COI!Je
Minnesota (lS-5. 6-5) and
Minnesota (18-5. ~5). follow,ed by .Michigan (15-9, 56), Wisconsin (14-9. 5-6)
and Northwestern (13-8, 46). Even undemtanned Iowa
(13-11. 3-8) and Indiana (616,. 1-9) have been pushing
the ti&gt;p teams.
As close as the standings
are, the games have been
just as tight.
"There's not a game that's
easy," Illinois coach Bruce
Weber said Monday. "I
gues&amp; that's why we have a
big mess in the middle (of
the standings) there, because
of the balance and compelitiveness of the conference."

••
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
)t ) l l '\ 1"'•\ttl

1.-;~

\\(1l'\lSl)\,.JIBRl \l{\

SPORTS
;,·

.

.• Hql school' bEB&lt;e1balt
adiOn.S.PipBl

piMIIe

AP,photo

"The theory of valuing an between payrolls and win,
asset would ·suggest that a ning. "Plus, in the NBA,
franchise's value is deter- · .teams keep their gate rev...-nined by fundamentals like enue.
current and future demand
"In the NFL, thoUgh, it is a
for tickets to games, team- very different story. NFL
branded merchandise and teams share gate revenue,
broadcast rights . fees," and other revenue as well,
Coates said in an e~mail. plus the Steelers he.d already
"Since Heinz Field sells out. won five titles hefore last
the attendance · demand week," Berri said in an easpect is likely to be small. mail.
Merchandise and broadcast
Another Super Bow I victorights are shared by the NFL. ry adds to their prestige, but
so the Steeler.:; would see the Steelers were recognized
only a small share of those as one of the best-run fran· (l/32nd)."
· .
chises in pro sportS before
Teams ·that play in the winning their second NFL
Super Bowl typically find title in four seasons.
the myriad costs to appear in
Winning titles also can
the same exceed what they increase what unsigned playrece1ve in compensation ers command on the open
from the NFL. Despite the market. making it difficult to
Steelers' coast-to-coast fol- stay under the salary cap lowing, their location in a another worry since 2010
relatively · small · market may · be an uncapped year
means they generate tens of unless a new labOr deal is
millions of dollarS less in reached.
corporate sponsorships than
The Steelers, as were all
the bigger-market teams like NFL teams, already were
the Cowboys and Redskins. concerned about a possible
Winning an NBA title can decline in revenues even
boost franchise
value. before they rallied in the last
according to Sl,!OrtS econo- minute to beat Arizona 27-23
mist David Berrt. but he says in Tampa on Feb. I.
there IS no such payoff m the
According to Sports
NFL, where every team Business Journal, contracts
· except the Lions. Browns. for about 50 percent of all
Texans, Jaguars and Saints club sponsorship revenues .
has played in at least· one expire within the next 18
Super Bowl.
months . The NFL doesn 't
"About half of all (NBA) have a national radio rights
learns don't win a title and I agreement for ·next season,
know wiiming a title can and nearly all the league's
impact a team's gate revenue corporate sponsorships end
for years," said Berri, an dunns the next three years.
associate
professor of Among those ending next
applied · economi~s . at month are deals with FedEx,
Southern Utah Untverstly Home Depot, IBM and State
who co-authored a 2006 Farm, the publication reportbook about the relationship ed.
·

has been as mucll about the assignments fof 2009:
price as the availability. Finant:e. Rae Moore. chair·
While some local govern- matJ; Sandy Brown, Craig
MIDDLEPORT - The ments have had trouble Webrung ;
lns.urance.
Middleport
Street finding any, pthers cannot Wehrung. chail'lllan; Brown
Department has more salt . . afford it. However. 'Roberts and Moo.re; · Recreation.
Just before the late-Janl!ary told
village
coum:il Jean Craig. chail'lllan: Julia
snow and ke stol'lll. Monday night the price has Houston. Shawn Rice. and
Village
Administrator remained steady for the
resident
volunteers:
Faymon Roberts said the son. The village jll$t bought Ordinance: Moore, chairvillage had just enough left another 25 tons. at a cost of man, Wehrung and Rice:
to treat streets in case of a $106 {lC" ton.
Building and Planning.
''good snow."
Dunng the regular meet- Brown. chairman. Houston,
The problem with supply- ing, Mayor Michael Gerlach · Rice. Wehrung anlj Craig.
ing salt for village streets distributed
committee
Brown said the building

and plat1ning committee
will ' meet at 2 p.m. on the
fourth Tuesday . of ea~h
month in l'Ouncil cl)ambers'.
Council approved the
mayor's report of fees ami
fines collected in January. in
the amount of $ 14.205.
Council members noted a
decrease in the collection of
old ftnes over the past few
months. and Gerlach said it
was likely to continue to
decrease. Recent and he'ight _ ..
ened efforts · to collect old

0BITUARIFS
PageAS
.
· • E&lt;Mard Buckner, 58

INSIDE
• Christian comedian
David Farrell to yisit
area. see Paae A2 ·
• OhiQ budget
director warns of
cuts. see Page A2
• Ohio officials
report 89 Ohio
salmonella cases.
·see Page A2
· • Deal with lottery-struck
parents. See Page A3
·• For the Record.
SeePageAS
• Australia begins .
recovery from wildfires . .
See Page AS
• Ohio teen charged
with fraud for
. huge candy order.
See Page A6
• A Maine event of
. 50 below excites
scientists. See. Page A6

Bv BETti SERGENT

J. REED

SSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

BAEEOef:4YOAILYSEI'tTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
Economic stimulus funds
from at least three sources
will be · made available to
cities and villages like
Middleport, but time will be
ot' the essence, beCause projects must be "shovel
ready" by later this year.
AI Monday's regular meetini· · Middleport Mayor
M1chael Gerlach updated
Village Council on the availability of federal funds some already approved during the Bush administration
and others proposed under
President Obama's American
Recovery and Reinvestment
Act - and projects they
might be used for.
. Because the programs are
designed for economic
stimulus and job retention
and growth, ihe projects
.must be ready for construelion by mid-2009.
·
• Middleport has ·already
been included in the target
area for $128,000 in blighted
housing clearance
through
the
new
Neighborhood Stabilizalion
program. The funds are part
of $1 .2 million opproved for
Meigs, Gallia. Jackson.
Lawrence, . Soioto and
Vinton counties and the

PluM •• Stimulus, AS

Art, history
mesh in
Haddox

WEATIIER

.
MeigS Cotlrliy
River V8lley High .School

''

.In neiQhborlng Gallla County.
plc:lured Mt,, pa~ed In a
¢liege ~tlon '-lr ~lei ·
1\.tts(lay at the Fultz Gente(.
Spc)nsorecl by the Ohio . .
AppalachleJI Center lot Higher
EdUcati9f1 ~ !he Rio Grande
·Meigs Ceftlltr; lhe fair Included
l&lt;lrnlaaloM itd ~ six arta ·
collaQta &amp;11&lt;1 unlverllltles: Rio
Grande, Ohio Unlveralty,·
Marshall University. '
Washington State, H~lng
Collage and Shawnee State
Unilll!rsity. Students cOuld pick
up lnlormatton, talk to coun-· ·
·selors about thalt canter choices, and even apply colleges
- wlih«lllt 8ppllcatton fees. .

to

'

captains organize

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICHeMYOAILYSENTINEL .COM

INDEX
, ll SECfiONS - tll PAGES

'

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials

A3

Obituaries
Sports.
'
Weather

B3-4

Bs
A4

As
BSection
A.2

® 0009 Ohio Volley PubllllhlntJ Co.

.

lltlln,J.AMd/plloloa

exhibit .
o.talla on Page A2

tines owing have been very
succ·essful. "but we have
mined that tleld.'' he said.
Gerlach · noted that the
report continues to be an ,
improvement over those of
a year ago.
Coundl approved monthly reports of the public
works. refuse. finance. fire
and pol i~.:e clt:parlments.
Coundlman Craig Wehrung
ex. pressed his appreciation
Pins• M s.1t. AS

Chamber
hears
about
•
sav1ngs.on
natural gas

faJr·

Middleport
pro-active in
stimulus · ,
gnmt process I
i!)V BRIAN

1 '111

I I

Gerlach:

OSU's Jenkins on verge of NFL dream
player !'mong the award's ~3
past wmners.
"I always looked at
Antoine . Winfield just
because he played at Ohio
Stale. and what he did at
Ohio State was always
something I tried to measure
myself from," Jenkins said,
standing in a hallway decorated with pictures of past
winners including Winfield,
Deion Sanders and Charles
Woodson.
"Then to look at all the
rest of these guys. it ~s just
amazi~g _a nd ~xtremely .
humbling for me JUSt to be
able to be mentioned in the .
same breath with these
guys."
·
After being a semifinalist
lost year. Jenkins made the
'I:holll!' Award hi s main individual goal for thi~ season.
He had three interceptions to
push his career total to II,
and beat fellow finalists Eric
Berry of Tennessee and
Taylor Mays of Southern
California.
"He's put so nmch work
imo this , so much heart into
ir,:· said Taver Johnson ,
Jenkins' cornerbacks coach.
"He would say first and
foremost that he wouldn't be
here without his te.ammates.
We're truly going to miss
him ."

BY BRtAN J.. FIUo

BI'IEEOeMYOAI~YSENnNE~.CQM

sea-

o Super payoff for. Steelers, Rooneys
PITTSBURGH (AP) The latest Lombardi Trophy
added to the Pittsbur$h
Steelers' overflowing &lt;!hsplay case makes them the
most successful fran·:hise in
the modem 1era. but even a
record sixth Su~r Bowl title
probably won t make .the
team more money.
It also is unlikely to
increase
owner
Dan
Rooney's net worth .. Or
make the Hall of Fame
owner look all the wiser for
completing a buyout of some
of his brothers' shares of the
76-year-old franchise only
weeks before the playoffs
began.
Several sports economists
said winning a Super Bowl
does little or nothmg .for a
franchise's bottom line during the best of economic
times, much less during what
may be the nation's worst
financial crisis since the
Great Depression.
"There is no evidence that
winning a Super Bowl has an
impact on franc.hise value,"
said Dennis Coates, an economics professor 111 the
University of Mary landBaltimore County and the
president of the North
American Association of
Sports Economists.
The Steelers have sold out
all home games since 1972.
The team is not planning a
dramatic increase in ticket
prices and is unlikely to
greatly increase corporate
sponsor~hi{ls during brutal
economtc limes.
· Their Su_pe~ Bowl payoff
m·ay be hmtted to hemg
known as the NFL franchise
envied by all others.

\\\\h oll \ d,tth ... ,·nttl1~·!,

II , .!OtH)

~ I

Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiVer and SuJiM Bowl MVP Santonio ~. center, Is introduced on stage tw linebacker Larry Foote, rigl'lt, at a rally alter their Super Bowl vittory
parad&amp; in Pittsburgh, Tuesday, Feb. 3. The. Stealers beat the Arizarla. Cardinals 27-23 to
win football's Super Bowl in Tampa, Fie. on Sunday.
·
, ·.

Ohio State guard Jeremie Simmons, right, shoots over
Indiana defenders Tom Pritchard. center, and Malik Story
during the first haH of an NCAA college basketball game in
Bloomington, Ind., on Saturday.
·
behind by the NCAA- in the conference. Purdue's
dogged tenure of the .fired Robliie Hummel is one of
Kelvin Sampson. A fol'lller the Big Ten's best players ,
lieutenant of lzzo's at but he hasn't practiced with
Michigan State. Crean spent his
teammates
since
nine successful seasons as December because of a
the !lead coach at Marquette. stress fracture in his back.
Here'sasi~ofhowmuch where he won 190 games He has spent most of the
· parity there ts: Then-No. 7 and took one team to the past few weeks watching
from the bench as the
Michigan Stale had won its Final Four.
ijaving spent three years Boilermakers try to gel by
last 28 home games and .its
!ast dozen overall headmg . coaching in the Big East. without him.
mto what appeared to be a he 's now back In the Big Ten
Same goes at Michigan
roulme home game agamsl and has gained a new appre- State and Ohio Stale.
North~estem on !an. 21. ciation forthe conference. · Michigan State isn't the
The Wildcats hadn I beaten
"The reality close up is same team without star forthe ~partans m the last 12 that if anybody has any ward Raymar Morgan. still
meeungs . .
.
questions about how com- tryin~ to fight back from
But .then Kevm Coble pelitive, how tough and how walkmg pneumonia and a
threw ID al~st every ~hot skilled the players are~ and mild case of mononucleosis.
he took, sconng 31 pomt~. how thorough and detailed ·The Buckeyes haven't had
and the SJ?art!Uls could.n I · the coaches are, then they captain .David Lighty since
get away With JUSt a routme haven 'I been. watching the he broke a bone in his fool in
effort a~ Northweste~ game," Crean said. "Being December. He may not
pulled off.a 70-63 shocker m in the Big East, and with the return to a team that doesn't
success that other leagues have a senior on the roster.
East Lansmg, l'\,ftch.
"As we've seen, every- · have had like the ACC or ihe · The Buckeyes at least had
body. can beat everybody,'' Pac-10, it's easy to maybe time to adapt to life without
M1chtg~ Slate coac~ Tom push (the Big Ten) down a Lighty before jumping into
lzzo swd on the Btg Ten little . (But) this is an out- league play.
"They're the one team,
conference call on Monday. standing conference."
So as the teams head down
Bring your lunch pail
going into the month of
the stretch. there are no or maybe a suit of armor - February and then on into
breathers. And 10 of the II if you want to play.
March. that could create a
t~~ have a decent shot ~~
In the past two weeks. tla- lot of havoc, not only in the
htlting the enchanted 20-wm grant fouls and violent Colli- Big Ten but throl!ghout the
plateau to earn a spot m the sions · have led to a broken country," Crean said. ·
NCAA tournament.
nose (for Purdue's Chris
Penn State coach Ed
It's not as if the copfer- Kramer) and a ·concussion DeChellis has his team chasence that gave the world (for Kramer's teammate, ing a possible NCAA berth.
Jerry Lucas, Magic Johnson Lewis Jackson), and lots of But to grab it , the Nittany
and Isaiah Thomas is more other bumps and bruises. Lions will have to finish
talented than ever. Sure, Two players have been sus- strong.
·
there .are still plenty of Oll!- pended and another ejected
Problem is. 10 other constandmg players. But tt ·S from a game for tos~ing terence squads are in the
more ·thatthere are so many elbows at opposing players. same boat.
. different styles of play, the. "It's a contact sport and
"We're in this' thing in the
home-court crowds are there are going to he contact sense that we're 6-5 in the
intimidating. and the grind . plays," Iowa coach Todd league .
17-5 . overall,"
of an 118-game conference Lickliter said: "What ·you DeChellis said. "But we've
slugfest wears down even have to try to distin§uish is, got to get some work done in
elite teams.
are they intentional?'
these last eight games Injuries' not caused by like all the temns . It's a critIndiana coach Tom Crean
is in his first year trying to intentional contact also have ical time as ~e enter mid'clean up the toxic waste left upset the balance of power February."

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) first cornerback taken in
- Malcolm Jenkms had Ar,nL.
.
(!reams about playing in the
'I've heard a lot of things.
NFL Just like every other lit- ~try to ~eep my face out of
tie k1d, but never really.' the medta and JUSt focus on .
believed he'd be so close to . y training and just focus
making them come true.
on what l need to do,"
Growing up in what he Jen~ins said. "It's right
called a "concrete Jungle" in there, it's right &amp;round the'
New Jersey. Jenkms rarely comer. an_d I'm excited to
even had a serious thought see where it's going to t~e
about college football. much me and see what new chapless the pros . Just getting ters life opens."
noticed by Ohio Stale was a And as Jenkins looks
hu~e first step.
. around at the other players
'A lot of guys don't get in his draft class. he has to
recruited . We just got on the take ~om~ Jersey pride.
map when I came out of Georgta tmlback Knowshon
· high school," Jenkins said Moreno; Virginin offensive
Monday night before being tacll:le Eugene Monroe.lowa
recogmzed wit~ the Thorpe running back Shonn Greene
Award as the top college and Southern Cal linebacker
defensive back.
Nick Cushing .are all from
"To think of a ·scholars)1ip New Jersey, too, and all prowas just like, 'Oh, my God. jected as first-raund draft
You've got to be like the picks.
best in the nation to get a HWe've got a lot of good
scholarship.' Nobody reitlly players out of Jersey but we
thinks of themselves like all disperse all over the
that that early. I was blessed place, so you never really
enough to get that opportu- hear about it," Jenkins said.
nity and make the best of it."
The
Thorpe
Award
After four years and two brought him to Oklahoma
BCS champiOnship game City for the first time, where
appearances
with
the he picked out a scarlet-andBuckeyes, Jenkins' recogni- gray tuxedo to wear to the
tion by the 'Thorpe Award formal reception along with
commmee is being mirrored a pair of dark grey cowboy
by many NFL draft experts boots with red accents. He's
who expect him to be the only the second Ohio State

jS. , I)

POMEROY
Jan
Haddox of Point Pleasant.
W.Va., who retired last year
after teach in$ art for several
years at Metgs Elementary
School. is the featured artist
in an art afid history exhibit
at the Markay Cultural Arts
Center in Jackson, Ohio.
A reception honoring
Haddox will be held Friday.
Feb. 13, beginning .at 7 p.m.
to open the exhibit which
will run through March 8.
There is no admission and
refreshments will be serve.
Regular gallery hours are
Wednesday through · Friday.
2 to 5 pm. and Saturday and
Sunday, I to 3 p.m. For
more information. contact
Southern Hills Arts Council
ut 740-286-6355 or ut
art@ shacmarkay .com.
The Markay is a project of
.
Beth SergenVphoto
Southern Hills , whtch is
Carrie N. Hope, an exclusive Boyds Bear (pictured) is being
partially supported by the
Ohio Arts Council with sold by local Relay For Life teams as part of the American
stale tux dollars to encour- Cancer Society's Daffodil Days. Local teams recently mel to
discuss lundraising for the Meigs County Relay For Life
held May 8-9.
....... •• Exhibit. AI

POMEROY - Members
of the · Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce
heard the bendits of a natural gas choke program for
their organization and members . through Volunteer
Energy. Columbus.
Volunteer
Energy
Services. is a for-profit
compuny that buy s natural
gas &lt;md sells it to munici- .
palities through contracts
with cities and villages as
well as individuals and
those participating in their
choice program.
The benefits of the choice
program. as presented by
Volunteer Energy's Fred .
~olmes, is reduced natural
· gas rates for chamber members and a return on investment to the chamber based
upon the volume of natural
gas used by it and its members. This return is based on
so many cents pe~ cubic feet
of natural gas purchnsed by
the chamber and its mem·
bers as a reimbursement.
Volunteer
Energy
Services can offer these ser·
vices since natural gas has
been dereguhited. giving. at
least those locally. u &lt;:hoice
beyond Colombia Gas.
However. Holmes said the
program is not available to
those who huve Knox
Ener~y as their natural g·as
prov1tkr which locully
excludes Rudne, Rutlnnd.
Syracuse.
.
Pomeroy recently voted
to place an issue on the May
b;dlot which. if passed.

. Plene see Ch1mber, AS ·

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - The daf- .
fodil is the official !lower of
the
American Cuncer
Society because it represents
hope and it also represents n
wity for local Relay For Life
teams to raise funds . .
At the most reccnl team
captains· meet in~ of the
Meigs County RFL. teams
learned they· can se ll daffodils for $10 per bunch or
$25 for the daffodils and a
Boyds Bear made especially for. this year :s
Daffodil Days .
This year's ex dusive
Boyds Bear is culled Currie
N. Hope . who is 10-inches
tall und complete with u
purse to carry all thut hope
around.
The daffodil s und/or duffodils with the bear can be
purchased through any RFL
team though the orders must
be placed by Feb. 19 .
Delivery is Murch 14-15
and the daffodils are transported by refrigerated truck
for Jre.shness. For more
information .call Courtney
Sim nt 992-6626. Money

Meigs, Galli a
awarded
emergency
funding
STAFF REPORT
MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

CHESHIRE - Gnllia
&lt;lltd Meigs C(llllllnlllity
Action Ag(•ncy has been
chosen to re..:eive $.16..153
($23.5·0 Gallia. $22.8 10
Meigs) Ill supplement tnrgeted emergency programs
in the urea. hcginnin~ in the
Spring 2009 .
The sck•·tivn was . mudc
by the Nntional Bourdmude
up of uftilimes of nurionul
voluntary organizations and
chuired by the Federul
Emergency . M;\nagemept
Agency (FEMA). United
Way of Atiterica will provide the ndminbtrative staff
und function us the fiscal
ujlent. The Bnurd wus
charged to distribute funds
uppropriuted by Congress to

I

Plea11 IH RillY, AI

Please IH Fundln~o A!l
\

�•

LoCAl .• STATE

The Daily Sentinel

ing today,~ well
Wtil:nt )'-Cloudy. A
over l50 ~a y~.
cba.ace- ot' showers in tbt
Thil&gt; CQa;.-ert featllreS
Cbris.ti.an ~--"'. ,....;..-•• , ro.01:0.ing ....Theu. showers
,~...~~ ~oe;.....
with. 11t ~ of tb.u.oderfunny . songs, and muSical ~ i.ft the atb:rnoon.
~oR~= S.Ome thUJI.de(stotws may
such as. Third I&amp;"J,'Mic~ ~ gust)n~Oo"- in the
~
· &amp;.fteta.ooo.
~Y
wtth
W. Slnith. The Da.Yid ~b.s .in th.e Uppef 1)&amp;.
Crowder Ba.Dd, and Mark. SOOth -.windS 15 to 20 mpll.
Sc~:~·moJrt" in"'rl!t«tiorr,
Gu_sts up to 35 mph in~
~v
afternoon. Chaw:.~ o~· l'll.i.n

POINT
PLEASANT. Allditoriwn
at
Poiu
W.VIl, - For new:ly ZO Pleasant High School. 7:~
yean ChristiliD. comedian p.m. on feb. 2.8. Ttdets.are
IA&gt;tid farrell has. shown $l0 and can be purchased
in adn.oce- at the Mason Jar
~ that dean oome-:
dy can be funn~. He is a in Point ~asant. at Sider's
described as a comedian, Jewelers in the Wa.t-Mart
awtivational speaker. youth Plua at Ga.llipo&amp;. or at th~
communicator. and di$C door on the day of tb.e
~ey. whose-~s

sbO',II .

.

PrQI:eeds. will go to the
PPHS
Lady .1\.nigbts
and ~ssiQU!&gt; .
He will be at the lillian Softball. Tbe cbll!Ch or
and
Paul
Wedge organization that brings the
tnclude stand-up comedy

0

u

eJ'f&amp; · or warns 0

conectioa.al
facHiti~s.
would be closed. she ~d.
ASSOCIATED PRess WRITeRS
~we will be I~ at
real impa~:ts of cuts in s«·
COLUMBUS - Ohioans vice1 ro Ohioans every
wOuld see significant cuts in day. sabety told members
mental health and drug of the Ohio Houre Finance
treatment pro.gouns liD.d · Committee. who got their
fllee an increase in ~-ollege t1rst (;hance to dis.sect lh~
budg~t
tuition if Cong~ passes a administration's
stimulU$ package with plan s.ince it was released
reduced aid to sttuggling last week.
Strickland, a former col\·
states. Gov. Tlld Strickland's
budget directot warned.state gressman. traveled . to
lawmakers TUesday.
Washington Monday to
Strickland's two-year. ~a! to Ohio's ~-ongres·
$55 billion budget plan s.tonal delegation to restore
relies on $3.4 billion in fed- the fllDding when the bill
eral mone_y to help fill a $7 retu_ms to the U.S.. House.
biUion deficit. The $838 bil· The Democrat satd he IS
lion . verSion of President also speaking daily with fel•
Banick. ()banta's . eool\omic low governors to coordinate
reoovery plan that passed efforts to see that the states'
the U.S. Senate on Tuesday position is heard.
doesn 'l include $25 billion
The Senate cuts "will do
that the U.S. House had set great harm, will deprive
aside fot states to spend on a people of Deeded services,
variety tlf prognuns.
· will result in job loss.. and
If the U.S. House is that is simply oontrar.)l to
unable to restore the fund- the ~ of a stimulus .
ing. Ohio would need to bill.' Striekland said.
trim between $900 million
Some states have put their
and $1 billion from its. bud· budget plans on bold while
get proposal. Budget federal lawmakers wQd out
Director Pari Sabety said.
the Obuma recovery plan.
As a result, 50,000 fewer Other states have cratled
people would get ment11l budgets that don't rely on
health treatment, 33.000. federal stimulus money, ·
Ohioans wouldn't receive
Ohio, however. is moving
drug and alcohol addiction forward with a budget plan
services. more than 40 per- based oo stimulus money
cent of Ohio students despite the li!ICI:rtllinty in
would have to · ~ay Washington,
increased college tuiuon
Republicans in Ohio ha'l'e
costs, and medium-si1ed criticiJed Strickland for

BY SIUttEMIIA.MIIIiS
AND .tuLlE CAM SnTH

BYTHE .BEND
ANNIE'S MAILBOX
Pa1·b1ers
in
Ca•·e
anniversary
Deal with lotterystruck parents

The Daily Sentinel

PageA.2

•

BY KAlMY lltllQIIU.
AIID MMc't baR
Dtv A.-~ I woul\.llil~

yoot a.l'l i~ about my par.mts, who ~ in ~ir 70s.

Moot Wid Dad sur\ i w off a
~mall amount of Sodab
Se\'uri•J~ ·
tJ .ttf\)rtu.t\ll.tel)l.
Uley a.l'e' ll.(.l\11\:ti!Q to. buy ill8
tott~ry . tid.tts. f'~~ SIN:l\
st!l!:k.s of$lU tii..'lt'ts, many
'ilf wbid\ ~~re n1.i1il~ in fot'
seoond-chaui..'l.' dr&lt;~.w\ngs , t Wurea.OWo
Dear Waaa~ tf yoo go.
be®w they ll.t'e' W&gt;ing theif
back
fann&lt;.)U~h. there w!-IS a
i:.!Wit cards to fitWJ.ce: this.

· . ~=S·;;.The~w~ s1J:

re~ing on ooe:-time t~ ;\ss~ia.tiQQ, · lht state:'s. · midalght. ~ tb.undetmoney. fearing it wQilld rW'gesl teacher's union. SliiJmiS may ~ gusly
lead to tax bikes in future sa:id ~tiro.ul~~~&gt; · cuts in the wi.nds in thee~~. W'indy
years IQ maint"&lt;!.i.n serv~.
U.S. Senate wootd affect ~ much cooler wtth tows
"It would be prudent .on the jobs of tel\'&gt; o{ thou- tn the upper 30$. Southwest
ou_r part to work. witb: a bud- sands of educators overtoo wtnds ZO to 30 mph Wllh
getlha.t uses revenue w~ can nex.t sevefal years, pare s~~~&gt;ts up to 40 mph, Ct\Wl(.'l.'
reasonab1)1 expect to gerier- bad. i.'Oilrse otlerings. and . Of mn 50 pet\."ent,
ate as a state," said Rep. all but etiminlll~ ~xtracu_rTh~.....Partly SY.Ull)l
Ross
~kGregor.
a rkutar uctivities.
~4 b.ee~~ . Much ~'IX•l.:t
Springfield Republican.
Meanwbil~. a coalitioo of wtth hlshs m the upper 4Us.
Sabety d~fended the plan social services advocates ":est wtnds IS to ZO mph
to state lawmakers. saying cal&lt;:ulated ~trimmed bacl wtth gusts up to 35 tl\ph.
the point of stimulus mooey · stimulus twuling would pren~ sittht...Mostl~
is to give stl.ttes something: vent expans.ion ot· public - - -- ...,---- -- - ' - -- - -- - - 11Hpend quid.ly.
·
h~alt~ insurance to 36-.000 T .--...1
"State govet'llment is an 01\io chlklr-en and result in ~
entity. wuike many tinan- cuts to food prognuns fot 2
cial mstituti(&gt;n~ . that actual-, million hungry Ohioans,
ly ts m the b(ts~ness of
Stnckllll\d satd th;: states
spewing money and putting can be e11gine:&gt; fol' ecooomit into the mark.etpliK.-e so ic rei.'O'I'ery. Ollio. tbr examthat people have money to pie. spends 88 cents of
buy groceries.. they have every dollar in its budget oo
money to stimulate our local progl'lltnS that support
economy. they have the sick children, thos~ with
ability to boost our oonfi. mental health issues. drug
den&lt;.-e," Sabety Sllid.
addiction, and 1M eld~rly,
Eoonomlc gro~,Vth lllOdlils be said.
·
·
show that tax revenues will
"This ~le is not over,"
increase during an expected he said, .
rewvery - enough to sus- · His off"M launched a Web
tain the level of state spend- site TUesday. ·www.reroving. she said,
ery .ohio. where Ohioans.
Strkl:.land 's
budget. can apply for programs
b&lt;lsed on 11 version of the underwritten by stimulU$
stimulus ~Jan in the U.S. dollars - such as ~ll
House,cans tbr usin~ $810 grants for college students.
million in lederal atu for ur unemployment compen·
special education and low· Slltion. ln a releose.
income school districts. . Stri~-k.land said he believe
and $1.35 billion for prima· the site will 11llow the state
ry, secondary and higlwr lQ uct more quickly wbell
education,.
the money becomes uvailThe Ohiq Education able.

addktioo.

'

My parents· win ll. l~w
hundred doUars from time
to tlrne. whldl ouly f~ls tl\e
·ttre. but IOOre's tlo. w a.•Y they
win ~uoog:n t&lt;.• P"Y fill' aU
these ti~:k.ets. I reali~ it's
t1011e ot' my b~ines-•. but I
wot'I'Y because they seem to
Ml tow o.n ~"k ~'l.'ssities
~ud\ lis food and lwatiug oiL
- I try to help otll Ill\\! they
are l:ll'J&gt;leciatlve. I rep}ac,-ed
som~ major appli&lt;m~o'ts l'o.r
them when we- up~n1ded
oor-;.. altnoo~h my s1hllngs
k.~:ep expect\~ me to do
111.~ and ~ comments
ure- gettiQ8 ''' me-. I'm 1101
sure- hl.'w to nUike my p&lt;il'ents stvp s~ndi~ so much
Ol\ lottery tkl\ets. and I
t-esent my s.ibli!l~' att&lt;~eJ;.s , l
&lt;Ull a v~ry patient ani.!
understauditlg person. but
tu,tve about had it. 8tllttled
Dear Belittled: C&lt;~ll a
s.iblins meetit1g to disi.'llss
what 1s going on with your
parents and what each of
you cun do to help t'inanda.lly and ph~sicaliJ&lt;:. Thl~ is
oot a comfi"lltioo, You 11e1.'\l
to wot·k tugether for the
greuter ·good.
·
On~-e you have reuched un
t~gm!menl. bring yom p!'l't&gt;nt~ int\l the UiSCIISSilll\.
Expl11lll thut too ex~-essive
uumber of lot111cy tkk~ts is
dlsh1rbing. espedully $illce
th~y ure huving tn•llbh:
tnul;.ing ends m~t . Pay
attentk•n to thclr 1-eu~&gt;ning
and comprebensioll to
determine whether the,Y
llee\! tm evaluation by the1r
doctor. mul cbe~k if tht&gt;y are
tuking medications that
might i.'Ontribute to addictive lle-h&lt;tviors, from this
poi11t t\l1'WII\'d, )IOU and )lOlli'
siblings should tulk to et1ch
other upenly ubom whm Is
going vn und how best to
hun~le it, The.r t is strength
in numbers.
Dear Annie:
liave
women lost all common
sense'? · I am tall;.ing tlhout
the CUIJ\lllt 11-end ,,f preg ·
mmt wo111en who insist 1•n
weuring SlK'h tight clothing
thut. every outlme and belly hutton shows - short tops

'.,

Stocks

Ohio officials report 89 Ohio salmoneDa cases
. COLUMBUS (AP) Department ai&amp;O.says testing
Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland on peaput butter samples
vetoed about $52.000 for from a Delaware County
food-safety inspections last long-term care facility found
year in the state that has salmonella matching the
reported the most cases of outbreak strain.
·
salmonella linked to a
Last year, Strickland Wl1lll·
national outbreak. that began gled with the Legislature
in September.
over how much to spend on
The state Department of food safety inspections con·
Health said Tuesday that 89 dueled by the Ohio
cases, of salmonella have De~ment of Agricultllfe,
been reported in the state, wh1ch can cost between $300
with patients reponing the and $600 . . Strickland. a
onset of symptoms as Democrut. stripped the
recently as Jan. 24. Twent~- · inspection fUnding from a
nine cases have resulted m · budget be was trying to keep
hospitalization. and officials lean in the fa~:e of grim ecosay an infection may have nomic projections.
contributed to one death.
The Legislature, with
. Ohio remains the state both chambers controlled
with the largest number of by Republicans. restored the
cases, uccording to the latest fundin~ in budget adjustnumbers from the U.S. ments 11 passed last June.
Centers for Disease Control
State Rep. Shannon Jones.
and Prevention. Nationwide. a Springboro Republican
600 people h11ve been infect· who championed
the ·
ed in the outbreak linked to restored f!lndmg. said she
tainted pe1111ut products and saw the spending as vital.
more than 1.840' foods have
"The bottom line is that
been recalled.
food-safety inspection is u
The
Ohio
Health fundamental government

responsibility and we ought
to be fundin~ that adequately ," ~e sa1d. "I beli~ve
there s an expectation
among people that their
food is goi~ to be safe, and
the only .entity that's in the
position to do that is the
government."
· In his veto message.
Strickland cut aoout $18
million that lawmakers
wanted to use from the
state's rainy day fund.
including money for food·
safety inspections, school
bus inspections. animal disease control and other ser·
vices.
"With the potential for
more economic challenges.
in the future. it is premature ·
to draw resources from the
budget stabililation fund ut
this time," Strickland wrote.
referring the ruiny day fund .
Ohio's economy did get
worse and Strickland has
proposed zeroing out the
rainy day fund to bahmc~;
the nel\1 two-yeur budget.
which is now being debated.

at the time of the ~eto.
Striddand said he was confident his veto wouldn't
affect Ohio's ability "to protect the health, safety and
welfare of the public.'
In making the cuts, agri·
culture officials worked
closely with state budgeters
to assure there was no
reduction in the state's
ins~ction abilities, said
Stnckland spokeswoman
Amanda Wurst.
II is unclear how the
$52,000 might have affect·
ed the impact of the salmonella outbreak on Ohio, said
Cindy Kalis. a spokeswoman for the state agriculture depanment. Slle said
the deJ:l;llrtment's primary
respomubility is to inspect
food manufacturing sites in
Ohio.
·
The peanut ingredient that
has been recalled was pro·
duced in Oeorgia.
"In terms of food safety
here · in Ohio. we're very
cont'ident .in the testing .that
we do," she said. ·

•

r
I
I
I

Buy One Purse
Get a Wallet
112 Price
Buy One Box of Candy
Get a Greeting Card

· ·

1/2 Price

,
I
I
I

L-------------.J
992·2955 • Pomeroy, OH

and to.w pants so th..:i.t
bulging bcllill:i are expooxl
to 1M publk-, As a seniot
dt®n. l ~tbef nuxlest
maternity ctotlles. l migb.t
be in~ in a pkture- of
the ctUlll ~ it is \om. but
l uoo 't ~are to see your
:&gt;wolteu tigu_re ~~~then . I
"'&lt;Ill ' t bol-tp but .make n~
he-ad to see our society s.liding
Uo\~ nhlll.
R-•btr &amp;d. Wlla t.

tin~ w~Q preg~W~t women .
wouen"IIA\Iowed oot in' pu~
lk al~tl\«. Th&lt;: preg~
bod)' IS 1\(&gt;thing ~~' be

a.'&lt;llu.uled of or hidden, We
agree that tight maternity

lashiOliS ill\' 11.(11 Particularly
flattering, but that is besi(ll)
the poiot. And all fmon
~s ovtt thne, so pk11.~
try to ftnd s1-.mething el~ to
be aggra.va.ted aboln ..
Dear A.-: l am a ~­
year. . old male'and ted ~'Om­
~'&lt;'tlo:d ''' respond · 10.
:..Wotried," whose tlooyfriei\Q
S&lt;IVS she ~s 1\X&gt; m&lt;my stu·
p.id questio11s. She i~ risb.t tu
lle 1.\l.IU.-emed. I have been
there. dol~ that ~;~nd h~;~ve .
the T-s.hirt. "Denu.i&amp;" does
1\01 love ht¢t as a pw'tl~f
should, He lllllJI have at 01~
tin1e. but no to.nger. He ha.\n't the ~-oomge to be hone-st.
so be tries to tolera.te her.
WedMsday,Feb. U
but ever~ Httle quirk. of ht¢r
POMEROY - Salisbury
persom1hty grate&amp; on his l&lt;~st Townmip 1rustees meet at
nerve. .
6:30 p.m.. 111 home · 1)1'
I hope "Worried" listens TrusteeManning Roush .
becau s~ it will get worse.
and on~ dlly lie will htwe
enough nerve t(&gt; say how he
really l~h , nr he will do
~&gt;ther.
more obnoxious
things to turn her uwuy .
Tbursda)'. Feb. l1
Thb is twt her fault . She .
RACINE
- Sunshine
should be thuni;Jul for the
· good times they had and Circle. 7 p,m, at too Dot"Ca~
tl\e e0UI:IIIi\ll1 ~ 1'1:\.'eived Hetlw•y Church. Memller-;.
in this relat\ons.hip, A r:er·
son l.'tlm\01 get these life
lessons out of ll. l.&gt;ool;. , It
will hun. but she will ~
lletter ot'L - I Knuw
llear Koow: We llgr«&gt;
tl\at this is not a bet~lthy
t'clationship. &lt;11\d if it does" 't chl.\ll9e. she is indeed
bet~ oil without hlm.
A1t1tif.'s Mctilbox iii wrif.
tf1t hy Kcttlty Mitcilf/1 uiHI
MctN'Y S..,ur, la~tgri•t fill·
tfln' of tltt "'"" l.ctltdtrs
~olw••· PIMst t·lffUII YiJNr

Community Calendar

•

Public meetings

to tale fruit ~o;\.ets and ~'01-

Clubs and

CHESTER - Sh&lt;wJe Riv~;r
l.~ 453. regulll.l' t11«ti11g.
7:3(1 pJll. Refreshments. .
RACINE - Ohio River
Producers. 7 p.m. at the •
Southern High School Vo
Agroom,
POMEROY - Alpha lOla
M&lt;tsters. II :30 a.m. a1 the
New Beginnings United
Metho.xlist Chu-:cli. Poo1eroy.
Friday, Feb. U
HARRISONVILLE · Amm11l
h1spection in
EmOOld Appreutke degm! . .

organizations

l~tibles .

Hal'fisoov ille L\~i) 14 11 .
free IU1d Al:\.-epted Mason ~,
be~in~ wlth refreshmems at
6:.0 p,n\,
Saturda)', Feb.
POMEROY - Rolturn
Jomllhan Miligs Cha~ter.
Dllughters of the Amencan
RevolutiO.I. I £ ·m, &lt;II th~;
Meigs library. ~(.'Oil Rrittl&gt;ll
of the SAR will he the
~pea~er. ·Linda Rus~ell.
Patty C1X&gt;~ llt'ld l.)orothy
Sayre ure hl&gt;\;tes&amp;t)s,
Mllllda)'. Feb. 16
POMEROY - P\llllei'Oy
Chapter 186. Order 111' tile

MIDDLEPORT
f(lrgiv-..u Fou1· s.· in~~ at
tO:,"lltl lUll.. MIYY
·•·• epofl
ChtH'I;h of the Nut.anme.
~neraal Hartinger l\u'kw11y.
· lnt'i.lro\at\otlflt 9112-319 L
l''rld~. Feb. 13
l.ONO . BOTTOM
hith Full (l,).~pel Church
~ervi~o-e. 7 p.m. with Deave
and Debbie Dailey si11ging.
'

ltux 1111.190. C"-kcqo, II.
60411. To {utd uttt lltCH'f
ctbollt A1111i('t · Mal'llmx,
It~ " " " jl!(fftfff$ by utllti'

Cffaton SyRcht"«tt writm
and t'url1141ni~l$, vMt lht ·
Cffctti.Jr.~ Sy~tdicatt Wth

'

p&lt;llf Ill WWW,CffUftli'S,('(Iftt,

Birth announced
TUPPERS PLAINS Dtlvid nnd llrundy R~mkin
of Tuppers Pluins unnOUIK'I)
lh~ birth of a daughter.
M&lt;~lwmm l.eiglumn. lx''" ul
Cumd~:n Clnrl\ M&lt;.'mnrit~l
· li~&gt;spitlll in Pt~rke1·~burg.
W.Vu . on Oct. 11 . 2008. She
wei!Jhed 6 pounds . 2
l)uvid
MlklnM
nod Jess ie Sums . of
Lelghenn
'lankin
Cheshire. John nnd Connie
Runkin of Tuppe1;s Pluins; · Plnin~. Mury L(\U Fryar l)f
and Keu umt Trn~o· ey Coolville. L.D. and Jenny
lld~rton (ll' Lond\lll, Ohi\l. Jt~rvis of Rumseur. N.C ..
Grell! Grum.lparents nrc and Curol Dnvey of
Shirley Jones of Tuppers Columbus.

HOLZER
CLINIC

Throupout the month of February, Holzer Clinic Physicians
&amp; Staff are pviq back to our community. Each of our
9locations will be coUectina food to f11l the shelves of local
food banks. Each Friday, employees will be wearing Jeans
and T-shirts as we collect food for the cause.

PLASTIC SURGERY SPECIAL
New State-of-the-Art Au
Ambulatory Surg

IIWUD

···-~·-·

.

50°/o OR

Fur infommtlon leuding to the urrest mul conviction
ot' indiVidmtl(s) Wil(l stole n 650 p_ound ~· upul:it)'
gulvuni~ed gmvlty dller feeder "long with tree
stnnds nnd digitul scouting Cllmem~ from n pmperty
lo~utlld on Steurns und Bentz Cemetery mud in
Omnge town ship. Meigs Co .. Ohio Thunksgivlng
wci:K und on a se~ond u~:cusion be.tween Junuury
I ~th to the 24th. those with inl'unn"tion plcuse lfHII:
(304) 372-7004 or (~04) 5~2-7965 . Your idetHity
will remuin conrklcnllul und be prlllt~cted .

Eyelid~
I

•
I'

Chu.rth events

qw~~·tiuns lfl Ultltits••il·
hu.rt'flntt•itsl.lttl, ctr writt
tu: AffHit'$ M11ilbox, P.O.

Gnmdpurem~ t~re

,

MllCk initi11tion tll be held.

·Our·Commmdty.is Very Important to Us
Tlult's fir .Wt W1111t to Glw Bt~cle•••

lllllll:~~.

Laser Facial

a-t

&amp;~stem Stat\ 7:30 p.m. meetlllg. rot't-eslu~nt~ at 6:30pJ11,

HOLZER
CLINIC

�•

LoCAl .• STATE

The Daily Sentinel

ing today,~ well
Wtil:nt )'-Cloudy. A
over l50 ~a y~.
cba.ace- ot' showers in tbt
Thil&gt; CQa;.-ert featllreS
Cbris.ti.an ~--"'. ,....;..-•• , ro.01:0.ing ....Theu. showers
,~...~~ ~oe;.....
with. 11t ~ of tb.u.oderfunny . songs, and muSical ~ i.ft the atb:rnoon.
~oR~= S.Ome thUJI.de(stotws may
such as. Third I&amp;"J,'Mic~ ~ gust)n~Oo"- in the
~
· &amp;.fteta.ooo.
~Y
wtth
W. Slnith. The Da.Yid ~b.s .in th.e Uppef 1)&amp;.
Crowder Ba.Dd, and Mark. SOOth -.windS 15 to 20 mpll.
Sc~:~·moJrt" in"'rl!t«tiorr,
Gu_sts up to 35 mph in~
~v
afternoon. Chaw:.~ o~· l'll.i.n

POINT
PLEASANT. Allditoriwn
at
Poiu
W.VIl, - For new:ly ZO Pleasant High School. 7:~
yean ChristiliD. comedian p.m. on feb. 2.8. Ttdets.are
IA&gt;tid farrell has. shown $l0 and can be purchased
in adn.oce- at the Mason Jar
~ that dean oome-:
dy can be funn~. He is a in Point ~asant. at Sider's
described as a comedian, Jewelers in the Wa.t-Mart
awtivational speaker. youth Plua at Ga.llipo&amp;. or at th~
communicator. and di$C door on the day of tb.e
~ey. whose-~s

sbO',II .

.

PrQI:eeds. will go to the
PPHS
Lady .1\.nigbts
and ~ssiQU!&gt; .
He will be at the lillian Softball. Tbe cbll!Ch or
and
Paul
Wedge organization that brings the
tnclude stand-up comedy

0

u

eJ'f&amp; · or warns 0

conectioa.al
facHiti~s.
would be closed. she ~d.
ASSOCIATED PRess WRITeRS
~we will be I~ at
real impa~:ts of cuts in s«·
COLUMBUS - Ohioans vice1 ro Ohioans every
wOuld see significant cuts in day. sabety told members
mental health and drug of the Ohio Houre Finance
treatment pro.gouns liD.d · Committee. who got their
fllee an increase in ~-ollege t1rst (;hance to dis.sect lh~
budg~t
tuition if Cong~ passes a administration's
stimulU$ package with plan s.ince it was released
reduced aid to sttuggling last week.
Strickland, a former col\·
states. Gov. Tlld Strickland's
budget directot warned.state gressman. traveled . to
lawmakers TUesday.
Washington Monday to
Strickland's two-year. ~a! to Ohio's ~-ongres·
$55 billion budget plan s.tonal delegation to restore
relies on $3.4 billion in fed- the fllDding when the bill
eral mone_y to help fill a $7 retu_ms to the U.S.. House.
biUion deficit. The $838 bil· The Democrat satd he IS
lion . verSion of President also speaking daily with fel•
Banick. ()banta's . eool\omic low governors to coordinate
reoovery plan that passed efforts to see that the states'
the U.S. Senate on Tuesday position is heard.
doesn 'l include $25 billion
The Senate cuts "will do
that the U.S. House had set great harm, will deprive
aside fot states to spend on a people of Deeded services,
variety tlf prognuns.
· will result in job loss.. and
If the U.S. House is that is simply oontrar.)l to
unable to restore the fund- the ~ of a stimulus .
ing. Ohio would need to bill.' Striekland said.
trim between $900 million
Some states have put their
and $1 billion from its. bud· budget plans on bold while
get proposal. Budget federal lawmakers wQd out
Director Pari Sabety said.
the Obuma recovery plan.
As a result, 50,000 fewer Other states have cratled
people would get ment11l budgets that don't rely on
health treatment, 33.000. federal stimulus money, ·
Ohioans wouldn't receive
Ohio, however. is moving
drug and alcohol addiction forward with a budget plan
services. more than 40 per- based oo stimulus money
cent of Ohio students despite the li!ICI:rtllinty in
would have to · ~ay Washington,
increased college tuiuon
Republicans in Ohio ha'l'e
costs, and medium-si1ed criticiJed Strickland for

BY SIUttEMIIA.MIIIiS
AND .tuLlE CAM SnTH

BYTHE .BEND
ANNIE'S MAILBOX
Pa1·b1ers
in
Ca•·e
anniversary
Deal with lotterystruck parents

The Daily Sentinel

PageA.2

•

BY KAlMY lltllQIIU.
AIID MMc't baR
Dtv A.-~ I woul\.llil~

yoot a.l'l i~ about my par.mts, who ~ in ~ir 70s.

Moot Wid Dad sur\ i w off a
~mall amount of Sodab
Se\'uri•J~ ·
tJ .ttf\)rtu.t\ll.tel)l.
Uley a.l'e' ll.(.l\11\:ti!Q to. buy ill8
tott~ry . tid.tts. f'~~ SIN:l\
st!l!:k.s of$lU tii..'lt'ts, many
'ilf wbid\ ~~re n1.i1il~ in fot'
seoond-chaui..'l.' dr&lt;~.w\ngs , t Wurea.OWo
Dear Waaa~ tf yoo go.
be®w they ll.t'e' W&gt;ing theif
back
fann&lt;.)U~h. there w!-IS a
i:.!Wit cards to fitWJ.ce: this.

· . ~=S·;;.The~w~ s1J:

re~ing on ooe:-time t~ ;\ss~ia.tiQQ, · lht state:'s. · midalght. ~ tb.undetmoney. fearing it wQilld rW'gesl teacher's union. SliiJmiS may ~ gusly
lead to tax bikes in future sa:id ~tiro.ul~~~&gt; · cuts in the wi.nds in thee~~. W'indy
years IQ maint"&lt;!.i.n serv~.
U.S. Senate wootd affect ~ much cooler wtth tows
"It would be prudent .on the jobs of tel\'&gt; o{ thou- tn the upper 30$. Southwest
ou_r part to work. witb: a bud- sands of educators overtoo wtnds ZO to 30 mph Wllh
getlha.t uses revenue w~ can nex.t sevefal years, pare s~~~&gt;ts up to 40 mph, Ct\Wl(.'l.'
reasonab1)1 expect to gerier- bad. i.'Oilrse otlerings. and . Of mn 50 pet\."ent,
ate as a state," said Rep. all but etiminlll~ ~xtracu_rTh~.....Partly SY.Ull)l
Ross
~kGregor.
a rkutar uctivities.
~4 b.ee~~ . Much ~'IX•l.:t
Springfield Republican.
Meanwbil~. a coalitioo of wtth hlshs m the upper 4Us.
Sabety d~fended the plan social services advocates ":est wtnds IS to ZO mph
to state lawmakers. saying cal&lt;:ulated ~trimmed bacl wtth gusts up to 35 tl\ph.
the point of stimulus mooey · stimulus twuling would pren~ sittht...Mostl~
is to give stl.ttes something: vent expans.ion ot· public - - -- ...,---- -- - ' - -- - -- - - 11Hpend quid.ly.
·
h~alt~ insurance to 36-.000 T .--...1
"State govet'llment is an 01\io chlklr-en and result in ~
entity. wuike many tinan- cuts to food prognuns fot 2
cial mstituti(&gt;n~ . that actual-, million hungry Ohioans,
ly ts m the b(ts~ness of
Stnckllll\d satd th;: states
spewing money and putting can be e11gine:&gt; fol' ecooomit into the mark.etpliK.-e so ic rei.'O'I'ery. Ollio. tbr examthat people have money to pie. spends 88 cents of
buy groceries.. they have every dollar in its budget oo
money to stimulate our local progl'lltnS that support
economy. they have the sick children, thos~ with
ability to boost our oonfi. mental health issues. drug
den&lt;.-e," Sabety Sllid.
addiction, and 1M eld~rly,
Eoonomlc gro~,Vth lllOdlils be said.
·
·
show that tax revenues will
"This ~le is not over,"
increase during an expected he said, .
rewvery - enough to sus- · His off"M launched a Web
tain the level of state spend- site TUesday. ·www.reroving. she said,
ery .ohio. where Ohioans.
Strkl:.land 's
budget. can apply for programs
b&lt;lsed on 11 version of the underwritten by stimulU$
stimulus ~Jan in the U.S. dollars - such as ~ll
House,cans tbr usin~ $810 grants for college students.
million in lederal atu for ur unemployment compen·
special education and low· Slltion. ln a releose.
income school districts. . Stri~-k.land said he believe
and $1.35 billion for prima· the site will 11llow the state
ry, secondary and higlwr lQ uct more quickly wbell
education,.
the money becomes uvailThe Ohiq Education able.

addktioo.

'

My parents· win ll. l~w
hundred doUars from time
to tlrne. whldl ouly f~ls tl\e
·ttre. but IOOre's tlo. w a.•Y they
win ~uoog:n t&lt;.• P"Y fill' aU
these ti~:k.ets. I reali~ it's
t1011e ot' my b~ines-•. but I
wot'I'Y because they seem to
Ml tow o.n ~"k ~'l.'ssities
~ud\ lis food and lwatiug oiL
- I try to help otll Ill\\! they
are l:ll'J&gt;leciatlve. I rep}ac,-ed
som~ major appli&lt;m~o'ts l'o.r
them when we- up~n1ded
oor-;.. altnoo~h my s1hllngs
k.~:ep expect\~ me to do
111.~ and ~ comments
ure- gettiQ8 ''' me-. I'm 1101
sure- hl.'w to nUike my p&lt;il'ents stvp s~ndi~ so much
Ol\ lottery tkl\ets. and I
t-esent my s.ibli!l~' att&lt;~eJ;.s , l
&lt;Ull a v~ry patient ani.!
understauditlg person. but
tu,tve about had it. 8tllttled
Dear Belittled: C&lt;~ll a
s.iblins meetit1g to disi.'llss
what 1s going on with your
parents and what each of
you cun do to help t'inanda.lly and ph~sicaliJ&lt;:. Thl~ is
oot a comfi"lltioo, You 11e1.'\l
to wot·k tugether for the
greuter ·good.
·
On~-e you have reuched un
t~gm!menl. bring yom p!'l't&gt;nt~ int\l the UiSCIISSilll\.
Expl11lll thut too ex~-essive
uumber of lot111cy tkk~ts is
dlsh1rbing. espedully $illce
th~y ure huving tn•llbh:
tnul;.ing ends m~t . Pay
attentk•n to thclr 1-eu~&gt;ning
and comprebensioll to
determine whether the,Y
llee\! tm evaluation by the1r
doctor. mul cbe~k if tht&gt;y are
tuking medications that
might i.'Ontribute to addictive lle-h&lt;tviors, from this
poi11t t\l1'WII\'d, )IOU and )lOlli'
siblings should tulk to et1ch
other upenly ubom whm Is
going vn und how best to
hun~le it, The.r t is strength
in numbers.
Dear Annie:
liave
women lost all common
sense'? · I am tall;.ing tlhout
the CUIJ\lllt 11-end ,,f preg ·
mmt wo111en who insist 1•n
weuring SlK'h tight clothing
thut. every outlme and belly hutton shows - short tops

'.,

Stocks

Ohio officials report 89 Ohio salmoneDa cases
. COLUMBUS (AP) Department ai&amp;O.says testing
Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland on peaput butter samples
vetoed about $52.000 for from a Delaware County
food-safety inspections last long-term care facility found
year in the state that has salmonella matching the
reported the most cases of outbreak strain.
·
salmonella linked to a
Last year, Strickland Wl1lll·
national outbreak. that began gled with the Legislature
in September.
over how much to spend on
The state Department of food safety inspections con·
Health said Tuesday that 89 dueled by the Ohio
cases, of salmonella have De~ment of Agricultllfe,
been reported in the state, wh1ch can cost between $300
with patients reponing the and $600 . . Strickland. a
onset of symptoms as Democrut. stripped the
recently as Jan. 24. Twent~- · inspection fUnding from a
nine cases have resulted m · budget be was trying to keep
hospitalization. and officials lean in the fa~:e of grim ecosay an infection may have nomic projections.
contributed to one death.
The Legislature, with
. Ohio remains the state both chambers controlled
with the largest number of by Republicans. restored the
cases, uccording to the latest fundin~ in budget adjustnumbers from the U.S. ments 11 passed last June.
Centers for Disease Control
State Rep. Shannon Jones.
and Prevention. Nationwide. a Springboro Republican
600 people h11ve been infect· who championed
the ·
ed in the outbreak linked to restored f!lndmg. said she
tainted pe1111ut products and saw the spending as vital.
more than 1.840' foods have
"The bottom line is that
been recalled.
food-safety inspection is u
The
Ohio
Health fundamental government

responsibility and we ought
to be fundin~ that adequately ," ~e sa1d. "I beli~ve
there s an expectation
among people that their
food is goi~ to be safe, and
the only .entity that's in the
position to do that is the
government."
· In his veto message.
Strickland cut aoout $18
million that lawmakers
wanted to use from the
state's rainy day fund.
including money for food·
safety inspections, school
bus inspections. animal disease control and other ser·
vices.
"With the potential for
more economic challenges.
in the future. it is premature ·
to draw resources from the
budget stabililation fund ut
this time," Strickland wrote.
referring the ruiny day fund .
Ohio's economy did get
worse and Strickland has
proposed zeroing out the
rainy day fund to bahmc~;
the nel\1 two-yeur budget.
which is now being debated.

at the time of the ~eto.
Striddand said he was confident his veto wouldn't
affect Ohio's ability "to protect the health, safety and
welfare of the public.'
In making the cuts, agri·
culture officials worked
closely with state budgeters
to assure there was no
reduction in the state's
ins~ction abilities, said
Stnckland spokeswoman
Amanda Wurst.
II is unclear how the
$52,000 might have affect·
ed the impact of the salmonella outbreak on Ohio, said
Cindy Kalis. a spokeswoman for the state agriculture depanment. Slle said
the deJ:l;llrtment's primary
respomubility is to inspect
food manufacturing sites in
Ohio.
·
The peanut ingredient that
has been recalled was pro·
duced in Oeorgia.
"In terms of food safety
here · in Ohio. we're very
cont'ident .in the testing .that
we do," she said. ·

•

r
I
I
I

Buy One Purse
Get a Wallet
112 Price
Buy One Box of Candy
Get a Greeting Card

· ·

1/2 Price

,
I
I
I

L-------------.J
992·2955 • Pomeroy, OH

and to.w pants so th..:i.t
bulging bcllill:i are expooxl
to 1M publk-, As a seniot
dt®n. l ~tbef nuxlest
maternity ctotlles. l migb.t
be in~ in a pkture- of
the ctUlll ~ it is \om. but
l uoo 't ~are to see your
:&gt;wolteu tigu_re ~~~then . I
"'&lt;Ill ' t bol-tp but .make n~
he-ad to see our society s.liding
Uo\~ nhlll.
R-•btr &amp;d. Wlla t.

tin~ w~Q preg~W~t women .
wouen"IIA\Iowed oot in' pu~
lk al~tl\«. Th&lt;: preg~
bod)' IS 1\(&gt;thing ~~' be

a.'&lt;llu.uled of or hidden, We
agree that tight maternity

lashiOliS ill\' 11.(11 Particularly
flattering, but that is besi(ll)
the poiot. And all fmon
~s ovtt thne, so pk11.~
try to ftnd s1-.mething el~ to
be aggra.va.ted aboln ..
Dear A.-: l am a ~­
year. . old male'and ted ~'Om­
~'&lt;'tlo:d ''' respond · 10.
:..Wotried," whose tlooyfriei\Q
S&lt;IVS she ~s 1\X&gt; m&lt;my stu·
p.id questio11s. She i~ risb.t tu
lle 1.\l.IU.-emed. I have been
there. dol~ that ~;~nd h~;~ve .
the T-s.hirt. "Denu.i&amp;" does
1\01 love ht¢t as a pw'tl~f
should, He lllllJI have at 01~
tin1e. but no to.nger. He ha.\n't the ~-oomge to be hone-st.
so be tries to tolera.te her.
WedMsday,Feb. U
but ever~ Httle quirk. of ht¢r
POMEROY - Salisbury
persom1hty grate&amp; on his l&lt;~st Townmip 1rustees meet at
nerve. .
6:30 p.m.. 111 home · 1)1'
I hope "Worried" listens TrusteeManning Roush .
becau s~ it will get worse.
and on~ dlly lie will htwe
enough nerve t(&gt; say how he
really l~h , nr he will do
~&gt;ther.
more obnoxious
things to turn her uwuy .
Tbursda)'. Feb. l1
Thb is twt her fault . She .
RACINE
- Sunshine
should be thuni;Jul for the
· good times they had and Circle. 7 p,m, at too Dot"Ca~
tl\e e0UI:IIIi\ll1 ~ 1'1:\.'eived Hetlw•y Church. Memller-;.
in this relat\ons.hip, A r:er·
son l.'tlm\01 get these life
lessons out of ll. l.&gt;ool;. , It
will hun. but she will ~
lletter ot'L - I Knuw
llear Koow: We llgr«&gt;
tl\at this is not a bet~lthy
t'clationship. &lt;11\d if it does" 't chl.\ll9e. she is indeed
bet~ oil without hlm.
A1t1tif.'s Mctilbox iii wrif.
tf1t hy Kcttlty Mitcilf/1 uiHI
MctN'Y S..,ur, la~tgri•t fill·
tfln' of tltt "'"" l.ctltdtrs
~olw••· PIMst t·lffUII YiJNr

Community Calendar

•

Public meetings

to tale fruit ~o;\.ets and ~'01-

Clubs and

CHESTER - Sh&lt;wJe Riv~;r
l.~ 453. regulll.l' t11«ti11g.
7:3(1 pJll. Refreshments. .
RACINE - Ohio River
Producers. 7 p.m. at the •
Southern High School Vo
Agroom,
POMEROY - Alpha lOla
M&lt;tsters. II :30 a.m. a1 the
New Beginnings United
Metho.xlist Chu-:cli. Poo1eroy.
Friday, Feb. U
HARRISONVILLE · Amm11l
h1spection in
EmOOld Appreutke degm! . .

organizations

l~tibles .

Hal'fisoov ille L\~i) 14 11 .
free IU1d Al:\.-epted Mason ~,
be~in~ wlth refreshmems at
6:.0 p,n\,
Saturda)', Feb.
POMEROY - Rolturn
Jomllhan Miligs Cha~ter.
Dllughters of the Amencan
RevolutiO.I. I £ ·m, &lt;II th~;
Meigs library. ~(.'Oil Rrittl&gt;ll
of the SAR will he the
~pea~er. ·Linda Rus~ell.
Patty C1X&gt;~ llt'ld l.)orothy
Sayre ure hl&gt;\;tes&amp;t)s,
Mllllda)'. Feb. 16
POMEROY - P\llllei'Oy
Chapter 186. Order 111' tile

MIDDLEPORT
f(lrgiv-..u Fou1· s.· in~~ at
tO:,"lltl lUll.. MIYY
·•·• epofl
ChtH'I;h of the Nut.anme.
~neraal Hartinger l\u'kw11y.
· lnt'i.lro\at\otlflt 9112-319 L
l''rld~. Feb. 13
l.ONO . BOTTOM
hith Full (l,).~pel Church
~ervi~o-e. 7 p.m. with Deave
and Debbie Dailey si11ging.
'

ltux 1111.190. C"-kcqo, II.
60411. To {utd uttt lltCH'f
ctbollt A1111i('t · Mal'llmx,
It~ " " " jl!(fftfff$ by utllti'

Cffaton SyRcht"«tt writm
and t'url1141ni~l$, vMt lht ·
Cffctti.Jr.~ Sy~tdicatt Wth

'

p&lt;llf Ill WWW,CffUftli'S,('(Iftt,

Birth announced
TUPPERS PLAINS Dtlvid nnd llrundy R~mkin
of Tuppers Pluins unnOUIK'I)
lh~ birth of a daughter.
M&lt;~lwmm l.eiglumn. lx''" ul
Cumd~:n Clnrl\ M&lt;.'mnrit~l
· li~&gt;spitlll in Pt~rke1·~burg.
W.Vu . on Oct. 11 . 2008. She
wei!Jhed 6 pounds . 2
l)uvid
MlklnM
nod Jess ie Sums . of
Lelghenn
'lankin
Cheshire. John nnd Connie
Runkin of Tuppe1;s Pluins; · Plnin~. Mury L(\U Fryar l)f
and Keu umt Trn~o· ey Coolville. L.D. and Jenny
lld~rton (ll' Lond\lll, Ohi\l. Jt~rvis of Rumseur. N.C ..
Grell! Grum.lparents nrc and Curol Dnvey of
Shirley Jones of Tuppers Columbus.

HOLZER
CLINIC

Throupout the month of February, Holzer Clinic Physicians
&amp; Staff are pviq back to our community. Each of our
9locations will be coUectina food to f11l the shelves of local
food banks. Each Friday, employees will be wearing Jeans
and T-shirts as we collect food for the cause.

PLASTIC SURGERY SPECIAL
New State-of-the-Art Au
Ambulatory Surg

IIWUD

···-~·-·

.

50°/o OR

Fur infommtlon leuding to the urrest mul conviction
ot' indiVidmtl(s) Wil(l stole n 650 p_ound ~· upul:it)'
gulvuni~ed gmvlty dller feeder "long with tree
stnnds nnd digitul scouting Cllmem~ from n pmperty
lo~utlld on Steurns und Bentz Cemetery mud in
Omnge town ship. Meigs Co .. Ohio Thunksgivlng
wci:K und on a se~ond u~:cusion be.tween Junuury
I ~th to the 24th. those with inl'unn"tion plcuse lfHII:
(304) 372-7004 or (~04) 5~2-7965 . Your idetHity
will remuin conrklcnllul und be prlllt~cted .

Eyelid~
I

•
I'

Chu.rth events

qw~~·tiuns lfl Ultltits••il·
hu.rt'flntt•itsl.lttl, ctr writt
tu: AffHit'$ M11ilbox, P.O.

Gnmdpurem~ t~re

,

MllCk initi11tion tll be held.

·Our·Commmdty.is Very Important to Us
Tlult's fir .Wt W1111t to Glw Bt~cle•••

lllllll:~~.

Laser Facial

a-t

&amp;~stem Stat\ 7:30 p.m. meetlllg. rot't-eslu~nt~ at 6:30pJ11,

HOLZER
CLINIC

�I

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111

4740) 992-2156 • FAX 1740) 992-2157
WWW..~eaM

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Olin Goodrich
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor
'

C~ss slt~.Jll

makr "" law l't"Sp«'"'..~ aN
tste~Nislt~ttrttt (lJ rt"'{ttl)ft, 11r prolti.itittg tltr
jm t«trdSt' tlttfti.!l} llf ll.ridgtll,f tlat' Jfttflorrt
II}' Sl'f'«lt. or '!f tltt p«ss; 11r tfle ri..t't ".! ,.,.
JWOJtlr pt'CI\'t'~.Jb#y t~.&gt; aSSt"fft&amp;lr, all to lt'titiM
tltt Got&gt;t'1'tttnl'ttt Ji.lr •• «drtss ofgritNtttts.

TODAY IN~IS TORY
-l~nd lluv

~OO'J ,

of

•.

Too.l&lt;~y's Hi~hhght iu Histor~:

. . · .
On fet&gt; . II , I S5S. ft\'oll:h let'll~l'r Bermtdettt: Sl&gt;ltbti\&gt;Us
!\'pi.&gt;l'tt'U th&lt;: tlt'l't ,,f l X vbtl&gt;tls l&gt;f &lt;t la..ty &lt;lt'&lt;'&gt;&gt;l'tl in white in
a i:l\&gt;ttl&gt; ll&lt;'&lt;U' L\&gt;~nks . rt'he l '&lt;tthnlll' Churdl luto:r m:~-.:ptl'tl
that th&lt;' visious w~re ,,f th~ Vit~in Mltf~ . )
On this \lat.::
In IX t 1, Mm•s&lt;t~hust'lls (i;w . f;lt&gt;ridg.&lt;' Gt:i1')' si~ne\l u
· t't'&lt;listt'i&lt;.:till~ l&lt;tW fU~l&gt;rin~ his p&lt;U't)', ~iviug_ ri-'&lt;' I\&gt; tht' t.:'fUI
"lolel'l'ym&lt;m~t'rh~ ."
..
' tn I ~61. f'l't'sidtnt·d~;:t 1\l:&gt;n1ham Utt..'\&gt;ltt d.:pm·to."\1
S.pting_fit'kL Ill., f1&gt;t' Wu~hiugton,
1t1 1~)1,1, h~·u~~wd~:ht bo:l.&lt;'l' Mux. llu~·r was bom in
Omuh&lt;~. N..-b .: (h\:~i·- winnin~ wt'it~t'-pr;xl\1\'t'Nht't'\'tl&gt;r
J;&gt;;~~&gt;h L Munkiewia w~ born in Wllkes-Burre, Plt.
In 1921,1 , tht' Ltt~t1111 Trt·~tt''./ W&lt;ts si:.:nt'll.
with lt&lt;~h l't'\:O~·
"
...
niting the ind&lt;:pt'ndi:'fll_'tl mtd S\\Vt'reignty ••f Vati•·un fit} .
In 1937, &lt;t stX·WtX'k·olll stHlown stnkt ugmnst Gtnt'rul
MotOJ'S tnd.-d. with the \'Otllp&lt;utV ugtwiug h' rt'\'\)gni:lt' tht'
United Autotll(&gt;bile Wvrl&gt;ers l l11'mn.
In 1945, President Roostvdt, !ltitish· Pritnt' Ministt•r
Winston Ch\tt'\:.hill u.nd SovioN lt'udt't' J;&gt;st'f St&lt;tlin si~n&lt;'\1 tht'
Yultu Agt-ooment durin~ w,,d,l Wm· IL
.In 197;1, Murgul\'t Thut,·h.-r was t'lt'l'!ed k-ad.-r of
Brituin 's oppo-~ition Const'rv uti vo:- Purty,
.
· hi 1979, followet'$ of 1\)'utl&gt;tluh Rt~hl&gt;ll~;~h ·Khvmdni
st:'iiei.l p;&gt;w.-r in lrun.
.
In 1989, tho:- Rev . !htrb&lt;lnt C HmTis t&gt;&lt;'l.'ttme. th\' t1rst
wvmmt wnstl.'rttted us &lt;t t:&gt;ishvp iu thl' f:pis\'\&gt;ptt l ChtU'l'h, in
u &lt;.:tt't'nwny hi.'kt in t!ost1&gt;11 .
·
Ten )'&lt;'til's ugo: A t'e&lt;.t~rut j\try in New YNI\ !\&gt;\Hid sevi.'ntl
gtut m&lt;tKt't'$ t't'sp;&gt;nsibk in tht'Ci.' m't'&lt;t shootings fl•r ktting
gtms full \nto the- hm11ls t&gt;f \Timimtls ttml ttsw&gt;s~XI ;htmast-s:
gtm mak~'"' wt-re 1\lttnd liabk' in "l:&lt;. 1&gt;tht'r insttln\'t's, but nv
111(11\e(tti'Y dttllutgi&lt;'S W¢1\' t\WUI\.k\1, (H\&gt;Wt'V\'1\ tht' ~)htilllill'~
!-\tftl:r.:-\1 " st'tbtt\'k in ::oo I when tho.' New York Court (If
Appt•uls invttliduted sud1 dttims.) . .
·
Hve rem'$ ugo: Wesk-y C'lttrk dropped 0\U (\f !~e 1'\K'i:' for
tht' Whtt&lt;' !louse. A •·m· t&gt;omt:&gt; t1t tin army l\1\.'rtlltmg center
in BughdmL lru4 , killt•d -47 pt'vpt.:-. Cublo: TV giat11
Com,·u,t _Cvrp. lttttnched u h~•stil~ . btd to ~uy The Walt
Dtsney Co. lor nM't' I hun $54 btllton , (C\lmcustlttter
•lroppt'd it' bid I.
Otw y~&lt;U' ltgo : Th.: l:lt'kns~: l'll:purtm~:nt ~h&lt;~rgoo Khttlid
Sheikh Mnhammed und fiv&lt;' other &lt;letuine;:s ut
Gu&lt;ttittltlttnw l!uv with tntn\kl' und wur crimes ln conn~·
tivn with th&lt;' s~pL II tltt&lt;td;.s . (Ch&lt;tt'gt'S fi8uinst one- W\'t\'
lutl'r lh''Pl"''l. 1 Y&lt;th1111 "''', t\'j~'\:tl'tl Mictwufl Cm·p.'s mm&gt;·
lkit&lt;-&lt;1 mkt•ov~:r t&gt;ioJ. Tom l.ttnt&lt;&gt;s, u 1-l·tl)t'm CttHfomhl con·
~Nssnum wh\1 wus tt 1\&gt;r,\-l'ttl V\&gt;k·e for hunum rights, died
m !Mh.-slltt, M1.l., &lt;tt "!!'' ~0 .
.
Thl•ug.ht tbr 'l(xhty: ''Tim\) is rt'ttiiY thll only ~;·apitttl thut
ttny htUlltm b&lt;)in!: htts. uud the on,· thing that he ~.·mi 't ttll'ot\1
ll&gt; lose," ~ Thuma~ i\h'&lt;t Edisl&gt;tl (born this duy in I.X47,
dil'tl in 19~ Il.
.

Town meeting
, POMEROY - Buckeye Hill&amp;'Hodlng Valley Regional
De..:elopment District will bold lll\)WD biill forum frOm I0
a.m. to nooa on Thursday a.t the Fult~ Center, 42)TI
Clwles Cha!li.~Y Dr.. Plmleroy.
This will be 1111 int'OOnal public meeting. open to the public. to voi.re opinion&amp; and ~ idetAS fOt future e\.'OOomic
de&gt;~o::lopment plannill8.
·

wol'ds: "If I wanted Obatntl
. tv su•-c~'ed. 1\1 bt ltappJi the
R.-publil.:ans hu&gt;~o:: laid
dvwn.. And I would be
,·nw\tr~lt~ Repo.tt&gt;lkans to
l&lt;ty dvwu u.nd ~tlpP'wt him.
L&lt;x&gt;k , wl\ut ho:: s talking
ub~.&gt;ut is the ubMlfPtil'll ol' a.&lt;
tn\t~' h vf the pti,·al\" ~t&lt;&gt;r
by the l/.S, go~ef!UU\'nt li,S.
1"-"-S.~it&gt;lt', fMII · ttl&lt;' b&lt;\nlill~
bttsino:"'' to the mortgase
itldustry, the . autom&lt;.\bile
t&gt;u.,ino:,_q,) health. o.:are . I d&lt;.&gt;
twt '' m1t th"' gowmml'tlt in
.:hm~..- of 1111 of tho::~ tllin~s­
. I don't wm\t this tv WVl'k , '
Limt&gt;au~h re&lt;'\'ived heavy
firt· for his t'¢mm'ks. Bttt
whttt's wt\lt'S with thenl'~To
suy ltll)'thittg dso:: would

For the Record
Highway Patrol
POMEROY - Sttpll"nie D. fllcemiN, 29, P\&gt;int
.Piel\SIIIIt, W,Vu.. wu~ cited with failing to maintain an
assured dear distlll\\.'e tlbeud followill8 tl tw~rvehide IK-ci·
dent that ~lln'lld Sunday tliOtlling in Sulisbury Tuwnship
at app.rol\imarely 9:31 a.m. ·
. Ace&lt;&gt;rding to troopers. Fac!!mlre was driving l:let 2007
Toyot11 Corolla southbound on Ohio 7 behind Martin L.
Johnson, 66. Middleport. who was driving his 1999 Mazda
B4(U) southbQund on Ohio 7, As Jobnson slow~ llis vehi·
de to t~ttempt a let\ turn ooto County Rood 3. Furemi~
failed to st;lp in an t~Sl&gt;ured deW' dist~ and her vehkle
~truck John~on's vehicle.
No injuries were reported, Facemire's vehicle sustained
disabling dam~oes and John.~on 's vehicle sustained func·
tionul damage~.

-

STIMULus

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
· trnrrs ro rhr edit&lt;ll' wr ll'dnmte . fhn .lhPIIIcl f&gt;e '"·'"
them 300 " 'orcls , All lmrn Wt' Stlbir&lt;'t ui rclitirt~, mmt b..
sig•wd. 111111 i11dmlt' aclcb-ns (IIICI' rrlef'hc&gt;llf lltlllll&gt;fl', NP.
mtsignrtl lrllrn ,..;// br l'llf&gt;lisht'ci . ti'llfl'.' shoulcl br ill
~ood ruste, II&lt;Mn·.,·sin~ i.1sun. IIOIJlf&gt;'.WIICIIitirs . (,etlfl's of
FIVf\, Tv sttve u few bit·
thcmb 111 or:~cmi:mir•;t, wul im/it·id~~&lt;lin\'1'/lur&gt;l be UC&lt;'el'i· lion u ye1u'. the 1\,,t Oll'ictl
ft/./(ll' l&gt;llb.limticm .
Is thinKin~o: of \'ttltlng mull

Co~IIOn Polley .

Ohio Vall•~:.ubllahlna.
P"blionoo "'"' v altornQon, MonO)oy

, Our .mam concern 1n all s.tonos IS to !tlrOl.IQh Fnd:ay. 111 Courl sv~~ ~ .
btJ. at.'Curattl, tf y!lu know ot an ~ttrror f.lomi}roy, Ot1io. S~nQ.t:l~'' PQ¥1~~~
1n a llOJV. c~ ll th\1' n~wsrqom ~~ (140) ~a 11:.1 ~~ Pom~~t•ov.
9~~ 1~6. ~btr : l he A~$OC1l:l.l&amp;a, Prt)~ a.no
th~ OhiQ Ne.w$1p~p~r AiiOCI~IIon

Our main number Ia

Pol,ma•t•r ~

(740) Ha-2156.•

Deperlment ••..natona art:

StmU addrwi

(: ont~c ,

ltOOi · 10 The Dally Sentln~l . 111 Cow l
Strf'J~I. Pomeroy. Oh1c;t 45 ?69

Subacrlptlon Rat••

News

ldltor: Charlene &gt;tootlrcn. ~'' 12
Aeporllr : llnan Reed. ~xl 14
Report•r: !loth Ser~J~ll\1 , E•l n

8y carrier Or motor fOUW
4 - · · , .. ,, ,, , ,, .. ,.'11.30
52 - · · ' ' ' . ·' . ' ' ' . ' .'138.15
D~lly ,.,.,., .. ,,. , , .. , .. 50'

ti~s .

SaniO&lt; Cltl••n rat..

l dun 't ~now it' the IX'l•ple
ut the l'u~t Offke httve
·hctml uiMtt it. but thet-e's
this new te~hnulogy (if
· "new" meunt 40 yeurs uld)
~ttlled -e·lmtiL It 's like regu·
lur uu1il exce)&gt;t it moves ut
the speed of lijlht und you
don't need tt stllmp. &lt;tnd it\
htst.er. bi:tto.:r 'uml chctttX'r.
And thet,•\ mwthiir thing
thltl h\'1/os ll lt&gt;l Wll\'tl )'l&gt;tt
pl&gt;silh'l' )'. ttbsolut\'ly ntttsl
),WI u messu~~· t&lt;&gt; svmeon&lt;.'
right uwuy ll's o:ulled u tde·
ph1&gt;twc. I V&lt;' ho:m\1 tlwy'i\'

211 - k · . ' ' ' ... ' ' . ' ' .'58.81

sa - k l

, ",, , , "., ,•ttUO
Sut1&gt;01""'• '"""'' '"'"' '" ~an&lt;»
I5 (!iloo;t t\J t11o ""'I Ploo..nl ROQ&gt;Sl\11 . No
Outllft Iaiii: Etre&gt;n&lt;ta Oavi~ , E111t 16 jut:~:n,,liQO b'l nle\il ~1111itt~ In artlM
CtaiiiCtro,: JudY Cl~r~ . Ext. 10
whooo homo canler ..rv~• IS a&lt;artalrl\1

Adv tl I
tr s ng
. Outaldtt ~-: Oaw H•rrio, Ext

General M•nager
Charlef\t He&lt;&gt;"IQh, Ext 1 ~

Mall Sub•crtptlon

lnalcle Maaon County

t a We&amp;~~

2ft W.Okl

52 Wevo•

l·mall:
mdtmitw!t@ myd..-il•i,enttoel ,~Qt n

____

.

26

w....

~ WeQ~o
_.....,:,__..

.....

, , . , .'70.70

. · t40.11

Outlldo Ma•&lt;&gt;n Co11n1~

1~ WeQkl

W.b:

, . , . . . '35.26

, ,.

.

Number crunching

servi\'1) do'wn fmm .sil\ dar,s
u wc:el\ to nve. A. few b•l·
lil&gt;tl'? Lt't's just mute It
I:'VI)t'Y &lt;.&gt;thet' dny, nnd ~nve u
few mot~ t&gt;illlllt\ , I'm trying ·
to thinl;. ~&gt;f 11 ~I ngle piece of
muil I've g1•tten tlmt Wtts l'll
impnrhtt1t it c&lt;&gt;uldn 't huve
o.:nnw u duy · Iuter without
chnnging m)' life. Tlte
ph11111: hill · ~mne on
Thurslluy · insteud
of
We11ne,\lny? Hett1ls will
wll! I The fifth LL · Beun
~utult&gt;!! of the tttl&gt;nlh ~'l.&gt;nws ·
u &lt;.luy htt\''? l·h&gt;w sh&lt;.&gt;\tld I
l't:nt my &lt;.&gt;utntlll"? I nee1led
thut Cunu&lt;.lhm blunket ''Ont
Y&lt;'-'1~'1\luy! Oh, the htttmmi·

(USPS ;113·980)

. . . '56.55
' 113.60
'227.21

..

"""'"--~····•··--·--·-···'--···-·_.... ~··-··

Jim
Mullen
----

til ttsii nnd it's nhno~t
Its if the p&lt;'l'$1'11 Y''" ure tult·
ing to is in thQ 1\111111 with
y1&gt;tl , lllNdkt thut, ~1&gt;melluy,
ulmost everyone wilt httve
one.
EIGHT. I ht'ttrd tht\1 ~~
womttn who httd 11\:tuplets
ulreudv hn1l six smull t;hil·
1h~n ~it hl&gt;nw . My uwt ht•r
lmd cijlht dtii&lt;.INn . S&lt;• di&lt;.l
S\tt''s mothet'. Btl! U\&gt;t ull un
the sunll' \lny . They · both
mttnttged to stt't'td1 it ot.tt
over cmtple of tlc~mles .
Then the oldt•r klds wtild
. hdp m11 wlth th1.• yl\\ttl!l&lt;'l'
ortlls: lt wu~ u sy~tem thut
worked, (~:x..:ept ll&gt;r t.tll th~
l'ij~htin~ 1\&gt;r uttention. the
hmtd·me-downs, th&lt;' tens·
ing, the cruel trid.s we
would pluy ~·none unpther:
tilt• )'&lt;'Itt'S ttn&lt;.l ~&lt;.'lii':O \II
intt•m.e psvdu•luj:t\'Ul ... t'&gt;ttt
I di~t~ss . J in tlw t'rtt ,,r t&gt;i~
fllmtli~s und ~tuy , ut · h\&gt;me
mums . On~ t'f om · n&lt;&gt;igh·
&lt;'Its)'

bors hu&lt;.l I~ children. They W\&gt;uld' get boring , Wamn
named the lust &lt;'ne O~mond Buffet ht~' ~lltnething like
Jr. We tlgtu'l:d thlly hud run $50 billion , He must be
out "'f mtmes, It wus ulso the bored to death, Congress
long-gone eru of names, JUst debut~ t1 near trillion·
too. Boh. Jim, Mike. Joo, dollur stimulus bilL I hope it
Betty, Pot, Susie, Now if works. Whut sca~s me.
you mtme t1 kid Bob, you though. is that I might start
. h&lt;t"&lt;' Ill s))Qll it timny, like heuring l1 new W\&gt;rd . Whut's
Bhllbb, m the kid will go the word for 1.000 trillion?.
lhtx•u!lh Ht'e tnmmlltiled . 20120: Our library has a
be~mtst' he's nN tmlque, I Iurge children's section,
\'tm't 1'1\We it, hut sonw· And gue$S wh!lt - chil~
thing. h:lls nw mm'tl 8hobbs dren 's b.Jo.1b ltre print~ in
end up in therupy thQn type THIS 810! Publi!lhen
8
~~~1 TRILLION: When seem "' huve this exactly
did yllu first hcurthut word? bud.wurd, It's old ·. geelers
like me tlult could use the
When Curl Sugun, the
· Wh d0 1h
f&lt;mwus u~tn&gt;ttomer used to lurge prmt.
Itt
ey
stly "hi llit~ns nml hiltions" ' think. I'm weuring tri-focals
thut S\'l)tllt~d 10 be pretty l'&gt;e~·tm:~e they ure so good
mttdt tlw high~st you could look in~? I'll ~let you liS per'1'1
'II'
cent \llull hook bttyers wear
j:l&gt;, t~n l'HillC U ~tilt ll\ll, s~ln1t' kind of re~tdin~&gt; aJIISS;
hut tlmt just meunt "u lot" I
.. "
think 1 wus ubout 30 when 1 es, I know they m11ke latl~
first hc&lt;tl\l "u trillion," aut lt print book~. but why don't
trillion meun~ ~omething . th~y ,,mttke, them all -'IItle
Whut wus the higlle~t tot· pnnt . I don t want to.ope~ a
tcry prite ~ver'? $430 •nil· best ,seller tlllll fee! hke I m
lion , i\ lot of millions.l'i~ht'? . read~ng the fin~ prmt on my
A billion is 1,000 mHiton, ~redtt curd jll&gt;hcy,
:
mol\' tltttn twii.'ll us mtH:h,
(Jim M11f fll if the w1th1&gt;r
Y11tt '&lt;.I -lutl'&lt;' h&gt; worl\ very P{ "It Tctkf,, u HIICIIII' ltll11t:
hnrd 111 '-l~&lt;'llll tt billll&gt;n dol· Com(•licmht,~ thf Simf&gt;lci
lm-s , lf 1'1'11 bl&gt;ttj:ht n nt.•w l.ij'r" wul " /Jctby\· First
$1\WUMl\l luxury &lt;'111' every 1llllflfJ," Yr'tt rw1 tWt&lt;'h hi"t
llny. it would tulle you 27 11
'
ye!trs 1n Slll.'tl\1 $1 llillion, It .Jim_mull~ll@mytffiy.fom) '
.

"

I

l.ocal Briefs

•

Reader Services

....

· POINT PLEASANT. W.Va. - Edward Dille Buckner,
SS. of PoUlt Plew;ant. W.Vtt.. died Mooday. Feb, 9, 2009, at
Holzer Medical C~. Gallipolis.
,
A priv~ gra..:eside servire will be held 111 ICirlland
Memorial Gardens. There will b&amp; 110r visitation. Meroorial
doo.alioo:&gt; ma:; be ~ l\) Stained. Glass Window Fund at
Chrisl El!is&lt;.'Oplll Ch~~~~:b. 804 Main St.. Plmlt Pleasant.
W.Va.IDSQ.
· Amlngements by Crow HusseU FIID.eflll Home. witb
guest ~gistry 111 www.~:ro.wl\usseUfb..com.

.

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel •

~

wt~S ~lly ~)ltll8, as~He~ u1~ ~ l."ltol&lt;.~

- Th. Flr$t A!MfldrMnt to the U.S. CCMIStltutlon

Pz•
recovery from .wildfires

Wednesday. February tt. aoG9

fl11sh witl\ power from
~i~·K~ry. hi~ e~&lt;' 1'\tft'ed by 111.1
tlJvnug pn-; s. tttlt! l:&gt;uoyil\.1
by a .:det&gt;rit:&lt; h)'pt'
mac hill&lt; , l'tt••ilknt ~It
Ooomu luL~ tul\.&lt;:11 II.&gt; \'tlrictr
turi eit~ hi~ oppvn~tlts. as
nutlt'•\llo:-nt e11&lt;:mio::s of the
~;x&gt;U . ~ lolOO(l, of c.:ou~.
would tit' til.. presidetlt tllld
his ~enda .
On&lt;!' nut.io.:or t'tlt'n~ would
be ruui'' ' talk-~hvw host
Rus.h Limt&gt;~ugl:l, .In tl ·
Jmutl\1'\' intervie-w with Sean
Hmulity ·lUI&lt;! ot\ ecpisOO!~ &lt;&gt;t'
nis (\W t\ shOW ' Umtlaug:h
ha.~ W&gt;.St'ltt\1 duit ne wan~
~tmt t&lt;' thll. ·~ lib«tll·
t:ne\ltu dt'tll~(&gt;gt!$ who
pnlt.nptly po.&gt;U~'e\1 on .~
~nwl.s tltis:;ed what Rll&gt;h

c.m su..t • PQmen)y. Otlka

Tixl&lt;l'' ~~ W&lt;'l.h~&lt;:s..l;;\ , Fd&gt;, It, th&lt;"
Tht&lt;l\' .U.: .11J davs ld~ in th&lt;' wac

PageA4

K.lNGLAKE. Australia

(AP} - Residents. of towns
srorclled off lhe map by

AIIStlallia's worst-e~er wildf~s
oa
Wednesday
n:turned tQ tMir homes for
lhe fll'St and found
scenes of - . devastation.
Officials salcl the ·detltb toll
will ex.ceed 200.
"WheN do you start?
Where oo yw start?"' said
hter De"''t}n. standing
l&gt;lank·fui:ed amid: the ruins
of his home in Kingtake,
wboft l.lrt least 39 pet\ple
wete killed - and 1M IQwn
lilt but destroyed - ill
Sllturday,"s. iDfeilliO. .
Denson. 11 carpeMe.r, bas
li~ed iD ' tciaalllb sinee
. IW?. lk said 'he WilliS to
tebuild, b.d ..). 1\Quse, ftt\W
a b~ pi~ of timber,
bricks and twisted metll),
was 110rt imuJed because ~
CQuld oot afford it, .
"It's litu bi&amp; lltQm bomb
bas gooe t)ft'." sllid ~:)woo,
El~w h4Qre.
ntOOrities
sealed off towns. because the
. task of~ bOO·
~fro.m coll11psed buildings Networlt late T\lesday
was p~ing slowly and "they should be allowed to
bectluse uuthorities wanted rot in jaiL"
Residents were 111lowed to
to prevent residents from
disturbing crime s&lt;.:enes •. return to Kinglalte. about 70
EmbefS. were still pi&gt;Sing 11 miles ( 130 kilometers)
, north of the Victoria stare
tllreat of flare-ups ,
PoliL~ suy they suspect capital of Melbourne. but
some of the fires we~ their · prog~ss was slow
deliberately set, and that at because emergen•·y woders
least one su~t is bting Wl:fi! still removing burned
pursued. Ausll'llliu 's top law det&gt;ri~ and cutting down
officer, Fedeml Attorney trees that appe!lred ready to
General ·Robert McLelland, fall. Power Iines - the elec·
said Wednesday any;~ne tticity supply long cut found guilty ol' lighting a we~ strewn llC'JOSS some
fire that caused multiple streets.
deaths would face life in
Some
1\ou~es
bo~
prison if convicted.
malte!lhift signs with mes-Prime Minister Kevin sages fro11 survivors to
Rulld tcsid tl:le Seven loved ones who might C\lme

RUTLAND - 8re11na D. Hemsley, 17. Rutland, was
cite&lt;..~ with failure to CQntrol following a one-vehicle acci·
\lent tl\~;~t o&lt;;cum:d ut 11pp.roximutely .1:35 p.m. ~'n Suturday.
:. A":wfdill8 to tl'tx&gt;pers,. Hemsley wus driving a 2003
h~undai Tiburon southbound on County Road 3 when she
fatl~ to ne1.:otiate a portion of the roadway und as a Nsult ·
tier vehicle ran off the right side of the roadw11y striking 11n ctuo::s of Portsmouth and
embanl&gt;menl and 11 driveway culven.
Ironton ,
,
' No injuries were repon~: Hemsley 's vehicle sustained
The program is designed to
tunctionul damages.
rel\at&gt;ilttute foreclosed bomes
lU1d re-sell them to tirst-titne,
qua.lifying homeowners, but
demolition of these homes.
PaaeAt
and even homes condemned
help ex.pand the capadty &lt;'f 3) prncti~-e non-discritnina· but not under foredo.~we. is
'
food und shelter ptugrums ti(ln: 4) lulve demonslnlted ))Qnnitt~.
At
lellst
nne
property
111
in high-need uro11nd the the capability to deliver
Pomeroy
vr
country.
.
emergency food and'or shel· either
Middleport
will
be
.
pur·
A locul Bllllrd made up of tt&gt;r progmms; and 5) if they
Gt~Uht und Meigs County ure a privute &gt;~oluntary otgll· chased under the progmm.
dtizens will deten11ine how nizmion; the)l should hll~e a the home demolishoo, lind a
new h&lt;mw constructed in its
tl\e t\mds t~wurd~ to the volull\111)' board.
I.'O\Uitles ure to .be distrib·
Gullia11t1d Meigs Counties place tlrid sold to a first-time
uted t~mllng tho: l.'mergency huve distribute&lt;..~ Emergency local homebuyer. The
food 11ml sht'lter progrums · F\1\&gt;U 11t1d Shelter funds pre· GaiHa-Meigs Community
run by locul service organi· vious.ly with the Gallill· At;tion A~ency will use
~at ions in the artu. The Meigs Community Action other housmg funds to pur·
. ~ocal Boord is responsible Agency and the Galli11
for rocommending agtmdes County Council on Aging
to receive these · funds und participating. Those agencies
any additionul funds uvail· were responsible IPJ' provid·
lillie un\ler this phase of the lng numerous meals. rent would t~llow vlllage . oft'i·
progrum .
·
and utility ussisttmce,
ciuls to 11ct as the heud.of 11
Under the terms of the
Funher infonnution on the bargtlinlng unit I buying
. grant from the National program may be obtained by group for residents who
Board. locul govemnwntul ot contacti~ S11ndra Edwards. wi!lh to participate in tl\e
private voluntlll)' organila· Commumty
, Services program, Tht.' villfi8e would
tions chosen to receive funds Division Director, Gullia·
must: I) oo non-protit: 2) Meigs Conimunity Action then attempt to purchase
have an tt~couming system A!Je!IC)I at 367-7341 or 9112· natural gas at u reduced rate
in con1parison to other utili·
lind conduct an unnuuluudit: 6629.
ty companies. Tl\is would
atl'ect customers, including
commercinl customers. not
This painting of Indian
ulready on u gus utility comChief Tecumseh is
pmly's plan, By burguining
among the works to
with u !urger group, it's
be shown In a one·
thought the prke for the
utility would be lower \hun
man uhlbltlon by
wlult the indivldU!tl wuuld
artlst Jan Hacklolt at
oo
o.ff~ dire&lt;.:tly,
thl Markly Cultural
Arts Clnler. 269 East
'Main Straet. Jackson.
The public,Is Invited
· \o meet Hadd011 on
Friday, Feb. t 3. at a
collected goes townrds the
~tlon beginning at
RFL tl.lum totuls,
· 7 p.m. The exhibition
LQCal team cuptains
. runs throl.igh March 8.
le!lrlled of Daffodil Duys at
Submltttd phOIO
this W\'ek 's RI'L tcmn cup·
tuin's meeting, The meet·
in11s assist teams in
tundruising idea!&gt; and ottn·
from Page At
nillttion. More meetings ure
•
plttnned for S: ~ll p.m ..
use "'''~'tll'mic ~mwth. edu· ''huracters. were ellplorln~ Monday.
Mmt:h 16 und
cutionut el&lt;.celhm&lt;-,, nne! cui· the new world west ot' the Motldtty, April 20 til the
turul enrichment for ull Appt~m;hiuns," In mlditi1111 Pomeroy Li brury,
Ohinuns.
to his lifetime of resellr.:-h,
Anyonll lntci-est~·d 'in th!-' Hnddnl\ is u rogulnr visitor
history of this r.:-gion from ut reenuctments. He uppre·
the nuddle to lut~ 1 7(l0~ will ciutes the delltils of dully
wunt to vl&lt;•w the puintings living t~ey cot~v.ey, llt!d
by Hmld1,x , H~ hns u pus· ot)~n pmnts pt~rttclpmtts m tu Fire Chief Lurry · Ryer
~lon ubout how this ureu · thetr uuthenttc costume und Polke Chief llmce
Swift for the do&gt;htilc\1
\levelopt:d, the interuction rer.~ucti&lt;.&gt;ns.
,
Hts ctmvases bnng that reports they P")vide,
between lndinns tmd set·
tiers, nnd tht.l harsh Ntllity of 'Y!'rld, gone hy vlv!dly ' to · During open discussi;ln,
lire in those dnys !l''"e by, hie, Smce Hnddox ts most, members of council c1&gt;t11·
Retired ft'lll11 u distit~ · P!trtkular in the uccu~ncy ol mended villugt: l'l't.'Ws
gui~hed ~·ur~er in pubhc hts work, m~my ptHnt,mgs uddressins both ley ~tf\.'l)ts
eductttion ln the chtssroom are U(.'l:ompum~d by wrrtten 1 mul u wutl.'r leuk during the
nml us un udmini~t!'ntor, histor,Y, wlt~ a IO\'lls on ~r­ I'CI.'ent storm uml po.•w~r out·
l'ludd\IX •lt.welopt'.d tttl mt~r- somthlles 1."'1~1 . the Ohio, ug~. uml utility Wllt'tcrs 1\w
est ln puintiug ht s_ lo~e l&lt;.&gt;f Wllst . Vt~~llll!t, " ut!d thdr work ,
"As I wus silting ut home
the uNu's history . "rhts wtts KentucKy tn,nttcr, , smd
u time ," lhtddl&gt;X suys. llttrhuru Sumuwrs ot the feeling sorry for myself dur·
ing the whole mess, I
"when so ,muny iuteresting · Murkny Center.

Funding rrom

Exhibit

tooling for them,
"All out ,.. we shall
return," suid one sign,
Tensivns huve been rising
in te\.'ent duys as lletnllnds
· rose for pohre to let residents back to checl on their
l:lomes ~d check on pets
11nd . other animuls left
behind, P\&gt;Uce urged people
·to be patient.
· ·
. Spol\eswoman Gillilln
foster suid police in
Victoria stute hlld no reports
of looting from the fire
zone. However. bxal
reports tna.t some undam·
aged propenies had been
tampered with was fueling
frustration among ~sidents
anxious to get bad home,

Victoria Premier John
Brumby said some sur·
vivors 1\ad not even seen
te-levision foot&lt;~.ge of the
disaster's scule and he was
wo.rried a.t&gt;out tbe emo·
tional impact on people
seeing the de~truction for
the first time .
,
More than 400 fires
ripped through Victoria
state on Saturday, fed by 60
mph \I 00 kph) winds.
. record 1\eat 11t1d a severe
drought. Tile officiul death
toll stood lit 181 on
W~nesday. but Brumt&gt;y
said there were at least SO
more bodies k.nown 11bQut
thllt had not Jet been includ·
~ in the otltcial tally.

Stimulus rmm Page At
chase, rehabilitate and re·
sell the property,
Gerlucl\ ~id 1\e. is now
working with Fuir Housing
Administmtor Jel\11 Trussell
to identify approJ?riate prop·
erties for the proJect.
• Gerlacl\ ~id chances life
good that the ~illttge will
qualify for around $1 8 1.000
through the st11te 's Jot&gt;
Stimulus program. Thttt
grunt would be usell to pur·
~:huse a solttN;,perut~ uera·
tor system for the villuge 's
sewer. lag\1\ln , The progrum
tiwors projects devot~ . to
cleun energy. und the cost
savings associated with
using a solar-run system
will be considerable over

using electricity for . the
sunw purpose.
The village has approv~
spending $4,000 for tl\e
necessary design and engineering work for thut propos~ project,
• Funding lor other public
infrustntcture work will also
be ttvailat&gt;le, Gerlach said,
but the village's chances ol'
developin¥, projects on a
"tust-tntek' in order to meet
readiness
requirements
could
inhibit
efforts.
Gerlach suid the ~illfi8e h11s
already applied for stimul\IS·
ty))Q funds for the village's
sewer upgrude project. and
will consider 11t1 application
tor funding for u water line

replacement project.
''The federal government
gave people 11t1 extension to
get (digital television) C\ln·
venor boxes, I wish we could
get 1111 el\tension to pre~
projects," Gerlach said, 'but
tt is important that the viii~
is as pl\racti ve as possible. '
·•We should do ull we can
to be in the b&lt;)st possible
position, so the viUnge can
'I,Ualify lor us much as po&amp;·
&gt;tble whilo: the money is
uvailuble."
Gerlach said the villoge
must also be tilindful that
.the funds are tax.payer, ~ol·
Iars, and that any proJect
cl\osen is a good use of pubhe money.

Chamber from Page At
Municipalities already
participating in progmm life
Brooklyn,
Alllance.
Brewester.
Nav11rre.
Broadview
Heights,
Marion, GaiUpolis, Mount
Vernon, Athen&amp; has ulso
voted to plac\' the i~sue on
the May ballot,
·
Commerciul customers of
Volunteer Energy Services
include
· Commercial
Consortiums ~ Alliunces
McOonalds. Wendy's, .Tim
Hortons, Oomttos. l'inu,
Mull: &amp; Ernm 's, Pnneru
Bre11ds, etc,
·For more inf1wmation
conU\(.'t Holmes ut 614-328·

2938 or nt t'holmes@volun·
teerenergy.com,
In
other
chamber
announcements:
The M~igs Medlen!
Center will offer a free
blood pressure · screening
from 9 a.m.· noon, Monday.
Murch 2, Also otl'ered is u
\'holesterol nnd glucose
screening for $5 by nppoint·
ment. Call 992-9158.
The
Meigs
County
Tourism Office and FM
K92 is spo.&gt;nsoring "A. Taste ·
of Home Mtlgtl'l ine" cook·
ing school culled "Spring
Senstttil&gt;ns." Doors Opt'n u!
5 p.m.. pri::&lt;entution ocgins

ut 7 p.m. on M&lt;trch 23 at
Meigs High SchooL Tickets
are $15 each and available
at the chamber office or
K 92 or by calling 992-6485.
992-2239.
There will be an open
houst&gt; from I:30-4 p.m .•
Tuesduy ttt Rv•·ksprings
Rehubilitation Center.
.
4-H month hegins next
month with the first
Snturlluy of eacl\ mont!\
design11t~'&lt;l tor ncti~ities. .

'

Relay from Page AI
· "Bttnk Night" will be held
fmm 5:30-7 p.m. on
Wednesduy. Mny 6 111
Fanners Bunk's Pomeroy
Bmnch. "Bunk Night" is
where teums tum in moniiy
ruis~ so far nnd th(l.~e who
t\tm their money ln on this
night are \'ntere..t into a
1lmwing t\&gt;r u door prize.
The prize will be given aw11y
nner the RFL for ench teum
cuptuins' meeting ttttllnded

us wdl us baQk night.
This yem·'s RFI. will be
held May 8-9 inside the
Thompson-Rnush Building
on the Mei~s County
Fttit-a:rounds. Gt~cs open for
"set up" ttl noon on Mtty ~.
the event ocgins 111 4 p.m.
with the opening l.'t't'tlmony
set lor 6 p.m, The ch,ing 1.-er·
emony is ut 10 a.m .. Muy 9.

•OIIIIM/1"'"""''-

• nllal'l IM~ · ktf41 J'O'II' OiMkti Illtl
ti O u-ni.'lli~IHiOI'II'i.tl~'-'
• C~tolll~1 ~8~ · ntl'\ls, .,...... .. II'IQI't!

c?,_~';_~§!:~~
"'""-Ooll"'l ~..- ....

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

FREE HEARING TESTS

Salt rrom PogeAt

i

As

thought of them, the worl&gt;
they were doing und the
comlitions th&lt;'Y hull til work 1
in," M01'1-e s~tld,
I
Council also:
• Appmved puymcnt of :
hills in the umount 1&gt;l' 1
II
$~6.017.47.
• Met in t·~~uti 1'1.' st'ssion
t\&gt; discus:. •iisciplint• of u 1
villuge employee, with no 1
1
nction follnw ing.
• Al."cepted th~ re~ignuti1.1n I
nf public wor~s t'mpl1&gt;y~-c
Brian Jucobs-Johnsun ., ·

.

. ,will be given io Pomeroy by
'

iBe/tone HEARING AID CENTER
. Dr. A Jackson Bailes Office

507 Mulberry Hghts., Pomeroy, OH

FRIDAY, FEB. 13th 9:00am-noon

I
I
I
I

· II
Tilt ltSIS will be gi'itll by fllctnstd IINring Aid Sptell/lit
Anl~" wno ha; '"'~~ hooN"9 or ;r&gt;ioi&lt;11~-.1 1\'l coovtll&lt;ll e&lt;&gt; son1 tid to navt aFREE
1.
llim9 tts: to!&amp;&amp; ~ tn~ prob.ll!11 e&lt;nc. ntl~' Bn~ 11\11 cc•pon w!h lOU br !lliJI FREE 1
HEAR~G TESl; alm.oo vahtt

UAW, ARIIOUNO All OTHER INSURANCE PROVtDERS

1.
I

L... 9~~~!9.~~~~E-~~99:~~~-----J .

�I

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111

4740) 992-2156 • FAX 1740) 992-2157
WWW..~eaM

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Olin Goodrich
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor
'

C~ss slt~.Jll

makr "" law l't"Sp«'"'..~ aN
tste~Nislt~ttrttt (lJ rt"'{ttl)ft, 11r prolti.itittg tltr
jm t«trdSt' tlttfti.!l} llf ll.ridgtll,f tlat' Jfttflorrt
II}' Sl'f'«lt. or '!f tltt p«ss; 11r tfle ri..t't ".! ,.,.
JWOJtlr pt'CI\'t'~.Jb#y t~.&gt; aSSt"fft&amp;lr, all to lt'titiM
tltt Got&gt;t'1'tttnl'ttt Ji.lr •• «drtss ofgritNtttts.

TODAY IN~IS TORY
-l~nd lluv

~OO'J ,

of

•.

Too.l&lt;~y's Hi~hhght iu Histor~:

. . · .
On fet&gt; . II , I S5S. ft\'oll:h let'll~l'r Bermtdettt: Sl&gt;ltbti\&gt;Us
!\'pi.&gt;l'tt'U th&lt;: tlt'l't ,,f l X vbtl&gt;tls l&gt;f &lt;t la..ty &lt;lt'&lt;'&gt;&gt;l'tl in white in
a i:l\&gt;ttl&gt; ll&lt;'&lt;U' L\&gt;~nks . rt'he l '&lt;tthnlll' Churdl luto:r m:~-.:ptl'tl
that th&lt;' visious w~re ,,f th~ Vit~in Mltf~ . )
On this \lat.::
In IX t 1, Mm•s&lt;t~hust'lls (i;w . f;lt&gt;ridg.&lt;' Gt:i1')' si~ne\l u
· t't'&lt;listt'i&lt;.:till~ l&lt;tW fU~l&gt;rin~ his p&lt;U't)', ~iviug_ ri-'&lt;' I\&gt; tht' t.:'fUI
"lolel'l'ym&lt;m~t'rh~ ."
..
' tn I ~61. f'l't'sidtnt·d~;:t 1\l:&gt;n1ham Utt..'\&gt;ltt d.:pm·to."\1
S.pting_fit'kL Ill., f1&gt;t' Wu~hiugton,
1t1 1~)1,1, h~·u~~wd~:ht bo:l.&lt;'l' Mux. llu~·r was bom in
Omuh&lt;~. N..-b .: (h\:~i·- winnin~ wt'it~t'-pr;xl\1\'t'Nht't'\'tl&gt;r
J;&gt;;~~&gt;h L Munkiewia w~ born in Wllkes-Burre, Plt.
In 1921,1 , tht' Ltt~t1111 Trt·~tt''./ W&lt;ts si:.:nt'll.
with lt&lt;~h l't'\:O~·
"
...
niting the ind&lt;:pt'ndi:'fll_'tl mtd S\\Vt'reignty ••f Vati•·un fit} .
In 1937, &lt;t stX·WtX'k·olll stHlown stnkt ugmnst Gtnt'rul
MotOJ'S tnd.-d. with the \'Otllp&lt;utV ugtwiug h' rt'\'\)gni:lt' tht'
United Autotll(&gt;bile Wvrl&gt;ers l l11'mn.
In 1945, President Roostvdt, !ltitish· Pritnt' Ministt•r
Winston Ch\tt'\:.hill u.nd SovioN lt'udt't' J;&gt;st'f St&lt;tlin si~n&lt;'\1 tht'
Yultu Agt-ooment durin~ w,,d,l Wm· IL
.In 197;1, Murgul\'t Thut,·h.-r was t'lt'l'!ed k-ad.-r of
Brituin 's oppo-~ition Const'rv uti vo:- Purty,
.
· hi 1979, followet'$ of 1\)'utl&gt;tluh Rt~hl&gt;ll~;~h ·Khvmdni
st:'iiei.l p;&gt;w.-r in lrun.
.
In 1989, tho:- Rev . !htrb&lt;lnt C HmTis t&gt;&lt;'l.'ttme. th\' t1rst
wvmmt wnstl.'rttted us &lt;t t:&gt;ishvp iu thl' f:pis\'\&gt;ptt l ChtU'l'h, in
u &lt;.:tt't'nwny hi.'kt in t!ost1&gt;11 .
·
Ten )'&lt;'til's ugo: A t'e&lt;.t~rut j\try in New YNI\ !\&gt;\Hid sevi.'ntl
gtut m&lt;tKt't'$ t't'sp;&gt;nsibk in tht'Ci.' m't'&lt;t shootings fl•r ktting
gtms full \nto the- hm11ls t&gt;f \Timimtls ttml ttsw&gt;s~XI ;htmast-s:
gtm mak~'"' wt-re 1\lttnd liabk' in "l:&lt;. 1&gt;tht'r insttln\'t's, but nv
111(11\e(tti'Y dttllutgi&lt;'S W¢1\' t\WUI\.k\1, (H\&gt;Wt'V\'1\ tht' ~)htilllill'~
!-\tftl:r.:-\1 " st'tbtt\'k in ::oo I when tho.' New York Court (If
Appt•uls invttliduted sud1 dttims.) . .
·
Hve rem'$ ugo: Wesk-y C'lttrk dropped 0\U (\f !~e 1'\K'i:' for
tht' Whtt&lt;' !louse. A •·m· t&gt;omt:&gt; t1t tin army l\1\.'rtlltmg center
in BughdmL lru4 , killt•d -47 pt'vpt.:-. Cublo: TV giat11
Com,·u,t _Cvrp. lttttnched u h~•stil~ . btd to ~uy The Walt
Dtsney Co. lor nM't' I hun $54 btllton , (C\lmcustlttter
•lroppt'd it' bid I.
Otw y~&lt;U' ltgo : Th.: l:lt'kns~: l'll:purtm~:nt ~h&lt;~rgoo Khttlid
Sheikh Mnhammed und fiv&lt;' other &lt;letuine;:s ut
Gu&lt;ttittltlttnw l!uv with tntn\kl' und wur crimes ln conn~·
tivn with th&lt;' s~pL II tltt&lt;td;.s . (Ch&lt;tt'gt'S fi8uinst one- W\'t\'
lutl'r lh''Pl"''l. 1 Y&lt;th1111 "''', t\'j~'\:tl'tl Mictwufl Cm·p.'s mm&gt;·
lkit&lt;-&lt;1 mkt•ov~:r t&gt;ioJ. Tom l.ttnt&lt;&gt;s, u 1-l·tl)t'm CttHfomhl con·
~Nssnum wh\1 wus tt 1\&gt;r,\-l'ttl V\&gt;k·e for hunum rights, died
m !Mh.-slltt, M1.l., &lt;tt "!!'' ~0 .
.
Thl•ug.ht tbr 'l(xhty: ''Tim\) is rt'ttiiY thll only ~;·apitttl thut
ttny htUlltm b&lt;)in!: htts. uud the on,· thing that he ~.·mi 't ttll'ot\1
ll&gt; lose," ~ Thuma~ i\h'&lt;t Edisl&gt;tl (born this duy in I.X47,
dil'tl in 19~ Il.
.

Town meeting
, POMEROY - Buckeye Hill&amp;'Hodlng Valley Regional
De..:elopment District will bold lll\)WD biill forum frOm I0
a.m. to nooa on Thursday a.t the Fult~ Center, 42)TI
Clwles Cha!li.~Y Dr.. Plmleroy.
This will be 1111 int'OOnal public meeting. open to the public. to voi.re opinion&amp; and ~ idetAS fOt future e\.'OOomic
de&gt;~o::lopment plannill8.
·

wol'ds: "If I wanted Obatntl
. tv su•-c~'ed. 1\1 bt ltappJi the
R.-publil.:ans hu&gt;~o:: laid
dvwn.. And I would be
,·nw\tr~lt~ Repo.tt&gt;lkans to
l&lt;ty dvwu u.nd ~tlpP'wt him.
L&lt;x&gt;k , wl\ut ho:: s talking
ub~.&gt;ut is the ubMlfPtil'll ol' a.&lt;
tn\t~' h vf the pti,·al\" ~t&lt;&gt;r
by the l/.S, go~ef!UU\'nt li,S.
1"-"-S.~it&gt;lt', fMII · ttl&lt;' b&lt;\nlill~
bttsino:"'' to the mortgase
itldustry, the . autom&lt;.\bile
t&gt;u.,ino:,_q,) health. o.:are . I d&lt;.&gt;
twt '' m1t th"' gowmml'tlt in
.:hm~..- of 1111 of tho::~ tllin~s­
. I don't wm\t this tv WVl'k , '
Limt&gt;au~h re&lt;'\'ived heavy
firt· for his t'¢mm'ks. Bttt
whttt's wt\lt'S with thenl'~To
suy ltll)'thittg dso:: would

For the Record
Highway Patrol
POMEROY - Sttpll"nie D. fllcemiN, 29, P\&gt;int
.Piel\SIIIIt, W,Vu.. wu~ cited with failing to maintain an
assured dear distlll\\.'e tlbeud followill8 tl tw~rvehide IK-ci·
dent that ~lln'lld Sunday tliOtlling in Sulisbury Tuwnship
at app.rol\imarely 9:31 a.m. ·
. Ace&lt;&gt;rding to troopers. Fac!!mlre was driving l:let 2007
Toyot11 Corolla southbound on Ohio 7 behind Martin L.
Johnson, 66. Middleport. who was driving his 1999 Mazda
B4(U) southbQund on Ohio 7, As Jobnson slow~ llis vehi·
de to t~ttempt a let\ turn ooto County Rood 3. Furemi~
failed to st;lp in an t~Sl&gt;ured deW' dist~ and her vehkle
~truck John~on's vehicle.
No injuries were reported, Facemire's vehicle sustained
disabling dam~oes and John.~on 's vehicle sustained func·
tionul damage~.

-

STIMULus

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
· trnrrs ro rhr edit&lt;ll' wr ll'dnmte . fhn .lhPIIIcl f&gt;e '"·'"
them 300 " 'orcls , All lmrn Wt' Stlbir&lt;'t ui rclitirt~, mmt b..
sig•wd. 111111 i11dmlt' aclcb-ns (IIICI' rrlef'hc&gt;llf lltlllll&gt;fl', NP.
mtsignrtl lrllrn ,..;// br l'llf&gt;lisht'ci . ti'llfl'.' shoulcl br ill
~ood ruste, II&lt;Mn·.,·sin~ i.1sun. IIOIJlf&gt;'.WIICIIitirs . (,etlfl's of
FIVf\, Tv sttve u few bit·
thcmb 111 or:~cmi:mir•;t, wul im/it·id~~&lt;lin\'1'/lur&gt;l be UC&lt;'el'i· lion u ye1u'. the 1\,,t Oll'ictl
ft/./(ll' l&gt;llb.limticm .
Is thinKin~o: of \'ttltlng mull

Co~IIOn Polley .

Ohio Vall•~:.ubllahlna.
P"blionoo "'"' v altornQon, MonO)oy

, Our .mam concern 1n all s.tonos IS to !tlrOl.IQh Fnd:ay. 111 Courl sv~~ ~ .
btJ. at.'Curattl, tf y!lu know ot an ~ttrror f.lomi}roy, Ot1io. S~nQ.t:l~'' PQ¥1~~~
1n a llOJV. c~ ll th\1' n~wsrqom ~~ (140) ~a 11:.1 ~~ Pom~~t•ov.
9~~ 1~6. ~btr : l he A~$OC1l:l.l&amp;a, Prt)~ a.no
th~ OhiQ Ne.w$1p~p~r AiiOCI~IIon

Our main number Ia

Pol,ma•t•r ~

(740) Ha-2156.•

Deperlment ••..natona art:

StmU addrwi

(: ont~c ,

ltOOi · 10 The Dally Sentln~l . 111 Cow l
Strf'J~I. Pomeroy. Oh1c;t 45 ?69

Subacrlptlon Rat••

News

ldltor: Charlene &gt;tootlrcn. ~'' 12
Aeporllr : llnan Reed. ~xl 14
Report•r: !loth Ser~J~ll\1 , E•l n

8y carrier Or motor fOUW
4 - · · , .. ,, ,, , ,, .. ,.'11.30
52 - · · ' ' ' . ·' . ' ' ' . ' .'138.15
D~lly ,.,.,., .. ,,. , , .. , .. 50'

ti~s .

SaniO&lt; Cltl••n rat..

l dun 't ~now it' the IX'l•ple
ut the l'u~t Offke httve
·hctml uiMtt it. but thet-e's
this new te~hnulogy (if
· "new" meunt 40 yeurs uld)
~ttlled -e·lmtiL It 's like regu·
lur uu1il exce)&gt;t it moves ut
the speed of lijlht und you
don't need tt stllmp. &lt;tnd it\
htst.er. bi:tto.:r 'uml chctttX'r.
And thet,•\ mwthiir thing
thltl h\'1/os ll lt&gt;l Wll\'tl )'l&gt;tt
pl&gt;silh'l' )'. ttbsolut\'ly ntttsl
),WI u messu~~· t&lt;&gt; svmeon&lt;.'
right uwuy ll's o:ulled u tde·
ph1&gt;twc. I V&lt;' ho:m\1 tlwy'i\'

211 - k · . ' ' ' ... ' ' . ' ' .'58.81

sa - k l

, ",, , , "., ,•ttUO
Sut1&gt;01""'• '"""'' '"'"' '" ~an&lt;»
I5 (!iloo;t t\J t11o ""'I Ploo..nl ROQ&gt;Sl\11 . No
Outllft Iaiii: Etre&gt;n&lt;ta Oavi~ , E111t 16 jut:~:n,,liQO b'l nle\il ~1111itt~ In artlM
CtaiiiCtro,: JudY Cl~r~ . Ext. 10
whooo homo canler ..rv~• IS a&lt;artalrl\1

Adv tl I
tr s ng
. Outaldtt ~-: Oaw H•rrio, Ext

General M•nager
Charlef\t He&lt;&gt;"IQh, Ext 1 ~

Mall Sub•crtptlon

lnalcle Maaon County

t a We&amp;~~

2ft W.Okl

52 Wevo•

l·mall:
mdtmitw!t@ myd..-il•i,enttoel ,~Qt n

____

.

26

w....

~ WeQ~o
_.....,:,__..

.....

, , . , .'70.70

. · t40.11

Outlldo Ma•&lt;&gt;n Co11n1~

1~ WeQkl

W.b:

, . , . . . '35.26

, ,.

.

Number crunching

servi\'1) do'wn fmm .sil\ dar,s
u wc:el\ to nve. A. few b•l·
lil&gt;tl'? Lt't's just mute It
I:'VI)t'Y &lt;.&gt;thet' dny, nnd ~nve u
few mot~ t&gt;illlllt\ , I'm trying ·
to thinl;. ~&gt;f 11 ~I ngle piece of
muil I've g1•tten tlmt Wtts l'll
impnrhtt1t it c&lt;&gt;uldn 't huve
o.:nnw u duy · Iuter without
chnnging m)' life. Tlte
ph11111: hill · ~mne on
Thurslluy · insteud
of
We11ne,\lny? Hett1ls will
wll! I The fifth LL · Beun
~utult&gt;!! of the tttl&gt;nlh ~'l.&gt;nws ·
u &lt;.luy htt\''? l·h&gt;w sh&lt;.&gt;\tld I
l't:nt my &lt;.&gt;utntlll"? I nee1led
thut Cunu&lt;.lhm blunket ''Ont
Y&lt;'-'1~'1\luy! Oh, the htttmmi·

(USPS ;113·980)

. . . '56.55
' 113.60
'227.21

..

"""'"--~····•··--·--·-···'--···-·_.... ~··-··

Jim
Mullen
----

til ttsii nnd it's nhno~t
Its if the p&lt;'l'$1'11 Y''" ure tult·
ing to is in thQ 1\111111 with
y1&gt;tl , lllNdkt thut, ~1&gt;melluy,
ulmost everyone wilt httve
one.
EIGHT. I ht'ttrd tht\1 ~~
womttn who httd 11\:tuplets
ulreudv hn1l six smull t;hil·
1h~n ~it hl&gt;nw . My uwt ht•r
lmd cijlht dtii&lt;.INn . S&lt;• di&lt;.l
S\tt''s mothet'. Btl! U\&gt;t ull un
the sunll' \lny . They · both
mttnttged to stt't'td1 it ot.tt
over cmtple of tlc~mles .
Then the oldt•r klds wtild
. hdp m11 wlth th1.• yl\\ttl!l&lt;'l'
ortlls: lt wu~ u sy~tem thut
worked, (~:x..:ept ll&gt;r t.tll th~
l'ij~htin~ 1\&gt;r uttention. the
hmtd·me-downs, th&lt;' tens·
ing, the cruel trid.s we
would pluy ~·none unpther:
tilt• )'&lt;'Itt'S ttn&lt;.l ~&lt;.'lii':O \II
intt•m.e psvdu•luj:t\'Ul ... t'&gt;ttt
I di~t~ss . J in tlw t'rtt ,,r t&gt;i~
fllmtli~s und ~tuy , ut · h\&gt;me
mums . On~ t'f om · n&lt;&gt;igh·
&lt;'Its)'

bors hu&lt;.l I~ children. They W\&gt;uld' get boring , Wamn
named the lust &lt;'ne O~mond Buffet ht~' ~lltnething like
Jr. We tlgtu'l:d thlly hud run $50 billion , He must be
out "'f mtmes, It wus ulso the bored to death, Congress
long-gone eru of names, JUst debut~ t1 near trillion·
too. Boh. Jim, Mike. Joo, dollur stimulus bilL I hope it
Betty, Pot, Susie, Now if works. Whut sca~s me.
you mtme t1 kid Bob, you though. is that I might start
. h&lt;t"&lt;' Ill s))Qll it timny, like heuring l1 new W\&gt;rd . Whut's
Bhllbb, m the kid will go the word for 1.000 trillion?.
lhtx•u!lh Ht'e tnmmlltiled . 20120: Our library has a
be~mtst' he's nN tmlque, I Iurge children's section,
\'tm't 1'1\We it, hut sonw· And gue$S wh!lt - chil~
thing. h:lls nw mm'tl 8hobbs dren 's b.Jo.1b ltre print~ in
end up in therupy thQn type THIS 810! Publi!lhen
8
~~~1 TRILLION: When seem "' huve this exactly
did yllu first hcurthut word? bud.wurd, It's old ·. geelers
like me tlult could use the
When Curl Sugun, the
· Wh d0 1h
f&lt;mwus u~tn&gt;ttomer used to lurge prmt.
Itt
ey
stly "hi llit~ns nml hiltions" ' think. I'm weuring tri-focals
thut S\'l)tllt~d 10 be pretty l'&gt;e~·tm:~e they ure so good
mttdt tlw high~st you could look in~? I'll ~let you liS per'1'1
'II'
cent \llull hook bttyers wear
j:l&gt;, t~n l'HillC U ~tilt ll\ll, s~ln1t' kind of re~tdin~&gt; aJIISS;
hut tlmt just meunt "u lot" I
.. "
think 1 wus ubout 30 when 1 es, I know they m11ke latl~
first hc&lt;tl\l "u trillion," aut lt print book~. but why don't
trillion meun~ ~omething . th~y ,,mttke, them all -'IItle
Whut wus the higlle~t tot· pnnt . I don t want to.ope~ a
tcry prite ~ver'? $430 •nil· best ,seller tlllll fee! hke I m
lion , i\ lot of millions.l'i~ht'? . read~ng the fin~ prmt on my
A billion is 1,000 mHiton, ~redtt curd jll&gt;hcy,
:
mol\' tltttn twii.'ll us mtH:h,
(Jim M11f fll if the w1th1&gt;r
Y11tt '&lt;.I -lutl'&lt;' h&gt; worl\ very P{ "It Tctkf,, u HIICIIII' ltll11t:
hnrd 111 '-l~&lt;'llll tt billll&gt;n dol· Com(•licmht,~ thf Simf&gt;lci
lm-s , lf 1'1'11 bl&gt;ttj:ht n nt.•w l.ij'r" wul " /Jctby\· First
$1\WUMl\l luxury &lt;'111' every 1llllflfJ," Yr'tt rw1 tWt&lt;'h hi"t
llny. it would tulle you 27 11
'
ye!trs 1n Slll.'tl\1 $1 llillion, It .Jim_mull~ll@mytffiy.fom) '
.

"

I

l.ocal Briefs

•

Reader Services

....

· POINT PLEASANT. W.Va. - Edward Dille Buckner,
SS. of PoUlt Plew;ant. W.Vtt.. died Mooday. Feb, 9, 2009, at
Holzer Medical C~. Gallipolis.
,
A priv~ gra..:eside servire will be held 111 ICirlland
Memorial Gardens. There will b&amp; 110r visitation. Meroorial
doo.alioo:&gt; ma:; be ~ l\) Stained. Glass Window Fund at
Chrisl El!is&lt;.'Oplll Ch~~~~:b. 804 Main St.. Plmlt Pleasant.
W.Va.IDSQ.
· Amlngements by Crow HusseU FIID.eflll Home. witb
guest ~gistry 111 www.~:ro.wl\usseUfb..com.

.

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel •

~

wt~S ~lly ~)ltll8, as~He~ u1~ ~ l."ltol&lt;.~

- Th. Flr$t A!MfldrMnt to the U.S. CCMIStltutlon

Pz•
recovery from .wildfires

Wednesday. February tt. aoG9

fl11sh witl\ power from
~i~·K~ry. hi~ e~&lt;' 1'\tft'ed by 111.1
tlJvnug pn-; s. tttlt! l:&gt;uoyil\.1
by a .:det&gt;rit:&lt; h)'pt'
mac hill&lt; , l'tt••ilknt ~It
Ooomu luL~ tul\.&lt;:11 II.&gt; \'tlrictr
turi eit~ hi~ oppvn~tlts. as
nutlt'•\llo:-nt e11&lt;:mio::s of the
~;x&gt;U . ~ lolOO(l, of c.:ou~.
would tit' til.. presidetlt tllld
his ~enda .
On&lt;!' nut.io.:or t'tlt'n~ would
be ruui'' ' talk-~hvw host
Rus.h Limt&gt;~ugl:l, .In tl ·
Jmutl\1'\' intervie-w with Sean
Hmulity ·lUI&lt;! ot\ ecpisOO!~ &lt;&gt;t'
nis (\W t\ shOW ' Umtlaug:h
ha.~ W&gt;.St'ltt\1 duit ne wan~
~tmt t&lt;' thll. ·~ lib«tll·
t:ne\ltu dt'tll~(&gt;gt!$ who
pnlt.nptly po.&gt;U~'e\1 on .~
~nwl.s tltis:;ed what Rll&gt;h

c.m su..t • PQmen)y. Otlka

Tixl&lt;l'' ~~ W&lt;'l.h~&lt;:s..l;;\ , Fd&gt;, It, th&lt;"
Tht&lt;l\' .U.: .11J davs ld~ in th&lt;' wac

PageA4

K.lNGLAKE. Australia

(AP} - Residents. of towns
srorclled off lhe map by

AIIStlallia's worst-e~er wildf~s
oa
Wednesday
n:turned tQ tMir homes for
lhe fll'St and found
scenes of - . devastation.
Officials salcl the ·detltb toll
will ex.ceed 200.
"WheN do you start?
Where oo yw start?"' said
hter De"''t}n. standing
l&gt;lank·fui:ed amid: the ruins
of his home in Kingtake,
wboft l.lrt least 39 pet\ple
wete killed - and 1M IQwn
lilt but destroyed - ill
Sllturday,"s. iDfeilliO. .
Denson. 11 carpeMe.r, bas
li~ed iD ' tciaalllb sinee
. IW?. lk said 'he WilliS to
tebuild, b.d ..). 1\Quse, ftt\W
a b~ pi~ of timber,
bricks and twisted metll),
was 110rt imuJed because ~
CQuld oot afford it, .
"It's litu bi&amp; lltQm bomb
bas gooe t)ft'." sllid ~:)woo,
El~w h4Qre.
ntOOrities
sealed off towns. because the
. task of~ bOO·
~fro.m coll11psed buildings Networlt late T\lesday
was p~ing slowly and "they should be allowed to
bectluse uuthorities wanted rot in jaiL"
Residents were 111lowed to
to prevent residents from
disturbing crime s&lt;.:enes •. return to Kinglalte. about 70
EmbefS. were still pi&gt;Sing 11 miles ( 130 kilometers)
, north of the Victoria stare
tllreat of flare-ups ,
PoliL~ suy they suspect capital of Melbourne. but
some of the fires we~ their · prog~ss was slow
deliberately set, and that at because emergen•·y woders
least one su~t is bting Wl:fi! still removing burned
pursued. Ausll'llliu 's top law det&gt;ri~ and cutting down
officer, Fedeml Attorney trees that appe!lred ready to
General ·Robert McLelland, fall. Power Iines - the elec·
said Wednesday any;~ne tticity supply long cut found guilty ol' lighting a we~ strewn llC'JOSS some
fire that caused multiple streets.
deaths would face life in
Some
1\ou~es
bo~
prison if convicted.
malte!lhift signs with mes-Prime Minister Kevin sages fro11 survivors to
Rulld tcsid tl:le Seven loved ones who might C\lme

RUTLAND - 8re11na D. Hemsley, 17. Rutland, was
cite&lt;..~ with failure to CQntrol following a one-vehicle acci·
\lent tl\~;~t o&lt;;cum:d ut 11pp.roximutely .1:35 p.m. ~'n Suturday.
:. A":wfdill8 to tl'tx&gt;pers,. Hemsley wus driving a 2003
h~undai Tiburon southbound on County Road 3 when she
fatl~ to ne1.:otiate a portion of the roadway und as a Nsult ·
tier vehicle ran off the right side of the roadw11y striking 11n ctuo::s of Portsmouth and
embanl&gt;menl and 11 driveway culven.
Ironton ,
,
' No injuries were repon~: Hemsley 's vehicle sustained
The program is designed to
tunctionul damages.
rel\at&gt;ilttute foreclosed bomes
lU1d re-sell them to tirst-titne,
qua.lifying homeowners, but
demolition of these homes.
PaaeAt
and even homes condemned
help ex.pand the capadty &lt;'f 3) prncti~-e non-discritnina· but not under foredo.~we. is
'
food und shelter ptugrums ti(ln: 4) lulve demonslnlted ))Qnnitt~.
At
lellst
nne
property
111
in high-need uro11nd the the capability to deliver
Pomeroy
vr
country.
.
emergency food and'or shel· either
Middleport
will
be
.
pur·
A locul Bllllrd made up of tt&gt;r progmms; and 5) if they
Gt~Uht und Meigs County ure a privute &gt;~oluntary otgll· chased under the progmm.
dtizens will deten11ine how nizmion; the)l should hll~e a the home demolishoo, lind a
new h&lt;mw constructed in its
tl\e t\mds t~wurd~ to the volull\111)' board.
I.'O\Uitles ure to .be distrib·
Gullia11t1d Meigs Counties place tlrid sold to a first-time
uted t~mllng tho: l.'mergency huve distribute&lt;..~ Emergency local homebuyer. The
food 11ml sht'lter progrums · F\1\&gt;U 11t1d Shelter funds pre· GaiHa-Meigs Community
run by locul service organi· vious.ly with the Gallill· At;tion A~ency will use
~at ions in the artu. The Meigs Community Action other housmg funds to pur·
. ~ocal Boord is responsible Agency and the Galli11
for rocommending agtmdes County Council on Aging
to receive these · funds und participating. Those agencies
any additionul funds uvail· were responsible IPJ' provid·
lillie un\ler this phase of the lng numerous meals. rent would t~llow vlllage . oft'i·
progrum .
·
and utility ussisttmce,
ciuls to 11ct as the heud.of 11
Under the terms of the
Funher infonnution on the bargtlinlng unit I buying
. grant from the National program may be obtained by group for residents who
Board. locul govemnwntul ot contacti~ S11ndra Edwards. wi!lh to participate in tl\e
private voluntlll)' organila· Commumty
, Services program, Tht.' villfi8e would
tions chosen to receive funds Division Director, Gullia·
must: I) oo non-protit: 2) Meigs Conimunity Action then attempt to purchase
have an tt~couming system A!Je!IC)I at 367-7341 or 9112· natural gas at u reduced rate
in con1parison to other utili·
lind conduct an unnuuluudit: 6629.
ty companies. Tl\is would
atl'ect customers, including
commercinl customers. not
This painting of Indian
ulready on u gus utility comChief Tecumseh is
pmly's plan, By burguining
among the works to
with u !urger group, it's
be shown In a one·
thought the prke for the
utility would be lower \hun
man uhlbltlon by
wlult the indivldU!tl wuuld
artlst Jan Hacklolt at
oo
o.ff~ dire&lt;.:tly,
thl Markly Cultural
Arts Clnler. 269 East
'Main Straet. Jackson.
The public,Is Invited
· \o meet Hadd011 on
Friday, Feb. t 3. at a
collected goes townrds the
~tlon beginning at
RFL tl.lum totuls,
· 7 p.m. The exhibition
LQCal team cuptains
. runs throl.igh March 8.
le!lrlled of Daffodil Duys at
Submltttd phOIO
this W\'ek 's RI'L tcmn cup·
tuin's meeting, The meet·
in11s assist teams in
tundruising idea!&gt; and ottn·
from Page At
nillttion. More meetings ure
•
plttnned for S: ~ll p.m ..
use "'''~'tll'mic ~mwth. edu· ''huracters. were ellplorln~ Monday.
Mmt:h 16 und
cutionut el&lt;.celhm&lt;-,, nne! cui· the new world west ot' the Motldtty, April 20 til the
turul enrichment for ull Appt~m;hiuns," In mlditi1111 Pomeroy Li brury,
Ohinuns.
to his lifetime of resellr.:-h,
Anyonll lntci-est~·d 'in th!-' Hnddnl\ is u rogulnr visitor
history of this r.:-gion from ut reenuctments. He uppre·
the nuddle to lut~ 1 7(l0~ will ciutes the delltils of dully
wunt to vl&lt;•w the puintings living t~ey cot~v.ey, llt!d
by Hmld1,x , H~ hns u pus· ot)~n pmnts pt~rttclpmtts m tu Fire Chief Lurry · Ryer
~lon ubout how this ureu · thetr uuthenttc costume und Polke Chief llmce
Swift for the do&gt;htilc\1
\levelopt:d, the interuction rer.~ucti&lt;.&gt;ns.
,
Hts ctmvases bnng that reports they P")vide,
between lndinns tmd set·
tiers, nnd tht.l harsh Ntllity of 'Y!'rld, gone hy vlv!dly ' to · During open discussi;ln,
lire in those dnys !l''"e by, hie, Smce Hnddox ts most, members of council c1&gt;t11·
Retired ft'lll11 u distit~ · P!trtkular in the uccu~ncy ol mended villugt: l'l't.'Ws
gui~hed ~·ur~er in pubhc hts work, m~my ptHnt,mgs uddressins both ley ~tf\.'l)ts
eductttion ln the chtssroom are U(.'l:ompum~d by wrrtten 1 mul u wutl.'r leuk during the
nml us un udmini~t!'ntor, histor,Y, wlt~ a IO\'lls on ~r­ I'CI.'ent storm uml po.•w~r out·
l'ludd\IX •lt.welopt'.d tttl mt~r- somthlles 1."'1~1 . the Ohio, ug~. uml utility Wllt'tcrs 1\w
est ln puintiug ht s_ lo~e l&lt;.&gt;f Wllst . Vt~~llll!t, " ut!d thdr work ,
"As I wus silting ut home
the uNu's history . "rhts wtts KentucKy tn,nttcr, , smd
u time ," lhtddl&gt;X suys. llttrhuru Sumuwrs ot the feeling sorry for myself dur·
ing the whole mess, I
"when so ,muny iuteresting · Murkny Center.

Funding rrom

Exhibit

tooling for them,
"All out ,.. we shall
return," suid one sign,
Tensivns huve been rising
in te\.'ent duys as lletnllnds
· rose for pohre to let residents back to checl on their
l:lomes ~d check on pets
11nd . other animuls left
behind, P\&gt;Uce urged people
·to be patient.
· ·
. Spol\eswoman Gillilln
foster suid police in
Victoria stute hlld no reports
of looting from the fire
zone. However. bxal
reports tna.t some undam·
aged propenies had been
tampered with was fueling
frustration among ~sidents
anxious to get bad home,

Victoria Premier John
Brumby said some sur·
vivors 1\ad not even seen
te-levision foot&lt;~.ge of the
disaster's scule and he was
wo.rried a.t&gt;out tbe emo·
tional impact on people
seeing the de~truction for
the first time .
,
More than 400 fires
ripped through Victoria
state on Saturday, fed by 60
mph \I 00 kph) winds.
. record 1\eat 11t1d a severe
drought. Tile officiul death
toll stood lit 181 on
W~nesday. but Brumt&gt;y
said there were at least SO
more bodies k.nown 11bQut
thllt had not Jet been includ·
~ in the otltcial tally.

Stimulus rmm Page At
chase, rehabilitate and re·
sell the property,
Gerlucl\ ~id 1\e. is now
working with Fuir Housing
Administmtor Jel\11 Trussell
to identify approJ?riate prop·
erties for the proJect.
• Gerlacl\ ~id chances life
good that the ~illttge will
qualify for around $1 8 1.000
through the st11te 's Jot&gt;
Stimulus program. Thttt
grunt would be usell to pur·
~:huse a solttN;,perut~ uera·
tor system for the villuge 's
sewer. lag\1\ln , The progrum
tiwors projects devot~ . to
cleun energy. und the cost
savings associated with
using a solar-run system
will be considerable over

using electricity for . the
sunw purpose.
The village has approv~
spending $4,000 for tl\e
necessary design and engineering work for thut propos~ project,
• Funding lor other public
infrustntcture work will also
be ttvailat&gt;le, Gerlach said,
but the village's chances ol'
developin¥, projects on a
"tust-tntek' in order to meet
readiness
requirements
could
inhibit
efforts.
Gerlach suid the ~illfi8e h11s
already applied for stimul\IS·
ty))Q funds for the village's
sewer upgrude project. and
will consider 11t1 application
tor funding for u water line

replacement project.
''The federal government
gave people 11t1 extension to
get (digital television) C\ln·
venor boxes, I wish we could
get 1111 el\tension to pre~
projects," Gerlach said, 'but
tt is important that the viii~
is as pl\racti ve as possible. '
·•We should do ull we can
to be in the b&lt;)st possible
position, so the viUnge can
'I,Ualify lor us much as po&amp;·
&gt;tble whilo: the money is
uvailuble."
Gerlach said the villoge
must also be tilindful that
.the funds are tax.payer, ~ol·
Iars, and that any proJect
cl\osen is a good use of pubhe money.

Chamber from Page At
Municipalities already
participating in progmm life
Brooklyn,
Alllance.
Brewester.
Nav11rre.
Broadview
Heights,
Marion, GaiUpolis, Mount
Vernon, Athen&amp; has ulso
voted to plac\' the i~sue on
the May ballot,
·
Commerciul customers of
Volunteer Energy Services
include
· Commercial
Consortiums ~ Alliunces
McOonalds. Wendy's, .Tim
Hortons, Oomttos. l'inu,
Mull: &amp; Ernm 's, Pnneru
Bre11ds, etc,
·For more inf1wmation
conU\(.'t Holmes ut 614-328·

2938 or nt t'holmes@volun·
teerenergy.com,
In
other
chamber
announcements:
The M~igs Medlen!
Center will offer a free
blood pressure · screening
from 9 a.m.· noon, Monday.
Murch 2, Also otl'ered is u
\'holesterol nnd glucose
screening for $5 by nppoint·
ment. Call 992-9158.
The
Meigs
County
Tourism Office and FM
K92 is spo.&gt;nsoring "A. Taste ·
of Home Mtlgtl'l ine" cook·
ing school culled "Spring
Senstttil&gt;ns." Doors Opt'n u!
5 p.m.. pri::&lt;entution ocgins

ut 7 p.m. on M&lt;trch 23 at
Meigs High SchooL Tickets
are $15 each and available
at the chamber office or
K 92 or by calling 992-6485.
992-2239.
There will be an open
houst&gt; from I:30-4 p.m .•
Tuesduy ttt Rv•·ksprings
Rehubilitation Center.
.
4-H month hegins next
month with the first
Snturlluy of eacl\ mont!\
design11t~'&lt;l tor ncti~ities. .

'

Relay from Page AI
· "Bttnk Night" will be held
fmm 5:30-7 p.m. on
Wednesduy. Mny 6 111
Fanners Bunk's Pomeroy
Bmnch. "Bunk Night" is
where teums tum in moniiy
ruis~ so far nnd th(l.~e who
t\tm their money ln on this
night are \'ntere..t into a
1lmwing t\&gt;r u door prize.
The prize will be given aw11y
nner the RFL for ench teum
cuptuins' meeting ttttllnded

us wdl us baQk night.
This yem·'s RFI. will be
held May 8-9 inside the
Thompson-Rnush Building
on the Mei~s County
Fttit-a:rounds. Gt~cs open for
"set up" ttl noon on Mtty ~.
the event ocgins 111 4 p.m.
with the opening l.'t't'tlmony
set lor 6 p.m, The ch,ing 1.-er·
emony is ut 10 a.m .. Muy 9.

•OIIIIM/1"'"""''-

• nllal'l IM~ · ktf41 J'O'II' OiMkti Illtl
ti O u-ni.'lli~IHiOI'II'i.tl~'-'
• C~tolll~1 ~8~ · ntl'\ls, .,...... .. II'IQI't!

c?,_~';_~§!:~~
"'""-Ooll"'l ~..- ....

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

FREE HEARING TESTS

Salt rrom PogeAt

i

As

thought of them, the worl&gt;
they were doing und the
comlitions th&lt;'Y hull til work 1
in," M01'1-e s~tld,
I
Council also:
• Appmved puymcnt of :
hills in the umount 1&gt;l' 1
II
$~6.017.47.
• Met in t·~~uti 1'1.' st'ssion
t\&gt; discus:. •iisciplint• of u 1
villuge employee, with no 1
1
nction follnw ing.
• Al."cepted th~ re~ignuti1.1n I
nf public wor~s t'mpl1&gt;y~-c
Brian Jucobs-Johnsun ., ·

.

. ,will be given io Pomeroy by
'

iBe/tone HEARING AID CENTER
. Dr. A Jackson Bailes Office

507 Mulberry Hghts., Pomeroy, OH

FRIDAY, FEB. 13th 9:00am-noon

I
I
I
I

· II
Tilt ltSIS will be gi'itll by fllctnstd IINring Aid Sptell/lit
Anl~" wno ha; '"'~~ hooN"9 or ;r&gt;ioi&lt;11~-.1 1\'l coovtll&lt;ll e&lt;&gt; son1 tid to navt aFREE
1.
llim9 tts: to!&amp;&amp; ~ tn~ prob.ll!11 e&lt;nc. ntl~' Bn~ 11\11 cc•pon w!h lOU br !lliJI FREE 1
HEAR~G TESl; alm.oo vahtt

UAW, ARIIOUNO All OTHER INSURANCE PROVtDERS

1.
I

L... 9~~~!9.~~~~E-~~99:~~~-----J .

�ACROSS THE NATION

The Daily Sentinel

PageA6

$3
BY DAVID ESPO
AP SPeCIAl CORRESI'ONDENT

WASHINGTON- On a
sin~le day filled with staggenng sums. the Obama
administration.
Federal
Reserve
and
Senate
attacked the deepening economic crisis Tuesday with
actions that could lhrow as
much as $3 trillion more in
government and . private
funds into the: fight against
frozen credit markets and
risin' joblessness.
·. . "It s §One deep. It's gptten
worse,' President Barack
Obama said of the recession
at a campaign-style appearance in Fort Myers. Fla ..
where unemployment has
reached double digits. "The
situ11tion we face could not
be more serious."
If any more emphasis
were needed , Wall Street
investors sent stocks plung. ing, objecting that new rescue details from tbe government were too s~ . The
·Dow Jones · mdustrials
dropped 382 (;l?ints. .
.
The prestdent spoke
shortly after Senate passage
of an $838 billion emergency economic stimulus
bill cleared the way for
· talks with the House on a
final compromise. In a display of urgency. White
House chief of staff Rahm
Emanuel traveled to the
Capitol for meetings that
stretche4 into the night with
Democratic leaders as well
as moderate senators whose
views - and votes - will
be key to any deal.
Separately.
Treasury
Secretary Timothy Geithner .
outlined plans for s~nding
much of the $350 btllion in
financial bailout money
recently
cleared
by
Congress. and the Federal
Reserve announced it would
commit up to $1 trillion to
make loans more widely
available to consumers.
Taken together, the events
marked at least a political
watershed if not an economic turning point - the day
the three-week old administration and its congressional
allies assumed full · L'Ontrol
of the struggle agl\inst the
worst economic crisis since
the Great Depression.
The vote was 61-37 in the
Senate to pass the stimulus.
with moderate Re~i.lblican
Sens. Susan Colhns und
Olympia Snowe of Maine
and Arlen Specter of
Pennsylvania · . joining
Democrots in support.
Even before the vote.
Majority Leuder Hurry Reid
and House S~aker Nuncy
Pelosi met wtth Obumu ut ·
the White House to go over
the task ahead .
· The Democratic leaders
have long pledged to have
legislation on Obama 's desk
by mid-month, and soine
Democrats said there was
an informal target of
Wednesday for agreement
on a bill that would likely
wind up in the range of
$~00 billion.
The political urgency
bumped up ugainst other ·
obstacles.. though .
The House measure
includes roughly $70 billion
more spending thun the
Senate's. but it lucks

:'1

r: r-

Slicing
bHI
. up the Senate's .stimulus
.

The Cangressionel'lludiletOiflca estimates that the bulk ollhe spaudil~g In the Sal tie R$111"ltlld .
$838 billion stimulus bill will be 811ocated .lo hNith, tear. eclucatlon.lriMpoltatJor. ~ lnd
developmeo • . T - will - ' l o r roughly 35 IMI'Il.,~ of the bill.

lllbllf
'

.t

~

•

Ene&lt;gy
111&lt;1 wotlr

su

Tranllflll'lailon,

hoosi/lg and urban

Slatwlloc.t

stabilization 1und
a..e~oe~menu... 31
L.: INDIRECT SPENDI~G

·-~
.
..... -

1U

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

r.:::11wdorti~furld.-So&lt;\irMlf,

: : ,e:':'~-~ry Ollco. """'"'Y

-me~~on
_'"'*'
-"-ICI!ogy
...::.;.._and
~~
---4U
--:::=::-::---:--:-::-:-""':':::------------~r~~or
AP .

sOI.JACli c~ BWgot Otlleo
~

""· .,,

Senate-approved tax breaks
totaling more than $100 bitlion for new car buyers• .
home purchasers Wld upper
middle income families.
In a further obstacle.
Collins and other Senate
moderates - in both parties
- signaled they wilf work
to hold the cost of the final
bill below $800 billion.
That's less than the $820
billion in spending and tax
cuts combined in the · bill
that cleared the House as
well as the $838 billion leg·
islation the Senate wrote . ·
Additionally, Obama has
campai~ned
particularly
energetically to · include
funds for school construction in the bill. At the insistence of Collins. the Senate
measure Oll)itted money for
that purpose, and it wasn't
clear whether she had eased
her position . on the presidential priority.
.
Whatever the cost of the
final bill, it will add to the
deficit, and that created
another · little·mentioned
dilemma for the administration and Democrats.
Future spending bills on
domestic programs or tax
cuts will probably have afar
more difficult time gaining
the support necessary , to
pass without offsetting
spending cuts or tux
increases that would hold
the deficit levet
Obama has campaigned
energetically in recent days
lor passage of the stimulus
bill.at the White House. on
visits to other federal agencies. in his trip to Florida
and a similar appearance
Monday in a high-unemployment area of Indiana. .
Reid depicted u president
deeply involved in lhe compromise eftort as well. He
said Obama had "certain set
ideas as to what he thinks
should be done" but
declined to elnbornte .
The president set the context for the unfolding events
Monday night at his first
presidential news conference when he said, "With
the private sector so weakened by this recession. the
federal government is the
only entity left with the
resources to jolt our economy back into life ...
· Geithner outlined some of
the details. although hnnd
aides lett numerou.s questions unanswered.

..

"We ' have to both jumpstart job creation and private
i~~,estme11t. and we must get
credit flowing aguin to businesses and families,"
Geithner said at a news conference. He pledged to "fundamentally reshape" the
financial industry bailout
that began last fall under the
Bush administration, and he
announced that at least $50
billion would be spent helping homeowners facing
foreclosure. He also said
new steps would hold banks
accountable for their use of
bailout funds.
One element of the
administration's · approach
calls for using as much as
$100 billion in federal
bailout funds to give banks.
hedge funds or other
investors the incentive to
purchase so-called toxic
assets carried on the books
of other financial institu·
tions. The goal is to return
struggling banks to health
so they can resume making
loon~. and .an administration

·. w'

fact sheet said the amount
of government and private
funds combined will be ~·on
an initial sciile of up to $5011'
billion, with the ~tialto
el!.pand up to $1 trillion." ' ·
the Federal Reserve
announced it would commit
up to $1 trillion to purchase
bonds or other assets
backed by consumer loans.
The Treasury will gullflll~
a portion of the Fed invest·
ment by putting up $100
billion, an increase. from a
$20 bill ion commitment
that Bush administration
hl)d announced.
The' goal of this
lll'lm
is to make it e.asier rli:dn-•
sumers to buy cars Ql obtfin
student loans, small busi~
ness loans or other type$ of
credit that have dried up in
recent months.
. .
Geithner said $50 bil ion
· in bailout funds would be
dedicated to an effort to prevent mortgage foreclosure
of "owner-occupied middle
class homes." Few details
were provided.

*

1

.

measums
ce~..
By chance, a morutoong

AUGUST~. Maine ....: crew that been at !be site 10
Teeth are chaltering in New days ~fore tile minus-50
England. where scientists reading d1ecked the device
just spent about a month ·and found it in perfect wortscrutinizing weather data ing order. But ~fore any
before procla.im.ing Tuesday finai!Rcisioos were !llllile, a
tbat. yes. Ma.ine has. pulled device just like: lhe: one at Big
even witb Vermont in bra~- Black River bad to be tested
ging rights for the: region s at 50 below, and it. roo;
lowest recorded tempera- tumed'OOI to be oo lhe: mark.
ture - 50 below.
"It turned out it was SfOl
That's wicked cold, as a oo." said Bob Lent, Mame
New Englander might ~- director of the U.S.
the breath freezing in a .
Geological Survey. w)lich
on the fi1St syUable. ut shares its monitoring sites
even though it's far from the with the: National Oceanic
chilliest the nation bas ever and
Atmospheric
seen. the: attention to detail Administrlltion.
in declaring !be tie - and
A vote was taken by the:
not really the: temperature State- Climate Extremcit~lf - might show bow Coounittee. iiDd the: final call
deeply .we: feel about lhe: was made by the: Nationa.l
weather.
·
Climatic Data Center, based
"Tbe general public, mete- in Asheville, N.C.
orologists and the media ...
Maine's new record beats
we're fascinated with · the old ·48-below mark set
extreme-s, whether it be wilh in 1925 in Van Buren. also
extreme- snowfall, or how in the ·IIOrthem part of the
much ra.in fell, or in this state:. The Jan. 16 low carne
case, bow cold did it get," as pint of a blast of arctic air
sa.id Hendricus Lulofs, chief that swept across the: state,
meteorologist at the National leaving man~ other spots in
Weather Service bureau in the .state. shivering in ternCaribou. "It's the fascinatioo peratures thai were in the,
of achieving something. or double digits below zero.
maybe having measured
The record on New
something that at least in Hampshire's
Mount
modem times has. never been Washington. known for its
measured before."
wild weather extremes, is
The frigid Fahrenheit "only" 47 below.
reading was recorded about
While Mainers may be
1:15 a.m. Jan . 16 at a proud to bolster their hearty
remote data-collecting sta- reputation with the new
tion in B.ig Black River, who-can-survive-this ternabout four miles from the perature, the minus-50 is
Canadian border. It ties lhe nothing like what other parts
record set in 1933 in . of the continent, not to menBloomfield, Vt .. for New tion the world. have seen.
The lowest temperature iri
England's lowest temperature in roughly a cent""" of North Am..rica - 81 below
-J
"" •
record-keeping, and reflects - was recorded on Feb. 3.
the actual air temperature, . 1947, at Snag, Yukon .
notthewindchillfactor.
Territory. In the United
But weathe~ experts don't States. the coldest re.ading ·
awlll'd temperature extremes was minus 80 at Prospect
willy-nilly.
,
· Creek. Alaska. on )an. 2.3.
The National Weather 1971. And in the lower 48.
Service's tirst report of the all-time cold spot is
what appeared to be a new Rogers Pass. Mont .. where
record low activated a it was minus 70 on Jan. 20,
group called the State I954. according to NOAA
.Climate
EAtreme records.
Committee, whose memThe lowest natural ternhers represent state and fed- · perature ever recorded on
eral weather agencies. They Earth w11s 129 below at the
examined all data pertaining Russian Vostok Station in
to the reading and called for Antarctica on July 21, 1983.
a testing of the thermistor,
Now. that's wicked cold.

Ohio teen charged with ··
fraud. for .huge candy order
MIDDLETOWN (AP) Police say an Ohio teenager
tried to pull off a sweet deal,
ordering more than $37,000
of candy online and charging
it to his former high sehool.
Police say. 18-year-old Jad
Holmes used a purchasing
number from Middletown
High School to order thousands of lollipo~ and candy
bars from Michigan-based
The Goodies Factory. It
wasn't clear how he
accessed the number.
The candy company

became suspicious. contacted the school and was told
by detectives to send an
empty box.
Police say Holmes was
arrested after the fake delivery to his home. ·
Holmes faces two counts
of felony telecommunications fraud. He was ·being
· held in Middletown City Jail
on· more than $30,000 bond.
. A message seeldnf comment from Holmes attorney, Melinda Cook, was left
Tuesday at her office..

Wednesday. February 11.2009

ot-"""
----.--..a.I'ONEIIO" -

A -

Golllo, - . . , . Wloogo-

-

tt D

,

f••wU

...,_,

. ,

•

n

~ P'ttSCM at~ 5:4.5

p.m.

I'Qollioowt!&gt; otGollla ~ 6 p.m.
Sfmn* ~It Soo.ltll Goill&amp; 6 p.m.
- l l - . , l &gt; p.m.
D

t

. . . .
,,.

...,.. r n n
OICS.ot - · 7:30p.m.
Gillet 7 7

-·-·&amp;1&gt;"'
2

llioigo ot l!ol!n. 6 p.m.

~VOlley Chti-11 SoMI&gt; Gillo. '

. r;t.:rn.

OIICS 01 Hannan. 6 p.m,

......,,..

- - · - · 7:3QJ&gt;!ft.
Ai'tlll' ~ 0 •
li ~m.

at

r"•·

rt;

, .• • n

E-otl.llller. 6:30p.m.

'\

.

'

.

,

'.

.~

,~,

·~-

'

-.

.i'

, ' •I

Office:
.PVH Medical Office Building
Suite 113
Point Pleasant, WV

~-·.-

. . .,,

' . • . ''\

'

'~ '•

' 1 ·,

.... ~~{1
.• ·.,ti

i.

,, · .

-~·r

I

·,

.

'

Appo.in tments:

304.175.1888

.

..
\

..

.

~

.,

MASON - Playing their
secolld Class A. ti)p 10 basketball team in less than a
week, the Wahama White
Falcons .bid for another
upset win fell just short as
nsitins
Parkersburg
Cathol1c escaped the: Bend
Area.with a blll'd fought 4534 hankourt win Tuesday
evening . .
Employing a deliberate,
patient offense with pressuring defensive tactics
against the taller Crusaders.
Wabama bad the visitors on

PIIUI SM W.Va..

- a t Rivor Vllloy; 6 J&gt;M.
1311111 'ctltlooyal- 6p.m
S&lt;MII Gallia ot lronlon St ..00.. 6 p.m.

Prep Basketball -

12 .

Ohio Roundup

~ll-.,6'llll&gt;m.

lll'oint Plouont 7:3Q pm.

-

•
. . 1 E,Wun14
. . . ... , II

BY BRYAM WALTaiS

t

Glllla ~at Pilrtsmautlo, 6 pm.
MoiQ10 at 111n10n County. 6 p.m.
• 1 n •
Gollia -.oy .. Dlli o1 Cllarnplans. s
pm.

S&lt;MIIGallleatC.......on.6p.m.
'We ltiUI
Gallia Academy II SEOAI. (Jacl&lt;sont.

to a.m.

.AP GIRlS STATE
BASKETBALL POLL
1 state panel of SIJCIIS Wfiters ond

-

broa&lt;ltUters

'"*' Oloio
high "' 1lie filth ·of six

lit10 -~~ teoms

~Associated Pntss polls ot 2009.
by OHSAA. dl"¥isk&gt;ns, with won~lott .
IOOOf&lt;i an&lt;! total points (firsl-pla&lt;e wtes
in.poron-):

DIVISION• I
. I, Cin. MI. ~. Dame (15)16-1
229
2. Dublin Collmon (5) 11r0
· 220
.3. Cifo. Winton -.11.0
168
4, W. Choler lokotoW. 15·2 140
~.Dresden 'lll-'lolley II) 20-0
136
6. Pflaware Hroy&lt;&gt;o 17·0
7, Porrystlurg 17·0
8. Warren Howland 12) 17.0

9. l'&lt;llnsllurg (2) 14-3

1 18
97
ll9

. 53

10. Xtnla 15-1

38

0111111 -~~~~ 11 or more polnta:
I I. Con. McKinley (1) 22. 12. Tt&gt;l. Start
21. 13, l&lt;tittertnQ F•lrmont 17. 14, Dublin
Scioto 15. 15. Grt&lt;ln 13.

DIVISION II
~1. Tllli&gt;O&lt;Ina&lt;t (14) 18.0
l!.
Columbian (1) 1&amp;-&lt;1
3,llmo Ballo (4) 16·1
4, CNIIIcolhe
(2) 17.()
5. Konorlng Alter (3) 16-2
6. Akr. - n (2) 15-2
7, Wa!UW Fjiver View 15-2

Tiffin

Unlolo

8. GtlliYl 16-1
9. Spring. Kenton Rljge 16·2
10. Canton Soulh 17·1

232
tS6
170
158
154
116
. 95
66

48
38

-·~~~~ 12 .. """" polnla:
11. Cuyahoga ~ails Walsh Jesuit 28. 12.
Solem 26. 13. Snekor Hts. Halllaway
Brown 21 14. Washington C.H. Miomi

hoe 15. 15. Wapakoneta 12.

!lWA\.TERSOMVOAilVTR18UNE.COM
GALLJPOUS - It started with a win. It ends with a
win.
Funny how history h~s a
way ·of repealing itself.
The Gallia Academy boys ·
basketball team gave the old
· GAHS ~ymnasium - and
its semors - a fitting
farewell Tuesday night dllJ'ing a 48-36 victory over visiting · Jackson · in
a
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League matchup on Senior
Night.
The Blue Devils (6-11. 28 SEOAL) posted a victory
in their final home game of
the regular season. which
just happened to also be the
final boys home game ever
ut the old Gulliu Academy
High School - since the
Blue and White will be in t1
new high school .sturting
next fall.
The old gym originally
opened on December 5.
·1958 - 51 years ago when the Devils hosted
Nelsonville . in a SEOAL
contest. The game went two
overtimes before GAHS
clinched the inaugural decision with 11 53-51 outcome.
Tuesday night. however.
was not as drawn out - but
just as dramatic. The friendly con(ines were packed - ·
particularly a very loud
home student section mak.ing for a very wurm
indoor environment.
And the Devils fed off of
that energy early. stomting
out to 1i 13-4 advantage
after eight minutes of play.
The hosts increased that
lead to 19-6 at the the 5:14
mark of the second stanza .
before entering the il)termission with a 24-13 cushPIHsl -

DIVISION Ill
245
204
195

140
131

I

128

Marshall
crushes
URG,92-59

Bryan Wolters/phDio

Gallia Academy's Chris Armstrong (24) releases a shot anempt over a Jackson defender
Roundup, 12 . · during the first half of Tuesday night's SEOAL boys basketball game in Gallipolis.

HUNTINGTON (AP&gt; Markel Humphrey and
Chris Ltitz scored 23
points apiece to lead ·
Murshull in a 92-59 rout of
Rio Gmnde on Tuesday
night.
Adam Williahts added
12 points ·and 14 rebounds
for ·the Thundering Herd
(Il - L~). who have won
two straight gumes ufter
dropping "rout' in " row.
Lutz wus 4-for-5 from
beyond the arc und dished
out
si~
assists
in
Marshull's final nonconference g;~me of the seasoiL
Darryl Merthie chipped
in I 0 points.
Bnmdon Ivery sL·ored 16 .
points to lead the Red
Storm ( 17 -II) of the
NAIA . Brett Bt•uder and
P.J . Rase finished with II
points apiece.
Marshall led .t6-2l) at
halftime. and shot 66 .7
peri.·ent from the fil'ld ( 18
of27) to &gt;'eal the win in the
seL·ond halL · Rio Gran de
was outrcbOUllded .t 1-JJ
in the ,;,intL·st.
The Thundering · Herd
improved to 13-0 in this
~t!rh~ s.

\~ohk· h

began in

1920.

Pacers sneak past Cavaliers, 96-95

INDIANAPOLIS (AP)Mike
Brown will gladly take
8t
the
fine
- if it makes a dif8. W. Llbort;-S.Iom 16·1
80
ference in the culls LeBron
9. Gonoa ..,..., 15-1
75
James gets.
j o, ~tuning l'allty (1) 17.0 68
Brown wutched his star
• 011111t -111111 or.....,. potnll: player score 47 points and
1,. Amonda.Cioorcreok 17.
do everything but ;.vin the
'
¥ame Tuesday mght 111
DIVISION IV
1~diana.
·
· ' One problem: James· foul
· 1. ConvoyCresiView(15)16.Q 246
with 0.2 seconds left gave
2. Ba~ln Hiland (8) 15·)
231 , Indilll\a's Danny Granger a
3. New Braman (1) 16-1 111(
chance to win . it from the
• . "-ttil)llllt 15-2
129
free throw .line. Granger
• 5. Col.o. Alrictrl!rl&gt; 15-4
110
sank .the first, then missed
·. e. Delphos St. John~ 13-3
9S .
the second intentionally . to
;7. C.nol Harvesl Prtp 16·2
88
· 8. Shactyolde 17-2
72
seal an improbable 96-95
;; . ~IW Rltgll 15-1
49
victory that left Brown and
10. Waltrford 15-2
41
his players fuming about the
call .
01'*' - •1111111 or mon 1&gt;01n1t:
\'I don ;1 care' if I get fined.
1:1, Cle. Hit. luthoron E. (a) ss. Ia: ·. It Is what it is. I saw the: two
ca~ 29. 13, 1\ol' Chrlotlan 22. 14, Ft.
I
.
b d all d
Roco110ry IS. 15. ouqvlllo 14. 1e, P uys, JUSt a a c
eterlolpalc 1s.
•·
· · mined the outcome of that
game," Brown said. "If they
want to fine me for telling
the
truth, fine me. This isn't
CoNI'ACI'US
me. I never do this ."
· The usually · composed
1·740·446·2342 ext. 33
Brown couldn't help htmself
..... - 1-74().446·3003
after a wild finish .
1.,.11 • ri&gt;doopamOmydoly_o..,.com
While James spoke in a
Sllatii..&amp;JAII
more moderate tone, he. too,
Bry11n Wlrt.ra, Sporta Wrttar. wus upset with the call. He
tugged at his headband und
(740) 446·2342, 0111. 33
bwelloroO mydailytrlbuno.&lt;Xllll.
walked around on the tloor

.

General, Cardi~,. :Vqpuliy-, .
Esophageal, .:tbora9ic.
..
.. .. ,, $'eivi~'
..
&amp; Anteriot:'$pine
Surg.,'A:ccess,,
..

lowing the game ·s first ·
eight minuti."s with lhe: Bend
Area team leaditl.g by a 1915 SC011.' at tile halt . Wabaina
continued to come- up with
the big plays to maintain a
four pomt edge at 29--25
before Purkersbur!! Catholk
nailed u couple ' of three
point baskets lute in the third
quarter to regain the ed~e for
the first time- since a Dylan
Riet:~teck. bucket to open the
come~ .
. .•
The Crusaders led by 11 3231 &gt;~:ore with eighl millu\es
remaining when hard times
hit
the White . Falcon
' .

_fillllln t a·

1. Morton Pietsont (16) 19-0
2. S. Euclid Regina (8) 16·0
3. Srnltlovilo 18.0
·4. Ook Hill (1) 15-.1
5. Findlay Llbe~·BaniOn 16-t
6. Millbury lake 16.0
7. MI. Blanchard RIIIO. .Ie 16·1

'

'

OW.I'fttN,, .......

an etectrkai!Rvice used ill

BYGuMNAD·w
.t.SSOCIATEtl PI'IESS. WRITER

... pllllllo

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

·A Maine event of 50
below~cites scientists

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Sen. Max Baucus, 0-Mont..' talks with reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington,
Tuesday. following the Senat&amp;'s passage of the stimulus bill.

lride

while Granger was shooting
free throws. and when the
game ended. James quickly
left the floor and walked
with disgust to the locker
room.
"I think Mike Brown guve
it his all." James said. "He
basically Sllid what he ·felt.
For it to end that wax. it's
defi'nitely tough on us .·
Indiana. which ended u
nine-game losing streuk to
the Cuvuliers. saw it ditTerently.
A· few moments earlier.
Cleveland had tried an alleyoop play to James oil' an
inbounds pass - the same
play Indiana used to win it.
While James never caught
the ball. Granger drew the
foul with 0.4 seconds to go.
Wld James made both free
throws to tie the score at 95.
"They were very. very
consistent culls on the lnst
two pluys." Pacers coach
Jim O'Brien suid.
For Jumes. it ruined u
night in which he ·turned
Conseco Fieldhouse into his
own pe..Sonal showcuse.
He connected on 15 of 21
shots, 13. of 14 free throws.
mude 4 of 7 3-pointers. uml
hnd seven rebounds nnd four

assists . He repeutedly hnd
the crowd on its feel with
high-tlying d11nks. nifty nolook. passes. one spectttcular
block and an array of bend
fakes. crossover dribbles
and acrobutic moves.
·
Yet somehow. perhaps
with u little help from the
officials, the short-hunded
Pacers absorbed the hody
blows and survived .
Troy Murphy scnred 18 tu
lead Indiana. while Gmnger. ·
playing on a sore right knee .
udded 16. lndiima played
without Marquis Daniels. ·
Mike Dunleavy and Jeff
Foster but got some key late
plays from backups like
Travis Diener and Brandon
~ush. ·
.
Cleveland lost its second
straight game for . the first
time this season and went
home in disbelief.
"Thut ·tast call. on the run.
is the worst t•ull thm I have
ever been a part of,'' Brown
said . •·1 cannot imugine
another worse cull than thilt.
lt was un awful call and for
.
AP photo
him to tuke uway a basketIndiana
Pacers
forward
Danny
Granger
(33)
is
fouled
by
bull game from u teum with
.4 seconds on the dock is Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James near the end of
of an NBA basKetball game In Indianapolis on Tuesoay.
irresponsibk.''

..

�ACROSS THE NATION

The Daily Sentinel

PageA6

$3
BY DAVID ESPO
AP SPeCIAl CORRESI'ONDENT

WASHINGTON- On a
sin~le day filled with staggenng sums. the Obama
administration.
Federal
Reserve
and
Senate
attacked the deepening economic crisis Tuesday with
actions that could lhrow as
much as $3 trillion more in
government and . private
funds into the: fight against
frozen credit markets and
risin' joblessness.
·. . "It s §One deep. It's gptten
worse,' President Barack
Obama said of the recession
at a campaign-style appearance in Fort Myers. Fla ..
where unemployment has
reached double digits. "The
situ11tion we face could not
be more serious."
If any more emphasis
were needed , Wall Street
investors sent stocks plung. ing, objecting that new rescue details from tbe government were too s~ . The
·Dow Jones · mdustrials
dropped 382 (;l?ints. .
.
The prestdent spoke
shortly after Senate passage
of an $838 billion emergency economic stimulus
bill cleared the way for
· talks with the House on a
final compromise. In a display of urgency. White
House chief of staff Rahm
Emanuel traveled to the
Capitol for meetings that
stretche4 into the night with
Democratic leaders as well
as moderate senators whose
views - and votes - will
be key to any deal.
Separately.
Treasury
Secretary Timothy Geithner .
outlined plans for s~nding
much of the $350 btllion in
financial bailout money
recently
cleared
by
Congress. and the Federal
Reserve announced it would
commit up to $1 trillion to
make loans more widely
available to consumers.
Taken together, the events
marked at least a political
watershed if not an economic turning point - the day
the three-week old administration and its congressional
allies assumed full · L'Ontrol
of the struggle agl\inst the
worst economic crisis since
the Great Depression.
The vote was 61-37 in the
Senate to pass the stimulus.
with moderate Re~i.lblican
Sens. Susan Colhns und
Olympia Snowe of Maine
and Arlen Specter of
Pennsylvania · . joining
Democrots in support.
Even before the vote.
Majority Leuder Hurry Reid
and House S~aker Nuncy
Pelosi met wtth Obumu ut ·
the White House to go over
the task ahead .
· The Democratic leaders
have long pledged to have
legislation on Obama 's desk
by mid-month, and soine
Democrats said there was
an informal target of
Wednesday for agreement
on a bill that would likely
wind up in the range of
$~00 billion.
The political urgency
bumped up ugainst other ·
obstacles.. though .
The House measure
includes roughly $70 billion
more spending thun the
Senate's. but it lucks

:'1

r: r-

Slicing
bHI
. up the Senate's .stimulus
.

The Cangressionel'lludiletOiflca estimates that the bulk ollhe spaudil~g In the Sal tie R$111"ltlld .
$838 billion stimulus bill will be 811ocated .lo hNith, tear. eclucatlon.lriMpoltatJor. ~ lnd
developmeo • . T - will - ' l o r roughly 35 IMI'Il.,~ of the bill.

lllbllf
'

.t

~

•

Ene&lt;gy
111&lt;1 wotlr

su

Tranllflll'lailon,

hoosi/lg and urban

Slatwlloc.t

stabilization 1und
a..e~oe~menu... 31
L.: INDIRECT SPENDI~G

·-~
.
..... -

1U

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

r.:::11wdorti~furld.-So&lt;\irMlf,

: : ,e:':'~-~ry Ollco. """'"'Y

-me~~on
_'"'*'
-"-ICI!ogy
...::.;.._and
~~
---4U
--:::=::-::---:--:-::-:-""':':::------------~r~~or
AP .

sOI.JACli c~ BWgot Otlleo
~

""· .,,

Senate-approved tax breaks
totaling more than $100 bitlion for new car buyers• .
home purchasers Wld upper
middle income families.
In a further obstacle.
Collins and other Senate
moderates - in both parties
- signaled they wilf work
to hold the cost of the final
bill below $800 billion.
That's less than the $820
billion in spending and tax
cuts combined in the · bill
that cleared the House as
well as the $838 billion leg·
islation the Senate wrote . ·
Additionally, Obama has
campai~ned
particularly
energetically to · include
funds for school construction in the bill. At the insistence of Collins. the Senate
measure Oll)itted money for
that purpose, and it wasn't
clear whether she had eased
her position . on the presidential priority.
.
Whatever the cost of the
final bill, it will add to the
deficit, and that created
another · little·mentioned
dilemma for the administration and Democrats.
Future spending bills on
domestic programs or tax
cuts will probably have afar
more difficult time gaining
the support necessary , to
pass without offsetting
spending cuts or tux
increases that would hold
the deficit levet
Obama has campaigned
energetically in recent days
lor passage of the stimulus
bill.at the White House. on
visits to other federal agencies. in his trip to Florida
and a similar appearance
Monday in a high-unemployment area of Indiana. .
Reid depicted u president
deeply involved in lhe compromise eftort as well. He
said Obama had "certain set
ideas as to what he thinks
should be done" but
declined to elnbornte .
The president set the context for the unfolding events
Monday night at his first
presidential news conference when he said, "With
the private sector so weakened by this recession. the
federal government is the
only entity left with the
resources to jolt our economy back into life ...
· Geithner outlined some of
the details. although hnnd
aides lett numerou.s questions unanswered.

..

"We ' have to both jumpstart job creation and private
i~~,estme11t. and we must get
credit flowing aguin to businesses and families,"
Geithner said at a news conference. He pledged to "fundamentally reshape" the
financial industry bailout
that began last fall under the
Bush administration, and he
announced that at least $50
billion would be spent helping homeowners facing
foreclosure. He also said
new steps would hold banks
accountable for their use of
bailout funds.
One element of the
administration's · approach
calls for using as much as
$100 billion in federal
bailout funds to give banks.
hedge funds or other
investors the incentive to
purchase so-called toxic
assets carried on the books
of other financial institu·
tions. The goal is to return
struggling banks to health
so they can resume making
loon~. and .an administration

·. w'

fact sheet said the amount
of government and private
funds combined will be ~·on
an initial sciile of up to $5011'
billion, with the ~tialto
el!.pand up to $1 trillion." ' ·
the Federal Reserve
announced it would commit
up to $1 trillion to purchase
bonds or other assets
backed by consumer loans.
The Treasury will gullflll~
a portion of the Fed invest·
ment by putting up $100
billion, an increase. from a
$20 bill ion commitment
that Bush administration
hl)d announced.
The' goal of this
lll'lm
is to make it e.asier rli:dn-•
sumers to buy cars Ql obtfin
student loans, small busi~
ness loans or other type$ of
credit that have dried up in
recent months.
. .
Geithner said $50 bil ion
· in bailout funds would be
dedicated to an effort to prevent mortgage foreclosure
of "owner-occupied middle
class homes." Few details
were provided.

*

1

.

measums
ce~..
By chance, a morutoong

AUGUST~. Maine ....: crew that been at !be site 10
Teeth are chaltering in New days ~fore tile minus-50
England. where scientists reading d1ecked the device
just spent about a month ·and found it in perfect wortscrutinizing weather data ing order. But ~fore any
before procla.im.ing Tuesday finai!Rcisioos were !llllile, a
tbat. yes. Ma.ine has. pulled device just like: lhe: one at Big
even witb Vermont in bra~- Black River bad to be tested
ging rights for the: region s at 50 below, and it. roo;
lowest recorded tempera- tumed'OOI to be oo lhe: mark.
ture - 50 below.
"It turned out it was SfOl
That's wicked cold, as a oo." said Bob Lent, Mame
New Englander might ~- director of the U.S.
the breath freezing in a .
Geological Survey. w)lich
on the fi1St syUable. ut shares its monitoring sites
even though it's far from the with the: National Oceanic
chilliest the nation bas ever and
Atmospheric
seen. the: attention to detail Administrlltion.
in declaring !be tie - and
A vote was taken by the:
not really the: temperature State- Climate Extremcit~lf - might show bow Coounittee. iiDd the: final call
deeply .we: feel about lhe: was made by the: Nationa.l
weather.
·
Climatic Data Center, based
"Tbe general public, mete- in Asheville, N.C.
orologists and the media ...
Maine's new record beats
we're fascinated with · the old ·48-below mark set
extreme-s, whether it be wilh in 1925 in Van Buren. also
extreme- snowfall, or how in the ·IIOrthem part of the
much ra.in fell, or in this state:. The Jan. 16 low carne
case, bow cold did it get," as pint of a blast of arctic air
sa.id Hendricus Lulofs, chief that swept across the: state,
meteorologist at the National leaving man~ other spots in
Weather Service bureau in the .state. shivering in ternCaribou. "It's the fascinatioo peratures thai were in the,
of achieving something. or double digits below zero.
maybe having measured
The record on New
something that at least in Hampshire's
Mount
modem times has. never been Washington. known for its
measured before."
wild weather extremes, is
The frigid Fahrenheit "only" 47 below.
reading was recorded about
While Mainers may be
1:15 a.m. Jan . 16 at a proud to bolster their hearty
remote data-collecting sta- reputation with the new
tion in B.ig Black River, who-can-survive-this ternabout four miles from the perature, the minus-50 is
Canadian border. It ties lhe nothing like what other parts
record set in 1933 in . of the continent, not to menBloomfield, Vt .. for New tion the world. have seen.
The lowest temperature iri
England's lowest temperature in roughly a cent""" of North Am..rica - 81 below
-J
"" •
record-keeping, and reflects - was recorded on Feb. 3.
the actual air temperature, . 1947, at Snag, Yukon .
notthewindchillfactor.
Territory. In the United
But weathe~ experts don't States. the coldest re.ading ·
awlll'd temperature extremes was minus 80 at Prospect
willy-nilly.
,
· Creek. Alaska. on )an. 2.3.
The National Weather 1971. And in the lower 48.
Service's tirst report of the all-time cold spot is
what appeared to be a new Rogers Pass. Mont .. where
record low activated a it was minus 70 on Jan. 20,
group called the State I954. according to NOAA
.Climate
EAtreme records.
Committee, whose memThe lowest natural ternhers represent state and fed- · perature ever recorded on
eral weather agencies. They Earth w11s 129 below at the
examined all data pertaining Russian Vostok Station in
to the reading and called for Antarctica on July 21, 1983.
a testing of the thermistor,
Now. that's wicked cold.

Ohio teen charged with ··
fraud. for .huge candy order
MIDDLETOWN (AP) Police say an Ohio teenager
tried to pull off a sweet deal,
ordering more than $37,000
of candy online and charging
it to his former high sehool.
Police say. 18-year-old Jad
Holmes used a purchasing
number from Middletown
High School to order thousands of lollipo~ and candy
bars from Michigan-based
The Goodies Factory. It
wasn't clear how he
accessed the number.
The candy company

became suspicious. contacted the school and was told
by detectives to send an
empty box.
Police say Holmes was
arrested after the fake delivery to his home. ·
Holmes faces two counts
of felony telecommunications fraud. He was ·being
· held in Middletown City Jail
on· more than $30,000 bond.
. A message seeldnf comment from Holmes attorney, Melinda Cook, was left
Tuesday at her office..

Wednesday. February 11.2009

ot-"""
----.--..a.I'ONEIIO" -

A -

Golllo, - . . , . Wloogo-

-

tt D

,

f••wU

...,_,

. ,

•

n

~ P'ttSCM at~ 5:4.5

p.m.

I'Qollioowt!&gt; otGollla ~ 6 p.m.
Sfmn* ~It Soo.ltll Goill&amp; 6 p.m.
- l l - . , l &gt; p.m.
D

t

. . . .
,,.

...,.. r n n
OICS.ot - · 7:30p.m.
Gillet 7 7

-·-·&amp;1&gt;"'
2

llioigo ot l!ol!n. 6 p.m.

~VOlley Chti-11 SoMI&gt; Gillo. '

. r;t.:rn.

OIICS 01 Hannan. 6 p.m,

......,,..

- - · - · 7:3QJ&gt;!ft.
Ai'tlll' ~ 0 •
li ~m.

at

r"•·

rt;

, .• • n

E-otl.llller. 6:30p.m.

'\

.

'

.

,

'.

.~

,~,

·~-

'

-.

.i'

, ' •I

Office:
.PVH Medical Office Building
Suite 113
Point Pleasant, WV

~-·.-

. . .,,

' . • . ''\

'

'~ '•

' 1 ·,

.... ~~{1
.• ·.,ti

i.

,, · .

-~·r

I

·,

.

'

Appo.in tments:

304.175.1888

.

..
\

..

.

~

.,

MASON - Playing their
secolld Class A. ti)p 10 basketball team in less than a
week, the Wahama White
Falcons .bid for another
upset win fell just short as
nsitins
Parkersburg
Cathol1c escaped the: Bend
Area.with a blll'd fought 4534 hankourt win Tuesday
evening . .
Employing a deliberate,
patient offense with pressuring defensive tactics
against the taller Crusaders.
Wabama bad the visitors on

PIIUI SM W.Va..

- a t Rivor Vllloy; 6 J&gt;M.
1311111 'ctltlooyal- 6p.m
S&lt;MII Gallia ot lronlon St ..00.. 6 p.m.

Prep Basketball -

12 .

Ohio Roundup

~ll-.,6'llll&gt;m.

lll'oint Plouont 7:3Q pm.

-

•
. . 1 E,Wun14
. . . ... , II

BY BRYAM WALTaiS

t

Glllla ~at Pilrtsmautlo, 6 pm.
MoiQ10 at 111n10n County. 6 p.m.
• 1 n •
Gollia -.oy .. Dlli o1 Cllarnplans. s
pm.

S&lt;MIIGallleatC.......on.6p.m.
'We ltiUI
Gallia Academy II SEOAI. (Jacl&lt;sont.

to a.m.

.AP GIRlS STATE
BASKETBALL POLL
1 state panel of SIJCIIS Wfiters ond

-

broa&lt;ltUters

'"*' Oloio
high "' 1lie filth ·of six

lit10 -~~ teoms

~Associated Pntss polls ot 2009.
by OHSAA. dl"¥isk&gt;ns, with won~lott .
IOOOf&lt;i an&lt;! total points (firsl-pla&lt;e wtes
in.poron-):

DIVISION• I
. I, Cin. MI. ~. Dame (15)16-1
229
2. Dublin Collmon (5) 11r0
· 220
.3. Cifo. Winton -.11.0
168
4, W. Choler lokotoW. 15·2 140
~.Dresden 'lll-'lolley II) 20-0
136
6. Pflaware Hroy&lt;&gt;o 17·0
7, Porrystlurg 17·0
8. Warren Howland 12) 17.0

9. l'&lt;llnsllurg (2) 14-3

1 18
97
ll9

. 53

10. Xtnla 15-1

38

0111111 -~~~~ 11 or more polnta:
I I. Con. McKinley (1) 22. 12. Tt&gt;l. Start
21. 13, l&lt;tittertnQ F•lrmont 17. 14, Dublin
Scioto 15. 15. Grt&lt;ln 13.

DIVISION II
~1. Tllli&gt;O&lt;Ina&lt;t (14) 18.0
l!.
Columbian (1) 1&amp;-&lt;1
3,llmo Ballo (4) 16·1
4, CNIIIcolhe
(2) 17.()
5. Konorlng Alter (3) 16-2
6. Akr. - n (2) 15-2
7, Wa!UW Fjiver View 15-2

Tiffin

Unlolo

8. GtlliYl 16-1
9. Spring. Kenton Rljge 16·2
10. Canton Soulh 17·1

232
tS6
170
158
154
116
. 95
66

48
38

-·~~~~ 12 .. """" polnla:
11. Cuyahoga ~ails Walsh Jesuit 28. 12.
Solem 26. 13. Snekor Hts. Halllaway
Brown 21 14. Washington C.H. Miomi

hoe 15. 15. Wapakoneta 12.

!lWA\.TERSOMVOAilVTR18UNE.COM
GALLJPOUS - It started with a win. It ends with a
win.
Funny how history h~s a
way ·of repealing itself.
The Gallia Academy boys ·
basketball team gave the old
· GAHS ~ymnasium - and
its semors - a fitting
farewell Tuesday night dllJ'ing a 48-36 victory over visiting · Jackson · in
a
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League matchup on Senior
Night.
The Blue Devils (6-11. 28 SEOAL) posted a victory
in their final home game of
the regular season. which
just happened to also be the
final boys home game ever
ut the old Gulliu Academy
High School - since the
Blue and White will be in t1
new high school .sturting
next fall.
The old gym originally
opened on December 5.
·1958 - 51 years ago when the Devils hosted
Nelsonville . in a SEOAL
contest. The game went two
overtimes before GAHS
clinched the inaugural decision with 11 53-51 outcome.
Tuesday night. however.
was not as drawn out - but
just as dramatic. The friendly con(ines were packed - ·
particularly a very loud
home student section mak.ing for a very wurm
indoor environment.
And the Devils fed off of
that energy early. stomting
out to 1i 13-4 advantage
after eight minutes of play.
The hosts increased that
lead to 19-6 at the the 5:14
mark of the second stanza .
before entering the il)termission with a 24-13 cushPIHsl -

DIVISION Ill
245
204
195

140
131

I

128

Marshall
crushes
URG,92-59

Bryan Wolters/phDio

Gallia Academy's Chris Armstrong (24) releases a shot anempt over a Jackson defender
Roundup, 12 . · during the first half of Tuesday night's SEOAL boys basketball game in Gallipolis.

HUNTINGTON (AP&gt; Markel Humphrey and
Chris Ltitz scored 23
points apiece to lead ·
Murshull in a 92-59 rout of
Rio Gmnde on Tuesday
night.
Adam Williahts added
12 points ·and 14 rebounds
for ·the Thundering Herd
(Il - L~). who have won
two straight gumes ufter
dropping "rout' in " row.
Lutz wus 4-for-5 from
beyond the arc und dished
out
si~
assists
in
Marshull's final nonconference g;~me of the seasoiL
Darryl Merthie chipped
in I 0 points.
Bnmdon Ivery sL·ored 16 .
points to lead the Red
Storm ( 17 -II) of the
NAIA . Brett Bt•uder and
P.J . Rase finished with II
points apiece.
Marshall led .t6-2l) at
halftime. and shot 66 .7
peri.·ent from the fil'ld ( 18
of27) to &gt;'eal the win in the
seL·ond halL · Rio Gran de
was outrcbOUllded .t 1-JJ
in the ,;,intL·st.
The Thundering · Herd
improved to 13-0 in this
~t!rh~ s.

\~ohk· h

began in

1920.

Pacers sneak past Cavaliers, 96-95

INDIANAPOLIS (AP)Mike
Brown will gladly take
8t
the
fine
- if it makes a dif8. W. Llbort;-S.Iom 16·1
80
ference in the culls LeBron
9. Gonoa ..,..., 15-1
75
James gets.
j o, ~tuning l'allty (1) 17.0 68
Brown wutched his star
• 011111t -111111 or.....,. potnll: player score 47 points and
1,. Amonda.Cioorcreok 17.
do everything but ;.vin the
'
¥ame Tuesday mght 111
DIVISION IV
1~diana.
·
· ' One problem: James· foul
· 1. ConvoyCresiView(15)16.Q 246
with 0.2 seconds left gave
2. Ba~ln Hiland (8) 15·)
231 , Indilll\a's Danny Granger a
3. New Braman (1) 16-1 111(
chance to win . it from the
• . "-ttil)llllt 15-2
129
free throw .line. Granger
• 5. Col.o. Alrictrl!rl&gt; 15-4
110
sank .the first, then missed
·. e. Delphos St. John~ 13-3
9S .
the second intentionally . to
;7. C.nol Harvesl Prtp 16·2
88
· 8. Shactyolde 17-2
72
seal an improbable 96-95
;; . ~IW Rltgll 15-1
49
victory that left Brown and
10. Waltrford 15-2
41
his players fuming about the
call .
01'*' - •1111111 or mon 1&gt;01n1t:
\'I don ;1 care' if I get fined.
1:1, Cle. Hit. luthoron E. (a) ss. Ia: ·. It Is what it is. I saw the: two
ca~ 29. 13, 1\ol' Chrlotlan 22. 14, Ft.
I
.
b d all d
Roco110ry IS. 15. ouqvlllo 14. 1e, P uys, JUSt a a c
eterlolpalc 1s.
•·
· · mined the outcome of that
game," Brown said. "If they
want to fine me for telling
the
truth, fine me. This isn't
CoNI'ACI'US
me. I never do this ."
· The usually · composed
1·740·446·2342 ext. 33
Brown couldn't help htmself
..... - 1-74().446·3003
after a wild finish .
1.,.11 • ri&gt;doopamOmydoly_o..,.com
While James spoke in a
Sllatii..&amp;JAII
more moderate tone, he. too,
Bry11n Wlrt.ra, Sporta Wrttar. wus upset with the call. He
tugged at his headband und
(740) 446·2342, 0111. 33
bwelloroO mydailytrlbuno.&lt;Xllll.
walked around on the tloor

.

General, Cardi~,. :Vqpuliy-, .
Esophageal, .:tbora9ic.
..
.. .. ,, $'eivi~'
..
&amp; Anteriot:'$pine
Surg.,'A:ccess,,
..

lowing the game ·s first ·
eight minuti."s with lhe: Bend
Area team leaditl.g by a 1915 SC011.' at tile halt . Wabaina
continued to come- up with
the big plays to maintain a
four pomt edge at 29--25
before Purkersbur!! Catholk
nailed u couple ' of three
point baskets lute in the third
quarter to regain the ed~e for
the first time- since a Dylan
Riet:~teck. bucket to open the
come~ .
. .•
The Crusaders led by 11 3231 &gt;~:ore with eighl millu\es
remaining when hard times
hit
the White . Falcon
' .

_fillllln t a·

1. Morton Pietsont (16) 19-0
2. S. Euclid Regina (8) 16·0
3. Srnltlovilo 18.0
·4. Ook Hill (1) 15-.1
5. Findlay Llbe~·BaniOn 16-t
6. Millbury lake 16.0
7. MI. Blanchard RIIIO. .Ie 16·1

'

'

OW.I'fttN,, .......

an etectrkai!Rvice used ill

BYGuMNAD·w
.t.SSOCIATEtl PI'IESS. WRITER

... pllllllo

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

·A Maine event of 50
below~cites scientists

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Sen. Max Baucus, 0-Mont..' talks with reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington,
Tuesday. following the Senat&amp;'s passage of the stimulus bill.

lride

while Granger was shooting
free throws. and when the
game ended. James quickly
left the floor and walked
with disgust to the locker
room.
"I think Mike Brown guve
it his all." James said. "He
basically Sllid what he ·felt.
For it to end that wax. it's
defi'nitely tough on us .·
Indiana. which ended u
nine-game losing streuk to
the Cuvuliers. saw it ditTerently.
A· few moments earlier.
Cleveland had tried an alleyoop play to James oil' an
inbounds pass - the same
play Indiana used to win it.
While James never caught
the ball. Granger drew the
foul with 0.4 seconds to go.
Wld James made both free
throws to tie the score at 95.
"They were very. very
consistent culls on the lnst
two pluys." Pacers coach
Jim O'Brien suid.
For Jumes. it ruined u
night in which he ·turned
Conseco Fieldhouse into his
own pe..Sonal showcuse.
He connected on 15 of 21
shots, 13. of 14 free throws.
mude 4 of 7 3-pointers. uml
hnd seven rebounds nnd four

assists . He repeutedly hnd
the crowd on its feel with
high-tlying d11nks. nifty nolook. passes. one spectttcular
block and an array of bend
fakes. crossover dribbles
and acrobutic moves.
·
Yet somehow. perhaps
with u little help from the
officials, the short-hunded
Pacers absorbed the hody
blows and survived .
Troy Murphy scnred 18 tu
lead Indiana. while Gmnger. ·
playing on a sore right knee .
udded 16. lndiima played
without Marquis Daniels. ·
Mike Dunleavy and Jeff
Foster but got some key late
plays from backups like
Travis Diener and Brandon
~ush. ·
.
Cleveland lost its second
straight game for . the first
time this season and went
home in disbelief.
"Thut ·tast call. on the run.
is the worst t•ull thm I have
ever been a part of,'' Brown
said . •·1 cannot imugine
another worse cull than thilt.
lt was un awful call and for
.
AP photo
him to tuke uway a basketIndiana
Pacers
forward
Danny
Granger
(33)
is
fouled
by
bull game from u teum with
.4 seconds on the dock is Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James near the end of
of an NBA basKetball game In Indianapolis on Tuesoay.
irresponsibk.''

..

�...••

Wednesdlly. Februlry 11,2009
Wednesday, February u. 2009

-.mydailysentiael.com

Roundup
from Page Bl

GAluA~48,
the All-Star festivities, but
~ . 36
not pulling on an All-Star
uniform .
4 9 12 ,, - 36
13 II 1311-48
But whe-n Bosh bad:ed
out ~ause of a sprained .w;I(SQN (4·14. 3-7 SEaM.): KIQ
2 1 ) . 1 5. Erii::LIIO'um~~
right l;.nee, Williams got 0. Brooon 0 1).0 0, lolorgan
anoth~r chance.
DcCll&gt;lns 1 2-2 4. Dylan • 2-&lt;1
~-~
He is averaging 17 ,I 10.Jooh8rawn3().08.
l-l:I.-~2:M6.­
points, and has provided a -oo-oo. tOTAlS: ·13 7-936 Thfo&lt;&gt;.
needed · compliment to poir1l
GAWA
~
OCAOEMY
3 (~ -(5-11
·· , 441 SEOo\L):
James· p~wess as the &lt;Nrttor1
0,.15. Ehn Moonll22 T. ,.,_ Mileholl I 1).(1 3. Cttris
league's second-leading 1itmotrong
7 Q.() IS. E¥Oin 0 ().0 0.
srorer (28.1 points).
~- 4 ~ II. Joroc:l ~I 1). .
0 2. Whaloy 0 5-$ 5. z.... 0
Williams has 11lso rejuve- ().0
0. J o l i n - 0 1).0 0. TOTAlS: 17
nated a tellm that made it to 9-13 48. '"-i&gt;oiot gools; 5 (Nibo&lt;t.
Mooto. N. lolil&lt;llell.. ,......,g. K.
the 2001 NBA Finals and MilelloU),
has fueled hope that the .N """"'- Gallia ~ 58. Joci&lt;son
Cavs can end Cleveland's 19
- . . . , . . - - -.ny 37.
45-year drought without a Jacl&lt;$)n2:j.
major chllmpionship inllny
EAsTERN 76,
spon.
RivER VALLEY 55
The Cavs have the best
13 13 14 15 - S5
Yallooj
winning percentage (.796) REastern
22 20 20 14 - 76
in the Eastern Conference,
~LE¥ (6-9): CO&lt;t&gt; Smillt 1 N
and the best horne record · 4.RII(ER
Jbrdan Oooll N 4. Keillt Ski&lt;lmore 0
(23-l) in the NaA despite I).Q 0, Cody Mo;A- 72-l 17. Clayron
• I· I 11 . Kody . - &lt;o-o
Sunday's loss to the l~ers CUJnutte
4, Parker HQ!IIng....,rtn 0 1).0 0. Miohael
and still haven't lost two in W:lj- 0 o-2 0, z.... ~'~&gt;io'i't 0 1).() 0.
Zoi&lt;Oool63-515. TOTAI.S:21 11).1755.
a row all season.
lhre&amp;-polnt goalS: 3 {Curnutte 2.
And now they have MoA.-).
EASTEIIN 18-1): l.tikoJohnson so-o 10.
James and Williams headed .IIQ
Lynolt 6 1-2 IT, Kelly W to Sunday's game in 3 2-2 8, !!Iayden P!aft 4 1-4 9. TIIUS
Piorte 3 2-2 8. Jordan K..,.. 2 2-2 6.
· PhoeniK.
Tvto&lt; Hendrill • :M 12. Kyle CoMely 0
"My advice. for ll first- 2-4 2. Zech Hor&lt;lrill 0 ().0 0. DoYon
2 o-o 4 TOTALS: 29 9-12 76.
time All-Star is that that lloum
Th'"'t)Oinl goals: 61Lynth 4, T. Hon&lt;:lrix
first shot feels like you 're 2).
shooting a medicine ball.
so try not to shoot an· air Field gaols: FlY 21-58 (.362). E 29-58
gaols: R'J 3-18(. 167).
l:&gt;all ," James suid. "But Mo E(.SOO):Th,...point
5-12 (.500): Fr.. ltii&lt;JWS: FlY 11).17
will be Wlth me all week- (.588). E 9-121 .750): 'll:IIOIIeboulldS: FlY '
24 (Z. Otel 7). e 31 (Pioreo 10):
end, so I'll guide him."
Ol!tnsive 1eboundo: FlY 9 IZ. Deel 3). E

-l

- Sentinel CLASSIFIED.

9 (Johnson 3): Assists: FlY 4 (McA•ena
2), E I 9 (lync:h $); Steals: RV 3
(CulftUM 2). E 8 (Lynch 4): Bkleks: FlY I
(J. Oool), E 0 (None): TUIIIO&gt;'!US: FlY 14.
e 10: PeiOOnai fouls: FlY 16. e 14: JV
S&lt;OJe: E 38. FlY 31 : JV ioa&lt;lols: -FlYKeith Skidr'no«t a. E--k&gt;nall'lan Barrett
15.

Gallia Academy claimed
an evening sweep with victories in bOth the junior varsity and freshmen contests
as well. The JV Devils won
by a 58-19 margin and the
freshmen claimed a 37•25
decision.
The Blue Devils return to
action Friday night when '
they travel to Marietta for
· another
SEOAL matchup.
The freshmen contest will
tip-off at 5 p.m.

ion.
GAHS - fnr all intents
and purposes - put the
contest away in the opening
three minutes of the second
half. going on a 10-0 run to
tab: a commanding 34-13
lead with 5:17 left in the
third stanza.
That 21-point margin was
MEIGS RALLIES PAST
the biggest lead for the
ROCKETS
Devils all night. but the
lronmen (4-14. 2-8) closed
WELLSTON _ Senior
the frame on u 12-3 charge
to cut the deficit 10 37-25 Clay Bolin drilled a threepoinlc:r with two seconds
entering the finale . JHS left in regulation, allowing
twice pulled to within seven visiting Meigs 10 claim a
points down the stretch. but
GalliuAcademy took a dou- hard-fought 61·58 victory
ble-digit lead for ~&gt;ood with over Wellston on Tuesday
·
1 "'
43 during a TVC Ohio oors
I: 15 Ieft 10
regu uuon 111 • basketball · contest
m
33.
J
k
c
ac son ounty.
.
· The hosts cIosed 1hmgs
Both the Marauders (6on a 5-3 run to secure the IO, 5_4 TVC Ohio) and
dozen-point
triumph. Golden Rockets (6-9, l-6)
GAHS also avenged an ear~ traded leads all night long,
lier 55 -43 setback at the last of which came at
Jackson buck on Januury 9 · 58-all with 30 seconds left
Five seniors - Quinton
Nibert. Chris Armstrong. in regulation . MHS retuined
possession and - out of a
K
M.ltc he11 · Beuu · timeout
r.y Ie
with 15 ticks left Whaley and Evan Wood Bry~n W11Mn/photo
were honored before their ran a designed piny for Gallia Academy's Beau Whaley Is foult:~d by a Jacl&lt;son
'or
ull of Bolin·
finl\1 home g•me
1
u
Bo1·m. re 1eased th e eventu· delen. der during the second half of TUesday night's S E0 AL
'
their achievements
over the
·
the b""S
bas~etball game in Gallipolis.
years. The Devils also hon- 1\1 ga me- WI·n·ne r from
-~
ored them with the final top of the ke~, hitting noth- on u 15-7 charge to take a
ST. JoE SWEEPS OVCS
boys victory in the old gym- ing but net wuh 1.9 seconds · 22-13 udvantage ufter eight
nasium.
showing on the clock. WHS minutes of play.
· ·
IRONTON
Senior
Armstrong led the victors called timeout and ran u
The Green und White Chad Harvey - the reign·
with a game-high 15 rints, designed pluy. but threw the extended their lead to 1\S ing Division IV Player of
followed by Mitchel with ball out of bounds. Meigs many us 19 points in .the the Year - scored u game11 and Ethan Moore with ran out the clock and first hulf at 40-2 1 with I :30 high.40 points while leading ·
seven
markers . Both secured the three-point left in the second, but the Ironton St. Joseph to 72-48
Whaley and Nibert had five decision.
Ruiders (6-9) ended the half victory over visiting Ohio
. points apiece. but Wood did
The Muroon und Gold on u 5-2 spurt to pull their Vallley Christiun during a
not score. Wood _ howev- also avenged an earlier 57- intermission deficit to with- non -conference matchup in
Lawrence County.
er _ wus the last player 10 56 setback at Larry R. in 42-26.
The Defenders (4- 11)
attt'mpt a shot at the old Morrison Gymnasium b!lck
EHS - who increased its
gym.
on January 23.
lead to 58-35 with 3:30 left hung close with the hosts
Dylan Newsom paced the
Wellston led 17-13 after in the third - went on u20- over the OP.&lt;:ning eight minRed and White with 10 ·eight minutes of piny and 14 run to open the second utes - trailing only 10-8 ·
f0 11
d b J h took a 29-28 edge into the half to take a 62-40 lead but a 17-8 second quarter
pomts.
owe
os intermission. Both teams into
the finule . The llosts surge allowed the Flyers (6Brown with eightY and
·
Andrew Christman with six. were tied at 44 heading into biggest lead of the night (24 8) some breuthing room
GAHS head coach Jim the finule .
points) cume 30 ~econds while tuking a 27- 16 cushOsoome _ who has called
Clay Bolin led the guests mto the fourth at 64-40.
ion into the intermission. ·
the old gymnasium home . with u game-high 17 points.
The Silver and Black cut
ISJHS took. control of the
for 40 seasons _ . noted followed by Jacob We II that deficit to as much as 16 contest in the third canto,
afterward that it was a very with II and Corey Hutton points (69-53) wi.th three going on a 23-9 surge for a
gratifying outcome _ not · with 10. Tyler· King paced minutes left in regulation. · 50-25 advantage heading
to mention fitting _ for the ' the Rockets with 14 mark- but never came closer the into the finale. OVCS
old building.
.
· ers, followed by Jay len rest of the way.
outscored the hosts 23-22 in
'"We had a lot of former Prater with 13. ·
Jake Lynch led 11 balanced the fourth , but never really
players come back for
Meigs will return to •.. Eustern unuck with 17 got back into striking distonillht. which really hel~d action Saturday when it points. followed by Tyler tance during the 24-point
"'
travels to Ml·Arthur for Hendrix with 12 and Mike setback.
mouvate the · kids.
e another TVC Ohio contest Johnson with 10. Cody
Ironton St. Joe - who
already wanted to win th'is against Vinton County. The MeA vena puced RVHS with hudn 't played in 18 days game for our seniors, but junior varsity gume will 17 points, while Zuk Dee! also cluimed a season S'\'eep
seeing the former players begin at 6 p.m.
udded 15 points to the set · with the win . ISJHS won
just made us want to muke
back.
89-38 buck on December 19
everyone proud at the end EAGLES AVENGE RAIDERS
The Eag les avenged an in Gallipolis. ·
of the. ni¥,ht. I thought we
earlier 65 -50 setback at
Harvey made 17 shots did that, ' Osoorne comTUPPERS PLAINS - Cheshire back on December including a pair of trifectas
men ted. "This place .was The Eastern boys basketball 23.
, - to pace the hosts. ISJ
filled and the fans were ·team shot 50 percent overall
Eastern also claimed an also had I0 players score in
really into the game. This, from the field and had nine evening sweep with a 38-31 the triumph. Henry Patrick
tonight, was the atmosphere · different pluyers contribute victory in the junior varsity paced the Blue and Gold
that we usually had here to the scoring column dur· contest.
with 18 points, followed by
over the years. The crowd ina an impressive 76-55
Both teams return to the Peter Carman and Daniel
really aave us some ene11y victory over visiting River hardwood on Friday night . Irwin with II markers.
toni~ht.
.
Valley on Tuesday durina a Eastern will travel to Carman ulso had a team"Its a sreat way to send non-conference matchup.
Hemlock to battle Miller in . best seven caroms .
thla place out In style, and It · The Eaales (8· 7) never u TVC Hocking mutchup,
The Defenders retum to
alao rewards our hard work trailed In the contest, jump· while the Raiders will host action Thursday when they
with a victory as the touma- in~ out to a small 7-6 edge Fuirhind in un Ohio V~lley travel to Hannan for a nonment gets closer. There are a With 3: IS left in the opening Conference
showdown . conference matchup. The
lot of positives to come out canto. The hosts, however,. Both JV games will tip-off varsity game will begin at
of tomght."
· closed the first period out at 6 p.m.
.
7:30p.m.
.
\.

MEIGS 61,WELLSTON 58
Meigs

Wellston

13 15 IS
17 12 15

.,'
.,

Wi-·

--.Jindhl-17- 61
.. - 58

MEIGS 16- I 0. 5-4 TVC Ohio): Je10my
Srnilh 2 1-2 5. Gaile HiU. 2 1-2 5. Jaeoll
Well 4 2-4 11. Conly Hufton 5 1).0 10.

W.Va.
from PageBl
offense.
Purkersb.urg
Catholic was able to tum
the Falcons· mi sfortune s
into transition baskets to
pull away
with
the
Crusaders claiming 11 13-3
scorino edge . in the final
"'
period to pick up the 45 ' 34
triumph.
Freshman Isaac Lee led
Wahama ollensively with
II points. with senior Kyle
Zerkle nett in~ eight murkers
in the outmg. Bnmdon
Flowers tallied six points us
well as huving a great game
on the boards for the White
Falcons,
with William
Zuspan adding live points
and Garrett Underwood
and Zack Whitllllch notching two points.euch.
POINT SWEEPS HUSKIES

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

~ribunt

Cavs' Mo Wdliams to replace Bosh in AU-Star game . Tile liP SclrlllllrINDIANAPOLIS (AP) team in the- top fi~e without missed the last three game-s
- Mo Williams is finally more than one All-Star. with the k.ne-e injllfy.
u All.Star.
LeBron Jame-s ~:ailed it a induding Tuesday night at
Twice snubbed, the ''total smacl;. in the face." Minnesota.
Cleveland Cavali.:-rs point Gilben was in.:redulous " It was mostly our ITllinguard was added to the ros- and poked fun at Williams· ers and do..· tors and Chris
ter Tuesday by NBA rom- snub by using made-up himself making the dedmissioner David Stem as a words lil;.e 'stupidiculous: sion:· Raptors l-oach Jay
replacement for injured 'idillogical' and '.preposter- Triano said before the
Toronto Raptors forward ageous · to describe his gameagainst
the
Chris. Bosh.
feelings .
Timbef'\\·olves. " I think. it's
Williams· teammates ~tmJ · By · Tuesday's pregame a real sign of Chris not
the
tone being selfish llt all: not try·
Cleveland's owner Dan interviews.
Gilbert were dismayed last changed.
ing ,to play in a game when
week when Williams was "ll'lllled Mo as soon ~ts I he's not 100 percent. Now
twice left off the Eastern found out. 1'm surprised he he gets an extra week of
Conference roster but didn't .:;all and tell me. rest so he, can come baclc
approved the move unani- though:· James said. druw- alter the All-Star game and
mously Tuesday.
ing laughter in the locker make u run ."
~~~ has a beautiful ring to room. ''It's great.lt's someThe news came utter the
it," Williams said before thing we all wanted."
Cuvs morning shootaround
playing at Indiana. 'Tm Gilbert wa!J equally and took some, including
excited for myself and my pleased .
·
Williams. by surprise.
teammates and the coach·
"It's unfortunate that
Coa~o·h Mike Brown said
es. It's u great thing. it's Chris Bosh is unable to he k.Jiocl;.ed on Williams'
one tiling people can't take ph1y in this year's All-Star hotel · door. and when
away from you."
game in Phoenix," he &amp;~~id Williams didn't answer.
Williams wasn't voted in · in an e-mail to The Brown figured Williams
by ·the fans. nor was he Assodated Press. "The was asleep. So he called
chosen
by
Eastern entire Cleveland Cavaliers Williams· room .
Conference head coaches organization are thanli.ful
Willi~tms didn 't know
as a reserve. Then he was that the NBA called on Mo what was going on. but
passed over by Stern in · Will.iams to take his right- . Brown could hardly wait to
favor of Boston's Ray ful place on the Eastern mform W11lmms.
Allen. who is repladng Conference squad. In fact , "This 'is terrific news ,"
injured Orlando guard we think it is 'fantacutar: Brown said. ''Mo has defiJameer Nelson on the ros- 'eKtraordulous· and 'phe- nitely been one of my highter.
nomerf11L"'
lights in my time here."
The Cavs then took their Bosh is averaging 22.7 After two snubs last
complaints public, con- points and 9.5 reoounds for week. Williams seemed
tending they were only the Raptors. But he has' resigned to taking pan in

www.mydailysentlnel.com

HH
PP

8 14 13
101312

15 - 50 '
18-53 :

HERBERT HOOVER (4· I H : Shawn
Chanllor I I).Q 3. Josh Han 2 1).0 4:
..amos Miller 21).() 4. Bllan Sl!allot 7 ON!

20. Jortlan E~s I 0.0 2. Ev~
$hamtll:1n 5 Q-0 t 1• Ned W1HiatnS 3 ().3 s.·
TOTAlS: 21 Ni 50. lh&lt;..-oolnt !ji&gt;als: 6
(Shatfor 4 . c -. _ _,_
POINT PlEASANT 19-4): B.J l'&gt;yd 5
5 15. Kyl. ., c..... 1 2-2 • . .,.,.,., tloal t
6-3 12. Oroke Nolan 0 1).0 0 . ..laool&gt;
Tompielon 3 1).5 IS. Cody GtH!hooS&amp; D
2-4 2. l'yson Jonoo 6 2-4 14. 'TOTALS: 11
14·28 53. Th~ gools: 5 IL"¥!1

..,.

W8b6itea:
In One Week With Us
www.mydallytrlbune.com
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS www.mydallyregislef.com
~ YOUB AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
'OI:ribunt
Sentinel
l\tgi~ter
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156
.(304) 675-1333
ca11 TodaJ•••

.,
'

.'

www.myd~.com

a-

Doal2).
JV ..,..,
Hoover&lt;3Z,

"""t

•

PIMsant 46. H4rbo(t

I

Or F• -n. •f7""tn

'

IRON10tt SJ 72, OVCS 48.

.

ave

8 s 9
23~48 ·
10 17 23 a2 - 72 :

ISJ

.

OHIO V~LlEY CHRISTIAN (4·11): Pool
Mille! 1 2-2 4. Jonaiii,VI \l'anllloiOf 21)-t
4. Daniel Irwin 3 5-7 II. Henry Plltic+. 6
4-6 18, Pelet Carman 3 5-7 11. ~
S&lt;ott 0 o-o O. TOTALS: 15 16-24 48.
nv.... jl(&gt;nt 'goo~s: 2 (Pelrick 2).

IRONTON SAINT JOSEPH (6·81:
Pay1on Blai• 2 1· 1 5. Cody Blackl&gt;urn 2
I). I 6. Chad Ha""y 17 4_. 40. Joey
BasoOOw 21).0 4. Joe Unger I ().0 2. 1'81
Gagai 1 ().0 2. Tanner Riley I 1).() ~'
Goorgo McCown I 1· I 3. T.J. ~ 2 Q2 4. Caleb Blacl&lt;bum 2 1).0 4. tOTALS:
31 6·9 72 . Tllr...poinl !J011IS: 4 (0.
Blackbum 2. HaMl)' 2).
·
'

Calholoe
Wahama

6
11

9
8

11 13 12 3 -

34 .

WAHAMA 13·11): Isaac Lee 4·2-2-lf.
Kyle Zerkle 3-2-4-8. Brandon Flowel$lo
().().6, William luspan 2-G-0-5. Zack
WMialth I ·Q.0.2, Gall~ Underwood!).
2-4·2. TOTALS: I 3 6· 10 34. Thlee-pollft
goals 2 (Zuspon, Lee).
:
PIIIRKESBURG CATHOLIC (11-4): Cole
Cwyner 4·2·2· 11 , John . Plddon 4·1).,..
10. Jason Williams •·~·10, .JaCOb
Hensler 3-1).1).6, Dylan Riolslack 2·1)-Z:.
4. Quintin Coli•e , .()-0.2. N~ Fisher o-a..
2·2 .TOTALS: 18 6·11 45. Thlee·poim
goals: 3(PIIdden 2. CWyner).
•
JV score: PC 62. W 60.

qin~rter charge · ult'imutel~
allowed the hosts to cluim a
season sweep of the Huskie ~
(4-11 ). Point defeateq
HHHS by 11 7'5-72 margin
bud&lt; on Junuury 17 iri
Clendenin.
.
PPHS led 10-8 nfter eight
minutes of pluy · but the
guests closed the hulf on a
14-13 run to cut their delicit
to 23-22 ul the intermission~
Herbert Hoover also went
on a· l3- 12 nm in the third to
tie things ut 35 heading into
the finule .
·
· Point Pleusant closed the
game on un 18-15 run. but
held a 10-point advantage
with under four minutes left
in regulation. The HuskieS
mude u lute charge . but we~
· ultimately unable to over· ·
come ~ allowing the
·. Knights to cluim their sec:
nnd strui·ght three-point
decision over HHHS .'
B.J. Lloyd led the victors
with 15 poil1ts. followed by
a double'double effort of 14
points and 15 rebounds.
Tyler Deal also chipped in
12 to the winning cause.
Brian Shaffer puced the
Huskies with rl · same-high
20 points. wh1le Evun
Shamblin added II markers.
Point Pleasant claimed un
evening sweep with u 46-32
victory in ·the junior vursity

POINT PLEASANT The Point Pleasunt boys basketball team won its seventh
consecutive·
decision
Tuesday night with u hardfought 53-SO victory over
visiting Herbert Hoover during a Curdimd Conference
mutchup in Muson County.
The Bluck Knights (9-4)
tripled lust yeur's win totul conte~t.
with the decision. but the
The Black Knights return
final outcome wus anything to action today when they
but easy.
.
travel to Poca for another
· Both teams battled with Cardinal
Conference
one another for the full 32 matchup . The JV game will
minutes. but a pivotal fourth tip-off at 5:45p.m . .

.. ""'' H.QW

m
WRITE AJII
Sutt MAds

1,!

n..

KIT I CARLYLE

OtherS. rim
Pel
CIOfllollons.
741).446-374$

Publislllng
·-lilt right to edit.

kllnclrlyteocomc••1.nel

Call

A,DIWHidl/

lljoct 01' _ . . .,

TOWII~

ld ...., timt.
Enols

llul1

~lltld

on lilt

lltlu1Hul Apia. ol Jack·
son EslaiH. 52 Wesl·
wood Or., from $365 to
$560.
741).446·2568.
Eque.l Housing Opportu·
nity. This institution is an
Equal Opportunity Pro-

vider and Employer.

All

RMI

BIMment
Wllorprooflng
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local refer·
ences furnished. Estab·
lished 1975. Call 24 Hrs.
740·446·0870, AogEIIS
Bastment WaterproofiOQ.

F10e lo good homo. 3
Chow puppies, 5 weeks
old. 740-245-5221
Gtveawav

6

beautiful

lab/CoiUe mi&lt; pups. 2(
m)/4 (I) 304·675&lt;3237
leave message.

CLASSIFIED INDEX
: logale ....................... .................................... 100 Rocrullonal V.hlcleo ............................... IOOO
' Announc.mente ..... ;.................................... 200 ATV ............................................................. 1005
Blrlhdey/Annlveroary .......................... ........ 205 Blcyclee ...................................................... I010
• Hoppy Ado .................................................... 210 Booto/Accellorltlo .................................... I015 ·
loll &amp; Found ....................... ................. ....... 215 ComperiRVo &amp; Trollere ............................. 1o20
Memory!Thonk You .......... ........................... 220 Mo1orcycloo .................. ............................ . 1025
Nollcoo ......................................................... 225 Olhor ..................................... :.............. :..... 1030
.,.roonolo ................................ ..................... 230 W1n11o buy ......................... ...................... 1035
Wanted ................................................ .,. ...... 235 Automotlve .. ;.,.,......................................... 2000
Sorvleea ....................................................... 300 Auto Roni1VI.oaae .....................................
Appllonce Servlce ....................................... 302 Au1oa .................................... ........... ........... 2010
Aulomo1lvo ...................... ... ................... ...... 304 Clooalc/Anllq-...... ... ............................... 2015
Building Mllerllllo ............................. .......... 308 Cammaroi1L1ndullrl11 ...... .......... ........·...... 2020
Bualn••• ......... .................................... ......... 308 Parte 6 Acceaeorlae .............. ....................2025
Cl11rlng ... .. ....... ............................................ 310 Sporl1 Ullllly ..... :........................................ 2030
·, Chlldl&amp;lderly Clre ............................. .,........ 312 TYucko .................... :....................................2035
Compu1ero ................................................... 31• Ullllly Ttlllota ............ ....... .............. .......... . 2040
CCM'draotora .......................;,,:., ..................... 318 Vana ............................................................ 2045,
o .......tlco/Jonltorlll ......... ..... ..................... 318 W1n11o buy .......................... :.................... 2050
Ell&lt;:lrtcal ........... ........................................... 320 Roll Eelale S.leo ........................... ........... 3000
Flnlncll1 ....................................................... 322 Comellry Plolo .......................................... 3005
, • Hllllh ..........: ...................., ........................... 326 Comll)erclll .... .............; ..............................3010
H11tlng &amp; Coollng ....................................... 328 Condomlnlumo .......................................... 3015
. Home Improvement• 330
For S.la by Owner ................ .....................3020
·' lnaurance ......... ,........................................... 332 HouHI tor Sala ......................................... 3025
Lown Sorvlco ...................................... ......... 334 land (Acrelgo) .......................................... 3030
MuotciDionCIIDrlml .................................... 336 Lo1o ................ ....................... ............ .........3035
.' Other Servlcaa ... ........................................ .. 338 Want to buy ................................................ 3040
·' Plumblng/Eioctrlco( ................ .. .............. ..... 340 Roal Eel11o Renlllo ...............................: ... 3500
: Protaaalonal Sarvlc:el ............ ................. .... 342 ApllrtmentiiTownhou. .a ........................ . 3G05
1 Repalra .................. .................... ................... 34•
Commarclal. ...............................................3510
· • Roollng ............. ,........................................... 346 Condomlnluml .......................................... 3515
' Socurlly ............ ... ......................................... 348 Hou. . . lor Ron1 ........................... ............. 3520
' Tax/Accounllng .............. ............................. 350 · Land (Acrelge) ................. ......................... 3525
..; Travel/Entertainment ......... :......................... 352 Storage ........ :·····- ............................... .. ....... 3535
•, Flnanclal ............ ....................... ..:................. 400 W1n110 Ront ... ........... .. .. .... .. ...................... 3540
~· Financial Strvlcaa .................. .'.:-·.......... ...... 405 Manufacturl,d Houelng ..............:.............. .000
' lneurance ..................................~ ......·........... 410 Lote .............................................................4005
; Money 1o Lond ..... ,....................................... 415 Movero ........................................................4010
, Ed~OIIIon .............................. ....................... 500 Ren.. lo ..... ,....... ,................. ........................ 4015
• Bulin••• &amp; TYido Schooi .................... ...... :SOS Saloo ............. .-..................... ........................ 4020
' lnotrucllon &amp; Tlllnlng ........ ......................... 510 Supplleo ...................... ..... .. ............. ............025
· Leeeona ........................................................515 Want to Buy .....................................r......... 4030
: Pereonal .. .............................. ....................... t520 Reeort Pro~rty ......................................... 5000
·, Anlmale ........................................................ eoo Reeort Property tor aale ........................... IS025
~. Animal Su~pllea .................................. .. ...... 60-!i
Reaort Property tor f'elnt ........................... 50SO
·, Horaa1 .............................. :........................... e10 employment ...............................................6000
' Llvaatock ... ........... .. ... ............................ ....... 815 Accountlng/Finai'tclal ................................8002
; Peta ...............................................................820 Admlnl.tratlvw'Proteaelonal .....................e004
, Want to buy ............................... ..:.......... ... ... 82&amp; Caahler1Ciark ............................................. 6006
• Agrlculturo ............. ........... ................... ........ 700 Chlldl&amp;lderly C1re .... .................... .............
• Farm Equlpment ................. .................. ....... 705 Cterlcal ....... :............................................... ao,o
: Garden &amp; Produca ........ ,..............................710 Cona1ructlon ............l..................... ,...........801'2
, Hay, Feed, SHd, Or1ln .. ... .......................... 715 Drlvero Dollvory ..................................... 8014
, Hunting &amp; Lind .. ,........... ....................... ....;. 720 Educit1on .................... ... .. .. ........................eo1e
• Want to buy ........................... :....................... 725 !lectrlcll Plumblng ............ ............ ...........8018
1
Nlerchandlae .. ...................... ,....................... 900 Empl"mant Agenclaa ..............................eo:zo
' Anllquoo ............ .... :................... ................... 905 Enlertllnment ............ ................................
: Appllanco ............................................... ...... 910 Food .Sarvlcoo ............................................e024
• Auctlot1• •· ····...... ....... ....................................915 Oovlljlrnment &amp; Federal Joba .................... 80215
1 Bargain 8aeement ....................................... 920
Help anted· Oan•r•I .................................. I028
• CoUectlblae ...·......... ...................................... 828 Law Enforcement ...................................... fl030
: Compute,. .................................... :....... .....:.930 MalntenlnceiDOmeatlc ............................. eo:s:a
.. Equlpment/Suppllaa .. ............. , ....................836 Management/Supervleory ........................ 8034
• Flea Marketa ..................... ........t .................. 940 ~hanlce ..................................................8036
' Fuol 011 Cooi/Wood/Oao ............................. 9o05 Medlcal ................................................ ....... 6038
: Fumlture ............................ .......................... 950 Mualcal ....................... ................................ 8040
, Hobby/Hun1 a Spor1 ............ ........................ 955 Pari·Tlmo·Temporltlee ............................. 6042
. Kld'a Corner ............................... ............... ...eeo Re•teurante ............. .................... .............. I04&amp;4

aooa

eoaa

•

.t,~.

Sllould llldude
n.n.
· To Help Get ltnpaa .....

a

From
Point Pleasant

addecUoyourcl~sslfteclads
Borders$3.00/perad
· GraphlcsSCMforsmall
. Sl.OOforlarQe

AD

eooa

George
Mayes

-·

~

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

Ohio Vllllty

-s :

.Now you can have borders and oi'QPhlcs

Monday thru Friday

'

PARK CATHOLIC 45,
WAHAMA34

Or F• To (31M) 17s-s2:W

og;. u,.,.,.,..

·

• Ml•cellaneoua ......................... ..................... SMIS

Salea ...........................................................8048

• want to buy.,................................................ 870
: vard sate ................ ..................................... 875

Technical Tradle ............... .............. ,......... IOIO
Taxtllee1Factory .................. ;........... ,.......... eo52

Jet Aeration 'Motors re·
palr6d, new &amp; rebuilt In
stock. Call Ro n E~ans,
I ·800·537-9528.

Hamilton Railway Spo·
Pocket
Watch,
992·21 jewels. real nice
$450. Serious inquiries
only. 740· 533-3870

cial

WantTo Buy
AbsOlute \dp Dotlar • ·sll·
~erfgold
coins,
any
10K/14K/1 BK gold jew·
etry, dental gold. pre
1935
US
currency,
proo!lmint
sets,
diamonds, MTS Coin Shop.
151 2nd Avenue. Galh·
polis. 446·2842

Buying farmhouse prlmi·
tlves,
9toneware,
pie
sates,
cabinet.
etc.
740·423·5509

�...••

Wednesdlly. Februlry 11,2009
Wednesday, February u. 2009

-.mydailysentiael.com

Roundup
from Page Bl

GAluA~48,
the All-Star festivities, but
~ . 36
not pulling on an All-Star
uniform .
4 9 12 ,, - 36
13 II 1311-48
But whe-n Bosh bad:ed
out ~ause of a sprained .w;I(SQN (4·14. 3-7 SEaM.): KIQ
2 1 ) . 1 5. Erii::LIIO'um~~
right l;.nee, Williams got 0. Brooon 0 1).0 0, lolorgan
anoth~r chance.
DcCll&gt;lns 1 2-2 4. Dylan • 2-&lt;1
~-~
He is averaging 17 ,I 10.Jooh8rawn3().08.
l-l:I.-~2:M6.­
points, and has provided a -oo-oo. tOTAlS: ·13 7-936 Thfo&lt;&gt;.
needed · compliment to poir1l
GAWA
~
OCAOEMY
3 (~ -(5-11
·· , 441 SEOo\L):
James· p~wess as the &lt;Nrttor1
0,.15. Ehn Moonll22 T. ,.,_ Mileholl I 1).(1 3. Cttris
league's second-leading 1itmotrong
7 Q.() IS. E¥Oin 0 ().0 0.
srorer (28.1 points).
~- 4 ~ II. Joroc:l ~I 1). .
0 2. Whaloy 0 5-$ 5. z.... 0
Williams has 11lso rejuve- ().0
0. J o l i n - 0 1).0 0. TOTAlS: 17
nated a tellm that made it to 9-13 48. '"-i&gt;oiot gools; 5 (Nibo&lt;t.
Mooto. N. lolil&lt;llell.. ,......,g. K.
the 2001 NBA Finals and MilelloU),
has fueled hope that the .N """"'- Gallia ~ 58. Joci&lt;son
Cavs can end Cleveland's 19
- . . . , . . - - -.ny 37.
45-year drought without a Jacl&lt;$)n2:j.
major chllmpionship inllny
EAsTERN 76,
spon.
RivER VALLEY 55
The Cavs have the best
13 13 14 15 - S5
Yallooj
winning percentage (.796) REastern
22 20 20 14 - 76
in the Eastern Conference,
~LE¥ (6-9): CO&lt;t&gt; Smillt 1 N
and the best horne record · 4.RII(ER
Jbrdan Oooll N 4. Keillt Ski&lt;lmore 0
(23-l) in the NaA despite I).Q 0, Cody Mo;A- 72-l 17. Clayron
• I· I 11 . Kody . - &lt;o-o
Sunday's loss to the l~ers CUJnutte
4, Parker HQ!IIng....,rtn 0 1).0 0. Miohael
and still haven't lost two in W:lj- 0 o-2 0, z.... ~'~&gt;io'i't 0 1).() 0.
Zoi&lt;Oool63-515. TOTAI.S:21 11).1755.
a row all season.
lhre&amp;-polnt goalS: 3 {Curnutte 2.
And now they have MoA.-).
EASTEIIN 18-1): l.tikoJohnson so-o 10.
James and Williams headed .IIQ
Lynolt 6 1-2 IT, Kelly W to Sunday's game in 3 2-2 8, !!Iayden P!aft 4 1-4 9. TIIUS
Piorte 3 2-2 8. Jordan K..,.. 2 2-2 6.
· PhoeniK.
Tvto&lt; Hendrill • :M 12. Kyle CoMely 0
"My advice. for ll first- 2-4 2. Zech Hor&lt;lrill 0 ().0 0. DoYon
2 o-o 4 TOTALS: 29 9-12 76.
time All-Star is that that lloum
Th'"'t)Oinl goals: 61Lynth 4, T. Hon&lt;:lrix
first shot feels like you 're 2).
shooting a medicine ball.
so try not to shoot an· air Field gaols: FlY 21-58 (.362). E 29-58
gaols: R'J 3-18(. 167).
l:&gt;all ," James suid. "But Mo E(.SOO):Th,...point
5-12 (.500): Fr.. ltii&lt;JWS: FlY 11).17
will be Wlth me all week- (.588). E 9-121 .750): 'll:IIOIIeboulldS: FlY '
24 (Z. Otel 7). e 31 (Pioreo 10):
end, so I'll guide him."
Ol!tnsive 1eboundo: FlY 9 IZ. Deel 3). E

-l

- Sentinel CLASSIFIED.

9 (Johnson 3): Assists: FlY 4 (McA•ena
2), E I 9 (lync:h $); Steals: RV 3
(CulftUM 2). E 8 (Lynch 4): Bkleks: FlY I
(J. Oool), E 0 (None): TUIIIO&gt;'!US: FlY 14.
e 10: PeiOOnai fouls: FlY 16. e 14: JV
S&lt;OJe: E 38. FlY 31 : JV ioa&lt;lols: -FlYKeith Skidr'no«t a. E--k&gt;nall'lan Barrett
15.

Gallia Academy claimed
an evening sweep with victories in bOth the junior varsity and freshmen contests
as well. The JV Devils won
by a 58-19 margin and the
freshmen claimed a 37•25
decision.
The Blue Devils return to
action Friday night when '
they travel to Marietta for
· another
SEOAL matchup.
The freshmen contest will
tip-off at 5 p.m.

ion.
GAHS - fnr all intents
and purposes - put the
contest away in the opening
three minutes of the second
half. going on a 10-0 run to
tab: a commanding 34-13
lead with 5:17 left in the
third stanza.
That 21-point margin was
MEIGS RALLIES PAST
the biggest lead for the
ROCKETS
Devils all night. but the
lronmen (4-14. 2-8) closed
WELLSTON _ Senior
the frame on u 12-3 charge
to cut the deficit 10 37-25 Clay Bolin drilled a threepoinlc:r with two seconds
entering the finale . JHS left in regulation, allowing
twice pulled to within seven visiting Meigs 10 claim a
points down the stretch. but
GalliuAcademy took a dou- hard-fought 61·58 victory
ble-digit lead for ~&gt;ood with over Wellston on Tuesday
·
1 "'
43 during a TVC Ohio oors
I: 15 Ieft 10
regu uuon 111 • basketball · contest
m
33.
J
k
c
ac son ounty.
.
· The hosts cIosed 1hmgs
Both the Marauders (6on a 5-3 run to secure the IO, 5_4 TVC Ohio) and
dozen-point
triumph. Golden Rockets (6-9, l-6)
GAHS also avenged an ear~ traded leads all night long,
lier 55 -43 setback at the last of which came at
Jackson buck on Januury 9 · 58-all with 30 seconds left
Five seniors - Quinton
Nibert. Chris Armstrong. in regulation . MHS retuined
possession and - out of a
K
M.ltc he11 · Beuu · timeout
r.y Ie
with 15 ticks left Whaley and Evan Wood Bry~n W11Mn/photo
were honored before their ran a designed piny for Gallia Academy's Beau Whaley Is foult:~d by a Jacl&lt;son
'or
ull of Bolin·
finl\1 home g•me
1
u
Bo1·m. re 1eased th e eventu· delen. der during the second half of TUesday night's S E0 AL
'
their achievements
over the
·
the b""S
bas~etball game in Gallipolis.
years. The Devils also hon- 1\1 ga me- WI·n·ne r from
-~
ored them with the final top of the ke~, hitting noth- on u 15-7 charge to take a
ST. JoE SWEEPS OVCS
boys victory in the old gym- ing but net wuh 1.9 seconds · 22-13 udvantage ufter eight
nasium.
showing on the clock. WHS minutes of play.
· ·
IRONTON
Senior
Armstrong led the victors called timeout and ran u
The Green und White Chad Harvey - the reign·
with a game-high 15 rints, designed pluy. but threw the extended their lead to 1\S ing Division IV Player of
followed by Mitchel with ball out of bounds. Meigs many us 19 points in .the the Year - scored u game11 and Ethan Moore with ran out the clock and first hulf at 40-2 1 with I :30 high.40 points while leading ·
seven
markers . Both secured the three-point left in the second, but the Ironton St. Joseph to 72-48
Whaley and Nibert had five decision.
Ruiders (6-9) ended the half victory over visiting Ohio
. points apiece. but Wood did
The Muroon und Gold on u 5-2 spurt to pull their Vallley Christiun during a
not score. Wood _ howev- also avenged an earlier 57- intermission deficit to with- non -conference matchup in
Lawrence County.
er _ wus the last player 10 56 setback at Larry R. in 42-26.
The Defenders (4- 11)
attt'mpt a shot at the old Morrison Gymnasium b!lck
EHS - who increased its
gym.
on January 23.
lead to 58-35 with 3:30 left hung close with the hosts
Dylan Newsom paced the
Wellston led 17-13 after in the third - went on u20- over the OP.&lt;:ning eight minRed and White with 10 ·eight minutes of piny and 14 run to open the second utes - trailing only 10-8 ·
f0 11
d b J h took a 29-28 edge into the half to take a 62-40 lead but a 17-8 second quarter
pomts.
owe
os intermission. Both teams into
the finule . The llosts surge allowed the Flyers (6Brown with eightY and
·
Andrew Christman with six. were tied at 44 heading into biggest lead of the night (24 8) some breuthing room
GAHS head coach Jim the finule .
points) cume 30 ~econds while tuking a 27- 16 cushOsoome _ who has called
Clay Bolin led the guests mto the fourth at 64-40.
ion into the intermission. ·
the old gymnasium home . with u game-high 17 points.
The Silver and Black cut
ISJHS took. control of the
for 40 seasons _ . noted followed by Jacob We II that deficit to as much as 16 contest in the third canto,
afterward that it was a very with II and Corey Hutton points (69-53) wi.th three going on a 23-9 surge for a
gratifying outcome _ not · with 10. Tyler· King paced minutes left in regulation. · 50-25 advantage heading
to mention fitting _ for the ' the Rockets with 14 mark- but never came closer the into the finale. OVCS
old building.
.
· ers, followed by Jay len rest of the way.
outscored the hosts 23-22 in
'"We had a lot of former Prater with 13. ·
Jake Lynch led 11 balanced the fourth , but never really
players come back for
Meigs will return to •.. Eustern unuck with 17 got back into striking distonillht. which really hel~d action Saturday when it points. followed by Tyler tance during the 24-point
"'
travels to Ml·Arthur for Hendrix with 12 and Mike setback.
mouvate the · kids.
e another TVC Ohio contest Johnson with 10. Cody
Ironton St. Joe - who
already wanted to win th'is against Vinton County. The MeA vena puced RVHS with hudn 't played in 18 days game for our seniors, but junior varsity gume will 17 points, while Zuk Dee! also cluimed a season S'\'eep
seeing the former players begin at 6 p.m.
udded 15 points to the set · with the win . ISJHS won
just made us want to muke
back.
89-38 buck on December 19
everyone proud at the end EAGLES AVENGE RAIDERS
The Eag les avenged an in Gallipolis. ·
of the. ni¥,ht. I thought we
earlier 65 -50 setback at
Harvey made 17 shots did that, ' Osoorne comTUPPERS PLAINS - Cheshire back on December including a pair of trifectas
men ted. "This place .was The Eastern boys basketball 23.
, - to pace the hosts. ISJ
filled and the fans were ·team shot 50 percent overall
Eastern also claimed an also had I0 players score in
really into the game. This, from the field and had nine evening sweep with a 38-31 the triumph. Henry Patrick
tonight, was the atmosphere · different pluyers contribute victory in the junior varsity paced the Blue and Gold
that we usually had here to the scoring column dur· contest.
with 18 points, followed by
over the years. The crowd ina an impressive 76-55
Both teams return to the Peter Carman and Daniel
really aave us some ene11y victory over visiting River hardwood on Friday night . Irwin with II markers.
toni~ht.
.
Valley on Tuesday durina a Eastern will travel to Carman ulso had a team"Its a sreat way to send non-conference matchup.
Hemlock to battle Miller in . best seven caroms .
thla place out In style, and It · The Eaales (8· 7) never u TVC Hocking mutchup,
The Defenders retum to
alao rewards our hard work trailed In the contest, jump· while the Raiders will host action Thursday when they
with a victory as the touma- in~ out to a small 7-6 edge Fuirhind in un Ohio V~lley travel to Hannan for a nonment gets closer. There are a With 3: IS left in the opening Conference
showdown . conference matchup. The
lot of positives to come out canto. The hosts, however,. Both JV games will tip-off varsity game will begin at
of tomght."
· closed the first period out at 6 p.m.
.
7:30p.m.
.
\.

MEIGS 61,WELLSTON 58
Meigs

Wellston

13 15 IS
17 12 15

.,'
.,

Wi-·

--.Jindhl-17- 61
.. - 58

MEIGS 16- I 0. 5-4 TVC Ohio): Je10my
Srnilh 2 1-2 5. Gaile HiU. 2 1-2 5. Jaeoll
Well 4 2-4 11. Conly Hufton 5 1).0 10.

W.Va.
from PageBl
offense.
Purkersb.urg
Catholic was able to tum
the Falcons· mi sfortune s
into transition baskets to
pull away
with
the
Crusaders claiming 11 13-3
scorino edge . in the final
"'
period to pick up the 45 ' 34
triumph.
Freshman Isaac Lee led
Wahama ollensively with
II points. with senior Kyle
Zerkle nett in~ eight murkers
in the outmg. Bnmdon
Flowers tallied six points us
well as huving a great game
on the boards for the White
Falcons,
with William
Zuspan adding live points
and Garrett Underwood
and Zack Whitllllch notching two points.euch.
POINT SWEEPS HUSKIES

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

~ribunt

Cavs' Mo Wdliams to replace Bosh in AU-Star game . Tile liP SclrlllllrINDIANAPOLIS (AP) team in the- top fi~e without missed the last three game-s
- Mo Williams is finally more than one All-Star. with the k.ne-e injllfy.
u All.Star.
LeBron Jame-s ~:ailed it a induding Tuesday night at
Twice snubbed, the ''total smacl;. in the face." Minnesota.
Cleveland Cavali.:-rs point Gilben was in.:redulous " It was mostly our ITllinguard was added to the ros- and poked fun at Williams· ers and do..· tors and Chris
ter Tuesday by NBA rom- snub by using made-up himself making the dedmissioner David Stem as a words lil;.e 'stupidiculous: sion:· Raptors l-oach Jay
replacement for injured 'idillogical' and '.preposter- Triano said before the
Toronto Raptors forward ageous · to describe his gameagainst
the
Chris. Bosh.
feelings .
Timbef'\\·olves. " I think. it's
Williams· teammates ~tmJ · By · Tuesday's pregame a real sign of Chris not
the
tone being selfish llt all: not try·
Cleveland's owner Dan interviews.
Gilbert were dismayed last changed.
ing ,to play in a game when
week when Williams was "ll'lllled Mo as soon ~ts I he's not 100 percent. Now
twice left off the Eastern found out. 1'm surprised he he gets an extra week of
Conference roster but didn't .:;all and tell me. rest so he, can come baclc
approved the move unani- though:· James said. druw- alter the All-Star game and
mously Tuesday.
ing laughter in the locker make u run ."
~~~ has a beautiful ring to room. ''It's great.lt's someThe news came utter the
it," Williams said before thing we all wanted."
Cuvs morning shootaround
playing at Indiana. 'Tm Gilbert wa!J equally and took some, including
excited for myself and my pleased .
·
Williams. by surprise.
teammates and the coach·
"It's unfortunate that
Coa~o·h Mike Brown said
es. It's u great thing. it's Chris Bosh is unable to he k.Jiocl;.ed on Williams'
one tiling people can't take ph1y in this year's All-Star hotel · door. and when
away from you."
game in Phoenix," he &amp;~~id Williams didn't answer.
Williams wasn't voted in · in an e-mail to The Brown figured Williams
by ·the fans. nor was he Assodated Press. "The was asleep. So he called
chosen
by
Eastern entire Cleveland Cavaliers Williams· room .
Conference head coaches organization are thanli.ful
Willi~tms didn 't know
as a reserve. Then he was that the NBA called on Mo what was going on. but
passed over by Stern in · Will.iams to take his right- . Brown could hardly wait to
favor of Boston's Ray ful place on the Eastern mform W11lmms.
Allen. who is repladng Conference squad. In fact , "This 'is terrific news ,"
injured Orlando guard we think it is 'fantacutar: Brown said. ''Mo has defiJameer Nelson on the ros- 'eKtraordulous· and 'phe- nitely been one of my highter.
nomerf11L"'
lights in my time here."
The Cavs then took their Bosh is averaging 22.7 After two snubs last
complaints public, con- points and 9.5 reoounds for week. Williams seemed
tending they were only the Raptors. But he has' resigned to taking pan in

www.mydailysentlnel.com

HH
PP

8 14 13
101312

15 - 50 '
18-53 :

HERBERT HOOVER (4· I H : Shawn
Chanllor I I).Q 3. Josh Han 2 1).0 4:
..amos Miller 21).() 4. Bllan Sl!allot 7 ON!

20. Jortlan E~s I 0.0 2. Ev~
$hamtll:1n 5 Q-0 t 1• Ned W1HiatnS 3 ().3 s.·
TOTAlS: 21 Ni 50. lh&lt;..-oolnt !ji&gt;als: 6
(Shatfor 4 . c -. _ _,_
POINT PlEASANT 19-4): B.J l'&gt;yd 5
5 15. Kyl. ., c..... 1 2-2 • . .,.,.,., tloal t
6-3 12. Oroke Nolan 0 1).0 0 . ..laool&gt;
Tompielon 3 1).5 IS. Cody GtH!hooS&amp; D
2-4 2. l'yson Jonoo 6 2-4 14. 'TOTALS: 11
14·28 53. Th~ gools: 5 IL"¥!1

..,.

W8b6itea:
In One Week With Us
www.mydallytrlbune.com
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS www.mydallyregislef.com
~ YOUB AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
'OI:ribunt
Sentinel
l\tgi~ter
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156
.(304) 675-1333
ca11 TodaJ•••

.,
'

.'

www.myd~.com

a-

Doal2).
JV ..,..,
Hoover&lt;3Z,

"""t

•

PIMsant 46. H4rbo(t

I

Or F• -n. •f7""tn

'

IRON10tt SJ 72, OVCS 48.

.

ave

8 s 9
23~48 ·
10 17 23 a2 - 72 :

ISJ

.

OHIO V~LlEY CHRISTIAN (4·11): Pool
Mille! 1 2-2 4. Jonaiii,VI \l'anllloiOf 21)-t
4. Daniel Irwin 3 5-7 II. Henry Plltic+. 6
4-6 18, Pelet Carman 3 5-7 11. ~
S&lt;ott 0 o-o O. TOTALS: 15 16-24 48.
nv.... jl(&gt;nt 'goo~s: 2 (Pelrick 2).

IRONTON SAINT JOSEPH (6·81:
Pay1on Blai• 2 1· 1 5. Cody Blackl&gt;urn 2
I). I 6. Chad Ha""y 17 4_. 40. Joey
BasoOOw 21).0 4. Joe Unger I ().0 2. 1'81
Gagai 1 ().0 2. Tanner Riley I 1).() ~'
Goorgo McCown I 1· I 3. T.J. ~ 2 Q2 4. Caleb Blacl&lt;bum 2 1).0 4. tOTALS:
31 6·9 72 . Tllr...poinl !J011IS: 4 (0.
Blackbum 2. HaMl)' 2).
·
'

Calholoe
Wahama

6
11

9
8

11 13 12 3 -

34 .

WAHAMA 13·11): Isaac Lee 4·2-2-lf.
Kyle Zerkle 3-2-4-8. Brandon Flowel$lo
().().6, William luspan 2-G-0-5. Zack
WMialth I ·Q.0.2, Gall~ Underwood!).
2-4·2. TOTALS: I 3 6· 10 34. Thlee-pollft
goals 2 (Zuspon, Lee).
:
PIIIRKESBURG CATHOLIC (11-4): Cole
Cwyner 4·2·2· 11 , John . Plddon 4·1).,..
10. Jason Williams •·~·10, .JaCOb
Hensler 3-1).1).6, Dylan Riolslack 2·1)-Z:.
4. Quintin Coli•e , .()-0.2. N~ Fisher o-a..
2·2 .TOTALS: 18 6·11 45. Thlee·poim
goals: 3(PIIdden 2. CWyner).
•
JV score: PC 62. W 60.

qin~rter charge · ult'imutel~
allowed the hosts to cluim a
season sweep of the Huskie ~
(4-11 ). Point defeateq
HHHS by 11 7'5-72 margin
bud&lt; on Junuury 17 iri
Clendenin.
.
PPHS led 10-8 nfter eight
minutes of pluy · but the
guests closed the hulf on a
14-13 run to cut their delicit
to 23-22 ul the intermission~
Herbert Hoover also went
on a· l3- 12 nm in the third to
tie things ut 35 heading into
the finule .
·
· Point Pleusant closed the
game on un 18-15 run. but
held a 10-point advantage
with under four minutes left
in regulation. The HuskieS
mude u lute charge . but we~
· ultimately unable to over· ·
come ~ allowing the
·. Knights to cluim their sec:
nnd strui·ght three-point
decision over HHHS .'
B.J. Lloyd led the victors
with 15 poil1ts. followed by
a double'double effort of 14
points and 15 rebounds.
Tyler Deal also chipped in
12 to the winning cause.
Brian Shaffer puced the
Huskies with rl · same-high
20 points. wh1le Evun
Shamblin added II markers.
Point Pleasant claimed un
evening sweep with u 46-32
victory in ·the junior vursity

POINT PLEASANT The Point Pleasunt boys basketball team won its seventh
consecutive·
decision
Tuesday night with u hardfought 53-SO victory over
visiting Herbert Hoover during a Curdimd Conference
mutchup in Muson County.
The Bluck Knights (9-4)
tripled lust yeur's win totul conte~t.
with the decision. but the
The Black Knights return
final outcome wus anything to action today when they
but easy.
.
travel to Poca for another
· Both teams battled with Cardinal
Conference
one another for the full 32 matchup . The JV game will
minutes. but a pivotal fourth tip-off at 5:45p.m . .

.. ""'' H.QW

m
WRITE AJII
Sutt MAds

1,!

n..

KIT I CARLYLE

OtherS. rim
Pel
CIOfllollons.
741).446-374$

Publislllng
·-lilt right to edit.

kllnclrlyteocomc••1.nel

Call

A,DIWHidl/

lljoct 01' _ . . .,

TOWII~

ld ...., timt.
Enols

llul1

~lltld

on lilt

lltlu1Hul Apia. ol Jack·
son EslaiH. 52 Wesl·
wood Or., from $365 to
$560.
741).446·2568.
Eque.l Housing Opportu·
nity. This institution is an
Equal Opportunity Pro-

vider and Employer.

All

RMI

BIMment
Wllorprooflng
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local refer·
ences furnished. Estab·
lished 1975. Call 24 Hrs.
740·446·0870, AogEIIS
Bastment WaterproofiOQ.

F10e lo good homo. 3
Chow puppies, 5 weeks
old. 740-245-5221
Gtveawav

6

beautiful

lab/CoiUe mi&lt; pups. 2(
m)/4 (I) 304·675&lt;3237
leave message.

CLASSIFIED INDEX
: logale ....................... .................................... 100 Rocrullonal V.hlcleo ............................... IOOO
' Announc.mente ..... ;.................................... 200 ATV ............................................................. 1005
Blrlhdey/Annlveroary .......................... ........ 205 Blcyclee ...................................................... I010
• Hoppy Ado .................................................... 210 Booto/Accellorltlo .................................... I015 ·
loll &amp; Found ....................... ................. ....... 215 ComperiRVo &amp; Trollere ............................. 1o20
Memory!Thonk You .......... ........................... 220 Mo1orcycloo .................. ............................ . 1025
Nollcoo ......................................................... 225 Olhor ..................................... :.............. :..... 1030
.,.roonolo ................................ ..................... 230 W1n11o buy ......................... ...................... 1035
Wanted ................................................ .,. ...... 235 Automotlve .. ;.,.,......................................... 2000
Sorvleea ....................................................... 300 Auto Roni1VI.oaae .....................................
Appllonce Servlce ....................................... 302 Au1oa .................................... ........... ........... 2010
Aulomo1lvo ...................... ... ................... ...... 304 Clooalc/Anllq-...... ... ............................... 2015
Building Mllerllllo ............................. .......... 308 Cammaroi1L1ndullrl11 ...... .......... ........·...... 2020
Bualn••• ......... .................................... ......... 308 Parte 6 Acceaeorlae .............. ....................2025
Cl11rlng ... .. ....... ............................................ 310 Sporl1 Ullllly ..... :........................................ 2030
·, Chlldl&amp;lderly Clre ............................. .,........ 312 TYucko .................... :....................................2035
Compu1ero ................................................... 31• Ullllly Ttlllota ............ ....... .............. .......... . 2040
CCM'draotora .......................;,,:., ..................... 318 Vana ............................................................ 2045,
o .......tlco/Jonltorlll ......... ..... ..................... 318 W1n11o buy .......................... :.................... 2050
Ell&lt;:lrtcal ........... ........................................... 320 Roll Eelale S.leo ........................... ........... 3000
Flnlncll1 ....................................................... 322 Comellry Plolo .......................................... 3005
, • Hllllh ..........: ...................., ........................... 326 Comll)erclll .... .............; ..............................3010
H11tlng &amp; Coollng ....................................... 328 Condomlnlumo .......................................... 3015
. Home Improvement• 330
For S.la by Owner ................ .....................3020
·' lnaurance ......... ,........................................... 332 HouHI tor Sala ......................................... 3025
Lown Sorvlco ...................................... ......... 334 land (Acrelgo) .......................................... 3030
MuotciDionCIIDrlml .................................... 336 Lo1o ................ ....................... ............ .........3035
.' Other Servlcaa ... ........................................ .. 338 Want to buy ................................................ 3040
·' Plumblng/Eioctrlco( ................ .. .............. ..... 340 Roal Eel11o Renlllo ...............................: ... 3500
: Protaaalonal Sarvlc:el ............ ................. .... 342 ApllrtmentiiTownhou. .a ........................ . 3G05
1 Repalra .................. .................... ................... 34•
Commarclal. ...............................................3510
· • Roollng ............. ,........................................... 346 Condomlnluml .......................................... 3515
' Socurlly ............ ... ......................................... 348 Hou. . . lor Ron1 ........................... ............. 3520
' Tax/Accounllng .............. ............................. 350 · Land (Acrelge) ................. ......................... 3525
..; Travel/Entertainment ......... :......................... 352 Storage ........ :·····- ............................... .. ....... 3535
•, Flnanclal ............ ....................... ..:................. 400 W1n110 Ront ... ........... .. .. .... .. ...................... 3540
~· Financial Strvlcaa .................. .'.:-·.......... ...... 405 Manufacturl,d Houelng ..............:.............. .000
' lneurance ..................................~ ......·........... 410 Lote .............................................................4005
; Money 1o Lond ..... ,....................................... 415 Movero ........................................................4010
, Ed~OIIIon .............................. ....................... 500 Ren.. lo ..... ,....... ,................. ........................ 4015
• Bulin••• &amp; TYido Schooi .................... ...... :SOS Saloo ............. .-..................... ........................ 4020
' lnotrucllon &amp; Tlllnlng ........ ......................... 510 Supplleo ...................... ..... .. ............. ............025
· Leeeona ........................................................515 Want to Buy .....................................r......... 4030
: Pereonal .. .............................. ....................... t520 Reeort Pro~rty ......................................... 5000
·, Anlmale ........................................................ eoo Reeort Property tor aale ........................... IS025
~. Animal Su~pllea .................................. .. ...... 60-!i
Reaort Property tor f'elnt ........................... 50SO
·, Horaa1 .............................. :........................... e10 employment ...............................................6000
' Llvaatock ... ........... .. ... ............................ ....... 815 Accountlng/Finai'tclal ................................8002
; Peta ...............................................................820 Admlnl.tratlvw'Proteaelonal .....................e004
, Want to buy ............................... ..:.......... ... ... 82&amp; Caahler1Ciark ............................................. 6006
• Agrlculturo ............. ........... ................... ........ 700 Chlldl&amp;lderly C1re .... .................... .............
• Farm Equlpment ................. .................. ....... 705 Cterlcal ....... :............................................... ao,o
: Garden &amp; Produca ........ ,..............................710 Cona1ructlon ............l..................... ,...........801'2
, Hay, Feed, SHd, Or1ln .. ... .......................... 715 Drlvero Dollvory ..................................... 8014
, Hunting &amp; Lind .. ,........... ....................... ....;. 720 Educit1on .................... ... .. .. ........................eo1e
• Want to buy ........................... :....................... 725 !lectrlcll Plumblng ............ ............ ...........8018
1
Nlerchandlae .. ...................... ,....................... 900 Empl"mant Agenclaa ..............................eo:zo
' Anllquoo ............ .... :................... ................... 905 Enlertllnment ............ ................................
: Appllanco ............................................... ...... 910 Food .Sarvlcoo ............................................e024
• Auctlot1• •· ····...... ....... ....................................915 Oovlljlrnment &amp; Federal Joba .................... 80215
1 Bargain 8aeement ....................................... 920
Help anted· Oan•r•I .................................. I028
• CoUectlblae ...·......... ...................................... 828 Law Enforcement ...................................... fl030
: Compute,. .................................... :....... .....:.930 MalntenlnceiDOmeatlc ............................. eo:s:a
.. Equlpment/Suppllaa .. ............. , ....................836 Management/Supervleory ........................ 8034
• Flea Marketa ..................... ........t .................. 940 ~hanlce ..................................................8036
' Fuol 011 Cooi/Wood/Oao ............................. 9o05 Medlcal ................................................ ....... 6038
: Fumlture ............................ .......................... 950 Mualcal ....................... ................................ 8040
, Hobby/Hun1 a Spor1 ............ ........................ 955 Pari·Tlmo·Temporltlee ............................. 6042
. Kld'a Corner ............................... ............... ...eeo Re•teurante ............. .................... .............. I04&amp;4

aooa

eoaa

•

.t,~.

Sllould llldude
n.n.
· To Help Get ltnpaa .....

a

From
Point Pleasant

addecUoyourcl~sslfteclads
Borders$3.00/perad
· GraphlcsSCMforsmall
. Sl.OOforlarQe

AD

eooa

George
Mayes

-·

~

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

Ohio Vllllty

-s :

.Now you can have borders and oi'QPhlcs

Monday thru Friday

'

PARK CATHOLIC 45,
WAHAMA34

Or F• To (31M) 17s-s2:W

og;. u,.,.,.,..

·

• Ml•cellaneoua ......................... ..................... SMIS

Salea ...........................................................8048

• want to buy.,................................................ 870
: vard sate ................ ..................................... 875

Technical Tradle ............... .............. ,......... IOIO
Taxtllee1Factory .................. ;........... ,.......... eo52

Jet Aeration 'Motors re·
palr6d, new &amp; rebuilt In
stock. Call Ro n E~ans,
I ·800·537-9528.

Hamilton Railway Spo·
Pocket
Watch,
992·21 jewels. real nice
$450. Serious inquiries
only. 740· 533-3870

cial

WantTo Buy
AbsOlute \dp Dotlar • ·sll·
~erfgold
coins,
any
10K/14K/1 BK gold jew·
etry, dental gold. pre
1935
US
currency,
proo!lmint
sets,
diamonds, MTS Coin Shop.
151 2nd Avenue. Galh·
polis. 446·2842

Buying farmhouse prlmi·
tlves,
9toneware,
pie
sates,
cabinet.
etc.
740·423·5509

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Wednlldly, February 11, 2009
ALLEYOOP

"M" Counuy Living
3 or 4 Bedroom 2 Bath
Owner will Anance

www.mydallysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

can to be Pre aua"lled
740-423-9728

ACROSS

Gov't funds available to
first time buyer$ who

own land or family land
·0- dwn no closlog cost
your land ts your credft

BANKS

877-311).2577

CONSTRUCTJO

"The Proctorville

DiJiel8f1Ce.
S1and a deed is aH you
need 10 own your dream

co.

presents:

"Woman &amp;

Keart Dlseese"

Discussion
Guest Speaker:
Agnes A. E. $1mon, MD
· February 18, 2009
6 p.m.
Buxton Co'lllerence Room
·Public Is invited
· For reservations please call,
(304) 675-4340, Ext. 2004

home. Cal Now!
Freedom Ho"""'

888·565.0167 .

Aceounllrlg I Fi-.cial
Gallipolis compa ny seeking individual for compil-

ing and maintaining all
accounts, payable
records and assisting accounting dept and ~tes
staff. Must have high

Saturday, February 14
Valentine Day

SChOOl diploma and accounting
expe rien~ .

Live remote
Big Country 99.5
11 811J to 1 pm

Please send resume to

CLA Box 1OS. Ann.: AP
Cieri&lt;. P.O. Bo• 469,
Gallipolis, Onio 45631

Oorical
0.0°/oAPR

tarylparalegal for Gallipolis law oHice . send re-

Financing Available Now

Smith
Superstore •

sumes to CLA Box 102.

PO. Box 469, Gallipolis
OH 45631.
Education

1911 Eastern Ave: Gallipolis

Gallipolis Career College
is seeking part-time in·

· structors in mathematics
accounting.

Mathe· !!!!'!'!"!!'!'!"!!'!'!"!!'!'!"!!"""'!'!"!!""

·malics candidates must Htlp Wantad • General

rc;ei];}Uii;;j;il
on
SAVINGS

have a Masters Degree
in Mathematics. AccoUnt·

In Memory

&gt;In Loving
Memory

Mildred
M.

·Hubbard
5121l1J -.
2/ll/05

Sadly missed
by children
&amp;

grandchildre11

:~t

Help Wanted

.toou

M:muLlcr•Jr!'C
Hcusm=

Ronlals

ing
have
gree

must

Bachelors

De·

in
Accounting.
Please e·mail resumes
jdanickl@ gallilpolisca·
2 bd. trailer.
Racine, to
$375 mo. pius · $375 reercollege.edu or fa)( lo
No Phone
dep .. no utilities included , 446·4124.
Calls Please.
740-591-6613

Rtnlals

2br, 1.5 bath A1o Grande ~-~-.--.--

area. $400 rent $400 3br. 1 bath trailer on
dep. No pets. Ret. Req . Georges
Creek
Ad .

740·367·7025

candidates

a

$450/rent
Please

$450/dep.
call

"""""""""""""""""""!!!'
!!!!
Gonmment &amp; Federal
Jobs

•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;

446-7311 •

,__ _.,.....;..___ and leave message. Will POST OFFICE NOW
Federal Funds just re- . be ready on 2120109 .
HIRING. avg. ' Pay $20/hr

leased for Land Owners. =,...~...,..--.,....,.. or
$57Kiyr,
includes
No closing cost and 3BR , 2BA, doublewide In Fect.Ben, QT. Place' by
ZERO DOWN! Will . do Bidwell
area. adsource, not affiliated
land
improvements. $600/month
&amp;
dep. with USPS who . hires.
Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Credit· ::36.,7,;;
·0,.5;;;
07"""""""""""""""' 1·866·403·2582
OK. 2, 3, 4 end 5 bed· =
rooms
available.
Sale~

740-446·3384

==;;;;;;;;"""""-=--

Help Wanlad ·General

;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;====•

Brand new 3bed 2bath
on + ·hall acre in Pt.
2BR
mobile
home Pleasant.
OWNER
Fl· Local
Water/trash . included w/ NANCE
AVAILABLE. Agency
ren t. No Pets. Located at (740) 446-3570
STAN's,

=,...-...,..,...-,...-

Johnson's Mobile Home
Park. Cail740·645·0506
· ~~~~~~-.~
"AA." Renters Wanted ,3
BR 2 Balh, limited
Homes
·Available.
Help Wanted
740·423·9728

Job Announcement

Abandoned
866;215-5774

home.

The Meigs County Health Department
Country living- 3-5BR.
invite s application s for the .position of: • 2·3 BA on property.
Many floor plans! Easy
WIC Clerk
Financi ng! We own the
bank..
Cali
today!
866·215·5774
Slllll:l:i •
Dependent upon qual ificmion s
Renters
wanted.
Final Filing Date: February 13 . 2009
866·215·5774
Date Available: M:1rch 9. 2009

MiuiwuuJ gggli(ii;Blii!D:ti
Education: High school graduate or
equivalent: posses sion of valid Ohio
driver's license:
EzmSrjenre; Expertise in co mputer
operation s and office program s:
demonstrated ability to operate oflice
machinery : good nrg,anizatinnal skills:
excellent communication skills : general
dcrica l skills . · • ·

Bs:luto Em121!um~:o1 AI2Rii,nUno iod
Three Lrtters of Referepce to;
Leanne Cunningham, WIC Dl.-.clor
.112 East Memorial Drive, Suite A
Pomero~ , OH 45769

The Meig~ County He:dth Departmenl is ""
equal oppnnunity employer and provider.

Home
Noe
CNA's,

Cu ~tnm

Building. Remodeling
Gencm l repair

L&amp; LTire Bam
44087 Wlpple Rd .
l'omeroy."OH
c5 Poin1s)
New &amp; Used Tires.
\Vc buy used tires.
computer wheel

alignments. We also
do Dud\. light

n1edmnic wurk.
L'omplt'!e sen.' ice Oil
chari~es, ~m all engine

Health
Hiring

Home

Sporttwrtttr
The Ohio Valley Publishing Co. is seeking motivated, people-oriented
individualti rm a vacancy
in the news dept. as a
Sportswriter. The successful candidate will
cover high school athletics in the area for the
daily edilion of the newspaper, as well as assist
with the production of
sports pages. EKcellent
writing and English skills,
photography skills and

We servke and
winteri1i: boats nnd

1
Nortb
•

WesT
• J 10 9 5

• A·a s

• 8 5 3
• l 64
• K J 65

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

Deale!' North
Vulnerable: NortMiouth

Auctioneer:
BillY l.loble Jr.
140-416-1164

S.Uoh
INT

E-mail: captb11165@yahoo.com,
www.auctionzlp.com
#5548

We appreciate ~VO"f
bt siuess

Hardwood

'*nevy And FnHire

, _...,,tlmbeta""llcabi1MitrJI-

THESE DISHES .SEEN
PASSED DOWN FROM M'f
GREAT-GREAT-GRANMAW !!

CAUUS T01J.r1Y
FORRrouCED
WINTER·RATES
DfC. · FEB

•

Cell: 740-416-5047
email:
jrshadlrm@aol.com

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp; ·
Paul Rowe

""''

I'~ Ll \££.~OUR ~IC:l~
"(

00,. T~~ ~ IVo.I!&gt;I'R\~1
IK TI-\E. Mf.I-IU-, 11"~ ~T

LOa~ttll. Ff&gt;..l\1~".,-

1'1/E. t-11'..1/t:.R 1-\IW

40 hours a week, with
benefits. Interested par·
ties can send resumes to
Kevin Kelly, Managing
Editor, Ohio Valley Publishing Co., 825 Third

I

'i
IT'!l ~1-\R\11\P't
I.O&amp;:i\"E.R!

51-\RIMP

Ave., Gallipolis. Ohio
45631 or kkeiiyllmy-

\ 1

dailytribune.com. No
phone calls please.

Fresh Norlh
SHRIMP
(740) 742-2563

·::--""-;;;;;;:-.

JUST WI\ITE'

Llir(lf,ufnorrrozeo, ht11tb Dill!

Help W~nted

Help Wanted

I

®

I ~:"''f&gt;4

Compensation

can

also

1

"""'"'"'===

Dump truck
•
serv1ce

IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

to re~ay you.
·
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) - You can
avo1d experiencing any ill effects in a
partnership situation by underplaying
your own prominence . Allowing your
cohOrt to feel more Important could be
one ol the smartest moves 'you can
make.
TAURUS {April 20·May 20) - Don't
allow self-doubts about your adequacy to
dominate your th inking . Whe n you have
confidence, your ta lefliS will come
throu gh like a champion.
GEMINI {May 21·June 20) - Don't be
too disappointed it a planned social
activ,ity falls through. La~y Luck has
something ta r better In mind lor you. Aide
the tide.
CANCER (J une 21·July 22)- It you get
stuck with someone who Is selfish and
demanding, don't let it get to you . Before
the day is over, you 'll be the one who
ends up gelling the most out ot what you
have shared together.
·
LEO (July 23·Aug . 22) - Don't respond
in kind when dealing with an argumentative individual. Unchallenged, this person
will talk himselt or herself Into a corner.
and you 'll be the one who ends up the

NewHomee,
. Remodeling,
Additions.
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding arid more. .

740-742·3411
.Orywall, Kitchens, Batha ·

COW and BOY

W~A.T.ITTAKES

...AND I WILL PUFF OUT
MY CHES.TAND TAU&lt; LOW

AN&gt; MOtmWIIICAU.Y.

~

TOBE AMAN.

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors. Windows.
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling,
Additions

buy

t~~ :t,;.,.
41

15
16 Curbed
51 W1ptd out•
· t7 Summar In · 11oppv
OUtllec . 55 Leta f8lty
18 Onuldt al 56 Hire
57 Trope:.!
19 Chorge R
fruita
21 Hwys.
58 Snrnp
23 Gennln
grau
20
.UCie
22
26 Recline
DOWN
27 "- Judo"
24
28~y
1 LPapetd
30 Dawn with 2 Tu shtltor 25
lheflu
3 Btcf.mouth
31 Atom
4 Modorelar 26
fragiroent
5 Locate
27
32 Tlbthe
6 OEA agenta
tllia
7 O.lry-caae 28
33Rocky
11om
29
praioCtlon
8 llllch flap
35 Pumper'.
9 RNeee', • 34
10 Before, to
36
37=
Bloke
38 Tire feature 11 Fllhlng
42
39 VOf'J, In
pola
.
. Verac~ 13 car option 43
40 Call. credn 19 Edmonton 45
un.lts
pucksllnl

a...,_

Mltlf...., 47 Calhnl:op

=··
ForcefUl

crutor

COOIIIII-.

41

::r-·

· 49 Glvt - -

Pilntt break
ringa
50 Kltchan
UplltllRem
Scurtltd
52 In the
atong
~
Bluohlng
$3

:::be

E-

Dlld

tupporta
54 Klklcw.....,
Acquiring
Slremhy
cord
WHheland

llitchers
...,.pli:Ue
Popular

cooltlt

Today's clue: L eQuals Y

" CP ' M ZABBCNLCDF PZIP YH ZIJH PA
NCFZP ASB AVO FAJHBDRHDP PA MIJH
PZH HOJCBADRHDP ." -

IOMHT IOIRM

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "This is a hee country. Folks have a nghf to send me
letters, and I have aright not to read them· · William Faulkner
.

lHAl DAILI
PUUliR

S©~4U}A-~E~S'

- - - - - Edirod

0 Rearrcnga

leners

oy

::::

CLAY A. POUAN - - - - - -

e1 r~~

fo v' l(rombled wcrd&lt; be·
!ow to form four simole word~ .

I

A L I VY N

II

t

I

DUXE E

T

I'

.....-------.
"'
E P 0 .N I "
\

~=r=~=~ =

~

"You will t'md," the

·
· philosopher lectured, .
"experience is tbe best

'.....,....;;s..o:...;;.X..;:E:..,P;,.,.,:;Er-1·1 ~~a-~-~~ ~d al1o the most
fhe chV&lt;klo quoled
filling in the mi10i"V words
I [I I L' Lb 0 b1Compleit

9 PRINT NUMBERED li
lETTERS

t

.

@)

you develop from step No. 3 beloW.

•

UNSCRAMBlE
ANSWER

fOil

•

111111111

SCRAM-LilTS ANSWiiRS-iiiO!IJ9
Manure- Berth -

Threw -

HOT WATER
. "A good time Io keep your mootb shut," admonished
• the mom, "is when you 'rc in HOT WATER."
Yonder-

ARLO &amp;.JANIS

Free hand·
outs Usually have sorim kind of stfings
attached, designed to rope us in . Thus,
when It comes to your material needs.
depend solely on •your brains and your
brawn to get what you need.
LIBRA (Sbpt. 23-0ct. 23)- From time to

~ARFIELD

time, You might tiave diHiculty adjusting

WHA1" A
SHORT
STRAW

1 Free Estlmatn

740-367-0536

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
• Prompt and Quality
Work
'Reasonable Rates
' ln ~ured

I)RIZZWELLS
:FLoQA WAHl"~ Mt ll ~~M~ .

1 AM, AS YOU

5AY, C.UR5E:C7

to what may be going on around you. But
if you remain calm, you 'll stay collected
and will easily bypass any Impediments
in your path.
,
SCORPIO (Oct. ?4-Nov. 22}- You migtit
be raced with seve ral important ma«ers,
one ot which may irk you a bit. If you're
smart. yo u'll get It out of the way first and
enjoy smooth saWing the rest of the way.
SAGITIAAIU S (Nov. 23-Dec. 21 ) - Be
as forthright as possible about promising
a friend something you would have a
hard time delivering . As the saying goes.
"The truth will set you tree ,~ so be as
honest about it as you can.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) - After
grumbling about your lot In lite, you could
end UP with egg on your face when Lady
Luck does something quite astounding
and proves how oH base you were.

SOUP TO NUTZ

::TUtKER 'flll'rl ME
·ToM$.~ "J)

~ ~It-A

. Dur Dror~-

WIIAi

lkaro

IP'Vo~A

Advertise
in this space for
$70 per month

by Luis Campos
Celebrity C"**' Cl)'ptogi!ITls are cruted from quotanons bY ramous people_pu arc1 prM1rt
Each leiter in1he ophtr starjjs lor Wiler

vi~:tor.

740-367-0544

. Please leave messa e

CELEBRITY CIPHER

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -

Local Contractor

•Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
. 740-591-8044

G

Astro.Graph

sibility that you will be given a leading
role In a group endeavor. Instead .of
th inking it an honor. )IOU mighl believ8
.you're being used; but to your surprise,
it'll l:le one of your luckiest breaks In life.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Others
will closely observe your action's, and,
although they'll see your imperfections,
the manner In which you conduct your·
self will end up e&amp;rf'ling their respecrand
admiration.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - A while
back, you did a favor for a friend, about
which you thought he or she had forgot1tm. You're likely to discOver that your pal-'
has been searching all lhis time for a way

COistructiDD

IN TODA.Y'S SOCIETY.
BOYS ARE GROWING
UP CONFUSED A.BOUT

n.· That's true, but 'this deal revolves
'around other lours:the spa~. heart ard
dub fours. Look at only the North and
East hands. South is in three no-trump.
Your partner, Wesf, leads lhe spade .
jack. Declarer takes It on the board ard
calls lor the diamond queen. After your
~ng hokls The trick, would you lead the
. spade four, hea~ four or dub four?
FirsT, count the points. Dummy has 18
and you have 1t. That leaves t 1 for
West and South. But you have already
'seen" five frqm pa~ner: lhe spade jack
(trick one) and the diamond ace (declar·.
er wool~ have taken your king if he had
that card). This means thaT South must
have the spade queen and club king·
jack.
So, neither a club shift nor a spade back
can help unless declarer has only
queen-doubleton of spades. Sooth will
drive outlhe diamond ace and eventual·
ly catch you in a hea~-club endplay. He
will take antler three spades, four dia·
monds and two clubs, or three spades,
one heart, lour diamonds and one club. ·
But surely a hea~. shift cannot be right,
away from the A·O around to dummy's
K·J·10. Problems!
Wart, though. When West geTs in with his
diamond ace, he can return a heart
through dummy, and you will take three
tricks in lhe surt for down one.
That is the lour to lead at trick three. And
if West does not return a heart when in •
wrth his diamond ace, scalp him'

By Bernice Bede Oaol

Sunsatle•

R.L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE COORDINAlOR
Pleasant Valley is currently accepting include housing on-site 11
We do driveways
desired. Please con'llict:
resumes for an Accounts Receivable 740.384·6508 to sched·
We Haul
Coordinator. Mimimum of three years ute an appointment or
Limestone· Gravel
experience in hospital ~alieni accounts, submit resumes to:
Dirt· Ag-Lime
A/R, and insurance bil ing. Three years Community Manager
mainframe system experience. Expenence c/o Sherry House
COURT OF COMMON lief oJ which pleading
740·985~4422
with Meditech and
B/AR module Wells Manor Apanments
PLEAS
MEIGS Is to foreclose the lien
preferred. Associates degree in business, 460 · S. Michigan Ave, COUNT'(, OHIO
ol plaintiff's mortgage
H&amp;H
US Bank National As· recorded upon .the lot·
secretarial science or related field Wellston, Ohio 45692
I
.
·
saclallan,
as
Truatee
Iawing
described
real
'
required.
Guttering
Mechanics
for MASTR Asset estate to wit:
Send resumes to:
Backed
'
Property
Address:
Seamless Gutters
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Service · Technician posi- Securities TrusT, 2006· 2976 Third Street SR Roofing, Siding, Gutters
c/o Human Resources
lion available tor diesel HE2 .
124, Syracuai, OH
Insured &amp; Bonded
2520 Valley Dr., Pt. Pleasant. Wl/25550
and hydraulics. Experl· c/o Wells Fargo Bank, 45779, an~ being more
. 740·653·9657
or (304) 675·6975 or apply on-line at
· once
•·
necessary. N.A.
·
particularly ~ascribed
Health/Retirement
'&amp; . Plaintiff,
In plaintiff's mortgage
www.pnlle~.!l!l
Benefits. Fax ~resume to •VS•
ricorded In Mortgage,
J&amp;L
740·446-9104
or
•·mail
Goldie
A.
Wolfe,
et
al.
Book
226, page 617, of
AA/EOE .
Construction
to LLC@CAREO.COM
Detendsnts.
this County Recorder's
·VInyl Siding
Case No.: 08CV189
Office.
Madical
Judge: Fr6d W. Crow ·The above named de• Replacement
Legal
Notice tn Suite fendant Is requjred 10
Windows
Asst./Receptionist • .
for Foreclosure of answer within twenTyneeded fo r local denlist
·Roofing
Mortgage
. eight (28) days alter
office in Pt. Pleasant.
·Decks
Edward
B.
Wolfe,
Jr.,
last publication, which
Need some knowledge
• Garages
whoso
last
known
ad·
shall
bo
published
.ol co mputers.
phones
dross Is 459 Adams once a wook lor three
•
Pole Buildings
and good customer serv- Street, Nelsonville, OH consecuthle .weeks, or
•
Room
Additions
ice skills, will tral(l for pO 45764, and the un· they might be denied a
Owner:
sition, please sei1d re known heirs, devisees, hearing In this case.
sume to : Dental Office legaTees, executors, Lerner, Sampson &amp;
James Keeaee II
3984 Indian Creek Ad
742·2332
administrators, Rothfuss
Elkview l'iv 25071.
spouses and assigns AHorneys for Plaln!IH
and the unknown P.O. Box 5480
Rollauranh
Replacement
guardians ol minor Clnclimatl, OH 45201·
IncompeTent 5480
Windows and
Sodexo Food Se!"'.lices at and/or
Rio Grande University is heirs ol Edward B. (513) 241·3100
Vinyl Siding
now taking applicatiomt Wolfe, Jr., all of whoa~ aHyemalt@lsriaw.com ·
Specialists, LTD
fo r a cook. Mus! have e)(- residences are un- (1) 28, (2) 4, 11
known
and
cannot
by
(740) 742-2563
perience. apply In person
reasonable diligence - - - - - - - at the cafeteria.
• Siding • VInyl
be ascertained, will .
Public Notice
Windows • Metal
take notice that an the - - - - - - - 16th day of December, PUBLIC NOTICE
and Shingle Roofs
2008, US Bank National The 2008 Financial Ro• llecks • Additions
Assoclatlon, aJ
port for Cheater Town•Electrical
Trustee for MASTR ship
. has
been
• Plumbing .
AISet Backed Securl· completed and subll)(t·
ties Trust, 2006·HE2 c/o ltd to the State Auditor,
• Pole Barns
'
Welts Fargo Bank, N.A. the report can be
filed its Complaint In viewed by appointment
the Common Pleas by calling 740-985Court of Meigs CounTy, 3836. Debra L. Che9a·
Ohio In Case No. ller, Fiscal Officer
08CV189,
on
the P.O. Box 46
docket of
Chester, OH 45720.
the Court, and the ob· ·(2) 11
ject and demand far re·

FIND ·
A·JOB
OR ANEW
CAREER

All pass

In the year ahead, there Is a strong pos-

with office 1'',;~,·lh!'\H&gt;'
lor Quick books pre- experienced
equipment, have reliable
!erred. iend resume '!'lith transportation, ' be de·
wage history to CLA Box pendable and like work· ·
21# 200 Main St. Pt
ing
with
the public.
Pleasant WV 25550.
Schedule has some flexland is part·lime
needing someone for
24+ hours per week.
Company offer: competi·
live salary, health benefhs, paid vacation ·and
sick le ave and 401 K.

Pass

'blr'lllrtbdoiY:
Thuiidoy,Fob. 12.2009

ANO

Tt1E NAME
1'1AKE
OF WHO ~OU
~UII.E
WANT IT
YOU~
'&gt;ENT TO,
MESS...t'oE'
AND THE
ISN'T TOO
MESSMoE
LONt'o,OK?
'(oU WAI'IT
ON THE
COOKIE!

$ 10 per lb Cash only
Pm1 i&gt;. req uired in advance
Shipments arrive every

bility

Pass

I •
3 NT

6 MaN Iaiiy
t2 Dalla up
t4 NFLer'a
honor

Author and editor Edgar Watson Howe,

RV 's.

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ~;o;;;;;;;;;;~·r--:
AVON! All Areas! To Buy Community Mgr. needed
or Sell Shirley Spears 'tor 32 unit lamlly .RO
p.roperty located in Galli·
304·675·1429
polis. Prefer prev1ous
property
management
Book keeper/accountant
experience,
preferably
needed lor local CPA
with a Aural Develop·
firm , exp. or education in
ment property. Must· be
Accounting, TaxeS and

Eut

1c.m..l
,..,_

41 Hindu title
42 Unlalcl
...........
43 Odtllab'•
CltiiO&lt;
44 CurNIIIIy
46 .lui* r.d

Who died in 1937, said, 'Aman is usual·
.IY bakl lour or five years before he knows

!··"••••••

S,,_.;..,ry ·

North

Which four would
you lead now?

New Gl:rages

Health A:ldes. Wlll provide training. II interested ""'""""""""""""""""""""
cail 740 .441 .1377 _
M...agernent /

West

Opening lead: • J

Electrical 1 Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutters
I Skiing &amp; hinting
Porch Dt!Ck•

The position is full time.

• K
•Q9 742

S.Uih
• Q8 6

Stop &amp; Compare

Room Addltlplll &amp;
Rtmodellng

knowied9e of des~top
pubtishing are sought.

•• 3 2
9 A Q9 4

.108 .3.

(740) 992·5344
Mon-Fri
8:00 am · 4:30 pm
Sat . 8:00am. 12

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

Eas~

• 76 2

'MI-112-1m

7:00am • 8:00 pm

A K 7

•A

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Hours

OHHJ9

9 K J 10
•QJI0 932

•New Homes

Home Bu1lding

Steel Frame Buildings

Phillip ·
Alder

•

Hill's Self
Storage

Pomeroy, Ohio
Commerdal
• Residential
• Free Estimates
(740) 992-5009

repa ir.

Experienced legal secre-..

an d

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

~u&lt;lr

U~\Wi

w• I ftMi.V f\T•
di•Nor IT
&lt;hurt~.

... Mr'l. i.IJCCI '"Ide 8

irate••··

di~~ +neT

MbodY . il&lt;td.

M•,.

said I. had 1b
eaT IT bvT I hio lr
I" m~ Mp!&lt;ln Snd
-.costrl m~oeif to
Go To the ~en.rocM
wkarto 1 - rid of i r

The l vccas' bil.oLi·
1"101.1.1 SWIMS W/11-f
11-oe ff•l-fto .

..,,!~

~;;___,~,~-':;{J-~
..

•

I

· ---- - ----·~ ·

..·--

~

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Wednlldly, February 11, 2009
ALLEYOOP

"M" Counuy Living
3 or 4 Bedroom 2 Bath
Owner will Anance

www.mydallysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

can to be Pre aua"lled
740-423-9728

ACROSS

Gov't funds available to
first time buyer$ who

own land or family land
·0- dwn no closlog cost
your land ts your credft

BANKS

877-311).2577

CONSTRUCTJO

"The Proctorville

DiJiel8f1Ce.
S1and a deed is aH you
need 10 own your dream

co.

presents:

"Woman &amp;

Keart Dlseese"

Discussion
Guest Speaker:
Agnes A. E. $1mon, MD
· February 18, 2009
6 p.m.
Buxton Co'lllerence Room
·Public Is invited
· For reservations please call,
(304) 675-4340, Ext. 2004

home. Cal Now!
Freedom Ho"""'

888·565.0167 .

Aceounllrlg I Fi-.cial
Gallipolis compa ny seeking individual for compil-

ing and maintaining all
accounts, payable
records and assisting accounting dept and ~tes
staff. Must have high

Saturday, February 14
Valentine Day

SChOOl diploma and accounting
expe rien~ .

Live remote
Big Country 99.5
11 811J to 1 pm

Please send resume to

CLA Box 1OS. Ann.: AP
Cieri&lt;. P.O. Bo• 469,
Gallipolis, Onio 45631

Oorical
0.0°/oAPR

tarylparalegal for Gallipolis law oHice . send re-

Financing Available Now

Smith
Superstore •

sumes to CLA Box 102.

PO. Box 469, Gallipolis
OH 45631.
Education

1911 Eastern Ave: Gallipolis

Gallipolis Career College
is seeking part-time in·

· structors in mathematics
accounting.

Mathe· !!!!'!'!"!!'!'!"!!'!'!"!!'!'!"!!"""'!'!"!!""

·malics candidates must Htlp Wantad • General

rc;ei];}Uii;;j;il
on
SAVINGS

have a Masters Degree
in Mathematics. AccoUnt·

In Memory

&gt;In Loving
Memory

Mildred
M.

·Hubbard
5121l1J -.
2/ll/05

Sadly missed
by children
&amp;

grandchildre11

:~t

Help Wanted

.toou

M:muLlcr•Jr!'C
Hcusm=

Ronlals

ing
have
gree

must

Bachelors

De·

in
Accounting.
Please e·mail resumes
jdanickl@ gallilpolisca·
2 bd. trailer.
Racine, to
$375 mo. pius · $375 reercollege.edu or fa)( lo
No Phone
dep .. no utilities included , 446·4124.
Calls Please.
740-591-6613

Rtnlals

2br, 1.5 bath A1o Grande ~-~-.--.--

area. $400 rent $400 3br. 1 bath trailer on
dep. No pets. Ret. Req . Georges
Creek
Ad .

740·367·7025

candidates

a

$450/rent
Please

$450/dep.
call

"""""""""""""""""""!!!'
!!!!
Gonmment &amp; Federal
Jobs

•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;

446-7311 •

,__ _.,.....;..___ and leave message. Will POST OFFICE NOW
Federal Funds just re- . be ready on 2120109 .
HIRING. avg. ' Pay $20/hr

leased for Land Owners. =,...~...,..--.,....,.. or
$57Kiyr,
includes
No closing cost and 3BR , 2BA, doublewide In Fect.Ben, QT. Place' by
ZERO DOWN! Will . do Bidwell
area. adsource, not affiliated
land
improvements. $600/month
&amp;
dep. with USPS who . hires.
Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Credit· ::36.,7,;;
·0,.5;;;
07"""""""""""""""' 1·866·403·2582
OK. 2, 3, 4 end 5 bed· =
rooms
available.
Sale~

740-446·3384

==;;;;;;;;"""""-=--

Help Wanlad ·General

;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;====•

Brand new 3bed 2bath
on + ·hall acre in Pt.
2BR
mobile
home Pleasant.
OWNER
Fl· Local
Water/trash . included w/ NANCE
AVAILABLE. Agency
ren t. No Pets. Located at (740) 446-3570
STAN's,

=,...-...,..,...-,...-

Johnson's Mobile Home
Park. Cail740·645·0506
· ~~~~~~-.~
"AA." Renters Wanted ,3
BR 2 Balh, limited
Homes
·Available.
Help Wanted
740·423·9728

Job Announcement

Abandoned
866;215-5774

home.

The Meigs County Health Department
Country living- 3-5BR.
invite s application s for the .position of: • 2·3 BA on property.
Many floor plans! Easy
WIC Clerk
Financi ng! We own the
bank..
Cali
today!
866·215·5774
Slllll:l:i •
Dependent upon qual ificmion s
Renters
wanted.
Final Filing Date: February 13 . 2009
866·215·5774
Date Available: M:1rch 9. 2009

MiuiwuuJ gggli(ii;Blii!D:ti
Education: High school graduate or
equivalent: posses sion of valid Ohio
driver's license:
EzmSrjenre; Expertise in co mputer
operation s and office program s:
demonstrated ability to operate oflice
machinery : good nrg,anizatinnal skills:
excellent communication skills : general
dcrica l skills . · • ·

Bs:luto Em121!um~:o1 AI2Rii,nUno iod
Three Lrtters of Referepce to;
Leanne Cunningham, WIC Dl.-.clor
.112 East Memorial Drive, Suite A
Pomero~ , OH 45769

The Meig~ County He:dth Departmenl is ""
equal oppnnunity employer and provider.

Home
Noe
CNA's,

Cu ~tnm

Building. Remodeling
Gencm l repair

L&amp; LTire Bam
44087 Wlpple Rd .
l'omeroy."OH
c5 Poin1s)
New &amp; Used Tires.
\Vc buy used tires.
computer wheel

alignments. We also
do Dud\. light

n1edmnic wurk.
L'omplt'!e sen.' ice Oil
chari~es, ~m all engine

Health
Hiring

Home

Sporttwrtttr
The Ohio Valley Publishing Co. is seeking motivated, people-oriented
individualti rm a vacancy
in the news dept. as a
Sportswriter. The successful candidate will
cover high school athletics in the area for the
daily edilion of the newspaper, as well as assist
with the production of
sports pages. EKcellent
writing and English skills,
photography skills and

We servke and
winteri1i: boats nnd

1
Nortb
•

WesT
• J 10 9 5

• A·a s

• 8 5 3
• l 64
• K J 65

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

Deale!' North
Vulnerable: NortMiouth

Auctioneer:
BillY l.loble Jr.
140-416-1164

S.Uoh
INT

E-mail: captb11165@yahoo.com,
www.auctionzlp.com
#5548

We appreciate ~VO"f
bt siuess

Hardwood

'*nevy And FnHire

, _...,,tlmbeta""llcabi1MitrJI-

THESE DISHES .SEEN
PASSED DOWN FROM M'f
GREAT-GREAT-GRANMAW !!

CAUUS T01J.r1Y
FORRrouCED
WINTER·RATES
DfC. · FEB

•

Cell: 740-416-5047
email:
jrshadlrm@aol.com

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp; ·
Paul Rowe

""''

I'~ Ll \££.~OUR ~IC:l~
"(

00,. T~~ ~ IVo.I!&gt;I'R\~1
IK TI-\E. Mf.I-IU-, 11"~ ~T

LOa~ttll. Ff&gt;..l\1~".,-

1'1/E. t-11'..1/t:.R 1-\IW

40 hours a week, with
benefits. Interested par·
ties can send resumes to
Kevin Kelly, Managing
Editor, Ohio Valley Publishing Co., 825 Third

I

'i
IT'!l ~1-\R\11\P't
I.O&amp;:i\"E.R!

51-\RIMP

Ave., Gallipolis. Ohio
45631 or kkeiiyllmy-

\ 1

dailytribune.com. No
phone calls please.

Fresh Norlh
SHRIMP
(740) 742-2563

·::--""-;;;;;;:-.

JUST WI\ITE'

Llir(lf,ufnorrrozeo, ht11tb Dill!

Help W~nted

Help Wanted

I

®

I ~:"''f&gt;4

Compensation

can

also

1

"""'"'"'===

Dump truck
•
serv1ce

IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

to re~ay you.
·
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) - You can
avo1d experiencing any ill effects in a
partnership situation by underplaying
your own prominence . Allowing your
cohOrt to feel more Important could be
one ol the smartest moves 'you can
make.
TAURUS {April 20·May 20) - Don't
allow self-doubts about your adequacy to
dominate your th inking . Whe n you have
confidence, your ta lefliS will come
throu gh like a champion.
GEMINI {May 21·June 20) - Don't be
too disappointed it a planned social
activ,ity falls through. La~y Luck has
something ta r better In mind lor you. Aide
the tide.
CANCER (J une 21·July 22)- It you get
stuck with someone who Is selfish and
demanding, don't let it get to you . Before
the day is over, you 'll be the one who
ends up gelling the most out ot what you
have shared together.
·
LEO (July 23·Aug . 22) - Don't respond
in kind when dealing with an argumentative individual. Unchallenged, this person
will talk himselt or herself Into a corner.
and you 'll be the one who ends up the

NewHomee,
. Remodeling,
Additions.
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding arid more. .

740-742·3411
.Orywall, Kitchens, Batha ·

COW and BOY

W~A.T.ITTAKES

...AND I WILL PUFF OUT
MY CHES.TAND TAU&lt; LOW

AN&gt; MOtmWIIICAU.Y.

~

TOBE AMAN.

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors. Windows.
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling,
Additions

buy

t~~ :t,;.,.
41

15
16 Curbed
51 W1ptd out•
· t7 Summar In · 11oppv
OUtllec . 55 Leta f8lty
18 Onuldt al 56 Hire
57 Trope:.!
19 Chorge R
fruita
21 Hwys.
58 Snrnp
23 Gennln
grau
20
.UCie
22
26 Recline
DOWN
27 "- Judo"
24
28~y
1 LPapetd
30 Dawn with 2 Tu shtltor 25
lheflu
3 Btcf.mouth
31 Atom
4 Modorelar 26
fragiroent
5 Locate
27
32 Tlbthe
6 OEA agenta
tllia
7 O.lry-caae 28
33Rocky
11om
29
praioCtlon
8 llllch flap
35 Pumper'.
9 RNeee', • 34
10 Before, to
36
37=
Bloke
38 Tire feature 11 Fllhlng
42
39 VOf'J, In
pola
.
. Verac~ 13 car option 43
40 Call. credn 19 Edmonton 45
un.lts
pucksllnl

a...,_

Mltlf...., 47 Calhnl:op

=··
ForcefUl

crutor

COOIIIII-.

41

::r-·

· 49 Glvt - -

Pilntt break
ringa
50 Kltchan
UplltllRem
Scurtltd
52 In the
atong
~
Bluohlng
$3

:::be

E-

Dlld

tupporta
54 Klklcw.....,
Acquiring
Slremhy
cord
WHheland

llitchers
...,.pli:Ue
Popular

cooltlt

Today's clue: L eQuals Y

" CP ' M ZABBCNLCDF PZIP YH ZIJH PA
NCFZP ASB AVO FAJHBDRHDP PA MIJH
PZH HOJCBADRHDP ." -

IOMHT IOIRM

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "This is a hee country. Folks have a nghf to send me
letters, and I have aright not to read them· · William Faulkner
.

lHAl DAILI
PUUliR

S©~4U}A-~E~S'

- - - - - Edirod

0 Rearrcnga

leners

oy

::::

CLAY A. POUAN - - - - - -

e1 r~~

fo v' l(rombled wcrd&lt; be·
!ow to form four simole word~ .

I

A L I VY N

II

t

I

DUXE E

T

I'

.....-------.
"'
E P 0 .N I "
\

~=r=~=~ =

~

"You will t'md," the

·
· philosopher lectured, .
"experience is tbe best

'.....,....;;s..o:...;;.X..;:E:..,P;,.,.,:;Er-1·1 ~~a-~-~~ ~d al1o the most
fhe chV&lt;klo quoled
filling in the mi10i"V words
I [I I L' Lb 0 b1Compleit

9 PRINT NUMBERED li
lETTERS

t

.

@)

you develop from step No. 3 beloW.

•

UNSCRAMBlE
ANSWER

fOil

•

111111111

SCRAM-LilTS ANSWiiRS-iiiO!IJ9
Manure- Berth -

Threw -

HOT WATER
. "A good time Io keep your mootb shut," admonished
• the mom, "is when you 'rc in HOT WATER."
Yonder-

ARLO &amp;.JANIS

Free hand·
outs Usually have sorim kind of stfings
attached, designed to rope us in . Thus,
when It comes to your material needs.
depend solely on •your brains and your
brawn to get what you need.
LIBRA (Sbpt. 23-0ct. 23)- From time to

~ARFIELD

time, You might tiave diHiculty adjusting

WHA1" A
SHORT
STRAW

1 Free Estlmatn

740-367-0536

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
• Prompt and Quality
Work
'Reasonable Rates
' ln ~ured

I)RIZZWELLS
:FLoQA WAHl"~ Mt ll ~~M~ .

1 AM, AS YOU

5AY, C.UR5E:C7

to what may be going on around you. But
if you remain calm, you 'll stay collected
and will easily bypass any Impediments
in your path.
,
SCORPIO (Oct. ?4-Nov. 22}- You migtit
be raced with seve ral important ma«ers,
one ot which may irk you a bit. If you're
smart. yo u'll get It out of the way first and
enjoy smooth saWing the rest of the way.
SAGITIAAIU S (Nov. 23-Dec. 21 ) - Be
as forthright as possible about promising
a friend something you would have a
hard time delivering . As the saying goes.
"The truth will set you tree ,~ so be as
honest about it as you can.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) - After
grumbling about your lot In lite, you could
end UP with egg on your face when Lady
Luck does something quite astounding
and proves how oH base you were.

SOUP TO NUTZ

::TUtKER 'flll'rl ME
·ToM$.~ "J)

~ ~It-A

. Dur Dror~-

WIIAi

lkaro

IP'Vo~A

Advertise
in this space for
$70 per month

by Luis Campos
Celebrity C"**' Cl)'ptogi!ITls are cruted from quotanons bY ramous people_pu arc1 prM1rt
Each leiter in1he ophtr starjjs lor Wiler

vi~:tor.

740-367-0544

. Please leave messa e

CELEBRITY CIPHER

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -

Local Contractor

•Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
. 740-591-8044

G

Astro.Graph

sibility that you will be given a leading
role In a group endeavor. Instead .of
th inking it an honor. )IOU mighl believ8
.you're being used; but to your surprise,
it'll l:le one of your luckiest breaks In life.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Others
will closely observe your action's, and,
although they'll see your imperfections,
the manner In which you conduct your·
self will end up e&amp;rf'ling their respecrand
admiration.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - A while
back, you did a favor for a friend, about
which you thought he or she had forgot1tm. You're likely to discOver that your pal-'
has been searching all lhis time for a way

COistructiDD

IN TODA.Y'S SOCIETY.
BOYS ARE GROWING
UP CONFUSED A.BOUT

n.· That's true, but 'this deal revolves
'around other lours:the spa~. heart ard
dub fours. Look at only the North and
East hands. South is in three no-trump.
Your partner, Wesf, leads lhe spade .
jack. Declarer takes It on the board ard
calls lor the diamond queen. After your
~ng hokls The trick, would you lead the
. spade four, hea~ four or dub four?
FirsT, count the points. Dummy has 18
and you have 1t. That leaves t 1 for
West and South. But you have already
'seen" five frqm pa~ner: lhe spade jack
(trick one) and the diamond ace (declar·.
er wool~ have taken your king if he had
that card). This means thaT South must
have the spade queen and club king·
jack.
So, neither a club shift nor a spade back
can help unless declarer has only
queen-doubleton of spades. Sooth will
drive outlhe diamond ace and eventual·
ly catch you in a hea~-club endplay. He
will take antler three spades, four dia·
monds and two clubs, or three spades,
one heart, lour diamonds and one club. ·
But surely a hea~. shift cannot be right,
away from the A·O around to dummy's
K·J·10. Problems!
Wart, though. When West geTs in with his
diamond ace, he can return a heart
through dummy, and you will take three
tricks in lhe surt for down one.
That is the lour to lead at trick three. And
if West does not return a heart when in •
wrth his diamond ace, scalp him'

By Bernice Bede Oaol

Sunsatle•

R.L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE COORDINAlOR
Pleasant Valley is currently accepting include housing on-site 11
We do driveways
desired. Please con'llict:
resumes for an Accounts Receivable 740.384·6508 to sched·
We Haul
Coordinator. Mimimum of three years ute an appointment or
Limestone· Gravel
experience in hospital ~alieni accounts, submit resumes to:
Dirt· Ag-Lime
A/R, and insurance bil ing. Three years Community Manager
mainframe system experience. Expenence c/o Sherry House
COURT OF COMMON lief oJ which pleading
740·985~4422
with Meditech and
B/AR module Wells Manor Apanments
PLEAS
MEIGS Is to foreclose the lien
preferred. Associates degree in business, 460 · S. Michigan Ave, COUNT'(, OHIO
ol plaintiff's mortgage
H&amp;H
US Bank National As· recorded upon .the lot·
secretarial science or related field Wellston, Ohio 45692
I
.
·
saclallan,
as
Truatee
Iawing
described
real
'
required.
Guttering
Mechanics
for MASTR Asset estate to wit:
Send resumes to:
Backed
'
Property
Address:
Seamless Gutters
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Service · Technician posi- Securities TrusT, 2006· 2976 Third Street SR Roofing, Siding, Gutters
c/o Human Resources
lion available tor diesel HE2 .
124, Syracuai, OH
Insured &amp; Bonded
2520 Valley Dr., Pt. Pleasant. Wl/25550
and hydraulics. Experl· c/o Wells Fargo Bank, 45779, an~ being more
. 740·653·9657
or (304) 675·6975 or apply on-line at
· once
•·
necessary. N.A.
·
particularly ~ascribed
Health/Retirement
'&amp; . Plaintiff,
In plaintiff's mortgage
www.pnlle~.!l!l
Benefits. Fax ~resume to •VS•
ricorded In Mortgage,
J&amp;L
740·446-9104
or
•·mail
Goldie
A.
Wolfe,
et
al.
Book
226, page 617, of
AA/EOE .
Construction
to LLC@CAREO.COM
Detendsnts.
this County Recorder's
·VInyl Siding
Case No.: 08CV189
Office.
Madical
Judge: Fr6d W. Crow ·The above named de• Replacement
Legal
Notice tn Suite fendant Is requjred 10
Windows
Asst./Receptionist • .
for Foreclosure of answer within twenTyneeded fo r local denlist
·Roofing
Mortgage
. eight (28) days alter
office in Pt. Pleasant.
·Decks
Edward
B.
Wolfe,
Jr.,
last publication, which
Need some knowledge
• Garages
whoso
last
known
ad·
shall
bo
published
.ol co mputers.
phones
dross Is 459 Adams once a wook lor three
•
Pole Buildings
and good customer serv- Street, Nelsonville, OH consecuthle .weeks, or
•
Room
Additions
ice skills, will tral(l for pO 45764, and the un· they might be denied a
Owner:
sition, please sei1d re known heirs, devisees, hearing In this case.
sume to : Dental Office legaTees, executors, Lerner, Sampson &amp;
James Keeaee II
3984 Indian Creek Ad
742·2332
administrators, Rothfuss
Elkview l'iv 25071.
spouses and assigns AHorneys for Plaln!IH
and the unknown P.O. Box 5480
Rollauranh
Replacement
guardians ol minor Clnclimatl, OH 45201·
IncompeTent 5480
Windows and
Sodexo Food Se!"'.lices at and/or
Rio Grande University is heirs ol Edward B. (513) 241·3100
Vinyl Siding
now taking applicatiomt Wolfe, Jr., all of whoa~ aHyemalt@lsriaw.com ·
Specialists, LTD
fo r a cook. Mus! have e)(- residences are un- (1) 28, (2) 4, 11
known
and
cannot
by
(740) 742-2563
perience. apply In person
reasonable diligence - - - - - - - at the cafeteria.
• Siding • VInyl
be ascertained, will .
Public Notice
Windows • Metal
take notice that an the - - - - - - - 16th day of December, PUBLIC NOTICE
and Shingle Roofs
2008, US Bank National The 2008 Financial Ro• llecks • Additions
Assoclatlon, aJ
port for Cheater Town•Electrical
Trustee for MASTR ship
. has
been
• Plumbing .
AISet Backed Securl· completed and subll)(t·
ties Trust, 2006·HE2 c/o ltd to the State Auditor,
• Pole Barns
'
Welts Fargo Bank, N.A. the report can be
filed its Complaint In viewed by appointment
the Common Pleas by calling 740-985Court of Meigs CounTy, 3836. Debra L. Che9a·
Ohio In Case No. ller, Fiscal Officer
08CV189,
on
the P.O. Box 46
docket of
Chester, OH 45720.
the Court, and the ob· ·(2) 11
ject and demand far re·

FIND ·
A·JOB
OR ANEW
CAREER

All pass

In the year ahead, there Is a strong pos-

with office 1'',;~,·lh!'\H&gt;'
lor Quick books pre- experienced
equipment, have reliable
!erred. iend resume '!'lith transportation, ' be de·
wage history to CLA Box pendable and like work· ·
21# 200 Main St. Pt
ing
with
the public.
Pleasant WV 25550.
Schedule has some flexland is part·lime
needing someone for
24+ hours per week.
Company offer: competi·
live salary, health benefhs, paid vacation ·and
sick le ave and 401 K.

Pass

'blr'lllrtbdoiY:
Thuiidoy,Fob. 12.2009

ANO

Tt1E NAME
1'1AKE
OF WHO ~OU
~UII.E
WANT IT
YOU~
'&gt;ENT TO,
MESS...t'oE'
AND THE
ISN'T TOO
MESSMoE
LONt'o,OK?
'(oU WAI'IT
ON THE
COOKIE!

$ 10 per lb Cash only
Pm1 i&gt;. req uired in advance
Shipments arrive every

bility

Pass

I •
3 NT

6 MaN Iaiiy
t2 Dalla up
t4 NFLer'a
honor

Author and editor Edgar Watson Howe,

RV 's.

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ~;o;;;;;;;;;;~·r--:
AVON! All Areas! To Buy Community Mgr. needed
or Sell Shirley Spears 'tor 32 unit lamlly .RO
p.roperty located in Galli·
304·675·1429
polis. Prefer prev1ous
property
management
Book keeper/accountant
experience,
preferably
needed lor local CPA
with a Aural Develop·
firm , exp. or education in
ment property. Must· be
Accounting, TaxeS and

Eut

1c.m..l
,..,_

41 Hindu title
42 Unlalcl
...........
43 Odtllab'•
CltiiO&lt;
44 CurNIIIIy
46 .lui* r.d

Who died in 1937, said, 'Aman is usual·
.IY bakl lour or five years before he knows

!··"••••••

S,,_.;..,ry ·

North

Which four would
you lead now?

New Gl:rages

Health A:ldes. Wlll provide training. II interested ""'""""""""""""""""""""
cail 740 .441 .1377 _
M...agernent /

West

Opening lead: • J

Electrical 1 Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutters
I Skiing &amp; hinting
Porch Dt!Ck•

The position is full time.

• K
•Q9 742

S.Uih
• Q8 6

Stop &amp; Compare

Room Addltlplll &amp;
Rtmodellng

knowied9e of des~top
pubtishing are sought.

•• 3 2
9 A Q9 4

.108 .3.

(740) 992·5344
Mon-Fri
8:00 am · 4:30 pm
Sat . 8:00am. 12

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

Eas~

• 76 2

'MI-112-1m

7:00am • 8:00 pm

A K 7

•A

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Hours

OHHJ9

9 K J 10
•QJI0 932

•New Homes

Home Bu1lding

Steel Frame Buildings

Phillip ·
Alder

•

Hill's Self
Storage

Pomeroy, Ohio
Commerdal
• Residential
• Free Estimates
(740) 992-5009

repa ir.

Experienced legal secre-..

an d

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

~u&lt;lr

U~\Wi

w• I ftMi.V f\T•
di•Nor IT
&lt;hurt~.

... Mr'l. i.IJCCI '"Ide 8

irate••··

di~~ +neT

MbodY . il&lt;td.

M•,.

said I. had 1b
eaT IT bvT I hio lr
I" m~ Mp!&lt;ln Snd
-.costrl m~oeif to
Go To the ~en.rocM
wkarto 1 - rid of i r

The l vccas' bil.oLi·
1"101.1.1 SWIMS W/11-f
11-oe ff•l-fto .

..,,!~

~;;___,~,~-':;{J-~
..

•

I

· ---- - ----·~ ·

..·--

~

�Pqe B6 •

The Daily Serd:i:i d

Reds looking for new lea~ers in 2009
CINCINNATI (AP) The fifth starter's spot and
the left fielder's job aren't
the only things up in the air
as the Cincinnati Reds ~et
ready to start spring traming. They're also looking
for leaders.
The trades that cut ties
with outfielders Ken Griffey
Jr. and Adam Dunn last season left the franchise at one
of those pivotal moments.
·
·10 a
For the fi1rst time
I
decade. there's no ac1mow· the c1ubed ged Ieader m
house.
A team brimming with
youngsters _ Jay Bruce,
Joe;Y Votto, Johnny . Cueto
- IS going to have to figure
out who's willing to step up

Wednesd•y, February n, ZOOCJ

www.mydailysentinel.com

and try to lead the franchise
out of its rut of eight straight
losing seasons.
Dunn and Griffey got the
job by default as the years
went along and the franchise discarded it~ other veterans. Oriffey amved before
the 2000 season. but was
never comfortable being put
in a leader's role. Dunn
came up to the majors in
·
200 I and has an easygom$
persona I'1ty tha 1 rnade I t
aw k ward •oor hi m to step
•oorw ard ·
Both are in the group of
71 free agents still looking
for jobs as teams prepare to
open camps this week, but
the Reds have shown no
interest in bringing either of

•

.

Ohio Pr:p Not;book

Middletown s Bill Edwards
hits 1 000 c•oreer porn
• ts

them back .
.
So. who m1ght become
th~ next face of the franch1se?
The 21-year-old Bruce
'
~
and the 25-year-old V~tto
could eventually g~w. mt.~ Bv THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 2007 stale title game win.
the role. Brandon Ph1ll:Js 1s
The Bombers last beat
27 and has the credenh s as
With a steal, a full-length . Moeller Feb. 17, 2006.
a Gold Glove second base- drive
and
a
dunk,
"It's pure happenstance,"
man , but hasn't fully
h C 1K
I o f Ieader Middletown senior Bill Moeller
emb raeed .the roe
'S coac
. X . at: remer
t
Edwards became one of said. • t. IS a great proso ar.
•
.
Oh'
Th •
h d th ·
The res t of the startmg nine players in the
10 gram.
ey ve a
e1r
1·m~ud IS
· e1'th er too qm_
'et school's history to score runs in this series. To
(th1r . baseman Edwm 1,000 career points·,J·oining sweep them this year took
Encarnacion , shortstop Alex NBA great Jerry lucas and a great effort by our kids."
Gonzalez) or . too new former NFL receiver CJl$ . JUST THE PARENTS:
(catcher Ramon Hernandez, Carter in the group .
School officials held talks
center
fielder
Willy
Edwards' milestone came Monday about re~uming a
Tavera~) to be front-and- Friday just as the school game between Aiken and
center 10 the clubhouse.
announced. it would retire Dayton Dunbar that was
·
d d af
f' h
the 68-year-old lucas' No . . sus pen e
ter a lg t
1J jersey later this month. broke out between fans and
No one has worn the num- junior varsity players .
ber since Lucas' final game Aiken led Dunbar 37-34 at
majority vote in the last
Susan
Garrigan-Piela, five decades ago, but halftime' of the Jan . 3
weekend of January. By hit- president of the Columbia school officials recently game. Officials from both
ting every sport - boys and.· Football Booster Club near realized there's never been schools were diScussing
fi · h h.
girls - the cuts also avoid Albany, complained that stu- a retirement ceremony.
whether to m1s t e game
violating any provisions of dents in New York already
Before leaving for Ohio Tuesday.
the 1972 fed~ral.Ti~e I,X la:ov play fewer games than their State,
lucas
led
"It's not set in stone, but
to prevent discnmmallon 10 counterparts· in states like
Middletown
to
state
titles
tentatively
the agreement
education spending based on Texas. And she is concerned
gender.
about cuts to programs that in 1956 and 1957 and an was to play," Aiken athletic
76-game
win director Steve Rossi said
"losing one game in a b~- allow students to fill their overall
streak. He'll be back Feb. Monday.
ketball season when you re time productively.
Originally, the resumpplaying 18 or 20 games,
"A lot of people say sports 13 when the school retires
that's not the end of the aren't needed," she said, ''but the number and the tion game was to 'be open
world," said Pat · Pizzarelli, the real fact is, what are you Edwards-led Middies take to the public~ with no
the president of the associa- . going to do with all those on Hamilton.
admission charge; But the
lion. "And if you do that kids with nothing to do?''
Edwards got to 1,000 - latest plan was to allow just
across the board, y~u're
Gary VanDerzee, football actually 1,002 - during parents of varsity players
goina to get. some savmgs. coach
for
Ravena- the school's 62-30 victory and school administrators
But 1f you don't do that, you Coeymans-Selkirk
High over Colerain, a win that to attend.
School near Albany, said the improved· Middletown to
can lose an ~ntire sport."
DOUBLE JEOPARDY:
The cost savings might association failed to exhaust 14-1 overall and 10-0 in Dover's Corey Lisowski
seem small - a referee here, every option before turning
Greater
Miami hit not qne, but two big
a bus trip there - but they some Fnday night lights out. the
· Another shots in an East Central
add up. A high school umpire He said instead of "putting Conference.
Middie
senior,
Allen Ohio Le~ue showdown
in New York averages $83 a budgetary problems on the
game, without travel retm- backs of the kids," schools Roberts, could join the against Cambridge. He
bursement, .said association could defer purchases of uni- elite group this season. As !hade·· a 3-pointer with 2
executive drrector Nma Van forms, balls and other equip- · of last week, he had 917 seconds left in regulation
Erk. Schools need two ment.
points.
· · to force overtime and: then
umpires a game. so two
"I
was
disappointed
CINCY STREAK: St. drove for a layup with 2
fewer home games saves a because it's less games we Xavier has reached the seconds left in the first
district $332.
get to play;' said Ravena state's Division· I tourna- overtime to force a second
Van Erk estimates that sophomore
Andrew ment twice over the last extra period. Dover ended
schools statewide will save Brozowski, who will play three years. But what they up winning, 56-53.
more than $3 million in offi- varsity for VanDerzee next haven't done is beat
PR 0 DU CTI 0 N
ciating costs alone. Add to year. "And all the seniors. I Cincinnati Moeller.
LINES: Kris Tibbs scored
that bus trips, chaperones.and was thinking, they always
The . Crusaders' domi- 42 points - going 12-'tlfscorekeepers and the savmgs. want to play another "arne,
nance
continued Friday 17 from inside the arc and
approach $10 million among
"'
as
776 schools statewide, she and now they have less with a 54-48 win _: 3-of-6 behind it chance to play."
Moeller's
seventh
straight
Symmes
Valley
beat
Green
d
sai . ·
VanDerzee said schools in
Some parents support the the area could vote to set win over its Greater 64-53.
Catholic League South
3's COMPANY: Mentor
restrained, universal cuts
rather than the more drastic longer s.e~sons . 1oca11 Y· ' rival, including both meet- made 18 of 35 3-point
option of wiping out whole However, It s poss1ble ~ose ings this-season. The streak shots in its 91-49 win over
teams.
~e~s ~ould be declared mel- also includes Moeller's rival
Mentor
Lake
''I'd hate to see any sport 1g1ble If they _play more than
eliminated. !think it's a bet- . the state maximum.
ter answer," said Pete Cure,
_VanDerzee srud the move
who has two daughters and a wtll put New York ~hletes at
son playing sports for dtsadvantage when 11 comes
Guilderland High School to college recruttmg, becau~e
nearAlbany.
students m other states Will
Critics concede the econo- have pla~ed more games
my is tough, but they focus over the1r htgh school
on the )J?licy's cost to kids - careers.
.
even tt's a few basketball
Shorter season I?roponents
games.
. stress the action. 1~ f&lt;?r two
"Those two or three games y_ear~. If ec~nom1c md1cators
are for us as a team to build nse 10 that llme ,_so could the
team chemistry, and to figure number of h1gh school
out what's going to work and games.
w~at's not going to work"
:·N~. one wants tocut,;mysa1d Wtll Reutemann, a thmg, P1zzarelh sa1d. You
senior on the La Salle never want to have kids play
Institute basketball team in one less ~arne, it's always
Troy, N.Y.
one more.'
·

Prep sports schedules shaved to save money
ALBANY. N.Y. (AP) Here's a new play call co'urtesy of the recess1on: shorter
seasons for high school athletes.
· The group that ove~s
·public high school athlellcs
10 New York state recently.
approved
shaved-down
~hedules next school year as
a cost-cutting measure, the
latest to take the step nationwide.
Cuts vary by sport in New
York: Baseball' teams that
play 24 regular-season games
will .go to 20, football teams
will go from 10 games to 9 or
B. depending on regional
officials.
The New York State Public
High
School
Athletic
Association says the shorter
schedules allow schools to
cut budgets without cutting
programs. Critics - includmg coaches an~ kids . claim the new pohcy unfrurly
targets student athletes.
. "Pick up your gear after
eight? That's terrible," said
Cfarence High School varsity
football coach Tom Goddard.
"That's a terrible thing to do
to the kids."
Ttimming games to save
JliOney is not a new idea. A
school
district
outside
Cleveland on Monday was to
discuss drophing all .sports.
Oklahoma sc ools shortened
seasons early in this decade
to save money.
Mississippi last year voted
to cut schedules by 10 percent _ . except for the
beloved moneymaker, football. Schools in Idaho are
considering a reduction,
though officials there noted
. there is some opposition.
And while a season-reducing
·proposal was rejected in
Mame last month , officials
$et rules that will result in
fewer teams qualifying for
playoffs .
New York athletic officials
say incremental cuts to all
programs will save sports
with fewer participants, like
gymnastics and bowling ,
from the budget knife, as
well as modified sports programs for seventh- and
eighth-graders.
The measure passed by a

·

Catholic,
with
Cole
Krizancic (31 points) canning 7-of-11 and Jaron
Crowe (22 points) 6-of-10.
Crowe an·d Krizancic have
ht't 56 and 47 3-pointers,·
respectively·, this season
· nals ( 11-4).
~or the Caro 1
,,
Mentor's
18 3-pointers
were one off the school
record.
Sycamore
Mohawk made
J-pointers in a
_ 15win over
79 47 h C
Fremont St. Josep · entra1
Catholic. Drew Trusty had
27 points on nine 3 's and
teammate Keith . Zeigler
l'
had 29 points. ... tma
Bath set a girls state record
by making 241 3-pointers
last season. But LibertyBenton made II "Of-13 3pointers Saturday as the
Eagles stunned the unbeaten Wildcats, 63-58 .
TRIPLE DOUBLE
THE
HARD
WAY:
Mariemont senior forward
Scott Herkamp pulled off
an unusual triple-double in
a loss to Finneytown last
week. Herkamp, a team
captain, scored 10 points,
grabbed 10 rebounds and
record.,:d 10 steals·.
MAGIC
NUMBER:
Barberton, playing its
JOOth season, is 14-1, the
42nd straight winning season for the Magics.
MORE 1,000-POINT
CLUBBERS:
Carlisle
senior
Kyle
England
became the fifth player in
school history to ·score
1,000 career · points when •
the school beat Tri-County
North on Friday. England
now has 1,006 points .
Earlier
this
season,
England
became
the
school's all-time leading
rebounder.
· .G ilead
Christian's 5-10 junior ceoter Kendra Votaw went
over 1,000 points for her
career in a 66-41 win over
Gahanna Christian · last
week.
Middletown
Fenwick senior Sarah
Pearce scored her I ,OOOth
point in a Feb. 2 win over
Monroe.

1:30 • 4:00 P.M.

To Introduce Our New

Accelerated Care Plus
'

• REFRESHMENTS
• FREE PROMOTIONAL (TEMS

Maximum tsnn d60 momns and minimum new loan tMnOUnt Ill SMOO.OO avtlllable Will credK apprO'IIII.
(Example: Amount ftnaiiCid SMOO.OO at 7.75% • eo niOIIIIII)' paymero Ill S103.99, Loan PlllCtmi'IQ lee
lll$1159.00 ·.9.01l%A.P.R.) A.P.R. •Annual Port:al1taQB Rats. RATE IS SUBJECTTO CHANGE

OW OHIO VALLEY BANK.

•

1-800-468-6682
www.ovbc.com

A Representative from Accelerated Care Plus will be on
hand to explain how the program can assist those
needing therapy and other day to day ailments

·Receive a FREE .
$10 Gas Card with tour ofthe facility

Rocksprings
REHABILITATION CENTER
36759 Rocksprings Rd. Pomeroy, OH • 992·6606

""'mbor
FlllC

•
Middlepo~
;;o t I'\ 1:-. • \ill. .1 ~ - '\t1 .

three, As

t.),;

•
Printed 011 1110%

• Pomeroy, Ohio

llll ' [{SII \).II I:Kl \I{\ t c&gt;. C'lltHI

R..,y&lt;led NowspriDt

-tl)

.

""" '""' "'"

•

SPORTS
:~

High school baskelball
Sction. See Page BI

Stonn causes.havoc.in area
Bv BETH SERGENT

pared to 1,021 in Gallia
County, 2.218 in Athens
County and 6,1 10 . in
POMEROY - Yesterday Franklin County.
evening as the sky grew
The Racine and Bashan
dark and the winds began to Fire Departments were
blow, the trees and power called out to McKenzie
lines began to fall.
Ridge Road where a car was
As of 7 p.m. yesterday, caught in power lines with a
American Electric Power patient still inside. The car
Ohio was reporting 856 cus- was safely removed from
tomers in Meigs County the power lines. No word on
were without pow~r com-. damages or inju£\es.
BSERGENTOUY!lALYSENTINELCOM

'the Chester Volunteer Lincoln Hill and the Flood
Fire Department was called Road keeping the Pomeroy
out to 47725 Scout Camp .Police
and
Street
Road where the wind had Departments busy. A tree .
pulled power lines from a was also reportedly caught
home. causing .them to in power lines on County
surge ..No word on damages Road 7A.
or injuries.
In Middleport stop signs
In
Pomeroy.
Union were reportedly blown
Avenue was closed due to down as were telephone ,
power, lines falling behind cable and power lines near
220 Union Avenue. Downed Pearl and .Ash Streets.
trees were also reported on
A tree · also feel onto a

power line near the intersection of Main Street and
Tyree Boulevard in Racine,
pulling electrical lines down
from the transformer.
In
Syrncuse.
the
Syracuse Volunteer Fire
Department was called to
remove a tree down on Roy
Jone s Road.
The story on damage
done by the storm was still
developing at press time .

Proposed
income tax
•
mcrease
Affects those who
work, live in Pomeroy
BY

BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM ·

OBITUARIES
..Page AS
,• Earl 'Dick' DeWees, 61
• Charlotte Ertewine, 78

INSIDE·

• Performing Saturday.
See Page A2
• VFW Post 9926
.: to award Scholarships.
.See Page A3
·• Century Aluminum:
· Closing smelter to cost
$30M. See Page AS

WEATIIER

In Our Therapy Department
andour.New

Director of Nursing
.
MissyRapp

7.75%
9.08o/o
A.P.R. ·
Interest Rate

Accident ogures

·

TUESDAY,
FEBRUARY 17, Z009

Cons.o lidate those
bills with help
fromOVB!

'

.

'Roses are dead, Violet is
too' set for local stage, A2

POMEROY
On
Tuesday it was incorrectly
reported the one-quarter of
a percent increase on the
Pomeroy income tax proposed on the 'May ballot
will affect only those working in Pomeroy.
The village already has a
one-percent income tax on
those both working and living in Pomeroy who earn
income, not just those whO
Work in Pomeroy. Therefore,
if the increase passes, it will
continue to be paid by those
both working and living in
Pomeroy who earn income.
The tax is normally handled
through payl'(lll deductions .
The Daily Sentinel apologizes for the error.
This week Pomeroy
Beth Sergantlphoto Village Counci 1 voted to
Drivers will notice the speed limit in sections of downtown Pomeroy has officially_changed to 25 mph from here, near H&amp;R place the · one-quarter of a
percent increase on the balBlock oh East Main Street, to the corporation limit with Middleport.
lot which would raise the
total income tax paid by
voters to one and one-quarter percent of their income.
Mayor John Musser said
five changes in the village's those on a fixed income will
speed limit within a 1.8 mile not be affected · by the
area. The speed limits alter- increase . Those who have
enforced until the speed ·limit has now dropped to 25 nated between 25 and 35
Bv BETH SERGENT
Please see Increase, AS
BSERGEI'ITOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
limit signs were posted, inph beginning near H&amp;R mph through certain areas
,.
lowering the speed limit to Block on East Main Street of downtown Pomeroy .
Proffitt also cited what he
POMEROY - Though 25 miles per hour through to the corporation Iimit.with
the ordinance technically sections of downtown · Middleport . The speed limit called an increase in the
.
went into effect on Nov. l, Pomeroy.
reniains 35 mph from the number of auto accidents in
I
the new speed limit signs
In aildition to lowering corporation limit near Water the expanded downtown
dido 't go up until this week the speed limit in sections Works Park to near H&amp;R area. including areas near
in Pomeroy, officially alert- of downtown, the ordinance Block on East Main Street.
Rivers1de
Marathon,
ing drivers to slow down.
Exxon,
also established a new
Part of what precipiiated Pomeroy
Pomeroy Chief of Police downtown business district the change in the speed McDonalds on West Main
Mark E. Proffitt said the where the new speed limit limit, according to Proffitt, Street and Wendy's on East
ordinance would not be will be enforced. The speed is there were not one but Main Street.

Speed officially lowers in Pomeroy

Middleport
.
reviews
emergency
response for
improvement
.

Merchants
plan year
activities

Rockfall

Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@ MYDAILYSENTINEL. COM

MIDDLEPORT - Two
weeks after the Village of
Middleport was crippled by
the late-January ice and
snow storm. the mayor and
council are considering bet. Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH
C.tella on Page A~
ter ways to respond to sucl1
HOEFLICHCMYDAILVSENTINEL.COM
an emergency. ·
At Monday evening's
POMEROY - Activities
of
regular
meeting
and . programs along with
Middleport
Village
projects and improvements
Council, Mavor Michael
2 SECilONS - 12 PAGES
for 2009 were discussed at
Gerlach discussed some of
Tuesday 's meeting of the
the problems residents and
Annie's Mailbox
Pomeroy
Merch-ants·
the village government
Association.
Calendars
expe-rienced during the
.Pomeroy Mayor John
emergenc'y, and potential
Musser reported on work
Classifieds
remedies for the next big
to be done in the Court
storm and power outage.
Comics
Street mini-park this spring
,
The village was com'
with a $1.000 grant from
pletely
without electricity
Editorials
A4 the Ohio Department of
for two days. including at
Obituaries '
As Natural Resources . The
the village hall. Gerlach
funds are expected to- be
the village must con,
said
Places to go
released
in
May.
sider
purchasing a gas-oper'
be
He
said
the
money
will
ated generator, so essential
B Section
Sports
used · to improve electrical
equipment can continue to
We11-tN!r
operate during a weather
.A3 service, trim and remove
some trees, and if the mol\ey
emergency.
© •009 Ohio Valley Publlohlllll Co. holds out · construct a stage
He said the village will
for use by local performers.
seek
a grant to purchase a
Brian J. Reed/photo
Bill Quickel, new president,
A rock falling from the high cliff behind the county courthouse and sheriff's department generator similar to that at
talked about conversations
the firehouse. so the police.
damaged a sheriff's cruiser early Wednesday. Sheriff Robert Beegle, pictured, said the car
1 PINie IH Merchants, AS sustained major damage to the front end and windshield .
PIHse SH Response, AS

INDEX

Bs

�</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="13038">
            <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="13037">
              <text>February 11, 2009</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3924">
      <name>buckner</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
