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                  <text>Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentinel.com

Wednesday, April29, 2009

Baseball
from PageBl

}

' ' '

·'

bases. In addition eight of
the nine starters on each
team collected at least one
base hit in the outing with
the Eagles having four batters eKperiencing a multiple
hit game while Wahama had
three .
Garrett Underwood led
the' White Falcons offensively with a pair of singles
and his first home run of
the spring with William
Zuspan swatting a single
and a double and Terry
Henry adding a couple of
singles in a 12 hit WHS
attack. Anthony
Bond
AP phOto
doubled home a pair or
Cleveland fndians' Mark DeRosa, left to right, is congratu·
Falcon base runners while
lated by Travis Hafner after scoring oil a error by Boston
Brice Clark brought in two
Red Sox pitcher Javier Lopez in the ninth Inning of a base·
more Bend Area runners
ball game, Tuesday in Cleveland. Victor Martinez.and Grady
with a single. Jerry
Berkley, Tyler Kitchen and
~izemore, right, celebrate also. The Indians won 9_.8.
..
Jacob Roach also added a
single each in the White
Falcon triumph .
Eastern totaled an amazing 15 hits in the loss with
a trio of Eagle diamond
players pounding out three
CLEVELAND (AP) - Javier Lopez took his eyes off
hits apiece. Derek Griffin,
the ball for an instant - and Boston's 11-game win·
Titus Pierce and Zack
ning streak was over.
·
·
.
Hendricks all had a single
Mark DeRosa had four hits and scored from second
and a double for the Meigs Meigs players Corey Hutton (11) and Ryan Jeffe.rs, right, congratulate
(16) after base on Lopez's error with two outs in the ninth inning
County
team with
Tylera scoring a run in the.first inmng
. liues day n1g
· ht aga1nst AI exan der 1n Flocks~1 rings.
as the Cleveland Indians rallied to beat the Red Sox 9.
Hendnx coming
up with
8 on Tuesday night. .
"
·.
. . .
. ..
pair.
o'f singles. Nick chasing home two more
WAHAMA 9, EASTERN a
field wall to give Alexander
"It's a play a pitcher .makes a thousand times m hts
Brannon.
Benedum. Falcon tallies with a two Wahama 130 032 0 _ 9122 a supposed three-run c~sh- . career," Lopez (0-2) Sllid of covering fir~ I base Of a~
Buckley and · Conpery base hit. lhe Bend Area Easlern 201 302 o -a ts 1 · ion. · Lawson, however, infield grounder. "I just took my eyes off tt. The~e s no
rounded out the huge team scored what would .
failed to touch home plate • real excuse for it. It's a tough way to break a wmnmg
· mg
· ht .or
, Eas t ern become the game winning
WP - Berkley: LP - Buckley.
offensJVe
on his sIam and retumed to streak."
.
with a single each.
.
runs in the sixth with a sinSPARTANS RALLY PAST
the dugout, which prompted • DeRosa, who entered the. game in a 2-for~2Z slump,
The win was the second gle by Underwood ·and four
MEIGS
Lawson to be called out.
began toe ninth ~ith a bloop sing I~. After.~ sacrifice
in a row for the Wahama walks producing two addiIn the end, the slam ended and a strikeout, f1rs1 baseman Kevm Youk1hs made a
and was the West Viqlinia tiona) scores and a 9-6
ROCKSPRINGS
up being a three.RBI hit and backhanded stop of Asdrubal Cabrera's grounder and
based teams 13th wm m tiS White Falcon lead.
Meigs baseball started out the third out of the inning. flipped to Lopez, who dropped it as he got to first base
last 14 games as the White
Eastern came back to
Alexander still held a 10-8 while DeRosa scored.
h
Falcons. moved their season 1
· 1 with a bang Tuesday night, d
~. th
h· h
c ose t e gap to a smg.e but visiting· A,leKandl!r held e ge a er e SIX , w 1.c
''The middle infielders 'fere playing deep, so I got a
record to 14-2 on the year. tally at 9-8 w1th two runs m the Marauders mostly in proved to be e final out- good secondary lead and just .started running," DeRosa
Eastern, after coming off a its half of the sixth with check after the first inning come. Meigs alsQ left the said. "Then it was just trusting Joel (Skinner, the third,
big TVC conference win Buckley driving in a pair
bases loaded in the bottom base coach). He said 'Keep going.' I did:'
.
over Federal Hocking on with a clutch two out hit. en route to claiming a lO-s· of the seventh .
.
Youkilis
didn't
blam·
e
the
left-bander.
Monday, falls to 12-5 . on
Eagles threatened decision during a Tri-Valley
Cia. y Bolin and Corey
"We didn 't Jose the game on that play," Youkilis said.
'Conference
Ohio
Division
h
t e season. .
again in the seventh as
Hutton Jed the hosts with ''We had a ton of opportunities. We left people on
The game see-sawed Connery J'ed ·off the frame match up in Meigs County.
two hits apiece, followed by base."
·
from the opening pitch with a single and moved to
The Marauders ( 8-8• 5•5 Justin Cotterill, Caleb
Boston stranded II runners.
with WHS jumping out to a · second on a successful sac- .· TVC Ohio) produced eight Davis; Cameron Bolin and
Cleveland
was 1 of 15 with runners in scoring posi1-0 advantage in the first ··f·
b
b H d · k runs and eight hits in the · 1' 1 'th
•
h.
n 1ce unt y en nc s setback, with,seven of each
ay or wt one sa.ety eac . tion a~d !.eft 1.2 men on base, but wo.ri for only the sec- .
frame only to have East.ern but Brennen lined out to
Meigs also had three errors "ond time m tts last 11 games ·agamst the Red Sox
1
score two times in the bot- Zuspan at short who threw: 'of those coming in the first in the setback.
·
including
Boston
sweeping
tbe
final
tHree
games
of
the
tom half of the inning.
to second to complete the inning - which helped ihe
The Spartans had eight
.
r
. .
7
5
run
second,
high'
inning
ending
double
play.
ho~ts
·jump
out
to
a
different
players produce at 2007 ALCS.
A three
•
J(,etrY..Wood
(1-1
),
worked
a
sha~y ninth, but ~arned ·
lighted by Underwood's
Jerry Berkley went the advantage after one come · least one hit, with Malone
iwo-run , round .tripper, put distance on the mound to plete :
leading the way . with two his firstAL win. The right,hander gave ~p two smgles, ·
4
5
Wahama in front by a 4-2 pick up the pitching win for
But · the Spartans ( hits. Alexander did commit · but got Jacoby Ellsbury to liile out to second with run'
ners on first and third an&lt;l two outs.
·
margin before the Eagles Wahama. Berkley gave up TVC Ohio) kept the five errors in the triumph.
was
a
great
team
win,"
said
Wood,
signed
as
~
"This
battled back to regain the · eight runs. six earned, on Marauders at bay for the
Colton Stewart took the ·
lead with a single.-un in the 15 hits with siK strikeouts rest of the night. allowing Joss for . Meigs, working free agent in December. "We were down early, came
third and three more in the and one walk. Buckley onlya hit in the third and an . · three innings of relief for back to tie it and the bullpen did a gteat job. I wasn't
fourth as Pierce, Griffin was tagged with the loss unearned ru'\ in the ~ourt~. starter Heath Dettwiller. · ~~~~ssive enough when I came in, but got out of it ·
and HendriK all belted dou- after working five innings AHS also scored twJce 10 , Lawson - outside of the
· · t he Eastern aII owmg
· seven runs, f'tve the fourth to make it an 8-7 game-winning hit - also . DeRosa said: "It was .good to Kerry a win after last
bles to tgmte
.
.
. ·
rally and a 6-4 advantage earned, on II hits with two contest through four com- picked up the win in relief . night."
Wood
gave
up
a
three-run
homer
to
Jason
·
B
ay
m
the
going into the home strikeouts ands one ·free plete.
of starter Doughty.
ninth
inning
of
a
scoreless
.game
on
Monday
as
the
Red
stretch.
pass. Tealgori finished up
Then - in a peculiar
Sox won 3-l.
·
· Wahama came charging on the hill for the Eagles twist - the guests had the
AL.
E
XANDER
10, MEIGS 8
Boston shortstop Julio Lugo, in his. first game since
back once again to gain the ~oing two innings and giv- bases loaded with two outs
July,
broke a 7-7 tie wi\h an RBI single in the seventh.
·
th
tng
·up
two
runs
on
one
hit
in
the
sixth
·
when
Lawson
Ale•ander
500
2o3
o
10
9
5
upper han d at 7-6 m. e
d 1.
d b' d .11 .
Melga
700 ioo o - BB3
DeRosa
tied it at 8 in the bottom half with his fourth
fifth with Clark delivering with a . strikeout and five
e 1vere
tg, n mg a
r
.
·
home·
an RBI single and Bond walks.
grand slam over the left WP- Lawlon: LP- Stewart.
Lugo, activated on Monday, had not pla~ed since .
July 11 , wheh he strained .his left quadnceps and
· had an RBI. Amy Noe also Meigs.
. missed the rest of the season·. He hurt )lis right knee on
WP- Turley; LP- Riggs.
performed well with 2
The Lady Rockets (5-2 March 13 in an exhibition game, had arthroscopic
•
RBI's of her own.
· TVC Ohio) had only three surgery, and began this.season on the disabled list.
BLUE ANGELS TOPPLE
Lugo was replaced by NiCk Green to start the eighth.
fromPageBl
The two Lady Dragons hits in the setback, which
· FAIRLAND
Manager
Terry Francona said Lugo told him his knee
scoring for Fairland were came from Chelsie Folden,
had
stiffened
up in the cold, drizzly weather.
Sashe Burcham and Amber Breanna Hall and Brittni
Mason County.
GALLIPOLIS
The
teams
combined
for 14 runs and 17 hits in the
Fairland's Keri Hall. WHS also committed
The Lady Eagles ( 10-3) Heaven smiled down on Bias.
first three innings, which took I hour, 55 minutes.
musto;:red' only five hits in the Blue Angels Tuesday Pinkerman also was noted' two errors in the contest, Included were five walks, three sacrifice flies, two hit
has
having
an
RBI
in
the
compared to only one misthe triumph while commit- night as the ladies of Gallia
conte$1.
cue by the guests.
· batters and a throwing error by Red Sox third basem.an
ting two errors, while the Academy defeated visiting
Continuing on their sucBailey was the winning Mike Lowell. There .were 193 pitches and an Indians
Lady Falcons (8·13) pro- Fairland High School 8-2.
official said eight dozen baseballs were used before the
duced only three safeties · The first inning as well cessful season, Gallia pitcher of record for Meigs, fourth inning. . .
·
.·
·
·
Academy
looks
forward
to
going seven innings and
while also committing three as the 'secom:l. were stundYoukilis'
two-run
double
capped
a
four-run
second
as .
next
contest alloY&lt;ing only two walks
errors~
.
·
stills. Neither team was. their
Boston
built
il
S-1
lead
against
starter
Anthony
Rey~s.
EH.S stormed out to a. 2-0 able to cross homeplate Wednesday in Jackson , while fanning eight. arittni . After Cleveland cut it t.o 5-3, the Red SoK tacked on
Hall took the loss for two runs in the third, both charged to Reyes .
edge after a half-inning, but with the Lady Dragons and starting at 5 ~.m.
WellstOn.
Wahama countered with a the Blue Angels holding
GALLIPOLIS.6, FAIRLAND 2
The Indians iied it at 7 in the third off Brad Penny.
Against
visiting Ben
.run.in the first to make it a each other at zero apiece.
Francisco's three-run homer on a. 3•2 pi tell capped
·2-1 contest after .one com- This trend was broken in Fairland ooo 200 o - 2 s"
Nelsonville-York
on a four-run
inning.
Gallipolis 004 200 X - 6 B 2
Monday, MHS fell behind
plete.
the third.
Reyes gave up nine hits and seven runs over two
The score remained that
Gallia Academy brought WP - Noo: LP __: ,Witl
1-0 after one complete, but innings. Penny allowed seven hits and four runs over 2
way until the fifth, wh.en the heat ·on a cloudy night,
retaliated with three runs in 2-3 innings.
·
LADY MARAUDERS TAKE
Eastern plated a run for a 3- brining in four runs to issue
the third·to take· a 3-1 edge
Penny's
ERA
went
up
to
8.66,
but the Red Sox have
1. edge through five full a blow. that ihe ladies of
TWO
after three full frames. scored 38 runs in his four starts, winning three.
frames. Soth tellms added a Fairland could not recover
NYHS closed the deficit to
Notes: The 4-hour, 19-minute game was the lorige~t
run in the sixth to make 4·2, from.
ROCKSPRINGS
3-2 after scoring a run in nine-inning contest at Progressive Field since the b~ll·
· then the Lady. Eagles plated
Running in home for the Meigs softball maintained · the fourth, but never came park opened in 1994 .... DeRosa went 4.-for-5. lt was
a .final score m the seventh Angels.were Alii Saunders, its lead on the rest of the closer the rest of the way.
his IOth career game of four or more . hits. ... The
to w~ap up the three-run Kimber Davis, Courtney Tri-Valley Corference Ohio : . MHS bad six hits in the Indians
are the only team in the majors without a triple.
dects!On.
·
Shriver
and
Mattie Division after posting a pair decision, led by Micki · ... Red Sox RH.P Daisuke Matsuzaka, on the DL with a
. Sami &lt;;ummins .led ·the Lanha~.
of league victories over Barnes with "two safeties. sore shoulder since April 15, threw in the batting cage
guests wtth two hits .• fol- . The Lady Dragons were host Wellston and visiting· Smith,
Elliott,
Meri Tuesday and is eKpected to have a l;mllpen session
lowed by Haylee Gtlhan, able to knock in two in the Nelsonville-York
by VanMeter and Emalee Wednesday.
Brenna ~olter and K~sey fourth inning, but t~e Blue respective scores of 6-1 and ·Glass also had a hit each in
Turley ~~~th one safety each. Angels matched their two 3-2:
the triumph.
Cummms, Holter and runs, setting the running
The Lady Marauders (9Hailey Ebersbach was the
Cass1e Randolph also added total at 6-2. The two addi- 4, 8-1 TVC Ohio) took a winning pitcher of record,
~ RBI apiece to the wm- tiona! runs came in from one-game lead on three- allowing two runs, two hits
rung
cause.
Alex
Wood. paced the . All't Saun ders sen t Lanham time defending champion · and two . walks over four
'hosts .with. two hits, while home on a smgle. Lanham Wellston on Saturday, scor- innings while striking out
Frldav. Mav1. 2008
Taylor Hysell had the other was then. sent h~me . by ing five runs in the top of six. Bailey picked up the
.Racl•l h81'1 FrldaV Nllhll
the seventh to break free save. striking out one over
safety in the setback.
Dav~s, agam b~ a smgle.
Open 4:3/) p.m. • Hot'Lapa 1 p.m. ·· Rfc/ng 8 p.m.
from
a
one-all
tie
for
the
three
innings
in
the
circle,
Turley was the winning
W1th those fmal runs the
five-run
triumph
.
pitcher· of record, allowing lad1es of Galha Academy
-Late ModeiS-$1,500 to wtn, '$115to mrt
MEIGS 6, WELLSTON 1
MHS knockec[ out eight
.four walks over · seve~ ~ecure? the1r lead by hold410 SprlntS-$1,1500 to wtn, $200 to 111rt
100 ooo s - sa 1
innings while striking out mg Fa1rland from any more hits in the decision, with Meigs
AMRA Modllllldl, PUA! Stockl, F011r Cyll-, Mlni·W~
six. Kylie Riggs took the adv.ances m the neJlt three Taylor Ellioll .leading the WeiiS1on 010 ooo o - 1 3 2
lacln• Frldar. Mav 8 &amp; . ., 111
Joss for Wahama, allowing mntngs- keepmg the fmal way with three hits . Kelsey wP-Balley:LI"- Han.
R~~g~~lfr Racing Ill C'l
II
Shuler was neJlt with two
seven walks over seven score at 6-2.
Regular
General
AdmiAion
$15
MEIGS 3, NELS·YORK 2
frames while fanning nine .
Standout players for. the safeties, followed by Tricia
Sr. Citizens $12 wiG olden Buckeye Card
Blue Angels Tuesday mght Smith, Shellie Bailey and Neis·York 100 · 100 o - 2 2 3
Kldt 12.Undet Free • Pita $30
EASTERN 5, WAHAMA 2
were Saunders who nad ·an Nicole Wise with one hit Meigs
003 000 ' ~ 3 6 1
Clltck Our Wtbslle
ea-n 200 011 1 _ 55 2 RBI, Lanham who had a each. Elliott also had a WP- Ebersbach; LP- Marlin:'Swahama
100 001 o - 2 ~a
triple, and Davis who also team-best two RBls for Bailey.

Indians end Boston's
11-game winning streak

The

Softball

•

Lady Marauders
cliitch lVC title, Bt

Ohio Valley Proud

.

In$ide Today's Sentinel

•
Prln~oniOO% ~

Recycled NeWiprlnt ~. .

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.)fl ( 1 :'\ I"'J. \

SPORTS

ol. ., H. ,

4,. :!li~

•

.
.
BY.BRIAN J; REJ!D

· • Local Roundup.
SeefageBl

\ 1'1&lt;11 :p1.

f ill HSI) \ \

.water line improvements;
improvements . to ' .the
sewage treatment lagoon,
· MIDDLEPORT - "We . and new water wells.
had no thought we would . At Monday evening's regever·get this kind of money, ular meeting, Village
but we're.very glad to have Administrator
Faymon
it," Mayor M1chael Gerlach . Roberts discusse~ last
Villa~e
Council week's announcement that
told
Monday evemng.
two projects the village proThe mayor was referring posed for funding under tbe
to nearly $4 million in fed- . American Recovery . and
era! stimulus money the vil- Reinvestment Act were
·lage expects to receive for placed on the Ohio
BREEOOMYOAILYSEt.JTINEL.COM

:! f ii )IJ

Environmental Protection
Agency's priority Jist for ·
fundit)g.
:
No funding will be
awarded until after a May 7
public hearing to be held in
Columbus, 9ut it is likely
the · funding ~ill be
approved based on the state
EPA's recommendation .. .
The priority list submitted
includes $2.8 million in
· form of a forgiven loan and
' a $700,000 no-interest or

\\\\\1

low-interest iorui for a new
water well .and replacement
of water lines and $195 ,000
for a· wastewater treatment
lagoon solar stirring system
and emergency generator.
Last month, council
retained the engineering
finn, ATS, on contingency
basis, to complete the planning and design · work
required for the proposed
projects. At that time·,
Roberts emphasized the

a

Meigs High
School
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICHOMVOAILYSENTINEL.COM
.

POMEROY .::... ''Health
,PageAS
.
and Wellness: Celebratipg a
Centurr,
of · Women's
•• Delbert E. Clay Jr,, 75
.
Health,'
a
free
all;day edu: • Robert Harrison II, 40 .
cational · program . on
·• Eber Pickens Sr., 73
women's heli.lth issues will
be held Wednesday at
: • Carolyn L Price, 88
Meigs High School.
·
The health fair will be held
from 8 a.m, to 2:30p.m. and
.?
is opeb to all students;
I" .,
grades 9' thro\lgh · 12, their
mothers .and :other female
.. • Consu~~~~t
relatives; •as well ·-a.s other
: spark Of new rJtJPI!! .
women of the community. · .
The primary goal of the
for economy revi\laF,
program
is to helP, ":omen
See Page AZ
come to an 'apprectauon of
·: ~ Circle plans Mothers
health issues, both past and
· Day obServance. ·
present,, and to learn about
responstble
.health care and
: See Page A3
preverttion geared to life: • Alumni softball .
long wellness. .
..
"It
is
critical
that
women,
• toumament Sunday.
young a.nd old, be em~w­
· See· Page A3
ered with knowledge whtch
• SHS plans minl·relay
they can apptr in tbeir perfclr life, ··Sal fage A3
sonal lives' said Jeri
. • USDA offe!l ..
. Thomas, graduate student
from Ohio . University
· low-Interest hpnie repair School of Nursing, who is
· roans. See Page A3
chairing the event. She said.
• Stewart put on
·Pfouo - Helllh f.ar, A!l

·INsiDE

: $2M bond for 3 Charges.
. See Page A6
.
' • Protection of bats
. brings cave, mine
closings. See Page A6

PlooH -

SIIYinp, AS

Bv BIT~ SEFIOENT

BSEAGE'NTOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - April is Organ
Donation Awareness Month but much
. misconception still remains about w~at .
many consider one. of the greatest g1fts
·one family can give another.
· ·
In 2002, the last thing Jon 1111d Cheryl
Thomas of Syracuse were thinking
· ·about was losing their 16-year old.
daughter Brandi though they .were soon
· faced with that reality. Brandi Jiied as a
result of injuries she sustained in a car
accident and h.er .parents were left with
not only a deVastating lo,ss but with the
responsibility of following through with
Brandi's wishes to be an organ donor.
Brandi made her wishes known when
she received her driver's license.
· Though nothln11 could make the loss
better, Cheryl sll.ld she felt it would've
been even harder without beiJtg able to
· do one last. thing., ~.Qt Brandi by ~pee(•
· ·jpg het w1shes to be an. organ donor .
'i~\;Vhich in tum affected tJ\e lives of count- .
tess others waiting on · transplants,
Cheryl said arandi's heart, liver, kid- .
neys, · bone (for . bone gra~hs) and
corneas went to patients.on walling lists.
"When you hear these .stories about
people receiving cornea transplants and
being able to see the faces of their loved
ones and grandchildreh, it definitely
helped," Cheryl said of what comfort
she did receive from the situation.
The Thomas' h;ive visited with and
stay in toucn . with the woman .w:ho
received Brandt's heart. After receiVIng
· arandi heart the woman develope~ a
. feat: of the .dark and a love for. cracking
her..toes,both of whiCh were tratts ~randi
disphtyed. Th!l Thomas' also re~etved a
letter frOm the mother of a chtld who
received one of Brandi's kidneys.
·. Cheryl said there's really no way to
kftow how many people benefited from
Brandi's gift .though at the time of ~e
girl's death there were ~ . stagllenng
80,000 people .on the w\llting hst for
.
·
.
. .
.
Submitted photo
organ donalloos.
Brandi Thomas (pictured), who died In 2Q02, was an organ donor whose gift
PIHH.- Gift. A!l
affected countless families on waiting lists for organ donation.

's

.'Sewer district
•
receives
$3.1 million
'
'in funding
·New K of C make~frrst charitable donati9n CAA1·eceives
BY BETH Sii!RBENT
BY BRIAN j, REED
. .
.
.
..
.·.
. , .
funds for .
·
BREEDOMYDAILYSENTiNEL.COM .
"
food/shelter
RACINE : The
POM£ROY - Father
Syracuse Racine Regional
Sewer District is one of two Jessing Council 1664,
program
·. .
projects in Ohio selected to Knights of Columbus, pre,.

'

.WEATliER

short time frame the viijage
will have to plan and award
bids for the work, and said
retamtng the engineer
would help expedite preparations for the work.
Monday night, Roberts
said the village will have 90
days td begin work once
funding is awarded: 30 days
to complete engineering
work, 30 days to award a

.· donation,

coming to .

'

11111

'·

Women's
health fair

OBITUARIEs

,,,,d ''II"' ••l•tt•l

BSERGENTOMVOO.'"YSE~TINEL.COM

receive funding through the
American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act to fund
safe dri\)king water .and
improve wastewater treatment systems· for rural
~Ita 1111 Page A&amp;
towns and comlllunities fn
~states.
·
The announcement was ·
made this we~k by United
EX
· A~riculture
· States
'
.
Secretary
Tom
Vtlsack and
' a SECnoNS - ua 'J&gt;AGM
·released through
the
Annie's Mailbox
A3 . United States Department
of Agric~lture and: Rural
&lt;;alendars
A3 Development. In all, the
American Recovery and
Reinvestment
Act selected
Classifieds
B3-4
to invest $61 S.8 million in
Comics
Bs 193 water and environmental projects throughout
Editorials
A4• the nation. The SRRSD
has been approved to
Obituaries
As receive $3 .I million for
upgrades to its current sysB Section tem which serves lhe vilSports
lages of both Syracuse and
A6 Racine. The project will
Weather
also extend service to
11:1 &amp;009 Ohio Volley l'ubllohl111 CO.
additional residents who
currently do not have centralized service in the
Tackerville area.
Ploaa,-bdne,AS
4

·' ...
IND

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

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sented $850 to the homedelivered meals program at
the Meigs County Senior
tenter. Itls the fiTSt charitable donation the council has
made since it was re-formed
i.lt .November.
The
Meigs
County
Council on Aging provides
hot tp.eal delivery tor seniors
who are horne bound or
have limited mobility. Due
to cuts in state funding, the
MCCoA is now seeking
additiorial funding frOm the
community. .
The donation represents
proceeds from two Lentenseason fish fries the
Knights held at the Sacred
Heart Catholic Church hall.
The .Wild Horse Cafe! and ·
Crow's KFC and Long
John Silver's made significant donations to the
fundraisers.
·
.
"Assistin~ the local senior
center in thtS important service goes to the heart of the
Knights of Columbus," said
MQrk Rhoneinus, Grand
Knight of the local council.
"We appreciate the community's support."
·

·-- ... •M-J.... - - . , . . . ....

.. ~ ..... -

.STAFF REPORT
MOSNEWSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Brian J. RMd/lihoto

Myron Franbkowlak of Father Jessing Council 1664,
Knights of Columbus, prasented $850 t? the home-deUvered meals program at the Meigs Sentor Center, represented by Council on Aging Director Beth Shaver."Since its foUnding by . in honor ·of Father John
Father Michael McGivney, Joseph Jessing, a German
the Knights of Columbus native who served Sacred
organization has always . Heart in his ftrst pastoral
placed charity at its heart, assignment in 1870.
and our local Knights could
While in Pomeroy,
think of no more worthy Jessing founded a Germancause than helping the language Catholic newsj)asenior center in their efforts per and . St. Joseph's
to provide for the most Orphanage on the site of
bas1c needs of our local the current! church buildsenior citizens."
. . ing. The newspaper and
Knights of Col~rnbus ts orphanage were later
the 18f$e~t Cath.ohc fra~r- ·moved . to
Columbus,
nal organtZabon m Amenca.
The iocal council is named PIIIM ... Donadon. AS
•-W••

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.' l ' -

CHESHIRE - Gallia and
Meigs Community Action
Agency has been awarded
federal funds thrQugh the
· American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009 ·
(ARRA) for the Emergency
Food &amp; Shelter National
Board Program.
The program will begin as
soon as funds are made
available, probably June,
according to the news
release.
Gallia-Meigs CAA was
chosen to receive an addi·
tiona! $20,025 ($10,028
Gallia, $9,997 Meigs) to
targeted emergency needs in
the area, largely brought
about by the economy and
unemployment.
The selection was made
by a National Board made
up of affiliates of national
voluntary organizations and
chaired by the U.S. Dept. of
Homeland
Security's
Federal
Emergency

PIIIH -

Shelter, AS

�The Daily Sentinel

NATION • 'WORLD

Consumers give .
spark of new hope ·
for economy reVIval

Pag~A2

BYTHEBEND

.The Daily Sentinel

Thursday,Aprilao,2oo9

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

:BY KATHY MITCHELL
:AND MARCY SuGAR

ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITERS

MEXICO CITY - Global health
authorities
warned Wednesday that
Bv JEANNINE AVERSA
by the housing, credit and
AP ~CONOMICS WRITER
financial crises - the WOrst swine flu was threatening to bloom
1
since the 1930s. The reces- into a pano;lemic, and the virus spread
WASHINGTON
sion, which began in farther in Europe even as the outbreak
Consumers are sn~pping December 2007, has bat- appeared to stabilize at its epicenter. A
back to life, kindling spring- tered the national economy toddler who succumbed in Texas
time hopes that the reces- and wiped dut a net total of became the first death outside Mexico.
&gt;ion is losing steam.
5.1 million jobs.
New cases and deaths fmally seemed
Even thou~h the economy
The economy totaled to be leveling off in Mexico, where
&gt;hrank agam in the first $11.3 trillion at an annual 160 people have been killed, after an
three months of the year rate in the first quaner, com- aggressive public health campaijln.
and by a lot - Americans pared with $11 .7 trillion in But the World Health Orgamzanon
stepped up their purchases the second quarter of 2008. said the global threat is nevertheless
of cars, furniture and appliStill, consumers roared serious enough to ramp up efforts to
ances. The surge in con- back in the first quarter of produce a vaccine against the virus . .
sumer spending, which this year. They boosted their
"It really is ·all of humanity that is
accounts for about 70 per- spending at an. annual rate under threat during a pandemic," WHO
APphQto
cent of the economy, could of 2.2 percent, the most in · Director General Margaret Chan said in Rene Piche, .head custodian,. center, joins the custodial staff, Carmen
set the stage for a rebound two years. Gains in dispos- Geneva. ''We do not have all the answers Sagastizado, left, and Hilda Darce, right, in· wiping down a classroom ·after
latcr this year.
able income helped by tax right now, but we will getthem."
school at Keller Middle School in Keller, Texas, Wadnesday. Extra precautions
Hopes for revival depend refunds and goverhment
It was the first time the WHO had are being taken to prevent the spread of swine flu at the school.
· . f
on those consumers, who benefit checks like So.cial declared a Phase 5 outbreak, the sechave been fortified by fatter Security. helped allow the ond-highesi on its threat scale, indicat- bans. In Fra~ce, President Nicolas chief epidemiologist, who suggested
paychecks from tax cuts and spending gains.
ing a pandemic could be imminent.
Sarkozy met with cabinet ministers to that someone could have brought the
smaller mortgage payments
Much stronger demand . The first U.S. death from the out- discuss swine flu, 311d the health minis- virus fro111 Pakistan orBanglad~sh. .
from refinancings. If they for long-lasting ''durable" .break was a Mexico City toddler who ter said France would ask ·th~ European
Miguel Angel Lezana, the eptdemtkeep buying, businesses goods, including cars, fumi- traveled to Texas with family and died Union to suspend flights to Mexico.
ologist, said the unhamed Bangladeshi
will need to boost produc- ture and household appli- Monday night at a Houston hospital.
The U.S., the European Union and had lived in Mexico for six months
tion .. feedinjl yet more eco- ances, led the increase. That U.S. Health and Human Services other countries have discouraged and was ~ecently visited by a brother
nom1c ac11v1ty.
spending rose at a 9.4 per- Secretary ~athleen Sebeliu~ ·predicted nonessential travel to Mexico. Some who arnved from Bangladesh or
Against that backdrop , cent pace, the most in a year. the child would not be the last U.S. countries have urged their citi~ns to Pakistan and was reportedly ill. The
many analysts think the econ·
Consumers ·also boosted death from swine flu,
· avoid the United States and Canada as . brotller has left Mex.ico and his whereomy is sinking less now ,than spending on clothing,.shoes,
The virus, a mix · of pig, bird and well. Health officials said such t&gt;ans · abouls are unknown, Lezana·. said.
it did from January through recreation services, medical human genes to which people have would do little to stop the virus.
·•
By March 9, the fir~t' symptoms
March. Most believe it could care, gasoline and other limited natural immunity, had spread
Germany and Austna became the were showing up in the MeKtcan state
stan growing a~ain by sum- energy products. One excep- to at least nine countries. In the United · latest countries to report swine .flu of Veracruz, where pi!! farming is a
mer or, more· hkely, by the lion was food; on which' States.• nearly 100 have been sickened infections Wedne~day, with ~as.es key industry in mountamhamlets and
final quaner or this year. . spend in¥ dipped slightly. .
in II states.
.
.
.
already confirmed m Canada, Bntam, where small clinics prmdde ·the only
Federal
Reserve
Amencans' higher conEight states closed . schools Jsrael1 New Zealand and Spain.
· health care.
·
Chairman Ben · Bemanke sumption. though, was Wednesday, affecting ·53,000 students
In addition ·to the 160 deaths , the ·· The earliest confirmed case was
and his colleagues, opting swamped by deep spending in Texas alone, and President Barack virus is believed to have sickened 2.498 there: a 5-year-old boy who was one
against further action cuts in virtually every other Obama said wider school closings people.across. Mexico. ~ut only 1 311 of hundreds of people in the town of.
1
Wednesday to shore up the area of the economy.
might be necessary to keep crowds suspected swme flu pattents remamed La Gloria whose flu symptoms left
economy, detected glimBusinesses cut back on from spreading the flu. Mexico has hospitalized, and a closer look at daily them struggling to breathe.
mers that the recession home building, commercial already closed schools nationwide admissions and deaths at Mexico's
bays later, a door-to-door tax
might be easing.
con~truction,
equipment until at. least May 6.
public hospitals suggests the outbreak inspector was hospitalized with acute
"The pace of contraction and software, and invento"Every American should know that may hav~ peaked during three grim respiratory problems in the n~ighbor­
appears to be somewhat ries at: goods. Sales of U~S. the federal government is prepared to . days last w~ek when thousancts of peo- ing state of Oaxaca, infecting 16 hosslower," Fed poticymakers · goods to foreign buyers do whatever is necessary to control the pie comJ?Iamed .of flu symptoms.
. pi tal workers before she became
said in a statement a few sank in the face of econom- impact of this virus," ·obama said,
ScientiSts bebeve that somewhere m Mexico's first confirmed de;~th.
hours after the· government ic troubles abroad. Even the highlighting his re9uest for $1.5 billion the world, months or even a year ago, a
Neighbors of the inspeetor, Maria
released its report showing jlOvemment trimmed spend- in emergency fundmg for vaccines.
pig virus jumped to a human and mutat- . Adela Gutierrez, said Wednesday that
a second straight big quar- mg. It was the first time
Just north of the Mexican border, 39 ed, and has been spreading between ·she fell ill after pairing up with a tempo·terly drop in the nanon 's ..., that's happened since the Marines were being confined to their humans ever since. Unlike with bird rary worker from Veracruz who seemed
gross domestic product.
end of 2005.
California base after one contracted flu, doctors have no ·evidence suggest- to have a very bad cold. Other people
On Wall Street, stocks
The Federal Reserve cited swine flu. Senators questioned ing a ~irect pig-to-~um~n infection ·frolJI La Gloria kept goinfJ to jobs in
jumped higher. The Dow some of these negative ·Homeland Security Secretary Janet from this stram, whtch ts why they Mexico City despite their i loesses, and
Jones industrials gained forces in warning that the Napolitano about he! decision. not to .haven'~ recomme~ded killing pigs.
·tould have mfected people in the ~apitaL
nearly 170 points. ·
economy is likely to remain . close the border, actton she sa1d "has
Med,1cal detectiVes have not zeroed
The deaths were already leveling off
At the start of his news weak for a time. The Fed not been merited by the facts·."
·
'in on where the outbreak began . One by th!l time Mexico announced the epi. conference
Wednesday said it hopes the aggressive
. Ecuador joined Cuba and Argentina in of the seven deaths in Mexico directly demic April23. At hospitals Wednesday,
night, President Barack action ifs taken so far will banning travel either to or from Mexico, attributed to swine flu was that of a lines of anxious citizens seeking care for
Obama praised recent gains lead to a gradual resumption and other nations. conside~ similar Bangladeshi immigrant, said Mexico's flu symptoms dwindled markedly.
but said much WaS left io do. of sustainable economic
"Even as we clear away growth - though it dido 't
the wreckage of this reces- say when.
sion, I have also said that
To brace the economy, the
we cannot go back to an. Fed on Wednesday pledsed
economy that i~ built on a anew to keep its key lendmg
pile of sand - on inflated rate at a record low level for
home prices and maxed-out an
extended
period.
.
.
credit cards, on. overlever- Economists predict the Fed
aged ~anks and outdated · ~ill keep rates there well '
regulattons that allowed the mto next year.
.
·
recklessnes.s of a. few to
Even if the recession were
threaten the prosperity of us to end this year, the ~cone­
all," he said.
my is likely to remam feeThe American consumer ble and unemployment will
is still a: wild card in any keep. climbing, government
recovery scenano.
·
offictals and analysts say.
· Though · the federal
The Labor Department on
Reserve noted that spending Wednesday satd all 372
"has shown signs of stabi- metropoiitan areas that are
lizing," it also said people's tracked saw their jobless
buying is still constrained rates rise in March from a
by rising unemployment , ~ear earlier. The national
falling home values and JObless rate is now at a quarhard,to-get credit.
ter-century high of 8.5 per'
Those negative forces cent and is expected to hit
"
or the emergence of new 10 percent by the end of this
ones, like the swine flu out- year. It will probably rise a
break - could cause con- bit higher m early 2010
sumers to do an about-face before · starting to slowly
and ratchet buck spending, drift downward .
.
throwing the economy into . Most analysts don't think
another tailspin.
it 'will return to normal "The economy is definite- around .5 percent - until
lynotoutofthewoodsyet," 2013.
said Brian Bethune, econoMore
layoffs
were
mist at !HS Global Insight. announced this week.
But. he added: "The good Textron Inc. ·said it will
news ... is that the most elilninate 8,300 jobs, or 20
severe phase of the reces- percent, of its global wort
sion is behind us."
f(\rce; as.the recession weakThe economy logged a ens .demand for corporate
worse-than-expected 6J per- planes. The maker of Cessna
cent annualized drop in the planes, Bell helicopters and ·
first three months of the year turf-maintenance equipment
dei;pite the rebound by con- e~tier this year said it
sumers. the Commerce would I!XIuce tts work force
Department reported. The by 6,200jobs. or 1.5 percent,
culpritsbehindthepoorover- , mostly at Wichita. Kan.all performance: sharp cut- based Cessna.
backs by businesses, espeGeneral Motors Corp.laid
skin~
cially in mventories of unsold out a restructurmg plan that
goods, and the biggest drop · inc.ludes cutting 21 .000
in U.S. exports m 40 years.
U.S. factory JOQs by next
The decline was nearly as year.
Clear
Channel
sharp as in the final three Communications Inc., . the
~
.
. .
.
months of last year. That's larg.est ow~e.r: ·?f U.~. radio
when the . economy shrank stattons, sa1d n s cuttmg 590
at a 6.3 percent pace, the jobs in its second round of ·
worst showing in a quarter- ·layoffs this year amid prescentury. The biggest pull· sure fro~ the recessto~ ~nd
back by consumers in 28 evaporatmg
adventsmg
years figured prominently . budgets. And bearings and
m that downward spiral.
specialty steels maker
All told. the economy Timken Co. indinted it will
logged its poorest six- cut about 4.000 more jobs
month performance since by the end of this year after·
the late 1950s.
earlier suggesting about·
The bleak . picture under- 3,000 jobs already had been
scores the damage caused
targeted.
.

: Dear Annie: My 29-year:Oid son and his wife have
;two young children. My
;oldest grandson and I were
-very close. I babysat, took
:him swimming, to the park
:and the library, taught him
'to ride a bike and accompa:nied him to Sunday school.
: Four years ago, my daugh;ter-in-law,
"Amanda,"
·accused me of talking about
:her behind her back: This
:was not troe. She told my son
;he wasn't allowed to visit me
•unless she was present. Then
'she started complaining
'about me. Finally, she said
'my son couldn't speak to ine
· anymore and I wasn't
·allowed to see my grandson.
She also cut off my son's
.father and stel,'father, leaving
'Only her famt!y. My grand·son was devastated he couldn't see ·his favorite Grammie.
: This campaign of hers
'Came at a bad lime in my
life, as I was going through
·an amicable but protracted
divorce. Friends encouraged
·me to move back home to
North Carolina. I waited a
year, but my son never spoke
1o me or acknowledged my
cards and gifts, so I left

Clubs and
organizations
,.

Other events

Church events

ILABLE

: MARIETTA - The U.S. repair loan is similar to a
·Department of Agriculture home improvement loan .
:Rural Development is offer- . The money must be used to
:ing home repair loans at one- improve or modernize
. :vercent interest for qualify· homes, make them .safer and
mg very-low incpme home- mo~e sanitary, or remove
.owners. Homeowners 62 and he!llth and safety hazards ..
:older who cannot afford a Eligible repairs. include
:loan may qualify for a grant . . roofing, sidmg, windows,
· The loans and grants are foundation repairs, kitchen
·available through Rural ca.binets, septic systems.
:Development's Section .504 furnace/~ir conditioning and
:Home
Repair
Loan other types of improve·Program. Loan funds can be ments. The maximum loan
:used to make general home amount is $20,000. The
:repairs and improvements. loan payment would be
Grant funds are used to $4.60 for every $1 ,000 that
·make accessibility improve- is borrowed.
. ments for disabled houseTo be eligible for a home
hold members or to remove repair loan, aeplicants must
•health and safety hazards. · live in an e!igtble rural area,
: A Rural Development own iilld occupy the single

Plastic Surgery

•

•

Birthdays

SHS plans mini-relay for life
SOUTHERN - Southern High School's Reconnecting
Youth classes are planning a mini-relay for life to be held
on Friday, May 8.
.
Currently luminar.ies are being sold for $2. At the relay
donations will be taken for several give-aways, including
two bicycles donated by Gary Roush/ &amp; Sons Farm &amp;
Christopher Roush, and two golf games given. by the
Riverside Golf Course. All proceeds will he donated to The
American Cancer Society .
Also provided are inflarables for the elementary students
to use during the mini relay paid for by Home National
Bank, Gatlin Coal Company, Dr. Margie Lawson, Hotspot,
Roses 'Excavating, D&lt;)ITell Norris &amp; Son Greenhouses,
Piz~a Hut (Ravenswood), Joey Roush Funeral Home,
Riverside Golf Course, Dr. Trent, Bob's Market, Locker
219, A&amp; 13 Video &amp; Tanning , and Attorney Trenton Cleland.

Alumni softball tournament Sunday
RACINE - The Racine/Southern Alumni Association is
hosting Meigs County's first-ever county alumni softball
tournament Sunday beginning at I p.m. and running until
.
dusk. at Star Mill Park in Racine.
The tournament will become an annual event with Eastern
having already expressed interest in hosting 2010 event.
Sign-in will be from 12 to 1 p.m . Panicipants are to come
early to ensure a spot on a team. More information is available from Junie Maynard at 949-4222 Ext. 1129 or school
representatives, Eastern-Shawn Bush 985-3304. Kristen
Oettwiller 985-3304; Meigs, Nick Dettwiller 949-4222
Ext. 1132 ; Kelly Smith Pape, 949-4222 extl217; Southern,
Joe Cornell 949-4222 Ext. 1206, and Rachel ~hapman­
Hupp 949-4222 Ext. 1119 .
.The Racine/Southern Alumni Association will sell
Alumni shins (for Southern alumni), Big Fooze Books,
Southern Alumni Basketball Night Game DVDs, baked
goods and water, and wganize a homerun derby, contest.
There will be a corn hole tournament with s1gn-up from
I to 2 p,m. Cost is $10 fot team games which will start at
2 p.m . with the winning team to .win $100 for their alumni to use for a scholarship. A traveling trophy will be
awarded.

Public meetings ·
Thursday, April 30
SHADE ,;;,. Bedford
Township meeting on fire
protection, 7 p.m., Bedford
Township Grange Hall. ·
PORTLAND - Lebanon
Township Trustees meet at
7 !)'.m ., township building.
Saturday, May 2
SYRACUSE - A meeting of the Sutton Township
Trustees will be held at 10
a.m. in Room 204 at

family dwelling in need of
repair, have an acceptable
credit history, the ability to
repay the loan and meet
income guidelines.
.
USDA
Rural
Development's mission is to
· increase economic opportunity and improve the quality
of life for rural residents. To ·
learn more about these programs or apply for assistance, homeowners are
encouraged to contact Carol
Costanzo in the Marietta
Office by calling (740) 3737113' Ext. 206 or visit the
office located at 21330 SR
676 Suite A, Marietta. OH
45750. Information is also
available
at
. www.rurdev .usda/gov.

Remains of 2 killed in WWII coming back to Ohio

Che&amp;icalPeeJ• ·
exfoliate the
benefits and deep pore
cleansing, loosen blackheads, stimulate skin drculation,
promote heaUng, restore elasticity, rejuvenate skin, improve
tone and texture, minimize pores and scars, improve the
appearance of stretch marb, and fade age spots.

•

fast, 8 a.m., Morning Star Overbrook
Center
in
United Methodist Church.
Middleport. One of the
Tuesday, May 5
trustees, Kenny Wiggins , is
POMEROY - Revival a resident receiving therapy
services will be .held at the ·. there.
Monday, May 4
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, State
RUTLAND .- . Rutland
Route 143, Pomeroy, Mah .510, 7 p.m. each evening . . Township Trustees, 5 p.m.,
Monty Hurst, evangelist, with Rutland Fire Station.
the Hurst Family providing
· Wednesday, MBy 6
special music. Rev. Charles
PAGEVILLE - · Scipio
McKenzie,pastor,992-2952. -Township Trustees, regular
meeting, . 6:30 . p.m ..
Pageville Town Hall .
POMEROY - Meigs
County
Board of Health,
Monday, May 4
regular
meeting, 5 p.m ..
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. Mildred Fry will observe conference room Meigs
her 95th birthday on May 4. County Health Department.
Cards may be sent to P.O . .
Box 75, New Haven, W.Va. ·
25265.

RACINE - Plans for a mother-daughter banquet to be
held on May 7 at the Bethany Dorcas Church were made at
a recent meeting of the Sonshine Circle.
The banquet will be catered by Ruth Arnold and served
at 6 p.m. Members are reminded to take a silk flower to th·e
May meeting. It was noted that orders are being taken for
noodles to be made May 18 and 20. Donations were made
to several organizations.
Kathryn Hart conducted the meeting following an Easter
potluck attended by 23 members. Evelyn Foreman gave the
blessing . Devotions were by Blondena Rainer and Edie
Hubbard who read from "Our Daily Bread."
Thank you cards were read from several individuals for
fruit baskets. Edie Hubbard reported she had sent out 85
cards. Members sang Happy Birthday 10 Han. Rainer and
Hubbard had the program on"Mixed Up City Shocker." Next
meeting will be on May 14 at the Bethany Dorcas Church.

.USDA offers low-interesthome repair loans

CLINIC
Department of

•

After Hours reception, 4-6
p.m., American Municipal
Power-Ohio,appetizers provided .
POMEROY Meigs
County Cancer Initiative,
regular meeting, noon, conference room, Meigs County
Health Department, 9926626 for more information.
RACINE· Racine
Chapter !34 Order of ·
Eastern Star, inspection,
· 7:30 p.m., lodge hall,
refreshments to follow . .

Friday, May 1 ·
RACINE - MeigsCounty
Pomona Grange, 7:30 p.m.,
Racine Grange Hall. All bak.'ing contests will be held.
.
Saturday,May 2
· MIDDLEPORT - .Job's
Daughters Bethel 62, 11
:a.m. 50th .anniversary din~
'ner. 2 p.m. open meeting
with - majority ceremony.
'Honored Queen Harley Fox
.'presiding and reception
honoring Kristen Davis,
Grand Bethel Honord
Saturday, May 2
Queen to fo11ow meeting .
TUPPERS PLAINS
, HARRISONVILLE ~ American Red Cross. bloodRegular stated meeting of mobile, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.,
Harrisonville . Lodge 4ll, Bethel Worship Center. Free
F&amp;AM,
.7
. p.m. Paula Deen apron to each
:Refreshments at 6:30 p.m. donor. Donors may register
:All Masons invjted.
at 667-6793, but registra· SALEM CENTER - Star. tion not required.
:orange #778 and Star Junior
:orange #878, potluck sup:per at 6:30p.m. followed by
:meeting at 7:30p.m.
·
.
Sunday, May 3
··
Friday, May 1
: RACINE
Racine · MIDDLEPORT
:Chapter 134 of Eastern Star, Healing and miracle ser·practice for inspection, 2:30 vice, 7 p.m., Rejoicing Life
:p.m., lodge hall, all officers · Church.
;urged to attend.
.
Saturday, May 2
:
Monday, May 4
. RACINE - Sou\hern
· POMEROY - Business Charge men 's prayer break-

HOLZE

•

may also be used as place
cards). small wrapped packages of candy or something
that ties in with your theme.
Dear
Annie:
Tell
"Ringless" not to place too
much emphasis on whether
or not her husband wears his
wedding ring.,Ooes he wear
any other jew~lry? I've been
married for 23 years to a
great guy who puts on his
wedding ring only for major
social events. He doesn't
like jewelry and n~ver has·.
If her husband doesn't like
to wear his ring every day,
she might ask if he'll wear it
for special occasions. If he is
loving in every way, the ring
is a minor point. - Also
. Ringless, But I Know He
Loves Me
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
MarcY, Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesma!l~
boxcomcast.net, or wnte
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.OBox 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features. by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit .the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators .com.

·coll1Iilunity Calendar

CHEMICAL ·PEELS

N
.. .

town. I've since had difficulIf you wish to send cards
ty finding employment and or gifts to your son and
.am living with friends. A grandchildren, continue to
year ago, I had triple bypass do so even if there is no
heart surgery. Wtthout my · re~ponse. You never know
knowledge, a friend 7 e- what the future hQids. But
mailed Amanda and begged otherwise; find things in
her to allow my son to speak your life that make you
to me, &amp;aying I might not happy. Be a surrogate grandsurvive the operation. mother to others' grandchiiAmanda e-mailed me direct- dren. Keep active and create
ly, saying she spoke to my a family out of your friends.
son about it and they both
Dear Annie: My sister
refuse to speak to me and I are giving my niece a
because she and I "dido 'I see bridal shower. Is it true that
eye to eye." I was shocked at you have to give a pany
their coldhearted cruelty.
favor to each guest who
EYen though I've healed attends? I've never seen this
from surgery, my hean is done, but it has been awhile
still broken. J.,ately, I've since I've been to a shower.
been. thinking I am better off My sister claims it is the new
. without them because they . thing, but tbe shower is costmust be horrible people to ing enough and we are also
treat me so despicably. providing nuts, mints, cake
Please tell other y,oung and game gifts. She also said
women that demanding con- guests should receive gifts at
trol over their husbands weddings, too .
causes heartache to everyone
.I attended two weddings
and will eventually come . recently and didn't get a
back to hun them, as well. ~ift. Am I just old-fash- Heartbroken in N.C.
toned? - Must Know
Dear Must: Party favors
Dear Heartbroken: We
agree that what goes around at showers and .weddings
comes around. It's sad that have become more popular,
your daughter-in-law isn't but are absolutely not
willing to allow her husband mandatory. If the .bride
to have a relationship with insists and you don't want
his family. It's even sadder to go over your budget, try
that your son. permits this.
little picture frames (which

Thursday, April30, 2009

Circle plans Mothers
Day observance

Cruelty should not prevent relationship

BY MICHAEL WARREN
AND PAUL HAVEN

PageA3

I

: LIMA (AP) - The mili:taty is bringing home the
·remains of two Ohio men
:who grew up within 20
:miles of each other and died ·
:when their plane was shot
·down over the Pacific Ocean
durinS World War II. Their
famihes are now phmning to
·bury them near their hometowns in northwest Ohio.
: The military used DNA to
.confUTD theiddentities after
divers found their plane in
2004.
. "It was a 65-year family
)nystery as to what really
:happened," said Nikki
-Abbott. whose great-uncle
U1 Yoh was among those.
killed. "Finding him is like
:solving the mystery."
· Both Yoh, who grew up in
'Scott. and Leland Price, who

graduated from Oakwood
High School. were staff
sergeants on a B-24
Liberator that was shot down
in September I~ during a
bombing mission against
Japanese-held ·islands and
airstrips in the South Pacific :
The two were from small
towns about 60 miles south of
Toledo and had never ·met
until they were assigned to the
same bomber, according to a
neWspaper article written
after the plane was shot down.
Three !&gt;fthe II crew memhers parachuted from the
.plane and were captured and
executed by the Japanese.
The eight others were initially listed as missing in action
and later presumed dead.
Sixty years Iiller, volunteer
divers searching for ships and

aircraft lost around the Palau
Islands found .the bomber sitting in 70 feet of water.
Surviving family me mbers provided DNA samples
that allowed the Department
of Defense to identify the
remains. Three years ago,
Leona Frederick provided a
DNA sample ·that helped
ide11tify Price"This is so many years
ago that it's really unbelievable almost." said Frederick.
who is his aunt and closest
surviving relative .
Pricewas21 whenhedied.
Frederick was just a few
years older and remembers
walking with him to school.
She said he was "always
crazy about airplanes."
''We were more like sister
and brother," she said.

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�The Daily Sentinel

NATION • 'WORLD

Consumers give .
spark of new hope ·
for economy reVIval

Pag~A2

BYTHEBEND

.The Daily Sentinel

Thursday,Aprilao,2oo9

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

:BY KATHY MITCHELL
:AND MARCY SuGAR

ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITERS

MEXICO CITY - Global health
authorities
warned Wednesday that
Bv JEANNINE AVERSA
by the housing, credit and
AP ~CONOMICS WRITER
financial crises - the WOrst swine flu was threatening to bloom
1
since the 1930s. The reces- into a pano;lemic, and the virus spread
WASHINGTON
sion, which began in farther in Europe even as the outbreak
Consumers are sn~pping December 2007, has bat- appeared to stabilize at its epicenter. A
back to life, kindling spring- tered the national economy toddler who succumbed in Texas
time hopes that the reces- and wiped dut a net total of became the first death outside Mexico.
&gt;ion is losing steam.
5.1 million jobs.
New cases and deaths fmally seemed
Even thou~h the economy
The economy totaled to be leveling off in Mexico, where
&gt;hrank agam in the first $11.3 trillion at an annual 160 people have been killed, after an
three months of the year rate in the first quaner, com- aggressive public health campaijln.
and by a lot - Americans pared with $11 .7 trillion in But the World Health Orgamzanon
stepped up their purchases the second quarter of 2008. said the global threat is nevertheless
of cars, furniture and appliStill, consumers roared serious enough to ramp up efforts to
ances. The surge in con- back in the first quarter of produce a vaccine against the virus . .
sumer spending, which this year. They boosted their
"It really is ·all of humanity that is
accounts for about 70 per- spending at an. annual rate under threat during a pandemic," WHO
APphQto
cent of the economy, could of 2.2 percent, the most in · Director General Margaret Chan said in Rene Piche, .head custodian,. center, joins the custodial staff, Carmen
set the stage for a rebound two years. Gains in dispos- Geneva. ''We do not have all the answers Sagastizado, left, and Hilda Darce, right, in· wiping down a classroom ·after
latcr this year.
able income helped by tax right now, but we will getthem."
school at Keller Middle School in Keller, Texas, Wadnesday. Extra precautions
Hopes for revival depend refunds and goverhment
It was the first time the WHO had are being taken to prevent the spread of swine flu at the school.
· . f
on those consumers, who benefit checks like So.cial declared a Phase 5 outbreak, the sechave been fortified by fatter Security. helped allow the ond-highesi on its threat scale, indicat- bans. In Fra~ce, President Nicolas chief epidemiologist, who suggested
paychecks from tax cuts and spending gains.
ing a pandemic could be imminent.
Sarkozy met with cabinet ministers to that someone could have brought the
smaller mortgage payments
Much stronger demand . The first U.S. death from the out- discuss swine flu, 311d the health minis- virus fro111 Pakistan orBanglad~sh. .
from refinancings. If they for long-lasting ''durable" .break was a Mexico City toddler who ter said France would ask ·th~ European
Miguel Angel Lezana, the eptdemtkeep buying, businesses goods, including cars, fumi- traveled to Texas with family and died Union to suspend flights to Mexico.
ologist, said the unhamed Bangladeshi
will need to boost produc- ture and household appli- Monday night at a Houston hospital.
The U.S., the European Union and had lived in Mexico for six months
tion .. feedinjl yet more eco- ances, led the increase. That U.S. Health and Human Services other countries have discouraged and was ~ecently visited by a brother
nom1c ac11v1ty.
spending rose at a 9.4 per- Secretary ~athleen Sebeliu~ ·predicted nonessential travel to Mexico. Some who arnved from Bangladesh or
Against that backdrop , cent pace, the most in a year. the child would not be the last U.S. countries have urged their citi~ns to Pakistan and was reportedly ill. The
many analysts think the econ·
Consumers ·also boosted death from swine flu,
· avoid the United States and Canada as . brotller has left Mex.ico and his whereomy is sinking less now ,than spending on clothing,.shoes,
The virus, a mix · of pig, bird and well. Health officials said such t&gt;ans · abouls are unknown, Lezana·. said.
it did from January through recreation services, medical human genes to which people have would do little to stop the virus.
·•
By March 9, the fir~t' symptoms
March. Most believe it could care, gasoline and other limited natural immunity, had spread
Germany and Austna became the were showing up in the MeKtcan state
stan growing a~ain by sum- energy products. One excep- to at least nine countries. In the United · latest countries to report swine .flu of Veracruz, where pi!! farming is a
mer or, more· hkely, by the lion was food; on which' States.• nearly 100 have been sickened infections Wedne~day, with ~as.es key industry in mountamhamlets and
final quaner or this year. . spend in¥ dipped slightly. .
in II states.
.
.
.
already confirmed m Canada, Bntam, where small clinics prmdde ·the only
Federal
Reserve
Amencans' higher conEight states closed . schools Jsrael1 New Zealand and Spain.
· health care.
·
Chairman Ben · Bemanke sumption. though, was Wednesday, affecting ·53,000 students
In addition ·to the 160 deaths , the ·· The earliest confirmed case was
and his colleagues, opting swamped by deep spending in Texas alone, and President Barack virus is believed to have sickened 2.498 there: a 5-year-old boy who was one
against further action cuts in virtually every other Obama said wider school closings people.across. Mexico. ~ut only 1 311 of hundreds of people in the town of.
1
Wednesday to shore up the area of the economy.
might be necessary to keep crowds suspected swme flu pattents remamed La Gloria whose flu symptoms left
economy, detected glimBusinesses cut back on from spreading the flu. Mexico has hospitalized, and a closer look at daily them struggling to breathe.
mers that the recession home building, commercial already closed schools nationwide admissions and deaths at Mexico's
bays later, a door-to-door tax
might be easing.
con~truction,
equipment until at. least May 6.
public hospitals suggests the outbreak inspector was hospitalized with acute
"The pace of contraction and software, and invento"Every American should know that may hav~ peaked during three grim respiratory problems in the n~ighbor­
appears to be somewhat ries at: goods. Sales of U~S. the federal government is prepared to . days last w~ek when thousancts of peo- ing state of Oaxaca, infecting 16 hosslower," Fed poticymakers · goods to foreign buyers do whatever is necessary to control the pie comJ?Iamed .of flu symptoms.
. pi tal workers before she became
said in a statement a few sank in the face of econom- impact of this virus," ·obama said,
ScientiSts bebeve that somewhere m Mexico's first confirmed de;~th.
hours after the· government ic troubles abroad. Even the highlighting his re9uest for $1.5 billion the world, months or even a year ago, a
Neighbors of the inspeetor, Maria
released its report showing jlOvemment trimmed spend- in emergency fundmg for vaccines.
pig virus jumped to a human and mutat- . Adela Gutierrez, said Wednesday that
a second straight big quar- mg. It was the first time
Just north of the Mexican border, 39 ed, and has been spreading between ·she fell ill after pairing up with a tempo·terly drop in the nanon 's ..., that's happened since the Marines were being confined to their humans ever since. Unlike with bird rary worker from Veracruz who seemed
gross domestic product.
end of 2005.
California base after one contracted flu, doctors have no ·evidence suggest- to have a very bad cold. Other people
On Wall Street, stocks
The Federal Reserve cited swine flu. Senators questioned ing a ~irect pig-to-~um~n infection ·frolJI La Gloria kept goinfJ to jobs in
jumped higher. The Dow some of these negative ·Homeland Security Secretary Janet from this stram, whtch ts why they Mexico City despite their i loesses, and
Jones industrials gained forces in warning that the Napolitano about he! decision. not to .haven'~ recomme~ded killing pigs.
·tould have mfected people in the ~apitaL
nearly 170 points. ·
economy is likely to remain . close the border, actton she sa1d "has
Med,1cal detectiVes have not zeroed
The deaths were already leveling off
At the start of his news weak for a time. The Fed not been merited by the facts·."
·
'in on where the outbreak began . One by th!l time Mexico announced the epi. conference
Wednesday said it hopes the aggressive
. Ecuador joined Cuba and Argentina in of the seven deaths in Mexico directly demic April23. At hospitals Wednesday,
night, President Barack action ifs taken so far will banning travel either to or from Mexico, attributed to swine flu was that of a lines of anxious citizens seeking care for
Obama praised recent gains lead to a gradual resumption and other nations. conside~ similar Bangladeshi immigrant, said Mexico's flu symptoms dwindled markedly.
but said much WaS left io do. of sustainable economic
"Even as we clear away growth - though it dido 't
the wreckage of this reces- say when.
sion, I have also said that
To brace the economy, the
we cannot go back to an. Fed on Wednesday pledsed
economy that i~ built on a anew to keep its key lendmg
pile of sand - on inflated rate at a record low level for
home prices and maxed-out an
extended
period.
.
.
credit cards, on. overlever- Economists predict the Fed
aged ~anks and outdated · ~ill keep rates there well '
regulattons that allowed the mto next year.
.
·
recklessnes.s of a. few to
Even if the recession were
threaten the prosperity of us to end this year, the ~cone­
all," he said.
my is likely to remam feeThe American consumer ble and unemployment will
is still a: wild card in any keep. climbing, government
recovery scenano.
·
offictals and analysts say.
· Though · the federal
The Labor Department on
Reserve noted that spending Wednesday satd all 372
"has shown signs of stabi- metropoiitan areas that are
lizing," it also said people's tracked saw their jobless
buying is still constrained rates rise in March from a
by rising unemployment , ~ear earlier. The national
falling home values and JObless rate is now at a quarhard,to-get credit.
ter-century high of 8.5 per'
Those negative forces cent and is expected to hit
"
or the emergence of new 10 percent by the end of this
ones, like the swine flu out- year. It will probably rise a
break - could cause con- bit higher m early 2010
sumers to do an about-face before · starting to slowly
and ratchet buck spending, drift downward .
.
throwing the economy into . Most analysts don't think
another tailspin.
it 'will return to normal "The economy is definite- around .5 percent - until
lynotoutofthewoodsyet," 2013.
said Brian Bethune, econoMore
layoffs
were
mist at !HS Global Insight. announced this week.
But. he added: "The good Textron Inc. ·said it will
news ... is that the most elilninate 8,300 jobs, or 20
severe phase of the reces- percent, of its global wort
sion is behind us."
f(\rce; as.the recession weakThe economy logged a ens .demand for corporate
worse-than-expected 6J per- planes. The maker of Cessna
cent annualized drop in the planes, Bell helicopters and ·
first three months of the year turf-maintenance equipment
dei;pite the rebound by con- e~tier this year said it
sumers. the Commerce would I!XIuce tts work force
Department reported. The by 6,200jobs. or 1.5 percent,
culpritsbehindthepoorover- , mostly at Wichita. Kan.all performance: sharp cut- based Cessna.
backs by businesses, espeGeneral Motors Corp.laid
skin~
cially in mventories of unsold out a restructurmg plan that
goods, and the biggest drop · inc.ludes cutting 21 .000
in U.S. exports m 40 years.
U.S. factory JOQs by next
The decline was nearly as year.
Clear
Channel
sharp as in the final three Communications Inc., . the
~
.
. .
.
months of last year. That's larg.est ow~e.r: ·?f U.~. radio
when the . economy shrank stattons, sa1d n s cuttmg 590
at a 6.3 percent pace, the jobs in its second round of ·
worst showing in a quarter- ·layoffs this year amid prescentury. The biggest pull· sure fro~ the recessto~ ~nd
back by consumers in 28 evaporatmg
adventsmg
years figured prominently . budgets. And bearings and
m that downward spiral.
specialty steels maker
All told. the economy Timken Co. indinted it will
logged its poorest six- cut about 4.000 more jobs
month performance since by the end of this year after·
the late 1950s.
earlier suggesting about·
The bleak . picture under- 3,000 jobs already had been
scores the damage caused
targeted.
.

: Dear Annie: My 29-year:Oid son and his wife have
;two young children. My
;oldest grandson and I were
-very close. I babysat, took
:him swimming, to the park
:and the library, taught him
'to ride a bike and accompa:nied him to Sunday school.
: Four years ago, my daugh;ter-in-law,
"Amanda,"
·accused me of talking about
:her behind her back: This
:was not troe. She told my son
;he wasn't allowed to visit me
•unless she was present. Then
'she started complaining
'about me. Finally, she said
'my son couldn't speak to ine
· anymore and I wasn't
·allowed to see my grandson.
She also cut off my son's
.father and stel,'father, leaving
'Only her famt!y. My grand·son was devastated he couldn't see ·his favorite Grammie.
: This campaign of hers
'Came at a bad lime in my
life, as I was going through
·an amicable but protracted
divorce. Friends encouraged
·me to move back home to
North Carolina. I waited a
year, but my son never spoke
1o me or acknowledged my
cards and gifts, so I left

Clubs and
organizations
,.

Other events

Church events

ILABLE

: MARIETTA - The U.S. repair loan is similar to a
·Department of Agriculture home improvement loan .
:Rural Development is offer- . The money must be used to
:ing home repair loans at one- improve or modernize
. :vercent interest for qualify· homes, make them .safer and
mg very-low incpme home- mo~e sanitary, or remove
.owners. Homeowners 62 and he!llth and safety hazards ..
:older who cannot afford a Eligible repairs. include
:loan may qualify for a grant . . roofing, sidmg, windows,
· The loans and grants are foundation repairs, kitchen
·available through Rural ca.binets, septic systems.
:Development's Section .504 furnace/~ir conditioning and
:Home
Repair
Loan other types of improve·Program. Loan funds can be ments. The maximum loan
:used to make general home amount is $20,000. The
:repairs and improvements. loan payment would be
Grant funds are used to $4.60 for every $1 ,000 that
·make accessibility improve- is borrowed.
. ments for disabled houseTo be eligible for a home
hold members or to remove repair loan, aeplicants must
•health and safety hazards. · live in an e!igtble rural area,
: A Rural Development own iilld occupy the single

Plastic Surgery

•

•

Birthdays

SHS plans mini-relay for life
SOUTHERN - Southern High School's Reconnecting
Youth classes are planning a mini-relay for life to be held
on Friday, May 8.
.
Currently luminar.ies are being sold for $2. At the relay
donations will be taken for several give-aways, including
two bicycles donated by Gary Roush/ &amp; Sons Farm &amp;
Christopher Roush, and two golf games given. by the
Riverside Golf Course. All proceeds will he donated to The
American Cancer Society .
Also provided are inflarables for the elementary students
to use during the mini relay paid for by Home National
Bank, Gatlin Coal Company, Dr. Margie Lawson, Hotspot,
Roses 'Excavating, D&lt;)ITell Norris &amp; Son Greenhouses,
Piz~a Hut (Ravenswood), Joey Roush Funeral Home,
Riverside Golf Course, Dr. Trent, Bob's Market, Locker
219, A&amp; 13 Video &amp; Tanning , and Attorney Trenton Cleland.

Alumni softball tournament Sunday
RACINE - The Racine/Southern Alumni Association is
hosting Meigs County's first-ever county alumni softball
tournament Sunday beginning at I p.m. and running until
.
dusk. at Star Mill Park in Racine.
The tournament will become an annual event with Eastern
having already expressed interest in hosting 2010 event.
Sign-in will be from 12 to 1 p.m . Panicipants are to come
early to ensure a spot on a team. More information is available from Junie Maynard at 949-4222 Ext. 1129 or school
representatives, Eastern-Shawn Bush 985-3304. Kristen
Oettwiller 985-3304; Meigs, Nick Dettwiller 949-4222
Ext. 1132 ; Kelly Smith Pape, 949-4222 extl217; Southern,
Joe Cornell 949-4222 Ext. 1206, and Rachel ~hapman­
Hupp 949-4222 Ext. 1119 .
.The Racine/Southern Alumni Association will sell
Alumni shins (for Southern alumni), Big Fooze Books,
Southern Alumni Basketball Night Game DVDs, baked
goods and water, and wganize a homerun derby, contest.
There will be a corn hole tournament with s1gn-up from
I to 2 p,m. Cost is $10 fot team games which will start at
2 p.m . with the winning team to .win $100 for their alumni to use for a scholarship. A traveling trophy will be
awarded.

Public meetings ·
Thursday, April 30
SHADE ,;;,. Bedford
Township meeting on fire
protection, 7 p.m., Bedford
Township Grange Hall. ·
PORTLAND - Lebanon
Township Trustees meet at
7 !)'.m ., township building.
Saturday, May 2
SYRACUSE - A meeting of the Sutton Township
Trustees will be held at 10
a.m. in Room 204 at

family dwelling in need of
repair, have an acceptable
credit history, the ability to
repay the loan and meet
income guidelines.
.
USDA
Rural
Development's mission is to
· increase economic opportunity and improve the quality
of life for rural residents. To ·
learn more about these programs or apply for assistance, homeowners are
encouraged to contact Carol
Costanzo in the Marietta
Office by calling (740) 3737113' Ext. 206 or visit the
office located at 21330 SR
676 Suite A, Marietta. OH
45750. Information is also
available
at
. www.rurdev .usda/gov.

Remains of 2 killed in WWII coming back to Ohio

Che&amp;icalPeeJ• ·
exfoliate the
benefits and deep pore
cleansing, loosen blackheads, stimulate skin drculation,
promote heaUng, restore elasticity, rejuvenate skin, improve
tone and texture, minimize pores and scars, improve the
appearance of stretch marb, and fade age spots.

•

fast, 8 a.m., Morning Star Overbrook
Center
in
United Methodist Church.
Middleport. One of the
Tuesday, May 5
trustees, Kenny Wiggins , is
POMEROY - Revival a resident receiving therapy
services will be .held at the ·. there.
Monday, May 4
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, State
RUTLAND .- . Rutland
Route 143, Pomeroy, Mah .510, 7 p.m. each evening . . Township Trustees, 5 p.m.,
Monty Hurst, evangelist, with Rutland Fire Station.
the Hurst Family providing
· Wednesday, MBy 6
special music. Rev. Charles
PAGEVILLE - · Scipio
McKenzie,pastor,992-2952. -Township Trustees, regular
meeting, . 6:30 . p.m ..
Pageville Town Hall .
POMEROY - Meigs
County
Board of Health,
Monday, May 4
regular
meeting, 5 p.m ..
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. Mildred Fry will observe conference room Meigs
her 95th birthday on May 4. County Health Department.
Cards may be sent to P.O . .
Box 75, New Haven, W.Va. ·
25265.

RACINE - Plans for a mother-daughter banquet to be
held on May 7 at the Bethany Dorcas Church were made at
a recent meeting of the Sonshine Circle.
The banquet will be catered by Ruth Arnold and served
at 6 p.m. Members are reminded to take a silk flower to th·e
May meeting. It was noted that orders are being taken for
noodles to be made May 18 and 20. Donations were made
to several organizations.
Kathryn Hart conducted the meeting following an Easter
potluck attended by 23 members. Evelyn Foreman gave the
blessing . Devotions were by Blondena Rainer and Edie
Hubbard who read from "Our Daily Bread."
Thank you cards were read from several individuals for
fruit baskets. Edie Hubbard reported she had sent out 85
cards. Members sang Happy Birthday 10 Han. Rainer and
Hubbard had the program on"Mixed Up City Shocker." Next
meeting will be on May 14 at the Bethany Dorcas Church.

.USDA offers low-interesthome repair loans

CLINIC
Department of

•

After Hours reception, 4-6
p.m., American Municipal
Power-Ohio,appetizers provided .
POMEROY Meigs
County Cancer Initiative,
regular meeting, noon, conference room, Meigs County
Health Department, 9926626 for more information.
RACINE· Racine
Chapter !34 Order of ·
Eastern Star, inspection,
· 7:30 p.m., lodge hall,
refreshments to follow . .

Friday, May 1 ·
RACINE - MeigsCounty
Pomona Grange, 7:30 p.m.,
Racine Grange Hall. All bak.'ing contests will be held.
.
Saturday,May 2
· MIDDLEPORT - .Job's
Daughters Bethel 62, 11
:a.m. 50th .anniversary din~
'ner. 2 p.m. open meeting
with - majority ceremony.
'Honored Queen Harley Fox
.'presiding and reception
honoring Kristen Davis,
Grand Bethel Honord
Saturday, May 2
Queen to fo11ow meeting .
TUPPERS PLAINS
, HARRISONVILLE ~ American Red Cross. bloodRegular stated meeting of mobile, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.,
Harrisonville . Lodge 4ll, Bethel Worship Center. Free
F&amp;AM,
.7
. p.m. Paula Deen apron to each
:Refreshments at 6:30 p.m. donor. Donors may register
:All Masons invjted.
at 667-6793, but registra· SALEM CENTER - Star. tion not required.
:orange #778 and Star Junior
:orange #878, potluck sup:per at 6:30p.m. followed by
:meeting at 7:30p.m.
·
.
Sunday, May 3
··
Friday, May 1
: RACINE
Racine · MIDDLEPORT
:Chapter 134 of Eastern Star, Healing and miracle ser·practice for inspection, 2:30 vice, 7 p.m., Rejoicing Life
:p.m., lodge hall, all officers · Church.
;urged to attend.
.
Saturday, May 2
:
Monday, May 4
. RACINE - Sou\hern
· POMEROY - Business Charge men 's prayer break-

HOLZE

•

may also be used as place
cards). small wrapped packages of candy or something
that ties in with your theme.
Dear
Annie:
Tell
"Ringless" not to place too
much emphasis on whether
or not her husband wears his
wedding ring.,Ooes he wear
any other jew~lry? I've been
married for 23 years to a
great guy who puts on his
wedding ring only for major
social events. He doesn't
like jewelry and n~ver has·.
If her husband doesn't like
to wear his ring every day,
she might ask if he'll wear it
for special occasions. If he is
loving in every way, the ring
is a minor point. - Also
. Ringless, But I Know He
Loves Me
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
MarcY, Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesma!l~
boxcomcast.net, or wnte
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.OBox 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features. by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit .the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators .com.

·coll1Iilunity Calendar

CHEMICAL ·PEELS

N
.. .

town. I've since had difficulIf you wish to send cards
ty finding employment and or gifts to your son and
.am living with friends. A grandchildren, continue to
year ago, I had triple bypass do so even if there is no
heart surgery. Wtthout my · re~ponse. You never know
knowledge, a friend 7 e- what the future hQids. But
mailed Amanda and begged otherwise; find things in
her to allow my son to speak your life that make you
to me, &amp;aying I might not happy. Be a surrogate grandsurvive the operation. mother to others' grandchiiAmanda e-mailed me direct- dren. Keep active and create
ly, saying she spoke to my a family out of your friends.
son about it and they both
Dear Annie: My sister
refuse to speak to me and I are giving my niece a
because she and I "dido 'I see bridal shower. Is it true that
eye to eye." I was shocked at you have to give a pany
their coldhearted cruelty.
favor to each guest who
EYen though I've healed attends? I've never seen this
from surgery, my hean is done, but it has been awhile
still broken. J.,ately, I've since I've been to a shower.
been. thinking I am better off My sister claims it is the new
. without them because they . thing, but tbe shower is costmust be horrible people to ing enough and we are also
treat me so despicably. providing nuts, mints, cake
Please tell other y,oung and game gifts. She also said
women that demanding con- guests should receive gifts at
trol over their husbands weddings, too .
causes heartache to everyone
.I attended two weddings
and will eventually come . recently and didn't get a
back to hun them, as well. ~ift. Am I just old-fash- Heartbroken in N.C.
toned? - Must Know
Dear Must: Party favors
Dear Heartbroken: We
agree that what goes around at showers and .weddings
comes around. It's sad that have become more popular,
your daughter-in-law isn't but are absolutely not
willing to allow her husband mandatory. If the .bride
to have a relationship with insists and you don't want
his family. It's even sadder to go over your budget, try
that your son. permits this.
little picture frames (which

Thursday, April30, 2009

Circle plans Mothers
Day observance

Cruelty should not prevent relationship

BY MICHAEL WARREN
AND PAUL HAVEN

PageA3

I

: LIMA (AP) - The mili:taty is bringing home the
·remains of two Ohio men
:who grew up within 20
:miles of each other and died ·
:when their plane was shot
·down over the Pacific Ocean
durinS World War II. Their
famihes are now phmning to
·bury them near their hometowns in northwest Ohio.
: The military used DNA to
.confUTD theiddentities after
divers found their plane in
2004.
. "It was a 65-year family
)nystery as to what really
:happened," said Nikki
-Abbott. whose great-uncle
U1 Yoh was among those.
killed. "Finding him is like
:solving the mystery."
· Both Yoh, who grew up in
'Scott. and Leland Price, who

graduated from Oakwood
High School. were staff
sergeants on a B-24
Liberator that was shot down
in September I~ during a
bombing mission against
Japanese-held ·islands and
airstrips in the South Pacific :
The two were from small
towns about 60 miles south of
Toledo and had never ·met
until they were assigned to the
same bomber, according to a
neWspaper article written
after the plane was shot down.
Three !&gt;fthe II crew memhers parachuted from the
.plane and were captured and
executed by the Japanese.
The eight others were initially listed as missing in action
and later presumed dead.
Sixty years Iiller, volunteer
divers searching for ships and

aircraft lost around the Palau
Islands found .the bomber sitting in 70 feet of water.
Surviving family me mbers provided DNA samples
that allowed the Department
of Defense to identify the
remains. Three years ago,
Leona Frederick provided a
DNA sample ·that helped
ide11tify Price"This is so many years
ago that it's really unbelievable almost." said Frederick.
who is his aunt and closest
surviving relative .
Pricewas21 whenhedied.
Frederick was just a few
years older and remembers
walking with him to school.
She said he was "always
crazy about airplanes."
''We were more like sister
and brother," she said.

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�The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

'
ThUJ'IIJday. Aprilao, 2009

PageA4
ThUrsday, Apri13o, 2009

Obituaries

Analysis:
Specter
defection
shrinks
GOP's
reach
The Daily Sentinel
~y CHARLES BABINGTON

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157

adding to the trend With his
Specter's departure fol - switch.
Specter accused party
lows rect;nt Republican
losses in once-reliable leaders of abatldoning modstates. While Barack Obama erate Republicans in tough
was cruising to the White mces, saying, "there ought
House last fall, Republicans to be an uprising." ·
were losing . loug-beld
In the I 970s, '80s and
Senate sears in Alaska, early '90s, the nation's politColorado, New Mexico . ical ·realigninent favored the
North Carolina and Virginia. GOP. Voters in many of the
A moderate Republican lost II former Confederate states
his seat in Oregon, and the ousted Democrats by the
same seems likely to happen dozens, no longer accepting
when Minnesota's long · the old odd-bedfellows
recount is settled,
aUiance of Southern com;erIn the House, ~ublicans vatives and more dominant
have suffered ~ losses in Northern liberals.
the last two elections, espeWith the Northeast still
dally in the Northeast. L&lt;)st ho~ to . many "Rockefeller
week; Democrat
Scott · Republicans" - centrists· in
Murphy won a special elec- the mold of fanner New York
ti()n in a heavily Republican Gov. Nelson Rockefeller congressional district in the realignment pinched
upstate New York. Muwhy Democrats hard.
will be sworn in Wednesday.
In recent years, however.
giving Democrats' 256 House the tide has reversed.
sealS to i 78 for Republicans Moderate-to-liberal voters in
with.one vacancy.
the Northeast and Pacific
The
congressional West felt increasingly at odds
Republicans· base is shrink- with the national Republican
ing, leaving them with Party, and they began electstrougholds only in the ing more Democrats to local
South and parts of ' the and federal posts: Obiuna
mountain West.
·
won surprising vi~o.1ories in
With the departure of Viq\inia, North Carolina and
. each centrist, including lndtana, though it's far from
Pennsylvania's Specter, the clearthatDemocratscanhold
party also appears more those states.
firmly right-of-center. Polls
Ute result is a shrinking
show most Americans near- and increasingly right-leailer the political center, and ing GOP, throughout . the
Democratic leaders . were nation and in Congress.
happy Tuesday to promote There, moderate Republicans
.the GOP's image as ni!JTOW· are almost an endangered
minded . ·
species. While lonely, they
"This is now ofticially a may play J?ivotal roles in braRep~blican Party w~ere mod- kering legtslative deals, espeerates .need not apply," said cially in the Senate.
Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass.
Snowe
and
her
Specter made similar Republican colleague from
remarks. "The Republican Maine, Susan M, Collins,
Party bas moved t'.uther and now are the Senate's most
farther to the right," he said, prominent GOP moderates.

WASHLNGTON - With
Sen. Arlen Specter's switch
'
to the Democrats, the
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Republican Party is increasingly at risk of being viewed
Dan Goodrich
L
as a mostly Southern and
Publisher
solidly conservative party, an
identity thai might take yean;
Charlene Hoeflich
to overcome.
Specter's move , which
General Manager-News Editor
rocked Congress and the
political world Tuesday, is
the
latest
blow
to
Republicans,
especially
in
Cqngress shall make no law respecting an
the Northeast, once a GOP
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
stronghold. The region's
free exerdse thereof; or abridging the freedom of Republicans ·now have been
to a scant presence
speech, or of ihe press; or the right of the peo- reduced
in the House and a dwindling
. pie peaceably .to assemble, and to petition the influence in the Senate.
But Specter's defection has
Government for a redress ofgrievances.
symbohc and immediate
ramifications for the GOP
· - The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution nationwide.lt makes it easier
for Democrats, fairly or not,
to paint the party as ideologically rigid and alien to large
swaths of the country.
· Today is Thursday, April 30. the !20th day of 2009.
Olympia
Snowe
of
There are 245 days left in the year.
·
Maine, one of the Senate's
Today's Highlight in HisJory: One hundred and fifty r.ears few remaining moderate
ago, on April30, 1859, the Charles Dickens novel"A Tale of Republicans,
called
Two Cities" was first published in serial form in the premiere Specter's decision another
issue of All the Year Round, a literary magazine owned by sign that her party must
Dickens. (The novel was presented in 31 weekly installments.) move toward the center.
On this date: In 1789, George Washington took office in
"Ultimately, we're ,headNew York as the first president of the United States.
ing to having the smallest
In 1803, the United States purchased the· Louisiana political tent in history,"
Territory from France for 60 million francs, the equivalent Snowe said. "If the
. ·
of about $15 million.
Republican Party fully
In 1812, Louisiana became the 18th state of the Union. ·· intends to become a majoriIn 1904, the Louisiana Purchase Exposition opened in St. ty party in the future, it must
Louis.
.
move from the far right
In 1909, Juliana, queen of the Netherlands from 1948 to back toward the middle."
1980, was born in The Hague.
But Senate Republican
In 1939, the New York World's Fair officially openeq leader Mitch McConnell of
with a ceremony that included an address by President J(entucky was defiant.
Franklin D. Roosevelt.
·
"I do not accept that we are
In 1945, as Russian troops approached his Berlin bunker, going to be a regional party,''
Adolf Hitler committed suicide along with his wife of one he said. "We're working very
day, Eva Braun.
·
·
hard to compete throughout
In 1948, the Charter of the Organization of American
States was signed in Bogota, Colombia.
•
'
In 1970, President Richard M. Nixon announced the U.S.
was sending troops into Cambodia, an action that sparked
widespread protest.
.
In 1973, Nixon announced the resignations of top aides H.R.
Haldeman and John Ehrlichman, along with Attorney General
Richard G. Kleindienst and White House counsel John Dean.
Ten years ago: A bomb exploded at a gay pub in Londori,
killing three people and injuring more than 70 . (David
Copeland, a white supremacist, was later convicted of mur. ~er for a series of bombings in London and sentenced to six
· life sentences.) The Rev. Jesse Jackson met with each of the
three U.S. soldiers being held prisoner by Yugoslavia.
Five ye;trs ago: Arabs expressed outrage at graphic photo~raphs of naked Iraqi prisoners being humiliated by U.S.
nulitary police; President George W. Bush condemned the
· mistreatment of prisoners, sa~ing "that's not the way we do
things in America." On ABC s "Nightline,... Ted Koppel read
aloud the names of72l U.S. servicemen and women killed in
the Iraq war (the Sinclair Broadcast Group refused to air the
program on seven ABC stations). Michael Jackson pleaded
not-guilty in Santa Maria, Calif., to a grand jury indictment
that expanded the child molestation case against him.
(Jackson was acquitted at trial .) Fonner NBA star Jayson
Williams was acquitted of aggt;~vated manslaughter in the
s))otgun slaying of a limousine driver at his New Jersey man-·
sion, but found guilty of trying to cover liP the shooting.
(Williams faces retrial on a reckless manslaughter count.)
One year ago: The Federal' Reselile cut interest rates for
a seventh straight time, reducing the federal funds rate a
While looking for a good
quarter-point to 2 percent. An avalanche in Italy's northwestern Alps killed five French ski-mountaineers.
· teen magazine ("good" being
Thought for Today: "Upper classes are a nation's past; the ones without hook-lip
the m.iddle class. is its future." - Ayn Rand, Russian-born tips) for her .d1mghter, one
reader stumbled onto an outauthor (1905-1982).
·
dated link on National
Review Online.'The link was
embedded.
in
old article.
LETTERS TO THE
But instead of the familyEDITOR
friendly information it origiLetters to the editor are welcome. They should be less nally went to, the link lead to
tHan 300 words. All/etters are subjec;tto editing, must be a porn site. The reader's hus.
signed, and include address and telephone number. No band called liS, not beca\ISC
, unsigned letters will be published. Leiters should be in he was angry with NRO, but
gOO(!. taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Leiters of because be wanted to spare
rlronks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- the next person who clicked
the link. He wasn''t surprised
ed for publication.
,
about the accidental link
.change since porn is legion
on the Internet.
Access to porn is probably
in your e-mail account's
Reader Services
(USPS 213-9601
inbox right · now. You're
Correction Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
probably used to just manuOur main concern In all stories is to PubHshed ~ty morning, ·Monday
ally erasing it as spam or setthrough Friay, 111 Cour1 Street.
be accurate. · If you know ol an error
Pomerov. Ohio. Second-clan !lOS"~" ting up automated filters to
1n a story, calllhe newsroom ~~ (740) paid ~~ Pomeroy.
block it ·out, but you know
992-2156.'
llembw: ·The Associated Press aod
it's out there in a big way.
the Ohio Newspaper AssoclaUon.
What are you going·to do?
Po8~..ter: $end ,address corrac·
Our main number Ia
The Hoover Institution's
tiona
· to The Dally Sentlnef, P.O. Box
(140) 992-2t56.
Mary
Ebecitadt calls it the
. 729, Pomeroy, Ollio 45769.
. Depllrtmenl extenalons •ra:
new tobacco. The heights to
which porn ha.~ been accepted
· Subscription Rates
a,
carrier
or
molor
route
in the mainstream represents
News
4 - .... ·..........'11.30
"widespread
tolerance, tinged
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, EICI. I 2
5 2 - · . ...........'128.85
with
resignation
about the
fl4porler: Brian Reed, EICI. 14
Dally .......... " .. " " .150'
notion that things could ever
llop.-; Bell&gt; Sergent, Ext 13
Senior CHI..n rat..
be otherwise." We've taken a
2 8 - · . "'" .. '." .'58.61
52 ••. ·. " ..... .'116.90
"full tum" in the last century
.
Advertising
Stb!olwn should ramlt in adllai'UI
in regard to tobacco and porn.
·OutakiiSolel: Dave Harris, EICI. 15 &lt;1n1a 1o The """ · No sub·
"Yesterday,
smoking was
Oulaklt Solei: Brenda Davis, EICI 1~ scription ty mall . permitted In areas
considered unremarkable in a
where home carrier seMce Is BWwabfe.
CtuaJCirc.: Judy Clalt&lt;, E&gt;&lt;t. 10
moral sense, whereas pomog-·
Mall Subscription
raphy was widely considered
lnalct. Melgo County
General Manager
disgusting and wrong - ·
12
We81&lt;s
....... . .....'35.26
' Charlene Hoeflich, EICI. 12
including even by peo[lle who
26 Weeks ... . .........'70. 70
consumed it. Today, as a gen52 Weeks ...•........ '140.11
E...,.. I:
eral rule, just the reverse is
-Omydaitysenllnel.com
OuUide Molgo County
!JUe. Now it is pornography
·1 2 Weeks ............. '56.55
that is widely (though not uni28 Weeks ............'113.60
versally) said to be value-free,
52 Weal&lt;s ... " . " . • "'227.21
whereas smoking is widely
www.mydallyaentlnel.com

TODAY IN HISTORY

the country."

lN ANY
OTHER COLORS' OR FABRICS'?
. IS IT AVAilAgu:

Collins said she was
"very, very disappointed
and surprised" by Specter's
defection. "It's somethin$ l
would never do:' she said,
but she called on Iter party
to be more inclusive.
''The Republican Party
has been most successful
when it has adopted the big
tent approach tha.t was
favored by Ronald Reagan,
by Gerald Ford" and others,
Collins said.
Obama bailed Specter's
switch, but its blessmg may
prove mixed. The president
vowed a more bipartisan.era
in Washington, and the loss
of another'GOP centrist will
make Congress more partisan than before.
Republican leaders, meanwhile, faced an uphill battle;
in next year's Pennsylvania
Senate race even before
Specter made ·the switch. In
that sense, they P-robably
have lost liqle. Bes1des. only
15 years ago some pundits
predicted permanent minority status for DelliOCrats, fatlowing their huge losses in
the 1994 elections.
Political fortunes can
change rapidly. and unexpectedly. But for . n~w,
Repubhc.ans hold drstuict
minority status in the House
and
Senate,
where
Democrats and in!lependents hold 59 seats to 40 foi
the GOP. They confront a
popular Democratic president, and they face numerous ill-timed retirements in
next year's Senate races.
Tuesday was another bad
day in a political season that
some Republicans must feel
cannot possibly get worse. ·

GALLIPOLIS - Delbert E. Clay Jr., 75. of Gallipolis,
passed away on Tuesday, April28, 2009, at his son's residence in Racine.
He was born April 18, 1934, in Carter County, Ky., son
of the late ~~be~ E. Sr. and Grace. Hampton Clay.
Delbert rettred tn 1994 from Katser Aluminum after 36
years of employment, and was a member of United Steel
Workers No. 557 at Ravenswood, W.Va.
.
' He was a member of Old Kyger Freewill Baptist Church,
where be was a Sunday School teacher and deacon, a member of th~ Old Tyme Chorus, and French City Treblemakers
at th~ Ar:tel Theater. He enjoyed playing the piano and guitar, stngmg and woodworking.
. He was preceded in death by his wife of 50 years, Karen
Clay, and from this union there are three children surviving,
Jeannie (Gary) Saunders of Gallipolis, Steve (Sandy) Clay
of Racine, and Danelte (Juan) McCabe of Gallipolis.
' He married Reba O'Brien Elkins of Rutland on Aug. 12,
2006. and she survives.
·
Also surviving are six grandchildren;Sally (BJ) Barneue,
Bradley (Mallory) Clay, Brooke Clay, Krisha Sheets, Kim
Hart and Seth Johnson; two great-grandchildren. Bailey
(3amette and Bella Barnette; and three . sisters, Louise
&lt;;ientry and Avalene Prichard, both of Wurtland, Ky., and '
Beulah Williams of Virginia .
.
. .
In addition lo his parents and his .first wife, Karen:,
Delbert is preceded in death by two sisters, Naomi Gillispie
and Pauline Shaw, and one brother, Alvis Clay. . .
· Services will be. I p.m. Friday, May I, 2009, at the
. Willis Funeral Home, with Pastor Rick Bourne officiating. Burial will follow in Gravel Hill Cemetery. Friends
may call at the fune.ral home on Friday from II a.m. until
1 p.m., prior to tbe service.
Pallbearers will be Seth Johnson , Bra,jley Clay, Tommy
Taylor, Gary Saunders, BJ Barnette and Juan McCabe.
.
Honorary. pallbearer is Bob Sij!man.
In lieu of flowers, the famtly requests donations in
Delbert's memory to Holzer Hospice,!()() Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis,.Ohio 45631.
·
·
·
Please visit www:willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
e,ondolences.
·
·
·

the event will provide
women with health information along with some
baseline knowledge for
behavioral change.
Topics to be explored at
the health fair will. include
diabetes prevention , cardiovascular healtlt. promoting
wellness and health, eating
disorders and health eating
· habits,
· pre-conception
health and prenatal care,
·talking to health care professionals and health literacy, coping with stress,

domestic violence and
abuse detection, and prevention aqd dental health.
There will be interactive
sessions with speakers on
,various topics concerning
women's heahb along with
infonnation on .screenings
and resources, preventive
measures, and community
support systems available
locally.
Exhibitors from local
health care facilities , area
hospitals and community
organizations will have

informational booths. Also
featured will be displays on
hunter and gun safety,
motorcycle safety. and law .
enforcement. Screenings
will include blOOd p.ressure
checks, glucose screenings,
and skin screenings.
"Our goal is to increase
participants' awareness of
the importance of a heahhy
lifestyle for lifelong wellness, to celebrate the extraordinary progress which bas
been made over the past
·century in women's health,

and to empower women to
take
responsibility
to
improve their personal
health;' said Thomas,
As for the fair, she said
tw() educational sessions
will be offered with each one
lasting 2 112 hours. DuriJtg
that time there will be six 15minute presentations on various women's issues after
which the participants can
view the displays. ChiJd.care
will be available for those
bringing children. Door
prizes will be awarded.

Racine from Page AI ..
The only other project
funded in Ohio by the
American Recovery and
. Reinveslment Act W&lt;~S the
Earnhart Hill Regional
Water and Sewer District
which was selected to
receive $3.6 million to consolidate wastewater treatment operations of two
neighboring villages.
The total cost of the
SRRSD's up~rade ·and
extension
tnto
the
Tackerville area is estimated to cost $3.9 million,

according to Bob Allen with
the Ohio Rural Community
i\ssistance Program.
Allen
previously
. explained the SRRSD's (JI'!)·
jeet includes "significant
upgrades and rehabilitation
of all lift stations, rehabbing
manholes ... rehabbing t!te
waster ·water treatment
plant" and of course extendmg ·sewer service to about
46 customers in the
Tackerville area.
Last month, Allen said the
district was looking for

fundin~ primarily from the through Meigs County as
USDA s Rural Development the applicant.
arm but at that .time was
Allen had said he hoped·
waiting on rural develop- the funding will ~II fall in
ment to complete its review place this year with some
of the project to then hope· of those
funds
(if
fully make a financial offer, approved) possibly being
whtch Vilsack's
press . awarded in late July or
release confirmed this week. August. He adderi that he
Also, last month -AlletJ along with the district hope
said other funding agencies the project can begin conthe district is considering is struction later this year
a $250,000 Appalachian though he guessed it might
Resource Grant and a take eight to 10 months,
$500,000
Community possibly less, to complete
Development Block Grant the project.

Shelter from Page M

Management
Agency ter programs run by local have an accounting system . Se..Vices Division Director,
(FEMA). The Board was service orgaqizations in the and c.onduct an annual Gallia-Meigs . Community
charged to distribute funds area. · The · Local Board is audit; 4) practice non-dis- Action Agency at 367-7341
appropriated by Congress to responsible ·for recom- crimination;
5)
have or 992-6629.
· help expand the capacity of . mending . agencies
to demonstrated the capability · Galli.a and Meigs Counties
· food and shelter progt;~ms receive these. funds made . to deliver emergency food have distributed Emer:gency
in high-need areas around available through ARRA. . and/or shelter programs; Food and Shelter fundS pre•
POMEROY - Robert William Harrison II, 40, of the
country. ·
Under the terms of the and 6) if they are a private viously with the G~llia­
Pomeroy, passed away on April 26, 2009 as the result of an
A
Local
Board
made
up
grant
from the National voluntary
organization, Meigs Community Action
. .
automobile accident.
of
Gallia
and
Meigs
choBoard,
local
agencies
they
should
have
a volun- Agency and the Gallia
· He was born on Nov. 8, 1968, in Fairbanks, Alaska.
County
citizens
will
detersen to receive funds must: tary board.
County Council on Aging
· Mr. Harrison worked as a pipe fitter for most of his life.
awardmine
how
the
funds
I)
be
private
voluntary
applyThose
interested
in
participating. These agencies
He was a member of the Carleton Church, where he was
ed
to
the
counties.
are
to
be
of
govnon-profits
or
units
ing
forARRA
EFSP
funds
were
responsible for providalso an assistant pastor, where he loved to work with childistributed
among
the
2)
be
eligible
to
ernment;
must
·
contact
Sandra
ing
numerous
meals and util~
dren. He loved to make people laugh. He was an avid
emergency
food
and
she!receive
f~eral
funds;
·
3)
Edwards,
Community ity assistance.
sportsman and car enthusiast.
He is survived by his wife,.Audra Harrison. Pomeroy; a
son, Wade Harrison, Pomeroy; parents, Chuck and Jan Van
Cooney, Pomeroy; a sister, Candy and Kevin Ulbrich,
.
aVID
. gs
· from Page AI
Pomeroy; stepbrothers: Joe, Mike and Tony Van Cooney;
stepsisters, Sandy Evans and Debbie Van Cooney; a sister: contract and 30 days to ject will address some seri- reducing leaks and the
in- law. Betsy. and Harry Rice; nieces and nephews; Cale begin work once .the. con- . ous infrastructure issues. repairs they require, and
Ulbrich, Lex1e Houdashelt-Rice, and Cody R1ce; mother- tractor is inplace.
Those . hydrants now in boil advisories that follow.
in-law and father-in-law, Richard and Mary Houdashelt, . While much of the fund- place, Roberts said, do not
One project was rejected
Pomeroy grandmothers, Rub~ Greene ~d Ruby Burnside; ing is made up of grants or clllT)t enough water pressure under th~ s.timulus program . .
numerous aunts, uncles, cousms and fnends.
forgiven ·
lo!lris, , the for today' s modern pumper A $4 mrlhon long•planned
· He was preceded in death by his grandparents, William $700,000 low-interest ·Joan l!'!lcks. Water lilies are too sewer outflow repair project
Middleport · Pomeroy
~Obert Harriso~ and Myrtle Faye Harrison grandparents, included in the ful)din,g small, and are iJI poor c&lt;incould be funded by .addi992-5141 992-5444
Al~rt and Marte Van Cooney; and grandfather Joe Payne. pa4lkage will be the r~pon- dition . They
will be tional federal money yet to
Funeral will .be held at I p.m. on Thursday, April 30, 81'bil'ty
fM'ddl
rt
·
bl'
1 0
1
.2.009, at the Anderson-McDaniel . Funeral ·Home ·r·n works
epoIt pu
IC replaced by larger 'lines, ~orne, Roberts said.
customers.
could
Pomeroy with Pastor Robert Vance offiCiating lltld Ronnie cost them as inuc~ as $3 .S'O
:Vance assisting.
· ··
·
·'
· ··
· · per month over a 20-year
.• Burial will follow at Cadeton Church Cemetery. '
· ·jl:riod, but Roberts said ~s~
Visiting hours were held from 4 to 8 p.m; Wednesday im,d rdents.should see the proJect
· will also .be held two hours prior to .the funeral today as money well spent. ·
(Thursday.) ·
·
For example, Reberts said,
mothers day, a heartfelt
A i'egistty is available ·on•Iiile at www. andersonmc- all the village's fire hydrants
daniel.com.
··
would be repaired or replaced

Robel t Hanison II

(Charles Babington cov•
. ers the White House for The

Associated Press).

s ' • · ' .·· ·

~AHLER
oza&gt;9,

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

·I

.carolyn·.·Pri
· .

c
'
e
.

.

,

Watching out for the ·'new tobacco'

· The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

' Health fair from Page AI

Delbe.t E day Jr.

S'A LE

an

www.mydailysentinel.com

The question about the govlatest issue of Policy Review,
ernment
· is
revealing.
Eberstadt reminds readers
that a Philip Morris executive Pornographers can dismiss
once asked "What do . you · this, but corporations know
think smok~:rs would do if there is harm done by 1&gt;9111,
tl'tey didn't smoke? You get even if it's just to producbvity.
Kathryn
some pleasure from it, and A~ording to one 2007 surLopez ·
you also ~et some other ben- . vey, 65 percent of corporaeficial things, such as stress tions use porn-detecting soft· relief. Nobody knows what ware. Divorce lawyers, clergy
· you'd tu~ to if you didli 't · and therapists can tell you the
smoke. Maybe you'd . beat (!amaging role it's playing in
considered disgusting and your . wife. Maybe you'd the matried and unmarried
wrong - including even by drive cars fast. Who knows lives of American couples.
many smokers."
The question about governIn making the compari• what the hell you'd do.''
ment
is also, of course, alarmson, Eberstadt observes that · And so I ~.hould s~rug
.
ing
to anyone who cares
many people say "con- because there. s not w.ldeabOut
freedom
and the future
sumers have a "ri.g ht' to spr.ead rape tn Amertcan
of the Internet. Further,more,
pOrnography - possibly offtces?
PeoJ?le seem to get that as it affects our children and
even a consti.tutional right.
... Given the soc.ial and polit- th~ ts a problem, perhaps our families, it is a cultural
ical circumstances arrayed looking for someon~ to sol'!e copout of a solution.
in its favor. what would be . the. problem that m1ght be m . Thinking about my caller
the point of objecting?"
thetr o':"n home for th~m or and his wife and daughter,
As horrific as it sounds, the otherwtse hope 11 wtll go I've been flashing back to
fact is, she's right. It is, sadly, away: For her 2005 book something Traci Lords once
no surprise that pam is the Pornified: .How Pornography said: "I have to thank Ed
most searched for and most Is DamaRtng Ot~r Lives, Our Meese for saving my life." At
profitable product 'on \he Rela!ioitships . · and Our 18, her career as a pam star
Internet. But unless it v.iolates, Ff:!~lllltes, Pamela. Paul com- ended in a federal raid. How
the sensitivities of even the m1sstoned a Hwns poll and many Traci' Lords are on a
most desensitized (child found that. "Despite wide- · computer near you today?
porn, simulated rape, things spread dental and the [lllrva- And who, besides Traci, is it
yqu rather me not write here), stve!less of outdated rabonal- harming? It's a question a
porno'graphy is too wide- tzattons. many Amencans society that in its rbetoric and
spread for many to bother to have a problem with the ram- culture says .it cares about
do anything bqt shrug or. pant spread of pornography." women and children and lives
even, to try to play along.
She f~und that liberal or con- and love needs to grapple
·As with tobacco; this is not , servattve. people were not with. If Eberstadt's comparigoing to change overnight. widely opposed to the gov- son is right, it's coming. The
But, as with tobacco, a ernment doing . something. shrugs will cease. I, for one,
change in perception would- "42 percent of Americans said . though, would hope the tum·
n't be bad for our health .
the government should regu- around comes not largely
Even those who smoke late Internet pornography because government has
don't pretend there's nothing .specifically so that children made it highly inconvenient
hannful about smoking now. cannot access X-rated materi- but because we have decided
But it wasn't long ago that a! online and 13 percent said we want something better.
tobacco compani~s brought the government sh.ould regu- , ( Kat/1ryn Lopez is tlte editor
their experts 111 to make the. late pornography in a way of National Review Online
case that tobacco "addiction" similar to cigarettes - with (www.nationalreview.com).
maY. just be leamed behavior. warning labels and restric- She can be conracted a(
Chtlhngly, in her piece in the lions to minimize harm."
klopez@nationalreview.com) ..

'.

.. PORTLAND - Carolyn L. Price·, 88,.of Portland, died
Ap.V:rial. 29, 2009, at St. Joseph's.. Hospital. in Park.ersb.·u· rg,
W.'
She was born Jan. 2, 1921, in Paw Paw, W.Va., da1,1ghter
of the. late Raymond and Buelah Larkin. She was a house. wife, and a!te111led the Portlahd United Methodist Church.
. Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her
husband, f:!ubert Price; and her brothers, Joseph Larkin and
Raymond Larkins:
·
· Surviving ar~ her daughter, Beverly Brougher, Phoenix,
Ariz.; sons arid daughters-in-law: Samuel (Carmen) Price
of Connersville, Ind., a11d Larry (Debbie) P'dce of
Cincinnati; a sister · and brother-in-law, Lois (Herman)
, Goede, Paw Paw, W.Va.; six grandchildren and two great
·
.
grandchildren.
· Funeral will be held at 10 a.m. on Satutday,May 2, 2009,
at Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Rev. Herman
Qoede officiatin$.
·
·
.
Burial will be 10 Browning Cemetery in Portland.
Friends may call from 5-8 p.m. on Friday at the funeral
home.

.Deaths
Eber O'dell.Pickens Sr.
,.

.

· . . SYRACUSE- Eber O'dell Pickens Sr:, 73, of Syracuse,
passed away at his residence on Wednesday,April29, 2009.
. Visitation will be held from 6-9 p.m. on Sunday, May 3,
2009 ai the Anderson McDaniel.F!Jnerl!l Home in pomeroy, .
· A funeral service will be held all p.m. on Monday, May 4,
2009 at the funeral home.
. .
,
. An online registry is avail!lble by logging onto
www..andersonmcdaniel.ct&gt;m.
·

.Donation rrom Page At
where Jessing later found·ed the Pontifical College
Josephinum~ the only pontifical seminary in the
.world outside of Italy. .
The Knights of Columbus ·
has grown to rnore than 1.7

million memberS throughour the United States and
other countries.
·
The local council will ·
sponsor a third fish fry for
charity from 4-6 . p.m.
Friday in the church hall.

7~,

and other hydrants \fill .be
install~ as part of the pro,.
gtlllll. Those ~royemencs
will likely result m a reduc·
· tion .in the cost of homerowners' insurance r,&lt;&gt;lici~, which
would "easily' make up for
the loan retirement expense.
Most importantly; the pro-

Gift
.

could be the best gift you could
ever give your mother.
Don't miss this opportunity to say it.

To be publishec:l
Sunday, May lOth

•

According to Lifeline of
Ohio, Ohio residents can
register as a donor by going
·1o www.lifelineofohio.org as
well as when renewing their
driver's license. Call Lifeline
nf Ohio at 1-800-525-5667
for mof'e itiformatioll.

1x3 Greeting $10

The Daily
Sentinel

..froin Page AI · .

"It's so·sad how many die
waiting on that list," Cheryl
said.
Over the years Cheryl has
beard many misconceptions
and concerns abQut organ
donation. Cheryl said the
biggest· she hears is the mis·
conception that doctors
wouldn't · do evetything to
save a patient's life if they
knew they could procure the
.organs. Cheryl said · in
Brandi's case, the issue of
organ donation was not even
brought up to the family
until there was absolutely no
hope that Brandi would
recover frQm her injuries.
Cheryl, . who is herself
signed up · to be an. organ ··
donor as is Jon, said she
always asks people if they
could save one life, "would" 't you do it?"
. "You don't need those
organs after _you're gone,"
·
Cheryl said.

ttUe

Happy
Mother's Day
..

•'

(Your Mother's
Name)
· Love, Adam, Evan
and Cameron
Rodgeis

Deodltn~ for this Spttdol. iifaUtttr'lllayTrl~ollle Is

Wednesday, Moy6, 2009
• Fill out the form below and drop olfthe payment to
The .DoltySentlnei"Molhar's Day"
Ill Cout:t$1., Pomeroy, OH 45769

Mother's N a m e - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - - - Your Name
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�The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

'
ThUJ'IIJday. Aprilao, 2009

PageA4
ThUrsday, Apri13o, 2009

Obituaries

Analysis:
Specter
defection
shrinks
GOP's
reach
The Daily Sentinel
~y CHARLES BABINGTON

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157

adding to the trend With his
Specter's departure fol - switch.
Specter accused party
lows rect;nt Republican
losses in once-reliable leaders of abatldoning modstates. While Barack Obama erate Republicans in tough
was cruising to the White mces, saying, "there ought
House last fall, Republicans to be an uprising." ·
were losing . loug-beld
In the I 970s, '80s and
Senate sears in Alaska, early '90s, the nation's politColorado, New Mexico . ical ·realigninent favored the
North Carolina and Virginia. GOP. Voters in many of the
A moderate Republican lost II former Confederate states
his seat in Oregon, and the ousted Democrats by the
same seems likely to happen dozens, no longer accepting
when Minnesota's long · the old odd-bedfellows
recount is settled,
aUiance of Southern com;erIn the House, ~ublicans vatives and more dominant
have suffered ~ losses in Northern liberals.
the last two elections, espeWith the Northeast still
dally in the Northeast. L&lt;)st ho~ to . many "Rockefeller
week; Democrat
Scott · Republicans" - centrists· in
Murphy won a special elec- the mold of fanner New York
ti()n in a heavily Republican Gov. Nelson Rockefeller congressional district in the realignment pinched
upstate New York. Muwhy Democrats hard.
will be sworn in Wednesday.
In recent years, however.
giving Democrats' 256 House the tide has reversed.
sealS to i 78 for Republicans Moderate-to-liberal voters in
with.one vacancy.
the Northeast and Pacific
The
congressional West felt increasingly at odds
Republicans· base is shrink- with the national Republican
ing, leaving them with Party, and they began electstrougholds only in the ing more Democrats to local
South and parts of ' the and federal posts: Obiuna
mountain West.
·
won surprising vi~o.1ories in
With the departure of Viq\inia, North Carolina and
. each centrist, including lndtana, though it's far from
Pennsylvania's Specter, the clearthatDemocratscanhold
party also appears more those states.
firmly right-of-center. Polls
Ute result is a shrinking
show most Americans near- and increasingly right-leailer the political center, and ing GOP, throughout . the
Democratic leaders . were nation and in Congress.
happy Tuesday to promote There, moderate Republicans
.the GOP's image as ni!JTOW· are almost an endangered
minded . ·
species. While lonely, they
"This is now ofticially a may play J?ivotal roles in braRep~blican Party w~ere mod- kering legtslative deals, espeerates .need not apply," said cially in the Senate.
Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass.
Snowe
and
her
Specter made similar Republican colleague from
remarks. "The Republican Maine, Susan M, Collins,
Party bas moved t'.uther and now are the Senate's most
farther to the right," he said, prominent GOP moderates.

WASHLNGTON - With
Sen. Arlen Specter's switch
'
to the Democrats, the
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Republican Party is increasingly at risk of being viewed
Dan Goodrich
L
as a mostly Southern and
Publisher
solidly conservative party, an
identity thai might take yean;
Charlene Hoeflich
to overcome.
Specter's move , which
General Manager-News Editor
rocked Congress and the
political world Tuesday, is
the
latest
blow
to
Republicans,
especially
in
Cqngress shall make no law respecting an
the Northeast, once a GOP
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
stronghold. The region's
free exerdse thereof; or abridging the freedom of Republicans ·now have been
to a scant presence
speech, or of ihe press; or the right of the peo- reduced
in the House and a dwindling
. pie peaceably .to assemble, and to petition the influence in the Senate.
But Specter's defection has
Government for a redress ofgrievances.
symbohc and immediate
ramifications for the GOP
· - The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution nationwide.lt makes it easier
for Democrats, fairly or not,
to paint the party as ideologically rigid and alien to large
swaths of the country.
· Today is Thursday, April 30. the !20th day of 2009.
Olympia
Snowe
of
There are 245 days left in the year.
·
Maine, one of the Senate's
Today's Highlight in HisJory: One hundred and fifty r.ears few remaining moderate
ago, on April30, 1859, the Charles Dickens novel"A Tale of Republicans,
called
Two Cities" was first published in serial form in the premiere Specter's decision another
issue of All the Year Round, a literary magazine owned by sign that her party must
Dickens. (The novel was presented in 31 weekly installments.) move toward the center.
On this date: In 1789, George Washington took office in
"Ultimately, we're ,headNew York as the first president of the United States.
ing to having the smallest
In 1803, the United States purchased the· Louisiana political tent in history,"
Territory from France for 60 million francs, the equivalent Snowe said. "If the
. ·
of about $15 million.
Republican Party fully
In 1812, Louisiana became the 18th state of the Union. ·· intends to become a majoriIn 1904, the Louisiana Purchase Exposition opened in St. ty party in the future, it must
Louis.
.
move from the far right
In 1909, Juliana, queen of the Netherlands from 1948 to back toward the middle."
1980, was born in The Hague.
But Senate Republican
In 1939, the New York World's Fair officially openeq leader Mitch McConnell of
with a ceremony that included an address by President J(entucky was defiant.
Franklin D. Roosevelt.
·
"I do not accept that we are
In 1945, as Russian troops approached his Berlin bunker, going to be a regional party,''
Adolf Hitler committed suicide along with his wife of one he said. "We're working very
day, Eva Braun.
·
·
hard to compete throughout
In 1948, the Charter of the Organization of American
States was signed in Bogota, Colombia.
•
'
In 1970, President Richard M. Nixon announced the U.S.
was sending troops into Cambodia, an action that sparked
widespread protest.
.
In 1973, Nixon announced the resignations of top aides H.R.
Haldeman and John Ehrlichman, along with Attorney General
Richard G. Kleindienst and White House counsel John Dean.
Ten years ago: A bomb exploded at a gay pub in Londori,
killing three people and injuring more than 70 . (David
Copeland, a white supremacist, was later convicted of mur. ~er for a series of bombings in London and sentenced to six
· life sentences.) The Rev. Jesse Jackson met with each of the
three U.S. soldiers being held prisoner by Yugoslavia.
Five ye;trs ago: Arabs expressed outrage at graphic photo~raphs of naked Iraqi prisoners being humiliated by U.S.
nulitary police; President George W. Bush condemned the
· mistreatment of prisoners, sa~ing "that's not the way we do
things in America." On ABC s "Nightline,... Ted Koppel read
aloud the names of72l U.S. servicemen and women killed in
the Iraq war (the Sinclair Broadcast Group refused to air the
program on seven ABC stations). Michael Jackson pleaded
not-guilty in Santa Maria, Calif., to a grand jury indictment
that expanded the child molestation case against him.
(Jackson was acquitted at trial .) Fonner NBA star Jayson
Williams was acquitted of aggt;~vated manslaughter in the
s))otgun slaying of a limousine driver at his New Jersey man-·
sion, but found guilty of trying to cover liP the shooting.
(Williams faces retrial on a reckless manslaughter count.)
One year ago: The Federal' Reselile cut interest rates for
a seventh straight time, reducing the federal funds rate a
While looking for a good
quarter-point to 2 percent. An avalanche in Italy's northwestern Alps killed five French ski-mountaineers.
· teen magazine ("good" being
Thought for Today: "Upper classes are a nation's past; the ones without hook-lip
the m.iddle class. is its future." - Ayn Rand, Russian-born tips) for her .d1mghter, one
reader stumbled onto an outauthor (1905-1982).
·
dated link on National
Review Online.'The link was
embedded.
in
old article.
LETTERS TO THE
But instead of the familyEDITOR
friendly information it origiLetters to the editor are welcome. They should be less nally went to, the link lead to
tHan 300 words. All/etters are subjec;tto editing, must be a porn site. The reader's hus.
signed, and include address and telephone number. No band called liS, not beca\ISC
, unsigned letters will be published. Leiters should be in he was angry with NRO, but
gOO(!. taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Leiters of because be wanted to spare
rlronks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- the next person who clicked
the link. He wasn''t surprised
ed for publication.
,
about the accidental link
.change since porn is legion
on the Internet.
Access to porn is probably
in your e-mail account's
Reader Services
(USPS 213-9601
inbox right · now. You're
Correction Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
probably used to just manuOur main concern In all stories is to PubHshed ~ty morning, ·Monday
ally erasing it as spam or setthrough Friay, 111 Cour1 Street.
be accurate. · If you know ol an error
Pomerov. Ohio. Second-clan !lOS"~" ting up automated filters to
1n a story, calllhe newsroom ~~ (740) paid ~~ Pomeroy.
block it ·out, but you know
992-2156.'
llembw: ·The Associated Press aod
it's out there in a big way.
the Ohio Newspaper AssoclaUon.
What are you going·to do?
Po8~..ter: $end ,address corrac·
Our main number Ia
The Hoover Institution's
tiona
· to The Dally Sentlnef, P.O. Box
(140) 992-2t56.
Mary
Ebecitadt calls it the
. 729, Pomeroy, Ollio 45769.
. Depllrtmenl extenalons •ra:
new tobacco. The heights to
which porn ha.~ been accepted
· Subscription Rates
a,
carrier
or
molor
route
in the mainstream represents
News
4 - .... ·..........'11.30
"widespread
tolerance, tinged
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, EICI. I 2
5 2 - · . ...........'128.85
with
resignation
about the
fl4porler: Brian Reed, EICI. 14
Dally .......... " .. " " .150'
notion that things could ever
llop.-; Bell&gt; Sergent, Ext 13
Senior CHI..n rat..
be otherwise." We've taken a
2 8 - · . "'" .. '." .'58.61
52 ••. ·. " ..... .'116.90
"full tum" in the last century
.
Advertising
Stb!olwn should ramlt in adllai'UI
in regard to tobacco and porn.
·OutakiiSolel: Dave Harris, EICI. 15 &lt;1n1a 1o The """ · No sub·
"Yesterday,
smoking was
Oulaklt Solei: Brenda Davis, EICI 1~ scription ty mall . permitted In areas
considered unremarkable in a
where home carrier seMce Is BWwabfe.
CtuaJCirc.: Judy Clalt&lt;, E&gt;&lt;t. 10
moral sense, whereas pomog-·
Mall Subscription
raphy was widely considered
lnalct. Melgo County
General Manager
disgusting and wrong - ·
12
We81&lt;s
....... . .....'35.26
' Charlene Hoeflich, EICI. 12
including even by peo[lle who
26 Weeks ... . .........'70. 70
consumed it. Today, as a gen52 Weeks ...•........ '140.11
E...,.. I:
eral rule, just the reverse is
-Omydaitysenllnel.com
OuUide Molgo County
!JUe. Now it is pornography
·1 2 Weeks ............. '56.55
that is widely (though not uni28 Weeks ............'113.60
versally) said to be value-free,
52 Weal&lt;s ... " . " . • "'227.21
whereas smoking is widely
www.mydallyaentlnel.com

TODAY IN HISTORY

the country."

lN ANY
OTHER COLORS' OR FABRICS'?
. IS IT AVAilAgu:

Collins said she was
"very, very disappointed
and surprised" by Specter's
defection. "It's somethin$ l
would never do:' she said,
but she called on Iter party
to be more inclusive.
''The Republican Party
has been most successful
when it has adopted the big
tent approach tha.t was
favored by Ronald Reagan,
by Gerald Ford" and others,
Collins said.
Obama bailed Specter's
switch, but its blessmg may
prove mixed. The president
vowed a more bipartisan.era
in Washington, and the loss
of another'GOP centrist will
make Congress more partisan than before.
Republican leaders, meanwhile, faced an uphill battle;
in next year's Pennsylvania
Senate race even before
Specter made ·the switch. In
that sense, they P-robably
have lost liqle. Bes1des. only
15 years ago some pundits
predicted permanent minority status for DelliOCrats, fatlowing their huge losses in
the 1994 elections.
Political fortunes can
change rapidly. and unexpectedly. But for . n~w,
Repubhc.ans hold drstuict
minority status in the House
and
Senate,
where
Democrats and in!lependents hold 59 seats to 40 foi
the GOP. They confront a
popular Democratic president, and they face numerous ill-timed retirements in
next year's Senate races.
Tuesday was another bad
day in a political season that
some Republicans must feel
cannot possibly get worse. ·

GALLIPOLIS - Delbert E. Clay Jr., 75. of Gallipolis,
passed away on Tuesday, April28, 2009, at his son's residence in Racine.
He was born April 18, 1934, in Carter County, Ky., son
of the late ~~be~ E. Sr. and Grace. Hampton Clay.
Delbert rettred tn 1994 from Katser Aluminum after 36
years of employment, and was a member of United Steel
Workers No. 557 at Ravenswood, W.Va.
.
' He was a member of Old Kyger Freewill Baptist Church,
where be was a Sunday School teacher and deacon, a member of th~ Old Tyme Chorus, and French City Treblemakers
at th~ Ar:tel Theater. He enjoyed playing the piano and guitar, stngmg and woodworking.
. He was preceded in death by his wife of 50 years, Karen
Clay, and from this union there are three children surviving,
Jeannie (Gary) Saunders of Gallipolis, Steve (Sandy) Clay
of Racine, and Danelte (Juan) McCabe of Gallipolis.
' He married Reba O'Brien Elkins of Rutland on Aug. 12,
2006. and she survives.
·
Also surviving are six grandchildren;Sally (BJ) Barneue,
Bradley (Mallory) Clay, Brooke Clay, Krisha Sheets, Kim
Hart and Seth Johnson; two great-grandchildren. Bailey
(3amette and Bella Barnette; and three . sisters, Louise
&lt;;ientry and Avalene Prichard, both of Wurtland, Ky., and '
Beulah Williams of Virginia .
.
. .
In addition lo his parents and his .first wife, Karen:,
Delbert is preceded in death by two sisters, Naomi Gillispie
and Pauline Shaw, and one brother, Alvis Clay. . .
· Services will be. I p.m. Friday, May I, 2009, at the
. Willis Funeral Home, with Pastor Rick Bourne officiating. Burial will follow in Gravel Hill Cemetery. Friends
may call at the fune.ral home on Friday from II a.m. until
1 p.m., prior to tbe service.
Pallbearers will be Seth Johnson , Bra,jley Clay, Tommy
Taylor, Gary Saunders, BJ Barnette and Juan McCabe.
.
Honorary. pallbearer is Bob Sij!man.
In lieu of flowers, the famtly requests donations in
Delbert's memory to Holzer Hospice,!()() Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis,.Ohio 45631.
·
·
·
Please visit www:willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
e,ondolences.
·
·
·

the event will provide
women with health information along with some
baseline knowledge for
behavioral change.
Topics to be explored at
the health fair will. include
diabetes prevention , cardiovascular healtlt. promoting
wellness and health, eating
disorders and health eating
· habits,
· pre-conception
health and prenatal care,
·talking to health care professionals and health literacy, coping with stress,

domestic violence and
abuse detection, and prevention aqd dental health.
There will be interactive
sessions with speakers on
,various topics concerning
women's heahb along with
infonnation on .screenings
and resources, preventive
measures, and community
support systems available
locally.
Exhibitors from local
health care facilities , area
hospitals and community
organizations will have

informational booths. Also
featured will be displays on
hunter and gun safety,
motorcycle safety. and law .
enforcement. Screenings
will include blOOd p.ressure
checks, glucose screenings,
and skin screenings.
"Our goal is to increase
participants' awareness of
the importance of a heahhy
lifestyle for lifelong wellness, to celebrate the extraordinary progress which bas
been made over the past
·century in women's health,

and to empower women to
take
responsibility
to
improve their personal
health;' said Thomas,
As for the fair, she said
tw() educational sessions
will be offered with each one
lasting 2 112 hours. DuriJtg
that time there will be six 15minute presentations on various women's issues after
which the participants can
view the displays. ChiJd.care
will be available for those
bringing children. Door
prizes will be awarded.

Racine from Page AI ..
The only other project
funded in Ohio by the
American Recovery and
. Reinveslment Act W&lt;~S the
Earnhart Hill Regional
Water and Sewer District
which was selected to
receive $3.6 million to consolidate wastewater treatment operations of two
neighboring villages.
The total cost of the
SRRSD's up~rade ·and
extension
tnto
the
Tackerville area is estimated to cost $3.9 million,

according to Bob Allen with
the Ohio Rural Community
i\ssistance Program.
Allen
previously
. explained the SRRSD's (JI'!)·
jeet includes "significant
upgrades and rehabilitation
of all lift stations, rehabbing
manholes ... rehabbing t!te
waster ·water treatment
plant" and of course extendmg ·sewer service to about
46 customers in the
Tackerville area.
Last month, Allen said the
district was looking for

fundin~ primarily from the through Meigs County as
USDA s Rural Development the applicant.
arm but at that .time was
Allen had said he hoped·
waiting on rural develop- the funding will ~II fall in
ment to complete its review place this year with some
of the project to then hope· of those
funds
(if
fully make a financial offer, approved) possibly being
whtch Vilsack's
press . awarded in late July or
release confirmed this week. August. He adderi that he
Also, last month -AlletJ along with the district hope
said other funding agencies the project can begin conthe district is considering is struction later this year
a $250,000 Appalachian though he guessed it might
Resource Grant and a take eight to 10 months,
$500,000
Community possibly less, to complete
Development Block Grant the project.

Shelter from Page M

Management
Agency ter programs run by local have an accounting system . Se..Vices Division Director,
(FEMA). The Board was service orgaqizations in the and c.onduct an annual Gallia-Meigs . Community
charged to distribute funds area. · The · Local Board is audit; 4) practice non-dis- Action Agency at 367-7341
appropriated by Congress to responsible ·for recom- crimination;
5)
have or 992-6629.
· help expand the capacity of . mending . agencies
to demonstrated the capability · Galli.a and Meigs Counties
· food and shelter progt;~ms receive these. funds made . to deliver emergency food have distributed Emer:gency
in high-need areas around available through ARRA. . and/or shelter programs; Food and Shelter fundS pre•
POMEROY - Robert William Harrison II, 40, of the
country. ·
Under the terms of the and 6) if they are a private viously with the G~llia­
Pomeroy, passed away on April 26, 2009 as the result of an
A
Local
Board
made
up
grant
from the National voluntary
organization, Meigs Community Action
. .
automobile accident.
of
Gallia
and
Meigs
choBoard,
local
agencies
they
should
have
a volun- Agency and the Gallia
· He was born on Nov. 8, 1968, in Fairbanks, Alaska.
County
citizens
will
detersen to receive funds must: tary board.
County Council on Aging
· Mr. Harrison worked as a pipe fitter for most of his life.
awardmine
how
the
funds
I)
be
private
voluntary
applyThose
interested
in
participating. These agencies
He was a member of the Carleton Church, where he was
ed
to
the
counties.
are
to
be
of
govnon-profits
or
units
ing
forARRA
EFSP
funds
were
responsible for providalso an assistant pastor, where he loved to work with childistributed
among
the
2)
be
eligible
to
ernment;
must
·
contact
Sandra
ing
numerous
meals and util~
dren. He loved to make people laugh. He was an avid
emergency
food
and
she!receive
f~eral
funds;
·
3)
Edwards,
Community ity assistance.
sportsman and car enthusiast.
He is survived by his wife,.Audra Harrison. Pomeroy; a
son, Wade Harrison, Pomeroy; parents, Chuck and Jan Van
Cooney, Pomeroy; a sister, Candy and Kevin Ulbrich,
.
aVID
. gs
· from Page AI
Pomeroy; stepbrothers: Joe, Mike and Tony Van Cooney;
stepsisters, Sandy Evans and Debbie Van Cooney; a sister: contract and 30 days to ject will address some seri- reducing leaks and the
in- law. Betsy. and Harry Rice; nieces and nephews; Cale begin work once .the. con- . ous infrastructure issues. repairs they require, and
Ulbrich, Lex1e Houdashelt-Rice, and Cody R1ce; mother- tractor is inplace.
Those . hydrants now in boil advisories that follow.
in-law and father-in-law, Richard and Mary Houdashelt, . While much of the fund- place, Roberts said, do not
One project was rejected
Pomeroy grandmothers, Rub~ Greene ~d Ruby Burnside; ing is made up of grants or clllT)t enough water pressure under th~ s.timulus program . .
numerous aunts, uncles, cousms and fnends.
forgiven ·
lo!lris, , the for today' s modern pumper A $4 mrlhon long•planned
· He was preceded in death by his grandparents, William $700,000 low-interest ·Joan l!'!lcks. Water lilies are too sewer outflow repair project
Middleport · Pomeroy
~Obert Harriso~ and Myrtle Faye Harrison grandparents, included in the ful)din,g small, and are iJI poor c&lt;incould be funded by .addi992-5141 992-5444
Al~rt and Marte Van Cooney; and grandfather Joe Payne. pa4lkage will be the r~pon- dition . They
will be tional federal money yet to
Funeral will .be held at I p.m. on Thursday, April 30, 81'bil'ty
fM'ddl
rt
·
bl'
1 0
1
.2.009, at the Anderson-McDaniel . Funeral ·Home ·r·n works
epoIt pu
IC replaced by larger 'lines, ~orne, Roberts said.
customers.
could
Pomeroy with Pastor Robert Vance offiCiating lltld Ronnie cost them as inuc~ as $3 .S'O
:Vance assisting.
· ··
·
·'
· ··
· · per month over a 20-year
.• Burial will follow at Cadeton Church Cemetery. '
· ·jl:riod, but Roberts said ~s~
Visiting hours were held from 4 to 8 p.m; Wednesday im,d rdents.should see the proJect
· will also .be held two hours prior to .the funeral today as money well spent. ·
(Thursday.) ·
·
For example, Reberts said,
mothers day, a heartfelt
A i'egistty is available ·on•Iiile at www. andersonmc- all the village's fire hydrants
daniel.com.
··
would be repaired or replaced

Robel t Hanison II

(Charles Babington cov•
. ers the White House for The

Associated Press).

s ' • · ' .·· ·

~AHLER
oza&gt;9,

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

·I

.carolyn·.·Pri
· .

c
'
e
.

.

,

Watching out for the ·'new tobacco'

· The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

' Health fair from Page AI

Delbe.t E day Jr.

S'A LE

an

www.mydailysentinel.com

The question about the govlatest issue of Policy Review,
ernment
· is
revealing.
Eberstadt reminds readers
that a Philip Morris executive Pornographers can dismiss
once asked "What do . you · this, but corporations know
think smok~:rs would do if there is harm done by 1&gt;9111,
tl'tey didn't smoke? You get even if it's just to producbvity.
Kathryn
some pleasure from it, and A~ording to one 2007 surLopez ·
you also ~et some other ben- . vey, 65 percent of corporaeficial things, such as stress tions use porn-detecting soft· relief. Nobody knows what ware. Divorce lawyers, clergy
· you'd tu~ to if you didli 't · and therapists can tell you the
smoke. Maybe you'd . beat (!amaging role it's playing in
considered disgusting and your . wife. Maybe you'd the matried and unmarried
wrong - including even by drive cars fast. Who knows lives of American couples.
many smokers."
The question about governIn making the compari• what the hell you'd do.''
ment
is also, of course, alarmson, Eberstadt observes that · And so I ~.hould s~rug
.
ing
to anyone who cares
many people say "con- because there. s not w.ldeabOut
freedom
and the future
sumers have a "ri.g ht' to spr.ead rape tn Amertcan
of the Internet. Further,more,
pOrnography - possibly offtces?
PeoJ?le seem to get that as it affects our children and
even a consti.tutional right.
... Given the soc.ial and polit- th~ ts a problem, perhaps our families, it is a cultural
ical circumstances arrayed looking for someon~ to sol'!e copout of a solution.
in its favor. what would be . the. problem that m1ght be m . Thinking about my caller
the point of objecting?"
thetr o':"n home for th~m or and his wife and daughter,
As horrific as it sounds, the otherwtse hope 11 wtll go I've been flashing back to
fact is, she's right. It is, sadly, away: For her 2005 book something Traci Lords once
no surprise that pam is the Pornified: .How Pornography said: "I have to thank Ed
most searched for and most Is DamaRtng Ot~r Lives, Our Meese for saving my life." At
profitable product 'on \he Rela!ioitships . · and Our 18, her career as a pam star
Internet. But unless it v.iolates, Ff:!~lllltes, Pamela. Paul com- ended in a federal raid. How
the sensitivities of even the m1sstoned a Hwns poll and many Traci' Lords are on a
most desensitized (child found that. "Despite wide- · computer near you today?
porn, simulated rape, things spread dental and the [lllrva- And who, besides Traci, is it
yqu rather me not write here), stve!less of outdated rabonal- harming? It's a question a
porno'graphy is too wide- tzattons. many Amencans society that in its rbetoric and
spread for many to bother to have a problem with the ram- culture says .it cares about
do anything bqt shrug or. pant spread of pornography." women and children and lives
even, to try to play along.
She f~und that liberal or con- and love needs to grapple
·As with tobacco; this is not , servattve. people were not with. If Eberstadt's comparigoing to change overnight. widely opposed to the gov- son is right, it's coming. The
But, as with tobacco, a ernment doing . something. shrugs will cease. I, for one,
change in perception would- "42 percent of Americans said . though, would hope the tum·
n't be bad for our health .
the government should regu- around comes not largely
Even those who smoke late Internet pornography because government has
don't pretend there's nothing .specifically so that children made it highly inconvenient
hannful about smoking now. cannot access X-rated materi- but because we have decided
But it wasn't long ago that a! online and 13 percent said we want something better.
tobacco compani~s brought the government sh.ould regu- , ( Kat/1ryn Lopez is tlte editor
their experts 111 to make the. late pornography in a way of National Review Online
case that tobacco "addiction" similar to cigarettes - with (www.nationalreview.com).
maY. just be leamed behavior. warning labels and restric- She can be conracted a(
Chtlhngly, in her piece in the lions to minimize harm."
klopez@nationalreview.com) ..

'.

.. PORTLAND - Carolyn L. Price·, 88,.of Portland, died
Ap.V:rial. 29, 2009, at St. Joseph's.. Hospital. in Park.ersb.·u· rg,
W.'
She was born Jan. 2, 1921, in Paw Paw, W.Va., da1,1ghter
of the. late Raymond and Buelah Larkin. She was a house. wife, and a!te111led the Portlahd United Methodist Church.
. Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her
husband, f:!ubert Price; and her brothers, Joseph Larkin and
Raymond Larkins:
·
· Surviving ar~ her daughter, Beverly Brougher, Phoenix,
Ariz.; sons arid daughters-in-law: Samuel (Carmen) Price
of Connersville, Ind., a11d Larry (Debbie) P'dce of
Cincinnati; a sister · and brother-in-law, Lois (Herman)
, Goede, Paw Paw, W.Va.; six grandchildren and two great
·
.
grandchildren.
· Funeral will be held at 10 a.m. on Satutday,May 2, 2009,
at Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Rev. Herman
Qoede officiatin$.
·
·
.
Burial will be 10 Browning Cemetery in Portland.
Friends may call from 5-8 p.m. on Friday at the funeral
home.

.Deaths
Eber O'dell.Pickens Sr.
,.

.

· . . SYRACUSE- Eber O'dell Pickens Sr:, 73, of Syracuse,
passed away at his residence on Wednesday,April29, 2009.
. Visitation will be held from 6-9 p.m. on Sunday, May 3,
2009 ai the Anderson McDaniel.F!Jnerl!l Home in pomeroy, .
· A funeral service will be held all p.m. on Monday, May 4,
2009 at the funeral home.
. .
,
. An online registry is avail!lble by logging onto
www..andersonmcdaniel.ct&gt;m.
·

.Donation rrom Page At
where Jessing later found·ed the Pontifical College
Josephinum~ the only pontifical seminary in the
.world outside of Italy. .
The Knights of Columbus ·
has grown to rnore than 1.7

million memberS throughour the United States and
other countries.
·
The local council will ·
sponsor a third fish fry for
charity from 4-6 . p.m.
Friday in the church hall.

7~,

and other hydrants \fill .be
install~ as part of the pro,.
gtlllll. Those ~royemencs
will likely result m a reduc·
· tion .in the cost of homerowners' insurance r,&lt;&gt;lici~, which
would "easily' make up for
the loan retirement expense.
Most importantly; the pro-

Gift
.

could be the best gift you could
ever give your mother.
Don't miss this opportunity to say it.

To be publishec:l
Sunday, May lOth

•

According to Lifeline of
Ohio, Ohio residents can
register as a donor by going
·1o www.lifelineofohio.org as
well as when renewing their
driver's license. Call Lifeline
nf Ohio at 1-800-525-5667
for mof'e itiformatioll.

1x3 Greeting $10

The Daily
Sentinel

..froin Page AI · .

"It's so·sad how many die
waiting on that list," Cheryl
said.
Over the years Cheryl has
beard many misconceptions
and concerns abQut organ
donation. Cheryl said the
biggest· she hears is the mis·
conception that doctors
wouldn't · do evetything to
save a patient's life if they
knew they could procure the
.organs. Cheryl said · in
Brandi's case, the issue of
organ donation was not even
brought up to the family
until there was absolutely no
hope that Brandi would
recover frQm her injuries.
Cheryl, . who is herself
signed up · to be an. organ ··
donor as is Jon, said she
always asks people if they
could save one life, "would" 't you do it?"
. "You don't need those
organs after _you're gone,"
·
Cheryl said.

ttUe

Happy
Mother's Day
..

•'

(Your Mother's
Name)
· Love, Adam, Evan
and Cameron
Rodgeis

Deodltn~ for this Spttdol. iifaUtttr'lllayTrl~ollle Is

Wednesday, Moy6, 2009
• Fill out the form below and drop olfthe payment to
The .DoltySentlnei"Molhar's Day"
Ill Cout:t$1., Pomeroy, OH 45769

Mother's N a m e - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - - - Your Name
YqurAddress-----------------------

(s)-------'------------------

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Zip------------------------

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I
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Ads Most Be Prepaid

·

�LOCAL • STATE

The Daily Se'ntinel

Stewart put
on$2Mbond
··r or 3 charges

PageA6

Inside

lndialls fall to Sox, Page B2
Playoff setbacks, Page B6

.Thursday, April 30, aoog

Protectio~ of bats brings cave, mine closings
Wtn:ne
National Forest l'ncluded 25st~tes.
including almost cave/mine to another on the
J
;000 endangered Indiana footwear and gear of
~

NELSONVILLE - In out of caves and mines is bats. White-nose syndrome humans. There have been
response to the uncon-• the one thing we can do is named for a white fungus noreported human illnesses
trolled spread of white- right now to slow the fur- that appears on the faces, attributed to the fun~us.
nose syndrome affecting ther spread of the fungus. ears, wittgs, and feet of Infected caves and mmes
bat species. all caves and We will enforce this clo- hibernating bats. The dis- may not show obvious signs
mines on National Forests sure order in hopes of pro- ease causes bats to come of its existence.
. I
in the · Eastern Region, tecting some·of the largest out of hibernation severely · Many national forests in
the jail, where Stewart is including the Wayne . bat populations in · the ·underweight, often starving the Eastern Region are
Bv j&lt;EVIN KELLY
"!!TNEWSOMYDAilVTRIBUNE.COM incarcerated.
·
before the insects ..:.. on home to several species of
National Forest in south- United States."
A preliminary hearing to eastern Ohio, have been
On the Wayne National which they feed _;_ emerge bats , including the federally
GALLIPOLIS - Bond determine if the case should closed by U.S. ·Forest Forest, hibernating . bats ·· jn the spring. ·Once a endangered Indiana bat,
has been set at $2 million proceed to the grand jury Service managers for one are monitored every year colony is . infected, it Virginia big-eared bat, and
for the 76-year-old Wellston was scheduled by Evans for year.
tn mines during the spreads rapidly and has. the gray bat. Bats are a natural
man accused in the shooting Friday, May 8 at 2:30 p.m .
"White-nose syndrome months of September JX!SSibility of killing over and important part of the
deaths of two Rodney-area in the Gallia County has already infected mines throu~h f!- pri I: Forest ~'!'&gt; of bats within the cave forests , making a significant
residents on Tuesday.
Common Pleas courtroom.
on the ' Green Mountain wtldltfe btologtsts have :. 'ID.JUSt two years.
. contribution towards the
Walter E. Stewart has
Gallia County 911 was National Forest in Vermont not detected any bats with
Scientists believe the fun- control of forest and agribeen charged with aggravat- informed at 5:28 p.m. and
caves
on
the white-nose syndrome.
· gus is spread bat-to-bat as cultural insect pests.
ed murder in the death of Tuesday that Holley and Monongahela
Nationat
The Eastern ·Region
Nearly 500.000 bats have they cluster in caves and
Carolyn S. Merry, 54, 7784 Merry had been shot l\Dd the Forest in West Virginia," died as .a result of white- mines, and there is evidence encompasses 14 national
. Ol)io 588, Bidwell; murder alleged shooter was still on said· Logan Lee, Deputy nose syndrome in the New that it ean be unknowingly
forests arid one tallgrass
scene.
Sheriff's Regional Forester. "Staying England and Mid-Atlantic . transferred
in connection with the death the
from
one
prairie in a 2Q-state area.
of John Paul f:lolley, 59, deputies, along with Rio
7179 Ohio 588, Bidwell: Grande Village Police, State
and attempted murder on . Highway Patrol and EMS,
David B. Merry, 49, no responded to the . scene.
Stewart was taken arrested
local address available .
.ATHENS (AP) - Ohio Hansen of Seven Hills near Center in Columbus.
South Green portion of camStewart was taken into at 5:43 p.m.. according to
University
says
·a
student
Cleveland
was
a
student
in
·
In
a
statement,
Ohio
.
pus. University police are
custody at the site of the the 911 log.
fell
from
a
fourth
floor
the
Russ
College
of
continuing
University
says
police
·
to investigate
Sheriff Joe Browning said
alleged shooting, on top of a
window
in·
a
dormitory
and
Engineering
and
Technology.
·
believe Hansen fell from the and are asking anyone with
hill at the Holley Brothers a preliminary investigation
has
died.
Hansen
fell
late
Thesday
upper
half of a fourth-floor information to contact them.
Stone Quarry off 588 just of the incident indicates the
The
university
says
20night
and
died
Wednesday
window
at Weld House, a
Counselors were on hand
shootings arose froin a busiwest of Rodney.
year-old
sophom~re Eric
afternoon
at
Grant
Medical
coed
residence
hall
on
the
at
the residence hall.
Bond was set during a ness dispute. It is believed
Wednesday arraignment on. Carolyn Merry died at the
the charges with Gallipolis scene, while well-known
Municipal Judge Margaret local businessman Holley .
Evans. If Stewart can meet was dead on arrival ar St.
10 percent of the bond Mary's Medical Center in
Ohio Valle)' Bane Corp, (NAS.
Th~y...Showers likely Southwest winds 10 to 15 AEP (NYSE) - 26.44
amount and be freed from Huntington, w.ya:, where
Akzo
(NASDAQ)
43.0S
DAQ)22.10
the Gallia County Jail , he he had been all'hfted by · with a chance of thunder- mph with gu~ts up to 25 mph. Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 19.25 . BBT (NYSE)
- 24.10
stonns in the morning...Then Chance of ram 60 pel'l;ent. · · Big Lot. (NYSE) - 28.88
will be confined to his resi- HealthNet. ·
. Peoplft (NASDAQ) -17.10
Friday nlgbt.. .Showers Bob Evana (NASDAQ) :- 24.89 Pepsl!:o (NYSE) - 50.45
dence with an electronic
Browning
indicated showers with thunderstorms
likely
in
the
afternoon.
Highs
likely
wtth a chance of !hun- BorgWarner (NYSE) - 2.7.60 · Premier (NASDAQ) - 5.08
monitor.
David Merry was at the
Stewart was represented scene of the shooting, but in the lower 70s. Southeast derslorms. Lows in the mid Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) ROCkwell (NYSE) - 33.08
-3.78
Rocky Boot. (NASDAQ) - •
by Columbus attorney further details were una vail- winds 5 to 10 mph... 50s. Southwest winds 10 io 15 · Champion
(NASDAQ)
1.71
3.73
Becoll)ing southwest 10 to 15 mph with gusts up to 25 mph.
Robert F. Krapenc, while able.
Charming $hop1 (NASDAQ) - RO)'I!I Dutch Shell - 45.95
Assistant
Prosecuting
The penalty for aggravat- mph in the afternoon. Chance Chance of rain 70 percent.·
3.62
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - ,
Sat~rday.•.Showers like- City Holding (NASDAQ) - 30.08
Attorney Eric Mulford ed murder is death or life of rain 80 percent.
ao.o3
Thlll'$daynlght ...Showers ly. Highs in the lower 70s. Colllna (NYSE) - 38.88
. WII-Mart (NYSE) ~ 50.45
appeared for the state. The imprisonment, along with a
DuPont (NYtEJ - 28.02
Wendy'e (NYSE) - 5.47
;·;
home confinement provi- $25,000 fine, while a mur- likely. A chance of thunder- Chance of rain 70 percent.
us
Bank
(NYSE)
18.79
·
.
WuBai!CO
(NYSE)
20.82
"
· Saturday nlght .. .Mostly
sion of Stewart's bond was der charge carries a penalty storms in the evening'.. ~Then
Gannett
(NYSE)
3.81
Worthington
(NYSE)
14.45
'
. recommended in part due of 15 years to life and a a slight chance of thunder- cloudy with a 50 ·percent General Eteotrlc (NYSEI . Dally etock report• are the 4
to the accused's age and $15,000 fine. Attempted storms after njdnight. Lows chance of showers. Lows 12.22
p.m. ET ctoalng quot.. ol
Krapenc's contention that murder results in a sentence around 60. Southwest winds around 50.
Hlll'ley.l)avldiOn (NYSE) tranuctlone for April 29,
2008,provlded by EdWard
Sunday and Sunday 21.09
Stewart does not represent of anywhere from 3 to 10 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain
JP
Morgan
(NYSE)
34.48
Jonea
financial advlaore luao
a flight risk or threat to years, a $20,000 fine and 70 percent.
nlght .. .Mostly cloudy with
Kroger
(NY~ll) .,- 22,18
.
MUll
In
at (740) 441•'.
anyone.
the possibility 'of addi!ional
Frlday...Showers, likely a 40 percent chancc'": of Umlllld Bn~nde (NYSE) - 11.21 . 9441 andGaltlpotla
Leeley
Marrwro
In
. The arraignment was con- · prison time . because a . with a chance of thunder·. showers. Highs in the ui)'per Norfolk SolitNi'n (NYSE) FolntPiaaant at (304) 874- .
.
.
ducted by video link with firearm was involved.
stonns. Highs in the mid 70s. . 60s. Lows in the lowed!)s; . 35.51
0174. Member SIPC.

Thursday, Apri130, 2009 ·

Prep Baseball Roundup
POMEROY - A IChMtlle ot upcoming l'lign
IChoot vartlly tPOrting ....m.lnvolvlng teams
from

l

Local Weather

MeJol, MUOI'i anct Gallia C«&lt;ffliee.
Thurtell)' April 30

· -11

Eaotorn at Watortor&lt;IS p.m.
Meigs at Belpre, 5 p.m.
.
· Point Pleasant at Wahama, 5 p.m. ·
Chillk:othe at Gailia AcadornV. 5 p.m.

.

8oftlloll

Eastern at Waterford s p.m.
Meigs at Belpre, 5 p.m.
Point Pleaoant ~ Ripley, 5 p.m.
ChHllcothe a1 Galila Academy, 5 p.m.
Nannan VI. Grace Chrtatlan, 4:30 p.m.

1)"'*0fldFlold
~

at VInton COunty Invite, 4:30 p.m.

Tennlt

·

·

Jackaonat Gallla Academy. 3:15p.m.
Point Ple.asant at Wmtiekl. TBA

•

fr""V·= 1

a...g

,..

Galiia Academy at Meigs; 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant vs. Herbert Hoover, 5:30

Student dies after 4th-floor falffrom OU dorm

I

B.l

The Daily Sentinel

lo1.m.

.

Alve• Valley al Chesapeake, 5 p.m.
wahama vt. Sot.jlhEirn, 4:30 p.m.

Southern at Wahama, 4:30 p.m.
.Trjmbla at Eastern, 5 p.m.

Soflboll

Galiia Aoademy at Meigs, 5 p.m. ·
River Valley at Chesapeake, 5 p.m.
Wahama va. Southern, 4:30p.m.
Southern at Wahama. 4:30p.m.
Trimble at Eastern, 5 p.m.
1l'lclc •nct F!Oid
&lt;!lallia Academy at ParkersbUrg South,

tBA

Poinl Pleasant a1 GazeQ:e Re!aya at ·
Laidley, 4 p.m.
AIV8f Valley at Arthur Lydlard Classic al
$outh Polnl, 4:30 p.m.
~annan at Ripley.
1

Local Stocks·

RV drops heartbreaker to Pointers
STAFF REPQRTS
MOSSPORTSOWYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

CHESHIRE River
Valley baseball fell victim
to some late-inning heroics
Wednesday ~ight against
visiting South Point during
a heartbreaking 3-2 setback
in· an
Ohio Valley
Conference matchup.
The Raiders led 1-0 after
· one . complete, but the
Pointers countered with
two rqns in the third for a
2-1 advantage. RVHS knotted things up at two with a
score in the fourth, which
led to the.climactic finale.
In the top of the fifth and
two, Jacob
tied · at
Seagraves belted a two-out
Anna Jeaomerlphoto solo homer to give th.e
River Valley starter Clayton Curnutte delivers a pitch during guests a 3,2 advantage - a
Wednesday night's OVC baseball contest . against South lead· that would eventually
stick.
Point in Cheshire:

. The Raiders had eight
hits in the contest, with
Clayton Curnutte leading
the way with two hits.
Tyler
Noble,
Matt
Goodrich, . Austin .Justus,
Cody Wimmer, Brandon
Smith and Zack· Polcyn
also had a safety each· in
the setback. Justus and
Smith each had an RBI.
Fielder led the Pointers
with two hits , followed by
Seagraves,
Dickess,
Adkins and Meadows with
one hit each.
.
Curnutte was the losing
pitcher of record, allowing
three ·walks while fanning
zero over seven frames.
Kyle Winkler .got the win,
allowing zero walks and
strikinjl out nine over
seven mnings. Both teams
· had one error in the contest.

on .

. PITTSBURGH, . (~?) ...:
Pittsburgh .Stee!ers·.receiv- · ·
e:r and Super Bdwl
Santonin Holmes wa11. ·
arraigned Wednesday ori a .
misdemeanor marijuana .
charge stemming· from a
traffic stop.
, HQimes • ·
attorney,
Robert DelGreco Jr.,
appeared at the brief hearing where charges were
formally ·
·presented.
Holmes did ~~t' llP.pea~,
11or was he . r~qu~red to. ':·.
· DelGreco said he
·
io chtillenge · the .co.nstilu·
tioriality o( ihe stop; but ·
did D.Qt...ol~b9rat!l .. , , ;:... · .. .
"I w'ill b"e' "filfiig "a·suP,·'··
p!'(lssiori motion, That \I(Jll
be a public . record and :
we'll go frQm .there," he
said.
· · ··
·
·
· Pittsburgh police· said .
they found three marijuana-filled
cigars
in
tlolmes' car when he was .
pulled over Oct. .
Holmes was. sto!)pe:d
because his car was stm.•·
lar to one. they were.Jloolhl
::i .
· .'
ing for in a drug .
. . · · · · ·· ··· ·· · · ·
. Holm,es was. cl&gt;.,oper.a:(iv.e; . . ~y\B.RYAN WALT~8 '; .... difference in the outcome. .. decision and the league title.
arid ,alerted of.ficer• to .
BW.I,l.T&amp;RSOMYDAILVTRISUN!i.COM •· MHS was held, ~it1ess
Ebersbach went the dis~
·
·
·
through
fd\lr
.
complete,.
but
tance
for the winning deci. ROCKSPRINGS ...;': For the hosts found their swing sion, allowing $even hits and
drugs, pojice said· ·
DelGre~o h\ls ·charac1er-. . the fifth time since the tum in the fifth with all three of zero walks over seven
ized the charge "u low. as ol the millenium and the their. hits '. coming in th&amp;.t innings while striking out
a grade a misdemeanor first time in four years, the . frame. All three, safeties also three. Leftwich tookthe loss
you can ·get." The penalty Meigs softball team clinched came with two outs in the for BHS.
is up to 30 days probation the
2009
Tri-Valley . inning.
. .
Fitch led the guests with
and a $500 fine, he said.
Conference Ohio. Division
Micki -Barnes started the three hits, followed lfy
Coach Mille Tomlfn championship Wednesday J;wo-out rally .wiib a singleto Milson with two safeties.
deactivated Holmes for a niglll 'with a hard-fougllt 2-0 rigllt; wh!ch was followeil McNabb and Turrill also had
game following the
, victory over Visiting Belpre. by back-to-back RBl dou' a hit apiece in the setback.
stop. He wa.s not arrested · The Lady Marauders (11- bles by Nicole Wise and
Meigs also struck a linle
and received a court sum- 4, .10-1 TVC Ohio) were far Hailey Ebersbach to give revenge against Alexander
mons, which is common from championship form, ' Meigs the 2·0 lead thrOugh on .Tuesday night, avenging
with misdemeanor charges. committing the · only four five complete.
its lone TVC Ohio. setback
errors made in the contest.
Belpre got the ~o-ahead a· this ·year with a 3-2 victory ·
in Pennsylvania.
The Lady Eagles also outhit · run to the plate m the sev- ·at home.
·
. Holmes said he "learned the hosts by a 7-3 . margin, enth, but left runners strandThe Lady Marauders led
a lot" from missing a but it was .the timing of the ed at second and third + 1-0 after one complete, but
game following the traffic Meigs' hits thill made the allowing Meigs to win the the Lady Spartans countered
stop. Before the Super·
· Bowl, Holmes told the
media that he had ·dealt
Prep Softball Roundup
drugs for a year in his
'ometown of. Belle Glade;

Special stories on
Florence Nightingale and nursing

•

,.

....' 8' 10' :12' 14' 18' 18' 20'
' 1UI U
1UD

· -. . .,

U

.
. .1111 .
UIUD

3"x5"x8'
PT
•3.25ea

............

, . , &amp; , . ,, ,

1/8" X 4' X 8'

Deadline is May 4th

1/2"x4·xa·

atbe ~oint ,Jileuant .Register
304-675-1333

The Daily Sentinel
I

\

•4..88ashaet

Fla.

•

: Holmes, a first-round
4raft pick out of Ohio
State in 2006, has had two
·
other run-ins with the law
since the Steelers drafted
bim. In June 2006, he was
·h d
. ·
charge d Wlt C .omebstlc
1urn us,
yiolence in
Ohio. Those charges were
tlropped when the mother
of one of his three children declined to help pros·
ecute the case and grosecHutors were assure that ·
olmes received anger
management and domestic
violence
counseling
through the NFL.
· In May 2006, Holmes
was arrested for disorderly
conduct by police in
Miami , who later dropped
Ute charges.
• No trial date has been
set on the recent charge,
but a pretrial conference
was scheduled for May 22
in Allegheny County
'court.

°

J/11........

Full page $728.31
Half $455.19
Quarter $260.11
Eightb $155.78

' Qt:ribune
Ql:be l§allipolis ::llllailp
740-446-2342

U

,_•••a•
.....
..,. "'
a sheet

Color:
PlonMr Whlla

~

'· -·

·.

092 010 0 - 361
tOO 100 0 -261

WP -Winkle[; LP - Curnutte.

BLUE DEVILS SPLIT WITH
JACKSON

JACKSON - The day
started well for Gallia
Academy baseball, but the
Blue Devils only managed
to come away from the
Apple City with one· of two
victories Wednesday night ·.
during a 7-5 victory and a 7'.
4. loss to host Jackson in a
pair of Southeastern Ohio .
Athletic League South
Division matchups at Haller
Field.
The Devils (12-6, 7-4
SEOAL South) finished a
game that wa5 played last

PIUHIIeBIIHINIII,Bi
..

against 76ers

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) Dwight Howard's elbow
has given the Orlando
Magic's playoff hopes a .
major hit.
·
Howard . has been suspended for Game 6 of the
Ma~ic's
playoff series
agamst the Philadelphia
76ers for his elbow on
Sixers center . Samuel
Dalembert, the
NB A
announced Wednesday.
The two got tangled up
going for a rebound in the
first quarter in Game 5 on
Tuesday · night. Replays
showed Howard threw an
elbow that hit Dalembeit
above the
shoulders. ·
Howard drew a technical
foul for the ·hit.
Orlando will · also be
without · starting guard
Courtney Lee, who suffered a fractured sinus after
taking an inadvertent
elbow to the head . from
Howard later in the quarter.
Lee's status for the remainder of the playoffs is uncertain .
The Ma~ic lead the
·
.· .
.Sixers
3-2 m the best-of·
with. two scores in the. sec;
seven
series.
Game ·6 ls
ond frame for a '2" I cushion
Thursday. Orlandq will
after two full frames. '
The score remained . that likely start ·Marcin Gortat
way until the bottom ·of the in place of Howard, and J.J.
sjxth, when the hosts rallied Redick for Lee.
for two scores to recapture · The Magic were traveling to Philadelphia and
the lead for good.
Taylor Elliott led off the · were not immediately
inning with a triple, then available to comment.
''Very physical in the
scored on a wild pitch to
paint,"
· Howard said after
knot things up at two apiece.
Chandra Stanley walked and the Magic's 91-78 win
later scored the winning run Tuesday night. "It's been
on a'one-out fielder's choice very physical in the series .
All we can do is hope for
by Micki Barnes.
the
hest. It's been a d&lt;lg·
· Elliott, Barnes and Shellie
Bailey had the· lone hits for fight all se.ries. It wasn't
Meigs in the triumph, while like I was out there trying
Daugherty led Alexander to hurt anyliody;"
Howard was having the
PIHH ... Melp. BJ · best playoff series of his
career and has been the
only consistent · Magic
player in the p&lt;istseason.
He had 24 pomts and a
career playoff-high 24
rebounds in Tuesday's win,
and
he's averaged 24 points
STAFF REPORTS
will go for 27 in-a-.row today · Brittyn Saunders led the last! Scoring three runs in and 15.8 rebounds in the
t.tDSSPOIIfSeMYDAIL¥seNTtNeL.cQM at honie ag_ainst Chillicothe iJi Angels with two hits and the sixth inning to tie the series.
the South Division finale .
three RBis, followed by.Noe, game and posiing the needed
Howard 's elbow on
JACKSON _ . Gallt'a
&amp;
G 1· Ki be · D ·
C
As ,or Wednesday, alta
m r
avts,
ourtney one in the seventh, the Dalembert in Game 5 set
Academy softball kept a good Academy wasted little. time Shriver and Mattie Lanham Southern Lady Tornadoes of off a wild · coaching, .
thing gomg Wednesday night &lt;&gt;etting on the scorebolu'd - with a hit apiece. GAHS, Coach Kelly .Pape scored a
against host Jackson, posting fumping but to ·u 4-0 advan- however, was limited to only 4-3 upset victory over the exchange afterward.
Philadelphia coach Tony
its
. 26th
consecutive tage after the first inning three hits through six innings Waterford Lady Wildcats (7Southeastern · Ohio Athletic alone. The guests tacked on of play.
7, 3-3) Wednesday night at DiLeo said Howard should
League South Division victo- one more in the second for a
JHS received hits from Star Mill P.ark. The win was have been called for 3 seconds in the lane several
ry during a convincing 7-0 5-0 cushion, then added two Apsley, · Breanna . Moore, Southern's third in a row.
decision in the Apple City.
insurance runs in the seventh · Erika Danver and Jami
Southern scored the win· times and asked the league
The Blue Angels (16-4, 11- for the final seven-run out- Oberholzer in the Setback. ning run when Lindsey 10 look into an elbow
oSEOAL South) are now one come.
Jackson's dhits came in fithfthe Teaford drew a two-out immediately.
"Dwight Howard had a
win away from clinching
GAHS starter Amy Noe first, secon • fourth and t
walk, stole second and great
game, and he's a great
their ·second oonsecutive was masterful in picking up frameS .
.
scored on a game-winning player. but he just lives in
unbeaten conference title, as the decision, allowing only .Game time with Chillicothe single by Lynzee Thcker that. the 3-second · lane on
well as improving on a 34- I . four hits and a walk over todl\y iS 5 pm. '
· offense and defense," .
put Southern up 4-3.
Waterford
had
gone
up
3-0
SEOAL South record over seven innings while fanning GALLIA ACADEMY 7. JACKSON 0
DiLeo said. "I'm just saythe last three springs - all of nine. Jess Apsley took the
in .the third inning when ing he's standing m the 3which have J;eSulted ip South loss for the lronladies (5-9. 4- Golipotio •1o ooo 2 - 760
Bethany Dailey walked , second lane on offense and
Division crowns.
4), allowing · six 'hits, four Jac:lcaon 000 000 0 -on
Maggie Lawlor walked and defense. He's a ~reat playIn fact, the only team. to earned runs and twO walks WP--:LP-Apsley.
· Megan .Negri reached on an er, and he doesn t need any
beat GAHS in league Rlay over seven innings while
error to score a run . Haley advantages."
over that three-year span is striking out five.
.
SoUTHERN UPSETS
Ellis singled home a run, and
Magic coach Stan Van
Ironton - · which accolll· · Jackson committed seven
WATERFORD
then an error and walk to Gundy heard DiLeo's
plished the· feat at Memorial errors in the contest, while
Mariah Thatcher brought remarks, took the podium
Field by a 6-2llllllgin back on Galli a Academy went errorRACINE - Southern (6P11111 - Haward, BJ
April 18, "l11J7. The An3els free.
10, 4-5) saved the best for PIIIH - SltftiNIL 11

TIC ·

nursing field, Qt:be ~allipoli~ Jlallp
·m:ribune, ¢be Joint Jlea~ant Jaeuister
arid The Dally Sentinel will be
publishing a special section on May 8th
in print and online. ·
This is a great way for • Hospitals •
Nursing Homes • Home Medical
Suppliers • Clinics • Doctor's Offices •
Health Departments • School Nursing
Programs, etc. to salute our hard-working nurses.

RV

forGame6

marijuana charge

In recognition of all the caring men and women in the

sP

POINT 3, RIVE AVALLEY 2

Magic's Howard'··
suspended ·

Steelers' .Jiolmes
~rraigned

S

Angels·pound Jackson; Southern shockS Waterford

�LOCAL • STATE

The Daily Se'ntinel

Stewart put
on$2Mbond
··r or 3 charges

PageA6

Inside

lndialls fall to Sox, Page B2
Playoff setbacks, Page B6

.Thursday, April 30, aoog

Protectio~ of bats brings cave, mine closings
Wtn:ne
National Forest l'ncluded 25st~tes.
including almost cave/mine to another on the
J
;000 endangered Indiana footwear and gear of
~

NELSONVILLE - In out of caves and mines is bats. White-nose syndrome humans. There have been
response to the uncon-• the one thing we can do is named for a white fungus noreported human illnesses
trolled spread of white- right now to slow the fur- that appears on the faces, attributed to the fun~us.
nose syndrome affecting ther spread of the fungus. ears, wittgs, and feet of Infected caves and mmes
bat species. all caves and We will enforce this clo- hibernating bats. The dis- may not show obvious signs
mines on National Forests sure order in hopes of pro- ease causes bats to come of its existence.
. I
in the · Eastern Region, tecting some·of the largest out of hibernation severely · Many national forests in
the jail, where Stewart is including the Wayne . bat populations in · the ·underweight, often starving the Eastern Region are
Bv j&lt;EVIN KELLY
"!!TNEWSOMYDAilVTRIBUNE.COM incarcerated.
·
before the insects ..:.. on home to several species of
National Forest in south- United States."
A preliminary hearing to eastern Ohio, have been
On the Wayne National which they feed _;_ emerge bats , including the federally
GALLIPOLIS - Bond determine if the case should closed by U.S. ·Forest Forest, hibernating . bats ·· jn the spring. ·Once a endangered Indiana bat,
has been set at $2 million proceed to the grand jury Service managers for one are monitored every year colony is . infected, it Virginia big-eared bat, and
for the 76-year-old Wellston was scheduled by Evans for year.
tn mines during the spreads rapidly and has. the gray bat. Bats are a natural
man accused in the shooting Friday, May 8 at 2:30 p.m .
"White-nose syndrome months of September JX!SSibility of killing over and important part of the
deaths of two Rodney-area in the Gallia County has already infected mines throu~h f!- pri I: Forest ~'!'&gt; of bats within the cave forests , making a significant
residents on Tuesday.
Common Pleas courtroom.
on the ' Green Mountain wtldltfe btologtsts have :. 'ID.JUSt two years.
. contribution towards the
Walter E. Stewart has
Gallia County 911 was National Forest in Vermont not detected any bats with
Scientists believe the fun- control of forest and agribeen charged with aggravat- informed at 5:28 p.m. and
caves
on
the white-nose syndrome.
· gus is spread bat-to-bat as cultural insect pests.
ed murder in the death of Tuesday that Holley and Monongahela
Nationat
The Eastern ·Region
Nearly 500.000 bats have they cluster in caves and
Carolyn S. Merry, 54, 7784 Merry had been shot l\Dd the Forest in West Virginia," died as .a result of white- mines, and there is evidence encompasses 14 national
. Ol)io 588, Bidwell; murder alleged shooter was still on said· Logan Lee, Deputy nose syndrome in the New that it ean be unknowingly
forests arid one tallgrass
scene.
Sheriff's Regional Forester. "Staying England and Mid-Atlantic . transferred
in connection with the death the
from
one
prairie in a 2Q-state area.
of John Paul f:lolley, 59, deputies, along with Rio
7179 Ohio 588, Bidwell: Grande Village Police, State
and attempted murder on . Highway Patrol and EMS,
David B. Merry, 49, no responded to the . scene.
Stewart was taken arrested
local address available .
.ATHENS (AP) - Ohio Hansen of Seven Hills near Center in Columbus.
South Green portion of camStewart was taken into at 5:43 p.m.. according to
University
says
·a
student
Cleveland
was
a
student
in
·
In
a
statement,
Ohio
.
pus. University police are
custody at the site of the the 911 log.
fell
from
a
fourth
floor
the
Russ
College
of
continuing
University
says
police
·
to investigate
Sheriff Joe Browning said
alleged shooting, on top of a
window
in·
a
dormitory
and
Engineering
and
Technology.
·
believe Hansen fell from the and are asking anyone with
hill at the Holley Brothers a preliminary investigation
has
died.
Hansen
fell
late
Thesday
upper
half of a fourth-floor information to contact them.
Stone Quarry off 588 just of the incident indicates the
The
university
says
20night
and
died
Wednesday
window
at Weld House, a
Counselors were on hand
shootings arose froin a busiwest of Rodney.
year-old
sophom~re Eric
afternoon
at
Grant
Medical
coed
residence
hall
on
the
at
the residence hall.
Bond was set during a ness dispute. It is believed
Wednesday arraignment on. Carolyn Merry died at the
the charges with Gallipolis scene, while well-known
Municipal Judge Margaret local businessman Holley .
Evans. If Stewart can meet was dead on arrival ar St.
10 percent of the bond Mary's Medical Center in
Ohio Valle)' Bane Corp, (NAS.
Th~y...Showers likely Southwest winds 10 to 15 AEP (NYSE) - 26.44
amount and be freed from Huntington, w.ya:, where
Akzo
(NASDAQ)
43.0S
DAQ)22.10
the Gallia County Jail , he he had been all'hfted by · with a chance of thunder- mph with gu~ts up to 25 mph. Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 19.25 . BBT (NYSE)
- 24.10
stonns in the morning...Then Chance of ram 60 pel'l;ent. · · Big Lot. (NYSE) - 28.88
will be confined to his resi- HealthNet. ·
. Peoplft (NASDAQ) -17.10
Friday nlgbt.. .Showers Bob Evana (NASDAQ) :- 24.89 Pepsl!:o (NYSE) - 50.45
dence with an electronic
Browning
indicated showers with thunderstorms
likely
in
the
afternoon.
Highs
likely
wtth a chance of !hun- BorgWarner (NYSE) - 2.7.60 · Premier (NASDAQ) - 5.08
monitor.
David Merry was at the
Stewart was represented scene of the shooting, but in the lower 70s. Southeast derslorms. Lows in the mid Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) ROCkwell (NYSE) - 33.08
-3.78
Rocky Boot. (NASDAQ) - •
by Columbus attorney further details were una vail- winds 5 to 10 mph... 50s. Southwest winds 10 io 15 · Champion
(NASDAQ)
1.71
3.73
Becoll)ing southwest 10 to 15 mph with gusts up to 25 mph.
Robert F. Krapenc, while able.
Charming $hop1 (NASDAQ) - RO)'I!I Dutch Shell - 45.95
Assistant
Prosecuting
The penalty for aggravat- mph in the afternoon. Chance Chance of rain 70 percent.·
3.62
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - ,
Sat~rday.•.Showers like- City Holding (NASDAQ) - 30.08
Attorney Eric Mulford ed murder is death or life of rain 80 percent.
ao.o3
Thlll'$daynlght ...Showers ly. Highs in the lower 70s. Colllna (NYSE) - 38.88
. WII-Mart (NYSE) ~ 50.45
appeared for the state. The imprisonment, along with a
DuPont (NYtEJ - 28.02
Wendy'e (NYSE) - 5.47
;·;
home confinement provi- $25,000 fine, while a mur- likely. A chance of thunder- Chance of rain 70 percent.
us
Bank
(NYSE)
18.79
·
.
WuBai!CO
(NYSE)
20.82
"
· Saturday nlght .. .Mostly
sion of Stewart's bond was der charge carries a penalty storms in the evening'.. ~Then
Gannett
(NYSE)
3.81
Worthington
(NYSE)
14.45
'
. recommended in part due of 15 years to life and a a slight chance of thunder- cloudy with a 50 ·percent General Eteotrlc (NYSEI . Dally etock report• are the 4
to the accused's age and $15,000 fine. Attempted storms after njdnight. Lows chance of showers. Lows 12.22
p.m. ET ctoalng quot.. ol
Krapenc's contention that murder results in a sentence around 60. Southwest winds around 50.
Hlll'ley.l)avldiOn (NYSE) tranuctlone for April 29,
2008,provlded by EdWard
Sunday and Sunday 21.09
Stewart does not represent of anywhere from 3 to 10 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain
JP
Morgan
(NYSE)
34.48
Jonea
financial advlaore luao
a flight risk or threat to years, a $20,000 fine and 70 percent.
nlght .. .Mostly cloudy with
Kroger
(NY~ll) .,- 22,18
.
MUll
In
at (740) 441•'.
anyone.
the possibility 'of addi!ional
Frlday...Showers, likely a 40 percent chancc'": of Umlllld Bn~nde (NYSE) - 11.21 . 9441 andGaltlpotla
Leeley
Marrwro
In
. The arraignment was con- · prison time . because a . with a chance of thunder·. showers. Highs in the ui)'per Norfolk SolitNi'n (NYSE) FolntPiaaant at (304) 874- .
.
.
ducted by video link with firearm was involved.
stonns. Highs in the mid 70s. . 60s. Lows in the lowed!)s; . 35.51
0174. Member SIPC.

Thursday, Apri130, 2009 ·

Prep Baseball Roundup
POMEROY - A IChMtlle ot upcoming l'lign
IChoot vartlly tPOrting ....m.lnvolvlng teams
from

l

Local Weather

MeJol, MUOI'i anct Gallia C«&lt;ffliee.
Thurtell)' April 30

· -11

Eaotorn at Watortor&lt;IS p.m.
Meigs at Belpre, 5 p.m.
.
· Point Pleasant at Wahama, 5 p.m. ·
Chillk:othe at Gailia AcadornV. 5 p.m.

.

8oftlloll

Eastern at Waterford s p.m.
Meigs at Belpre, 5 p.m.
Point Pleaoant ~ Ripley, 5 p.m.
ChHllcothe a1 Galila Academy, 5 p.m.
Nannan VI. Grace Chrtatlan, 4:30 p.m.

1)"'*0fldFlold
~

at VInton COunty Invite, 4:30 p.m.

Tennlt

·

·

Jackaonat Gallla Academy. 3:15p.m.
Point Ple.asant at Wmtiekl. TBA

•

fr""V·= 1

a...g

,..

Galiia Academy at Meigs; 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant vs. Herbert Hoover, 5:30

Student dies after 4th-floor falffrom OU dorm

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B.l

The Daily Sentinel

lo1.m.

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Alve• Valley al Chesapeake, 5 p.m.
wahama vt. Sot.jlhEirn, 4:30 p.m.

Southern at Wahama, 4:30 p.m.
.Trjmbla at Eastern, 5 p.m.

Soflboll

Galiia Aoademy at Meigs, 5 p.m. ·
River Valley at Chesapeake, 5 p.m.
Wahama va. Southern, 4:30p.m.
Southern at Wahama. 4:30p.m.
Trimble at Eastern, 5 p.m.
1l'lclc •nct F!Oid
&lt;!lallia Academy at ParkersbUrg South,

tBA

Poinl Pleasant a1 GazeQ:e Re!aya at ·
Laidley, 4 p.m.
AIV8f Valley at Arthur Lydlard Classic al
$outh Polnl, 4:30 p.m.
~annan at Ripley.
1

Local Stocks·

RV drops heartbreaker to Pointers
STAFF REPQRTS
MOSSPORTSOWYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

CHESHIRE River
Valley baseball fell victim
to some late-inning heroics
Wednesday ~ight against
visiting South Point during
a heartbreaking 3-2 setback
in· an
Ohio Valley
Conference matchup.
The Raiders led 1-0 after
· one . complete, but the
Pointers countered with
two rqns in the third for a
2-1 advantage. RVHS knotted things up at two with a
score in the fourth, which
led to the.climactic finale.
In the top of the fifth and
two, Jacob
tied · at
Seagraves belted a two-out
Anna Jeaomerlphoto solo homer to give th.e
River Valley starter Clayton Curnutte delivers a pitch during guests a 3,2 advantage - a
Wednesday night's OVC baseball contest . against South lead· that would eventually
stick.
Point in Cheshire:

. The Raiders had eight
hits in the contest, with
Clayton Curnutte leading
the way with two hits.
Tyler
Noble,
Matt
Goodrich, . Austin .Justus,
Cody Wimmer, Brandon
Smith and Zack· Polcyn
also had a safety each· in
the setback. Justus and
Smith each had an RBI.
Fielder led the Pointers
with two hits , followed by
Seagraves,
Dickess,
Adkins and Meadows with
one hit each.
.
Curnutte was the losing
pitcher of record, allowing
three ·walks while fanning
zero over seven frames.
Kyle Winkler .got the win,
allowing zero walks and
strikinjl out nine over
seven mnings. Both teams
· had one error in the contest.

on .

. PITTSBURGH, . (~?) ...:
Pittsburgh .Stee!ers·.receiv- · ·
e:r and Super Bdwl
Santonin Holmes wa11. ·
arraigned Wednesday ori a .
misdemeanor marijuana .
charge stemming· from a
traffic stop.
, HQimes • ·
attorney,
Robert DelGreco Jr.,
appeared at the brief hearing where charges were
formally ·
·presented.
Holmes did ~~t' llP.pea~,
11or was he . r~qu~red to. ':·.
· DelGreco said he
·
io chtillenge · the .co.nstilu·
tioriality o( ihe stop; but ·
did D.Qt...ol~b9rat!l .. , , ;:... · .. .
"I w'ill b"e' "filfiig "a·suP,·'··
p!'(lssiori motion, That \I(Jll
be a public . record and :
we'll go frQm .there," he
said.
· · ··
·
·
· Pittsburgh police· said .
they found three marijuana-filled
cigars
in
tlolmes' car when he was .
pulled over Oct. .
Holmes was. sto!)pe:d
because his car was stm.•·
lar to one. they were.Jloolhl
::i .
· .'
ing for in a drug .
. . · · · · ·· ··· ·· · · ·
. Holm,es was. cl&gt;.,oper.a:(iv.e; . . ~y\B.RYAN WALT~8 '; .... difference in the outcome. .. decision and the league title.
arid ,alerted of.ficer• to .
BW.I,l.T&amp;RSOMYDAILVTRISUN!i.COM •· MHS was held, ~it1ess
Ebersbach went the dis~
·
·
·
through
fd\lr
.
complete,.
but
tance
for the winning deci. ROCKSPRINGS ...;': For the hosts found their swing sion, allowing $even hits and
drugs, pojice said· ·
DelGre~o h\ls ·charac1er-. . the fifth time since the tum in the fifth with all three of zero walks over seven
ized the charge "u low. as ol the millenium and the their. hits '. coming in th&amp;.t innings while striking out
a grade a misdemeanor first time in four years, the . frame. All three, safeties also three. Leftwich tookthe loss
you can ·get." The penalty Meigs softball team clinched came with two outs in the for BHS.
is up to 30 days probation the
2009
Tri-Valley . inning.
. .
Fitch led the guests with
and a $500 fine, he said.
Conference Ohio. Division
Micki -Barnes started the three hits, followed lfy
Coach Mille Tomlfn championship Wednesday J;wo-out rally .wiib a singleto Milson with two safeties.
deactivated Holmes for a niglll 'with a hard-fougllt 2-0 rigllt; wh!ch was followeil McNabb and Turrill also had
game following the
, victory over Visiting Belpre. by back-to-back RBl dou' a hit apiece in the setback.
stop. He wa.s not arrested · The Lady Marauders (11- bles by Nicole Wise and
Meigs also struck a linle
and received a court sum- 4, .10-1 TVC Ohio) were far Hailey Ebersbach to give revenge against Alexander
mons, which is common from championship form, ' Meigs the 2·0 lead thrOugh on .Tuesday night, avenging
with misdemeanor charges. committing the · only four five complete.
its lone TVC Ohio. setback
errors made in the contest.
Belpre got the ~o-ahead a· this ·year with a 3-2 victory ·
in Pennsylvania.
The Lady Eagles also outhit · run to the plate m the sev- ·at home.
·
. Holmes said he "learned the hosts by a 7-3 . margin, enth, but left runners strandThe Lady Marauders led
a lot" from missing a but it was .the timing of the ed at second and third + 1-0 after one complete, but
game following the traffic Meigs' hits thill made the allowing Meigs to win the the Lady Spartans countered
stop. Before the Super·
· Bowl, Holmes told the
media that he had ·dealt
Prep Softball Roundup
drugs for a year in his
'ometown of. Belle Glade;

Special stories on
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•4..88ashaet

Fla.

•

: Holmes, a first-round
4raft pick out of Ohio
State in 2006, has had two
·
other run-ins with the law
since the Steelers drafted
bim. In June 2006, he was
·h d
. ·
charge d Wlt C .omebstlc
1urn us,
yiolence in
Ohio. Those charges were
tlropped when the mother
of one of his three children declined to help pros·
ecute the case and grosecHutors were assure that ·
olmes received anger
management and domestic
violence
counseling
through the NFL.
· In May 2006, Holmes
was arrested for disorderly
conduct by police in
Miami , who later dropped
Ute charges.
• No trial date has been
set on the recent charge,
but a pretrial conference
was scheduled for May 22
in Allegheny County
'court.

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,_•••a•
.....
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a sheet

Color:
PlonMr Whlla

~

'· -·

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092 010 0 - 361
tOO 100 0 -261

WP -Winkle[; LP - Curnutte.

BLUE DEVILS SPLIT WITH
JACKSON

JACKSON - The day
started well for Gallia
Academy baseball, but the
Blue Devils only managed
to come away from the
Apple City with one· of two
victories Wednesday night ·.
during a 7-5 victory and a 7'.
4. loss to host Jackson in a
pair of Southeastern Ohio .
Athletic League South
Division matchups at Haller
Field.
The Devils (12-6, 7-4
SEOAL South) finished a
game that wa5 played last

PIUHIIeBIIHINIII,Bi
..

against 76ers

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) Dwight Howard's elbow
has given the Orlando
Magic's playoff hopes a .
major hit.
·
Howard . has been suspended for Game 6 of the
Ma~ic's
playoff series
agamst the Philadelphia
76ers for his elbow on
Sixers center . Samuel
Dalembert, the
NB A
announced Wednesday.
The two got tangled up
going for a rebound in the
first quarter in Game 5 on
Tuesday · night. Replays
showed Howard threw an
elbow that hit Dalembeit
above the
shoulders. ·
Howard drew a technical
foul for the ·hit.
Orlando will · also be
without · starting guard
Courtney Lee, who suffered a fractured sinus after
taking an inadvertent
elbow to the head . from
Howard later in the quarter.
Lee's status for the remainder of the playoffs is uncertain .
The Ma~ic lead the
·
.· .
.Sixers
3-2 m the best-of·
with. two scores in the. sec;
seven
series.
Game ·6 ls
ond frame for a '2" I cushion
Thursday. Orlandq will
after two full frames. '
The score remained . that likely start ·Marcin Gortat
way until the bottom ·of the in place of Howard, and J.J.
sjxth, when the hosts rallied Redick for Lee.
for two scores to recapture · The Magic were traveling to Philadelphia and
the lead for good.
Taylor Elliott led off the · were not immediately
inning with a triple, then available to comment.
''Very physical in the
scored on a wild pitch to
paint,"
· Howard said after
knot things up at two apiece.
Chandra Stanley walked and the Magic's 91-78 win
later scored the winning run Tuesday night. "It's been
on a'one-out fielder's choice very physical in the series .
All we can do is hope for
by Micki Barnes.
the
hest. It's been a d&lt;lg·
· Elliott, Barnes and Shellie
Bailey had the· lone hits for fight all se.ries. It wasn't
Meigs in the triumph, while like I was out there trying
Daugherty led Alexander to hurt anyliody;"
Howard was having the
PIHH ... Melp. BJ · best playoff series of his
career and has been the
only consistent · Magic
player in the p&lt;istseason.
He had 24 pomts and a
career playoff-high 24
rebounds in Tuesday's win,
and
he's averaged 24 points
STAFF REPORTS
will go for 27 in-a-.row today · Brittyn Saunders led the last! Scoring three runs in and 15.8 rebounds in the
t.tDSSPOIIfSeMYDAIL¥seNTtNeL.cQM at honie ag_ainst Chillicothe iJi Angels with two hits and the sixth inning to tie the series.
the South Division finale .
three RBis, followed by.Noe, game and posiing the needed
Howard 's elbow on
JACKSON _ . Gallt'a
&amp;
G 1· Ki be · D ·
C
As ,or Wednesday, alta
m r
avts,
ourtney one in the seventh, the Dalembert in Game 5 set
Academy softball kept a good Academy wasted little. time Shriver and Mattie Lanham Southern Lady Tornadoes of off a wild · coaching, .
thing gomg Wednesday night &lt;&gt;etting on the scorebolu'd - with a hit apiece. GAHS, Coach Kelly .Pape scored a
against host Jackson, posting fumping but to ·u 4-0 advan- however, was limited to only 4-3 upset victory over the exchange afterward.
Philadelphia coach Tony
its
. 26th
consecutive tage after the first inning three hits through six innings Waterford Lady Wildcats (7Southeastern · Ohio Athletic alone. The guests tacked on of play.
7, 3-3) Wednesday night at DiLeo said Howard should
League South Division victo- one more in the second for a
JHS received hits from Star Mill P.ark. The win was have been called for 3 seconds in the lane several
ry during a convincing 7-0 5-0 cushion, then added two Apsley, · Breanna . Moore, Southern's third in a row.
decision in the Apple City.
insurance runs in the seventh · Erika Danver and Jami
Southern scored the win· times and asked the league
The Blue Angels (16-4, 11- for the final seven-run out- Oberholzer in the Setback. ning run when Lindsey 10 look into an elbow
oSEOAL South) are now one come.
Jackson's dhits came in fithfthe Teaford drew a two-out immediately.
"Dwight Howard had a
win away from clinching
GAHS starter Amy Noe first, secon • fourth and t
walk, stole second and great
game, and he's a great
their ·second oonsecutive was masterful in picking up frameS .
.
scored on a game-winning player. but he just lives in
unbeaten conference title, as the decision, allowing only .Game time with Chillicothe single by Lynzee Thcker that. the 3-second · lane on
well as improving on a 34- I . four hits and a walk over todl\y iS 5 pm. '
· offense and defense," .
put Southern up 4-3.
Waterford
had
gone
up
3-0
SEOAL South record over seven innings while fanning GALLIA ACADEMY 7. JACKSON 0
DiLeo said. "I'm just saythe last three springs - all of nine. Jess Apsley took the
in .the third inning when ing he's standing m the 3which have J;eSulted ip South loss for the lronladies (5-9. 4- Golipotio •1o ooo 2 - 760
Bethany Dailey walked , second lane on offense and
Division crowns.
4), allowing · six 'hits, four Jac:lcaon 000 000 0 -on
Maggie Lawlor walked and defense. He's a ~reat playIn fact, the only team. to earned runs and twO walks WP--:LP-Apsley.
· Megan .Negri reached on an er, and he doesn t need any
beat GAHS in league Rlay over seven innings while
error to score a run . Haley advantages."
over that three-year span is striking out five.
.
SoUTHERN UPSETS
Ellis singled home a run, and
Magic coach Stan Van
Ironton - · which accolll· · Jackson committed seven
WATERFORD
then an error and walk to Gundy heard DiLeo's
plished the· feat at Memorial errors in the contest, while
Mariah Thatcher brought remarks, took the podium
Field by a 6-2llllllgin back on Galli a Academy went errorRACINE - Southern (6P11111 - Haward, BJ
April 18, "l11J7. The An3els free.
10, 4-5) saved the best for PIIIH - SltftiNIL 11

TIC ·

nursing field, Qt:be ~allipoli~ Jlallp
·m:ribune, ¢be Joint Jlea~ant Jaeuister
arid The Dally Sentinel will be
publishing a special section on May 8th
in print and online. ·
This is a great way for • Hospitals •
Nursing Homes • Home Medical
Suppliers • Clinics • Doctor's Offices •
Health Departments • School Nursing
Programs, etc. to salute our hard-working nurses.

RV

forGame6

marijuana charge

In recognition of all the caring men and women in the

sP

POINT 3, RIVE AVALLEY 2

Magic's Howard'··
suspended ·

Steelers' .Jiolmes
~rraigned

S

Angels·pound Jackson; Southern shockS Waterford

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

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www.n,ydailysentinel.com

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Meigs
fromPageBl
arid all hitters with two
safeties apiece. AHS pro•
duced five hits total in the
setback. and Meigs had the
lone error in the game.
Ebersbach was the winning pitcher of record,
allowing no runs and three

J

Softball
fromPageBl
)lome the other two ruris for
.. the Wildcat lead.
Southern had threatened
on a couple ·of occasions,
but in the fourth and .fifth
Southern went down 1-2-3
at the hands of Wildcat
starter Maggie Lawlor.
Lawlor struck out the side
in the fifth as Southern
hopes dimmed.
Then in the sixth,
Southern brought out the
rally caps arid the magic
dust to ignite a wild offensive inning. Chelsea Pape
walked, Tucker reached on
an error, Kelsey Holsinger

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dation of public health officials.
''The health and safety of
our student activity participants is of the utmost importance ," Breithaupt said.
"Taking every possible precaution to prevent the further
spreading of this disease is
an important contribution to
the welfare of our great state,
and altering the schedule of
our events is a way .to keep
our participants safe."
School officials say 53,000
students are out of school
due to concern over the

virus, and dozens of schools
were closed to be sanitized.
The stale golf and tennis
championships are scheduled to begin May 11.
The state track meet, one
of the largest high school
track and field competitions
in the country, has been
extended from its nonnal
two days to three and is
scheduled for May 14-16.
All UIL academic competitions, including a state meet
that was to begin May 7,
were also postponed and will
be rescheduled later,

hits . over four innings of _It is the first league crown
relief. Bailey started and for third-year coach Dave
lasted three innings, allow- Fife. ·
ing two runs and two hits .
MEIGS 2. BELPRE 0
· McClain took the loss for
the Lady Spartans.
Belpre
000 000 0 - 070
Overall, Meigs has now Meigs
090 020 ) ( - 234
won seven straight decisions and returns to action wP- Ebersbach; LP - Leftwich.
today when ir travels to
MEIGS 3, ALEXANDER 2
Belpre for a rematch in the
020 000 0 - 250
TVC Ohio finale. MHS Ale•
100 002 X - 331
· also won league titles in Molgs
2000, 2002,2004 and 2005. WP- Ebersbach; LP- McClain.
was hit by a pitch to load Haley Elli~ and Mariah
the bases, and Cheyene Thatcher with singles.
Southern's
Brooke
Dunn walked to force home
the first Tornado run. With Gabritsch posted the will
two out, Katie Woods on the mound for Southern
slammed a two-run single to with four strikeouts and
tie the score bringing home four walks. Waterford's
Tucker and Holsinger. · · Lawlor had nine strikeouts
The Woods drive. proved · and five walks in suffering
to be a savior as it rattled . the loss.
Playing out of position,
·the Wildcat confidence
and ·set up the heroics from . Tucker · played a strong
Teaford and Tucker to win third and made room for
Hope Teaford to put in her
the game in the seventh.
first
varsity start at catchSouthern hltters were
Emma Hunter, Tuck~r, and er.
Southern is at Wabama
Woods
with . singles.
·
Friday.
Kelsey Holsinger doubled.
Southern was . playing
without lead-.off · hitter · SOUTHERN 4, WATERFORD 3
Waterford 003 000 0 - 3 2 1
:E\reanna Taylor who was at
Southern 000 003 t - 4 4 3
an Academic Awards funcWP - Gabritsch; LP - Lawlor.
tion. Wildcat hitters were

hiller, began the season · on
the disabled list with a
sprained ankle and entered
Wednesday with only one
plate appearance, a walk.
He signed with the Red Sox
as a minor league free agent
following the 2007 season.
Van Every Stl!J'led in /right
CLEVELAND (AP)
field because J.D. Drej, has )
Jonathan Van Every . hit his been bothered by a sore
first major league home run quad. .
.
,
in the lOth inning, lifting _The Joss capped a bad day
the Boston Red Sox to a6-5, for·tbe Indians, who .placed
comeback win · over the designated hitter· Travis
Cleveland Indians on Hafner on the disabled list
Wednesday night.
. ·- witl) a sore right shoulder.
Van Every, who played m Hafner, who had surgery on
the Indians • minor league the shoulder in October, is
system from 2000-07, hit a batting .270 . with four
J-·1 pitch fro.m Jensen Lewis •homers and eight RBis.
(2-3) to center with two
Cleveland led· 5-2 going
outs. Van Every got his first into the eighth, but.a crucial
big league hit this season, an fielding error by third· baseRBI single, during Boston's ·man DeRosa helped Boston
three-run rally in the eighth score three runs and tie the
that was aided by Mark. game.
.
.
· DeRosa's error.
Rafael Betancourt retired
Hideki Okajima (2-0) Jason Bay to start the
worked the ninth for the inning, but allowed singles
win, Jonathan Papelbon to Mike Lowell and Jason
pitched the I Oth for his sixth Varitek . Jeff Bailey hit what
should have been a doublesave in six opportunities.
The Red Sox have won 12 play grounder directly to
DeRosa, but DeRosa mis.of 13 . .
Vall Every, a left-handed played the ball and the bases

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Troester· with one safety 15,6 win.
each. Dingess had two
Waterford pitching had
RBis, followed by Calvert .eight walks, and . two
and Bowmim with ohe strikeouts. Deem had three ·
fromPageBl
apiece.
wjtlks · and four strikeouts·
Malone led JHS with two h\.posting the win: · ·
week in Jackson, whicl\
Waterford hilling was
resul!ed in a five-all tie after . hits and three RBis.
I
.
led
by Matt McCutcheon
nine innings before darkGALLIPOL.IS 7, JACKSON.!;
with two ·singres, Levi .
ness cancele&lt;;l the contest.
GA
102
000
101
2
7143
McCutcheon
a double and
GAHS didn't wait long to J ' 001 000 301 0 - 565
Matt
Negri
two singles.
finsh
· the
marathon
WP
Rouso;
LP
Stepp.
Southern was led by
matchup, scoring twice in.
the lOth to pull off the 7-5
Whittington
with two sinJACKSON 7, GALLIPOLIS 4
victory.
gles, Taylor two singles,
GA
001 001 2 - 4 5 1
Ian
Dressel, Chuck
Brown a triple, Ash,
J
000 6"10 X - 765
Cal vert and Terry Smith all
Deem, and Cunningham
delivered consecutive oneWP - Jarvis; LP ..... Roush; S singles, Adam Warden two
out singles, including Smith Malone.
singles, Greg Jenkins a
&lt;;)riving in Dressel for a 6-5
single, Taylor Lemley a
. contest Brett Bowman
.SOUTHERN SLAMS
single, and Brauer a sindelivered a sacrifice fly one
WtLDCATS
gle.
batter
later. · allowing
Southern
goes
.to
Calvert to score for a twoRACINE
Southern
run cushion.
junior Taylor Deem picked Wah~ma Friday.
JHS had runners at sec- up his first varsity win on . SOUTHERN 15. WAT(:RFORD 6
ond and ·third with one out · 'the mound as the Sothern
in the bottom of the frame, Tornadoes ~ routed the Waterford 301 020 o - 6 57
but never managed to cut Waterford Wildcats 15-6 Southern 701 141 1 - 15133
into its deficit.
Wednesday night in boys WP - Deem; LP - McCutCheon.
Austin Roush was the Tri-Valley Conference basewinning pitcher of record, ball action at Star Mill Park ..
while Taylor Stepp took the Southern is now 10-7 on the
loss for the Jronmen.
· season in picking up their
GAHS had 14 hits in the third straight win for Coach.
triumph, led by Smith with Ryan Lemley.,
three hits. Roush and Caleb
Waterford took the early
Wamimont were nex:t with lead until Deem settled
two safeties, w'hile Calvert, down in his first varsity
Bowman; Tyler Eastman, start. By virtue of two sinKyle Dingess . and Beau gles (Matt McCutcheon.
Whaley each added a hit to Matt Negri) and three walks
the cause.
Waterford took a 3-0 lead.
Game two, however, was
Southern opened the
not meant to be as Jackson game up early as Deem led
erased a 1·0 deficit after off with a . single, J.D.
three complete with a six- Whiuington singled, and
run outburst in the fourt)J Jordon Taylor had an RBI
for a five-run edge . JHS single for Southern's first
tacked on another run in the run. Zach Ash singled; Kyle
fifth for a 7.-1 lead, but Cunningham had a two-run
· GAHS countered with a single, Adam Warden an
score in the sixth for a 7-2 RBI single, and Johil Brauer
deficit.
a walk.
Greg Jenkins
The Devils s.cored two added an RBI when he
more times in the seventh. reached on an error. and
but never came closer than Deem and Whinington each
the final three-run outcome. walked home runs for RBrs
Roush was the losing and a 7-3 SHS lead.
pitcher of record. allowing
Waterford scored a single
four runs,three hits and one run in the third and two in
walk
over
three-plus the fifth off reliever
innings of work . John Cunningham, but the
Troester worked three Wildcats were never really
innings . of relief. allowing a factor. Sixteen Tornadoes
three runs, three hits and saw action in the game.
four walks. Roush fanned . Southern added a single
three and Troester struck . run in the second innin~,the
out one.
big blow a Brauer stngle
Brian Jarvis took the win, that knocked home Warden .
surrendering four runs, five Southern added a single run
hits and three walks O\ier in
the
third
when
6.1 innings of work. Jarvis Whittington walked, stole
also struck out one. second , advanced Qn a
Anthony Malone l'icked up passed ball, and then stole
the save in ·two-thirds of an home, 9-4.
inning of work.
Southern scored four in
Calvert led the guests the fourth (Brown had a
with two hits. followed by leadoff triple) and one in the
Roush,
Dingess
and fifth and sixth to claim the

Howard
fromPageBl
and defended. his star center by mocking Dileo . .

CLASSIFIED

were loaded .
Van Every then singled to
right. making it 5-3. Lewis
relieved and gave up an RBI
fielder's choice to pinch-hitter Drew.
Jacoby Ellsbury's single
up the middle tied the game.
DeRosa hit a solo homer
in the second and Kelly
Shoppach, starting at DH in
place of Hafner, added a
two-run homer in the fourth,
helping the Indians build a
5-0 lead.
Fausto Carmona held
Boston to two runs in 6 2-3
innings. He retired 12
straight bailers between the
second and sixth innings. ·
Lowell; extending his hitting streak to 13 games, and
Varitek had RBI doubles in
the sixth.
Jon Lester gave up fiv~
runs in six innings.
First baseman Kevin
Youkilis (sore. back) .and
shortstop Julio Lugo (stiff
knee) were all out of the
starting lineup for Boston. ·
Youkilis, who leads the
majors with a .405 balling
average, was hit by a pitch
from AnthOny Reyes in the
first inning Tuesday.

In One Week With Us
u.llclu&lt;~..d~!'!n)i,ilxa&gt;.,com. REACH OVER.285,000 PROSPECTS

Webslles:
www.mydallytribune.com
www.myclallysentinel.com
· www.mydailyregister.com

. PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

tlODCED
Now you con hove borders and oraphlc$
~
added to vour classifled ads
..{,;Borders$3.00/perad
I!!
1

Monday thru Friday·

Graphics SOC far small
$1.00 for lar9e

a.m. to 5:00 p.m
. HO.W

m WRITE AN AD
Succ

rtlectorcanctl.ny
111 at tillY time.
Errors· Mult

Repc&gt;rted on 111e

Baseball

that are not
p~ked up will be

ctrtlllod

estimates. 74D-395·3369

Appllcallons

CaK
Cremations.

may . be 741).446·3745

picked up at Lakin Hospl· .. Pralaulanal"--~...

We

tal. Monday - Filday
,...,
8am· 4pm. Applications . TURNE"., DOWN ON
must be turned In no SOCIALSECURITVSSI
later than 05108109 at
.
NOFE!eUnlessWeWinl ·
COB. E.O.E. '
1-888·582·3345 ·

"'

•

:
•
•
:
•
:
,
·•
:
.
'

Legolo ..............................................;....... :.... 100
Announcernenta~ .................................." ... ;,200
Blrthdoy/Annlveroary ........................:......... 205
Hoppy Ado............................ .,.....,................ 210 ·
Loot &amp; Found............................................... 215
Memory/Thank Vou ...............................".... 220
Notlcn ......................................................... 225
Poroonelo..................................................... 230
wanted .....................................; ................... 235
Servlceo ...............................,....................... 30Q
Appllanoe Servlce ....................................... 302
Automotlvo .................................................. 304
Building Matorlalo ....................................... 306
Buolneoo ...........................................:.......... 308
Coterlng......... ,..............................................310

;. ChlldiEI~!IfiY Cere ................~ ....................... 312
,.· Computera ..................................................... .-314

Contr•ctors .......................... .'.......................316
Dornolllco/Janllorlil .............;..................... 318
Electrical ...................................................... 320
Flnanclat ...................:....:.............-...............322
Hoalt~ ........................................................... 328
Hntlng &amp; Coollng ....................................... 328
Homelmprovementa 33Q
lnouranoe ..................................................... 332
Lown Servlco ............................................... ~
MUIIC/DIInCe/Drome .................................... 338
0111or s.rvtceo .............................................338
Plumblng/Eiectrlca).....................................340
Pro'"o)onol S..VIoeo.................................342
Ropelro ......................................................... 344
Roollng......................................................•..348
Security ........................................................348
ToliiAccounllng ......................................•.... 350
Travei/Ent-lnment ....................,.............352
Flnanclllt .....................................................:.4oo
Financial Servlceo...................................... 405
lnaurance ........................................- .......... 410
Mon•y to Land ................................:.......•.... 415
Educotlon .....................................................soo
Buotnau &amp; ~ Schoof .........:.................505
lnotructlon &amp; Tralnlng.................................510
Lueona ....:...................................................515

Peraonal ....................................................... 520
Anlmale ................................................... ,.... eoo

Animal Supplloo ..........................................605

Hor..e..........................................~ ...............810
Livestock ........................................................815
Peta...............................................................620

Wont to buy...... ,...........................................825
Agrlculture ....:...................................... ,.......700
Farm Equtpmant..........................................705
. ·. Gorden &amp; Produco .......................................710
: Hay, Feed. Seed, Grain ............................... 715
• HuntlnQ &amp; Lond ..........................................,720
· Won1to buy..,........................................ -.....725
. : Merchondlu .................................................aoo
. Antlquoo ........................................................i05
• Appllonce ....................................... ,.............910
, Auctlono ....................................................... 915
Bargain Boumont.. .....................................920
· Collocllbteo .................................................. 925
• Compu1ero ................................................... 930
Equlpmanll$upplteo...,........................_..... 935
·. Flea Mar1tet&amp; .......:........................................ 940
Fuel 011 C01111Wood/G11 ............................. 945
Furniture ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport .................................... 955
c

• Kld'a Cornef ................................................. 960
Mlacellaneou•.............................................. 965

. Want to buy ......................................... ~-·-···· 970

Yard Sale .....................,.......•.•..•...••..•.•..•...•• 975

I

lor lstngs.

Huge Yard Sale. May 1&amp;1 2BR, large LA. asking
2nd. 1903 . Raccoon $75,000. 740·4-le-7029
Rd . .down
.SA 75 or 21 B
acree wl 2100 sq. ft .
5·· Little Tikes 11ov•. 30.5
02 Clayton · on blool&lt;

meta!
bed,
complete foundation w/ 2K6 .con·
dlshe~ set, home lnt(!riof, structlon . &amp; premium wtn-

www.comlc•.com

tupperwear nam_e brand
clothes, girls sizes Infant
3T bo
l5 lot
t
to
•
Y~ • ' 15 0
baby. ttems. To much to
mentJOnl
.

~we. 4 BR 2 full ·aA
log FP 1
.,
gas, .
' arge 1\1 1
large laundry room. walk
In ctosels, master bath
w1 dressing room. Total

~'!""!~Oi!!~~~ 1umiture, misc. items.
· 10x16. out bldgs. above
Yard &amp;ale I Bake Sale Frl . ground pool exc hunUrig

'Yard S81e sat May 2

Buil-" &amp;r·--~-

·~ ... """'
.;x;n

· "";;;;;;;;;;iii;;i;;....,....,
GalllpollaCareer

College

(Careers Close To

Hom~)

Coil Todayl740·446-4367
1-800-214{1452
gaiii~$Ctireercollege.edu
Accrlldltad Member Accr11dlt·
ingCourdlfcr lt'ldeptndent
Col~~~tt~and Schools·127o4B

CLASSIFIED INDEX

'

yrs. at 8%

. ~~~~~~~~~~==~~;~==~;;;;;,May 1, .2. 4, 5 1 mile elec healing 1 &lt;:wllng
below
dam, . clothing, t4x80 concrete pallo on
Yord Sale
. homo lnterlo&lt;, tools, back wl carport. a,16 &amp;

·much more. Insured, .tree

Other SeMcu ,

homesl0nly$199.!amon.,

gn.locatlonl5%dwn.15

&amp;

censed. (This 18· a publk: '1-Ju
'
Lawn Some.
service
announcement ~
·
..
from . tho Ohio Valley . 'rl't
Jiin's Lawn Malnten(lnce, Publishing Company)
C ~by NEA, Inc.
mowing ' . mulching . and

Must have a high school .
diploma or GEO to apply. Pel

for Safe ·

elliptical, antique fum.
and
pte1ures
gO
10
I &amp; 2. 4.4 ·www.orvb.ccm
phcne
mt. out 218 . H~ chair, 4•6·1210or339·3834
newbom girls &lt;:IO!fles to N
ho
b .· I
adult clothes misc.
· ewer
me. Ul11 n
'
2006 on 2.99 acres .

fSQU&amp;sts tor · any large
advance
payment! ot
Waterproofing
Unconditional Ufetlme · tees or insurance. Call
the Offioe of Consumer
guarantee. Local refer·
rree
at
encea tufnlatutcf. Estab- Afflars toll
lished 1975. Call24 Hrs. · 1-866-278-0003 . 1o learn
740-448-oB70, Rogers If the ·mortgage broker or
' B¥ament WateToofinp. tender is properly li-

~740-;;;;;;2!!56-654;;;;,;,111!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Houte~

~~-'!;i;;i-o;;i;;i~
3 Bed,2 fSath
HUO

· Huge sale May

........,

aoololent =

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!--!!!iii

French City Goldwlng 800-620-4946 ex T461 .
C-2, Yard sale Saturday ~:'!"'~~~'"!"'~
9 bll?? at 1544 SR 7N
4338 SA 141 1 Mile
Fri &amp; Sa1 9·3 at 1105 From New Ktgh School
Teooora Ave.Mutti tam- 2100 Sq . A. NICe ~ome
Price
reduced
to
ily, kids cJotlies. dishes, $139.900 _ FO( more info

l.oo!dno to do .yard work,
mowtng, trimming. CaH ..,11!!!!11!!!!!1!!111!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Upcoming
burolng
clall.

511 &amp; 512 from H
Centenary. Boys clothes
size 0-4, plus shOes ,
toys, high chair, swing
many mare baby accessories, elec. range, much
more
,.....,......,,__,..._

ownadloperaled. . Single? 800-537-9528
Not into bars or Internet? =====~=
Mee1 other area 'singles
ages 21 to 85, many- lQ(J
' 1 ory :"II
Christians,
many
matches. Safe, fun and

Money To r..nd
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY conlldBntlal. Greenup Ky
101m
to
8pm ~~!:-"~;;;;;;~!""""
PUBUSHING CO. rec· 808-473-511111
. NOTICE Boffow Smart
ommends · that you do
Contect the Ohio DivibUSiness with people you
sion of Financial lnatltu·
knQ:W, and· NOT · to send
1tona
Office of Consumer
money through the maR
Affairs BEFORE y&lt;&gt;u refl·
until you have irlvesligal~
nance your home or ob·
lng the offering.
Hamo tmpro.__ tain
a loan. BEWARE o1
have been
placed In ada at
the GalllpoUa
Dally Tribune ·
must be picked
wllhln 30 days.
·'Any · pictures

· Yard Sale

kltncarlyleftcomcatt.net

..

VIP Dating and Match- SEPTIC
PUMPING
mioklng SoMce
GaJiia . co. .OH and
Est.
In
a2 fat Mason Qo. WV. Ron
'!"'~~~;i;i;;,;.;;;;;;; Tri-StaiO elngl!ls. Local~ Eva"' Jaci&lt;OOn, OH

FolMld sel at keys Wed.
, Momtng on ERA Town &amp;
Country ,Real Est lot
304-675--5548.

....._

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

.,-'•
OhiO Valley .
Publtlhlnti ........
the riQhllo odlt, .

CRio...,

~~
JWi "'tt to ecll. "fKt. til canctt In, ld II q UN. · Enort IIUIIM NpOfttCI on the·~
fd .........NI.Aigi. . WIIil1be IA$161 5 IDrMiftlfttMft!MCDMMtht..-.~ ~ tl'le«r''fnt Otlfy ttw ltrlt ....,._
111W laa or_.... thll r..-lran! ttw pWitt II n CH 011111km.GI In . . . .,....._ Comc:don wttl biiHde In tb1 tkW: .......
n ....,. OOi'lftllenUil • Cwrent rM Olld - - · All *I ..............-.a~ to h , ......flit Houlqf Act 01
liCICiefllll only '*ll Wlll'lltcllldl ....arv EOE . .,_... Wt Will not tnowl"oor . . . . lfiW adVettillng In WIOIMtOn Of fhl ' -· Wll not
lfnn In 1n M laMn awerthl pfl&amp;n.

JOUCIEi.:

r..1 Ade

Should Include ThMe I t To Help !let ilellpotiM...

"Am I supposed io come lobby for the calls we want
up here and talk about the · the ·next game? Let's just
game? Or am I supposed to . play the games.
com~ up here and lobby for , "I guess that's the only
the calls I · wimt ·the next reason Dwight's having
game?'~ Van Gundy sai~l. 'success in this series. It has
"Is that what it's about nothin~ to do with the fact
now? We're supposed to that he s good."
:

THURSDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

I

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Van Every hits first homer, Red Sox
rally for win against Cleveland

Swine flu forces Texas
HS officials to halt sports
AUSTIN. Texas (AP)
Tcxas
otlicials
on
Wednesday postponed all
pubbc htgh school athletic
and academic competitions
untH May 11 because of the
swme flu outbreak.
The move suspends the
baseball and softball seasons
and eliminates the regional
track championships that
were to start Friday, said
Charles Breithaupt. ·executive director of the
University Interscholastic
League. He said league officials acted on the recommen-

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Recreotlono\ Vohlc.lea ..:........,..........,........ 1000
ATV ....................................... ~ ..................... 1005
Blcycleo ..................................;...........c......:1010
Boeto/Acoeooorloo...................................:1015
CamperiRVo &amp; Traller•················"···········1020
Motorcycleo ............................................... 1025
011111 .......................................................... 1030
Wont to buy ...............................................1035
Automotlve ................................................ 2000
Auto Ron1011leaoo .......................... :..........2005
Au1oo ......................:................................... 2010
Claoalo/Antlq-...................,........... :....... 2015
Commorclolllndulttlal ....•......................... 2020
Porta &amp; Accnoortee..................................2025
Sporbo Utlllly .........................;....................2030

Ttucka ..~ ......................................................2035 .
Utility .n anera ............................................ 2040
Vena ............................................................2045

Aullllono

Urootoak

Centenary UM ChurCh. 511 &amp;Sat 512 on Solar Dr fie~ woods wl trails.
2887 St. At. 141 from 8a · 5p
Vary privata &amp; peaceful. .
9:cioAM·4:00PM
Yard
Sale
1st-ever Mdavllle school district
~""':!""":~::-'-::"..... Fri-Sat 9.5 Fort Flan· G~orges Creek Ao~ ~0

Angus ·
Bulls,excellent AUCTIONModular
bloodlines,
Priced House at 12:00 Noon on big

Reasonably.

www.staterunangus.com

. 01

away,

Garage dolph

COmmunity _ room m1ns.

Wolman.

from

Gall1polls

Asking

$160,000. For appt call

-:33:; :9.;·9.; 73:; :3; . ~~-~
"Great Deal asking
$225,000 for a. 300K

Milctlkrneous
o.Multi Family Yard Sale ~~a;;•s!!!a!;;n~.
~~!!!!!!!!!! .home. 3500 Sq. ft. Big
;:;;;;..;;~~~:;;_;;;;;;:;;
~
2. male e Jat Aeration MotOrl May 18t &amp; 2nd, . 8-4 on
garage,
wrap around

Pill
Give
week

s · Family

May 9, 2009. Buckeye Sale 30, 1 &amp; 2. 2 Miles 123 Mlq 8t.Pt Pleasant .
Hilts career Center, Rio east of Porter on. 554
• .Grande. Ohio. (740) Clothing, DVD players Yard Sale May 1&amp; 2, 8-5
245-5334
old record plauor,
end ta·· scmolhlng1 9th.tor&amp; everyone
'
M1 s
;;;bl~e~loiS~Of~niiou•s":o~wa~r.;,;a·= coPtmPelr o .I
an t.

old

740-446·3742

rePtlred, new a rebuilt

ktttens.

·

In 1 tock. Caii .Aon

1573

Graham

School

Ad. HD Items,. clo1,hlng

porch, on 25 acres. ~0
minUtes
Gallipolis.

=;;;;;;;;;;;;; Big Oak ·below
Kitchen to much

Evanei·BOII-537-9528 D-adull1. mise toots &amp; !
Cocker Spaniel pupp\09 - - - - - - - - - house hold Items." ' Rain Crlmpon/ tiVo &amp;
to list buill to leo).
lull ·blooded buff color 7 Hamilton· 992, . Pocket or Shlno.
Trallen
~7:;;40;.;·645~·;;;;59;:;2~8~"':""~
weeks old. 388-0401
Watch 21- Jewels; also i:R~o&lt;f~ney~":c~o~m~m~un~lty~H':'".:oll ~~~~~:=!~ House in Hanford, WV,
Reg. Black Lab pupPies Winchester 2 bladed. 6 Faml~ varo Sale May !992 Soutllwlnd 30 ft $75,000
oliO,
1 ·weeks . otd 5 male pocket knHe, pearl han· 1st &amp; 2nd from 9-5. motor home, air, power (740)444-1366
$300, .4 females $350. dies, should see, tare ·Game
bou.n•me
"'"'
general()( awning, asking :;.;~;;.;;;;,;"!'"'--co'~
~, $8500 256 1731!
4 Bed, 2 Balhl Only
387{1500 or 645·6351
$445. 74G-533·3870
· ·
•nomos. ho"sohold IIams,
·•· ~~"":'--~-,....,
S25:ooo. for listings
7 bench leg. Seagle pup· Mollohan's C~rpet "Qual- home Interior, ~r stool, 2007 Funflnder travel 800-620-4946 ex R019
at Low Prices• 13'6" womens &amp; girls clothhg, trailer, air, patio 8wnlng, Extraordinary Property:
Pies, 7 wks, trf Color, for
I hi ng, an- . asklng$8800. 256·1738
more
Jnfo.
calf Bomer carpel In stocK on girls &amp; _bOys cot
Splctecular vieW ol ttit
740-742·0528
sale Now. Eastern Ave. Uques. lurn~ure, tools RV Service at Carmi· Ohio Alvltr
Free .to g_
ood home male Ga»l@lis to 448•7444
and lots · more. Some· chael
Trailers flrlvate drive off. UncOin
puppy 112 beagle·l/2 For sale A select Jazzy thing for evsryooe.
740-446·38?5
Hill, Pomeroy. Ohio,
itv
.

poodle,
very.
304-675-7625

playful Powered chair, used 3 Big Yard Sale . 15 Ann RV
woods on three sides
mon. Contact Leon Yo· DriVe Gallipolis. May 1, 2 Service at Carmichael (4-t:)e.cres. to a historical
To good home small dar 304·675·3447.·
&amp; 4. Cloths&amp;, dishes. Trailer&amp; .
home. Circa 1900, 5
Lab/Jack Russell mixed, For, Si.le Honaa r;ienera· misc. .
740-446·3825
bedro0m,a, 2 .nrepla_
c,B, 2

Want to buy ............................................... 2050
Reel Eototo Saloo ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Ploto .......................................... 3005
ha9 had she!! &amp; spayed tor EM3500 SX, olrie. 5 lamlly, May 2nd, 9·5, 1 ::~=~=-== full baths. 2 stalrcaaee,
Commorcl 01................................................ 3010
304-675·2834.
start
$750.00 mile scuth ol Chaster on
Motorc)....
beaullful ooiglnal Wood·
· Condomlnlume .......................................... 3015
304-675· t259.
St. Rt 7, no sales be1ore
wOrk, many picture win•
for Sale by Owner........... .-;.....................:•• 3020
Bam, rain cancels
07 Yamaha FZ6 2100 dows. · mostly new win·
Houoaolor Salo......................................... 3025
?()()
~qt r ( Ullllff'
·
.
Want
To luy
~~~~~~~ miles. Excellent Cond. dows, rarga klichen and
Land (Acroege) ..............................:........... 3030
""'""'ii.i';imii&amp;'"--Big yard sale May 1·2 on Red. w/ black accents breakfast • rooi-n, beaut!·
LOll ............................................................ 3035
Absolute Top Dollar - sit- Rowley" lane 1 114 mi $6500', Call 441-9865
fully landscaped with In
Wantlo buy................................................ 3040
v&amp;r/gold
coins,
any abOve T1.1ppeB Plains off
ground pool. Sit on the
Fqrm
Equipment
Roai .E110to Rentolo ...:............................... 3500
10K/14K/18K gold jew· St. Rt. 7 watch for signs,
wrap around porch and
Apertntonto/Townhouoee ......................... 3505
John
Deer
1219
elry,
dental gold, pre girts 3mo-,8mo, S-6X.,
enjoy the· spectacular
Commorclal ...............................,................ 3510
cuner/con(lltloner &amp; Mas· 1935 US currency, some qoys. lots 01
view of the Qhlo River. ~
Condomlnlumo .......................................... 3515
sets,
dia- household items, 9-3
sie ·Ferguson Hay rake. p&lt;oof/mirll
Houooolor Rent ........................................3520
Autot
car detached garage and
740,645·1081
Land (Acreago) ............:....................:........ 3525
monds. MTS Coin Shop. Garage · Sale April 3D.
2 ou~ buildings.· Would
Storaga ....................................................... 3535 · EBY,
INTEGRITY.
·1 5~ 2nd Ave11ue, Galli- May 1st 341 Rutland St., 04 PontiaC · Grapd PriK make a wonderful family.
want to Ron1 .............................................:3540
KIEFER BUILl;
polls. 446 ·~8 42
La;ey Boy recliner. nu· GT2 teather, sunroof, 6 nome or bed &amp; breakta$t.
Manulactured Houolng ............................. 4000
VAUEY
HORSE/LIVEYard Sale"
·merOus Items.
· disc CO, loaded. 61K, Private and Picturesque
Lohl .................................................. ,.......... 4005
Movero ............................:........................... 4D1D
STOCK
TRAILERS. ""'"""~""'~'--- Garage Solo April 301h &amp; $9400. Call339·2494 .
SPECTACULAR VIEW.
Rentolo ..............................:........................ 4015 · LOAO · MAX EQUIP- Evans Family Sale Ma.y Ma~ 1st, top of Chester 2001 Pontiac Grande $209,000.00, please call
Salu ...........................................................4020
MENT
TRAILERS. 101 &amp; 2nd 9-5 11 Jowell Hill on 248, Sr~ house on Prill 4 door while 95,000 ;,740-·99·2-·3·6-7BBII!!!!!I!!I""'
Supplln ......... :........................................... 4025
CARGO
EXPRESS
&amp; Evans Mill Rodney Pikel lan,
clothing, Go-Kan. mijos. Loade&lt;f e•tra nt&lt;e • Land (Acnage)
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
HOMESTEADER
A! 850 Bidwell. Collectl· Matthew's Bow &amp; misc.
,;='!'Oiii"""o.,;¥=
Aaeort Pi'operty .............................,........... SOOO
54500 OBO. 3B8·0332
CARGO/CONCESSION • bles. small a~llanoes.
Garage sa 1e at 501 Vlne Suv•s, Tru~s. Cars full ~R lo ·Grand~ • 1.8 Acres
Aqort Property tor aale ........................... 5025
TRAILERS.
B+W weed eater, Kitchen &amp; S
R1 0 M
"""
1 112
Rooort Property lor rent ..................... ~..... 5050
GOOSENECK f!'LATBEO bath sinks, counter 1ops treet, acne
~ ay size and cornpacts, all 00 paved road .
Employment-................:............................ ~
$3999. VIEW OUR EN· &amp; much moran Aslo serv- .(.5 f~m 9-4. Plashc craft with
warranty. Prices mile . lrom ·u.s. 35.
AccountlnCIIflnanclal ................................ &amp;002
TIRE TRAili;:R INVEN· lng Steve . Evans Sau· suppii&amp;S, 8 track tapes, starting St S1900. Stop or County water. Mobile
A.dmlnlatretlve1Proleulonal .........•....•......6004
TOAYAT
baby 91r1 clothes from Gall Cook Motors 328 home
o.k.
$12,500.
Ceohlor/Ctork ..............................:..........;...6001
sage . Don't Miss; Bob birth to 18 ~onths, g~fl Jackson
Pike. 386-755-5596
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008 . WWW.CARMICHAEL·
Eyans Ball Caps!!
Items, new 1tems, qu11t 740.446.0103
Clorlcal ..............•........................................ 6010
TAAILERS.COM
140-446-382S
Five.
Family
Garage tops, lots of mise: All pro- ~;.;.,;.;.;.;.;-.,,.,..,.,..,.__
.eonotructlon............................. :................6012
Sole Sal· May 2nd ClOdS go to RACOIGar· 95 Merculy Sable $1750.
Drlvilro &amp; Oolhrery .....................................6014
Educa11on ................................................... 6016
t1aVe you priced a John SAM: 3PM 1 mile from aldine Cleland Memorial Call740·446·4816
Electrlcll Plumblng ................................... 6018
Deere
la!Oiy? You'll be Rio Gra;do up Cherry .scholarship fund. Tl)anks .Ciaulc / ~uoo •
•--onM'
Ernploymen1 Agonclee..............................6020
sorprlsedl Cl'leek. out our Rld_
g
e
Ad.
then right on for your support
"ffY' II'' 'Y
Entortolnmant............................................ 6022
used
Inventory
at Wayne Lane. Little boys Garage . sale May t~2, 72 Foret Torino, garage "'!"...,T"'own=-·~ho"'U"'MI=.~
Food 5ervlceo .....................................:... :..6024
www.CAREO.com. Car- clothes. pre-teen and g..3, 32087 Hysell Aun kept, classic, all original, Modern 1BR apt: Call
Government a F-ral Jobo .................... 602&amp;
m1chao1
Equipment teenage girls sizes. Moo Rd, clothing 0-3T girts, $12,500
OBO, 74 o- 446-0390
Help anted- Gonerel.. ................................ 6028
740 -44 6•2~ 1 2
Low Enlorcomont ...................................... 6030
&amp; womens, hOus.ei\Oid mise, Ratn or Shine
(740t444·1366
Malntontlnc:./Domutlc ............... ,............. 6032
STIHL Sates &amp; S&amp;J\Ilce items . ~5-6220
Lg. multi family, 4·5 •
.
•s•pa•c-iou·s- -secon
- ·clllt1
'!'"""ord
MonogornontiSuporvleory ........................ 8034
Now Available at ~rmi· Garage Sale Frl &amp; Set days, starts Fri. 511 , lots
· Trucb
flOOr apt.
overtciotllng
Mechanlco..................................................6036
EqUJpment 8·4 1111 Ohio Ave. (near ot ·vanety, Noble Summit ~2006
=.:":':Ma"'·~".~B4~000~
. ---vs GaD1polis Cny Park and
Medtcol ....................................................... 8038. chael
~74!!0!!!·44!!6!i·2.,4!!12...,...,...,..,. G.O.C.) Decorator items, Ad, watch for signs
4 lllre 4W; automatic. 4 River. L A. den., lrg
Muelcal ...... ,................................................ 6040
= ·
L
be
elotn
Kilcl1en-diriing area w1th
Porl·llme-Tomporarloo............................. 0042
Hay1 Fted, s..cl~ Grain onga _rqe r,
es, 6 family yard sale. tons dr, extended cab wAop- 811 new S!'Phancos &amp;
Re&amp;tauranla ............................;.................. 6044
~ii;;;i;i;;;.;i;i;i;~~ books. dishes
of baby items, electron· per &amp; bod Uner. 28,400 cupboards. 3 BA , 2
Salea.................................~ .........................6048
Ground . ear cam $160.00 Garage Sale 2 days May ics. tools, home goods. miles limltecl warranty, baths,
laundry
area .
Technical Trlldea ....................................... 8050
a
·
ton,
your
saelcs
1-2
Bula\lill&amp;
Pike
on
mile
Mat
1
&amp;
2
sam.
Near
Jer·
loaded,
513,
900,
$900
per
mon
th
.
Call
Todllea/Foctory ......................................... ilosa
740.992-7803.
ofl 51 At 150
ry's Run. All1)te Grove
(740)992·7113
44M325 oo 446-4425

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

·,

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

.

www.n,ydailysentinel.com

.

I

I

I

Meigs
fromPageBl
arid all hitters with two
safeties apiece. AHS pro•
duced five hits total in the
setback. and Meigs had the
lone error in the game.
Ebersbach was the winning pitcher of record,
allowing no runs and three

J

Softball
fromPageBl
)lome the other two ruris for
.. the Wildcat lead.
Southern had threatened
on a couple ·of occasions,
but in the fourth and .fifth
Southern went down 1-2-3
at the hands of Wildcat
starter Maggie Lawlor.
Lawlor struck out the side
in the fifth as Southern
hopes dimmed.
Then in the sixth,
Southern brought out the
rally caps arid the magic
dust to ignite a wild offensive inning. Chelsea Pape
walked, Tucker reached on
an error, Kelsey Holsinger

'

'

t
I

.l

I

dation of public health officials.
''The health and safety of
our student activity participants is of the utmost importance ," Breithaupt said.
"Taking every possible precaution to prevent the further
spreading of this disease is
an important contribution to
the welfare of our great state,
and altering the schedule of
our events is a way .to keep
our participants safe."
School officials say 53,000
students are out of school
due to concern over the

virus, and dozens of schools
were closed to be sanitized.
The stale golf and tennis
championships are scheduled to begin May 11.
The state track meet, one
of the largest high school
track and field competitions
in the country, has been
extended from its nonnal
two days to three and is
scheduled for May 14-16.
All UIL academic competitions, including a state meet
that was to begin May 7,
were also postponed and will
be rescheduled later,

hits . over four innings of _It is the first league crown
relief. Bailey started and for third-year coach Dave
lasted three innings, allow- Fife. ·
ing two runs and two hits .
MEIGS 2. BELPRE 0
· McClain took the loss for
the Lady Spartans.
Belpre
000 000 0 - 070
Overall, Meigs has now Meigs
090 020 ) ( - 234
won seven straight decisions and returns to action wP- Ebersbach; LP - Leftwich.
today when ir travels to
MEIGS 3, ALEXANDER 2
Belpre for a rematch in the
020 000 0 - 250
TVC Ohio finale. MHS Ale•
100 002 X - 331
· also won league titles in Molgs
2000, 2002,2004 and 2005. WP- Ebersbach; LP- McClain.
was hit by a pitch to load Haley Elli~ and Mariah
the bases, and Cheyene Thatcher with singles.
Southern's
Brooke
Dunn walked to force home
the first Tornado run. With Gabritsch posted the will
two out, Katie Woods on the mound for Southern
slammed a two-run single to with four strikeouts and
tie the score bringing home four walks. Waterford's
Tucker and Holsinger. · · Lawlor had nine strikeouts
The Woods drive. proved · and five walks in suffering
to be a savior as it rattled . the loss.
Playing out of position,
·the Wildcat confidence
and ·set up the heroics from . Tucker · played a strong
Teaford and Tucker to win third and made room for
Hope Teaford to put in her
the game in the seventh.
first
varsity start at catchSouthern hltters were
Emma Hunter, Tuck~r, and er.
Southern is at Wabama
Woods
with . singles.
·
Friday.
Kelsey Holsinger doubled.
Southern was . playing
without lead-.off · hitter · SOUTHERN 4, WATERFORD 3
Waterford 003 000 0 - 3 2 1
:E\reanna Taylor who was at
Southern 000 003 t - 4 4 3
an Academic Awards funcWP - Gabritsch; LP - Lawlor.
tion. Wildcat hitters were

hiller, began the season · on
the disabled list with a
sprained ankle and entered
Wednesday with only one
plate appearance, a walk.
He signed with the Red Sox
as a minor league free agent
following the 2007 season.
Van Every Stl!J'led in /right
CLEVELAND (AP)
field because J.D. Drej, has )
Jonathan Van Every . hit his been bothered by a sore
first major league home run quad. .
.
,
in the lOth inning, lifting _The Joss capped a bad day
the Boston Red Sox to a6-5, for·tbe Indians, who .placed
comeback win · over the designated hitter· Travis
Cleveland Indians on Hafner on the disabled list
Wednesday night.
. ·- witl) a sore right shoulder.
Van Every, who played m Hafner, who had surgery on
the Indians • minor league the shoulder in October, is
system from 2000-07, hit a batting .270 . with four
J-·1 pitch fro.m Jensen Lewis •homers and eight RBis.
(2-3) to center with two
Cleveland led· 5-2 going
outs. Van Every got his first into the eighth, but.a crucial
big league hit this season, an fielding error by third· baseRBI single, during Boston's ·man DeRosa helped Boston
three-run rally in the eighth score three runs and tie the
that was aided by Mark. game.
.
.
· DeRosa's error.
Rafael Betancourt retired
Hideki Okajima (2-0) Jason Bay to start the
worked the ninth for the inning, but allowed singles
win, Jonathan Papelbon to Mike Lowell and Jason
pitched the I Oth for his sixth Varitek . Jeff Bailey hit what
should have been a doublesave in six opportunities.
The Red Sox have won 12 play grounder directly to
DeRosa, but DeRosa mis.of 13 . .
Vall Every, a left-handed played the ball and the bases

r'
I

.!

!

•I

www.mydailysentlnel.com

'atribune- Sentinel -l\e

Troester· with one safety 15,6 win.
each. Dingess had two
Waterford pitching had
RBis, followed by Calvert .eight walks, and . two
and Bowmim with ohe strikeouts. Deem had three ·
fromPageBl
apiece.
wjtlks · and four strikeouts·
Malone led JHS with two h\.posting the win: · ·
week in Jackson, whicl\
Waterford hilling was
resul!ed in a five-all tie after . hits and three RBis.
I
.
led
by Matt McCutcheon
nine innings before darkGALLIPOL.IS 7, JACKSON.!;
with two ·singres, Levi .
ness cancele&lt;;l the contest.
GA
102
000
101
2
7143
McCutcheon
a double and
GAHS didn't wait long to J ' 001 000 301 0 - 565
Matt
Negri
two singles.
finsh
· the
marathon
WP
Rouso;
LP
Stepp.
Southern was led by
matchup, scoring twice in.
the lOth to pull off the 7-5
Whittington
with two sinJACKSON 7, GALLIPOLIS 4
victory.
gles, Taylor two singles,
GA
001 001 2 - 4 5 1
Ian
Dressel, Chuck
Brown a triple, Ash,
J
000 6"10 X - 765
Cal vert and Terry Smith all
Deem, and Cunningham
delivered consecutive oneWP - Jarvis; LP ..... Roush; S singles, Adam Warden two
out singles, including Smith Malone.
singles, Greg Jenkins a
&lt;;)riving in Dressel for a 6-5
single, Taylor Lemley a
. contest Brett Bowman
.SOUTHERN SLAMS
single, and Brauer a sindelivered a sacrifice fly one
WtLDCATS
gle.
batter
later. · allowing
Southern
goes
.to
Calvert to score for a twoRACINE
Southern
run cushion.
junior Taylor Deem picked Wah~ma Friday.
JHS had runners at sec- up his first varsity win on . SOUTHERN 15. WAT(:RFORD 6
ond and ·third with one out · 'the mound as the Sothern
in the bottom of the frame, Tornadoes ~ routed the Waterford 301 020 o - 6 57
but never managed to cut Waterford Wildcats 15-6 Southern 701 141 1 - 15133
into its deficit.
Wednesday night in boys WP - Deem; LP - McCutCheon.
Austin Roush was the Tri-Valley Conference basewinning pitcher of record, ball action at Star Mill Park ..
while Taylor Stepp took the Southern is now 10-7 on the
loss for the Jronmen.
· season in picking up their
GAHS had 14 hits in the third straight win for Coach.
triumph, led by Smith with Ryan Lemley.,
three hits. Roush and Caleb
Waterford took the early
Wamimont were nex:t with lead until Deem settled
two safeties, w'hile Calvert, down in his first varsity
Bowman; Tyler Eastman, start. By virtue of two sinKyle Dingess . and Beau gles (Matt McCutcheon.
Whaley each added a hit to Matt Negri) and three walks
the cause.
Waterford took a 3-0 lead.
Game two, however, was
Southern opened the
not meant to be as Jackson game up early as Deem led
erased a 1·0 deficit after off with a . single, J.D.
three complete with a six- Whiuington singled, and
run outburst in the fourt)J Jordon Taylor had an RBI
for a five-run edge . JHS single for Southern's first
tacked on another run in the run. Zach Ash singled; Kyle
fifth for a 7.-1 lead, but Cunningham had a two-run
· GAHS countered with a single, Adam Warden an
score in the sixth for a 7-2 RBI single, and Johil Brauer
deficit.
a walk.
Greg Jenkins
The Devils s.cored two added an RBI when he
more times in the seventh. reached on an error. and
but never came closer than Deem and Whinington each
the final three-run outcome. walked home runs for RBrs
Roush was the losing and a 7-3 SHS lead.
pitcher of record. allowing
Waterford scored a single
four runs,three hits and one run in the third and two in
walk
over
three-plus the fifth off reliever
innings of work . John Cunningham, but the
Troester worked three Wildcats were never really
innings . of relief. allowing a factor. Sixteen Tornadoes
three runs, three hits and saw action in the game.
four walks. Roush fanned . Southern added a single
three and Troester struck . run in the second innin~,the
out one.
big blow a Brauer stngle
Brian Jarvis took the win, that knocked home Warden .
surrendering four runs, five Southern added a single run
hits and three walks O\ier in
the
third
when
6.1 innings of work. Jarvis Whittington walked, stole
also struck out one. second , advanced Qn a
Anthony Malone l'icked up passed ball, and then stole
the save in ·two-thirds of an home, 9-4.
inning of work.
Southern scored four in
Calvert led the guests the fourth (Brown had a
with two hits. followed by leadoff triple) and one in the
Roush,
Dingess
and fifth and sixth to claim the

Howard
fromPageBl
and defended. his star center by mocking Dileo . .

CLASSIFIED

were loaded .
Van Every then singled to
right. making it 5-3. Lewis
relieved and gave up an RBI
fielder's choice to pinch-hitter Drew.
Jacoby Ellsbury's single
up the middle tied the game.
DeRosa hit a solo homer
in the second and Kelly
Shoppach, starting at DH in
place of Hafner, added a
two-run homer in the fourth,
helping the Indians build a
5-0 lead.
Fausto Carmona held
Boston to two runs in 6 2-3
innings. He retired 12
straight bailers between the
second and sixth innings. ·
Lowell; extending his hitting streak to 13 games, and
Varitek had RBI doubles in
the sixth.
Jon Lester gave up fiv~
runs in six innings.
First baseman Kevin
Youkilis (sore. back) .and
shortstop Julio Lugo (stiff
knee) were all out of the
starting lineup for Boston. ·
Youkilis, who leads the
majors with a .405 balling
average, was hit by a pitch
from AnthOny Reyes in the
first inning Tuesday.

In One Week With Us
u.llclu&lt;~..d~!'!n)i,ilxa&gt;.,com. REACH OVER.285,000 PROSPECTS

Webslles:
www.mydallytribune.com
www.myclallysentinel.com
· www.mydailyregister.com

. PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

tlODCED
Now you con hove borders and oraphlc$
~
added to vour classifled ads
..{,;Borders$3.00/perad
I!!
1

Monday thru Friday·

Graphics SOC far small
$1.00 for lar9e

a.m. to 5:00 p.m
. HO.W

m WRITE AN AD
Succ

rtlectorcanctl.ny
111 at tillY time.
Errors· Mult

Repc&gt;rted on 111e

Baseball

that are not
p~ked up will be

ctrtlllod

estimates. 74D-395·3369

Appllcallons

CaK
Cremations.

may . be 741).446·3745

picked up at Lakin Hospl· .. Pralaulanal"--~...

We

tal. Monday - Filday
,...,
8am· 4pm. Applications . TURNE"., DOWN ON
must be turned In no SOCIALSECURITVSSI
later than 05108109 at
.
NOFE!eUnlessWeWinl ·
COB. E.O.E. '
1-888·582·3345 ·

"'

•

:
•
•
:
•
:
,
·•
:
.
'

Legolo ..............................................;....... :.... 100
Announcernenta~ .................................." ... ;,200
Blrthdoy/Annlveroary ........................:......... 205
Hoppy Ado............................ .,.....,................ 210 ·
Loot &amp; Found............................................... 215
Memory/Thank Vou ...............................".... 220
Notlcn ......................................................... 225
Poroonelo..................................................... 230
wanted .....................................; ................... 235
Servlceo ...............................,....................... 30Q
Appllanoe Servlce ....................................... 302
Automotlvo .................................................. 304
Building Matorlalo ....................................... 306
Buolneoo ...........................................:.......... 308
Coterlng......... ,..............................................310

;. ChlldiEI~!IfiY Cere ................~ ....................... 312
,.· Computera ..................................................... .-314

Contr•ctors .......................... .'.......................316
Dornolllco/Janllorlil .............;..................... 318
Electrical ...................................................... 320
Flnanclat ...................:....:.............-...............322
Hoalt~ ........................................................... 328
Hntlng &amp; Coollng ....................................... 328
Homelmprovementa 33Q
lnouranoe ..................................................... 332
Lown Servlco ............................................... ~
MUIIC/DIInCe/Drome .................................... 338
0111or s.rvtceo .............................................338
Plumblng/Eiectrlca).....................................340
Pro'"o)onol S..VIoeo.................................342
Ropelro ......................................................... 344
Roollng......................................................•..348
Security ........................................................348
ToliiAccounllng ......................................•.... 350
Travei/Ent-lnment ....................,.............352
Flnanclllt .....................................................:.4oo
Financial Servlceo...................................... 405
lnaurance ........................................- .......... 410
Mon•y to Land ................................:.......•.... 415
Educotlon .....................................................soo
Buotnau &amp; ~ Schoof .........:.................505
lnotructlon &amp; Tralnlng.................................510
Lueona ....:...................................................515

Peraonal ....................................................... 520
Anlmale ................................................... ,.... eoo

Animal Supplloo ..........................................605

Hor..e..........................................~ ...............810
Livestock ........................................................815
Peta...............................................................620

Wont to buy...... ,...........................................825
Agrlculture ....:...................................... ,.......700
Farm Equtpmant..........................................705
. ·. Gorden &amp; Produco .......................................710
: Hay, Feed. Seed, Grain ............................... 715
• HuntlnQ &amp; Lond ..........................................,720
· Won1to buy..,........................................ -.....725
. : Merchondlu .................................................aoo
. Antlquoo ........................................................i05
• Appllonce ....................................... ,.............910
, Auctlono ....................................................... 915
Bargain Boumont.. .....................................920
· Collocllbteo .................................................. 925
• Compu1ero ................................................... 930
Equlpmanll$upplteo...,........................_..... 935
·. Flea Mar1tet&amp; .......:........................................ 940
Fuel 011 C01111Wood/G11 ............................. 945
Furniture ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport .................................... 955
c

• Kld'a Cornef ................................................. 960
Mlacellaneou•.............................................. 965

. Want to buy ......................................... ~-·-···· 970

Yard Sale .....................,.......•.•..•...••..•.•..•...•• 975

I

lor lstngs.

Huge Yard Sale. May 1&amp;1 2BR, large LA. asking
2nd. 1903 . Raccoon $75,000. 740·4-le-7029
Rd . .down
.SA 75 or 21 B
acree wl 2100 sq. ft .
5·· Little Tikes 11ov•. 30.5
02 Clayton · on blool&lt;

meta!
bed,
complete foundation w/ 2K6 .con·
dlshe~ set, home lnt(!riof, structlon . &amp; premium wtn-

www.comlc•.com

tupperwear nam_e brand
clothes, girls sizes Infant
3T bo
l5 lot
t
to
•
Y~ • ' 15 0
baby. ttems. To much to
mentJOnl
.

~we. 4 BR 2 full ·aA
log FP 1
.,
gas, .
' arge 1\1 1
large laundry room. walk
In ctosels, master bath
w1 dressing room. Total

~'!""!~Oi!!~~~ 1umiture, misc. items.
· 10x16. out bldgs. above
Yard &amp;ale I Bake Sale Frl . ground pool exc hunUrig

'Yard S81e sat May 2

Buil-" &amp;r·--~-

·~ ... """'
.;x;n

· "";;;;;;;;;;iii;;i;;....,....,
GalllpollaCareer

College

(Careers Close To

Hom~)

Coil Todayl740·446-4367
1-800-214{1452
gaiii~$Ctireercollege.edu
Accrlldltad Member Accr11dlt·
ingCourdlfcr lt'ldeptndent
Col~~~tt~and Schools·127o4B

CLASSIFIED INDEX

'

yrs. at 8%

. ~~~~~~~~~~==~~;~==~;;;;;,May 1, .2. 4, 5 1 mile elec healing 1 &lt;:wllng
below
dam, . clothing, t4x80 concrete pallo on
Yord Sale
. homo lnterlo&lt;, tools, back wl carport. a,16 &amp;

·much more. Insured, .tree

Other SeMcu ,

homesl0nly$199.!amon.,

gn.locatlonl5%dwn.15

&amp;

censed. (This 18· a publk: '1-Ju
'
Lawn Some.
service
announcement ~
·
..
from . tho Ohio Valley . 'rl't
Jiin's Lawn Malnten(lnce, Publishing Company)
C ~by NEA, Inc.
mowing ' . mulching . and

Must have a high school .
diploma or GEO to apply. Pel

for Safe ·

elliptical, antique fum.
and
pte1ures
gO
10
I &amp; 2. 4.4 ·www.orvb.ccm
phcne
mt. out 218 . H~ chair, 4•6·1210or339·3834
newbom girls &lt;:IO!fles to N
ho
b .· I
adult clothes misc.
· ewer
me. Ul11 n
'
2006 on 2.99 acres .

fSQU&amp;sts tor · any large
advance
payment! ot
Waterproofing
Unconditional Ufetlme · tees or insurance. Call
the Offioe of Consumer
guarantee. Local refer·
rree
at
encea tufnlatutcf. Estab- Afflars toll
lished 1975. Call24 Hrs. · 1-866-278-0003 . 1o learn
740-448-oB70, Rogers If the ·mortgage broker or
' B¥ament WateToofinp. tender is properly li-

~740-;;;;;;2!!56-654;;;;,;,111!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Houte~

~~-'!;i;;i-o;;i;;i~
3 Bed,2 fSath
HUO

· Huge sale May

........,

aoololent =

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!--!!!iii

French City Goldwlng 800-620-4946 ex T461 .
C-2, Yard sale Saturday ~:'!"'~~~'"!"'~
9 bll?? at 1544 SR 7N
4338 SA 141 1 Mile
Fri &amp; Sa1 9·3 at 1105 From New Ktgh School
Teooora Ave.Mutti tam- 2100 Sq . A. NICe ~ome
Price
reduced
to
ily, kids cJotlies. dishes, $139.900 _ FO( more info

l.oo!dno to do .yard work,
mowtng, trimming. CaH ..,11!!!!11!!!!!1!!111!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Upcoming
burolng
clall.

511 &amp; 512 from H
Centenary. Boys clothes
size 0-4, plus shOes ,
toys, high chair, swing
many mare baby accessories, elec. range, much
more
,.....,......,,__,..._

ownadloperaled. . Single? 800-537-9528
Not into bars or Internet? =====~=
Mee1 other area 'singles
ages 21 to 85, many- lQ(J
' 1 ory :"II
Christians,
many
matches. Safe, fun and

Money To r..nd
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY conlldBntlal. Greenup Ky
101m
to
8pm ~~!:-"~;;;;;;~!""""
PUBUSHING CO. rec· 808-473-511111
. NOTICE Boffow Smart
ommends · that you do
Contect the Ohio DivibUSiness with people you
sion of Financial lnatltu·
knQ:W, and· NOT · to send
1tona
Office of Consumer
money through the maR
Affairs BEFORE y&lt;&gt;u refl·
until you have irlvesligal~
nance your home or ob·
lng the offering.
Hamo tmpro.__ tain
a loan. BEWARE o1
have been
placed In ada at
the GalllpoUa
Dally Tribune ·
must be picked
wllhln 30 days.
·'Any · pictures

· Yard Sale

kltncarlyleftcomcatt.net

..

VIP Dating and Match- SEPTIC
PUMPING
mioklng SoMce
GaJiia . co. .OH and
Est.
In
a2 fat Mason Qo. WV. Ron
'!"'~~~;i;i;;,;.;;;;;;; Tri-StaiO elngl!ls. Local~ Eva"' Jaci&lt;OOn, OH

FolMld sel at keys Wed.
, Momtng on ERA Town &amp;
Country ,Real Est lot
304-675--5548.

....._

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

.,-'•
OhiO Valley .
Publtlhlnti ........
the riQhllo odlt, .

CRio...,

~~
JWi "'tt to ecll. "fKt. til canctt In, ld II q UN. · Enort IIUIIM NpOfttCI on the·~
fd .........NI.Aigi. . WIIil1be IA$161 5 IDrMiftlfttMft!MCDMMtht..-.~ ~ tl'le«r''fnt Otlfy ttw ltrlt ....,._
111W laa or_.... thll r..-lran! ttw pWitt II n CH 011111km.GI In . . . .,....._ Comc:don wttl biiHde In tb1 tkW: .......
n ....,. OOi'lftllenUil • Cwrent rM Olld - - · All *I ..............-.a~ to h , ......flit Houlqf Act 01
liCICiefllll only '*ll Wlll'lltcllldl ....arv EOE . .,_... Wt Will not tnowl"oor . . . . lfiW adVettillng In WIOIMtOn Of fhl ' -· Wll not
lfnn In 1n M laMn awerthl pfl&amp;n.

JOUCIEi.:

r..1 Ade

Should Include ThMe I t To Help !let ilellpotiM...

"Am I supposed io come lobby for the calls we want
up here and talk about the · the ·next game? Let's just
game? Or am I supposed to . play the games.
com~ up here and lobby for , "I guess that's the only
the calls I · wimt ·the next reason Dwight's having
game?'~ Van Gundy sai~l. 'success in this series. It has
"Is that what it's about nothin~ to do with the fact
now? We're supposed to that he s good."
:

THURSDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

I

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Van Every hits first homer, Red Sox
rally for win against Cleveland

Swine flu forces Texas
HS officials to halt sports
AUSTIN. Texas (AP)
Tcxas
otlicials
on
Wednesday postponed all
pubbc htgh school athletic
and academic competitions
untH May 11 because of the
swme flu outbreak.
The move suspends the
baseball and softball seasons
and eliminates the regional
track championships that
were to start Friday, said
Charles Breithaupt. ·executive director of the
University Interscholastic
League. He said league officials acted on the recommen-

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Recreotlono\ Vohlc.lea ..:........,..........,........ 1000
ATV ....................................... ~ ..................... 1005
Blcycleo ..................................;...........c......:1010
Boeto/Acoeooorloo...................................:1015
CamperiRVo &amp; Traller•················"···········1020
Motorcycleo ............................................... 1025
011111 .......................................................... 1030
Wont to buy ...............................................1035
Automotlve ................................................ 2000
Auto Ron1011leaoo .......................... :..........2005
Au1oo ......................:................................... 2010
Claoalo/Antlq-...................,........... :....... 2015
Commorclolllndulttlal ....•......................... 2020
Porta &amp; Accnoortee..................................2025
Sporbo Utlllly .........................;....................2030

Ttucka ..~ ......................................................2035 .
Utility .n anera ............................................ 2040
Vena ............................................................2045

Aullllono

Urootoak

Centenary UM ChurCh. 511 &amp;Sat 512 on Solar Dr fie~ woods wl trails.
2887 St. At. 141 from 8a · 5p
Vary privata &amp; peaceful. .
9:cioAM·4:00PM
Yard
Sale
1st-ever Mdavllle school district
~""':!""":~::-'-::"..... Fri-Sat 9.5 Fort Flan· G~orges Creek Ao~ ~0

Angus ·
Bulls,excellent AUCTIONModular
bloodlines,
Priced House at 12:00 Noon on big

Reasonably.

www.staterunangus.com

. 01

away,

Garage dolph

COmmunity _ room m1ns.

Wolman.

from

Gall1polls

Asking

$160,000. For appt call

-:33:; :9.;·9.; 73:; :3; . ~~-~
"Great Deal asking
$225,000 for a. 300K

Milctlkrneous
o.Multi Family Yard Sale ~~a;;•s!!!a!;;n~.
~~!!!!!!!!!! .home. 3500 Sq. ft. Big
;:;;;;..;;~~~:;;_;;;;;;:;;
~
2. male e Jat Aeration MotOrl May 18t &amp; 2nd, . 8-4 on
garage,
wrap around

Pill
Give
week

s · Family

May 9, 2009. Buckeye Sale 30, 1 &amp; 2. 2 Miles 123 Mlq 8t.Pt Pleasant .
Hilts career Center, Rio east of Porter on. 554
• .Grande. Ohio. (740) Clothing, DVD players Yard Sale May 1&amp; 2, 8-5
245-5334
old record plauor,
end ta·· scmolhlng1 9th.tor&amp; everyone
'
M1 s
;;;bl~e~loiS~Of~niiou•s":o~wa~r.;,;a·= coPtmPelr o .I
an t.

old

740-446·3742

rePtlred, new a rebuilt

ktttens.

·

In 1 tock. Caii .Aon

1573

Graham

School

Ad. HD Items,. clo1,hlng

porch, on 25 acres. ~0
minUtes
Gallipolis.

=;;;;;;;;;;;;; Big Oak ·below
Kitchen to much

Evanei·BOII-537-9528 D-adull1. mise toots &amp; !
Cocker Spaniel pupp\09 - - - - - - - - - house hold Items." ' Rain Crlmpon/ tiVo &amp;
to list buill to leo).
lull ·blooded buff color 7 Hamilton· 992, . Pocket or Shlno.
Trallen
~7:;;40;.;·645~·;;;;59;:;2~8~"':""~
weeks old. 388-0401
Watch 21- Jewels; also i:R~o&lt;f~ney~":c~o~m~m~un~lty~H':'".:oll ~~~~~:=!~ House in Hanford, WV,
Reg. Black Lab pupPies Winchester 2 bladed. 6 Faml~ varo Sale May !992 Soutllwlnd 30 ft $75,000
oliO,
1 ·weeks . otd 5 male pocket knHe, pearl han· 1st &amp; 2nd from 9-5. motor home, air, power (740)444-1366
$300, .4 females $350. dies, should see, tare ·Game
bou.n•me
"'"'
general()( awning, asking :;.;~;;.;;;;,;"!'"'--co'~
~, $8500 256 1731!
4 Bed, 2 Balhl Only
387{1500 or 645·6351
$445. 74G-533·3870
· ·
•nomos. ho"sohold IIams,
·•· ~~"":'--~-,....,
S25:ooo. for listings
7 bench leg. Seagle pup· Mollohan's C~rpet "Qual- home Interior, ~r stool, 2007 Funflnder travel 800-620-4946 ex R019
at Low Prices• 13'6" womens &amp; girls clothhg, trailer, air, patio 8wnlng, Extraordinary Property:
Pies, 7 wks, trf Color, for
I hi ng, an- . asklng$8800. 256·1738
more
Jnfo.
calf Bomer carpel In stocK on girls &amp; _bOys cot
Splctecular vieW ol ttit
740-742·0528
sale Now. Eastern Ave. Uques. lurn~ure, tools RV Service at Carmi· Ohio Alvltr
Free .to g_
ood home male Ga»l@lis to 448•7444
and lots · more. Some· chael
Trailers flrlvate drive off. UncOin
puppy 112 beagle·l/2 For sale A select Jazzy thing for evsryooe.
740-446·38?5
Hill, Pomeroy. Ohio,
itv
.

poodle,
very.
304-675-7625

playful Powered chair, used 3 Big Yard Sale . 15 Ann RV
woods on three sides
mon. Contact Leon Yo· DriVe Gallipolis. May 1, 2 Service at Carmichael (4-t:)e.cres. to a historical
To good home small dar 304·675·3447.·
&amp; 4. Cloths&amp;, dishes. Trailer&amp; .
home. Circa 1900, 5
Lab/Jack Russell mixed, For, Si.le Honaa r;ienera· misc. .
740-446·3825
bedro0m,a, 2 .nrepla_
c,B, 2

Want to buy ............................................... 2050
Reel Eototo Saloo ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Ploto .......................................... 3005
ha9 had she!! &amp; spayed tor EM3500 SX, olrie. 5 lamlly, May 2nd, 9·5, 1 ::~=~=-== full baths. 2 stalrcaaee,
Commorcl 01................................................ 3010
304-675·2834.
start
$750.00 mile scuth ol Chaster on
Motorc)....
beaullful ooiglnal Wood·
· Condomlnlume .......................................... 3015
304-675· t259.
St. Rt 7, no sales be1ore
wOrk, many picture win•
for Sale by Owner........... .-;.....................:•• 3020
Bam, rain cancels
07 Yamaha FZ6 2100 dows. · mostly new win·
Houoaolor Salo......................................... 3025
?()()
~qt r ( Ullllff'
·
.
Want
To luy
~~~~~~~ miles. Excellent Cond. dows, rarga klichen and
Land (Acroege) ..............................:........... 3030
""'""'ii.i';imii&amp;'"--Big yard sale May 1·2 on Red. w/ black accents breakfast • rooi-n, beaut!·
LOll ............................................................ 3035
Absolute Top Dollar - sit- Rowley" lane 1 114 mi $6500', Call 441-9865
fully landscaped with In
Wantlo buy................................................ 3040
v&amp;r/gold
coins,
any abOve T1.1ppeB Plains off
ground pool. Sit on the
Fqrm
Equipment
Roai .E110to Rentolo ...:............................... 3500
10K/14K/18K gold jew· St. Rt. 7 watch for signs,
wrap around porch and
Apertntonto/Townhouoee ......................... 3505
John
Deer
1219
elry,
dental gold, pre girts 3mo-,8mo, S-6X.,
enjoy the· spectacular
Commorclal ...............................,................ 3510
cuner/con(lltloner &amp; Mas· 1935 US currency, some qoys. lots 01
view of the Qhlo River. ~
Condomlnlumo .......................................... 3515
sets,
dia- household items, 9-3
sie ·Ferguson Hay rake. p&lt;oof/mirll
Houooolor Rent ........................................3520
Autot
car detached garage and
740,645·1081
Land (Acreago) ............:....................:........ 3525
monds. MTS Coin Shop. Garage · Sale April 3D.
2 ou~ buildings.· Would
Storaga ....................................................... 3535 · EBY,
INTEGRITY.
·1 5~ 2nd Ave11ue, Galli- May 1st 341 Rutland St., 04 PontiaC · Grapd PriK make a wonderful family.
want to Ron1 .............................................:3540
KIEFER BUILl;
polls. 446 ·~8 42
La;ey Boy recliner. nu· GT2 teather, sunroof, 6 nome or bed &amp; breakta$t.
Manulactured Houolng ............................. 4000
VAUEY
HORSE/LIVEYard Sale"
·merOus Items.
· disc CO, loaded. 61K, Private and Picturesque
Lohl .................................................. ,.......... 4005
Movero ............................:........................... 4D1D
STOCK
TRAILERS. ""'"""~""'~'--- Garage Solo April 301h &amp; $9400. Call339·2494 .
SPECTACULAR VIEW.
Rentolo ..............................:........................ 4015 · LOAO · MAX EQUIP- Evans Family Sale Ma.y Ma~ 1st, top of Chester 2001 Pontiac Grande $209,000.00, please call
Salu ...........................................................4020
MENT
TRAILERS. 101 &amp; 2nd 9-5 11 Jowell Hill on 248, Sr~ house on Prill 4 door while 95,000 ;,740-·99·2-·3·6-7BBII!!!!!I!!I""'
Supplln ......... :........................................... 4025
CARGO
EXPRESS
&amp; Evans Mill Rodney Pikel lan,
clothing, Go-Kan. mijos. Loade&lt;f e•tra nt&lt;e • Land (Acnage)
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
HOMESTEADER
A! 850 Bidwell. Collectl· Matthew's Bow &amp; misc.
,;='!'Oiii"""o.,;¥=
Aaeort Pi'operty .............................,........... SOOO
54500 OBO. 3B8·0332
CARGO/CONCESSION • bles. small a~llanoes.
Garage sa 1e at 501 Vlne Suv•s, Tru~s. Cars full ~R lo ·Grand~ • 1.8 Acres
Aqort Property tor aale ........................... 5025
TRAILERS.
B+W weed eater, Kitchen &amp; S
R1 0 M
"""
1 112
Rooort Property lor rent ..................... ~..... 5050
GOOSENECK f!'LATBEO bath sinks, counter 1ops treet, acne
~ ay size and cornpacts, all 00 paved road .
Employment-................:............................ ~
$3999. VIEW OUR EN· &amp; much moran Aslo serv- .(.5 f~m 9-4. Plashc craft with
warranty. Prices mile . lrom ·u.s. 35.
AccountlnCIIflnanclal ................................ &amp;002
TIRE TRAili;:R INVEN· lng Steve . Evans Sau· suppii&amp;S, 8 track tapes, starting St S1900. Stop or County water. Mobile
A.dmlnlatretlve1Proleulonal .........•....•......6004
TOAYAT
baby 91r1 clothes from Gall Cook Motors 328 home
o.k.
$12,500.
Ceohlor/Ctork ..............................:..........;...6001
sage . Don't Miss; Bob birth to 18 ~onths, g~fl Jackson
Pike. 386-755-5596
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008 . WWW.CARMICHAEL·
Eyans Ball Caps!!
Items, new 1tems, qu11t 740.446.0103
Clorlcal ..............•........................................ 6010
TAAILERS.COM
140-446-382S
Five.
Family
Garage tops, lots of mise: All pro- ~;.;.,;.;.;.;.;-.,,.,..,.,..,.__
.eonotructlon............................. :................6012
Sole Sal· May 2nd ClOdS go to RACOIGar· 95 Merculy Sable $1750.
Drlvilro &amp; Oolhrery .....................................6014
Educa11on ................................................... 6016
t1aVe you priced a John SAM: 3PM 1 mile from aldine Cleland Memorial Call740·446·4816
Electrlcll Plumblng ................................... 6018
Deere
la!Oiy? You'll be Rio Gra;do up Cherry .scholarship fund. Tl)anks .Ciaulc / ~uoo •
•--onM'
Ernploymen1 Agonclee..............................6020
sorprlsedl Cl'leek. out our Rld_
g
e
Ad.
then right on for your support
"ffY' II'' 'Y
Entortolnmant............................................ 6022
used
Inventory
at Wayne Lane. Little boys Garage . sale May t~2, 72 Foret Torino, garage "'!"...,T"'own=-·~ho"'U"'MI=.~
Food 5ervlceo .....................................:... :..6024
www.CAREO.com. Car- clothes. pre-teen and g..3, 32087 Hysell Aun kept, classic, all original, Modern 1BR apt: Call
Government a F-ral Jobo .................... 602&amp;
m1chao1
Equipment teenage girls sizes. Moo Rd, clothing 0-3T girts, $12,500
OBO, 74 o- 446-0390
Help anted- Gonerel.. ................................ 6028
740 -44 6•2~ 1 2
Low Enlorcomont ...................................... 6030
&amp; womens, hOus.ei\Oid mise, Ratn or Shine
(740t444·1366
Malntontlnc:./Domutlc ............... ,............. 6032
STIHL Sates &amp; S&amp;J\Ilce items . ~5-6220
Lg. multi family, 4·5 •
.
•s•pa•c-iou·s- -secon
- ·clllt1
'!'"""ord
MonogornontiSuporvleory ........................ 8034
Now Available at ~rmi· Garage Sale Frl &amp; Set days, starts Fri. 511 , lots
· Trucb
flOOr apt.
overtciotllng
Mechanlco..................................................6036
EqUJpment 8·4 1111 Ohio Ave. (near ot ·vanety, Noble Summit ~2006
=.:":':Ma"'·~".~B4~000~
. ---vs GaD1polis Cny Park and
Medtcol ....................................................... 8038. chael
~74!!0!!!·44!!6!i·2.,4!!12...,...,...,..,. G.O.C.) Decorator items, Ad, watch for signs
4 lllre 4W; automatic. 4 River. L A. den., lrg
Muelcal ...... ,................................................ 6040
= ·
L
be
elotn
Kilcl1en-diriing area w1th
Porl·llme-Tomporarloo............................. 0042
Hay1 Fted, s..cl~ Grain onga _rqe r,
es, 6 family yard sale. tons dr, extended cab wAop- 811 new S!'Phancos &amp;
Re&amp;tauranla ............................;.................. 6044
~ii;;;i;i;;;.;i;i;i;~~ books. dishes
of baby items, electron· per &amp; bod Uner. 28,400 cupboards. 3 BA , 2
Salea.................................~ .........................6048
Ground . ear cam $160.00 Garage Sale 2 days May ics. tools, home goods. miles limltecl warranty, baths,
laundry
area .
Technical Trlldea ....................................... 8050
a
·
ton,
your
saelcs
1-2
Bula\lill&amp;
Pike
on
mile
Mat
1
&amp;
2
sam.
Near
Jer·
loaded,
513,
900,
$900
per
mon
th
.
Call
Todllea/Foctory ......................................... ilosa
740.992-7803.
ofl 51 At 150
ry's Run. All1)te Grove
(740)992·7113
44M325 oo 446-4425

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

·,

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel .

www.mydallysenUnel:com
HouteoforRont

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Thursda~April30,2009

I

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

ALLEYOOP

Holp

BRIDGE

l f \fi &amp;PWorl&lt;itg e,;,ooment
' Complete lleolefits

ACROSS

Phillip

Pad&lt;age
~

..........

Alder

--

1 1M IIIC..PAYU

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

ffgn.-

Roofing, Siding,

."..
N"-

Hill's Self
Storage

.• Jt87C

Weal

Sofflt.~.

.A

Electric, Plumbing,

Drywall,

Remodeling, Room
Additions

L&amp;LnreBam
44087 Wlpple Rd.

Pomeroy, Off
(5 Points)

ROO!If Addlti0118
Remodeling

New Ga..,. ,
Electrical &amp;
Plumbing
·Roofing &amp; Gutters
Vinyl Siding &amp;
Painting
• Patio and Porch

S&amp;L
'froeking

·,·

Hours

7:00

.m. 8:00pm .
BANKS

••

or 7441-591·37Ui

We·serVice and

(CeO)

wwwNn•mb.dlil

740-992-3220

· I•

co.

Steel Frame Building•
Building. Remodeling
Generai...,.Ur

Coal Eh:....
CaD Wall or Sandy

South

. Pomeroy,Oblo

Dump 1i"uck Senke
Dlrt,L~,

• 2

• K Q
•KQIOH
t KH
6 KQ .J

Dealer. South
Vulllerable: Neither

CONSTRUCTION

New &amp; Used Tires.
We buy used tires.
computer wheel
alignments. We also
dQ Duel's; lighr
mechanic work ,
'complere service oil
changes, ·small engine
repair. ·

We ifaul Gra..l,

1.

-k

~~
740-367-0536

member~

• HJ .

.. 10

Weal Norlh Eul
llbl. 3 NT
Pui
Pan· .....

Pall

L....;c..-Ope~nln-·.::..gl_ead_:+..,Q---'

COi#mttclil •

Resldentlai
• Free·&amp; t••etee
(740) 991-!009
Cusumi Home Building

I

THE BORN LOSER

trio\~~~ O~W'(

Racine, Ohio 7.w;.247•2019
Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul ROW.

retreatl to four heartl.
How ehould South plan lha play alter
Wut laldlllto diamond queen?
South hU tour looera: one spade, one
lttan, On. dfarnood and one club. nItt
ptiye a tritrnp lmmadlatel)', he ehould
ioN lltoee lour tncke, Woet winning end
folding onotheo diamond. Ooclarer mulll
elimlnste that diamond ioeer. To do thai,
..l.,;..._. i::~~~:::::;::;;::.:;.J.:.Jit:....;L;:;::::..::;:~~LUlllLJ . he mulll dlacard .dummy'alhlrd diamond
"" hialhlrd club, then ruff hie remaining
!Iamond on lhe bOard. But II West Ia
going to duck lhellret round ot ctuba aild
Tl-\t. TI-\CllX.I-\i TAAi
II-\OU61-\T li:\M
. take 1M eeoond, Sooth must win lilt flral

or-..,..-.---, ·

:· WOI'r.~ ...

· email:

t-.:t P"T~

M\~1" t-IOTAA~t FULf'\l.l.EI&gt;
fo\'( POTE.tl.iiN... .C::~-..r

;: 0!-IE. IJ.l.lt-IG

'Cell: 740-411$-5047

'TI-'J~.N

t "'i~l J.l.~IJE.!

I.K Llf'f:. ...

..

l
1

WORK IN~

.

~

Ofi MY

0~

NOW, r"i'l

.SITTINCO ON T-HE
~NCH t&gt;I)RINI!o /&gt;.. ·

&amp;A.LL G.I.ME, WORKING
G~APHI.&lt;". NOVE.L .

-~

Work for a'top

employer, commiHed to
offering employment
opponunltles in our areal

..
rN THE C.H ...PTER tM

'

)/

r

Earn up to $25,00Qiyr+
lfler alx monthal

•

1

Employees are needed
to provide customer .

~.

SGIVIce OY8( the phone

1 Hiring Full Ttrrie
Positions (2·1t pm)
1 Hiring Part Time
Poshlons (8:Q0-1 :30pm &amp;
5:30 • 11 :OOpm)
1 OFF on Sunday
1 Weekly Bonus
1 Onsite Doctor

TELUHM rf's THE MONTJ.I

(¥.

. OF MA'(, AND IT'S TIME ·
TO STOP HI8ERNAT!N6,
AND COME OUT AND
. · ENJO'( LI\IIN6..

m
":
1

'

•
MA'(8E VOII1D .
BETTER WRITE ALL

~

TMAT D-OWN ..

•~

',1·

Friday, May B, 2009
6 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Free Flowers with
test drive .
Supporting
America In Bloom

Public is cordially invited
Refreshments will be served
409 Main Street
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
For more information
please call,

Smith's
Superstore
1911 Eastern Ave. Gallipolis

Eagles Club
.Pomeroy
.
.
Welcomes

."

Tallahassee
Frieght Band
Saturday
May 2, 2009
8:00 pm • 12:00 am

Members &amp; Guests Welcome

.

(304) 812-4625
· Racine American Legion

Public Dinner
Fried Chicken/ Por!l Chops
Sunday, May 3 11 :00 • 1:00
$6.00

Road,

•

Vinton,

OH

45686
The defendant nomad
abo.. II ""'Uirad to onawer the Complaint
within twenty-eight (28)
days aftorthe fall publlcatlon ollhlalegal nolice on April 30, 2009.
Thloltgll noll.. will be
published on.. a - k

Natural R.-ourcea, Dl·

Public Notice
Gatling Ohio, LLC., 430
Harper Parte Drlva,
Beckley, Weal Virginia,
25801" has oubmltled
an Underground ~011
Mining and Reclamalion Permit numbered

vlelon of Mineral R•
eourcee Monagemen~
2045 Morae Road,
Building H-3, Cotum·
bua, Ohio 4322N693,
Wllhln (30) thirty daya
olthalaot date of publlcatlon olthla notice.
(4) 30, (5) 7, 14, 21

I

21 Tecltf..

i:."!Y...

tole

· · '

For: • Room Additions • Patios
• Porches • Decks • Garages .• Horse Barns •
&amp; Wood Siding • Roofing • Chain Link &amp;
Wood Fencing &amp; General Heme Maintenance

MilE W.IIRCUI, OWIEI
47.239 Riebel Road , Lo1J8 Bottom, OH

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-416-1834
affiliated with Mike MIU'\:um Roofing &amp;. Rcmodclina

25+ yean experltncr

F':f• E1tlmal11

lOBEIT
BISSEll
•New Homes
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling

740-912-1111
Stop &amp; Compare

·GARfiELD ,
Lewis

THONK

740·992-6971
Insured
Frw Estimates

Replacement

Windows and
VInyl Siding
Spedallsts, LTD
(740) 742-2.563
• Siding • Vinyl
Windows • Metal
and Shingle Roofs
• D«ks • Additions
•Electrical
• Plumbing
• Pole Barns

Stanley TreeTrimming .
&amp; Removal
and Quality
Work
Rates
•Insured
*Experienced

&lt;

Call Gary Stanley @
740-591 -8044

•

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Addlllons, Remodeling, Melal &amp;:
Shingle Roofs, New Homes, Sldlna, Decb,
Bathroom Remodeling. Liaostd &amp; lmurtd

"

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.

by Lui• C1111pot ~
Elch ltl*ln lilt** ,n.ror llltChlr.

Ctlel;rtyC4tfrr;rypqrll!ltftcrtad 11om ~by tlmout PIOPif, Pllflndp-t}ll'll.

•

Todats cluo: U6qus18S

"B

Q

KIf Z J VB P z' K N Z j

t,

B K BJ

NZVWMHV KA DZYZYUZD KNXK KNZDZ
trick w~h dummy's diamond ace; o!Mr·
wise. he will v.in tho eecond dl""'ond NXIZ XVTXFJ UZZO KBYZJ VBPZ
trick in lhe wrong hand. Ooclaror than
drives out Ute club ace. &gt;linathe aecond KNZJZ." • VIXHV NXDIZF
!Iamond In hla hind, and flnlahu ·the
clubs, pllchlng dummy's lhlrd clamond. •

FlnsHy MIs ssfalo lead a trump,lhe loser
count being &lt;*lwn to lhoee.

Meet the Artists
Reception

=· .

·

w-·

girl

tak81&gt;Ul ciOW!t with a textbOOk hand.
Eut nu nolhlng to ldcl. and SOuth

.,

.

pel

37 8nflll..
~';woro 38 Tucbcl .
18 · nuclt
IWIY.
18 flllndill . 41 GOII with
nu!Wif
43 Buying .
20 Olympic
fllnzy
45

.47 WWW
lddresuo
48 From
1111111ory
41 Datllottvee
50 lnlllnl
llwn
!&gt;1 Kl-powl
52 Frotlty brew
53 Mlllfln
· pewtor
114 "Uttie

openi cne haan, and .Wut makea •

7 •warhNbiiiCI ,.._

to

presents

22 Flmout
HVtn
23 Wlnier
warmer
24 ~In dale
25 Wind dlr.
27 -Kippur
29 Cty noilfly
30 Blflboorda
32 Sfllllde
34 LIIIBMII

·major would deny a eldtr·'"M tnck.)
Nol!h doH that In lhil dial after South .

Hospital on SA
CIA. (740) 441-Q194

Gallery at 409

lheatrone
3lHYI'tlllnl
4 T,_,.
tHonHr
5 IJ-Inllna
e Whlotlt
time
7 -~
8 Exlct
t Willi«!
-·
10 - i t W t 11 realn
12 Ub
•

ace or aking- a dlltnalvt tdek'-ln a
side """· (A jump lllalght to four ot lht

WW'tlr.£'

Live Remote
Sa:turday, May 2
11 am to 1 pm
Big Country 99.5

17 f!lllotnwltt
11 Suddtn
· .,... ·
23 Hfi1t ribte .
28 ·ou.iwny '
28 0...
1omut11on
29 ~
. . . t.g.
31 1tant~ Tookllftpe
34 intpiOIIH
. upon
35 GrieYOul
dl38 Flluclultnt
echlmt
· 3t Hill Clll.
46 Cootdng Ill
42

Opener bids one ola ma)ct'and lilt next
player makel a takeoul - n you
are going to use. a two-no-trull1f)
reop(tnoe 10 show lour-plus tnmpo and
10-p!UJ auppcrt points (oalher lhan two
no-trump with 1ll-121Upp011 pclnfJ and
three no-trump with t3-plua IUPPOn
pointa), title ~... three no-trump for an
alternative usa.
For oxaiTjlie, Mcan show a poe-oniptlve
ralee 10 four ol partnor'a major, ptua an

Harnaod Mlnetrf AM r.1t111e .·

lor throe oucceoolve 0·2317·2 10 the Ohio
-kl.
Department of Nature!
(4) 18, 23, 30
Fle1ourcea, Dlvlelon of
Mineral
RHourcoe
Management. Tho proPublic Notice
~·~~~ cottt mining end
raclamallon OJI'ratlona
AT&amp;T Mobllhy II pro· will be In LOll 275,276
poelng to construct 1 a. 836, SuHon Town·
talecommunlcallona ship, · Townohlp 2,
tower (DHV -3822) at Rango 12 and In Lot
30440 Roy Jones Road, 274 and Section 8,
Syrocuse,
Meigs Letart Townahlp, TownCounty, O)tlo. The ac· ship 2, Range 12 Melgl
lion area will conalst .ol County, Olllo.
tho conotructlon of a The area·Ia locllod on
prefabricated, radio thl New Haven 7 112
oqulpmentahattarand minute U.S.G.S. Quod·
a 250' tall aoll-aupport ranglt map. The pro-·
call tower. AT&amp;T Ia poaltd area to · be
etaklng
comments unct.rmlnod encom·
from alllnterealtd per- paaaea 155.5 acroa Mtd..
aona on the Impact of lo located . appro•!·
.the pro~sod tower on mattly 1.3 mllet Southany dletrtcte, eltea, aut oltha corporllton
buildings, etructu,.., limite of Racine, Ohto.
or ob)acta algnlflcent In This cottl mining appll·
American hletory; ar· cellon will remove coal
chltecture, archaltOI· uolng the underground
ogy, enginHring, or mining
methode,
culture, that ara listed epeclllcelly tho room
or aro eligible lor llat- and pltlar method.
lng In the National Reg· Thia application Ia on
Iaiit" of Hlalorlc Places. llloat the Meigs County
All que1tions, com- c o u r t h o u 1 1 ,
mente, and corroa~n- Recorder's Office, 100
denca should ba West 2nd Street,
directed to Me. Renee Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
Yinger, at 485 Metro lor public ln1pectlon.
Piece South, Sullo 500, WriHan comments, obDublin, Ohio 43017, jectlonaorrequeatolor
Phone I (61 4)793 4708, an Informal conferantl
or RY2135®att.com.
mey be eent to the
(4) 29, 30
Ohio . Departtlllt"tl of

DOWN

::$"· ~=~ tm~;

An ahernatlve use :;::-;or
for three no-trump . 44 Linchpin

.I wOflf.Y

winrerize boats and
RV's.
(740)·992-5344
Mon-Fri
8:00am · 4:30pm
Sa( 8:00am . 12
We apprecillte your

12 Coumlr· .
ikJ*Iod
57 Bl'liny club
13 Truly
58 Out and Jo
1.4 Joekpol

•u l

+QJIOB
6 A 7fl

.,

-

• J 10

• A 98 C

Doors, Windows,

Frw~

......

• 512

6 I 5

=.

114 Gulch
55 _ ,
villkn?
58 Boc-

flOw.

.....,anllno:

. IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Chau Homo Flnanca
LLC
·
Plaintiff,
· va.
Dtvld L. Cottrill, eta I.
Dlllenclanllo.
C.u No. 08CV148
Judge Fred w. Crow Itt
Legal Notice
Unknown Spoual (II
any) of David L Cotlrlll,
whoae tnt known ed·
dros1 Is 541
Salmon Rlvor Road,
PIIHiburgh, NY 12901,
will take notice that on
September 28,2008,
Cha.. Homo Finance
LLC fliltd llli.CGmplllnt
In the Court of Com·
mon Pleas, Malga
County,
Ohio, ca.. No. 08 CV
148. The object of, and
demand lor relief ln.
tho Complaint Ia to
foreclose ·
the lion of ptelntllla
mongaga
roc:ordltd
upon the realeata.. deecrtbed below and In
which
ptalnlllloll0ge8 thottht
fol"ellolng de.. ndont
hu or clalma to have
an lntereat:
·
Parcel
number(l):
1 3 0 1 o &amp; 4 Moo,
1300422002
addme:
Property
31330 Pelntor Ridge

. 46

Puzzle

An- to P,..louo PUDlO

IOclle

6 Appulrilld
to Olflce
11 Mounllln

s.!WOIII~t ·

-~ ... ,

1. p,.....

Cr~11word

forpevtng 51 • -

Todoyt

zer

NEA

'

•

Astr_oGraph
-'lli'!hdlr!

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel .

www.mydallysenUnel:com
HouteoforRont

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Thursda~April30,2009

I

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

ALLEYOOP

Holp

BRIDGE

l f \fi &amp;PWorl&lt;itg e,;,ooment
' Complete lleolefits

ACROSS

Phillip

Pad&lt;age
~

..........

Alder

--

1 1M IIIC..PAYU

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

ffgn.-

Roofing, Siding,

."..
N"-

Hill's Self
Storage

.• Jt87C

Weal

Sofflt.~.

.A

Electric, Plumbing,

Drywall,

Remodeling, Room
Additions

L&amp;LnreBam
44087 Wlpple Rd.

Pomeroy, Off
(5 Points)

ROO!If Addlti0118
Remodeling

New Ga..,. ,
Electrical &amp;
Plumbing
·Roofing &amp; Gutters
Vinyl Siding &amp;
Painting
• Patio and Porch

S&amp;L
'froeking

·,·

Hours

7:00

.m. 8:00pm .
BANKS

••

or 7441-591·37Ui

We·serVice and

(CeO)

wwwNn•mb.dlil

740-992-3220

· I•

co.

Steel Frame Building•
Building. Remodeling
Generai...,.Ur

Coal Eh:....
CaD Wall or Sandy

South

. Pomeroy,Oblo

Dump 1i"uck Senke
Dlrt,L~,

• 2

• K Q
•KQIOH
t KH
6 KQ .J

Dealer. South
Vulllerable: Neither

CONSTRUCTION

New &amp; Used Tires.
We buy used tires.
computer wheel
alignments. We also
dQ Duel's; lighr
mechanic work ,
'complere service oil
changes, ·small engine
repair. ·

We ifaul Gra..l,

1.

-k

~~
740-367-0536

member~

• HJ .

.. 10

Weal Norlh Eul
llbl. 3 NT
Pui
Pan· .....

Pall

L....;c..-Ope~nln-·.::..gl_ead_:+..,Q---'

COi#mttclil •

Resldentlai
• Free·&amp; t••etee
(740) 991-!009
Cusumi Home Building

I

THE BORN LOSER

trio\~~~ O~W'(

Racine, Ohio 7.w;.247•2019
Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul ROW.

retreatl to four heartl.
How ehould South plan lha play alter
Wut laldlllto diamond queen?
South hU tour looera: one spade, one
lttan, On. dfarnood and one club. nItt
ptiye a tritrnp lmmadlatel)', he ehould
ioN lltoee lour tncke, Woet winning end
folding onotheo diamond. Ooclarer mulll
elimlnste that diamond ioeer. To do thai,
..l.,;..._. i::~~~:::::;::;;::.:;.J.:.Jit:....;L;:;::::..::;:~~LUlllLJ . he mulll dlacard .dummy'alhlrd diamond
"" hialhlrd club, then ruff hie remaining
!Iamond on lhe bOard. But II West Ia
going to duck lhellret round ot ctuba aild
Tl-\t. TI-\CllX.I-\i TAAi
II-\OU61-\T li:\M
. take 1M eeoond, Sooth must win lilt flral

or-..,..-.---, ·

:· WOI'r.~ ...

· email:

t-.:t P"T~

M\~1" t-IOTAA~t FULf'\l.l.EI&gt;
fo\'( POTE.tl.iiN... .C::~-..r

;: 0!-IE. IJ.l.lt-IG

'Cell: 740-411$-5047

'TI-'J~.N

t "'i~l J.l.~IJE.!

I.K Llf'f:. ...

..

l
1

WORK IN~

.

~

Ofi MY

0~

NOW, r"i'l

.SITTINCO ON T-HE
~NCH t&gt;I)RINI!o /&gt;.. ·

&amp;A.LL G.I.ME, WORKING
G~APHI.&lt;". NOVE.L .

-~

Work for a'top

employer, commiHed to
offering employment
opponunltles in our areal

..
rN THE C.H ...PTER tM

'

)/

r

Earn up to $25,00Qiyr+
lfler alx monthal

•

1

Employees are needed
to provide customer .

~.

SGIVIce OY8( the phone

1 Hiring Full Ttrrie
Positions (2·1t pm)
1 Hiring Part Time
Poshlons (8:Q0-1 :30pm &amp;
5:30 • 11 :OOpm)
1 OFF on Sunday
1 Weekly Bonus
1 Onsite Doctor

TELUHM rf's THE MONTJ.I

(¥.

. OF MA'(, AND IT'S TIME ·
TO STOP HI8ERNAT!N6,
AND COME OUT AND
. · ENJO'( LI\IIN6..

m
":
1

'

•
MA'(8E VOII1D .
BETTER WRITE ALL

~

TMAT D-OWN ..

•~

',1·

Friday, May B, 2009
6 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Free Flowers with
test drive .
Supporting
America In Bloom

Public is cordially invited
Refreshments will be served
409 Main Street
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
For more information
please call,

Smith's
Superstore
1911 Eastern Ave. Gallipolis

Eagles Club
.Pomeroy
.
.
Welcomes

."

Tallahassee
Frieght Band
Saturday
May 2, 2009
8:00 pm • 12:00 am

Members &amp; Guests Welcome

.

(304) 812-4625
· Racine American Legion

Public Dinner
Fried Chicken/ Por!l Chops
Sunday, May 3 11 :00 • 1:00
$6.00

Road,

•

Vinton,

OH

45686
The defendant nomad
abo.. II ""'Uirad to onawer the Complaint
within twenty-eight (28)
days aftorthe fall publlcatlon ollhlalegal nolice on April 30, 2009.
Thloltgll noll.. will be
published on.. a - k

Natural R.-ourcea, Dl·

Public Notice
Gatling Ohio, LLC., 430
Harper Parte Drlva,
Beckley, Weal Virginia,
25801" has oubmltled
an Underground ~011
Mining and Reclamalion Permit numbered

vlelon of Mineral R•
eourcee Monagemen~
2045 Morae Road,
Building H-3, Cotum·
bua, Ohio 4322N693,
Wllhln (30) thirty daya
olthalaot date of publlcatlon olthla notice.
(4) 30, (5) 7, 14, 21

I

21 Tecltf..

i:."!Y...

tole

· · '

For: • Room Additions • Patios
• Porches • Decks • Garages .• Horse Barns •
&amp; Wood Siding • Roofing • Chain Link &amp;
Wood Fencing &amp; General Heme Maintenance

MilE W.IIRCUI, OWIEI
47.239 Riebel Road , Lo1J8 Bottom, OH

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-416-1834
affiliated with Mike MIU'\:um Roofing &amp;. Rcmodclina

25+ yean experltncr

F':f• E1tlmal11

lOBEIT
BISSEll
•New Homes
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling

740-912-1111
Stop &amp; Compare

·GARfiELD ,
Lewis

THONK

740·992-6971
Insured
Frw Estimates

Replacement

Windows and
VInyl Siding
Spedallsts, LTD
(740) 742-2.563
• Siding • Vinyl
Windows • Metal
and Shingle Roofs
• D«ks • Additions
•Electrical
• Plumbing
• Pole Barns

Stanley TreeTrimming .
&amp; Removal
and Quality
Work
Rates
•Insured
*Experienced

&lt;

Call Gary Stanley @
740-591 -8044

•

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Addlllons, Remodeling, Melal &amp;:
Shingle Roofs, New Homes, Sldlna, Decb,
Bathroom Remodeling. Liaostd &amp; lmurtd

"

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.

by Lui• C1111pot ~
Elch ltl*ln lilt** ,n.ror llltChlr.

Ctlel;rtyC4tfrr;rypqrll!ltftcrtad 11om ~by tlmout PIOPif, Pllflndp-t}ll'll.

•

Todats cluo: U6qus18S

"B

Q

KIf Z J VB P z' K N Z j

t,

B K BJ

NZVWMHV KA DZYZYUZD KNXK KNZDZ
trick w~h dummy's diamond ace; o!Mr·
wise. he will v.in tho eecond dl""'ond NXIZ XVTXFJ UZZO KBYZJ VBPZ
trick in lhe wrong hand. Ooclaror than
drives out Ute club ace. &gt;linathe aecond KNZJZ." • VIXHV NXDIZF
!Iamond In hla hind, and flnlahu ·the
clubs, pllchlng dummy's lhlrd clamond. •

FlnsHy MIs ssfalo lead a trump,lhe loser
count being &lt;*lwn to lhoee.

Meet the Artists
Reception

=· .

·

w-·

girl

tak81&gt;Ul ciOW!t with a textbOOk hand.
Eut nu nolhlng to ldcl. and SOuth

.,

.

pel

37 8nflll..
~';woro 38 Tucbcl .
18 · nuclt
IWIY.
18 flllndill . 41 GOII with
nu!Wif
43 Buying .
20 Olympic
fllnzy
45

.47 WWW
lddresuo
48 From
1111111ory
41 Datllottvee
50 lnlllnl
llwn
!&gt;1 Kl-powl
52 Frotlty brew
53 Mlllfln
· pewtor
114 "Uttie

openi cne haan, and .Wut makea •

7 •warhNbiiiCI ,.._

to

presents

22 Flmout
HVtn
23 Wlnier
warmer
24 ~In dale
25 Wind dlr.
27 -Kippur
29 Cty noilfly
30 Blflboorda
32 Sfllllde
34 LIIIBMII

·major would deny a eldtr·'"M tnck.)
Nol!h doH that In lhil dial after South .

Hospital on SA
CIA. (740) 441-Q194

Gallery at 409

lheatrone
3lHYI'tlllnl
4 T,_,.
tHonHr
5 IJ-Inllna
e Whlotlt
time
7 -~
8 Exlct
t Willi«!
-·
10 - i t W t 11 realn
12 Ub
•

ace or aking- a dlltnalvt tdek'-ln a
side """· (A jump lllalght to four ot lht

WW'tlr.£'

Live Remote
Sa:turday, May 2
11 am to 1 pm
Big Country 99.5

17 f!lllotnwltt
11 Suddtn
· .,... ·
23 Hfi1t ribte .
28 ·ou.iwny '
28 0...
1omut11on
29 ~
. . . t.g.
31 1tant~ Tookllftpe
34 intpiOIIH
. upon
35 GrieYOul
dl38 Flluclultnt
echlmt
· 3t Hill Clll.
46 Cootdng Ill
42

Opener bids one ola ma)ct'and lilt next
player makel a takeoul - n you
are going to use. a two-no-trull1f)
reop(tnoe 10 show lour-plus tnmpo and
10-p!UJ auppcrt points (oalher lhan two
no-trump with 1ll-121Upp011 pclnfJ and
three no-trump with t3-plua IUPPOn
pointa), title ~... three no-trump for an
alternative usa.
For oxaiTjlie, Mcan show a poe-oniptlve
ralee 10 four ol partnor'a major, ptua an

Harnaod Mlnetrf AM r.1t111e .·

lor throe oucceoolve 0·2317·2 10 the Ohio
-kl.
Department of Nature!
(4) 18, 23, 30
Fle1ourcea, Dlvlelon of
Mineral
RHourcoe
Management. Tho proPublic Notice
~·~~~ cottt mining end
raclamallon OJI'ratlona
AT&amp;T Mobllhy II pro· will be In LOll 275,276
poelng to construct 1 a. 836, SuHon Town·
talecommunlcallona ship, · Townohlp 2,
tower (DHV -3822) at Rango 12 and In Lot
30440 Roy Jones Road, 274 and Section 8,
Syrocuse,
Meigs Letart Townahlp, TownCounty, O)tlo. The ac· ship 2, Range 12 Melgl
lion area will conalst .ol County, Olllo.
tho conotructlon of a The area·Ia locllod on
prefabricated, radio thl New Haven 7 112
oqulpmentahattarand minute U.S.G.S. Quod·
a 250' tall aoll-aupport ranglt map. The pro-·
call tower. AT&amp;T Ia poaltd area to · be
etaklng
comments unct.rmlnod encom·
from alllnterealtd per- paaaea 155.5 acroa Mtd..
aona on the Impact of lo located . appro•!·
.the pro~sod tower on mattly 1.3 mllet Southany dletrtcte, eltea, aut oltha corporllton
buildings, etructu,.., limite of Racine, Ohto.
or ob)acta algnlflcent In This cottl mining appll·
American hletory; ar· cellon will remove coal
chltecture, archaltOI· uolng the underground
ogy, enginHring, or mining
methode,
culture, that ara listed epeclllcelly tho room
or aro eligible lor llat- and pltlar method.
lng In the National Reg· Thia application Ia on
Iaiit" of Hlalorlc Places. llloat the Meigs County
All que1tions, com- c o u r t h o u 1 1 ,
mente, and corroa~n- Recorder's Office, 100
denca should ba West 2nd Street,
directed to Me. Renee Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
Yinger, at 485 Metro lor public ln1pectlon.
Piece South, Sullo 500, WriHan comments, obDublin, Ohio 43017, jectlonaorrequeatolor
Phone I (61 4)793 4708, an Informal conferantl
or RY2135®att.com.
mey be eent to the
(4) 29, 30
Ohio . Departtlllt"tl of

DOWN

::$"· ~=~ tm~;

An ahernatlve use :;::-;or
for three no-trump . 44 Linchpin

.I wOflf.Y

winrerize boats and
RV's.
(740)·992-5344
Mon-Fri
8:00am · 4:30pm
Sa( 8:00am . 12
We apprecillte your

12 Coumlr· .
ikJ*Iod
57 Bl'liny club
13 Truly
58 Out and Jo
1.4 Joekpol

•u l

+QJIOB
6 A 7fl

.,

-

• J 10

• A 98 C

Doors, Windows,

Frw~

......

• 512

6 I 5

=.

114 Gulch
55 _ ,
villkn?
58 Boc-

flOw.

.....,anllno:

. IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Chau Homo Flnanca
LLC
·
Plaintiff,
· va.
Dtvld L. Cottrill, eta I.
Dlllenclanllo.
C.u No. 08CV148
Judge Fred w. Crow Itt
Legal Notice
Unknown Spoual (II
any) of David L Cotlrlll,
whoae tnt known ed·
dros1 Is 541
Salmon Rlvor Road,
PIIHiburgh, NY 12901,
will take notice that on
September 28,2008,
Cha.. Homo Finance
LLC fliltd llli.CGmplllnt
In the Court of Com·
mon Pleas, Malga
County,
Ohio, ca.. No. 08 CV
148. The object of, and
demand lor relief ln.
tho Complaint Ia to
foreclose ·
the lion of ptelntllla
mongaga
roc:ordltd
upon the realeata.. deecrtbed below and In
which
ptalnlllloll0ge8 thottht
fol"ellolng de.. ndont
hu or clalma to have
an lntereat:
·
Parcel
number(l):
1 3 0 1 o &amp; 4 Moo,
1300422002
addme:
Property
31330 Pelntor Ridge

. 46

Puzzle

An- to P,..louo PUDlO

IOclle

6 Appulrilld
to Olflce
11 Mounllln

s.!WOIII~t ·

-~ ... ,

1. p,.....

Cr~11word

forpevtng 51 • -

Todoyt

zer

NEA

'

•

Astr_oGraph
-'lli'!hdlr!

�Page 86 •

The Daily Sentinel

Thunday, Aprilao, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.eom

Sports·Shorts

Injuries can change things quick at playoff time

Adelman knows from
BC~
experience , . be it losing
Chris Webber in the post•
"
· WASHINGTON (AP)- Thj: political football that isthji
The ·San Antonio Spurs season to a knee injury
Bowl Championship Series lands in Congress this week ail
·were done liS title con- when he was in Sacramento ,
lawmakers examine whether the system for awarding 11
tenders the minute .they or having to play without
national
championship is fair. ·
·
· ·
revealed Manu Ginobili was Yao Ming just last year in
BCS coordinator John Swofford is among the witnesses
lost for the year. Boston Houston .
.
·
invited
to Friday's hearing.
Many NBA; co;~ches have
might be , too, if Kevin
Several
lawmakers-are
pushing
bills
on
the
BCS
.
Rep.
a similar story - sometimes
Garnett can 't return.
Joe Barton of Texas, for example, has sponsored legislation
The Spurs hoped to meet even a few of them .
that would prevent the JIICAA from calling a college footthe Lakers , and the Celtics
"There's an · element of
ball game a "national championship" unless it results from ·
were expected to battle the luck involved in winning a
a
playoff system.
.
:· ·
· '
.
.
Cavaliers in a marquee final championship,"
Knicks
Barton
.
IS
the
top
Repubhcim
on
the
Energy
and
four. Now maybe nothing coach Mike D' Antoni said .
ColllllJerCe CollliTI!ttee; Friday's hearing will be held iD ~uiJ.
can prevent a Kobe Bryant- "You have to have it, or at
committec:'s commerce, trade and consumer protection
LeBron James showdown in least can't be unlucky."
subcomnuttee.
the NBA finals .
The former Phoenix coach
·President Barack Obama has said he. would prefer an
But watching Brad Miller can point to Joe Johnson's
·
·
eight-team
playoff system.
spit out blood before shoot- facial fracture that sidelined
ing two crucial free throws, him late in the 2005 postseaor a woozy Courtney Lee son, or even a freak cut on
j f.
taken to a hospital after Steve Nash's nose that
being clobbered m the head couldn't be contained, foreNEW ORLEANS (AP) - Th~ New Orleans SaintS hav~
- by his own teammate. no ing him to sit out most of the
agreed to a lease extension that will k'eep the NFL team
less - was a reminder that last 2 minutes of a loss to ·
playing home games in an improvedLouisiana.SuperdOme
even those presumed final- San Antonio in the opener of ·
through the 2025 season.
,
·.
&lt;
·
ists from Los Angeles and a series two years latet.
An announcement by · Saitlts owner Tom Benson and
Cleveland could be one
The one that stands out to
Louisiana ~oy. Bobby Jindal has been schedule~) for 10 ,
mistimed injury away from D' Antoni was from the
a.m. local lime Thursday,al.the Superdome.
.
becoming an ordinm , team. 2006 Western Conference
A person with direct knowledge of lease negotiations
Or as Hornets coach finals, when the Suns' Raja
conffrmed to The Associated Press •that a general agreem11nt
Byron Scott warned before Bell and Dallas forward
has been.reached and was expected to be signed later in the
the playoffs: "With !he bet- Josh Howard were both
·
AP photo week after final details have been worked out. The persOn
ter teams, it probably comes injured in a Game 1 victory Orlando Magic center Dwight. Howard (12) makes a shot spoke on condition of anonymity because the team and
down to who stays the for Phoenix. Howard made over Philadelphia 76ers forward Thaddeus Young (21) dur- governor had yet to malte the a1111ouncement. ·
:.
healthiest. The farther the it back for Game 2, Bell did- ing the second half of a firsM6und NBA playoff basketball
Benson and Jindal wanted a long-term extensiqn in place
series goes, the inore your n't, and the Mavericks went game in Orlando, Fla., on Tuesday.
·
. by this spring to improve New Orleans' bid to host the 2013
best players can get hurt and on to win the series.
· starting forward Luol Deng, failed to hit the rim while Super Bowl.
·
':
the series can change quick"If it was . just flip- out with a leg injury. ·
attempting to miss the secly."
flopped, if Raja Bell comes
Already kilowing they'll ond on purpose, and the
·And it happens often in back 100 (percent) and Josh be without the suspended Celtics hung on to take a 3- .
. ,,
the playoffs, when the hits doesn't, then we probably Dwight Howard for Game 21ead.
.
ANNAPOLIS , Md. (AP) _ Navy has signed an 3 .,...,;~·become harder .and there's could have won the series, 6 • the Magi·c could be·10 1'ur
All
h
·
·
·
·
Jd
.·
' ·
t e IDJUnes cou not ment to appear in the 2013 Armed F. orces Bowl .i n o·-Pori-·
less time between games to which ·was
conference ther trouble if they're also
1 1
h
d
heal the inJ'uries they cause. · final, then: been in · the
·h
Le
on Y eave 1 e avs an
Worth, Tex.
·
.·
· ,,
wtt out
e, whose status Lakers as the best teams, but . The Armed "orces -Bowl has featured a military theme.· .
Miami ·seized . the. homefinals," D' Antoni said.
was unknown after Howard a1so the he al th'test. w·
.
. tth B en since 2006. Air' ' Force has appeared in the past two ·game".
court advantage t_n tis senes
T.he. Spurs were hurt the J·nadvertently hit ht'm I·n the w 11
· ·
,
""
a ace
returnmg
.or held at Apmn G. Carter Stadtum. This year's game, slatect
with Atlanta, then quickly most thts year, unable to head while trying to block a Cleveland and Andrew for Dec. 31. will .match teams from Conference USA and
gave it back when Dwyane overcome
Ginobili 's shot earlv in Game 5
Wade was in such pain from absence and eliminated by . . Sometimes, the 'player Bynhum back fori the Lakefrsll' theAMou~tatd·n Wedst Conferenhce . . bo I' . b h,.
. ; d•~
back spasms that he had to Dallas, ousted in the open- doesn't even have to be bot are as c ose to u
san m epen ent, Navy as no . w lles ut as eame ·
be helped from h,s seat on ing round for the frrsttime knocked out 10 swing a strength as a team could six straight bowl-berths. The Midshipmen ' played 'in the
the bench.
since 2000 _ when an game _ or potentially a hope.
Houston Bow.! (2003), Emerald Bowl (2004), Meineke Cat
Being good helps. Come injured Tim Duncan was series.
· Unlike the Spurs. ·
Care Bowl (2004), Poinsettia Bowl (2005, 2007) a1i4'
playoff time, being healthY' sidelined with a knee·injury.
Miller was bloadied on a
"We're
disappointed EagleBank Bowl (2008). :
.
'
:;
might count more.
The Celtics have to drive to the basket after tak- because we didn't have
Naval Academy athleuc director Chet Gladchuk ha:t
"You just can't afford believe· they could have ing a shot to the mouth on a everything available to us . · ~ready signed an ~greement for~he Midshipmen to appear
(injuries) when you play the eliminated the Bulls by now hard foul by the Celtics' come playoff time," Spurs 10 the Texas Bowl 10 Houston lhts year.
best teams in the league," if they had. not only Garnett . Rajon Rondo with 2 seconds coach Gregg P9povich said.
Houston
coach
Rick (knee) but also Leon Powe lef~ in overtime and Chicago "That's probably as imporAdelman said. "You can't (knee), his injured backup. triultng 106-104. Clearly tantas anything, figure out a
afford it when ,you play Chicago col,lld argue it shaken even after attending way to have best oppprtuni- ·
them · in a seven-game could have already complet- to his injury, Miller missed ·. ty to have e.verybotly
series."
·
ed the upset if it had normal badly on the frrst free throw, healthy .for the playoffs." . .
. .
' '

House subcommittee hearing on

BY BRIAN MAHONEY
AP BASKETIIALL WRITER

.Saints .agree to Superclome lease

Navy_commits to.Armed Forces Bow_•

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·Local Economy

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$17,280

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In ·tough.· Climate··· ·

Despite a global economy that analysts predict is going to ·get worse before it gets better, people•ln the tri-county area are living and working
in an environment that remains ~table during tough econoiiJiC times.
• · '' :
·
·

lllllllftl ... ,. ...... ..__ .

That's certainly true in Mason County, where Charles Humphreys, who serves as executive director of the Development A!lthority and·the
Main Stre.et program, said the local economy is a stable environment thanks to sev~ral businesses that help maintain productive jobs.

OntyM&lt;ua.

(_ &lt;)

Prev~lls

He cited tbe county's two largest employers - Pleasant Valley Hospital and the Mason County Board of Education, who together provide
nearly 1,300 jobs -:-- as piaying a major role in that objective. When combined with numel'\)us positions available at other mainstays,
. including Bob's Market and Greenhouses. City Ice and Fuel, Fruth Phannacy and American Electric Power, Humphreys pointed out that the
local communities are fortunate to have access to an economy that, even though it might not be flourishing, isn't doing as badly as others
·around the nation.

I I :Il

•

He also said more industries are looking to Mason County for potential development, adding that there have been more p(Ospects in the past
year than in the previous 10 years combined. Add that to.an agg~sive miuteting of the area online via numerous networking sites an~ agoal
to fill empty storefronts~ and Humphreys said the future looks bright in Mason County.

PONTIACY

·-...........

"It's not the biggest economy. but it' s a stable economy. Everything we build in the future will be icing on the cake," Humphreys concluded.
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