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                  <text>" ww .mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Dai ly Sentmel

I

Tueday. May 12. 2009

ADVERTiSEMl~ ------'--"-----'F-"0"R-'-P!C
AT,_.E=NTHEALTH LLC &gt;939 EVERHARD RD .. CANTON OH 44709

©2009 UNIVERSAL M[DIA SYNDICATE SPECIAl,_ADV[RTISEME!'/T FEATUR{_

Sales are booming for

Holzer Senior
Outreach gives back
to communities, Aa

str~ngth diet pill

Participants in clinical study lost an average of 5 times more weight
without additional exercise or diets; 48-hour time limit now in place

,

By K. Tedeeebl
t!niwnai Medin Syndicau

en

(UMS) - Over 10 million doses
have been shipped to dieters so far,
and sales continue to climb every
day for the diet supplement called
Apatrim•.
"We knew we had a great prodnet, but it's even exceeded our
expectations," said Ken Geis, Manager of Call Center Operations for
PatentHEALTH the company that
developed the clinically tested
weight loss supple ment.
"People just keep placing orders,
it's been pretty amazing," he said.
But a closer look at this weight
loss sensation suggests that
maybe the company shouldn't
have been caught off guard by its
There are some very good
.reasons for Apatrim's surging
popularity.
To begin with, the clinical test
results were very impressive. Participants taking Apatrim's active
ingredient lost an average of 400%
more weight than those taking a
placebo during the 4-week U.S.
. clinical study. ·These remarkable
results were achieved without
additional exercise or diets.'*
Apatrim comes from a natural
edible plant source. It's safe, as
well as easy to use. This weight
loss supplement can actually begin
working the very first day. And
since researchers believe Apatrim
works to suppress appetite, most
people can eat what they want and
still lose weight.*
"By suppressing their appetite,
most people will consume fewer
calories which can lead to weight
loss," said Dr. Joseph Dietz, Director of Health Science, Research &amp;
Development for PatentHEALTH.
''Consumers should always keep in
mind that there is no substitute for
proper diet and exercise when it
comes to losing weight."*
Impressive cllnlcal .results
Apatrim's active in'gredient has
a known-ability to help control hunger pangs. This allows people to
eat the foods they want !llld always
seem to be craving because they'll
just want to eat less.•
The U.S. clinical study was con- .
ducted in Los Angeles. The study
included healthy, overweight individuals between the ages of 31 and
73. The caloric intake and level of
exercise was not disclosed.
The participants were instructed
not to change the food they were
eating and not to add any exercise.
Specifically, no changes to their
daily routine; just take the recommended dosage 30-minutes before
lunch and dinner.
A remarkable 100% of the participants. taking Apatrim as directed

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11 111 111

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SPORTS·
: •,Angels win SEOAL
title. See Page 81

BY BRiAN

J.

REED

BAEEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - The Ohio
Bureau
of
Criminal
Identification
and
Invesligation has made pub'lic n~w d~velopments concerning lhe weekend death
of Winfield Hardiman.
Hardiman's death was

determined to be- a homicide , according lo the BCI.
.Hardiman, 65, was fot~nd
dead jusl outside hi s
Albany-area · home
on
Saturday morning .
An autopsy has been performed by the Montgomery
County Coroner's Offtce .
The Montgomery County
Coroner and Meigs County

Coroner Douglas Hunter,
who was on the scene of
Hardiman's death , have
dete[mined
that
Mr.
Hardiman's death was a
homicide, the result of blunt
force trauma, the BCI
reported late Monday.
An ac'\uaintance found
Hardiman s lxx!y just outside his residence on Darst

Road in Columbia Township
aft er he had noticed hirn ·
mi ssing for a day.
No further information
surrounding Hardiman 's
de&amp;th is a vailable at thi s
point .. the BCI said , but
mvestJgal o rs a re encouraging anyone who either
had knowledge of Mr.
Hardiman' s r(Jutincs , or

either lost weight or inches off of
their waistline during the 4 week
clinical study. Those ·losing weight
lost an average of 5 times more than
study participants who were taking
the placy!bo pills.*
Some participants experienced
fabulous results, losing as much
as 8 lbs and up to 3 inches off their
waistline: These amazing results
were achieved without changes in
lifestyle. All they.did was take the
pills as instructed.'*

with the quality of the clinical help people lose weight.''*
trials as well as the U.S. patent
(#7,060,308). This patent protects Wh~re to get It
the proprietary method of extractAD of the national retail phannscies
ing the active ingredient. This pro- . including Wahnart, CVS/pharmacy
cess is what the developing scien- and Rite Aid have placed orders for
tists believe is the key,to the active Apatrim.
ingredient's effectiveness.
There have been some reports
"When I read the clinical results, of out-of-stocks, so to make it eas·
the U.S. patent and all Of the other ,ier for people to get it right away a
scientific support I jmmediately Regional Health Hotline has been
knew we needed to use this weight put in place for the next 48 hours.
loss compound," said Dietz.
Starting at 8:00am today,
"The results are real; Apatrim is all consumers have to do is
a great product that's been shown to ·call 1-866-964-2349 an,d ask for

Dept. AP4363; orders will be filled
on a first-come, first-served basis."For those people who call the
hotline to have Apatrim shipped
directly to their homes, we guarantee
they'll get product and they can also
qualify for a direct-to-home discount,"
said Ken Geis. "But this discount is
only available through the hotline for
.the next 48 hours," he said.
.
So for those who choose not to
call or miss the deadline you may
have to pay more for Apatrim or
possibly run the risk of not finding ·
it at the drug store. •

Professional support
.,
Industry trends along with professional 's support in the weight
loss and fitness industries indicate
that Apatrim is the real thing. This
amazing pill is being recommended
' To make it easy for PePPle to get Apatrim quickly, the company h as set ~P a Regional Hea.lth
to companies and clients across the
.
Hotli ne. Fo.llow the ins truct ions listed. be.low to have Apatrir]'l shipped directly to'ypur honie:orYci.l:! ..
country.
can
check your local drug store to-s!!e if they have it in s toc k, For co nsumers wbo call the hbtliiie, ·
Mark Loy, a pe~sonal trainer has 11 .
advise, th-e oJJerato~ that yolt W?Jilt Apatrim shipped directly t6 your home so -l hey:can see lf:you ·
had some of his clients use Apatrlm
qualify fQr the direc_t-to -home -shipping,discount. . . ,. · ·
· ·
·
·,
·
-._ ·
with great success. 3
~hours
"When I'm working with my cli.
. t; .. .
..
.
.
.
.
.
., '
ents I can control what they're eatCon.
s
umers
.can
begin
calling
.prorTiptly
at
~:OOam today. The hotline will be available for the ne~t
ing," said Loy. "But when they leave
48 hours. Call J·866·964;2349 and ask for Dept. AP4363. All orders will be procesSed on ~
they're on their own and that's
firstccorpe, first-served basis . ·
·
. ·_. : .
·
·
when the tendency to cheat comes.
into play," he continued.
P~armacias:
"I heard about Apatrim so I
Natiomil chains across the country tha't have ord~ed:Apatrim include Walmart;C'(S/pharm;!cy and
checked out the facts then decided
Rite Aid. All of these chains ha)(e confirmed .t hat they have received their initial shipments of Apatrlrn .
to try it as a part of my training
and
are working to rnake certain they have stock available. Consumers not abl.e
fin&lt;;l Apatrim at · .
·
program," Loy said.
. their locaf pharmac ie~ can call the hotline and have it delivered Meetly to their honi~s. You roay alsp
"It's really helped some of my
,· qualify for a spec(al discount. .
· :. · &gt;.
·_
·
·
. -.
.
. .·
. ·· ·
· ·. ·
clients to control their eating. I've
.. On the _web: www.aJ)atrim,com · l~l20091&gt;;~t~nlHfALT[I.
··
·· ·
watched people get some amazing
LtC P4~0A OF794SR~l
results while taking Apatrim," said · 1: Primary study ~a sed on 26 participants over a 4-week period Participants wers directed. not to add any exer- :
c1se or c hange eetmg habits. PartiCipants level ol caronc mtake and exercise were not measured or disclosed . 2. individuLoy. "Sign riie up, I'm a believer,"'
al results may vary. 3. Mark loy is a personal trainer and fitness consultant to PatentHEALTH , · he is remunerated for his serv1ces.
Dr. Joseph Dietz was impressed .•l!:!tSE STATEMI_NTS HAVE NOT BEEN EVALUATED BY THE FOOD AND DRUG ADM~ISTIYtTION
.. THIS PRODUCT IS NOT INTa.OED TO lA OSE ff!EAT CUfiE R PREVENT ANY DISEASE. '
.
.

Here's how to guarantee you get it; ·{·

Regional Htatth Hotline;

only

.. ·

· ·. . .

Retail

to

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Bv BRIAN

0BITUARIFS
. Page AS
• Caden Day
•Shane Day
• Autumn DeMoss
. • Jack Follrod
• William -Edward Lewis
• Patricia Marcinko
• Mary Aliee Miller
• Richard Newell, Jr.
• Wilma Young

'.

--. ·

INsiDE
· • SO(:fety members tour

UMS- Consumers can't seem
to get enough of it and drug
stores are selling it as fast as
. they C!lll get it. ·
"Unbelievable, that's all I
cal) say," said Darla· Miller,
Operations Manager for
PatentHEALTH the company
that developed the breakthrOugh joint supplement.
Miller was referring to the
fact that in just one day a drug
Store chain sold 2,000 bottles
of the powerful joint health supplementcalled Trigosamine• .
''We've already shipped over
500,000 bottles of Trigosamine
and sales just keep growing,
it's been crazy," said Miller.
Scientists have developed
this amazing oral tablet that
.
.
doesn't require a prescription 1
and Is taken only once-a day.
1.
..
.
'
.
It's so impressive that one
'
.
.
key ingredient has the ability
You may be at)le to find Trigosamine at CVS/pharmacy and Rite Aid since
to retain fluid up to 1000 times
.t hey have received s hipme nts. If you want Trlgosarnin&amp; shipped .directly to your ·
its own weight; this helps
horne and would llke t he local readers di sco unt, call the Nation al Order Hotline
increase lubrication for the
listed below before th e 72_·hour ·deadline ex pires. Otherwise you'll have to get '
jointl lllowing them to move
Trigosarnlne. at the drug
store and rnay run the risk of. not
being able to find it .
:
.
with-·
TrigoSamine's key ingredient
Begin Calling at 8:00AM TODAY
is Hyaluronate also' called HA-13
.•
1-800·924·2109
.
which is the building block of , .
Approval Code: TG8519
"natural joint fluid," medically '
Discount Ends in 72 hours
. !mown as synovial Huid.
~~~~~------~--~-~~~~~~~-. Tblsjoint fluid reduces fric - , Dr. Joseph ()jetz, _Php currentty conducrs full 11me rase.an::h lor PatentHEALTH. LLC. as Owectof ol Health Sc.ence, Research Oevelol)llent.
2. Statamen1s herem are bBS&amp;d upon published public information anc1 do not imply afl11iation. sponsorship or em1orsement of
'JriQOS$mlrwt by the United State:tGovernment
tion in the joints allowing for
...
effortless motion. It not only ' THES£ STmr.wm KAVE NOl BEEN E~AU!ATf:O ~V THE rooo AtfODIIYG_~~A~_li_O"' NS "AODl!Ci IS NOT lliiENDEO_TO OIAG"'OSE. TREAT. CURE~ PII:VENTAWV m
@

amounts of synovial fluid to lubricate the joints. HA'l3, one of:
Trigosa mine's key ingr'edient s is a co m ponent of synovial flUid .

'

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-local Readers Discount Deadline :
'

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SEtTIONS -

12 PAGES

Classifieds

83-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4
As

Weather

B Section
A2

© 2009 Ohio VaHey Publishintl Co.

• ALMOST GONE: Sales of I he joint pill Trigosamine are soaring
which cou ld lead to out of stocks as shown in t h1s photo illustrat ion.

Consumers unable to find it can call 1'800-924·2109 and have it
shtpped dtrectly to thetr homes.

.

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• .,. . .

..

. ·

·

.

Charta~e Hiietltchlphoto

-part of life from birth to death, we can County . Health Department in 2008
·
overcome the challenges of healthcare · were as follows:
Please see Council. Al
and disease and truly itnpact the qual - . Vital Statistics: Six births and 151
·POMEROY - Public health has ity of our lives," said Marshall.
deaths were recorded in 2008 .
been desl;ribed as "the ·science Md art
Th~: health commissioner works Courtney Sims isregislrar. ·
of preventing disease, prolonging life with a staff of about 2S to provide serEnvironmental Health: 63 animal
and promoting health through the orga- vices ranging from immuniiations and bites were reported with 49 requiring
nized efforts and informed choices of health evaluations to threats of cata- medical care, 76 public nuisance calls
Society, organizations . public and pri- strophes and disease epidemic;.
were investigated _mostly relating to BY BETH SERGENT
vati!, communities and individuals."
Marshall noted that in Meigs County sewage and solid waste, 66 inspec- BSERGENTIIMYDAILYSENTINELCOM
'['he description holds lrue today for . revet~ue to operate the various pro- . tions were made in schools, mobile
county health departments; like the grams comes from three separate horne par.ks, public pools, landfill
RACINE - After nearly
. one here. where Larry D. Marshall is sources - levy on property owners , areas, camps, parks and home loa!l . 10 years in the making and ·
health commissioner and has the fees and grants . The one mill levy in inspections . 18 water and sewage per- two years of construction ,
responsibility of managing an agency Meigs Counly generates ·about mits were issued along wilh 130 food officials with the Ohio
of health and safety professions geared $210.000 annually, fees bring in licenses and 308 inspections done. Department of Natural
Ia addressing a broad range of issues another $170,000 and grants amount The program manager is Keith Little, . Resources
and . Ohio
to about $340,000
in·Meigs County.
Division of Wildlife are
Please see Health. AS
Services provided by the Meigs
"By viewing health as an integral
planning a dedication cere·
mony for the ·new Racine
Boat Ramp at 11 a.m. on
Thursday, May 21 at the
ramp along Ohio 124.
Bv BRIAN J. REED
The ramp has been open
BAEEDOMYOAILVSENTINELCOM
for
busines s
since
December though officials
TUPPERS PLAINS waited until spring, ahd bet·
Kyle
Sargent · has . been
.BY BETH SERGENT
ter weather, for an offici~!
named valedictorian of
BSERGENTOMYOAILYSENTINEL.coM
dedication .
·
Eastern High School's Class
Gus Smithhisler of ODNR
POMEROY
Ohio of 2009. Tina Drake is salu-.
said the project .and its cost
.
Tourism Director Amir tatorian.
has not been finalized yet
Sargent is the son of
Eyloil will speak at next
with some finish work still
week 's
Meigs
County Charles and Cathey Sargenl
waiting on completion from
Chamber of Commerce's and Drake is the daughter
the contractor though major
Business Minded Luncheon. of Thomas and Debra
cons11uction is over. The last
The luncheon begins at Drake of Racine . Both will
cost estimale ODNR gave
noon on Tuesday at the address their classmates,
on the project was $2 millfamily arid fri ends at comWild Horse Cafe.
lion-plus.
·
Eylon 's arrival coincides
The dedication ceremony
Tina Dra~e
, Kyle Sargent
Please see Easte"'. A1
wilh May being declared
is open to the public and
"Ohio Tourism Month" by
Smithhisler said scheduled
·Gov. Ted Strickland and Lt.
to attend is the Director of
Gov. Lee Fisher. During
ODNR Sean Logan, Ohio
It was noted that mulch and community volunteers to Divis.ion o( Wildlife Chief
May, lhe Ohio Tourism BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICHOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM
and
Other materials needed plant the flowers , a par! Of Engineer Dave Mohr and
Division is urging Ohio 's
for the· beds between Main the downtown beautification possibly Ohio Division of
convention and vi sitors
POMEROY
Street and the parking lots which has been handled by Wildlife
Chief
Dave
bureaus, attractions, restauDowntown
beautification
are
now on hand in prepara: the Merchants Association Graham . The guest list of
rants and lodging facilities
and the summer fe stival tion for putting !lowers in the for many years.
other local or state official s
to showcase Ohio's touri sm
season were the topics of bed. Alice Wamsley, a master
A
report
was
given
by
Bill
and itinera ry was still being
experiences. Tourism, as an
discussion al Tuesday ' s gardener, is chairman of lhe Qu_icke 1. president , and completed and will be
industry, contributed $38
meeting of the Pomeroy project. A work day will be
Merchants Association .
set for association members Please see Merchants. Al Please see Boat ramp, Al
Please see Tourism, A5

Ohio Tourism · Sargent, Drake are Eastern
Director to
visit county

Calendars

Sports

..

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
approved the purchase of a
$23 ,000 storage building
and a $26,500 truck at
Monday's regular meeting.
Adminislrator
Village
Faymon Roberls recom·
mended the purchases. He
said he sought cost esti·
mates from vendors , but did .
not advertise for sealed bids
for the purchases .
·
The metal storage build·
ing, to cost $25,680 once
electrical work is complet·
ed , will house village street
department and public
works department equip·
ment. Thai equipment is
now in the elements· and
unprotected, Roberts s~id.
The building -will be purchased from and installed
by Gallia Construction. It
will be built on the former
Park Street School iot adjacent lo.the village garage.
The cost will be divided
among the street , water, and
sewer
funds.
Mayor
Michael Gerlach said the
building will allow for
" long-run savings," becau8e
it will protect lhe village's
public works equipment . .. Roberts said he received
quotes from, 32 auto dealers

Dedication of
new boat ramp

A3
·A3

Obituaries

.

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2

...

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

INDEX
Annie's Mailbox

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REED

HOEFLICHIIMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Oetalla on Page A2

• HEALTHY JOINTS: X-rays reve.al joints that have the proper

,

Health Depat·bnent protec·ling
public health and safety· ·

· Chester Courthouse. ·
· See Page A2
- • Great potential
lor a healthy life.
. See Page A3
• Birthc!?y obsenied.
See Page A3
: • Harrisonville alumni
dinner planned.
See Page A3
· • Local Briefs.

WEATHER
Miller.
"And to make it easier for
people who can't find Trigosamlne
or · don't want to go to the
store, we've set up a National
Order Hotline so they can
have it delivered directly to
their home," said MiUer:
"We'll be pfferirig a direct delivery discount for the next 72
hours, and consumers should
know they can't get this diScount
at drug 'stores:• she added
Otherwise those living in
the local area that miss the
deadline won't be able get the
discount. They'll have to go to
their local drug store to try
and get Trigosamine and may
be hard pressed to find it. •
Or, visit us online at:
www.trigosamlne. com

·

'

The staff of the Meigs COunty Health Depart!Mnt _consists of frorn the left, seated, ·~nlse Weekley, MeigS' Denial Clinic
Offjce Manager; Keith little, Director of Environmental Health; Sherry Wilcox, Director of· Nursing; Larry Marshall, ·Health
9ommissioner; Courtnliiy Sim, Assistat')l Mminlstrator/i=teglstrar;Connie Little, Child and Family Health Services· (CFHS)
ProjilctiPregnancy Care Clinic Director; Andrea Osborne, Meigs Co. Family and Children First Council Coordinator; and
standing, Becki Ball, billing clerk; Andrew Brumfield, ·Cardiovascular .Heallh Coordinator; Coleen Murphy-Smith,
Sanitarian:· Sandy Dalton, WIG health 'professional; Janet Jones, WIC health professional; Steve Swalzel, sanitarian;
Sherry Eagle, WIC ADP clerk;' Sherry Hayman, family planning/immunization nurse; Nora E:llis, WIG health educator; Beth
Cr~means, GFHS assistant; and Sandy Brumfield, fiscal officer/deputy registrar. On staff bul not pictures are Frank
Gorscak, publiC health emergency response coordinator: Leanne Cunningham, WIG director; Tonya Kelley, Meigs Dental
Clinic clerk; Linda Riggs, dental clinic billing clerk; and Lee Heid, DMD, contract dentist.

_Sales skyrocketing; news of its amazing results spread across the U.S.
lubricates the joinis, but it also the United States governnient
acts as a comfortable shock found that glucosamino and
absorber.
chondroitin, similar to those
"As we age, the body's natural found - h1 Trlgosamine, had a
production of this fluid declines 79.2% effective rate for those
and this can force the bones with moderste to severe joint
in our jointS to grind together discomfort.' *
which can result in nagging disBut' it's the results that
comfort," said Dr. Joseph Dietz.' make this joint supplement so
"Using Trigosamine is like impressive.
taking a can of oil and 'applying
"We get messages from conit directly to your joints," said sumers all the time telling us
Dr. Dietz. •
·
· how great Trlgosamine works
Trigosamine combines for them;' said Millet~
HA-13 with the essential blend
"Everybody wants it;• added
of glucosamine and chondi'Oi- Miller.
tin which have been clinically
''CVS/phrumacy and Rite Aid
shown to help build healthy were one of the first ones to
cartilage in the joints allowing order Trigosamine and they've
for increased flexibility and loaded up tl1eir shelves. We've
range of motion.•
received reports that show they
Aclinicalstudy conductedby haw some inventory left," said
-·------------

J.

BREEOOMYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

See Page A5

.

who saw suspicimls activ ity in the Darst Roac\ area
in the past week, to contact -the sheriff's office at
992~3371'
Slleriff Robert Beegle
asked the BCI to serve as
the
lead
investigating
agency in this case . It is the
third homicide investigation
in Meigs County this year.

Council
approves
$50Kin new
purchases

• POPULAR PILL: All ison Garwood (front) and R~nee P~ l legrini pick up a bot tle of the breakthrough weight loss supp lement called Apatrim®~t the
pharmacy. ·An amazing 100% of the participants tn the U.S. clinica l t rial got res ults ta king Apatrim and its popula rit y is-soaring. Consumers can call '
1-866 -964-2349 to have Apatrim sh ipped directly to their homes.

Drug stores load up with powerful joint pill

~

· Printed on 100'11&gt;
Recycl&lt;d Newsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

success.

By G.W. Napier
Universal Media Syndiralt

EHS wins oub:*igbt titles
in baseball, softbaD, Bt

•

Pomeroy merchants discuss summer activities

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COMMUNh'Y

The Daily Sentinel

CHESTER - A tour of ing which features a variety
th~ 19~8 re;tored Chester of historical displays and
Counhou'e \\US a feature of artifacts . A gift was presentth~ recent meeting of Delta ed to Holter by the Meig&gt;
Kappa G.unma Honorary and Vinton CouQty memSociety. Omi.:ron Chapter.
bers attending.
Pat Holter of the ChesterPaper products were colHistorical lected from the members. for
Shade
A;sudatiu11, led the mem- support of the local
bers on th~ tour of the build- women's shelters in the

Community.Calendar

Local Weather

recent
meeting
were
Wednesday ... Partly
President Pam Toon, Vice sunny in the moming ...Then
President Jo Ann Hays, mostly cloudy with a
Secretary Barb Rhodes, chance of showers in the
Rosalie Story, Gaye Perrin, afternoon. Highs in the
Kathleen Bledsoe, Donna lower 70s. Southeast winds
Jenkins,
and
Beckie 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain
Zurcher. Hostesses were 40 percent.
Donna Jenkins and Jo Ann · Wednesday
night ...
Hays.
Mostly cloudy. A chance of
in
the
showers
evening ...Then a slight
chance of showers after
from Page At
midnight. Not as cool with
lows in the upper 50s. South
for the purchase of a one- ing arm. for $195,0oo in dent of council the authority works departments.
ton Ford 350 pickup truck. forgiven loan funds for a to declare a village-wide
• Scheduled the next regu- winds around 10 mph.
Onc&lt;&gt; a hitch and snowplow solar sewer stirring system, state of emergency.
lar meeting for 4:45p.m. on Chance of rain 40 percent.
Thursday...Showers likeare fitted on the truck. the and $2.8 million in forgiven
• Approved payment 'o f May 26, due to the
ly with a chance of thundercost will be $30,605. It will loan funds for water line bills in the amount of Memorial Day holiday.
be purchased from Ricart and well improvements. $39.593.09.
Present were Mayor storms. Highs in the mid
Ford in Columbus.
• Approved the mayor's Michael Gerlach, Fiscal
The twd projects are part of
Council passed two reso- the federal stimulus award report of fees and fines col- Officer Susan Baker, Council
lected in April, in the President Rae Moore and
lutions necessary to receive the village received.
Council also:
funding through the Water
amount of$19,172;
Council members Jean
Pollution Control Loan
• Conducted the second
• Approved monthly Craig, Sandy Brown, Craig
(NVSEl - 28.64
Fund. the Environmental reading on an ordinance reports from the finance, Wehrung, Shawn Rice and AEP
Akzo (NASDAOI - 44.21
Protection Agency's fund- granting the mayor or presi- income tax and public Julie Houston.
Aahland Inc. (NVSE) - 23.59
area. The planning meeting
for 2009-2010 will be held
June 19 at 10 am at the
home of President Pam
Toon. It will be a carry-in
dinner with the hostess
proving the meat dish and
members bringing side
dishes and desserts.
Those present at the

Council

POMEROY
Alpha
IOTA Masters will meet at
11:30 a.m. at the New
Friday, May 15
Beginnings
Methodist
POMEROY . - Meigs
County
Commissioners Church.
Friday, May 15
have rescheduled their
HARRISONVILLE
Thursday regular meeting
until 10 a.m . on Friday.
· Harrisonville 0 .E.S annual
inspection, 7:30 p.m . at the
Monday, May 18
POMEROY - Veterans hall. Refreshments .
Saturday, May 16
Service Commission meets
RACINE
· Brooks
at 8 a.m., 117 Memorial Dr.,
Grant
Camp
of
the
Sons
of
Pomeroy.
the Union Vetemns of the
Civil War and Major
U S
Daniel McCook Circle of
the Ladies of the Grand
Army of the Republic,
annual Memorial Day serThursday; May 14
vice at Star Mill Park in
'POMEROY - Meigs . Racine, II a.m. Guest
County Historical Society speaker, also announcetrustees' meeting at the ment of winners in the
Meigs County Museum. · third annual Memorial Day
Open house . for members . essay contest with essays
and friends at 6:30 pm. to be read. Picnic lunch to
Meeting to follow. ·
follow.
CHESTER
Shade
Monday, May 18
River Lodge 453, 7:30p.m.
RACINE - Cha~ter 186
at the hall. Refreshments.
of ·Eastern star, 6: 0 p.m.,
MIDDLEPORT
refreshments.
Middleport Development
Group, 8:30 a.m., Job and
Family Services.
RACINE - Ohio River
Saturday, May 16
Producers, 7 p.m. at
MIDDLEPORT
Southern Vo-Ag room.
Scr.eening of motion picTUPPERS PLAINS ture,
"Fireproof," 6 p.m.,
Tuppers Plains VFW Post
Hope
Baptist Church, for
9053 meets at 7 p.m. with
new · officers to be . adults only who are married
installed. Dinner ati 6:30 qr planning to be married.
Free to the public. Call 992p.m.
2197 for information.
MIDDLEPORT
Special
meeting · of
Middleport Lodge #363, 7
p.m. , with work in the
Saturday, May 23
Entered Apprentice· and
Fellowcraft degrees. Dinner
MIDDLEPORT
at 6:30 p.m . All Master Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
Masons invited. •
American Legion baseball
team tryouts, 3 p.m.
SYRACUSE
Wildwood Garden Club, Saturday and Sunday,
6:30 p.m. at the Syracuse Meigs High School. Rain or
Community Center.
shine .

Cl b and
organizations

chairman of the June 5 and
6 Gold Wings and Ribs
Festival , on the entertainment and activities planned
fur that event. He reported
that power boat racing is on
the Saturday agenda. There
wi II be entertainment on
both Friday and Saturday
along with a variety of con- ·
tests. and an an in the park
competition on Saturday
where both rock and face
painting will take place.
This year motorcycle
light parades will be held on

both Friday and Saturday
Also announced · was a · papers, as a .way of promo~­
nights. 9 p.m., along with gospel sing in the amphithe- ing business . and " events
competitions for Ohio's best ater on July 25.
·
were also approved.
ribs, and Ohio's best Wings.
Ways of promoting more
As for fundraising, the
Gold Wings and Ribs opens business downtown were group discussed possible
the fesiival season in discussed with Quickel sug- purchase of a . new glass
Pomeroy.
gested extendit:tg hours and . ornament featuring a Meigs
Also noted was the sum- more consistent hours as a County historic scene as
mer music series, Rhythm on ·way of getting in more another addition to bulb
the River, which gets under- shoppers.
collections. Suggestions
Adyertising was dis- included a picture of downway on June 26, featuring
five Friday nights of enter- cussed including television town Pomeroy from the
tainment in the amphitheater. spots on Suddenlink cable West Virginia side, the
The ninth annual Big Bend for which the Tourism Meigs County Courthouse,
Blue Bash will be held July Office will donate $1.000. or
the · Rocksprings
30-31 and Aug. I. ·
Ads on radio and in news- Grandstand.

Eastern rrom Page At
n1encement exercises at 2
p.m . Sunday.
Sargent is an avid skateboarder and enjoys other
activities with friends. His
college plans are incomplete.
Dr~ke is an active member of her class, including
serving as class president.
She is a two-year member
of National Honor Society,
and serves as its secretary.
She is ·also a cheerleader
and a 14-year member of
the Pioneers 4-H Club.
She plans to attend The
Ohio State University, and
major in Agri-business.
The class's Top 10 scholars will be announced
Friday at the school's senior
awards assembly.

Mem~~s of the 'graduat- · Katelyn Marie Haught,
ing class are: Keith Gordon Zachary Dwayne Hendrix,
Aeiker, Tasha Nicole Joshua Arnold Hupp, Allen
Barber, Danielle Nicole Cody Hysell , Carly Richell
Barnhart,
. Matthew · Kimes, Jordan Bradley
Nicholas Barringer; D--right Kimes, Jacob Tadd Kittle,
Ethan Beaumont, Sarah Kay Travis Lee Koenig, Amanda
Bentz, Hope Dawn Bland, Marie Larkins, Jeremy Todd
Heather Ann Brooks. ··
Lee,
Tesla
Rachelle
Benjamin Neal Buckley, Maynard, Danielle Natalie
Morgan Lynn Burt, Zachary Mcintyre, Kaylee Lynn
Stephen Carson, Brittany . Milam, Christopher Allen
Nicole Casto, Hannah Minerd, · K.ayla
S11e
Marie Cozart, Melvin James . Mollohan.
.
Aaron Douglas Moore,
. D~iley, Brandon Douglas
Daugherty, Tina Marie Zachary Michael Moore,
Drake, · Rhonda Marie Alyssa Lynn Newland,
Durham, William Action James Morgan Powell,
Charles Facemyer, Robert Anthony Richard Putman,
Derek Griffin, Robert Casey Dale Michael Riffle, Jared
Hannum. William Cody Brett Rose, Micah James
Russell, Kyle William
Hannum .

Ohlo Vlllley Bane Corp. (NAS.
DAQ) - 22.75
BBT (NVSE) - 22.50
Btg Lola (NYSE) - 24.68
Peopleo (NASDAQ) .,- 17.92
Bob.Evana (NASDAQ)- 25.05
Papaleo (NVSE) - 49.27
BorgWIII'ner (NYSE) - 28.96
Premler (NASDAQl - 5.43
Century Alumtnunl (NASDAQl
RockWeii ·(NYSE) - 32.50
- 8.51
Rocky Boote (NASDAQ) - 3.95
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.59
Royal Dutch· Shell - 49.83
Charming Shope (NASDAQ) Sears Holding (NASDAQI 54.70
3.17 .
.
.
City Holding (NASDAQ)..;. 31.77
Wai-Mart (NY:SEj...,. 50.110
Collins (NYSE) - 38.83
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.38
DUPont (NYSE) ..,-' 28.11
WesBanco (NYSE) - 18.08
US Ban~ (NYS~l - 17.89
Worthington (NVSE) - 14.42
Gannett (NVSE) - 4.93
Dally atock repc;rta Ill'&amp; the 4
General Electric (NY$E) - 13.68 p.m. ET cloatng quotH ol tranolfllrtey-Davtdaon (NYSE) - 18.110 acttono tor May 12, 2009, provldJP Morgan (NVSE) - 35.36
ed by Edward Jo"" ttnanclal
Kroger (NYSE)- 21.51
aclvlaora taaac Milia In Galllpolla .
Limited Brandl (NYSE)- 11.50 .· at (740) 441-944hnd Lealey
Norfolk Sout""" (NVSE) . Marrero In Point Pt1aaant at ,
38.51
(304) 874-0174. Member S!PC.

Church events

Boat ramp from PageAl

.

POMEROY - Jessica
Paige Workman , daughter
of BJ and Lacy Workman of
Pomeroy, observed her May
6th fifth birthday with a
recent celebration at the
Athens Community Center
w.ith "A Princess. Turns
Five" theme .
Guests enjoyed a tea
party, beauty salon station,
and breaking the pifiata.
· Attending or sending gifts
were Sharon and Butch
Dean of Pomeroy; Brett
and
Lori
Saxon of
Gallipolis; Bob and Belva
Workman of Rutland; Bob
Day· of Pomeroy; G"abby
Sanders of Albany: Cathy
Workman of Racine; Phil,
Klm, Brad, Alexis, and
Joshua
Schwab
of
Pomeroy: Eric, Ccirtney,
Leora , Mason, and Brendan
Coffinan of Glouster,
Jessica
Carlson
of
Nelsonville ;
Charlie,
Tamra, and Jayce Mallett
of Athens ; Dorothy Day of
Pomeroy: Albert and Sandy
Banks of Porrieroy ; Dan,
Fonda, Daniellc, Michell'e,
and Heather Thomas of
Ashville: Jerry and Jacque
Fields of Pomeroy; Jeremy
Banks
of
Pomeroy:
Shannon and Addison
Whitlatch of Pomeroy;
Tim. Stephanie. arid Abbie
Fife of Cheshire: Butch,

we remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.
On Sunday, May 24, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
forgotten. They will be similar lo the sample below:
If you wl!h, select.one otthe following FREE verses below to
acoompany your tribute.
·

~

,

Place a mr~spnper a~

.~

· L.!t'

May _God's angels

.

guide
you and
I
protect you .
throughout time.

Place on online ad

. AUTOS

!Jt;tv

.

. .

. .

Alw~

in our hearls,

John and MoM. Andrews and
. !amity

A Do-it-yourself classified ads
Save time and money. Go to www.mydallysentinel.com
and click on Classifieds and follow the user-friendly steps
to place your ad.

I. We hold you in our thoughts and memories forever.
2. May God (ladle you in His anns, now and forever.
3. Forever missed. never forgouen. May God hold you in !he palm of
His hand.
4.Thank you .for the wonderful days we shared together. My prayers
wjll be with you until we meet again .
5. The days we shared were sweet. t long to see you again in God 's
heavenly glory.
.
6. Yom courage and bravery still i111pire us all,and the memory of your
smile fills us with joy ard laughter.
7. Though out of sight, you'll forever be in my bean an(! mind.
B.The days may come and go. but the times-. shared will always remain:
9. May God's angels guide you and prote&lt;t you throughout time.
10. Yoo were a light in our life tllat bums forever in our hearts.
It. May God's gra&lt;es,shine over you for all time. ·
12. Yoo are in our thoughMnd praym from (llllming to night and from
yeac to year.

Harrisonville
alumni dinner
planned .

TO RE~IEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN TmS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $8.50 PER USTING • $151F PICTI.JRE.INCLUDED
· Fill oat the fonn below ~d drop otT lo
Tite Daily Sentinel
With' Fondest ~fetimries
Ill Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45769

tl' Do-it-yourself convenience
tl' Easy to use
tl' Upload photos and graphics
· tl' Print and Online options
tl' 7 great packages to choose from

'

·'

DEADUNE: WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 12 Noon

•~l•m.of~--~----------------~-------

....

INumber of selected VeJ&gt;e - - - - - - . , . - - - - - - - - -

1

~­

JOllie of binh

Date of passing - - - - - - -

~rom---------

The Daily Sentinel

I
I

www. mydailysentinel.com

1

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

Make Che~:k Payable lo THE DAILY SENTINEL

L
.

-

.' .

_. ____ ,J

..

Great potential for a healthy life
BY KATHY

MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: I just finished my colleg~ degree.
Getting the career I've
always wanted is a hop, skip
and jump away.· I have
amazing friends and a big
family. But! feel so lost and
alone&gt;. I was raped by a family member when I was 5,
sexually assaulted as a
young girl and raped again
when I was '18. I was dose
to all these men. My father,
the only man I ever trusted ,
died when I was a teenager,
and my mother has never
been a good role model.
My friends and family
are aware of what I've been
through, ,although they
.d on't know the details
because I don't believe
they would understand or
be sympathetic. I feel like
my childhood was stolen
from me, and that my sexuality defines who I am. I've
been in several relationshi~ all of which turned
out badly, and I've regretted every single sexual
encounter I've had.
I know I need hdp. I want
so badly to have a normal
relationship, but I feel
nobody will accept me. I'm

beyond depressed. I was a same day. she only needs
self-mutilator for years and to tip once based on the
have thought about suicide, final bill. She says .she
though I doubt I could actu- should tip individually.
ally do it. I've seen doctors And she always tips 20
and taken sleep aids and p:rcent at restaurants, even
three different types of anti- 1f it's only a bite at a diner.
depressants. When I was
These tips add up: I work
younger, I talked to a psy- as a mechanic. I'd love to
. chiatrist, but I wasn't ready see a person tip the r.erson
to open up. I don't have who changed the 011, the
health insurance and have one who did an alignment,
no idea where to get the tuneup, etc. Whoiscorrect?
kind of help I need. Please -John in N.Y.
tell me there's still hope.Dear John: This is perFinaDy·Ready to Talk
sonal preference. It is perDear Finillly: Of ~ourse missible to tip ot1ce on the
. there is hope, and the fact e,ntire bill because .most
that you are now willing to .salons will divide it up
reach out means you have among those who took care
great potential to finally live of you. However. there is
a healthy life . Contact nothing wrong with tipping
RAINN (rainn.org) at 1- each. person individually.
800-656-HOPE · (1-800- And20percentatadineris
656-4673) and ask for help. perfectly fine if that is her
You will find a community standard. Your girlfriend
of support there , along with likes to be generous and her
any necessary · referrals. tipping is not out of line.
Please call today.
· Unlike car mechanics,
Dear Annie: I have a there is an assumption that "
disagreement with my girl- hairstylists and wait staff
friend. She tips everyone. personnel will be tipped,
At her salon, she tips the . and their base salaries
shampoo girl, manicurist, reflect that. We 'd let her
stylist, masseuse, facialist win this one.
and sometimes the girl
Dear Annie: I would ljke
who brings her a beverage. to .comment on "Annoyed
1· say, since it's all being Friend," who belongs to a
done at one place on the coffe~ club that meets in

orie another's homes. I was
in a group like that.
I was never a freeloader. I
always brought food or a
hostess gift. I stopped when
the bragging parties started
and we suddenly had to plan ·
events to keep up with tbe
Joneses. My work schedule
didn't permit me to compete, so I was ousted. At
first, I was very hurt, but
you know what? I'm
relieved. True friends do not
treat each other that way.
God has brought along
some real friends who
understand ' my circumstances. "Now I'm actually
glad it happened·. I believe
when a door is closed a window is opened. - Moving.
Onward
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
ten by KoJhy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. PlefUe e-moilyour
questions to anniesmail·
buxcomcasl.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 11-8190, Chicago, JL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators SyndicoJe writers
and cartoonists, .visit the·
Creators Syndicate Web .
page at www.creat(lrs.com.

.

Birthday observed

•

. Classified&amp;

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Youth events

announced later by The finally officially opening in
December. From Nt:)Vember
Daily Sentinel.
.
· The new ramp is open 24- 2007 until May 2008, work
hours a day; seven days a was stalled due to continuweek though there are gates ally hi\!h water along the ·
Sargent,. Marie Katlyn- in place to close th¢ ramp.dur- Ohio Rtver.
· .
Sauvage, Cayla Nicole . ing high Water emergencies. . The facility has a . four
Scyoc , Chelsie, Renee · High water plagued ,the lane ramp into the river,
Smith, Tresa Rae Swatzel, construction of ·the ramp including handicap accessiEmily Suzanne Welch, whiCh was supposed · io be ble ramps, 73 car and trailer
Amber Jo White, Katie Ann completed last May though parking spaces. and 14 autoWilfong, Coel Michael " that date was pushed to last mobile spaces including
Williams. ·
!ifovember Wtth the ramp handicapped spaces.

July 10, 1981:Mt.y 5, 1&amp;80

PageA3

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Public meetings

70s. Southwest winds 10 to
15 mph. Chance of rain 70
percent.
Thursday night ...Partly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the mid 50s. Northwest
winds 5 to 10 mph.
1
· Frlday...Panly
sunny.
Highs in tbe mid 70s.
Friday night ...Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the upper 50s.
Saturday•..Showers likely
with a chance of thunderstorms. Some thunderstorms
may produce heavy rainfall.
Highs in the upper 70s.
Chance of rain 70 percent.

Local Stocks

Merchants from Page At

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Ml\)' 13, 2009 ·

tour

Societv

I!

PageA2,

HARRISONVILLE
Plans have been made for
the 79th HarrisonvilleScipio Alumni dinner to be
held on Saturday: May 23.
at 6:30 p.m. at the H.S .
Alumni
Center
near
Harrisonville.
The dinner is $12: children under 12 are $8:
annual dues are $2 plus
the dinner. Roast beef and
ham loaf dinner~. will be
served.
Classes to be honore·d this
year are 1919, 1929, 1939.
1959.
1949
and
Reservations are to be sent
to Joy Wiseman Clark. P.O.
Box 706. Syracuse. Ohio.
45779 or by calling her at
992-3690 or call in~ Harold
Graham at 742-3033 by
May 20 . Ofticers are Donna
Burliridge Wiboo . president: Harold Graham, vice
president: Larry Clark, treasurer: Joy Wiseman Clark.
secretary .

dillla

ounach

Holzer

Here Beth
Shaver, lhird
from left, director
of the Meigs
County Council
on Aging,
accepts a check
from Vickie .
Nottingham,
director of Holzer
Extra Care,
Teresa Reilly,
vice-president of
. Holzer Long Term
Care/Home Care
Division, and ·
Amber Johnson,
Director of
Marketing for
Holzer Long Term
Care/Home Care
Division; The
Meigs Senior
Center was one
of several area
organizations
receiving dona- ·
lions.
submltlcld pttoto

POMEROY - The Meigs Gallipolis. The program pro- finance the program for the grams that they have provid.
Jessica Paige Workman
County
Senior Citizens . vides reassurance and med- year, and allow for dona- ed in the past." said Teresa
.
.
.
.
Center
was
one of several . ication ·reminder phone calls · tions to be made to ,the area Remy, vtce-president · of
. Bonme. and Jerry Ltj\htfoot
Holzer
Long
Term
of Pomeroy; Kellt and recipients 9f donations from to isolated seniors in their Senior Citizens Center.
"There have been signifi· Care/Home Care Division.
Isaac McCarty. of New the Holzer Senior Outreach, homes, a~ong with providing
cant
cuts made to the Senior "When the opportunity came
a
not-for,profit
extension
or
free
of
charge
cleaqing
supHaven, W.Va; Lrnda Rapp
Citizens
Centers from the along to be able to give to
Holzer
Extra
Care.
.
.
plies
aild
a
resource
library
of Pomeroy, Ethan Short of
state
budget,
which has our local Senior Centers, my
Holzer
Senior
Outreach
is
.
for
health
infonmation
that
is
Pomeroy;. Sonny, MafCia,
placed a burden on the area division, could think of no
and J?avtd Shankle of a senior program that is oper- pertinent to local seniors.
The Holzer Celebtity Senior Citizens Centers to better way to utilize the sur'
Fredenck. Md.: and Conard ated solely by the Holzer
Celebrity
Dinner
fundraising
Dinner
held in February, maintain ·the much needed plus funds \!enerated by our
and Thelma Belcher of
in
raised
enough
funds to and appreciated senior pro- Celebrity Dmner Event."
event
held
annually
Pomeroy.
.-----------"-----.,.-------___:---,..------------------------,

HOLZER
.
.

.

CLINIC

.

PLASTIC SURGERY SPECIAL
.

.

DUE TO THE OVERWHELMING
.
RESPONSE , WE ARE
EXTENDING THE
.

50°/o DISCOUNT*
THROUGH THE MONTII OF
MAY!
Breast Enlargel)lent
· Tummy Tuck.
Liposuction
Eyelid Lift
*Must live i_n Athens, Meigs or
Hocking County
-Cannot be combined with any other discount:sN

�OPINION

.The Daily Se~tinel

The Daily Sentinel
111

.PageA4

Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Co11gress shall make 110 law respecting an
establislm~e11t of religiou, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or 11britlging the freedom
,o f speech, or of tlu press; or .tfu ·right of the
people peace11bly to assemble, and to petitio11
the Gouerument for a redress of grievattces.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
•
- - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

.
T 0 DAY
I N H I ST 0 R Y

2009

•
•'

..,
' •'

EDUCATION
.,

..

1

William Edward Lewis

Patricia Marcinko

d

.

Day

Local Briefs·

Benefit breakfast

.Sock hop planned

Open house to celebrate
.
career

Autumn DeMoss

Wilma Yioung ·

Tourismrrom

.ck.follrod
. ·.

.,

A really big show ifgeneration gaps

Letters to the editor are welcome. Thev ·slwuld be less
than 300 "'onis. All/etten are subiect to' editing, must be
. srgned, and mclude address and telephone number. No
unsrgned letters will be p11blished. Lerter.~ should be . in
A TV commentator said
good taste , addressing issues, not_pers01urlities. Letters of
the
·other day that with all
thanks to orga111~atrons and mdit&gt;idua/s will not be acceptthat
was going on in the
ed for publication.
world today, President
Obama had to "keep a lot of
plates spinning.:' Those of
us who stayed home every
Sunday night to watch Ed
Reader Serv1ces
· (UsPs 213-960) · Sullivan
knew exactly what
Correction Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
he
meant.
8ut would anyone
Our main concern in aU stories is to PubHs~ed ev.ery morning, Monday
under
40
get
it? What would
be accurate. lt.yoLI know Of an error through Friday, 111 Court Street,
plate
spinnii1g
mean to
in a story, call the newsrpom at (740) Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-t:lass postag~
992·21 56,
paid at Pomeroy.
today's college freshman?
MaRJber: The ASsoC1ated Press and
Ed Sullivan was the great
the Oh1o Newspaper Association
Our main number Is
divide· between generations.
Poetmaater: Send address correc(740) 992-2156:
If you watched Ed Sullivan
Department extensions are: tions to The Daily Sentinel. P.O. BOx to see the acrobats. th.e
729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Borscht Belt comedians and
News
Subscription Rates
the
tiny little dogs jump
Editor; Charlene Hoeflich. Ext. 12 •
By carrier or motor route
through
their trainer 's
Ropor1er: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
4 weeks .•.••••..•.•..'11.30
hoops, you 'r~ from one genRopor1er: Belh Sergenl, E&lt;t . 13
52 woeka - ...........'128.85
eratton. II you suffered
Dolly ...................50'
through all that to see the
Senior Clllzen 1:11tes
AdvertisinQ
rock band he had on that
Oubltde Sales: Dave Hams, Ext. 1S 26 weeks .............'59.61
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week . you're from another.
Subscribers should remit .in advance
ClosaJCirc.: Judy Clark. Eld. 10
If you're googling Ed
direct to The DaJ1 So&lt;11inOL No sub·
Sullivan right now on your
si::tlption tJy mail permitted in areas
Circulation
where home caiTiel" servfce is avaltabte.
!Phone, well. never mind.
Clrculetlon Man~~gei: Oavtd Lucas,·
There was a time when . if
74().446-2342, Ext . 11
Mall Subscription
you
could imitate Ed's
tnoldo Meigs County
pinched voice and self-hug12 Weeks .. , . ... ...•..'35.26
General Manager
ging
arms at partJe,, vou
26
Weeks
.
.
.
.
.
_
.
70.
70
Charlene Hoeflich. EX1 12
52 Weeks ..........' 140.11
could '"Y almo't anytliing
E-mail:
and get a laugh as long as you
Outside Meigs County
mdsnewsC mydai!ysentinel.com
said the words "Right here
12 Wooks . . . . • . . . . ...'56.55
on
our stage tonight" first. ·
26 Weeks ... .... .. .. .'113.60
Web:
It
was· with those same
52
Weeks
...•.•......
'227.21
www.mydailysefttinel .com
word&gt; that Ed would intro-

Richard Pleasants Newell. Jr., 67, of Point Pleasant,
W.Va., died Monday, May II. 2009, at Cabell-Huntington
HospitaL
·
.
Hts wtfe, Mary McLaughlin Newell survives him.
Funeral will be held at I. p.m. on Friday, May 15,2009,
~
bowler.
at
~row-Hussell Funeral Home in Point Pleasant with bur. _He leaves behind a daug~tl!r, Kimberly Follrod and her
fnend Stacey Shank; two sssters, JoEilen (Donald) Roush ial to fol)ow in Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Visitation will
and Emma Kay (Teriy) Faulks; two brothers, Phillip 'and 1 be! from15-7 p.m. on Thursday.
Dan Follrod; two nephews, Darin Roush and David Follrod · · Online guest registry at www.crowhussellfh.com.
and a niece, Gioa Follrod.
.
Shane Day, Autumn DeMoss and Caden Day
J-le is also su!""ived by his devoted ~ompa!!ion, Rosemary
,
Werry; two chtldren of the heart;Chlp (Canna) We~ and
lenni (Shawn) Durst; grandchildren of the heart: Bnttany
Mary Alice Miller, 88, formerly of Middleport, Ohio
and Ntcliolas D~;~rst, . Kaylee Werry, and Mackenzie and passed away on May \2,2009 at the Laurels Nursing Home
I
S~ane Isaiah Day died suddenly on May II, 2009 in a car Jacob Sellers; and spectal friends: Abe Grueser, Chuck m Columbus; Ohio.
·
Hannahs and Sue Hager.
.
accsdent.
Funeral seryices will be held on Friday at II a.m. at
Interment service under the direction of Anderson A~derson McDaniel Funeral Home in Middleport. Burial
. He w~ the son of Ralph and Retta Day of Pomeroy. He
ts survryed by two brothers, Jack and Bethany Day, McDaniel Funeral Home will be held at the convenience of wrll follow at Le~ Falls Cemetery. Visiting hours will be
Galhpohs, and Jay and Tatum Day, New Haven, W.Va.; sis- the family at Meigs Memory Gardens with Rev. Father on Thursday from 6 to 8 v..m. at the funeral home.
·
ter, Angel Day, Pomeroy; six nephews: Dakota, Nathan, · Walter Heinz officiating.
;,
A complete obituary wsll be.announced.
·Memorial
contributions
may
be
made
to
the
Pomeroy
Bra~ton, Trenton, Trey, . and Coleman; three nieces:
Adnanna, Alexandra, and Ashton; grandparents, Marvin Fire J)epartment, 590 E. Main St., Pomeroy, OH 45769.
and Rhea Bean, MinersvilJs:; and several aunts, uncles , and . An online registry is available at www. andersonmcdaniel.com.
COUSJOS.
.
William Edward "Sleepy" Lewis, 67. of Gallipc;lis, died
He was preceded in death by ·his fiance, Autumn; a son,
Tuesday,
May 12, 2009 at the St. Mary's Medical Cenier.
Caden Day; and grandparents, Frank and Betty Dickens.
He
was
preceded in death ·by his wjfe, Delores Lewis.
Service will be held atll a:m. oitSaturday, May 16,2009
Services
will be I p.m., Friday, May 15, 2009 at the
at the .Anderson McDamel Funeral Home in Pomeroy with
Patricia Faye Mareinko, 68, of Middleport, passed away Willis Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Dickey ChapeL
Pastor Len Powell Officiating. ·
·
on May II, 2009, at her home.
·
Friends may call at the funeral home on Thursday, May 14,
B~al _will f?llow at the Carleton Church Cemetery.
She was born March 24, 1941, in Racine, daughter of the 2009 _from 6-8 P..m.
.· ·
Vtsttallon wtll be held from 2-8 p.m. on Friday at the late ·Everett Roush and Grace Pieree Roush. She retired as
. Visst www.wtlhsfuneralhome.com to send e-mail condofuneral home.
·
·
a ~tary from the Ohio Department of Transportation. lences.
·
An online registry is available by logging onto She .was an actjve member of the Rejoicing Life Church·
www.andersonmcdamel.com.
and. a vo!unteer at the Food Pantry and the Meigs County
Semor Csttzens Center.
· ·
·
. (a eft
She is survived by her husband, Thomas J. Marcinko
.
,
of Re~dsville ; chil~ren: Greg Cundiff of Franklin,
Caden Isaiah Day was born on Nov. 20.2008, and passed Vieton~ Lynn Cundtff of Middleport, Melodi (Bob)
away suddenly on May II, 2009, in his mother's arms dur- Ea$terhng of Jackson, Tenn., and Melissa (Michael)
· ing a car accident.
.
.
. ·
N~wland of Reedsyille;, grandchildren: _Yalerie (Chip)
He is survived by his grandmother Sandra Lee of Racine; Httte, Jason Cundtff, Matthew (Wends) Riffle, Joey · WILKESVILLE - Wilkesville Presbyterian Church will
grandfather, Richard and Sis DeMoss of Rutland· and Easterling and RyanEasterling;.six'great -grandchildren; host a Retay for Life pancake and sausa~e breakfast from
grandparent~. RBJph and Reltli Day of Ponieroy. · ' .
brother, James (1\{arie) . Roush of Johnstown; sisters. 8-10 a.m. Saturday at the Wilkesville Community Center.
· He ts sumved by many aunts, uncles, cousins and great J3:ne (Tim) Conard of Mason, W.Va., and Judy (Bill) Proceeds will go to the Vinton County Relay for Life on
grandparents.
Bsrd. of Racine; and several niece.s; nephews and ~ay 30 at Viqton County High School. Call 669-5646 for
mformatton. .
. ·
He was preceded in death by his mother, Autumn cousms.
.
·
.
~Moss, and father, Shane Day; and great grandfathers, .:
In addition .to her parents, she was preceded in death
Richard Demoss and Louie Lee.
.
.by a daughter, Jennifer M!lrcinko, and three sisters:
Servicewill.beheldatll a.in.onSaturday,May 16,2009 Dorothy Hodge, Dori.s Ann Roush and Loris Isabel
.
.
·
·
.
at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy with . R'Oush:
GALLLIPOLIS ...:.. The Rivercity Singles Chib w.ill host
Pastor Leh Powell officiating.
. Funeral will be held at 1 p.m. on Thursday, May 14, . ~ sock h_op. Saturday from 8 to II p.m. at the Seniior Center
B~al_will f~llow at the Carleton ~hu!'Ch Cemetery.
2009., at Andersop McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy. . m Galhphs'. Charge · is $5. There will be concessions,
V!Sttatton Wlll be from 2 10 8 p.m. Fnday at the funeral
Fnends may eau from 11. a.m. to r p.m. on Thursday at games and prizes.
. .· .
home.
the funeral home. Greg &lt;;:undiff will officiate.
.
An . online registry is .available by logging onto
Mel)1orial donations may be made to the Mei~s
www.andersonmcdaniel.com.
.
, County Cancer Initiative, P,O. Box 85, Pomeroy, Ohio
. 45769.
.
.
bar~ering
A registry is available on-line at wwwlll!ldersonmcdaniel.com.
PARKERSBURG, W.Va . ...:.. A celebration of 50 years of
• barbering
at the same shop honoring Phillip "Joe" Boyles,
Autumn DeMoss died suddenly on Monday, May 11,
.
o
f.Meigs County, will be held M;~y 19 from 10
fonnerly
2009, as the result of a car accident.
.
a.m.
to
3
p.m.
The open house will be at the Man's Place
S~ewas the. daughter of.Saridra Lee and James Phillips,
Barber
Shop.
312
5th Street, Parkersburg, W.Va.
Racll)e, and Rschatd and Sts DeMoss, Rutland:
·
Wilma Frances Young, 80, of Lancaster, passed from this
She is survived by sisters, Ashley and Ariel DeMoss, . life at Rockmill Rehabilitation Center on Monday, May 11,
Po"!eroy; brothers: Brian Brown, Racine,, Rex Phillips, · 2009, surrounded by her family.
·
Racme, and James Carter, Racine; a sister, Brandi and
She was born.Oct. 23; 1928, irt Hockingport, to the late
Page At
Adam Wyatt, Middlepan; sister; .Jessica Anderson, Lon and Rosie Blake: Snider of Hockingport. Ovet the
Syracuse; a brother, Steven Anderson, Rutland; grand. years, she. was a yery hard and devoted worker. She spent
mother, Est~r DeMoss, Middleport; grandmother, Janice many years working at a glass factory known as Lancaster billion and 454,000 jobs to ·bagged with Ohio Magazine
Danner, Racme; grandmother; Wanda Lee, Nonh Carolina; Gl~ss, She also loved to crochet, quilt and read, along with Ohio's ecol!omy in 2007. · for sale on newsstands in
great grandmother, Goldie Ratcliff, Racine; aunts and bemg a devoted mother and grandmother who ·loved her
''This Is peak travel plan· almost 800 stores. ·
uncles: Kathy and Gary Fife, Middleport, Kim and Eddie family very much. ·
·
. · .
ning time for visitors,'' , "A majority of Ohio's visFife, Pomeroy, Karla and Tom Rousll, Racine, Karen and
She is survived by two sons, Lawrence :H. Rood of ·Eylon said. · "We have liOn come from· about 300
Doug Phali~, Pomeroy; uncle, John IIi!~ Teresa DeMoss, Lancaster, ~d Donald W, (Cindy) Rood of Belpre; a assembledanumberofpart· ·miles of Ohio," Eylon said .
Nonh Carohna; aunt, Cmdy and Tom Young; Racine; uncle da,~ghter, Juhe M. (GBIY,) Pete~s ofLancasier; three grand· !lershlps for Ohio's travel "Ohio is well positioned
Terry and ·Bonnie Lee, Texas; and many cousins, friends chtldren: Andrea N. (Bnan)K1mes of Middleport, Eiic M. tndustry to combine our geoaraphically
(within
and extended family. .
.
·
.
Runyon and J. ·(Daniel) Runyon both of .Pomeroy; two dollars and push our mes· aboUt 600 miles of roughly
She was preceded in death by . h~r son, .Caden [)ay; great grandchilW:Cn. Makayla Dlll_lielle and Noah Bradley sages of affordable, h~h· 60 pereent of the US popu~
fi$11cc!, Shane Day; grandfather, Rtchard DeMoss and Kime,s both of Msddleport; and a s1ster, Mary Alice (Butch) value getaway opportunilles lation). ftom a value pergrandfather, Louie Lee. .
·.
·
Samblanet of Navarre; along with miuly naeces, nephews out to consumers in Ohio spective and in terms of the
Service will be held at 11. a.m. on Saturday, May 16, and step:~rllitdchildren.
.
,
.
and adjoining states."
variety of first-class, unique
2009, at the Anderson McDamel Funeral Homem Pomeroy
In aadstion to her parents, she was preceded in death by
Accordil!j! to the Ohio expenences ·the state offer5
with Pa~tor Len Powell officiating.
·
her first husband, Harding A. Rood; her sel'ond husband, Tourism Dsvision, to help to hold our own this year if
Burial will follow at the Carleton Chureh Cemetery.
Warren E. Baker; a grandson, Brad Steven Runyon; two get' the word out about travelers . stay closer to
Visitation will be held from 2-8 p.m. Friday at the funer- brothers, Lawrence Snider and Clifford Snider; and four Ohio's tourism opportuni· home and . seek affordable
al home.
.sisters: Freda Yeater, Benha Gregory, 'Edna Snider and ties, it developed· partner- travel options."
An ~nline registry is available by logging onto Thelma Swiers.
ships with Ohio's 20 Barnes
For those attending the
www.andersonmcdaniel.com.
. Service will· be held at i I a.m., Friday, May 15, 2009 at &amp; · Noble Bookstores and luncheon,
RSVP with
.'
White-Schwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville, with Pastor Ohio Magazine. During Chamber Director Michelle
Ieriy Eaton officiating. Burial will be in the Eden May, Ohio Barnes &amp; Noble Donovan by 4 p.m. on
Cemetery, Reedsville:
·
. · ·
Bookstores are featuring Mo11day at 992-5005 or at
Ja
· Friends may call from 5-8 p.m. Thursday at the funeral Ohio Tourism Month with .mir;helle@ meigscounty-'
··
·
·
·
·
signage and book displays . chamber.com. · · .
Jack E. Follrod, 68, peacefully left this world on May I, home.
You can sign the Qnline guestbook at www.white- including Ohio .traveVgui!fe· .
2009, at his residence at 112 Pleasant Ridge, Pomeroy, after
· '
· books, authors; photogra·
· a lengthy Ulness.
·
· schw~lfuneralhome..com.
'·
phy, history, hooks about
Ohioans
and · more.
fromPag
. e Al
Additionally, each bookstore is holding a series of
events that range from book
Family planning: The pro- Preparedness: The health operation of the agency are author signings to events
R. S. assisted by Steve
Colleen gram is geared to providing department's , preparedness Jim Clifford, Jr., president; created in collaboration with
Swatzel
and
Murphy Smith; registered individuals with compre- plan is under the leadership Gene Jeffers, president pro Ohio travel entities to offer
hensive family planning and of Frank Gorscak, who tern. Dr. James Witherell, bookstore customers a taste
sanitarians.
• Fltll l4fJ' TMMICII ~ ,
Mobile Mammography: related preventi"e health works · closely with Bob -Brenda. Barnhart, and Dave of some· of Ohio's tourism
•II'IM.n ~ · -)'Wr~ lillf·
•10 ............. ~
Three clinics were held with . services. Under the -leader- Byer, Meigs County's Weber. Th11 district advisory attractions and experiences.
~
·111WJ,. Wlllhef &amp; nnt
67 women being screened, ship of Director of Nursing Emergency Manag~ment council is compo$e4 of vilThe
Ohio
Tourism
.coordmator.' lage 1)1.ayors, president of Division also says Ohio.
10 of. which were referred Sherry Wilcox, 177 cli.ents · Agency
for · further diagnostic were seen during 322 visits. · Mobilized readiness to the Meigs County Board of Magazine's May issue
The primary clinic physi- respond to the· health effects Commissioners, and presi- includes a 10-page section
aSsessments.
cian
is
Dr. Wilma of bio-terrorists, natural dis- dents of the township on Ohio tourism opporturtiWIC: The goal of tile proMansfield.
asters, pandemic influenza trostees. Joe Bolin is presi- ties and 11 ,000 copies of
gram is to safeguard the
Denial Clinic: The dental outbreaks, and other health dent of the·council and John Ohio's official 2009 Travel ·
health of low-income
pperates
in emergencies is the goal of
women, infants and children clinic
J'lanner have been polyMusser is secretary.
Middleport
and
about
2,500
the department.
.
up to age 5 who are at nutriMembers of the Board of
tional risk by providing patients were seen by Dr.
Lee
Heid,
DDS.
The
clinic
Health
which oversees the
qutritious foods to supplement diets. In 2008 the operates on a sliding· fee
office had 434 initial certifi- basis charged to patients
·
cations and 1005 re-certifi- and grant money.
Cardiovascular Health:
cations for services. Leann
Cunningham, BSN admin- Since heart disease is a
leading cause of death. with
isters the program.
, Child an~ family health slroke close behind, a carservices: The program is diovascular health program
.
.
designed as an organized is operated through the
community effon to elimi- health department by
&amp;
qate health disparities , Andrew Brumfield, exer-.
improve birth outcomes and cise physiologist. He not
Avenu~, Po~nt
improve the health status of only encourages more exerwomen, infants and chil- cise for better health, but
dren. The clinic saw 67 5 selecting more nutritious
clients; 242 of which were food and beverages as a
for pregnancy testing. The way of living better and
program is administered by lowering the risk of disease.
am ·4:30
Health
Emergency
Connie Little.
·
•

Shane Day

'..

·'

Richard Newell, Jr.

Mary Alice Miller

~AHLER.
,,

Deaths
He was born Juqe II, 1940, the eldest child of E.E.
and Philomena Killinger Follrod, who both preceded
him in death.
Jack was a member of Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
He was a long-time member of the Pomeroy Fire
Department and the Fraternal Order of Eagles Club. as
well as an enthusiastic NASCAR racing fan and an avid

••

'•

The D~ily Sentinel

Obituaries

I'm encouraging all parbe_cause it highlights some- some more .... and may be
en Is and teac hers to rea d
thmg busy parents and raise them a little?" That's
Judy Blume's latest writing.
teachers all too often don't in "Forever," which is clearAnd I'm not alone. Cecile
realize: That book your Iy a pre-teen or teen book (if
Richards. president of the
child is reading is imparting that makes it better _ I'm
Planned
Parenthood
values·, and they m1'ght not not so sure ). "Deente,
· ·•
Kathryn
Federation of America.
be your own. "I first heard however, is for children on a
implores, "Please, let her .
Lopez
.about sex from Judy fourth-grade reading level.
know how much we appreBlume," a fortysometpiitg Would you knowingly hand
date her courage.'' That's
mother of si~ told me imme· your thJTd or fourth grader a
where . Richards and I
diately after I mentioned guide to self-arousal? You
diverge.
·msu 1tmg.
· most espec13
· · II y to Blume's name to her. "'-Aay,
are . when you hand ht'm
'""
J UdY Bl ume · aut hor 0 f the
women who are suffer- perhaps, that's not the situa- "D~enie ." This is the dirty
"SupeArfud~e·• (a hstapllhe in ing because they rejected tion - Blume's not the first little secret th!! Planned
mo~t r merf•candsc doo c ild- mo!herhood and know they time - our culture being as Parenthood world has long
rhen s .ves or eca es now) ended a life in the process.
oversexualized as it is. But· been aware of even if every
as most recenrly penned a
The Blume pitch for Blume remains an unrieces- parent and teacher hasn't.
fundraising
letter
for Planned Parenthood reminds sary presence in children's As one writer on the · RH
~anhne~ Parenthood for me of something that. hap- lives, as a substitute parent Reality Check Web site put.
01 er s Day.
pened last Mother's Day. In , and cheerleader of that sex- it: "When you can't count
''Say thanks this Mother's perhaps.
a misguided ed crazed culture that she on the government, schools ,
Day with a gift that honors attempt at compassion, 1 served as a trailblazer of. or dubiously funded clinics
her courage by making a wanted to highlight a web And · a presence trusted for medically accurate and'
to
Planned site
called . abortion- adults put in children's lives, comprellensive sex educadonation
Parenthood in her name. I ,·hangesyou.win. But the .as if issuing an Imprimatur, tion, you can still count on.
guarantee you that she'll be founder of the site , A Good Housekeeping Seal Judy Blume." .
pleased. I know I would Michaelene
Fredenburg, of Approval. Though freIn her fundraising letter,
b~.'· 'Blume writes.
· talked me out of it. Unlike · quently thought of as the Blume writes that "If you·
Blume continues: ''I'm a Planned Parenthood, I didn 't harmless
author · of are the daughter · whose.
mom, and I'm also a writer have fundraising on my "Superfudge," that spin is mom had the guts to give.,
and an activist. Nothing has mind.! ,imply wanted moth- f1,1dging the reality of Jitdy Y.ou the answers to quesmade me prouder than see- ers who· were gnevtng
· ·
a Blume. Her books are hor- !tons you couldn't qu1'te fig
ing my own children - and pamful
·
choice they made in · mona1 c heerleaders- as ·if ure out how to ask," you.•
really, all young people their lives to be drawn to an auolescents' bodies need the should give to Planned
grow up to be healthy, edu- online. anonymous place 1\elp. In "Forever," Blume is Parenthood. If you are the
cated, and in charge of their where they could dis.:uss right where sbe was in her daughter whose mqm didn'i
bodie&gt; and their lives. That's their reeling~ and seek more · fundraising letter, praising a have "the guts," Blume was
where PlnlliJed Parenthood professional help if . they progressive grandmother probably on your classroom
comes in . There is no orga- · chose to. But it s just too · whose only fault seems to be b00k5h If
be
nization that I know of that painful, Michaelene . said. that she is so devoted to
e - or may your
supports"lllotherhood and all Every day is painful if you Planned Parenthood ·rallies ~:f:nn~~in;~en _ pt&amp;v~:~~
that it means more than regret your abortion, but that she doesn't have time to h ·
Planned Parenthood. That's M. other ,s Day can be too help her granddaughter get tlong,
e mtroduction.
protracted Forller
pohcy
why· J'. m honoring ·moms rasnful. It'S pat·n Fredenburg contraceptiOn
.
from there. debatesaboutsexed.Blume.everywhere with my gift to
nows intimately. And s·o Planned Par·enthood does has had it all covered, since,:,
the Planned Parenthood ti11·s year. here ,·s Planned · prov1'd e young K at herine perhap,s
long before yo
Action Fund today." Critics Parenthood and Judy Blume, with the Pill and makes a
·'
·
ur
are accused of a lack of explot·r,·ng the HallnJark hoi- grap n·•c fi•rsHtme
. scene pos- child's
fourth-grade
teacher·"
was even born.
"compassion" by Richards. iday for political advocacy. sible.
.
But a Mother's Day For fundr,a 1·51·11g'. Alld ac~LISNext . time
.
LopezJs the edi-'·
y
you •re just tor(Kathryn
o' National Revie1&gt;''
fundraiser for the si ngle ing other.s of Iack1'ng co·m- . happy your. dauguter
L
or son OnlineJ (www.nationalrebiggest abortion provider in .passion all the wllt·l·e. ·
·IS read"mg , ·const·der that view.com). She can be conthe . United States. (s·ubs. ,·.I' m ~tefuI'oor th e Blume . your child may be reading, tacted at klopez@nationa/-'
ciized by v_our tax dollars) is fundratsing lett r th · h "C
·--J·--:--------:-~~·~__e_.__o_u_g_.-:-_a_o_:_yo_u_s::._pr_e__ad_:_y_:q::._u_r_le_:g::._s_,_·e_v'..:..·e_w_.c_·o_,m:.._.):..__ _ _~

'l()Oi},

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.eom

•

Getting a read on·your childs literature

Today i&gt;' "
Wednesdafr.
d
. May 13. the 133rd day of 2009.
Th..-ered are, LJL
avs
le
t
111
the ·-vear.
H. hl.·h
•o ay s l.g •g tin History: On May 13. 1918, the first
U.S. airmail stamps. featuring a picture-of a Curtiss JN-4
biplane , were is,ueu to the public with a face value of 24
cents. (On a few of the stamps. the biplane was inadverten;ly ri~]ted upsidel~lown : the ")inverted Jenny" stamp
ms ant Y ecame a co ector s Jtcm.
On this d:•te: In 1607. English colonists arrived by ship at
the sit~ ol what became the Jamestown settlement in
Virginia (the colonists went ashore the next day).
In d1846.· thed Uruted
declared that a state ofwar
· h M States
.
1
a rea
YCXIS!e
1 191
7 1 Wit1 1CXICO.
d h'ld
F
n
.
!tree
s
1ep
1er
c
1 ren near ·atima, Portugal.
r•c,' Dorte(! sec m g 'a ,.•s•on or th e v 1rgm Mary.
·
· h. fi
h
·
·
In 1940 . 111 " •rst 'peec as prune mmister of Britain.
Winston
House of Commons.
"I have
th. t Churchill
t·• b told
bl the
1 ·1
d ·
no 111g o o oer ut oo&lt;. to1. tears an sweat.''
President
DwightDD. Eisenhower
theInSt1954.
L
s
1
A signed
Th into law
· awrence
·Geaway
p ·
" eve dopment
B dct. e musical
h · "Th
amc
opene
on
P ' Y · e apma
. p "d t R h d N' roa way.
d h' ·c p
V
In
1958
.
1ce
res•d en
we e · t
th · 1c1· ar · txonb an d1s Wloe,
b · at,
r spa upon an
e1r 1mousme altere . y rocks
thrown by anti-U.S. demonstrators in Caracas. Venezuela.
In 1968. a one-day general strike took place -in France in
support ofstudent protesters.
, ·
. . In 1981 . ~ope John Paul II was shot and seriously woonded
111 St. Peters Square by Turkish a•sailant Mehmet Ali Agca.
In 1985 , a confrontation between Philadelphia authorities
ami th~ rad1c.al group MOVE ended as police dropped an
explt"•ve onto the group's headqua11ers; II people died in
the r~sulting fire.
In 1994, President Bill Clinton nominated federal appeals.
lut.lge Stel'hen G. Breyer to the U.S . Supreme Court to
replace retmng ·Justtce Harry A. Blackmun.
·
Ten years ago: Russian lawmakers openeQ hearings on
whether Prestdcnt Boris Yeltsin should be impeached. (The
lower chamber of parhan:ent ended up rejecting all ·five
charl'cs ru1sed agamst Yeltsm, including one accusing him of
startmgthe Chechen War.) Pulitz,er Priz~-·winning editor and
colummst Meg Greenfield dted m Washuigt\)n at age 68 . .
. F1ve years ago: Defense Secretary Donald H. Rtimsfeld
v•slled the AbuGhraibprison camp in Iraq. where he insisted the Pe.ntagon. d.td not try to ~o~er up abuses there. During
a campatgn swmg 111 West Vtrgmta, President George W.
Bush smd he !elt '.'dtsgraced" by the images of U.S. soldiers
.abusmg lraqt pnsoners, but reminded his listeners that
act~o'1~ of a handful of Americans should not sully the
nations m1htary. TV anchorman Floyd Kalber died in Burr
R1dge, Ill., at age 79.
,
..
· ,
One year ago: · An embattled Hillary Rodham Clinton
trounced Barack Obama in the West Virginia DemQCratic primary. Seven bombs hit crowded markets and streets outside
Hindu temples in Jaipur, India. killinl? 80. LPGA greatAnnika
Sorenstam announced she would retire at the end of the season. Actor John Phillip Law died in Los Angeles at age 70.
Thought for}oday: '.'I can us.ually judge a·fellow by what
he laughs at. - Wtlson Mtzner. American playwright
(1876-!933).
.

LETTERS·TO THE
EDITOR

Wednesday, May·ta,

VVednesday,Mayt3,2009

an easier way to 'make a liv- . to be on every single week. ·
ing .'' After a few commer- He'd say, "Right here , on
cials for Chevy Corvairs, our stage tonight ..."and out
Esso gas and Marlboro cig- would come a guy in a tuxe-'
. arettes, Ed would introduce do with a bunch of three or.
· a Russian dance troupe that four foot-long skinny pool'
Jim
would· fold their ar1l'~ in an cues·. He'd balance what
Mullen
Ed Sullivan-ish way and looked like.a dinner plate on
then suddenly squat and . top of the stick and give it a.
kick out •one leg and then few quick spins to get if
the other over and over. It · going like a top. He'd wave ·
duce a band of Romanian wa~ all anyone did at recess it back and forth a few'
acrobats who would come at school the next day · times, flick it to .spinning·
out in their circus tights because , as everyone knew faster and 'faster and then se.t
logrolling atop multicol- during the Cold War that if · it, still spinning in a little;:
orcd. 2-foot-high hollow· the Russians could out- holder on a table in front of
cylinders. They'd jump and dance us, they would win. him. Then he'd start anoth-'
tumble for 60 seconds to Or if they got !f~Ore medals er. And another. And anoth-'
calliope music and then at the Olymptcs than we er. The first plate was start-'
they'd jump off a spring did, they would win . Or if ing to wobble, but just at the
board to make a human they got to the moon first. · last moment he'd run over'
tower six people high while they would win. And if the and get it going again. And·
the bottom guy balanced the Commies won, they'd sys- another. What ·was the'
whole !;lrOLIJ' as he stood, · tematically remove Elvis record for plate spinning?
legs 4mverlng , ori two of · Presley and rock 'n' roll Ten? Twelve? Twenty? We'
tile roly-poly cylinders. It music, and they wouldn't let did not practice this the·nexf
must have taken years of us wear blue jeans to day at schooL We just sat in
practice to make something school. They'd also find a .·front of the TV set and won-·
like that happen and a way to ruin our hair. Turns dered where r,ou would
superhuman amount of out, these are all the things acquire a skill hke that and·
effort. This was live televi- our leaders wanted to· do. whether it would get you'
·
"on. Sometill]C' they They kidnapped Elvis for any dates .
(Jim Mullen is the author
couldn't do it the first time, two years and put Chuck
so they'd back up and do it Berry in jail for three. and &lt;&gt;f "lr Takes a Village Idiot'
;1gain. You sat there think- Buddy Holly died in an Complicating the Simple'
ing. " I couldn't do that in a "accident," leaving plenty Life" and "Baby's Fir.ft
million years." But you also of time on Ed's show for Tattoo." You can reach hi11i
thought. "There's got to be plate spinners. They seemed ar jim_mullen@myway.com)

Health.

·

.

Start,..

1lreton L. ~tgan, ~«D.

Dr. Breton L. Morgan is proud
to announce
his return to the practice of
Adult Adolescent Medicine
2907 Jackson
Pleasant, WV

304-675-6492

;

I
1

�Page A6- The Daily Sentinel

I

www.mydailysentinel.com •

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Benoit's doctor, Page 82
Indians face Sox,l'age 86

I

Wednesday, May 13, 2009.

POMEROY -A echadule of upcoming hill~
tehoGI varsity spOrting aventa Involving
teams from Mtlgs and Gal!ia counl.iee.

.I

BY BRYAN WALTERS

SOftball

BWALTEASCMYDAILYTRIBVNE.COM

Melgs, Eastern et · Nelsonville-Ydrk

p.m.

Thu!'ldly

May 14

-Ill
OElk HIU at Eastern, S p.m.
Pike Etstern at Southern, 5 p.m.
GaiUa fpademy at Wa\16fly, 5 p.m.
. South Gallia at Symmes Valley, 5 p.m.
FrJd13f May 15
Track and FHtld
Meigs, Eastern at' Nelsonville· York

(TVC). 4 p.m.

·

Rlyer Valley at South Paint (OVC), 4:30
p.m.

-II

Marietta at Galli~ Academy (SEOAL
DOC continuation). 5 p.m.

Eastern tames
Tomcats, wins
The Lady Eagles ( 14-3, plete. The Green and White out RBI double for a
10-0 TVC Hocking) had tacked on another run in the ·
TVC Hocking
already clinched '' share of sixth and produced a total of
The b1g breakout came in
the 'FVC Hocking crown. nine hits in the decision.
the third. when the )losts sent .title outright ·.· ·
headed into Tuesday night,
For Eastern, it completes nine batters to the plate .

WtdDt'dlf..MQ_13 '

Jackaon at Gallia Academ)l. 5 p.m.
Athens at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Track anc1 Field
(TVC), 4

Lady Eagles go unbeaten in TVC Hocking
TUPPERS PLAINS . Why · share, when you can
keep the whole thing for
yourself?
. Eastern softball was feeling a · little greedy TueSday
night in its Tri-Valley
Conference
Hocking
Division finale a~ainst visiting Trimble, wmnin~ the
league outright and fimshing
unbeaten by postmg a 6-0
victory at Don Jackson
Field.

and the Lady Tomcats (14-5,
8-2 TVC Hocking) were the
only team that could prevent
the hosts from winning outright.
·
· ·
EHS, however, left little
doubt about who the eventual victor would tie, as starter
Kasey Turley limited the
gUests· to just two hits while
Eastern jumped out to a 5-0
edge through three com-

the team's youthful resurrection - there is only one
senior. - this season while
also marking the program's
first TVC Hocking title
since 2004 .
The Lady Eagles struck
first blood in the bottom of
the second as a leadoff sin~le by Allie Rawson turned
mto fruition later when Sami
Cummins delivered a two-

SltUrdQ .Mn.1l

.
SOftball
SoUthern at Eastern, 1 p.m.
South Gallla at Symmes Valley. 1 p.m.
Track end Field
jlalila Academy at Logan iSEOAL). 10

a.m.

Southern boys
fall to Fed Hock
BY

ScOTT WOLFE

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

i

'
~

•...

~

...•"'
,., ·,·'

STEWART - It had all
lhe makings of a championship game and quite a
bit was on the. line. Yes,
second place of the T.V.C.
flocking division rode on
the outcome of Tuesday
night's boys' varsity baseball game between the
Southern Tornadoes and
Federal · Hocking
the
Lancers, who come out on
top of a 5:1 score to claim
the win and . the higher
rank on the league totem
· pole. .
.
· Southern (10-11) threatened big til"e in the first,
but was only able to
squeeze out one run. J.D.
Whittington had a lead off
single, but was caught off
third ·· in a 1-2 pi~k off.
· Brad Brown reached on· a
fielder's · choice
and
advanced on lin · error
moved to second · and
scored when Zach Ash
reached on im ·error. Chris
Holter singled before a fly
out left two. runners· on
base, and left Southern
:With a 1·0 lead.
.
. · The lead was short-hved
as Federal Hocking took a
3-1 advantage in the botfom of the frame. Chad
Campbell walked, Grant
. ~mith was hit with a pitch;

•

Plea~

IH TDmadaes. Bl

1-0

advanta~e .

which resulted in four runs
on three hits, an error and a
walk. Brooke Johnson started the rally by rc~ching on a
leadoff error, then Haylee
Gillian was walked to give
EHS two baserunners with
nobody out.
Brenna Holter followed
with a single to load . the

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWAlTEAS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

TUPPE~S

PLAINS . Why share, when you can
keep the whole thing for
yourself?
· .
Eastern baseball was feeling a little greedy Tuesday
night in its Tri-Valley
Conference
Hocking
Please see Eastem, Bl
Oivision
home
finale
against visitin~ Trimble,
winning the league outright
by posting a 7-1 victory in
Me1gs County.
The Eagles (17-5, 9-0·
Gallla
TVC Hocking) had already
Academy's clinchetl a share of the TVC
Heather
Hocking crown headed into
Ward (5)
Tuesday night. and a win
runs
over the Tomcats would
toward her . assure the hosts of their first
teammates outright title since 2002.
at home
EHS responded by limiting
plate alter
the guests to just two hits,
knocking
while poundin~ out eight
overall in the tnumph.
in the
Eastern never trailed in
game-win·
the contest, jumping out to a ·
ning run
1-0 lead in the f1rst after
Tuesday
Tyler Hendrix led the inning
night
off with a triple. Hendrix
against
Marietta in scored one batter later when
Nick Brannon hit an RBI
the,
sacrifice fly to right.
SEOAL
EHS added to its lead in
Day of
the
third, as Hendrix again
· Champion
led off the frame with a ·
s title
triple. Brannon followed
'. gamem
with a walk, then got himGallipolis.
self caught up in a rundown
SCI that Hendrix ·could score
Bryan
- making it a 2-0 contest
Watters
/photo . after three complete.
. The Eagles' big explosion
came in the fourth, when the
hosts erupted for four &amp;cores
on five hits and two errors
for a 6-0 cushion. Andrew
Benedum
and ··. Kyle
And on top of exercising Connery delivered back-to. those demons , the Angels back one-out doubles,
also bCcame the first softb.all which allowed Benedum to
team since the SEOAL cross home plate for a 3-0
expanded into two divisions edge. ·
·
in 2007 to go unbeaten ( 12Ben Buckley followed
0) throughout the course of with a single. but was
divisional play and then win forced out when Christian
the overall league crown.
Amsbary grounded into a
Fifth-year GAHS coach fielder's choice for the secJ.im Niday was over- ond out of the inning.
whelmed with joy about the Hendrix delivered his third
final outcome afterward. consecutive triple to plate
Then again, for a team ~ith both Connery and Amsbary,

.

WinSEOAL
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSCMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM' ·

GALLIPOLIS - . Now
that was worth the wait. · '
· A(ter waiting four d~ys to
'complete its Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League Day of
Champions title game with
visiting Marietta, the Gallia
Academy softball · team
made the most of. being
patient Tuesday night .:.,..
winning their first SEOAL
crown (n 25 years with a
dramatic 4-3 victory at

Memorial Field:
The S,lue .Angels (18-5)
captured their first outright
SEOAL softball title since
the 1984 campaign, the only
other tiine that GAHS has accomplished that feai in the
'school's illustrious history.
It also marks the first time in
three consecutive years that
the Angels came away with
a victory in an SEOAL Day
of Champions title game.
With the bases loaded 'and
one out in the bottom of the
seventh, ·freshman Heather

aue,down
Ward delivered the heroics
- driving a single io right
field that plated Courtney
Shriver for the game-winning run.
For GAHS, it was a monumental day on many levels.
First and foremost, it
aHowed the Angels to
avenge an 8-1 loss to
Marietta · back in the 2007
DOC at Memorial Field as well as last year's heartbreaking 1-0, eight-inning
loss at Logan in the same
title game.

4-3

Please see Angels, Bl

Please see Eactes, Bl .

·Buffalo blanks White
F~col}S in nine, 2-0
played at .6:00 ptil today on
the Falcons home turf. The
diamond setback snapped
MASON · - A ninth the White Falcons five game
inning error allowed two . winning streak as Wahama
runs to score and break up a ' dropped to 17-3 on the seascoreless contest as visiting son with .Suffalo improving
Buffalo Putnam gained a 2-0 to 21-9 on the. year.
.
extra inning diamond win in
The contest was a pitching
the Regio~ Four Section battle through the first eight ..
One sectiOnal baseball frames with only one base
opener Tuesday evening at runner for either· team
:Wahama. The
exciting advancing past first base.
baseball contest enabled the Buffalo talhed the lone runs ·
Bison to take an early 1-0 of the outing in the top half
lldvantage in the best of of the ninth on a one-out
fhree post-season tourney double by Chris Belcher.
format.
and intentional walk to
: The spirited rivals sent Lewis and a heartbreaking
Jheir respecti~e ace pitc~ers mistake on the part of the
to the mound m the sechon- White Falcons defense.
lll opener with Jerry Berkley
Belcher collected two of
l:lf . Wahama and Jason the Bisons four base bits on
. 1--e~ts of Buff~t;lo hookmg the evenin~ with a pair of
up tJ;I an old fashtoned p1teh- ·doubles w 1th Jared Tucker
!ng duel. ~erkleY. gave .up and Nathan Winterstein
JUSt t.wo hits whtle striki'!g coming up with a single
out.rune throu~ the first stx each Lewis flirted with a
lnmngs before gtvmg way to
: .
h
f'
throug
tve
'Anthony Bond who allowed no-huter
just two hits and fanned five frames . before
Garrett
m three innings of work for Unde.rwOod broke up the no
'he White Falcons . Lewis hu b1d w11h a .bloop smgle
went the distance for wllh one out m the s1xth.
Buffalo and fired a two hit Terry Henry recorded the
~hutout with an amazing 20 Falcons . remaining safety
strikeouts in . the 2-0 extra w1th an mfield. smgle m the
inning
affair. Lewis WHS eighth.
· notched the mound triumph
The game featured 19 diffor the Bison while Bond ferent batters between the
:Was the hard luck loser in two teams with Belcher
relief for the host Bend Area being the lone hitter to
team.
avoid being retired by a
The post-season triumph strike out. All nine Wahama
puts th_e Bison in the drivers. batters went down on strij(es
seat in the best of three at least once in the outing
series between the · two
sc~ools with game two to be Pluse see Waham1. 86
' BY GARY CLARK .

SPORTSCOR~SPONDENT

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�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Lady Lancers J\lexander endS the·
down Southern Silver and Black ~on
Bv ScoTT WOLFE
SPORTS CORRE SPONDE NT
STEWART - Four fiv e
innings the Southern Lady
Tornadoe' (7 - 14) were in
control. but in the sixth
inning the ceding caved in
on what was to become a
9-4 Federal Hocking victory Tuesday night during
TVC Hockmg Division
softball action.
Southern took a 2-0 lead
in the first when Breanna
Taylor singled, Lindsey
Teaford
singled . and
Kelsey Holsinger · reached
on an error. Two walks to
Chelsea Pape and Lynzee
Tucker and a fielderfs
choice on Chelsi Ritchie 's
hit ball brought home two
runs .
In the bottom of the
inning.
Tara
Rus sell
· h
lk
A
d
wa e d . man a Parn s
walked and a stolen base
advanced the runners.
Russell scored on a wild
pitch. then Parrish scored
on a 4-3 ground out by
Jordan Salyers , the score
tied at 2-2 .
•
the lead
Southern retook
in the secon'd when Taylor
again. singled and scored
on a pair of stolen bases

STAFF REPORT
delivered
the
heroics ,
MDSSPORTSCMYCWLVSENTINEL.COM knocking a double to' rightcenter _ which allowed
ALBANY - River Valley Curnutte and Justus 10 score
baseball struck first. but host for the early i-0 edge.
Alexander countered with
Not much else went right
12
unanswered
runs for River Valley who manTuesdaynightduringa 12-2, aged as inany hits in the
six-inning decision in a contest (four) as errors
Division 111 sectional semi- Justus led the guests with
final matchup in Athens two hits followed b
County.
Good · h ' d T
N bly
The lOth-seeded Raiders
'th nc_ an . f r? 0 ·he
(4-20) came to play early on , WI
·one sa e Y eac ·
establishing a 2-0 lead after Goodr!ch had the only ·extra
one half inning of plaY: The base hit for the Rwders.
th ed d S rt
(8
Kyle Lmdner pa~ed the
~r)e~ou~~re~ wiiha aa~~n i~ Spartan~ - who produced
~~~fhJ~~t~=~~r~ut/~h:~~ the first to pull within one, eight hilS overall - With
seventh to preserve the then exploded for three runs tw,::&gt; safelles and four RB!s.
win .
in the third to tum a 2-1 .Jacob Brown wasthe losmg
Taylor led Southern hit- de tic it into a 4-2 advantage. P}tcherfiof ~ord Jo~ RVH~
ring with three singles .
The hosts never looked a ter IV~-p us mnmgs 0
Brooke Hill posted the back from that point, adding work, whii~ Curnutte fimshed
win for Federal Hocking a run in the fifth for a S-2 the . game m rehef With one
and Brooke Gabritsch suf- edge before scoring seven mnmg of work. AHS starter
fered Ihe loss. for Southern . times in the bottom of the Cody Lawson went the dislance for the winning deciSouthern plays in the sixth to wrap up the mercy ·
Sectional Championship rule decision .'AHS advances sion.
Saturday beginning at 1 to the sectional final on
It was the final game. for
p.m . at Eastern High Friday when il travels to semors Curnutte, Goodrich,
School again'st Coach Pam second-seeded Wellston.
Jer.emy Brumfield, and AI
Douthitt's Lady Eagles.
RVHS made a little two- Sbdhngton mthe Silver and
out lightning in the first, as Black.
FED HocK 9, SouTHERN 4
Clayton Curnutte was hit hy
a pitch and Austin Justus At E•ANDER 12, RIVER VAU.EY, 2
Southern 2' 0 oto o
•e 2 added an infield hit to give RValley 200 ooo _ 244
~~ Ho~\1 , L~oo- .,O,'~otsc~ - 9 4 1 the guests two runners on Alexander 103 011 - .12 8 o
the bags. Matt Goodrich w~ _Lawson;LP _Brown.

and a wild pitch . Southern
leading 3-2 .
Southern went up 4 -2 in
the fifth when Teaford
walked and Pape had
Rachel Boso smashed an
RBI single . Federal countered with a single run for
a 4-3 tally. then in tl\e sixth
a senes of three walks and
clutch Lancer hitting broke
the gam~ open in the hosts
favor . In all six runs scored
as Federal surged to a 9-4
lead and eventual win. A
T k
· 1
f
uc cr smg e went
or

Tornadoes

gained an insurance run in
the fifth when Campbell
who had walked, scored on
a Tyler Thompson single.
fromPageBl
It was in this frame that
Southern reli~ver Taylor
Zach Burke singled to load Deem came in with the
the bases and Lance Sharp bases loa\led and got out of
pounded a three-run dou - the inning with just one
ble, the score 3- 1.
run across the plate. The
From that point on the run was charged . to
game stood at a stalemate Cunningham.
for the next four innings .
Federal plated another
Southern starter Kyle run in the sixth when
Cunningham settled down Sharp singled, advanced
and gain the rhythm for a on an error,, and scored on
solid middle fold, while a Bob Anderson single, the
Federal starter Lance score 5-1.
Sharp hand -cuffed the
Southern did draw a
Tornadoes.
walk from Eric Buzzard in
Southern gam'ered a couple the seventh , but two strikescattered singles from Taylor ours thwarted the Southern
Deem, Zach A,sh, Jordan drive as Federal marched
Taylor (two singles) and a on to the S-1 win .
second single from Chris
pitching posted
Holter. but couldn't get the sixFederal
strikeouts
and two
hits to fall in succession as
Sharp rolled through to the walks. Southern pitching
yielded rwo strikeouts and
end of the fourth. Tyler seven
walks.
Thompson mowed Southern
down in order in the fifth and
FED HOCK 5, SOUTHERN 1
Zach Burke closed out the
17 3
game with two strong innings Southern 100 000 0
Fed Hock 300 011 x
573
for Rocky Brunty's Lancers.
Meanwhile.
Federal WP -Sharp· LP- Cunningham.

Eagles
fromPageBl
making it a S-0 game.
Brannon drove Hendrix in
one batter later with 'a single, completing the rally at
6-0.
Trimble plauid its lone
run in ·the top of the fifth
when Kish doubled to start
the inning, then stole third
and scored on a fielder's
choice - making it a 6-1
contest.
Eastern added its final run
of the night in the sixth, as
Connery walked to start the
inning and later scored on a
sacrifice fly by Brannon concluding the game at its ·
six-run outcome.
Titus Pierce was the winning pitcher of record,
allowing zero hits and only
two baserunners over three
innings while striking out
two. Buckley worked the

final four innings of relief.
allowing two hits and zero
walks while fanning three.
Chesser took the loss for
THS , allowing eight hits
and three walks over six
innings whiie striking o\lt
zero. Trimble also had two
errors in the setback, one
more than the hosts.
Hendrix led the Eagles
with three hits, followed by
Brannon, Pierce. Benedum,
Connery and Buckley with
one safety apiece. ·Brannon
led the offense with three
RBis, followed by Hendrix
with two. Kish had both hits
for Trimble.
· Eastern still has one TVC
Hocking road game remaining against Waterford
before league play is completed.

Trimble
Eastern

000 010
101 401

WP- Pierce: LP -

0
k

-

froin Page Bl
bases. then Rawson delivered an RBI single one batter later to make it a 2-0
contest . Turley followed
with the team's third consecutive single. which plated Gillian for a 3-0 edge .
Britney Morrison hit into
a fielder's choice, which
allowed Holter to score for
a 4-0 lead. Cummins, with
out, also grounded into
a fielder's choice - allowing Rawson to score for a 50 't:ushion through three
complete .
.
Then in the sixth, Holter
delivered a two-out single
and scored one batter later
when Rawson' doubled concluding the score at 6-0.
Holter and Rawson both
had three hits in the triumph,
followed
by

one

'

WP -

T\Jifey: L~

Sentinel -l\egis'ter
CLASSIFIED

son was. sentenced to 10 years m pnson Tuesday for Illegally
prescnb~g pn:nkillers and other drulls to patients.
Dr. Phil Astm. 54, had pleaded guilty Jan. 29to a 175-count
fe.:Ieral md1ctment. Prosecutors said. Astm prescnbed
pn:nkillers and other d";lgs to known addicts for y_ears. \hey

saidatleastrwoofAstmspallentsdie~becauseofhislaxover-

s1ghtofwhat med1cmes they were taking.
.
.
The mdictment was unclear about whether Chris Benm!, a
wrestle.r for Stru;nfo~, Conn .-based W?rld . Wrestlil)g
Entertamrnent,orhis WJfe were among 19 pallents mcludeain
the investigation. They were not among the two patients prosecutors said died because of Astin's actions.
"I take fuU responsibility," Astin told the judge Tuesday. "I
am sorry I hurt so many lives: I was thinking that I was looking after my patients."
U.S.DistrictJudgeJackCampsaidtherewasnodoubtAstin
tried to help hundreds of patients at his western Georgia clinic.
But the judge said he could not overlook the fact that at least
two patients died as a result of Astin's misconduct.
'The fact that.rwo ~ople did_ die outweighs other ~onditions
that I must consider,' Camp swd.
A federal investigation found Astin wrote prescriptions without conducting physical exams and sometimes gave patients as
many as four simultaneous prescriptions for Percocet. He also
~scribed "cocktails" of drugs like Percocet Oxycontin
'
'
1'codm' and Adderall ·
"Medical doctors know that after a period of time, if the prescriptions are not working, you get them off," Assistant U.S.
Altoflley John Hom said during the hearing.
Investigators cited one case in which an unidentified female
patient began receiving a combination of drugs that included
Xanax from Astin in 2002. She die&lt;! in June 2007, the same
month authorities discovered the bodies of wrestler Chris
Beno1't , hi s W11e
·~
. suburban AI1anta horne.
and. son .m therr
Police said Benoit stran&amp;led his \\'ife and son and then
hanged himself. A medical examiner' couldn't say whether the
steroids Astin prescribed for Benoit played a role in the deaths.
lowed with the single that allowed Felton to score and
]Jroughtthe title home to the · tie things up at two. Brown
later scored on a wild pitch,
Old French City.
Both teams went scoreless giving Marietta a 3-2 cushthrough the first two frames, ion he~ding into the bottom
then GABS struck first blood of the fifth.
Shriver was walked in that
in the bottom of the thil'd
when back-to-back leadoff home half of the fifth, then
singles by Calyssa Mayes later scored on a bases-loaded
and Alii Saunders gave the walk to Kassie Day that knothosts two on with nobody ted things up at three apiece.
out. Mattie Lanham followed GAHS also left the bases
by reaching on an error; loaded in that at-bat.
Noe - who was the losallowing Mayes to score the
frrst run of the night. .
ing pitcher of record in both
. With one out, Courtney previous SEOAL Day of
Shriver was walked to load Champions contests
the bases, then Amy Noe finally got her first win in
delivered an RBI single the big one, allowing only
allowing Saunders to come three hits ·and four walks
homeward for a 2-0 cushion over seven innings of work
, while striking out six.
after three complete.
The score remained that
Carpenter - who was the
way until the top of the winning pitcher against
fifth, when MHS erupted GAHS in the 2007 DOC for three runs to turn a two- settled for the loss, allowing
'run deficit into a one-run seven hits and five walks
edge. Hutchison was issued over 6.1 innings of work
11 leadoff walk, then Davis while fanning 13.
laid down ll bunt single to
Noe led the offense with
give the guests two on with three hits, followed by
nobody out.
Ward, Calyssa Mayes, Alii
Felton followed by hitting Saunders and Kimber Davis
into a fielder's choice. with one safety apiece.
which loaded the bases. CarJ?enter, Stalter and Davis
Thomson then flied out to had the lone hits for
left, and Hutchison was Marietta.
thrown out at home trying
GALUA ACAOI!I.tY 4,
to score on the tag.
MARIETTA 3
Brown followed with a
fielder's choice to load the Marietta 000 · 030 0 - 3 3 ..
bases with two away, then Gallipolis Q02 010 1 - 4 72
Stalter singled home Davis MARlEnA (13-6): Carpenter ancl
to make it a 2-1 contest. ThOmson.
Milligan was hit by a pitch QALUPOUS (18·5~: Noe and lanham
on the ensuini at-bat, which WP - Noe: l.P - Carpenter.

WEDNESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE
l

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mdtclassi!ie!:':J!ilytrit.me.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
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PLUS YOUB AD tiOW ONLINE ·
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c:.r;~::v. (740) 446·2342 (740) 992·2156 (304) 675~1333
Or Fax To (304) f7H23'
P""..-----,----·-·_ _:o.;.;rF;,;ax;;;,To (740} ..-uooa
Or Fax To (740) 992·2157

Ou.t/4'1(e,
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.in. to 5:0,0 p.m.
HOW TO WRITE AM AD
Sueceslfcll Ads
Should lnducle These Items
To Help Get Response...

«POLICIES«
Ohio Valley
Publishing """""
the right to edt~
reject or cancel any
ad al any lime.
Errors

Must

the firs
ay of publlcatl

• tR-rtad on
nd

Tribun

the

nllnei-Aegloter wll
responsible for
ore than the cost o
he space occupf
y the error and 0111
he first Insertion. W

hall not be liable fo
ny loss or expens
nat results from t

ubllcallon ·
mission

of

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
200

tctures a
have been ·
placed in ads at
the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
·must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked up will be
discarded.

lwaya confldonHat.
·car

ppllea.
All Aeal Eataf
dvertltements 11
· ub]act to !he Federe
air Housing Act o
96$,

This newapape
ccepiS only hoi
anted ads meelln
OE standards.
We

will

no

nowlngty accept an
dVertlsement
I

lolatlonofthelaw.

F1rH 1 1&lt;1l

""'"""""'"""""";;,"""' , Publishing Company)

Other SorriC41
Pet

Cremations,

SOO

Wanted. Houses to clean
&amp; yards to mow, will
clear out hills &amp; creek
tleds. Will also remOve

brush.

Local

references

caii256·12B9

Proleuloool S.rriCio

Set:lin~;1o atlopl
Fun 1()\ ltlg., fin~n~mlly

So!-

cLrru nmrribl &lt;-'flllJ'Ic wrth
nuturmg home ;1\\".lit~ your
tnc•ou~ bab~. E\~nso:s
pard
Kr m · &amp; . RuSii'
lfi i ·IISM-272-8&lt;1:!0 \\ ww.ou,·.
T

Btnin... &amp; Trod•
School
;;;;;;;;Gil"e~lll~po~ll~o~C•;;;'";;;;;r=;;;;
College
(Cafaars Close To Home)
Call Today! 740·446·4367
. 1·800·214-0452
galllpoliecareercollege.edu
Aocredhed Member Act"redit·
lng Council for Independent
CoHegei and Schools 12748

Servlcea .......................................................

Recreational Vehlclea .......................,....... 1000
ATV ... ............................ .............................. 1005
81cyclea .....,...................................... ,.........1010
Boata/Acceaaorlea .................................... 1015
Camper/RVa 6 Trallera ............................. 1020
Motarcyales ... ,........................................... 1026
1

"e"at't ... &amp;....c..'o""iing
o ......................................... 328
H ng
........................... ............
Hon\el~provementl 330

Insurance .................................................... 332
Lawn Servlce ................ ........................ ....... 334

""'othalc/OSea~.ce/Ot-o111rma .................................... 338S36

Want to buy ...............................................1035
Automotlve ................................................ 2000.
Auto Rentalll..eaae..................... - .............. 2005
Auto1 .......................................: .................. 2010
Clnelc/Antlquea ...........................~ ........... 2015
Commerclalllnduatrlal .............................. 2020
Parta 6 Acceuorlea..................................2025
Sport&amp; utlllty ..............................................2030
Truck.......................................................... 203S
UtjiJtY Trellera ............. ,.............................. 2040
Want10buy .................,............................. 2050
Rut S.late Salea ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
CoComndomerola1................................................ 30105
mlnlums ..................... ..................... 301
For Sale by Owner ............., .......................3020
Hauaaa for Sale .........................................3025
Land {Acre.-ge) .. ..:.,................................... 3030'

Financial Servlces .......................................

Money to Lend ......................,.- ••.•••, ......... .... 15
Educatlon ......... .......................... .................. SOO
Business a Trade Schooi ........................... SOS
Instruction &amp; Tralnlng ................. - .............. 510

Equipment1Supplles ................ ~ ..................935
Flea Markets .... ............................................ 940

Fuel 011 CoaiiWoodfGis ............................. 945

02 2
69 1

Want to buy-................................;.................970
Yord Sole ..................................................... 975

- Walton.

•

Storage ....................................................... 3535
Want to Renl .................... ............. ......... - •• 3540
4c.GO

Movers ............................::..........................4010

S.Jea ........................................................... 6048

Computert ...,............................................... !iJ30

6, TRlloiBLE 0

Lanci&gt;(Acrta[ll) ..............:........................ ,.. 3525

Mlscell•neoUa .............................................. 965

Appllonce ..................................................... 910
Auctlons .......................................................915
.Bargain Sasemenl .................. ....................920
Cotlec:tlbtea ..........., ................... ..............,.... 925

Free kittens part
Ca11740.441·063

Persian

Community

Mttcollanoouo

F~- 2 female, 1 male =;;;;;;i;;;i;;;;;i;i;""';;;;;o

has

had

Jet A111'8tion Motora
repaired, new &amp; rebulh
In stock. Call Ron

Evan•1-800-537~9528

shots _._..,.._ _....,_
Mollohan's Carpet "Quality at Low Pnces· 13'6"
Berber carpet, in stock ori
sale Now. Eastern Ave.

Galllt)Oiis to 446·7444

Farm Equipment

Hot

Tub

Outlet,

T""'

-

Quality, Frt!t Dtllwry,
1456 John Deere Baler S.ve SO%. TMd. TUbs.

$8500 Firm Eloc. COJ,&gt;d,
Gehl 10 ft elise mower

6116-326-0m

$6300

!Ike .new.

Deere

Rake $1200 or

i::2~e6welry $65,00

John L.arge

NOW

no

pals

Eledrlc 304-674.()()23 or

House lor sale by owner 304•617•9986
In camp COnley, Pt.
Pleasant, WV 675-6495 N. 3rd •Ave .. In Middle·
or?40-388~ 751
port, 1 br. fuml&amp;hed apt.,
Great
Deal
asking ref. &amp; dep., no pets,
740-992.0165
$225,000 for a 300K
home 3500 Sq. Ft. Bi(l
•· · 1 IC •
S..wtltul
J k
garage, ' wrap around 10n
~...Apt
ea. 52t West·
porch, on 25 acres. 10 wOOd Dr., from $365 to

c.......

~~~;;;Trot~'IM;;;;'!"";;;;;; FR. 2

Ttc:hntCIII T , . . ..... .................................. 6050
Toltt1Ieo/FOdOry ......................................... 6052

1.o-446-3825

lui! baths, central live 3 bedroom, unfur-

no~veh~00~2r&lt;Jc 1~r

contained

Chevy

454

or

~.,;;;;;~~-,.-~
Gr1cloua Living 1 and 2

I6&gt;.000304·8Sl·3901.

power gen· Forsafebyowner
1
ask.JniJ 3br.,2 story modular

home, 304-675-StSt

AMIFWCMIVO
player,
$250 TV &amp; antenna. micro·
wave over 2 burner gas
range top. Lg roll out

$6500.

FeJ9U· "!;;;;;;;Y;iioni~S~o;;;I•'!O'!~ 2003 1()(65 ~ke new. rid·
Perkins
~
d' at 304-6 75_7216
2 lam sale fn 5115 &amp; Sot don ''"'I littte $1100. CaH
leS
•
Sl16 100 Hea0 Ad. Vin- 740-446-6865
He.ve you priced a John ton SR 160 8C)proll 3 mi !200~7,_~~.-.m-.aha'"""-:':vi'"ra-go
Deere tately? You'll be ·~::' Intersection .::, SR 250,
80
m11es
surprised!
out our
rum (R) 00 omi&gt;' 304-675-5::900~.~~~
,_
in"'"to'Y
el son R&lt;l. first (L) ~ Head
www.CAREQ.com.
car- Rei. 1st d!Weway on (A).
michael
E q - Signs postod 4 woy
740..46·2&lt;41 2
. stop a1 554 &amp; 160.

Hoy,

=

fHd. s..d, GnJin Creek

~i;i;;;--~;;;;;'-,:~

Ad

ibell&gt;ncl

~lligo·

tor Jacks) clo1hes, JX)ys.
git!s &amp; J•. ~tis,
40-50 lb wire ' lied baleS womens 18. scrubs, kids
of
straw
for
sale toys. household rtems,
$3,50/bale Call evenings fum•ture,
AC
welder,
....6-2974
toots. May 15 &amp; 16

CleoNiew

Fann:

Clean 6T-14,

304·675-1256
304·937·3241.

~

For sale Massey
son 3 cyl. 135

•
~- . mise, 'baby
· A"'11t&gt;Ie at ~- bedding sat.
ctlael
Equipment
,;;
74;;,0-44;;;5-;;;2,;;4,;;12~"""""""" _7_houses
___
on--W-illo
-w

'!"='o;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
04 Dodge Stratus 95,000
m1 afr cruise. power Wihdow&amp;. runs great. $3500

256-9031

$327
to
$592.
740-992·5064.
Equal
· Hollslng Opportunity

Island

VIew

Motel •·s

$35.00/N~.

or 74Q.446.0090
Pleasant Valley

Apartmeflts is now tak1ng application&amp; tor 2BR, 3BA

AparlmentV'
TownhouMI

o•

,:;256-!!!!!1:;
233~""'""""""~

~
UtilityT......
~~~~~~~

; 6 ft flatbed lrlriler tan dem
a1de
$1300
388·9320 "'045-8303

are

$50.00 Nnt, mullt

P~rty

taken

Monday

through

mow. In by Jun. 1at.
Aural Development

Friday.
from
9am•1pm. Otllce IS tocalecl at 1151 Evergreen
Drive, Point Pleasanl,
WV. 304-675·5806

Currently rent•

lng 1 &amp; 2 BR unlta Spa·
ctous floor pte.ns. randl
&amp; townhome atyle livIng, plav9round &amp; ~$ ·
ketbal! court, on·slte
~undry

facility. 24

hr

e~malnll!t-­
~"~ence . quiet country lO-

catiOn ct0se to

mator

medical
fac•lm.s.
pl\a1'1'Nl1Ciet, grocery
$lore just

OBO

,.....

&amp; 4BA HUO SubS&lt;dlze&lt;l
;;;;;.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,,.,., Apartments. App41catiolls

dl&amp;· Strvlce at Carmichael
monds, MTS COin Shop. Tra11ers
151 2nd Avenue, Galli· 740-446-3825
polis. 4462842
Molal C1, :clu

c.-

Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor
8fld Alverside
"16. In Middleport, from

Mani!la Aidge Ad, · 52 vacancies
Krts more or Jess, sev· 140-446-0406
era! house sites, hay ~~~~--~
"eld &amp; woods $65 000 Modem 1BR apt CaU

Carrru·
Trailers

sets,

--=~"'!:"'~"'!:"'"'!:"'- Boys/g&lt;ris clothes, toys
inHL Sales &amp; 5ervl08 litue to teen. lOts of

740·446·2568.

$560.

·
A
1
10 14
19n Airstream Argossy air,
X
metal bulld""aptatl&lt;· Lin
28 lt. exc. cor.d ready to •ng, 5 mine. trom town.
" ... ~
,, r
go camping
5109,000. 740.7()9-1858
Gallipolis. lhllllles not ln·
.... .. , ,•• f
eluded. No pets allowbd,
· H
$4700. 304-882-3959 or IAJI.I 1t1'A' 10J1t: 0 ~ ~ 1e '" anford ~br .2bi oo1r; &amp;
References required, Secell304-675-oo45.
· · · ·
~;:e- curtty Deposit $600/mo.
ramie floonng. knony pme Call
446·4425
or
1992. SOUthwlnd 30 ft ceilrngs. 2 car aar.ncw heot 446 _3936
or
cell
Motor
Home,fully
seil pump
lf3 acre •skin@ .&amp;4 1_5539

Exereis~r, u~

proot!Tmnt

Jordan

LEASING

S450/mo Landing, 2 &amp; 3BA Avail·
plus deposit. Reference able No .Pets. Tenant
required. 740-446-3870
Responsible for Rent &amp;
2BA

I

Won! 11uy
awning Asking
HOMESTEADER
256-1736
CARGO/CONCESSION
Absolute Top Dollar • sll- AV Service at
TA•ILERS. ·
B+W ver/gold
coins,
any Chlel
""'
GOOSENECK FLATBEO 10014Ki1 8K gold jew· 74().446·3625
$3999. VIEW QUA EN· elry, dental gold, pre
us currency, · RY
TIRE 1'FIAILEA JNVEN· 1935
TRAlLERS.COM

eklarly/dlsabled, ·

EC!ual Housing . Opportu~
to list built to las!. nlty This Institution Is '-"
Equal Oppdftunlty Pro74o-S45-Se2e
'"!!!!!!i!!l!l!!!!m..!!l!!!!
vlder and Employer.
....
LeGrande
B!Yd.
JBR ~;,;;:;:.:;::..;;;;:,;;~Campera RV1 &amp;
brick, 'hardwOOd floors, For tease: large attr:ac-

motor AJC

ass&amp;nment

HO~SEILIVE·

TORY AT
WWWCAAMICHAEL
·
•

the

1i;r

minutes below Gafl1polls.
Big Oak Kitchen to much

all . tor ·-;,;..;;;;;;.;.;;;.;..,....,.."!""'

purchasa

aetas for

$125,000 callers-sere

month. 446·3093

=

Free to good home 5
mon. old male Black Lab,

Is ac·

appl~tlons tor
list· for HUO sub·

ceptlng
walling

May 15th, 112 mt~
Hobby/ Hunt &amp; Span low Creek behind Alllge. 36A 2. bath 5349 per ~'!!'"'~;;,;'!!!""""!""!""

puppies bam 3/4 GUN SHOW a SALE • tor Jacka, rain or shine

kitten,
2
wks · old,
741).742-2713 after Spm

t.ea

sale, Ambrosia,
Wll· 304-675-4995

yard

Tower

Twin Alvei'S

2300 sq. ft. many lm- eldlzed, , 1-BR apartment '
provements,

Apartments/Townhouaea ......................... 3505
Commeralal .................-.,.................... .... ... 3510
Conctomlnlums .......................................... 351S
Houaootor Rent ............................ ,........... 3520

Furniture ...............:..................................... 950
HObby/Hunt &amp; Sporl .................................... 955
Kid 's Corner ................................................. 960

Antlquel ................................... ..............,.....905

rd
::;;;;;;;:;•Y~a;;;;;;So;;;;lo~""!'"

Pots

VALLEY
Syttem
STOCK
TRA.li:.EAS, tal'(l!y
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP- 304-675·6679
MENT
TRAILERS,
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
To

Rentilla ........ ..................... .............. ,••.•••.••••4015
S.lea .......................... .......................... ....... .020
Suppllea ........................................ ............. 4025
Won! to Buy ............................................... 4D30
Reaort Property .............. ........................... 6000
Resort ProP9rtv tor ule ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent .... .. ......... ............ 5050
Employment ............. .......................... .... ....6000
Accountlng/Fin~~nclal ...... ~ ...................... .. 6002
Admlnl&amp;tratlveJProlesalonat .....................6004
Caah..riCJtrk ...................................... ....... 60Q6.
ChlldiE.Iderty C..re ............... ...................... 6008
Cl~,lcal ...."............................. ...................... 8010
ConstrucUan ......... ..................................... 6012
Driver-a &amp; Deliyery ..................................... 601•
Edue~~Uon ...................................................6016
ElectrtcarJ Plumll;alng ..................................~6018
Emptoyment·rkgenclee ............... ~...... ..... ... &amp;020
Entertalnmltf1t ..................... ....................... 6022
FOOd Servtceo ............................. :..............&amp;024
GO'Iftrnment l Fedenll Jobs .................... 6026
Help •nted-- Generll .................................. 6028
Law Enlorcetnent ...................................... 6030
Mllntenanca/Donleatlc ............................. 6032
Mlnagement/Supervlaary ........................ 1034
Mtch.nlcs ...... ,, ............. ............................. 6036
Medlctrt ..........•... .......................................... 6038
Muslc•l ....................................................... 6040
Part-T1111tt-Tempor•rtea ....~ ........................ 6042
R11teuranta ............................................. .. 6044

Lessons ............. ,.................:........................ 515
Personal ....................................................... $20
Animals ... .......... .......... ........................ ......... 600
Animal Supplies ......... ........................ .~ ...... 60S
HOI'Ms .............. ......................................... ... 610
Llves,ock.......................................... ............ 615
Pets ............................................................... 620
Want to bu'f ..................................................625
Agricultura .......... - ....................................... 700
Fafn1 Equlpment .......................................... 705,
Garden &amp; Produce.......................................710
H1y, Feed, seed. Grain ............................... 715
Hunting a ~nd ........................................... 720
Want to bu, ..................................................725
Merchendlsa ............ ...... ............ .................. 900

Fo Sale

H

~;:;;;;~~~~;;;;:;;;;;:;;~=;2009;;;;b;y;N;E;A;,!;"";. :;;;=.;;;..,;;"';;;;~'.;;;;~
..
3 bedroom, 2 run bath,

WlOit ... :........................................................ ~~

405 Lota
Manuteclured
Houalng ............,... .............
.... .........................................................400S.

lnouranoe .................................................... 410

~

www.comlcs.com

~
$14,5000 740-446-9383
Riding Lawn Mower Hke Cruiser traveJ trailar wf
Land (AGMgeJ
new.
Ask
lor
Jr. queen bed up front light
EBY,
·tNTEGRITY, ~740-~2;:.56~·1;;_i02~~~~ we•ght, root mount AJC tn Putnam County apKIEFER BUILT,
Weider Pro 4950 W&amp;~~'&gt;ht unn.
gas . fumace, prox. 2 112 mJies out

Plu:~lni.ie~,·;it;ai:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::340 R:~t~:.::Re0i8i8::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::3sQO

Professional SerYicn ................................. 342
Rapalrs ........................................................ . 344
Rooflng ........................... ,.............................346
Security ....................... ................................. 348
TOle/Accounting .. ,.. ,, .................................... 350
TraveL/Entertainment ............................... ... 352
Flnanchll ................................................... ....400

~

S-1~

0

Anrm.rls

No1loeo ......................................................... 225 Other ..........................................................1030

P41raonata ....................... .... .......... ................ 230
Wanted .................. ,..................................... 235
300
AppllanceServlce ....................................... 302
Automotlve ............. ...... ............................... 304
B 11 1 M ...r 1
306
u d ng ate,.a s ....................... ........- ......
Bualn.. l ................................. ..................... 308
Catarlng ... ............... ......................................3'10
Chlld!Eiderly Care ....................................... 312
Computera •.. ,..... .......................................... 314

..1
~
·;:

Free
GOU

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Legals ........ ............. ....... ............................... 100
Announcamanta .......................................... 200
Blrthaay/Annlversary ... ............................... 205
. Happy Ada.................................................... 210
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
MamoryiThlnk You ..................................... 220

D

Educa1 rol'

rtiOther !S walker father Marietta, OH • Washing· RACO Scholarship Yard
unknown 256-1289
ton County Fairgrounds. Sale at S!ar Mitl Park,
Racine on May 12·13
Uvos!odc
M1n1 Oacllshuncls CKC Sat &amp; Sun May 16&amp;17
1
9 4 nd M 14
525
1-888-582-3345
=:'::"""~~;;;;;;;~~ reg · 5 shorl Mired $300 Adm $4
S'tbls
· rom
• a
ay
Ptnl mmlature stalliOn 1 long haired. $350 1S1 74[)..667·0412
from 9·2pm. May 14
~~~--~~= $200080 256-1233
shots
&amp;
wormed. ~-..,.----,~ clothing $1 a bag and
SEPTIC
PUMPING
3SB-844S or 645 _2396 Remlngton
1100, other
lleme
one-half
Gallla
Co
OH
and Boar goats for sale. 14 may leave message
cantrlever rifled barrel, price. Clothing, toys~ gut
Mason eo. wv Flon babies (1 female 13 ~~~~~-~ scope, $550. Highpoint Items,
craft
supplies,
E"ans . Jackson,· OH
45 acp
$150. Knight shoes,
fwmiMe, yard
~
. •
•
Disc
50
cal
$300: items,
antique wicker
llV"
male. 740·256.....36 1
lull
Cocker
blOOded
Spaniel
buff puppies
color 7 740..256-1739
settee, . tots of misc.
weeks old. 388·0401
Thanks for
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIALSECURITVSSI
No Fee Unless We Wml

Pononolo

I 1I I

Call

740·446-3745

~n~~lal.. ................- ................................... ~=

12 2
781

. l :/ l

M...,Talond

rlll.i('llllot"'ruli!t.,o•n
8 537 1528
~~~~~~~~==~~~:=~~-~~~=~_:~m~al~o~s):
, ~4~ad~u~l1s~a~ll~fe-

~

Apartrn*"'&gt;/

. Townhou111

kllncarlyle@comcasl.nel

Lost· Black Lab w/wh;te 37 year old stay at home NOTICE Borrow. $man.
paws/chest 50~ has un- · Mom will pmvide child Contact the Ohio · Oivlderblte, 740-645-0299
care. Summer full of sion of Financial lnstituplanned aclivJties. Call lions OH•ca or Consumer
Notiooo
740·367·0536
for
an Affa1rs BI;FORE you refl·
Interview
nance your home or ob·
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'"' taln a loan. BEWARE of
PUBLISHING CO. recrequests for any large
ommends that you do Hol"''te I...,I'Ovtlmenb
advance
payments of
business with people you
tees or insurance. Call
know, and NOT to send
the Off\CEI of consumer
money through the mail
Baaement
Affiars
toll
free
at
Waterproofing
unI1I you have 1nves11ga11-866-278
~'3 10 loarn
~ 1
Uncondltronalllfetlme
-vvv
I1'19the Ont~r
ng.
· It the mortgage broker or
guarantee Local refer·
ences furnrshed. Ealab·
lender Is properly Hlished 1975 Call 24 Hrs
cens&amp;d. {This •s a public
740·446-0870, Rogers
servrce
announcement
Basement Waterproofing. from the OhiO Valley

Box number ads ar
rate

O.ild I Elderly Caro

Loot &amp; Found

dvertlsement.
orrecllons wtll
ado In tha fir
vellable edition.

Currenl

4 00

Anno unccnu:nls

DomeatlcafJanltortat ... ............... ......... ........ 318
Eleclrlcal ... ............................................ ....... 320

4

Now you con hove borders and orophlcs
11..1o
added toyourelossifled ads
f,;~
.m
Borders$3.00/perad
I!
Graphics SOC for small
s1.00 for Iaroe

Noon 2
PriOr 'to

Controotora.................................................. 316 Vono ........,.......................:........................... 2045

Chesser.

000 0 001 k -

~ribunt-

. NEWNAN , Ga. (AP) -: The pe.rso!W doctor .to a profes-

.

Tnmble 000
Eastern 014

www.mydallysentlnel.c:om

sio!Wwrestlerwhokilledhunse!f,hi~wifeandtherr7-year-old

Cummins with two aild and
Turley with one . Cummins
and Rawson both led EHS
with two RB!s. while the
duo of Turley and Morrison
added one RBI each .
Sierra Lenigar had both
·hits for the Lady Tomcats ,
who also committed two
errors in the setback . EHS
committed only one miscue.
Kaitlyn Walton was the losing pitcher of record. allowing two walks and striking
out nine over ~x innings.
Turley was the winning
pitcher of record, allowing
three walks and fanning a
dozen over seven frames . It
was also' Senior Night for
Hope Bland, the Lady
Eagl~s· lone upperclassmen .
EASTERN

Wednesday; May 13r 2009

Wrestler Bent?it's ~octor
gets 10 years m P.nson

EASTERN 7, TR!IoiBLE 1

.

Eastern

Angels

adding a 2009 to our softball
banner in the gynmasium."·
The game - which origifromPageBI
·nally started on Fri.day
before ,lightning halted
things
...., resumed in the top
three SEOA.L South titles, a
27-game SEOAL South of the sixth with the score
winning streak and a com- tied at three.
Hutchison led the inning
bined 35-1 mark in SEOAL
South play, this result was off for MHS by reaching
safely on an error, but Davis
long overdue.
"We've waited four days grounded. into a 1-3 double
for this. Heck, we've waited play in the next at-bat to vil'three years for this and the .tuall y ~top any momentum
wait was worth every single during that frame. GAHS
second," Niday commented. also had a baserunner reach
on an error in the sixth, but
"I couldn't be more proud
of these kids· and the work Mattie Lanham was left
they have put in to get to stranded at second base.
Things really got tense in
this point. r can' t really say the top of tHe seventh, as
anything else rightnow,.l'm Brown reached on an error
just very happy for this and Stalter followed with a
group and what they have walk to give the guests two
accomplished today."
on with one down. Milligan
Niday was also very com- struck out one batter later
plementary of the Lady for the second out, then
Tigers (13-6) on a very Brown was caught stealing
well-played contest.
at third to wrap up. the
"We knew what we had to Marietta half of that frame:
do against Marietta. Layne , Then in the bottom of the
(Carpenter) is a tremendous seventh, GAHS went to
pitcher and they are a very work against Carpenter.
solid softball team all the Shriver was issued a leadoff
. way around, so we needed walk, then Amy Noe singled
to execute and make big to give the hosts runners on
pl~ys when the opportunity the corners with nobody
was there ...: and that's what out.
we did," Niday said. "They
Brittyn Saunders was
were definitely a worthy issued an intentional pass
opponent ·and if they would one batter later, loading the
have come out on top, we'd bases with the winning run
have been congratulating standing only 60 feet away.
them on a league title. But,
Cl\l'jl\:nter battled back to
as it went. we came up with strike out Kassie Day for
the big plays and we are the first out, but Ward fol-

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

m l l'lut~

away from other mt.JOt
shOpp4ng

tn the area

HoNyauckitc Hma

ApM1.mtatl
266 Colonial Drive 41 113

Bidwell. Oh1o 4561-4

7..cJ-«6.o33-44
orlice H01.1ra M, W. F
9A.M · SPM

Spflclous

seconc11third

apt oveOOOIUnQ
GaiMpohs Cny ~art&lt; oncl
floOr

R111er. L R. den,
Kilchen-dining area

lrg.
With

ell new appliances
tupOoards. 3 BR,

&amp;

2.

batr'IS,

laundry
area
$900 per month. Can
446·2325 or ""6-4425

Tara

TownhOUSe

Apartments • 2BR, 1.5
beth, back petio, pool,

ptayground. (trash, sewage.

$425/rtnt,

water

pel.)

$425/sec;:.

&lt;tetJ. cau 740-645-8599

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentlnel.com
· CondominiumJ

Help Wanted. Ge~llnll

Al~er

front 3br 2 full
basement, water
ancJ sewer pd. Central
AC . $600 sec, d"ll $600

Sales rep needed to sell

baths,

Cable TV &amp; relaled services in the P!. Ple~sant.
Gallipolis areas.
Safes

rent. 740-446-3481

exp.

training.

HoU.oo For Rent
'&gt;IW mo:

preferred.

Great

Wednesday, May 13, 2009
ALLEYOOP

.,

www.mydailyaentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Paid

Earning

Potenttaf. 304-476·2169.

4 bed. J · bath. Appalachian TJre PrQd..

R(po' ~~~ down, L5 uets, Inc.
IN .\PR J for lh l i~5 Is currenU y seeking an
l!W (,:!0-41,146 I: XIW27
inSide retail sales person
-~~--~~~ for our P1. Pleasant WV
2
bedroom
$350/mo location. Experience pre$350fdep water &amp; Jrash !erred,• job benelits inpaid Pets Wllh wtiting elude 401k, health insur:
permission.
Phone aoce and paid vacations
740-245-5671
a,re · also
a vailable.

I

lbn~

~ ar~ .

Available Fall 2009

at the Rio Grande Meigs Center· Pomeroy

PIWir
Application Deadline:
June 1, 2009

. Clll740.$92.1880 or

l aOO Zll7201, ext.7425 or

• •rio.edu/admisslons
~ far 111011! inroullidion

NOW OPEN .

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

Hubbards Greenhouse
Hours: Mon •..s;-1. 9-S, Sun. Closed

,... ,,_,•• 10.
~

4000

Local Contractor

740·367•0544
Free Estimates

2 Br water and trash Included . No pets. AI John-

conservalive causes.
influentialpolitJcal
leaders and interest ·
gmups.

son 's MoOile Home Park.

i Hiring ALL ShiftS

Caii740-+645-0S06

1

2 bedroom 2 bath trailer
for rent N1ce &amp; clean,
de-

-1_

Bonuses
1 Onsite Doctor
Complete Benefits
1

For rent- 3br. aU elec, all
appl. included lg. deck &amp;
big yard 304-812-7214.

NewGaragos
Eioctrlcal &amp;
Plumbing
Roofing S Gutters
• Vinyl Siding S
· Painting
• PatiO and Porch

Weekly Pay ,&amp;

Package
FAEE NAA

membership
Call NOW ta schedule

your Interview!

TRUCKING
Oumptruck
•
serv1ce

South

.

• Q6 4
.AK 75 t 2
t A

Hours
7:00 am ·8:00pm

•

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION
Pomeroy, Ohio
Commercial •

We H aul G ravel,

Re•identlal

Composi , Top Soil
Call

Walt or Sandy

740-992-3220
or

7400' 591-3726

•.

co.

2.••

South

•
•

-•
"

Johnson's Tree

Ext. 2311

Country living 3, 4, &amp; 5
bedrooms. Owner w111 finance. Can today tor pre-

Apply online:

992·6215
740-!)9 1·0195

Service
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Insured, l"ree

Pomeroy, OhiO

30 Yl• :n-; local bpewnrc

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

' (740) 992-5009
•'
Cus1om HOme Building •,
•,
Steel Frame _Bui ldings ••
. Building. Remodeling
General re pair
w.ww .bankscdb.eom·

,,,,••

Estirputes, 20yrs Elp.
740-441-9387

Full
time
FIJLLY INSIJREO
Rick Johnsun·Owner,. ·
(866)2 15·5~74
service/cleaning· position
::-~-':"':'~""':~':':' available in . the Mason 1"'"--~~ ~~-,
Country living- 3-5BA, COunty
area.
Hours GRAND OPENING
2·3 BA on property. - 11:30am-8:00 pm Mon·
Cheater Tire
Many floor plansl Easy dayFriday_
call
, Center &amp;
Financing! We own the 304·529-7378 or loll tree
Total Auto
Seamless Gutters
beink.
Call
todayl 888-305-7378 for · more
Tranlm..alon
IRc&gt;olii r&lt;Q, Siding, Gutters
866·21 s-sn4
details.
Repair
Insured &amp; Bonded
1
740·.653·9657
Fnr )ale: 14x 72 IY J7 2br.. 2 ""'"""""",;""",;"""""
l!a.. mohile
hum{"
Management I
•• your check
Su-oviiory
·
1-34 14 ·67~-:~ 1~ 1
,.-eng Ine. II ght on?

...

Harclwoo- cablne&amp;rr And Furnlilre

i
I

BARNEY

STII.L

•'

GOSSIPIN'

Sheriff Sates
Case Number DBCV096
Ohio Valley Sank
Plaintiff
vs
J.emes R &amp; Kristin C.
Acree el al
Defenda nts
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuance of an
order of sale to ,me dl·
rected from sllid court
· In the .above entitled
action, I will expose -to
sale at public auction
on lhe front steps of
the Meigs County
Court House on Friday,
M
t
ay .29, 2009 a 10 a.m.,
I ld d lh f II
0 sa
ay, e 0 OW·
ing described real es·

Public Notice
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Cltlf1nanclal, Inc.
Plaintiff

vs
· (De
Franklin D Gheen

ceased) et· al
•
·
Defendants

Case No. 08CV130

Judge

Ste~hen

Crowe
LEGAL.NOTJCE
iRn
Un

· •

c-

thence across.said lot
to the place of begin·
ning.
Being part of lhe property by deed reeordod
In Vol. 139 page 52S
Meigs County Oeed
Records.
The defendanl named
above Is required to an-swer the Complaint
wllhln twenty-eight (28)
days after the last pub·
h
llcatlon of I Is legal notlce on Nov. 26, 2008.
·
Thisl•gal notice will be
published once a week
for six successive
weeks

"The Proctorville
Financial institution In
Di fference··
· Ath ens County seeks e•·
$ 1 and a deed is all you
pen6nced lender manneed to own vour dream ager. · Primary respOr'lslhome. Call Now!
bilities include:
Freedom H9mes
• Supervist;J and man"age
~~B~B:;B·~5~65~·0ii1~67i:::~ all branch ·operations, in~
eluding· supervision and
Coaching tor four em·
ployees
• Make and serv~e mort·
gage, commercial, and
AccounNng Finandol installment loans
Accountant :
Full-time ' Facilitate the opening

I

bllsy ac· of new depostt accounts
counting office In Galllpo· • Execute Ousin ess de·
.
lis for Immediate
employ- velopment strategies, in·
eluding the ehl"lancement

position

with

ment_. Accounting degree of customer relationships
via outbound calling and
cominunity outreach programs in the branch marke1area
·
ently
h strong allen· The preferred candidate
lioo IO e.tail. Please is a busine$8 professend resume and rater- Slonal who ·is self-mOtiences to
. .
. t I@
vated and commltte.d to
ga111po11saccoun an
workin~
effectively with
gmail.ceim
senior maoagement, the
or mail to CLA 101, PO Board. Qt Directors and
Box 469, Gallipoli s, OH employees under hislher
~458,..,31"""""'""'""'""'~ management
Salary
;;;:
commensurate with ellEducation
perience.
To apply, sent letter orVACANCV: H.S. SCI·
infereSI and resume lo·
ENCE INSTRUCTOR
PO
Valid Ohio Science certi· Lender Position,
Bo~
ficalion reqllired. CON- 4B47, Athens, Oh ·45701
TACT:
by · Friday May 15, 2009.
Gal!ia·Jackson.Vinton
Equal .Opportunity Em,
JVSD (7401 245·5334, ;P,•o.,ye.,r=.""'""'""'""'""
~E!i'l!!.2!;0!!1..;E!!E!!0~":"'""'"7 Mochanico
"
.:.H.;e~lp"W~a;im.~d"·"G"eno;;i;;ra;;;l Service Techn~ian posi·
Oeuvery!Warehouse per· tion available for diesel
d d 1 11 •- 1 and hydraulic.s. Ex~ri'
son nee e ' u ltme, IT!- once·
necess~ary.
mediate opening, must
have good driving re· Health/Retirement
&amp;
A
.,
1 F
Benel&lt;.ls. Fa• resume to
cord. pply•Ll esty e ur·
niture 856 Tl"llrd Ave. 740·446-9 104 or e-mail
to LLC@ CAREO.COM
Gellipolrs, 9:30·5:00 No

and e•perience reQwed.
Must have good organization~s
kills and the
a~ilify
"' lndepend-

ownhelrs, lhede·
vlsees, legatees, ex·
e c u t 0 r 8 '
administrators, and 88· (4) 29 .(5) 13
signs of Franklin D.
'
'
Gheen, and lhe un·
known guardians of
.
Public No~ce
tate:
minor andlor incompe~
EXHIBIT A
tant heirs of Franklin PUBLIC NOTICE
Situated In the County D. Gheen, will lake no- NOTICE: Is hereby
C)f MeJgs, In the State of tlce that on May 29 • given that on Saturday,
Ohio andlntheVIIIaga 200 9, CIIIFinanclal, lnc. May 16,2009 at tO:OO
ol Middleport:
flied Its
a.m., a public sale will
Being all of Lot No. Complaint In lhe Court be held at 211 W. Sec·
Twelve (12) In the Orlg· ol Common Pleas, ond St., Pomoray,
lnai Pial and Survey of Me_
igs County, Ohio, Ohio. The . Fartne.rs
the Village of Middle.. Case No. 08 CV. 130. Bank an" Savings
part, Meigs County, Tha oblect of, and de· Company Is selling for
OhiO, said , Lot No. mend .for relief in, the cash In hand or ·cert,_..
TWelve (12) being on Comp,alnt Ia to lore- fled check the follow·
the East side of Second closet he lien of plain· . ·lng collateral:
Stroot between Walnut lift&amp; mortgaga recorded 1996
Chev
Blllzer
and Coal Streets In upontharealastatede· IGNOT13WOT2279B12 ·
said Village, and for a scribed bel~w and In 2005 Honda Civic
mara dellnlle relerence which plaintiff alleges I HGES16385~003968
Ia hereby' made to the that the foregoing de· The Farmers Bank and
fendant has or claims
Plat ol the Survey of
•
.
Savlnga
Company,
the same.
to have an Interest:
Pomeroy, Ohio, reSituated in the Town
Baing the same prop·
• servlil the right to bid
orty conveyad lo by ship 01 Salisbury, at this sale, and Ia wHhElls Harry to Maude Meigs Counly, State of dew the above collet·
Ohio ·
Phone Calls
Ryan by deed dated PARCEL NO 1,
oral prior to sale.
May 31 , 1935, and
, • ·
Further, The Farmers
recorded In book 139 ol Situated &lt;n the north Bank and Savings
· ATTENTION
the Deed Records of part of that. p~ut of 100 Company reserves tha · Local compan~ w/ FT &amp;
Meigs County, Ohio, al acre Lot No. 157 which rightto relect any or all PT posllions rn ,our cus·
Page 482.
lies east of and adJoin· bids submitted.
tamer service de~artBeirlg the same Real ing Section 29 • Town 1· The above described ment. Gompany tramlng
Estate conveyed lo Lll· Range 13 in Salisbury collateral will be sold provide, must. be e. HS
nan Louise Cowie by Township,
Meigs "as Is-where Is'', wHh graduate. FT pos1t1~na
Lewis E. Burford by County: described 11 no exprelled or lm· $16 per hr. For tntervtew
died recorded In Deed follows.
plied warronty given.
calf 866·339·7797
Book t 70 Page 40 ol Commencing at the For further Information
the Meigs County Deed southeast comer of a or for an appointment Clean up, packing assisR.cords.
lot deeded by V.B. Ho,-.. to Inspect collateral, tant for
move out.
Reference Deed: VOl· 1on
and
Marcus prior to lale date con- ~7~40~-2~45 -~7:288
':"""":-"!""o::­
27
• tact Cyndie or Ken at AVON! All Areasl To Buy
ume 297, Page 299, Bosworth, May
Molgs County Oeed . 1 ~ 6 4 t o Anthony Rob· 992·2136.
or Sell Shirley Spears
Records. Auditor 's Par· "thon,
lh
(5) 13, 14, 15
304-675· 1429
26 112
eel No. ts-onaa.ooo . once sou
SubJect to all leasea, deg. w'st along the - - - - , - - - - eaaemenls and rights· north line of lhe street,
Public Notice
af·woy olrocord.
207 feet : thence south - - - - - - - PARCEL
NUMBER · 26 ll2 deg , wett along Public Notice
·
' the north llna of said In accordance with lite
1501188000
PROPERTY AOoRESS : street aforesaid, 30 provisions of the lnter·
244 North Second Av· feet; thence north 25 nal Revenue Coda, .the
onue Middleport, OH deg. west to 1 point 30 annual report of the
45760
foot frorl\ tho not1hwest Roger Parker Long
Current Owner: James comer of lot owed by Memorial Trust for the
R. Acf"M Jr. &amp; Kri stin C. Dennis Morrow;
period ending Decem·
Acree
thence east 3~ leet to ber 31 , 2008 , has been
Praperty at : 244 North Oennls Mor~w s north- prepared by Harold
west comer' thence Roger &amp; Delores Jean
Second Ave.
Middleport, Ohio 45760 along t~ e weat .llne of Long, TrusiHs. The anPrior Deed References : Morrow 1 lot to south· nual report Ia available
Volume 297, Pogo 299 west comer of same, lor InspeCtion by any
Apprai sed at $90,000 a n~ to the north line of citi zen during normal
Terms of Sale: Cannot sa•d street aforesaid, hours within 180 days ,
be said for less than and being premises Iron) the dote ol this
2J3rda of the appraised conveyed by deed notice at the home of
valuo. 10% down on r ecordod In Vol. 71 Harold Rogoi &amp; Deday of sale, cash or page 89 Meigs County lores Jean Long,. 581
certified c heck, bal· Deed Recorda.
4th Avenue, Mlddlaonce due on confirm&amp;- PARCEL NO. 2'
port Ohio 45760 (740)
Tho easterly holt of the 992 4t 5 · ·
flon of sale.
Tho appraisal did not following
doocrlbed (5) 13
.
Include an Interior ex- r eal estate:
omlnollon of the house. Baing a part,of Loti 57
Robert
E
B811fle In Bosworth s Addition
Public Notice
Molgs Cou~ty Sheriff ' to the Vllloga of Middle- - - - - - - - AHorne~ for the Plein- port, Meigs County, Rutlond Village Council
Uff
Ohao, commencing ~t Meeting has
been
Fran k a Wooldridge Mary E. Pennington 1 rescheduled
from
CO
comer, ru nning 40 1fl Tuesday, May 12 to
PHrl St.
leetalong main road ; )'ledneeday, May 13,
Columbus, Ohio 43206 t,hebncekafc rou uhld lot ~009 ot 7:00p.m.
o oc once; t en~a (S) 13
6 t4-22 1-16S2
to said Pennington 1
(4) 2t (5) 6 13
'
comer, 43 fte t;

6

.7

600

Limited Time
OHerl

.
I

•

I .I

.

'

'

Al.JTOIVH..J T I V r

:';':":1-=?t::;'·
_,.....,. ,-··
Now Selling: ·
• Ford &amp; Mlllorcr,"fl
"
Pan s 1 Engines .

Transfe r Cases &amp;
Transmissions
• Aftetmri rket
Reptacement Sheet
M eta! &amp; Components
Fto1· .r\ 11 Mo1kcs of Vchicb

Raci ne, Ohio

740-949-1956

THE BORN .LOSER~--,

&gt; ·&lt;
CUTTING EDGE
LAWN CARE
Commen:ial IJ&lt;

Residential
Free Estimates

'I r-IE.E.t&gt;

"'iN 'IOU~ F'M~ER~
C.!&gt;&amp; -F'I&gt;.T!

""SE.\IE.I{\"'1' I'U.C,f.Ni Ck

1"1-1£ 1-\U~ BOtte.
I!&gt; 1"\N:£ OF W~1" .

• Lawn M aint.,..... nance
, ,I.A1··nd•"apl"ng
"""

• Power Washing
· Seth Carleton

Tree removal, planting,
1awn·care, an d aII your
1 d
• · d
. an SCapmg nee S,
3D

dC

Fully

BIG NATE
CARE l1:l I'IAK£ IT A
LITT~e MORE ..---..

J&amp;L
Construction

INTERESTIN&lt;:o,
~oN&gt; A
POL~AR

• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
· Roofing

•J

O~merCIB

A HOLE?·

• Decks
• Garages
, Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee 11

74~·2332

F"'sh North Corollna
SHRIMP
(7401742·2563
Llrtl"fle. ne"'rfroun, h~.daon

$ 10 per. lb Cash only
Pun is 1"\iLt ~in:d in 11dvllnce
-Shipments arrive everY
other Frida

'·

~=;;;

IF J EAT
ALL M'(

DINNER,

CAN I HAVE
A D06?
Caii:·MARCUM CONSTRUC'fiON
For: • Room Additions 1 Palios
•·Porches • 'Decks • Oarag·es • Horse Barns •
' Vinyl &amp; Wood Siding • Rooting • Chain Link &amp;
Wood Fencing &amp; General HomeMaintenance

COWandBOY

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom. OH

740-985-4141

·'

Cell : 740-41 6- I 834
·'
N01affitilned wi1h Mike MlltC'um ROOting &amp; Remodeling

15+ years experie~ct
Friday, July 17,2009
ICihartanlll Coach Transportallon
to Four Ohio Wineries,
ALL TASTINGS INCLUDED,
Lunch &amp; Dlimar
· Only $130/person
Cash, check and credit cards
accepted
LIMITED SEATS AVAILABLE
Payment due ill time of
reservation .
Coach leaves PVH lower level
parking lot at 8 a.m.
Coach returns at approximately
t0 :30p.m .
Please call
PVH Community Relations
to reserve a seat,
Ext. 1326

2\JMBA DANCE
AEROBICS
Pleasant Valley Wellness
Center
Beginning Tuesday, May 19
Tuesday evenings ( 7 p.m.)
Thursday evenings ( 5 p.m.)
·
$6/class
Instructor: Ashley Hackney
For more inlormation,
(304) 675-7222

Wesl cashes his club king and playa a
third club to your qusen, What now?
Slnca you have taken all possible side·
!lUff tricloi, give aiUII-and·slulf: leaa your
last cluti. When West ruffs with his heart
eiQht, if &amp;ff8CI&amp;an uppercut, gaining you
·a trump frick. (11 Weal .;ioesn'l ruff, throl·

IIIII

DOWN

t7 Loll at

a

"Lolo
t Yard
Clllrlc"
p"'**Ir
18 T-cargo 2 Foundation
19 Raul-llel
IUpport
23 Not windy
3 Kind at
25 Hockey
.._
flint
4 Troublel, to
26 Emil""'"
Hamill
mental proliX S Authorize
2t Thick wllll
6 Writer . CIHIIII
Grey
32 Home tel.
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�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Clemens breaks Thome hits 2 homers as White Sox beat Indians
silence, again
denies drug use ·
CLEVELAND (AP) - ple games I've been feeling
Don ' t tell the Cleveland a lot better."
Indians that Jim Thome was
Playing at Progressive
struggling at the plate.
Field didn't hun . Thome has
He was hitting .212 and in 183 career home runs in the
a 3-for-22 &gt;lump entering ballpark that was his home
Tuesday night's game. but fteld from 1994-2002. The
he hit a pair of two-run slugger began his major
homer&gt; to lead the Chicago league career with the Indians
White Sox to a 7-4 victory. in 1991. His last two-homer
"It's hard when you're game came in Cleveland on
struggling," Thome said. opening day last season.
"That\ what makes this
"It's alwar,s nice to come
game so tough . You have to back here ,' Thome said.
under.tand there are going ''I've always felt comfort-·
to be hard times and they're able. hitting in this ballpark."
sure not fun to go through."
White Sox manager Ozzie
Both home runs were off Guillen said his team needed
starter Jeremy Sowers (0-2), Thome's power surge.
and Thome's 42nd multi"We need a big bat , espehomer game gave him 547 cially with the way we ve
for his career.
been 'swingin.g," he said.
Mike "He does damage with the
Thome
trails
Schmidt by one for 13th game on the line."
place on the all-time home
Sowers was impressed.
run list.
. :·1think he has a.lot of peoD.J Carrasco ( 1-0)_pitched ple's number throughout his
two scoreless innings . in career based on the statistics
relief of starter Clayton he's put up,'' Sowers said.
Richard and struck out Mark "He's extremely good, he's
DeRosa and Shin -Sao Choo been around a long time to .
to work out of a bases- have seen pretty much every. loaded jam in the fourth .
thing and he's smart at the.
· Bobby Jenks, who was plate. He swings at balls in the
fined by Major League zone and doesn't chase balls
.
APphoto
Baseball earlier Tuesday for out of the zone. My situations, Cieve.land Indians' Shin-Soo Cl:loo, from South Korea, geti
admitting to intentionally, both those balls were up and knocked down by an inside pitch as Chicago White .Sox
throwing behind Texas' Jan he hit him a long way."
catcher Corky Milter grabs the errant pitch in the seventh
Kinsler, pitched the ninth
Thome walked in the third inn!ilg of a baseball game Tuesday.
inning , recording his eighth and seventh innings, giving
save in as many chances.
him I ,567 and moving him
"We have to keep try in!!," heel. ... LaPorta started for thll
Cleveland, which defeated into sole possession of 13th manager Eric Wedge sa1d. first time in five games, play~
the White Sox 9-4 on place on the all-time list.
"Now we have to try and ing first base. Considered on,e
Monday night, has lost five
Sowers, losing for the sec- win the series. We 're work- of the top hitting prospects,
of six and has won two ond time in two starts since ing to string something. LaPorta was acquired from
straight once this season.
being called up from Triple-A
· Milwaukee for pitcher CC
Thome's first-inning homer Columbus last week, gave up together."
moved
into
the
Sabathia last season .... Free
Richard,
to center followed a walk to a solo homer to Jayson Nix in rotation when veteran Jose ageill
RHP Luis Vizcaino'
Jennaine . Dye and gave the the third. The left-bander Contreras was sent to Triple- · threw to hitters before the
White Sox a 2-0 lead. His allowed five runs and seven A Charlotte , was making his game. He's expected to sign
home run in the fifth came hits in four-plus innings.
first stan of the season after with the Indians soon. ...
&lt;lftcr Dye's double and landed
"'I think I struggled a little 12 relief appearances. The Cleveland
RHP
Jake
in the seats in right, putting bit with command and keep- left-hander · allowed four Westbrook, who is coming
Chicago ahead for good, 54. ing the ball down," he said. runs in 3 1-3 innings.
back from Tommy John
"I've been working hard
The Indians are in last
Notes:
OF Carlos Quentin surgery, threw 20 pitches in an
to make a few adjustments,'' place in the AL Central with was scratched from the extended spring training game
Thome said. "The last cou- a 12-22 record.
Chicago lineup with a sore left Tuesday.
,.

NEW YORK (AP) - Roger Clemens broke his 'ilence
Tuesday, again denying that fanner personal trainer Brian
McNamee injected him with perfonnance-enhancing drugs
m his ftrst public comments in mor~ than a year.
The seven-time Cy Young Aw. ard; win~rr was interviewed
by phone on ESPN Radio} "Mike &amp; Mi~e in the Morning."
He said he chose to speak ouf Tuesday becau&gt;e it was the
release date of a book about his alleged drng use.
"He's never injected me with HGH or steroids," Clemens
said of McNamee's assertions to baseball investigator
GeGrge Mitchell .
.
Clemens appeared on CBS' "60 Minutes" in January of
last year, then held a news conference the next day. But he
had stayed quiet since testifying before Congress the follow ing month :
.
While " American Icon: The Fall of Roger Clemens and the
Rise of Steroids in America's Pastime" was officially
released Tuesday, its revelations were not new to the public .·
The book. by four New York Daily News reporters, recaps
previous reports in the newspaper. It had been available to
reviewers and had excerpts published before Tuesday.
Clemens said he had started working with a communications fmn .
"They came in and said, 'You need to get your story out
about all' this garbage that is being said,"' he said. "It's
imponant for me to do that. I've seen excerpts of the book
and they're completely false .... You know, guys, it's piling
on. It's hurtful at times . But I'm moving on."
· Clemens said he had given a DNA sample to federal investigators but that syringes provioed hy McNamee would not
link him to pertonnance-enhalicing drug use.
"It's impossible because he's never given me any,"
Clemens said.
Clemens is under investigation by a federal grand jury in
Washington that is trying to determine whether he lied when
he told a congressional committee last year that he had not
used illegal performance-enh&lt;)ncing drugs. Clemens said he
had not been summoned to testify before the grand jury.
· He also has sued McNamee for ·defamation. ·
"He'~ on the offensive again. which is Roger's mode of
operation .... This, in my view, is going to backfire, because
he's publicly now poking a stick in Congress' eye. And, to
me, all that's going·to do is vitalize the prosecutors going forward," McNamee's lead lawyer. Richard Emery, said in a
telephone interview with The Associated Press. "Nobody, for
a nunute.lhinkS he's not a liar just because he's talking. He's
always talked, and he has ·stood by his falsehoods. So going
forward, I think. it's just going to dig the. hole deeper for
him."
Clemens' radio appearance returns him to the spotlight as
uther stars had replaced him as the most visible reminders of
l)aseball's drug scandal. Alex Rodriguez ad.mitted before the
~ason that he had used sterOids, and Manny Ranmez was.
suspended last week for violating MLB's drug policy.
. Clemens said he had not followed either situation closely.
The Ramirez case proved "the testing progmm we have set
up in Major League B~eball is great," he said.
.
STAFF REPORT
100 meter dasn. Geiger and
Clemens said he was sad to hear about Rodriguez.
· MOSSPORl'soMvDArLYSENTINEL.COM · Jackson had times of 12.40
"I wish him the best, tell him to move forward , continue to
and 12.50, respectively. .
CIRCLEVILLE - · The
Geiger also placed second
do what he 's doing," he said. ''But I hope none of the things
that he took or anything like that hurt his body to· the point Lady Angels track and field . in the long jump in which she
team dominated the events hit a distance of 16-04.75.
where it would hurt his career."
last
Friday at the Circleville
Jac~son took her s~d into
Clemens said it would have been "suicidal" for him to use
Invitational
against
six
other
the
200 meter dash m which
steroids because of a histor)' of heart problems in his family.
"Everywhere I've gone and gotten the opportunity to squads. The Gallia Academy she placed tirst, blowing the
speak to young kids or college kids, I take a lot of pride in program ran, threw. and competition out of the water
·· ·
telling those boys to get after it and do things the right way Jumped with strength and with atime of25.9.
agihty
to
sec)lre
the
number
Samantha
Barnes
followed
and take care of your bod~, because 1 know how I did it; I
know how hard I worked.'. Clemens said. "For some of that one ftnish at the invitational. -in suit, taking a firs~ place finThe. girls took first place ish in the 800 meter run,
to come in question, of course it's hurtful. But it's not going
finishes in ten of the 18 clocking in at 2:21.7.
to break my spirit."
In the distance events, the
Clemens also repeated his much-lampooned use of the events scored. finishing the
meet
with
a
total
of
148
Adkins
sisters took to the
·word "misremembers•· about friend and tonner .teammate
. . track, putting up solid points
Andy Pettitte 's statement that Clemens told him he -used points overall.
Starting off the scoring for the Blue Angel squad. .
HGH .
Peyton topped the 1600
· Clemens said qe has spoken to Pettitte a few times, but not frenzy for Gallia Academy
were Alexis Geiger and Kara meter run w1th a time of
about the drug allegations.
· ·
Clemens disputed the perception that's he ·gone into hid- Jackson, star sprinters who 5:22.5 to secure her tirst place
ing, insisting he's doing the same things, he's always done took tirst and second in the finish. Peyton then joined sis- ·
when he's not playing. He joked about competing with Brett
l&lt;avre to see w)lo could come out of retirement the most
times.
. Asked about polls showing the public doesn't believe him.
Clemens said. "Alii can do is speak the truth and from my
bean to them."
"That's alii can do," he said. "I know what your polls say,
(but) I've been getting greai responses everywhere I've gone
in the cities I've traveled to. All I can do is be me and give
them the message I just told you about that steroids are bad
. for these kids. You don't want to have anything to do with
them the w~y th~y tear your body down. . .
"But I can't def~nd a negative. When you've got somebody that's out there that is real!}' just crawling up your back
to make a buck - which is what this is - other than speaking·out, what else can you do?"

Blu~ Angels r~n c.ircles at Circleville
ter Lauren in the 3200 meter
run in a battle to the finish
line in which the elder Adkins
won, clocking in at 11:50.20
to s.ister Peyton's 11.50.30.
Galli a Academy's Brea
Close swept the hurdling
events, with first place finishes in · both the 100 and 300
meter hurdies. Close posted
times -· of ·[6.10 and 48.7,
respectively.
The 4x 100 and 4x200 relay
teams met their events with
great success as well.
In the 4xl00, the team
ma\le up of Close, Geiger,
Jackson and Tonia Logan
took·first place with a time of
51 ,4.
The sameAngels that made
up the winning 4x 100 team
took to the 4x200 meter relay

and posted a frrst place finish
again. With a time of 1:48.HJ,
the relay dream team beat ou!
the six other compelitm:ii
rivaling for thetop spot. · '
. The rest of the meet was tl:'ll ·
Allie Troester show.
;'
Troester started her rally it)
the high jump, taking f~t
place in the event to out-jump
11 other girls with a height oi
5 feet.
·
..'
Her next perfonnance was
in the shol put in which she
placed third with a throw qf
33-06.5andthenfourthintl'l!:
discus throw 107-04.
The Blue Angel squad's
combined efforts took them
to the first place spot at the
invitational, adding to the
team's overall successes ·this
season.

10 dead, 17 rescued after

Wahama

the inning as Lewis walked
a pair to put the tying runs
.
on base. The White Falcon ·
fromPageBl
threat was quicldy snuffed
out as Lewis fanned the
with nine of the to Buffalo final two WHS batters to
hitters also returning t0 the preserve the 2-0 Buffa!!)
dugout after being set down victory and give the Bison
on
str1kes. Belcher the early edge in the secsmacked two doubles and tional series.
flew out to center during his
BUFFALO 2, WAHAMA 0
four plate appearances.
After Buffalo gained its Buffalo 000 000 002 - 2 4 2
2-0 edge in the ninth Wahama 000 000 000 - 0 2 0
Wahama made things inter- WP - lewis; LP - Bond.
esting in the bouom half of

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leVJ. II

.• High school Softball
action. See Page 81

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICHOMYOAILYSENTINELCCM

POMEROY - By unanimous vote the Meigs ·Local
Board of Education at the
req~est of the Meigs Local
Ennchment · FoundatiOn
(MLEF) approved placing a
five-year 1.95 mill pennanent improvement levy

before· voters in a special
election on Aug. 4.
The levy, according to
figures presented by Steve
Musser, Foundation treasur.. er, would ·generate about
$I ,059 ;000 (82 percent collection rate) to go into the
improvement project cur· rently underway. .
.
The overall ~toJect estl-

•

go1ng,

•

· POMEROY ~ By ihe
time this newspaper h1ts the
streets, the West Virginia
side of the old Pomeroy
Mason Bridge will be no
more, weather permitting. '
Officials with the Ohio
Department · .
of
Transportation announced
yesterday the piece would
be brought down with
explosives be;ween . 8.8~30
a.m. this morning. Dii\&gt;id
Rose, spokesperson · .for
ODOT district 10 said · it
will take approximately I00
charges to bring down the
remaining piers and span on
the West Virginia side.
Rose also said the Bridge
of Honor will be closed during the demolition and will
reopen shortly after the
[Jost-bl.ast . inspection is
completed this morning.
Rose did not anticipate the
closing time to be significant. When the Pomeroy
Mason Bridge's center span
was detonated the Bridge of
1-lonor was closed for less
than a half hour.'
There will be a I ,500 foot
"clear zone" radius from the
bridge. Only authorized persoonel are allowed within
ihe clear zone.
OOOT has said removal
of the spans and piers could
take up to six weeks once
the first of four remaining
blasts are detonated. 'Those

Page AS
• Mary Allee Miller, 88
• Helen York, 86

INSIDE.
• Wis~ .~ no~~ bY
·· ·Ma&amp;ori"." · '-Pa:ge A3
~ .forth~Rerorct.

See

Page AS ..
• United Plant Savers
Inaugurates trail in ·
RUiland. See .Page A6

.'
'

.
'

'

BY BRIAN J. REED

..

.
·

Please -.Brlclp, AS

Beth Sergentlphoto

Yesterday workers were making final prepan;~tions to "shoot" the ex~losives which .are
to bring qowri the west Virginia side .of the old Pomeroy Mason Bndge th1s mornmg,
weather permitting. .

'

·

INDEX

•·

:wnr be

I PL'US~TVALt,;E'YHO$\'ICE BUTTERFLYRELEA~ 1011 Viand Street, ..
I P{)int ~Pl~t,
All cbCcks ~ouldbe
·,- .W.V,
'. 2SSSO.
'~ . :. . macl!:toutto
. . - 'l- .Pleasanti Valley'. ,Hospice..
' '
I
.
._.. ".
,,
I •NAME: .
·. ,.
.
._ .

· .· '

I
... ·.
1 • ADDRESS: ·_ ......_;_-,-----,._....,-_ _ .TELEPHONE:.....,.._ _~;..,....I • IN ME~ORY;O}':' i'.
I · ··
·
·
. ..,
.
,
. .
_._ ._
.,....__
~,__--~------,_;-~----

..............___

Emma Hunt«tr
to study speech and ianguage pathology as a member of the College of Health
and Human Services.
"I decided on this panicu-

because
rewarding
and
I willit is
beaable
to see job
the
progress. of th~ ~ple I will
be workmg With."
· During her time at SHS,
Hunter has been involved in
the following· extracurricutar activities: Volleyball,
basketball, softball, track,
cross country, Spanish club.
Varsity S. Club; pep club,
National Honor Society.
The theme for Hunter's
speech on Sunday will
focus on "Dreams" and the
importance of following
through with those dreams.
In her s!ieech, Hunter said
·
.
. she wants to encourage her
lar fie~d because I w.as .mter- classmates not to give up on
ested tn workmg With 0 " their dreams and not to be
ple .who have speech .. tffi- afraid of failure.
·
culues," Hunter sa1d. I am
also ,·nterested ·,n this field Pie... SH ~ AS

Jif

Editorials

~

.ll

Obituaries

'I

Sports

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I
I
I
I

..........____...

As

Cooperative parish grants scholarships, ~onors workers

B Section Bv BRtAN J REED
BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Weather

A6

© 11009 Ohio Volley Publlshlnc Co.

4

Please see Levy. A5

BREEOCIMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

BSERGENTOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES

Meigs County auditor, has
been contacted and will provide the necessary paper-·
work along with actual ftg• ·
ures to the Board of
Education prior to then. It
was noted that expenses of a
special election will be
borne by the Foundation.
On Friday bids on constfllction of the fi.eld -and
track will be opened by the

Rizer
murder
trial set
for August

Bv BETH SERGENT

' · RACINE
Emma
Hunter, of Racine, has been
named valedictorian of
Southern High School's
Class of 2009. Jaime
Detatta on Page A&amp;
Warner, of Syracuse, is
salutatorian. .
. . Hunter is the daughter of
Doug and Tonja Hunter and
Warner. is the daughter of
Mike and Darlene Warner.
a SECTioNs - 1a PAGES
Both will address their
classmates
and families dur- ·
Annie's Mailbox
A3 ing commencement exercises at 8 p.m. Sunday inside ·
Calendars
.A3 the C)larles W. Hayman
Gymnasium at Southern
Classifieds
83-4 High SchooL .
. .
H
'II be tt d1n
Comics
WI
en fallg
Ohiounter
University
ina the

Valley Hqspic\1l Yoll·Cu.nre)!erve
for
1
special ~Vent :~u ofthe b\ttterf(es
relel!Sedtog~her U, memory of
I ..loved ones.·Ple,aS~ fiJI:butt'o~ detach arid_~end wit\! pa~eui. to:· ..·. ·
, .·

... __

9

Bridge piece
to go today, · ·
maybe

.
BY BETH SERGENT

1
~~~..•lte ~~tuatavu · ~-~~iii': · ~u•e.· · . . •..
1 . ·· Wilh donation ofS'Sto..Pieasant
a buttetfiy

.

the Meigs Board in addition
to Musser were Mike
Bartrum, president , and
.
'mated to ~ost between $2.4 Frank Blake.
Superintendent William
and $3 million includes a
cross country/nature trail Buckley noted thai May 21
through a wooded ruea near is the deadline for getting
the Meigs campus, and a the necessary paperwork
new fteld and stadium on ftled if the levy goes to vote
land between Meigs tfigh in August. To meet that
and
Middle
Schools. deadline, a special meeting
Speaking on the project and has been set for 7 p.m.
for the . Foundation at Monday at the central office
Tuesday night's m~eting of meeting room. Mary Byer,

Hunter Warner are Southern top grads

For more i11{ormation about this special event
or: to learn mqre about Hospice or the "Wings"
GriefSupport Gmup, please call, (304) 675-7400.

this v!li:y

\\\\\\.IIJ~ d .!ll\"'e/lllt!l'l.tttiH

j ....
1 '- }{)()()

For benefit of Enrichment Foundation

WEATHER ·

: . . .._. . .. . . e.ae &amp; ·. n~~,-r~. ~ ·•.11•te!fiy,'

Frldav. Mav 15, 2008
lac••• EVerv Frldav NIUhtl .·

'

BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTlNEL.COM

-a

~

Printed on 100%
Recycled Newsprint~~

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

• Cunningham retires.
See Page A6

0 Wednesday, May 27, 2009
0 PVH Main Entrance
0 Noon
0 Public is cordially invited

education program, A:J·

boat sinks off Florida, A2

AnnuaiPVH Hospice Tribute
Butterfly Release &amp; Celebration

Students attend.civic

POMEROY
Scholarships were awan!ed
to 14 young people dunng
the Meigs Cooperative
Parish's annual volunteer
banquet at the Mulberry
Community Center. \

.

Scholarships
were
awarded to Ryan Lee
Beegle, Patrick , Carey,
Ryan Keith Chapman,
Mason Co~de, Ryan Davis ,
Melissa Grueser, Rebecca
Hanstine, Bryan Harris ,
Alex
Hawley,
Sarah
Hubbard, Kaylee Kennedy,
Alyssa
L. . Newland,

Whitney Thoene, and Cat1e
Wolfe .
. .
Students receiVIng schol- ,
arship were chosen based
on a~plic~tions and me.mbershtp 111 Cooperative
l'arish-member churches,
according to Rev. Walter
Heinz, chairman. of the
scholarship commltlee.

Severa~ church~s tect"~d

organ1zat1ons contn u
o
the scholarship fund, according to Rev. Hemz: Alfred,
Bethany, Carmel-Sutton ,
Chester, Forest Run, Heath,
Minersville, Morning Star,
New Beginnings, Racine ,
· ,..__
Pari h. AS
nwt~Ms

POMEROY - Trial in the
murder case of Paula Rizer,
accused in the April 3 shooting death of her husband, has
been set for Aug. 18.
Rizer appeared in Meigs
·County Common Pleas
Coun Monday for a pre-trial ·
bearing on an indictment
charging her with aggravat" ·
ed murder. She is accused of
shooting her · husb&lt;tnd,
Kel)ll~th. Ri.z,er. Sr,. at.l!!eir .
tovett Road home "near
Portland. He was pronounced dead at the scene,
the victim of multiple gunshot wounds to the chest.
Rizer has pleaded innocent
to the charge. Her new attorney, Herman Carson of
Athens, was present at the
hearinj:. Carson will represent R1zer through the Athens
Public Defender's Office. ·
If convicted, Rizer could
face a possible sentence of
life without parole, life with
parole eligibility after 20
years, 25 years or 30 years.
The indicunent against Rizer
also contains a firearms
specificillion, · adding a
mandatory three-year sentence in addition to any other
sentence, if she is convicted.
Rizer waived her right to
a speedy trial. An initial pretrial has been set for July 6,
a final pre-trial on July 20
and a jury trial on Aug. 18 . .

Donner.police..·
Chief receiVeS
suspended
sentence

r&lt;

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEOOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM'

POMEROY -,. Folmer
Rutland Police Chief
Jet'fery A. Miller has
received a suspended oneyear sentence for theft in
office. A judgment entry
was filed Tuesday following Miller's April 27 sentencing hearing .
·
Miller was indicted late
last year on four counts of
theft in office, and entered a
guilty plea to the second
count of the indictment last
month. The other charges ·
were dismissed.
. Miller was sentenced to
five years of community
control. or probation. He
was ordered to perform
500 hours of community
service.
He was represented by
Pomeroy Attorney Charles
Knight.
· Special
Prosecutors Bridget Cany
and Paul Scarsella of the
Ohio Attorney General 's
Office were appointed over
a year ago to handle the

Please -

I
(

'

Miller, AS

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