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                  <text>Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

•

www .mydailysentinel.com ·

After 122 years, Sporting News leaving St. Louis
8v JtM SALTER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ST. LOUIS- After 122
years in St. Louis. Sporting
News magazine is heading
south.
The publication . once
known as the "Bible of
Baseball" for its devotion to
box scores and statistics is
moving to Charlotte. N.C..
Iiome to its parent company,
American City Busmess
'Journals. Last summer,
online
operations
for
SportingNews.com. previously housed ,in both New .
York and St. Louis, were
consolidated i·n Charlotte.
The move was announced
Friday by Ray Shaw, chairman of American Cities.
Several calls and e-mails to
Sporting
News
and
American City officials
were not returned on
Monday.
The loss isn't a.major one
economically for St. Louis
- Sporting News employs
just a few dozen people

who wor~ out of an office
building
in
suburban
Chesterfield.
But the 'loss of the
respected publication lof)g a
par~ of the St. Louis journahsm commumty 1s cerlainly a blow to the psyche
of the region.
Sparling News was
founded by Alfred H.'Spink
as an eight-page broadsheet
in 1886. Spink was a former
newspaper writer and a
director of the · St. Louis
Browns.
Sporting News quickly
emerged as a favonte. for
hard-core qaseball fans.
who turned to the publication for box scores , game
sum maries, even minor
league coverage.
Regular coverage of pro
football didn 't begin ~ntil
1942. Basketball and hockey were added that winter.
Sporting News switched
to a tablOid format in 1943,
originally as part of the
effort to conserve paper
during World War II. It did-

·Steelers·

AP Sports Writer Alan
Robinson · contributed to
tlri.1· report.

Bengals

n't print a color picture until
from PageBl
1967, a shot of baseball's
Frank Robinson.
In recent years, competi- tackles. He had eight of his
lion has increased signifi- career-best 12 112 sacks in
cantly with lhe arrival of 2007, and he has eight tackESPN
Magazine
and les for losses with three
Internet pages and blogs forced fumbles and two
devoted to sports. Sporting fumbles recovered in his
News long ago dropped box
scores that are now readily career.
But 2007 was his best
available on the Web.
1n 1997, then-owner season opposite Vanden
· Times Mirror Co. spent mii- Bosch. He had a careerlion s to update Sporting high 29 quarterback presNews to an all-color maga- sures with his eight sacks.
The moves helps shore
·zine. More dramatically, the
makeaver shifted focus 10 up the defensive line for
the NFL, though the maga- the Bengals, who had a
Zille continued to cover trade fall through with
Detroit that would have
baseball, hockey, basket - brought them defensive .
ball, college football and, tackle Shaun Rogers.
eventually, NASCAR.
Odom al~o helps replace
Times
Mirror
sold
end
Justin Smith, who left
Sporting News to Vulcan
Inc .. a holding company Cincinnati himself as a
AP phQIO
owned by Microsoft co- free agent and signed for a
reported
$45
million
deal
Tennessee
Titans
defensive
end
Antwan
Odom
i~
shown
founder Paul Allen, in 2000.
In 2006, · American Cities with $20 million in guaran- during an NFL football game in Nashville, Tenn. in this Dec.
purchased the publication tees over the weekend with . 2, 2007 file photo. Odom signed a five-year deal with the
San Francisco.
Cincin.nati Bengals worth $29.5 million on Monday.
for an undi sclosed sum.

Perfonning arts
council to fonn
drama group, A6

Middleport • Pomeroy, 9hio
:;o ( I ' \ I '-i

• \

Anderson, Lowery win commissioner races

SPORTS
~

Green Bay Packers
QB Brett Favre retires
· after 17 seasons.
SeePageB1 ·

Williams, Beegle take prosecutor, sheriff

TO DAY'S
R IS:

..

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1'1

.

•

•

ROcebi's Pool ,'

,t ·and Spas ' ·;'
i' ·

'· pio7ll!l(:·..,.. l'jf.," ,t'

, .1

.~·~.

~.'·~

J. REED .

incumbent
Prosecuting
·Attorney Pat Story in the
Republican primary. She
won with a 55.8 percent
POMEROY
Republican
Tom margin of victory over Story,
Anderson and Democrat who will finish his second·
Tom Lowery will advance .term at the end of the year.
Robert E. Beegle will
to the November election
.as their parties' candidates remain county sheriff after
for
Meigs
County defeating Steven E. Heater
Commissioner,
after in -the GOP primary. Beegle
strong
victories
in received a 57.6 pereent win
Tuesday's primaries.
in the race.
Republican Commissioner
In the closest Republican
Jim Sheets was unopposed primary race, Pe'lr Yost
in his primary nommation, · defeated Marty line in
and no Democrat filed for their race for County
his seat on the board.
Treasurer - with a halfAnderson won a four-way percent margin- 33 votes.
race for the commissioner . Final unofficial results
term beginning Jan. 2, 2009, include 813 absentee balwith 47.5 percent of the lots, but do not include 122
vote. Lowery received 38.3 provisional ballots, which
percent of the vote in his will be counted in the offifou~-l'erson race. ~hedy will cia! counMt of hbatlots schedbe
Jomed by two m epen- uled for arc 27.
Democratic Primar;r
dent candidates who filed
petitions with the . Board of
According to unofftci'al
Elections on Monday. results, 48 percent of regisSheets will also be chat- tered · Democrats voted in
lenged in the fall by an inde· . yesterday's primary.
D~ Iegate an d a1ternate to
pendent . cand 'd
t ate. (See
related story, page I.)
Democratic
National
Colleen Williams won her Convention: Hillary Clinton,
first political race, defeating 2,774; John Edwards, 12 I;
BY BRIAN

. BREEO®MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

OBITUARIES
~

"""·"'"1."1"''"'""' .c'""

\YLD'\l .Sil \\ . M \R('If ;; . :.!ook

ol. :; -. '\o . 11• 1

PLAY COVERALL BINGO

.

Meigs archery
teams take
second, B2

••

WIN UPTO $1,000 !! !

from PageBl
In
four
seasons,
Roethlisberger has steered
Pittsburgh to two AFC
championship games, one
Super Bow I and three
playoff appearances. No
Steelers quarterback, not
even Bradshaw, had a better start to his career;
Bradshaw didn't win a
Super Bowl until his fifth
season.
. Roethlisberger wants to
- be "like the Dan Marinos,
like the John Elways, guys
who played with oqe team
their whole career."
The Steelers, quiet in
free agency until signing
running back-kick returner
on
Mewelde · Moore
Monday,
felt
some
urgency to get a deal done
with
Roethlisberger.
Director of football operalions Kevin Colbert called
it his top offseason priority.
Roethlisberge~ wa~ due a
$2.95 million bonus this
month that, if paid. would
have put the Steelers over
the salary cap. By reworking Roethlisberger's contract now, the team rolled
that bonus into his new
contr~ct and can prorate
his signing bonus over the
eight years of the contract.
"Ben never said, 'I need
a record-breaking contract.' He never said, ·' I
need the most money in
the h)story of anything,"'
said
Roethlisberger's
agent, Ryan Tollner. "He
said,. 'I need a fair deal."'
Roethlisberger,
who
played in his first Pro
Bowl last month, is now
focused on getting "a
bunch more trophies."
"I believe that the guys
we have on !his team right
now are excep.tional players," he said. "I believe we
all have the pieces of the
puzzle, that we could be a
championship
football
team, and I think that we
know the history that we
have . of drafting well,
we'll be able to bring guys ·
in that will hopefully do
more."
·
Roethlisberger was one
of the leading vote-getters
for the NFL Comeback
Player of the Year award.
By contrast, he never
found a groove in 2006
after reporting to training
camp only six weeks after
his motorcycle crash. in
Pittsburgh, then needed an
appendectomy the week of ·
the season opener. The
Steeler&gt; started 2-6 before
finishing 8-8 during former coach Bill Cowher's
I 5th and final season.
Moore, the Steelers'
only pickup during free
agency. spent his first four
seasons
with
· the
Minnesota Vikings. A likely replacement for kick
returner Allen Rossum, he
returned two punts for
touchdowns and averaged
10.4 per return while
returning 74 punts from
2003-07. He averaged 19.3
yards on 26 kickoff
returns.

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

.Page AS
• George Bunch, 72
.• Zelia,.,.Coppick, 78
..
• Norrrya V. Sturgeon, 91

Barack Obama, 733.
Clerk of Courts: Brenda
Phalin, 2,740; County
Commissioner ( 1/2 term):
William A. Barnhart, 662,
April L. Burke, 757, A.
Thomas Lowery, 1,257,
Victor Young lll , 556.
State Rep., 91 st District:
Debbie Phillip s, 2.541;
Justice of the Ohio
Supreme Court (1/1 term):
loseph D. Russo, 2.296;
Justice of the Ohio
Supreme Court ( 112 term):
Peter M. Sikora, 2,048.
State Central Committee,
20th District: William E.
Moore.
2,215,
Susan
Gwmn,
· 2,263 .
State
Senate,
20th
District: Rick c. Shriver,
2,233; U.S. Rt;p., Sixth
District: Charlie Wilson,
2,744.
Republican Primary
Delegate-at-large.
and
Alternate-at-large
to
Republican
National
B~an J. Reed/photo
Convention: Mike Huckabee,
Colleen
Williams
of
Albany,
pictured
with
her husband,
1 121 , h u c · 2 287
'
;
JO n '"c arn, '
;
· Ron Paul, 146; Mitt Romney, David, speaks to a supporter just moments after learning
61: Fred Thompson, 84. she had won her GOP primary race against Prosecuting
Attorney Pat Story. Williams now works as an assistant
Please see Races, AS
prosecutor In Athens County.

TO THE POL.LS

'

r

INSIDE

BY

BRIAN

J. REID

BREEillPMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

.•

_DILES

HEARING CENTER

A One Stop Shop For ·
All Your Medical
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OtiCCJon • Delta

Rebecca
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435'!. Second Avenue
(740) 446-7619

DIU,.,

ATHENS

AeereditMI 111 lit
Jolltt CoiUdlrio1

Clinton wins.
·Texas, Ohio in
primary comeback. ·
:See Page A2
• Husband holds
too tight to secrets.
' See Page A3
· • For the Record.
See Page A5
• Camp to judge
mediation contest.
. ~Page A5
•• ·Fowler starts
: home-based
:travel business.
See Page A5
:• Family Medicine:
See doctor about
. chronic cough.
: See Page A6

WEATHER

POMEROY - Voters in
Meigs County approved
two· county-wide levies on
Tuesday's primary ballots.
The
Meigs
County
Council on ~ging 's request
for replacement of one mill
and an additional tenth mill
passed, with a vote of 4,780
for the levy, and 2,439
against. The. Meigs County
Board
of
Mental
and
Retardation
. Developmental Disabilities
request for renewal of two
mills for five years passed,
4,424 to 2, 789. ·
Syracuse voters passed a
two-mill, five-year levy for
police protection, 200 to
114. In Rutland Township, a
one-milJ, five-year levy for
fire protection passed 544 to
I 71. In Scipio Township,
voters approved a two-mill,
five-year ' levy for road
maintenance, 241 to I 61.
'

275 West Upion Street
(740) 594-3571

'

Independents
flle as county
• •
cormmss1oner
candidates
Bv BRIAN J.

,.,

REED

BREED®MYDAILYSENTINELCC)M

BY DIANE POTTORFF
DPOTIORFF@MYDA!LYREGISTER.COM

Yesterday Meigs
Countians went to the
polls to make their picks
In the primary election.
POll workers in Syracuse
said voters were "steady"
throughout the day and
by 2 p.m~ 160. had
already voted. After casting their ballots here in
the Syracuse Community
Center, many voters
picked up homemade
soups, sandwiches and
desserts served up by
volunteers at the center.
Beth Seraent/photos

INDEX

215-A Sbtll Stnet
Pt. ......... wv 25551
31U75-7136
Fu: 304-675-7317

It's Just
Around The
Corner

''"",......, •••:Msdhlr•eH ccill

Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone (740) .u&amp;-1711

l'wq locatioru
1/4 mile north or Pomeroy ·M..on
Bridge, Meson , WV
Phone (304) 773-5721

Bs

®, aoo8 Ohio Vall"?' PubUshlng Co•
•

. Ple.. e see File. AS

'

POINT . PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Two counts of
ar~m against a Mason volunteer firefighter were dis- ·
missed Monday by the prosecuting attorney.
Damon Morgan Jr. said he
was dismissing two counts
of arson against Kimberly
Blake, 24. of Mason, when
officers for the West
Virginia Fire Marshal's
office did not attend the preliminary hearing.
The case was heard by
Magistrate Gail Roush.
Blake was arrested Jan.
I I, along with Brent Kapp,
19, of Mason, and Jamal J. ·
"J.J." Cuthberson, 19, of
· Hartford, for first-degree
arson. Blake and Kapp were
members of the Mason .
Volunteer Fire Department,
while Cuthberson served on
the New Haven Volunteer
Fire Department.
Blake and Kapp were
accused of setting fire to
some trash on the front
porch of a trailer located at
286 Front St. in.Mason Oct.
15, 2007.
A three-panel committee
Kapp apparently told
consisting of the mayor, fire investigators that he and
chief and police chief will Blake knew the house was
help implement the ordi- vacant so they walked up to
nance with the mayor being the porch, took some paper.
the chairperson.
ignited it, threw it onto the
Mayor J. Scott Hill also trash and left the scene.
asked council to consider a
Before the fire departspecial meeting to prepare ment was called to fight the
the final draft of a letter lire, it went out of control
concerning the village's and did .damage to the
proposal · for annexation house next · door, whose
which will be mailed .to res- occupant was' inside al the
idents. Hill also reminded time of the blaze. ·
council a· subdivision regu- . Cuthberson allegedly set
lation ordinance needs to be tire to an outbuilding locatin place as does a records ed at 16698 Ohio River
retention policy.
Road Sept. 29, 2007.
Clerk Treasurer David
Both fires were in the
Spencer reported to council Mason VFD coverage disthe total cash funds in tbe trict.
•
village checking account at
Blake also is a dispatcher
the end of February was with Mason County 911 ami
$293,833 which was up was placed on administrative
from last month.'s balance
Pleue see Dismissed. AS
of roughly $285,000.

Burned-out structure ordinance discussed
BY

POMEROY Three
. Det8118anP... A3
independent
candidates
have filed for county commissioner races in the
November general election.
Becky Johnston, deputy
director of the Meigs
•
• 2 SI!CfiONS - 12 PAGES
County Beard of Elections, ·
said Janet Howard Tackett
Annie's Mailbox
A3 .of
Middleport a.n&lt;i William
Quickel
of Pomeroy have
Calendars .
A3 filed as candidates
for the
bassifieds
B2-4 commissioner 1erm beginning Jan. 2, 2009. - · the
position
on the board now
Comics
held by Democrat Jeffrey .
Thornton.
Editorials
A4
Michael Bartrum of
Obituaries
As. Pomeroy has filed for the
seat now occupied by
Sports
B Section Republican Jim Sheets, who
is seeking re-election. That
Weather
A3 term begins Jan . 3, 2009.

Arson
charges
dismissed
against
firefighter

'!age would receive a specific
amount needed tO demolish
the structure if that amount is
RACINE - At ·its most certified.by a contractor.
recent meeting, Racine·
Upon receipt of · the
Village Council passed the money, a special fund
first reading of a burned-out would be set up solely as
stnicture ordinance meant security against the total
to ptomote the aesthetic . cost of removing, repairing
value of the village.
or securing incurred by the
The ordinance requires village. The fund shall be ·
two' additional readings and a returned to the named ·
vote before it becomes effec- · insured or insureds when
live. H passed,' structures sit- repairs or removals or
uated within the village securing ·of the building or
which are burnt should be &lt;Jther structure have been
repaired by the owners in a completed. If Racine has
timely and reasonable man- not . incurred any costs for
ner not to exceed 90 days.
repair~. removal or· securing
If repairs aren't made in nf the building or other
this time frame, the ordi- structure. such costs shall he
nance allows the village to paid from- the fund and if
receive up to 15 percent of excess funds remain, the
the insurance claim money village will transfer the
to help tear. down the struc- remaining funds to the
ture. In some cases, the vii- ·named insured or insureds.
BETH SEROENT

BSERGENT1i1!&gt;1YDAILYSENTINEL.COM

�•,.

The Daily Sentinel

ACROSS ·THE NATION

~----=I=I..:Y:.......;T=-=H==E=-.:=:II::E~·N~D~--~w~·e~dn~es~day~,M~~~~~~~!:...:·~~00~8

PageA2
Wednesday, March 5,

':T""-:h_e_o_a_il_y_se_n_tin_e_l

2008

ANNIE'S MAILBOX Community Calendar

Clinton wins Texas,·Ohio in primary comeba.ck
McCain seals GOP· nomination
BY DAVID ESPO
AP SPECIAL CORRESPONDEN!

Either way, he added, it was
the delegates that mattered.
Clinton and Obama spent
most of the past two weeks
in Ohio and Texas in a costly, bruising campaign, with
the former first lady questioning his sincerity in
opposing NAFfA and questioning his readiness to serve
as commander in chief.
Polling place interviews
with voters in both states
suggested the criticism hit
nome, showing Clinton was
winning the votes· of late
deciders in Ohio and Texas,
' as well as Vermont.
Hispanics, a group that
· has favored Clinton in earlier primaries, cast nearly
·one-third of the .Election
Day votes in Texas, up from

WASHINGTON
Hillary Rodham Clinton
scored comeback primary
wins in Ohio, Texas and
Rhode Island Tuesday
night, denting Barack
Obama's delegate lead in a
riveting Democratic presi·
dential race. Arizona Sen.
John McCain, an unflinch·
ing supporter of the war in
Iraq, . clinched .
the
Repubhc~n nommat1on. ·
Clinton s three tmlmphs
ended .a month of defeats
for the f~rm~r fust lady, and
. ~he t:&gt;ld JUbilant support~rs,
We re gomg on, we ,re
go~ng strong a~d we re
.
gomg all the way.
Obama won the Vermont
primary, and sought to.
counter Clinton's claims
that the night had been a
race-altering event "We
have nearly 'the same delegate lead as we did this
mornirig and we are on our
way to winning this nomi~ation," he' told supporters •
m Texas. ·
.
The two rivals also com- ·
peted for support in caucuses in Texas that began 15
minutes after the state's primary polls closed.
Both Democrats called
McCain - a Senate colleague - to congratulate
him on his triumph in the
Republican race.
The 71-year-old Arizona
senator surpassed the 1,191
delegates needed to win his
party's nomination, completing a remarkable come-· ·
back that began in the
snows of New Hampshire
eight weeks ago. President'
Bush invited him to lunch
- and an endorsement at the White House on
Wednesday.
"We are in Iraq, and our
most vital security interests
are ' involved there," said
McCain at a victory celebration nearly a decade in
the making.
McCain's last remaining
major rival, former Arkansas
Gov. Mike Huckabee, conceded defeat after a campaiJln
that included a stunning vuitory in the leadoff Iowa caucuses on Jan. 3. "My commitment to him and the party is
to do everything possible to
unite our party, but more
important to unite our country so that we can be the best
we can be," Huckabee said in
Irving, Texas.
Clinton won the Rhode
Island primary with more
than 58 percent of the vote.
· But Ohio and Texas were
the big trophies of the night,
rich ·in delegatt&lt;S and · - ·
according to Bill Clintonmust-win states for his wife.
· Her share of the Ohio vot~
was 55 percent in nearly
complete returns, and she
was winning nearly 51 perceitt in Texas.
Obama was gaining
roughly 60 percent of the
Vermont vote.
In the four-state competi•
lion for delegates, Clinton
picked up at least 100, to at .
least 77 for Obama. Nearly
,;100· more remained to be
allocated for the night, 163
. of them in the Texas primary and caucuses.
Obama had a total of
1,466 delegates, including
separately chosen party and
elected offteials known as·
superdelegates, according
to the Associated Press
count. He picked up three
superdelegate endorsements
Tuesday,
Clinton had I,376 dele- .
gates. It takes 2,025 to win
the nomirlation .
With their remarks, first
Clinton, then Obama,
sought to frame the race in
the best possible terms for
their own campaigns.
"They call Ohio a bellwether state, the battleground
state. It's a state that knows
how to pick a president and
no candidate in re~ent history,
Democrat or Repu~lican, has
won the White Hause without winning the Ohlo primary," the former first l11dy said
in Columbus.
.·
Moments 'later, Obama
stepped to the microphone
in San Antonio. He said the
outcome of the Texas prima- .
ry might not be known until
Wednesday, and he all but
conceded defeat in Ohio.·

•

about one- quarter of the
ballots four years ago,
according to interviews
with voters as they left their
polling places. Blacks, who
have voted heavily for
Obama this year, accounted
for roughly 20 percent of
!he votes cast, roughly the
same as four years ago.
The economy was the No.
I concern on the minds of
Democratic voters in Texas,
Rhode. Island and especially
in Ohio. But in Vermont,
almost as many voters said
the war in Iraq was their top
concern.
· ·More than three-quarters
· of Ohio Democrats said
internatiomil trade had cost
their state more jobs than it
had created.
·

.

Husband holds
·:. too tight to secrets
•

Public meetings

to Pasior Whitt Akers,
Thursday, March 6
Wildwood Garden Cluh,
591-1236.
TUPPERS
PLAINS
6:30
p.m. at the Syracuse
"All those states coming
13
Thursday,
March
Tuppers
Plains
VFW
Ladies
Community Center. Joy
up are going to make a difWednesday, March 5
FOREST
RUN
Rev.
p.m.
at
the
hall.
Auxiliary,
7
Bentley to give program on
he
said.
"What
we
ference,"
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
tioned outside the polls paigned o'n Tuesday. "You
Kerry
Wood
to
speak
at
CHESTER
Chesterhydrangeas.
Township Trustees meeting, Tuesday said that so-called don't get to the White want to do is make sure
community Lenten service, Shade
Historic;~!
CHESTER
Shade
superdelegates, who are House as a Democrat with- we're competing in every
BY KATHY MITCHELL
children. Why is it ·unfair 6:30 p.m. at the Pageville 7 p.m., Forest Run United Association, 7 p.m. at the River Lodge 453, 7:30 p.m.
.
party ·officials, should vote out winning Ohio," she said single state."
AND MARCY SUGAR
for him to make a decision town hall.
Methodist Church.
Chester courthouse. Final Refreshments.
·Thesday, March u ·
It takes 2,025 delegates to
at the national cmwention in Houston.
for both• of them, but not
planning for the April 4
REEDSVILLE -Olive
based on the results of pri''My husband didn't get win the Democratic nomiDear Annie: I have been unfair for.her?
benefit dinner and auction.
maries and caucuses. That the nomination wrapped up nation, and slightly more ·
with my husband for four
Having ·a child means tak- Township Trustees, 6:30
Monday, March 10 ·
p.m.,
township
garage.
was unwelcome news for lliltil June· (in 1992). That than 600 remained to be
: · years ... married for two. In !ng on huge long-term phys-.
Saturday, March '15
POMEROY -Big Bend
.
ATHENS -Area 14
Clinton, who trails Obama -has been the tradition,". she picked in the I 0 states that
all thts ltme, there are still teal , financial and emotional Workforce
TUPPERS
PLAINS
_
·
Farm
Antiques
Club,
7:30
Thursday,
March
6·
Investment
among delegates picked in added, without mentioning vote after Tuesday.
~orne thin~s I ,am not com- · responsibilities. For those ·
Board, 8 a.m., Ohio Free clothing giveaway, 9 p.m., Mulberry Community . MIDDLEPORT - Anna
The Democratic marathon
the states but holds a lead · that this year most primaries
who want a child, the University Inn.
·. tortable wtth.
a.m. to noon, Bethel Certter.
Rose Fitch will celebrate
among superdelegates.
were held much earlier than was in contrast to a
:'Norm" is a very qJJiet rewards of parenting make
Worship
Center,
Route
7.
Thesday,
March
II
her
90th birthday on March
Wednesday, March 12
Obama had campaigned in .1992. "This is a very Republican race that was
: · man . who doesn't say it worthwhile, but for those
Clothing
for
new!Jorns
to
SYRACUSE
·
The
6.
Cards
may be sent to her
POMEROY - Bedford
fierce while it lasted but had
hoping to land a knockout close race."
. much.. He has a brother who don't, it entails great Township ·Trustees, · 7 p.m. children's size 14. Contact Syracuse Community Center at 776 Grant Street,
blow. As of March I, his
For his part, Obama was long since been settled.
who ltves really close, but sacrifice for little return. If at the town hall.
church at 667-6793.
Board of Directors, 7 p.m. at · Middleport, Ohio 45760.
McCain's campaign nearcampaign had spent about $9 already advertising · in
• Norm has never introduced the husband gives in
the Community Center.
Thesday, March 11
million on television adver- Mississippi, which holds its ly imploded last summer.
u~. I also have never met ~cause he is pressured into
HARRISONVILLE
POMEROY Marie
tising in Texas and about . primary next week, and But he regrouped, reassum· · h1s mother or talked ·to her 1t, he may "come around"
Harrisonville 255, O.E.~., Hauck will observe her 91 st
$4.5 million in Ohio; Clinton planned, trips there and to ing the · underdog role that
· on the phone. She lives out and learn to love the child
7:30p.m. at the hall. Ladies birthday .on March 11.
Thursday, March 6
of state and calls Norm . but he may spend the next
had spent about $5 million in Wyoming, which has week- he relishes, and methodicalto take decorated hats. ·
Cards may be sent to her at
ROCKSPRINGS -Rev.
ly dispatched one rival after
only on hts cell phone. I 20 years begrudging the
Texas artd about $2.3 million end caucuses:
Thursday, March 13 . 644 Osborne St., Pomeroy,
Wednesday, March S
bought her a gift for the time, energy and money he · Mark Morrow to speak at
in Ohio, according to TNS
Pennsylvania, the biggest. another in a string of priSYRACUSE
Ohio 45769.
POMEROYMiddleport
holidays and she told him has to spend, and no child community Lenten service,
Med!a lntelligence/CMAG, . single prize left, holds its maries in January ancl' early
to thank me. I have never deserves that ·kind of child- 7 p.m., Rocksprings United Literary Club, 2 p.m. at the
an ad tracking firm.
primary on April· 22.
February.
Library . in Pomeroy. Pat
Methodist Church.
seen any pictures of his hood. - B.N.
March
9
Holter
will
review
Sunday,
• · childhood or of his parents.
Dear B.N:: Sorry if our
"Whitethorn
Woods."
Norma
ALBANY -"Gospel
: He keeps ·his bank state- response gave that impresments and his checkbook sion. We don't believe Jam Sessio.n," 6-8 p.m., Tooes will be hostess.
POMEROY - Meigs
at his brother's house.
either of them . should Carpenter Baptist Church,
30711
Ohio
143.
Public
County
Board of Health, 5
Norm moved here from make unilateral decisions
invited
to
participate.
p.m., conference room,
• out of state 12 years ago about having another
Sunday
Scheduled
second
County Health of
Meigs
: and recently changed his child. We think the busof
each
inonth.
Questions
Department.
; . last name because he said band should be willing to
:
he didn't like the way it discuss it (which he isn't)
'·
• sounded. He doesn't have instead of making the deci~
: any life insurance. I have sion for both of them.
never seen him naked. Sex Read .on for more:
is rare. When I try to get
From N.Y.: Tell "Ticking
mformation from him, he Clock" that having two kids
Wednesday ••• Mostly
Thursday ••• Mostly
acts weird and gets mad, so is not all it's cracked up to
; I leave it alone. ·
be. My girls have been . cloudy with a slight chance cloudy with a slight chance
:
I am his wife. We don't fighting since the youngest of rain and snow showers in of rain and snow showers.
even have a checking could talk. If I had it to do the moming ... Then mostly Highs in the lower 50s.
' account together. He splits over again, I would have sunny in the afternoon. Southwest winds 5 to 10
Highs in the mid 40s. West mph. Chance of precipitaevery bill with me. One stopped at one.
day, I asked if I could use
California: There · is no ·winds 5 to I 0 mph. Chance tion 20 percent.
Thursday night...Mostly
; his gas card. He followed guarantee that siblings will . ofprecipitation 20 percent.
Wednesday
·
night
...
cloudy. Cold with lows in
~ me . to the station, put 20 have a special bond. My
• bucks in and drove back brother and I love each Partly cloudy · in the the upper 20s. Northwest
mostly winds 5 to I 0 mph.
- ; home. He keeps score on other, but simply have noth· evenmg ... Then
cloudy
with
a
slight
chance
Frlday...Cloudy with a 40
· who pays for wha,t. He ing in common. We don't
of
snow
showers
.after
midpercent
chance of snow
seems so strange. to me. share even a fraction Of the
· What's up? ·- Not Sure in bond that I have with the night. Lows in the lower showers. Highs in the .mid
Califorma ·
. .
people I have come to love 30s. South winds around 5 30s.
Friday night..:Cioudy.
• Dear Not Sure: You've and respect through many mph. Chance of snow 20
percent.
Lows
in the lower 20s.
• known this man for four years of shared experience.
I : years. Surely this secretive
Omaha: You should
• behavior is not new. Your have
asked
"Tickin'g
Caleb jones
~ stingy, paranoid husbimd Clock" one simple quesHappy Easter
co.ul? be hiding things- a · t.ion: "Is it more important
Love, Aunt Beth
cnmmal .past, another fam- lor your child to have a sibtly, money ~but it's also ling or for his parents to noi AEP (NYSE) - 42,22
I : possible
BBT (NYSE) ;_ 30.71
it's just his per- . be divorced?" That is basi- Aklo (NASDAQ)- 74
Peopltos (NASDAQ) - 21.82
!
Mail to or Drop off at The Daily Sentinel
cally the corner her hus- Aohhnllnc. (NYSE) ·- 43.19
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111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
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Dally atock reporta . . the 4 p.m.
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ET ciOIIn&amp; quotH ol t ... laotiDM
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to: Annie's Maiibox, P.O. DuPont (NYSE) ...;... 48.43
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louc Mills In Clolllpolla at (740)
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PageA4

O .P INION

The ·Daily Sentinel
'

Wednesday, March 5,

When
larger-than-life
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
William F. Buckley Jr.,
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
founder of the magazine I
.www.mydailysentlnel.com
love and the movement I am
devoted to, died while
working in his study Feb.
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
27, he left behind a thriving
conservative movement.
Dan Goodrich
You might think I'm
Publisher
crazy for using the word
"thriving." I don't blame
Charlene Hoeflich
you.
After all, didn't
General Manager-News Editor
Newsweek just announce
with a "There Will Be
Blood" cover that rightwing, talk-radio hosts are
Congress shall make no larv respecting an
devoted to destroying the
establishment of religion, or prol1ibiting the
Republican nominee for
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom president? Didn't conservatives just fail in an overof speech, or of the press; or the right of the
hyped quest for "the next
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition Ronald Reagan"? Aren't
the Government for a .redress of grievances. . some popular, right-leaning
op-ed writers going for the
jugular,
admonishing politi- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
cal .and ideological teammates to "grow up," quit the
"temper tantrum" and just
support John McCain for
Today is Wednesday. March 5, the 65th day of 2008. president?
Sure, that's all true. It's
There are 30 I days left in the year.
not always a happy family
Today's Highlight in History :
·
.
On March 5, I 770, the Bostdn Massacre took place as on the right side of the politBritish soldiers who'd been taunted by a crowd of colonists ical spectrum. But those
vital signs do not indicate a
·
opened fire, killing five people.
stagnant
movement.
On this date:
. IQ I 849, Zachary Taylor took the oath of office at his
On the contrary, the
presidential inauguration.
·
Republican presidential priIn 1868, the Senate was organized into a Court of mary (which, for all purposImpeachment to decide char~es against President Andrew es, has been over since Mitt
Johnson, who was later acqumed.
Romney dropped out at the
In 1908, actor Rex Harrison was born in Lancashire, beginning of February) was
England.
bursting with conservative
In 1933, in German parliamentary elections, the Nazi life. As I was trying to wrap
Party won 44 percent of the vote; the Nazis joined with a Christmas presents, colconservative nationalist party to gain a slender majority in leagues were eagerly calling
the Reichstag.
In 1946, Winston Churchill delivered his famous "Iron and asking, "Did you hear
what Rush said today?" The
Curtain" speech at Westminster College in fulton, Mo.
In 1953, Soviet dictator Josef Stalin died after .three king of talk radio was criticizing McCain and former
decades in power.
.
In 1963, country music performers Patsy Cline,
"Cowboy" Copas and "Hawkshaw" Hawkins .died in a
plane crash near Camden, Te.nn .. that also claimeo the life
of pilot Randy Hughes (Cline's manager).
In 1970, a nuclear nonproliferation treaty went into effect
after 43 nations ratified it.
In 1977, President Carter took questions from 42 telephone callers in 26 states on a network radio call-in program moderated by Walter Cronkite.
·
In 1982, comedian John Belushi was found dead of a
drug overdose in a rented bungalow in Hollywood; he was
33.
Ten years ago: Details of President Clinton's deposition
testimony in the Paula Jones sexual harassment case
against him were published in The Washington ·Post,
prompting an angry denunciation from the president for the
news leak. NASX scientists said enough water was frot:en
in the loose soil of the moon to support a lunar base and
perhaps, one day, a human colony.
Five years ago: In a blu'nt warning to the United States
and Britain, the foreign ministers of France, Germany and
Russia said they would block any attempt to get U.N.
approval for war against Iraq. Thousands of , students
around the U.S. walked out of classes to protest a possible
war. A suicide bus bombing in Haifa, Israel, kille~ 14
Israelis and. an American teenager. A Kuwaiti policeman
was sentenced to 15 years in prison for the 2002 attack that
wounded two U.S. soldiers on a Kuwaiti desert highway.
Comedian George Miller died in Los Angeles (his age is
given variously as 53 or 61).
Thought for Today: "Exhilaration is that feeling you get
jusi after a great idea hits you, and just before you realize;
what's wrong with it." - Sir Rex Harrison, British actor
.
(1908-1990).

TODAY .IN HISTORY

Obituaries

conservatism. His speeches,
columns, magazine and
books sought to answer one
central question. What is
Right here?
Buckley was never a
Kathryn .
Republican
Party man so
Lopez
much as he was a conservative, always thinking about
fundamental principles. So
if Republicans in general.
Gov.
Mike . or one Republican candiArkansas
Huckabee for their statist ·date in particular, veered
tendencies, . while praising off course, it was his role tl)
Fred Thompson and ulti- point that out; to criticize,
mately embracing Romney publicly or privately; to
for his conservative policies offer guides for the practiand uplifting rhetoric. about cal application of that phiAmerican exceptionalism. losophy. In other words,
Rush Limbaugh may not what Limbaugh routinely
have "won" in the end, inas- does on his radio. show. It's
much as McCain wasn't his what writers at NatiQnal
preferred candidate, but he Review do from their lapalso wasn't playing a game tops. It's what thinking conwith a scoreboarcj. He was servatives do and debatereflecting on conservative on a blog site, at a think
principles. He was doing tank or inside a conservawhat he does every day; he tive Capitol Hilf office.
was applying his basic
Conservatives are forever
political philosophy to real- accused of being backward.
We are supposedly anti-scilife politics.
He was asking himself, ence
because
we 've
"What would Bill Buckley · opposed human cloning and
do?"
federal funding of research
In a conversation with that · destroys
human
Limbaugh a few months embryos. We're accused of
back, talking about issues being anti-sex because we
. long and short term, he told encourage personal responme that that's exactly the sibility, self-respect and
question , everyone who fundamentals like marriage.
calls himself a conservative In truth, we can't stop
should be asking.· Not thinking about tomorrowbecause we're unrealistical- what con.sequences may
ly deifying our now- arise from our decisions
deceased friend and mentor, today. We're trying to do
as some have accused us of what Buckley did. As he
·doing with Ronald Reagan, wrote in his publisher's
but because Buckley was· a statement in the first issue
founder, practitioner and · of National Review, we're
teacher of this thing we call "standing athwart history,

yelling 'Stop!'"
Buckley has inspired
three generations of conservatives, now with a string
of proven, historic results
under our belts. We' ve got
our issues, sure. We've got
policy battles, even among
ourselves on the ·Right, b\,lt
we' re alive and kicking.
And the words that Buckley
wrote in the , first issue of
National Review are as true
today as they were then :
'"We offer, besides ourselves, a position that has
not grown old under the
weight of a gigantic, parasitic bureaucracy, a position
· untempered by the doctoral
dissertatic&gt;ns of a generation
of Ph.D.s in social architecture, unattenuated by a
thousand · vulgar promises
to a thousand different pres- ·
sure groups, uncorroded by
a cynical contempt for
human freedom. And that,
ladies and gentlemen,
leaves us just about the
hottest thing in town."
So don't mistake · the
death of a legend with a
rich legacy as the end of
conservatism. For those of
us who read, listened arid
· learned from William F."
Buckley Jr., there is work to
do. He did what his talents
and beliefs required of him,
and so must we. Miles haVe
gone by for conservatism,
but there are miles to go
yet.
.
(Kathryn Lopez is the editor of National Review
Online (www.nation(llreview.com). She can be contacted at klopez@natiodalreview.com.)
•

~TAHLER.
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(740) 992~2156.
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ness than his scratch-golf
game.
But the last thing anyone
wants '? he~ just .ar~r a'
devastau~g d1vorc~ 1s, We
all knew It wouldn t last. No
one could ever figure o~;
why you mamed ~he_ c~eep.
E_ven thou&amp;h I sa1d Jt m ~e
n!ces! poss1ble way, Momca
d1dn t speak to me for
weeks.
Now, sh~'s told all her
fnends that she'~ ready t?
start dating. That s the atutude. When you fall down,
get . back up. Even though
she dreads the thought of
dating, she's tough and willing to put up with a lot of
disappointment. Bu( even if
you say it in the nicest possible way, the last thiryg a

a

Zelia Coppick .,
MIDDLEPORT -. · Zelia Mae Coppick, 78, of
Middleport, passed away on March 3, 2008 at her resi;;lence, after an extended iII ness.
·
She was born Aug. 9, 1930, to the late James Albert and
Mary Ann (Hinckley) Pack in Ham len, W.Va. She was a
homemaker.
She is survived by her children: Nancy Lawson, Portland,
· Ted and Patricia Coppick, Portland, David Coppick,
Middleport, Bonnie Coppick, Middleport , Jerry and Lisa
. Coppick, Syracuse, Ben Coppick, Pomeroy; a sister, Doris
Haynes, Middleport;· several grandchild(en and great
grandc~itdren; several nieces and nephews; and several
step brothers and stepsisters.
· Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her
. husband, Theodore Coppick; a granddaughter, Tiffany
Coppick; a brother, Okey Coppick.
Service will be held at I p.m. on Thursday, March 6,
2008, at Fisher Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Middleport, with Rev. Brian Dailey officiating. Burial will
follow 111 the Bald Knob-Stiversville Cemetery.
Friends may call from 6-8 p.m. on Wednesday, March 5,
2008, at the funeral home. Online registry is available at
www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Deaths
N.onna Virginia
(Buffington) Sturgeon

WAVERLY - Rita Slavin, Syracuse, was appointed to
the Meigs County Board of Elections for four-year term
beginning March I.
.
·
Slavin was officially sworn in by Secre~ of State
Jennifer Brunner at a ceremony held Feb. 26 in Pike County.
Every two years, half of the 352 board of elections members are re-appointed or newly appointed to their posittonS
by the Secretary · of State. One Democratic and one
Republican board member is appointed for each county. ·

"No, he doesn't. Just that
charity tournament his business sponsors to raise
money for unemployed,
starving puppies,"· Sue
explained.
"And you expect me to go
out with this creep?"
"Maybe it's a little too
soon for you to .start dating
again," Anita suggested.
which was the last thing
Monica wanted to hear. ·
"You're all on his side, 1
can tell," she said as she
stomped out of the 'restaurant. The next day she apologized.
Tonight, Sue and Monica
and I are having dinner with
our friend Carl who follows
rock bands around the country selling their T-shirts anu
COs. Even though she might
not want to hear. it, I said, "I
like Carl, but I t~ink you
should know .that years ago
he did time in a country-club
prison for tax evasion." •
"But you're sure he doesn't golf?"
"Positive."
''I'm dying to meet him:"
(Jim Mullen is the autho&lt; of
"It Takes a Village Idiot:
Complicating the Simple
Life " and "Baby:, First
Tattoo. " You can reach him at
jim_mul/m@myway.cum.) :•

....

.,

ot

''

1¥

P•

...,....__., -··:

...... ,

and Tamara L. Taylor, 41, Pomeroy.

.Dissolutions
POMEROY - Dissolutions were
granted in Meigs County Common
Plea~ Court to Homer L. Welsh and
Anna J. Welsh, and Penny M. Cochran
and James D. Cochran.

Divorces
POMEROY Divorces were
granted in Meigs County Common

Pleas Court to Bradley A. Young from
Rhonda J. Young; Thomas P. Hall
from Sharon L. Hall; and Lynn M.
Curl from Scott T. Curl.

Sentenced
POMEROY - Jesse Harris was
sentenced in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court to five years in prison,
with a year suspended, on a charge of
attempted aggravated vehicular _
assault, with special terms under the
community corrections program.

Ca•np tojudge mediation contest
.

POMEROY - Maitha Camp of
Pomeroy, mediator for the Mei!ls
County Common Pleas Court, wtll .
serve as a judge for the American Bar
Association's "Representation in
Mediation Competition."
The competitiOn bejlan Saturday at
The Ohio State Umversity Moritz
College of Law.
Marthe
Camp began working in ihe court a
Camp
year ago, and has mediated civil,
domestic and juvenile court custody tions, to see

.
cases with a 90 per- stand and communicate their clients'
cent success rate, she interests, work collaboratively, and
said. She has been a seek creative problem solving
mediator for 22 years. approaches to a lawsuit.
She is a · board
During mediation, Camp said, parmember
of
the ties work together toward a settlement.
Ohio
Mediation ·The mediator is not a judge and does
Association. She will not decide cases for parties. The par·
evalute law students ties decide the outcome and an agreefrom six states partici- ment becomes ·a court order, saving
pating in mock media- · the cost of tfial and resolving cases
how well they under- more quickly, she said.

Fowler starts home-based travel business
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - A
popular U.S. destinanew year often brings changes, and
tions, and European
2008 is no exception for Mary Fowler
travel also will be
of Point Pleasant, as she announces
offered.
plans for a new group travel business,
With more than 23
Traveltime Tours.
·
years of experience in
Operating from her home, Fowler
the travel industry,
will specialize in planning and escortincluding six years
ing group. travel. She plans to offer
with AAA South
day trips and overnight and weekend Mary Fowler Central Ohio and 17
tours as well as several day tours to years operating Peoples Choice

Travel for City National Bank before
retiring Jan. 2,
Fowler has received· national
recognition from various travel organizations.
.
Many plans are being completed,
and information and schedules can be
requested by sending name, address
and phone number to Traveltime
Tours at P.O. Box 441, Point
Pleasant, WV 25550.

Morgantown club raid yields 19 arrests in multistate drug ring

a

.......

.

POMEROY - Marriage licenses
were issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to: Steve R. Barnett, 55, and
Lue Ann Deveny, 42, Pomeroy;
Joseph ·Domingo Foley, 16, and
Dailielle Marie Bing, 18, Pomeroy ;
Joshua D. Weaver, 26, and Carol L.
Brown, 43, Racine ; D&amp;vid Louis
Kemppel, 41, Dana Danelle Larsen,
34, Pomeroy; Kenneth Raymond
Cook, 46, .and Vicki Linnea Long, 34,'
Syracuse; and Norman S. Matson , 34,

·sworn in

____ ____________________________. . .,. ;•:-.--.-· _.,.,_.....,"""',_..
____,,

POMEROY -George Arthur Bunch, 72, of Pomeroy,
went to be with the Lord on March 4, 2008 after long battle with cancer.
. He was born on June 21, 1935 in Pomeroy, son of the late
George and Emma Bunch. He was a retired coal miner of 43
years, and was. a member of the Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene. He was a lifelong resident of Meigs County and a
graduate of Pomer?Y High School. He will be missed by all.
In addttmn to h1s parents, he was preceded in death by
two brothers and four sisters. He leaves to mourn a wife,
·Joyce Bunch; sister and brother-in-law, Ruth and Charles
Lewis; lifelong partner and best friend, Patsy Ward; son
and daughter-in-law, James and Cheryi "Yeauger; granddaughters, &lt;Destinee Blackwell and Alexandrea Yeauger;
grandsons, Jack, Paul and Ryan.
. Funeral will Qe )leld at I p'.m. on Friday, March 7, 2008,
at the Ftsher-Anderson-McDaniel Funeral Home in
.. Pomeroy with Pastor Jan Lavender officiating.
. Burial will follow at Beech Grove Cemetery.
Visiting hour~ will be from 6-8 p.m.·on Thursday at the
furteral home. A. registry is available online by visiting
www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains Fire Department
will have an Easter egg hunt at noon on March 23. Five age
groups: babies with mothers, waJking to four, 5-8, 9-ll,
and 12-15. Prizes include bicycles, U.S. Savings Bonds,
Easter baskets, tricycles and wagons. 7,500 eggs will be
hidden. Food will be served.

Friend finds dl!ifer dating way under par

tions to The Daily Sentinel, 11'1 Co!Jrt
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45789.

Marriage licenses

Egg hunt

LETTERS TO THE
EDIT'OR

The Daily Sentinel

George Arthur Bunch

Local Briefs

'
brother, AI, the one who just
won the award for raising all
· that money for Katrina victims, the one who spent all
that time in the Peace
Corps'! Well, he just got
Jim
back it town after spending ·
. Mullen
six weeks in an ashram in
Bhutan," Sue started.
_ "You mean AI Tompkins?
The guy who was named
woman over ·40 wants to Handsomest Athlete of the
hear when she's looking for Year at Smarty Pants
(jates is thllt she's "got about College?" Anita chipped in
as much chance of finding a as planne.d.
man as Adam Sandler has of
"Yeah, that's the guy.
winning.an Oscar:"
Wasn't
he Valedictorian,
Monica and I don't speak
too?'' Sue and Anita were
h
b S
muc · any more, ut ue rolling, now.
tells me that when her
"No, he couldn't deliver
friends try to fix her up with
his
speech that day because
· a wonderful guy, a sweet
· guy, a good-looking guy, a he was donating a kidney to
decent,
cheerful
guy, · a homeles ~ felon."
"That's right. He wanted
Monica always shuts tliem
to
donate both kidneys, but
down with, "Does he play
golf?"
the doctors wouldn't let
"I think he does " Sue him. And the funny thing is
says, trying to gloss it over. that you'd .expect him to.be
"Maybe twice a year. But he a bit of a snob, coming from
spends most of his spare such a rich family and all,
time as a big brother, work- but he's really a down-toing in soup kitchens and earth guy. To bad he's never
mowing his elderly parents found anyone that pu_shes all
lawn."
his buttons." They paused to
"Sounds like a golf-play- take long pulls on their
ing jerk to me," Monica spit. strawberry daiquiris, wait· L-ast week, Sue and Anita ing for Monica to ask when
took Monica to lunch to she 'could. meet him.
give it another try. "Joe's
"Does he play golf?"

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

For the Record

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Norma Virginia
(Buffington) Sturgeon, 91, died Tuesday, March 4, 2008, at
Belle's Residential Board and Care Home in St. Albans, W.Va.
Funeral arrangements are incomplete and will be
announced later by Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, Point
Pleasant, W.Va. An online guest registry is available at
www.crowhussellfh.com.

WHAT DO THfSE
WORDS MEAN?

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be les.s
than 300 words. All leiters are subject to editing, must be
signefl, and include address and telephone number. No.
unsigned leiters will be published. Letters should be in
good wste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
Monica hated her duffer
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be aci:ept- ex-husband so much that
t:dfor publication.
when she felt it was time to
start over, she made it a
hard-and-fast rule that she
wou.ldn't date any golferS.
That would be understand(USPS 213-960)
Reader Services
able if golf -was the reason
Ohio Valley Publishing
their marriage tanked, but it
Co.
Correction Polley
wasn't. Tom's string of flaPublished every afternoon, Monttay
Our main concern in all stories is to
grant infidelities, his drug
through Friday, 1H Court Street,
be accurate. If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio.
and
drinking problems, his
Second-class
In a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
stalker-like behavior and his
992-2156.
Member: The Associated Press and
chronic
unemployment
the Ohio Newspape.r Association .
probably h&amp;d a lot more to
Postmatter: Send · addr&amp;ss Correc-do with Monica's unhappiOur main number Is

www .mydailysentinel.com

2008

2008

Buckley lives

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 5,

.Races

County Engineer: Eugene
Triplett, 2,948; County
Coroner: Douglas D. Hunter,
from Page A1
3, 187; Common Pleas
Judge, Probat.e/Juvenile: L.
, District Delegate and District .Scott Po~ell, 3•1~ 9 ; County
Alternate to the RNC: Mike Recorder. Kay Hill,. 3,_10~. ,
Huc kabee, I •147.• John J"llStateThRep., 92nd D1stnct:
2 '·658·'
McCain, 2;098; Ron Paul, · 1 .
ompso~,
165· Mitt Romney 85' Fred Justice of the Oh1o Supreme
Tho~pson, 98.
' '
C?urt (I II term).: Ma~reen
Clerk of Courts:· Diane . 0 Conn?r, 2,636, Jusuce of
County cthe Ohm .Supreme Court
Lynch
2 820·
Treasu'rer: P~ggy'Yost, 1,848, . (1/2 . term): Evelyn L.
Mary Cline, 1,815; County Stratton, 2,379.
.
Sheriff: Robert Beegle,
State. C~ntral Comm1tt~e,
2,221, Steven Heater, 1,632. 20th Distn~t: Pete Coulad1s,
County Prosecutor: Pat 962, Patr~ck Hennessey,
Story,
1,649, Colleen I ,858; Mar1lyn K. Ashcroft,
Williams, 2,081; County 2,388.
. .
Commissioner ( 1/3 term):
. State Senate, 20th Dtstnct:
Jim Sheets, 2,752; County J1mmy Stewart,_ 3,264.. .
Commissioner ( 1/2 term):
U.S. Rep., S1xth D1stnct:
·Ray C. Frank, 743, Jack Richard D. Stobbs, 2,490.
Judge of Court of
Williams · 587 Sandra
Iannarelli: 559, Thomas R. Appeals, Fourtli District:
Anderson, I,709.
Peter B. Abele, 2,574.

Chester nre Center
TIRESALEI

WIIIIIICII4MW Ult tMC.hl:
•WIIIuclttlnllllnlMIII
• fiH IIIIIIIIMUII....

..........

•llllb IF •II I'IIIIIIIH

MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
(AP) -Federal agents have
charged 19 · people in an
alleged multistate drug ring
involving a downtown
Morgantown nightclub.
Robert Hines, an assistant
special agent in charge for

the U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement, said
TuesC!ay that more arrests
are possible.
Agents seized cocaine,
weapons, . vehicles and
nearly $190,000 in cash
during a raid of the club

Envy on Feb. 15.
Hines ·said the arrests
stemmed from a more than
yearlong undercover investigation involving the sale of
cocaine in New York, North
Carolina,
Pennsylvania,
South Carolina, Virginia,

Washington, D.C., and West
Vrrginia.
Charges include conspiracy
to distribute cocaine, money
laundering and firearms violations. Hines said the suspects are in the custody of the
U.S. Marshals Service.

Hypnotist to conduct wellness seminar at O'Bleness
ATijENS - Hypnotist American
Lung Guild of Hypnosis and the
Donald Mannarino, M.A., Association f()r more than American · Psychological
will bring the opportunity to 21 years, he has hypno- Association
Hypnosis
stop smokin~; and/or · lose tized thousands of individ- · Division-13. Mannarino is
we1ght to individuals strllg- uals of all ages.
· co-author
of
"Stop
gling to kick a habit pn
Mannarino, who earned a ' Smoking and Weight Loss
Thurs(lay, March 13, at master's d~gree in human Hypnosis," which was preO'Bieness
. Memorial services from John Carroll · sented -to the annual scien•
Hospital, . Lower Level University, has conducted tific program of the
RoomOIO.
his . Wellness Seminars American
Society of
Sponsored
by smce 1978. He has Clinical Hypnosis. He has
0' Bleness, Mannarino will received the national certi- been a featured guest on
hold two one-hour ses- fication of the National hundreds of radio and telesions using clinical and .Guild of Hypnotists, is a vision shows
medical methods of hyp- member of the , North
The fee for a one-hour
notism. According to American Association for ~ession is $60 .. Each particiMannarino's Web site, as the Study of Obesity, the pant receives a CD reinthe former exclusive clini- American Association of forcement copy of the hypcal hypnotist for the Hypnosis, the National nosis program as well as

instruction on self-hypnosis
for stress relief.
The "Stop Smoking" session is at 5 p.m. and the
weight loss session is at 6
p.m. Register online at
www.DonMannarino.com
or call 216-831-6251.
\-.1:'-i'l C1.f .

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~

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·~-OMH~~OOOOOOOOoooooOOO•• •• • o•••• •M H.HHHU

PERFQR.~flt'iG .-\RlS ("lSTMJ;

Auditions
Thumbellna
March 10 &amp; 11

was placed on admjnistrative in a preliminary hearing to
leave without pay.
move the case forward
Since the char¥es have against· Kapp.
from Page A1 .
been dismissed, 11 is not
Kapp and Cuthberson
known when Blake will remain out of jail on bond.
'return to work at 911.
Both cases will be preleave with pay by the Mason
"By law, we have to let . sented to the Mason County
County Commission follow- her . return," Commission
ing her arrest. Later, the President Rick Handley · grand jury in May.
commissioners amended
their ruling and presented an
In
late
January,
said.
agreement to Blake saying Cuthberson
appeared before
that if she were found guilty, Roush and waived his preshe would have to pay back liminary hearing. In early
the money. She declined to February, Magistrate Cheryl
sign the agreement and then Ross found probable cause

c;l

.

Dismissed

6·8pm

Charlotte's Web
March14&amp;15@7pm
Match 16@ 3pm
Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.

Gattlpolle, OH (740) 446-ARTS

ft~~~~~~~~~~~~}~;;~E:B~

File ·

Tackett and Quickel will
join
Republican Tom
Anderson and Democrat
from PageA1
Tom Lowery in the
November race for the commissioner
term beginning
Johnston said the petitions
Jan.
2,
2009.
of the three candidates have
Monday was the · filing
not been certified br the
deadline
for independent
elections board. She d1d not
say when the board would candidates to file for the
meet to certify petitions.
November general election.

Soup
Luncheon

Fri. March 7, 2008
11:00 AM· 1:00PM
Basement of the .Courthouse Annex
( 117 E. Memorial Dri ve in Pomeroy)

Menu: Home-made Chili, Vegetable Soup, Hot Dogs (with
Sau~e), Crackers, Beverages
. Sponsored by:
Meigs Co. Health Depar!mentffB Clinic Relay for Life Team
, 740-992-6626 or 740-992-3722
Call In/Fax Orders Accepted Until 9:30 AIVI on 03-07-08
Fax: 992-08361'&lt;0 DELIVERIES!
All Donations Bene6t Relay For.Life!

Family Owned
Jerry Tucker • Funeral Director in Charge

2nd Stroet

304-773·5561

Mason, WV

Regain your agility and mobility...
with First Settlement Orthopaedics!
• Slate oflhe an Surgery Center
• Specially 1rnined &amp;highly skilled sratr
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We Specialize In:
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�•

,.

The Daily Sentinel

·PageA6

LOCAL • STATE

Inside
Meigs archery teams take second, Page B2

Wednesday, March 5, 2oo8

Hayman, Thrley make Division IV honorable
flll!ntion, Page B2

FAMILY MEDICINE

BCW returning to New Haven, P;~ge B6

See doctor about
chronic cough
Question: I visited my
parents recently and noticed
that my dad coughed all the
time. He never smoked, and
I have never noticed this
before. When I asked him
, abow it, he said it didn't
bother him. When I asked
my mother about the cough,
she said that she doesn't
notice it much anymore. He
hasn't bem sick, running a
fever or getting any worse.
He doem 't think he needs to
go ro the doctor. Should he?
Answer: Chronic cough
IS a very common cause of a
trip to the doctor. The
chronic cough, one lasting
for several weeks, is a
symptom of something else
going on and is not a disease
itself. There are many
things that can cause a
chronic cough, and mos~ of
them are not serious but are
quite treatable.
Of course, cigarette
smoking tops the list of
causes for chronic coughs,
but in your father's case,
this does not apply. ·
Chronic drainage from
the nasal sinuses, often
called postnasal drip, can
also cause a cough that
lingers for quite a while,
even year-round.
Acid reflux, or GERD,
causes fluids from the
esophagus to collect in the
throat and can lead to
chronic throat clearing and
cough. More serious problems, like bronchitis, asth. rna and pneumonia can
cause prolonged coughing.
. Some medicines, especially
blood pressure medication,
can cause a chronic cough.
A visit to the doctor can
start the diagnoslic process.
Many times a chest X-ray is
done. While it seldom tells
you what is wrong, it often
tells you what is not wrong.
For instance, it can rule out ·
a tumor or foreign body, as
well as pneumonia. If your
. father complains of a lot of
postnasal drip, his doctor
may want to look at X-rays
of the front part of his skull
to see wl!at is going on in
the sinuses.
Sometimes the doctor will
ask for an upper GI
endoscopy if he or she suspects GERD. This is a test
w!)ere the . doctor inserts a
fiberoptic tube through the
mouth and down into' the
esophagus, stomach and
duodenum. As sedatives are

given, the procedure is easily tolerated. by most
patients.
The treatment of a chronic cough is aimed at treating
the cause, so getting the ·
problem diagnosed is really
1mportant. Sinus problems
are frequently treated with
antihistamines and decongestants. There are several
medications to decrease the
symptoms of GERD .. Some
neutralize stomach acid and
others reduce the production of acid. Bronchitis,
pneumonia and asthma also
need to be diagnosed and
.treated with appropriate
medications.
If your father's chronic
cough is due to medication
for high hlood pressure,
his doctor may be able to
switch him to another
drug. Fortunately, there
are many classes of blood
pressure medications that
do not cause cough, and
most
people
tolerate
changes in blood pressure
meds quite well.
,
· Finally, I'd urge you to
not let this go because inaction can lead to lifestyle
changes and isolation.
Many times the spouse is
annoyed by the cough artd.
won't even be in the same
room as the cougher. Social
occasions can become
embarrassin~ for the person
with a chrome cough.
The problem here is not
just the chronic cough itself.
In many people, chronic .
coughil)g can cause urinary
incontinence; as well. So,
please encourase your father
to see his phys1cian to 'get to
the root of the problem.

Wednesday, March 5, 2008.

Reds beat
Indians 7-4 in
five-inning game

Submitted photo

Board memt&gt;ers of the Mason County Performing Arts Council met recently to discuss forming an acting group to perform
in theatrical productions at the historic State Theater. ·

tolono

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va.- The Mason County
Perfonning Arts Council . is
ready to begin forming an
acting group to perform in
theatrical productions at the
historic State Theater.
The McPAC Board of
Directors, headed by its
president, Jack Fowler, is
hosting a meeting for people
in the area who are interested in working in theater and
drama. The meeting will be
at the Point Pleasarlt River
Museum, 28 Main St., at 7
p.m. Thursday, March 6.
Plans already are under
way for a ll)elodrama in the
genre of the old showboat
productions. The drama is
expected to be presented
during the comFamily Medicine® is a · sometime
summer
months .
weeki! column. To submit ing
Auditions for that producquestions, write to Martha tion may start as early as
A. Simpson, D. 0., M.B.A.,

March 15. In tinie, the
group also will be called
upon to perform in historical dramas and movies. The
McPAC Drama Group will
be a permanent part of the
Arts Council.
The Drama Group welcomes . everyone who is
interested, not only in acting, but in set design, costuming, lighting, sound, etc.
This is a community project
and there is no age restriction. As a member of the
group. anyone who is willing to give time and energy
on a volunteer basis will
have a part to play.
Community service credits
will be made available for
high school students.
The McPAC Board of
Directors held their monthly
meeting Thursday, Feb. 28.
Members of the Board of

group
and Margaret Richardson,
secretary. Board members
are Jack Fowler, Denny
Bellamy, Carolin Harris,
Margaret .
Richardson~
Charles Humphreys, Jeff
Riff, Roy Mayes, Leota
Sang and Nancy Mayes.

Directors were elected to
term limits of one, two and
three years. Ofti.cers for .the
board also were elected for
2008. Elected were Jack
Fowler, president; Denny
Bellamy, · vice-president;
Carotin Harris, treasurer;

SPORTS BRIEFS
f

MYLto
hold
.
.baseball-softball
sign-ups in March

"Smile! NCM you can 0'11/Jl ~ pk:\Jre of that urdrorgettable
rnom.nt captured In the newspaper. Photos become lim&amp;J•s
whan framed or pnnted on a mug or mouse pad.

Doctoral candidate
MIDDLEPORT- Chad Mourning, son of Jim and
Carol Mourning of Middleport, has been admitted to the
Ph.D. program at the School of Electrical Engineering and
Computer Science.
.

Green Bay Packers QB Brett Favre retires after 17 seasons
a

BY CHRIS JENKINS.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

GREEN BAY, Wis.
Brett Favre finally met the
one person 'who could stop
him.
Himself.
He won a Super Bowl and
three MVPs .. He set every
record worth having for a
quarterback in the NFL - _
most career touchdown
passes, mo'sl career yards
passing, most career victories by a starting quarterback. -In an age when few
quarterbacks could last a .
whole season, Favre went
almost 16 years without
missin'g a single game, an
indestructible 253 straight
regular-season starts.
The fist-pumping highs
didn't satisfy him. The headshaking lows . didn' t deter
him. He had done it all, and
he was worn out.
"I know I can stilt'" play,
but it's like I told my wife,
I'm just tired mentally. I'm
just tired," one of the NFL's
greatest players tcild ESPN's
Chris Mortensen in a voice
AP photo
mail message.
Green Bay. Packers, from left, John Michels, Brett Favre and Andre Rison celet&gt;rate after
The Green Bay Packers Green Bay's Antonio Freeman recovered a fumble t&gt;y teammate Edgar Bennett for a touchquarterback who completed down in the third quarter against the San Francisco 49ers in Green Bay, Wis., in this Jan.
more passes than anyol)e in
history will let that last 4, 1997 file photo. Green Bay won 35-14. Favre has decided to retire from the NFL after
throw _ an interception in 17 seasons. FOX Sports first reported Tuesday that the Green Bay Packers quarterback
the NFC championship informed the team of his decision in the last few days.
game that set up the New Ted Thompson said. "Brett less than a Super, Bowl win career victories by a starting
York Giants'· winning field Favre's not going to be our would be unsuccessful. "
quarterback.
goal - stand as his final quarterback anymore."
The 38-year-old Favre
Most thought Favre had
toss. •
Even the prospect of play- experienced a career resur- another good year left in
This time, Favre's fans ing in one more Super Bowl ogence last season,' leading him. But the guy who had
won't have to endure anoth- couldn't convince · hi Ill to the Packers back to the play- joyful disregard for the ironer long winter wondering stay.
offs. And he broke Dan clad rules of quarterback
whether he'll retire. ·
"To go to the Super Bowl Marino's career records for play said he was done.
_"! think the finality of it and lose; would almost be most touchdown passes and
"I was surprised when I
just kind of hits you," worse than anything else," most yards passing and John heard it." former Packers
Packers general manager . Favre to!~ ESPN. "Anything El,way's record for most general manager Ron Wolf

said. " He played with such
great passion. He must have
figured he no longe r had that
passion, and it was lime to
get out." ·
·
Favre told the team he was
simply worn ·out, physically
and mentally, after staning
every game since taking
over as the Packers' starting
quarterback in 1992.
He talked to coach Mike
McCarthy by telephone
twice Monday ni ght, indi-..
eating he intended to retire. ·
then spoke to Thompson to
finalize his decision Tuesday
morning.
''He said it was time for
him to hang up the cleats,"
McCarthy said.
Thompson and McCarthy·
spoke at a news conference
Tuesday afternoon, but the
team has not said when
Favre will address reponers.
Favre accompanied hi s
youngest daughter on a field
trip to Jackson , Miss ..
according to a woman who
identified herself as someone who works for Favre.
She spoke to an Associated
Press reporter through the
security intercom.
Favre retires with 5,377
career completions in 8,758
attempts, with 61 ,655 yards
and 442 touchdowns.
As the Packers cheered
those touchdowns and victories (and cringed at his NFLleading 288 interceptions )
Favre's body was breaking
down.
·
"After a while it takes a
toll," Thompson said. ''And
based on my conversations
with him and Mike's conversations with· him, he feels

Please see Favre,

'

MIDDLEPORT - · The Middleport Youth League
will be holding sign-ups
for baseball. and softball
for boys and girls ages
five to 18 on Saturday,
March 8 from 10 a.m.
until 2 p.m. at the
Middle(lort
Council
CHambers.
~nyone interested in
participating should attend
either of tiiese sign-up
dates.
'

SALE
March 3rd-15th

PYLtobold
baseball-softball
sign-ups in March

Rain, snow-melt bring
new flood threat·to Findlay

.

SARASOTA, Fla. (AP)
- Cleveland left-bander
Cliff Lee' returned from a
sinus infection and pitched
one inning Tuesday during
the Indians' 7-4 loss to the
Cincinnati Reds in a rainshortened game.
Lee, competing for the
fifth spot in the rotation,
. gave up one hit in his scoreless inning.
·
· "I've never been sick for a
week and felt that bad," Lee
said. "It feels good to feel
good now. I felt like I threw
the ball remotely close to
where I wanted to, so I'll
take that."
Left-banders
Aaron
Laffey and Jeremy Sowers,
the other candidates for the
final spot in the rotation,
followed Lee and gave up
ppcinnati's seven runs in a
g,ame called after the
Indians batted in the fifth.
. Laffey walked three and
gave up .three hits while
· retiring only two batters in
the second inning. He was
~barged with five runs in
all. Sowers pitched the
fourth and gave up four hits,
a walk and two runs.
.- "All three of those lefties
have been throwin~ the ball
good," manager Enc Wedge
said.
'. Joey Votto singled home a

Please see Reels, 86

Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
Box 110, Athens, .Ohio
45701, or via e-mail to
readerquestions@familymedicinenews.org. Medieal
information in
this
column is rrovided as an
educationa service only.
lt does
not replace the
judgment of your persoNJI
physician, who should bt
relied on to diagnose and
recommend
treatment
for any medical conditions.
Past columns are available
online at www.familymedicinenews.org.

FINDLAY
(AP)
- · "The people are getting ·
Flooding from ·melting very flustered with it,"
snow and heavy downpours Valentine said. "It's getting
led to road closures, early ridiculqus."
school dismissals and the
The new flood threat for
relocation of some primary Findlay was mainly due to
election poUing sites around melting ·snow, after a couple
Ohio on Tuesday, while this of days of mild temperaflood-prone city braced for tures,
said
Walter
yet another visit by high Fitzgerald, a National
water, after two bruising Weather Service meteoroloencounters in the previous gist in Cleveland. In the 24six months.
hour period ending Tuesday
. The · National Weather afternoon, the city had
Service, which issued flood received less than an inch of
watches and warnings ra.in, he Sllid.
. across the state, said the
That compares with about
Blanchard River in north- 2 inches in Columbus and
west Ohio was approaching more than 2 1/4 inches in
what's considered flood Cincinnati. Fitzgerald said
level and likely to crest near that heavier rainfall was the
Findlay early Wednesday major reason for flooding in
about a half-foot above central and southern Ohio.
flood stage.
Police a~encies ·across
Sections of about a dozen those reg10ns reported
low-lying roads along the numerous road and lane cl()o
river were already under sures because o( standing
water and closed by water, and several districts
Tuesday afternoon, said closed schools early so chiiGarry Valentine, director of dren would make the trip
the
Hancock
County . home safely.
At least 10 eastern and
Emergency Management
~gency.
southern Ohio counties with
, While he expected no flooding
problems
major problems, Valentine Jefferson, Adams, Harrison.
said another brush with Hocking, · Perry,
Pike,
flooding was the last thing · Athens, Vinton, . Guernsey
they wanted to see in and Ross -· asked the state
Findlay, after last August's for permission to move votworst flood since 1913 and a ing sites located near waternear repeat,early last month. logged roads.

Bl

·· The Daily Sentinel

POMEROY
. The .
Pomeroy You.th League will
be holding sign-ups for
baseball and softball for
boys and girls ages four and
up today and Thursday,
March 6 from 5:30-7:30
p.m., as well as Saturday,
March 8 from I 0 a:m. to 2
p.m. at the Pomeroy Fire
D~partment.

For more information,
contact Ken at 992-5322. ·

District 13 All-Star
..
game Monday at Rio
.

RIO GRANDE - The
District 13 Basketball
Coaches Association AllStar Game for. both boys
and girls will · be held
~esday at the University of
-Rio Grande .
; :The girls contest will take
~lace at 6 p.m., while the
bpys game will. start around
8'p.m. There wtll be a Slam
Dunk and 3-point contest in
between games.
'
: Tickets are $5 at the gate.
Division I-II selections will
play D III-IV selections.

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1-740-446-2342 ext. 33

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~-rqall- sportsOmydallyse('ltlnel.com

.SaOft•

Stoff

Etl¢ Randolph, Sports Writer

HOLZER

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fPQf\S 0 mydallysentinel.com

CLINIC

£14e) 446·2342,
33
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446-2342,

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Jl!ltan Walters, Sports Writer

••t.

li.;ry Crum, Sparta Writer
(700) 446·2342, e&gt;rt. 33

k:rumO mydallyreg!ster.com

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'

APphoto

Ohio State's Jamar Butler (:1,4) is fouled as he goes to the
basket by Purdue's Chris Kramer (3) during the second half
of their basketball game Tuesday in Columbus : Butler
score(J 25 points in Ohio State's 80-71 overtime victory
over No. 15 Pyrdue.
·

Ohio State.npsets.No.
15 Purdue in overtime
8Y RUITY MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS - Purdue
coach Matt Painte'r couldn't hide the hurt.
"It's frustrating, but it's
one game," he said. "We
controlled out own destiny,
and now we don't."
. Jamar Butler scored 23
of his 25 points in the second . half and Othello
Hunter, one of.Ohio State's
worst free throw shooters,
hit two foul shots and
made a big defensive play
in
overtime
as
the
Buckeyes
upset
the
Boilermakers 80-77 on
Tuesday night .
. The loss dropped Purdue
(23-7,
14-3), one-half
game behind first-place
Wisconsin in the Big Ten .
The I Oth-ranked · Badgers

host Penn
State on
Wednesday
and
Northwestern on Sunday.
The Boilermakers finish at
Michigan on Sunday.
The Buckeyes (18-12, 98), who, had lost their last
four, may have revived
their hopes for an at-large
berth to the NCAA tourna.men!.
Butler was th_!: biggest
difference . He mana~ed
just two free throws, missing his only shot frotn the
field, in the first half. In
the second 20 minutes, he
was 6-of-7 from the field
incl.uding 5-for-5 on 3pointers.
"At one point, Terrance
Crump, their point guard,
told me, they (the other

. Please see Upsets, Bl

790 East Main Street
Jackson, Ohio
740-286-5271
Mon-Sat. 10-6 ........

~6

�•

..
www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 5,

www.mydallysentlnel.com
2008

Selby, Moss named top players on Division III, IV
All-Ohio teams for 2007-08 girls basketball season

. Submitted photo

Pictured above are members of the Meigs trtermediate, Middle and High School Archery
Teams. who recent ly came in second at the state tournament and qualified for the national archery tournament in May.

Meigs archery teams take second.
BY

BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

COLUMBUS
- The
Meigs fntermediate, Middle
and High School Archery
Teams each took second
place over · the weekend at
the National Archery in the
Schools Program state tournament held in Columbus,
and qualified for the national tournament.
Meigs came in just behind
Maysvi lle Schools which
took overall team titles in
elementary, middle and high
sc hool divisions.·
Meigs' archers also did
well in individual competi-

Upsets
from Page BJ .
eight players) are going to
be playing four-ol}-four all
night because you're not
going to get the ball," Butler
said with a laugh. "1 was
standing out there ·and he
was denying me."
Painter said once Butler
found his range, it didn't
matter how many players
were guarding him.
"If you let someone like
Jamar Butler shoot a couple
of 3s you can actually play
good defense on him and
he's still going to hit some
shots," he said. "That's
what he was able to do."
Hunter, averaging 9.3
points a game, had 15, as
did Evan Thrner.

tions . .At the intermediate
school
level ,
Brooke
Reynolds took first place
female
overall, Selena
Reynolds took second place
female overall, Taylor Rowe
took fifth place male overall.
At the middle school
level, Kassandra Mullins
took second place female
overall, while at the high
school level Kelsey Sauters
took fifth place male overall .
The tournament was held
in conjunction with the
Arnold Sports Festival,
spearheaded by California
Governor
Arnold
Schwarzenegger.
Meigs joined more than

COLUMBUS (AP) Players who proved their
worth during the season and now during the tournament - are the - marquee
2008
names
on
the
Associated Press Division
Ill and IV All -Ohio girls
basketball teams announced
Thesday.
· South Euclid Regina's
Shay Selby is the player of
the year in Division III, with
Columbus
Afticentric's
Tyeasha Moss repeating in
Division IV.
Selby, a 5-foot-9 guard,
averaged 24.3 points, 8.1
rebounds, 7.2 assists and 4A
steals per game while shooting 51 percent from the field
and 82 percent at the line.

Hayman

Turley

With more than 2,100 points
in her career, she has signed
to play next year at Duke.
Selby and No. 2 Regina
(24-2) play Versailles (26-0)
Friday in the state semifinals
at Ohio State's Value City
Arena.
Moss, also a 5·9 semor,

650 students from 29
schools participating in the
state tournament. Each competitor could score a maximum of 300 points by shoot~
ing arrows as close to the
center of a target as possible.
Awards were given for both
teams and individuals who
competed well in the elementary, middle, .and high
school divisions.
There were 18 Ohio
teams, including Meigs, ·
receiving qualifying scores,
making them eligible to
attend the NASP National
Invitational Tournament,
scheduled for May 10 in
Kentucky. ,

~II

~rthune

..

CLASSifiED

was good for 15.2 points,
4 .8 assists, 4 rebounds and
3.7 stea l1 a ga me for lopranked Africentric (24- 1).
The Nubians arc back to the
defend their state championship and mee.t Convoy
Crestview (23-2) in the state
·semitinals Thursday.
The pl ayers awarus and
the teams were selected
based on the recommendations• of a state panel of
sports writers and broadcasters . "
Locally, thrt;e players Jennifer Sheridan of South
Gall ia, Katie Hayman of
Eastern and Kasey Turley of·
Southern - 'were named to
the Honorable Mention
squad in Division IV.

E-mail
classified @mydailytribu~e.com

Monday thru Friday ·
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

*POLICIES•

·'

r

It

Ohio Valley ·
GIVEAWAY
Publishing reserves
..__ _
_ _ _ _,..
the rlgh1 to edH,
--.
l
reject or cancel any
11/2yroldPugle, neutered,
housebroken. Very friendly &amp;
ad at an~ time.
affectionate, Call (740)441Errors Must B
9865 after 5pm.
eported on 1ha fin1
ay o1 publication an
4 dogs, 1 mother, 3 pups,
he rrlbune·Senllnel
mi•ed breed, (740)441-0524
e,gla1er will b
after 6pm.
eaponsible for n
=Au"'s'-lra:.::li.c.an_S_h-ep_h_e-rd_do_g
re than the cost o
(740) 256-.1664
he space occuple
Four mixed Beagles. 2-4
the error and on
mos. old. 2-1 yr. old. 949·
t'te first Insertion.
hill no1 be liable 1o . 2188.
Free to good home, 6 month
old mixed breed puppies
part coonhOund Please c.all
(740) 256·1445
nt. Corrections wll
made In the firs
ill;r
..
vallable edition.

Lost F. German Shepherd
laSI seen Jan. 30 w/etitches
in belly &amp; red ·collar,
Carpenl&amp;"r/Oyesville, $250
for sate return. (740)698 ·
2267

.,"
All

Real

Estal
ar
ubject to the Federa
air Housing Act o
1968.
dvertlsements

newspape
ccepts only hel
anted ads meetln
OE standards.

•

PLabllc
Iie.IKh't t&lt;O&gt;

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

:N'"~Ucoe•

~~1.1......-e~d

I•-.. J"oole._..-sp-p~.-s­

:R.Ight: too

""Vc:..,._..-

Property at: 748 High
Thence Wall 80 feel to Robert E. Beegle, other mlnarala with the
Street
Public Notice
uld Corporation Une; Melp County Sheriff right to remove flmt,
Middleport, OH 45760 Sheriff SetH
T ' - South 300 IM1; Attorney
for
the which have not already
PP115-01138.000
CaH Number 07CV102 Thence South 1fT 1/2 Plllntlff
been excepted or
Prior Deed References: us BANK NA
dag. East 80 feet; Manley,
Oeas, raoerved.
Volume 324, Page 543 Plaintiff
Thence South 7f71M1; Kochallkl
. Being pert of the 10
Oeacrlptlon of Real vt
Thence NOrth 88 deg. P.O. Box 165028
scree · 111 real astete
Property
TAMARA HUBBARD Eall 348 IMI; Thence Columbua, Ohio a21tl llaicrlbed In Volume
Situated In 1he Vlll1111a ET AT
North 112 dag. Eaat 614-222-4821
251, l'llge 183 of the
of Middleport, County Oefendenta
255.5 IMI; Thence. (2) 20, 27, (315
Melge County Dead
of Melga and State of Court of Common North 6 112 deg. Well
ReCorda.
Ohio
Plus ·
30111wt; Thence North
Reference
Dead:
Parcel One: The East Malg~ County, Ohio
373 feel; Thence Weal
Public Notice
Volume 327, Page 345,
one-haH of South one- In pursuance of an 295 Met; Thence North
. Melga County Deed
haH (50 feel ollotll297) order of sale to me 180 feel to the place of Sheriff Selaa
. Recorda.
In Horton's Addition 10 directed from said beginning, containing Cae Number 02CV125 Permanent
Parcel
what Ia now the VIIIIIIIB court In the above ent~ 7.01 acres, mora or Branch Banking I Nuniber: 08-00294.
of Middleport, Ohio, tied action · 1 · will lele.
Trust Co. fka Ohio Prardleas commonly
formerly
tower expoH 10 Hle 11 pub- Sevlng ·and axceptlng Valley Bank NA ·
known
sa: 47670
Pomeroy, Ohio. Sold lie auction on the front the following rMI Plolntlff
'
Adloma Road, Racine,
original 1111 being 50 otepe of the Mtlgo ..-being In Rutland vo .
Ohlo45nl.
fell In wfdlh and 140 County Court Houll VIllage, Fraction 7, Slaven Jenkins oka Seld premises also
feel In depth and being on Friday March 21 Towr&gt; 6, Ronge 14, Stophen
Janklno, contains a double-wide
further deecrlbed ae 2008 81 1o'a.m., of said Rutland
Townahlp. Ellubelh Jenkins etal mobile home owned by
foUowa:
.
d ·
the following Melge County, Ohio, Oelendanta
Stephan 0. Janklne,
Beginning 70 feel eat C::~rlbed real estate: delcrlbed •• followo: Court of Common Identification
No.
of the aoldhwell cor· Legal Description:
Beginning on the w..t Pleao, Meigs County, HH13881NA&amp;B2
ner allot 1297; thence Tract No. One: PPNt · line of
the
old OhlO
Year· 1896
north 50 feet; thence 12 200
Corporation line of In pursuanca of an Make- Hart
east 70 feet; thence Situ lied In the VIllage Rutland VIllage on the order of sale to me A copy or the subject
aouth 50 feat; thence of Rutland county of South aide of Salem directed from said Ohio Certificate oiTitle
weal 70 feet to the Malgo and State of Street, 30 feel South court In the above anti· B Ia attached hereto as
place of beginning.
Ohio and bounded from the North line ol tied action, I will Exhlbii"B".
Parcel Two: A right-of- 1nd ~acrlbed ea lol· fraction 7, deed to upoee to ule at pub- Currant Owner: Steven
wey lor _.r linea aa Iowa·
Ernaat
Nlcholoon lie ouctlon on the front Jenkins aka Stephen
currently
existing Begl~nlng 55 rods and deacrlbed In . deed ateps of the Melga Jenkins &amp; Elizabeth
acroas the west one-. 7 llnka and . 164 feel .recorded In Deed Book County Court Housa Jenkins etal
heH of the lOUth one- weal and 45 112 links 208, Page 267, Dead on Friday, March 21, Property at: 47670
half of Lot 1297 con- SouthoftheNortheaat Recorda
of Malgo 20088110a.m.,ofaald Adams Road, Racine,
necllng Into . High corner of Fraction 7 County, Ohio:
day, the following Ohio
Street.
.
Township 6 Range 14' Thence South 300 feet daecrlbed reel estate: PPt 08.(1()294-000 ,
Subject to an eaae- D.hlo
Company'~ to the center of the Legal Oe•crlptlon
Prior Dead References:
ment for the benellt of Pun:heH In Rutland creak;Thenca South 60 Sltuetad In Lat.art 'Volume 327,
345
the weal one-hell of Malgo County Ohto' dog. 15' Eaot t08.4 feel Township,
Meigs
the oouth one hoH of and 11 a llak~ In ~~~~ al~lftg aold creek; , County, Ohio, being
lot 121fT for water and Northwest corner of ·Thence North 173.79 partofa10ocrapercal
gaa linn connecting whll waa formerly feet; Thence Waot 15 of
real
eotate
Into the ollty belwHn Francaa Snowden'• feel; Thence North .180 daacrlbed In deed
BI'Oidway ond High Lot·
feel to the South aida recorded In Volume
Stratta.
Thtnct south elong of
Solem
Streat; 251, Page 183 of the
Apprallld at UI,OOO the Weal line of aald Then'ce Wtat 80 feet Mtlgo County Dead
Tarme of Sole: Cannot Lot 134 lttt; Thanci along the uld·llreat to Racorda and_ being
be aold tor lou than Eaat 64 fl8t 10 aatakl· the placo of beginning, part of 100 acre lot no.
213rdt o the appralled Thonco North 134
containing .70 acre, 257.
value. 10% down on to 1 ollkl ea fell Eaet mora or 1111.
,
Baglnnlng 7315 fl8t
day of 111e, caah or from · the place of Currant OWntr: Tamare wtll from the north•
aertllltd check, bll· beginning·
Hubbard II at ·
out aornar of 11ld 101
1n01 due on oonflrma· T'hlnOI w~et ea r..t to Property at: 111 Salem 257 on the north llna of
tlon of sala.
the place of beginning &amp;treat, Rutland, Ohio
lot 257; thence wut
Thl ·approloal did not Traot No. Two: PPNi PPI12-G0200.000
along told north llna
Include In Interior 12..Q0043
12•00043.000
201', thonoa eouth
examination of tha ·lltuatad In the VIllage Prior Died Rlferlncea: along the wtat line of
houH.
of Rutltnd, Matga ~ume 2411, Pole II
Hid 10 lara triO! of
Robert ! . . IHgle, County Ohio·
· Appralled at 25,000 real 11tate 417.1';
Melgt County llherlff Beginning 1 j en Iron Terma of Sl.ll: Cannot then01 111t along the
Attorney
for
the pin on the Iouth aldl be oold tor 1 - thon aouth line of ufd 10
Plalntln
of Solem StrHI, the 213
rda
of
the acre tract of realaotata
Stephan D. Mlltt
uld beginning point oppraiHd value. 10% 201'; thence north per·
11
W.
Monument being 8 fill !Itt of down on dloy of 1111, 11111 with tht wtll Una
Avenue
tho Wool Corporotlon caoh
or
certified of 11ld 10 ocre troot of
Dayton, Ohio 45402
llna of the VII loge of check, be lance due on real estate 417.5' to the
(037) 411-11100
Rutlond and 30 FHt conftrmatlon of 1111.
p11ce of beginning,
(2) 20, 27, (31 5
South of the North 1101 The opprolool did ccntotnlng 2.32 ocraa,
of Fraction 7 of Town lncludo on Interior mara or leu.
8 Rongel 4 the Ohio examination of tht !xceptlng ond rtHrv•
cOmpeny'a Purchaoe; houoe.
lng all coal, all, g.. and

-oo

A complaint lor divorce
(Case No. 07-0R-35)
was flied In the
Common Pleas Court
Of . Melga County, OH,
located on 2nd Street,
Pomeroy, OH, by Reba
Tillis VI Dennll Buck
Tillis lateiy of 293 112 S.
2nd Ave. Middleport,
OH, who muat fila an
answer within 28 days.
(1) 30, (2)6,13, 20,27
(3) 5

·

y 1\RII Si\I.E

r:

•

Anllquas ..........................:............................530
Apartments.for Rent ................................... 440
Auc11on and Flea Market .............................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repalr ..................................................no
Autos for Sala .............................................:710
Boats &amp; Motoro for Sale ............................. 750
li~lldlng Suppllaa ........................................550
Business and Bulldlngs ............................. 340
Buslneas Opportunity ,................................ 21 0
Buslneas Training ....................................... 140
Campara &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment................................... 780
Cards of Thanks ..........................................010
Child/Elderly Care ........ :.............................. 190
Electrlcai/Refrlgerellon ............................... 840
Equipment lor Rant ..................................... 480
Excavating ..............................,.................... 830
Farm Equlpment...................;...................... 610
Farms for Rent ........... ;.................................430
Farms for Sale ....... ;..................................... 330
For Laase ................................................ ..... 490
For Sale ....,...................................................585
For Sele or Trade......................................... 590
. Fruita &amp; Vegatables ..................................... 580
' · Furnished Rooms ........................................450
General Haullng ...........................................850
Glveaway ..................................................., .. 04o
. Happy Ads .......,............................................050
: :: Hay &amp; Graln ..................... ,............................ 840
' HelpWanted ................................................. 110
• Home lmprove111ents ...............................,;,,810
Homes for Sala ............................................310
··• Household Goods ....................................... 510

Houoes.for Rent .......................................... 410
In Memorlam ................................................ 020
Insurance ................. .................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equtpment .......................1860

~ . Motorcycles&amp;: 4 Wheelers ..........................740

• · · Mualcallns1rumenta ................................... 570

· ' Personals ..................................................... oos

Pels lor Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing '&amp; Haatlng .................................... 820
ProfasslonafServlces ................................. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... 180
- Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
.. Schools lnstructlon .....................................150
.. · Seed, Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............. .. .............. 850

Sl1uatlona Wanted .......................................120
Space for Rent .............................................460
. Sporting Gaoda ........................................... 52Q
. ' · SUV's for Sale ..............................................720
Trucks for Sale ............................................ 71 5
Upholstery ................................................... 810
Vans For Sale ...............................................730
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
, Wanted 10 Buy· Farm Supplles .................. 620
• Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
'
Wanted to Rent ............................................470
~ Yard Sele- Galllpolls ....................................072
' • Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middte......................... 074
'! ~ard Sele-P1. Pleaoant ................................ 078

.(

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POLtaES: Ohio V.l~ Publllhlng
'ftlbu~NJ.,ftltl'* will M

rwervn the right 1o tdlt, rtttot. or 01nce1 •nv 8CI It eny tlrM . Error• mutt be report•d on the flr•t dey of

mponllltlt tor ftO more tMn the coet ot 1M IPIC• occupied by thl error end only the flr•t lnHrtton. We •hell not be
any 10M or QPenH that multa from the pua!INtiOn or omltllon ot ·• n ICfYtftiMrMnl. Corr•cUon will be m1de In the II rat avall1ble lldltlon. • Box
Cll'll appl.... • AH rell Mtat1 ldvertiMIMnll •r• •ub)ect to the Fact.ltl Fair Hou•lng Act of 19811. • This
We will
ICc:.pt •ny •dvertislng In vlollltlon of the lllw.

Ire IIWIYI contldlntlll.

%~I Kr:I:-::T:-&amp;:-C-,.A-.R:-::t.::-:Y":'LE~=--:-:----------~ .r'.olllliiOm&gt;tmJNnyiiolk51Nmiiiiiiiiiio.. .,l ~.rt.o__:iii~iiSALEiiio_..l eo
~

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Mary Kay Consultant .Buy, 0 down payment. 4 bed·

Sell, or Host. Earn Free rooms. Large yard. Covered
PrO&lt;iJ&lt;:ts, Call Angle (740) deck. Attached garage. 740245·5206 or (740) 578·1051 367-7129.

currency, proolfmint sets,
diamonds. MTS Coin Shop,
151 ~ nd Avenue, Gallipolis.
446 _2842
-------Small Church needs smSII
Piano call 304·773-5166 or
304-675·2338
Wanted to buy Junk Cars,&amp;
Farm Ml;'chinery call 740·
388-0884 Can Call Collect

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends
that you do business with
people you · know, and
NOT to send money
through the mall unt!l you
have investigated the
offering.

MONEY

Wanting to Buy Junk Cars.
304-675·2176
I ' 11 '1

t

now&gt;IP"F'"'I

H~

FOR SALE

I

~G:t

r--•.!'!N~OT!!!I~C~E·.--. 2.600 sq. ft, 4br, 2 acres

IDLilAN

1\ \ 11 \ 1

wlpool, in New Haven
$ 139 _500 304 ,59HI871 call
after epm

3 BR, 1 Bath, LR, OR ,
Kitchen , Den , Back Deck, &amp;
Paved Drive. Located on
Kelly Dr. $86,000 446·2444

77 Hawthorne Ln., Pt.
Pleasant. 3br, 1bii, 10~ 5/.SF
New floor coverings, fresh
paint, new heat pump
$79,000 304·674-3698
9 room 2500 sq. ft . ranch ,
Bailey Run Rd. , Pomeroy,
Ohio, $105,000. (740)992,
9363, 304-722·3894

" 1 1&lt;\ I! I "

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts, wood
items. To S4BO/wk MaterialS'
provided. Free information
.pkg. 24Hr 801-428·4649

~ -S"
t,A-~

~~

for

Operators
brakeinpresses
and shears.ofApply
person
at King Kutter II 2150
Tuppers Plains St. Paul' Eastern Ave, Gallipolis. No
U.M.Ch. basement sale, Phone Calls Please.
Mar. 7 9·7pm, Mar. 8 9·2pm,
lurniture, clothing, ·dishes, An Excellent way to earn
money. The New Avon.
books, toys, misc. items.
CaU Marilyn 304·882·2645

CLASSIFIEDS

l!i4

Absolute Top Dollar • sll·

.'

..--=sH=o=p--.

Now you can
borders and graphics
~addedtoyo urclassifiedads
(.~
1m
Borders 53.00/perad
Graphics SO¢ for small
.$1.00 for large

,Prlldav r:or Sundaya Paper
Thursday
• All ad8 must be prepaid•

LOCAL EXPERIENCEO
manlacturer Is ~;w~w~w~.~co~m~lc~a=.c=o=m~~;=====:::;~Cl~2008~=by=~:E:A:·:'n:c=
.
I Aloo~ng

'VARDSA.l.E·
PoMEROVIMIDDLE

4x:4's For Sale .............................................. 725
AnnounCement ............................................ 030

i

All Dlapl•y: 1:1 Noon· :l
auelneu Daya Prior To
Publlc.tlon
sunday or::!':,':."~n";;,~:,,P,;•:;;

4

CLASSIFIED INDEX

I

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Mond•y-Frlday for ln-rtlon
In Next D•y•a P•per
Sunday In-Column: :1.:00 p.m.

~~~~::::"'~~~~-....., ~~dE X pER IE ~~d:r~ nll'~~to~"'"Hru&gt;--W-ANMI--.,
. IItio Hru&gt; WANMI llno Hru&gt; WANMI

; .. Llvestock......................................................630
; . • Lost and Found........................................... 080
Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
Miscellaneous......................:....................... 170
Miscellaneous MerchandiM., ..................... 540
Mobile Home Rapalr....................................880
Mobile Homes for Rent ....... ;...,................... 420
Mobile Homes for Sela ................................ 320
Money 10 Loan ............................................. 220

oi

'

' ' ~iiiiiiiiiiiii~

Public Nollce

o

•

lsement In vlolatlo
flhelaw.

Appraised
at
$60,000.00 Terms of
Seta: Cannot be sold
for lisa than 213rds of
the appralaed value.
10% down on dey of
Mia, cash or ceriWied
check. Balance due on
confirmation of sale.
The appraisal did not
Include an Interior
examination of the
land &amp; mobile home.
Robert E. Beagle,
Meigs County Shariff
Attorney
for
the
Plalntlfl
Culflce &amp; Brown
121 N 4th St.
PO Box 490
Zanllvllle,OH43702
740-453-01188
(2) 20, 27, {3) 5

teal

I

will not knowing
•• &gt;We
'I accept an'l adver

I:.oo&lt;O&gt;r-

r

Display Ads

ver/gold
coins,
any
tOK/14K/18K gold jewelry.
dental gold, pre 1935 US

.,t__ ~iiiOUNiiiANiiiD•D-plll110

•

or

\\\( 11 \ 1 I ' II \ I"

Word Ads

• Start Your Adl With A Keyword • lnclltlde Complete
Detcrlptton • Include A Price • Avoid AbbrtVIetiDftl
• Include Phone Number And Addreu Whln Heeded
• Adt Should Run 7 DIYI

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get
..

~&lt;D&gt;II.a.ll"'

Websjtes:
www.mydailytribune.com
· www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

(304} 675-1333

E'Twaun Moore had 16 Turner rebounded and was
points for the Boilermakers, fouled. He hit both shots to
' who had won 13 of 14, seal it and drop Purdue to 5while Scott Martin had 14 5 on the road.
"When I got into the
and Robbie Hummel added
~arne,
the look in our eyes, I ·
12 points and I 0 rebounds.
With I :28 left in over- JUSt knew we were going to
time, Hunter was fouled on come in and win," Turner
a dunk attempt and the 56 said. "That's what we came
percent free throw shooter here to do - to win . We
hit them both for a 74-72 didn't want anybody cutting
nets down on our floor."
lead.
Ohio ·State had been if\,
The ieams traded possessions until Turner hit a lean- tight games in the final miner with 25.8 seconds left to utes before. Almost every
put Ohio State ahead 76-72. time, they had lost. But not
Hummel countered with a this one.
3 to cut the gap ·to a point,
''!' m very proud of our
but Butler - one ·of the guys -. the word we used
nation's top free throw was resiliency - in Staying
with it," coach Thad Matta
shooters at 93 percent was fouled and hit both with said. "By any stretch I don't
16.7 seconds left for a 78-75 think we played perfect, but
guys kept going, guys made
lead.
Moore missed a wild 3 · some plays down the
with 12 · seconds left and stretch."

Sheriff Sales
Road No. 270, the fol- The above description
Case Number 07CV001 towing four cou,...:
prepared by' Roger W.
Bruner Land Comp.
{1) South 02 dog. 54' Claus,
Registered
52" West a dlllance of Surveyor No. 6456,
Plaintiff
vs
66.5) IM1 to a point;
baaed on an actual
Stephen E. Bunner et (2) Thence South 12 field aurvey of January
at
deg.18' 50'~ Weal a dlt- 8,2003; said survey
Defendants
lance of 75.04 feel to a being subliCI to any
Court of Common point; .
.
, _ thllt may be dltPleas, Meigs County, (3) Thence South 23 ctoaed In a lull and
Ohio.
deg. 43' 24" Weal 1 dlt- eccurata title ...n:h.
In pursuance of an lance of 80.03 fell to a Lot 4 Llmberger Ridge
Road Oliva Townahlp,
order of sale to ma point;
directed from sold (41 Thence South 38 Ohio
Court In the above deg. 12' 06" West a dla· PI'N: 09-00551.004
Owner:
entitled action; I will lance of 52.57 featiO a Currant
expooe to sale at pub- point;
Stephen E. Bunner ~~
lie auction on the front Thence, leaving the al
Property at: Lot t4
steps of the Meigs roed, North 86 deg.
County Court Houaa 40" Wall a d l a - of Llmberger Rdg Rd.
on Friday, March 21, 1.019.48feeltolftlron. Rledavllle,Ohlo
2008 at 10:00 a.m., of pin oet In the Eallllnt PPI 09-0055104
aald day, the following of a 51.6607acrae trlcl Prior
Dead
described real estate: as conveyed to Eric L. Referenc'aa:Volume
EXHIBIT A
·end
Sharon
R. 212, Pege 823
Situated
In
the Johnson by Official Appraised at $17,500
Townehlp · of Oliva, Recorda Volume 108, Tol'lllll of Sale: Cennot
County of Melga, and Page 321 of the Melge be aold for le11 than
State of Ohio, being In County
Rato"ler'a 2l.1rd of the appraised
paeolng value. 10% down of
Fraction 35 of Old Office,
Section 34, Range 11 through two Iron pine day of sale, cash or
West, Township 4 181 at dlabincea of plut certified
check,
North, of '"The Ohio 25.90 .IMI and pluo Balance due on conflrCompany
First 125.90 feel, raapac- mellon of uta.
The appraiHI Included
Purchase of1787", and lively;
being bounded and Thence, with lhl Eall land only.
line ol Hid Johnaon Robert E. Beagle,
described as follows:
for property. North 01 deg. Malga County Sheriff
Commencing
Relaranceeta518"1ron 25'19"Ealtadlltance Attorney . for
the
pin found at the of 200.00 feello an Iron Plaintiff
Southeast corner of pin
HI
at
the David
Bennatt,
Fraction 35 (Nota: Southwest .corner of Attorney
Reference bearing on the· aforementioned 129 N ilh St.
the Eaat line of Ray M. and Ina J. Combrldge, OH 43725
740-438-2718
' Fraction 35 uaed aa WHvar property;
North 01 deg. 08' 40" Thance,wlthlhaSouth (2120,27, (3)6
Eaot);
line or · aald Waavar
Thence, with the Eall property, South H deg.
Public Notlee
llna of Froctlon· 35, 00' 17" Eaat 1 d l North' 01 dog. 08' 40" of un.03 feet to the
Eaat a dlotanc:e of point of beginning, lhlriH Salel
1,111.53 fHt to an Iron pllllng through on Call Number 08CV098
pin
oat
at
the Iron pin 181 II 1 dlt- United
Stotu
of
• 8outh1111 corner of 1 Iancia of pluo 1.147.03 America
40 acr11 trect •• con· feel;
Plaintiff
vayed to Rey M. ond Containing
1.071 . va .
lno J. W.ovar by Peraal oarea, mare or leaa. Joanna l'erguaon
No.I of Deed Volume being 1 new tpln out of Dtr.ndlnll
211, Page 335 of the Alldltot'l Peratl No. Of. ·Court of · Common
Malgo
County 00811.000.
"""
Rtaardar'o Offlot;
All !rein plna Itt Ire Mllgl County. Ohio
Then01, with the Iouth 1111" x 10" reblr liPped In pureuonoa of an
line of eold Weaver and lobated "Ciaua order D1 1111 to me
property. North 88 deg. 114111".
directed from told
00' 17" West • dletan.. The bpr!nao In thlt court In the above entl·
of 314.82 feet tc e point deocrlptlon are for tied action, I will
In the centerline of angle oetcullllona only expooe to Hie II pubTownahlp Road No, and are baeed on the lie auction on the front
270 (Limbergar Ridge 1!1111 line of l'ractlon :II atepa of tha Melga
Road), being th1 true UHd 11 North 01 dig. County ·Court Hou11
point of beginning for 08' 40" Eut.
on Friday, March 21 ,
thll deacrlpllon;
A pill of tho abov• 2008 II 10:00 o.m., of
Thence, from aald dHcrlbed ourvey hot Hid dey, the following
point of beginning and been aubmlltad lor ftla described rut Illata:
running with tho cen- ot
the
. County Current
Owner:
ttrllne of Township EnglnHr'a Office.
Joanna F~rguoon tt,al

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD· NOW ONLINE

l\egister

Burke. Beallsville, 5-10, sr., 17.0; Jessica
Slagle, Sidney Lehman, 5-7, sr., . 17.9;
Leslie Pumell, Spring. Collt Gent. 5-10,
sr., 19.2; Kelly Analra, Mansfield St.
Pelers, 5-10, sr., 16.3; Keyla Wiley,
Glenwood New Boston, s-e,;., 17.0; Kayla
Selp, Mowryslown Whleoak, 5-n;. sr.,
18.2; Emily lloloak, Mellon~. 5-11, "··
15.0,

Barhost, Anna;

- Sentinel -

"------··
Management poaltion with
local shoe store in Gallipolis.
Exciting career opportunity.
Retail experience preferred.
Competitive benefit pack·
age Apply at SHOE SHOW
·
'
305 Upper River Rd. EOE
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or M/F.
-~------·
SelL Shirley Spears, 304, ManpoWer Is now hiring for
675·1429
the . following positions
Produtlon
Babysitter needed in my Autonlobile
home for 2 children before Workers in the Buffalo, WV
school only. Must have refer· Area Benefits available Call
Today 304·:57·3338
ences, (740) 208-7177
Medical Testing Assistant,
PT, ·to pertorm drug testing,
other mediCal services, end
conduct tralnlrig courses· in
the Ashland, Charleston,
and RavensWOOd areas.
Medical background unnec·
essary-will train. Prefer out·
going personality. Fax
rasoore to (740) 288-6671 or
call 888·269·8344 ·

1.,.- - - - - - · ·

Regional, Pneumatic Tanker
&amp; OTR driving Positions:
A&amp;J Trucking COmpany in
Mariana, Ohio is searching
for qualified COL A Drivers
to operata Semi-Dumps,
Pneumauc Bulk Tankers lor
both regional and OTR
opportunities.
Qualified
applicants must be at least
23 yra, have 1 minimum of 1
ye_ars of aale comme~ical
dnYI':'Q opel'lence, Haz Mat
Certlftcatlon, Clean MVA
and good )ob Sl8blll1y. We
offer a 1tJI Slale o1 btneflls
O k) • .,.
1o
I
Pus 4 1 ( ..,"" vacat n
pay. For Information contact
Kan1 at 800·482·9385 or
vlsll our web site a1
wwwrnnP:IoocOmE.O.E.

Romarklblo CNA'o

-lid

,

,
Well Tender needed, competltlve wages, medical,
dental, eye, 40tk, stock
options. Exp. Preferred.
Send resume to: PO Box
1478, Cambridge, Ohio
m431l172~5-":"_ _ __,

ll!O

Sc.:Hools
INsnwcnoN
'--liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioorl
•

OllllpoUI Cfii'MI' COllege
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl740446-4367
1-1100·214·0452
'
www.QIIIpolleolreerooi&amp;QII.eau
Accradlted M•mhr Accrediting
eounc~ 1or
coa.gea

;it~:i:·~
mi:!.,e
. :.._.:_.:,

!l7v

.

MJSCF.IJ~

2 Gas Fumances $100..00
each, 50gal. Hot Water Tank

o-11 HNIIhC.nt

-awood VIllage

New Carry Out/Delivery SOIIdng CNA'S . llntar-.~cantacl
Restaurant
l.n Point
Pleasant
Hiring,
for Milly Strader Ill (8ee)728- George's Porl8ble sawmill,
5117or
Interview call 304-593-3120
doni haul your Logs to the
mlltv.ztrO Optnt=
or 304·812·5088
Mill just cal304-875·1957.
lllhGcGOfDOutside 5alea Poalllon. MuSI www.aa-~-.l*· Ne&amp;d a helping hand for
have experience with oper·
1!0!.
everyday cleaning, or Spring
ating farm equipment and rr====-===='11 cleaning, Residential or
computers. Fax Resume to
Commerclel 446,2313 and
BENNIGAN'S Now Hiring 740·446-9104
ask for ~ay
Servers, Cooks &amp; PreP c-------·Roofing·
all
'lypes
Cooks, Apply withiri.
Owner
Operalor
Opportunities:
R&amp;J
commerclai·Aesldental, 20
Take Inbound cuS!omer
Courtside B8r &amp; Grill now Trucking · Marietta, Ohio
yrs· """"rlence In all types
service calls lor
taking appfications for expe· has opportunities available
metal
roofing,
Brian
Fortune 100 Companiea
rienced grill and fry cooks. for Owner Operators within
(740)992-2910
Including:
Apply in person or call the region. We feature
Small Home RePair· and
(740)441-9371 to set up an weekly senlements end lrailinterview. 30Q 2nd Ave., er rental. OperatOfS should ~!me Warner Cable Brush Cutting, 'mrtl Service
(740)446·3682
Gallipolis.
have newer equipment and
t Up to tUOihour
_ _;___F_E_D_E_R_•_L__ lrame type trailers. For more
Now Hiring:
,..
information · contact Dennis
Ful Time Day Shift
POSTAL JOBS
al 800·462·9365 .
Full Time Evening Shift
• $17.89-$28.27/hr., now hir·
Child care done In my home,
POST OFFICE NOW
ing. For application and free
Infants welcome, meals
HIRING
Coli
lnfoCIIIlon
governement Job Info, call'
Included, lots of activities for
Avg. Pay $20/hr or
Todayl
American Assoc. ollabor 1·
your child, dayS, night and
S57K/yr.
Includes
913·599-8226, 24htrs. emp.
weekends. $2.00 per hour.
Federal Benefits, OT.
1-888-IMC-PAYU
serv.
Call 256·1438 ask lor
Offered by Exam Services,
Exl- 2347
Nanny.
Help wanted at Darst Home not offered w/ USPS who
www.lnfoclslon.com
Group Home. 740·992·5023
hires.
I 1\ 1. \t I\ I
1-866-542,1531
Homemaking
ar.d
The Chari111on Guatto
Personal Care Attendant&amp;
POST OFFICE 00W
Independent Contracior
Tralnl~:~g : local Agency now
HIRING
CarTier Needed For
accepting applications lor
Avg. Pay $20/hr or
New9Paper Delivery At. 35classes to be held March 17·
· $57K/yr, includes
St8YB Branch-5&amp;20 Ml, Rd· Do you en(oy decorating?
21St. CHHA 'a, STNA't,
Federal Benellls. Of.
Butfalo Area Eam about Become a Home Interior
CNA't and PCA's welcome Otfered by EMam Services,
Consultant and receive
$1.600 month~ btlore
to apply. Please call not offered wl USPS who
S500
In Mercnandlso tor
expenApprO&gt;&lt;Imololy
4
(740)441-1377 fo r more
~Ires .
hours a day Dependable only $991 Make a profit or
information.
'
1-866·403·2582
vehlde a must CALL f .. · decorAte your ·home on a
IT Technician. MUst have Post Office Now Hlrlngl
800·982-8397 ~.t 1709 45% dlacoun11 Call Robin
experienc'e. Fax reSume to Avg. pay $20/hr. 57Kiyr,
Martin to find out about this
740·446·9104
Incl. Fed. ben., Ol Offered
imlled ~me ol1erl 304'372·
L.1qu1'd AsphaIt or·1vers by Exam Services, not aff. Weldefs needed. 1yr. expert· 7060or 304·532·1272
Must b e 21 years ·
w/USPS who hires.
Need'"
cu,
ence. Good wages &amp; bene· Home Interiors &amp; Gifts
1 • 866 -506- 91 ~ 9
old or older. Must have
ftts. Send r88Uflle&amp; to: CLA COntact Rosalie Unrue at
Class A COL wilh Hazmal -R-N'_s_n_o-ed_e_d_l_o_pr-ov-ld-e eOx 103, clo Gallipolis Dlllly (304) 273-2969 Join &amp; gel
Endorsement and good baSiC first aid at Industrial Tribune, PO Box 469, $500 In merchandise for $99
MVR. local Trips Call 1· s"e in Point Pleasanl, WV. Gallipolis, OH 45631
runrueOI'&lt;Jghsa.not .
BOO·S9B· 6122
Part and Full time. INTER-~
M•dnight Clerk needed at At ESTINGI LOW STRESS!
FIND A JOB
· 35 Video &amp; Bookstore 304· Call 888·269·8344 or lax
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS
937-4900
resume tO 740-266-6671
•

--===-:--'-

I

i

'.

All real ettllte advertleing

In this new1ptptr It
sut»tect to the Fedtr11l
Fair Houalng Act of 1818
which makealt lllegll to

advertise "•ny

preference, llmh811ion or
discrimination buld on
rice, color, religion, MX

femllial stlltue or nltlonll

origin, or •ny Intention to
m•b any such
preterenc1, limitation or
dlecrlmlnlltlon."

This newspaper will not
knowingly accepl
ldvertlaementlfor reel

Borrow Smart. Contact
11tate which 11 In
the Ohio . Division of
violation of the law. Our
Attention!
reeders are hereby
Financial
Institution's
Local
company
offering
"NO
intormed th•t 111
Office of Consumer
dwellings advertised In
Affairs BEFORE you reti· DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
this newspaper are
nance yo1.. home or grams for you to buy your
available on an equal
ot)taln a loan. BEWARE home instead of renting.
opportunity baHa.
of requests for any large * 100% financing
advance payments of • Less than perfect cr&amp;dit =======~
For sate by owner. 3BA
tees or insurance. Call the accepted
Office of Consumer • Payment could be the Rancn, 1 bath, Family
Room , Stove/Fridge, W/0
Affairs toll free at 1·866- same as rent.
Locators. included. Asking $70,000
278.0003 to learn if the Mortgage
Call740·709·6339
mortgage broker or (740)367·0000
lender
Is
properly .House for sate in Racine Let your garage make the ·
licensed. (This is a public area. Approx. 4 acres, all mortgage pymt. , with 7,000
service announcement professionally landscaped. lb. lift and mini apt. Near
from the Ohio Valley Ranch style house with 4
Walmart, 2BA, CIA, love tub.
:P:ubl~isll;ln:g:CO::m:pa:ny:)=~ bedrooms, living room, din· 1816 Chatham Ave .
ing room, kitchen, large fam· $62,500. 740·446·3442
PI!SomilOOERVIIElNAL
ily room, cenlral air. gas heat
e as ome o eonar
and 1 fireplace. Addition of a
&amp; Lelah Sergent,
large Florida room com·
ooms
2 full baths, 2 ca
pletely cedar opens onto
Hidden View Bakery Is open patio &amp; pool area. Heated in arage, security system,
every Fri. &amp; Sat. from 7am· ground poOl enclosed by pri· ack up -heat, chain lin
5pm on 82 Deckard Road, vacy fencing and land- ence on corner lot. 201
BidWEll , OH 45614
scaped. Finished 2 car orest 51. Henderson
-675·6411 or 304-674
garage attached to house
070
TURNED DOWN ON
and 1in!Shed &amp; healed 3 car
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI? garaQe
unattached.
No Fee Unless V'Je Wilil
Excellent condition ready to
1 888 582 3345
· $255 000 00 C 11
· · "
mOl/a "'·
· · · a:
7401949·2217
Open House Saturday t6X80 3 Bedroom 2 Bath
"rlli0~--:::-0MES
..
--.,
March 8, trom 1o:30-2:3o, Vinyl Siding . Shingle Roof.
0
FOR SAlE
960 Ash Street, Middleport. $230 per month. 740·385·
'"--lllliiiiiiiiio-rl Ohio, 2yr. ranch, $179,000, 9948.
'
for more information contact
2008 3 bedroom 2 bath secDuplex for Sale on Land Sharon Warner 740·992· tional home $279 per month
Contract 740,992·5858. 7205 or (740)992·7587
740·385· 7671 .

r

I

(

r Mo~~s~ I

�.'
Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel
'Help Wanted

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Wednesday, March 5, 2008
ALLEYOOP .

Help Wanted

American Electric Power/
Mountaineer Plant in New Haven,
seeking temporary personnel.

Seeking people interested in the coal
yard/equipment operator P.OSition(s)
as well as personnel ·interested in
operations department position(s) .

40

Hr. workweeks anticipated, rotating
shift work required. Two Year Degree
preferrell .
Entry level wage

rate

www.mydailysentlnel.com

package being offered .
Interested candidates shoulll mark
which interest they prefer and submit'
resumes to:

•2&amp;3 bedroon1 apartments
• Central heat &amp; A/C
•Washorlrl'yof hookup
•All etedric· averaging

Pleasant Valley
Hospital is currently
accepting resumes
for a Full time
·Nursing
House
Supervisor.
Experience in acute
'
'
care
setttng
preferred. Current
WV license.
Send resumes to:
Hospital
c/o Human

H1ll s Self
Sto rage

Mason County Fair
· 2nd Annual Tack Sale
Saturday, March 8th
6pm

$50-S«llmon1h
•Owner pays .water, sewet,
trash

(304)882-3017

Mason Co. Fairgrounds

it

apply on-line at
www.pvaliey.org
AA/EOE

;::::;,;;;:;::;::;;;;;,::~
FIND A

Equal Opportunity Emplo.yer

JOB IN

THE CLASSIFIEDS

M/F/DN

.. ".....·-,...
•r .;"'~

.....

'

·--,.......
-~

.

IINII~

VOTE

99 Beech Street

Pomeroy,OH

Mlddl • rt OH

Ton•·,...

Roger Manley·
Owner

1-888·992·7090
Phone: 740.992.7090 :

'

~allipolis

Housing .

AERATION MOTORS

Hardwood bblnmy And Furnialre :

HAY &amp;

Upstairs apt. downtown Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1· ....__ _ _
GRAIN
_,__ _..
4 Bedroom House lor Rent Gallipolis, clean, 2BA, 2 ~80:::0.:::5_3=7·=95:-2:::8.=::-:~:::­
(740) 446·4060 or 367·n62 Baths, rNI, WID hookup, NEW AND USED STEEL 8001 round bale Hay. 740·

$575 mo. Call446·0725,

MAKf
SOMfONf'S
DAY!

J)ailp ~ribune

' (740) 446-2342

Double Wide for Raot·Ex1ra $500 dep. ret. 17401 446 · Steel Baams, Pipe Rebar
Nice, 3BA, 2Bath, CA. large ~92z09r--~----, . For
Concrete,
Angle,
deck, No Pets, 1622
SPACE
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Chatham Ave , Ga!lipolls
lOR RENT
Grating
,For
Drains,
446·4234"' (740)208·7881 ~
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Atloii/WorohouHISt_. Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Bedroom House In Location in Gallipolis 1800 Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
sq. ~ . bUilding $400 mo. oH Thurs~ay, Saturday &amp;
Syracuse. $500/month +
street
· call Wayne at Sunday. (740)445-7300
depos~ Hud App. No Pets.
(304)675·5332 weekando
STEEL ARCH BUILDINGS·
740·591·0265
SAVE THOUNSANDS

r

I

~

House for rent. 992-6305.

i

I

riO

llousoloLD
GooD!;

MOBFORILF;,J!O..MI'S
Lw-..,;,llii.ii"'""iiii",;._.t.

(740) 992-2155

lloint ll~easant l\egister
(304) 675-1333

Motk&gt;han Furniture selling
~ sewer off all1urnhure stocK. Save
included $350mo. + $35Q big. 202 Clark Chapel Rd.
dapoait, No Pets call (740) 388·0173
31J8.8547
Sate: Barber Carpal $5.95
·
1·
to1 $4 5o Vd remnants $40.00 &amp; up.
2BR ' on
prvate
MoiJohan , Carpet. 2212
rent
d.p· ,.. $450 per mon ~
u•
Eastern AVe, Gallipolis, Oh
in Addison Twp. call (740) 741).446 .7444
645·3413 or (740) 367·0654
2BR, on private lot $550 WhitefOSk Tile Top Kitchen
dep. + $550 per mon1h rent Table, with 6 chalrs·good
-r:
. condition $125; Glass Top &amp;
In Addison •WP. can (740) tron Coffee &amp; End TabtQs
645·3413"' (740) 367·0654 $125 for 11le pair (740)388·
3 bedroom, 2 ba11l, an alec· 8926
tric in Middleport, $450 pfus
s4so deposit, 1740)416·
1354
.
Mobile Homes tor Rent in
Point Pleasant &amp; Gallipolis
Ferry. HUO accepted call

304-675·3423
Nice 2BR mobile home in

Public Notice
posed action. ~riHen
County: Meigs
comments, requests
The following appllca- lor public meetlnga,
tiona and/or verified and adjudication hearcomplaints
were lng requests must be
received, and the to~ sent to: Hearing Clerk,
lowing draft, proposad, Ohio Environmental
or final actions wore Protection
Agency,
Issued, by The Ohio P.O.
Box · 1049,
E n v.l r o n m e n t a I Columbus,
Ohio
Protection
Agency 4 ,3 .2 1 6 • 1 0 4 9
(OEPA) .last week. (Telephqne: 614·644·
" Actions" Include the 2129). "final Actions:
adoption, modification, Are actions of the
or repeal of orders director which are
(other than emergency upon Issuance or a
orders); the l11uance, stated eHectlve ilate.
denl.al, modification or Pursuant to Ohio
revocation of licenses, Reviled Code section
permHs, leases, var~ 3745.04, A final scUon
ancea, or certificates; may be appealad to the
and the approval or Environmental Review
disapproval of plans Appeals Commission
and
specifications. (ERAC) ,
(Formerly
"Draft Actions" are . know
as
the
wriHen statements of Envlronroental Board
the
director
of of Review( by a person
E n vir on menta ·I who was a party to a
P r o t e c I i o n ' s prpcoedlng before the
(Director's) Intent with director by riling an
respect
to
the appeal within 30 days
, Issuance, denial, etc. of notice of the final
!If a permit, license, actlon. Pursuant to
order, etc. Interested Ohio Revised Code
persona may submit Section 3745.07, A
written permit, license, Final Action Issuing,
order, etc . Interested denying, modllylng,
persons mey submit revoking, or renewing
wrHten comments or a permit, license, or
request a public meet· variance which Is not
lng regarding draft preceded by a pro·
actions. Comments or posed action, may be
public
meeting appealed to the ERAC
,requests must be sub- by filing an appeal
miHBd within 30 days within 30 days of
· o1 notice or the draft Issuance of the final
action .
" Proposed action. ERAC appeals,
Actions" are written accompanied by a $70
atatements of the filing lee which th
director's intent with ecommloslon In it dis·
reapect
to
the cretlon may reduce If
Issuance, denial, modi· by aHidavlt tha appal·
flcatlon, revocation , or lent demonatrates that
renewal of a permit, payment of the full
license, or variance. amount of the faa
Written comments and would cause extreme
requests for a public hardship,
mull be
meeting regarding a flied
with:
propoaad acllon may Environmental Review
be aubmiHed within 30 Appeals CornmiSIIOn,
daya of notice of the 309 South Fourth
proposed action. An Street, Room 222,
adjudication hearing Columbus, Ohio 43215.
may be held on a pro· A copy of the appeal
posed action if a hear· must be served on the
lng request or objec· director within 3 dayo
lion Ia received by the alter ftllng the appeal
OEPA within 30 days of with the ERAC.
lasuance ; of the pro· Final lsauance. or

Certification
Ohio Department of
Transportation
1980 West Broed Street
.Columbus, Ohio 43223
OH
Action
Date:
02/2612008
Receiving
Waters:
Ohio River
Facility Description:
401 Certification
ldentlilcation
No.:
073276
This final action not
preceded by propooed
action and Is appeal·
able to ERAC. Pertains
to 401 Certification,
Grant, Pertains to
Huntington Corps of
Engineers
Public
Notice (H) 2006-2410.
Project for the reloca·
lion of State Route 124
by approximately 6,900
1eet In Olive Township.
(3)li

Johnsons Mobile Home
Park. 740-446·1409 or 740·

~--

I SHORE COULD
USE SOME HALP
IN TH' GARDEN,
PAW!!

..

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

ENNYTMIN' !!

I'LL GIT RIGHT
ON IT

YOUNG 'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Adc:Utlon• I

*Prompt and Quality
Work

*Reasonable Rates

gocd quality, $4.75 aa. {740)
245·0485 after 6 p;m.

*Experienced

' P"

I'
II

·•
'"I

; HE:'(, (;IJ'I'S! MINt&gt; I fi JOlt-~ I 1'(

t 01'1 -mE.&lt;..ClNVt::!ZS~\1~?

f) l o(l h/ 1'1
l '

'

. THE BORN LOSER

WV036725
V.C YOUNG Ill

'

.

,

Electrtc.l &amp; Plumbing
Roofing I Outtert
VInyl Siding I Pslntlng
P1tlo •n4 Pa~ch Detka

740·591 -H044

FOR SALE

, ·

NewG•r•ue•

Reference$ Available!
Call Gary Stanl'ey @

AI!TOS

'

A1mochllng

*Insured

II&lt;~ "\

II&lt;\ \ -. 1'111\ I\

FER 'r'OU, MAW,

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

Hay for Sale: 250 sm. sq.
Bales, orchard grass mixed,

on two canceled orders.
25'x34', &amp; 16'x24'. "First
Inventory Won't Last! Call
Today Made in USA.
866--352-0469
--------

r

OF c.ou~~~ ~~, uuru~!

'"I

~

w.~~:&gt; ~LWI&gt;.'&lt;S ROot-\ FollOt.\E. BORE. ! 1'\~, 1-\ ~ 1-\ ,._, !

11 11 I ny I l [H

I " .I I

lfH I" 'I

'

01
Hyundal
Accent
Hatchback. 5 speed trans,
65,310 miles, good condi·
lion. needs catalytic convert·

STEEL BUILDINGS Save ar. Asking $2600. Call 740·
orders.

Year

End

BARGAINS
EVERY DAY
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

::-:-::--:=::--:-:::--:-::::-

Clearance! 16x22, 25x32, 01 Suzuki GrandVitar, 4DR,
35~~:46 First Come First AC, 4WO, 100k miles.

Servedl Call Today 866· $4000. can 740·339·2457
11!35ii2~.Q-469;.;.."'!'!_ _ _.., 1990 Honda Accord, air,
PETs
automatic, 129,000 miles,
FOR SALE
$1,500 F(rm . 1999 Chrysler
L._-lllliliiitiiiii-,.1
LHS, 106,000 miles, leather
'
"
AKC German Shepherds ~eats $3,200 304-675·2867
Pups &amp; Adults 304·937: Ft5
TRUCKS
305 9 .
mR SALE
•

r .

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
AKC Golden Retriever pup·
Drywall,
pies $300, shots. 61emates 2004 Chevy Silverado, 4·3 Remodeling, Room
8i 2 mates 304·675' 3363
V·6, aufo, AC, CD, 45k
Additions

I

CKC Min. Dachshunds 2
mates $250, 6 females
$275, long haired, first
shots/worm,
Aea9y 1o go
now. 304·593-3820 .

miles. As,king $9000. OBO
645-8712

Super Cab, 4.6L, V8,
43,000/mi\es, 4x4 $16,000

•04·593·1336

Fo!~~

l

Nice 2BR mostly furnished.

pets.
$375/renl.
$375/deposit. 740-441.q&amp;29

No

r

2004 Ford Ranger Edge ext.
4x4, ~ door, 4.0 !Iter,
20.000 miles. eKtended wBr·
ranty. lots Of extras, great
$14,900,

call

1 and 2 bedroom apart·
ments, furnished and unfur·
nlshed, and houses in
Pomeroy and Middlepor1,
security daposit raqulred, oo
pets, 740·992·2218.

truck,

1BR Apt, WID hookups,
intarneVsatettite TV Incl.
wlrent, close to hospnat. Call
740·339.()362

lots
of OJctra's, $3,500 OBO,
(740)416·1588

740 992-6282

MuroRC\UF.s/

4WI!ElURS

2002 Harfay Davidson Ultra
Classic Electra Gtide, new
cusfom paint, $12,000 OBO,
(740)418·1588
4-wheeler 300EX, $1,000
(740)446-4060
"I

1{\

J&amp;L
Construction ·

~IG NATE

OW!

• Vinyl Siding
, Replacement
Windows
, Roonng
, Decks
, Garages

II I -.,

rt..;;~;;~;;;;;~~~;:===;==:::

Manley' 8
Recycling
. . . . . . . . . .11.1141710
J4HI2-8M

..........

·PEANUTS

...

. . . 27 diJfi'. . . . . . HI . .
~

r-==::;;;;ICII~~r.~Cit~IW=I=Pr~l~U=tl===~

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Thuraday, -.rch e . 2008
By Berrllce Bide 0101
You will enter Into some kind of secret

alliance in the ~ear eJ:lead with two. aepa·
rate individuals. Both will offer potentially
large material benefit&amp;, but one kl partic-

·-.GARFIELD
:,......--r-----:"'\--,
lfiHI\1 WA!I
fHAf?

SAGITTARIUS (NoV. 23-Dec. 21) -

28 Years ,Experience

David Lewis :

known for some Ume. Co wl'lal needs

doing.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. 1~) - What
· you can do bitter than moet Is lntpl,.
othara and htlp thlm •nlargt their vltlon
and ecopt~, ~laity tha type of horizon
thev lhould Ht for them•lvee. tn turn,

you'll benefit u muoh u they do.
AQUARIUS (Jan, 20·Ftb. 18) - Como
Fortuna Ia now taking a ap.ctal intar81t
In your financial atfllre, 10 ~ I'll~ to
mow ln unleon with hlr when the Hndt
htr elgnale. Thl1 oould turn out to bl •

740-992-6971

prcf~ll&gt;le

in The
C(assifiedsJ

You

haw a better chance than usual to add
to your financial position In waya that will
pi'OIIIde a greater surplus than you've

te A&amp;AIN

Say it'

Devote your

time to the types of things you enjoy
doing, and you will have an extremely
productive day - not to mention a very
profitable one. Labors of love can
become flnandal generators lor you.
VIRGO (Aug. 23~Sept. 22) - This is a
better-than -usual periOd to cultivate a
relationship that you hOpe could become
a signtficant one. Once the assoclatlan i!!l
&amp;trengthened, many good th ings will
happen tl'li'OUgh thla apeclal union.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) - A matter .
that hu been of gra\18 concern to you is
going to work out In waya that will make
vou a very· happy person. Tne lesson
here is to never give up and don't worry
over that whk*l you can't control.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-r-,lov. 22) - Just
when your ego Is at Its lowest point, it Is
going to get an unexpec1ed boost from
those who find both your personality and
physical appearance to be extremely
attractilla. Simply be yourself and
sparkle.

'I'W~If

. S_pecia~Someone?

winner.

LEO {July 23·Aug. 22) -

Concrete Removal
aQd Replacement

§o't S,omerh'ing
'to sa11 t'o t'hat'

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

CeletJity Ci~t~ercr,:rourams ~recreated !rom quotations b~ lamous people, past and IJ"_..
EICII IM!er in the CIDI\er ~ms lor 8[IOihef

nKtey's dUB: f equals G

"FJNRIJFP

FN lA EXTPGTNG

FJNHFXPGFRJ. " • ORJ
PI

LX'FZTJ. SAP

NGT.UPXG "F

URJLTXWVK IVNT

MPKKTL PKFIRJA." • LFMB

NMCPPH

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' Whao will our consc1ances grow so lender thai we
will ac1 to prevenl human misery ralher lhan avenge il." · Eleanor Roosevatt

.'::~~~~, s~~~lA-~£~s· ....

wan

low to form lour simple wordo.

-'llrthdlrr:

ends up as the big

Seamless Guners
Roofing, Siding, Gu1ters
Insured &amp;'Bonded
740·653·9657

( (1 "\L.., II\l l l l( l \

41 Toamwork'
obetacleo
43 Surfe~
45 Contrived
46 Lo-· graphics
47 Caviar
46 Dallas
eager
50 Forty winks
51 Riviera
oummer
52 "- Rooen·
lravaller"

RoorrlUIQB loners of lite
0 lour
JCI'tlntbiod wardJ be-

in the process. YOu'll be the one who

WHAT'S FO~ DINNER?
BUIIGERS?

I I \I I'
' () \ ( IU I I

~raph

because it wilt become fortunate for you

H&amp;H
Guttering

beard

35 Let loooe
40 Recluse

- . . , . - - - - Edllod by CLAY R. ,QIUN - - - - -

are kxlklng out lor the lnteASsta of others,

dl ........

24 Hrs. (740) 446·

Astro-

judgment concerning a matter where you

IIUIII!CIIIIIIllll• ....

0870, Roger s Basement
Waterproofing.

~

iS in midseasoo form, after laking the
first 1rick, he will sMt to the spade king.
Then you will go down, 11le opponents
taking thiae spades, one heart and ona
diamond.
Wha1 does West's opening lead 1mply
about 11te heart spit? Assuming his card
is honest, the hearts must be 4·4.
Therefore, win lnck one and take the dia·
mond finesse. You wll lose only three ·
hearls and one diamond.
II you know lheir eight cards are dividing
4-4, lake the lirst frick and go abou1 your
business.
·
How will you know the S!J~ is di~ding 4·
4? Perhaps, as in this deal, lhe lead was
a IWo, advertising a lour-card su~: or ~
was a three and you can see 11la two;
and 8o on. ·

I

I

DI p Au N

I

2

1

I

I

I

DAVI L

hr-T'"'TA_,S'TE;..,YT.:-1

1

I

f

l~ ~
"
U C Q NE H

I hA~ a friend who bas
amazing will power. She

I
1-"1'1-.,1"'!'""1~...,.~...,.~-· O

caneatonlyone ---.

-i

I

PIYIIIB TOP PIICES ,_
'

DOWN

Complelll

lf1•

chuckle

quoted

!lshlng a union with an lndlvldual who
• • . • •
by filling in lito mi:lllng word_s
possesses knowledge that you lack but
._....___._,_...___.__. you dwelop from lltp No. 3 below.
11itally need.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20) - Attention
~ PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
(&gt; I'
may be drawn to you rtght now because
THESE SQUARES
·
of something In which you're presently .
engaged. Others realize the potential
your invoiiiEiment has and will be hoping
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
to be Included In the endea110r.
TO GET ANSWER
CANCER (June 2hluly 22) - Trust your .

antee. L'OCal references furnished. Established 1975.

-·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- --·- -

Dbl.
All pass

TAURUS (April 2Q.May 20) - Someone
new will -become very. lucky lor you and
end up playing a prominent role In eatab·

TI-llS IS HOW WE PLA't'
MAR&amp;Lf5, RERVN .. FIRST,
WE DRAW A 816 .
CIRCLE OR RIN6 ...

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guar·

'

I NT

ventures you personally put your hand to
will nave marvelous opportunities lor
giant success. Chances are you'll make
It big in two separate areas.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) - After a
bad start. something unfOreseen and
unexpected - but ttxlremel)l fortuitous
- could happen to you through a situs.·
tlon over which you have no control. It'll
sot evel)1hlng right again.

Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James K - II
742·2332

HoME

With so many
"clloices, ifs easy to
get carried away
·with our .
Merchandise listings
in the classHieds!

East

1•
3 NT

ular could be gigantic.

IMPROVEMENIS

Call

North

Pass
Pas&amp;

named
12 Femouo
wlurd
1 "Harper
13 Bono ex
· Valley-"
18 Kitchen
2 Two-timer
appliances
3 Ottfta'e
19 Counterfeit
20 -gular
prov.
4 Comics
array of
pooch
numbera
5 Meoeratl
22 Lace
rival
or ribbon
36Do
6 Couple
23 Preaoed
of pfnta
24 Widen
:ztne
7 Big Dipper 25 Teeter
37 Miss
bear
·toner
Piggy's
8 Sullivan and 28 Top hall
retuoal
Murrow
of a bikini
38 Airport info 9 Bracket
30 Well-known
39 Beantown
type
Pharaoh
team
10 Once
34 Pointy

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)- Be reedy
to strike it big, because endeavors or

111-C.S•I IIIIIIMIIII

2900 Yamaha Wolvarlna,

1BR, WID hock·up, stova &amp;
fridga turn., watar &amp; trash
Included. No pets. Ref. Aeq.
740·367-7453 or 6115·7214 ....~-

Free Esllmatea

740-367-0536

I

cab,

~------­

~'4lr!fsf~osl4

::-::~:-:-::::-:-:-:-:--::-

2004 F·150, Hantaga, XL,

West

O

thousands on 4 canceled 709--6339.

446-2003

2Br apt, )'liD hookup, watar
pd, close to hosphal &amp; college on Centenary Rd, no
- - - - - - - - pets, 446·9442 a~ar Spm
Public Notice
2BR apls 6 mi from HOlzer.
PUBLIC NOTICE
· Some utilities pd. S400+dep.
74_0_
Meigs Cou.nty
_
·4_1_8·_52_8_8_ _ __
NOTICE OF PUBLIC 2BR In Rio Grande.
INFORMATION SES· $3401rent $340idepos~. Call
SION
740·245·9060
Notice Is hereby given ---'-'C:..:.~--­
on March 3, 2008, that 3 BR. $395 and 2B $295
Ohio EPA will conduct plus utilities &amp; dep. 3rd ST,
a Public . Information ReCine. 740·2 47· 4292
Session concerning Apartment available now
Permit
to
Install Aiveroend Apts. New Haven
AppllcstA&gt;n (PTI 106· wv. Now accepting applica·
08301)
American tions lor Hud·Subsidized,
Municipal Power· Ohio one Bedroom Apts. utiiHies
Generating· Station included. Basad on 30% of
Realdual Solid Waste ad)usted Income.
Call
Landfill
(AMPGS (304)882.Jt2t available for
Landllllf, State Route Senior and Disabled Paot&gt;e.
124, Letart Falla, Ohio Equal Housing Dpportun~
45n1. This Is a New
Facility. A
Public lloouttful Apto. II Jactoon
Information Seaolon Eotaltt. 52 Westwood
wilt be held on Drive, from $365 10 $560.
Wednesday, April 16, 740·446·2588.
Equal
2008 at 6:30 p.m., at Housing Opportunity. This
the
Southern institution Is an Equal
Elementary School, Opportunity Pro'lfder and
located at 920 Elm E_m..:plc.oy..:.c.ar_._ _ _ __
Street, Raclnl, Ohio CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
45n1 . l - I e d fill'· ED • AFFDIIIIABLEI
tleo may contact, Ohio Townhouse · apartmanto,
EPA Southealt Olotrlct and/or small houses FDA
OHica, 2195 Front RENT. Cafl (74b)44H11f
Str..., Logan, Ohio far application &amp; information.
~3138, tel: (740) 385·
8501,
Furnished Apt, 2nd Ave.
(3) 5
Upstairs, All utilltias . pd.
1BA, No Pets, Gallipolis,
Call446·9523

•

388·8950.
c:
H-ay--,-fo-r-s-al_e_
: -20-0-ro_un_d
bales. grass and some
orchid grass w/ alfatta. Call
245·5175 before 9pm.

.----===:---,
.
FIND

PUBLIC
NOTICES

: r---------~

Come-First Served:.

-,
2 BA Trailet, water

The Daily Sentinel

I

: BARNEY

740 286·5395

Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In

42 Natural
moleture
43 Tweak
the momory
44 Reception
46 Oft-grated
cheeoe
49 Pulled clown
53 Weaoela out
of
54 Tycoon's
home
55 Coupon
c)lpper
56 Wired

We are looking at the Rule ol Seven. You
are in three no-trump. Your only high
card in the led sun is 1he ace lor 1he king,
~ nghty wins the lirst trick with fhe ace).
You sublracl the number ol cards your
side has in 1his sun from seven, and hold
up your ace fur that number of rounds.
It sounds slraigMorward, but lhe Aula ol
Seven is like a 11 firecracker: It can easi·
ly explode in your hand. Tllis depl lea·
tures one ol the key exceptions. Against
three no·trump, Wast leads the heart
IWo. What would be your plan?
You have seven top 1ricks: one spade,
one heart, ' one d1a1Mnd and lour clubs.
The extra 1rick&amp;. will come lrom dia·
monds, bu111le linesse will probably tail,
given East's 1akeout double.
Tlla Rule of Seven 1ells you lo hold up
your heart ace lor two rounds. But WEast

Single Barrel Shotguns, 12 .__ _ _ _ _ _,...

apartmerit,for
the ' - - - - , : : : - - - ; - - - A e a s o n a b t y •
elderly/disabled call 675·
JET
. www.slaterunangus.com,

Equal

1 Evidence
6 ChaM ploca
11 One behind
the other
13 Go sour
14 Raiment
15 Headache
16 Make a
blunder
17 Historic
period
18 45 or 78
21 State oi
vlgilatlce
.23 Vloa and
peaaport
26 Film speed
no.
27 Free of .
28 Camembert
coualn
29 Math
31 Starlet's
dream
32 Meditation
guide
33 Pet lizards

Opening lead: • 2

EQuii'IIIE1&gt;7

handicap accessible, $6JS 8 Twin Rtvers Tower Is ac~ept- Loo~ Identical, Clean Guns, Angus Bulls, show heifers.
month , (740 )g4g.2303
ing applications for' wahlng $JSO Buys Both (740) 533• EKcellent Breeding, Top
list for Hud-subsized, 1- br, 3870 Ironton, Ohio
Performance,
Priced

66:79

10 7 2
K Q 10 9

South

t.fo

1'0 Do• 453

new carpet, very clean, ' - - ' - - - ' - - - - - - and 16 Ga., both 30~ FuU,

Opportunity

7 6 2

+K5

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: North·Suuth

3 br. house, Pomeroy, 2 fuW · Security Deposit Required, 2-Winchester Model 370

38A, 1 1/2 bath, Ranch,
basement, carport, all appU·
ancas, plus washer &amp; drya(
Included, No Pets, Cheshire

•
(o A 8 5
¥ A 10 9

ll:JIT'DOIT!

wtrlswrNrash $650 dep. 446· Ba11l, Adu~ Pool &amp; Baby
4824
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo
No Pets, lease Plus
(740)367..0~7.

K J 6 4

South

SY AlL MtAN~. IMI'l,

iron bed w/rails and metal
3 BR, 1 bath, FA, Basemerit, Tara
TownhOuse mattress, l iron bed w/rails.
4WO M105S Kubota Tractor,
2 car garage, At 141 2 m. Ap'artments, Very Spacious,
607 hrs. loader, CHA,
from town, $700 includes 2 Bedrooms, f;/A, 1 112
$46,000 new, must sell,

bath, garage, full basement,

QJ 9

¥

40 lnawdrnAi

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2 Sr. house in
FARM
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cupboard, Old sideboard, 1

(o K

•

Murty O'Bryant •
Owner

Duncan Phyfe drop le'af CKC
Reg .
Female
table, 7 mahogany chairs. Pomerania n puppy. $400.
Knock d.own oak flatwall Call740·441·7218
cabinet, ~6) SO's st~le
·kitchen chairs, Singer alec·
I \In I ..,I 1'1'1 II\
tric sewing machine in cabi·
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74 3
Q7 5 2
6 4 3
B5 3

•

Pomeroy dep. Nice

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of-

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Solution

Grecloul Living 1 and 2
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1304)675·7381
Leave $592. 740-992-5064. Equal
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Massage

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FORREN'r

tO 6 2

of-

"Resources
RENT. 1031 Georges Creek
2520 Valley Drive
Ad, 44f ·1111
I&lt; I ' I \ I '
Point Pleasant. WV
304·675·6975 or

1051
New Haven, WV 25266-1 051
By; March 14, 2008
P.O. Box

MONTY

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North

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For more lnfonnaUon, contact your
local Ohio Valley
Publishing office.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

Phillip
Alder

EllmView
Apartments

@ approx.

aren't only for
buying or selling
Items, you can use
this widely read
section to wish
someone a
Happy Birthday,
provide a T11ank
You. and place an
ad uln Memory"
of 1 loved one.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

BRIDGE

INDUSTRIAL
WORKERS
WV

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

C\~ ~t'f SAY 'N'HAi ~
IT ~1&amp;11TED~

period.

SOUP TO NUTZ

JJ rl
I l IIIII

SCIAMUTS ANSWIRS !- ~- oe
Peaked- Waken- Ninth- Impair- W11H a NAP
"No day is so bad," one gent told another, ''that it can't be
fixed WITH a NAP."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

· IJOW, W~l' ARE. W£
PAYfiJ/l TO WATCH '!Hi&amp;~

�'

Page 86 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentine'J.com

Boys
REGtONALS
AIC--tlnl&gt;otei!W
St. Edward (11M) vs. Elyria
(17-6), IVedneoday, 6:15 p.n\.; Montor
(20-4) v.l . Wiman Harding (22· 1),

La-

Wednooday, 8 p.m.
ChampionShip: Saturday, 7:30p.m.
At X-llnlvorel!y
MI!IKltl N
Cln. St. XIIYier (21·2) vs. Cln. Prlncoton
AI Colo. Follgoounclo Coll-m
(16·5), Wednoadoy, 6:15 p.m.; Cln.
Withrow (21 ' 3) vs. Hubaf Hts. Woyne Wor1hlngton Chriltlan (24-1) vs. 0111&lt;
(21-2) , Wednesday, 8p.m.
Hllll21-3)- Friday, 7.30 p.m.
Cbampionahlp: Saturdoy, 11 a.m.
AI Con1011 'Pieldhouot
· AI Un!vtrwlly of Aleron
Malvern (25·0) Y1. e.dford Chanol
Tot. WMmer (18-5) vo Pelrysburg (22· (16-8)- Frldoy, 7:30p.m.
1),. Thufl!day, 5:15 p.m.; Akron
. Allowing Qreon Slrlo U.
Firestone (20-3) vs.Canton Tlmkon (23·
Van Buran (20-4) va. Defiance
0), Thumday, 8 p.m.
AyaniVIUe(21·2)·Ha.nllnd Woyne Trace
ChampionShip: Saturdoy, '7;30 p.m.
(19-4) winner, Wodnosday, 6 p.m.
At COlo. Feltgrounda Coll-m
Nework (20-4) vs. Trolwood-Modison Champlonahlp: Friday, 7;30 p.m.
(20-4). Wadflesdoy, 6:15 p.m.; Dublin
AI U~ ol Ooylon
Scioto (22-1) vs. WoslerviUe S. (17-7), New Knoxville (24-{)) vo. Cln. Seven
Wadfleoday, 8 p.m.
Hills (23-1)- Friday, 7:30p.m.
ChampionShip: Saturdoy, 7:30 p.m.
...... Mlllllrwl ,.,,.

--filii

Cleveland St Winner vs.pe/rlnp
Xavier winner,
March 14, 5:15 p.m.: Akron winner vs.
Columbus winner~ March 14, 8:30p.m.

Columbus winner vs. Canton winner,
March 13, 5:15 p.m.; BowHng Green
winner vs. Dayton winner, March 13,
8:30p.m.

PMSION II
At W~ght Stale UnNwslty
TUESDA'I sCoRES
St. Paris Graham (24-o) vs. Canal
D!y!algo IV
Wlnchaater (21-2), Thursdoy, 6:15p.m.;
Kstterlng Mer (16-7) vo. Day. Bedford Chane! 71, Windham 57
ChamlnacJo.Jullonne (16-8), Thursday, . Cln. Seven Hilla 40, Lockl8nd 37
e p.m. Championship: Saturday,, 11 Malvern 103, Oclurnbiona 67
a.m.
New KrlOl&lt;VIIIe 79, Houston .41
AI Bowling Gtoon- U.
Ook Hll 56, Conal W l - r 46
Vermilion (17-6) vs. LexingtOn (t!l-4), Van Buren ell, PlymoU1h 52
Thurodoy, 6;15 p.m.; Tol. Ubbey (21-2)
Worthington Chrla118n 72, WotOflord
vs. Cola. Eastmoor Aced . (20-2), 80
..
Thuroday, 8 p.m.
~Saturday, 3 p.m.
·At 0111o Un,._lty
McArthvr Vinton COunty (22·1) vs.
Chllllcolll&lt;l (21·2), Thuroday, 6:15 p.m.;
Zanamlla Mayavllle (17-8) va. Byaa.nlle COLUMBUS (AP) - Pairings tor flo
MoadOWI&gt;rool&lt; (14-9), Thuroday, 6 p.m. 2008 glrlo Ohio H~ Sc11oo1 Alhlellc,
Championship: Saturday, 3 p.m.
Assoclallon boskelball stato 'toutnl·

Momort.l Clvto c&lt;.nttr

.

,

.

CleYo. Benodlcllnt (17·5) vs. Akron menlo! Ohio Staltl Val-. Oily Arena:
Hoban (20-3), Thuroday. 5:15 p.m• • ..
Parry (20-3) vs. Poland Seminary (23-. '•
PIY"MlN I
0), Thurodoy, 8 p.m:
·
Vo~nge. Boardman (19-7) vs.
Championship: a&amp;turday, 3 p.m.
ChesiOI 1.a1o&gt;1a W. (25•1), Friday, 8
...;.Itt~~
p.m.; TOI. C.,._ Colli. ~~~va. Cln. MI.
..... -~ ~nner YS: =nolng roan Notro Dame (i~2), Frlday,•8 p.m.
wlnnor, March 13, 10:45 a.m.; Athans
Cham"' hlp •--'-· 8 30
wlnnor .. .. CS- winner, March 13. 2
. ,..ana ' - - · : p.m.

·w. ·

'!-!.'!..•a

.

p.m.

DM'KWI ·

Shaloor Hto. H..,_ Brown (2H)
Yl. Urns Bath (24-1), T~Moday, 1 p.m;
At.ContonCieYo. VASJ (19-4) YB. Smi!h11111e (21• Cola. Mlfllln (21-3) va. Kallo&lt;inV Mer
2), Wodnooday, 6:15 p.m.:. Andover (23-3), Thufl!day, 3 p.m.
pymatunlng
Valley (22· t) • va.
Championship: Slolurday, 10:45 a.m.
QIY!$10H II

Vaungatown
Ursuline
,(14-9),
Wednesday. 8 p.m.
Champtonahlp: Saturday, 7:30p.m.
AI Ohio UnlvlrSity .

from Page Bl

(1&amp;,7), -~. 8 p.m.
ChJmpionolllp; llllurda)o, 7'.30 p.m.
...,. a&amp;JJIM;MII,..It,.
Canton wlhner v.. Atttenl winner,
March 14, 10:45 a.m.; -.,g Groen
winne&lt; vo. Wrigh1 S1a1o winner, March
14, 2 P.'ll·

DMSIOHI

AI Canton

Reds

At Wright 1 - Urt•1111tt
Colo.llcadorrrf (20-4) vs. Cln. Shfodor
Paldola (8·18). Wlldileidorf, 6:15p.m.;
Amo (23-1) YL Cln. Non11 Collouo HI!

'

Colo. Ready (15-8) vs. Whaolerablirg
(21·2), Wednssday, .6:15 p.m.;
Sugim:reek . Garoway · (21·3) ve.
Proctorville
Fairland
(19·15},
Wednesday, 8 p.m.
Championship' Solurdoy, 7:30p.m.

At Bowling G - SUitt U.

QIYlfiiON 1M
Veraalllea (28.0) Yl. S. Euclid ~na
(24·2), Friday, 1 p.m.; SugarcrHic
Garaway (24-2) va. MI. BlanQhard
RIYerdalo (23-2), Friday, 3 p.m.
Chomplonahl~: Saturday, 5:15p.m.

.·

BCW championship on line
at tournament in New Haven
BY lARRY CRUM
LCRUM&lt;I&gt;MYOAILYREGISTER.COM

ond round. Prior to the show
the superstars will draw to
decide their first round partner.
· Headlining
Saturday's
BCW tournament will be
TNA star Vance Desmond,
Viper, Japanese heavyweight
champion Juggulator, Joka
Wyld and Brandon Morgan,
a rising star inside the BCW
ranks.
Also scheduled to be at the
show are Sarah Lynn, Cole
Cash, Cross, Thug, Damien
Blade, the Day Brothers,
Vayne Lewis, Death Falcon
7,
· k 8'11'
1 mgs and a
....,ro, Demc
surprise competi~or. Many of
these stars have· made a
name
for
themselves
wrestling against some of

..

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

run for Cincinnati . Jolbert
Cabrera doubled home two
runs. and Ryan Freel had a
run-scoring single.
Right-hander
Matt
. Belisle, part of a· group of
pitchers competing for the
last
three
spots
in
Cincinnati' s
rotation,
pitched a perfect tirst inning
before giying up three runs
and ·three hits in the second .
Andy Marte had a two-run
· double.
·
· Belisle has a history 'o f
letting one bad inning
undercut his outings.
"He was good early, then
he lost his command," manager Dusty Baker said. "I
don' t know what causes it. I

have to see him some more.
He detinitely has the stuff."
Right-hander Josh Fogg,
who signed a one-year deal
with (he Reds last month.
gave up a solo homer by
Franklin Gutierrez during
his three innings. Fogg also
is competing for a spGt in
the rotation.
Notes: Light rain started
to fall in the third inning
and became heaYier in the
fifth. .. . It was the only
game this spring between
the
intrastate
rivals .
Cleveland .wi II move its
spring training base to
Goodyear, Ariz., next ye;rr.
The Reds currently are
negotiating with Goodyear,
which wants them to move
into a shared facility with
the Indians. .. . Reds 3B
Edwin Encarnacion signeq
a one-year deal.

NEW HAVEN, W.Va~ For the second time in four
months the highly popular
Ballistic · Champtonship
Wrestling organization will
be returning to the New
·Haven Community Center
for a night of exciting
matches inside the squared
circle.
BCW
,presented
by
Alligator Jack's Aea Market
.brought out a large crowd for
its last show in Mason
County and BCW commissioner Mike VanMatre
Promises his show Saturday .
night will deliver once again.
Saturday night's action
will feature a 16 person
elimination tournament with the top names in WWE and
.
be'
d TNA competition.
th e wmner
mg crowne
Desmond, who ·has held
the .BCW champion. With
the title on the line, many of several titles over his career,
the top wrestlers from is the favorite for Satu~day's
around the country will be show, but with the strong
· on hand for the show with field on hand anyone has a
nearly a dozen matches shot .at the title, according to
planned. ·
VanMatre. Among them are·
"You can bet each and veteran BCW competitors
every one of these superstars Cole .Cash, Viper, Death
wants to be the champion so Falcon Zero and Brandon
we should have some incred- Morgan.
ible matches," VanMatre
The dark horses of the
said. "You can be sure every- tournament include Helen
one is going to bring their native Sarah L_ynn, the lone
'A' arne ."
female participant in the
With so many matches field, along with fan-favorite
planned for the evening, the Joka Wyld.
fu:st round of the tournament
Doors will open at the
AP photo
will pair wrestlers in tag New Haven Community
team competition with the · Center Saturday night at 5 Cleveland Indians outfielder Grady Sizemore, left, talks l'!lth
winners moving on and fac- p.m. with wrestling action Cincinn;lti Reds second baseman Brandon Phillips priorto
ing one another in the sec- scheduled to begin at 6 p.m. a spring training baseball game Tuesday in Sarasota, Fla.

General Health
District Report, A7'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,)0 ( ' (· :"\

I'S • \ ol. .) ~ , !'\o.

SPORTs

Berlin Hiland (26;1) vs. New Alogel
(22·3), Thuroday, e ·. p.m.; Colo. ·
Alrlcontr1c (24-1) va. COn'&lt;Oy C r (23-2), Thursday, 8 p.m
Championship: !l"turdoy, 2 p.m.

Favre

then nobody encouraged
him not to go out that
door, either." He spoke to
the AP by pbone from his
Hattiesburg, Miss .. office.
Thompson
and
McCarthy also said 'the
Packers' lack of interest in
wide receiver Randy Moss
- a player Favre publicly
lobbied the Packers to
sign last offseason but
who re-signed with the
New England Patriots on
Monday - wasn't a factor.
Former Packers coach
Mike Sherman, now the
head coach at Texas A&amp;M,
said he always figured
Favre would go out with
more fanfare.
"I always envisioned his
teammates carrying him
off the field - and his
arm falling off as he left,''
Sherman said.
, Now, he must be tough
enough to stick to his
decision to retire.
"As the season gets
closer, I wouldn't be·surprised at all if he changes
his mind," said Hall of
Fame qua'rterback Troy
Aikman, a Fox analyst
who played 12 years with
tht; Dallas Cowboys.
What if Favre were to
call the Packers come
•
July?
"I
think
somebody
would find a place for
him," Packers chairman
emeritus Bob Harlan said.

IIII ' I&lt;Sil \\ . \L\1{{ ' 11

tho

h. !!001'1

'"'" ·lll)&lt;lioil)"'"linel.&lt;·nm

Clinton claims large victory after Pomeroy visit
J.

.

commissioner and chairman governor had endorsed
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
of the · Meigs County Senator Clinton, and that
Democratic Party, . said carries a lot of w~:ight here,"
POMEROY
-Meigs .clinton's visit with two -Davenport said.
County Democrats sup- Pomeroy families on Feb. 28
'.'It means. a lot that
ported
Sen.
Hillary "helped tremendously" in (Clinton) would take time to
Clinton, D-N.Y., with a 76- getting out a strong Clinton visit here," Davenport said.
percent margin of victory vote in the county. He said 76 "We as Democrats know the
Tuesday, just days after her percent is "a large margin."
Clintons are no strangers to
brief visit here.
Clinton stopped here after Appalachia, and for her {o
According to unofficial spending the night in make a visit to Appalachian
election results, · 3,689 Parkersburg, W.Va. She Ohio contirms her commit3,95~
Democrats and
spoke in Belpre on Feb. 27 , ment to.the region. "
Republicans cast ballots in and went on to Bob Evans
Davenport noted that both
Tuesday's primary. Clinton · Farms in Rio Grande and former
President
Bill
received 2,774 of · the Hanging Rock in Lawrence Clinton and the senator have
Democrats' votes for pres!- · County, where she spoke visited Ohio and the Sixth
dent. The party's only other about her Pomeroy visit.
Congressional District to
Davenport said Clinton's campaign for Strickland durremaining contender, Sen.
Barack Obama, D-Ill., endorsement by Gov. Ted ing his -years in Congress.
received 733 votes: John Strickland, a popular favorite · Davenport said he was
.Edwards received 121, and particularly among faithful skeptical when he was first
a fourth candidate who Democrats, also helped her contacted about a possible
· Clinton visit. He said a
withdrew from the race carry Meigs County.
"A lot of Democrats in
received 15.
Please see Clinton, AS
Mick Davenport, county Meigs County knew the
BY BRIAN

• 24 locals named to
District 13 Coaches
. . Association teams.
SeePageB1 .

__;_
· -

I

REED

Submitted photo

U.S. Senator Hillary Clinton, pictured during her visit to
Pomeroy on Feb. 28, took 76 percent of the Democratic
presidential vote in Tuesday's local primary.

Central
committees
elected

January
jobless
rates up

gyBQNN

CVCA (15-8) vs. Oltawo-Giandorl (195), Wednesday, 6:15 p.m.; Bucyrus
.Wynford (21·3) vs. An:hbold (19-4),
Wodneodoy, 8 p.m.
CM~plonshlp: Saturday, 7:30 p.m.

Black Knight
Revue set this
weekend, B8

. 2007 Meigs Connty

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTI NEL C0 t,.1

Bv KeviN KEUv

fromPageBl

like that's enough paying of
the toll."
That comes from his
quarterbacR-record streak
of 253 consecutive regular-season starts - illustrating his trademark
toughness. Add in the
playoffs, and Favre's
streak stands at 27 5.
"Brett's . career accomplishments will be measured among the greats of
the game for the balance
of time," said Seattle
Seahawks coach Mike
Holmgren, Favre's former
coach in Green Bay. "He
truly was as gifted a player as I have ever seen, and
as proud and amazed as I
am of what Brett has
accomplished on the playing field, the thing that
impresses me the mos.t is
what kind of a man and
leader he has become off
the field since I have
known him."
Even Favre's teammates
didn't see it coming.
"I just saw it come
across the TV," Packers
wide
receiver
Koren
Robinson said, when
reached on his cell phone
by the AP.
Thompson
and
McCarthy insisted it was
. clear the team wanted
Favre back.
"How could you not
Associated Press Writer
. want Brett Favre's career Ron Harrist · in Jackson,
to continue," McCarthy · Miss. and sports writers
said.
Arnie Stapleton in Denver.
However, Favre's agent, John Wawrow in Buffalo,
Bus Cook, .said:
N.Y., and Brett Martel in
"Nobody pushed Brett Hattiesburg, Miss:, con·
Favre out the door, but · rributed to this report.

.Packing It In
NFL NCOI'dl(career)

Green Bay

Packers quarter·
back Brett Favna

has declde!lto

P-ngyordo

and hlaNFL
career alter
1 7 - S. _.,IF i''

FavN
D.
I

8,75!1
8.358

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Boston
Pork·autt·
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Roast f;olt RoiJI P!l:t90Gd tru Mrd! 8th.

Kltniko ROIO
« lbdlt Goltlrt

. • Anna Blackwood, 78
.• Robert Moodisp11ugh, 54
; • Norma Sturgeon, 91
, •.Lawrence Yeauger, 79

SPHIAL BUV!

'

INSIDE
• Jenkins retires from
DJFS. See Page A3
• Butkeye Hills
offers loans to
·local businesses.
See Page A3
• 'For the Record.
See Page AS ·
• Meigs County Court
News. See Page A&amp;

Pillsbury

Crescent
RollS
·~pkg '

SPfCIAL UUV!

WEAmER

~lltonP.AI

,

2 SECI'IONS- 16 PAGES

Fresh, Crisp

Annie's Mailbox

Yellow

C.alendars

Onions.

Classifieds
.'
Comics
' .'

A3
·A3
Bs-6

B7

A4

Obituaries

As

Pl!lces to go

B8

S'ports

'llod

AP

B Section

. Weather

A6

© aoo8 Ohio Volley l'ub!lshlng Co.
\,"

~

.

Changes
coming to
Star Mill Park

I.

~··Pro
8owW j • ....... MVP
M..-M-P~olll!m
, .(lllfi.IIIOfl,

-...

Potatoes

Page AS

Editorials

Hlgllllglll8

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Green Giant

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with moot
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J.

7,250

0BITUARIFS

Rto~lvert

A. Freeman

POMEROY - Member-s
of the central committees of
GALLIPOLIS - Jobless
both
Democratic
and
Republican parties were
rates in southern Ohio -eounties · increased
during
elected in Thesdats primary.
January,
Central commtttee mem·
the
Ohio
bers are unpaid. They are
Department of Jobs and
called upon to appoint a
Family Services revealed.
replacement when an elect·
County-by-county unemed office is vacant, and
ployment data for the month
appoint poll workers for
was released Tuesday by
precinct elections. In cases
ODJFS, showing ~bat jobwhere no candidate filed for
lessness in Galli a and Meigs
a central committee post,
was up significantly.
the remaining members can
Gallia, which had been at
appoint someone from the
6.2 percent unemployment
precinct to serve.
in, December 2007, s~w the
Democratic
rate increase by eight-tenths
W. Chester, Mary Hunter,
of a point to 7 percent ' in
115; · Columbia, no candiJanuary. Meigs, which- reen,
date;
Lebanon, no canditered the double-digit level
Belli Seraant/photo
.
. in joblessness at I 0 percent, Syracuse Community Center Board Members John Bentley and Gordon Fisher review grad· date; Letart, no. candidate;
experienced a 1.2 percent uatlng class photographs from Syracuse Grade School. '(he center is asking for help in N. Olive, no candidate; ~·
Olive , ' no
candidate;
jump.to 11.2 in January.
tracking down class photos for display at the center.
Orange, no candidate:
The trend was reflected
Rutland Village, Samuel
around the area, as Athens
Bruce May, 58: E. Rutland,
County was listed at 6.4
no
candidate;
Salem ,
percent for January, an
Rebecca J. Johnston, 135.
mcrease of two-tenths of a
1980, 1982, 1997, 2000.
said of the ongoing project.
BY BETH SERGENT
percent over December's
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Not only has the project
John Bentley, president. of
Please see Elected, A5
6.2. Jackson County rose
started conversations inside the Syracuse Community
five-tenths of a percent
SYRACUSE- From the the building but inside Center, said up until 1962,
from 8.4 in December to 8.9 1930's until 2001, the , homes of folks · who have . the .graduating class includin January, while Lawrence Syracuse
Community been searching for old pho- ed eighth graders but the
County also rose.five-tenths Center was the Syracuse tographs.
following year the graduatof a percent, from 4.8 in Grade School and now a
Fisher began doing some ing class was comprised of
December to 5.3 the follow- project involving class pho- detective work by searching sixth graders thanks to the
ing month.
tographs is underway to pay through old yearbooks .from then new Racine Junior
Vinton County's rate was homage to the building's the Racine and Pomeroy High School.
9 percent in January, an scholastic history. ·.
High School eras in order to
Fisher said the project has
BY BETH SERGENT
increase of four-tenths of a
Volunteers with the com- make contacts . with former .been a lot of"fun" and even
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSEI'&lt;TINELCOM
percent over 8.6 the previ- munity center have been' Syracuse Grade School stu- led to him eventually trackous month, and Wa~hington tracking dowu graduating dents which helped bril,lg in ing down the une(lpected
RACINE- Changes and
County rose eight-tenths of class photographs beginning several photographs, though gift of a 1921 Minersville
a percent, from 4.9 in with the Syracuse Grade several more remain missing. School photo including his improvements at the Star
Mill P.a• k ball fields are
December to 5.7 in Januarr. Sch,ool Class of 1931 up
Particularly bare are the father as a'boy.
The state says Ohio s until the last graduating frames for classes graduAs · for those m1ssmg underwa} fo ~ the upcoming
unemployment rate was 5.5 glass in 2001. Voluntee~ are ating in the 1930's, 1940's Syracuse
photogr,apl\s, softball, baseball and little
percent in. January, down grouping the . classes by and 1950's. Class pho- "they're out there," Fisher league season.
The softball field lighting
from 5.8 percent in decades along the walls of tographs needed include said.
·
project
has
received
December.
If you have any informathe building though several all of the 1930's, every·
Figures released last week picture frall)es remain blank. 1940's class except 1945, tion on photographs of $20,000 through the Meigs
show that the number of
"It is a conversa.tion 1951, 1953-58. Also need- graduating classes from County Commissioner 's ·
unemployed workers in piece," Gordon Fisher, tom- ed the graduating classes Syracuse Grade School, call Community Development
Block Grant Application.
muni,ty center board member of 1960, 1962, 1973-1977, Bentley at 992-2365.
Please sea Jobless. A5
The Racine Youth League
has $16,000 to go towards
the project which had a bid
price of $49,000 from Kal
Electric.
At its most recent meet·
earned at least $3,000, but not have any tax ' liability.
Senior Center, 992-2161.
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
.i.ng . Racine Coundl dis·
HOEFLICH&lt;I&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Questions have arisen not enough to pay income You will ·need to report any cussed an adjustment 011 the
about how seniors can bene- taxes, will be eligible for Social Security income on bid from Kal Electric which
POMEROY - Seniors fit from the economic stim- payments of $300. For high· the tax return. This does not deducted th e drilling and
who need assistance in get- · ulus law enacted on Feb. 13, · er income individuals, the mean you will be taxed on setting of poles for a new
Social
Security estimate of $29,700. The
ting their income tax forms 2008 . According to the law provides rebate checks your
filled out can get that help at Internal Revenue Service, of up to $600 per individual. income, but you must village will provide ' the
the Meigs County Senior there is a requirement that The stimulus payment report it in order to getJhe poles and the overage.
Citizens Center at no cost.
,they need to file an income begins to phase out for indi- rebate. If you file the tax around $7.000. will go back
Representatives of the tax return . . To qualify viduals with adjusted gross return on time, you should to the yout)lleague.
(AGI)
over receive the rebate check in
American Association of seniors, disabled veterans, incomes
Ryan Lemle y. Sou1i1 ern
$75,000
and
married
cou- May or.June.
Retired Persons are at the and veterans ' widows will
High School baseball cuac h.
For more injormatio11 011 was also at the rece nt meetCenter from 9 to II a.m. on receive $300 payments if pies who file a joint return
1he stimulus payments and ing discussing his plans to
Tuesday and Thursday to they earned $3,000 in Social wifh AGI over $150,000.
In
order
to
get
a
rebate,
what income tax forms to put in a new fie.ld withiQ in
give assistance. An appoint- Security or veterans' disyou need to file an income file, go 10 www.irs.gov or
ment is required and caD be ability benefits in 2007.
Pleue see Park. AS
secured by calling. the " In addition, workers who tax r~tun\ even if you do · tall 1-800-829-1040.
KKELLYC&gt;MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Seniors need to file tax return to get rebate ch~ck

•

I&gt;

.

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