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                  <text>Page 88 •

The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, April24, 2007

Pistons, Rockets take 2-0 leads in respective firSt round serieS

AP photo

Detroit Pistons guard Chauncey Billups directs a play in
the second half of the Pistons ' 98-90 win over the
Orlando Magic in a fi rst-round NBA playoff basketball
game at the Palace of Auburn Hills, Mich . Monday.
Billups scored 21 points and dis hed out eight assists
in the win .

AUBU RN HILLS . Mich. an ce 'wa' too muc h for game was essentiall y over.
(AP) - Rasheed Wall ace - Orl ando 's
two- pl ayer The All-Star center began
fee ling ill Monday afterusually needs to get mad at- attack .
~n official or face a lateDetroit' s starters eac h noon and the team said he
~am e situation to get moti - scored at least 10 points an d wasn' t doing interviews
~·ated .
top
reserv~
An tonio after the game. .
Th e opening tip was McDyess added ni ne p\}ints · '" Dwight was sick quite
· honestl y." Brian Hill sai d.
enough for him Mo nday and II rebounds.
nig ht.
Richard Hamilton scored "He just didn't have anyWa llace blocked a shot 22 points. while Billups had thi tJg . Before the game. he
and made a ]-poi nter on the 21 points. eight a" i s t ~ ami was nauseo us and had
open ing possessions · and onl y
one . tu rnover. intense stomach pains:·
fin ished with 17 points. I I Tayshaun Prince scored 18
The Pistons were in conrebounds and three blocks points and Chris Web ber trol for much of the game,
to help the Detroit Pistons added I0 poi nts and nine bu t just like the opener,
beat the Orl ando Magic 98- re bounds.
Orlando rallied late to make
90 and take a :!-0 lead in the
" II isn't just that they ' re th e fin al score .look
balanced. They arc bal- ·respectable.
first-round series.
"Sheed has bee n ve ry anced and they are good.''
Detroi t led by 15 poi nts
focused evenince we stu rt- Orla'ndo coach Brian Hill earl y in the fourth qu arter,
ed practici ng for the play- said . "You have to play hut was ahead by just six
offs." . Pi'stons point guard solid defense against them with I 1/2 minutes left.
Chauncey Billups said. because they are used to
On the ensuing posses"You can sec the difference pl aying toge ther and they sio n,
Billups
ended
in him. When he's like that. are · very unselfish. It's Orlando's comebac k hopes
we ' re a difficult tea m to tough.''
with a three-point play.
play."
The Mag ic. meanwhile,
Wallace al so dishea rtened
Former teammate Carl os di dn 't have a third player in the Magic du ring th eir late
Arroyo agreed.
double fi gures until th e rall y by throw ing up a 27"lt's so toug h to detend linal minute of the game footer just before the shot
them when he\ stretching when former Pi ston Darko clock ex pired and making
the defense shooting fro m Milicic scored his lOth the lucky shot off glass. givthe outside li ke a guard.'' point - all in the .fo urth ing Detroit a 10-point lead
Arroyo said. '·He can also quarter.
with a few minutes left.
score inside and defend. so · Hcdo Turkog lu scored 22 · "We had started to get
·he reall y creates problems points and Grant Hill had some momentum , we
all over the place ."
21 for Orl ando to pre vent it played a good defense posWa llace insisted th e from being a rout. but their sess ion and then he hits one
Pi stons will riot lack incen- teammates - particularly fro m almost halfcourt,"
ti vc in Game 3 on Thursday . Dwight Howard - didn ' t Grant Hill said. "Alii could
ni ght in Orlando even do enough to give the do is tell him to try shooting
thou gh the Mag ic need to Magic any shot at eve nin g with his eye s open next
win four of five to el iminate th e bes t-of-seven series.
time."
the Eastern Co nference' s
"They are a good team.
Last month, Wallace
top seed.
We are learnin g to be a made a shot from about 60
"We can't let th em get good team," Grant Hill said. feet at the buzzer to forc e a
back into th e seri es,"
Howard was held to eight game against Denver to go
Wallace said . "We have to point s and didn 't score in into overtime and Detroit
get that third win."
th e second half until the went on to win.
In Game 2. Detroit 's bal- final minute, When the
"He hits crazy shots like

that," Billups said. "I can't
-say he meant to do that, but
I' II take it.':
Rockets 98., Jazz 90
HO US10N (AP) Tracy MCGrady scored 31
points and Houston had an
exceptional night at the free
throw . line · to overcome
Carl os Boozer's huge game.
The Rockets wen't 34-for38 ·from the line and t.ook a
2-0 lead in the series .
Boozer matched a career
high with 41 points. tossi ng
in jumpers from all angles
over 7-foot-6 Yao Ming. He
fini shed 17-of-30 from the
.field and had 12 rebounds
and six assists. ·
But Boozer dribbled the
ball off his foot with 20 seconds to play and Yao finished off the Jazz with two
more free throws with 12
seconds remaining.
Yao had 27 points and hit
all nine of hi s free throws.
McGrady went 12-for-14
from the line.
The Jazz were 13-for-17
from the free throw line .
Chuck Hayes had 12
poi nts and 12 rebounds for
the Rockets, who have won
seven of eight playoff series
when they led 2-0.
Game 3 is Thursday night
in Salt Lake City.
Since 2001 , only six
teams have rail ied from ao
0-2 deficit to win a ·series.
The Rockets were one of
the teams that blew a 2-0
hiad , losing four of five to
Dallas in 2005.
The Jazz have lost 16 of
their last 17 road playoff
games.

Griffey
sidelined
by colon
problem
CINCINNATI (AP) Ken Gri ffe y Jr. was
ex pected back m .th e
Cincinnati Reds ' lineup
.Tuesday aft er reco ve rin g
from div erti culiti s, an
inflammati o n of th e
colon.
The right fi elder was out
of tile starting lineup for
the last four games of a
homestand last week. He
pinch-hit in the ninth
inning of a 9-3 loss to
Philadelphia on Sund ay.
Griffey confirmed th at
he was di ag nosed about
six mo nth s ago with
di ve rticuIit is.
'" It' s ju st a condition
that I have." Gri ffey said .
"I' ve go t to watch everythin g that I eat. Th ere are
certaiu foods th at I have
to stay away from . It 's
somethin g that a lot ·of
peo pl e have, and it' s
uncomfortabl e."
Griffey ex pects to be
back in the lineup for the
start of a se ri es Tuesdav in
St. Loui s. Gri ffey is bat ting .275 with seve n RBi s
and no homers. He mi ssed
most of the Reds' spring
trainin g ga mes while
recoverin g from a bro k &gt;J~
left ha nd. an injury sustained in Decem ber.

Henry settles
traffic charges
CINCINNATI (A PJ Traffic cha rges ag ain st
Cincinnati Bengals rccc iv- .
er Chri s Henry were
dropped Monday. :
Henry, who has bee n
· arrested fo ur times since
December 2005. has bee n
suspended for thl; firs t
eight ga mes nex t season,
fo r violati ng the NFL's
co nduct pol icies . He spe nt
two days in ja il las t
Janu ary after pleading
guilt y to letti ng min ors
drink alcohol in a hote l
room he had rented .
Henry recCi ved traffic
tickets on Marc h 25 for
driving with a suspended
.lice nse. fai li ng to use his
turn signal and a seat bell
violati on. He was allowed
to go into a li cense in te rven tio n program to sett le
the charges.

·n e
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:ill

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OBITIJARIEs

• Ranger who saw
.lillm§n .hit with friendly
fire saitJ he was
ordered to conceal
info. See Page A2
• Ohio promotes
boating safety
awareness.
See Page A3 .
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
·• For the Record.
See Page AS

·zERO

• Hoover wins race.
See Page A6

BY BRIAN

VOU VISIT YOUR LOCA(. CUB CADET•

RETAILER.

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
8880 UNITED LANE
ATHENS, OH 45701 .
740 -593-3279 OR 1-800-710-1917
MON - FRI 9:00AM - 6:00PM I SAT 8:00AM 12:00PM

Details on Page A6

INDEX
ll SECTIONS - '\2 PAGES

Calendars

A3
A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Annie's Mailbox
• (H ~.? M on th! No Payme-oh &amp; No lnlerel!t If Paid Wilhin 12 Monlhs 12) Ftlled Monthiy P~s fa, ~ Monl~ &amp; No lnl~ tor 36 Month$ •

f l!' ' 2 Months No P~ ~l$ &amp; No lnler~ar d Pl!l!.ld Wtlhtn 12 MQnll'1 s; 'Wthd on purc hases ot $m (Jif mv!" ml~ by 5131/01 on iJ Powe r Crldi Card lccrunt On promo j)JcN9t. nomOntf\fy Pflyrnenf!l
rEq:Jnd &amp; no finiiti"'Cr.\1 cl'1ilf81l iiSI.4tSS.d tf 11) pt omo p-.rc.f'tay ~od in full In 12 tnonths, ~~)any mlnimurY~ mDnthty PI.Ymfnt$ Qn fC.C:~I pttd when ct.e. ilfld {3 ) ;u;(:QII,IM billan.;e doe$ nor exeat&lt;~
c·!dA lirn-1 OlhefliJIS!, ptomo may 'be term !l'lii H~d &amp; tinance cllittges aswssed from po-c~5tl dlll'f. (2) Fixed MontNy Pt)'metlll ! tor 16 Uorn1h~ &amp; No lnt~sllor J6 Mon1h&amp;. VMid on pschues.
of ~hly • fli C\A) Cdl Com rNrti.tl Tank &amp; Enlor&lt;:&lt;tr mod@t!. fTI3IN by S/J1107 on a Power Credit Cwd conS4Jmer accounl On ptoroo purc hase. fiud monl ~ pr;~ 1 tQUM 1G1/"36!tl of in~ ill
promo pschese amount ! re ~ red ur.U t11p1r!l10n or fl!! rrr nahon of promcllOI\ bJl r.:;~ f1n111Ce charge$ 'MJI be •s.~ntd f m promo purcl\u e ~ in fi.JIC rn 24 months, (2) en; rnrnirrun moottll)'
~ywe nt s on occoun t pa d~ d ~ and f.3) &amp;ecounl balance dll@S not bCM&lt;I cred11 ~ m i t O'htrwise . prON'iO may be' h~rml n&amp;l@d _ 0r1 111 promotiON! off«'s.. !ttndard tll!ri'M IJC)ply_lo non·promo
JN"CNRS. ~ ional char~.s &amp; lllrstins accOiM\ts .As of 312.3101. vlr,able APR'"· }8 ~ &amp; 0t1 ol1~ca&gt;unts ;n def1ull, 2l 9'n M..ntf'PJIT'l Finp;e Cherse 11" Subjecf iQ IA:Jrovtl by 6E MalleY Blnl.
... P..od.Jct Pnce- MMfhty paym.tn!S do not reflect • pplic11blt tl1~ or lbwn payment Aclual reta il pros rN'f vary . T•..e-:s. frtiaht. Si!Mup IRI hlrdin.1 dllr~ ml:f bl1dM~\ and m.ay v.ry.
Mocll!ts t ubJK I to hmiled ava11abthty
• .. . SN '(('AT kleal ~ent ~Piailer tCJ" l• rM~ warrMty dei&lt;J•Is Cef"la•n l,m,taflOns 8rd restr1d1011\s 141Piy SpK f iC.atfOns .,.~ subjM• to chen&amp;~ wifhout notic-t.
!t"N.ges rr.ay nal rtllec:t dtiler I"Nt''!Df)l and/or unit ~pec ·l..cai 1DtH Cub CacJet Corr.tnl!rcoi!l prodiJCIS are 1ntlftdld l'or ptcftuionil use.

t as ralecf by engine manu racturer

·

n,hrt?rlr&gt; r
-

--·-~-- ~

--

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4
As

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© 2007 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

J. REED

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

KKELLY@MVOAilYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS
Unemployment in area counties was mostly down during
March as weather improved
and more people entered the
workforce,
the
Ohio
Department of Jobs and
Family Services has found.
County-by-county jobless
rates for last month were
released Tuesday, in which
the unemployment rate for
Gallia County remained
unchanged at 5.9 percent
and fell more than 1.2 1 percent for Meigs County to
8.6 percent.
Beth sergent/ photo
Meigs' jobless rate in Jordan "Dougie" Pickens takes a jump off the lligh dive at London Pool last summer. Tlie
February was 9.8 percent.
pool is due to reppen on Memorial Day weekend . .
In Athens County, joblessne ss was down onetenth of a percent from 5.8
percent in February to 5. 7
percent in March. Lawrence
County dropped two-tenths
of a percent, from 5.4 per. cent .in February to last
month's 5.2 percent.
BY BETH SERGENT
Councilwoman Joy Bentley also di sc ussed
Vinton County was at 8.7
BSERGENT@MVDAILYSENTINEL.COM
planning swimming lessons at the pool
percent in March, down
though
those dates have not been confirmed.
•
four-tenths of a percent from
SYRACUSE
Grab
your
sunscreen,
Also
discussed at both the regular and
9.1 percent during the previbathing
suits
and
water
wings
because
the
recessed council sessions:
ous month. Washington
Those residents leaving for vacation ca n
County was at 5.4 percent, London Pool is ,set to reopen on Memorial
down two-tenths of a percent . Day weekend for a full summer of swim- speak with Police Chief Shannon Smith
about filling out a form to keep on file at .the
from February's 5.6 percent. ming in Syracuse.
The
decisidn
to
reopen
the
pool
over
the
police station informing the department you
Jackson was the only
holiday
weekend
was
made
by
Syracu
se
are
.out of town and would like to have your
area county to see an
Village
Council
at
its
most
recent,
regular
property
checked.
increase in unemployment
session.
Council
also
voted
to
authori
ze
Council
is also receiving several comin March to 8.3 percent,
Pool
Masters
of
Vienna,
W.Va.
to
do
repair
plaints
about
dogs running loose, leaving
one-tenth of a percent highwork
to
some
valves
at
the
pool
to
prepare
droppings
in
other
residents' yards. All reser than February's 8.2 perfor
the
season.
idents
are
reminded
to clean up after their
centTeading.
Heather
Smith
was
hired
as
pool
managpet,
even
when
they
're
out walking with it
ODJFS reported that
er
by
council
at
its
recent
recessed
session.
·
around
the
neighborhoods.
Ohio's unemployment rate .
Patrolman C. Brent Rose was oftlcially
was 5.2 percent in March, up The rate of pay for pool manager is $630
per
pay
period
which
is
every
two
weeks
hired
on a part-time basis.
.from 5 percent in February.
for
a
minimum
of
84
hours.
Council signed a proclamation supportin g
The national unemployCouncil
also
authorized
the
phone
being
the
National Day of Prayer observed
ment rate for March was 4.4
turned
back
on
at
the
pool
house
and
on
May
3.
.
·percent, down from 4.5 perDonna
Peterson
and
Clerk
Councilwoman
The next meeting of Syracuse Village
cent in February.
Treasurer Sharon Cottrill have purchased Council is at 7 p.m., Thursday, May 3 at vilPlease see Jobless, AS
125 cases of pop to begin the season. lage h&lt;~ll.

London Pool .to reopen
Day weeliend

Fire destroys-house
IT

allow de molition to proceed
immediately., allowi ng the
village to. tear it down and
proceed with ci vii collection ofthe demolit ion cost&gt;.
Coun cil
Pre sident
Stephen Houchins voted
against the order because.
he said, it is unfai r for the
village to use donated funds
Please see Council, AS

Siting board .
decision is
'critical step'
in Great
Bend plant

BY KEVIN KEUY

WEATHER

lOO'K SERVICE AND SUPPORT.

about the building and made
the motion for an order
authori zing demolition at
village expense if donation s
can be secured.
"Not onl y is the building
an eyesore, but the liability it
presents is a constant threat
. to this village," Craig said.
If those funds are donated
to the village for demolition, last night's ac tion will

Jobless
rates drop
during
March

'

SALE '3,399**

BRIAN

BRE£0.MVOAILYSENTINEL.COM

• 46"tripte. blade 3-in-1 mowing deck
·
• 20 HP' Kohler'" CourageV-Twin OHV engine

I'REE TRACTOR COVEll

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:! .) , :! Oil -

already subject to demoli- year, he was granted a 30tion because of a condem- day extension of a condemnation notice iss ued in nation order issued by the
MIDDLEPORT
2006. Ho wever. efforts are village's building inspector
Middleport Village Council underway' to · raise private allowing him to outline to
ordered the demolition of a donations to pay for the the village's design review
condemned and dangerous demolition, because Irvin board his plans for repairing
building in the downtown has failed - or refused the building, and to demonshopping district at Monday to tear it down.
strate financi al ability to
evening' s regular meeting.
Irvin insists that the con- complete the work.
The building, owned by demned building can be
Council Member Jean
Alan Ervin of Pomeroy, is rehabilitated. Early last · Craig initiated discussion

• Southern splits with
Meigs. See Page 81

INSIDE-

R8STAND .

\\ I· ll:\ ES ll \\ , . \I' I{ II

1 H.l

Council to pursue demotition of downtown eyesore

SPORTS

Page AS
• Charles Baker
• Charles 'Eddie' Branch
• George Harris

UR INDEPENDENT

O'Bleness Volunteer
Honor Garden
dedication, A6

Canter's Cave 4-H Camp
to have open house, A3

POMEROY ~ The Ohio
Power Siting Board's approval
of the location proposed for a
new IGCC power plant in
Lebanon Township is a ''major
step fmwaro" in plans to locate
the project here, Meigs County
Economic
Development
Director Peny Varnadoe said.
The OPSB approved
AEP-Ohio's proposal at a
regular meeting on Monday.
based on an application AEP
filed over a year ago. The
11-member OPSB reviews
applications for the siting of
large electric and natural gas
facilities in Ohio.
AEP and local offici als
have considered th e OPSB
permit process a major step
in locating the power plant
at Great Bend. AEP corporate spokesman lefT Renni e
said AEP is ,; very pleased''
with the OPSB 's decision to
approve the Lebanon
Township site.
The approval sets forth 36
conditions the company must
meet to remediate the environmental · and economi c
Please see Plant. As

Independent
filmmakers
seek local
talent for
features
BY KEVIN KEUY
~KELLY@ MYDAILVTR IBUN E . COM

GALLIPOLIS
If
you' ve always had a burning desire to be in a feature
film but have been frustrat ed because Holl ywood is.
well, over 2,000 miles away
from here,· a good chance at
fulfillin g that wish is available this weekend.
Auditions for · two films
being shot and independentAn electrical
malfunction is ly produced by a group of
local filmmak ers will . be
blamed for a
held
Friday at the Bossard
fi re that
Memorial
Library from 6 to
destroyed a
9
p.m.
-and
on Saturday ai
house on
the
.
Gallipo)l
s Ctty Park.
Ohio 7 in
starting
at
noon.
Middleport
The men planning these
Monday
films under the banner of
, evening.
Brown Sound Productions
Middleport,
are from this area an d
Pomeroy and
believe local talent is the
Rutland fireonly way to go with their
fighters were . productions.
\ on the scene
"''d like to leave someof the fire.
thing here." said Chad
The home's
Whitson of Point Pleasant.
owner was
W.Va., who plans to be in
not immediLos Angeles before the end
ately re portof summer.
. eel.
· But before he leaves, he
Photo courtesy
and his associates hope to
of C.L. Triplett·
have two films ready for
festival showings and the
Please see Tlllent. AS

.

�'

NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2
Wedriesday, April25, 2007

ble of determining their
own ideals of heroes and
they don't need to he told
WASHINGTON - An elaborate li es," Lynch said.
Army Ranger who was
Tillman's death received
with Pat Tillman when the worldwide
attention
former football star was because he had walked
cut down by friendly fire away from a huge contract
in
Afghanistan _said with the NFL's Arizona
Tuesday a com manding Cardinals to enli st in the
officer had ordered him to Army after the Sept. II .
keep quiet about what hap• 200 1, terrorist attacks.
pened.
His fami ly was initiall y
The military at first por- misled by the Pentagon
trayed Tillman's death as and did not learn the truth
the result of heroic combat fo r more than a month.
with the enemy. Army Spc. Tillman was awarded a
Bryan O'Neal told a con- Silver Star based on fabrigressional hearing that cated accounts - who fabwhefl he got the chance to ricated them still isn't clear
talk to Tillman's brother, after several investigawho had been in a nearby tions.
convoy on the fateful day,
"We don't know what the
"I was ordered not to tell secretary. of defense knew,
him what happened."
we don 't know what the
"You were ordered not to White
Hou se
knew,"
tell him?" repeated Rep. Waxman said. "What we
Henry Waxman, D-Calif. , do know is these were not
AP photo
chairman of the House a series of accidents, these
.
Kevin
Tillman,
brother
of
NFL
star-turned-Army
Ranger
Pat
Tillman
who
was
killed
by
frrendCommittee on Oversight stories. They were calc uand Government Reform.
latedly put out for a public ly-fire in Afghanistan. testifies before the House Oversight and Government Reform hearing
"Roger that, sir," replied r~Jation s purpose .... Even on Capitol Hill, Tuesday as his mother Mary Tillman looks on at right.
O'Neal, dressed in hi s now there seems to be a sible so that the Tillman a month of political disas- The Army is reviewing the
Army uniform.
cover-up
family would not learn ters ... so the truth needed actions of the officers.
The revelation came as
Kevin Tillman was in a , those facts through news to be suppressed," the
In questioning what the
committee members ques- convoy behind his older media leaks. That, in turn, brother said.
White House knew about
tioned whether, and when. brother, a former NFL star, shaped ·Bailey 's guidance
"Our family will n;:ver Tillman, Rep.
Elijah
top Defense officials and on April 22, 2004, when to his troops .
be satisfied. We' ll never Cummin'gs, 0-Md., cited a
the White House knew that Pat Tillman was mistakenThe Army said initially have Pat back," Mary memo _written by a top
Tillman's death in eastern ly shot by other Army that Till man was killed by Tillman
testified.
Afghanistan three years Rahgers who had just enemy gunfire while trying "Something really awful general seven days after
Tillman's death warning it
ago was actually a result of emerged from a canyon to help another group of happened. It's your job to was "highly possible" the
gunfire from fellow U.S. where they'd been fired -ambushed so ldiers, The find out what happened to Army Ranger was killed
soldiers.
upon. Kevin Tillman didn't family was not told what him. That's really . impor- by friendly fire and makThe committee also . see what happened. 0 ' Neal really happened until May tant."
ing clear his wan\ing
should
heard from Jessica Lynch, said he was ordered not to · 29, 2004, a delay the Army
be conveyed 10 the
Last month the military
the former Army private tell him by then-Lt. ~ol. blamed on procedural mis- concluded in a pair of president. President Bush
who was badly injured Jeff Bailey, the battalion takes.
reports that nine high- made no reference to the
when her· convoy was commander who oversaw
Kevin Tillman and rankin~ ~rmy officers, way Tillman died in a
ambushed in Iraq in 2003. Tillman's platoon.
Tillman 's mother, Mary includmg four generals, speech delivered two days
She was later rescued by
"He basically just said, Tillman , also, testified made critical errors in after the memo was wntAmerican troops from an sir, that uh, .' Do 'not ·let Tuesday but . were not in reporting Tillman's death ten.
Iraqi hospital, but the tale Kevin know, he's probably " the room when O'Neal but that there was no crimA
White
House
of her ambush was in a bad place knowing · spoke.
inal wrongdoing in his spokesman has said there's
changed into a story of that his brother's dead,"'
indication
Bush
After the hearing, Mary shooting - a conclusion no
O' Neal testified. "He made Tillman
heroism on her part.
approached the family has disputed. received the warning in the
Still hampered by her it known that I would get O' Neal, introduced herinjuries, Lynch walked in trouble, sir, if I spoke self, embraced him and
slowly to the witness tabl'e, · with Kevin."
sobbed.
took a seat alongside
Kevin Tillman, in his
O'Neal said he was
Tillman's family members "quite appalled" by the testimony, accused the miland said the heroism order.
itary of "intentional falsebelonged to others who
Bailey's superior officer, hoods" and "deliberate and
fought in Iraq, such as her then-Col. James C. Nixon, careful
misrepresentaroommate Lori Piestewa, has testified to the Defense tions" in the portrayal of
who died in the same Department' s
inspector his brother 's death. ·
."Revealing that Pat' s
ambush in which . Lynch general that he ordered that
was captured.
information on the facts of death was a fratricide
·"The bottom line is the Tillman's death be shared would have been yet
American people are capa- with as few people as pos- another political disaster in

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
. HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

JACKSON - For years
Meigs Coun~ 4-Hers and
other area youth groups have
be.en traveling to Jackson to
attend camp at the Elizabeth
L. Evans Outdoor Education
Center, owned and 9perated
as Canter 's Cave 4-H Camp.
Located near Jackson off of
S.R. 35, the camp will be
holding an open house fun
day and fundraiser on Sunday
April 29 from 10 a.m. to 4
p.m. to give 4-Hers, alumni,
friends and family a time to
' enjoy the camp and the many
facilities it offers.
There will be free guided
hikes back to the caves on the
property, and nature crafts for
the kids. For small fees visitors can enjoy a trip out on the
camp pond in a paddle boat,
get in some fishing, or try
their aim at shooting sports
and archery programs. They
can try their skills at the high
ropes in a tree top course, and
horse rides will be offered for
children, or enjoy a corn hole
tournament which will be taking place. There will things to
do with cash prizes awarded,
a silent auction, a live auction, and a Chinese auction.
There will also be lots of
good things to eat for sale as
well as a cake walk. goodies
for sale and a cake walk on
the hour during the day.
All funds raised will go into
supporting Canter's Cave 4H Camp that serves thousands of area youth every
summer.

memo written April 29,
2004, by then-Maj. Gen.
Stanley McChrystal to
Gen. John Abizaid. head of
Central Command.
Questioned by Waxman,
Defense
Department
Acting Inspector General
Thomas F. Gimble said he
did not believe the memo
ever went to the White
House.
Gimhle s'aid that Defense
Secretary
Donald
H.
Rumsfcld se nt him a letter
around the .time Rumsfeld
left office last December
sayi ng he hadn't ~nown
Tillman's death was from
fri end! y fire unti I around
May 20. 2004. Abizaid told
Gimble he was traveling in
the war theater and didn ' t
see th e memo saying
Tillman's death was possibly friendly fire until afterTillman' s memorial service.
Mary Tillman -dismissed
the suggestion Abizaid
hadn't seen the memo as
"ridiculous," and said she
believed Rumsfeld must
have known. "The fact that
he would have died by
friendly fire and no one
told Rumsfeld is ludicrous," she s_aid.
The committee had
wanted to hear from retired
Lt. Gen. Philip Kensi nger,
who was in charge of

BY ERICA WERNER

..

Army specia ~ operations
and came under the heavi. est criticism from military
investigators for misleading information about
Tillman's de~th .
Kensinger 's
attorney
sent Waxman a letter last
week saying that if
Kensinger were called to
testify he would refuse to
answer questions, citing
his Fifth Amendment right
against self-incrimination.

POMEROY - With the
popularity of boating on the
Ohio River, . Meigs residents
and visitors from adjacent
areas can benefit much from
an awareness program of boating safeiy and the importance
of watercraft safety inspections.
Every spring the Ohio
Department
of
Natural
Resources
Division
of
Watercraft and its boating partners, including the U.S. Power
Squadrons, U.S. Coast Guard
Auxiliary and some local
marine patrols offer recreational boaters free watercraft safety inspections.
The · safety 'inspections are
aimed at increasing boating

J~Zud~ ·

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

1tJ 1he
,.

~

,,..-

.'
~

4:' .

-;;?'

-""----¢"'

'r

Happy

2
•\1

(Your
Mother's
Name)

1

--

.

Love, Brenda,
joe, Tom, Ken
8.. Elaine

·- ~

I_~

. ·."' t

in this special seqiq~,: )l

992-2155·

Wednesday, April 25
RACINE
Special
meeting of the Southern
Local School
District
Board of Education, 8 p.m.
at the high school for the
purpose of conducting
interviews for the treasurer's position.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Local Board of
Education, 6:30 p.th., elementary library conference
room

Happy
Mother's Day Mother's Day

1

""'t·

Public meetings

1X3 Greeting $12.00 1X5 Greeting. $15.00

~ern•nel

!

We love you
mommy!
. Love,
Cierra, Skylar
&amp;.. Pratt

Dear Annie: I am a 15year-old girl who is considered smart, fun . confident
and pretty. I have never had
problems with guys losing
interest in me or avoiding me
before, but my boyfriend,
"Alec," has been ignoring
me on and off for the past
two months. Neither of us is
looking for some kind of
super-committed relationship, but I feel very hurt and
disappointed at. the way he
has been acting.
Alec and I will talk on the
Submitted photos phone or text message. · and
Boating is big at Canter'.s Cave and like these 4-Hers you can experience life on the lake everything is fine, and we
part ways saying we wi ll
at Sunday's open house.
.stay in touch and talk soon holiday time. We are quite
or hang out. But do we? No_ fortunate and don't need
The Camp has been serving
He ignores my e-mails when more stuff. I deeply appreci- ·
area youth for over 60 years·
'
••
I know he 's online. He won't ate that Mom makes donawith many parents returning
pick
up the phone when 1 lions to charities in ourthere with their ·children to
enjoy many of the same
call, and.after a week or two, names as well as her own at.
things. It is a place where ·
I get mad and give up trying Christmas. And she always
revisiting brings back memoto reach him. Then he calls checks to make sure we sup- ·
ries of good times enjoyed in
and acts like everything is . port the organization's goals.
the out-of-doors. A visit there
.totally normal. When I eOf course, my in-laws give
S~nday during the fun9raismml that I was startm~. tog~! us lots- of gifts throughout·
ing event is an opportunity to
womed, he replies LOL the year. They put up with
give back so that many more
(laughmg out loud).
.
.
..
Even if I wasn ' t his girl- our active • fal11tly . of h ~e
youth can share the experifriend, I would still be irked (plus dog) when we vtstt.
ence.
by his behavior. 1 don't think They pay attentton to our
Cassie Turner, 4-H educator for Meigs County, invites
he should totally devote his mterests and actiVIties. They
anyone with questions ·conlife to me or anything. I just have seen us through several
cerning the camp or tlie Rustic cabins like these don 't provide all the comforts of ·don 't think it's nice to treat health crises, and yes, they
Sunday event to contact her at ~cime. but add to the fun of living in the wocds when camp- people this way. What do have helped us out financial992-6696.
ing at Canter's Cave 4-H Camp.·
you think'! - Confused ly over the years. My in-laws
Libra
do not make donations out of
Dear Libra: We thin~ you laziness or lack of imaginamake Alec nervous. He s try- tion, as Gifting Dilemma
ing_v~ry hard .to prove that suggests. On the contrary,
.
he tsn. tat your beck and call. they .have found yet another
safety awareness at a time watercraft registration will be Logan; 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. May You need to back off. gtve
10 be gener?us. when many Ohioans are distributed to boaters whose ' 19, Huntington Riverfront him a lot niore space, and way
launching their boats for the vessels undergo the safety Park ; Noon to 2 p.m. May find other things to occupy Grateful for Donattons
Dear Grateful: We heard
season. Watercraft officers will inspections. During Safe 19, Jackson Lake; Noon to I your time. Let him make the
first
·
move
when
he
wants
from
a great number of read-·
not issue citations, but will Boating Week (May 19-25), p.m. May 19 Seneca Lake,
contact,
even
if
it
takes
three
ers
who
agree, especially
instead provide written inspec- watercraft officers will also Main Ramp; 9 a.m. to I p.m.
tion reports that allow boat distribute a limited supply of May 19-20, Salt Fork Lake, weeks. (You're more inter- those who say they have
owners to make recommended _wrist bracelets inscribed with Morning Glory Ramp; 10 a.m. esting to him when you everything they rieed, and
improvements to their safety the words, "Wear Your Life to Noon. May 19-20, Salt Fork aren't so eager for his atten- donations make them feel
equipment. Officers and safety Jacket," to boaters they Lake, Marina Ramp; 10 a.m. !io~.) You may decide this good.
Dear Readers: Today is
inspectors will look for proj:Jer- obserVe who are properly to Nocn, May 20, Lake Hope; 1sn t the kmd of relatJonshtp
ly working frre extinguishers, wearing a life jacket.
2 p.m. to 3 p.m .. May 20 Ohio you want, but nght now,lt s Administrative Professionals
horns. navigational light~. disIn Southeastern Ohio, safety River,, Holiday Point Marina; the only one ~lee ts oftenng. Day. If you have assistants
Dear Anme: As I under.
.
tress .signals and an adequate inspection locations and the Noon to I p.m. May 20, Ohio stand
it, when there is a who make your JOb easter,
number of U.S. Coast Guard- dates available for the free River, Ginatt Run Ramp; funeral car procession, it is let them know how much
approved life jackets that are inspections are a~ follows:
Noon to I p.m. May 20, polite to pull over to the side they are appreciated.
the proper style, size and type
May 18-19, Ohio River, Seneca Lake, Main Ramp; 10 of the road. What should 1do
Annie's Mailbox is writfor any of the boat's likely pas- Harris Riverfront P&lt;).rk in · a.m. to Noon, May 20. Dillon if I am on the interstate and ten by Kathy Mitchell and
sengers.
Huntington, WY (National Lake, Big Run Ramp; I0 a.m. ·
A limited number of tloating Maritime Days Celebration); to Noon. May 20 Burr Oak come upon a funeral proces- Marcy Sugar, longtime edision? Is il OK to pass them if . tors of the Ann Lilllders colkey chains ideal for carrying a 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. May 1'9, Lake Lake, Main Ramp.they are only doing the min- 11111n. Please e-mail your
imum speed, or should I fol- questions to anniesmail- -.
low them·) What about on a box@comcast.net or wrire
divided highw~y i~ they are to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
on the other stde . Thanks. Box 118190 Chicago 1L
'
'
-DDanaD
. It .
606JI. To firtd
0111 more
CHurch in Tuppers Plains.
officers, 7 p.m .• YFW hall.
1
ear ana. ts respec - b A . , M 'lb
d
RACINE - Auxiliary,
CARPENTER
ful to pull over to the right to a out nme s m ox, art .
American Legion Post 602
Community felloowship 6 allow a funeral procession to read jeat11res. by o~iler
Wednesday, April 25
of Racine. 7 p.m.
to
8 p.m. . Sunday at the pass. Otherwise, the main Creators Syn~tcate . ":"lenRUTLAND - Revival
Carpenter
Bapitist Chuch, rules are that you should not ·and cartoonzsts, vtstl tile
services will be held at the
Monday, April. 30
30711
S.R.
143, Albany, get in between the cars in a Creato'rs Syndicate Web
Rose of Sharon Holiness
POMEROY - Oh-KAN Church, Rutland, 7 p.m. Theme "The Great Carpenter procession. and you should page at www.creators.com.
Coin Club, .dinner at 6 p.m. , through April 29. Rev. Chad Cookie Bake-off.'.' Dan and
meeting at 7 p.m. at the Searles, evangelist. Pastor i'ami Daly in concert during
Pomeroy Library.
Dewey King invites the pub- evening.
lic.
Thesday, May l
CHESTER
-:- 73rd
s.m.,
Saturday, April 28
Anniversary of Chesier
RIO
GRANDE
Council #323, Daughters of Community
Friday, April 2-7
Christian
America celebrated with Fellowship youth rally to
MIDDLEPORT · - Free
·~ 11111-.Awlloblel
supper at 6:30 p.m.. at feature "Mantle" in concert, community dinner, 4:30 to ·
Masonic Hall. Lodge meet- 6 p.m. Located at Trails End, 6:15 p.m.,
• FREE 2~/7 Live Technicot Support ·
Middleport
ing at 7:30. Members who Rio Grande. For more in for• Unlimited Hours, No C
have not regi stered for sup- mation call 742-1900 or 245- Church of Christ Family Life ; 10 E-moil Addmsos
www rorr or1
CORf \ ' 1l~/1~/l
per should call Esther 5946. Games, Fear Factor, Center. Baked steak, mashed
1-877-26 7-3266
_/
potatoes, · mixed vegetables, • FREE Spom'Protection
Smith at 985-4424.
prizes,- free pizza and drinks. rolls, dessert.

...

Church events

Other events

Clubs and
organizations

~

' -

'

'

· . The-DallySentlriel "Mother'sOaY~.
11 ·1 Cour1St., PomerOy, OH 45769

__

r----.-------------~-----_..'t£._
1 · Circle, One: · 1X3 Greeting $12.00 1X5 Greeting- $15.00
I

0

I

1 Mother's Name
I Your Name (s):
Your Address

1
I
I

CDEFG

Wednesday, April 25
MIDDLEPORT .
~
Middleport Literary Club. 2
p.m. at the Pomerf-Jy_
Library, Phylhs Hackett to
review "The Team ot
Riv.al s" by .Doris Kearns
Goodwin. · Dana Kessmger,
hostess.

Preschool
I
. Screeni
.
For the 2007-2008 school
year will be held May 7, 2007
at Bradbury Learning Center.

1

l

Thursday, April 26
POMEROY The
. American Cancer &lt;\Society
Meigs County Advi~ory
·Board's annual meeting.
noon. basement conference
room at Pomeroy Library.
TUPPERS PLAINS -Tuppers Plains VFW 9053,
regular meeting, 'election of

l1

I

I City, State, Zip
IPhone#
·

I

·

yield the right -of-way in
intersections. On highways,
it is perfectly OK to pass the
procession on the left (unless
it is in the far left lane, in
which case, you can pass on
the right). You do not have .to
do anyth ing at all when the
procession is trave ling on the
other side ot: a divided highway. And thanks for being
considerate enough to .
111ljUtre. .
.
Dear Annie: This is lor
"G ifting Dilem ma.'' who
didn 't want donations to.
charity in lieu of gifts.
My mother-in-law knows
we are uncomfortable with
the con&amp;umerist frenzy at ·

cw,S9.95,.

'

School events

OLit..-form
drqp
olltbe poymentto
... below4nd
. ., .
..

l

BY KATIIY MITCHEll.
AND MARCY SUGAR

Thursday, April 26
POMEROY Meigs
Soil
and
Water
Conservation
District
Board of Supervisors,
II :30 a.m. at the district
Sunday, April 29
office, 331·QI Hiland Road,
MIDDLEPORT
Pomeroy. '
"Bound from Heaven" of
Thursday, April 26
MIDDLEPORT
Parke6burg, W.Va. to sing at f
Special
meetin g
of. TUPPERS PLAINS confer- II a.m., Hope Baptist
Middleport
Vi II age Parent-teacher
Council, 6 p.m., to discuss ences, '4-7 p.m., Eastern Church.
POMEROY
lease of village property to Local School District.
Missionary Gastom Ntambo
Big Bend Youth Football
from Congo to worship at .II
Friday, April 27
League.
RACINE - S~uthern · a.m. at Forest Run United
Local School District, aca- Methodist Church, and hold
demic ban4uet, 6:30 'p.m., a workshop at 4 p.m. at St.
Paul United Methodist
Southern Hi gh School. .

'·

. ·~

Let your guy friend
have some space

Community Calendar

GreetillK Hxamples ...

The Daily

~-

~~

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Ohio promotes boating safety awarent~ss

This mothers day, a heartfelt

To be published
Sunday, May 13th

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Canter's Cave 4•H Camp to have open house

RANGER WHO SAW TILLMAN HIT WITH FRIEN:t;JLY
FIRE SAID HE WAS· ORDERED TO CONCEAL INFO
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

PageA3 '

The Daily Sentinel

I

I

L------· --------l~!:!~t!e.f.!!:e!iS.~----•--------J
Sentinel

2

3
4

s·

For an appointment contact:
Betsy Nicodemus

(740) 992-1740

-

Good limes
Presents

Triple Threat
Saturdav, April 28th
********************

Check out our weekly lineup!
Monday· 50&lt;; Draft
.Tuesday- Karaoke w/Ron Campbell
_Sl.OO Cover 9pm-1am
Wednesday· Mens Nig~t -Pool tournament
$5.00 entry Bpm · 50&lt;; off all drinks 1Opm· 2am

J~ursday-

Ladies Nighl w/DJ
$1.00 cover 9pm- 2am
50~ off all drinks - 1Opm· 2am
frlliiY · DJ 9pm - 2am
Saturday · Live Bands
Sl!rulml · $1 .00 Beer- $1.25 Coronas

opqrs uvwxyz

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•

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�'

NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2
Wedriesday, April25, 2007

ble of determining their
own ideals of heroes and
they don't need to he told
WASHINGTON - An elaborate li es," Lynch said.
Army Ranger who was
Tillman's death received
with Pat Tillman when the worldwide
attention
former football star was because he had walked
cut down by friendly fire away from a huge contract
in
Afghanistan _said with the NFL's Arizona
Tuesday a com manding Cardinals to enli st in the
officer had ordered him to Army after the Sept. II .
keep quiet about what hap• 200 1, terrorist attacks.
pened.
His fami ly was initiall y
The military at first por- misled by the Pentagon
trayed Tillman's death as and did not learn the truth
the result of heroic combat fo r more than a month.
with the enemy. Army Spc. Tillman was awarded a
Bryan O'Neal told a con- Silver Star based on fabrigressional hearing that cated accounts - who fabwhefl he got the chance to ricated them still isn't clear
talk to Tillman's brother, after several investigawho had been in a nearby tions.
convoy on the fateful day,
"We don't know what the
"I was ordered not to tell secretary. of defense knew,
him what happened."
we don 't know what the
"You were ordered not to White
Hou se
knew,"
tell him?" repeated Rep. Waxman said. "What we
Henry Waxman, D-Calif. , do know is these were not
AP photo
chairman of the House a series of accidents, these
.
Kevin
Tillman,
brother
of
NFL
star-turned-Army
Ranger
Pat
Tillman
who
was
killed
by
frrendCommittee on Oversight stories. They were calc uand Government Reform.
latedly put out for a public ly-fire in Afghanistan. testifies before the House Oversight and Government Reform hearing
"Roger that, sir," replied r~Jation s purpose .... Even on Capitol Hill, Tuesday as his mother Mary Tillman looks on at right.
O'Neal, dressed in hi s now there seems to be a sible so that the Tillman a month of political disas- The Army is reviewing the
Army uniform.
cover-up
family would not learn ters ... so the truth needed actions of the officers.
The revelation came as
Kevin Tillman was in a , those facts through news to be suppressed," the
In questioning what the
committee members ques- convoy behind his older media leaks. That, in turn, brother said.
White House knew about
tioned whether, and when. brother, a former NFL star, shaped ·Bailey 's guidance
"Our family will n;:ver Tillman, Rep.
Elijah
top Defense officials and on April 22, 2004, when to his troops .
be satisfied. We' ll never Cummin'gs, 0-Md., cited a
the White House knew that Pat Tillman was mistakenThe Army said initially have Pat back," Mary memo _written by a top
Tillman's death in eastern ly shot by other Army that Till man was killed by Tillman
testified.
Afghanistan three years Rahgers who had just enemy gunfire while trying "Something really awful general seven days after
Tillman's death warning it
ago was actually a result of emerged from a canyon to help another group of happened. It's your job to was "highly possible" the
gunfire from fellow U.S. where they'd been fired -ambushed so ldiers, The find out what happened to Army Ranger was killed
soldiers.
upon. Kevin Tillman didn't family was not told what him. That's really . impor- by friendly fire and makThe committee also . see what happened. 0 ' Neal really happened until May tant."
ing clear his wan\ing
should
heard from Jessica Lynch, said he was ordered not to · 29, 2004, a delay the Army
be conveyed 10 the
Last month the military
the former Army private tell him by then-Lt. ~ol. blamed on procedural mis- concluded in a pair of president. President Bush
who was badly injured Jeff Bailey, the battalion takes.
reports that nine high- made no reference to the
when her· convoy was commander who oversaw
Kevin Tillman and rankin~ ~rmy officers, way Tillman died in a
ambushed in Iraq in 2003. Tillman's platoon.
Tillman 's mother, Mary includmg four generals, speech delivered two days
She was later rescued by
"He basically just said, Tillman , also, testified made critical errors in after the memo was wntAmerican troops from an sir, that uh, .' Do 'not ·let Tuesday but . were not in reporting Tillman's death ten.
Iraqi hospital, but the tale Kevin know, he's probably " the room when O'Neal but that there was no crimA
White
House
of her ambush was in a bad place knowing · spoke.
inal wrongdoing in his spokesman has said there's
changed into a story of that his brother's dead,"'
indication
Bush
After the hearing, Mary shooting - a conclusion no
O' Neal testified. "He made Tillman
heroism on her part.
approached the family has disputed. received the warning in the
Still hampered by her it known that I would get O' Neal, introduced herinjuries, Lynch walked in trouble, sir, if I spoke self, embraced him and
slowly to the witness tabl'e, · with Kevin."
sobbed.
took a seat alongside
Kevin Tillman, in his
O'Neal said he was
Tillman's family members "quite appalled" by the testimony, accused the miland said the heroism order.
itary of "intentional falsebelonged to others who
Bailey's superior officer, hoods" and "deliberate and
fought in Iraq, such as her then-Col. James C. Nixon, careful
misrepresentaroommate Lori Piestewa, has testified to the Defense tions" in the portrayal of
who died in the same Department' s
inspector his brother 's death. ·
."Revealing that Pat' s
ambush in which . Lynch general that he ordered that
was captured.
information on the facts of death was a fratricide
·"The bottom line is the Tillman's death be shared would have been yet
American people are capa- with as few people as pos- another political disaster in

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
. HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

JACKSON - For years
Meigs Coun~ 4-Hers and
other area youth groups have
be.en traveling to Jackson to
attend camp at the Elizabeth
L. Evans Outdoor Education
Center, owned and 9perated
as Canter 's Cave 4-H Camp.
Located near Jackson off of
S.R. 35, the camp will be
holding an open house fun
day and fundraiser on Sunday
April 29 from 10 a.m. to 4
p.m. to give 4-Hers, alumni,
friends and family a time to
' enjoy the camp and the many
facilities it offers.
There will be free guided
hikes back to the caves on the
property, and nature crafts for
the kids. For small fees visitors can enjoy a trip out on the
camp pond in a paddle boat,
get in some fishing, or try
their aim at shooting sports
and archery programs. They
can try their skills at the high
ropes in a tree top course, and
horse rides will be offered for
children, or enjoy a corn hole
tournament which will be taking place. There will things to
do with cash prizes awarded,
a silent auction, a live auction, and a Chinese auction.
There will also be lots of
good things to eat for sale as
well as a cake walk. goodies
for sale and a cake walk on
the hour during the day.
All funds raised will go into
supporting Canter's Cave 4H Camp that serves thousands of area youth every
summer.

memo written April 29,
2004, by then-Maj. Gen.
Stanley McChrystal to
Gen. John Abizaid. head of
Central Command.
Questioned by Waxman,
Defense
Department
Acting Inspector General
Thomas F. Gimble said he
did not believe the memo
ever went to the White
House.
Gimhle s'aid that Defense
Secretary
Donald
H.
Rumsfcld se nt him a letter
around the .time Rumsfeld
left office last December
sayi ng he hadn't ~nown
Tillman's death was from
fri end! y fire unti I around
May 20. 2004. Abizaid told
Gimble he was traveling in
the war theater and didn ' t
see th e memo saying
Tillman's death was possibly friendly fire until afterTillman' s memorial service.
Mary Tillman -dismissed
the suggestion Abizaid
hadn't seen the memo as
"ridiculous," and said she
believed Rumsfeld must
have known. "The fact that
he would have died by
friendly fire and no one
told Rumsfeld is ludicrous," she s_aid.
The committee had
wanted to hear from retired
Lt. Gen. Philip Kensi nger,
who was in charge of

BY ERICA WERNER

..

Army specia ~ operations
and came under the heavi. est criticism from military
investigators for misleading information about
Tillman's de~th .
Kensinger 's
attorney
sent Waxman a letter last
week saying that if
Kensinger were called to
testify he would refuse to
answer questions, citing
his Fifth Amendment right
against self-incrimination.

POMEROY - With the
popularity of boating on the
Ohio River, . Meigs residents
and visitors from adjacent
areas can benefit much from
an awareness program of boating safeiy and the importance
of watercraft safety inspections.
Every spring the Ohio
Department
of
Natural
Resources
Division
of
Watercraft and its boating partners, including the U.S. Power
Squadrons, U.S. Coast Guard
Auxiliary and some local
marine patrols offer recreational boaters free watercraft safety inspections.
The · safety 'inspections are
aimed at increasing boating

J~Zud~ ·

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

1tJ 1he
,.

~

,,..-

.'
~

4:' .

-;;?'

-""----¢"'

'r

Happy

2
•\1

(Your
Mother's
Name)

1

--

.

Love, Brenda,
joe, Tom, Ken
8.. Elaine

·- ~

I_~

. ·."' t

in this special seqiq~,: )l

992-2155·

Wednesday, April 25
RACINE
Special
meeting of the Southern
Local School
District
Board of Education, 8 p.m.
at the high school for the
purpose of conducting
interviews for the treasurer's position.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Local Board of
Education, 6:30 p.th., elementary library conference
room

Happy
Mother's Day Mother's Day

1

""'t·

Public meetings

1X3 Greeting $12.00 1X5 Greeting. $15.00

~ern•nel

!

We love you
mommy!
. Love,
Cierra, Skylar
&amp;.. Pratt

Dear Annie: I am a 15year-old girl who is considered smart, fun . confident
and pretty. I have never had
problems with guys losing
interest in me or avoiding me
before, but my boyfriend,
"Alec," has been ignoring
me on and off for the past
two months. Neither of us is
looking for some kind of
super-committed relationship, but I feel very hurt and
disappointed at. the way he
has been acting.
Alec and I will talk on the
Submitted photos phone or text message. · and
Boating is big at Canter'.s Cave and like these 4-Hers you can experience life on the lake everything is fine, and we
part ways saying we wi ll
at Sunday's open house.
.stay in touch and talk soon holiday time. We are quite
or hang out. But do we? No_ fortunate and don't need
The Camp has been serving
He ignores my e-mails when more stuff. I deeply appreci- ·
area youth for over 60 years·
'
••
I know he 's online. He won't ate that Mom makes donawith many parents returning
pick
up the phone when 1 lions to charities in ourthere with their ·children to
enjoy many of the same
call, and.after a week or two, names as well as her own at.
things. It is a place where ·
I get mad and give up trying Christmas. And she always
revisiting brings back memoto reach him. Then he calls checks to make sure we sup- ·
ries of good times enjoyed in
and acts like everything is . port the organization's goals.
the out-of-doors. A visit there
.totally normal. When I eOf course, my in-laws give
S~nday during the fun9raismml that I was startm~. tog~! us lots- of gifts throughout·
ing event is an opportunity to
womed, he replies LOL the year. They put up with
give back so that many more
(laughmg out loud).
.
.
..
Even if I wasn ' t his girl- our active • fal11tly . of h ~e
youth can share the experifriend, I would still be irked (plus dog) when we vtstt.
ence.
by his behavior. 1 don't think They pay attentton to our
Cassie Turner, 4-H educator for Meigs County, invites
he should totally devote his mterests and actiVIties. They
anyone with questions ·conlife to me or anything. I just have seen us through several
cerning the camp or tlie Rustic cabins like these don 't provide all the comforts of ·don 't think it's nice to treat health crises, and yes, they
Sunday event to contact her at ~cime. but add to the fun of living in the wocds when camp- people this way. What do have helped us out financial992-6696.
ing at Canter's Cave 4-H Camp.·
you think'! - Confused ly over the years. My in-laws
Libra
do not make donations out of
Dear Libra: We thin~ you laziness or lack of imaginamake Alec nervous. He s try- tion, as Gifting Dilemma
ing_v~ry hard .to prove that suggests. On the contrary,
.
he tsn. tat your beck and call. they .have found yet another
safety awareness at a time watercraft registration will be Logan; 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. May You need to back off. gtve
10 be gener?us. when many Ohioans are distributed to boaters whose ' 19, Huntington Riverfront him a lot niore space, and way
launching their boats for the vessels undergo the safety Park ; Noon to 2 p.m. May find other things to occupy Grateful for Donattons
Dear Grateful: We heard
season. Watercraft officers will inspections. During Safe 19, Jackson Lake; Noon to I your time. Let him make the
first
·
move
when
he
wants
from
a great number of read-·
not issue citations, but will Boating Week (May 19-25), p.m. May 19 Seneca Lake,
contact,
even
if
it
takes
three
ers
who
agree, especially
instead provide written inspec- watercraft officers will also Main Ramp; 9 a.m. to I p.m.
tion reports that allow boat distribute a limited supply of May 19-20, Salt Fork Lake, weeks. (You're more inter- those who say they have
owners to make recommended _wrist bracelets inscribed with Morning Glory Ramp; 10 a.m. esting to him when you everything they rieed, and
improvements to their safety the words, "Wear Your Life to Noon. May 19-20, Salt Fork aren't so eager for his atten- donations make them feel
equipment. Officers and safety Jacket," to boaters they Lake, Marina Ramp; 10 a.m. !io~.) You may decide this good.
Dear Readers: Today is
inspectors will look for proj:Jer- obserVe who are properly to Nocn, May 20, Lake Hope; 1sn t the kmd of relatJonshtp
ly working frre extinguishers, wearing a life jacket.
2 p.m. to 3 p.m .. May 20 Ohio you want, but nght now,lt s Administrative Professionals
horns. navigational light~. disIn Southeastern Ohio, safety River,, Holiday Point Marina; the only one ~lee ts oftenng. Day. If you have assistants
Dear Anme: As I under.
.
tress .signals and an adequate inspection locations and the Noon to I p.m. May 20, Ohio stand
it, when there is a who make your JOb easter,
number of U.S. Coast Guard- dates available for the free River, Ginatt Run Ramp; funeral car procession, it is let them know how much
approved life jackets that are inspections are a~ follows:
Noon to I p.m. May 20, polite to pull over to the side they are appreciated.
the proper style, size and type
May 18-19, Ohio River, Seneca Lake, Main Ramp; 10 of the road. What should 1do
Annie's Mailbox is writfor any of the boat's likely pas- Harris Riverfront P&lt;).rk in · a.m. to Noon, May 20. Dillon if I am on the interstate and ten by Kathy Mitchell and
sengers.
Huntington, WY (National Lake, Big Run Ramp; I0 a.m. ·
A limited number of tloating Maritime Days Celebration); to Noon. May 20 Burr Oak come upon a funeral proces- Marcy Sugar, longtime edision? Is il OK to pass them if . tors of the Ann Lilllders colkey chains ideal for carrying a 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. May 1'9, Lake Lake, Main Ramp.they are only doing the min- 11111n. Please e-mail your
imum speed, or should I fol- questions to anniesmail- -.
low them·) What about on a box@comcast.net or wrire
divided highw~y i~ they are to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
on the other stde . Thanks. Box 118190 Chicago 1L
'
'
-DDanaD
. It .
606JI. To firtd
0111 more
CHurch in Tuppers Plains.
officers, 7 p.m .• YFW hall.
1
ear ana. ts respec - b A . , M 'lb
d
RACINE - Auxiliary,
CARPENTER
ful to pull over to the right to a out nme s m ox, art .
American Legion Post 602
Community felloowship 6 allow a funeral procession to read jeat11res. by o~iler
Wednesday, April 25
of Racine. 7 p.m.
to
8 p.m. . Sunday at the pass. Otherwise, the main Creators Syn~tcate . ":"lenRUTLAND - Revival
Carpenter
Bapitist Chuch, rules are that you should not ·and cartoonzsts, vtstl tile
services will be held at the
Monday, April. 30
30711
S.R.
143, Albany, get in between the cars in a Creato'rs Syndicate Web
Rose of Sharon Holiness
POMEROY - Oh-KAN Church, Rutland, 7 p.m. Theme "The Great Carpenter procession. and you should page at www.creators.com.
Coin Club, .dinner at 6 p.m. , through April 29. Rev. Chad Cookie Bake-off.'.' Dan and
meeting at 7 p.m. at the Searles, evangelist. Pastor i'ami Daly in concert during
Pomeroy Library.
Dewey King invites the pub- evening.
lic.
Thesday, May l
CHESTER
-:- 73rd
s.m.,
Saturday, April 28
Anniversary of Chesier
RIO
GRANDE
Council #323, Daughters of Community
Friday, April 2-7
Christian
America celebrated with Fellowship youth rally to
MIDDLEPORT · - Free
·~ 11111-.Awlloblel
supper at 6:30 p.m.. at feature "Mantle" in concert, community dinner, 4:30 to ·
Masonic Hall. Lodge meet- 6 p.m. Located at Trails End, 6:15 p.m.,
• FREE 2~/7 Live Technicot Support ·
Middleport
ing at 7:30. Members who Rio Grande. For more in for• Unlimited Hours, No C
have not regi stered for sup- mation call 742-1900 or 245- Church of Christ Family Life ; 10 E-moil Addmsos
www rorr or1
CORf \ ' 1l~/1~/l
per should call Esther 5946. Games, Fear Factor, Center. Baked steak, mashed
1-877-26 7-3266
_/
potatoes, · mixed vegetables, • FREE Spom'Protection
Smith at 985-4424.
prizes,- free pizza and drinks. rolls, dessert.

...

Church events

Other events

Clubs and
organizations

~

' -

'

'

· . The-DallySentlriel "Mother'sOaY~.
11 ·1 Cour1St., PomerOy, OH 45769

__

r----.-------------~-----_..'t£._
1 · Circle, One: · 1X3 Greeting $12.00 1X5 Greeting- $15.00
I

0

I

1 Mother's Name
I Your Name (s):
Your Address

1
I
I

CDEFG

Wednesday, April 25
MIDDLEPORT .
~
Middleport Literary Club. 2
p.m. at the Pomerf-Jy_
Library, Phylhs Hackett to
review "The Team ot
Riv.al s" by .Doris Kearns
Goodwin. · Dana Kessmger,
hostess.

Preschool
I
. Screeni
.
For the 2007-2008 school
year will be held May 7, 2007
at Bradbury Learning Center.

1

l

Thursday, April 26
POMEROY The
. American Cancer &lt;\Society
Meigs County Advi~ory
·Board's annual meeting.
noon. basement conference
room at Pomeroy Library.
TUPPERS PLAINS -Tuppers Plains VFW 9053,
regular meeting, 'election of

l1

I

I City, State, Zip
IPhone#
·

I

·

yield the right -of-way in
intersections. On highways,
it is perfectly OK to pass the
procession on the left (unless
it is in the far left lane, in
which case, you can pass on
the right). You do not have .to
do anyth ing at all when the
procession is trave ling on the
other side ot: a divided highway. And thanks for being
considerate enough to .
111ljUtre. .
.
Dear Annie: This is lor
"G ifting Dilem ma.'' who
didn 't want donations to.
charity in lieu of gifts.
My mother-in-law knows
we are uncomfortable with
the con&amp;umerist frenzy at ·

cw,S9.95,.

'

School events

OLit..-form
drqp
olltbe poymentto
... below4nd
. ., .
..

l

BY KATIIY MITCHEll.
AND MARCY SUGAR

Thursday, April 26
POMEROY Meigs
Soil
and
Water
Conservation
District
Board of Supervisors,
II :30 a.m. at the district
Sunday, April 29
office, 331·QI Hiland Road,
MIDDLEPORT
Pomeroy. '
"Bound from Heaven" of
Thursday, April 26
MIDDLEPORT
Parke6burg, W.Va. to sing at f
Special
meetin g
of. TUPPERS PLAINS confer- II a.m., Hope Baptist
Middleport
Vi II age Parent-teacher
Council, 6 p.m., to discuss ences, '4-7 p.m., Eastern Church.
POMEROY
lease of village property to Local School District.
Missionary Gastom Ntambo
Big Bend Youth Football
from Congo to worship at .II
Friday, April 27
League.
RACINE - S~uthern · a.m. at Forest Run United
Local School District, aca- Methodist Church, and hold
demic ban4uet, 6:30 'p.m., a workshop at 4 p.m. at St.
Paul United Methodist
Southern Hi gh School. .

'·

. ·~

Let your guy friend
have some space

Community Calendar

GreetillK Hxamples ...

The Daily

~-

~~

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Ohio promotes boating safety awarent~ss

This mothers day, a heartfelt

To be published
Sunday, May 13th

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Canter's Cave 4•H Camp to have open house

RANGER WHO SAW TILLMAN HIT WITH FRIEN:t;JLY
FIRE SAID HE WAS· ORDERED TO CONCEAL INFO
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

PageA3 '

The Daily Sentinel

I

I

L------· --------l~!:!~t!e.f.!!:e!iS.~----•--------J
Sentinel

2

3
4

s·

For an appointment contact:
Betsy Nicodemus

(740) 992-1740

-

Good limes
Presents

Triple Threat
Saturdav, April 28th
********************

Check out our weekly lineup!
Monday· 50&lt;; Draft
.Tuesday- Karaoke w/Ron Campbell
_Sl.OO Cover 9pm-1am
Wednesday· Mens Nig~t -Pool tournament
$5.00 entry Bpm · 50&lt;; off all drinks 1Opm· 2am

J~ursday-

Ladies Nighl w/DJ
$1.00 cover 9pm- 2am
50~ off all drinks - 1Opm· 2am
frlliiY · DJ 9pm - 2am
Saturday · Live Bands
Sl!rulml · $1 .00 Beer- $1.25 Coronas

opqrs uvwxyz

·'

•

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

�The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (74(1) 992~2157
www.myda!lysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Eclitor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievancts.
..:... The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday. April 25, the !1 5th day of 2007.
There are 250 days left in the year.
·,
Today's H1ghhght m History:
Five hundred years ago, on Apri I 25, 1507, America got
its name from German cartographer Martin
Waldseemueller, who first used the term on a world map to
refer to the huge mass of land in the Western Hemisphere,
in honor of Italian navigator Amerigo Vespucci.
On this date:
In 1792, highwayman Nicolas Jacques Pelletier became
the first person under French law to be el\ecuted by the
guillotine.
In 1898, the United States formally declared \var on
Spain.
In 1915, during World War I, Allied soldiers invaded the
Gallipoli Peninsula in an unsuccessful attempt to take the
Ottoman Empire out of the war.
In 1945, during World War II, U.S. and Soviet forces
linked up on the Elbe River, a meeting that dramatized the
collapse of Nazi Germany's defenses.
In 1945. delegates from so rnt 50 countries met in San
Francisco to organize the United Nations.
In 1959, the St. Lawrenee Seaway opened to shipping.
Ten years ago: The prosecution began calling witnesses
in Timothy McVeigh's Oklahoma City bombing trial. A
federal judge ruled for the first time that the Food and Drug
Administration can regulate tobacco as a drug - but said
it couldn 't restrict cigare tte ad,ertising. .
Five years ago: President Bu sh hosted Crown Prince
Abdullah of Saudi Arabia at his Texas· ranch for a day of
talks. The House voted overwhelmingly, 405-9, to abolish
the embattled Immigration and Naturalization Service. Lisa
"Left Eye" Lopes, the effervescent, sometimes volatile
member of the Grammy-winning trio TLC, died in a car
crash in Honduras; she was 30.
Today's Birthdays: Movie director-writer Paul Mazursky
is 77. Songwriter Jerry Leiber is 74. Actor AI Pacino is 67.
Rock musician Stu Cook (Creedence Clearwater Revival)
is 62. Singer Bjorn Ulvaeus (ABBA) is 62. Actress Talia
Shire is 61. Actor Jeffrey DeMunn is 60. Rock musician
Michael Brown (The Left Banke) is 58. Rock musician
Steve Ferrone (Tom Petty &amp; the Heartbreakers) is 57.
· Country singer-songwriter Rob Crosby is 53 . Actor Hanlt
Azaria is 43. Rock singer Andy Bell (Erasure) is 43. Rock
musician Eric Avery (Jane's Addiction) is 42. TV personality Jane Clayson is 40. Actress Renee Zellweger is 38.
Actress Gina Torres is 38. Actor Jason Lee is 37. Actor
Jason Wiles is 37. Actress Emily Bergl is 32. Actress
Marguerite Moreau is 30. Singer Jacob Underwood is 27 .
Thought for Today: "I thin,k that the glorious thing about
the human race is that it does change the world - constantly. The world or ' life' may seem to more often overwhelm the human being, but it is the human being's capacity for Struggling against being overwhelmed which is
remarkable and exhilarating." - ·Lorraine Hansberry,
American author-dramatist (1930-1965).

OPINION~-

PageA4
Wednesday, Aprll25, 2007

Santornm sgood fight reaping recent rewards ·
The
U.S.
Supreme
Court's narrow ruling April
I8 to uphold a federa l ban
on partial-birth abortion
came after years of trying to
prohibit thi's barbaric procedure that the late Daniel
Patrick Moynihan, called
infanticide. And Republica'l
Sen. Rick Santorum, now a
fellow at the Et hics and
· Public Policy- Center in
Washington, D.C., had a
partial-birth-"dbortion victory as early as )998. As a
frontrunner in the battle
against this procedure,
Santorum has created policy
as well as some remarkable
stories of perseverance in
the process.
It was the night before the
Senate was goi ng to vote to
override President Clinton's
veto on the partial-birth ban,
and everyone knew Clinton
would have his way.
Santorum was the only se nator left on the Senate floor
- only the presiding officers, who were required to
be there, were beside him at
such an hour.

.

Kathryn
Lopez .

So Santohlm stayed and
talked, becoming one of
those guys on C-SPAN,
standing in the Senate and
talking to virtually no one.
But that night SaniOrum
speech was much more than
futile lip service.
Santorum talked abou t
life and death, seemingly
thanklessly, 90 minutes and
then went home to his wife
Karen and six ·children . The
nel\ t morning the Senate did
not override ihe president's
veto of the infanticide ban.
And not one vote changed
.because of Santorum's time
spent the night before.
Five days later, however,
Santorum received an . email from a student at

Michigan State University. inhuman decision but mak"
It read: "Senator, on ing Americans more aware
Thursday ·night I was of the brutal extent to which
watching television with my a permi ssive Roe vs. Wade
girlfriend. We were flipping mentality (and legal regime)
through the channels and has taken us.
we saw you standing there
And; meanwhile, despite
on .the floor of the Un ited that November loss, despite - ..
States Senate with a picture no longer having a Senate
of a baby next to you. And perch. Sanlorum has interso we listened for a while nali zed the virtue in fighting
and the more ·we listened the right battles. even as
the more we got interested people roll thei r eyes and
in what you were say ing.
call you names.
"After a while I looked
While run ning for re-elecdown at my girlfriend, and tion he warned of the gathshe had tears running down ·ering storm we face in the
her face. And I asked her
war lslamo-fascists are .
what was wrong, and she
looked up at me and said, waging on us. Not exactly
Tm pregnant, and tomor- chipper campaign talk. But
row I was going to -have an he knew leaders needed to
abortion, and I wasn't going focus on the threat and the
10 tell you, but I'm not enemy to America. And he
going to have an abortion lost. But he goes on lecturing, wri ting and foc using in
now."'
admirable
ways.
A girl would be born to
(
Kathrm
Lope~ is tile edithat young couple and given
tor
of
National
Review
up for adoption . And
Santorum had saved at least Onli11e (uww. nationalreone life that ni ght, later view.com). She can be conplaying no small role in, not tacted at k/opez@nationalonly, banning this particular ret·iew.com.)

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing
Co.

Correction Polley
Our main concern in all stori~s is to Publlsl'1ed every afternO?ri, .Monday
through Friday, i 11 Court Street ,

be accurate. If you know of an error
S9cond-class
Pomeroy, Ohio.
in a slory, calllhe n ewsroom~ ~ (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
992-2156..
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the Ohio Newspaper Assoc iation.

Our tnaln ·number Is

Postmaster: Send address correc-

(740) 992-2156.

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Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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·Obituaries

LONDON -Charles E. "Eddie" Branch 63 of London
Ohio (Big Plain). died unexpectedly ai hi's residenc~
Sunday, April 22, 2007.
·
He was born July 5, 1943, in Mount Vernon, Ohio, son.of
John Gerald and Delia (Sayre) Branch.
A former member of the U.S. Army Reserves, he was a
former employee of General Motors in Columbus from
1965 until his retirement in 1994. He was also a member of
the London Eagles Lodge; Aerie No. 950.
He is survived by numerous aunts, uncles and cousins
including his Aunt Cathy Renesto and Aunt Helen (Bill) Eaton:
Services will be I p.m. Thursday, April 26, 2007, in the
Eberle-Fisher Funeral Home and Crematory at London, Ohio.
Interment will follow in the Sunset Cemetery.- Friends may
call at the funeral home on Thursday from 10 a.m. until noon.
Condolences can be made to the family at www.eberlefisherfuneralhome.com.
·
.

W~AT
MAKES
PEOPLE
DOT~IS?

Deaths
. Cieorge,Harris

GUN
SHOP

MIDDLEPORT - George Harris Sr., of Middleport,
passed away Monday, April 23, 2007 at the Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis. Graveside services are .sc heduled for
II a.m. on Monday. April 30, .2007 at Letart Falls
Cemetery. A full obituary will be announced by the Fisher
Funeral Homes in Pomeroy.

WILD,

BlOOD·
·THIRSTY

For the Record

SAVAGE

Arraigned
POMEROY - The following were arraigned in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court on charges contained in
secret indictments:
. • 'Richard Warnecke. 20, Middleport, burglary, $1,000
personal reco~nizance bond, Trial on June 7. Christopher
Tenogha appomted as counsel.
·
• Brian Brown, 22, Racine, burglary, $1,000 personal recognizance bond. Trial on June 7. Tenoglia appointed as counsel.
• Randall H. Tomlin, 20, Racine, burglary, $1,000 personal recognizance bond. Trial on Jur\e 7. Tenoglia
appointed as counsel.
· • Anthony Carpenter, 25, breaking and entering; $1,000 personal recognizance bond, $1,000 surety bond, $1,000 appearance bond. I rial on Aug. 13. Tenaglia appointed as counsel.

Fpreclosure

The evolution of the tube and the boobs that watch them
Willi be the last person in
the world to bu y a $4,000
flat-screen plasma TV? I
see the ads in the paper
every day and alii can think
is "Where is everyone getting $4,000?" The last time
I had an "extra" $4,000 I
wasted it on food, taxes and
healtll insurance. What was
I thinking? I could have had
a TV. Not that I could have
afforded to watch it. Once
you get the $4,000 TV,
you've got to subscribe to
cable or satell.ite Of there's
no point. And you don.'t
want the basic package, you
want the HDTV package
with all the sports and the
movie channels, so let 's add
a $150 each month to the
cost of your television. Face
it, once you've seen "Deal
or No Deal" on a giant, flatscreen plasma TV, there's
no going back to the 27incher.
When I was a kid, there
were only three channels on
television. Unless you lived
in a big city where they
might have one or two
ex.tras. And there was the
"educational channel" on
the UHF dial. We could
never figure out what that .
UHF dial was for, it never
seemed to work.

Jim
Mullen

But there were problems.
Some people didn't like the
stranglehold the three networks . had on the news.
Some people thought shows
like "Petticoat Junction"
and
"The
Beve rl y
Hillbillies" proved we were
a culture in decline. I ·
thought , Lawrence Welk
was old and hokey. But I
watched him because whatever was on the other two
stations was even older and
hokier, which· is hard to
imagine. Half of Ed
Sullivan 's .
audience
watched to see the Beatles
and the Rolling Stones: The
other half watched to see
pl at~ spinners and Senor
Wenceslas. To thi s day, his
two audiences have a hard
time speaking to each other.
People complained about
how bad all three channels
were, how nothing was on.'
Now we have hundreds of

channels and thousands of and most sophi sticated men
shows. And guess what? in the country, touches a
People co mplain about how button, the butler comes in,
bad television is. They don 't changes the channel then
like the cable news chan- leaves the room.
nels, they don' t like the
Now we would feel lost
shows, the y don 't like the without the clicker. Don't
violence, they don 't like like the channel ? Click. If
what the kids are seeing, ·onl y it stopped there. Don 't
they don't like the music like your job? Click. Don't
videos. ' How buying a like your nose? Click. Don't
$4,000 TV will . solve those like your spouse? Click. I
problems is beyond me.
don' t blame TV, we do it to
For me, th e biggest ourselves.
change in TV since .I was a
Now . TV's changing
kid harn' t been what's on it, ·again. I was at the movies
but how we watch it- with · last week and waiting for it
the ci icker in our hands. to start, I noticed a bunch of
The invention of the remote teehagers in the seats in
control, the clicker, changed front ·of me with their cell ·
TV and it changed us. When phones out. They weren't
they first came out, comedi- talking on them; in groups
ans used to make fun of the of twos and threes, they:
people who had remote would gather around somecontrol channel changers. one's cell phone arid watch
How lazy can you get? TV shows they'd missed on
Pretty lazy, as it turns out.
the tiny screen.
In "The Powers That Be,"
They seemed to be enjoyDavid Halperstam tells a · ing TV on the tiny 2-inch
story about Walter Cronkite screen as much as they ·
watching TV at the home of would on a brand new ·
his boss, the found.er and $4,000 80-incher. Go figpresident of CBS, Bill Paley ure.
in the mid- '60s. At one
(Jim Mullen is the author:
point they want to change of "It Takes a 11illage Idiot: ·
the channel and Cronkite Complicating the Simple ·
says, "Bill, where 's the Life" and " Baby's First
clicker?"
Tattoo. " You can reach him ·
Paley, one of the richest at jim_mullen@mywav.com)
•

•

~

I

POM EROY - A foreclosure was · iss ued in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to ,Citizens Bank of Logan
agamst Terry J. Parsons, and others .

Arrested
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Police Chief Bruce Swift
reported the arrest of Anthony Carpenter, 25. Middleport,
last ,week on charges of burglary and theft of drugs.
Carpenter's arrest was' the result of an investigation into
the theft of medication from Mildred Herndon on Lagoon
Road, Swift said. Carpenter was arraigned in Meigs County
Court and is in sheriff's custody in lieu of bond.
Samara Stone was arrested and charged with felony possession of drugs following an altercation on Cole Street.

Dinners to
be served

Gator in a fundraiser to be . bring their be st cookie
carried out at the Racine recipe and a sampling of the
Flower Festival Saturday.
cookies to be eaten. Dan
and Tami Daly will be in
RACINE - The Racineconcert during the evening.
Southern FFA will be servEveryone is invited to
ing chi cken dinners at Star
attend. For more informa. Mill Park . fo llowing :the
tion contact Pastor Whitt
Racine Flower Festival
Akers at 740-591-1236.
Parade. They wi ll also be
selling flowers from the
CARPENTER - The
FFA greenhouse.
Carpenter Baptist Church
located at 307 11 S.R. 143,
RUTLAND - A benefit
Albany, will have its month- spaghetti dinner and bake
ly community fellowship sale has been pian~d as a
from 6 to 8 p.m Sunday. ' fundraiser for Ruth and
The "great Carpenter Amos Tillis. "
RACINE - The Ohio cookie bake-off' will be the
It will be held Saturday
Ri ver Producers are using a theme of the social with ni ght at the Rutland Free
mod'el C.X John Deere those attendi ng invited to· Will Baptist Church from II

.Carpenter
church plans
fellowship

Benefit planned

Fundraiser
underway

Council
from PageA1
to demolish the building
when the owners of three
properties on tht; same
block assumed the financial
responsibility for demolishing them .
"I don ' t care if the money
is donated," Houchins said.
"The building will be there
five years from now. If we
use donations to tear it down,
we should reimburse the
three who demolished their
buildings and paid for it."
Mayor Sandy lannarelli is
one of the neighboring
property owners who joined
together in hirin g a contractor to demolish their buildings after they were condemned.
"I did my duty," lannarelli
said. "My building had to

come down and it came ' lens on the traffic light at solicitor, who is work ing
down. I don 't care, person- General .Hartinger Parkway · with ~he prosecuting attorally, if donations are raised ·and Pearl Street was to have ney to collect it.
and (Irvin 's) building is been .replaced months ago.
Council Member Sand;t
demolished."
and has not been.
Brown noted that a trailer
During cou ncil's ope n
Craig asked about the sta- on Page Street is in need of
di scussion, Craig discussed tu s of collecting fund s repairs.
several other issues. She allegedly stolen from the
Council also:
asked that Police Chief water department . She
• Approved a proclama'
Bruce Swift be required to asked why several council tion declaring National Day
attend council meetings. · committees were not meet- of Prayer in Middleport on
She noted that a eommittee ing on a regular basis. She May 3.
was appointed to pursue · asked if owners of unsightl y
• Approved payment of
funding for a new jail at the properties had been cited to bills · in the amount of
Pearl Street elementary mayor's court.
$19,785.43.
sc hool building, and that
lannarelli said the jail
• Excused the absence of
nothing has been heard project has. been referred to Councilman Jeff Peckham,
from the eommittee.
the In stitute ·for Local with Houchins voting no.
Craig also inquired about Government and Rural
• Approved an advance
the status of efforts to -Development at Ohio from the general fund to the
secure fundin g for water University. She said she has firetruck fund to make a
source protection from the asked Swift to attend meet- ·pay ment due, based on
Ohio
Environmental ings on a regular basis.
· reimbursement after the tax
Protection .Agency and the
lannarelli said the traffic settlement.
appointment of a committee iig~t will be repaired later
Also present were Council
to oversee the process of this month. She said the Members Ferman Moore
applying· for those. funds.
water office theft case is in and Ropert Robinson and
Craig noted that the green the hands of the village Fiscal Office Susan Baker.

designed to make viewers
think as well as be amused.
''The stereotypes we and
from PageA1
society label people with
are dangerous,'· Banks said.
networking opportunities
"Whatever our gifts and
they offer, .not to mention a
meanings may be are overchance a distributor will
·shadowed by people's perpick up the films.
ce£tions.
·
Whitson, who has a
· 'I actually get to play a
healthy share of acting credcharacter in the story who
its in his portfolio (includstays with these people," he
ing extra work in "We Are
added. "I turn out to be
Marshall"), is working on
Satan, giving them one last
chance to be swayed."
one film tentatively titled
"Ewah" (pronounced "AEacl;l film will be featurewah" ), taken from the
length at around 90 minutes.
Cherokee term for off cenActors and el\tras drawn
ter. The film follow s the
from the tri-county commuexploits of several 1970s
nity are key to the project,
college students who, after
and Whitson believes conhearing of the Appalac hian
ducting auditions in lhe city
myth called the "Wompus
park while this weekend's
Cat," ~o off in the. woods
Federal Army Homecoming
Kevin Ktltyjphoto. Civil War encampment is
searchmg for the fabled .
From
left,
Dave
Banks,
Chad
Whitson
and
Chris
Adkins line underway may attract some
creature.
up
a
shot
while
scouting
locations
for
their
upcoming
pair of vi sitors to their productions.
The Wompus Cat, Whitson
independent
feature
film
productions
to
be
shot
in
the
area.
explained, is a Native
"Reenactors would be terAmerican woman who, dis- Audi\ions for roles in the films will be Friday at the Bossard rific, .especially if they're
trustful of what her husband Memorial Library and Saturday at the Gallipolis City Park .
from the Revolutionary War
era," Whitson said.
did on trips with male members of the tribe, spied on this area, Mothman's legac;y Classroom scenes are
Once completed and editthem while they performed overshadows other mythicld planned to be. filmed at the ed, Whitson. Banks and
magical feats. The wife is creatures and phenomenon University . of
Rio their collaborators look to
discovered and cursed to live known to the mountains.
Grande/Rio
Grande get the films on a website,
forever as a feral being,
TheLot.com, sponsorei:l by ·
"There are other legends Community College.
haunting the hills and valleys that need to be brought forBanks' film,
"Holy Steven Spielberg and his
of the region.
·
ward," Whitson said.
·
Smoke," is a comic exami- producer. that give ·indepenWhitson said he first
Exterior shooting for nation of several individuals .· dent fi lmmakers a chance to
learned about the lege nd "Ewah" is scheduled for representing all stereotypes have their works seen by an
when he lj ved near Spencer, several areas stretching in American society waiting Internet audience before
W.Va., and 'finds it's just as from Spencer to Centerville, their tum in Purgatory for hopefully making it to the
commonly known - and said Dave . Banks of passage into Heaven . big screen. ·
believed - in some areas of Gallipolis, one of the col- Banks, who wrote the
Appalachia as Mothman. In laborators on the project. sc reenplay,
said
it 's

Plant
from

P~geA1

Complaint ·

.PAGEVILLE - Harold E.. Darst, 66, 32853 McCumber
R'Oad Rutland, was cited for operating a vehicle under the
influ~nce and assured clear distance in a twO-vehuicle accident Friday on County ,Road 3 (New Lima). .
.
Troopers said Dar~t. was southbound, one-tenth of a nule
south of Ohio 143, at 6:05 p.m. when he was unable to slow
the car he drove in time, crossed the center line and struck
a pickup truck driven by·Christopher J. Lambert, 29,36 100
O,hio 143, Pomeroy.
Lambert had slowed to make a left turn into a private dri:
veway at the time of the crash, according to the report.
Damage to Darst's car was fun ctional, and non-functional
to the vehicle driven by Lambert.

a.m. to 4 p.m. A salad,
Italian bread. drink and
dessert wi ll be served with
the dinner. The price is $6
for adults and $3 for kids.
Mrs. Tillis is has been battlin g cancer for several
months and is currently 'at
James Cancer Center in
Columbus
undergoing
extensive treatment. Ail of
·the proceeds from the dinner wi ll go to the Tillis family. Donations may also be
mailed to the Rev. and Mrs.
Tillis at Pleasant Region
Allegheny
Wesleyan
Methodist Church, Route 2,
Bol\ 1809A; Leon , W_ Va.
25123 .

.Talent

impacts presented by the
construction and operation of
the facility. Those impacts
were included in an agreement between AEP and the
OPSB approved in March.
The state-of-the-art plant
will use new Integrated
Combined
Gasification
Cycle
clean
coal
technology
MIDDLEPORT - Ida Martin of South Second Avenue,
Middleport, reported to Middleport Police Department that to generate 629 megawatts
someone had egged vehicles sitting on South Second of electricity. A public hearAvenue nex t tn her residence. One vehicle belonged to her, ing on the. OPSB applica-'
and a second to her daughter. A Meigs Local School lion· was held in December
District bus that Martin drives was also egged, according to 2006 at Meigs High School.
'There are other steps that
Police Chief Bruce Swift.

Highway Patrol_

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Local Briefs

. RACINE -Charles J. ,;Chuck" Baker, 68, of Tanners
Run Road,. Racme •. went to be with his Lord on April 23,
2007, wh1le worktng at home with his special friend
R1 chard Massey.
'
He was born March 27, 1939 in Long Bottom son of the
late Osborne Baker and Mildred Powell Baker Turn~r. He
was an elder and song leader in the Racine 'Pentecostal
Asse~bly, a member of God's NET, and retired from
Pechmey Rolled Products of RavenswOOd, W.Va., after
betng employed for 37 years.
Charles is survived by his wife of 49 years. June Codner
Baker•. whom he mamed in Dorcas on Nev. 9, 1957. Also
surviVIng are a son, Stephen Charles (Lee Ann) Baker of
Gaffney, S.C.,. and a daughter, Kathryn Baker of Winter
Haven, Fla.; SIX grandchildren: Elizabeth Ann (Andy), Amy
R~bekah, Wll Stephen, Stephame June. Kelsey Marie and
Kmsey Lee; a ~l&gt;ter, Betty (Ken) Cossin of Columbus,
. Gen ny .(Russ) Wllhs of Gallir,olis, and a brother, Jim Turner
of Racme, a .brother-In-law. Bob (BJ,) Codner of Arizona
and s1sters-m-law: Joyce Hoback of Racine. Bev Codner of
Racme, Shirley Gnmm of St. Clairsville and Elaine (Bob)
Sayre of Walker, La.: andseveral nieces and nephews.
~es1des h1sparents. he 1s preceded in death by his mother-m-law. Eduh Eddy Codner Paynter; stepfather, Aaron
Turner; and three brothers-in-law: Jack Codner, Bill
Hoback and Russell Grimm
f!'- celebrat ion of life service will be held at II a.m. on
Fnday, Apnl 27, 2007, at the Cremeens Funeral Home
Racine •. with Robert Sayre, Gary Hughes and David Dai ley
offiCiatmg, and Joe McCloud singing. Burial will be at a
later date in the Bald Knob Cemetery.
·
Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. Thursday at'the funeral home,. El\pressions of sy mpathy may be sent to the famIly by v1s11mg www.cremeensfuneraihomes.com.

Charfes E. •Eddie· Branch

I

www.mydailysentinel.com

Charfes ·chuck' Baker

LETTERS TO THE
·EDITOR
· Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All lerrers are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Lel/ers should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

VVednesday,April 2 s, 20 ~ 7

Jobless.
from .Page A1

have to be taken, but this is
a major, critical step forward on the project,"
Varnadoe said.
AEP plans to take a second
cost recovery application this one for construction of
the plant- before the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio
once the costs associated with
construction are determined.
A preliminary cost estimate
was deemed to high. ·
Rennie said AEP is continuing to work with its with
construction and design
partners to finalize cost estimates .associated with the
front -end engineering and
design process.
Rennie said AEP hopes to
finalize that cost estimate
struction employment."
The number of workers
unemployed in Ohio in
March was 307,000, up
from 295,000 in February.
The number of unemployed
. has decreased by 8,000 in
the past 12 months from
315,000. The March unemployment rate for Ohio was .
down from 5.3 percent ·in
March 2006. ·
·

"Better weather in March
than ·n mid-February
brought more job seekers
mto the labor market,
incre·asing the unemployment rate," ODJFS Director
Helen Jones-Kelley said in
a statement. "The milder
(The Associated Press
weather also boosted con- contributed to this story.)

by the end of June.
AEP also has a permit
pending with the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency, and must again go
to the OPSB for the siting of
the transmission lines to be
associated with the plant.
That permit process is "on
hold" pending the finalization of the FEED study,
Rennie said. All of the permit
processes are independent of
one another, and the outcome
of any one permit application
will not likely affect the outcome of any other.

Jei!Willlltr Insurance
Jell Warner
113 W.2nd St. ·
Pomeroy, OH 45769
' . (740)992-5479
wamerjl@nationwide.com

},\RIEL
ESTABLISHED 1895

4/28
The Ohio Valley
Symphony
Guitar Classics
Bpm
5/11
'The Sinatra Show
feaiUJing the
Joey ThOmas Big Band
Dil\ller tickets available
The Ariel: Dater Hall
428 Sec. Ave. Gallipolis, OH
740-446-ARTS (2787)

·0

Nation.wida"
On Your Side

Autn HM!•

LJfp

llusloos

�The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (74(1) 992~2157
www.myda!lysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Eclitor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievancts.
..:... The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday. April 25, the !1 5th day of 2007.
There are 250 days left in the year.
·,
Today's H1ghhght m History:
Five hundred years ago, on Apri I 25, 1507, America got
its name from German cartographer Martin
Waldseemueller, who first used the term on a world map to
refer to the huge mass of land in the Western Hemisphere,
in honor of Italian navigator Amerigo Vespucci.
On this date:
In 1792, highwayman Nicolas Jacques Pelletier became
the first person under French law to be el\ecuted by the
guillotine.
In 1898, the United States formally declared \var on
Spain.
In 1915, during World War I, Allied soldiers invaded the
Gallipoli Peninsula in an unsuccessful attempt to take the
Ottoman Empire out of the war.
In 1945, during World War II, U.S. and Soviet forces
linked up on the Elbe River, a meeting that dramatized the
collapse of Nazi Germany's defenses.
In 1945. delegates from so rnt 50 countries met in San
Francisco to organize the United Nations.
In 1959, the St. Lawrenee Seaway opened to shipping.
Ten years ago: The prosecution began calling witnesses
in Timothy McVeigh's Oklahoma City bombing trial. A
federal judge ruled for the first time that the Food and Drug
Administration can regulate tobacco as a drug - but said
it couldn 't restrict cigare tte ad,ertising. .
Five years ago: President Bu sh hosted Crown Prince
Abdullah of Saudi Arabia at his Texas· ranch for a day of
talks. The House voted overwhelmingly, 405-9, to abolish
the embattled Immigration and Naturalization Service. Lisa
"Left Eye" Lopes, the effervescent, sometimes volatile
member of the Grammy-winning trio TLC, died in a car
crash in Honduras; she was 30.
Today's Birthdays: Movie director-writer Paul Mazursky
is 77. Songwriter Jerry Leiber is 74. Actor AI Pacino is 67.
Rock musician Stu Cook (Creedence Clearwater Revival)
is 62. Singer Bjorn Ulvaeus (ABBA) is 62. Actress Talia
Shire is 61. Actor Jeffrey DeMunn is 60. Rock musician
Michael Brown (The Left Banke) is 58. Rock musician
Steve Ferrone (Tom Petty &amp; the Heartbreakers) is 57.
· Country singer-songwriter Rob Crosby is 53 . Actor Hanlt
Azaria is 43. Rock singer Andy Bell (Erasure) is 43. Rock
musician Eric Avery (Jane's Addiction) is 42. TV personality Jane Clayson is 40. Actress Renee Zellweger is 38.
Actress Gina Torres is 38. Actor Jason Lee is 37. Actor
Jason Wiles is 37. Actress Emily Bergl is 32. Actress
Marguerite Moreau is 30. Singer Jacob Underwood is 27 .
Thought for Today: "I thin,k that the glorious thing about
the human race is that it does change the world - constantly. The world or ' life' may seem to more often overwhelm the human being, but it is the human being's capacity for Struggling against being overwhelmed which is
remarkable and exhilarating." - ·Lorraine Hansberry,
American author-dramatist (1930-1965).

OPINION~-

PageA4
Wednesday, Aprll25, 2007

Santornm sgood fight reaping recent rewards ·
The
U.S.
Supreme
Court's narrow ruling April
I8 to uphold a federa l ban
on partial-birth abortion
came after years of trying to
prohibit thi's barbaric procedure that the late Daniel
Patrick Moynihan, called
infanticide. And Republica'l
Sen. Rick Santorum, now a
fellow at the Et hics and
· Public Policy- Center in
Washington, D.C., had a
partial-birth-"dbortion victory as early as )998. As a
frontrunner in the battle
against this procedure,
Santorum has created policy
as well as some remarkable
stories of perseverance in
the process.
It was the night before the
Senate was goi ng to vote to
override President Clinton's
veto on the partial-birth ban,
and everyone knew Clinton
would have his way.
Santorum was the only se nator left on the Senate floor
- only the presiding officers, who were required to
be there, were beside him at
such an hour.

.

Kathryn
Lopez .

So Santohlm stayed and
talked, becoming one of
those guys on C-SPAN,
standing in the Senate and
talking to virtually no one.
But that night SaniOrum
speech was much more than
futile lip service.
Santorum talked abou t
life and death, seemingly
thanklessly, 90 minutes and
then went home to his wife
Karen and six ·children . The
nel\ t morning the Senate did
not override ihe president's
veto of the infanticide ban.
And not one vote changed
.because of Santorum's time
spent the night before.
Five days later, however,
Santorum received an . email from a student at

Michigan State University. inhuman decision but mak"
It read: "Senator, on ing Americans more aware
Thursday ·night I was of the brutal extent to which
watching television with my a permi ssive Roe vs. Wade
girlfriend. We were flipping mentality (and legal regime)
through the channels and has taken us.
we saw you standing there
And; meanwhile, despite
on .the floor of the Un ited that November loss, despite - ..
States Senate with a picture no longer having a Senate
of a baby next to you. And perch. Sanlorum has interso we listened for a while nali zed the virtue in fighting
and the more ·we listened the right battles. even as
the more we got interested people roll thei r eyes and
in what you were say ing.
call you names.
"After a while I looked
While run ning for re-elecdown at my girlfriend, and tion he warned of the gathshe had tears running down ·ering storm we face in the
her face. And I asked her
war lslamo-fascists are .
what was wrong, and she
looked up at me and said, waging on us. Not exactly
Tm pregnant, and tomor- chipper campaign talk. But
row I was going to -have an he knew leaders needed to
abortion, and I wasn't going focus on the threat and the
10 tell you, but I'm not enemy to America. And he
going to have an abortion lost. But he goes on lecturing, wri ting and foc using in
now."'
admirable
ways.
A girl would be born to
(
Kathrm
Lope~ is tile edithat young couple and given
tor
of
National
Review
up for adoption . And
Santorum had saved at least Onli11e (uww. nationalreone life that ni ght, later view.com). She can be conplaying no small role in, not tacted at k/opez@nationalonly, banning this particular ret·iew.com.)

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·Obituaries

LONDON -Charles E. "Eddie" Branch 63 of London
Ohio (Big Plain). died unexpectedly ai hi's residenc~
Sunday, April 22, 2007.
·
He was born July 5, 1943, in Mount Vernon, Ohio, son.of
John Gerald and Delia (Sayre) Branch.
A former member of the U.S. Army Reserves, he was a
former employee of General Motors in Columbus from
1965 until his retirement in 1994. He was also a member of
the London Eagles Lodge; Aerie No. 950.
He is survived by numerous aunts, uncles and cousins
including his Aunt Cathy Renesto and Aunt Helen (Bill) Eaton:
Services will be I p.m. Thursday, April 26, 2007, in the
Eberle-Fisher Funeral Home and Crematory at London, Ohio.
Interment will follow in the Sunset Cemetery.- Friends may
call at the funeral home on Thursday from 10 a.m. until noon.
Condolences can be made to the family at www.eberlefisherfuneralhome.com.
·
.

W~AT
MAKES
PEOPLE
DOT~IS?

Deaths
. Cieorge,Harris

GUN
SHOP

MIDDLEPORT - George Harris Sr., of Middleport,
passed away Monday, April 23, 2007 at the Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis. Graveside services are .sc heduled for
II a.m. on Monday. April 30, .2007 at Letart Falls
Cemetery. A full obituary will be announced by the Fisher
Funeral Homes in Pomeroy.

WILD,

BlOOD·
·THIRSTY

For the Record

SAVAGE

Arraigned
POMEROY - The following were arraigned in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court on charges contained in
secret indictments:
. • 'Richard Warnecke. 20, Middleport, burglary, $1,000
personal reco~nizance bond, Trial on June 7. Christopher
Tenogha appomted as counsel.
·
• Brian Brown, 22, Racine, burglary, $1,000 personal recognizance bond. Trial on June 7. Tenoglia appointed as counsel.
• Randall H. Tomlin, 20, Racine, burglary, $1,000 personal recognizance bond. Trial on Jur\e 7. Tenoglia
appointed as counsel.
· • Anthony Carpenter, 25, breaking and entering; $1,000 personal recognizance bond, $1,000 surety bond, $1,000 appearance bond. I rial on Aug. 13. Tenaglia appointed as counsel.

Fpreclosure

The evolution of the tube and the boobs that watch them
Willi be the last person in
the world to bu y a $4,000
flat-screen plasma TV? I
see the ads in the paper
every day and alii can think
is "Where is everyone getting $4,000?" The last time
I had an "extra" $4,000 I
wasted it on food, taxes and
healtll insurance. What was
I thinking? I could have had
a TV. Not that I could have
afforded to watch it. Once
you get the $4,000 TV,
you've got to subscribe to
cable or satell.ite Of there's
no point. And you don.'t
want the basic package, you
want the HDTV package
with all the sports and the
movie channels, so let 's add
a $150 each month to the
cost of your television. Face
it, once you've seen "Deal
or No Deal" on a giant, flatscreen plasma TV, there's
no going back to the 27incher.
When I was a kid, there
were only three channels on
television. Unless you lived
in a big city where they
might have one or two
ex.tras. And there was the
"educational channel" on
the UHF dial. We could
never figure out what that .
UHF dial was for, it never
seemed to work.

Jim
Mullen

But there were problems.
Some people didn't like the
stranglehold the three networks . had on the news.
Some people thought shows
like "Petticoat Junction"
and
"The
Beve rl y
Hillbillies" proved we were
a culture in decline. I ·
thought , Lawrence Welk
was old and hokey. But I
watched him because whatever was on the other two
stations was even older and
hokier, which· is hard to
imagine. Half of Ed
Sullivan 's .
audience
watched to see the Beatles
and the Rolling Stones: The
other half watched to see
pl at~ spinners and Senor
Wenceslas. To thi s day, his
two audiences have a hard
time speaking to each other.
People complained about
how bad all three channels
were, how nothing was on.'
Now we have hundreds of

channels and thousands of and most sophi sticated men
shows. And guess what? in the country, touches a
People co mplain about how button, the butler comes in,
bad television is. They don 't changes the channel then
like the cable news chan- leaves the room.
nels, they don' t like the
Now we would feel lost
shows, the y don 't like the without the clicker. Don't
violence, they don 't like like the channel ? Click. If
what the kids are seeing, ·onl y it stopped there. Don 't
they don't like the music like your job? Click. Don't
videos. ' How buying a like your nose? Click. Don't
$4,000 TV will . solve those like your spouse? Click. I
problems is beyond me.
don' t blame TV, we do it to
For me, th e biggest ourselves.
change in TV since .I was a
Now . TV's changing
kid harn' t been what's on it, ·again. I was at the movies
but how we watch it- with · last week and waiting for it
the ci icker in our hands. to start, I noticed a bunch of
The invention of the remote teehagers in the seats in
control, the clicker, changed front ·of me with their cell ·
TV and it changed us. When phones out. They weren't
they first came out, comedi- talking on them; in groups
ans used to make fun of the of twos and threes, they:
people who had remote would gather around somecontrol channel changers. one's cell phone arid watch
How lazy can you get? TV shows they'd missed on
Pretty lazy, as it turns out.
the tiny screen.
In "The Powers That Be,"
They seemed to be enjoyDavid Halperstam tells a · ing TV on the tiny 2-inch
story about Walter Cronkite screen as much as they ·
watching TV at the home of would on a brand new ·
his boss, the found.er and $4,000 80-incher. Go figpresident of CBS, Bill Paley ure.
in the mid- '60s. At one
(Jim Mullen is the author:
point they want to change of "It Takes a 11illage Idiot: ·
the channel and Cronkite Complicating the Simple ·
says, "Bill, where 's the Life" and " Baby's First
clicker?"
Tattoo. " You can reach him ·
Paley, one of the richest at jim_mullen@mywav.com)
•

•

~

I

POM EROY - A foreclosure was · iss ued in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to ,Citizens Bank of Logan
agamst Terry J. Parsons, and others .

Arrested
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Police Chief Bruce Swift
reported the arrest of Anthony Carpenter, 25. Middleport,
last ,week on charges of burglary and theft of drugs.
Carpenter's arrest was' the result of an investigation into
the theft of medication from Mildred Herndon on Lagoon
Road, Swift said. Carpenter was arraigned in Meigs County
Court and is in sheriff's custody in lieu of bond.
Samara Stone was arrested and charged with felony possession of drugs following an altercation on Cole Street.

Dinners to
be served

Gator in a fundraiser to be . bring their be st cookie
carried out at the Racine recipe and a sampling of the
Flower Festival Saturday.
cookies to be eaten. Dan
and Tami Daly will be in
RACINE - The Racineconcert during the evening.
Southern FFA will be servEveryone is invited to
ing chi cken dinners at Star
attend. For more informa. Mill Park . fo llowing :the
tion contact Pastor Whitt
Racine Flower Festival
Akers at 740-591-1236.
Parade. They wi ll also be
selling flowers from the
CARPENTER - The
FFA greenhouse.
Carpenter Baptist Church
located at 307 11 S.R. 143,
RUTLAND - A benefit
Albany, will have its month- spaghetti dinner and bake
ly community fellowship sale has been pian~d as a
from 6 to 8 p.m Sunday. ' fundraiser for Ruth and
The "great Carpenter Amos Tillis. "
RACINE - The Ohio cookie bake-off' will be the
It will be held Saturday
Ri ver Producers are using a theme of the social with ni ght at the Rutland Free
mod'el C.X John Deere those attendi ng invited to· Will Baptist Church from II

.Carpenter
church plans
fellowship

Benefit planned

Fundraiser
underway

Council
from PageA1
to demolish the building
when the owners of three
properties on tht; same
block assumed the financial
responsibility for demolishing them .
"I don ' t care if the money
is donated," Houchins said.
"The building will be there
five years from now. If we
use donations to tear it down,
we should reimburse the
three who demolished their
buildings and paid for it."
Mayor Sandy lannarelli is
one of the neighboring
property owners who joined
together in hirin g a contractor to demolish their buildings after they were condemned.
"I did my duty," lannarelli
said. "My building had to

come down and it came ' lens on the traffic light at solicitor, who is work ing
down. I don 't care, person- General .Hartinger Parkway · with ~he prosecuting attorally, if donations are raised ·and Pearl Street was to have ney to collect it.
and (Irvin 's) building is been .replaced months ago.
Council Member Sand;t
demolished."
and has not been.
Brown noted that a trailer
During cou ncil's ope n
Craig asked about the sta- on Page Street is in need of
di scussion, Craig discussed tu s of collecting fund s repairs.
several other issues. She allegedly stolen from the
Council also:
asked that Police Chief water department . She
• Approved a proclama'
Bruce Swift be required to asked why several council tion declaring National Day
attend council meetings. · committees were not meet- of Prayer in Middleport on
She noted that a eommittee ing on a regular basis. She May 3.
was appointed to pursue · asked if owners of unsightl y
• Approved payment of
funding for a new jail at the properties had been cited to bills · in the amount of
Pearl Street elementary mayor's court.
$19,785.43.
sc hool building, and that
lannarelli said the jail
• Excused the absence of
nothing has been heard project has. been referred to Councilman Jeff Peckham,
from the eommittee.
the In stitute ·for Local with Houchins voting no.
Craig also inquired about Government and Rural
• Approved an advance
the status of efforts to -Development at Ohio from the general fund to the
secure fundin g for water University. She said she has firetruck fund to make a
source protection from the asked Swift to attend meet- ·pay ment due, based on
Ohio
Environmental ings on a regular basis.
· reimbursement after the tax
Protection .Agency and the
lannarelli said the traffic settlement.
appointment of a committee iig~t will be repaired later
Also present were Council
to oversee the process of this month. She said the Members Ferman Moore
applying· for those. funds.
water office theft case is in and Ropert Robinson and
Craig noted that the green the hands of the village Fiscal Office Susan Baker.

designed to make viewers
think as well as be amused.
''The stereotypes we and
from PageA1
society label people with
are dangerous,'· Banks said.
networking opportunities
"Whatever our gifts and
they offer, .not to mention a
meanings may be are overchance a distributor will
·shadowed by people's perpick up the films.
ce£tions.
·
Whitson, who has a
· 'I actually get to play a
healthy share of acting credcharacter in the story who
its in his portfolio (includstays with these people," he
ing extra work in "We Are
added. "I turn out to be
Marshall"), is working on
Satan, giving them one last
chance to be swayed."
one film tentatively titled
"Ewah" (pronounced "AEacl;l film will be featurewah" ), taken from the
length at around 90 minutes.
Cherokee term for off cenActors and el\tras drawn
ter. The film follow s the
from the tri-county commuexploits of several 1970s
nity are key to the project,
college students who, after
and Whitson believes conhearing of the Appalac hian
ducting auditions in lhe city
myth called the "Wompus
park while this weekend's
Cat," ~o off in the. woods
Federal Army Homecoming
Kevin Ktltyjphoto. Civil War encampment is
searchmg for the fabled .
From
left,
Dave
Banks,
Chad
Whitson
and
Chris
Adkins line underway may attract some
creature.
up
a
shot
while
scouting
locations
for
their
upcoming
pair of vi sitors to their productions.
The Wompus Cat, Whitson
independent
feature
film
productions
to
be
shot
in
the
area.
explained, is a Native
"Reenactors would be terAmerican woman who, dis- Audi\ions for roles in the films will be Friday at the Bossard rific, .especially if they're
trustful of what her husband Memorial Library and Saturday at the Gallipolis City Park .
from the Revolutionary War
era," Whitson said.
did on trips with male members of the tribe, spied on this area, Mothman's legac;y Classroom scenes are
Once completed and editthem while they performed overshadows other mythicld planned to be. filmed at the ed, Whitson. Banks and
magical feats. The wife is creatures and phenomenon University . of
Rio their collaborators look to
discovered and cursed to live known to the mountains.
Grande/Rio
Grande get the films on a website,
forever as a feral being,
TheLot.com, sponsorei:l by ·
"There are other legends Community College.
haunting the hills and valleys that need to be brought forBanks' film,
"Holy Steven Spielberg and his
of the region.
·
ward," Whitson said.
·
Smoke," is a comic exami- producer. that give ·indepenWhitson said he first
Exterior shooting for nation of several individuals .· dent fi lmmakers a chance to
learned about the lege nd "Ewah" is scheduled for representing all stereotypes have their works seen by an
when he lj ved near Spencer, several areas stretching in American society waiting Internet audience before
W.Va., and 'finds it's just as from Spencer to Centerville, their tum in Purgatory for hopefully making it to the
commonly known - and said Dave . Banks of passage into Heaven . big screen. ·
believed - in some areas of Gallipolis, one of the col- Banks, who wrote the
Appalachia as Mothman. In laborators on the project. sc reenplay,
said
it 's

Plant
from

P~geA1

Complaint ·

.PAGEVILLE - Harold E.. Darst, 66, 32853 McCumber
R'Oad Rutland, was cited for operating a vehicle under the
influ~nce and assured clear distance in a twO-vehuicle accident Friday on County ,Road 3 (New Lima). .
.
Troopers said Dar~t. was southbound, one-tenth of a nule
south of Ohio 143, at 6:05 p.m. when he was unable to slow
the car he drove in time, crossed the center line and struck
a pickup truck driven by·Christopher J. Lambert, 29,36 100
O,hio 143, Pomeroy.
Lambert had slowed to make a left turn into a private dri:
veway at the time of the crash, according to the report.
Damage to Darst's car was fun ctional, and non-functional
to the vehicle driven by Lambert.

a.m. to 4 p.m. A salad,
Italian bread. drink and
dessert wi ll be served with
the dinner. The price is $6
for adults and $3 for kids.
Mrs. Tillis is has been battlin g cancer for several
months and is currently 'at
James Cancer Center in
Columbus
undergoing
extensive treatment. Ail of
·the proceeds from the dinner wi ll go to the Tillis family. Donations may also be
mailed to the Rev. and Mrs.
Tillis at Pleasant Region
Allegheny
Wesleyan
Methodist Church, Route 2,
Bol\ 1809A; Leon , W_ Va.
25123 .

.Talent

impacts presented by the
construction and operation of
the facility. Those impacts
were included in an agreement between AEP and the
OPSB approved in March.
The state-of-the-art plant
will use new Integrated
Combined
Gasification
Cycle
clean
coal
technology
MIDDLEPORT - Ida Martin of South Second Avenue,
Middleport, reported to Middleport Police Department that to generate 629 megawatts
someone had egged vehicles sitting on South Second of electricity. A public hearAvenue nex t tn her residence. One vehicle belonged to her, ing on the. OPSB applica-'
and a second to her daughter. A Meigs Local School lion· was held in December
District bus that Martin drives was also egged, according to 2006 at Meigs High School.
'There are other steps that
Police Chief Bruce Swift.

Highway Patrol_

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Local Briefs

. RACINE -Charles J. ,;Chuck" Baker, 68, of Tanners
Run Road,. Racme •. went to be with his Lord on April 23,
2007, wh1le worktng at home with his special friend
R1 chard Massey.
'
He was born March 27, 1939 in Long Bottom son of the
late Osborne Baker and Mildred Powell Baker Turn~r. He
was an elder and song leader in the Racine 'Pentecostal
Asse~bly, a member of God's NET, and retired from
Pechmey Rolled Products of RavenswOOd, W.Va., after
betng employed for 37 years.
Charles is survived by his wife of 49 years. June Codner
Baker•. whom he mamed in Dorcas on Nev. 9, 1957. Also
surviVIng are a son, Stephen Charles (Lee Ann) Baker of
Gaffney, S.C.,. and a daughter, Kathryn Baker of Winter
Haven, Fla.; SIX grandchildren: Elizabeth Ann (Andy), Amy
R~bekah, Wll Stephen, Stephame June. Kelsey Marie and
Kmsey Lee; a ~l&gt;ter, Betty (Ken) Cossin of Columbus,
. Gen ny .(Russ) Wllhs of Gallir,olis, and a brother, Jim Turner
of Racme, a .brother-In-law. Bob (BJ,) Codner of Arizona
and s1sters-m-law: Joyce Hoback of Racine. Bev Codner of
Racme, Shirley Gnmm of St. Clairsville and Elaine (Bob)
Sayre of Walker, La.: andseveral nieces and nephews.
~es1des h1sparents. he 1s preceded in death by his mother-m-law. Eduh Eddy Codner Paynter; stepfather, Aaron
Turner; and three brothers-in-law: Jack Codner, Bill
Hoback and Russell Grimm
f!'- celebrat ion of life service will be held at II a.m. on
Fnday, Apnl 27, 2007, at the Cremeens Funeral Home
Racine •. with Robert Sayre, Gary Hughes and David Dai ley
offiCiatmg, and Joe McCloud singing. Burial will be at a
later date in the Bald Knob Cemetery.
·
Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. Thursday at'the funeral home,. El\pressions of sy mpathy may be sent to the famIly by v1s11mg www.cremeensfuneraihomes.com.

Charfes E. •Eddie· Branch

I

www.mydailysentinel.com

Charfes ·chuck' Baker

LETTERS TO THE
·EDITOR
· Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All lerrers are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Lel/ers should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

VVednesday,April 2 s, 20 ~ 7

Jobless.
from .Page A1

have to be taken, but this is
a major, critical step forward on the project,"
Varnadoe said.
AEP plans to take a second
cost recovery application this one for construction of
the plant- before the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio
once the costs associated with
construction are determined.
A preliminary cost estimate
was deemed to high. ·
Rennie said AEP is continuing to work with its with
construction and design
partners to finalize cost estimates .associated with the
front -end engineering and
design process.
Rennie said AEP hopes to
finalize that cost estimate
struction employment."
The number of workers
unemployed in Ohio in
March was 307,000, up
from 295,000 in February.
The number of unemployed
. has decreased by 8,000 in
the past 12 months from
315,000. The March unemployment rate for Ohio was .
down from 5.3 percent ·in
March 2006. ·
·

"Better weather in March
than ·n mid-February
brought more job seekers
mto the labor market,
incre·asing the unemployment rate," ODJFS Director
Helen Jones-Kelley said in
a statement. "The milder
(The Associated Press
weather also boosted con- contributed to this story.)

by the end of June.
AEP also has a permit
pending with the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency, and must again go
to the OPSB for the siting of
the transmission lines to be
associated with the plant.
That permit process is "on
hold" pending the finalization of the FEED study,
Rennie said. All of the permit
processes are independent of
one another, and the outcome
of any one permit application
will not likely affect the outcome of any other.

Jei!Willlltr Insurance
Jell Warner
113 W.2nd St. ·
Pomeroy, OH 45769
' . (740)992-5479
wamerjl@nationwide.com

},\RIEL
ESTABLISHED 1895

4/28
The Ohio Valley
Symphony
Guitar Classics
Bpm
5/11
'The Sinatra Show
feaiUJing the
Joey ThOmas Big Band
Dil\ller tickets available
The Ariel: Dater Hall
428 Sec. Ave. Gallipolis, OH
740-446-ARTS (2787)

·0

Nation.wida"
On Your Side

Autn HM!•

LJfp

llusloos

�..

-

,-

LocAL • STATE··

The Daily Sentinel

Rleness VolUnteer Har Garden Dedicition
ATH ENS ~ O' Blencss
Memorial Hospital volunteei
honorees and guests gathered
for the dedicmion of the
O'Bieness Volunteer Honor
Garden Thursday. Apri l -19.
The e\·ent was held in the
garden in the O"Bieness
Memorial Park to celebrate
the creation of the new garden. to honor those recognized and to thank those
who made the garden possible.
The Volunteer Honor
Garden is part of the larger
Ri verview Garden Project at
O"Bleness. Inspired by the
creative vision of ·James
Anastas. a fom1er member of
the Hocking ConservaiJCy
District hoard and a lorgtime
O' Bieness supporter and
fund raiser. the project·s goal
was to enhance the appearance of the hospital and the
riverbank with plantings of
shrubbery at the back of the
hospital imd trees between.
Hospi tal Drive and the bicycle path. Anastas spoke
about the birth uf the project
and his vision at the dedication.
The Volunteer Honor
G;mlen was made possible
because of the continued
investment and commitment
of the Hocking Valley Bank
(HVB). one of the original
contributors to the Riverview
Garden landscaping project.
HVB sponsored trees in
honor of recipients of the
annual 0' Bleness Excellence
in Service volunteer award.
The award is given to volunteers who provide service
above and beyond their regular duties. HYB also chose to
dedicate a tree for e"1ich.
future Excellence in Service

PageA6

Inside

Wednesday, April25, 2007

Wahama wins a pair, Page 82

Choir announces schedule
MASON, W.Va. - The
Mason County Area Gospel
Choir will kick off their first
2007 rehearsal at the Good
Shepherd
Church
at
' Flatrock. Monday, Apri l 23,
7 p.m.
Rehearsal and performance dates through the end
of
June
have
been
announced .· The rehearsals
will be held at 7 p.m. on
Monday, May 21 at the Good
S hepherd U .M. Church, and
Monday, June 18, at the
Good
Shepherd
U.M.

Flatrock.
Church.
Performances. all gospel
sin gs, will take place on
Saturday, May 5, at the Good
Shepherd U.M. Church at
Flatrock featuring The
Humphreys of Dunbar. W.
Va., along with the choir:
June 2 at the Good Shepherd
U .1\:1. Church, with singers to
be announced; and Saturday.
June 30 at the Good
Shepherd U. M. Church.
Flatrock, feturin g Randy
Parsons and the Forgi ve n
Four, along with the choir.

Z was big for Cavs in Game I, Page B'z

The Area Choir will not
have
any
sc heduled
rehearsals. or sings, during
the month of Jul y, but will
re sume with rehearsals and
sings. beginning in August
through October. ·
Anyone wishin g to participate. or needing informati on. may call Carol
Browning at 773-5689 , or
Rev. Denni s or Brenda
Weaver at 675-5525 . The
Area Choir wehsite is
www.geociti es.com/countychoir

Reds hammer Cardinals, Page B6

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEAOY - A schedule Of lli)COOling high
school varSity sporting 9V9nl s invot.,;ng teams
!rom Meigs Counl'f.

Today's games
Prep Softball
Meigs at Tr imble, 5 p.m

Eastern at Waterford. 5 p.m.
'
Prep Baseball
Meigs at ~Tnm ble . 5 p.m.
Eostern at Waterford, 5 p.m.
Southern at Wahama . 5 p m

Submitted photo

O'Bieness Memorial Hospital's new Volunteer Honor
Garden was dedicated on Thursday, April 19., Honorees and
representatives of the Hocking Valley Bank (HVB) who
attended the dedication include from left, seated, Avanelle
Conrath and Ermyl Ballinger: ancl from left standing, Kathryn
Devoe, AI Leep, Clayton Bolin, Scott Nisley, president of
HVB, Ethel Pierce, Harold Swisher, Clarice Swisher, June
Hunter, Sick Weissenrieder, CEO of HVB and Wanda
Llewe llyn. HVB established and sponsors the garden.
award
rec ipient
Bick nition luncheon. Carlson is
Weissenrieder, CEO of the the long-time treasurer of the
HVB. spoke at the dedication Guild of O' Bleness.
about the bank's ongoing
The dedication ceremony
commitment to the garden.
was concluded with the folCurrently 17 O'Bieness lowing words by Lynn
volunteers are each honored ·Anastas, vice .president of
with a tree and a plaque in community relations at
the
garden
including · O'Bleness:
"And so in
Avanelle Conrath, Ethel recognition of those who are
Pierce, Erm)'l Ballinger, already honored in our garBette
Dresher.
Bob den and with sincere appreSympson. June Hunter, ciation for the vision and
Jessie Essex, Jaunita Wigal, commitment of Hocking
Clarice Swisher, Harold Valley Bank, we dedicate the
Swisher, AI Leep, Ann 0 ' Bleness Volunteer Honor
Farley, Clayton Bolin, Judy Garden to O'Bleness volunWoolery, Kathryn Devoe, teers who are honored here,
Wanda
Llewellyn and to our volunteers who will
Harriet Carlson. The 2007 be honored in the future, and
Excellence in Service award to the spirit of volunteerism
was presented to Carlson thar lives on through our volFriday,
April
20, at unteers and these beautiful
O'Bieness' volunteer recog- trees."

Hoover wins race

.

Local stocks

Thunday

P!Pril 26

Prep Softball
Vinton County at Metg s, 5 p.m.
Southern at Eastern , 5 p.m.

Prep Baseball

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Chamjllon (NASDAQ) - 8.10
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) -

Nerfolk Southern ( NYSE) -

64.64

55.57

12.71 .

Oak Hill Ffnanclal (NASDAQ)

City Holdlrig (NASDAQ) -

-24.15

38.92

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NA5DAQ)- 25.26
.BBT (NYSE) - 41.52
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 25.62
Pepsico (NYSE) - 66.41
Premier (NASDAQ) - 15.60

Collins (NYSE) - 66.52
Dollar General (NYSE) -

21.42
DuPont (NYSE) - 49.86
US Bank (NYSE) - 34.13

Vinton County at Me igs, 5 p.m.
So uthern at Eastern , 5 p.m.
Track and Field
Ea stern at Vmlon County. 4·30 p.m.

fr!dav. April 27
Prep Soflball

187.80

.

'

Eastern at South Ga!lia; 5 p.m.

Wai-Mart ( NYSE) - 48.69
Wendy's ( NYSE) - 32.10
Worthington (NYSE) _- 23.06
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for April 24,
2007, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac
Mills In Gallipolis at (740)
441-9441 and L.esley Marrero
in Point Pleasant at ( 304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

Prep Baseball
Eastern at South Gallia , 5 p.m.
Track and Field
Meigs, Sout hern at Federal Hocking
Invite, 5 p.m.

1VC STANDINGS
BASEBALL
Ohio Division
Alexander
7- I
Meigs
6-2
Wellston
5-2
Vinton Co
3-5
Belpre
2-5
Nels- York
0-8

.Local weather
Wednesday ... Rain. Highs
around 70. Northeast winds
5 to 10 mph . Chance of
rain 90 percent.
W e d n e s .d a y
night...Cloudy. A chance of
showers and thunderstorms
in the evening ... Then a
slight chance df showers
after midnight. Lows in the
mid 50s. Northeast winds 5
to I0 mph. Chance of rain
50 percent.
Thursday .. . Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Warmer with highs around
80, Southeast winds 10 . to
15 mph. Chance of rain 50
percent.
Thursday night...Mostly
cloudy with showers and
thunderstorms likely. Lows
in the mid 50s. South
winds 10 to 15 mph .
Chance of rain 70 percent.
Friday .. .Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Cooler
with highs in the- upper
60s. Chance of rain 40
percent.
Friday
night
and
Saturdayc.. Mostly cloudy.
Lows in the ·upper 40s.
Highs in the mid 60s.
Saturday night and
Sunday ... Partly
cloudy.

Today's Forecast
Forecast for Wednesday, April 25

High I Low temps

SOFTBALL
'

~,_

.,
*Columbus ·

61 "1 51·"

Nate Hoover won his first heat race and went on to take third place in his first feature race
on opening day at the Skyline Motor Speedway. He is the 8-year-o ld son of Mr. and Mrs.
Dave Hoover of Pomeroy and races in the Mini Wedge Racing Association.

Ohio Division
8-0
Wellston*
Belpre
6-2
Alexander
5-3
Mei gs
3-5
Vinton Co
2-6
0-8
Nels-York

.

~
~

.

-, '

•'

'
'

,.

h....
L._~
Panly

Cloudy

~ Thunder · ~

"'

storm s

Flu mes

e;:))

•
'

Ice

,..:;r-.,_ ,,,.,, ~' ; ' ~ '.: .:: "~
~

Cloudy "C._) Showers

1 , , ,. ;

Ra1n

•

•

Snow

, •, ~~

Weathe r Unde rground · AP

Lows in the mid 40s.
Highs in the lower 70s.
Sunday
night
and
Monday ... Mostly
clear.
Lows around 50. Hi ghs

around 80.
Monday
night
and
Thesday .. .Partly cloudy.
Lows in th e mid 50s.
Highs .in the upper 70s . .

Proud to be apart of your life.

Submitted photo

Hocking Division
Southern
7-1
Fed Hock
6-2
Eastern
5-2
Miller
2:6
Waterford
1-5
Trimble
I-6

City/Region

.Youngstown •
59' 140'

'

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

'

The Daily Sentinel • Subscribe today • 992-2155

At Holzer Clinic, the Diagnostic Testing Center offers
the highest level of technology with Cat Scan.Medical Imaging ... Close to You

'

'

Tornadoes avenge Meigs, 8-1
BY SCOTT

WoLFE

SPORT S CO RRESPONOENT

RACINE - A hard hitting, sold-defensive combination supported a masterful
pitching performance by
junior hurler Ryan Chapman,
who pitched six sco reless
innings to close the game in
an 8- 1 Southern Tornado
victory over the rival Meigs
Marauders Tuesday night at
Star Mill Park.
The
Tri- Valley
Co nfe rence interdivi sional
game left the state-ranked
Tornadoes with a 15-4 overall mark (7- 1 leag ue). The
win avenged a · 2-1 Meigs
win in Rock Springs earlie r
in the year.
Chapman gave up a leadoff si ngle to Clay Bolin, .
then with two out Dave
Poole ripped a liner up the
middle for the lone Meigs

Chapman

Poole

run . Meigs pitcher Bryan
DeLong went four batters to
retire the Southern offense
in the bottom of the first. the
score 1-0 Meigs.
From that point on
Chapman seemed to get
stronger with every pitch.
He retired the stde in order
in the second,.then the SHS
bats went to work to tie the
game at 1-1.
Chapman walked, but was

later put out on a fielder's
choice by J.R. Hupp and
Nick Buck si ngled. Buck
then scored on a first pitch
single to junior Kreig
Kleski.
Chapman went through
the heart of the Meigs lineup with j ust a walk in the
th iril'. Southern came back
to take a 3-1 lead in the bottom half of the frame. Butch
an
Marnhout reached
error. Chapm an singled ,
then Hupp reached on an
error to score Marnh out.
Kleski followed with his
second single. of the night
for the RBI.
In the Tornado fourth
Patrick John son walked,
Bryan Walters/photo
Marnhout walked, Chapman
slugged a two-run doubl e . Southern senior Patrick Johnson, center, slides safely into
and Buck had an RBI single the hot corner ahead of the tag of Meigs· third baseman
that gave Southern a 6-1 Caleb Davis (4) during Tuesday-s TVC non-conference baseball game at Star Mil l 'Park in Racine. SHS coach Ryan
Please see Avenge, B:l
t:emley, left, calls for timeout.
·

on

Lady Marauders mercy Southern, 12-2 Lady
.Bulldogs
rally past
Eastern
Bv ScoTT

WoLFE

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

R_ACINE - , The visiting
Metgs Lady Marauders
made a c·lean swee p of
Southern this 2007 season, .
defeating
the
host
L. a d y
Tornadoes
12-2 in a
six- inning
m e r c

y

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTER S@MVDAILVTrl!BUNE.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern soft ball appeared to
have Athens' number for six
innings Tuesday, but two
runs in the top of the seve n t h
allowed the
visit tn g
L a d y
Bulldogs to
come away
wir.b
a
hard-fought
6-5 decision in nonconference
action.
AHS (69) trailed 41 after fou r
frames and
was also
down . 5-4
headed into
its final atbat,
but
three consecut i ve '
hits to start .
the sevent h
resu lted in a pair of scores
- including the eve ntual
game-winner.
Lau ra Snoddy's RBI sin-.
gle allowed Robin Morley
to score. breakin g ope n a
five-all tie for a one-run ·
advantage. Morley doubled
home Katie Clark one baller
earlier to knot the contest at
fi ve.
Now trailing 6-5 in the
bollom of' the seventh. the

game
at
Star Mill
Park. The
Tri -Valley
Conference
interdi visional
softHocking Division
ball
contest
Waterford
7-0
I e f t
Trimble
5-3
Southern
Fed Hock
4-4
with a 6-11
Southern
4-4
mark overEastern
3-4
aiL
0-8
Miller
Meigs
scored fir st
* - clinched sha re or
· in the fir st
better of league title
i nning
Ebersbach when Lian
Hoffman doubled, Whitney
Smith had an RBI single,
Shanalle Smith walked and
Amy Barr slammed an RBI
single. Barr later scored on
an error on a ball hit by
Talisha Beha, the score 3-0.
Southern came back with
two runs on a Sarah Eddy
single and passed ball, an
RBI sin~le by Whitney
Wolfe-Riffle, a passed ball,
-BY BRYAN WALTERS
and an error, the ·score now
BWALTER S@M VDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
3-2.
Southern went scoreless
OAK ·HILL - Meigs
captured another girls' track the rest of the ~a rne at the
and field title by winning hands of winnm g pitcher
Ebersbacp.
the Oak Hill Iln:itational in Hailey
six batEbersbach
fanned
Division II cFriday at Davis
walked
live,
and
scatters,
Stadium .
tered
live
hits.
'
The Lady Marauders won
Meanwhile,
a
two-base
the six-team divi sion with a
.
Bryan Walters/photo
team score of 90 points, fin- error on a hit by Whitney .
Smith
scored
Meri
Meigs
senior
Whitney
Smith
slides
safely
into
third
base
ahead
of
the
tag
of So uthern 's
ishing 18 poi nts ahead of
Lindsey
Buzzard,
left,
during
Tuesday's
TVC
interdivisional
softball
contest
at
Star Mill Park
run·ner-up Wheelersburg.
Pleas11 see Mercy, B:l
Please see Rally, B&amp;
in
Rac
ine.
Shortstop
Sarah
Eddy
(4)
and
left
fielder
Virginia
Brickles
(00)
are
also
pictured.
Minford was third with
64, Waverly fourth with 46
and Port smouth rounded out
the top-five with 32 markers. Portsmouth West was
last in D2 with 23 team
BY BRAD SHERMAN
points.
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
The Maroon and Gold
managed only two firstRIO GRANDE
Gallia
place finishes, both coming
Academy's Cody Noble drove in
in relay even ts.
the game winner with a walk-off
The team of Catie Wolfe,
s in~le in the bottom of seventh
Emily
Fields,
Devan
inmng, lifting his Blue Devils to a
Soulsby
and
Meghan
6-5 high school baseball victory
Clelland came together to
over the Eastern Eagles on
win gold in the 4x I00-meter
Tuesday.
event. Wolfe , Clelland,
On the first pitch of his at-bat,
Joel Lynch
Griffin
line
drive
to
Noble
hit
a
two-out
Please see Invite, B~
right field that fell in front of the
Eastern defender. Austin King, along wi th an RBI triple in the
who was hit by a pitch .and stole first.
Also for Gallia Academy. Niok
second earlier in the inning, scored
CoNTACT
Stevens
)lad an RB-I single and
to end the co ntest. ·
The win improved Gallia Dave Rumley was 1-for-1 . •
OVP Scorellne (S.p.m.-1 a.m.)
Derek Griffin, Titus Pierce and
Academy to 13-6 on the year, and
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
perhaps will stop the bleeding for a Kyle Gordon all had single hits for
club that entered the day having Eastern, but Joel Lynch had the
Fax- 1·740-446·3006
dropped four of its last live games. biggest day, going 2-for-3 with
E~mall- $ports @mydailysentinel .com
Eastern, similarly, has now lost three run s batted in. His seventh
~POrtt...Sla.tl
three · of its last four and is 9-8 inning double capped an Eagle
.Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
overall.
rally over the final two innings that
(7401 446·2342. ext 33
The
Noble
hit
was
ju
st
one
of
saw the· Eagles come back from a
· bsherman@my da ilytribune .com
three on the day for the junior, who 5-3 deficit to even the score.
has emerged as one of the most
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
In the sixth, Matt Morri s reached
(740) 446·2342, ext 23
·
consistent hitters for coach Rich on an error. Pierce singled, then
Ierum @mydailyreg ister.com
Corvin's club; one of those hits Jake Lynch hit an RBI ~roundout
Brad Shennan/photo
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer Eastern starter Kyle Gordon deli~ers a pitch during the first inn ing of was a double. King and John Paul to pull his Eagles to withm a single
Tuesday's non-conference baseball game against Gallia Academy at Bob Finnicum were each 2'for-3, with
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33
Please see Thrlllei B&amp;
bwalters@ mydailytnbune.com
King scoring three times to go
Evans Field in Rio Grande.

Lady
Marauders
win Oak

Hill Invite

Eastern drops thriller to GA

We have 9
Board
Certified
Radiologists,
reading
films in-house

740.446.5289
.

US

•

90

Jac~son· .Pike,

.Gallipolis, Ohio

�..

-

,-

LocAL • STATE··

The Daily Sentinel

Rleness VolUnteer Har Garden Dedicition
ATH ENS ~ O' Blencss
Memorial Hospital volunteei
honorees and guests gathered
for the dedicmion of the
O'Bieness Volunteer Honor
Garden Thursday. Apri l -19.
The e\·ent was held in the
garden in the O"Bieness
Memorial Park to celebrate
the creation of the new garden. to honor those recognized and to thank those
who made the garden possible.
The Volunteer Honor
Garden is part of the larger
Ri verview Garden Project at
O"Bleness. Inspired by the
creative vision of ·James
Anastas. a fom1er member of
the Hocking ConservaiJCy
District hoard and a lorgtime
O' Bieness supporter and
fund raiser. the project·s goal
was to enhance the appearance of the hospital and the
riverbank with plantings of
shrubbery at the back of the
hospital imd trees between.
Hospi tal Drive and the bicycle path. Anastas spoke
about the birth uf the project
and his vision at the dedication.
The Volunteer Honor
G;mlen was made possible
because of the continued
investment and commitment
of the Hocking Valley Bank
(HVB). one of the original
contributors to the Riverview
Garden landscaping project.
HVB sponsored trees in
honor of recipients of the
annual 0' Bleness Excellence
in Service volunteer award.
The award is given to volunteers who provide service
above and beyond their regular duties. HYB also chose to
dedicate a tree for e"1ich.
future Excellence in Service

PageA6

Inside

Wednesday, April25, 2007

Wahama wins a pair, Page 82

Choir announces schedule
MASON, W.Va. - The
Mason County Area Gospel
Choir will kick off their first
2007 rehearsal at the Good
Shepherd
Church
at
' Flatrock. Monday, Apri l 23,
7 p.m.
Rehearsal and performance dates through the end
of
June
have
been
announced .· The rehearsals
will be held at 7 p.m. on
Monday, May 21 at the Good
S hepherd U .M. Church, and
Monday, June 18, at the
Good
Shepherd
U.M.

Flatrock.
Church.
Performances. all gospel
sin gs, will take place on
Saturday, May 5, at the Good
Shepherd U.M. Church at
Flatrock featuring The
Humphreys of Dunbar. W.
Va., along with the choir:
June 2 at the Good Shepherd
U .1\:1. Church, with singers to
be announced; and Saturday.
June 30 at the Good
Shepherd U. M. Church.
Flatrock, feturin g Randy
Parsons and the Forgi ve n
Four, along with the choir.

Z was big for Cavs in Game I, Page B'z

The Area Choir will not
have
any
sc heduled
rehearsals. or sings, during
the month of Jul y, but will
re sume with rehearsals and
sings. beginning in August
through October. ·
Anyone wishin g to participate. or needing informati on. may call Carol
Browning at 773-5689 , or
Rev. Denni s or Brenda
Weaver at 675-5525 . The
Area Choir wehsite is
www.geociti es.com/countychoir

Reds hammer Cardinals, Page B6

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEAOY - A schedule Of lli)COOling high
school varSity sporting 9V9nl s invot.,;ng teams
!rom Meigs Counl'f.

Today's games
Prep Softball
Meigs at Tr imble, 5 p.m

Eastern at Waterford. 5 p.m.
'
Prep Baseball
Meigs at ~Tnm ble . 5 p.m.
Eostern at Waterford, 5 p.m.
Southern at Wahama . 5 p m

Submitted photo

O'Bieness Memorial Hospital's new Volunteer Honor
Garden was dedicated on Thursday, April 19., Honorees and
representatives of the Hocking Valley Bank (HVB) who
attended the dedication include from left, seated, Avanelle
Conrath and Ermyl Ballinger: ancl from left standing, Kathryn
Devoe, AI Leep, Clayton Bolin, Scott Nisley, president of
HVB, Ethel Pierce, Harold Swisher, Clarice Swisher, June
Hunter, Sick Weissenrieder, CEO of HVB and Wanda
Llewe llyn. HVB established and sponsors the garden.
award
rec ipient
Bick nition luncheon. Carlson is
Weissenrieder, CEO of the the long-time treasurer of the
HVB. spoke at the dedication Guild of O' Bleness.
about the bank's ongoing
The dedication ceremony
commitment to the garden.
was concluded with the folCurrently 17 O'Bieness lowing words by Lynn
volunteers are each honored ·Anastas, vice .president of
with a tree and a plaque in community relations at
the
garden
including · O'Bleness:
"And so in
Avanelle Conrath, Ethel recognition of those who are
Pierce, Erm)'l Ballinger, already honored in our garBette
Dresher.
Bob den and with sincere appreSympson. June Hunter, ciation for the vision and
Jessie Essex, Jaunita Wigal, commitment of Hocking
Clarice Swisher, Harold Valley Bank, we dedicate the
Swisher, AI Leep, Ann 0 ' Bleness Volunteer Honor
Farley, Clayton Bolin, Judy Garden to O'Bleness volunWoolery, Kathryn Devoe, teers who are honored here,
Wanda
Llewellyn and to our volunteers who will
Harriet Carlson. The 2007 be honored in the future, and
Excellence in Service award to the spirit of volunteerism
was presented to Carlson thar lives on through our volFriday,
April
20, at unteers and these beautiful
O'Bieness' volunteer recog- trees."

Hoover wins race

.

Local stocks

Thunday

P!Pril 26

Prep Softball
Vinton County at Metg s, 5 p.m.
Southern at Eastern , 5 p.m.

Prep Baseball

AEP (NYSE) - 50.95
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 79.06
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 60.11
Big Lots (NYSE)- 32.27
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) -

Gannett (NYSE) - 56.63
General Electric (NYSE) -

Rockwell (NYSE)- 59.11
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) -

34.76

11.42

Harley-Davidson (NYSE) -

36.62
BorgWafller (NYSE)- 75.70
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)

JP Morgan ( NYSE) - 52.16
Kroger (NYSE) - 29.64
Umlted Brands (NYSE) -

Royal Dutch Shell - 69.50
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) -

-48.91

28.86

Chamjllon (NASDAQ) - 8.10
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) -

Nerfolk Southern ( NYSE) -

64.64

55.57

12.71 .

Oak Hill Ffnanclal (NASDAQ)

City Holdlrig (NASDAQ) -

-24.15

38.92

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NA5DAQ)- 25.26
.BBT (NYSE) - 41.52
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 25.62
Pepsico (NYSE) - 66.41
Premier (NASDAQ) - 15.60

Collins (NYSE) - 66.52
Dollar General (NYSE) -

21.42
DuPont (NYSE) - 49.86
US Bank (NYSE) - 34.13

Vinton County at Me igs, 5 p.m.
So uthern at Eastern , 5 p.m.
Track and Field
Ea stern at Vmlon County. 4·30 p.m.

fr!dav. April 27
Prep Soflball

187.80

.

'

Eastern at South Ga!lia; 5 p.m.

Wai-Mart ( NYSE) - 48.69
Wendy's ( NYSE) - 32.10
Worthington (NYSE) _- 23.06
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for April 24,
2007, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac
Mills In Gallipolis at (740)
441-9441 and L.esley Marrero
in Point Pleasant at ( 304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

Prep Baseball
Eastern at South Gallia , 5 p.m.
Track and Field
Meigs, Sout hern at Federal Hocking
Invite, 5 p.m.

1VC STANDINGS
BASEBALL
Ohio Division
Alexander
7- I
Meigs
6-2
Wellston
5-2
Vinton Co
3-5
Belpre
2-5
Nels- York
0-8

.Local weather
Wednesday ... Rain. Highs
around 70. Northeast winds
5 to 10 mph . Chance of
rain 90 percent.
W e d n e s .d a y
night...Cloudy. A chance of
showers and thunderstorms
in the evening ... Then a
slight chance df showers
after midnight. Lows in the
mid 50s. Northeast winds 5
to I0 mph. Chance of rain
50 percent.
Thursday .. . Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Warmer with highs around
80, Southeast winds 10 . to
15 mph. Chance of rain 50
percent.
Thursday night...Mostly
cloudy with showers and
thunderstorms likely. Lows
in the mid 50s. South
winds 10 to 15 mph .
Chance of rain 70 percent.
Friday .. .Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Cooler
with highs in the- upper
60s. Chance of rain 40
percent.
Friday
night
and
Saturdayc.. Mostly cloudy.
Lows in the ·upper 40s.
Highs in the mid 60s.
Saturday night and
Sunday ... Partly
cloudy.

Today's Forecast
Forecast for Wednesday, April 25

High I Low temps

SOFTBALL
'

~,_

.,
*Columbus ·

61 "1 51·"

Nate Hoover won his first heat race and went on to take third place in his first feature race
on opening day at the Skyline Motor Speedway. He is the 8-year-o ld son of Mr. and Mrs.
Dave Hoover of Pomeroy and races in the Mini Wedge Racing Association.

Ohio Division
8-0
Wellston*
Belpre
6-2
Alexander
5-3
Mei gs
3-5
Vinton Co
2-6
0-8
Nels-York

.

~
~

.

-, '

•'

'
'

,.

h....
L._~
Panly

Cloudy

~ Thunder · ~

"'

storm s

Flu mes

e;:))

•
'

Ice

,..:;r-.,_ ,,,.,, ~' ; ' ~ '.: .:: "~
~

Cloudy "C._) Showers

1 , , ,. ;

Ra1n

•

•

Snow

, •, ~~

Weathe r Unde rground · AP

Lows in the mid 40s.
Highs in the lower 70s.
Sunday
night
and
Monday ... Mostly
clear.
Lows around 50. Hi ghs

around 80.
Monday
night
and
Thesday .. .Partly cloudy.
Lows in th e mid 50s.
Highs .in the upper 70s . .

Proud to be apart of your life.

Submitted photo

Hocking Division
Southern
7-1
Fed Hock
6-2
Eastern
5-2
Miller
2:6
Waterford
1-5
Trimble
I-6

City/Region

.Youngstown •
59' 140'

'

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

'

The Daily Sentinel • Subscribe today • 992-2155

At Holzer Clinic, the Diagnostic Testing Center offers
the highest level of technology with Cat Scan.Medical Imaging ... Close to You

'

'

Tornadoes avenge Meigs, 8-1
BY SCOTT

WoLFE

SPORT S CO RRESPONOENT

RACINE - A hard hitting, sold-defensive combination supported a masterful
pitching performance by
junior hurler Ryan Chapman,
who pitched six sco reless
innings to close the game in
an 8- 1 Southern Tornado
victory over the rival Meigs
Marauders Tuesday night at
Star Mill Park.
The
Tri- Valley
Co nfe rence interdivi sional
game left the state-ranked
Tornadoes with a 15-4 overall mark (7- 1 leag ue). The
win avenged a · 2-1 Meigs
win in Rock Springs earlie r
in the year.
Chapman gave up a leadoff si ngle to Clay Bolin, .
then with two out Dave
Poole ripped a liner up the
middle for the lone Meigs

Chapman

Poole

run . Meigs pitcher Bryan
DeLong went four batters to
retire the Southern offense
in the bottom of the first. the
score 1-0 Meigs.
From that point on
Chapman seemed to get
stronger with every pitch.
He retired the stde in order
in the second,.then the SHS
bats went to work to tie the
game at 1-1.
Chapman walked, but was

later put out on a fielder's
choice by J.R. Hupp and
Nick Buck si ngled. Buck
then scored on a first pitch
single to junior Kreig
Kleski.
Chapman went through
the heart of the Meigs lineup with j ust a walk in the
th iril'. Southern came back
to take a 3-1 lead in the bottom half of the frame. Butch
an
Marnhout reached
error. Chapm an singled ,
then Hupp reached on an
error to score Marnh out.
Kleski followed with his
second single. of the night
for the RBI.
In the Tornado fourth
Patrick John son walked,
Bryan Walters/photo
Marnhout walked, Chapman
slugged a two-run doubl e . Southern senior Patrick Johnson, center, slides safely into
and Buck had an RBI single the hot corner ahead of the tag of Meigs· third baseman
that gave Southern a 6-1 Caleb Davis (4) during Tuesday-s TVC non-conference baseball game at Star Mil l 'Park in Racine. SHS coach Ryan
Please see Avenge, B:l
t:emley, left, calls for timeout.
·

on

Lady Marauders mercy Southern, 12-2 Lady
.Bulldogs
rally past
Eastern
Bv ScoTT

WoLFE

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

R_ACINE - , The visiting
Metgs Lady Marauders
made a c·lean swee p of
Southern this 2007 season, .
defeating
the
host
L. a d y
Tornadoes
12-2 in a
six- inning
m e r c

y

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTER S@MVDAILVTrl!BUNE.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern soft ball appeared to
have Athens' number for six
innings Tuesday, but two
runs in the top of the seve n t h
allowed the
visit tn g
L a d y
Bulldogs to
come away
wir.b
a
hard-fought
6-5 decision in nonconference
action.
AHS (69) trailed 41 after fou r
frames and
was also
down . 5-4
headed into
its final atbat,
but
three consecut i ve '
hits to start .
the sevent h
resu lted in a pair of scores
- including the eve ntual
game-winner.
Lau ra Snoddy's RBI sin-.
gle allowed Robin Morley
to score. breakin g ope n a
five-all tie for a one-run ·
advantage. Morley doubled
home Katie Clark one baller
earlier to knot the contest at
fi ve.
Now trailing 6-5 in the
bollom of' the seventh. the

game
at
Star Mill
Park. The
Tri -Valley
Conference
interdi visional
softHocking Division
ball
contest
Waterford
7-0
I e f t
Trimble
5-3
Southern
Fed Hock
4-4
with a 6-11
Southern
4-4
mark overEastern
3-4
aiL
0-8
Miller
Meigs
scored fir st
* - clinched sha re or
· in the fir st
better of league title
i nning
Ebersbach when Lian
Hoffman doubled, Whitney
Smith had an RBI single,
Shanalle Smith walked and
Amy Barr slammed an RBI
single. Barr later scored on
an error on a ball hit by
Talisha Beha, the score 3-0.
Southern came back with
two runs on a Sarah Eddy
single and passed ball, an
RBI sin~le by Whitney
Wolfe-Riffle, a passed ball,
-BY BRYAN WALTERS
and an error, the ·score now
BWALTER S@M VDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
3-2.
Southern went scoreless
OAK ·HILL - Meigs
captured another girls' track the rest of the ~a rne at the
and field title by winning hands of winnm g pitcher
Ebersbacp.
the Oak Hill Iln:itational in Hailey
six batEbersbach
fanned
Division II cFriday at Davis
walked
live,
and
scatters,
Stadium .
tered
live
hits.
'
The Lady Marauders won
Meanwhile,
a
two-base
the six-team divi sion with a
.
Bryan Walters/photo
team score of 90 points, fin- error on a hit by Whitney .
Smith
scored
Meri
Meigs
senior
Whitney
Smith
slides
safely
into
third
base
ahead
of
the
tag
of So uthern 's
ishing 18 poi nts ahead of
Lindsey
Buzzard,
left,
during
Tuesday's
TVC
interdivisional
softball
contest
at
Star Mill Park
run·ner-up Wheelersburg.
Pleas11 see Mercy, B:l
Please see Rally, B&amp;
in
Rac
ine.
Shortstop
Sarah
Eddy
(4)
and
left
fielder
Virginia
Brickles
(00)
are
also
pictured.
Minford was third with
64, Waverly fourth with 46
and Port smouth rounded out
the top-five with 32 markers. Portsmouth West was
last in D2 with 23 team
BY BRAD SHERMAN
points.
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
The Maroon and Gold
managed only two firstRIO GRANDE
Gallia
place finishes, both coming
Academy's Cody Noble drove in
in relay even ts.
the game winner with a walk-off
The team of Catie Wolfe,
s in~le in the bottom of seventh
Emily
Fields,
Devan
inmng, lifting his Blue Devils to a
Soulsby
and
Meghan
6-5 high school baseball victory
Clelland came together to
over the Eastern Eagles on
win gold in the 4x I00-meter
Tuesday.
event. Wolfe , Clelland,
On the first pitch of his at-bat,
Joel Lynch
Griffin
line
drive
to
Noble
hit
a
two-out
Please see Invite, B~
right field that fell in front of the
Eastern defender. Austin King, along wi th an RBI triple in the
who was hit by a pitch .and stole first.
Also for Gallia Academy. Niok
second earlier in the inning, scored
CoNTACT
Stevens
)lad an RB-I single and
to end the co ntest. ·
The win improved Gallia Dave Rumley was 1-for-1 . •
OVP Scorellne (S.p.m.-1 a.m.)
Derek Griffin, Titus Pierce and
Academy to 13-6 on the year, and
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
perhaps will stop the bleeding for a Kyle Gordon all had single hits for
club that entered the day having Eastern, but Joel Lynch had the
Fax- 1·740-446·3006
dropped four of its last live games. biggest day, going 2-for-3 with
E~mall- $ports @mydailysentinel .com
Eastern, similarly, has now lost three run s batted in. His seventh
~POrtt...Sla.tl
three · of its last four and is 9-8 inning double capped an Eagle
.Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
overall.
rally over the final two innings that
(7401 446·2342. ext 33
The
Noble
hit
was
ju
st
one
of
saw the· Eagles come back from a
· bsherman@my da ilytribune .com
three on the day for the junior, who 5-3 deficit to even the score.
has emerged as one of the most
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
In the sixth, Matt Morri s reached
(740) 446·2342, ext 23
·
consistent hitters for coach Rich on an error. Pierce singled, then
Ierum @mydailyreg ister.com
Corvin's club; one of those hits Jake Lynch hit an RBI ~roundout
Brad Shennan/photo
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer Eastern starter Kyle Gordon deli~ers a pitch during the first inn ing of was a double. King and John Paul to pull his Eagles to withm a single
Tuesday's non-conference baseball game against Gallia Academy at Bob Finnicum were each 2'for-3, with
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33
Please see Thrlllei B&amp;
bwalters@ mydailytnbune.com
King scoring three times to go
Evans Field in Rio Grande.

Lady
Marauders
win Oak

Hill Invite

Eastern drops thriller to GA

We have 9
Board
Certified
Radiologists,
reading
films in-house

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•

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�•

'Page B2 o The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, April 25. 2007

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wahama blasts Raiders, 17-8 Wahama blanks Lady Irish, 3-0
BY BIIYAN WALmiS

BY GARY CLARK
SPORT~

BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

CORRESPONDENT

CHESHIRE
The
Wahama White Falcon
baseball team withstood a
late River Valley Raider
comeback rally Thursday
evening with the Bend
Area diamond nine needing a five-run sixth inning .
offensive explosion to
escape 'with a 17-8 hardball deci sion.
The White Falcons
jumped oil! to a sudden 81 advantage before River
Valley sto rmed back to
within a run after scoring
three time s in the fourth
inning and another four
tallies in the fifth frame.
WHS put the contest away
Brad Shermanlphoto
by scoring eight run s over Wahama's Garr&amp;tt Underwood slides home as River Valley
the final two innings for catcher Ryan Eggleton goes for the tag during a high school
the somewhat deceiving baseball game Tuesday in Cheshire.
17-8 win.
Wahama captured it s hasty 6-0 edge. The while fanning six and
third win in its last four Raiders broke into the walking one.
outings to improve to 4-8 scor ing column with a run
Eggle)on got the starton the 2007 spring season in th e second before the ing ·call for River Valley
while
River - Valley Bend Area. team posted and failed to make it out
dropped to 1- 13 following single tallies in each of of the fir st after walking
the thi rd and fo urth five and hitting two batthe diamond setback.
.The wild affair featured frames for an 8-1 advan- ters without recording an
25 run s, 25 hits and· nine tage.
out. Eggleton was tagged
errors with six WHS playRiver Valley bounced with
the
loss with
ers experiencing multiple back to within a si ngle Mulholland goi ng the rest
hits
games.
Garrett ·digit with three run s in of the way allowing 13
Underwood stroked a cou- the bottom half of the runs on 16 hits with three
pie of extra base smashes fourth and four more in free passes and two
with a double and a triple the fifth but that would be strikeouts.
with
Brenton Clark, all the offense the Raiders
Wahama, in preparing
Nathan Stafford, Trevor could gather. Wahama put for -the fast approaching
Peters, William Zuspan the game a.way with a run sectional tournament post
and Justin Arnold all col- in the fifth and six more season, is slated to host
lecting a pair of safeties in the sixth before cap- Southern in a 5 p.m . outin a 16 hit attack for the ping the nights scoring ing today ·before closing
White Falcons.
activity with a pair of sev- out the week with succesGibbs . led River Valley enth imiing tallies.
' sive road contests against
with three base knocks on
Caleb Roach, th e first of
Ravenswood at 5 p.m . on
the day with Jones adding two WHS pitchers on the
Thursday and Buffalo in a
a pair of singles for the day, came away with the
Raiders.
mound win after going 7 p.m. encounter on
Jacob Roach, Cody four innings allowing five Friday.
Gerlach, Derek Veazey runs on five hits with
WAHAMA 17, RIVER VALLEY 8
and Travis Ferguson three strikeouts and a hit Wahama. 421 116 2 - 17 16 5
chipped in with one hit batter. Derek Veazey fin- R Valley 010 340 0 - 8 9 4
C. Roach . Veazey (5) and Underwood.
apiece fot Wahama with ished up on the hill allow- Eggleton,
Mulholland (1) and Jones.
Mulholland,
Caldwell , ing three runs on four hits WP- Roach; LP - Eggleton
Eggleton and Frazien
coming up with one hit
each for River Valley.
Wahama jumped out . to
the early lead with four
Subscribe today.
first inning runs and two
992-2155
01ore in the second for a

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Invite

Kimi Swisher took the junior duo of Brandan
three-spot in the 3200m Fisher and Cornelius
race.
English brought home the
· from Page Bl
Meigs placed third in .lone silver performances.
Division II on the boys' . Fisher took second in the
side of thmgs, posllhg a lOOm dash, while English
Soulsby and Adrian Bolin team score of 53 points. ·did the same in the 200m
combined on the other win Wheelersburg won the six- dash.
in the 4x200 ·competition. team event with an overall
Both also pl!t in a bronze
MHS was also runner-up in . tally of 112 point s, fol- effort as well, with Fisher
both the 4x400 and. 4x800 lowed . by
runner-_up placing third in the 400m
relay events.
Waverly with 99.
dash and English accom• Bolin also won silver in
Portsmouth was fourth plishing that same feat in
the I 00-meter hurdles, with 30 markers, fifth - the 1OOm dash. The
while Soulsby took third place Minford h;~d 20 and 4x IOOm relay team also
in the 800-meter run.
Portsmouth West rounded took third place.
Melissa Grueser won out the competition with
For complete results of
bronze in the discus, 17 points.
the Oak Hill Invitational,
Casey Smith took third in
MHS did not win a gold visit the OHHS website at
the I OOm hurdles and medal in any event, but the www.oakhill.k 12.oh.us

HARTFORD, W.Va. Wahama softball improved
its overall record to 16-5 this
spring following Tuesday's
3-0 victory over visiting
Huntington St. Joseph.
The Lady Falcons managed only six hits in the .tri-·
umph. but starter Kylie
Riggs stole the show by
throwing a two-hit shutout
over seven innings. Riggs
also walked five and struck
out six in the triumph.
The Lady Irish tried to
put a good scare into the
hosts during their opening
at-bat, however, loading the
bases with nobody out in
the top of the first. .
· Kaya nna Sayre snagged a

line drive and turned a douHysell, Kebler, .Sayre;
ble play, then Riggs got out Riggs. · Young and Haley
of the inning: unscathed Davis each had a hit apiece
when the following at-bat in the triumph. Stephanie
turned into a ground out. St. Sang had .both hits · for
Joe's never came closer to a: Huntington St. Joe 's.
scoring opr,onunity.
· Maddie Purtee took the
The Red and White loss for the Lady Iri sh,
responded in theirhalfofthe surrendering a walk and
first when Mary Kebler fanning five in her six
innings of work .
reached safely on an error.
Wahama returns to action
Kebler later scored when
.
.
. . Thursday when it travels to
Sayre smgled her home for a Buffalo for a 5 p.m. cori1-0 advantage.
test. Buffalo is currently
Ke_bler added her own ' the top- ranked team in
RBI 111 the th1rd when her Class A. Wahama is cursmgle plated Taylor Hysell rently seventh.
for a 2-0 edge, and Wahama
WAHAI.\A 3, ST. JOSEPH 0
added another insurance run
St. Joe's
000 000 0 - 0 2 2
in the fourth when Chelsea Wahama
101 100 x
361
Hicks drove in Kayla HSJ (nla) : Maddie Purtee and Stephanie
·
Young with a fielder's sang
WH S (16-5): Kylie Riggs and Mary Kebler
choice for a 3-0 score.
WP- Riggs: LP - Purtee

CLEVELAND (AP)- At
the mall or at the movies.
Cavaliers 7-foot-3 center
Zydrunas llgauskas stands
out in a crowd. On the court,
he's usually the biggest of
the big men in the middle.
Tough to miss him.
But for some strange reason.
the
Washington
Wizards couldn't find him in
Game I - until it was, too
late.
With a huge size advantage down low, llgauskas
scored II of his 16 points in
the fourth quarter when
Cleveland finally stomped
out Washingion for a 97-82
victory io the opener of their
first-round playoff series.
It wasn't LeBron James or
Larry Hughes who did the
Wizards in. It was the guy
'nicknamed 'Z' who fittingly
put them to sleep.
If Washington has any
notion of evening this bestof-seven series in Game 2 on
Wednesday, the Wizards
must do a better job of' con·
taining Ilgauskas, who is
five inches taller than Etan
Thomas, Washington's starting center.
However,
llgauskas,
Cleveland's gentlemanly
giant, thinks the Wizards'
priorities will remain elsewhere.
"I think they should be
worried about LeBron and
Larry more," he said.
James didn't practice on
his sprained left ankle
Tuesday but will play in
Game 2. He ~ot hurt on a
drive to the basket in
Sunday.'s third quarter and
has spent the past two days
getting rest and treatment.
"I'll be ready," he said.
The
undermanned
Wizards had better be, too.
They' ve spent the past two .

days regrouping and practic- bench. Haywood played just
ing in Washington . On five minute., - zero in the
Monday, forward Caron fourth . The burly 30-yearButler had the cast taken off old has had success against
his broken right hand. While llgauskas in past matchups,
he thinks he can be back in so i.t was puzzling to see him
time for Game 3, cqach keep his sweat pants on . .
Eddie Jordan isn' t planning
"I can't do anything to
to have Butler unless the change the situation ,"
Wizards can advance.
Haywood said Tuesday.
Although they were with- 'That's up to him (Jerdan).
out leading scorer Gilbert. If there's going to be a lot of
Arenas or Butler, the - changes. it'll be because he
Wizards did enough to hang feels there should be. If not
around with the Cavs in the he ' ll play the guys he thinks
fourth quarter of Game I. will help him win the
They were within striking g11me."
distance
when
Jordan
Ilgauskas was shocked
switched to a smaller lineup Haywood wasn't bangi ng
hoping for :an offensive into him inside.
spark.
"He (Haywood) has had
Instead, he left the success guarding 'me before
Wizards vulnerable on and I think for sure I'm
defense and the Cavaliers going to see him a lot more,"
made them pay.
he said. "He's a good on·They pounded the ball into the-ball defender in the post
Ilgauskas, who scored nine because of his length. He
points in a decisive 13-4 can bother a lot of shots
burst that put Cleveland up because his wing span is
by I 5.
.
bigger than mine, and he ·
At
various
. times, . holds hi s ground pretty,
llgauskas was guarded by well ."
Thomas. Atawn Jamison (6- · Haywood has been 111
foot-9), Darius Songaila (6- Jordan's doghouse for
foot-9) and Michael Ruffin weeks; but with the season
(6-foot·ST. Not one of them on the . brink, it might be
could handle him as time to turn him loose.
Cleveland's big man shot Jordan wasn't making any
over the top, drew fouls and promi ses, but appeared to be
made free throws.
·
leaning toward giving
"Obviously, he's a lot big- Haywood some time.
ger and taller," Songaila
"We want him to play with
said. "You have to stay a lot of energy, intelligently,
between him and the basket. and let's see what happens,"
You can't .let him back you Jordan said. "You 'make your
down under the rim. With own minutes. He's practiced
his height he can easily well the. last two days. He's
reach over and get .the tip upbeat and let's see if it carand some rebounds and stuff ries over to the game."
·
like that."
Jordan, too, would like to
Surprisingly,
while get more offensively from
Ilgauskas was having his Thomas, who was just !-ofway with the Wizards, 4 from the field, made three
Jordan
kept
7-footer turnovers and didn't get to
Brendan Haywood on the the line in 20 minutes.

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

.

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.

Bryan Walters/photo

Meigs relief pitcher Austin Dunfee, left, throws a w~rm-up toss while teammate Dave Poole
(30) and pitching coach Mike Kloes, right, ooserve during the .sixth inning of Tuesday's TVC
Interdivisional l&gt;aseball game against Southern at Star Mill Park in Racin!l.

Avenge

seventh inning Meigsthreat. The SHS defense
made some goo~ plays in
fromPageBl
the frame, but Meigs still
had some spark in hopes of
pulling
off the win. Bryan
lead to work with.
,
Delong led off with a douChapman struck out three ble to center and Bolin was
Meigs batters in the sixth. hit by a piich. Chapman
Meanwhile, Southern plated fanned the next batter and
two addition runners to pad then snagged a drive up the
the lead at 8-1 . Johnson was middle for a l-3 ¥round out
hit by a pitch, stole second to preserve the wm.
·
and third, then Marnhout
Southern's
Chapman
walked and stole second as struck out ten to pick up the
Austin Dunfee came onto win, walked three, and hit
the scene. Nick Buck clob- two. Delong suffered the
bered his third hit of the loss with three strikeouts
night, a two-run double.
and five walks, while
Chapman fought off a Dunfee fanned none and

walked one.
Southern hitters were
Buck ·
(three
hits),
Chapman
(two
hits),
Kleski (two hits ), and
Jordan Pierce a single.
Meigs hitters were Bolin,
Poole, Aaron Story, Cale~
Davis, and Delong.
.
Southern
goes
to
Wahama Wedne'sday and to
Eastern Thursday for a big
TVC contest.
Meigs

SOUTHERN 8, MEIGS 1
100 000 o - 152

Southern

012 302 x

-

882

, MHS (11 ·6): Bryan Delong, Austin
Dunfee [B) and Aaron Slory
·SHS (15-4): Ryan Chapman and Butch
Marnhout
WP- Chapman: LP- Delong

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to:
(N)TRucnON
Aockspnngs Aetlabililation, "--oiliiliiliiiliilii-r'
36759 Rocksprings .Road.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Gallipolis Career College
EKtendicare
Health (Careers Close To Hom e)
Services. Inc. is an 8qual Call Today! 740 ' 446"4367•
800 21 4 0452
opportunity employer that
t'
"
encourages
workplace A=~:~~ot~~e;;co!:~~~':ng
diversity. M/F ON
. Council ta lndepend£1"11 Coll&amp;ges
and SchOds t21 4s.

1150

Lookipg
for
fn·Hom e
Childcare provider 12 hour
days. Ref. required, Serious
inQuires only Call 304·675·
3161
~-----...,.-- - - - - - - - Roofers: Metal rooting,' sid·
Now accepting applications ing and EPDM. Top pay and
for GriiVFry Cook. Apply in benefits. 724·229·8020
person at 308 2nd Av6, rr:::;=====;;==;=;=;t
Gallipolis.
Salesperson Needed.
EKperience in hardwara/
NOW HIRING, Point pleas· building matenals Apply
ant and Alo Grande
in
perSon
Mon-Fri
McDonalds. Apply within.
Thomas Do It Center
245·5156 and 304·675· Gallipolis, OH.
390

a

· ~------Buckeye Hills Career Center
is now accepting applica·
lions tor substitute teachers
(in all academic. and C·T
areas).
Conlact
the
Sliperintendents OHice cit
740-245·5334. EEO
POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg. Pay $20/hr or
$57K annually
Including Federal Benefits
and QT. Paid Training.
Vacations·FT/PT
1-800-584-1775 EKt #8923
USWA
R&amp;J Trur:k1ng leadmg The Way
R&amp;J Truck1l"l9 now H inr~g at our

New Haven, WV Terminal. For
Aeg1onal Hauls·Dllmp D1v. 1
yoar OTR ~enli11bla axp. Call I·
800-462·9365 esk lor Kent

.Haven.WV. 31;&gt;dl2ba. Ranch, 0815
lg.sunroom, 2 car gar. great Miniature farm . Unibuilt
area. D; 304-675-3637 .E; . home on 4 acres. on SR
304·882·2334
t60. JBR, 1BA. Peaches.
berries.
grapes. Swimm1ng
t9B9 Clayton Mobile Home.
14K60, 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath pool. New appJiances. Wood
wilh a 12K t8 additional bed· burner. $95,000. 740·388·
room . 12K6 muddroom on 0815

~ -~5

www.comic5.com

lk======dl
TheVillage of Rio Grande is
taking applications for the
position of part lime police
officer. Two years eKperience
is
required.
Applications can be pick'ed
up al the Rio Grande
Municipal Building Monday·
Friday,
8:30AM
until
4:30PM. Applications are
due back tO the Municipal
Building by noon on Monday
1 2007
May 4.
·
Wanted: Dir€!ct Supervision
employees to oversee male
youth in a staff secu r1;1 resi·
den!lal environment. Must
pass
physical !raining
requirement. Pay based on
experience. Gall (740)37?9083 between 9-3 Mon·Fri

Nursing Assistant classes
beginning May 7th, 2007. 11
you enjoy elderly people and
want to become a member
of our health Care team.
pleSse stop by R"ocksprings
Rehabilitation Center ' at

r,150
~-~SCH~OO~LS~-, 1/2 acre lot with chain link
fence &amp; 10K10 building,
IN.'iffiULTION
Asking $40,000. (740)379·
2668
be dependable/allendance 2005 3 bedroom, 2 bath,
is a must) team players with Commodore
Ooublewtde
posilive attitudes to join us in Home. Never lived in. As
provid1ng outstanding, quali· new 28x60 with delivery and
ty care to our residents. II sot-up
$45,000
call
yO\J have any questions con· (3041675·5578
,,
tact Hollie Bumgarner. LPN.
Staff
Deve lopment
CoQ(dinator @ 740·992·
6472. Overbrook Center is
an E.O.E. and a participant ·
of the drug free workplace
Midwest Homes
program.
mymldwesthome.com

24n HOME
STORE

170

3bd,
GALLIPOLIS.
Foreclosure! Buy for only
554.900! More homes
Oil &amp; Gas Well Leases. available, Far laca liStings
Addison/Cheshire Twps. 8 call 800-559-4109 xF254
Berea Wells comp w/ Pump
3BA, 2BA, 1 acre, metal out·
Jacks. Motors. Tanks &amp;
buifding. LA Laundry. Large
Sales Meters $56,000
Kit. HT and SG district.
Phone 740-934-2073
$75000. 740·256·9137

luJ~ &amp;

I,

I

-N-ew
- Ho_m
_e_l_o,-S:--ale-.:--sa-v-e
$20,000. Immediate occu pancy. applrances Inc., 2
story w/wrap around· porch.
3-Br.. 2&amp;.1f2
tlath ,"large
garage w/Bonus room over·
h~ad·Fun Basem'ent &amp;
More.Selter will pay cl_osing
cost. 740·992·5635 or 992·

_2 4_7_8 ·----~-

One acre along Rt 7 below
Holiday Inn in Kanauga, OH.
Commercial
property.
(740)446-4782

"

.
.......
·' ~ '.::
'

-

6

40K80 insulated/ ·heated
horse Darn. 10 stalls. Bri ck
wash sta ll with 4 Bedroom
living quarlers. 37 addilional
acres can be purchased
also. (740)446-3844
Undeveloped land, 6.86 ac
mit avail, pond, openl wooded. Long term (5·15 yr)
lease for mobile home or
other approved. uses. Lac
Brum!ield Ad , H~rrison Twp.
ph (5 13)295·6309 leave
msg lor return call.

~r~-:RI:A:.--L-::El~!\1:-A~n-:..,
WANITJ&gt;

~.·- - - - - Need to sell your home?
late on payments, divorce.
job transfer or a death? 1
can buy your home. All cash
and QUICk ClOSing. 740·4163130.

1!1\111,

~10

HOUSES
IUKRI-Nr

Reduced
2 bedroom house on
large 2-story home on Graham School Ad. $400
Locust Street. Gallipolis. 4 per month. plus deposit.
Bedrooms, 2 Bath. KIT~ FM. Water include 304·675·
DR, LA, Laundry, out-build· 2178
ing, fenced yard , close to
WANriD
4br,
2
1/2
bath,
2FP,
2
acres
.
schools.
Excellent 3 Bedroom House in
To Do
AC , $149,500 (304)674- Conditi on! 740-441-1202.
Syracuse. $500/month +
304·675·6363.
W1ll cleanup old buildings, 5921 or (304)593·8871
deposit No Pets. (304)675basements, and out build·
Attention!
Remodeled stngle story 5332
·ings. ca11tor 1ree es t"1mates, Local company oHering "NO home wt·rh ' 3 bed rooms and
DOWN PAYMENT" pro- 1 112 baths on large lot. 3·bedroom, 2·bath, hOuse
grams for you to buy your Located at 3408 Mossman with dining and kitchen
home instead of renting.
Ave .. Pt Pleasant , wv· together, livingroom, all car·
BUSINESS
• 100% financing
Asking 45,500 Sellers Will peted ellcept kitchen , deck
OtroRTUNm'
·• Less than perfect credit pay closing cost. For off dining area, stove, ref rig·
~==;~~=~ accepted
'appointment to see: 304· era tor, dishwasher provided.
• Payment could be the 576·2247
123 Sunset Lane oH
•NOTICE•
same as rent
Sandhill· Road ,
Point
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· Mortgage
LoCators. Single story home with 2 Pleasant. $'700 montllly, ptus
G c~
_
bedrooms aM 1 bath. Large deposit.
References
17401367 0000
IN
Qr ." recommends
lot
loc8ted at 2112 required Call304·675·2319
that you do business with Brand new log home sitting Madison Ave . Pt. Pleasant. - , - - - - - : - - - people yo~ know, and on approx. 1.44 acres, WV Asking $29.500. Sellers 3Br/2Ba.,Midd.,fen .yard .sec
NOT to send money almost ready to move into. will pay closing cost. For dep$250 / S540M .basethrough the mail until you Custom Amish Kitchen with appointment to see : 304·· ment,new roof&amp;furnace.304·
have investigated the solid .surtace counters, 3BR, 576-2247
675-8626 or 740·4 16·5620
lo=ff~ar:ln:g·::;;:==~ 2BA,
$142,000 .
Call
www.orvb.com
Pl
_17_4_01_25_6_·9_24_7_ _ __
All new, 3 Bedrocm. ·2 full
5 BR 3.5 Bath, 5 acres
MONtY
balh, New Kitchen, living
TO l...oM'
Building Downtown with 3 with access to ·the boat
Room . Large Family Room.
Dining Room, 3 112 miles
~==~~~=~ apariments &amp; oH street park- docks, 1 mi. outside
ing. Rent to own, $750/mo Gallipolis. View photos/info from . town. No pets.
**NOTIC.t.:••
with option to buy, Must online, Code 4107 or call
References
Required.
qualify. (740}710-0007
(740 )441 -1605.
$650/mo . (740)446-3292

r

Borrow Smart. Contact
the ' Ohio Division of
Financial
Institution's
Office of ' Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
nance your home or
obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments ol
fees or insurance. Call the
Otlice ol Consumer
Affairs toll tree at t-666·
278-0003 to learn if the
mortgage broker or
lender
is
properly
licensed: (This IS a public
service announcement
from 1he Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)

36759 Rocksprings Road ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 and fill
out an applicatiOn for the
classes .
EKleni'Jicare

Hea~h Services, Inc. is an
equal opportunity employer
that encourages workplace
diversily. M/F DN
Overbrook Cenler located
@ 333 Page St., Middlepon,
Ohio is pleased to announce
we will be holding an STNA
Class, scheduled for May 8·
21. Hours will be SAM·
4:30PM. 11 you are interest·
ed in joining our lriendty and
dedicalod staff, please stop
by our front office Mon .-Fri.,
9AM-5PM and till out an
application. Space is limit·
od, applications will be
accepted until May 1. Full
Time and Part Time posi·
lions available to those qual·
iliad individuals completing
lhe class. Applications must

MISCELlANEOUS

1

i3So.

I·--Oiiiiiiiioiiiio_.J
. ACR~Gf.

--oit"OiliiR.SiiAiili.l'l:o

0

Celebrating 26 year1 In Butilll!l ..
W)1hov,ltc, Virglria,
1·800-334·1203

Great used 2005 3 bedroom .
16K80 with vinyl/shingle.
Must sell. Only $25.995 witb
delivery. Call (740)385·4367
r=;--:-~::---,

106 acres on Leon Baden
Rd . stream, pasture &amp;
woods, electric avail. can
Randall Bradford 101 dirac·
lioos
304·206·6326.
~------- S125,000
Century
21
0 Down even with less than·1 House on Land Contract Runyan Assocaites Tim
perfeel credit" is available on Pomeroy. 740-992-5858
Runyan ·Broker
this 3 bedroom. 1 bath
home. Corner lot, fireplace. Miniature !arm . UnibUIII 2 Mobile Home lot for rent
home on 4 acres: on SA
modern kitchen. jacuzzi tub.
1 near Vinton . and 1 on
Payment around $550 per t60. 3BA, IBA. Peaches. Georges Creek Rd . Call
berries. grapes. Swimniing
month. 740-367·7129.
(7401441·1111
pool. New applianceS. Wood
H o-r-se-.p-rop_e_r_ty_--a-cras-w~
ith
104 Tatum
Dr. New burner. $95,000. 740-388- -

"'-Y

TRACTOR·TRAILER

S Earn Extra Money$

675-6578

Clay Townhouse, Lovers
Lane Off 218, 26th &amp; 27th.
McCa &amp; eBmas.

I"OK SALE

FEDERAL

1111'1 0\111 \1
'i 1!111 Is

tv

GAWPOUS

MoBIUHO~US

POSTAL JOBS

TRAINING CENTE RS

DRIVERS needed to pro·
Free puppies, half Border videlit&gt;raryservicethrough·
Collis. 740·256-1652 or 740- out Gallia County. Required:
256-1233
COL. love of reading , abiliW
to work with people of all
Free Rod Iron Patio ages, computer and Internet
Furniture , Chaise lounge &amp;2 skills. Must De 25 or Older.
benches, (740)446·9921
able to dr!ve 35ft Bluebird
bookmobile. Substnute posi·
Moving must lind homes for liOns available. For appli es·
yellow kittens &amp; cat some tion and complete job
tlave bobtails 304-675-8720 description. visit Bossard
library. 7 Spruce Street.
. EOE .
needs some work 304· Gallipolis, Oh10.

r

~Weeded

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

,Join us in making calls
for major Political
organizations!
~~-----, · An Ellcellem way to earn ·
ANNOUNCEMENTS
money. The New Avon .
Call today to schedule an
Can Marilyn 304·882·2645
interview!
ALL KCHS ALUMNI SEC· AVON! All -Areas! To 8uy or
1-877-463·6247
OND ANNUAL REUNION . sen. Shirley Spears, 304·
ext. 2331
MOOSE LODGE. MAY 26, 675·1429.
2007, 8-1:00 ENTmTAINBennigans. hiring Servers·
MENT. (304)675-4831 OR
Host. and Cooks. Apply at
(7 40)446·3488
the Point Pleasant location
only
Conceal &amp; Carry Training .
NRA Certified Instructor. Carpentry, Drywall, Painting,
Sam sharp, May 5th. General Labor. Must be
Mercervil le Fire Dept, email dependable. Neat &amp; Clean
star key @in b OK. co m . appearance. Tak1ng applica(740}256-6514
tions at Special Care
Cleaning. 1743 Centenary
Ad , Gallipolis.
G V" "''i\Y

YARD SAID

POLICIES: Ohio. Valley Publlahing reserves the right to edit. reject, or uncal any ad at any time. Error1 mull be reported on the tirat day of
Trlbune-Sentinei-Regiater will be respon1ible for no more than the Cotll of the 1p1ce occupied by the error and onty the filii interUon. We ahall not be II
any 1011 or expense that ruutta from tile publicatiOn or omlulon ol an advertlstmef1t. Correelion will be made In the firs! available edition. o Bo1
are always confidential. o Current r.te card applies. o All real estate adv~t~tiaements 11111 1ubject to the Federal Fair Housing Ac1 of 1968. • Thle ,...,.,,.,..
aceepta only help wanted ada mMIIng EOE atandanls. We willrtot knowingly accept any advert Iaing In violation of the law.

HEtJ&gt; WANTF.ll

Buying Junk Cars.Trucks &amp;
Wrecks , Pay Cash J D
Salvage
(304)773·5343
(304)674 ·1374

I.

We will not knowin

Lost:
Full-blooded
Norwegian Elk Hound,
Storys Run Ad area·
Gallia/Meigs, Answers to
Pe e1. 740 367-7204

must be prepaid'

Currency, 8pm &amp; Saturdays 10·4pm. at

ltD

This
newspape
ccopts only h~l
anted ads meetin
OE standards.

FOUND

• All ads

TO DRIVE

.Estel
dvertlsements ar
ubject to the Federa
air Hausing Act o
968.

r

Thursday for Sundays

2842 .

Real

iAlrr AND

Friday For Sundays Paper

. Solitaire Diamonds- M.T.S. TA Communications 740Coin .S hop. 151 Second
_ ,_
441 97 1
Avenue. Gallipolis, 740-446- r-"LEJ~Jmr--,

,._Current rate car
pplies.

y accept any adver
isement in violatia
ltholaw.

Sunday Display: 1:00

Proofsets. Gold Rings. Pre- Help Wanted evenings 5 _

hat results from th
ubllcalion or omis
ion of an advertise
nt. Corrections wil
made in the firs
vallable edition.

&gt;All

Publlc:atlon

Sunday In-Colu.m n: 1:00 p . m.

Help wanted at Darst Adult
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. Group Home, some lifting,
Silver and Gold Coins, 7·5 shift . 740·992·5023.

esponslble for n

)-Box number ads ar
lways confidential .

Bu&amp;lness Days Prior To

L.r_.·_w,;ro;;,A,;;011•u•~-·w
'l ~~~s99·8042. 24/hrs. emp.

he Tribune-Sentinel
agister
will b
ore than the cost a
he space occupie
y the error and onl
he first insertion. W
hall nol be liable to
ny loss or expen

Monday-Friday for Inseirtlon

In Next Day's Paper

k itnca,rl y Ie@co mcast. net

*POLICIES*

y of public!ation an

Now you can have borders and graphics
4..J
addedtoyourclassifiedods .
Jl~
If'!'.
Borders $3.00/per ad
t!i
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

Display Ads

All Display: 12 Noon 2

• lndude Phone Number And Address When
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

AUt:llON AND
H.EAMARKET

Errors Must B
oporte&lt;l Oh the firs

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
DII!SCription • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

Domino's Pizza Now Hiring
Beautilul Pill Boller Pups, Safe Drivers &amp; Man8gement
Born 2-26, 3M. 4F. 1 Brindle Point Pleasant. Gallipolis &amp;
restai-e Black &amp; White, Must Pomeroy locations Apply 1n
Person '
Go ASAP, 1740)367-0248

·

Websites:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinet.com
www.mydailyregister.com

To Place
UCrtbttne ·
Sentinel
l\eg15ter
. Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday... or l'ax To 446-3ooa
or Fax To (740) 992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

r~·---~-~.·-"-•I

•
' .

Gallia
County,
O.H

\\\Ill \11111 \IS

from PageBl

m:rlbune - Sentinel - l\e tster

CLASSIFIED

'Z' was difference for Cavs in Game 1

-. Mercy
VanMeter
and
Nikki
Guinther who hao both ·
walked for a 5-2 Meigs
lead.
Eddy buckled down in the
third inning to strike out all
three Meigs batters, but the
next frame Meigs was back
at work. ·
VanMeter reached on an
error and scored on a
Whitney Smith single,
Smith's fo11rth RBI of the
riight. The score now stood
6-2.
, Kasey Turley came on to
· pitch for SHS in the ' fifth
after Meigs had scored three
· more runs. Shanalle Smith
reached on an error, Barr
reached on a hard shot error ·
to center, and Beha fanned
but reached on a passed
ball, allowing a run to score.
Ebersbach walked to load
the bases, then VanMeter
had an RBI ground•out tlie
score 9-2.
Mei~s scored three more
times m the sixth for the six
inning mercy, 12-2.
Eddy went four and one
third tnnings to allow five
hits, seven strikeouts; five
, Bryan W1ttera/photo
waiks, and nine runs. Turley Meigs catcher Shanalle Smith knocks out a single during
went one and one-third Tuesday's TVC interdivisional softball contest with Southern
innings for three strikeouts at Star Mill Park in Racine.
and two walks.
MEIGS 12, SOUTH!RN 2
.Shanalle Smith
Southern
is
idle
Meigs
.320 133 - 12 6 3
SHS (6-11 ): Sarah Eddy, Kasoy Turley
Wednesday, ·but goes to
Southern 200 000 256
{ 5~ and Whitney Wolle-Rittle
MHS . (9-8): Halley Ebarsbach and
WP - EberSili!Ch: LP- Eddy
Eastern Thursday.

..

The Daily Sentinel o Page 83

a;:::~~~==~

r

FIND

A JOB

OR A NEW
' CAREER
IN THE
ClASSIFIEDS

r,=;--~Mo=--111-LE-:
. H:-:0-M_E.....,S
I'OR SAu:

All real estate advertising

in this newspaper is,
au.bject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act ol1968
wt'lich makes it IUegat to
adventse '"any
preferenr:e, limitation or
dlacrlmlnation b1aed on
race. color, religion , sex
famlllalatatus or national
origin, or any Intention to
makit any such
preference, limitation or
discrimination."
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertiSements lor real
estate which Is In
violation o"f the law. Our
, readers are hereby
Informed that an
dwellings adyertlsed In
thla newspaper are
avellable on an equal
opportunity btua.

1982 Mobile Home 4 bed·
room 2 add on 14K70. semi
furnished
0.50
acres
$28.000 30 4·882·21 96
1987-- 14X56-- 2 Br., 1 bath,
all electric . Must move. 740698·1815. $6000.00

·Attention!
local compan~ offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENT' programs 1for you to buy your
home instead of renting.
' 100% f1nancing
• Less than perfec1. credit
accepted
' Payment could be th e
same as .rent.
Mortgage
locators
(740)367·0000

95 Hor ton 14li70. 2 BR. 2
BA. VinyVshingle Cent. Heat For rent . Pomeroy, 2
and Air. Part. Furn. Like new.
BDRM ..FamilyRoom,S475,P
t2,900. 304-633-?536
Ius
Utili1ys&amp;Oep.
Aei.Aequ ired.
740-8435264.

BEST BUY
NEW 2007 4 Bed

$49,989
11tt1wnt JU.mmt
mymidwesthome.com
Clearance Sale. New Total
drywall homes from $299.63
per month. Call 17 40)3852434

HUD HOMES! 4 bedroom, 2
bath. $199/mo, 3 bedroom,
$198/mo.More homes avail·
. able. 5% dn. 20 yrs @ 8%.
For listings 800·559·4 tog
ext F144
Middleport.3bdrm.basement
(lull),fenced yard ,neighbor·
hoo&lt;l goo&lt;l,$550 plus ut &amp;
dep.,ref.req ., 740·843·5264.

�•

'Page B2 o The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, April 25. 2007

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wahama blasts Raiders, 17-8 Wahama blanks Lady Irish, 3-0
BY BIIYAN WALmiS

BY GARY CLARK
SPORT~

BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

CORRESPONDENT

CHESHIRE
The
Wahama White Falcon
baseball team withstood a
late River Valley Raider
comeback rally Thursday
evening with the Bend
Area diamond nine needing a five-run sixth inning .
offensive explosion to
escape 'with a 17-8 hardball deci sion.
The White Falcons
jumped oil! to a sudden 81 advantage before River
Valley sto rmed back to
within a run after scoring
three time s in the fourth
inning and another four
tallies in the fifth frame.
WHS put the contest away
Brad Shermanlphoto
by scoring eight run s over Wahama's Garr&amp;tt Underwood slides home as River Valley
the final two innings for catcher Ryan Eggleton goes for the tag during a high school
the somewhat deceiving baseball game Tuesday in Cheshire.
17-8 win.
Wahama captured it s hasty 6-0 edge. The while fanning six and
third win in its last four Raiders broke into the walking one.
outings to improve to 4-8 scor ing column with a run
Eggle)on got the starton the 2007 spring season in th e second before the ing ·call for River Valley
while
River - Valley Bend Area. team posted and failed to make it out
dropped to 1- 13 following single tallies in each of of the fir st after walking
the thi rd and fo urth five and hitting two batthe diamond setback.
.The wild affair featured frames for an 8-1 advan- ters without recording an
25 run s, 25 hits and· nine tage.
out. Eggleton was tagged
errors with six WHS playRiver Valley bounced with
the
loss with
ers experiencing multiple back to within a si ngle Mulholland goi ng the rest
hits
games.
Garrett ·digit with three run s in of the way allowing 13
Underwood stroked a cou- the bottom half of the runs on 16 hits with three
pie of extra base smashes fourth and four more in free passes and two
with a double and a triple the fifth but that would be strikeouts.
with
Brenton Clark, all the offense the Raiders
Wahama, in preparing
Nathan Stafford, Trevor could gather. Wahama put for -the fast approaching
Peters, William Zuspan the game a.way with a run sectional tournament post
and Justin Arnold all col- in the fifth and six more season, is slated to host
lecting a pair of safeties in the sixth before cap- Southern in a 5 p.m . outin a 16 hit attack for the ping the nights scoring ing today ·before closing
White Falcons.
activity with a pair of sev- out the week with succesGibbs . led River Valley enth imiing tallies.
' sive road contests against
with three base knocks on
Caleb Roach, th e first of
Ravenswood at 5 p.m . on
the day with Jones adding two WHS pitchers on the
Thursday and Buffalo in a
a pair of singles for the day, came away with the
Raiders.
mound win after going 7 p.m. encounter on
Jacob Roach, Cody four innings allowing five Friday.
Gerlach, Derek Veazey runs on five hits with
WAHAMA 17, RIVER VALLEY 8
and Travis Ferguson three strikeouts and a hit Wahama. 421 116 2 - 17 16 5
chipped in with one hit batter. Derek Veazey fin- R Valley 010 340 0 - 8 9 4
C. Roach . Veazey (5) and Underwood.
apiece fot Wahama with ished up on the hill allow- Eggleton,
Mulholland (1) and Jones.
Mulholland,
Caldwell , ing three runs on four hits WP- Roach; LP - Eggleton
Eggleton and Frazien
coming up with one hit
each for River Valley.
Wahama jumped out . to
the early lead with four
Subscribe today.
first inning runs and two
992-2155
01ore in the second for a

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Invite

Kimi Swisher took the junior duo of Brandan
three-spot in the 3200m Fisher and Cornelius
race.
English brought home the
· from Page Bl
Meigs placed third in .lone silver performances.
Division II on the boys' . Fisher took second in the
side of thmgs, posllhg a lOOm dash, while English
Soulsby and Adrian Bolin team score of 53 points. ·did the same in the 200m
combined on the other win Wheelersburg won the six- dash.
in the 4x200 ·competition. team event with an overall
Both also pl!t in a bronze
MHS was also runner-up in . tally of 112 point s, fol- effort as well, with Fisher
both the 4x400 and. 4x800 lowed . by
runner-_up placing third in the 400m
relay events.
Waverly with 99.
dash and English accom• Bolin also won silver in
Portsmouth was fourth plishing that same feat in
the I 00-meter hurdles, with 30 markers, fifth - the 1OOm dash. The
while Soulsby took third place Minford h;~d 20 and 4x IOOm relay team also
in the 800-meter run.
Portsmouth West rounded took third place.
Melissa Grueser won out the competition with
For complete results of
bronze in the discus, 17 points.
the Oak Hill Invitational,
Casey Smith took third in
MHS did not win a gold visit the OHHS website at
the I OOm hurdles and medal in any event, but the www.oakhill.k 12.oh.us

HARTFORD, W.Va. Wahama softball improved
its overall record to 16-5 this
spring following Tuesday's
3-0 victory over visiting
Huntington St. Joseph.
The Lady Falcons managed only six hits in the .tri-·
umph. but starter Kylie
Riggs stole the show by
throwing a two-hit shutout
over seven innings. Riggs
also walked five and struck
out six in the triumph.
The Lady Irish tried to
put a good scare into the
hosts during their opening
at-bat, however, loading the
bases with nobody out in
the top of the first. .
· Kaya nna Sayre snagged a

line drive and turned a douHysell, Kebler, .Sayre;
ble play, then Riggs got out Riggs. · Young and Haley
of the inning: unscathed Davis each had a hit apiece
when the following at-bat in the triumph. Stephanie
turned into a ground out. St. Sang had .both hits · for
Joe's never came closer to a: Huntington St. Joe 's.
scoring opr,onunity.
· Maddie Purtee took the
The Red and White loss for the Lady Iri sh,
responded in theirhalfofthe surrendering a walk and
first when Mary Kebler fanning five in her six
innings of work .
reached safely on an error.
Wahama returns to action
Kebler later scored when
.
.
. . Thursday when it travels to
Sayre smgled her home for a Buffalo for a 5 p.m. cori1-0 advantage.
test. Buffalo is currently
Ke_bler added her own ' the top- ranked team in
RBI 111 the th1rd when her Class A. Wahama is cursmgle plated Taylor Hysell rently seventh.
for a 2-0 edge, and Wahama
WAHAI.\A 3, ST. JOSEPH 0
added another insurance run
St. Joe's
000 000 0 - 0 2 2
in the fourth when Chelsea Wahama
101 100 x
361
Hicks drove in Kayla HSJ (nla) : Maddie Purtee and Stephanie
·
Young with a fielder's sang
WH S (16-5): Kylie Riggs and Mary Kebler
choice for a 3-0 score.
WP- Riggs: LP - Purtee

CLEVELAND (AP)- At
the mall or at the movies.
Cavaliers 7-foot-3 center
Zydrunas llgauskas stands
out in a crowd. On the court,
he's usually the biggest of
the big men in the middle.
Tough to miss him.
But for some strange reason.
the
Washington
Wizards couldn't find him in
Game I - until it was, too
late.
With a huge size advantage down low, llgauskas
scored II of his 16 points in
the fourth quarter when
Cleveland finally stomped
out Washingion for a 97-82
victory io the opener of their
first-round playoff series.
It wasn't LeBron James or
Larry Hughes who did the
Wizards in. It was the guy
'nicknamed 'Z' who fittingly
put them to sleep.
If Washington has any
notion of evening this bestof-seven series in Game 2 on
Wednesday, the Wizards
must do a better job of' con·
taining Ilgauskas, who is
five inches taller than Etan
Thomas, Washington's starting center.
However,
llgauskas,
Cleveland's gentlemanly
giant, thinks the Wizards'
priorities will remain elsewhere.
"I think they should be
worried about LeBron and
Larry more," he said.
James didn't practice on
his sprained left ankle
Tuesday but will play in
Game 2. He ~ot hurt on a
drive to the basket in
Sunday.'s third quarter and
has spent the past two days
getting rest and treatment.
"I'll be ready," he said.
The
undermanned
Wizards had better be, too.
They' ve spent the past two .

days regrouping and practic- bench. Haywood played just
ing in Washington . On five minute., - zero in the
Monday, forward Caron fourth . The burly 30-yearButler had the cast taken off old has had success against
his broken right hand. While llgauskas in past matchups,
he thinks he can be back in so i.t was puzzling to see him
time for Game 3, cqach keep his sweat pants on . .
Eddie Jordan isn' t planning
"I can't do anything to
to have Butler unless the change the situation ,"
Wizards can advance.
Haywood said Tuesday.
Although they were with- 'That's up to him (Jerdan).
out leading scorer Gilbert. If there's going to be a lot of
Arenas or Butler, the - changes. it'll be because he
Wizards did enough to hang feels there should be. If not
around with the Cavs in the he ' ll play the guys he thinks
fourth quarter of Game I. will help him win the
They were within striking g11me."
distance
when
Jordan
Ilgauskas was shocked
switched to a smaller lineup Haywood wasn't bangi ng
hoping for :an offensive into him inside.
spark.
"He (Haywood) has had
Instead, he left the success guarding 'me before
Wizards vulnerable on and I think for sure I'm
defense and the Cavaliers going to see him a lot more,"
made them pay.
he said. "He's a good on·They pounded the ball into the-ball defender in the post
Ilgauskas, who scored nine because of his length. He
points in a decisive 13-4 can bother a lot of shots
burst that put Cleveland up because his wing span is
by I 5.
.
bigger than mine, and he ·
At
various
. times, . holds hi s ground pretty,
llgauskas was guarded by well ."
Thomas. Atawn Jamison (6- · Haywood has been 111
foot-9), Darius Songaila (6- Jordan's doghouse for
foot-9) and Michael Ruffin weeks; but with the season
(6-foot·ST. Not one of them on the . brink, it might be
could handle him as time to turn him loose.
Cleveland's big man shot Jordan wasn't making any
over the top, drew fouls and promi ses, but appeared to be
made free throws.
·
leaning toward giving
"Obviously, he's a lot big- Haywood some time.
ger and taller," Songaila
"We want him to play with
said. "You have to stay a lot of energy, intelligently,
between him and the basket. and let's see what happens,"
You can't .let him back you Jordan said. "You 'make your
down under the rim. With own minutes. He's practiced
his height he can easily well the. last two days. He's
reach over and get .the tip upbeat and let's see if it carand some rebounds and stuff ries over to the game."
·
like that."
Jordan, too, would like to
Surprisingly,
while get more offensively from
Ilgauskas was having his Thomas, who was just !-ofway with the Wizards, 4 from the field, made three
Jordan
kept
7-footer turnovers and didn't get to
Brendan Haywood on the the line in 20 minutes.

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

.

-

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.

Bryan Walters/photo

Meigs relief pitcher Austin Dunfee, left, throws a w~rm-up toss while teammate Dave Poole
(30) and pitching coach Mike Kloes, right, ooserve during the .sixth inning of Tuesday's TVC
Interdivisional l&gt;aseball game against Southern at Star Mill Park in Racin!l.

Avenge

seventh inning Meigsthreat. The SHS defense
made some goo~ plays in
fromPageBl
the frame, but Meigs still
had some spark in hopes of
pulling
off the win. Bryan
lead to work with.
,
Delong led off with a douChapman struck out three ble to center and Bolin was
Meigs batters in the sixth. hit by a piich. Chapman
Meanwhile, Southern plated fanned the next batter and
two addition runners to pad then snagged a drive up the
the lead at 8-1 . Johnson was middle for a l-3 ¥round out
hit by a pitch, stole second to preserve the wm.
·
and third, then Marnhout
Southern's
Chapman
walked and stole second as struck out ten to pick up the
Austin Dunfee came onto win, walked three, and hit
the scene. Nick Buck clob- two. Delong suffered the
bered his third hit of the loss with three strikeouts
night, a two-run double.
and five walks, while
Chapman fought off a Dunfee fanned none and

walked one.
Southern hitters were
Buck ·
(three
hits),
Chapman
(two
hits),
Kleski (two hits ), and
Jordan Pierce a single.
Meigs hitters were Bolin,
Poole, Aaron Story, Cale~
Davis, and Delong.
.
Southern
goes
to
Wahama Wedne'sday and to
Eastern Thursday for a big
TVC contest.
Meigs

SOUTHERN 8, MEIGS 1
100 000 o - 152

Southern

012 302 x

-

882

, MHS (11 ·6): Bryan Delong, Austin
Dunfee [B) and Aaron Slory
·SHS (15-4): Ryan Chapman and Butch
Marnhout
WP- Chapman: LP- Delong

o~arltir~

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m .. to 5:00 p.m.
.!fQ.W IQ WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

AUCTION: Modular House
and tools &amp; Equipment.
Buckeye
Hills Career
Center. Rio Grande, OhiD. T
&amp; E at 11 :OO a.m., House at
12:00 noon on May 5,2007.
740-245-5334

Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the rlghllo e&lt;lit,

reject or cancel any
ad at any lime.

1935

U.S.

4

YARIISALE, ·
Pol\lEROY/MIDDLE

Rain or shinlt. Sat 4/28,
Bam·?, no before Sam sales.
Syracuse 2nQ St.. across
from Fire Station, sofa &amp;
"chair, bike. Pfaitz. mise

MObile Home.set.up. servic·
COUNTRY SEmNG
es, windows, doors, steps &amp; 3br. 2ba . with 24 x 24 ft
·supplies
{304)391·5863 garage. 9/10 of an acre
locatt!d in Nitro.
- approx . 8 miles !rom Pt.
Pleasant on At 2 ca ll for
TURNED DOW~ ON
Appointment 304·675·5995
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Win! . Home in country. 9.73 acres
1-888-582·3345
3 BR . 1 1/2 Bath. Full base·
men!. 2 112 car garage.
~:;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Mature P1ne trees. 2 barns .
r-.:10
old school house. $130,000.
HOf\fl)ji
call 740. 286 •7212 or 937 •
-,.J 515-8670
L,

$tG.5J-$2 ?.S81hr., now hir-

ing. For application and free
governement job info. call
American Assoc. of labo r 1-

'FULL·TIME CLASSES'
'COL TRAINING··
' FINANCING AVAilABLE'

Ha1•WAN11:11

1 J~~-c
A.'i&gt;~ ~ril&gt; 11'
W~'&gt;

-so~ I

1-U ttc.~ I,

Independent COntractors
(mu"st be at least 18)
needed to deliver the
Ohio Valley Phone Book
in Gallipolis. Jackson.
Wellstlln &amp; surrounding
areas.
1-866-606-8900
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble cralls, wood
iterris.To $480/wk Materials
provided. Free "informatiOn
pkg. 24Hr. 801 -428-4649
Accepting applica·uons for
part time bartender 3 days a
week. Apply at the American
l egion Post 27, McCormick
Ad . 3pm·6pm, April 24th·
301 h.

Dnvers Needed:
COL
Drivers willing to drive for
local ready-mix company.
Experience is preferred but
not necessary. Oriyers must
be willing to do pre mainte·
nance on trucks &amp; equip·
ment, yard wor~ &amp; other mi~cellaneous
choreS.
Experience operating equip·
ment &amp; extra skills svch as
welding a plus
Call
(304)937-3410

0

ALLIANCE

' JOB PLACEM~NT' '

LOOK HE;RE
'For a Better Employment
Opportunity!

~

© 2007 by NEA, Inc.

110 .

Hlu WANTI:n

110
'

HllJ' WANfEV

1

We offer:

0 Full time and Part time
shifts available
0 Up 1o $8.50/hour +
weekly bonus potential
0 Paid training
0 Pa1d vacations &amp; paid
holidays
0 Medical, dental &amp; VISion
insurance
0 401 (k) retirement plan
0 Friendly, professional
work atmosphere

Receptjonist
John Sang Ford Lincoln
Meccury is experiencing
continued growth that
reQuires us to·lind a
energetic Receptionist .
Qualifications that would
be a good fit for the jc:ib
is. out going personality,
good phqne skills and
cashiering experience.
Contact Dee Swfeney io_
person at John Sang
Ford Lincoln Mercury.
195 Upper River Road
Gallipolis, Ohio

Jilii9.1M

f!:Jj&gt;

I · '"""" . ... , ,.,

, :,erv1ce

Aa~lsor

Due to the increase in our
Traffic the Tri·Stat
le&lt;id~r in automotive repai
is looking for a Service
Adviser. Qualifications for
the job are a strong desire
to help people with their
service needs.. friendly,
outgoing and a good
understanding of automo·
tivC repair. In addition to
the best pay plan in the
. area, we also offer 401 K
retirement. health care. life
insurance and disability
insurance. To apply. con·
tact Jim Thomas, Service
Manager. 740·446·9800
~rvice

EOE
--~

ry ' • •, .. . . . ... ..

Rocksprings Rehabilitation
EOE
Center provides residents
with outstanding nursing
Care and rehabilitation serv· ' - - - - - : - - - "
i9es helping them return tO a Super 8 Motel is accepting
life · of independence at applications for Front Desk
home. We currently have Clerk. Must be able to work
opportunities for LPN 'S at flexible hours and have
our facility in Pomeroy, Ohio. str ong customer service
We offer a COMPETIVITE skills. Apply in person. NO
SALARY SCALE, an eKce f· PHONE CALLS.
lent benefit ·package and a
supportive work envirOn· . ~~-~----,
men!. Interested candidates
ScHoolS
Should
apply
to:
(N)TRucnON
Aockspnngs Aetlabililation, "--oiliiliiliiiliilii-r'
36759 Rocksprings .Road.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Gallipolis Career College
EKtendicare
Health (Careers Close To Hom e)
Services. Inc. is an 8qual Call Today! 740 ' 446"4367•
800 21 4 0452
opportunity employer that
t'
"
encourages
workplace A=~:~~ot~~e;;co!:~~~':ng
diversity. M/F ON
. Council ta lndepend£1"11 Coll&amp;ges
and SchOds t21 4s.

1150

Lookipg
for
fn·Hom e
Childcare provider 12 hour
days. Ref. required, Serious
inQuires only Call 304·675·
3161
~-----...,.-- - - - - - - - Roofers: Metal rooting,' sid·
Now accepting applications ing and EPDM. Top pay and
for GriiVFry Cook. Apply in benefits. 724·229·8020
person at 308 2nd Av6, rr:::;=====;;==;=;=;t
Gallipolis.
Salesperson Needed.
EKperience in hardwara/
NOW HIRING, Point pleas· building matenals Apply
ant and Alo Grande
in
perSon
Mon-Fri
McDonalds. Apply within.
Thomas Do It Center
245·5156 and 304·675· Gallipolis, OH.
390

a

· ~------Buckeye Hills Career Center
is now accepting applica·
lions tor substitute teachers
(in all academic. and C·T
areas).
Conlact
the
Sliperintendents OHice cit
740-245·5334. EEO
POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg. Pay $20/hr or
$57K annually
Including Federal Benefits
and QT. Paid Training.
Vacations·FT/PT
1-800-584-1775 EKt #8923
USWA
R&amp;J Trur:k1ng leadmg The Way
R&amp;J Truck1l"l9 now H inr~g at our

New Haven, WV Terminal. For
Aeg1onal Hauls·Dllmp D1v. 1
yoar OTR ~enli11bla axp. Call I·
800-462·9365 esk lor Kent

.Haven.WV. 31;&gt;dl2ba. Ranch, 0815
lg.sunroom, 2 car gar. great Miniature farm . Unibuilt
area. D; 304-675-3637 .E; . home on 4 acres. on SR
304·882·2334
t60. JBR, 1BA. Peaches.
berries.
grapes. Swimm1ng
t9B9 Clayton Mobile Home.
14K60, 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath pool. New appJiances. Wood
wilh a 12K t8 additional bed· burner. $95,000. 740·388·
room . 12K6 muddroom on 0815

~ -~5

www.comic5.com

lk======dl
TheVillage of Rio Grande is
taking applications for the
position of part lime police
officer. Two years eKperience
is
required.
Applications can be pick'ed
up al the Rio Grande
Municipal Building Monday·
Friday,
8:30AM
until
4:30PM. Applications are
due back tO the Municipal
Building by noon on Monday
1 2007
May 4.
·
Wanted: Dir€!ct Supervision
employees to oversee male
youth in a staff secu r1;1 resi·
den!lal environment. Must
pass
physical !raining
requirement. Pay based on
experience. Gall (740)37?9083 between 9-3 Mon·Fri

Nursing Assistant classes
beginning May 7th, 2007. 11
you enjoy elderly people and
want to become a member
of our health Care team.
pleSse stop by R"ocksprings
Rehabilitation Center ' at

r,150
~-~SCH~OO~LS~-, 1/2 acre lot with chain link
fence &amp; 10K10 building,
IN.'iffiULTION
Asking $40,000. (740)379·
2668
be dependable/allendance 2005 3 bedroom, 2 bath,
is a must) team players with Commodore
Ooublewtde
posilive attitudes to join us in Home. Never lived in. As
provid1ng outstanding, quali· new 28x60 with delivery and
ty care to our residents. II sot-up
$45,000
call
yO\J have any questions con· (3041675·5578
,,
tact Hollie Bumgarner. LPN.
Staff
Deve lopment
CoQ(dinator @ 740·992·
6472. Overbrook Center is
an E.O.E. and a participant ·
of the drug free workplace
Midwest Homes
program.
mymldwesthome.com

24n HOME
STORE

170

3bd,
GALLIPOLIS.
Foreclosure! Buy for only
554.900! More homes
Oil &amp; Gas Well Leases. available, Far laca liStings
Addison/Cheshire Twps. 8 call 800-559-4109 xF254
Berea Wells comp w/ Pump
3BA, 2BA, 1 acre, metal out·
Jacks. Motors. Tanks &amp;
buifding. LA Laundry. Large
Sales Meters $56,000
Kit. HT and SG district.
Phone 740-934-2073
$75000. 740·256·9137

luJ~ &amp;

I,

I

-N-ew
- Ho_m
_e_l_o,-S:--ale-.:--sa-v-e
$20,000. Immediate occu pancy. applrances Inc., 2
story w/wrap around· porch.
3-Br.. 2&amp;.1f2
tlath ,"large
garage w/Bonus room over·
h~ad·Fun Basem'ent &amp;
More.Selter will pay cl_osing
cost. 740·992·5635 or 992·

_2 4_7_8 ·----~-

One acre along Rt 7 below
Holiday Inn in Kanauga, OH.
Commercial
property.
(740)446-4782

"

.
.......
·' ~ '.::
'

-

6

40K80 insulated/ ·heated
horse Darn. 10 stalls. Bri ck
wash sta ll with 4 Bedroom
living quarlers. 37 addilional
acres can be purchased
also. (740)446-3844
Undeveloped land, 6.86 ac
mit avail, pond, openl wooded. Long term (5·15 yr)
lease for mobile home or
other approved. uses. Lac
Brum!ield Ad , H~rrison Twp.
ph (5 13)295·6309 leave
msg lor return call.

~r~-:RI:A:.--L-::El~!\1:-A~n-:..,
WANITJ&gt;

~.·- - - - - Need to sell your home?
late on payments, divorce.
job transfer or a death? 1
can buy your home. All cash
and QUICk ClOSing. 740·4163130.

1!1\111,

~10

HOUSES
IUKRI-Nr

Reduced
2 bedroom house on
large 2-story home on Graham School Ad. $400
Locust Street. Gallipolis. 4 per month. plus deposit.
Bedrooms, 2 Bath. KIT~ FM. Water include 304·675·
DR, LA, Laundry, out-build· 2178
ing, fenced yard , close to
WANriD
4br,
2
1/2
bath,
2FP,
2
acres
.
schools.
Excellent 3 Bedroom House in
To Do
AC , $149,500 (304)674- Conditi on! 740-441-1202.
Syracuse. $500/month +
304·675·6363.
W1ll cleanup old buildings, 5921 or (304)593·8871
deposit No Pets. (304)675basements, and out build·
Attention!
Remodeled stngle story 5332
·ings. ca11tor 1ree es t"1mates, Local company oHering "NO home wt·rh ' 3 bed rooms and
DOWN PAYMENT" pro- 1 112 baths on large lot. 3·bedroom, 2·bath, hOuse
grams for you to buy your Located at 3408 Mossman with dining and kitchen
home instead of renting.
Ave .. Pt Pleasant , wv· together, livingroom, all car·
BUSINESS
• 100% financing
Asking 45,500 Sellers Will peted ellcept kitchen , deck
OtroRTUNm'
·• Less than perfect credit pay closing cost. For off dining area, stove, ref rig·
~==;~~=~ accepted
'appointment to see: 304· era tor, dishwasher provided.
• Payment could be the 576·2247
123 Sunset Lane oH
•NOTICE•
same as rent
Sandhill· Road ,
Point
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· Mortgage
LoCators. Single story home with 2 Pleasant. $'700 montllly, ptus
G c~
_
bedrooms aM 1 bath. Large deposit.
References
17401367 0000
IN
Qr ." recommends
lot
loc8ted at 2112 required Call304·675·2319
that you do business with Brand new log home sitting Madison Ave . Pt. Pleasant. - , - - - - - : - - - people yo~ know, and on approx. 1.44 acres, WV Asking $29.500. Sellers 3Br/2Ba.,Midd.,fen .yard .sec
NOT to send money almost ready to move into. will pay closing cost. For dep$250 / S540M .basethrough the mail until you Custom Amish Kitchen with appointment to see : 304·· ment,new roof&amp;furnace.304·
have investigated the solid .surtace counters, 3BR, 576-2247
675-8626 or 740·4 16·5620
lo=ff~ar:ln:g·::;;:==~ 2BA,
$142,000 .
Call
www.orvb.com
Pl
_17_4_01_25_6_·9_24_7_ _ __
All new, 3 Bedrocm. ·2 full
5 BR 3.5 Bath, 5 acres
MONtY
balh, New Kitchen, living
TO l...oM'
Building Downtown with 3 with access to ·the boat
Room . Large Family Room.
Dining Room, 3 112 miles
~==~~~=~ apariments &amp; oH street park- docks, 1 mi. outside
ing. Rent to own, $750/mo Gallipolis. View photos/info from . town. No pets.
**NOTIC.t.:••
with option to buy, Must online, Code 4107 or call
References
Required.
qualify. (740}710-0007
(740 )441 -1605.
$650/mo . (740)446-3292

r

Borrow Smart. Contact
the ' Ohio Division of
Financial
Institution's
Office of ' Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
nance your home or
obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments ol
fees or insurance. Call the
Otlice ol Consumer
Affairs toll tree at t-666·
278-0003 to learn if the
mortgage broker or
lender
is
properly
licensed: (This IS a public
service announcement
from 1he Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)

36759 Rocksprings Road ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 and fill
out an applicatiOn for the
classes .
EKleni'Jicare

Hea~h Services, Inc. is an
equal opportunity employer
that encourages workplace
diversily. M/F DN
Overbrook Cenler located
@ 333 Page St., Middlepon,
Ohio is pleased to announce
we will be holding an STNA
Class, scheduled for May 8·
21. Hours will be SAM·
4:30PM. 11 you are interest·
ed in joining our lriendty and
dedicalod staff, please stop
by our front office Mon .-Fri.,
9AM-5PM and till out an
application. Space is limit·
od, applications will be
accepted until May 1. Full
Time and Part Time posi·
lions available to those qual·
iliad individuals completing
lhe class. Applications must

MISCELlANEOUS

1

i3So.

I·--Oiiiiiiiioiiiio_.J
. ACR~Gf.

--oit"OiliiR.SiiAiili.l'l:o

0

Celebrating 26 year1 In Butilll!l ..
W)1hov,ltc, Virglria,
1·800-334·1203

Great used 2005 3 bedroom .
16K80 with vinyl/shingle.
Must sell. Only $25.995 witb
delivery. Call (740)385·4367
r=;--:-~::---,

106 acres on Leon Baden
Rd . stream, pasture &amp;
woods, electric avail. can
Randall Bradford 101 dirac·
lioos
304·206·6326.
~------- S125,000
Century
21
0 Down even with less than·1 House on Land Contract Runyan Assocaites Tim
perfeel credit" is available on Pomeroy. 740-992-5858
Runyan ·Broker
this 3 bedroom. 1 bath
home. Corner lot, fireplace. Miniature !arm . UnibUIII 2 Mobile Home lot for rent
home on 4 acres: on SA
modern kitchen. jacuzzi tub.
1 near Vinton . and 1 on
Payment around $550 per t60. 3BA, IBA. Peaches. Georges Creek Rd . Call
berries. grapes. Swimniing
month. 740-367·7129.
(7401441·1111
pool. New applianceS. Wood
H o-r-se-.p-rop_e_r_ty_--a-cras-w~
ith
104 Tatum
Dr. New burner. $95,000. 740-388- -

"'-Y

TRACTOR·TRAILER

S Earn Extra Money$

675-6578

Clay Townhouse, Lovers
Lane Off 218, 26th &amp; 27th.
McCa &amp; eBmas.

I"OK SALE

FEDERAL

1111'1 0\111 \1
'i 1!111 Is

tv

GAWPOUS

MoBIUHO~US

POSTAL JOBS

TRAINING CENTE RS

DRIVERS needed to pro·
Free puppies, half Border videlit&gt;raryservicethrough·
Collis. 740·256-1652 or 740- out Gallia County. Required:
256-1233
COL. love of reading , abiliW
to work with people of all
Free Rod Iron Patio ages, computer and Internet
Furniture , Chaise lounge &amp;2 skills. Must De 25 or Older.
benches, (740)446·9921
able to dr!ve 35ft Bluebird
bookmobile. Substnute posi·
Moving must lind homes for liOns available. For appli es·
yellow kittens &amp; cat some tion and complete job
tlave bobtails 304-675-8720 description. visit Bossard
library. 7 Spruce Street.
. EOE .
needs some work 304· Gallipolis, Oh10.

r

~Weeded

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

,Join us in making calls
for major Political
organizations!
~~-----, · An Ellcellem way to earn ·
ANNOUNCEMENTS
money. The New Avon .
Call today to schedule an
Can Marilyn 304·882·2645
interview!
ALL KCHS ALUMNI SEC· AVON! All -Areas! To 8uy or
1-877-463·6247
OND ANNUAL REUNION . sen. Shirley Spears, 304·
ext. 2331
MOOSE LODGE. MAY 26, 675·1429.
2007, 8-1:00 ENTmTAINBennigans. hiring Servers·
MENT. (304)675-4831 OR
Host. and Cooks. Apply at
(7 40)446·3488
the Point Pleasant location
only
Conceal &amp; Carry Training .
NRA Certified Instructor. Carpentry, Drywall, Painting,
Sam sharp, May 5th. General Labor. Must be
Mercervil le Fire Dept, email dependable. Neat &amp; Clean
star key @in b OK. co m . appearance. Tak1ng applica(740}256-6514
tions at Special Care
Cleaning. 1743 Centenary
Ad , Gallipolis.
G V" "''i\Y

YARD SAID

POLICIES: Ohio. Valley Publlahing reserves the right to edit. reject, or uncal any ad at any time. Error1 mull be reported on the tirat day of
Trlbune-Sentinei-Regiater will be respon1ible for no more than the Cotll of the 1p1ce occupied by the error and onty the filii interUon. We ahall not be II
any 1011 or expense that ruutta from tile publicatiOn or omlulon ol an advertlstmef1t. Correelion will be made In the firs! available edition. o Bo1
are always confidential. o Current r.te card applies. o All real estate adv~t~tiaements 11111 1ubject to the Federal Fair Housing Ac1 of 1968. • Thle ,...,.,,.,..
aceepta only help wanted ada mMIIng EOE atandanls. We willrtot knowingly accept any advert Iaing In violation of the law.

HEtJ&gt; WANTF.ll

Buying Junk Cars.Trucks &amp;
Wrecks , Pay Cash J D
Salvage
(304)773·5343
(304)674 ·1374

I.

We will not knowin

Lost:
Full-blooded
Norwegian Elk Hound,
Storys Run Ad area·
Gallia/Meigs, Answers to
Pe e1. 740 367-7204

must be prepaid'

Currency, 8pm &amp; Saturdays 10·4pm. at

ltD

This
newspape
ccopts only h~l
anted ads meetin
OE standards.

FOUND

• All ads

TO DRIVE

.Estel
dvertlsements ar
ubject to the Federa
air Hausing Act o
968.

r

Thursday for Sundays

2842 .

Real

iAlrr AND

Friday For Sundays Paper

. Solitaire Diamonds- M.T.S. TA Communications 740Coin .S hop. 151 Second
_ ,_
441 97 1
Avenue. Gallipolis, 740-446- r-"LEJ~Jmr--,

,._Current rate car
pplies.

y accept any adver
isement in violatia
ltholaw.

Sunday Display: 1:00

Proofsets. Gold Rings. Pre- Help Wanted evenings 5 _

hat results from th
ubllcalion or omis
ion of an advertise
nt. Corrections wil
made in the firs
vallable edition.

&gt;All

Publlc:atlon

Sunday In-Colu.m n: 1:00 p . m.

Help wanted at Darst Adult
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. Group Home, some lifting,
Silver and Gold Coins, 7·5 shift . 740·992·5023.

esponslble for n

)-Box number ads ar
lways confidential .

Bu&amp;lness Days Prior To

L.r_.·_w,;ro;;,A,;;011•u•~-·w
'l ~~~s99·8042. 24/hrs. emp.

he Tribune-Sentinel
agister
will b
ore than the cost a
he space occupie
y the error and onl
he first insertion. W
hall nol be liable to
ny loss or expen

Monday-Friday for Inseirtlon

In Next Day's Paper

k itnca,rl y Ie@co mcast. net

*POLICIES*

y of public!ation an

Now you can have borders and graphics
4..J
addedtoyourclassifiedods .
Jl~
If'!'.
Borders $3.00/per ad
t!i
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

Display Ads

All Display: 12 Noon 2

• lndude Phone Number And Address When
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

AUt:llON AND
H.EAMARKET

Errors Must B
oporte&lt;l Oh the firs

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
DII!SCription • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

Domino's Pizza Now Hiring
Beautilul Pill Boller Pups, Safe Drivers &amp; Man8gement
Born 2-26, 3M. 4F. 1 Brindle Point Pleasant. Gallipolis &amp;
restai-e Black &amp; White, Must Pomeroy locations Apply 1n
Person '
Go ASAP, 1740)367-0248

·

Websites:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinet.com
www.mydailyregister.com

To Place
UCrtbttne ·
Sentinel
l\eg15ter
. Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday... or l'ax To 446-3ooa
or Fax To (740) 992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

r~·---~-~.·-"-•I

•
' .

Gallia
County,
O.H

\\\Ill \11111 \IS

from PageBl

m:rlbune - Sentinel - l\e tster

CLASSIFIED

'Z' was difference for Cavs in Game 1

-. Mercy
VanMeter
and
Nikki
Guinther who hao both ·
walked for a 5-2 Meigs
lead.
Eddy buckled down in the
third inning to strike out all
three Meigs batters, but the
next frame Meigs was back
at work. ·
VanMeter reached on an
error and scored on a
Whitney Smith single,
Smith's fo11rth RBI of the
riight. The score now stood
6-2.
, Kasey Turley came on to
· pitch for SHS in the ' fifth
after Meigs had scored three
· more runs. Shanalle Smith
reached on an error, Barr
reached on a hard shot error ·
to center, and Beha fanned
but reached on a passed
ball, allowing a run to score.
Ebersbach walked to load
the bases, then VanMeter
had an RBI ground•out tlie
score 9-2.
Mei~s scored three more
times m the sixth for the six
inning mercy, 12-2.
Eddy went four and one
third tnnings to allow five
hits, seven strikeouts; five
, Bryan W1ttera/photo
waiks, and nine runs. Turley Meigs catcher Shanalle Smith knocks out a single during
went one and one-third Tuesday's TVC interdivisional softball contest with Southern
innings for three strikeouts at Star Mill Park in Racine.
and two walks.
MEIGS 12, SOUTH!RN 2
.Shanalle Smith
Southern
is
idle
Meigs
.320 133 - 12 6 3
SHS (6-11 ): Sarah Eddy, Kasoy Turley
Wednesday, ·but goes to
Southern 200 000 256
{ 5~ and Whitney Wolle-Rittle
MHS . (9-8): Halley Ebarsbach and
WP - EberSili!Ch: LP- Eddy
Eastern Thursday.

..

The Daily Sentinel o Page 83

a;:::~~~==~

r

FIND

A JOB

OR A NEW
' CAREER
IN THE
ClASSIFIEDS

r,=;--~Mo=--111-LE-:
. H:-:0-M_E.....,S
I'OR SAu:

All real estate advertising

in this newspaper is,
au.bject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act ol1968
wt'lich makes it IUegat to
adventse '"any
preferenr:e, limitation or
dlacrlmlnation b1aed on
race. color, religion , sex
famlllalatatus or national
origin, or any Intention to
makit any such
preference, limitation or
discrimination."
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertiSements lor real
estate which Is In
violation o"f the law. Our
, readers are hereby
Informed that an
dwellings adyertlsed In
thla newspaper are
avellable on an equal
opportunity btua.

1982 Mobile Home 4 bed·
room 2 add on 14K70. semi
furnished
0.50
acres
$28.000 30 4·882·21 96
1987-- 14X56-- 2 Br., 1 bath,
all electric . Must move. 740698·1815. $6000.00

·Attention!
local compan~ offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENT' programs 1for you to buy your
home instead of renting.
' 100% f1nancing
• Less than perfec1. credit
accepted
' Payment could be th e
same as .rent.
Mortgage
locators
(740)367·0000

95 Hor ton 14li70. 2 BR. 2
BA. VinyVshingle Cent. Heat For rent . Pomeroy, 2
and Air. Part. Furn. Like new.
BDRM ..FamilyRoom,S475,P
t2,900. 304-633-?536
Ius
Utili1ys&amp;Oep.
Aei.Aequ ired.
740-8435264.

BEST BUY
NEW 2007 4 Bed

$49,989
11tt1wnt JU.mmt
mymidwesthome.com
Clearance Sale. New Total
drywall homes from $299.63
per month. Call 17 40)3852434

HUD HOMES! 4 bedroom, 2
bath. $199/mo, 3 bedroom,
$198/mo.More homes avail·
. able. 5% dn. 20 yrs @ 8%.
For listings 800·559·4 tog
ext F144
Middleport.3bdrm.basement
(lull),fenced yard ,neighbor·
hoo&lt;l goo&lt;l,$550 plus ut &amp;
dep.,ref.req ., 740·843·5264.

�Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Apartment lor rent, 1·2
Bdrm .. remodeled. new car·
pet, slave &amp; fr1g., water.
sewer, trash pd . Middleport.
$425.00. No pets. Ref.

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments, Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms. C/A, 1 l /2
~ . Adult flool &amp; Baby
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.

~r-~-...,~-.,

requ1red 740 843·5264

No

i

I

fUR""""''

2 Bdrm. 1 Ba mobile home
in country. Big Yard. No pets.
Call 740-"25E-6202
Nice 2 BR mobile home.
AJC. located at Johnson
Mobile Home Park. 446·

r •
2003

""~. fl:'llo.-..c

tu"Juu ~~ .... ~ M
t'ORRE\T

Pels, l ease PluS
.Security llepo&lt; ~ Required,
Beautiful Apta. at Jackson (740)367-7086.
Estates. •52 Westwood
Drive. from 5365 to $560.
Equal TwinRiversTower isaccept740_44 6·2568.
Hous1ng Opportunity. This ing applications for waiting
instilution IS an Equal list tor Hud-subsized. 1· br.
'apartment,for
the
Opportunily
Provider and elderly/disabled call 675Employer.
- ' - - - ' - - - - - - - 6679
Equal
Housing
CONVENIENTLY lOCAl· Oppor1unity
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!

\ BR Ap1. Apr~ lree. with
paid deposit and approved
application. 740-441·9668
or 74Q-339·0362
1 BR. Newly Remodeled.

.Walk to Wai-Man. utilities
Pdf;&lt;Jlep. Req. (740)245·
5555, l740)441 -5 t05 .
2 Bt; Apt.

on Watson Rd.

i--tiiiitii...,iii;.'-"
ll="'-""":~--...,

Townhouse

apartments,

and/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740) 441 ·1111 L,
-,
lor application &amp; intorm8tion.

1 ar'id 2 bedroom apart· Gracious Uvlng 1 and 2

ments. furnished and unfur·
nished, and houses in
Pomeroy and Middleport.
security deposit required. oo
pets. 740-992·22 18.

The Daily Sentinel• Page BS

www.mydailysentlnel.com

NEA Crossword Puzzle
I

BRIDGE

Pomer?Y~ 2 or 3 BA.,
Naylers Runl&lt;tondor, No
pets, yards. sir: WID hook·
up. References. Call 9926886.

MoBILE HOMES
n ...... "'

Wednesday, April 25, 2007
ALLEYOOP

Bed10om Apts_ at VIllage
Manor and Riverside Apts. in
Middleport from $327 _to
$592. 740·992·5064 Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
institution is an Equal
Oppor tunity Provider and
::Em"p'loy"-e'
-' -r.- - ' - - - - Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Manor and Riverside
Apartments in Middleport
From $0-$592. Call 740·
992·5064. Equal Housing
Opportunities
. Equal
Opportunity Employer
Modern 1 BA Apt. Call 4463736

SPAcr

FORo--

Commercial building ' For
Aenr 1600 square feet. off
.
G
street parking. reat 1ocalion! 749 Third Avenue in
Gallipolis. Rent $4001mo.
Call Wayne (404)456-3802
---:-~--:---

Commerical Space- for rent
Mam St. Pt. Pl. $400fmo call
Julie 703:528-0617
---:----:---

Mobile Home space tor rent
in Rio Grande, (740)446·
3617

~P-,-rim_e_co_m_m_e-rc-ia-,-l_
sp_a_ce-:1-or
rem at Springvatley Plaza.
CaiiS4S·2192 _

r

·Rooney area. Ref . Stove.
W&amp;D included Water &amp;
Sewer pd. Oep and Ref
WANJlll
required. No pets. 709-1657 .:__:________
ro lbNr
or 446-1 271
New 2BR " apartments. "~-------Washer/dryer
hookup,
3 and 4 roomfurnished apts. stove/refrigerator inCluded. Responsible and ethical
·
clean WfO hookup. No pets. Also' Units on SA t60. Pets hunter loak.rng 1or Huntmg
Ref. and d&amp;posit required.
Welcome! (740)44Hl194. 'land lor lease in Gal1ia
County area, will pay min.
740-446- t5t9.
New Haven, 1 Br., turnished, $20 per acre maybe more
no pels, dep.&amp;relerences, depending ·on location. 304740-992-0t65.
675-5258
Nice Clean furnished 1
bedroom Apartment. $350
month Deposit requ iied
Hot.miOLD
(304)675-2970
Gooi:fi
Nice clean new deCOfated,
A HIDDEN TREASURE! 2
br no pets, relidep · 304· Applr·ance Warehouse
Laurel
Commons 675.5t62
Apartments. Largest in the
· in' Henderson, WV. Pre·
Two
80. owned Appliances, all under
area.I o-DU&lt;~U tif ll nY renova led Upstairs,
· 1 d. b d Apt Large Clean modern
throug hou1 1nc
ll 1ng ran
··
·
Warranty, also have recondi. Ie, N0 grass I0 tioned Big Screen TV's
new kilchen and bath. · WID Pnva
· el $405. ca11 Iodey'. m-=2
S1art1ng
v-., • -7094or4t64369
.
· (304)675-7!J9ll
(304)273-3344
Fully furnished or not.

r·o

.Moflohan Furn. 202 Ctark
Chapel Rd. New furn, If you
~ke to save money, d1eck us
out. Drive a little, Save alot!
388..()173

r

AKC Bos1ooTerrier puppies
mff $400ea.-AKC Collie
PiJppies rr\1'1 sable/wh.,eyes
normai,OSU cert . S400ea.-

Kiefer Buill· Valley-BisOn·
Horse
and
Livestock
TrailersLoadmax·
Gooseneck, Dumps, &amp;

ACROSS

AKC
Golden
Ret. Utility· Aluma Aluminum
pup s(2 F)12wks .. shots Trailers· B&amp;W Gooseneck
~
$350ea.-AKC Yor~e PUP' HitChes- Trailer Parts.
~
.pies males $800. females Carmichael
Trailers.
~
. $900 small. ALL Vet C~d . (740)446·24t 2
740-696-1085
21001 LPTanksphone304. Model 847 New Holland
675-1732
-AK_C_R_eg_
. S-h~ih-T-zu-p-upp-ie-s, round baler. Good condition . .
$2500.740-441 -7390
36x24 Oval Pool with deck· adorable &amp; loving. 1 male &amp;
Pool ·
·
t
~male all shols lemale
ing.
sits down mside
•-c
•
•
deck, $2995. (740)446-7425 spayed, S300· male: 5350·
\ LlmTOl"K
female. {740)446-7820
-- •
Crallmatic Adjustable bed· - - - - - - - 2004 model. Rumba power English Mastiffs AKC, CH Fair Pigs 6 weeks old $50 ILl..I.U..:.&amp;.;..o.:..t'"'-'=•
wheel chair, good condition. bloodlines. Only 3 tell . e~ch
304-675-5492
_;__ _ _ _ __
Bedside rommode toiler · lifl ClearanCe sate. 740-245· GoatsforSale. BoerGoats, .lum' ll l'l ' ~l' l' in·
740 992
• Top • Removal
::sea=
!. ..:...:.:.." -£9611.
.=: ,·- - 5823 or 740-645- 1912
Club kids, Born Jan &amp; Feb,
• Trim • Stump
Hot Tub. TO!l Quality. 5 per·
M•~CAL
2007. Call (740)256-9247
~
Grinding • Bucket
son, Never U9ed, warranty.
•· ~• ~a. ·IENTS
ol""'iliii'iiKiuliil
" iitiiiii'- Reg. Angus Cow/Call
Truck
Lounger. Will deliver. L,-··
.,
$1000. 4001 - 600# Angus
Full
insured
07
~(606--')32S_-__n
_ _ _ _ MES.AJBoogie Dual Rectifier Bulls &amp; He!. $1 .05 per
Senior
Citizen
HUGE SAVINGS ON Ampttlier Head and match· pound. 74Q-256-t758
Discount
ARCH STEEL
ing MESA 4x2 cabinet. 100 I Ill\ , \ ( , 11&lt;111 \ I IIIII'
BUILDINGS,
wat1s great condiiiOn, will
740-367-0266/
Repos. Slight Damages. sacrifice $1 ,400 call 304- 1988 Pontiac Grand Prix .
1-800-950-3359
Aiding lawn mower. 740·
773·5958
No Reasonable Offer
256" 1102. Ask for Jr.
30 Yis. Ex p. lns.
I
\R\1
"'I
1'1'111"1
Refused! 3left. 25'x36',
II~\\ '1'1 I I~ I \II! I\
,\ 11\I ..., I! Hh.
Owner Ronnie Jones
35x44. Call Today! Save
Thousands! 866-352-0469 "'r"ro,....-..,..---..,~ ~10
FrL'C Estimates
AIJfOS
JET
FAKI\1
fUR SALE
AERATION MOTORS
,
F.Quii'MI'Nr
Repaired..N'!W. &amp; Rebuilt In ·--iiiiiiiiiiitii-,.J
Stock. Caii ·Ron Evans. 1- 0% Financing· 36 Mos. 1987 Mazda 82200 ext cab
available . now on John automatic overdrive. hard
800. 537 _9528
Deere Z Trak Zero Turns &amp; shell , bed Cover. good cond.
NEW AND USED STEEL 5.99% Fixed Rate on John 96.000milesSt.200D80or Concrete Removal
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar II Deere Gators Carmichael trade 304-773-5078 or 304and Replacement
For Concrete. Angle, Equipment (740)446-24 12. 593-0958
Channel. Flat Bar, Steel - - - - - - - - --~----AU Types Of
t984 Case tt94 48hp dl·esel 1990 Mustang built 302 lots
Con•rete Work ·.
Grating
For
Drains.
2026
'
.
.
&amp; ot extras_ 740-742.
.
DriveWays &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l power steenng, wet 11nes
Sc
M 1 ""' M d frontend loader 1000fhrs. t998 Pontiac Sunfire. 26 Years Experience,
rap e1as ...,..,en on ay,
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp; ext. con. ~6,500 misc. 102000 miles. 38.5 MPG.
David Lewis
Fn'day' Bam-4 :30pm · Closed · attachments ava~able also $2500 · 740-446-4620
740-992-6971
Thursday, Saturday &amp; 304-n3-S070 304·5930958 2000 Chevy ·'- pala 43,500
Sunday. (740)446-7300
""
Insured
Antique Farman H tractor miles Must See $7,000 304Free Estlmatet
TaHie Tale Alarm System, with mounted Qn mower. 593-3707 or 304-675·4893 ':;;::::;===~
new,inbox,$400 'ortradefor new tires on back. kept in 2004 Stratus, $6000 080, r Wise Concrete
Gun. 740-992-2478.
barn hasn't been run lor 2000 Ford Mustang, $5000
years also mce shde tn twdl 080, 2000 Chevy Cavalier, All lypes of concrete
PETs
bed camper &amp; true!&lt; IQ!lper $2800 080, 2002 DOdge
Owner- Rick Wi se
fURS"~
lor large P'~ up (740)667
~
~
w
·
· Stratus, 2 door, $5600 080
740-992-5929
3253
(740)256-6169.
740•416• 1698
Basset/pupsAKC .
six
wk .old,4-trl -color,4-lemon USED Rotary tillers. 4', 5', 2006 Hyundai Elantra, 6- 15 )TS. 6xp. Free Estima.tcs
and wh. Parentson site.Ask 6:, 3 point hitch. BIG 7'000 miles ' $t3 ·OOO·' 2007
SELECTION. Jim's Farm Lincoln Navigator, 5,000
$275 ea.740-667-6758
Eqllipment: 74t&gt;-446·9777
miles. $55,000; 2007
Thoroughbred by Palomino
_camper, $25,000. (740)44t 8204
·

I

r

RENTALS SALES
SERVICE FREE DELIVERY
MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS
I

I
1

Bo's Classic Cars
29670 Bashan Road
2000 Chevy S-t o "'' cab
Racine , Ohio
5 speed, 4 cyl. 60,000 m~ es
45771
nice $5500. 95 8uicl&lt; Park
740-949-2217
ave. 110,000 miles $2800.
:t
~·
SheriN Sales Case Mrs. Thomas Lowden's ales olthe Meigs coun- The above dexcrlbed Acllon. An adjudlca· 740 .208-0028 0 , 740·245· , ~ 5'xt0' '
Number 06CV100
Lot; Thence South 77 ty Court House n tract was surveyed by lion hearing may be 5087 .
',
10'X30!:
JP Morgan Chase deg. West, 40 feel; Friday May 11, 2007 at George F. Seymour, held on , a proposed
..,
,
Thence along said 10:00 a.m. of said day, Ohio
Profaaalonal acllon If a hearing Cook Moton
Hours
Bonk
Plaintiff
Lowdeo's West line, lhe
following Surveyor, No. 6044, In request or oblectlon Ia 2004 Stra)us, 200t Grande
vs
North.1/2 dog. West, 96 described real estate: · December of 1998.
received by lhe OEPA Prix GT 2D Sunrool, 2000 7:00AM-8:00PM
Edith Barnhouse
feel to the. placa of Balog a part of the Reference
Deed: within 30 days of Saturn L100 4D Sunroot All ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~";'4~/l;m:•·:"":
at al
beginning;
tract of land that Is Voume 82, Page 507, Issuance of the pro- Power. 2005 Sunfire Sport
Defendants
ALSO a permanent now or IOrmerly In the Meigs County OHictal posed action. Written 2D Sunrool, t 999 · Jeep
Court of Common right-of-way 16 feet name,of Joseph Hall as Records
commenta, requests Wrangler, 2000 S-to Auto 4
Pleas, Meigs County, wide across Lot 162 recorded In Official Auditor 's
Parcel lor public meetings, Cyl, 2 Mini Vans.
Ohlo
from the premlaea record 73 at page 325, Number: 01.00304.002 and adjudlcallon hear- Cars starW!g at $2500.
In pursuance ol an herein conveyed; (said Meigs
ocunty Current Owner: Kevin ing requests must be 3 months, 3·000 mile warorder of sale to me right being mentioned Recorder's OHice, said Collins
sent to: Hearing Cieri&lt;, ranty. 328 Jackson Pike
directed lrom said In deed to Louis tract being part of Property At: 37012 Ohio
446·0t03
• New Homes
court In the above ehtl· Seyfried lrom Kenneth Section 31, T3N, R13W, Wolf
Pen
Road E n v I r o n m e n 1 a I -Tw-o-t _ _ - -ui-ck_P_a-rk
989 8
• Garages
tied action, 1 will Seyf~ed and Margeret Bedford
Township, Pomeroy, Ohio
Protection
Agency, Avenues for parts. $ 300 ,
-Complete
expose to sale at pub- Seylrled, et. al, former Meigs county, Slate of PPI: 01.00304.002
P.O.
Box
1049, King woodburner. S200: old
lie auction on the front grantors, to which ref- Ohio and being more Prior
Deed Columbus, Ohio
rille.
Mason,
(Bt
_
Remodeling
22
41226
steps of the Meigs erence
Is
hereby particularly described References: Volume 4 3 2 1 6 • 1 0 4 9 9986
County Court House made.)
as follows:
82, Page 507
(Telephone: 614-644on Friday, May 4th, ALSO the following Beginning at a point In Appraised
at 2129).
l'lft"'-":::'_____.,
2007 at 10:00 a.m. of described real estate: . the center of County $55,000.00 Ternis ol
" FINAL ACTIONS" ~1.5
TRUCKS
Stop &amp;Compare
said day, the following Excepting all ol Lots Road 14, the South line Sale: Cannot 'be sold are actlona of the I
FUR SALE
deecrlbed real estate: 159 and 160. ~ Is the of Section 31 and the for less than 213rds of director which 11re •--iiiiiiiiiiiiiio-r ·~:~:~:~
.EXHIBITA
Intention of the former grantor's Southwest the appraised value. effective.
_upon 94 Dodge Ram. 2wo, 5 r
PARCELN0.1:
Grantees to convey all corner which Ia taken 10o/o down on day of Issuance or a alated Speed. $t 300 080 Call
Johnson's Tree
Situated In the Village of the real property ·to baar South 84 sale, cash or certllled effective
dale. 740 : .
Service
578 1040
of Pomeroy, County of owned by Bertha degrees 00 minutes 29 check, balance due on Pursuant to Ohio
Golllpollo, OH 45&lt;3 1
Complet..li M C••e
Meigs and State of Seyfried 8llhe tlnie ol seconds East ala dis- conllrmallon of sale. Rev Ised Code Seclion --=--~~~-~
~ suvs
Top • T•Im•H'"""' ' S"mp
Ohto:
her deceased with the lance of 1180.24 feel The oppralsal did not 3745.04, a llnal ai:llon
"""""' ' e"'""""'"
FOR Si\LE
1n1urec1 • Free E1llm1tt1
And known as being exception of a portion from the Southwast Include an Interior may be appealed lo the ~it·--iiiiitiiiiiiio•r
,.,...,_,,.,
Lots No. 159 and 160 conveyed to Edith corner of Section 31;
examination of the Environmental Ravlew '
""' ''""~"·""at shown on Plat of Thomas· and with the Thence leaving the house.
Robert
E. Appaals
2004 Cadillac Escalade. ~~
· "~"'~":"~""~·=~~~
Horton and Dabneys exception of Lots 159 South line of Seclon 31 Beegle, Meigs County Commission (ERAC) Low Mileage, loaded. ll
Addition to Pomeroy. and 160, which have and along the grantor's Sherlfl
(formerly known as the Excellent
Condition.
C~PER'i &amp;
The real estate lnclud· been conveyed by _Waalltne and the cen- Attorney
for ,. the Envlronmenlal Board $37,ooo. 446-7249
MO'IOR HoM~
ed the land on which deed of even dale ter ol aald road the fol- P.lalntltf: Little, Sheela Of Review) by a person
MoroRaa.Elil
the garage for the real· herewith.
lowing two couraaa:
&amp; Warner
who was a party lo •
4WIIEEl.ERS
t976 Chevy RV, steeps 6,
dence 11 located.
Subject lo oil legal 1, North 38 degrees 20 213
E.
Second proceeding before the ~
~•w tires, 350 V-8, ale, runs
111-00072.1100
highways, easements, minutes 06 seconds St. Pomeroy, Ohio
director by filing an 2006 Blacl&lt; Harley Da~dson good, s2500 , 74 o. 4t 6. 1472 ,
111-00073.1100
right of ways, zoning , eaat a distance ol 740-992-6689.
appeal wllhln 30 d8YS t owner lots 01 , extras 740·992·1493
PARCEL NO.2:
ordinances, restrlc- 152.96 feat to point, (4) 11, 18, 25
of nollce of the Final $8.900
_ _
304 593 3542
Situated In the VIllage lions a nd conditions and;
Acllon. Pursuant to _ _ _ _ _ _ __
2. North. 24 degreea 17
Ohio revised code sec·
Camping Site lor rent' on
01 Pomeroy, County of ol record.
tnsta-trike kit, converts river, full hook-up. 992 _
Meigs and Stale of 18-()0074.000
minutes 11 seconds
Public Notice
tlon 3745.07, a Final Harley Sportster into a trike.
5956 ·
Ohio:
16-ootl75.1100
· east a dlatance ol
Action Issuing, deny, (740)368·040t
And known as being 9 Liberty Lane
69.89 feet to a point;
The IOIIowlng apptl- lng, modifying, revok- ~~~.;....;.:-:'":""--,
\II{\ I( I ...
Lots Number 157 end Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Thence laavlng the cations and/ or verified lng, or renewing a per- (1:iO BoAlS &amp; M0101t'i
158 as shown on the Parcel " Number: 16- center Of said road and complaints
wara mit, license, or varl~UR SALE
HOME
Plat of Horlon and 00072.000,
16- wHh a new line through received, and lhe fol- once Which Is not preIMPRoVEMENTS
Dabney&amp; Addition to 00073.00,
16- the grantor's land the lowing draft, proposed, ceded by a ·Proposed t989 Regal Medallion t8 Lw.,;iiiioiiiioiiiiiiiio,.J
Pomeroy.
00074.000,
16- following two courses: or final actions were Action,
may
be 11211 open bow 3.0
BASEMENT
Beginning
at
the 00075.000,
16- 1. South 82 degrees 26 Issued, by tha O)llo appealed to the ERAC Mercruiser $3,000 304-n3WATERPROOFING
Soulhwast. corner ol 00076.000,
&amp;
16- minutes 03 seconds E n vI ron mont al by filing an appeal 5070 or 304-593·0958
Unconditional lifetime guarLot No. 158 above;
110077.00
east, passing through Protection
Agency within 30 days ol
antee. Local references fur·
Thence South 4 112 Currently Owner: Edith a 518"x30" Iron pin with (OEPA) last
week. Issuance ol the llnal
nished. Established 1975.
dag. East, 22 feet to a Bam house
a plastic Identification "ACTIONS" Include tha action. ERAC appeals,
Cell 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
stake on the South Prior Deed References cap sel at 25.00 feel, adoption, modification, accompanied by a $70
0870, Rogers Basement
aide of a stone wall ; Volume 173, Page 669 going a total dlllanca or ropaol of, orders filing lee which the
WaterprOOfing.
Thence North 80 3/4 Appraised at $13,500 of 233.17 leet to ·(other than emergency commisSion In Its disdog. East, 110 feel to Terms of Sale: Cannot 5/8"x30" Iron pin with a orders); the Issuance, cretlon may reduce If
the W01t end of a stone be sold lor less than plaatlc ldentlflcatloq cl8nlal, modification or by affidavit the appal~~~~==:~~i:~~
wall on the South side 2/3rds of the appraised cap aat, and;
revocation of licenses, lant demonstraaattes
of Lot Number 161;
value. 10o/o down on 2. South 08 degrees 23 permHs, leases, varl- that payment of the full
Thence 'North 4 112 day of sale, cash or minutes 51 seconds antes, or certificates; amount of the fee
deg. West to the certified check, bal- Weal a distance of and the approval or would cause extreme
Southeast comer of once due on confirms- 189.35 feet to a disapproval ol plans hardship, must tie llled
Lot Number 160;
tlon olsala.
5/B" X30" Iron pin with and
specifications. with : Environmental
Thence North 89 dog. The appraisal did a plastic Identification ''DRAFT ACTIONS" are Review
Appeals
Wast along the South include an Interior cap
set on
the written statements ol Commission,
309
line of said Lot160 and examination of the grantor's south line the
director
ol South Fourth
along the South line of house.
and the south line of E n v I r o n m o n t a I Street, Room 222,
said Lol 159 to the Robert E. Beegle, Section 31; Thence P rote c I I o n 's Columbus, Ohio 43215.
place of beginning.
Meigs County Sheriff
olong tho granlor's (Director's) Intent
A copy ol the oppeal
111-00076.000
Attorney lor the plain- aoulh line and the with respect to the must be served on the
111-00077.1100
tiff
south line of Section Issuance, denial, etc. director within 3 days
PARCEL NO.3:
Frank Wooldridge
31, North 84 degrees of a permit, license, after lillng lhe appeal
Sltuat~ In the Vllleg~ 600 S. Pearl St.
00 minutes 29 seconds order, etc. lnterealed with the ERAC.
·
of Pomeroy, County of Columbus, OH 43206
West, passing through persons may submit Final Issuance Of
Meigs and State of 614-221'-1662
a 518" x 30" Iron pin written comments or ParmltTo Install
(4) 4, 11, 18, 25 (5) 2
with a plastic ldentlfi- request a public meet- Southern Ohio Coal
· Ohio:
&amp;
Beginning
at
the
· cellon cap set at lng regarding Draft Company
Northwest. corner of
243.07 feet, going a Actions. Comments or Meigs Mine No. 31
smithsuperstore.com
Lot Number 158;
Public Notice
total distance of 328.90 public
meeting Salem Twp. , OH
Thence South n dog.
feet to the point of requests must be sub- Action
DAte:
West, 55 1/2 feet; Sheriff sales Case beginning, containing milled within 30 days 0411812007
MOTOCROSS RACE
Thence 44 1/2 deg. Number 06CV14S
1.215 . acres, more or of notice ol the Draft Facility Description:
West, 78 feel; Th,nce Farmer's Bank and lesa, and augjact to the Action. " PROPOSED Wastewater
South 46 12 dog. WHI, Savings ,' Co. PLAIN- right-of-way of County ACTIONS" are written Identification .No. .:
Sat., April 28
· 40 112 feet; Thence TIFF
Road 14,., Township sta"ments of the 566944
South 1/2 dog. W01t, VS
Road 167 and all eaae- director's Intent with This final action not
Practice 4:30pm
207 feet;
•
Kevin D. Collins et.al. menta of record.
respect
to
lhe p"'"eded by proposed
Thence North 76 1/2 DEFENDANTS
All 518"x30" Iron pins l11uance, denial, mod- action end Is appeal- ·
· Race 6:00 pm
dag. East, 302 feet; Court of COmmon with plasllc ldentlfi- lflcatlon, revocation, or able to ERAG. Meigs
Adm. $8.00 under
Thence North 2 114 Pleaa, Melga County, colon caps set are r~newal of a permit, Mine No. 31- Hydrated
dag. Wast, 163 feet to Ohio.
stamped " Seymour &amp; license, or
Lime
Wastewater ·
6 years free
the uld Seyfried's In pursuance of an Associates",
variance, Written com- Treatment Plant and
Southeast
corner; order of sale to ma The bearing used In menta and requests for associated
support
. 675-5463
said directed from. said the above desrlbad a
public
meeting lacllllies to treat water
Thence along
Seyfried's South line, court in the above e.ntl- troct wire assumed regarding a proposed pumped from a closed
SOuth 80 3/4.dtig. Weal, lied action, ·1 will and are lOr the deter- action may be submit- underground mine.
110 leet · to ' the axpoaa to 111e lit pub- mlnallon of angles ted withi n 30 days of (4) 25
Southeast corner or lie auction on the front only.
notice of the Proposed
v

140-992-1611

r
v40

......-w.tlmber&lt;&gt;reekcabiJietr)'.eom

L

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

1-------.J

Check Our Large
Inventory Of
New Used Vehicles

Mason Co. Fairgrounds

I ,

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

TH' ROMANCE TWIXT URIAH
AN' TH' SCHOOLMARM IS
HEATIN' UP !! 1 HEARD THAT
URIAH STOLE A KISS !!

AN'MIZ
PRUNELL'I'
MADE HIM
STAND INTH'
CORNER!!

'TIL HE GIVE IT

BACIC !!

THE BORN LOSER
(,A~\[(:.IC. ~'(P~S SURfpE~?'

I'fl.. (,OI~C. .
TO C.IIJE. UP

740·992-sns
Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

•
r7amihJ
'

'

.

YOU HAVE TO BE

GET H'(f'NOTIZ.E.D'
THAT'$ NOT ME~ MY
WILL 15 TOO 5TRONG 1
M~ 1'\IND IS TOO SHARP'
·~=

More than the usual amount or accompWshments can b,e achl9'.18d, but you
must oe careful not to overload yourself
at times to the point that everything you
have In the mill breaks down. Make gains
judiciously.
·
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Don't let
emotions govern Mw much you $Penct
on something ·you love doing or someone you care a great deal about. You
couki put out mu ~h more than you can

SNAP!

)=

Please leave messa e

3''

Thuraday, April 28, 2007
By Bernice 8ede Oeol

SUGGEST! SLE T.O

740-742-2293

-~-=
___, ;\":;-:?:-

o:ntJ.

PEANUTS

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
70 Pine Street , Gallipolis

L------446---0007--------.1

1

L ~c
-~ .. --~~-- -

SUNSI:fiNE CLUB.
YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room~Addltion•

&amp;

Remodeling
New Garages
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutter•
VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
Patio and Porch Decks
WV.036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pol'wroy OhiO
]5

Yl':~

s

Lor.&lt;~ I

f-lprr PIH'('

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local Contractor

740-367.0544

www.oon\iCI.com

Free Estlmatea

740-367-0536

t

........ rw.w ...... ..
IIIB11111••12:11••

·-·-·71
..
.
.
.
,................
PIYIIIST. PIICES . . .

llllllldC 11111•1111 ·CII..

47 Ballot
marks
48 Split
49 Certain Ivy
Leaguer
50 Metro RRo
52 Stop signal .
53 Miscellany
54 Six games,
In tennis

,.J
i
f·

I

•

..

•m ..... ....

~RIZZWELLS
t'\l~ \IE~\\ W\:l\~Q fleo\r{ A~E'fJ
~eRA

rvE iSEEfl
VfiN~ '\b
~·

CUT

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
cereonry Ci!1181'CtYIXOQrams are crealed !rom !W~ons oy tamouspoople pas1 and present
Eacl11dle~ mthe al)her stands tor another

Today'sclue:BequalsJ .

"NSZF
CSE

RVL

DKRRLMR

RVL OKRRLMR

NSLM IVN

GEMINI {May 21-June 20) -In order to
realize continued successes throughout
. the day, It Is Important you try to maintain
a consistent pace. If your mode of oper, atlon is erratic, only partial victories will
be attained.
d ANCER (June 21-July 22) - Gauge
your audience wisely or else you could
pour your heart out to someone who
can't wait to spread the WOfd to everyone
else. A busybody won't keep anything
confidential.
LEO (July 23·AUQ. 22) - Try to make it a
point not to offer any un~liclted advice
with matters of the heart or business
information, ragardless of what you know
or don't know.
,
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 221 '- Allhough
the opinions of your companions may not
be witt10ut merit, don't let their views or
thinking override your own beHer jlldgment. Events will prove that you must
think for yourself.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) - It wilt be
important thi:lt you spend your time pro·
ductlvely, but this doesn't mean you
should attempt projects where you lack
the expertise or the know-how to handle
them well.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NOII. 22) - When it
comes' to ·major bbligatlons or expendi·
tures, you should be able to have things
pretty much under control, yet many
small extravagances could add up to
being your downfall.
SA81TTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . 21) Actions can b9 taken to enhance your
home Ute in ways that make everyone
h&amp;PP'J, yet you might go about il in such
an ·erratlc way you'll undo everything pre·
vlously accomplished.
,
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19) - Vou'r8
a self-sufficient person who ta.kBS your
responslb!Nties and duties seriously. II
you shut down . you could disappoint
someone important.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20~Feb. 19) - You'll be
extremely ccmpetenl in getting what you
want, yet OflCe you h~ve them in hand
you may not know how to solidify your
gains. You could thoughtlessly throw
away your harvest.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Don't tel
outside IntereSts become so engrossing
that you forget about 111 the tnlnga you
promlaed to do for your flmlly. Home and
loved ones Should come first.

ARIE S (March 21·Aprll 19) Unfortunately, you might not aceomplilh
11 much·as you hid hoptd, owtng to 1
aiowiF,; doWn from Impatience on your
pan vmtn It come• to dcHng tuU you
think oho&lt;tkl bo ooay.

SOUPTONUTZ

IKZZ ' MOHJKJL ,

NDDKGL ' M TNZKRKGM ."
VNZZCSEM

.

YL RVL

IKZZ

OSELHMRCSE

RVLKH
-

.

BLCS

.

PREVIOUS SOLUTiON - 'We have no more rrghl lo consume happrness
wrthout producing rt lhan to consume wealh .;lhout producing it.' - G.B. Shaw

r::~::.r S(C~(llA-l££~s·

WOIO

tAM I

- - - - . . ; , l41to4 ftty CLAY l. POIWI-'-.- - - Rtam~n;e liners of the
four IICiatl1bled MtCh be-

0

ro form four

low

~mpll

-dl.

CAYVS

I

l

I~

I I

aftord.

'-fP.I'li'I'!!P.!I'lrl.,

•.

All pass

V~!r!,

BIG NATE

References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @

orne xygen
Portable Oxygen
H fill S t
orne I ys em
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H
O
•

Pass

Somelimes less capable players think
that experts play as il they can look
arotnd corners. But usually it is just a·
maHer of counting to 13. as in this deal.
If yoo were South, in six no-trump, how
would you plan the play? West leads the
spade jacl&lt;.
East opened three hearts in the modern
· style. Tradlllonally, he would promise a
decent seven-card suit and 5-10 highcard points. But when the vulnerability is
ravorable, a little nexibillly Is permilted.
South overcalled a natural thrill! notrump. The textbook says this shows a
gOod 15 10 18 high-card points, but he
could have a stronger hand tt1an that
because a four-no-trump overcall would
show a mllor two-suiter, not be natural.
You have tt top trlcl&lt;s: three spades, lwo
hearts, lhree diamonds and three clubs.
You need a lourth club !riel&lt;. And clearly,
II either the clubs are ,Pitttlng 3-2 or East
has a J~ngleton club hooor, you wil have
no prot;ems. But belore leaping to that
conclusion, play off dummy's heart ~n'g
to conlirm the 7-0 spl~. Then lake yoor
spade and dia'mond winners. What do
yoo learn? Here, lhal East slarted w!h
rwo·dramonds, seven hearts and at least
three spades. So, he has at most one
club.
~
'
Cash your club queen to see East's
ca·rd, then lead a club. towmrd th8
dummy. II West plays low, put In
dummy's nine. Or, if West Splits his honors, win with dummy's king, play a hea~
to your ~ce, and take the club finesse.

BARNEY

Closed Sunday "That's Gods Day"

e

3 NT

East

a•

24 Studio
renter
25 Dish with
saffron
26 Party
lhrower
27 "My Way"
composer
28 Perceived
29 Fly, to a
spider
34 Bayou
dwellers
36 Getuluck
42 Weighed
down wflh
cargo
43 Sonic
prelix
45 First-magnlludutar

·sal."

r:ti~U&gt;o.~TIC-,GI.At:t(.S 1 '&lt;OU ~ p-No-r 1"fAA

Work ·
*Reasonable Rates
*Insured
*Experienced

North

41 Joey or Kiki
42 Box top .
1 Pink43 Ms. Hagen
sllpped
of fllms
6 Voodoo
44 Fish roe
slave
46 Harden
1'2 Wrinkle-free 48 Lurched
14 Orcheetre 51 Bonuses
member
55 Aasen
15 Ve•
56 Placid
16 Far away
57 Sentra
11 One, In
l1'8lUiacllftr
Frankfurt
58 Nobellst
18 Grain crop
from Egypt
19 Duffers
goal
DOWN
21 Gloallng cry
23 Carpet pile 1 Shari&lt;
26 Checkroom
giveaway
Item
2 Pique
27 See - 3 Go bad
glance
4 Calculator
28 Narrow strip
key
ot flexible 5 Lox J)IIYI!'fa'
material
6 Maiked ,
30 Ottawa's
swordsman
prov.
7 Yield to
31 Just out
8 Jiffies
32 Banana oil, 9 Sci. clasa
t 0 Devotee
33 ~&amp;:key
11 Riviera
gear
summer
35 Pub pint
13 Signify
37 Seine vista t 9 Brealhed
38 -coHo
hard
39 Atom
20 Threeds
frogmen!
22 Romanllc
40 Wily
place

· Aldous Huxley said, "There's only one
corner of the universe you can be certain or improving, and mars yoor own

4" Pots $1.25-$1.49
Shrubs-$2.95-$6.95
Open M-Saturday 1D-5

Stop in at
participating
Pomeroy
Merchants
for our
Mother's
Day Gift
Basket
Giveaway

West

He can look
around corners

OPEN FOR SEASON!
Flats $7.50
1O"Hanging Baskets $5.5D-$6.50 _

South

Opening lead: • J

Syracuse, Ohio

IriO

l

Dealer: East.
Vulrierable: North-South

Hubbard's·&lt;lreenhouse ·

l

·I,________.

.. 7
• A4 3
¥ A, 9 4
+AK7
• Q5 3 2

Additions
Garages
Roofing
Vinyl Siding ,
New Construction Interior Remodeling
Residential &amp; Commercial
740-985-4141 Office
740-416-1834

;rto

CI'NSJIUmON

• 9 6

• J 10 8 6
Soul~

Marcum Construction and
General Contracting

Hardwood Cabinetry And FvrnHUre

¥ QJI08753

+1 08542

70 Pine Street • Ga llipo lis
740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio
Mike W. Marcum, Owner

East
• 6 5 2

·-

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

ft

ROBERT
BISSELL -

West
• J 10 9 6

MONTY

r1amiht l•tftaM•

I

Hill's Self
Storage

H -2fH)?'

I

I

r,

=

i

Phillip
Alder

GR A 0 C

l

I Is

I'

..
D

I

"'I
N

~

If yo111 offer or help and
fiiondship i.s givcn with strings
at1acbOO, you are aot beiJ!8

I-"TIN;,;,. 0;.,7'f-J-;_, .,~_,L,. .;E; . ,-I-·il 0-~o.:.,:.,.

tho &lt;h•&lt;klo q•oted
L.-.J."--1.-J..-.L.-1. ...J.
by filling if\ the miuing words
yov devt!Qp from 11tp No. 3 below.

(j

PRINT NUMBERED
ltllf!S IN SQUARES

() ~~~:~~A~ l£l EISI ' I I I I I ·I I I
SCRAN\-LETS ANSWERS • - 2 • - o 1
Ground - Await - Young - Oddily ·- WANTING
I overtacard two womcp at the gym complainin g
abo\at dieting. One woman said lhat her ambition'""
10 be weighed and fi11utd WANTING ."

ARLO &amp;JANIS

�Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Apartment lor rent, 1·2
Bdrm .. remodeled. new car·
pet, slave &amp; fr1g., water.
sewer, trash pd . Middleport.
$425.00. No pets. Ref.

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments, Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms. C/A, 1 l /2
~ . Adult flool &amp; Baby
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.

~r-~-...,~-.,

requ1red 740 843·5264

No

i

I

fUR""""''

2 Bdrm. 1 Ba mobile home
in country. Big Yard. No pets.
Call 740-"25E-6202
Nice 2 BR mobile home.
AJC. located at Johnson
Mobile Home Park. 446·

r •
2003

""~. fl:'llo.-..c

tu"Juu ~~ .... ~ M
t'ORRE\T

Pels, l ease PluS
.Security llepo&lt; ~ Required,
Beautiful Apta. at Jackson (740)367-7086.
Estates. •52 Westwood
Drive. from 5365 to $560.
Equal TwinRiversTower isaccept740_44 6·2568.
Hous1ng Opportunity. This ing applications for waiting
instilution IS an Equal list tor Hud-subsized. 1· br.
'apartment,for
the
Opportunily
Provider and elderly/disabled call 675Employer.
- ' - - - ' - - - - - - - 6679
Equal
Housing
CONVENIENTLY lOCAl· Oppor1unity
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!

\ BR Ap1. Apr~ lree. with
paid deposit and approved
application. 740-441·9668
or 74Q-339·0362
1 BR. Newly Remodeled.

.Walk to Wai-Man. utilities
Pdf;&lt;Jlep. Req. (740)245·
5555, l740)441 -5 t05 .
2 Bt; Apt.

on Watson Rd.

i--tiiiitii...,iii;.'-"
ll="'-""":~--...,

Townhouse

apartments,

and/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740) 441 ·1111 L,
-,
lor application &amp; intorm8tion.

1 ar'id 2 bedroom apart· Gracious Uvlng 1 and 2

ments. furnished and unfur·
nished, and houses in
Pomeroy and Middleport.
security deposit required. oo
pets. 740-992·22 18.

The Daily Sentinel• Page BS

www.mydailysentlnel.com

NEA Crossword Puzzle
I

BRIDGE

Pomer?Y~ 2 or 3 BA.,
Naylers Runl&lt;tondor, No
pets, yards. sir: WID hook·
up. References. Call 9926886.

MoBILE HOMES
n ...... "'

Wednesday, April 25, 2007
ALLEYOOP

Bed10om Apts_ at VIllage
Manor and Riverside Apts. in
Middleport from $327 _to
$592. 740·992·5064 Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
institution is an Equal
Oppor tunity Provider and
::Em"p'loy"-e'
-' -r.- - ' - - - - Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Manor and Riverside
Apartments in Middleport
From $0-$592. Call 740·
992·5064. Equal Housing
Opportunities
. Equal
Opportunity Employer
Modern 1 BA Apt. Call 4463736

SPAcr

FORo--

Commercial building ' For
Aenr 1600 square feet. off
.
G
street parking. reat 1ocalion! 749 Third Avenue in
Gallipolis. Rent $4001mo.
Call Wayne (404)456-3802
---:-~--:---

Commerical Space- for rent
Mam St. Pt. Pl. $400fmo call
Julie 703:528-0617
---:----:---

Mobile Home space tor rent
in Rio Grande, (740)446·
3617

~P-,-rim_e_co_m_m_e-rc-ia-,-l_
sp_a_ce-:1-or
rem at Springvatley Plaza.
CaiiS4S·2192 _

r

·Rooney area. Ref . Stove.
W&amp;D included Water &amp;
Sewer pd. Oep and Ref
WANJlll
required. No pets. 709-1657 .:__:________
ro lbNr
or 446-1 271
New 2BR " apartments. "~-------Washer/dryer
hookup,
3 and 4 roomfurnished apts. stove/refrigerator inCluded. Responsible and ethical
·
clean WfO hookup. No pets. Also' Units on SA t60. Pets hunter loak.rng 1or Huntmg
Ref. and d&amp;posit required.
Welcome! (740)44Hl194. 'land lor lease in Gal1ia
County area, will pay min.
740-446- t5t9.
New Haven, 1 Br., turnished, $20 per acre maybe more
no pels, dep.&amp;relerences, depending ·on location. 304740-992-0t65.
675-5258
Nice Clean furnished 1
bedroom Apartment. $350
month Deposit requ iied
Hot.miOLD
(304)675-2970
Gooi:fi
Nice clean new deCOfated,
A HIDDEN TREASURE! 2
br no pets, relidep · 304· Applr·ance Warehouse
Laurel
Commons 675.5t62
Apartments. Largest in the
· in' Henderson, WV. Pre·
Two
80. owned Appliances, all under
area.I o-DU&lt;~U tif ll nY renova led Upstairs,
· 1 d. b d Apt Large Clean modern
throug hou1 1nc
ll 1ng ran
··
·
Warranty, also have recondi. Ie, N0 grass I0 tioned Big Screen TV's
new kilchen and bath. · WID Pnva
· el $405. ca11 Iodey'. m-=2
S1art1ng
v-., • -7094or4t64369
.
· (304)675-7!J9ll
(304)273-3344
Fully furnished or not.

r·o

.Moflohan Furn. 202 Ctark
Chapel Rd. New furn, If you
~ke to save money, d1eck us
out. Drive a little, Save alot!
388..()173

r

AKC Bos1ooTerrier puppies
mff $400ea.-AKC Collie
PiJppies rr\1'1 sable/wh.,eyes
normai,OSU cert . S400ea.-

Kiefer Buill· Valley-BisOn·
Horse
and
Livestock
TrailersLoadmax·
Gooseneck, Dumps, &amp;

ACROSS

AKC
Golden
Ret. Utility· Aluma Aluminum
pup s(2 F)12wks .. shots Trailers· B&amp;W Gooseneck
~
$350ea.-AKC Yor~e PUP' HitChes- Trailer Parts.
~
.pies males $800. females Carmichael
Trailers.
~
. $900 small. ALL Vet C~d . (740)446·24t 2
740-696-1085
21001 LPTanksphone304. Model 847 New Holland
675-1732
-AK_C_R_eg_
. S-h~ih-T-zu-p-upp-ie-s, round baler. Good condition . .
$2500.740-441 -7390
36x24 Oval Pool with deck· adorable &amp; loving. 1 male &amp;
Pool ·
·
t
~male all shols lemale
ing.
sits down mside
•-c
•
•
deck, $2995. (740)446-7425 spayed, S300· male: 5350·
\ LlmTOl"K
female. {740)446-7820
-- •
Crallmatic Adjustable bed· - - - - - - - 2004 model. Rumba power English Mastiffs AKC, CH Fair Pigs 6 weeks old $50 ILl..I.U..:.&amp;.;..o.:..t'"'-'=•
wheel chair, good condition. bloodlines. Only 3 tell . e~ch
304-675-5492
_;__ _ _ _ __
Bedside rommode toiler · lifl ClearanCe sate. 740-245· GoatsforSale. BoerGoats, .lum' ll l'l ' ~l' l' in·
740 992
• Top • Removal
::sea=
!. ..:...:.:.." -£9611.
.=: ,·- - 5823 or 740-645- 1912
Club kids, Born Jan &amp; Feb,
• Trim • Stump
Hot Tub. TO!l Quality. 5 per·
M•~CAL
2007. Call (740)256-9247
~
Grinding • Bucket
son, Never U9ed, warranty.
•· ~• ~a. ·IENTS
ol""'iliii'iiKiuliil
" iitiiiii'- Reg. Angus Cow/Call
Truck
Lounger. Will deliver. L,-··
.,
$1000. 4001 - 600# Angus
Full
insured
07
~(606--')32S_-__n
_ _ _ _ MES.AJBoogie Dual Rectifier Bulls &amp; He!. $1 .05 per
Senior
Citizen
HUGE SAVINGS ON Ampttlier Head and match· pound. 74Q-256-t758
Discount
ARCH STEEL
ing MESA 4x2 cabinet. 100 I Ill\ , \ ( , 11&lt;111 \ I IIIII'
BUILDINGS,
wat1s great condiiiOn, will
740-367-0266/
Repos. Slight Damages. sacrifice $1 ,400 call 304- 1988 Pontiac Grand Prix .
1-800-950-3359
Aiding lawn mower. 740·
773·5958
No Reasonable Offer
256" 1102. Ask for Jr.
30 Yis. Ex p. lns.
I
\R\1
"'I
1'1'111"1
Refused! 3left. 25'x36',
II~\\ '1'1 I I~ I \II! I\
,\ 11\I ..., I! Hh.
Owner Ronnie Jones
35x44. Call Today! Save
Thousands! 866-352-0469 "'r"ro,....-..,..---..,~ ~10
FrL'C Estimates
AIJfOS
JET
FAKI\1
fUR SALE
AERATION MOTORS
,
F.Quii'MI'Nr
Repaired..N'!W. &amp; Rebuilt In ·--iiiiiiiiiiitii-,.J
Stock. Caii ·Ron Evans. 1- 0% Financing· 36 Mos. 1987 Mazda 82200 ext cab
available . now on John automatic overdrive. hard
800. 537 _9528
Deere Z Trak Zero Turns &amp; shell , bed Cover. good cond.
NEW AND USED STEEL 5.99% Fixed Rate on John 96.000milesSt.200D80or Concrete Removal
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar II Deere Gators Carmichael trade 304-773-5078 or 304and Replacement
For Concrete. Angle, Equipment (740)446-24 12. 593-0958
Channel. Flat Bar, Steel - - - - - - - - --~----AU Types Of
t984 Case tt94 48hp dl·esel 1990 Mustang built 302 lots
Con•rete Work ·.
Grating
For
Drains.
2026
'
.
.
&amp; ot extras_ 740-742.
.
DriveWays &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l power steenng, wet 11nes
Sc
M 1 ""' M d frontend loader 1000fhrs. t998 Pontiac Sunfire. 26 Years Experience,
rap e1as ...,..,en on ay,
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp; ext. con. ~6,500 misc. 102000 miles. 38.5 MPG.
David Lewis
Fn'day' Bam-4 :30pm · Closed · attachments ava~able also $2500 · 740-446-4620
740-992-6971
Thursday, Saturday &amp; 304-n3-S070 304·5930958 2000 Chevy ·'- pala 43,500
Sunday. (740)446-7300
""
Insured
Antique Farman H tractor miles Must See $7,000 304Free Estlmatet
TaHie Tale Alarm System, with mounted Qn mower. 593-3707 or 304-675·4893 ':;;::::;===~
new,inbox,$400 'ortradefor new tires on back. kept in 2004 Stratus, $6000 080, r Wise Concrete
Gun. 740-992-2478.
barn hasn't been run lor 2000 Ford Mustang, $5000
years also mce shde tn twdl 080, 2000 Chevy Cavalier, All lypes of concrete
PETs
bed camper &amp; true!&lt; IQ!lper $2800 080, 2002 DOdge
Owner- Rick Wi se
fURS"~
lor large P'~ up (740)667
~
~
w
·
· Stratus, 2 door, $5600 080
740-992-5929
3253
(740)256-6169.
740•416• 1698
Basset/pupsAKC .
six
wk .old,4-trl -color,4-lemon USED Rotary tillers. 4', 5', 2006 Hyundai Elantra, 6- 15 )TS. 6xp. Free Estima.tcs
and wh. Parentson site.Ask 6:, 3 point hitch. BIG 7'000 miles ' $t3 ·OOO·' 2007
SELECTION. Jim's Farm Lincoln Navigator, 5,000
$275 ea.740-667-6758
Eqllipment: 74t&gt;-446·9777
miles. $55,000; 2007
Thoroughbred by Palomino
_camper, $25,000. (740)44t 8204
·

I

r

RENTALS SALES
SERVICE FREE DELIVERY
MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS
I

I
1

Bo's Classic Cars
29670 Bashan Road
2000 Chevy S-t o "'' cab
Racine , Ohio
5 speed, 4 cyl. 60,000 m~ es
45771
nice $5500. 95 8uicl&lt; Park
740-949-2217
ave. 110,000 miles $2800.
:t
~·
SheriN Sales Case Mrs. Thomas Lowden's ales olthe Meigs coun- The above dexcrlbed Acllon. An adjudlca· 740 .208-0028 0 , 740·245· , ~ 5'xt0' '
Number 06CV100
Lot; Thence South 77 ty Court House n tract was surveyed by lion hearing may be 5087 .
',
10'X30!:
JP Morgan Chase deg. West, 40 feel; Friday May 11, 2007 at George F. Seymour, held on , a proposed
..,
,
Thence along said 10:00 a.m. of said day, Ohio
Profaaalonal acllon If a hearing Cook Moton
Hours
Bonk
Plaintiff
Lowdeo's West line, lhe
following Surveyor, No. 6044, In request or oblectlon Ia 2004 Stra)us, 200t Grande
vs
North.1/2 dog. West, 96 described real estate: · December of 1998.
received by lhe OEPA Prix GT 2D Sunrool, 2000 7:00AM-8:00PM
Edith Barnhouse
feel to the. placa of Balog a part of the Reference
Deed: within 30 days of Saturn L100 4D Sunroot All ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~";'4~/l;m:•·:"":
at al
beginning;
tract of land that Is Voume 82, Page 507, Issuance of the pro- Power. 2005 Sunfire Sport
Defendants
ALSO a permanent now or IOrmerly In the Meigs County OHictal posed action. Written 2D Sunrool, t 999 · Jeep
Court of Common right-of-way 16 feet name,of Joseph Hall as Records
commenta, requests Wrangler, 2000 S-to Auto 4
Pleas, Meigs County, wide across Lot 162 recorded In Official Auditor 's
Parcel lor public meetings, Cyl, 2 Mini Vans.
Ohlo
from the premlaea record 73 at page 325, Number: 01.00304.002 and adjudlcallon hear- Cars starW!g at $2500.
In pursuance ol an herein conveyed; (said Meigs
ocunty Current Owner: Kevin ing requests must be 3 months, 3·000 mile warorder of sale to me right being mentioned Recorder's OHice, said Collins
sent to: Hearing Cieri&lt;, ranty. 328 Jackson Pike
directed lrom said In deed to Louis tract being part of Property At: 37012 Ohio
446·0t03
• New Homes
court In the above ehtl· Seyfried lrom Kenneth Section 31, T3N, R13W, Wolf
Pen
Road E n v I r o n m e n 1 a I -Tw-o-t _ _ - -ui-ck_P_a-rk
989 8
• Garages
tied action, 1 will Seyf~ed and Margeret Bedford
Township, Pomeroy, Ohio
Protection
Agency, Avenues for parts. $ 300 ,
-Complete
expose to sale at pub- Seylrled, et. al, former Meigs county, Slate of PPI: 01.00304.002
P.O.
Box
1049, King woodburner. S200: old
lie auction on the front grantors, to which ref- Ohio and being more Prior
Deed Columbus, Ohio
rille.
Mason,
(Bt
_
Remodeling
22
41226
steps of the Meigs erence
Is
hereby particularly described References: Volume 4 3 2 1 6 • 1 0 4 9 9986
County Court House made.)
as follows:
82, Page 507
(Telephone: 614-644on Friday, May 4th, ALSO the following Beginning at a point In Appraised
at 2129).
l'lft"'-":::'_____.,
2007 at 10:00 a.m. of described real estate: . the center of County $55,000.00 Ternis ol
" FINAL ACTIONS" ~1.5
TRUCKS
Stop &amp;Compare
said day, the following Excepting all ol Lots Road 14, the South line Sale: Cannot 'be sold are actlona of the I
FUR SALE
deecrlbed real estate: 159 and 160. ~ Is the of Section 31 and the for less than 213rds of director which 11re •--iiiiiiiiiiiiiio-r ·~:~:~:~
.EXHIBITA
Intention of the former grantor's Southwest the appraised value. effective.
_upon 94 Dodge Ram. 2wo, 5 r
PARCELN0.1:
Grantees to convey all corner which Ia taken 10o/o down on day of Issuance or a alated Speed. $t 300 080 Call
Johnson's Tree
Situated In the Village of the real property ·to baar South 84 sale, cash or certllled effective
dale. 740 : .
Service
578 1040
of Pomeroy, County of owned by Bertha degrees 00 minutes 29 check, balance due on Pursuant to Ohio
Golllpollo, OH 45&lt;3 1
Complet..li M C••e
Meigs and State of Seyfried 8llhe tlnie ol seconds East ala dis- conllrmallon of sale. Rev Ised Code Seclion --=--~~~-~
~ suvs
Top • T•Im•H'"""' ' S"mp
Ohto:
her deceased with the lance of 1180.24 feel The oppralsal did not 3745.04, a llnal ai:llon
"""""' ' e"'""""'"
FOR Si\LE
1n1urec1 • Free E1llm1tt1
And known as being exception of a portion from the Southwast Include an Interior may be appealed lo the ~it·--iiiiitiiiiiiio•r
,.,...,_,,.,
Lots No. 159 and 160 conveyed to Edith corner of Section 31;
examination of the Environmental Ravlew '
""' ''""~"·""at shown on Plat of Thomas· and with the Thence leaving the house.
Robert
E. Appaals
2004 Cadillac Escalade. ~~
· "~"'~":"~""~·=~~~
Horton and Dabneys exception of Lots 159 South line of Seclon 31 Beegle, Meigs County Commission (ERAC) Low Mileage, loaded. ll
Addition to Pomeroy. and 160, which have and along the grantor's Sherlfl
(formerly known as the Excellent
Condition.
C~PER'i &amp;
The real estate lnclud· been conveyed by _Waalltne and the cen- Attorney
for ,. the Envlronmenlal Board $37,ooo. 446-7249
MO'IOR HoM~
ed the land on which deed of even dale ter ol aald road the fol- P.lalntltf: Little, Sheela Of Review) by a person
MoroRaa.Elil
the garage for the real· herewith.
lowing two couraaa:
&amp; Warner
who was a party lo •
4WIIEEl.ERS
t976 Chevy RV, steeps 6,
dence 11 located.
Subject lo oil legal 1, North 38 degrees 20 213
E.
Second proceeding before the ~
~•w tires, 350 V-8, ale, runs
111-00072.1100
highways, easements, minutes 06 seconds St. Pomeroy, Ohio
director by filing an 2006 Blacl&lt; Harley Da~dson good, s2500 , 74 o. 4t 6. 1472 ,
111-00073.1100
right of ways, zoning , eaat a distance ol 740-992-6689.
appeal wllhln 30 d8YS t owner lots 01 , extras 740·992·1493
PARCEL NO.2:
ordinances, restrlc- 152.96 feat to point, (4) 11, 18, 25
of nollce of the Final $8.900
_ _
304 593 3542
Situated In the VIllage lions a nd conditions and;
Acllon. Pursuant to _ _ _ _ _ _ __
2. North. 24 degreea 17
Ohio revised code sec·
Camping Site lor rent' on
01 Pomeroy, County of ol record.
tnsta-trike kit, converts river, full hook-up. 992 _
Meigs and Stale of 18-()0074.000
minutes 11 seconds
Public Notice
tlon 3745.07, a Final Harley Sportster into a trike.
5956 ·
Ohio:
16-ootl75.1100
· east a dlatance ol
Action Issuing, deny, (740)368·040t
And known as being 9 Liberty Lane
69.89 feet to a point;
The IOIIowlng apptl- lng, modifying, revok- ~~~.;....;.:-:'":""--,
\II{\ I( I ...
Lots Number 157 end Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Thence laavlng the cations and/ or verified lng, or renewing a per- (1:iO BoAlS &amp; M0101t'i
158 as shown on the Parcel " Number: 16- center Of said road and complaints
wara mit, license, or varl~UR SALE
HOME
Plat of Horlon and 00072.000,
16- wHh a new line through received, and lhe fol- once Which Is not preIMPRoVEMENTS
Dabney&amp; Addition to 00073.00,
16- the grantor's land the lowing draft, proposed, ceded by a ·Proposed t989 Regal Medallion t8 Lw.,;iiiioiiiioiiiiiiiio,.J
Pomeroy.
00074.000,
16- following two courses: or final actions were Action,
may
be 11211 open bow 3.0
BASEMENT
Beginning
at
the 00075.000,
16- 1. South 82 degrees 26 Issued, by tha O)llo appealed to the ERAC Mercruiser $3,000 304-n3WATERPROOFING
Soulhwast. corner ol 00076.000,
&amp;
16- minutes 03 seconds E n vI ron mont al by filing an appeal 5070 or 304-593·0958
Unconditional lifetime guarLot No. 158 above;
110077.00
east, passing through Protection
Agency within 30 days ol
antee. Local references fur·
Thence South 4 112 Currently Owner: Edith a 518"x30" Iron pin with (OEPA) last
week. Issuance ol the llnal
nished. Established 1975.
dag. East, 22 feet to a Bam house
a plastic Identification "ACTIONS" Include tha action. ERAC appeals,
Cell 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
stake on the South Prior Deed References cap sel at 25.00 feel, adoption, modification, accompanied by a $70
0870, Rogers Basement
aide of a stone wall ; Volume 173, Page 669 going a total dlllanca or ropaol of, orders filing lee which the
WaterprOOfing.
Thence North 80 3/4 Appraised at $13,500 of 233.17 leet to ·(other than emergency commisSion In Its disdog. East, 110 feel to Terms of Sale: Cannot 5/8"x30" Iron pin with a orders); the Issuance, cretlon may reduce If
the W01t end of a stone be sold lor less than plaatlc ldentlflcatloq cl8nlal, modification or by affidavit the appal~~~~==:~~i:~~
wall on the South side 2/3rds of the appraised cap aat, and;
revocation of licenses, lant demonstraaattes
of Lot Number 161;
value. 10o/o down on 2. South 08 degrees 23 permHs, leases, varl- that payment of the full
Thence 'North 4 112 day of sale, cash or minutes 51 seconds antes, or certificates; amount of the fee
deg. West to the certified check, bal- Weal a distance of and the approval or would cause extreme
Southeast comer of once due on confirms- 189.35 feet to a disapproval ol plans hardship, must tie llled
Lot Number 160;
tlon olsala.
5/B" X30" Iron pin with and
specifications. with : Environmental
Thence North 89 dog. The appraisal did a plastic Identification ''DRAFT ACTIONS" are Review
Appeals
Wast along the South include an Interior cap
set on
the written statements ol Commission,
309
line of said Lot160 and examination of the grantor's south line the
director
ol South Fourth
along the South line of house.
and the south line of E n v I r o n m o n t a I Street, Room 222,
said Lol 159 to the Robert E. Beegle, Section 31; Thence P rote c I I o n 's Columbus, Ohio 43215.
place of beginning.
Meigs County Sheriff
olong tho granlor's (Director's) Intent
A copy ol the oppeal
111-00076.000
Attorney lor the plain- aoulh line and the with respect to the must be served on the
111-00077.1100
tiff
south line of Section Issuance, denial, etc. director within 3 days
PARCEL NO.3:
Frank Wooldridge
31, North 84 degrees of a permit, license, after lillng lhe appeal
Sltuat~ In the Vllleg~ 600 S. Pearl St.
00 minutes 29 seconds order, etc. lnterealed with the ERAC.
·
of Pomeroy, County of Columbus, OH 43206
West, passing through persons may submit Final Issuance Of
Meigs and State of 614-221'-1662
a 518" x 30" Iron pin written comments or ParmltTo Install
(4) 4, 11, 18, 25 (5) 2
with a plastic ldentlfi- request a public meet- Southern Ohio Coal
· Ohio:
&amp;
Beginning
at
the
· cellon cap set at lng regarding Draft Company
Northwest. corner of
243.07 feet, going a Actions. Comments or Meigs Mine No. 31
smithsuperstore.com
Lot Number 158;
Public Notice
total distance of 328.90 public
meeting Salem Twp. , OH
Thence South n dog.
feet to the point of requests must be sub- Action
DAte:
West, 55 1/2 feet; Sheriff sales Case beginning, containing milled within 30 days 0411812007
MOTOCROSS RACE
Thence 44 1/2 deg. Number 06CV14S
1.215 . acres, more or of notice ol the Draft Facility Description:
West, 78 feel; Th,nce Farmer's Bank and lesa, and augjact to the Action. " PROPOSED Wastewater
South 46 12 dog. WHI, Savings ,' Co. PLAIN- right-of-way of County ACTIONS" are written Identification .No. .:
Sat., April 28
· 40 112 feet; Thence TIFF
Road 14,., Township sta"ments of the 566944
South 1/2 dog. W01t, VS
Road 167 and all eaae- director's Intent with This final action not
Practice 4:30pm
207 feet;
•
Kevin D. Collins et.al. menta of record.
respect
to
lhe p"'"eded by proposed
Thence North 76 1/2 DEFENDANTS
All 518"x30" Iron pins l11uance, denial, mod- action end Is appeal- ·
· Race 6:00 pm
dag. East, 302 feet; Court of COmmon with plasllc ldentlfi- lflcatlon, revocation, or able to ERAG. Meigs
Adm. $8.00 under
Thence North 2 114 Pleaa, Melga County, colon caps set are r~newal of a permit, Mine No. 31- Hydrated
dag. Wast, 163 feet to Ohio.
stamped " Seymour &amp; license, or
Lime
Wastewater ·
6 years free
the uld Seyfried's In pursuance of an Associates",
variance, Written com- Treatment Plant and
Southeast
corner; order of sale to ma The bearing used In menta and requests for associated
support
. 675-5463
said directed from. said the above desrlbad a
public
meeting lacllllies to treat water
Thence along
Seyfried's South line, court in the above e.ntl- troct wire assumed regarding a proposed pumped from a closed
SOuth 80 3/4.dtig. Weal, lied action, ·1 will and are lOr the deter- action may be submit- underground mine.
110 leet · to ' the axpoaa to 111e lit pub- mlnallon of angles ted withi n 30 days of (4) 25
Southeast corner or lie auction on the front only.
notice of the Proposed
v

140-992-1611

r
v40

......-w.tlmber&lt;&gt;reekcabiJietr)'.eom

L

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FRANK &amp; EARNEST

TH' ROMANCE TWIXT URIAH
AN' TH' SCHOOLMARM IS
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URIAH STOLE A KISS !!

AN'MIZ
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THAT'$ NOT ME~ MY
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M~ 1'\IND IS TOO SHARP'
·~=

More than the usual amount or accompWshments can b,e achl9'.18d, but you
must oe careful not to overload yourself
at times to the point that everything you
have In the mill breaks down. Make gains
judiciously.
·
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Don't let
emotions govern Mw much you $Penct
on something ·you love doing or someone you care a great deal about. You
couki put out mu ~h more than you can

SNAP!

)=

Please leave messa e

3''

Thuraday, April 28, 2007
By Bernice 8ede Oeol

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·-·-·71
..
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,................
PIYIIIST. PIICES . . .

llllllldC 11111•1111 ·CII..

47 Ballot
marks
48 Split
49 Certain Ivy
Leaguer
50 Metro RRo
52 Stop signal .
53 Miscellany
54 Six games,
In tennis

,.J
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~RIZZWELLS
t'\l~ \IE~\\ W\:l\~Q fleo\r{ A~E'fJ
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VfiN~ '\b
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CUT

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
cereonry Ci!1181'CtYIXOQrams are crealed !rom !W~ons oy tamouspoople pas1 and present
Eacl11dle~ mthe al)her stands tor another

Today'sclue:BequalsJ .

"NSZF
CSE

RVL

DKRRLMR

RVL OKRRLMR

NSLM IVN

GEMINI {May 21-June 20) -In order to
realize continued successes throughout
. the day, It Is Important you try to maintain
a consistent pace. If your mode of oper, atlon is erratic, only partial victories will
be attained.
d ANCER (June 21-July 22) - Gauge
your audience wisely or else you could
pour your heart out to someone who
can't wait to spread the WOfd to everyone
else. A busybody won't keep anything
confidential.
LEO (July 23·AUQ. 22) - Try to make it a
point not to offer any un~liclted advice
with matters of the heart or business
information, ragardless of what you know
or don't know.
,
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 221 '- Allhough
the opinions of your companions may not
be witt10ut merit, don't let their views or
thinking override your own beHer jlldgment. Events will prove that you must
think for yourself.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) - It wilt be
important thi:lt you spend your time pro·
ductlvely, but this doesn't mean you
should attempt projects where you lack
the expertise or the know-how to handle
them well.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NOII. 22) - When it
comes' to ·major bbligatlons or expendi·
tures, you should be able to have things
pretty much under control, yet many
small extravagances could add up to
being your downfall.
SA81TTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . 21) Actions can b9 taken to enhance your
home Ute in ways that make everyone
h&amp;PP'J, yet you might go about il in such
an ·erratlc way you'll undo everything pre·
vlously accomplished.
,
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19) - Vou'r8
a self-sufficient person who ta.kBS your
responslb!Nties and duties seriously. II
you shut down . you could disappoint
someone important.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20~Feb. 19) - You'll be
extremely ccmpetenl in getting what you
want, yet OflCe you h~ve them in hand
you may not know how to solidify your
gains. You could thoughtlessly throw
away your harvest.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Don't tel
outside IntereSts become so engrossing
that you forget about 111 the tnlnga you
promlaed to do for your flmlly. Home and
loved ones Should come first.

ARIE S (March 21·Aprll 19) Unfortunately, you might not aceomplilh
11 much·as you hid hoptd, owtng to 1
aiowiF,; doWn from Impatience on your
pan vmtn It come• to dcHng tuU you
think oho&lt;tkl bo ooay.

SOUPTONUTZ

IKZZ ' MOHJKJL ,

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VNZZCSEM

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PREVIOUS SOLUTiON - 'We have no more rrghl lo consume happrness
wrthout producing rt lhan to consume wealh .;lhout producing it.' - G.B. Shaw

r::~::.r S(C~(llA-l££~s·

WOIO

tAM I

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Pass

Somelimes less capable players think
that experts play as il they can look
arotnd corners. But usually it is just a·
maHer of counting to 13. as in this deal.
If yoo were South, in six no-trump, how
would you plan the play? West leads the
spade jacl&lt;.
East opened three hearts in the modern
· style. Tradlllonally, he would promise a
decent seven-card suit and 5-10 highcard points. But when the vulnerability is
ravorable, a little nexibillly Is permilted.
South overcalled a natural thrill! notrump. The textbook says this shows a
gOod 15 10 18 high-card points, but he
could have a stronger hand tt1an that
because a four-no-trump overcall would
show a mllor two-suiter, not be natural.
You have tt top trlcl&lt;s: three spades, lwo
hearts, lhree diamonds and three clubs.
You need a lourth club !riel&lt;. And clearly,
II either the clubs are ,Pitttlng 3-2 or East
has a J~ngleton club hooor, you wil have
no prot;ems. But belore leaping to that
conclusion, play off dummy's heart ~n'g
to conlirm the 7-0 spl~. Then lake yoor
spade and dia'mond winners. What do
yoo learn? Here, lhal East slarted w!h
rwo·dramonds, seven hearts and at least
three spades. So, he has at most one
club.
~
'
Cash your club queen to see East's
ca·rd, then lead a club. towmrd th8
dummy. II West plays low, put In
dummy's nine. Or, if West Splits his honors, win with dummy's king, play a hea~
to your ~ce, and take the club finesse.

BARNEY

Closed Sunday "That's Gods Day"

e

3 NT

East

a•

24 Studio
renter
25 Dish with
saffron
26 Party
lhrower
27 "My Way"
composer
28 Perceived
29 Fly, to a
spider
34 Bayou
dwellers
36 Getuluck
42 Weighed
down wflh
cargo
43 Sonic
prelix
45 First-magnlludutar

·sal."

r:ti~U&gt;o.~TIC-,GI.At:t(.S 1 '&lt;OU ~ p-No-r 1"fAA

Work ·
*Reasonable Rates
*Insured
*Experienced

North

41 Joey or Kiki
42 Box top .
1 Pink43 Ms. Hagen
sllpped
of fllms
6 Voodoo
44 Fish roe
slave
46 Harden
1'2 Wrinkle-free 48 Lurched
14 Orcheetre 51 Bonuses
member
55 Aasen
15 Ve•
56 Placid
16 Far away
57 Sentra
11 One, In
l1'8lUiacllftr
Frankfurt
58 Nobellst
18 Grain crop
from Egypt
19 Duffers
goal
DOWN
21 Gloallng cry
23 Carpet pile 1 Shari&lt;
26 Checkroom
giveaway
Item
2 Pique
27 See - 3 Go bad
glance
4 Calculator
28 Narrow strip
key
ot flexible 5 Lox J)IIYI!'fa'
material
6 Maiked ,
30 Ottawa's
swordsman
prov.
7 Yield to
31 Just out
8 Jiffies
32 Banana oil, 9 Sci. clasa
t 0 Devotee
33 ~&amp;:key
11 Riviera
gear
summer
35 Pub pint
13 Signify
37 Seine vista t 9 Brealhed
38 -coHo
hard
39 Atom
20 Threeds
frogmen!
22 Romanllc
40 Wily
place

· Aldous Huxley said, "There's only one
corner of the universe you can be certain or improving, and mars yoor own

4" Pots $1.25-$1.49
Shrubs-$2.95-$6.95
Open M-Saturday 1D-5

Stop in at
participating
Pomeroy
Merchants
for our
Mother's
Day Gift
Basket
Giveaway

West

He can look
around corners

OPEN FOR SEASON!
Flats $7.50
1O"Hanging Baskets $5.5D-$6.50 _

South

Opening lead: • J

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Dealer: East.
Vulrierable: North-South

Hubbard's·&lt;lreenhouse ·

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East
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ft

ROBERT
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West
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MONTY

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H -2fH)?'

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Phillip
Alder

GR A 0 C

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"'I
N

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If yo111 offer or help and
fiiondship i.s givcn with strings
at1acbOO, you are aot beiJ!8

I-"TIN;,;,. 0;.,7'f-J-;_, .,~_,L,. .;E; . ,-I-·il 0-~o.:.,:.,.

tho &lt;h•&lt;klo q•oted
L.-.J."--1.-J..-.L.-1. ...J.
by filling if\ the miuing words
yov devt!Qp from 11tp No. 3 below.

(j

PRINT NUMBERED
ltllf!S IN SQUARES

() ~~~:~~A~ l£l EISI ' I I I I I ·I I I
SCRAN\-LETS ANSWERS • - 2 • - o 1
Ground - Await - Young - Oddily ·- WANTING
I overtacard two womcp at the gym complainin g
abo\at dieting. One woman said lhat her ambition'""
10 be weighed and fi11utd WANTING ."

ARLO &amp;JANIS

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentine!

Thriller
· from Page Bl

www .mydailysentinel.com

Griffey passes Jackson as Reds haminer Cardinals

ST. LOUIS (AP) - Ken
Griffey · Jr. finally passed
tally. Griffin singled to put Reggie Jackson and helpe(,l
Eastern in business in the the Cincinnati Reds get over
seventh, then scored · ·'~!hen a mi serable homestand.
Griffey moved into sole
Joel Lynch hit a double that
possession
of lOth place on
burned the Gallia leftfielder.
the
career
home
runs list with
Both starting pitchers
his
first
of
the
season, and
went the entire way. Shawn
Alex
Gonzalez
tied career
Thompson gave up five hit s,
highs
with
two
homers,
four
struck out six and walked
hits
and
five
RBls
in
a
10-3
two in earning the victory.
His counterpart
Kyle victory over the St. Louis
Gordon, surrendered nine Cardinals on Tuesday night.
"Last year, tying him. just
hits, walked one and fanned
my
name and his name mentwo.
tioned
in the same breath was
Weather
permJttmg,
just
overwhelmin·g,"
Griffey
Gallia Academy will cross
the river to take on Point said. "To pass him, somePleasant today. Eastern wi ll times it's mindboggling
play
a
Tri- Valley because I didn't think when I
Confe rence
Hocking started playing this game 19
at years ago that I'd be anyDivision
make-up
where., close to where I am
Waterford. also today.
now.
GALLIPOLIS 6, EASTERN 5
Griffey entered .with no
Eastern
102 001 1 - 55 0
homers and seven RBls in 51
Gallipolis 221 000 1 - 6 9 2
at-bats, and was limited to
Kyre Gordon and Jake Lynch . Shawn
one
pinch-hit appearance the
Thompson and David Rumley. WP .Thompson . LP - Gordon
last four games due to diver-

Rally
from Page Bl
Lady Eagles (7 -12) ma,de
things interesting in their
final at-bat.
Kelsey Holler's one-out
double put her 120 feet
away from home r1late, representing the tying run.
Brittany Bissell followed
. by reaching safely on an
error by the shortstop, but
Holter was picked off at
third trying to advance on
the play.
Now with two away,
Sarah
Athens
starter
Daugherty got Kathryn
Bland to strike out. ending
the Green and White's rally
bid.
Daugherty was the winning pitcher of record,
allowing 10 hits, five
earned runs and no walks
during her seven innings of
work. Daugherty also
fanned three in the triumph.
Sasha Collins took the
loss for EHS, surrendering
five earned runs, nine hits
and two walks in her seven
frames of work. Collins also
recorded three strikeouts.
Holter, Bland and Kate
Wilfong paced the Lady
Eagles with two hits apiece.
Alyssa Baker, Hannah Pratt,
Hannah Cozart and Sami
Cummins provided the
other safeties in the setback.
Cummins and Cozart also
had two RBls apiece, while
Holter added the other run
batted in. Bland, Wilfong,
Pratt, Cozart and Amber
White each scored once.
Anna Pomento led the
Green and Gold with three
hits, including a solo home
run to lead off the sixth.
Morley was next with two
hits, while Snoddy, Clark,
Raven Cline and Richelle
Hecker provided one safety
apiece.
Cline's hit was .a two-run
homer in the fourth, leadi ng
to her team-high two RBls.
Pomento, Morley and
Snoddy each drove in one.
Pomento also scon;d twice.
The game was scoreless
through two complete, ·
then EHS struck first blood
in the third when a leadoff
error allowed Amber
White to reach safely.
White later scored on an
RBI single by Holter, mak·ing it a 1-0 game.
Pomento reached on a
one-out single in the fourth,
then Cline belted her blast
to centerfield for a 2-1
advantage.
Bland and Wilfong provided back-to-hack singles
to lead off the founh . then
Cozan delivered a triple to
make it a 3-2 contest.
Cozan later scored on a
fielder's
choice
by
Cummins for a 4-2 score.
Athens tied the game at
four in the sixth .with two
scores, but the hosts. retaliated with a run in the sixth
when Cummins singled
home Pratt for a 5-4 edge
after six complete.
Eastern returns to action
Wednesday when it travels
to Waterford for a TriYalley Conference Hocking
Division makeup game. lt is
scheduled to stan at 5 p.m.

ticulitis, an inflammation of
the ~olon. He grounded out
and walJ&lt;,ed hi's first two atbats. before hitting a two-run
shot in the fifth , the 564th of
his career.
Jackson made a congratulatory telephone call last fall
when Griffey t'ied him, &lt;!nd
Griffey expected anoth.er call
soon.
·
"Not yet, but somehow
he 'II find out," Griffey said.
"I just don't hit them as long
as he did. I don't get the ooh,
aah. ooh shots."
Manager Jerry Narron,
Jackson 's teammate when he
hit his SOOth homer, didn't
think Jackson would mind
dropping out of the top I 0.
"Reggie will be fine ,"
Narron said. "Reggie was
one of the best power hitters
ever."
Aaron
Harang
(3-0)
worked into the eighth for the
Reds, looking nothing like
the team that just completed a
2-5 homestand marred by a

.232 batting average, 13
errors and a 5.20 E~A .
Cincinnati total~d six runs in
its three previous games
before
punishing
the
Cardinals, who fell to 1-7 at
home.
Kip Wells (H) got
knocked out in the fifth for
St. Louis, which was 49-31
in the first season at new
Busch Stadium and wrapped
·up the World Series there.
The Cardinals have been
outscored 42-20 at home,
getting I0 of the runs in the
lone victory.
"What did we do worse
today, hit or pitch?" manager
Tony La Russa said. "I just
think our team had a tough
day. The margin is immaterial to me."
Griffey is a career .304 hitter with 20 homers against
the Cardinals; most of any
NL· team, including a .412
average with foul- homers
and six RBls against St.
Louis last season. He has 30

Pomento

EHS (7 -12): Sash a Collins and Kathryn
Bland
WP -· D~iJgherty: LP - CoWns
HR: A - Raven Cline (tourth inning, one

on. one out): Anna PomQnto (sixth
inning, nobody on, nobody out}

homers
against
the
Milwaukee Brewers, but
only 13 since they moved to
the NL in 1998.
lt was the second milestone
homer for Griffey in St.
Louis in recent years. He hit
his SOOth career homer on
Father's Day in 2004 at old
Busc h Stadium with his parents in attendance.
This one was only the second of his career as a right
fielder, the position he moved
to on a full-time basis this
year. The other came on May
9, 1994; at Boston off Tony
Fossas.
Scott Rolen had two hit s
for the Cardinals, making
him 7-for-9 the last two
games. Rolen doubled and
scored on Scott Spiezio's single in the fourth to cut ·the
deticit to 3-1.
Gonzalez entered with no
homers and four RBl s. He hit
a two-run homer in the second to stan the scori ng, doubled and scored in the fourth

and capped a five-run fifth
with a three-run shot in the
fifth for an 8-1 lead. His four ·
hits tied a career high, and he
also set a career mark by
scoring four runs.
Harang, who led the NL
with nine road wins last year.
is 3-1 in four starts at yearold Busch Stadium. He
allowed two runs on five hits
in 7 2-3 innings with five
strikeouts and one walk.
. Wells, who made hi s fi rst
start against the Reds since
2005. 1s 2-9 with a 4.90 ERA
for his ·career ag;1inst them.
He surrendered three homers
after allowing only one in 26
in nine s in hi s first four starts.
''It's pretty obvious I didn't
make too many good pitches
judging by the quality of
swings that they took," Wells
said. "I just missed in the
middle of the plate a lot and
they did a good job of taking
advantage of it. and that 's not
the way you want to start a
homestand."

'

4-H club completes
. CPR course, A3

·Gallipolis hosts
reenacbnent, A7

-

.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,-;o { ' FNTS • \ ol. ,;&lt;&gt; . :\:o. tH6

Tlll ,KSDAY, .\I'IUL !!h,

"""·"')•taif._,.,.,; 11 ,.t., ... ,,

:!CIO"'

Meigs Local Board hears proposal on sports complex

SPORTS
• Southem drops
shocker to Wahama.
See Page 81

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILY SENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - While vot'ers several years ag·o reject ed a levy which would have
provided funding for a complete sports complex on the
Meigs High School campus,
plans are now moving
toward raising private donations for that project.
Mike Chancey, Meigs

PLAY COVERALL BINGO

WIN UP TO $1,000 !!!

footba ll couch and athletic
dire.ctor, met with the Mei gs
Loca l Board of Education
Tuesday night to outline
plans of a citi zens group
intent on building a footba ll
field and stadium on the
Meigs school campus along
with upgrading all current
sports facilities there. He
announced a meeting set for
Sunday at 2 p.m . at the
sports training building and

invited anyone interested to
;ltlentl .
Chancey noted that several members of the interested
group have visited sdiools
to see sports facilities whi&lt;;h
have been constructed with
private money and to get
ideas from those schools on
fund rai sing . He said lhey
plan to visit more schools
for more ideas on overcoming obstacles and arriving at

a point of actual construc tion.
According to Chancey, the
group plans to move ahead
with setting up a 50 I. 3-C
.(non-profit) account to
receive donations. He said
the objective is to updaie
and improve all athletic programs through improved
facilities . That, he said. will
include a new stadium and
football field , and track,

By BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

675-4340
INSIDE

NUMBER I

· Hair Crtre II. Makeup
• Nail Cue • Helix Cuts
· Fart,ll5 &amp; Waxing
• Massage • Body WraP"
• Spa r.\Ck&lt;!ges ' Chemical l'eets
• Mlcroderm Abrasions

• Advocates for the
poor clash with ·Gop'
over health insurance.
See Page AS.
• Ohio University limits
students' use of
file-sharing programs.

(740) 446-2933
Hours:

Open M·F lOam-Close

• Chester-Shade
association sets annua~
tea party. See Page A3
• Wahama announces
alumni dinner.
See Page A3
• CD-ROM to help
Somalis team U.S.,
Ohio legatsystem.

See Page AS

326 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631

:Z.

See Page AS

Signa,ture
• Oxygen
• Nebulizers
• C-PAP
Portable Oxygen
• Pulse Oximetry

24k Rose or
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• Free help with
genealogy planned.

See Page AS

Th_jj]])])
Quad Cab 4x4, 21,000
miles, Factory Warranty

WEAmER

...
Everett McDaniel of Pomeroy displays
the certificate he received alon g with a
cash award for his photograph of ducks
on a lake.

Photography
.contest Winners
. recognized
POMEROY - Many residents from
across the county entered the annual
photo coniest of the Meigs Soil and
water Conservation District and the
Leading Creek Watershed Group which
this year used as the theme, "Water:
Essential for Life. "
Taking the top spot in .the contest was
Everett McDaniel of Pomeroy with his •
entry showing ducks on a lake. He was

i!Jbl1 UD

"Fun F~ir'' for preschool
children, parents and educators
BY BETH SERGENT

(740) 446-Q724

ElSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTIN'EL.COM

David

Jrench C~ty

142 2nd A... O•lllpotl•, OH

7'40-4 48-9020
Ol»tft Mon ·Sittll-6: SUI! I·S
• ·••Jrmcltdlvmall.lVIII

Details an Page A8

·~

..

INDEX

~

Otlcon
Hear what others are saying about
Oti&lt;on Delta.
·

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(740) 446· 7619

2 SECTIONS -

16 PAGES

Calendars ·

A3

Classifieds

. B4-6

Comics

B7

Annie's Mailbox

· A3

Editorials

A4

Places to Go

A7

Sports
Weather

B Section

AS

© 2007 Ohio Valley Publishifll Co.

Another satisfied
Customer.!
Debra K.

, Agent

(304)675-7036
2400
Gallipolis , Dnio

215 Shih Sr. Pl. PIU..n1, WV
(304) 675-7036 '

(7 40) 446-1 f 11

rinnitielins@suddtnUnkmail.com

TWo IMBII'otu:

AutolllomtlllusiiiCSIIILifel

114 m11e norm of Pomeroy, Mason
Mason, WV

H..tth/Anuily
An lnckpencltlll Agoncy

.

.

"Call AIS today and you
could
be smiling tool"
.

~ADVANCED
HEARING
• CENTER
1 I 22 Jld&lt;son Pike • GaHipolis
(740)441·1t71 (800)0W114

'

.

RA C INE ~ A 14-yearold
girl claims three unidentified
men jumped out of a van and ·
attemp!ed to chase her
around noon on Tuesday
while she was walking to
Southern Elementary.
The girl's mother. Sherry
Wolfe of Racine. said her
daughter had been sick that
morning but around II :30
a.m. began fee lin g better and
left their home on Broadway
to walk to school. Wolfe said
the girl said she was almost
to El!n Street when a van
drove past her. turned around
and came back. pulled off on
the opposite side of the road
and three men whom the girl
described as "Mex ican "
allegedly started chasing her. ·
Wolfe said her daughter
didn 't know the men who·
said nothing to the girl during the alleged chase. Wolfe
added ihe daughter mn past a
home on Elm Street. behind
the Racine United Methodist

Please see Chasing, AS .

Meigs first -day
turkey harvest
down this year
STAFF REP()RT .

2147 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH

*Home Decor *Furniture
*Hand Puppets for
Children
• Antiques for the
Antique lover
Our 19,000 square foot
store offers thousands
of gifts for the entire
family.

These prize-winning photograghs
of Joani Powe rs of
Long Bottom took
second and third
in the "Water: .
Essential for Life ..
themed contest.

Please see Winners, A5

Gallia Auto Sales

J1ntique &amp; era~ .MaU

Please see Meigs. A5

incident
.in Racine alerts
community

Pleasant
Valley
Hospital

TODAY'S

concession stands. everything needed.
He emphasized that the
group now involved is "just
in th e "begi nnin g stages.
exploring possibi lities," and
trying to see what support
will come from the community. As for the money it will
take. Chancey repeated that
"the goa l is to have it all be

Chasin~

Employees. Independent Contractors. Vendors and their immediate famiily not eligible.

.

All1EN5 6, EASTeRN 5
Athens
000 202 2 - 6 9 2
Eastem 001 301 0 ..... 5 10 0
AHS (6·9): Sarah Daugherty and Anna

Wednesday, April2s, 2007

MIDDLEPORT
Children, their parents and
eductors of preschool children are invited to attend the
Meigs County Help Me
Grow Fun Fair from 9:30
. a.m . until2 p.m., May I at the
Middleport Family Life
Center.
Kids party entertainment
will be provided by Angel
Bug who will provide a
Honey Bear Bounce House
for chi ldren. face painting
and an educational program
about sea life. Bug connects
her program to ,the State of
Ohio curriculum standards
by helping children with the
acquisition of vocabulary.
Her objecti.ve is to suppon
new understanding s and
questions in a risk free setting
for sharing ideas or feelings
helping to expand vocabulary
and introduce new words.

Also performing at the fun
fair at 9:30 a.m .. I0:30 a.m.
and I p.m. is Debbie Clemet
an
Arts
Enrichment
Specialist serv1 ng young
children and their families,
often children with special
needs. An educator as well as
a singer-songwriter, in 199g
Clcmet was awarded the Ell a
Lyman Cabot Trust award for
preschool music se rving children with special needs.
Clemet will bring to Meigs
County an extravaganza of
ideas : puppets.' props. costumes, rhythm instruments.
games, dances, and tlannel
board ideas. .Children and
their parents are encourged to
partipate in the peformances.
Clemet will also share ideas
on multiple intelligence theory, learning preferences and
behavior management.
In addition to Bug and
Clement, the fair will feature

Please see Fun Fair. AS

Medical savings.accounts
add ·up to savings for county

POMEROY
- Meigs
County had the third largest
harvest of wild· turke ys on
Monday, the first' day ;Jf the
BY BRIAN J. REED .
Any money remaming in spring season. but the counBREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM · the account at the end of the
ty's harvest was clown from
plan year, which ends on July last year.
POMEOROY
- Meigs 31, carries over into a longOhio hunters harvested
County Commiss ioners are term account the employee
bearded wild turkeys
2,569
pleased wi.th the results nf a can access upon retirement. to
on
the
fi rst day of the spring
new health insurance pro- pa¥ medical. expenses after
turkey
huntin ~
season.
gram for county employees. retirement.
which
is
open'
statewide
'
and expect the plan to save
To date. Sheets said, on ly
additional costs as it contin- eight of the 68 employees through May 20. The prelimues.
have $100 &lt;H less remaining inary !'igurc was 16 percent
In August. commissioners in their accounts. meaning the below last year's opening
institutctl a medical savings insurance plan has paid no dav harvest number of :1.05R
tut:kcys. according to th e
account program for employ- claims for any employees.
Ohio
Department of Natural
ees participating in the health
Because there is a personal
Resources
Di Yision · of
insurance plan offered by the benefit to the employee from
county The county allocated saving
medical
costs. Wildlife .
$2.000 for each employee employee's tend to spend le" . . Top l'&lt;lllnti~s for wilu
killed
were :
into an account for use toward For example. Sheets said. turkey s
Ashtabula.
with
125.A
tllen
s.
all medical expe nses.
employees are more likely to
County Commissioner Jim visit a family physician rather with I tn. Mei~ s with 86.
Sheets said the savings than the emergency room. or Harrison wit!]· R'i and
account is used in lie11 of request a generic presc ription Tuscarawas. 81. Last year.
deductibles for health insur- medication rather than a more Meigs County hunters harance costs. The first $2.000 in expensive name brand prod- vested 116 turk p s on the
office VISits , diagnostic uct.
opening day of the season.
expenses. prescription med''When an employee
Th is is the ei ghth year that
ications and other medical
Please see SavingS', A5
Please see Turkey, AS
costs is paid froin the account.

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'

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