<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="4395" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/4395?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-19T21:17:51+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="14322">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/b051f341e8dec941c8af9013c17b9180.pdf</src>
      <authentication>b8ffadd63d34284ba53f8fc0a4015daa</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="15287">
                  <text>I
_.,

PageD6

GARDENING .

iunbap lime~ -ienttnel

Hocking College .
Camp offers taste of·
college life, A2

Sunday, Apri129, 2007

I

WAY BEYOND DAISIES Fann will host landscape seminar May 12
[AP) - Howe,er fitful
this year's ~pri n g. gardeni ng
books can inspire you for
the growi ng season that's
under way. The worse the
weather. the more time for
1'eadin g - and armchair
Qarden in co can he wi ldlv.
'
mnbitiou's. ta kin ~ \lJU far
beyond daisy bonlcrs and
the cabbage patrhc
Here are some po'Sibili ties that reall y are not just
daydreams. The writers of
the fL111owing co lorfully
illustrated books urge you
to think camellias. palms.
cacti and co nifers.
• "Bevond the Came llia
Belt" !Ball. April 2007 ) is
by William L Ackerman. a
retired research gene ti cist at
the
U.S.
· Natio nal
Arboretum in Washington.
D.C. who lives on hi s farm
ih Maryland. devoted to hi s
"love and obsession.. with
camell ias. Maryland is a bit
chilly for these lusi: iou s
bloo ms. but he says he
enjoys the challenge of cultivatin g them here. and his
research has helped develop
hybrids that can be grown in
places ranging from Nova
Scotia to Iowa and
Michigan.

Hi s book says plenty
about camellias· beauty and
fragrance. But. asked what
he finds the single most
gratifying reason for growing them, Ackerman told the
AP in an e-mail ex~hange
that it 's the welcome timip g
of · their
appearance .
"Camellias are unique garden evergree n ornamentals
in that they bloom during
the bleak days of autumn,
winter. and early spring
when many plants are dormant."
• "Palms and Cycads'' .
(Ball. April 2007) by David
Sq uire is a source of basic,
helpful information on these
two all uring plants that are
botanicall y
unrelated
althoug h they're see mingly
simi lar. In spite of their
graceful image of tall trees
crowned with plumes of
curving leaves, Squire says,
many palms "have a clumpforming or sc ramblin g
nature": and cycads often
have lea th ery leaves ~ nil
short.
woody
trunk s.
Tropical or subtropical temperatures are esse ntial for
many palms, he says; in
cool-tempe rate
climates
you' II have to grow them

indoors or in conservatories.
• "Cacti and Succulents"
(Ball. . April 2007) by
Gideon Smith desc ribes
al&gt;out 50 . species of cacti
arid more than I 0 families
of succu lents. givi ng details
of the characteristics and
care of these often prickly
but oddly beautiful plants.
He also gives readers tours
of notable garden collecti ons in places rangi ng from
Zurich to Phoenix.
•
"Gardening With
Conifers" (Firefl y, paperback 2007) by Ad ri an
Bloom points out that while
conifers can be deciduous
or evergreen. smi1e of these
so-ca lled evergree ns can
glow with colors incl uding
brilliant powder blue.
orange and yellow, even red
and crimson. Cgnifers can
also seduce with thdr aromatic fragrance , he points
out. If you're overawed by
the thought of giant
Redwoods in yo ur back
yard. Bloom reminds you
that there are plenty of
hardy dwarf and miniature
co nifers - solace for those
who are resigned to clearly
being out of the camellia,
palm tree or cactus belts.

offer tips on the physical planting of the materials, with easy steps to get t~e best outcome.
In the second workshop, Dav ison talks
about growing and pruning the pl ants.
"Visitors will learn how to correctly trim .
plants, how to split them and how to keep
the weeds out of their landscaping,"
Davison said. "Much of it is information
that professional landscapers know, but
homeowners haven' t necessarily learned."
Davison developed the workshop information after years of answering questions
for customers · at his nursery, which he
opened in 1983.
The plant exchange is sponsored by Bossard .
Memorial Library of Gallipolis, and held in
conjunction with local garden clubs. Visitors
are invited to bring annuals, perennials, seeds,
herbs, bulbs, small trees or shrubs and houseplants to exchange with others. The exchange
will be held from 9:.30 a.m. to 2:30p.m.
For informarion. call (800 ) 994-3276 or
(740) 245-5305, or visir rhe websire at
~ ww. bobe1'a11s. com.

RIO GRANDE- A Landscape Workshop
and Plant Exchange scheduled at the Bob
Evans Farm on Saturday, May 12 will offer
tips for everyone, from those j ust beginning
to landscape their yard to avid gardeners.
The day will include two landscaping
seminars and a plant exchange from 9:30
a.m. to 2:30p.m. The event is free and open
to the public at the farm in Rio Grande.
Bruce Davison , owner of Davison's
Nursery, will share his expertise in
"Landscaping Made Simple" at 9:30 a. m.
and in "Mai ntenance of Landscaping" at
I :30 p.m. Each seminar lasts for 30 minutes.
'These workshops offer an opportunity to
learn fro m a professional, whether you've
been working on your·yard for years, or are
just starting an outdoor project," said Bob
Evans Farm Manager Ray Me Kinni ss.
In the tlrst class, Davison will talk about
how to select plants with various colors, height
differeinials and leaf contrasts, as well as how
to lay out the landscaping to fit the structure of
an individual 's home. This seminar will also

·' " U ·. vrs • \'ol. :;h . ~o . • !'HI

SPORTS
• Raiders choose Russell
No. 1. See Page 81

RIVERFRONT HOME FOR SALE

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• ~tty L. Weyersmiller
• Ruth Musser

INSIDE '
• Ariel offering summer
ballroom classes.
See Page A2
• Attending one
ceremony1s'enoggh.
See Page A3 ..
• Applications available
for Meigs Junior Fair
royalty. See Page A3
• House Republicans
put stamp on state
budget ' See Page AS
• Robber takes
wallet, forgets phone.
See Page AS

Office phones: 740-446-5217 or 740-446-5017
Office lax:
740-446-552,2 Emails: lgooch@holzer.org
• For adddional house pictures visit our website at: www.holzer.org'foundationlindex.aspx Uester@holzer.org

rr

Marauders sweep
·Athens in DH, Bt

.

••

WEATHER

Ell

\\\\\\ m~d.lil~..,t'llllnt • l.toltl

delavs on S.R.
124 continues as liVer
.bank WOIII DIOV8S along
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Holzer Fouridatkln will accept sealed-bids for a prime.location/Ohio River-front property in the historic and '
scenic residential section of Gallipolis. Ohio.· This 42' x 200' dty lot located at 553 First Avenue includes a
three-bedroom home with a carport and storage building. The absolutely spectacular view, however, is to
the rear of the property, which extends a good distance to the shora of the beautfful Ohio River. (Lot 9 of
Garden Lot 20 - Lot size: 42' x200' -1 ,395 square feet of living area}.
This property has a certified appraisal (March 29, 2004) of $94,000 (exclusive of improvements/furnishings}
and a reserve of$100,000 is set for this auction. The sealed-bid opening (bidders/public invited to be present)
is planned tor Saturday, May 19, 2007 at 12:30 p.m.·in the French 500 Room at Holzer Medical Center
(100"Jackson Pike). Open houses, tor bidder/public inspection, are scheduled for Salurday\May 5},
Sunday (May 6) and Saturday (May 12) w~h Holzer Foundalion slaff on-site to show the property, ansvler
questions and disaJss the auction. Hours for the open houses are frorn Noon until2:00 p.m. each of the three
days (special showings by request). ·
For furth!lr information or discuss on, we invite you to contact Holzer Foundation Staff .
(Tom Gooch, Executive Vice President; Linda Jeffers-Lester. Development Associate) at:

.

I

\ION n " ' \I'KII • .l
. 11 '-00
.,
~/

MIN ERSV ILLE
Motori sts trave ling State
Route 124 can expect continued delays at Minersville
where only one lane is open
to traffic for another two
month s.
In last week's trave l advisory Stephanie Filso n, public
information officer for
District I 0, Ohio Department
of Transpmtation, said it will
take about that long for the
U.S. . Army Corps of
Engi neers to finish needed

100 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH 45631

.

Middleport • Pomeroy~ Ohio '

In Celebration 01 f'he
Week 01 t'he Young Child

Meiis CountJ Hel~ Me.Grow

•

river bank stabili zation and
ODOT to get the highway
open to two-way traffic
again.
Meanwhile, ODOT is handling two-way traffi c on the .
one lane using temporary
traffic signals and has
marked off the lane with
concrete barriers along the
centerline. The section is
located .4 of a mile east of
intersection Ohio 833, just
above where Nye Avenue
and East Main Street intersed.
· 'Please see River, AS

· .

.

.

Cha~ene Hoe~tch/ photo

.

Route 124 at Mmersv1lle rematns one lane as the U.S. Corps .of Engineers coAtinues work
to stab1l1ze the nverbank along the road. ·

FLOWER FESTIVAL BLOOMS INTO SUCCESS .Middleport
BY BElH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

absentee ballot
deadline nears

.

RACINE - Despite beginning
with a co()l breeze blowin~ off the
Ohio River and a few ratndrops,
the Racine Area Commumty
Organization's (RACO) Flower
Festival ended the day in sunshine
and blooming flowers.
After .the parade and a performance from the Southern High
School Marching Band, parade
wmners were announced and
included: first place, Racine
Southern FFA; second place, Ohio
River Producers; third · place,
Elizabeth Teaford.
F?llowing the parade awards,
Emtly Babbitt was crowned the
2007 Flower Festival Queen.
According to organizer Sherri
O'Brien, Babbitt received . prizes
from Juhli( Campbell, Weaving
Stitches and Love Your Tan.
Babbitt is the daughter of Debbie
and Lawrence Howell of Racine
and Red Babbitt of Gallipolis.
Other candidate~ includes Mallory
Hill , daughter of Perry and Bobbi
Hill of Letart; Bethany Vance,
daughter of David and Annettee
Vance of Portland; Rachel Wood,
daughter of Kerry and Deborah
Wood of., Racine; Adelle Rice,

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTIN&amp;L .COM

Emily Babbitt
(left) was . ,
crowned the
2007 RACO
Flower Festival
· vuee~ . Betty
Holman, last
year's queen
passes the ti ara
to Babbitt
Both Sorgont/ photo

P'lease see Flowers, AS
Loaded. Lealher. Hea!eo Seals. DVD System.
3rd Row Seating, New Pirellis
$
Scorp1on T1res

2 9 ' 86 6 •

15,655 Miles. S:lver. Sedan. 4 Dr.. Auto.

2006 Chevy Impala LTZ

$27,993

23. 104 Mite's, Silver, Sedan, 4 Or.. Auto.

:26,074 Miles, Brown S00an, 4 Dr., Auto.

$18.859

STAFF REPORT
NEWS @ MYDAILY S ENTINE~ .C OM

Details on Page AS

$14,995
AWD Premier
1U9&amp; MIIQ, T1n, 4 Or., Aulo.

SI!Y1tr Auto

$20,445

$30,677

2004 Ford

2005 Ford
Escape Limited

Mustang GT

24,106 Milet, Whie, 4 Ot

35.874 Milet, Maroon

....

$18,969

$20,888

2 SECTIONS -

$20,495
2001 Cadillac
Deville

2006 Uplander LS
25,268 Miles, Maroon,
Exttndad Sport Van . .\ulo

42,047 Milt, Whn• 4 Or.

SopcL

$16,995

INDEX

2005 Mercury Mariner

22,257Miel, 5.7 Liter V8

AIIIO.

$16,445

$15,395

1.994 Cadillac Deville

4 Dr., Sedan, Maroon, t 01 ,209 Mites

4 Dr., Sedan, Gold, 121,978 Mites

4 Dr., Sedan, Silver, 77,408.Miles

Econollne Conversion Van, White

4 Dr., Sedan, Blue

$6,399

$4,899

$16,695

$7,995

$8,995

l\2tlOO Pontiac Bonneville SSEi
Dr., Sedan, Black, 80,920 Miles

2001 Buick Regal LS
4 Dr.', ~dan, Gold, 85,101 Mites

$9,995

$6.995

2004 Chevy Ext Cab Pickup

2001 Dodge Durango 4x4 SLT

2005 Pontiac Grand Prix

Red, 27,000 Mites

4 Dr. Utility, Blue, 74,770 Mites

.4 Dr. Sedan, Sliver, 18,388 Miles

$14,995

$9,995

2004 Chrysler PT Cruiser

2004 Chrysler Sebring LX

2001 Fort! Ranger

2005 Chevy Aveo LS

2005 Ford Taurus SEL

4 Dr. Sedan, Black, 25,811 Miles

3.5, 4 Or. Sedan, Brown, 25,811 Mlleo

Sedan, Blue, 48,034 Mites

4 Or., Sedan, Maroon, 15,809 Mites

$11,995

$10,666

$18,859

2007 Chevy Coiba!t LS

2006 Chevy HHR LS

2002 GMC Sonoma 2WD

2006 Cadillac SRX

4 Dr. Red, 23,097 Mites

4 Dr., Auto, 22,288 Mites

Extended, Gray, 43,756 Miles

4 Dr., Utility White, 31,285 Mites

2.9 for 60 months

$14,995

$11,633

$10,995
$26,995

I

$15,366 .

Limited- 4 Dr., Sllvei, 30,510 Miles

$10,995
2004 Pontiac Vlbe

.

Black, Auto, Atr

$12,995

A:3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Annie's Mailbox

A:3
A4
As

Obituaries

II

12 PAGES

Calendars

Editorials

r-~------------~ r---------------~ r---~==========~
1999 Ford E·150
2003 Chevy Malibu

2001 Oldsmobile Alero GLS

Eastern High School.prom

Eastern board approves contracts

rr •
•••

GTO

Please see Ballot, AS

2006 Chevy Impala LT

S21 ,288

2004 Pontiac

Sports

B Section

Weather
© 2007 Ohip Valley Publishing Co.

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Eastern Local Board of
Education approved contracts
fo r teachers and other personnel
at last week's regular meeting.
After meeting in executive
session, the boa'rd approved
Eric Scites, William R. Tipton,
Mindy Chancey and Chris
Saber as substitute teachers for
the remainder of the school
year.
Tonya Barber as a substitute
custodian for the remainder of
the school year.
The board approved two-year
contracts for teachers Mary
Anne Moore, Adam Pryor.
Robert Neal, and Julie Spaun.
Three-year contracts were
awarded to Deborah Kerwood,
Linda Smith, Christi Lisle,
Kri sta Johnson,:Wmfda Shuler,
and Nancy Wachter.
Five-year contracts were

apf&gt;roved for Chad Griffith,
Kirk Reed, Howie Caldwell,
Tina Kelley, Angela Houck,
Teresa
Lemo ns.
Sharon
Wickersham, and Nancy Circle.
A continuing teaching contract was awarded to Becky
CotterilL
The board appr~ved continuing cq ntrac ts class.ified staff
Keith Downs and Becky
Maxson.
The board approved nonrenewal of long-term substitutes Chad Milliron, hi gh
school intervention specialist
and Angela Weeks, kindergarten teacher, and approved
non-renewal
for
Betsy
Martmdale,. Gwen Hall, Sheila
Conno!ly, and Melissa Conde
due to fundin g and lack of
necessity.
Non-renewal of all certi tied
and classified substitute staff
e ffecti~e at the end of the 2006Piease see Eastem, AS

Jenna Hupp was
crowned 2007
Prom Queen and
Justin Riebel
Prom King at
Eastern High
School's JuniorSenior Prom on
Saturday
evening. The
prom was held ·
at the school.
B~an

'

J.

Re~/ photo

I

I,

Paint the Town Purp~~J

TuSay, May 1- wearPurple-DecoratevourH6nleorBusl~'iilii.·~rbliE
Join YDUr community neighbors at events taking place at
.
10 am- Ohio Valley Bank Main BranCh 1 pm- Holzer Center fOr
6 pm • Gallipolis City Park_Jor more lnfonnatlon, call (740) 446-5679.

I .

MIDDLEPORT
Saturday js the.last day to
request an absentee ballot
fo r the May 8 election in
Middleport , .and May 7 is
the last day to cast an
abse ntee ballot.
Only four absen tee ballots have been cast so far
in the elec tion, wfilcl\
includes onl y a iwo-m ill
lewy request from the village. There are. no primary
elect ions in any of the
co unty 's oth er villages
. town ships.
and .
Candidates who have filed
fo r office in Midd leport
will appear on th e
Nov ember ge neral electi on ballot. Residents in
other villages and in th e
co unty 's town ships will
elect village offic ial s and
tru stees in November, as
well.
Boa rd of Elections
Direc tor Rita Smith said

"

�.PageA2

COMMUNITY
HOCKING C·oLLEGE CAMP

The Daily Sentinel

Community Calendar

OFFERS TASTE OF COLLEGE LIFE
. NELSONVILLE
Hocking College is offering a, summer camp that
provides a little more than
the usual arts and trafts.
The Summer Experience
Camp '07 allows high
school st udents. to enroll
in a one-week college
class session while living
on campus, experiencing
college life, and earning
college credit.
The college recently
received a $3. 15 I .gran t to
fund scholarships for the
camps as part of the 2007
Fostering
Access. to
Education Mini-Grant program
in Appalachian
Ohio.
The camps allow students the opportunity to
choose their own program
of s tudy that most interests them . Classes are
taught
by
Hocking
College faculty. Offerings
for this year's curriculum
include: culinary, theater,
rock (music), alternative
energy, wilderness horsemanship, radio broadcasting, natural resources and
police, fire and emergency
servtces.
"The activities
and
workshops . provide an
educational , hands-on, fun
experience for high school
students," said Matthew
Waldman, camp director.
In addition to the curriculum,. students are able
to live in the dormitory
and participate in a variety of campus activities .
Regardless of the program
they are enrolled in, all
students unite at night for
hiking, volleyball, ping
pong and other recreational activities.
With the help of the
mini-~rant, The Summer
Expenence now can offer
financial aid to those
wishing to attend tfle
camp.
Fourteen full
scholarships and five partial ones will be given to
Appalachian students who
demonstrate a need as
well as p·rovide an essay
stating why you would
like to attend the camp.
"These scholarships will
allow students to open
educational doors that
have previously been
closed," Waldman sai~·.
The college camp is one
of 17 grantees receiving a
total of $70,000 in funding which has been awarded to the area nonprofits
through the mini-grants
· program , · a partnership
between the Osteopathic

Heritage Foundation of
Nelsonville (OHFN), the
Ohio
Children's
Foundation(OCF) and the
Foundation
for
Appalachian Ohio (FAO).
The Foundation for
Appalachian Ohio is the
managing partner for the
mini-grants ini ti ative and
is a 501(c)(3) public charity and regional comm un ity foundation. FAD' s mi ssion is to enrich the current and future quality of
life in the 29 counties of
Appalachian Ohio by fo sterin g access to opportunity.
2007 is. the third year
for the regiot1al partnership and mini-grants progra m. Past distributions
have focused on improv-

ing quality of life and
access to opportunity in
Appal a-c hian Ohio. Since
the program 's inception in
2004. more than $213,000
has been awarded to
regional
non-profits.
Projects ·were recommended for funding by the FAO
Grants . and
Program
Advisory
Commillee,
which was comprised of
II leaders from the
region. Many grantees
also are able to use the
m1m-grant dollars
to
le verage more funding for
their programs,
For more information on
Summer Experience Camp
· Submitted photo
'07,
con tact
Mall
Dave
Sagan,
Hocking
College,
instructor
leads
students
on
a
nature
walk
at last year's
Waldman at 740-753-7091
Summer
Experience
Camp.
Students
attending
camp
this
summer
can
select
from a varior
waldman_m@hockety
of
classes
offered.
ing.edu.

'

WIN UPTO $1,000 !!!
2400 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
(7 40) 446-1711
Two /n(rrfitfll _
\:

1/4 mile north of Pomeroy, Mason
Mason , WV

773·5721

675;.4340

• Delta

·Church events

AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie : My "Aunt
Valerie'' ha s a 40-year-old
so n who e-mailed invitations to hi s de stination
wedding at a fancy hQtel.
My parem s drove 12 hours
(one way). whi le another
aunt and uncle endured a
32- hour drive (one way),
paying $250 per night at
the hoteL
The day of the ceremony. my mother jokingly
ask ed Valerie. "So he' s
reall y going to do this ?
He 's go t a license and
everythi'ng '"
Valerie
replied . "Actually. this is
so rt of a mock weddi ng.
They didn ' t have time .to
ge t the license . Besides.
th ey really want to get
married by t,heir minister.
but he couldn 't come this
weekend. Nobody 's supposed to know.''
My mother was furious
they ' d driven all that way
and spent an exo rbitant
amount of money for a
muck wedd in g. Mom waited until after the ceremony
and quietly mentio~ed llie
in formation to my father.
who. fuming, told my aunt
and uncle. My aunt. eventually phoned Valerie and
told her none of them had

POINT
ROCK
Revival
wi ll
begin
Sunday and co nt inue
throu
gh Wednesday at the
Tuesday, May I
Point
Rock Church nf the
ALFRED
- Orange
Nazarene.
Services will
Township Tru stees regube
held
at
7 p.m. · with
lar meeting . 7:30 p.m.. at '
Evangelist
Herman
th e home of th e cle rk.
Siewart
speaking.
The
Osie Follrod.
PAGEVILLE - Scipio church is located on State
Township Trustees. 6:30 Route 689 .
p.m. at the Pagev ille town
Wednesday, May 2
hall.
POMEROY - Rev ival
at th e ML Hermon United
Wednesday, May 2
in
Christ
REEDSVILLE - Olive Brethren
Township Trustees meet Churc h. to 1\:lay 6. 7 p.m.
Wayne
in regular sess ion , 7:30 Evan gelist.
ghlin
of
McLau
p.m., Oli ve Township
Chillicothe.
Special
Garage .
s1ng1 ng nightly. "The
Kin g&lt;' of Lancaster on
Thursday. Churi:h loca ted
on Wickham Road. off
Texas Road in the Texas
Community.
Peter
Monday, April 30
Martindale
.
pastor.
Call
POMEROY
Oh985
-983
7
for
information.
KAN Coin Club. dinner
at 6 p.m. , meeting at 7
p.m. at the Pomeroy
Library.
Friday, April 27
Tuesda y, May I
. MIDDLEPORT - Free
, CHESTER
- 73rd comm unit y dinner, 4:30
. Anniversary of Chester to 6: I 5 p.m .. Middleport
Council #323, Daughters Church of Christ Family
of America celehrated Life Cen ter. · Baked steak.
with supper at 6:30 p.m., mashed potatoes . mix ed
at Mason ic Hall . Lodge vegetabl es, roll s, de sse rt.
meeting at 7:30. Members
who .have not regi stered
for supper should cal l
Esther Smith at 985-4424.
Tuesday, May I
MIDDLEPORT
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Lodge #363,
F&amp;AM , monthly business Meigs Help Me Grow
meeting, 7:30 p.m. All sponsors a free Fun Fair
· mem bers to attend. All for preschool -aged chil Master Masons invited. dren. I 0 a.m. to 2 p.m. ,
Refreshments.
Middleport Chur ch of
Christ
Family
Life
POMEROY ·Drew
Webster
Post
39 , Center. Door pri1.es, food,
American Legion, dinner bounce house, live enter7 p.m . followed by meet- tainment, clowns, craft.

'

I

- .

The l)aily Sentinel
~today '

' 992-2155

.

another and wish the ·new - Patriot Guard Rtders. and
lyweds well.
our Mi ss iss ippi group
Dear Annie : My cousin made Easter baskets for
joined a gang. She's only ·\'et s at the veterans home
12, and r m so scared for
her that when 1 found out. in Jackson. I took my 121 couldn't sleep . She's year-old granddaughter to.
making me so mad . How th" event so she could s~e
can I help her' - Scared . the sun me on a veteran s
in the USA
face. - Appreciated in
Dear Scared: You are Long Beach, Miss.
right to be scared. The best
Oear Long Beach :
thing you can do for your Thank you for taking the
cousin ts to tell your par- time 10 make a difference
ents, and ask them to dt ~- in the liV.es of our vetercuss 11 wllh your cousin s
.
parents . Your co usin may an s, as well as teaching the
be upset with you, but you children how much a VISit
are doing the right thing. means to someone in the
We hope her parent' will hospitaL We hope more of
find a way to help be fore our readers will be equal ly
your cousin makes a terri- in spired .
ble mistake.
Atmie's Mailbox is
Dear Annie : Wh en I written by Kathy Mitchell
read .your column about and Marcy Sugar, longValentines for Vets. I got
my little honor guard con- time editon of th e Atm
sisting of four kids (s ixth -, Landers columll. Please
sevent'h - and
eighth - e-mail your questions to
graders). and the sc hool anniesmailbox @co mallowed us to have a field ca1·t.net, or write to:
trip to the VA hospital in Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Biloxi.
Box 118/90, Chicago, /L
The experience was a 60611. To find out more
teary eye-opener for me , a about Annie's Mailbox,
retired Navy chief, and my and read features by other
honor guard loved i.t. It
was one of the most Creators Syndicate writrewarding experience s of ers and cartoonists, vi.1·it
my life, and the kids are the Creators Syndicate
still talking about it.
Web page a/ www.c reI am a member of· the alors.com.

I

Applications available for Meigs Junior Fair royalty

Youth events

POMEROY - The deadline to
submit applications to reign as
Meigs County's Junior Fair king or
queen or live stock prince or
princesses
at the
2007 Meigs
County Fair is 5 p.m. on May 3 I.
Applications are available at the
OSU Extension Meigs County
Office at 992-6696 and are to be
returned to Joai)n Calaway at 38680
Sumner Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 . She advises that no late

Otlcon Dtltll.

STOP IN AND sn OUR NEW
2007 SPRltJO AIR r.tAnRESS
on QR,AT INTRODUCTORY
l:Al' PR1C,Sl

I&gt;II.J·,S ill· \1{1'\t;

CIWnJ&lt;

:'Jrom Our Jlomc 'To Yours•

GALLIPOLIS

Cor6in &amp; Sngltr furniture

435'/, Second Avenue

•••

tA r ro~

Open

ISIS....d "'"" • G~lpolll, ON

from Po~\ Office )

~em .·

·s· Mother's

Day...

applications wilL be accepted.
Preparations for the fair are well
underway and as happens every
year youths from Junior Fair organizations are selected in advance as
the reigning royalty at the fair.
Those organizations are 4-H, FFA.
FCCLA, Junior Grange. Boy
Scouts. Girl Scouts, and Teen
Institute. Any youth member that
is at least 16 years old as of Jan. I
of this year is eligible and encour-

aged to apply for king and queen.
Junior Fair animal species prince
and princess applications are also
available at the Extension office
and wi II be se lected in the categories of poultry, rabbi ts. swi ne.
sheep, goats, beef, dairy, and horse.
Youth must be ex hibiting an animal
project · in the category in which
they are competing and be between
9 and IS years old as of Jan. I of
this year.

.

. .

'

l

Make Yard Care Easy.......,__

Thurs. 8:30-5pm

(740) 446-7619

?Jl) .

MilS

Sider's
Signature

INSVRANCE.uc.

Another satisfied
Customer!
"Call us today and you
could be smiling too!"
~

·

~ADVANCED HEARING
CENTER
1122 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis
(740)441-1871 (800)434-f1114

~rench CitH
.:.UUque &amp; era~ .Mall'

• Oxygen
• Nebulizers
• C-PAP
• Portable Oxygen
• Pulse Oximetry

'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.
842 2nd Ave. Gallipolis, OH

70 Pine Street •

740·446·9020

Gallipolis

740-446-0007

!I Erie

~Insurance
Debra K.

'

FS 45 Trimmer , .

24k Rose or
Orchid Brooch
Only $20
'!2e..,&amp;&gt;tt"' 'fi!At~c' ;

, Age11t

(304)675-7036

liS Si•th St. Pt. Pleasant, WV
(304) 675-7036

$1

Zlf~¥
$«&lt;ui4f . (lffl¥ 13
\

I

• Faci,,ts II. Waxing
• M.lss-'8" • Body Wr,,ps

TODAY'S
NUMBER IS:

326 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631

(740) 446-2933
~

Hours:
M·f IOam·Cio&gt;e

••

•

of STIHL trimmers.

.

GREAT AT HOME

---plus---

S.yOU"Iacal

GET 50% OFF

dealer for elullllne
otmHLblowtiB.

WHEEL KIT with purchue.
Product sll'own

Offers End June 30th, 2007

Storage
839 Kerr Road
Bidwell, OH
(740) 446~9043 .
(740) 388·8320

with option•/
wh•ellit.
SRP$39.15

Versatile cultivator
Converts easily to other

useful tools with these Optional
attachments !sold separ11telyl:

BG 55

Handheld

Blower

L Optional vacuum

c·• Edger, Aerator, Culliva10r,
·

Sign a 1 year Lease
Recelvit 2 months FREE!·

-Dethatchar, .Bristle Broom,
STIHL PowerSweell 1M

and gutter k~
attachments available

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

·S:ee·vour local
STIHL dealer :
for a h!illine of ,.

outdoor:power
~ equiptnllnt~:-·~

" ··

STINt: '

Gallla Auto Sales
2147 Jackson

.

'

STIHL YARD BOSS'!:

J']iJJJJJJ -

• Mltroderm AbrasIons

'~"~:

SAVE $30ona

Quad Cab 4x4, 21 ,000
miles, Factory Warranty

• Spa Packages • Chemical Peets

'

dealer for a full line

$299!!

~

• H" ir CNe a_ M.lkeup

•17
· ·gas

. ;..· .0-\~·.L,,~:.£'
'

MM 55 STIHL YARD BOss•

AVII11Bbls ,n piritcipscing rJsalsr~.

• Ndll C:tre • Helix Cut&gt;

Sat your local

-~...,-

Heallh/Anu11y
An Independent Agency
B:~!!!!!!YL~_rjili~~L~~f.l£~...

Storage

NOWJUST

·-.nHL"

riYtrciliesins @s uddtnlinkmail.cum
Autolllomt!Businr.s/Life/

LWC

996

Well-balanced
homeowner trimmer lightweight ttnd
fasl c~tting

TO:

'

FULLY ASSEMBLED AND SERVICED.

Keepihg .
Mei~. '
County.
, inforr{led

any intention of attending
another ceremony back
home . Valerie said everyone was overreacting. She .
got into an argument with
my father. flung all kinds
of accusations at my mother, and was upset that no
one seemed supportive of
the bride and groom.
I heard the bride and
groom are now lega ll y
married, finally. Are we
justified
in
feeling
deceived and misled7 Or,
as Va.ferie said, are we all
overreacting? Please help
us sort this out. There are
some pretty hard feelings .
- Niece
Dear Niece : We understand your anger. You
were misled, but it doesn't
see m intentionaL This is
the wedding your cousin
wanted to share with his
family, and he was too di sorganized to get the
license in time. In stead of
canceling, they decided to
go through with the festivities . None of you was
obligated to attend a second ceremony, but it
would hav e been more
diplomatic if your parents
had simply replied, "Sorry,
we can't make it," when
invited to th~ real thing,
instead of say ing so in
advance. Now we hope
everyone will forgive one

Hear what others 1r1 11yln1•bout

111-.. ~~-N •111-1171 •tiiiMIIl

Ariel offering
summer
ballroom classes
GALLIPOLIS The
waltz will ''be the focus of
the Ariel's upcoming ballroom dancing classes taught
by Jose ph Li, MD.
Classes will begin Friday,
May 18 and will nun for a
iota! of six consecutive
Friday evenings. Beginner
ballroom dancers will be
trained from 7:30-8:30, followed by an. intermediatelevel course at 8:30-9:30.
Course fees are $60 per
person. Registrations are
currently being accepted
and space is limited. Due to ,
the popularity of the Ariel's
ballroom dancing classes,
advance registration is
required.
Those wishing to signup, as a couple or individual, should contact The
Ariel - Dater Hall box office
at 740-446-ARTS (2787).

BY KATHY' MITCHELL

Other events

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

FRII! Removal
FRI!E let-Up
PREI! Delivery

Attending one ceremony is enough

ing .. when new officers
wil l be elected.

Monday, April 30
POMEROY ~ Veterans
Service Commission. 9
a.m .. 117 Memori al Dr.

Monday,April30,2007

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Clubs and
organizations

PLAY COVERALL
BINGO
.

Pleasant
Valley
Hospital

•

Public
meetings

Page A:}··

YTHE ;BEND

· The Daily Sentinel

Monday, April3o, 2007

Pike

Gallipolis, OH

Always w11r p1111ectir• 1ppa111 as IICfllllfllflldtd in your instruction manu1l.

Dettwiller Lumber
634 East Main Street
Pomeroy
.

.

'

.

740-992-5500

(740) 446·0724
David

Owner

foraSTIHL~?

stihlusa.com
,_

'

.. '· .

�.PageA2

COMMUNITY
HOCKING C·oLLEGE CAMP

The Daily Sentinel

Community Calendar

OFFERS TASTE OF COLLEGE LIFE
. NELSONVILLE
Hocking College is offering a, summer camp that
provides a little more than
the usual arts and trafts.
The Summer Experience
Camp '07 allows high
school st udents. to enroll
in a one-week college
class session while living
on campus, experiencing
college life, and earning
college credit.
The college recently
received a $3. 15 I .gran t to
fund scholarships for the
camps as part of the 2007
Fostering
Access. to
Education Mini-Grant program
in Appalachian
Ohio.
The camps allow students the opportunity to
choose their own program
of s tudy that most interests them . Classes are
taught
by
Hocking
College faculty. Offerings
for this year's curriculum
include: culinary, theater,
rock (music), alternative
energy, wilderness horsemanship, radio broadcasting, natural resources and
police, fire and emergency
servtces.
"The activities
and
workshops . provide an
educational , hands-on, fun
experience for high school
students," said Matthew
Waldman, camp director.
In addition to the curriculum,. students are able
to live in the dormitory
and participate in a variety of campus activities .
Regardless of the program
they are enrolled in, all
students unite at night for
hiking, volleyball, ping
pong and other recreational activities.
With the help of the
mini-~rant, The Summer
Expenence now can offer
financial aid to those
wishing to attend tfle
camp.
Fourteen full
scholarships and five partial ones will be given to
Appalachian students who
demonstrate a need as
well as p·rovide an essay
stating why you would
like to attend the camp.
"These scholarships will
allow students to open
educational doors that
have previously been
closed," Waldman sai~·.
The college camp is one
of 17 grantees receiving a
total of $70,000 in funding which has been awarded to the area nonprofits
through the mini-grants
· program , · a partnership
between the Osteopathic

Heritage Foundation of
Nelsonville (OHFN), the
Ohio
Children's
Foundation(OCF) and the
Foundation
for
Appalachian Ohio (FAO).
The Foundation for
Appalachian Ohio is the
managing partner for the
mini-grants ini ti ative and
is a 501(c)(3) public charity and regional comm un ity foundation. FAD' s mi ssion is to enrich the current and future quality of
life in the 29 counties of
Appalachian Ohio by fo sterin g access to opportunity.
2007 is. the third year
for the regiot1al partnership and mini-grants progra m. Past distributions
have focused on improv-

ing quality of life and
access to opportunity in
Appal a-c hian Ohio. Since
the program 's inception in
2004. more than $213,000
has been awarded to
regional
non-profits.
Projects ·were recommended for funding by the FAO
Grants . and
Program
Advisory
Commillee,
which was comprised of
II leaders from the
region. Many grantees
also are able to use the
m1m-grant dollars
to
le verage more funding for
their programs,
For more information on
Summer Experience Camp
· Submitted photo
'07,
con tact
Mall
Dave
Sagan,
Hocking
College,
instructor
leads
students
on
a
nature
walk
at last year's
Waldman at 740-753-7091
Summer
Experience
Camp.
Students
attending
camp
this
summer
can
select
from a varior
waldman_m@hockety
of
classes
offered.
ing.edu.

'

WIN UPTO $1,000 !!!
2400 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
(7 40) 446-1711
Two /n(rrfitfll _
\:

1/4 mile north of Pomeroy, Mason
Mason , WV

773·5721

675;.4340

• Delta

·Church events

AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie : My "Aunt
Valerie'' ha s a 40-year-old
so n who e-mailed invitations to hi s de stination
wedding at a fancy hQtel.
My parem s drove 12 hours
(one way). whi le another
aunt and uncle endured a
32- hour drive (one way),
paying $250 per night at
the hoteL
The day of the ceremony. my mother jokingly
ask ed Valerie. "So he' s
reall y going to do this ?
He 's go t a license and
everythi'ng '"
Valerie
replied . "Actually. this is
so rt of a mock weddi ng.
They didn ' t have time .to
ge t the license . Besides.
th ey really want to get
married by t,heir minister.
but he couldn 't come this
weekend. Nobody 's supposed to know.''
My mother was furious
they ' d driven all that way
and spent an exo rbitant
amount of money for a
muck wedd in g. Mom waited until after the ceremony
and quietly mentio~ed llie
in formation to my father.
who. fuming, told my aunt
and uncle. My aunt. eventually phoned Valerie and
told her none of them had

POINT
ROCK
Revival
wi ll
begin
Sunday and co nt inue
throu
gh Wednesday at the
Tuesday, May I
Point
Rock Church nf the
ALFRED
- Orange
Nazarene.
Services will
Township Tru stees regube
held
at
7 p.m. · with
lar meeting . 7:30 p.m.. at '
Evangelist
Herman
th e home of th e cle rk.
Siewart
speaking.
The
Osie Follrod.
PAGEVILLE - Scipio church is located on State
Township Trustees. 6:30 Route 689 .
p.m. at the Pagev ille town
Wednesday, May 2
hall.
POMEROY - Rev ival
at th e ML Hermon United
Wednesday, May 2
in
Christ
REEDSVILLE - Olive Brethren
Township Trustees meet Churc h. to 1\:lay 6. 7 p.m.
Wayne
in regular sess ion , 7:30 Evan gelist.
ghlin
of
McLau
p.m., Oli ve Township
Chillicothe.
Special
Garage .
s1ng1 ng nightly. "The
Kin g&lt;' of Lancaster on
Thursday. Churi:h loca ted
on Wickham Road. off
Texas Road in the Texas
Community.
Peter
Monday, April 30
Martindale
.
pastor.
Call
POMEROY
Oh985
-983
7
for
information.
KAN Coin Club. dinner
at 6 p.m. , meeting at 7
p.m. at the Pomeroy
Library.
Friday, April 27
Tuesda y, May I
. MIDDLEPORT - Free
, CHESTER
- 73rd comm unit y dinner, 4:30
. Anniversary of Chester to 6: I 5 p.m .. Middleport
Council #323, Daughters Church of Christ Family
of America celehrated Life Cen ter. · Baked steak.
with supper at 6:30 p.m., mashed potatoes . mix ed
at Mason ic Hall . Lodge vegetabl es, roll s, de sse rt.
meeting at 7:30. Members
who .have not regi stered
for supper should cal l
Esther Smith at 985-4424.
Tuesday, May I
MIDDLEPORT
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Lodge #363,
F&amp;AM , monthly business Meigs Help Me Grow
meeting, 7:30 p.m. All sponsors a free Fun Fair
· mem bers to attend. All for preschool -aged chil Master Masons invited. dren. I 0 a.m. to 2 p.m. ,
Refreshments.
Middleport Chur ch of
Christ
Family
Life
POMEROY ·Drew
Webster
Post
39 , Center. Door pri1.es, food,
American Legion, dinner bounce house, live enter7 p.m . followed by meet- tainment, clowns, craft.

'

I

- .

The l)aily Sentinel
~today '

' 992-2155

.

another and wish the ·new - Patriot Guard Rtders. and
lyweds well.
our Mi ss iss ippi group
Dear Annie : My cousin made Easter baskets for
joined a gang. She's only ·\'et s at the veterans home
12, and r m so scared for
her that when 1 found out. in Jackson. I took my 121 couldn't sleep . She's year-old granddaughter to.
making me so mad . How th" event so she could s~e
can I help her' - Scared . the sun me on a veteran s
in the USA
face. - Appreciated in
Dear Scared: You are Long Beach, Miss.
right to be scared. The best
Oear Long Beach :
thing you can do for your Thank you for taking the
cousin ts to tell your par- time 10 make a difference
ents, and ask them to dt ~- in the liV.es of our vetercuss 11 wllh your cousin s
.
parents . Your co usin may an s, as well as teaching the
be upset with you, but you children how much a VISit
are doing the right thing. means to someone in the
We hope her parent' will hospitaL We hope more of
find a way to help be fore our readers will be equal ly
your cousin makes a terri- in spired .
ble mistake.
Atmie's Mailbox is
Dear Annie : Wh en I written by Kathy Mitchell
read .your column about and Marcy Sugar, longValentines for Vets. I got
my little honor guard con- time editon of th e Atm
sisting of four kids (s ixth -, Landers columll. Please
sevent'h - and
eighth - e-mail your questions to
graders). and the sc hool anniesmailbox @co mallowed us to have a field ca1·t.net, or write to:
trip to the VA hospital in Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Biloxi.
Box 118/90, Chicago, /L
The experience was a 60611. To find out more
teary eye-opener for me , a about Annie's Mailbox,
retired Navy chief, and my and read features by other
honor guard loved i.t. It
was one of the most Creators Syndicate writrewarding experience s of ers and cartoonists, vi.1·it
my life, and the kids are the Creators Syndicate
still talking about it.
Web page a/ www.c reI am a member of· the alors.com.

I

Applications available for Meigs Junior Fair royalty

Youth events

POMEROY - The deadline to
submit applications to reign as
Meigs County's Junior Fair king or
queen or live stock prince or
princesses
at the
2007 Meigs
County Fair is 5 p.m. on May 3 I.
Applications are available at the
OSU Extension Meigs County
Office at 992-6696 and are to be
returned to Joai)n Calaway at 38680
Sumner Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 . She advises that no late

Otlcon Dtltll.

STOP IN AND sn OUR NEW
2007 SPRltJO AIR r.tAnRESS
on QR,AT INTRODUCTORY
l:Al' PR1C,Sl

I&gt;II.J·,S ill· \1{1'\t;

CIWnJ&lt;

:'Jrom Our Jlomc 'To Yours•

GALLIPOLIS

Cor6in &amp; Sngltr furniture

435'/, Second Avenue

•••

tA r ro~

Open

ISIS....d "'"" • G~lpolll, ON

from Po~\ Office )

~em .·

·s· Mother's

Day...

applications wilL be accepted.
Preparations for the fair are well
underway and as happens every
year youths from Junior Fair organizations are selected in advance as
the reigning royalty at the fair.
Those organizations are 4-H, FFA.
FCCLA, Junior Grange. Boy
Scouts. Girl Scouts, and Teen
Institute. Any youth member that
is at least 16 years old as of Jan. I
of this year is eligible and encour-

aged to apply for king and queen.
Junior Fair animal species prince
and princess applications are also
available at the Extension office
and wi II be se lected in the categories of poultry, rabbi ts. swi ne.
sheep, goats, beef, dairy, and horse.
Youth must be ex hibiting an animal
project · in the category in which
they are competing and be between
9 and IS years old as of Jan. I of
this year.

.

. .

'

l

Make Yard Care Easy.......,__

Thurs. 8:30-5pm

(740) 446-7619

?Jl) .

MilS

Sider's
Signature

INSVRANCE.uc.

Another satisfied
Customer!
"Call us today and you
could be smiling too!"
~

·

~ADVANCED HEARING
CENTER
1122 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis
(740)441-1871 (800)434-f1114

~rench CitH
.:.UUque &amp; era~ .Mall'

• Oxygen
• Nebulizers
• C-PAP
• Portable Oxygen
• Pulse Oximetry

'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.
842 2nd Ave. Gallipolis, OH

70 Pine Street •

740·446·9020

Gallipolis

740-446-0007

!I Erie

~Insurance
Debra K.

'

FS 45 Trimmer , .

24k Rose or
Orchid Brooch
Only $20
'!2e..,&amp;&gt;tt"' 'fi!At~c' ;

, Age11t

(304)675-7036

liS Si•th St. Pt. Pleasant, WV
(304) 675-7036

$1

Zlf~¥
$«&lt;ui4f . (lffl¥ 13
\

I

• Faci,,ts II. Waxing
• M.lss-'8" • Body Wr,,ps

TODAY'S
NUMBER IS:

326 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631

(740) 446-2933
~

Hours:
M·f IOam·Cio&gt;e

••

•

of STIHL trimmers.

.

GREAT AT HOME

---plus---

S.yOU"Iacal

GET 50% OFF

dealer for elullllne
otmHLblowtiB.

WHEEL KIT with purchue.
Product sll'own

Offers End June 30th, 2007

Storage
839 Kerr Road
Bidwell, OH
(740) 446~9043 .
(740) 388·8320

with option•/
wh•ellit.
SRP$39.15

Versatile cultivator
Converts easily to other

useful tools with these Optional
attachments !sold separ11telyl:

BG 55

Handheld

Blower

L Optional vacuum

c·• Edger, Aerator, Culliva10r,
·

Sign a 1 year Lease
Recelvit 2 months FREE!·

-Dethatchar, .Bristle Broom,
STIHL PowerSweell 1M

and gutter k~
attachments available

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

·S:ee·vour local
STIHL dealer :
for a h!illine of ,.

outdoor:power
~ equiptnllnt~:-·~

" ··

STINt: '

Gallla Auto Sales
2147 Jackson

.

'

STIHL YARD BOSS'!:

J']iJJJJJJ -

• Mltroderm AbrasIons

'~"~:

SAVE $30ona

Quad Cab 4x4, 21 ,000
miles, Factory Warranty

• Spa Packages • Chemical Peets

'

dealer for a full line

$299!!

~

• H" ir CNe a_ M.lkeup

•17
· ·gas

. ;..· .0-\~·.L,,~:.£'
'

MM 55 STIHL YARD BOss•

AVII11Bbls ,n piritcipscing rJsalsr~.

• Ndll C:tre • Helix Cut&gt;

Sat your local

-~...,-

Heallh/Anu11y
An Independent Agency
B:~!!!!!!YL~_rjili~~L~~f.l£~...

Storage

NOWJUST

·-.nHL"

riYtrciliesins @s uddtnlinkmail.cum
Autolllomt!Businr.s/Life/

LWC

996

Well-balanced
homeowner trimmer lightweight ttnd
fasl c~tting

TO:

'

FULLY ASSEMBLED AND SERVICED.

Keepihg .
Mei~. '
County.
, inforr{led

any intention of attending
another ceremony back
home . Valerie said everyone was overreacting. She .
got into an argument with
my father. flung all kinds
of accusations at my mother, and was upset that no
one seemed supportive of
the bride and groom.
I heard the bride and
groom are now lega ll y
married, finally. Are we
justified
in
feeling
deceived and misled7 Or,
as Va.ferie said, are we all
overreacting? Please help
us sort this out. There are
some pretty hard feelings .
- Niece
Dear Niece : We understand your anger. You
were misled, but it doesn't
see m intentionaL This is
the wedding your cousin
wanted to share with his
family, and he was too di sorganized to get the
license in time. In stead of
canceling, they decided to
go through with the festivities . None of you was
obligated to attend a second ceremony, but it
would hav e been more
diplomatic if your parents
had simply replied, "Sorry,
we can't make it," when
invited to th~ real thing,
instead of say ing so in
advance. Now we hope
everyone will forgive one

Hear what others 1r1 11yln1•bout

111-.. ~~-N •111-1171 •tiiiMIIl

Ariel offering
summer
ballroom classes
GALLIPOLIS The
waltz will ''be the focus of
the Ariel's upcoming ballroom dancing classes taught
by Jose ph Li, MD.
Classes will begin Friday,
May 18 and will nun for a
iota! of six consecutive
Friday evenings. Beginner
ballroom dancers will be
trained from 7:30-8:30, followed by an. intermediatelevel course at 8:30-9:30.
Course fees are $60 per
person. Registrations are
currently being accepted
and space is limited. Due to ,
the popularity of the Ariel's
ballroom dancing classes,
advance registration is
required.
Those wishing to signup, as a couple or individual, should contact The
Ariel - Dater Hall box office
at 740-446-ARTS (2787).

BY KATHY' MITCHELL

Other events

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

FRII! Removal
FRI!E let-Up
PREI! Delivery

Attending one ceremony is enough

ing .. when new officers
wil l be elected.

Monday, April 30
POMEROY ~ Veterans
Service Commission. 9
a.m .. 117 Memori al Dr.

Monday,April30,2007

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Clubs and
organizations

PLAY COVERALL
BINGO
.

Pleasant
Valley
Hospital

•

Public
meetings

Page A:}··

YTHE ;BEND

· The Daily Sentinel

Monday, April3o, 2007

Pike

Gallipolis, OH

Always w11r p1111ectir• 1ppa111 as IICfllllfllflldtd in your instruction manu1l.

Dettwiller Lumber
634 East Main Street
Pomeroy
.

.

'

.

740-992-5500

(740) 446·0724
David

Owner

foraSTIHL~?

stihlusa.com
,_

'

.. '· .

�OPINION

The Dw.ly Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
..

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich.

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prol1ibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right .of the
people peaceably to asset1ible, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, Apri\30, the- I 20th day of2007. There are
245 days left i11 the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
.
On Apri l 30. \945, as Russian tr00ps approached h1s Berlm
builker, Adolf Hitler committed su1c1de along wtth h1s wtfe of
one day, Eva Braun .
On this date:
In 1789, George Washington took office in New York a~ the
ftrst president of the United States.
..
.
In 1803, the United States purchased the Louts• ana Tern tory
from France for 60 million francs; the equivalent of about $15
million.
In 1812, Louisiana ·became the 18th state of the Union. .
In 1900, engineer John Luther "Casey" Jones of the IUi~ois
Central. Railroad died in a train wreck near Vaughan, M1ss.,
after staying at the controls in a successful effort to save the
passengers.
In 1904, the Louisiana Purchase E~position opened in St.
Louis.
In 1939, the New York World's Fair oftlcially opened.
In 1947, President Truman signed a measure officially
changing the name of Boulder Dam to Hoover Dam.
In 1970, President Nixon announced the U.S. was sending
troops into Cambodia, an action that sparked widespread
protest.
In 1973, President Nixon announced the resignations of top
aides H.R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichman, along with
Anorney General Richard G. Kleindienst and White House
counsel John Dean.
In 1975, the South Vietnamese capital of Saigon fell to
Communist forces.
.
One year ago: Thousands of people joined celebrities and
lawmakers at a rally on the National Mall in Washington, urging :fue Bush administmtion and Congress to help end genqcide in Sudan's Darfur region. .
Today's Birthdays: Actress Cloris Leachman is 81. Singer
Willie Nelson is 74. Actor Gary Collins is 69. Actor Burt
Young is 67. Singer Bobby Vee is 64. Actress Jill Clayburgh is
63. Movie director AJian Arkush is 59. Actor Perry King is 59.
Singer Menill Osmond is 54. Movie director Jane Campion is
53. Actor Paul Gross is 48. Basketball executive lsiah Thomas
is 46. Country musician Robert Reynolds (The Mavericks) is
45. Actor Adrian Pasdar is 42. Rapper Turbo B (Snap) is 40.
Rock musician Clark Vogeler is 38. Rhythm-and-blues singer
Chris "Choc" Dalyrimple (Soul For Real) is 36. Rock musician Chris Henderso!J..&lt;O Doors Down) is 36. Country singer
Carolyn Dawn . Johfisoil is 36. Rock singer J,.R. Richards
(Dish walla) is 35. Actress Lisa Dean Ryan is 35. Rhythm-andblues singer Akon is 34. Rhythm-and-blues singer Jeff
Timmons (98 Degrees) is 34. Actor Johnny Galecki is 32.
Rapper Lloyd Banks is 25. Actress Ki·rsten Dunst is 25.
Country singer Tyler Wilkinson (The Wilkinsons) is 23.
Thought for Today: "Love demands infinitely less than
friendship ." - George Jean Nathan, American author and
critic ( 1882-1958).

Someday, when the war in
Iraq has become a historical
ep1sode. we will tally up 'the
lessons learned - if, that is,
we ever learn any .. Here are
two
worth
mastering
becau se failing to do so
probably means we will no
longer exist.
I. Nation-building in a
war zone is nuts. Nation-·
building in an Islamic war
zone is suicide. '
,
When the United States
embarked on its most successful cases of nationbuilding in Germany and·
Japan, both countries lay in
rums, their cities and infrastructure devastated, their
populations
decimated.
These appalling conditions
worked wonders toward
opening both countries to
all manner of Americana:
democracy. deNazification.
demilitarization and , in
Japan's case, not just a constitution practically written
by
Gen.
Douglas
MacArthur, but also baseball. In other words, Total
War was followed by Total
Pacification.
In lraq, we have fought a
Limited War for Limited
Pacification, which has
resulted in a perpetual, if
limited , war zone. At about
$200 million a day, this war
may not sound very "limited," but consider where
"Sunni insurgents," "Shiite
militias" and assorted thugs
and jihadi groups go at
night after a hard day's
maiming and killing and
IED-ing. They go home to

Diana
West

safe hou ses. Now, ask yourself whether, say, a George
Patton or a Curtis LeMay
wou ld allow them to wake
up again, chow down breakfast and return to maim. kill
am,! JED :mother day . .
the answer is no, not on
your life . Such generals
would have seen to it that
the enemy's home. his
neighborhood, his entire
town if · necessary, was
destroyed, doubtless killing
innocent (and not innocent)
civi lian s in the process.
TQtal War. It's ugly and barbaric , but it leads to Total
Pacification, not to mention
Total Victory, which is supposed to be the point.
Limited War is ugly and
barbaric, but it just leads on
and on. And where ·is the
moral purity in war unend ing?
The Limited Warrior
struggles for the answer,
. and comes up with ... Hearts
and Minds: The superpower
that doesn 't want to use its
super powers will instead
make everyone like it a lot.
To that end, Gen, David
Petraeus, our top commander in Iraq, has ordered
troops out of their well-for-

The Daily Sentinel

i

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing
Co.
Published every afternoon, Monday
tl1rough Friday, 111 Court Street,

Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-class
postage paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and

.992·2156.

the Ohio Newspaper Association.

Our main number Ia

(740) 992-2156.

Poetmaatir: Send address corrections to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court

Street, Ppmeroy, Ohio 45769.

Dep11rtment extensions are:

Subscription Rates

.
)

By carrtar or motor route
one month
'1 0.21
One yeer
'115.84
' Dally
50'
RepOrter: B~ian Reed, Ext 14
Senior Citizen rates
Reporter: Beth Sergent. Ext. 13
·one month
'10.27
One year
'103.911
Subscribers should remit in advance
Advertising
direct to the Daily sentinel. No sub·OutBide Satea: Dave Harris, Ext. 15 script ion by man ' permitted in areas
Outalde Selea: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 where home carrier service is avaiClaaaJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext t 0
·able.

News
Editor: Cha~ene Hoeflich, Ext 12

'

General Manager
Charlene Hoellictl. Ext 12

E-mail:'
news@mydailysentinel.com

Web:
www . myd~il yse ntinel .com

Malt Subscription
Inside Meigs County
· 13 Weeks
' 32.26
26 Weeks
'64.20
52 Weeks
'127.11
Outside Melga County
13 Weeks
'53.55
26 Weeks
' 107. 10
52 weeks
'214.21

tified bases into "outposts".
in Iraq's most dangerous
enclaves. (One such outpost
was recently struck by suicide bombers, killing nine
Americans and wounding
20.) Often described as the
linchpin of Gen. Petraeus' ·
counterinsurgency strategy,
this outpost-plan is supposed to "establish regular
contact with Iraqi civilians
and win their allegiance,"
according to The New York
Times.
Win their alleg iance- is
he kidding? I hate to be the
one to break it to Gen.
Petraeu s, not to mention
Presiden t Bush; but the fac t
is, in an Islamic war zone.
an "infidel" arm y just is n't
go ing In win Islamic alle giance. There are many reli giou s and cultural reaso ns I
could utTer in explanation.
but in stead J' II turn to the
underrcpo rted story of the
week: twu findings co ntained within an extensive
new poll of Muslim opinion
co nducted in four major
lslainic countries Egypt.
Indonesia, Morocco and
Pakistan.
According
to
WorldPubl icOpi n ion .org,
more tha}l half of those
polled in Indonesia, and
, three-quarters of · those
polled in Egypt, Morocco
and Pakistan believe in the
'strict application of Shari a,
or Islamic law. Nearly twoihirds of all respondents
expressed their desire to see
the Islamic world united in
a caliphate.

Which brings me to
Lesson 2.
With numbers like these,
portraying jihadist war
goals (S haria, caliphate) as
belonging to a "tiny band of
extremists"
is
nut s.
Persisting in this PC fantasy
as part of the narrative and
strategy of the "war on terror" is suicida L
But such PC fantasy fuels
hearts-and-minds efforts
that go beyond "allegiance"-wi nning outposts in
Iraq as the United States
now weirdly cheers on
world Islami zation to curry
Islamic fav or As said by
House Foreign Affairs
Committee Chairman Tom
Lantos at a recent Kosovo
hearing "Here is yet another
exam ple that the Umted
Stales leads the way for the
creation of a predominantly
Musl im country in the very
heart of Europe. Th is should
be noted by hoth responsible leaders of Islamic govas
ernments.
such
Indonesia. and ·also for
jihadi sts of all color and
hue. ... The United States
stand s .foursquare for the
creation of an overwhelmingly Mu slim country in the
very heart of Europe."
Aren't we nice? Aren't we
lovable?
Or are we just too dumb
to live?
(Diana West is a columnist
for 71te Washington Times.
She ca11 be co/llacred via
dianmvesr@ verizon.net.)

•

Monday, April3o, 2oo7

ONCE UPON A TfME ...

wWw.mydailysentinel.com

Flowers ·
from PageA1

Betty L Weyersmlller

daughter of Steve and Julie
POMEROY - Betty L. Weyersmiller 79, of Rocksprings Riffle of Racine .
passedaway on Fnday April27, 2007 at Darst Adult Group
RACO also recognized
Home m Pomeroy.
individuals
who have
She was born near Po'meroy on July 15 , 1927 the daugh- assisted the organization
ter of the late Clarence and Mary Eblin Spurrier. Betty and
with ·
community
wo~ke~ f,or many years at the Meigs County Cooperative plaques. Those individuals
Pansh m Pomeroy and was a member of the Rock Springs are: Clarence and Louise
Methodtst Church.
.
Frank, Donna and Butch
In addition to her parents she was preceded in death in Sweet, Chris
Wolfe,
1987 by her husband Norman Weyesmiller.
Mabel Brace, Delore s
Su(VIvmg are a daughter and son in law Diana and Dana Cleland, Libby. Fisher.
Warner of Reynoldsburg, Ohio and a grandchild Jeannine; Mary Ball, David and Ann
two b1 other~ and SISter m laws Clarence and Doris Spurrier Zirkle, Maralyn Capretta,
of Ea~le River Alaska and Steven and Mary Spurrier of Jack Mykelby, Sherri
Nashville, Tennessee.
O'Brien, Jean Alkire, Jan
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday at the Middleport Chapel and Marvin Hill ..
of Ftsher Funeral Home with Rev. Keit.h Rader officiating.
Al so recognized were
Bunal WI I\ foll ow 111 Rockspnngs Cemetery. Friends may members of !he Wooly
call at the funeral home Monday, April 30, 2007 from 6-8 Bully's and More 4'H Club
p.m. and on Tuesday from 12 till time of the service.
who se members helped
In !1eu o( flowers memorials may be made to the clean ~p Star Mill Park as
Amen can Cancer Society. Online condolences may be sent well as mulch and plant
to www.flsherfuneralhomes.com
·
flower donated by Dwight
HilL Those members that
worked to prepare Star
Mill Park ·for the festival
are:
Kelsey
Turner,
ATHENS
Ruth R. Musser. .87. of Athens died Michaela Holter. Ashlec
Saturday morning, April 28. 2007 at Fairfield Medical Fi lkins, Caitlyn Holter,
Center, Lancaster.
Born April 26, \920 in Megan Tripp, Amber
Langsville: she was the daughter of the late Todd and Lena Tripp, Du stin Smith. Rusty
Franklin P1ckens. She retired as a switc hboard operator at Carnahan, Che lsea Holter,
!he former Athens State Hospital. She was a member of the Haley Tripp, AJ Rou sh,
Umon Un1ted Methodist Church and the Grange.
Mrs . Musse r is survived by a daughter, Ruby Ann
Henderson.,.ol Columbus; a daughter and son in law,
Patnc1a and Clifton Rice. Jr. of Athens; a son and daughter
m l~w . John and Dollie Musser of Pomeroy; 16 grandchi ldred, 28great-grandchddren and 10 great-great,grandchil. from Page A1
dren ; a s1ster m law, L01s Musser of Pomeroy, and a special
me~e. Halite Willard of Pleasantville.
07 sc hool year was also
Besides her parents she is preceded in death by her hus- · approved. u
The board also :
band, W1lham K. Musser in 1978; a son , William R.
·
• Approved the resignation
Musser; a grandson, James David Henderson: a son in law,
of
Howie Lawrence, bus driJames D. Henderson; a sister, Ruby Pickens; two brothers,
ver, effective April 13:
Carroll and Samuel G. Pickens.
Funeral service wi ll be conducted Wednesday II a.m.at . • Approved the following
lagers &amp; Sons Funeral Home, Athens, by Pastor supplemental contracts for
Chnstopher Brown with burial in Athens Memory Gardens . the 2007-08 school year:
Kevin Welsh, head football
Fnends may call Tuesday 6-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
coach; Sue Arnold, eighth
absentee requests . Ma:i.l grade volleyball coach and
applications for absentee
ballots must be received
by Saturday, Smith said .
from PageA1
The board wi II conduct
the board office will be its required te st of elecMonday ... Mostly sunny.
open from 9 a.m . io noon tions equipment at I p.m.
in the lower 80s.
Highs
on Saturday .to handle on Wednesday.
Southwest winds I0 to IS
mph with gusts up to 25
mph. · .
Monday nlght...Partly
cloudy. A slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms
in the evening. Lows in the
mid 50s. Southwest winds 5
Bv JULIE CARR SMYTH nate; and providing guaran- to I 0 mph. Chance of rain
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT teed funding to public col20 percent.
leges and universities rather
Tuesday... Sunny. Highs
COLUMBUS ·
than employing the compact in the lower 80s. Southwest
Expanding Me.dicaid was Strickland had proposed winds 10 to IS mph with
among
the
issues tying their .&gt;tate payouts to gusts up to 25 mph.
Republicans in the Ohio . meeting efficiency stanTuesday night... Partly
House
wrestled
with dards.
cloudy with a chance of
they .Earlier in the week , showers and thunders·torms.
Saturda Ju n1'ght ·ts
' ·
worked to put the putting the Republicans said they also Lows in the lower 60s. West
finishing touches on their planned to drop the gover- winds 5 to 10 mph with
version of a two-year budget nor's expansion of Medicaid gusts up to 20 mph. Chance
health insurance to 25,000 of rain 40 percent.
proposal.
Some of the. GOP's priori- parents of children under 19 .
Wednesday
through
ties match those laid out by
::7l:i~~~:::::;tiiiii;;-..
Democratic
Gov.
Ted
Strickland. A House finance
committee planned a lateevening Vote on the $52. 1
billion proposal before send.ing it for a schedu led for a
House vote Tuesday. ,
A BINCiOBEAR
The House bill includes
·IN
EVERY
LONCiABERGER BASKET
$587 million more than
Strickland's already generous increase, retains the governor's proposal to sell off
Ohio 's tobacco settl ement
share to pay for property tax
breaks for seniors, bolsters
money for public schools,
and extends Medicaid cover'
age to more chi ldren.
The House wasn't expect15 GAMES, 4 SPECIAL GAMES,
ed to change its mind in key
2ND CHANCE DRAWING, BEAR RAFFLE,
areas where its budget
BA·SKET RAFFLE, 50/50 DRAWING,
DOOR PRIZE, ADVANCE TJ&lt;KiT DRAWING
reverses the governor: reinSponsored by The Middleport Co1nnnmily Associati~n
•
stituting charter and ·voucher
Proceeds benefit the 4th of July Celebration
schools Strickland wanted to
Getadvlll'll'.e ti c ket ~ at tile Ohio River Rtllf Crwnpany or Peoples Bank.
abolish, retaining absti Forll.l t'nr Sale! N11 smok.iu! Uuriu!l e:veut.
nence-only sex education
Ill Jill II' I
Ill II 111'11 '
Strickland wanted to eli mi -

Ruth Musser

Eastern

'

the Sarbanes-Oxley corporate reform law passed by
the U.S. Congress in 2002,
which established governance and accountability
rules that companies nation wide must follow.
peeled location: North
There is also legislati011
Dakota, where state law- currently before Congress
makers passed the nation's that would give shareholdfirst shareholder-friendly ers at public companies a
law.
formal say in executives'
Investor groups have long compensation packages.
complained that Delaware,
But for the most part;
where m?re than half of Delaware still holds great
U.S. pubhc compames are sway
over · corporate
mcorporated, favors corpo- • America's dealings and is·
rate manag~ment ov~r often perceived by sharesharehold,er nghts . That s holder groups as ·having a
why they ve bee~ cheenng bias toward busi ness. That's
for North. Dakota s new law, . troubling since corporate
which gives them . greater boards have a fiduciary duty
~~~c~ir~~ ~~~h a~~n~~si:~ . to . put investors' interests
proxy access.
fi~~t.
.
But their real motive in . It was long believed that
applauding North Dakota's mv,estors need to be protectrenaissance as a sharehoid- ed and mana~~ment was the;
er-focused state may be to best to do It, said Charles
pressure siate legislators in Els?n, d1rector of the
Delaware to get religion, Wemberg
Center
for
too.
Corporate Governance at
Delaware doesn't hide its Umverslty of Delaware:
links to business Its official "But now there is growing
state Web site to~ts the busi- sentiment that investors
ness-friendly and accessible don't need as much protecgovernment while its 215- !Ion, and there IS great cauyear-old co'urt of Chancery tion about · management
has' written most of the mod- agendas" after all the corpoern U.S. corporation ·case . rate scandals.
Jaw. Sixty percent of
Enter North Dakota,
Fortune 500 companies are which. has had. largely . a
incorporated in Delaware.
nonexistent role m corporate
There have been attempts America. Only two public
in the past to loosen companies are incorporated
Delaware's grip, including there.

·'

Beth Sergentjphoto

Austin Rose, Clayton group's advisors are Rod
Moore, Whitney Waite- . Beegle and Amy Ritchie .
Riffle, Eric Perry, Chris
Festival
goers illso
Holter, Ryan
Beegle, snacked on ·RACO' s tacoAndrew Smeck. Miranda in-a-bag and chi cken dinHalter, Emily Manuel. The ner s prepared by the

Racine Southern FFA and
Ohio River Producers. In
addition, the festival coincided with the opening day
of the Rac ine Youth
League..
·

I

juni or high track coa.;:h; and
Katie Robinson, seventh
grade volleyball coach.
• Approved the st udent
accident insurance for the
2007-08 school year with
Brogan-Warner Agency as
provider.
• Approved posting of
summer school positions.
· Approved membership in
the Ohio High School
Athletic Association for the
2007-08 school year.
. The next meeting will be
held at 6:30p.m. on May 16
in the elementary building.

Friday
night...Partly
cloudy. Hi!lhs in the lower
70s. Lows tn the mid 40s.
. Saturday ... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the mid 70s.

River
from PageA1
Filson said the Corps
along with ODOT worked
last year to stabilize the
bank, but there remained
problems in that area. This
time, she said sheet piling is
being installed along the 270
feet of bank which needs stabilized. .
What that includes, she .
added, is· driving interlockmg p1eces of metal into the
ground which creates a wall
to keep the soil in place. As
for when the work will be
completed, Filson gave a
tentative date of June 30.
· In her traffic advisory
Filson also· reported that the
annual routine inspection of
the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

was completed. Friday.
Dunng the mspecuon which
began on Apri l 16, traffic
was reduced to one lane
from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily.

•

fft!~

WT T.:hnal kpport

• lfl5tanl Nes~aging . ~eop yoor OOddy llltl
• 10 t-ma.i idare&amp;ll86 wkfl WlbnM!

• cumm Sran P&amp;ge. news, wealh&amp;r &amp; mcntl

('tTf :;:6Xft#lfltts!W'f't
~
13 ,.,.

Sign Up Onllntl www.L.acMthl com

So Many Different Models ...

Onl One Kubota!

..

2

Those behind the new law win their proxy contests. the
actually took the idea to .companies must reimburse
Vermonl first, where it did- them forth~ percentage they
n't' get far. Success came in are successful. For instance,
North Dakota this year- it if they look to elect three
passed the state legislature directors and two win, then
and W&lt;JS signed into law this the board reimburses twomonth. It takes effect in thi rds of the cost of the
proxy contest.
July.
North Dakota's two existLeading the charge was a
group called the North ing public companies are
Dakota
Corporate . g(andfathered out of such
Governance Council, which requirements, but new combills itself as a nonprolit panies incorporating in the
group organized to support state can opt into the new
the enactment of ·the new law or follow the previous
law and· to advance the dis- standards. ·
The law's proponents tout
cussion of shareholder
rights in publicly trac;led that the built-in governance
requirements will likely lead
companies.
The new law wraps shareholder groups to press
together many governance companies to reincorporate
issues being pushed by in North Dakota in the comshareholder grotlps this year. ing years. No one is predictA!Dong them is the required ing a mad dash nmih, but it
election of directors by could cerJainly be an oftenmajority voting. That means. raised proxy issue.
Should that happen, it
candidates must receive a
majority of "yes" votes to be could be used as leverage to
get Delaware to begin to
elected.
Shareholders also get soften its business-friendly
·advisory votes on executive stance.
"Delaware will initiallY.
compensation, and there is
scoff
at North Dakota," said
now a requirement for the
Clark,
a
separation of the. chairman William
Philadelphia attorney who·
and chief executive roles.
The new law siphons con- authored the new law as the
trol from corporate boards head of the North Dakota
Governance
by forcing companies to Corporate
include any proposals on Council. · ~But it will eventu·their proxy statements put ally feel the pressure."
That may be the goal
forth by shareholders who
hold 5 ·percent or more of behind all this. From
stock for at least two years. investors' perspective , it
Should the shareholders may not be a bad one.

.

The Racme Southern FFA took home first place For this parade float which contained flowers,- a C1v11 War cannon and FFA members (from left) Paul Powell , Nathan Moss Justin
Eblin, Ronnie Wi lson.
'

Local weather ·

House Republicans put
stamp on state budget

ALL BUSINESS: Goal of North Dakota's new
shareholder·law could be to soften Delaware law

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

'

Obituaries

Banot

Letters to the editvr are welcome. They should be less
Bv RACHEL BECK
AP BVSINESS WRITER
than 300 words. All /etters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and inc/lide address and telephone number No
unsigned leiters ll'i/1 be Jillblished. Letters should be in
NEW YORK - Those
good taste, addressing i ssues. not personalities. Letters of fed up with Delaware's cozy
thanks to organizarionnmd individuals will nor be accept- link to corporate America
are fighting back in ap unexed for publication.

Correction Polley
Our main concern in all 'stories is to
be accurate. If you know of arl error
In a slory. call the newsroom at (740)

Monday, April3o, 2007

The 'limited' war for 'hearts and minds'

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Reader Services

·pageA4

••
,;

BEAR &amp; BASKET BINGO! ·
820.00

May 3rd

8:00p.m.

altha
Middleport

FIRE StAtiON

In Celebtatlon Dl f'he
Week Dl f'he Yeung Child ·

_.. . . ,Mei1s Coun~ Hel~ Me Grow

..

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
. ONE MILE WEST OF ATHENS ON ROUTE 50/32
ATHENS, OH • 740-593-3279/ 800-710~1917
"\bur Friendly Outdoor Ptlwer Equipment and Tractor Suprrstore"

,,

,'

�OPINION

The Dw.ly Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
..

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich.

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prol1ibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right .of the
people peaceably to asset1ible, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, Apri\30, the- I 20th day of2007. There are
245 days left i11 the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
.
On Apri l 30. \945, as Russian tr00ps approached h1s Berlm
builker, Adolf Hitler committed su1c1de along wtth h1s wtfe of
one day, Eva Braun .
On this date:
In 1789, George Washington took office in New York a~ the
ftrst president of the United States.
..
.
In 1803, the United States purchased the Louts• ana Tern tory
from France for 60 million francs; the equivalent of about $15
million.
In 1812, Louisiana ·became the 18th state of the Union. .
In 1900, engineer John Luther "Casey" Jones of the IUi~ois
Central. Railroad died in a train wreck near Vaughan, M1ss.,
after staying at the controls in a successful effort to save the
passengers.
In 1904, the Louisiana Purchase E~position opened in St.
Louis.
In 1939, the New York World's Fair oftlcially opened.
In 1947, President Truman signed a measure officially
changing the name of Boulder Dam to Hoover Dam.
In 1970, President Nixon announced the U.S. was sending
troops into Cambodia, an action that sparked widespread
protest.
In 1973, President Nixon announced the resignations of top
aides H.R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichman, along with
Anorney General Richard G. Kleindienst and White House
counsel John Dean.
In 1975, the South Vietnamese capital of Saigon fell to
Communist forces.
.
One year ago: Thousands of people joined celebrities and
lawmakers at a rally on the National Mall in Washington, urging :fue Bush administmtion and Congress to help end genqcide in Sudan's Darfur region. .
Today's Birthdays: Actress Cloris Leachman is 81. Singer
Willie Nelson is 74. Actor Gary Collins is 69. Actor Burt
Young is 67. Singer Bobby Vee is 64. Actress Jill Clayburgh is
63. Movie director AJian Arkush is 59. Actor Perry King is 59.
Singer Menill Osmond is 54. Movie director Jane Campion is
53. Actor Paul Gross is 48. Basketball executive lsiah Thomas
is 46. Country musician Robert Reynolds (The Mavericks) is
45. Actor Adrian Pasdar is 42. Rapper Turbo B (Snap) is 40.
Rock musician Clark Vogeler is 38. Rhythm-and-blues singer
Chris "Choc" Dalyrimple (Soul For Real) is 36. Rock musician Chris Henderso!J..&lt;O Doors Down) is 36. Country singer
Carolyn Dawn . Johfisoil is 36. Rock singer J,.R. Richards
(Dish walla) is 35. Actress Lisa Dean Ryan is 35. Rhythm-andblues singer Akon is 34. Rhythm-and-blues singer Jeff
Timmons (98 Degrees) is 34. Actor Johnny Galecki is 32.
Rapper Lloyd Banks is 25. Actress Ki·rsten Dunst is 25.
Country singer Tyler Wilkinson (The Wilkinsons) is 23.
Thought for Today: "Love demands infinitely less than
friendship ." - George Jean Nathan, American author and
critic ( 1882-1958).

Someday, when the war in
Iraq has become a historical
ep1sode. we will tally up 'the
lessons learned - if, that is,
we ever learn any .. Here are
two
worth
mastering
becau se failing to do so
probably means we will no
longer exist.
I. Nation-building in a
war zone is nuts. Nation-·
building in an Islamic war
zone is suicide. '
,
When the United States
embarked on its most successful cases of nationbuilding in Germany and·
Japan, both countries lay in
rums, their cities and infrastructure devastated, their
populations
decimated.
These appalling conditions
worked wonders toward
opening both countries to
all manner of Americana:
democracy. deNazification.
demilitarization and , in
Japan's case, not just a constitution practically written
by
Gen.
Douglas
MacArthur, but also baseball. In other words, Total
War was followed by Total
Pacification.
In lraq, we have fought a
Limited War for Limited
Pacification, which has
resulted in a perpetual, if
limited , war zone. At about
$200 million a day, this war
may not sound very "limited," but consider where
"Sunni insurgents," "Shiite
militias" and assorted thugs
and jihadi groups go at
night after a hard day's
maiming and killing and
IED-ing. They go home to

Diana
West

safe hou ses. Now, ask yourself whether, say, a George
Patton or a Curtis LeMay
wou ld allow them to wake
up again, chow down breakfast and return to maim. kill
am,! JED :mother day . .
the answer is no, not on
your life . Such generals
would have seen to it that
the enemy's home. his
neighborhood, his entire
town if · necessary, was
destroyed, doubtless killing
innocent (and not innocent)
civi lian s in the process.
TQtal War. It's ugly and barbaric , but it leads to Total
Pacification, not to mention
Total Victory, which is supposed to be the point.
Limited War is ugly and
barbaric, but it just leads on
and on. And where ·is the
moral purity in war unend ing?
The Limited Warrior
struggles for the answer,
. and comes up with ... Hearts
and Minds: The superpower
that doesn 't want to use its
super powers will instead
make everyone like it a lot.
To that end, Gen, David
Petraeus, our top commander in Iraq, has ordered
troops out of their well-for-

The Daily Sentinel

i

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing
Co.
Published every afternoon, Monday
tl1rough Friday, 111 Court Street,

Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-class
postage paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and

.992·2156.

the Ohio Newspaper Association.

Our main number Ia

(740) 992-2156.

Poetmaatir: Send address corrections to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court

Street, Ppmeroy, Ohio 45769.

Dep11rtment extensions are:

Subscription Rates

.
)

By carrtar or motor route
one month
'1 0.21
One yeer
'115.84
' Dally
50'
RepOrter: B~ian Reed, Ext 14
Senior Citizen rates
Reporter: Beth Sergent. Ext. 13
·one month
'10.27
One year
'103.911
Subscribers should remit in advance
Advertising
direct to the Daily sentinel. No sub·OutBide Satea: Dave Harris, Ext. 15 script ion by man ' permitted in areas
Outalde Selea: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 where home carrier service is avaiClaaaJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext t 0
·able.

News
Editor: Cha~ene Hoeflich, Ext 12

'

General Manager
Charlene Hoellictl. Ext 12

E-mail:'
news@mydailysentinel.com

Web:
www . myd~il yse ntinel .com

Malt Subscription
Inside Meigs County
· 13 Weeks
' 32.26
26 Weeks
'64.20
52 Weeks
'127.11
Outside Melga County
13 Weeks
'53.55
26 Weeks
' 107. 10
52 weeks
'214.21

tified bases into "outposts".
in Iraq's most dangerous
enclaves. (One such outpost
was recently struck by suicide bombers, killing nine
Americans and wounding
20.) Often described as the
linchpin of Gen. Petraeus' ·
counterinsurgency strategy,
this outpost-plan is supposed to "establish regular
contact with Iraqi civilians
and win their allegiance,"
according to The New York
Times.
Win their alleg iance- is
he kidding? I hate to be the
one to break it to Gen.
Petraeu s, not to mention
Presiden t Bush; but the fac t
is, in an Islamic war zone.
an "infidel" arm y just is n't
go ing In win Islamic alle giance. There are many reli giou s and cultural reaso ns I
could utTer in explanation.
but in stead J' II turn to the
underrcpo rted story of the
week: twu findings co ntained within an extensive
new poll of Muslim opinion
co nducted in four major
lslainic countries Egypt.
Indonesia, Morocco and
Pakistan.
According
to
WorldPubl icOpi n ion .org,
more tha}l half of those
polled in Indonesia, and
, three-quarters of · those
polled in Egypt, Morocco
and Pakistan believe in the
'strict application of Shari a,
or Islamic law. Nearly twoihirds of all respondents
expressed their desire to see
the Islamic world united in
a caliphate.

Which brings me to
Lesson 2.
With numbers like these,
portraying jihadist war
goals (S haria, caliphate) as
belonging to a "tiny band of
extremists"
is
nut s.
Persisting in this PC fantasy
as part of the narrative and
strategy of the "war on terror" is suicida L
But such PC fantasy fuels
hearts-and-minds efforts
that go beyond "allegiance"-wi nning outposts in
Iraq as the United States
now weirdly cheers on
world Islami zation to curry
Islamic fav or As said by
House Foreign Affairs
Committee Chairman Tom
Lantos at a recent Kosovo
hearing "Here is yet another
exam ple that the Umted
Stales leads the way for the
creation of a predominantly
Musl im country in the very
heart of Europe. Th is should
be noted by hoth responsible leaders of Islamic govas
ernments.
such
Indonesia. and ·also for
jihadi sts of all color and
hue. ... The United States
stand s .foursquare for the
creation of an overwhelmingly Mu slim country in the
very heart of Europe."
Aren't we nice? Aren't we
lovable?
Or are we just too dumb
to live?
(Diana West is a columnist
for 71te Washington Times.
She ca11 be co/llacred via
dianmvesr@ verizon.net.)

•

Monday, April3o, 2oo7

ONCE UPON A TfME ...

wWw.mydailysentinel.com

Flowers ·
from PageA1

Betty L Weyersmlller

daughter of Steve and Julie
POMEROY - Betty L. Weyersmiller 79, of Rocksprings Riffle of Racine .
passedaway on Fnday April27, 2007 at Darst Adult Group
RACO also recognized
Home m Pomeroy.
individuals
who have
She was born near Po'meroy on July 15 , 1927 the daugh- assisted the organization
ter of the late Clarence and Mary Eblin Spurrier. Betty and
with ·
community
wo~ke~ f,or many years at the Meigs County Cooperative plaques. Those individuals
Pansh m Pomeroy and was a member of the Rock Springs are: Clarence and Louise
Methodtst Church.
.
Frank, Donna and Butch
In addition to her parents she was preceded in death in Sweet, Chris
Wolfe,
1987 by her husband Norman Weyesmiller.
Mabel Brace, Delore s
Su(VIvmg are a daughter and son in law Diana and Dana Cleland, Libby. Fisher.
Warner of Reynoldsburg, Ohio and a grandchild Jeannine; Mary Ball, David and Ann
two b1 other~ and SISter m laws Clarence and Doris Spurrier Zirkle, Maralyn Capretta,
of Ea~le River Alaska and Steven and Mary Spurrier of Jack Mykelby, Sherri
Nashville, Tennessee.
O'Brien, Jean Alkire, Jan
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday at the Middleport Chapel and Marvin Hill ..
of Ftsher Funeral Home with Rev. Keit.h Rader officiating.
Al so recognized were
Bunal WI I\ foll ow 111 Rockspnngs Cemetery. Friends may members of !he Wooly
call at the funeral home Monday, April 30, 2007 from 6-8 Bully's and More 4'H Club
p.m. and on Tuesday from 12 till time of the service.
who se members helped
In !1eu o( flowers memorials may be made to the clean ~p Star Mill Park as
Amen can Cancer Society. Online condolences may be sent well as mulch and plant
to www.flsherfuneralhomes.com
·
flower donated by Dwight
HilL Those members that
worked to prepare Star
Mill Park ·for the festival
are:
Kelsey
Turner,
ATHENS
Ruth R. Musser. .87. of Athens died Michaela Holter. Ashlec
Saturday morning, April 28. 2007 at Fairfield Medical Fi lkins, Caitlyn Holter,
Center, Lancaster.
Born April 26, \920 in Megan Tripp, Amber
Langsville: she was the daughter of the late Todd and Lena Tripp, Du stin Smith. Rusty
Franklin P1ckens. She retired as a switc hboard operator at Carnahan, Che lsea Holter,
!he former Athens State Hospital. She was a member of the Haley Tripp, AJ Rou sh,
Umon Un1ted Methodist Church and the Grange.
Mrs . Musse r is survived by a daughter, Ruby Ann
Henderson.,.ol Columbus; a daughter and son in law,
Patnc1a and Clifton Rice. Jr. of Athens; a son and daughter
m l~w . John and Dollie Musser of Pomeroy; 16 grandchi ldred, 28great-grandchddren and 10 great-great,grandchil. from Page A1
dren ; a s1ster m law, L01s Musser of Pomeroy, and a special
me~e. Halite Willard of Pleasantville.
07 sc hool year was also
Besides her parents she is preceded in death by her hus- · approved. u
The board also :
band, W1lham K. Musser in 1978; a son , William R.
·
• Approved the resignation
Musser; a grandson, James David Henderson: a son in law,
of
Howie Lawrence, bus driJames D. Henderson; a sister, Ruby Pickens; two brothers,
ver, effective April 13:
Carroll and Samuel G. Pickens.
Funeral service wi ll be conducted Wednesday II a.m.at . • Approved the following
lagers &amp; Sons Funeral Home, Athens, by Pastor supplemental contracts for
Chnstopher Brown with burial in Athens Memory Gardens . the 2007-08 school year:
Kevin Welsh, head football
Fnends may call Tuesday 6-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
coach; Sue Arnold, eighth
absentee requests . Ma:i.l grade volleyball coach and
applications for absentee
ballots must be received
by Saturday, Smith said .
from PageA1
The board wi II conduct
the board office will be its required te st of elecMonday ... Mostly sunny.
open from 9 a.m . io noon tions equipment at I p.m.
in the lower 80s.
Highs
on Saturday .to handle on Wednesday.
Southwest winds I0 to IS
mph with gusts up to 25
mph. · .
Monday nlght...Partly
cloudy. A slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms
in the evening. Lows in the
mid 50s. Southwest winds 5
Bv JULIE CARR SMYTH nate; and providing guaran- to I 0 mph. Chance of rain
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT teed funding to public col20 percent.
leges and universities rather
Tuesday... Sunny. Highs
COLUMBUS ·
than employing the compact in the lower 80s. Southwest
Expanding Me.dicaid was Strickland had proposed winds 10 to IS mph with
among
the
issues tying their .&gt;tate payouts to gusts up to 25 mph.
Republicans in the Ohio . meeting efficiency stanTuesday night... Partly
House
wrestled
with dards.
cloudy with a chance of
they .Earlier in the week , showers and thunders·torms.
Saturda Ju n1'ght ·ts
' ·
worked to put the putting the Republicans said they also Lows in the lower 60s. West
finishing touches on their planned to drop the gover- winds 5 to 10 mph with
version of a two-year budget nor's expansion of Medicaid gusts up to 20 mph. Chance
health insurance to 25,000 of rain 40 percent.
proposal.
Some of the. GOP's priori- parents of children under 19 .
Wednesday
through
ties match those laid out by
::7l:i~~~:::::;tiiiii;;-..
Democratic
Gov.
Ted
Strickland. A House finance
committee planned a lateevening Vote on the $52. 1
billion proposal before send.ing it for a schedu led for a
House vote Tuesday. ,
A BINCiOBEAR
The House bill includes
·IN
EVERY
LONCiABERGER BASKET
$587 million more than
Strickland's already generous increase, retains the governor's proposal to sell off
Ohio 's tobacco settl ement
share to pay for property tax
breaks for seniors, bolsters
money for public schools,
and extends Medicaid cover'
age to more chi ldren.
The House wasn't expect15 GAMES, 4 SPECIAL GAMES,
ed to change its mind in key
2ND CHANCE DRAWING, BEAR RAFFLE,
areas where its budget
BA·SKET RAFFLE, 50/50 DRAWING,
DOOR PRIZE, ADVANCE TJ&lt;KiT DRAWING
reverses the governor: reinSponsored by The Middleport Co1nnnmily Associati~n
•
stituting charter and ·voucher
Proceeds benefit the 4th of July Celebration
schools Strickland wanted to
Getadvlll'll'.e ti c ket ~ at tile Ohio River Rtllf Crwnpany or Peoples Bank.
abolish, retaining absti Forll.l t'nr Sale! N11 smok.iu! Uuriu!l e:veut.
nence-only sex education
Ill Jill II' I
Ill II 111'11 '
Strickland wanted to eli mi -

Ruth Musser

Eastern

'

the Sarbanes-Oxley corporate reform law passed by
the U.S. Congress in 2002,
which established governance and accountability
rules that companies nation wide must follow.
peeled location: North
There is also legislati011
Dakota, where state law- currently before Congress
makers passed the nation's that would give shareholdfirst shareholder-friendly ers at public companies a
law.
formal say in executives'
Investor groups have long compensation packages.
complained that Delaware,
But for the most part;
where m?re than half of Delaware still holds great
U.S. pubhc compames are sway
over · corporate
mcorporated, favors corpo- • America's dealings and is·
rate manag~ment ov~r often perceived by sharesharehold,er nghts . That s holder groups as ·having a
why they ve bee~ cheenng bias toward busi ness. That's
for North. Dakota s new law, . troubling since corporate
which gives them . greater boards have a fiduciary duty
~~~c~ir~~ ~~~h a~~n~~si:~ . to . put investors' interests
proxy access.
fi~~t.
.
But their real motive in . It was long believed that
applauding North Dakota's mv,estors need to be protectrenaissance as a sharehoid- ed and mana~~ment was the;
er-focused state may be to best to do It, said Charles
pressure siate legislators in Els?n, d1rector of the
Delaware to get religion, Wemberg
Center
for
too.
Corporate Governance at
Delaware doesn't hide its Umverslty of Delaware:
links to business Its official "But now there is growing
state Web site to~ts the busi- sentiment that investors
ness-friendly and accessible don't need as much protecgovernment while its 215- !Ion, and there IS great cauyear-old co'urt of Chancery tion about · management
has' written most of the mod- agendas" after all the corpoern U.S. corporation ·case . rate scandals.
Jaw. Sixty percent of
Enter North Dakota,
Fortune 500 companies are which. has had. largely . a
incorporated in Delaware.
nonexistent role m corporate
There have been attempts America. Only two public
in the past to loosen companies are incorporated
Delaware's grip, including there.

·'

Beth Sergentjphoto

Austin Rose, Clayton group's advisors are Rod
Moore, Whitney Waite- . Beegle and Amy Ritchie .
Riffle, Eric Perry, Chris
Festival
goers illso
Holter, Ryan
Beegle, snacked on ·RACO' s tacoAndrew Smeck. Miranda in-a-bag and chi cken dinHalter, Emily Manuel. The ner s prepared by the

Racine Southern FFA and
Ohio River Producers. In
addition, the festival coincided with the opening day
of the Rac ine Youth
League..
·

I

juni or high track coa.;:h; and
Katie Robinson, seventh
grade volleyball coach.
• Approved the st udent
accident insurance for the
2007-08 school year with
Brogan-Warner Agency as
provider.
• Approved posting of
summer school positions.
· Approved membership in
the Ohio High School
Athletic Association for the
2007-08 school year.
. The next meeting will be
held at 6:30p.m. on May 16
in the elementary building.

Friday
night...Partly
cloudy. Hi!lhs in the lower
70s. Lows tn the mid 40s.
. Saturday ... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the mid 70s.

River
from PageA1
Filson said the Corps
along with ODOT worked
last year to stabilize the
bank, but there remained
problems in that area. This
time, she said sheet piling is
being installed along the 270
feet of bank which needs stabilized. .
What that includes, she .
added, is· driving interlockmg p1eces of metal into the
ground which creates a wall
to keep the soil in place. As
for when the work will be
completed, Filson gave a
tentative date of June 30.
· In her traffic advisory
Filson also· reported that the
annual routine inspection of
the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

was completed. Friday.
Dunng the mspecuon which
began on Apri l 16, traffic
was reduced to one lane
from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily.

•

fft!~

WT T.:hnal kpport

• lfl5tanl Nes~aging . ~eop yoor OOddy llltl
• 10 t-ma.i idare&amp;ll86 wkfl WlbnM!

• cumm Sran P&amp;ge. news, wealh&amp;r &amp; mcntl

('tTf :;:6Xft#lfltts!W'f't
~
13 ,.,.

Sign Up Onllntl www.L.acMthl com

So Many Different Models ...

Onl One Kubota!

..

2

Those behind the new law win their proxy contests. the
actually took the idea to .companies must reimburse
Vermonl first, where it did- them forth~ percentage they
n't' get far. Success came in are successful. For instance,
North Dakota this year- it if they look to elect three
passed the state legislature directors and two win, then
and W&lt;JS signed into law this the board reimburses twomonth. It takes effect in thi rds of the cost of the
proxy contest.
July.
North Dakota's two existLeading the charge was a
group called the North ing public companies are
Dakota
Corporate . g(andfathered out of such
Governance Council, which requirements, but new combills itself as a nonprolit panies incorporating in the
group organized to support state can opt into the new
the enactment of ·the new law or follow the previous
law and· to advance the dis- standards. ·
The law's proponents tout
cussion of shareholder
rights in publicly trac;led that the built-in governance
requirements will likely lead
companies.
The new law wraps shareholder groups to press
together many governance companies to reincorporate
issues being pushed by in North Dakota in the comshareholder grotlps this year. ing years. No one is predictA!Dong them is the required ing a mad dash nmih, but it
election of directors by could cerJainly be an oftenmajority voting. That means. raised proxy issue.
Should that happen, it
candidates must receive a
majority of "yes" votes to be could be used as leverage to
get Delaware to begin to
elected.
Shareholders also get soften its business-friendly
·advisory votes on executive stance.
"Delaware will initiallY.
compensation, and there is
scoff
at North Dakota," said
now a requirement for the
Clark,
a
separation of the. chairman William
Philadelphia attorney who·
and chief executive roles.
The new law siphons con- authored the new law as the
trol from corporate boards head of the North Dakota
Governance
by forcing companies to Corporate
include any proposals on Council. · ~But it will eventu·their proxy statements put ally feel the pressure."
That may be the goal
forth by shareholders who
hold 5 ·percent or more of behind all this. From
stock for at least two years. investors' perspective , it
Should the shareholders may not be a bad one.

.

The Racme Southern FFA took home first place For this parade float which contained flowers,- a C1v11 War cannon and FFA members (from left) Paul Powell , Nathan Moss Justin
Eblin, Ronnie Wi lson.
'

Local weather ·

House Republicans put
stamp on state budget

ALL BUSINESS: Goal of North Dakota's new
shareholder·law could be to soften Delaware law

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

'

Obituaries

Banot

Letters to the editvr are welcome. They should be less
Bv RACHEL BECK
AP BVSINESS WRITER
than 300 words. All /etters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and inc/lide address and telephone number No
unsigned leiters ll'i/1 be Jillblished. Letters should be in
NEW YORK - Those
good taste, addressing i ssues. not personalities. Letters of fed up with Delaware's cozy
thanks to organizarionnmd individuals will nor be accept- link to corporate America
are fighting back in ap unexed for publication.

Correction Polley
Our main concern in all 'stories is to
be accurate. If you know of arl error
In a slory. call the newsroom at (740)

Monday, April3o, 2007

The 'limited' war for 'hearts and minds'

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Reader Services

·pageA4

••
,;

BEAR &amp; BASKET BINGO! ·
820.00

May 3rd

8:00p.m.

altha
Middleport

FIRE StAtiON

In Celebtatlon Dl f'he
Week Dl f'he Yeung Child ·

_.. . . ,Mei1s Coun~ Hel~ Me Grow

..

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
. ONE MILE WEST OF ATHENS ON ROUTE 50/32
ATHENS, OH • 740-593-3279/ 800-710~1917
"\bur Friendly Outdoor Ptlwer Equipment and Tractor Suprrstore"

,,

,'

�·-.

The Daily Sentinel

. LOCAL • STATE

PageA6

Inside

'

.

Bl

The. Daily ·Sentinel
'

. Monday, April 30, 2007
Troy Smith heads to Ravens, Page B2
I

SCENES FROM RACINE FLOWER FESTIVAL

Reds rally past Bucs, Page B6

'

'

Monday, April30, 2007
LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY - A SChedUle of upcoming collage
and hll/1 school varsity sporling events invoh.r1 ing teams from Meigs County.

STAFF REPORT

Todav's gamtt
Prep SoHball

Prep Baseball
Meigs at Nels· York, 5 p.m.

Water1oro at Eastern, 5 p.m.
MilLer at Southern, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
Eastern. Southern at Aleltander, 4:30

p.m.
Tyetday M11y 1

Prep Softball

Vinton County at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Prep Baseball

Vinton County at Meigs, 5 p.m.

Beth Sergentj photo

Individu als honored by RACO at the flower festival are (from left) Jack Mykelby, Ann Zirkle,
Mabel Brace. Donna and Butch Sweet. Dave Zirkle , Ron Wagner of Wagner Hardware ,
Libby Fisher, Jan Hil l. Mary Ball , Jean Alkire. Sherri O'Brien, Maralyn Capretta. Not pictured
Marvin Hill, Chris Wolfe . Delores Cleland. Clarence and Louise Frank.

Submitted photo

Members of the Wooly Bully's and More 4'H Club helped clean up Star Mill Park and plant
flowe rs for the festival. Pictured are members, first row (from left) Kelsey Turner, Michaela
Holter. Ashlee Filkins . Caitlyn Holter, Megan Tripp, Amber Tripp; second row, (from left)
Dustin Smith. Rusty Carnahan, Chelsea Holter, Haley Tripp, AJ Roush, Austin Rose, Clayton
Moore; third row (from left) Whitney Wolfe-Riffle, Eric Perry, Chris Holter. Ryan Beegle,
Andrew $meck, Miranda Holter, Emily Manue l. The group's advisors are Rod Beegle and
Amy Ritchie. ·

-----· ------------•

Robber takes
wallet,Jorgets phone

.

COLUMBUS - A robber
demanded his victim's wallet
and car keys, then dumped
him in the trunk of his car and
withdrew cash with his bank
card early Sunday, police said.
Martino Williamson is
wishing . he had taken Ira
Sully's cell phone, too.
Sully called police from
inside the trunk and described
the car and Williamson, who
was caught a short time later
when an officer matched him
and the car to Sully's description, police said in a report. ·
Police freed Sully, 59, from
the trunk and charged
· Beth sereent/photo
Williamson, 20, with aggra~
What's a flower festival without flowers? Everything from hanging baskets to flats to gera- vated robbery and kidnapniums to ferns were on sale at this year's festival.
ping. ·

ROLLEN .GARAGE
14727 St. Rt. 554
Bidwell, Ohio 45614

740-388-8547
888-TOW-8547

.Proud to be apart of your life.

Prep Baaeball
logan at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Wahama at Eastern, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Southern, 5 p.m.
Thi.uodoy. Mav 3
Prep Softball

Eastern at Vinton County, 5 p.m.

Prep Baseball
Eastern at Vinton County, 5 p.m.
Track and Field

Meigs. Eastern at Vinton County, 4:30
p.m.

BASEBALL
Ohi11 Division
Alexander 7-2
Meigs ·
6-2
Wellston
6-2
Vinton Co
3-5
Belpre
2-6
Nels-York
1-8

3
4

5

,.

For an appointment contact:
Betsy Nicodemus

(740) 992-1740

i

Meigs
shortstop
Caleb
Davis (4)
jumps in
the ai r to
snag a
throw during a steal
attempt in
game ohe
of
Saturday's
non-conference
baseball
doubleheader
against
Athens in
Rock
Springs.
Ian
McNemar
/photo

Raiders take QB Russell with top pick Gordon
BY BARRY WILNER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

.,

2

Prep Softball

1VC STANDINGS

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

Wadneadoy. May 2

Meigs at.Point Pleasant, 5 p.m.

Subscribe today •992-2155

contest. DeLong. Aaron
Story and Caleb Davis pro·
vided the other safeties.
ROCK SPRINGS Hutton scored four runs on
Meigs baseball picked up a
the day and Bolin added
pair of convincing 'home
three scores overall. Poole
wins Saturday during a nonled MHS with four RBis,
conference doubleheader
while DeLong and Dunfee
with Athens, posting victoeach contributed three
ries of 7-2 and Il-l in five ·
apiece.
innings.
The Bulldogs (2-16) Jed
The key to both triumphs
Dunfee
Poole
only once throughout the
came down to starting pitchday. and that was after the
ing, as the Marauders (14-6) The southpaw also fanned top of the first inning of
allowed just three
earned six and walked four..
,
game one .
runs and six h1ts during a
The Maroon and Gold also
Mike Malesick was the
dozen innings of play.
pounded out nine hits and 16 losi ng pitcher of record in
Austin Dunfee surren- earned runs in the sweep, game one, followed by Brad
dered a pair of those earned including nin e earned runs Bentley in the nightcap.
runs in game one, but the and three hits during the Malesick wen! the distance
junior more than had control mercy-rule finale . Thai big in game one, allowi ng six
of the contest - allowing inning was capped off with a walks and s1x hits while
just five hits and a walk in three-run shot to left-center striking out five. Bentley
his complete-game decision. by Bryan DeLong, who gave Lasted just an inning-plus,
Dunfee also struck out a the hosts a I0-0 advantage surrendering four walks and
dozen over seven innings of after two complete.
a hit while fanning one.
work.
Meigs also had three playMitch Crabtree went the
Senior Dave Poole was ers acquire. two hits. oh the rest of the way, allowing
just as masterful in the sec day, mcludmg a pa1r from · fou r walks and two hits in
ond matchup. surrendering Clay Bolin in the _opener. four mmngs of work.
just one earned run and one Poole and Corey Hutton also
hit over five frames of.work. added a hit apiece in eac h
Please see Sweep. 86
SPQRTS@MVOAIL'VSENTINEL.COM

Meigs at Nels-York . 5 p.m.
Waterford at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Miller at Southern, 5 p.m.

I

Marauders sweep Athens in DH

Hocking Division
Southern*
8-1
Fed Hock
7-2
Eastern
5-3
Waterford
2·6
Miller
2-7
Trimble
2-7

NEW YORK - JaMaFcus
Russell barely had to wait
before taking the stage as an
Oakland
Raider
at
Saturday 's NFL draft.
Brady Quinn turned out to
be the forgo11en quarterback, lingering long after
SOFTBALL
Ru ssell was picked; until
Cleveland
look him 22nd.
Ohio Division
Russell
was the top
Wellston** 9-0
choice,
by
the
offense-defiBelpre
-7-2
cient
Raiders.
The
6-foot-6
Alexander 5-4
QB
who
can
throw
junior
Meigs
3-5
the
ball
80
yards
fits
the
Vinton Co
2-6
mold
for
-AI
Davis,
who
Nels-York
0-9
. loves the deep baiL
LSU players had plenty of
Hocking Division
draft-day
luster. Five spots
Waterford** 8-0 .
after Russell, Tigers safety
· Trimble
6-3
LaRon Landry went to
Eastern
4~4 .
Washington, and two · more
Fed Hock
4-5
Tigers were chosen later in
Southern
4-5
the opening round.
Miller
0-9 .
Notre Dame's Quinn sat
and watched 21 players get
• - clinched ihare of league title
••- won league tRio out~ght
called before he went to the
Browns, lhe team he grew
HS SECTIONAL PAIRINGS up rooting for in Dublin,
Ohio. Once considered the
BASEBALL
. Monday, May 7
best prospect in this year '.s
02 - (7) Vinton County at (2) Meigs, '5
crop, he was still available
p.m.
D2 - 161 Chillicothe al (3) Gallia
when the Browns· traded
Academx. 5 p.m.
·
with Dallas to get back into
04 - (9) South Gallia at (6) Waterford.
5 p.m.
the first round.
When' selected, Quinn let
Tuaaday, May 8
03 (16) River Valley at (1)
out
a big sigh of relief
Wheelersburg , 5 p.m.
before shaking commissionThursday, May 1o•
er
Roger Goodell's hand,
02 -Winner of VC-Meigs game versus winner ot C~ illi coth e-GA game at' and fans who booed him
. TBA. 5 p.m.
before the draft cheered him
04 - Winner of Waterford-SG game at
this time.
(1.) Southern, 5 p.m.
04 - Winner ol (7) Tnmble·(10) Miller
"1 felt like the weight of
at (2) Eastern, 5 p.m.
the world was lifted of my
'Friday, May 11'
shoulders," Quinn said.
03- Winner of RV-Burg game versus
winner oL\ 8) lronton-(9) Crooksville at
"The love-hate relationship
TBA, 5 p.m.
comes from going to Notre
Dame. It's like the
7
Yankees, you either love
03 - (11) """"""' (6) Belpre, 5
p.m.
.
' em or hate 'em.
AP photo
"I got great advice beforeWednesday, May 9.
02 - (7) Jackson at (2) Gallia
JaMarcus Russell , right, a quarterback from Louisiana State Univeristy, stands with NFL
hand
and
that
was
just
to
be
Academy. 5 p.m.
commissioner Roger Goodell after being selected by the Oakland Raiders as·the No. 1 over·
02 - (5) Meigs at (4) Waverly, 5 p.m.
Please. see Russell, B:Z
04 - (9) Miller at (B) South Gallia, 5
all pick in the NFL Draft Saturday at Radio City Music Hall in New York.
p.m.

surpasses
Earnhardt
on career
wins list

TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP)
- As beer cans bounced
around his car, Jeff Gordon
crossed the fini sh line
Sunday for win No. 77 breaking a
tie with the
late Dale
Earnhardt
o

n

NASCAR's
career victory list.
It
was
only fitting
that it ~ap­
pened at
Gordo.n
Talladega
Superspeedway,
where
Earnhardt - who would
have been 56 on Sunday won I0 times in his Cup
career.
But it was anticlimactic
and confusing, ending
under · caution to leave
GQrdon unsure if he'd actually won and taken over
sixth place on the wins list.
"Is it over?'' he radioed
his· crew. "Is it over? Is it
official?"
Nobody knew after twb
separate accidents on the
first lap of a three-lap
shootout to the finish froze
the field and had NASCAR
scrambling to make sense·of
the finish.
Gordon, who was 14th on
a restart with I0 laps to go,
stormed to lhe lead a second
before NASCAR called a
caution
after
David
Please see Go.rdofl, B:Z

Friday, May 11•

03- Winner of AV·Belpre game versus winner of (3) Wheelersburg-(14)
Crooksville game at TBA. 5 p.m.

We'll Do More Than Tow It,
We'll Repair ltl
.

• D4 -

Saturday, May 12"
(5) Southern at (4) Eastern, 1

Cavs take 3-0 lead

WASHINGTON (AP)
In an attempt to inspire the
crowd and their teammates
Gilbert Arenas and Caron
Butler were introduced with
the Washington Wizards'
startin~ lineup. Arenas gin
• - sectional final game; winner
gerly
hmped down the steps
sdvancss to districts
and across the court on his
surgically repaired knee as
the crowd went wild.
CoNTACT US
·· Nice try, fellas. Game 3
once it started, followed the
OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 o.m.)· same script as Games I and
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
2.
The
undermanned
Fox~ 1-740·446·3006
Wizards
rallied
.from a 17
E-mail- sports@mydailysentinel.com
point third-quarter deficit,
~Uilt«
but again couldn 'I finish the
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor job in the final period. The
(740) 446·2342, ext 33
Cleveland Cavaliers, mas
bsherma'n@mydallytribune.com
tering the art of doing just
enough to win, held on for a
Larry Crum, Sports Write.r
(740) 446·2342, ext 23
98-92 victory Saturday to
lcrumOmydailyregister.com
lake a 3-0 lead in the first
-round
series.
'
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
LeBron James had his best
(740) 446·2342. ext 33
game of the series with 30
bwalters @mydailytribune.eom

pm
02 .- Winner of GA-Jackson ame
versus winner ol (3) New Lexington ·(6)
. Athens at TBA. 5 p.m.
02 - Winner of Meigs-Waverly game
versus winner of (1) Warren-(8) Vinton
County game at TSA, 5 p.m.
D4- Winner ol SG·MIIIer game at (1)
· Waterford , 5 p.m.
·

a

• Auto ·&amp; Truck Repair
• .Towing &amp; Recovery
• ·Crane Service
• Haz-Mat Cleanup
• Snow Removal
• U·Haul Rental ·
• Heavy Truck &amp;Tire
Road Service
.'

,I

points, nine .assists and six
rebounds for the Cavaliers,
who are one game away
from sweeping a playoff
series for the first time in
franchise history. Zydrunas
llgauskas added 24 points
and eight rebounds, but the
most glaring statistic was
the Wizards' 6-for-20 shooting in the fourth quarter.
The Cavaliers led by
seven after ·Jlgauskas'
jumper with 2:45 to go, but ·
the Wizards were back within three after Elan Thomas
made one of two free throws
with 37 seconds left.
Cleveland responded with
the big basket - James fed
Sasha Pavlovic for an open
3-pointer . that pushed the
l~ad to six ~ith 25 seconds
to play.
The · Wizards had trouble
AP
getting a good look on their Washington Wizards' Etan Thomas, left, fights for a loose ball against Cleveland Cavaliers'
1
·
Daniel Gibson, right, during the fourth quarter of an NBA first-round . playoff basketball
Please see Cavs, 86
game Saturday in Washington. The Cavaliers won 9B-92, and lead the series 3-Q.

�·-.

The Daily Sentinel

. LOCAL • STATE

PageA6

Inside

'

.

Bl

The. Daily ·Sentinel
'

. Monday, April 30, 2007
Troy Smith heads to Ravens, Page B2
I

SCENES FROM RACINE FLOWER FESTIVAL

Reds rally past Bucs, Page B6

'

'

Monday, April30, 2007
LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY - A SChedUle of upcoming collage
and hll/1 school varsity sporling events invoh.r1 ing teams from Meigs County.

STAFF REPORT

Todav's gamtt
Prep SoHball

Prep Baseball
Meigs at Nels· York, 5 p.m.

Water1oro at Eastern, 5 p.m.
MilLer at Southern, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
Eastern. Southern at Aleltander, 4:30

p.m.
Tyetday M11y 1

Prep Softball

Vinton County at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Prep Baseball

Vinton County at Meigs, 5 p.m.

Beth Sergentj photo

Individu als honored by RACO at the flower festival are (from left) Jack Mykelby, Ann Zirkle,
Mabel Brace. Donna and Butch Sweet. Dave Zirkle , Ron Wagner of Wagner Hardware ,
Libby Fisher, Jan Hil l. Mary Ball , Jean Alkire. Sherri O'Brien, Maralyn Capretta. Not pictured
Marvin Hill, Chris Wolfe . Delores Cleland. Clarence and Louise Frank.

Submitted photo

Members of the Wooly Bully's and More 4'H Club helped clean up Star Mill Park and plant
flowe rs for the festival. Pictured are members, first row (from left) Kelsey Turner, Michaela
Holter. Ashlee Filkins . Caitlyn Holter, Megan Tripp, Amber Tripp; second row, (from left)
Dustin Smith. Rusty Carnahan, Chelsea Holter, Haley Tripp, AJ Roush, Austin Rose, Clayton
Moore; third row (from left) Whitney Wolfe-Riffle, Eric Perry, Chris Holter. Ryan Beegle,
Andrew $meck, Miranda Holter, Emily Manue l. The group's advisors are Rod Beegle and
Amy Ritchie. ·

-----· ------------•

Robber takes
wallet,Jorgets phone

.

COLUMBUS - A robber
demanded his victim's wallet
and car keys, then dumped
him in the trunk of his car and
withdrew cash with his bank
card early Sunday, police said.
Martino Williamson is
wishing . he had taken Ira
Sully's cell phone, too.
Sully called police from
inside the trunk and described
the car and Williamson, who
was caught a short time later
when an officer matched him
and the car to Sully's description, police said in a report. ·
Police freed Sully, 59, from
the trunk and charged
· Beth sereent/photo
Williamson, 20, with aggra~
What's a flower festival without flowers? Everything from hanging baskets to flats to gera- vated robbery and kidnapniums to ferns were on sale at this year's festival.
ping. ·

ROLLEN .GARAGE
14727 St. Rt. 554
Bidwell, Ohio 45614

740-388-8547
888-TOW-8547

.Proud to be apart of your life.

Prep Baaeball
logan at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Wahama at Eastern, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Southern, 5 p.m.
Thi.uodoy. Mav 3
Prep Softball

Eastern at Vinton County, 5 p.m.

Prep Baseball
Eastern at Vinton County, 5 p.m.
Track and Field

Meigs. Eastern at Vinton County, 4:30
p.m.

BASEBALL
Ohi11 Division
Alexander 7-2
Meigs ·
6-2
Wellston
6-2
Vinton Co
3-5
Belpre
2-6
Nels-York
1-8

3
4

5

,.

For an appointment contact:
Betsy Nicodemus

(740) 992-1740

i

Meigs
shortstop
Caleb
Davis (4)
jumps in
the ai r to
snag a
throw during a steal
attempt in
game ohe
of
Saturday's
non-conference
baseball
doubleheader
against
Athens in
Rock
Springs.
Ian
McNemar
/photo

Raiders take QB Russell with top pick Gordon
BY BARRY WILNER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

.,

2

Prep Softball

1VC STANDINGS

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

Wadneadoy. May 2

Meigs at.Point Pleasant, 5 p.m.

Subscribe today •992-2155

contest. DeLong. Aaron
Story and Caleb Davis pro·
vided the other safeties.
ROCK SPRINGS Hutton scored four runs on
Meigs baseball picked up a
the day and Bolin added
pair of convincing 'home
three scores overall. Poole
wins Saturday during a nonled MHS with four RBis,
conference doubleheader
while DeLong and Dunfee
with Athens, posting victoeach contributed three
ries of 7-2 and Il-l in five ·
apiece.
innings.
The Bulldogs (2-16) Jed
The key to both triumphs
Dunfee
Poole
only once throughout the
came down to starting pitchday. and that was after the
ing, as the Marauders (14-6) The southpaw also fanned top of the first inning of
allowed just three
earned six and walked four..
,
game one .
runs and six h1ts during a
The Maroon and Gold also
Mike Malesick was the
dozen innings of play.
pounded out nine hits and 16 losi ng pitcher of record in
Austin Dunfee surren- earned runs in the sweep, game one, followed by Brad
dered a pair of those earned including nin e earned runs Bentley in the nightcap.
runs in game one, but the and three hits during the Malesick wen! the distance
junior more than had control mercy-rule finale . Thai big in game one, allowi ng six
of the contest - allowing inning was capped off with a walks and s1x hits while
just five hits and a walk in three-run shot to left-center striking out five. Bentley
his complete-game decision. by Bryan DeLong, who gave Lasted just an inning-plus,
Dunfee also struck out a the hosts a I0-0 advantage surrendering four walks and
dozen over seven innings of after two complete.
a hit while fanning one.
work.
Meigs also had three playMitch Crabtree went the
Senior Dave Poole was ers acquire. two hits. oh the rest of the way, allowing
just as masterful in the sec day, mcludmg a pa1r from · fou r walks and two hits in
ond matchup. surrendering Clay Bolin in the _opener. four mmngs of work.
just one earned run and one Poole and Corey Hutton also
hit over five frames of.work. added a hit apiece in eac h
Please see Sweep. 86
SPQRTS@MVOAIL'VSENTINEL.COM

Meigs at Nels-York . 5 p.m.
Waterford at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Miller at Southern, 5 p.m.

I

Marauders sweep Athens in DH

Hocking Division
Southern*
8-1
Fed Hock
7-2
Eastern
5-3
Waterford
2·6
Miller
2-7
Trimble
2-7

NEW YORK - JaMaFcus
Russell barely had to wait
before taking the stage as an
Oakland
Raider
at
Saturday 's NFL draft.
Brady Quinn turned out to
be the forgo11en quarterback, lingering long after
SOFTBALL
Ru ssell was picked; until
Cleveland
look him 22nd.
Ohio Division
Russell
was the top
Wellston** 9-0
choice,
by
the
offense-defiBelpre
-7-2
cient
Raiders.
The
6-foot-6
Alexander 5-4
QB
who
can
throw
junior
Meigs
3-5
the
ball
80
yards
fits
the
Vinton Co
2-6
mold
for
-AI
Davis,
who
Nels-York
0-9
. loves the deep baiL
LSU players had plenty of
Hocking Division
draft-day
luster. Five spots
Waterford** 8-0 .
after Russell, Tigers safety
· Trimble
6-3
LaRon Landry went to
Eastern
4~4 .
Washington, and two · more
Fed Hock
4-5
Tigers were chosen later in
Southern
4-5
the opening round.
Miller
0-9 .
Notre Dame's Quinn sat
and watched 21 players get
• - clinched ihare of league title
••- won league tRio out~ght
called before he went to the
Browns, lhe team he grew
HS SECTIONAL PAIRINGS up rooting for in Dublin,
Ohio. Once considered the
BASEBALL
. Monday, May 7
best prospect in this year '.s
02 - (7) Vinton County at (2) Meigs, '5
crop, he was still available
p.m.
D2 - 161 Chillicothe al (3) Gallia
when the Browns· traded
Academx. 5 p.m.
·
with Dallas to get back into
04 - (9) South Gallia at (6) Waterford.
5 p.m.
the first round.
When' selected, Quinn let
Tuaaday, May 8
03 (16) River Valley at (1)
out
a big sigh of relief
Wheelersburg , 5 p.m.
before shaking commissionThursday, May 1o•
er
Roger Goodell's hand,
02 -Winner of VC-Meigs game versus winner ot C~ illi coth e-GA game at' and fans who booed him
. TBA. 5 p.m.
before the draft cheered him
04 - Winner of Waterford-SG game at
this time.
(1.) Southern, 5 p.m.
04 - Winner ol (7) Tnmble·(10) Miller
"1 felt like the weight of
at (2) Eastern, 5 p.m.
the world was lifted of my
'Friday, May 11'
shoulders," Quinn said.
03- Winner of RV-Burg game versus
winner oL\ 8) lronton-(9) Crooksville at
"The love-hate relationship
TBA, 5 p.m.
comes from going to Notre
Dame. It's like the
7
Yankees, you either love
03 - (11) """"""' (6) Belpre, 5
p.m.
.
' em or hate 'em.
AP photo
"I got great advice beforeWednesday, May 9.
02 - (7) Jackson at (2) Gallia
JaMarcus Russell , right, a quarterback from Louisiana State Univeristy, stands with NFL
hand
and
that
was
just
to
be
Academy. 5 p.m.
commissioner Roger Goodell after being selected by the Oakland Raiders as·the No. 1 over·
02 - (5) Meigs at (4) Waverly, 5 p.m.
Please. see Russell, B:Z
04 - (9) Miller at (B) South Gallia, 5
all pick in the NFL Draft Saturday at Radio City Music Hall in New York.
p.m.

surpasses
Earnhardt
on career
wins list

TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP)
- As beer cans bounced
around his car, Jeff Gordon
crossed the fini sh line
Sunday for win No. 77 breaking a
tie with the
late Dale
Earnhardt
o

n

NASCAR's
career victory list.
It
was
only fitting
that it ~ap­
pened at
Gordo.n
Talladega
Superspeedway,
where
Earnhardt - who would
have been 56 on Sunday won I0 times in his Cup
career.
But it was anticlimactic
and confusing, ending
under · caution to leave
GQrdon unsure if he'd actually won and taken over
sixth place on the wins list.
"Is it over?'' he radioed
his· crew. "Is it over? Is it
official?"
Nobody knew after twb
separate accidents on the
first lap of a three-lap
shootout to the finish froze
the field and had NASCAR
scrambling to make sense·of
the finish.
Gordon, who was 14th on
a restart with I0 laps to go,
stormed to lhe lead a second
before NASCAR called a
caution
after
David
Please see Go.rdofl, B:Z

Friday, May 11•

03- Winner of AV·Belpre game versus winner of (3) Wheelersburg-(14)
Crooksville game at TBA. 5 p.m.

We'll Do More Than Tow It,
We'll Repair ltl
.

• D4 -

Saturday, May 12"
(5) Southern at (4) Eastern, 1

Cavs take 3-0 lead

WASHINGTON (AP)
In an attempt to inspire the
crowd and their teammates
Gilbert Arenas and Caron
Butler were introduced with
the Washington Wizards'
startin~ lineup. Arenas gin
• - sectional final game; winner
gerly
hmped down the steps
sdvancss to districts
and across the court on his
surgically repaired knee as
the crowd went wild.
CoNTACT US
·· Nice try, fellas. Game 3
once it started, followed the
OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 o.m.)· same script as Games I and
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
2.
The
undermanned
Fox~ 1-740·446·3006
Wizards
rallied
.from a 17
E-mail- sports@mydailysentinel.com
point third-quarter deficit,
~Uilt«
but again couldn 'I finish the
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor job in the final period. The
(740) 446·2342, ext 33
Cleveland Cavaliers, mas
bsherma'n@mydallytribune.com
tering the art of doing just
enough to win, held on for a
Larry Crum, Sports Write.r
(740) 446·2342, ext 23
98-92 victory Saturday to
lcrumOmydailyregister.com
lake a 3-0 lead in the first
-round
series.
'
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
LeBron James had his best
(740) 446·2342. ext 33
game of the series with 30
bwalters @mydailytribune.eom

pm
02 .- Winner of GA-Jackson ame
versus winner ol (3) New Lexington ·(6)
. Athens at TBA. 5 p.m.
02 - Winner of Meigs-Waverly game
versus winner of (1) Warren-(8) Vinton
County game at TSA, 5 p.m.
D4- Winner ol SG·MIIIer game at (1)
· Waterford , 5 p.m.
·

a

• Auto ·&amp; Truck Repair
• .Towing &amp; Recovery
• ·Crane Service
• Haz-Mat Cleanup
• Snow Removal
• U·Haul Rental ·
• Heavy Truck &amp;Tire
Road Service
.'

,I

points, nine .assists and six
rebounds for the Cavaliers,
who are one game away
from sweeping a playoff
series for the first time in
franchise history. Zydrunas
llgauskas added 24 points
and eight rebounds, but the
most glaring statistic was
the Wizards' 6-for-20 shooting in the fourth quarter.
The Cavaliers led by
seven after ·Jlgauskas'
jumper with 2:45 to go, but ·
the Wizards were back within three after Elan Thomas
made one of two free throws
with 37 seconds left.
Cleveland responded with
the big basket - James fed
Sasha Pavlovic for an open
3-pointer . that pushed the
l~ad to six ~ith 25 seconds
to play.
The · Wizards had trouble
AP
getting a good look on their Washington Wizards' Etan Thomas, left, fights for a loose ball against Cleveland Cavaliers'
1
·
Daniel Gibson, right, during the fourth quarter of an NBA first-round . playoff basketball
Please see Cavs, 86
game Saturday in Washington. The Cavaliers won 9B-92, and lead the series 3-Q.

�•.
Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, April 30,

'

2007

..,onday, April 30, 2007

www.my!;lailysEmtinel.com

Reisman Trophy winner Smith to Baltimore Bengals take CB H~ll

'
NEW YORK (AP)
Troy Smith is taking hts
Hetsman
Trophy
to
Baltimore. Randy Moss ts
bringing his sinkmg reputation to New England.
The. second day of the
NR.. draft hardly was wtthout btg names and drama
No, Sunday couldn't match
the slide of Brady Qumn and
the dealmg of three 2008
first -round picks. But it had
some juicy an~les, mcludmg
Smtth, the Ohto State quarterback, going to the Ravens
on the final pick of the fifth
round. That's 174 picks
overall . the mnth quarterback and seventh Buckeye
chosen.
"The wan. that· s not a
concern for me," Snuth satd.
"The concern was the
chance to be a part of an
organization whtch ts the
ideal fit, playing for a winning team and a wmnmg
organization and getting a
chance to learn from guys
like Steve McNair. Ray
Lewts, Ed Reed, coach
(Bnan) Btlltck and Ozzie
Newsome."
Balttmore's seasoned roster of wmners ts a major reason Newsome grabbed
Smtth.
"I satd, ' Here you are,
coming off a big-lime career
at Ohio State, playing in the
national
champ10nshtp
game, the Heisman Trophy
winner, and you 're &lt;probably
_. going to be a nobody
because we've got some
Hall of Famers that are in
that locker room.' And you
know what? He reall),' relished that opportunity. '
Moss never took advantage of his few opportunities
With the Oakland Raiders
and was dealt to the Patriots
on Sunday for a fourthround pick, No. 110 overall.
"Just really last mght me
and coach (Bill) Belichick

Russell
from Page 81
patient. I said before that I
was going to be open-minded, and that's the tough
thing. I was open-minded,
and I had a point in my head
~ere I didn't think I was
gomg to fall any further,
and it obviously exceeded
that."
Russell had no such anxious moments.
When Goodell, conductins his first draft as commissioner,
announced
Russell's name, Raiders
fans in the crowd cheered
loudly. But there was a mixture of cheers and boos
when Russell, who is btgger
than some NFL linemen,
came on stage to don a
Raiders hat and hold up a
No. I black jersey.
Then came chants of "LS-U, L-S-U" for the man
who soon will be in charge
of the Oakland offense.
"I kind of had faith in it.
Everybody had been talkm~
about it for a whtle,
Russell said of bemg chosen
ftrst. "It's a dream come
true. Growing up as a ktd
playing every sport in life
and always seeing the guys
on the professiOnal level ,
and here I am today."
"I can 't wall to get in the
black and silver and get to
work."
'
Whtle he works for a
t!!am that went 2-14 last
season and scored only 168
points, Landry heads to the
Redskins to team with Sean
Taylor in what could be a
dynamic set of safeties.
"Our feehng there was,
with this pick, we need to
pick someone that we feel is
~oin&amp; to play for a long
time, 'coach Joe Gibbs said,
'.'and have a chance to do
some outstanding things."
LSU
wide receiver
Dwayne Bowe went 23rd to
Kansas City, and wideout
Craig Dav1s was chosen
30th by San Diego.
Quinn's draft day turned
into an agonizing wait.
lie kept flashtng a smile
that becii!IIe harder to main·
tain .with each selection,
perhaps recalling how Matt
Leinart dropped last year
and Aaron Rodgers prummctcd in 200S. Leinart only
fell to I Oth to Arizona;
Rodgers went 24th overall
to Green Bay.
When Miami selected
Ohio State wide receiverkick returner Ted Ginn Jr.,
at No. 9, Dolphins instead
of Quinn fans at Radio City
Music Hall let out a gasp
and booed. And then a Iiuge
portion of he crowd began
chanting,
"BRADY,

really talked for the ftrst
Oakland selected defentime about what's been sive back John Bowte of
going on,'' Moss said. "He Cincinnati with the pick for
asked me how excited I Moss.
(would be) tf the opportuniNew England never has
ty would prese nt ttself for shted from taking on other
me to become a Patnot and, teams problem players really, I was overwhelmed perhaps most notably runbecause I didn 't expect to ning back Corey Dillon hear from coach Behchtck " ana has succeeded with
It took him two years to them. Now the Patriots have
become a panah, wtth the Moss to bolster their receivwoeful Ratders Less, actu- mg corps. and they chose
ally, because the former All- safety Brandon Menweather
Pro receiver in Minnesota of the Miami Hurricanes m
even admtlted he dtdt)'t the first round. Meriweather
always go all-out as Oakland played a prominent role m
plummeted to 2-14, the Miami's brawl wuli Florida
worst record m the league
International last season and
Moss, who made five Pro s~rved a one-game suspenBowls in seven seasons wtth ston
Mmnesota, had 102 catches
"He ran over there and
for 1,558 yards and II made a bad decision. I don 't
touchdowns
wuh
the thmk that's who he is,"
Raiders But he had career coach Btll Behchick said of
lows last season with 42 Menweather. "I spent ume
catches for 553 yards and wtth him (and) a lot of peothree touchdowns.
ple m that program and I
"We felt this was the best think football's tmportant to
scenario for both the Raiders him."
and Randy," Oakland coach
Then there was Mtchael
Lane Kiffin said.
Bush, a likel,Y first -rounder
So dtd Moss, who refuted before breakmg hts leg in
the tmJ?ression he has a bad Loutsvtlle's opener last seareputatton in the NFL.
son. The big, fast running
"I have a microscope (on back was the opening pick
me) and my microscope ts of the second day after the
very big," he said. "The peo- Raiders had nearly 12 hours
ple that talk about me, as far to contemplate the selection.
as my work ethic and my
"I was ju st stunned," Bush
competitive nature and me said of not going in the ftrSt
gomg out there and playing three rounds, probably
football, the best thing r can because he needed a second
say to you, male or female, surgery in March, when a
all you have to d6 is line up new rod was inserted into
against me and see what his leg after the bone dtdn't
happens."
heal quickly enough. "I didThe Raiders pumped up n't know .what to expect,
their offense by taking quar- what to think My agent and
terback JaM arcus Russell of I didn't have anythmg to go
LSU at the top of the draft; by. I just felt like maybe it
tight end Zach Miller of wasn't nght for me to go on
Arizona State in the second lhe {irst day. It w:ls a little
round; wide receiver Johnny disappointing, but everyLee Higgins of UTEP and thing worked out fine."
tackle Mario Henderson of There even were some
Florida State in the third, players with character issues
and Bush.
who went in . the middle
BRADY."
At one point the NFL
allowed Qumn to wait it out
m a room away from TV
cameras.
"I guess just the opportunity to have Cleveland
come back around and giving me a chance to play
there ts just something that
I've always dreamed of
doing,'' Qumn said
The Browns gave a second-round choice and next
year's No. I to the 'cowboys
to get Quinn. Th~y could've
had htm at No. 3 but took
Wisconsin offensive tackle
Joe Thomas instead.
Thomas spent the mornmg fishing back home
ratber than attend the draft.
"It didn't surprise me,"
Thomas said of being taken
by the Browns. "I hoped for
a few
months that
Cleveland would pick me.
They showed a lot of interest in me all the way along."
After Russell's selection,
Detroit declined several
trade options for the No. 2
overall pick and chose wide
receiver Calvin Johnson of
Georgia Tech, considered
the best athlete avatlable. It
was the fourth time in five
years the Lions chose a
wideout high in the draft
Only one of the others, Roy
Williams, has succeeded in
Detroit. Johnson, an AllAmerican junior known as
"Spider-man," ts 6-4 and
237 pounds and can run a
4.35 m the 40.
"I told him when he was
here (for a pre-draft vtsit)
that he ,wouldn't get past2,''
Ltons gresident Matt Mtllen
said. 'This guy is the real
deal."
Tampa Bay picked the
ftrst defensive pla,Yer,
Clemson
end
Games
Adams, who at 6-5 ts an
inch shorter and three

pounds lighter than Russell.
"Oh, it's a tremendous
honor,'' Adams said of
being the top defensive
selection. "There's a lot of
great defensive players that
are out in this draft and it's
just an honor to me to be
one of the ftrst ones chosen.".
Arizona also went for
offensive line help at No. 5,
taking Penn State tackle
Levi Brown, who should
replace Leonard Davts, now
wtth Dallas after leaving as
a free agent.
Adrian
Peterson of
Oklahoma was chosen by
Minnesota, which apparently was unconcerned by the
running back's history of
injuries in college.
"I don't want to say necessarily
disappointed
because my dream has
come true," Peterson said of
sliding to seventh overall. "
You never put all your ej!gs
in one basket. I am JUSt
excited."
At No. 8, Arkansas defensive end Jamaal Anderson
went to Atlanta, whtch went
to the Super Bowl in 1999
with a running back named
Jamal Anderson.
Then Miami got Ginn.
"I promise you that Ted
Ginn is J;lOing .to be sol!leone you re gomg to enJOY
watching play for a long,
long time as a Miami
Dolphin," coach Cam
Cameron said
But Johnson was the true
pnze at wide receiver, and
Lions coordinator Mike
Martz has a history of using
such players well.
"He's ecstatic just like
me," Johnson said of Martz.
"Like I satd , l'm going to be
in a good sttuation."
The lOth pick was 19year-old defenstve tackle
Amobi Okoye of Louisville,

rounds, including Florida
defensive tackle Marcus
Thomas - for whom the
Denver Broncos traded their
two remaining picks Sunday
and a thtrd-rounder m 2008.
"You talk about taking an
educated gamble,'' coach
Mike Shanahan. "If they do
·make a mistake, then you
have to release a player and
let them go. No one's bigger
than the team. We've had
players before that have
been m this situation, and
it's been the best thing that's
ever happened They come
mto the NFL without a second chance.
"Ttme will tell. I can't tell
you fOO percent. If I dtdn' t
have a very good gut feelmg
about the guy he wouldn't
be wtth our orgamzat10n."
Shanahan also chose
Gators DE Jarvts Moss m
the first round. Moss tested
positive for marijuana m the
middle of the 2006 season
and was suspended for one
game.
Other notable selections
Sunday were Ohio State RB
Antonio Pittman, fourth
round to New Orleans;
Michigan
WR
Steve
Breaston, fifth round to
Anzona; Pittsburgh linebacker H.B Blades, sixth
round to Washington, UTEP
quarterback Jordan Palmer,
the brother of the Bengals'
Carson Palmer, six.th round
to Washington; and WR
Jordan Kent, who played
t~ree sports at Oregon and ts
the son of bucks basketball
coach Ernie · Kent. Jordan
Kent went at the end of the
six.th round to Seattle
The final pick of the
longest draft ever - 18
hours. 5 minutes - was
Alabama defensive back
Ramzee
Robinson
by
Detroit.
by Houston. ' He's the
youngest player drafted in
the first round since the
mer~er and wtll JOin last
year s No. I overall pick,
defensive
end
Mario
Williams, on the line.
Johnson, Adams and
Okoye all reportedly admitted in team interviews at the
NFL combine that they had
tned manjuana. That clearly didn't hurt their stock.
San Francisco followed
by choosil)g tbt;' best !mebacker in the draft,
Mississippi's Patrick Willis.
Buffalo, selected next, was
interested in Willis, as well
but settled for Cal running
back Marshawn Lynch

CINCINNATI (AP)- For
the second year m a row, the
Cmcmnall' Bengals took a
cornerback with their first
pick in the dr;aft.
Michigan's Leon Hall was
the 18th overall pt ck
Saturday, the latest attempt
to fix a defense that has
dragged down · the Bengals
for years
Hall is the second
Michigan player taken wtth
the Bengals' top ptck in the
last four years Runntng
back Chris Perry was thetr
No. I chotec In 2004
·
The Bengal s had one of
the NFL's worst defenses
again last season, a recurrmg
problem dunng Marvin
Lewts' four years as head
coach The1r pass defense
was particularly atrocious.
fin ishing in a tie for last 111
the league.
They particularly needed a
cornerback.
Tory James was allowed to
leave as a free agent - he
signed with New England after a disappointing season.
Deltha O'Neal also dropped
off last year, when he was
one of nine Bengals arrested
during a nine-month span
The
Bengal s chose

Gordon
fromPageBl
Reuttmann's engine failed
and dumped oil all over the
track.
It set up a three-lap spri nt
to the tlnish, but NASCAR
makes only one attempt to
complete it. If cautton
comes out, the race instantly ends So when Elhott
Sadler bumped the back of
Greg Biffle to trigger a
Lynch could replace Wtlhs
McGahee, who was traded
to Baltimore m the offseason.
The Jets and Panthers
swung the first trade of th~
day, with !'New York moving
up from 25th overall to 14tn
for Pittsburgh's Darrell e
Rev1s, the tlrst cornerback
selected Saturday. The Jets
gave their first, a secondrounder and a ftfth-rounder
for Revis, who also returns
kicks. Carolina also gave
New York a stxth-round
choice.
Late in the opening
round, San Franctsco sent
its 2008 first-rounder to
New England to get the
~

Johnuthun Joseph in the first
round last year. the first ttme
m thctr 39 drafts that they
made a cornerback thetr top
ptck Jose ph can replace
James as a starter thts season. but there's no much
depth behind him.
The New York Jets made u
twde wtth Carohna and
moved up to 14th m the ti rst
round, where they took
Durrelle
Rev ts
from
Ptttsburgh. comtdered one
ol the top two cornerbacks
ava tlable.
Denver moved up to 17th
- noht
betore the
Bengal
s
e
.
.
by tradmg
wnh
Jack,onvtlle so tt could take
defenstve end Jarvts Moss
from Flonda That lett Hall
ava tlable to the Bengals.
Hall understands that he'll
be under a spotlight m
Cmcmnatt lor how he handles hunsel f.
''I'm also a good character
guy," Hall said, speaking to
reporters trom a tamtly celebration _ m
southern
Califorma " I know for a
fact, knowmg myself and the
people I've put myself
around. that I'm staying out
of trouble and not having
any trouble with that."
wreck, the race was effectively over.
But Tony Stewart was
knocked mto the wall far
ahead of that accident and
went spinning down the
track mto the mside wall.
He was fummg as the field,
passed by hun under cautton, angrily gesturing at
Jamte McMurray.
The fans, meanwhtle, figured out that Gurdon. who
tied Earnhardt last w~ek in
Phoemx, was the vtctor and
reacted wtth the shower of
beer cans
28th spot, where the Ninet s
picked offensive tackle Joe
Staley of Central Mtchtgan
Mtdway into the second
round, the 49ers got back an
'08 ftrst-round pick from
the Colts for a pick
Indianapolis used to take
Arkansas tackle Tony Ugoh.
At one pomt m the 6hour. 8-minute first round
- longe st ever - nine
straight defensive players
were chosen
In all, 17 defensive players were tak en, and 15 on
offense. Fourteen underclassmen were selected and
II SEC players went in the
opening round.

~rthune

- Sentinel - l\egi~ter

CLASSIFIED
.

......__
E-mail
classtlted@m ydatlytnbune com

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

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

o~a.d'IJ!rec

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In - Column: 1:00 p . m.
Friday For Sundays Paper

• Start Y.ouf' Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

*POLICIES*
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time
Errors Must B
eported on the firs
'I of publication an
he Trlbune.Sentinel
eglster
will
b
espons lble for n
ore than the cost o
he space occuple
the error and onl
he first tnsertlon. W
hall not be liable fo
ny loss or eKpens
hat results from th
ubllcaUon or omis
ion of 11n advertls
ent Corrections wll
made In the firs
vailable edition.

&gt;Box

number ads ar
lways confidential

&gt;Current rate car
pplles.

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone NumDer And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 oavs

1\\111 \II Ill\ IS

r

r:1117?:::::=:::==~
70

,

-

, Thursday for Sundays

1

L.ln.o_____
.,
liF.LP WANn.D ,..~l.

,.. •

GtvtAWAY

lost

ANil

FOIJND

INTERVIEWS
Start a new career
today t

Thursday
May 3rd
10:00am-3 :00pm
\

1

1

I

242 Th1rd Avenue
GallipOliS, OH
If unable to attend,
please call
1-877 -463·624 7
ext 4256
to scheCule an
1nterV1ew

Estate Leftover Sale Pnces
Reduced Crystal Jewelry
decorattons, Etc One pnce

takes an•• To set up an
appo1nlmen1 cal( (740)441
5826

.. . 'q.Jo

5

~

YARD SALE·

Lost
Full blooded
l'oMERO\/MIDDLt,
Real Estat
Norweg1an Elk Hound
www comics com
dvertlsements ar
Slorys Run Ad area·
ubject to the Federa
Gall1a/Me1gs Answers to Aprll 29 30 May 1 9am·
5pm (740-985-3929) ne~tto
air Housing Act o
Pepper (740)367 7204
I
I d 110
S
1968
Eastern Hlgtl chao so I
HILl, WAN'I"EI&gt;
Rescued Pupp1es need a oak !able &amp; chai rs, electriC 1
If
I
h
I
good home Appear to be 1t cha1 r, e ectn c osp1ta
)'This
newspape
part Australian Shepherd bed, was her swlve I recImer,
ccepts only hel
Call 740 388 9064
anted ads meetln
DJ 'stereo
eqwpment
skates b eauty -•
t.~ ,op we 1s1a
OE standards
Reward offered tor m1ssmg t1on bow I and Iaugue mats,
300 Br1arwood Dr1ve
•We wlll not knowing dog
Mixed
breed btcycle clothes ba by IIams
Gallipolis Oh1o
Dachshund, short black ha1r
accept any actver
Rawlelgh Products mat
740-441 -9633
w/ a split 1n one of hiS ears
tresses tools m1sc
sement In violatlo
Has m1croch1p can be Idenllhataw.
Holzer Assisted Livmg
tified by a vet 740· 245·0004 Behmd Masomc Lodge In
Aacme Monday, Tuesday, Gall1pohs has Employment
Opportun1t1es tor
Wednesday g.? Mens PART-TIME and as need ed
women s, plus Sizes, boys
Res1dent ASSISta nts
clolhlng, furnuure toys rod
4x4's For Sale .......................... ................. 725
&amp;
reels
watcnes
kmves
Prefer
expenenced STNA
Announcement ...................... . ............ .. . 030
complete
set
of
Dept
56
bu!
not requtred
An,llques .................................................. 530
Lillie Town of Bell1tehem • Please apply m person or
Apartments for Rent . . . .. . . . . . .. 440
Auction and Flea Market....... ...... .. .. . ... 080
senes c1rcte of In ends f1g- D~a.nsee~~~~!~~eNtoDON
unnes, pmk M1ss Amer1ca
Aulo Parts &amp; Accessones .... . .............. ..... 760
depressiOn glass lots of ~------­
Auto Repair.......... .. .. ......... ... . .. .. . .. . 770
m1sc, (740)949 2671
A
Celebrabon
of
Autos for Sale ........................................ 710
l1fe
Overbrook
Center
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ....................... .. 750
Btg
yard
sa le,Maytst- located at 333 Page Street
Bultding Supplies ................................. 550
5th Whttes t"ull Rd ,Rutland Middleport, Oh1o IS pleased
Business and Bu1ld1ngs ........................... 340
Depct Street Rutland Apnt to announce we are accept
Business Opportunity . ..
.. . .
210
30th through! May 3rd tools 1ng applicat1on9 for the tol
Business Training .................................... 140
collectables newborn to lOWing pOSitiOnS tO jOin Our
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................ 790
lrtendly and dedicated statt
adult clolh tng more
Camping Equlpment ................................ 780
Pari
T1me LPN 's 7P·7A &amp;
Cards of Thanks ...................................... 010
Garage Sale Vtne Street 7A·7P, Full Time STNA's 3A
190
Racme cral1s hOusehOld 3P &amp; 7A·7P Part T1m e
Electrical/Refrigeration .................. .......... 840
ttem s tools Harley parts STNA s 3P 3A &amp; 7P 7A
Equipment lor Rent .................................. .480
Chnstmas
decorattons Applicants must be depe nd·
Excavating.. ..
. ..
. . .
.
830
Thurs
May
3rd
&amp; Fn May able team players w1th pos
Farm Equipment.. ................................ 610
4th 9 4
111ve att1tudes to JOIO us m
Farms lor Rent.. .. ..................................... 430
prov1dmg outstanding qua11
Farms lor Sale.. .. .. .............. .. .. .. ... . . 330
May 2nd 1 1/2 m1 Hysell
ty cam to ou r res1dents
For Lease ............................................. ... 490
Run Ad baby boy clothes
Stop
by anq fill out an apph
For Sate ................................................... 585
baby 1tems women s dou
cat1on 01 conla ct Holl1e
For Sale or Trade ............................ .. . 590
ble st roller, housewares
Bum garner LPN
Stall
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ................... .......... 580
under shelter pnced to sell
Development
Furnished Rooms . . . . .
450
(740)992 5275
Coordinator@ 740-992·6472
General Hauling .......................... ......... :850
and come see lor yourself
Giveaway .......................................... ...... 040
the dtfference you can make
FU-AMARIIH
HapJIY Ads ............... .. .. ............... .. .. .. .050
at Overbrookllfl EOE &amp; A
Hay &amp; Grain .............................................. 640
PartiCipant of The Drug Free
Help Wantad .............................................. 110
AUCTION Modular House
Workplace Program
Home Improvements .... ........................... 81 0
and tools 8. Equ1pment
Homes for Sale .................................1...... 310
Buckeye
H1lls
Caree.r An Excellent way to earn
Household Goods . . . .
.
.. . 510
Canter Ala Grande Oh1o T
money The New Avon
Houses for Rent.. ..................................... 410
&amp;Eal 1100am Houseal
Ca ll Manlyn 304·882 2645
In Memoriam .............................................. 020
12 00 noon on May 5 2007
Insurance .............................................. 130
740-245 5334
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ........................ 660
Livestock .................................................... 630
Loqt and Found ..................... ...................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ........................................ 350
Absolute Top Dollar
Miscellaneous...... .......................... 170
S1lver and Gold Co1ns
Miscellaneous Merchandise .......... ~ ........ 540
Proofsets, Gold Rings PreMoblte Home Repair ................................ 860
1935
US
Currency,
Moblte Homes for Renl. . .. .. .. .. ...... . . 420
Sol1la1re D1amonds- M T S
Moblte Homes lor Sale .............. ............... 320
Com Shop, 151 Second
Money to Loan ..... ...................................... 220
Avenue GaU1pohs 740-446·
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .......................740
2842
Musical Instruments ................................ 570

© •2007 by NEA, Inc

v

Personals. .. .... .. .................................... 005
Pots for Sale ............................................. 560
Plumbing &amp; Healing .................................. 820
Prolesslonal Sarvlces............... . .. .. ..... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ...,........ ................. 160
Real Estate Wanted .................................... 360
Schools Instruction ......................... .'........ 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fortttlzer .............................. 650
, Situations Wanted ....................................... 120
Space for Rent ............................................. 460
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
for Sal~.... .. ................................ 720
Truckalor Sale ............................................ 715
• Upholstery ........................... .................... ... 870
V1n1 For Sale.......... • .............. . .. .. • .. • . 730
• Wanted to Buy ............................................ 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies .................. 620
Wanted To Do ..................... ...................... 180
Wanted to Rent ........................................... 470
Yard Sale- Gattlpolla ....................................072
Yard Sate-Pomeroy/Middle ....................... 074
Yard Sate-Pt. Pleasant ............................... 075

suv•a

IIJ.:J..P WANTED

11110

L,""""""""""""""""!"_.l

HEU, WANI'F.D
~""""""""""""""""""_.J

CHILD CARE WORKERS
To wor.k part t1me 1n the~
evemng
and
some
Saturdays With emotionally
or behaviorally challenged
chtldren tn the Mason
County area Some dut1es
mctuda part1c1pahng m
recreational acttvltles, build·
1ng soc1al sk1Us and mom·
tonng behaVIor Must have
HS dtploma/GED, valid dnver's license, and a Willingness to work w1th children
Resumes lVIII not be accept·
ed ApplicatiOns are avail
able
at
www prestera orofapphca1i2nJ2Qt or our 715 Main St
Pt Pleasant oM 1ce Submit
appt 1cal 1on by fax to
(304):399·005:3 or ma11to
PRESTERA CENTER
HA/Aesp1te
3375 U S At 60 E
Huntington WV 25705
EOE/AA
-------Dom1no's P1zza Now Hlnng
Safe Onvers &amp; Management
Po1nt Pleasant, Gallipolis &amp;
Pomeroy locations Apply 1n
Perso n

Due to lhe mcrease m ow
Serv1ce Traff1c the Tn-State
leader m automot1 ve repa1
1s looktng tor a Serv1ce
Adv1ser Ouahhcahons lor
the JOb are a strong des1re
to help people With the1r
serv1ce needs fnendly
oulgomg and a good
understanding ot automo·
t1ve 1epa1r In add1t1on to
th e best pay plan m the
area M also offer 40 t K
retirement health care life
msurance and dlsabtlity
1nsurance To apply contact J1m Thomas Serv1ce
Manager 740 446 9800

. ......

R&amp;J Truckmg Lead1ng The
Way R&amp;J Trucking now
EOE
Hinng at our New Haven
WV Term1nal For Reg1onal
Hauls-Dump ,01v
1 year 16~---==.lt
OTR venhable exp Call 1·
800-462 9365 ask, lor Kent The Town of Mason IS
accepting apphcatlons for
the pos1t1on of temporary
Ready for an Independent
full time laborer Dulles Will
rewarding and fleKible
career 1n home health?
mcltJde work1ng 1n !he water
sewer and street depart
Local Home Health Agency ments as well as some con
looktng for self motivated
strtJctiOn Carpentry expen1nd1vlduals for a vanety ol
ence 1s helpful Th1s pos111on
shrfts PCA, CHHA, CNA
STNA cert1ftcat1on We have w111 last approx1mately three
to four months and does not
trammg available and we
1
"&gt;
Include
bene bl
liS
ass1st w1th lOb placement
Applicati ons are avalla a
Applications are being
thmugh Fnday, May 4 at the
accepted or mall to PO Box C1ty Bu1td1ng 1601 Second
707, GallipOliS Oh 45631
Street, Mason
(740)441 -1377 or fax to
_ _;__ _ _ _ __
(740)44 1-1648
The Village or R1o Grande IS
lr'"""'::"'""i'':""';"';""""'il taking apphcallons for the
Receptionist
posll1on of part t1me pollee
John Sang Ford Lincoln
officer Two yea rs ex pen
Mercury IS expenencmg
ence
IS
requ1red
cont1nued grow1h that
Appl1ca110ns can be p1cked
reQUires us to ltnd a
up at the A1o Grande
energetiC Recepi10111SI
Mun1c1pal Bu1ld1ng Monday
Oualil1 cattons that would
Friday,
8 30AM
un!ll
be a good 111 for the tob
4 30PM Appl~ea11ons are
IS, out go1ng personality
due back to the Mun1opal
good phone sktlls and
Bwldtng by noon on Monday
cash1er1ng expenence
_M:_.:ay_1_4,_2,_o_o7_ _ __
Contact Dee Sweeney 1n
Wanted part t1me apartment
person at John Sang
mamtenance person send
Ford L1ncoln Mercury
work expenences to D&lt;uty
195 Upper R1ver Road
Senllnel PO Box 729 4
GallipoliS Oh1o
Pomeroy Oh 45769

I

r:":l:-------,

1110

VISOr

www.lnfocision.com

.·

Yard Sat€ Alnca Ad May 2-

~t4

II\ I \1 I II

liEU' WMTIIJ
10

r.==:;::::::::::::=:;'l'
OPEN

YARil SAl £·

House hold goods Holiday

2 male i yr old cats i long
half tabby striped, 1 solid
black very sweet &amp; lov1ng
304 675·890 1

flo

k1tncarlyle@comcast.net

d1vorce hearmg IS set for 4 Famtly Yard Sale/ Bake
May 7 2007 at 11am 1n Sale May 2nd, 3rd S 4th
Jackson Co West Virg1n1a
Solar Dnve

t

POLICIES Ohio V.!llley Publlthlng rna111e1 the right to edit, rt)ect, or Clncelany alii at any time Error• mutt be reported on the first day of' P"lbUoo,Uon
Trlbu,..Sentlnei-Regltt&amp;r will be retpontlble for no more then tht ca.t of th~ lp.!ICe occupied by the error and only the flrtt 1naer110n We
not be II
any loll or exptnae that re1u1ta lrom the publication Of I;H111talon of an advertisement Correction Will be made In th .11 first available ed11ion • Box
are alway• conlldtntlal. • Current rate card app1te1 • All reel etlate .!ldvertlsement• are tubj&amp;et to the Federal Fa1r Housing Act ol 1968 • This ~;~~~••;~;1
wanted ad1 meeting EOE tlandarda We will not knowlnglv accept any advertlllng In viol.!llion of the 1.11w

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

ALL KCHS ALUMNI SEC L,""""""G~AI;,;.I:i;Jijl~lilliii
.L~-,.J
OND ANNUAL REUNION,
MOOSE LODGE, MAY 26, 1 mt le below dam furmture,
2007, 8 I 00 ENTERTAIN· home 1ntenor clothtng all
MENT (304)675 4831 OR SIZBS, ffiiSC May 1 2 3
(740)446-3488
1939 Chathatn Ave May 1-5
I Karen Honacher would hke Furntlure Dtshes Clolhtng
to announce the divorce of ETC
her &amp; her husband Fred
Honacher
Jr
of 3 Famtly yard sale wtll have
Tupperspfams Oh10, the baby lh1ngs May 3 4 &amp; 5

r

I'

be prepaid '

YARHSAI.t:

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Now you can have borders and graphics
"-'
added to your classlHed ads
s,~
Jm
Borders $3.00/per ad
I!
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 r ~~• .;.,,r,[

• All ads must

HOW TO WRITE AN AD

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

AUCIIONANU

I

.....

Or

Chltd/Etderty Care ......................................

!

Websttes
www mydatlytnbune com
www mydatlysenttnel.com
www.mydatlyregtster.com

To Place
~rtbune
Sentinel
l\egt~ter
ctuAs:G~A~!
Your Ad, (7 40) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675·1333 I
·
I
:
.
vtSA
Call Today... or Fax To (740) 446·3008 ·
or Fax To
992-2157
Fax To
675-5234

CLASSIFIED INDEX

L. 992-2

The 'Daily Sentinel • Page 83

TO DRIVE
ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRAILER
TAAI~'ING CENTERS
,.
• FULL TIME CLASSES"
· cOl TRAINING'
'FINA~-~eNc AVAILABLE'
c.~e~..~:~~~~~;·u:lne11
Wythe~1ile Vlrg1n1a
1_8oo- 334_1203
wwwal~a~&gt;CelrK~ort'~'Mcom

L...:::::!!:!!!=~~~..J
Lookmg
for
in -Hom e
Ch1lctare provtder 12 hour
days Ref reqwred, Senous
lflqu1res only Call 304·675·
3161

a

Job?

Need GREAT
We flave what you are
looking fort

We offer
0 Full lime and Part-time
shifts available
0 Up to $8.50/hour •
weekly bonus potential
0 Pa1d tra1n1ng
0 Paid vacat1ons &amp; pa1d
holidays
0 Medtcal, dental &amp; VISIOn
Insurance
0 401(k) ret1rement plan
0 Fnendly, profeSSIOnal •
work atr:nosphere

Dr1vers Needea
COL
Dr1vers w1lhng to dnve for
local ready m1x company
Expenence IS preferred but
not necessary Dnvers must
be w1lling to do pre .ma1nte· Jom us In making calls
nance on trucks &amp; eQUIP·
for major Political
ment, yard work &amp; other mtS
organizations!
cellaneous
chores
EKper1ence operatmg equtp Call today to schedule an
ment &amp; extra skills such as
Interview!
weldmg a plus
Call
1-877-463-6247
(304)937 ·3410

ext 2341

Gall• polls Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Cal l Todayl 740 446·4367
1-800 214 0452
www gall!pOisc!ueertollege com
Accre&lt;lil ed Membe r ACC/9011 ng
Counc11 101 Independent Colleges
and SchoolS12748

170

011 &amp; Gas Well Leases
Add1son/Chesh1re Twps 8
Berea Wells comp w/ Pump
Jacks Motors Tanks &amp;
SaleS. Meters $56,000
Phone 740 934 2073

I 111'111\\ll \I

HELP WANl'Eil
100 WORKERS NEEOED
Assemble crafts
wood
Items To $480/wk Matertals
provtded Free mformatton
pkg 24Hr 801·428-4649
COL Dnver for trash truck
Knowledge of Oallta County
preferred 2 years dnvmQ top
Hea vy trucks
needed
(740)388 9686

'I

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS
$1653-$2758/nr , now' hlr·
AVQNI All Areas• To Buy or tng For apphcatron and free
Sell Shirley Spears, 304· governement lob nfo call
Amencan Assoc of Labor 1675·1429
913·599·8042, 24111rs. emp
serv
POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Help wanted at Darst Adult
Avg Pay $20/hr or
Group Home, some llfttng,
$57K annually
7·5 Shift, 740.992·5023
lncludmg Federal Benefits
and OT Paid Tram1ng
Help Wanted evenmgs 5·
Vacations FT/PT
8pm, &amp; Saturdays 10 4pm at
1·600 584·1775 EXI #8923 TA Communlcattons 740·
441 9711
USWA

- ------=--

- - - . _ _____ _ _ __ j _ _ _ _ ~

'I

-·

•NOTICEo
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO recommends
that you do busmess w1th
people you know and
NOT to send money
th rough the ma1l un111you
have mvesugated the
offenng

r

MONEY
I'OloAN

Borrow Smart Con tact
th e OhiO DIVISIOn Of
InstitUtion 's
OHtce of Consumer
Affa1rs BEFORE you refl·
nance your home or
obta1n a loan BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments of
fees 01 msurance Call the
Offtce of Consumer
Affa1rs toll tree at 1 866278·0003 to learn tf the
mortgage broker or
lender
IS
properly
licensed (This IS a publiC
v
ser"oce
announcement
from the Otuo Valley
Publishing Company)

:;::;;::::::::~
PkO~IONAL
SERVIOO

..__lllliiiiiiioiiiiiiilo""",.t
--,

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We W1n1
1·888 582 3345
Ill II I \I I II
~:--=---.,

1310

HOMES
FOR SALI-:

]

$269/mol Buy GALLIPO·
LIS Foreclosure! 1-4 bed
homes from 199fmo. 5%
down, 20 years at 8%
More homes available For
loca listings call 8(1()..5594109 xF254
0 Down even with less than
perlect cred1t IS ava1labte on
th1s 3 bedroom 1 bath
home Corner tot fireplace,
modern kitchen JacuZZI tub
Payment around $550 per
month 740 367·71 29

1989 Clayton Mobile Home
14x60 2 Bedroom 1 Bath
w1th a 121i18 additiOnal bed
room 12x6 muddroom on
1/2 acre lot w1th cha1n hnk
fen ce &amp; 10~10 bulldmg
ASking $40 000 (740)379·
2668

2417 HOME
STORE
M1dwes1 Homes
mymidwesthome.com '

Buymg Junk Cars Trucks &amp;
Wreck s Pay Cast'l J 0
Salvage
1304)773 5343
1304)674 1374

"'I R\ H I ""

BU~1NIN5
0PI'OR11JNri'Y

104 Tatum
Dr
New
Haven WV 3bd/2ba Ranch
lg sunroom 2 car gar great
area D 304 675 3637 E
304·882 2334

EOE

RESCARE
Leadmg Prov1der for
IndiVIduals/Developm ental
01sablht1es IS acceptmg
apphcat10ns for Director
Care Profess1onals
Ouahf1Cal1ons Valid Onve1s
L1cense, H1gh School
Diploma or GED Apt&gt;y at
Mlddle)on Estates, 8204
Carla D11ve, GallipOliS, OhiO
No Pnone Calls

I

\

3BA 1 5 SA CA gas furn
full basement frame house
on 5 lots on SA 554 81dwell
$50 000 740·993-4551
4br 2 1/2 bath 2FP 2 acres
AC $149 500 [304)674·
5921 or (304)593·8871

�•.
Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, April 30,

'

2007

..,onday, April 30, 2007

www.my!;lailysEmtinel.com

Reisman Trophy winner Smith to Baltimore Bengals take CB H~ll

'
NEW YORK (AP)
Troy Smith is taking hts
Hetsman
Trophy
to
Baltimore. Randy Moss ts
bringing his sinkmg reputation to New England.
The. second day of the
NR.. draft hardly was wtthout btg names and drama
No, Sunday couldn't match
the slide of Brady Qumn and
the dealmg of three 2008
first -round picks. But it had
some juicy an~les, mcludmg
Smtth, the Ohto State quarterback, going to the Ravens
on the final pick of the fifth
round. That's 174 picks
overall . the mnth quarterback and seventh Buckeye
chosen.
"The wan. that· s not a
concern for me," Snuth satd.
"The concern was the
chance to be a part of an
organization whtch ts the
ideal fit, playing for a winning team and a wmnmg
organization and getting a
chance to learn from guys
like Steve McNair. Ray
Lewts, Ed Reed, coach
(Bnan) Btlltck and Ozzie
Newsome."
Balttmore's seasoned roster of wmners ts a major reason Newsome grabbed
Smtth.
"I satd, ' Here you are,
coming off a big-lime career
at Ohio State, playing in the
national
champ10nshtp
game, the Heisman Trophy
winner, and you 're &lt;probably
_. going to be a nobody
because we've got some
Hall of Famers that are in
that locker room.' And you
know what? He reall),' relished that opportunity. '
Moss never took advantage of his few opportunities
With the Oakland Raiders
and was dealt to the Patriots
on Sunday for a fourthround pick, No. 110 overall.
"Just really last mght me
and coach (Bill) Belichick

Russell
from Page 81
patient. I said before that I
was going to be open-minded, and that's the tough
thing. I was open-minded,
and I had a point in my head
~ere I didn't think I was
gomg to fall any further,
and it obviously exceeded
that."
Russell had no such anxious moments.
When Goodell, conductins his first draft as commissioner,
announced
Russell's name, Raiders
fans in the crowd cheered
loudly. But there was a mixture of cheers and boos
when Russell, who is btgger
than some NFL linemen,
came on stage to don a
Raiders hat and hold up a
No. I black jersey.
Then came chants of "LS-U, L-S-U" for the man
who soon will be in charge
of the Oakland offense.
"I kind of had faith in it.
Everybody had been talkm~
about it for a whtle,
Russell said of bemg chosen
ftrst. "It's a dream come
true. Growing up as a ktd
playing every sport in life
and always seeing the guys
on the professiOnal level ,
and here I am today."
"I can 't wall to get in the
black and silver and get to
work."
'
Whtle he works for a
t!!am that went 2-14 last
season and scored only 168
points, Landry heads to the
Redskins to team with Sean
Taylor in what could be a
dynamic set of safeties.
"Our feehng there was,
with this pick, we need to
pick someone that we feel is
~oin&amp; to play for a long
time, 'coach Joe Gibbs said,
'.'and have a chance to do
some outstanding things."
LSU
wide receiver
Dwayne Bowe went 23rd to
Kansas City, and wideout
Craig Dav1s was chosen
30th by San Diego.
Quinn's draft day turned
into an agonizing wait.
lie kept flashtng a smile
that becii!IIe harder to main·
tain .with each selection,
perhaps recalling how Matt
Leinart dropped last year
and Aaron Rodgers prummctcd in 200S. Leinart only
fell to I Oth to Arizona;
Rodgers went 24th overall
to Green Bay.
When Miami selected
Ohio State wide receiverkick returner Ted Ginn Jr.,
at No. 9, Dolphins instead
of Quinn fans at Radio City
Music Hall let out a gasp
and booed. And then a Iiuge
portion of he crowd began
chanting,
"BRADY,

really talked for the ftrst
Oakland selected defentime about what's been sive back John Bowte of
going on,'' Moss said. "He Cincinnati with the pick for
asked me how excited I Moss.
(would be) tf the opportuniNew England never has
ty would prese nt ttself for shted from taking on other
me to become a Patnot and, teams problem players really, I was overwhelmed perhaps most notably runbecause I didn 't expect to ning back Corey Dillon hear from coach Behchtck " ana has succeeded with
It took him two years to them. Now the Patriots have
become a panah, wtth the Moss to bolster their receivwoeful Ratders Less, actu- mg corps. and they chose
ally, because the former All- safety Brandon Menweather
Pro receiver in Minnesota of the Miami Hurricanes m
even admtlted he dtdt)'t the first round. Meriweather
always go all-out as Oakland played a prominent role m
plummeted to 2-14, the Miami's brawl wuli Florida
worst record m the league
International last season and
Moss, who made five Pro s~rved a one-game suspenBowls in seven seasons wtth ston
Mmnesota, had 102 catches
"He ran over there and
for 1,558 yards and II made a bad decision. I don 't
touchdowns
wuh
the thmk that's who he is,"
Raiders But he had career coach Btll Behchick said of
lows last season with 42 Menweather. "I spent ume
catches for 553 yards and wtth him (and) a lot of peothree touchdowns.
ple m that program and I
"We felt this was the best think football's tmportant to
scenario for both the Raiders him."
and Randy," Oakland coach
Then there was Mtchael
Lane Kiffin said.
Bush, a likel,Y first -rounder
So dtd Moss, who refuted before breakmg hts leg in
the tmJ?ression he has a bad Loutsvtlle's opener last seareputatton in the NFL.
son. The big, fast running
"I have a microscope (on back was the opening pick
me) and my microscope ts of the second day after the
very big," he said. "The peo- Raiders had nearly 12 hours
ple that talk about me, as far to contemplate the selection.
as my work ethic and my
"I was ju st stunned," Bush
competitive nature and me said of not going in the ftrSt
gomg out there and playing three rounds, probably
football, the best thing r can because he needed a second
say to you, male or female, surgery in March, when a
all you have to d6 is line up new rod was inserted into
against me and see what his leg after the bone dtdn't
happens."
heal quickly enough. "I didThe Raiders pumped up n't know .what to expect,
their offense by taking quar- what to think My agent and
terback JaM arcus Russell of I didn't have anythmg to go
LSU at the top of the draft; by. I just felt like maybe it
tight end Zach Miller of wasn't nght for me to go on
Arizona State in the second lhe {irst day. It w:ls a little
round; wide receiver Johnny disappointing, but everyLee Higgins of UTEP and thing worked out fine."
tackle Mario Henderson of There even were some
Florida State in the third, players with character issues
and Bush.
who went in . the middle
BRADY."
At one point the NFL
allowed Qumn to wait it out
m a room away from TV
cameras.
"I guess just the opportunity to have Cleveland
come back around and giving me a chance to play
there ts just something that
I've always dreamed of
doing,'' Qumn said
The Browns gave a second-round choice and next
year's No. I to the 'cowboys
to get Quinn. Th~y could've
had htm at No. 3 but took
Wisconsin offensive tackle
Joe Thomas instead.
Thomas spent the mornmg fishing back home
ratber than attend the draft.
"It didn't surprise me,"
Thomas said of being taken
by the Browns. "I hoped for
a few
months that
Cleveland would pick me.
They showed a lot of interest in me all the way along."
After Russell's selection,
Detroit declined several
trade options for the No. 2
overall pick and chose wide
receiver Calvin Johnson of
Georgia Tech, considered
the best athlete avatlable. It
was the fourth time in five
years the Lions chose a
wideout high in the draft
Only one of the others, Roy
Williams, has succeeded in
Detroit. Johnson, an AllAmerican junior known as
"Spider-man," ts 6-4 and
237 pounds and can run a
4.35 m the 40.
"I told him when he was
here (for a pre-draft vtsit)
that he ,wouldn't get past2,''
Ltons gresident Matt Mtllen
said. 'This guy is the real
deal."
Tampa Bay picked the
ftrst defensive pla,Yer,
Clemson
end
Games
Adams, who at 6-5 ts an
inch shorter and three

pounds lighter than Russell.
"Oh, it's a tremendous
honor,'' Adams said of
being the top defensive
selection. "There's a lot of
great defensive players that
are out in this draft and it's
just an honor to me to be
one of the ftrst ones chosen.".
Arizona also went for
offensive line help at No. 5,
taking Penn State tackle
Levi Brown, who should
replace Leonard Davts, now
wtth Dallas after leaving as
a free agent.
Adrian
Peterson of
Oklahoma was chosen by
Minnesota, which apparently was unconcerned by the
running back's history of
injuries in college.
"I don't want to say necessarily
disappointed
because my dream has
come true," Peterson said of
sliding to seventh overall. "
You never put all your ej!gs
in one basket. I am JUSt
excited."
At No. 8, Arkansas defensive end Jamaal Anderson
went to Atlanta, whtch went
to the Super Bowl in 1999
with a running back named
Jamal Anderson.
Then Miami got Ginn.
"I promise you that Ted
Ginn is J;lOing .to be sol!leone you re gomg to enJOY
watching play for a long,
long time as a Miami
Dolphin," coach Cam
Cameron said
But Johnson was the true
pnze at wide receiver, and
Lions coordinator Mike
Martz has a history of using
such players well.
"He's ecstatic just like
me," Johnson said of Martz.
"Like I satd , l'm going to be
in a good sttuation."
The lOth pick was 19year-old defenstve tackle
Amobi Okoye of Louisville,

rounds, including Florida
defensive tackle Marcus
Thomas - for whom the
Denver Broncos traded their
two remaining picks Sunday
and a thtrd-rounder m 2008.
"You talk about taking an
educated gamble,'' coach
Mike Shanahan. "If they do
·make a mistake, then you
have to release a player and
let them go. No one's bigger
than the team. We've had
players before that have
been m this situation, and
it's been the best thing that's
ever happened They come
mto the NFL without a second chance.
"Ttme will tell. I can't tell
you fOO percent. If I dtdn' t
have a very good gut feelmg
about the guy he wouldn't
be wtth our orgamzat10n."
Shanahan also chose
Gators DE Jarvts Moss m
the first round. Moss tested
positive for marijuana m the
middle of the 2006 season
and was suspended for one
game.
Other notable selections
Sunday were Ohio State RB
Antonio Pittman, fourth
round to New Orleans;
Michigan
WR
Steve
Breaston, fifth round to
Anzona; Pittsburgh linebacker H.B Blades, sixth
round to Washington, UTEP
quarterback Jordan Palmer,
the brother of the Bengals'
Carson Palmer, six.th round
to Washington; and WR
Jordan Kent, who played
t~ree sports at Oregon and ts
the son of bucks basketball
coach Ernie · Kent. Jordan
Kent went at the end of the
six.th round to Seattle
The final pick of the
longest draft ever - 18
hours. 5 minutes - was
Alabama defensive back
Ramzee
Robinson
by
Detroit.
by Houston. ' He's the
youngest player drafted in
the first round since the
mer~er and wtll JOin last
year s No. I overall pick,
defensive
end
Mario
Williams, on the line.
Johnson, Adams and
Okoye all reportedly admitted in team interviews at the
NFL combine that they had
tned manjuana. That clearly didn't hurt their stock.
San Francisco followed
by choosil)g tbt;' best !mebacker in the draft,
Mississippi's Patrick Willis.
Buffalo, selected next, was
interested in Willis, as well
but settled for Cal running
back Marshawn Lynch

CINCINNATI (AP)- For
the second year m a row, the
Cmcmnall' Bengals took a
cornerback with their first
pick in the dr;aft.
Michigan's Leon Hall was
the 18th overall pt ck
Saturday, the latest attempt
to fix a defense that has
dragged down · the Bengals
for years
Hall is the second
Michigan player taken wtth
the Bengals' top ptck in the
last four years Runntng
back Chris Perry was thetr
No. I chotec In 2004
·
The Bengal s had one of
the NFL's worst defenses
again last season, a recurrmg
problem dunng Marvin
Lewts' four years as head
coach The1r pass defense
was particularly atrocious.
fin ishing in a tie for last 111
the league.
They particularly needed a
cornerback.
Tory James was allowed to
leave as a free agent - he
signed with New England after a disappointing season.
Deltha O'Neal also dropped
off last year, when he was
one of nine Bengals arrested
during a nine-month span
The
Bengal s chose

Gordon
fromPageBl
Reuttmann's engine failed
and dumped oil all over the
track.
It set up a three-lap spri nt
to the tlnish, but NASCAR
makes only one attempt to
complete it. If cautton
comes out, the race instantly ends So when Elhott
Sadler bumped the back of
Greg Biffle to trigger a
Lynch could replace Wtlhs
McGahee, who was traded
to Baltimore m the offseason.
The Jets and Panthers
swung the first trade of th~
day, with !'New York moving
up from 25th overall to 14tn
for Pittsburgh's Darrell e
Rev1s, the tlrst cornerback
selected Saturday. The Jets
gave their first, a secondrounder and a ftfth-rounder
for Revis, who also returns
kicks. Carolina also gave
New York a stxth-round
choice.
Late in the opening
round, San Franctsco sent
its 2008 first-rounder to
New England to get the
~

Johnuthun Joseph in the first
round last year. the first ttme
m thctr 39 drafts that they
made a cornerback thetr top
ptck Jose ph can replace
James as a starter thts season. but there's no much
depth behind him.
The New York Jets made u
twde wtth Carohna and
moved up to 14th m the ti rst
round, where they took
Durrelle
Rev ts
from
Ptttsburgh. comtdered one
ol the top two cornerbacks
ava tlable.
Denver moved up to 17th
- noht
betore the
Bengal
s
e
.
.
by tradmg
wnh
Jack,onvtlle so tt could take
defenstve end Jarvts Moss
from Flonda That lett Hall
ava tlable to the Bengals.
Hall understands that he'll
be under a spotlight m
Cmcmnatt lor how he handles hunsel f.
''I'm also a good character
guy," Hall said, speaking to
reporters trom a tamtly celebration _ m
southern
Califorma " I know for a
fact, knowmg myself and the
people I've put myself
around. that I'm staying out
of trouble and not having
any trouble with that."
wreck, the race was effectively over.
But Tony Stewart was
knocked mto the wall far
ahead of that accident and
went spinning down the
track mto the mside wall.
He was fummg as the field,
passed by hun under cautton, angrily gesturing at
Jamte McMurray.
The fans, meanwhtle, figured out that Gurdon. who
tied Earnhardt last w~ek in
Phoemx, was the vtctor and
reacted wtth the shower of
beer cans
28th spot, where the Ninet s
picked offensive tackle Joe
Staley of Central Mtchtgan
Mtdway into the second
round, the 49ers got back an
'08 ftrst-round pick from
the Colts for a pick
Indianapolis used to take
Arkansas tackle Tony Ugoh.
At one pomt m the 6hour. 8-minute first round
- longe st ever - nine
straight defensive players
were chosen
In all, 17 defensive players were tak en, and 15 on
offense. Fourteen underclassmen were selected and
II SEC players went in the
opening round.

~rthune

- Sentinel - l\egi~ter

CLASSIFIED
.

......__
E-mail
classtlted@m ydatlytnbune com

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

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

o~a.d'IJ!rec

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In - Column: 1:00 p . m.
Friday For Sundays Paper

• Start Y.ouf' Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

*POLICIES*
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time
Errors Must B
eported on the firs
'I of publication an
he Trlbune.Sentinel
eglster
will
b
espons lble for n
ore than the cost o
he space occuple
the error and onl
he first tnsertlon. W
hall not be liable fo
ny loss or eKpens
hat results from th
ubllcaUon or omis
ion of 11n advertls
ent Corrections wll
made In the firs
vailable edition.

&gt;Box

number ads ar
lways confidential

&gt;Current rate car
pplles.

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone NumDer And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 oavs

1\\111 \II Ill\ IS

r

r:1117?:::::=:::==~
70

,

-

, Thursday for Sundays

1

L.ln.o_____
.,
liF.LP WANn.D ,..~l.

,.. •

GtvtAWAY

lost

ANil

FOIJND

INTERVIEWS
Start a new career
today t

Thursday
May 3rd
10:00am-3 :00pm
\

1

1

I

242 Th1rd Avenue
GallipOliS, OH
If unable to attend,
please call
1-877 -463·624 7
ext 4256
to scheCule an
1nterV1ew

Estate Leftover Sale Pnces
Reduced Crystal Jewelry
decorattons, Etc One pnce

takes an•• To set up an
appo1nlmen1 cal( (740)441
5826

.. . 'q.Jo

5

~

YARD SALE·

Lost
Full blooded
l'oMERO\/MIDDLt,
Real Estat
Norweg1an Elk Hound
www comics com
dvertlsements ar
Slorys Run Ad area·
ubject to the Federa
Gall1a/Me1gs Answers to Aprll 29 30 May 1 9am·
5pm (740-985-3929) ne~tto
air Housing Act o
Pepper (740)367 7204
I
I d 110
S
1968
Eastern Hlgtl chao so I
HILl, WAN'I"EI&gt;
Rescued Pupp1es need a oak !able &amp; chai rs, electriC 1
If
I
h
I
good home Appear to be 1t cha1 r, e ectn c osp1ta
)'This
newspape
part Australian Shepherd bed, was her swlve I recImer,
ccepts only hel
Call 740 388 9064
anted ads meetln
DJ 'stereo
eqwpment
skates b eauty -•
t.~ ,op we 1s1a
OE standards
Reward offered tor m1ssmg t1on bow I and Iaugue mats,
300 Br1arwood Dr1ve
•We wlll not knowing dog
Mixed
breed btcycle clothes ba by IIams
Gallipolis Oh1o
Dachshund, short black ha1r
accept any actver
Rawlelgh Products mat
740-441 -9633
w/ a split 1n one of hiS ears
tresses tools m1sc
sement In violatlo
Has m1croch1p can be Idenllhataw.
Holzer Assisted Livmg
tified by a vet 740· 245·0004 Behmd Masomc Lodge In
Aacme Monday, Tuesday, Gall1pohs has Employment
Opportun1t1es tor
Wednesday g.? Mens PART-TIME and as need ed
women s, plus Sizes, boys
Res1dent ASSISta nts
clolhlng, furnuure toys rod
4x4's For Sale .......................... ................. 725
&amp;
reels
watcnes
kmves
Prefer
expenenced STNA
Announcement ...................... . ............ .. . 030
complete
set
of
Dept
56
bu!
not requtred
An,llques .................................................. 530
Lillie Town of Bell1tehem • Please apply m person or
Apartments for Rent . . . .. . . . . . .. 440
Auction and Flea Market....... ...... .. .. . ... 080
senes c1rcte of In ends f1g- D~a.nsee~~~~!~~eNtoDON
unnes, pmk M1ss Amer1ca
Aulo Parts &amp; Accessones .... . .............. ..... 760
depressiOn glass lots of ~------­
Auto Repair.......... .. .. ......... ... . .. .. . .. . 770
m1sc, (740)949 2671
A
Celebrabon
of
Autos for Sale ........................................ 710
l1fe
Overbrook
Center
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ....................... .. 750
Btg
yard
sa le,Maytst- located at 333 Page Street
Bultding Supplies ................................. 550
5th Whttes t"ull Rd ,Rutland Middleport, Oh1o IS pleased
Business and Bu1ld1ngs ........................... 340
Depct Street Rutland Apnt to announce we are accept
Business Opportunity . ..
.. . .
210
30th through! May 3rd tools 1ng applicat1on9 for the tol
Business Training .................................... 140
collectables newborn to lOWing pOSitiOnS tO jOin Our
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................ 790
lrtendly and dedicated statt
adult clolh tng more
Camping Equlpment ................................ 780
Pari
T1me LPN 's 7P·7A &amp;
Cards of Thanks ...................................... 010
Garage Sale Vtne Street 7A·7P, Full Time STNA's 3A
190
Racme cral1s hOusehOld 3P &amp; 7A·7P Part T1m e
Electrical/Refrigeration .................. .......... 840
ttem s tools Harley parts STNA s 3P 3A &amp; 7P 7A
Equipment lor Rent .................................. .480
Chnstmas
decorattons Applicants must be depe nd·
Excavating.. ..
. ..
. . .
.
830
Thurs
May
3rd
&amp; Fn May able team players w1th pos
Farm Equipment.. ................................ 610
4th 9 4
111ve att1tudes to JOIO us m
Farms lor Rent.. .. ..................................... 430
prov1dmg outstanding qua11
Farms lor Sale.. .. .. .............. .. .. .. ... . . 330
May 2nd 1 1/2 m1 Hysell
ty cam to ou r res1dents
For Lease ............................................. ... 490
Run Ad baby boy clothes
Stop
by anq fill out an apph
For Sate ................................................... 585
baby 1tems women s dou
cat1on 01 conla ct Holl1e
For Sale or Trade ............................ .. . 590
ble st roller, housewares
Bum garner LPN
Stall
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ................... .......... 580
under shelter pnced to sell
Development
Furnished Rooms . . . . .
450
(740)992 5275
Coordinator@ 740-992·6472
General Hauling .......................... ......... :850
and come see lor yourself
Giveaway .......................................... ...... 040
the dtfference you can make
FU-AMARIIH
HapJIY Ads ............... .. .. ............... .. .. .. .050
at Overbrookllfl EOE &amp; A
Hay &amp; Grain .............................................. 640
PartiCipant of The Drug Free
Help Wantad .............................................. 110
AUCTION Modular House
Workplace Program
Home Improvements .... ........................... 81 0
and tools 8. Equ1pment
Homes for Sale .................................1...... 310
Buckeye
H1lls
Caree.r An Excellent way to earn
Household Goods . . . .
.
.. . 510
Canter Ala Grande Oh1o T
money The New Avon
Houses for Rent.. ..................................... 410
&amp;Eal 1100am Houseal
Ca ll Manlyn 304·882 2645
In Memoriam .............................................. 020
12 00 noon on May 5 2007
Insurance .............................................. 130
740-245 5334
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ........................ 660
Livestock .................................................... 630
Loqt and Found ..................... ...................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ........................................ 350
Absolute Top Dollar
Miscellaneous...... .......................... 170
S1lver and Gold Co1ns
Miscellaneous Merchandise .......... ~ ........ 540
Proofsets, Gold Rings PreMoblte Home Repair ................................ 860
1935
US
Currency,
Moblte Homes for Renl. . .. .. .. .. ...... . . 420
Sol1la1re D1amonds- M T S
Moblte Homes lor Sale .............. ............... 320
Com Shop, 151 Second
Money to Loan ..... ...................................... 220
Avenue GaU1pohs 740-446·
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .......................740
2842
Musical Instruments ................................ 570

© •2007 by NEA, Inc

v

Personals. .. .... .. .................................... 005
Pots for Sale ............................................. 560
Plumbing &amp; Healing .................................. 820
Prolesslonal Sarvlces............... . .. .. ..... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ...,........ ................. 160
Real Estate Wanted .................................... 360
Schools Instruction ......................... .'........ 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fortttlzer .............................. 650
, Situations Wanted ....................................... 120
Space for Rent ............................................. 460
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
for Sal~.... .. ................................ 720
Truckalor Sale ............................................ 715
• Upholstery ........................... .................... ... 870
V1n1 For Sale.......... • .............. . .. .. • .. • . 730
• Wanted to Buy ............................................ 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies .................. 620
Wanted To Do ..................... ...................... 180
Wanted to Rent ........................................... 470
Yard Sale- Gattlpolla ....................................072
Yard Sate-Pomeroy/Middle ....................... 074
Yard Sate-Pt. Pleasant ............................... 075

suv•a

IIJ.:J..P WANTED

11110

L,""""""""""""""""!"_.l

HEU, WANI'F.D
~""""""""""""""""""_.J

CHILD CARE WORKERS
To wor.k part t1me 1n the~
evemng
and
some
Saturdays With emotionally
or behaviorally challenged
chtldren tn the Mason
County area Some dut1es
mctuda part1c1pahng m
recreational acttvltles, build·
1ng soc1al sk1Us and mom·
tonng behaVIor Must have
HS dtploma/GED, valid dnver's license, and a Willingness to work w1th children
Resumes lVIII not be accept·
ed ApplicatiOns are avail
able
at
www prestera orofapphca1i2nJ2Qt or our 715 Main St
Pt Pleasant oM 1ce Submit
appt 1cal 1on by fax to
(304):399·005:3 or ma11to
PRESTERA CENTER
HA/Aesp1te
3375 U S At 60 E
Huntington WV 25705
EOE/AA
-------Dom1no's P1zza Now Hlnng
Safe Onvers &amp; Management
Po1nt Pleasant, Gallipolis &amp;
Pomeroy locations Apply 1n
Perso n

Due to lhe mcrease m ow
Serv1ce Traff1c the Tn-State
leader m automot1 ve repa1
1s looktng tor a Serv1ce
Adv1ser Ouahhcahons lor
the JOb are a strong des1re
to help people With the1r
serv1ce needs fnendly
oulgomg and a good
understanding ot automo·
t1ve 1epa1r In add1t1on to
th e best pay plan m the
area M also offer 40 t K
retirement health care life
msurance and dlsabtlity
1nsurance To apply contact J1m Thomas Serv1ce
Manager 740 446 9800

. ......

R&amp;J Truckmg Lead1ng The
Way R&amp;J Trucking now
EOE
Hinng at our New Haven
WV Term1nal For Reg1onal
Hauls-Dump ,01v
1 year 16~---==.lt
OTR venhable exp Call 1·
800-462 9365 ask, lor Kent The Town of Mason IS
accepting apphcatlons for
the pos1t1on of temporary
Ready for an Independent
full time laborer Dulles Will
rewarding and fleKible
career 1n home health?
mcltJde work1ng 1n !he water
sewer and street depart
Local Home Health Agency ments as well as some con
looktng for self motivated
strtJctiOn Carpentry expen1nd1vlduals for a vanety ol
ence 1s helpful Th1s pos111on
shrfts PCA, CHHA, CNA
STNA cert1ftcat1on We have w111 last approx1mately three
to four months and does not
trammg available and we
1
"&gt;
Include
bene bl
liS
ass1st w1th lOb placement
Applicati ons are avalla a
Applications are being
thmugh Fnday, May 4 at the
accepted or mall to PO Box C1ty Bu1td1ng 1601 Second
707, GallipOliS Oh 45631
Street, Mason
(740)441 -1377 or fax to
_ _;__ _ _ _ __
(740)44 1-1648
The Village or R1o Grande IS
lr'"""'::"'""i'':""';"';""""'il taking apphcallons for the
Receptionist
posll1on of part t1me pollee
John Sang Ford Lincoln
officer Two yea rs ex pen
Mercury IS expenencmg
ence
IS
requ1red
cont1nued grow1h that
Appl1ca110ns can be p1cked
reQUires us to ltnd a
up at the A1o Grande
energetiC Recepi10111SI
Mun1c1pal Bu1ld1ng Monday
Oualil1 cattons that would
Friday,
8 30AM
un!ll
be a good 111 for the tob
4 30PM Appl~ea11ons are
IS, out go1ng personality
due back to the Mun1opal
good phone sktlls and
Bwldtng by noon on Monday
cash1er1ng expenence
_M:_.:ay_1_4,_2,_o_o7_ _ __
Contact Dee Sweeney 1n
Wanted part t1me apartment
person at John Sang
mamtenance person send
Ford L1ncoln Mercury
work expenences to D&lt;uty
195 Upper R1ver Road
Senllnel PO Box 729 4
GallipoliS Oh1o
Pomeroy Oh 45769

I

r:":l:-------,

1110

VISOr

www.lnfocision.com

.·

Yard Sat€ Alnca Ad May 2-

~t4

II\ I \1 I II

liEU' WMTIIJ
10

r.==:;::::::::::::=:;'l'
OPEN

YARil SAl £·

House hold goods Holiday

2 male i yr old cats i long
half tabby striped, 1 solid
black very sweet &amp; lov1ng
304 675·890 1

flo

k1tncarlyle@comcast.net

d1vorce hearmg IS set for 4 Famtly Yard Sale/ Bake
May 7 2007 at 11am 1n Sale May 2nd, 3rd S 4th
Jackson Co West Virg1n1a
Solar Dnve

t

POLICIES Ohio V.!llley Publlthlng rna111e1 the right to edit, rt)ect, or Clncelany alii at any time Error• mutt be reported on the first day of' P"lbUoo,Uon
Trlbu,..Sentlnei-Regltt&amp;r will be retpontlble for no more then tht ca.t of th~ lp.!ICe occupied by the error and only the flrtt 1naer110n We
not be II
any loll or exptnae that re1u1ta lrom the publication Of I;H111talon of an advertisement Correction Will be made In th .11 first available ed11ion • Box
are alway• conlldtntlal. • Current rate card app1te1 • All reel etlate .!ldvertlsement• are tubj&amp;et to the Federal Fa1r Housing Act ol 1968 • This ~;~~~••;~;1
wanted ad1 meeting EOE tlandarda We will not knowlnglv accept any advertlllng In viol.!llion of the 1.11w

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

ALL KCHS ALUMNI SEC L,""""""G~AI;,;.I:i;Jijl~lilliii
.L~-,.J
OND ANNUAL REUNION,
MOOSE LODGE, MAY 26, 1 mt le below dam furmture,
2007, 8 I 00 ENTERTAIN· home 1ntenor clothtng all
MENT (304)675 4831 OR SIZBS, ffiiSC May 1 2 3
(740)446-3488
1939 Chathatn Ave May 1-5
I Karen Honacher would hke Furntlure Dtshes Clolhtng
to announce the divorce of ETC
her &amp; her husband Fred
Honacher
Jr
of 3 Famtly yard sale wtll have
Tupperspfams Oh10, the baby lh1ngs May 3 4 &amp; 5

r

I'

be prepaid '

YARHSAI.t:

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Now you can have borders and graphics
"-'
added to your classlHed ads
s,~
Jm
Borders $3.00/per ad
I!
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 r ~~• .;.,,r,[

• All ads must

HOW TO WRITE AN AD

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

AUCIIONANU

I

.....

Or

Chltd/Etderty Care ......................................

!

Websttes
www mydatlytnbune com
www mydatlysenttnel.com
www.mydatlyregtster.com

To Place
~rtbune
Sentinel
l\egt~ter
ctuAs:G~A~!
Your Ad, (7 40) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675·1333 I
·
I
:
.
vtSA
Call Today... or Fax To (740) 446·3008 ·
or Fax To
992-2157
Fax To
675-5234

CLASSIFIED INDEX

L. 992-2

The 'Daily Sentinel • Page 83

TO DRIVE
ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRAILER
TAAI~'ING CENTERS
,.
• FULL TIME CLASSES"
· cOl TRAINING'
'FINA~-~eNc AVAILABLE'
c.~e~..~:~~~~~;·u:lne11
Wythe~1ile Vlrg1n1a
1_8oo- 334_1203
wwwal~a~&gt;CelrK~ort'~'Mcom

L...:::::!!:!!!=~~~..J
Lookmg
for
in -Hom e
Ch1lctare provtder 12 hour
days Ref reqwred, Senous
lflqu1res only Call 304·675·
3161

a

Job?

Need GREAT
We flave what you are
looking fort

We offer
0 Full lime and Part-time
shifts available
0 Up to $8.50/hour •
weekly bonus potential
0 Pa1d tra1n1ng
0 Paid vacat1ons &amp; pa1d
holidays
0 Medtcal, dental &amp; VISIOn
Insurance
0 401(k) ret1rement plan
0 Fnendly, profeSSIOnal •
work atr:nosphere

Dr1vers Needea
COL
Dr1vers w1lhng to dnve for
local ready m1x company
Expenence IS preferred but
not necessary Dnvers must
be w1lling to do pre .ma1nte· Jom us In making calls
nance on trucks &amp; eQUIP·
for major Political
ment, yard work &amp; other mtS
organizations!
cellaneous
chores
EKper1ence operatmg equtp Call today to schedule an
ment &amp; extra skills such as
Interview!
weldmg a plus
Call
1-877-463-6247
(304)937 ·3410

ext 2341

Gall• polls Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Cal l Todayl 740 446·4367
1-800 214 0452
www gall!pOisc!ueertollege com
Accre&lt;lil ed Membe r ACC/9011 ng
Counc11 101 Independent Colleges
and SchoolS12748

170

011 &amp; Gas Well Leases
Add1son/Chesh1re Twps 8
Berea Wells comp w/ Pump
Jacks Motors Tanks &amp;
SaleS. Meters $56,000
Phone 740 934 2073

I 111'111\\ll \I

HELP WANl'Eil
100 WORKERS NEEOED
Assemble crafts
wood
Items To $480/wk Matertals
provtded Free mformatton
pkg 24Hr 801·428-4649
COL Dnver for trash truck
Knowledge of Oallta County
preferred 2 years dnvmQ top
Hea vy trucks
needed
(740)388 9686

'I

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS
$1653-$2758/nr , now' hlr·
AVQNI All Areas• To Buy or tng For apphcatron and free
Sell Shirley Spears, 304· governement lob nfo call
Amencan Assoc of Labor 1675·1429
913·599·8042, 24111rs. emp
serv
POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Help wanted at Darst Adult
Avg Pay $20/hr or
Group Home, some llfttng,
$57K annually
7·5 Shift, 740.992·5023
lncludmg Federal Benefits
and OT Paid Tram1ng
Help Wanted evenmgs 5·
Vacations FT/PT
8pm, &amp; Saturdays 10 4pm at
1·600 584·1775 EXI #8923 TA Communlcattons 740·
441 9711
USWA

- ------=--

- - - . _ _____ _ _ __ j _ _ _ _ ~

'I

-·

•NOTICEo
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO recommends
that you do busmess w1th
people you know and
NOT to send money
th rough the ma1l un111you
have mvesugated the
offenng

r

MONEY
I'OloAN

Borrow Smart Con tact
th e OhiO DIVISIOn Of
InstitUtion 's
OHtce of Consumer
Affa1rs BEFORE you refl·
nance your home or
obta1n a loan BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments of
fees 01 msurance Call the
Offtce of Consumer
Affa1rs toll tree at 1 866278·0003 to learn tf the
mortgage broker or
lender
IS
properly
licensed (This IS a publiC
v
ser"oce
announcement
from the Otuo Valley
Publishing Company)

:;::;;::::::::~
PkO~IONAL
SERVIOO

..__lllliiiiiiioiiiiiiilo""",.t
--,

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We W1n1
1·888 582 3345
Ill II I \I I II
~:--=---.,

1310

HOMES
FOR SALI-:

]

$269/mol Buy GALLIPO·
LIS Foreclosure! 1-4 bed
homes from 199fmo. 5%
down, 20 years at 8%
More homes available For
loca listings call 8(1()..5594109 xF254
0 Down even with less than
perlect cred1t IS ava1labte on
th1s 3 bedroom 1 bath
home Corner tot fireplace,
modern kitchen JacuZZI tub
Payment around $550 per
month 740 367·71 29

1989 Clayton Mobile Home
14x60 2 Bedroom 1 Bath
w1th a 121i18 additiOnal bed
room 12x6 muddroom on
1/2 acre lot w1th cha1n hnk
fen ce &amp; 10~10 bulldmg
ASking $40 000 (740)379·
2668

2417 HOME
STORE
M1dwes1 Homes
mymidwesthome.com '

Buymg Junk Cars Trucks &amp;
Wreck s Pay Cast'l J 0
Salvage
1304)773 5343
1304)674 1374

"'I R\ H I ""

BU~1NIN5
0PI'OR11JNri'Y

104 Tatum
Dr
New
Haven WV 3bd/2ba Ranch
lg sunroom 2 car gar great
area D 304 675 3637 E
304·882 2334

EOE

RESCARE
Leadmg Prov1der for
IndiVIduals/Developm ental
01sablht1es IS acceptmg
apphcat10ns for Director
Care Profess1onals
Ouahf1Cal1ons Valid Onve1s
L1cense, H1gh School
Diploma or GED Apt&gt;y at
Mlddle)on Estates, 8204
Carla D11ve, GallipOliS, OhiO
No Pnone Calls

I

\

3BA 1 5 SA CA gas furn
full basement frame house
on 5 lots on SA 554 81dwell
$50 000 740·993-4551
4br 2 1/2 bath 2FP 2 acres
AC $149 500 [304)674·
5921 or (304)593·8871

�Monday, April 30, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, April' 30, 2007
AL~EY OOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85
NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
Buiklng Downtown with 3 95 Horton

2 BR, 2 2 bedroom, 114 S. Park Dr.
Rei/Cre&lt;lt Clled&lt;, No Pets,
Deposit 304-675-2749
wtth option to buy, Must 12,900 . 304-633-6536
qualiiy. (740)710-Q007
--,----,---=::-:--- 2 1 Br./1 bath home in
SyracusQ. $400/n:"onth &amp;
$200 Security deposit. 949·
2o2o.
NEW 2007 4 Bed
2br House. large Uvlng
Room &amp;Kitchen, Garage for
. . . JUJZI.ml storage, no Yard, no Pets.
$300/deposit $300fmonth
All real estate idvertialng
mymidwea1home.com
304·882,·3652
In thll newspaper Is
lubtfct'to the Federal
Clearance Sale. New Total 3 Bedroom House in
Fair HOi!slng Act of 1968
dryWall homes !rom $299.63 Syracuse . $500tmonth +
which maket It illegal to
per monrh. Call (740)385- depos11 No Pels. (304)675•dvertlae "'any
2434
. 5332
preference, limitation or
:-::-=--:--:---=
di.c::rlminatlon based on
ract, color, religion, se~~:
Great used 2005 3 bedroom 3 1BR. 1 Car Garage. 136
Gavin Street, Rodent Village
flmlli•l status or national
16x80 with vinyVshingle.
II . $575/mo. 3SR, 2 car
crlgln, or any Intention to
Must sell, Only $25.995 wi1h
garage, 803
Brownell,
make any such
delivery. Call (740)385-4367
Middleport
$525/mo.
preference, limitation or
lAO'S &amp;
Accepting HUD. Require
.dltcrlmlnation."
dep and ·/ ef. Call 740-446Alllli\GE
4543,
Th is newspaper will not
knowingly accept
0 acres located on Broad -3b_r_Ho_u-se-in-Le-ta_n_S_500_
1
•dvertlsements for real
estate which ill in
Run Road, in. New Haven month, 5300 depoSit 304vlol•tlon of the taw. Our
$36.500 i304)773·5Ba 1
aa2-2858
rNders are hereby
3br. 2ba. on 2 acres, deck.
lniOfmed that all .
106 acres on Leon Baden Mt Alto, wv
close to
dwellings advertised In
Rd . stream , pasture &amp; Century
Aluminum
&amp;
thl1 newspaper are
woods . electric avail . call Moun!alneer
Plant
•v1ll1ble on en equal
Randall Bradford for direc- $700/month plus deposit, 1
opportunity bases.
lions
304 -206-6326. year lease. Ref Req. 740$125,000
Century
21 695-3082 cell614-747-1 066
COUNTRY SETIING
Runyan Assocaites Tim
3br. 2ba, with 24 x 24 It Runyan Broker
3Br/28a .,Midd.,fen.yard,sec
garage, 9/10 of an acre - - - - - -- - dep$250 .f $540M .ba seapp ro~~: . 8 miles !rom Pl. 2 Mobile Home Lot for rent ment.new roof&amp;lurnace .304Pieasant on At 2 call lor 1 near Vinton. and 1 on 675-8626 or 74Q-416-5620
Appointment 304·675-5995 Georges Creek Rd . Call
(7401441 ·11 11
All new, 3 Bedroom, 2 lull
Home in country. 9.73 acres
battl . New Kitc,hen, Living
3 BR. 1 112 Bath . Full base- For Sale Soon 163 acres Room, Large Family Room,
ment, 2 1&lt;2 car garage. wi th Timber. minus Mineral Dining Room, 3 112 miles
Mature Pine trees. 2 barns - Rights. in Gallia County, from town , No pets,
old school house. $130,000. Ohio near Bidwell, Legal Rehi rences
Required .
call 740-286-7212 or 937- description recorded in $650/mo., (740)446-3292
515-8670
Deed volume 165 at page
42 . owner would like three
Attention!
Land Contra ct separate offers before 1 DOWN
Local company
offering proPomeroy.on740-992-5858.
PAYMENr
June as follows: (1) otfer on
grams for you to buy your
HUD HOMES! 4 bedroom Timber only, (2) on Land
home instead of renting.
only $1991mo. 3 bedroom, only, (3) offer on land with • lOO% financing
$203/mo. More 1-4bed standing. Timber
only. • Less than perfect credit
homes available. 5% dn, 20 lnlerested persons should
Yrs @ 8%. For listings 800- Inspect 1t1e .e property and •accepted
Peym.ent could be the
559·4109 ei&lt;l. F144.
send their serious offers to :
same as i-ent.
Land Contracts: 3 Bedroom, Osceola DeOavfess PO Box Mortgage
Locators.
391 , Richmond Hill, GA
2 Bath, 1 acre in country, 31324 or .fax their serious ~17_4_
0 )'36
-~7-·0_0_00_ _ _,....
Oak Hill &amp; Jad&lt;son. oflers to 912·236·8782
House for Rent in MaSon,
$600/mo with down. pay · - - - - - - - h A'
ment 1·800·951 -2060
WV, on t e rver 304-488 •
Undeveloped lapu, 6,66 ec 7g46
mt1 avail, pond , open/ woodMiniature farm. Unibuilt
H·ouse' lor rent . 2 1 3
home on 4 acres, on SA ad. Long term (5-15 yr)
lease for mobile home or Bedroom in city, CIA, 1 yr
other approved uses. Loc lease.
$5001mo.
Also
pool. New appliances. Wood Brumfield Ad , Harrison Twp. upstairs Apt. $350/mo. at
burner, $9S,OOO. 740 .386. ph (513)295·6309 leave 621 1r.! 2nd Ave. 740·446·
msg for return call.
0603 days, 446-2158 eve.
0815
REAL~
HUD HOMES! 4 bedroom
New Home for Sale. Save
TE
oniy 199lmo. 3 bedroom ,
$20 ,000. Immediate occuWANTF.D
$203/mo. More 1•4bed
I'
pency. app 1ances Inc., 2
homes avar·'·ble. 5% dn, 20
1a
story w/wrap around porch. Ne ed to sell your home? yrs @ 8%. For listings 800 _
3-Sr.,2&amp;1 12
balh ,large La(e on payments, divorce,
ei&lt;l. F
_
5594109
144
garage wi Bonus room over- job transfer or a death? I - - - - - - - head-Full Basement &amp; can buy your home. All cash Land Gontracts: 3 Bedroom,
More.Seller will pay closing and quick closing. 740-416- 2 Bath, 1 acre in country,
cost. 740-992·5635 or 992-' 3130.
Oak Hill &amp; Jackson,
2478.
$6001mo wittl down paymen!. 1·800·951 -2060
Syracusebeautiful
4
14~~:70 .

IP8nments &amp; ott street park· BA. Vinyllshingle Cent. He~t
ing. Rent to own. $750/mo and Aif?-Part. Furn. Like new.

BESJBUY
$49,989

r

Hous~

~No

~~ie;,s:;a~:s~- s~~~~~

i

s

~

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

I

bdrom . 2 bath house .. r10.
secluded, yet close to

1 br · Trailer in .' Letart ,
Complete furnished, utilities
paid $350 month (304)8822858
----,----2 Bdrm, 1 Ba mobile home
in country. Big Yard. No pets.
Call 740-256-6202
2 Bedroom trailer, ideal for 1

or 2 people. No pets. Must

&lt;"

·'

,,

·or older?

.;.

r

Senior Discount*
when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!
Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the cou_p on below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

4Jallipoli• Jlailp Qtribune
~oint ~lea•ant ~egt•ter

t
"
I

The Daily Sentinel·
6unba!' t!time• -&amp;entinel
P•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I
1
I
I

_,

Subscriber's Name
'

'

I

Address

''

Phone

.

Mall or drop off thla coupon along
with a copy of your photo ID to
OhiO Valley Publishing P.O. BQX 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631
~

I
I

·--· ----------------------------~

Comp~et~

r.... c.,.

Top • Trim • Htlullng •Stump

Grinding • 8~Ut TnK:k
lnlur.d • Fr• EttitNin
74D-441-t317

"ldl John---owner
20r--. •.,_.,_

Atlantic City
Getaway!
NEW COMPANY

• Trim • Stum p
Gri ndi ng • Bucket
Truck
Full i nsured

May 24, 2007 to May 26, 2007

Senior Citizen

Boardwalk

70

30Yrs.

stores

Exp.

Ins.

Ow ner Ronnie Jones

Based on double occupancy

Free Estimates

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

No refunds
G ladly accepl cash, check , credit
cards and money orders '

i

I

ron.--...

26 Years

room apartments at Village
and
Riverside
Manor
Apartments In Middleport.
From $0-$592 . Call 740992-5064. Equal Housing
0pportunlties.
Equal
Opponunily Employer
Middlepon 1 or 2 Br. apls.,
no pels, dep. &amp; ref., 992·
0165
Middleport Beech Street, 2
Br., furnished apt. , utilities
paid, no pets, dep. &amp; ref.,
992·0165.
Modern 1 Bedroom Apt. ,
Call (740)446-Q390
Modern 1 SRApt. Call 4463736
•
New 2BR apartments.
Washer/dryer
hookup,
stove/refrigerator included.
Also, uMs on SA 160. Pels
Welcome! (740)441 -0194
New Haven, 1 Sr., furnished.
no pets. dep.&amp;,references,
74Q-992-Q165.
-------Ntce ~o~ean new
. ~
de cora ted,
2br no pets, rel/dep 304675-5162

r

_45_2~1------'--- ~

Commerciol building "FOJ
Ren1' 1600 squara 18et, on
streel pari&lt;Jng. Great loca·
lionl 749 Thrd Awnue in
GallipoJis. Rent s40olmo.
Call WWfllO (404)456-3802

g~ A
guSIN~SS fC~OOL.

IT MUH

29670 Bashan Road
R,acine, Ohio
45771
740-949·2217

r

MlscEu..AMxJus
· MERaiANoiSE

I

riO

_At.J'[O§

FORSALE

·--iiiiriiilliiiioro_.l

1987 Mazda 62200 ext cab
36x24 Oval Pool with deck- automatic overdrive, hci.rd
ing. Pool sits down inside sh9u, bed cover. good CoM.
deck, $2995. (740)446 -7425 96,000 miles $1,200 OBO or
trade 304-773-5070 or 304Hoi Tub, Top Quality, 5 per·
_
593 0958
son, Never Used. warranty,
Lounger,
Will
deliver. 1995 Ford Mustang GT, ve,
(606)~2 6 _ 07 n
auto, nice car. $4500 _ Also,
1997 camaro V6. 8\ltO, new

Flats $7,50
1O"Hanging Baskets $5.50-$6.50
4" Pots $1,25·$1.49
Shrubs-$2.95·$6.95
Open M-Saturday 10-5·
Closed Sunday "That's Gods Day"

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

•' Complete
Remodeling

140-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

r

FoR SALt:

~•••••iiiiiiliiiii••-"

&lt;-

paint , black, sharp car, 7'10 MoroRcraB
AERA I N MOTORS
. $4500. Both cars carry 1
4 W~•
Repa· ed New &amp; Rebu'lt
1 1n year -warranty. KG Aula .,_irrioiii"iiiii~iiiiiiiil--'
1r •
St·~ C 11 A
E
1
~- a
on vans, · • Sale.s. 740-446·8172
2004 Honda Shadow VLX
600·537 -9526.
1997 Oheuy Cavalier $1000. 600, gels 60mpg. 7400
Ne119r Used Kenmore Water Call Evenings. 740-949- mrles, $3250. 446·1 006
Softener. Paid $600, wilt sell 1301
-------lor $ 125. 740•44 6-6906
- -- - -- - - 2005 Honda 400ex, HMF
2001 Mercury Cougar, V6, pip, Hot cam , Wisco pisNEW AND USED STEEL auto, sunroof, 80K , $7900. ton .$3600 Call 740·339·
740-339-2494
DB06
Steel Beams, Pipe Reber :::::-:-::---:-:~~= ::::-:--,--:-:-::--::-For
Concrete,
Angle, 20Q4 Stratus, $6000 080, 87 Kawasaki 1200 Voyager
Channel , Flat Bar, Steel 2000 Ford ~ustang. $5000 21,000/miles · $4,500/0BO
Grating · For
Drains. 080, 2000 Chevy Cavalier, 304-773-5109
Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L $2800 OBO, 2002 DOdge ~Djj~:;;"&amp;jM&lt;;;;;]
Scrap Metals Open Monday, Slralos, 2 door, $5600 OBO.
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; (740)256-6169
· - - - ·-lilliiii
Fridey, Bam-4:30pm. Closed - - - - Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; 2006 Hyundal Elantra , 6· 1998 18. Straros, ISOHP
7 000
Sunday. (740)446-7300 ·
·
mil es. $ 13•000 ' 2007 Evenrude, 60 hours on
Lincoln Navigator, 5,000
-~-----~
rebuild. $7800. (740)256Tattle Tale Alarm System. mile·s.
$S 5,0oo: 2007 1962
-new in box, $400 or trade for Thoroughbre&lt;f by Palomino ~=:o-"!':"--""!':-""1
Gun. 74()-992·2478.
camper,' $25,000 . (740)441CAMPERS &amp;
" - - - - - - - - 8204
MOI'OR HOM~
•,.,;n Captian·s Bed, $250; - -- - -- - - - _
.
94 Honda Auto. $600 060
Chaise
Lounge
Chair
1996 lnnsbrooke 5th Wheel
. 7- _ca_ll_7_
40_·_25_6_·1_65_2_ __
(Burgundy), $200 (740)36
29ft Camper, loaded 12ft
0139
96 Caravan $2200, 97 slide w/hitch $7,500 1996
- -- - - - - - Dakota Ex Cab $3000, 02 Dodge SLT 4x4 ext cab.
Used pool equipmeht, sand Cavalier 2DR $3500, 00 Diesel Truck $7 ,500 304·mler and mo1or, diving Pont !)R .Prr·x
R • ._ ,
20
95
board, vacuum hose. winter 99 Forcl Ranger $3000,
ON£
...e message
95 576-2737 lea
cover,
medal
steps,
s
Mere Seble $! 500
95 Camp1ng ita for rent on
(740)992-3242
·
,
=~-~---, Dodge Ram E• Cab PU river, lull hook-up. 992·
PEls
$24~5. B&amp;D Auto 160 N. 5956.
FOR SAlE
446-6865

r

I

i'lllr"-~~--,
HOME

Spltt 10 good home. Good

Prtx GT 2D Sunroof, 2000
Salu'n l100 4D Sunrool All
Power, 2005 Sunlire Sport
2D Sunroof, 1999 Jeep
Wrarigler. 2000 S-10 Auto 4
Cyl, 2 Mini Vans.
Cars staring al $2SOO.
3 monthS, 3,000 mile warranty. 328 Jacison Pike
446-0103

"-•biiiiiPROiiiiioVEMENniiii
.i iiiiiit.-"

r ~':rs

11993 Ford 250 XLT
• Exlended Cab 1NCI&lt; auto,
MESA/Boogie Dual Aectifler 5.8. $3500.00, Mason. 6.14Ampl~ier Head and matd1- 226-9986.

l'lo\ !:OR£'(OU ~
1-\0W &gt;I~Q'(1U~t&gt;
1'\'( 5£~ m_ TO 11'E
WO!t.Lt&gt; AAO\J!IIt&gt; f/1£ •.

* Prompt an~ Quality
Work
* Reasonab le

'&lt;OUR~EOF

5tt-I~S \.IOULt&gt;'(OU
sr&gt;..'( 1s f.\'1 wo..~&lt;£Sil

w.J..I'N!

Pass

Pass ·
Pass

* Insured
* Experienced

References Available!
Call Gary Stan ley @

740-742-2293
Please leave messa e

PEANUTS
IF WE'RE A COUPLE OF FA~
D065, OLAF, DON'T YOU TI-lINK
WE SHOULD 6E DOIN6

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

DON'T VOU TI·UNK
WE 51-!0ULD
6E USEFUL'?

IF WE MOVE, THE BARN
WILL FALL DOWN ..

'J

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007

t----------------.1
SUNSHINE CLUB
YOUNG'S

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Roofing," Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,

Room Additions I
Remodeling
New G•r•gn
Electrlc•l &amp; Plumbing
Rooting &amp;
VInyl Siding &amp; P•intlng
P•tiOandP'orchOecks
WV
n
036 5

a.....

Electric, Plumbing,
~ Drywall,

RemodeI'mg, Room
Additions
Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free

Estiinates

740·367·0536
;::;~;===~~===:;;:::::~
·

M an I .,.-.
Ra--.w-J . . .

IIII•Sl·······II,·4IJII
-

•

-

GARFIELD
IF ~ L-IFE WeRE ANo,&gt; MORE
. el&lt;CITINc;., t'P NeEP A
6TUNT liCXJBLE

1.a12-3194·

IIIIIII'MIIIII:II• 5M ..
S.IIUII:II•12:11•

PIYIIII , .,PIICES . .

Answer to Prevloua Puzzle

sofa

'2

Sweet roll
It has rings
Undressed
55 Occupied a
chair
56 Watermelon
leftover
57 Crestfallen

53
54

ITF;'-i'ilir

DOWN
Card combo

2 Famous

3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
12
16
20
22

lioness
Like - of bricks
Thick wilh
catta ils
Under 1he
weather
- kwon do
Grabs the
phone
Gaius' garb
Europe-Asia
range
·
Home port
Coveted
award s
Motion
picture
Aoos1 siller
Makes
taboo

23 Princess
38
Di 's niece
24 Dawdles
25 What
40
Haml et
smelled
41
(2 wds.)
42
26 Sticky fruit
27 Duele.i's
43
wea pon
28 Take·
45
charge type
30 Part of an
46
orange
· 47
32 Uh cousins
34 Orchestra
50
members
51
35 Roman
army
37 Near the
stern

Start of a
famous
boast
Cost
a ballo1
Taxis
Water,
in Baja
Small
change
Heavy
burden
~ip
Winter
runner
Before
Average
grade

t'M NOT GARFIEL.P,l'M
HIS STUNT POUBLe

o.bur 'lllrthdlrt':

Tueadov. May 1. 2007
By Bernice Bede Osol
Some happy transformations you were
unable to make previously are tl~ely to be
in the offing. Although they may involve
al1erlng your lileStyle, you'll happily make
the exchange tor what you'll gel.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - If something lmporlant needs to be discussed,
avoid group involvement in the deliberation. An Intimate, one-on-one excnange
will be· tess confusing, and It Is all you'll
need Jo resolve it.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) - An industrious producer, you will , even make
much 01.:1t of what othBrs have consid·ered inconsequential projects. Noth1ng
you do will be lime wasted or Irrelevant.
CANCER (June 21-July 221 - II you
can. make time to sineH the roses. Hours
Spent doing something enjoyable wilt
yield much more than a pleasant time.
You'll benefit in both physical and mental
ways.
·
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - II you are tenacious and persistent. victory in whatever
you pursue will not be denied you. By
focusing on the final results, you wilt con ~
tinuously grow strooger as the end game
draws near.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) - II you are
dissatisfied with some kind of arrangement you've made, remember nothing is
carved in stone. Open up discussions lo
make the needed adjustments. You'M be
a good negotiator.
·
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0Ct. 23) - There are a
number of things you can do that would
help to enhance your financial affairs.
Once you figure things out, don't postpone what could advance your in tere~ ts .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - It's
important to be a leader and not a follower - and if need be, act independently without others. You will perform at
peak efficiency when you haye the freedom to do so.
SAGITTARIU S (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Something ltlat may prove to be to your
ultimate benefit when fully disclosed is
going on behind the scenes. And .
although you might only get the first
inkling of it, it'll bring you hope.
CAPRI CO RN (Dec. 22- Jan . 19) Because you are apt to be tudder with
your current interests than you would be
with ar'fllhtng new, temporarily postpone
in\IOI\f9ment in a fresh endeavor that has
captured your laney.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Don't
waste time and effort on small, insignilicant goals. You're capable of achieving
major accomplishments a! this ttme.
Think on a grand scala and focus there.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mar&lt;h 20) ·- Simply
by having total faith In your abilities, you
~ do anything you wllh and even su r·
priM you110" 11 tt1o 11111 you pull ott. It
you blillewln yourailt, mountain• can be
ARIES (March 21-Apnt tD) -

f'l ........

·GRiztwELLS

!

1\-IDU~~

I'D iR,Y 1b 1'AIHT

A t:PI'I ctf 'TilE
~Li~

ing MESA 4&lt;2 cabinet. 100 - - - - . , .- - - watts great condition, wHI 1999 Dodge Dakota 4~~:4 , V8

COmmericat Space lot' rent sacrifice $1 ,400 call 304· Club ' Cab. 127,000 miles
Mail St. Pt. Pl. $400/mo call ;,
T73;,;;,;5"'958
"'a~&amp;..---, askrng $9,500 OBO lor
.Allie 703-528-0617
r
call:lQ&lt;I-458·2214

-n·

Mobile Home space for rent
2000 Chevy Silverado ext
in Rio Grarde, (740)446·
cab, 4•4LS, tttue, 114,000
3617
L - - - - - - - . J · miles. Gaii740-339-08D6

'
•"

by Luis Campos

Although

octln1111tiG DV onott1or. Supt&gt;~ 11\e bl&lt;*·

up power.

SOUP TO Nlii'Z

.

.

Geebnty Cl~e r ci)'JllogriJI1s ~e creared rrom qootat1o1s by ramous !)eOple. past and present
Each !e!ter ITl !hH Cipher stands 1()1' anotller
rooays cloo: v equals P

" MN L ' HW

ANRRC

KNYW

YNTW

ICKKACTWY CAX MNL ' HW
YNTW ICKKACTWY CRX
CINLO

ANRRC

ZGR

OPCO ' Y

GO. " · TCACAWH

YVCHJM

CRXWHYNR
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' Dreams are Mremely rmportanl. vo·u can't do il
unless you imagine il."- George Lucas

'::'n':' s~~(\}A -J&amp;t,~s· woao

Graph

you uouoll)l IPf&gt;l\l )'Our ellorto toward
what you orlgln~.ta, your largHt g~lna
could como hom portfclpatlng In o proj·

Clhllllc~o.lai•C.IW
1

! 1HAT WAr&gt; AoJOKI,6ARFIELD

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Astro~

moved.

111-•IDIII•I ' .......
ICIIfWCIII'.-NIIII

""

A tournament player sitting North would
bid three spades over West's double lo
show a weak hand with four·card spade
support. (He would respond two notrump with at least game-inv~alional values and four-plus spades.)· Whatever
North bids, ttlough, South would take a
shot at ga.m8.
South is faced with lour losers: one
heart, one diamond and two clubs. But
he can use dummy's J-10 of hearts and
a loeer-on·loser play to reduce that total
to thfee. After winning the second trick,
declarer plays a trump to dummy's king,
calls for the heart jadl;, and instead of
ruHng, discards a k&gt;ser from his hand. If
at trick two West shifted to the diamond
king, Sou1h may p~ch from either minor.
11 West shihed 10 the club king, !hough,
South must shake a club.
West takes thiS trick with his heart king,
but declarer gets" another minor-suit
loser away on dummy's established
heart 10.'
Note thai West would have defeated lour
spades if he had led either minor-suit
king at trid&lt; one. Sorlle deals are too
Iough.

G

Rates_

~

SHOPCLASSifiEDS

.

BUT Wfllc.f\ CF TI-lE-q

BIG NATE

.. . .
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guar·
arltee. Local relerences furnished. Estabfisl-..d 1975 .
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Bas&amp;menl
WatelpFOOfing.

dog, needs room to run. llr.ll"'-~----, r-~,...-;:-.-.----,
Also Copper nose Beagle, V15
' 'I'Rixl&lt;s
good hunting dog.388·8849
FOR SAlE

L

THE BORN LOSER

~ .~~.&gt;t'l!"l'l1~rl!P.!IAA~:"'•

I'

puppy, Bl~e/Gold, Parents
on premises, Has shots.
paper trained, (740)388·
9686
------Jack Rat pups, tails docked,
ready to go. Pertact hunters
or extra family member.
$100 eed1 74!1-379·~371

A WRIGHT,
I'LL SEE
YORE
'TATERS.,, ·

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Helios System ·

: .

Ooor Locks, AMIFM/CD,
AJC, Cruise, Interior/Exterior
Good Shape, Runs Good, 1
owner, regula r maintenance.
7401446•0500

J OJET

·-----pi

FER
SUPPER, MAW
WHAT'S

We Deliver To You I

VANS

~~~try~~!~r w~~~~s

Ea st

48 Geolog ical
period
49 Popular

Abigail Van Buren wrote, "Wisdom doesn't automatically come with old age.
Nothing does - except wrinkles. It's,
true, some wines improve with age. But
only if the grapes.were good in the first
place.'
On opening lead, if you have an unbid
side suit headed by the ace and king, it
Is ~automatic~ to lead that ace - but it
will not always be best
First, though, let's look at South's troubles. He is in four spades. West leads the
heart ace, then shifts to a minor-suit
king. How shout~ South continue in each

G

740-992-5776

• Garages

North

usually automatic

OPEN FOR SEASON!

2 Bedrooms, CIA; 1 112
_Cook_Mot_0&lt;11
____
Bettr. Adu~ Poof &amp; Baby
r1.0
Poof, Patio, Stan $425/Mo. AKC Small. Yorkle male 2004 Stratus, 2001 Grande
'No Pets , Lease Plus
Securi1y Oepo~t Required,
1740)367-7086.
'--'------TWin Rivers Tower is accepting applications for waiting
lis! lor Hud-subsized, 1- br,
apartm8nt ,for
the
elderly/disabled call 6756679
Equal
Housing

,.

'

Syracuse, Ohio

::------- i
Tara
Townhouse
Apartments, Very Spaoious,

-.

IT'S IMPOilTANT TO
MAINTAIN
1-IQUIPITY I

Hubbard's Greenhouse

Hill's Self
Storage

• New Homes

,.

The lead is

2459 St. Rt. 160 ' GaiUpoUs
f

c•STRUCTIOI

""

Dbl.
Pass

Opening lead: • A

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

740.446.9200

ROBERT '
BISSELL

West

H•

www,tlmbe...,....,lu:ablnotry,...,,..

-15 yrs. Exp. Free Est imates

LMSJOCK

Mollohan Furn. 202 Clark Goats for Sale. Boer Goats,
Chapel Rd. New furn; It you
Club kids, ~om Jan &amp; Feb,
like to sav~ money, check us 2007. Call (740)256-9247
out Drive a •llnle, Save slot!
388-0173
Reg. Angus
Cow/Calf
- - - - - - - - $1000. 400! - 6000 Angus
Used Furniture store . 130 Bulls &amp; Hal. $1.05 per
-Bulaville Pike, Gallipolis. pound. 740·256·1758
Large selection ol everyI !~\ \'--oi 'OIU \I H l\
thing. Home-Business for
sale . 740 _,
"6 -4782

Hardwood Cabln"ry Alld FurnHure

740"77
""2 " 5929
.740-416-1698

r·P

South

ACROSS
'
1 Tiny legume
4 Beatles'
meter maid
8 Popcorn buy
11 Kind of sali
13 Vivacity
14 Mouths,
in biology
15 Type
of triangle
17 Mining
hazard
18 Foul-tasting
19 Largest
mammal
21 Some
22 Drone
23 Traffic-jam
noise
26 Dratled
29 Headphone s
30 Prospecls
for gold
31 " Ulalume"
poet
33 Khan of r&lt;&gt;te
34 Ump's calls
35 Bold look
36 Pony pad
38 Sw~Nes
39 Dandy
40 Really relax,
slangily
41 Prickly flora
44 Hamburger
extra

case?

All types of concrete
Owner- Rick Wi se

·--l!iiliiiiiiiio-_.1

Gracloua Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Village
MMadndor and Riv,erside$ Ap ts. in
I
leport, rom 327 to
$592. 740·992·5064. Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
institution is an Equl!l
Opportunity Pro'tlider and
Employer.

Deal er: South
Vuln erable: Eas1-West

BARNEY

Wise Concrete

z

10 '·9fl43

• J 10 9

t AJ

Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured
~=::=F;r:••~Ea~t~lm~a~te~s

3

" A 4 2

LIMITED SEATS!

2 BA Apt. on Watson Ad.
Rodney area . Ref, Stove, ~:~-~---...,
.W&amp;D included. Water &amp;
Sf..\CE
I \U \ 1 "' 1'1'111..,
Sewer pd. Dep and Ref
FOR RENT ·
\\ I I\ I "' I ( H 1\
required. No pets. 709-1657 ••-iiiiiiiiiiioro_.l !rill"'"-~:-"---,
or 446•1271
.
Prime commercial space for .r.IO-IIIiiioiriFARM-.iiiiorlrror
Sp
"~ 'lPIIIENf
2BR Apt Washer/Dryer rent at
ringvaney Plaza.
&amp;:A,l\..1
·
C 1164 2192
Hookup, appliances fura
5.
nished, (740) 286 _5789 or ''i'l·il'· ""!'~----, 0% Financing- 36 Mos.
441-3702
WANTED
available now on John
Deere Trak zero rums &amp;
3 d4
1 · h d 1 ~---ioi"""iiii,;,;,'-•
an
room urnrs e ap s.
5.99% Fl•ed Rale on John
1
WID hookup No pets
c ean
·
·
Deere Gator~ Carmictlael
Ref. and deposit required. Responsible and ethical Equipment~740)~46·2412.
740 446 ~519
hunter looking for Hunting
-.
·
Land for lease in Gallia 4-loot,3pointhitchdischarCounty area, will pay min. row $375.00: Call 740-949$20 per acre maybe more ·
2727
depending on location. 304- - - - . , - . , - . , - . , - 675-5258
Kiefer Built- Valley-BisonHorse
and
livestock
;
TralleraLoadmaxHOUSDIOIJ)
Gooseneck, Dumps, &amp;
Gooos
Utility- Aluma Aluminum
A HIDDEN TREASURE!
TralleiS- B&amp;W Gooseneck
~aurel
Commons
. , Hitches- Trailer
Parts.
Apenmen1S. Larges1 in the Appliance Warehouse Carm!cheel
Trailers.
area! Beautifully renovated in Henderson, WV. Pre· (740)446-2412
throughout including brand
dA d
owne
pp11ances, a11 un er Model 847 New Holland
new kitchen and bath . W
1y 1 h
d.
· G
arran • a so ave recon 1- round baler. ood condition.
Starting at $405. Call todayl tioned Big Screen TV's $
_
_ _
2500 740 441 7390
(304)273-3344
)
_
1304 675 7999
Apartment for rent, 1_2 - - - - - -- - USED Rota ry tillers. -4', 5',
Bdrm., re;modeled, new car- For sale/Best offers: over- 6', 3 point hitch. BIG
pet, stove &amp; trig., water. stuffed chair, 2 l&amp;flllS, and SELECTION. Jim 's Farm
sewer, trash pd. Middleport. tables, · oak
doors, Equipment. 740-446-9777
$4
N
A I vanlty/sink, ab lounger,
25.00. 740-843-5264.
0 pels.
• . palates machine. Call 992required.

t

~

o!I A Q8 1632

Vinyl Siding
New Construction Interior Remodeling
Residential &amp; Commercial
740-985-4141 Office
. 74(1-416-1834

(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1492

• 5
• 9 8

• Q

Ga rages

PVH Community R e lations,

East

Sout}l

Pin e S tree t • Gallipolis

Mus t be 21 years of age

1 SA, Newly Remodeled.
Walk to Wa i-Mart , utilities
Pd . Dep. Req. (740)245·
5555, (740)441 ·51 05

West
• J
• AK74
+K Q5 2
• KQ 76

Marcum Construction and
General Contracting

To make reservat ions please call ,
1 BR Apt WID hookups.
First Mon. rent $250 plus
dep. 740·441 ·9666 or 740·
339-0362

MONTY

740-446-0007 Toll Free 87'7 -669-0007

$2651person

K tO 9 4

• 7 6
• B5 3

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

740-367-02661
I -800-950-3359

&amp; Beachfront Property

«o

O-i-30-07

• J 10 5 !

r]ami/q l•ti1ij411

Discuullt

&amp; Resort

Within walking distance of outlet

1 and 2 bedroom aparl ments, furnished and unfurnished, and houses in
Pomeroy and Middleport,
security deposit required , no
pets. 740·992-2218.

~

•

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

• Top • Removal

L,--oiiOiORiiiriRmriiii,;,;,-,.1

i
'

Tree

O.lllpoUt, OH 45&amp;31

Pomeroy, Ohio
May 1st · 2nd· 3rd 9 am·?
Rain or Shine "Nice Stuff"

Tropicana Casino

Opportunity

City/State/Zip

North

Service

4 Family Yard Sale
522 Mulberry Heights

APAR1MTh1'S

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed-

·'If so, you qualify for a

Johnson's

have references. 740-~41 o161 . Gall 9am-6pm
-----'--For rent, 2 bedroom trailer.
$250 Dep. $250 Mo. 245- ·
0095
.:..:..:..:._:--:::-~:::--:-Nice 2 BR mobile home.
AIC. Located at Johnson
Mobil e Home Park. '4462003
.:..:..:.:_-:-::-:--:---,Small 3 Br. M.Home outside
of Pomeroy. $250 a month.
$250 dep., year. lease, no
pets, no calls after 9 P.M.
740-992-5039.

Large 4 bedroom house. 86
H~
Garfield Ave. $575 mo. plus B•uttful Apta. lt Jackson
RENr
Eatlltea. 52 Westwood
schools &amp;. town, twge above ·--FORiiiiiiiiiiiiioro_.l deposit and utilities. 446$
ground pool w/deck, call ,
2515
.
Drive, from 365 to $560.
740
'
446
2568
Equal
now won't last long, S158/mol Buy 4bd ·home.
:
•
·
Middfeport,3bdrm,basement Housr·ng Opportunity Thr·s
(740)992-2429
HUD t 5% dn , 20yrs @ 8%.
.
For Listings
_ _
(full),fenced yard,neighbor- institution Is an Equal
800 559 4109
K
hood good,$550 plus ut. &amp; OppOrtunity· Provider and
www.orvb.com
1709
dep.,ref.req., 740-843-5264. Employer.
5 BA 3.5 Bath, 5 acres
_.:.__:___~--wHh access to the boat
2 bedroom tlouse on Pomeroy, 2 or 3 BR. , CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
docks. 1 mi. outside
Graham School Rd. $400 Naylers Run/Condor, No ED 6 AFFORDABLE!
Gallipo~s. Viaw photos/info
per month, plus deposit, pets, yards. sir; WID hook- T
t
.
ownhou se
apar1mens,
online, Code 4107 or call
Water include 304·675- up. AefereJlces. Call 992- and/or small houses .FOR
(740}441-1605.
2178
6888.
RENT ·can (740)441-1111
tOr application &amp;information.

,&amp;re you 65'.~

Phillip
Alder

lAM I

NltH ~r CU.T l. P01W1 - · ~----"-

0 ..._,.

len.il of !lie'
favr ICI'Cimbltd -d1 btlow 10 1«m four ~mple -ds.

.
I II r

CLABHE

I lz

I

GUJ E0

I I! I I
~

I P ET N
~

c

'

0

l I 1I .
5

~

I

I

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

DJNHED

"This portrait makes bim loo~
so handsome," on~ art pali'On
~ed. "WeU," mused the
companion, "I think painler.; art

"

I-'"TI&lt;'6""TI'-TI-.T,_'7::';..,j---l G) ~:;;j.,,
..-•--•-_J._-.1.--:1..--J.

rho. chuckle quoted

by filling In tho . missing words
you develop from 11eP No. 3 below.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
• -' ' ... o 1
Nitwit - D&lt;lll)·- Knack Yellow - 0\VN \VAY

'll1 e eutie and her boyfriend were urguing . I h.·
:u: c u scd her or being un.-~a son:'l.blc.. •• Jt ' s nnf
\IIUOasonablc,'' she iufo':'n"..d hitll. when llll I
myO\\'NWAY ."

ARLO &amp;JANIS

IOOl

TAKE. IT.

'''~ nl

is

�Monday, April 30, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, April' 30, 2007
AL~EY OOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85
NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
Buiklng Downtown with 3 95 Horton

2 BR, 2 2 bedroom, 114 S. Park Dr.
Rei/Cre&lt;lt Clled&lt;, No Pets,
Deposit 304-675-2749
wtth option to buy, Must 12,900 . 304-633-6536
qualiiy. (740)710-Q007
--,----,---=::-:--- 2 1 Br./1 bath home in
SyracusQ. $400/n:"onth &amp;
$200 Security deposit. 949·
2o2o.
NEW 2007 4 Bed
2br House. large Uvlng
Room &amp;Kitchen, Garage for
. . . JUJZI.ml storage, no Yard, no Pets.
$300/deposit $300fmonth
All real estate idvertialng
mymidwea1home.com
304·882,·3652
In thll newspaper Is
lubtfct'to the Federal
Clearance Sale. New Total 3 Bedroom House in
Fair HOi!slng Act of 1968
dryWall homes !rom $299.63 Syracuse . $500tmonth +
which maket It illegal to
per monrh. Call (740)385- depos11 No Pels. (304)675•dvertlae "'any
2434
. 5332
preference, limitation or
:-::-=--:--:---=
di.c::rlminatlon based on
ract, color, religion, se~~:
Great used 2005 3 bedroom 3 1BR. 1 Car Garage. 136
Gavin Street, Rodent Village
flmlli•l status or national
16x80 with vinyVshingle.
II . $575/mo. 3SR, 2 car
crlgln, or any Intention to
Must sell, Only $25.995 wi1h
garage, 803
Brownell,
make any such
delivery. Call (740)385-4367
Middleport
$525/mo.
preference, limitation or
lAO'S &amp;
Accepting HUD. Require
.dltcrlmlnation."
dep and ·/ ef. Call 740-446Alllli\GE
4543,
Th is newspaper will not
knowingly accept
0 acres located on Broad -3b_r_Ho_u-se-in-Le-ta_n_S_500_
1
•dvertlsements for real
estate which ill in
Run Road, in. New Haven month, 5300 depoSit 304vlol•tlon of the taw. Our
$36.500 i304)773·5Ba 1
aa2-2858
rNders are hereby
3br. 2ba. on 2 acres, deck.
lniOfmed that all .
106 acres on Leon Baden Mt Alto, wv
close to
dwellings advertised In
Rd . stream , pasture &amp; Century
Aluminum
&amp;
thl1 newspaper are
woods . electric avail . call Moun!alneer
Plant
•v1ll1ble on en equal
Randall Bradford for direc- $700/month plus deposit, 1
opportunity bases.
lions
304 -206-6326. year lease. Ref Req. 740$125,000
Century
21 695-3082 cell614-747-1 066
COUNTRY SETIING
Runyan Assocaites Tim
3br. 2ba, with 24 x 24 It Runyan Broker
3Br/28a .,Midd.,fen.yard,sec
garage, 9/10 of an acre - - - - - -- - dep$250 .f $540M .ba seapp ro~~: . 8 miles !rom Pl. 2 Mobile Home Lot for rent ment.new roof&amp;lurnace .304Pieasant on At 2 call lor 1 near Vinton. and 1 on 675-8626 or 74Q-416-5620
Appointment 304·675-5995 Georges Creek Rd . Call
(7401441 ·11 11
All new, 3 Bedroom, 2 lull
Home in country. 9.73 acres
battl . New Kitc,hen, Living
3 BR. 1 112 Bath . Full base- For Sale Soon 163 acres Room, Large Family Room,
ment, 2 1&lt;2 car garage. wi th Timber. minus Mineral Dining Room, 3 112 miles
Mature Pine trees. 2 barns - Rights. in Gallia County, from town , No pets,
old school house. $130,000. Ohio near Bidwell, Legal Rehi rences
Required .
call 740-286-7212 or 937- description recorded in $650/mo., (740)446-3292
515-8670
Deed volume 165 at page
42 . owner would like three
Attention!
Land Contra ct separate offers before 1 DOWN
Local company
offering proPomeroy.on740-992-5858.
PAYMENr
June as follows: (1) otfer on
grams for you to buy your
HUD HOMES! 4 bedroom Timber only, (2) on Land
home instead of renting.
only $1991mo. 3 bedroom, only, (3) offer on land with • lOO% financing
$203/mo. More 1-4bed standing. Timber
only. • Less than perfect credit
homes available. 5% dn, 20 lnlerested persons should
Yrs @ 8%. For listings 800- Inspect 1t1e .e property and •accepted
Peym.ent could be the
559·4109 ei&lt;l. F144.
send their serious offers to :
same as i-ent.
Land Contracts: 3 Bedroom, Osceola DeOavfess PO Box Mortgage
Locators.
391 , Richmond Hill, GA
2 Bath, 1 acre in country, 31324 or .fax their serious ~17_4_
0 )'36
-~7-·0_0_00_ _ _,....
Oak Hill &amp; Jad&lt;son. oflers to 912·236·8782
House for Rent in MaSon,
$600/mo with down. pay · - - - - - - - h A'
ment 1·800·951 -2060
WV, on t e rver 304-488 •
Undeveloped lapu, 6,66 ec 7g46
mt1 avail, pond , open/ woodMiniature farm. Unibuilt
H·ouse' lor rent . 2 1 3
home on 4 acres, on SA ad. Long term (5-15 yr)
lease for mobile home or Bedroom in city, CIA, 1 yr
other approved uses. Loc lease.
$5001mo.
Also
pool. New appliances. Wood Brumfield Ad , Harrison Twp. upstairs Apt. $350/mo. at
burner, $9S,OOO. 740 .386. ph (513)295·6309 leave 621 1r.! 2nd Ave. 740·446·
msg for return call.
0603 days, 446-2158 eve.
0815
REAL~
HUD HOMES! 4 bedroom
New Home for Sale. Save
TE
oniy 199lmo. 3 bedroom ,
$20 ,000. Immediate occuWANTF.D
$203/mo. More 1•4bed
I'
pency. app 1ances Inc., 2
homes avar·'·ble. 5% dn, 20
1a
story w/wrap around porch. Ne ed to sell your home? yrs @ 8%. For listings 800 _
3-Sr.,2&amp;1 12
balh ,large La(e on payments, divorce,
ei&lt;l. F
_
5594109
144
garage wi Bonus room over- job transfer or a death? I - - - - - - - head-Full Basement &amp; can buy your home. All cash Land Gontracts: 3 Bedroom,
More.Seller will pay closing and quick closing. 740-416- 2 Bath, 1 acre in country,
cost. 740-992·5635 or 992-' 3130.
Oak Hill &amp; Jackson,
2478.
$6001mo wittl down paymen!. 1·800·951 -2060
Syracusebeautiful
4
14~~:70 .

IP8nments &amp; ott street park· BA. Vinyllshingle Cent. He~t
ing. Rent to own. $750/mo and Aif?-Part. Furn. Like new.

BESJBUY
$49,989

r

Hous~

~No

~~ie;,s:;a~:s~- s~~~~~

i

s

~

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

I

bdrom . 2 bath house .. r10.
secluded, yet close to

1 br · Trailer in .' Letart ,
Complete furnished, utilities
paid $350 month (304)8822858
----,----2 Bdrm, 1 Ba mobile home
in country. Big Yard. No pets.
Call 740-256-6202
2 Bedroom trailer, ideal for 1

or 2 people. No pets. Must

&lt;"

·'

,,

·or older?

.;.

r

Senior Discount*
when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!
Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the cou_p on below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

4Jallipoli• Jlailp Qtribune
~oint ~lea•ant ~egt•ter

t
"
I

The Daily Sentinel·
6unba!' t!time• -&amp;entinel
P•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I
1
I
I

_,

Subscriber's Name
'

'

I

Address

''

Phone

.

Mall or drop off thla coupon along
with a copy of your photo ID to
OhiO Valley Publishing P.O. BQX 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631
~

I
I

·--· ----------------------------~

Comp~et~

r.... c.,.

Top • Trim • Htlullng •Stump

Grinding • 8~Ut TnK:k
lnlur.d • Fr• EttitNin
74D-441-t317

"ldl John---owner
20r--. •.,_.,_

Atlantic City
Getaway!
NEW COMPANY

• Trim • Stum p
Gri ndi ng • Bucket
Truck
Full i nsured

May 24, 2007 to May 26, 2007

Senior Citizen

Boardwalk

70

30Yrs.

stores

Exp.

Ins.

Ow ner Ronnie Jones

Based on double occupancy

Free Estimates

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

No refunds
G ladly accepl cash, check , credit
cards and money orders '

i

I

ron.--...

26 Years

room apartments at Village
and
Riverside
Manor
Apartments In Middleport.
From $0-$592 . Call 740992-5064. Equal Housing
0pportunlties.
Equal
Opponunily Employer
Middlepon 1 or 2 Br. apls.,
no pels, dep. &amp; ref., 992·
0165
Middleport Beech Street, 2
Br., furnished apt. , utilities
paid, no pets, dep. &amp; ref.,
992·0165.
Modern 1 Bedroom Apt. ,
Call (740)446-Q390
Modern 1 SRApt. Call 4463736
•
New 2BR apartments.
Washer/dryer
hookup,
stove/refrigerator included.
Also, uMs on SA 160. Pels
Welcome! (740)441 -0194
New Haven, 1 Sr., furnished.
no pets. dep.&amp;,references,
74Q-992-Q165.
-------Ntce ~o~ean new
. ~
de cora ted,
2br no pets, rel/dep 304675-5162

r

_45_2~1------'--- ~

Commerciol building "FOJ
Ren1' 1600 squara 18et, on
streel pari&lt;Jng. Great loca·
lionl 749 Thrd Awnue in
GallipoJis. Rent s40olmo.
Call WWfllO (404)456-3802

g~ A
guSIN~SS fC~OOL.

IT MUH

29670 Bashan Road
R,acine, Ohio
45771
740-949·2217

r

MlscEu..AMxJus
· MERaiANoiSE

I

riO

_At.J'[O§

FORSALE

·--iiiiriiilliiiioro_.l

1987 Mazda 62200 ext cab
36x24 Oval Pool with deck- automatic overdrive, hci.rd
ing. Pool sits down inside sh9u, bed cover. good CoM.
deck, $2995. (740)446 -7425 96,000 miles $1,200 OBO or
trade 304-773-5070 or 304Hoi Tub, Top Quality, 5 per·
_
593 0958
son, Never Used. warranty,
Lounger,
Will
deliver. 1995 Ford Mustang GT, ve,
(606)~2 6 _ 07 n
auto, nice car. $4500 _ Also,
1997 camaro V6. 8\ltO, new

Flats $7,50
1O"Hanging Baskets $5.50-$6.50
4" Pots $1,25·$1.49
Shrubs-$2.95·$6.95
Open M-Saturday 10-5·
Closed Sunday "That's Gods Day"

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

•' Complete
Remodeling

140-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

r

FoR SALt:

~•••••iiiiiiliiiii••-"

&lt;-

paint , black, sharp car, 7'10 MoroRcraB
AERA I N MOTORS
. $4500. Both cars carry 1
4 W~•
Repa· ed New &amp; Rebu'lt
1 1n year -warranty. KG Aula .,_irrioiii"iiiii~iiiiiiiil--'
1r •
St·~ C 11 A
E
1
~- a
on vans, · • Sale.s. 740-446·8172
2004 Honda Shadow VLX
600·537 -9526.
1997 Oheuy Cavalier $1000. 600, gels 60mpg. 7400
Ne119r Used Kenmore Water Call Evenings. 740-949- mrles, $3250. 446·1 006
Softener. Paid $600, wilt sell 1301
-------lor $ 125. 740•44 6-6906
- -- - -- - - 2005 Honda 400ex, HMF
2001 Mercury Cougar, V6, pip, Hot cam , Wisco pisNEW AND USED STEEL auto, sunroof, 80K , $7900. ton .$3600 Call 740·339·
740-339-2494
DB06
Steel Beams, Pipe Reber :::::-:-::---:-:~~= ::::-:--,--:-:-::--::-For
Concrete,
Angle, 20Q4 Stratus, $6000 080, 87 Kawasaki 1200 Voyager
Channel , Flat Bar, Steel 2000 Ford ~ustang. $5000 21,000/miles · $4,500/0BO
Grating · For
Drains. 080, 2000 Chevy Cavalier, 304-773-5109
Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L $2800 OBO, 2002 DOdge ~Djj~:;;"&amp;jM&lt;;;;;]
Scrap Metals Open Monday, Slralos, 2 door, $5600 OBO.
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; (740)256-6169
· - - - ·-lilliiii
Fridey, Bam-4:30pm. Closed - - - - Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; 2006 Hyundal Elantra , 6· 1998 18. Straros, ISOHP
7 000
Sunday. (740)446-7300 ·
·
mil es. $ 13•000 ' 2007 Evenrude, 60 hours on
Lincoln Navigator, 5,000
-~-----~
rebuild. $7800. (740)256Tattle Tale Alarm System. mile·s.
$S 5,0oo: 2007 1962
-new in box, $400 or trade for Thoroughbre&lt;f by Palomino ~=:o-"!':"--""!':-""1
Gun. 74()-992·2478.
camper,' $25,000 . (740)441CAMPERS &amp;
" - - - - - - - - 8204
MOI'OR HOM~
•,.,;n Captian·s Bed, $250; - -- - -- - - - _
.
94 Honda Auto. $600 060
Chaise
Lounge
Chair
1996 lnnsbrooke 5th Wheel
. 7- _ca_ll_7_
40_·_25_6_·1_65_2_ __
(Burgundy), $200 (740)36
29ft Camper, loaded 12ft
0139
96 Caravan $2200, 97 slide w/hitch $7,500 1996
- -- - - - - - Dakota Ex Cab $3000, 02 Dodge SLT 4x4 ext cab.
Used pool equipmeht, sand Cavalier 2DR $3500, 00 Diesel Truck $7 ,500 304·mler and mo1or, diving Pont !)R .Prr·x
R • ._ ,
20
95
board, vacuum hose. winter 99 Forcl Ranger $3000,
ON£
...e message
95 576-2737 lea
cover,
medal
steps,
s
Mere Seble $! 500
95 Camp1ng ita for rent on
(740)992-3242
·
,
=~-~---, Dodge Ram E• Cab PU river, lull hook-up. 992·
PEls
$24~5. B&amp;D Auto 160 N. 5956.
FOR SAlE
446-6865

r

I

i'lllr"-~~--,
HOME

Spltt 10 good home. Good

Prtx GT 2D Sunroof, 2000
Salu'n l100 4D Sunrool All
Power, 2005 Sunlire Sport
2D Sunroof, 1999 Jeep
Wrarigler. 2000 S-10 Auto 4
Cyl, 2 Mini Vans.
Cars staring al $2SOO.
3 monthS, 3,000 mile warranty. 328 Jacison Pike
446-0103

"-•biiiiiPROiiiiioVEMENniiii
.i iiiiiit.-"

r ~':rs

11993 Ford 250 XLT
• Exlended Cab 1NCI&lt; auto,
MESA/Boogie Dual Aectifler 5.8. $3500.00, Mason. 6.14Ampl~ier Head and matd1- 226-9986.

l'lo\ !:OR£'(OU ~
1-\0W &gt;I~Q'(1U~t&gt;
1'\'( 5£~ m_ TO 11'E
WO!t.Lt&gt; AAO\J!IIt&gt; f/1£ •.

* Prompt an~ Quality
Work
* Reasonab le

'&lt;OUR~EOF

5tt-I~S \.IOULt&gt;'(OU
sr&gt;..'( 1s f.\'1 wo..~&lt;£Sil

w.J..I'N!

Pass

Pass ·
Pass

* Insured
* Experienced

References Available!
Call Gary Stan ley @

740-742-2293
Please leave messa e

PEANUTS
IF WE'RE A COUPLE OF FA~
D065, OLAF, DON'T YOU TI-lINK
WE SHOULD 6E DOIN6

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

DON'T VOU TI·UNK
WE 51-!0ULD
6E USEFUL'?

IF WE MOVE, THE BARN
WILL FALL DOWN ..

'J

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007

t----------------.1
SUNSHINE CLUB
YOUNG'S

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Roofing," Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,

Room Additions I
Remodeling
New G•r•gn
Electrlc•l &amp; Plumbing
Rooting &amp;
VInyl Siding &amp; P•intlng
P•tiOandP'orchOecks
WV
n
036 5

a.....

Electric, Plumbing,
~ Drywall,

RemodeI'mg, Room
Additions
Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free

Estiinates

740·367·0536
;::;~;===~~===:;;:::::~
·

M an I .,.-.
Ra--.w-J . . .

IIII•Sl·······II,·4IJII
-

•

-

GARFIELD
IF ~ L-IFE WeRE ANo,&gt; MORE
. el&lt;CITINc;., t'P NeEP A
6TUNT liCXJBLE

1.a12-3194·

IIIIIII'MIIIII:II• 5M ..
S.IIUII:II•12:11•

PIYIIII , .,PIICES . .

Answer to Prevloua Puzzle

sofa

'2

Sweet roll
It has rings
Undressed
55 Occupied a
chair
56 Watermelon
leftover
57 Crestfallen

53
54

ITF;'-i'ilir

DOWN
Card combo

2 Famous

3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
12
16
20
22

lioness
Like - of bricks
Thick wilh
catta ils
Under 1he
weather
- kwon do
Grabs the
phone
Gaius' garb
Europe-Asia
range
·
Home port
Coveted
award s
Motion
picture
Aoos1 siller
Makes
taboo

23 Princess
38
Di 's niece
24 Dawdles
25 What
40
Haml et
smelled
41
(2 wds.)
42
26 Sticky fruit
27 Duele.i's
43
wea pon
28 Take·
45
charge type
30 Part of an
46
orange
· 47
32 Uh cousins
34 Orchestra
50
members
51
35 Roman
army
37 Near the
stern

Start of a
famous
boast
Cost
a ballo1
Taxis
Water,
in Baja
Small
change
Heavy
burden
~ip
Winter
runner
Before
Average
grade

t'M NOT GARFIEL.P,l'M
HIS STUNT POUBLe

o.bur 'lllrthdlrt':

Tueadov. May 1. 2007
By Bernice Bede Osol
Some happy transformations you were
unable to make previously are tl~ely to be
in the offing. Although they may involve
al1erlng your lileStyle, you'll happily make
the exchange tor what you'll gel.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - If something lmporlant needs to be discussed,
avoid group involvement in the deliberation. An Intimate, one-on-one excnange
will be· tess confusing, and It Is all you'll
need Jo resolve it.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) - An industrious producer, you will , even make
much 01.:1t of what othBrs have consid·ered inconsequential projects. Noth1ng
you do will be lime wasted or Irrelevant.
CANCER (June 21-July 221 - II you
can. make time to sineH the roses. Hours
Spent doing something enjoyable wilt
yield much more than a pleasant time.
You'll benefit in both physical and mental
ways.
·
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - II you are tenacious and persistent. victory in whatever
you pursue will not be denied you. By
focusing on the final results, you wilt con ~
tinuously grow strooger as the end game
draws near.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) - II you are
dissatisfied with some kind of arrangement you've made, remember nothing is
carved in stone. Open up discussions lo
make the needed adjustments. You'M be
a good negotiator.
·
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0Ct. 23) - There are a
number of things you can do that would
help to enhance your financial affairs.
Once you figure things out, don't postpone what could advance your in tere~ ts .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - It's
important to be a leader and not a follower - and if need be, act independently without others. You will perform at
peak efficiency when you haye the freedom to do so.
SAGITTARIU S (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Something ltlat may prove to be to your
ultimate benefit when fully disclosed is
going on behind the scenes. And .
although you might only get the first
inkling of it, it'll bring you hope.
CAPRI CO RN (Dec. 22- Jan . 19) Because you are apt to be tudder with
your current interests than you would be
with ar'fllhtng new, temporarily postpone
in\IOI\f9ment in a fresh endeavor that has
captured your laney.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Don't
waste time and effort on small, insignilicant goals. You're capable of achieving
major accomplishments a! this ttme.
Think on a grand scala and focus there.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mar&lt;h 20) ·- Simply
by having total faith In your abilities, you
~ do anything you wllh and even su r·
priM you110" 11 tt1o 11111 you pull ott. It
you blillewln yourailt, mountain• can be
ARIES (March 21-Apnt tD) -

f'l ........

·GRiztwELLS

!

1\-IDU~~

I'D iR,Y 1b 1'AIHT

A t:PI'I ctf 'TilE
~Li~

ing MESA 4&lt;2 cabinet. 100 - - - - . , .- - - watts great condition, wHI 1999 Dodge Dakota 4~~:4 , V8

COmmericat Space lot' rent sacrifice $1 ,400 call 304· Club ' Cab. 127,000 miles
Mail St. Pt. Pl. $400/mo call ;,
T73;,;;,;5"'958
"'a~&amp;..---, askrng $9,500 OBO lor
.Allie 703-528-0617
r
call:lQ&lt;I-458·2214

-n·

Mobile Home space for rent
2000 Chevy Silverado ext
in Rio Grarde, (740)446·
cab, 4•4LS, tttue, 114,000
3617
L - - - - - - - . J · miles. Gaii740-339-08D6

'
•"

by Luis Campos

Although

octln1111tiG DV onott1or. Supt&gt;~ 11\e bl&lt;*·

up power.

SOUP TO Nlii'Z

.

.

Geebnty Cl~e r ci)'JllogriJI1s ~e creared rrom qootat1o1s by ramous !)eOple. past and present
Each !e!ter ITl !hH Cipher stands 1()1' anotller
rooays cloo: v equals P

" MN L ' HW

ANRRC

KNYW

YNTW

ICKKACTWY CAX MNL ' HW
YNTW ICKKACTWY CRX
CINLO

ANRRC

ZGR

OPCO ' Y

GO. " · TCACAWH

YVCHJM

CRXWHYNR
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' Dreams are Mremely rmportanl. vo·u can't do il
unless you imagine il."- George Lucas

'::'n':' s~~(\}A -J&amp;t,~s· woao

Graph

you uouoll)l IPf&gt;l\l )'Our ellorto toward
what you orlgln~.ta, your largHt g~lna
could como hom portfclpatlng In o proj·

Clhllllc~o.lai•C.IW
1

! 1HAT WAr&gt; AoJOKI,6ARFIELD

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Astro~

moved.

111-•IDIII•I ' .......
ICIIfWCIII'.-NIIII

""

A tournament player sitting North would
bid three spades over West's double lo
show a weak hand with four·card spade
support. (He would respond two notrump with at least game-inv~alional values and four-plus spades.)· Whatever
North bids, ttlough, South would take a
shot at ga.m8.
South is faced with lour losers: one
heart, one diamond and two clubs. But
he can use dummy's J-10 of hearts and
a loeer-on·loser play to reduce that total
to thfee. After winning the second trick,
declarer plays a trump to dummy's king,
calls for the heart jadl;, and instead of
ruHng, discards a k&gt;ser from his hand. If
at trick two West shifted to the diamond
king, Sou1h may p~ch from either minor.
11 West shihed 10 the club king, !hough,
South must shake a club.
West takes thiS trick with his heart king,
but declarer gets" another minor-suit
loser away on dummy's established
heart 10.'
Note thai West would have defeated lour
spades if he had led either minor-suit
king at trid&lt; one. Sorlle deals are too
Iough.

G

Rates_

~

SHOPCLASSifiEDS

.

BUT Wfllc.f\ CF TI-lE-q

BIG NATE

.. . .
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guar·
arltee. Local relerences furnished. Estabfisl-..d 1975 .
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Bas&amp;menl
WatelpFOOfing.

dog, needs room to run. llr.ll"'-~----, r-~,...-;:-.-.----,
Also Copper nose Beagle, V15
' 'I'Rixl&lt;s
good hunting dog.388·8849
FOR SAlE

L

THE BORN LOSER

~ .~~.&gt;t'l!"l'l1~rl!P.!IAA~:"'•

I'

puppy, Bl~e/Gold, Parents
on premises, Has shots.
paper trained, (740)388·
9686
------Jack Rat pups, tails docked,
ready to go. Pertact hunters
or extra family member.
$100 eed1 74!1-379·~371

A WRIGHT,
I'LL SEE
YORE
'TATERS.,, ·

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Helios System ·

: .

Ooor Locks, AMIFM/CD,
AJC, Cruise, Interior/Exterior
Good Shape, Runs Good, 1
owner, regula r maintenance.
7401446•0500

J OJET

·-----pi

FER
SUPPER, MAW
WHAT'S

We Deliver To You I

VANS

~~~try~~!~r w~~~~s

Ea st

48 Geolog ical
period
49 Popular

Abigail Van Buren wrote, "Wisdom doesn't automatically come with old age.
Nothing does - except wrinkles. It's,
true, some wines improve with age. But
only if the grapes.were good in the first
place.'
On opening lead, if you have an unbid
side suit headed by the ace and king, it
Is ~automatic~ to lead that ace - but it
will not always be best
First, though, let's look at South's troubles. He is in four spades. West leads the
heart ace, then shifts to a minor-suit
king. How shout~ South continue in each

G

740-992-5776

• Garages

North

usually automatic

OPEN FOR SEASON!

2 Bedrooms, CIA; 1 112
_Cook_Mot_0&lt;11
____
Bettr. Adu~ Poof &amp; Baby
r1.0
Poof, Patio, Stan $425/Mo. AKC Small. Yorkle male 2004 Stratus, 2001 Grande
'No Pets , Lease Plus
Securi1y Oepo~t Required,
1740)367-7086.
'--'------TWin Rivers Tower is accepting applications for waiting
lis! lor Hud-subsized, 1- br,
apartm8nt ,for
the
elderly/disabled call 6756679
Equal
Housing

,.

'

Syracuse, Ohio

::------- i
Tara
Townhouse
Apartments, Very Spaoious,

-.

IT'S IMPOilTANT TO
MAINTAIN
1-IQUIPITY I

Hubbard's Greenhouse

Hill's Self
Storage

• New Homes

,.

The lead is

2459 St. Rt. 160 ' GaiUpoUs
f

c•STRUCTIOI

""

Dbl.
Pass

Opening lead: • A

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

740.446.9200

ROBERT '
BISSELL

West

H•

www,tlmbe...,....,lu:ablnotry,...,,..

-15 yrs. Exp. Free Est imates

LMSJOCK

Mollohan Furn. 202 Clark Goats for Sale. Boer Goats,
Chapel Rd. New furn; It you
Club kids, ~om Jan &amp; Feb,
like to sav~ money, check us 2007. Call (740)256-9247
out Drive a •llnle, Save slot!
388-0173
Reg. Angus
Cow/Calf
- - - - - - - - $1000. 400! - 6000 Angus
Used Furniture store . 130 Bulls &amp; Hal. $1.05 per
-Bulaville Pike, Gallipolis. pound. 740·256·1758
Large selection ol everyI !~\ \'--oi 'OIU \I H l\
thing. Home-Business for
sale . 740 _,
"6 -4782

Hardwood Cabln"ry Alld FurnHure

740"77
""2 " 5929
.740-416-1698

r·P

South

ACROSS
'
1 Tiny legume
4 Beatles'
meter maid
8 Popcorn buy
11 Kind of sali
13 Vivacity
14 Mouths,
in biology
15 Type
of triangle
17 Mining
hazard
18 Foul-tasting
19 Largest
mammal
21 Some
22 Drone
23 Traffic-jam
noise
26 Dratled
29 Headphone s
30 Prospecls
for gold
31 " Ulalume"
poet
33 Khan of r&lt;&gt;te
34 Ump's calls
35 Bold look
36 Pony pad
38 Sw~Nes
39 Dandy
40 Really relax,
slangily
41 Prickly flora
44 Hamburger
extra

case?

All types of concrete
Owner- Rick Wi se

·--l!iiliiiiiiiio-_.1

Gracloua Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Village
MMadndor and Riv,erside$ Ap ts. in
I
leport, rom 327 to
$592. 740·992·5064. Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
institution is an Equl!l
Opportunity Pro'tlider and
Employer.

Deal er: South
Vuln erable: Eas1-West

BARNEY

Wise Concrete

z

10 '·9fl43

• J 10 9

t AJ

Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured
~=::=F;r:••~Ea~t~lm~a~te~s

3

" A 4 2

LIMITED SEATS!

2 BA Apt. on Watson Ad.
Rodney area . Ref, Stove, ~:~-~---...,
.W&amp;D included. Water &amp;
Sf..\CE
I \U \ 1 "' 1'1'111..,
Sewer pd. Dep and Ref
FOR RENT ·
\\ I I\ I "' I ( H 1\
required. No pets. 709-1657 ••-iiiiiiiiiiioro_.l !rill"'"-~:-"---,
or 446•1271
.
Prime commercial space for .r.IO-IIIiiioiriFARM-.iiiiorlrror
Sp
"~ 'lPIIIENf
2BR Apt Washer/Dryer rent at
ringvaney Plaza.
&amp;:A,l\..1
·
C 1164 2192
Hookup, appliances fura
5.
nished, (740) 286 _5789 or ''i'l·il'· ""!'~----, 0% Financing- 36 Mos.
441-3702
WANTED
available now on John
Deere Trak zero rums &amp;
3 d4
1 · h d 1 ~---ioi"""iiii,;,;,'-•
an
room urnrs e ap s.
5.99% Fl•ed Rale on John
1
WID hookup No pets
c ean
·
·
Deere Gator~ Carmictlael
Ref. and deposit required. Responsible and ethical Equipment~740)~46·2412.
740 446 ~519
hunter looking for Hunting
-.
·
Land for lease in Gallia 4-loot,3pointhitchdischarCounty area, will pay min. row $375.00: Call 740-949$20 per acre maybe more ·
2727
depending on location. 304- - - - . , - . , - . , - . , - 675-5258
Kiefer Built- Valley-BisonHorse
and
livestock
;
TralleraLoadmaxHOUSDIOIJ)
Gooseneck, Dumps, &amp;
Gooos
Utility- Aluma Aluminum
A HIDDEN TREASURE!
TralleiS- B&amp;W Gooseneck
~aurel
Commons
. , Hitches- Trailer
Parts.
Apenmen1S. Larges1 in the Appliance Warehouse Carm!cheel
Trailers.
area! Beautifully renovated in Henderson, WV. Pre· (740)446-2412
throughout including brand
dA d
owne
pp11ances, a11 un er Model 847 New Holland
new kitchen and bath . W
1y 1 h
d.
· G
arran • a so ave recon 1- round baler. ood condition.
Starting at $405. Call todayl tioned Big Screen TV's $
_
_ _
2500 740 441 7390
(304)273-3344
)
_
1304 675 7999
Apartment for rent, 1_2 - - - - - -- - USED Rota ry tillers. -4', 5',
Bdrm., re;modeled, new car- For sale/Best offers: over- 6', 3 point hitch. BIG
pet, stove &amp; trig., water. stuffed chair, 2 l&amp;flllS, and SELECTION. Jim 's Farm
sewer, trash pd. Middleport. tables, · oak
doors, Equipment. 740-446-9777
$4
N
A I vanlty/sink, ab lounger,
25.00. 740-843-5264.
0 pels.
• . palates machine. Call 992required.

t

~

o!I A Q8 1632

Vinyl Siding
New Construction Interior Remodeling
Residential &amp; Commercial
740-985-4141 Office
. 74(1-416-1834

(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1492

• 5
• 9 8

• Q

Ga rages

PVH Community R e lations,

East

Sout}l

Pin e S tree t • Gallipolis

Mus t be 21 years of age

1 SA, Newly Remodeled.
Walk to Wa i-Mart , utilities
Pd . Dep. Req. (740)245·
5555, (740)441 ·51 05

West
• J
• AK74
+K Q5 2
• KQ 76

Marcum Construction and
General Contracting

To make reservat ions please call ,
1 BR Apt WID hookups.
First Mon. rent $250 plus
dep. 740·441 ·9666 or 740·
339-0362

MONTY

740-446-0007 Toll Free 87'7 -669-0007

$2651person

K tO 9 4

• 7 6
• B5 3

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

740-367-02661
I -800-950-3359

&amp; Beachfront Property

«o

O-i-30-07

• J 10 5 !

r]ami/q l•ti1ij411

Discuullt

&amp; Resort

Within walking distance of outlet

1 and 2 bedroom aparl ments, furnished and unfurnished, and houses in
Pomeroy and Middleport,
security deposit required , no
pets. 740·992-2218.

~

•

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

• Top • Removal

L,--oiiOiORiiiriRmriiii,;,;,-,.1

i
'

Tree

O.lllpoUt, OH 45&amp;31

Pomeroy, Ohio
May 1st · 2nd· 3rd 9 am·?
Rain or Shine "Nice Stuff"

Tropicana Casino

Opportunity

City/State/Zip

North

Service

4 Family Yard Sale
522 Mulberry Heights

APAR1MTh1'S

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed-

·'If so, you qualify for a

Johnson's

have references. 740-~41 o161 . Gall 9am-6pm
-----'--For rent, 2 bedroom trailer.
$250 Dep. $250 Mo. 245- ·
0095
.:..:..:..:._:--:::-~:::--:-Nice 2 BR mobile home.
AIC. Located at Johnson
Mobil e Home Park. '4462003
.:..:..:.:_-:-::-:--:---,Small 3 Br. M.Home outside
of Pomeroy. $250 a month.
$250 dep., year. lease, no
pets, no calls after 9 P.M.
740-992-5039.

Large 4 bedroom house. 86
H~
Garfield Ave. $575 mo. plus B•uttful Apta. lt Jackson
RENr
Eatlltea. 52 Westwood
schools &amp;. town, twge above ·--FORiiiiiiiiiiiiioro_.l deposit and utilities. 446$
ground pool w/deck, call ,
2515
.
Drive, from 365 to $560.
740
'
446
2568
Equal
now won't last long, S158/mol Buy 4bd ·home.
:
•
·
Middfeport,3bdrm,basement Housr·ng Opportunity Thr·s
(740)992-2429
HUD t 5% dn , 20yrs @ 8%.
.
For Listings
_ _
(full),fenced yard,neighbor- institution Is an Equal
800 559 4109
K
hood good,$550 plus ut. &amp; OppOrtunity· Provider and
www.orvb.com
1709
dep.,ref.req., 740-843-5264. Employer.
5 BA 3.5 Bath, 5 acres
_.:.__:___~--wHh access to the boat
2 bedroom tlouse on Pomeroy, 2 or 3 BR. , CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
docks. 1 mi. outside
Graham School Rd. $400 Naylers Run/Condor, No ED 6 AFFORDABLE!
Gallipo~s. Viaw photos/info
per month, plus deposit, pets, yards. sir; WID hook- T
t
.
ownhou se
apar1mens,
online, Code 4107 or call
Water include 304·675- up. AefereJlces. Call 992- and/or small houses .FOR
(740}441-1605.
2178
6888.
RENT ·can (740)441-1111
tOr application &amp;information.

,&amp;re you 65'.~

Phillip
Alder

lAM I

NltH ~r CU.T l. P01W1 - · ~----"-

0 ..._,.

len.il of !lie'
favr ICI'Cimbltd -d1 btlow 10 1«m four ~mple -ds.

.
I II r

CLABHE

I lz

I

GUJ E0

I I! I I
~

I P ET N
~

c

'

0

l I 1I .
5

~

I

I

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

DJNHED

"This portrait makes bim loo~
so handsome," on~ art pali'On
~ed. "WeU," mused the
companion, "I think painler.; art

"

I-'"TI&lt;'6""TI'-TI-.T,_'7::';..,j---l G) ~:;;j.,,
..-•--•-_J._-.1.--:1..--J.

rho. chuckle quoted

by filling In tho . missing words
you develop from 11eP No. 3 below.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
• -' ' ... o 1
Nitwit - D&lt;lll)·- Knack Yellow - 0\VN \VAY

'll1 e eutie and her boyfriend were urguing . I h.·
:u: c u scd her or being un.-~a son:'l.blc.. •• Jt ' s nnf
\IIUOasonablc,'' she iufo':'n"..d hitll. when llll I
myO\\'NWAY ."

ARLO &amp;JANIS

IOOl

TAKE. IT.

'''~ nl

is

�Page B6 ': The Daily Sentinel

Monday, April 30, 2007

Www.mydaiJysentineJ.com

Cincinnati
•Reds
pitcher
Aaron
Harang
throws
against
Pittsburgh
in the first
inning of
baseball
action in
Pittsburgh
on
Sunday. .~

Browns ·get Quinn, Thomas in first round
BEREA (AP) - .Brady , Browns jersey by NFL comQuinn's wish was grunted missioner Roger GoodelL
after aiL Just not nearly as
"It 's really living out a
soon as he had hop~p.
chi ldhood dream," said
The Cleve land Browns Quinn, who thinks that old
didn't pass up a second Browns helmet is somechance at drafting the Notre where in storage at home.
Dame quarterback, who "You don't count on a team
before he wore the Fighting comi ng back in the picture
Irish's f&lt;1mcd golden helmet. like th at."
strapped on the plain orange
Earlier. the Brmvns landone of the team he root~d ed another big one, se lectin g
for as a kid,
Wisconsin offensive tack le
After 20 teams let him Joe Thomas with the No. 3
slide')Ja&gt;l in Saturday's NFL pick. Thomas skipped a trip
· draft. the Browns traded to New York to go fishin g
their second-round pick with his father and friends
(No. 36 overall) and first- on Lake Michigan.
round pick in 2008 to Dallas · The team made another
at No. 22 ID move up and deal with Dallas in the secselect Quinn.
ond round. The Browns
"In the end. it worked out gave th e Cowboys their
the bes t way poss ible." picks in the third, fourth and
Quinn said.
sixth rounds to move up
Once considered a possi- from No. n7 to No. 53 so
ble No. I overall pick. thev could take UNLV corQuinn. who grew u'p in the nerback .Eric Wri ght.
Columbus suburb of Dublin.
The 2 1-yearcold Wright
Ohio, dropped deeper than comes with baggage. He
he or anyone expected .
transferred from Southern
Seconds after bei ng taken California in 2005. a year
by the Browns. "Quinn ·after b~ing charged with
exhaled before slowly walk- rape. Authorities said they
ing onto the stage at Rad io also .found drugs in the
City Music Hall and being apartment he shared with a
prese nted with a No. I roommate. The chu.rges

were dropped when the
woman failed to testify.
As soon as Quinn sl id past
Miami at No. 9; Browns
ge neral manager Phil
Savage began working the
phones to find a partner to
trade witli. He finally found
one 2 1/2 hours later in-the
Cowboys, who have Tony
Romo b~t may have been
tempted to take Quinn.
"We didn't expect Brady
Quinn to fall as far as he
did ,~ Savage said. "We had
Brady rated very high on
our board, just not top
three."
After four agomzmg
hours. Quinn was on the
phone with the Baltimore
Ravens when he got another
calL
"Once I picked up, they
said, ' Hey,
it's the
Cleveland Browns . We
made a trade, we are going
to come get you right now,"'
Quinn said. "I was obviously taken aback by it because
I had just gotten off a long
conversation with Baltimore
thinking, "Al l right, that's
probably where I'm going to
end up."
On Friday, Savage called

skid that's now reached
seven games.
Game 4 is Monday in
Washington.
' The blowout everyone
had been expecting in this
se ries seemed finally ready
to happen Saturday night.
The Cavaliers outhustled,
outrebounded and - without Arenas and Butler in the
game :_ out-talented the
Wizards to take a 61-44
halftime lead.
llgauskas scored the tirst
eight points in a 23-10 second-quarter run, with six of
his points coming after
offensive rebounds. James
.hit a pair of 3s to gel the
lead to 13, and Cleveland
simply outran Washington
down the court for two easy
dunks by . Pavlovic in the
final 30 seconds of the half
Cleveland had a 29-15

rebound advantage at halftime.
But the Wizards, showing
the spunk they had in
Games I and 2, didn't give
up . Jamison scored 17
points on 7-for-9 shooting
in the third quarter. Jamison
and Jarvis Hayes combined
for 19 points and Thomas
ripped rebounds with
authority in a 21-4 run, with
Jamison's putback tying the
score at 65 midway through
the quarter.
But the Wizards cool (in 't
· fini sh. They went4 I/2 minutes without scoring during
the fourth , allowing the
Cavaliers to go on .a modest
6-0 'run that gave them the
lead for good.
Notes: Washington assistant coach Mike 0' Koren
missed the game due to illness.
Wizards G

Cavs
from Page Bl
next possession. and the
game was essentially over
when Roger Mason missed
a 3-poimer.
Antawn Jamison scored a
career playoff-high 38
points and grabbed II
rebounds for the Wizards.
Antonio Daniels. who drove
more aggressively to the
basket than he did in the
lirsl two games, finished
with 20 points and 13
assists.
The Wizards had hoped
the col11forts of home would
give them ' the fin al push
needed
to beat
the
Cavaliers, even though
Washington hasn 't won at
home since March 28 - a

Oakland about trading up to
the No. I spot to possibly
select LSU quarterback
JaMarcus Ru ssell . Savage
has known Russell since t,he
QB was a 14-year-old in
Mobile, Ala. However, the
Raiders' asking' price was
· too high.
·
"When they' re asking for
(outside
linebacker)
Kamerion Wimbley, that
pretty much ends the conversation," Savage said.
The 6-foot-3, 232-pound
Quinn came to the Browns
with a high recommendation from Notre Dame coach
PITISBURGH (AP)' - 25 hits in their next two
Charlie Weis, who worked Edwin Encarnacion's bases- games, including an 8- 1 vicwith Cleveland coach loaded
triple
key'ed tory Saturday.
,
.
Harang (.f-0) beneftted
Romeo Crennel in New Cincinnati's comeback from
England.
an early three-run defic it, from the offensive supf!?rt.
"Charlie always said he and Aaron Harang settled even helping himself wtth a
could come in and play," down to maintain his domi" run-scormg single in a fiveCrennel said. "Charlie was nance of the Pimbur~h run fourth that turned a 4-1
probably disapppinted we Pirates in the Reds' 9-5 vrc- Reds deficit into a 6-4 lead.
The big inning came against
didn't taker him at No. 3. I tory Sunday.
Paul Maholm ( 1-3), who
·
Adam
Dunn
added
a
twothink he feels good we have
was coming off a three-hit
run
homer
and
Brapdon
him now."
shutout
of the Astros on
drove
in
two
runs
as
Phillips
A four-year starter in colTuesday
that was easily the
the
Reds,
losers
of
seven
of
lege, Quinn could immedibest start of his three-season
nine
following
a
3-1
defeat
ately step into the starting
Friday, bounced back to career.
job ahead of Charlie Frye, on
win the final. two games of The right-hander, 2-0 on
Cleveland's primary starter the series.
the road this season after
before getting hurt late last
After his team was shut leading the NL with nine
season.
out u'ntil the ninth inning road victories last year, is
Friday, Reds manager Jerry 10-3 in his career against
Pittsburgh and has beaten
· DeShawn
Stevenson Narron predicted his club them
twrce this season.
was ready to come out of its
bruised his left hip when he offensive
slump - and he . Harang lasted eight-plus
fell after driving to the bas- wasright. The NL's weakest- innings, giving up 10 hits,
ket in the fourth quarter. He hitting team going into walking four and throwing
later returned to the game. Saturday night's game, the three wild pitches , but strikDaniels rolled his ankle try- Reds scored 17 runs and had ing out nine.
· ing to guard James late in
the game. He · lay on the
Division matchup with the
court during much of the
Buckeyes . Game time is
subsequent timeout, but he
slated for 5 p.m.
stayed in the game. . ..
. from Page Bl
Wizards centers Thomas
MEIGS 7, ATHENS 2
and Brendan Haywood
Athens
100'000 1 -255
combined for zero points Crabtree also struck out Meigs 104 101 1t - 763
AHS: Mike Malesick and Kyle Dean
and two rebounds in the one.
MHS: Austin Dunfee and JT, Evans
first half.... James, watch- Dunfee; LP- Malesiek
Cline had the lone hit in WP
- AHS: Jake Anderson (seventh
ing the NFL. draft in the game two, while Malesick HR
inning, one out, nobody on)
locker room before the and Jake Anderson each
MEIGS 11, ATHENS1
game, was naturally inter- provided a pair in the initial
Athens
001 00
1 13
ested when the Cleveland contest. Charlie Garron
Meigs
281 Ox
- 11 .32
Browns traded up into the added the other safety for AHS (2·16): Brad Bentley, Mitch
(2) and Kyle Dean. Charlie
first round to take Brady the Green and Gold in game Crabtree
Garon (5)
Quinn - a projected high one.
MHS (14-6) : Dave Poole and Aaron
pick who went at No. 22.
Meigs returns to action Story
- Poole: LP - Bentley
"He lost a lot of money," today w:hen it travels to WP
HA - MHS: Bryan Delong (second
James said.
Nelsonville for a TVC Ohio inning, two outs, two on)

PVH observes
National Nurses
Week,A2

Reds rally past Pirates

MSWCD announces
Conservation's
Power Week, A3

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
-; o ( I :\IS • \ ol. •-;h. :\o . tH•!

•

SPORTS
• Eagles bounce
Waterford. See Page 81

II ' I Sll \' , 1\1 ' ,,.

1 ' '1111 ~
, -

BY BETH SERGENT
drilled shafts to stabilize the also required some blasting
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM river bank which is a similar of a nearby hill side in order
procedure used to stabilize to move the roadway furthei
TUPPERS PLAINS - the slip found a few years away from the river.
One lane of traffic along
The roadway closed for
Ohio 124 located south of ago on the Ohio side of the
the Athens County line will new Pomeroy Mason Bridge repairs on Feb. 20. Since
be reopened beginning June construction. The previous · then motorists have used
15, according to the Ohio design for the slip repair of detours along Ohio 681, 7
Department
of Ohio 124 called for signifi- and 144 to bypas·s the work
cant rock channel to stabi- area which is less than a
Transportation (ODOT).
Slip repair is currently lize the bank . which in turn mile in length.
The section of Ohio 124
ongoing at the site and will might raise the tloodway, a
be completed in July at a problem which was mitigat- in Olive Township was temcost of $3.77 million.
ed by . the use of drilled porarily closed in January
ODOT is curre-ntly. using shafts mstead. The job has 2005 following tlooding and

Page AS
• Kathryn Elisabeth
(8\Jrdette) Faudree
• Mrs. Norma Russell
·

INSIDE

Submitted photos

Local Teen wins
ciJeerleader title.
· See Page A2
1 Brandi Thomas
scholarship applications.
See Page A3 ,
1 Bike Rodeo
encourages safe bicycling
habits. See .Page A3
1 Trickle Up business
grants now available.
See Page A5
1 Missionary pilot visits
Forest Run church.
See Page A6

-and-

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

FINE jEWELRY·

.151 2nd Ave. • Gallipolis, OH

1X3 Greeting $12.00 1XS Greeting ; $15.00

/o OFF

0

(Your
Mother's
Name)
Love, Brenda,
Joe, Tom, Ken
&amp;. Elain~

I

I

J

*Storewidel

•••••••••••••
RK YOUR CAlENDAR I

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

Topes Furniture Galleries
~ Acquisitions Fine jewelry
are pleased to invite you to
our 4th Annual Mother's Day
. Tea '&amp;. Bridal Event . · ·

· outtheformbelowand~rop~ffthf~~·to

.:(,he Dolly Sentinel "Mother's Day'',

Scripture readings from the Pomeroy parking lot continue
today and tomorrow and unti l lO a.m . Thursday. Here Alison
Hanstine, a~sited by Kristi Powell, reads from the Bible.

r-----------------------

.

I
I City, State, Zip

I
I

Dc)n't Miss· Our
Biggest, Event .Ever!

~

More SaVings I More Choices I,More FunI

~ Your Address

~.

.

·

·

Make

Annie's Mailbox

Bs
A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

B Section
'

Weather

A6

·

I

______________ .J
Sentinel

lEACillNG CHDDREN TO·.SAVE
TUPPERS PLAINS Students in second grade
classrooms ·at Eastern and
Southern
Elementary
Schools got a fun lesson in
the value of saving money
last week through a program
presented by Home National
Bank.
Tina Wood, Sara Allen
and Ann' Engle of Home
National Bank visited students in observance of
National Teach Children to
Save Day. Nationally,
26,000 banks participated in
the observance, designed to
show young children the
importance of saving their
money, ' determining the
·importance of what they
wish to buy, and spending
money wisely.
Why is it such an impor-

Jeff
Facemyer, a
student in
Dee
Simmons'
second grade
class at
Eastern'
Elementary
School,
demonstrates
for his classm;:ttes some
of the
arithemetic
required in
sound money
·management.

BY BETH SERGENT
According to Mark Miller,
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM superintendent of Southern
Local Schools, if the comRACINE - The Southern mission agrees with the resoLocal Schools District .is lution, representatives from
applying for release from fis- the Ohio Auditor of State's
cal emergency status after Office will then begin the
nearly eight.years.'
appropriate paperWork to
The Southern Local Board confirm the district has met
of Education recently passed all criteria for release. Miller
a resolution asking th~ state's said once this process begins,
Financial · Planning and it may take the officials from
Supervision Commission to the auditor's office three to '
consider the district's release. six mQnth to complete the

work.
"As far as we're concerned
at Southern Local, we've mel
our criteria or we wouldn't
have passed the resolution."
Miller added.
Separate five-year financial forecasts done by former
treasurer Richard Koke·r and
interim treasurer Cindy
Rhonemus project the district will be in the black for
·
Please see Southern, AS

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
to 8 p.m. and continuing
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM Monday from 8 a.n]. tO 8
p.m. , the same hours volunPOMEROY - National t~ers will read scripture both
Day of Prayer services in today and Wednesday. From
Meigs County got underway 7 to 8 p.m. tonight a prayer
Sunday with Christians cir- walk will take place on the
cling the Meigs County Pomeroy-parking lot.
Courthouse to p:ay for the
Thursday 's
schedule
·.begins at 7:30 a.m. with a
county and rts oflrctals.
After that Bible reading prayer breakfast at the
began on the parking lot
stage, going Sunday from 4
Please see Prayer, AS

Youth league to lease
high school space
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
. MIDDLEPORT - The
Big Bend Youth Football
League will lease a part of the
Middleport Hi gh School
building ori South Third
Avenue. Middleport Village
Council met in special session last week to approve th~
lease, with Council Member
Sandra Brown voting ·in
opposition.
The league will lease the
kitchen and cafeferia area.
part ofihe coach's room s and
the gym and auditorium area
in the abandoned school
building. The space will be
used for league-sponsored
events, including bingo
fundraisers , dances and
cheerleader camps and practices.
The league plans to construct a partition to separate
the area it leases from the

remainder of the building .
Council agreed to allow
the league to occupy the
building at no cost for six
months, and for $400 a
month afterthat, plus utilities
and insutance. The league
will also be responsible for
maintenance of the building.
The lease will include the
opportunity for the league to ·
bu y the building if the village
opts to sell it
Council members Jean
Craig, Robert Robinson and
Ferman Moore met last week
with league officials., after
council approved leasing
space the league occupied in
the Pearl Street elementary
school building to an auction
company. The league, also
leases the Middleport High
School football field under a
separate agreement.
The league plans to host
Please Jee Youth, AS

would like to welcome Dr. Chris Good

*Proud
to. support the American
Cancer SocietY
.
.
'

·For an appointment with Dr. Good or Dr. Nick! Please call:

•

.740.446.7460

.)•

a

servzces zn progress

Back-to Health Chiropractic

1
I
I
I

L-~-~----------12!!:1~M!!e!i!

B3-4 ·

Comics

.•

Brian J. Reed/photos
·Ashley Tolliver and Laura Pullins participate in the Home Natipna l Bank's program for
National Teach Children to Save Day, counting pretend money and determining how it is
most wisely spent.
·

A3 Southern applies for release from fiscal emergency

Classifieds

f

I

12 PAGEs

Calendars

Friday &amp;.. Saturday
May 11th &amp;:: 12th

1
Circle One.: 1X3 Greeting $12.00 1X5 Greeting· $15.00
I
1Mother's Name
I Your Name (s):

I

2 SECTIONS -

Day ofPrayer

Piease see Save, AS

© 20070hio Valley PubUshing Co.

111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45769

~ Phone .N

INDEX

*Excludes Fossil Watches • Earl To~ Prints • Brad Painter Santas

llriudUne,.;,lhiiSpeclal Molhe!'s DayTI'IIIIM II Wldn111tav, MIIy i,llio7

1.'

Detail• on. Page A6

Beginning May 1st· Don't Miss It

' '

'
I

WEATHER

·Are'Having The Biggest Sale Ever!

. Happy
Happy
Mother's Day Mother's Day

Township are tied to the
HO(:kingport area slip repair
project that inc lodes upgrading County Roads 59 and 62
in Athens Cou nty. Thi s
recent upgrading resulted in
th e
transformation
of
County Road 59 into ' the
new Ohio 144, bypassing
the worst pan of the slip in
that area. Fini,iling work on
County Road 59 and the
work on County Road 62
(Youba Ridge) is already
underway.

OBITUARIES

FURNITURE
GALLERIES

JJZuJ 7/{J{J;
The Daily
ntinel

the Belleville Locks and
Dam situation where barges
sank to the bottom of the
dam, closing the locks.
Sections of Ohio 124 in
Meigs County and Ohio 144.
in Athens County suffered
subsequent flood damage
and area slips. The Meigs
section of road reopened
later that spring after ODOT
made temporary repairs
until a permanent fix could
be made.
The repairs in Olive

Sweep

This mothers day, q heartfelt

Greeting Examples ...

·

One lane of ·Ohio 12+ to reopen

1

To be published
Sunday, May 13th

·

W\\' \\ .m~d;ul~st..•nliiJt•l.,• ttm

,

. I

'·

..

- - - - -------·

I
-· ~.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="529">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9980">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="15289">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="15288">
              <text>April 30, 2007</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1103">
      <name>musser</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="251">
      <name>pickens</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2925">
      <name>spurrier</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4156">
      <name>weyersmiller</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
