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Pap B6 • The ~y Sentinel

I

'

Tu~~May9,20o6 :

www.mydallysentineJ.com

Cleveland
Clinic
.
.
trustees tighten ·
ethics policies, A6

Cookies donated to
Holzer Hospice, A2
SPENCER, W.Va. - While
Point Pleasant once held a six
game win streak with five of
those wins coming by I 0 runs
pr more, that has all but van-

··· ~

.

ished.
Now the Big Blacks (1511) own another streak -

two losses in a row after Point
' fell 9-4 to Roane County ( 178) Monday evening in
Spencer.
And while two straight
losses doesn' t seem all that
. bad, it is what happc;ned during those games that makes if
so tough to swallow. After
annihilating
opponents
through the first half of last
week, Point faced a tough letdown when No. l Herben
Hoover came to town and
held them without a hit in a
19-0 beatdown Friday.
.
One r game later, Point
Pleasant went on.the· road to
face Roane County and saw
two dropped fly balls haunt
them as the Raiders turned
Point errors into runs and the
eventual 9-4 win.
"It is hard to win games
when we .can't catch popups," commented Point
Pleasant
coach
James
Higginbotham.
Both dropped fly balls
came at the worse possible
time, as the Big Blacks saw a
~-1 lead through two innings
dissipate . when the Raiders
.added four runs in third after
one dropped ball and two
more in the sixth on another
which allowed Roane County
to take the lead and the victo-

•
&gt;

,')til'~.!\ IS • \

ROANE COUNTY 9, PT PLEASANT 4
POint
030 OOt o - 4 5 3
Roane
t04 022 · x -981
Justin Cullen, Ricky Wyant (3rd), Curtis
Grimm (5th) and Chris Casey. Harry Goins,
Phil Hall (3rd) and Zach Reed, Goins (3&lt;d).

BY MARK WtWAMS
SPECIAL TO lllE SENTINEL.

Devils'
Bryan Watleralphoto

ed~~h led off the fifth with

walked nobody in the triumph.
VanMeter, Josh Kimes and
Matt Imboden - all seniors
-concluded their Marauder .
careers in the setback.
Warren
and
Gallia
Academy will square off at 5
p.m. on Thursday. The home
team won both head-to-head
matchups this year. ,
WARREN 12, MEIGS 0
51nnlnga
Meigs
000 · 00 01 3 ·
Warren
140 16 12 12 0
Auslin Dunfee, Eric VanMeter (5) and
Aaron Story. Tyler Wynn and Garrett
Proctor. WP -Wynn. LP - Dunfee. HR: .
W - Alex Barth, second inning, one on.
Cory HooPer, fifth' inning, two on.

fromPageBl
·
d
·
Austin King adde two smgles and drOve in three runs,
including the 1Oth and final
one that ended the contest in
the botto.m of the fifth inning.
Justin Saunders, Chris Miller
and Brad Caudill also had
RBI singles.
Greg Russell doubled, and·
Matt Mooney and Robinson
chipped in singles for the
winners.
Athens, meanwhile, logged
just two hiis off Gallia ·ace
Robinson, who struck out
eight and walked only two.
Mitch Crabtree, the first of
three Bulldog hurlers, took
the loss.
Jared Cline and Ben Kester

URG

Softball
. . .
C 0 IIege, the N0 nh DIVtStOn
champion, defeated Ohio
Dominican to earn the right to
host the eight-team ·toQ111ament and will be the No. 1
seed. ·
Rio Grande and Shawnee
Sta~ spli! a pair of games qn
Apnl 26 '10 West Ponsmouth.
had multiple hits, including a .
double, and also drove in a
pair of RBis. Andrea Flint
added · an RBI double and
freshman Bridgette Suyer
logged her fust hit of the
year.
Jessica Athey had a tworun double for Belpre in the
fifth inning - · accounting
had · th.e only hits for Athens
(5-17), whtch wrapped up
one on the .worst seasons dur-.
ing the coach Fred Gibson
era.
.
Gibson's club managed to
stick aroun.d and was only
trailing 3-0 after three
innings,· but the Blue and
White tacked on six tallies
in the bottom of the founh
frame to end any upset.
hopes.
·
··
Russell1ed off with a double over the centel" fielder's
head, then Caudill followed
with a . sbtgle to· plate the
Iirst run of the pivotal
inning. Saunders reached on
an error before Haislop doubled off the fence in nght to
knock in another.
· King provided what may
have been the back-breaker
with a two-run single that
made it 7-0. Robinson fol-

Rio lost the first game 5-3
after failing to a hold a 3-0
advantage. ~hawnee State
·scored six runs in the sixth
inning to win that game. Rio
·
·
~ponded w1th a 6-5 v1ctory
m game two.
Other fust round m_atch-ups
have Notre Dame facmg No.8
seed, Lyndon State from
NAIA Region X. No. 2 seed
Ohio Dominican will face No.
7.
Mountain
State
for both the Lady Eagle
scores.
River Valley jumped out to
an 8-0 lead after one inning
and was up J6:o after two.
Flint had a run scoring double in that first while Taylor
and Flint each had doubles in
the second frame.
·
Porter knocked in two
lowed with the fifth of six
Blue Devils · hits in the
inning, and on . that same
play, a errant throw sailed
mto a dugout and allowed
King to come home. Miller
capped the scoring and
made it 9-o · with a sharp
RBI single to right.
· King's walk-off single in
the fifth finally brought the
game to an end.
Gallia Academy scored in
every inning except the second.
Saunders and Haislop had
run-scoring shtgles as the
Blue Devils put together a
.solid stan in the first. frame
and built· a 2-0 advantage.
Athens had one of only
four ba:se runners on the day
in the third inning, when the
Bulldogs nearly tied it.
After Cline singled with
two away, Jake Anderson

(Independent), and No. 3 seed
Tiffin will battle No. 6 seed
Geneva.
The NAJA Region IX .
Tournament is a double elimination tournament with the
winner advancing the NAIA
National Tournament in
Decatur, AL, May 19-24. Rio
won the tournament in 2004
and finished 7th in its only
national tournament appearance.
more runs as pan · of a fourrun fourth inning for the
Silver and Black.
The winner of Friday's
sectional title game advances
to district pla;Y at the
University . of R10 Grande,
tOJ?·Seeded
where
Ponsrnouth West 1,\/tll likely
be waiting.
smashed ihe ball to deep left field, where Caudill robbed ·
him of a homer.
·
In what was surely the
play ·of the night, Caudill
sprinted toward the fence
and lunged into the air and
snagged the ball just before
it cleared the fence.
••
Haislo,p scored in the third
inning to give the Devils a
3-0 edge thanks to one of
five Athens errors ·on the
day. After · singling his wa)l
aboard, Haislop advanced
on a wild pitch and passed :
ball before coming ·home on
a fielding error.
.:
GALUA ACADEMY 10, ATHEN8"0 · •

The Holzer Cardiovascular Institute welcomes ·
Howard Kander, MD, FACC

Interventional Cardiology

proce- ·

0

.

· Barth, Wynn, Hooper,
'Oliver and Proctor all had
:two .hits to pace Warren.
:Spence and Wagner prpvid'ed the other safeties.
; Wynn struck out four and

already goes to police depanment expenses. Several limes
this year, Baker has said the
general fund will run out of
money before year's end if
expenses are not cunailed, and
has indicated that cuts or layoffs could be necessary.
"The general fund cannot
afford that," Baker said. "In
September or October we' ll
have to make decisions in
other areas."
Council President Stefhen
Houchins assured counci the
mone~ could be found for the
raises, and said the need for
police suppon is even stronger
now that the streetlights are to
be turned off next month.
"We can come up with the
money," Houchins said. "The
lights are going out and we

need a police force . We have to
show some good faith to the
public."
At the meeting's end, Moore
said he is concerned about
"overspending in the general
fund," and suggested that
council initiate discussions
about combining the police
forces of Middlepon and
Pomeroy, or consider a police
protection levy tn help offset
the costs of operatmg the
department.
· "We can't bankrupt our general fund, and that's what's
happening," Moore said.
Council also approved a pay
increase of $1.83 per hoQr, to
$11 per hour, for full-time
water depanment clerk Linda ·

Pleese see Relsu, AS

HOLZEil

CA8DlOVASCUWl
l STIWT£

To schedule an appointment, please call

740.446.5002·

No solution in
sight for dark
Middleport streets .

VeazY

\
5 Inning•
~
a single, . then an error
Attoens
000 00 o 2 5 ·· ·
allowed Banh to reach secGallipolis 201 61 10 12 0
ond. Banh stole third and
Mitch Crabtree, Taylor Cowie (4). Wet .
Dingess and Chris Carplnefll. Shaphei\ •
later scored on a passed ball
Robinson and Luke · Halalop. W
·
for a 6-0 lead after four
Robinson. L - Crabtree. ·
innings of play.
Bryan DeLong had the • r-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~------~
Maroon and Gold's only ·
safety in the top of the fifth,
. but Wynn retired the next .
three batters to wrap up the
victory.
Ethan
Proctor
and
· Bonnette were both hit by
pitches with one out in the
fifth, then Welch was walked
to load the bases with two
away.
'
'
Wynn helped his · own
·cause with a single, plating
Dr. Kander is seeing patients at the Holzer CardiovaScu1ar Institute in
Proctor for a 7-0 lead.
Gallipolis and Jackson, Ohio. Dr. Kander is Board Certified in Internal
Daniel Wagner doubled in
the next at-bat, scoring both
Medicine and has performed thousands of ~oplasty and stenting
Bonnette and Welch for a 9dines, as well as cardiac catheterizations.
' ·
0 advantage.
Hooper hit the next offering · from VanMeter just
under tile scoreboard in nght
field for a three-run shot,
:Concluding the contest at 12-

·o.

ter and those of Anthony King
The $1.50 per-hour pay raise
and Brandy Tobin into the will apply to all police
council minutes. Smith also emp!oyees, and will bring the
read a statement from the three stanmg wage for patrolmen to
police officers which was first $9.28 per
hour.
Only
printed in The Daily .Sentinel Couqcilman Ferman Moore
last week.
voted against the raises, which
In that statement, the three will be paid through the generofficers expressed their frus- al fund. Council Member
tration with management of Sandra Brown abstained from
the depanment, in panicular the vote ..
council's handling of recent
"The general fund is going
sexual harassment allegations broke, and we' re basing this
against Jeffery Miller, another decision on an ·extra $100,000
police officer on the force. we have this year that we
Miller was reinstated to his won't have next year," Moore
position late last month after a said, referring to an inheritwo-week paid suspension. At tance tax payment the village
a special council meeting last received this year.
·
week, internal charges of
Fiscal Officer Susan Baker
insubordination against Mil)er • said the raises could not be
were dismissed, and the three supported from the general
officers resigned.
fund, 75 percent of which

St.Joo . 000 0 0 017
1
Wahama 432 . 01 10 6 0
Voazy, Underwood (5) and StaffOrd.
Miller, A,ogers (4) and Barebo. W(2-2) L - Miller.

.

WP - Goins. LP - Cullen.

The Meigs infield ·gathers with MHS cpach Jeremy Grimm,
right, during the fourth inning of Monday's 12-0 Division II sectional loss against Warren at Vincen\ .

feet fifth frame. The two
pitchers combined to face
just 16 batters which is one
batter over the minimum.

Redwomen draw No.4 seed at .Region To~rnament ·

Terra Poner 'went 3-for-4
with two doubles and three
runs batted in to pace the
winners. Holly Taylor also

to stan the inning, then
Garrett ·Proctor delivered a
two-RBI double to right for a
3-0 lead. Alex Barth followed
two batters later with a· tworun shot to right for a five-run

1\1\1\.omd.oih"·'llind."''"

111. :!OOh

51nnlnga

ter in the extraordinary outing. Garrett Underwood finished out the contest for the
White Falcons with a per-

fromPageBl

p

Bv

BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

MIDDLEPORT
Middlepon ,Village Council
approved $1.50 per-hour pay
raises for all police depanment
employees and hired · two
patrolmen and three dispatchers at Monda;Y evening's retlar meeting, JUst minutes a r
receiving resignations from
· three long-time officer~.
Council also approved pay
raises.for two.employees in the
village water office Monday
night and tabled a request from .
the income tax administrator
for a pay increase. Randy Smith, one of three
who resigned their posts with
the police department last
week, read his resignation let-

WAHAMA 10, ST. JOE'S 0

Raiders ·

l' l' i1U
from Page 81

\\I ll'l Sll \\. :\1\\

Middleport council.approves raises for police, water employees

• Piston power too much
for Cavaliers. See Page 81

RIO GRANDE The
University of Rio Grande
Redwomen softball team is
the No. 4 seed at the NAIA
Region IX Tournament beginning on Wednesday.
Rio will face No. 5 seed
Shawnee State at 10 a.m. in
qeveland
at
Ursuline
College.
Notre Dame

''IT..,.IJO

ol. :;;; . C\o . 11'1H

SPORTS

ry.

Adding to the problems for
the Red and Black was a lack
of hitting on a normally bathappy · squad, as Point
Pleasant could pnly. manage
.five hits while stranding 12
runners on base.
The Big Blacks left the

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

•

O:anuARIFS

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Page AS
·• Char1es Blake"

INSIDE
• ou to celebrate
International Week.
See Page A2
.• Patrol decals rern.ir,~ .ii
dri~lf&gt;'J)~ ·~lety

bellS. , ~)'!9 A2

---·-

----·----

·-

.

t

-··-- ... -·- ,__

Ple•se see SbHts. AS

• Scholarship awarded to
Southam student
See Page A3

Return of dental
clinic, Appalachian
celebration top
Chamber agenda
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYOAILVSENTINEL.COM

Beth Ser&amp;entjphoto

This week Pomeroy Village Council voted to pay for asbestos removal at the old Pomeroy Junior High School. No decision to
demolish the buUding has been
. .made at this time.

· -(OUNCR VOTES TO REMOVE ASBESTOS
FROM POMEROY JUNIOR HIGH
·• International program
· offered at OU.
SeePage AS
.• Governor's curriculum
p~n faces hurdles.
SeePage A&amp;

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Although
the ultimate fate of the old
Pomeroy Junior High Schoql
remains uncenain · Pomeroy
· Village Council voted this
wee:C to finance removal of
the asbestos from the build-

WEATIIER

ing.
.
According to a repon done
by SRW Environmental
Services of Milford, this
removal process should not
exceed $2,500.
.
SRW
Environmental
Services only tests for
asbestos, it does not perform
asbestos removal.

The repon states asbestos
was found in the old school in
light heat shields in the stage
shower room, in transite pipe
in Room I 0 I, in aircell paper
pipe insulation in the basement I boiler room and tran- ·
site pipe in the basement/
boiler room.
Pomeroy Mayor John

•

Musser said he would check
with
multiple
asbestos
removal outfits to begin the
abatement process.
SRW d1d the testing for
$1750.
In addition to removing the
asbestos, the repon also states
·
Pleue SH Asbe.tos, AS

POMEROY -The return
of the Meigs Dental Clinic
and the Appalachian Heritage .
Celebration topped the. local
agenda at yesterday's Meigs
County
Chamber
of
Commerce's business-minded luncheon, while a visit
from Monty Lobb of the
.Ohio Secretary of State's
Office focused on the universal issue of character build. ing.
Dawn Tatum, business .
manager of the Meigs Dental
Clihic announced that after
five· months the clinic would
reopen on. May 23 in the

Pleese see Clink. AS

Pomeroy Merchants plan EHS ban~ takes first place, sup~rior
historical and holiday tours
rating at Tennessee festival
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
' HOEFLICH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Two tours,
one of historic Pomeroy nellt
Saturday, the other of churches during the holiday season.
were planned at Tuesday's
Dtotallt on Pace A8
meeting of the Pomeroy
Merchants Association.
·
Michael Gerlach will again
be conducting the walking
historic tour down Main
Street
and up Second. His
2 SI!CI10NS - 12 PAGI!S
narrative will take panicipants
Calendars
A3 from the early days of settlement, to the industrial devel82-4 opment of the boom years,
Classifieds
and the, construction era of
Comic~
downtown buildings when
coal was king, to the beginDear Abby
A3 , ning of the decline when the
railroads came in and detractEditorials
A4 ed from river transponation.
Those taking the tour are to
Obituaries
As meet at tile comer of Lynn and
St. (Trinity Church
BSection Second
Sports
comer) at 10 a.m. to go on the
hour-long tour. Between 9:30
A6 and
Weather
10 a.m. refreshments \yfll
be served in Trinity Church

INDEX

Bs

@ 2006 Ohio Valley PubUohllll! Co.

I

MIDDLEPORT
Middlepon Village ·Council
will try again in November to
pass a levy for streetl_ights,
but m the meantime residents
should get used to dark
streets.
At Monday evening's regular meeting, council met with
residents concerned about
· .last week's defeat -by one
vote - of a one;plill levy for
street light expenses. Brian

basement dining room. There
is no charge for the tour
ljlthough a donation box wiil
be available. Any funds contributed will go into the downtown beautification project.
Merchants are bemg asked
to display a history of their
businesses in shop windows,
along with antiques of interest, for viewing by those on
the tour.
New this year will be a holiday church tour to take place
on Dec. 10. Sandy Mills is
chairman of the tour with
invitations to r·articipate to be
extended to al seven churches
in Pomaroy. Mills shared with
the group information on a
church tour 'she had attended
in Lancaster last year.
The gene,,d plan is for the
church tour to be a walking
event with 15 or 20 minutes
being spent at each church. In
that time 'the churches will be
asked to give a short ·history
and musical or other program,

Piene sH Toun, AS

'

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
39,-member Eastern High
School Concert Band brought
home a first-place trophy and a ,
"superior" rating from the
Smoky Mountain Music
Festival in Gatlinburg, Tenn.
last week.
The band is under the direction of Cris Kuhn. The annual
event includes instrumental and
choral groups from the U.S. and
Canada, who are judged on tone,
balance, technique. intonation, ·
interpretation and repenoire. Dr.
Gary Sousa, Director of Bands
ill the University of Tennessee,
Dr. Johnnie Vinson, Director of
Bands at Auburn University,
and Bryce Taylor, a music consultant with the schools of Ali€e,
Submtttedplloe.
Texas, were judges for the event.
·Eastern High School senior band members David Maxson,
The Eastem band performed
Branden Bartee, Taylor Russell and Autumn Hauber are pic"Waves of the Revolution" by
tured with their first-place trophy, awarded the band at the
Pleese see EHS bend. AS Smoky Mountain Music Festival in Gatlinburg, Tenn. last week.

-.

�•

REGIONAL

:The Daily Sentinel
'

Patrol decals
reminds drivers to buckle safety belts·
.

GALLIPOLIS
In an
effort to remind commercial
vehicle drivers to buckle
their safety belts, decals are
being offered by the Ohio
State Highway Patrol.
As part of a federally funded safety belt awareness initiative focused on commer"cial vehicle drivers, the decal
·..Two seconds ... that's the
amount of time it takes to
protect yourself .. . please,
fasten your safety belt" will
be displayed on the back of
commercial vehicles travel-

PageA2

Cookies donate.d to
Holzer Hospice

only Sl.99

675-1112 .
Point Pleasant, WV

173-5536

.Community Calendar
.Public meetings

Charlene Hoeftlch/photo

Winners In the Easter coloring contest, sponsored by The Daily Sentinel and several area mer:
chants, in their respective age categories were from the left, 6 to 8, Lauryn Flinner, first, Tyler
fields, second, and Kelsie Powell; and 9 to 12, Brittany Durst, third, Deanna Sayre, first, and
Cat Maynard, second . . Checks for $15 for first, $10 for second, and $5 for third were presented to the winners.
·
·

PORTLAND - Portland
Community center, 6:30p.m.
at the Center.

TUesday, May 9
RUTLAND Rutland
Village Council, regular
Wednesday, May 10
meeting, 6:30 p.m ., council
POMEROY- Middleport
·
. Literary Club, 2 p.m. at the
chambers.
Pomeroy Library. Group discussion led by Jeanne Bowen
of "All He Ever Wanted" by
Anita Steve. Program committee, ·hostesses. '
POMEROY
Meigs
Thesday, May 9
County
Board
of
Health,
reguHARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Chapter 255., lar meeting, 5 p.m., . Meigs
Order of Eastern Star, annual County Health Department
inspection, 7:30 p.m., at the conference room.
hall. Refreshments.
Thursday, May l.l
POMEROY
-. Meigs
SYRACUSE
- Wildwood
County
Chamber
of
Commerce Business-Minded · Garden Club, 6:30p.m. at the
Luncheon, noon, Wild Horse home of Joy Bentley. Peggy
Cafe, featured speaker Monty Moore to present program,
to
Attract
Lobb of Ohio Secretary of "Flowers
State's Office, RSVP 992- Hummingbirds."
CHESTER- Shade River
5005.
'
CHESTER Chester Lodge 453 will meet at 7:30
Council 323, Daughters of p.m. at the Mawnic Temple.
America, f will observe 72nd Refreshments.
. POMEROY - Alpha Iota
years of lodge at the Masonic
Lodge hall with a 6 p.m. sup- · Masters, I }:30 at St. Paul
per and prograrnfollowed by a Lutheran Church. Hostesses,
7:30 p.m. lodge meeting. Vera Crow and Janet Brown.
TUPPERS PLAINS Members who cannot ·attend
are asked to call JoAnn VFW 9053 will meet at 7:30
Ritchie, 992-7362 by Sunday. p.m. at the hall . A meal will be

Clubs and
organizations

'

served adt 6:30p.m.
Friday May 12
MIDDLEPORT The
Widows Fellowship will meet
at noon at Bennegens
Restaurant in Point Pleasant.
Bring your coupon.
RACINE
Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
DAR, I p.m. at the Racine
Library. Recognition of dedicated members. · Southern
Band member will have program ~

Church events
Friday, May 12
LONG BOTTOM - A
hymn sing will be held at the
Faith Full Gospel Church at 7
p.m. Jim Blair and the
Southern Gospel Aires will be
tfte singers.

Birthdays
Thursday, May 11
POMEROY - Virginia
Hoyt will observe her 90th
birthday on May ·1I. Cards
may be sent to her at I 02
Union Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio,
45769.
.
.

. DEAR ABBY: Last year, on
April 30, my 16-year-old son
was hit by a car and killed. He
was walking with friends in the
min on a dark road at night. The
driver of the car says he never
saw my son, although he was
wearing a dark sweatshirt with
white designs on it, black pants
and a white hat. I will · never
know exactly what was going
on in my son's head, walking in
the rain at night. And I will
. have to live with the pain of losing him for the rest of my life.
, I would like to urge other parents out there that whenever
your sons or daughters leave
the house - no matter what
time of day or night it is make sure they have some sort
of bright clothing on or with
them . You never know when
they might be walking in the
dark.
Also, no matter what is going
on in your life, or theirs, please
make sure that you always tell
them you love them. Because in
just a snap of a finger, your
child could be gone. - SAD
IN CLINTON, MASS.
DEAR SAD: Please accept
my deepest sympathy for the
tragic Joss of your son. Your
message is worth repeating, and
it applies to adults as well as
young people. Pedestrians as
well as bicycle riders should
!'lake absolutely certain they
can be seen by drivers by wearit\g reflective clothing itt night.
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FrldiJ &amp;11111111 IIIMI

Miss Girl Scout 2005 Brooke Dean, and Lori Dean , troop
leader of Brownie Troop #362 and Junior and Cadet Troop
#1439, donate 9fl boxes of Girl Scout cookies to Anita Moore,
volunteer coordinator for Holzer HoSpice. The cookies were
. distributed to fam'lly members and patients of Holzer Hospice
as a special treat. "This is the third year these troop mem·
:pers have donated to Hospice and we a·re so thankful to each
:and every member," said Moore. For information about ser.vlces provided by Holzer Hospice, call (740) ll46-5074 or toll
free .at 1-800-500-4850.

DEAR ANGRY: Your feelings arc valid. You were not
consulted because your lady
friend already knew what your
feelings would be. Avoiding a
discussion (notice I did not say
Dear
"confrontation")
with he~ about
Abby
this is not the way to go. 1i1is
matter needs to be talked about
to your satisfaction, and if the
tattoo dampens your ardor, it
should be removed before the
one. An ounce of prevention ... wedding.
DEAR ABBY: l have been in
DEAR .ABBY: Last month,
a serious relationship for 13
months. The woman 1 am with my sister, "Diane," was going
has a daughte~ who is · 15 on a trip to Europe. At the la~t
months old. I am the only father moment, .she asked me if she
tigure that has ever been in her could take my digital camera
life. Her biological father, with her. I told her no, I needed
"Ethan," saw her only twice. I the camem for my .work and
have been supporting my lady . didn't want to take a chance on
and her child for a while.
her losing it. The camera was a
· Last January, Ethan died, and Chrisunas gili. and I have had it
my lady took it hard. Last only a few months,
Saturday, she got his name tatWhen Diane returned from
tooed on her back without con- her trip, she decided not to talk
suiting me.. She dido'( tell me to me. It has been more than
until after it was done, and it two weeks now. 1 told her she
upset me. We arc supposed to should talk, but she doesn't
be married soon.
·want to. What can I do? Every ·time we make love, DANlELLE IN P"SSAIC N J
that tattoo rtmtinds me of Ethan.
· "
· ··
I feel she should have asked me
DEAR DANIELLE: Enjoy
what 1 thought about the idea the silence while you can. Once
ftrst. She expects me to consult she starts talking again, you'll
her about things that 1 do before never hear the end of i"t.
I do them. Am 1 wrong for
Dear Abby is written by
expecting the same respect ·Abigail Va11 Buren, also
from her a~ I give her? Should I known as Jeanne Phillips, and
tell her how I feel , ,or should I was founded by her mother,
avoid having a confrontation Pauline Phillips. mite Dear
with her and try to forget about Abby at www.DearAbby.com
it? - ANGRY AND CON- or P.O. Box 69440, Los
FUSED IN PHOENIX
Angeles, CA 90()69.

'
'
' COLUMBUS - · Serena
Wilson, a historiim, quilter,
griot, lind a world tmveler was
speaker at the recent annual
Victorian Ita and meeting of
the Ohio Cameo Society.
She is retired from the
Columbus Board of Education
RACINE- Linda Eddy is
1888, comprising nearly I .5
as a consultant-teacher supervia
'
recipient
of
·
a
$I
,000
million members throughout
sor with the Department of
Moose
International
,
R.
the
U.S., Canada, Great
Special Education.
Anna
Robert
Dale
Scholarship
for
and Bermuda.
Britain
Cleland and Linda Cleland
2006.
She
will
be
graduating
The Moo se organization
Bohner represented Return
from·
Southern
High
School.
founded
and continues t&lt;i
Jonathan Meigs Chapter of
R.
Robert
Dale
support
Mooseheart
Child
Meigs County at the Society's
Scholarship winners mit st
City &amp; School, a I ,000-acre
!lleeting.
,
meet
eligibility
criteria
by
community and school for
The Ohio Cameo Society of
.
being
the
chi.ld
of
or
under
chiidren and teens in need,
the DAR was organized in
· legal guardianship of a
located 40 miles west of
1994 to promote 4nderstanding
Submitted photo
Chicago; and Moosehaven
and fellowship between gener- Serena Wilson, third from left, was speaker at the Ohio Cameo Moose organization member
retirement community, a 65ations and to encoumge the organization of the Daughters of the American Revolution. She in good standing, and carry
passage of genealogical in for- is pictured with two Return Jonathan Meigs members, Anna at least a 2.5 out of 4.0 accuacre campus · for qualified
retired members and their
mation, family histories and Cleland, left, and her daughter, Linda. Bohner, right, and.Valerie mulated grade point average:
patriotism to subsequent generSince 1986 the Moose fraspouses, located in Orange .
ations. The Society is especial- Merideth Cameo president.
ternity has awarded I, 144
Park, Fla. Last year the
Linda Eddy
scholarships
in
excess
of
Moose
organization was
ly
desig~ed
to honor Civil War em. Many quilters will always be howdy, howdy
tpother/daughter/grandaughters will recognize patterns in the and never good-bye. Thank $1. I million to qualifying
Moose International , hea(l- responsible for more than
students associated with quartered at Mooseheart, $93 million worth of com ~
who hold DAR membership following McDaniel's Quilt God you be free."
during the same time period. Code:
Serena and her husband, Dr. Moose Lodges across the Ill , is a fralernal and service munity service throughout
Membership to date shows
''The Monkey Wrench turns Wilson, presented a display of country.
organization founded in North America. .
•
approximately 650 members the Wagon Wheel North, up the guilts .made by Serena in some
across Ohio, the United States road toward Canada. Follow of the quilt patterns listed
,and abroad.
.
the Drunkard's Path, Watch and above. Solllll patterns can be
· Wilson spoke about the
1 k ~ th A · G
Faffow-McDaniel's Quilt Code pmy, 00 · or e ymg eese found in East and West Africa
m the Day and the North Star at as well
in the Pyramids.
Installed
Patterns Which were stitched in night. Follow the Bear Paw
Following Serena's . lecture
White VInyl Double Hung
quilts to help -slaves · get to trail to the Cross Roads. regarding the Quilt Code and
Canada. This Code has been Shoofly says dress up, put on the Underground Railroad,
Better Window, Better Price- Since 1993 "
handed down for five genem- · cotton or satin Bow Ties, Sue Cameo Members presented
tions in Serena's family. Quilts Bonnets or Bandanas. Soon, their own quilts, some antique,
Quality Window Systems, Inc.
were hung .on porches and you will cross over river to share wt~ the membership
1;.aoo-291-ssoo
clothes lines to let slaves who Jordan. Look for the Tumbling present. For table favors, memwww .qualltywindowsystems.com
were heading for Canada know Blocks. Nearby you will see a bers received a quilt block,
that it was a safe house where Cathedral (Church) with the made and quilted by Cameo
740-992-4119
wv #023477
they could get help on their Dresden Plate window. Now member, Emily Dailey, also a
journey. Each quilt pattern sent go in, you can sing and shout, member of The French Colony
slaves a certain message. Thank God, You Be Free. You DAR Chapter, Gallipolis.
Serena· Wilson contributed to can get married, exchange
the Publication "Hidden in rings, no more hish chains
. The Meigs Cooperative Parish Scholarship Committee wishes to
Plain View" by Jacqueline around your feet. You can build
expFess thanks to everyone who assisted and/or donated to th e
Tobin, regarding the qmlt pat- a log cabin, the women can dig
Spaghetti Dinner served at the Mulberry Community Cenler on
terns that aided slaves on their and plant a nine patch garden.
Friday. April 21 sl to provide scholarship monies for our children .
journey to Canada through When you get hot, you can fan.
A special. thank you to the following businesses: Powell s Food Fair,
Northern United States.
The men can go fishing in a
Hometown Market, Bob Evans Restaurant , Wal Mart and Fast Phil's
Many of the quilt patterns sail boat, and the children can
Exxon.
will be recognized by many play with pinwheels. When
Their substantial donations eliminated the r.:osts for the dinner and
W;~tches
allowed lhe Cooperative to raise $1 ,258.00.
and quilters are currently using somebody d1es, weave a sweet
Along With contributions from participating churches, we will be '
these same patterns as in the ~as&gt; basket, put wild flowers
30% Off
providing six (6) five-hundred dollar scholarships this year.
to it and put it on the grave.
Scholarship
Committee
Members:
You and your children can
Extra SPecial
Kathryn Hart, Jim Huff. Father Walter Heinz
"Dever be sold away again, it
.

F•dltiDI

SUbmitted photo

VVednesday,~ayto,2oo6

Sright or reflective clothes let walkers be seen at night

DAR Cameo Society hold Victorian tea

Will

,

. PageA3

BYTHE .BEND

'

OU to celebrate International Week
ATHENS
·Ohio Festival with chinese food , University. During the
University marks 30 years games and boat races, week, we can li sten to the
of celebrating the world 12:30 p.m. to 6 p.m., Dow wisdom of international
with
. thi s
year's Lake-Strouds
Run. scholars, sing and dance
International Week, May Admission $2. The Color and enjoy the colors, foods,
12-21.
Orange,
a
Cultural and artifacts of the world ."
· Gifford Doxsee, professor Explosion Through · Hip
For more information and
emeritus of history, will Hop, 8 p.m. , Templeton- a complete schedule of
deliver the keynote address Blackburn
Memorial events
·
visit
entitled "Thirty Years of Auditorium. Free Concert www.ohio.edu/isfs/intweek/
Internatio nalism at Ohio sponsored by International intweek.html or contact
Universi ty" on Monday, Student Union.
International Student and
· May 15, at 7:30p.m. in the
Tuesda"y, . May
16: Faculty
Services,
Walter Hall rotunda.
Hiroshima and Nagasaki: A 740.593.4330.
Doxsee , who joined · the Campaign for Peace Taeko
facu lty of Ohio University Tanaka, Peace Activist,
in 1958, is a former direc- 6:30 p.m., Bentley · Hall,
tor of Ohio University 's . Room 233.
African Studies program.
Latin Dance Workshop 9,
. The keynote address is free . I 0:30 p.m., Casu Cantina.
. and open to the public and
Wednesday, May 17: A
will be followed by · a Taste of Study Abroad, 5-7
reception.
p.m., Gordy Hall. Peace
The week will begin at 8 Corps Information Session ,
p.m. Friday with · the con- 6:30-8 p.m.; Alden Library
cert "Heritage: Celebrating Friends of the Library
African Culture Through Room.
mproving
the
the Arts" in Templeton Quality of Life of AIDS
. Blackburn
Memorial Orphans
and
their
Auditorium. Tickets are Caregivers
Prisca
$12 for general admi ssion Nemap.are,
Founder,
·and $8 for students and are Zienzele Foundatron
7
available in the Templeton p.m., Walter Hall, Room
Blackburn
Memorial 235.
Auditorium Box Office :
Friday,
May . 20:
Images
from
the International Student Union
. International
Photo · Talent Show. Enjoy talent
Contest, sponsored by the and performances from
Office
of
Education around the world 7:30
Monday • FREE Drinks
Abroad, will be · on display p.m., Mitchell Auditorium,
Tuesde~
--$100 off any Dinner
in
Baker
University Seigfred Hall. International
Wednesday·
Halt Rack Dinner
Center's Alumni Lounge on Dance Party Casa Cantina,
$7.99 · 10 Wongs $3.00
Monday, May 15 through 10 · p.m.-2 a.m. Over 21Ibltr.J.IIay · Halt Chid&lt;en Dinner
Tuesday, May 16. The $3/Under-$5
$599
Student
The week concludes with
. International
f'r.lllay · PlaHars $5.99
.Union, with support from the annual International
Sa.llltd.IY · Chicken &amp; Rib Donner
the
Student Activities Street Fair on Court Street
S9.50
. Sundwy · Pork Chop Donner
Council, will present a free from II a.m. to 5 p.m ..
1 pc . S5.99 2 pc. 57.99 ·
concert on Saturday, May ~aturday, May 21. Tlie fair
tlftt;..MJ.n..:ili..J.1 .1tft-.J •M lhlli•.Um.· .1 Pf!!
13 at 8 p.m. in Templeton- provides an opportunity for
rJOB
0114563r
Blackburn
Memorial the community to enjoy the
Auditorium. : The public is music, food and art of
invited to enjoy a "cultural many international cultures.
"International Week and
explosion through hip hop"
with The Color Orange fea, the Street Fair offer a
turing Mohamed Bilal and unique opportunity for the ·
Josh "BOAC" Goldstein. · university, the city of
Combining hip hop theatre Athens, and our students
and sheer mayhem, thi s and scholars from countries
performance
' enlivens throughout the world ·to
Come in for our
cross-cultural communica- gather together to celebrate
"Daily Lunch
tion.
our lives and our cultures,"
Specialsw
Other International Week said Alan Boyd, director of
·events include:
~
International Student and
I 0:3.0 am - 2:00 pm
Saturday: Dragon Boat Facult~ Services at Ohio
5 great sandwiches
to choose from ...

The Daily Sentinel

VVednesdax.~ayto,2oo6

Easter coloring contest

ing on Ohio roadways.
could save their life."
· Last month as part of the
According to the Federal
Carrier
Safety
same initiative, the Patrol Motor
placed similar signs at 10 Administration (FMCSA),
truck terminals across the nationally, 48 percent of
state.
truck drivers wear safety
"In Ohio, commercial truck · belts, compared with 79 perdrivers are the least likely to cent of passenger vehicle dribuckle up when compared to vers who buckle up.
drivers of other vehicles,"
Any commercial vehicle
Major Robert Brooks, 10001- company interested in r'eceivmander of the Pa.trol's Office ing the s.afety belt decals
and may contact Lt. Dick Grau of
of
Licensing
Commercial Standard~. said .. the Patrol 's Gallipolis Post at
"Truck drivers who ·buckle (740) 446-2433. There is no
up are making a choice that cost for the decals.

I

, , www.toodfairmk.com

WHY PAY MORE??
EVERY DAY
LOW PRICES!

lAwn
Samantha Cole

·Meigs student
receives scholarship
.

;

RIO GRANDE - Samantha
Cole, a senior at Meigs Higb
School, has been awarded the
Peoples Banking and Trust
Company of Middleport
Scholarship to the Universi~y
of Rio Grande and RIO
Grande Community College .
The scholarship was established in 1978 and is granted
to a graduating senior from
Meigs High School. ,
Samantha is the daughter
of David and Tamm.i Cole.
She plans on studying education at Rio Grande.

'Stoc·k
1/2
Price
.'

·told
Po·P
20 oz.
bottle.
Onlsr ttc

'

'I

Russell
Stover
CandY
1 Pound
Res. 1.99
OnlY 5.29
Greetine
Cards
ComPJete
Stock
1/2 Price

�PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily ~entinel
· 111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

· .,

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
·Jim Freeland
Publisher
•

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesd;~y, May I0, the I 30th day of 2006. There
are 235 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: ·
On May 10, 1869, a golden spike was driven at Promontory,
Utah, marking the completion of the first transcontinental railroad in the United States.
On this date:
In 1774, Louis XVI ascended the throne of France.
In 1775, Ethan Allen and his Green Mountain Boys captured the British-held fortress at Ticonderoga, N.Y.
· In 1865, Union forces captured Confederate President
Jefferson Davis"in Irwinville, Ga.
·
In 1924, J. Edgar Hoover was given the )ob of FBI director.
In 1933, the Nazis staged massive pubhc book burnings in
Germany.
In 1940, British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain
resigned, and Winston·Churchill formed a new government
In 1968, preliminary Vietnam peace talks began in Paris.
In 1978, Britain's Princess Margaret and the Earl of
Snowdon announced they were divorcing after I 8 years of
marriage . ·
In 1994, the state of Illinois executed serial killer John
Wayne Gacy for the murders of 33 young men and boys.
·
In 1994, Nelson Mandel a took the oath of office to become
.
South Africa's lirst black president.
Five years ago: The U.S. House of Representatives voted to
withhold some back U.N. dues until the United States was
reinstated on the U.N. Commission on Human Rights. The
Justice Department handed over thousands of documents it
said should have been provided to Oklahoma City bomber
Timothy McVeigh's attorneys - because of the blunder,
McVeigh's execution, set for May 16, was.postponed. Boeing
chose Chicago as the site for its new headquarters, replacing
Seattle. The World Wrestling Federation announce~ it would
fold the upstart XFL football league. ' ·
·
.
One year ago: A federal bankruptcy judge approved United
Airlines' plan to terminate its employees' pension plans.
Cheered by tens of thousands in the former Soviet republic of
Georgia, · President Bush urged the spread of democracy
across the former communist world and beyond. Germany
dedicated its new national Holocaust memoriaL Gunmen kidnapped the governor oflraq's Anbar province; the governor
(Raja Nawaf Farhan al-Mahalawi) was later killed.
Today's Birthdays: Sportscaster Pat Summerall is 76.
Author Barbara Taylor . Bradford is 73 . . Rhythm-and-bl~es
singer Henry FambrQugh (The Spinners) is 68. TV and radio
personality Gary Owens is 67. Actor David Clennon is 63 ..
Writer-producer-director Jim Abrahams is 62. Singer
Donovan is 60. Singer Dave Mason is 60. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Ron Banks (The Dramatics) is 55. Rock singer Bono
(U2) is 46. Playwright Suzan-Lori Parks is 43. Model Linda
Evangelista is 41. Rock musician Krist Novoselic (Nirvana,
Eyes Adrift) is 4 I. Rapper Young MC 'is 39. Actor Erik
Palladino is 38. Rock musician Jesse Vest is 29. A1ctor Kenan
Thompson is 28. Rhythm-and-blues singer Jason Dalyrimple
(Soul For Real) is 26. Singer Ashley Poole (Dream) is 21.
Thought for Today: "Creative minds always have been
known to survive any kind of bad training." -Anna Freud,
Austrian-born psychoanalyst (1895-1982).

Wednesday, May to,

Fire Congress! That's
pretty tempting. isn't it?
It's the sort of thing that
could bring the country ·
together.
In a recent piece called
Kath.Yn
"A Congress Gone to Pot"
Lopez
my
colleagues
Kate
0 ' Beirne and ~ich Lowry
take aim at our congressional
friends:
" Congressional Republican majority, It 's
Republican governance no wonder Congress is
has gone through phases polling dreadfully, garnerthat can be roughly ing a recent 22 percent
described as Revolution approval rating. Some of
(1994-1996), it, truth be told, is not necConsolidation
{1996- essarily . their fault. Iraq
2002), and Deterioration makes people nervous (2002-present). Thf! deteri- the~e are some pretty
oration· has steadily gotten . awful images on television
worse . The · Republican and reasons to worry about
majority has lately be~n its future . The president
notable for its bungling, isn't up for re-election, so
fecklessness , self-.serving who can pay the price for
defensiveness and hysteria Americans' frustrations
- sometimes all at once. this year on Iraq or anyThe congressional majori- thing else? Congres s. ,
But some of it is comty
has
repudiated
Republican governance pletely
fair.
Some.
before voters even have Republicans in Congress
the chance to do the same have seemingly surren· this November."
dered any sense of a conIf that's what we're say- . servative governing phiing at a conservative mag- losophy, supporting the
azine about the current taxation of windfall profits

on gas companies and/or
demonizing gas companies
for making money. And
the newfound tendency to
bend over backwards to
accommodate immigrant
lawbreakers is a flawed
strategy for vote-getting,
becau se, in the end, Dems ·
will always be more pro,amnesty thim Republicans
could ever muster.
LACK OF TRUST
One
Washington
Post/ABC poll found
re spondent s
trusting
Democrats more than
Republicans, ''to do a better job handling corruption ·
in · Washington" (52 per- .
ce.nt to 27 percent). And
yet, when you talk to
Republican s
in .
. Washington, you don't
hear them worried enough
about the state of their
party's leadership and
N.ovember
prospect s.
In stead, you get the message that what they ' re
really passionate about is
the message the other side
is just as bad or worse:
"look, that guy just plead
guilty to bribing a DEMOCRAT, see, they have a

The D~ily Sentinel
Reader ServiCes
Correction Polley

(UsPs 213-9&amp;0) ·
Ohio Valley Publishing Co. ·

.Our main cOncern In a.Ustories Is to be PubliShed every afternoon, Monday
through Friday,

111

Court

Street,

accurate. If you know of an error in a
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
slory, calllhe newsroom at (740) 992· paid at Pomeroy.
2156 .
Member: The Associated Press and the

Our main number Is
(740) 992-2156.
Department extensions are:

Ohio Newspaper Association.
Po•tmaater: Send address corrections
to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Stre~t .
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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News
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Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
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tnalde Melgo County
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52 Weeks ... : ..... . ..'127.11
Outside Melga County
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Obituaries

' culture of corruption,"'
too! But the look-at-him
deflection doesn't work
with teachers on the playground and it's no concrete plan to win over voters. If you're not A) being
responsible and B) able to .
make a solid case that
you've been responsible,
November is going to hurt:
And, right or wrong, some
of yo ur friends may not
shed too many tears, hoping, that if all else fails,
minoritizing you will be
the wake-up call you needed .
There 's still time before
November, but .not much ..
And if immigration ar\d ·
irresponsible spending on
top of general grandstanding are any indication,
"Speaker (Nancy) Pelosi"
may be something we'll
have to get used to. And
every time l have to say it,
I expect I'll blame · the
Republicans.
,
(Kathryn Lopez is the
editor of National Review
Online (www.nationalreview.com). She tan be contacted at klopez@ national- .
review. com.)

I WONDER

IF THE CIA

IS AWARE
OF THIS?

Local Briefs

COOLVILLE - Charles Blake, 77 , of Coolville died
Tuesday, May .9. 2006 at Arcadia Nursing Center, Coolville.
He was born March 28 , 1929 in Reedsville, son of the late
Elmer and Elva Founds Blake. He was a retired finish carpenter for Day Brothers Constn1ction, Columbus..
.
He is survived by two sons, Randy and Mary Blake and
Chuck and Shelley Blake; five daughters, Debbie and Bob
Estep, Becky and Danny Arnold, Vonda Blake, Peggy and
Kevm Belcher and Pennie Berendt; three brothers, Roger
Blake, Gary and Sharon Blake, Neil Blake; six sisters, Nola
Jean Collins,cDoris Stansbury, Roberta Pounds, Lorraine and
Paul Williams, Carma Johnson and Elaine and John Daniels;
a son-in-law, Gerald Landes; several grandchildren; several
great-grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded m death by hi s
wife, Irene Brawley Blake; a daughter, Sandy Landes;-and
two infant brothers.
.
Services will be held II a.m.. Friday, May 12, at WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home , Coolville, with Rev. George Horner
officiating. Burial will be in the Heiney Cemetery, Coolville\.
Friends may call at the funeral home Thursday, from 6 to 8,
p.m.
,

Tours
from PageA1
and sing a Christmas song
with the visitors. Participants
will be divided into groups,
one for each church represented, and walk from church
to church along a luminary
lighted pathway, or ride a
handicapped accessible van,
singing carols as they go.
The tour will begin at 4
p.m. Merchants set a price of
$5 for adults and $1 for chi!dren under 12 in ·the. hope of
making it a family affair. The
participants will be divided
mto as many groups as there
11re involvBd churches and be
led by a guide in period costurning. Other plans will be
announced as they are completed.
It was reported during the
meeting that the ornamental
bulbs etched with a design of
the 1928 Pomeroy -Mason
Bridge have arrived and are
now availab~e at several
downtown busine ss locations including the Farmers '

ODNR sets meeting to
discuss mine projects

\

Charles Blake

'

Bank.
The two new banners to be
purchased for the period
light bulbs were discussed .
Susan Clark Dingess reported that the one. featuring the
Meigs County Courthouse
on a green background has
been ordered. A second banner of floral design is still in
the process of selection with
Bobbie Karr to make the
deCision on the design and
background color.
John Musser, president,
expressed concern about the
decreasing funds being
brought . in from the ducky
derby held during the
Sternwheel Festival. It was
decided this year a newspaper coupon would be used to
help promote sales. Musser
also asked for volunteers to
serye on the festival committee.
It was reported that flowers have been planted in
plots between Main Street
and the .parking lot.
Appreciation was extended
to Bob's Market which
donated several flats of
flowers to the beautification
project·

Area ·Agency on Aging cancels
bidding conferences
MARIEITA - The Area Agency on Aging at Buckeye
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development District, 1400
Pike Street, Marietta, Ohio retracts its annouucement of May
3 regarding its hosting a Bidders Conferences for the solicitation of proposals to provide &gt;en'ices tel individuals 60
years of age and older within the Planning an(! Service Area
for the Area Agency on Aging PSA 8 (Athens, Hocking,
Meigs, · Monroe, Morgan, Noble, Perry and Washington
Counties). A notice will be · published in the future . to
announce the Bidders Conference for the solicitation of proposals for services and to identify the proposal due date, If
you have questions regarding thts retraction, please contact
Rick Hindman at 740-373-6400.

Correction
POMEROY. - Youth interested in the Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency Summer Youth program should
calL 992-6629 for information. The number was incorrectly
reported in Monday's edition.

EHS.band

during the award ceremonies
he1d in the Gatlinburg
Convention Center.
Band members and their
from PageA1
seven chaperones also enjoyed
an afternoon in Dollywood; folSean O'Laughlin, "Hymn to the lowed by dinner at the famous
Fallen" by John Williams, and Dixie Stampede. They also
"Castles and Dragons" by Todd enjoyed a guided tour of the
Stalter. The bane! received a rat- Smoky Mountail1 National Park
ing · of "superior" from the and partied at the Hard Rock
judges and were awarded the Cafe and the Comedy Barn
·
first place trophy in their class Theater.

Raises
from PageA1
Broderick, and an 86-cents
per:hour increase, to $7 per
hour, for part-time clerk
Norma Wilcox. Those raises
were approved at the recommendation
of
Village
Administrator
Bradford
Anderson, and will be divided
among the water, sewer .and
refuse accounts. The rmses
were approved unanimously.
Council hired Mary Kimes,
Randy
Carpenter
and

Cassandra Smith as police
department dispatchers and
John Kolchar and Chris
Pitchford as part-time patrolmen, and discu ssed hiring
two part-time employees to
fill the posts of daytime dispatcher and mayor' s court
clerk.
of.
Jerry
Strickland
Middleport was hired as a
street department laborer, at a
rate of pay of $6.50 per hour.
Anderson said he received
over 60 applications for the
position.
.
A request for a pay increase
from Carol Cantrell, income
tax administrator, was tabled.

ATHENS A public mine clean-ups during the
meeting to discuss proposed next year throughout the
abandoned mine projects in northeastern and southeastern
nine southeastern Ohio coun- Ohio coal mining region, A
ties will be held from 6 to 9 portion of that money is earp.m., Wednesday, May 17, at marked for 21 non-emerThe Ohio Department of gency projects in southeastNatural Resources (ODNR) ern Ohio.
district office, 360 E. State · ODNR proposes to swnd
Street, in Athens.
about $1.27 million on
ODNR Division of Mineral design and construction for
Management these projects, Also included
Resource s
employees will be available in the $4.56 million grant is
to discuss the environmental, $268,000 to improve streams
'public health and safety impacted by acid mine
issues associated with Ohio drainage and $ I. 8 million
mines that were abandoned to address emergency abanprior to Aug. 3; 1977, when · doned mine land issues in
lejli slation addre ssing the the coal region.
.
mmes went into effect.
Non-emergency projects
The policie s and proce- proposed for the southeastern
dures of Ohio's Abandoned Ohio mining district include:
Mine Land tAML) Program
• Eliminating one dangerwill be discussed, as well as . ou s water impoundment
the proposed AML projects
• Stabilizing four minefor Athens, Belmont, Gallia, related landslides
Hocking, Meigs, Monroe,
• Backfilling several subsiMuskingum, Perry and deuce features
Vinton counties.
·• Sealing 29 mine entries
Meeting attendees . are · • Installing or upgrading
encouraged to present details nine mine drainage diversion
of their own . abandoned systems
mines in these counties as
• Removing a dangerous
well as Guernsey, Jackson, mine-related structure
Lawrence, Licking, Morgan, • Conducting exploratory
Noble and Washington coun- drilling and geotechnical
ties, and to check on eligibil- investigations
•
ity fo.r AML project funding. Reclaiming a 29-acre eroding
ODNR is see!&lt;ing approxi- mine waste gob area .
mately $4.56 million in,.fed• Removing obstructions
era! grant money frorr\ the and taking corrective meaU.S . Department of the sures to prevent mine-related
Interior to fund abandoned stream flooding problems.

International program cffered at OU

ATHENS - The Ohio being offered and students'
Program of lntensi ve English can attend one or both. The
is again this year offering the first session will be held
"Go International" program Sunday, July 30, to Friday,
for area high school students Aug. 4; and the second session from Sunday, Aug. 6, to
this summer.
In this program, stud~nts Friday, Aug. II.
will learn basic Japanese and
For more information and
cross cultural communication an application, contact Gerry
skills by socializing with high Krzic or Rerla Peters at OPIE
or ·
school students from. Tokyo, 740-593-4575
krzic@ohio.edu
or
peterJapan.
searching for a part-time
The Appalachian Heritage
When asked how to mainTwo one-week sessions are sr@ohio.edu
dentist as well.
Celebration will coincide tain one's character in a
· Brenda Phalin · of the . wit~ the seasonal opening of toxic political atmosphere
University of. Rio Grande's the Farmer's Market on the that is at times riddled with
from PageA1
council voted to give the
Crossroads Program spoke "T" in Middleport the same attack ads, Lobb answered ,
Community Improvement
of
the •
upcoming day. There is no fee to par- "You have to be consistent in
Corporation (CIC) first
Jones Memorial Clinic on Appalachian
Heritage ticipate in the· Farmer' s your message and ask youroption
on the proP.erty. This
from PageAf
South Third Avenue.
Celebration from 10 a.m. to . Market
self 'are you speaking the
means the CJC WJU have an
. Tatum said the building 3 p.m. on Saturday, May 20
New
Meigs
Courity truth with compassion?"'
opportunity to match any
the
following
"hazardous
has been remodeled for mod- in downtown MiddlepoJ1.
Chamber · of Commerce
Other chamber announce- materials"
should
be b1ds on either the building or
ernization and ' will be more
This is the third year for Coordinator
Michelle ments:
remaved prior to any demoli- property.
patient friendly. Services the celebration that is meant Donovan introduced,keynote
A
Meig s
County tion:
· The building was built in
li~ht bulbs,
have also been upgraded to tQ promote u·nderstanding speaker Lobb who spoke Chamber of Commerce light Fluorescent
ballasts, drinkmg foun- 192 9 and has ileen passed
provide low cost dental care and
appreciation
of about character and how he Board of Directors meeting, tain, mercury
from the village to the Meigs
thermostat.
1o the uninsured, underin- Appalachian herita~e and believed ·it was the corner- · 8 a.m., May 30, Chamber
Demolition of the building Local School District back to
sured or to Medicaid clients. culture. The celebration-will stone of good citizenship.
boardroom.
the village in the 1990's. The
"I believe character is
Pandemic Flu Summit, 8 is estimated to cost roughly village still owes $13,000 on .
The clinic will also be · include a ·parade at 2 p.m.
accepting patients with · and ·outhouse races at 2:30 highly relevant today," Lobb a.m. to noon , Friday, May $40,000.
The building sits on a Ll the proJ?erty and currently
insurance and will treat chi!- p.m. on May 20 complete · explained. "Character is the 12 at Middleport Church of acre lot which is zoned for carries liability insurance on .
dren 12 years old and up.
. with prizes and trophies .
language of the conscience." Christ Family Life Center.
the structure that s'ustained
commercial use.
The clinic's new dentist
Games for kids, food,
Lobb passed out a pamCoffee, Commerce and
fire
damage in June 2003.
.
At this week's council
1
will be Dr. John Sheets, Appalachian crafts and phlet fromOhio Secret~ry of Conversations, 8 a.m., every meeting Musser estimated
PDS who has a practice in music will also be featured. State J. Kenneth Blackwell Friday . at the chamber that without the bmldmg the
Gallipolis he is closing as he Those vendors, artisans and called "The Uncommon office.
property might be worth
M'ishes to be se mi-retired musicians wishing to partici- Sense Declaration" which is
The next business, mind- $125.000 to $150,000 though
according to Tatum. Thi s pate in the celebration available at the . website ed luncheon is at noon, June council made no decision for
means the clinic is also should call 992-0000.
www.OhioSpirit.org.
13, at the Wild Horse Cafe . demolition. Demolition was
- just one of the options dissaid he continues to receive cussed at the meeting that
Other business
public dissatisfaction with
Council met with David complaints about stray cats, ended with council deciding
village government, and said
the levy might have passed if Jenkins a!Jd Richard Hill of and asked that police step up to explore the marketing posa campaign for the levy's the Big Bend Youth Football enforcement of the speed sibilities for the property.
from PageA1
League, and agreed to lease limit on· Ash Street and
passage had been made .
Whatever those possibiliCouncil Member Jean a portion of the Middleport General Hartinger Parkway ties may turn into, in 2004
Conde asked if council might Craig said she remembers a Elementary School to the in the area from Broadway
pay for the lights from anoth- time long ago · when the league for storage and prac- Street to Art Lewis Street.
commenaed
er source, assume debt to pay streetlights were turned off tice areas . .The league will · Houchin s
and
the
other ownlannarelli
lease
the
building
for
the
under
similar
situations,
and
for the lights until a levy
ers
of
.
properties
on South
cost
of
utilities.
"
passes, or raise fuhds through said residents wi II be
·Second
Avenue
for the
Council
approved
vacating
alarmed. by how dark the
private donations.
.
improved
appearance
of the
Fiscal Ofticer Susan Baker community is at night with- a portion of Beech Street to
said it would cost the village out the streetlights. She said Betty Rash of Grant Street, lots after the completion of
Subsdribe today • 992-2155
approximately $17 ,000 to council members should and executed a quit,claim demolition .
Sandra Brown noted the
keep the lights burning for hav·e made greater efforts deeg transferring · the porneed
for tree trimming at
tion.
Councilman
Stephen
to
campaign
for
individually
, the remainder of the year, a
Dave
Diles
Park.
Houchins
voted
against
the
~urn the village cannot afford the levy.
Council
also:
"We as the governing body vacation.
•
to pay without levy proceeds:
MEIGS COUNTY
• Approved a jail housing
During open discussion ,
Mayor Sandy t~nnarelh of this village are also
INFLUENZA PANDEMIC SUMMIT
said the village will make a responsible," Craig said. Craig said she had received · contract with Washington
County
Jail,
at
a
rate
of
$55
complaints
about
the
condi"We
talked
about
a
concenfourth attempt to pass a levy
WHEN; Friday, May 12, 2006 8 :00am to Noon
for the lights in November, trated effort to educate the tion of the vHlage cemeteries per day.
• Approved payment of
but said the streets w11l be voters about the need for this and asked that weeds be
WHERE; Middleport Church of Christ ,
.
111 the amount of Jll!!ll
bills
trimmed.
She
also
raised
levy,
but
all
we
did
was
·
dark until reside nts see the
Family Life Center
lP.Il'l
. llilll 437 Main Street, Middleport, OH 45760
questions · about · code $56,287.66.
~
need for streetlight s and pass . talk."
• Approved supplemental
"We as council members enforcement efforts as they
a levy for their operation ..
SPEAKERS ; Dr. Doug Fisher, SE Ohio Sub' Some residents attendmg must' make a greater effort to relate to a condemned house transfers as requested by
Baker,
with
·Peckham
on
South
Second
Avenue.
Region One Public Health and RMRS
lead
this
community,"
Craig
the meeting said the levy's
abstaining.
Peckham
Councilman
Jeff
11!1
Coordinate.-:
said.
·
defeat was a statement about'

·Clinic

Asbestos

Streets

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
.
.
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be. less than
300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be signed,
and include address and telephon e number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters . should be in good taste;
addressing issr1es, not persorzalities. Letters of thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2006

Republicans must·make a plan bifore November
.

Wednesday, May 10, 2006

Proud to be a·part of ·
· your life.

VVho 0ves ya, baby?
"What are we going to
get the Cruise baby?" I
asked Sue.
·
"What are you talking
about?"
"Tom and Katie's baby,
Jim
S uri. Maybe we should get .
Mullen
her a onesie or 'Baby
Ei nsteil)' DVD or a crib toy
or something."
"We don't know the
Cruises,;· Sue said. "Why less if we had a baby."
"Let's have our publicist
would we buy their baby a
present? We've never met ask them."
"We don't hav~pubJic
them, they've never been
~
to our hou se for dinner, cist."
"Which is why ·We don't
they don't know us, they
wouldn' t recognize yo\J on h.ave a baby. How can ·we
the street if they hit you raise a child without a pubwith their limo. They don't licist? We 're not qualified
know our friends, they to answer hard-hitting
don 't kn9w my hobbies, questions from the press.
they don't know our fami- What does our baby think
lies . Why would I get their of Cruises' baby? What
baby a present any more does our baby think of
than I would buy a com- Scientology? What does
plete stranger a baby pre- our baby think about
'Mission: Impossible 1,11?:
sent?"
"You're saying Tom and When will our baby start
Katie wouldn't buy our kid dating Tom Cruise's baby?
a present if we had ·a Does Suri have a fringe on
top? Wr; need professional
baby?"
"I clon't think they help here!"
"We. Don't. Have. A.
would. Actually, 1 think
Baby."
Sue said.
Tom· and Katie could care

"Because of our religious,
differences, no doubt"
"No, because of the differences in the size of our
brains. Yours being so tiny
and alL That, and the fact
th&lt;tt J' tn 56 years old. "
'"I asked you to get a
lobotomy. ~ut noooboo ...
We could adopt. I hear
Brad . and Angelina are
adoptmg. What dtd w~ g~t
for B.~a\i and Angelina s
b~?y?
,
. We don I k~ow the~ ,
either. They don t know us .
Why do you care so much
about the babtes of people
you don't even know? Your
. ter had four bab,.1es and
s1s
you never even sent her a
card."
"When was that?"
"Twenty-five years ago ."
"Are you sure? Why didn't her publicist tell me ?
Wl)y didn't I read about it
in ' People ' or 'Us? ' Are
any of her kids named
Suri? How much clid she
sell her baby's pictures for ?
"

"Who would pay money
for baby pictures of your
nieces and nephews?" '

..

"People·waiting in line to
pay for their groceries .
Were any of her kids adopt.~
ed from terribly depressing
Third World countri~s?"
. "No."
"You mean all she did
was have these kids and
raise them? And for that ·
you want rne to send her a
present? How can you
compare that to whai Tom
and Katie have done? You
act as if a celebrity having
a baby is .no big deal, you
act as if pretty much any
man and woman could do
the same thing as if mil- ·
.
· . '
!tons of ordinary
people
·
?round t.h~ world were hav- '
mg babtes every day: You
· act as tf Tom a~d Katte are
not a · special, more
evolved , htgher class of •
human bemgs ~han the ~est ·
of us .. What kmd of stck,
pathetic, fant~~y world are
you hvmg m? .
(fun Mullen

the author
of '' It Takes a Village Idiot:
Complicating th e Simple
Life'" and "Baby's First .
Tauoo." You can .reach him ;
at jim_mul/en@myway.com)
IS

aoaaaoaoaoaaaaaa

.

----------EE ·HEARING TESTS

Sometimes she dupl'J disappointed 'JOU

•

for all the times she did make you laugh, and for
looil;g you in ways 'JOlt never expected, ·
come.1ee w /m a special gift,
li1stMI Ctecitl

.........Naiahle

'

--------------WALK-INS WELCOME

"

Long. SE Ohio Sub- Region One

a
a

llilll • Larry

~WA • UAW • ARMCO, AND ALL OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS

·

13
aD

Jll!!ll Epidemiologist ,

1
~ill be giveri in MEIGS COUNTY by
I
I &amp;/tD.e ™ HEARING .AID CENTER I
I
· Dr. A. Jackson B~lles Office · I
1 New Location: 507 Mulberry Hghts, Pomeroy, OH 1
. I FRIDAY, May 12th • 9:00am-noon • (740) 446-1744 I
Call Toll Free 1-800o634·5265 lor an Immediate appointment.
I The testa will be given by i Licensed Hearing Aid Speclatlat. I
Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding
1
I conversailon
Is Invited to have a FREE hearing test to see II
I this problem can be helped! Bring this coupon with you lor I
your FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value.
1
I
L .

.

llilll • Jonah

COUPON

-''I'm not here to
tertain you F'

,,

a
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a
aa

..

Marshall. Meigs County Health
Commissioner.
Jll!!ll • Frank Gorstak, Meig s County Health
llilll Emergency Resp~nse Coordinator.
Learn what the Centers for Dise,a se Control

Jll!!ll and P&lt;evention , the Ohio Department of

llilll

Health and the Meigs County General Health
IIIII Distric t a re planning in the eVent of a
.
= ·Pandemic Influenza Outbreak In this country,
llilll Ohio and M eigs County.
·

a

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IIIII

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IIIII

~~

Respond to this Invitation by May 10, 2006
by calling 740·992·6626 Ext. 34
Meigs County Health Department
Frank Goracak, ERP
112 East Memorial Drive Suite A
IIIII
Pomeroy, OH 45769 .
IIIII
Fax: (740) 992-oo3s
Email: fgorscak@odh.ohlo.gov
'

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.
'

�•

•

The Daily Sentinel

..

OHIO

. PageA6

,..

Wednesday, May 10, 2006

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

'

Mighty Ducks win in OT .B6
Rio roasts Bickerstaff . _ . .B6

AIDS Memorial Quilt:on
display at Ohio University

Mmi88S
BY THOMAS J. SHEERAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CLEVELAND
Cleveland Clinic trustees
have moved to ensure
patients will be aware of possible ethical conflicts involving doctors, trustees and the
growing business ventures of .
the research hospital.
.
The changes come after a
hospital review found shortcomings involving ethical
conflict disclosyres have
occurred across the board at
the clinic.
In December, a Wall Street
Journal story detailed clinic
CEO Dr. · Toby Cosgrove's
relationship with a medicaldevice company and .the clinic's role in a venture capital
firm that invested in it.
Cosgrove sat on the company.' s board of directors and
served as a general .partner of
the venture firm.
The
policy
change,
approved by the board
Monday and announced late
Tuesday, creates a regular
standing trustee board committee on ethics matters. T~e
head of the committee wtll
meet regularly with the top
staff officer checking for
conflicts between patient care
and profits.
In
addition,
trustees
approved upgrades in a database to make the 1,500 doctors and others working at the
hospital and its satellite oper. ations aware of possible conflicts involving trustees or
clinic-related business ventures.
The policy would require
disclosure and competitive
bidding if the business of an
Ol,ltside trustee is trying to
sell to the clinic. The board
~gan tightening conflict of
· interest policies governing
physicians last year, includmg a limit on outside consulting fees.
·
The clinic released summaries but didn't release the
revised policy documents. -

ATHENS - The biggest become aware of its transcommunity arts project in mission rate and 9f its
the world, "The NAMES severity. We hope that visiProject:
The
AIDS tors will see the life of a
Memorial Quilt," whic_h person rather than just their
began m 1987 as a memon- name. It is emotionally riv~1 to those who l_
o st 'their ·eting to see the hard work
hves to AIDS,_ ":til · be at and love that family and
Oh~o Umverstty s Baker friends have put into .creatCenter May 15_-17.
ing their memorial of their
_ The qmlt proJect currently lost one's life,. The Quilt is
mcl~des over 46,000 panels more than just another name
dedtcated to over 83,440 .
,.
individuals who have died. on a square of cotton, she
The Quilt has been dis- adcjed.
.
.
played in a 'l'ariety of loca!he AIDS Memonal QUilt _
tions throughout the United. wtll be on dtspla~ at Baker
States and viewed by over Ce~ter Ballroom m :Athens,
15 million people
Ohto, on May 15, 16 and
Twenty blocks. of' "The 17: The display will be open
Quilt" will be displayed. datly from _1 0 a.m: to 10
Each block consists -of an p.m. The dtsplay IS open
average of eight panels that and free to the public :
are each 3 feet by 6 feet. However, donations will be
Each panel is dedicated to accepted• and given to the
one or more individuals Athens AIDS Task Force..
who have died of oppor- Also, the Athens Middle
tunistic diseases related to School 8th grade health
AIDS. "Fainily and friends class will display their
spent much time and effort AIDS Awareness projects at
making an .artful memorial the event.
'\
to their loved one that canAdditional events include
not . be replicated," . said a program on HIV presented
Katie G~hlfu~s. a semor at by Planned Parenthood on
~hto Umv_erslty who ts anx- ~onday at 6:30 in Baker's
wus to ratse awareness for 1804 Lounge. On TuesdaY,
HIV and AIDS .
.
free anonymous oral HIV
She noted. that there IS a test'
will be provided
lack of fundmg and support
tng
, .
for HIV and AIDS educa- from 2 to 6 p.m. AJso, at
lion in Southeast Ohio, and 7:30 m the 1804 L_ounge,
said the goal in bringing the Dr. Ronald Aman wtll leeNAMES Project to Athens ture on the backg_round _of
is to rejuvenate people's The AIDS Mem_o nal Qutlt.
awareness of HIV/AIDS.
A Chmese auctiOn wtll be
"We want people to held to raise funds for The
understand · that thts syn- Athens AIDS Taskforce and
drome can affect anyone. POWER (Ohio University's
The number of infected student organization of
individuals is steadily ris- peer-health educators) who
ing, and people need to are hosting this _event.

AP Photo

The Lerner Research Center at the Clevelanc;j Clinic is shown Tuesday in Cleveland. Cleveland
Clinic trustees have adopted policy changes meant to ensure patients will be aware of ethical
conflicts involving doctors, trustees and related busi_ness interests of the research hospital.
The changes come after a hospital review found shortcomings involving ethical conflict disclosures have occurred across the board.
D~n W. Brock, a professor
of medical ethics at Harvard
University, said he had no
data on how many hospitals
require disclosure of conflicts
involving trustees.
"It wouldn't surprise me
that the Cleveland Clinic is a
little ahead on this. They
have been facing these issues
recently , in a fairly public
way," he said.
Tiffany Himmelreich, a
spokeswoman with the Ohio
Hospital Association, said the
government requires nonprofit hospitals to have conflict -of interes~ policies to
'make sure the institution
operates in the best interest of
the community. The ·clinic's
research work puts it at ·risk
of more conflicts than many
hospitals might see, she said. ·

- Board members said the
revised policy would ensure
openness. "'The issue has to
be transparency and disclosure on a continual basis,"
said William MacDonald Ill,
a clinic trustee.
MacDonald, vice chairman
of Cleveland's National City
Corp. banking company, said
the board found no evidence
that the clinic's reputation
had been damaged by ethical .
lapses.
"We can't find evidence
that it had any negative
impact at all ·whether
fundraising , whether patient
activities, patients coming to
the clinic. Operating results
are strong. We just haven't
seen it," he said.
That might be because "we
did try to be responsive to

what we've heard. We
formed
this committee.
Doctor Cosgrove came out
very early and said he wanted
a full trustee.. review,"
MacDonald said.
'The law firm that reviewed
ethics oversight at the clinic,
McDermott Will &amp; Emery of
Chicago, said actions taken
by trustees in response to the
outside audit were consistent
with the board's goal of creating the best ,possible
approach to ethics matters.
·The clinic p lans a national
symposium Sept. 20 on medical conflicts of interest.
"This is an area. of uncertainty for all academic medical
centers, and all institutions
are struggling to strike the
right balance," the clinic said.

AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

COLUMBUS · As it
debuted in the Legislature, ·
the fate of Gov. Bob Taft's
plan to increase required
coursework for high schoolers and toughen entry requirements at state universities
faced an uncertain future.
Lawmakers are preoccupied with the November election and have scheduled only
six days to vote on bills
between now and then, leaving litile time to address
Taft's involved proposal
before his administration is in
its final weeks.
'
Under the program, which
Taft
- calls "the .Ohio Core "
students would have to take
-four years of math and
English, three years of sci-

.

__

,.....

Wednesday ... Mostly
cloudy. A chance of showers with a slight chance of
thunderstorms in the morning .• .Then showers and
thunderstorms likely in the
afternoon. Highs in the
upper 70s. South wi'nds 5 to
I 0 mph. Chance of rain •'16
percent.
Wednesday
nlght...ShOwers with thunderstorms likely. Lows in
the mid 50s. SotHhwest
winds 5 to I 0 mph. Chance
of rain 80 percent.
Thursday ... Partly cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Cooler
with highs in the mid 60s.Southwest winds 10 to IS
mph with gusts up do25
mph. Chance of rain SO percent.
Thursday night...Mostly
cloudy with a · 20 percenl
chance of showers. Cooler
with lows in the mid 40s.
West winds 10 to 15 mph.
Friday
through

ence a nd social· studies- ll~d ;;, iftiHC6l17~'!'{o'''1li'ilil the pfa"ie~:ot· "Other states ililif"' have
two years · of a foreign Ian- Neither •lawmakers nor teach- gone down this road are
guage beginning in the fall of ers appeared ready Tuesday months ahead of you - not
2007. Completing those to sign .off "'6n it any time decades ahead of you but
courses would be required to soon.
months," said Michael Cohen
get into one of Ohio's fourHouse Speaker Jon Husted, of
. Washington-based
year public colleges or uni- a
fellow
Republican, Achieve, created by goverversities, and most remedial expressed support for aspects nors and business leaders in
work would have to be done of the · plan, but said he 1996. Taft is co-chairman of
at a two-year college.
wouldn 'I want to estimate the group.
Taft, whose approval rat- when the bill might ,pass.
Committee members had
ings plummeted last year. Senate President Bill Harris, concerns the plan might be
after he pleaded no contest to likewise, could not say when too ambitious and questioned
ethics charges, said he sa~ a the bill might ever come up the cost of teacher developjoint meeting Tuesday of the for a vote.
ment and other expenses that
House and Senate education
"This · legislation is too might' arise.
committees _as ·a strong siglJ important to pass it without
Taft sought to bolster the
of support within . ij!e . getting it right," Harris said.
proposal's chances with the
Legislature. He also said he
At a hearing before the edu- announcement Monday that
has reached out to teachers' cation committees Monday, an alliance of busines~. eduunions, whom he ·called the president of a nonprofit cation and civic leaders has
"absolutely key" to the pro- education group said Ohio gotten behind it.
posal's success.
must push its kids harder if' it r-----~----The governor asked the is to catch up with other
Legislature on Friday for $13 states.

....

...,..... BY GARY CLARK

___
sP_o_Rrs_c_oR_R_Es_PO.:,N.:.D.:.E.:.Nr_

LocAL SCHEDULE
GALUPOU$ -A achedule of upcoming college
and high SChool &gt;Jal'lity sporling ENents tnvoMng
le&amp;ml from, Gall ~ ; Milgi and Mason counties.

Wfdottd'Y'I umta

Tournament Softball
Gallla Academy al Jackson , 5 p.m.
Athens at Meigs, 5 p.m.
·
SOuth Webster at South Gallla, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Miller, 5 p.m.

Point Pleasant vs.
Ravenswood), 5:30p.m.

·

..

Saturday ... Mostly cloudy
with a 30 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the mid
60s. Lows in the mid 40s.
Saturday night ... Partly
cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of showers .. Cold
with lows in the mid 40s.
Sunday ... Partly cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in
the upper 60s. Chance of
rain 50 percent.
Sunday
night
and
Mdnday ... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Lows in
the upper 40s. Highs in -the
mi&gt;l 60s. Chance of rain 40
percent. .
_
Monday night...Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the upper 40s.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Tuesday .. .Mostly cloudy
with a 50 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the mid
60s.
·

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Depar~ent. at (740) 592-9300.

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OYP Scorellne {5 p.m.·1 a.m.)
1-740·446·2342 ext. 33
or 992·5287 (Meigs _Co-.)

Fn -1-740-4-46-3008
E..mtlll - sportsGI mydallysentlnet.com

Sgor!LSII.U
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor

With the dinner specials only- Every Mom gets.a free piece of
Hot chocofate Fudge Cake ala-mode or Hot Caramel Cake ala -m.ode.

COOLSPOT

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· L:ight ~Q,mehts·;~ and ?,tlier beverag~
' receive a gili for attendi_ng ,die C:VCI,lt. · .•

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Smothered Grilled
Chicken Breast

1ason Michaels followed wi\h
-singles. tlie last two driving in
: Grudzielanek had an RBI
single and Doug Mientkiewicz
rut a sacrifice fly to make it 2in the third.
• After Guiel's home run in
ihe fourth, Buck's RBI single
fied it 4-all.
.

Guests at
" ' ,;

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)
- Jonn Buck drove in four
runs with a single and a three.run homer and the Kansas City
Roy:ils beat Cleveland 10-7 on
Tuesday night, their fourth
straight victory over the
Indians.
--- ,
Buck, who hit his first homer
of the season on Monday, had
an RBI single in the fourth
inning and then clubbed a 422foot shot off reliever Danny
Graves (2-1) in a six -run sixtlJ.
He went 3-for-3.
: Aaron Guiel had three RBis,
including a solo homer in the
fourth and a two-run single to
eap the sixth.
Kerry Robinson and Tony
Graffartino also had three hits
for l)le Royals.
, Graves relieved starter Jason
Johnson with two on, no outs
4nd the Indians leading 6-4,
but the light-hitting Buck hit a
2-2 pitch over the wall in left.
Mark Grudzielanek, who
went4-for-4, then doitbled and
with two outs Graffanino hit a
shot off the glove of third baseman Aaron Boone that went
for an Rl31 double.
Joel Peralta ( 1-0) got the victory with 2 1-3 innings of tworun relief.
Victor Martinez hit a
tiebreaking two-run single off
Peralta in the top of the •sixtp
for a 6-4 lead.
•
· Travis Hafner hit a ·two-run
triple, barely missing a home
run, for a 4-2 Cleveland lead in
the fourth.
. Starter Jeremy Affeldt hit
Eduardo Perez · with a pitch
leading
the second.
Ronnie
· BelliardCasey
and .
Blake, off

tuJ!S.

'

· p~nancyas

least one Buffalo base runner
in every inning but managed
to escape seyeral jams
throughout the evening.
Buffalo gained a 1-0 edge
in the second when the Bison
received a leadoff base hit by
Whittington with Martin sacrificing him into scoring position. Legg later delivered a
two out -single io give
Garrison a one run advantage
and what would become all
the run production he would
need.
The host team added an
insurance run in the fifth after
Garrison stroked a one out
single. A stolen base and a
balk put courtesy runner
Moore at 'third where he later
scored the games second run

Please see Plkhlng.. B6

Larry Crum/plloto

Wahama's Cody Herdman tries to pick off a Buffalo runner at
first during th!! third Inning of. the White Falcons' 2-0 loss
Tuesday evening in Buffalo.

NationalS
•
securewm
over Reds
•

Royals
outslug
Indians

Saturday, May 2o,·2oo6 · "'~ ".
.11 a.m7·to I p.m. • Gastrop Genter Lobby_ .

f

.

BUFFALO
Adam
Garrison struck out 18
Wahama batters in twirling a
one hit shutout as the Buffalo
Bison sqYeezed out a 2-0 sectional
tournament
win
Tuesday evening on the
Putnam County team's home
turf.
Garrison fanned at least two
Falcon hitters in every inning
and took a no-hitter into the
seventh before Brenton Clark
· broke out the no hit bid with a
single to lead off the seventh
inning. Justin Whiftington
was the man of the hour for
Buffalo offensively after scoring one run and driving in
another in the BisOn two run,
post season victory.
•'

The diamond win launches
Buffalo into the forefront in
the double elimination, Sectional tourney as the tourneys
top seed will now sit back and
wait as Wahama and St. Joe
meet at 6:00 pm today in an
elimination round contest.
Wahama saw its record dip to
12-11 .following ihe loss
while Buffalo grabbed its
24th triumph against just
-three defeats.
While
Garrison
and
Whittington were propelling
Buffalo to the sectional win
the Falcons' Kameron Sayre
provided the Bend Area team
with (I strong pitching outing
of his own. The senior righthander scattered eight Bison
hits and allowed just two runs
while striking out five and
walking two. Sayre allowed at

$eturdly'l QI!JWI

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Traclt and Flald
TVC Championships at Vinton Counl)', 5
p.m.
Tlnnla
W.Va . State Tennis

_.:,_ '

Tourn1mtnt Bu8b1ll
Point Pleasant at Ravenswood, noon
Tourn1ment Softball
GA/Melgs, 1 p.m.
,
Southern at Waterford, 1 p.m.'
.Trick and Flald
SEOAl Championships at lOgan, 10 a.m .

Marer·n aiea -··
;j

Warren at Ganta Academy, 5 p.m.

Potnt Pleasant at Ravenswood, 5 p.m .

Toumoment Butboll
P,olnt Pleasant at Ravenswood, 5 p.m.
.
Tournament Softball
Nelsonville-York at River vanev. 5 p.m.
Track and Field
OVC Championships at Rock Hill, s p.m.,
Point Pktasant at Tyler Consolidated, TBA

..

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Tournament Banbllll

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Buffalo pitching burns White FalcQns
.

Local weather

Governor's curriculilrrft&gt;lair faces 'hurdleS'·
BY JUUE CARR SMYTH

Wednesday, May 10, 2oo6

(740)446·2342, oxl. 3:l
bsherman 0 mydailytrtbuna .com

740-66 7-6/00
7../0-6fJ 7-6 J() I

Bryan Waltera, Sports Writer
(740)446-2342, SXI. 23
• bwalteraOmyds.ilytrlbune .com

•2

OQn't fofset to stop by Coolspot
in Tupp!!ts Mains.
Featurint speciil c.akes and baked goods for Mom. If vour Mom doesn't want to go out
· to l!at on her spMial day dop by and pick up a bucke1 of our famous
Frii!d Chic:Wen and Homemadl! side dishi!S.

Lilrry Crum, Sparta Writer
{740) 446-2342, ext.'3:l
lcrumom'ydallyregistef.com

BY TERRY KINNEY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

AP photo

Detroit Pistons center Ben Wallace, left, steals the ball away from Cleveland Cavaliers · center Zydrunas llgauskas, of
Lithuania, during the third quarter of Game 2 of their NBA basketball playoffs second-round series at the Palace IIi Auburn
Hills, Mich. Tuesday.
' _ .

Piston power too much for Cavaliers

came away from o·ur defen - it 92-87 with 1: 13 left, but with a 13-0 run late in the
ASSOCIATED PRESS
si ve scheme, and LeBron Richard Hamilton scored a first quarter and early 1in the
three-point play on the ensu- second. The burst grew to
started to hurt us."
AUBURN HILLS , Mich.
Jame£ didn't reach double ing possession and both \9-3 and the Pistons led by
- LeBron James .a lmost figures
until
midway players lraded free throw s in 18 before the Cavs ended a
field-goal drought that lastmade the Detroit Pistons through the third quarter, the final seconds.
"We kept our composure ed more thim seven minutes.
regret getting bored.
then he led a fourth-ll,uarter
"Our guys have the ability
James scored 23 of his 30 rally with -jumpers ani:l dri- and gave them run for their
to
lock down," Detroit coach
points in the second half, but ving layups through a sea of money," James said.
For three-plus quarters, it Flip Saunders said. "As a
Rasheed Wallace had 29 Pistons.
·
points and Tayshaun ~rince
Cleveland pulled to 87-78 didn't look like there was coach, you hate th~ term
added 20 to lead Detroit to a . after a 10-2"run before Ben much James or the Cavs, 'Flip the switch,' but there's
97-91 victory over the Wallace made a fadeaway who advanced in the play- no question they have the
Cleveland Cavaliers on shot otl' his own miss and offs for the first time since ability to do that."
The Pistons were coasting
Tuesday night - and 2-0 Rasheed Wallace followed 1993, could do against the
until
the - Cavs .suddenly
two-time
defending
Eastern
lead in their second-round with a 3-pointer, forcing the
showed
signs of life midway
series.
Cavs to call a timeout !;)own Conference c!Jampions.
through
the fourth quarter.
"We had the game going by 14 points with 4 :31 left. : After leading by just two
The Cavs - who lost
through three quarters, and
James wouldn't let the points, Detroit took control
of
Game
2
and
perhaps
we got a little lax," Detroit's Cavs go away.
PINsesees.cu,..ll
PI•••• sH Pistons, Bel
Chauncey Billups said. "We
His three-point JJlay made the best-of-seve n series --:----------------------------~------------'-----------Bv LARRY LAaE

a

a

-.

Feder. al_HOC.king. poun.dS RV m
• fjIVe
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMANC&gt;MVDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

.

STEWART
Federal
Hocking is going back to the
sectional title game, River
Valley is going back to the
drawing board.
The top-seeded Lancers
scored in every · inning but
one, including a five-run sec. ond, that propelled them to a
I 0-0 Division 111 sectional
baseball victory over · the
Raiders on Tuesday. .
· The game was called after
five innings because of the
mercy rule .
Federal .Hocking, now 22-5
overall, plays host to Belpre 5
. p.m. Friday with a' sectional
championship and trip to the
district tournament on the line.
' beat Alexander ll-2,'
Belpre
also on Tuesday, to punch 'its
Brad Sher!T'anlphoto ticket to the next round.
River Valley, on the other
River Valley's Jason Jones throws to first to get' an out during ,
hand
, was simply overthe Raider$ ' 10-0 loss t~ Federal Hocking Tuesday.

matched and completes the a two-run single off the bat of
season without tasting victory Springer ' and an RBI base
in 22 tries. In fact, the Raiders knock by Chadwell.
have won just once over the · The Maroon and Gold
past two years.
tacked on five more in the secTyler Chadwell went 3-for- ond to pull in front cornfort3 including a double and two ably. Run-scoring hits ftom
runs batted in to p~ce the win- Chadwell and Gandee, as well
ners. A.J. Smith singled three as a R!ver Valley error and
times while Nick Springer passed ball, fueled . the big
also had an extra base hit and mnmg .
drove in three runs. Jared
After a scoreless third,
Gandee had two singles.
Springer tacked on another
Freshman Claylon Curnutte run with a 'fourth inning RBI
had two singles to lead River double and then Gandee d(ove
Valley,
while
Aaron m the I Oth and final Lancer
Mu Iholand had the on 1y other run. ·
hit off Federal HQcking pitchThe Raiders had no series
·
scoring threats and stranded
mg.
'
1
Le
Brandon Bamhari got the on Yone base runner. ad-off
win on the mound, working man Curnutte was erased in
three innings of two-hit ball. the top o(the first inning,by a
Springer finished up the final double play and two other
two frames in relief. River Raiders were picked off.
Valley's T.R. Flint went the A.Valley 000 00 - 0 31
Fed Hock 350 2x
10 11 1
distance and took the loss.
T.R. Flint and Eric Caldwsll. Brandon
The Lancers jumped in front Barnhart, Nick Sprtnoer {4) and A.J. Smllll.
3-0 after one inning thanks to W - Barnhart. L - Fllnl.
.•

•

•

- - - ' -- •---

CINCINNATI Alfonso
~onano wasn't sure what pitch
he hit out of Great American
Ball Park.
"It was either a changeup or a
fastball. I didn't have time to
look at it," Soriano said. "It was
· in the middle of the plate and I
got good conmct."
Whatever it was, it traveled an
estimated 492 feet, the fourthlongest drive at the home run
friendly ballpark, and it was the
last of the
Washington
Nationals' season-high five
homers iil a 7 - I win over the
Cincinn;ui Reds on Tuesday
ni*ht.
'Any time you hit the ball out,
it's a good swing, but some are
better than others," Washington
manager Frank Robinson said.
"Soriano's would have been out
of the Grand Canyon."
Tony Armas Jr. allowed two
hits as he pitched into the sevenlh inning. Jose Guillen homered twice and drove in three
run s, and Ryan Zimmerman and
Matthew LeCroy add,ed solo
drives for Washington.
"Right liow, everything is
beginning to fall into place, and
I feel a lot better,!' said Guillen,
who is 8-of-24 with three hom1:
runs and eight RBis in his past
sill games.
Soriano's ninth-inning drive
off Brian Shackelford, his lOth,
was only the fifth ball to clear
the batter's eye in straightaway
center field at Great ·American
Ball Park.
Armas (3-2) held the Reds to
one hit until he loaded the bases
with no outs in the seventh on a
single, a walk and a hit batsman.
Scott Hatteberg hit a sacrifice
fly off Joey Eischen ·to cut the
Washington lead to 6-1 but Gary
Majewski relieved Eischen and
retired Austin Keams and Jason
LaRue to end the threat.
Armas allowed one run and

•

�•
Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentinel.com

,...,
'

'

.

.

Wednesday, May 10, 2006

Wednesday, May 10, 2006

www.mydallysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

'•

bune - Sentinel -

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Females
Appro)ltmately
th ree months. Great with
cihtl dren. (740)379-9 ~89

t

Summer help needed at
0 0 . Mcintyre Park Dlstrlc;t
For application apply at
Raccoon Creek County Park
518 Dan Jones Road off of

1·

3 Family yard sale, Wed,
Thur &amp; Fri. Clothing, old &amp;
new, collectibles, garage
Items, sJorm doors, some·
thi ng lor everyone. 2 miles
out SA 143.

775. .

Grow's Subdivlsion-5-Points.
May ~2, 13,14 .
lntenor
Doors , Facing, BaseBoards,
Carpet.
Garden Tractor,
Generator, Heater · Kids
Clothes Misc.

fl

•

Main ST, Pt Pleasant WV

255!;0,

Fri. &amp; Sat. on Rt. 143 at
Wolfe Pen Road· Interesting
Lost: Male black Lab mix
Items I
dog . Little. Kyger/Jericho Rd .
area. If seen please call Garage Sate. Friday and
740 367-7047,
Saturday, May · 12 and ~3
340 · Page
Street,
Middleport. Somethjng tor
Everyone.

r

Wanted· full -time veterinary
receptlonist ,experlence
helpful but not essential tor
perso n willing. to learn
respond with complete
resume &amp; 3 reference . to
EB6
Pt.Pieasant ..Register 200

~
C&gt; 2008 by

lEA, Inc.

id-------~lli
i.d________.
, IIELP

l

.1

HELP

II

CLASSIFIED INDEX

il;==

no

..,r_..

r

S·A-~m..""...,I

· rouuv

.ao

·We
have dedicated
openings forpro
enthuslaslic.
fesaionals who anjoy working
with people in a fast paced
environment, who exhibits
leadership and desire to
build managenient skills. If
this desc ribes you and
you're ready to grow, we ,
offer you the opportunity.

FOR SALE

~arrow Smart. Conlee
he Ohio Oillislon o
lnanclal
Institution'
Pttlce of Consume
!"flairs BEFORE you refl
ence your hOme o
btaln a loan BEWARE
requests for any largE
dvance payments o
ees or · ins~ra nce . Cat
he Office of Consume
~~airs toll free at 1-866
78·0003 to learn if thE
fnorigage broker o
ender , is
proper!
icensed. (This is a publl
ervice announcemen
rom the O~io Valle

Pt.

llo~P:•ubl~i=sh=l~ngCo
~m~pla~nny~)~

r
i

i'R&lt;»l:ssiONAL
SERVICES

!SHOP CLASSIFIEDSI

r~o

Ho··oo
"=

4BR, 2ba, 100C'tb financing
available. even with less
than perfect credit. No down
payment (740)742·2376,

A well mamtalned House for
Sale . Large porch , base·
ment, deck, heat · pump,
located in Gallipolis Ferry
$69,900 phone (304)675·
'1536
Auentlonl
Loc81 company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" programs for you to buy you r
hOme instead of renting.
• 100% linanctng
• Less than perfect credit
ecce pled
• Paymen t could be the
same as rent.
Mortgage
Locators.
(740)367-0000

BANK REPO
Never lived in, new 3BDRM
w/2 bathrooms, In drywall
stage, s1 ts on · 2 beau-tiful
acres, county water at road ,
about 20 mins south of
Athens, OH . $74 ,500. Call

..__ _iFOIIiiiiiiiSiiAiiiLE;;;,_p
112 Pleasant Street, Point
Pleasant , WV (304(675·
4034 or (304)675-o4~a: 3
bedroom, 1 1/2bath, family
room, dining room, new windows, new AC , new water
tank, fenced yard.

1900 sq,h, 3bd 2ba homa
with basement, sits on 3
acres, just off of Rt 7,
Chester Township, Eastern .
School District. Also regis·
te red quarter horses lor
sale. Call (740)985·4321
If Interested apply et Burger after Bpm
t&lt;lng. 65 Upper River Road
In Gallipolis, OH or mall 1997 Fairmont Celebrity
resume to : 3210 Was~ington double wide 28)172, FA, den,
Blvd.
Huntington,
WV. lg. kitchen. 2 full baths, 3BR
with walk· in closets, lg . deck, ·
'2ji5j;70•5o.,.OE.OO:O:E..
, .....- - . ,
All real eatate advertising
above ground pool 36)11 81 2
In this newspaper Is
utility buildings. l..:.ot 2.69
lrBntucnON
aubject to the Federal
acres,
very
secluded,
prl..,_taiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiao-"
Fair Houalng Act ol1968
llate drive . 5 m1n. from Green
which mekea It Illegal to
GeiUpolls Career College SchOolfHolzer. $110,000.
edvertlae "any
Call afte r 3pm (740)441 (Careers Close To Home)
preference, limitation or
can Todayl740-446-4367, · 0494,
dlacrlmlnetlcn ba..d on
1 -600-2 14-0452
race, color, religion, aex
20 acre farm with 2500sq.ft
_,.,.~~pol i.careMcallege com
familial etatua or national
custom
1999,
2
story
nome
Accredited Member Accrediting
orlgln, Df any Intention to
Cooncll for lndependem Collage&amp; located between Rio Grande
make any such
and Schools 127118.
and Jackson, !3-4BA: den; 3
praterence, limitation cr ·
fu ll balh with master jacuzzi.
f
ANfEI)
·
dlacrlmlnetlon."
huge wrap-around p"o rch .
.
ToDo
large ldtchen with Island, 3
Thla newspaper wm not
knowingly accept
car garage foundation ready
Computer Troubleshoot &amp;
advertisement• tor real
to frame; private setting with
Repair, Call (740)992·2395
•atata which Ia In
great hun ting ; $234,900
violation or the taw. Our
George's Portable Sawmill, (740)384-5162
readera are hereby
don't haul your Logs to the
Informed that aU
Mill just call304-675-t957 , 2912 Anniston Or., Pt
dwalllnga advertised In
Pleasant. 3BR, 2BA, LA,
thla newapaper ara
Wlll do Lawn Mowing, Have FR, Garage Nice neighbor·
available en an equal
good References. reason- hoo d,(304 )675-3637 days;
oppor1untty baMa.
able
prices .
In
Pt. (304)675-2355 evenings,
Pleasant/Gallipolis
area.
I 304)675-3765 ( 304)593- 3BO, 2Ba, fireplace, 40)160 New 3 bedroom , 2 bath,
4120 cell
barn, 8 flat acres. Pleasant brick home for sale In Alo
Valley Ad,, Rio ' Grande ,Grande, Ca ll (740)379·2615
11'\\"\ 11 \ 1
$120,000, (740)709- 1166,
Sand Hill Ad, almost new
B~
3BR, 2 Car attached Garage house, 3 br., 2 ba., heat
ClPPoKnJNrry
on 1.06 acres $60,000 pump, 1.2 acres, nice subdi·
(304)675-6331
vision 304-675-2319

rd50

S&lt;lJOOLS

w

Iilii '

bath, $6,995, Call (740)365-

'86 Skyline front kitchen .
pash price $8,995 , Will
deHver, Call (740)385-9948,

We offer the Qpportuntty and
the following benefits: Blue
CrOss
Blue
Shield
Insurance,
Dental,
Prescription card , 401 K,
pa•d 11acations, five day work
week and Ur:1iforms.

r

10

~110th

of an acre for eaie on
143 . 2 mobile "homes. 740-

992-5656,

eN OTI CEe
HIO VALLEY,PUBLISH
NG
recommends tha
u do bualnoaa with peo
lo you knOW, and NOT
end cnoney ,through t
all until you have ln111att
attd tha offtrln ,

co.

on

, ,'~)'INGS

(....

COUPONS

House

TECHNOLOGY

~We would like~
to thank
everyone for
everything they
did during the
, loss of our
beloved wife
and mother
Alma Jean
Johnson and
special thanks
to the Racine
Volunteer Fire
Dept., Racine
Police Dept. &amp;
Cremeens
Funeral Home

Shop
Classlfleds!

r.

3BDR, 2Ba doublewtde.
Close to RVHS . No pets, ref.
required $500 dep, $500
mo, (740)367-7025,

Douglas
(two speed)
·Johnson Jr.

.

'

' 992·21 55

'

Beautiful
Siberian
Husky/Collie
, pupp ies,
Black/White .
Tan/White,
Blue eyes, $25.00 Each.
740-949-2950,
New John Deere COmpacts
Boston Terrie~ pups, 6 wks, and 5000 Senes Utility tracno papers, $200. (740)441 - tors @0% Fhced for 36
months
through
John
37 55, (740)388-9143.
::-':'::"-:-'----'~-'--::-- Deere Credit. Carmichael
Ct&lt;C Registered black Pugs. Equipment ,1740)446-24 12
One mate &amp; female, 1.5
Qua lity John Deere Hay
years old ," and one male 10
Equipment for less-round
month old, $250, 1740)366·
balers.
squa~e ba lers &amp;
9327,
mower conditioners @ 4 7%
Dalmatian Puppies AKC Fixed for 48 month s lhrough
Registered $200 1304)937' John
Deere
Credit .
Carmichael ·
Equipment
2929
(740)446-24 12,
$20.
Mother
Pupptes
Australian Shepherd, Father
LMSJOCK
unknown . Ca ll (740)245·

r

5984,

ML5JCAL

-------,--

Exterior,
Ivory
leather
Interior, While vinyl top.
Nice driver, 390ci engine ,
auto transmission, · power
steering,
power
brake ,
power window, power seat
Prlca $13.500 ,00,
Hrll's
Au tomotive Classic Car
Restoration &amp; Parts, Inc .
29670
Bashan
Road .
Racine, Ohio 45n1 ; Phone :
740-949·2217 ; Fax , 740on
949-1957 , Pi ctured
www thu nderbirdcenter.com

Boer Goats for sale

6 full blood, 1 year old regis· 1997 Buick Park Avenue
tered !)~ales . Ready to Leath er. loaded, all mainte breed Champion~hl p blood- nance records, well mainlines. Call (740)245-0485.
ta1ned, 116k. asking S4.600.
(740)245-5934 ,
Quality horse and livestock '-:::-=--::--:----::---:--:-~
trailers now available at "1997 Pontiac Grand Am . 4
carmichae l Equipment. New door, automatic, Pslpb, air.
dealer for Valley
and am/fmlcd . 127,000 m1les .
Ktelerbu ilt
Horse
and run s real good $2.499.00

r

(740)256· 1962
1995 16 1/2 tt Hydrasport
Bass boat with 90 hors e·
pow er Johnson motor. stai nl ~ss steel -prop
trp llin g
. rnotor, 2 battenes. 2 dep th
ilnders, in e&lt;eelient condt·
t1on and g "age kept lo r
$S ,OOO , 1740 1992 · 2268

2 man ~ass Boat New wit h
electnc anchor excellent
condition $700 or best olfer
(740)441-8299

Johnson 25 Hp. long shaft ,
Chevy'
Impala Johnson 6 1-iiJ shOrt shaft; 2
Burgu ndy, base plus model cycle manual start , e)(cellent
w/e)ltras. Only 36,000 miles, condition . 740-992-5 181.
gets 30 mpg. $11 ,500
60 Al!IV PAlm &amp;
(740)388-9217,
ALLffi&lt;;()RJF.~

2003 PT Cr uise r, 4 cyl ,
rUns"&amp; looks great, goO!;! gas 258 6 cylinder engine Runs
m11eage .
$7 ,200.
Call good, make offer. 5.0 HO
Ford engine, runs exceilen·t.
(740)386,0 i40,
tra ns. to go w1th. engtne , can
95 Z-28 Camara 350 Auto T· hear 5.0 run . $,3000 080
Tops Leath er, Great Shape. 740 441 ·9445
runs grea t, green, tan interiCAMPERS &amp;
or $4500. 92 Corsica V-6
MmoRHOMES
1900 Audr 200 and 1990 Auto New Tires and Brakes
Cad1ll ac Deville--good con- Lots of repairs done. Recent " 02 Wildcat 2Sf1. Sth wheel
.
.
'
Paint Job Looks and Runs
dttion. $4,500.00 Flrm-·Sold Great
S~
500 740_742_ slide out, ftberglass stdes ,
As A Pair. 740-992-D03l
·
$~ 8,000. Exce llent con di4011
ti on, clea n. (740)245·9 109 ,
1995. Pontiac Bcmne11ille
3800 V6 , 20 mpg, 93,000 99 Buick Regal LS, 3800 V6 , (740)441-7632
mtles, all power, AC, $3,000 4dr, 62 .000 miles excellent
For Rani Camping Trailer
080 (740)245-5934,
condition, $5,495 (304)675, Sites Near River. Cement

Angus Bulls, two X-breds , 4
heifers. Excellent breeding .
INsrRUMFNI'S
~--itiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil-~ Slate · Run Farm . See
www. slate ru nf a rm .com,
(740)266-5395,

4

18'3~ Stratos 150 hp. Just
~ebu ilt
$12.500
Call

1962 Thunderbird ; Blue 2003

r

I

goosenecks, ~umps and utU- ' " - - - - - - - - ·
itiEis. Your dealer for Prostar
and Load Trail trail ers. ·Tobacco Plants for sale. Call
(740)446-7843or (740)64 51740 )446 •241 2 ,
1660,

~861

TRUCKS

t'ORSALE

nnr--:"!"---....,
'IR\1(1 '

97 Dodge Cummms 4)14
automatic exte nded cab,

IO

Ho~u:

tong bed. Good shape, lot~ L_,.;IMiiiiji.'RiiOiiVEME
iiiliiiii
'.N'
ilfiiSi.-1
of extras. (740)446 -4228 or
I740i645-s9t6,
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
98 Dodge 1500 Quad cab. Unconditional lifetime guar4WEI, toa"ded, $6,850 nego- antee. Local referenCes furtiable. (740)446· 1905 or nished. Established 1975.
(304)412-4645,
Ca ll 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers Basement
4x4
Waterproofi ng .

r

FOR SALE

200~ 600 Grizzly Auto 4X4.
Casta Contracting
Less than 300 miles. Great Commercial
Residential
Shape
$3600, 740-742- Remodeling "We do it air
Phone (740 )446.0306,
4011 .

:::::-:--:-:::-:-::--:2001 Grand Chief Cherokee

8)1terior and charco8! tnte~- 4x4 , white. loaded, sun roof,
or, lowered , 16' factory rims. $ 12,000 . books $14,500.
$10,000
0522

Patios. Full Hook-Up Only 2
Sites Left
can 740-9925956,

080 1740)416· (740)367-7272, (740)3677762, ( 740)4~6-4060 ,

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In
• S1ock. Call Ron Evans, 1600-537-9526,
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
Angle ,
For
Concrete,
Channel. Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains.
Orlvaways &amp; Walkways, l&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Mon.iJay,
Tuesday, Wedne sday &amp;
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
Thu rs~ay,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300

MobUe home sites for up to
16x80 In Country Homes. Pleasant Valley Apartment
ll (740)385-4019,
Are now taking Applications
lor 2BR, 3BA &amp; 4BR ,
''
Applications
are
taken ·
In Memory
lnMamory
Monday thru Fr+day, from
9:00 A.M.·4 PM. Office Is
Located at 11 51 Evergreen
Drive Point Pleasant WV
Ph'one No. Is (304,)675New Coleman Compresso r,
5806 : EHO
4HP, 1 gat. Wheel chair, lg.
bath seat (740)441-0706,
Taking applications for a 1
large bedroom upstairs apt,
who pas sed away
central air. Call (740)441, 0731,
May 10,2005

In Memory of our son

Jon 'Freeman

business
is interested
in
,
,
,
I
,...,.•ng in this special sectlo.n~
'

You are always in our he n~ts
&amp; thoughts
You may not be with us,
But your memories always
will be
We love you,
Mom, Dad

91-2

&amp;

Joe &amp; Shirley
Halp Wanted

Minimum

two

years

~ucation/experience

The Dally Sentinel

At&lt;C . reg. mini dachahund
puppies 2 1itte rs 1 ready now
very unusual co lors and
dapPles 350.!)0 and up 740256-1498, cell-5781 OSS

t'OilSALE

Class

·or

To Subscribe Call

lUll SALE

f50 lloA1S &amp; MarollS

Card of Thank8

. .experience as a Registered/Licensed Dietitian;
Registered Diet Te'ch or Regi stered Nurse With
an active license issued by the State of OH
iespomlbUIUes: Provide nutrition counseling
Schedule and teach group nutrition Assist
clerically with program end eavors/client
assistance Other dulie s as assigned by Health
Commissioner, Wit Director or designee
Houl-s Work: 28 hours per week (Monday
lhrough Friday) between 8:00am - 4:00pl" PM
as scheduled by WJC Dtrcctor, Flex hours as
necessary on weekends and during evenings.
Salary:
Co mm ens urat e
w ith

ENTERTAINMENT

P ETS

1

small 2br,
Utilities,
Call (740J709- 1166'
Doposlt, No Pets, (304)675Vacant land on Jessie Creek 4874
off 554 by Kyger. 5,064 - - - ' - - - - - - •cres. Rife Farm Lot #8.
$10,000, (740)845·0440

nutrition/nursi ng :

COMICS SPORTS .

i

U11estock Trailers. Many call 675.0935 after 5.00pm
opti ons available- steel, aluminum. dressing rooms, u11• 1998 Oodge Dakota. Auto.
lng quarters. (740)446-2412. V6, 2X4 , air, bed topper.
1994 Chevy Aslro Conv.Van,
Quality
reg
Angus
bull
s
&amp;
Auto,
Air, $1500.
1999
t \ ln l ' l t' l 'lll ..,
heifers, 12 to 18 months. Dodge Caravan, Auto; Air,
,\ I I\ I . _, I ( H f.._
Call (740)446-9856 ,
$2800,
1998 Chrysler
Sebring LX, Auto, Ai r,
Registered Ang uf bul~ .. 3 53200.
M&amp;J Auto, St. At.
year olds to year lng. nee 160, Vi nton. Ohto Call 388$2,000-$ 1,000,
Call
9693 2PM,6PM or 742-2662
740)2 5•5984 ,
h
do?
Have some aullng to
"a,
nY",,m,e'C
, ~---=-~~
Carmichae l
EquipmentHw &amp;
2005 Chev ro let Cavalier.
your source tor quality
GRAIN
. Auto 2dr. Burnt Orange

Rent

Part-dme Meigs County ~C Health
Profeulonal
Quallftcadom: Graduate of an accredited
college or university; Major in foods and

and more ...

~

riO H~

49 ·5 acres by Tycoon Lake. $275/month,

Help Wanted

CURRENT EVENTS

I

Brand new
16' wide
Attontlonl
vinyl/shingle $181 /mo, Call Local ~omp any ottering "NO
(740)385·7671'
DOWN PAYMENT" programs for you to buy your
Nice 14x70 3 bedroom only
$10,995, Will help with deliv- home Instead of renting.
* 100% financing
ery. Call (740)385·9621 ,
• Les s than perfect credit
Trailer &amp; House in Country accepted
(Broad Run area) (304)882· • Payment could be the
sams as rent.
3970
Mortgage
Locators.
Very clean 1 4M64 2 bed- (740)367-oooo
room , Only $7,995, Call
Farm House for Rent ·near
g40)385-o698,
AID Grande. No InSide pets,
mUst
have
references
(304)675-7624

;::::::==~

eao ,

'

TO LoAN

, TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Winl
1-888-582-3345
I\ I \ I I .., I \ II

Garage Sale: May 12&amp;13.
i•.
..
ll..1.0_ _ _ _
___
WANIID
IfELp WANTiill
WANflill
341 Rutland St., Middleport.
GAUJPOLIS
Rain or Shine.
linens,
968,
Knlck-Kn¥f&lt;s , Much More.~ An Excellent way to earn
4 family sale. · Thur-Sat,
~man
r uc 1on , nc
money, The New AIIOn,
This
nawspape
mile above Mercerville on RACO Schlorohip Yard Sale, CaU Marilyn 304-662-2645
urchastng Age nt, lcnowl
ccepts only hel
SA 2 18. Boys clothes, Star Mill Park, Racine, May
dge
In
Tech nical,
anl3d ada meetin·
lon_M_ec_h_a_nl-cs_:_N_o_w
Generator 5,000 watt, lots 9 and 10 from 9 tO 4· May -A-H-en-1lectronics, Automottve,
OE standards,
more.
11 from_ 9 to 2. _Thursday~ taking applications for expeyd raullc&amp;, w/experlence I
eve rythmg one·ha lf price .
M
,
urchasing &amp; buying Sen
$1 00
b
rtences Truck
echamc .
,d 1 th '
M~ 12-13. Clothes. houseWe will not knowing
an co. mg
·
a ag. Mall resume to · R&amp;J Resume Fa)l to (304)882
hold s, wicke r f~rn itu re. Somethmg for everyone. Trucking
y accept any adver
14530 Sl. At 1187
treadmill ,
etc .
323 Thanks lor your support.
. 7 ,Marietta, OH 45750
lsement In violatio
mall glp...!mmarker C fron
Honeysuckle Dr. in Addison
flhe law,
lernet.net
Rained
out
last
t
ime-Having
behind gas station off At 7.
AVONI All Areas! To Buy or ~!!:::""""'-------' ~~~~~:;~II and Dental
another sale on Saturday on
Taking
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304· Help Wanted!
Saturday, May 13. 2006-· 675·1429.
Applications for a Barge
I Vacation Every 6
9:00AM to 5:00P.M, 33932 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _P Loader. River Experience IL\IIonth!
Basham Road -Log home Bartender/waitress, fu ll/part Helpful
4~4 's For Sale .................. ,..................... ...... 725
Please apply at
Today to Start
· above Bashan. Many items time, steady employment , Shelly
, Ar1nouncemeni ................ ....... ... .. ............ ~ ... 030
Materials,
Inc .
NEW Career
still available. Women's and trainmg available, apply Rac1ne, PlanUAacine, Ohio.
Antlques ....................................................... 530
1--877~3-.6247
Children
clothing , col- Jericho Inn "304·675·4167
Apanmenta tor Rent ............ ... .................... 440
lect ibles. kitchen items,
Auction and Flea Markat ............................. 080
Locally own lamil y owned
l1nens, bicycle, children's
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
company seeking driVers lor
OakwOod Homes
cross bow, wooden table,
Auto Repair ......................... ,........................
regional
ope
ration.
Must
Sales
Person. 6 figu re
our
Autos for Sale .. ,........ ,..... ,, .. :,............. , ......... 710
cha ir, and much much morel
have
good
MVA.
potential.
Blue Cross, Blue
Boats&amp;· Motors for Sale ............................. 750
competitive pay with benefit Shield, 401K, 5 day work
Robert Barrens, St. At. 124,
Building Supplies .... ,.. ,.. ,.... ,........... ,........... ,550
package, whicih includes week. Proven sales record .
Thurs. &amp; Fri. , 9-4, ra in canBusiness and Bulidlngs ........... .................. 340
medical and dental insur- Call
Russ
Murdock
cels till 15th. 16th, girls
' Buolness Opportunlty ........ ,................ ;....... 210
ance,
life
insurance,
vaca(740)446·3093
or
fax :
' NO EXPERIENCE NECESSAA'I'
clothes.
Business Tralnlng ....................... ................ 140
• FULL· TIME CLASSES
tion pay, holiday pay and a (740)446·3599,
email:
, Campers &amp; Mo1or Homes ........................... 790
' COl TRAINING
Yard and Sake Sale at Long
retirement plan Must llave rm760@clayton .net
'FIW.NCING .-.vAI~BlE
Camping Equipment .... ,............ .. : ............... 780
Bottom
Community
Building,
'
JOB PLACEMENT
18 months tracto r trat ler
, Cards of Thanks ................ ,............. ............ 010
.' ENROLLING NOW
May 11 and 12. 9·00-??
experience. Home th rough- Ohio Valley Home Health,
, Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
out the week and on week- Inc. hiring AN's, Accepting
Electrical/Refrigeration ............................... 840
ends. If mterested ca ll 800 - appl ications for CNA, STNA,
Equipment for RanL ................................ A80
ALLIANCE
Pt:.y••
AIID
I'LEAs
..
632-1547,
Excavating ................................................... 830
CHHA, PCA. Competitive
TRACTOR· TRAILER
Farm EqulpmenL .. ,.. ,............ ,...... ,............. 610
wages , mileage and benefits
TRA INING CENTERS
4.9 miles out Sandhill turn
Farma for Rent ... ,....... , .............. ,.... ,........... A30
WYTHEVILLE , 1/A
_including health insurance.
right on to A8yburn Road .5
Farmo for Sale .. ,.......................................... 330
Apply at 1480 Jackson Pike,
miles ou1 Rayburn on right. . 1 -800-334-1203
For Lease .. , .... ,.. ............ .............................. .490
Gallipolis or 2415 Jackson
Garage
door,
men's,
For Sale ................ : .. ,.. ,............ ,.. ,................. 585 ,
Avenue, Point Pleasant, WV
www.•I111111C11Ir.tclcr1rall•r.com
women's &amp; baby clothing,
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
or phone toll free 1--866·44 ~ •
toys/stuffed anlmlas. full stze Childcare worker needed lor ·
Frutte &amp; yegetables ................. ,............. ..... . 580
1393,
Treatment
Furnished Rooms ...................................... .. 450
bed, pool tavle, wallpaper, Resi den ti al ·
General Haullng .. , .. ,, ................ "' ................. 850
nic nacks, baby swing , Facility. Pay based on expe·
Pa1d Training
Glveaway ..... ...... ...................... ,.................... 040
Thursday 8am-3pm; Friday rlence, paid insurance. Call
Individuals willing to train for
Hap'p y Ads ...................................... ,............ ,050
&amp;Saturday Sam-Bpm,
to apply Mon·Fri, 9am·3pm
clerical or driving positions.
Hay &amp; Gr"n ....... ,... ....................... ,...........,.... 640
(740)379·9063,
'
Must be AGE 55 OR OVER
, Help Wahted ................... .............................. 110
Big Garage Sale Thur-Frl
and mae! allglblllty require·
Home lmprovemento ........ ,.......................... 810
one miler out Sandhill Ad Dental Chair Side Assistant
ments. Additi onal trBinlng
Homos for Salo ............ ,........ ,.... ,.. ,..... ......... 310
Lots
of
E11erything. ond
Dental
Hygienist
positions available. Call the
Household Gooda ...... , .... ,...............,. .......... 510
Rain/Shine
Experience preferred, but
Senior Emplovment Center
Houses for Rent ............... ......... .................. 410
not Mandatory. Reply to
(866)734-~3 01 '
Huge
Two
Family
Yard
Sale.
' In Memortam ................................................ 020
Point P-leasant Register ·aox
May 12-13, Camp Con ley, TSC5, 200 Main Street,
lnaurance .. ,, ...... ,.. ,.. ,"' ........... ....... ............... 130
Pert time position to Manage
326 Milton Dr. ·a:OOam to
Lewn &amp; Garden Equipmenl ..... ................... 660
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
3:00pm. Video~. materials,
Llveatock ..................................................... ,630
Country Homes
rental Area·
com·
munlty
In Shade
, Looi and Found ........................... .... ............ 060
furniture, appliances, crafts, Direct
Sales
Fantastic
Loto &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
tnctudes a house to 11118 In,
very cheap ,
Opportunity, • SOK
no
Mlacellaneoua ......... ..................................... 170
Sand resume 1o' Country
Problem. Must be·Motivated
WANrED
Mlacelianeouo Merchandlu ....................... 540
Homes, PO Box 1033
and Self Starter. Call Ke n
Mobile Home Repair ......... .......................... ,860
'logan, Ohio 43138,
(740)892-7440
Mobile Homea for Rent ................ .. ,............ 420
Mobile Homaa for Salo .. ...... ........................ 320
Parta Salesperson wanted.
Absolule Top Dollar: u .s . Employment!
2 Man
Money to Losn ....... : ...... :........... "' ................ 220
Computer experience and
Sliver and Gold Co!ns, Carpenter Crew needed .
Motorcyctaa &amp; 4 Wheelera .......................... 740
knowladgo of farm oqulp·
Prooteets, Gold Ringa, Pre- Must have own tools, truck,
Mualoallnalrumenta ............. ,........ ............. 570
ment prtftrrtd. Sal1ry
1935
u .s .
Currency, and ladders. Good Pay.
Peraon111 ,,,,,,,,;.,,,,,,,,.,......................... 1•• • • • •• 005
negotiable depending on
Solitaire Dlamonda- M.T.S. 740-992·0498 ,
Pete for Sate ............................ ,,,,,,,, ............ 510
tMporlonoo ,
Hoanh
Coin ' Shop, tei 1 Second
P)umblng &amp; Haatlng .................................... 820
lnturance prov ldtd . Stnd
Avenue, Galllpolla, 740·44G·
Proteaalonal Bervlcaa ................................. 230
, reoumeto: CLA BOM Aaa c/o
2842,
. Radio, TV &amp; Cl Rapalr .. ,............................ 180
Galllpolle Tribune, PO Box
Aeellllllte Wanteel ......... ,.....h .................... 310 . 1 will buy Juolt CJri, Ca~
Tlrod of working all holl· 48Q, Gtlllpolle, OH 41583t,
IOhOOIIInltructlon .................... :,,,,,,,,,,.,.,., 110
dayo? Tired ol working 12
(740)388:&amp;303.
EXTRAI EXTRAI hour thlfto? come home
IMd. Plant' Fertllller,; .. ,......................... eeo
POSTAL JOBS
I \ 11 ' 1 0 \ \ II ' I
IIIUitlonl Wanted,,.,,,,,.,,,.,,, ,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,, ... 120
Motor Route Orlvtr
and
1o1n
ue
11
Modi
Homo
SIUY·SiUB/hr.,
now hl~
'
I I&gt;\ It I '
lpt~ae for Aant,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,, ,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,, .........
needed tn t1'1e L.eon area.
Htalthl Oponlng fer a PRN
F
II 1 nd f
lpartlng Qooda ........................................... l30
Pay O\lfr 11,000/month
RN and/or lulitlma RN peal· lng. or,app eaton 1
'"
. govtmement Jab Info, call
IUV'I ror 1111 .............. ,,,,,,,.,,,,, ,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,, .. 720
Mutt hlYO Rollabla
lion. EOE . Fulltlmi polltlone A merican Aaooo. ol Labor 1·
Tran1port1t!on &amp; allernala
Truokl for ••,. ""''"'"'"""'"""""""'""'"'"" 71 a
lncludu bonellt ~ackaga, g 13-SIH042 24/hri. om~ .
Upholattry ................................................... 870
oar. Quallrltd applicants
401 K, and olgn on bonuo . Hrv
'
Van• Por lale......................................a•..•.•.. 730
Contact
$2,000. Call Judlo Rallo,
•
100 WORKIRI NilDID
Wanted to Buy .............................. ,.,,, .. ~ ....... 010
Sean M. Cullen,
Auemblt oraftt,
'
RN , C. Clinical Manager, at , -R-t-35_A_dul-18-0C:. -kS-1-or""'e-nt_td_
Wanted to auy· Farm Buppn....................
(304)875· 1333 "" 20
wood
Items.
(740)441·1779 or 1·800· Mldnlghl Clerk Full l imo
wanted To Do ............................................. ,180
To $480/wk
(304)137-~iOO
Wenled to Rant ............................................ 470
Solely Profeoalonal on con- 481·6334,
Malerlalo provided ,
Yerd let.. Oalllpolla .................. ,.. ,...... ,....... 072
tract baalo, F'ay baoed on
Froe lnlormatlon pkg. 24Hr.
- Vard Sai•Pom•oy/MiddJe ............:.. ,, .. ,,,,,,o74
experlenct. Call (740)845·
801 ·428·4849
Yard lai.. Pt. PIHaant .............. , ................. 078
3810 and leave message.
YARDSALE-

HOMES

'86 Crestrlge 14)170 2BRI 2

9948,

4BR
Foreclosure, only
$14,900. For listings call
B00-391 -5228 ext F254 ,

~

?-t•

MoNEY

Harrisonville.
Exterior
Painted recently. Has new
carpet, cei lings painted .
Make nice starter home or
rental unh $13,600.00. 740742~1 1

200Q Clayton f6X70, 3 Br,,
2Ba., CIA·Heat pump new
carpet, vinyl, porches, on
rented lot --$18,000, 740992-()650,

POUCIES: Ohio Valley Pub lilhlng raHrYH thll right to edit, reject, or cancel any .d at any Ume. Enort. muel be r11p0r1ed on the first day of
I
Tribun•S.ntlnei·Regleter will be reaponslble ~or no ITIOfl than the colt of the apa~ occupied by tht error lnd only tha flrat lntert.lon. We lhell not be
any lou or u:panee tblt multe from the publlotdlon or omlealon ot.an MlverUaemant. eorr.ctlon will be mada In the PI rill: lVI IIabie adltlon. • ~:::,
are .rwaya contidantlal. • Current l"llt. e~~rd appiiM. • All ,... ...._ HvertiMrnent."art
to the Fedaral Fair Houalng Act of 1968. • Tt,la
accepts only n.lp wanted eda ntMtlng !0! atllndarde. We will not
acoept
of ttlt taw, •

Sam--? Out 218 7847 just
Bedding &amp; Vegetable Plants , past Teens Run Ad on left.

t., __G•-JVEA•w•:.•v-r'l F\&gt;t~=Y~

1970 2 Bd.Rm. Trailer on
50'X225'.
Lot
In

iJ;.

All Display: 12 Noon 2

KIT &amp; CARLYLE •

b~

14x55·'97 Fleetwood MH2BR, ~ bath, elec. heat/ACgood condition $10,500, Call
(740)446-3644 for appt

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
.m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 fQr large , '

Display Ads

• All ads must be ' prepaid'

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • lndude A Price • Avoid Abbrevlallont

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To
Get

building. C lay Township. No Pets, Lease
Plu s
$300 depostt, $400/month Security Deposit Required ,
Includes water, you paw ·(740)367·7086 .
electric (740)256-110Ji:-·
THE MAPLES APART,
MENTS 100 Memorial Drive
East
740-992-7022
·Subsidized
Residential
1br House; and 3br House
Housing lor 50 years of age
lor Rent Call (304)675-2441 1 and ,2 bedroom apart· and older. Pri ority Given To
between 9am &amp; 2pm
ments, furnished and unfur- Applicants With Income At
nished, security deposit br Below $10,900.00 lor 1
1BA house- t 1 Garfield Ave, required, no pets, 740-992· person or $12,450.00 for 2
Gallipohs. $350 month. ·Ca ll 2218,
persons. Maximum Income·
tor details (740)441..0194 or
1 person , $18 ,150.00 or
(740)441-1 184,
2 Bedroom Apartments
$20,700.00 for 2 persons.
starting at S400Jmo. Most
2 br house 2013 K Main St Brand New. Call tor details Must meet HUD/202/8 criteria for household composiPt. Pleasant central air (740)44Hl194 ,
tion .
MANAGED By
!heal. washer/dryer included
Si111erheels·A
Aeefty
~04-674-047~
2 bedroom apt on VIne St.
~-~-----:--~ Galllpolla, Ulllltlas pai d, Company. Equal Housing
Opportunity
3 bedroom house for re nt (740)367-7886 ,
. no pets, references ,availTwin Rl11ers Tower 1s acceptable June 1st close to locks. 3BR .apt. W/0, stove, refrig ..
Ing applications for waiting
(304)576-2842
OW,
central
air/heat. list for Hud·subsized, 1· br,
(740)256-6846 ,
apartment, call 675·6679
3 bedroom, 2 fu ll baths, full
basement, 1 car Qarage, 661 Third, Gallipolis, 28R, Equal Housing Opportunity
$600/sec, deposit, $600/mo, w/appllances, pay own ulilt·
(740)446-3481
ties.
$350/montft plus
$350/dapos lt ' (740)2453 bedroom, cia. nice clean
1
9595 leave message
house, small yard , quiet
street, good neighborhood, Accepting applications for 1
$450,00
plus
daposlt, or 2 bedroom apartment, 35• Sony Wega Tr initron TV
(740)843·5264, In Racine,
$400-$ 500 mon1h, kitchen wl stand, DVD, surround
sound system, good condi·
Acce pting applications. 3 applian ces &amp; WID furnished , lion, $375, Ph, 1740)446·
water
&amp;
garbage
Included,
bed roo m, 1 bath, 1 car
1802,
garage, outbuilding . Green no pets, 1st month, security
deposit
&amp;
lease
required
.
School Distr ict No pets.
$550/mo. plus deposit. (740)446-9585,
(740)245-0372.

10

Sentinel

Word Ads

acres and quick closing. 740·416· ' with awning, 811.8 storage Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.

r.~-----.,J
M~s~ Ir .!~ I
.~-"""'iititittiitiiiitto_.. r ~~. '

/

~egt~tet
{740) 446-2342 {740) 992•2156 {304) 675-1333
......c_a_I_I_T_o__d_a_y._••_.__o_r~Fa1 1x•To (740) 44&amp;-3o.,oa,__ _ _o_r_F_ax_r_o,.:__:_9_92_-2_1_57...,...

To Place
Your Ad,

Two

optional. ldSat tor Horse 3130.
owner. Two miles from Point
Pleasant(304)675-1536-

2005 26 HP Cub Cadet
lUll SALE
LT1050 Hydrostatic dri'o'e.
John Deere 10 fl. No Til Drill 50" cut riding lawn mower 1999 Mustang-Automatic aH
for
rent.
Carmichael with shade. Topper $1 ,700 Power Options
$6995.
Equipment (740)446-24 12.
200t Neon Aut omattc, 4
Door. 4 ely. $5995. t995
John Deere Mfnl E:ccavator/
Bul&lt;lkAivieraAII Power3800
Tractor · Lo ade r Backhoe/
Super Charged . $3495.
Skid Steers. CarryHchael
1996 Gee Tracker, 4 cyl.---5
Equipment (740 )446-2412
speed $3495. Many More.
Riverviey.t Motors. 1 Block
Load Trail/Load Ma)l Trailers· · $5001 Pollee Impounds!
G
k 1D
above · McOona lds
1n
oosenec s
umpsl Cars from $500 For listings
Uti11ti9s.
Carmichael , BD0-39 1-5227 e)lt. 390~
Pomeroy. Phone 740-992·
Equipment (740)446-2412,
• 3490,
04 VW Bug GLS, 16,300
New 146 John Deere front. mile s, BOFW, aulo. all 200 1 Chevy Metro call
end lo~der for sale Or trade power, $16, 100, average between 8-5pm (304)675for a d1sc mower (740) 992- retail $1 8,600, (740)350- 7375 or call (304)674·0098
7603 '
9977'
after 5:30

Pleasant Valley Hqspital
Coed Flag Football
, Tournament
has been moved,to the
POINT PLEASANT
MOOSE LODGE fields
(past Krodel Park) on
Saturday, June, 10, 2906.
Games begin at Bam. ·
Rain or shine!
THE PUBLIC IS INVITED

I

. .Hql!ris
ren(la Davt
.

'

992·2155

...

May.12~

Applleadon Process Deadline: Mail resume
,to 112 R Memorial Drive. Suite A. Pomeroy,
OH 45769 by OS/12/06

~
'

'

�Wednesday, May 10, 2006

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

v.ww.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentin!;!l • Page 85
NEA Crossword Puzzle ·

BRIDGE

ACROSS
which
Ia a1poae to aala at pub- A a Shirley
eel any and all legal point
et
•!
rlghta of way, and the 111umed to be the lic auction on the Reynolda
"""*" of the ofora- SouthNIII- of 1 front atape of the Property 11 1241
SlrNt,
aald d01crlbed real 0.30 acre f!IOra or 11e1v- County Court College
aa- being marked leal tract of land ia HOUII on Friday, SyrecUH,' Ohio PPt
by 4" round cement described In ~I 1 June lith, 2006 at 10 20-00190.000 Prlo~
Relerencea:
A.M., of .. ld day, the Deed
cyllnderl.
of e recorded In
Auditor's Parcel No.: Dald Book 328 II following · delcrlbed Volume 328, Page 731
Appralaed
Ill
Page 171;
Reel E1tata: .
08-G0430.DOO
In
the SO,OQO.OO Term• of
ALSO THE FOLLOW· Thence leaving said Situated
lNG
DESCRIBED centerline and along Townahlp
of Sale: Cannot be oold
REAL ESTATE alluat· the boundarlea of Sallabury, County of lor leas than 2l3rd of
ad In LetartTownshlp, said· 0.30 acre mora Malga and State of • the appralaad value .
Meigs County, Ohio or len tract are the Ohio, and deacrlbad 10% down on day of
and being mora fully following lhrae couro- •• followt: Baing In sale, cash or certified
Section No. 16, Town check, balance due
descr.lbed as follows:
ea:
t. North 33 dog. 2, Range 12 of the on confirmation of
CORRECTED
8
.
Company's sale. , The appralaal
DESCRIPTION
OF 41 '26 '" Well a dis· .Ohio
ESTATE tanca of 112.50 laallo ·Purchaae and begin· did not Include an
The Farmers Bank REAL
nlng Ill the Norlheaol Interior examination
Savings OESCRIBED IN VOL· ·a point;
and
2. South 52 deg. comer of a 1 acre para of the house. Robert
Company, Pomeroy, , UME 331, PAGE 73;
Ohio reaervea the Being a part of two 36'49'" Wool a dis· eel •• set out ·and E. Beegle, Melga
right to bid at this tracts of land record· lance ol112.00 laatto · deacrlbad In a dead · County
Sheriff.
from Esta L. David; at Attorney · for
the
aile, and to withdraw ed as Tract 2 and a point;
the above collateral Tract 4 of a daad 3. South 25 deg. al, to Guy cole, e! al Plaintiff Frank &amp;
recorded In Volume Wooldridge, Co. LPA, ,
to 13'22'" East a . dis·
prior to sale. Further, transferred
The Farmaro Bank Rodney A. Nelgler lance of 114.50 laet to 155 at Pago104 of the 600 South Pearl St,
Savings and Sarah E. Nelgler a point In the cantor· Meigs County Deed Columbus,
and
Ohio
Company reserves as recorded In Dead line of said Township recorda, which place 43208,614-221-1682
of beginning Is also (5) 3, 10, 17, 24, 31
the right to reject any Book 283 at Page 377 Road 1100.
Meigs
County Thence leaving said 160 feet North of the
or all .b kla aubmlltad.
The above deacrll&gt;ad Recorder's · Office, 0.30 acre mora or road which runs East
leas tract and along and West; thence
Public Notice
collllleral will be aold Meigs County, Ohio,
.
"aa is-Where Ia", with also being a part of said centerline South North along Willow
58 deg. 28'36" Weal a Creek Roall 216 faat, Clifton Lee Adkins,
no express or Implied 100 acre Lola No. 271
distance of a3.39 laat ' more or leas; thence last
and 272 Townshlp-2·
residence
warranty given.
For further Informa- North,
Range·12· to the principal point West 283 feel more unknown, Ia hereby
Letart of beginning contain· or 1811 to the Western notified lhat he must
tion,
or for
an West,
Melga lng 3.1660 acres mora boundry of Section respond within 28
appolntmanl .
to Township,
lnopacl
collateral, County, Slate of Ohio or leas of said Tract 2 16, thence South 218 days to a complaint
prior lo sale contact and mora particularly and 1,0415 acres faa! ·to the Northwest lor divorce 08 OR·032
mora or less of 11id cor- of said above Iliad by Rebecca G.
Cyndle, Stacy or described os lollowa:
Beginning at o point Tract 4 for a total of relrenced 1 acre Adklna
In
the
Randy at 9~2-2136.
In the centerline of 4.2075 acres mora or tracl; thence Easterly Common Pleas Court
(5) 10, 11 , 12
Township Road H100 less, aubject to all along
the
North of Meigs County, 2nd
which bears North 89
legal easaments and bountry of said 1 acra Slraal, Pomeroy, OH
deg 00'47" East a dis· rlghts-ol·way.
lrtct to the place of 45769.
Public Notice
lance of 570.25 fell! to
Bearings
are beginning, containing (5) 3,10, 17, 24, 31, (6)
.
an e~lsllng Rail Road assumed and are for 1.6 acres, more or 7
Sheriff Sales
Splb
which
'
Is
the
detennlnatlon
of
Number
leu. Parcel Number:
Caae
assumed to be the angles.
14·00767.000
05CV0119
Home National Bank lnteraectlon of the The above descrlp· Commonly known as:
Public Notice
centerline of State · lion waa prepared 34115 Willow creek
Plaintiff
Route 338 and the from an actual survey Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio. • Sheriff Saial
vs .
' Dennis Boothe at al South line of said 100 made on the 22nd day C~rrtnt Owner: Eater Ca1e
Number
acre Lot No., 271;
of May, 1992, by C. L. DeMoaa et al 05CV108
CIT
Defendants
Court of Common thence leaving said Thoma• SmHh, Ohio Property at: 34115 Group/Conaumer
Pleae, Meigs County, centerline South 89 Profelalonsl Willow Creak Drive, Finance Inc
Pomeroy, Ohio PPII Plalntlf
deg.00'47"
West ·Surveyor 16844.
Ohio.
In pursuance of an passing thru an exist• Note: The 3.1660 14.00767.000 Prior vs
Referencea:
Denise D. Qualla et al
order of sale to me lng Iron pin at a dis· acres In Tract 2 Ia pan Dead
Volume 104, Page 33 Delandarita
directed from said lance of 28.88 feet of 100 acre Lot 1271
at
Court of Common
court In the above and going a total dis· and the 1.0415 acraa Appralaed
entitled action, I will lance of 186.651eetto In Tract 4 Ia part of $40,000.00 terms of Pleas, Melga County,
aala: Cannot be sold Ohio. .
expoae to sale at pub- a 518" Iron pin . set; 100 icra Lot 1272.
lic auction ori the thence North 33 dog. Being a part of the for laaa than 213rda of . In purouance of an
real estate daacrlbad the appralaad val~e. order of sale to me
front steps of the · 21 '07" East passing
Meigs County Court lhru a 518 Iron pin set In Volume 321, Page 10% down on Oay of directed from 1ald
House on Friday,. at a distance of 193, Meigs . County Sale, cash or c:anlflad court In the above·.
June 9, 2006 · at 10 128.95 feet and going Deed
Records. check, Balance Due entitled action, I will
A.M., of said day, the a total distance of Reference
Deed: on Confirmation of expose to 1181a at pubfollowing described 528.37 feet to a 518" Volume 104, Page 403 Sale. The appraisal lic auction on the
Iron pin set;
Meigs County Official did not Include ·an Front Step1 of the
Real Estate.
Situated
In
the Thence North 44 dog Recorda. Audltor'a Interior examination Meigs County Court
House on . Friday,
No.
08· of the house.
Township of Letart, 01 '54" East a dis· Parcel
County of Meigs, lance of 190.72 feet to . 004 73.001 Property Robert E. Beegle, June 16, 2006 at 10
Melga County Sheriff. A.M. of aeld day, the
State of Ohio and a 518" Iron pin set;
Address:
25671
Road, Attorney lor
the following described
being mora partlcu· Thence North 20 dog. McNicklea
Raal Estate: ·
Plaintiff
larly.descrlbad as lol· 35'58" East a dis· Racine, O.H 45771
lows: Being In 100 tanca ol157 .641eetto Also· a 1964 VIrginia Shapiro &amp; Felly LLP, Situated In the Village
mobile home, I.D. 1500 w. Thlrd ,Strael, of Middleport, In the
AcreLot · 1271 and a 518"1ron pin 101;
. County of Melga and
beginning South 70 Thence North 31 dog tFDCEXBMV3691, Suite 400,
Ohio State of Ohio and
deg. Eaat a distance 40'22'" Eaat a dis- Ohio Certificate of Cleveland,
44113, 216-621·1530
deecrlbad aa follows:
of 135.5 feet and tance .of .152.241eet to Title 15300114540.
Curreri!
Owner · (5) 3, 10, 17
Elghlaan feat off the
North 74 deg. 20' East .a 518" Iron pin set;
North North Side of
a distance of 479.2 Thence North 32 dog. Dennnls Boothe at al
feet along the Bull 12'09'" East a dis· Property and Trailer · - - - - - - - - the West One-Hall of
Public Notice
lo,t No Twenty (20)
Cave Road, from an tanca ol196.071aat to at 251!71 McNickle&amp;
and twenty·four·feet
Rd, Racine, Ohio PPI
Iron bolt In the center a 518"1ron pin set:
off the south side of
of State Routa 1336 Thence South 65 dog. 08-00430.00 . Prior Sheriff Sales
Case
Number the west ons-haH of
Referencaa:
aeld boll being South 12'37" East passing Deed
the Lot No. Nlnetaan
a .!llstance 843 feet thru a 5/B" Iron pin set Volume 104, Page 403 05CV113
and South 5 deg. 15' at a distance of 27.42 Meigs County Official Beneficial Ohio Inc (19) In Sheffield, now
Incorporated In 'tha
Records. Appraised Plaintiff
West a distance of· laet and going a total
Village of Middleport,
123.5 faa! along the distance of 39.68 faa! at $10,000.00 terms of
canter of State Route to a point In the Sale: Cannot be Sold Floyd A &amp; Shirley D. Meigs County, Ohio,
1336 from an Iron pin assumed cent,rllne for less then 213rda of Reynolds et al dolan- fronting on the Third
Street, known aa Lot
on the West aide of of Township Road the appralaad value. dania
purchasad from M.E.
1Oo/o down on Day of Court . of Common
said State Route and 1100.
Church of Mlddlaport
Sale, cash or cenHied Pleas, Meigs County,
on the North line of Thence along said
Ohio. Being the same
100 Acre Lot 1271 ; centerline the follow· check, balance due Ohio.
on confirmation of In pursuance of an Real Estate conveyed
thence North 71 deg. · lng eight courses:
South 27 .dog. sale. The appraisal order of aaloi to me .fo Cecil P. Bradbury
50' E!!&amp;l a dlaianca of 1.
124.4 faa! along the 02'26 " West a dis· did Include an Interior directed from said by Dead Recorded In
canter of Bull Cave tance of 20.66 feet to examination of the Court In tho above Deed Book.131, Page
antlllad action, I will 292 of tha Melga
house.
Road to a point of a point;
Daad
2. South 15 dog. Robert E. Beegle, e•poaelo sale at pub- County
which Ia South 52
Meigs County Sheriff. lic . Auction on . the Recorda. Parcel No:
dog. 22' West a dis· 03'25 " West e dis·
for
the front steps of the 15·00167 and 15·
lance of 250.5 leal lance ol166.50faatto Attorney
Plaintiff Llltle, Sheets Meigs County Court 00168 As currently
along the bull Cave a point;
Road to the center of 3. South 06 deg. &amp; Warner, Second House on Friday, aat forth In Deed
first bridge; thence 38'15'" East a dis· · Street, Pomeroy, Ohio June 9, 2006 at 10 Volume: 62, Paga;398,
A.M., of said day, the Recorded; 1·14·98.
North 18 deg. 55' lance of 213.83 feet to 740-992-6689
·
West a ~ distance of a point;
(5) 3, 10,17
commonly
following described Alao
Real Estate: Situated known as: 224 South
112.25 feet; thence 4. South 38 dag.
!n the State of Ohio, .Third,
Middleport,
South 72 deg. 50' East 43'02" West a dlsPublic Notice
County of Meigs and Ohio 45780.
112
feet; thence tanca of 51.00 feet to
In the VIllage of Currant
owners:
South 11 dog. 50' East an existing spike;
Syracuiae and being Denise D. quails el al
33
deg. Sheriff Sales
a distance of 114.5 ~.South
Numbar more
particularly Property at 2.44 s.
faa! to the place of 35'30" West a dis· Case
Union bounded
and Third
Ave,
beginning, containing lance ol21 1.59 fell! to O&amp;CV084
de1crlbed as follows:
Middleport, Ohio· PPf
0.30 acre, more or a point;
.Planters Ban~ NA
less.
plaintiff
Being known as Lot 1&amp;-00167.000 and 16·
6. South 37 deg.
The coal and other 04'07" .west a dis·
VS
.
Number Elghlaen (18) 00168.000 Prior Dead
minerals underlying lance of 144.58 feet to Ester L OeMoss at al of Hlghlawn Sub-dlvl· Rilfarancas: Volume
Defendants Court of alon of the aald 82,
Page
396
the above described a point; · .
Pleaa, Village of Syracuae, . Appraised
preml,as . and the 7. South 31 deg. Common ·
. 11
privilege of . mining 18'48" Weal a dla.· Melga County, Ohio.
Ohio Parcel Number $25,000.00 Tet·ma · of
Property Sale: Cannot be sold
and removing the lance of 166.10 feetto . In pursuance of an 20·00190
' order of sale to me Addre88:
same without unnec· a point;
1241 for leas than 213rd of
Street the appralaad value.
easary disturbing tho 8. South 40 dog. directed from said College
10% down on Day of
30'28' Wesl a distance court In the above Syracuae, Oh 45779.
aurface Is reserved.
Thera Ia also .except· of 60.93 feel to a entitled action, I will Currant Owner Floyd Sale, cash or certified
check, Balance Due
on Confirmation of
sale. The 'appraisal
did Include an Interior
examination . of the
houl8. Robert E.
Balgla, Meigs county
Sheriff. Attorney for
the plaintiff Starch
Miller, Olander 1940
Huntington Blvd, 925
Euclid
Ave,
Cleveland,
Ohio
4411!5 216-621..()04() .
(5) 10, 17,24
PIJBUC N011CE
NOTICE: Ia
hertby ·
given
that
on
S.turday, May 13,
2001, II 10:00 am, a
puj&gt;llc aale will be
hald Ill 211 W. Second
St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
The Farmaro Bank
and
Savlnga
Company Ia aelllng
lor !'111111 In hand or
certified check the
following collateral:
11193
Ford • . F150
P I c ·k u p
f1FTEX14NPKA0323

vs

Public Notice
Shariff Salea
C11e
Number
05CV107
Wachovla Bank NA,
Plalntlll
VS Denloe Smith·
Puraloy
at
al
Delandanll
Court of Common
Plaaa, Melga County,
Ohio.
In purauanca of an
order of aale to me
directed from said
court In the above
· entitled action, I will
expose to aale at
Public Auction on the
front atapa of the

Phillip
Alder
"Carpet Guy"

North
05-10-06
.AK 532
• A K. J 4

Free Measurements·

• 3
4Q 83

Ray Martin
Insta ller
Carpet
Ceramic Ttle
Hardwood • Vinyl
Carpet Restretch '
Laminates
74()-517·3704
74()-992-0650

26 Years Experlem:e

David Lewis
. 740-992-6971
Frtt

• SEAL COATING
•PATCHING

.....

- Free Estlmoles

wlfri"

Breakf;ast Speci;a J
All Day
eggs, suusage or biicon
homl!fries &amp; totJSt $4.99

South

I

" 1:

11

:

Daily Lunch Spec;;a ls

$4.!19

Sal~tds- Chef- Grilled
Chicken &amp; Chicken Tender

'All 8U'1fer5
fudy Kays Speci;d Burger
· Brown Burgtr
.
f:i CRrolinR Burger

... I 0 7 4

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: Neither

LAWN CARE
Mowing- Tree
Trimming - AeratioriFenilization· planting·

I t I: ' ' I
I l I
(740) 992-2804

iF.RANK &amp; EARNEST

Retrie\·er beagle mix
3 Jack Russell - Mix
2 Australian Shepherd Mix

Female
Brittany Spaniel-mix- female

Many puppies to choose
from

992-3779·

.

Jell Steth e m · Owne r

-,ln-

'partner respond s one no-trump. What
would you rebid?
You have a nice 17-point hand...:. nice.
that is, if your side has a fit. You are nearly worth a game-forcing th ree-heart rebid,

\I
All trP" of rooflng:

New or Repair
Seamless Gutter
Downspout

FREE
ESTIMATES

949-1405

but that would badly cromp the auction.
Settle for two hearts. If partner'l'ebids two
spades, contin'ue with three clubs to give
a good picture of ypur distribution and
strength.
Here, though, partner rebids three dia·

Hardwood cabinetry AM Ful'lllilrt
www.tlmlloii'I'CI&amp;eekaabbl.try•..,.

Meigs County Court
House on Friday,
June 16, 2006 at 10
A.M., of said day, the
following described
Rea! Estate:
All that certain tract I'I'P."''PI'IP.'I~'!"'!"'I"!''
or pai'Cal of land, situ· ,
1
Ide, lying and being In J.I.L:.&amp;.t.llu.t.:I.I.ILLI~~
the
VIllage
ol
Pomeroy•. County of
Melga, State of Ohio,
and being known and,
designated on a map
97 Beech Street
of Lincoln Heights,
Middleport, OH
made ·tiy Breece &amp;
carper . . Reglllerad
10x10x10x20 ·
Civil
Englneera,
Hunllnglon, Well vir·
992·3194
glnla, dated Octolltr
or 992·6635
17, 1942, a copy of
which waa recorded " •Middleport's only
In the offlca of tho
Self·Siorase•
Recorder of Meigs
County, Ohio, on
Open For
December'17, 19421n
Spring Season!
Plat Book 113, at
Pages 43 and 44 ail
*Flats $7.50
Lot No. 24 and being
'Hanging Baskets
parllcular)y
more
' PolS and Thbs·
. described as follows:
SPRING SPECIAL
Bag'innlng Ill a point
Large 10'" Ferns $6.95
In the North llna of
Shrubs and Perennials
Lincoln Road at the

MANlEY'S
SELf STOUGE

howaver,

one-

28 Uneer
52 Anlcle
and Gore
In Berlin
30 Pleaaed
sigh
31 More
Whimsical
35 Military trim
40 Graceful
aaablrds
41
43 Eggnog
time
45 Fundralear,
allen
46 Pooh's pal
47 Mlsca!culate
48 tlamm
olooccer
50 Tiny- .
51 Arden
of old TV

tion progresses.
Sitting North,· you open one spade and

Public Notice

raaerv~ng1

1 Next up
(2 Wda.)
6 Exoner11te
WlfW
11 Antenna
54 Experience
13 Trpe
alfa1hback
o cactus
55 Paperlesa
14 Hen or mare
eum1
15 Jeer at
56 Not as wild
16 Just a taote
17 Groosl
DOWN
18 Llpatick color
21 Rame
1 Not on
23 Rocket
2 Before
trajectory
marriage
26 Fury
3 Speaker
27 Help out
pro 28 Far East
4 MouniU! wail
nanny
5&lt;Pouchad
29 Kind
animal
of budget
6 Make aura
32 Kind of moth 7 Ringlet
33 This saftora 8 Yellowstone
34 Wlriter
tight
resort wear 9 The works
(hyp/1.)
tO "Norma -'"
36 Slangy
12 Close copy
afflnnallve 13 Snazzy
37 GO
18 Staak cut•
38 SUbway
19 Pencil port
opposites 20 River-mouth
39 PauBOIIIIers
deposits
40 Physicist
22 Masters
Nlkoil23 Entertains
42 Have a look 24 Notal! well
43 Mesh Iabrie 25 Pallo
44 Haul
lumlahlng

Ant- to Prwvtout Puzzlt

We all know players who are wedded to
point-count. "I had to double theiT game,
par tner, because I had 18 points .~ Good
players, though, unde rstand th at the
value of a hand can fl uctuate as an auc-

I . ' I
(740) 517 -6883
I

7

ARE

HEADIN '
OURWAY1
MAW

WHATTA YA
TALKIN' 'BOUT,
PAW? IT'S
PERFECTLY

NOT IN

ELVINEYLAN'D!!

monds. What would you do now?
For some, the immediate reaction is th ree
oo-trump. But where wiii nine tricks come
!rom? With a solid diamond suit, partner
would have responded two"di8monds, not
one no-trump. Even if you can establish
his suit while losing only one .trick there,

(:LEAR!!

II

corner be-n Lots
24 .and 25 as shown
on said maps then
with the aald ·line of
Lincoln Road North
63 dog. 51' Weal, 50
feel; thence with the
line between Lots 23
and 24, North 26 deg.
09' East, 308.77 feet
·to a point In the
· South line, of North
Street; thence with
said line of North
Street, South 68 dag.
33' East, ' 60.17 feel;
thence with tho line
. between said Lola 24
and 25, South 26 deg.
· 09'West312.88 feel to
the point of beglnng,

??

East
Pass
Pass

Points are overrated
In some hands

staining or painting
Special rates for
Trucking companies

Dog Pound

Husk)' mi:o. spayed very timid

s•

Pass
Pass

12..

Opening lead: A 2

Please Adopt A
Dog
· Meigs County
Golden Retritver- Mix male
Black Lab- Mix male
Yellow chow - Mix male

West

tNT

Homes- Decks ·
Driveways - Equipment
Degreasing- BoatsCampers- Trucks • Deck

II ~ ,J'

South

.
.North

•

POWER WASHING

f II I

Judy '](Qy's 'llestaurant

•
.

21111
EIP.

Anll LHWn CHRE

~ulching

195 N . Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

92
· ~AK
J 08765

.,

304-675-2457

S5.99 Ev'."!!da~
(made with Choice Fresh
Blal'k Angus Slil'ed Ribeye)

1.--------..-------~1

• Q8 5
• Q9 4
• K 8 52

Playgrounds

,

East
• J tO 9 8
• tO 7 6 3
• J 2
... A J 9

• Q7 4

Parking Lots • Ball Courts • Private
Roads • Driveways • Streets •

TRI -STATE mOBILE POWER WASH

Ph illy Steak &amp; Cheese

West

.MONTY

45 Shark
hitchhiker
49 On cloud'*"'
53 Utlea

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

Syracuse. OH
74().992-5776
Open Mon-Sat 10:5
· Closed Sunda
t 52mo

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Addhlone l
Romodellnt

WOLFE · ~ ·

CONSTRUCTION~
Owner

THE BORN LOSER

• New Homes • Additions
• Remodeling

, S.ou wouLD~\ W.\E.IIt Til-t
~C. ro..u.

Licensed Home Builder

(740) 992-0496

WV03e725

.

V.C . YOUNG Ill
'Ji ll

b~ l ')

the coal and all other
f '"Ill , 1 I) l uo
,. y, I ' l ' \ I I &gt; Ill FI ')I
minerals
In
and
underlying the above
described property,
arid together with tho
right to ml"e the
same without encum·
branceto the surface,
and subject to an
·29670 Bashan Road
easement for eew-..
Racine , Ohio
filter ditch or leaching
45771
ditch aa eel forth and
740·949·2217
deacrlbed
In the ·
lnatrumant bearing
.dale November 6,
1943, aa recorded .
December 3, 1943, In
the
aforesaid
Recorder's Offlca In
Dead Book 151, at
Page 178.
Parcel
Number:
STANLEY TRE~
18:00240.000
TRIMMING&amp;
Current
Owner:
GENERAL
DeniH Smlth·Pursley
CONTRACTING
Ill al Property at 1637
Lincoln Hla, Pomeroy, . • Prompt &amp; quality ·
Ohio
PPI
16·
work
00240.000 Prior Dead • Affordable Rates
Refrencea: Volume • References
96,
Page
578
Available
Appraltied
at
Free Estimates
•
$25,000.00 terms of
"Insured"
Sale: cannot be sold
c;all Gary Stanley
for leaa than 213rda of
the appraised value.
74P·742·2293
10% down on day of
sale, cash or Clrlllled • Leave a messa e

Hill 's Se lf
Storage

l'•••••••

check, balance due
on confirmation of ·•
•ate.
•
•
The appralaal did
Include an Interior
examination of the
house.
Robert E.
Beagle, Meigs County
Sheriff. Attorney tor
• New Homes
the plaintiff Shapiro &amp;
• Garages
Felly LLP, 1500 West
• Complete
Third St, Suite 400,
Remodeling
Cleveland,
· Ohio
44113 phone 216-621·
1530
(5) 10, 17, 24
Stop &amp; Compare

ROIIERT

BISSELL

COIISTIIICnlll

740-992-18n

l JU:)\ \OOK-l NE:.\1 (R

'""JU~I 1*1 ~01&gt;\'&lt; tv\OU~ !&gt;~!'. ~
CA.LLLR, l :'j.jl't'O:)E!

.

.

~

"-&lt;.TUro..LL'I', \T W~ IJ(E:\'JLE.Ff.~iiU.
CJo.U.t~(, FOR. '{OU !

opponents must not cash 1our club tricks
You should pass out three diamonds.
Against thre e diamonds, West leads the
ch,1b two. EaSt win s with his jack, cashes
the· club ace. and plays a third round to
his partner's king. West should realize
that they are getting no major-suit tricks,
because South is known to have at least
nine minor-suit cards (six-plus diamonds

' 1!1\TE , YOU
'i'EEM TO· llE \-~-5&gt;TRUc;,6LtNG
A SIT \oltTH
· MATH.

'I
I

l
..... ... .

Opening Day
Sunday May 7th
12-?
Refreshments !krved
$8.00 Flats $8.00 Baskets
Variety of Miniature Rosee
Hours: 8-8 Daily
50447 Tornado Rd.
Racine, Ohio

PEANUTS
RI6~T UP AI-lEAD YOU'RE
601N&amp; TO SEE HIE

FAMOU5'' BALANCIN6 ROCK''
_I

ADVERTISE IN THIS
SPACE FOR $54 PER
MONTH
Cornerstone
Construction.

A .

Resldent~al

"ZMFGHGO

• Commercial • General Contractln1

Painting • Doors • Windows • Decks
• Siding • Roofing • Room Additions • Remodeling
WV 038992
• Plumbing • Eleclrical 740-387~&amp;44
OH 38244
• Accoustic Ceiling
7 -339-3412

Q

.,

•

''BALANCING ROCK" ~A5
BEEN PERC~ED ON T~ 15
CUFF !=ORTEN MILLION
YEAR5. AND...

·I 6VE55 WE
S~OVLD .I-lAVE COME
YE5TERDA'f..

D

SUNSHINE CLUB

I •

l 1HINI&lt; WI WAIST"Liu;
JUSTlOPFW 52

1

I

·I

FGAA

MOPWSTJGI

B M E S I W 0 T M. S C M 8

THAT Dltll
'UilLU
- - --

VG

BEAA

MB

GAATC

S©.RJ.l~-~t,~~~ ::!~
......~ ldilld

0 rour
~tc:munpe itlltrl of
.t;romblec worcb

....... 'lllrlhdo\y:

oy

ClAY L POLLAN_;;_-,..---

the

be

lew.· ro icrm icur srmole words

GLAN C
I

~~

UV N E S

15

M,· young nephew "'anted w act

i-'"'1.:_.,..-,,_..,./~l~,
.

1

1

CANCER (June 2t ·July 221 " If you expect
someone you recently helped to return the
lavor. you may be severely disappointed.
Yo u're not likely to handle his/her excuses;
lower you r expectations.
LEO (July 23·Aug . 22)- Be On guard concerning your work or career. Don't be
drawn into a competitive situation where
!he odds are stacked against you going in.
You can't win.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Be very
careful to think before you speak, so Ss not
to come off as cocksure . If it turns out
you 're wrong; and it's likely It will , you'll be
In an embarra!ltSing position.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0 ct. 23) - Make certain
you have all the facts and know exactly
what you're getting Into before making ariy
llnanclat Investments. It's the overlooked
details that'll get you in big trouble.
SCORP IO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22 )· Whot's not in
your head, you better have in your fee t. If
you don't think things through, lots of
retraced steps will have to be taken before
you rus h off in haste.
,

WAFWKC

PREVIOUS SOLUTIO~ - ··The past at least~ secure ." - Daniel Webster
"One locos tbefutura with one 's past." - Pearl S. Buclt

AstroGraph

someone· important to you have a major
disagreement, do all you can to resolve it.
Anything that goes unresolved at this time
could be a thorn in your side forever more.
GEMINI (May 2blune 20) - Do not lock
yourself into any promises, especially if
you don't know whether you he"Je the abilIty to fulfill them.You'll be held acCountable
lor another person's responsibility.

UECD

DZG

A T8 G U WK VG,

OTCXC . " - ZWHGAMRX

person.
T,t.,URUS (April 2Q-Moy 201 - If you end

'Red 'Rose
§reenliouse

and present
.

T£lday's clue: P equals G

Thursday, Miy 11, 2006
By Bernice Bede Oeol
In the year ahead . you are likely to do far
better in ventures or undertakings where
you can express your individualrsrn 1han
you will in arrangements that must be
Shared with partners. Try to be your own

•

Luis Campos

ATBG

G

'

by

Celetrity Cipher cryptograms are aeated from quotations by 1111\008 peoole, •
·
.
E!dJ,Ie1ttr lnthedphefstandsb"llllOthef.

last club, which East, if in midseason
form·, will.ruff with the diamond jack. This

elfects an uppe1cut, giving the defenders

BIG NATE

CELEBRITY CIPHER

and three clubs). West should lead his

. two trump tricks and live in all.

a

RoOting a Gutter.

..q ·

~

ll.E:n.D ~UO\
1\!-lt&gt; ~ll\N.&amp;! l
1-\f\1&gt; 10 f.\f&gt;l'l(, UP!

New a.rage•
El.ctrk•l PlUmbing

VInyl Siding a P1lntlng
P..io Md Porch _D eco

you will need a du mmy entry and the

Chuck Wolfe

LD M p
1

iike his hero athlete; Graruiy told
him t&lt;i be himselfbecauie .vou will ·

I

~

~ ~:~~plish nothing by -·--

1 I 17 I I ~ O :omolerehorrthe
f&gt;

.

.

.

.

@ Pilf.lT

NUMitRED LETTm
IN lH!S f SJU~ !!S

€)

~huctre auoutd

by W1•n~ rr. the mr&amp;ljn!f woras
Step 1\;c 3 below.
you o eve loo

l

UNSCRAMBlE LEiTERS TO
Cfl ~N SWo!

SCRAM~S ANSW!RS 518108
Upheld - Mmif - Bra'o - Sorrow - WHOLE FORM
Word! yOu will nevct ·hear: "'Don't worry about it.
Just fi ll in your name and don' t bother to fill out the
. WH OLE FORM."

ARLO &amp; JANIS
SO.".e!~DY

IJ(.E.D!'l 1"0 !iHAVt•

SAGITIAR IUS (Nov. 23-Deo . 21) ; You'Te

I

apt t9 be careless because you think the
little th,ings are beneath your concern s.
-..e Whole may be more than the parts,
but, nevertheless, the parts d~e rml n e the
whole.

I
.I

•

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 1 ~1- We are

GARFIELD
&amp;U1 YOU't.L. WAlle

.,

TO

aeG

I

PISCES (Fob, 20-March 20)

FOR RENT· MEICiS COUNTY
1~4 BR Houses·&amp; Apts.
1 Luxury- Also HUD
Also Comf~?ercial Space
740·416·5547

"Taking The Sting Out Of

~

Ease up W '

you find your Ideas In conflict with those of
your ahoclates. You may be Inclined to
see only the Imperfections and flaws. fiind
not appreciate the good In things.

AR IES (March 21-Aprll 19) - E&lt;eept In
extrema caa11 or tor axtreme reuona,
avoid detMt apandlng at all coat , especially
If 11 carrl• • a high price tag. It could be a

GRIZZWELLS

BAl ll\1 Ll li\JBEI{
Scorpion Tractors

AQUARIU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 191 - .Guard
against being too cynical or too critical of
the world around you, which could lead to
taking things out on Innocent bystan ders. If
something goes badly, focus on it and
don 't look tor scapegoats

I

Now Available At

judged by tho Impression we make on others . So If you aren't flexible enough to
adjust your opinions to accommodate the
&gt;Aews ol Ot'hers, you'll come off as Sfll\JQ
.and self-righteous .
,

long limo

~tfort

you're able to, PlY It off.

SOUP TO NUTZ

~nL. ~~~ &amp;~i

;tillS W~Y". Wf. r----'
ffJ.,'( w '1111:\.l..
-l'&gt;r....l'.-""'

NCT FAc .. :rk

lfWiiC~ iO
~~e

0\fFe~tNr~'l

..

Hard Work!"

We'-DP

Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985•3301

--~---··~------

---....,.----

--'--

·.

I

-.

�I

.... B6 • The Uril.y Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.oom

Mighty Ducks win in overtime

Bickerstaff and ~anham roasted by Rio )

.

STAFf' REPORT
youngest assistant coach in
SPORTSOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM the league. He has served as
,
the head coach for NBA franRIO GRANDE - A le~- chises in Washington, Denver
endary coach and athletic and Seattle, and currently
director and a Fonner Rio bas- serves as head coach and genketball player who went onto era! manager for the NBA's
become a head coach in the Charlotte Bobcats.
NBA were welcomed back to . He a_nd his wife Eugenia
the University of Rio ltve m Charlotte, r and
Grande/Rio
~ Grande Btckerstaff has won numerous
Community College campus honors &lt;:?V!'r the •years.
recently, only to be made fun
Steve Gilmore, a 1965 gradof by a few of their friends.
uate of Rio Gran.de; ·shared a
The .legendary coach was story about the Urn~ the basArt Lanham ·and the NBA ketball team stayed m a hotel
coach was Bernie Bickerstaff. wtth an tndoor pool, whtch
On Friday. Rio Grande wel- n~1ther
Btckerstaff
nor
corned the two ·back to cam- G~lmore had seen before.
pus and roasted them during G1lmore recalled t~at they
the Champions of Character went to the pool, but 1\ turned
Roast. During the event, out_ that Btckerstaff could not
friends and family members s_wtm well and dtd not even
made remarks about Lanham hke to get ht~ face wet.
·
and Bickerstaff, often telling
Norm Persm, a 1973 gradu-humorous and sometimes ate, tovld how ~anham u~~d to
embarrassing stories about the ~II e e~~ne ~~g Man, and
two guests of honor.
Laennheamxpdatdnetdhat.at.thebere.~son
Lanham joined Rio Grande
t
was cause
as basketball coach and athlet- he often couldn't ·remember
ics director in 1960. During . their names He recalled the
his tenure, he led the Redmen "runnin' and gunnin' and havto six championships and a ing fun" style of offense that
record of 267-192. He was the basketball team played
named the conference Coach under Lanham. ·
'of ihe Year twice and was also
Bill Parker who played on
named the Coach of the Year the Redme'n team with
for the state of Ohio. Lanham, Bickerstaff said that he
who lives in Kentucky with learned a tot from Bickerstaff
his wife Indri, is a member of although he added that many
the University of Rio Grande of the things Bickerstaff
Athletic Hall of Fame.
taught him were things of
Bickerstaff attended Rio which his grandmother would
Grande from 1961-1963 and not have approved.
Parker and Bickerstaff were
played basketball under
Lanham. He be~an his NBA two of only a few Africancoaching career m 1973, join- Americans on the Rio Grande
ing the staff of the Washington campus when they were in
Bullets and becoming the school, but Parker said their

_
DENVER (AP) - Eve~.
though fiya Bryzgalov was~ t
l~peccable, the ~nahe1m
Mighty Ducks n:mamed pe~rect thanks to Joffn:x Lupul s
rour goals Thesd.ty m~t.
Lupul's three goals m n:gulation and one in o':ertime
gavetheDucksa4-3wmover
the Colorado Avalanche and a
3-0 lead in their ~estern
(:onfen:nce playoff senes.
Bryzgalov's shutol!t streak
ended at three games~ but the
Ducks are sull a wm away
from advancmg to the confer~nee finals.
.
The Ducks can complete
tM sweep Thursday night at
the Pepsi Center. The
Avalanche will try to joiri the
1975 New York Islanders and
the 1942 Toronto Mapl~ Lea!'s
as .the _only te~ms tm wm
·senes after losmg the first
three games.
Colorado had won its last
.
ff
.
s1x P.1ayo overttme games,
!OJ?s m the NJ:IL an~ a franch1se record: mclud1_ng three
over ,Dallas m the first round
ofth1syear's playoffs..
After both teams k1lled a
power play in the extra period, Dustin Penner stole the
puck from Patrice Brisebois
m the Colorado zone and fed
Lupul, who added to his first
career hat trick ' with a shot
from between the circles that

Secure
from Page Bl ·
two hits in six-plus innings.
He struck out four and
walked one to shut down the
.
R d
NL
I Ie~ dmg
Centra.
e s,
whose offense ts one of the
m~st pot~nt ~n t_he league.
.. For SIX, mnm~s, he was
lights out, Robmson sa1d.
:·He was nice and easy, loc~tmg pitches m the zone and
keeping hitters off balance."
Reds starter Brandon
Claussen (2-4) allowed II
hits in 5 1-3 innings and
struck out four in his second
straight loss·.

·
.
. .
beat Avs goaltender Jose the ' first -penod, · gmng
Theodore at 16:30 of over- Colorado a 1-0 lead.
.
,time.
The 2~-ye~r-old ~uss1an
The Avalanche took a 2-1 was. clostng m o~ h1s 13th
lead on Jim Dowd's short- stratght perfect penod.
handed goal early in the third
He had stopped 99 straight
period, but Colorado was lax shots dating to the Ducks'
on defense and allowed Lupul Game 1 win at Calgary in the
to score his second and third Western Conference quartergoals less than two minutes finals
before
Andrew
apart.
Brunette got control of the
Defenseman Rob Blake got puck behind the net and with
caught pinching in on the bi!Je one ami slid it to the left side
line and ·Alex Tanguay's of the crease to Hinote.
turnover led to a 2-on-1
The Avs, who didn't get off
breakaway and Lupul tied it a single shot in a 5-on-3
with his second goal at 8:54. advantage that lasted more
He gave Anaheim a 3-2 led at than a minute, acted~ though
I0:40 with a slap shot from they'd won another overtime
between the circles.
game . It was, after all, their
The deflated Avs fou ght first goal since April 30.
back to tie it at 3 on Blake 's
The celebration was shortslap shot at 13:35.
lived, however, as Lupul tied
Bryzgalov allowed a goal it at 9:02 of the second period
for the first time in 249 min- w(th a slap shot after the
utes, 15 seconds when he Ducks controlled the puck in
gave up -a goal late in the fir,~t · the Colorado zone for more
h
.
.
period . The rookie goalie_'s t ~n a mmute, ev.en mana~mg
streak IS the sec?nd-longe_s~ m a hne change dunng that Ume.
NHL playoff htsto!)'. trallm,g
Brunette had a goal late in
only George . Hams worth s · the second period waved off
270:08, set m 1930 for because Milan Hejduk's pass
Montreal.
was high-slicked as he swat~
After posting three straight ted a deflection into the
shutouts, including two crease. Later in the period,
against the . Avalanche in Theodore made a sensational
Anaheim, Bryzgalov finally save while sprawled when he
gave up a goal when Dan reached high to stop Teemu
Hinote tapped the puck past Selanne's hard, high shot·
him with 26 seconds left in from the left circle.
"He gave us a couple good
· innings, then gave up way
too many hits," Reds manager Jerry Narron said. "At
times, I thought he threw real
well. At this level, you have
to be way more consistent."
Royce Clayton led off the
third with a double, went to
third on Armas' sacrifice bunt
. and scored on Marlon Byrd's
bloop single.
Zimmerman hit his fifth
homer of the season in the
· fifth inning. Guillen ted off
the sixth with his fourth
. homer, and LeCroy hit a
drive one out later to make it
4-0 Nationals.
Guillen added a two-run
drive off Matt Belisle in the
seventh.

"We were in the game until
then," Narron said. "That
spread it out."
Notes: Clayton was 3-of-4.
... Cincinnati CF Ken Griffey
Jr., ·on the 15-day DL since
April 12 with a strained tendon in his right knee, was
held out another dar. .. .
Washington SS Cnstian
Guzman had season-.ending
surgery on his Tight shoulder.
... Wednesday's starter for
Cincinnati, RHP Aaron
Harang, turned 28 on
Tuesday. .:. · Nati.onals C
Brian Schneider; who left
Saturday ' s
game
with
Pittsburgh with tightness in
his left hamstring, was
expected
to
return
Wednesday.

..

Wednesday, May to, 2006

team only two base runners
a~d ~o ~its through the first
SIX mnmgs before Clark
spoiled the no-hit bid with a
sharp single to left leading
off the final frame. Clark's hit
. in his last plate appearance
extended the junior shortstops hitting streak to II
straight games for the Mason
County diamond nine. ·
Whittington and Garrison
had two hits ·apiece for the
Bison
with · Meadows,
Martin, Scott and .Legg col-

Pitching
fromPageBl
on another two out base hit
by Whittington.
Garrison had little trouble
protecting the narrow two run
Buffalo lead as he completed
his masterpiece by striking
out seven of the last eight
batters he faced. Garrison
allowed the WHS diamond

race did not make any difference and they were treated
very fairly.
.
"We could not have come to
a better school," Parker said.
Steve Bartram, a 1975 graduate, summed up his thoughts
about Lanham with a heartfelt, "I love you, Coach."
Among, the others roasting
Bickerstaff and Lanham were
John Holloway, a childhood
friend of Bickerstaff's, and
John
Blair
Bickerstaff;
Bickerstaff's son, who said he
had waited a long time for an
opportunity like this to get
back at his father.
Lanham, who was introduced by his son Jeff Lanham .
(the current athletic director at
Rio Grande), asked several of
his former players in the
crowd to stand, and thanked
Bickerstaff for taking the time ·
out of his busy schedule to
come to Rio Grande for the
event. Bickerstaff also served
. h
k
,
R'
as t e spea er •0~ . 10
Grande's,
traditiOnal
Founders Day ceremony on
Saturday.
.
Lanham. sat~ that he
enJoyed h1s ttme at Rto
Grande, and was honored to
be welcomed back to campus
for the roast. He told stories of
working with players such as
. Bickerstaff, trying to get him
to keep his elbow in when he
shot th~ basketball, and of
how Rto Grande had some
outstanding teams and some
wonderful people on those
teams. He thanked all of his
friends and family members,
and all of the people who have
helped him over the years.

,; ul ' l· :\IS•\ul. :;:; . :\11. 1H&lt;J

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

• Meigs blanks Lady
Bulldogs. See Page B1

POMEROY - The U.S.
Department of Energy and
the FutureGen Industrial
Alliance will consider 12
sites across the country as
potential locations for the
FutureGen research facility,
including sites in Meigs and
Mason counties.
Ohio Rep. Jimmy Stewart;
R-Aibany, and Jackie -Bird of
the Ohio Coal Development
Office said Wednesday the 12
potential sites were confmned
Thesday as those uil~er consid-

·Lift A Finger on

MOTHER'S
DAY

lecting one base knock each.
All eight Buffalo safe.ties on
the night were singles.
WHS will return to Buffalo
today at 6:00 pm where the&gt;'
will meet S!. Joe in an elimination round contest with the
winner
advancing
to
Thursday's finals · and the
loser conducting its 2006
spring season.
·

c§g~*~c§g
Every Mom.Gets
a Free Side of Shrimp*

PONDEROSA

Waham• 000 000 0
- 0 11
Bulfllo
010 010 '
-2 8 2
Garrison and Bigham. Sayre and
Stafford. WP - Garrison. LP - Sayre

• Giant aquarium
'. returns to River Museum.
See Page A2 ,
· • ·Benefit will fea~re ·
model's collection .
See Page A2
• Actor Trevor Thomas .
to appear at area church.
: See Page A2
· • Transfers posted.
See Page A3
• Local student honored
· at OU. See Page A3
. • For the Record.
: See Page AS
• • Meigs County
Girl Scout Diary.
See Page AS
.• CAA accepting
: cooling applications.
: See Page AS

On Friday, May 26, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
forgotten. They will be similar to the sample below:
you wish, select one of the rollowing FREE versos below to
laa:om11any your tribute.
I. We hold you in our thoughts and memories forever.

2. May God cradle you in His ilflllS, now aJJd forever.

3. Forever missed, nevei forgotten . May God hold you in the palm of

His hand.

4. Thank you for the wonderful days we shared together. My prayers
will be with you until we meet again.
5. The days we shared were sweet.l long to see you again in God's

heavenlyglory.
·6. Your courage and bravery still inspire us all, and the

your
smile fills us with joy and laughter.
1. Though out of sight. you'll forever be in my heart and mind.
8. The days may coine and go, butlhe times we sh111ed will always remain.
9. May the light of peace shine on your face for eternity. ·
, 10. May God's angels guide you and protect you throughout time.
II . You were a light in our life that bums forever in our hearts ...
12, May God's graces shine over you for all time.
13. You are in our thoughts and prayers from morning to night and from
ye111to year.
14. We seod this message with a loving kiss for eternal rest and happiness.
15. May the Lord bless you with His graces and warm, lo"'ng heart.

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $8.00 PER LISTING • $12 IF PICTURE INCLUDED Fill out the form below and drop off to:
The Daily Sentinel
With Fondest Memories
lll Court Street, _Pomeroy, OH 45769
·" .

DEADLINE: MONDAY, MAY 22ND, NOON

Number of selected verse----..,-

Date ofbinh _____________________ Date of passinl'o-----------Print your 'name bere ------'-------'-------------------------------Address------...-----------.,..-------- Phone numbe~·------City""·------'-------------------- State:--------- Zi:P-----Make Check Payable to THE DAILY SENTINEL
I

L---~------------ ------~------~---~--~

..,.._,-.:=--__;=-...,..,.
.

Youth drug
awareness
meeting
organized,
parents needed
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT~MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY Having
four different teenagers test
positive for cocaine in the
WEATHER
Meigs County Juvenile
Court System last month as
well as dealing with recent
overdoses have caused local
officials to not only get
angry but get organized to
combat the problem.
Part of combating that
.problem will be a community
meeting at 7 p.m. on
Thursday, May 18 at God's
NET attended by local
school, court and law
o.tallo on Pac• All
enforcement officials, and
hopefully parents.
Fenton Taylor, coordinator
for
the
Athens-Meigs
Educational Service Center's
...
adult education program, is
a SEcnoNs- 16 PAGES
helping organize the meeting
Calendars
A3 with the hope of identifying
solutions for teenage drug
84-6 use and how to assist parents
Classifieds
in identifying any .problems
87 as well as what to do about
Comics
·them should they arise.
Dear Abby
A3 Trooper Robert Jacks of the
State Highway Patrol
Editorials
A4 Ohio
said the I 0 county district
A2 that includes Meigs _led the
Places to go
state in total drug arrests last
year, beating out larger metB
Section
Sports
ropolitan areas such as
AS
Weather
Columbus, Cleveland and

. I

I

I

;@aou6 Ohio ya11ey Publlohlng Co.

I .

•

i

'

Please see Meetln...A5

__ __.___ - - -

West Virginia has proposed
a location · near Lakin, W.Va.
in Mason County. Illinois has
proposed four potential locations for the plant, Kentucky
one, North Dakota one,
Wyoming one, and Texas two.
Bird said yesterday a "short
list" of potential sites for the
plant is expected to be
announced tn August or
September of this year, and a
final · selection made by
September, 2007.
Bird said the FutureGen
Industrial Alliance, a nonprofit consortium of coal producers and utility companies,

plans to begin preliminary
site reviews of the proposed
sites "right away" as part of
the site selection process.
"There should be cuts made
to the list as thedrocess con- ·
tinues," Bird sai yesterday.
FutureGen
Industrial
Alliance members intend to
contribute up to $250 millior
toward the project's costs and
provide technical ex-pertise
and industrial project management expenence to the
project. Me1gs County has
partnered · with
Athens
County to promote the Ohio
River locatton .

Left: The

'

Bv BETH SERQENT

BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

Carleton School
./Meigs
SYRACUSE - The Meigs
County Relay For Life takes
Industries Relay
place this weekend but miniFor Life team
relays are already cropping
begins its mini~
up across the county, includ- ·
relay through ·
Syracuse yester- , ing one held yesterday at
day In support of Carleton School I Meigs
Industries.
the county wide
The participants, students
· Relay For Life
and
staff of Carleton School/
this weekend to
Meigs
Industries Relay For
benefit the
Life
team
exceeded their goal
American Cancer
of $3,000 by raising $3,200
Society.
in the fight against cancer.
One of the incentives for
Below: Students raising over $3,000 was a
from Carleton
chance to watch Carleton
School receive
Schoo! I Meigs Industries
prizes from
Director Steve Beha shave
Meigs County
his head.
Tobacco
Beha sard he will be happy
·Prevention
to do it to reward his Relay
·Specialist Kyle
For Life team and to raise
Ord for answerawareness of cancer patients
ing questions
who live with hair loss everyday due to chemotherapy
about the dan·
gers of .tobacco
treatments.
· ~! think it's awesome what
·use. namely lung
these
kids did," Relay For
cancer during the
Life CO-chairperson JoAnn
·school's Mini
Crisp
s.aid of the mini-relay
Relay For life.
as
did
American Cancer
Beth Sercontfphotoo
Representative
Society
Jennifer McGuinness.
Part of what the Carleton
School I Meigs Industries
team did was collect $338 in
pennies, gave a spaghetti dinner and organized prize
drawings.
Preceding
yesterday's
mini-relay were presentations about the relay given to
participants, student s and
staff · by Beha, . Crisp and
tobacco prevention specialists Brenda Curfman and
Kyle Ord.
After the presentations the.
team took to the back streets
of Syracuse for a walk to
show their support for the
relay and respect for cancer
survivors and victims. ·
The Meigs County Relay
For Life begins at 6 p.m.
tomorrow at the Meigs
County Fairgrounds with a ·
luminary service at dusk. Th~
lighted luminaries will fonn a ·
ring around the midway track

Pluse IH Fundln.. A5

INDEX

Nameofde~a~d--------------------------~------~----~-------

" " "·'" " l.oo h " oo ti11.-l•nou

Gearin up for Relay For Life

MIDDLEPORT - The
Appalachian
Regional
Commission has denied the
Village of Middleport's
application for grant funding for a water line. extension to Hobson.
Village
Administrator
Bradford Anderson told
Middleport Village Council
Monday evening that the village's
application
for
$300,000 in grant fundil)g fpr_
the expansion project · was
denied. The proposed expansiop of service was proposed
last year to fulfill. a promise
made 15 years ago to Hobson
residents as a condition of
annexation of the community. II would have provided
water service to 14 households in the community.
According to Anderson, the
relatively small number of
customers who would be
served by the expansion project and the cost per customer

.

Relationship to me:_________________________

It will also support iesting
and commercialization of
technologies focused on generating clean power, capturing and permanently storing ·
carbon diOxide underground,
and producing hydrogen.
The . Meigs County proposed site, neat that of a $1.3
billion clean-coal plant proposed br American Electric
Power, 1s one of two sites
promoted by the State of
Ohio. It is privately-owned
real estate in Lebanon
Township along the Ohio
River. The second Ol)io site
is in Tuscarawas County.

Bv BRtAN J. Re~D
BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

.'We remember those who have passed away
.
and are especially dear to us. .

Always in our hearts,
.John 'and Moll&amp; Andrews and
family

eration for a $1 billion power
plant and research facility.
"This •is primarily a' list of
states which respomjed to the
call for potential sites," Bird
said yesterday. "It is not a list
that has been narrowed."
FutureGen is a public/private partnership to des1gn,
build, and operate the world's
first coal-fueled, "zero emisSions" power plant. The commercial-scale plant wi II prove
the technical and economic
feasibility 9f producing lowcost electricit~ and hydrogen
from coal wh1le nearly elimi. nating emissions.

ARC denies
funding for
Hobson water
•
expansiOn

INSIDE

·May God'$ angels
guide you aru,t
protect you
throughout time.

lllli(SIJ\, , \1\, t i ,:! OOh

Meigs, Mason sites on official list of FutureGen proposals

SPORTS

fromPageBl

D&amp;vid C. Andrews
July 10, 1961-M&amp;y 4, 1980

·'concert, AS

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Pistons
Sunday by 27 points in a
game that wasn't as close as
the score indicated - will
h&amp;ve pleilty .o f time to search
for a solution to tum the
series around because Game
3 isn't until Saturday in
Cleveland. · .
Cavs coach Mike Brown
was so desperate late in the
first half Tuesday that he
resorted to a hack-a-Ben
strategy, having his players Donyell Marshall was upset pionship last year. I think
intentionally foul . Ben that his comments before their knowledge is gain~ to
Wallace late in the first half. Game I were interpreted as overtake our youth nght
The tactic backfired; perhaps if he was giving up in the now," he said Monday....
because Brown might've series. "Detroit has the James had six points in the
sent his players a message knowledge from winning a first quarter, one in the secthat they couldn't slow the championship two · years ond, nine in the third and 14
Pi.stons down any other way. ago, and going to the cham- in the final quarter.
When Brown instructed
his players to foul Wallace,
.
Petroit was ahead by 16!
After Wallace went 2-of-4
Mom Shouldn't Have to
from the line and Rasheed
Wallace made a 3-pointer off
the glass, the Ca vs were
trailing by -21.
·
"I've seen it before, but
not in the first half,;' Billups
said. "I was shocked. We
were pretty much like,
'Wow, they showed their
trump card.' But when
... Except to Pick up a Fork!
you're a coach, especially a
young ·coach, ,and you're
playing a veteran group like
ours, after a tough Game I,
you can get a little desperate.
. "He was just tryin~ to heiR .
his team out, and 1t didn t
work."
Brown acknowled~ed that
he dido 't like telling his
player to put Wallace .on the
with any Adult Meal Purchase at Regular Price.
line.
' Glilku or Flied
'·
"But I didn't want to use
all of my timeouts, and I
wanted to stop the bleeding,"·lte said.
Hamilton finished with 17
points, Billups had 15 points
and seven assists, and Ben
Wallace added I 0 points and
15 rebounds.
&amp;TI!AKHOUBE ·
Cleveland's Drew Gooden
had •J7 points, Zydrunas
215 Upper River Road
Ilgauskas scored I0 and
GallipoUs, Ohio 45631
reserve Anderson Varejao ·
also added I0.
·
(740) 446-1101
Notes: Ben Wallace was 1-----....:,__:.....,__ _ _ _ __. .......... _ ___
presented witli the NBA's ·
,Gift.Cards Make
Defensive Player of the Year
awar4 - fc;&gt;r an unpreceGreat Gifts for Mom!
dented fourth time in five
Pun:ha'lCa$:zsGiftCard for Mom &amp; Youll Get Wl
seasons - by Boston Celtics·
Additional $5 Gift Canl FREE!
great. Bill Russell before tbe
game . .... Cavs reserve .

. OVCSband

Music festival to feature
Elvis tribute ~t, A2

Please ~H Relay, A5

Meigs variety show to.feature rock 'n roll
STAFf' REPOIIT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - " Born to Rock and
Roll" is the theme of the annual variety · show to be presented . by the
Meigs High School music department
thi s weekend.
·
Under the direction of Toney'
Dingess, the two-act shpw to includ~
band and vocal numbers along with guitar selections will be performed twice
- at 7 p.m. on both Friday and
Saturday nights.
Group numbers in the first act will
include "Bom to Rock," "Schoolhouse
Rock, a medley of "Conjunction
Junction ," "I'm Just a Bill", and "Lolly
Lolly; "School's Out," and "Higher and
Higher," interspersed by solos.
The second act wi II open with "Knock
Pluae see Show, A5

Again this year the
variety $hoW' piano
accompanist is S~e
Legg, a student at
Rio Grande ·
University. Here
Legg and a student
accompanist. Janie
Bailey, play as
some of the
singers practice for
their performances.
Charlene Hoefllch/ photo

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      <name>blake</name>
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