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Page 86 •.The Daily Sentinel

Monday, January 24,

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

.

Commentary

The Eagles reached uncharted ground
l/2-point favorite for the Feb. · Rosevelt &lt;::alvin stuffing
6 Super Bowl in Jacksonville, Jerome Bettis· on ·a fourth
Associated Press
Fla.
down AND forcing a fumble
A big 'asset for the Eagles on the play ; Eugene Wilson
Tht: Philadelphia Eagles
this
time
was
Brian with two interceptions and
Westbrook, whose absence in · Deion Branch with touch finally have their NFC title.
Beating the New England
last year's NFC championship dow~s on a 60-yard pass and
Patriots in the Super Bowl in memioned in the same breath oame loss to Carolina a 23-y\\fd reverse.
two weeks will be an entirely with Vince Lombardi ," he deprived McNabb of his only
The Eagles and Patriots
different matter.
said. " I don ' t think I deserve playmaker.
This ' year's opened. th'e p_reseasof\ in New
The Eagles' 27-10 win over 1t.
superlative addition. Terrell England, with the Patnots
Atlanta on Sunday got them
If he wins another Super Owens, could be back for the winning 24-6, but that' was
beyond the NFC champi- Bowl. he will.
Super Bowl - the first time basically scrubs against '
onshi'p game, where they had
Belichi ck and the Patriots since tearing ligaments in his scrubs. the starters on each
· lost the past three seasons. It beat Pittsburgh, 41 -27, a team ankle on De~ . 19.
team were in for perhaps 10
lifted · an incredible load off whose 15- 1 record was the
Owens certainly was active plays.
. .
.·
the team AND its fans, proba- NFL\ best this season . The ·Sunday,- waving towels, and
They last played a meamngbly the most critical in _Pats got three interceptions moving extremely well along ful game in the second week
Amencan sports.
·
off rookie Ben Roethlisberuer the sideline.
· of the 2003 regular season,
It may be all downhill from . and handed the league's m~sl . The difference is that if he with the Patriots winning 31here, however.
· .
successfu l rookie QB his first plays in the Super Bowl I 0 in Philadelphia.
F.or starters, the Patnots ·loss after 14 straight wins.
and that 's still a big IF - he
In that game, McNabb complay Ill the AFC., a far supenThey
intercepted won ' t be on the sidelines. pleted just 18 of 46 passes for
or conference. Its safe to say Roethlisberger' s first pass , He'll be playing against an 186 yards, threw two interthat Atlanta mtght have had a. then jumped to a 24-Jlead on extremely aggressive defense . .ceptions- one returned for a
hard ltme makmg the playoffs Rodney Harrison's 87-yard · "Every day he's making TD - · lost two fumbles, and
m the other conference - the interception retum, a classic progress," Eagles coach Andy heard loud boos for the first
Falcons lost 56- I0 to Kansas case of an !! -year veteran Reid said. "We 'II see how he ttme smce the day he was
Ctty, a 7-9 AFC team.
· suckerinu a rookie into a hor- does this next week .... You drafted in 1999 .
Philadelphia · is going ~ible t!m~w.
saw him down there walking
"We've seen a lot of each
against · a team that has :von
Philadelphia's
Do.novan around, jumping around, actu- other:" Belichick said. ::we're
two of the last three NFL tttles McNabb is not a rookie, not ally."
.
, certamly not str4ng~rs. . . . ,
But jumping around . wont
The Eagles certaml_y won I
and ts one wm away from even close
establishing itself as one of
He's on~ of the NFL's best cut it aga inst New England. roll over. The1r coachmg staff
the 'great teams in the 35 years QBs and he is certainly capa- After all, the game will be on rivals New England'.s since the AFL-NFL merger. ble of reading New England's 1the . tleld, not the sidelines. 'defensive coordinator Jim.
Beyond that, the Eagles wtll complex defenses and making Then there's quarterback Tom Johnson did a masterful job in
' face ~ coach, Btl! Beltch_tck~ plays to beat it - with his Brady, who was MVP in two containing Michael Vtck.
who ued Vmee Lombardi for . arm and his legs. But does he · Super Bowl s.
.
But -even wtth Owens. the_y
the best posts~ason wmnmg have the supporting cast''
As always, the Patnots probably are only the NFL s
Las Vegas _oddsmakers did- make huge plays and differe-nt third best team.
percema.ge m history.. 9009-1.
.
· n't think . so, installing New guys make them.
.
The real Super !Jowl was
"It's very flattenng to be . England as the early 6-to-6
Thi s time it was HarrisOii; played Sunday 111 Pittsburgh.
BY DAVE GOLDBERG

National Basketball Association - - - -

LeBron'S amazing triple-double
spree could become average
rel:\ounds and assists. After
Associated Press
several near-misses in recent
games, the 20-year-old had 27
.. :
points, II rebounds and 10
OAKLAND, Caht.- Most · assists in Portland, beating
of the fans who gathered previous record-holder Lamar
around the tunnel , to the Odomby nearly live weeks.
Cleveland, Cavaliers locker
And Jame s did .it again
room dtdn t reahze they ha~ , Saturday night, . picking up
JUSt Witnessed LeBron James. two assists in the fma!'ininutes
second tnple-double 111 thre~ against the Warriors to wrap it
games, sm~e the feat wasn t up. His teammates knew the
announced m the arena.
But as the Cavs left the numbers, and they celebrated
court following a 105-87 win when Zydrunas llgauskas htt a
over Golden State, one fan 3-pomter ,w;th 30 s~conds left
still shouted' above the rest: fqr James hnal ~sst st.
"Every night' That's how
In Cleveland s I~sl seven
games, James averaged 27.4
'Bron does it every night'"
The fat guy in the No. 23 pomts, 9.3 rebounds and 8.6
jersey might soon be right ass1sts while keepmg the Cavs
about his hero, who had 28 111 first place m the Central
points, 12 rebounds and 10. Dtvtston. He dtd tt all while
assists to cap his sparkling six- weanng a clear_plasuc mask to
game road trip.
protect h1s brut sed cheekbone
· Though James still hasn't - though James also threw
reached the midway point of the mask mto the mr !n frushis second NBA season his tration with a call agamst the
teammates and coaches' are Warriors·.
wondering whether a tripleJames is almost certain to be
double might soon be an aver- a starter for rhe Easter,n
age night for basketball's most Conference m next month s
gifted youngster. Even James ·All-Star Game. With half the
can't deny his game _is unique- season still to go, coach Paul
ly suited to this particular sta- Silas. believes James is ready
tistical feat.
to do more great things - and
"It's hard to average a triple- put plenty of double-digit
double, but I'm going to keep numbers on his scoresheet. .
doing what I'm doing, and I'll
"He's going to play big mincome close to it," James said. utes, and if he's out.there for
"It's not a goal of mine ... but any .length or time, he should
I'll keep trying to play well." be productive," Silas said. "( )\
Nobody around the NBA triple-double) every night is
was surprised last week when not out of the realm of possi James became the youngest · bility. You get shooters around
player in league history to him, which makes the assists
reach double figures in points, very easy, and with his scoring
BY GREG BEACHAM

and rebounding he should be r m going to get them. l love
able to do every night."
making my teammates happy.
James' game seems particu- lf you ask any of my team larly suited for. such a notion. mates now, they're happy."
He is talented enough to be a
big-time scorer, tall enough to
be an effective· rebounder and smart enough to be a
superb playmakcr, with a
coun sense that sometimes
reminds spectators of John
Stockton or Magic Johnson.
There 'is precedent for thi s
achievement:
Oscar
Robertson averaged a tripledouble in his second NBA
season, getting 30.8 points,
12.5 rebounds and 11.4 assists
per game with the Cincinnati
Royals in 1%1 -62.
The Big 0 nearly duplicated
the feat t»'o years later, averaging 31.4 points, 11.0 assists
and 9.9 rebounds. He averaged a triple-double through
his first five NBA seasons and
finished his· career with an
NBA-record 181.
Johnson had 138 triple-dou-·
bles, but never averag~d double digits in rebound~. He
came closest· in , his fourth
N BA season, when he got
16.8 points, 10.5 assists and
8.7 rebounds.
James admires Robertson
and Johnson - and like those
stars, he considers assists to be
the most important statistic of
the three.
·
"I'm trying to make this
game be played the right way,
and it'.s a team game," James
said. "You can' t play without
the team. Individual goals
mean nothing to me. I know

Tiger ·outlasts the fog,
and everyone's mistakes
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Eerie fog tlnally lifted
~d ga.ve way to a . bizarr
_ e victory by Tiger
.-.Oods
Ending the longest stroke-play drought of his
PGA Tour career, Woods barely made It through
a 31-hole Sunday at Torrey Pines by taking
advantage of everyone else's mistakes and one
bad break for Charles Howell Ill to win the
Buick Invitational.
l,Jitimately, Woods almost made the biggest
blunder of all.
·
Trying to reach the par-5 18th green in two .
with a one-shot lead, he hit a 2:iron so badly that
it landed on a stnp of farrway to the nght of the
big pond. He finally ended the suspense by mak.ing an 18-foot birdie putt to close with a 4-under ·
68 for a three-shot v1ctory over Ryder Cup captain Tom Lehman, Luke Donald and HowelL
It was his first stroke-play victory since the
American ,Express Championship m October
2003. Woods only won the Match Play
Championship last year.
·
"This ¥olf course is so difficult, anything could
happen.' Woods said.

Almost everything did.
. .
Lehman went toe-to-toe with Woods over the
final six holes and hit better shots on most of
th~m . But he .caught a plugged lie in the bunker
on No. 17 to make bogey and fa ll one shot
behind. Needing a birdie at the 18th to have any
chance, Lehman hit a fat wedge that barely got
over the water. and he wound up making bogey.
Woods finished at 16-under 272 and earned
$l;64,000, putting him atop the PGA Tour money
list for the first time since V~ay Singh won a,
Disney in October 2003.
.
·
:· H~ whtpped the field playm~.lousy." Lehman
srud. I g1ve hJm a lot of credit.
It was hiS 13rjleSt final-round comeback three shots - smce he ralhed from five shots
behmd at Pebble Beach five years ago. But th1s
time, Woods had to rely on everyone around him.
Donald had gone 37 hole' wtthout abogey_and
was in control ol the tournament unul he h1t 6iron over the 14th green and into the hazard for a
double bogey. One shot behmd, he pulled h1s lee
shot into the hazard on No. 17 and had to scramble for bogey. He shot 73.

2005

.

.

\

Trimble takes down ,
Tornadoes, Bt

High School Girls Basketball
Southeastem Ohio Distrid
Sectional Pairings

Eagles double-up
Miller, Bt

.

Wednesday, February 9
Pdrlsmouth vs. Portsmouth Wesl,
6:15p.m.
.
District
.
Chesapeake vs. North Adams, 8
*Marietta to Northeast District
p.m.
.
Thursday, February 10
Dtvlslon II
at University of Rto Grande . tronlon vs. Wheelersburg/Peebles
Winner, 6:15 p.m. (winner advances
.
Monday, February 7
to district tournament al Waverly)
Meigs vs. River Valley, 6:15p.m.
LC/Wellston winner vs. CGIWU
Waverly vs. Rock Hit!, B p.m.
winner, 8 p.m. (winner advances to
Saturday, February 12
Gallia Academy Vs. Meigs/RV win· district tournamenl at Waverly)
Saturday, February 12
ner, 1· p.m. (winner advances to disSouth Point vs. PortsmoutWPW
trict tournament at Chillicothe) ·
Oivlslon t
'Logan, Chillicothe to. Cenlrat

Warren vs. Waverly/RH winner.

2:45 p.m. {winner advances to dis-

winner, 1 p.m. (winner advances to
district tournament at Waverly)

Eastern
(Brown) · vs.
!ricl tournament al Chitlicolhe)
at Adena High School
· Chesapeake/NA winner, 2:45 p.m.
(winner advances to district tournaMonday, February 7
Logan Elm vs. McClain, 6:t5 p.m. menl at Waverly)
Washington Court House vs.
Division IV
Hillsboro. B p.m. ·
at Athens High School
Thursday, February 10
Mond~y. February 7
Unioto vs. Northwest, 6:15 p.m.
(winner advar1ces to district tourna-

ment at Chillicothe)

Miami Trace vs. Circkwille, 8 p.m .
(winner advances to 'district tourna-

ment at,Chillicothe)
Saturday, February 12

Sheridan vs. WCH/Hillsboro win-

ner, 2.:45 p.m. (winner advances to
district tournament at Chillicothe)
#At site to b€ determined

Thursday, February 10
Vinton County vs. Fairland, 6:15

p.m. (winner advances to district

tournamenl al Chillicolhe)

JacksOn vs. Athens, 8 p.m. (winner
advances to district tournament at

Chillicothe)

Division Ill ·
at Wellston High School
Monday, February 7
Hunlington vs. Pikelon, 6 15 p.m.
vs.

,
Wednesday, February 9

Crooksville vs. Miller, 6:15p.m.
Green vs. Soulh Gatlia, 8 p.m.
Thursday, February 10 ·

• Second-half blues sink
Cavs. See Page 81

Trimble vs. Southem/ISJ winner,

Fairfield Union vs. LEJMcCial n winner, 1 p.m. (Wjn.ner advances to distriCt tournament at Chillicothe)

Nelsonville-York
Lexington. 8 p.m.

Southern vs.lronton St. Joe, 7 p.m.
Wednesday, February 9

Partial barge removed, road.failure begiits·aiong river

SPORTS

New

Federal Hocking vs. Alexander,

6:15. p.m. (winner advances to district tournament at Wellston)
Southeastern vs. Eastern (Meigs),
8 p.m. (winner advances to district
tournament -at Wellston)
Saturday, February 12

Watenord vs. Crooksville/Miller

winner, 1 p.m. (winner qdvances to
district tournament at Wellston)

Symmes Valley vs. Green/SG win-

ner, 2:45 p.m . (winner advances to

district tournament at Wellston) .
at Northwest High School
Monday, February 7
Pain! Valley vs. Manchesler, 6:15
p.m:
Sciotoville vs. Notre Dame,

.

a p.m.

WedneSday, February 9

Western Latham vs. New Boston.

6:15p.m.
Whiteoak vs. South ·Webster,
p.m.
Thursday, February 10

Portsmouth
Clay
vs.
6:15p.m.
PV/Manchester winner, 6:15 p.m.
Belpre vs. Adena, 8 p.m.
(winner advances to district tournaThursday, February 10
Oak Hill vs. Huntington/Piketon ment at Wellston)

Valley vs. Sciotoville/ND winner, 8
winner, 6:15 p.tn. (winner advances
p.m. {winner advances to district
to district tournament at Waverly)
Minford vs. N-Y/NL winner, 8 p.m. tournament at Wellston)
Saturday, February 12
{winner. advances to district tourna-

ment at .Waverly)
Saturday, February 12

Zane Trace vs. FH/Aiexande,r winner, 1 p.m. (winner advances to district tournament at Waverly)

Westfall vs. Belpre/Adena winner,

Fairlklld Leesburg vs. WUNB win·

ner, 1 p.m. (winner advances to diStrict tournament at Wellston)

at Valley High School
Monday, February 7
Wheelersburg vs. Peebles, 5 p.m.
Lynchburg Clay vs Wellston, 6:45
p.m.
.
Coal Grove vs. West Union, 8:30

p.m.

Page AS
• Irene Miller Hayman
• Raymond Robinson
• Carrie Beth Wiggins
• Anna Quivey
• Levi Partlow
• Kathleen Clonch

Eastern (Pike) vs. WhiteoakiSW

winner, 2:45 p.m. (winner advances
to distr,ict tournament at Wellston)

INSIDE

• Pairings far Division I tournaments
will be determined 'at a later dale.
. # Games originally scheduled for
University of R1o Grande, but.will be
moved to different side because of
Rio Grande-Cedarville men's and
women's makeup games. New- site
expected lo b€. delermined today.

• Teenager has a passion
for collecting road signs.
See Page A6

2':45 p.m . (winner advances to district tournament at Waverly)

OBITUARIES

B

WEAmER

llatlp ~rtbune

locks continue, the level s qf
the Ohio River are beginning
to cause problems for the
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation and property
owners along the Ohio and

Hocking banks. On Monday •
ODOT closed Ohio 124
between Reedsville . and
Hockingport because of
pavement di slocationfrom a
slip affecting approx!mately

Corps of EngtneersjphotOA

Memoers of a contract salvage crew work to remove half of '
one of six barges sunk at the Belleville locks and Dam.
· 300 feet of'highway.
the junction of U.S. 50 at
· "Because of. continuin g Little Hocking to the junction
movement and pavement of Ohio '681 in Reedsville,"
damage at various locations . ODOT's Stephanie Filson
along 124, the route will be
Please see Barge, AS
closed to through traffic from

One driver ·Is it a cold or the flu?
killed in
weekend
crash
.

.

.

symptoms of colds and flu
are as follows:
• Headaches are rare with
colds and prominent with flu·.
• General aches and pains
are slight wi_th colds but usual
and often severe with flu.
• Fatigue and weakne~s are
mild with a cold but can last
up to two to three weeks with
the flu.
• Extreme exhaustion
never .accompanies a wld but
is early and prominent with
the tlu.
·
• A stuffy nose, sneezing
and sore throat is co mmon
with a cold and sometimes
with the flu.
• Chest discomfort ~nd
cough sl;10uld emerge as a
mild to moderate hacking
. cough in colds but in flu
chest discomfort is common

Please see Flu?, A5

Meigs Cooperative Parish Nurse Lenora Leifheit (left) passed
out information and tissues to God's NET Administrator Dee
Rader about how to tell the difference oetween a cold and the
flu, and how to prevent the conditions .

·Pomeroy Village Council hears Middleport citizens
plans to repair parking _lot wall raise que.stions

jotnt {Bleasant l\egtster
The Daily Sen ......~

Proftltt informed council that he had done
a background check on Gruber, who was lh!!n
approved by council for employment.
During the forum for supervisor's issues,
POMEROY - The Federal EmergenGy
Management Agency will make $55.000 in Councilwoman Mary McAngus inquired
repairs to the parking lot wall that has sus- abo.ut a hole on Pleasant Ridge which
tained substantial damage from recent flood ~, Krautter had inspected and found to be a
it was announced at Pomeroy Village Council sunken· spot. Krautter said' the spot needed to
be level ed when warm weather arrived .
Monday.
Councilman Jim Sisson inquired about
"They are going to re-lay sandstone and-rehow the village was doing collecting unpaid
grout." Pomeroy Mayor John Musser said.
parking
tickets and other fines to Proffitt .
The repairs will run from the concrete )-Vall
"Not too good right now." Proftitt said. but
to the parking lot and are scheduled to t:&gt;egin
added
that in February the department. will be
at FEMA's discretion.
taking
a more aggressive stand to collect'·
Councilman George Wrigl)l ·suggested
Street Department Superintendent Ja.ck those tines.
Sisson also asked Krautter about the halted
Krauller supervise the FEMA repairs to which
progress of installing a guardrail on Union
council and Krautter agreed. ·
Terrace
.
Pomeroy Police Chief Mark E. Proffitt.
"We
can't drive it,'' Krautter said, "there's
informed council that he has lost two parttime oftlcers to the Mason, W.Va., Police too much rock. It has to be drilled and we
Department. He asked for permission to hire can 'tflnd anything big enough.''
Councilwoman Ru_th Sisson told Kruutter
Christopher C. Gruber of Cheshire as a parttime officer effective Jan . 22.
Please see Pomeroy, AS
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTtNEL.COM .

~~'4

Detallo on Pace

A&amp;

INDEX

To advertise
in this special
Retirement
Edition
contact your
Advertising
Represen ..a.r~I\J'P~

The removal of part of a oarge from the Ohio River at Belleville
Locks and Dam is pictured from atop the dam. The ·removal
has allpwed the Corps of Engineers to lower one of five gates
,on the dam olocked oy the sinking of the barges .

POMEROY - Knowing
the difference between a cold
and the flu can sometimes be
difficult. Meigs Cooperative
Parish Nurse Lenora Leifheit
' STAFF REPORT
is'presently taking calls from
NEWS@MYOAtlYSENTINEL .COM
residents to help contlrm cold
and flu symptoms as well as
TUPPERS PLAINS - A offer other health related
two-vehicle accident over the advice free of charge.
weekend blled . a Mt:igs
Leifheit created a handout
County resident and injured with help from the National
three Gallia County resi- Healtl!
Ministri€s
that
dents, the Gallia-Meigs Post explains colds and flu often
of the State Highway Patrol share symptoms which vary
reported.
in severity. For example,
Carrie B. Wiggins, 20, fevers rarely accompany
Reedsville. driver of one of colds but are characteristic of
the vehicles involved in the the flu where high fevers
crash, · was- transported ( 102 to I04 degrees) that last
from the scene to Camden three to four days are not
Clark Memorial Hospital uncommon.
Other
distinguishing
Pluse see Crash, AS

for your retirement years.

~alltpolis

REEDSVILLE - Salvage
crew·s have managed to cut
one su nken barge in half anu ·
have removed a section of it
from the Belleville Locks and
Dam, but the loss of water in
the dam's pool is beginning
to cause serious· slips and
bank, failures along the Ohio
and Hocking riv.ers.
The removal cleared the
No. 5 dam gate. but the other
half of the barge is sti ll
wedged in the No.4 gate, the·
U.S.
Army Corps
of
Engineers reported Monday.
Six barges from the Jon J.
Strong sank on Jan. 6, below
five gates of the-dam on the
Ohio River at Reed sville .
Until the barges can be
removed ahd all the gates can
.be closed, the navigation
pool between Belleville and
Willow Island Locks cannot
be restored to normal levels.
and locking has been halted.
As recovery efforts at the

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COt-'

News.and information

[·February ll, 2005

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.eOM

2 SEcrtONS- 12 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds

A3
83-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

-Editorials

A4

Obituaries ·

A5

Sports
Weather

B Section

A6

© zoos Ohio Valiey Publishing ~-

about audit report
BY BRIAN J. RE£D
BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

MIDDLEPORT - Mayor
Sandy lannarelli said she
expects criminal charges to
be filed · in the matter of
money stolen from ' the
Village 0f Middleport 's public works- department.
·
An Ohio Auditor of State
report issued Jan . 13
revealed, for the first time to
the public. the theft of $1.300
from the village's public utilities funds in 2002 . A fom1er
water department employee
was accused in the theft. and
Iannarelli ·told village council
last night that Police Chief
Bruce Swift referred the mat-

ter to both the FBI and the
local prosecutor for legal
action, as he was instructed
to do bv state examiner-s.
The ' employee, Christy
William s, , allegedly was
caught stealing cash utility
payments on videotape after
suspicion arose that bank
deposits did not match cash
receipts. According to the
audit report. the Bureau of
Criminal Investigation and
Identification was called iri to
investigate the matier. and as
a result, the state issued a
finding for recovery against
Williams.
~nnarelli said she has spo-

Please see Audit, AS

~~alHpoliS' JBaHp m:rtbune . Daily Sentinel Jotnt JleaS'ant ll\egtS'ter

740-446-2342

740-992-2156

3o4-675-1333
•

'·

...

.,,

'

---'------

•

•

.

�LOCAL • STATE

The Daily Sentinel

SOCIETY
Club members
learn all about
amaryllis
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
members
Garden Club
learned how to grow and care
for amaryllis at their recent
meeting held at the home of
Linda Ru ssell.
·
Sara Roush informed the
club members that amaryllis
is a tropical plant from cen.tral South America whose sap
has been psed in making poisonous arrows.
According to. Roush, purchased bulb s should be
examined to see if they have
some fleshy roots still
attached, or the !lower bud
·will never appear or else
make a poor showing. Bulbs
should be potted in soil, not
grown in water since the
roots will rot in water.
After the amaryllis bloom
fades, cut off the dried blossom and then provide four
hours of direct sunlight per
day. Weak stems result if the
·light is inadequate. Water
adequately and fertilize once
a month through the.sum mer
to feed next year's blossoms.
Good growing conditions
help provide more foliage,
and more foliage means more
!lowers.
Plant amaryllis in the
spring and bring inside dur. ing the fall. Two months of
cool temperature between 50
· to pO degrees Fahrenheit· are
needed to make flower buds.
Amaryllis should be repotted
every three-to-four years. At
that time. remove the smaller
bulbs and plant them in other
pots. They will bloom in
three to four years.
·
. Roush summarized by
saying that amaryllis are easy
to care for, and if we follow
these rules, they will reward
us with continuous blooms
every winter. .
President Peggy Moore
announced that Regions II
and I 2 will be hosting the
OAGC State Convention in
July. Each club will donate a
door prize for the convention.Janet Bolin will be presenting a history of garden

O'Bieness offers
breastfeeding
class

-· -·

Residents voice concerns regarding 911 move

Bill would expand Ohio's public records law

Health
screenings
offered at ·
O'Bieness

POMEROY Meigs $30 and costs, speeding; Scott
County Court Judge Steven L. R. Frazier, Midd!ep&lt;?!!, probaStory recently processed the tion, 180 days in Jail, 90 susfollowing c!)SCS:
pended, possesion, $100, proRandall A. Armes, Long bation, 180 days in jail, susBottom, $100 and costs, proba- pended, attempted forgery;
tion, disorderly conduct, $40 Michael A. Frost, Lons
and costs. probation. speeding, Bottom, $30 and costs. speed"
$70, probation, 30 days in jail, ing.
suspended, reckless operatton;
Herman E. Gonzalez,
Thomas J. Atkinson, New Westerville, $30 and costs.
Mansfield, $20 and costs, left speeding; James R. Greene,
of center; Paul E. Barker, $25 and costs, probation, three
Georgetown, Del., $'20 and days in jail, suspended, passing
costs, failure to control; Joshua · bad checks; Nils R. Gustanson,
R. Barton, Coolville, $30 and Lancaster, $29 and costs,
costs, drug paraphenalia; speeding; Roger A. Hart, $I 00
Jordan D. Bass, Syracuse, $30 and cost~, probation, 30 days in ·
and costs, speeding; Howard jail, suspended, disorderly 'conM. Beasley, Ravenswood, duct; Ryan M. Hill, Racine,
W.Va., $30an.dcosts, speeding; $145, probation, five days in
Kevin R. Blackburn, Long jail, suspended. no operator's
Bouom, $20, seat belt-passen- license, probation, seat belt vioger; Adriana M. Booth, lation; Timothy A. Johnson,
Columbus, '$50 and costs, Pomeroy, $53 and costs, speedspeeding; Michael J. Boswonh. ing, $26, speeding, $50, fishing
Proctorville, $30 and costs, Seat without valid license; Billy J.
belt violation; Karlow M. Jones, Reedsville. $50 and
Brown, Jonesboro, Ga., $30 costs, speeding; Coy D. Jones,
and costs, speeding; Mathew T. South Bend, Ind.. $5 I and
Brown. Middleport, $100 and costs, speeding; Diane D.
costs, probation, 180 days in Jones, Middleport, $30 and
jail, · 176 suspended, domestic costs, seat belt violation; Rick
violence; Ancil. H. Burbridge, J.Justice, Falmouth, Ky.. $150,
Albany, $20 and costs, failure equipment violation; Gary M.
to control..
Kallff, Middleport, $90 . and
Milton
H.
Carnes, costs, improper tagging of deer;
Charleston, W.Va., $30 and Staesha D. Kennedy, Pomeroy,
costs. speeding; Howard E. $25, failure to control.
.
· Coomer, Mogadore, $30 and
Klare B. Kimes; Reedsville,
costs, speeding; Tony C. $20 and cost~, left of center;
Crouch. Racine. $20 and costs, Amber N. Lee, Middleport.
failure to control ; Leo P. Darcy, · $25, failure to control; Ashley
McArthur, $250 and costs, pro- K. Litchfield, Bidwell, $30 and
bation. 30 days in jail, suspend- costs, speeding; Roger L.
ed, reckless operation ; Keith R. Lovsey, Long Bottom, $20 and
Day, Middleport, probation, 30 costs, failure to control; Brian
days in jail, 24 suspended. dis- M. Lyons. Junction City, speedorderly conduct; Tomasz W. ing; William B. Maynard,
Dedek, Elberton,. Ga., $30 and Racine, $30 and costs, seat belt
costs, speeding; Robert M. violation; Erik E. Metheney,
Deramus, Reynold~burg, $50 Vinton, $20 and costs, failure to
and costs, speeding; Jason W. control; Edward L. Mitchell,
Dunbar, Glen Daniel, W.Va., Langsville, $25, probation,
$50 and costs, speeding; Daniel drug abuse, $300, probation, 30
Durfee. Zanesville. $30 and days in jail, 27 suspended,
costs, speeding; William J. DWI, probation, unsafe left
Eakins, Middleport, $50, right- tum, $25, probation, failure to ·
of-way/public
highway; control; Brad A. Morrison,
Christopher
S.
Evans,. Middleport, $20 and costs, traf.
Couegeville, W.Va., $23, pro- fie cont dev/signs; Jason L.
bation, speeding, $ I00. proba- . Murdock, Pomeroy, $30 and
tion, I0 days in jail, seven sus- costs, seat belt violation;
pended, no operator's license; Anthony J. Nutter, Reedsville,
Andrew J. Fox, Marysville, probation, 10 days in jail. seven

•

Tuesday, January 25, 2005

BY NtcoLE FIELDS
many of the residents who gency services) were two
clubs· with a fashion show men! at (740)• 592-9300.
NFIELDS@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM attended the meeting, and years ago." Handley Said.
dating from the 1930s to pre-· Appointments are limited.
they said Blake and·the emer- "We've come so far."
Free colon-rectal cancer
sent day.
Several of the residents
POINT PLEASANT - It gency services have no right
Moore also announced that home screening kits ·and might have been frigid and to use taxpayers' money for a agreed that the emergency
anyone planning to take the information will be available snowing outside. but a heated new building. Many of the services need a new building.
June trip to Michigan should .at the screening. The free kits debate quickly warmed things residents quoted the ordi - but suggested the county
send a $100 deposit to Faye also . can be obtained on a up at the Mason County nance, which they said specif- com m i~sion build it rather
Collins l)y
March · I. daily basis at the information
meetmg ically outlined what the 911 than the emergency services.
Members should marK their desks near the hospitar s Commission
Thursday.
funds can and cannot. be used
As Commissioner . Bob
calendars for the Spring patient and visitor entrances.
Several
Mason
County
resi-for.
Baird
pointed out. however,
Regional meeting to be held
Cholesterol levels typically
CommissioneiRick the issue never has been
on April23 in Athens County do not change dramatically in dents attended the meeting to
express
their
concerns
about
a
Handley
acknowledged
that included on the agenda, and
this year.
one month . so individuals
Shirley Hamm read devo- may want to wait two to ihfee recent proposal that Chuck the wording of the current when it is, he said the public
tions and presented "Now Is months
before
being Blake, direc.tor of 91 I, EMS ordinance does not support will be aware of it.
the Time" tips with the fol- screened again. Also, screen- and Emergency Services for the use of911 funds for things ' "We' re a long ways down
lowing reminders: Get your ings do not take the place of Mason County, made for the such as what Blake has pro- the road from any building,"
lawn mower maintenance testing.
emergency services to build posed, but added that he and Baird.said.
done now, clean all pots to
In other business, the comA screening will indicate and relocate to a single build- the other commissioners · had
get them · ready for spri ng, whether an individual 's level ing rather than have the dif- discussed changing the word- missioner1 recognized Phylli s
turn the compost pile, feed is below. at or above normal ferent groups working in dif- . ing of the ordinance arid vot- Arthur. wlio ended her second
the birds, and plant live trees ranges ; however, for specific ferent places.
ing on the change in the term with the commission last
.soon after Christmas.
readings, .an individual may
Ideally for Blake, the coun-, future . Handley went on to month. She lost her seat to
Pe-ggy Moore took a fruit be directed to see a physician ty commission will approve acknowledge the good job Miles Epling in the general
basket to member Evelyn for further testing. The cho- his proposal to construct a Blake and the emergency'ser- · election this past November.
Holter, who is presenlly con- lesterol and glucose screen- new building to house the ser- vices personnel have done in
"It's been a good i2 years,"
fined to Pleasant Valley ing measures total choles- vices. Blake said the building,' the past few years, noting that Arthur said. "I think Mason
Rehab Center. Christmas cor- terol, HDL and glucose lev- which will cost an estimated changes that have been made County has a bright future." \
sages were made and els.
$450,000, will be financed by so far have been posi tive
The next county commisexchanged by · members.
911
funds.
ones.
·
.
sion
meeting will be 7 p.m.
Peggy Moore won the door
" I know where we (emer- · Thursday, Jan. 27.
That was the ~roblem for
prize. Hoste sses
Linda
Russell and Joy Bentley
served a buffet dinner to
those named and Evelyn
Hollon, · Ada Titus, Janet
Theiss, Barbara Koker and
ATHENS O,Bleness
. Petro said in a release that
"These records belong to
COLUMBUS- (AP)
Tunie Redovian.
Memorial Hospital in Athens Government officials will be tHe people who paid for .them the education of public offiwill offer a breastfeeding reguired to take classes on with their tax dollars and cials. written policies and
class for expectant mothers Ohio's public records laws they should be readily acces- re,medies for citizens who
next month.
and would face a $250 a day sible," Oelslager said in a · request the 'records are essenThe class, which is held in penalty for noncompliance release.
tial for "more openness in
conjunction with the lactation under a bill introduced
by
the government.'~
A
survey
program sponsored by the · Monday.
Newspaper Association and
O' Bleness Birth Center, will
Press
Rep. Scott Oelslager, a The
Associated
take place . Feb. 2. from I Canton Republican, worked released in June found pubATHENS - O'Bieness p.m. until · 3:30 _p.m . in with Attorney General · Jim lic emp,loyees followed the
Memorial Hospital in Athens O' Bleness, lower level con- 1Petro and Frank Deaner. law only about half the time
will o(fer blood pressure ference room B-7.
Michele
Biddlestone, president of the Ohio when asked to provide comscreening as well as cholesM~igs
international Newspaper Association, to . mon records on an unconditerol and glucose screening O'Bleness,
draft
the
legislation.
·
tional
and
timely
basis
as
board certified lactation con· Wednesday, Feb. 2.
. The free blood pressure sultant, will lead the class. · ,l'he bill requires that required by law.
screening will be open to the Topics to be discussed will olfices have written public · The proposed bilt also
·public from 10 a.m. until include: advantages of records policies and bans would establish a fine of
Sunday
noon and from 2 p.m. until 4 breastfeeding for mother and officials from limiting the · $250 per business day if a
Times-Sentinel
p.m. in the hospi-tal's patient child, anatomy of the breast, availability of records by ask- public office fails to provide
ing
the
name
of
the
person
by
an
a
record
to
a
requester
physiology of breastfeed!ng,
entrance lobby.
Gallia • 44&amp;2342
The cholesterol and glu, preparation for breastfeeding, requesting information or agreed date or . after the
Meigs
• 992·2156
cose screening, which will be maintenance and manage- what the information will be requester files a court
action.
offered for a $5 fee, will be ment of breastfeeding, and used for.
available at the same location advice for working mothers.
The class is provided free
by appointment only from 10
a.m. until noon and from 2 of charge; no registration is
p.m. until 4 p.m. To make an required. For more informaappointment. call 0 ' Bleness, tion, contact Biddlestone at
community relations depart- (740) 592-9364.

Meigs County Court News

- - : - - --

PageA2 _

Keeping ·
Gallia, &amp;
County
informed ·

suspended, driving under suspension/revocation; Brett M.
Parker, Coolville, $I SO, probation, I0 days in jail, suspended,
no operator's license; Thomas
W. Parks, Reedsville, $90 and
costs, illegally taking deer;
Sonya .D. Parsons, Souths!de,
W.Va., $30 and costs, speeding;
David M. Persons, Reedsville,
$41 and costs, speeding; ·
Dwayne E. Qualls, Pomeroy,
probation, 10 days in jail, disord~~~ conduct; James D.
Q s, Pomeroy, probation, 10
days in jail, suspended, ·driving
under suspension/revocation.
Brian K. Ross, Middleport,
$50, probation, 10 days in jail,
suspended, hWlting w/out special permit, $50, pronation,
hunting without valid NR
license; Adam W. Roush,
Racine, $20. and costs, failure
to control; Jessie L. Sargent,
Long Bottom, $20 and costs,
failure to 'control; Josh
Saunders, Bidwell, $25, no
operator's license; Ronald . S. .
Sibaja, Charlotte, N.C., $30
and costs, speeding; Micah R.
Somerville, Gallipolis, $I 50,
probation, 30 days in jail, suspended, obstructing official
business, $150, probation, 30
days in jail, suspended, disorderly .conduct, $25 and costs,
failure to control ; Neil J.
Sommers, Racine. $50 and
costs, speeding; Clayton A.
Taylor, Middleport, $2 I1 speeding; Michael A. Taylor,
Pomeroy, $30 and costs, seat
belt violation; H.T. Thomas,
Long Bottom, $30 and costs.·
speeding; John T. Troutman,
Heath, $30 and costs, speeding;
Kimberly·D. Turner, Coolville,
$30 and costs, speeding; Peter
W Voidness, Rockbridge, $~0
and costs, seat belt violation;
James
A.
Whitti11gton,
Middleport, $50, probation, 10
days in jail, suspended, no driver's license; Joni L. Williams,
New Castle, . Ind., $50 and
costs, speeding; Matthew C.
Wilson, Portland, .$30 and
costs, seat belt violation;
Francis H. Wood, Reedsville,
$30 and costs, speeding; Tangie
L. Wood, Rutland, $200, probation, 100 days in jail, sus-pended, endangering children,
$50 and costs, failure to control, $100 and costs, no child
restraint; Dale~ P. Wright,
Wheelersburg, $30 and costs,
speeding.

We'll run your classified line ad to sell your Boa~ Camper, Moton:ycle, 4-Wheeler,
Van, Pick-Up Tmck, or Automobile for the low price of only $25.00.

This special is only available to private, non-commercial individuals.
We'll run your classified line ad in 25 consecutive editions of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
the Pomeroy Sentinel and the Point Pleasant Register. Your ad will reach mr
13,500 homes. In addition, your ad will appear in o'ur weekly Tti County Marketplace
which is delivered to 17,000 homes. If you sell your vehicle within 25 days, just call ·
'
.
and we'll cancel your ad, if your \'ehicle'didn't sell, just call prior to the end of 25 days
and we'll extend your ad another 25 days.

•

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

As a part of the preliminary
process of application, a onePOMEROY - Residents sheet survey form titled
interested in seeing improve- "What's Your Vision for Our
ments in the neighborhoods Community" also is being
where they liv}l are encour- taken, and Musser's goal is 10
aged to attend a public meet- have at least 600 surveys
·ing to be held at 7 p.m. completed for evaluation in
·wednesday at the Pomeroy the grant process.
Library.
"All you have to do is mark
. This will .be the second of on the survey form what you
at least three required public want to see happen in your
meetings to .be held on neighborhood and get it back
Pomeroy's application to the . to us," said Musser.
Ohio
Department
of
The forms are available at
Development for a communi- the
Pomeroy
Water
ty disttess grant of up to Department, in some down,
$300,000.
town businesses, the Senior
A third. meeting .still must Citizens Center, the Mulberry
be held before the application Community Center and The
.can be liled in late February Daily Sentinel:
by Jean Trussell, Meigs
Completed surveys may be
County's gra nt administrator, returned to any of the locawho is handling the applica-• tions or left in the mayor's
tion process for the village. · office at. Pomeroy village
Pomeroy Mayor John hall.
Musse r urged attendance at
" Input from the public is a
the meeting by an'yone key factor in getting a
intere sted in seeing street grant," sa id Musser, . who
and sidewalk repair, more stressed the importance of
street lighting , expanded attending the meeting and
street parking, demolition completing the . survey.
of abandoned stru ctures "Feeoback from residents on
and/or development. of what they think are the most
parks and recreation facili -. · important need s in their

l~e toinl J~a~ant l\'tgistrr .

.304-675·1333

.,
'304-675·1
'

--

-·-- ·- ...,... -....--...... .-..
•

The surveys wbich are
short ask residents to rate
what is important ·to them in
the way of improvements in
th ei r ne ighborhoods, includi·ng infrastructure needs, puhlie fi1ci li1y needs, and demo:
lition of abandoned buildings.
Trus sell had earlier said
that information from the
meetings and on the surveys
will be correlated to de termine. what the majority wants
and decide on projects.
While some matching
money is required. Trussell
· said sometimes another project can become a part of the
match .money . .
It has been stressed by" both
Musser and Trussell that
community distress grants
are not money awarded for
use in downtown areas. but in
the neighborhoods.
With that said Musser
again urged resideius ro
atte nd Wednesday night 's
meetin g and if they can't
come to the meeting to pick
· up a survey and t omplete il.
"Participation is· vital if we
arc to be awarded this grant.."
he said:

Padgett, Stewart introduce legislation to
.create partnership for continued learning
COLUMBUS- State Sen.

life (regardle" of ho" brief)
DEAR ABBY: "Caring
Friend in Califomia" was at
is. neeueu. lnsreaJ of major
a loss about whether to hold
""furi"" Eifls. perh;~ps " fund
.a baby shower ror her. friend. .
coLi lei be set, up anJ friends
whose baby was not expected
cou lu dunale Ill l1cl p pay for
to make it lhrough the gestaDear
the medical expenses '111J the
tion period. You advised her
Abby
funeral. To ignore 1he siruathat rat her than hold a show·
tion is li ke pretending s\le
er, her friend~ should stay
i,n.t prt:Eil&lt;~ nt at all.
close and provide . willin g
FROM
·NA~CY
1 !\~
ears and shoulders to cry on .
GEORGIA : When 1111 hab~
A dear friend of my• 1oca1 March o1• D.1mes n1.1•JCe~. was st illbom . . our
. -frienJ·,
;- donalcd bunks 111 h"n'11ne to
daughter's faced · the same Read on:
circumstances. We knew . that
DEAR ABBY: My heart our local school .or l1hr~uy ~
if her baby survived delivery. breaks for the fri enJ who mcm01y note was placed 11
it w·ould be only a short time · will soon lose the child she the from ul each Jonallnn. 11
until the child was gone. h&gt;ts growil to love. 1 have Was a joyfu l way ·t" rememWhat we did was to create a known many mothers and bcr a sad event.
"
"mem,ory box." We included fathers who have losl . chi!FROM
'A
GRAND a camera t() take pictures of dren very yoUiig (even MOTHER OF 27 .IN MIS
the baby. and a smaller ver- throug h miscarriage), and SOUR !' : There are &gt;pecial
sion of a baby book to hold each one has treasured any clothing patterns l(lr babies
the footprints. hand prints, a reminder of the c.hi ld the y who arc premalure nr slillJock of hair and, of course, lost. Many ·hospital,; have born. Parents need 1o sec
the photos. We also bought programs run by volu nteers their baby as more 1han a
the infant' a cross as she was that provide a blanket and a naked little bndv. A balw
tiny hat to be made available dressed in a pretty outfit
immediately baptized.
It gave the parents some- to . the grieving · parent s. gives the p:~rents a pil'lure of
. thing to· re.member -ii a spe- ·•caring Friend" should · give their child to carry w1ti1 them
cia! meiJlory of their baby. It her friend the option of as they grie ve. And a· baby
wouldn't hurt for "Caring choosing gentle reminders of shower that would pn11·ide
Friend'" to contact the hospi- her . love and strength in this the hospital nursery a collec . tal a,s well, as it may have time of need, or a small. tion of these clothes for parsomething already set up for quiet ceremony of her love to ents to choose from would be
people facing these circum- make thin~s easier for her. a blessing .
My thanks to all "f you
stances. - HOPE IN MIN- My · gue ss~ is she'll choose
NESOTA
both. I know 1· would.
who took the time tn "rile. I
DEAR HOPE: Those are MOTHER OF FOUR IN regret that space · does not
wonderful sugge stions. A VIRGINIA
allow me io print more su-gwoman
mimed . Michelle
DEAR MOTHER OF gestions.
Dear Abby is writte11 by
. wrote me from Las Vegas .to FOUR: Thank you for the
say that the March of Dimes input. I have a stack of let- Abigail Va11 Buretr, also
has a bereavement packet ters from rend ers echoing ktrowtr as Jeatrtre Phillips,
that could · be helpful. In your sentiments. and offering atrd was forw.ded by her
addition
to
information suggestions. Read on:
mother, · Paulitre Plt.i/lips .
regw:ding the loss. it contains
FROM 'BEEN THERE IN Write
Dear
Abbv
at
a memory book for the lock CANADA': . Instead of the . www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
of hair and/or footprint. The traditional baby shower. a Box 69440, Los Atrge/es, CA
packet can be obtained from scaled-back celebration of it s 90069.

The
Partnership · for of public in struction , the
Cpntinued Learning will chancellor of the Ohio Bow:d
chairwoman of the Senate focus on crafting recommen- of Re gents, the director of
Educution Committee, and dations in the followin g· · development, the chairman
State· Rep. Jimmy Stewart areas:
. ,
of the Hou se Education
(R-Athens) introduced com• Increasing opportunities Committee and the ranking
panion legislation Monday to for students to earn credit minority me111bers of both the
. create the Partnership for toward a degree ·while still House and Senate Education ,
enrolled in high school.
Committees.
'
: Continu~d Learning.
Senate · Bill/House Bill 6 · • Expanding access to
The governor also will
would establish this new workforce development pro- appoint additional members
administered by from the private .sector, the
biparti san advisory council to grams
make recommendations for school districts and colleges state board of education. the
ways to better prepare Ohio's and universities.
Ohio Board of Regenis and
:future workforce by develop• Improving the sc ience . the State Workforce Policy ·
; ing improved coordination and mathematics skills of stu- Board.
; between
the
Ohio dents and employees.
"This legislation is part
• Reducing the number of of a solution that will help
Department of Education and
the
Ohio
Board· of students who need to enroll to create a more effective
Regents.
in remedial courses at col- and co nsi stent education
"It is important that ·we leges and universities.
syste m in our slate," said
; make every effort to ensure
• Expanding access to pro- Stewart. "The Partnership
;that the state's education sys- grams to overcome financial, will prove particularly
·tem is efficient. cohesive and cultural and organizational important in Appalachian
responsive to the needs of barriers that prevent students counties of Ohio as we
Ohioans." Padgell. a former from obtaining a post-sec- increase opportunities for
:educator, said.
ondary education.
high -school students wish• Aligning teacher prepara- ing to pursue higher educa!
: "Education means the
; whole learning continuum tion programs with the tion credit as well' as wor"
-from preschool through instructional needs and to overcome the financial
"higher education - whether expectations of school dis- obstacles for them should
they wish to continue their
it be an individual returning tricts.
to a technical school for
• Examining strategies for . education and pur sue a
;additional training or a per- retaining more graduates of degree. I' m excited to be a
· son pursuing a bachelor or Ohio's colleges and universi- part of thi's major step for
· :masters degree. · I look for- ties in the state and for the future of education in '
:ward to working with other attracting individuals from our stale ."
:state officials, as well as spe- outside of Ohio to work in .. This · joint
proposal
cialists in the field of educa- the state.
between the two chambers
tion , to craft sound recomAs chairwoman · of the has been identift.ed as a Jegmendations for promoting an Senate
Education islative priority for the I 26th
: ed~cational
system that Committee, Padgett will General Assembly and is sup:begin s in-.. early childhood . serve as a member of the . ported by Senate President
:and continues beyond coL- . Partnership, along with: the Bill Harris and Speaker of the
·Jege. "
governor. the superintendent f-!ouse Jon Husted.
)oy Padgett (R-Coshocton),

~- Physician joins
GALLIPOLIS Holzer
Clinic announces the addition
of gastroenterologist, Dr.
Kwadwo
Agyei-Gyamfi,
MD, MHS.
Agyei-Gyamfi received his
medical degree from the
University of Ghana Medical
School, Ghana. He completed
his internal medicine residency and his gastroenterology
at
Harlem
fellowship
Hospital Center in New York,
N.Y.
He completed a master's
degree in health . science with

clinic staff ~-

Gastrointestinal Endoscopy
(ASGE): the New York Society
of Gastroenterolog ' (NYSGE):
the Ghana Medi .. Association
(GMA); and the · American
College o Physicians and
American Society of lntemal
(ACP-ASIM).
Medicine
AMA.
Agyei-Gyamfi has a special
Dr. Aayelinterest
management of
Gyamfl
Agyei- hepatitis C infection and irritaGyamli is a member of the ble bowel sy ndrome. To
American Gastroenterology sc·hedu le an appointment, call
Association (AGA): the Hol(:er Clinic at (740) 446Society
of 5131.
American
emphasis on
h e- a I t h
administraat
tion
Armstrong
At Ian t i c
S t a t e
University.
Savannah.
Ga.

.

Lodge 453 will "be held for
the purpose of annual inspection. Dinner at 6:30 p.m.:
l\Jesday, Jan. 25
meeting at 7:30 p.m.
POMEROY Bedford Members to take a pie.
Township Trustees will meet' . . Monday, Jan. 31
.in special session at 7 pi.m.
POMEROY ·- Ott-KAN
:adt the town hall . .
Coin Club will meet at 7 p.m.
_
Wednesday, Jan. 26
at the Pomeroy Library.
· CARPENTER
--. . There will be an auction at
Columbua ·
Town &amp;hip the open meeting.
Trustees wil meet in special
sessoin at 6:30p.m. at the fire
: station .
:
Saturday, Jan. 29
Thesday, Jan. 25
: PORTLAND -· Lebanon
POMEROY -" The Meigs
:Township Trustees will meet
at 7:30 p.m. at the township Area Holiness Association
will have its monthly rally at
building.
7 p.m. at the Mlddleport
Church of the Nazarene .
Allen Midcap is president of
the Association.
POMEROY -· Community prayer meeting. 7 p.m.,
Th\lrsday, Jan. 27
POMEROY
The Enterprise United Methodi st
Wildwood Garden E:lub will Church. Enterprise [.'l.oad off
meet at 6:30p.m . at the home Ohio 833. Pray ~r for community, nation and world.
of Tunie Redovian.
Saturday, Jan. 29
: TUPPERS PLAINS MIDDLEPORT
The
.- VFW 9053 will meet at · 7
Proclaimers
of
Parkersburg.
: p.m. at the hall in Tuppers
W. Va. will be singing ·at 7
Plains.
p.m. at the Middleport
Friday, Jan: 28
Church
of · the Nazarene ..
CHESTER
Special
will be served.
Refreshments
meeting of Shade River

:clubs and
:organizations

'

.

Memory box helps friend
t?...~~-~~,~~~.~~~~n face loss of unborn child

Church events

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740r446·2342
The Daily Sentinel
740-992·2155

·Tuesday, January 25, 2005

Calendar of Events

...

il

BYTHE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

.

~**You must call

~~~ ~aUipolis iailp lribunt

PagcA3

;

Support groups
Thursday, Jan. 27
POMEROY - The Caring
and Sharing Group will meet
at I p.1i1. at the Meigs Senior
Center. Darleen Vandine.
Area Agency, on Aging caregiver advocate will speak on
what is available in Meigs
County in the way of relief .
for. caregivers.

Other event$
Thursday, Jan. 27
POMEROY- Parents of
junior class members at
Meigs Hi gh· School are to
meet at 6:30 pim. in the
library. to plan- for th e
prom.

If you are one of over 60 million Americans wh n sutter with persistent pain,
·the progressive approach' to pain mrinagement ser;ice&gt; at O'Riencs&gt; ~'kmorial
Hospital m ay help reduce pain levels and impr,l\"e rhe LJmtlity ,,f ynur life.
Disc uss your symptoms with yuur primary care phvsician .mel ii:&lt;k if a rdcrr,tl
to uur pain maf)agement program is appmpriate t;,r you.
'

George Chen, M.D., a. ex&gt;ard-certified specialist in &lt;m-e&gt;thl.'si,,l ,,~i an ,l pain
management, and O'Bleness' qualified , caring staff measure progress 111
community health- one patient at a time.

Birthdays
Saturday, .Jan. 29
MIDDLEPORT - Ralph
McCune wil1 observe his
90th birthday Satur..fay. His
family will entertain with an
open house· from noon· to 4
p.m. at the McCune home,
800
High
Street
in
Miadleport.

O'BLENESS
Memorial Hospital
S~ HOIJ"Ial Dr,.e. A:lhens. OH •~101 -~"10~
( ii\l)~Q\ - 5;'il

• " ..........,..,lt'fl~~o;lft

�•

.'

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentlnel.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 tlte·
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

VIEW

READER'S

EPA
Clarffies ·test results
Dear Editor:

The front-page headline for Dec. 22, "EPA: Limit
Consumption of Forked Run. river fish," needs clarification. I
. contacted the Ohio EPA's office and requested a copy of the
repon ·from the Forked Run survey. The advisory on limiting
large-mouth bass 'consumption to one meal a day is based on
a sampling of two - yes, two - fish. On Aug. 1.2, '2003 , a
survey of two large-mouth bass, .two white crappie, one common carp, one channel catfish was conducted. How can one or
two fish from a I02-acre lake give enough information tb
issue an advisory? The environmental specialist from the
. EPA's office arso informed me that this was a common advi. sory throughout Ohio's inland lakes. Mercury concentrations
· for large-mouth bass here in the U.S. have a mean concentration of 0.52 PPM, according to the· EPA Fact She~t on mercury. The two sampled at Forked Run contained an average
concentration of .440 PPM.
Mercury is found in the air, soil, water, plants and animals
in the organic and inorganic .form. It occurs naturally.
So what does this mean? The Daily Sentinel needs to
research the details · before ·printing al)... article. I made one
phone call and printed the Fact Sheet from the EPA's website.
· The EPA needs to survey more fish to get a better idea of the
mercury concentrations. Six fish cannot possibly tell the
whole story of Forked Run Lake 's fi~h population. Forked
Run was also u~naware of this survey and the results. Pregnant,
. childbearing-age women and nursing mothers do not eat any
fish from anywhere.
I have a copy of the entire report from the EPA's survey of
Forked Run Lake and the mercury Fact Sheet if anyone. wants
to check the data.
Jenny ,R idenour
Education Coordinator
Meigs Soil and Water Conserl'ation District

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to .
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good ·taste,
addressing 'issues, not personalities.

_The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our main concern in all stories·is to be
accurate. If you know of an error in a
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992·
2156.
·

Published every afternoon , Monday
through Frit:tay. 1•11 Court Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and the
Ohio Newspaper Association.
Postmaster: Send address corrections
to The Daily Sentinel , , 1, Court Street.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

'-"Our

main number Is

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Department extensions are:

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Editor: Chartene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter; Brian Reed , Exl. 14
Reporter; Beth Sergent, Exl. 13
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CtoooJCirc.: Judy Clark . Ext. 10
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Correction Polley

District Mgr.: Jason Panerson, E:xt. 17

Subscr'lptlon Rates
By carrlf)r or motor route
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Mall SubSCI'Iptlon
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Tuesday, January 25,

2005

Bush's Inaugural: soaring, ideqlistic - but also scary
President Bush's 2005
inaugural address w~s one of
the . most exhilarating ever
delivered - but also one of
the most disconcerting.
The address was soaringly
Morton
eloquent, audaciously idealKondracke
istic and deeply reverent. Yet
its content was so breathtakingly ambitlous as to verge
on hubris.
The president set nothing
less than this as the standard over, as Bush hopes, or we
by which his tenure will be will be mired in violence,
judged: "America, in this tiatred, division and humiliayoung century, procla1ms tion..
.
We will not ·have to wait
liberty throughout the world,
and to all inhabitants there- long to see whether Bush
of. Renewed in our strength ranks as one of the greatest
leaders in American history
- tested , but not weary we are ready fot the greatest or whether he has drastically
achievements in the history and tragically overreached.
Jraq is the test and as such it
of freedom ."
This was a man who. dur- deserved to be given more
ing the 2000 campaign, than a passing, almost crypdeclared that America tic, reference in" his speech
should pursue a "humble" -"our country has a~¥cepted
obligations that are difficult
foreign policy.
Initially, that approach to fulfill."
.
was disappointing, especialIf Iraq becomes a stable
ly in view of America's fail- democracy - or even if it
ure to · stop genocide in becomes only a semiRwanda. But now, four years democracy - then there is
later, there is nothing left of every reason to hope that
'humility, or . even modesty, freedom can spread throughabout · George W. . Bush's out its benighted region and.
the world .
..
.ambitions.
Indeed, it appears that the
But if Iraq cascades into
only entity he deems .himself .chaos - and especially if
inferior to is God Almighty. the United Stales abandons
The president has made its mission in the process plain that he, want' to liber- ·then Bush will go down as a
ate the world and reform the failure as a president. Worse,
most sweeping social pro- American ideals will be targrams of the ·past I00 years. nished, American leadership
· Bush will not only be will be undermined, the enejudged on his ability to mies of liberty will have trideliver on his promises; he umphed and, likely, our
also serves notice that he is country will be plunged into
taking this country on a his- even deeper div1sion.
toric rocket ride. We will
An image that occurred to
either live in a transformed · me when Bush had finished
country and world when it is his speech was of one of l)ase-

ball's greatest moments presumes to do no less than
Babe Ruth's legendary "called to rewrite Franklin Delano
shot" in the 1932 World Roosevelt's legacy: "By
Series. Heckled by Chicago making every citizen an
Cubs fans, he pointed his bat agent of his or her own des'
toward Wrigley Field's center tiny, we will give our fellow
field bleachers and Americans greater freedom
promptly hit a home run right from want and fear, ·and
where he had pointed. ·
make our society more prosBush will be Ruth - lion- perous and just and equal."
izcd
and
remembered
FDR, following on Teddy
decades later- if Iraq and Roosevelt and Wil son,
hi s domestic reforms work established government as
out..lf they don't, he'll be the the great protector of indilaughingstock that Rlrth vidual citizens against fear
would have been had he and want. Bush wants "to
· struck out.
give every American a stake
Of course, the stakes for in the promise and future of
the country are much greater our country" by building an
than a baseball game. Our · "ownership society."
nation's destiny rides on hi s
Overwl1e:mingly, though ,
ambition.
this was a Wilsonian speech
So . Bush's speech · and with overtones of JFK. "The
goals deserve to be judged in survival of liberty in our owri
more. lofty historic terms. land increasingly depends on
And, indeed, he echoed in .the success of liberty in other
· places the best of Abraham .lands," he ·said. "The best
Lincoln,
Fran~lin
and hope for peace in our world
Th·eodore Roosevelt, Ronald is the expansion of freedom
Reagan, John F. Kennedy in all the world."
and, especially, Woodrow
That was Wilson.
Wilson.
"So it is the policy of the
Bush's chief speechwriter, United State&gt;," he said, "to
Mike Gerson, deserves erect- seek and support the growth
it for writing a dazzlingly of democratic movements
eloquent speech. And Bush and in stitutions in every
. was compelling when he nation and culture. with the
asked young people to ultin1ate goal of ending
"believe the evidence of tyranny in our world."
your eyes" about the idealThat was Kennedy, as in
ism and courage of U.S. sol- ·his inaugural promise to
diers and to dedicate them- "pay any price, bear any burselves to causes "larger than den ... support any friend.
your wants." ·
oppose any foe" .to assure
Bu sh echoed Lincoln : the success of liberty.
"Eventually, the call of free- · It was an exhilarating line.
dom comes to every mind But it also. disconcertingly,
and every soul. We do not led to Vietnam, a noble
accept the existence of per- cause but a national tragedy.
manent tyranny because we
I Morton Kondmcke is
do not accept the possibility executive editor of Roll Call,
of permanent slavery." ,
th e ne\l·spaper r4 Capitol
B)J sh's ·domestic policy . Hill.)

'

Tuesday, January 25,

Obituaries

ANSWER:
KING oF
LATE-NIGHT

TV.

· The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www .mydailysentinel.com

2005

--TIME OUT FOR TIPS

Local Briefs

either convection or radiant it has an automatic shut-off
energy.
The convection switch or heat guard , Don't
heater naturally warms the allow anything to block the
POMEROY -Real estate
intake
or
exhaust
vents
that
surrounding
air
or
it
may
use
and
manufactured home taxes
Irene Miller Hayman, 98, fonnerly of Westerville, died peaceAre you thinking about try- a fan .to distribute the heat. could cause it to overheat.
are
now payable. The payfully at Friendship Village in Columbus, on Sunday, Jan. 23, 2005. ing to stay warm this winter
The
appliance.was
not
meant
Tl;te
radiant
model
warms
ment deadline for taxes on
She was preceded in death by her father, Bart Miller; her with a . portable or space
to dry clothes or heat food. real estate and manufactured
mother, Mini a; and stepmother Mamie; her husband, Charles; heater? They can ensure a objects as well as people.
Read and follow the label Never store flammable liq- homes is March 31, according
and her sister-in -law, Mary Kerst.
.
warm and cozy atmosphere directions
are included uids such as gasoline near the to Meigs County Auditor ·
Irene was born in East Letart, Ohio, on Aug. 7, 1906.
with minimal cost, but with your that
heating
product. heater, because they could Nancy Parker Grueser.
HeF mother died when Irene · was just eight years· old. Her beware of their potential
"first" family of siblings, Lyd ia Stultz (Elmer), Lewis (Ruby) safety hazards. Many home- Only use it indoors on .flat cause a spark.
Avoid using . extension
and Grace, are all deceased. ·
.
heating fires have been attrib- surfaces and away from cords with your space heater.
Her "second" family. Cora Mae Byers.(Wilma, deceased) of uted to. the · use of these water. Don't place on tables
MIDDLEPORT - Soup
Warren , qhio, Opal Diddle (Bernard) of Racine, Jeane Fisher · heaters: Here are some things and chairs where the appli- They also may cause the unit and sandwiches will be served
(Kermit) of Gallipolis, William Miller (Betty) of Gallipolis, you can do to reduce the ance could fall. Make sure .to overheat. Don't run cords from 4:30 to 6:30p.m. Friday
that the cord and plug are in under rugs or furniture, and at the Middleport Church of
Robert Miller (Betty, deceased) of PennYan, N.Y., and Fred risks .
never leave the heater run- Christ Family Life Center.
Miller of Racine, survive her.
·
Select a portable heater that good working con~ition.
Further, Irene is survived by brothers-in-law, John Hayman has been UL (U nderwrilers
Set the heater so it will be ning . unattended . Turn it off
before leaving the house or
· (Mary Ellen) of Westerville, and Ralph K~rst of Columbus. Laboratories)
approve(!. at least three feet away from going
to bed. Be·sure to keep
Many nieces and nephews also remain.
·
·Most models &lt;:reate I ,500 draperies, bedding, furniture, small children
away from the
POMEROY - A meeting
Irene graduated from Rio Grande Normal School in 1927 · watts of heat, which is the clothing and papers. Keep it
appliance,
because
little
finof
the Meigs Local Board of
and Capital University in 1952. She taught in public schools maximum allowed. That located out of high traffic
gers
may
come
in
contact
Education
sc heduled for
for over 50 years, starting in Letart Falls, Ohio, Orange amount will heat small to areas where it could be easily
With
the·
heating
coil,
resultWednesday
ha5 bee n canTownship School in Delaware County, Scioto Trail (now a medium-sized rooms through upset or tripped over, even if
celed
due
to
the
lack of items
ing in electrical shock or
Columbus school); and Broadleigh E.S. in Cojumbus. .
on
the
agenda.
burns.
She 'was a charter member of Delta Kappa Gamma Sorority
der
when
they
should
see
a
and a longtime volunteer at the Otterbein College Thrift Shop.
doctor for treatment. A few
Visitation hours Will be I to 3 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 26.
Street. On the property are
warning signs for seeking
2005, at the Hill Funeral Home, 220 S. State St., Westerville . .
du.mp trucks in which people
from Page AS
medical treatment are diffiServices will be conducted at 3 p.m. at the funeral home by
are discarding trash. This
culty breathing pr chest pain,
the Rev. David Redding . Interment and graveside service will
from
Page
A1
practice is attracting rats.
be held at the Letart Falls Cemetery in Letart Falls, Ohio, at 2 and can become severe.
persistent fever, vomiting or
Sisson brought up his own
p.m. Thursday, Jan. 2?, 2005.
Leifheit wants the public to inability to keep fluid s down,
. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made in Irene's know that there are simple painful swallowing, persis- the street department employ- concern s about unauthorized
name to Central College Presbyterian Church, 975 S. Sunbury rcmedies to avoid colds and tent coughing (unexplained . ees were doing a "good job." persons dumping their perRoad, Westerville, Ohio 43081.
flu , the most important of coughing for more than two She· also asked Krautter to sonal trash into the dumpster
'
the
Pomeroy
which is ffequently washing or three weeks), persistent inspect what resident s had . behind
described to her as either an ,.Municipal Building:
yout hands. When there is no congestion and headaches.
In other business:
water or antibacterial lotion
Leifheit suggests that if open well or cistern near a
burned
home
on
Peacock
•
Resolution 2.05 transferPOMEROY- Anna Lucille Quivey, 85, of Pageville Road, nearby you can vigorously you were unable to obtain a Street.
ring and advancing money
Pomeroy, passed away on Saturday, Jan. 22, 2005, at rub your hands together for flu shot earlier in the season
Krautter said he had cov- was approved.
Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center in Pomeroy.
one minute to create. friction you might ask your physician
ers
made to 11t over the well
• Resolution 3.05 adjust"
She was born on Sept. 21, 1919, in Athens, daughter of the and disperse .germs.
or pharmacist about current
or
cistern
and
would
check
ing
2005 appropriations in
late Naham Ward and Ellen Irene Willison Cheadle. She was
Other preve~tative tips are availability or about Flumist,
the water department was
a· homemaker.
using a tissue (instead of your a nasal -spray
vaccine. out the complaint.
Councilman Wright asked approved.
Surviving are two daughters and sons-in-law, Ruthie and hands) to cover eoughs and Flumist should not be taken
Bud Lowery of Detroit, Mich .. anp r&gt;ebbie and Larry Rogers sneezes, don 't touch your by those in high-risk groups. Musser and Krautter about , • Wayne Leib of the Galliaof Pikeville, Ky.; two sons and a daughter-in-law, Charles and face, drink plenty of fluids,,. Physicians and pharmacists slips on Union Avenue and if Meigs-Maso n
• Marine
Joyce Cheadle of Thornville and Jose]1h C. Quivey of · take a sauna, get fresh air, do should also be consulted the city was responsible to fix League was given approval
Pomeroy; a sister, Rose Hoskin of Chi)licothe; and several aerobic exercise regularly, before taking over. the those slips or the residents. to use the auditorium of the
·
grandchildren and great grandchildren.
Musser said he would check Pomeroy Municipal Building
Besides her parents, he was preceded in death by her hus- don't smoke, cut alcohol con-. counter cold medications.
into
it.
free of charge so. that the
sumption and relax.
Once a cold or the flu is
band, J.C. Quivey.
During open discussion, Marine League may practice
Eating a well-balanced · contracted Leitheit recomServices will be held at II a.m . on Wednesday, Jan. ~6,
Norton
spoke about com- their honor guard . .
2005, at Ewing Funeral HtJme in Pomeroy with Theron diet also can be used as a pre- mends rest; fluids , and avoid- plaints he 'd -received conAll members of council
Durham officiating. Burial will follow at Pageville Cemetery. ventati ve measure by in cor- ing soda pop becaue their
cerning
property
on
Osborne
were
preseni for the meeting.
Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. on Tuesday at the funeral home. porating foods containing sugar and caffeine can add to
phytochemicals which are dehyd~ation. One of her
dark green, red and yellow favorite tips for battling a cold
matel y 4,000 feet 'in length,"
vegetables and fruits. Eating or flu remains the home remeFilson said. "The posted
ogurt
is
also
suggested
as
it
dy
ot'
eating
chicken
soup.
d
·
d
TUPPERS PLAINS - Carrie Beth Wiggins, 20, ofTuppers Y
etour has been 1nterrupte
·
contains
calcium
and
keeps
Leitheit's
office
is
located
from
Page
A1
1
f
1
·
Plains. Ohio, passed away Saturday, Jan. 22, 2.005 in the
.
as a resu t o new s rps an d
· Camden Clark Memorial Hospital. Her death was a result of your digestive tract healthy.
at the Mulberry Community
closures. Motorist s must find
injuries sustained from an automobile accident.
Whetlier you have a cold Center and she can be said. "A ll traffic will be pro- alternative routes."
hibited at the AtliensfMeigs
"' Again , motorists should
Carrie was born in Parkersburg, a daughter ot Phillip and or the flu people often won- reached at 992-7400 ·
Deborah Dillon Wiggins of Tuppers Plains.
.
line effective immediately."
exercise extreme caution when
She was an. active siudent and graduate of Eastern High
on Ohio 7 near Tuppers
Fi.Json said ·motorists are · navigating all roadways along
School in 2003 where she especially enjoyed playing on the
Plains.
·
advised to use the following the Ohio and Hocking Rivers·
softball team. She was enrolled il'\ the physical therapy pro· Troopers said Wiggins, dri- detour: Ohio681 to0hio7/U.S. at this time," Filson said.
'
gram at Washington State Community College and . was
from Page A1ving a 1999 Ford Escort, was 50, arid back to Ohio 124.
All river traffic in the
employed by Analytical Products Group in Belpre.
northbound when she report"ODOT and the Corps of Belleville navigation pool is
Surviving Carrie along with her parfenpts kare tbwo sisterds, Ann in Parkersburg, . W.Va., edly lost control of the car, Engineers are monitoring all controlled by an industry
5
MR · Rwoc_khold afnTd husbanPdl _Ryan
arl ers durg,than Clara where she was pronounced went left of center and collid- river route for slips resulting traffic and safety control cenose lggms o uppers ams; materna gran mo er, ara dead.
d
'th
1992 Dodge f
1
II I
.
ter. Chuck Minsker of tbe
Bloomfield of Logan, W.Va. ; paternal grandmother, Barbara
e WI
a
rom ow poo eves assoc1at. B. Fore Wiggins of Parkersburg; three aunts, Marjana Edman
David A. Somerville, ·49, ·Caravan driven by David ed with the recent barge sink- Corps of ·Engineers said last
ing at Belleville," Filson said. week the loss of water in the
of Parkersburg, Rose Dillon of Lexington, Ky.. and Mary driver of the other vehicle, Somerville.
Witkosky of Parkersburg; two uncles, Robert Webb of and his passengers, Micah
Both vehicles were heavily
Ohio
144
between Belleville pool will result in a
Lexington, Ky., and Mark Dillon of Charleston, W.Va.; two R. Somerville, 19, and damaged and towed from the Hocldngpon and the junction of queue of towboats between
nephews, zachary and l)'ler Rockhold ofParkersbur~. Carrie Allorah Odell, 4, all of scene, the patrol reported.
U.S.50atCoolvillewasclosedto . the Willow Island Loch and
is survived by many friends; too numerous to mention. Her Gallipolis, were taken to
The crash marked the first all U'llffic laSt. week as the result of Dam north of Marietta and
personality never allowed her to meet a stranger.
CCMH for treatment, the rural traffic fatality of 2005 severe pavement displacement Belleville, until the navigaShe was preceded in death by her maternal grandfather, patrol reported.
.
in Meigs County, and is also along the Hocking_River.
tion pool can be restored to
'Benjamin Dillon; and her paternal grandfather, Denzil D. Wiggins.
The acc,ident occurred . the first in the post's cover- . "That slip is continuing to normal and traffic resumes
Funeral services will be conducted 1 p.m. Wednesday at the around 10:52 a.m. Saturday age area for the year.
move and is now approxi- on the river.
Vaughan Funeral Home, Parkersburg, with Rev. Dwight C. · _ _ _...,.._,;__ _ _ _ _ _...;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Honaker officiating. Services will conclude.with burial in the
I 0 meeting, a resident com- place on Friday with the
years?"
Evergreen North C~metery. The Jamily will receixe friends at
pll!ined
that the discount was ·council's finance committee
business
Other
the funeral home from 2-8 p.m. today and one hour prior to
offered
but not publicized, to discuss their needs and
The village must change
services on Wednesday.·Expressions of sympathy are requestthe zoning classification of and that many qualifying res, budget requests for the year.
from Page A1
ed to the Carrie Wiggins Memorial Fund, c/o Farmers Bank,
lannarelli said she will
the Middleport High School idents were not receiving the
P.O. Box 339, Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783. An online guest
property on South Third discount because they did not meet with Becky ·Hays of
book is available at www. vaughanth.com.
!"loyd Browne Associates,
ken to the county prosecuting Avenue before the property know it was ·offered.
Village
Administrator the village's engineering
attorney's office, and expects dm be sold, lannarelli said.
charges to be filed.
.The village hopes to sell the Bradford Antlerson discussed firm, on Friday, to discuss a
Jean Craig, a former mem- property later this year, but snow removal efforts follow - brownfield redevelopment
POMEROY- Levi A. Partlow 78, Pomeroy, died Monday ber of the Board of Public lannarell( said the "special" ing last week 's snowfall. grant
through
the
'Jan. 24, 2005 at his residence.
.
Anderson said the village Community bevelopment
Affairs,
which
was
dissolved
zoning
classification
which
He was ·born in Meigs County Oct. 27, 1926 son of the late
was out of salt when . the Block Grant program. If
Adam and Susie Lee Partlow. He was a coal miner and a last year in favor of a. village applied to the school must snow began, and a delivery approved. the grant would be
administrator,· read an "open now be changed to a residenUnited States Army Veteran of World War II.
used to demolish the Park
He is survived by hi s wife Helen McKee Partlow; daughters letter" to council addressing tial classification, allowing was not made until Saturday. Street School, used until
and sons in law. Suzanne (James) Richmond, Donna (Ed) the audit finding s. Craig and ' the building's development· He said the village "borrowed" a load of salt from the recently for street departEurell, Linda (Paul ) Michael all of Pomeroy; sons and daugh- other members of a citizens as an apartment' building.
lannarelli said adjacent county highway department ment storage. lannarell i said
ter-in-law, John Partlow of Langsville and Alan (Sara) group which monitors village
Partlow of Racine; two brothers-in-law Richard (Jan) McKee council activities attended property owners must be con- allowing workers to begi n the necessary title work has
been completed on the pro.
of Racine and Jackie (Berniece).McKee of Missouri; two sis- last night 's meeting to tacted and public hearings snow removal.
Council approved tempo- ject.
ters-in-law, Edna Stewart of Pomeroy and Violet Stover of express concern about the must be held before the zanrary
2005 appropriations as . Council also approved payaudit
report.
ing
changes
are
approved.
North Carolina: and several grandchildren, great grandchil"We were very disturbed
lannarelli recognized Dr. submitted . by Fiscal Officer ment of bills in the amount of
dren, nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents he was preceded in death hy a son, by these finding s," Craig Harold and Lynn Brown of Susan Baker. Baker said the $12.93 1.05 .
Also present were Council
Roger Partlow, and all hi s brothers and sisters. .
·
said. "As citizens, we are Pomeroy for their donation of vi II age has until the end of
Services will be held at I p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 26, 2005 at entitled to some answers. You a parcel of real estate on Page February to make pern1anent President Stephen Houchins,
Fisher Funeral ~orne _in Pomeroy with the Rev. Keith Rad~r cannot be an effective 'coun- Street, adjacent to the appropriations for the year. .A arid Council members Roger
officiating. Bunal w1ll follow 10 Rockspnngs Cemetel)l m cil person two ni ght s a Browns ' Overbrook Center. meeting with village depart- Manley. Robert Robinson
Pomeroy. Friends may call on Wednesday from 11 a.m. ullume month. It's a job, not just a The donation of the land will ment supervisors will take and Laurie Reed.
of the service .. Military rites will be conducted at the graveside. position.
be used as the site of the new
"You have eroded the trust water treatment plant. if
of the people of Middleport council receives grant and
\
\
by allowing these things to loan funding needed for conCraig
said. · struction. and will allow the
LETART- Raymond Denver Robinson , 74, of Letart, W. happen,"
Va., formerly of Charleston. died Sunday, Jan. 23, 2005 at the "Council is responsible for village to use the real estate's
Charleston Area Medical Center.
·
these problems since chang- value as a match for some
He is survived by his wife, Josephine Robinson of Letart, W. Vil. : ing fhe position of Fiscal grants. · .
Funeral services will be held I p.m. Wednesday at the Foglesong Officer from an elected posilannarelli said notices have
uH Jolla lie• to Ieora
Tucker Funeral 'Home. Pastor Gregory Collins will ofticiate and tion to a position controlled been posted in the village
I kill yew llfll rltllls.
burial will be Oak Grove Q!metery where military graveside rites by council."
water office promoting the
will be performed. Friends ~ay ~all 5 to 8 p.m. Tuesday.
.
"Why did these things discounts. offered to · senior ·
In lieu of flowers contnbutwns can be made to the Oak occur and why were they citizens on water and refuse
Grove United Methodist Church Cemetery Fund C/0 Hollice ·allowed to continue for two service fees. At council's Jan.
,Thompson, Rt. 2 Letart. WV 25253.
•
E-mail condolences: foglesongtucker@myway.com

Irene Miller Hayman

BY BECKY BAER
MEIGS COUNTY EXTENSION
EDUCATOR

Clarification

Free dinner .

Meeting canceled

Flu?

Pomeroy

·Anna Quivey ·

Bar.ge .

Carrie Beth Wiggins

.crash

°

Gonzales ·speaks for. himself, sort ·of
' .

Before the confirmation
hearing of Alberto Gonzales
for U.S. attorney general dissolves into the mists of time,
we should look at the official
record of that day, notirig it
Nat
as a harbinger of his crediHentoff
bility as our chief law
enforcement officer and
guardian of the rule of law.
~~ ~ ) .
..
'
At the start, Gori.zales told
the senators and the rest of
us: "I think it is impOrtant to in-chief?
stress at the outset that I am
Should he noi have told
and will remain deeply com- the president that the Geneva
mitted to ensuring that the · Convention Against Tonure
United States government and Other Cruel, Inhuman,
complies with all of its legal or Degrading Treatment or'
obligations as it fights the Punishment forbids "any act
war on terror, whether those by which severe pain or sufobligations arise from fering, whether physical or
·domestic or international mental, is intentionally
law. These obligations inflicted on a person for such
include, of course, honoring purposes as obtaining from
Geneva Conventions when- him or a third person inforever they apply."
mation or a confession."
Sen. Ted Kennedy (DAnd shoufd he not have
Mass.) asked the nominee if been interested in trying to
the media reports were accu- find out how many of those
rate that Gonzales had detainees had been .suffichaired meetings that cov- ciently screened when capered specific. ways to make tured in order to indicate
detainees talk. For example, whether they actually were
having them feel they were terrori sts- or suspects - ·or
about to be drowned or indiscriminately rounded up?
·
buried alive.
. Sen. Russ .Feingold ·(DGonzales answered: "I Wis.)
asked
Gonzales
have ~ recollection that we whether the president has
had some discussions in my "the authority to authorize
office." But, he said, "it is violations of the criminal
not my job to decide which law under duly enacted
types of methods of obtain- · statutes (by Congress) siming information from terror- ply because he's commander
ists would be most effective. in chief?"
. That job falls tQ folks within
Gonzales: "To the extent
the agencies."
that there is a decision m.ade
So, "the agencies," includ- to ignore a statute, I consider
ing the CIA, can do whatev- that a very significant .decier they consider effective; sion, and one that I would
and Gonzales suggests that personally be involved with
. he had no role as to the law- ... · with a great deal of care
fulness of those methods and seriousness."
when he was counsel to the
"Well," Feingold said,
president, our commander- "that sounds to me like the

~~
\~-.J

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
•

Reader Services

PageA4

•

· president still remains above
the law."
When Kennedy asked the
same question, Gonzales
said it was "a very, very difficult question."
So, ,What does he believe
about the separation of powers?
Another question from
Kennedy : "Do you believe
that targeting persons based
on their religion or national
origin rather than specific
suspicion or connection with
terrorist organizations is an
etTective way of fighting terrorism?
.
"And can we get interest
from you (that), as attorney
general, you'd review the socalled anti-terrorism programs that have an inordinate and unfair impact on
Arab and Muslim."
Gonzales responded: "I
will commit to you that I
will review it. As to whether
or not it's effective wi.ll
depend on the outcome of
my review."
But Gonzales didn't answer
the first crucial part of the
question: Is targeting people
based on religion, without
specific suspicion, effective?
And, I would add, isn't it
hroadly discriminatory?
Asked by Sen. Patrick
Leahy (D-Vt.) about increasing reiJorts of abuse of
detainees in · Iraq and
Guantanamo Bay. Gonzales
said: "I categorically condemn the conduct that we
see retlected in these piclures at Abu Ghraib.
"I would refer you to the
e.ight complete investigatrons of what happened at
Abu
Ghraib
and
,Guantanamo Bay, and t])ere
are still three ongoing." ·
But none of the investiga•

tionji have gone so far up the
chain of command as the
Defense Department and the
Justice Department to determine the accouiltability of
high-level
policy makers
~there. As The Washington
Post noted in a lead editorial
on Jan. \!(, "The record of the
past fe\11( months suggests
that the kdministration will
neither hold any senior offi cial accountable nor change
the policies that have produced this shameful record."
No'r did the ·Senators ask
thems~lves
abo ut Stuart
Taylor's Gharge in the Jan . 8
National
Journal
that
"Congress continues to ahdicate its constitutional responsibility to provide a legislative framework" for the' treatment of detainees. The White ·
House
strongly resi sts
Congress's involvement.
"No longer," Taylor insist:
ed, "should executive fiat
determine such matters as
how much evidence is nee-'
essary to detain such suspeels (ar)d) how long they
can be held without criminal
charges."
As U.S . attomey general,
will Gonzales move to reinstate the constitutional sepa~ation of powers to prevent
the further shame to the
United States for the widespread abuses of detainees
under the executive branch's
parallel legal system - of
which Alberto Gonzales was
a principal ·architect?
INat Hentoff is a nationally renownell mlllwrity on the
First Amendment and tire
·Bill of Rixirts and awiror of
several books. including
. "Tire War on the Bill of
Rights and the Gathering
Resistance " (Seven Stories
Press, 2003).

Audit

Levi A. Partlow

Raymond Denver Robinson

ELLEM LAw OFFICE

Kathleen Clonch ·
· MIDDLEPORT -Kathleen Clonch of Middleport died
Monday Jan. 24, 2005, at Plea.'Wlllt Valley Hospital in Pt. Pleasant,
W.Va. Arrangements will be announced by Fisher Funeral Home.

·- ------------------------------------~-----------------~----~

�PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel
'

Tuesday, January 25, 2005

Bl

The Daily Se.ntinel

INSIDE
MLB news, Page B2
Rookie makes Brady look good, Page B6
NFC title not enough for.Eagles, Page B6

3.5

.

•

' '

Tuesday, January 25, 2005
•BOYS PREP BASKETBALL

PREP BASKETBALL

ovc

Grandy, Trimble,take down Tornadoes

School .
. ALL ~
Chesapeake .............. 14·0 ...... 7'0
River Valley ............... 7-5 ........ 4-2
Coal Grove ....... :........6·6 ....... .4·2
South Point ............... 4·9 ........ 2-4
Fairland .... ...... ........... 3·11 l .... ,2·5
Rock Hi11 .................... 3·10 ...... 0·6

BY ScOTT WOLFE

Sports correspondent

SEOAL

School
ALL
s.EQ.
Warren ................... ... 10·2 ......7·0
·Logan ........................ 8·4 ........5·2
Jackson ..... :.. ............ 10·2 ...... 3·2
Gallia Academy .........6·7 ........ 2·3
Marietta .................. .. .4·7 ........ 1-4
Athens ............. :......... 1·12 ......0·7
AP pholo
Christopher Belt stands in front of several road signs he has cqllected at his Warsaw 'home . Belt
has 560 m'iniature signs, 50 road signs, vaFious cones . barrels, caution tape and refleCtor lights.

TVC
Ohto Division

Teenager has a passion for collecting road signs
WARSAW
(A P.)
Christopher Belt isn' t old
enough to drive, but he pays
·more attention to road signs
than most motorists.
The 14-year-old has a traffic light installed in his mother's · driveway, and he has
helped crews install signs in
his hometown, about 57
miles northeast of Columbus.

His collection of hundreds
of . miniature street signs, 50
ofticial signs, cones, barrels
and traffic lights spills into
his mother's . yard. He buys
the items at yard sales and
orders them from listings in
collector magi!Zines. The
Ohio
Department. · of
Transportation has also let
him keep some signs he

Soldier in scrounging case
says she's returning to duty
DAYTON (AP) - A former Ohio Army Reserve
' commander, court-martialed
for taking Army vehicles in
Kuwait so her . unit could
carry out its mission in Iraq
said Monday she is returning
to duty pending her bid for
clemency.
Maj. Cathy Kaus, 47, of
Dayton, said she plans to
report for duty Tuesday at
Fort Sill, Okla. Kaus said she
is not sure what tasks she
will be assigned.
"I'm very anxious to get
down there and prove to
them that I do have some
qualities the Army needs,"
· Kaus said. "I look at it as
starting a new job."
Kaus was convicted of
theft, abandoning military
property, conspiring to abandon military property, and
neglect.
Her attorney, Philip Cave,
said that while the court dismissed Kaus from the military - an officer's version
of a dishonorable discharge
- the dismissal is not final
until the · clemency and
appeals process is complete.
Kaus applied for clemency
and . has until Feb. 9 to submit documents to the Army
making her case. Cave said
the Army. could decide to
reverse the court's decision,
modify it or leave . it
un~hanged .
.
.
Last inonth, Kaus was
released from a Navy brig· in
San Diego after serving a
six-month sentence. In the
meantime, she remains a
major in the Army.
Cave said his client wanted
to return to duty while the
lega! .Prcr5ess continues. He
said-~ is concerned for
her future and wants to show

she can still serve.
"The lady, for 27 years as
a reservist, has been loyal
and hard-working for the
Army," Cave said . . "She
made some mistakes. Th!:!
tinit made some mistakes.
They thought they were
doing it for the right rea-

sons."

found and returned to ·the
agency and has given him a
road sign rule book.
"I think 'they're interesting.
It's a hobby ... one of the
things I' m good at," he says.
"Traffic signals are my
favorite thing."
Christopher began · making
road signs out of construction
paper when he was 3 years
old after his mother began
teaching him about the different signs while traveling. ·
· Soon, family members
began giving him real ones as
gifts, and a hobby was born.
Christopher. who has used
hi s rule book to set up signs
for his grandfather's excavating business, wants to wo.rk
for the state transportation
department someday.

Kaus was among six Ohio
reservi sts
from
the
Springfield-based
656th
Transportation
Company
wh0 were court-martialed at
a time when some U.S.
troops in Iraq are complaining they have to scrounge for
equipwent.
Members of the unit said
they needed the equipment to
deliver fuel to U.S. forces in
Iraq for .everything from
helicopters to tanks.
Calls to Army oftices at
the Pentagon were referred
to Fort Sill. Several messages seeking comment were
left· at Fort Sill.
Cave said that if Kaus' dismissal stands following the
clemency
and
appeals
be
kicked
process, she will
out of the Army and lose her
retirement benefits.
Another member of Kaus'
unit. who was court-martialed
is trying to get his retirement
benefits back.
Darrell Birt, of Columbus, ·
was convicted of theft and
destruction of military property. He applied for clemency, but was denied, and
served six months in jail.
However, Birt 's attorney..
Steve Brand, said the
clemency ruling could be .
changed. Earlier this month,
the Army allowed Birt to
submit additional arguments
·on why clemency should be
granted.

t/ FRESH MEAT
t/ FRESH
PRODUCE
t/ EVERYDAY
- LOW PRICES.

Seeking new fees for funding
COLUMBUS (AP) - A
regional sales tax w fund
higher education. Another tax
on cigarettes. A tax on hotel
·beds.
Tax proposals are flyin g as
Gov. Bob Taft prepares to
introduce his next two-year
state budget, which he calls
the tightest in decades.
Several groups want Taft and
lawmakea to increase taxes
and fees To fund their causes
and help balance.the budget.
"Investing the money thi s
way will prevent even more
kids from smoking. It will
help adults who are trying to
quit be able to ,quit," said
Wendy Simpkins, spokeswoman for a coalition that
wants .to fund prevention 'and
health care programs ~Yith a
75-cent per pack increase on
cigarettes.
State parks want a $5 per car
entrance fee, and Taft is studying a I percent statewide bed
tax to promote travel and
tourism in Ohio as part of a
budget · plan in which state
---~

Evening (7 p.m.-MitJnight) start near 8: 00am . 8xpect

Thesday, January 25

Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will rise to 32
with today's low of 20 occurring around 7:00am. Skies
will be partly cloudy to mostly cloudy with 5· MPH winds
from the southwest.

'Aftemooll (1-6 p.m.)

Temperatures will hold
steady around 35. Skies will
be partly cloudy with 5 to I 0
MPH winds from the southwest.

Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
It should be a cloudy
overnight. Temperatures will
linger at 34. Winds will be 5 to
I 0 MPH from the southwest
turnin g from the west as the
overnight progresses.

Temperatures will rise from
34 early afternoon to the high
for the day of 39 at 3:00pm as
they drop back down to 34
later this afternoon. Skies will
range from partly cloudy to
WedJ:tesday, January 26
mostly cloudy with 5 to 10
Moming (7 a.m.-No(}n)
MPH winds· from the southExpect a mix of rain and wet
west.
snow. The rain is predicted to

accumulations of 0.02 inches.
Temperatures will hover at 35. ·
Skies will be mostly sunny to
cloudy with 5 to I 0 MPH
'winds from the west turning
.from the northwest. as the
morning progresses.
Aftenrooll ·(1-6 p.m.)
There is a slight chance for a
few
snowflakes.
Temperatures will remain
around 31. Skies will. range
from mostly sunny to mostly
cloudy .with 5 to I 0 MPH
winds frl)m the . northwest
turning from the north as the
afternoon progresses.

BIG BEND

'

agencies are being asked to
trim pudget requests and look
for alternative funding sources.
The suggestions come on top.
of a temporary penny sales tax
that lawmakers must decide
whether to keep as ihey try to
fill a $5 billion budget hole.
University of Toledo president Dan Johnson has suggested a half-cent sales tax
increase to help reduce tuition
at public universities and
increase enrollment.
The tax could cut the average yearly tuition from $7,000
to $3,500, Johnson said in a
speech Thursday to university
students and faculty.
Johnson also floated the
· idea of allowing public universities to ask local ·governments to leyy taxes for them.
· "It is simply not true that we
as a state .cannot afford lower'
tuition," Johnson· said. "We
can afford it and, moreover,
such a policy would be a
major force in helping Ohio
achieve its other economic
and education goals."

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

GLOUSTER - Southern
held Trimble ace Jennifer
Grandy to just two points the
first .quarter, then the flood
gates opened and sent the
Tornadoes· awash.
Grandy nailed 8-12 three
pointersandhit7-ll two's en
route to a ·38-point effort that
led the state-ranked Trimble
Tomcats "to a 79-44 TriValley Conference Hocking
Division win over the
Tornadoes Monday night in
White Gymnasium.

SAVE·A·LOT.
700 West Main St, Pomeroy

JUST LOOK AT THE RECEIP!

School
ALL
M
Vinton County ........ .. 10·3 ......5·0
Belpre ........... :.......... .. 10·4 ......5·1
Alexander .................. 9·4 ........3·3
Meigs ........................ 5·8 ........ 2·4
Nelsonvitta-York ...... .. .4·8 ........ 2·4
Wellston .................... 1-11 ......0·5
·Hocking Dlvlston
School
ALL
M
Federal Hocking ..... ... 12·3 ......5·1
Eastern ,.................... 12·1 ......4·1
Trimble ........ :.......... ...8·3 ....... .4·1
· Southern .................. .4·11 ...... 2-4
Mitter ...................... ..4·10 ...... 1-5
Watertord ..................3·11 ...... 1·5

ovc

School
ALL
~
South Point ............ ... t 3·2 ......5·0
Chesapeake .............. 9-8 ....... .4·2
Fairland .................. ... 8·9 ....... :4·2
Coal Grove ................ t0-6 .... .4·3
River Valley ............ ,.. 3-11 ...... 2·5
Rock Hill ....................1-11 ......0·6

SEOAL

School
ALL
~
Marietta ....... :......... .... 9·6 ........5·1'
warren :.................... :9-4 ........ 3·2
Logan ........................ 8·7 ...:.. ..4-3
Gallia Academy ......... 10-6 ...... 3-4
Jackson ..................... 10·7 .... .. 3-5 .
·Athens ..................... ..4·9 ....... .2·5

TVC
Ohto Division

·We Accept
. WIC. EBT
and most .
CREDIT

School
ALL
M
Nelsonvitte-York ......... 10·5 .... .:7·1
Vinton Co ..................10-7 .... .. 7·2
Belpre ........................ 10·5 ......6·2
·Alexander ..................5·1 0 ...... 3·4
Meigs .. .................... 4-14 ...... 2·8
Wellston ................... .2·15 ...... 1-9
Hocking Division
School
AlJ. i l l
Trimble ..................... 15•1 .... ..8·1
Watertord ........... .. 11 ,4 ......6·1
Federal Hocking .... ... 8·7 ...... ..4·3
Eastern .................... 9·6 ...... ..4·5
Southern ...................5·9 ........ 1· 7
Miller .........................5·10 ...... 1·7
OTHERS

-· Coca Cola Classic
• SPRITE

•.Diet Coke
• Caffeine. Free Diet
6 PACK 24 oz. BOTTLES

ovcs ................

.........4-9

South Gall1a ....... ..................... 3·10

Prep .Schedule
Today's Games
Boys Basketball
Alexander at Meigs, 6 p.m .
Eastern at Fed Hock, 6 p.m.
Miller at Southern. 6 p.m.
OVC at Hannan, 7:30p.m.
Girts Basketball
OVC at Hannan. 6 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
Girls Basketball
S. Galtia
.. at Coal Grove. 5 p.m.

.Prep Scores

GIANT
14 oz.

&amp;PACK
NRS
*AFTER $4.00 MAIL-IN REBAT£

SAVE UP TO $5.97 ON l!!

Vinton County 43 , Meigs 40
Trimble 79, Southern 44
Eastern 56. Miller 28
Ironton 53, Gatlia Academy 33
Fairland 71 , OVCS 23
·
Alexander 57, Wellston 43
Warren 56, Williamstown 38
W~terford 53, Fed Hock 49
Zanesville 68, Marietta 34
Minford 63, Portsmouth 46
Northwest 71, S. Wepster 31
Ports. Clay 66, Ports. West 35
Tri-Valley 51, Sheridan 46
-Huntington 64. Paint Valley 43

ancl Williams did a great job IU deficit and later to a 17-10
defensively on Grandy.
' mark .
Pickens gave Southern a 6The Tornado offense also
2 lead before Grandy hit a became less selective and
driver down the middle, the often went one shot and out.
Southern's Williams hit a pair To . compound
mailers,
of free throws for a '8-4 SHS Williams reinj ured a sprained
lead. Julie Trace drilled a ankle and was slowed defenthree pointer and Brooke sivel y as Grandy broke open
Kiser hit a corner jumper to the game with I5 . second
· give Southern a I 0-7 lead at quarter points. Trimble led at
the end of the first round.
the half 32- 16.
Trimble become more · Southern twice cut the lead
aggressive and the hosts 'to 13 points on six straight
started setting more · screens points from Pickens. but then
to free up their t;ilented star. Southern once agai n became
Likewise, Southern became careless in the front court and
careless and made three early
Ple•H see Trimble, 81
turnovers in falling to an II-

Wizards magical in win 9ver Cav~
ToM WtTHERS
Associated Press

BY

CLEVELANO - After
the final horn sounded,
Washington's
Anthony
Peeler ·grabbed the ball
and slammed it off the
Gund Arena floor as han!
as he could. As it rose
toward the rafters, Peeler
pumped his fi st and yelled.
The surprising Wizards
had done it again.
Peeler made· three 3pointers and scored all 14
of his points in the fourth
quarter,
and
Gilbert
Arenas scored 30 . as the
Wi zards rallied for a I0697 win over the Cleveland
Cavaliers on Monday
night.
With their lOth win in
12 games, the Wizards
(25-15) matched their win
total from last · season,
when they went 25-57.
Washington scored just
30 points in the first half,
but overcame a 17-point
deficit by making 39 free
throws and pulling out the
type. of game the Wizards
probably would have let
slip away last season.
"They rattled us in the
first half," Arenas said.
"We didn 't know what to
do. But we were down by
10 - that 's five baskets.
And the way our guys
shoot the 3, less than that."
LeBron James just
missed his third tripledouble in four games, tinishing with 3_1 points. 10
rebounds and eight assists
for Cleveland, which was
coming off a six-,llame
West Coast trip. The Cavs .
lost at hom~ for just the
. fourth time·in 18 games.
"We 9ave up a lot of free
throws,' James said after
the Cavs attempted just 23
to Washington 's 49. "We
kept fouling their jump
shooters and they just
came out and made shots
in the second half."

Ple•H see C.vs, Bl

Eagles
double
up Miller
Bv BRYAN WAL~ERS

bwatters@ mydaitytribune.com

AP pholo
Cleveland Cavaliers' LeBron James , front, is fouled by Washington Wizards' Jarvis Hayes in
the third quarter of Washington's 106-97 win Monday in Cleveland .

'

Vikings rally late to beat Meigs
BY BRYAN WALTERS

bwalters@ritydailytribune.com

Cavs' PG but
with foot injury
CLEVELAND (AP) Cavaliers starting point
guard Jeff Mcinnis will
miss his second straight
game . with a sprai ned left
. foot Monday night.
Mcinni s injured hi &amp; foot
last week in Sacramento
and sat out the finale of the
Cavaliers' six-game road
trip. on Saturday. With Eric
Snow replacing Mcinni s in
the
starting
lineup,
Cleveland beat Golden
State to finish the trip 3-3.
Mcinnis, who is in the
final year of his contract
with Cleveland, is the
Cavs' third-leading scorer
with I 5.1 points and 5.3
assists a game.

Robie one.
Southern
p. I a y e d
some of its
best ball of
the year in
the
first
quarter .
Broo ke
Kiser hit Ashley Roush
underneath for the games'
first points and a Southern
lead. Alicia . Andrews then
tied it ·for Trimble, and
Kristiina Williams hit Roush
for another deuce and a 4-2
Southern lead . Southern's
patience and good passing
paid off in the first quarter,

NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION

OTHERS
South Gallia .........
.. ....... 10-3
ovcs .................................... 1-10
GIRLS PREP BASKETBALL

Trimble (15-1, 7-1) got a
·spirited 12-point effort from
Southpaw Julie Trace, who
also led the team with six
·rebounds. Andra Hooper
added seven, Allie Jago six,
Carri Woodgerd six, Hannah
Faires four, and two apiece
from Alicia Andrews and
Tabby Jenkins.
Southern was led by dual
13-point efforts from seniors
Joanne Pickens and Brooke
Kiser. Pickens also cleared·
the boards of seven rebounds,
while Ashley Roush added
seven
poi.nts,
Kristiina
William s five , Whitney
Wolfe-Riffle four, and Ashley

..

MCARTHUR The
Meigs girls basketball
team suffered a flash of
deja vu Monday in a heart·
breaking 43-40 los s to
Vinton County in . Tri Valley Conference Ohio
divi sion play.
The Marauders (4~ 14, 28) held a comfortable 3525 edge headed into halftime of Thursday's contest
with Wellston, only to see
the Rockets rally back to
steal a 5 1,46 victory at
WHS.
This time, the Maroon
and Gold held · an 18-9
advantage at intermission
only tb see the Vikings
(l 0-7, 7-2) go on a 34-22
second half run that catapulted the hosts to within a
half game of the Ohio divi-

sian title chase:
Vinton County missed its
first 2Z shot attempts of
the game, but heated up in
the second half to make 65
percent of their tries. That,
combined with an 11-of-12
effort at the charity stripe
down the stretch, allowed
The Maroon ·and White to
complete the · miraculous
comeback .
Sam Pierce paced the
Marauders with 13 points,
with Meg Clelland and

'Justine
Dowler
adding
seven and
six markers respectively.
Renee
Bailey and
Cayla Lee
e a c h
Pierce
chipped in
four, while Lesley Preece,
Amber
Burton
and
Brittany Hy sell rounded
out the scoring with two
apiece in the setback.
Tiffany Patterson guided
the Vikes with 14 markers
and eight rebounds. Megan
Owings had eight points.
while Lyndsie Bobb contributed seven to the tri,
umph .
The guests were ou Irebounded 30- 18 in the contest and also had 27

turnovers in the outing.
Both teams s how~d a
good touch frotn the foul .
line, as Meigs netted 13of-16 tries and VCHS hit
14-of-19.
The. lm;s completed the
Ohio diyision season for
the Marauders .
Meigs isn't . scheduled to
play again until Jun . 31
when they travel to
Southern.
VInton County 43. Melg1 40
Meigs
8
Vinton Co 2'

10
7

11
18

11 16 -

40

-43

MEIGS (4-14, 2-1)- Renee Bailey 1 2·
2 -4, Justine Dowler 1 4-6 6, Sam Pierce
2 7-9 13, Cl)'la Le. 2 0.0 4. Lesley .
PrHCO 1 ().{) 2, Meg Clelland 3 ()-1 7,
Amber Burtoo 1 0.0 2. Brittany Hysell 1
0.02. TOTALS: 1213·1640.
VINTON COUNTY (10.7, 7-2) - Kalli
Mceorl&lt;le 1 1· 1 3. Kelsey Day o 5-6 S.
l&lt;rl&amp;ten CoHins t O.Q 2, Lyndsie Bobb 3 0..
o 7. Kara Reed 0 2·2 2. Trieia Hewitt 0 2· ·
2 2, Ttffany Panerson 6 2-4 14, Megan
Owings 3 2-4 8. TOTALS: 14 14·19 43.
3~nt

goele: M -

·Clelland): VC- 1 !Boot).

3 (Pierce 2.

HEMLOCK - The Eastern
Lady Eagles had little trouble
on the road Monday in TriValley
Conference
Hocking
division play,
as they doubled up host
Miller ·for a
56-28 victory
at
Dunlap
Gymnasium.
The Eagles
(9-6,
4-5)
M. Weber
jumped out .
to an early
13-5 lead after eight minutes
of play and never looked back
in cla1ming the team's second
consecutive triumph.
Morgan Weber paced The
Green and White with 19
points, while Erin Weber and
Jen Hayman chipped in 17
and seven markers, respectively. Erin Weber and
Hayman also led EHS with
· six caroms apiece.
·.
Jessie Hupp added five
·points. with Krista White contribuling four to the win.
Jenna Hupp contributed two
markers and Cassie Nutter
a'dded a point to round out the
Eastern scorin g.
Brianne Hinkle guided the
Falcons (5- I0, 1-7) with 13
points and Kelsi Brown added
six markers to the setback.
The Purple and White netted just 31 percent ( 12-39) of
its field go~! attempts, while
Eastern canned 20-of-42 tries. ·
· The Eagles grabbed a· 24-19
advantage on the boards and
forced the hosts into 25
turnovers. The guests committed just 12 on the eveninjl.
EHS also held a 17-6 edge m
steals.
.
EHS led 29-9 at half and
held a 43-20 edge after three
quarters of play..
Eastern· made it a sweep·on
the night with a thrilling 24-22
victory in the junior varsity
contest.
South Gallia comes to
Tuppers Plains Thursday for a
non-conference game. Tip-off
is sc~duled for 6 p.m.
Easlern
Miller

E01twm 56, Millo&lt; 28
13 16
14
13 5

4

11

8

-

28

EASTERN (9-6, H) - Katie Hayman 0 0.
0 0, Kr ista Wl'lite 2 o-o 4, Amber Wit~
o 0-0 a. Cassie Nutter 0 1-2 1, Morgan

Weber 8 2·2 19, Erin Weber 6 5-S 17.
Jenna Hupp 0 2-4 2, Jessie Hupp 2 1-2 5.

Jen Hayman 2 3-7 7. Morgan Werry 0 0.0
0 TOTALS· 2015-26 56.
MILLER (5-10, H) - 1\st'jy Hea"""er 2 ().
2 4. Kal&amp;i Brown 3 I){) 6. Jenna Murptly 0

1-2 1. Emitie BraY 0 o-o 0. Brianne Hinkle !S
3-4 13, Lono Spencer 0 (}{) 0. Jenna
Bo~artl 1 0.0 2. S~ra Toth o 0.0 0.
Courtney Hoops I (}{) 2. TOTALS: 12 ol-8

28.

:loi&gt;&lt;&gt;lnt pa: E - 1 tM. WoiJer): M -

None.
Toom otolto11cll1ndtvlduol EASTERN: ~ FG 1.478), 1·2 3PG

(.500). 15·26 FT ( 577). 24 rebounds (E.
WoiJer 6, J. Heyman 8). 10 USi11a (J.
Hayman 5). 17 ateals (E. Weber 5. J.
Hayman 5). 12 turrovera, 12 louts.

MILLER: 12·39 FG (.308). ().3 3PG (.000).
HI FT (.500). 19 rebOunds (Hinlde 7), 6
usists (Hea"""'r 2. Bolyonl 2). 8 (Brown 3). 25 tur""'"'". 20 oola.

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

r.

56

'

_.,_,

___ _

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

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

Tuesday, January 25. 2005

Tuesday, January 25, 2005

www.mydailysentlnel .com

Mets back in Delgado hunt; Tony Clark to D'backs, Aurilia to Reds
Delgado saying he wasn't
·Associated Press
prepared to be a designated
hitter most of the time.
NEW YORK _ The New
In Miami, free-agent outYork Mets, Florida Marlins fielder Magglio Ordonez met
with Detroit owner Mike
and Baltimore Orioles await Bitch and his top staff. Tigers
Carlos Delgado's decision.
president Dave Dombrowski
Delgado's agent, David and manager ·Alan Trammell
Sloane, said Sunday that New also attended the meeting, as
York had withdrawn - a did agent Scott Boras and
statement that puzzled . the associate Mike Fiore.
Mets, who said ·they were
Ordonez, a four-time Allwafting to hear back after say- Star who turns 31 on Friday,
ing they needed to have a hit .292 last season with nine
decision. On Monday, the homers and 37 RB!s .in 202
sides started talking again.
at-bats for the Chicago White
"I spoke to the Marlins , Sox. A career .307 hitter with
Mets and Orioles today 187 homers, he missed 36
regarding our respective pro- games after injuring his left
posals," Sloane said in an e- knee May 19, then went on
mail. "Carlos and I also talked the disabled list for good on
about all three offers. There July 22 with bone marrow
will be further discussion edema.
tomorrow with all the con"We 've actually had anumcerned parties."
ber of calls prior to this meetTexas, which had offered a . ing," Buras said. "Their doc$48 million, four-year con- · tors have talked with
tract, withdrew Sunday, with Magglio ' s doctors. They're

Cavs
from Page 81
' The Wizards also improved
to 3-2 without swingman
Larry Hughes, sidelined with
a broken thumb.
Arenas , took special satisfaction in beating James.
"He is the NBA right now,"
Arenas said of Cleveland's
second-year star. "You've got
to come · to play or he will
embarrass you. It's the big
matchup, I take ii personal."
Peeler drained his 3s in a
span of 4:27 and made three
free throws after being fouled
on · a long:range shot for

certainly comfortable he'll be
ready to go by spring train- ·
ing."
Dombrowski and Trammell
didn't return telephone calls
seeking comment.
O!her player~ did make
their picks Monday.
First baseman Tony Clark
agreed ·to a $7 50,000, oneyear contract with his hometown Arizona Diamondbacks.
Clark, 32, appeared in 106
gah1es and started 64 for the
New York Yankees last season, hitting . 221 with 16
hoine runs and 49 RB!s.
''From the time the
Diamondbacks . came into
existence, I was already here

Washington. which entered straight buckets to make it
the fourth down 73-68 before 82-78 with 6:54 remaining
storming back.
before Peeler, who missed all
Antawn Jamison added 16 four of his shots in the first
points
and
Brendan half, hit another long 3.
"He's got the green light
Haywood 15 for the Wizards,
who had six players score in for the 3 and he hit them,"
Wizards coach Eddie Jordan ·
double figures.
Washington's bench was said.
Cleveland closed to 90-85
· no factor for most of the first
. three quarters, chipping in on Drew Gooden's two free
with just two points before throws but Arenas hit another
the final period. But Peeler 3-pointer, 3(1d the Wizards
started the fourth with a 3- put it away by making l 0 free
pointer and the Wizards' throws in the final 2:31.
reserves scored 16 of 20
The Cavs played their secpoints to open the quarter.
ond game witl!out starting
Peeler's second 3 of. the point guard Jeff Mcinnis, out
fourth gave the Wizards a 78- with a sprained left foot. His
76 lead, their first since the replacement, Eric Snow, had •
game's opening basket. Etan I 0 points, I 0 assists and eight
Thomas then scored two rebounds in 45 minutes.

·Trimble

44 win.
Trimble hit 31-55 for a
blistering 56 percent, hitting
21-37 two's, 10-18 three's,
and 11-11 at the line. Trimble
had 21 rebounds (Trace 6),
seven assists (Grandy 5), 19
steals (Grandy 4), and 16
fouls.
Southern hit 14-43 overall,
hitting 13-33 two's, 1-10
three's, and going 14-20 at
the line. Southern had 21
rebounds (Pickens 7, Robie

from Page 81
Trimble converted several
steals in ·to lay-ins . After
three rounds Trimble led 5931. Grandy scored 14 of
Trimble's 27 third quarter
points.
Trimble
outscored
Southern 20-11 in the final
round to bring home the 79-

6), 13 steals (Robie 3, Kiser
3, Williams 3), 22 turnovers,
nine assists (Kiser 3, Pickens
3), and 13 fouls.
·
Trimble won the reserve
game 41-17 led by Abby
Withem with nine, Megan
Yore eight, and Kristen Angle
eight. Southern w·as led by
Sarah Eddy with five.
Southern goes to Alexander
. Thursday, and Trimble goes
to Belpre.
Trimble 79, Southern 44
Southern 10 6
15 11 -

44

hoping that an upportunit~ young guys so he should be a
would come at some point, • big help," general manager
Clark said .
Dave Littlefield said. "In the
Rich Aurilia and the Reds past he's been very producagreed to a minor league con- live, although not as much
tract that gives ·the 33-year- recently, and he · gives us
old former All-Star the chance another alternative."
to become Cincinnati 's startJapanese second baseman
ing shortstop. He would get a Tadahito Iguchi and the White
$600,000, one-year contract if Sox agreed on a two-year·
he is added to the major · contract. Iguchi will get
league roster.
between $2 million and $2.5
"I still think I offer a lot as million per season, and the
an everyday player," Aurilia White Sox will have an option
said. "I'm not thinking I'm for a third year. The agreegoing to be just a backup ment was reported by Kyodo
guy."
in Japan and on Chicago's
Ben Grieve agreed Monday Web site. ·
to a minor league contract
An official ~nnouncement
with the Pittsburgh Pirates, will come after Iguchi tak,cs a
who will give the 1998 AL physical. He would be the
Rookie of the Year a shut at second White Sox player
making their increasingly from Japan, joining reliever
crowded outfield. He would Shingo Takatsu , who was 6-4
get a $500,000, one-year con- witll a 2:31 ERA and 19 saves
tract if the Pirates add him to in hi s first season a year ago.
their big league roster. .
Three players in salary arbi"He's got some experlence, tration settled, leaving 31
and we have quite a few scheduled for hearings next
Cavs rookie forward
Anderson Varejao had l 0
rebounds in 19 minutes
before bruising his left leg
with 8:38 left. The Brazilian
was helped to the locker
room and did not return. He
was on crutches in the locker
room afterward and will be
evaluated at the Cleveland
Clinic on Tuesday.
The Wizards managed just
30 points- a season low for
a half - on 26 percent shooting to trail 40-30 at halftime.
But they found their. range in
the third quarter, making 10
straight shots to pull to 57-56
on a 3-pointer from Arenas.
Trimble

7

25

27

20 -

79

SOUTHERN (5-9, 1-7)- WMney WOI!e-

Riffle 1 2-2 4, Brooke Kiser 4 4-4 13,
Kasie Sellers 0 0-0 0, A!!hf~;ty Roush 3 1-2

TRIMBLE (15-1, 7-1)- Jenny. Sikorski 0

0-0 0, Julie Trace 5 2-2 12, Alicia Andrews
1 0-0 2, Andra Hooper 3 1-1 7, Hannah

Faires 2 0-0 4, Abby Withem 0 0-0 0,
Jennifer Grandy 14 2-2 3&amp;. Allie Jago 1 44 6, Carri Woodgerd 2 2-2 6, Tabby
Jen~1ns ~ 0-0 2. Totals 29 11·11 79.
3-polnt goals: S (Grandy 8, Trace 2) .

For fast results~ advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

1 (K1ser}; T -

1

o

Your

PUBLIC NOTICE
The 2004 Annual
Financial Report of
the
Village
of
Middleport for the
· ending
year
December 31 , 2004
has been completed
and Ia available for
public · inspection at
the Cterk!Treasurer's
Office In the Village
Hall at 237 Race
StrHt, Middleport,
Ohio 45760 betwHn
the hours of 9am and
4pm Monday through
Friday.
(1) 25, 26, 27, 28 4TC
Public Notice
·ADVERTISE.MENT
FOR BIDS
WATER MAIN
VILLAGE OF RUTLAND, OHIO
Sealed proposals for
a Water Main Prolect
for the Village of
Rutland, Ohio will be
received by the Meigs
C ·o u n t y
Commlsalonera,
County Courthouoe,
100 East Second St.,
Pomeroy, Ohto 45769,
until 1:30 p.m., local
time, on February 10,
2005, and will then be
publicly opened and
rHCI afoud. Any blda
received tater than
the above lima will be

ralurnacl unopenacl.

The work for which
llf'OPOHll are to be
..-twd coneleta cit:
WATER MAIN
The Coet Eattmata of
thta
pro1act
ta

148,000.
The work tncluc!M
the tnatallatlon of
ajlpro•tmataty
820
liMit feel cit f.lnoh
ctllmetar wlllr main,
precut
concrete
m...r ..ult with I"
compound metar and
.atral- and.beolcllpreventar and con·
IIIOIIona · to nt1ttng
IHllttiH, road oroallnga,
final
alta
r111011t1on and all
othar · requlrlmantl
lor 1 oomptata and
functional proJect.

.

'

Proposals shall be
properly and completely executed on a
proposal
standard
form, obtainable from
the office or the
Owner, with fully executed Non-Collusion
Affidavit required by
the statutes of the
State of Ohio.
Each
proposal '
s,hall be accompanied
by a certified check ,
made payable to the
Meigs
County

contractors

Rl~~:ht

to

are

advised
to
not
include any such
escalation clauses In
their propcisat for this
pro[ect.
No bidder may
withdraw his proposat wllhtn a period of
90 days following the
date aet for receiving
proposals. The Board
reserves the right to
retain any and all proposals for a period of
ndt more than 90
Commissioners, or days, and oald proen acceptable bid- posal shall remain tn
der's bond by an full Ioree and effect
Incorporated surety durtng said lima. The
company In good Melgo
County
standing and quell- Commlsetoners 'f urlied to do business In ther reaarve the right
the State of Ohio, In to waive Informalities
an amount not less and to award the conthan live percent (5%) tract lo any bidder or
of said bid, said bidders, all to the
deposit being made advantage of the
for the purpoee of Meigs
County
Insuring the execu- Commissioners, or to
tion of the contract re[ect all propoeals.
lor which bld Is made.
The
contract
The contractor to Documdts, conslala
whom work is award· tng oi"%tddlng and
ed lhall be required ~ontract
requtrelo
furnish
a men.ts,
specificaPerformance Bond tions, drawings and
and a Payment bond, addenda may be
acceptable to the examined
without
Meigs
County charge at the followCommllolonara
. lng location:
A pre-bld conierMalgo
County
anca wtu be h•td at Comml11tonero
1:oo p.m. (tocat time) Court HOUH
on the 111 dl'f of 100 Eoet Second
February,
In . the Streal
Offtca Of ·the Moiga Pomeroy, Ohto 45788
C o u n t y Talaphona: 74D-812Commtsalonara.
2885
Contractor• ond Fu: 740-882-2270
aubcontractora 1r1 Coptae
of
the
~Wqulred to pay not
Contract Documanle
lila thon tha prevotl- ml'f be obtained from
lngllata Woge Rolli the office of the
lltabllahed by tha Malga
County
IIIIa
of
Ohio Commlaetoner11 upon
Dlpartmlnl cit Llbor j)lymant cit dlpoalt cit
111\ct lnctudld tn the 110.00 I* HI (non·
pro(IOI. - epaolfiOI• mundabta).
tiona.
Information
All !WqUHII for full
nplalnlng prtWtttng lhltt be midi tn
IIWI which wrtllng only. The
to IIIII - k le proepaotlva · bidder
: 10 contalnact tn the muat . provldl hi I
1
pro)IOt
lpaolfiCI· nama, lclclllll, tall11-.
phon• number and
No oonaldoPIIIon Pu Number. DUI to
lor IIOal!lllon Of lima
oonatralnta,
prt- can be oonatd· addlndum'l witt be
arid ond, ·lharlfcre ""I out by fax. Attar

i

Kno~~

AJump

SAY. I·NGS

Doourntntl.

The IWircl cit IIIII
oonll'llct wttl be madl
by the Melga County
Comm llalonara. In
dalarmlnlng who 11
lha IOWIII, rllpOn•
alva, , rtlponalbla

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experience
Portland.•
Reward. Salon Corner of Sixth St. &amp; · Weekly Pay &amp; Benefits
HFJ.P \\'ANlH&gt;
HELP W&gt;\l'lrm
HEI "W• "~'D
1
(7 40)2,4 7-2584
Matn St. (304)675-1411 Jan
Call JnfoCISiOn
28 to Feo 28 Tann~ng-$25
1-877-463-6247 ext. 2457
Lost: Female dog, Collie and
Need 2 .Cosmetolog1s1s and
UNIT MANAGER
Car
salesmen needed at
LICENSED SOCIAL
.Chow m111 , reddish color.
Wanted and needed in
1 Nail Tech War~ on
POSITION MANAGER
WORKER
Hilppy Hollow area. Call
Pomeroy, Oh10. Full time hve
lcx;al dealership, salary com- . Overbrook RehabilitatiOn
Percentage 65%-35%
:{740)742·2653
miSSIOn bases, send resume
1n. care taker lor specia lty
ltOLZER
SENIOR
CARE
to Daily Sentinel, PO Box Cente r IS now accepting
bed an d brea~fast , 11 you are
CENTER IS a 70. bed long
729 _21 , Pomeroy, Oh 45769 resumes for the position of
of Engl iSh, Welch , Irish
Director of Social Serv1ces. term care nursi ng faci llly
decenl, and an accent
located 1n . rural Galli a
COL DRIVERS NEEDED
The quatit1ed candidate
4x4's For Sate .............................................. 725
enjoy cooking, house keep·
whose
miss1on
Local company needs class must be a LSW, possessmg County
Announcement .... :....................................... 030
1ng and general caring for
A COL drivers local and strong verbal and wrinen
focuses on quality ca re lor
Anliques ....................:......................,........... 530
others thiS poS111on IS made
reg1onal jobs ava1lable Mus! commun1cation skills ,
, ourres1~
· Apartments lor Rent ................................... 440
lor you . We offer a salary
have good MVR and 1 112 Med1ca1d , Med1ca:re and
· Auction and Flea Market.............................080
plus and upscale enwon UNIT MANAGER
years driving experience. MDS ~nowledge Long_
- Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
mentlitestyle.
Non-smokmg
REQUIREMENTS· _
Benefits available Please term care experience pre. Auto Repair .............................:....................
non drinking cultured perAN- Expenence preferred
call 800·821-4870 x24 ask ferrad but not required
son (s) des(red . Please con·
Autos for Seta.............................................. 710
Oualiftei::l cand1dates may
for Mary Beth
tact us at: Dr. and Mrs M
Boats &amp; Motors for Sate ............................. 750
WE ALSO HAVE LIMITED
send resumes to : Charla '
Dellavalle, 8227 Blueberry
Building Supplles .....; .................................. 550
DATA ENTRY
Brown-McGUire , AN. LNHA ,
pART-TIME POSITIONS
War~
from
home
Drwe. New Pori R1chey. Fl.
. Business and Buildings ..................:.......... 340
AVAILABLE FOR ·
Administrator 333 Page
34653.
727~ aoa - 4021 .
Fle•ible
Hoursl
S.treet,
Middleport.
Ohio
Buslneaa Opportunity ................................. 210 .
AN position
'net
DADOKTA@att
$$$Great PaySSS
45760. EOE
STNA positiOn
• Business Trainlng ....................................... 140
Personal
Computer
-:--:--:c::::-c-:=-:-:-cc::~~l':!lSi):""-~----.,
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Requlred
MANAGER-IN-TRAINING
Benef1ts Include:
Srnoots
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
1-8D0-873-0345 ext. 1200.
&gt;Competitive Wages
• Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010
L,
Domino's Pizza 1s now hir· Health Care Services cur- · •Experience Credit
Child/Elderly Care ....., ................................. 190
ing, Management Personal rently has a laundry/house- ~Health Insurance (FT)
Gallipolis Career College
ElectrlcaVRefrigeralion ...............................840
tor Galhpohs &amp; Pomeroy keepmg supervtsor-in-tram(Careers Close To Home )
Equipment for Rent ...........;......................... 480
Ohio, . Pt. Pleasant. · &amp; 1ng post1Jon open . Rotating •Life lnsuranc~ (FT )
Call Today! 740·446·4367.
Excavating ................................................... 830
EleanorfWinlield,
Apply schedule wl!h on-call dulies •401 K (after 1 year)
1-800-214-0452
Farm Equlpment ............. :............................610
in Person at The Spring requ1red .
Must
posses :Equat' Opportunity employ·
www galhpoliscartl@rcollege com
· Farms lor Renl... ..........................................430
A~credlled Member Acc rediting
Location
1200 strong superv1sory · s~1IIS , be er
Valley
Counc11 1or ind~dv nt CoJego:es
Farms for Sete ............................................. 330
Jacl\son Pl~e. Gallipplis, QH hardwor~ing and dependFor Lease ..................................................... 490
or call (304)593-5365
able Benefit package avail- If work.1ng in a friendi'y, ''team al'ld SChOOls 12749.
_
_
;_...:...,
_
_
_
~
able.
EOE .
WANTI'll
orienled~ facility appeals to
- For Sale .......................................:................ 585
Established
Heating-Cooling
Send
applica110n/
resume
to.
you.
please
come
see
us
at.
For Sale or Trade .........................................590
.
ToDo
Company 1n Gall1a Co lookThe Arbors al Gallipolis
380 Colomal Dr. Bidwell.
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
ing
lor
Experjenced
1?0 P 1necrest Drive
Oh10 or ' call (740)446-5001 Assisted living lor you"r loved
. Furnished Rooms ........................................450
installers &amp; techniCians. II
Gallipolis , OH 45631
and ask !Or Phyllis Cantrell,
one In my home Pr ivate
General Haullng ...........................................850
Interested send resume to :
AITN : Linda Dennis
RN.
rooms,
3 hot meals
Givaaway ...................................................... 040
CLA Box 548, c/o Gallipolis
fa)( 740-446·9088
(740)366·0118.
Happy Ada ....................................................
Daily Tribune, P.O. Box 469,
· Hay &amp; Gratn .................:................................640
Med1 Home Heal!h Agency,
Gallipolis. OH 45631
- eBay consignment I
Inc . seeking a full-t1me RN
Help Wanted .................................................110
GET READY FOR
Case Manager for the
Home lmprovements ...................................810
I will sell your stuff on eBay.
SPRING BREAK!
Gallipolis, Oh io location .
Homes for Sate ............................................ 310
My services include : Pic+-; up
Lose Weight with Herbalife. Must be licensed both '"
Household Goods ....................................... 510
of the ttem, ~JBiuation , pro·
Call Tracy (740)441-1982 or Ohto and West Virginia.
Houses for Rant .......................................... 410
fessionaJ photography, w nt·
(800)201·0832
Minimum two yea rs supervi. tn Memoriam ................................................ 020
ing clear descripttons of the
http:/lwww.famousnulrition .c SIOn , managt\ment and
Insurance .............................~ ....................... 130
item. handling questions.
om .
home health experience . we Utility Contractor see~mg
invo1c1ng and payment col·
. Lawn &amp; Garden Equtpment ....~ ................... 660
Htring expenencedliicensed offer a compel1live salary, expenenced operator fdr lection, and ultimately shipUvestock.......................................................630
waterline
Installer &amp; 'Service Tech for benefits package, 401K , t:~nd underground
ping the item AU you' have to
Laat and Found .....................................l ..... 060
placement.
Expertise
in
flex
t1me
.
E
.O.E.
Please
HVAC with knowl,edge on
do Is wall for a checkl A min Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
serv1ce &amp; installation of send resume to 352 SeCond placmg P.VC and ductile . imum expected value of $50
Mlacellaneous .............................................. I 70
GallipOlis, OH Travel is requi red
plumbing. Send or drop off Avenu e,
is the only requirement. !I
Mtacellaneoua Merctfandtae....................... 540
resume to: 300 Fourth Ave. 4563 1. Ann : Audrey Farley, Beneflts i'nclude· optio nal you are interested please
Health , Den tal , Short &amp;
Mobile Home Repair .................................... 860
Gallipolis, OH 4563~ , or call R.N . Cl1n 1cal Manager.
contact me at (740 )645 Long Term Disability, 401K ,
Mobile Homes lor Rent ............................... 420
(740)446·1637.
0065 .
NOW HIRING- ResCare , a
and L1te Insurance
Mobile Homes for Site........ :.......................320 .
leading provider to irldJVIdUHardwood floo r, ceramic tile,
Money to Loan ............. :,.............................. 2:iO
lmme&lt;:hate
Opentngs.
als with mental retar.dation Qualified applicant!! should pole barns , remodeling ,
Motorcyclll &amp; 4 WhHlera .......................... 740
Residential
Treatment
and developmental diSBDIII-. Send resume to :
additio ns or ' a new house.
Facility tor boys, now hinng ties IS looking for a
Musical Instruments ...:............................... 570
·
licens
ed &amp; insured . Top
Youth Worker positlon.· Pald
Paroonate ..................................................... 005
AN/Superv1 sor~ ll interested
Guctenkauf ·Corporation
Nolch Bu11dlng Contrectors
Medical
Insurance.
Cf!ill
Peta for Sate ................................................ 560
please call Kelly Cline at
Attn · Cun Nolan
304-675-3042 or 593-, 1 15
between
9:00am·4 :00pm
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
(740)645 - t5 39
or, tax
2679 McKinley Avenue
(740)379-9083.
Snuggle Bugs Chiidcare dis~
Proftlllonat Strvlcaa ................................. 230
resum e to (740)446--3987.
Columbus, Ohio 43204
counted private rates based
· Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr ...............................180
An EQual Opportu nity
Or Ema1t:
Immediate position available
on Income,' capay, public
Employer FIMIDN.
· Real Etlllte Wanted ...........................,......... 380
cooten Ogudeokau1 cern
tor in,stallation· servlce ,tech·
rates Follow county guldeSchoolt lnatructlon ......................................180
6141488· 1776 ext 230
nictan
tor
secunty Rece p t i on i st ·
Unes. Hourly rates· lntants. Seed , Pl1nt Fertilizer .... ~o .......... 1 ~ ............ 650
E.O.E
Ca.re
AlsrmMdeo systems, com· Congrecatlonal
!5.50 ; Toddlers-. $5, Pre• Sltualione Wanlad .......................................120
merclal telephone systems Coord inator. $6.25 per hour,
school-$4 .30 &amp; School ageSpeca for Rent ............................................. 480
·and satellite T.V. systems. 30 hours a we&amp;~ . Br1ng
$4.
Co unty
licens&amp;d
Sporting Gooda .........,.................................520
Previous expenence andlor resume to Gra ce United
(7 40)446· 71 22, Ga lli po ~ s .
SUV'a lor 5811 ..............................................720
education preferred tlul Meth odial Church, 600
OH .
: Truck• for Sale ............................................ 715 company will train 1he right Second Avenue, Gallipolis
Will do eng1ne changes and
Candidate.
wee~days
between the ·
Uphotetery ..............................................,.... 870
othe r auto repairs ASE
Reply wtlh resume to:
tlours ol 9:00am and
· V•n• For Sele...............................................730
c 8rt il led. Call (740)441 Consolidated Security
4 :00pm. Resumes In by
Wanlod Buy ............................................. GeO .
January
28.
2005
1306.
Services,
Inc.
Wanlod Buy· Farm Supptl.................... 820

All real estate advertising

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements tor reel
eslale which Is in
violation of the law. Our ·
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings adver11sed In
this newspaper are
available on an equal

MONEY

Inbound &amp; Oulbound
M a~e a difference'
Calls for political and
important non·profit
organizations

·~""

no

Spill level home. 3-b edroom,
1 1/2 bath 1 car attac hed
L
d
garage 1589 sq. 11 oca 1e
Ill Meadowlan d E sta tes
$ 89 000 Ca ll {3040593 _
3866

OIRECTV
Free DVD Player
Fr,e HBO &amp; Cmamax
Free,Professional
Installation
up to 4 Rooms
Callf-8(X}-523-7S56
fo r details

SS IJ Soc1 al Secunty
$ t ,300 Net. We can rm ance
·
you a hOm e. CaU (304)736Jewelry. Buy Sell G old .• 3400
D1amonds,
Gemstones
Repair, Apprai sals. Gem
Testing.
Graduate
www.orvb.com
Gemologis t.
Jewele r
Home Listings.
(740 )645·6365 or {740)446·
L1st your home by call1ng
30BO .'
'
(740)446-3620

I

--INs-ITRiiiiUCiiiiiliilONiiii-,.1·

wv

uiO

l

Race tor the Nextel Cup PreView

ruarv 18; 2005·

oso

.

.~allipolh~ lDaflp t!trtbune.
446-2342 '

Joint Jlea•ant l\egit1ter
675-1333

The Daily Sentinel
992-2156

a

Don't miss out on this great opportunity
to have your business included!
\ch l'l'l isin~
. I h-atllim· is h·hruan. 10, 2UU _

l

to
to

Wanted To Do .............................................. 180,
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
Y•rd Slle- Gelllpoll ............... ~................. .-. ..072
. Yard Sat•Pomaroy/Middte .:....................... 074Yard Sal•PI. PleaHni ................................ 078

240 Upper River Rd.

Gallipolis, Ohio -45631

f'aramedlcs
&amp;
EMT's
needed . Apply at 1354
Jacll:son Pike, Gallipolis.
·

FIND A ,J B
IN THE CLASS·IFIED.S
'

.

.. --

~

..-. ---- -

.

.

TURNED DOWN ON

SOCIAL SECURITY fSSI?
No Fee Unless We W1nl

1-888·582·3345 .

HotS£;
mRREr..~·

Wanted I 'I Deater cand1dates
interested tn diversifymg and
selling Dtxie Chopper Z~:tro
turn
lawn
equipment
At1ract1ve
program
To

CLASSIFIED INDEX

GINES: .......

IURSALE

H!O VALLEY PUBLISH
lN G CO. recomme.nds tha
u do business with pea
le you know . and NOT t
end money thrqugh th
ail until you have lrw est1 ·
ated the offerin .

110

It's Time To

IU'\1\J&gt;.;

OI'I'OR'IlJI'ITY

Will pay up to $50 each lor
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
unwanted or junk vehicles ~o
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304haul away, (740)992-0413 if
675·1429.
· no answer leave message.

t \ 11 ' 111\ \ II \1

HOME~

10

BUSINENS

IO

"'3 wh ite female cats All
:Spade. lns1de homes need- Absolute Top Dollar : U.S.
-ed .
(740)446·2700
or Silver and Gold Qoins,
Prootsets, Gold Rings, U.S
'(740)446-0650
Currency,-M .T.S . Coin Shop, Send resume to ·
Free pupp~es- 8 weeks old 15 1
Second
Avenue,
•
- Adorable Coc~e 1-L ab mix Gallipolis, 740·446-2842.
Personnel
: Looking lor good home. Call
C J 'Hughes ConstruCtiOn
w(740}446-7696 before 1pm Buy1ng JunK Cars, pay1ng up

Don Tate Motors

Can! ·

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

Missing half-+grown
An Excellent way to earn
and White female Border money. The New Avon . •
)Jo ATV'S or vehicles of any Collie. Four Whtte boots, Call Marilyn 304-882-2645
·kind permitted on Zuspan grayish dot on top of right
property near Mason I frorit leg Reward 304-675- ~re you wmmg o trevet
for attady work, good
Clifton,WV
7545 or 304·593-0348.

t~.t~ Plfiu.t~ ~ tk ~.

on,

G.m. Cnun1 y OH

I

Service Technicians
please apply in person.
Experience preferred
but 'others considered.

Delivered Right to Vour Door.

receiving an adden· Bidder,
dum by fax the con- Commissioners wllt
tractor
will
be consider the bid, and
required to 'tax back all other relevant '
an acknowledgment facts or matters men·
of addendum receipt.
llonad In the Contract
Bld aacurlty of all Document or which
except the three low-. the Commissioners
est,
responsive, may legally consider
reaponslble Bidders tn determining the
will be returned with- lowest, responsive,
In fourteen (14) days responlllbte Bidder.
altar the opening of · (1) 18,25
bids. The remaining
bid securities will be
Public Notice
retumed within fourteen (14) days after · ---,----.....__ _
the successful Bidder FOR SALE
has executed the con- 1992 Ford Crown
tract, bonds, ate. lf VIctoria Sedan used
the contract Is not ae pollee cruise.
executed, any Bidder. ApproxlfT!atety 29,068
whose bid security mllea
on
motor
has been retained Installed In 2002.
may, after ninety (90
Minimum Bid accept·
days after he ached- ed $1,500.00.
uled time for opening,
Sold
"As
ts",
request return or hla Council reHrves the
bld security unless right to reject any
agreed to by the com- and/or all bide.
ll)illloners or specHIBids
must
be
catty permitted by sealed and marked
law.
"Cruteer Bid". Mall
The attention ·of Blda to P.O. Box 266,
prospective bidders Syracuse, OH 45779,
Ia directed to revtew or drop ofl at the
the bid Form dlocrlp- Clerk's . ofllce, 2581
lion set lorth In the Thlrd
Street,
"lnatructlons
to SyracuH, Ohio (durBiddera" HCilon of .tng regular office
the
Contract houre) All blda must
Document• for eddl- be received on or
tlonal documentation before February 3,
required at lha bid 2005.
opening.
(1) 18, 25, (2) 1
All Blddara •••
epaclftc•tty dtracted
Ia ravtaw the lima ·
echldute HI forth In
On
the "Instruction• to
llddara" Helton of
th•••
Contract
Document• for th1
time far lull oompllllon cit the pro)aot.
Liquidated ctamag11
lhlll be llllllld lot
daloyed oomplllton
II Ill foMh In lhl
"tnatructlona
to
lldctara" Molton of
1111111 ·
Contraol

.. No
, Else

\Y\111 '\II \II '\ I..,

Public Nul.lc"!ll In Ne-spupcrs.

We Cove
Meigs, .Gallla,
And Mason

Counties Like

E-mail your.
sports·news to:
'
sports@mydailysentinel.com

7, Joanne Pickens 5 3-6 13, Krlstilna
Wtlliams 1 3-4 5, Jordan Nelgler 0 0-0 0,
Ashley Robie 0 1·2 1. Totals 14 14-20
44. Three Point Goals: Brooke Kiser one .

CLASS.IFIED

month.
Right-hander Brad Penny,
oblained by Los Angeles
from Florida last summer,
agreed to a $5.1 million ~
one-year deal with the
Dodgers. Penny was 1-2
with a 3,09 ERA in II 2-3
innings fur Los Angeles
before he was sidel ined
Aug. 9 due· to a· nerve problem in his pitching arm.
"We believe Brad can be
one of the top young pitchers in the National League,"
Dodgers general manager
Pau.l
DePodesta
said.
" Dodger fans have only
begun to see his ability."
Right-h.ander
Jake
Westbrook, who became an
All-Star for Cleveland last
year, agreed lo a $7.5 million, two-year contract, and
Pittsburgh utilityman Rob
Mackowiak agreed to a $1.5
million, one-year deal.

SERVICE
TECHNICIANS
NEEDED

'

m:rtbune - Sentinel ·- l\e

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

Bv RoNALD BLUM

The' Daily Sentinel • Page 83

•.

I&lt;I \I I "I \II

Vtew photoSJtnfo onl tne
Bedroom. 2 Car un at ached garage well main·
a1ned home in GallipoliS
Code 1105 9r call

7401245-0437

2br
House
m
West
Columbia, call (304 )773·
5284

fU" MOBILE Ho~m;
IUR SAL~

1 to 5 bedroom apartments
and houses lor rent. n1ce
and
clean .
No
Pets

(740)992-3702
2 or 3 bedroom house 1r
Pomeroy 1or rent . no pets
'
(740)992-5858
t~H
lull basement S
garage. large ya rd 5475 OC
a rnor, . + $250.00 Oep. 304675-4469

3

3 br. )ocated al 109 L 1berty
St. washer1d ryer, no pet&lt;:
304-675.4655

4br m NeW Haven. cente r ol
Town, $500. a mont h. $35 0
d ep os1 t No . mdoor Pe t~

(304 )882·3652
For Rent 2br home 1n New
Haven. must ha·Je Dep &amp;
Ref (304 )934-7462
House lor rent 1n Syr acuse .
3 bed rooms
2 baths .
$500 00 a mon th can aMer
4p m (740!667-06 74

4'" MoRn .E H01&gt;n:~
FOR RENT
14K 70 $4 00 ren t $400
depos1t, 6 mon t ~ lease no
pets . Call (740) 367-7762 or

(74())367-7272.
2 bedroom 1 bath. 12 m1tes
from Gall1pohs . Large pnvate
lot
S325fmonth.
325/d epoSII (7 ~ 0)446-9.116

2 br tra1ler wa(?her I drye ·
5300 00 a mon 7 40-441·
5725
d
M b
H
3 8 e room 0 11e ome 10
Gallipo lis Fer-y. S350 per
.
lh
. h 5350 •
4 epos1t
rnon
wit
No Pets Call {304\67 4-4633
3Br, Traner w :Refndg 8
Stove tnclueied '(304 }5762934
For rent 2 and 3 bedroom
mobtle hOmes starling at
$260 00 per montn Cal l
(740!992-2167
Or sale 14X52 tra1ler 2 bedroom on lot t00X120 1n
Syracuse OhiO Also other
flv'er tro nl lots lor sale

(740)992·5888.

.&gt;\.I,_IU!I n:vrs
FOR RE~T
t and 2 oedroom apartmen ts. lt./rn1shed and unturmshed. sec ur1ty deposit
required. no pets. 740-992·
22 18
.
1 beeiroom apartment tor
rent 1n Pomeroy. no oets.

(740)992- 5858

t 995 Clayton Double Wide,
3 bedioom 2 bath w1th !Ire- 52 X24 3br. · 2ba th Tota l 2 Bedroom . apol•ances
•nctuded. $275, month plus
place, 7 years old, 1n co unty Electrrc (304)675-2907
depOSit
on 4.3 acres. $75,000. Call
2 ·oedroom mobile home !or 2 Bedroom , fully furmshed
(740)709-1168
1ncludes ut1htles &amp; cable
- - - - - . . . , . - - - s'ale, (7 40)992-SBSB
$700/mon th plus deposn
3 bedroom. 2 b~th . f1replace,
on 1 6 acre.s. Rio Grande 200 1
28)( 52
Fatrmon t Both 10 Ne w Haven call
area
$85 ,000
{740)709-1166.

1996
14x70 {304)882·3 131
Fl~aet wood .
$8.500
Call 2-Apts tor-rli!nt upsta1rs, 2br
(740)709-11 66
$350/mont"l + depos•t.

Call $26 .500.

3 bed room, 3 baihs, 30x50
steel g8rage. $90.000. Call For sale 14X70 Windsor. 3
(7 40)256 -9 197
bed room set up m Country
'
Homes. $6 995 00 Move m
Bidwell-Porter area 3 bed- tod ay I Call (740 )992-2167 or
room , 2 bath, 5 acres. cus-,( 740) 38 5-4019
tom Oa~ cabinets &amp; wood
$138.500
Call lmmed1ate possess ton 1 O"IY
work .

Downsta1r5 · 1br. $250/month
+ deposJt located on MI.
Ve rnon Ave Pt Pleasant

1304)77 3-6061

23B F1rst Avenue 1BA 1
bath
kltCOen lurmshed
Rive r v1ew Ne"' carpet and
paint Easy wal~ downtown
(740)367·7 181
S2 13 68 per mo New 3 bed- No pets S350 month olus
room, 2 bat h mob1lC home ut1l1t1es Reterence oepos11
Bu1lne11
Opportunity· Only mmutes from Athens (740)446-4926.
Three rental properties for t ·8Q0.837·3236
2BA apr State Rou1e 160
sale DupleJII, each w1th 3
B!R . LJR. 0/R. Kitchen. Balh SAVE -SAVE -SAVE
$400/month. stovetretngere&amp; Porch. House 3 8/R, U R. Stock models at otd pr~ees. tor 1nCIJJded , washer/dryer
K1tc hen, Bath Conage SIR, 2005 models arrtVlrtQ Now, hookup ~7 4 0) 44 1-01~ or
Kitch en, Bath.
Rental Cole's
Mobil e
Homes,· (740)441· 1 184
Income lor all thre8-Approx 15266 US. 50 Ea st. Atnens. 3
.room
and
balh.
$900 per month PriCe lor all Ohio 45 701 (740)592 -1972,
Clow n stove 1elr1Qerator
three-· $ 75,000
Located "Where You G et You r
sta1rs, all ut1htles paid 46
104-106 7th St ree t. Potnt Mon ey's W orth"
Oi1&gt;1e
Streel
5450.
Pleasa nt
(30 4)675-2495
[74.0)446-3945

ane• 6-00---~
--

Sprm g YaJity .
3 Bedroom , 1- 1/2 . b aths.
Large
Famny
Room.
F1rep1ace
.&amp;
G arage
Rece nt ly
r• novated,
Posse ssion.
tmmed1a1e

(740)445-7661

r__.__

L&lt;m;_:_&amp;_ _..

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUOGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
1 ' acre more or
less, 1n ESTATES , 52 Westwood
covn l ry. Water/e l8ctnc on Dnve from S344 to S-442
All · mowable Wal;.. to shop &amp; movies Ca ll
property
Equal
Bea ut1l ul
hOmesite. 740·446·2568
Housmg Opportunity
1( 40)379-9096

i\CREAGE

•

�Card of Thanks .

. Card or Thanks

-.

Help Wanted

everyone who sent a card for
my December 25th birthday.
'
Special thanks to those who
wrote notes recalling old times.
I was so blessed.
May God bless all of you.
~ lit
Patty Shain

_~,.;roi i Ul1MENTSi Oa.RFNri i i ,_.,il ~.,t__roli isi .RPAi ·i.~i i._.l

no pets. $900 per mo.
(740)446·2325 or (740)446·
4425.

For Lease: Office or retail
spaces in very good condi·
lion. Downtown Gallipolis.
Approx . 1600 sq. ft. each. 1
or 2 baths. Lease price
n_egotiable to encourage
new
business.
Call
(740)446·4425 or (740!446·
3936.

!~;~~ 0~~:11 h~~:~~~~~ j 16

{740)44~·1111

. RENT. Call
tor application &amp; information,
For Lease: One bedroom,
'
' nice 2nd floor ·apt Corner
Pine and Second. Large
ki tchen with dining area.
New r8nge, refri gerator.
.Water include'd. References
.
. required. $300/mo. Secunty

:f7to):.:!6.44~5 0~~~4o)~~~~
9

H~w

L,____
""""'_;:;;:,_ _.l.

r

l
•
•

0

.tO-

I

Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle ,

r

390 motor, 42,000 miles, .Rancher(ATV ), goodcondi$4,550; '96 Subaru Legacy, tion.
$2,2 50.00 Phone
wheel
drive, or
$3,250.
Call• PI
~(71Z4!1'0;.)9":
49•·2 4•0-:1
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel Reg . Quarter and Paint all
(740
)256_9090
(740)256
Grating
For
Drains horses. Priced to sell. Also 6200 ·
AAUCCESSO!O
PARTSRIES&amp;
Appliance Dr1veways &amp; alkways. L&amp;L Haflln ers. 740 446 -3413 .
Scrap Metais Open Monday,
r· 15.
. TRUCKS
Wa.1thouse Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
FUR SALE
Dark blue fiber glass truck
4
3
Friday, Bam- : 0pm. Closed · - - - - - - - 1..,0.-iOiiioiiiiiioo-" to pper, excellent condition,
&amp;
$
F
9 F d f 11
Thursday,
Saturday
m Henderson , WV. Pre - Sunday. (740)446- 7300
1000# round bales mixed 1996 Ford F-150,
351,
300. its up to 7 or u

r
~

r . ,. .,_.,

[l:.tO

r

_
_.:.__ _ _ _.,..,...
1gge Do~ge Ram, 4dr, 4X4,
long bed $S995.00. 1997
Dodge D~kota. slcab. 4X4,
$8495 .00 .
Ford
1994
Ranger
Slcab.
4X4,
$539S.OO. Riverview Motors
2 bl k b
M D
td
oc sa ove c ana s,
Pomeroy, Ohio (740)992 ._34_9_o_·- - - - - 1998 Ford Ranger, 65,000
miles, .5 speed, excellent
co ndition. $3.200 . (740)379·
2675 or (740)645-4494

1

ISHOP CLASSIFIEDSI

Baldwin Console Piano. Nissan
Sentra
1990 .
Good co ndi tion, asking Original · owner, .153,000
$700. Call (740)441;W14.
miles. Call (740)446·3352.

.

I

j

HoME

96 • Ford • El(plo rer Eddie
Brauer.- New shocks, new
tires. (740)667-01 86.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding . New Garages

Rcj&gt;laccmcm
Windows • Roo li"ng .

WATERP;ROOFING
unconditional lifetime guarFREE ESTIMATES
an tee. Local relerences lur·
_
•
nished. Established 1975.
Call. 24 Hrs. {740) 446· L,._ _ _ _ _....;Wi,l
0870, Roge rs Basement
Waterproofi ng.

740 992 7599

Brian Reeves
New Home Construc1ion, Remodeling,
Renovations. Decks, Garages, Pole
Buildings. Roofs. Siding. Window s &amp; All
Other Residential Needs
Phone: 740· 742-3411

-BARNEY
NEXT TiME I'M GONNA CHECK
TH' FORECAST 'FORE I GO
"OFF ON ONE' A MY L!'L
FORAYS !!
~----~--~

for a free estimate.

MANlEY'S .
SElFSTOUGE
97 Beech Street
Middleport OH

10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992-6635

www .~lngfllturu.com

INFLr'.l\0~ f.\~ ;·

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING

I'!.Er&gt;-l't.tl&gt; II~ UGLY

PRE.\IE.t-1''\101'-1 I~ NOW

i-\t:t-.0 ~GP\11'{!

OI'IL..'\ WORT\-\ 1'-. 1-\N..f
I'O'Ji'lt&gt; 01' CURE. I

in the market

.

ROBERT
BISSEll
COISTRUCDOII
·New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

•

740-992-1171
Stop &amp; Compare

~'

.

I:FI
T/&gt;.LK S MACK
OUT ON THE
FLOOI'. . WHAT
/&gt;.M I
SUPPOSED TO

~

IMPORTS
Athens

1)0 7

Whaley's Auto
Parts .
S1. R1.68l Darwin, OH
740-992-70 13 or 740-992-5553

Restockir'9 fnte . Nlodel Sai&gt;u,ge
and .4rter Market 1\Jrts
See Brem or Brian Whaley ·
ri:.-:.1~•'1
M·Fri 8:30-5:00
~ ~·
.
SaL 8:30-Noon
I
I
{j!
·'
"
-'
"
"'
'"'
Sun. Closed
•

PEANUTS
1 THINK THE TEACHER 15
MAD AT YOU FOR NOT
DOIN&amp; YOUR HOMEWORK ..

Scorpion Tractors
"Taking The Sting Out Of
Hard Work! "

SUNSHINE CLUB

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

BAUM LUMBER

St. Rt. 124 Ches~85-3301

GARFIELD
'TODAY 1 C:.OT MY HEAD
6'fUC.K IN A WAS'fESASKE:T

f111'iiW®®&amp;
· Locust,

Oak

Maple $45 Delivered
Bill Slack
740-992-2209

GRIZZWELLS

I

I
t}olnt ~leasant l\eglster I·

.. _ .._!,304!.ill.:~~.-..

I

..;..J

I

•

17 Exist

65 Treal
fractures
. 66 Depot Info

18 Stick up
20 Muffin

morsel

39

40
41

45

48

show

· 42 - ·Wan

14 Nerve
Kenobf
network
43 Boston
19 Olive In lhe
Bruins org.
comics
45 Stem

DOWN

22 Pat
25 ·Zoo staffer
26 Golly!
27 Facilitate
28 Ogled
31 Willowy
33 Archltecl
·I.M. 34 Keen

38

I

64 Twosome

1 Sardonic

21 Lunched

2 Buu

22 Keg
23 lunar
valley
24 Fal est's
vlcllm
25 Swerved
29 Skin
30 Family man
32 Dues payer,
brlel!y

3 Computer
key
4 Feet
nostalgic

opposHe

48 Lukewann

47 Big mlx. up
50 Spooky
52 Bogus
butter
5 Like some
53 Sac'y
Swiss artist
errors
56 Ruraladdr.
Umbrage
6 Geologic
58 G!anls hero
Lox .source
division
. ot yore
7 . More puoplo,
Current
59 Call
Society
as prooe
35 "I came,"
- -cab
column
8 Class ender
to Caesar
60 911
word
9 leaving
36 Dots In the
responder
at. parts
breathless
Seine
Truck floor 10 Zlogfeld
37 Low-cal

into good habits?
What does the word "habit" mean to you ?
Probably, your first thought is of doing
something almost without thinki ng
bec·ause you do it so often: Although you
are more often the dummy, when you are
declarer, do you play without thinking?
Say it isn't so! Have a second half,grapefruit while'you mull over this problem.
How would you try to brin§ home three
no-trump after West leads the spade six
and East puts in the five?
The auction is straightforward. A two-notrump opening shows a good 20 to an
average 22 points and does not promise a
stopper in every suit.
Th ere•are six top tricks: two spades (given
the opening lead), 1w0 hearls and two
clubs. The extra tricks muSt come from
dummy's diamond suit. So, you win the
first trick with the spade seven and lead
the diamond queen, but East unsporting!y holds up his ace. (Nole lhal Wesl
should ~ay lhe lhree: his lowest card to
show an odd number of cards in the suit.)
Then, when you play your second diamond, East takes the hick and returns his
remaining spade (or shifts to the club
jack) . The C9n1r!fct is no longer makable.
Your habit of winning tricks as cheaply as

possible proved cosUy. After es1ablishing
dummy's diamonds, you will need an
entry over there. And the only one is In
spade s. So, win the first trick with the
spade ace. Then, dri ve out the diamond
ace. If East shiftSio lhe club jack, you can
win 1n hand and lead a .spade, forcing t~e
vital dummy entry.
Get into the habit of playing slowly at trick
whatever habit you

are wearing.

1'HEN l 00'1' 'fHE 1'RASI-4
CAN S'fUC.K IN A DUMP51'E:R

VVedneada~Jan.26 ,2005

By Bernice Bede 0~1
A new assertiveness wi!l be awakened
within you in the year ahead which Will
· considerably enhance your potential tor .
success in whatever ybu undertak:e. No
longer will second best have ahy appeal
1or you; being first will become a must .
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - There
isn't apt tq be any patience lett in you
today for peop~ who tend to drag their
feet You'll toss them aside and seek out
associates who are" as energetic and
eager to go as you.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Perhaps
your greatest asset today is your deter·
mination to succeed. Once thi s desire is
understood and answered by you , objec·
tives you set tor yourself at this time
become achievable.
AAIE;S (March 21· April 19)- Make up
for the past two days by taking bold
measures to ensure that your plans will
go. smoother for you· then they dfd yesterday. Time is your ally ---:- don't dl!lydally.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Because
of some reluctance on yoU'r part. you
1 may need a bit of a push to get back on
track: today. Teaming up with an eager
beaver will get you up and on your way
once again .
·
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Even
though you are an independent thinker,
thank goodness. you're always willing to
change your mind. Today, enthusiastic
companions will influence your attitude
to do so in a bfg way.
CANCER'(June 21-July 22) - If you are
a salesperson or in a field that require~
moving abbu t. this is an excellent day to
make a number of ex tra calls. Your
prospects lor geHing new customers are
partiCularly good.
LEO (July 23- Aug , 22) - Your leadership
qualities will be. quite pronounced today
in both business and social situations.
When you take charge. you'll make
thing s start ro happen .and have every body jumping on board.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) - Substantial
·accomplishments are . possible today,
particularly when YQUr compassionate
instincts are aroused. In such matters or
cases, you 'll be helpful to any and all
who need you.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) -Your energetic and sparkling personality will add
luster and life to any gathering today,
especially, in business situ~t.ions. You
bring out the bes't in others and make
them fe el ii'nportant.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24 -No'o'. 22) - Devote
your time, efforts and anergies today to
ways to advance YQlH career or add to
your resourcas ." Th ese are the two areas
where substantial reward&amp; may ex:lst ror
good work.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ac. 21 ) Ct1ancae are you won't waete any mora
ti!Tie today worrying aboU1 whatner your
Idea• will work or not. You'll try them .out
and , If they tall , you'll try &amp;QIIIn. You'll
raallze action Ia auantlal .
CAPRICORN (DeC . 22·Jin. 19) Scmathln~ 1h1l Ia dt~ndant on enother
for wh l t~h you'w bten nervouety Wllltln~ .
but which hu been eub~t to muiUp(e
deleye, mey break through the barrltre
today. Aclt on It lmmedlltt!y.

SOUPTO NUTZ

I

L._{740).~~~-.. -·:-.. _.~740).!2!:.~~.-.. _

DO SOMETHiNG
TO YOU IF YOU DON'T
KNOW WHAT IT MEANS ..

THEVCANrT

BAUM LU:VlBER

740-992-5232

The Daily 'Sentinel

511E SAYS SHE MAY HAVE
TO RESO~T TO CASTIGATION

Now A,vuiluble At

•

chairman

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campos
Celebrity Cl~r cryptog rams are crnted trom quotatiOnS by famous people. past an:l present
Etd11ener 10 the ciphef stands lor arother

Today's clue:· F eQu~ls M
" SUCGZSM

NPZCT,

KUL

GU!T

CU

OT

TJTP

DUFT

RSK

GU!TY."

KUl

MUUY , ' NZXX

RH

ULC

ZB .

B Z PH C

K UL

XZXXZRS

GTXXFR$

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "The two most imponan1things 1n
friends and a slrong bull pen: - Former pilcher Bob Lemon
• • (C) 2005 by NEA, Inc. 1-25

!~e are good

S©\\.J.llA-~t.trs·

· ·

::::

O ••orronge · lener1 ·of · the

\' Huppil!i!"

33795 Hiland Ad.
Pomeroy, Ohio

45771
740-949·2217

• 6

' R()c~"R~"

•

Racine , Ohio

All pass

49 Bank fob
51 "The
I Curds
Bathers"
companion
painter
5 Rock ' s
53 Froth~ brew
- Leppard · 54 Libra a
8 Happy hour
stone
site
55 Butterworth
11 Trick
or Wiggs
12 Home page 57 Trev!
addr.
FOIJntaln
13 Jug
site
15 Non-profit 61 Spouse
org.
82 - a dalef
16 Famous
63 L!sl detail

- - - - ' - - - tdltod by tLAT I. •OilAN _.;.__ _ _....:._

I Self-Storage

29670 Bashan Road

Pass · 3 NT

East

ACROSS

TIIAT DAILY
IUULII

. ~~~
High &amp;Dry

Hill's Self
Storage

2 NT

one -

• Leave a messa e

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

Nortb

See

740·742·2291

Reach 3 Counties

I~alllpolis JlaHp ~rlbune

~~ 0\Jt'\Ct: Of

"'

" Middleport' s only
Self·Storose"

• Prompt /1. quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• References
·Available
• Free Estimates
Call Gary Stanley

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
·BARGAINS
.
.

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point·Pleasant Register, or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

.ft4AP~
~1Tt4Eil·

Sunset Home
Construction

UNDA'S PAINTINI

... THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!! .

ANI&gt; Tt4~
roi&gt;Y
ISN'T IN

""' ti~~AT

Let me :lo it for youl

NOMATTrol
WHAT YOU.rt&gt;l
STYLE...

West

Will we ever get

~MIIY IS Tt4~
Tt4AT
w~A~.f Tt4~ '~OwN ...

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

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

r-·-··~··-··-··-··-··-··- _ ·,-··~·- ·-·~··- ·-··~··-··-··.-··-·1

I

NEA Crossword Puzzle

44

Bucket Truck

BUilDERS IDC•

COMMERCIAL an d
RESIDENTIAL

1987 Ford F-150 4x4 with·3"
body lift 14x35x 15 Monster
Mudder tires, motor out cov·
ered in garage with lots of
new parts for motofl,
(740!247-25al

94 S· 10 Blazer ·4x4, PNY,
P/0, air, loaded, new lira's,
$2500. (740)388.()()1 1

AK 7 6

Soutb

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

BISSEll
•

4x4
FOR SALE

1994 red Chevy EKI . Cab Z71, .112 ton, 4x4 . Excellent
condition . Asking S5,900.
(740)379·28 18; (740)3792929.

-' J1092

Opening lead:

~::;;;:;~~~~~

BASEMENT

wheel hitch/reese new .
motor. LooKs &amp; runs good.
1740)379·9098.

+A87

•

'!"'"..,."::"'..,

~--lr.iiii'ROiiiiiiiVEMENTSiiililiiiiiiii.-J

92 Ford F-600 Dump Truck
90 Jsuzu Car nice $800
(740)446-9177
F350 Ford 1·ton dully, 5th

J 3
6 4J
(p 6

Soulh
• A J 7

.V.C. YOUNG Ill

2000 Chevy Silverado Z71.
4x4, l eather. l oaded, HardDed Cover, Extended caD,
Running Boards. Excellent
Condition,
46,000-miles ,
Books-for $19,500. asking
$17,500 (304)675-3899

-

'-.-li

r

"

Tree Service

• Room AddiUons ·&amp;
Remodeling
• New Garagea
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; GuHer•
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Del:ks
We do !Ia!! excepl
furnace work

~

4 WD, 5 speed, 25,0QO
miles on Jasper Motor .and Clutch (304}675·2961. leave
10
message

•
•

JONES'

CARPENTER
SERVICE

LIVES IOCK

owned applicanes starting at ....- - - - - - . . , hay some alfalfa/orchard
$75 &amp; up al! under warranty,
B UilDING
grass,
$8.00-$20.00,
we do service work on all
Sum..JES'
(740)698·2765
Gracious living. 1 and 2 De'O- Make and Models (304)675· • _ _ _ _ _ __ . c4,..,5-'-r-ou_n_dba- !e_s_o_at"s-&amp;
7_99_9- , - - - - - - - room apartments at Villane
_
lll'
Block , brick, sewer pipes, clover, barn kept. $ 16; 4x5
Manor
and
Riverside
M
11
~
c
Cl
· dows, I"1nte 1s, etc. Claude· roun d Da1es mtxe
· d grass &amp;
A
M"ddl
o o an arpet. 202 ark w1n
1 eport. Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio. Winters, Rio Grande, OH alfalfa, lil"st cu ffing, $12; 4x5
partments in
From $295-$444. Call 740- (740)446·7444 1-877-830- ~
C:;:al;;.l7:.;4;:;0~
-2;;45;:;-;:.
51;,:2~1;..
. - - - . round Dales wheat hay, $12:
.
· 992 - 5064 · Equa I Housmg
9162. Free Estimates, Easy
4x5 round bale fescue $12;
·. Opportunities.
.
nao
11 nanc~ng,
4' 5 1as1 years hay. $S
90 days same as
mR S•LE
cas h. Visa/ Master Card .
I'V
11.
(740)245·5047
Modern 1 bedroom apt. Call
i
·,
(740)446·0390.
Drive- a- little sav~ alot.
male
Jack
Russell
pupHay·
for
Sale:
Good quality
5
Thompsons Appliance &amp; pies, 5 weeks old. (740)446· Timothy &amp; Alfalfa. $3·$4 a
New 1 bedroom apt. Call
Repair-675-7388. For sale, 3413 .
bale. Taylor Farm (740)643·
1740)446-3736.
re-conditioned automatic
2285
Pleasant Valley Apartment washers &amp; dryers, refrigera- 8. wee~s old Flame Point Hay for sale: Square · and
Dales.
Delano
Are now taking Applications tors, gas and electric Himalayan. female. CFA round
lor 2BR, 3BR &amp; 4BR., ranges. air cond itioners. and registered, 5 month old Ted Jackson Farm, 304-675wri nger washers . Will do Tabby1 mate, tlat faces. ~ ·
1743 _
Applications afe
taken
repairs on major brands in (740)992-9947
work
Monday thru Friday, from
\740)742 -3144 Reward.
shop or_at your home.
9:00 A.M.-4 P. M. Office is
Located at 1i51 Evergreen Used Furniture Store. 130 AKC Black- Lab puppies. 7
AI.JTO'ii
Drive Point Pleasant, 1/'N Bulaville Pike. App liances. weeks old. All shots and 1
FOR SALE
Phone No is (304)675-5806. bunkbeds. twin, full, queen. wormed. $150.00 each. ·--iiiiiliiiiliiiiO._.J
E.H.O
king . mattresses. dressers. (740.)985 -3362
couches, dinettes, reCliners,
$500! Honda's, Chevy's,
Tara
TownhOuse grave monuments, inuch AKC Chocola te Lab pup- Jeep's,
Ect .
Pollee
~artments , Very Spacious. more.
(740)446-4782. pies. tst shots and wormed. Impounds! Cars from .' ~500
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors, CA. 1 Gallipolis, OH , Hrs. 11 -3 (M- $300. Call· (740)286·3064.
for listings 800·39,·5227
1/2 Ba th, Newly Carpeted, S)
•
EXT 3901
Blue eyed, male Boston
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool.
Terrier, 7 mon th s. Ca ll 03 Mitsubishi Lancer. 02
Patio, ·start $385/ Mo. No
ANnQIJE'l
(740)245-9428 or (740)645.- . Rally Edrtion. 18,000 miles,
Pets, Lease , Plus Security
1505
auto, · $6,200
080.
Deposit ReQuired, Days: - (740)256-1618 or (740)256·
· 740·446·3481 ; Evenings· Buy or seiJ. Riverine
_62_o_
o._ _ _ _
· __
74_0_·3_6~7·_0_50_2_._ _ _ _ Ant iques. 11 24 East Main ~Uti blooded Lab puppies,
no
papers.
Phone
(740)446·
on SR 124 E. Pomeroy. 7401996 Pontiac Firebird, T100 992·2526. Russ Moore, 2460.
THE
MAPLES.
root,
e&gt;~ce ll ent condiliori.
Memorial
Drive
East,
Miniature Schnauzer's
8 Asking $5,000.00
Pomeroy, 740·992·7022 ,
weeks old AKC registered , 1986 c hevy Silve·rado, askSubsidized
Residential
;ng $2 .000 .00 . (740)992·
$300
each (304)895·3745
Housing for 50 years of age
6079
and
older.
PRIORITY ..,
Parrot wlcage and play
GIVEN TO APPLICANTS 4 Busch &amp; Ne~ttel Cup tick·
1998 Chrys ler Concord
stand.
$700.00.
Call:
.
WITH INCOME AT OR ets for ·the Spring Bristol
11 1,000 m1 1es. c1ean car.
1
740
992
1987
BELOW $~0.650. Maximum Race. Calll740)256-9197.
1 '
$3500 OBO. (740)256-6169
Income effective 01-28-2bo4
. JET
Reg. English SeHer pups, 7 85 Ford Crown Victoria.
for 1· person $17,700.00.
AERATION MOTORS
females. $275. Will De ready Southern car, 1 owner, like
Must meet HUD/20218 crite·
1/21 /05·. Taking cteposits . new,. 82000
.
mt·1es, $1 ,200 .
ria for household composi- Repai red , New &amp; Rebllill In
7_4_01_
3_
88_·0_1_8_2·_ _ _ _ .::Cc::a!'-11:,.7,.40::.)64'-"3-=-2=28:,.5:,.._ _
Stock.
Call
Ron
Evans,
1
_
_1
tion.
Manag8d
by
Sitverheels, Incorporat ed, A 800·537.S528 .
Siberian Husky pups. AKC 89 Grand Prix. needs some
Realty Comp·any Equal -..,~~~~"!!!'!!!""'~ Registered. Black · &amp; while Engine work $550 (304)675·
male-$300, solid white 6486
Housing Opportunity.
II SPA fACTORY OUTU:"TS
Cedar Kn oll Mall,
~e :~~·$ 500 ·. Ph: (74 0) 797 • 96 Ford TauruS, maroon, 4Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
Kentucky
Trading
Post,
door, auto, V-6 . air, power
ing applications lor waiting
Ashland.
seats
and
windows
list for Hud-suDsized, 1· br,
MUSICAL
Mitton, WVA Flea Market
$2,000.00
or
willing
to trade.
apar tment, call 675-6679
INs"l'kUMENTS
606 922-7185
.' EHO
1740)247-2028

45760

East
• 5 2
• Q 10 9 B

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

YOUNG'S

~~~:o~~~~~=n~~r~ l~~

ve

8 3

West
• K98 63

-' AK54 ·

2001 Yamaha R1 , 8,000

r

'•1

"

• Q2

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Box 189
Middleport

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
. Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

OTOHEELERSRCYCLES'

CLIFF'S USED CARS

01 -2s-os

Q 10 4
l 4 2

+KJ1 095

miles, alarm. new tires &amp;
99 Durango, 39,000 miles,
k:ept.
$9,900; 03 PT. Cruiser, exhaust, garage
(740!441-1578.
~~CHAND\
NEOISEUS
37,000 miles. $9,500; 00 $5,500.
.
Mustang, 29,000 miles, (740)709·11 58.
1,.mK
1
NEW AND USED STEEL !P.I!"'_ _ _ _ _.....,
-F-or-sa-!e_:_2_
00.;.0_H_o_n_d_a_3_50

~

I

3936.

I

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

North

L..r•10--~A:.lJT05l~---~. 1_
~4 WM.
L

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

lor rent, very nice, (740 }9923702

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED 6. AFFORDABLE!

.

PHYSICIAN PRACTia OFFICE MANAGER
Pleasant Valley Hospital is · currently
seeking a physician practice office
manager. Prior. physician office manager
experience requ ired,. including accounts
payable, payroll and general offi,ce
management.
Associate
Degree tn
Accounting preferred.
Send resumes to:
·Pleasant Valley·Hospital
c/o Human Resour~es
1510 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. WV 25550
(304) 675· 4340
www.pvalley.org
AA/EOE

An equal opportunity employer·
M/F/D/V
·

Clean, G•ound Floor, 2br. Storetront,
Retail
WID hookup, Ref &amp; Dep, no ~space/Commercial Buildin·gs
Pets (304)675 •5162

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Phillip
Alder

Minimum
Qualifications
are
Associate Degree in Electronics or
Equivalent.
Regular
full-time
positions. Overtime and rotating
shift schedule as required. Entry
level wage rate of pay is S18.05
per hour. Benefits include Medical,
Dental,
Vision,
401 K
and
Retirement. Interested candidates
should call 1-800-300-1858.

r.,r.
·

required. security deposit.

ALLEY OOp .

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

American Electric Power ·
Company's
General James M. Gavin Plant,
located in Gallia County, Ohio,
is seeking personnel in the
INSTRUMENT AND CONTROL
DEPARTMENT.

~ My sincere thankY to eacJ, and li

laundry area. References

Help Wanted

Tuesctay, January 25, 2005

BRIDGE

'M""

Beautiful 2-story townhouse.
overlooking Gallipolis Gity
park. Ki1chen -family, D.R.,
L R. 3 B.A. , stud y, 2 baths,

· Tuesday, January 25, 2005

www.mydaily~entinel.coni

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

foor scrambled words below to form l our words.

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Breach - Gauge- Bless· Kellle. GET BACK
At an office party a colleague made a real fool of himsel f. I th ink that i/ you let yourself go you should know
how to GET BACK.

ARLO &amp;JANIS

••
·'

�·-

Page 116 • The_Daily Sentinel

•

Tuesday, January .25. 2005

www .mydailysentinel.com

SUPERBOWL _XXXIX

I

Doctor cuts Wall
Street ties to avoid
potential conflict, A7

Rookie makes Brady lc;&gt;?k good NFC championship not
Agamst
the
Patnots, Brady s apparent tumble
Associated Press
Roethlisberger's first pass was seeme~ to end the Patnots'
upped by Asantc Samuel and dn11e tor the tymg field goal,
.·
. _ · intercepted by Eugene Wilson but it was overruled by replay
. As Tom Brady prepares for to set up Adam Vinatieiri; s when he was said to be tucking
h1s thtrd Super Bowl and Ben ·field goal that got New the · ball away and New
R~ethhs~erger heads home. England off to a 3-0 lead. Just England went on to beat
B1g Ben s playoff struggles before the half, with Pittsburgh Oakland 16-13 m overtime.
only accentuate how remark- trailin&lt;&gt; 17-3, he got suckered
The next week, Brady startable B_rady's 8-0 postseason by R~ney Harrison, an II- ed the AFC chat:npionship
record IS.
.
.
year veteran, who interc~pted game 111 Pttt~burgh , mJured .ht s
Brady took over m 2001 tor the ball and returned - tt 87 . nbs 111 the ltrst half, and was
the injured Drew Bledsoe in yards for a score that made it replaced by Bledsoe, who
•. the second regular-season 24-3 at the half.
·
threw for New England 's only
game after throwing just three
That put Steelers in catchup offensive touchdown in a 24passes as a rookie . Four mode. something a rookie 17 win . But Brady was back in
months later, he was the Super' quarterback just can' t do !lme to wm the MVP award·m
Bowl MVP.
against a tej!m like "New . the Super Bowl and Bledsoe
And he still hasn't lost a Engl,and. · Monrana maybe. was traded to Buffalo the next
Maybe Brady . or Peyton season.
playoff game.
"Yeah, sometimes I'm a lit- Manning or Daunte Culpepper.
Brady had been a sixthtie surprised by how .fast it 's But not Roethlisberger, whose round draft pick in 2000 after
· happened," he· said after su~cess was in large part due a starting only one year at
throwing two touchdown pass- strong supponing cast - the Michigan, where he beat out
es in the Patriots ' 41-24 ·win very thing Brady credits for his Drew Henson for. the job. As a
rookte, he started as a fourth
over Pittsburgh in Sunday's own achievement.
AFC championship game. ·Wil-son ended up getting a stringer, threw three passes
"But I've had so many good second interception later and · and co mpleted one for six
people around me to help me. Samuel dropped a couple he vards.
It's a team effort, not my might have had. ·
· Though he didn't go unbeateffon."
"He has happy feet," en, he was as good in 200 1 as
OK, so Brady 's right: It's Harrison
said
of Roethlisberger was this year.
almost a cliche now that the Roethlisberger after the game.
"It was my second year but'
Patriots are the ultimate team, "He's a rookie. Sometimes he my first year as a player,'\
and that's why New England is throws the ball up for grabs. Brady recalled last week. ''My
a 7-point f~vorite over We got three and we could .rookie year there's no way I
Philadelphia as it seeks to -win · have had a few more: That's could have done what he.did. I
its third Super Bowl in four just being a rookie."
was awful. I .couldn't do anyseasons on Feb. 6 in
Keep in mind that Brady was thing."
Jacksonville.
practically a rookie himself H.: can do it now.
But Brady - every season when his streak began.
Perhaps the best demonstramore like his boyhood idol Joe
Sunday's win broke the tion came on the second-quarMontana - is a remarkable record set a decade ago by ter touchdown pass to David
athlete himself. To find out just Troy Aikman for playoff vic to- Givens that gave the Patriots a
how remarkable, one need ries by a quarterback at the 17-3 lead Sunday.
. only
look · as
far as start of a career.
On a second-and-fi ve from
Roethlisberger's playoff trouBut Aikman was 0-11 as a the Steelers' 9-yard-line,
bles.
rookie in 1989 and didn't get Givens was flanked out wide
Big Ben had the be st rookie his first postseason win until right and had staned in motion
season ever by a quarterback, after the 199 I season, winning to the left when Brady put up
with 14 straight wins, eight a wild~card game against the his hand to stop him becau se
more than the next best. But he Bears in Chicago before losing he noticed that only cornerhit the wall in the playoffs - at the Detroit Lions. The next · back Willie Williams was out
as rookies at every position year, the Cowboys won the there. He nipped the ball out to
often do.
first of their three Super Bowls Givens, Williams fell anp it
He threw two interceptions in four seasons - a record the was an easy touchdown.
against the Jets. One was Patriots are now on course to
Would Roethlisberger have
returned for a touchdown ; the tie.
noticed that coverage and
other came late in the game
Brady's· first playoff game made the quick decision?
and could have knocked the was one of the most fabled in
Maybe, but probably not.
Steelers our of the playoffs had recent history - the "tuck
A rookie, no matter how sueJets kicker Doug Brien not rule" contest in the snow of cessful , is still a rookie.
missed from 43 yards.
Foxboro in January 2002.
Tom Brady is not.
BY DAVE GOLDBERG

I
'
h
fo
E
I'
near Y·enoug
r ag es
.

I

·
BY BARRY WILNER

.one more game. Let's go
win it."
The on ly other team with
such a long gap bet.ween
Super Bowl appearances
was Green Bay. The
Packers won the first two
Super Bowls, then didn't

Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA _ The
ce lebrations hardly were
muted in Philadelphia.
Fans .stood atop snow
banks on Broad Street,
waving Eagles banners and
hats. Cars honked their
horns late into the evening.
Toasts were raised to
Donovan McNabb, Brian
Dawkins, Andy Reid even to Swoop the mascot.
For the first time in 24
years, the Eagle_s are NFC
champion s.
Jt 's not nearly enough.
"There were some tears
of joy, definitely,'' All-Pro
safety Brian Dawkins said
Monday, looking back . at
the locker room scene foltowing Sunday's 27-10 victory over the Atlanta
Falcons.
After
three
straight 1 title game flop s,
the Eagle s were headed for
the Super Bowl.
"It 's
something
we
worked for a long' time and,
went through a lot of bad
situation s - I ~2,3 of losing - so that comes flowin g out," Dawkins said.
"After the tears have
ceased, we're ready for the
next step. This wasn't our
Super Bowl. We didn't
approach· it like it was our
Super BowL"
And they won't approach
the next two weeks as any-·
thing but business.
"We· didn 't do what we
set out to do yet," Dawkins
said. "I have. a lot of confidence we ' ll win."
Beating the defending
champion New England
Patriots, winners of two of
the las t three NFL crowns·,
. will take the very best the
Eagles .ha ve to · offer. _But

return until January I ?97.
when they beat the Patriots.
· Eagles coach Andy Reid
was an assistant to Mike
h
Holmgren
with
t ose
Packers. He still has hi s
notes from that postseason,
but he hadn't looked at

they won't bring their full
comp lement offensively.
Tight end Chad Lewis, who
caught two touchdown
passes against Atlanta, is
out with a foot injury. Andstar
receiver
Terrell them again until Monday.
"It's a little different sitOwens, their offensive
· ting there as head coach,
spark p Iug, · ·I S uncertain
because of an ankle injury but it sti ll is a great feelthat has kept him sidelined ing," sa id Reid, hired by
since Game 14.
the Eagles in 1999. "Part of
What they will bring, the you is excited. another part
players swear, is the right of yo u understands you're
attitude. No way wHlthey not through . There's anothfall into the trap of prema- er game against a great
ture satisfaction that hurt football team and you want
past Super . Bowl te~ m s to get yo urself right in
such as the 1998 Falcons , preparation for th at team."
1994 Chargers and 1985
The Eagles lost 27-10 to
Patnots. Those clubs w~re the Raiders in their only
happy to be there, and they Super Bowl trip. The
got routed by supenor Raiders broke a 19-year
opponents.
·
Super Boy.; I drought t~o
New . England might be s~sons back, but they
the superior team this time w'€~ routed by Tampa Bay
- it's favored by seven in the big game. · .
points - but the Eagles
McNabb was there. He's
promise they will give it been to the . last five Super
theif alL No awe at the su r- Bowls, and he.hasn't exactroundings and· no worship- ly enjoyed them.
ping at the Patriots·' shrine. · "It's frustrati.ng, because
"The ultimate goal is every coll'Versation is: 'I'
obviously the Super Bowl,'' expected you guys to be ·
McNabb said. 'Then we here,'" McNabb said. "Well
can come back and cele- I did, too .
brate in a parade on Broad
"Now we can · go down
Street.
·
there and hav e· all our pe-o"We're ex~ited about this pie smi ling and you ' re
win and the ci ty hav ing that htlppy you're there. But
confident feeling back. It 's playing the game is somea great feeling to have the thing different. It 's keeping
opportunity to move to the that business mind-set of
Super Bowl. - When it going out and winning the
comes down to it, hey. it's game." ·
'

02ltS SA:OAl l.N~ MrlM S'fNtJK'.ATE"' AD\IERTISWfNT FFATut:

en
Middleport; • Pomeroy, Ohio
.) 0 (

I :\

I'S • \

o I. .!-+. :\ o.

Scramble to get 2 bills could run Fed dry
· As one·Fed branch runs out, now is the time for the general public to get them at face value
By DANIEL COTTRELL
Universal Meaia Syndicsre

HIW· II gat ·tllam

(SYNDICATED) - So many people arc
calling the National Hotline · to get $2 bills
for face value that one Fed Branch ran out.
Some collectors are trying to snatch up
all they can.
.
The crisp. uncirculated $2 bills are being
banded in packs of tive a.nd sent directly to
their homes.
·
If parents and grandparents I iving iq .
1928 had kept a pack of five undrcu- ·
yalues
.
always
But,
if
parents
or
lated $2 hills they could be worth
grandparents living in 1928 had kept
$2,250.00 today. That's why people
a
pack of five uncirculated $2 bills
want these new bills so badly.
they
·could be worth $2,250.00 today.
"Our current private vau It reserves
of the new $2 Iii lis wtll soon be gone.
Historic: Featuring a tribute to
Founding Father Thomas
Those who want to· get them shou t&lt;)
'
.
'
"'
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
.
,
_
_
_
..,
Jefferson
painted by artist Gilbert
call now." said John Thomas White.
Stuart in the 1!100's.
Executive Director qt' the World "
Reserve Monetary Exchange.
Originally issued in 1928, the Two
Dollar Bill has largely been locked away in bills. That's why we have- authorized the controlled by the Treasury .Department's '
dark. U.S. Federal Reserve vault&lt;. rarely -dis- release of a limited number of the uncircti- Bureau of Engraving and Printing. makers
tributed by banks and ahi10st never seen in lated $2 Bills from our vault reserve to the of lhe nations paper c4rrency.
circulation.
general public," White said.
The $2 bill makes up less than I% of the
That's why it is extremely rare to actuall y
The $2 Bills arc highly sought after and $670 billion in genuine U.S. currency that ·
ftnd one of these historic Two Dollar Bit's in extremely popular to give as gift• for friends · circulates worldwide, according to the u:s.
your pocket change these d~ys .
and family. They are the perfect gift for any Department of Treasury under Secretary
"When our stockpile is gone collectors occasion.'' he said.
· John W. Snow.
·
•
Will have to son through money or go to the
Many younger people have never even
Dealers must submit requests in writing
bank. to get them," he said.
seen one of these historically significant $2 for I0 or more banded packs of 5 bills.
"The $100, $50, $20, $10 and $5 dollar · ~ills that feature President Thomas Jefferson But, the general puNic can now get what
bills have all recently undergone major new oo the front. .-\ historic engraving of the they need by calling the National Direct
design changes. Now, it's feared that new signing of the Dedaration of Independence Hotline now at 1·800-235-8052 and ask for
legislation may be introduced to discontinue is on the back.
·
Dept. DBJStl. Dealer limits will be Slrictly
the historic designs of these Two Dollar
These cr-isp. new $2 bills arc closely enforced, White said.

The World Reserve Monetary Exchange is
releasing ·the popular $2 bills to the general
public. Call the National _Direct Hotline
1-800-235-8052, ask for Dept. 083511. The
· standard $9 processing fee plus shipping gets
ou a vault sealed uncirculated pack of five $2
bills at face value. · ·
.

• Strong start lifts Meigs
.past Spartans. See Page 81

______________

BY BRIAN

_____ ___

.

flood s, and will be administred
Two years ago. Meigs County
through the Ohio · Emergency Commissioners commited $350,000
·Management Agency.
in funds from the county's Temporary
Rio Grande has announced tenta- Assistance to Needy Families allocative plans to expand its local branch · tion for the development of higher
campus, now located in Middleport, education opportunitie s in the county,
but has not officiall y announced a and Stewart said yesterday URG has
location fonhe new facility. While ulso committed fund s for the coninitial plan s centered around con- struction project.
...This should help get the URG
structin g an expanded facilit~ in
downtown Middleport. local officials Meigs Center expansion moving,"
have indicated the university is giv- Stewart said .
ing most seriou s consideration to a'
"Capital budget money is usually
site near Meigs High School at ·
Rocksprings.
Please see Stewart. AS
(&gt;

Healthy
eating
habits

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• F. Berl Boggs, 79 ·
• Kathleen Clonch, 81
• Waller Allen Jenkins, 94
• Patricia Miller, 57
• Joseph L. Neal. Jr., 66

INSIDE
• Lydia Council plans
improvement project.
SeePageA3
• Alfred UMWtakes on
projects. See Page A3
• DofA installs officers.
See Page A3
• Computer classes
offered. See Page AS

WEATHER

Slip results
in second
closure of
Ohio 124 .
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

•'

'

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENrtNEL.COM

POMEROY - Americans
in · general are eating too
much, which is directly related to ponion size. an issue
the new food pyramid is
expected to address. ·
Until the new food pyramid arrives, Ohio State
University Extension Agent
Linda King re.cently informed
senior citizens of healthy food
choices they can make.
·
"It's never too late to
develop · healthy habits,"
King said, because healthy
habits reduce the risk of
chronic diseases.
Dietary guidelines established by the government
encourage consumption of a
variety of nutrient -dense
foods . and beverages within
the basic food groups while
limiting the intake of saturated
and trans fats. cholesterol,
added sugars, salt and alcohol.
Particularly _important to

·

Beth

s...-nt/ photo

OSU Extension Agent Linda King recently gave a presentation to sen'ior citizens about healthy
dietary choices they can make. Pictured are Frances Reed, Loraine Osbourne and King with the
food pyramid.

..

POMEROY - Another
section of Ohio 124 was
closed to traffic yesterday
because of worsening pavement displacement and
unstable embankments along
the Ohio River.
According to a news release
from the Ohio Depanment ·of
Transportation, District I 0,
Ohio 124, located just south
o{ the Washington County
line (near the jnnction of TR
174 - Bowman Road) has
now been-closed.
ODOT closed Ohio 144
between Hockingpon and the
junction of U.S. 50 last week.
Ohio 144, locaied 4.8 miles
nonh of the junction of U.S.
50 was closed Monday afternoon. and Ohio 124 at the
Athens-Meigs County line
was closed Monday evening.
ODOT officials say that
the. low pool levels associat,
ed with the recent barge
backup at the Belleville
Locks and Dam have caused
very unstable embankments

Ple•se see Slip, AS

··

removal at Belleville Locks

Volunteers at the
Meigs County •
REEDSVILLE- Five of the eight dam gates at Belleville
Sen for Center
Locks and Dam are now clear of barges, after salvage crews
were busy making moved one and a half sunken barges off the piers of the dam
favors for the ir
. on Monday, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers reponed_
Valentine's Day
One barge is still blocking the number three dam gate, but
party which will
crews have cleared the number four gate. Two sunken barges
be held at 11
a.m. on Feb. 10 . are still blocking gates six and seven.
The other. half of the barge wrapped around pier four was
at the center.
removed
Sunday 'afternoon. Both halves are located immedi•
Lunch wil l be
served and a king ate ly downriver from the dam. Salvage crews will remove
and- queen will be · them after the remaining dam gates are cleared.
crowned. Picture~ ·· The loss of water in the Belleville navigation pool -nearare Gerri Pullins.
ly 50 miles of riverway between Reedsville and Marietta- is
Paulie Curtis.
causing growing problems for those who live along the Ohio
Rosy Niday,
and Hocking Rivers.
·
Geraldine Cle land, · The Ohio Depanment of Transponatioo District 10 announce
Madge! Smith ,
Tuesday that Ohio 144, five miles nonh of the junction of U.S. 50
Mary Alice Bise.
Both lerJient/ photo
Ple~~se see a.rp, A5 .

INDEX
• liFT -The tirst 10,000 people even get these Official Cordovan
Collector's Wallets with eadl Bill. Satisfaction is guaranteed.

THE WOI'ILO RESERI/E MONETARY EXCHANGE IS A PRIVATE EXCHANGE NOT
A"FIL ...TED WI'IH THe U.S. GOVERNMENT OR ~y GOVERNMENT AGENCY

"'""

z SECriONS Calendars

16 PAGES

Classifieds

A3
B4-6

Comics

B7

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As
B Section

Sports
W~ther

A7

© 2005 Ohio Volley Publlshlq Co.

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PI f • '

&gt;

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Call or come in to receive a

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E~)))

actual user comments!
• FRlE - The new Quarter Dollar honoring the
Great State of Minnesota.
•Tho LXittd Statot r.tnt"'" and "Fifty Stale Ouorl.....'
we registered tradsrilarko of tho Ur0lod Stat" Min,..

JACKSON

Diane McVey GALLIPOLIS
M.A. CCC-A
Owner a Aud~o&amp;oPt

232 Huron Street

435'1&gt; Sealnd Avenue
. (Across from Poll Office)

(740) 4441-7619

ATHENS
275 West

Union Street

Opt'n 1\Jes.. Wed .. Thurs. 8:30-Spm

Open M on.- Fri. R : 30- ~pm
Saturday hy ~ppoimment

(740) 286-1430

(740) 594·3571

!

Mc&lt;:iraw Ph)'!ik.al Therapy Bid&amp; )

.,.
. -----

'

and $75.000 for
continuing restoration work at the:
Chester Academy.
Stewart
sa id
Meigs County also
stands to .benefit
from $2.5 million
in disaster relief
funding
approved
·Rep. Jimmy ·
as part of . the
. Stewart
Capital
Budget.
That funding will assist local residents in recovery from the
September, 20M and Jan~!lry. 2005

Seniors preparing for Valentine's"Day Crew continues ~arge

-

__.:

REED

POMEROY -Funding for two
local construction projects is included
in the Capital Bill approved Tuesday
by
the
Ohio
House
of
Representatives, State Rep . Jimmy
Stewart, R-Athetis, said.
Stewart said the budget is expected
to pass the House "as is" in the next
two weeks. It includes a $200,000
appropriation for the expansion of the
University' of Rio Grimde/Rio Grande
Community College Meigs Ce nter,

Open Mon.· Thun. 8:30-.5pm
__;_

J.

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Pluse see Healthy•.A5

The U.S. Mint• has announced the release · earlier state coins have already increased in neatly on a piece of paper.
date of the newest of the Fifty State Quarters•. value, some by up to 516%. ·
. 2. Enclose along with three fir~t class
For a limited time the general public can
This national effon assures coins are avail- postage stamps. MONEY CAN NOT BE
get the new Minnesota Quarter Dollar FREE. .' able not OlliY to Minnesota residents, but to ACCEPTED. Send the stamps loose
The coins are being given away FREE in all .citizens outside the state.
inside your envelope.
Uncirculated condition for only three stamps to ·
To be among the first to get the FREE
DO NOT staple, tape or aflix them .
cover yoor order acknowledgement, shipping, uncirculated coins when released by the Mint
3. Mail to:
handling and the protective display capsule.
in early April. send 3 first class stamps for the
FREE Coin Processing,
The coins are special because they are display capsule which preserves its beautiful
Postal Box 3678, Dept M3511
straight from the mint in brilliant. uncircu- uncircullltcd condition.
, Akrol), OH 44309-3678
lated condition. You can not filld these
ForFRdeEIEivery. foLII~w th ese instruct ionds to get · ."' t 1, 1: .,, ~ ~ eCHJS PtU TriDPtiBEO
coins io your change. Only the Uncirculated your
. corn. tmJl 1 per 11ouse11 o1 :
1HtMRDfi:seM:MCt£TIRIEXO-INIG'~ APRVA!t'El&lt;OWlGEMJT
coins have increased in value. All of the
I. Wnte your name and complete address A'Fll&gt;.TED WHll£ uS. (l(Mft,t,400 0A PNY ~~

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Stewart: Local projects to benefit from state allocation

SPORTS

.

FREE giveaway announced for popular U.S. Mint State.Coins
'

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·--------------...--.-...- --- ~ - -- - --

'

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American hostage with
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With Syncro y.ou can talk on the phone or get a
hug without worrying about the age-old problem
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