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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

'
Thursday, February 3, 2005

www.mydailysenti,nel.com

·

'

Louisville co.ntinues dominance Browns donate \·
of Bearcats, claim 77-70 victory _ tickets to Marines
'

'
BY CHRIS DUNCAN

Associated Press

k

I

. LOUISVILLE. Ky. - At
the end of Louisville' s 77. 70 win over Ci ncinnati on
Wedne sday ni g hi, Juqn
Palacios happily hopped
. near
midcourt,
still
buzzing over the biggest
shot of his career.
:· The fresnm an forward
· from Colombia scored 17
points and banked 111 an
unlikely 3-pointer to sea l
the
Cardinals·
ei~hth
straight victory,
.~
'·J didn't call it, but thank
God it went 111 ." said
Palacios, who had 'made
only 16 3-pointers" all sea son coming into th e game.
Taquan Dean scored 19
points to lead No. 9
7- I
Loui sv ille
( 19-3.
(::onference USA). whi ch
has won 13 of 14 and six of·
its last I 0 meetin2S with
Cincinnati. ·
"That was a hea vyweig ht
fight and we go t the last
punch ," Dean said .
The Cardinals led 68-64
entering, the final 90 seconds of a game that was
dominated by the top two
. field-goal
percentage
defense s tn Conference
USA .
With the .shot clock ticking under I0 se.co nd s.
Louisville guard Brandon
Jenkins got caught 111 a

double team near halfcourt. Palacios came to
l1elp and when Jenkins
leaped and passed him the
·ball. Palacios
turned and hit
the straight on bank shot
from five feet
behind the 3point lin e.
··1 knew it
was good the
whole way,"
J o k e d
Louisville coach Rick
Pitino j

"That's just lucky . lu cky
Tello from Colombia," sa id
Louisville senior .center
Ellis
Myles.
calling
Palacios by his nickname.
Palacios also banked in a
3-pointer in the Card inal s'
105-6'1 win over Tulane on
Suturday. This time. he got
some urging from Pitino.
"Coac h P was saying,
··shoot the ball' Shoot the
ball'" I kt1 ew I was ftir from
the bas.ket.'" Palacios said.
" I didn't even have tittle to
think about it.''
Louisville went 4-of-4
from the free-throw line in
the final minute to keep
No. 18 Cincinnati at bay .
"That w·as a very good
w1n."'
said
Francisco
Garcia, who was held to II
points. six below hi s average. ''I'm very proud of my
teammate s. We're getting

AEP~

theater on safety to

-schools, A8
1 !-r ~

BY TOM WITHERS

Associated Press
better every day."
The Cardinals rebuilt a
Eric Hicks matched a four-point lead, but Garcia,
career high with 2 I points Louisville's leading scorer,
CLEVELAND - As he
to lead Cincinnati ( 17-4, 6- got hi s fourth foul and left
recovers from being wounded
ga me
with 9:48
2), which was swept by the
during the war in Iraq, Lance
Louisville for the first time remaining. The Bearcats
Cpl. Michael Berninger figsince 1988.
couldn't take advantage,
ured he'd watch the Super
C in ci nnati coach Bob though, going four minutes
Bowl on TV and cheer for his
Huggins was pleased with without a field goal.
New England Patriots.
hi s team's performance,
Without Ga.rcia, -Dean
Turns out, the Marine will
have a much better seat for the
bllt harped on. the Bearcats ' became Louisville's go-to
game.
20-of-31 shooting from the guy and sank two 3-pointThe Cleveland Browns have
frce- throw
line .
The ers to push the lead to 64donated Super Bowl tickets to
Bearcats also mi ssed II 55. Garcia returned with
50
U.S. Marines who have
free throws in an 87-68 3:59 left and the Cardinals
recently
returned from Iraq
win over Houston on ahead '66-60, but he fou"Ied ·
and Afghanistan or are about
Saturday.
out a minute later, clipping
to be deployed for active duty
" We need guys to step up Armein Kirkland 's arm .on
in the war-torn nations.
and make plays," Huggins a layup .· Kirkland hit two
"I have never been so surthrows to
trim
said . " I think they should free
prised and grateful for a gift
throw it out of bounds . Cincinnati's deficit to 67like this, even on Christmas
instead of mtss111g free 64.
morning," said Berninger of
throws . .You are going to
A free throw by Jenkins
Martha's Vineyard, Mass. "I
mi ss some , but we need to with 2:08 remaining put
am definitely
a New
make more than we are the Cardinals up 68-64.
Englander and have never
The Bearcats had their
making now., .
been to a college game or an
Cincinnati mis sed 13 of chances to come back, but
NFL game, let alone the Super
their first 18 shots in the never shook .their poor
Bowl. I can't wait to go root
on my team."
ope ntng 10 minute s, b~t , shooting, going 23-of-61
· su·per Bowl tickets are
rrailed only 15-.12 becau se · from the fi!)ld (38 percent)
priced at $500 anp $600
of
seven
Louisville and 4-of-18 from 3-point
apiece.
The Browns ' dpnation
turnovers.
range (22 percent) .
will
go
to Marines currently
Louisville led . 25-24
The Cardinals also genserving at Camp Lejeune,
when a 3-pointer by Dean erated 24 points off 17
N.C., Parris Island, S.C. ,
started a 7-0 spurt.
Cincinnati turnovers.
Reserve Command . in New
Palacios · steal and a fast"We know we have to be
Orleans
and U.S. Central
break layup 111 the first an excellent defensive
Conunand in Tampa, Fla.
minute of the second half team against them to win
''It was a wonderful act to
gave Louisville it s biggest and we played excellent
see an organization that apprelead at 40-31.
defense tonight," Pitino
ciates the contributions these
James White then scored said. "We kept saying the
· young Marines are making to
in the Jane to trigger a 9-0 be st defensive team is
our country," said Col. Jim
Bearcats ' run.
· going to win this, game."
Walker, Secretary to the
'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
Commandant of the Marine
Corps. "This will truly be a
special event for Marines who
otherwise never would have
thought about attending a
Super Bowl."
The Browns have a special
connection . to the Marines
Corps. Late owner AI· Lerner
was a first lieutenant in th~
Marines from 1955-57. The
club tli~s the Marine tlag outside its team offices in Berea,
participates in the "Toys for
Tots" program and Marine
jets do ceremonial tly-overs
as part of pregame festivities
during .the season.
Sgt. Brian Goff, who is
about to return to Iraq for a
14-morith deployment. was
overwhelmed by the Browns'
generous gift.
''I was shocked for about an
hOur and had a permanent
smile for at least a couple of
hours," said Goff of Centralia,
Ill., who was awarded the
Bronze Star foilowing last
year's assault on BaghdiJd. "It
is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. This is my first NFJ..;
game and 1 can't think of any·
better game to go to than the
Super Bowl."

...

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SPORTS
• Emmitt retires. See
Page 81

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Athens, Meigs plan joint proposal for FutureGen project
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY -County commissioners in Meigs and Athens County
have begun working together on a
joint proposal to attract the $1 billion FutureGen power plant to
· Meigs County.
FutureGen is an initiative to build
th'e world's first integrated sequestrat\on and hydrogen production
research power plant. It isiritended to
create the world's first zero-emissions
fossil fuel · plant. When operational ;
the prototype will be the cleanest fos '
sil fuel. fired power plant in the world.
Meigs and Athens are two of eight
Ohio counties which . the project's
leaders have identified as potential
sites
for
the
power plant.

Commissioner Mick Davenport said
yesterday the two ctJuntics .likel y will
promote Meigs County as the best
Ohio county for the project. Meigs
Courity Commissioners met with their .
Athens counterparts on Thursday
morning to discuss a joint prdposalto
the f€deral government touting an
Ohio River location in Meigs County
for the project 's location.
At least II other states are also
. competing for the project, Davenport
said. A joint presentation by Athen'
·and Meigs counties would comb ine
assets from both counties, according
to Davenport. Meigs County would
offer a river site for the project, and
Athens County would make available
research expertise and facilities at
Ohio University and Hocking College
and airport access to the region

through the Ohio University Airport response to President .Bush's directive
nea~ the Meigs County line at Albany.
to draw upon the best sc ientific
Representatives of OU and Hock ing research to address the issue of global
College also attended the Thursday climate change. Other countries will
meeting in Athens, Davenport said, . be invited to participate in the demonalong with stall members , from the stration project. which also will serve
Ohio governor 's office. and the as a major. research operation .
oftlces of U.S. Rep . Ted Strickland
The prototype plant will eMablish
and Sen. Mike De Wine .
the technical and economic feasibi li "We think it .would be a good part- ty of producing electricity and hydronership in our efforts to attract the g~n from ct;&gt;al, the lowest cost and
facility here," Davenport said. "We're most abundant domestic energy .
exc ited about the poss ibility of hav- resoUFce.. while capturing and
ing this sll!te-of-t~c-art facility, which . seq uestering the carb.on dioxide g.enhas the backing of the federal govern- erated in the process.
mem, in our community, and a joint , The initiative will be a governeffort between ·Meigs and Athens ment/industry partnership to pursue
counties, with all that Athens County an innovative ·'showca se" project
has to offer such a facility, should focused on the de sig n, construction
make our prt!sentation very strong."
Please see Project, AS
The FutureGen initiative is · a

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Ilene D. Hall, 77
• Hollis Mayo, 93
• William 'Mutt' Wagner, 82
o Patrick D. Wood, 78

Domestic Beer
$1.00 All Day
St6p- Ut. &amp; epa~ d.e 9a"'e

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tJuue &amp;

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GOOD TIMEJ

INSIDE

CR7 A • Pomeroy, OH
740-992-7986

• Transfers posted.
See Page A3
• Promised Heirs coming
to local church.
See Page A6
• Meigs Soil and Water
announces contest
winners. See Page AS

WEAmER

REBATE

SUPER BOWl PARTY .
AU DOMESTIC ·BEER ., ·

$1.00 All DAY

'

!trt.

SYRACUSE- Ariny National Guardsman
Travis Gibson of Syracuse, currently on active
duty ·in Iraq , recently received a Sergeant
Major Award.
Gibson is with the 3664th Maintenance
Company out of Point Pleasant, W.Va.
The Sergeant Major Award is given to soldiers it.-rocognition of outstanding work.iJone
"in their military job as well as other jobs helpful to the mission.
Gibson's job is canvas repair, and he repairs
tents and sews patches onto uniforms.
However, in Iraq he said soldiers pitch in to do
whatever tasks need completed, which for him
has included welding work.
·
"I believe I was awarded becau se I helped
out others when they needed me so we .could
get the job done as .a tearri:'' Gibson said, but
was quick to share. the accolades with his fellow soldiers. "Everyone worked really hard to
complete our assignments."
The serg~ant major of the Mississippi
National Guard .presented Gibson the award.
He is in charge of his battalion, which is comprised of several other units, including the
3664th Maintenace Company.
· "I was just so proud of him ," Trisha Gibson
-said of her husband and his award. ''I'm glad to

Please see Soldier, AS

E·V· E· N·T

CflftR 'tOIJ 1YM ON Wfffl ~TENDERS

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

oetallo on Pqe AS

.VINNY SDfJSIY

'

REBIllS

Wayne·s Place
N. 2nd Avenue
Middleport, OH
740-992-5884

-....-'11"-lMil\1 Room
So~

IHIIJ

-''124::0
11"---

INDEX

J.

REm

BREE~MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - · Dwindling
Calendars
A3 sales tax revenue combined
with threatened cuts in local
Classifieds
B4-6 government reve!JUe·from the
Comics •
B7 • state could cause serious cash
tlow problems for the county
Dear Abby
A3 in the year ahead . .
Editorials
A4
Sales tax collections tn
2004.
were
Faith•Values
A6-7 November,
'
$15,000 less than they were a
Movies
As year ago, causing a collection
Obituaries
As deficit for the first month in
B Section 2005. Meanwhile, Ohio
Sports
House Speaker Jon Husted,
AS
Weather
R-Kettering, has indicated
© aoos Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
the Ohio Legislature plans to
2 SECtlONS- t6 PAGfs .

-

992-5432
.,

MASON FURNITURE CO.
,.

9:00 AM · 12 Noon • HMC French 500 Room •
f'lao,. bnng a list ol home medications to drus and ho.e a prescripfioo from yoor ,f.ysicicn to offend.
· For more in~ormation on these FREE programs, or to register, ~II (740) 4.46-5011().

Flllrotnyalgla Support Group

This FREE ~ group is sponsored by fhe Anhrifis Fovnciofion and Holzer Medical Center

,Tuesday, February 8 • 5:30PM - 8:00PM • HMC Education &amp; Conference Center Room AB
Topes ~iocuued will include .. pain room&gt; , exe&lt;ci10, ..laxohcw&gt;. lorigoo. dopre..ion and cJ,c.,f pm;ont ..toricnohip.

For mo"' information, or to register, coli Mi"i Ro&gt;1 at (740)446-5121

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Piabetes Sell-Management Proaram · February 7, 8 and 9

'318::0
"Your Complete Home Fumisili11g Store".

Diabetes Support Group will meet SUnday, February 13 from
~:00 pm · 4:00pm ot the HMC French 500 Room .

-'ft-t&gt;llll
. · 'ftiiiHI-

228 Main Street • Pomeroy

National Guardsman Travis Gibson (right) of Syracuse is pictured receiving his Sergeant Major Award from the
sergeant major of the -Mississippi National Guard who is a commander of the battalion that includes the
3664th Mainten'a ce Company from Point Pleasant, W.Va. Tt\e. award recogn izes soldiers who .have done out. standing work at their military jobs.
·
,
•

Cuts since 200 I have
go ahead with plans I() make Parker Gr.ue ser shows the received $1.19 million from
the
tax.
In
2001
,
the
county
·already
cut int() the county's
maJor cuts m the Local county received $77 ,974.15 ·
Government Fund redistribu- in sales tax proceeds m collected $1.15 million , in monthly cash flow. In 20j)2,
tion to local governments. January.
· representing 2002, $1.12 million. 2003, the state paid Meigs County's
operating
fund
which county commissioners November receipts. The $1.10 million and last. year, general
$1.09
million.
$593,202.
In
2002,
the
paycounty
collected
$93,198
say could cause problems for
The
county
recei.ves ment was $563,993.68, and
from its !-percent sales tax in
them.and township trustt;es.
2003
and
·2004,
Cutting those monthly · January, 2004, creating a col- approximately $46,000 a, in
month
in
local
govern
ment
$556,701.47
.
local government fund dis- lections deficit of $15,223 for
Davenport said townships
revenue from the state, and
bursements to local govern- the first month of this year.
The county recetves its townships and the public in Meigs Countyhave relied
ments or eliminating them
completely could help the sales tax payment from the library system receive their ·on the local government disstate cut deficits in the state Ohio Department of Taxation own disbursements from the bursements not only for operbudget. The state began each month . ,The monthly same fund . Those funds are ating revenue, but also as
irreplaceable, matching funds needed to
freezing the payments three payment represents sales tax virtually
Commissioner
!VIick access grant dollars, includcollected two months prior.
years ago.
Revenue from the sales tax Davenport said yesterday, ing money from the state and
- A sales tax collection comparison issued by Meigs ' has· dwindfed consistently and the loss of them could be · federal governments for disaster relief. .
Counly
Auditor
Nancy since 2000, when the county devastating .

The HMC

. ."lllt

Ad. Alt de 7...,."'94

Submm,d photo~

Diabetes

R«:hna-Roci.er
Clase P.lltlo!r

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Legislature plans cuts in local gover1nnent funds
BY BRIAN

,.

.

---- - - --··-

01r

MEDICAL CENTER

"Healthcare in You r
Own Backyard"
www .holzer.org

1-800-8.16-5131.

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

�NATION

The Daily Sentinel

• WORLD

•

•

PageA2
Friday, February 4, 2005

U.S. aircraft carrier leaves Indonesia in single biggest withdrawal from tsunami relief
f:IY CHRIS BRUMMITT
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ABOARD THE USS
ABRAHAM LINCOLN The U.S. aircraft carrier that
led a massive tsunami relief
operation steamed awaY.
from the di saster zone
Thursday after a mission that
helped repatr America's
bruised image in the world's
most heavily populated
Muslim nation.
The USS Abraham Lincoln,
with a crew of 5,300, formed
the core of the largest foreign
military deployment in the
area and the most extensive
U.S. operation in Southeast
Asia since the Vietnam War.
Helicopters from the ship
flew hundreds of mi ssions to
deliver food, water and other
aid along the devastated western coast of the · lndonesitm
island of Sumatra. .
Its departure was the single
biggest drawdown of the
American relief effort.
U.S. offic ials said last
month the emergency phase
9f the relief effort was ending
and the military would gradu ally withdraw. About 5,000
" of the 15,000 U.S. servicemen who had been deployed
were pulled out last month.
The Lincoln's departure will
leave some 5,000 U.S. mili·tary 'personnel aboard other
ships around Sumatra.
The ship headed for
Singapore and was expected
back in · its home port of
Everett, Wash., in mid-March .

"I' m glad to have been out
here tO help," . Said Craig
Stark,
a
sailor from
Memphis, Tenn. "We did our
time and did ·some good
deeds for the people - but it
is great to go home."
In Sup1atra, survivors have
welcomed the Americans
warmly and ·greeted helicopter crews with broad
smiles - an attitude mirrored by government officials
Thursday in a nation where
many strongly opposed the
U.S.-Ied invasion of Iraq.
"It is with deep appreciation that I' say to all of you ,
'Thank you for ·a great job,
well doqe,"' ·indonesia's
Welfare
Mini ster Alwi ·
Shihab said at a shipboard
ceremony. "I am pleased that
the government of Indonesia
no longer needs the full complement of forces that were
originally deployed." .
The long-term effect on
U.S.
political · ties to
Indonesia remains unclear,
but the mission hascertainly
strengthened the hand of
those who want to boost mil itary relations.
The United States cut off
ties with the Indonesian military tn 1999 because of
human rights concerns. The
· Bush administration, however. is keen to see the restrictions lifted, partly because of
fears that ai-Qaida may
launch
attacks
from
Indonesia, which has seen a
string of deadly bombings in
recent years.

U.S . Ambassador . B. Lynn
Pascoe praised the ·military
cooperation.
·
"We look forward to having
much better relations with the ·
military tn the weeks and
months to come, and we will
certai nl y be working on that
with them," he told reporters.
Pascoe declined to say
whether he would recommend
that Congress lift the ban.
In a visit to Indonesia last
month , Deputy Defen se
Secretary Paul Wolfowitz a former ambassador to the
country- said closer contact
with the U.S. military would
strengthen the Indonesian
military's commitment to
human rights and let it .better
respond to natural disasters.
Critics warned against turning a blind eye to accusations
of widespread abuses by the
Indonesian military. Congress
has so far blocked moves to
reopen ties. .which were severed when Indonesian sol diers and militia proxies took
part in bloody ranipage that
killed hundreds of people in
East Timor following its vote
for independence.
U.S. lawmakers maintain
that the military has not
improved its human rights
record since then.
The departure of the
Lincoln came · as the death
toll from the Dec. 26 disaster
continued to rise. indonesian
workers cleaning up debris
found 897 more bodies, the
government said, raising the
confirmed death toll in that

Rumsfeld says he offered·to resign
twice last year but Bush rejected it
BY ROBERT BURNS
·

AP MILITARY WRITER

WASHINGTON
·Defense Secretary Donald H.
Rumsfeld disclosed Thursday
that he had offered President
Bush his resignation twice
during the height of the Abu
Ghraib prisoner abuse scandallast year. He said he wanted the decision on his. future
to be placed in Bush's hands.
"He made that decision and
said he did want me to stay
on," Rumsfeld told CNN's
"Larry King Live."
In the CNN interview,
Rumsfeld asserted, as he has
many ti.mes in ttie past, that
as defense secretary he could
not be expected to know all
that takes place in war zones
halfway around the world.
But he also indicated that he
could have done more · to
head off the trouble.
· . The release of photographs last spring depict. ing American soldiers abusing Iraqi prisoners at Abu
Ghraib triggered worldwide
outrage, particularly in the
Arab world. Rumsfeld told

Congress at the time that he subject of the Abu Ghraib
would quit if he felt he could abuse scandal arose in a difno longer serve effectively, ferent context. Rumsfeld said
but he also said then that he he may skip an appearance at
would not resign simply to a· security conference. in
please his critics and politi- Germany next week because
cal opponents.
of a lawsuit there accusing
the CNN interview, lie him of war crimes for · the
indicated that he felt a mea- prisoner abuse.
"It's something that we
sure of responsibility for
have to take into considerathe scandal.
"The problem is, this kind . tion," he said when asked
of thing . occurs in .prisons whether the war crimes suit
across the country and across was a factor' in weighing
the world," he said. "And you · whether to attend the Munich
have to know i.t's going to be Conference · on Security
a possibility. ,And 'lberefore Policy, an annual gathering of
the training and the discipline, government defense officials,
and the doctrine has to be lawmakers and others from
such that you anticipate that Europe and elsewhere.
•
risk. And clearly, that wasn't
. Rumsfeld said he · had not
done to the extent it shoulcj." yet made a ftnal decision on
· Some had speculated last · attending the two-day conferfall that if Bush was re-elected ence, where an address by the
he would repla9e Rumsfeld, U.S . defense secretary typibut in December the president cally is a highlight. Last year,
said he wanted him to stay. Rumsfeld stoutly defended
Rumsfeld told CNN that when the · U.S. invasion of Iraq,
· Bush asked him to stay for a which ~as highly unpopular .
second terlll, they did n9t dis- in much of Europe.
cuss whether it would be for · "Whether I end up there
the full four years.
we' ll soon know," he said
At a news conference at the Thursday. "It' II be a week,
Pentagon .on Thursday, the. and we' It ftnd out."

A U.S. Navy crew applauds during a farewell ceremony on board the USS Abraham Lincoln off
Banda Aceh, Aceh province , Indonesia, Thursday. The aircraft carrier will withdraw from
Indonesia's tsunami-battered Sumatra island on Friday in the single biggest drawdown of the
American militafy aid effort since the Dec . 26 disaster.
·
country to · at least Ill, 171. Dozens of names were listed Organization health cnsts
official, . told reporters. "We
That put the overall death toll twice in the confu sion.
The winding down of the must remain vigilant."
between
158,868
and
178 , 115. The number of American effort signaled the · t'n another development, the
missing ranges from 26,404 transition from relief opera- tsunami survivor known as
·!o 142. I07 - with most pre- tions to rehabilitation efforts. A "Baby 8 J" and the Sri Lankan
sumed dead .
health oflicial said Thursday couple fighting a court battle
Underscoring the difficul - that precautions at I he outset of to claim him were ordered to
ties in accounting for those the tsunami disaster in undergo DNA testing next
missing after the disaster, the Indonesia prevented major out- Wednesday.
The judge also sa id he
li st of missing Swedes was breaks of .infectious diseases.
trimmed to 523 by Swede1i's
"We have managed to pre- would consider ruling on the
National Police on Thursday. · vent any major disease out- case much earlier than the
Three weeks ago, the figure. break from affecting the ·April 20 date previously set.
·was I ,900, but most wete tsunami -affected
popula- nisi ng hopes of a quick reso-·
found .either still in southern · lions," David Nabarro, the lution to the couple's agonizAsia or after returning home. · top
World
Health ing custody battle.

a

BY JAYMES SONG
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

HONOLULU
Astronomers using a giant
telescope atop a volcano have
discovered a hot spot at the
tip of Saturn's south pole.
The infrared images cap- ·
tured by the Keck I telescope
at
the
W.M. _ Keck
Observatory atop ~auna Kea
on the Big Island suggest a
warm polar vortex - a largeseale weather pattern likened
to a jet stream ort Earth that
occurs in .!he upper atmosphere. It's the first such hOt
vortex ever discovered in the
solar system.
The team of scientists say
the images are the sharpest
thermal views of Saturn ever
taken from the .ground. Their
work will be a published in
Friday 's editions of the journal Science.
Thi s .warm polar cap is ·
believed to contain the hi ghest temperatures on Saturn;

the ' scientists did not give
temperature estimate.
On Earth, the .Arctic Polar
Vortex is typically located
over eastern North America
in Canada and plunges cold
arctic air to the northern
Plains in the United States.
Polar vortices are found on
Earih, · Jupiter, Mars and
Venus, and are colder than
their surroundings. The new
images from . the Keck
Observatory ' show the first
evidence of a polar vortex at
much warmer temperatures.
·:saturn 's is the first hot
polar vortex that , we've
seen because it's been sitting in the sunlight for
about 18 years," said Glenn
S. Orton , a scientist at
NASA's Jet Propul sion
Laboratory in Pasadena,
Cali f. , and lead author.
· Saturn, which takes many
earth years to orbit the sun,
just had its summer solstice
in 2002.
"If the increased southern

•·

temperatures are solely the
result of seasonality, then the
temperature should increase
gradually with increasing latitude, but it doesn 't," Orion
said. "We see tl)at the temper-.
ature increases abruptly by
· several degrees near 70
degrees south and again at 87 .
degrees south.
.
"A really hot thing within a
couple degrees of the pole is
something I don 't understand
at all," he said.
Scientists may learn more
from the data coming from
the infrared spectrometer on
the Cassini spacecraft currentl y orbiting Saturn; informati on that is expected to
complement the Keck discoxery, Orton said.

On the Net:
Keck Observatory:
http://www.keckobservatory.org
· Jet Propulsion baboruJory's
Saturn page:
' •
http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov

p.m. at the Clark Chapel County Health Department.
Freewill Baptist Church . Take ch ild's shot records and
There will be different speak- medical card if ap plicable.
Saturday, "Feb. 5
Children must be accompaat each Saturday service.
ers
PORTLAND - A communied by parent or legal
Sunday,
Feb.
6
nity meeting will be held at I
SHADE - A gospel con- guardiim.
· p.m.
at
the
Portland
TUPPERS PLAINS featuring Kevi n Spencer
cert
: Community center for anyone
Tuppers
Plains baseball.
will
be
held
at
7
p.m.
Sunday
. interested in volunteering at the
softball
and
T-hall . signups
United
. center. Applications for board at the Shade
will
be
held
from
9 a. m. to l
· members will also be accepted. Methodist Church.
in
the
Eastern
MIDDLEPORT -Eddie p.m.
: .Coffee and dessert served.
ElementaryCafetorium.
Fee
Baer will be sipeaking at the
.
· Monday, Feb.'7
is
$20.
Bring
birth
cenifi: SYRACUSE - Syracuse I 0:30 a. m. service at the Ash ·cate. Questions to Tra.cey
.: Board of Public Affairs, 7 Street Church, 398 Ash St., Chevalier, 378-6364, or Lisa
- p.m., water office in Village Middleport.
· Lute, 985-3338.
Tuesday, Feb. 8
. Hall.
.
POMEROY - St. Paul
RACINE
Racine
Lutheran
Church will begin
Village Council wil meet at 7
p.m. in council chambers in Lent ·with a Shrove Tuesday
(Fat Tuesday) pancake .supthe municipal building.
SYRACUSE - , Sutton per, 6 to 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, Feb. S
VVednesday,Feb.9
:. Township trustee regular
·
SALEM
CENTER - Star
POMEROY - St. Paul
· mohthly meeting at 7 p.m. at
Lutheran
Church
Ash Grange 778 and .Star Junior
town hall.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m., Grange 878 will meet in reguTuesday, Feb. 8
POMEROY - Bedford ' with ashes marked on the lar session for a potluck supper at 6:30p.m. followed by .a
Town ship Trustees will meet forehead.
meeting at 7:30 p.m.
at 7 p.m. at the town hall.
Interested
metilbers will meet
VVednesday,Feb.9
at
I
p.m.
to work on ABC
POMEROY- The ·Meigs
quilts and stuffed toy projects.
County Board of Health will
Saturday, Feb_ 5
Sunday, Feb. 6
meet at 5 p.m. in the conferMIDDLEPORT -IV' ~ i gs , POMEROY
-Drew .
ence · room of the Meigs County Humane Sc _ie ty
Webster·
Post
389,
American
County Health Deparrment, offering free straw ·· for ·pet
Leg ion. observance of Four
112 E. Memorial Drive.
bedding, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Chaplains Sunday, 9:30 a.m.,
behind Thrift Shop in Pomerov . United Methodi st
Middleport.
Church.- Commander Mick
POMEROY - Childhood William s asks . members
Saturday, Feb. 5
immunization clinic will be attending to gather in church
BIDWELL - Special ser- held frm 9 to II a.m. and I to sanctuary. Early church services will be held at 6:30 3 p.m. Tuesday at the Mei gs vices begin at 9:30a.m.

·. Proud to be apart of your life.
The Daily Sentinel• Subscribe roday •992-2 155 • www.mydailysentinel.com

Other events

Church events

Birth announced
GERMANTOWN - ·Joe
and Karen Hemsley Fares
of · Germantown , Ohio,
announce the birth of a
daughter, Shelby Elisabeth
Fares , born on Nov. 4.
She weighed 7 pounds , .
13 ounces.
Mr. and Mrs. Fare s.
are . the
parents ·of
anoth.er daughter, Simone

Friday, February 4,

2005

TRANSFERS POSTED

Clubs and
organizations

POMEROY
- Meigs
Freddie Moore, Delta·
County Recorder Kay Hill Mae Moore, to Scott J.
reported the following Moore , deed, Sali sbury.
transfers of.rea l estate:
Bryan. H. Morris, Staci
Eloise Pickett to Robert M. Morris, to Amy B.
William Markham , Jame s White, deed , Columbia. ·
Rhode s Markham, deed,
June Dell Wickersham to
Bedford.
Ryan D. Norris, affidavit,
Eloise M. Pi ckett to Letart.
Robert Glenro y Pickett ,
Harry Leland , Parker,
deed. Bedford .
·
deceased, lo Margaret
Robert
Lee
Halley, Parker, affidav it. Chester.
deceased. to Gera ldine
Roscoe Mills, Sandra J.
Halley, affidavit. Sali sbury .
Mills
, to Donald Moreland,
Marie Youn g to Glen
· Robin Moreland , deed,
Young, Jr. , deed, Suuon.
Churc h. Olive.
George
K.
Rachacl Church. to Eugene . Kelley A. Need s, Kelley
A. Brooks , to Travis R.
W. Ritchie, deed. Olive.
Frederick Oy ler, Anna Brooks , deed, Olive.
Faymon G. Roberts,Jr. to
Howard Oyler, to Greg L.
Bu ckeye Rural Electri c
Hall. deed, Scipio.
Cooperative,
right of way,
Oscar Maynard. Lillian
L. May.nard , to Douglas Scipio.
Gary Ray George to .
Jenkin s, Virginia Je11kins ,
Tuesday, Feb. il
BREC. right of way, Salem.
deed. Sutton.
TUPPERS PLAINS · Willi am R. Lawson, W.R.
Patricia
A.
Buchanan
to
Audrey Clark wi ll observe
her 80th birthday on Feb. 8. Patricia A. Buchanan. Terry Lawson. to BREC, right of
way, Columbia.
L. Barber, deed, Olive .
Cards may be sent ,to her at P.
Hazel M. Almendin ger to
Gaylord L. Young to
0. Box 333, Tuppers Plains, Ha ze l M. ' Alme ndi hge r,
BREC.
right of way, Scipio.
45783.
Joseph D. · Alme ndinge r,
Robert D. Butcher to
Wednesday Feb. 9
affidavit.
BREC. ri gh t of way,
ALBANY
- Carroll
Hazel M. Almendin ger to Scipio.
Ll)mp, .formerly of Tuppers Tuppers
Plains-Che.s ter
Mont Vance, Ronnie
Plain s, will observe hi s 92nd Water Dislrict, ease men t.
Vance, to BREC. right of
birthday on Feb. 9. ·Cards Bed ford.
way, Scipio.
·may be sent to him at Rus;ell
Jose ph D. Almendinger
Paul A .. Musser, Michele
Nursing
Home,
5176 to Ha ze l M. Almendinger,
C.
Musser, to BRSC, right
Washington Road, Albany, Jo sep h D. Almcndinger,
of way; Salem.
Ohio 45710.
affidavit.
Wayne Samuel Michael ,
Josep h D. Almendinger Nellie Michae l, Gary L.
to TP-C WD , easemen t,
·Michael, Sharon Michael ,
Bedford.
Violet Pre ston. Sha ron to Gary L. Michael , Sharon
Ours. Harry L. Ours. Kare·n Michael, deed, Chester. ·
S.
Will son,
Mic hael · Joyce A. Sayetta, Joyce
Willson, William H. .Ours , Anna Carter, James Caner, ·
Patri cia Ours , Nancy J. to R. Sean Riffle, deed,
Pedigo, Nancy J. Yoacham, Village of Racine.
Autumn D. Thomas ,
Jay E. Pedigo, Michae l L.
Autumn
D.
Vanaman ,
Ours, Brenda· L. o ·urs,
Robert J. Ours, Patricia Morgan James Vanaman,
The Daily Sentinel
Ours, Li sa G . • Co les, Morgan J. Vanaman, to
William Coles. to Nancy J. Shawn W. Arnott, deed,
Village of Pomeroy.
Pedigo, deed, Sutton .
Subscribe today
992-2155
Robert 0 . Schmoll to
Theodore P. Sauber,
Carol J. Sauber, to Kell y P. Kathy L. Rupe , deed,
Sauber, deed.
. Village of Middleport.
Monday, Feb. 7
RACINE
- Racine
Chapter 134, OES will meet
at 7:30 p.m. at the hall.
Mock initiation and balloting wi II be held.
Tuesday Feh. 8
POMEROY - The Meigs
Chamber
of
Cou nty
Com merce's
BLtsinessMinded luncheon will be
held at noon at the Wild
Horse Cafe. Ge ne Lyons.
EMS coordinator will be the
speaker.
Thursday, Feb_ 10
POMEROY - Apha Iota
Masters will meet at noo n at
Bob Evans Restaurant.
Mason, for a luncheon.

·Birthdays

Keeping
Meigs ·
County
informed

Elizabeth. 20 months.
Maternal
great-grandmother is Eileen Frances
Clark
of
Minersville.
Maternal grandparents are
Elizabeth An!l Hemsley of
Kingston and Jimmy Joe
Hemsley of Pomeroy.
Paternal grandparents ·are
Bob and Rita Elisabeth Fares
of Springboro.

0y vey! Rabbi.is exposed
~ to patient's discomfort

In

Astronomers find 'hot spot' on Saturn

·Community Calendar
Public meetings

AP phOto

PageA3

BY.THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

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and .we'll cancel your ad, if your vehicle didn't sell, just call prior to the end of 25 days
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DEAR ABBY: After read: ing the letters about hospital
: gowns, I thought I' d share my
: story. I am a rabbi. When I.
: ftrst trained as a chaplain, I
·: was taught to make. my hospi: tal rounds in full dress : wearing a suit and tie, with
: my jacket buttoned. However,
· one day a patient expressed
: that although she needed to
: talk to me, she felt terribly
; uncomfortable lying there "in
: a hospital gown with her
• tuchas sticking out" while I
· sat there in a three-piece suit.
I stood up, told her I'd be
· back in a moment, went to
. the nurse's station and got a
· hospital gown. I took off my
suit, donned the· gown over
· my briefs and T-shirt, and
: headed Straight back to the
: patient's room. The minute
: she saw me in that gown, she
· brightened and relaxed
: enough to open up about all
; the concerns on her mind.
: The visit took a little longer
• than usual, and when I ftn: ished our session with a
: prayer for healing,. I rose
· from the chair. As I did, the
· sound as my thighs ripped
: themselves
from
the
:: Naugahyde brought a huge
-· smile to both our faces. I was
: laughing so hard I forgot to
: hold the back of the gown as
: I headed back down the hall
: - so I was exposed.
• Fortunately, the nurses had
:· a sense of humor. One said,
:: "Not a bad tush for a rabbi!"
. I learned an important les- son on creativity that day. But
: I also learned that two hospi. tal gowns are better than one
· - if you remember to put
. one on backward. - R.ABBI
:CRAIG H. EZRING, B.OCA
: RATON. FLA .
DEAR RABBI EZRING:
: Your suit may have been off
' for her, but my hat is off to
you for going the extra mile
, to make a difference in a sick
· woman's life. Your method
. may have been unorthodox,
: but your message of healing
far surpassed any. fashion
· statement. Thanks for an
. "upper" of a letter.
DEAR ABBY: My husband
- of 21 years, "Robert." made
; me a wonderful dinner, made
. love with me, and then instead of sweet dreams - he
served l)le with divorce

Dear
Abby

papers. He treats me like a
princess, but the divorce is
still going through. Robert
says we have nothing in common and no longer think alike.
I am confused. He calls me
two or three times a day, and
cries and becomes angry
when I say I am mo vi ng
away from the house. He tells
our adult children he "loves
me dearly" but will never be
truly happy with me. In a few
more months we will no
longer be husband and wif5;
. however, he won 't let to
emotionally. l am still hopelessly in love with him, and
his constant attention does
not make our situation easier.
Can you please tell me what's
the right thing for me to du 0
- HURT IN CALIFORNIA
DEAR HURT: The right
thing to do is find a therapist
who can help you make sense
of what has happened, help you
to heal the wounds of this
divorce, .and go on with your
life. The day your divorce
becomes tina! will be an important line of demarcation. From
then on, you'll be responsible
for your own interests. Please
don't be distracted by what
your husband says. Instead,
watch what he does: The sooner you start thinking with your
head rather than your heart, the
better off you' II be.
CONFIDENTIAL
TO
BORED IN BIRMI NGHAM :
Get off .the couch and look
around you. Visit the library.
Take a class at a local college.
Attend a concert or a play. It
will take you outside of yourself and stimulate your imagination. A person with imagination is never alone.
Dear Abby is wrinen by
Abigail Va11 Burell, also
known as Jeamre Phillips, a11d
was founded ·by her mother,
Pauline Phillips. mite Dear
Abby aJ www.DeiuAbby.com
or P.O. Box 69440, Los
Angeles, CA 90069.

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Collies/

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Rules:

1) Must be at least 18 yrs of age.

••
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Must register at one of these participating
businesses.
·
3) Name, phone number and name of
business must appear in each entry
form.
4) No purchase necessary_
5) Employees of this newspaper &amp; their
immediate families are not eligible.
6) Contest good Feh. 1- Feh. II, 2005
7) Winner will he randomly drawn Friday,
February II , 2005.
8) Winner will be contacted to schedule
promotional photo ut business lo&lt;;ation.
2)

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Be lure.tc R.e~r. at
~These Pattleipatini 8
POMEROY
. Weaving Stitches
Pomeroy Flower Shop
.Hartwell House
Dan's
Swisher ~ Lohse
K~C Jewelers
Riverfront Past~ Present
Francis Florist
Long John Silvers/KFC
Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center
Clark'sjewelry ;
The Fabric Shop

•••
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••
•

MINERSVILLE
River Bed

Tanning~

Party Supplies

•••
••

MIDDLEPORT
Dairy Queen
Nails by Pam
· Added Touch
Locker 219 ~ The Shoe Place
White Ulac Inn
Middleport Flower Shop
Ingels jewelry &amp;..Picture Gallery
Middleport Department Store
~Sue's Selectables
'Two on the T"

'

•

•••

RACINE
Love Your Tan

SYRACUSE
The Cutting Crew · ·
Riverway Cafe
TNT Pit Stop (4 Locations)

•······•·····•·····•·····•···

MASON, WV
Bob Evans Restaurant
Debbie's Flowers N' More
Mason Bowling Lanes
Riverside Golf Club
Oopsa Daisy Flowers~ Gifts

t

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r

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•

OPINION

The ~aily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

.

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

Ohio Valley-Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall. make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the ·
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress· of grievances.
_.

-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, Feb. 4, the 35th day of 2005. There are 330
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. 4, 1945, President Rooseyelt, British Prime
Minister Winston Churchill and Soviet leader Josef Stalin
began a wanjme conference at Yalta.
· On this date:
· In 1783, Britain declared a formal cessation of hostilities
with its former colonies, the United States of America.
·
In 1789; electors unanimously chose George Washington to
be the first president of the United States.
In 1801, John Marshall was sworn in as chief justice of the
United States.
·
·
In 1861, delegates from six southern states met in
Montgomery, Ala., to form the Confederate States of America.
In 1932, New York Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt opened the
Winter Olympic Games at Lake Placid.
In 1941 , the United Service Organizations (USO) came into
existence.
In 1974.. newspaper heiress ·Patricia Hearst was kidnapped
in Berkeley, Calif., by the Symbionese Liberation Army.
In 1976, more than 22,000 people died when a severe eanhquake struck Guatemala and Honduras.
In 1983, singer Karen Carpenter died in Downey, Calif., at
age 32.
In 1997; a civil jury in Santa Monica, Calif., found O.J.
Simpson liable for the deaths of his ex-wife. Nicole Brown
Simpson, and her friend Ronald Goldll)an.
Ten years ago: A standoff between the United States and
China escalated into a trade war, with each country ordering
stiff tariffs against the other..
Five years ago: Austrian President Thomas Klestil swore in
a coalition government that included Joerg Haider's far-right
Freedom Pany, a development which triggered European
Union sanctions. Former House Speaker Cad Alben died in
McAlester, Okla., at age 91. Singer Doris Kenner-Jackson of
the Shirelles died in Goldsboro, N.C., at age 58. .
· One year ago: The Massachusetts high coun declared that
gays were entitled to nothing less · than marriage and that
Vermont-style civil unions would not suffice. A Senate rattled
by a ri€in attack began returning to regular business with no
illnesses reponed.
.
Today's Birthdays: Civil rights pioneer Rosa Parks is 92.
Feminist author Betty Friedan is ,84. Actor William Phipps is
83. Actor Conrad Bain is 82. Actor Gary Conway is 69. Movie
director George- A. Romero is 65. Rock musician John Steel
(The Animals) is 64. Singer Florence LaRue (The 5th
Dimension) is 61. Comedian David . Brenner is 60. Former
Vice President Dan Quayle is 58. Rock singer Alice Cooper is
57 Country singer Clint Black is 43. Country musician Dave
Buchanan (Yankee Grey) is 39. Actress Gabrielle Anwar. is
35. Actor Michael Goorjian is 34. Rock musician Rick Burch
(Jimmy Eat World) is 30. Singer Natalie lmbruglia is 30.
Rapper Cam' ron is 29. Rock singer Gavin DeGraw is 28.
Thought for Today: "La vida es duda, y Ia fe sin Ia duda "es
solo muene." (Life is doubt, and faith without doubt is nothing but death.) - Miguel de Unamuno, Spanish philosopher
(1864-1936).

The Daily Sentinel
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Ohio Valley

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home , everyone joined in
singing "God Be With You
Til We Meet Again."
1 was also curious, watching the first two rows at the
inaugural prayer service, to
see how the people in the
first two rows would say the
Lord's Prayer.
It has never been resblvcd
whether it is correct to say,
"Forgive us . our TRESSPASS-uz" (with the stress on
the first two syllables, or to
say "Forgive us our TRESSpa- suz" (w ith the stress on
the first syllable alone).
As for the next phrase.
should it be "as we forgive
those who TRESS-puz
against us" or "as we forgive
those \l'ho TRESS -PASS
against us"? If you are saying
the Lord's Prayer alone. of
course it doesn't matter
where you put the accent.
But if you are standing or sitting next . to someone who
doesn't say it the way you do,
it can throw both panies off.
·. As I heard it, everybody in
the group I was monitoring
at the Washingto11 prayer
service said "Forgive ~s our
TRESS-PASS-uz as we for-

The cameras panned over
the first two rows in the congregation. There was the.
president of the United
:States. GeorgeW. Bushand Mrs. Bush; e.vangelist
George
Billy Graham; vice president
Plagenz
Dick Cheney and his wife ·
Lymi ; tbe former president
- sometimes referred to as
Bush "41" - and Barbara
Bush.
'
Washington
National
It's a g09d thing they had- Cathedral on the morning
n't put up a microphOne in after the presidential inaugufront of each member bf this ration, you wou ld have
distinguished group because heard me - for I grew up in
nobody appeared to be a singing household.
singing - although a few
My father sang in
were moving their lips Lutheran Church choirs ror
slightly.
72 years- from the time he
It \)/asn't as if the hymn was 12 until shonly before
wasn't familiar for it was the he died at age .86.
rou sing "God of Our : When we would ~isit our
Fathers."
relatives. we would gather
"Maybe," you say, "they around the piano at the end
didn't know the words." But of the evening and si ng
no, everybody had leaflets songs. My father would usuwith the words printed. on ally lead. Uncle Ben would
them . They did a little better harmonize in his thrilling
(but not much) on the next . whiskey tenor voice (what
number, "America," which choir .directors would call
we all ought to know.
descant) and those who
If I had·been in the congre- couldn't ·carry a tune would
galion at this inaugural pretend they were singing
prayer service at the bass. Before we set out for

2005

.

Patrick D. Wood
give those who TRESSPASS against us." According
to Charles Marrington Elster,
one of the foremost authorities on pronunciation, everybody in my elite group was
wrong . (l couldn't see Billy
Graham.)
In Elster's book. "The Big
Be&lt;;~stly
Book
of
M i s pro n u n cia t i o·n s·" .
(Houghton .
Mifflin
Company, 1999) he says it is
"a cardinal sin" to say "forgive us our TRESS-PASS-uz
as we forgive those who
TRESS-PASS against us."
fs it imponant enough to
argue about?
Elster quotes one of his
·correspondents who says,
"Because these words are
repeated millions of times
each day throughout our
country, l think the correct
pronunciation. is extremely
important." So does Elster.
So do r.
Of course it probably isn't
something that should influence how you vote . .
(George Plagenz is an
ordained minister and veteran newsman . based in
'
Columbus. Ohio.)
'

.'
i

.I

The Daily Sentinel"•. Page ..As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2005

Obituaries

I

Display reveals details of Lake Erie Civil War prison
TOLEDO (AP) - For
nearly two decades, David
·Bush has sifted through the
ground on a Lake Erie
island · where more than
1·0,000 Confederate soldiers
were imprisoned during the
Civil War.
The Heidelberg College
professor is ready to show off
nearly 500 of the anifacts he
and his students have tound
on Johnson's Island .
War
POWs:
. "Civil
Excavating ·
Johnson's
Island Pri so n" will open
Sunday at the Rutherford B.
Hayes Presidential Center
·in Fremont.
':It's unpanilleled by ~ny
other Civil War site," Bush
said while setting up the
exhibit. "It's such a wonderful

POMEROY -· Patrick D. Wood, 78, Pomeroy, passed
away on Feb .. I, 2005, at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
He was born in Pomeroy on Aug. 26, 19Z6, son of the late
Don L. Wood and Corrina Cornell Nicholson Wood. He
served as president of the Band Boosters for Meigs Local
from 1976- 1979; was a member since 1977 and Past Master
·
of the Pomeroy Masonic Lodge until 1992 when he transferred to the -Harri sonville Lodge 411 where he served as
' treasurer; a member of Harrisonville Eastern Siar 255 ; a
member of Grand Chapter, Ruyal Arch Masons Chapter 80;
Grand Council, Royal and Select Masons of Ohio, Boswon.h
Council46; Ohio Valley Commandery, 024 Knights Templar;
Thai Coo Zyo Lodge 457, Order of the Arrow and Silver
Beaver; and active in ,Scouting from 1967 to present time,-a
Past Noble Grand of Mineral Lodge 242 IOOF; Past
Presiden.t , 12th Masonic District ; and a member · of
International Society of Poetry.
.
AP Photo/The Toledo Blade, Jeremy Wad......,h
He was employed as an accountant at Jone s Buick in Athens
David
Bush.
left,
professor
of
anthropology
at
Heidelberg
College, arid student Andy VanCamp,
and Blaettnar's Buick in Pomeroy. He was a member of the
set up a display of Civil War art1facts Wednesday, at the Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential
Trinity Church in Pomeroy, where he served as elder and
Center in Fremont. The artifacts were excavated from a prison for Confederate officers at
trustee from 1983· 1986 and as deacon until 1987.
resource."
Johnson Island in Lake Erie .
In addition to his parents. he was preceded in death by his
The items include a pair of
wife, Audrey E. Wood in 200, and a sister, Allegra Will.
yellow chamber pots that
"I see it as almost a thera- from shards. of glass and bits encourage donations toward
He is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Lori Ann were used indoors at night peutic thing for them to do,'' of metal to medicine vials and preserving it from possible
and Glenn C. Cluttr of Wiliamsport, Pa.; a· son a nd daugh- when prisoners of war he said. "When you look at. beer bottles.
· development.
ter-in-law, Danny L. and Linda C. Will of Pomeroy; grand- weren 't allowed outside to the kind of stuff -they were
Tom Cu lbertson, acting
'There's so much history
children, Tara Gaab and Tess Clutter both of Williamsport, use the latrine.
able to carve, it 's amazing."
executive director of the there," he said. "There's so
Pa. , Randall Carpenter, Jr. , Middleport , and Deni se
The island about 50 miles Hayes Center, said many peo- much more to be learned."
Dozens of pieces of jewelGibeaut, Pomeroy
. ry and other crafts the prison- east of Toledo had the only ple are unaware of the pri son.
Services will be held at 2 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 5, at Trinity ers made from hard rubber Ohio prison of about 30 for
"It's the first chance many
On the Net:
Church in Pomeroy. Officiating will be Rev. Jonathan Noble also will be in the exhibit, Civil War PbW s. Confederate people will have to see
Hayes Presidential Center:
and burial will follow in Beech Grove Cemetery. Friends may including a black ring inlaid · officers were held ·there fmm things that were unearthed, http://www.rbhayes.org/
call on Friday, from 6 to 9 p.m. on February 4, at Fisher with a white shell in the 1862 to 1865.
and learn what the pri sol)ers
http://w w w.johnsonsisFuneral Home in Pomeroy.
shape of a diamond.
Bush and his students have did . while they were there." land.com
'
.
Making trinkets gave th'e excavated latrines dug behind he said.
Harrisonville Eastern Star 255 and Harrisonville Masonic
Lodge 411 will conduct services at 8:30p.m. Friends may also prisoners a way to cope with camp's blockhouses and
8 ush hopes the exhibit,
Information from: The
http://www.tolecall one hour prior to services at the church.
boredom and lon elines~. found "hundreds of thou- which runs through July 4, Blade,
sands" of artifacts ,ranging will stir interest in the site and doblade.com/
Memorial contributions may be made to Trinity Church, P. Bush said.
0. Box 429, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 or to Boy Scout Troop 249,
c/o Paul Reed , Farmers Bank, 221 West Second Street,
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769. '
On-.line condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.
RIO
GRANDE
son or gro ups of older people Esther Allen Greer Museum Aging District 7 Inc. for pubExecutive Director Pamela and should refl ect the pho- and Gallery on the campus of lications, Web site; and/or
K. Matura of the Area tographer' s interpretation of the University of Rio Grande exhibits. By entering this conAgency on Aging District 7 the theme: "Aging Well , in Rio Grande, Ohio.
test, each contestant agrees to
Contestants will not be assign all copyright. tradeMIDDLEPORT - Ilene D. Hall , 77, Middlepon. passed Inc . (AAA7) anpounces the Living Well ."
a.way on Feb. 2, 2005, at St. Joseph' s Hospital in second annual Area Agency
lntergenerational photos are notified of award placement mark, and all other intellectuParkersburg, W.Va.
on Aging .District 7 · Inc. allowed and encouraged. prior to the art ·show .. The al property rights in ·their
She was born on Feb. I 0, 1927. in Sharon, W.Va., daugh- Older
Americans Photos must be submitted the photo exhibit :also will be photo to the Area Agency on
ter of the late Walter B. and Dollie Glover Fetty. She was Photography Contest.
Area Agency on Aging displayed at the 2005 AAA 7 Aging District 7 Inc. The
This contest offers local District 7 Inc .. 160 Dorsey Senior EXPO held at the model release form must be
employed by Holzer Medical Center and retired in 1991.
She was a volunteer at the former Veterans ·Memorial amateur photographerS , at Drive, P.O. Box 500, URG, Scioto County Fairgrounds in' signed by the subject(s) for
Hospital in Pomeroy, and was·a member of the Middlepon least 55 years of age, . the Rio Grande, Ohio 45674, no Lucasville in September. the photo to be considered.
First Baptist Church.
opponunity' to enhance the later than April 15, 2005.
For a rules and entry forms
·
. Display of any photo is soleIn addition to her parents, she was preceded by sisters, image of ol'der persons to
Photo entries will be . dis- ly at the discretion of the ·for the 2005 Older Americans
Phyllis Cadle and Mary Fetty, and a brother, Harold Fetty.
'all
generations
through played with award ribbons at Area . Agency on Aging Photography Contest, please
the AAA 7 Annual An Show District 7 InC. ·
· ·
call the Area Agency on
She is survived by three daughters and twin sons: Sherry photographs.
Photo
entries
should scheduled for May 23-27 and . Photos submitted rnay be Aging District 7 Inc. at (800)
Weaver. New Haven, W.Va.; Connie (Jay) Johnson, Belpre;
Trudy (Matt) Lyons·. Pomeroy ; Rick Hall (Rhonda include at least one older per- May 31-June 2, 2005, at the . used by the Area Agency on 582-7277.
.
'
Schroeder) , Michigan ; Randy Hall (Sherry McCown) ,
Michigan ; seven grandchi ldren . and six great grandchilindustries, with ·the project the U.S. government.
dren; sisters, Gloria (John) Case ·of Columbus. Billie
results being shared among . Davenport said commisBuffington of Atlanta, Ga.; brothers, Wallace Fetty of
all participants, and industry sioners will attend a meetGallipolis; Walter (Rose) Fetty of Baltimore, Md. ; and sevfrom Page A1
as a whole. · ·
ing in Columbus later this
eral nieces and nephews .
The Daily &amp;ntirud ..
In the operational phase, month to learn additional Subscribe today • 992·21#·
Services will be held at 7 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 5, 2005, at
Fisher Funeral Home in Middlepon. Officiating will be Rev. and operation of a technically the project will generate rev- details about the project
www.mydaily$enlinfl.¢all«
Mark Morrow. Friends .may call from 3 p.m. on Saturday until cutting-edge power plant. It enue streams from the sales and the site specifications,
time of service. Private graveside services will be held at the will take 10 years to Com- of electrici·ty, hydrogen and and said an official presenplete and will be led by an carbon dioxide. The revenue tation will not be made proconvenience of the family.
· On-line condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneral- industrial consonium repre- will be shared among the pro- moting the Meigs site until
senting the coal and power ject panicipants, ·including later in the year.
homes.com.

Older Americans photography contest slated

Ilene D. Hall

•

.PROUD to BEA PArt

Project ·

William Mutt' Wagner

OF YOUR LIFE. :

6

. VVho 's lying now?

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
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.

Friday, February 4,

Friday, February 4,

Post-inaugural issues

The Dai~y Sentinel
·

PageA4

The .Democrats · are still
arguing among themselves
about . the best · course for ·
their pany to take in the
aftermath of its bonecrunching defeat on Nov, 2.
William
Here and there a voice is
Rusher
raised counseling moderation. But the most popular
suggestion is that · the
Democrats should forget
about moderation and go
. after tht&gt; Republicans (and "lied."
The response of Bush's
President Bush in particular)
with no holds barred. In fact, defenders is equally simple.
many Democrats are already We know Saddam had at one.
slugging away as suggested, . time possessed chemical
and it's high time somebody weapons of mass destruction
blew the whistle on them. So because he used them on his
let me be the first: The own people. And the belief
Democrats who charge that that he was clpse to conPresident Bush "lied us into structing nuclear weapons
war" in Iraq know better. It was universal among the
is they, and not the president, world's intelligence services:
who are lying through their not only the CIA, but the
te~th ,
intelligence agencies of
Their basic accusation at Britajn, France, Germ[)ny
least has the. merit of si m- and Russia. Bush· was misplicity. In advance of the taken in accepting this belief
attack, Bush justified it on as fact, but he would have
the ground that Saddam been inexcusably reckless
Hussei n had weapons of not to act in the light of what
mass destruction, and that he sincerely believed. .
As Democratic criticism
his possessing them made it
of
, the Iraq war began to
in America's vital interest to
see his regime ovenhrown . deepen in the latter half of
But when the attack was 200:1. some of . the more
launched and we quickly brazen critics began to wonoverran Iraq, no weapons of der aloud "whether" - note
mass destruction could be that "whether" -. Bush had
found . Th.erefore, Bush misled the American people.
.

'

The phrasing of .the question . including the statement
was properly, cautious: He about weapons . of mass
might have misled them (as, destruction. When the interin fact, he did) inadvertently, viewer protested that all of
but the notion of deliberate the leading Democrats were
deception was left out there saying the same thing,
as an implicit possibility.
Mitchell calmly replied,
By 2004, these same crit- "They believed what Bush
ics were getting bolder. They told them ."
now omitted the "whether."
That statement is such a
and simply stated, as a bald filthy lie that it has a certain.
fact, that Bush had misled . criminal majesty. The asseTthe American people. This tion is that Bush duped the
was technically true, if the Democrats. But Bush was
misleading was unintention, . only the . governor of Texas
al, but the possibility of when Sens. Tom Daschle,
intentionality was again left Carl Levin, John Kerry and
open.
others wrote to President
Now, however, the gloves Clinton on Oct. 9, 1998, sayare off. Bush "lied us into ing. "(W)e urge you .. . to
war" is the charge, and the respond effectively to the
· act 'is 'clearly . to be under- threat posed by Iraq's refusal
stood as an intentional mis- to end its weapons of mass
representation of the facts as destruction programs. " And
he knew them.·
Clinton himself had said, on
One recent exP.onent of Feb. 17 of that same year,
this view
is
former that "We want to seriously
Democratic Sen. (and major- diminish the .threat posed by
ity leader) George Mitchell. Iraq's weapons of mass
Mitchell has an air of urbane destruction program."
sanctimony, but he was .
Mitchell apparently thinks
widely known in the Senate the American people are just
as a vicious panisan. In a TV too dumb to understand a
interview recently, ~e pol- . rebuttal that complicated.
tshed that reputation by We can only hope he is
declaring that the only true wrong.
(William Rusher is a
statement Bush made in the
run-up to the Iraq invasion Distill guished Fellow of the
was that Saddam was a mur-. Claremom Institute for .the
derous tyrant; everythmg Study of Statesmanship and
else he sa1d was fal se, Political Philosophy.)

•
"

LOGAN- William ','Mutt" Wagner, 82. of Logan died Feb .
2, 2004 at his residence .
·
He was born Sept. 9, 1922 in Pomeroy, son of 'the late
William and Minnie Arnold Wagner. He was a veteran of the
U.S . Army and a .retired heavy equipment operator.
·
He is survived by &lt;) daughter Brenda (Roger) Arms of
Logan; two grandchildren, Bill and Lisa Arms of Lo~an ; two
great grandchildren, Nikki and Chandler Arms of Logan;
and two nieces, Beth (Shane) Skeen and Kim (Michael)
Reddick, Lancaster. He was preceded in death by 2 brothers
Charles and George Wagner.
Memorial Services will be held at a later date. No calling
hours will be observed. Arrangements are by the Cardaras
Funeral Home, 183 E. Second St., Logan. ·
The family suggests contributions be. made to Fair Hope
'Hospice., II II E. Main St., Lancaster, Ohio 43130.
To send an expression·of sympathy. or sign the online guest
· registry, please visit www.cardaras .com.

Soldier

to take a vacation with her husband when be returns home.
·As for Gibson, what he
from Page A1
said 'he misses most about
home are his wife and family.
"I also mi ss seeing the
see that they're recognizing
soldiers for their work. It gras,s and going outside
. raises their morale and helps knowing I can go wherever I
want, " he said.
them get through it."
For security reasons, he
Mrs. Gibson lives · in
Syracuse and works at the · &gt;aid he could not answer ·
Meigs County Emergency questions about what is going
Management Office. She hopes on in Iraq, but wanted to

Local ariefs
Present play
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Eastern High School Junior
Play, "Who Killed Elvis?" will be presented at 7 p.m. on Feb.
i 9. Tickets will be sold at the door for $6. More information
is available by calling Heather Wolfe at 985 -3329.

Deaths
Hollis Mayo
GALLIPOLIS - Hollis Randolph Mayo, · 93 ,
. Gallipoli s, died Wedne~day, Feb . 2, 2005 •. in the Scenic
Hill Nursing Center.
·
Services will be held at 11 a.m. on Saturday, Feb. 5,
2005, in the Pine Hill Cemetery at Evergreen with Rev.
Calvin Minnis officiating. Burial will follow at Pine
Hills Cemetery.
Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. on Friday at Cremeens
Funeral Chapel in Gallipolis.

Meetings set

•

thank all 'the people back
home for their support,
thoughts and prayers.
Gibson said he hopes to be
home , the first week of
March. He has beendeployed
since December 2003. He is
24 years old and originally
from Apple Grove, W.Va. He
is the son of Gary and
Carolyn McCoy.
"I can't wait. for him to get
home,'' Mrs. Gibson said.

POMEROY - A giant yard sale advenised in The Daily
Sentinel to be held at the St. Paul Lutheran Church fellowship
hall basement Saturday is not at the St. Paul Lutheran·Church
in Pomeroy, it is reported.

,...-

l:

We're betting slie
has_ a taste for ·

.b"'J

'lJtamoritfs.
,•

...

••

o/afentine's f}]a9
Cani9? .

CARPENTER - The Columbia Township Trustees will
meet at 7:30. p.m. the first Monday of every month at the fire
station unless otherwise anounced.
·

Not' here

(PG13)
1:00, 3:30, 7:00 &amp; 9:30

•

$

.-1i

.....l '
)!}··

.
\ ..

#.

~~

SAVES

ON EVERY ITEM IN OUR STOCK•
NOW THROUGH VALENTINE'S DAY
151 S«ond Annue

Gollipol&amp;. Ohio

FINE jEWELRY
liliCI:i-~

446-2842

11:31).5 Moil·Thuro; 9:30.S:30 F~ ; 11:30-0:30 lot

..

�•

FAITH •VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

no

Church Briefs
Special
services set
BIDWELL- Special services will . be held at 6:30
p.m. Saturday at the Clark
Chapel Freewill Baptist
·Church. There will be different speakers at each
Saturday serv ice.

·Ash Wednesday
breakfast
POMEROY -The Trinity
Congregational Church will
have an A~h Wednesday
breakfast and quiet hour at
7:45 a.m. Wednesday in the
Bethany building , Second
Street entrance .

(

f

The

Friday, February 4, 2oos

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Promised Heirs coming to local church

A Hunger For More

The teeth-grating whine of
drills cutting through steel
plating has been reverberating in my head all week long.
painfully reminding me that
there is
insulation or other
type of sound proofing in my
office wall.
Ah, well, the price of
progress often includes the
need for aspirin. With · the
sounds ' of construction and
remodeling ,ringing through
my office space for the time
being , I'm also reminded of
how carefully one must be in
the building of one's life .
Hmm. Only one life to live
with eternity to follow.
Maybe we 'd better get things
right in the here and now.
Begin by asking yourse lf.
"Who is doing the building in
my life·?•· Perhaps that seems
like a odd question. but it's an
extremely important one. It 's
vital to understand who ulti mately has the right to be the
architect of your destiny. Is it
not God the Creator, Savior,
Master and Lord'? Would it
not be worthwhile and wise to
let the One Who created you
with Hi ~ grand themes in
mind to lead you into experi encing His plans for your life?
After all. ·' Un less the
. LORD builds the house. its
builders labor 111 vain'' (Psalm
127: Ia NIV). Who wants to
live a life that ultimately is
summed up as vain and
empty of meaning·? Besides
that, while it is a great idea to

PageA6

MIDDLEPORT
The
Promised Heirs, a southern
rhythm (or lack thereof) of gospe l quartet wi ll present a
hammers whacking al¥ay a concert m 7 p.m. Sunday, Feb.
mere yard or two away from 13, ·at the First Southern
Baptist Church, Pomeroy Pike.
me all .this week.
The quartet, represented by
you
will
have
Nonetheless,
Pastor
not lived in vain if you build Capitol Artists of Colorado
Thorn .
Mollohan your life on the foundation of Springs, Colo. and based in
Jesus Christ with the figura- Greenville, is considered one of
tive bricks and mortar of love, the tri-state's leading gospel
holiness. faith, service. hope quartets. .While the' quartet is
and courage. On the contrary, sure to be entertaining, ·they
plan ahead, remember that ''As you come to Him, the state their rrtain goal is to pre"We can make .our plans, but living Stone - rejected by sent the niessage of Jesus
the LORD determines our men but chosen by God and Christ and the plan of salvation.
"We want this ministry to
steps" (Proverbs 16:9 NLT). precious to Him - · you also,
The Promised Heirs Quartet
Is it not better to go willingly · like living stones, are being impact people. To see the
than to go kicking and drag- built into .a spiritual house to lost come to Christ, the bro- comes from Pitsburg. Ohio. and enjoys participating · in
be .a holy priesthood, offering ken hear.ted mended, the He has been involved in the choir and worship team.
ging one's feet?
Secondly, ask yourself the spiritual sacrifices acceptable wbunded restored and the gospe l music nearly all of his A resident of Greenville, he is·
question, "Wi th what material to God through Jesus Christ. Chri stian uplifted," said one· life. He has. been a praise and_ a Vietnam veteran · havi-ng
wors hip leader and has sung been . awarded the Co!flbat
am I building my life?" I For in Scripture it says, 'See. of the members.
has
been
Matt
Felts.
tenor,
in
various churches through- Infantry Badge and the
I
lay
a
stone
in
Zion,
a
chosen
don't mean, of course, things
like straw. wood or even brick and precious cornerstone, and performing southern gospel ·out the area with his wife and Bronze Star Medal.
Noah Wilson of Franklin.
(w hatever the Three Little the one who trusts in Him music for many years. &lt;is a solo arti st. But his true
Originally
from
St.
Louis,
love
has
always
been
southOhio
sings bass for the' group.
will never be put to shame :"
Pigs may think).
Mo .. he played college base- ern gospe l quartet music. He is a .studio musician and
The things I mean are a lit- ( I Peter 2:4-6).
If I were to attempt to sum ball for th~ University of Beri·y is tl)e managing editor can be heard singi ng in the
tie bit more abstract. Are you ·
'building. a fi fe wi th the highly up the gist of what God cari Missouri and semi-pro ball in of a weekly newspaper in his background on inany recording projects. He js a past volunstable materials so highly do with yo ur life, I might bor- the Frontier League. He has a home county.
Gaylen Blosser is the bari- unteer fireman, and a Vietnam
valued by the world? Are you row the theme' fro m "Bob the solo recording project which
tone and business manager. veteran, having served as ·a
in ·an obsessed pursuit for Builder," one of our chil- was rece ntl y released.
Ryan
Berry
sings
lead
for
He has served as a deacon in medic, and has received ihe • ·
material success? Are you dren's favorite television
aiming for the topsy-turvy · shows. "God the Builder: Can The Promi sed Hei rs and hi s church for many years Bronze Star Medal.
goal of the acclamation of He build it? Yes, He canr"
others'? Are the evasive prizes
(Thorn Mollolian has minof position an&lt;;l influence your istered in southem Ohio the
hearts desires and ·the reasons past 9-J/2 years and is the
that you do all that you do'?
pastor
of
Pathway
With all the ways you Community Church. He and
" It puts our church in real bad light. ... What
is so harmful about having cookies .and punch
·.COULD spend your life lying his wife are the parents of
after
a film thljt brings people the knowledge
before you like an endless jour children. He may be
that the church is bringing ministry to lesbian
menu , you' ll likely get ri reached by e-mail at pasand
gay people?"
·
throbbing in your head ak in forth om @path way gal/ipoto the one that I have from the lis.com).
ROYAL OAK, Mich. (AP)
The
http://www.archdioceseofdetroit.org .
Archdiocese of Detroit says it canceled a
churcb's plan to honor a . nun on parish
premises, saying her gay outreach is incompatible with Roman Catholic teaching.
Sister Jeannine Gramick, 62, was to have
been honored last Sunday at St. Mary Parish
CHICAGO (AP) - Michael J. Easley, a
in
Royal
Oak
following
a
screeni
ng
of
a
docReservations can be made· Lent with a Shrove Tuesday
Virginia pastor and a na~ionallecturer on marwith Dianne Hawley, 992- (Fat Tuesday) pancake sup- umentary film, entitled "hi Good Conscience: ri age and ·fa mil y life, was named president of
Sister Jeannine Gramick's Journey of Faith ." Moody Bible Institute on Tuesday.
.
2722 or Peggy Harris at 992- per, 6 to 7:30 p.m.
The
reception
instead
was
held
after
the
He
succeeds
Joseph
M.
Stowell,
who
7569. The public is invited to
screening at the Royal O!ik Main Art Theatre as served in the. position for 18 years. Stowell
join in the service of preparapart of Reel Pride Film Festival, supported by will step down at the end of this month.
tion for the Lenten season.
the gay rights group the Triangle Foundation.
The institute was founded by evangelist
In 1999, Vatican officials ban·ed Gramick Dwight Lyman Moody in 1886 to train
from pastoral outr.each to gays and lesbians Chri stians to spread their faith, and has grown
after she had been working in the field for to an organization with a $9 1 million annual
about
20 years. The main complaint from budget, 'e ncompassing an undergraduate and
POMEROY -St. . Paul
Rome
was
that she had fail ed in her ministry to graduate school , publishing houses and a
Church
Ash
SHADE - A gospel con- Lutheran
make clear that the churchcondemns gay sex . broadcast .network that includes 33 radio stacert featuring Kevin Spencer Wednesday service, 7 p.m.,
Once the Detroit Archdiocese learned of the
in 14 states.
will be held at 7 p.m. Sunday with ashes marked on the reception, it determined that "one of its parish tions
Easley,
who has more than 20 years' experiat
the
Shade
United forehead.
facilities is not the appropriate setting for a ence in ministry, was most recently the senior
Methodist Church.
gathering not in accord with the mission and pastor at Immanuel Bible Church in
me ssage of the church," archdiocesan Springfield, 'Va. He has served as a national
. spokesman Ned McGrath said in a statement. speaker for FamilyLife Marriage Conferences,
MIDDLEPORT -Eddie
Gramick said this was the first time a dio- which uses a Bible-based program to help couBaer will be speaking at the cese has banned her from a parish.
ples strengthen their marriages, and earned his
I0:30 a.m. service at the Ash
"There's a real sadness and embarrassment doctorate from Dallas Theological Seminary.
POMEROY - St. Paul Strdet Church, 398 Ash St., for my church when leaders of my church
Lutheran Church will begin M idd!eport.
exercise thi s kind of authority," Gramick said.
http://www.moody.edu/

Gospel concert
announced

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checr(uln ~:"SJ... Romam t 2:6-s
• God bu given mo

Young's Carpenter Seruice
26 years In local business .
Roofing &amp; Building Work

Pomeroy, OH ·
740-992-6215
"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear
before God and man."

Acts 24: 16
(740 1992·645 1

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tooi J ,.-;tb which to'buikl lti$
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.pan 1hc cflrth to ~en e Him

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Sunday Schlllll - Y·JOam . Prcachmg
Service
!0: 30am, Evening ScrVIl'c
7:00pm , \'l.'cdnesday 13iMe .S tudy 7 .()0 pm,
lmcrim Prcuchcr - Floyd Ross
Cheshire Baplisl Chunh
Pu:.tor : Ste ve Lilllc. Sunday Sehoul. 9.30
nm. Muming Worsh1 p: lO: JO am , Sunday
" venin g. 6: ~ 0 pm Wcd nc~ da y 6.30pm
Hope Ba !)li~l Chun:h (Suuthern)
57,0 Granl St.. Middlcpon. Sunday schoof
- 9:W a m.. Worship - II a. ni and 6 p.m ,
Wednesday Scrvu.•e - 7 p.n1 .
Rulland firs l Baptist Chun: h
Sunday SLhool - · lJ·30 am .. Worship
10:45 a.m.

Pomtroy First Baptist
Pn ~ tnr Jo 111 B ro~ k e rl , Ea~t Main St ,
Sunday S4.'hnu l · 9:30 a.m., Worshtp 10 .~0 J.m
1-'irsl Southern Baptb;t

41 1!72 Pomeroy P1ke. Pas1or: E. Lounar
O' Bryan t. Sunday School - lJ::\0 a m .
Worship . 8:15a .m.. 9 4~ am &amp; 7:00p.m..
Wednesday Serv i~·es- 7:00pm. ·
lo'int Baptist Chu~h
Mllrk \1mmw, 6th !Uld Palmer St ..
Middleport, Sunda y Schoo l - 9 15 a.m .•
Worship . 10 15 a. m.. 7:00 p.m ..
Wc dne~a y Servkc - i 00 p.m.

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Athens. Pomeroy or Parkcrshurg

1-740-667-3156
''Still small e11ough to care"

Racine lo'lrst Baptlsl
Rlt'k Rule: Sunday School - 9:30
.t.nl .. Wur~hip - 10:40 a.m., 7 :00 p.m.,
Wednesda y Ser.'lt·.:s - 7 00 p.m.

Third
Racine, OH

7 40-949-221 0
"A Home Bank for
Home People"

Hills Self Storage
Racine, OH

P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

7 40-949-2217
Sizes available 5x1 0 to 10 x 20

If ye abide i11 Me; a11d My
words abide in you, ye sha{l
ask wllal ye will, alld it shall
be dime rmto you.
499 Richland Ave_n ue, Athens

740-594-6333

Jo1J11 15:7

1-800-451 ·9806

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see·God.
Matthew 5:8

Community Services

MEIGS FAMILY EVECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

Heighl•
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 . ~•
(740) 992-3279
~
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433
507 Mulberry

Overbrook

Rehabilitation Ctr. .
"A Celebration of Life"
333 Page Street
Middleoort OH

(740) 992·6472
Fax 17401 992·7406

Armolphe rt'

ham - 8 rrn

Homemade Dess!'rtS Made Daily

Silver Run Bapli&lt;it
Pastor: Juhn Sv.anson, Sunday Sehuol l Oa.m . Worsh1p - lla.m., 7·00 p.m.
,Wcdi\C ~d:~ y Scrv ices- 7:00 p.m.
l\1t. Union Baptist
l'astot · Uavid Wi seman, Sunday SehooiY:4 5 a .m .. Eve nin g - 6 :30 p.m ..
Wc dncsd:.~ y .Serv1ces. 6 JOp m

llethlehem Baptist Church
Grea t Bend. RoLJte 124, Radnc. OH ,
Pasto r · Da111d Mcn:a, Su nday Schoo l 9:30a.m.. Sunday Worship - 10 30 a.m..
Wednesday Bill ie Study -.6. 00 p.m.
Old Bethel lo'l'l.'t' Will 8.11.ptist Church
2B00 l St. Rt. 7. Middle port. Sunday
Sl.'h nol - 10 a.m.. E\•Cuin g_ - 7:00 p m .. .
ThuNday Scr\'iccs- 7'()()
llillside B~plisl Church
S1. Rl. 143 JU St off Rt. 7, Pastor Rn.
hmes ~ . Acree. Sr , Sunday 1 J nifH~d
Serv il.:c, Worship · 1 0 . ~0 a.ni .. 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Serv1ce~ -7 p m

Pomeroy Churth of Ch rist
2 12 W. Main St. • .\llwi stcr : Anthon y
Morris- Sunday School - 9:30 a.rn .
Wurship- 10:30 a.m , 6 p.m.. Wedne sday
Scm ecs · 1. p.m.

Blessed are the pure·
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8
MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N. Second St.

Pomeroy Westside Church of Christ
33226 Cl!ildren's Home Rd .. Sunday
Sc hool - II a.m., W1l~h1p - lOa !n.. 6 p.m.
Wcdn csUay Serv ice~ - 7 p m
Middleport C hurch of Christ
5th omd Mo1m . Pa~tnr : AI Hartsl'ln. You th
Mini ster: Jo.~ h Ulm , Sunday School - 9 ]()
a.m.. Worship- X· IS. lll 30 a.m .. 7 p.m . .
Wednc~d ay Scr\'kcs - 7 p.m.
Ktmo C hurch of Christ
Wor• hi p - l) :JU a.m , Sunday Schnnl 10 30 a.m.. Paswr-Jdfrt=y Wallace, ht and
.~nl Sundu y

7 40-992·6128
source lor trophies,
Ia ues t-shirts and more

KEBLER
BUSINESS SERVICES
An Income Tax &amp;
Fillallcial Services Firm
· 61 8 E. Main Street • Pomeroy

(740) 992-7270

Leviticus 19; II

Gr11tt EpiSt.:opal Churth
326 E. Mnin St.. Pomeroy, Sunday School

and

.
' '
Holy Eu ~ ha r i st 11·00 am .

Holiness
Community C huKh ,
Pastor: Sic'VC Tomek. M:un Street.
Kutland. Sunday Worship--- 10:00 a.m.,
Sunday Servil:e- 7 p 111.
D11nville Holiness Chun-h
Stutc Route 325. Langsvll e. Pas1or:
Viclor Roush, Sunday school - 9.30 am ..
Sunday 'wnrship - 10:30 El .m &amp; 7 p.m..
Wcdncsdlly prayer service · 7 p m.

Calvury PiiKrim Cha~l
Rnml. l,ustor: Charles
McKcn~ic , Sum.luy School 9.30 a.m .
Wo r~h1p · II 11 .111 . 7:00 p.m.. Wednesday
Serv ice - 7:00 p.m.
l hrr i ~ nnvill e

Rose or Sharon Holiness C hurch
Creek Rd., Rut land. Pastor : Rev.
Dewey King, Sunday ~l:huul - 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday worsh1p -7 p.m .. Wednesday
prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Wor ship - 10: 30 ~ . Ill .. 6:30 p.m ,
Wcdne sdtty Serv1ces · 6:10pm.
Zion Church of Christ
Pomeroy. Harri sonville Rd. tR t.14 3),
Pastor. Roger ' Watson. Sunday SchOOl 9· .~0 a .m.. Worsh ip · 10:30 a .m., 7:00
p.m.. Wednesday Serv ices · 7 p.m.

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Chun:~
75 Pc!lrl St , Middleport. Pastor: R1ck
Bourne . Sunday School - 10 a.m · worship
- 10:45 p.m . Su nday Eve. HIO pin ..
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Tuppers Plain Church ol Christ
lnslrumcntal. Worship Se rvice · 9 a.m..
Communion - 10 a.m., Su nday Sc hoo l ·
10:15 a. m., Youth - ~ : .30 pm Sundny, Bible

Run Communlly ChuKh
Re.v Larry Lem ley; Sunday School ·
- 9:30 n.m.. Worship . 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m ..
TIIUrsda ~ Bible Study and Youth - 7 p.m

a.m.

~ludy

Victory baptist Independ ent
N. 2nd St. Midd lcpon, PastOr: Jamc.s
E Keesee. Wouh1p .- IO~ . m .. 7 p rn .,
Wed ~esd:~ y Services - 7 p.m.

Forest Run Baptist
P.1stnr &gt;\ru1 s Hun. Sunday Sr hool · 10
a.m.. Worshtp · II a.m.
Mt. Mori.11.h Baptist
l·ourth &amp; Mam St. Middleport. Pu swr :
Rev. Gil herl Cra1g. Jr. , Sunday. Sl·h0o,&gt;l Q 30 lUll . , Wor ~ h1p - l0:14'i am.
Antiquity Raptm.
Sunda y Sc hdol - 9:30 a.m., Wmli hip 10:45 a m., Sunday Ew mng · 6:00 p.m..
Pllstor: Don Wal ker
Rutland Free Will 811ptist
Salem St.. Pasto r: Jatmc Fnrtner. Sunday
School - 10 a m., Evening - 7 p.m ,
Wednesday Services · 7 p.rn

Pablor Re ~ . Herbert G r~t c . Sunday S~:.luHJl
- 9:3(] a.m.. Wor~ hip - II 11.111 .. fl p m..
Wednc!.day Serv1ce • . 7 p.m._
Rullahd Chur&lt;'h 11f the Nazartne
. Su nday Sl:h ool - 9:30 a.m .. Wu r~h 1p 10 :]0 a.m., 6 ]0 p.m .. WedneMJuy
Se 1 v i ce~ . 7 p.m .

Tuppt'r!il Plains St. Paul
Paslor Jane Be!lnie, Sunday Sc hoo l - 9
a.m.. Wor ~h i p - lfl a.m.. Tue ~day Se r.·ices
- 7.30 pm.
Cenlral Cluster
Asbury CSyracuse ), Pu~lur : Bob Robinson,
S und a~· Schoo l ~ 9:45 a.m.. Worshi p - II
a.in .• Wednesday Ser ~1 cc s. 7:30 pm.

Other Churches
Amazing Gran• Community Chun·h
1-'astur· Wayne nu nll1p. S lut ~ Rt flX I,
Tuppers Plam s Worship 10:00 am,
Thursd'Uy H1hl c Smd r 7: 1Xf p.m

[nterprise
Pu s10r : Arl rmd Kin}!. Sun day Sc hool
10 30 a m., Wo r ~~ ~p - 9:3 0 a.m .. Bi ble
Stud~ Wed. 7:30
Flatwoods
Paslor: Keith Rader. Sunday Sc hon\ - 10
a:m , Worship - II a.m.

Oasi~

( Non-denom lnil tl(lnal

Forest Run
Pa stor : Boh Robinson. Sunday Schoo l - 10
:.1 m ., Wm~hip - 9 11 .111 .

Miner~ville

Pas1or Bob Robin so n. Sunday School - 9
a.m. , Worsh1p - ]I) :a.m.
Pearl Ch~tpel
Sunday Sehoul · 9 u 111 • \\onrsh1p - l U a m.

, Ash Stl1!et Church
Ash St ., Mid dl eport - Pa ~t or : Greg Sca rs
Sunda y School - 9:30 a m.. Murn ing
Worship - 10· 30 a.m &amp; 6 pm, Wcdncsl).ay
Service - 6:30 p.m., Youth Servir.:e- 6 30
p.m.
Agape Life Center
" Fuli·GQspel Chu rch". Pasto rs John &amp;
Pauy Wade, 603 Second Ave. Mason , 77 .' 5017. Sernce tm1e: Sunday 10·3 tl am .
Wednesday i pm

Pomemy
Pastor: Bnan Dunham, Worship - 9:30
a.m , Sunday School- 10:35 a.m.
Rock Sprinp
Pas10r: Keith R3der, Sunda y School - 9 :1 ~
a .m., Wo rship - II! a m., Youth
Fellowship, Sunday - 6 p.m.
Rutland
Paslor: Rid Bourne , Su nday School ·
9: 30a.m.. Worship - IO:JOa.in .. Thursday
Services · 7 p.m
Salem Ct n1er
Pastor:' William K Marshall, Sunday
Sc hoo l - 10:15 a m . Worshtp · 9:15a.m..
B1ble Sl u.d y. Monday 7 00 pm
Snowville
Sunday School - 10 a.m .. Worship- 9,il.m.

Abundant G r11ee R.F. I.
S Third St , Middl epo11 , Pa stnr Tcresn
Davi s. Sunday se m c e, 10 a .m .
Wednesday servi ce. 7 p.m.
~23

Lau~l Clift' Free Methodist Church·
Pastor· Glenn R o~e . Sunday Sc h~l 9: 30 a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6
p . m . ,Wedne .~d!l)' Scr.' ICe - 7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Ruthmd Churth of Christ
Sundr•y Schoo l .. 9:30 am ., Wnrship and
Communion ~ IO: JO a.m., Bob J. Werry.
Minister
Bradford Church of Christ
Corner of SL Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd ...
Mimster: Dtlujo! Shamblm, Youth M1111Ster:
Bill Amberger. Sunday School - 9:30 am.
W1•rshi p - 8 00 a.m, 10.3 0 am . 7 00
p.m.. Wcllne sd:.~y Scr.'kes · 7·00 p.m
llirkory Hills Church of C hrist
E vu n~di st Mike Monre , Sumby School &lt;J u.m .. Worship - 10 u.m .. 6 :~0~ p . m.
Wcdne ~du y Services· 7 p.m
Rt'eds"ille Church ufChri~l
Pao;tnr· Pluhp Sturm. Sunday School · 9:30
a.m..' WUrship Scrv il:e:. IOJO a.m.. Bible
SluJy. Wo.:1 111 ~S! Iay. fr 10 p.m
Dexter C hurch of Chri!iit
Sunday schfHII 9:30 a.m., Sunday wors hi p
- 10 30 a.m.

Church of Christ
ln tc r s ~l'tl(lfl 7 and 124 W. Evange li ~t·
Dcnni" Sargent. Sunda y U1bk Study - ·
9 .~0 rut\ . Worship: 10 JO a.m. and 6:30
p.m , W(-d nesJay Bible Stud)' - 7 p.m

Christian Union
Church of Christ in

Christilm Union
H:1rtfoui, W Va .. Pa stor Dav 1tl Gn:er.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m. Worship ·
10:30 ~ . m .. 7. 00 p m . Wednesda y
Services - 7:00p.m.

Church of God
Mt. Muriah Church of God
M1 lc Hill Rd .. Rlit!!ne. Pustor· hmc s·
S:tHcrficld. Sunday School - 9:45 a .m..
l: venm g · 6 p.m .. Wedne~da} Scrv1ces · 7
p.m.

The C hutt:h or IHus
Christ of Lauer-Da) Saints
51 . Rt.. 160. 446-6247 o r 446-7486.
Sunday School 10:20-11 a.m .•. Relid
Son e1y/ Pn C" sthood II :05- I 2: 00 noon ,
Sacramen1 Se rvice 9- 10 :15 a .m ..
Homemaki ng meelmg, lsi Thurs -7 p m.

Lutheran

.
.
St. John Lulheran Churth
Pi ne Grove.. Worship · 9·00 a.m , Sunday
School
10:00 a.m. Paswr: James P.
Brady

Our S11vio ur l.utheran Church
Walnul and Henry Sts .. Raven swood,
W.Va . .' Pastor . Duo,rid Rus sell . Sunday
School - 10:00 a.m.• Worship- II a.m.
Sl. P11ul Lutheran Churth
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St. Punu:ru y.
Sunday s~· h ool - 9:45 am , Worship - II
a.m Pastor: James P. Brady
Sat HID pm Contemporary Service·

United Methodist
Graham United Methodist
Wor•h1p • 1:UO a.m ! 1st &amp; 2nd Suil) , .
1:.~0 p.m. Ord &amp; 4,th Sun),Wednestla)'
Service· 7:30pm

Mt. Olh·e United Mdhodist
OtT 124 behind Wilkesvill e, Paswr: Re v.
Ralph Spires. Sunday School - 9:30am ..
Wnrshlp - 10.30 am .. 7 p.m. , Thursd~tyn
Services- 7 p.m.
Meias Cooperatin Parish
Nlltthcasl Clu ster. l\ lfred, Pas10r: lane
Beattie , Sunday Sch ool · 9.30 am ..
Worsh ip · II ti.Tn , EdO p.m.
Ches ler
Pasw r: Jane Bcatll\!, \\lnrShip - 9 a 111 .
Sunday Sc hno l - 10 a.m. . Thursdny
. Ser~ke~ - .7 p.m.

Jopp11
Rutland Ch un:h of God
'
.
Pustor: Ron Hca th, Sunday Wor&lt;ihlp · 10
a.m., 6 p m., Wednesday Servi n:s - 7
p.m.

Pa~ tor : Anh K&lt;~nd n lph . Wors hip - 9:.\ 0
a.m. Sunday School - 10:30 u.m.

S~·racusf First Church of God

Sunday Sch nol · 9:] 1) ~ . 111 .. Wor ~hip I OJ Oa.m.
Reedsville
Worship - 9:30 01 .m.. Sunday School 10:30 a.m., F1rst Su nday ot Month · 7:00
p.m. service

'
Apple nnd Second
Sts. Pastor. 'Rev. Da\'ld
Russell. Sunday ~ c h oo l and Worship- 10
a. m Exe mng SCT\'Jces - 6 3U p m .•
Wednesday Serv1ces : 6:30p.m

School - 9:30 a.m. Worship - 9:30 a.m
and 7 p.m.. Wedne sday - 7 p.m.• Fnday fellowship service 7 p m

~thany

Pa stm : John Gil more . Sundily School · 10
a .m., Worship - 9 a.m.. Wednesday
Services - I 0 a.m.

Harrisonville Community Church
Pastor. Theron Durham, Sunday - 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m.• Wednesday- 7 p .m .

..

992·3785

·--··
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Oavls-Qulck~l

Agency Inc • If ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner .
Full tine of
INSURANCE
words abide in you, ye shall
Insurance
SERVICES
Products+ · ask what ye will, and it shall
Financial
214 E. Main
be.done unto you.
Services
AGENCIES Inc.
992·5130
John 15:7
Pomer~y

Bill Quickel

Carmel-Sutton
,Carmd &amp; Ba~ h a n Rds. Radne, Oh iu,
Pastor: Johh G1lmore, Su nday School 9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:45 a.m. , Bible
Study Wed . 7:oq p.m. ,

Evening - 7:30p.m. . Wednesday Service 7:30pm.
-

Morning Star
Pasmr. John Gilmore , Sunday Schoo l - -11
a.m.. Worsh1p - Ill a.m.
'

.'
f'airvle\ol Hi bit' l:hurch
le lar1 , W\'a H. t I. pd,tor· Undll May,
Su nday Sd1oo l 4 .' 0 J'.m .. Wur\ lllp · 7:00
p m . Wcdnc'&gt;tlfi ) A1hle SIUd) - N~ l p.m. '
fal1h Fellowship Crusade ror Chri!il
Pastor· H. el' 1-rankhn B1 clo. o.: f.l ~ . Scr\!Ce:
Fnda}. 7 p m.

Bible ~ hurch •
W. d , P&lt;~~ l or. Key
Blackwolxi , Sund a~ Sclmo l - i) J O f:l .m ..
CIIIVIll1'

Pomero y P1k e. Co
Wvr~h 1 p

ltJ 10

Wedne~ da ) Scn· K~ -

S•iH•n;ville

Y&lt; o

&lt;J.n.1..

p 111 ,

i '\0 p.rn

Communit~·

Aposllllic
Church
Pas~w . Wa)ll t' R. Jc..-.di .' S u n d;~ y SeT\ let: 6:00 pm. Wc dn c~du y · 6 :{ ~ 1 p m.
Rrjoiring L1re Chul"(h
500 N. 1nd A1 e . Midtll q 'll•rt. Pa,IOt

P.. t,tor: E ment u ~
.\11ke Foreman
La•.ue!lCe Furem an. W01 sh1p- 10 I~~ ~~~
Wednl':.Juy Se n lt'l' '- 7 p.m.
Clifton T~htrnucll' Chul"(h
Cliltnn, W.Va , Sunday Sa: hml · 10 am ..
Worship . 7 p.m . Wcdnc:, tl:lj Scn it l' - 7
p.m.
s~w

Life \'ictury C..-nh:r
Creek Roud, Ga l11 poh OH
Pastor. Bill Slaten, Sunda y Sen ice~ · 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. Wedne~y - 7 p.m. &amp;
Yuuth 7 p.m.
~773 Ger&gt;rgc ~

. ' Full Gospel Chu rc h
of th t' Living Snior
R't.338. Ant1 quity, Pasl0r: Je~se Murri~ .
Scm ces: Saturday 2 (X:) p.m.
Salem Cn mmuni1 y Church
Back of Wes t C Qlumb1a, W.Va.om Lie vinM
Roud, Pastor: Charle s Roush (3 04) 675·
1288, Sund~ y School 9:30 am, Sunda}
e\·enmg serv h.:~ 7:CMl .pm. B1bly S tud~
Wednesda y ..c n ·ice 7:00 pm
Hobson Chri5tilm Fello" ship Cbun:h
HerM: hcl Whilo.:. Sunday School 10 am , Sunday' Church se rvice - 6:30pm
·Wednesday 7 pm
Pa~or·

Restoration l.'hri stia n 1-'rllmnihip
9365 Hooper Road, Athens. Pastor.
Lonn1e Coats. Sund.1y Wor~ hi p lt H.II) am.
Wednesday: 7 pm
LangS\·llle Chrls11an Church
Gospel. Pastor· Robert Mus,er.
Sunda~ School 9:30 aril.._.. Worship 10 30
ftm · 7 00 pm.. Wedne:.da~ Sen 'I Ce 1·~
Fu ll

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pm
Faith Valley Taber~de Church
Bllllcy Run Road. Pa st{)r : Rev. Emmett
Rawson, Sunday Evening 7 p.m ..
Thursday.Service - 7 p.m.

EaSt Lttart
Pastor: Bi ll Marshall Sunday School 9a.m.. Worship - 10 a.m., lsi Sunday
ever.y momh evening service 7:.00 p.m.:
Wednc¥fay - 7 p m.

Syracuse Mlulon
14 11 Bri dge man S1., Syral:use. Sunda y
School - 10 a.m. Eveni'llg
6 p m ..
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Racine
Pastor. Pete Shafler. Sunday School - I0
a.m., Wo1 ship :· II a m., Wednesdtiy 1
p.m.

Hazel Community Chu rch
Off Rl. 124, Paslor· Edsel Harl. Sunday
Schoo l - 9 : ~0 a.m , WorShip· 10 30 a. m..
7:30p.m.

Coolville United Me.bodls1 Parish
Paswr: Helen Klif!e. Coo lville Chu rc h.
Mam &amp; Fifth St.. Sunday School - 10
!l.m., Worship - 9 a.m.. Tuesda y Service s7p m.

Uyesville Gommunity Chul"(h
Sunda y Schoo l - 9:30 a .m .. Wor~ hip 1030a.m . 7 pm.

Morse Chapel Churth
Sunday schoo l · 10 a.m.. Worship - ·11
a.m., Wednesday Servu.; e - 7 p.m

Be thel Churth
Tov.nship Rd., 46SC. Sunday Sl:hool · 9
a .m, Worsh1p - 10 a.m .. Wednesday
Services - 10 a.m.

hith Gospel Church
Long Bollnm. Sundny Schoo l · 9 :~ 0 a m.,
Wur sh1 p - 10.4~ a.m., 7·30 p.m .
Wedncsduy 7:]0 p.m.

Hcx:klngport C hurch
Grand Street. Sunday School - 9:30am .
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. Pastor Phillip Bell

MI. Olive Communit} Ch urch '
Lawrence Bu~h •. Sunday School ·
9:] 0 a.m , Evening - 6 30 p.m .. Wedn~day
Sen·ict: ~ i p.m.

Torch Chunh
Co. Rd 6.\. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m :
Worship - 10.30 a.m .

Pa~to r.

Nazarene

' FuU Gospel Liahthouse
33045 Hiland R{)ad, Pomeroy. Pasmr: Roy
Huntt:r, Sunday School - 10 a.m.. E,·ening
7:.' 0 p m.. Tuesday &amp; Thursday - 7:30
p.m.

Middleport Church of the Nazarene
Pa"or: Aller! Midcap. Su nday School 9:30a.m..Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m .
~edne sday Se_rvlees : 7 p m .• P~tor:
Allen ,Midcap

South Bethel Commu nity Church
S1lver Ridge- l&gt;astor Linda Damewood.
Sunday School - 9 u.m., ¥/orship Semcc
10 a.m. 2nd and 4th Sunday

·Rtedsville Fel.lowshlp
Churc h of the Nazlll'ene. Pastor: Jamie
Penit. Sunday School - 9: 30 a.m.. Worship
- 10.45 a.m, 7 p m.. Wedncsd a)' Services
-7 p.m .

Pentecostal
Pentecostal i\ssembl y
S1 Rl 124. Rac mc, Pa s101.. Willi&lt;tm
Hobru:k. Sunday School - . 10 :t.m..
Evenmg . 7 p m .. Wednestla y Scr.·JeC' s · 1
p.m.

Presbyterian
Syracuse First Unlled Presbyterian
Robert Crow, Wnrsh1p · 11 a.m.

Pa~ tor

Harrisonville Presb~· lerian Chur&lt;'h
· Pastor: Roben Cro'&gt;~ . Worship · 9 a.m
Middleport Pres~yterian
Pas10r. Rober Crow.. Worshi p · 10 a.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Snenth-Day Adnnlls!
M_ulberry H1 s. Rd .. Pumcruy, Pa!itnr
Benncn .Luck.irsh , Suturday Ser vic:cs·
Sa~h:uh School · :2 p.m.. Won.hip · 3 p. m.

United Brethren
MI. Hennon United Brethren
in Chrisl Chur&lt;'h
Te~ as Communi\} ~ 641 1 W1 c~h:.~ m Rd ,
Pastor Pr ter Mt~l1m da l e. Sunday· Schoo! 9:.' 0 a .m.. Wor~ hip · 1 0 : ~0 a.m, 7:00 ·
p..;,., We.tnesday Sen !O.:l' s - 7:00 p.m
't'olllh group m ectm~ 2nd &amp; ..\.th Sunda y~
7 ~m

Eden United Brt'thrrn in Christ
Stat e Route 124. Rced H·illt , Sunday
School . 11 a.m.. Sunday WnNh1p . 10·00
a.m &amp; HlO p m, Wednesdll} Services 7 lMl p rn . Wt'dnc,day You th ServiCe ·
7:00p.m.

C11rh~ ton

Interdenominational Chu~h
Kmg shury Road . 'Pastor: Rl&gt;ht· rt \';~n~·e .
Sund ay Schon! - 9 30 a m .. Worsh ip
S!i! rl·ice 10:30 a.m.. EvenmJ! Sen 1ce 6
p.m

Syruuse Church of1ht Nar.~rt n e
Pastor Mike Adkins. Sunday Schoo l · 9 ..' 0
a.m.. Worship - 10 :30 a.m .. 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m

Frftdom Gospel Mi~n
Bal d KrKlb, on Cu. Rd. J 1. Pa~to r. Rc\ .
Roger W11lford. Sund a ~ School - 9· ·' 0 a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Chun:h of the N•zanme
Jan La vend~r. Sunday School ·
9 .30 a.m.. Worship - 10,30 a.m. and 6
p.m.. Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Pa ~mr :

White's Chapel Wesleyan
Cool\l ll c Road . Pastor: Rev Phillip
Ridenour. Sunday School - 9·30 a.ni ..

Chesler Church of the Nazarene

ROCKSPRINGS
REHABILIITION CENTER

me11, thar they may see your

The care yoM dtsent, clast to home

good works a11d glorify ymtr

36759 Rocksprings Rd .
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-6606

7 p.m

Middleport Community Church

575 Pe11 rl St., Middleport . Pustor· Sam
Anderson ! Sunday School 10 a.i11 .

Long Hottum

.1tJ!ler ,1unerll-.,me

your light so shine bel'on'l
that they may see
works and glorify
lfatlter in heaven."
Malthew 5:

W\Jr,h lp · 1!)' 10 ot m Wt"d nl',llil} .'i.:rv 1ce

Faith Full Gospel Chun:h

Loj,g Bonom. Pastor: Steve Reed, Sunda~

Wednesday 7 pm

Bradbury Church uf C hrist
Mini ster: Tom Run)nn, 39558 Bradbury
Ro ~d. Middleport, Sunday Sl:hool - 9: 30
am
Worship . I0 30 a.m.

fcll nw~h 1 p )

Community ofCtirist
l'ortl and-Rari nc Rd .. Pastor: J1 m Profti tt .
Sunday School - 9. 30 am .. Wor ~ hip ·
10 ~ tl a.m.. Wed nesday Sen 1c e~ - 7:00
p.m.
Bethel Wonhip (: enlu
Ch ester S ~ houl. P:a ~ t u 1. Rob B.l1bcr.
Ass1S1ant Pastor: Karen bav l ~ . Sun day
Worship: 10 am . Evc mng Wursl11 p: 6 pm.
Youth group fl pm. WcJn c ~ ay : Pn ~· c r m
Prayer , and Bib le Slud y · 1 pm

Heath (MiddleJX!rt)
Pasw r Briun Dunham. Sund11y SchOCII 9:30a.m . Worshi p - II :00 a.m

H~ sell

P;~ s tur :

ChriQiian 1-' elluw!ihip

Meet1n g 111 the old Arnenc&amp; n Lcg10 n Ha ll
South Founh Avenue. M1ddl eport
Pastor Ch ris .Ste\\.an 10 ()(I am Sunday
Olhcr mce1i1 1g~ in h o me ~

Lc;~dmg

Pine Grove Bible Holiness Chun:h
112 mile off Rt. 32 5, Pastor: Re\o'. O'Dell
Man ley, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m ..
Wl)l ship - 10.30 ~t . m ., 7:30 pro. ,
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Btarwallow Ridge ChurTh of Chri!it
Pastor.Bru,·c Tct:ry. Su nda)' Schon! -9:30

Middlepon, OH

Loc;o~l

Episcopal .

3 10~ 7

52~

Hume Cuoked Meal!,· &amp; I.HJily Specillll'

Open 7 day s a week
740-992-7713

T.,-inil)' Church
Second &amp; Lyn n. Pomeroy. Pastor: Re v.
Jonathan Noble, Wor~hip 10:25 a.m..
Sunday School9: 15 a.m.

Pa ~tor :

t-lours

:Mi{[ie's :J(estaurant

"Do not steal. Db not lie. Do. not dece ive one another."

..

l

Congregational

Church of Christ

Pa~ to r:

Fail.h Doptl st Ch urch
lbilroad St .. Mason. Sunday School - 10
a .m.. Wnr sh tp - II a.m .. 6 p.m.
Wcdnc~a y Serv ices - 7 p m.

Michael L. Crites
Director or Family &amp;

. Wa rm I 11 endf_'

209

Pa ~t or .

H~~rtford

Coolville, Ohio

Locmcd' less than 30 minutes fmm

29670 Bashan Rd.

with gifts \lot ha'•c been gwtn.
One e ~t col lent Y.'J)' 10
strVe God ''through your

.

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only dao! Ood wan\ u• 10

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

Hemlock Grove Christian Church
Mmb ter: Larry Brown. Wor.&gt;hip - 9 :30
a.m. Sunduy Sehoul - 10': 30 a.m.. Bible
Study - 7 p.m.

Cacyf nl~r Baptist Chun:h

'

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Hurl Cadholic Church
16 1 Mulberry Avc .." Pomeroy, 992-5898.

Emma.nutl Apos101ic Tabernacle Inc.
Loop Rd off New Luna Rd Rulland,
Scm ces: Sun 10: 00 a. m &amp; ] ;JO p m .
Thu rs . 7.00 p.m., Pastor Marty R. Hutton

Baptist

Baer to speak

f

Catholic

Church of God of Propbety
O.J. White Rd . off St . Rl . 160, Pastor: PJ.
Chapman, Sunday School - 10 a.m.,
.Worship - 11 a. m.. Wednesda y Sen•1ces - 7
p.m

Sa~ red

Rev W~:dt e r E. Heinz, S&lt;~t. Con.
4:-l.'i-.'i: l.'ip .m.. M as~· 5:30 p.m.. Sun.
Cl' ll· -X:45-lJ 15 a.m... Sui! M.IH · 9 30
tun . Dmly M u~s- ~ .~0 am.

Liberty Assembly of God
P.O. Box 467. Duddmg Lane. Mason.
W.Va.. Pastor: Neil Tennant , Sund;1y
Servu.:e s- 10:00 a.m. und 7 p.m.

Ash Wednesday
service
announced

Shrove Tuesday
supper set

Second Baptlsl Church
Rawr1swood , WV, Sullday'School 10 am, Murnirig worshi p II am E.,..ening - 7 pm.
. Wcdn e~d~ y 7 p ni .

Rh·erValley
A[1t l~ tnlic Wor~h1 p C~nter, 87.~ S. Jnl
Ave., Middleport. Kevin Konkle . Pa~ lM.
Su nday. IO:l O a.m. Wcdm..~ d lly, 7.1)1 1
p.lt).: You1h Fri. 7:30 p.m.

Assembly of God

Moody Bible Institute
names new president

.

•''

Churth of Jf!lus ChrislApostollc
VanZandt' and Ward Rd.. Pastor· James
Miller., Slmday Sch(l()J . 10.30 a.m ,
Evening - 7:JOp.m .

Detroit archdiocese bans
reception for nun who
ministers to gays

.completing God's Work

•

Apostolf~

Religion News in Brief

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community

.••
...•

Fellowship

Sentinel•

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Let your lighr so shine before

Father ill heaven. "
Matrhe11 · 5: 16

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
or God so /m•ed the world
PHARMACY
he gave his only
We FlU Doctors'
(b&lt;?gcilte•n so11 ...
·Prescriptions
John 3:/6
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Pomeroy

Meigs County's Oldest Aori st

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Pomeroy, Oh
•ut ut und ~o t.1 1 thoughrc t11ltfl1partel ee111•

740-992-2644

74D-992-6298

MYarace is
for thee: for m11
strenath is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

Jnjj
White Funeral Home
Blessed are the pure "So I strive always to keep ~~
6noulfer'•
Office Service &amp; SUpply
ANDERSON
Since 1858
;tin &amp; .&amp; aletp
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
in heart; for they my conscience clear before
FUNERAL HOME
9 Fifth Street
t74l.ay.. stmt •PO a.x~7o
shall see God.
God and man."
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Ml'ddleport, OH
'II
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�Pagei\8

COMMUNITY

The Daily Sentinel

Meigs (Ashley) - Lara Perrin. Mackenzi
Hunter and Chase Curtis.
Meigs (Kennedy), - Skylar Jenkins.
Brennan Bell and Kaitlyn Gilkey.

Meigs (Hawkins) - Just·in Cue, Bradley
Thompson and Levi.Ashburn.
·
Meigs (Howard) - · Dylan Haynes, Shawn
Molden and Zack Grimm.
Meigs (Fetty) -· Brandy Parsons, Sonja
Young and Adriahna Patterson.
Meigs (Ramsburg) -. Jerrika Keese, Dylan
Darst and Shawn Yeager.
,
Mid Valley Christian (Asbeck)- Brandon
Johnson and Wesley Reitmire.
Eastern (Hill) - Zachery Connolly, Holly
Johnson and Dillon Swatzel.
Eastern (Jones) Makya Trussell ,
Brittney Leach and Alex Schuler.
Eastern (White ) - Ladonya Arnold,
Kourtney Lawrenc!! and M.egan Douglas.
Southern (Rose) - . Jansen Wolf, Justin
Deerp and Sylvia Richards . .
Southern (Harris) - Courtney Katona,
Kamryn Diddle and Katelynn Ginther.
Southern (Guinther) - Kari Arnold, Dru
Jenkins·and Elizabeth Wolf.

POMEROY - Louie the
Lightning Bug of the American
Electric Power Co. will buzz
into Meigs.County twice next
week ' to bring his electrical
safety education progmm into
elementary school classrooms.
·. At 9 a.m.. on M&lt;;mday,
Louie will visit the children
at the MidValley Christian
School in Middleport, and on .
Thursday . will go to the
Meigs Intermediate School
near Rutland for programs at
9 anCI lO .a.m. andl:45 p.m.
Described by Jeff Rennie,
AEP communications
. consul.
tant, as an mnovattve,
mte·
ractive educational touring
theater," the show is geared to
teaching c.hildren "about how
to be safe around electricity.
AEP Ohio is sponsoring the
program in eight area elemenWY schools at no charge.
'·'\ "Lights On for· Louie" is a
fast-paced, action-packed
live learning program that
involves kids in the subject
matter, presents lessons in a
way that kids enjoy and helps
children remember' what they
learned about electrical safe·

.. -.

ty long after the show is over. eta! messages in a unique way.
In the production, Sparky the Using creative audience par- ·
Wonder Bug foils the villain, ticipation techniques, NTC
the Dragonfly, as Sparky performs age-appropriate live
strives to become a super hero theater and supplies each stu:
sidekick to Louie the Lightning dent and teacher with folloWup cunicuium.
·.
.
Bug, AEP's safety spokesbug.
· Tim Seyfang, AEP Ohio's
Sparky :decides the best
way to derail ·the Dragonfly's Athens District manager, said
evil. plan is to lear~ as much bringing Lights On for Louie
as he can about electricity to. local schools underscores
safety. Relying on audience the company's commitment
participation, Sparky and the to electrical safety and the
students learn how to "play it education of young people.·
"Working together, AEP
safe around electricity" and
their newfound knowledge Ohio and NTC wi II make it
possible for every local stusaves the day.
Using colorful . sets and dent to see this program and
characters in humorous situa- learn about electrical safety
tions, Lights On for 'Louie is in a fun , exciting way that
designed to teach young peoc will help students remember
pie 'the· concepts and impor- how to play it safe around
electricity," he said.
tance of electrical safety. .
·The program will be offered
The producer of the educational program is The National to every local elementary
Theater for Children (NTC), a school in the AEP Ohio serMinnesota-l;lased
national vice territory over the next
touring company. NTC devel- two years. The curriculum
ops and tours educational the- materials that accompany the '
ater programs for schools on . program are used in the class~
behalf of corporations, non- room to expand on and reinprofits and municipalities that force electricity and electrical ·
wish to teach important ·soci- safety concepts.

Louie the
Lightning Bug
(left) and
Sparky the
.Wonder Bug will
be coming to
two Meigs
County schools
next week to
·share their key
safety message
during
theatrical
presentations.

Jansen WQife, Southern

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Friday, February 4
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
There is a slight chance for
a bit of snow. Temperatures
will rise to 38 with today's
low of 25 occurring around
6:00am. Skies will be sunny
to mostly cloudy with 5 MPH
winds from the north turning
· from the northwest as the
morning progresses.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.) .
Temperatures will rise from
40 early afiernoon to the high
for the day of 42 at 3:00pm
as they drop back down to 34
later this afternoon. .Skies , Temperatures will linger at
will be sunny with 5 MPH · 33. Skies will be clear with 5
winds from the northwest MPH winds from the north
turning from the .north as the turning from the south as the
afternoon progresses:
evening progresses.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
Temperatures will hov,er at
31. Skies will be clear with 5
MPH winds from the south
turning from the southwest as
the overnight progresses.

.Local Stocks
ACI- 38.50
AE)J-- 35.62
AKzo- 42
Ailhland Inc. - 61.50
AT&amp;·T -19.75
BLI- 12.59
Bob Ev~no - 24.06
BorgWarner -

Saturday, February i
· Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)

. .· ·.
•fJH/1
•

•

Temperatures will climb
from 3.1 · to 46 by late. this
morning. Skies will be sunny
with calm . turning from the
west as the morning progresses.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will rise from
47 early this afternoon to 49
by 2:00pm then drop down to
40 late afternoon. Skies will
be sunny with calm turnjng
from the southeast as the
afternoon progresse.s.

Out day'a tranaactlona,

provld~

ed by Smith Partner• at Adveot
Inc. ol Galllpollo. ·

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618 East Main St

Pomeroy,OH
740-992-6674

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..,,...,.1

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February 25, 2005

.'

Ad Deadline 2-17~05
PUHLIC NOTICE

The Meigs County Family and Children First Council, serving as Local Advisory Board for the Ohio
Children's Trust Fund, is announcing the availibility of funds for State Fiscal Year 2006, commenc·
ing July I, 2005 and ending June 30, 2006. There will he $14,250 available for services with 20%
· local match required ( 10% cash, no federal funds may he used). The Council has identified the
.need/priority for Sf'Y 2006 a~ life skills training for at risk children and families. Services must he
either primary or seconday prevention in nature. The program 'selected for funding may he•rcne~ed
for SFY 2007 if state funds are available and the provider has met aU grant requirements. This decision will be entirely at the discretion of the. Meigs County Family &amp; Children First Council in conjunction with the Ohio Children's Trust Fund.
Required application forms are available at the Meigs County Family &amp; Children First Council
office at 129 North Second Avenue, Middleport, Ohio. Completed applications are due in the Council
office no later than 12:00 noon on February 25, 2005·. A public bearing will be conducted on
Wednesday, february 9 at .1:30 p.m. in the Directo's ConJerence Room, 3rd Floor at the M.eigs
. County Department of Job and Family Service, 175 Race Street, Middleport, Ohio.
For further information please contact: Sharon Bushong. FCF Coordinator
129 North Second Ave., Middleport, Ohio 45760 (740) 992-5266.

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Bl.

Tbe Daily Sen!inel

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Fljd.ay, February 4, 2005

Prep Schedule
Today's Games
Girls Basketball
ovc vs.,South Gallia (at URG)
Boys Basketball
Logan at Gallia Academy
Southern at Eastern
Meigs at Wellston
OVC vs. Soutli Gallia (at URG)
River Valley at So'tlth Point
Saturday's Games
Boys Basketball
Gallia Academy at Wheelersburg
Athens at River Valley
· Girls Basketball
Southern at Eastern \
Monday's Games
Girls Basketball
Gallia Academy at Marietta
Sectional Tournament
Meigs vs. River Valley (at URG)
Southern vs. St. Joe (at Athens)
·, Tuesday's Games ·
Girls Basketball
·.
Ohio Valley Christian at. Calvary
. Boys Basketball
Eastern at Wellston
Grace Chr. at Ohio Valley Chr.
Southern at Meigs
Miller at South Gallia

Marshall falls to
Northern Illinois
DJ;:KALB, Ill. (AP) Mike ·McKinney scored 22
points artd Cory Sims added
17 to lead Northern Illinois
to a 77-66 .victory over
Marshall in a Mid-American
conference game Thursday
,
night.
The Huskies ·took a 32-30
lead into the half and manage!! to hold off Thundering
Herd before a I ,615 'ho.me
crowd . at the . Convocation
Center to snatch the win.
The lead changed eight
limes in the game and was
tied four times.
Mark Patton led Marshall
(3-16, O, I 0 Mid-American)
in scoring with 17 poV1ts,
and Tre Whitted added I 0 for
the ThtlnderlngHerd.
In addition to McKinney
and Sims, one other player,
Todd Peterson., scored in
double digits for Northern
Illinois (8-1 I, 4-7 MAC);
Peterson scored II points.

BALTIMORE. (AP) - He
signed autographs, ·praised .
manager Lee Mazzilli and
took great care in avoiding ·
use of the word "I" when discussing his gmils for this
·.
year.
Still smarting · from the
backlash of his final days
with the Chicago Cubs,
Sammy Sosa was determined
to make a good first impression with the Baltimore
Orioles on Wednesday. He
really didn't have to try so
hard, because the Orioles
clearly were delighted to
have him on their side.
The trade ·that. sent Sosa
from the Cubs became official after commissioner Bud
Selig approved the deal and
the slugger passed his physi·
cai.Chicqgo received second
baseman ·Jerry . Hairston Jr.
and two minor leaguers, second baseman Mike Fontenot
.and right-handed pitcher
Dave. Crouthers.

0

can 1-800-HRBLOCK or

Prep hoops schedlonal pairings, P,age B2
James to be on The Slmpsons; Page 84 ··

Sosa finds
Baltimore to be
his kind of town

53.2&amp;

Champion - 4.04
C~armtnc Shopo - 8.33
. City Hotdtne - 33.02
Col- 42.10
DG -22.29
DuPont - 48.10
·Federal Moeut - .35
Gannett - 79.86
General Electric - 38.07
GKNLY- 4.80
Harley Davldoon - 61.03
JPM- 37.39
Kmart -100
Kroger - 17.18
Ltd. - 23 .75 .
NSC- 34.26
Oak Hill Financial --' 37.30
ova- 34.50
BBT- 39.76 .
Peopteo - 27.41
Popolco - 54.33
Premier- 10.78
Rockwell - 58.83
Rocky Boob - 27.82
RD Shell - 59.51
sac- 24.&amp;2
Soaro- 51.50
USB- 30.41
Wai·Mart - 13.42
Wendy'o - 31.42
Worthln.ton ..:... 20.31
Dally ltock report•' are tho 4
p.m. clooln• quotu ol th.• prtvl·

•

2005

INSIDE

AEP touring theater on safety to visit schools

MEIGS SOIL AND WATER
ANNOUNCES CONTEST WINNERS
. POMEROY - "Ce lebr.ate Conservation"
was the theme of the 2005 Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation first grade coloring contest held in December and directed by Jenny
Ridenour, education coordinator.
·
The three overall county co-champions in
the contest were Jansen Wolf of Southern,
Makya Trussell of Eastern, and Lara Perrin of
Meigs were the three overall county co-champions. Each one .received $10.
A total of $160 was awarded in the color.ing contest. First place winners in each class
received $5, second place received $3, and
third place .$2. Each student in the class
received a "Habitat Network" booklet and a
pencil. Winners in each class, listed first
through third respectively were: .

friday, February 4,

·'

·can:·
~alltpolts

Jlailp 'Ql:ribune • 446-2342

a ~otnt t')Ieasant l\egiSter • 615-1333
.oHtl¥'"'

The Daily Sentinel• 992-2156

.;J'
•

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Attf!ntion varsity
hoops coaches.
Boys and girls varsity basketball coaches are reminded
to. send us your final regular
slats-. upon the completio.n of
the season for consideration
for the Associated Press alldistrict team as well as . the
OVP Super I 0 teams.
You may fax· them td 4463008 or drop them off at our
Gallipolis office on Third
Avenue.
You may also e-mail them to
sports@mydailysentinel.com
or call in any nominees, with
their stats. to ·992-5287, ext.
33.
.
Deadline for this information is 5 p.m., Feb. 23. To. get
someone on either of these ·
teams, this information ·is

required.
f-.--- - - -----

--~----'--~...:...._-· . College Track

and Field

Rio's Willey earns distinguished honor
BY MAliK WtWAMS
Special to the Sentinel

Distinguished
Service Award for
District 16 by the
Ohio Association of
RIO· GRANDE - University. o(
Track and · Cross
Rio Grande Head Track and Cross
Country Coaches
Country coach Bob Willey has spent
·Association through
30 years in college coaching and
the
Ohio
High
teaching, he has servep the sport of
A
t
h
l
e
t
ic
Cross Country and Track and Field ·
Association.
religiously during that time in many
Willey, has been
roles.
· .
Willey
the meet manager
All of that service has paid off for
for the Rio Grande
the longtime Rio mentor. Willey
Cross
Country
lnvitat~onal held
was
presented
with ·· · the
annually pn the first Saturd.ay in

Heat
. to
hot for
Cavs
.

Octbber and the Southeast Di strict
Cross Country4loeet as well as a
number of other junior high and
hi gh school meets.
He . also hosts the Southeastern
Ohio Pole Vault Clinic and has conducted variou s other clinics and
r,anning· camps over the years.
· In addition , Willey has served as
the president . of the National
Association of lntercollecoiate
Athletics Cross Countrv co:ches
Association and has been a board
member of the United States Track
Coaches Association.

Willey 's active involvement in·
those organizations carry to him to
many eli nics as a guest. lecturer as
well as to serve. on committees
working to improve the sports of
cross country. and track and field .
., Willey \ love for the sport has
tueled h1s passion to· serve in this
manner.

"It 's like I' ve always .told
coaches and !tell my students
coach1ng track and field
you've got to love it; and Jove

EMMITI RETIRES
.

.

BY TtM REYNOLDS

.Associated Press
MIAMI - . Shaquille
O'Neal is an All"Star for
the 12th time, and he
played like one ·down the
stretch. ·
O' Neal scored eight of
his 26 points in th~ final
etsht mmutes, helpmg the
Mtami Heat hold off the
Cleveland Cavaliers I0088 on Thursday night. ·
Miami led by as many as
17 in the third, then let
LeBron James and the ·
Cavaliers close to 77-76
with 8:31 remaining. But
O'Neal sparked a . gamesaving 9-0 · run with a
dunk; and the Heat held on
to send Cleveland to its
fourth lo.ss in five road ,
games.
.
.
.
"When we have lapses
like that in the gan1e, we
just have to dig deep down
and pick it up," said .·
O' Neal, who added 12
rebounds. "And that's
what we did."
Eddie Jones had 22
· points, including a pair of
clutch . 3-pointers in the
final quarter, and Dwyane
Wade scored 20 points for
the Eastern Conference. leading Heat.
James, who, at 20, is the
second-youngest player to ·
be named a starter in AllStar history, finished with •
31 points and I0 assists for
Cleveland.
Zydrunas
llgauskas had 23 po.ints
and 12 rebounds for the
' Cavaliers, who had won
eight straight games that
followed a loss . ·
Cleveland had alternated
losses ·and wins in its last
II games coming in, and is
now I/, games .behind
Detroit in .the Central
Division. The Cavaliers
missed 13 of their fimil 18 .
· shots from the field.
"Right now, we're not
playing the level of basketball we want to play,"
James said. "Down the
stretch. we were just not
making enough shots." .
Miami trailed for most
of the . first half, then
outscored Cleveland 18-6
to end the second quarter
- and went on to score
the first 10 points of the
third, building a 60-43
lead.

.

other
in my
class,
to see

Please see Willey, 83 .

Prep Girls
Basketball .

EaQies
slay
Vikings
STAFF REPORT

sports@mydailysentinel.com
McARTHUR - Eastern
held Vinton County to 10
points in the first half, only ·
three in the opening quarter, as
the Eagles went on to a 45-38
. victory in girls basketball
Thursday.
The Eagles outscored
Vinton County 13-3 in the first
quarter, but were held to three
points in the second period.
Eastern still led 16-1"0 at
halftime.
"We played very sluggish in
the second quiuter and only
scored three points against
Vinton's pressure defense,"
said Eastern head coach Rick .
Edwards.
Morgan Weber led the
Eagles efforts with 20 points,
going IO·for-10 at the free
throw line. Weber also hauled ·
in 10 rebounds. Jen Hayman
grabbed eight boards.
"At times, we really didn't
look very sharp," said
Edwards. "We tUrned the ball
over in several unforced situations . But, all in all, a win is a
win and this was very impor·
tant because it was against a
very good opponent and it was
on the road."
Eastern plays ho.st to
Southern Saturday.
'

.

.

· ~

Dallas Cowboys' Emmitt Smith (22) runs for a first-quarter touchdown in front of
Washington Redskins' LaVar Arrrington (56) and Cowboys' Joey Galloway (84 ) in
Landover, Md,, in this Dec. 2. 2001 photo. Smith retired Thursday.

Emmitt Smith: "A tremendous
ride'' ends after 15 years.:

Belpre
washes
out 'D·oes
BY ScoTT WOLfE
Sports correspondent

BELPRE· Behind 51 sec·
ond half points, · the Belpre
leader and played a key role on three Super
BY PAUL NEWBERRY
Golden Eagles broke open a
Bowl champions.
· .
Associated Press
close game at the · half to
The decision had been expe&gt;ted for sevenll
bounce the Southern ' Lady
days, but the finality of it all was still
Tornadoes 88-49 Thursday
JA'CKSONVILLIO, Fla. - Emmitt Smith poignant. Flanked by his wife, Pat, and
night at Belpre High School.
decided to stop running. There wa~ nothing Cowboys owner Jerry Jones, Smith thankeq a
Guard play proved to be the
left to prove; no records left to chase.
list of people several pages long - everyone
kex to the win for the Eagles as
Breaking down in tears and grasping his from his Pee Wee football coac_hes to longBelpre ( 11-8) glaced it~ two
!Jeloved Dallas Cowboys helmet, Smith time Dallas fullback Darryl "Moose"
guaros
in the 2 's -Whitney
retired Thursday . after a IS-year career in
Blackburn
leading the way .
which he became the NFL's career rushing
Please sH Emmitt. 83
with 26 points and Shawna
Please see C.vs, 83
Mincks wtth 23,
Belpre's Tabitha VanDyke
also hit double di~its with ten
points, Aubree Mtller had six,
and Shawmae Cline five.
·
Southern was led by junior
guard Kristiina Williams with
19 points, while senior Joanne ·
Pickens added . II, · Ashley
chance to save the hockey season, the
The NHL declined comment on · what Roush nine, Whitney Riffle
BY IRA PODEU
Associated Press
union invited commissioner Gary was being discussed, or if any progress and Linda &amp;tdy three each,
and Bethany Vance and Ashley
Bettman and players' association chief wa1 being made. ,
.
Bob Goodenow back to the table after the
"A collective ' bargaining meeting Robie two each .
NEW YORK - One day · after the . leaders sat out the previous five sessions between representatives of the National
Southern (6' 12). playing
NHL rlayers' association rejected the d~~ng a two-week span.
Hockey Leaglfe and NHL . Players' . without i~ senior point guard
league s latest. salary-cap propos:;tl, the
The meettng with .. the league has Association he.gan Thursday afternoon Brooke Kiser who is out with
s1des met agam for 'about mne hours ended
for thts evenmg, sm~ a stat~mem and contmucd mto Thursday night." the an injury. played well the first
Thursday and planned to resume talkS on released
by the NHL Players AsSiilCtatton league sa1d m a statement. "In deference half. Senior Ashley Roush and
Friday.
•
II p.m. "The parties plan to ' .
just
before
In what might. have been the last meet again tomorrow,"
Please- NHL. BJ
Phtase - 'Does.
'

.

'

NHL and players' ·:assoqiation talk for
nine hours, talks to resume Friday· .

•

----

- ------ ~

------------ -----·--'

--

•J

�·.

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydatlysentinel.com

High School Boys Basketball Sectional Pairings . Prep

•

I

Division II
at Logan-Hocking Middle School
Monday, February 14.
Fairiield Union vs. Athens
Tuesday, February 15 .
Vinton County vs. New LeKington, 6:15p.m.
Sheridan vs. Gallia Academy, 8 p.m.
Wednesday, February 16
Warren vs. FU/Athens winner, 6:15p.m.
River Valley vs. Meigs. 8 p.m.
•
·)
Friday, February 18
· VC NL winner vs. Sh~ridan/GA winner, 7 p.m.
(winner advances to district tournament at
Convocation Center, Athens.) ·
Saturday, February 19
Warren/FU~Athens· winner vs ..RV/Mei~s winner, 7
p.m. (winner advances to district tournament at
Convocalion Center, Athens.)
at Southeastern High School
Monday, February 14
Washington Court House vs. Rock Hill, 7 p.m.
TUesday, February 15 ,
Logan Elm vs. Waverly, 6:15 p.m. ·
Jackson vs. Miam1 Trace, 8 p.m.
Wednesday, February 16
McClain vs. WCH/RH winner, ,6:15 p.'m.
Hillsboro vs. Circleville, ·8 p.m.
Friday, February 18
.
LE/Waverly winner vs. Jackson/MT winner, 7 p.m.
(winner advances to dist11ct tournament at .
Convocation Center, Athens.)
Satu relay, February 19
McCiairvWCH/RH w1nner vs. Hillsboro/Circleville
w1nner, 7 p.m. (w1nner advances to district tournament at Convocation Center, Athens.)
,., Division Ill
at Jackson High Scho.ol
Monday, February 14
Coal Grove vs. Portsmouth, .6:15 p.m.
Minford .vs. $outh Point, ·8 p.m. ·
Tuesday, February 15
Wheelersburg vs.Wellston, 6:15p.m.
.AieKander vs. Nelsonville-York, 8 p.m.
Wednesday, February 16
Federal Hocking vs. Oak Hill, 6:15 p.m.
Belpre vs. Fairland, 8 p.m.
· '
Friday, February 18
Ironton vs. CG/Portsmouth winner, 6 p.m. (w1nner
advances to district tournament at Convocation
C.enter, Athens.)
Saturday, February 19
Chesapeake vs. Minford/SP winner, 3 p.m. (winner advances to district tournament at Convocation
Center. Athens.),
.
.
FH/Ofi winner vs. Belpre/Fairland winner, 6 p.m.
(winner advan·ces to district tournament at
· Convocation Center, Athens.)
Wheelersburg/Wellston winner vs. Alexander/N-Y
winner, 7 p.m. (winner advances to district tourna-

Division II
Portsmouth vs. Portsmouth West, 6:15p.m ..
at University of Rio Grande
Chesapeake vs. North Adams, 8 p.m.
Monday, February 7
Thursday, February 10
Meigs vs. River Valley, 6:15 p.m.
ironton vs. Wheelersburg/Peebles winner, 6:15p.m.
Waverly vs. Rock Hill, 8 p.m.
(winner adVances to district tournament at Waverly)
Saturday, February 12
LC/Wellston winner vs. CG/WU winner, 8 p.m. (winGallia Academy vs. Meigs/RV winner.. 1 p.m. (win- ner adVances to district tournament at Waverly)
ner advances to district tournament at Chillicothe)
Saturday, February 12
Warren vs. Waverly/RH winner, 2:45 p.m. (winner ·South Point vs. Portsmouth/PW winner, 1 p.m.
advanc~s to district tournament at Chillicothe)
(winner advances to district tournament at Waverly)
at Adena High School
Eastern (Brown) .vs.. Chesapeake/NA winner, 2:45
Monday, February 7
p.m. (winner advances to district tournameht at
Logan Elm vs: McClain, 6:15p.m.
Waverly)
Washington Court House vs. Hillsboro, 8 p.m.
Thursday, February 10
Division IV ·
Unioto vs. Northwest, 6:15p.m. (winner ,advances
at Athens High School
, to distnct tournament at Chillicothe)
Monday, February 7
Miami Trace vs. 'Circleville, 8 p.m, (winner advances Southern vs. Ironton St. Joe, 7 p.m.
to district tournament at Chillicothe)
Wednesday, February 9
Saturday, February 12
Crboksville vs. Miller, 6:15 p.m.
Fairiield Union vs. LE/McCiain winner, 1 p.m. (!"in- Green vs. South Gallia, 8 p.m.
ner advances to district tournament at Chillicothe)
ThurSday, February 1o·
·Sheridan vs. WCH/Hillsboro winner, 2:45p.m. (winTrimble
vs.
Southern/ISJ
winner, 6:15p.m. (winner
ner advan6es to district tournament at Chillicothe)
.
adVances
to
district
iournament
at Wellston)
#At site to be detennlned
Southeastern
vs.
Eastern
(Meigs),
8 p.m. (winne(
.Thursday, February 10
adVances
to
district
tournament
at
Wellston)
Vinton County vs. Fa1~and .. 6:15 p.m. (winner
Saturday, February 12
adVances to district tournament at Chillicothe)
Waterford
vs.
Crooksville/Miller winner, 1 p.m. (win- .
Jackson vs. Athens, 8 p.m. (winner advances to disner
advances
to
district tournarT)ent at Wellston)
trict tournament at Chillicothe)
Symmes Valley vs. Green/SG winner, 2:45 p.m.
(winner adVances to district tournament at Wellston)
Division Ill
at Northwest High School
at Wellston High Sch.ool
Monday, February 7:
Monday, February 7
PaintValley
vs.
Manchester, 6:15p.m. '
Huntington vs. Piketon, 6:15p.m.
Sciotoville
vs.'
Notre
Dame, 8 p.m.
Nelsonville-York vs. New Lexington, 8 p.m . .
Wednesday,
February 9
Wednesday, February 9
Western Latham vs. New Boston. 6:15p.m.
Federal' Hocking vs. Alexander, 6:15 p.m.
Whiteoak vs. South Webster, 8 p.m.
·
Belpre vs. Adena, 8 p.m.
·
.
Thursday,
February
I
0
.
Thursday, February 10
Oak Hill vs'. Huntington/Piketon winner, 6:15 p.m. Portsmouth Clay vs. PV/Manchester winner, 6:15
(winner advances to district tournament at Waverly) p.m. (winner advances to 'district tournament at
·
Minford vs. N-Y/NL winner, 8 p.m. (winner advances Wellston)
Valley vs. Sciotoville/ND winner, 8 p.m. (winner
to district tournament at Waverly)
adVances to district tournament at Wellston) ·
Saturday, February 12
Saturday, February 12
Zane Trace vs. FH/Aiexander winner, 1 p.m. (winner
Fairfield Leesburg vs. WUNB winner, 1 p.m. (winner
adVances to distri.ct tournament at Waverly) ·
Westfall vs. Belpre/Adena winner, 2:45p.m. (winner adVances to district tournament at Wellston)
Eastern (Pike) vs. Whiteoak/SW winner, 2:45 p.m.
adVances to district .tournament at Waverly)
at Valley High School
(winner advances to district tournament, at Weilston)
Monday, February 7
Wheelersburg vs. Peebles, 5 p.m.
# Games orjginally scheduled for Un1versity of R1o
Lynchburg Clay vs. Wellston, 6:45 p.m.
Grande, but will be moved to different side bPcause
Coal Grove vs. West Union,.8:30p.m.
of Rio Graride-Cedarville men's and women's makeWednesday, February 9
up games. New site expected to be determined today.

Columbus Grove 74, Upper Scioto Valley
51
Creston Norwayne 65, W. Salem NW 37
Danbury 61, Northwood 50
Danville 45, Fredencktown 37
DaYton Belmont 73, Cin. Woodward 47
Delphos St John's 47, Coldwater 46
Deltonwood 48, Elmore Woodmore 37
t:don 48. Stryker 34 .
Franklin 38, Lemon-Monroe 36

. NEW YORK (AP) - Grant Hill of the NBA said Thursday in announcing the starters.
Orlando Magic edged indiana's Jermaine The prevtous record of 2,451 ,136 for Michael
O'Neal by slightly more than 65,000 votes for a Jordan of the Chicago Bulls was set in 1997.
starting spot on the Eastern Conference All-Star
James, the Cleveland Cavaliers' 20-year-old
team.
.
phenom, will be the only first-time All-Star
Hill received 1,497,489 votes in fan balloting among the 10 starters. Shaquille O'Neal was
to 0 ' Neal's I ,432,438, a!Jowing him to join selected to his 12th All-Star team, Garnett to his
Shaquille O'Neal, Allen Iverson, Vince Carter eighth; Bryant, Duncan and Hill to their seventh,
and LeBron James a~ the startin~ five for the Carter and Iverson to their sixth and McGrady to
East at the All-Star game Feb. 20 m Denver.
his fifth.
,
Yao Ming of the Houston Rockets received a
Hill, sidelined for most of the past three searecord 2,558,278 votes in winning the starting . sons after undergoing four surgical procedures
spot at center for the Western Conference for the on his troublesome l~ft aflk.le, was selected an
third stra19ht year. He will !me up alongside All-Star for the ftrst lime smce 200 I .
"It's amazing. I haven 't expected any of this. I
Minnesota s Kevin Garnett, lim Duncan of San
Antonio, the. Lakers' · Kobe Bryant and was just trying to concentrate on commg in and
Houston 's .Tracy McGrady for the 54th version being healthy and not judging myself or looking
of the league's showcaiie event. .
at any pe_rsonal goals,' Hill said. "I' ve been a litShaquille O'Neal's 2,488,089 votes were the tie shocked at all this, all the love and attention
second highest in All-Star balloting history, the - and I'm thankful for it."

Triad 61. Sprir:1g. NE 53
Unioto 71, Piketon 46
Urbana 45, Belletontaine 41
Van Buren 85, Van Leu 41
Versailles 75. Rockford Parkway 33
Waverly 56, Portsroouth W. 28
Wheelersburg 38, Lucasville Valley 36
Williamsport Westfall 51 , Adena 34
Wilmington 78, Cin. NW 51
Wooster 55. Ashland 33

National Chrlst1an Academy, Md. 76 .
Capital 56
Parkersburg 89, Riverside 67
Petersburg 69, Pendleton County 59
Spring Valley 61 Ripley 31
St. Albans 85 , Humcane 56
St. Maria Goretti, Md . at Jefferson, ppd ,
weather
University 54, East Fa1rmont 44
Wyoming East 56 . lhdependen9e 41

It's Time To
GINEs·.......

Friday, February 4,

The DiuJ.y Sentinel • Page B3

www .mydailysentinel.com

2005

For problem gamblers, Super Bowl
·is a big; unavoidable temptation

prime. He fmished up in a redbirded helinet, playing in a
half-filled stadium in the sweltering Arizona desert.
from Page 81
"There were·a lot of people,
including myself, who didn't
Johnston, the fierce blocker
want him to go,"· said Darren ·
"Certainly, this is a hard ground or be caught cleanly who cleareq so many holes for Woodson, a longtime teamEGG HARBOR TOWNThat's a difficult prbposiSHIP, N.J. (AP) - One by tion, esp~cially here - in a time for folks in recovery and whether the reigning No. 22.
mate in Dallas. "! told him a
" It 's been a tremendo us lew times, 'Let's think about
one, they filed in for a southern New Jersey commu- from sports betting,'' said champs ' point total will be an
ride," said Smith, who spent his this before you do it.' But he
Tuesday night meeting of nity awash in Philadelphia Marlene Warner, program even number or an odd one.
Nevada sports books amici- final two yeilts with the had it set in. his mind that he
Gamblers Anonymous.
Eagles fever. There are ."Go direclor of the Massachusetts
on Compulsive pate taking up to $100 million Arizona Cardinal s after 13 sea- wanted to prove he had someOne man wore an Eagles Eagles" signs on cars, grocery Council
sweat shirt. · One remembered store circulars advertising Gambling. "lh particular, .the . m lega l bets on Sunday ' s sons in Big D. "My 15 years, thing left in the tank."
.
the Super Bowl Sunday he Super Bowl snacks and seem- media' s hyping the Super game. Millions more dollars my 15 minutes of fame, is up."
Plagued by injuries, Smith .
spent babysitting his ¥rand- ingly nonstop c.overage of Bowl, saying it's a dynasty ...are expected to be wagered on · Not quite . .
rushed for a career-low 256
.
There's one more stop daughter, only to find himself · Terrell Owens' injury on radio here in New England .and the the Internet.
yards in 2003, averaging a
Patriots are' favored to win.
Many others will bet with Canton, Ohio.
with an uncontrollable urge to and. TV.
meager 2.R yards per carry. He.
"They just have to ignore it,
"''m going m be biased bounced· back to have · a
· bet $10,000 on the game, 10
"It's .kind of a 'We can 't bookies who accept wag~rs on
years after his last bet.
and it's really difficult in this lose' attitude and I'm sure credit. All the gambler 11eeds when ,you ask who's the great- respectable season, 'but ' the
est running back of all time," Cardinals still missed the playThen there was the new- area because of all the hype that's .sending signals to peo- is a telephone.
"There's a romanticism to Johnston said. "You can proba- oft's with a 6-1 0 record.
comer, facing his first Super about · · the Eagles,'' said pie that it' s a sure bet, that if
compulsive you're going to bet, thi s is the it," said one recovering sports · bly mllke a case for eight to 10
Bowl since he quit a lifelong Harvey Fogel,
Smith said he had no regrets,
addiction in which he bet up to gambling counselor. "If they time to do it: That starts think- bettor, a 41-ycar-old man from guys. But for me, it's always
other than failing to meet his
$12,000 a game on the NFL.
were in Minnesota, it would- ing in people like, ' Well , New England who asked that been Emmitt."
"lt's a tough week," he told n't be that big a· deal. Jt'.s marbe this one time. I can do· hi s name not be used. " You
The 35-year-old Smith ran goal of leading Arizona to the
·
want to hear every nuance, for I R,355 yards and 164 playoffs. He acknowledged
the gathering. "It's the trifecta: . worse here, there•s more hype it," Warner said.
·
We've got football, the Super because of the Eagles."
To recovering gamblers every detail, every injury touchdowns in his caree r, both Cardinals coach Dennis Green,
Bowl and my favorite team
The same is true in New whose passion was sports bet- report. It 's a whole thin g. · NFL records. He closed it out one of several hundred people
playing."
·
England, where Patriots fans ting, the Super Bowl means You're romantically connect, by running for 937 yards and who crowded the room for
For gambling addicts like are immersed in the team's super temptation.
ed to the spoT! and to the play- nine touchdowns in Arizona Smith's retirement.
" I . want to thank the
these, the Super Bowl is any- hunt for a third NFL title in
It is an opportunity to sal- ers."
this season.
Cardinals
for letting me play
thing but super. The buildup to four years. The game also is vage a losing season, a chance
And come Mo'nday, the 1Former Giants linebacker
Sunday can be even worse : It the . ·subject of ad~ertising, to erase debts with one big ROO-GAMBLER .helpline run Pepper Johnson still remem- two more years," he said. "I
is a time to relive bad memo- news media coverage, office victory - lots of chances, in by the New Jersey Council on bers the determined rookie who padded' that record. That does ·
mean a lot to me."
ries, to fight gnawin~ tempta- pools and waterctJoler talk fact: There are dozens of pos- Compulsive
Gambling ' came out of Florida in 1990.
Arizona hastened Smith's
tions, to avoid thinkmg about about the .Patriots, who are sible bets, including who ~~eins expects to see its annual spike,
" I saw a guy with the eye of
the event everyone seems to favored by a touchdown to the coin toss, whether . th e with bonomed-out gamblers 1 a demon, a guy thai ran the ball retirement by telling him that
be talking about.
beat tne·Eagles.
· game's first punt will hit the seekmg help.
· with a passion, a guy that had he wouldn't be back for next
season. ·Like Dallas two years
great vision and a small guy
earlier, the Cardinals wanted to
that 'didn't play small," said
and Southern called time to · played well at the point,· and turnovers, three assists, and 22 Johnson , now an assistant go ""ith their younger backs.
"That made mv decision a
settle down. Southern fought although , not scoring much, foul s.
coach with the New England
whole
lot · easier," he said,
back to within six points on a Ashley Robie, Whitney Riffle,
Southern hit 16-44 overall , Patriots. '· I rem ember him·
that·· lie turned down
adding
couple occasions and· trailed and Jordan Neigler did a good hitting 15-41 two 's, 1-3 pi~k.ing me 11p on a blitz and
from Page 81
32-23 at the three minute job on inside post defense for three\, and 16-30 at the line. when he hit me, he was like, offers to continue his career
mark. Belpre hit a deuce but SHS .
.
Southern had 25 rebounds 'Oh Pepper, I shocked you on elsewhere. "I have a home. It's
junior Kristiina Williams Southern still held close, but
with my family:"
Both cluhs substituted freely (Pickens 7, Williams 5, Riffle that, didn't!""'
picked up the pace at guards, with 2.2 seconds left on an the- second half. Belpre led 62- 5), seven steals (Williams 2,
Two names stood out on
Smith was more consistent
while Joarme Pickens did a inbounds play, Southern lost 36 after three rounds and 88- Robie 2, Riffle · 2), 20 than he was spectacular, a run- Smith's lengthy thank-you list.
nice job from the post.
hot hitting Shawna Mincks, 49 at the finish.
turnovers, five assists, and 18 . ning back ...,Jm could be relied There was Jones, 'mocked by
A three-pointer at the who drilled a last second three
Belpre hit 31-73 overall, hit- fouls.
.
on to get tough yards when some for drafting a 5-foot-9/,
buzzer gave Belpre a 15-9 first pointer to give Belpre a 37-23 ting 25-61 two's and 6-9
running back who didn't exactBelpre · won the reserve tough yards were needed.
period lead. Southern had lead at the half.
three's, while going 18-25 at game 37-24 led by Laura
He rushed for I ,000 yards Or ·ly blow people away with his
played well up to this point on
The second halfwas acade- the line. Belpre had 37 Green with 15 and Jessy Cain more every year between 1991 speed. And Johnston, a close
both ends of the floor, but saw
rebounds. topping Southern's with seven. Southern's Linda and 200 I. He led the NFL in friend who stood along a walJ
mic.
Belpre widen its I 2~91ead with
the
retirement
· Belpre went on an I 1-2 run meager 25. Belpre rebound Eddy led the· team with 12 rushing from 1991-93, then during
a last second shot. History to start the franie and that pret- leaders were VanDyke with 8 points.
again in 1995. He also paced announcement.
would later repeat itself.
·
:'Darryl, I love you to death,"
ty much spelled disaster for a and Blackburn · 6. Belpre had
Southern goes to Eastern the league in touchdowns three
Smith said, dabbing at his tears
Southern gave up four easy Tornado comeback. Williams 12 steals (Stephens 4). eight · Saturday.
times.
· points to start the second round
with a tissue. "You' ve
But despite his impressive
statistics. he won just two there through thick and thin. I
don't know why, but every
major awards in 15 seasons the All-Stl:lr game. The efits. The union needed onlv a salary cap. The latest offer NFL MVP in 1993 and the time I think of you. I always
remainder of the I ,230-game few hours to turn it down . ·
would give players between Super Bowl MVP that same break down."
Smith wasn't happy about
There were other compo- 53 and 55 percent ·of league season. ·when he rushed for 130
schedule could be called off
leaving
Dallas two years ago,
within days if significant nents to the offer. such as a revenues.
from Page 81
yards and two touchdowns in
but
any
hard feelings toward
profit-sharing plan, reduce.d
An economic study com- the Cowboys· 30-13 win over
progress· isn't made quickly.
his
former
employer have
age for unrestricted free · missioned by the NHL found Buffalo. He also had perhaps ·
to the process, there will be no . Neither side expressed opti- agency, a raise of the minimism on Wednesday that the
that players got 75 percent of his greatest game with a sepa" clearly thawed. DalJas plans to
comment, and no further
philosophical
differences mum salary, and the continued revenues, but the union has rated shoulder, rushing for 229 · sign Smith to a one-day con,. update is expected tonight."
could be bridged, but Bellman conclusion of guaranteed con- challenged many of the yards in a crucial victory. over tract, so he can officialJy retire
.. Players turned down the and Goodenow '¥ere needed tracts, but the issue has always league's lindings.
as a Cowboy.
the New York Giants.
_NHL's offer on Wednesday, in the room before any deal been about a salary cap.
"You don't know how mucli
The NHL has been ope rat"Emmitt has never forgot he
· sticking to their vow that they could possibly be reached. No
this
star realJy means to me,"
Bellman has said that teams irtg under the same collective
will never accept a salary cap. major league in North lost a total of more ti)a1i $1.8 bargaining agreement since was ·part of a team and what the ·Smith said, breaking down as
The fact that the sides America has lost an· entire sea- billion over I 0 years and that 1995, when the last lockout team meant," Jones said. "Your he placed his left hand on one
place in our fraf!chise has
' remained together for so long . son to a labor displlte.
of two DalJas helmets on the
management will not agree to went 103 days before .a 48- always been secure."
· a day later provided at least a
dais.
The NHL proposed a six- ·a deal without a defined rela- giune season was played.
It was only appropriate that
.. glimmer of hope that perhaps
·
Wearing a pinstripe suit year deal that contained a cap tionship between revenue and
The Stanley Cup has been Smith retired · at the Super
.. a deal could be reached.
blue,
of course - Smith said
awarded every year since Bowl, having been part of
, The 4Y,. month . lockout that would force teams to salaries.
he'll pursue some business
spend at least $32 million on
Last season's average salary 1919, when a flu epidemic .
reached its !41st day on player costs but no more than was $1.8 million, and the NHL wiped out the final series Dallas' glorious run in the opportunities. But he also
Thursday and has wiped out $42 million - including ben- wants to push·that back with a between Montreal and Sean Ie. 1990s - .three championships vowed to stay close to the game
in four years with a team fea· 772 regular-season games and
and give something back to the
turing Smith, Troy Aikm&lt;m and
fans.
Michael Irvin.
. "I' m moving on to another
Manv were shocked .wheil
award is very humbling .
All the while, Willey has managed to
in ll1Y life," he said.
chapter
"Things like this come along and its coach both men's and women's cross Smith ieft D'allas after the 2002 "That's a chapter I'm looking
really refreshing, just overwhelming country and track and field teams at seas01i, deciding to ex,tend a forward to."
and very humbling," Willey said. Rio Grande , 'teach a fullloadof classes, career that was clearly past • it~
from Page 81
"When I out found out I was receiving mentor many otner young people along
this award, it was a very humbling the way and be a husband and father . .
, your students perform better and see experience for me."
· Willey received the award at the
..
them enjoy and love the sport also," he ·
"Your peers are recognizing you, for Ohio Association of Track and Cross
··said. "You do it for the students."
your efforts," he added. "It humbles Country Coache s Awards Banquet,
Willey admits that receiving the you and exc.ites you at the same time."
Jan. 28. It was on.e of eight presented.

Emmitt

a

'Does

been

NHL

Willey

SalurdDIJ ie&amp;rua'IJ 5lh

Cavs

Race lor the Nextel Cup Preview

Februarv 18, 2005
4Palltpoli- Jaatlp Ql;ribune
446-2342

Joint Jlea,ant )legt•ter

Grant Hill edges Jermaine O'Neal in fan
voting for East's starting All-Star spot

•

Scoreboard

ment at Convocation Center, Athens.)
at Waverly High School
Fremont St. Joseph 80, Bettsville 9
Girls Boxscore
Ft. Recovery 55, New Bremen 30
Monday, February 14
Ohio High School
Gates Mills Hawken 4"8 Newbury 30
Eastern 45, VInton County 38
Zane Trace vs. West Union; 6:15p.m.
Boys Basketball
·
GeorgetD'Nn 67, Clinton-Masste 38 .
Eastern
13 3 14 15 - 45
Thursday's Results
Unioto vs. Westfall , 8 p.m .'
Vinton County
3 7 10 18 -38
Gibsonburg 58, Genoa 47
Bryan 64. Swanton 45
·
Tuesday, February 15
EASTERN MWeber 4 10-10 20,
Glen Este 46, Amelia 35
Cardington-Lincoln 69, Galion Northmor
EWeber 3 0-p 6, JHayman 1 4-6 6.
~Hopewell Loudon 54, Mohawk 23
Huntington vs. Portsmouth West, 6:15p.m.
31
JesHupp 1 0-0 2, While 1 3-6 5, NUtter 0 0Huntington 54, Chillicothe Zane Trace 48
Delta 50, Wauseon 46
Adena vs. Valley, 8 p.m.
0 0, JenHupp 2 1·2 6 TOTALS - 12 18·24
Jeromesvtlle Hillsdale 51 , Doylestown
E. Liverpool 70. Cle. S: 49
Wednesday, February 16
45.
Chippewa 43
Gallon' 69 , Sh"elby 51
VINTON
COUNTY
Bobb
3
1-2
8,
P1keton vs. Paint Valley, 6:15 p.m.
Kettenng Alter 49, Cm St. Bernard
Liberty Center 6 3, Hamler Patrrck Henry
Patterson 2 3-5 7, McCorkle 2 2-2 6, Reed
Roger Bacon 37
Northwest vs. Lynchburg Clay, 8 p.m.
62, OT
2 0-0 6, Hewett 2 2-2 6. Collms 2 1-2 5.
Kidron Central Chr. 53 , Akr. Elms 48
Mansrield St. Paler's 70, Mansf1eld
'
Friday, February 18
Ratcliff 0 Or1 0. TOTALS - 13 9- 14 38 .
Kin gs Mills Kings 63. Hamilton Ross 31
Ct'lri sllan 66
3-polnt
goals
Eastern
3
(MWetler
2,
·
North Adams vs. Zf/WU winner, 6:15 p.m. (win- JenHupp), VC 3 (Reed 2, Bobb).
Le1psit: 73, Dola Hardin-Northern 38
Marion Elgtn 41 , Sparta Highland 25
ner advances to district tournament at Convocation
Lewi stown Indian Lake 62, Spring.
Montpelier 45. Metamora Evergreen 43
Shawnee 58, OT
Belpre 88, Southern 49
Morral Ridgedale 64 , Mt. Gilead 56
Center, Athens.)
Lexington 52, Mansfield Sr. 39
Southern
· 9 14 13 13 -49
MI. Blanchard Riverdale 48, Crestline 41
Eastern Brown vs. Unioto!Westiall winner.- 8 p.m. Belpre
Lima Bath 46, St Marys Memorial 28
15 22 25 26 -88
Sandusky 59, Tiffin Columbian 57 .
(winner advances to district tournament at SOUTHERN -Whitney Wolfe-Riffle 1 1-2 Lima Perry 66 Lima Temple Chnstian 29 Youngstown
Chr 69. Falrporl Harding 53
3, Kasie Sellers 0 0-Q 0. Linda EOdy 0 3-4
L1ma Shawnee 72, Kenton 35
Convocation Center, Athens.)
3. Ashley Roush 4 1-2 9, J oanne P1ckens 2
Madison 66, Fa1rport Harding 43
W.Va. prep basketball scores
Saiurday,.February 19
7-1 2 11. Knstilna Williams 7 4-6 19,
Malvern 39, Bowerston Conation Valley
Thursday's Results
Piketon/PV winner vs. Northwest/LC winner, 6 Jordan Neigler 0 0-0 0, Mallory Hill 0 0·0 0, 37
Girls
p.m. (winner adVances to district tournament at Adelle Rice 0 0-0 o, Bethany Vance 1·o-o , Mansfield St. Peter's 35, Marion
Berkeley Springs at Musselman. ppd.
2, Ashley Ao ~ie 1 0·0 2, Amber Hill 0 0-2 Pleasant 29
·
Convocation Center, Athens.)
weather
0, Sarah Eddy 0 0·2 0. TOTALS - 16 16·
McComb
56,
Gory-Rawson
47
Brooke 52. Edison, Ohio 46
Huntington/PW winner vs. Adena/Valley winner, 30 49.
Medma Buckeye 6:?, Med1na Highland
Burch 76, Shady Sprmg 27
BELPRE
Whttney
Blackburn
9
7·
7
26,
8:45p.m.
o1. 2 OT
Camer.on 58 . Madonna 45
Shawntae Cline 2 1-2 5, Shawna Mincks 7
Mtami E. 53, Greenan 36
at Wellston High School
Elk Valley Christran 54, Parkersburg
5·8 23, Aubree Miller 3 0·0 6, Maranda
Miamisburg 65, Lebanon 44
Chnstian 31
Monday, February 14
Baker 2 Q-0 4, Madison Stephens 1 0-0 3,
Middletown Fenwick 46. Trenton .
Fairmont Senior 57, Preston County 5~
fvterodith Miller 0 0·0 0 , Laura Green 1 0-0
Crooksville vs. Southeastern, 7 p.m.
'
Greater Beckley Christian 62, Gauley
2, Heather Welsch 1 2-2 · 4, Tessa Edgewood 15
Tuesday, February 15
Middletown Madison 44, Day. Northridge Bridge 26
Duckworth 1 0-0 2. Rachel Canada 1 1·2
Milier vs. Ironton St: Joe, 6:15 p.m.
3, Tabttha VanDyke 4 2-4 10 TOTAL$ - · 20
Hundred 68 , Trinity 39
Millersburg W Holmes 62, Mansfield
31 18-25 88.
Huntington 47. Summers County 35
Southern vs. Wateriord, 8 p.m.
~ '
3-pomt goals - Southern .. I (Roush), Madison 54
Linsly 61, Bridgeport. Ohio 26
Friday, February 18
Belpre 6 (Mihcks 4. Blackburn, Stephens).
Morrow Linle Miami 76, Goshen 55
Midland Trail 62, Webster County 59
Eastern (Meigs) ,vs. Crooksville/Southeastern
Navarre
Fa1rless
61.
Zoar11111e
Moorerield 28. East Hardy 21
Tuscarawas Valley 33'
winner, 6:15p.m. (winner advances to distrt'ct tour- ,
Notre Dame 40 , Clay-Battelle 32 .
Nelsonville-York 5;}. New LelCmgton 34
Ohio High School
Parkersburg Catholic 60, St. Marys 25
nament at Convocation Center, Athens.)
New Boston 75 , Portsmouth Notre
Parkersburg South 67, Fort Frye. Oh1o
Girls B.asketball
South Gallia vs. Symmes Valley, 8 p:m, (winner
Dame 37
.
·
53
'
Thursday's Reaults
advances to district tournament ·ill Convocation
New Riegel 59, Fostoria St. Wendelln 28
Akr. Coventry 46, Massillon Tuslaw 32
Pr keV1ew &lt;;~I Mercer Christian : pp'd,
Norwalk St. Paul 59, New London 30
Akr. Manchester 50 , E. Can 22
weather
Center, Athens.)
Oak Harbor 49, Milan Ed1son 44
Apple
Creek
Waynedale
50.
Dalton
37
Scott 62. Sherman 28
Saturday, February 19
Old Fort 41, Seneca E '25
Arlington 36, L1berty Benton 28
St Joseph 45 , Harls 37
Eastern (Pike) vs. Miller/ISJ winner, 6:15 p.m.
.Orrville 42, Belleville Clear Fork 41
Ashland Crestview 76, Gree nwich S.
Tug Valley 4;! , Logan 45
Otsego 57, Kansas Lakota 28
(winner advances to district tournament ai Cent. 43
Valley Wetzel 64, Paden Ctty 41
Ottawa Hills 48. Emmanuel BaptiSt 39
Berli n Hiland 90, Ridgewood 23
Wheeling Park 64, Wheeling Central 62.
Convocation Center, Athens.)
Ottoville .69. DelphOs Jefferson 38
Bethel-Tate 6( Williamsburg 37
OT
. Trimble vs. Southern/Waterford winner, 8 p.m.
Oxford Talawanda 72, W. CarrolltOn 30
Bluffton 59 , L1ncolnv1ew 39
Winfield 54 , SissonVille 47
at Valley High Sqhoot
Pauld1ng 44 , Lafayette Allen E. 38
Cadiz Harrison Cent. 48, Bellaire . St.
Woodrow Wilson 56, Wests1de 23
Pepper Ptke Orange 63, Shaker Hts.
John's 39
Monday, February 14
.
· Boys
Laurel 52
Cedarviile 57, Spring Cath. Cent. 37
Berkeley Springs 69, Hampshtre 56
New Boston vs. Leesburg Fairiield, 7 p.m.
Por1 Clinton 47, Castalta Margarena 45
Chillicothe SE 52, Paint Valley 51
Bluer1eld 76 , Summers County 55
Tuesday, February 15
Portsmouth 55 , Ashland, Ky. 54
Cln. Anderson 63, Loveland 50
BralCion County 50, Webster County 46
Western vs. Manchester, 6:15p.m.
Portsmouth Clay 64, Beayer Eastern 55
Cin. Clark Montessori 85, C1n. Shrader
Bndgeport sa. Philip Barbour 39
Rocky A1ver Magn1hcat 56, Bay 52 , OT
43
Budo::hannon-Upshur 43, Lewis County
Peebles vs. Notre Dame, 8 p.m.
S Charleston SE 65. Greenview 54
Ctn. Hamson 49, Cin . Walnut H1lls 44
26
Friday, February 18
Sandusky Perkins 63 Huron 37
Cin.lndlan Hill 51 , Cln. Deer Park 31
Charleston· CathOlic 56, Valley Fayette
South Webster vs. NB/LF winner, 6:15p.m. (win34
.
Sherwood Fairview 65, Lakewood St
Cin. Madeira 44, N. B~nd Taylor 25
Augustine 30
Cin. fv1c:Auley 43, Cin. St. Ursula 40
ner adVances to district tournament at Convocation
Doddridge County 96, Ritch1e County 89
Smithville 54, R1ttman 2a
Cin. Mercy 56 , Gin. Ursulir)e 48
·Fairmont Sen1or 68, Elkins 64. OT
Center, Athens.)
Spencerville 78. Ada 39
Cin. Mt. Notre Dame 62, Cin. Seton 31
George Washington 86 , Pnnceton 56
Sciotoville vs. Green, 8 p.m . .(winner advances to
Spring. Kenton l=lidge 71, Spriilg. NW 49
Cin. Turpin 61, Norwood 34 '
Gilmer County 56 , W1rt County 52 . 20T
district tournament at Convocation Center, Athens.)· Cin. Winton Woods 56, MasOn 52
Strasburg 46, New Philadelphia
Hannan 60. Ohio Valley Christian 44
Tuscarawas Cent. Cath 28
Cin. Wyoming 37, C1n . Reading 31
Hu ntington · 52, , Eastern Commerce,
Saturday, February 19
· Cle. Christian Community 46, ElyM
SugarCreek· Garaway . 43. Magnolia Canada , 43
Whiteoak vs. Western/Manchester winner, 6:15 Open
Door 45, OT
Sandy Valley 16
Lin coln 62, Gratton 57
p.m. (winner advances to district tournament at
Thompson Ledgemont ~o. Andrew s 35
Clyde 77, St. Marys Memorial 59
Magnolia 52. Brooke 50
Convopation Center, Athens.)
Collins Western Reserve 50, Monroeville
Tiffin Calvert 53, N. Baltimore 37
Moorelield 55, Frankfort 47
30
Tipp City 56, Tecumseh 38
Morgantown 74 . North Manon 50
Portsmouth Clay vs. Peebles/NO winner, 8 p.m .

High School Girls Baskelhall Sedional Pairings

•

Friday, February 4; 2005

675-1333

The Daily Sentinel
.

.

.

...

.992-2156

Don't miss out on this great opportunity
to .have your business included!
Advertising Deadline is February I 0,
•

200~

from Page 81
Keyon
Dooling, who
played the entire second
quarter while Miami's . starting . guards - Wade 'and
Damon ·Jones - sat on the
· bench, had the bulk of his 13
points during that burst for
. Miami, which held a 23-9
· edge in scoring by backu(JS.
"Keyon was great, part1cu-.
- larly in the second quarter,"
. Heat coach Stan Van Gundy
. said. "Then we let them back
, into the game, but we fin. ished extremely strong."
Cleveland chipped away,
. and James made a spectacu. Iar play to draw the Cavaliers
to 73-65 with 2:08 left in the
third.
Defending on the wing, he
: leaped to snare Damon
Jones' pass and tossed the
·ball upcourt to Jeff Mclnni&amp;
- who eventually fed it back
· to James for a one-handed
• slam that he called "one of
· my best."
' "Damon is my guy. l apol- ·
· ogized for it," James said. "I
· just tried to elevate, get up
. and ,made sure I got the bas. ket.
.
Said Cleveland coa.ch Paul
· Silas: "Every night, he 's
. gojng to show 'you something
,· to wow you."
James opened the fourth
with a three-point play and,
. after Gooden's dunk, added a
•,

pair of free throws with .8:31
left to cut Miami 's lead to 7776 - capping a 7-0 Cavaliers
run to open the final quarter.
. Cleveland got no closer,
however. Over the next 2/,
minutes; the Heat restqred
their I 0-point lead and held
on from there.
''We fought back, but we
just didn't have enough to
sustain it,'' Silas said.
Drew Gooden had his sixth
straight double-double : 10

points and 12 rebounds, for
the Cavaliers ,· who al so got
13 points from Mcinni s.
Miami 's 50-43 halftime
lead could have been significantly larger, but in what's
becoming . a theme for the
Heat, free throw shootmg
was a liability. Miami - the
NBA' s second-worst foul
shooting team -. missed nine
of 19 from the line in the half.
but was a perfect 10-for-10 in
the second half.

lli~JJ()ill)l~l)

Jlgauskas hit his first five
shots and had 11 points in the
opening 4:44, · but foul trouble limited him to three
point5 the rest of the half. He
picked up his third with fi:09
left before halftime.
"Shaq is the best big man
in the league," Ilgauskas said. ·
"You waste so much energy
playing against him on
defense that you don 't have
much left on the offensive
end."

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�Friday, February 4,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • _The Daily Sentinel

2005

Friday, February 4, 2005

urrthune - Sentinel - ~e

James to appear in Super Bowl·.spot, on Simpsons
following Thursday's shootaround
Associated Press
in Miami as the Cavaliers prepared
to play the Heat. ''!' m happy that I
can
be a part of it, happy I did the
CLEVE
,
L~ND
- LeBron Jallles spots and .things like thai. I hope
won t p1ay m the Super Bowl, but people just don't forget' about the
~ft~~ be theptng up during - and S~per Bo.~l and watch just the comtg g,ame.
· merctals.
!he Cavahers All-Star forward
James, who last year signed a $5
wtll debut hts stgnature Bubbhctous ·million e ndorsement deal with
bubb~e gumma 15-second,TV com- Ca\]bury
Adams,
maker of
mer~tal dunng Sunday s Super Bubblicious, stars in the commercial
Bo:l telecast. Followmg the game for LeBron's Lightning Lemonade,
.bet een the Phtladeiphta Eagles and the sour and snappy gum named for
New Engla~d Patnots, James wtll_ him.
appear as htmself m an ep_tsode ol
Cadbury Adams paid roughly $1.2
"The
S
tmps
·
"
.. t'
. ons.
,
.. . million to run the spot, the compal s gomg to be great, James satd ny's first ever commercial during the
BY TOM WITHERS

Super Bowl 'and Bubblicious' first
major TV ad in years.
James, who was named a starter
on the Eastern Conference All-Star
team on Thursday, filmed the -commercial in December at Gund
Arena. ·
·
With his first Super Bowl advertisement, James continues to follow
the path carved by his idol, Michael
Jordan, who regularly starred in
commercials during the NFL's
showcase event.
In the Bubblicious cummercial,
James strides onto · a court inside a
deserted arena chewing his gum.
"So much hype, so much pressure ·...
so .much for letting it affect you. ,"

the announcer says before James,
the league's reigning rookie of the
year, blows a bubble and drives to
the basket for a dunk.
"I can ' t think of a more exciting
way to debut our new campaign
than the Super Bowl ," said Blake
Glenn of Bubblicioos. "This new
spot showcases Bubblicious' tradition of explosive navors -- and
embodies LeBron's explosive
style."
·
Following the game, James will
appear in animated form along with
Bart, Homer, Marge and the rest of
The Simpsons.
"It's my favorite cm1oon," Ja111es
said. "Heck, it 's like a sitcom. It's

CLAS.SI ·F IED

my favorite show of all time."
James, New England quarterb~ck
Tom Brady, Houston Rockets center
Yao Ming, figure skating champion
Michelle Kwan and Oakland
Raiders lineman Warren Sapp lent
their voices for the episOde.
In it, Homer Simpson is spotted
doing a dance at a local · carnival
before being asked to choreograph
the Super Bowl halftime show.
James recorded his voice-over in
Los Angeles last July before leaving
for the Athens Olympics.
"He had a blast doin9 it," said
Mary Ford, one of James representatives. "They loved having him,

c .. m. C01.1n1y. OH

Associated Press

BY JIMMY GOLDEN

Associated Press

ST. AUGUSTINE. Fla. - The New England
Patriots ended last year's Super Bowl with two
subs in the secondary.
.
This year, they're starting the game that way.
The Patriots will face the Philadelphia Eagles
with a patchwork defensive backfield that features a converted receiver, an undmfted free
agent and a guy who was out of football most of
the year.
"We've got a lot of talented ~ys on our
defense that are really versatile,' linebacker
Willie McGinest said. "I think that's what makes
us so special."
It goes beyond the secondary. Most of the linebackers played on the defensive line ih college.
"If you're backing up a guy, you've got to definitely be ready to step in at any time," McGinest
said. "First string, second string - whatever everybody gets reps, everybody prepares hard,
everybody understands the game plan because
we've been in situations in the last few years
where you have two guys go down and other
guys step in and play really well."
The Patriots won their second NFL title in
three years last seaSOI], holding off the Carolina
Panthers in the Super Bowl despite losing both
safeties during the game - Rodney H'!frison t\l
a broken arm and Eugene Wilson to a groin
IllJury.
This year, the problem is with the cornerbacks.
Tyrone Poole was injured in Week 3, and 1'y
Law, a four-time Pro Bowl selection, went out
four games later.
The Patriots have since subbed and shuftled
and managed to finish 14-2 for tbe second consecutive season. In the playoffs, they shut down
NFL MVP Peyton Manning and rookie of the
year Ben Roethlisberger in back-to-back weeks.
Harrison and Wilson have settled in at safety,
with rookie Randall Gay ·and -Asante Samuel at

the comers, backed up by
PONTE VEDRA BEACl:l, Fla.
Jevon
wide receiver Troy
Brown and Hank Poteat, Kearse is stronger than most linemen, faster than
a former Steelers special some running backs and so quick off his first
teamer ·who had gone step that he's been known to slip around blockback to get his college ers untouched.
'
degree when the Patriots
In this league, where jaw-dropping athleticism
signed him last month.
is' never more than a locker away. Kearse stands
The defensive line fea- out so much that his nickname is "l11e Freak."
tures end Richard Seymour, an All-Pro who
On defense, Kearse has almost equaled the
missed the last three games with a leg injury. impact Temill Owens had on the offense in both
McGinest plays linebacker with Ted Johnson, players' first season with the Philadelphia
Mike Vrabel and Tedy Bruschi, who was added Eagles. A disruptive force on the field , Kearse
to the Pro Bowl this week.
significantly bolstered the pass rush and solidi"Guys like that, most teams would die to fied one of the best defenses in the NFL.
have," Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb
Now. comes Philadelphia's biggest challenge:
said. "No one really talks about them."
Stopping Tom Brady and the New England
Instead, most of the attention has been paid to Patriots in the Super Bowl.
the secondary and its struggles to make tt from
"All across the line, they've got the 0-line,
week to week. The one constant has been tight ends, receivers. quarterback, running back.
Harrison.
They have all the goods," Kearse said
''Rodney is the glue of our secondary," said Wednesday. "In a situation like that, you have no
Gay. who went from an undrafted free agent to
but to go in and give them all you have."
starter because of the injuries. "He has more choice
Kearse
already played in one Super Bowl, a
experience than all of us together."
gut-wrenching loss to St.:L.ouis in his rookie seaHarrison passed that on to ltis teammates.
"Right after Ty got hurt, he came to me and son with Tennessee. He spent part of this week
told me that I was the starter and that he expect- giving his teammates advice on handling the
ed me to play like a starter. ... He would al&gt;Yays pressures of p,laying in the big game.
"Me and Dorsey (Levens) had to remind
tell me, 'If you want to stay here, you need to
everybody
that this trip is only fun when you
listen to me,"' Gay said. "I have been listening
win,"
Kearse
said.
to him and now I am startin$, in the Super Bowl.
·Eagles
defensive
coordinator Jim Johnson utiSo it has meant a lot to me. '
·The secondary was New England's biggest lized Kearse:s speed by playing him at both end
question heading into its first playoff game, spots and sometimes at linebacker, confounding
against the Indianapolis Colts and their record- . quarterbacks and the 9ffensive line.
Philadelphia finished second. in the league
setting quarterback. Manning was unable to
take advantage of them, and the Patriots won with 47 sacks, including 7 112 from Kearse, who
dido 't play the last two games· because the
20-3.
"It's a great testament to him. He's able to Eagles had already clinched the No. I seed in the
really just go out there and play well regardless NFC.
"Even when he wasn't getting sacks, he was
of who is next to him," linebacker Don Davis
said: of Harrison. "He's like, 'Yeah, put him getting double-teame.d and freed other players to
there and then we're going to get it done."'
make play~." Eagles coach Andy Reid said. "His

too."

energy level was contagious and · everybody
feeds off that."
A . tirst-round pick in
1999, Kearse spent five
years with the Titans.
establishing .himself as
one of the NFL's premier
sack artists. He stgned a
$66 million, eight-year contract with the Eagles
on the first day of the free agency period last
Mar&lt;;h, hoping to get another chance at winning
a championship.
"This is what every player wants," Kearse
said. " 1· know how much this team has been
through the last four years, knocking on the door
but not getting 111 . This year, .we want to get
through the door, run through the house and out
the back door. Now that we're here, we have to
cash in."

Kearse and the rest of Philly's defense were
overshadowee by Donovan McNabb, Terrell
'Owens and a high-powered offense. But, no
team was tougher to score against when the
games mattered. The Eagles gave up the fewest
points (222) in the first 15 games, before the
reserves gave up 3S in the meaningless regularseason finale against Cincinnati.
1ohnson, who has a knack for confusing quarterbacks and shutting down prolific offenses
with his complex schemes, is busy cooking up
another one of his innovati v·e game plans to stop
the Patriots.
·
Some of the best quarterb'lcks in the league
had a tough .time against the Eagles this season.
Brett Favre . had his worst game in
Philadelphia. Daunte Culpepper struggled in tbe
playoffs against the Eagles. Michael Vick never
had a chance in tlie NFC championship game.
If Brady has time to throw, he's going against
a secondary that includes All-Pro free safety
Brian Dawkins, Pro Bowl strong safety Michael
Lewis, All-Pro cornerback Lito Sheppard and .
cornerback ' Sheldon Brown, who probably was
Philadelphia's most cqnsistent defensive back.

To Place
~egi£iter
urrtbune
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675;.1333
"'c_a_II--,---T_O-:--d_a_v_._._._--=.o;..,;rF~a-xTo(740)446·3•o•oa,.......:_ _ _o_r....:.FII_x_To-'-(74-:-o..:....&gt;9_9_2-_2,_s_7__

Offtee 11o~.f'
Monday thru Friday
s:oo a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

sate of aald raal
estate, and the proceeds or said sale
applied .to the payment of Petitioner's
Ctatm In the proper
order ol Ill priority,
and lor ouch other
and further relief as Is
just and equitable.
The Defenda'n t(a)
named above are
required to answer on
or before the 18th day
of March, 2005.
By: Reimer, Lorber &amp;
Amovltz Co., LP.A.
Ronald J. Charnek,
Attorney at l.aw
EMCMortgage
Corporation
Attorney lor PlalntlfiPetltlonar
P.O. Box 968
1\Ninaburg, OH 44087
(330) 425-420t
(t) t4, 2t, 28, (2) 4, t1,
18

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE .
The VIllage
of
Pomeroy, Ohio, to curre~tly
accepting
H&amp;•ad blda for 29, alx
foot
Boca · park
benchea, ced1r color,
Ncycted
plastic
daalgn, along .with
five truh reeeptacleo, 32 or 33 gallono,
recycled
plaotlc
dellgn.
Any and all bldo
muat be ualad and
be
In
the
C lerkiTreuurer'a
Office , 320 E. Main

Street,

Pomeroy,

Ohio, where they wilt
be reed aloud, at
noon, ,
Monday,
Fabr. .ry 28, 2005. A
bid bond Ia not
required. The VIllage
of Pomaloy ,...,.••
lila right to IICCipt or
deny any and all blda.
.(1) 2t, 28 (2) 4 3TC

February 5

Items

·
r
r~I
\V\(11

't

I \11 'IS

~~D .I

$200

First Pack $10.00 All After 1sl $5.00

Paying a $100.00 a Game
$200.00 for the X
$300.oo·picture frame
$1 ,000.00 coverall
Crank II Up $16,000.00
20 Numbers Left ,
Starburst $1,100.00
Weather Permitting

BIRD HUNTERS
EM Hunting Preserves
1/2 Day Pheasant Hunts
or Minimum Bird Hunts

r

GIVEAWAY

r~::::::;::~
YARDSALE

r

(740) 379~2932
GIANT YARD SALE
Sl. Paul Lutheran Church
Fellowship Hall Basement
Saturday, Feb. 5, 2095
10:00. 2:00
Food - Drinks • Popcorn
Racine American Legion Post 602
will have a publi!1
HAM &amp; TURKEY DINNER
Sunday, Feb. 6th
11 :00 am Iii?
$6.00

Broad Run Gun Club
Sunday, Feb. 6th
meeting

Mal:chl

ADVERTISE V UR EVENT
IN THE BULLETIN BOARD
'

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

HoMES

OHK C!ean.ng. Do you
need? House Cleaning or
Elderly Ca•e . Call (740)985·
3633 / 1740)416 - t 82 ·3
Aelerences available. Ask
lor Karen/Dave.

'

Black Lab &amp; Airedale mrx REWARD leading to the Absolute Top Dollar. U S.
return · ol Stolen S1lver and Gold Coins,
4469or441·7193
Aoltweiler
puppies
on Proolsels, Gold Rings, U.S.
Free to good home, three 8 Sunday afternoon, Jan 30. Currency,-M .r'. S. Coin Shop,
Second
Avenue,
mo old black Lab/German 2-males,
2-!f!males
(7 151
weeks old) The suspects are Gallipolis, 740~446-2842 .
Shepherd muc pups, 60·65*, from Gallipqlls &amp; have relalovlng, sweet pups, excellent l tves tn wv You can call us Help me l1nd thiS 1ar, Ball
compamo~, good w/other at 740·2BB·1592 or Jackson Perfect Mason, green color,
dog &amp; Children. only dOg Co Shenff De I 740-286- 1/2 pint, with #13 Qn the bot·
lovers reply, all shots, \let
.P
tom, standarQ screw top lid,
_
. 6464, or GalltpoltS Pollee
h k d
I wm pay $350 for this jar.
c ec 9 • 17401742 2377
Dept 740·446-1313
don't ca ll unless you have
Free to good home: mixed REWARD!!
thiS part1cular jar Please oall
Golden Retriever pupptes, 4
Lost- 2 cats, 1 neute red 1740)533·3870.
months old, 1 male , 1
orange male, other one IS
female . (740)367·0624.
Wanted to buy · Fas hion
~ad&lt;. female Bidwell area .
magazmes lrom the 1960's.
Part Chow &amp; Eskimo Spttz. (740)388·8166.
SfJVonteen. Vogue. etc .
excellent watch-dog. no t
Two los! dogs in Pomeroy. 1740)446·4034
good w/chlldren Includes
Small dark brown hound
I \11'1 I 1\ \II ~I
dog-house (304)593·0724
type, male: short legs, long
.., I H\ ll I._,
Larr AND
body. Wearing red collar.
FOUND
Sadley missed by 1 year old

Puppies 11 weeks old 675· safe

..

re you Wm•ng 10 1rave•
or steady work, good
pay and benefits?

aborers·. Operators,
~eld8rs, CDL Onvers and
foreman needed lor
prpehne work
!send resume to
Personnel
C J Hughes Construction
PO Bo• 7305
Huntington WV 25n6
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears. 304675-1429
Children's Home Society
currently has an opening lor
a Youth Services Sacral
w orker 1n the Maso~1 County
office. Posrt•on will provld~
case management and support1ve serv1ces to OHHR
Youth
Serv.1ce
cases.
Requirements
mclude
Bachelor's degree and SW
11cense eligibility, expenence
preferred .
Compet1t1ve
Salary and benefits. Please
send letter of interest and
resume to.
Mason County DHHR
o- I
AJTN . Youth ..,.,rv
ces
710 Viand Street,
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
EOE
Cimarron coach Hiring
Drivers- No COL required ,
Seniors welcome, Full and
part time, Paid vacations &amp;
holidays, Must past pre·
employment drug test &amp;
h8\le a good drMng record,
Caiii ·S00-531 ·6553
Established Heatmg-Cooling
Company In Gatha Co. look·
l ng
tor
Expecjenced
inslallers &amp; technicians If
interested send resume to:
CLA Sox 548, clo GallipOlis
Daily Tnbune, PO Sox 469,
GallipoliS, OH ~5631
GET READY FOR
SPRING BREAKI
Lose Weight with Herbaltfe.
C•! Tracy (740)44t-t982 or
1800)2()1-()832
http //www tamousnutr~tlon .c

om

Furnace and air condition
chan'ge outs, heat pumps
and duct war~ . Cer.tified .
1740)245·9108
Georges Portable Sawmill ,
don't haul your logs to the
mill JUSt call304-675-1957

TO BUY

B•dweii.I740)38B·I520

.

Hardwood floor, ceram1c tile,
pole barns, remodeling,
add1t1ons or a new house
licensed &amp; 1nsured Top
Notch Building Contractors
304·675·!3042 or 593·1115 .

0'
0
{)

'1--+.

~

@2005 by NEA, Inc.

www.comlcs.com

Ina

be reported on the ti,..t day ot

llno

-·HELP-•W•Amw
_ _.~.

t.,.

Green Acres
Regional Center, Inc.
H11 an Immediate
opening tor: Treatment
·
Instructor
Job Requirements·
H1gh School diploma or
GED eQuivalent

ll11o

-•liEu&gt;•
' -W•AN1-ID_.1

t.,.

Mason
County L ActiOn
Group, Inc IS accepting
applicatiOns for In-Home
Personal ·Care Assistants
Our serviCe area mciOOes all
of Mason County Startmg
rate :$6 15 per hour, plus 50
per hour add1t1onal for Sub·

Will do office cieamng in
Pomeroy, Middleport &amp;
Mason areas. Have reler·
ences, Phone after 5:00 or
leave message.{740)992·
6564

have
expenenca,
friendly,off1ce
honest,
dependable Must be available for
Saturday Q.nd somet1mes 1111
In lhru the week Please

r·O

8lb1NESS

()pp(}KilJNITY

I·

~~;~::~~~
lit&gt;

ur

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
NG CO recommends tha

deliver resume 1n person to
ou do busmess with peo
Pay Day EMpress. 900
le you know, and NOT t
Full ~time posi1ions available . Pay, plus 35 per mile lor Second Ave Gallipolis, OH
end money .through th
Working with MR/DD aduns travel, lor shopptng..or travel ·No phone calls please.
all until you have 1nvest1
client lo client Apply at 22 1·
ated the offenn
10 Varied settings
Send reaLime or
1/2 Ma1n Streel, Po1nl ---~~-.~-- ::::~~:::!::::~
Interest letter tc:
· Pleasant from 8:30·3.30pm ·Por1amed1c, the na110ns
MONEY
Green Acree Regional
or 3041675·3300. MGAG, leading paramedical health
Canter, Inc.
Inc. is an EOE , M/F, A/A informat1on service compa· ___
10 LoAN
AttenUon: Personnel
employer.
ny is seeking med techs.
P.O. Efcx 240
phlebotomies, EMTs and
Lesage, wv 25537
Medi Home Health Agency, LPNs to do insurance
••NOTICE••
Inc. seelong a full-time AN 8Mams m the Gallipolis &amp;
Fax: 304 ~ 762 •2862
Email:
Case M~nage r lor the Meigs County area. Must !Berro\)' Smart. Contact thE
garcOdlrecway.com
Gallipolis, Oh1o locatiOn have 1. year blood .draw P,1o Division of Financia
EOE .
Must be licensed both In experience
Contractor Institution's
Office
a
Oh10 and West V1rgima Postlon
Fax res ume to. E?nsumer
Affair
Immediate
Openings Minimum two years superv1- District Manager-614 _785• . ~EFORE you refinancE
Residential
Tre,atment sio'n, management and
~ur home or obtain a loan
0565 or email to
~EWARE of requests fo
Facility for boys, now hiring hqme health expenence . We phi\l 20dmrOpor1amedienet
ny large advance pay
Youth Worker position. Pa1d offer a competitive salary,
Medical Insurance. Call benelits package, 401K, and
Swimming Pool Service
~ents of tees or 1nsurance
~_;,all
the · 0111ce
o
between 9:00am-4.00pm ilell. time . E .O E. Please
Techn1c1an
1- ·
(740)379-9083.
send resume to 352 Second Job dulles Include, serv•c 1ng ponsumer AffMs toll freE
Avenue , Gallipolis. OH above ground and rn ground
t 1-866·278·0003 to lear
Local electrical distributor is 45631 . Attn: Audrey Farley. pools, spas, installing liners f the mortgage broker o
now hiring a counter sates· AN. Clinical Manager. •
and building billiard tables. ender is properlylic~msed
person Previous exper~ence
·or basic electrical knowl- - - - : - - - - : : - - : - - - : Wages considered on expe·
This IS a public serviCE
edgE! is preferred Please Meigs County Chamber of rience . Must have valid dnv· ~~nouncement from thE
send
resume
to
HR Commerce 1s seekrng coor- ers licenses . Contact ~h10 Valley Publisi'Hi'lG
d1nator ol Operations with Debbie (304)295·6985 or ~ompanv)
Department· P.O. Box 6668
tune! raising a plus. Salary (30-4)488-7272 . After 6.00
Huntington, WV 25773 or
p30 PRot~
based on expenence. Send PM call (740)378-6111
fax to 1{304 l 697•8 t 15·
resume
to
:
238
West
Main
1
SERVICES
EOE/MIF/DN
Streel , Pomeroy. Deadline ~-------1nllcr Technician
'
Management Opportunities February 15, 2005.
DIRECTV
We seek career oriented
Free DVD Player
individuals who will stnve to -----.,.-c.--:- One oJ Oh1a's leading motor
Neede d RN tor approxi· · ca~ ·1 ers has an immediate
Free HBO &amp; Cinamax
achieve the best in customer
"
mately 240 children In openrnn •n 'o ur ex1remely
Free Professional '
satisfaction and team work.
•
Installation
·If you have a desire to be Athens County Preschools. active growing shop for a
up to 4 Rooms
successful with a goat driven Must have criminal back· Trailer lechnician. The sueground check .
Duties cessful applicant must have
Call1·800·523·7556
and growing company, we
d' 1
k'
include me •ca trac 1ng, a hr'nh 1--1 ol mechanical
for details •
offer- health, dental, II I e
•
......
vis•on and hearing screens, aptitude and be able to work
insurance, prescription caret nrowth charting and teach·
·u.. d .
Th
d h
bonus program , pa'ld vaca· •
Wlu• nvers.
ree an a a11 Jewelry. Buy Sell Gold ,
ing health and safety units to d~ work week , paid vaca· Diamonds.
Gemstones
and
adults. .
d
h "h
tion
and
management children
1
apparel. Adva.ncement from
lion, persona p.ys. eau ' Repalf, Appraisals , Gem
.1you are 1nterested 1n Approximatety 40 hours nd
a msurance. paid holld'"'s,
..."estlng
Graduate
Within 1
"'
oventme pay. 401 K plan and Gemolonlst.
Jeweler.
Gampo I.IS, OH or Ch ar 1eslon, month. both mormngs a
•
0)64&lt;6365
.
afternoons
.
Required
uniforms
are
among
the
(7
or
1740)446·
4
WV area. Apply 1n person at
S
~
Wednesdays. Pay 1s 20.00 many benefits of working al 3080 _
. ~..
the Burger Kmg nT:Sstaurant
located at the Ohio River an hour on a service con· Arctic Express, Inc T[le
tract. Mall or drop off a position is open now and
TURNED DOWN ON
Plaza. Gallipolis, or mail
resume to The Athens· \H'III can benln work immedi· SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
resume to: Burger King, 65
•
•
Meigs Educational 5 ervice ately. FaM, emalls or In per·
No Fee Unless We W1n1
Upper
RIVer
Road,
R
d
Center,
507
ichlan
son apptlcants are we+come,
1·888-582·3345
Gallipolis, OH 45631 or fax Avenue . Suite 108, Athens.
3Q4·529.0053
Deadline ·February 18. We
Denver Fannin
I~ I \ I I .., I \ I I
MANAGER·tN-TRAINING are an EOE/Provider.
Maintenance

r

L-------.,1

HeaHh Cerw Services cur·
rently has a laundry/house·
keeping superv1sor·ln·lra•n·
ing posltion open Rotating
schedule with on-can duties
required. Must posses
strong supervisory lkllls, be
hardworking and depend·
able. Benefit package avail·
able EOE.
Send application/resume to·
The Arbors at Gallipolis
170 Pinecrest Dnve
G&amp;llipohs, Ott 45631
ATIN linda Oenn1s
Fax: 740·446·9oaa

Overbrook Center i~ currently accepting applications for
a Reglstere&lt;l Nurse Please
come In and till oU1 an application at . 333 Page Street.
Middleport. EOE

Bualneas · OpportunityThree renlal properties for
sale DupleM, eaCh with 3
BIA . UR. 0/A, Kitchen. Bath
&amp; Porch House 3 BIA , UA,
Kitchen. Balh. Conage BJA,
Rental
Kitchen , Bath
income lor all three -Approx
$900 per month Pflce for all
Located
three-- $75,000
104; 106 7th Street, Pmnt
Pleasant
(30 4)675·2495
attar 6'00
·

HELP WArmm

Pa rt-llme h eIp wanted · Must

Superintendent
42n Lyman Drive
Hilliard, OH 43026
Fax 614·527-4114
Ema1t: mtm:Oorc;tlcexpress
EOEI Drug free ·W?rkplace

com

1!!8

FOR SALE

3 bedroom. 2 bath, fireplace,
on 1 6 acres. RIO Grande
area .
$85,000
Call
(740)709· 1166.

Jim'S: Carpentry
We do remodeling and most
any unl1nished wor.k, also
tree
removal
small
1740)446·2506. (740)367·
0437.

All real eatate advertl•lng
In this newspaper !a
•ubject to the Federal

Fair Hou•lng Acl ot 1968.
which makes It lllegallo
ldvertlae "any
preferenc•, llmlllitlon or
discrimination baled on
race, color, religion, HX
f1millal •tatu• or n..lonal
o'rlgln, or any lnt.ntlon to
make •ny such
preter•nce, llmtta,tlon or
dlal::rlmlnatlon."
This

new1paper wm not
rN1

estate.whlch 11 In
vlolarlon of tM l•w. Our
readers ant hentby
Informed that 111

..

r M~s~ I
2 bedroom mobile home tor ·
sele. (740)992·5858

2001
28x52
Fairmont,
$26,500; 1996
14x70
FleetwoOd, $8,500 Call
1740)709·1166
2003
Fleetwood
Anniversary, 14X52. 2 bedroom. 1 bath. heat pump,
stove,
refrlgera1or,
$17,000.00. 1740)992.0002
70's 2br, 1ba, Tax~T 1 me
steal, Central-Heat/Air, all
appliances
included.
Washer/Dryer hook·up, ntce
front-porch.
Located In
Camp Conley, great starter·
home on Rented Lot or can·
be
moved.
$1 ,500
(304)372·8534 al rocordl,...
d!al3333
92 BreezewoOd 14x76- 3
bedroom, 2 bath, CIA,
$10,000. Valley VIew Dr
1740)441.Q953.

Immediate possession! Only
5213.68 per mo. Now 3 bod·
room, 2 bath mob1le home.
Only minutes from Athen1:
1·BD0-837-3238

dwelllnge lldv.rt!Hd In

thla newspaper are
•v.tlable on an equal
opportunity .,_..,._

--------House for sale by Owner,
4br, 2ba, Lg. Eat·ln K1lchen,
Bonus rooms, 0 /2 Car
Garage, Wood Floors &amp; Tile.
Located on approx. 1-acre,
lots of Extras (304)675·2523

SAVE·SAVE·SAVE
Stock mOdels at old prieta,
2005 models arriving Now,
Cole 's
Mobile
Home&amp;,
15268 U.S. 50 East, Athens,
011io 45701, 1740)592·1972,
~whe re
Vou Oet Vour
Money's Warth~

Inventory Blowout!
All S:lngle wldes must go!
Oakwood
Homes
1
Barboursvil le,
(304)7363409
Elegant Cafe for Sale,
Barboursville, WV call 59J..
Move-In cond1t1on 3 bed· 2869 leave message If inter·
room , 1 bath home, garage, ested.
deck, !;lose to sthool
LoiS&amp;
priced .
Reasonably
ACREAGE
1740)949·3090

rAND~

r

Over 2000 · sq It home ·
$53,999 00 ctetlvered . Offer
ends 02128/05. Only 2 avail·
able No trades-no dealers
, -800-349-6411
Own your land?
down?

$500 00

Have
· 95%

approval an your dream
800·349-6411

Approx . 64 acres of wooded
land west side St. At. 160
between Klrr &amp; Evergreen.
$95,000.
740·245-s-18;

iiiiliiiill

1· ~r·'

Reduced 31ldr. 2ta. 28x56
home, 28x48 barn. hid
inground-poot hot·tub on 6acres. Mtllstone Rd,$95.000
1304)576-2920
Spring Vtl\ev

3 Bedroom, 1·1/2 baths,
Large
Family
Room,
Fireplace
&amp;
Garage
Aecenlly
renovated ,
Immediate
PossessiOn
(740)446·7881 .

HousEs
FORRi:Nr
t..-...iliiiitiliiii._.l
1BR tumlshed house, NC,
no smoking, no ~ta,
water/garbage · turrnal'\ed.
$325/rnonlh, $325/deposll.
1740)446-1759.
2 Bedroom houH In
Middleport. Call after 5·00
PM. (740)992·7501 .

2 "' 3 bedroom hOuSe In
F'omeN&gt;y ·for ...... ,., pets,
(740)992-5858 •

ssuSocial Security
$1.300 Net. We can finance 3 bedroom house in
you a home. Call (304)736· Middleport, all. electric. No
pels. $450 .00 per month and
3400
$450.00 · (740)992Use your tax refund 10 buy 3t91'
your DREAM HOME We - -bed-room--hOu-.-_-r_R_Io_
.
3
have government programs . GrancN, $550/month CaH
and speciaiiM:'andng to help
make your dreams came {740)4.4Hl 194 or (J~)44 1 •
184
true. Call now. Umited pro· _1_
_ _ _ _ _ _ __

grams available 1-800-349- 87 Spruce St. small 2-3 bm&amp;4 11
room home. S375 month ,.._
erences
required. CaH
in
West
2br
House
(740)446-2158.
Columbia , can (304)773·
www.orvb.com
5284
ntce 3 beelroom, 2·1/2

HornelloHngo.

Lilt your hOme by calling
ScHorul
Overbrook Center is current·
MB!gs Industries, Inc is hir·
3 bedroom 2 bath with fir&amp;17ol4)0ole-3112Q
1y accepung appl&lt;eations for 1
ing substitute Janitorial and
place.
t
years
aki
m
county
a
Licensed
Prac1ical
Nurse
lawn maintenance positions.
on 4.3 acres. $75.000. CaM View photoSf~nfo online.
(LPN). Please come in and
Experience
in
(740)709·1 166.
O.lllpolls
Career
Coil4tge
1!11
out
applicahon
at
333
Jan1tonaVcustodial
work
Bedre&gt;O!", 2 Car unatPage Street . Middleport . (C areers ClOse To H ome)
preferred . Must have a valid
Call
T.odaJ'
740-446·436
7,
~rage , well malnacf'led
3
bedroom.
1
stOf)'
all
elec·
EOE
Ohio drivers license and
1·800-214-0452
81ned hOme m GallipoliS
tric
remodeled
house
m
'
high school diploma or GED.
WWWQI~.C.IMroollegecom
Middlepon 371 Broadway Code 1105 or call
&amp;
EMT's
Paramed•cs
Send resume to
Meigs
Accr~I &amp;CI Memoer Accttt01iing street. $26.000 00 (740) 992·
(740 ) 2~5-043 7
Industries , Inc .. PO Box 307, Sell Avon rna~· 50%. Cell needed. Apply at 1 354 Coura b 1~1 Coli ~
3194
Jackson P1ke, GallipOliS.
1740)446-3358
Syracuse Ohio 45779
a~ School• 127.. B

·--~-mliiiuctlONIIiliilliita.,l

Your dream home is only a
phone call away. Apply now·
land programs 'a available
with rates as low as 4.99%.
1-BD0-349-641 1

For sale· 14X70 Windsor, 3
bedroom, set up In Country
Homes, $6,995.00 Move In
tOday' Call (740)992-2167 Of
(740)385-4019.

• knowingly accept
ldvertl..n.ntli for

--*1

HOMES

mRSALE

fwrighl@lc.net

WAI'ill'D

Ad. area·

mull

Trlbune-Senllnei-Regiater will be respon1lbh!l for no more than the cost of the apace occupied by the error and only the first inaertlon. We ahlll
eny to.. or expense that result• from the pub!ic:allcn or omission of an advertisement Correction will be made in the first availabh1 edition . • Box
are always confidential . • Current rate card applies . • All real estate advertlaementa are aubjecllo lhe Federal Fair Hou~ng Act of 1968. • Thla
accepts only help wanted ada meeting EOE alandarda. We will not knowingly accept any advertl1lng In violation ot the 111\111.

• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Lost: Pygmy 81lly Goat,

Clark Chapel

oso

Skip and Eddie McGovern
Patriot, OH

must be prepaid'

Reward fO! &lt;nforma·
hon leading to recovery or a
YARD SAl··=Anyone Interested In study- short red ha1r female Lo~--tiiGiiAiiWPOiiiiiiiiiUSiiit'•
lng and discussing "A Dachshund Lost in Herman ·
Course In Mira cles ~ ca ll Ad/ Ingalls Rd. area on Jan . Heated garage sale, 1!4-t /9
.9·5pm Mov1es, ,tapes, cos ,
1740)992·1901
171h. Calll740)446·7732.
4 speaker amp wfhead
No ATV'S or vehicles ol any Found: Mmiature Collie OVDs, guns, sweat shirts,
kind permitted pn Zusj:lan 1131105. Clark Chapel Rd . Lev1 jeans, coats &amp; lots
property near Mason I area- B1dwell (740)388· more 3154 Kriner Rd off
Clifton,WV
r
1520
218. 740 446·4419.

4x4'o For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement ............................................ 030
Antlqu......................................................... 530
Apartments tor Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flee Market.............................080
Auto Pane &amp; Accessories .................. :....... 760
Auto Repair ..................................................770
Autos lor Sate ............................................:. 710
Boato I Motors for Seta ............................. 750
Building Supplles .......................... :............. 550
Bualneoa and Buildings ............................. 340
Business ppportunlty.................................210
Buslneaa Training ....................................... 140
Campers I Motor Homes .............., ............ 790
Camping Equipment .................................... 780
Carda of Thanka .......................................... OtO
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... t9D
ElectrlcaVRefrlgeratlon ..: ............................ 840
Equlpmenl for Renl ..................................... 480
Excavatlng ................................................... 83D
Farm Equlpment .........;................................ 610
Farms for Rent. ............................................430
Farms for Sale ............................................. 330
For Leaae ..................................................... 490
For Sate ......... :.................................. :........... 585
For Sale or Trade ..............................-. ......... 590
Fruita I Vegetabteo ..................................... 580
Fumlahed Rooms ........................................ 450
Ganeral Haullng...........................................85D
Giveaway......................................................040
Happy Ada ................................:...................
Hay &amp; Graln ..................................................640
Help wantacl ................................................. 1tO
Home lmprovamenta...................................81 0
Homae lor Sata ............................................ 31 0
Houaehold Goods .............................., ..••.••• 510
Hou-lor Rent ........................................ ..4t0
In Memoriam ................................................020
lnaurance ..................................................... t30
Lawn &amp; Garden Equtpment.........................660
UYntock ............ :..........................................630
L.oat and Found ........................................... 060
Lot• &amp; Acre~ge .....:...................................... 350
Mlacellaneouo ..............................................170
Ml-llitneouo Merchandlae .......................540
Mobile Home Repair ....................................860
Mobile Homaolor Rent... ............................ 420
Mobile Homao for Sale ................................320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcyclaa &amp; 4 W'-elera ..........................740
Mualcal lnotrumanta ,................................. 570
Peraonato ...........................................,......... oos
Pets tor Sale .................... ~ ........................... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
Profaoolonal Servtces ................................. 230
Radio, TV I CB Rapetr ............................... t60
Real Eotata Wantad ..................................... 360
Schocilo lnotructlon..................................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 850
Situation• Wantad ....................................... 120
Space lor Rent ............................................. 480
Sporting Goodo ........................................... 520
SUV'olor Sille .............................................. 720
Tnlcb lor Sale ............................................ 715
Uplloletery ................................................... 870
Vana For Sate ...............................................730
Wantad to Buy ............................................. 090
Wantad to Buy- Farm Suppllea .................. 620
Wantad To Do .............................................. 180
Wantad to Rant ............................................ 470
Yard Silla- Ga1Upotlo.................................... 072
Yard S.la-PomeroyiMlddla ......................... 074
Yard Seta-Pt. Plaaunt ................................ 076

6:30pm

12 gauge- Slug- 680

• All ads

All ~ Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display : 1:00
Thursday for Sundays Pape,r

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(. ~
~
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SO¢ for small
51.00 for large

POUCIES: Ohio Valley Publlehlilg rtltNtl the right IO tdlt, reject, or cancel any ad 81: any time. Enore

CLASSIFIED INDEX

American Legion Middleport

Display Ads

• Start Your Ads With .A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevliltlan5

Public No1.lces 1., Ne-spw.p•r•.
Vour RIKht 1.n K.-. ..- . Delivered Rl&amp;hll 1.. , 'nur'Dooor.

Oeari!Jire.f'

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

child Possibly running with 2
year ok:l male Walker hound.
Found· Par1 Yorky Rt 2
Phone·
(740)992Gallipolis Ferry Area cau to
4572(evenlngs) (740)992· An Excellent way to eam
iden1ily 13041638· 7048
3812 and (740)992-1362
money The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304·882·2645

'

National Association,
Lee by deed datad
as Indenture Trustee,
November 19, 1891,
AFCMortgage loan
end
recorded
In
Volume 73, Page 2t1
Assai Backed Notes,
Serlae t999-4 filed Ita and 2t2 of the
Complaint In Case
Recorda of Deed of
No. 04 CV 110 and on
Meigs County, Ohio.
tiled Its Supplemental
Save and except a
Complaint In the
small tract of Real
Court ol · Common
Eatate conveyed to
Pleas Meigs County,
Loula Reibel, beginOhio alleging that the
ning at Point 26 laet
above-named North 20 deg. 1rom
Oelendant(s), Thomas · the Southeast comer
Darst, Jane Doe,
of lhe M.E. Church
Unknown Spouse, tf
Parsonage
Lot:
any, of Thomas Darst, thence North 66 t12
'Yvonne Darst, 'John
deg. west 3 fHt and 9 .
Doe,
Unknown
Inches; thence north
Spouse, II any, of
20 deg. east 17 faet
Yvonne
Darst, and 4 Inches; thence
'Charles Whittington,
aouth 66112 deg. east
•Jane Doe, Unknown 3 leet and 9 Inches;
Spouse, If any, of
thence south 20 deg
weal 17 faet and 4
Charles Whittington,
have or claim to have Inches to the place of
an lnterelll In tho real
beginning, end coneotate
daacrlbed lalnlng about
65
below "The
land
square leet, more or
referred to In thla
tass, and H Is further
co'm mltmentls a~uet­
understood that no
ed In the State of
pan of the well on
Ohio,
County
of oald parsonage lot Is
Meigs Situated In the
hereby
corweyed.
VIllage or Pomeroy,
Parcel No.: 16-01943
County of Malgo and
and currently sat
State of Ohio:
forth fn Deed Book
Beginning at the 335,
Page
96,
SoutheMI corner of a Recorded 5111/93.
lot formerly -nod by Atoo
commonly
Lucinda Starkey on
known aa: 118 Union
Union Avenue In oald
Avenue, ' Pomeroy.
Village of Pomeroy;
Ohlo; 45769.
lhance north 20 deg.
The "-tltloner fureaot along the north
ther alleges that by
line of oald lot too
reaaon of default of
IMI; thence lOuth 70 the Defendant( a) In
'deg eaot 50 feet; the payment or •
thence lOUth 20 deg promlooory
note,
weot 100 feel to the according to )ta tenor,
llna of. uld Union
the conditione of a
AY8nue; thence along
concurrent mortgage
the line of uld Union
deed glvan to oecure
AY8nue, North 70 deg the payment of said
weal 50 feet to the
note and conveying
place of beginning,
the
pramlaea
oald premleea being a described, hiVB been
pan of L.ot No. 425 ol
broken, and lhe uma
aald
VIllage
of
hao
become
Pomeroy, and being absolute.
the aame preml•••
The
Petitioner
dl8dad by Margarat praya
that
tha
Hurst to Theodora
Dafendant(a) named
Eleelataln . by deed
above be requiN to
deled November 16, anowar and ut up
1885, and recorded In their lntMUt 'eald real
Volume 6t, Page 224
eotita or be l o r and 225 recorda,
berrad from aolll11ng
U.lgo County, Ohio,
the ume, lor loractoand
deeded
to aura of oald mortGeorge
Eiaetoteln
gaga, the marehallng
and wife to Eloa S. ol any llano, and the

Word Ads

r
1,-------·

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
NOTICE BY PUBLI- HEREIN AND COSTS.
CATION ON DEFENYOU ARE REQUIRED
DANTS
AND TO ANSWER THE
UNKNOWN HEIRS. IN COMPLAINT WITHIN
THE COURT OF COM·
28 DAYS AREA THE
MON PLEAS, MEIGS
LAST PUBLICATION
COUNTY, POMEROY,
OF THIS NOTICE
OHIO. THE CITIZENS
WHICH WILL BE PUBBANK OF,LOGAN VS.
LISHED ONCE EACH
ESTHER
MAE
WEEK FOR SIX SUCFRANKLIN, ET. AL.
CESSIVE
WEEKS.
CASE NUMBER 04- THE LAST PUBLICACV.142
TION WILL BE MADE
TO: ESTHER MAE ON FEBRUARY 18,
FRANKLIN, IF LIVING,
2005 AND THE 28
THE SPOUSE IF ANY,
DAYS
FOR
AN
AND TO THE WIDOW,
ANSWER WILL COMHEIRS, . DEVISEES,
MENCE ON THAT
AND NEXT OF KIN OF
DATE. IN CASE OF
DESCENDENT, ALL
YOUR FAILURE TO
OF WHOSE NAMES
ANSWER OR OTHER·
OR ADDRESSES ARE
WISE RESPOND AS
UNKNOWN TO PLAINREQUIRED BY THE
TIFF, JOHN H. WARNOHIO RULES OF
ER, JR, IF LIVING,
CIVIL PROCEDURE,
THE SPOUSE IF ANY
JUDGMENT
BY
AND TO THE WIDOW,
DEFAULT WILL BE
HEIRS, DEVISEES,
RENDERED AGAINST
AND NEXT OF KIN OF
YOU
FOR
THE
DESCENDENT, All
RELIEF DEMANDED
OF WHOSE NAMES
IN THE COI,IPLAINT.
OR ADDRESSES ARE •(1) 14, 21,28,(2)4, 11,
UNKNOWN TO PLAIN18
TIFF, MARY EMMA
KING, IF UVING THE
SPOUSE IF ANY, AND
P11bllc Notice
TO THE
WIDOW,
HEIRS, DEVISEES,
AND NEXT OF KIN OF
LEGAL NOTICE
DESCENDENT, ALL
Thoma a·
Darst,
OF WHOSE NAMES
Jane Doe, Unkn-n
OR ADDRESSES ARE
Spouoe, II any, ol
UNKNOWN TO THE
Thoma•
Darst,
PLAINTIFF,
AND
-vvanne Derail "'John
DOROTHY A. HILL IF
Doe,
Unknown
UVING THE SPOUSE
Spouu, II any, or
IF ANY, AND TO THE
Charteo Whittington,
WIDOW,
HEIRS,
whou t..t known
lldd,... II P.O. Box
AND
DEVISEES,
NEXT OF KIN OF
70 Smithfield, PA
DESCENDENT, ALL
1547S.0070 and •118
OF WHOSE NAMES Union
Avenue
OR ADDRESSES ARE Pomeroy, OH 45769UNKNOWN TO THE
11100, but whou praa·
PLAINTIFF.
. THE
ant place ol real·
OBJECT OF THE
dence Ia unknown
COMPLAINT IS TO will take notice that
THE
on Auguot 12, 2004 at
PARTITION
2:12 p.m., LaSalle
REALTY
PARCEL
NUMBER
Bank 1
N.A.,
fka
11-0tttMI.IIOO,
LaSalle
National
11-01193.1100,
Bank, as Indenture
11-0IIW.IIOO,
truatae under that
11-011e2.000, AND
certain Slla
and
THE PRAYER IS THAT
Servicing Agi'MIIIent
SAID REALTY BE
dated December 1,
t lit, among AFC
PARTITIONED
OR
'ORDERED SOLD IF IT
Truot Serlae 1H9·4
CANNOT BE PARTI·
aa loouar Superior
TJONED, FOR AN
Bank FSB, ao llaller
ALLOWANCE
OF
and Servlcer, and
ATTORNEY
FEES
LaSalle
Bank

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

.'

Defense wins-championships; Kearse is Philly's own Freak
·this defense has.won two
BY ROB MAADDI

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydallysentlnel.com

VerY

baths, No pelt, $7501m0nth
+ S.C. Cop. (740)048'2423
after 7pm.

For ,..,..~, 2 and 3 bedloom
mobile homes starting It
$260.00 per month . Cali
1740) 992·2167.

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

r M~~ l~.._t_AP.oiii~iiioR

Help Wanted

RENriiiiiiii-"

2 bedrooms,
Completely

f bath, dEtn,

BEAUTIFUL
APARTAT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344 to $442.
Walk to shop ~ movies, Call
740-446-2568 /
Equal
Housing Opportunity.

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

ALLEYOOP

Help Wanted

r

Gracious living. 1 and Z bed:
roor:n ·apartments at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments in· Middleport .
From $295·$444. Call 740·
992-5064. EqUal Housing
OpportunitiEis.

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, f urnished and unfurnished, security deposit
required, no pets, 740-9922218.

PVH
We are expaocling our staH and need more sales people.

No Experience is required. onlY, a willingness to learn. wor~
as a team and have a strong initiative.

• Excellent Pay and Bonus Plan • Great Benefits
• Work AI The #1 Dealership
Call To 'Schedule An Interview:

Tom Peden Country
1-800-822·0417. 372·2844
475 South Church Street'· Ripley, WV 25271 .

r1.~---{;o(Jffl--·•'- -Ir
iO

HOUSI:HOIJJ

, 238 First Avenue, IBR, t
·bath. kitchen furnished.
: River view. New carpet and
• paint. Easy walk downtown.
No pets.' $350 month plus
utilities. Reference, deposit.
(740)446-4926.

Housing Opportunity.
1

Twin Rivers Tower is accepting a~plications for waiting
list for Hud-subsized, 1· br,
apartment, call 675-6679
EHO

2BR apt. State ROute 160.
$400/month. stove/re frigerato r included , washer/dryer
hookup. 1740)44 f-0194 or
(740)441; 1184.
'

Two bedroom apartment. 2
blocks from downtown
Gallipolis. NO ANIMALS.
Water paid. References,
requi red. $425 month, $200
2BR clean apartment W/0 security deposit. (740)256~
hookup, no pets, $350 per 6176.
month &amp; deposit. Call ~:!::'--~----,
(740)256-1245
SIII.CE
~2B-R~ups-1a-ic_s_a_p_
t_2_38__Fi-rst

iL,--•FOiriliRI.iiRENrliiliri._.l

bunkbeds, twin, full, queen,
king mal1reSses. dressers.
couChes, dinettes, recliners,
grave monuments, much
mo~e.
{740)446-4782.
Gallipolis. OH , Hrs. 11-3 {M·

Mlsc:Eu.ANEous
MERCHAoNDl'ffi

PETS
ffiR SALE

. ..,

"---iriliirriiriiiiriro_.l
Border Collie puppies. Know
for intelligence &amp; livestock
working ability. Imported
bloodlines.
1st
shots/wormed . (740)379·
9110.

r

'IIF.~~~~~~~'ii
SPA FACTORY Oun.ETS
New Shipment
. 20-tubs in-stock
Cedar Knoll Mall.
Ken1uckyTrading Post,
Ashland.

iO

r

• • • •

ius

u

__L60~22-7185

i

·1

•

u

a

:;;:=~=======~
BUUJJING
St.Jil'PLIES

"'~-------...

a

•

Tell Someone You Love Them
In' A Special Way

-Your Way- On February 14thWith A Sentinel Love Message!
Examples of Sizes and Prices
I INCH AD ..... $5.00

l'h INCH AD .. $7.50

(APPROXIMATELY 20 WORDS)

(APPROXIMATELY 30 WORDS)

Happy
1st Valentine's Day
Tessa!
~Mommy &amp; Daddy

Happy Valentine's Day
Grandma, Grandpa,

Mom, Dod, Sister, and.
· Brother ...

Thanks lor belnq such
a QreallomMy!
lloYeYouVeryMuch!

3 INCH AD ... $15.00
(A.PI"ROXIMATE:LY 60 WORDS)

2 INCH AD ... $10.00

•
Happy
Valentin~ · !! Day

(APPROXIMATELY 4&lt;1 WORDS)

CUpid!s arrO'.\' Is
straight and true,
In bringing this tt)ought
I'm sorry about the
other night.
When we had that

terrible fight.

A Sentinel Jove message
Wo\S

a"gcxxl Idea.

To show you just how
much I love you, Marla.

MAY W[ALWAYS
HAV[A
WOND[RFUL Llf[

MY

ADS MUST BE
RECEIVED BY
· 5:00PM,
TUESDAY,
FEBRUARY 8,
2005.

HUI~tY

Writing this love
message gives me the
opportunity to tell you
just how much I love
you and enjoy being
yo,ur husband. I know
I sometimes don't
it but I
do.
Valentines

TOGITH[RI

r '

HAv &amp;

1r---------------------------------·--------~
Write your
Below:
•

Message

•I

•I

Mail Your Love Message and Totti Amount Due To:

·The Daily Sentinel

•I
•
I

Ill Coort StrHI, Pomeroy, Ohio 4~769

Name·~~;,;~=-===;============================================

Address:

I1 Size or Valentine:

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gu"er.s
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks
We do It all except
· furnace work

' AUTOS
mR SALE

BUILDERS InC.

New Hnrnl!s • Vinyl
Siding •

Windows·.·Roofing
, COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

JONES'

i

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

·

• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• References .
Available
• Free Estimates
Call Gary Stanley

740·742·2293

Construction

·MANlEfS
SElF STORAGE

2000 Ford Winstar LX , 81K,
Mixed round bales, hay 2/sliding doors. seats 7, all·
power, rear air, t1nted win·
stored insid8. $15-$20
asking .$6,900,
New day bed, $325. Phone dows.
(740)669-5653
(740)446·1 062

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992-6635

Square bales of hay for sale. 2001 Dopge Qaravan Sport,
NeVer wet, $2 bale. Quantity 70,000 miles, excellent con(740)2 45· dition, sliding doors-both
discount. Call
sides, auto, V6, AJC, power
9044
everything, time/temperaI R \ \'oi 'OI{ I \110 \
ture
gauge.
$11 ,000
.
Auras
(7401256-6543.
·
10

"Middleport's only

Self-Storage•

r40 re:ws I
4

04 Suzuki Volusia 800,
1 ,000+
miles.
black,
(740)256-6938 leave mas·
sage.

ROBERT
BISSELL
COISTRUCnOI
• New Homes
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling

·1981 · Olds 98, 4dr, Runs 1979 Honda 750 10th
Good, Condition fair $1,000 Anniversary UrTJited -Edition.
Needs
ignition
work .
Call (304)675· 1264
(740)256-6870.
Evening
1991 Oldsmobile Cutlass Low mileage. $2,500.
Supreme, 4 door. sunroof,
good condition , $1 ,200 1999 Honda ES 4-wheeler.
OBO. (740)245-96.52.
Excellen t condition. $4,000
----------------- 'OBO. (740)256·6655.
1992 Chevy lumina, 3.4, 4 _;___:._.:___- : - - - - door, 107,000 miles, CD, au 2005 Ki:!iwasaki V-Twin 750
· Vulcan
Cycle,
never
pod
d
power, 1 owner, $2,900. d
(740)446-1463.
rop
, garage , 50 mpg.
$4,400 (304)675-2942

740-992-1m
Stop &amp; Compare

r

CAMI'ERS &amp;

OBO

(740)446-

WHEN YA SEE

THEM

THEM WORDS,

.JUGHAID, STEER

CLEAR !!

THE BORN LOSER

'""'~
Tk\S \)\/\) '&lt;OU
Rt:N.TE.C&gt; \S Tfl£.
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10

HOME

)MPROVfMEI'mi

ADVERTISE
v:OUR
I'
BUSINESS
IN THE

.G

"D

IMPOm
· Athens
Whaley's Auto
Parts
St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553

Re..tncki"9 lA~ ft· !'l'lodel . Stthnge
and After Marl&lt;et AJ.rts

PEANUTS
!1M A HUMAN BEING

See Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed
Now Available At

BAUl\1 LU\IBER
Scorpion Tractors
"Taking The Sting Out Of
Hard Work!"
Mid-Size 4Whe~l Drive Tractor
With 39hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

SU.NSHINE CLUB

c1XJLD

£(AIJA I weLL, 1
·~
~ .. tvl~tVJDI&lt;'(S {I)()T

WHAT IT Usa&gt; TO Be

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124, Chester 985-3301

27 Bireme

on

movers

45 Roed
ofsllcoms
46 -ex

29 Farewells
31 Civil War
prez

machine

32 Wimple
sporter
33 Ambulance
pro
35 Sheet·
music
words
37 Knickknack
stand

48 Dawn
under birds
49 Purple
Hower
50 Big hairdo
54 Month
fraction

G,

VMNT

DT

TJVNGRIG;

EM N T 0 B R I J N I

DT

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LNJF
RFGTI

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "ltbink when I was bom, it's like God said, 'Music!"
and that was it. All my life, that's alii knew.' - Shi~ey Hom
·
.
(c) 2005 by NEA, Inc . 2-4

T~~~~~y '2&gt;©\\~lA~~ttff6«

WORO
GAM I

- - - - - - ldhod ~y CLAY l . POLLAN
borrange leHars of
0 fcur
mombltd wcrds

the
be-

low to form four wordJ.

.

G YT E C N

It looks like you're going to be doing ·a lot
of running around in the year ahead,·both
careerwise and fqr perSonal reasons.
The added activity will be both stimulat·
ing and productive in all oi your affairs.
AQUARIUS {Jan. 20·Feb. 19)- Don't be
.,.....~ , disheartened tOday; because financial
trends are now beginning to rUn In Y&lt;Jur
favor. However, you'll need to be doubly
alert and on your toes to spot an unusual opportunity.
·
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - It won't
matter whether you're with a handful of
people or Involved in a t&amp;Tge group today.
Your natural leadership qualllles will be
muc:h In evidence and you'll be appointed chief of activities.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Those
contacts who you consider to be the
most progressive wilt be the vary ones
who will be able to help you the most
today. Avoid conferring with those who
are too steeped in tradition .
TAURUS {Aprir20-May 20) -Your co mmercial instincts will be beHer than usual
today, so trust them over more conservatiw thinking. There 's a chance you'll spot
something new that could be quite profitable in the tuiure .
GEMINI (May 21·-lune 20) - ·A clever
pvrson may come to your assistance
today and aid you in ways that would
enable you to accomplish something
meaningful which thus far you have been
unable to do on your own.
,
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) -You're an
especially quick thinker today and your
on·the-epot ideas are apt to be your best
ones. Friends and associates will appreciate your cleverness perhaps even more
i . than you dQ vo.urselt.
.-!..
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22} - New ways and
!
methods can be found at this point in
~ time to enhance your productivity where
~ • your work Of career Is concerned . Don't
be stuck in a rut today - give vent to
your new ideas.
VIRGO (Aug . 23~ Sept. 22)- Do not
I
reject any invitation you get today to a
!
social gathering. You coutd ~~ some~
one very Interesting Who'll /be able ,to
Introduce you to a brand-new group.
o
l....-.-.-.----.-------.1 LIBRA (Sop!. 23-0ct. 23) - Hood any
flashes of inspiration you get today to
make changes in your bask:: llfestyi8. Your
Intuition Is trying to put you on a track of
improv&amp;ment that you11 enjoy greatly.
YOU MU~T
ON AVeRA~.
SCORPIO. (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Praise
."THINK 81RPS
from you today will mean a lot to others.
1WOOUfOF
SO If you ·spot anyone of your friends
AReN'T VeRY
THRee OF
OB!'iERVAN"f
"fi-IEM AReN'T · doing something that is 'NOrthy or a c6m""'"'pllment, don't hokt baCk !rom tenlng them

2

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a lways

running around in circles. I think
1r a person has his reet·on the
ground and his head in the·

-R-'1 cl~~~~ _h.~

,.,-E-~1-U-T-A

I ALWA'r'5 FORGET
ABOUT TEETH ..

AND YOU'RE A DOG ...

(2 wds.j
Cava, of1en
011-quotad
catcher
lmpollng

ayprograms II'S created lrom quotations bV famous l)eOJ)Ie , paSI ana ~m
Each leltet mthe ciphe! i!MJs ~~ arlO!hef.
Todey's clUB: I equ~s K

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'lllrlhdto,y:

By S.rnlce Bade O.al

23 King. .
to monsieur 41
24 Palntlripa 42
25 "Snow•
veggle
43

by Luis Campos
Ca~ Ci~r

AstroGraph
-

swing .

40 Ready to

CELEBRITY CIPHER

S.lu~ay,F•b.5,2005

I

GARFIELD

';~::e~~~-"1
I

I

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

Yesterday, I gave a deal in which the
delenders snould have been plus 1,100
but ended minus 950. Thl ~ deal fea!ures
another big turnover and in some ways is
even more strange. It arose during the
Open Series match between France and
Greece.
Against six hearts. West leads the diamond king. You win with yoUr ace and
play the heart queen, but West pitches a
diamond. Hqw would you continue?
West must have been tempted to 99 the
"whole hog~ and .leap to five diamonds.
But his heart" void suggested that partner
mlghl have · sufficient length there to
incon\lenience the opponents. North's
live diamonds indicated slam interes1 in
hearts. South's six hearts was a major
overbid, but he did better than the French
South, who settled for five hearts. North ,
still trying to reach seven hearts, continued with six clubs ....... and South passed!
That contract had to rail by one trick. .
In six hearts, after West showed yoid in
trumps. I am confidenlthat you won with
dummy's heart ace and played on clubs.
When East follows four times, you cfiscard
both of your spades. Then, you can either
take a ruffing finesse through East's
SPade ace or trump both or your remaining diamOnds on the board; one low and
one high. You lose only one trump trick.
Bizarrely, the Greek South fan the heart
queen and went one down. So, Instead of
Greece's gaining 1,030 points {980 plus
50), the board was flat.
Finally, note that West must lead a spade
to defeat six hearts, which was found by
Michael Rosenberg for the United States

guy

22 Elevator

should pul[ himself .

0

Complete the chuckle Quoted
by frl ln"lp in the rni,~mg words
you d~vl!'lop from $./ep No . 3 below.

1
t:'ll PRINT NUMBEiED
t,;1 t(iiEilS IN SCL'A~ES

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

Reelor. Ebony- Opera · Revoke - BROKE
The guy my roommate dated liked Jo spend lots of
money . He has mastered the art of be1ng prosperous
·even though he's BROKE.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

l

,

BASEMENT
2002 Ford Escort ZX2, 5
WATERPROOFING
speed, 29,000 miles, air',
Unconditional Hfeiime . guar:
one ownar. Nice (740)441antee. Local references fur· .
0157 or (740)645-5141 .
nlshed. Established 1975 .
2003 Dod~e Neon STX Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4464door, 4cyl., automatic, 0870, Rogers Basement
power - everything. 11 ,000 Waterproofing.

~00

BARNEY

BIG NATE

MmuaHoMES ·
1998 Chrysler Conc:ord
111 .000 miles. c:lean car.
$3500 OBO. (740)256·6169 Class C Dutchman Motor
Ho,me 2000 Model, N~w
1998
Dodge
Strauss, tires,
all
accessories,
100,000 mil~s , runs great. sleeps-B. (304)675-7388 to
power everything, $2,400
OBO. (740)256-9031 or
(740)256-1233.

r-

+K

46 Mr. Arnaz.
47 Pot flower
1 Soggy
51 Gui!Jirlat
4 Deadly
- Clapton
aneke
52 Fomous lilt
7 Witty ona
ward
10 Old opy org. 53 P.O. aervlce
11 Tolly
55 Collae
13 Blouse trim
brewers
14 Emer\""'cy 56 Time to play
algna
57 401(kl
15 Soothing
eauoln
herb
58 Droop
t6 Pickling
59 SaH water
lngradlent 60 Protein
17 Pancake
source
flipper
19 Catches an
DOWN
20 Comhusker
at.
1 Calendar
21 Setfree
dlvs.
23 Entrancad
2 They Ofltn
26 Keno kin
clash
28 Source
.3 Recipe
. of metal
meas.
29 "Luck-- 4 Form
Lady"
of quartz
30 Senseless
5 Easily
34 Austria
mixad
neighbor
6 Billiards
36 Home tel.
7 Tam Jones'
· 36 Vagrant
country
39 Bread
8 lntenae
In gradient
9 Blrthstonas
41 Ding a door 12 Bargalnad
42 Pap
13 Shallow
44 Summer
Jake
cooler
18 Crumb toter

against Luxembourg .

1996 Ford Contour, excel· For SB.Ie: 1997 Honda 4 _
lent condition, one owner.
wheeler, 4x4. Used very lit·
low mites, $3,600, reason for
tie . $,2,200. (740)742-2852.
selling
moving
away,
(740)742-2459

93 Ford Escort LX . Auto, PS,
PB, AJC, 88,000 miles,

~

·-

• Leave a messa e

VAoNS

East
Pass
Pass

Another ride on
the big swing

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING.&amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING

new parts
for motor.
(740)2 47-2581
---:-------------199_i Dodge Aam 1500
truck. 4x4, quad cab ' Call
(740.)446-0924

North
St
Pus

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

.,
Brian Reeves
New Home Construction. Remodeling.
Renovations. Decks. Garages. Pole
Buildings, Roofs. Siding, Windows &amp; All
Other Residential Needs
Phone: 740-742-3411
for a free estimate.

West
4+
Pass

Opening lead:

1987FordF-1504K4with 3~

b d l'tt
3
M
o Y 1 14x 5x15 onster
M dde ,.
u
r ~res , motor out covered in garage with lots of

Delano
.
FOR SALE
304·675· •~--lliriiiiiriiiiiii,_-'

2003 Mitsubishi Eclipse,
excellent Condilion s14.soo
1304)675-6986

1¥
6¥

Tree Service

SEPTIC TANK PUMPING$95.00
PORTABlE TOflfT RENTAl
CAll FOR APPOINTMENT TODAY
992·3251 OR 591·8757

2285.
$6,500. (6 14)231-1355.
-H-ay__
to_c- .-a-le-:-S-q-ua_r_
e -.a-nd

· miles, $6.500. {740)441 ·
0337 or (740)645-6153.

South

Let me do it for youl

Hay lor Sale: Good quality 99 Jeep Cherokee Sport,
Timothy &amp; Alfalfa . $3·$4 a 4K4, EC, gold, auto, PW, Pl,
. bale. Taylor Farm (740)643- V6. CD, CC. keyless entry,

$5001 Honda's, Chevy's,
Jeep's,
Ect.
~alice
Impound s! Cars from $500
for listings 800·391 -5227
EXT 3901

+

TaKe the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

20 00

F
L,~--FUR-·S-Aoi·E··-

New Garage!\

• Rcplaccm(:n\

---=-------------

I

Q5

¥QJ10764
AJ 7

BISSfll

1977 1 ton Chevrolet with a
1o· dump, V8 , with 4 speed
tran s. (740)992·5228

i

South
•

992-6215 \WOJ6~5
Pomeroy, Ohio·
25 Years local Ex ience

1998 DOdge Dakota Sport
1000# round bales mixed extended cab 4x4, V6, autogh~aysssome a$l fa~losc C ha r d malic, 63,000 miles, $],000 .
·
· ·
· • (740}44~·0337 or (740)645· .
(740)698-2765
6153.

8

l ..... ·

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Lorori_..,;,IUriiiiRiiiSiiA.Jii,iiiE.__. . 740-992·7599

GRA.JN

2000 Fire Bird, for sa't.e.
Unique coldr of green, good
mileage call (304)675·8156

•I

CARPENTER
SERVICE'

Toyota Aav-4, '97 all wheel
drive. Loaded. 1 owner,
''" . . MVSJCAL
$5,700. Call (606)923-3259
l~llUJMENTS
or (304)429·8032, leave
message.
Conn Alto Sax· hardly used- mr-.;..~~---.,
15
new condition. $1 :095 .
TRUCK.';

Block, brick, sewer pipes,
bales.
windows, lintels, etc. Claude round
Winters, Rio Grande, OH Jackson Farm,
Call 740·245·5~21.
1743.

It's Valen-time!

oflove to you. .

YOUNG'S

r

3' room
and
bath , tion. Downtown Gallipolis_.
stove/refrigerator.
down· Approx . 1600 sq. ft. each. 1
stairs, all utilities paid. 46 or 2 baths. Lease price
Olive
Street.
$450. negotiable to encourage
new
business.
Call
(740)446-3945.
(740)446-4425 oc (740)446ANTIQU&amp;';
821 112 Seconel Ave . 2 beel- 3936.
~
•
room. upstairs apt. $315
\liiH II\ \JJI"'I
Buy - or sell. Riverine
month reference required .
Antiques, ·1124 East Main
Call (740)446-2158.
Hou~"OUJ . .on SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740. Beautiful2·story-town~ouse,
.,.......
992·2526. Russ Moore,
· overlooking Gallipolis City ..___•Gooooiililiilii--.,.11 owner.
park. Kitchen-family, · D.A. ,
L. A. 3 B.A., study, 2 baths,
MlscEuANEous
laundry area . References Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
MERCHANDISE
req uired, security deposit , Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.
no pets. $900 per mo. (740)4~6-7444 1-877-830(740)446-2325 oc (740)446- 9162. Free Estimates. EasY 1 electric scooter, 1 electric
financing, 90 days same as Wheel chair. 2 electric nits for
4425.
cash. Visa/ Master Card. vehicles. Call {740)446·
New 1 bedroom apt. Call Drive- a· little save alot.
0022.
(740)446-3736.

etHT THAT

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Neither

Steel Beams. Pipe RE!Par
For
Concrete,
Angle .
Channe l. Flat Bar, Steel
1990 Chevy, extended cab,
Grating
For
Drains,
8-foot bed. 32,000 actual
S)
Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L
miles, excellent mechanical
Scrap Metals Op'en Monday,
shape: 305
Autom atic.
SPOKilNG
53.400.00 060. (740)696Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
Goons
Friday, 8am-4.:30pm. Closed rlO
FARM
i227
T
VA
Thursday,
·
Saturday
&amp;
EQuiPMENT
Remington 11 00 L 20 . . Sunday. (740)44G-,7300.
'
1990 Ford F150. 4x4, auto.
synthetic
stock,
$400;
PW, POL, cruise. 92.000
30"
1996 C4 Cat dozer series Ill
8 tt BL4 I 12
ere a
ou
ga.
Prom Dresses fOr Sale:
model .
$26,500
OBO. actual
miles.
$3,000.
full chokes. $750: S&amp;W 63 "Tiffany design , pirik. full
(740)446·4053.
stainless 4" 22 revolver,
740 446·8044.
~'!r'--~-:o---,
$350; "Auger P95, blued length, layered, with straps
....
4x4
9mm2-i 0 roundclips,$375; and bead design. Size 24 ·
LIVESTOCK
· FoRSAI...E
Marlin 17 cal. heavy barrel Only been worn once, last ~

~~i~r~}~~.

H!.I...P YET!

"' Q 5

Honda Del Sol, black- 1993.
Moving· Must sell . Call
(740)446-4241.

"-------.;.,.1

au~ ~N'T

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Roll overs • Major Med •
Medicare
· • Cancer • Accident

96 Grand Prix, clean.
Q5 Ford F-150, clean.
(304)675-7375 (8-5)
Llewellyn Setter puppies. (304)674-0098 after 6 pm.
FDSB Registered. Excellent
bloodlines. DNA cer tified. 98 Cadillac Calera . Fully
Intelligent, loyal, make out- equipped , leather inter ipr,
low miles, mint condition,
standing hunters &amp; loving
pets: Ready Vale~tine 's Day. $7,900 Call (740)704-3751 .

Yamaha Tenor SaK· excel·
lent condition . $695
Artley Clarinet- excel lent
condition. $250.
Conn Trombone - eKcellent
condition , $295. (740)446·
1304 _

·-

··~ GOII&gt;IA NUl&gt; MOr!t: MUIGI.i

"Ti;ET ,t.U. 'T'HCet DINOS OUT""TH' PIT/ I WONO&amp;R.· WMY

93 maroon Caravan. 4 cyl.,
3rd row seat, runs good.
$900 080. (740)256-1652.

(740)379-2615
:__:_______~----Parrot • wlcage ami play
stand .
$700.00.
Call:
,17,:4~0):.;;9,;;92;.·~19~8,;,7_ _ __,
~ .....

•

.r.AKJ .63
E"u t
• 9 6 2
oil A 8 7 4
¥ K83
• K Q 10 9 8 5 3 2 • 6 4
.... 10 2
tfo9874

West

Ir!;=::::;==:;;;;;:=:;::=~
;
IF
10

02:-04-05

ot&gt; K J 10 3
¥ A 9 52

304-675-4340
AA/EC!E

fullleilgth, lay- Hogs for sale. Ready to
ced, with straps and shawl butcher (740)388 9858
·
•
·
from
David's Bridal. Size 22.
.'
heavy barrel , scope mount, Only been worn once, last Paint Ponies 46·48 inche'S.
$200; May1ag 30" white eiec$500 each.
'
year. $50. Contact Kristen
!ric stove, S75. (740) 446- Rayburn at 304 _675 _5979 or Hackney Pony $350
"2i!i90~5;;,·- - - - - - . , 304 674 5671
(740)593·7390
•
IF
•
·
C!:z~-"'":':'"""::"-......,

.u

North

Pleasant Valley Hospital
% Human Resm,uces
2520 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550

---:-:-::-:-c:-::-::--::::=:NEW AND USED STEEL

Ave. Stove/refrigerator. no
action , clip
led ,
boll
pets. $385/month + utilities + For Lease: Office or retail · wlscope
,
$225;
New
deposit. (740)446-4926.
spaces in very good condi- England 223 · single sho t,

r

i

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a Medical Record
Transcriptionist.
Registered
Health
Information Technician preferred. One to
three years of medical transcription
experience.
Excellent
salary,
holidays,
health
insurance single/family plan, dental plan,
life insurance, vacation, long-termed .
disability and excitement.
·send resumes to:

. Wondenul opportunities are ava i~~e in Tom Peden Country.

Tara
Townhouse •
Craftsman 12"' woodturning
1 bedroom apartment for Apartmenls, Very Spacious,
· lathe with copy crafter, used
rent in Pomeroy, rio pets, 2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors , CA, 1
1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted.
orie time: CraftsmarJ 4" belt
(740)992-5858
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool.
Appliance sander: metal cu lting band• 1 bedroo·m apt. in Sprlng Patio, . Start $385/Mo. No
saw; Cr'altsman 120 volt air
· Valley, $290 month plus · Pets. Lease Plus Security
Warehouse compressor 4 hp: (all like
' deposit , WI D hookups . Deposit Required , Days:
new) , (740)742-2620
; (740)388-0017 or (.740)339· 740-446-3481; Evenings:
m Henderson, WV. Pre• 0362.
740·._
367-0502.
Full Mount cinnamon coloiowned applicanes starting at
uunusual" black bear, walk: 2 bedroom apartment for THE
MAPLES .
100 $75 &amp; up all under warranty, ing position on all 4·1egs·
• rent in Syracuse: $200.00 Memonal
Driv8
·East, we do service work on all $700. Taxidermist fee on this
~deposit.
$330.00/tnonth Pomeroy, 740-992-7022, Make and Models (304)675·
aniffial is around $1,250.
· rent. includes water. sewage Subsidized
Residential 7999
Nice
mount; also Full Case
, and trash. Must have suffi· Housing for 5.Q veers of age
Western
Super X, 28 ga.,
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
. cient income to qualify and
older
PRIORITY
~p ape r'' shotgun shells, 20
Aepair-675-7388. For ·sale,
• (740)378-6111
GIVEN TO APPLICANTS
,~~------------re-cond ition ed automatic boxes of 25 each, 500·
WITH
INCOME AT OR
rounds, never open. 1960
' 2 bedroom apartment In
BELOW $ 10 .650 _Maximum washers &amp; dryers, retrigera·
: Centenary. all utilities paid
ERA, rare- $600. WW deliver
Income effective 01·28·2004. tors. gas and electric tor a fee, (7 40)533-3870.
• eKcep\ electric· $325. Call
ranges, air conditioners. and
for 1 person $17,700.00.
~(740)256-1 135.
Must meet HU0/202/8 crite· wnnger washers . Will do
JET
AERATION MOTORS
: 2 bedroom tri-level ap1. ria lor household composi- repairs on major brands in
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
· Spring Valley area . Deposit tion .
Managed
by ·shop or at your home
; required Phone (740)446· Silverheels. Incorporated , A Used Furniture Store . 130 Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1800-537-9528.
• 2957.
Realty Company Equal Bul aville Pike. Appliances,
·~c:c-~~~

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

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

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

BRIDGE

~2 BR mobile home in Bidwell.
. Water/trash/sewer
paid.
, $435/rent + deposit. . Will CONVENIENTLY LOCAT. : (Pro-rate).
No
pets. ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
• (740)368·9325.
To.wnhouse
apartments,
and/or small houses FOR
'-FOr rent: 2 BD mobile home,
RENT. Call '(740)441 - 111 1
.· $400/month $350/cleposit,
lor application &amp; information.
water &amp; trash included
(740)388-9905 or (740)388- For Lease : One bedroom,
0159.
nice 2ncf floor apt. Corner
Pine and Second . Large
Secluded Mobile Home near
kitchen with dining area.
Point Pleasant, for Working
N..ew ran ge, · refrige rator.
or Aetireds older Couple or
Water included. References
Person; Non-Smoker, Nonu,quired. $300/mo. Security ,
Drinkers. No Pets, Free
deposit. No pets . . Call
Water $200 deposit, $300 a
(740)446-4425 or (740)446month (304)675-2917
3936

•

Friday, February 4, 2005

refurbished . MENTS

· Located in Point Pleasant.
' Depos1i &amp;
references.
' $4501month Call (304)675. 3423

'

Friday, February 4, 2005

www.n:aydallysenti'1el.com

Hilrs Self
Storage
Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

29670

45771
740·949·2217

. SlaM 1'1!10'

to
10'11311'
•

.· ADVERTI E
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Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

EaQies.may not
realize 1t but,
.
deep down, they're
the Steelers
BY ALAN

as coac h and announced a
name change from the
Sieelers to the Iron Men .
PITTSBURGH _ If it But as the months passed
weren't for a millionaire and Thon1pson failedto set
desire to be close . up an ofltce or sell llckets,
Playboy's
.
.
. Rooney sen~ed the new
to hts newest toy and a htg~ - owner's hesitation to operrolhng race track &amp;ambler s ate in ·Pittsburgh. So a swap
refu sal to leave hts home- was proposed: Rooney and
town more. than 60 years Bell would get the Steelers
ag.o, the Phtlad~lphta Eagles and Thompson the Eagles,
mtght not be m the · Super which he could operate from
Bowl on Sunday.
New York.
_Instead, tt would be the
The deal wlts com pleted in
Ptttsbur~h Steelers .- or, to April 1941 , though not withbe prectse, the . Pttt sb~ rg.h out . perhaps the most comIron Men - who , to thts plicated shuffling of players
day, sttll ope_rate the NFL in leagu e history. Eleven
franc~tse ong.mally a\):ardeq Steelers
stayed
in
19 Philadelphia. .
. .
Pittsburgh, 14 fo rmer Eagles
. Tear awal: thm green and joined the Steelers, seven
~.tlver extenor, stle~ce thetr Eagles
stayed
in
Fly, Eagles , Fly theme Philadelphia, and 16 former
song, and the ,Eagles are Steelers joined the Eagles.
re~ealed to bleed black and Several . Eagles were so
gold, all because of an enor- unhappy with being sent to
mous but largely forgotten Pittsbut;gh they sued Bell,
transactiOn that set t~e and the NFL ultimately
course for two of the NFL s ret.urned
them
to
most renowned franchtse s.. Philadelphia so they wouldA deal that, for one worn- 11 •1 leave the league.
" Back in those·· days , it
some day, caused a then 8year-old Dan Rooney of wasn't unusual for nearly
Ptttsbur~h to . fear the the whole team to change
b1ggest J0 Y 111 hts hfe was from year to year," said Dan
about to pack up and leave Rooney, who, like hi ~ father,
town.
is in the Pro Football Hall of
The Eag.les, · fo~m ~rly Fame. " It was mostly guys
called the Frankford e 1 ow out of college who wanted a
Jackets·for the sectton of the little extra money and
ctty they played m, and the enjoyed playing football.
Steelers, then known as the Contracts were done on the
P1rates, began operatmg 111 back of an envelo e"
1933 after Pennsylva111a
Thompson kept ~~ale and
lawmakers repealed laws the Hall of Fame coach 'tater ·
t~at, among other transgres- Jed the Eagles to NFL titles
stons, banned Sunday foot- in 1947 and 1949. The
ball.
.
f
.
Eagles also got tailback
But wearymg o losmg Tommy Thompso'n who
$25,000 or more annually- was blind in one ~ye but
a small fortune m the day - became one of the league's
. St$!elers founder and leg- best quarterbacks after the
endary gambler Art Rooney traditional
single-wing
Sr. sold the team fo.r
·
.
$ 160 OOO · to 2S-year-old' offense was dtscarded for
Alexis
Thorn son
ill .the T-formatwn.
It )\'aS dectded Bell would
December 1940. ~hompson,
a Yale-educated drug com- co~ch the Steelers, though
pany executive and New hts Eagles went only 1-10
York-based playboy, had the prevtous season. Bell
inherited $6 million at age stepped do~n after two
16 and was eager 10 spend close losses and Rooney
some of it for h'1s own foot-- brought 111 r~specte? college
ball team. ·
coach Aldo "Buff Donelh
ROBINSON

Associated Press

"I certainly hated \O give from cross-town Duquesne . .

up the franchise in the old
One problem. The college
h0 m tow
b 1 it would game was much btgger than
e
n, u
.
pro ball at the . time, and
have been poor bu.s mess to Donelli wouldn't g·ve
1 up the
refuse the propos1tton for a
.
second-division ballclub · at Duq~esne JOb· So hl~
the terms which were coac _ed both teams for ha.
offered," Art Rooney Sr. a season.- the Steelers ~n,
sai.d at the time. .
·the mormng, the Dukes •?
Once the swap was com- the afternoon - until . a
pleted, Rooney bought a Du'!uesne road game tn
'half-share of the Eagles &lt;;:ahforma yrevented h1m
from good friend Bert Bell, fro'!! coachmg the Steelers
who six years later. became agamst the Eaglt:s.
the NFL commissioner.
NFL commtsswner Elmer
Knowing Thompson wanted Layde,n, one of Notre
to move the Steelers to Dame s
famed
Four
Boston,· Rooney and Bell Hor.semen , was so angry he
hatched a plan to operate the bamshed Donelll from the
Eagles as the Pennsylvania lea~ue . The Stee~ers then
Keystoners, splitting home rehtred f~r~er coach Walt
games between Pittsburgh Kt~shn~ as the _ thtrd and
fmal coach of a l ~9-1 seaand Philadelphia.
.
That womed young Dan son,. . Do nell! dtdn t return
Rooney, who, though barely unttl t~ree years, later as the
in grade school, loved tag- Cleveland Rams coach.
In 1943, . the Eaglesging along with dad Art to
Steelers games and hanging Steelers merger fmally came
,
about, but only for one seaout with the players.
" I remember reading it in son -due to the Wor ld War II
the paper _ my dad was in manpower
. shortage.
Philly, working out the ~1eshng and Neale served
details," said Dan· Rooney, as wco-coaches of a team.
now the Steelers' chairman. kno n as the Steagles.
:'My · mother called him and
After that, the Steelers setsaid, ' Dan is ·really con- tied 1111() .a long run of mos~­
cerned about what's going ly losmg seasons unttl
on with the team.' And 1 emergmg m the I 970s as a
· 'dl h'
four-ttme Super Bowl chamremel!' b.er, ,very vtyt y, tm pion under team president
explammg everythmg would D
R
. h
be all right and that we 're
an
oaney and coac
.
h
,
Chuck Noll.
gomg to ave a team.
While the franchise swap
The Rooneys d1d - Art .
b
.
·
Roane never had any in ten- ts now uta dtstant· ~emory,
tion
pulling pro football !he Steelers - desptte losfrom his beloved Pittsburgh mg lo the Patnot.s m the
- but only after more com- AFC champwnshlp · game
.
.
h
. two weeks ago- st1ll own a
phcated dealings t at u1It- link to this Super Bowl.
mately led to a player _law"We still have (the Eagles'
sutt and the NFL bamsh111~ a . original) franchise book ,"
coach for the ftrst and last Dan Rooney said: "Maybe
time.
we could switch back · for
Thompson _quickly hired one game."
the esteemed Greasy Neale

ol

.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Friday, February 4,

2005

ALONG TH'E RIVER

NFL to "Let It Be"
with
Sir
Paul
·
·. .
on Super Bowl halft1me stage

LIVING

.
Sweet Adelines:
French Colony Chorus offers area women
chance t~ sing out, Cl

House of the Week:
A home that features the outdoors, Dl

If

·u ·n

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP)- A year be something like that attached to it," i.f.lappropriate from airing. Short delays on
removed from the Janet Jackson debacle, McCartney said ·at a news conference live events became much more popular m
the NFL has come up with the pert'ect way Thursday. "That's OK. It's an honor to do the aftennath of the Jackson affair.
to clean up its act at halftime of the ~uper it."
"Basically, we're treating the Super
Bowl: Hire a British knight to entertain.
McCartney's play list - he has hun~ Bowl as a news event," Fox spokesman
Sir Paul McCartney will be the only dreds of songs to choose from - is a Dan Hill said. "We don't believe in tape
pert'ormer during the NFL's 12-minute secret, although everything has been vet- delaying news events."
·
. ·
extravaganza. He promises not to cause . ted and approved by the NFL to ensure he
Last year, CBS broadcast the game and
the same furor Jackson stirred up last sea- doesn't sing anything that might be offen- the NFL farmed out the halftime show to
&gt;on when Justin Timberlake tore open·her sive.
· MTV, which along with CBS is a subtop at the end of the show and revealed her · The 62-year-old icon, who was knight- sidiary of parent company Viacom. The
bare breast - the infamous "wardrobe ed in London nine years ago, joked about league was sorely disappomted. ·
malfunction."
. the possibility of exposing flesh during the
The Jackson episode dominated converAnd so, tire former Beatles star has halftime ·show.
· sation about the game for weeks aftercome full circle. Considered among the
"I can assure you I won't," McCartney ward. It prompted congressional hearings,
most edgy entertainers in the world during said, "because I'll be naked." .
. stricter
Federal
Communication
the 1960s, he has now become the safe
Fox, which is televising the game, has Commission rules and triggered $550,000
choice.
opted against an eight-second delay of the in fines against the 20 CBS-owned sta"1- had a slight inkling that there might telecast as a way of preventing something tions that carried the game.

't -···-·

!.

tm

en ne

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
llhio \ alll'~ l'uhJi,hin).\1 o.

SPORTS
• Bartrum making se&lt;;ond ,
trip .to Super Bowl. See
Page 81

l'onH·m~ • \liddit'l"'t'l• (; ;tllipoli' •lt·ht·uat·~ h. :wo:;

~1.;;o • \'ol. :~9. :'&gt;Jo. :1

Robbery suspect st••~·enders to authorities
.

Bv TIM

MALONEY
JMALONEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS Clinton G.
Shelton, 18, showed up with ·his
mother at the Gallia County Jail
Friday morning after a week on the
run from police.
"He and his mom just came to the
window ·and said he wanted to turn
himself in," said a sheriff's dispatcher.
Shelton is accused of robbing a
woman trying to ina,k.e a night deposit
at the Ohio Valley Bank oil Third
Avenue late Jan: 29. At the time, he
was free on bond, which ·his mother
had posted for him, for a separate

'

burglary charge.
Evans set a preliminary hearing for
During
an
9:15 a.m. Tuesday, but Adkins said
arraignment
. Shelton's case could be included in
Friday afternoon
grand j~ry proceedings taking place
in
Gallipolis
Friday and expected to continue ihto
Municipal _Court,
Monday. If Shelton's case is in fact
Gallia
County
presenteq to the grand jury, he will not
Pro sec U·l i ng
appear in municipal court Tuesday.
Attorney
Jeff
At 11:29 p.m. on Jan. 29, a
Gallipolis
officer on patrol was
Adkins requested
Clinton G.
flagged down by an · employee of
· Shelton's
new
Shelton
bond be set at
Robbie's BP, 87 Vine St. She said
$200,000 cash, to which Judge she had been robbed while trying to
Margaret Evans agreed.
make the station·~ night deposit.
·
"When someone is out on bond,
The victim reported that when she
and they commit another felony, we began to put the bank bag into the
take that pretty serious," Adkins said. night depository, a white male wear:

Steering com

ing a ski mask emerged · from some
shrubs and grabbed he r. After a sc uf~
fle, the suspect, believed to have been
Shelton, got the deposit from her and
then attempted to steal her vehicle .
The victim was able 10 throw her
keys into some bush~s and flee on
foot, when she flagged down the
. officer. During the initial phase of ·
the investigation. officers were
unable to locate the subject.
Shelton has been charged with
robbery for allegedly taking the
night deposit, a third-degree
felony . for which he faces one to
five years in prison and a maxi- .
mum fine of $10,000. ,·

'encouraged' .by Bush speeeh .·

BRIAN J. REED
BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

' BY

OBITUARIFS

BRAND NEW 2005 CHEVY AVEO

lUND NEW

5 DOOR
4 Crllllot ko-lot 11(1.. s 1....

Page A5
• Juanita S. Bevins
• Paul 0. Lewis
• Earl Wilson 'Scrappy'
Riley
• Hugh Barbee Shiflet
• Kenneth R. 'Rusty' Smith
• Charles Kenneth Steger .

2005 PONIIAC ANilE
g COUPE

,_tit_
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lute NEW 2005 CHEVY
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INSIPE

lUND NEW

• Celebrity dinner raises
over $18,000. See Page A2
• New surgeon joins
Holzer Clinic staff.
SeePageA2
• Immunizations set for
Tuesday. See Page A2
• The Eagles win out
with Meigs readers.
SeePageA3

2005 CHEVY

EQUINOX LS
16" ..... WWr, ... l'tol .... ~ t:nloo &amp; Ill

POMEROY
Meigs
County Commissioner Mick
Davenport said. he is
"encou·raged" by President
Bush's plans to put a.community health center in every
.poor community.
Meigs County has four times
been rejected in its efforts to
receive federal funding to
open a community health center in the former Veterans
Memorial Hospital building,
although the county 's model
for such a center has been
approved -. . but not funded - .
in the last two funding rounds.
In his State of the Union
· address to Congress on
Wednesday. President Bush
included community health
centers in his plans for health
care in his second term.
"I ask Congress to move forward on a comprehensive
Former Veterans Memorial Hospital building

Pl,-se ... StHrln1- A5

Gallipolis police busy Meigs County gets new health care cli.nic
again with drug arrests
.

--u..

BRAND NEW
LACROSS Cl
l1a ... _ . , . .

lUND I&amp;W

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2005 CHEVY

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• CJ SIW" Syo._ • Pew•LMD

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Deals! •• a•IIIJ 111:1r1111• ..... llhll:•l

Alo•••

• , ...; Sot!
•
• Pow• Willows • KtrJeu lilly

Around Town
Celebrations
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Comics
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ObituarieS
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Sports
Weather

2004 CHIVY IUILIUDII
LS 414
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:.14 PAGFS

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A3
C4
D Section
.insert

A4

As
A2
B Section
A6

© 2005 ohio Volley Publl•hln&amp; Co.

• YOIIK UN Hyt • 16' All.,

•lorJoubtry

SECI'IONS -

'

.

.

Middleport clinic, which is was aware that' residents of
home to Dr. Timothy P. Meigs Comity were utilizing
Metzger, who specializes in the hospital's services in
STAFF REPORT
MIDDLEPORT
family medicine.
Point
Pleasant.
W.Va.
Alvin Lawson, chie( According to Lawson. by
NEWS®MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
Pleasant Valley Hospital
recently
reopened
its exexcutive officer of PVH , opening the clinic tn
Middleport, PVH is coming
GALLIPOLIS - . Arrests we-:e made by the Gallipolis
Police Department in three separate drug-related incidents
to the people and meeting
·
Thursday night and early Friday. .
more of Meigs County's
Officers conducted their first drug interdiction stop of the
health care needs.
"We've wanted to h&lt;~ve a
evening just after 8 p.m., when Dale A. Blake, 21, Gallipolis,
presence in Meigs County,"
was pulled over. Officers seized marijuana and drug paraPVH Business Development
phernalia and Blake was cited for possession.
·
Coordinator Jeff Fleck said..
,........ Arrests, Al .
Since Veterans Memorial
Hospital closed in Pomeroy,
the only other health care
providers in the county have
been
the Holzer Clinic
BY TIM MALONEY
home, starting or improving a
Meigs branch and Dr.
TMALONEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
small business or furthering
Douglas Hunter in Racine.
their education.
Fleck said the biggest
CHESHIRe - ·A new proThey put a maximum of
expense in reopening the
gram through Gallia-Meigs $50 a month into a savings
Beth S.r&amp;ent/plooto
Middleport Clinic was the
Com~unity Action Agency account, which is matched by
Pleasant Valley Hospital recently cut the ribbon on its
to help poor people save $50 in grant money and $50 reopened Middleport clinic , where Dr. Timothy ·P. Metzger new equipment. Besides the
money is dependirig on the from the bank.
will practice family medicine. Pictured from left PVH board equipment, the facility has a
generosity of local banks. ·
Getting local banks .to member William R. Knight, PVH chief executive officer AI private nurses' station and
Qualified participants in agree to put up the matching Lawson, Meigs County Chamber of Commerce President three exam rooms decorated
the Individual Development money has been a sticking Tom ·Reed, T.J. Metzger, Timothy Metzger. Preston Metzger, to reflect the patient's gender.
Cheryl Metzger. Sharalin Metzger, and PVH Vice President
Account program get help in
Ple8H He s.vlni- Al
PINH see CHntc. A5
of Administrative Services William Barker.
saving money for a new
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Saving_program needs help from banks

.

Therapies.. .in the comfort of your own home.

n••

• Taxes, Tags,
Ftts txlra. Rtbalt lndudtd In salt prkt al new.vlhldt llslld whert applicable.
••On approved ueclil. On stlldld models. Nat respdle far typographkal 11rors.
~Ices good February 31-d lhraugh hbnrary 61h.

Holzer Honie Care provides physical, occupational and
speech therapies to patients in Southeastern Ohio and Mason
County, West Virginia. Call us for more information toll-free at

•

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"

i·

_ _________.:..,:,...____

•

~~====- .==-=
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