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Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

I

•

~esday,

www.mydailysentinel.com.

February 8, 2005

Winning next ye~r ~s the Rio's Perry,has big day
at Cedarville Inv-itational
Only goal for the Patriots ,

CEDARVILLE - University of
On the women's side junior Tory
Rio Grande freshman Josh Perry had Jordan tallied II total points for the
three straight Super Bowls and the deal is unlikely to be among them.
BY DAVE GOLDBERG
· a big ·day at the Cedarville Collegiate Red women with a third place finish in
first to win four in five seasons.
With rookie Randall Gay and secAssociated .Press
Invitational at the Doden Field the 55-meter dash with a time of 7.37
The San Francisco 49ers .came ond-year player Asante Samuel at ·
House.
and a fourth-place finish in the 200,
closest to three NFL titles in a row, cornerback, the Patriots obviously:
Perry, a nati~e of Gallipolis, was clocking in at 27.04:
·
~ JACKSONVILLE, Fla.
· · th 1'989 d 1990 S
did well without him·, after
responsible for .18 points by himself
Freshman thrower Leah Bonnell
e
an
uper
Peion Branch needed.J·ust five lit- wmnmg
Bowls, then losing the next NFC Eugene Wilson left the Super
by
winning
the
men's
200-rheter
dash
produced
a third place effort in the
tie words to explain why the New ·
B 1· b ~
h If ·
·h
.England. Patriots have won three championship game on a last-secow JUSt e ore a lime Wit an
with a time of 22.64 and finishing as shot put. The Wellston native .regis. p.layed the second
O'nd t"Ield goal ·by the New York ar1n inJ·ury. thev
runner-up in the 55-meter dash with a tered a throw of 32 feet, 9.5 inches.
of the laSt four Super Bowls.
half with Harrison as the only regGiants' Matt Bahr. .
.
Junior Billie Robinson finished third
time of 6.63.
. .
. .Asked Monday if he had any
That New York team. which ular starter in the secondary. .
in the · l ,600-meter race walk with a
Perry
then
teamed
with
Howard
thoughts of leaving the team when went on to beat Buffalo in the
That's how the Patriots workHoisington,
Brandon
Baston
and
time of 8:44.48. ·
fie becomes a restricted free agent,
S
B
hd
h'
they alway·s find someone to fill in.
'the Super Bowl MVP reiJlied: 1991 uper ow.1 a a coac mg
Gi Ibert Evans to take. second in the
Other scoring efforts for the
"My home is in Foxboro.'.'
staff headed by Bill Parcells and without los.ing a step.
.
4x400 ~elay. The foursome timed out Redwomen: the 4 x 400-meter relay
Then. referring 10 team owner inclu&lt;;ling Belichick, Crennel and
Branch, who had 133 yards in
at 3:35.83, scoring eight more points team of Hope' Jagodzinski, Shannon
Robert Kraft, Branch added: "I'm Weis, along with futur~ NFL head receptions and tied a Super Bowl
for the Redmen.
· Soulsby, Nicholet McKinniss and
proQd of the family that Mr. Kraft coaches Tom Coughlin, AI Groh record with II ·catches, was the
Rio finished 5th (out of 7 teams) Niesha Fuller finished fourth with a
ltas built."
and Ray Handley. Two of the game's MVP, but it could have
time of 4:36.55, freshman Cassie
accumulating 44 points.
·
·
·
·
. . An emphaSIS on wmnmg over players on that team are . also _been any one or a number or playSenior Matt Boyles also captured Chaffins was 6th in the long jump (I 5
money is what. drives the Patriots coaches and are reportedly on ers: Harri son: linebacker Tedy
firsi place in the 5,000-meter run. The feet, 9.75 inches), junior Dawn
to success in an era when free Cretlnel's wish list for his staff Bruschi: or Mike Vrabel, who
Tuppers
Plains native, pact;d the rest Nagle, tied for 7th in the 800-meter
agency and the salary cap force with the Browns: Pepper Johnson, played linebacker, defensive end,
· of the field with a time of 15:00.
run with Cedarville's Audree GoQdew
major turnover at most teams each New England's defensive line had a sack and also caught a
The Redmen also collected points (2:41.55) and sophomore Alicia .
season.
coach, and ,Maurice Carthon, the touchdown pass for the second
from
senior Brian Mitchell , 6th in the Smith finished 8th in the shot put (29
Next season's Patriots 'certainly offensive coordinator· in. Dallas Super Bowl in a row.
55-meter
hurdles (8.92), junior Brad feet , 10.75 inches).
will be different than this season's. under Parcells.
Or, of course, it could have been
Gilders, 7th in the 800-meter run
Other Redwomen . results: sophoThe biggest losses are not players
Belichick's first order of busi- quarterback Tom Bra&lt;;ly, the MVP
(2:02.67),
Hoisington,
8th
in
the400.
more
Jana Marshall, 5th in the 1,600but coaches: Offensive coordina- ness, therefore. is rebuilding his in the Patriots' first two Super
m'eter dash (53.52) and freshman meter race walk. (8:54.80), Soulsby,
tor Charlie Weis is the new ,head coaching staff, although he will Bowl v.ictorics, Who played his
Richard Reffitt, 9th in the shot put (37 II th in the 400-meter run (I :07.24),
coach at Notre Dame. and defen- take at least a week off, traveling usual steady game.
feet,
0.25 inches).
Sarah Brame, II th in the shot put (26
sive coordinator Romeo Crennel to California for the AT&amp;T Pebble · "Every time we play, it's a total
Other Redmen · results: freshman . feet , 8.25 inches), sophomore Sharita
accepted the Cleveland Browns' Beach National Pro-Am.
effort . from everyone," said
Dennis
Hange, 7th in the I ,600-meter Was~ington, 12th in' the 200 (28.35), ·
head coaching job immediately
Most of the core players, how- Branch, an emerging star ;vho had .
race 'walk (I 0:28.37), freshman Cody Chaffins, 19th in the 200 (29.36) and
ever, should be back, although a 60-yard touchdown catch and a
after Sunday night's game.
12th in the 800 (2:12.97), McKinniss, 21st in the 200 (29.83).
Rochus,
Crennel's move, which gives some are getting up there in age, 23-yard TD run in the AFC title
Baston,
13th in the 200 (24J9),
The Redwomen were 7th (out· of ,
ihe NFL a record six black head notably
linebacker
Willie game in Pittsburgh. "It's a total .
junior Brian Hill, 19th in the 1-mile eight teams) with 27.5 points.
coaches, was hardly a secret. As MeG in est and safety Rodney organizational effort from the top
run (5:36. 73), freshman· B.ryan Cedarville also captured the women
'the Patriots·' 24-21 win over Harrison, both of whom have down."
Workman,
25th in the 200 (25.35) and event, tallying 154.5 points.
Some of the top of the organizaPhiladelphia was ending, coach . played major roles in the team's
The Redmen and Redwomen will
Mitchell, 30th in the 200 (25.83).
B_ill Belichickyut his arms around success . . Hamson, who ,had 1wo tion will be missing with Wej,pnd
his two top rudes m a gesture of . mtercept1ons m Sunday s game, Crennel "gone. Belichick said that
Cedarville won the men's meet, participate in the All-Ohio Meet held
will turn 33 next [)ecember, when h6 had been too busy working on
. affection and appreciation.
at the University of Akron, ~aturday .
scoring 174.5 points.
McGmest w1ll turn 34.
the Super Bowl to start considerThey will be hard to replace.
"Romeo and Charlie have done
One member of the Patriots ing replacements. although it's a
~mall us~ ~
a great job. A lot of the success unlikely to return is cornerback Ty_ sure bet he has some in mind. ·
we've had should go to them." Law, who missed the second halt
Then he brushed off all' the talk
Belichick said Monday. "I've •of the seas.on with a broken foot about a dynasty.
been with them both a long time. I after quarreling with the team over . "Every ye&lt;)r is. a new year," he
e~N~t··· ·· sports@ mydally s e n1:1 n el.com
go back to 1981 with Rom~o and his contract in training cam(J: · said. "We start at the bottom with
.
·
Fllx numb•r• · 446-3008 . ,
I'll miss both of them a lot.'
And while Behchick md1cated · the other 31 teams:"
Sport• lin·•• . 446-2343. • x t 33
The Patriots might, too.
that the team will spend the next
That philosophy i.s one reason
· Next season, they will be seek- few weeks renegotiating contracts New England tends to wind up at
ing to become the first team to win for salary-cap purposes, Law 's the top.

Coaches::

', In y~r. g;~m,

Eastern makes Rockets
misfire, Bt

• Meigs downs Torn~does
on Senior Night. ·
See Page 81

or phonE
Np0rt:51

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COLVMBUS - Gov. Bob Taft's ' commit s_pccific revenue w promote
as much as Michigan while secondadminisiraiion may propose a t percent · touri sm and expand rn,arkeLing progmms.
ranked Illinois has a $46 million budge!
"Our goal is 10 gel more revenue for
statewide hed tax to promote trave l and
and third-ranked Pennsylvania 'spends $30
travel and tourism," said Philip Craig.
Iourism in Ohio as pari of a budget plan
million. .
·
executive director of the Ohio Association
in which slate agencies are being asked to
Tourism in Ohio wa s a $28.5 billion
of Convention and Visitor Bureaus.
1rim budge1 requ eSJS and look for
induwy in 2003. TuurisiS spend $135 in
Bul some worry that !he increase could · Ohio and contribute nearly $10 in state
alternative fundin g sources.
make Ohio more known for high 1axes
"We're not ready to talk about what we're
and local dollars for every dollar lhe state
1han
auractions.
·
·
looking at, b~I like every olher sl ate
spends on rourism advertising.
·
Keith Stepl_len son, execu tJve vice
agency we've been tas ked wiih finding
E·ven with Lhe high retu.rn, the sta le is
·president of th~ Ohio Hotel and Lodging
ways to reduce our dependence on
unlikely to. increase funding for ~ ourism
general revenue funds," said Bill Teets. · Association, said a tax increase wou ld be
considering that il is facing up !O a $5
had for 1he induSiry ~rid !hat many Ohio
spokesman for the Ohio Dcpanmeni of
billion deficii for the next Iwo-year
ctlies already charge some of the highesl
Developmem, which includes Travel and
budget period beginning July 1.
bed taxes in the counlry.
Tourism.
·
Taft's
request has other state agencies
He said the hotel occupancy rates have
Ofticials would not say .how much money
looking
for \\;a&gt;'s .to raise money. This
heen llat in Ohio as the state. along with
the lax would genera1e.
.month, !he Ohio Deparimeoi of Natural
the' nation. cont inue s t.o recover from the
The money would be in addition to' local
Resources said ii would ask for a $5
Sepl.
II . 200 I, terrorist auack and lhe·
bed and sales taxes lha! visitors already ·
parking fee a! its 74 parks.
recession
pay. If !he tax is implemented, a visiiOr
The Legislature will begin hearings on the
The
Ohio Departmenl i)f Travel and
staying in · a $100-a-nighl room in
· budget afler Taft releases his proposal in
Tourism 's $8 million annual budget is · February.
Columbus would pay $17.75 in ta.xes.
··
31s1 in !he counlry. The state
spends
about
Tourism officials have long asked Ohio !O
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748-992·1771
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124 west Main Street
Pomeroy, Otl

"A ll of us wan! Io hold .down

governm~nt

.

.

spending," Wilkins said , adding, "and when people file their Ohio individual income tax
·

number~

everi higher.

"Some states, like Michigan,' are mandating electronic fi ling for higher-volume tax preparers. We'd like to see 1he program grow on a
voluntary basis first. Electronic filing makes sense for everyone involved." . '
,
·
Wilkins noted there are several ways Io file Ohio income lax returns electronically. Taxpayers can file on-line using Ohio !-File, available
at the ODT web site (lax.ohio.gov). They can file lhrough a lax prac1itioner or with any nuinbcr of commercially available lax ·
preparation software programs.
.

• It delivers the quickest refunds- usually in five Io seven days - when the taxpayer chooses direcl deposit to their bank account. .
• Ohio 1-File (and TelcFile) has no fcc. Most tax preparation programs charge extra for tiling an electronic re!urn wilh Ohio.
~Fewer

errors. Ohio !-File does the math and finds the correct tax rate . '

,

•GET
STUCK.
HERE!

In addition to saving 1axpayer dollars, Wilkins said electronic filing offers many other advantages:
• It, employs the highest level or cnmputer security.

www.ovbc.com

.

One new feature this year is that Ohio 1-File offers eleclronic tiling .of the school' district income 1ax for resideots of the 133 Ohio school
districts lhal had an income tax in 2004.
.
Wilkins said I he rapid pace·of filing electronic reiurns probably will slow bel ween now and April 15 but added he's confiden! !hat Ohio
will remain one of the top fi ve states in the country in paperless returns.

"Our goal is to have 80 percent of our returns come in electronically," Wilkins said. "Getting rid of paper completely isn'I realistic a11his
point. But I would say 10 paper filers, on the basis of the cost savings alone, to please consider filing' electronically this year, or a.'k lheir ·
tax preparer Io send !heir returns in electronically. h 's good for 1hem and good for every taxpayer in Ohio."

INDEX
2 Sl!criONS '-

A3

Classifieds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

· Obituaries

· As

618 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
Phone: 740-992-7270

.'

BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@ MYDAtLYSENTtNEL.COM

POMEROY - Last week
the $1.53 , billion capital
appropnatwns bill . was
·approved by the Ohio Senate.
Funding for the Cultural
Facilities
Commission,
appropriated within the. bill,
affects historic site&amp;_such as
the old Chester Academy in
· Chester which will receive
$25,000 for rel)ovations.
Historical sites, museums,
cultural and sports facilities
fall . under the Cultural ·
· FaciLities Commission. By
providing funding for these
organizations the hope iS'that
they will create jobs and
attract tourism.
Meigs County is in need
of an economic boost · and
the $25,000 for Chester
Academy will be welcome;
but where is the rest of. the
money going across ·lhe

A6

397

w. Main St.

(1/2 block East of McDonald's)

740-992-9000

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

1

Please see Taxpayers, AS

Ple•se see bster. AS

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This year's first-half bills will be mailed
about two' weeks later than they were last
. year, because they have not yet been received
from the printer.
Frank said his office has been inundated
with taxpayers who .wish to pay their firsthalf taxes before bills arrive, and althougb
·taxpayers· may do so by paying an estimated
bill as calculated in his office .·it ultimately

Please see Schools, A5

Tuesday, February 15 • 5:00 PM

Income Tax &amp; Financial Services

- BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH

.

Frank: Taxpayers will have plenty of time to pay
POMEROY - · Real estate tax bills will .be
later than usual arriving in property owners'
mailboxes this winter, but Treasurer Howard
Frank said there will be plenty of time to pay
them before the .deadline.
Frank said the bills are calculated and printed_at an out-of-county computer company,
and shipped back to his office for mailing.

Merchants to sponsor Easter egg hunt
POMEROY - Again this year the Pomeroy Merchants
Association will sponsor an Easter egg hunt for area children . .
. Plans were discussed at a meeting of the merchants held at ·
Far111ers Bank Tuesday imd it was decided to provide $300 for
the purchase of several hundred plastic eggs and t,he candy,
_and trinkets needed to fill them. Prizes will be awarded to the
winners of specially marked eggs.
John Musser. president, noted that Michelle Noble who
chaired the hunt last year has agreed to serve as chairman
again this· year. A bunny suit was purchased for last year's
hunt. Tentative place for . holding the hunt is the Meigs '.
Marauder football · field. in Pomeroy. The . qate will be
announced later.
Mary Powell met with the group to talk about ihe Ohio
Chautauqua which will be casting · its tent on the Chester
Common s on July 13-16. A Chautauqua feature.s a living
history of historic characters through first person presentations, she said.
The Chester-Shade Historical Associatimi made applicatimi with the Ohio Humanities Council for a Chautauqua last

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For more-information: http://tax..ohio\gov/divi sions/communications/news- releases/index.stm

Kari-Kebler 111•
Certified Public Accountant
e-mail:kkebler@chaner.net

Pork politics
or progress?

lion in grant funds for the purchase of automated external detibrillators.
Ohio House Bill434.appropriated the funds
to equip Ohio schools with an AED. The .initiative also includes training of five staff
members and alerting the local EMS operation of the placement and location of the
device. The grant program . also includes

REED

POMEROY - Two local school districts
are -seeking funds for heart defibrillators in
their buildings through a grant program from
Ohio Emergency Medical Services.
Meigs Local School District and Southern
Local School District have applied for funding through a new program offering $2.5,mil-

Detlllle on P"'e A6

sports

·

J.

BREED@MYDAILr$ENTI NEL.COM

· Ask About
Our On-Line
·san king

Wilkins said last year almosl half of the 5.2 million income tax reiUrns filed canie in eleCtronically, saving abom $2.1 millio11. .This year
he wants to push those

Please see 9 11, As

WEATIIER

BY BRtAN

returns elccti'onically. it cuts our expenses considerably."
,
·
.
t
II eost.s !he Ohio Departmenl of Taxation (ODT) approximalely $1. 15 Io process an electronic return compared to $3 for a paper one.

Meigs County'EMS Administrator Gene tyons (rigl'lt) talks with
Meigs County Chamb.er of Commerce President Tom Reed at
the chamber's business-minded luncheon Tuesday. A topic .of
discussion was the proposed 911: service for Meigs County, ·
now the only county in Ohio without the servi.ce .

Schools ·seek funding for defibrillators

Ohio Tax Commissioner William W. Wilkin's says electronic filing delivers more thim just refunds. He says it produces benefits for
,

Beth Sergont;photo

Please see Procress. AS

COLUMBUS (Business Wire) - Ohio lax payers, most eager to claim a lax refund, arc ftling their retu;ns electronically at a record rale
- up '39, percem Ihi s year from the sarJOc period laSI year. As of·lan. 25, 128,112 taxpayers had filed !heir state income tax re!Urn
e~~

POMEROY - The history and goals of
the Emergency Medical Serv.ice and the
urgency for establishing 911 were discussed by Administrator Qene Lyons at
Tuesdafs Chambe[ .of Commerce . meeting
at the Wildhorse.
•
Lyons· said Meigs County is the only county in Ohio· without 91.1 service.
"It is desperately needed," she said.
. Currently on a 911 committee which meets
every ·first Wednesday of the month, Lyons
described the biggest hurdle to bringing the
service to Meigs County as being funding.
"We're trying to decide what we're going
to do about funding," she said about where
the committee is at the moment.
Initia,ting 911 requires a two-year proce ss
securing funding for operational costs like

• Meigs District
announces .honor rolls.
See Page A2
· St Paul ·Lutheran Church in Pomeroy dbserves a pancake supper
• Garden Club for OAGC every ~rove Tuesctay, in keeping with the pr~n tra(:lition. Here,
A'/ink ~~~~~. for the suppe.r, while Jaxon Ohlirger,
convention. See Page A3 -~;:,s~~
~.n:I9ar~~!· ~~· ... ._ __ __
---.--sons,of Union Veterans
Brian Jc....,/pllotoo
·. ~
install new officerS.
See Page A3
.. o Boil advisory issued.
See Page AS
o Record breaking year
for Ohio deer hunters.
See . Page AS
• Tai Chi beginner class .
begins Feb. 15 at HMC.
See Page A6

Filing electronic~lly saves Ohio money
electronically. an innease uf 49Jr:S5 from the same point iast year.

BSERCiENT@MYDAI LYSENTINEL.COM "

Shrove Tuesday, also known as "Fat Tuesday," is a day of Christian
celepration as well as penitence, because it's the last day before
Lent It has tra(:litionaliy been a day to indulge, and to ~ up the
foods that aren't allowed during Lent. Fats, eggs, and milky foods
were'once forbidden by many churches during Lent, and so 110 food
·Was wasted, families would have a feast on the Tuesday prior to ASh
Wednesday. This need to eat up the fats gave rise to the French .
name Mardi Gras, meaning "Fat Tuesday. " Pancakes becarre associated with Shrove Tuesday as they were a dish lhat could use up
all the eggs, fats and milk in the house with just the addition of flour.

·INsiDE

SPECIAL EDITION

phone lines. Securing the funding cou ld
come from a surcharge on phone hills or a
sales tax levy.
Lyons estimates that lJ II is two years away
. from becoming a reality in the counfy.
Other goals for the Meigs County EMS as
outlined by Lyons were to provide advanced
life support coverage to all residents. There
are currently two paid medic units on standby
24/7 but Lyons hopes to have a third.
She also hopes for a · new, larger EMS
building sometime in the future . ·
"We have outgrown our building on the hill,"
she said, adding that her staff has also-grown to
35 employees of which 16 are full-time.
Lyons welcomed the public to stop by
the EMS office if they had any suggestions
and expressed her gratitude at the ~ommu­
nity 's suppor.t.

BY BETH SERGENT

Ready for Lent

It's that &amp;asylll

Instant Money.
gets you more

honored,A6

911 reality discussed at eha•ttber luncheon

SPORTS

us

Taxes: .Tips

·Real daughter

..

-------~~-

\

---'--- -- -

.

�'

.
PageA2

COMMUNITY

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, February 9,

The Daily Sentinel

2005

RUTLAND - Members
of the Rutland Garden Club
members began planning for
thetr part m hostmg the Ohio
Association
of Garden
Club's convention at a recent
meeting held at the home of
Betty Lowery.
Region II and 12 will cohost the convention which
marks the diamond jubilee of
· the OAGC. It will be held
July II to 15 .. Members were
· encouraged to begin gathering
up ttems for gtft bags. Clubs
have also been , asked to
donated a $15 to $25 gift for
use as a door prize . A countywide planning meeting has
been set for Feb. 21 at the
conventiOn room at . the
Pomeroy library. ·
Lowery gave devotions on
the theme "Do You Wonder
and Live For Today." For roll
call ' members talked about
birds they have seen at their
feeders. A thank you card was

•

POMEROY - Honor rolls
for schools of the Meigs
Local District for the second
. nine-weeks grading period
have been announced by
Superintendent
William
Buckley.
Students making a grade of
B or above in all thei'r subjects listed on 'the honor rolls
are as follow s:
Meigs Intermediate .
Elementary
Grade 3: Garrett Bat1on.
. Shandi Beaver, Josiah Beha,
Austin Beliles, Bre Bonnett.
Kim Casci, Mega n .Cleland,
Olivia Cremeans. Garret
Cundiff,
. Kimberly
Cunningham,.
Michaela·
Davidson , Trenton Deem,
Alysori Dettwiller, Devan
Dugan, Brittany Durst, Jarret
Durst, Chri5sonia Francis.
Isaac Gibbs. Chase.· Hayes.
Bradley Helton, Derik Hill,
Cqurtney Holley, Taylor Hood.
Abbie Houser. Jordan Hutton.
Sara · Klein, A.J . Kopec.
Brandon
Mahr. · Andrea
McGrath. Chelza McMillin,
Brett Milhoan, Taylor Mitchell.
Brandon Moodispaugh. Daniel
Morman , Joshua Myers.
Andrew Nash, Blaine Perry.
· Jacob Pierce, Trenton Prater.
Autumn
Preast,
Selena
Reynolds. Cassidy Rose.
Taylor Rowe. Morgan Russell,
Jessica R~'11er. Brim1a Smit9.
.Enc Smtth; Levt Smtth.
Samantha Spires,. Katlynn
Stanley, Carly Taylor, Ni~kie
Walker, Shannon Walker.
Jamie Walters,Tara WalzerKuharic, Nikki Wayland,
Brianna Werry, Cody White.

DmTin Will, Tori Young.
Grade 4: Braden Baker,
Matthew Casc i, Alyssa
Cremeans,
Brittany
Cremeans, Shestan. Curtis,
Allyson Davis, Robbie Diilon,
Megan Dyer, Tyler Eblin,
Jorden Evans, Codey Fink,
Delilah Fish, Chris Folmer,
Shana Gorslene, Kendra ·
Haning, Justin Hettinger,
Matthew Keesee, Corey Kin g,
Hannah King, Adam Little ,
Brandon Marcinko, Jessi
Meadows, Jordan Meadows,
Alexanoer Morris, Jacob
Mulholland, Kasey Napper,
Shawnella Patterson, Rachel
Payne, Emma. Perrin, Tess
Phelps, Tyler Price , Keana
Robinson, Kaiflin Russell ,
Ashleigh Sayre, Chad Searles,
Maggie Smith, Bethany
Spaun .. Kyrie Swann, William
Taylor. Justin Tillis, Dustin
Ulbrich. McKenz,ie Whobrey,
Haley Will. Autumn Williat'ns.
Grade 5: Brandon Bachner.
Leah Barley, Charlie Barrett.
Cheyenne Beaver, Darienne
Betzing, 'Bruno Casci. Olivia
Cleek. Terrie Craig, Desirae
Cundiff, Kimberly Curl,
Michael Davis, . Wes Davis,
Tara DeMoss, Tyler Dunham,
Chelsey Eads. Andy Fairchild,
Jazzman
Fish,
Michael·
Freeman, Emalee Glass, Dmel .
Goff. Karl Gueltig, Cody
· Hanning, Raynee Herman,
Michelle Hilyard, Stephanie
Hoalcraft, Marlee Hoffman,
Cassidy Hood, Cody Hysell,
Morgan Johnson, Taylor Jones,
Jeffrey Kimes, Austin King,
Samantha King, Samantha
Lewis, Jon MacKnight, Steven

Mahr, Cody Mattox, Tiffany
McKinney, Tanisha McKinney,
Kassandra Mullins~ Justin
Myers,
Brady 'Norville,
Timothy Parsons, Ben Reed,
Whitney Reitmire, DiJaun
Robinson, Jennifer Robinson,
Nathav Rothgeb, • Jeffrey
Roush, Zachary Sayre, Mac
Sellers, Kayla Shane, Zachary
Sheets, Cayelynn Smith, Jesse
Smith , Emma Swiger, Travis
Tackett, Brittany Wheeler,
Victoria Wolfe.
Meigs Middle School ,
Grade 6: Jordan Anderson,
Hannah Arnold , Alaine
Arnold, Shellie Bailey, Kastle.
Balser, Ashley Bateman-Lee, ,
Olivia Bevan , Cameron
Bolin, Brianna Buffington,
.Suretta Cade, Hannah Cleek,
Valerie Conde, Terrance
Conlin, Nicole Davis, Heath
Dettwiller, Taylor Dowler,
Nataniel
Eblin,
Ashley
Edwards. Joshua -Fetty.
William Folmer. Nathaniel
Gilkey, Miranda Gr).leser,
Wade Harrison, Morgan
Howard, Nicholas Ingels,
Shelby
Johnson,
Kyle
Johnson, Kassandra Johnson,
Angela Keesee, Colt Kerr,
Teirsa Kopczinsky, Julia
Lantz, Fancy Markin, Aaron
Mason,
Shannon
McLaughlin, · Tyson Morris,
Jeremiah Myers, Amber
Nichols, Charles Noland Ill,
Joelan
Nutter, ·Chelsea
Patterson, Braden Prater,
Garrett Riffle, Kasey Roush,
Austin Sayre, Carlee Smith,
Brenton Southern, Katelyn
Stacy, Chandra Stanley,
Connor · Swartz, , Tanner

Tackett, Michelle Unbankes, Ashley Li ~e. Jahnna Lydic. Curtis, Chelsea Dent, Kayla
Paula Vanmeter, Shannon Maria Meadows, Jason Morris, Fetty, James Fife, Carita
Walzer-Kuharic, Kara Welch, Lindsey Myers, Andrew Gardner, Tyson George, Anna
Tabatha Wells, Carrie White, O'Bryant, April Oiler, Erin Hartenbach , William He ss,
Jose' Whitlatch , Christian Perkins, Ripley Raubenolt, Nathan Jeffers, Kimberly
Calee . Reeve s,
Zachary Johnson, Jacob Kennedy,
Woods, Victoria Zahran.
Schwab,
Caitlin
Swartz, Joshlla Kennedy, Taryn
Grade 7: Tyler Andrews,
Jeremy Ash, Lauren Barnes. Kimberly Swisher, Eric Tolar, Lentes, Meghan Leslie, Kay Ia
McCarthy, Brooke OBryant ,
Dawn
Bissell,
Joseph Jessica Wagner, Catie Wolfe.
, Meigs High School
Brandon Roach, Ashley
Blackston, Chelsea Breuer.
Fresl!ma11:
Amy
Barr,
Savage.
Stephanie Snider,
Tyler
Brothers ,
Ian
Bullington, Ashley Carey, Talisha Beha, Emily Davis, Whitney Thoene, Christopher
Justin Cotterill, Caleb · Davis, Robert Foreman Jr, Rebecca VanReeth, Jarob Venoy,
Taylor Deem, Megan Dunfee, Hanstine, Bradley 'Jones, Adam Wilson, Alison Woods
Se11ior: Emily Ashley,
Travis Dunham, Jacob Dunn, Kaylee Kennedy, Kirk Legar,
Bailey, · ·Jeffrey
Dustin
Eads,
Autumn Shane Milhoan, Tiffany Renee
Ebersbach, Kristen Eblin, Simp son, Steven Stewart, Baughman ,' Ashley Baylor.
Jeremy Bl-ackston, Jenny
Dale Ellis, ' Darby Gilmore, Alexa Yenoy, Eric Wood
Sophomore:
Clayton Bowl es,
Eric
Burnem,
Kayla Graham, Alyss Green,
Verm,ica Grimm, Megann Blackston, Daniel Bookman, Jennifer Cade. Mirinda Davi s,
Charles
Hayes, Brittany 'Casey, Cory Dill. Trevor Depoy, Patrick Dowell,
Halley,
Eichinger, Sarah Zachary Dunham, Eddie Fife .
Breana Hemsley, Benjamin Dane
Kayla
Grover, Keilah Melissa Gow. Amber Handley.
Engle;
Hood, Bradley Hood, Scott
Hart,
Andrew
Kennedy, Pamela Kessinger, Jacks, Katherine Kibble , Randy
Anni6ha Kopec, Heather Bethany King, Sarah Lantz, Henderson, Joseph Howard,
Lowery, Chalsie Glena Jarvis, Denessa Jones,
Lascelles, Aryan McCombs. Luke
Erin Paterson, Jennifer Payne, Manley, Nicholas McKnight, Ashliegh Kimes, · Madison
Jacob Riftle, Latricia Smith, Joshua Partlow, David Poole. King, Amanda King, Courtney
Price,
Bradley Landis, Cassie Lee, Megan
Cayla Taylor. Meri Vanmeter. Jesse
Ramsburg, Robert Reed , . Mayes, Carrie
Michael ,
Jacob Well. Michael Wills II.
Grade 8: Jamie Bailey, AIT'anda Schartiger. Jennifer Joshua Neutzling, Carl Noel,
William Barcus, Adrian Bolin, Smith. Krysta Stitt, Tanisha Samantha Pierce, Katie Reed,
Clayton Bolin, Chad Bonnett, Thomas, Michelle Weaver, Clare Sisson, Adam Snowden,
Ricky Colburn, Crockett Jackie Wilson, Amber York, Paula Weaver, Curtis Welch.
Elizabeth Well, . Lindsey
Crow, Alexandria Cullums, Ashley Zielinski
Jennifer Fife, Amanda Gilkey,
Ju11ior: Miranda Beha, White,
Shannon-Dee
Tisha Hart, Amber Hockman, Stacy
Black,
Sherman Whitlatch, Nicki Wil son.
'Lian · Hoffman,
Jessica Buckley, Travis Butcher, Jenna Wilt, Natasha Wi se,
Holliday, Morgan Kennedy, Samantha Cole, Christopher Jennianne Young.

MIDDLEPORT New
officers of Brooks-Grant Camp
7, Sons of Union Veterans of
· the Civil War, were installed at
a recent meeting at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Installed by Keith Ashley,
past commander of the Ohio
Department -were Gregory
Michael of Huntington, commander; Alan Holter of Five
Points, senior vice commander;
Thomas
Galloway
of
Huntington. junior vice commander;
Ashley
of
Rocksprings, secretary and
camp council; James Mourning
of Middleport, treasurer;
. Fmnklin Sisson of Pomeroy.

There's no excus.e for.not
getting your hearing checked!

FAMILY . MEDICINE

recei've immunizing agents mellt for a11y medical co11dito college next fall. I just got a that contain only diphtheria tio11s. Past columns are
letter from her college recom- and tetanus toxoids and not available online at www.fam· mending that she have a pertussi s vaccine. And, while ily{lledicillenews.org.
meningitis vaccine before you are at it, cileck you(own
starting school. Do you think record. There are probably
she should have this'! Are many adults who are overdue
there other immuni~ations she for a diphtheria and tetanus
needs at her age?
booster.
Adults
sho.uld
A11swer: I. too. have a receive .these booster shots
daughter starting college in every 10 years for the rest of
the fall, and she will be get- their lives.
Your child should. have had
ling her meningitis vaccine
soon. The vaccine you refer two measles, mumps and
to is for bacterial meningitis, rubella (MMR) imm'unizawhich can be a fatal disease. tions after the age of one
College freshmen living in year. Most states require the
' .
dormitories are at significant second shot before starting
•••
risk for meningococcal elementary school.
meningitis. This disease t an
The Hepatitis B vaccine
••
Contest Rules;
rapidly spread through any was introduced in the mid to
1) Must be at least 18 yrs of age.
living community where peo- late 1980's, and many college
~)
register at one of these participating
•
pie m:e housed together in age men and women still
••• Must
businesses.
·
close quarters. Army bar- have not received this immu3) Name, phone number and name of
racks have also been known · nization. Given as a three•
business must appear in each entry
to have serious outbreaks of shot series over a six-month
form.
this disease.
period, it preve nts hepatitis
•• 4) No purchase necessary.
5) Employees of this newspaper &amp; their
Usually after one or two . B, which is transmitted
•
immediate families are not eligible.
cases, the public or military through blood products or
••
6)
Contest
good Feb. 1- Feb. 11, 2005
health authorities can stop sexual contact. Often there
7)
Winner
will be randomly drawn Friday,
further spread, but the tirst are no symptoms, but it can
February
•• Ill Winner wiU11,be2005.
few cases are· often fatal. cause i!I ness. If your child is
contacted to schedule
••
When a person does recover entering a health-related field
promotional photo at business location.
from a case of bacterial like medicine or nursing,' it is
•
meningitis, he or .she can suf- especially important that they
fer permanent brain damage. receive this series.
·••
Finally, the varicella vacThe seriousness of the dis•••
ease and the relative ease of cine for chickenpox should
preventing it are why all ·of be given if your daughter
my children have had or will has not had chickenpox.
••
have meningttts vaccitie Ad~lts do get chickenpox,
•
before staning college - so and it can be a serious ill•
•
should yours.
ness in an adult. The vaccine
There are other immuniza- is a two-shot series, with the
Weaving Stitches
tions that ·you should be sure doses given at least four
•
Pomeroy Flower Shop
are up io date before your weeks apart
:
Hartwell House
daughter starts college , as
So pull ut h shot record
:
Dan's
well. In fact, this applies to and call your ctor or health •
Swisher &amp;. Lohse
other readers who have chi!- department to get these vac•
'
dren who may be a few years cines started. Having her
:
K&amp;.C jewelers
away'from high school grad- fully immunized will give • •
Riverfront Past &amp;. Present
•
uation. Use the following you one less thing to worry
Francis Florist . .
information to detennine if about as you send your
Long john Silvers/KFC
••
your child's . "s hot record" daugh ter off to college.
Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center
indicates that he or she is
Family Medicine® is a
••
under-immunized. If so, you weekly colum11. To submit
Clark's jewelry
•
should . get your child' s questiom, write to Martha A.
The Fabric Shop
immunizations caught up .
Simpso11, D.O., M.B.A., &gt;Ohio
•
First thing to check on is U11iversity
College
of •
your child's immunization Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
•••
against diphtheria, tetanus Box JJO, Athe11s, Ohio
Love Your Tan
(lockjaw) and pertussis 45701, or' via e-mail to read••
( whooping
cough). erquestiolls@familymedi••
. AccoQiing to the , National ci11e11ews.org. Medical illforlnstitutes of Health, immu- mation i11 this column is
•
The Cutting Crew
nization against all three of provided as an ·educational
· Riverway Cafe
these diseases is recommend- service only. It does not
••
TNf Pit Stop (4 Locations)
ed for all infants fllld children repklce tile judgme/11 of your
•
from 'two months of age up to perso11al physician, who . •
,
their seventh birthday. Those should be relied on to dlagseven and older · should nose a11d recomme11d treat-

•
•
•
•
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•

499 RiChland Avenue • Athens, Ohio 45701

Phone (740) 594-6333 • 800-451-9806
www.karraudiology.com
'•

POMEROY

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RACINE

SYRACUSE

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MINERSVILLE
River Bed Tanning&amp;. Party Supplies

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

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MA~N.WV
Bob Evans Restaurant
Debbie's Flowers N' More
Mason Bowling Lanes
Rive'rside Golf Club
Oopsa Daisy Flowers &amp;. Gifts

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•

She described the flowers
as thin petals twisted threads
about an inch long arranged
like tassels or pom-poms
along leafless branches . The·
blooms last up to a month .
Celcie Stearns talked about
grow ing orchids. She said
they can be gro'\'n indoors by
simulating their outdoor en vironment. She suggested the
phalaenopsis as the easies.t of
the many species to grow, and
can be found in garden cen ters, supermarkets, and di scount stores. They are easy to
grow an have an extended
bloom throughout the winter
months,
sometime
into
spring, she ·said.
She talked about temperatures, watering. fertilizer and
sunlight needed.. for good
growth and suggested raising
orchids is best when a spare
room is available. ·
Joy Combs talked about
feedmg the birds and control-

camp council: Gerald Crawford control over the wreath-laying
of'Letar1 Falls, camp council.
ceremony for the Battle of
Appointments made by the Buffington Island Battlefield.
new commander included This was done to correct conDonald Swisher of Thurman, fusion that occurred last year
chaplain; .Dale Colburn of with actions of the Ohio
Pomeroy, historian; Franklin Department. This will be held
Sisson of Pomeroy, patriotic II :30 a.m. , Saturday, July 15,
instructor and quartermaster; at the park at Portland in conRhett Milhoan of Echo, guard; junction with the re-enactPaul Ditty of Piketon. guide; men! being held that weekKeith Ashley, newsletter editor. end. All community, patriotic,
Retiring commander. Gerald and vetemns' organizations
Crawford. pinned the comman- are asked to participate.
der's badge on ~ommander
It was noted that the camp
Michael. Ashley then presented · gave assistance to a member
a Civil War book to the retiring of the Ladies of the GAR at
Bainbridge by sending fire
commander for his service·.
· The camp vou:d to take full wood to her to endure the 12

Wife refuses husband's plea
to perform in his road show

AUDIOLOGY
HEARING AIDS

Questio11: My child is going

received from Overbrook
Center for the tray favors proVided by the club.
The spring regional meeting
to be held The Plains was
announced for April 23. The
program will be ·:A Tea Par1y"
and "Birds and their Habitat."
A prog'ram ·on the cold
weather was
presented.
Marjorie Rice used "Winter .
· Wonders" as her topic.
"Winter-blooming witch
hate! are proof that ·gardens
needn ' t,shut down for the season," she said. "These endear: ingly odd tlowers defy cold
and snow."
· She said that while . witch
hazel may lack the !lower
power of forsythia or the
head-ov~r-he e ls perfume of
lilacs. They have one attribute
that distinguishes .them from
other flowering shrubs. They
unfurl soft-scented fringy
tlowers at a time when gardens offer few blooms.

'

days without power during
the December ice storm.
Morgan D. Silvers and
· Morgan W. .Silvers both of
Oxford, Ala., were welcomed
jnto membership based on their
ancestor, Pvt. Morgan Leonard
of Co. A, 8th Ohio.Cavalry.
The camp voted to hold the
annual Appomattox Day bean
dinner on Saturday, April 9, at
the James Mourning farm off
Railroad Street in Middleport.
The occasion will mark the
I 40th anniversary of the surrender of Gen. Robert E. Lee.
The Ladies of the Grand
Army of the Republic will
join the camp in the dinner.
A letter was read concerning
the recent turnover of the u.s.
Colored Troops monument in
Washington, D.C. to the
National Park Service. The
monument has not honored all
black troops of the war including the four Still brothers of
Meigs County who fought in
"white" units rather than U.S.
Colored Troop units.
T.he annual Memorial Day
ceremonies were set for
Saturday May 21. Work will
be done to obtain a public
address system to handle this .
. The locatidil for the ceremony
has not selected.

ing his wife's sisters and their
DEAR ABBY: My husband. "Wilmer," and I are. in
families 10 our wedding next
our mid, 50s. ·we' ve been
year. I don't believe it would
be proper, nor do I want .them
married 35 years, and for the
at my wedding. Please .help.
most part we have gotten
along great. However, for
- MIFFED IN FLORIDA
'
Dear
DEAR MIFFED: There is
about the · last 12 years,
Wilmer has been on this kick
Abby
nothing improper about your
that when we're on a road trip,
fiance's wish to invite his forhe wants me to ' 'flash'' truck. 1ner in-laws to the wedding.
ers. At times, he has even tried
It is evidence ·that he had a
to get me to show everything.
happy marriage and a good
I was raised to be modest obvious answer would be to relationship with the family
and have told my husba.nd · ask your teacher to assign - which is why he was open
repeatedly that I don't want you a different partner. to marrying again . Please
to do it, that.the mere sugges- However, if the two of you rethink your stance on this.
tion makes me uncomfort- are dancing in competition You cannot erase his past,
able. He says I'm not getting and it 's not praciical, then and you will have a much
any younger and I' II regret it you'll have to readjust the happier marriage if you curb
someday. Last weekend, we way you . think about the your insecurity and .don't try .
were on the road again, and' young man . When you go to to isolate him .
he wanted me to do the truck- the dance 'tloor. take a mental
NOT CONFIDENTIAL
er thing. When I refused, I step backward. Tell yourself TO MY ASIAN READERS:
got the silent treatment for he is your business partner• A happy, healthy and prosthe rest of the trip .
because in a sense that's perous New Year to all of
After we returned home . what he is. I'm not saying it you. May the Year of the
Wilmer and I were in our hot . will · be easy to do. But it Rooster be one to crow about.
tub, and he said another trip might give you a different
Dear Abby is written by
had been "wasted" because I perspective - and that's a Abigail Va11 Burell, also
wou ldn · t cooperaie .
"step" in the right direction . known as ]ea1111e Phillips, and
I am not a prude. I enjoy sex
DEAR ABBY: I am. recent- was founded by ller mother,
with my husband, but I' m·not an ly . engaged to a wonderful Pauli11e Phillips. 1#ite Dear
exhibitionist. I have thought man whose wife died a year Abby at www.DearAbby.com
about talking to my pastor, but and a half ago. My problem is or P.O. Box 69440, Los
Wtlmer would just say he's on that' he is thinking about invit- Angeles, CA 90069.
.
.
my side because I believe in God
and thy husband is an atheist.
Please help me. I don't think our
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
sex .life needs a third party. Sealed
proposals Jor the l&amp;n~ Rup Road Slip Repair will be
UNDERCOVER WIFE IN S.C .
received
by
the Lebanon Township Trus(ees at the home of
DEAR UNDERCOVER
DorQ!b): A. RQs~berr): , Cl~rk 3Q348 V~ll~ ): B ~ !l~ Rd .. R~~in~
WIFE: Neither do I. What
QhiQ
your husband is suggesting
45771 unti I 3:00 P.M . on Februar): 26. 2005 or at the Lebanon
could cause a fatal accident.
Il!woobip
l!uih:lion, 5!000 ~Qt:!laod B,Qad. B.a~io~. QIJiQ 45721
Please remind Wilmer that
(IQ~;at~d a! !b~ int~r•~cliQn Q[ M~i~&gt; C2Mnl): B,Qad 35
indecent exposure is a crime
(PQnland Road and Lebanon TQwnshi~ Road 132 (LQv~!l R!lad
and that he is going to have to
in Spiller) between 7:30 P,M . and 7:45 P,M. and then at 7:45
get his kicks somewhere
~.M Qn february 26. 2005 at said Lebanon Township Building
·
other than Route 66.
opened and read aloud.
DEAR ABBY: I'm 16 and
The project provides for installing piling and deadmen for pura junior in ~igh school. For
poses of stabilizing a slip affecting Lrlng Run Road (Lebanm.'
Township Road 149) in Meigs County. Ohio.
the past year and a half, I
DOMESTIC STEEL USE REQUIREMENTS AS SPECIFIED
have been taking ballroom
IN
SECTION 153 .011 OF THE REVISED CODEAPPLYTO
dancing lessons and was
THIS
PROJECT COPIES OF SECTION 153.01 I OF THE
assigned a teenage dance
REVISED
CAN BE OBTAINED FROM ANY OF THE
partner. To make a long story
OFFICES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF-ADMINISTRATIVE
short, l fell for him. It was a
SERVICES
.
· schoolgirl crush for a while .
Bid
documents
may be secur~d at the office of The Meigs
and I would call him daily.
CQUDI~
Eu~iD~~r.
3111 QFairgrQund&gt; B.Q~d. f'Qm~ru): QbiQ
A few months ago, he final451~2; ~bQD~ !'lumber HQ-222-2211 for a $10.00 non-refundly decided to date me. It did- '
able fee .
n ' t last long. After six weeks
E;tch bid must be accompanied by either a bid bond in the
we broke uR. It turned out
amount of 10% of the bid amount with a surety satisfactory to
that he didn t really like me.
the aforesaid LebanQD Towo 0hip Trustees or by certified check.
We have sort of gone back to
cashiers check, or letter of credit upon a solvent bank in the
'
being friends .
amounr of not less than 10% of the bid amount in the favor of
Is there any way I can get
the aforesaid LebanQO Il!wnsbip Trusteeo . Bid bonds .shall be
over him quicker? I can't preaccompanied 'by Proof of Authority of the official or agent signtend he's dead ·or anything.
ing the bond.
Bids shall be sealed and marked as Bid for: LQng B.uo B.wd
How can I get the pain to stop
Slip Repair and mailed or delivered to:
so we can just be friends? I
LebanQD Towosbill IDm~~ s [!Q[Qib.): A B.Qs~:bea): Cl~rk. 3QJ~8
have to ballroom dance with
Yall~ Ildl~ B.d. Ra~iDl: Qbil! 1~111 .
.
him every week, and it hurts
.Qr
bamJ
d~lin~ll:i.l
imm~:dialkl~
IUiQ[
IQ
lb~
bid
Qll'lliD&amp;
12;
to waltz with someone yo.u
L~banQD
Toll'oob.ip
Irnum
LebanQD
IQll'DSbip
lluildiol;l.
know doesn't reciprocate ·
51000 ~!lDI~nd B.Qad. Rae in~. ObiQ 151Z l (local~d a11b~ iDil:ryour feelings. - TAKES
:iL:i.aiQD
2i M!i::ii::t CQUDI~ Road ~5 !B,rlhmd BmuD umJ l&amp;bi.lllQO
TWO TO TANGO
Toll'
nobill
R1md 132 (LQY~U Road in Spill~rl
DEAR TAKES TWO: The
'

. Wednesday, February 9,

2005

Community Calendar
.

ling costs by feedipg suntlower seeds, cracker corn, Publi~
millet and niger for the finchWednesday, Feb. 9
es, and rationing out treats like
POMEROY
- The Mei gs
small fruits and nuts. She also
suggested giving suet in cages, County Board of Health wi ll
and buying in quantity and meet at 5 p.m. in the conference room of the Mei gs
even mixing your own seed.
, Birds like pinecones tilled · County Health Department.
with peanut butter then dipped 112 E. Memorial Drive.
Thursday, Feb. 10
in bird seed, she said, adding •
REEDSVILLE
- Olive
that an ear of corn, hanging in
a tree, is also a treat for the Township Trustees will meet ·
larger birds. Another way to in special session , 6:30p.m. at
cut costs she suggested is to the .township garage. Regular
plant llowers in your garden . meeting to follow. Annual
thar produce seeds for the tinancial report for 2004 is at
birds such as bachelor buttons, the clerk's oftice for review.
Thesday, Feb. 15·
cosmos, amarantus, sunllowMIDDLEPORT
ers, tickseed and· zinnia.
Hint for the month was to Middleport Village Council regsave money by putting out . ular meeting, 7:30p.m., council
pine cones which hide a mul- chambers at Village Hall. Date
titude of seed without the changed from Feb. 14.
RUTLAND
- Rutland
peanut butter .
Pauline Atkins will host the Township Trustees, 5 p.m. ,
February meeting. There will Rutland Fire Station.
be a potluck qi nner.

Sons of Union Veterans install new officers

Excuse Me.

Daughter needs meningitis vaccine
and full ''s hot record' ·check ·

BYTHEBEND

Garden Club for OAGC convention

MEIGS DISTRICT· ANNOUNCE-S HONOR ROLLS

PageA3

meetings

CHESTER - Shade Ri ver
Lodge 453 will me e ~ at 7:30
p.m. at the haJJ: Refreshments.
POMEROY - Relay for
Life meetin g. 5 30 p.m . at the
Count y
Library,
Meigs
Pomeroy.
TUPPERS PLAI NS
VFW Post 905 3 will meet at
6:30 p.m. for a meal and at 7
p.m. for their regular meetin g
at the VFW .hal l.

Church events

Wednesday. Feb. 9
POMEROY - St. Paul
Lutheran
Chu rc h
A'h
Wedne&gt;day 'en'ice . 7 p.m.. with
ru;he&gt; marked on the forehead.
RA CIN E - David Daile1
wil be preaching at 7 p.ni,
Wednesday eve nin g at the
Pentecostal A"embl y on ol d
Route 124. 'Racine. Hi s services will be he ld even
Wednesda y ni ght.
~
Friday, Feb. II
LONG BOTTOM - Hvmn
time. 7 p.m. at the Faith ·Ful l
Gospel Church. Singers "i ll
Thursday, Feb. 10
be Dave and Debbie Dailcv.
POMEROY - Apha Iota
Saturday, Feb.l2 .
Masters will· meet at noon at
REEDSVILLe - Valent ine
Evans
Re staurant , · dinner at the -Reedsvi lle United
Bob
Mason , for a luncheon. ·
Methodi st Church, 5 p.m.

Clubs and
organizations

EITC Could
Mean More Money
for You.
Earned Income Tax Credit. You could
increase your refund by up to $4,300.
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111\:R lllolk alway'&gt; get' )NI tho 111axinllttlt r &lt;· l'lli lll Y""·,-;.

rntitl•••l to. guaranl\•l'd
Call HDD·HRBLOCK
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II;;H Uki"' ~·~ &lt;'mil'. Jo'OO Ill"!' \"11:.01 1•-.\ tn h .&lt;.r..~·r ~!':.n •l't ( 01 l1 ..o,llo~ !.:u1 l1:.t.o~ht., ,;J,,o,~ , .,., .,r .,;,.
,. ,, ... .1: n·t.m&lt;l ~'•" f&lt;..\ ].JJ ~ar~~.b11 f, .,. fur IL..t f1 ' \"m 1\.1 ~( 1~1 1;: lr.:~,,,,. !l t~ . u .rl ~l: &gt;~ r ·• ~
:p.~· tiJtlr&lt;J:: ··lllrlllilr ~t·N in .. ~~ :1 • tM ~·~~~ r~~ ,..-:, .,.,.. ;.e vp-"'·:1 ..::~(! : ll' n 1~ .•~1&lt; ~1'\ ,,., ... l··-'

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�Pagel\4.

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, February 9, 2005

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

r

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

Ohio Valley, Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General ManagercNews Editor

Congress shall make no law respect~ng 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

VIEW

O'Reilly
Is he serious?
Dear Editor:

I comment on the Feb. 6 O'Reilly column which states, "All
· over the country far left ravings on acceptable and sometimes
encouraged by fanatic al faculty." In four years of college and
'
two years of graduate school.
I never had a single professor
who tried to force hi s or her views on me, Who comprises a
typical board of tr4stee s? Corporate la"!yers, doctors and
aftiuent conservative business people who themselves fr~­
quently play fast and loose with the rules. In the case of smaller colleges. local mediocrities frequently get hired in faculty
and administrative posts because of Masonic connections or
cronyism with trustee board .I,IIembers. And individuals with
far greater intelligence are sidelined.
Colleges and universities ought to be bastions offree speech
and inquiry where I00 schools .of thought content. O'Reilly
would allow only ''legitimate dissent," which would essentially amount to quietude. It astounds me that millions of people take this ridiculous man seriously.
Jeff Fields

In January 1935, President
Franklin D. Roosevelt delivered a message to Congress
in which he unveiled his proposal for Social Security.
Among the features the
Joseph
new federal entitlement proPerkins
gram ought to include, he .
said, was "voluntary contributory annuities.' by which
individual initiative can
increase the annual amounts invested in government savings bonds.
received in old age."
And it is far less than the 6
Seven decades · later,
President George W. Bush percent to 7 percent real
drew hisses and catcalls dur- return on their Sucial
ing his State of the Union Security contributions they
address from latter-day wbuld have reaped if their
members of the party of money had been invested in
Roosevelt when he proposed . the stock market.
Persol}al
retirement
to "strengthen and save "
Social Security by allowing accounts offer another
the voluntary contributory important ·advantage, the
annuities his Democrat pre- president noted. ·
"You'll be able to pass
decessor first advocated.
The annuities· Bush has in along the money that accumind would take the form of mulates in your personal
personal retirement accounts accpunt, if you wish, to your
permitting workers to volun- children or grandchildren,"
tarily invest a portian of he said. "And, best of all , the
· their Social Security payroll money in the acc.ount is
taxes iri -the private equity yours, and the government
can never take it away."
markets.
The D~:mocratic oppost"Here is why personalaccounts are a better deal," tion on Capitol Hill is
the president explained this unswayed .
The president's plan is
week, as he stood in the well
of
the
House
of "dangerous," Harry Reid, the
Representatives.
"Your Senate Democratic leader
money will grow, over time, frOJll Nevada, demagogued.
at a greater rate than any- It "isn't really Social
. thing the current system can Security reform. It's more
Security'
offer. And your account will like · .Social
provide money for retire- roulette ."
.
ment. over and above the
Reid was echoed by Rep.
check you will receive from . Nancy Pelosi of California.
the -Hous~ Democratic
Social Security."
As it is, workers who retire lea~can solve this
today can expeci a mere I.6 long-term challenge," she
percent return on the money squealed, "without disman· they paid into Social tling Social Security and
Security over their lifetimes. without allowing this
That's less than the return administration's fal se decthey would have earned if larl)tion of a crisis to justitheir funds simply had been fy a privatization plan that ·

Local Briefs

·deer. Hunters also ·exceeded
the record for deer taken durRACINE - Tuppers · Plains-Chester Water District has
POMEROY - The latest ing the archery season with
. issued a boil advisory . for Township Road 604, TR 116, deer season is now a memory. 57, 198. A total of 125,681·deer
Minserville Hill Road, TR 660, Forest Run Road, Nease While Meigs County ranked were killed during the popular
Road, Amberger Road, Pine Grove Road, Roy Jones Road, 14th in deer harv.ests statewide, one-week deer gun season. Morning Star Road , Salser Road, Court Street Road, Wessel the county's totals were still
Young hunters even set a
Road . ijnd Snowball · Hill Road . in Sutton and Chester impressive with 5,034 killed.
new mark in the second year
Townships, because of the re pair of a main line.
This figure is couttesy of the of the state's two-day youth
When service is restored, the boil advisory will be in effect Ohio Department of Natural deer-gun season with 6,673
until 10 a.m. on Thursday.
··
Resources that reported Ohio deer killed.
hunters set a new record, taking
A record trophy buck was
• Concert at Court Street 217,30 I deer during the 2004- recognized with Warren
· County bow hunter Brad
Grill featuring David Childers 2005 hunting season. ·
on Feb. 18.
Counties reporting the Jerman shooting a buck that
from Page A1
• Family storytelling event highest number of . deer scored 201 1/8 in the typical
at 6 p.m . . on Feb. 28 at checked during the season (syminetrical antlers) cate- ·
Other . Meigs
C.ourity Eastern Library.
were: Tuscar&amp;was, '8,293; gory of the Buckeye Big
Chamber of Commerce
The
next business-minded Coshocton, 7,055: Licking, . Bucks Club. Jerman's deer
'
announcements were as luncheon will be held at 6,61 0; Washington, 6, II 0: lied the score of a buck taken
'
follows:
noon on March 8 at the Guernsey, 6,028:
Harrison, in 1986· in Clark County by
• Relay for Life meeting at . Wi ldhorse Cafe featuring 6,021:
Holmes.
5,930; William Kontras.
5:30 p.m .. Thursday at the keynote
speaker
Fran Athens, 5,915: Muskingum,
Deer hunting contributes
Submitted photo
·Pomeroy Library.
Tiberzio ·of the Ohio 5,779: Jefferson, 5,481 .
an estimated $266 million to Young hunters bagged 6,673 deer in the state's two-day youth
• Meigs County Cancer Humanities Council which is
. During the four . day Ohio's economy each year deer·gun season. Contributing to this trend was six-year-old
Initiative meeting at I :30 p.m. bring the Ohio Chautauqua ,statewide muzzleloader season and helps to support thou- Nate Hoover of Pomeroy who bagged his first deer during the
2004 West Virginia youth gun season.
on Feb. 18 at the senior center. to Meigs County in July.
hunters took a record 27,749 sands of jobs.

conservative mix of bonds
i's unnecessary."
The Democrats disingenu- and stock funds."
Then. there is th(! television
ously insi st that Social
that
Security wHI be just fine for commercial
the next half-century or so , MoveOn.org is airing in
with no changes whatsoever selected congressional disin how revenues are raised tricts around the country. It
shows white-haired workers
and benefits are paid.
They dishonestly claim performing menial jobs, liftthat the president's plan· to ing boxes, mopping tlciors,
reform Social Security, to . shoveling and laundering.
The voi ceover laments,
create personal retirement
accounts, will result in be·he- "Thanks to George Bush's
fit cuts of "40 percent or planned benefit cuts of up to
more.''
46 percent to pay for private
Meanwhile. the party of accounts . it won't be long
Roosevelt has mobilized i.ts before America introduces
politically aligned special - the Jorkin g retirement."
interest groups and 527
But ·the ad is patently
organization s for it s cam - "false,"
FactCheck.org
paign
again st
Social a(tests. The president has
said repeatedly · that there
Security reform.
The AARP, for instance. would be no change in Social
has sponsored a series · of Security for those already
full -page newspaper ads retired. or near retirement.
attacking personal retireAnd,
states
"Wh.at
ment accounts. The most FactCheck.org,
egregious line of the ads MoveOn.org calls 'Bush's
warns:
"WINNERS &amp; planned .Social Security benLOSERS are stock market efit cuts' is actually a plan
term s. Do you really want that would hold starting .
them to beco.me retirement . Social Security benefits
steady in purch'asing power,
·term s""
FactCheck.org, a nonparti- rather than allowing them to
san.Web site produced by the double over the next 75
Uritverstty ot Pennsylvama's years as they are projected to
Annenberg Public Policy do under the current be.nefit
Center. not es that a photo formula."
accompanying the AARP's
If a Democratic president
attack ad shows. a wild trad- had proposed the Social
ing pit and a board listing Security reforms that Bush
"cocoa," "sugar," "coffee" outlined during his State of
and othet,.commodities.
Union address, Sen. Reid
However, . none of . the and Rep. Pelosi and their feloptions under con sideration low Democrats would hail
by President Bush would him as the second coming or'
allow holders of personal Franklin D. Roosevelt.
·Bur because it is Bush, a
retirement accounts to speculate in commodities, w.hich Republican, the Democrats
are notoriously volatile and are determined to obstr\ICL
ri*y
. (Joseph Perkins is a
In fact, the president columnist for The San Diego
assured in his State of the Union- Tribune and can be
Union me ssage that "the reacl!ed at Joseph. Perkins'@
money' can only go into a UnionTril&gt;.com.)

·,

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' THAT'S RED INK
ON YOUR

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, Feb. 9, the 40th day of 2005. There are
· 325 day,s left in the year. This is Ash Wednesday. This is the
. Chinese New Year of the Rooster.
'.
.
. Today's Highlight in History: On Feb. 9, 1943, the World
War II pattie of Guadalcanal in the southwest Pacific ended
with an American victory over Japanese forces .
On this date: In 177'3, the ninth president of the United
States, William Henry Harrison, was born in Charles City
County, Va. .
.
'
·.
In 1825, the House ofRepresentatives elected John Quincy
Adams president after no candidate received a majority of
· electoral votes.
In 1861, .the Provisional Congress of the Confederate States
of America elected Jefferson Davis president and Alexander
H. Stephens vice president.
In 1964, The Beatles made their first live American television appearance on "The Ed ~ullivan Show" on CBS .
In 1971 , the Apollo 14 spacecraft returned to Earth 'after
man 's third landing on the moon.
In 1984, Soviet leader Yuri V. Andropov died at age 69, less
than 15 months after succeeding Leonid Brez,hnev; he , was
succeeded by Konstantin U. Chemenko.
In 2001, a U.S. Navy submarin.e collided .with a Japanese
fishing boat off the Hawaiian coast, killing nine men and boys
aboard the boat.
Five years ago: Hackers ~tepped up their "denial of service"
attacks on popular Internet sites, zeroing in on such targets as
ETrade and ZDNet, inconveniencing millions of Web users
and unnerving Wall Street. Boeing C0. engineers and technical workers began a 40-day strike.

The Daily Sentinel
Correction Policy

(UsPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our milin concern in all stories is to be Published every afternoon . Monday
accurate. If you know of an error in a through Friday, 111 Court Street,
story, call the oewsroom at (740) 992·

2156.

Our main number

ts

(740) 992·2156.

Department extensions are:

News

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Member: The Associated Press and the
Ohio Newspaper Association.
Poalmaater: Send address corrections
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Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
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Holzer Medical Center Laboratory receives accreditation

Taxpayers

'

...

Southern Nurse Junie
Maynard and Meigs Local
Superintendent
William
from Page A1
Buckley said their districts
have applied for funding
GAU.IPOLIS -Holzer Medical 6,000 CAP-accredited 'laboratorie s the overall management of the labora development of . a template through the Ohio EMS grant Center's Laboratory in Galli(iolis has nationwide.
tory. This stringent inspection pro for a comprehensive emer- program for defibrillators. been awarded accreditation by the
The CAP Laboratory Accreditatio'n gram is designed to specifically ensure
gency respon se plan to which cost an estimated Commission
on
Laboratory Program, that began in·the early 1960s, the highest standard of care for the
alligning local EMS offices $2.400 each.
Accreditation , of the College of is recognized by the federal govern- laboratory's patient s.
with schools.
.
T.q.~ machines are used to · American Pathologists (CAP), based on
ment a~ being equal to or more strinThe
College
of
American .
Of Meigs County's three check a person's heart the results of a recent on-site inspection. gent than the government's own Pathologists is a medical society servschool districts, only Eastern rhythm and recognize a
Bill Gouckenour, MT (ASCP), inspection program.
ing nearly 16,000 physician members
Local now has AED· s in rhythm that requires a shock . Administrative Director, and David
During the CAP accreditation and · the laboratory community
place -one in each of the They can also advise trained Althaus, MD, Medical Director, of process, inspectors examine the labo- throughout the world . It is the world 's
district's two· school build- rescuers when a shock is the Laboratory at Holzer Medical ratory's records and quality control of largest association composed exclu ings, said the district's nurse, needed. The AED uses voice Center, were advised of this national procedures for the preceding two sively of pathologists and is widely
prompts, lights, and text mes- recognition and congratulated for the years. CAP inspectors also examine considered the · leader in laboratory
Mary Ann Moore.
Meigs EMS Administrator sages to tell the ;escuer the "excellence of the services being pro- the entire staff's qualifications, the quality assuranc·e. The CAP is an
Gene Lyons said she con- steps to take.
vided. " Holzer Medical Center's laboratory's equipment, facilities. advocate for high quality and costAED's are becoming Laboratory is one of the more than safety program and record. as well as . effective medical care.
dt.tcted an inservice at Eastern
to train Moore and other staff increasingly common in
members in the use of the public places, Lyons said.
device, and completed a' sim- Tpey are frequently found
ilar training program at i!l shopping malls, train
Southern. and would do the stations and airports, .and in
same at Mei gs if defibrilla- many
police
cruisers,
Lyons said
tors are secured.
VINTON - Cadet Devin Keith Nan Harder of Vinton, and the late. Fred
They are Laura Sojka, Bidwell, fresh George, son of Rick and Robin George George, and Avanell George of Rutland. man; Alex Breech, senior, Matthew
once those bills have been of Vinton, was mimed to the dean's list at
••• .
Canady. senior, Devan Cottrell, senior,
received, Frank said.
the U.S. Military Academy at West
BIDWELL- Kara Renee Adkins of Joel Elliott , junior. Leslie Linder, senior.
'The deadline for paying . Point, N.Y.
Bidwell \las earned her way onto the Jennifer Massie. junior. and Nicole
from Page A1
tax bills is March 31 this
To qualify for the dean's list, a dean's list for fall semester at Morehe~d ·Mount, senior, all from Gallipolis: Bryan
year, so even though they· re cadet must .maintain a 3.0 grade point, (Ky.) State University.
Rupert and . Heidi Tipple. both seniors
delays the mailing of bills late arriving here, t,axpayers average.
To make the dean's list, a student must from Patriot; Kristin Meyer. senior. Rio
over 26,000 parcels in all . will have plenty of time to
George graduated from River Valley . be enrollf!d full-time and maintain at least Grande: andCara Butcher. senior. Vinton.
Clerks in Frank 's office · pay their bills," Frank 'said High School in 200 I. He is concentrating a 3.5 grade point average ..
To be named to the dean's list, a· stuspend days correcting bal- Tuesday. He said bills could his studies in military art and science and
Adkins·attained a perfect GPA of 4.0.
dent must have earned a gra{le point
ances nn bi lis when advance be ready for mailing some- plans to graduate in May from West Point
average of 3.3 or better on a scale of 4.0
•••
payments have been made, time next week.
and be commissioned a second lieutenant
GALLIPOLIS- Eleven local students (straight A's) for the quarter and earned
in the U.S. Army.
have been named to the fall quarter 2004- 16 hours, 12 of which were taken for a
sale price.
George is the grandson of Cletus and 05 dean's list at Ohio State University. ' leiter grade.
The annual membership
drive is underway. The fee
from Page A1
was increased from $50 to
Marietta
Colonial
• Akron Art Museum in Cincinnati. $4.1 million
•
.• Schuster Arts Center in ·
$60. Information will be
Theatre
m
Marietta. Akron, $1 million
summer and was one of six mailed to businesses and
$335,000
• Charles A. Eulett Dayton, $5.5 million
. from Page A1
The capital appropri asites· selected from the 30 professionals on the role of
• Pro Football Hall of Education Center I Edge of
the Merchants Assoc·iation
communities applying.
Fame in Canton, $400,000
Appalachia in Portsmouth, tions bill not Ot)l y provides
funding for cultural faciliIn addition to · evening ·and its work in the state? Here is a sampling
• Grant Boyhood Home in $1.85 million
from the list of facilities Georgetown, $480,000
• COSI Toledo, $1.9 mil.- ties but for other state faciliprograms under the tent, · community.
tie s such as the School
there will be' workshops
Brenda Merritt announced and their appropriated
• Taft Museum
in lion
each · day at the Senior the winners in the tri-county funds:
Cincinnati, $500,000
Commission.
• Blossom Music Center in Facilities
of · Public
· Citizen s Center for adults Christmas decorating con- .
• The Ariel Theatre in
. • Cleveland Institute of Cuyahoga Falls, $2.5 million Department
·
test.
In
Pomeroy
the
winners
Safety.
Department
of Jobs
Music
Gallipolis. $100.000
in
Cleveland,
• Marina District I lee
and at the Meigs County
Arena Development 111 and Family Services. Ohio
Library in Pomeroy for chil- . were Weaving Stitches,
• Ohio Glass Museum in $750,000
Veterans' Home Agency and
dren every day with the Anderson ' s and Hartwell Lancaster, $250,000
Western
Reserve Toledo, $3.5 million
•
Public
Work&gt;
Society
• Rock 'N Roll Hall of Historical
111
• National Underground the
exception of Thursday when House . . The judges were
Railroad
Freedom
Center
from
out
of
county.
Fame
in
Cleveland,
$250,000
Cleveland,
$1
million
in
Commission
among
others
.
it will be held at the
Riverbend Arts Council in
R•tea or Tu.tlon 2004
·
Middleport..
'
~~- ~ ;~-~1'1~~~~~~~ campi I•.A _ . c;.,.,. No. 32l oe or s.. ,. ol Oh6o. oo he.-.~;~,~ 00111':11 u11r.. "'•- .- Ta•t~&lt;J" tor~ ' h• v ...,
:;'.",;;~
Powell talked about the
;
detail
of ho sting
a
Dlatricta
[RIO
B"' 01
[All Oth~r
~~g&amp;RH
~:'· Total
""'"&amp; Ao•
and•
'T.B.
I
1196
lvoe . Corp. j.., ' H l~e:
Ag
Chautauqua
in
Meig s
County along with the cost
n
....,,.i.so 4.30 11.70
on .
(23.90
n .021l971
0.50
1.00
1.00
41 .70
3.00
15 .30 1.00
""
and requested a donation
1.00
0 .50
tLSO 4.30 11.70
l:zaoo
1.00
!3.00
ls.30 1.00
40.80 .
toward the $7,500 needed .
tLSC
The merchants agreed they
' o~ · 0~~
-LSC
~
~
wanted to . contribute , but
'
(38.70
n,
r LSD! 4.30 12.70
0.50
1.00
3.00
3.30
5.30 11.00 11.00
n
"'·
••"'"1871
deferred the amount until
_I
the March meeting. She
.,
;
n
4.30 3.70
0.50
1.00
13.00
•LSC
123.00
5.30 11,110
.1.00
0.124174
,.,
also noted that Chestern
oLSC
4.30 3.70
I31 .N
o.eo
1.00
(3.00
1.00
51.681
0.238183
6.30 1.00
jLotan
Shade 'Day activities w'ill be
,.
n
n OL""1
tLSDI 4.30 4.20
131.88
11 .00
13.00
5.30 1.00
1.00
52.,
o.eo .
, incorporated into Friday
jOllve
"
n
I.a.~ lo.eo
41,
&lt;LSC
4.30 4.20
1.00
43.31J
0.
la.oo I•.'!CJ U)(J_
and · Saturday
of
"00
"
Chautauqua week.
n
Eaa1amLSC
4.30 3.70
123.00
lo.so
.00
42.80
0. 1211151
lu&gt;O
la .oo
15.30
lu&lt;&gt;
""·
"
.
Ways Pomeroy might oihn
MelgsLSC 4 o30 5.00
1.00
45.00
0
.032115
38
1&gt;3.90
lo.so
15.30 '00
l• .oo
laoo
erwise participate were disn ..
n
&lt;&gt;.&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;107
4 .30 3 .70
123.90 lo.50
49,20
15.30 lu&gt;O . lu&gt;O
l• .oo
J5.50 la.oo
cussed and suggestions
.......
n
., ,991015
4.30 [3.20
123..0 :o.50
0 123714
. 4320
!a.oo
1530 1.00 l• .oo_
ranged from heritage displays
I• oo
in "The Roaring Twenties"
....... 'qn 4 .30 11 .70
23.80
0.50
3 .00
41 .70
0.115309
40 .• 91915
1.00
5.30 I• oo · [1 .00
36
theme and bringing in a
..
46.1 H)()OO
4.30 lo.2o
23.90 lo.so
5.30 I•..; 11 .00
50.40
0.173804
1.00
10.20 3 .00
0.0851"
••
sternwheeler f&lt;Jr cruises on
I 4.;., lo.20
I
23.90 lo.50
1.00
3.00 . 5 .30 lt.oo 11 .00
40.00
0.
41
the river . .
8 .00
It was announc ed that
.,.
Meios Lsol 4.30 14.20
123.80
1.00
5 .30 1.00 11 .oo
...201
0.111M99I
0
0.50
3~&lt;)()
ornamental bulbs with etch'
n
1.00
1LSD 4.30 !3.60
31.89
0.50
.00
3.00
5 .30
.00
51 .59
0 .234115
ings of the current bridge
and the new one scheduled
-·4.30 :uo
31 .89
(a.:OO 3.00
1 .00
59.09
0.50
5 .30 1.00
53
I• oo
to ope n in 2006 will be
,, 00
n
4.30 2.10
1.00
31.80
0.50
5 .30 1.00
56.891
51 .
lo.eo . 13.00
0
ordered thi s morith . The
delay in getting bulbs wa' s
Real "tate1axH which have hat been pakt at the clot;e d .ach cohctton carry a penalty of,.,. ~t. Taxee may be P8'd at lhe orftce ol the County
T,_..,,... Of by'rnelit . Plea. . brtng rour last tax ~pt. •nd II you PBV by mall. be aunt to ~te your pope'' by tutng &lt;*lr1ct and enc~o.e • swnpea
attributed to the higher price
Mtl llddraa!W envelope . ~ examine your-. rec:etpt to ... . _ K covert an~ property. Offtce hou,. are 8:30A.M. to 4 :00P.M. Monclay through·
during the peak production
.
Frfd.y · Closed Satwdlly. Fall~ to receive lax abiiitemeuta dON not a\IOid any pene.lty. 111ternt. or charge lncurYed tor sucf'l delay.
· time in the last quarter of the
ONo Ar.riaed Coc;e 323. 13.
ao.ing dat•: a-4arch 31, 2005
year whi ch would have
HOWARD E. FRANK, Meigs County Treasurer
resulted in an increase in the

Local students make dean~· listings

(

~

STAFF REPORT

911

YOU KNOW

Reader Services

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Record breaking year for Ohio deer hunters

Boil advisory Issued

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

Syracuse

.

wWw.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, February 9, 2005

The Daily Sentinel

READER'S

.O PINION
The parly Of Roosevelt nowfails on Soda! Seatrity

FINGER?..

Easter

Progress

TV or not TT{ that is the qt:Jestion
My neighbor Arnie just
television and have a job.
bought a television that took
Click. A commercial for a
four guys the size of pro
contraption that let's you
wrestlers to move into his
cook fish on the tailgate of ·
house. It's a wall-size. tlatyour car in just seven minpanel, plasma HDTV with a
utes. Arnie can't cook fish in
Jim
16:9 aspect ratio, picture0 inhis own kitchen, what on
Mullen
picture, split screen, horiearth ·makes them think he
zontal- and vertical-edge
can cook it in the back. of bis
correction
and
car? And do you really want
stereo/SAPidbx noise reducto carpool with him the next
tion. Those are just the 'first . "Keep your grabby hands off day''
few features. I'm pretty sure . me, you disgu sting old
Click. Court TV. Wow! All
it can also make a fine cup of goat!"
the drudgery and tedium of
cappuccino. There's almost
Arnie put the television being on a jury without get. nothing this television can't through its paces. Not only ting paid the $15 per diem.
do. That is, ir you have the does he get 125 channels, he
Click. A 1950s black-andremote. Considering it's the gets satellite radio, he gets white movie that's not even ·
size of cereal box, I don't pay-per-view, he gets the good enough to colorize. It's a
know why it took us 45 min- premium channels, he gets Western staning Telly Savalas·,
utes to find the thing, but it the West Coast feeds·and the Shelley Winters and Ricky
did. Then it took another two East Coast feeds. He can Nelson. That's believable.
hours to program the remote. pause in the middle of beer
Click. A commercial for
· Tl)e main problem seemed to commercial and go get a one of tho&gt;e hospital beds
be that every time Arnie hit beer without mis sing a that moves up, down and
1 the
"power" button· · his minute of the commercial. sideways. You know it must
garage door would oflen . We He can watch two shows at be wildly expensive because
fimil.ly solved the problem once. He can also drink two they won'l tell you how
by turning on the television. beers at once . He can tape much it costs in the commerwith the garage door opener. shows iii the past, present cial. Maybe if you'd buy a ·
On snapped the clearest, and future, and watch them cheap treadmill you wouldlargest, most lifelike picture in super slb-mo or zip n't need the expensive hospi1. have ever seen. Almost 3- through them at 300 times tal bed.
D. It was crisper than real their normal running time .
Click. C-SPAN. Something
life. It was as if I could reach The only thing it can't do is . tells me the real rea&gt;on they
out and touch the people in get him a job. But I don 't put camera s in th e U.S.
front of me.
really think he's been look- Congress wasn't so we could
"Hey," said his wife as she ing . There's not enough time hear the debates and the orahand away, in the day to watch all thi s tory, b~t to keep the senators
smacked my
)

a

from stealing the curtains.
Click.
The
Home
Shopping Network. It says
206 people have already
bought sets of "tapestry luggage" .so far. If they · won't
even leave their homes to
shop, do you think they're
going to leave their homes to
travel? What do th'ey need
luggage for?
Click. Bass fishing. And ·
you thought it was exciting
(n regular television. ln
high-definition it looks as if
you can reach out and whoa - I'm not going to
make that mistake twice.
· CI ick . Dr. Phil was
explaining how parents can
find out if their · children
have gotten tattoos on their
foreheads . Apparently the
trick is to look at their foreheads. Who knew ?
Afrer
Arnie
flipped
through the channels a few
times. he asked me when I
was going to join the modem
world and go HDTV. I told
him I was going to wait for
HCTV:
High-Content
Television.
(Jim Mullen i•· the am/tor
of "It Take.\ a Village {diot:
Complicating the Simple'
Life" and "Baby's · first
Tmwo." You can reach l1im
at jim_mulleJI @my way.com)

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PageA6

ARoUND ToWN

. The Daily Sentinel

Meigs County Court News
POMEROY
Meigs Robert A. Johnson, Athens, Ross, Middleport, $100, proCounty Court Judge Steven $30 and costs, speeding; bation, use/possession drug
L. Story recently processed Joann Kelly, Nitro, W.Va .. parapherna; Ashley M. ·
the following cases:
$30 and costs, speeding; Rowley, Columbus, $30 and
Michael A. Bailey, Long Dustin L. Keyes, Portland, costs, speeding; Aaron J.
Bottom, $350 and costs, 30 $100 • .pro~ation, 30 days i~ Sellers. Portland, $100, 30
days in jail, suspended, pro- . jail, suspended, spotlighting. days in jail, suspended, pro'bation, DUI, $30 and costs, $100, 30 days in jail, sus- bation, spotlighting, $100, 30
probation, seat belt violation, pended, probation , illegally days in jail, suspended, pro$50 and costs, probation, fail- , taking deer, $100, 30 days in bation, illegally taking deer,
ure to control; Charley F. jail, suspended, probation,, $100, 30 days in jail, susBrown, McArthur, $200 and illegally taking deer, $100, 30 pet!ded, probation, illegally
costs, 180 days in jail, 178 days in jail, suspended, pro- taking deer; $100, 30 days in
. suspended, . probation, no bation, illegally taking deer, jail. probation, illegally tak. O.L., $30 and costs, proba- $100, 30 days in jail, sus- ing deer; $1 00, 30 days in jail,
tion, seat belt violation; Ryan pended, probation, hunt deer suspended, probation, illegalA. Cozart, Syracuse, $250,90 w/o permission. James R. ly taking deer, $100, 30 days
days in jail, 8D- suspended, Keyser,
Ashland,
Ky. , in jail, suspended, prob'ation.
probation, possession, $250, $3,463, 180 days in jail, 160 hunt deer w/o permission.
James D. Sellers, Long
90 days in jail, 80 days sus- suspended, probation, solicpended, possession, $100 and it/receive. improper comp; Bottom, $1 00, 30 days in
costs, · 180 days in jail, 180 Arthur K. Klepinger, Ludlow jail. suspended, spotlighting,
suspended, domestic vio- Falls, $50 and costs, hunting $100, 30 days in jail, suspended, probation, illegally
lence, $250 and costs. 90 days ·wtout special permit.
in jail, 89 suspended, .probaCvrus
H.
Knotts. taking deer, $100,30 days in
Reedsville; $400, 90 days in jail. probation, illegally taklion, endangering children.
Jeffrey
W.
Cundiff, jail. 88 suspended, probation, ing deer, $100, 30 days in
Pomeroy, $100, 90 days in a~sault; Lori A. Langdon. jail. suspended, probation,
jail, 87 suspended, probation, Middleport, $20 and costs, no illegally takjng deer, $100.
drug abuse, $100 and costs, child restraint ; Christopher 30 days in jail, suspended,
30 days in jail, 27 suspended, R. McGrath, Guysville, $30 probation, .hunt deer w/o
resisting arrest, $50 and and costs, seat belt violation; permission; Bradley D.
costs,. probation, illegally tak- Peter L. McKinney, West Smith, Bidwell, $150 and'
ing deer, $50 and costs, pro- Columbia. W.Va., $350 and costs, 30 days in jail, susbation, illegally taking deer; costs, 30 days in jail. 27_sus- pe,ndcd, probation, no driver
Harry
J.
Cunningham, pended, probation. OWl license; Ralph R. Snider.
Pomeroy, $20 and costs, traf- and/or drugs of abuse; Chad . Middleport, $30 and costs,
Matthew
C.
fie cont dev/signs; HermanJ. · L. Mourning, Middleport, speeding;
Staten,
Virginia
Beach,
Va.,
Dalton, Reedsville, $25 and $30 and costs, speeding;
costs, failure to. register; Carl Jason L. Murdock, Pomeroy, $30 a'nd costs, speeding;
H. Diegel, Mitchell, On. $30 and costs, speeding; Tammi L. Stover, Stewart,
Nokino, $100 and costs, Terry D. Napper, Middleport. $20 and costS, failure to reg· speeding;
Brandon
E. $530 and costs, overload; ister; Nathan E. Taylor,
Fackler, Rutland, $20 and Jeffrey Q. · Noble, Shade, Simsonville, S.C. , $30 and
costs, stop sign; Gary W. $800 and· costs, 180 days in costs, speeding; Gregory
Gilmore, Langsville, $20 and jail, suspended, probation, Weddle, Portland, $70, failure to control; Charles B.
costs, use of unauthorized phy cont veh intox.
Melissa L. ' Null, Hilliard, Williamson, Rutland, $30
plates; Douglas C. Grover,
Middleport, $20 and costs, $30 and costs. speeding; and costs; seat belt violation;
traffic cont dev/signs; Sherri Kevin F. Offenberger, Belpre, Kathie L: Williamson,
A. .Haley, Middleport, $30 $30 and costs, speeding; Rutland, ·, $70, no child
and costs, seat belt violation; Roderick L. Parsons, Gay, restraint; Donald P. Woolley,
Joshua A. Haning. Pomeroy, W.Va., $30 and costs. speed- Durham, . N.C., $30 and
$30 and costs, seat belt viola- ing; Candace L. Patterson, costs, speeding.
Rufus · A.
Wright,
tion; Mikiel B. Houser, Atlanta, Ga., $30 and costs,
Athens, $200, 10 days in jail, speeding; Amy M. Podolski, Columbus, $20 and costs,
suspended, probation, driving Pomeroy, $30 and costs, seat belt-passenger, $200,
under susp/revoc; Julie M. speeding; . Kenneth
C. 30 days in jail, 27 suspendHumes, Youngstown, $30 (&gt;ulliam, Granville, $50 and ed, probation, driving under
and costs, speeding.
costs, speeding; Benjamin W. fra susp, probation, tinted
Patrick
N.
Jacks, Putman, Coolville, $400. 90 glass; Kenneth E. Zuspan,
Langsville, $200, I0 days in days in jail, 88 suspended, Middleport, $50 and costs,
·
jail, seven suspended, no o.l.; probation, assault; Brian ~. speeding.

VVedneBday,February9,200~

MIDDLEPORT- Rachel
Perine of Parkersburg, W.Va.,
a real daughter of a Union
soldier, was honored recently
by the Major Daniel Mc.Cook
Circle I 04, Ladies of the
Gra~d Army of the Republic,
of Middleport.
Kila Frank, circle president,
presented her with a membership certificate to the LGAR.
Perine is the daughter of Pvt.
Harvey Smith who .served in
Company A, 14th West
Virginia Infantry who was captured at the Battle of Cloyd's
Mountain when he remained to
care for his injured first cousin
who served in the same company. They were sent to
Andersonville Prison, the only
two of that company.
Smith is said to have often
related the story of the ere-

Wednesday, February 9, 2005

LOCAL
SCH.E'DULE
(REGULAR SEASON)

· Todav

·. :-

. .

ation of "Providence Spring" commander of Brooks-Grant
at 'the prison. He is buried in Camp No. 7 Sons of Uniol)
Cabin Creek Cemetery in Veterans of the Civil War of
Middleport, who presented
Doddridge County, W.Va.
Also attending the presen- · Perine with a basket of fruit
tation was Keith Ashley; ·past from the camp.

Tai Chi beginner class begins Feb. 15 at ~C
GALLIPOLIS~ Tai Chi beginner class will
take place on Tuesday, Feb. 15, at the Holzer
Medical Center French 500 Room, located on ·
the hospital's ftrst floofin G&lt;Ulipolis.
Sponsored by the Arthritis Foundation, the
ancient discipline of Tai Chi combines agile
steps, joint safe exercise and mental strength
to improve mobility, breathing and relaxation.
According to Mark Hasseman, LMT, MMP,
instructQr for the program locally, Tai Chi is a
system of thought and motion that encompasses the building of one's internal energy by the
movement and storage of that energy.

Meditation and philosophy also play a
large part in the system.Tai Chi is shown to
reduce pain and stiffness, and may improve;
in addition to rela;.;ation, concentration, memory, balance, muscle strength and stamina.
Registration for the class will take' place ·
on Feb. 15 at 5 p.m.; with the one-hour program itself beginning at 5:30 pm. The .sixweek session is $50 .. Participants are asked
to wear loose clothing and to prepare for
some fun.
For more information, ontact Hasseman at
(740) 446-5121 or (740) 446-7460.

-'

NOTICE TO LOW/MODERATE INCOME HOUSEHOLDS
The Meigs County Grants Office is preparing a CDBG Community Housing Improvement application for a
Hotnebuyer Down-payment/Closing Cost Assistance Program to provide low/moderate income households
with this such assistance to allow them to obtain homebuyer loari apprOval from a financial institution.

A SURVEf OF INTEREST IN THIS PROGRAM IS BEING CONDUCTED AND HOUSEHOLD
THAT MAY WISH- TO PARTICIPATE ARE ASKED TO COMPLETE THIS FORM AND RETURN
TO THE MEIGS GRANTS OFFICE AT 117 EAST MEMORIAL QRIVE, POMEROY, OHIO
PRIOR TO MARCH 11, 2005.

Harley DavldHn - 81.17
JPM -37.76
.
Kmart - 102.38
""'-"- 17.44
'

'

OVC at Cross Lanes

·

saturday, Feb. 12
Soya Baaketball
·South Gallla at Oak Hill, 6 p.m.
Glrle Ballketbatt

BOYS PREP BASKETBALL

OVC
AI.L

~-

SEOAL
~

AI.L

AI.L

HOUSEHOLD SIZE

INCOME LIMITS- No more than:

1 Person

$28,350.00
$32,400.00
$36.450.00
$40.500.00
$43,700:00
$46,950.00
$50,200.00
$53,450.00

2 Persons
3 Persons

4 Persons
5 Persons
6 Persons
7 Persons
8 Persons

IYC

Belpre ............. .... ....... 13-5 .... .8: 1
Vinton County ........... 12-5 .... .. 7-2
Alexander ... ..... .......... 12-7 ·...... 5-4
Meigs ............ ............ 9-10 .... ..4-5
Nelsonville-York ......... 7-11 ...... 3-6
Wellston ...... :............. 2- I 7 ...... 0-9
Hocking Dlvlalon

ALL

-

OTHERS
South Gallia .. .... .. .............. ...... 14-4
ovcs ................ :.....................1-17

ovc

ALL

1M:

· 'South Point.. ........... .18-2 ...... 10-0
Chesapeake ....... .. ... ..12-8
Fairland .............. ....... 9-11
Coal Grove ....... ..... .... 12-8
I River Valley .. ...... .....3-17
tRock Hill. ................. 2-15

...... 7-3
....... 6-4
.. .. .. 5-5
...... 1-9
.. .... 1•9

SEOAL

AI.L

School

'Marietta .................... 1I -8
'Warren .. ................... 14-6
Logan ........................11-9
Galli a Academy ....... .. 12-8
Jackson .............. ....... 11-9
Athens ....................... S-13

SEQ
.... .. 7-3
.... .. 7-3
...... 6-4
.. .. ..4-6
.. .. ..4-6
...... 2-8

TVC
Ohio Division

My gross annual income falls below the inCO!)le guidelines listed._ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __

School

· Number of Household members--~---------,---------­
Number of Children in House~old - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 currently rent a home-~
· -------------,---------1 currently own a horne that is s u b s t a n d a r d - - - - - - - - - - , . - - - - - - - - 1 live with relatives _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Please contact me should the Down Payment Assistance prog•am be funded so that I may appiy _ _
Print name and address of Head of Household:

Overnight (1-6 a.m.) .
It will continue to be cloudy.
There is just a slim chance that
we could see a bit of snow.
Temperatures will hover at 28
with today 'slow of28 occurring
around 6:00am. Winds will be
10 MPH from the northwest.

· All.

I'lC

•tNetsonville-York .. .. .14-7 .. .... 9-t
Vinton Co .......... :..... ..11-9 ......8-2
Belpre .............., ......... 12-8 ......7-3
Alexander .......... ........ S-15 ......3-7
· Meigs ..... ...................7-14 ......2-8
tWellston .................. 2-19 ......1-9
Hocking Division ·

&amp;mlllll

AI.L

I'lC .

•Trimble ............. ........ 19-1 ...... 9-1
•waterlord ................. 16-4 .... .. 9-1
Eastern ..................... 13-7 ...... 5-5
Federal Hocking ........ 10-10 .... 5-5
Southern ................. ~ ?-13 .. .... 1-9
Miller .................... .. .. .6:14 ..... .1-9
OTHERS
OVCS ..................... ....... .......... 8-10
South Gallia ........ ...... .. ............5-13

Phone Number( optional)

The snow will start around
9:00am. Temperatures . will
remain· around 28. Winds will
be 10 MPH from the northwest.

Thul'liday, February 10

SPORTS
BRIEFS
Attention varsity
hoops coaches
Boys and girls varsity basketball coaches are reminded
to sen,? us your final regular
slats upon the completion of
the season for' consideration
for the Associated Press alldistrict team as well as the
i:&gt;VP Super I0 teams.
You may fax them to 4463008 or drop them off at our
Gallipolis offtce on Third
Avenue.
You may also e-mail them to
spons@mydailysentinel.com
or call in any nominees, with
their stats, to 446-2342, ext. 33.
· Deadline for this information
is 5 p.m., Feb. 23. To get someone on either of these teams,
this information is required.

38

OVB-34.26
BBT- 40.28
Peoples - 28.90
Pepsico - 55.50 .
Premier- 10.96
Roc:k-11 - 60.70
Roc:ky Boots ...,... 30.80
RD Shell- 58.58
SBC-24.81

S..ra-52.20

------ ~- --· --~------~-----

Please see Crennel, 81

Meigs downs Tornadoes on Senior ·Night
BY BRYAN WALTERS

Assodatecl Press
boys state

bwalters@rnydailytribune.com

basketball poll

ROCKSPRINGS - · It
was Senior Night for the
Meigs boys basketball
team Tuesday, and the
home crowd at Larry R.
Morrison Gymnasium was
::---~ able to see
I h e i r
upperclassmen
go out in
style with

COLUMBUS (AP) - How a state panel of
sports writers and broadcasters rates Ohio
high school boys bSskstbaH teams In the

a

fifth weekly Associated Press poll of 2005,

by OHSAA divisions. with won-lest ...:or&lt;~
and total points (lirst·place YOt:e&amp; In parenthese!l):

OIViSION I
1, Can. McKinley (29)·

n

impressive 66-48
victory
.o v e r

. Please see Meigs, 81

16-1 .203

14-3 182
j 9-0 152
1:&gt;-2 138
15-3

75

9.l.ibertyTwp. l.akotaE. (1) .

t7-1

65

10, Cin. St. Xavier

14-C

81

Others receiVIng 12 or more points: 1'1 ,
CenterviiO! (1) 35. 12. Mar1sfoeld 33. 13, Cin.
Princeton 24. 14, SpringbOrO 19. 15, w.

~ casey

Southern.
T h e
Marauders (9-1 0) went on
a 17-0 run over the ftnal
5:0 I of the contest to turn
a closely-contested 49-48
battle into the comfortable
18-point Winning margin.
Despite a strong start by
the hosts,-who jumped out
to a 16-8 edge after eight
minutes of play, the
Tornadoes (5-14) responded with a solid second
quarter effort to pull within a basket (24-22) headed
into the break.
Afterward, MHS coach
Carl Wolfe was somewhat
perplexed by the opening
half, but also mentioned
that he had faith that his
team could pull out the
win in the end-.
"We didn't play with a
lot ·of emt;&gt;tion tonight. I
thought we were going to
at the start of the game, but
Sout)lern hung around and
made it a dog ftght," said
Wolfe. "We kept telling
the kids that we were
going to win on the defen·
sive end, and that's what
we did in the last ftve minutes."
•The Maroon and Gold
hit 6 of 19 floor attempts
and held a 15-6 rebounding edge, including an 8-1
offensive discrepancy, in
that first frame.
Conversely, the Purple

t6-t 345
18-1 287
16-1 264

2, Spring. S. (2)
3, Wanen Harding (2)
4, N. Can. Hoover
s. Tol. StJohn's (1)
6, Solon
7, Lima Sr. ·
8, Cin. MoeHer

·chester Lakota W. 18. _
16, Galloway

Weifland 18.
tlMStON II
1, Upper sandusky (25)

18-&lt;l
16-1
15-3
· 15-1
17-:&lt;
tiKi

2, Akr. Bucht81 .(2)
3, Akr. SVSU (7)
4, Cuya. Falls Welsh Jesuit

5, St. Paris Clrahtim
6. Ctn. Taft
6 (tie). Willard

14-4

319
286

271
230.
1~
89
89

6 (tie), Cambridge
16-2 89
9, Van Wart .
13-2 -82.
10. E. Liverpool ·
._ 15-2 ~·
othe!S receiving 12 or roore pollito: 11 , Dey.
Dunber (1) 55. 12, Painesville HaM!' 21;
13, DI'OIKiell Tri-Valley 28. 14, WoOolol
Triway 22. 15, J - . 21 . 16, Onville 20,
17, St. Marys Memorial 19. 18, Edgewood 14.

DIVISION•

1. Cln. N. College Hi! (28)

17-t 332

2,~1ce(S)

tt-0 213
tt-0 275

3, ln&gt;nton (2)
4, St. Henry (1) ·
5. Rocl&lt;y River LUihorBn W.
6. Sugan:reek Goraway ·
7, Cle. VASJ (2)

15-2
17~
17-1
15-2
15-2
15-2
15-1

234
179
163

tl-1
16-1
1S:O
15-1
1t.1

334
290
235
200

120

8, DelphO$ Sl John's
91
9, Independence
49
10, A!Ohbokl
38
Others receiving 12 or more points; 11 ,
'!~lungs . UrauHne 211. 12. Belaire 24. 13, Old
We~ngton Buckeye Trail 18. 14, Akr.
Menehester 17. 15 (tie)." U Fenwid&lt;, lotJ&lt;lO!WIIIe 16.

DIVISION IV
t.Cots. Africentric(25)
2, Sebring McKinley (5)
3, L~- Danbury (4)
4, Pettisville

S, S. WebSter
6, Zanesville Rosecrans (1)
7. Von Buren

e, - - e - . .

Bryan Walters/photo

Meigs senior Adam Snowden (34) drives past a trio of Southern defenders for a lay-up during the third quarter of the Marauders: 66-48 victory Tuesday. Snowden finished his final
contest at Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium with seven points, nine ret&gt;ounds and two stea'is.

•

118

15-2 171 ,
15-2 124

14-3

a

9, Wellsville
16-2 74
10. Holgate
14-3 38
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 ,
Dellence .t.yersv;IO! 32. 12, Mlneter 27. 13,
Continental19. 14. Sh~ IS. 15. (tie),
Dalton. S. C!&gt;olle&amp;ton SE 13. t7, Ccto.
Horveot 12.

• - clin&lt;hed league title
t - eliminated from toumamsnt

Morning (7'p.m.-Nof!n)
·
It's going · to be a cloudy
morning. Expect a few flurries.

USB-30.62
Wai-Mart - 53.20
Wencty'l - 40.11
WOrthington - 20.60
Dally ltoc:k reporta are the 4
p.m. closing quotet of the
previous day's tranaactlona,
prov~ by Smith Partners
at Adveat Inc. of Galllpolla.

I

"I hope that I possess the
qualitie' that Me in a head
coach with the leadership,
organization, and the prioritizing. In many cases I have
been th e onl y Afri canAmer,ican on a staff or in the
neighborhood . The best thing
I ~an do fo r othe r minonty
candidates is be successful
and a role model."
Crennel received a
year. $11 million contrac
from 1he Browns, who are
coming off a disastrous 4- 12
season that was scuttled by
major injuries and highlight-

PREP BASKETBALL

I'lC

Federal Hocking .. .. .... 16-3 ...... 8-1
Eastern ..................... 15-3 ...... 6-2
Trimble ........ .. ..... ... .... 13-5 .. .... 6-2
Southern ... ... .. ........... 5-14 ...... 3-6
Miller .............. .... .. ..... 7-12 ......2-7
Watertord .................. 3-.16 ..... 1-8

~

"I've been
The Browns, who have·
in this league , gone a league-worst 30-66
for a while. with one playoff appearance
and
I've since 1999, are counting on
bee·ri some- Crennelto end six seasons of
what
sue- chaos.
cessful as . a
Crennel is Jhe II th full p o s i t i on time coach in team history
coach," said and Cleveland's first black
C r en n e I, coach. He's also the NFL's
who
won sixth minority coach, but the
Crennel
two . Super only one boasting a Super
Bowls with Bill Parcells and Bowl ring for each finger .of
three under Bill Belichick. one hand.
"Now, taking the reins of a
Crennel would prefer to be
team and trying to run a known simply as a coach
whole program is going to be who wins.
special. It's a big challenge,
"My skin color is black, but
but I think I' m ready." · ·
I am, a head coach." he said.

SEQ

Warren ............... ....... 15-3 ...... 8-1
Logan .................... ..... 12-6 ...... 7-2.
Jackson ............... .. .... 15-3 .. .... 6-3
Marietta ....... ,.. .. ......... 7-11 ...... 3-6
Gallia Academy ........ .6-12 .. .... 2-7
Athens ........ .. .............. 2-16 ......1-8

School .

BEREA - · Romeo Crennel
walked. into the news conference wearing- one of his diamond-studded Super Bowl
rings and a smile. In one
hand, he held seven notecards
chronicling 35· years of
coaching experience.
He was missing a big
parade and party back in
Boston, and Crennel couldn't
have cared less . There was no
place else he wanted to be.
The lifelong assistant was
finally a head coach.
"I got the spotlight, huh,"

he said.
Crennel's long wait ~nded
Tuesday as New England's
former defensive coordinator
was introduced as coach of
the Cleveland Browns, who
just six years after their
expansion return are rebuilding once again . ·
A GOaching odyssey that
began in 1970 at Western
Kentucky and included slops
at Texas Tech, Mississippi.
Georgia Tech, New York and
New England, has brought
the 57-year-old coach back,to
Cleveland, where he was the
defen sive coordinator in
2000.

~

'Chesapeake .. ......'.:.. 18-1 .. .. .. 9-0
Coal Grove ................ 9-9 .. .. ..... 6-3 ·
River Valley ... ........ .... 9-9 .. ... ...4-5
South Point ............... 8-11 .... ..4-4
Fairland ...........: ......... 3:15 .... .. 2-7
Rock Hill'. ................... 5-12 .. .. .. 1-7

GIRLS PREP BASKETBALL

As a low/moderate income household in Meigs County, I am interested in participation in the CHIP Downpayment Assistance program your office may offer to qualified households, should the FY'03 CHIP
application be fun~ed.
·

Oak Hill Financial -

QKNLY-4.80

e p.m.

Girls Baakelbatt

School

Ltd.- 24.40
NSC-35.36

City HoklriiJ- 32.93
Col-44.09
DG-22.23
DuPont - 49.57
Feder81Mopl-.35
G•r.lett - 81.28
a-rill Electric - 38.43

EasTern lit Miller
Southern at Trimble
Buffalo at South Gallla
OVC at Cross Lanes ·
Rock Hill at RIVer Valley,

TVC

Local Stocks

Channlnl ~- 8.29

Meigs at Vinton County

Ohio Olvlslon

Wednesday, February 9

Bor&amp;Wamer - 53.80
CMmplon - 4.05

!lov• llaeketbalt

·

ToM WtTHERS
Associated Press

'

F~,Fib.11

Gallla Academy at Marietta

Kila Frank presents a membership certificate to the Ladies of the
Grand Army to Rachel Perine, a real daugher of a Union soldier.

Brown·s g·et.their man, Crennel in charge
-

Boya Bnkalbalt
RivefYalley11S. Gallia Acad. (at URG)

· ·

N ATlONAL FOOTBALL "LEAGUE

BY

Sclotovllle at Sooth Gallla

NewsChannel

Aahlend Inc. - 81.57
AT&amp;T-19.78
BU...,...12.28
BobEv--24 ·

,

REAL DAUGHTER HONORED

SHOULD THERE BE ANY QUESTIONS, YOU MAY CALL LIZ ANDERSON OR JEAN
TRUSSELL AT 992-7908

ACI-38.18
AEP-34.98
Akzo-39.73

Cava roll over Raptors, Page 82

...

..

Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
It'sgoing to be a cloudy morning. Temperatures will linger at
47. Wmds will be 5 MPH from
the west turning from the southwest as the morning progresses.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
It will continue to be cloudy.
Light rain is expected. The
rainfall is expected to begin
near 3:OOpm. The rain fall
should reach 0.12 inches by
this afternoon. Temperatures
will rise from 50 early afternQOn to the high for the day of
52 at 2:00pm as they drop back
down to4~ later this afternoon.
Winds will be 5 to I 0 MPH
.from the south turning from
the northwest as the afternoon
progresses.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
It will continue to be cloudy. A
slushy mix of rain and wet snow
is predicted. The rain should stop
by 7:00pm with total accumulations for this event near 0.13
· inches. Temperatures will
diminish from 40 early this
evening to 32. Wmds will.be 10
MPH from the northwest. .

Bl

The Daily .Sentinel

INSIDE

Oallfo": atr o/1/'0tirlMt-~rt.·

304-87:S..:SI8S

Worker's eom(K".!Yai~W

Acftpti:ng new patients;

WiN

'

'

Rockets grounded.by Eastern
WELLSTON
The
Eastern boys basketball
team used a 59-29 second
half run Tuesday to turn a
two-point halftime lead into
a convincing 92-60 rout of
lowly Wellston.
Amazingly, the Eagles
(15-3) trailed 10-9 at the
3:20 mark of the tirst quarter
and were tied at 29 with I :24
remaining in the ·ftrst .half,
but an 11-3 run out of the
break sparked the 30-pofnt
difference as the Green and
White cruised to its 15th win
of the season.
Adam Dillard had the hot
h!Jlld, hjtting all 10 of his
field goal tries to lead
Eastern with 23 points. The
senior guard also netted 18
of those during the strong
second half run.
\

'· '

play. then returns to Tuppers
Plains Saturday for Senior
Night with Trimble.

BY BRYAN WALTERS

bwalters@mydailytribune.com

E•stern 92, Wellaton 60
Eastern
20 13 26 33 Wellston 17 14 18
11 -

Dillard

I .

92
60

Bengats and
NFL agree to
medi,ation
CINCINNATI (AP) The Cincinnat i Bengal s and
the
National
Football
League have agreed to mediation in Ham ilton County 's
antitru st law s ~it ag ainst
them. according to an order
filed by a federal judge.
U.S. Di,t rict Coun Judge
S. Arthur Spi ege l' s order
· filed Monday said the parties ~re considering several
mediators to help settle the
$600 million suit, which
accuses the Bengab and the
NFL of using monopol y
power to force construction
of a new stadium and a
favorable lease.
The case is scheduled for a
nonbinding summary trial in
Jul y. · which also could lead
to a settlement. If it is not. a
tentati ve tri al date of Sept. 6
has been set ..

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, February 9,

www .mydailysentinel.com

www.mydallysentinel.com
2005

m:rtbune - Sentinel - 3aegt1)ter

·cavaliers roll over Raptors
Meigs se111or Enc
Cullums
(40)
hauls down a
rebound 1n front
of
Southern's
Dann
Teaford
(42 ) dunng the
f1rst quarter of
the Marauders'
66-48
VICtory
Tuesday. Cullums
fmished
the
game w1 th four
points,
nine
rebounds and a
steal 111 h1s !mal
contest at Larry
R.
Mornson
Gymnasium. All
nme of Collums'
caroms came 1n
the f1rst half.
Bryan WaHars/
photo
Meigs claimed a sweep on
well and made some clutch
shots down the st retch." elab- the mght With an excitmg 44orated Rand olph . "Casey 43 VICtory 1n the JUnior varsimade some 1eally nice plays ty tilt. Dan Bookman found
late and he was the d1fterence C1sey Rtchardson on a fast
break for the game-winning
m the game, at least I fe lt.''
lay-u
p as t1me ex pired for the
Semor Je•emy Blackston
also helped the cause during tnumph.
Bookman gu1ded Meigs
the fmal canto. add 1ng e1ght
v.
ith
13 p01nts wh!le Patnck
of hiS 17 111 that p1votal late
Johnson Jed Southern With II
surge
Adam Snowden and Enc markers .
Both sc hools next play on
Cullums fini shed wllh se&gt;en
and four pomts, respecttvely, F1 iday, as Meigs heads to
1n thetr fmal home game. Vmton County and Southern
Carl Wolle was linuted to JUSt travels north to take on
Tnmble. Both games are slata held goal m h1s finale .
ed
to start at 6 p m
"We are happy w1th the win
and I am so happy for those
Meigs 66, Southern 48
semors. they have won a lot Southern 8 14 20 6 - 48
16 8
20 22 - 66
of ball games here m the last Metgs
three years ," commGnted SOUTHERN (5-14) - Derek Teaford 1 0·
Wolfe. "That's v.,hat tt was all 0 2 Cratg Randolph 9 2·3 22, Chrts Tucker
0 o-o 0 Josh Pape 0 0-1 0 Dusltn
about tonight was those four Bnnager 1 0 0 2, Tyl er Roberts i 0 0 3,
young men Not many people Brad Crouch 2 0·2 6, Dann Teaford 3 0-0
6 Jake Nease 3 1-2 7 TOTALS 20 3·8 48
can say that they graduate MEIGS
(9-10) - Jared Casey 8 3·7 19,
four semors that are quahty Jeremy Blackston 5 4-4 17, Carl Wolfe 1
people and National Honor O·D 2 Enc ·VanMeter 4 1·2 9 Mtchael
Blaettner 0 0 0 0, Josh Buzzard 0 0·0 0,
Society students. It makes tt Adam
Snowden 3 0·0 7, Ertc Cutlums 1 2
all very special."
5 4 Chris Goode 0 0 0 0 Dave Poo le 2 4·
Eric VanMeter and Dave 4 8 TOTALS 20 14·22 66
goals: S - 5 (Randolph 2,
Poole rounded out the Me1gs Three·poln1
Crouch 2 Roberts}, M - 4 (Blackston 3,
sconng with mne and e1ght Snowden)
'pomts, respectively.
Team statistlcsnndlvldual leade,.
Jake
Nease
followed SOliTHERN· 20·56 FG I 357), 5-21 3PG
Randolph with seven mark- I 230). 3·8 FT I 375) 24 rebounds
ers, wtth Brad Crouch and (C rou ch 6), 9 otfenstve rebounds (Nease
2, Crouch 2). 10 asststs (De Teaford 4), 4
Dann Teafo rd ch1ppmg m s1x Sleals (Randolph 2) 3 blocks (Randolph .
3) 13 tu rno'.oers -2 1 fouls
ap1ece in the setback
MEIGS:
24 53 FG ( 453) 4-15 3PG
Robert~ fnu shed with three
( 267) 14·2 1 FT ( 667) 39 rebounds
and both Dustm Brinager and (Cullums 9, Snowden 9) 14 offensive
Derek Teaford had a basket to rebounds (Casey 3, Pool~ 3-), 3 asststs
2) 7 steals (Blackston 2 Snowden
round out the Tornadoes' (Casey
2) 3 blocks (Casey, Blackston Wolfe) 16
sconng.
turno...ers, 11 fouls

Meigs
from Page 81
and Gold netted JUSt three of
II attempts.
'
"I thought that we came out
t1ght. We didn ' t ru n our sets
as cns p as we should h.1ve.
That is a ke} to us being successful." sa1d SHS coach
Steve Randolph "In that second quarter, when v.,c made
our run, that v.,as what we
were star lln~'' to oet ''
"
e
The vmtors
held
Me1gs to
JUSt three of nme from the
field and clauned a I0-7 edge
on the glass, mcludmg a 3-0
edge on. the offensive boards
That effort allowed the guests
to t1c the game at 20 wllh
I 49 before half
Craig Randolph hn I0
stra1ght pomt s to open the
second half for Southern. and
added 13 overall in the third
quarter. to kee p w1thm a possess ion (44-42) headed down
the stretch. Sol!lhern also
took the lead bnefly at the
2:31 mark (37-35) follow mg
a tnfecta from Tyler Roberts.
In that final eight min~tes,
It was a junior that stole the
show and allowed Me1gs to
walk away with the win
Jared Casey scored II of
h1s team-h1gh 19 markers m
the fourth, while holdmg
Randolph to JUSt two points
dunng that same span .
"They (Meigs) shot the ball

CLEVELAND (AP) Zydrunas ilgauskas scored
23 points, fellow All-Star
LeBron James fi1rted w1th
h1s th1rd tnple-doubl e m limited action and the Cleveland
Cavaliers rolled to a 104-91
VICtory over the Toronto
Raptors on Tuesd~y mght.
Raptors
guard
Rafer
James, voted to start for Alston scored f1ve pomts m
the Eastern Conference m hi s eight minutes and did 110t
first All-Star game at age 20, play after the first quarter. A
had 15 pomts, II assists and team spokesman satd during
e1ght rebounds 1il just 33 the second half that Alston's
mmutes.
absence was not injury relatIlgauskas, named an All- ed.
Star reserve earlier m the
Alston, averagmg 14
day, shot 8- tor- I 3 from the pomts a game, served a twolield and had s1x rebounds game team suspension late
last month and has had a
and three blocked shots.
Robert Traylm added 13 rocky relanonsh!p wJth hrstpomts and II rebounds off year coach Sam Mttchell
the bench for the Cavaliers,
When the Raptors played
who improved to 18-4 at 111 Cleveland on Dec. 4 ,
home and ti ed Detro!l for Alston was held out of the
tirst place m the Central startmg ltneup by Mitchell
DiviSion at 28-19
alter gettmg a cnncal techniJalen Ro se scored 2 1 cal foul in a two-point loss 1n
potnts to lead Toronto, v.,hrch Boston the previous mght
lost for the fifth time in • and then say mg he would
seven games.
qu1t the NBA.

Crennel
from Page 81
ed by th e res1gnatton of
Butch Davts on Nov. 30.
In h1ring Crennel, the
Browns selected a more
experienced coach instead
of going for an up -and-coming college cand1date, as
they dtd in 200 I when they
plucked Davts from the
Universtty of Mmmi
On Davis ' first day With
the Browns, he guaranteed
Cleveland fan s he'd bnng
them a Super Bowl champion. Crennel was wise not to
make any promises
He wants to mold a team
in the image of the Patriots,
one made up of tough players of h1gh character.
''Now that I'm a head
coach, if I can get the
Cleveland Browns - the
team - to play the way my
defenses played with th e
Patriots, some of them noname guys, then the Browns
wJIJ be competitive and a
team to be proud of," he
said.
"Know that it might not
happen ovem1ght because 11

takes lime to bu1ld a wmner."

Jn the past lew years,
Crennel, who began h1 s pro
coaching career in 1981 , had
been passed over for several
head coachmg JObs. mcluding the Browns At times,
the so n of a m1lllary lather
wondered 1f he would ever
get h1s chance
·'J d1dn't know where It
was gomg to happen or 1f 11
was going to happen," he
said
On Jan 7, Browns owner
Randy Lerner, team president John Collins and ge neral manager Phil Savage met
with Crennel in Boston l01
his interview. It d1dn ' t take
them long to re alize he was
their man
''There was sort of an aura
about h1m," Collins smd
" We were all shooting each
other looks like, th1s is the
guy."
Crennel's pnonues 111
Cleveland Will be to h1re
assistants and bUild a re latiOnship w1th Savage, who
was hired the same dav
Crennel mterv1ewed w1th
the Browns The team 1s
countmg on the CrennelSavage combination to
reverse SIX years of ques-

CLASSIFIED

Al~ton played 37 mmutes
that mght and scored a teamhigh 20 pomts m a I05-97
loss at Gund Arena.
Tuesday night, llgauskas
scored 13 points and James
had s1x assists m the f1rst
quarter as Cleveland qmckly
took w mmand
James' best play came
early m the game when he
appemed pn\ned to turn an
alley-oop paS&gt; fro m rookie
Sasha PavloviC mto one of
hi s patented power slams
But the pass was shghtly off
the mark, so James had to
deftly t1p 11 down mstead
The Cavaliers opened a
19-point lead and led 57-43
at halftime
Cleveland unproved to 2-0
w1th
games
remmnmg
against Denver, th e Los
Angeles Lakers and Atlanta
in an Important l1ve-game
homcstand
,
Toronto forward Chris
Bosh, who had a car~er-htgh
29 pomts Sunday, scored s1x
on 2-fOI-8 shooting

l!on,tble draft p1cks and lurmo!l
The Browns have spht the
dut1es such that Savage will
have fmal authority over the
draft and 53-man roster, and
Crennel Will d e~ •de who
plays ,sundays Crennel 1s
expected to bnng m Maunce
Carthon fro m Dallas as h1s
oltens1ve coordmutor The
Browns have asked for permi ssion to speak wnh
Carth on. and the Cowbovs
Web s1te' reported th at he's
he.1ded to Cleve land
Patnots defensive backs
coach En~ Mang1111 1s th e
leadin g candidate to run
Cleveland's defense, but th e
club mav have to outb1d
New England fm the 34year-o ld' ~ services
Kn ow n for h1 s composure
and conf1dence, Clennel
isn't warned ahout any
compansons to Behch1ck.
the one-t1me C leve land
coach who tr.msformed th e
Patnots mto a dynasty. In
fact, Crennel would appreciate be1ng likened. to hiS old
boss. '
"] wouldn ' t mmu bemg
considered a ge niu s," he
smd. " I m1ght not be there
yet, but J can work towards
th at "

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r

M'NOUNCI:~tENIS

I i-

·tr~

property, together
with the right to mine

Case

Num,ber

Conseco

Finance

04cv073

Serv1ces

Plaintiff

vs

Peggy Musser et al

Defendanls

Court of Cammon
Pleas, Meigs County

OhiO.
In pursuance of an
Order of Sale to me

directed from said

Court in the. above

entitled action, I will
expose to sale at pub·

tic auction on tho
front steps of the
Meigs Cdunty Court
tiouse on Friday,
March It, 20115 at 10
a.m. of said day, tho
fallowing described
real estate.
Being known and

the same
without
encumbrance to the
surface, and subject
to an easement tor
sewage filter ditch or

Code and pursuant to

Section 5511 .07, the
Director of the Ohio
Department
of
Transportation here-

declares the vaca·
tlon of a segment of
leachmg ditch as set State Route 338 In
forth and described Lebanon Township,
In that instrument Meigs County, Ohio.
bearing
date Tho action speclflcal·
November 26, t943 as ly pertains to the sec·
recorded 1n tho said lion of S.R. 338 cur·
Recorder's Office, rentiy closed to traffic
December 3, 1943, in

Deed Book 151, Page
178.
The real estate hereto
conveyed Is subJect
to certain building
restrictions which are
set forth in a deed

by

due to erosion and ,.

damage along the
Ohio River. In addl·
lion, the remaining

151, at Page 181 ,'
Deed RecordS of
Meigs County, Ohio.

segments of State
Route 338 shall be
abandoned to the
Meigs County high·
way aystom.
Upon the determination that the subject highway was no

Deed :

longer necessary for

recorded in Volume

. Reference

Volume 263 Page 425
des•gnotod an a map ' Meigs County Deed
of Lincoln Heights
records.

public

made by Breece &amp;

conducted

Carper,

C1v1t

Current Owner :

Peggy Musser eta!
Properly at:
Engineers,
dated 1642 Lincoln Hilt
October 17, 1942, a Pomeroy, OH 45769
copy of which map PP• 16-01865.000
was filed In the office Prior
Deed
Reg , l s t e r e d

of the Recorder of

Relerence:

Volume

Meigs County, Oh1o,
December 17,1942
recorded ln Plat Book
13. at Pages 43 and
44, as Lot •43, and
being more partlcu-

79, Paget67

larty described as fol-

appraised value. 10%

lows: Beginning at a
point In the south line
or Lincoln Road at tho
comer between Lots
42 and 43, as shown
on said map; thence

with said line of
Uncoln Road, south
63 5,-J feet east a dis·

Appraised

at

$15,000.00
Terms of

the purposes of a
highway,

a

public hearing was

on

Thursday, January 27,
2005 In the Meigs
County Courthouse

at Pomeroy, Ohlo.
Department

of

Transportation ofll·
cials presented . the
vacation and abandonment
actions
detailed below, to the

Sale:

County officials and

Cannot be sold for

citizens in
attendance. In consideration
of
the

less than 213rd of the
down on day of sale,
cash

or

certified

inlerested

questions and com·

manta resulting from

check, balance on

the public hearing,

of sale.

the Director declares:

confirmation

Ralph E. Trussell,
Meigs County Sheriff.
for

Attorney

the

THE VACATION OF
A SEGMENT OF
STATE ROUTE 338 IN
LEBANON TOWNSHIP

Ptalntiff
Shapiro L FeHy
Said vacation to
1500 W. Third St., begin at a po1nt on
tence of 50 feet;
thence wtlh the line Suite 400
S.R 338 Identified as
be._ Lots 43 and Cleveland, OH 44113 Straight Line Mtloege
44, south 26.9 feet .,Z16-621-1530
(S~M) po10t 20.00,
west a distance of (1) 26, (2) 2, 9
said point being 0 60
2011 feet: thence north
mllea north of the
63 51 feet weal a dls·
tnlersectton with S.R.
Public Notice
lance of 50 feet:
338 and u.s. Route
thence with the line
33; thence &amp;Ktend in a
between aaid Lots 42 STATE OF OHIO
northwesterly dirac·
and 43, north 26 9feet DEPARTMENT OF lion along S.R 338 to
east a distanCe of 200
TRANSPORTATION
a point Identified as
Legal Copy
, , feet; to the point of
SLM po10t 21 .52, said
beginning. Reservin g
No. 01-02-05
paint being 0.2 miles
In accordance with aouthoaat of the
however the coal and
all other mlneralo tn the authority granted Intersection with S.R
by Section 5511.31 of 338 and S.R. 124; and
an underlying the
above
descrlbec;t the Ohio Revised there terminate.

'

f

The total length of
S.R. 338 to be vacated
shall be approximate·
ly 1.52 miles, as
measured along th&amp;

Musklngum Drive,
Marlena, Ohio 45750.
Failure to file claims
In that manner Is a
waiver of any claim

centerline

for damage by reason

of

the

roadway.
THE ABANDON·
MENT OF BOTH REM·
NANT SEGMENTS OF
STATE ROUTE 338 IN
LEBANON TOWNSHIP
Said abandonment

ol the' ¥8Catlon.

'Nondertul opportumtles are avatlable tn Tom Peden Coull!ry

In accordance with

ORC Section 5511.07,
the following affotcted
property owners, who
reside out of slata or
whose

address

Is

the southern rem· unknown, shall take
nan! shall begin at due notice of the
the junction of S.R. . pending action and
338 and U.S. Route requirements for fll·
33, being ldenUflad as lng ·a claim: W.S.
SLM 1!!.40; thence Fleming, Viola &amp;
extend in a northerly
Albert C. Criddle, Jr.,
direction along S.R. Louisa Fleming Noll,
338 a distance of Jeanne Flaming Karr,
approximately 0.6 Josephina Fleming
miles to SLM point Shinn,
Marjorie
of

20.00, and there ter·

mlnate. The abandon·

ment of the northern

remnant ahall
at SLM point
sa1d point
located 2.12

begin
21.52,
baing
miles

lrom the Junction of

S.R. 338 and U.S.
Route 33; thence
extend In a northerly
direction along S.R.
338 a distance of
approximately 0.2
miles to SLM point
21 .72, and there terminate.

The total length of
S.R. 338 to be aban·
daned shall bt
approximately 0.8
miles, as measured

aton!f the centerline
of the roadway. Tha
abandoned pprtlona
shall revert lo the

Meigs
County
Highway
System
once the final aban·
donment is author·

11ed.
Notice Ia hereby
given, that claims for
compenoation tnd
damege may be fllod
w1th the District
Deputy Director an or
before March 9, 20115.
Claims, by reason of
the vacation proceed-

ings, mull be Iliad In
writing, in duplicate,

addressed to: Ohio
Department

of
Transportation ,

District

Deputy

Director, George M.

Collins,

338.
(

Fleming

~

as ateam and have a strong tntltattve

· Exctttent Pay and Bonus Plan •Great Benellts
·Work At The #1 Dealership
Call To Schedule An lnterv1ew

Tom Peden Country
1-800-822·04t7. 372·2844
475 Sou1h Church Street • Ripley, WV 2527t

Baker,
H.
&amp;

Charles
Josephine Shinn, H.
Ann Kellar, Michael R.
Vorpe,

and need more sales people
No EJ.penence ts requtred only aWillingness to learn , work
We are eKpandtng our slaH

Thomas

Edward Vorpe, Robert
Allee Yorpe, Phyllis
Louise Kasper, Clyde
Van Dyke, Alan Stone

Help Wanted

&amp;

Co., inc.

The final vacation
action will nat occur
prior to Juno 1, 2005
and the seHioment of
all claims.
Gordon Proctor,
Director.
219,t6

Maintenance Manager
Part Time
30 hours per week
Monday - Friday
Our assisted living community has an
outstanding opportunity for a person
with general maintenance and
painling skills. This person is responsi·
ble for all aspects of maintenance
which includes the scheduling of out·
side vendor for specialized
maintenance tasks.
This is a great job at a great comwunity ... don 'I miss an opportunity to
meet with us and get more details!
Holzer Wyngale - Gallipolis
300 Briarwood Drive
Gallipolis, OH 45631
...... ~ 740.441.9633
~~~~" Fax -740.441.9026
Email: wyngal@aol.com
EOE'

~:~~~!~:~~:.Ua~~~~~C:.~:rt~~n

:~s?~::~a~~!! :r~~;'T~

Sunday In-Column : 1:00 p . m.
For Sundays Paper

Sunday Display : 1:00
Thursday for Sunday5 ""'P~~

Day ·~

Paper

Frlldaoy

Publication

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Dt!ICrlption • InClude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Indude Phone Number And Addtt!IS When Needed

• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Ohio Yaney Publllhlng reaervea the rlghl to edit, reject o.- cancel any ad at any lime Errora muat be reported on the first day or pub ltcat1on and
Tribun•Sentlnei·Aeglater will be rnponalble for no more than the eotl of the apace occupied by the error and only ttlel•ratlnaertion We al'la ll not be liable
any lo" or expenaa thet reautts from Ute pubhcahon or omlaalon of an advertlaement Correction will be made In the first avatlabkt edtllon • Bo11. number
•e alwaya contklentlal. • Current rate card applies • All real eatale
are aubject to the Federa l Fair Housing Act of 1968 • Thra Mwopo 1po&lt;l
accepts only help wanted ada meeUng EOE
We will
In violation of the law

1r______
~~~

I'ROtl'NllONAL

Lost- Red Sable Pomertan ,
3 S IX week old kit1ens to between Pauls E ~~:xo n and
Jertcho Rd , answers to
gtveaway
Call
anyt1me
Punkte Reward, tf found ca11
(740)446·0375
5 female pupp1es, 7 weeks

old, 112 reg Coonhound &amp;

I \ II' I o\ \ II \ I
" I It\ II 1 "

of a Black Toy-Poodle on Mt
112 lab (740}379-2715
Vernon ra n away on th e
Free Beagle m1x pupp1es to evemng of Feb 1. 05 Please
a good home (740)388 call (304)675·5357

Reward

for

mforma110n

regardtng lost whtla male
West Highland Terrier Call

j740)3aa 0157

r__

0
0
0

MAKE A
DIFFERENCE IN A
CHILD'S LIFE
Foster Parents needed
To learn more about
fostenng and free lratmng
opportunt1tes contact
Ktm Romeo at
740·894·4360

AEWAROII
Lost- 2 cats 1 neutere d
1·877-50 NECCO
orange male, other one 1s
black female Btdwell area An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon
LOi'rr AND
(740)308·8166
Call Marilyn 304·882·2645
re you wuung 10 1rave
or sleady work, good
$500 Reward for return ol ___
tO BUY
pay and benefits?
Yellow Honda 400 4·wheeler
Spectal numbers 389 6-ply Absolute Top Dollar US
ttre s Stolen from Harley Sliver and Gold Coms
aborers Operators
Kmg Aestdences on AI 87 Prootsets, Gold A tngs U S ~elders COL Dnvers and
Jan 31 between 7 pm · 12 Currency,- M TS Coin Shop Foreman needed for
pm Any mfo call (304)372 1 51
Second
Ave nue,
'
1pellne work
9741(Deu! 5.19)
Gallipolis 740-446·2842

i_ _,.;F,;;OUND--,..1

0

.... ~ Necco· ...

8358
Free to good home three 8
mo old black Lab/German
Shepherd muc pups, '60·651t
lovtng sweet pups excellent
compamon, good w/other 1
dog &amp; chtldren on ly dog
lovers reply. all shots vet
checked, (740)742·2377

Wanted and needed tn
Pomeroy, Ohto, Full ltme lt.,.e
m care taker for spectalty
bed and breakfast, tf you are
of English , Welch , l nsh
decent and an accent
enjoy cook1ng house keepmg and general canng for
others thts post!IOn IS made
for you We olfer a salary
plus and upscale enwon·
men! hlestyte Non-smoktng
non drtnkmg cultured per·
son(s) destred Please co n
tact us at Dr and Mrs M
Dellavalle 8227 Blueberry
Ortve , New Port Rtc hey Fl
346 53
727 808-4021
OADOKTA@ at! net

(740)446-4034

"(7_4o.,.l_99~2-·5_2_42____
lt.to------•
·
ful"P WAN'IHl
Lost Very Stck Dog-Owner

.

:Send resume to

4x4's For Sale ............................................. 725
Announcement ............................................ 030
Antlquas ....................................................... 530
Apartments lor Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market.. ...........................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repelr .................................................. no
Autos for Sale ..............................................710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles ........................................550
Business and Buildings ............................ 340
Business Opportunity............................... 21 0
Business Training ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homeo ........................... 790
Camping Equipment.. ................................. 780
Cards of Thanks ......................... ................ OtO
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Electrlcat/Ralrlgeratton ...............................840
Equipment lor Rent ..................................... 480
Excavating ...................................... ,............ 830
Farm Equipmeni.......................................... &amp;IO
Farms lor Rent. ...................................... ... 430
FanJISior Sale ............................................. 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490
For Selo ........................................................ 585
For Sale or Trade .........................................590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables .....................................580
Furnished Rooms ........................................ 450
General Haullng ...........................................850
Giveaway.....................................................040
Happy Ads ....................................................
Hay &amp; Graln ..................................................640
Help Wanted ................................................. 11 o
Home lmprovements...................................81 0
Homes for Sale ............................................ 310
Household Goods ....................................... 510
Houses for Rent .......................................... 410
In Memoriam ................................................ 020
Insurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment........................ 660
Llveatock........:.............................................630
Lost and Fpund ..:........,............................... 060
Lola &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
Ml-lianeoua..............................................170
Mtscellaneoua Merchandlae.................. l .540
Moblla Home Repair ....................................860
Mobile Homes lor Rent .............................. 420
Mobile Homes lor Sate .. :.............................320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheeltra ..........................740
Muolcallnatruments ................................... 570
Personate .....................................................0115
Pela for Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Hutlng .................................... 820
Proleulon~~l S.Nh:eo ................................. 230'
Redia, TV &amp; CB Repelr ............................... 160
Rul Eatate Wenled ..................................... 360
Schooltlnetruetlon ..................................... t50
Sud , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 150
SHuatlont Wtntecl ....................................... 120
Space lor Rant. ......... ,.................................. 480
Sporting Goode ...........................................520
SUV't lor Sale..............................................720
Truckl for Sale ............................................ 7t5
Uphalttsry .... ,.............................................. 870
vans For Sate........... ,...................................730
Wanted to Buy ............................................. avo
Wanted to Buy· Farm Suppttea .................. 820
W8nted To Do .............................................. 180

Wanted to Ran1 ............................................ 470
Ylt'd Sat. Qelllpolle.. ,.................................072
Ytrd Sate-Pomeroy/Middte .........................074
Ytrd Sate-Pt. Pluunt ................................ 078

Personnel
C J Hughes Constructton
PO Box 7305
Hunttnaton WV 25776
AVON ' All Areas' To Buy or
Sell
Shtrley Spears 304·
675 1429
Chtldren's Home Soctely
currenUy has an opentng for
a Youth Servtces Soc tal
Worker tn the Mason County
offtce Pos thon wtll pro.,.tde
case management and supporhve servtces to ' DHHR
Youth
Servtce
cases
mclude
Requ irements
Bachelor's degree and SW
license ellgtbtltty expenence
Compet1t1.,.e
preferred
Salary and beneftts Please
send letter of mterest and
resume to
Mason County DHHR
ATTN Youth Ser.,. tces
710 Vtand Street
Potnl Pleasant WV 25550

EOE

'1.

-1

~~~

www comics com

*Paid Vacation after year

:10 HrLPWA.,m

1

L,._ _ _ _ _ _ _, . . .

lmmedta te opentng for partltme Dn.,.er at the Mason
Cou nty Act1on Group INC
Must have ~urrent dnvers
license have a clean drtvtng
record and be WllltnQ to
work flex•ble hours Starttng
Pay ts $6 15 per hour
Submtt resume with refer·
ences or apphcattor:1s can be
p1cked up !rom Mason
Cou nty ActiOn Group INC
ASAP
Pteclse respond
Apply •n confidence to Ruth
R1ce.
Transportatton
Manager by February 14,
2005 Mall or deh.,.er to
Mason
County
Act1on
Group INC PO Box 12.
Porn! Pleasant WV 25550
No phone calls EOE MJF

&lt;C)

a

Ann · Dianna Thompaon,

HR
Seenk: Hilla Nu.-.lng

Canter
311 Buckrldge Road

Bidwell, OH 45814
Pll 7401446-7150

GET REAI!Y FOR
SPRING BREAK!
(B00)201-0832

http://www tamouenutrttton c

om
Help Wanted Bartender&amp; ,
COOks &amp; Waitress, piCk-up.
Applications at the Moose
Lodge on Charleston Ad . .
Hiring all shths- all positions
Plua Piu&amp; .
Now under new management. Must be neat and
clean Apply w1th1n , H&gt;....,.
Jackson Pike. Sprtng Valley
~laza

Local elecfrK:a.l distributor Is

now

hiring a counttr sate•person F»raviOtJ&amp; experience
or basic electrical kno&gt;M ·
edge Ia preferred Please
send
re:aume
to
HR
Oepa.rtmerU· ~0 Box 6688
Huntlng1on , WV 25773 01"
fo to 1(304)897-8115

EOEIM/FiON

ltto

IIH.PWAtnm

L , .- - - - - - - ·

Medt Home Health Agency
Inc seek tng a tull-ltme AN
Case Man ager for the,
Galttpohs Ohto locatiOn
Must be licensed both tn
OhiO and West Vtrgtnt~
Mtmmum two years supeiVt·
ston , manag ement and
home health expenence We
otter a co mpet lttve salary
beneftts package, 401K and
flex time E 0 E Please
send resume to 352 Second
Avenue
Ga!ltpohs
OH

2005 by NEA, Inc.

I·l

Fax: 74W448-2438
Email· admln thnO
tandemhealthcare.cam

jt10 liELPW,\NIID

CAREER EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITY
POSTAL SERVICE
COLUMBUS DISTRICT
U~

Anyone tnterested should
apply onhne February · 14
through February 18 at
www usga cgm/amplov :
Jlli..Qt Heanng tmpatred tndt·
v1duals may dml
num
ber 1·BOO 800·8776 and fol·
Overbrook Center 1S current- low prompts to apply
ly accepttng applicatiOns for AppliCants may apply only
a RegiStered Nurse Please EJnce per announcement
come lf1 and 1111 out an applt number Duplicate , apphca·
catton at 333 Page Street ttons will not be accepted
Mtddleport EOE
- - - - - - - - Alkapphcants are requtred to
Overbrook Center ts clJrrent · take a multiple chotee eKam·
ly accepting applications 1or 1nat 1on that w111 be Qt\len 1n
a Ltcensed Practtcal Nurse Apnl Applicants applytng
(LPN) Please come 1h and onltne w•tl be sem a sched·
ftll out ~ppllcat10n at 333 uhng package that 1nctudes
Page Street, Mtddl~port the exam dates t1me and

m

Paramedtcs
&amp;
EMT s
needed Apply at 1354
Jackson, Ptke Galltpohs

ToDo

OHK Cleanmg Do you
need? House Cleanmg or
Swtmm•ng Pool Serv1ce
Elderly Care can {7 40 )985
Techntctan
3633/(740)416· 1 8 23
Job duttes tnclude servtc tn g References ava 1tab le Ask
above ground and 1n ground for Karen/Dave
pools spas mstalling lmers
and but!dmg btlhard tables Furnace and atr condttiOn
Wages constdered on expe cha nge outs. Ileal pumps
nence Must have 'o'Shd dnv· and duct ~ork Cedtfted
ers licenses
Contact (740)245·9108
Oebbte (304)295-6985 o r
Georges Por ta ble Sawmtll
{304 )488 •7272 After 6 oo
don't haul your logs to the
PM call (740)378 _6111
mtll JUSt call 304 675 1957

--------

EOE

WANTFJJ

L,._ _ _ _ _ _ _. . .

45631 A«n Audrey Farley UNITED STATES
A N Chn~al Manager
POSTAL SERVICE

NA

lnwes1ed parttes call
800-652-2362 for more mfo

Lose Wetght w1th Hert)altfe
Call Tracy (740).S4 1-19.82 or

o. .er

DIRECTV
Free DVD Player
Free HBO &amp; C1namax
Free Professtonal
Installation
up to 4 Rooms
Call, ·800·523·7556
for detatls

'

2000 sq ft home
$53 999 00 defl'o'ered Otter
ends 02'28105 Only 2 avail·
aOie No trades no dealers
1 8oo-349-64 t 1

Own vour land ?
Have
$500 00 down?
95 "1&lt;l
approval on your dream 1
Jewelry Buy Sell Gold 800-349 6411
Dtamonds
Gemstones - - - - - - - Sprmg Valley
Aepatr Appra1sal s Gem
3 Bed room 1-1 '2 baths
Testmg
Graduate
Large
Famil~o
Room
Gemologist
Jeweler
F1replace
&amp;
Garage
(740)645-6365 or (740)446Recently
renova ted
3080
Immediate
Pussess1on
(740)446· 7881
Rogers Home
lmpro.,.ements
Use your, tax refuno to bu\
Spectahzes rn all mobtte your DREAM HOME
Wn
150
ScHooLs
home parts &amp; accessones have go.,.ernment programs·
wtth sales &amp; servtce
and spec1alllnancmg to help
t.,.!III,;INsnliiiiii.iiiUCI10NiiiiiiOiiii..-J Home- (740)384·341 2
make your dreams come
'
Celt (740)710 1861
twe Cafl now L1m1ted pro
Gallipolis Career College
grams available 1·800·349
(Careers Close To Home)
TURNED DOWN ON
6411
~
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
Call Todayl 740·446·4367
No Fee Unless We Wtnf
1-800 214-0452
Your dream h.ome IS only a
www galllpo~scareercollege com
1·888·582·3345
phone call away Apply now
Accredited Memtler Accredltmg
land programs a available
HI II I s 1I 11
Counc:•l lor Independent Colleges
w1th rates as low as 4 99""
1·800·349-64, ,
~
''i'P
~~hoo~'~'~"~''~·------~ ~~--~~-------,
10

'illl

Scemc Htlts Nursmg Center
Tandem Health Care
Dnve
Fac11tty, ts soekmg a select
few to JOrn our outstancMg
Canton Ohto based earner team We currently seek two
looktng for e)(penenced full ttme !til m LPN's to work
Class A COL dn'o'ers
every weekend
Proper
hcense
or
ce rttftcatton
NEW PAY SCALE
requtred We offer shth dtf
EFFECTIVE MARCH 1
lerentl81. excellent benefits
pertect attendance lncen
'40 cpm ALL MILES
liVes and much more 1
•No forced NVC
Please apply to
•escy. rto Touch Freight
•Hoapftalizatton I 401 k
available

HOi\ If-~
HJK SAlt.

1

WiiiANrnfliiiiil-_.1

I

10

SF.R~IQ."i

lwrfght@lc net

,.1

~.,

r

oso

Help Wanted

Display Ads

In Ne•t

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
oddedtoyourclossifiedods
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for smoy
S1.00 for large

tJ;4

Word Ads

Lost Red Pom from Pauls Cash for JUnk cars &amp; trucksExxon and Jencho Ad, At 2 Gallta ,
Metgs
Athens ,
No ATV 5 or vehicles of any &amp; 62 (304)675·6183
Vtnton
&amp;
Washtngton
kmd perm1t1ed o n Zuspan
County (740)508·0487
property near Mason I Lost· black &amp; white male
Jack Russell Terrier, CoiJnty Wanted to buy Fa shton
Clifton WV
Road 35/Sellers A1dge Road magaztnes from the 1960s
area (740)843-5212
Seventeen, Vogue , etc

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Shenff's Sale
Real Estate

Oeatlifir~

location and matenals need·
ed to prepare tor the examtnatlon Completron of the
examtnation and other forms
wttltake approx•mately 3 1/2
hours to complete All applicants on current regtsters
must take Test 473 to matn·
tatn potential employment
conSiderattort..._

Ptua ~Ius
Now
under
new manageSFIDFIEOE
ment Hiring all shtfts· all
HROt.n&lt;WnhM~ com
positiOns Must be neat and
clean Apply wtthtn, 10&lt;$4
Mason
County
ActiOn JackSOn Pike , Sprtng Valley
-Gro~o~p, Inc Is aaceptlng Plaza
auahf1ed applicants must
applications for In-Home
successfully pass a pre·
Personal care Assistants Reporter Opening
employment drug screening
to
meet
US
Poatal
Our &amp;el'\ltce area tncludes all
employment
of Mason County Sta rting The right individual will haYe Servlce'a
rate $6 15 per hour, plus 60 common senH and the abil- reQutrementa The general
per hOur addlttonal for Sub- Ity to recognize a news minimum age requirement
storY as well aa a keen tor POIIItOna in tht U.S
Pay, plus ·35 P8f mile for
tra'i81 , for ahopplng or travtt MnH ~ enrtlullasm about Postal SeMCe It 18 yei.TI 11
client to client Apply at221· the profeuk)n We tak&amp; our the ttme or appointment or
1/2 Mam Street, Point Job Hrloualy and are com- 16 .,.ears with a high school
mitted to the oommumty we diplOma Appttcanta mutt bt
Pleasant !rom 8 30-3 30pm
or 300875·3300 MCAO, Mrw lnt....sted'l' We 'flrill a U S citizen or have per·
Inc 18 an EOE, M/F, AlA keep you buiJ Pleau ema1t manent resident ahen sta·
your
reaume
to
Jim 1\JI

.

.

Jlnts Carpentry
We do remodeltng and most
any unftnrshed work also
small
tree
removal
(740)446·2506 1740)367

0437
I I \ \ \( I \ I

r

lO

In

(740)«e·3358

An

IIOMFS

FOR SAl~.
136 Graham Street for Sale
by Owner
3 bedroom 1995 Skyhne 14X70 vtnyt
house 1 car garage large s1d1ng
shmgle
roo!
lot
Rodney VIllage II $13 995 00 Call Karen a
{740)245·9917 or {740)446· (740)385·7671

3644

2br
House
m
West
Columbta call (304)773·
5284
~-~----'3 bedroom 1 story all elec
Inc remodeled hOuse tn
Mtddleporl 371 Broadway
street $26 000 00 {740)992·
3194

Business
OpportunltyOProlrruNm'
Three rental properttes lor
'--ailiaioiiliiiliiiii,;,;,_.l sale OuplaJt each wtth 3
B!A UA 0 /A Krtchen Bath
"EARN 50%• TO OVER
&amp; Porch House 3 BIA LIA
100% EVERY 28 DAYS II" Kttchen Bath Cottage BJA
For complete mto-send ' Kttchen
Bath
Rental
name address fax or phone •ncome tor all three -Approx
to Dale Ptrlot 460 Hodges $900 per montn Pr1ce for all
Ave San Jose CA 95128
three·· $75 000
Located
ltl
~
104 106 7th Street Pomt
(304)675 2495
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH Pleasant
lNG CO recommends tha after 6 00
ou do bustness wtth peo
le you know, and NOT t
end money through th
atl unttl you have rn.,.esh
ated the oftenn

r-----:Gl~

r

ea 1ng 1nancta
lnslttutton apDro.,.tng Small
Business Mortgage
Personal and Veh1cle
Loans tmmedlate
response
give us a call at

All rut estete advert1slng
rn thts newspapor Ia
subtect to the Federal
Fair liOusang Act of 1968
whtch makes II illegal to

advert!H any
preference limitation or
dlacrimlnaHon baaed on
raee. color, r~igion 11111

1·866·228-7063' Or apply

familial atatus or national
origin, or any intentlon to
ITtllke any 1uch
-preferen&lt;:e, llnWbttion or

onltne at

dlacrtmlnatlon.·

Equal Opportunity
Employar

-------

Available for 1mmed1ate
occupancy
rn
Country
Homes 1Qgro down 5175 44
per month Call Harold

(740)385·4367

room 2 bath mobtle home
Only m1nutes tram Athens
1-800·837 -3:238
Inventory Clearance 24X60
3 bedroom 2 bath Del1very
and set up 1ncluded Cal
M1ke (740)385·9948
SAVE SAVE·SAVE
Stock models at ol&lt;;l pnces
2005 models arnvmg Now
Coles
Mob1te
Homes
15266 U S 50 East Att"teno
Ohto 457m {740)592·1972
"Where You Get Yout
Moneys Worth
SSI Soc1al Secur~tv
S1 300 Net mcome We ca ~
fmance ypu a 'lome Call
!30·n736 3400

Bl.'il~}:,o,.'i

INti Bt liJJN ;s
Ele9anl

Cafe lor Sale
wv call 593
2869 leave message 1f mter
ested
sarom.~rs ... 111e

r

dwelllnga edvertiMd In

60•1 00 lot wrfh :28 ft

5trl

thlenew~ere

wheel camper &amp; outbut!dmg
28~e:24 shelter Beautiful v•e~N
L..,;;:;:;;;.;;;;;;;:.;;;;;;;;;,....,l of
Raccoon
Creek
1\ccessttlle to the Ohto Rt'o'er
Askmg
For Sate '"Great Investment" wt111 ooa1 Call
$23
000
pnce
nflgotte.ble
3 homes 7 acres, located
on Graham School Ad 1740)446,0022
$165.000 PhOne 740·446· 1\pprox 64 acres of wooQe(j
3184 or 74D- 441 ·0219 or land west slOe St At 160
740-441 9974
betweeo Ke n &amp; E'o'9rgreen
available on an lqUII
opportunity

bli....

House tor sale by Owner
4br. 2ba Lg Eat·ln Kitchen
Bonus rooms, 0 /2 Ca r
Garage, WOOd FlOOrs &amp; Tile
Located on approx 1-acre
k&gt;ts ot Extras (304 )675-2523

(740)949·3090

.

(7 40)245-5242

advertisements fOf r"l
"btte which 11 In
vlol•tlon of th8 l•w Ou r
,...,. •• hereby
informed that atl

Move-•n condition
room , bath home
deck. cloae to
Reasonably

UNITED STATES
POSTAL SERVICE

8p

12 40 acres butldmg S1le
960 f1 road frontage some
wooded rural water on srte
gas &amp; elecH rc ava tl able
hOme s11e cleared sur
veyed road to srte S30 000
flfm (7401992·2800

nQ netWa,.per wtll not
knowklgl't 1ec:.pt

rrow Smart Contact I
hto Otvrston of Ftnancta
Ofltce
o
onsumer
Atfa1r
EFOAE you rehnflnc
ur home or obtatn a loan
EWARE ol request&amp; fo
ny large advance pay
ants of tees or Insurance
the
OrtJce
o
all
naumer Affatrs toll fr
t 1-86«3·278·0003 to lear
the mortgage broker o
ndtr 11 property lblnsed
ht1 IS a pubhc serv
nnouncement from th
hlo Valley Pubhahtn

2 bedroom 2 bath mob1le
home tn Rto Grande next m

For sate t 4X70 Windsor 'l
bedroom
set up 1n Countr~
3 br House 1 5 bath
Garage Basement New Homes S6 995 00 Move rr
A!C New Furnace Large eat today' Call [740)992-2167 0 1
m K1tcheO Locateq. m (740 )385 4019
Pt Pleas $87 900 (304 )675· lmmed1ate possesstdnl Only
6052 or (304)593 1912
S2 t 3 68 permo New 3 bed

n. """"'

M~
lU Ul~N

Mosu.E HoMES

roRSALt:

DU&gt;O"''Ji$

.:.•m.:.p: .Joye::. :. :.r- , - - - - - Froolond. ~rHiandOmydal·

McOoN!IIds' of A10 Grande lvtrlbune com or man to
now htrtng att shths Flaxible Gampoua Tribune 825 Thtrd
hours, patd vacation tnd ~VI , Gal!lpOI!I, OH 45631
holidays Starttng rata above
mrn1mum waQe Apply Wtth· Sell ~von rnaka !10% Call

fl

3 b4KI·
garage
school
priced

$95 000
740-245·5418
740-446-7611 af1e1 5pm
For sale 6 acres has water
&amp; etectnc 25 mu1utes from
Gallipolis (740)379·9098

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
,

�Nice 2br. · Mobile-Home tor New 1 b8droom apt. Call Inside sale: Mise items, such

I BUY HOMES

.Need to sell your home Rent, Apple Grove Area .
qu1ckly because of a Garbage/Water paid, NoFrom
$260
to
. divorce, bankruptcy, job Pets ,
: transfer, or death. Don 't let $300/month(304)5~6-2999
. the bank foreclose and rui n

your credit. Local person
buys houses. Fast closings.
All cash . Jim
(740)9926300. No calls after 9 m.

r

APARTMEN'I~
FOR

JbNr

~~-------_.1
1 and 2 bedroom apart·

ments. furnished and unfur·
· nished, security depoSit
• ~,,.._ _ _ _ _ _., required, no pets. 740-992·
H ~~
. r1U _
2218 .

•u RRENT

2 bedroom apartmen t tor
rent in Syracuse. $200.00

2 or 3 bedl-oom house ~or deposit.
$330.00/month
rent m Rutland, no pets,
rent. includes water. sewage
(740)742-266 1
and trash. Must have suffi·
· 2 or 3 bedroom house in clen1 income to qualify.
Pomeroy lor rent. no Pets. (740)378-6111

Easy_

2 bedroom tri-level apt.

3 bedroom
house
in
Middleport, all eleotric. No
pets. $450.00 per month and
$450.00 depoSit. (740)992-

Spring Valley area. Deposit
required . PhOne (740)446Adul t Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
SPoRTING
2957
Patio, Start $385/Mo. No
~
c2-BR
_ ap
_ l. -S-taleR-ou- te-t-60.
Pets, Lease Plus Security
.$400/month , stove/ref(ig era- Deposit Required , . Days: Colt lightweight bolt riffle
tor included, washer/dryer 74 0-446 -3481 ; Evenings: 30 _06 cal. N.I.B. '$ 5
· Armalite M-t 5 $650 4
hookup. (740)441.0194 or 740.367-0502
AR-tS's, Hke new, 's 1 ,10o
(740)44 t -1184.
.
. t 00
MAPLES,
THE
each. 740 379-2601 .
Drive
East,
2BR upstairs apt. 238 First Memorial
740·992-7022,
Ave. Stove/re frigerator. no Pomeroy,
Residential
pet s. $385/month + Ulilities + Subsidized
deposit. (740)446-4926.
Housing for 5.0: years of age · - - - - - - and . older.
PRIORITY
Riverine
ba1h, GIVEN TO APPLICANTS Buy or sell
3
room
and
down· WITH INCOME AT OR Antiques, 1124 East Main
stove/ rel ri gerator,
stairs, all ulill1ies paid. 46 BELOW $10,650. MaKimum on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740.
$450 Income effective 01·28·2004 992-2526 . Russ Moo re ,
Olive
Street
owner.
(740) 446-3945
lor 1 person $17,700.00 .
821 1/ 2 Second Ave .•2 bed· Must me.,et HUD/202/8 cri le·
room. upstairs apt. $315 ria lor household composi·
Managed
'by
month refere nce required. lion.
Silverheels, Incorporated, A 1 electric scooter, 1 electric
Call (740)446-2t58.
Realty Company Equal wheel chair, 2 electric lifts for
Beautiful 2-story townhO use, Housing Opportunity.
vehicles. Call (740)446·
over looking Gallipolis City ::-c-:--:c - - - 0022.
park. Kitchen-family, D.R., Tw\n A1vers Tower is acceptL R. 3 B.A., study, 2 baths. ing applications lor waiting "Barrels Only• have 3
laundry area. References list for Hud-subsized, 1- br,
Winchester' model 1200, ~6
required, security depoSit, apar tment. ca ll 675-6679
&amp; 20 ga., $125.
. For the 3;
no pets. $900 per mo. E~
also lver Johnson 32 ga.
(740)446·2325 or (740)446shotgun, very unusual ga.,

3 bedroom
house in
Middleport, $400 a month.
$200 deposit, (740)949·
2025

3 bedroom house near' Rio
Grande, $550/month . Call
(740)441 -0194 or (740)441-

1184.

'

. 87 Spruce St. small 2·3 bed. room home. $375 month ref. erences
required . Call
. (7~0)446 -2 158 .
House uniurnished 2 br,
gas heat. Middleport , 7 41)742·2424 or
(740)992·
3439.
Nice Large 3br Hom e in
Town. Upstairs Laundr'y. 1 ~
Year Lease , $550/month
plus Deposit (304)675·4030
9-5
.

20 MooiU: HoM•~
lllR RENT

2 bedroom, 1 bath, W/0
·
;
•
:

(304)675- 1262
(740)446-7398
Pilot Program - Renters
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
needed . Call (304)736Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.
3409
::-:-· --,-:--,-:--:--- (740)446-7444 t-8n-830Pleasant Valley Apartment 9162. Free Estimates,
Are now taking Appllr ations flnancln~, 90 days same as
tor 2BA , 3BR &amp; 4BR., cash . V1sal Master Card.
ApplicationS; ·are taken Driv~~ a· little save alot .
Monday thru Friday, from
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Office is
Repalr-675-7368. For sale,
LCM:ated at 1151 Evergreen
Drive Point Pleasant, WV re-.condltloned automatic
Phone No is (304 }675-SSOG. washers &amp; dryers, refrigera·
tors , gas and electric
E.H.O
ranges, air conditioners, and
Tara
TowntJouse wringer washers. Will do
.
t
v
Sp
..
Apartmen s, ery
aclous. repairs on major bran ds in
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA. 1 shop or at your hOme.
1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted,

(740)992-5658 '

3194

.
•
:
.

as clothing, some furniture,
(740)446-3736.
pictures, lamps, all reason ·
;_...:__ _ _ _ __
One Bedroom furnished able priced.
Skaggs Appliances
Cot1age,
Pt.
Ple asant.
76 Vine Street
Adults only, No Pets, Phone

hookup, $350 rent. deposit!
references
requi red .
Mercervil le area. (740)256~
1008.

2 bedroom, 2 bath on SR
: 554. S400 month, no pets,
. Bidwell School Distric t.
(740)367-0255.
2 bedroom, all electric. $335
month. reference &amp; deposit.
No pets. Aprox . 10 south of
Gallipolis. (740)256-· 6507.

2 Br Mobile Home for Rent

j

0o,.
co~

i

4425
BEAUTIFUL
MENTS
AT

APART·
BUDGET

"---lll·R-REN'fiiiiii,;.-"
·

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

~---·Goor--JS--'"

(740)441-0500

·

-------'-~

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete ,
Angle,
Appliance Cha nnel, Flat Bar, Steel
Gratin g
For
Drains,
Dri veways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Warehouse Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
in Henderson, WV. Pre- Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
owned applk::anes starting at Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
$75 &amp; up rut under warranty, Sunday. (740)446-7300
we do service work on all
Make and Models (304 )675• Tow-dolly, new tires, 6 ply
and new 'straps, $425 080.
7999 ''
(740)379-2706.

To

~;P:A:f:ACT;U;R;Y~O\m.ETs=;~
New Shipment
20-lubs in-stock
Cedar Knoll Mall.

:==:====~

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

No

•-w

--------

r

oeo

West
• K4

1

•
1995 Jeep Cherokee Sport,
pups. 4.0 automatic, air, excell~nt
5:tock. cond . $3495.00 304-727·

YOUNG'S

··

•

BISSELL
.BUILDERS me.

;~/FM/CO:~:S.ene ;,~~6

Nc\\-: Homes • Viny,l
Sidin'l'e&gt; • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Roofing

mile s, remainder facto ry
warranty. (740 1245-9162

GINEs.......

COMMERCIAL and

i

r

HAv
G •&amp;

~.,._ _ _ _ _ _ _,.,
2000 Ford Winstar LX, 8t K,
2/sliding doors. seats 7, all
power, rear ai r. tinted win·
do~s.
askin g
$6,900,
(740)669-5653
--------200 1 Dodge Caravan Sport,
70,000 miles, excellent ~ondition, sliding doors-both
sides, auto, V6 . AJC. po~r
everything, tim e/temperature
gauge.
$11 ,000.
(740)256·6543.

IF'lU

M~ncv~
•-.'
v 1vn.
LoLr~'lt'

i iRAiili iNi o-_.1 4WHEELERS

~---··

Hay for sale: Square and
round
bales.
Delano
J$ckson Fa rm. 304~675·
1743.

?

RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
·

·-------,.J

1979 Honda 750 1oth
Anniversary Limited Edit1on.
Needs
ignition
work.
Evening
(740)256·6870.

$500! Honda's, Chevy's,
J'eep's,
Ec1.
Police
Impounds! Cars fro m $500
for listings 800 _391 _5227
EXT 390 1

L__ow_m_ile_a_g_e,_S_2_,s_oo_._ _
1998 Yamaha
Warrier.
E)(Cellent condition, $2,600.
4-w heeler ti res· various
sizes
and
co nditions . .
198t Olds 98, 4dr, . Runs (740) 446-0048.
Good, Condition fair $1 ;000
1999 Honda ES 4-wheeler.
Call (304 )675-t264
ExCellent condition . $4,000
1985 Mazda low Aider. OBO. (740)256-6655.
1999 Ford Expedition , se rious calls only {304)675~ 2003 Suzuki Vinson 500, 4
6640 or 593-0665
whf!tel drive, alum. wheels,
lTD tires, low mites . Call
1992 Chrys. Imperia!, V6,
(740)446·6688 or (740)339oe;,
nice car, $1,800
4221.
1996
Dodge
Grand
. CaraVan, V6, dual air &amp; heat , 2005 Kawasaki V-Twln 750
Cycle,
neve r
.AM-FM·CD, dual sliding Vulcan
doors. $3,250. (740}256- dropped, garage( 50mpg.
tt89.
54,400 (304)675-2942
t996 Olds V6 Auto, $t .800 .;~;;.;.::;;;.,;~~;.;.;.-.,
(304)576-3231
BoATS &amp; MamAS

•UKSALE

I.

·----~iio-,J

1998 · Dodge
Strauss.
100,000 miles, runs great. 2000 Yamaha wave Runner
power everythi ng, $2,400 &amp; Trailer, 760 GP (740 )446 _
(740)256-9031 or 9 t 77
(740)256-t233 .
~~r-~~-~~..,

oso.

Race tor the Nextel Cup Preview

Februarv 1-8, 2005
~allipolt' Dailp ttribunt
446-2342
Joint Jlta,ant B,egh~ter
675-1333

The Daily Sentinel
992-2156

TaKe the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me do 1\ for

youl

Soulb

Tree Service

2 • .

3NT

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

r M~ I

r

\8

'I'RucKs

FOR SAU:

Basement

Pass

2

¥

East
Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

Poss

Theodore Roosevelt said, "People ask
the difference between a leader and a
boss ..._. The leader works in the open , and
th.e boss in covert.~
At the bn dge 1able, lhough, lhe opening ·
leader works partly in the dark, using only
the light provided by his hand and the
auction.
To test you r leading read ing, look only at .
the West hand . You know· thai the dummy
has 11 · 15 high-card points with four
hearts and five or six club s. Sbuth's harld
is undefined, except that he seleCted
three no-trump opposite that North haod.
What would you lead?
South could have looked for a 5~3 spad e
lit, but decided that if hi s partner had nine
or 10 rounded-s uit cards , that was unlike·
ly to exist. South preferred to keep his
,
hand covert.
Sitting West was Tarek Sadek, one-half of
Egypt's best pair with partner Watid El
Ahmady., Sadek decided that hearts
would give the defenders th e best chance
to defeat the contract. But , sinc.e dummy
rated to have the heart jack, Sadek led
the imaginative hear1 nine!
This systemically ·promised H-10·9-x or
longer, where H is the ace, king or queen.
So, declarer understandably placed East
with a sing leton or doubleton queen or
king. South played low from the dummy at
tri ck one, an d did the same at trick two
when West continued with lhe heart 10.
West happily persevQred with the heart
king, leaving the declarer with no chance
as the cards lay.
Teddy Roosevelt also .said, ~N i ne-tenths
of wisdom consists in beirlg wise in time.~
Sadek's lead was nine-tenths wisdom

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

BARNEY
PAW'S GOTTEN ALL
SUPERSTITIOUS
'BOUT HIS WINNIN'
STREAK, EL VINEY

HE EVEN WANTS
TH' SAME THIN'
FER SUPPER
EV'RY NIGHT HE
PLAYS

THAT'S GONNA BE YORE
.JOB !! HIS STREAK
STARTED TH' NIGHT YA
SENT OVER THAT
~:;&amp;w;toL.e

!!

AHentlon
lllelga Co. Rnldental!l

BUCKEYE Sanilation
THE BORN LOSER

1'1-1-1,._, ~~ FQii:.~ ~\Jrn

N..WI\'&lt;S C(LE.~\( Will\ 1\ "'l
~UG£,
f(t-6\0N fl\1

P""[

!

FI\TIEIZ

chants
36 Ice Follies

venue
38 Tlnls
40 VIncent

van-

Unseld
42 Hoodwink

48 Sta.

• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
Call Gary Stanley

~Astro­
~Graph

BIG NATE

:

KNOCK! ,

MANlEY'S ·
SElF STORAGE
97 Beech Street
OH

10x10x10x20
992·3194
or992-6635
•Middleport's only
Seii·Storage·

~;;;;;;~;;;;;

ROBERT
BISSEll
CIISTRUCnOI

Material goals and financia l gains which
are based upon sound premises cS.n be
tuHilled in the year ahead. If you want to
add to your resources, stay focused in
reality.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - The
possibilities lor personal acquisition
today Are extremely high, provided you'
are prepared to work hard !or what you
get. Returns fo r work ing hard are apt to
be in proportion to your input.
PISCES ·(Feb. 20-March 20) - You have
great ability today in managing diHicutt
situations that pop up, but this does not
Include the handling of loved ones. When
your heart rule s your head ,, things can go

Wh~ley's

Auto
Parts

St. Rt.681 Darwin. OH
· 740-992-70 13 or 740-992-5553
Re.tockitllf late Model Sttlvoge
and After J~la.rket Parts
See Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

.PEANUTS
THIS IS M'( REPORT ON
A TALE OF TWO CITIES" 13V
CHMLES DICKENS ..

•' ST. PAUL AND MINNEAPOLIS
ARE ... '' -

ONE OF THE 6R.EAT
TRIES OF ALL TIME, SIR.

BAlll\11 LlJl\IBER
Scorpion Tractors
" Taking .The Sting Out Of

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

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

251 Upper River Road • Gallipolis
74G-446-0842 • 949-1155 Evenings

SUNSHINE CLUB
fO,.U (X)ES 0/VE- C-EAL WITH
1Hf. ~S OF AGllolG. IF
I MA'r' ASk DLD .f\"A~?

.

HEU.O, l-UIGI'5? t'D' l-IKf.
1"0 ORD'eR A 5MAL--

ADVERTI E
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $50 per mo11th
GRIZZWELLS

Don't miss out on this great opportup.ity
to have your business included!

Hardly ,;
wallflower
49 Willow
flower
5Z Ocoon
game fish
.53 Orchestra
membtlr
54 Llama
COUiin
55 Slip back
56 . Charter

DOWN
1 Slip-up
2 . Lasso
3 Many-armed

18
20
21
22
24

4 Foresl
ruminant
5 Journal
VIPs
26
6 Des Moines · 27
locale
28
7 Plugged·
away
30
8 91 1
responder
31
9 Go1
·
acquainted 3.7
1 0 Almost
39
grads
·1 1 Wharf
41
locale
43
1 2 Hwys.
44

Mounlles
Promo lope
Latch onto
Small barks
Frallotter
Ice mass
Potpourri
Sweat
cherry
Europa 's
lover
Riviera
summer
Tan slacks
Everes1
guide
Had alum
Crocks
Rock

16 Goes over

musician -

anknals

again

45 Lucy
Lawless role
47 Carpenter's
jaws
48 Hay bundle
49 Mounlaln
pass
50 Lawyer's
org.
51 Go one
better
52 -de mer

Cooper

b-!-+-+--1-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Ce~

Cfiher cryptograms are created I!om quola!ions by lar+.ous people, past af'ld pre5ell1
Eac."l letter in the crpher slallds lor WQther
,

Today'sclu'e: H f.'QUals R

" P ·z.S S Z L

JZ

JTN

MGDOZS

0 Nl 0 N

MKBD

0 RGJ 0

ZV

JHGND

JTN

JZ

G. J 0 N A

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MZHAO .

PZLVZHS

JZ

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FZRUNHJ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Guill punishes the author of the cnme." - Juvenal
"Every man IS guiily of all the good he didn·t do." - V(jtaire
(C) 2005 by NEA, Inc. 2·9

·:~~:~;~· ~©1\~~\-~ttf~
.. GAMI
S:d il •d hy ClAY A. POll4N _.::.__ _ _ __
WORD

Keorronge let!e r1
0 loJr
sc.ror:-.bied

o:

v.orc1

lhe

be -

low 10 lorm fowr .....-ordl

GUiHEN

I I I I' I

8Wt)'.

Now Available At

NORTHUP DOllE

29670 Bashan R oad
Racine, Ohio
45771
740· 8411-2217

'l!lrthdlly:

By Barnlce Bede Oaol

GARFIELD

Hill's Self
Storage

-

Thur~a~Feb. 10 , 2005

74D-742·229l
• Leave a messa e

48

FZDNWT

CONTRACTING

• Prompt &amp; quality
work

MiddlePort.

Ully or
Wallach
34 Surprise
. win
35 -Mantra

an d one·tenth luck .

--~--

91 Ch8'J)' StO, V6, 5 speed, 0870, Rogers
Waterproollng.
. St ,200. (740)256·8507.

North
2 ..

The lead turned
the tide

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

Toyota Rav--4, '97 all wheel
drive . Loaded, 1 owner,
$5,700. Ca ll (606)923-3259
or (304)•29-8032 , leave
message.

West

Bucket TMICk

GENERA~

740-992-1611

Affordable Servic'e, paint,
chimneys, trees, Gutters.
Jack of All Trades. Senior
disco'unt. free estimates.
(304)882-2196, (304)37711
8266
__ _·_ce__·
BMIEMENT •
WATERPROOFING
UnConditional lifetime guarantee. Local references fur·
nlahed . Established 1~75'.
Call 24 Hrs . (740) 446-

·

41 Craven or

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;

2002 Ford Escort ZX2, 5
speed, 29,000 miles, air, --•
one owner. Nice {740)441·
t997
24'
Coachman
0157 or (740)645·5~41 .
Catalina Lite Trailer Frt
200~ Dodge Neon STX Queen Bed, Awning , 2 -3dlb.
Excellent
4door. 4cy!., automatic, Propane,
• New Homes
power everYth ing, 11 ,000 Condition $7,495 .oeo
miles, S6.500. (740)441- (304)875-2039
• Garages
0337or 1740)645-6153.
-------• Complete
· ~ 998 30' fifth wheel travel
2003 Mitsubishi Eclipse,
Remodeling
trailer, double slide, excelExcellent Condition $14,500 len t condi tion , $t 3 ,900
13041675 -6966
phone' (740)698-93t9
93 Ford Escort Ut Auto, PS, - - - - - - - . Stop &amp; Compare
PB, AIC, 88,000 miles, Class C Dutchman Motor
$1 ,800 080. (740) 446- Home 2000 MOdel, New . . . . . . . . .~
6JQ4.
tires ,
all
accessories . ...
sleeps-8. (304)675•7388 to
93 Honda Accord LX, auto, inquire
PW, PL. Great Car. Only
. . 1 1n t' 1 ...
51,000 miles (304)675-7565

98 Cadillac CB.tera . Fully
equipped. leather Interior,
low miles, mint condition.
$7,900. Call (740)704~375 1 .

companion

Opening lead: ?•

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

I

04 Suzuki Vo lusia BOO,
black ,
t ,000+
miles.
(740)256·6936 leave message.

r

740·992·75,99

L..........................~

I R \ \'I'OH I \1 IO\

m::;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
FlO
Al!fOS
FOR SALE

JONES'

13 Makes
a speech
14 Wrenches
15 Generator
.
part
16 Not bogus
17 Sink part
18 Legaf-19 Nervous
23 Have a rash
25 Lox locale
26 Short halnlo
29 Dazzle
32 Broom

33

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: East-West

V.C. YOUNG Ill

E~epedi tion

Yearling Angus Bulls, Mostly
A.I. exce llent bloodlines,
priced reasonably. Slate Run
Farm. Jackson. (740)2865395 .
www .slate'runfarm .com

CARPENTER
SERVJCE

•RoomAdditiona&amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Gutters
,
• Vln~l Siding &amp; Palnllng
• Patio and POJch Oeckl
We do It all except -·
furnace work

I \R\1 '-II 1'1'1 II'-~
2004 Ford
XLT,
,\II\ l"'l f H h.
5.4L Trilon V-8, air, cruise.
ji~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

For Sale' t4 foot slock lrail·
d
d·t·
er, m goo
con t 1on.
Several registered fullblood
yearling Boer Bucks (goats) ,
registered 2 year old Suffolk
ram (sheep). Call (740)256_t.:_3.:_30:..a:..n.:yt.:_im.:e.:·_ _ _ _

+

A K Q4
.. J 5

r------------,

L -

LIVESTOCK

.Q986 2
• 8 a
• 9 '
.. K 10 9 6

. A J 753
• 7 2

CJ~,nadian.

~

East

.KQJ09 5
• . 10 8 5 3
.. .7 4
South

American and
6924.
Champion in parents pedi·, - - - - - - - gree .(740)368-9269.
t998
Jeep
Cherokee
Classic, 4.0. automatic. fully
Llewe llyn Setter puppies. loaded $ 5495 _ 304-727~
FDSB Regislered. Excellent 6924
bloodl(n es, DNA certified . ; , ; ; ; _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Intel ligent. loyal. make out- [125
4x4
standing hunters &amp; loving
FOR SALE
pets. Ready Valentine's Day. L~--~----·
1740)379-26 15·
1997 Dodge Ram 1500
truck.
4~e4, quad cab.. Call
Th e
perfect
gilt
for
6-0924
Valentine's Day! YellOw Lab. (740)44_
females,
males.
$
_
5
3
125
Call (740)446 _4589 _
_ _:___:_ _ _ _ __
UKG reg. Rat Terrier puppies. Shots and wormed,
$tOO each.(740)256-6824.

j

02-09-~

¥A J 6 4
• J 7 8
.. AQ832 ,

L~-------_.1 ~r;;:,;;.;;;.;;;;;;~~--.,
1 Pit BUll for sate. Asking
SUVS
$ 150 _Call 1740)3B8-830S or L---lllliRiliiSiiALEilli-.rJ
·
AKC ·Reg. Lab
E)(cellent hunting

Form a
gully
6 llo1 parts

1

11 Set a
....teat value
12 Paying gta1

1990 Ford F1 50, 4x4, auto,
PW, POL , cruise, 92,000
actual
miles.
$3,000.
(740)446-4053.

_Block, brick, sewer pipes, 1998 (::hev. Silverado 1/2
windows lintels etc. Claude Ton Extended Cab. 4x4,
'winters.' Rio Grande, OH 4.3l, V-6, Auto, PS, P'B. PL,
PW. Alum . Rims, Fiberglass
1 2~t:;.
5 ·;;:
5~
i1C!;ai;;,17~4:;D;-:2;;:4;:.
. _._., topper, Pewter color. 98 1000
P-ETs
miles Phone (3M)675-2039
~
tl&gt;R SALE
$9,995

(740)368·8526.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

--------

BUIIJ)ING

SIJI'I'l.mS
L~-------_.1

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5
BRIDGE

1221

Kentur.y Trading Post,
1 Ashland.
606 922-7t65

i:

www.mydailysentinel.com

1990 Chevy, extended cab,
· 8-foot bed. 32,000 a9tual
miles, excellent mecha,nlcat
shape. 305 · Automatic.
$3,400.00 OBO. (740)696-

4 Pygmy goats, $50 each or
all 4 tor $175. (740)256· g9 .Jeep Cherokee Sport,
1090 or (740)64".6746.·
4x4 , EC , gold , auIO, PW, PL ·
o.r
V6
, CD, cc, keyless eniJy,
Buckskin Quarter Stallion , $6 ,500 _(614 )231 •1355.
and excellent condition, . $hown Running Color pro$695. 1ronlorl, OH (740)533- ducer. $3500, (740)992VANS
3670 .
2600
FoR SALE

PRICES AT JACKSON .,For Le ase: Office or retail Eleclric Scooter. Rarely
ESTATES, 52 _ Westwood spaces 10 very good Condi - uSed. E~cellent Condition
Drive tram $344 to $442. lion . Downtown Ga llipolis. $900 (304)675-6114
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call Approx. 1600 sq. ft. each. 1
740-446-2568.
Equal o~ 2 baths. Lease price
JET
~H:::o::us:::in~g~O~P:::P::
Or_::lu:::n:::ity:::._ _ negotiable to encourage
AERATION MOTORS
Call Repai red, New &amp; Rebuilt In
business
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- new
(740)446·4425 or (740)446- Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
800·537~9528.
Townhouse
apartments. 3936.
and/or small houses FOR
\II l~l 11\ \IH"'I
RENT. Call (740)441-1111
King size waterbed frame.
for application &amp; information ~r-:~
liner and heater- $100. 4
'HOUSEHOUJ
For lease: One bedro om. r1u
drawer
dresser$50

Gas Heat $300/depoSit,
$325/month, (304)882- 11 07 nice 2nd floor apt. Corner
·Pine and Second. large
2BA mobile home in Bidwell. kttchen with dining area
Water/trash/sewer
pa1d. New range . refrigerato r.
$435/rent + deposit. Will Water included. References
(P r o-rate~.
No
pets. required. $300/mo. Security
(740)368-9325.
deposit. No pe ts. Call
For rent 2 and '3 bedroom '(Z40)446-4425 or (740)446·
mobile homes starting at 3936.
$260.00 per month . Call
(740)992-2167.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Mobile home. Rio Grande Manor
and
Riverside
area, 2 bedroom. 2 bath - Apartments in Middleport.
room .
$300/deposit . From $295-$444. _Call 740$400lmonth. J'jo pets. Phone 992-5064. Equal Ho'using
(740)367-7025
Opporluniftes.

It's

SPACE

Wednesday, February 9, 2005
ALLEY OOP

PIZZA iO

00

{March
2 1- April
19)
Intellectually, you 'll Size up the proper
ways tor important matters to be handled
today. Yet when it comes to the lmple·
mentation of doing so, you .couk:t blunder
through with faulty concepts.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Even
though your common sense tells you to
be cautious in handling your funds today.
for th e sake ol having a good time you'll
ignorEt it and do th ings that could end up
being very costly.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - ~u are
likely to be quite ambitious today in for·
mulating a lot ot bright ideas. The trouble
is once you realize the work Involved to
achieve your dreams, you 'll want to'
throw in the towel.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22}- The plans
that you conceive and lay out today are
likely to be far more prac)ical and elfec·
tive than any of th ose thought out by
your peers. Don't let them sell you their
poor schemes.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Your involve·
ments tod$y will have great profitable
possibilities. but only l1 you keep them
within realistic and reasona~e bonds.
Pipe dreams will be doomed .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - II You ere
in the midst of making a serious agreement, be it with a friend or stranger, each
mu st fully understand all the terms .
Fuzzy arrangements could cause sari·
ous complications.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23)- There will be
no . reason wnatsoever Why you oan't
achieve your objectives on your own
today, but needing a buddy at your stde
may take precedent. Sadly, it'll onry slow
you down.
·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - A num·
bar of good investmenr po!lslbililles
might be placed on the table today, but if
you beJ ieve the retums are too slow for
you, you coUk:t opt for risky ones and
make an expenstve mistake.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec . 21) When shopping today tor items to beau·
tify your sun-oundings. 11 wUI be extremely impor1anl for YQU to be Quality con·
sctous instead ot lad conscious. The Ia!·
tar will have a short lit~ span.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) - Your
judgment ill most sifuatlons ,will be very
good today. The exception. , however,
, could be when it comes to career matters. In these cases, keep an open mind
·to ~worker9' suggestions.
ARIES

l:b 'j,U 1\\11'11(

8

P'!.INT NUMBERED LETl[RS IN

lH!SE SQUARES

() UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE U11ERI
10 GET ANSWER
·

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

'--e--o ;

Fi ck 1e - ~·ours- =oyer- Gut:cr- YOURSeLF
Overheard m line at Pcsl Office . " Ma1 i 1~g a let~e r
seems to get more expens11;e every year Soon 1:w 1H be
chea~er logo YOURS ELF "
,

ARLO &amp;·JANIS

0

SOUPJ"ONUTZ

A\'\11-\IIL? AREp-----.-----'1

• EVER
6\C,OiEO
?

:\dH·rtising lkadlinl' is

'

•

Fl'hruar~

IU. 21111.

v

,.

•

�· Pope misses Ash
Wednesday public

Wednesday, February 9, 2005

www.mydallysentirrel.com

Page 86 •The DallY Sentinel

FULL·COURT ·
BIG TEll STMDJNGS

GAME OF THE WEEK

Michigan State at Michigan

Average per game

nu a-oou. HI'INII:

Indiana. . . . . .' . . . . . . . . . . . . .409
~

The outside shot was
,
falling all night for the
fllini as they beat Michigan State 81·68
last Tuesday. The fllini made 13 of 24
. 3-pointers, led by Luther Bead and
Deron Wi\Uams, who hit four apiece,
c2oos Longwing Publications Inc.
while Dee Brown added three.
With swingman Bracey .
Wright on the sidelines
· Sunday, the Hoosiers were forced to start
four freshmen for the first time all season ·
in a 60·47 loss to fllinois. freshmen
.
Robert Vaden and D.J. Wlilte led Indiana
with 12 points, while freshman Jamea
Hardy added six. Freshmen A.J. RatUff,
White and Vaden each had five rebounds.
1'!11-•r'A Pierre Pierce, the Hawkeyes' ·
h
leading scorer (17.8 ppg),
· was dismissed from the team after coming
under police investigation last week for
various crimes at the home of his
.
girlfriend. "I regret this step has becpme
·necessary, but Pierre has betrayed the
trust we placed in him when he was given
a second chance two years ago," Iowa
coach Steve Alford said. "Pierre is an
excellent basketball player who will be
missed by·our team. But, given the
circumstances, I feel this is the only
appropriate response."

INOIS

PF
PA
80.5 61.3
79. 5 63.3
69.6 59.8
11.6 63.1
74.7 64.6
62.8 63.9
76.2 68.2
63.2 63.8
60.3 . 61.3
66.1 '69.8
64.4 . 68.4

TEAM J.Eil)ERS

Iowa . , .. . . ... .

to appear at area
church, B2

prayers for first time
as pontiff, A2

Through games of February 6
Big 10 A\\ Top 25
fi\inois
9-0 23-0 6-0
Michigan St. 6·1 15-4 0·3
Wisconsin
6-3 15-5 3-1
Minnesota
6-3 16-6 1-4
Ohio State
5-4 16·7 1-1
Indiana
5·4 10·10 . 0-5
Iowa
3-5 15-6 1-3
Michigan
3·6 12·11 1-3
Northwestern 3-6 10-11 1-4
Penn State . 1·7 7-14 0-4
Purdue
1·8 5·15 0·5

West·Vuginians

. . . . .. ...412

Michigan .. ... .......... . ....417'
Ohio State . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . .418
n\inois . . . . . . . . ·. . .. . . , . . . . .410

lANA

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.o ( I \, 1 \ •\ o l.

IIDOaDINO MIUlGIN
Wisconsin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . +4.4

nlinois .. . .. ' ' . . . . . .. .. .. +4.0
·Penn State . . . . . . · ....•• .. . ·. +4.0
Minne.sota •... . ••••• . ••... +3.1

u•••••

ntinois . . . . ' . . . . . . . . . . ' . 10.0
Michigan State .. . . . . . . . . . . . . 17.6
Iowa . . . . . . . . . . .• . . • . . . . 16.3

Ohio State . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . 15.9
Minnesoia . . . . . . . . . .. . •.. . .. 15.3

1 '\o

Iowa . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . ·. . . 6.0 ·
Minnesota . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . 5.0

Indiana . . . . . . . . : .. . . . .... 4.8
Michigan ... .. .. ... . . ...... 4.4
nlinois . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.9

INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
I'OIN'I'I

Turnovers continued
....,....
to cost the Wolverines
as they lost their sixth consecutive game,
72·46 to Ohio State last Saturday.
Michigan committed 29 turnovers,
allowing 31 points on them. with only
four assists. The Wolverines forced Ohio
State to commit 12 turnovers, which
turned into six points.
When the
·
· Spartans fell to
fllinois 81·68 last Tuesday, it was their
first home loss of the season. Michigan
State has sold out 108 conSecutive
regular-season games, and,_theloss was
just the seventh in the past 102 games at
home, dating back to the start of the
1g98-9g season. Coach Tom lzzo holds a
·130·1g cateer record at the Breslin Center,
'A Junior college
NESOT.
.
n transfer Vincent
Grier took over in the second half and the
Gophers bOat Wisconsin 60· 50 last
Saturday, ending Minnesota's seven-game
losing streak against the Badgers. Grier
scored a careei-high 32 points, with 26
after intermission. Grier also scored 14
points with six reboUilds and four a.!!Sists ·
in last Wednesday's 71·54 victory at
·Michigan.
,.

\1{\

IO .:! OU :J

Plant~

c 2005

Spartans rule Michigan
.

.
W

.

·hen Tommy Amaker took over ~s the head coach at
Michigan , he hoped to rerum the Wolverines to the

The Nittany Lions and center Aaron Johnson will battle Ohio
State 'and center Terence DiaJs.

national spotlight. And along the way. he wanted to make

Wisconsin at Illinois

sure thai his team remained competitive with cross·state rival

point gUard Daniel Horton was suspended Jan . 25. the Wolverines
haven't won . In fUel, Mich!gan has lost six in a row, including

• Records: Wisconsin 15-5 (6·.3 Big Ten); Illinois 23-0(9-0 Big
Ten) . • Coaches: Wisconsin 's Bo Ryan (466-96); Illinois' Bruce
Weber ( 152-61). 1 Tip-off: Sat:mlay, noonCT. II TV: CBS.
ICeys for Wisconsin: Disrupt the Ulini 's passing flow . Illinois

falling even to lowly Purdue.
When Michigan hosts Michigan State on Saturday, the
Wolverines will be looking to end their losing streak and end the

has found sllccess with a three· guard rotation and a 20·'assists·per·
game average. Wisconsin needs to slow down the passing
attack .... Prevent 3·point attempts. The Badgers have beCn

Spartans ' domination in the serieS - in their past 12 meetings, ·
Michigan has won only once against Tom lzzO's club.
The Spartan ~ are hoping to continue their trend of not allowing
upsets . Of Michigan State's four losses this season , three have
·.come against ranked teams, with Geqrge Washington beirig the

successful with a league-best 30.0 percent 3-point shooting
defen se. The Illini are tops in the conference at 40.4 percent from
beyond the arc .
·
ICey for llUnqis: Win tbe rebounding battle. Both teams
usually have tlie advantage (Illinois plus-4.0, Wisconsin plus-4.4).

Michigan State.
As of now. the Wol verines still have a long way to go. Since

Deron Williams, filinois . . . . . . . . . . 7.0
Jeff Homer, Iowa . . . . . . . . : . . . . 5.6
Dee Bmwn, filinois . . . . . . . , , . . . 4. 7

Chris Hi\\, Michigan State . . ... : ... 4.5
Pierre Pierce, Iowa . . . . . . . . •· ... . 4.2

Brandon McKnight, Purdue ..... ... 3:9
'Luther Head, nlinois . . . . . . . . . .. 3.9
Brandon Fuss-Cheatham, Ohio State · ... 3.7
DionJiarris, Michigan .

. . . . . . 3.5 .

Ben Luber, Penn State . . . . . . . . ... 3.4

lftlllol
Pierre Pierce. Iowa . . • . . . . . . . . . .
Brent·Lawson, Minnesota . . . . . . . . .
Rico Tucker, Minnesota . . .. . . . . . .
Dee Brown, filinois . . . . . . . . . . . .

2.5
2.1

2.0

I. 9
Luther Head, nlinois ....... . . .. 1.9

Vincent Grier, Minnesota . . . . . . . . : 1. 9

Tony Stockman, Ohio State . , , . . . . . I.7
JeffHorner,Iowa . . . • . • • . . . , .. 1.7

¥ron Robinson, Minnesota .... .. .. 1.6
Je Xel Foster, Ohio State ... .. .... 1.5
"MIMI

Erek Hansen, Iowa . . . . . . . . . . ... 3.4
Jeff Hagen, Minnesota . . . . . . . . . . .Z. 5

D.J. White; Indiana .. .
Courtney Sims, Michigan
Brent Petway, Michigan .
James Augwtine, nlinois

... ..
.... ,
,., .,
... .,

. ...
.. , .
. .. .
. . . ·.

1.1
1.7
1.7
1.5

Mike WilkinSon, Wisconsin . . . . . . . . 1.1

Greg Brunner, Iowa ....... . .. .. 1.0
Vedran Vukusic, Northwestern .... . .' 0.9
Gary Ware, Purdue . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.9

nn· ••·• NW..

James Augustine, filinois . . . . . . . . .652
carl Landry, Purdue , .... , ......613

Brent Petway, Michigan ... , ...... 584
Jeff Hagen, Minnesota ........ ... .579
Kelvin Torbert, Michigan State ...... .571
Terence Dials, Ohio State .... ·..... .571
Courtney Sims, Michigan . . . . . . . . . . 571
Paul Davis, Michigan Stat e ... . .. : .. 563

J.J. Sullinger, Ohio State . . . . . . . . . . 560
Roger Powell Jr•• nlinois ........ ' .557

I

•-a

IW"'..

· Shannon Brown, Michigan State .. .' ... 897
[elvin Torbert, Michigan State .. . .. ,..875
Alan Anderson, Michigan State ... . . .870

Luther Head, filinois . . ·. . . . . . . . . .818
Mauri&lt;e Ager. Michigan State .. , . , ..826
Vedran Vukusic, Northwestern . . . . . . .811
Adam Haluska, Iowa . . . . . . . . . . .. 807
Chtis Hunter, Michigan ... . . . . . . . . 789
, ·D.J. White, Indiana ..... .'. ' .... 184
V'mcent

G~r.

Minnesota ••.•••.... 783

only non-ranked team to beat the Spartans.
Michigaq State dominates on the boards with a 7.2 reboundsper-game advantage . and also shoots well from the free-throw
line, holding down four of the top five,spots in the conference
statistics .
The SpartanS' main weakness this season has been the lack of a
consistent point guard and the inconsistent play of center Paul

Davis. Michigan State needs Chris Hill or freshman Drew Neitzel
to step in and take control. like forrner Spartan Mateen Cleaves

once did, if they hope to return to the Final. Four. as they did three
times during Cleaves' tenure.

• Records: Michigan State 15-4 (6-2 Big Ten); Michigan 12-ll
(3-6 Big Ten). • Coaches: Michigan State's Tom Izzo (222-94);
Michigan's Tommy Amaker ( !31 -!08). • Tip-off: Saturday . 4.
.
p.m. ET. If TV: ESPN.
ICeys for Michigan State: Make clutch free throws. The
Spartans lead the conference in free-throw percentage (80.3
percent), but have missed free throws to lose two close games.
... Create turnovers . The Wolverines are prone to making
mistakes, and a good team can capitalize. Michigan has a league·
·
worst 0.78 assisHo·tumover ratio.

"'ICeys for Michigan: Improved rebounding. The Spartans are
tops in the conference in rebounding margin (7.2 advantage), and
Mjchigan will have to neutralize thar advantage .... Better shot

selection. Michigan shoots 30.9 percent from beyond the 3-point
arc and can't afford to take too many chances shooting fTom
outside.

fte Rest of tile Matcbaps
While ihe in-state battle of Michigan and Michigan State is
hard to beat, the top two teams matching up this weekend will be
Illinois and Wisconsin , as the lllini continue ftleir quest to become
the second team ever to complete an undefeated season . When
they hOst Wiscon.sin, they will face one of the conference's best
defenSive teams.

· In Bloomington.Ind .. an upstart Minnesota team will depend
on the hot h.and ofVin"ent Grier and inside preoence of Jeff'
Hagen to nOtch another victory. Indiana, on the other hand , will be

hoping for the return of star Bracey Wright , who has .led a young
team to a 5A conference start .
-.........,.
In Iowa City , Iowa, NonhwesterD. and Io~a will bani~ .to stay

out of the cellar positions ~urrently held by Purdue and Penn State.

and the team that controls the boards could win.

THwESTERN

·

Minnesota at Indiana
• Records: Minnesota 16-6 (6-3 Big Ten); Indiana JO. 10 (5-4 Big
Ten). • Coaches: Minnesota's Don Monson (! 45-98); Indiana's
Mike Davis (91 ·63). • Tip-off: Saturday , 3 p.m. ET. • TV: ESPN
Plus.
ICeys for Minnesota: Find good shots . Indiana is the best in
the conference, holding opponents to 40.9 percent shooting this
. season . . .. Create turnovers , Tbe Gophers lead the conference
with 9.9 steals per game.
Keys for .Indiana:.Avoid the long-range shot. The Hoosiers
shoot a confe.r:ence·wor~t 29.1 percent from beyond the 3-point

arc, and the Gophers hold opponents to 31.8 percent . . .. Improved
passing. The Hoosiers average a league-low 11 .7 assists per game.

Ohio State at Penn State
11 Records: Ohio State 16-7 (5-4 Big Ten): Penn State 7-14 (1-7
Big Ten). a Coaches: Ohio State's Thad Matta (117-38); Penn
State's Ed DeCbelis (1t2; JQ8).:a Tip-off: S;oturday. S p.m. ET.
II TV: ESPN Plus.
ICeys for Ohio State: Win the turnover battle. The Nittany
Lions lose 3.6 more turnovers per game than they gain , while the

Buckeyes gain 3.3 more than they lose, ... Box qut Penn State
center Aaron Johnson . Johnson averages a conference·best 10.6

rebounds per game. .
ICeys for Penn State: Slow down Ohio State forward Terence
Dials. The Buckeyes depend on Dials for 15 .4 points and 8.3 .
rebounds per game . ... Keep the score low . Penn State gives up
an average of 69.8 points per game, worst in' the Big Ten .·

Northwestern at Iowa .
a Records: Northwestern I0-11 (3-6 Big Ten); Iowa 15-6.(3-5
Big Ten). a Coaches: Northwestern 's Bill Carmody (155-HJO);
Iowa's Steve Alford (259-154). &amp; Tip-off: Saturday, 7 p.m. CT.
a TV: ESPN Plus. ·
Keys for Northwestern: Improve the defense . Northwestern
allows it~ opponents tos hoot 44.7 percent from the field.
.... Better rebounding. Northwestern is worst in the conference.
with a negati ve-4.4 rebound margin.
ICeys for Iowa: Keep the pace fast. Northwestem·averages
60.3 points per game,lo,west in the conference .. .. When
necessary. put the Wildcats on the free-throw li~e . Northwestem
shoots 63'.5 percent from the stripe,lowest in the Big Ten.

Junior
guard
Mohamed Bachad was removed from the
starting lineup but made a difference off
the bench in Northwestern's 73·58loss to
Wisconsin last Wednesday. The Montreal
native's 61-game starting streak ended,
~ut'heled the Wildcats with 14 pojnts on
6-for-8 shooting as the only Northwestern
ptayer in double figures. In last Saturday's
67·61 victory over Purdue, Hachad scored
five points. Vldran Vukudc scored 21,
while guard T.J. Puker tied his season
high with 18 points.
· i
A'~"!:' The Buckeyes
ST.'n1
Ill jumped out to a
40·1g halftime lead and clobbered rival
Michigan 72·46 last Saturday. It was the
most lopsided win for the Buckeyes over.
Michigan since a 103-70 v,ictory in 1g68.
The sold-out Ohio State crowd cheered . •..
just \ike a football crowd in the second
half, ·recalling the Bucl&lt;;eyes' 37·21
gridiron win over Michisan in November. '
-..nn.r STATE In a contest of
..,...,...,~
two of the B1g
Ten's top freshmen, Geary Claxton got
the best of Indiana's D.J. White, but the
Nittany Lions fell to the Hoosiers 68-63 . •
last Wednesday. Cluton scored 16 points ·•
with five rebounds while White managed
six points ·and six rebounds.

Meigs board approves Sali,s bury school renovation

• Spartans top Buckeyes.
SeePage 81

Associates, for review by the board,
Buckley explained that the entire
which gave a unanimou s vote to front of the building plus the hallaccept the drawings and proceed with ways will be renovated, that some
sections will simply be converted into
POMEROY - Action to proceed· the bidding process.
with renovating the former Salisbury
The estimated cost of the renova- storage space, and that the gymnasiElementary School into administra- tion project is $355,000, most of um and kitchen currentl y being used
tive . offices for the Meigs Local which will be paid with the balance of by the American Legion will have litSchool DistriCt was talien at funds generated by the permanent tle done in the way of improvements.
Plan s call for new heating and air
Wednesday night's meeting of the improvements levy .which wenl off
the tax ballot in December. The conditioning to be in ~ talled, some
Meigs Local Board of Education.
Superintendent William Buckley asbestos in the parts of the building walls to removed to make larger
displayed plans prepared by Athens where the renovation will take place offices, the div ision of one large
restroom' into two smaller ones, a
architects, Panich, Noel and was removed last fall .
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HO EFLICH@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM

BY BETH SERGENT

OBITUARIES

'

'I I '(I \

'0 1\ F P

tn

Page As ·
• James Authei:Son, 74
• Earl Bonecutter, Sr., 60
• Curtis Bradford, 83
• Glen Schneider, 82
• Freda Searls, 80

INSIDE
.• Histories pr~nted to
Eastern Ubrary.
See Page A3
• Issue boil adVisory.
See Page A5
• Play postponed.
See Page AS
• Road to close.
See Page AS
.
• Parish plans sale.
See Page AS

Gerri Pullen (! em
hears about a new diet
analysis and nutrition education program offered at
the Meigs County S~ nior
Center. Also pictured is
Tiffany Hoffman , a regis·
tered dietetic technician
who is in charge of the
new program.

Above:

Left: The new nutrition
education program
offered at the Meigs
County Senior Center as
part of their well ness program is not only for senior
citizens but adults of all
ages. Pictured is Tiffany
Hoffman (left), who is the
program's director,
Nida Kearns, a loca l resident who takes advantage
of the workout room at
the center.

WEATIIER

and

Beth Sareont/ photos

INDEX

.

~

Please see Salisbury, A5

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

a

Dea.r Abby

Obituaries
Sports

Weather

REED

prescription
medication s
REEDSVILLE- The Ohio Department of
from Patterson. Immediately
following the purchase, Chief Transportation has retained three engineering
. POMEROY - Undercover . of Police Mark Proffitt , Lt . firms to assess damage to Ohio 124 and 144
drug stings that are common Alan Queen and Pomeroy in Athens County, caused by a season of
on television cop shows are Assistant Chief Joe Kirby. Jr. heavy flooding and the loss of the navigation
now becoming
reality in entered the resi dence and pool upriver from Belleville Locks and Dam.
While damage to public roadways and pri Pomeroy as part of an aggres- Patterson was arrested.
sive new campaign by the
Proffitt said hi s officers vate property essentially has been limited to
Pomeroy Police Department to were given tips that Patterson Athens County areas, the road closures which
rid the village of illegal drugs. was selling his own prescrip- have resulted have created traffic detours for
At 12:30 p.m. on Jan. 27 at tion medicalions out of his motorists traveling to the Belpre, Marietta
the residence of Stephen E. residence, which precipitated and Parkersburg, W.Va. area from the
Reedsvi lle area. Those commuters are now
Patterson on Spring Avenue, the sting operation.
Yesterday in Meigs County using Ohio 681 and Ohio 7 as a detour.
an undercover informaDI
ODOT spokeswoman Stephanie Filson said
working for the Pomeroy
the engineers will detennine the extent of
PINH He Pollee. AS
police department purchased
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Calen-dars

g&lt;?

diets as per their doctor' s request or
simply to lose weight.
'' You never go on a diet."
Hoffman sai d. ''You · change
your diet." .
Meigs County Senior Center
Wellness Director Joy Bentley said
Hoffman's new servic.e is meant to
q)mplement the we llnes~ program,
which includes a wq~kout room
where residents age 40 and up are
taking advantage of a variety of
exerc.ise equipment .
" Diet and · exercise go hand in
hand. Exerc.i5e alone will not do
it," Bentley sai d.
"Nutrition is the medicine of the
future ," Meigs County Senior
Cenler Director Beth Shaver added.
Shaver said she believes the residents of Meigs County would ben·
efit from the · new nutrition pr!)c
gram because of the area's high
incidence of diabetes, coronary
disease and cancer.
There is a private-pay fee for
Hoffman 's services. For members of
the Meigs Council on Aging. the fet;
is $25. For non-members, it is $30.
The price includes individual
diet analysis.and recommendation.s
over a three-session _period; ·one
session is equivalent to one hour.
·Group sessions of two or more will
receive discounted rates. Classes
will be available upon request.
Appointments will be scheduled at
a client's convenience. Call 992268 1 ext. 233 or 992-2 161 for .
more information or to sc hedule an
appointment.

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

''

B2

B Section
A6

© 0005 Ohio Valley PubllshlPJ! Co.

U.S. Anny Corps of Engineers in determining
how the roads can be repaired most effectively and re-opened.
· "We're trying to balance the safety of !be
traveling public, the needs of residents in the
area, and cost effectiveness of 'the repairs.
along with the time it wi II take lo remedy the
problem," Filson said.
·"We must work closely with the Corps of
Engineers because river routes are involved,"
Filson said. "While we're dealing with the
roads along the river, the Corps is dealing
with the river itself." .
Approximately one week after barges sank
in high water at Belleville and blocked the

PluH ._ ODOT, AS

Annual Heart Fair

FARM • HOME • BUSINESS
LIFE • BONDS • MOBILE HOMES • HOSPITAUZAnON

.
'

·192·3381

POMEROY - .The well ness
program at the Meigs County
Senior Center has added a new
nutrition education program to
assist adults of all ages in ,adjusting
their diets, which may result in a
healthier lifesty le.
Tiffany Hoffman , a registered
dietetic technician, will be in
charge of the diet analysis and
nutrition education program.
"My objective is to educate
clients so they' ll ~ake good decisions, which will help them meet
their goals," Hoffman said. "I do
not want to just tell people what to
ear and what not to eat."
Clie01s who may benefit from
Hoffman 's services are those wilh
hi gh blood pressure, high cholesterol, the overweig ht, parents of
hyperactive children. those n.eeding increased fiber. diabetics and
those who have been in structed
by their doctor to modify their
di et in any way.
For example, doctors often recommend to patients that they go on
low cholesterol diets, give them
some infonnation and hope they
·follow their instructions. Confusing
.food label s, old eating habits and
food temptation s can make it difficult for a person to make healthy
.choices or find alternatives
for their
.
.
cravings. This is where Hoffman
steps into the picture to empower
eli ems to · make changes in their

BY BRIAN

Places to

118 EIITRCIII n • PIIIE•t•

.

Pomeroy Police go undercover ODOT begins damage assessment from bank failures
. damage to the two highways, and ODOT will
J.
to rid village of drugs
use the results of their study to work with the

Details on Paee A6

a SECTIONS- ta PAGES

I !II H 1/ I tl \II\ l; H l .\ 1\ F \\I-'S :

'

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM

Editorials .1

I I II ' I' \ &lt; , I I' 1\ t 'I /l I )

break room for the employees, and a
reception area.
·
There will be private offi ces for the
superimendem, ass istant superintendeD!, treasurer, technology coordi nator and nutri tion director, as well as
offices for admin istrati ve assistants
and clerical personnel. The building
will be handicapped accessible .
According to the arc hitects, the
work can be completed in 20 weeks

Don't go on a diet,
change your diet

~

liilllwu!CONSJN The Badgeis used a
..,.....
team effort to beat
Northwestern 73-58 last Wednesday.
Sophomore guard IC•mmron Taylor led
five Wisconsin players in double figures
with 18 points. Mike W!Udnsoa and
Clayton Iianso11 had 11 points apiece
while Shulf ChliiJiblilo scored I o.
Redshirt freshman Brian Butch scored a
career-high 12 points off the bench.

l n~t ·l,tn ll

'

-.mDUE

Gene Keady's farewell
tour took a day off
•.
Wednesday in the Boilerm.akers' 75-65 loss •
to Ohio State. Keady missed the game
·
with the l\u, and assistant coach Matt
PliDter took over. It was the first time
that Keady missed a game in his 830
games as a college head coach over 27
years at Pl!rdue and Western Kentucky.

11 1\ il , lih ... ,ll

'

HIGAN ST

mustration by Bruce

\\\ \ \ \

SPORTS

-...u::-HIGAN

81013iif+ . . .ft '

IIIII~SI•\\ . IIBRI

I '!. '
'

$

Michigan State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . +7.1

1

spOnsored by the HMC Wei/ness and Marketing Departments and the Holzer CCiJrdiovascular Institute

PLEASANT

Monday, February 14, 2005 • 9 AM· 3:30PM • HMC Education &amp; Conference Center

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.
--- - - - - - -- -----'-----.L-- - - ----1
r

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