<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="4993" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/4993?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-07T08:16:06+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="14921">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/36079b411466cce6feece16b855d98a6.pdf</src>
      <authentication>c2c593da0b2144ed9de32736193a2fb9</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="17082">
                  <text>Pope undel"goes
successful tracheotomy
·after being rushed
to hospital, A2
.

Look inside today's
edition for 2005 Bridal
special section
. Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel
·~

artoo ,.

.....

-

~ ea

www:mydailysentlnel.com .

Thursday, February 24, 2005

\

\...

.quarters return s to f\rlel Saturday
'

By lan McNemar
IMCNEMAR@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - For the second year in a row,
Cartoon Headquarters will be performing at the
Ariel Theatre this Saturday.
The show is made up of 25 cast members
dressed as different cartoon characterS
and will bring a fun, interactive and
energetic experience for kids of all ages.
The shows are at 2 and 6 p.m. and will
be jam packed full of every child's favorite
cartoon characters. . Shrek, Spiderman,
Batman and Robin,. Cinderella, Care Bears,
Sully and Mike, Winnie the .Pooh and Tigger, the
Incredible Hulk, Scooby Doo and friends and many
more.
"It's a wonderful · show for the whole family," said
Christine Coger, administrative assistant at the Ariel. "It's
fun, raw energy. There is never a dull moment."
The company hails from Clarksburg, W.Va., and has done shows all over
the tri-state area.
The show was a big success last year at the theatre. Nearly all
seats were sold out for both shows and they are close to surpassing
that mark this week.
The show child and family oriented.
Tickets are $10. Tickets are becoming limited and they
are close to selling out, according to the Ariel• .
.For tickets and more information,
contact the Ariel Theatre
box /.
,
o
office at (740) 446-2787.
·
. .
I

Dwight Icenhower
returns to Down Under
GALLIPOLIS
On
Friday
and
S&lt;!turday
evenings, March 4 . and 5,
Dwight Icenhower, the well·
known and popular Elvis
impersonator, wiII return to
the Down Under, performing ·
two dinner shows on Friday
evening, and again, two din·
ner shows on Saturday
evening.
The first each evening
wifl be seating at 6 p.m.,
with rhe second seating at
8:30 p.m. The re~ taurant is
now accepting reservations
·
for both evenings.
Friday evening 's dinner
performances will · feature
music ofthe 1950s and '60s,
while
Saturday's dinner
shows will be Los Y~gas
show music.
When Icenhower appeared
at the Down Under in
January, his 'dinner shows
were total sell-outs. As
David Rice, manager, and
Dwight Icenhower .
Jeff Nelson, bar manager,
point out, early reservations he appears.
will guarantee seating. The
"We are really pleased to
restaurant is now accepting have Dwight make a return
reservations · for either or appearance .by
p,opular
both nights featuring these demand at the Down Under,
unique dinner shows.
presenting two totally differIcenhower is not only a ent shows, Friday and
re~ional favorite as an enter- Saturday night," Rice said .
tamer. He has achieved "A fast sell-out is expected.
national
recogmuon. A We urge people to make
native of Pomeroy, he began their reservations immediate·
his "Elvis career" when he ly for either or both nights,
was only 16. He is one of . to enjoy this great entertainer
very few Elvis tribute a.I;lists during a dinner show."
who has made a full-time . Reservations are available
career keeping the Elvis leg- by calling (740) 446-2345,
end alive.
between 5 and 10 p.m .
He is known for his amaz, · Tuesday .through Saturday
ing voice and good looks, evenings, when the Down
sometimes being mistaken · Under Restaurant is open.
for Elvis himself. Traveling Combining an outstanding
aJI over rhe country, he often dinner with great entertainperforms four to five shows ment is the ·perfect way to
· weekly. He attracts ·fans from spend a Friday or Saturday
rhroughout the area wherever evening.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio .

GALLIPOLIS
The
French Art Colony, 530 First
Ave. , Gallipolis, presents its
2005 fund-raising campaign,
"Everything's A Game," to be
held Saturday, Marth 5 from
6:30 to 9:30p.m.
This fun-filled night will
include scrumptious food,
along silent auction and raffle
items. The evening has been
made possible, in part, by a
donation
from
Century
Aluminum of Ravenswood.
Tickets should be purchased in
advance. Call the FAC at 4463834 for ticket information.

A sneak preview at some of of Rio Grande's Lyne Center;
the silent auction items up for a "Pizza Fest" packa~e
bid are as follows: Two Ohio (Lorobi's,
Jimanetti s,
State football tickets (Jan Domino's, Giovanni''s, Pizza
Thaler): an ·office chair and Plus and Pizza Hut); "Chinese
blanket both done in Gallia dinner for 8" prepared by Nian
Academy
l3lue
Devils Hong Yang an outstanding
(Graham's.Upholstery); wash- Chinese chef: "Bowling/Pizza
ing, wax and cleaning of rhe party for 10" (Skyline Lanes);
inside of a car/van (Gene week get-a-way to Emerald
Johnson Chevrolet); a 16-foot Isle, N.C. (Kay Cameron) and
flagpole and flag (Thomas Do· more.
It Center); a signature spa 1 Besides the numerous silent
facial (Mane Designers) ; auction items up for bid you
hand-painted vase (Bonnie can also try your chance to win
Penix); two one-year family ·numerous raffle items. Many
memberships to the University more silent auction/raffle

items are being confirmed.
The French Art Colony, a
non-profit organization, has
several fund-raisers during the
·year to help support the facility. A special thank you is
offered to all businesses and
individuals who have donated
items to make this event possible.
Tickets for this fun-filled
night are $25 a couple and $14
a person. Please ca11446-3834
for more information. All FAC
programming is offered
through sul'port of the Ohio
Arts CounciL

UWGC's 'Hot Time' b~nefit slated for this Saturday
STAR' REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - United
Way of Gallia County has set
the date for the annual "Hot
Time in the Old Town" dinner
benefit for Saturday, Feb. 26,
from 6 to 9 p.m. The
Gallipolis Holiday Inn will
host the event.
Th,e benefit will ' feature
entertainment by the Freeman
bal)d, a roast beef and chicken
dinner buffet, celebrity waiters
and many prize opportunities.
All auction and raflle items
were donated by local busi'nesses,
including
a
YCR/DVD combo from WalMart. All items will be displayed with an identifying
card in gratitude to the
donors.
'
Last year's Hot Time was a
success, raising money for the
United · Way agencies ·while
United Way members and
Jlffiliates enjoyed fun and fellowship. The II agencies that
provide UWGC funded ser-

vices include: American Red
Cross of Gallia County,
Arthritis Foundation-Ohio
River Valley Chapter, Boy
Scouts of America, Tri-State
Area
Council,
Family
Addiction
Community
Treatment and Prevention
Services (FACTS), Gallia
County Council on Aging,
Galli a-Meigs
Community
Action Agency, Girl Sd:JUts,
Seal of Ohio Council . Inc.,
Holzer Hospice, the Outreach
Center: Serenity House and
Woodland Centers. ·
The United Way of Gallia
County members . and affili·
ates w!'luld like to encourage
the community to step out for
. an evening o( celebr.ation
while supporting local humaf1
service agencies. Seating is
limited, so reservations are
requested. Tickets are on sale
now for $25.
Reservations may be made
by calling 446-2442, and
Submitted photo
reservations left via voice- Retired United Wa~ of Gallla County Executive Director Jean
mail will be accepted until all Houck, left, dances with Jay Tatum , current campaign chairman,
at the 2004 "Hot Time in the Old Town " fund-raiser for UWGC.
seats are claimed.

\\\\\\ . nf\d,llh ..,•· utuwl••&gt;~• •

Davenport 'hopeful' about Meigs AEP project

SPORTS

'

• Eastern looks to tame
.Bobcats. See Page 81

. .

'

J.

dent electric transmission provider, to
evaluate transmission interconnection
feasibility for three potential sites: the
POMEROY - Meigs County Great Bend site, a site adjacent to
Commissioner Mick Davenport said AEP's Moul)taineer Plant. in New
he is "hopeful " about the chances of a Haven , W.Va., and an Ohio River si te
new power plant coming to Meigs in Lewis County, Ky.
.
County after attending a meeting in
Davenport attended a meeting in
Columbus last week.
· · Columbus last Friday to . discuss the
At Thursday 's regular meeting of ·environmental concerns associated
Mei gs County Commissioners, with each of three sites AEP is now
Davenpon said he remains optimistic · giving serious consideration . AEP
that American Electric Power will engineers and the U.S. Army Corps
choose a site along the Ohio River at ·. of Engineers, Ohio Department of
Great Bend near the Lebanon/Letart · Natural ~e sources , Ohio Department
Township line for the new clean-coal of Tran sportation , Environmental
plant. Earlier this month, AEP Protection Agency and Ohio
announced it has asked an indepen- Historical Society participated in the
Bv BRIAN

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

meeting to discuss what permits will Belleville and Racine .
be necessary and how the environOnce . operational, the. facility
ment might be impact~d by the con- wot)ld employ approximately I00 .
struction of the plant.
· people, and would be an economic
The
Corps
of
Engineers , boon to the county, especially the
Davenport said, would oversee the Southern and Eastern Local School
issuance of all permits relating to the . Di stricts. It would provide "thouconstruction.
sands' ' of jobs during its construction ,
·'The meeting went very well , and AEP has said .
it appears that the Great Bend si te. is , The three sites named are consid·
a good one in terms of environmen· ered front runners because they are
tal impact," Davenport sa id . "We're already owned by AEP, and because
still hopeful. "
of their acreage, contour and wate.r
According to Davenport,, the Ohio proximity. The proposed plant is a
River sediment . pool at Great Bend .co mmercial -size ·
Integrated
makes the Mei gs County site particu- Gasification
Combined
Cycle
larly good for the project, because it (IGCC) clean-coal plant, and would
is located between two dams be the first of its size in the U.S.

Community manual .will help people help themselves

3664th
members
•
coming
home
'

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

0BmJARIES
Page AS
• Wayne 0. Roush, 83

'EVERYTHING'S A GAME' FUND-RAISER SET FOR FAC

11(11)\\ , IIBI{l ' \I{,~.J .:!. UO.)

.•o(I'\IS•\ol ·.1 \.o . l't;t

INSIDE"
• Yeager assists in New
Horizons operation. See
Page .A3
' AE P discusses futur-e
investment at Mountaineer.
See Page AS
• Meigs Area Holiness
Association to hold indoor
camp meeting. See
Page· A6
• Mason Police
Department receives two
new police officers. See
· Page AS

WEATHER

POMEROY - Local agencies are joining forces to create a data base of information
that .will link the people of
Meigs County with the proper resources.
This information is being
collected into a manual called
the
Meigs
County
Community
Resource
Manual. The guide will be
used by professionals to refer
clients to proper agencies,
including health-care facilities
in and around Meigs County.
The guide does not limit
itself to focusing on healthcare but also acts as a reference guide for those searching fo{ aging , children's, edu. cation, government, financial
and volunteer services.
The committee that is
assembling the guide come
from a variety of different
fields. They are Billie Bently,'
Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce; Andy Brumfield,
County
Health
Meigs
Department (MCHD) cardiovascular grant coordinator;
Sharon Bushong, Family and
Children First coordinator;
Connie Little, MCHD Child
and Family Health Services
project director; Tom Reed,

Bv BRIAN

· Details on Page A8

J.

2 SECTIONS- 16 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
·Dear Abby
Editorials
Faith•Values
Movies
NASCAR
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A3
Bs-6
B7
A3

A4'
A6-7

As
B4

As
B Section
A8

© auos Ohio Valley Publishing,Cu.

.

BY KEVIN KEU.Y
KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

POINT PLEASANT - It's
official: Members of the
3664th
· Maintnen;~ce
Company of the West Virginia
Army National Guard, based
in Mason and Putnam coup- ·
ties, are returning home on
Monday following a year's
deployment to Iraq .'.
Maj. Michael Cadle, public information officer for
the . National Guard's headquarters in Charleston, confirmed that about 150 memBeth 5ergemjphoto
A grou·p of professionals from various agencies. have combined forces to compile the Meigs bers of the company are
scheduled to return .
County
. Community Resource Manual which will be available on the Internet in the hopes' of linkThat 's. the entire unit, he
ing people with the Correct resources . Pictured are members of the manual work group going
over the data they have collected, Sharon Bushong, Norma Torres. Andy Brumfield and Connie added.
Little. Not pictured are Billie Bentley, Lenora Leifheit.
· They will arrive in
Charleston around II :45 a.m.
Gallia-Meigs Community of collecting and editing data group that the Meigs County Monday and will be treated
Action
· director: Norma'
which will then be transferred Economic Development and to a homecoming celebration
\
Torres, previous Meigs into manuals for professional · Tourism board will offer Web at the !30th Airlift Wing at
County health commissioner; agencies as well as onto the space on the Meigs County Yeager Airport, Cadle said.
and Lenora Leifheit, Meigs Meigs County Supersite web- Supersite free of charge for
The troops have been at
County Pari sh nurse.
site for all to access.
'Please see J664th, AS
Please see Manual, A5
Bentley reported to the
The group is in the process

Convicted car thief
sentenced to 18 months

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

INDEX ·

.

BY BRIAN J. REED ·
BREEIJ@MYDAilYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY -Individuals
and community groups have
donated $1,734 toward the
completion of renovations at
the Meigs County Jail, and ·
County Commissioner Jim
Sheets said he is confident
the state will allow the facility to be re-opened once renovations are completed.
At Thursday's regular meet·
ing of Meigs County
Commissioners, the Racine
B~an J. Reed/ photo
Area C'Ommunity Organization Betty Sayre and Elizabeth Rsher, representing Racine Area
donated $500 to the project and Community Organization·. and Victor Young Ill pr~sent Sheriff
Victor Young lll donated $100. Robert Beegle and County Commissioners Jim Sheets and
Mick Davenport with donations toward the renovation of the
Meigs
County Jail.
Please see Donations. A5

POMEROY
-A
Chillicothe man was sentenced Wedne~day ,to I 8
months in prison for grand
theft auto. a week af~r a .iury
convicted him.
A Common Pleas Court jury
convicted Lawrence Legg, 21.
of grand theft auto on Feb. 15.
and acquitted him on charges
of breaking and entering and
vandalism in connection with
the Nov. 7 attempted theft of a
Ford Explorer owned by
Wesley Karr.

Legg and a co-defendant.
Craig Karr. were charged in
November indictments in connection with the incident. A
burglary charge against Legg
was dismissed prior to trial.
Judge Fred W. Crow Ul sentenced Legg to 18 months in
prison on the charge. 'and Legg
also is subject to potential
charges resulting from a probation violation in Ross County.
Legg 's cousin, Craig Karr,
21. also of Chillicothe,
entered a plea agreement just
prior to Legg's trial, admit-

Please see ConYided. A5

'
0

'

t

I

.Otleoa Syauo•s .

,24CIIO Eutlm AvL ·
1/4 Mile Nortta
,cro... hom IC'? 51) Pomeroy/MuOn Bridge

GIIHpollt, Ohio 11lt1

M,ton, WV 21280

(740) 448-1)'11

Phone (304) 773-5323

ability to justautly and
automatlealiy ahatyze aud
adjust the SC)UDd Is made
possible by state-of-the-art
application or microchip
proceSsing.
·

DILES HEARING CENTER

Two Corritn!tnt ' osetfrew:

Diane McVey GALLIPOLIS
M.A., CCC·A
(hnaer lr Aud~l'

43S•!J second Avenue
( AcrtJ!o~ rrom Pu~1 Of'li.;:c)

. Open Moo. 1 Thur~ . 1D O-:"ipm

(740) 446-7619
u

.232AmoN
Huron Street
t M{'(i raw Phyq ct J ThCrlltJY Bldg. I

Open Tucli .. Wed .. Thu ~ .

R ·.m.~rm

(740) 286-1430

•

ATHENS
275 Wtst Union Street
Open -Mun. - Fri. 8:30-5pm
Saturda y h)' Appnintmc nt

(740) 594-3571

aina~laa

.

'

•

WORLD LMDa iN HIIJtiiiG I ICS ffOi.OGY
MIIIODUCIIWOI'I M HalT

INTELLIGENT HEARING AID

The goal was to create an instrument that processes sound the way the human
-brain does. We call it Artificial Intelligence . it selectively responds to voice levels
and background noises; amplifying, suppressing and actually managing sound for
better
and
comfort.
'l

- ------..

,,
-

-·---

•
--~-----------

�PageA2.

'N ATION. WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 25, 2005

Community Calendar

Pope undergoes successful tracheotomy to help him breathe after being rushed to hospital
BY VICTOR L. SIMPSON

a.m. in an ambulance, was to from an illness that kept him in
spend the night in his hospital the hospital fqr 10 days earlier
this month. On Wednesday, he
room . Navarro-Vall s said.
But the tracheotomy may gave a 30-minute audience by
require a longer hospital stay· video hookup, reading a stateand have serious . conse- ment in six languages before
quences for the pope' s abilities wavi ng anct' giving his blessing ·
to carry out his duties since he at the. end·.
will not be able. to speak, at
With each successive
least in itiall y. whi le the breath- 'appearance, he seemed a little
ing tube is in his throat.
stronger. a little more alert,
Medical experts said the. and his voice rang out · with
respirator \vas a serious devel- greater clarity.
opment. ''The' fact that he is
That made Thursday's rever~
on a respirator is not good. sal all the more shocking for
The fact that he was read mit- · the faithful from Nigeria to the
ted so quickly i.s not good . All Philippines to St. Peter's
this suggests there's a· serious Square, and raised more doubts
problem," said Dr. Michael · about his ability to carry on.
Kaplitt, a Parkinson's disease
"We have prayed for the
expert at· New
York · P.Ope to live as long as possiPresbyterian Hospitai/Weill ble sn we can still share our
joy with him ," said Zofia
Cornell Medical Ce nter.
Before the tracheotomy, · Gebala, a·73-year-old retiree.
outs i&lt;)e medical experts had as she left a church in
said John Paul may have Wadowice, the pope's birthpneumonia.
However, . place in southern Pol and. "We
Navarro- Valls'
statement are' praying for him every day.
made no reference to pl)eumo- for his well-being. But it's all
ni a, ~ayi n g the pope suffered a in God 's hands now."
narrowing of his larynx.
Vanessa Animo B9no, 32, a
President .Bush, !lying Catholic being treated at
home from a European trip, Gemelli , expressed fear
sa id in a .statement:' ''On because of .the pope' s recent
behalf of all Americans, treatment. "He is one of the
Laura and I send our heartfelt few popes who i's actually
best wishes to Pope John Paul · able to listen to people."
II. The Holy Father is in our
Papal officials played down
thoughts and prayers and we the seriousness of the hospiwish him a speedy recovery talization, saying a patient of
and return to the service of hi s the pope's age . is always at
church and of all humanity.". risk from the tlu. Vatican aides
In recent days, the pope said the pope had a fever and
appeared to .be recuj:Jerating congestion in addiiion ·to the

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

VATICAN CITY - Pope
John Paulll underwent a success(ul operation Thursday
night to insert a tube in .his
throat to re lieve his breathing
problenis. hours after he was
rushed hack to the hospi tal
for the second time in a
month with flu- like ·sy mptoms of fever and congestion.
the Vatican said .
The pontiff was conscious in
his hospital room after the tracheotomy. breathing with· the
help of a respirator, the Italian
news agency ANSA reported.
A top aide to Italian Prime
Minister Silvio Berlusconi ·
who visi ted the pope
Thursday said John Paul was
"serene" after waking up
from the anest-hesia. The pope
raised his hand and attempted
to speak with doctors but was
told · not to try, . Cabinet
Undersecretary Gianni Letta
· told reporters at Gemelli
· Polyclinic Hospital in Rome.
Vatican spokesman Joaquin
Navarro-Valls said the tracheotom y lasted 30 minutes
and that the outcome Was
"positive.'' The pope had
approved the procedure.
which the Vatican characterized as elective - underscor.ing that it ~as not done as ali
emergency measure.
The frail. 84-year-old pontiff. who was .taken to · the
hospital shortly before II
.

'

'

.

.

.

.

Public meetings

ASSOC IATED PRESS WRIT ER

WASHINGTON
They're mainly yo ung. single
and ' urban . They move frequently. usually rent ing ratller
than owning their homes.
Pollsters cal l them ·'ce ll
phone only" because they
dori't own traditional phones.
As this' hard-to-track population grows. so does the
problem of acc urately ·incorporating them into polling
and scientific surveys that
seek to measure everything
from heal th and busi ness
practices to political attitudes.
F9r now, the problem is most
pressing in areas of research
where the attitudes of young
adults are sought, like surveys
of radio listener preferences.
Paul Lavrakas. a public opinion researc her at Nielsen Media
Research; organized a meeting
in New York City this month
where pollsters and others
involved . in survey research

discussed ways to address the
cell-phone-only issue. One
major aim is to learn how to
deal with this population before
the next presidential election.
"What the industry doesn't
know how to do is how to
stati stically balance thos·e
reach~d by cell phones with
those reached on land lines,"
said Lavrakas.
The cell-phone-only population is growing fast. In 200 I,
it comprised about a half-per;
cent of the population. Now
it's estimated at 7. percent.
Among people age 15 to 24,
almost one in fi ye have only
cell phones, according to
Clyde Tucker, researcher ':i.t
the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The industry has to deal
with the cell phone issue
while it's still. manageable or
it will be doing \hat research
work when cell phones have
become a problem for surveys- "and that's nol a good
practice," said Mike Brick, a
stati stician at Westat, which

a

handles scientific surveys for
the federal government.
The cell-phone-only issue
is just the latest challenge
facing survey · re searchers.
People have shown less willingness to talk to survey
researchers, especially on the
phone. Many poll s are conducted on the telephone, the
fastest and most eft1cient way
to do a survey. But some surveys are do.ne face to face.
· Raj Naik, a 26-year-old
· employee of a software com. pany who lives · in Rosslyn,
Va. , is a good example of the
"cell phone only" crowd.
He got rid of the traditional
phone because ·most of the
calls he received "were calls I
didn't wantto take." Naik said
he wouldn't mind getting calls
from survey researchers "if
those calls aren't costing. me
anything, but as soon as someone calls me oil my cell phone,
it's costing me something."
That's part of the problem
for . poll sters: Cell ~hone

4:30 to 6:30 p.m. at the
Middleport Church of Christ,
Fifth and Main.
Saturday, Feb. 26 ·
Thesday, ~arch I
PORTLAND ~ Lebonan
POMEROY
- Evening
Township Trustees will
meet at 7:30 p.m at the clinic hours, 4 to 7 p.m.,
Meigs
County
Hea lth
· town ship building . ·
Department.
Offering
child:
~onday,Feb.2~
RUTLAND - The regular hood and ad ult immun izaboard meeting for Leading tion s, blood. pressure and
Creek Conservancy Di strict blood sugar as sessments,
WIC office hours, pre-natal
has been changed to 5 p.m.
services
, head lice screenings
POMEROY - Veterans
and
eradication
education •
.·Service Commission will
: meet at 9 a.m. at the office, environmental he alth, vital
statistics and general health
: 117 Memorial Drive.
information available.
. Thesday, ~arch 1
ALFRED
Orange
Township Trustees, 7:30p.m.
at the home of Osie Follrod.
Wednesday, ~arch 2
Saturday, Feb. 26
: PAGEV!LLE - Scipio
POMEROY- Mamie M.
: Township Trustees will meet Stephenson will observe her
: at 6:30 p.m. at Pageville 82nd birthday on · Feb. 26.
: town hall .
Cards may be sent to her at
39520
Union
Ave. ,
'Pomeroy, 45769.
Thursday, ~arch 3
Friday, Feb. 25
SHADE - Katie Biron
MIDDLEPORT - A free will be 90 on March 3. She is
dinner will be served from now res iding with her

.Birthdays

AP photo

This photo made available by the Vatican newspaper Osservatore Romano shows a general
view of the Clementine Hall at the Vatican Thursday during a ceremony attended by Bishops and
Cardinals (in .red) and presided by the Vatican Secretary of State, Card. Angelo Sodano (at .left
standing), to discuss the new candidates for sainthood. Pope John Paul II failed to show up for
the scheduled meeting following his hospitalization after suffering a relapse of the flu, the
Vatican announced Thursday.
breathing problems.
ANSA reported the pope
was conscious when he
arrived at Gemelli and that he
was sitting upri ght in a
stret.cher. According to the
report, people who saw him
enter the hospital said hi s
face looked "quite relaxed."
Before the operation, the
pope was well enough to joke
with his medical team, Lena
said. When .doctors told the
pope that the operation would~
.

be a small one; the pontiff secretary 'Of state, CardinaL
retorted : '.'Small , it depends Angelo Sodano.
. But outside experts said peofor whom," he said. citing
ple don't get a relapse of
doctors' accounts.
Earlier Thursday, Vatican influenza itself. Instead, tlu can
officials had said the pope lead to a bacterial infection
suffered from a "sy ndrome of .such as pneumonia or bronchitis, which is an .inflammation
intluenza."
Chile's ambassador to the of the tubes that carry air into
Holy See, Maximo Pacheco, the lungs, or to congestive
told . The Associated Press heart failure , a treatable condithat the pope suffered a "bad tion in which the heart is
relapse," citing a conversa- unable to pump enough blood
tion he had with the Vatican' s to meet the body 's needs.

.

Cell-phone:...only crowd a problem for pollsters, researchers .
BY WILL LESTER

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

users don't expect to get survey call s. When they do .
many are uncooperative.
"People say, 'Do.you know
you're calling me on ·my cell .
phone?'" said Charlotte
Steeh, ·a Georgia State
researcher who has done
experimental cell phone surveys. "Some people mentioned the privacy issue, saying, 'How did you get my
number? 1 only give it out to
family and friends.' Some
just hang up immediately."

Other events

daughter and son-in- law,
Don and .Jane Frymyer, and
cards may be sent to her
there, 42199 Gilkey Ridge,
Shade, Ohio 45776.

Clubs and
organizations
· Friday, Feb. 25
CHESTER
-Chester
baseball signup 6 to 8 p.m. at
the
Chester . firehouse .
Business meeting at 7 p.m.
Saturday, Feb. 26
RACIN E - The Racine
· Youth League will hold its
organizati onal mee ting at
noon
at
Southern
. Elementary School , Room
101. Coaches and helpers
encouraged to . attend. 'For
more information call Allen
Tucker, 2470-2103.
Thesday, ~arch 1
MID DEPORT
Middleport . Lodge
363
F&amp;AM business meeting,
7:30 p.m at the Masoni c
Temple .

Century signs for ·power service
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.
- Century . Aluminum of
West Virginia Inc. has signed
an
a~reemeilt
with
·Appalachian Power Co. for
electrical power service to its
Ravenswood plant.
· The agreement ·is effective
Jan . I, 2006, when CenturyWest Virginia's contract with
Ohio Power Co. expires. It
will have an initial term of
two years, but will continue
until Century-West Virginia
gives 12 months' notice of
: cancellation.
·
Appalachian Power and
· : Ohio Power are both sub. sidiaries of American Electric
Power. Century-West Virginia

DEAR ABBY: I . am 13
years old and I suffer from a
condit ion where the person
has a strong, persistent desire
to have one or more limbs
amputated. This happens
every day. and I don't understand it, but I want to have
. my leg amputated .
.
I have researched prosthet'
ics on the Interne t and have
found that life as an amputee
is not that different. But I'm
afraid if I tell my parents the y
will think I' m crazy. What
should I do ? Pl ea~e an swer
. thi s. li is ripping me apa rt. WANNAB E AMPUTEE IN
BERKELEY
.
. DEA R WANNABE : The
compulsion
you
have
described is. I don 't have to
tell you. an unusual one.
Pl ease lind the courage to tell
your parents what is on your
mind. You r parents may want
yo u to explore this issue with
a psychotherapist. Do not be
afraid to do so: it does not
mean you are "crazy.''
However. it would be
extremely helpful for you to
understand what is driving
this "need."
,
DEAR ABBY: In my line of
work I come in contact with a
lot of people . Occasionally,
my clients bring up the subject·
of ritce and make unacceptable comments.
I have two beautiful biracial children and I feel! need
to defend their honor and tell
these people I do not approve

'

Supplement to:.
.
Point Pleasant Register
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
·.The Daily Sentinel

.

Adel A. Ibrahim, M.D., F.R.C.S., F.A.C.S.
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital ,;elcornes Dr. ~brahim to ou~ medical staff.
Dr. Ibrahim comes to O'Bleness after 24 years in· private practice as a
gen eral and vascular surg~on in Huntington; West Virginia . He was an

Dr. Miller received his medi ca l degree from the Un iversity of C incinnati

.

.

•

DON'T MISS OUT ON THIS ....
•

• Hardware
• Paint ·
• Construction
• Banks

• Furniture
• Carpet

• Wallpaper
• Insurance

·· ·Appliances
• Electrical
• Plumbing
• And More ...

College of Medicine and completed his residency at Shands Hospital,
Ga inesville/Jackson ville,
Florida. P'rior to moving. to Athens, he practiced
'
orthopedic surgery at Garden Medical Clinic, Garden C ity, Kansas .
'

ligament reconstruction surgery; knee, hip and shoulder 'replacement
surgery; 'sports or work-related injuries; fracture s; as well as carpal t unnel
·and other nerve compression conditions.
Dr. Miller's practice, Mounta in View Bone and Joint C linic, is located in
Suite 230 of the Castrop Center. Call (740)566-4590 for more infonnation.

Dr. Ibrahim's practice is located in Suite 310 of the Castrop Center.
Call (740) 594-6100 for more information.

The Castrop Center is 'located at 75 Hospital Drive, Athens,
in the O'Bleness Medical Park.

The Castrop Center is located at 75 Hospital Drive, Athens,
in the O'Bleness Medical Park.

e

(740) 992-2155
(304) 675-1333

'

Dr. Miller's practice will include orthoped icsurgery; knee and shoulder

Dr. Ibrahim h as .eamed professional certifications in laparoscop ic ventral
hernia repair, sentinel n ode biopsy, stereotactic breast biopsy, advanced
trauma-life support and laboratory interpretation . Dr. Ibrahim's services
include genera l, vascular and endoscopic surgery, biopsy, upper a~d lower
gastrointestinal endoscopy, and vascular laboratory interpretation. ·

eat£ (740) 446-2342

.

M. Miller, M;D., Orthopedic Surgeon

O'Bleness Memorial Hosp ital welcomes Dr. Miller to our medical staff.

associate clinical professor at Marshall University School of Medicine for
21 years and is currently an associate professor at the O hio University
College of O steopathic Med icine.

e

'

• O'BLENESS
Memori.J Ho•piW

~o~~~o~:j
•

'•

'
---

I•

..

-··--·--

-----·

•

-

.....,._..,_,.~

"

,.
...". . . ...............- . . .....

.•
~--···

Dear
Abby .

with mothball s. and the odor
has saturated her house a·nd
everything in it .
Oth er peopl e have. been
offended by it ahu have made
commen~&gt; [() my sister and
me . We have tried to· tell.
Granny ·nicely. but ;he acts
like we're exaggerating and
shru gs it off. No one can stay
in her home for-lqhg periods .
At a recem fun gtion. people
commented about the "funny
odor.. in the next room . It was
Granny Claire ' What ca n we
do to help her'' - HOLDING MY NOS.E IN N.J . .
DEAR HOLDING : Your
problem is not as uncommon
as you mi ght think . As peop le
age their 'e nses du ll. and the
senses of ·hearin g. taste and
smell can be affected.
(Example: I rece ntl y heard
from a man who was worried
because hi s elderly mothe r
did n0t seem to noti ce when
food had spoiled in her
refrigerator.)
In yo ur grandmother' s
case, I recommend a family
interventi on that she can not
shrug off - and that her son.
your fa ther. accompany her
to an ear, nose and .throat speciali st for an evaluation.
Dear Abby is writte11 by
Abigail Van, Buren, also

of the comment$. However. I
have been informed by manageme nt . that I am not '
all owed to say anything to
the clients. I have spoken ro a
. fri end about thi s. She has also
had encounters like mine.
How cari I handle this
tastefully and still keep my
job? - OFFENDED IN
OBERLIN , OHIO
DEAR OFFENDED : A
picture is. worth a thousand
words. If there are no rules
against displayin g fam il y
photographs, bring a lovely
framed picture of your little
ones to work and di splay it
.on your desk. Should anyone
ask who the children are~
smile sweetly a'nd say,
"They' re mine." Unless the
person is deliberately trying
to be obnoxious, that should
put an end to the comments.
DEAR ABBY: My 75year-old paternal grandmoth- known as Jeanne Phillips, and
er. "Grann y Claire," smell s was founded by her mother,
like mothballs and she's Pauline Phillips. "'lite Dear
totally un aware of it. She Abby at www.DearAbby.com
stores her winter clothes in a or P.O. Box 69440, Los
basement storage area tilled ·Angeles, CA 90069.

Yeager assists in New Horizons operation

.· .

Steven

25, 2005

is a subsidiary of Century that the PSC had jurisdiction
Aluminum Co., .based in over the provision of service.
Monterey. Calif.
The
agreement
will
Power under the agree- become effective unle ss the
ment will be priced under an · PSC fails to. affirm its previAEP tariff and will be sub- ous finding s.
stantially similar to the price
"This is an excellent agreeCentury~ West ·virgini a is ment for the Ravenswood
now pay mg.
plant, for .its employees and
Appalachian Power has for the community at large,"
fil ed . a petiti on with the Century-West Virginia Vice
Public Service Commi ss ion President Ron Thompson said.
of West · Virginia seek in g
"We also welcome the
affirmation of its authori za- . · opportunity to work with West
tion to provide service to the Virginia-based Appalachian
Rave nswood plant. In an Power," he added. :•we have
COOLVILLE
-· Navy and U.S. Army Reserve . Amphibious assauit ~hips
order issued in 2000, the PSC had a great working relatione
found that the Ravenswood ship with Ohio Power, and we Se.aman Darrick A. Yeager, Military Police, in support of like USS . Saipan depl.oy
plant was within Appalachian expect to have the same with son of Patricia A.. and Kevin the .90 day exercise. New throughout the world to
Power 's service territory and Appalachian Power."
W. Yeager of Coolville. Horizons will support the maintain U.S. · pre sence and.
recently participated in New . re building of schools and provide rapid response .in
Horizons, a humanitaria n wells, and also provide med- times of crisis. They serve as
assistance exercise in Haiti. ical support to the victims of a hi ghly visible deterrent to
would-be aggressors. an·d are
while assigned to the Hurricane Jeanne.
cially in those types: and nications and telerecruitment. amphibious assault ship USS
El ements of the Saipan equipped with the most vercan call 446-5171 for an
Individuals at least 17 Saipan, homeported
in Expeditionary Strike Group satile and powerful weapQns
appointment.
years old, weighing at least Norfolk, Va.
·
will also conduct maritime avail able.
"Inventory levels of these I05 pounds and in generally
Yeager and his shipmates i'nterdiction operations trainYeager is a 2003 gniduate
·blood types are hoveril'g good health may be able to off-loaded I ,200 tons of con- itig and multi -national exer- of Heritage Christian School
. below or at .a one day's sup- donate blood. Normally, struction equipment and sup- cises with Marine s from of Little Hocking and joined
ply; while we try to maintain individuals can give blood
the Navy in February 2004.
at least a week's supply of .every 56 days. Individuals plies for U.S . Navy Seabees Honduras and'Columbia.
each blood type ," said with specific eligibility
Cheryl Gergely, -the Red question s should ·call (800)
Cross supervi sor of commu- 542-5663.

2005 HOME IMPROVEMENT EDITION:.
will be here Fridqy, March 25, 2005

Friday, February

Teenager's odd compulsion
demands parental attention

BLOODMOBILE AT ·HMC MONDAY
GALLIPOLIS
· An
· American Red Cross blood
drive has been set for
Monday from I' to 5 p.m . at
Holzer MedicaL Center to
. help boost inventories of
.· Type 0, A and B negative
: blood types which are cur; rently in short supply.
' Area residents are encouraged to donate blood, espe-

·PageA3

..

.

•

�PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 25, 2005
.,

Many concepts, ~ne .heaven

The Daily Sentinel

Given the alternatives ,
most of us would like to go
10 heaven when we die . But
we must first enter a couple
of caveats. While'we wahl to
go heaven . we want to make .
George
it clear &lt;we ·don't mean .right
Plagenz ··
: now. We like it here fine for
the time being. No hurry,
----·
Lord.
And ~orne of us are not
sure the conditions in heaven the doctrines of the church,
will be to our liking. An eter- although she did confess
nity of hymn-singing and whimsically on one occanon stop hugging isn't every- sion; when she was ill and
old, "I sometimes think the
body's idea of eternal bliss.
We understand Thomas resurrection of the body,
Huxley who, speaking of the unless much improved in
afterlife, said he would pre- construction, a mistake."
. fer "the upper reaches of he II
And in a cemetery in
where the temperature and England is a lovely epitaph
the company are not too try- over the grave of a man who
ing. " We recognize the heav- obviously regarded death
en types Huxley is talking and resurrection as normal
about from people we have · as sleeping and waking:
all met ·at Aunt Martha's "When thou cal! est me, Lord
Christ, I will arise, but first
church.
Some people, however, let me rest awhile, for I am
.
have no trouble with the idea very weary."
It
is
apparent
that,
for
this
of heaven. Not only do they
accept it literally, they also doughty pilgrim. heaven is
. not going .to be a ptace of
can't wait to get there.
The father of th.e late eternal rest. He'll rest now
Daniel Poling. longtime edi- but he expects to be up and
tor of the Christian Herald about in the next world.
Rev. Arthur , Ford, the
magazine, was one of these
rare human· beings. "The medium who is 'said to have
greatest day of my life, " he put Bishop James Pike in
once said, ~'wi ll be the day touch with his departed son.
told of talking with scientists
after they say I'm ~ead."
Evelyn Underhill, the in the next world who are
English mystic, was another. continuing to do research in
· She believed implicitly in all their new envirOnment.

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today .is Friday, Feb: 25. the 56th day of 2005. There are
309 days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
.
.
On Feb. 25, 1793, the department heads of the U.S. govern- .
. ment met with President Washington at his home for the first
Cabinet meeting on record.
·
On this date:
In 1570, Pope Pius V e'l.communicated England's Queen
Elizabeth L
.
In 1836, inventor Samuel Colt patented his revolver.
· In 1901, United States Steel Corp. was incorporated by J.P.
Morgan. .
·
·
In 1913, the 16th Amendment to the United States
Constitution, giving Congress the ·power to levy and collect ·
inc.ome taxes, was declared in effect.
· In 1943, during World War II, U.S .· troops reoccupied the
Kasserine Pass.
·
In 1948, Communists seized power in Czechoslovakia:
In 1964, Cassius Clay (later Muhammad Ali) became world
heavyweight boxing,championby defeating Sonny Liston in
· Miami B_each, Fla. .
·
·
In 1973, the Stephen Sondheim musical "A Little Night
Music" opened at Broadway's Shubert Theater.
In 1986, President Ferdinand E. .Marcos fled the. Philippines
· after 20 years of rule in the wake of a tainted election';
Corazon Aquino as.sumed the presidency. .
,,.
In 1991, during the Persian Gulf War, 28 Americans were
killed when an Iraqi Scud missile hit a U.S. barracks in ·
Dhilhran, Saudi Arabia.
·
Ten years ago: Former President Jimmy Carter wound up a
54-hour visit to Haiti, denying he'd been given·a chilly reception by Haitians whom he'd helped save from a potentially
bloody U.S.-led intervention. ·
Five years ago: A jury in Albary, N.Y.. acquitted four white
New York City police officers of all charges in the shooting
.
death of unarmed African immigrant Amadou Diallo.
· One year ago: The Supreme Court ruled states don't have to
underwrite the religious training of students planning careers
in the ministry. The Mel Gibson film "The Passion of the
Christ" opened in more than 3,000 u,s. theaters on Ash
Wednesday.
·.
.
· Today's Birthdays: Country -singer Ralph Stanley is 78.
Musician Tommy NewSOII) is 76. Actor Tom Courtenay is 68.
CBS newsman Bob Schieffer is 68. Actress Diane Baker is 67.
Talk show hosi Sally Jessy Raphael is 62. Actress Karen
Grassle is '61. Movie director Neil Jordan.is 55. Rock singermusician Mike Peters (The Alarm) is 46. Actress Veronica
Webb is 40. Actor Alexis Denisof is 39. Actress Tea Leoni is .
39. Actress Lesley Boone ("Ed") is 37. Actor Sean Astin is 34.
Latin singer Julio Iglesias Jr. is 32. R&amp;B singer Justin Jeffre
(98 Degrees) is 32. Rock musician Richard Liles is 32. Actor
Anson Mount.is 32. Actress Rashida Jones is 29. Actor Justin
Berfield ("Malcolm in the Middle") is 19. Actors James and
Oliver Phelps ("Harry Potter" movies) are 19.
·
· Thought for Today: ''If people behaved in _the way nations
do they would all be put in straitjackets." - Tennessee
. Williams, American playwright (1911-1983).

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publllihlng Co.

CorreCtion Polley

Pu~ished every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio: Second-&lt;:iaos postage
paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and the
Ohio Newspaper ASSOCiatiOn.
Pottmuter: 5end address correc1lons
to The Daity Sentinel, 111 Court Street,
f'Qm~roy. O!lio -45769.

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

Our main number Ia
(740) llii2-2158.
Department axtenalone era:

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Rapor!M: Beth Sl!fg8nt. Ext. 13

Subacrlptlon Rataa
By carrier or motor route
' One month . ..... .. .. .'10.27
One ye~~r .. . .........'123.24
Dally ..................110'
·

AdVertising
aut.kle Salee: Oave.Harris, Ext 15
aut.lde S.te.i Brenda Davis, Ext 16
C-JCtrc.: JUdy Clarl&lt;, Ext. 10

Senior Citizen · One month ............'8.70
One ye~~r .... ... ......'98.70
at&gt;oolbooalhoUd,...,.. in odvance &lt;~teet
10 lte Doitv Sontlnot. No oubacrtption by.

. mail permitted In areas where home
carrier aarvioa Ia avaHabkl.

Circulation
llletrlct Mgr.: Jason Patterson, Ext. 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12

M•ll $Ub11Crlptlon
lnelde Melga County
13 Weeks .. . : . . . . ... ..'32.26

26 Weeks . .. .. ... . .. . .'64.20
52 Weeks . .... ... . . : .'127.11

E...,.ll:
~
newsOmydailyaentlnel.com

-=

.

. www.mydaltysentinel.com

Outekle Melge Couniv
13 Weeks .. .. .... .. ... '53.55
26 Weeks , . .. .. .. .... '107.10
52 Weeks .. . . . . . . ... .'214 . ~1

. .

tion the human work that
had fallen short of its goaL ·
In
"Old
Picture s in
Florence," the failed artists
do not envy the painters who
have won fame on Earth:
"We are faulty -- why not?"·
they said. "We have time in
store. Things learned on
Earth we shall practice in
heaven.;!
·
· To Browning, Earth'~ spe. cia! glory lay in the struggle
and' the chas·e, '"the almost
but noi quite getting it and
the brave adventure of trying
· again to get it."
So when he asked himself,
"How should I · conceive
what a· heaven there may
be?" he answered, ".Let it but
· re&gt;emble Earth myself h,ave
known." .
·
I
Like Earth -- but with this
exception: "Nothing' has
been which .shall not bettered be hereafter."
While these conceptions
differ in their particulars ,
. they all succeed in picturing
the next world as a lively
place, full of vigorous and
varied activity and inte·nsely
interesting. They deal vividly and imaginatively with a
·universal experience that
awaits all of us. Hugs in
abundance, yes· -- but only
after a good day's. work.
· (Geo rge · P lagenz is an
ordained minister and veter·
an newsman based m
Coluinbus, Ohio.)

.·

Obituaries
Wayne 0. Roush

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www .mydailysentinel.com
.

.

AEP discusses future -investment at Mountaineer

and the flue gas desulfuriza- Agency 1 (EPA), which per- scrubber construction will
SJENKINS@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM
tion. (FGD) system, which mits 36.000 tons, or credits. begin in August 2005. The
RACINE - Wayne 0. Roush , 83, of Bashan Road, Racine,
red uces sulfur dioxide emis- of su lfur per • year. Th ose project is expected to be com'
went to be with the Lord on Wednesday, Feb. 2~ . 2005 at his
MASON ,
W.Va .
sions, are the systems that credits that are not used after pleted by Janu i1ry 2007 .
hQme following a length y illne ss.
Representatives
from were se lected to meet · poilu- one year may be sold on the
In other bu siness, Mason
'Born May 16, 1921 in Parkersburg, W.Va., he was' .the son Ameri can Electric Power .lion regulations . ·
marke t .or used internall y co un cil agreed to hire a cerof the late Lloyd and Hattie Geary Roush.
Mountaineer Plant in New . Sulfur dioxide is a gas that · within the system.
tified building inspector to
Wayne was a long time dairy farmer and prior to his retire- Haven addressed members of forms when the sulfur in coal · The FGD, also known as a in spec t the dil apidated and
ment was a member of the ·Farm Bureau, Meigs County Dai.ry Maso n Town Council at this is burned. From 1994 to "scrubber," also will · allow neglected properti es in the ·
Service officer and a member of the American Golden week's meeting · about the 2002, the AEP system tlexibil ity in obtaining fuel town. Interested individual s
Guernsey Association. He was active in his faith and was a plant's future -investments.
reduced sulfur dio~ide emis- and will increase the asset should contact Mayor Ray
long standing member of the Racine First Baptist Chu~ch.
The Mountain.eer Plant was sions
by
36 percent. value of the plant to the com- Cundiff at (304 ) 773c5892
Wayne was a De;~con in the church and taught Sunday approved Tuesday, Feb. 15, Mountaineer currently burn s pany and the cominunity.
or tlie town hall at (-304 )
School until his illness. Included in his activities was a term for a $507 million grant for low ,sulfur coal to meet reguScrubbers use mechanical 773-5201.
as trustee of the Veteran's Meniorial Ha,spital in Pomeroy and the installation of two sys' lations, and the price of low and chem ical · processes to
Counci l also di scussed the
an active member of Gideon's InternationaL Until his recent terns which will decrease sulfur' coal has increased .
remove up to 95 percent of 2006 town ce lebra.ti ori and
· resignation he was a -director of the Home National Bank in nitrogen oxide and su lfur
In · addition, the price for sulfur dioxide emissions.
find ing item s to . raffle a s .
Racine and Syracu se . He was an avid supporter of the local dio.xide emissions.
• sulfur dioxide credits ha s
Preliminary site preparation fund-rai sers for the event.
Kiddie Tractor Pull:
The selective catalytic increa sed. Sulfur dioxide began in 2004; and a . new
The nex t ril eeting of town
He is survived by his sisters-in-law and brothers-in-law, r.eduction · (SCR) system, credit is a market created by I ,000-foot stack will be con- counci l . will he 'VI onday .
Paul ~nd Eileen Beegle of Letart Falls and Mike and Mary which -re.duces'nitrogen oxide, the Environmental Protection structed in April 2005. The March 7.
Griley of Lancaster;. a niece, Melanie and her hu sband, Bruce
Hann of Athens , and several, grand nieces,. nephews and
cousins. A special friend and cousin, Tonja and her husband
Dr. Douglas Hunter and honorary grandchildren, Jacob,
.
.
Emma, Lucas, and Eli Hunter.
BY CARRIE SPENCER
the attorney general full access with the' power to limit the involved, the .state will need
Wayne was preceded in death by his beloved wife of 35
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
to the state computer database · office's access to following to ensure there are clear and
years, Claudia, 'who passed away Jan. 14, 2004 and his moththat tracks both pa(ients and stale dollars , spokyswoman consistent definition s of pverer and fath er, Lloyd and Hattie Roush. . .
· COLUMBUS
The
medical providers in Medicaid, Jen Detwiler said.
payments and fraudulent pay.
Funeral services will be 2 p.m. Sunday, Feb.. 27, 2005 at the state's· Medicaid agency has the state· federal insurance proThe agency does not oppose ments, said Tim Maglione,
bill ; · Allen
said. govern ment relations director
Racine First Baptist Church with Rev. Rick Rule and Rev. proposed sharing more tinan- gram for the poor and di sabled. the
Steve D~aver otl'iciaiing. Interment will follow in the Letart cial information with the state · Limited access for the auditor Meanwhile. Family Services for the Ohio State Medical
Falls Cemetery.
attorney general .and. auditor V.·ill be granted · after a legal has,. referred some payment Association. the trade group
· Friends may call. at the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine, to try to collect ll]illions of review, Allen said.
recipien'ts to both the auditor for 15,000 physicians.
· from 4 to 9 p.m. Saturday. The body will lie in state at the dollars in overpayments for
Federal patient privacy Jaw and attorney general for inveschurch one hour prior to the funeral service.
incorrect or fraudulent bills.
says state attorneys general tigation, Riley's plan said.
Department of Job . and liave the power of Medicaid
Casketpearers will be Br,uce Hann, Ray Smith, Doug
Riley
said
immediate
H\lnter, Jacob Hunter. Steve Shuler, Dave Hen sler, and Family Services Director oversight but doesn't mention improvement will come from
from _Page A1.
Barbara Riley submitted her auditors. That means the audi, moving the 30 workers
Cliff Ashley.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests memorial contribu- plan Thursday for fixing the tor can .see data stich as the responsible tor tracking down
tions to the Racine First Baptist Church Building Fund, process used to identify over-- number of patients a doctor the overpayments from the the finished manual.
payments to hospitals, nurs- sees for a condition but not an . Medicaid office to the depart- . Placing the man~al on the
Gideons International or Holzer Hospice.
ing homes ami doctors. Gov, individual patient record, ment's own auditing and frdud Internet simplifies any reviBob Taft ordered the plan last Allen said . That would be prevention office that oversees sions that need to be made.
Many of the unit's mem-' month following a report by enough to flag unusual trans- other programs such as unemAs for the hard copies, the
the
state
watchdog
that
criti• actions and pick a doctor or ployment and . food stamps. group reported that there is a
bers are from Maso~. Gall ia
and Mei gs counties. They cized the agency for failing to hospital for an audit.
The ·transfer is set for Apri I I. possibility of money from
fro'!' Page A1
Parts of Taft's budget pro- local government to reproTaft approves of Riie{ s
have been the subject of recover more overpayments.
prayers and devotions from
''We y.oil! be stronger in .our plan and will meet with posed to lawmakers al so help _duce the manuals though that
Fort Dix , NJ ., about a week · their families and friends, · attempt s to recover those Auditor · Betty Montgomery the. problem , the plan said. has not been con firmed.
·for'i:lemobilization, a process while local communities have overpayments than · the and Attorney General Jim Taft called for using a federal
The manual s will not conagency had been in the past," Petro as the state works on "a grant to update the 20-year- .sist solely of phqne numbers
that typically takes about five rallied behind the families.
highly coordinated and effec- old computer system for and contacts, but also will
The 3664th are among more spokesman Jon Allen said.
working day s, Cadle ~aid .
The inspector -general's . tive campaign" to stop fraud. Medicaid data, thus eliminat- . include a brief summary of
The 3664th, based at Point than 400 guard members
Pleasant and Eleanor, left for returning to West Virginia. report also referred .to a spokesman Mark Rickel said. ing paper claims and improv- what specific agencies offer.
A message seeking comment ing both accuracy and · effi ·
Iraq from Fort Dix in late Cadle said. about 175 mem- ''bunker mentality," saying
Along with agencies, . local
bers
of
the
First
Battalion,
the
·agency
rejects
outside
was
h!ft
with
Petro's
office
.
.
ciency
of
payments.
churches
are also listed and as
January 2Q04 for a deployThe siate also will seek of last count, the group had tab-: ·
Auditor Betty Montgomery
ment that was to last for up to 20 Ist Field Artillery were to cntictsm or sug~estions.
18 months. The bulk of the return today, and another 110 Family Services officials had is separately seeking a charige changes in federal rules that ulated I06 in Meigs County.
unit left the Point Pleasant are to arrive .in the Mountain said the agency saved $500 in state law to allow the audi- require the state to repay the
The manual was originally a
armory on W.Va. 62 North State on Sunday. Those sol- mi[]ion by focusing on pre- tor to independently review . entire amount of an overpay- component of Little's Child
with its motorized units and diers will be taken by bus to . venting fraud and didn't wan I finances without a request ment even if no money was and Family Health Services
from Family Services- cur- , recovered from the recipient. grant and has a mission ofhelpequipment on Dec. II, 2003. homecoming celebrations at to "chase'' doctors.
Now
the
agency
will
grant
rently the only state agency
With more state agencies ing people help themselves.
The deployment included their local armories.
The deployment was the
time for mobilization and
training, Cadle said .
first time in more than 40
open the 100 year-old facility. county's
Community and Johnson .Controls, in the
"The soldiers were told years that the 3664th was
He hopes re-opening the local Development Block Grant amount of $4.260, for m&lt;!inthey' d have boots on the mobilized for active duty.
five-man jail as a temporary formula allocation as a lo.;al . tenance and repair of the
ground for 12 months," he The unit left for a year's
from
PageA1
holding facility . will provide match for the grant program. agency's heating and cool ing
said. "It's worked out well for assignment at Fort Polk, La.,
system.
housing
for up to tive days for
Coii)Inissioners also:
us, Nobody has hit that 18- in Sept~mber 1961 during
• Authorized a grant appli · · • Approved the appoint·
month 'mark and we have been the · Berlin Wall Crisis, Other donatiotlS were recently . those serving short-term seilvery fortunate to· have our replacing a unit .there that _received by Jack Mykhiby and tences, such as DUI offend- cation for $100,000 through ment of Mike Gulliver to the
Danny Lantz, Sheriff Robert· ers, and would · allow the Appalachian
Development
Regional Workforce
units back in a year's time.'~
had been sent overseas.
county to temporarily hold Commi ssion for a water Board, to replace Perry
The unit spent several · Another call-up for the Beegle said.
The donations are being men who are awaiting court improvement project in Varmidoe.
weeks, except for . a brief 3664th anytime soon appears
made to the county general appearances or prison terms. · Syracuse.
break at Christmas 2003, at unlikely.
• labled action on an animal
Sheets said he expects the
" It 's ultimately the call of fund and will be used for variFort Dix undergoing additional training before ship· the Army and the Department ous projects associated with the state will be cooperative in claim from Alvin Tripp of
ping out to Iraq and assisting of Defen se," Cadle said . renovation .effort Beegle began · approving the re-opening of Pomeroy, pending the comwith ' military ' support in the "There are sorrie restrictions when he took office last month. the .jail becau se of statewide pletion of an investigation.
• Approved appropriation
·Beegle said renovations in jail housing shortages.
postwar reconstruction phase. when it comes to having
adjustments requested by the
Other business ,
The 3664th has served at already served time, and the cell area, including
Grants Administrator Jean Board of Mental Retardation
military installations mainly there are no indications they plumbing repairs, painting
Developmental
and lighting improvements, Trussell conducted a second and
will be called again."
in western Ira~. Cadl.e said.
are nearly completed. Next, puhlic hearing on the coun- Disabilities, Juvenile Court .
he said; will be work on the ty's 2005 application for and County Engineer.
• Opened a bid from
Legg 's trial that the two ran booking and visiting · areas. grant funds through the Ohio
Asphalt
Materials of Marietta
out of gas near Wesley Karr 's He said he has received com- Department of Development
Flatwoods Road home, and mitments of donated materi- New Horizons program . for bituminous materials for
from PageA1
.that he decided to move Karr's als and labor for those phases Trussell said the cou nty will March, and referred the bid to
seek $15,000 to be used for Engineer Eugene Triple.tt .
vehicle from the garage in of the renovation project.
Beegle said electric locks seminars educating tbe pu,blic . • Approved a service conting to grand theft auto, order to siphon gas into Legg's
breaking and entering, and vehicle. He said he never for the jail are next on the about predatory lending 'a nd · tract between the Department
tenant rights, and for promo- of 'Job and Family Services
vandalism. He was ordered to intended to move the vehicle project list.
Once
the
projects
arc
com·
tiona! materials for those prQbeyond
Flatwoods
Road,
·
and
pay $1 ,200 restitution for ·
grams. The . county will use
damag~ to We sley Karr 's said Legg was not aware of his .pleted, Beegle must apply to
the state for approval to re: · $ 15,300 set aside from the
· vehicle. He also testified in plans to move the Explorer. .
When Wesley Karr arrived
Tuesday's jury trial. · and
on
the scene, armed .with a
admitted that he had entered
Wesley Karr 's garage and gun, Legg fled the scene and
removed the vehicle without was captured hours later at a
Five Points convemence
Legg 's knowledge .
. Craig Karr testified in store by sheriff' s deputies .
BY STEPHANIE JENKINS

Medicaid agency submits plan to correct, collect overpayments

.

·Manual

3664th

I'D
LIKE TO
REPORT AN
IDENTITY
THEFT.

Donations

More dilemmas for President Bush

It seems to be the fate, or
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
at
any rate the deci.si,on; of
be less than 300 words. All letters are s~bject to
George W. Bush to spend his
editing and must be signed and include address
years in the White House ·
making life easier for the
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
.
presidents who will succeed
be published. Letters should be in good taste, · him.
··
addressing issues, not personalities.
·
After all, the Soda!

·Reader Services

"Remember,"
.wrote
Emmell' Fm&gt; , one of the most
. popular of the metaphysical
writers, "that death makes
positively no change in you.
You are just· the same person
you were before it-happened.
· You wiU go to the sort of
place, and be among the sort
of people. for whom .you
have prepared yourself by
JlOlif habitual thinking and
your mode of conduct while
.living on thi s earth.''
Wifl you see your loved
ones again? Fox asked.
"Wherever there is ·a strong
emotional link . -· either of
love or hatred --.there is Iikely to be a meeting when you
have passed ·over. If you
want to prevent the possibil ity.of meeting up in the next
world with someone · you
detesi on Earth, destroy the
link now by ceasing to hate."
Jesus himself spoke of
renewing human relationships in the Kingdom of
God. He al so seemed·to suggest that the k\ngdom would
not be devoid of all ·earthfy
pleasures: While he was eating the Last Supper with his
friends, he said, "I will not
drink henceforth of the fruit
of the vine until I drink it
new with you in my Father's
kingdom."
·
For the poet Robert
Browning. heuven was
going to be an opportunity to
carry on with more sati sfac.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The ·Daily Sentinel

.

'

Friday, February 25, 2005

Security system won't collapse on ]]is watch. He cou ld
let i1 rock along (as Bill
Clinton did) until hi s term
expires, knowing that the
roof will fall in on whomever is president in 20:i2.
Instead, he is taking the
responsible course of trying
to repair it now, when the
cost' of doing so is far less
than it will be in 27 years.
Similarly, the Iranian s
almost certainly haven't
managed to develop nuclear
weapons yet, and will probably have few, if any, before
Bush retires to Texas in four
years. Yet the president is
cl'early determined to pre. vent Iran from becoming a
nuclear power, whic.h could
confront the next president
with truly ghastly choices.
Then there is North Korea,
which has a few nuclear
weapons already, and is in
the grip of a regime that may
well decide to use them . But
. even here time would be on
the president's side if he
chose (as Clinton did) t(l
stall' things along with mean-

'

.

position to endorse military to risk backing changes in
measures against either Iran this program, on which
or North Korea, regardless America's elderly have necof what the consequences of essarily learned to . depend.
failure to do so may be. To ("He doesn't have to run for .
be sure, American forces are office again, but I do," is the
William
probably stretched too thin complaint.) The natural
Rusher
fo permit an all~out invasion human impulse is to boot the
of either country for the time ball down the field and let the
being, but there. are military · politicians of the next gener.measures short of that -- pre- ation cope with the mess.
ingless negotiation s until his cision air strikes, for examBut that is not the truly
term is up, and let his suc- ple "- that might slow, or responsible thing to do, and
cessor · face the music. even end, their drives· for a Bush knows it. Four years of
Instead, though , Bush is nuclear capability. The experience with this man ·
insisting grimly th!lt North · Democrats, firmly in the have taught- .us that he is a
· Korea must end its nuclear grip of actiyists who are true leader: He is not afraid
weapons program now ,_ on against any American mili- to tackle jobs that need to be
his watch.
tary moves whatsoever, done, even if they could
These are the decisions of would oppose these with all safely be postponed ;md left
a man who's taking the long their might.
to someone else to do (at far
view of America's best interBut President. Bush will greater cost) in the years
ests. On Social Security, the press on with whatever mea- ahead.
'
Democrats know very we II sures he considers necessary
Maybe he will fail.
that the present system is to protect' the health and Perhaps Social Security will
unsustainable and will have safety of the country, even in collapse around the ears of
to be .radically revi sed if we the years that stretch beyond some unlucky future genera· are not to break faith with his· own administration. tion, when delay is no longer
future generations. But they Since he cannot count on ·im option. Perhaps we will
are determined not to allow a Democratic help, everything have to live in a world in
Republi can president to ger will depend on whether he which all sorts of reckless
the credit for reforming thi s can mobilize. public opinion and malevolent dictators can
Ponzi scheme, which is the to support his proposals.
brandish nuclear weapons at
, principal remaining jewel, in · That is the purpose of the us at will. But not if George
the tattered diadem of . long swing he has just com- W. Bush can prever11 it.. He
Franklin Rooseve lt's . New pleted around the -country, · means to try.
Deal.
making speeches in support
(William Rusher is a
And having denounced the of his plan for the reform of Distinguished Fellow of the
American attack on Iraq as Social Security. Even some Claremont Institute for the
an unmitigated disaster, the Republican members of Study of Statesmnnship and
Democrats are simply in no . Congress have been reluctant Political Phih1sophy.)

Convicted .

Earned Income Tax Credit. You could .
increase your refund by up to $4,300.
!lid you know Y'111 iuight
('n"&lt;lir~

If ~·nu (lo, you

qualify

f&lt;&gt;r !Ill' Earnr&lt;llnrr•mr :n,~

~·n uld :-. i~mfiran!.ly

mt:n•a."(' ymtr rr fw~ d .

Hl&lt;lllllock "'"'"Y' g~t' you tlw max im um n:hlll&gt;i you·.-, .
·
. rnti tkd to, guamnll'&lt;'d
Call 1-800·HRBLOCK

or visit hrblock .com

for an offio» , _ you.

6 Months Some As Cash with Approved Credit!
OPEN 9am-5pm Man • Frl; 9am·l pm Sat.
Owr 40 yeors experience: Family owned &amp; opervted.

~

INGELS
CARPEJ
rsJ
991·7018
175 N. 2nd AVENUE -

OH

HHILOCX"

618 East Maln St
PorneroyOH
740-992-6674

roo ..,

*"

lt '-"" ,,, t16 H tlltll'k"t,rtmf
«CJ~lo...t 1\1 ~ ;ar..~"~" !'!'! ,•..i t(ll 1:r..Uk-1 t.u IJ;J,..!,t)·, :l r;or• • l-.t
~ d,· ,~ .r...:! .. f 01.1: r.•t..-..! Wit. lA.' \ll't-pW.U "' ~ I rur u~ rNum ".! I»&gt;W''p.Uj'( IIIC:NI!'II :I jMIIM &lt;"LVMI
11.1.,., I• :11Uo lf.JI'III( r"""ld.llr ~.,..'1! '" .. ~ -f,
rr ,_-:. "'"'' : ~ •· plol'l-::l :::~~6 : li&amp;Jl !l!fl( k .:.,"' ·~ tr r

�...
..

FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

As the shadows of ni ght
deepen to darkness and the
q uiet stillne ss of slumber
finally fills o ur home, our chi!d re n rest from all their cares
and worries, lulled to a place
of peace by the ger1tle melod"
J
of their mother's sing ing.
And when the day 's first
light once again begins to ·
spread irs fingers across the
sky, o ne often hears the so und
of quiet singing in -our home .
When the littl e ones in o ur
arms nestle their little heads
against us, my wife and I
can' t seem to help but ~ ing.
Such sing ing soo the s the
inexplicable fears and anxieties that beset small children
but it also gives utterance to
the joy and love we have for
o ur beloved offspring.
Thus does our Heaven ly
Father sing to us a heavenly
love so ng that only the ears of
fai th can. hear. He sings of how '
He would have · us set aside
worry and fear for ourse lves,
trusting both His goodness arid
His great and glorious pqwer
to sustain us, protec t us and
guide us in our daily li ving.
"Con s ider how the ·li-lies
grow. They do not labor or
spin. Yet I te ll you, not even ·
Solomon, in all hi s splendor,
was dressed like one of these.
If that is how God clothes the

Pastor
Thorn
Mollohan

The song of your heavenly
Father, pleased as He is to
give . you the Kin gdo m
through faith in His Son, is a
so ng of joy and de light.
Indeed, all of heaven sings in
unabashed celebration when
anyone turns from sin and
selfishne ss and embraces the
Father's call to "come home"
to Him. " ... I tell you. there is
Fejoicing iii the presence of
the angels of God over one
si nner who repents" (Jesus in
Luke 15: 10).
Are you ready to come
home to the heart of God? He
is more than re ady to receive
you. · Are you ready for the
healing touch of the Father?
He is more than willing to
wash your si n away and se t
you free . Though you may
fee l unw anted, unloved.
reJected and shut out of life,
He yearns to hold you to
Himself and sing you the love ·
song that is borne out in the
laying down of His life on the
Cross of Calvary.

grass of the fi eld , which is
here today. and tomorrow is
th row n into the fire, how
much more will He clothe
you, 0 you of little faith' And
do .not set your heart -on what
you will eat or drink; do not
worry about it. For the pagan
world runs after all such
things. and your Father knows
that you n.eed them. Bur seek .
His kingdom, and these things
will be given to you as well"
(Luke 12:27-31 ).
Ever does His Holy Spirit
softly si ng the notes of the
melody of His love for you i r
onl y you will liste n with ears
of trusting obedience . Ever
(ThomMoUohanhasminisdoes He beckon you to lay tered in southern Ohio the
yo ur head upon the boso m of · past9-1!2year.w ndisthepasHis love and hearken to His tor of Pathway Community
lullaby of grace. " Do nor be Church. He and his wife are
afr~id, little !lock', for Your the parents of four children.
Father has been pleased to Hemaybereachedbyemailat
give you the Kingdom" pastorthom@pathwaygallipo(Luke 12:32).
lis.com).
·

•

College in Trinidad and
holds a diploma -in sociology from the U ni versity of
Guyana.
· He has served as pastor
for nine years and Guyana
Di stri ct Superintendent for
12 years. During the past 15
years, he. has been preaching in the Caribbean and the
U.S.A. and speaking for
Faith Promise conventions,
revivals and at district conventions.
The music evangelist for
the camp will be the Rev.
Harold Massey.

Church of.Christ
·hosts free dinner

i'

Rev. Robert Dabydeen

Subscribe today • ~92-2155
www.mydailysentinel.com

r

r

r

r

Fellowshio
Apostolfc

track the same teens interviews found rhar many
teens ' religious knowledge
AP RELIGION WRilER
through-2007.
While America is becom- was "meager, nebulous .and
The majority of American ing a more diverse nation, at often fallacious" and engage- ·
teens believe in God and least 80 percent of teens still ment with the substance of
worship in conventional .con- identify' as Protestant, Roman .their trad it rons remarkably
gregations, but their re ligious Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, shallow. Most seemed hard
knowledge is remarkably Mo rmon or Jewish, with put to express co h er~ ntly
shallow and they h av~ a most tee ~ s adhering ro their their beliefs and what dtffertough time expressing the parenrs' faith trl!dition, the ence they make.
Many were_ so detache_d
difference that faith makes in report said.
Substantial rnajorities said fro m th e tradtt1ons of thetr
their lives, a new survey says.
The notably ·co mpre hen - they: Were affi liated wi,rh a faith, says the report , that
sive National of Study of local congregation (82 per- they're virtuall y_ followin g a
Youth and Re ligion conclud- cent); had few or no doubts ditlerent creed 111 which an
ed that "religion really does about their beliefs in the past undemandin g God exists
year (80 percent); felt mostly to solve problems and
matter" to teens. ·
The research found that "extre me ly,'' 1 " very" , or make people feel good. Truth
devout teens hold more tradi- "somewhat" close to God (7 1 in any absolute, . theological
tional sexual and other values percent); prayed alone a few sense·, takes a back seat.
"God is something like a
than their nonreli giou s coun'- times a week or more often
terparts and are better off in (65 percen.t ); and "definitely" combination Divine Butler and
emotional health , academic believed in divine miracles Cosmic Therapi st" who's on
success, community involve- from God (61 percent). Fifty- call as needed, Smith writes.
ment, concern . for others, two percent said they attend- He says the trend ·reflects tentrust of adults and avoid ance ed worship two to three times dencies among teens· Baby
Boomer parents. The report
a month or more often.
of ri sky behavior.
On most of the measured speculates. that poor educationThe four-year effort was
conducted by 133 researchers criteria, Mormon youths were al and youth programs, and
and co nsultants led by social-' the most engaged in practic- competition for teens ' time
ogist Christian Smith of the ing their faith, followed in from schOQI, sports, friends University of North Carolina order
by
evangelical and entertainment also are pan
at Chapel Hill. Smith .reports Protestants, black Protestants, of the picture.
In an interview, Smith Protestants,
the full results in the new mainline
book "Soul Searching: The Catholics and Jews.
an Episcopal layman with
Religious and Spiritual Lives
An entire chapter of the children ages ' l3 , ll and six
said f~llow · parents
of American Teenagers" book examines Catholic
(Oxford University Press). yo~ths. described as fairly should know lhat "teens are
written with doctoral student weak "on most measures of not from another planet.
Melinda Lundquist Denton . religious faith , belief. ·experi- They're ju st people lils:e
The book will be published ence and practice." The prob- everyone else . They ' re a lot
next week.
lem is attributed largely to more connected ro the adult
Smith says the material ineffecti ve youth programs world, and list~nin g to their
"is not just about teenagers. and "the relative religious parents, th an .people have
any idea of."
lr speaks more broadl y laxity of their parents."
about the direction of
Among Jews, only 44
No margin of error was
Ame rican religion ."
percent believed in a per- released, though the response
. The project involved a sonal God who is involved rate of 57 percent in the
telephone survey of 3,370 in peoples' lives today, a nd 2002-03 phone survey makes
randomly selected English, 34 percent said they neve r th e results statistically signifand
Spanish-speaking pray itlorie.
.
icant, Smith said, with variaAmericans, ages 13-17, folFuture reports from the tion s depending on the. group
lowed by face-to-face inter- researchers will provide more being di scussed.
views with 267 of the detail on teens from specific
respondents in 45 · states. religious denominations.
On the Net:
With ongoing fundin g from
Though the phone survey
Study information:
the
Lilly
http://www.youthandreliEndowme nt , depicted broad affinity with
researchers will continue to re li gion ; .the face-to-face gion.o'rg

BY RICHARD N. OSTLING

MILWAUKEE (AP) ~ An Orthodox sy nagogue is offering $150 to young Jewish adults
to take classes about Judai sm.
·
The money was promised to nine students
who signed up· for Lake Park Synagogue's
"Learn, Earn, and Lead" program if . they
attend five Friday night sessions.
It includes the regular Shabbat, or Sabbath,
service in the sanctuary, a dinner and a discussion and guest speaker.on topics like spirituality
in the Sabbath observance, meaningful Jewish
prayer, atheism and what happens after death.
David Ostrow, 18, a University of WisconsinMilwaukee freshman who grew up in Israel and
moved to the area two years ago, said the
, stipend didn't.convince him to participate.
"I'd do it anyway," · said Ostrow. who
attended an Orthodox school in Israel and
observes the full Sabbath, from sundown
Friday until sundown Saturday. "I live around

The Daily Sentine(

r

.WORSH·IP GOD THIS WEEK
Church ot Jesus Christ Apo~tollr
VanZandt and Ward Rd., Pa5 tor: James
~iller, Sunday School - 10: 30 a.m.,
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Rinr Valley
AIJI.a~tolil: ,Wurship Center, 873 S. JrLl

Ave .. Middlcpon , Kevin Konk.h,:, Pas t ~o1r,

r

r

r

r

r

r

r

r

·r

i'

i'

r

r

r

r

Emntflnuel APQstulic Tllbtmacle Inc. ·
Loop Rd off New Li ma
Ru tlat~J.
Services: Sun 10.00 11.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m ..
Thurs. 7:00pm .. Pastor Many R. Hulton

Rd.

Assembly of God
Uberty Assembly of God .
P.O. Boll 467, Dudd ing Lane. Maso n.
W.Va .. Prus tor: Nc'i l Tc nn:ml , Su nday
Services- 10:00 a.m . and 7 p.m.

Baptist
Carpenter Hapti.Qf Church
Sunday SJ.;houl - 9:30am, Preaching
Scr\·ice HUOam. f.\'cr;m~ Scrvitc
7:00pm, Wednesdlly Bible Study 7:00pm,
Interim Preacher - Floyd Rm ~
Cheshil't' Raptist ChUrch
Pastur: Steve Llnle. Sunday School: 9:30
.am. Morn ing Worship: 10:30 urn, Sunduy
eve nmg: 6:30pm Wednesday 6:30pm
Hope Baptist Church (Southern 1
570 Grant St .. Middlc:porl . Sunday ~c h uul
- 9:JO a.m.. Worship - II a.m. und 6 p.m .. ·
Wednesd ay Servil·e - 7 r m.
Rutland First Baptlsl Chun:h
Sunday ' School · 9:30 u. m .. Worship 10:451l.m.
Pof!!eray Fint Raptkt
Jon Brockert. E:1s1 Mai n S1. .
Su nday School - 1:U O a.m.. Worshtp IO:JO a.m.
Pa~tor

t:lrst Southern Baptist
~ lt! 72 Pomeroy Pike. Pastor: E. Lamar
O'Bryum. Sunday School -. 9:30 a.m ..
Worshi p- 8:15 a.ri.1 ., 9 45 am &amp; 7:00 p.m..
Wednesday Sef'\'ic·e~- 7:00p.m.
~·~ ~ ~ Bapllst Church .
Mark Mu nu\1.. 6th &lt;~mJ Palmer St..
Middl i!pon. S unday Sc hool - 9: I ~ a.m ..
Wor ship - 10. 15 a.m .. 7:.0Q p.m ..
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.

•

•
Silvrr Run B•ptist
Pastor: John· .Swanson, Sunday Sl·h nol • ·
lOam .. Worshi p
I ]a.m .. 7:00 p.m.
,Wednesday Services- HIO p.m.
Mt. ~ nion Bsptist
Pa~ tor : David Wiseman. Sunday Sc hool· ·
9 45 am .. Evenmg : () ·JU p.m.,
Wednesday Serv ices - 6:30p. m.
Bethlehem Baptist Church
Gn·~ ~ Be nd. Rout e 1 2 ~ . Racine. OH .
Pastor : Dll nicl Mecca. Sund oy Schnol ~
9:30 lUll , Sunday Wo.m hip - 10:30 a.m ..
Wednesday Bi ble Study - 6:00 p.m.
Old Btthel Free- Will Baptisl Church
2R60 1 St. Rt. 7, Middl eport, Sll n~ ay
Sc hool - 10 a. m.. Evening - 7:00 p.m..
Thursd:~y' Scrvil-es · 7:00
Hillside Baptist .Church
St. Rt . 143 just .off Rl. 7. Pastor: Rev.
James R. Acree, Sr., Sunday Unified
Service, Worship - 10:30 a. m., 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Ser\'ices · 7 p.m.
Vktory B•ptlstlnd~ pende nt '
5Z.'i N. 2nd St .\1iddkporl, Pasto r: James
E. ,Keesee. Worship - IOa. m., 7 p.m ..
Wednesday Sen.·1cc:s · 7 p.m
Faith Baptist Churc:h

Railroad St., Mason, Sunday School • 10

oil know Uoal tompWinco ""' bftn lartttnw. as loa&amp; • mM ..., bftn upon lbe
.
rarth ..... ltherin&amp; amund In lbe Gonlm ol'. Eden . ..cll!plota&amp; ltotlf whh Jlltlt&lt; and
............ -~ lo&gt;ooml ~. Olld 001nt1i- , _.... ,lobe the ont1 JOiutiool
•o your probW.m.
M "" opp.-11 l'ntkltnl'•
.......,herlblltven
W*"'&gt;loat.on.tll!i
" Fother oi'O.r l'-.lry" chopped doora tbi dwrry lift, \'d. lot rahlnllbe ........... "'
U.abootiL
. .
.
All ol' • - b to kmplalioos """ud
As I Corillthlaos 10: llr........ II:
"No ltmp18tlon b a .,.........,
1101101
Gild lo llliiiiiUI, aM wtllaol
let you b•i lemplod bry-y""r lllmllll!. boil-....,,...,~ wltlolto pnwide llot way
ol6eapf. ahal yc. -.y be ...,,o ndurt k.•• Cod .allows utto be lllllplld for • lftf(a.
Whta ""mist ............. !IDd allow Him to be.,., auide. .., oplrit,lo ll""'lfh&lt;Md.
P•m•pu111r &lt;11t11d tlllnk ol'lhlsas a '"dhi~~&lt;" H&lt;nivl• ln&lt;llilla ..,, llawnly F!llher.
WOD't )GOI•IoM )'OIIr , _ oi'W.,...Ihlo - 1 0 keep too- wlttl""r
Croa&amp;er !IDd tallow Ills Wonlln tlotlloly Biblo? As you ...,..·to kiiOW God aM Hh will,
you wil~ like GtorJo
d - t r di•IM popillllllitt lbr Y
'*• tll't. ·

O.y. ""

1""-

1-to-.

c.....,.

w-•-·

Yo...-g's Carpenter Service
26 yws in local busjnt;SS

Rooting &amp; Building Work

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

Acts 24:16
uardrail, Fence &amp;
sign erection

.....

---~~

.........,
P

, sua

P.O. BOK 683
Pomei
Ohio 45769·0683

Coolville, Ohio

Loca!ed less than 30 minu1es from
A1hens, Poiperoy or Par~ersburg

l-740-667-3156 '
"Still small e1iough to care"
209 Third
Racine, OH

7 40-949-221 0
"' Home Bank for
Home

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

7 40-949-2217
Sizes available 5&lt;10 to 10 K 20

..

Foret1t ·Ruo Bapdat
Pastor : Arius Hurt, Sunday School • I 0
a. m., Worship : 11 a.m.
Mt. Moriah B•pdst
Fourth &amp; Main s·t, Middleport, Pll5tor:
Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr., Sunday SchOol 9:30a.m .. Worship - 10:4.5 a.m.

333 Page Street
Middle rt H
Hours
6am, ·8pm

Fne~tdl)

A tmo .~p l!ere

Antiquliy Bapli§t
Sunday Schoo l - 9:30 a.m., Worship •
10:45 a.m ., Sunday Evening - 6:00 p.m ..
Pastor: Don Walker

:Mif[ie's 2(estaurant
Homemade Desserts Made Daily
Home Cooked Mellis &amp; Daily Speciols

.'

Open 7 days a week
740-9 2-7713

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

190 N. Second St.

Trinity Churth
Second &amp; Lynn. Pomeroy. Pastor: Rev.
Jonathan Noble , Worship 10:25 a.m .,
Sunday S~hoo l 9:15 a.m.

EpiM.-opal Church
326 E. Mai n St., Pornc.my, Sunday SchoOl
and Holy Euchari st II :00 a. m.

Holiness

Pomeroy Church of Christ
212 W. Ma in St. , Min iste r: Anthony ·
Morris- Su nday School
9:30 a.m..
Worshi p· 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m., Wednesday
Serv ices· 7 p. m.
• Pomeroy ·Westside Church of Chrlsl
~3226 Children's H om~: Rd ., Sunday
School - II a.m .. Wor.ship - lOa.m .• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Middleport Church of chris(
5t h and Main. PastOr: AI Hanson. Yout h
Mmister: Josh Ulm. Sunda)' School- 9:30
a. m., Worship- 8: 15. 10:30 a. m.. 7 p.m ..
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Community Church
Pastor: Sieve Tomek. Main S ~rcc1.
Ruthmd, Su oday Wnrshtp- lfl:Ofl u m.,
Sunday Service- ? p. m.

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

D•nvill~ Holiness Church
3 1057 State Rnutc 325. l.angsvll e, Pas1nr:
Vk:tur Roush, Sunday s~·hool - 9:30a. m..
Su nday worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p . m ~.
Wednesday praye r se rvice- 7. p.m.

507'Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(740) 992-3279
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

· BUSINESS SERVICES

AGENCIES Inc.

An Income Tax &amp;
Financial Services Firm
6 18 E. Main

S~ree l

C•h·ary PiiKrim Chapel
Uarr isonvi ll c Road . PastOr: Charles
McKe nzie, Su ndcty S~ h uol 9:30 a.m.,
Worshi p - 11 a.m., 7·0U p.m, Wednesday
Service - 7:00p.m.

Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio

" Do not steal. Do not lie. Do not deceive one another."
Leviticus 19; II

~ ·----~-~----------------

-

..·- --· ·--;~· ...

740-667-3110

.,

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

~.

-Y

Pearl Chapel
Sunduy Srhulll - 9 ;u n .. Wor ~ hip - 10 a.m.

Pastor· Brian Dunhllm. Woishtp - Y:Yl
Sund&lt;1y Sd11K1I- 10:35 a.m.

:~ . m ..

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
7S Pearl St, Middl eport. Puslor: Rkk
Bourne. Sunday Sc hool - 10 11. m. WoP:~ h tp
· 10:45 p.m., Sunday Evc. 7.00 p.m ..
Wednesday Sen.·ice - 7:JO p.m.

1\Jppen Plain t.:hunh of Christ
In strumental , Worship Service - 9 a.m.,
Communion - 10 !i.m . Sunday Sc hool ,10:15 a.m.. Yo uth- 5:30 pm Sunday. Bible
Study Wednesday 7 prn

Hysdl R~n Community Church
Pastor: Rev. Larry Lemley; Sunday School
- 9:30a.m.. Wors hip· 10·45 a.m ., 7 p.m.,
· Thursday Bibh.: Stud) and Youth - 7 p:m.

' Bethany
Pastor John Gilmore. Su nday School - 10
a.m.. Worship
9 &lt;f. m., Wednesday
Services · IU a.m.

burel Cliff Fret Methudist ChJJrt:h
Pastor: Glenn Rowe:. SUnday School 9:3.0 a.m .• Worsh ip · 10:30 am. an(l 6
p.m.. Wednesday Scrv1ce- 7:00 p.m.

Carmel·Sulton
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds. Racine. Ohio.
Pas tor: Juli n Gi lmore, Sunda~ Sehoul 9:30 a.m .. Worship - !0·45 a.m . , Bible
Study Wed. 7 00 p.m.
'

Brad bur,· t.:hurch of Chri11t
Minisler· Tom Runyon. 39558 Bradbury
Road, Middleport. Sunday School · 9:30

Rull•nd Churth of Christ
Sunday School - 9:30 a. m., Wnrship and
Communion • 10:30 a. m., Bob J. Werry,
Minister
Bradford Churth ttf Chrkt
Corn~r of St. RL 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd .,
Mintster· Doug Shamhlm, Youth Minister:
Bill Amberger, Su.nday School - 9:30 un.
Wors hip ~ H·OO a.m , 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m.,Wcdrtt:sUay Scrvkcs -7:00 p.m.
Hickory Hills Church of Christ
I::vangclist Mike Moore, Sunday St hool ·
9 a.m.. Wors hip - l 0 a.m .• 6:JO p.m.
Wcdn.::sd&lt;~Y Services. 7 p.n1.
Reedsville Churth of Christ

Pastor: P~ ilip Stu nn. Sunday Sc hool: 9:JO
a.m., Worshi p Serv ice: l 0:30 a.m., B1ble
StUdy, Wednesday. 6:30 p.m.
De~ter

Sunday s~.:hool
- 10·30 a.m.

Rock Springs
Pastor: Kc tlh Kader. Sunday School · 9 : IS
a.m.. Wo rshi p - 10 a .m, Youth
Fellnwsh1p, Sun.d ay · h p m.

Latter-Day Saints

Worship - 10.30 a. m.

Church or Christ
9:30a.m.. Sunday "' orship

The Chutth of Jesus
Christ of Latlc:r-Day Saints
St. Rt 160, 446-6247 or 446-74t!b.
Sunday School 10:20· 11 a. m .. Relie f ,
Society/Pnest hood 11 :05 - 12:00 noon .
Sacra ment Sen·ice 9-1 0 :!5 a.m ..
Homemakmg meetmg. lst Thurs .~ 7 p.m.

Lutheran

St. Joh~ Luthtran Church
Pine Grove, Worship · 9:00a. m., Sundil)
School - 10:00 a. m. Pastor: James P.
B ro~dy

Ou .. Saviour Luthe~n Church
Waln ut and Hen ry Sts .. Ravenswood.
W.Va .. P11 stor: David Russell. Sunday
Schoo l ~ 10:00 a. m., Worship · II a.m.
St•.Paul Lutheran Church
Comn Sycamore ·&amp; ScL-ond St., Pomeruy,
Sunday School - 9:4S a.in., Woi'.~h i p - II
a.m. Pastor: Jame5 P. Brady
Sat. 7:00pm Contemporary Si::n 'lCe

United Methodist

Church c&gt;f Christ
Intersection 7 and 124 W. Evangelist:
Dennis So.rgent. Sunday Bible Study 9:30·a.m., Worship: 10.30 a.'m. and 6:30
p.m .. Wednesda)' Bible Study- 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Hartford Churth of Christ in
CbriJtian Union
Hart ford, W.Va .. Pastor!Davi d Greer,
Sunday S~.:h ool • 9.30 a.m., WQnhi p ·
10 :·30 11 .m .. 7:00 p. m., Wedne~da y
~en.· ice1 ·7:00p.m.

Church of God
· Mt. Moriah Church of Cod
Mile Hill Rd ., Racine, Pasta[: Ja mes
Satterfield. Sunday School · 9:4~ a.m.•
Evenina •. 6 p.m., Wednesday Scrvic~s • 7

Graham Unlled Mtthodi!l1
Wof!lhip • 9:30 a.m. (Is! &amp; 2nd Sun ), .
7:30 p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun),Wednesday
Service· 7:30 p.m.
Mt. Olive Uniltd Methodl'it
Of( 124 behind Wilkesville, Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Sp1rc:s. Sunday School • 9:30a.m.,
Worship - 10.30 a.m ., 7 p.m., Thursday
Services- 7 p.m. ·

Melp Cooper•dve P1ri1h
Northeast Cluster, Alfred, Pastor: Jane
BeaHie , Sunday School • 9:30 a.m .
Wo111hip · 11 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Cbnlc:r
Putor: Jane Beanie, Worship - 9 11.m.,
Sunday Sc hool · ' 10 a.m . , Thursday
Services· 7 p.m.

MorninK Star
Pas tor. John Gi lmore. Sunday School - II
a.m., Won;hip - 10 a. m.
East Letart
Pastnr: Btll Marshall Sunday School ·
9a. m.. Worship · 10 a.m .. 1st Sunday
every month eveni ng servic~ 7:00 p m.;
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Radne
Pastor: Pe!c Shaffer. Sunday School - 10
a.m·.. Wors hip - II a.m .. Wednesday 7
p.m.
Coolfllle United Methodist Parish
Pastor: Helen Kline. Coolv ille Church,
Main &amp; Fifth 51., Sunday School · 10
a.m .. Worship - 9 a.m.. Tuesday Services .
7 p.m.
Bethel Church
Township Rd .. 468C. Sunday School ~ 9
a. m, Worship - 10 a. m.: Wednesday
ServiceS- 10 a.m.

Hockingport Churdl
Grand Street, Sundl.y School · 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m .. Pastor Phillip Bell
Torch Churth
Co. Rd. 63. Sunday School · 9 30 a.m .,
Worship . 10:30 a."!.

Nazarene
-MiddlEport Church of the Nazarene:
Pastor: Allen Midcap, Sunday Schoo l •
9:30 a.m.. Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 6:30p.m ..
Wadncsdi. y Services - 7 p.m., Pa stor:
Alfen Midcap
RecdtVIUr: Fellowship
Church of the Nazaren~. PIIStor: Jamie
Pettit. Sunday School-9:30a.m., \\;'onhip
'- 10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m., Wednesda y Serv1ces
- 7 p.m.

p.m.
Rutland C~urtb of God
Pastor: Ron Heath, Sunday Worship ~ !0
a.m .. 6 p.m .. Wednesday Services ~ 7
p.m.
Syracuse Firsl Cbun:h of God
Apple and Second Sts.., Pastor: Rev. Dav id
Ru ssell. Sunday School and Worship- 10
a.ni. Even ing Serv-ices· 6:30 p.m ..
Wednesday Services- 6:30 p.m. ·

K&amp; C JEWELERS.
212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

Joppa
Pastor: Bob · R11ndolph, Worship • 9:30
a.m. Sunday Sr: hoo l - 10:30 a.m.
Long Bottom
Sunday Sr:hool - 9:30 a.m., Worsh ip 10:30 a.m.
.
'
Reednllle
Worship - 9:30 a.m , Sunday School 10·30 a. m., First Sunday of Month - 7:00
p.m. service

...........
......
- __
......._.,__
.11fber .tuneral .-.me

~·

-~--­
Mill!.....

words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye wiU, and it shall
be done unto you.
John 15:7
linll
ANDERSON
FlJNERAL HOME
174Layne Slmt • PO lklx !71
New H1nn, \\'V 25265
J~ H. Andmon, Lktmed Funenl Dirtdor ·

Hridi S.

Funenl P11nnin1

Syracuse Church oftbe Nazarene
Paslor Mike Adkins, Sunday School- 9.30
a.m.. Wors hip - 10:30 am .• 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Pomtro)' Churth oftbe Nltal'ftlt'
Pastor: Jan La\'ender. Sunday School ~
Y:JO 11m .. Worship · !0:30 am . and 6
p.m., Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
c'hester Chun.:h of the Nilzarenc:

Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
'
Matthew 5.

Ash Strul Churc h
A ~ h 81.. Middleport -Pasto r· 'Su nday
School · Y·.'\U a.m .. M&lt;lrnlng Worshi p 10:30 ~ . m . &amp; 6:30pm, Wednesday Sen;icc
- 6:J(] p m .. Youth Scr&gt;Oicc- 6·]1) p rn
Agapl' Ufe Cenler
" Fui! - Go~pd Churc h". P ~sto r ~ John &amp;
P~tt y Wade. 603 .'Se~:ond Av~ . Mason. 77 J;
501 7, Scrvkc tt me. Sund&lt;1y 10 30 a. m .,
Wet.lncsday 7 pm

3713

L:~w rc nC\'

Furl!man . Wor~lllp- 10:041 :~ m

Wcdnc~da~ Scr\ K' t:~ •

7' p.Ul .

Clifton Tubcrnudt• Church
Clifmn. W Vll.. SunJa) School - HI e~ . m ..
.wur ~ tup - 7 p.m . \\&gt;cJ nc'Uu &gt; St.:n ~~·e - 7
pm

··so I strive always to keep
my conscie nce clear before
God a nd m a n."

Acts 24,· 16

Lifl' \'iciOry Center
Ctcck Rq&lt;tJ. Gallipoli ~. OH
Pa.~ tnr: Rill Staten. Sundu: Sen u:~~ ~ 10
a. m. &amp; 7 p.m. Wcdnt'\d&lt;l ) - 7 p.m. &amp;
Youth 7 P;nt
Ge o 1 g~~

Full Gospt=l Churc h
of tilt' Lh·ing S¥viur
Sc rvu.: c ~: S~tmd&lt;t ~ ~ . O(J

p.m.

Communit~· Church
lultlmhm, 'W .Yn n~ L1cvmg
Roo~d . Pa~tllf . Clmrlc~ Rou sh 1~04 1 67522KR. Su nday Sd1nol Y: 10 lim. Sundll~
c\lening: ~mc e 7:00 pm. Bibl} Study.
Wedne..Uay ..en tee 7:1MI pm . ,

Swlt&gt;m

Ahundant Crace R.F. I.
92J S. TI1ird St .. MuJdlcpon, Pastor Ten:~&lt;1
Davi s . Sunda y service. 10 a.m ..
Wednesday scrvt~.:e, 7 p.m .
F'11ith Full Gospel Church.
Long Bottom. Pa ~ tor : Stevc .Rccd, Sunday
S~.:h ool - 9.30 a.m. Wurship - 9:30 a.m.
and 7 p.m.. Wednesd.a~ - 7 p.m . Frida} fellowship ~&gt;Cn' ice 7 p.m.
Harrisun,· iiJ~ Community Church
Pastor: Themn Dur;h am, Sunday · 'l :30
a. m. and 7 p.m., Wcd m:sd&lt;~y - 7 p.m.

Middleport Community Ch~rch
57 ."i Pearl St. , Middlcporl . P11s1or:. Sam
Anderso n, Sund11y School 10 a.m .
Evening · 7:30 p.m.. Wednesday Scrvrcc ·
7:30p.m
Faith Vall~y T11btrnacle Church
Ra1ley Run Road , Paslor: Rev Emmett
Raw son , Su nday Eve ni ng 7 p.m ..
Thursday Service - 7 p.m.
Syracuse Ml§lllion
141 1 Bridgeman St.. Sy racuse. Sunday
School · 10 a. m, Eve nin g - 6 p.m .
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.
Hazel Community Church
OtT Rt. 124. Pastor. Edse l Han . Sunday
SchoO l - 9:30a.m .. Worship · 10:30 a . m~
7JO p. m.
Dyesville Communit y Church
Sunday Sc hool - 9:30 a.m.. Worsh ip ·
!0:30a.m., 7 p.m.

.

.

Morse: Chapel Churth
Sunday sc hoo l - 10 a.m.. Worshtp - 11
a.m., Wedne~y Service- 7 p.m.
Fllilh Gospel Church
' Long Bottom, Sunday School - 9:30a.m..
Wors hip · 10:4.5 a.m. 7:30 p.m ..
Wednesday 7:30p.m.
Mt. Olin Communily Churth
Law rence Bush. Sunday Sc hool 9:30a.m.. Evening - 6:30p.m .. Wedneday
service . 7 p.m.
P ~sto r :

Full Gospel LighthoUK'
3304.5 Hiland Road. Pomeroy. Pasmr: Roy
Hunter. Sunday Sc hool · 10 a.m., Even ing
7:30 p.m.. Tuesda y &amp; Thursday - 7:30
p.m.
South Bethel Community Church
Sih·er Ridge · Pastor Lind a Damewood.
Sunday Schoo l - 9 a. m., Worship Semce
10 a. m. 2nd and 4th Sunday

Bud.

nfWe~ l

Hohsnn Christi11n Ft'llmuhip C'hu ~ h
White , Su nday Schuol10 am . Sunday lhureh !&gt;CT\ t c~.: · fdll rm
Wednesd:1 y 7 pm
Pt~stor : H cr~c hd

N ~turntiun Chri stia.D Fellowship
9Jh5 Hoope r \{ nad. Ath..:n 'i'. Pa:; .tor
Lonnie Com ~. Sunday Wor.;htp l 0:00 am .
WedneSday: 7 pm

Lang.'l\lilll' Christia n Church
Full Gus~l. Pa~tor Roben Musser.
Sunday Sc huol9 :~ 0 am .. Wor~hip 10·.\0
am - 7:00 pm, WcdneMlay Sen·ice 7. 00
pm

Pentecostal
Ptnl«ostal Asvmbly
St Rt. 124, Racine. Pastor: Wilham
Hohack . Sunday Sl·hool · .10 a.m..
Eve ni ng - 1 p.m.. Wednesday Services 7
pm

Presbyterian
Syracuse Fin~t United Presbylerian
P:JStor: Robctl Crow. WurShip - I I a.m.
Harrison ville PrtSbyterian Church
Pa,tor Robert Crn\l . Wur&lt;;hip · 9 a. m '
Middleport Presbyterian
Pastor. Rc;&gt;ber Crow.. Worship - 10 a.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
\ 1ul herry Hi s. Rd .. Pomeroy . . P3~t or':
Benneu Luckie~h. Saturda) Sen il· e~ .
Sabba_th School - 2 p.m.. Worship - .~ p . m.

United Brethren
l\IL Henn on United Brtthrtn
in Christ Church
Te11as C o mmunit~ ~641! Wickham Rd.
Pastor. Peter Manindale. Su nda)' School .
9:30a.m.. Wors hip - ·1 0:30 a.m.. 7:00
p.m .. Wednesday Sen ·ices · 7: 00 p. m.
Youth group mee tini 2nd &amp;. 4th Sunday s
7 p.m.
Eden i.lnlltd Brtthrtn In Christ
Sla te Route 124. Reedsville. Sunday
School · ll am .. Sunday Worihtp • 10.00
a.m . &amp; "1:00 p,m. Wednesday Ser'&gt;ices 7·00 p.m.. Wedne sday Youth Ser. • ic~ ·
·
7:00p.m.

Carielon lnlerdeaomlnatlonal Church
Kingsbury Road. Pastor: Robert Vance,
Sunday School · 9: 30 a.m.. Wonhi~
S~rvice 10:30 a.m., Evening Sen.·ice· 6
p.m.
Freedom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob. on Co Rd. 31, Pastor · Re v
Roger Willford. Sunrl;ay School ·9:30a.m.
Worshtp- 7 p.m.
&lt;

White's Chapl'l Wnl~ya n
. Cool\'ille Road, Pastor : Rev. Phllhp
Ridenour, Sunda y School · Y·1n a.m
Worship - I O: JO a.m.. Wednesday Sen·kc

740-992-6606 •.

992-5130
Pomeroy

Rejoil:ing.Ufc Ch urch
500 i' . 2nd A\c, Middle port. Pastor :

The care you desei-ve, close to hQme good works and glorify yo11r
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Fmher in heaver~. "
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Maultew 5: 16

INSURANCE

~~4Rt;~~ . ~

Cnmmunily orChrisl
Pon land-Rudne Rd ., Pastor: Jim Proftin .
Su nday Schnol - 9·3 U a.m .. Wo r~ ht p IO J O a.m.. Wcdne ~ day Scn•il:e s - 7 00
p.m.
Relhl!l \\'or!ihlp Ce nler
Che..,te r Schnnl, P tt .~ t m : Rob H&lt;trht.! r.
A ~stst a nt Pa~ wr : Ka,re n Davb. Sund:~y
Worshrp· 10 11111. b 'l'lllng Wor~ h1 p. 6 pm,
Youth group 6 pm. We dnc~ day : Powe r tn
Pr:r)'er.' an}i Ll ihlc Study· ~ pm

ROCKSPRINGS
Let your light so.shi11e before
REHABILIITION CENTER . me11, lhat iher mar 'see ro11r
.
.
. .

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'

Brogan-Warner

Sth·er S\'illl' Community Apostolic
Chun-h
Pastor: Wuy ne R Jcy, cll. Sumla&gt; Sen in·· ·
fdJO p m , WcJ m:•lht) . (, UO p.m.

~£ ...

Pom ~roy

Zlnn Chun:h of Christ
Pomeroy, Harri sonv ille Rd . (RL 14J J,
Pastor: Koger Watson. Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m.. Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m., We~ n c: sda y Servtces- 7 p.m.

White Funeral Home

(740) 992-7270

S~:huo l

Rutland
Paswr: Rick Bourn i!, Su nday School 'J&lt;l'O &lt;t .m , Worsh\p- lll·JU a.m., Thursday
Sen: i cc~ - 7 p.m .
Saltm Ce nter
Pa'&gt;tor: Wtlliam K. Marshall. Su nday
School - 10·15 a.m.. W~:lfsh i p ·9:15 a. m.,
Bible Sludy,: Monday 7:00 pm .
Snow,·ille
Sunday School · IOa.m .. Wors hip 9a.m.

Bill Quickel

• Pomeroy

Miner.wille
Pustur: Bob Ro.1b i n~u n , Sum.lay
a.m..•Worshi p - 10 u. m

Pine Grove Bible Holiness Church
1!2 mile off Rt. J25. Pa ~ tor · Re\ O'De ll
Manl ey, Sunday School
9'· ]0 a.m..
Worship · 10:30 a m .. . 7.]0 p.m.,
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Davls-Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, and My
·

He11th 1Middleport)
PaStor: Bna n Dunham, Sunday Schuol 9:30a.m.. Worship - 11:00 a.m.

Bearwallow Ridge Churrh nfChri~l
Pasto r:Brun: Te rry, Sunday Sd wol -9:30
a. m.'
· Wor~ h i p . 10 :30 a.m., 6:30 p. m.
WcdneS&lt;hly Scr\'tcc:s - 6:30 p m

Middleport, OH

"KEBLER

Forest Run
Pasto1: Boh Robinson, Sunday St·huul - 10
a.m.. Worshi p -? a.m.

Keno Chunh of Christ
Worship · 9:30 a.m., Sunday Sc hool :
10:30 a.m .. Pastor·Jt:ffrey Wullace, 1st and
·'rd Sunduy

992-3785
Fullline ,of
Insurance
Products+
·Financial
Services

Oasis Christl11n Fellqwship
Non-denominauo nal fe llowshipJ
Meeting in the old Ameman legion Hall
Soulh Founh Avenue , Middleport
PllS tor: Ch ris Stewan I0:00 urn Sunda)
Olhc: r meetings m homes

Ca l~ ar~· Dible thuu·h
P1•mcroy Pikt:. Cu. RU . Pa•tor Re\ .
Bloc kY.ood . Sunduy Schbo l · 9: ~0 a.m.. •
Wor.\h!p
]i ).J(~
&lt;~ . m ,
7:.~0
p.m,,
We Unc~da} Se n tee . 7:'0 p m

i

Rose of Sharon Holiness Church
Leading Crce.k Rd .. Rutl and , Pastor: ){ cv.
De·wey King, Sunday sChool- 9:30 a.m .•
Sund.ly worsh 1p -7 p.m.. Wednesday
prayer meeting- 7 p.m

Mauhew 5: 16

Local source for trophies,
Ia ues !-shirts and more

E nt t rpr~

Grau~e

Hemlock Grove Chrllitian Churth
Ministe r: Larry Brown, Worship - 9:30
a.m. Su ndtty School . 10:30 a.m.. Bi ble
Study - 7 p.m.

Oth~r Churches

Amazing Grace Community Chu rc h
P ~stor : Wayne Dunlap. State Rt. 68 1.
Tuppers Plain s, Sun. Wor ~ hip 10 am &amp;
6:30 pm., Thur~dJy Bible St udy 7:00 p.m.

Pastor: Arl umi 'King. Sunday Sc hoo l 10:.30 o..m.. Worship - 9: .\0 am. Bible:
Study Wed. 7:30
Flat\\&gt;oods
Pasto r: Keith Radt:r, Sund;~y Sl·hool - 10
a.m., Worship - J l a.m.

Episcopal

Church of Christ

-7 p m.
Pastor: Re\1. Herben Grate. Sunday School
· 9.:\0 a.m.. Worship · 11 a.m&amp; 6 p.m..
Wednesd11y Sm·tc:es. 7 p.m.
Fair view Blbll' Church
, Letun . W. Vu R1 I. Pa~ tor. Bnan Ma).
Nutland Chun:h of !he N•za~ne
Sunday School - 9:jo a.m.. Worship ·
Sunday S ~ hool 9·30 am .. Wnrs hlp - 7:oc;J
p m., Wednc ~da} Bihlc Stud ) ~ 7 00 p m.
10:30 a.rn .. 6.JO p. m .. Wednesda y
Serv ices- 7 p.m.
Faith Ftllo"ship Crusade for Christ
Pa~u r Rc\ Fr~ni..J m D~eken ~. Sen 'lce:
Frid:~y, 7 p.m

Tuppers Plains St. Paul
Pa stor: Jane Bc: aute, Sun(lay School . ~
a.m.. Worship - 10 11.m.. Tue~day Services
- 7:30p.m.
Ctntral CIU!l ter
Asbut)' !Syracuse). Pastor: Bob Robinson.
·Sunday School - 9:45 11.m., Worship - II
a.m.. Wednesday Services - 7:30 p.m .

Congregational

161 Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy, 992~5898.
Pa!ltor: Rc\1 Waller E. Hemz, Sat . Co n.
4:45·5· 1Sp.m.; Mass- 5:30p.m., Sun .
Con. •}t4 .V~ : 15 ttm .. Sun. Mil &lt;iS · Y 30
a.m., Daily Mass - 8:30a.m.

7 40-992-6128

499 Richland Avenue, Athens
748-594-11333
1·800-451-9806

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

Rudand Free Will Baptist
Sa lem St. , Pastor: Jamie Fortner, Sunday
Sc hool · 10 11.111 . , Ewning · 7 p.m .
Wcdne!iday .S ernces " 7. p.m.

"Let your ligh! so shine before
men, that they may see your
good works and glorify
Father in heaven."

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

p ••

a.m., Wor ship · 11 a.m ., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Ser:ices- 7 p.m.

"A Celebration of Life"

Warm

MCIHDI\Y

p

Michael L. Crites
Director of Family &amp;
Community ServiCes
Overbrook ·
Rehabilitation Qr.

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

Catholic

a.m.
Racine First Baptist
Pastor: ~i ck Rule , Sunday Schunl - 9:30
11.111 •• Worsh1p · 10·40 a.m.. 7: 00 p.m ..
WeUncsday Scni~:e ~ - 7:00p.m.

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

Cbun:h of God of Propbety
O.J. White: Rd . off St. Rt. 160, Pastor: P.J.
Chapman, Sunday S-c hoo l - 10 a.m ..
Worship. •II 11.111. , Wednesday Sen.·ices- 7
p.m.

S•cffit lleart CathoDe Churth

Past~•r

r

i'

Second Baptist Church
Ravenswood. WV. Sunday School I 0 am ~
, Morning worship l l am Evening- 7 pm,
Wednesday 7 p.m.

p.m.: Yout h Fri. 7:30 p.m.

here and so, since I keep Shabbos, it wasn 't a
.
big deal for me to walk .there ."
. Without the stipend, "I wouldn ' t feel as obligated to stay through the whole thing," he said.
Offering money to attend religious education
or services is patt of a trend in which Orthodox
Jewish religious leaders and educators liken the
payments to scholarships. They are striving to
deepen knowledge. answer questions. ex plore
issues. and counter the loss of religious and cultural identity that causes young Jews to .assimilate into the general culture.
"A few people have .que stioned it," Lake
Park Synagogue Rabbi Shlomo Levin said of
the stipend. "One student actually told me
they felt uncomfortable and would come even
if there were no payment. I said, ' You tell me
what charity you want to donate it to."'
Applicants are interviewed to screen out
those who are interested only in getting paid.

·r

i'

Wcdnc~day. 7: 0U

Sunday, 10:30 a.m.

Synagogue offers $150 to those who take classes about Judaism

·PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.

MIDDLEPORT - A free
dinner will be served from
4:30 ,to 6:30 p.m .' Friday
(tonight) at the Middleport
Church of Christ, Fifth and
Main, Middleport.

2005

teens involved in their faiths but have
major gaps in religious knowledge, survey says

Meigs Area Holiness Association
to hold indoor camp meeting
POMEROY
Indoo r
camp meeti ng will be he ld
by the Me igs ~rea Holiness
Assoc iation 7 p.m . Monday
throu gh Saturday. March 5,
a nd 6 p.m . on Sunday,
March 6 at th e Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church.
The evangelist will be. the
Rev. Robert Dabydeen, a
conve rt from Hinduism and
a product of· mi ss io ns.·
Dabydee n was brought to
Jesus Christ as a res ult' of
missionaries to Guyana. He
is a grad ua te of the
Nazarene
Theol ogica l

Friday, February 25,

u~s.

A H~nger For More

-

PageA6

Meig&gt; Count)·, Olde;t Flori•l
~

352 East Main

W

Pomeroy. Oh
· let

u ~ cct~d ljll tJ I

lhoughtt with t~JBCIII I

C81'!'

740-992-2644 . 740-992-6298

God so loved the world
. he gave his only
son ...
Jo/mJ : /6

........

&amp;noulftr'•
:firr &amp; 6altt!'

.........
lOLLI . .

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

Office Service &amp; Supply
137.C N. 2Rd
Ave.
'.\,
Middleport, OH
992-6376
'

�'

\.

Mason Police
••
two new

Lady Buckeyes upend Purdue, Page 82
Jeeps drive past South Gallla, Page 82
Indians start search for shortstop, Page 88 ·
Cavs acquire Welsch from Celtics, Page 88

officers

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

BY STEPHANIE JENKINS
SJENKINS@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

Friday, February 25, 2005

MASON - Mason residents may be able to sleep
better at night with the addition of new officers David W.
Woolard Jr. and John Riley Jr.
Woolard, 30, and Riley. 27,
are both from Chester, Ohio,
Woolard previously worked
for the Pomeroy Police
·Department
and · Riley
worked for the Middleport
· Police Department in Meigs
County, Ohio. The two officers joined the ranks of the
Mason Police Department in
December 2004.
"We' lJ provide the best
protection we can provide to
the community of Mason," ·
Woolai-d said.
Both officers graduated
from Hocking College in
Nelsonville, Ohio, Riley 'in
1996 and Woolard in 1997, in
the Peace Officer · Basic .
Training program.
Riley and Woolard agreed
that they · feel at home . in
Mason and have· enjoyed
working in the community.
"It's· been wonderful so
far," said Riley. " It's a great
place to work. This is a

•

Boys Distrid

Schedule

.

~

.

BY BARRY WILNER
DIVISION II

Friday, Feb. 25 .
.Warren (19-3) vs. Logan Elm (19-3), 6:.15
p.m.
.
Greenfield McClain (2o-21 vs. , GaiJia
Academy (9·13), 8 p.m.
Winners meet Sunday. March 6, 2 p.m. in
district final.

wonderful community."
Woolard added that Mason
was a "whole different world.
It's nice for a change."
Mason
Police
Chief
Derrick Taylor praised the
two officers for . their
work during the past two
month s and stated thqt
they were a good addition to
the department.

"They do· a good job,"
Taylor said .. "It's a big transi. tion from Ohio to West
Virginia law: It seems like
th~y' re picking up on it and
doing a real good job."
The
Mason
Police
Department now has seven
police officers· in the force,
with three full-time and four
part-time officers.

.

~

.

.

2005 Nissan .
Quest

CIVICS
~1ES2675MW

2005
HONDA
CRY'S

2005
HONDA
ELEMENTS

-

'1 .9% "04 Element
. ,
• 2 9%up to 60 moos. AHFC app'rove&lt;.l credit on Civic &amp; ~cord

250 Columbus Rd.,
740·59-HONDA
Toll Free 1-877-772~8993

~~~

2004 Nissan
Xterra XE

r------., Sal

l•t this

.I .~ IPric~$21 I 5
~c· ='

STEPILl., SERFONTEIN, MD .
lntea•nal

T:~-1_7,870
Buy of a .

lifetime!

· 2005
Nissan
350Z

1

~

_

. · 2005

PIK~

..., $ I,500

$ 25,JQO,..,.,

DRIVE TO A

Sentra 1.8 S
2 •I ll&gt;i• prit~

..... $ 2,500

12,770

MJLLION

- @-

1000000

-

250 Coknlb.l• Rd
740-S94-J528

~~~dicine

1..frr7 -716-6685

•

M . jXM' 5!roke IM$el,i1IJO.
sllarp. -

m15100500

· cllarcoaJ

$22,700

$24,991

2002 Dodge Ram 2500 SLT
Mar&lt;m.eoomr. ilo!O... niles

2004 Ford F250 XLT Super Cab

$29,991

$27
to

J, £t,m . J

to 5 p.m.)
4 p.m.)

,.,,

·.~ '"'~•~~

· ..

UIIIJ.k·in~
~J
''lJ
~
¥it. wO,e.

Worie~slltio•pensat~on,palientll ~pfed.

' \l-eeptwgl.&amp;\f' vlilienb, IS ye....r,oilagl} &amp; older.
.

"".

'•

· '

· f· !

to.fl(!,._ fit: ~~iiillle/ft:
so4-6r:s:&amp;ss~

51.46

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

Tie- fa~~rt'{, o/ p,..IJfu.fiMak

2001 Filii 350 XLT

"""Oly.
$24,491

2004 NIJ1811 A~lma 2003 Ford Ranger XLT 1997 Chevy 5-10 2003 Dodge S1ratus 21102 Dodge Du 111190 SXT 2005 Dodge Grand
gok:l, llir, auto.
FX-4 off road, red, bal. of
Bedliner i
r blue , 4 dr., AM/FM
'¥11· CJ1Iy 36,1)lJ min , moonCaravan SE
co prayer, FT"IOfe
factory warranty. auto
caasene, auto
rco1, factory warrani'J, liN new. Wlilt. bll.a 11m)' "IIIMif"4llir.

WAS $16,991
NOW $15,494

~·~

$36,991

'"'·.... ..., 5l!do do&amp;O.
Si!/1 '~:~~::::J
tasselle. CQ ~.llllmios, STKI58Milliiles0 ~.DOOm"' I

ONLY 25,000 MILES!

WAS $17,991

NOW $16,994

$2,990

BUY
TQ(;)AYI

2002 Foll1 Focuo

2002 Honda Acoonl 200211ondl Accord

silwr, cit.CO, canette

green . CO player. air.

· player. all. mOfel

$7,991

pwt".

window&amp; &amp; ~oats

$14,991

2002 Chevy Ca'illt. 2004 Nl011n Sentrl 1.85
lllfhite, 4 dr.. cruM , tilt, auto. llhler, ladory wamr.nII'IOfEI
ty, cruise, till, CO pla.,-.r,

$6 991
'

"' .....
$11,991

se 2 oR

While, CD player, a1r,
moonroot, spoi6&amp;r!

$15,900

2001 Nltun

$9,991
NOW $8,994
WAS

$17,991 """""".., '""""'""
NOW $16,994 . S~~~~~~t
WAS

1997 Honda CRV EX . 111911 Chevy Csmoro
auto, rad, &lt;4.J.4, air,
crul&amp;e. tilt cassette.

s8,991 .

auto, 6 cyl .. gold. .

auto, loaded•

$8,991

Moflbu LS'

blue. cruiH , tilt, a1r,

CD player. more!

$8,991

A~~D
CO play9f,

SLT pkg., QOk:l,

CD player, more

air, more\

leather. CD

LOADED!

$10,500

$8,991

blue,

$14,991

$22,991

&amp;:::~

2001 Chevv

Silver. air,

Xterra 4WO

Athens
250 Columbus Rd.
740-594-3528
1-877-716-6685

p.m.

.
DIVISION IV

Saturday, Feb. 26
Lower bracket
Reedlvtlle Eastern (18--3) vs. Franklin
Furnace Green (13-8), 11 a.m.
Whiteoa"k (15-6) vs. Tnmble (16-5), ,12:45

Clarett

en

t

e d

enough . for

them.
- And if you've matured
during thai hiatus caused by a
school suspension, then having a federal appellate court

overturn a. lower court ruling the young man a chance to
that made all underclassmen give his side of the story and
(and even high school play- · then decide wtiether he's
ers) draft eligible.
, · truthful. If you talk to other
"He' ll have to .show people people . and decide what he
he's been working and is in says is accurate, then you
shape," said Bills general have to try and weigh the
manager Tom Donahoe, a whole thing. I don' t wish ·any
loud critic of Clarett last year, kid ill will. but·! think when
when he did noi work out for you;re on display, you should
teams at the combine. "He' ll do everything you can to put
probably h~vc ·to work out your best foot forward, and I
well to show that. The fact don ' t think. he did that las!,
that he hasn't played in a year year. Hopefully, he will 'this
is not a positive. so I think it year."
is important based on what
Clarett is · guaranteeing it.
happened last year.
·,.1 think you have to give
Please see. Clarett, B8

DIVISION IV DISTRICT PREVIEW

Eastern looks to tame Bobcats
BY BRYAN WALTERS

bwalters@ mydailytribune.com

p.m.
Friday, March 4 ·
Upper bracket championship game, 7 ·
p.m.
Lower bracket championship game, 8 :15

Green Bobcats (13-8)
No.
3
10
11
12
23
24
31
32
33
34
42

Neme
C. J. Blevins
Jason Bester
Derek Lewis
lan Kelley
Nalhan Palten
Adam Sparks
Brian Ramey
John Bowen
Bract DeHart
Mark Castro
John Dawson

Ht.

·vr.

5'8
12
11
5'8
11
5'8
8'1
10
5'11 . 10
8'1
12
11
6'2
6'0 · 11
11
'2
11
5'11
11
8 '3

ATHENS - There is .
good news and bad news
in regards to Eastern's
p.m.
upcoming district basketball game this Saturday at
the Convocation Center.
Head ~oaeh: Kevin lewis
The bad news is that
Saaepn gaulle
they will be playing the
Bobcats.
Portsmouth West
wn-55
The good news is that
0 Notre"Dame.
w 91-38
Fairland
w 66·58
the opponent is not Ohio
L 45·83 .
0 Aacela"nd
University 's
basketball
Clay
L 34-49
. RIO GRANDE - As the
team.
o
EastSrn
L 76·78
University of Rio Grande
Elliot County
L 62·69
And allhough the lopwomen's basketball t~am is
0 Fairview
L 52·55
seeded Eagles (18-3) can
East
L 49·51
preparing for the semifinals
breathe a sigh of relief in
New Bosto'"l
w
73-46
of the American M ideas!
0 Western
w 82-40
not playing a Division I
Conference tournament and
w67·46
Symmes Valle)'
collegiate program, rest
Notre Dame
w80·22
a possible run at the NAJA
assured that . Franklin
Eastern .
W73-80
National Tournament. head
Furnace Green ( 13-8) will
0 East
W56-47
coach David Smalley took
ON6w Boston
w 56·57
still be a tough challenge
Western
w 64·55
time out for a quick glance at
in advancing to the
SoUth Webster
L 38-57
next season.
Division 'IV district final.
0 Symmes Valley
w 63·58
Smalley and Rio Grande
0 Clay
L5H5
That is, according to .
East
w 55-54
are pleased to announce the
EHS
coach
Howie
signing of Marion Pleasant
Caldwell.
standout Erin Kume to a ·
"They are playing very
Eastern Eagles (18-3)
national letier of intent.
well right · now. We feel .
Kume. is t~e second play.er to
thai Green plays as hard as
No. , Name
HI.
Yr.
sign with the Redwomen for
any team that we have
4
Justin Browning
5'8
10
10
Derek Baum
12
5'9
faced this year," he said.
next season.
5'11
12
Nathan Cozart
11
"They have an aggressive
Kume,. a 6-0 post· player
14
AteK McGrath
5'1 0
10
press and they get after
and . reb(,iunding phenom,
Brian Castor
5'10
20
.11
' 12
Adam Dillard
22
5'9
you . They are .definitely a
should soften the blow of los24
Ed
BeaHy
5'9
12
concern and it is going to
·.
ing senior power forward
Mark Guess
.5'10
11
30
be a heck of a game."
Alkia Fountain to graduation.
Chrl$ Carroll
12
32
6'1
. The Bobcats have seen
34
Chris Myers
5'10
12
Kume has landed I st team
42
Roberl Crooa
6'4
12
the good and bad sides of
honors on the Mid Ohio
. 6'4
44
Cody Dlll
12
: basketball this season,
Athletic·Conference team the
40
Derek Roustt
5'11
' 11
starting 3-0 before droplast two seasofls. She is also
Head coach: Howle Caldwell
ping their next six outtwo-time selec.tion to the
comes.
.The
Scioto
District I I Division Ill
"&amp;tiiDD lli.IIUI
.
Countians
then
reeled
off
'
Coaches First Te'am.
OWaveri.Y .. .........•.67_.5 W
eight
straight
wins
before
In addition to those honors
0 Trimble . . .• . . . . . . . . .7o-61 W
finishing with a .500
Kume was tabbed AP Central
South Gallia ........... 73-41 W
record over the last four.
Fede1al Hocl&lt;lng ........ 71-89, L
· District
Division
lll
In
all,
Green
finished
Nelsonville-York ...• . ..• -~2--&amp;3 W
Honorabl.e Mention in 2002,
• Watertard ............. 73-43 W
third in Southern Ohio
3rd Team in 2003 and 2nd
Meigs ...............85·52 W
. Conference Division l
Vinton County : . . .......72·~ W
Team in 2004·. The Marion .
action
with
a
I
0-4
record
0 River Valley .... : .....75•54 W
Pleasant team captain was
0 Southerrr ............55._.7 W
and averaged 61.9 points
AP All-Ohio Division Ill
OOU vs. Claymon1 . .... .67-65 W
per game offensively. The
Miller
...... .. : .. . ...57-46 W
Honorable Mention last seaGreen and White defense
Southeastern ...... ·.... -~ W
son.
0 Federal Hocking .. . ...84·70 L
held opponents to 53.4
She has led the Spartans in
0 Watertord . .. . ..... . .63-34 W
PPG this season.
·
IrOnton .. .............60·58 W
rebounds all four years and
Franklin Furnace Green
Southern . . ..... . .....60-38 W
had was the top free throw
also had five games that
Bryan Walters/photo
0 Wellslon ............92·60 W
shooter on the team in 2003
.•.........54·53 W
were ·decided by a single Eastern's Nathan Cozart, with' bal l, splits apair of defenders for a layup Friday against - 0 Miller
Trimble . . . . . . . . .
. .ie...so w
and 2004 an,! topped the stat
Southeastern. Cozart and the Eagles will be looking 'for their fifth consecutive district tour- Southeastern . . . . . . . . . .75--'0 W ;
sheet in tleld goal percentage
Please see Eagles. Bl
nament win when they take on Franklin Furnace Green Saturday at the Convocation Center.
last season.
Her career numbers: Kume
'
has eclipsed the I ,000-career
point total and is the school's
all-time leading rebounder.
She also excelled in track
BY Joe KAY
hard to pl.ay this game comfon- wrapped an arm around his
and volleyball at . Marion
able
."
shoulders ..
Associ~led
Press
Pleasant.
Marquette
(
18-9,
6-8)
had
Huggi ns said something that
Kume will be the class
CINCINNATI
With trouble finding shots without made. both of them laugh. then
valedictorian when sh.e gradDiener running the show. pumped his hand again before
uates in the summer and carbest
Cincinnati
is No. 2 in the · walking away to attend to his
Marquette
missing
.its
ries a 4.0 grade poi~! average
player, all No. 24 Cincinnati nation in forcing opponents to team .
in college preparatory courshad to do was let its two formi - miss. holding them to 36.8 perThen. the Golden Eagles
es.
take
over
centexactly
what
Marquette
found
.out just how ·much
dable
power
forwards
Kume was excited abQut
the game.
shot.
they ' re going to miss Diener.
her selection of Rio Grande.
Diener. one of the nation's
Marquette had ·won three of
.Eric Hicks and Jason Maxie!\
1
"'I'm really excited,' Kume .
were up to it again.
top point guards, led the con- its last five games, showing
said. "'I'm really pleased with
Hicks scored 17 point s and terence in scoring (19.7 points signs of stabiliJing. · Without
my choice, I think I made the
Maxiell added 14 on Thursday, per game) and assists (7 per Diener. · the' Golden Eagles
right chpice." .
leading the Bcarcats to an 80-.. game) when he broke hi s hand looked lost on offense. They
On why she chose Rio
68 win in Marquette's first Tuesday durin g practice. He couldn't get into a flow Withour
Grande as a college home.
game without leading scorer had surgery and will miss the the sc hool' s career 3-poilit ·
"The people ," she said.
Travis Diener, lost for the sea- rest of his senior season. ·
leader on the floor.
"Everyone there, all the girls
son with a broken hand.
Steve Novak led ·Marquette
"When they called plays, I
that I met on the team, they
(21-6, · 9,4 with 25 points, going 7-of-12 know a lot of people weren't in
. Cincinnati
were all so nice to me and it
Conference USA) got up by 28 from behind the 3-point arc. the right spots," Hicks said.
felt genuine."
points in the second half before Sophomore guard Dameon "There was confusion at times.
· She plans to major in
coasting, one of the Bearcats' Mason took Diener 's spot in I could tell they missed not
Biology with a minor in
worst habits .. Marquette hit the lineup and had 17.
having Diener out there."
chemistry. "Hopefully, I want
some late 3s, cutting the lead io
Diener was upbeat and smilCoach Tom Crean called a
to get a masters (degree) and
· seven points in the final minute ing a~ he walked around the 30-second
timeout
after
become a physician's assisagainst Cincinnati's reserves.
court
during · pregame Cincinnati surged ahead 13-4
tant."
·~we get passive:· coach Bob warrimps. slapping hands with in the opening minutes. Diener
Kume
joins
StowAP photo
Huggins said. "We come out teammates as they stretched on walked pensively around the
Munroe's Sarah Drabinski as
Cincinnati's Jason Maxiell puts in a lay up past and play really, really hard, the floor. Huggins spotted perimeter of the huddle, and a
the first two signees in the ·
Marquette 's Todd Townsend in the· second half in then get a lead and get passive. Diener. walked over to him.
2005-06 recruit class.
We get comfot1able, and it 's shook his hand and warmly
Please- luruta. II
Cincinnati Thursday. Cincinnati won 8CJ.68.
I
1
r
•

Bear~ats ·breeze

2001 Ford F350 kLT Crew Cab

Oak Hill Financial - 35.57

·------

2005
.HONDA

155itn

..

ova -

J-

2005
HONDA
PILOTS

· Lower bracket .championship game. 6

- NFL
teanis want
to know how
a two-year
layoff has
affected your
running
ski lls.
-And
whether you
are team-ori-

Redwomen
sign second
hoops recruit

Model ~Rl3875M'

#oa~

NSC-36.05

•

2005
HOMDA
ODYSSEYS

.

c ·Hftvs:LII!n

Ltd.- ~3.30

Worthln&amp;ton - 20. 92
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ciOIIIne quotes of the previous day's transact!-, provided by Smith Partne,. at
AdYeet Inc. of Glilllpolla.

,

BUY
'934
.
NOW $32
2005 DODGE RAM
2500 414 ESEL

.ooccse

·Kroger- 17.7Q ·

-

J:•J.9%APR*

2005
HONDA
ACCORDS

8 722

JPM-36.69
Kmart- 97.44

Wa~Mart

15

Starting at

looatecl at tlu
Plea!alft 1/affe/lllo~/taf
!feel/cal Offtee Oilfte,.. ·

Whe~ l ersburg

INDIANAPOLIS
Maurice Clan:u isn ' t challenging anyone but himself
these days.
No lawsuits against the
'NFL. No feuding with
authorities.
Instead, Clarett showed up
Thursday at the NFL
Combine with a smile and a
.plan. The former Ohio State
star who challenged the
league · s draft . rules in court
- · and eventually lost -·

claims he can handle anything except not playing.
"'{his is a big day I've been
prep'lu:irul for for a long
time," he said. "This dav has
been on my calendar !·or a
long time, coming here interviewing with everybody,
kind of knocking off the
kinks everybody had on me
aild the knocks everybody ·
had on me. I've been real
focused and ready for this
day to come.
" I'm not sure what I have
to convince them of."
·
Here's a little help,
Maurice:

p.m.

2005 .·
CHRYSLER
300C

PRICED TO SELL

-4.70
Hartay Davidson- 61.35

Wendy's- 37.29

Eastern Brown (16-5) vs.
(19·3), 815 p.m.

VB eng , aulqma~c . SIT pJ..g., 61a
•~· ............,•. ·choose from!

GKNLY

SBC-24.16
Sea,. - 50.13
USB-29.80

Satur'day, feb . 26-8:15 p.m.

Sunday, March 6 . •

2005 DODGE RAM
1500 QUAD CAB 414

DG-21.23
DuPont- 53.54 · ·
Federal Mogul - .34
Gannett- 79.75
General Electric - 35.55

RD Shell - 61.97

Lower brt~cket
Ironton (21·0) vs . Piketon (18-4), 6:30
p:m.

Associated Press

.. Upper bracket championship game, 4

ModeiiiYFI B65JN\'.'

Col-46.60

Rockwell - 60.38
Rocky Boots- 30.86

250 Columbus Rd.
740-594-3528
1-877-716-6685

Cluod cob, SLT~kg. ,
oulomo~c. loaded

Ashland Inc. - 63.13·
· At&amp;T- 19.38
BU-11.66
Bob Evans ·- 22.82
BorgWamer - 52.72
Champion -'- 4 .14
Channing Shops -7.73
Qlty Holding - 31.23

33.4!l'1j
BBT- 39.14
Peoples- 26.23 .·
Pepsico- 53.65
Premier - 11.47

4:45p.m.

$34,845.MSRP

.

ACI- 44.53
AEP~ 32.96
Akzo-44.64

Athens

David W. Woolard Jr. (left) and John Ri ley Jr., the newest additions,to the Mason Police Department, issued a mock citation
to fellow Mason town employee Steven Ohlinger. Woolard and
Riley joined the police department in December 2004.

.

Local Stocks

DIVISION Ill
Saturday, Feb. 26
· Upper bracket
North Adams (20·1) vs. Federal Hocking
· (19-3), 3 p.m.
· ·
Chesapeake (20-1) vs. Adena (16·6),

Stephanie Jenkins/photo

The Dally Sentinel • Subscribe today • 992~;2155 • www:mydailysentinel.com
'

Friday, February 25
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
There is just a slim chance
that we could see a bit of snow.
Temperatures will rise to 32
with today's low of 24 occurring around 6:00am. Skies will
be sunny to mostly cloudy with
5 MPH winds from the north- .
west turning from the west as
the nioming progresses.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will rise from
35 early afternoon to the high
for the day of 38 at 3:00pm as
they drop back down to 31
later this afternoon. Skies will
range from sunny to partly
cloudy with 5 MPH winds
from the west.
:
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Temperatures will hold
steady around 30. Skies will be
partly cloudy to cloudy with 5
MPH winds from the west
turning from the southwest as
tl)e evening progresses. .
Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
It, should be . a cloudy
overnight. There is a slight
chance for a lew snowflakes.
Temperatures will linger at 30.
Wmds will be 5 MPH from the
southwest.
,
Saturday, February 26
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
A cloudy morning. We will
see a few · snow flurries ..
Temperatures will climb from
31 to 38 by late this morning.
Win(ls will be 5 MPH from the
west turning from the northeast
as the morning progresses.

Clarett emerges from the s~adows for NFL Combine ·

At_Co.ovo - Athens

Proud .to be apart of your life~

.· ·

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE

111911 Honda
. Acconi2DR
red, sunroof, IPQiler,

MANY
MORE TO
CHOOSE
FROM!

1-'---~------------·- ----·-~

·-----·---.

past Marquette

•

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Friday, February 2s, 2oos
'

.

.Jeeps drive past South Gallia
I

BY BUTCH COOPER

bcooper@mydailytribune.com
ATHENS - The founda tions for the future of the
South Gallia boys basketball
program was set deep into
the floor of the Convocation
Center..
Even though the Rebels
lost 53-41 to South Webster,
No. 5 in the final AP boys
basketball poll, just stepping
foot on the court at the
Convo may have ignited
South Gallia for years . to
come.
"Our program is on th'e
map for awhile,'' said South
Gallia head coach Donnie
Saunders. " I feel I ike,
through the. freshmen class,
we can be. in gam~s like this
for the next three ~r four

years.''

AP photo
Ashley Allen. right, of No. 4 Ohio State picks up a loose ball in
front of Purdue 's Emily Heikes (52 ) during the second half in
West Lafayette. Ind., Thursday. Ohio State won 57-51.

Lady ·Buckeyes
upend Purdue
.

.

final basket of the first half
Associated Press
and her team' s first nine
points after the break to bring
the Boilermakers within 33WTEhST ,LAFAYETTE], l~d . 28 .
. ere s a reason esslca
Ohio State then broke open
Davenpon has played all 40 the game with a 3-pointer by
minutes in eac h of the past Caity Matter and two straight
fourgames. When she's under baskets by Da'(enpon.
the basket, no one can stop
"We dug ourselves into a
her.
hole in the first half," Gearlds
Davenpon. who had Ohio said. "Our press worked for a
State's tlrst triple-doubl e over little bit in the second half, but
the weekend, came back with they made the plays when
21 points, eight rebounds and they had to."
five blocked shots . Thursday
The Buckeyes stretched the
night in the No. 4 Buckeyes '. lead to 46-33 with just over 7
57-51 victory over Purdue.
·
p d
h
"We had a lot of defensive mmutes to go. ur ue cut I e
lead to four with 9 seconds
intensity," she said. ''There's a left on. two free throws by
lot of things we didn' t do well Gearlds, but Matter iced the
on offense. ·but I think our game with two fou l shots of
defense was pretty good."
her own 6 seconds later.
Ohio State held Purdue to
"Down the stretch, they sus31 •percent shooting, 'forced
·
the Boilermakers into 16 tained a couple punches from ,
us,'' Purdue coach Kristy
turnovers and altered many of Curry said. "I think we lost
11
· h
d 0
their
shots just
with
Davenpon· 's 6-foot-4 presence · the ba game m t e secon 1
minutes of the first half."
in the paint. Davenport, the
Brandie Hoskins added 14
only Ohio State player .to go points and Matter had II for '
all 40 minutes in any game
h. s
·
1
this season. also went 9-of- 13
to tate. Enn Law ess
13
for
the
added
. against . the
smaller Boilermakers.
Boilermakers.
"V
•
•
.
Lawless went 6-of-11 but
.ou ·re not gomg to stop · missed several open shots
her. You can only hop~ .!o not under the basket _. partially
let her touch the. ball , s a1d thanks to Davenport.
Katie Gc,arlds, ':"ho .. led . "When you have a huge
Purdue wnh 16 PDI~ts . We presence like that, it's going to
d1d ~very poor1ob of, denying . alter your shot," she said . "We
on the ~enmeter. Its SOI,~ e- don't have the. height io match
up.· You just have to play
thmg we ve got to correct.
II wa s the f1rst Win at strong and try to stay with it."
Mackey Arena m more than
Lawless had nine of
.J 0 years fm the Bucke~es Purdue's first II points,
(26-3. 13-2 Btg Ten). The.v1c- including a three-point play
tory moved Ohto State mto a and another basket that
tie with Penn State for second brpught the Boilermakers
place·m the conference stand- within 12-11. She left after
ing s, a .half- game behi,nd picking up her second foul, ·
Michigan State.
however, and the Buckeyes
"The game was ugly. and took advantage of her
we won it." Ohio State c.oach absence. Aside from Lawless.
Jim Foster said . " From that none of the Boilermakers
point ot: view. I was very scored more than two points ·
pleased.
.
in the opening half.
Davenport scored si~ points
Purdue (15-11. 8:7 ) tra1l ed
the ennre game , fallin g behmd during a 13-2 run, and a 3by 12 111 the first half before pointer by Hoskins gave the
Gearlds led a modest come- Buckeyes their biggest lead of
back. She scored Purdue 's ,the half at 25-13.·
BY STEVE HERMAN

°

PUBLIC NOTICE
REQUEST FOR FEE PROPOSAL
Meigs Coumy is preparing an application for the FY' 2005
Community Housing Improvement program, funded through the
Office of Housing and Community Partnerships. One componem
o_f the planned program is the rehabilitation of owner and rental
occupied homes.·
·
The Meigs County Commissioners will accept fee proposals
for a Lead DuSI Clean ing Service In provide lead dust cleaning
of housing units. following lead-safe rehabilitation and renovation activities. As·per Title X Residential Lead-Based Paint
Hazard Redl.fcti on Act of 1992 effective Sept. 15, 2000, areas of
the unit where rehabiliiation and renovation acl ivitics arc completed must pass lead dust clearance.
Fee proposals mu st state qual ifications, incl uding any related
completed lead-based paint 1ra inmg approved by the Ohio
Department of Hea hh as an approved lead-safe renovator training programs.
Serv1.ce provider mu &gt;l ha ve available, !he nece&gt;Sary equipment
for lead-dust cleaning and co ntrol, to perform cleaning services.
Units where cleaning services are prov ided must pass lead dust
clearance testing of the-unit.
Proposal should state Scope of Services and pricing data 10
suppon the fi ~ed pri ce (e.g.. per hour. diem; unit). All related
qualifications and/or training certifi cations must be attached to
the fee proposal. Any que" ions on thi ~ request should be
addressed to Jean Trussell. Grants Ad ministrator
at 740-992-7908.

The Rebels (16-6t trailed
by 22 points going mto the
fourth quarter, but were ab le
to fight back to make it a I0point contest at one point
with the help of four 3-point
goals.

The Jeeps (21 - 1), though,
were able to hold off any late
surge by So'uth Gallia.
"We came up on the short
end. but not because of the
of effort,"
said
lack
Saunders.
.
Gearld Cade led South
Gallia with 17 points and
eight rebounds, while Curt
Waugh added nine points.
South Webster's 6-foot-7
. junior Nick Aldridge led · all
scorers . with 28 points.
Jordan Lower added II

6

6

7

19

12 ' 12 -

41

0·1 2. TOTALS ~ 16 4·8 41.
SOUTH WEBSTER (21·1) ~ Zach Harr 0
0-0 0, Kyle Gayton 2 0..0 4, Jordan lower
4 2·2 11 , Nick Bowman 0 2-2 2. Patrie;~
Rice 0 0-0 0, Andy Fenton 1 0-2 2, A'ian
Grashel 0 0-0 0, Ryan McClintic 0 0·0 0,
Nick Aldridge 11 6-8 28. Ryan Fenton 0 0·
0 0, Evan DeCamp 2 2·3 6, Allen Horn 0
0-DO. TOTALS - 20 12·1753

3·polnt goele - SG 5 (Waugh 2, Fulks,
Cade. Bayless) . SW 1 (lower).

V
''

I

~

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

BoYS PREP BASKETIIALL .

ovc

School
ALL ~
"Chesapeake ............ 20·1 ...... 10-0
#Coal Grove .............. 10·11 ·.... 6-4
#Soulh Point ...... ....... 10·12 .... 6·4
#River Valley ............. 10·11 .... 5·5
#Fairland ...................3-18 ......2·8
#Rock Hill ......... :........ 5·16 ......1·9·

,.0 ,.HE
•

22-53

SOUTH GALLIA (16·6)- Bernie Ful~ s 2
H 6 , Seth Williamson o 0-0 O, Gearld
Cade 8 0-2 17, Ryan Geiger 0 0-0 0. Curt
Waugh 3 1·2 9, David Bayless 1 2-2 5,
Jose Correa 0 0-0 D. Josh Wright 0 (}.0 0 ,
Sleven Call 1 0-0 2, Michael Pope 0 0·0
0. Josh Skidmore 0 O·Q 0, Paul Combs 1

CHANCE TO WIN

.~
·-~ ~--~

GIRLS P.REP BASKETBALL

ovc

~

AI.I.

sro22l

•south Point.. ............ 20-2 ...... 10·0
#Chesapeake .... ..... .. 13-9 ...... 7-3
#Fairland ........ ...... .... .9-12 .... .. 6·4
#Coal Grove .. ........... 1'2-9 .... .. 5·5
#River Valley .......... .... 3-17 ...... 1·9
#Rock Hill ........ ...... .... 2-15 ...... 1·9

SEOAL
School
ALL SEQ
••warren . ...... .......... 15-7 .. .... 7-3
,.Marietta... .. .. ...... 13·9 .. .... 7-3
#Logan .. ........... .... ..... 12-10 .... 6-4
#Gallia Academy .. ..... 13·9 ..... .4·6
#Jackson .. .. .... .... .....11-1 0 ... .4·6
#Athens ...... ...... .... ..... 7-14 ...... 2·8

TVC
· Ohio Division
School
ALL . l l i
'#Nelsonville·York ..... 14-7 ...... 9· 1
#Vinlon Co ...... .. ........ 12·10 .... 8·2
#Belpre ...................... 14·9 ..... .7·3
#Alexander.
.. ...6-16 ...... 3·7
#Meigs ..... ............ ..... 7-15 .... .. 2-8
#Wetls!on .................. 2-19 .... .. 1·9
Hocking Division
School
ALL l l i
"Trimble ............. ....... 21-1 ...... 9· t
•waterlord ................18·4 .: .... 9-1
#Eastern .. .. .
.. .... 13·8 .... .. 5-5
•Federal Hocking ..... 10·11 .... 5-5
#Southern .:. .... .. ...... .8-14 ...... 1·9
#Mtller ....................... 6·15 ...... 1-9
OTHERS
#South Gallta ...... .................... 5· t 5
• - clinched league title·
# - final record

MORE LOCAL NEWS..
.MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

•

ournaments!

Eastern vs Franklin Furnace Green
Saturday February 26th- 11:00 a.m.
..

Lets Go To The District Finals!
GOOD LUCK
EASTERN EAGLES!!
Eastern Athletic Boosters.

"'

REGULATORS .MC
.
. &amp;
.GOqD TIMES
Are sponsoring a bEnefit for

Kenny Rizer, Jr.

.

at Ohio University's Convocation Center

Subscribe today.
992-2155

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

t

IS

Summerfield's Crow&amp;Crow
Attorneys-at-Law
Restaurant
985-3857

992-6059

Chester, Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio

(cancer victim)

•
Saturday, February 26th · .
•

Get home delivery today

J"he Daily Sentinel
..... -.. 155

'\
~

starting at 3:00 p.m.
$5.00 donation at 'the door,

Jle;#

\

K and D Disc Jockey

Quality
Print Shop
992-3345

- 1:30

Middleport, Ohio
PUBLIC NOTICE . .
REQUEST FOR FEE PROPOSALS/
REQUEST FOR QUALIFICATIONS
The Meigs County Commissioners will be applying for the
2005 CDBG Community Housing Improvement Program Grant
funding and will accept fee proposal s for REHABILITATION
CONSULTING SERVICES 10 implement the program. if
fun&lt;;led. Fee proposals ;yil l be accepted until I :00 P.M. on
March I0, 2005 at the office of the Meigs Cou,nty
Commissioners, Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Fee
·proposals will then be opened and considered durihg the regular
Board of Commissioners meeting at I: 15 P.M. on the above date.
The Program will require the professional services of a
rehabiliiation specialist to provide the following services:
Preliminary Inspection and preparation of rehabilitation
spec ifications 10 meet Residential Rehabilitation Standards of
approximately 25 -27 single family units and specifications/costs,
estimates for such work on each unit The Specialist will also
assist in the contractor bidding process and review all bids for
compleleness and adequacy, aitendancc at pre-bid/construction
meetings: interim construction inspections; oversee compliance
with Residential Rehabilitation Standards; underlake finn!
inspections and paymem approvals and provide written reports.
Fee proposals muSI state qualifications, incl,uding all related
completed training for the Housing Rehabilitation project
activity, previous experien ce in CDBG/Home Hou sing
programs; scope of services to be provided and amou111 of fixed
pri ce compensation required for the above services and pricing
data to support the fixed price (e.g., per hour, diem units, etc.).
All related qualifications and/or training certifications must be
a!lached to the proposal .
Fee proposals may be mailed or delivered to·the Meigs County
Commissioners, Courthouse, Second Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769. Questions in regard 10 this request may be addressed to
Jean,Trussell, Grants Administrator, at 740-992-7908'.
Mick Davenport, President
Meigs County Commissioners

•

SGallia

S Web ster 10

Eagles

Don't miss a BINGO
number and your

www.mydailysentinel.com

from our defense," said
South Webster head coach
Marc Kreischer.
"We just had a bad two or
three minute run there at the
end or the second quarter
where \Ve didn't take care of
SEOAL ·
the ball and give them some Sehool
. AIJ. SEQ
easy shots," added Saunders. •warren .................... .19-3 ...... 9-~
"We was still positive #Jackson ................... 18·4 ...... 7-3
when we came out (after #Logan ...... :... :........... 13·8 ...... 7·3
#Mariella .......... .........8-12 ... . .4-6
halftime)."
Galli a Academy .. .......9-13 ...... 2·8
With their size, the Jeeps #Athens .......... ...........2-19 ..... 1·9
·were able to focus their
TVC
defensive efforts more on the
Ohio
DiviSion
South Gallia outside game.
School
ALL m
. " I thought we had the
#'Vinlon
Counly
........
14-7 ...... 8·2
strength inside, so we want#"Belpre
....
..
..............
...... 8-2
ed to stop their perimeter #Alexander ................ 14-8
14·8 .... .. 6'4
guys,' said Kreischer. "We #Meigs .'.............. .. :.... 10-12 .. ..4-6
did a good job for three quar- fNelsonville-York .... ...9-12 .... ..4-6
ters."
#Wellston .. .. :............. 2-19 .... .. 0-1 0
Hoeklng Division
South Webster, a state
AIJ. l l i
semifinalist last year, will School
"Federal
Hocking
..
....
19·3 ......9·1
face Portsmouth Clay for the
Easlern
....
..
......
..
......
,1
8·3 ..... .8·2
district title 7 p.m., March 4.
Trimble
....................
..
15·6
.7·3
Clay was a 52-44 winner · #Soulhern ...... ........ .. .6·16 .....
...... 3·7
over Eastern (Pike) in the #Miller ....................... 8·14 ..... .2·8
sec01id district semifinal #Walertord .... .. .. ........ 3-t8 ..... 1-9
Thursday. ·
OTHERS
South Webster 5~, South Gallla 41
#Soulh Gallia ........................ .. 16·6

guards with a 14.1 PPG ed Leesburg Fairfield 68-43
average. Ramey, a 6-;1 junior in the final.
forward, averages 13.6
Conversely, . Eastern is
points.
from Page 81
making its sixth consecutive
Senior forward Adam district appearance in the
Sparks (6-1 , 9.4 PPG) and Convocation
Center.
possession,
including
·
junior
center John Dawson Caldwell knows his troops
Friday's 55-54 sectional victory over Sciotoville East at (6-3, 8.5 PPGJ are also key are ready for all the distracLucasville Valley High components to the Green tions that come with the
School. The Bobcats fin- . attack. Senior point guard colossal surroundings.
ished with a 2·3 record in C.J. .Blevins (5-8) rounds
. "We are not going to get
out the starting five with a
those contests.
caught up in the hoopla. I
Green's biggest wins 3.3 PPG average and the top can remember about seven
came against Portsmouth reserve is 5-8 junior sharp- years ago, we had never
Notre Dame this year by shooter Jason Bester.
Others that may see action played at the Convo. Now
margins df 55 and 58, and its
we' ve played here so many
biggest loss came a.t the · include Joey Dyer, Ian
times that the kids really
hands of South Webster in a Kelley, John BQwen, Nathan
look forward to coming
57-38 loss. The Senior Night Patton and Brad DeHan.
back,"
commented
Saturday 's game marks
setback also ended the eightthe first time since 2002 that Caldwel l. "We know that we
game winning streak.
Green
will have played at ' have; to come out, play well
Led by the duo of Derek
Lewis apd Brian Ramey, Ohio University, suffering a and keep doing things the
Green has four players that 72-52 loss to Whiteoak that right way. We know what we
average over eight points season : The last time the are here to do. "
per outing. Lewis, a 5-foot-8 Bobcats won in district play
Tip-off is scheduled for II
j unjor, leads the Bobcat was 1997 when they defeat- a.m . .

Mick Daven1J9rt. President
Meigs County Commissioners

•
J-

points off the bench.
The big factor 'in the game
was the South Webster big
men of Aldridge and 6-5
Evan DeCamp, who· domi nated the ·defensive boards
on the evening. Tlie two
combined for 26 rebounds
and held South Gallia to just
three offensive boards in the
first half. fivy through the
first three quarters.
"You ' ve got to stop the
(South Webster) big guys,"
said Saunders. "They're a
good team. They may end up
winning it all."
"Their defense hurt us.
That is a very good defensive
club, It's the best we've
faced . They're two or three
clubs that might be able to
match our offensive, but I
don ' t know of anybody that
can match their defense."
For the most part, the
Rebels' [)layed even with
South Webster. During the
tlnal four minutes of the second quarter, however, ·the
Jeeps managed to set the
tempo of the entire second
half.
Waugh made a short
jumper with 4:13 left in the
first half. That basket was the
last points the Rebels put on
the scoreboard before the
half as the Jeep~ closed out
the second qual1er with a )30 run.
That run was extended to
· 19-points before a Cade layup ended the drought.
"I thought we picked up
the defensive intensity and
we got some easy baskets

Friday, February 25, 2005

'·

PUBLIC NOTICE
LEAD CLEARANCE TECHNlClAN

Ingels Electronics
K&amp;C
Jewelers
and Jewelry
992-3785
992-2635
fomeroy, Ohio
Middleport, Ohio

Swisher• Lohse
Pharmacy
992-2955
Pomeroy, Ohio

,.

REQUEST FOR FEE PROPOSALS/REQUEST FOR
QUALIFICATIONS STATE AND OHIO DEPARTMENT
OF HEALTH CERTIFICATION REQUIRED

Meigs County is currently preparing an application for
FY' 2005 Community Housing Improvement Program.
· .
The Meigs County Commissioners are requesting fee proposals for the services of a Lead Clearan~e Technician for !he Meigs
CQunty CHIP Rehabilitation program funded through the Office
of Housing and Community Partnerships.
.
The CHIP program consists of the rehabilitation of owner
/renter occupied units. The rehabilitation program is re4uired to
comply with the Title X Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard
Reduction Act of 1992 now in effecl
The Meigs CHIP program will require the professional services of State of Ohio certified l:ead-Based Paint Clearance
Technician to provide the following Services:
Visual assessment and dust testing 10 . i&lt;)entify lead-contaminated dust areas of completed rehabilitation end renova1ion work
as required.
Fee proposals .for such services will be accepted until March
10, 2005 . Proposals may be .mailed or delivered to the Meigs
Grams Office, 117 East Memorial Dri ve, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Fee proposals must provide fee cos! per unit tested inclusive of
all laboratory fees.
·
Proposal most state timeline for resp\)nse to request for clearance testmg and tum-around schedule for results report. Fee proposal must also state qualifications, including all related completed lead based paint training approved by the O~io
Department of Health provide State Certification or be able to
provide such certification prior to September I, 2005 ; Listing of
all previous experience in Lead Based Paint Clearimce Testing,
scope of services to be provided and amoun t;of fixed compensation required for the above services and pricing date to support
the fixed price (eg., per hour, diem, unit ). All related qualifications and/or training certifications nut be attached to the
proposal.
.
•
Questions in regard to this request way be addressed to Jean
Trussell, Grants Administrator, at 740-992-7908.
.
· Mick Davenport, President
· Meigs County Commissioners
• I

D. V. Weber..

Fisher
Shoe Place
Baumlumber Construction Funeral Home The
&amp;Locker219
985-3301

Chester, Ohio

740-378-6293

Middleport Pomeroy

992-5627

Reedsville, Ohio

992-5141 992-5444

Middleport, Ohio

Downing-Childs
-Mullen-Musser Brogan Warne
Insurance
Insurance
992-6687 .
992-3381

Wesam
Construction
992-6466
Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio

Shade River

Valley Lumber

.AgService

&amp;Supply

985-3831

992-6611
Middleport, Ohio·

Chester, Ohio
l

Pomeroy, Ohio

Quality Furn·i ture

Plus
'l-800-200-4005
7,4 0-667-7388 .·
"ore

Plain Ohio:

ome
Farmers Bank
National Bank "Your Bank For Life"
Racine
Syracuse
949-2210 992-6333
'"

!mi£
Pomeroy

Gl
Gallipolis Tuppers Plains

992-2136 446-2265 667-3161

�'

B4 • The Daily Sentinel·

Friday, February 25, 2005

Friday, February 25, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

.

www.mydailysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

'QJ:rthune - Sentinel - ~egtster
CLASSIFIED

M••.. County O H

'

~ If you have a question or a comment, write : NASCAR Tht s Week , tVa Th e Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box !893, Gastonia, NC 28053
Call1a Cownty, OH

Race: Auto Club 500
Where: Cahforn ta Speedway,
Fontana (2.0 m tles), 250
laps/500 mtles
When: Sunday, Feb. 21
Laet year'• winner: Jeff Gordon
· Qualllylnl record : Ryan Newman , Ford , 187.432 mph,
• Aprtl 26, 2002 .
Race record · Jeff Gordon ,
Chevrolet , 1 55.012 mph,
June 22 , 1997
laet week Jeff Gordon won
t he Daytona 500 for t he thtrd
ttme, roanng past Dale Ear~
hardt Jr. , the defendtng champton, on t he 198th of 203
Ia ps In a race exte nded by
t he "green-white-checkere d "

rule. Nexte-i Cup champton
Kurt Busch finished second.
w1th Earnhardt th1rd and second-year d nver Sco tt Rtgg s
fourth . Tony Stewart led 107
of t he 203 laps but had t o
settle for seventh. Fo ur of
th e top five finiShers drove
Cheyrolets, g1vmg the Monte
Carlo seven vtctorres m the
past mne Daytona races · The
race had 22 lead c hange s
and was slowed 1 1 ttmes by
caut1on flags , the most srnce
1968. Allin all , 1t was one of
t~ e more excttmg Dayt ona
500s 1n recent memory

Race: Stater Brothers 300
Where : Cal1forn1a Speedway,
Fonta na (2.0 m1le s), 150
laps/300 mtles
When: Satu rday, Feb. 26
Last year's wlnner. Greg Btf
fie
Qualifying record Kevtn Harvtck , Chevro let, · 183.941
mph, Apnl 26. 2003
Race record . Hank Pa rker
Jr.. Chevrolet, 155.957 mph,
Apnl 28, 2001.
l,est race . Tony Stewart, m a
Chevrolet, won the Hershey's
Take 5 300 at Daytona, hts
f trst-ever vtctory 1n the Busch
~ene s
·

In One Week With Us
REACH 6VER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Race · Amencan
Ra c mg
Wheel s 200
Where : Califorma Speedwayl
Fonta na (2 .0 mtles) . 100
laps/200 miles.
When Fnday, Feb . 25
last year's winner. Todd Bo·
d1ne
Qualifying record : Travts Kvaptl, Toyota, 178 .669 mp h,
Oct 24, 2004.
Race record . Ted Musgrave ,
Dodge, 145.926 mph, Sept.
20, 2003
Last race . Bobby Ham tlton,
in a Dodge , won t he Flonda
Dodge Dea le r s 250 at Daytona

m:rtbune

-To Place

Your Ad,

992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today••• (740) 446-2342 (740)
Or
To (740) 992-2157
Fax

Oeacllfire&amp;'
Word Ads
Display Ads

Offtee !It~~$' ·
Monday thru Friday
s:oo a.m. to s:oo p.m.

JEFF GORDON

v

NEXTEL CUP SERIES, No. 24 DuPONT CHEVY

Jimmie
Johnson

11"1!1:------.., ~.,r.~o-".ELP_w_ANTED
__))lto

R

J' to

u

s

to the la te Dale

responstble tor any debts of

lit'•

Tony
Stewart

r

for a driver who wa s 39th
fastest on quallfytng day.
I' The last two positions, 42nd

and 43rd, went to former cham·
pions . Matt Kenseth and Bobby
Labonte both suffered engme
failure.
•

swimmtng atone 1n a sea of
Crtevys, yet he fintshed second
., Pole winner Dale Jarrett was
never a factor. He dtdn't even
lead the f1rst lap and lt m ped
across the hne 1n 15th prace.
•Despite all the' crashes, onl y
five drivers - Mike S!&lt;lnner,
John Andrettt , Jamte McMurray,

P1t Bull mt)( pupptes to gtve
away Call (740)388-9783
To good home 1 male 1
female cat, both declawed ,
ltxed &amp; shots up·to-date .
Must go together (7 40)388·
0038

r

NASCAR Thlo Week's Monte
Dutton Clves his take " Thi S littl e
scra pe was predictable, gtven the fre
nettc nature of a green w hite-check
ered' f1n 1sh at Daytona. There probably wo n't be any ltngenng effects.
Both are htghly com pet1t1ve. but neither holds grudges. "

.,. Kurt Busch served nottce that
his Nextel Cup champtonshtp
wa s no fluke . Hts Ford was

ftrst ltme four family Yard
Sale, March 4th and 51h. 9?, rat n or shtne ~ 1!2 m1les
out llevmg Ad , West
Columbia watch for stgns

Photos by John Clark/NASCAR ThiS Week
Jeff Gordon roasts his tires after a dramatic victory in Sunday's Daytona

500.

'The Reck' will be sorely
mluecl by longtime fans

ra.,.. .
d~'s Cinderella story was

Second-year driver Scott Rtgg s,
who showed patlence and verve
In bringing hiS Cnevrolet home

fourth.

Gordon second only to Earnhardt in restrictor-plate victories
By Monte Dutton

"plate racing ." It was his ninth restrictor-plate vj c tCJry, rankmg him
second only to the late Dale Earn hardt, who won 11.
Gordon i s a proponent of the current rules package governing the
race s at Da y tona and Talladega.
"You know, you wa tch those truck
(series) guys, you watch those Bu sch
(Senes) cars, and it's pretty hairy," he
said. "I think we've got a package
right now that allows for great rac ing,
allow s for pa ss miL but keeps us , you
know, able to control the cars, as
well."
Gordon held on ' to first place
through a "green-white-checkered"
fimsh that extended the race by three
laps .
t o ok the lead away from defending c hampion Dale Earnhardt Jr.
on the 19Sth of 203 laps

NASCAR ThiS Week
Jeff Gordon's third Daytona SOO victory was alsp his 70th career win. Can
a fifth Cup championship be far behind?
• After all, the last driver to go on to
the championship after beginnmg the
season with a Daytona victory was
Gordon in 1997.
Gordon- who won championships
in 1995, 1997, 1998 and 2001 -was
quick to pomt out that even though the
Daytona 500 is NASCAR's most prestigious race , it isn't much of a predtctor
of a championship season.
"There are some different rules
that we have !hi's year that really
don't have anything to do wtth Daytona," he said. "I think you're going to
see more lead changes, but I don' t
know if you're gomg to see as much
side-by-side racing. What you see here
at Daytona isn't what exists anywhere
other than here and Talladega."
Those two tracks, of cou~se , are the
ones where carburetor-restrictor
plates are used to limit horsepower
and hold down speeds.
What is11'~ in question is the fact
that Gordon has become a master of

He

Gordon previou sly won the Daytona
500 in 1997 and 1999.
"You know," he s atd , "this i's a big
event. It's a tough one to win I think I
look more al how proud I am to have
won three more so than how long it's
been smce I won the last one."

Gordo~ In victory lane at Daytona

Contact Mont e Dutton
at hmdutton50@aol.eem

North
Ca rolma
Speedway,
dropped from the schedule this year,
wtll be sorely m1ssed by competttors
and fans altke The Rocktngham track
used to offer Ra no rmal race~ after all
the g 11tter and 11ype of Daytona Th at
won't be the case 10 Fontana, where
Caltfo rnta Speedway now o&lt;!cup1es
the slot trad itiona lly held by •the
Rock ~ Th e f1rst race ever he ld at
Rockmgham, m 1965, marked th e fl·
na l maJor vtcto r y of t he late. great
Curtis Turner

Hair Styllata
Don't mtss this tncredt ble
' opportunity wtlh Ftesta Hair
Salons• We curreJltly . have
openmgs for lull and part·
ttme licensed Hair Styllets
at our salon 1n Mason We
offer gua ranteed 11ourly
wages, new pay acale with
up to 52% aervica com·
An Excellent way to earn mission, retati and tanmng
commtsstons, medical, denmoney The New Avon
tal, VISIOn and hfe InS ,
Call Manlyn 304-882-2645
advanced educalton, and
Are you a sales person ? much more Call1-877·327·
Audtt and se ll Cabl e TV 7001 lor more tnformat1on
Excellent Commtsstans
1-800·270-1780
Help Wanted, mu st have
Dnver 's License Ser1o us
ra you w ng o rave
calls on ly Commercial Floor
or steady work, good
Care Call (740)367-0255
ay and benefits?

aborers, Operators.
Valders. COL Drtvers and
oreman needed for
tpeltne work

I

I
.I

WaHrlp calling on guys to
help his charitable cause
Fo r the t htrd year m a row,
M tc hael Walt np IS ca lling on men
across the cc;&gt;unt ry to help him ratse
funds for cha rity. ThiS yea r, tt's for
Kyle and Pattte Petty's Vtctory Junctton Gang Camp, whtcl1 creates memorable campt ng experiences f o r c ht l
dren w1th chrome or
ll fe-t l1 reatenmg 111
nesses . To hel p,
men Just have to
log on to www.JUSt·
formen.com
and
ente r the . Ju st For
Men Hatrco lor " H1t
Your Target" Sweep- Waltrip
stakes. By entertng, men wtll be ehgtble to w1n an all·
expenses-patd tnp to the 2005 Ford
400 race at the Homestead- M taml
Speedway, and for every entry, $1 will
go to the Vtctory Junctio n Gang
Camp . To enter via ma11 and rece1ve
the i3 ppro pnate entr y form , send a
sel f-addressed stamped envelope
(Vermont and Washington reside nts
may omit return postage) to: Just For
Men Ha1rcolor "Hit Your Targetn
Sweepstakes; P.O. Box 3667 , Pittsburgh, PA 15230

I
t·

Co.

'

•

Absol ute Top Dollar U S
Stiver and ' Gold Cotns
1
Proofsets Golel Rmgs. U S AVONI All Ar eas To Buy or
Currency,·M TS Co1n Shop, Sell · Shtrley Spears, 304151
Second
A~enue , 675- 1429
Gallrpolts, 740-446·2842
Bates Bros Am usement Co
Wanttng to buy 48x40 tnch Sprtng/Summer Must Be 17
wooelen
pallets
l Or Oleler And Able To Travel
March-La te
Wtlhamson Pallels 304-675· Late
September,
Weekly
Pay.
27 16
L1vtng Faclhfles, Bonus,
Want1ng to buy Lawn mow· Contact Us At 740·266·
ers and weed eaters 2950
(740)366-9327
Fost&amp;r Paren ts Needed!
Make a dtf1erence. For more
mfo, contact TRANSITIONS
FOR YOUTH (740)9654349

· CLASSIFIED INDEX

&amp; Supply

·'

.i

I

4x4's For Sate .......... ....... ............................ 725
Announcement .••......••.•....••••...•••• ... .. ......... ,,030
Antlques ..................... .................................. 530
Apartments tor Rent ·········- ------·- -··- --··--·· ····· 440
Auction and Flea Market .•.•....•....•.••.•• ••••••••• 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repalr ....................... ........................... 770
Autoe lor Sale:................... ......................... 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Building Suppliea ............. ........................... 550
Business and Buildings . ............................ 34D
Business Opportun1Jy .......................... ....... 210
Business Trainlng ............. ........... ............ .'.. 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cands of Thanks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ........ ........................ ,...... 190
ElectricaiiRelrlgeration .............................. 840
Equipment lor Rent ..... ... :............................ 480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equipment ............... ........................... 610
Farm a lor Rent ............ .................................430
Farms tor Sale •••••••••••••••• .... ••••••••••••••.•...•••..•330
For Leaae ........................ .. ...... .. ............ ,...... 490
For Sale ........................................ ................ 585
For Sale or Trade .......... ............................... 590
Fruita &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
Fumlahed Rooms ... ..................................... 450
General Hauilng .. .... .... ................................. 850
Glvaaway.....: ...... .......................................... 040
Happy Ada .......... ........, .................... ............. 050
Hay &amp; Graln., .... ............................................ 640
Help Wanted ................................................. 110
Home lmprovementa .. ............................ ..... 810
Home&amp; for Sale ............ ................................ 310
Houaehold Gooda ....................................... 510
Houaea tor Rent .~ ........................................ 410
In Memoriam ........... ..................................... 020
lnaurance ....................... .............................. 130
uwn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ BBD
Llveatock ...................................................... 830
Loot and Found ................................; .......... OBO
Lola &amp; Acreage .... ........................................ 350
Mlecellaneoua ... ........................:•••••••.....•....• 170
Mlacellaneoua Manchendloe ..................... .. 540
Mobile Home Repair .................................... 860
Mobile Homea for Rent ..................... .......... 420
Mobile Homes for Sale ................................ 320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycle• &amp; 4 Wheelera .......................... 740
Muoicollnatrumenta ................................... 510
Pereonala ............................................... ...... oos
Pet. for Sale ................................ ,............... 580
Plumbing &amp; Heating ............................... ..... 820
Profeasionel Sarviceo .......................... ....... 230
Aiello, TV &amp; CB Repair .............................. 160
AMI Eatat. Wented ..................................... 36~.
Schoola lnatructlon ............................, ........ 150
, Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 850
Sltuatlorla Wanted ................................ ....... 120
Space tor Rent ............................................. 46D
Sporting Goode ........................................... 520
SUV't for S.le ..............................................720
Trucka for Sale ............................................ 715
Upholatery ........... ........................................ 870
Vena For S.te............................................... 730
Wanted to Buy ............................................. OliO
Wanted to Buy- Farm Suppllto .................. 820
Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
Wanted to Rant ............................................ 470
Yarcl Sale- Galllpolla ....................................072
Yard Saie-P-oy/Middta ......................... D74
Yard Sale-Pt. Ple.,.ant ................................ D78
/,

GM Dealership looktng for
sktlllul Mechan tc Please
send resumes to P:O Box
989, Galbpohs OH 45631 '

MAKE A
DIFFERENCE IN A
CHILO'S LIFE
Foster Parents needed
To learn more about
tostertng and free rratnmg
opportuntheS contact
Ktm Romeo at
740·89 4·4360
1·877·5D-NECCO

Personnel
C J Hughes Construction
PO Box 7305
Hunltn ton WV 25776

It was the 70th victory of Gordon's illustrious career.

-had their cars so damaged
that they couldn 't return to t he

I

....... NECCO ....

end resume to

Soott Wtmmer ar1d Jason Leffler

.,. The

GIVEAWAY

Floor model 23 mch TV,
cable reaely, needs a httle
work 304·675-2620

The two stars raced each other
aggresstve ly m the fmal lap o f the
Daytona 500. w tt h Johnson fim sh1ng
fi fth and Stewa rt seventh. In fact , 1t
looked at as 1f !?tewart was trytng to
shove Johnson tn to the wall. Afterward, the two Chevy dnve r s agam
bumped each other on the cool down
lap. But 1n the tra ilers after th e race
- a nd after a pnvate meetmg wtth
NASCAR off tc tals - th e two sa td
there were no hard feeltngs

Earnhardt Jr. 5:erved noti&lt;:e, once agatn, that Qualifying
&amp;pee~s m ean little at Daytona.
It's all about handling characterJstics in traffic, and that's where
Earnhardt Jr.'s Che')' still excels.
Third place In the 500 Isn't bad

HFJ.P WANTED

I. Robert 0 Willis Jr am not

Jimmie Johnson
n. Tony Stewlll't

in "plate r-aces " ts

• All

E

four restnctor·plate
his career tota l of

D•llv tn-Column: 1:00 p . m .
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
•
Sunday In- Column : 1:00 p . m.
Po.- Sundavs Paper-

I \11'1 tn \II'\ I
..,, 1(\ It I..,

s
lllf~lon n$ts now won three of

~egtster

Sentinel

lmmedtate opentng lor part·
ttme Orwer at the Mason
County Act1on Group, INC
Must have curre nt dnvers
Itcense have a cIean dnvtng
recor d, and be WI IImg I o
wor k IIext ble hours. Starttng
Pay ts, $ 6 15 per hour
Submtt res ume with references or appltcaltons can be
ptcked up from Mason
County ActiOn Group, INC
Ple:ase respond ASAP
Apply 1n confidence to Ruth
Atce ,
Transportetron
Manager, by February 14,
2005 Matt or de ~ver to
Mason
Cou nty
Actton
Group, INC PO Box 12,
Potnt Pleasant WV 25550
No phone calls EOE MIF,
AJA.
Mamtenance Dtrector
Overbrook RehabtlitatiOn
Center ts now acceptmg
resumes for the position of
Matntenance Dtrector The
quahfted candtdate must
possess strong verbal and
wr1tten communrcalton SkillS
1nclud1ng technrcal report
wntmg and rtK:ord ~eep t ng
Must have experrence 1n
general mamtenance
mclud1ng carpentry, plumb·
mg, electncal. telephone
and cable mstallatlon. patnttng .grQunds work, evaluatton and 1nspectton of emergency eqUipment ttem
·
-assembly, and batter sys
rem operatton Must have
knowledge of OSHA, Ltfe
S3tely Code, HVAC and
BUIIdmg Code Long term
ca re e)(penence pfelerred
but not reqUtred Ouahfled
ca ndtdates may send
resumes to · Charla Brown·
McGutre, RN, LNHA,
Adm1mstrator, 333 Page
Street, Middleport, Oh1o
45760. EOE

Now taktng appltca!IOns for
Truck Drivers Also, hmng
seasoned garden cen ter
help. (740)256-9247 or
(740)645-0870
-~------­

Office Clerk- Sel f-starter
and ene rgetiC mdtvtd ua l
sktlled tn Mitrosoft Word and
E)(cel Must posses supenor
oral and wnt1en commu mcat1on sktlls-and knowledge of
general offtce procedures
Aeqwements dependable,
high school dtploma and one
{1) year eKpenence m otftce
and comp uter sktlls Send
resume by March 1, 2005 to
FACTS . 45 Oltve Stre.et
Gallipolis Ohto 45631 or
Fax to (740)446-801 4 EOE
M1FJH
- - - - - -- - Overbrook Rehab Center IS
currently ac:ceptmg apphcat 1ons for anyone 1nterested
In th e STNA classes The
class w1U begin on February
22nd
and
apphca hons
should be turned 1n by
February 17tn Cla ss space
IS l1m1ted so 11 you are mterested. please sto p by and f"l
out en appilcatron at 333
Page Street , Mteldleport Oh
45760 EOE
ParamediCS
&amp;
EMT's
needeel Apply al 1354
Jackson P1ke, Gallipolis

..

POSinON
ANNOUNCEMENT
Ptlsihon Dale
February 18 2005
FULL TIME
COMMUNICATIONS
CENTER OPERATOR
The Umvers tty of Rio
Grande mvttes applications
for the pos1110n of full t1me
Commumcat1ons " Center
Operator

Responstbllttles for th1s lull
t1me 12 month posttton
Include, but are not l1mtled
to, roubng tncommg, outgo1ng and special cal ls and
performmg ~anoos recep·
Management
!lon1st duttes for the un 1vers 1Opportunities
ty student center area by
greettng and recetvtng v1s1We seek career oriented
tor's, delermmulg needs and
mdlv!duals who wtll stnve to
achieve the best m customer Provtdtng necessar11, mtormation and dtrecllng people
sahsfactton and team work
to appropnate sources
If you have -a desire to be
successful with a goal driven
and growtng company, we A high school diploma, or
offer· health. dental, life equivalent, IS requi red
InsuranCe, prescription card. Previous expenence tn tela·
bonus program, paid vaca- phone operator set1tng pretion1401 K and management ferred Prevtous clencal
apparel. AdVanCement from experience helpful

within 1f you are Interested m
Gallipolis, OH or Charleston.
area Apply In person at
the Burger K1ng Restaurant
located at the Ohio Rtver
Plaza, Gallipolis, or mall
• resume to· Burger King, 65
Upper
R1ver
Road.
Galltpolis. OH 45631 or tax
304•52 9-0055
--,.--,------'-McClure's Restaurant now
htrlng aU locations, full or
part-time. p1dl; up appilca·
tmn at lOCation &amp; br1ng back
between
9'30am
&amp;
11 ·00a(Tl , Monday lhru
Saturday

wv

N.w Yur~ New Career
Chrlshan based Tech Co
Expanding
In your area
·
Managers/Sales Rep
Needed
Call 800-470-6843
&lt;24 Hours)
"'--rbr(X)t( Center Is current·
v••
appliCations tor_
ly accoptlnn
...
Nursmg Assistants Please
call Holl•e at (740)992-6472,

ROUTE SALES
HERR FOOD INC.
Is accepltng
' resumes for
Route Sales People m thts
area
Must possess these
qualtttes·
"Cieoo Dnvmg Record
*Self starter early riser
"Good commun1catmn sktlls
•strong selltng sktlls
"F1rst year tncome potential
of $30K+ wlbenef1IS
Send resume to
Herr Foods, Inc
476 E Seventh Street
Chllltcothe, OH 45601

HOMt:S

SutooLS

INsntucnoN
Gallipolis career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740- 446-4367,
1·800·214-0452
www Qilll pol•scareercolleQe com
Accred!led Membe r Accred1tmg
Counc:~l for Independent CoUsges
and Scnools 12746

All real estate adver11alng

In thla newapaper Ia
subject 1o the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes It illegAl to
advertise " an~
preference, limitation or
discrimination baaed on
race, color, reltglon , sex
familial atatua or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such
preference, llmttiUion or
discrimination "

WANJ·tln

To Do

Independent Caregiver willtng to take care of diSabled
or elderly w1th all home
health needs 740·245·0335
or 740-339-3246
Jtm's Carpentry
We do remodelmg and most
any unftn1shed work, also
small
tree
removal
(740)446-2506, (7~0)367 ·
0437

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real
estate which Ia in
vlolatlan of the law Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
. dwellings advertised In
thla newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity buea

11'\\'\(t\1
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:_
SASS'\' St:ISSORS
B!NINE.._.,
Styltst wanted Sal~ry/
Commtssion. 7A0-441-1880
01'1'0RI1JNITY
-:c:-:o::r_:7_:4n:_·.:2:_56::·:..63:_36:::___
C
STNA'a
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
Arbors at Gelltpolls Is cur
rently seekmg Slate Tested lNG CO recommends tha
au do bustness wtth pea
Nursmg Assistants for PT
le you know, and NOT t
and FT ~sltiOn s We offer
end
money thr ough th
master schedultng health,
atl until you have mvest1
dental, vrsto n and hie tnsurated the offertn
ance Please stop 1n to com·

..

plele an appltcatton Con tact
J_essH:a Hamson/ Ttna
F1sher SOC at (740)441·
8320 wtth questtons
~E~O_:E~M_:I~F_:ID::N:__ _ __
The
Atl1 ens-Metgs
EducSttonal Serv1ce Center
1s seek1ng a qualtfted applicant to work five (5) days a
week (32 hours per week)
as an EducatiOnal Atde tor
asstgnment at Beacon
MRDD lor the rematneler or
the 2004·2005 School Year
Tht s postttan c;loes not have
beneftts Applicants must be
wtlllng to be ftngerprmted to
have a . cnmtnal record
check hold a valid educa·
lienal aide perm tt, ab1hty to
wor~ well wtth staff, student
and publtc, and must provtde
own tra nspo rtation Salary
w111 be based on qualtf1ca·
ltons
and
experience
Please submit .a letter of
tnterest resume and references to John D Costanzo.
Supenntendent,
At~ens·
Metgs EducatiOnal Servtce
Center
507
Atch land
Avenue, Sutte *108 , Athens,
Oh 45701 The AM ESC IS

r

EOi MlFIDN

-------

MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE

FOR SA!.E

"'

SAVE-SAVE·SAVE
Stock models at old prices
2005 models arn ... mg Now
Coles
Mobile
Homes
15266 US 50 East, Athens
Ohoo 45701 (740)592-1972.
~where
You Get Your
Money's Worth"

t

MONEY
'IOLoAN

. L.~autng t"mancta
Institution approv1ng Small
Busmess, Mortgage
Personal and Vehicle
Loans lmmedtate
response
gt~e us a call at
1-866·228· 7063~ Or apply
onlme at
www inves1mentllnanc1al ora

hto DIVISion of F1nancia
InstitutiO n's
Qtt 1ce
o
iFonsumer
Affair
!IBEFORE you retmanc
• our home or obtam a loan
~EWARE of requests fo
ny large advance pay
:~ants of fees or Insurance
p·~ ll the Olftce 0
ponsumer Atfatrs 1~11 Ire
t 1-866 278·0003 to lear
1 the mortg age broker o
ender ts property lteensed
Thts 1s a publiC servtc

www.orvb.com
Home Listing•
.l.1st your home by calling
(740)«6·3620
V

h0I0 sf to I ,"'
IBW P
tn on lne.

~otn l Pleasant, WV 4
~edroom . 1 Bath, Many
men1t1es Open House
~arch 12, t0am·6pm
r. oct 2165
11
~- 1 e
orca
304)675-4125

nnouncement !rom lh
an
equal
opportunity Phto Valley Publtshm
em P 10 Y e r 1 P r 0 v 1d 9 r k;ompany)
jAedwood Cape Cod
Apphcatton Deadline March
9 5 Acres , 4
~4:.:200
=::5 - - - - , - - - PR~ONAL lleedroom. 2 Bath. 2 Ca&gt;
Town of Hartford w1U be grv·
SERVICES
~arage, Abo.,.e Ground ·
mg
out
Appllcat 1ons ~~---lliiiilliiiiiiii.-.,1. lt"ool Bidwell OH
between the hours of 9am to
~iocked Pond Code 914
DtAECTY
r.,,
1pm Monday tl1u r Fnday for
rvr Call (740)388-041 0
Free DVO Player
a Class 1Water Opera to
_ r
Free HBO &amp; Ctnamax

~~~~====~ ~orne

j

"' ISHOP CLASSIFIEDSI
_

FOR

RENT

AppliCations be1ng taken for
very mce, clean 2 bedroom
apartment In country setting
yet close to town, on
Centenary Road Washer
dryer stove frtd ge, dtsh·
washer provrded Total electrrc wiAC Tenant oays electnc No pets no smoktng
$400 depostt, $475 per
month. Water tncluded 740446·2205 or 740-446-9585
As~ lor Vtrgmta

iiiiiiiill
HOUSES
FORRmf

Furn1shed 3 rooms &amp; bath
upstatrs newl~ decorated
clean. no pets Reference.&amp;
depoSit requ 1red (740}4461519

bedroom house . 1005
Thtrd Ave . GaiUpoiiS $250 Gractous hvtng 1 and 2 bedplus utlilltes anel depostl room apartments at Vtllage
(740)256-6661
Ma nor
and
A1verstde
_
'
bedroom
house
ntce
&amp;
Apartments
m
Middleport
12
clean no pets, Storefront From $ 295-$44 4 Call 74 ()..
Retatl space/Commercial 992·5064. Equal Housmg
Opportunities
Bwldmgs ,
very 1 nice
(740)992r3702
MOClern 1 beelroom apt Can
_4_0c..l4_4_6_'0_3_90
3 bedroom Condo wt th nver ,(7
_ _ _ __
vtew,
lull
basement
Galhpolts Ferry $700 month
Calli740)446-3461

New 1 bedroom apt Call
(740)446-3736

Ptlot Program- Renters
4 rooms and bath 52 Olive needed
Call {30 4)736·
St No pets, S300 montl1 3409
(74{])446-3945
•
Pleasant Valley Apartment
Clean 2 bdr , Ret. Oep No Are now takmg ApphcatMJns
Pel$ (304)675-5162
lor 28A . 3BA &amp; 4BA ,
Appl rcattons
are
taken
Small house one mtle from
Monday th ru Fnday, from
Mason WaiMart no pets
9.00 A M.-4 PM Offtce ts
$250 a monlh (304\773located at , 151 e . . ergreen
5163
Dnve Potnt Pleasant WV

r M~~IES I -~-~-~-·-N_o_ls-(304_)_6-75--58-'-06

Twtn Rtvers Tower IS accept·

:2 bedroom mobile home all mg apphcahons for wai1tng
electriC
tn
Middleport hst for Hud·subs12ed, t- br
$350 00 plus depostt No apartment. call 675·6679
InSide pets (740)992-3194 . EHO

r MC::s~~ I

r

for

AI'ARI'IIIENTS

Beauttful 2-story townhouse.
overlookmg aa111pohs Ctty
park Kttchen·famtly, 0 A
l A 3 B A . study, 2 baths
laundry area References
reqUired secunty deposit
no pets $900 per mo
(740)446 -2325 or (740)446Ntce double-lot close to
4425
school&amp; pool 2120 Mad1son
Ave $t B 000 all reasonable BEAUTIFUL
APART;
&amp; senous offers considered MENTS . AT
BUDGET
304-512-9151
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Dnve from $344 to $442
Walk to shop &amp; movtes CaU
740·446·2568
Equal
I BUY HOMES
Housmg Opportumty
Need to sell your home
qwckly because of a For Lease One bedroom
dtvorce, bankruptcy, JOb ntee 2nd floor apt Corner
transfer, or death Don 't let Pme and Second Large
the bank foreclose aM rutn kttchen wtth d1n1ng area
your cred1t t.ocal person New range, retngerator
buys houses Fast clos tngs Water tncluded References
All cash Jtm (740)992· reqwed $300/mo Secunty
depostt No pet$ Call
(740)446-4425 or (740)446·
3936

2 bedroom 4 m11es south
tram Holzer on
tSO
$350/month
plus
sec
depoSit Reference needed
1980 141160 Nausna, 2 bed- (740}446-6865 or (740)379room . remodel bathroom 2923
new porcn roof, w/0 stove
3 bedroom mobrle home m
refr igerator,
$6,000 ,
M1ddleport 1
no
pets
(740)992-0925
(740)992·5858
1993 141170 Norris 2 bed·
room , 2 bath. garden ruo.
APAKIMtNIS
dishwasher. 8x8 deck , ____
FUR RENT
$II ,900 174lll446 · 9460 ·
1 and 2 bedroom apart 1995 Skyline . 14X70, vtnyl ments ftJrmshed 800 untur·
sldtng,
shmgle
roof ntShe\1, securtty deposit
$1399500 Call Karena reqwred , no pets, 740-$92 _
(74{])385·7671
2218
.
Ava11able

r

r

No Down Payment needed
even wtth less than perfect
credit on th1s 3 bedroom. 2
1/2 bath home 4 years old
basement, 15 acres, garage
Wllh a beauttlul v1ew 14x70
mobtle home on property
used as rental pays tor large
part of payment. (740)9924212
.

~arrow Smart Contact th

LoTs&amp;
ACREAGE

6011100 lot wtth 28 ft 5th
wheel camper &amp; outbutldtng,
28x24 shelter Beautiful vtew
of
Raccoon
Creek
Accesstble to the Ohto River
wtth boat Call
Askmg
$23 000. pnce negottable
(740)446-0022
.

Located on Graham
School Road
3 Homes W1th 7 acres
$165.000
3BR House 1 bath .
2 car. garage
3BR Doublewtde,
2 ba th , above ground
pool central fll r
38A 1-112 bath Mobtl e
Home wtlh additton
(74{])446-3 164
(740)44 1·9974
(740)441 -02 19

r'o

I

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

ads must be prepaid•

Uhlily Contractor se6kmg
Free Proless1onal
expenenced buned ' tele·
lnstallatton
phone foreman , operators
up to 4 Rooms
and laborers COL e)(pefl·
Call1-800·523-7556
ence a plus Travel ts
• lor detatls
requ1red
,
Jewelry Buy Sell Golel
Benents mctude optional Diamonds.
Gemstones
Heallh, Dental, short &amp; long Aepatr, Appratsals, G em
term d!SSblllty, 40 1K, and Testmg
Graduate
ltfe Insurance
·
Gemologist
Jeweler
Oualtf1ed applicants should (740 )645 _6365 or (7401446 _
send resume to
3080
Gudenkaul Corporation
Attn Mtke Fraley
TURNED DOWN ON
2679 McKtnley Avenue
SOCIAL SECURITY 15517
Columbus, Ohto 43204
No Fee Unless We W1n1
Or Ematl
1·888-582-3345
All applicants must submtt a
mfraley
0
gudenkaut
com
letter of interest and resume
I ~ I \I I " I \II
614-488-1776 ext. 229
Including the names of three
references on or before
Ho~
March 4, 2005 toMs Phyllis _ _ _ _E:.O:.E:____
~UR SALE
Mason, SPHR, Director of Wanted 23 more people to ·--oitiiiiliiiiii-Human
Resources, lose up to 30 lbs Dr recom· 2Bx56 home on 6 acres
Unt~erst ly of Rio Grande. mend Cell Darlane or Carol 28x48 barn , In ground pool
P.O Bo~~: 500 , Rio Grande , (74n)!l84 3:ln
Millstone Ad 304-576·2920
OH 45674. Ematl·lll!llk :.,-....:__-_ _ _ __
$95 ,000 •
sonOno edu, fax 740-245· Wanted and needed m
4909
Pomeroy, Ohio, Full time live --~-----1n care taker for spectalty 3 bdrm , 2·1 /2 bath LA-DR
EEO/AA Employer
bed tfnd breakfast, tf you are K, FA wl1plc, fenced yarn,
of English Welch, lnsh storage bldg , In' City
Un!WI'Sity of Rio Grande and
decent, and an accent, Excellent
IOCAttOn ,
Ato GrJndt Community College enpy cooking, house keep- (740)44fH945
AN Tl'utmenl NUrH
ing and general caring for
-- - - In the others th IS
' pos"ton
"
1s made 3 bedroom . 2 bath. fireplace
Dueto an
upgrade
1or you we o11e r a sa1ary on 1 6 ·acres. A10 Grande
actiVIty level at Arbors , tM
, $85 .000
Call
1 and upsca1e enwon- area
tactflh&gt; 1s seeking an flN , Pus
(74{])709-1 166
1
"
1
f
tyl
Treatment nurse 10 work FT men! • es e Non·smoklng,
Mond8\I·FmJay Our facthty non dnnking cultured per'
( 1 •- od PI
3 br house 1 5 ba th,w/
ease conotte rs competitive wages , son s ....ilr
tact 6 at o
nd M- M garage &amp; basement,narel·
40tK , and an e11cellenl benu
r a
••·
eftls package. with the Dellavalle, 8227 Blueberry wood floors , hied &amp;newly
0
.,_ ~ A' h
Fl remodeled kitchen w/ extras
opport~&lt;Jnlty for aelvanceriVe, ~~w ~rt IC ey, ·
~'653
727 608 4021 located 1n Pt Pleasant 304ment
~
·
· 675·6052 or 304-593·2532
OAOOI&lt;TAO
• •t •
Apply tn person or call Judy ...~.,.;,:":;.";r;n~a~.-r--.r.~X'i"'ltri'•'llll..,n

~~:t~o~n~;~:~~~~.:~ ~7~~~6-71~NIDON .
Middleport, Oh. EOE

All Display: 12 Noon :z
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p . m.
Thur-&amp;day for sundays

HELPWM'I'ED

Now accepttng resumes for
Cost Tec hmctan postt1ons
ReqUires good E11cel sk tlls,
general computer knowl·
edge, w1llmgness to travel
and work ovarttme Starttng
pay $15 00 hou r Applicant
needs not to have e)(pen·
ence. must have good work
ethtcs and the wtllingness to
learn Tratmng provtded Fax
resume to (614 )71 6·2272

Now you can have borders and graphics
""-"
added to your classified ads
{I~
lr1'l
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SO¢ for small
$1.00 for large

__..,

r::t::---FOR~s-P.k_
cr

For lease OffiCe or retail
spaces tn .,.ery good oondr·
!ton Downtown Gallipolis
Appro){ 1600 sQ. ft each 1
or 2 baths Lease pnce
negottabie to encourage
new
business
Call
(740)446--4425 or (740)446·
3936

Gara~IBody st!op 2500 sq

~..
ft ~arage 2500 sq ft park·
1ng lot . tn Gallipolis, Uppe1
A1ver Rd Call (740)6455785

lrii'III.;...-~W~ANnD
~---.,
~~~n;~~:~nt s~o;:n:~ •~---oimioiRFNriiii
.,;;,__

1mmed1ate - - - - - - - --

occupancy
tn
Country
Homes 10% down, St 75 44 pluS depOSit water &amp; trash
per month Call Harold tncluded (J 40)3B8-00n or Protesstonal, non-smok1ng
(740)385-4367
(740)339-0362
non·drmktng
non-drugs
young woman seeks house
For Sale · 1979 Homette 2
2 bedroom apt Second on land contract or long term
bedroom . w/central arr,
$3.495 00 Call (740) 385· Ave. Galltpohs $450 month, lease. preferably close to
stove/relngerator tncluded. Holzer
yet
country
4367
washer/dryer hookup, cen· Peace/qutet a must
For Sale, 14X70- 3 bed- tral atr 7-40·441-0194 or NECESSIDES; SAfE area,
room, set up m Countr~ ~7-4Q-4'--4'-I~·.:_fi~8~4'-----­ all electuc. central AJC, ck&gt;s·
tub/shower
Homes. $6. 995 ·00· Move 10 2BR apt State Route 160 etslstorage,
todayl Call (74{])385-4367
washer/dryer
hooK
up, 1·3
S4001month, stove/refngerator tncluded . washer/dryer bedrooms, garage/carport
Immediate pouesslonl Only
hoolrup (740)«1-019-4 or Ranch Purf9ct' refurences.
$213 68 per mo New 3 bed·
stable job Own relngerator/
room , 2 bath mobile home (740)441-fiM.
stove. Call (304)593-3207
Only minutes from Athens 3
room
and
bath, please ~ave VOIC8 matl
I-80Q-837-3238
downstove/refngerator,
statrs all Utllibes pold o&amp;6
1nven1ory ClearanCe 24X60, Oltve
Street
$45Q
3 bedroom, 2 O&amp;lh OeiMiry (740)446-3945 •
ana set-up tnctueled Cell ::__:;__::_:::_::....:.__ __
Mike (740)385-9908
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED l AFFORDABLE!
SSV Social Security
Townhouse
apartments

::...::.:=-==----

51 ,300 Net tnOOme. we can aooror small houses FOR
finance you a home. C. II RENT Call (740)«1-1 111
lor apphcat~on &amp; mtormatton.
_ 130-4)736·3400
I

l:;~~~~;cJ

----------~-----:---~-------

�www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, February 25, 2005.

Friday, February 25, 2005

www.mydallysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puz.zle

BRIDGE
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel eeams, Pipe Rebar
For
Conc re1e.
Angle .
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drams,
Appliance
Driveways &amp; Walkways . L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Warehouse Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
SatUrday
&amp;
in Henderson, WV. Pre- Thursday,
owned applicanes starting at Sunday. ('740)446-7300

Specials of the Month on
Farmpro Tractors. Farmpro
20hp, 2-wheel drive, diesel
utility tractor, $3899.
Farmpro 25hp 4·wheel
drive. diesel utility tractor
wlloader, $8999. More
units available, all with 1yr
warranty, call lor more
de1ails.' (740)696'0358

Phillip
Alder

NorCh

Tractor parts &amp; service , spa$75 &amp; up all under warranty,
Pole Barn 30•SOx10FT cializing
in
Massey
we do service work on all
$6795. includes Painted Ferguson , Ford, Long. and
Make and Models '(304)675·
Metal , Plans, Instruction Belarus. (740)696·0358
7999
Book, Slider, Free Delivery

;,.l9~3..7 1,.55~9-83.,;;;;;;85;;;o;;~~""'ffi

FurnitUre : Sofa- chair sets,

$399 : Sola- love seat sets,. lrr SPA F A.CTOR\' OUnETS

$499.

Mollohan . ·carpet
(740)446-7444 or (740)3880173.

New Shipment

9162. Free Es1imales, Easy

financing , 90 days same as
cash. Visa/ Master Card.
Drive- a- little save alot.

I.JVESTOCK

~~--------'

Cedar Knoll Mall, '
Kentucky'Trading Posl,

Ashlarid .

Yearling Angus Bulls, Mostly
A.l. e~Ccellent blood lines,
priced reasonably. Slate Run
Tiffany design Prom dress, Farm, Jackson. (740)286worn once. Pink with layered
5395.
bottom. Size 24 . Cost $350 www.slaterunfarm.com
new- sell $150 OBQ. Call
Kristen (304)675-5979 or
HAY&amp;
(304)675-567 1.
GRAIN

r

r

-

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •

1-888-321-0311
740-682-6188

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• Now Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbktg
;, RoOfing &amp; Gunera
• Vlilyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Dtcka
We do It all except
turnBce work

First PacK $10.00 All After 1st $5.00

,)1

\' '

Paying a $100.00 a Game
$200.00 for the X
$300.00 picture frame
$1,000.00 coverall
Crank It Up $16,000.00
17 Numbers Lett
Starburst $1,300.00
Weather Permitting

740·742-2293

• Leave a mes5a e

BISSEll

BUILDERS IQC.

New Homes • Vinyl

• Bucket Truck

Sunset Home
Construction

FREE ESTIMATES

Phone: 740·742·3411

Window s • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and

740-&amp;92-7599

Wish!!

In !Jieinory

Jeep Grahd Cherokee 00
Laredo. 65K miles. Excellent
co ndition, 4x4, remote stan,
ex1ras.
$13,000neg.
(304)617-1380.
Must sale, 1984 Corvette,
350engine. (740)992-6797

Help Wanted

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Cytotechnologist
Pleasanl Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a full-time
·Cytotechnologist Baccalaureate
degree in Cytotechnology and
certification by ASCP. WV license.
Excellent salary, holidays, health
insuraru:e single/family plan, dental
plan, life insurance, vacation, long
term disability, and retirement
Send resumes to :
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
AA/EOE
w,vw.pvalley.org
I

~

I

1

'DON'TCMA

FERGIT, MAW,
% WEAR TH'

s;~~t~

...,-,.,,

f

'DANG II

~

ANOTHER

'DRAW II

Jf

~
...,.,.....__I

j
I

•
~~=

BUCKEYE Siaitalioa ·
THE BORN LOSER

";-ou DOO\ iN'£ Y~ :&gt;iu~:&gt;~t.~
·- ~~IO~SLY

ENOU61\!
I'JI.f&gt;l TIONS DO
YOU W&gt;.'o'E. I'~YOUR

[ f'\£1&gt;}1, Wl-\t\i
/J/J"m.... DO YOU WN&gt;IHD
&amp; Wf\t.l'-1 '1'0V
GROW UP?

Whaley's Auto ·

t 99a· 30' fifth whe el travel
trailer, double slide. excel. lent coi1ditlon, $13,900
phone: (740)698-9319

. ROBERT
BISSEll
COISTRUCnON
• New 'Homes
• Garages

1993 Chevrolet Astra Van,
good
condition
phone
(304)675-50n
-------1994 Chevy Astra Van. 7
passenger, ex~enent condi· PUBLIC NOTICE
l ion, new tires, 74,000miles,
NOTICE II hereby
$3.200. Call (740)256·6395.

f14U4WM~~~

I

Low mileage , $2,500.

-------,.-

on
given
that
Saturday, February
26, 2005 at 10:00 a.m.,
a public Hie will be
held at 211 w_ Second

SlrHI, Pomeroy, Ohio.
The

Farmers

Bank

and
Savlngo
Company lo oelllng
lor caoh tn hand or
certified check tholol·
lowing collateral:
2000 FORD PT F2S
SAW
SUPERDUTY
1FTNX2DF6YED18771
The Farmers Bank

and
Company,

Savlnga
Pomeroy,

Ohio, reaervea the
right to bid at lhla
Hla," and to wllhdraw
the above collatorol
prior to Hie. Further,
The Formara Bank
and
Savlnga
Company re1ervee .
the right to relect any
or all bide aubmltted. ·
The
above
doacrlbed COIIIIIrll
will be eold '"aa !a-

1982 Honda 500 ' Trik8
Faring w/ttereo sys1em. Dk
blue. Evenings (740)256- where Ia", · with no
exprea- or Implied
8870. $3,000.

1997 Dodge Ram 1500,
warranty given. The
4•4. trucl&lt;, $4,900. Call 1986 Honda Foreman, 4 wd, collateral muat be
I1Ccellef1'! condition, garage mQVJd
(740)448-()924,
property.
kep1, ~000. (740)992-0413
For lurthlr lnlorma·
1998 S1D- 59,500 miles, 4
cyl, 5 speed, PS-PB-AC. 1995 Harley Softail Custom, tlon , or lor an appolnl·
S9,995. Call (806)232-6319. mant to lnapect colla!·
(740).. 1-9160

rrom

eral, prior to Nle dote

87 Chevy 112-lon. 2WD 350engine, 8 t ..CJOO..mlles, good
condition, PW/PL, or~ . 4
new
tir••·
Red/black,
$1,700. (740)506-1367.

0

1998 Yamaha
Warrier. contoct Diane Aletor
Excellent COI'ldltion, $2,600. or Rindy Heya at 882·
4·wheeler Urea- various 2136.
sizes
and
conditions. (2) 23, 24 &amp; 25 3TC
. (7,00)446-()048.

• Complete

Remodeling

~

741-BB2-1m
PUBLIC NOTICE
The
VIllage
of
Pomeroy
will
be
occeptlng
ground
maintenance proposala lor Beech Grove ·
Cemetery. All propoo·
ala muat be received
by 1.2:00 pm on March
28, 2005 In lhe Clerk"o
OHica, 320 East Main
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio.
The maintenance sea·
lone begins In the
laat pori of April
through
mid
Septomber of 2005Thlo will Include mowIng, weed eating, etc.
with conlractor pro·
vldlng
their
own
equipment and auppllea. Alao contractor
muat provide their

own

lnsurence.

Camalery muot be
malntalnaa 2 .to 3
tlmoa per month In
-1 period~ and I lo 2
tlrnea per month In
dry
perloda.
Contractor will be
paid on completion of
each compltote mow•
lng and with thll Hill·
lacllon of Pomeroy
VIllage
Council.
Pomeroy ·
VIllage
Council raservea the
right lo accept or
reject any or all propoaolo _
Kalhy Hysell

CJM'k/Treaaurer ·
Vllloge of Pomeroy
(2) 25, (3) 4, 11, 18

Stop &amp; Compare

·~------·

0

k

St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH
7jl0-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Restnckfrtg /.ate JWodel
n.n d . After .M arket Rlrls
See Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

r F~~

Forcr F·250 diesel, 1
~
automatic. many new
130,000 miles, runs 1979 Honda 750 tOth
body great shape, no
. 52 •800.
Phone Anniversary Llmi1ed Editidn.
Needs
ignition
work .
(740)441-9378.
Evening
(740)256-6870.

1995 F350 Dually Power
Stroke- aluminum bed wl
e)l1ras. 66,000 ortg. miles.
$15·,000. Call (740)256·
6746.

0

·Parts

0

u
0

PEANUTS
MA'f l TrN Tfll5

WI4AT DOES IT DO?

6ALL AND PADDLE

lJ.liN6. 616 6ROT~ER'

Now Available At

BAlll\1 Llll\IBER
Scorpion Tractors
"Taking The Sting Out Of
Hard Work!"
Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor

with 30hp &amp; 40hp

Kubota

SUNSHINE CLUB

Engines

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

GARFIELD
·nu; FOReCAST CAL-l-5
A
ReAL.L..,. BAD BL.IZZARP fOI'7A~'IJ

Hill 's Se lf
Sto rage
29670 Bashan Road

Racine', Ohio
45771 .

740-9411-2211

11
13
14
15
18

43 c..rtes
45 Reddlah

horHI
47 Baby food
50 lmmunHy
ahoto
51 Stein IIIIer
52 Bedges
54 Softens up
58 CountJy hDIIII
59 Same old
grind

·17 Electr1cai..,H 60 Cut, as tleJ
18 What
61 Whart
broncos ~o
denizen
20 Salta used 62 Halpl
medicinally 63 Cotillion
22 Exploiar
honorees
-daGama
24 Diamond
DOWN

Is this either/or,
or either/and?

a lime!y fashion.

25 UPS truck
26 Pizazz
28 Zillions
32 Recipe word
33 Gate tanned
34 BUffalo's
lake
35 Only
37 Rockies,
briefly ·
39 Toothpaate
choice
40 Trial run
41 Lowoat
high tide

1 Invoice no.
2 VIsualize
3 Colo.
neighbor
4 Uppity folks
5 Oulck tum
6 ElDorado
loot
7 More willing
8 Low beams
9 Nymph who
pined away
10 To- H may
concern
12 Ceaseflres

19 Newapapar
features
21 Faded
22 "Star Waro"
villain
23 Glde or
Maurots
24 Trap
25 Shoe part
27 Feed the
kitty
29 Gill or lung
30 Sladlum
levels
31 Me
36 Tlwsl-endIBTY sword
38 NoWs II8CIIon
44 Benallclarleo
46 Sighed
wtth delight

47 Two
of a kind
48 Humerus
neighbor
49 Tear
50 Sound·
barrier
· breakers
53 Laurel end
Hardy
55 SL kin
56 Duck's foot
57 Almost
grads

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

C.~ Clph&amp;t eryptogra1115 .n ere818d 11om ql.lllition! by lamou~ peopll!, pas1 and prea&amp;nt

Each letter i1 the dpher atarw:!1 for Mother.

Todsy's clue: Z equals D

"XCCO·BXIW

YWJFTN

UJYW

YWXY'N

NBRHYWJFT

(SSBAZ

LOJZTHN)

RH ,

LOY

WH

RA

MXYWHO

FHKHO

YBSZ

NWBUHZ
PHMM

HVXRCSH. '"

PBA .

RH

LA

LOJZTHN

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "No, painting is not made to decorate apanmen1S.
11's an offensive and defensive weapon againsl the enemy.· - P. Picasso
(C) 2005 by NEA, Inc. 2·25 '

S.tu~ay,Feb.28, 2006

HE SAID 50t'(ETHING
ABOLlT BLliLDtNG ·THE
WORLDS LARc,E:;T,
SNOWMI'-N.
0
0

IMPORTS
Athens

5
8

m,ybe
KeepiH
Flower
droplot
Waa alncera
A Gerohwln
Berlin
pronoun
Choir vOice
Name, .
to Pierre

. ~~!!!:
0

2000 Ford Win dStar LX,
Toyota Rav~ . '97 all· wheel 91 ,000 miles. 2 sliding
drive. Loaded, 1 owner,
$5,700. Call (606)923·3259 doors, power windows &amp;
or (304)429·8032, leave . cruise $6,300 (304)6754014
..
,message.
2000 Ford Winstar LX, En K,
TRUCKS
2/sliding doors, ·seats 7, all
roRSAIE
power, rear air, tinted win·
dows,
asking
$6,900,
1985 Chevy Silverado. 300 (740)669·5653
mites on rebuil1 350, but - - - - - - - won't tlold oil pressure. 2001 Dodge Caravan Sport,
Asking $700. Can {304)675· 70,000 miles, excellent con5979.
ditlon, . sliding dooi-s-both
- - - - - - - - sides, auto, V6 , A/C, power
1988 Ford F1SO, 79,300 evervthlng, time/tempera·
miles_Excellent condition , 5 ture · gauge.
$11,000.
speed, overdrive. (740)388- (740)256-6543.
0140.
1989
2WD,
parte,
good .
rust.

East
Pass
Ali p&lt;:itiS

Two days ago, we had a deal in which the
declarer had to choose between playing
lor a 3·2 diamond break and taking the
club finesse . Yesterday, declarer could
have his gateau and eat it too. first tryi ng
lor a 3-2 diamond division, the n turning to
the club finesse when -the diamonds were
4· 1. Into which camp does today's deal
drop? You are in two no-trump, and West
leads our old friend , the Spade king.
You can get home in one of tWo ways: one
spad9, two hearts. and five diamonds: or
one spade, four hearts and three diamonds. But if you play on diamonds and
they break bad ly, you will be stranded in
the dummy, unable to take the heart
finesse.
Perhaps 'you think that you do still have a
chance, lir:tdtng the heart queen singleton
or doubleton. The former would be all
right, but the latter would not. You win the
first or second trick With the spade ace
and take dummy's three top diamonds
(the correct percen tage play in that suit) ,
gening the bad news. Now you caSh the
two top hearts, getting the good news.
But after you play .a heart to your jack, you
are stranded In hand and should go one
down .
'
·
The secret Is to lead the heart jack first,
tempting West · to cover if he has 1he
queen. But If he plays low smoothly, rise
with dummy's king .and cash the heart
ace. When the queen falls , play a heart 16
your nine, then retum to dummy with a
diamond. At this point, you are chasing
oYertrlcks. But.if the heart queen hadn't
dropped, you would have taken diamonds
lrom tho top, hoping tha1 1he lack would

BARNEY

llelge Ca. Rnldentell!

93 Columbus Rd.

98 Cadillac Catera. Fully 86 BroncQ X LT. 4 WD, 302, 4
equipped, leather interior, BBL. auto, new ti res, roters,
low miles. min1 con dition. $1 '100, (740)992-3679
$7,900. Call (740)704-375 1.
99 Jeep Cherokee SpOrt.
SMW ' Z3, '99, Special 4x4, EC, gold, au1o, PW, Pl,
Edition , 22.000 miles; dark V6, CD, CC, keyless entry,
green, $t9,999. (304)412· $6,500. (814)231·1355.

Sadly missed by wife,
Wilda &amp; Family

Help Wanted

,,

IN rA5~~TBAt.L, fAN
ANTONIO StiOT
•.
W~t.L ANf&gt; viON,
t(OIJSTON WAS
VICTO#liOIJ5,
UTAI'I t.OST ANf&gt;
·'·
P~TilOIT f&gt;II&gt;N'T
.'
PLAY.
l--rt--Rn

BIG NATE

99 Dodge Intrepid good
• John· ·Deere 204Q, diesel ~ shape $4,000
(304)675EC , new tires, $8,950. Ford 6986
3000
diesel,
$5.995.
93 Ford Escort LX. Auto, PS,
(614)419-2781 .
PB. NC , 88.000 miles,
$1 ,800 080
(740)446In Memory
6304.

Chevy Monte Carlo SS, '84,
$6.500 neg. Call (740)3779943.

Pm; ~

North
I I
:!NT

~Astro..;

power everything, 1 1,000
Bison stock trailer. 18 ft. miles, $6,500. (740)441goose neck, e~Ccellent condi· 0337 or (740)645 -6153.
tion, kept ins1de. (740)446· 2003 Mitsubishi Eclipse,
2075 . .
Excellent Condition $14,500

3380.

I NT .

appear ln

2002 Ford Escort ZX2, 5
speed, 29,000 miles, air,
one owAer. Nice (740)4412000 M.F. 231 S Tractor 235 0157 or (740)645·51-41 .
hrs. $9,500 . Call (740)256· 2603 Dodge Neon STX
6746.
4do~r.
4cyl. , automatic,

who passed 0\•Vay
Febniary 25, 1995
Ther:e ',\' an open gau~
At rhe end of the road .
Thtvugh which each m1.1st go atune.
And there:" a figh t we camwt .\·ee
Our Father claims his own .
Beyond the, gate our loved one ·
Finds happine~i~i afld re.'lt,
And there is c omfort
In the thought
That a loving God knows bttst.
Ynu arr 1101 forgotlen
Tho on earth y ol( are n'o more,
Still in memory you are with u ,!o
As yQu always were before.

West

Opening lead: • K

FUT~E. 7

Roy M. Wiseman

South

0~111,

1

42 Comlc·atrtp
.,.rk

stat

~ 2

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: Both

lltenUoa

Complete !amity of Ohio
8iver Bears- $100.
Antique Gooseneck Rocker.
newly upholstered· $200.
Rocker Recliner- $100
Complete set of BudweiserX-mas mUgs· $100
·Amish Rocker- $150
2001 Honda Civic LX
·Phone (740)44 t-8299.
Coupe. Green, automatic,
excellent condition. very
I \lt\1.., 11'1 '111 ..,
clean. 73,000 highway·
,\II \ I .., HH h.
mites, $8,395 negotiable
(614)313-7096.

In Loving Memory of

A2

... Q86 .542

HOUSE

FARM

l!iuer her a
l!reat bil! old

' •

BRITCHES
IN THIS
)_

for a free estimate.

· SEPTIC TANK PIJMPING $95.00
PORTABlE TOilET RENTAl
CAll FOR APPOINTMENT TODAY
992-3251 OR 59f·8757

EQuiPMENT

out on Feb. 26

•

tv.
3

RESIDENliAL

• Replacement

• J 8 65
... A K 9

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

• Stump Grinding

Brian Reeves
New Home Construclion, Remodeling,
Renovations. Decks, GarageS, Pole
Buildings, Roofs, Siding, Windows &amp; All
Other Residential. Needs

Siding • New Garages

Let me do it f~r y oul

If You see
Paula Roush

Q 6

• J 9 5

Top • Remov.al • Trim

.
lance

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

L Shaped Oak Computer
Desk 68"x74H w/hutch 32"·
heightx48N·Width excellent
conditio n $400 (304)882·
. 3570 after 5pm

10 8 6 5

•

South

l'ree .Service

WV03672S

25 Years Loeal E•

STANLEY· TREE
TRIMMING&amp;
.GENERAL .
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
Call Gal)' Stanley

•

8 74 3
7 4

.... t O 7

JONES'

V.C. YOUNG Ill

American Legion Middleport
February 26
6:30pm

KQJ97

wv

CARPENTER
SERVICE

BINGO

•

•
•

-5264

YOUNG'S

992-.6215

East

Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident.

Pomeroy, Ohio

·r....o----...;.-__,

r

West

Ask for Art

Wanting to _
48 x.40 inch
Wooden pallets
L_ Williamson Pallets
304-675-2716

wringer washers. Will do
Block, brick. sewer pipes.
repairs on major brands In windOws, lintels, etc. Claude ·Round bales ol hay, mixed,
shop or at your home.
stored inside, $15·$20 .
Winters, Rio Grande, OH
:_17~4.::0 ):_:44~6:.-~1 0:.:6.::2 ~
· --Used Furniture Store, 130 Call 740-245-512 1
Bulavllle PiKe . Appliances,
PETs
Wanting tO rent sum mer
mattresses,
dressers.
FOR SALE
pasture, for beef cattle in
Gallia County. Call after
couches . dinettes, recliners. __
grave monuments. much
6pm, (740)446-3375.
Registered
.Toy
more.
(740)446-4782 , AKC
lit \ \..,I'Oln \110\
GallipOlis, OH. Hrs. 11·3 (M· Poodles 4 blacK males,
$350, 1 black. 1 aprico1
S) We buy used furniture .
1emale, $400 . (740)367Aura,;
7429.
FOR SAIE
ANIJQUES

i

,~~@@~[1\1~

~::34~;1§

Dry &amp; wrapped rou nd bales
tors, gas and · electric ·
SUPIW:S
for sale. Delivery available. ·
ranges, air co.nditioners,. and ~~--ooiliiiioiiiiiiilo-_.1 (740)245-9557.

• J 3

Buyers of standing timber
Also Land Clearing

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
March 5. 2005
Meigs County Fi!irgrounds
Auctioneer
Capt. Billy R. Goble, Jr.
740-992-5794 Home .
740-416-1164 Cell
Lunch by Southern Local
Band Boosters

(606)922-7185

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Aepalr-675-7.388 . For sale,
re-- conditioned automatic
. washers &amp; dryers. retrigera- -~--..,
8UUJHNG

&lt;i

.~

Whi1e male Llama, 4 years
old. $100. Call (740)2561652.

20-tubs in-stock

Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road , Porter, Ohio.
(740 )44&amp;.7444 1-877-830-

r

• 4 3
.AK102 .
I A K Q 10 9

~~~u~[!' !L®'~bu~

Broad Run Gun Club
Sunday, February 27th
12 Noon 12 gauge
Outlaw/12 gauge
$lug Match

D2·:!5-05

ACROSS

0

By B•rnlce Bed• O.al
The lactthat others might not easily recognize opportunities. which will be quite ,
apparent to you in the year ahead, gives
you the edge over yoWr peers. Vou'll be
· able to take advantage of several situations without too much competition.
PISCES Web. 20-March 20)- Because
of the compassion you always show
toward others, someone in dis1ress
might esk tor your help IOday. In aiding
this person, you'll end up helping yourself more tt\3,n you do him or her.
ARIES (MarcH 2l·Aprll 19) - Listen
. carefully to the Ideas and suggestions
put forth by those with whom you assOciate today. Among all the talk, some
gems of wisdom might slip out that'tl be
· ol big help to .you .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Strive to
get right to work today1nstead of wasting
away the morning. Once you get started,
this could turn out to be a very productive day tor you, 9\len if you didn't lay out
a game plan.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20) -You may
start out doing merely the same old
things you always do on Saturday, but
chances are the day will evolve Into placIng more emphasis on social activitl~s
than you anticipated.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - This
could turn out to be a very del~htful day
for you spending your time with family
members or loved ones. Those who are
the closest to you can make the commonplace seem very special.
lEO (July 2~- Aug. 22) - vdur active,
alert mind today' is likely to SEieK out
activities that foster mental chaHenges
and cerebraJ dexterity. The more
provocative they are, the more sllmulatlng they'll be for you.
VIRGO {Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- A shopping
excursion may be just what 'll give you
the lift you 're seel&lt;ing today. The only
trouble is you mlght find too many beautiful items, so you 'll have lo keep your
budgel in mind.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - You'll be
quite an effecdve leader 'today when the
situation calls for it. 'fbur peers will automatically look to you for direction and the
ways and means to make their day successfu l.
··
'
SCORPIO (Oct
24-Nov_ 22) _._
Spending your day in solitude won'l be
confining to you today_ You'll seek out
your own ll"le comer in the world to
refurbish your anergies and find solu·
Uons to Introspective problems.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Reflecting on tUture plans of what you
can Of can't do with your li1e·has its value
'today. A positive hypothesis can help
provide a mental ptctura to clarify your
objectives.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan, 19) - Lett
to your own cte\lices, you can be a preny
good aChiever today. It'll give you the
opportunity to determine your own procedures which . when put to the lest. will
work fof you.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - TrUst
yoor own faith and beliefs today when It
comes to making an impor1ant judgment
call. 0on·t let Others discourage you trom
what you know In your heart to ba lrue.

"W 0 K N Ill

. [ I' I

1

!' :::;
· You loJt a lgt ·~ mon~v
. ~ trying IQ find oil,' one tycoon
: .~ salo 10 anot~ar. • Yoa,' the

j .

N

other tycoon replied , • It could

...,--E-N_V_P_H_H_..,, ~~~;se. It coula nave been.
j
. .
I_ I"
6

I~

.

I. 0

1....-L.-~..1..-1--'--' yo•

'8 ••IN,~,THfjf
NUM6S~EO t!~E&lt;S
lOVAO.tS .
. .

·c,;,.,plo•o 11\o th10tl lo ~o!od
b., f llllftg '" the mlnltl_; ¥tar~'
d"'olop lrQM lltP No. J bolo...
I

0 ~;;'!i:!£~ LtTTEIS I .j

ll

I

•

' •

7

I I I I I

SCRAIMlrs- ANSW!RS • 1 ~ 2 ~ ~ a l
Whiten.-lneot- Wsdge- Maraud .,.,CIDN'T

·

True happiness is finding oulthal:he boy,., h1gn school

voted most likely 10 succeed. DIDN'T.

ARLO &amp;JANIS

·(~i'~
»;1/0
'lillY OOO'f YOllf.vtR Vl~i II!;
llllEJJ !:ol Ill f~E.lVB'

SOUPTONUTZ
~--~~ troNEA. In&lt;; - ~_...

c:::::=======::::::;:--,
so .. rrs "'" ~~
NEMI&lt;SIS ,· NE'.I~·1&gt;1k£S-

A - a.-.11-1 ""•'•n ~

PICTURE
THIS!!
Professional Photogr11phy
&amp; Vkltoanpby

A.ny occulon-Ponnlt
Snslon1, Wttldinp.
Families, Engagement"
Babla
Call Jan Cupenter
.

740-74~Jl16

I

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

�Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, February 25. 2005: .

.

Indians use spring Cavs take a shot, trade for Welsch~
training to search
for next shortstop
BY ToM· WITHERS

Associated Press

WINTER HAVEN. Fla .
(AP) - Cleveland Indians
manager Eric Wedge knows
. he can't replace a nine-time
Gold Glove shortstop.
But who he will pick to succeed Omar Vizquel will be his
biggest decision of camp this
spnng.
For the fir st time since
1993, the Indian s open a season without Vizque I, who
signed with San Francisco in
the offseason.
. Jhonny
Peralta
and
Brandon Phillips, both comiii~ off outstanding seasons at
Tnple-A Buffalo, will compete for the job: ·
Wedge knows the first time
either makes an error, the natural reaction from the fans
and media will be: "Omar
would have had it."
"Both of these kids have a
chance to have tremendous
careers," said Wedge . as the
team held its tirst full-squad
workout Thursday. "l don't
want them to think they have
to replace anybody. Our
expectations of them.are realistic."

Both players insist · their
focus is on winning the job
aQd not replacing one of the
most popular players in franchise history.
"I don't feel pressu,re,"
Peralta said. "I know I'm a
good player. I knew someday
they 'd need a new guy to play
short."
· Both are capable of making
this team, but one will likely
stan the season in Triple-A
Buffalo, Wedge said. The
addition of veteran infielders
Alex
Cora
and
Jose
Hernandez doesn ' t leave

Bearcats
from Page 81
fan in the Cincinnati student
section held up a sign that
·read: "No Diener No
Chance."
Crean thought hi s team
· missed Die·ner's leadership at
the outset.
·
"Probably; but that 's not an
excuse," Crean said. "We've
got to learn to deal with it.
We figured it out in the second half:"
.
Cincinnati got open 3s over
Marquette's zone, packed in
to try to contain Maxiell and
Hicks. Nick Williams made
three of his tirst four shots
from behind the arc, putting
the Bearcats in control early.

Clarett
from Page 81
At.21, he says he has matured
and learned from his mistakes. He spent much of the
last year training · in
California and being tutored
by his lawyer, David Kenner.
Now, he's presenting the new
Maurice Clarett, not the guy
who basically. blew off the
2003 combine. Not the guy
who pleaded guilty to lying
on a police report after claiming $10,000 in merchandise
was stolen fi'om his car. Not
the youngster who accepted
benefits in college to which
he was not entitled.
And not the Claret! who
accused Ohio State.of arranging for a no-work job and
providing improper academic
aid after he was suspended by
the school.
"A more positive person" is
what the NFL will get, .he
says. "I've got a lot greater
work ethic · than I had last
year. I think my drive is a
whole lot more determined
than I was last year. I just
want to work, I don't care if
it's special teams, anything,
just get me on the field, I
want to play with anybody."
Who JS interested? That's
hard to tell this early in the
draft process and with so
many questions surrounding
Claret!.
But pro teams know all
about the powerful runs and
shifty moves Clarett showed
in leading the · Buckeyes to

room for both young players.
"I don't see it as competi·
tion," Phil lips said. "It 's not
pressure. I'm not looking at it
like that. I can't make the
decision. I' ll let them do
that."
.Peralta, who turns 23 in
May, was last year's
International League MVP
and appears to have the early
edge. He batted .326 with 15
homers and 86 RBI s last season.
Phillips failed miserably
when he was handed the second base job out of spring
training in 2003. He played
capable defense but hit .208
in 112 games.
The 23-year-old rebounded
last season, batting .303 with
eight homers and 50 RBis at
Buffalo.
He said he's not thinking
about going back.
.
"That's the last thing on my
mind," he said. "Once something negative happens, come
back to me and I' II answer the
question then."
.
Peralta also· was rushed to
the big leagues in 2003, fill ing in because of Vizquel's
knee surgery. Barely 21,. he .
was · the youngest po sition
player in the American
League. Peralta batted .227
and drove in 2 I runs in 77
games.
Williams finished with 16
points.
,
Freshman walk-on guard
· Ryan Patzwald ma(le a 3 and
a jumper during an eightpoint spurt, and Hicks made ·a
turnaround jumper an·d three'
point play that put the
Bearcats up 38-21 at halftime.
Marquette had only two
assists in the first half, under. scoring how much it missed ·
Diener.
Hicks and Maxiell scored
· Cincinnati's first 10 points in
the second half, helping the
Bearcats extend their lead to
20. Cincinnati led by as many
28 before Marquette closed
the gap down the stretch
behind Novak's long-range
shooting over the Bearcats'
back-ups.
the 2002 national title. Of
course, they also are aware of
all the troubles . he's had
since.
Plus, this is a strong class
of running backs, led by
Cedric Benson of Texas,
Ronnie Brown and Carnell
· Williams of Auburn, and
Ciatrick Fason of Florida.
"I think it's a disadvantage," Fason said of Clarett"s
layoff, . "bec~use sometimes
when yqu play, 'you'd be in a
football season like us being
in college, then we take four
months off. Then we are back
in spring football. In .just
those four months that you
. took off, you'd be kind of
ru sty the first couple of
weeks when you put the pads
back on. You have to get used
to it all over again.
"Him sitting out two years ·
is going to be real strange for
him to get back onto the
field ."
Clarett, who last was tackled in the spring of 2003,
·acknowledges there will be
some rust, but expects it to
wear off quickly. He seems to
understand the · questions
about his character could last
longer.
"I had to take a look at
. myself froin outside myself,"
he said. "When I looked at
myself, sometimes I kind of
looked like a joke to myself.
I guess it was a pan of growing up and becoming who I
am today. I did do some
things I shouldn't have done .
I' ve taken responsibility for
all those things and I'm just
ready to move forward."

CLEVELAND - For nearly a year, the Cleveland
Cavaliers discussed adding
guard Jiri Welsch to their roster. On Thursday, talk turned
to action.
Hoping to improve their
atrocious outside shooting to
make life easier tor All-Stars
LeBron James and Zydrunas
llgauskas, the Cavaliers
acquired Welsch ·from the
Boston Celtics .for a 2007
first-round draft pick.
The deal doesn't stack up
with some of the blockbusters
made before the NBA's 3 p.m.
trade deadline, and it certainly
won't tilt the · balance of
power · 111 the · Eastern·
Conference. But it was itn
essential move for the,
Cavaliers.

. Welsch isn't Michael Redd,
but he' ll help. ·
"This is so mebody that
we've liked for a while," Cavs
general manager Ji111 Paxson
said. "He's a very versatile
player. He's got good size,
he's got toughness. He can put
the ball on the floor and he
can defend.''
Paxson spent the past few
days working the phones in
hopes of adding someone to
ease the burden on James and
llgauskas. The pair combined
to score 60 of Cleveland's 100
points in a win over Chicago
on Wednesday.

Redd's name was the one
most mentioned in pre-deadline rumors, but when it came
and passed, Redd, who will be
an unrestricted free agent this
summer. was still a member
of the Milwaukee Bucks.
Paxson refused to comment
on specific talks with other
teams, but it's no secret that
the Ca vs would love to eventually add Redd.
"We were aggressive trying
to pursue some opportunities," Paxson said. ~'But we
didn't want to do anything
that would possibly severely
hamper our flexibility thi s
summer, and Jiri ·Welsch

doesn't."

·

Wel sch, who started 132
games this season for Boston
before losing his job to rookie
Tony Allen, will be in un.iform
for Friday night's .game at
Indiana. He's makmg $1.4
'million this season and $2.1

$JJ,
BRAND N•;w 2005 PONTIAC
SUNFIRE SUN &amp; SOllND
CDJMP3 Sllne Syllem, Ptwer Suorool,

Air Ce!dtll11t11

million' in 2006.
.
A first-round draft pick in
2002, Welsch should help th~
Cavaliers improve their spot~):
3-poi nt shooting. After going,
1-for-7 on 3-pointers on
Wednesday, the club is ranke&lt;)
27th out of '30 teams from
beyond the arc.
The 25-year-old Welsch ha£
made 32 of 99 3-pointers tni ~
season, and is averaging 7.fl_
points; 2.5 rebounds in 205
minutes per game. .
·
"Coming down the stretch,
you need as much firepowe~
as you can get," Cavs coacl~
Paul Silas said. "And an~thet
shooter shOuld do that for us.' ~
The Cavaliers · co.nsidered
trading the No. I 0 overali
pick in last year's draft for
Welsch, a nattve of the Czech
Republic. Instead, they used
the selection on rookie Luke
Jackson, out "for the seasmt
after back surgery.

$J7'990*
.

RRANJ) NEW 2005 CIIEVY
OOLOR!\00 LS EXT. f,t\8 4X4

Vertac 4310 EJitiRI, Smllltl Rl~l
SMI!IInllan, Driver 1111. Ctnttr

Dtep Till Glm. Vortec 115 HP Elglne,

,

''

. .,.

$21,
c;amw

IJRi\NI&gt; NEW 2005 BUICK

RRJ\ND NIIW 2005

RI&lt;:NDI':ZVOUS CX 5 DOOR

Sli.W.RAUO EXT. &lt;:AH 4X4

stx P111t1111 BnU11, Driver Ptwer

l'lwer WII~IWI &amp; ltekl, Rtmtll
Keytm Eltry, CD Blertt Syll1m

111 Pau1111r St 0U•t. OJtvtr Ptwlr
lamhr, Ptw11 Wta~eioollecb

llmbtr, PIWII WII~NI &amp; llcb

....

,

AbaJD

,$23,

BR.\ND NEW 2005 01\'Y Slll'ERAOO
314 'I'm Ill EXT. (:.\11 4X4

BRAND NIIW 2005 CHEVY
TRAIUU.AZIIR.IS 4X4

Bt\i'll) NF.W ~005 CH ~'\''\
SIWf:KADO 1/2 TO\ (:IU:W Ci\8 4X4

Hll V·l Eltln, Dill Ztlt Air
Cll~ltlul11, AM/FM lltnt

4ZIII·Uitllt, Olllar laltty lylltm,

17" Aliml11m Willi II, Ptwtr Wll~tWI
&amp; leclll, HD Tnlltrllt f'tl.

Cnlu I TIH

$11,790* $14,880*
81&gt;:0.-\.~

2004 •:m:n n ::vnJRt;
t:XTENDF;D V.\iN

, AI--~. PworWlmloin,

Rtll Hill • AC, CD lltm lyolem ,

Keyt-~.P-Iell

loy!• EIIIY. CnllltlllM

. 2004 (!Ht:vl IMPAlA

2004 BIIICK Rt:f:AI, U' .

st:o.\N

Folly P•tr ~"N! Alolli- Wllttlt.

CO lltnoSWIIJ•. t:moo I Tilt

200.J IJlli(:K
l..t:s.wm smA:N
3100 V-1 f'ooler, Pawtr 111~ Aloml11m
Wllteli, Rtmolt K•ll• (IIIJ

• Tales, Tags, Rllt Fees utra. Rebalt induded In sole pr.kt of new vlhidt listed wflert appli!Oble.
••0n approved atdiL On 5lltdtd models. Not rl!jlonslle f11 typographkal trrOIS.
Prices gOOII february 241h tllrough February 271ft.

february ?5

2CXJ5

e.G
A~pecial
~upplcmenl

~allipolif matl~

To
'Otribunt

,tlotnt t)ltaiant 1\ililttr

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MOIW LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
992~2155 .

., .. -r--.•.

fllrld Wbul Moldlogl

BRI\ND NIIW 2005
BUICK lACROSSE SIIJ)AN

'

~

.

BRAND NEW 2005 CIIIM'
SIIA'EJW)() 4X4 I'ICKllP

·'$19,9

S22 97

'

The Daily Sentinel
MONDAY · SATURDAY 9 am · 8 pm • SUNDAY 1pm · 7pm • 422-0756 • TOLL FREE 1·800·822 ·0417
----------------~--~ ~.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="501">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9952">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="17084">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="17083">
              <text>February 25, 2005</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
