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                  <text>Thursday, March 10, 2005

www.mydailysenlinel.cnm

Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel

'

FULL· COURT

'Hannony' to perfornt
at Wesleyan Bible
Holiness Church, A6

Griffey back in
lineup,Bt

."
Games through March 6

BIC TEN STANDINGS

Big 10 AU Top 25
Illinois
15-1 29-1 7-0
Michigan St. 1~ -3 22-5 l-3
Wisconsin
11-5 20-7 3-3
Indiana
10-6 15-12 1-6
Minnesota
10-6 20-9 1:5
Ohio State
8-8 19-11 2-3
Iowa
' 7-9 19-10 Z-5
Northwestern 6-10 14-15 J.6
Michigan
4-12 13-17 1-6
Purdue
. · 3-13 7-10 0-8
Penn State 1-15 7-12 0-6

ntini were left
NOI S The
reeling from their\ast-

PF
PA
79.5 61.0
78.0 63.0
68.8 60.7
63.8 63.5
68.8 63.1
72.0 64.1
74.0 '67.6
59.4 61.5
61.5 63.8
63.8 68.1
63.1 70.0

"2005 Long wing Pubtications Inc.

BIG I 0 TOURNAMENT

PW'eview

TEAM LEADERS
Average per game

FIELD·GO.IU. DEFENSE
Indiana . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 416
Ohio State . .
. . ... .
. .. 419
Iowa . .
. . . . . . . .... 420
Dlinois . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . 410
Wisconsin . . ·.

. . . .. .

. .. .. 426

REBOUNDING MARCIN
Michigan State .. .
Wisconsin

. . . . +8.5

lllinoif .....

. . . . . . +4.3
. . . . +3.3

Minnesota ..
Penn State ..

. . . . +2.0

... +3.0

ASSISTS
Tilinois . .' . ,

Michigan State . .

.... 19.0
. .. 18.0

Iowa ... · .. , . . . . , . . . . , . , . 15.5

Ohio State . . . . . · . . . . . . . . .. 15.5
Northwestern . . . . ." . . . . . . . . .. 15.4

BLOCKED SHOTS
.....
.. .
Minnesota , . . . . . . . . . . ,
Indiana .. , .
, .. , . . . . . •, ...
Michigan , , ... .. , .... . .....
.
lilinois. . . .
. .... .
Iowa . . . . . .

5.4
4.6
4.4
4.2
3.3

Vedran Vukusic, Northwestern . . . . .

18.5
18.1
17.9
17 .i

Terence Dials, Ohio State .... ... .. 16.4
Luther Head, fllinois .. .. .' . . . . . 16.1

James Augustine, Tilinais . . . .
, .
Al.ando Tucker; WisconSin-. . . . . . . . .
Geary Claxton, Penn State. . . .
..
Jeff Hageit.. Minnesota . . . . . . , ...

7.9 ·

7.3

7.1
7.0
6.7

6.1
6.1

ASSISTS
Deron Williams, Tilinois_ . . . . . . . . . . 6.6
Jeff Homer. Iowa . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.6
, Dee Brown, illinois . . . . . . . .. ... 4~6

Chris Hill; Michi~n State . . . . . . . . . 4.5
Luther Head, illinois . . . . . . .

~

... 3.8

Brandon McKnight, Purdue .........
Dian Harris, Michigan .. ·, . ·. . . . . . .
Ben Luber, Penn State . . . . . ·. . . . . .
Millshall Strickland, Indiana . . . . . .
Brandon Fuss-Cheatham, Ohio State ...
STEALS

3. 7
3.5 .

3.5
3.4
3.2

Brent Lawson, Minnesota . .
. . . . . 2.1
Vincent Grier, Minnesota . . . . , ·. . . . 1.9
Dee Brown, lllinois . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.8

Luther Head, fllinois .... .. . . . . . . 1.8
Aaxon Robinson. Minnesota . . . · . . . . .
Rico Tucker, Minnesota . . . . , . . . . .
Robert Vaden, Indiana . . . . , , . , ...
Jeff Homer, Iowa . . .. .· .. . . . . . .
Tony Parker, Northwestern . . . . . . ..

lllini must regroup

9.9
8.3
7.3

1, 6

1. 6
1.5
1.5
1.5

Je'Ket foster. Ohio State . . . . . . . . . . 1.4
BLOC:HS
Erek Hansen, Iowa. , . . . . . . . , ... 2.8
Jeff Hagen, Minnesota . . . . . . , . . . 2.5

. D.J. White, Indiana . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.1
Courtney Sims, Michigan . .' . . . . . . .. 1.6

Brent Petway, Michigan.. . . . . . . . . , 1.6 .
James Augustine, ntinois .. ..... .. .. 1.3
Gary Ware, )'urdue . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.1
Mike Wilkinson, Wisconsin . . . .. , .. 1.0
Greg Brunner, Iowa . . . . . . . . . . . 1.0

·vedran Vulrusic, Northwestern . . . . . . 0.8
nELJ!)·GOAL PC:T.
cart Landry, Purdue . . . . . . . . . . .618
James Augustine, Tilinois , .· ....... .617
Terence Dials, Ohio State . . . . . . . . . . . 584

D.J. White, Indiana ..... .. .... .. 583
Paul Davis, Michigan State , . . . . . . . .57 7
Courtney Sims, Michigan. . . . . . . . . 576

Brent Pettway. Michigan . . . . . . . . . . 574
Roger Powell Jr., Illinois . . . . . ... .566 ·
Alan Anderson. Michigan State . . ... . 559
Dee Brown, filinois . . . . . , . . . . . . . 538

FREE-THROW ,PCT.
Alan And,rson, Michigan State . . . . . .898
Kelvin Torbert, Michigan State . . . . . . . 859
Sltannon Brown, Michigan State .. , . .. 853

Luther Head, fllinois . . . . . . . . ... 831
Adam Haluska, Iowa. . . . . . . . . . . .817
Maurice Ager, Michigan State . . . .. . . . 810

Jeff ·}{omer, Iowa . . . . . . . . , .... 786
Bracey Wright. Indiana . ... . . . . . . .781
James Augustine, fllinois . . . . . . . . .778
Vedran Vukusic, Northwestern •..· . . . .777

at

en

Middleport • Pomeroy, OhiQ
,, c; f I'\ J 1.-, • \ ol . . t 1

'\1J

1

1•

11&lt;11) \\ . \I \IU II

tl

:!.fHJ,J

T

he. plans were set. History was ready to be m~de .
But in a split second. ll li n_ois' un~cfentcd season be~ame a

thing of the past. When Oh1o Slate s Matt Sy lvester hit a
3-pOinter with 5.1 seconds ief~ in Sunday\ fin;.tl regular-season

~:ountrv . The Hoosiers will need a strong showing thi s weekend to
garner. an NCAA hid. so they will need to win when they open t~e
cOn ference tournament again ~ t Minnesota at 1:30 p.m. CT Friday
(~SPN)

The Big Ten· ~ other bubbl e team is fifth-seeded Minnesota
contest, the Illini had no answer. Le:-.:-. than a minute af.ter missing
(20-9.
10-6) . The Go lden Gophers have made a surprise run this
an awkward shot from long range. Sy lvester showed no remorse
season.
but they will be puni shed for playing a weak nonand no nerves as he knocked down the Buckeyes' biggc:-.t shot of
(.'On
fercncc
&lt;.,chcd ule. lt is impen1tive that the Gophers win their
the season.
round
mmchup to keep NCAA Tournament hopes alive.
opening'
Now. afrer the 65-M loss. Illinois (29- 1. 15-1 Btg Ten) wil l
Th~
winner
or
Friday's
game wil l probably have to face Il li nois at
need to regmup as it prepare~ for thi:-; wee kend 's B1g Ten ·
12:40 p.m. CT Saturday in the semifinals (CBS).
tournament m Chicago. illinoi s wm, vying to become th,e ·firSt
Ohio State ( 19- 11 . 8-8) has no chance of playing in the NCAA
conference team to run the tabl e in the regular sea~on and the first
Toumament, owing to sel f·imposcd sanctions announced earl ier
team in ihe.nation to enter the NCAA Tournament undefeat ed
in the ~easnn. The Buckeyes wi lL howeYer, p_lay in the Big Ten
since UNLV accomplished the feat in 1991 .
Tournament
a~ the six th seed. They open aga'inst last-seeded Penn
The up;et was nothin£ new for Ohio State coach.Thad Matta.
Stotc
at4
p.m.
CT Thursday on ESPN2. The Buckeyes hope to see
who coached a Xavier team that ended .St. Joseph 's undefeated run
the
sume
contribution
they got from reserve forward Matt
in the Atlantic 10 tournament last :-5Cason.
Syl\•ester;
in
the
final
game
of the regular season, when he poured
After dominating the conference all season. the tllini will have
in
a
career-high
25
points.
including
the game-winni ng 3-puinter,
to regain the confiden ce that helped them win by an avefi.lge uf ·
against Illinois.
.
.
18.5 point~ a game.
.,
Aher :-.tarting the season strong. Iowa ( 19-10. 7-9) has been
To get where it is. lllinois has depended on the best ballmediocre . Sincc the loss of Pierre Pierce (kicked off the team for
handling in the country and the three-guard approach that hadn't
violating rule.s). the Haw keyes have had to count on the guard .
been touc hed until Sunday. But when Deron Willia~s wem cold.
tande m Adam Haluska and Jeff Homer. along with forward Greg
shooting I of 7 from the field with two point&gt;.tlle lllini folded
Brunner. On ly Brunner has been consjstently dependable for the
with him . After shouting 50. 1 percent al l season. they made ni ne
H;t wk.eycs. who would probably need to make the c-onference
of 27 shots (33 percent) in the second half of the lo ~s.
tournament
final or win it to be considered for an NCAA
The lilini will need to get b;.1ck to the passing offense aild
Tournament
bid. The Hawkeycs open play :it I :JO p.m. CT ·
premier shooting that helped them win their first 29 games. T~e
Thursday
(ESPN)
against Purdue . The winner of that game will
lll ini lead the conference with 19.0 assists per game while winni ng
move on tn face MiChi£an Sli:lte .
the turnover battie:: by a conference-best 4.8 per game .
After struggling in its last several, games. Northwestern
Illinois has shot the best 150 .1 percent) and made the most
( 14- 15. 6- 10) wi ll try this weekend to make itself el igiblc forthe
3-poioters (9 . 1 per game) of any conference team . The Illini hold a
postseason. The eighth-seeded Wildcats open play at II a.m. CT
3.3 rebounding advantage eac h time out and average 7 .X ste&lt;Ji s per
Thu!'day (ES PN ) against Michigan. Led by Croatian center
game while shooting 74. 1 perl;ent from the free- throw line. _
Vedran Vukusic. the upset-mindeu Wildcats will depend on ball
Along with outstanding offense and the contributionS of role
control in their Princeton-style offense if they are to beat the
players like ROger Powe!l Jr. and James Augustine. the lllini have
Wolverines and face Illinois. Guards T J . Parker and Mohamed
also dominated on defense. holding opponents to 42.0 percent
Huchad will need to shoot well to keep Nonhwesrern alive .
shooting . They have been the best team in the co nference thi s
1t stt1rted the season hot, taking Arizona to overtime in the
season, and it would take an ugly early upsel to knock them out of
Pre&gt;eason
NIT . but Michigan (I J-17, 4-12) has been anything but
the ranks of No . I seeds entering the NCAA Tournament.
.
~i
n
ce
guard
Daniel Horton was suspended for the season. The
. Michig~n State (22-5, 13-J) enters the tournament"' the •
Wolverines have athletes underneath (Brent Petway, Courtney
second seed. but the Spartans are d1stinct underdogs to top~seeded .
Sim:.;) but have struggled , with the conference's worst assisr.toIllinois. While the lllini -bcat all seve n Top 25 teams they faced
turnover rmiq,(0 .78·) . Michigan wi ll need a big performance from
this season, the Spanans beat only one uf four. Michigan State's
guanJ Dion Harri ~ to beat Northwestern in the opener.
senior'class has been critic ized for never fulfilling the expectat ions
Ge ne Keady ·~ grand 'finale could come when the Boilermakers
· I hey brought to East Lansing.- and JlOW have one las't chance to .
open
the tournament against Iowa . Purdue (7-20, 3-13) depends
play for a confere nce iitle. The Spartans open play at 5:40 p.m. CT
on
a
healthy
contribution from Carl Landry ( 18 .2 points and 7.1
Friday (ESPN Plus) against 1he winner of lowr~ vs. Purdue .
rebounds
per
game wilh 61 .8 percent shooting) and will also need
Third~seeded Wisconsin (20-7. 11 -5) enters the tournament on
David
Teague
and others to play unbelievably well to extend
a roll and wifl sit on the bottom half of the bracket along with
Keady·~
final
season
. ·
,
Michigan State. Bo Ryan's team is once again defensive-mindcQ,
No team has been outmatched this season as much as Penn
allowing a conferenCe-low 60 .'? points per ga me as they cnntr-ol
State (7-22. I· 15), and thai was never as evident as when the
the tempo. The squad doesn't ha ve the most athletiC talent. bul ·
Nlttany Lions were pounded on senior nig~ts at Minnesota and
guard Alando Tucker and center Mike Wilkinson have become
Michi gan State last week. The Nittany Li9ns got strong
one of the conference ·s most productive pairs.
contribution s from center Aaron Johnson on the offensive end to
While the top three seeds seem to have NCAA Tournament
stan the season, but recently he ·has been a factor only on the
bids locked up . rhe questionable teams begin with Indiana
boards . The Penn St~llc scori_ng'load has been thrust on freshmen
(15- 12. 10-6). At times thi s se:1son. the Hoo~ie rs h;,ave looked
Mik e W&lt;.~lker &lt;.~nd Geary Claxton. and they will need to shine if
outstanding, but away fro m horne they have ~trugg le_d. winning
Penn State hope~ to beat Ohio State to reach the quarterfmals
only two of eight conference. games on the road. Yet they ha•./e
tigainst
Wi!&lt;.consin.
one of the most talented underclassmen-laden tCani~ in the

NESDT.'A

THWESTERN ~=c
shone, but the Wildcats again faltered as
they lost to Indianan.: 75 Saturday (o
close the regular season. Vukusic had a
first-half scoring burst that brought the
game within three points, but that was as
close as the Wildcats could get. Vukusic
scored a game-high 22 points.

. OST.'A"'E

Whi~e tlle Buckeyes
.
'"
wont play rn the
NCAA Tournament because of rules
violations, it felt like an NCAA
Tournament game as a capacity crowd saw
Ohio State rUin illinois' perfecl season
with a 65-64 victory on Sunday. Reserve
forward Matt Sylvester led the Buckeyes
with 25 points and Terence Dials added
21.

NSTATE

The.Nittany Lions
hung tough for a
half but lost their lith straight game
when they fell go-64 to Michigan State on
Saturday. Penn State led e;uly, but the
Spartans took the lead with an 11-0 run
late in the half and put the garne·away
with a 16-2 run to start the second half.
The Nittany lions were led by 12 points
from Ben Luber and Mike Walker while
Danny Morrissey scored 11.

CONSIN

The Badgers found .
. out Wednesday tllat
coach Bo Ryan was one of 20 finalists for
the Naismith Coach of the Year award.
Ryan, along with illinois' Bruce Weber,
were the only Big Ten coaches on the list.
Ryan has led the Badgers to a school·
record four straight 10-win conference
,seasons.

\\

111\ll.ul' ''' !llllu ·l lo ln

First step toward Middleport revitalization due for May completion

SPORTS
• Buckeyes claw past
Penn State. See Page 81

BY BRIAN J •. REED
. BREEO@MYDAILYSEN'rlNEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - A leadership group working with
the I nstilule for Local
Gover.nment and Regional
Development on a revitalization plan for the shopping
district in Middleport should
complele lhe first step of lhe
project by lhe end of May.
ILGARD, ' an
Ohio
University-based orgaljization assisling local govern-

'

ments in economic development efforts, plans to complete an economic analysis
and market study report by
lhe end of May, after holding
a meeting with the core committee and members of the
Middleport ' Community.j
Association, and a comniuni ly open house for lhe business and residential communities in April.
That comm iltee is made up
of Comm issi oner M ick
Davenporl ,
Middlqiorl

The group is largeting the
Mayor Sandy lannarelli,
Michael Swisher, director of central business dislrict froin
the Department of Job and · King Hardware and Rutland
Family Services , Brenda S treel 10 MiII Street at South
Phalin and Donna Hartson of Fifth Avenue, hoping thai a
the University of Rio Grande comprehensive plan for reCrossroads and WorkNet pro- developmenl will help the
gram s. · Midpleport Fiscal community qualify for revi OtTi cer and Ohio River Bear talization funding . That fundCo. Founder Susan · Baker, ing would be used for build Economic
- Development ing rehabililalion, slreetscape
Direc tor Michael Gulliver, improvement s and improved
and Tom Dooley, owner of infrastructure in lhe downthe Middl eport Department lawn districl.
Slore .
The group's .plans include a

market analysis, which is
now ·under way. to study .
demographics. re.tail gaps
and .markel potential of lhe
area, business recommendations 10 be developed by lhe
ILGA'RD staff, and a final
economic analysis and market study. The economic
analysis, .which examines the
· exisling busine ss base, the
direct and secondary effects
of those businesses on lhe
Please see Step. A~

Meals on·Wheels raising
money to keep rolling ·.
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

. Me'1gsCoun ~ y
council on Aging· .
1

· nc

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Waid B. Hayman, 93

INSIDE ·
• Family spans five
generations. See Page A3 ·
• Hemlock Gra~ge
celebrates National Peanut
Month. See Page A3
• Family Medicine.
See Page A3
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A6
• Church briefs. See
Beth Sergentjphoto
' Page A6
Meals on Wheels driver Dan Smith loads 130 meals o.nto one of the program's
three delivery trucks which have both hot and cold compartments. Meals on
Wheels drivers covered 64,964 miles last year delivering meals to homebound
residents of Meigs County..

WEATHER

POMEROY - Last year the
Meals btl Wheels program ba&gt;ed at
lhe Meigs Senior Citizens Center
delivered 40,000 meals to 210
honiebound rcsidcn1s in the county.
. In order to keep the program
rolling smoothly down the highway,
a Gospel sing fund-raiser is planned
for · 6· p.m. on Saturday at Meigs
Eiementary SchooL in Rutland .
Food expenses alone are projected 10 reach $75,000 this year for
Meals on Wheels. This does not
include staff costs, utilities. repairs
or replacing equipmenl. containers
in which the meals are senl out cost
$9,000. G·asoline expenses are .estimaletl to be $ IO,OOO .as the drivers '
covered 64.964 miles last year delivcring meals.
. Although the program receives
$30,000 from a levy and $34,622
from Title Ill for expenses, the
remainder of the funding comes
from donations imd fund-raising.
Meigs County Senior Center
Nutrition Director Teresa Marcinko
said about the Meals on Wheel s program, "This may not be lhe most
important program in the county, but
it ranks up near the top. It amazes
me I hat more people don't know
.d bOU t I·t . "
Besioes providing customers

wilh one-third of. their nutritional
vaiue for the day, Meals on Wheels
drivers provide customers with
human contact.
"After our drivers drop off a
meal on Friday to a customer. that
customer might now see anorher
person until Monday when they get
their next meal on wheels,"
MarcihRo said. .
One of the program 's drivers,
Paul John son, once di scovered a diabelie man collapsed i.n his home
when delivering a meal. Subslitule
driver Dan Smith recently helped a
customer who could not get off his
electronic chair because il had
become unplugged .
Driver Pat Medley is known to
carry on conversations with elderly
customers antl help thym move
small , household ttems. The men are
JOtned by fellow dnver Frank
.
.
Imboden on the routes.
Yesterday. Metgs County Semor
Center cooks Ramona Hawk and
Mary Morton were bu~y prepar.mg
130 meals fof'the days deltvenes.
The hot meals come wtth dessert
and a carton of mtlk . .
. ·[
, Smtth esttmate s .that tt takes htm \
almost stx hours to make ~ts rounds
and admtts lhat ~hen he s runmng
behtnd hesktps. h1s own meals 10 get
ba':~ ,on h1s dehvery schedule ,
..
I m always glad to see lhem,
Please see Meals. AS

Ravenswood firm is low bidder on fire equipment
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

DUE .Gene Keady's final

.regular-season gcime
ended much tike the others Saturday,
· witll a 64-52.,)_oss. Purdue was led by
David Teague, who scored a game-high
17 points with eight rebounds. Gary Ware
wa~ the only other Boilermaker in double
figures, scoring 12 points.

\\ H

•

HIGAN ST

Alando Tucker, Wisconsin ... .- . . . . 15.0
Greg BruniteL Iowa .. , . . . . ·. . . . 14.5
Adam Haluska, Iowa . . . . . . . . . . . 14.4

REBOUNDING
Aaron Johnson, Penn State . . . . . . . .
Greg Brunner, Iowa . . . . . . . . ... ..
Terence DialS, Ohio' State .. ..... .. ,
Paul Davis, Michigan State . . . • . . . .
Mike Wilkinson: Wisconsin ... . ....
Carl Landry, Purdue.
. ..

•

.
HIGAN

INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
POINTS ,
Bracey Wright. Indiana ... : . . . . .
Carl Landry, Purdue . . . . . . . . .
Vincent Grier, Minnesota . ... •. , ,

second 65-64 loss to Ohio State on Sunday
in Columbus, Ohio,'which ended the
ntini's hopes for an unbeaten conference
season. The last Big Ten team to finish the
season undefeated was Indiana, 29 years
· ~go. illinois failed to get a scoring punch
from any of its players. Dee Brown led the
lllini with 13 points, and Roger Powell
and Luther Head added 12 each.
. A With a 77-55 victory
I AN over Northwestern on
Saturday, the Hoosiers finished their
conference season undefeated (8-0) at
home. To close out the regular season,·
Indiana got a surprise performance from
sophomore guard Rodericl&lt; Wilmont,
who led the Hoosiers with 20 points,
shooting 5 of 6 from 3-point range.
Wilmont's previous scoring high carne in
November 2003, when he scored 13 points
against Vanderbilt.
its last game before the
A Inconference
tou'rnament, Iowa
pulled off a big 74-72 victory over
Michigan. In the game's final14 minutes,
no team led by more than three points.
The Hawkeyes rattled off five straight ·
overtime points to pull ahead for good. ·
The game included 10 ties and 13 lead
changes.
When the Wolverines ·
lost to Iowa 74-72 in ·
overtime last Saturday, it marked the end
of a disrnal13 :g~rne stretch- during
which Michigan defeated only Penn State
- after guard Daniel Horton was
suspended from the team. Sophomore
guard Dion Harris, who took the scoring
burden in Horton's place, contributed 25
points with six 3-pointers in 42 rninufes
against Iowa.
The Spartans'
• senior class has
·been much maligned, but they got a good
sendoff to the conference tournament
with Saturday's 90-64 victory over Penn
State, the eighth victory in their last nine
games. Senior Alan Anderson led the
team with 22 points while Chris Hill
·added 21.
The Golden ·
Gophers finished
the regular season on a high note by ·
beating Penn State 73-69last Wednesday.
The Gophers, who forced 15 Penn State
turnovers, were led by junior Vincent
Grier, who scored 27.points on 8-of-13
shooting with four steals. Brent Lawson
scored 14 while Aaron Robinson had nine
points, five assists and four steals.

regular meeting of Meigs
County
Commissioners.
Dill's bid $15.350 for the
POMEROY
The camera. transmitter • and
Ravenswood, W.Va . firm receiver, and Finley Fire
Dill's Fire and Safety is the . Equipment
of
apparenl low bidder for a McConnelsville bid $15,499.
t~ermal imaging camera and
Action on the bids was labled
other equipmenl to be pur- · until March . 24, allowing
chased for the Rulland Fire review of specificalions and
Departn1ent
submitted bids by the fire
Two bids were opened for departmenl.
the equipment at Monday's
The cameras are used lo

Details on Pa&amp;e A8

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 16 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B4-6

Comics

B7

Dear Abby

A3
A4

Editorials
Faith• Values

A6-7

Movies

As

NASCAR

B2

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather ·

B Section
A8

© aoos Ohio Volley Publishing eo.

FARM. • HOME
. • BUSINESS

Foundation for
Meigs County's
future organized

help firefighters navigate insuillation of plumbing. a
burning buildings when try- · kitchen and restroom and a
ing to rescue people from the heating and cooling system.
is part of a $300,000
structures .
Bv CHARLENE HoEFUcH
Communi,ty
Develo"pment HOEFLICH@MYDAI LYSENTINELCOM
Other business
Commissioners approved a Block . Grant Community
bid from R. V.C. Architects ·of Distress Grant recently
POMEROY Officers
Athens in the amount of approved for the Village of have been elected and objec$7.500. for plans for the ren- Mtddleport. Thfee other bids tives sel for lhe newly orgaovalion of the freight depol in were received. ·
nized Foundation for Meigs
Dave
Diles
Park
in
Paul Ca~;ter of the Joseph Counly 's Future.
'
Middleport . Renovation of
The local organization
Please see Bidder. AS
lhe building. to include
slarted out as a pilot project
over a year ago with a local
committee chaired by Becky
· Baer,
Meigs
County
Extension educator, meeting
One of Richards' · biggesl with the Foundation . for
events, increasing membership, and building new rela- · projec1s will be planning a Appalachian Ohio.
· "That agency, as a special
tion ships wilhin lhe commu- series of "Tours of Rural
nities we serve.''
Aclion" across lhe region . project of Appalachian· Ohio
called "
'New
in These one-hour information giving ·
Currently ·residing
Amesville with her family, sessions. showcasing the Vent11res,' took four counties,
Richards, QR, who majored in accomplishments of Rural Guernsey, Noble, Hocking
journalism and political sci- Aclion 's programs, will be and Meigs, and had them go
ence al Ohio University, said hosted in various communi- through the philanthropy
she is exc iled that Rural ties throughout Ihe · year. index to see if a foundation
would be a plausible thing,"
Action has provided her with Spring 2005 dales include:
an opportunily to not · only
• .April 13 - Rural Action s.aid Baer. "And .we did."
The
Chester-Shade
work in her field but to help Research and Education Center
Historical Association then
an organizalion committed to in Rutl;md(Meigs County).
c reatin~ m.~ anin g ful jobs in
Please see Future, A5
Please see Rural, AS .
our regton.

Rural Action looks to future with development coordinator
RUTLAND
Athens
County
native
Laura
Richards has returned to
southeastern Ohio, joining
Rural Action, which has its
Research ·and Education
Center in Rutland, as lhe nonprofit organization's new
development coordinalor.
Ri chards. joins
Rural
Action after spending several
years as rlirector of public
relations and development
for Michigan Paralyzed
Veterans of America. She
also worked as an account

executive for a top trans~
portation-related public relalions tirm. a district intern in
Ihe Marietta office of U.S.
Rep. Ted Slrickland and as a
newspaper copy editor. ·
"We are verv excited about
Laura's arrival and il coincides wilh a new course lo
make Rural Aclion a more
sustainable organization,"
said Runil Aclion Execulive
Director
Jane . · Forre st
Redfern : "We are pleased
Ihat she has come on board 10
assist us with fundraising

LIFE • BONDS •.MOBILE HOMES • HOSPITALIZAnON

196 EASTSECOII ST. • POMEROY. 01

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�•

The Daily Sentinel

'The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

NATION .• WORLD

Friday, March

11, 2005

Community Calendar
Public meetings

Bv MICHAEL .
WEISSENSTEIN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

nation's commander in chief.
They also argued that
international law generally
exe mpts corporations, as
opposed to individuals , from
liability for alleged war
cnmes.
"We've said all ·along that
any
issues
regarding
wartime activities should be
reso lved by 1the U.S. and
Vi etnamese. governments•,''
said
Dow
Ch emi c,al
spokesman Scot Wheeler.
"We , believe that defoliants
saved' lives by protecting
allied forces from enemy
ambush and · did not create
adverse health effect~. "
The Department of Justice
had supported the chemical ·
companies in court , saying a
ruling against the firm s
could cripple the presidcnt:s
power to direct the military. .
A
plaintiffs'
lawyer,
William Goodman, said the
judge made "a clear en-or"
in deciding Agent Orange

NEW YORK - A· federal
judge Thursday di smissed a
lawsuit filed on behalf of
some 4 million · Vietnamese
: claiming that U.S. chemical
companies committed war
crimes by makin g Agent
Orange for use durin g the
Vietnam War.
U.S. Distri ct Judge Jack
· B. Weinstein di sagreed that
the allegedly toxic defoliant
anq similar U.S. herbic ides
should be considered poisons banned under internationa! rules of war, even .
though they may 1\ave had
comparable efl'ects on peo. pie and ·Jand.
The Brooklyn judge also
· found that the pl&lt;tintiffs
could not prove that Agent
Orange had caused their illnesses, large ly because of a
lack of large-scale re search.
plaintiffs' lawyers said an
appeal was planned.
was not a poison and said
The lawsuit was the first an appeal was planned.
"The use of this chemical
attempt
by
Vietnamese in Vietnam was · a scandal
plainti ffs to seek compensation for the effect s of Agent from · the very beginning ,
Orange, which is laden with and the failure of this cou~t
the highly tdxic cher&gt;lical to. redress these wrongs rs "
dioxin and has been linked contrnuatron ot that scanto cancer, diabetes and birth · dal," Goodman said.
defects amon g Vietnainese
Some 10,000 U.S. ~ar
soldiers
civilians
and veterans recerve medrcal dJSAmeric;n veterans.
ability be·nefits related to
U.S. aircraft sprayed mor~ Agent Orange. ·
than 2 1 million oallons of
The Vretilamese govern- ·
the chemical bet 1~een 1962 ment has said the Uniteq
to 1971 in attempts to S!ates _has a moral responsi:
destroy crops and remove brlrty for damage to rts crtJfoliage used as cover by zens and .envrronment but
communist forces.
has never sought compensa- .
Lawyers for: Monsanto , tion. for victims.
Dow Chemical and · more
On the Net:
than a dozen other companies had said they should
U.S. il!{otmarion on Agent
not be punished for follow - Orange:
ing what they believed. to be
http://www 1. va .govlagenthe legal orders of the tomnge

Rice vows cooperation with Mexico
on border rather than finger-pointing ·

'

MEXICO CITY (AP) borders," Rice said.
Secretary .
of
Stale
'The terrorists are going to
Condoleezza Rice, acknowl- keep trying. They're going to
edging the difficulty of moni, keep trying on. oUr Southern
toring the porous southern border. They're going to keep
border. . sa·id Thursday the trying on our Northern bar·
United States would work der," si-te added.
with Mexico to thwart alRice ~I so announced that the
Qaida and other terrorist United States and Mexico had
groups rather than trade accu- settled a decades-old, crosssations.
water debt.
Rice, on her first visit to
Mexico will transfer enough
Mexico since. taking over at water to the United States to
the State Department in late cover. a debt that Texas has
January. echoed concerns claimed that Mexico has owed
raised by government officials under a 1944 treatv. That
in .congressional testimony water-sharing pact requi~es
last month about the motives Mexico to send the United
of the terrorist network States an .average of 350,000
blamed for t~ e Sept. II acre-feet of water annually
· attacks.
from six Rio Grande tribu··we and the Mexica ns had a taries . The United States in
robust dialogue about border return must s6nd Mexico 1.5 ·
· security, and I be lieve we ' re million acre feet 'from the
going- to continue to have Colorado River.
that," she said . "This is not a
''I'm delighted that we have
matter of pointing fingers. been able to reach this underThis is a matter of really trying standing," Rice said. ·
to get the best possible coordiLater. Rice traveled to a
nation and work that we can financial center in the city's
so that there 's safety for citi- historic district to a:nnounte a
zens in both. countries. on both $10 million grant to support
sides of the border."
'the expansion of a financing
Recent intellige nce from program
that
provides
current investi gations, deten- Mexican citizens with banking
tions an,d other sources s~g- services and small business
gests that al-Qaida has con s id~ loans.
ered using the Southwest borRice said progress· has been ·
der to infiltrate tHe United made in securing the border
States, according to testimony since Sept. 11. 200 I. But she ·
from a top Homeland Security also said the United States is
· Department official last month obligated to alert its citizens·of
· before the Senate Intelligence concerns.
Committee.
President Bush's former
Rice cited the borders with national security adviser faced
Mexico and Canada. .
· a diplomatic test in her first
"Indeed we have from time visit to Mexico. She discu ssed
to time had reports about al - with Derbez immigration, bor. Qaida trying to use our south- der issues, free trade and eco. ern border but also about them nomic growth.
· trying to use our northern borRecently, Mexican politider," Rice told reporters. cians have accused the Bush
"There is no secret that al- administration of interfering
Qaida will try to get into this with Mexico's internal affairs.
country and into other coun- They have denounced U.S.
tries by any means they possi- offic ials ' comments about
: bl y, can.
human ri ghts abu ses, drug
'That' s how they managed trafficking and poss.ible electo do it before and they will do tion related instability.
everything that they can to
Prior to Rice's meeting with
cross the borders." she said.
Fox.
Mexican
Attorney
Ri ce made the one-day trip General Rafael Macedo de Ia
to Mexico to · meet with Concha reiterated his . coun. President Vicente Fox and try 's annoyance at recent U.S.
: Foreign
Secretary
L-Uis government reports critical of
: Ernesto Derbez. Emerging Mexico.
from her meeting with Derbez,
Analyses of problems
Rice said the United States, "should always be done from
Canada and Mex ico have been a multilateral perspective,"
cooperating better on border Macedo ..aid during .an anti security over the past few terrori., m
con fe re nce
i.n
· years , and the th ree countrres Madrid . . " When o ne country
: must continue their efforts.
unil aterally evalu ates (anoth"We are all concerned about . er), we don 't. agree with that.
terrorists and how they might This has caused· much irrita:
use our very long and porous tion in Mexico."

Tuesday, March 15
POMEROY
-Meigs
County Tobacco Coalition,
II a.m., Meigs County
Public Library. ·
.
·
.
·

Wednesday, March 16
. CHESHIRE -The Board
of Directors of the GalliaMeigs · Community Action
Agency will meet at noon on
March . 15 in the Cheshire
office.

Clubs and
organizations
:
·
:
:
, .

Monday, March 14
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM will have a special
meeting at 7:30 p.m. with
work in the E.A., F.C. and
Master Mason degrees. All
Masons
invited.
Refreshments.

.BY THE BEND
Family spansfive generations
Friday, March 11,

2005

p.m. For more information
call ·992-200 I.
POMEROY
Randy
Parsons will be speaking at
the I0:30 a.m. worship service and Jerry Frederick at
the 6 p.m. service at the
Larrel Cliff Free Methodist
Church. At . the 10:30 a.m.
March 20 service, Bobby
Siders will be singing.

Church events

Thursday, March 17
POMEROY
Rev.
Marvin
Sallee
of
Vinton
Friday, March 11
Baptist Church will speak at
LONG
BOTTOM
7
· p:m: at Hysell Run
Rogie Bissell and Headed
Community
Church.
Home will be singing at the
Faith Full Gospel Church ut
Long Bottom, 7 p.m.

Birthdays

Saturday, March 12
. MIDDLEPORT -Hymn
sing with Rita Cunningham,
Corrina , Barnitz, . Earthen
Vessells, at Ash Street
Church, Middleport. 7 p.m.
Sunday, March 13
MIDDLEPORT
Harmony, a . music ministry
of God's Bible School and
College, Cincinnati will be
.appearing at the Wesleyan
Bible Holiness Church, 75
Pearl Street, Middleport at 7

Saturday, March 12
CHESTER
Wilma
Ginther Seaman, formerly of
Chester, will be 88 years old
on March . 12. Cards may be
sent to her at I 0720 State
Route 550, Vincent , Ohio ·
45784.

These five generations were present for a recent ho liday gathering at the home of Roberta
Sunday, March 13
Swisher. The generations (rom the left are Mrs. Swisher, great-great grandmother: Ann Zirkle ,
LONG
BOTTOM
great grandmother; Debbie Maynard, grandmother; Amber Dugan , mother ..and her infant daughHenry Bahr ·will be 80 on ter, Lily Dugan, being held here by Mrs .. Zirkle. At the family gathering were Patty Maynard.
March 13, Cards may be sent Samantha. J. D. and Alli son Holley, Mason, W. Va.; Paul and Jill Maynard , Ben , Jessica and
to him at 37837 Greenup Baylee Maynard of Point Pleasant; Brenda, Kyrie and Nik Seagraves of Middlepor t; Bruce , Terry
Lane, Long Bottom, 45743. · and Travis Hysell of Nitro; .Debbie Maynard of Pomeroy, Jesse, Oanyel , and ·Taylor Maynard· of
Cheshire; Arnie , Amber and Lily Dugan; David and Ann Zirkle, all of Racine : Rusty, BrooKe. Co~y
and Kaelee Maynard of Mason; Roger. Samantha, Bradley and Austin Smith and Greg, Jessica
and Zackery King of Pomeroy.
.
HEMLOCK GROVE Dyer reviewed the Grange
Final . plans were maqe
Lecturer Kim Romine pre- for their annual inspection for serving an auction on
sented "Peanuts" as her and at the conclusion gave March 12.
.
program during the recent comments and suggestions. '
The Grange banquet will
assOciated with hot · tub use. irnrnune sy stem. can inhale
: Hemlock Grange meeting.
Murl Bradford, CWA · be served by the ' American HQt tubs safe,
Many people have skin damage bacteria from the hot tub
Romine's
presentation chairwoman: announced a Legion on April 29 at the · enjoyable for those_from prolonged exposure to the vapors and develop pneuma: consisted of a history lesson county baking contest will Salisbury School. cafeteria.
hot water. which can cause skin nia. This should not occur in a
in
good
health
: on the peanut, peanut butter be held at the April meet- Members have banquet tick· rdShes or itching. Skin infections clean hot tub, but it can hapare less common. but can occur. pen .
trivia, . peanut cultivation ing. The recipe will be ets for sale and tickets for
Question: I have some mild You should not go into a hot tub
The good news is that hot
and the health benefits of pumpkin muffins.
drawings.
osteoarthritis and am in my late if you have open skin lesions.
tubs
are great ·for reducing
peanuts.
Legislative chairman Roy
Members Cecil Brickles 40s. My husband and 1are thinkA
good
first
step
lo
prevent
stress,
relieving di scomfon
.
Peanut plants ·were given · Grueser gave reports on and Joan Kautz were listed ing or getting a hot tub. Are there
skin problems is to be sure to from sore muscles and lessening
· · to all in attendance as well wild horse laws, medical as ilL
risks associated with using a hot take a shower atier using the hot pain due to &lt;U1hritis. Most hot
tub
at my age'l Are there things I tub to wash off cQlorine, salt or tub owners love them and use
: as samples Of six kinds of personnel required at footPop tabs, eye glasses and
· peanut butter to close ball
games
and
U.S. Campbell . Soup labels are should be careful about? .
other chemicals. You also can them frequently. But moderaAnswer: Hot tubs are gener- lower the temperature and shon- tion is the key. If you limit your
Romine's program.
Treasury bonds that China · still being · saved by the
ally safe for healthy people. The en your time in the tub. Using time in th~ hot tub and pay
Master' Rosalie Story and Japan possess.
•
Grange ..
; .conducted
the
meetmg. ·
The charter was draped
The April meeting will most serious risk from "hot tub- hot tub chemicals that are le&gt;s anention to cleanliness and safebing" is drowning. ·people have
: Deputies Patty and Opal in memory of Eva Robson. be preceded by a rib dinner. been known to drown because initating can also help. There are ty, you can make your experia variety of chemicals that can ence a thoroughly pleasant one.
they were held underwater by be purchased for your hot tub,
Family Medicine® is a weeksuction drains. This is particu- and it may take a few tries to · ly column. To submit questions.
larly a problem when a person's find a set of chemicals that keep write to Martha A. Simpson,
hair gets cau~ht in the suction the hot tub clean and are agree- D.O., M.B.A ., Ohio University
that's the problem. At the tltting, causmg the victim's able tQ everyone's skin.
DEAR ABBY: I am a hapCollege
of
Osteopathic
pily married :man, raising two
time my wedding is sched- head to be held underwater.
Some
women
who
are
prone
Medicine,
P.O.
Box
110; Athens, .
r daughters, ages 12 and 15. .
uled, I'll be nine months' According to the Consumer to bladder infections find that Ohio 45701. or via e-mail to
Product Safety Commission,
A friend I have known for
pregnant.
there have been 49 such inci- hot tllb use causes those infec- readerquestions @familymedi: 20 · · years , "Kevin," has
The day we're being mar- . dents since 1978 - including ti&lt;ins to flare up. This can be cinenews.org. Medical infonna: become a little too friendly
ried has special significance I 3 deaths. You can reduce the due to the temperature or the lion in this column is provided
Dear
· toward our
15-year-old ,
to my fiance. I don ' t know · risk of hair entrapment by mak- ·chemicals. For some women, as an educational service only. It
Abby
"Amanda." He has been givhow to tell him l don't want ing sure that your hot tub is fit- though, avoiding 'the hot tub is· does not replace the judgment of
your personal physician, who ·
ing Amanda money for doing
to waddle down the aisle. I ted with a drain cover that the best solution.
Developing
lung
infections
should
be relied on to diagnose .
nothing. The first time, he
have told him about the baby, meets CPSC standards. And
from
using
a
hot
'tub
is
a
less
and
reconunend
treatment for
: gave her $300 and told her
but I don't know how to bring never use a hot tub with a misscommon
problem,
but
j(
is
any
medical
conditions.
Past
· not to tell her mother or me. to keep secrets from their par- up changing the date of the ing or broken dr.ain cover. ·
: Of course, our daughter told ents, and then the seduction wedding. I don't want to ruin
Another cause of hot tub possible. Older people. who columns are available online at
· us anyway. When we con- begins. That's what the "free" it for him- but I don't know accidents is drinking. Alcohol may have a less active www.familymedicinenews.org.
fronted Kevin, he said he felt porn channel in your daugh- if I can handle a formal wed- and hot tubbing are a dangerous
sorry for Amanda and she ter's bedroom was for.
combination. This is because
ding when I'm about to pop.
heat and alcohol together can
· was supposed to baby-sit to
You did not do nearly
Am I being selfish, or cause a person to pass out in the
: pay back the loan, so we enough in dealing with this would it be a good idea to ask
tub and drown. So always exer: allowed her to keep the predator. Although you may him to change the date? -·
cise
caution, as you would
: money to buy clothes with.
have discouraged him from SCARED IN OREGON
. around any body of water. Use
A few weeks after that,
targeting Amanda, what about
DEAR SCARED:
For
Kevin gave Amanda $200 for other young girls in 'your heaven's sake, speak up. To 'the buddy system. or at least, let
letting him cut her long blond community? Please contact do sd is not selfish; it's prac- someone know when you are
hair so he could sell it on the your local police immediate- ticaL Ask your. fiance to count getting into the hot tub so they
: Internet. Needless to say, her ly, and tell the detectives in to nine, and remember that can check on you. Never let a
child use a hot tub without con- .
. mother and l were very upset
the sex crimes division what babies don't alw.ays arrive stant adult supervision.
: But · instead of confronting.
Generally, using ' a hot tub is
you have written to me. I give exactly .on time -sometimes
: him again, we just gave you my word. they won ' t they decide to come early. fine for any healthy person
Kevin the cold shoulder, hopthink you are overreacting.
When you're standing at the regardless of age, wtth a few
ing he'd get the· message and
DEAR ABBY: My daugh- altar exchanging your vows. exceptions. Pregnant women
go away.
ter came home from s chool you should not have to worry should never use a hot tub.
. About a month later, he
The usual temperature for a
the other day with bruises on about your water breaking.
· snuck into our home while her body. When I asked her
hot
tub is I 04 degrees
Dear Abby is written by
: my wife and I were . out and
Fahrenhei,
t, but this can be
how she got them, she told Abigail Van Buren, also
. $5.00 Couple
$3.00
: installed a satellite box in me
lowered
to
accommodate older
a little boy beat her up at k
J
Ph 1
and
younger
people
.
Also.
·
: Amanda's room. When we recess. I went to the school to nown as eanne
Ips,
7A • Pomeroy,
discovered the box, we asked talk with her teacher, but and was . founded by her individuals with diabetes, high
Amanda where it came from, nothing was done, and my . mother, Pauline Phillips. blood pressure or heart disease
740-992-798
· . and she said Kevin. I looked daughter came home ' with Write
Dear
Abby
at should consult with their
: at the programming on the another bruise' yesterday. www.DearAbby.com or P.O. physician prior to hot tub use.
; box·. It had been rigged with What should 1 do? _ WOR- Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA . Skin problems are the most
common medical condition
: free pay and pornography RIED
MOM
IN 90069.
: channels. .We were very THOMASVILLE, GA.
r~-.y;;r:;ir.;T~£~:-T..-Trrm,.---1
upset. We removed the box,
DEAR WORRIED: Your '
gave ifback to our ex-friend child -has a right to get an
· and ordered him never to· education, free from bullying
111 (\aBJ
~ come around our kids again. or harassment Since talking
~Ill. \lliYf/
· Do you think we did enough? .to the teacher didn 't he)p,
: We don't want to overreact. here's the drill: Take your
: - UNSURE IN WASHING- complaint to the principal of
TON
the schooL If !hilt doesn't
DEAR UNSURE: One of stop the problem, go to the
the things pedophiles do with school board. If they fail ·to
. potential victims is something act, consult a lawyer.
·
: called "grooming." They
DEAR ABBY: I just found
Eamed Income Tax Credit. You could
: befriend the young person, out that I'm pregnant, and
increase your refund by up to $4,300.
· give him or her gtfts or I'm thrilled. I'm being mar[lid you kn,;w yo ur; Ii ~ht qualify for l) u• F..arnr tl tn ro nw Ta'
· money, encourage the. minor ried . in September - and
Cn·diL1 If \'OU do, n ul" ~·o tlld :-.i..,1tfi· ·aritly llltrt•a....:t• your rd1 :11tl.
ll~lllll o~ k alway' gr t' l'"" th~ rna xin nri11 tl'fund yo11 't•·
mtitlt•d 10 . g11arant ec·d
Tuesday, March 15
POMEROY Pomeroy
American Legiori Post No.
39 will hold their annual
birthday party at 7 p.m. at
the post home. Contact Mick

•
AP Photo/Richard Vogel
Nguyen Van Quy, 49, sits with his two children his son Nguyen Quang Trung, 17, left and his daughte r Nguyen Thi Thuy Nga,
16, at his house in Ha i Phong on July 2004. Quy believes his chi ldrens birth .defec\s. were caused by Agent Orange . On Thursday
a federal judge dismissed a lawsuit filed on behalf of some 4 mill ion Vietnamese claiming that U.S. chemical companies committed war crimes by making Agent Orange for use during the Vietnam War. ·

Williams and Tom Anderson
for reservations.
MIDDLEPORT- BrooksGrant Camp, Sons of Union
Veterans of the Civil War and
Maj . Daniel McCook Circle
Ladies of the Grand Army of
the Republic regular meeting,
7 : 15
p.m.,
Middleport
Masonic Temple. Civil War
program on Civil War nurses.

PageA3

: Hemlock Grange celebrates National Peanut Month

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
' Jim Freelafld
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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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 Governmentfor a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

VIEW

Invaluable

"You are guilty the
moment you realize that you
have made a hasty promise
to do something good or
bad." (Leviticus 5:4) ·
We· don't go in for promisGeorge
es very much today. A
Plagenz
promise is a · commitment
and we don't like to b,e tied
down by something we may
have said once.
Most of us cannot remem- lay critically ill in a hospital
.
ber the last time we made a in Essex Falls, N.J .
promise. ''I'll see what I can
Surgeons had performed
·do" is as far as we will go. an operation on him, but he
We quickly add, "But I can't was not responding. Johnny
make you any promises."
was an ardent Yankees fan.
Like most stories that get Babe Ruth was his hero.
As the boy's father and the
passed on from one storyteller to another, the saga of doctor talked gravely about
condition ,
it
Johnny Sylvester has gone Johnny ' s
through countless versions. occurred to b'oth of them that
The details may vary, but all a visit from the boy's idol
might be just what was needthe accounts are touching.
The most popular version ed to spur hi s recovery.
The next morning Johnny
is this one: At the time of the
1926 World Series between couldn't believe hi s eyes
the New York 'Yankees and when the door to his'hospital
the St. Louis Cardinals, the room opened and Babe Ruth
Yankees' star homerun hit- walked in. The two - the ·
ter, Babe Ruth, received a hero' worshipping boy fightmessage from the father of ing for hi s life and the most
Johnny Sylvester, II , who legendary sports figure in

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,,

history - chatted like old
friends for almost an hour. .
Before he left, Ruth signed
a baseball for Johnny and
then made · him a promise.
He would hit a home run for
him in the Series game that
afternoon. In fact , Ruth hit
nol one but three home runs
that day. Johnny slept well in '
his bed that ni ght. The crisis' •
had passed.
There were discrepancies
in that story, . however. For
one thing, the game in which
Ruth hit 'three home runs
was played in St. Louis. lt
wouldn't have been possible
. for the Babe to get from the
hospital in New Jersey that
mornin'g to St. Louis in the
afternoon to keep his
proinise to the boy.
An item that appeared· in
the New York Ti01es on Oct.
8, 1926, may have had the
facts straighter. The article
quoted the boy's doctor as
saying that Johnny's recovery began "when he learned
the news o[ the Babe's three
home runs . His fever began
to abate at once."

SAT~ SECTION ...

But the story said nothing
about Ruth vtsttmg Johnny
in the hospital, and nothing
about a promise.
The late Mel Allen, the
famed Yankees broadcaster,
preferred the more popular
version of the story and
always made a dramatic
point when it came to Ruth's
promise to Johnny:
"Babe knew that Johnny
would be holding him to his
promise every time he came
to bat that afternoon. H~
went to the ballpark knowing he was ' under contract'
to hit a home run. He knew
Johnny would be crushed
with disappointment if he
didn ' t come through .."
The next time we make a
promise and find it hard to
stick to, what weuld be good
inspiration for us is to follow
God's example: "He doesn't
tell lies or change his mind.
God always keeps his
promises ." (Numbers 23: 19)
(George Plagenz is a11
ordained minister and veteran newsman · based 111
Columbus,. Ohio.)

TEXT· MESSAGE

..•

ESSA'I

I

'

Friday, March n, 2005

Obituaries
Waid B. Hayman
'

HARTFORD, W.Va. Waid B . Hayman , 93, of
Hartford, W.Va., and formerly of the Racine area, died
Wednesday, March 9, 2005 in
Rocksprings
the
Rehabilitation
Center
.
'
. .Pomeroy.
·Born Nov. 24, 1911 in
Apple Grove, Ohio, he was
the son of the late George W.
and· Vera Mae Crawford
Hayman.
He was a retired deckhand
with the Union Barge Lines,. ·
Pittsburgh, Pa. and was a
member of the Hobso n
Christian Fellowship.
He married Donna Alma
Swan on Sept. 20, 1930 in
Pomeroy and she preceded
him in death on Nov. 8, 1993.
He was also preceded in
death by his son, Archie A.
Hayman who was killed in
Vietnam on April 2, · 1968;
sisters, Ruth Ours, Ruby
Wolfe; brothers, Gerald,
Harry and George W.
Hayman.
He is survived by a daugh:
ter, Cheryle (Carroll) Knight
of Hartford, W.Va.; four
grandchildren, Becky Knight
of Hartford, W.Va ., Linda
· Kriight of Ashton, W.Va .,
Teresa L. VanMeter of New
Haven , W.Va., · David B.·
Knight of Galloway; eight
great-grandchildren, Bradley,
Chandler, Cole, Candace;
Brandon, Shane, Erika and
Mathew; one great-great
grandchild; a brother, Dan
(Faith) Hayman of Syracuse;
three
. sisters,
Gladys
Richardson of Port Huron,
Mich. , Marge Packman and .
Doris ,Rogers both of
Columbus, and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be at
I p.m. ,on Sunday, March 13
in the Cremeens Funeral
Home, Racine with Rev.
Hershel W. White officiating.
Interment will be in the
Letart
Falls
Cemetery.
Friends may call from 7 p.m.
to 9 p.m. on Saturday, March
12 at the funeral home.

The battle over Social Security
The current argument
result, as the history of the Jet George W. Bush
between President Bush
. market demonstrates, on "destroy" Social Security.
and the ·Democrats o'v er
retirement in an actual nest Any old lie will do if it
Social Security reform may
egg substantially bigger than defeats the idea. For examsound, at first, confusingly
the
alternative,
Social ple, you can warn those now
complex, but its essentials
Security payments. What's already old that the Bush
William
are simple.
more, the nest egg, unlike reforms will end or diminRusher
Above. all, · one mu st
the payments, won't evapo- . ish their current payments.
remember the place of
rate when he or she dies, but In point of fact, Bush's pro-,
Social Security in the in stican be left to one's children posals don't even apply to
tutional memory of t~e
or some other beneficiary.
anyone who is presently 55
Democratic Party. Many Democrats care about the
There are several things or older - their payments
New Deal "reforms" have little. fellow, and they are wrong with this from the will
remain
wholly
proved evanescent or even . intensely proud of it.
· . Democrats' standpoint. For unchanged. But polls indicounterproductive.
But
The problem, of course, is one thing, it will accustom cate that the elderly are,
Social Security, which that the amount owed to the the elderly to participating in nonetheless, the group most
allegedly assures every beneficiaries' is approaching · the growth of the American opposed to Bush's plan.
American of a dignified old trillions of dollars, while the economy, rather than simply
Then there are the
·age, claims pride of place · number of taxpayers who getting monthly checks from Republicans. Like all politias the central jewel in are supposed to pay it is get- those nice people in cians, they will avoid, if
Franklin D. Roosevelt's ting, proportionately, ever Washington. For another, it they can, any proposal that
diadem. Never mind that it 1 smaller. The crunch is still admits there is something sounds disagreeable, ho~­
is .widely misunderst,ood as some years up .the road, but sefiousl'y wrong with Social ever wise it really is. They
an insurance plan, in- which every so often an attempt is Security as it stands - a complain, understandably,
an employee arrd hi s or her made to fix matters, so as to painful admission that can that Bush doesn't have to
employer contribute to an avoid it.
· easily be postponed, though, get re-elected, but they still
annuity that then funds the
That's what President not in the long run, avoided. do. Why not kick the .can
employee's life after retire- Bush proposes'to do. He has
Worst of all, however, is down the road, and let the
ment. Never mind that the suggested several reforms, the fact that this reform is next generation of politiinoney contributed by both and has indicated that he is prqposed by President cians fix it?
is, in fact, spent immediate- open to others, but his most Bush. If Social Security
George W. Bush is made
ly on whatever strikes lhe novel proposal, and the one must be fixed, let the credit of sterner stuff. The problem
gbvernment's fancy, and that has drawn the most flak, go to so me Democratic is real, and serious, and will
the "guaranteed" payments is to allow yo11nger people to president and Congress cost much less to fix now. So
are left to be paid for (if at put a fraction of their pay- down the road. Heaven for- he has taken his case to the
· all) out of taxes extracted ments, not into the Social bid· that FDR 's culminating people, and we shall see.
from those who are work- Security "lrust fund," but masterpiece should be
(William Rusher is a
ing 'at the time they're due. into conservative invest- repaired by Republicans!
· Distinguished Fellow of the
· SQcial Security has, never- ments .in the market - or, in
So the Democrats have Claremont l11stitute for the
theless, always been held other words, in the American dug in their heels and swear Study of Statesmanship and
up as proof that the economy. These funds will they will all die rather than Political Philosophy.)

States: Program for poor loses money under Medicare drug benefit
Bv CARRIE SPENCER

$ll5 million the first year of
the program, depending on
which enrollment option the
COLUMBUS
The plans choose. But they can't
Medicare prescription drug share that money · with
program meant to save states Medicaid because it came out
millions of dollars would of state retirees' paychecks.
instead eost Ohio up to $56
Several states are tro.ubled
million more in · two years about the costs for those who
than if the state kept buying qualify for both . Medicare,
drugs on its · own., budget federal insurance mainly for
officials say.
those 65 and older, and
And Ohio is not alone : Medicaid, a state-federal
California, Michigan, Iowa insurance program for the
and Hawaii so far have cal- poor and disabled,
culated that they will lose
About 244,000 , Ohioans
money, according to the . fall in that dual category.
association· for
welfare Ohio · Medicaid buys them
agency directors in all 50 prescription and over-thestates and so me cities.
counter medication, and the
That's because state pay- federal government reimments to the federal govern- burses part of the cost.
ment for drugs for poor and
The new plan reverses the
disabled seniors will be arrangement, with the federal
based on costs in 2003 , government buying the drugs
before rebates and drug dis· and the states paying money
counts.
back. Congress wanted the
"11 doesn't incorporate what states' savings to increase
kind of cost savings states over time, so the payments
already had in place. to lower would represent 90 . percent
the cost of drugs,"' said Elaine of the cost in 2007 but
Ryan, deputy director of the decline, to 75 percent by
American Public Human 2015 ..
Services Association. "States
Instead of basing the payare just trying to begin to get back on what Medicare will
their arms around what the actually spend on the. drugs,
cqstsmight be. "
Congress said the payments
The National Governors would be based on what a
has
urged state paid for Medicare·
Association
Congress to work with the approved drugs in 2003,
states to tweak the law. increased each year for inflaCalifornia ha s ·estimated its tion. Ohio negotiated signifiexcess costs at $215 million cantly lower drug costs the·
and Michigan at $30 million following . year,
the
in 2007.
Department of Job and
The drug benefit that will . Family Services said.
pick up part of seniors' preThe state estimates it will
scription ' costs over $250 pay $155.3 . million for the
begins in January, and not all first si.x months of 2006, and
rules governing it are in $340 million from July 2006
place. It was expected to to June 2007.
save the .s tates $8 · billion
"There are some data
over I 0 years.
issues with lllany states,"
The program has already said Gary Karr, Medicare
drawn attention this year spokesman in Washington ,
becau se budget estimates But the government can't
show it costing the federal change the 2003 base year,
government more than $700 he said.
billion over . the next 10
Republican U.S. Sens.
years.
. George Voinovich and Mike
Most seniors and employ- DeWine both voted for the
e'fs will see a benefit.. plan. DeWine is aware of
Preliminary estimates from Ohio's
problem,
but
Ohio's five pension fund s · Congress isn' t likely to
show they could save at least revi se the law this year,
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

local committee, Wellston 's nities, small-town charm, and
success will likel¥ serveas a village assets such as parks
model for Middleport' s plans and quaint brick streets. ·
Deteriorating buildings and
for
downtown revitalization.
from Page 'A1
" It 's going to be important blighted areas downtown, a
for
the village to narrow · traffic flow that impede s
local economy, and current ·
market trends, has already . down a focus for the work retail shopping, and botherbeen completed for the entire that needs to be done," some loitering in the downcounty, based on 2002 market Davenport said. "The sur,veys town shopping district are
information . The team will of existing busine sses can some of the liabilities. the
committee has identified as
also work to determine retail help us do that."
The
commjtee
also
will
needing addressed.
"gaps," or niche markets, that
local entre'preneurs might work to determine "retail · The committee also disgaps," or needed goods and cussed the need for involvetake advantage of.
serviceS\
in both Middleport ment and support from the
ILGARD completed a similar project with the City of and other Meigs County general public, and agreed a
determine strong public relations camWellston. in Jackson County, communities;
and Well ston has since quali- niche markets which · might . paign will be needed to ·
fied for $750,000 in public . encourage new businesses by attract participants and ideas .
grant funding for its revital- local entrepreneurs, and for the project.
" It's ·going to )le very
ization project, said Karl increase traffic by building
Runser, a research associate on strengths already identi- important to stress public
for ILGARD working with fied in Middleport and sur- 'ownership' of this project,"
Phalin said yesterday. "We
the
local
committee. rpunding communities.
Runser said those stren- need to let people know it's
to · · County
According
Commissioner
Mick ngths include the river, really going to happen this
Davenport, who serves ·on the attractive residential commu- . time."

"

•'

tion is to improve the qu111ity
of life and increase opportunities in Meigs County,
according to Baer. She listed
from PageA1
the "key players" as the OSU
came up with a $3,000 Extension
Service;
the
match, which brou'g ht ·a Chester Shade Historical
$3,000 grant to provide start- Association, the Retired
up money, explained Baer.
Senior Volunteer·prograrp of
At the recent organization- .· the Meigs County Council on
al meeting, Hal Kneen was Aging and the Riverbend
Pam Arts Council.
elected
president;
Schatz, vice president: Diana
Plans were discussed at the
Coates, secretary; and Jim recent meeting about affiliaMourning, treasurer. A gov- lions, whether the .local group
eming board will be orga- would go under a larger founnized later.
dation, like an umbrella, or an
The purpose of the founda- en~owment progrdlll. The goal,

Future
.

Rural
from Page A1·
• April 26 - Athens
• May 11 - Monday Creek
Restoration Project office in
New Straitsville (Perry
County).
~ June 8 Kuhre Center
for Rural Renewal, Rural
' Action's office in Trimble.
Richards invites those
interested in Rural Action to
attend a "Tour of Rural
Action" event and to call her
at 740-767-4938 or email
laura@ruralaction .org or see
222.ruralaction .org .for more
information .

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Step

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel

11, 2005

NEW STUDENT-PROPOSED

Dear Editor:
This March, Appalachian Community ,Visiting Nurse
Association, Hospice and Health Services and the National
Association of Social Workers celebrate National Social Work
M'onth 2005 ..
The theme for this year's campaign- "Social Workers. Help ·
Starts Here."- reinforces the point that social workers can connect a variety of people to a variety of resources in their community. Many people don't realize that most of the country's
mental health services are provided by social workers. Even
more don't know that social ~ rk~r~an be found in hospita]s,
schools, community health clinics. and even cor;porations.
Here at ACVNAHHS, fou r licensed social workers, Joan
Armstrong-Pennington, Tammy Hawk, Kate Oches and
Stephen Simko, provide invaluable help to our home health
and hospice clients. Their services include ensuring clients'
participation in Medicare, Medicaid and Veterans' programs
to help meet their health care needs. Our social workers also
evaluate a diversity of special needs and work on solutions
that may involVJ! the clienf, the family, social service agencies
and local charities, support groups or clergy.
Hospice social workers are an integral part. of our Hospice
team, which strives to ensure terminally ill clients the right to
die with dignity, in peace and comfort. Our social workers
continue working with bereaved family members after the
client 's death as well, offering a sympathetic ear and a help. ing hand throughout the grieving process.
. Approximately 600,000 'social workers in the United States
are dedicated to helping people ofall ages. religions, sexual
orientations, and nationalities gain access to adeq.uate
resources and services.
This month, please join Appalachian Community Visiting
Nurse Association, Hospice &amp; Health Services in paying tribute
to the contributions social workers make in our community.
MileTUl Miller
·
Director of Developme11t
Appalachian Community Visiti11g Nurse Associatio11
Hospice &amp; Health Services
30 He"old Ave11ue
Athens, Ohio 45701-

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

Friday, March

Remember now, you promised

The Daily Sentinel··

READER'S

PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

.

said Baer, is to proyide lasting
resources for the community's
future to give and bequeath.
"This is only the beginning
of the foundation,"· she said,
noting "that it is a way of
encouraging people to make·
donations and beque sts.,
things like that so that granting can .begin , perhaps for
scholarships or grants to nonprofits for Special projects, or
things yet to be decided."
Baer said the Foundation
for Meigs Counly's. Future is
different from the United
Fund "in that it will not have
an annual drive."

Sing
Saturday, March 12, 2005 • 7:00P.M.
Special .
Rita Cunningham
Singing by: Corrina Barnitz
Earthen Vessels
For More Information Call 740-992-6446

Ash Street Omrch
398 Ash Street

:Ohio

spokesman Mike Dawson
said .
Mark McClellan, admi ni s·
trator for the Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid
Services, told Voinovich on
Thursday that the agency is
working with Ohio to update
its figures, the senator's
spokesman Scott Milburn
said.
Not all states will be hurt,
Ryan said. Some hadn · t

negotiated the discounts and
some already buy drugs for a
wider population of seniors
that the federal government
will take over. ·
Meanwhile, the la,rgest
new · entillement program
since 1965 will draw out
seniors to sign up for the
drug benefit who di scover in
the process that they alSO'
qualify for Medicaid, Ryan
said. "The states would have

Meals

raisers are critical ,' according
to Retired and Sen ior
Volunteer · Program Director
Diana Coates .
The Gospel sing fun&lt;.lraiser will feature the Gospel
Harmony Boy s, Glorybound
and John Stevens . The
Merry Makers. the choir
from · the . Meigs Senior
Cen ter. also will perform .
Admission is $ 10 per person
or $18 per coupl e. A 10-perce nt discount will be avail-

from Page A1
Smith said l\bout his customers, some of which cannot ·afford to make a donation to the Meals on Wheels
program.
Ensuring th at an inability
· to make a donation does not
mean denial of a hot meal is
why the program 's fund-

to share the cost of those new
services as well."
On the Net:
• Medicare Modemiwtion
Act:
http: I/www. cms.llhs.gov/m
edicarereforml
• ODJFS:
http :1/jfs.ollio.gov
• American Public Huma11
Services Association:
http://www.aphsa.org
able to indi vidu als wh o have

a 2005 silver. bronze or gold
memberships to the Meigs
Senior Center. . Children
under 12 will be admitted
free of charge.
Pies and refreshments also
will be sol&lt;.l.
To find out more about ·
the fund-raiser, or to find
out if you yualify for the
Meals .on Wheels program.
call the Meig s Senior Center
at 992-216 1.

Beth Sorgont/ pholo

Meig$ County Senior Center cooks Ramona Hawk (left) and Mary· Morton prepare meals and
place them in their traveling containers for the Meals on Whee ls program. Last year the program served 210customers, who received 40,000 meals.
·

Bidder

Comissioners also:
• Appointed Judge Fred W.
Crow Ill , Sheriff Robert
Beegle,· Parole
Officer
from Page A1
Denise
Carter-Brooks,
Treasurer
Howard
Frank and
Freeman Post. 4 76, American
Legion. presented commis- Judy Sisson to the Common
sioners and Sheriff Robert . Pleas Court Local Planning
Beegle with a $200 contribu- Board.
~Tabled attion on an anitioh from the organization for
mal
claim filed . by Dave
the county's jail renovation
Watson
of Sumner Road,
project. Al Detwiller of
Detwiller Lumber was recog- Pomeroy, pending an ·investinized for the donation of gation by Dog Warden. Tim
.
paint for the project. Beegl~ Lawrence.
• Approve a Title 1V-D
·said the county has received
$3, 159 towar&lt;.l the project Contract with Meigs County
from residents and groups in Juvenile Court between
the county.
Meigs County Juveni le Court

and the Department of Job
and Family Services in the
amount of $26,050.46.
• Approved payment of
bills in the amo unt of .
$538.257.52.
Present
were .
Commissioners
Mick
Davenport and Jim "Sheets
and Clerk Gloria Kloes.
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA7

446-4514

~. I ~

1IF '1' •

1.

'1f

OXYGEN

Brian J. Reed / photo

AI Dettwiller, left. of Dettwiller Lumber in Pomeroy was recog- ·
nized for a donation qf paint to the Meigs County Jail renovation project, and Paul Carter, center, presented Sheriff Robert
Beegle and Commissioners Jir'n Sheets and Mick Davenport
with a $200 contribution toward the project from the Joseph
Freeman Post 476, American Legion of Langsvil le.

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Middleport, OH

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�PageA6

FAITH. • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

WORS.HIP GOD·THIS WEEK

Are you 'Running' or 'Rigging' your Race? 'Harmony' to peiform at TM:sleyan Bible Holiness Church
BY RICK RULE, PASTOR
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH .

An eight year old cub scout
named Gil once built a wooden
derby race car. He was quite
proud of his creation. True, the
paint had a few runs, and the
shape appeared more sql!are
than sleek, but he had done all
the work himself and to him, it
looked like the fastest car on
eann.
Finally the night of the big
race came and Gil received
quite a surprise . Alllhe other
boys had obviously received
help from their fathers. Their
cars had colorful paint schemes
and styled bodies which contrasted harshly with Gil's
rough-cut racer. To add to the
embarrassment. Gil was the
only boy present who did not
have a father or grandfather by
his side.
·
The race begap and Gil's
racer proved that whatever it
may lack in appearance ,· it
made up for · in velocity. Gil
quickly advanced in the eliminations. easilv defeating the
other cars until onlfllts car and .
one other were left for a final

Rev.
Rick
Rule

elimination race.
Right before the race was to
begin, Gil as ked if the race
could be stopped long enough
for him to pray. The request was
unusual , but the permission
was give n nonetheless and Gil
spent a long minute in conversation with God. When he had
finished, Gil simply looked up
and announced. ''Ok. l am
ready

now~"

The race began and Gil's car
raced dowh the ramp. nose to
nose with the other cat. The tinish was close, but Gil's car was
slightl y faster and crossed the
fimsh line a split second before
his rival's car.
As the trophy was presented
to Gil, the scoutmaster asked
the obvious question, " Did you

r.ray to win Gil?'' Gil replied,
'Oh no sfr 1 That wouldn't be
fair to ask God to help you beat
someone. I prayed that He
would help me not to cry when
, I lose ."
Children often have wisdom
far beyond us. Gil didn't ask
God to "fix" the race, he asked
God to give him strength in the
outcome. When Gilbert saw the
other cars he didn't complain to
God, "Not fair, they had a
father 's help." Instead, he went
to hi s Father for strength.
Do.we spend too much of our
prayer time askiu.g God to rig
the race or to marce us number
one? Do we ask God to remove
us from the struggle, instead of
requesting strength to get
through''
·•
That is the message of
Philippines 4: 13: "I can do all
things through CMst which
strengtheneth me." I ·
Perhaps today Y!lU should
"Stop the race" and talk to your
father. Maybe you should show
someone near you that your
father is near and that He wants
to be near to them as well.lfyou
\viii, 'you will find out what it
really means to be "A Winner"'

Fellowship
Apostolic

Evening · 7:30p.m,

11 certainly behooves a
Christian to think long and
hard on the manner in which
he or she lives his or her life.
"What exactly ARE my priorities?" "How now shall I live
seeing that I've turned from
sin and self and placed my
faith in Christ?" " What really
is the MAIN THING to which
I wanf to devote my pass ion
and energies?"
·
If such questions are meaningless to someone who has
su pposed ly
. become
a
Christian, then he or she needs·
to examine the condition of his
or her heart. Consider the
work of heaven effected in you
as the righteousness of Christ
is credited to your life! '' ... If
anyone is iri Christ, he is a new .
creation; the old has go ne. the
new has come' All thi s is from
God, who reconciled us to
Himself ihrdugh Christ and
gave us the ministry of reccin~
ciliation ... God made Him
Who had no sin to be sin for
us, so that in 'Him we· mi ght
become the righteousness of
God. As God's fellow workers
v.(e urge you not to receive
God's grace in vain" (2
Corinthians 5: 17-18,21-6: l ).
Frankly, the signs of the
times suggest that His grace
and goodness toward us ' as
Christians have had little
impact on how we live .
Wherein His love and power

and attitudes (and self and sin
still reign in us), · His grace
·bestowed upon us has proven
vain indeed ... vain in securing
Pastor ·
for the Kingdom of God the
Thorn ,
domain of out' hearts ... vain in
Mollohan
opening up the territory of our
li ves· and yielding fertile soil
for the growing of spiritual
fruit ... and vain in allowing us ·
even to come into the place FIRST the . kingdom of God
where we may be.most blessed and· His righteousness and (all
by the King of glory. ·
your needs will be met)"
"For this very reason, make (Matthew 6:33). "(Jesus said),
every · effon to add to your 'Love the Lord your God with
faith goodness; and to good- · ALL your heart and with ALL
ness, knowledge; and to your soul and with ALL your
knowledge, self-control; and mind.' This is the first 11nd
to self-control, perseverance; greatest
commandment"
and to perseverance, godli- (Matthew 22:37-3l!).
.h
ness; and to godliness, broth- . "T rust .m the LORD w1t
erly kindness; and to brotherly ALL your heart and lean not
kindness, love. For if you pos- on your own understanding: in
sess these qualities in increas- .ALL your ways acknowledge
ing measure, they will keep Him, and He will make your
you from being irreffective and paths straight" (Proverbs 3:5unproductive in your . knowl- 6).
edge of our Lord Jesus Christ.
.Let your love for God be
But if anyone does not have manifested in how you plan
them , lfe is nearsighted and your life. Do hobbies take
blind, and has forgotten that he precedence over service to
has been cleansed from his your Lord? Does slee~i~g. in
past sins" (2 Peter l :5-9).
on Sunday cancel your JOtnmg
Making every effort to live with other Believers in offera life that is going to count in ing worship to the Holy One?
eternity means (dare I say it?) Do ball games come before
letting go of some things in your serving in God's work?
order to pursue the " main Does television pre-empt your
thing." The main thing? Yes ... private time in prayer and in
a close walk with God. "Seek reading His Word?

Emmanuel Apostolic Tahernatlt Inc.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd . Rut land.
Services: Sun 10: 00 a.n;. &amp; 7:30 p.m.,
Thurs. 7:00p.m .. Pastor Matty R. Hulton

Assembly of God
Liberty As.&lt;;tmbly or God
P.O. Box 467. Dudding Lane, MastHl.·

W.Va.. Pastor: Neil Tennam. Sunday
. Se rvices- 10:00 u.m. &lt;tm17 p.m.

Church Briefs
If any (}[ these things are
true, "make every effort" to
reorder your life and place
yourself , on the altar of His
love. Based on all appearances; the' argument can be ·
made that the .Church is ane·
mic - lacking in vitality,
power and conviction. If this is
so. it is merely because God's
own people hold back and let
otber things come before the
"main .thing." Don 't let other ·
things depose God 's place on
the throne of your life. Even
"good" th'ings must be sacri·
ficed in our choices if they
must be had at the expense of
the "best thing of all."
"There 1·ore. my brot hers, be
all th
t.
k
e more eager o ma e
you~ calling and elect1on s,ure.
For 1f you do these thmgs, you
w1ll never fall , and you will
_recetve a nch welco.me mto
the eternal kingdom of our
Lord and Savior Jesus Christ"
(2 Peter l : lO- ll).
(Thom Mollohan has min·
istered in Southern Ohio the
past 9·112 years and is the
t
.I'
p th
pas or . 0J
a way
C?mm.unity Church. He and
h1s wife. are the parents of
four children. He may be
reached by email at pas·
torthom@pathwaygallipo·
lis.com).

Hymn sing
planned

Larrel
Cliff
·Free
Methodist Church. At the
10:30 a.m. March 20 service, Bobby Siders will be
smgmg.

MIDDLEPORT
A
hymn sing will be held at 7
p.m Saturday at the As
Street Church. 398 Ash St.,
Middleport. Singers will be
Rita Cunningham, Corrina
Barnitz. and Eanhen Vessels.

Gospel.benefit
concert Saturday

RUTLAND
The
Gospel. Harmony Boys
will be in concert with
Gloryland and soloist
John Stevens at., 6 p.m.
Saturday '
at
Meigs
LONG BOTIOM
Elementary
School.
Rogie Bissell and Headed
Admission is $10 a perHome will be singing at the
son
or $18 a couple.
Faith Full Gospel Church at
Long Bottom, 7 p.m. Friday.. There will be a l 0 percent
discount for those J!olding
a 2005 silver, bronze or
gold membership to the
Meigs County Council. on
Aging.
Children under 12 will
POMEROY Randy
be
admitted free. Proceeds
Parsons will be speaking
from
the event will benefit
at the l 0:30 a.m. worship
service
and
Jerry the "Meals on Wheels"
Frederick at the 6 p.m. program. For additional
servtce Sunday at the mformation call 992-2161.

Sing setat Long
Bottom church

Guest speaker
coming

Sc nic~

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Evening

Pomeroy,OH
740-992-6215

Proud to be apart .of your life.
Sub~cribe

:'i70 Grum Sl.. Middleport. Su nday Sl.:houl

- 9:JO a.m.. Worship · 11 a. m. and 6 p.m..
WcJncsduy Sen· icc - 7 p.m:

today • 992-2155

i'

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CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 minutes froffi
Athens. Pomeroy or Parkersburg

1-740-667·3156
"Still small enough to care"

e

Services
Overbrook
· Rehabilitation Ctr.
"A Celebration of Life"

Page Street
Middlenort OH

333

(740) 992·6472
Fax i740\ 992-7406
Hours
6&lt;lm · Hpm

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

.....

lt-

Tlltloot ... IIWI_......,. ... .,..,h&lt;llltl- .. tlolyoldlto"J ulllyef
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.... Tlll&lt;lolloolillf ... _olllll' .._. -tltoi1J1ot - · otlooorloopwlllitllllo
'"'l'IIM""HIIp t lolloll.. aboolllw._.;ltlifllolldotJ_,.., I lllwlrlllo - •

~~

P.O. Box683
Pomero Ohio 45769·0683

. - , ; . -• . , _ . _. . . . . . -..1.... . , . _ -

to ill&lt; M)' li&gt;a oiJD _,_..,...., wido oor dtild... """ •lilt Gtt4 . . _ " ' - r.r

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499 Richland Avenue, AthenS
740·594-6333
t-800-4St-9806

Hills Self Storage
291)70 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

7 40-949-2217
Sizes available 5x1 0

to 1o x 20

If ye abide in Me, a11d My ·
words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done unto you.
}aim 15:7

-~- ot otoo -'ti"C' of'"' t!tll&gt;ftlt F-. ""'""' :11:6 ,.,._ "lrrio o&lt;llltl ill .....,

... _,..,,.. ...... olcliooorill ....• ... r.... IL"

w......... --lo(;.d..tltelp--lnro_l .. la'l

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

MEIGS FAMILY EYECAAE, LLC .
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00 .

507 Mulberry Height.•
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

l'ii&gt;~

(740) 992·3279
~
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

Af11WlfJhere

9vfi[[ie's 2(estaurant
Homemade Desserts Made Daily
Home Coo.ed Meals &amp; Daily S,wcials
&lt;;lpen 7 days a week.

7 40·992·

Blessed are the pure
ln heart,· for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8
MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; lEES
190 N. Second Si.

•

Middlepor1, OH

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

·KEBLER
BUSINESS SERVICES
An Income. Tax &amp;
Financial Services Firm
618 E. Main Street • Pomero)

(740) 992· 7270

.

1):.10 a.m.. Wnrs.hip

Paswr:

Vktor Roush .. Sunday s\: hool - 9:30a.m ..
Sunday wnrship - 10:30 a.m: &amp; 7 p.m ..
Wt:dm:sday prayer .scrvke - 7 p. m.
Cal\'ary Pilgrim C hatw~
Harrisonville l{und. Pnstor:

Middleport Churcl1 of Christ

Worship - II

u.m:. 7:00

-

Pastor: Bria n Dunham. Sunday
9: 30!1.111., Worship - l l :CX)a ,m.

t'irst South~rn Baptist
· ~HI? :! Pnmcroy .P1kc. Pa~lor : E. Lumar
O ' H ry~nt. Sunday St hlll&gt;l · 9 :30a.m .,
Worship - K: I :'i ;un .. 9:45am &amp; 7:011 p.m ..
Wcdne ~, l ay Scn· i cc~ -

7:00p.m.

. Pa ~ lur :

a. m.
10 :30 a.m ., 6 :30 p.m .

-

Wcd nc.~day

woNhip -7 p.m ..

Sunday

Chun:h
112 mile off Rt. ~25. P11stor: Rev. O'Dell
Man ley. Sund~y Sc h\&gt;ll f - 9:30 •a.m .,
W0:1rship

-

10 :30

a.m.,

7:30

p.m..

Pa.~tor :

~ 10:45

p.ril .. Wednesday Scrvkcs - 7 p.m.

Servir e- 7-:00pm

Rarine First Baptist
Pastnr: Rid Rule, Sunduy Sc hoo l - 9:30

Tuppers Phtin ChurdrofChrist
Instrume nta l, Wmsh ip Servic.e - 9 a.m.,.

Bradbury

Chu~h of C hrist

a.m
wOrsh1p - 1 O:.m a. m.

,Wednesday Sen·ices- 7:00p .m.
1\tt, Union Baptist
Puslnr : David Wi~c num , Sunda~ SdiUul-

r.m..

9 : 4~

a .m .. Evcmng • tl :.W
Wcdncsduy Se ~;v t te s- fl:JOp. m.

· Rutland Church ofCbrl'it

Bradford Church of Christ
Come r of St. Rl. 12.4 &amp; Brad bur)' Rd ..
.Minister: Dnug Shnmblin. Youth Minister:

9:JO am _, Wmship · IO: JO a .m. and 5
p.m ..Wednesday Sen·ice - 7:00p.m .

The Church or Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day Saints
St. 'Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446· 74811 ,

WorshiP - H:OO ~.m .. IO:JO a. m .. 7:00
p.m .. Wednesday Sen-ires - 7:00 p.m.

, q a.m .. Wnnh ip ·. 1(1 a.m. , fl :.30 p.m.
WE'dncsda~

Sen•ices - 7 p.m.

ReedS\"IIle Church of Christ

Society/Prie sthood II :05· 12:00 noo n.
Sacramen.t Senice 9 - 10 : 15 a.m. ,
Ho memaking meeting, 1st Thurs.- 7 p.m.

a.m .• Worship Scn·icc : 10:)0

~ . m ..

Dil"llc

StuJy, Wellnl'sday. C:dU p.m

School · !0 a.m.. Even ing - 7:00p.m ..
De:~tcr C hurth of Christ
Sunday school 9:JO a.m .. Sunday worship

Hillside BBPtist ChuiTh
Sr. RL 14 .~ ju ~ t off R1. 7, P;~ ~ tor : Kt v.

Sen ·ices -7 p.m.

- IO:.Wa. m.

9 :30 a _m., Wnrship: !0·30 a.m. and 6:.30
p.m .. Wednesday Bible S111dy - 7 p.m.

Lutheran

lbilrnad Sl. . Mason. Sunday S~hool · 10

Hartford Church of Christ il\
Christian Union
Hartford. W.Va .. P11 sto r:Dnvi·d G reer.

a .m .. Wors hip . .

S'-\nday SChi'liil · 9 :.~0 a.m .. Worship -

Wednl'sday Services

II

a .m ..

6

p.m.

-1 p.m.

10:30 a .m ..

7: 00 p .m ..

Wednesday

Fon:st Run Baptist

Fourth &amp; Main St .. Middlepon . Pastor :
Rev. Gilllerl Crai~. Jr., Sunday So.:hool ·-

Mile Hill Rd ., RaCine. Pas!tar: J11,mes
Sauerl"ie ld. Sunday School - 9:4S n. m .,
Evening - 6 p. m~ . Wednesday Services - 7

Rutland Chun::h of God
Pastor: Ron Heath. Suliday Wor~ hip

Su ndU)" Sc hool · &lt;Ufl a.m ., Worship -

a.m , 6

IU:4.5 a.m .. Sund y Evening · 6:00p .m ..

p.m.

Paslnr: Don Walker
Rutland Free Will B•plbt
Salem St .. Pastor: Jam1e Fortner, Sunday
Schoo l - 10 a .m., E\'ening - 7 p.m.,
Wedt_l.:sday Services- 7 p.m:

B1~ l e

1-'aith f'ull Gospel Church
Long Hollom . Pastor: Steve Reed, Sunda'y

Study: Monday 7:00pm
Snowvillr

. S~riday School - 10 a.m .. Worship - 9 a.m.'

School • 9 :30 a.m. Worship - 9.: JU am
and 7 p.m., Wed n ~'Od.ny - 7 p.m.. Frid~ y­

10

Syraruw first Ch_u rch of God
Apple lind Second Sts.: Pa stor: Re\'. David
Russe ll. Sunday School and Wmship - 10
a.m . Evening Service~ - 6 :30 p .m ..
Wednesday Scr\·io.:es - 6:30 p.m.

.

· Pas tor : John di lmore, Sunday Sc hool - 10
a.m. , Worship · 9 a.m .. Wedn~sday
Sen·ices- 10 a.m.

174 Llynt Stmt• PO Bo~ ·l70

Nt'• H1wen. WV 25265
H. Ande!WR. Lkemed Funertl Dim:lor

P1111nlng

1

Life Victory Center

George~ C ~ck

Ro:ld, Galillo. •ll '. OH
,Bil l StatCn . Sunday S o.:n 1 c~~ -, 10
a.m. &amp; 7 rIll . Wedno:,du y · 7 p.m &amp;
Pa~tor :

Ynutll 7 p.m
Full Gospel Ch urch
of !he Lh·ing Savior
RIJ .\K, Allliyuity.

Pa ~tor:

l l'~~e ~-lorri ~.

Service~: Saturda ~ 2:00 P-Ill.

Ruck

Sall'm Communily C hurrh
We'o t \{ilum h i~. W. Vll .lllll L1eving

(I f

Road. Pa~1t1r: Charb Rnu~ h (304J ft75i 2288, Sunday Sl· hool 9:.\0 ~~~~. Sunday
e' cni n11 'en 1.:e 7:00 pm. Bib ly Study
7:{)0 pm

Hohson Christian Fellow~hip thul'l"'~
P!l.\ lor: Hc:rs..:hcl White. SunUay St:hLKJ I·
10 am. Sunda} Church

SL' I"\

ice - fl:JOpm

Y365 Hooper Kn~d. Atho.: n~. F•astor:
Lnnnie Co;H ~. Sunoiay Wm.~ h 1p I(J:f.J() am.

Restoration Christian Fe-.llowship

WedneM!ay: 7 pm

Carmel-Sutton
Middleport Community Church

Radne, Ohio.

Pa stor: foh n Gi lmore, Sunday Sc hool 9:-'0 a.m., Worship - l0:45 "a. m. . Bible

~75

St1.1dy Wed. 7:90p.m.

Evening- 7 :.~0 p.m. . Wednesday Scn· in~7:30p.m.

Pearl St.. Middl eport . Pa stor: Sam
Anderson. Su nday Sc hool 10 a.m ..

Lallgsville. C~ristian C hun:h
Full Gospel. P;~ s tur : Rohc11 Mu ~ M:r.
Sunday School IJ. JU am . . Wor'\hip IU:.'O
.am • 7.0V pm. Wc dne~y Service 7: 00
pm

~hoo l

Failh \'alley Tabernacle Church
, Baile)' Run Road . Pastor: Rev. Emmell

- II

u. m.. Worship - -10 a.m.

Rnw son . Sun day

Evening

Pentecostal

7 p .m ..
Pentecostal Assembly

Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

· East Letart
Pastor: "Bill Marsh all Sun dlay School Yll. m.. Wors hip · 10 a.m ~ 1st Sunday
every month t'Wning ser\liCt' 7:00 p.m _:

SynK"ust' Mission
14 11 Bridgeman St .. Syracuse, SundaY
6 p.m ..
School - IU a. m. b ·e ning
~.m.

Brady

School - 9:.\0 a.m., Worship - IO:JO a.m ..

Our S~;~viour Lutheran Churth
Walnut a nd Henry Sh ., Ravenswood.
W.Va .. Pastl&gt;r: David Russell ~ Sunday

Coolville United Mrthodist Parish
Pa~tor : Helen Kline, Coolville Chur&lt;"h.

School · 10:00 a.m.. Wor.;hip - _11 u m.

St. Rt. 124, Rao.:in~. Pa ~ tl.K : Will1am
Hobacl. Sunda) Sr hool · 10 ;1 m ..
Evcnin~ . 7 p.m .. Wedn e..;;da~ Sen•ice'o . 7
p.m

. 'Presbyterian
Syru&lt;"tist rirsi United Prt'!ibyte rian
Robert Cro~~o . Wor.;htp · II a.m

Pa~ t ur~

7:30p. m.
Pa.~ l or :

Main &amp; Fifth St ,, Sunday School - 10
a.m.. Worship - 9 a.m .. Tut'sday Services -

10:30 a.m , 7 p.m.

Middleport Pm;byle-rian
Pastor: Jamc~ Snyder. Worship · I I u. m.

7 p. m.
Comer Sycamore &amp; Seco nd St .. Pumeru.y.
Sunday Sl·hool - 9:45 a.m .. Worsfiip - II
a.m. P..tstliT: Jumcs P. Brady
Sat. 7:00pm Contemporary Se rvice

Graham l Jnited M"thodist
Worship - 9 :.'0 -a.m. 1 ls,t &amp; 2rld SunJ ..
7 :JO p.m. nrd &amp; ~ 1 h SunJ.Wedn~sd:ly

Morse Chapel Chun::h
J undi!y s&lt;:hool · 10 u.m.. Worship - II
a. m., Wr:dne!&gt;day Service - 7 p.m.

BetiM-1 Church
To~nsh1p Rd . 46RC. Sunduy S&lt;" hon l - q
a.m . WOrship ...: 10 tl .m .. ' Wednesday
Scr\'ice~ -

•

10 a.m.
Hu~:kingport

Chun::h

Gmn d Stfi.'t.'l, Su nda y School • YdO a. m..
Worship - !0:.~0 a.m.. Pastor Phtlhp Bell

~: 30

Worship , 10:30 a.m.

Scrvke- 7 r -m.

Nazarene

..

·Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
sha.ll see God.
Matthew 5.

·

7· HO p.m
Sundays

~th

7 p.m
Eden Uniled Biethren in C hrist

p.m.

Sunday School - 9 a.m .• Worship Service
IQ a.m. 2n1 and 4th Sunday

State Ro ute 12-t Rl•e d~ ' illc. Su nda~
School · II a.m·.. SunJa y w ,,l..,hip- 10:00
a.m. &amp; 7:00p .m. Wl'dno.: ..,Ja)
7.00 p.m.. WednesJay Yo uth

S en1o;t'~

Pomeroy C~urch oflht Na.za~ne
Pastor: Jan Loi vendcr. Sunday School ·
9:30 ll .m .• Worship - 10:,3 0 a.m. and 6
p.m.. Wednes4ay Servi ~ es - 7 p.m.
Chun-h oflhe Nazarme

7: 00p.m.

C•rleton lnterde-nomln•tional chul'("h

P·f12·
Ffft'dom. c:J:ospel ~1ission
Bald Knob. on Co . Rd. J I. Paslor: Rev
Roger Willford. Sunday S~· hool - 9 :.~0 a.m
Worship- 1 p.m.
While•s Chapel WeUeyan
Coohi ll e Roa d, Paswr: Re v. Phillip
Ridenour. "s unday School - Q:30 a.m ..
- 10:30 a.m .. Wednesday Sel"\·ice

ROCKSPRINGS
Let your light so shine before
REHABILITTION CENTER men, that they may see your

SWISHER •&amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
·We Fill Doctors'

Prescriptions
992-295~
Pomeroy
"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear before
God and man."

Acts24:16

God sn loved I he world
he gave his only
lbegol'leiT son ...
Jolm 3:16
&amp;nowlltr'e:
:firt &amp; &amp;altt!'

..........,
fOU . .

Meigs County's Oldest Florist
East Main

Pomeroy. Qlq
~ ltlll~ t1nd !t{)tJ t fllollghlli

·

S ~ n i ~· c .

Ser,·ice 10:30 ~ . m .. Evenina Scn'icc ~

Syracu.w Cbun-h of the N11zarene

~

p.m .. WcJno.: ~da y Sa\ ICC'
Youth group m c ~·t1n g: 2nd.~

K in~sb ur y Road .. PaJitor: Roht-n Vance .
Sunday School - 9 :JO a.m .. Worship

Paslor Mike. Adki ns. Sunda)' S~; hool · 9:30
a.t!l .. Worship · 10:30 a.m .. 6 ·p.m ..
Wcdne!lday SCrvicc~ - 7 p.m.

Che.~er

in C hrist C hurch

7.30 p.m .. Tuesday &amp; T hursday • 7: 30

South Bdhel Community Churtb
Silver Ridge- Pas10r linda Damewood.

AHen Midcap

Services · 7 p.m.

Ntfds\'i.lle
Worship - 9 :30 a.m .• Sunday S~hool . ·
10:30 a.m., FirM Su nday of Month - 7:00
p.m. SCf\' I ~""C

f'UU GO!lpel Ughlhouse33045 Hiland Ruud, Pomeroy. Pastor: Roy
Hunte r, Sunday School· 10 un .. heni ng

Wednesday Sen·ices - 7 p.m.. · Pastor:

- 7p.m.

l..onR Bottom
S unday SchnPl - 9:30 a.m-. Worship ·
IO :JO a.m.

United Brethren

Co_ Rd . 113. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m ..

Churc h or the Nazarene. PRslor: Jamie
Penit. Sunday School · o:uo a.m.. Worship
· .10:45 a.m .. 7 p.m .. Wednesday Sen·ices

a. m . Sunday Sc hool · IOJO a.m.

Wednesday 7:30 p.m

Texas Ct •mmunit~ .164 11 Wi \· ~ h am Rd.
Pastor: Peter M~nmda l~·. SunUa~ School ·
9 :JO a.m .. Wor~ h ip - 10.3U u.m .. 7 .lW:I

Chester
Pa sto r: Jane Bl.'alliu. Worship · 9 &lt;t .m ..
Sunday School · 10 a.m . . Thui"Way

9JO

Bcnnen Lu c kic sh. Suturd:~~ ·S en k c•·
Sahbath Schl..,)l · ~p. m .. Wu111hip · .l p.m.

9:30a.m.. Hening. - 6:.\0 p.m.. Wedneday

9:30a .m .. Worship- IO:Jl)" a.m., 6:30p.m..
a.m .,

Filith Gospel Church

' - 9:30a.m ..
Long ~ottom. Sunday Sch1fl
Worsh1p - 10:4~ a .m .. 7:.~0 p .m.:

Torrh ChurTh

Middleport Chun::h or the NaurTnt
Pastor: Allen Midcap, Sunday School -

Northeast Clusta, Al fred. Paslor: June

Sevtnth-lla~· ...\ d \"enlist
Mulherry Ht ..;. Rd .. Po mcttly. PaMor :

\11 . Hennon l'nilcd RN"thM'l"l

Ralph Spires. Sundt1y Sl'hoo l - 9:3(J a.m..
Wnrship - 10 :30 a.m .. 7 p.m .. Thur::rduy

Mei~ Cooperathe Parish

Seventh-Day Adventis~

Mt. Olive t )tmmunlly Churrh
Pastor:. lawrence Bush. Sunday Schnol -

Sen·ice · 7:.'0 p.m.

Services - 7 p.m.

H.a rrisonville Pl'l'Sbyterian Church
Rtlbcn Cm\.1 . Wo r~hip · 9 a.m.

Community.Chorc:h
Su nda)' School - 9:30 &amp;em., Worshin -

Dynvil~

St. Paul Lutheran Chul'("h

Davla·Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
Full line of
INSURANCE
·
Insurance words abide in you, ye shall
SERVICES
Products+ ask what ye will, and it shall
Financial
2·14 E. Main
be done unto you.
Services
AGENCIES Inc.
992-5130
John 15:7
Pomeroy
am
992-66n ·
ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME

Wc dn e~da ~· Sl' f\"IO.:l' -

Harrisonville Communily Chun::h
Pustor: Theron Durham, Sunday - 9:3 0
a.m. and 7 p.m., W("dne~ay - 7 p.m

The care you deserve, close tO home good works and glorify your
JINIH1I1
36759 Rocksprings Rd .
Father in heaven. "
. . .111....
11 , ...... - ..-. . .
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Marrhew 5:16
992-3785
• 740-992-6606

J1fu

am

Wedne sda y 7 pm

p.m.

.flfber .funeral
............
t•
Pomeroy

Ill:!.~ I

fl'llowship service 7 p. m.

Hazel Community Church
Off Rt. 124. Pastor: Edse l Han. Sunday

Joppa
Pastor: Bob Ra ndolph. Worship ·
-

p.m ..

Wedne ~da) ~o:rv i c e

Racine
Pastor: Pete ShafTer. Sunday s~·huol · !0
a.m .• Wors hip . II a.m.. Wednesday 7

p.m .. y.·cdncsda)' Scr\'ices - 7

your light so shine belfon~ l
men. that they may see
works and glorify
Father in heaven."
Matthew 5:

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667-3110

Wednesday service. 7 p. m.

p.m

9 :JO a.m.. Worship - 10:45 a.m.

~nttuity Baptllil

Center

Rt'edsvllle Fellowship

Mt. Moriah Chun:h of God

Grace N.f. 1.

9D S. Third St.. Middleport. Paslor Teresa
Davis. S unda y sen·ice . 10 a.m..

Worship- \ I a.m., 6:30 p.m.

Church of God

Pasltlr . Ariu~ Hun , Sunday School · 10
a.m .. Wor.;hip · I~ a .m
Mt. Moriah Baptist

Abund~nt

- ·st. John Lutheran Chur&lt;"h
Pine Gm\'e . WMship · ~:00 a.m .. Sunday
Sl·ht)tJI
10:00 a.m . Pastor : hme s P.

Beall ie. Sunda)· Sc hool -

Serv.ices · 7:00 p,m.

7

l.ire Center

Wednesday Service- 7

Mt. Olh·e United Methodist
Of( 124 .h ehind Wilke sville , Paslnr: Rl'Y.

Christian Union

\\;ur\hip -

.' 773

Pastor: William K. Marshall. Sunday
Sohool - 10: I~ ~ . m ., Wnrsh1p · 9 : I 5 a.m.,

United Methodist

t'hurch ur Christ
Intersection 7 and 12~ W. E,vange li st:
Hennis Sargent . Sunday Bihl c Sludy -

Rejoicing Lifl' Chun·h
, 500 N . 2nd A \"l'., M1Udlc pm1. P:.t\tnr:
Mike Forem:.tn
P a~ t or :
Eml•ntu~

p.m

5017, Ser,•irc time : Sunday 10:30 a.m..
Wcdn e~du y 7 pm

Wednesday· 7 p.m.

Pu...tor: Philip Sturm. Smiday SC hool: 9:30
Old Reibel Fr« Will Ba'ptist Chore~
2'KI)OI Sl. Rt. 7. Middl epnrt, ·Sunday

,C.: hUrr h
Pastor: W:tyne K. J~v.t.'ll . Su nd:t) Scro.icc.
11·{)() p.m.• W~dn ~~Jl.l )'- 6JX) p.m

Worship: I 0 a m. Evening Wor ~ h1p : 6 pm .
Youlh grou p 6 pm. Wcdncsdlly : Power in

9:30a.m .. Worship - HUO a.m .. Thursday

Morning Star
Paslor: John Gilmore, Su nday

p.m

(:Iifton Tal):('i'naclt" Church
Clii"w n. W.Va . SunJa y Schunl - 10 &lt;l m ..

Church"". Pas10rs John &amp;
Patty Wade, 603 Second Av~ . Mawn, 773-

Rutland
Sunday -School .

Carme l &amp; Ba sha n Rds.

~()

Sti,·ersl'illl' f·;Jmmunit~· A.po~ lotic

Bourn ~.

Sundlly S chool 10: 20- 11 u.m_, Relief

Bill Amhcrgcr. Sunday Schoul - !.J:JO a.m.

Hickory HiUs Chu~h of C hrist
Evangt'list Mike Moore . Sunday Schoril .

lk1:hlrhem Baptist Churth

Bib I~ Study and Youth- 7 p. m.

Latter-Day Saints

Communion - 10:3p a.m., Bob J. Well)'.
Minister
·

Pastor. John Swnnson. Sunday Sc hool ·
IOa .m .. Worship - I I run., 7:1)(1 p.m

Thur~ay

Laurel Cliff Frt'"e Methodist Church
Pustor : G le nn Rowe. Sunday Schnol ·.

Sunduy School - 9:30 a,m .. Worship and

Sil\·er Run Baptist

Rev. Larry Lem ley: Sunday Sc hoo l

- 9JO a.m.. Worship - 10 :45 a.m .. 7 p.m..

Servile· 7

Bethel Wonthip Center
Cheste r So.:huol, Pastur: Rob Barbe r,
Assistant Pastor: K:neu Dliv i~ . Sunday

Aga~

Hy'itll Run Communit)· Church
Pa~tcu :

We dnc~ ny

· ·f ull -Go .~ pel

r

Mini ster: Tum Runyon, J955g Bmdbury
Road, Middlepvrt. Sunday s~· hoo l · IJ: 30

a.m .. Worship - 10:40 a .m .• 7:00 p.m ..
Wednesday Services-7:00 p.m.

p.m., Sunday Eve. 7:0U p.m.,
Wednesday Scrvu:c · 7:311 p.m .

Re\1

Blackw uud . S unda~ s ,·hoo l - 'UO ~ . m ..
Wllrshi p
10:30. a.m..
7:)fJ
p.m..

Lawrcno.: c Fvrt.'lllall . Wor\ hipWedncMI:.t y St: rvio.:n- 7 p.m

A ~ h St'-, Middleport -Pastor :
Sunday
School - 9:.30 a.m. , Morning Worship 10:30 a . m.~ 6:JU pm. Wednesday St·rvice
- 6:)0 p.m., Youth ,Sen.·ice- fdO p m.

•

Mark Morrow. 6th unJ P(l.hm:r St..

Wedn~·sday

Wesle)'a n Bible Holiness Chun:h

9:30

Wmsh1p - 10:30 a.m .. 7:00

Pomeroy Pike . Co . Rd .. Pl!stow

p.m.

, Ash Street Chun:h

Rock Springs
Keith R~dcr. Sunday School - 9: I~
Wor ship - 10 a .m., Youth

Pas1nr: Ri c k

DK kcn ~. S~rvke

( '11lvary Rihlt Chur&lt;" h

N~•·

Scl"\' ice!v- 7 p.m .

Wedne-sday Scn·it-c - 7:30p .m .

75 Pearl St.. Middlepnn. Pastor: Rkk
Bourne, Sunduy S~·hovl - 10 a.m. Wor~hip

ll.lll. .

Pa ~ tur : Re v. Fnmklw
Frida):. 7 p. m.

PrRycr . and Rihlc Study - 7 pm

Sunday School - 9 a.m.. Wors hip - 10 a.m.

a.m.,

Zion Church of Christ
Pomeroy. ~larr i sonvi ll e Rd (Rt. \4 .~) .
PB .~ Ior : Ruger Wats&lt;
n n, Sunday School -

Study Wedne~ny 7 pm

MiJdlq•1irt. Su nday School · 9: 15a.m ..
Wn1~hip - 10 : 15 il. lll .• 7: 00 ~;~ . m ..

IO:JO a .m .. Wedne s{l:ly Services - 7:00

Pin~ Grov~ Bihl ~ Hulin~ss

Commun1o n · IU a.m .. Sunday SChool IO:l.'i ;un .• Ynu th· ~dO pm Sunday, Bihlc

l'"irst Baptist Chun:h

-

Pearl Chapel

Sal~m

!OJO ~. m .

S~ h oul

Min ernille
Plt stor· Bob Robinso n. Sunda~· Sc hoo l - 9

l•omeroy first Baptist

a.m.. Worship -

Communit.l-" of C hrist
l~onl and - R aci n e Rd ., Paslor : 11111 P.rofl"in,
Sundu y Sc hool ·- 9:30 ~ . m .. Wor~hip .

fellowship, Sunday · f&gt; p.m.

Wor~hip

Sundoy Sl·honl - I.J :)O

(Non-denom inalional fcll nw ~hipl ·
Mc;t.ing in the old American Legion Hall
South Fourth Avenue , Middl eport
Paslor: Chri~ Stewllr1 10:00 am Sunday
01her meetings in homes

I I a.m.

Fumt Run
Pastor: Bob Robinson, Suil dlly So.:hool - 10
a.m., Worship - 9 a.m.

Leadmg Cree k. Rd .. Rutland, Pastor: Rev.
Dewey · King. Sunday "schr.ol - 9 :30 a.m·..
pmyer meeting- 1 p.m.

~ un da y

WcJnesduy Se r v i co.:~ - fl:30 p. m.
Pa stor Jo n Rrodo:ert. Ea sl Main St..

Oasi~ Chrislhm Fellowship

Pomeroy
Pn~lor : Brian Dunham , Wor~hip - 9:30
&lt;1. 111., Sundil-y School- 10:3.5 il .m

Service-7:00p.m.
Nose of Sharon Holiness Church"

Keno ChU.och of Christ

p.m.. Wednesdt~y Btb !r Stud y- 7 00 p m.
. F11ith Jo'ell0wship CruM~de for C hrisl

Wcdn~sday

p.m..

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

3rd

Flatwoods
Keith Rader, Sunday School - 10

Ch~~rlc s

Mc Kem-:ic. Sunduy Sl·huol 9:30 a.m ..

Fair-vi~• Hible C hurch
Lctan , W.V3. l{t. I. Pa~tt "o r: Briun Ma y.
Sunday '\d1111\l . 'J :Jt a.m.. Wnr~ lll p - 7:00

Pasto r: Wayne .Dun lap, S tat~ Kt . 6~1.
Tuppers Plam s, Sun. Worship: 10 am &amp;
fdO pm,. Thursday Bihle Study 7:00p .m_.

Heath (1\tiddlf'port)

l..an~s\· lle.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Rutlund Church
th~ N11zare1M
Sund uy Sdwo l - 9.30 a.m.. Wvr~hip 10 :30 a.m ., 6 :30 p.m., Wordne!iday
Services - 7 p.m

Other Churches

Enterprise
Pa~lllf" Ar land "King, Sunday Sc hool 10:30 a.m ,, Worship • 9:30 a. m .. Bible
Study Wed. 7:J[)

.•

Service&lt;: - 7 p.m.

740-992-6128'

"Do not steal. bo not lie. Do not deceive one another."
Leviticus 19: ll

•

n 13

Community Chun::h
Stl'VC Tomek. ~ain St reet,
R u tl~ nd , Su nJa}" Wor~hi,,_JO;(){) ~ . m ..
Su nd ay Scr\' ire-( p. m.
Pastor:

. 7p.m.

Anaazln(!l Gract Community Church "

a.m., Wnrship - 10 a.m .

Puslilr: Rrncc Terry, Su~day ScOnol -9:30

Victor)' Bapll&lt;it lndeprndenl
N. 2nd St. Middleport. Pa~ l m : Ja m c~
E . Keesee, Wv!1ihip ·. IOa .m .. 7 p .m ..
Wctlncsday Ser,•kooes- 7 p.m

~.Community

Third
Racine, OH

sign erec1ion

Wedn~ suay

Centml Cluster
Asbury (Syracuse ), Pastor: Hob Robinson,
Suriday School - 9 :4~ a.m ., Wo11hip ·- I I
a.m.• Wednuday Services- 7:30 p.m.

a.m . Wor~ hip

Holiness ·

Pastor: Rr:\'. Hr:rben Grate" , Sunday School
- 9:30 a .m., Worship . II a.m., 6 p.m.,

or

\

- 7:30p.m.

Pa~ t or :

I I :IJO a.m.

llam·ille Holint~ C hurch

52~

Michael L. Crites
Director of Family &amp;

ARCADIA NURSING

Ellchari~l

Wednc s d~y

Rearwallow Ridge Chun:h or Chri~t

Nuthmd Firsf 811pfist Church
Sunday School
IU : 4~ a. m.

10:30 a.m .. 6 p.m..

and Holy

7 p.m .

Worship : 9:30 ~.m .. Sunday Sc hool ·
10;)0 ~. Ill ., PasiUr-JciTi"cy Walluu: , 1st and

Church !Southern)

Jame-'&gt; R. Ac ree, Sr. , Sunday Unified
S..:-1"\·ice. Worship · !0:)0 n.m .. 6 p.m ..

209

(740) 992 .- 64~ I

Service ~-

'

Huptist Chun:h

Thur.duy Scr\"k c:. - 7:00

Wa m1 Friendfy

uardrall, Fence &amp;

, Worship-

. 5th ~ ml M~i n , Pa.-,tor: AI Hartson. Youth
Min ista· Josh Ulm, Sunduy SrhlJOI • 4 :30
. 8: 1.5, .10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m .,
a.m ... Worshtp-

Faith Baptist Church

26 years in local business
Roofing &amp; Building Work

Pon1eroy C~ur't'h of Christ
212 W. Main St.. Mini ster : Amhnny·
Murri s· Sunday School - 9 :30 a.m ..

WL"l.lncsllay 8,iblc Sludy • 6:00 J1.m.

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
Young's carpenter Serillce

Mlni stu: Larry Brnwn , Worship - 9:JO
a.m . Sunday Sdtoul - 10: 30 a.m., Bi ble
Shld y · 7 p.m.

• ServiCe

Pastor: Ste ve L1Ulc, Sunilily So.: hnol: 9:30
am. Morning Wol"!;hip: Hl:JO am, Su nday
!!\ll..'tlln g: fl:Jtl pm ~'ednesday 6:)lJpm
Ropti.~l

Grace Episcopal Chun::h

Tuppers Plain• St. Paul
P a~ lor : J ;~nc Beattie . Sunday School - 9
a.m., Wor.~ 'hip · 10 a.m., Tuc.~t.lay Services

.~26 E. M~in St. , Pomt:roy, Sunda y Sd mol

Hemlock Gnn·e Christian Chun:h ·

9:30a.m., Sunday Worship - 10:30 u.m ..

i'

i'

Preaching

Interim Preac her · Floyd Ross

Hopt&gt;

Trinity C hurch
Second &amp; Lynn, PQmeroy. Pa~lor : Rev.
Jonathan Nohlc , Wo r~ hip 10:25 a. m..
Sunday Sc hool Q: l•.'i l\.111.

Church of Christ

7:00 pm, Wednesday Bible SIUd.y 7:00pm.

C heshi~

Congregational

Epis&lt;;opal

Pomeroy Westside Church of Christ

Grea1 Bend. Route 124. Racine . 0 1~ .
Pastor : Danie l Mecca, Sunday School -

.
i'

r

9:JOam ,

!0:30am.

w~·d ne~ ay

i'

·

Worship · II a.m .. Wednesday Services · 7
p.m.

a.m., Dai ly Mass- H:•.'O a. m

H226 Children's Hnme Rd .. Sun tltly
Sc hno l - II a'.m .. Worship - I Oa. m., fl jl.ITI.

Cal"(ltnt.er Raptisl Chun:h
Sunduy Sc hool

161 Mulberry Ave ., Pomerl?&gt;'• 992 - ~898,
Pastor: R~ v. Walter E. He inz, Sat. Con.
4 :45 -5: 15!'. m.; Ma ~s - ~ : )0 p.m ,. Sun.
Colll . ·~: 45.· 11 : 1 5 J . l\1.,. Sun , M il~ ~- 9;;\0

Church of God of Prophet)'
O.J . White Rd. off S1. Rt. 160, Pastor: P.J .
Chapman, Sunday School • 10 a.m.,

31057 Stille Route J2.'i .

Baptist

'

i'

Sacred Hflrt Catholic Church

Rh·erValleJ
Ap"stolic Worship Center, 873 S.' .1rd
Ave., MiddlcptJn, Kevin Kon~l c , Pas111T,
Sundny, 10 ·.~0 a.m Wcdncsday, 1 7:lHJ
p.m.: Youth Fri. 7:_~0 p m.

A Hunger For More
'
do not change priorities, habits

.
[
Catholic

VanZandt and Ward Rd., l'llstur: l Umes
Miller, Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.,

'

..

Second Baptht Church
Ravenswood, WV, S.unday School 10 nm . Moming worship II am Evening - ? pm.
Wedncsduy 7 p.m.
·

Ch11rch of Jesus Chrl!it ApoStolic

·submitted photo
"Harmony", a music ministry of God's Bible School and College in Cincinnati. will singing at ·the
Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church, 75 Pearl St., Midd leport, at 7 p.m. Sunday. The Rev. Rick
Bourrie is pastor and may be contacted at 992·2001 for more information.

The Dally Sentinel• Page A7

www.mydallysentinei.com

Friday, March 11, 2005

wiTh tptellll eiN!"

740-992-2644 740-992-6298

arace is sufficient
for thee: for m~
strenath is made
Perfect in weakness.
11 Cor. 12:9

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

�Page AS.

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March n,

2005

New federal rule resets limits on soot and smog
BY JOHN HEILPRIN

In West Virginia, emisAssociArm PREss WRITER
sions of sulfur dioxide pollution and nitrogen oxides
ASHINGTON would be reduced by .78
The. Bush adminis- percent each.
trat10n set new
"CAIR will result in the
limits on smog and soot largest pollution reductions
pollution Thursday with the and het11th benefits .of . any
aim of .benetiting tens of air rule in more than a
millions of people who live decade,"
said
Stephen
EPA's
acting
downwind of the dirtiest J\)hnson,
coal-fired power plants· in administrator and President
the
East,
South
and ·Bush's nominee to .be the
Midwest.
fu ll-time agency chief.
The new regulation cov- "The action we are taking
ers 28 states, mostly easl of will require all 28 states to
the
Mississippi
River, be good neighbors; helping
including · West Virginia, states downwind by conand
the
District . of trolling airborne emissions
Columbia. It requires .most at their source."
of them to cut smog-formThe regulations will help
ing nitrogen oxides and · states and counties meet
soot-producing sulfur diox- hew federal standards tor
ide that can drift by wind . healthy air. The agency said
long distances across state 474 counties around .the
lines, the Environmental country have too much
Protection Agency said.
smog and 224 counties
_EPA's new "Clean Air have too much soot.
Interstate Rule" requires . The regulations will help
phased-in red11ctions in the bring five West Virginia
Marion,
volume of air pollution that counties
states can allow. By 2015, Berkeley, Wood, Marshall
the nation's pollution from and Ohio, along with parts
nitrogen oxiQes would be of Harrison. Monongalia
reduced by 61 percent and Pleasants - into combelow 2003 levels. Sulfur pliance with soot standards
dioxide pollution would be by
2010.
By
2015 ,
reduced by 73 percent.
Kanawha and Putnam coun-

W

ties also would be in compliance, the EPA said.
Soot pollution in Cabell,
Wayne,
Brooke
and
Hancock counties qnd parts
of Mason County also
would be reduced.
Eleven West Virginia
counties that have been
designated as failing to
meet federal ozone standards will be brought into
compliance
by
20 I0
through existing Clean Air
Act programs, the agency
said. Those counties · are
Berkeley,
Jefferson,
Kanawha, Putnam, Cabell,
Wavne , Wood, Brooke,
Hancock, Marshall and
Ohio.
,
EPA estimates the ··rule
also will pre-.:ent 17,000
premature deaths, 22,000
nonfatal heart attacks · and
700,000 respiratory ailments from bronchitis ·and
asthma each· year, and
reduce haze afflicting parks
and forests . ·
It is up to states to
decide how best to achieve
those reductions, but the
rule env ision s that the
most cost-effective rrieans
is by requiring power
plants to install new
scrubbers for sulfur diox- ·

ide · or chemical processes
for nitrogen oxides.
"This is going to provide
a big boost across the eastem United States for .commumtles suffering from
unhealthy particulate and
smog pollution levels," said
Vickie Patton, an · attorney
for Environmental Defense.
But the rule also · is
expected to boost consumers' monthly electric
bills by at least a few cents
more within 15 years.
EPA said the benefits outweighed costs, dollar for
dollar, 25-to-1. By 2015,
EPA said, there would be
up to $100 billion in yearly
health benefits and $2 billion in yearly visibility benellis, compared with about
$4 billion in yearly costs.
in
the
Homeowners

United States now spend on
average about $70 a month
for electricity, according to
industry figures. The new
rule is not expected to
result in any significant
changes in retail electricity
pric~ between now and
2020, EPA has said.
But it would add a fraction of a· penny to the cost
of each kilowatt hour by
2020, the agency estimated.
That would boost the average U.S. customer's monthJy electricity. bill by up to
$·1.
·
In West Virginia, the
average monthly. electricity
bill would increase · by 58.6
cents by 2015.
It's difficult predicting to
what extent utilities will
pass on costs to consumers,
said Jim Owen,. spokesman

Florida, Georgia, Illinois;
Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky;
Louisiana, Massachusetts,
Michigan,
Minnesota,
Mississippi, Missouri, New
Jersey, . New York, North.'
Carol in~.
.
Ohio;
Pennsylvania, Rhode Island;
· South Carolina, Tennessee:
Texas,
Virginia . and
Wisconsin.

· Friday, March 11, 2005

. Girls basketball ·
OHSAA state .
toumall'ient
STATE SEMifiNALS
.

DIVISION lA

Hamler . Patrick Henry (24- t) vs.
Waynesv!He t23·3), Friday, 1 p.m.; Ironton
(24-1) vs. S. EilClld Regina (23-3), Friday,
3p.m.
·

DIVISION I

Youngs. Boardman '(22-3) va. Cln. Mt.
Notre Oame (24 -2), Friday, 6 pcm.;
Sylvania. i'jortllvlew (25-1) va. Day.
Chamlnade-Jullen~o (23-2), Friday, 8 p.m.

. Thursday r~aulta
. DIVISION II
COlo. Eostmoor 59, Dresden Tri·Valley 48
Walah Jesuit 53, Mentor Lake Cath. 33 1

State Finals
DIVISION II
Cols. Eastmr;&gt;or (2~-2) vs. Mentor lake ·
Catll. (19-8), Saturday, 10:45 a.m.

.

DIVISION.I
Finals- Salufday, 8:30p.m.

Boys basketball
regional pairings
COLUMBUS

(AP) :- Regional pairings

for the 2005 boys state Q.ilsketballtourna- ·

rr\ent

REGIONAL FINALS

.'&gt;tarti11g . I I

$17,499.

DIVISION I
At UniV6rs;ty of Toledo ·
Solon {25·0) vs. ManSfield Sr. (24-1 ),
Saturday, 7:30p.m.
Ar University of Akron

..

Can. McKinley (24-1) vs. Hudson (20-5).
Saturday, 7:30p.m.

Ar.University or Dayton
Centerville (24·2) vs. Gin. St. Xavier (205), Saturday, 7:30 p_m

At Columbus Fairground Coliseum
Cin. Moelle.r (21-3) vs. Cols. BrookhaYen
(22·4) , Saturday, 7:30p.m.

.

"'

XG350
'

' 'J

I

State Tournament Pairings: Toledo vs .
Akron; Dayton vs. Columbus.

DIVISION II
' At Canton Civic Center
Painesville Harvey (24-1) vs. Wooster

\

$24,399'

Triw8:y (22-3). Saturday, 3 p.m.
At Ohio University, Athens
Zanesville {14-10) vs. Cols. Lindli!n
McKinley (10-14). Saturday, 7 p.m.
At University of Dayton

Cin. Taft (22-3) vs. Day. Dunbar (21-4) .
Saturdav. 3 p.m.
At University of Toledo
Akr. SVSM (18-6) vs. Upper SandUsky
(24..0) . Saturday, 3 p.m.

anneI
Friday, March 11

Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
It looks like a cloudy morning. We may see a snowflake
or two. Temperatures will
linger at 37. Winds will be I0
to 15 MPH from the southwest turning from the west as
the moming·progresses.

Afternoon (1·6 p.m.)
It will continue to be
Some
place s
cloudy.
around the area will see a
few
snowflakes.
Temperatures will hover at
35 with today's high of 37
occurring around I :OOpm.
Winds will be I 0 to 15
MPH from the west.

State Tournament PSirings: Canton vs.
Athens: Dayton vs. Toledo.

TIBURON
\jo 1 lr 11

Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)

Saturday, March 12

It should remain cloudy.
Expect a few flurries.
Temperatures will diminish
from 32 early this evening to
26. Winds will be I0 MPH
from the west turning from the
southwest as the evening J?rogresses.

Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)

$15,999'

It's going to be a cloudy .
. morning. Some snow will fall ,
generally on the light side.
The snow should stop by
!O:OOam with'total accumulations for this event of less ihan
an one inch. Temperatures
Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
will stay near 27. Winds will
. It will remain cloudy. We be 5 ·to 15 MPH from the
will see a few snow flurries. northwest.
The snowfall should begin
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
around 3:00am. Temperatures
It will continue to be cloudy.
will remain around 25 with Some flurries are expected.
today's low of 25 occurring Temperatures will hold steady
around 5:00am. Winds will be around 32. Winds will be 10 to
5 MPH from the southeast 15 MPH from the nonhwest
turning from the north as the turning from the west ·as the
overnight progresses.
afternoon progresses.

lf,W..1i\Jow~loltt ...
AMIIUCA'i: llll WAIIII.ANTT'

__ .., .......
8

------r--

5 ~~~

5~~~~

--

-~­
7 -~-

TAX-FREE Contributions
AND Distributions.

• Pomeroy

• Mason
• Gallipolis
• Tuppers Plains

Substantial interest penalty is required for early withdrawal.
Consult your tax advisor regarding eligibility.
•

DIVISION Ill
AI Canton Fieldhouse
Loudonville (21-3) vs. Cle. VASJ (22-2) .

Saturday, 7:30p.m.
At Wright State University. Fairborn
Cin: N . College Hill (24·1)

vs. Reading (20·

4). Saturday. 7:30 p:m.

·

.

At Ohio Universi~ Athens
Carroll Bloom-Carroll {17-6) vs . Ironton
(24-0), Saturday, 1 p.m.

At Bowling Green State University
Archbold (23-1) vs. Cuyahoga F.alls CVCA
{18·6), Saturday, 7:30 p.m . .

Farmers Bank Education IRAs

Farmers
Bank·
&amp; Savings Company

I1

992.2136
773.6400
446.2265
667.3161

'

' RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
Redmen baseball program has
signed left handed starting
pitcher Chris Stewart of
Dublin Coffman High School.
Stewart, the ace of the
Shamrocks staff. is coming off
6-2 loss season last year and
a 1.72 ERA. He struck out 42
and walked 22 in 44 2/3
innings on the hill.
· Stewart said he's relieved to
have the signing behind him,
and hopes this is the next step
to a possible professional
career. "A big rehef," Stewart
said. "I finally made it to 'my
senior year and gel to go a cou. pie more years of baseball and

a

State Tournament Pairings: Canton vs,
Fairborn; Ath.ens ~s . Bowling Green.

DIVISION IV
At Canton Fieldhouse
lanesville Rosecrans {23-2) vs. Cle. Hts.
Lutheran E. (19-5), Frictay, 7:30p.m.
At University of Dayton
Locklan(j (23·2) vs. Minster (2Q.4), Friday,
7:30p.m .
,
·
At Bowlin{} Green Stat6 University
Tiffin Calvert (20·4) vs. Con1inental (21-3),
Friday, 7:30 p.m.

At Columbus Fairgrounds Coliseum
Cols. Africentr~ (24-1) vs. S. Webster (231), Friday, 7:30p.m.

·Stare Tournament Matchups: Canton vs.
_Dayton; Bowling Green vs. Columbus.

Bearcats fall to
.South Florida
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) Terrence Leather scored 16
of his 21 points in the second
half and South Florida upset
No . 2 1 C:incinnati 80-68
Thursday night in the
Conference USA tournament
quarterfinals.
The II th-seeded Bu lis ( 1415) now have won three
straight and reached the tournament semifinals for the
first time and in their last
season as a member. The .
Bulls will be playing in the
Big East next season along
with Cincinnati.
But it will be the Bulls
playing Memphis, an 83-69 '
upset winner over No. · 25
Charlotte, in the semifinals
Friday instead of Cincinnati
(24-7).
Brian Swift added 16
points for the Bulls, James
Holmes and Marlyn Bryant
each had 14.
Jason
Maxiell
led
Cincinnati with 21 points,
Eric Hicks added 18 and
James White had 10.
The Bearcats had dominated their series with USF,
winning 18 of the 21 games
aq~ the last 14 .

hopefully go on to the pros or
the minor lea~ ues . "
·
It was the v1sit to the oampus
that swayed Stewart to choose
Rio Grande as a college home.
"I wem down there and got to
see everything, at first my
thought was, I'm out in. the
country, not much to do,"
Stewart said. "I actually got .
down there and everyone
showed me what to tlo and
(Nate) Chau, l roomed with
him and I got to see everything
and it wasn't just I'm in the
country."
Stewart is a three-pitch
pitcher using a fastball ,
change-up and curve and also
is developing a mystery pitch.
''A knuckleball . just for fun
every once in a while," S1ewart
joked. ,

Dublin would be a j}erfect fit for Chris.
"As long as he's happy, I'm
Coffman
Head Coach glad for Rio Grande I think
T 1 m they're getting a good pitcher,"
Saunders was Saunders added. "But I'm also
happy for his glad for him that he's found a
star pitcher· spot where he's going to fit in
- and 11 did- and he' II do fine there becau·se
n't hun ·. that. he's a good left-handed pitcher
Stewart elect- and he's done a nice job for
ed to sign us."
,
Stewart
w i t. h
Rio Grande ·Head Coach
Saunders' Brad Wamimont continues io
alma mater. "I think it's stockpile. young left-handed
always nice when you get a kid pitching talent and believes
that. does his homework, does that Stewart will make an
his research and checks out impac1 on the tield come nexf
yuite a few schools to ,lind the season.
"Chris has been
ri ght one," Saunders said. (Dublin Coffman's) ace since
"Mysel r. being an alumni at his · sophomore
year~ "
Rio Grande , I knew the situa- Warnimont said. "He's pitched
tion and the surrotmdings in a very competitive league
down that way so I thought it and he's been their No.I.

"We' re very pleased .to get
him," Wamimont added. "The
University of Kentucky was
looking . at
him
and
Georgetown College as well
so we're very happy to have
him.
"Everything he throws,
moves," Warnimont said. "It
wiggle s, he' s a low-to-mid
80's guv: we're looking for an
immediate impact out of
Chris. We think it's a ~reat fit
tor him at Rio Grande. '
Stewart joins fellow lefthander Mickey Robinson of
Canal Winchester as the first
two members of ihe 2005-06
recruitihg class. :
Stewart plans to major in
Sports Medicine.
Chris is the. son or Carl and
Linda Stewart.

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

DIVISION IV

Berlin Hiland (27-CJ) vs. Ottoville (23-3),
Saturday, 2 p.m.
DIVISION HI
Finals- Saturday, 5:15p.m.

HYUNDAITUCSON

BY MARK WILLIAMS
Special to the Sentinel

AH games at St. John Are'na; ColumbUs

DIVISION IV

Rockwell- 57.21
Rocky Boots- 30.35
RD Shell- 63.11
SBC- 24.12
Sears - 53.36
USB - 29.60
Wai-Mart - 52.15
Wendy's -· 38.76
Worthington - 20.08
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day's
transactions, provided by
Smith Partners at Advest
Inc. of Gallipolis.

Rio .Grande baseball signs second recruit

I

so.

TheAll New

Gannett- 79.10
.General E;lectric- 36.13
GKNLV- 5.125
Harley Davidson- 60.42
JPM - 36.36
Kmart- 112.11
Kroger -.,- 16.07
Ltd.- 25.09
1
NSC - 37.51
Oak Hill Financial -. 35.49
OVB- 33.35
BBT - 40.06
Peoples - 26.59
Pepsico - 53.15
Premier- 11.00

District 13 Coaches Basketball poll, Page B3
Bobcats claw past Kent State, Page 88
Red Hawks ground Bowling Green, Page 88

Berlin Hiland
Monslioid St. Peter's 31
Ottoville 48, X~n!a Chrfstlan 41

Local Stocks
ACI-42.23
AEP -34.21
Akzo-44.73
Ashland Inc.- 65.04
AT&amp;T-19.39
BLI-11.88
Bob Evans - 23.30
. BorgWarner -. 51.88
Champion - 4.16
Charming Shops- 8.49
City Holding - 30.80
Col-47.83 ·
DG -22.23
DuPont - 54.04
Federal Mogul -. .36

for the Edison Electric
Institute, a lobby group for
power companies.
. '
The regulations set up a
trading system that will let
plant ~perators buy poilu~
tion allowances from otheF
· plallts that did · more thari
was required.
·
Other states affected by
the new . regulations are
Alabama,
Arkansas,
Connecticut ,
Delaware;

Bl

The paily Sentinel

INSIDE

Buckeyes rally past Penn State
BY RICK GANO
Associated Press
CHICAGO Tony
Stockman rescued Ohio
State, scoring 19 of his 25
points in the second half
as the Buckeyes rallied
and beat Penn State 72-69
Thursday in the Big I0
tournament.
Ohio State, coming off
a one-point upset of topranked
Illinois
last
Sunday that· ended- the
lllini 's unbeaten run at 29
games,
will
meet
Wisconsin in the quarterfinals.
The Buckeyes (20~ II)
came out flat after their
bi'g victory four days ago
and needed a 27-7 second-half run behind the
shooting of Stockman and
J.J. Sullinger to rally from
a 1'5-point deficit.
Whatever they do in the
conference tournament,
the Buckeyes are going
home after they are eliminated or when it is over.
The basketball team is
under a self-imposed
school ban on postseason
play to mitigate possible
NCAA penaltles stemming from violations
committed under former
coach Jim 0' Brien.
Thursday's comeback
victory came in the first
game since it was
revealed head coach Thad
Matta had signed an .
eight-year contract.
Stockman's 3-pointer
with 4:46 left gave the
Bucl\eyes a 57-54 advantage - their first lei!d
since 90 seconds into the
game - and when he hit
another jumper at 4: 17 the ·
Buckeyes were suddenly
. up five.
Travis Parker, who led
the scrappy Nittany Lions
AP photo
with 21 points, then made
Ohio
State's
Tony
Stockman
drives
to
the
basket
past
Penn
State's
Ben
Luber
in
the
secfive of six free throws to
ond half of OSU's 72-69 win during a first round game-at the Big Teo tournament Thursday
Please see Rally, Bl
at the United Center in Chicago. Stockman was the game's high scorer with 25 points.

Griffey
back in
lineup
BY LARRY I.AGE
Associated Press

SARASOTA, Fla. - With
his sweet, familiar stroke,
Ken Griffey Jr. hit a sharp
liner directly into first baseman Carlos Pena's glove in
his first at-bat of the year.
"I said to him, '[ haven't
had a base hit since July, you
could've let that one go by,"'
a relaxed Griffey related
Thursday, lounging on a
trunk next to his locker.
Actually, Griffey's last hit
· was on Aug. 4 and his final
game of 2004 was two days
later. The Cincinnati outfielder can be forgiven for getting
his dates mixed · up as he
attempts ·yet another comeback.
Griffey, 35, has been sidelined by serious injuries each
of the last four seasons. He
had surgery last Aug. 16 to ·
reattach his tom right hamstring.
· In his second and last at-bat
of the Reds' 4-3 win over the
Tigers, Griffey walked. He
trotted to second on Adam
Dunn's single and jogged to·
third· on an inning-ending
double play.
''We just wanted to get him
two at-bats the. first time out
of the shoot." Reds manager
Dave Miley said. "Tomorrow
we· II shoot for three.''
The 12 - tim~ All-Star aod
10-time Gold Glove center
fielder has 501 homers, I ,444
RBis and a .292 average during his 16-year career.
Please see Griffey, Bl

Trust. Hope. • • Closer to You
..

"~HOLZER C n tl&lt;'r f or

. ~ CANCER CARE
Opening March 2005

�•

- '\

www.mydailysenti nel.com

PREP BASKETBALL

District coaches all-star
game slated for Monday
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailysentinel.com
WELLSTON
The
13
Coaches
District
Association All-Star games
will take place Monday at
Wellston High School, featuring the district' s top
seniors.
The girls game is s.cheduled to begin at 6 p.m., with
the boys game slated to start
at -8 p.m.

~ If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR Th1s Week, c;o The Ga.ston Gazette, P.O. Box 1893, Gastonra, NC'28053

Series raGe In Mex"
· ·· co City seemed more like an efldurance roce and was·run at a
crawl. Nothing helps college
basketball like three hours of
road rac1ng on network TV.
II&gt; Fox's broadcasters repeatedly
told the nation that NASCAR had
nl!\ler sanct1oned a race outs1de
the U.S. in "a major touring series.' Untrue. Thare were Grand
NaUonal (now Nextel Cup) races
run in the Canadian provmce of
Ontario in 1952 and 1958. Buddy Shuman and Lee Petty were
the winners. You can look it up.
It's a shame Fox didn't.
• The race at 'Autodiomos Hermanes Rodnguez drew a huge
crowd, and NASCAR off1c1als
have to be think1ng about what
the presence of an Adnan Fernandez in the f1eld could do for
ticket demand at tracks - like
Homestead-Miami SpeedwaY: for
Instance - where there is a
huge Hispanic population.
• Roush Racing dnvers occupy
four of the top five positions in
the Cup po1nts standings. This
would not seem to be the week
for that to change.' Roush-owned
Fords have won five of the seven
previous races at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.
•Greg Biffle's Cal1forn1a w1n was
the 75th for Jack Roush, whose
• · • Th~ Busch

drivers have won at least once in

each of the last n~ne seasons.
•On the other hand, Jeff Gordon
comes to Las Vegas with something to prove. 'He's f1n1shed no
better than 15th in hi s last
three vis1ts-to S1n C1ty.
. • The champ's on track. Kurt
Busch has finished second and
th ird in the season's first two
races. He's never won at hi~
hometown track, though. In fact,
Busch has only one top-10 finish in four tries at Las Vegas
Motor Speedway.
• Very few observers would have
pred1cted that Jorge Goeters
would win the pole for the Mexico City Busch Series race. And
not that many more would've
pred1cted that Martm Truex Jr.
would win the race.
• Don't look now, but there are
three veteran dnvers ranked '"
the current Top 10 of the Cup
points standings: Mark Martin
(third). Rusty Wallace (eighth)
and Sterlmg Marlin (ninth): By
last year's standards, that's a lot.

.,_Who's not - Kevin Harvick
has finished second '" all
three of the Busch Series
races to date .... Martin Truex
Jr.'s road-course victory, at Autodromos Hermanos Ro·
driguez in Mexico, was a surprise to most of the experts.
The native Mexicans - pole winner Jorge
Goeters, national hero Adrian
fernandez ..and Michel Jourdain Jr., in particular - had
moments of glory but u~lmate·
ly left a huge home crowd feel·
ing unfulfllled,

• Who's not -

Race: UAW-Daimle rChrysler
400
Where: Las Vegas (Nev.) Mo·
tor Speedway (1.5 miles ),
267 laps/400.5 m1les.
When: Sunday, 2 p.m.
last year's winner: Matt
Kenseth
Qualifying record : Kasey
Kahne, Dodge, 174.904
mph, March 5, 2D04.
'I Race record: Mark Martm .
· Ford. 146.554 mph, March
1, 1998
Last race: Greg B1ffle served
not1ce that h1s may be the
breakout story of the 2005
NASCAR Nextel Cup season
by w~nnmg the Auto Club 500
0 t California Speedl'(ay in .
Fontana. Not that Biffle's suc-

cess should be a surpnse, by
the way. Counting the 2004 finale 1n Homestead, Fla., he's
won two of the last three Cup
races. He was the only multi·
pie winner not to finish in the
top 10 of the pomts stand·
mgs last year 81ffle and
Ro'ush Racmg teammate Kurt
Busch secured track positiOn
by passmg up a tlfe change

Race: Sam's Town 300
Where: Las Vegas (lllev.) Motor Speedway (1 5 miles ),
200 laps/300 miles.
When: Saturday, 3:30p.m.
Last year's wlnner: Kev1n

Race : World Financial Group
200 .
Where: Atlanta Motor Speedway, Hampton , Ga. (1.54
miles), 133 laps/204.82
m1l es.

When: Friday, Minch 18, 9 p.m.
Qualifying record: M1ke Last year's winner: Bobby
Bliss, Chevrolet, 171 .238 Hamilton
mph, March 5, 2004.
Qualifying record:· David ReRace record: Jeff Burton , utimann, Toyota, 179.452
during the race's final caut1on Ford, 135.118 mph, March mph, March 13, 2004.
penod. Biffle then passed 4, 2000.
Race record· Bobby HamilBusch, tile reignmg cham pi
Last week: Martin Truex Jr.. ton, Dodge, 123 675 mph,
on, w1th 23 laps rema1n1ng. 1n a Chevrolet, won the March 13, 2004.
·
He then held on for dear l1 fe Busch Senes race 1n Mex1co Last race: Steve Park, 1n a
as h1s Ford became loose. He ' City.
Dodge , won the Amen can
held off the fa st-closmg
Racing Wheels 200 1n
Chevrolet of J1mm1e Johnson,
Fontana, Calif.
with Busch settling for third
and taking the po1nts lead.

•, .loon Johnoon, Falrl~nd
Cooch of the Vtar -

Ironton
Pf.Yer of
Aloxander

Division I and II

FtmToom

Josh-·

Matt
Kenseth

.,

Gordon's experience convinces him NASCAR can thrive in Mexico

Matt Ken&amp;eth vs. NASCAR
schedule makers
After two weeks 10 Daytona, the
Nextel Cup schedule went off to Call·
Busch Series race

NASCAR This Week

1n

Mexico . Thts

weekend's race is 1n Las Vegas. Matt
Kenseth didn't race 1n Mexico, but he
would have preferred to save the
open date for later. "I never want to

give up an off weekend : he sa1d,
"but I'd rather put 1t in the bank and
use 1t 1n September or Ottober, when
everybody is gettmg tired and worn
down and you've got 20-some-odd
weeks ' in a row. Having the thtrd

weekend of the year off
strange."

IS

kmd of

NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton gives his take: "How'd you
like to be a truck driver (no, not the
racing senes) m the Buscb Senes?
Daytona to-California to Mexico City
to Vegas. What a shame they don't
have freqyent-driver miles."

Warren .

Ptoyer of the Year- Karl Jame&lt;, Galtla
Academy

North/South Repreaentlve James, Gallia Academy

Robert Crdaa, Eastern
•
llecOn&lt;IT"m

•

Mam Olllatd. Eastern .
Jake Na-. Southern
Curt Wausjh, Soutn GaRia
Terry Holbert, Trimble·

Karl

.

Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.

Jr.

Sr.

Sr.

Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.

Jr.

• - .eo.ct'l of the .- - Roger
Brandeberry, GaiHa Academy

Dlvlalon Ill

··

· flniTMm
Jake Hale, AleJ&lt;ander

Sr.

Cody Homlby. FilderBI Hocldng
Donnlt Ciog&amp;l, 1...mon
Brigham W&amp;Qinger, Ironton

Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.

Joe lDrnta, lrontOto
Joy Edwatdo. - TriYis Morrlo, Belpre
'
Jordan ThomhiM, Belpre

Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.

~J

Rue, Chftepoal&lt;e

llnrnnan Hall,~

' -T-

Matt
· Alex.-r
Cliff Howard,
Ironton
Joe Worren, l&gt;jOtaomlllte-'lblk
S..ndon Smltl1, Belpre
O.Wid Hoorman. Welllltoo
.
lpeatat-n
lion!

Sr.
Sr,
Sr.
Sr.
•Sr.

Flniav. Chosljl8al&lt;e

Sr.

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CHRVSL~n ~~~

Griffey
Motorsports writer's son
overcomes shooting
Motors ports JOurnalist Brad Win·
ters had a ternble accident strike his

fam 11y 1n February when h1s twm
sons. Derek and Dustm, were exam-

John Clarkj NASGAR Tht s Week

Robby Gordon has driven in almost every racing series in the United States and around the
wo!ld. He's convinced that NASCAR can succeed in Me~lco if they pay attention to detail.
ner is Jim Smith. The No.7 has been
handed down through several purchases since Kulwicki's untimely
death in a 1993 plane crash.
"Even though none of the cars that
came over from the Sirius No. 7
(Smith's former team) are actually the
cars that we're racing today, Jim

Smith has been a supporter of my career for many years"' Gordon said.
"He's been a sponsor, and a friend, and
has a lot of experience that I'll be able
to use, as well."

Contact Monte Dutton at
hmd50@aol.com

ining a 22-cal1ber nfle one had JUSt
purchased. The nfle bumped against
a bedpost and went off, strikmg
Dustm 10 the neck. Another of Wm
ters· sons, 21-year-old Jeremy,
grabbed Dustin and raced to the hospital, where Dust1n underwent emer·
gency surgery to repair a severed
carotid artery Brad, who was 1n New
York at .the t1me, said doctors told
him no one had ever surv1ved such
an injury at the local hospital.
According to Brad , Dustin returned to school this week, although
he still has only 10-20 percent motton m hts nght arm. Doctors expect

h1m to recover most of h1s range of
mot1on eventually. The incident was
traumatic to Derek, the twm brother
who was With Dustm at the time of
the accident. but another son . 18·
year-old Adam, has ass&lt;sted Derek in
re covering from hiS gnef, according
to the boys· father.
"As a father, I have been humbled
by an awesome God. a giv&lt;ng church ,
great friends and a-loving fam1ly,"
sa1d Brad W1nters , who said there
were 70 people at the hospital within
45 m1nutes of Dust1n's arrival.

from Page 81
Since Griffey hit 40
homers and had 118 RBis in
145 games in 2000, his first
with the Reds, he has averaged just 15.8 homers, 43.5
RBis and 79.3 games per
year.
"He was one of my favorite
players growing up," the 26year-old Pena said. '"l want
him to get healthy and do his
thing."
Tigers
manager Alan
Trammell, whose 20-season
careet as a shortstop ended in
1996, said Griffey was·one of
the best players he faced.
"In my mind, he's a Hall of
Famer," Trammell ~aid. .
Detroit's Dmitri Young,
who played with Griffey for
two seasons in Cincinnati,
said Griffey sliould be given
credit for not being linked to
performance- enhancing
drugs like many power hitters
have been during this era. ·
"He didn't do any of that
poison ," Young said. "He's
all natural.
"He's like the forgotten
guy because he's been
injured, but he's still one of
the best players to ever play

this game."
torn hamstring that bothered
The son of major league him throughout that season.
standout Ken Griffey Sr., He then spent two long stints
Griffey said he never consid- on the disahled list in 2002
ered taking stero.ids or other because of a torn knee tendon
drugs to make hi ill stronger and a torn right hamstring . .
-· or more durable.
Griffey went· on the DL
"It never really entered my twice again in 2003 for a dismind because the person I located right shoulder and
wanted to be like was my torn ankle tendon.
dad," he said.
· Last year, he was voted an
The Reds received permis- All-Star starter for the 12th
sion from major league base- time, but had to drop out after
ball and Detroit, Philadelphia straining his right hamstring.
and Cleveland to use the des"Every year I have the
ignated hitter · during Reds' same approach iri thinking
home games. The Reds have this is going to be the year I
four
consecutive home stay healthy," Griffey said.
gaines
beginning
with . "I've always stayed positive
Thursday's
against
the because this is a game that I
Tigers. ·
love to play and I know I can
Griffey is to be the desig- bounce back from everything
nated hitter for two days, take that has been thrown at me."
a day off. then appear again
After Griffey left the game,
as the designated hi'tter in two
the
Reds beat the Tigers in
more games, followed by an
off day and an evaluation. the ninth when Detroit short•Griffey said he's ready to stop Gookie Dawkins booted
play in the outfield, but the a grounder, allowing two
Reds want to bring him along runs to score.
Cincinnati's ·Eric Mitton
slowly.
started
and gave up one run
"If something happens , it's
not going to be because of a on six hits while striking out
lack of effort," he said. "I·' m two over three innings:
Jason Johnson, Detroit 's
going to giv,e I00 percent and
if I get hurt doing il, then I projected opening day starter.
get hurt. I don't really worry allowed one run on one hit
and two walks ·and had one
about it."
He missed more than a strikeout over the first three
month in 200 l because of a innings.

•

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from Page 81
\

tie it at 59 with 2:58 left.
But again Stockman hit a
big 3 from the top of the key
to put the Buckeyes back up
to stay with 2:31 left. In the
final minute, Ivan Harris hit
a 3-pointer and Je'Kel
Foster dropped in four free
throws.
Ohio State finished ll-of31 on 3-poiriters.
Geary Claxton added 20
· points and had 13 rebounds
. for the Nittany Lions (7-23),
who didn't play like a team

pointers.
Sullinger, who had all II
of his points in the second
half, made two 3-pointers
and a , dunk after a steal,
starting the Buckeyes' run
and slicing the lead to 52-49
with 7: I0 left.
Following a timeout, Penn
State turned the ball over
and Sullinger connected
again on a 3-pointer for a
52-52 tie with 6:29 left.
Penn State fell to 33 percent shooting in the second
half after its .torrid opening
20 minutes and had 19
turnovers for the game.
Ohio State made 4 7 percent
in the second half.

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Penn State used separate
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11, 2005

Sale Ends March 28th

Division Ill

Amanda Stover, Federal Hoel&lt;ing
Brlnany Boyle, Cnasapeake
Oa\lld Bayle,., South Galtla
Jr. ,
Mandl Boykln, Ironton
Mat! Townsend, Waterford
Samantha Hall, Coal Grove
So
llpeciol-n
,latlaha Koukos, South Point
Sr.
Sr.
Chase Higgins, Symmes Valley Sr.
Spoctol Montlon
Sr.
Robby Jenkins, 'rHmbte
,
Sr.
Kellee Guthrie, Alexander
So.
~ Mitchem, warren
Sr.
Bernie Fulks, Souti1 GoHia
Jr.
Jordan Bateman, Neloonvilte-'lblk Sr.
Jarred AlbJ'Igh~ VInton County So.
Jooh Wright, Sooth Galla
Jr.
Sr.
Robby Caldwell, warren
Jr.
Matt Christman, Trimble
Jr.. . Shawna Minks, Belpre
Mogan Edward&amp;, Nelsonville-Yorl&lt; So.
Aokl Arnold, JacksOn
Jr. ·
Juttln F(lfguaon, Symmes Valley Sr
Noelle Wood, Cheoapeal&lt;e ' Sr.
Jason 8cllob. Marietta
Sr.
Kyto Meadows. Symmes Valley So.
Jr.
CotrcMe 01 the v- - Outtln Ford, c;-t&gt; of lhl - Howl&amp; Caklwell, Oanie!Je Hender8or), Ironton
Jaml Turrill, AleXander
SQ,
Jael(aon and t!lalno Maddox, Warrtn
Ea816rn
Sr.
f11.,.r of the y.., :.. Ban Hewlett, • Ploy« of the Veer - Craig Randolph, Sara Cartmell, Ironton
!(ayla Moc!e. Oak Hill
Sr.
Mlrietta ·· .
.
.
. Southern
·.
Horthllouth Aaprenntlve - Ban
~th Repre•suUw Craig · Coacll of 1M Veer ,.- Sarah Garatena,
OakHill
,
Hcwtett, Meriotta
Randolph, Sout11.ern
Ptoyaf of Ute Y..,.- Alysllll Hammond,

fornia , then some dnvers were

wooed by NASCAR to compete 1n a

By Monte Dutton

Jared Humphreys, JackSOn
Carson toa¢11, Warren ,
Jared Casey, Meigs
lpeatat Mlliollan
Alex Richards, Logan Sr.
Tory Kratzenberg, Logan
Josh Ousley. Vinton County

Jr.
Zornes,

Jake Half),

Craig Randolph, SOUfllern
Na111an Cozart, Eastern
Cody OHt, Eastern
Bruce FOOts, Trimble
:Gaarld Cade, South Galtla'
Jusfln Hollahd, Symm&amp;s Valley

Sr.

Sr
Sr.
Sr.

the Year -

Ptrat TUm

Jr.

Colby Reese, River Van!ly

Rog&lt;~r

Division IV

Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.·
Sr.
Sr. .

Ban Howlett, Marietta
Max Morrow, -;Jackson
Warren
Chr1t Balhol, VInton &lt;;ounty
StOj&gt;hon Holrder, RMir Valley
Zed) Shawver, Gatna - m y
Co~ Wolfe, Jr., Meigs
Andrew Chonko, Athens

VERSUS

Co.

Cade are expected to play
for the Division lii and IV
team with Eastern's Howie
Caldwell as one of the
coaches.
On t~ girls side, Kari
James of Gallia Academy
will be joined by Meigs'
Sam Pierce and River
Valley 's Kristina Naylor for
the Division I and II team .
No local girls are expected to play for the Division
Ill and IV team .

Dlstrld .13 Basketball Coaches Association
AII-Distrld Team

No. 7 HARRAH'S CHEVROLET

RoBBY GoRDON

&amp; Supply

A slam dunk contest and
3-point shootout will be
held in between games.
Local boys expected to
play are River Valley's
Stephen Harder and Colby
Reese , Gallia Academy's
Zach Shawver and Meigs'
Carl Wolfe, Jr. for the
Division I and II team.
Eastern's
Meanwhile ,
Cody Dill and Robert Cross,
Southern's Craig Randolph
and South Gallia 's Gearld

Harvick

s..onctT,_
K.O. Chnstlan, Rock Hilt·
Patrld&lt; Howe, Logan

No NASCAR driver championed the
cause of racing in Mexico City more
than' Robby Gordon, the versatile Californian who swept the Nextel Cup
road races during the 2003 'season ..
It should come as no surprise that
Gordon, 36, should promote NASCAR
diversity. Few drivers have more diverse backgrounds than Gordon, who
has raced off-road, in sports cars, and
in both CART and the IRL before and
during his stock-car career. He spent
part of the offseason competing in the
annual Dakar Rail y.
Of Mexico, Gordon said: "It's a good
market for us. It makes a lot of sense
because it's in a different country, and.
we can just drive across the border to
go down and put on the event.
"I've been going to Mexico for 20
years, and I've always enjoyed myself
every time I've been there. The key is
keeping it all in perspective, in knowing where you are and what your consequences may be.-·I've had friends of
mine who have gotten in trouble' in
Mexico before. You don't want to .get
into trouble do)Vn there. The rules are
still the rules. They still have speed
limits, When you have a language barrier, like we do of being U.S. citizens
and not speaking fluent Spanish, it can
be a big issue. I think Mexico City is a
lot different than being in Baja, but
for 20 years I've n.ever had an iss,_ue ·
down there."
Gordon failed to make the starting
field for the Daytona 500, but he has
high aspirations of getting his new
team up to speed and eventually winning races. His ambition is underscored by the fact that his Cup Chevrolet carries No. 7. The significance of
that number is that it was carried by
Alan Kulwicki, who won the championship in 1992. He was the last combination owner-driver to win a title.
Coincidence? Maybe. Gordon's part-

Friday, March

Friday, Ma'rch II , 2005

www.mydai Iysentinel.com

B2 • The Daily Sentinel

. Page B3 • The Daily Sentinel

2001
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�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentlnel'.com

Friday, March 11 , 2005

CLASSIFIED

we eo,_,_.,

ASSIFIED

AnciMeiiOI'l
Countf•Uke '

Card of Thanks

NOOM

Else Cant

We would like t~ .11
express our sincere
thanks to Holzer
Medical Center, Dr.
James Witherell,
Rocksprings
Rehahilillltion
Center, Cremeens
Funeral Home and
Rev. James
. Satterfield.
Everyone who sent
Dowers, said a
prayer, sent a card,
made a caD and .
sent food during
the Illness and loss
of our Mom.

In One Week With Us
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garage. Newly remodeled,
city schools. $123.000.
(740)446-7881 '

·r
1

WANTED

Beagle, 8 mo. tamale, . first "---m
-B:;;m~·.·-.,J
shots. wormed. heartworm
tested. Run's rabbit &amp; cats Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
(740)379-9465; (740)379- Silver and Gold Coins.
Proofsets, Gold Rings, U.S.
9445.
Currency,-M.T.S. Coin Shop,
Free puppies· to good home ~51
Second
Avenue,
only. Austr~li an Shepherd Gallipolis, 740-446-2842.
m~ . 9 weeks old. (740)256Wanted: An inexpensive reli6623.
able automobile Please calf
Puppies to g1ve away. Gary after 3pm at (740)446·
Mother-regiStered Golden 8398.
Retriever Father-Black Lab
8 weeks old. Good home
only. (740)367-7708.
Puppies , 7 weeks old.
German/Austrian Shepherd.
Cell (740)367-7947.

FIND BARGAINS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4's For Sale ...................... :....................... 725
Annauncement.. .............. :........................... 030
Antiques ....................................................... 530
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market... ..........................oao
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ........................... 760
Aula Repalr ..... ~ ............................................ 770
Autos for Sale .............................................. 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Bulldlng.Supplies ........................................550
Business and Bulldlngs ............................. 340
Business Opportunlty ...................... :.......... 210
Business Tralning .•\ .........1.......................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment...................... :............ 780
Cards of Thanks .......................................... OIO
Child/Elderly Care .................!..................... 190
E~rlcai/Relrlgeratlon .•.• ,,,,.,,.,,.,, .............. 840
Equipment lor Rent.. ................................... 480
Excavating .. ,................................................ 830
Farm Equlpment............................. ,............ GIO
Farms for Rent.. ........................................... 430
Farms for Sale ...................... :...................... 330
For LA88e ...... ,.............................................. 490
For Sale ............................................. ........... 585
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruita &amp; Vegetables ................: .................... 580
Furnished Rooms ........................................450
General Haullng................................. ~ .........850
Glveaway......................................................040
Happy Ads....................................................oso
Hay &amp;.Grai/\:.................................................640
Help Wantad ................................................. 110
Homelmprovements:.... :.............................810
Homea for Sale ......................\.. ................... 310
Houeehold Gooda ........:.............................. 510
Hou- lor Rent .......................................... 410
In Memorlam ..............,.................................020
lnsurance ...................................: ................. 130
LAwn &amp; Garden Equlpment.. ...................... 660
Uveatock......................................................630
I.Oet and Found ........................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
Mlacel..neoua.............................................. 170
Mlacel..neoua Merchandlse .......................540
Mobile Home Repair ....................................860
Mobile Homes for Renl.. .............................420
Mobile Homes for Sale .............., .................320
Money to loan .........................................,.. 220
Motorcycle• &amp; 4 Wheelera ....... .,. ................740
Muelc.llnatruments ................................... 570

Penonala ...................... :..............:............... oo5
1'1118 for Sllle ..... :.......................................... 560
Pluinblng &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
Pro!Malonal Sarvlces ... r···············--··· ......... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr ............................... 160
IIMI Estate Wanted .....................................360
Schoolalnatructlon ................. .,. ................. 150
Seed , Pl1111t &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Sltul1tlon1 Wented ....................................... 120
ap.ce for Rent ................... :......................... 460
lpoftlng Gooda .................;......................... 520
suv·a for Sllle ....................................... .,. .... 720
Trucka for Sale .............. :..... .!..................... 715
Upllol- t .................................... .,.............870
V1111a For Sllle ............................................... 730
W1111Sid to Buy ......................... .,..,......... .,.... 090
-ta.d to Buy- Farm Supplles .........,. ....... 620
W.m.cl To Do ........................................~ .... t80
W.m.cl to Rant ............................................ 470
Yard a...Gelllpolle ....................................072
Yard &amp;e»-Pornaroy/Middle ......................... 074
Yard ...._Pl. Ptueent................................ 076

MOBILE HOMES
tlJR SALE

ASPHALT COMPANY in
HU NTINGTON looking for
EXPERIENCED dump truck
drivers. asphalt labors,
equip. oper. P.O. Box 3105,
Huntington, WV 25702.

1973 Grandville 14~70, 3
bedroom. with stove &amp;
refrig erator'. $3.000 080.
Call (740)446-0194 .
·

ATTN· needed 23 people to
lose up to 30 lbs in the next
30 days 100"/o natural,
100% ·guaranteed,
no
ephedra. Call 1·888-2345146, or Vi~it www. newshaperesults.cOm

1982 Schultz 14x_70, 2 br., 1
bath, asking $5000. 304675-6349

3-11

@

1116

11180

AVON ! All Areasl To Buy or
Sell. Sl'lirley Spears, 304liELP WANTED
675- 1429.
'
...._ _ _ _ _ _,~

WANTED

To Do

r:

1'

50

~em

I

To Do

r

.

1995 Claytop Double W1de ,
52X24, 3 Bedrooms, 2 Bath,
Total Electric (304)6/5·2907
For Sale - 1979 Homette, 2
bedroom, wlcentral air,
$3,495.00. Call (740) 3854367

Jewelry. Buy Sell Gold,
Diamonds,
Gemstones.
Repair, Appra1sals, Gem
Testing·.
Graduate
Gemologist,
Jeweler. For Sale, 14X70. 3 bed (740)645-6365 or (740)446- roo m. set up in .Country
3080.
Homes, !6,995.00. Move In
today!
Call (740)385-4367
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SS1?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1, 888-582-3345

r10

I

H

Home a\lailable for 1mmedi·
ate occupancy! Alre~dy setup ~n rented lot 3 bedroom,
1 bath, 10% down, $209.00
month.
Ca ll
Harold ,
(740}385·99.48 .

FO~~
·--oitiiiiliiiiiii-_.1 ' Immediate possession! Only

"'

mLoAN

2005 by NEA, Inc.

·It

Babysitter . needed weekPARTS DEPARTMENT
J1m's Carpentry
ends. 18 or alder. Call
We do remodeling and most
(740)441·8957 0&lt; (740)645- One of Ohio's leading motor ~ny unfinished work, also
0718.
carriers · has an Immediate small
tree
removal.
opening lor a qualified Parts (740)446·2506; (740)367Bates Bros. Amusement Ca.
Experience 0437.
Person.
Spring/Summer, Must Be 17
required. We offer top pay ·
Or Older And Able To Tra~l
and benefits lor the righi
Late
March-Late
person. Three and a half day
September, Weekly Pay,
work week, paid vacation ,
L1ving Facilities, Bonus,
personal da}'s, health insur·
Contact Us At 740·266ance, paid hOlidays, over2950
time pay, 40t K plan and
Babysitting·
Very
Licensed Practical Nurse work uniforms are among
Reasonable Rates. Ages .4
.(LEW Overbrook center Is th e many benefits. :rhis posiand under. Ca ll ·c rystal
currently aCcepting applica- tion is open now and you (740)441-9654 or (740)590tions for Full-Time and Part- can begin work immediately.
2590.
Time LPN's: Anyone inter- Apply by fax , email or you
ested please come In an lilf may walk in.
11'1"1\1
out an application at 333
Page Sueet. Middleport, Oh
Arctic Express. Inc
EOE
4277 Lyman Drive
Bl.JS!NEX'&gt; ,
Hilliard, OH 43026
0rroRIUNfJY
Maintenance Director
Fax: 614-527-4114
0\/erbrook Rehabilitation
Email; mfox filarct;cexCenter IS now .accepting
oress com
resumes for the position of
E:O.E!Drug Free
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
Maintenance Director. The
Workplace
lNG CO. recommends tha
qualified candidate must
u do busin8ss with peo
possess strong verbal a~d
Regjstered Nurne ,fBNl
le you know, and NOT 1
written communication skitls Overbrook Center Is currentend money through th
including technical report
ly accepting applications for
ail until you liave investi
writing and record keep1ng. a Full-Tim e BN for the shift
ated the offerln
Must have expenence in
of 7p-7a. Anyone interested """"'.:::!~!!!::C!lt.----'
general maintenance
pleas~ come in and fill out
MONEY
including carpentry, plumb- an application at 333 Page
ing, electrical, telephone
Street. Middleport , Oh EOE
and cable installation. paintSASSY SCISSORS ·
ing ,grounds worK. evalua·
~ Leamn g
lnBnCIBI
Stylist wanted. Salary/
tion and inspeCtion of emer·
Commission. 740-441·1880 Institution approving Small
genCy equipment, item
Busi ness. Mortgage
or 740.256-6336.
assembly, and bOiler sysPersonal and Vehicle
tem operation . Must have
Wanted- · Licensed Physical
Loans. lm!'l'1ediate
knowledge of OSHA, Life
Therapy ASSIStant fOr home
response.
S8fety Code. HVAC and
health services. Pl ease send
give us a call at.
Building Code. Long term .
r"esume to McGraw Physical 1 -866- 22 8-7063 ~ Or apply
care experience pr6ferred
Therapy, Inc., PO. Box 983,
online at
but not required. Qualified
Jackson, OH 45640 or ca ll
www.investmenttinan&lt;:iai org
candidates may sef)d
1740)286-6631 .
.
resumes to : Charla Brown ••NOTI{;EH
McGUire. AN. LNHA,
Administrator. 333 Page
Street, Middleport, Ohio
arrow Smart. Contact th
45760, EOE
Gelllpollt Career College · lohio Division of Financia
nstitutlon's
Of! ice
0
McClure's Restaurant now (Careers Close To Home)
onsumer
Affair
Call
Today!
740-446-4367,
hinng all locations, lull or
BEFORE you relmanc
1-800-214-0452
part-lime, pick up applicayour home or o~ta i n a loan.
gallipoi•9CIIrear001ege.com
tion at location &amp; bring bad&lt;
BEWARE at requests fa
Accredited
Member Accredlling
between
1O:OOa m
&amp;
'Councl lor Independent Colleges
ny large advance pay
11:OOam. Monday thru lnd Schooltl 127"8.
'!Ients of fees or Insurance.
Saturday.
the
Office
o
all
WAI'mll
Paramedics
&amp;
EMT's
Consumer Affairs toll Ire
t 1-866 ~278-0003 to tear
needed. Apply at 1354
f the mortgage broker o
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.
Call B. 0 . Cons!. for all your ender Is properly UcenseCI.
Secunty Officers
This is a public servic
home repair needs, roofing,
15 1mmed. Openings
nnouncement from th
siding, add-ons. remodeling
Ohio
Va lley Publ1shln
tree
estimates .
Wackenhut Corp has lmmed etc.,
Company)
(740)992-2979
leave
mes·
openings at AEP Gavin
Power Plant for a temp out· sage.
age. Must ha\le HS Dip. or
GED, clean Police Record,
DHK Cleaning . Do you
vahd DL and willing to work
need? House Cleaning or
any shift. Coutd turn into FT
Elderly
Care,
Outside
DIRECTV
Perm positions. Please call
Maintenance (powerwashFI'M Equitment
f40·925·30~6 M-F, 7a-3p.
lng , etc) Call (740)985·
FrH Professional
EOE MJFIDN.
36331(740)416-1823
Installation
Wa nted
Manager
and Aelerences available: Ask
up to 4 roams
Experienced Auto Body for Karen/Dave
Free 50 + prem1um
man. Collision painting &amp; --------~
channels
frame e)(perience neces- Georges Portable Sawmill,
Free) DVD player
sary. Call (740)446-4486 &lt;Q don't haul your logs to the
c'Sn for details
·
set up an appointment.
mill just call 304·67[-1957.
Call 1-Boo-523-7556,

"'

~~

1993 14x70 Norris. 2 bedroom. 2 bath, garden tub,
dfshwasher, Bx 8 deck,
$11 ,500 (740)446-9480

I

$2 13.68 per mo. New 3 bed3 Bdrm Ranch, 2 bath , LA , room, 2 bath mobile h"ome.
FA, basement, 2 fireplaces ,
Only minutes lrOm Athens.
2 car garage. Centenary. 1·800:837·3238
(740)446·1035.
ln\/Bntory Clearance
3 Bedroom 1 &amp; 1/2 bath, 5 used homes under
new-windows &amp; roof ,located $2,000.00
Mike ,
Call
12 Smith St. Kings town (740)385-7671.
area River-view available No
Down-Paymenl
$425.a SAVE- SAVE-SAVE
month (304)675-2749
Stock models at otd prices,
2005 models arriving Now,
3 bedroom, 2 bath, fireplace.
Cote's
Mab1te
Homes,
on 1.6 aCres. R10 Grande
15266 u.s. so East, At hens,
area.
$85,000.
Call
Ohio 45701 . (740)592- 1972,
(740)709- 1166.
"Wh ere You Get Your
Money's Worth ~

~

All real estate. advertising
~ In this newspaper 11
t ubject to the Fechnl
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makea It illegal to
advertiH "any
. preference, limitation or
dlacrtmtnatlon based on
race, color, religion, sex
tamlflal •tatu• or national
origin, or any Intention to
make'any such
preferenc•, limitation or
di~~erlmlnatlon ."

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertl..ments f01 real
estate Whkh Is In
violation of th• law. Our
readers s,. hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advertiHCI In
this newspaper are
available on an aqual .
opportunity bases.

•
Handy Man's dream 3.
Bedroom Bungalow good
· starter home or rental
. 522,500 (304)675-6444
LO\Iely 3 bedroom home
overlooking Hock.1ng RIVer,
Coolville, $129,000, call
Maggie Gifford 740·5917221 , Hayes Realestate.
Must Sell - 3 bedroom, 1
bath . nice neighbprhood,
aski~g $69,900, (304)5933542
Po1nt Pleasant Historic
District
5
Bedroom
Approximate 3500 Sq. feet.
New · Thomasville Kitchen
(304)675-6444

.

HousEi

FOR RENT

1r

Help Wanted

· Responsible couple to rent
2BR home 1mi. from
Gallipolis, ofl "·State Route
588. Refe rence and .deposit
required. (740)446-3413.

r M~~=!Ei

1

One BA apartment in Spring
Valley. $290 Per month plus
deposit. WID hookups.
(740)339-0362, (740)3880017.

AA/EOE

'I

SPACE

Ll· ·

_ _,

Housmow

2 bedroom apartment for
rent. Racine. OH. ·Deposit
~
requ ired. no pets. (740)992 - · - - - - - - - _ . 1
5174, leave message.

SS t/ Social Security
$1,300 Net income. We can -----.::..:=~­ 3 p1ece Queen Bedroom.
finance you a home. Call 5 rms, 2 blocks from downBookcase, headboard, 5
(304}736-3400
town. Water, sewage, trash
drawer dresser, dresser with
paid. No pets. (740)256·
mirror. $300. CaU (740)388We have approximately 13 6176.
8658.
used homes fo r under - - - - - - - - $2,000, 1-800-837-32 38
Applic(l.tions be1ng taken for - - - - - - - ' - - - very n1ce. clean 2 bedroom
LoTs &amp;
apartment in country setting,
__
ACRFAGE
yet . close to town, on
Centenary Road . Wa sher,
Appliance
Corner Lot lol' Sale in Camp dryer, sto\le, fridge, dishConley. Alread y Double- washer pro'llided. Total elecWarehouse ·
Wid e Equlped , w/water, ·tric w/AC. Tenant pays electric. No pets. nci smoking.
sewage &amp; footers.
$400, deposit, $475 per in Henderson . WV. Pre$ 15,000 or
month. Water included . 740- owned applicanes starting at
446·2205 O&lt; 740-446·9585. $15 &amp; up all under warranty,
Ask for Virginia .
we do aervice work on all
Make and Models (304)675Beautiful 2-story townhouse, 7999
overlooking Gallipolis City
I BUY HOMES
Need to sell your home park. Kitchen-family, D.R.,
Furniture: Sofa· chair sets,
quickly because of a L.A. 3 B.A. , study, 2 baths,
Sofa· kM3 seat sets.
$399;
di\/Orce, bankruptcy, job laundry area References
$499. Mollohan Carpet
dfi'po&amp;it,
required
,
security
transfer, or death . Don't let
(740)448-7444 or (740)388the bank foreclose and rui n no pets. $900 per mo.
0,
173.
your credit. Local person 1740)446-2325 or (740)446·
4425
.
buys houses. Fast closings.
Kenmore washer, $95;
Ail cash . Jim
(740)992BEAUTIFUL
APART· Wh irlpool dryer, $95; GE
MENTS
AT
BUDGET electric
range,
$95;
PRICES AT JACKSON Whirlpool retrlgerator, $150;
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Like new Wh irlpool dryer,
Drive from $344 to $442. $250; Like new Magic Chef
Hot.l5ES
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call washer, $250; Octagon end
t"OR RENT
740-446-2568.
Equal tables, $15 each : Tappan
.___,.:;,:___.,.1 "Houl:iing
Opportunity.
~as ran~. $175.
·
Skaggs Appliances
3 bedroom Condo with river Check out a cl ean 2B A
16 Vine Street ·
view,
lull · basenient, country setting with WID
(740)446-7398
Gallipolis Ferry. $700 month. hookup. No pets. $350/mo.,
Call (~40)446·3481
depooit (740)25e·1245.
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
3Br. house
for Rent. CONVENIENTLY LOCAT~ Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.
$1375/month , plus
One ED &amp; AFFORDASLEI
(740)446·7444 1·877-830·
Month DepoSit in Advance. Townhouse
apartments, 9162. Free. Estlmatss, Easy
Fenced -In Yard, Smgle Car and/or small houses FOR financing, 90 days same as
Garage Aneched (304)531· RENT Call (740)441-t1 11 cash. Visa/ Master Card.
1 t97 or (304)531· 1198
·' tor application &amp; lntornlatJon. Ori'lle· a- ll«&lt;e save akJt. ·

r

.i iiiiiiill

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- -'
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~Ox50x1 OFT

www.pvalley.org

Gospel Harmony Boys,
Glorybound
&amp; John Slavens
March 12 at 6 pm
Me1gs Elementary School
Sponsored by Me1gs Senior Center

BINGO
· American Legion Middleport
March 121h
6:30pm
First Pack $10.00 All After lsi $5.00
Paying a $100.00 a Game .
$200.00 for the X
$300 ~ 00 picture frame
$1,000.00 coverall
Crank II Up $16,000.00
15 Numbers Lefl
Slarburst $1.400.00
Weather Permitting

FASHION BUG
2 Days Only Sale!
Friday &amp; Saturday March 11 &amp; 12
40% off Reg. Priced Items
(Excludes 'Prices Jus1 Righr 11e m s) .
20% oil Red &amp; Yellow·Stlcker ll~ms
·Also save 65% off enti re stock of jewelry

(740) .446-2009
23 Ohio River Plaza Gallipolis,

ATV Poker Run
March 19th 10 am

in New Haven, WV
Follow signs
by Bend Area Care

MilWAY TAVERN
Karaoke Wed &amp; Fri
Karaoke Sat with K&amp;D
DJ Service

For
AN~ Home?

TrY the
.C iassifieds!!

I

1 Quarter horse mare,' 4 yrs 1996

:r;;:::

BU" niNG
ILL}'

SUPPUES

iirz:.;..;;;.;;.~;;,o;;.;;.--.,

Ai&lt;nlQUES

r

I

-

,( 7·~4:::0::.
1 5:::4 .:.:1 ·.:.:74.:.:7..:0~---

t&lt;:o;''::::::::~

DS
Block. brick. sewer pipes,
-windoWs, lintels, etc. Claude
Llama 45 cal. ACP. Duo Winters, Rio Grande. OH
Call740·245 -5121 .

MlscEiLANrous

Auros

Auros

FOR SALE

mRSALE

Cadillac

Sedan ·

3 yr old · Guilding quarter Ph . (740)256'1948, cell
horse. Green broke. $500. (740)339~2724
(740)367-7413 after 6pm.
1998
Pontiac
Suntire
4-H Pigs tor Sale
Convert.ible .
97,000
Begin farrowing 1/20/05 and
miles/auto, 2.4Liter engine,
still farrowing. Pure bred all power, CD plaYer, new
Yorks
and
crossb reds.
Black
w.IRed
Please call (740)448·2002 tires ,
Pinstripes. $3.500 Firm .
91
or
(740)541 -7 4
or (740)245-9266.

11am-7pm
Open Dally
U.S. 60
Cannonsburg-Ashland
{behind Mr. Gatti's)
, '606'922-71 85

I

SPoR11NG
Goo

r

HAY

&amp;

.GRAIN

1000# bales, $7.00-$1 0.00
&amp; $15.00, pick up toad or

semi-load ,
good
(740)698-2765
·
For Sate:

Round

hay,
Bales,

2000 Chrysle&lt; Concord,
82,000 miles. $5.300 080.
2002
Dodge
"strauss.
64,000 miles, $5.500 OBO.
(740)256- 1539.
'---'-------2000 Kia Sephia , $ 3 •100 :
1999 Ford Ranger XLT.
$3,800; t999 Dodge Dakota
ex cab, $4,800, 1996 Ford

mR

I
1

:·~~Silverado

s

New solid oa.k Glider chair.
Amish made with cus hion.
Full size , playing pool table,
like new with sticks &amp; ace.
(740)446-2506.

Tractor parts &amp; service, spe·
cializing
in
Massey
Ferguson , Ford, Long, and
Belarus. (740)696-0358

SFLL YOUR CAR

HERE

W1TH A PHOTO!

. Call (740)446-2342"
For Details
15

TRUCKS

°

r•o

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, cal\ lor more
de1ails. (740)696-0358

It

1999 Ford
Con tour SE- 4.
SA
For Sate · Day olt:l Rhode door,
24 .300 miles excellent •---·-~liiRiiliiilii.iF:i-Island Reds St. run q_nly
6
$ 1 00 each (304)593-5073
n,
$ 5 ·500· Call . 1988 Ford F150, 79, 300
(740)446-0771 aher fi:prry.
·
,condlll
miles. Exe91ient condition , 5
Yearling Angus Bulls, MostlY
A .I. excellent bloodlmes, 200 Chrysler Cirrus 4·door speed, overdrive. (? 40)3BSS
A.
sedan . ~utomat1c power 0140
priced reasonab ly. late un seats,windows,door-locks, - - · - - - - - - F
J k
o)
~
86
174 2
arm, ac son.
- Silver excel!. cond 63,000 1993 Chevy 3500 Turbo
5395
·
miles $6000. 304-()75·6047 Diesel, Red Pickup, Dully,
www.slaterunfarm .com
Power Windows, Locks.

1-

·--tlJIIIiRiiSiiiALEii-r·
•
Chihuahua puppy. 6 weeks
old, short hair, vet checked
and vaccin._ated, weighs 1.4
pounds, no papers, fu ll
bl d d
$25 0
C 11
00 e .
.
a
( 740}441 "72 18 ·

.

Dachshund puppies 'AKC 1.000 lbs. Mostly orcha rd Aero Start van . sharp,
l\.'IERLllANDISF.
1st shots, 1st worming , grass. Kept inside. $20 each. $2,300: 1998 Chevy Z-24
-$350. Call (740)446-4446 .
{740)446 -0223.
$3,295: 1999 Ford Contour.
$2 100
1992 Dodge Steal~h . .24
C 1 Square Bales m1xed Hay. $2
'
Purebred Border
ol le
B &amp; 0 Auto Sales
valve turbo, $4 ,000 ·
pups. Impacted bloodlines . .each leave message if no
·
I
h
.(740)446·6865
. E arly 90's Ge 1 oad er, 1St shots/wormed. Classic answer {304)675-1118
$10,500.
colors. $100 each. Call
200 1 Hond a Civic LX
Coupe. Green, automatic,
3- black Angus Bulls. $2,000 (740 )379 _9 11 0 _
each
'---'-------AIJJ'OS
excellent condition, very
2001 Cargomate cargo tra1t- Relrievers {Golden) CKC
clean. 73,000 highwayer, $8,500. (740)256-9247 or Seven weeks old. $250
SALE
m'iles. $8.395 negotiable
(7401388•8965 .
(1
8 0
40)645·0 7 ·
(614)3 13-7096.
$500! Honda's, Chevy·s,
Sheltle pupa;
2002 Ford Escort zx 2 . 5
Ect.
Pollee speed, 29,000 miles, air.
Aylce·2004
Ball ~ IM/1F, AKC, Born 12/31, Jeep's,
~, ·
Impounds! Cars from $500
GownN63s7,
· Yellow
at Chk'd , shots 1
·
one owner. Nice (740)441 IL.,
tor listings 800-391 -5227
w/S equeins.
s1ze
6, 11•• ormeQ.
$500, POP. EXT 3901
Oi 57 or (740)645-514t.
Excellent
Condition,
740)4 73-2785, (740)236
!;..,.,,.
2002 Pont1ac Grand AM SE.
(304}593-4659 after 6pm or 1
1p..ru28.
00 Ford F-150 XL. 4 door. V- A
AJC CD
leave message
2,aulo, 2WD, miles077.411.
ed,
'
'loaded._ 56 k
miles,
Euro
taillights ,
UKC Toy Rat Terriers. 6
weeks.
tail
s
docked.
$100.
PU
Z-71.
chromeaccents,
$8,995 .
For rent· 24'x32' 3 stall Pole
VB , auto, 4x4, shor t bed, Excellent condition . Call
Barn. Private. At . 7. $200/ (740)256-6824.
m;les-094 491. 1o,900.
(740)256-8816 ·
month ,
{740)446-4782
99
Dodge
Caravan.
Miles2003 Dodge Neon ST X
Gallipolis.
I \In I "it I'Pf II"'
085.960.
$5,995.
4door. 4 cyl ., automatic ,
.\ l l \ l "iltllh
98 Ranger ext cab 4x4. 4 .0, power everything, 11 ,000
JET
V6, auto, 4x4, miles- miles. $6,500. (740)44 1AERATION MOTORS
120,946.$7,500 .
0337 or (740)645-6153.
Repa1red, New ~ Rebuilt In
Southern Auto Sales
Stock. Call Ron .Evans, 1·
{740)446-8554
2003
Pontiac
Sunfire
800-537 ·9528.
--,':..:::':::::.=_:_--,-_ . approx. 20,ooo miles $7900 .
Dunham-Lehr 22 QT loa der. 1952 Plymouth 4dr. engine (304) 458 _1881
All hydraulic, with bale runs good, body excell., all
Locust Posts· 7· 112 to 8 feet spear. Excellent cond1tion.
· 1, no rust 32 ,000 m1es
'I
93 Lincoln Town Car. 81 ,000
org1na
lon g, 4~ to 8" diameter
miles . Very nice. $4,500 .
$1 ,600. (740)379-2768.
304•576 -2532
Firewood- All hard wood .
1740)446-1759.
Large load. Cut and split. · -~------­ 1969 Ford XL, Gala&lt;y 390.
Will deliver Call (740)256- John Deere 2040, diesel, automatic, power steering 98 Cadill.ac ' Cater~. Fully
91 15 or (740)25~-6605 .
EC, new ."tires. $8,950 Ford and brBkes, AC, Interior equipped, leather inte rior.
3000
diesel,
$5,995. excellent, Mochanicaf e)(cel- low mile s. mint condition.
lent, body good. Needs $7.900. Call (740)704-3751..
.
NE.W AND USED STEEL (6 14)41 9-2781.
minor
repair and · paint. BMW Z3, '99, Spec1al
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
$3,300.00 080. (740)696- Edition , 22,000 miles, dark
For
Concrete.
Angle , Specials' of the Month on
Phannel , Flat Bar, Steel Farmpro Tractors. Farmpro 1373 (740)591-5888 .
green, $19.999. (304)4 12·
For
Dra1ns.
Grating
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Mon day,
Tuesd8y, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
Saturday
&amp;
Thursday,
Sunday. (740)446-7300

hom9 in Raci ne. $225 per
_..,;fliRiilii.RENriOIIOi-_.1
month, $225 9eposit, years
lease, no pets. no calfs after For Lease: Office or retail
9pm , (740)992-5039
spaces in very good condi~r::;:.;;..;;;;;,;.;;.,;;;;;;.
tion. Downtown Gallipolis.
APARil\tiNfS
Approx. 1600 sq. ft. each . 1
FOR RENT
or 2 baths. Lease price
negotiable · to encourage
1 and 2 bedroom apart- new
busmess
Call
ments, furni shed and unlur· (740)446-4425 or (740)446·
nished, security deposit 3936.
required, no .pets, 740-992·
\ II Rl 11\"\fll..,l
2218.

t

Us9d Furniture Store. 130

Help Wanted

304-675-4340

:__:_------'--- t

•

Pole - Barn

tors, gas and electric (937)559·8385
ranges, air conditioners, and
SPA OunET
wringe r was hers. Will do
repairs on maj01r brands In
Grand Opening
shop or at your home.
Saturday/Sunday

more.
(740)446-4782,
Gallipolis, OH, _Hrs 11·3 (M·
S) We buy used furn iture.

10

$6795. includes Painted old . Green broke, $400. Deville. Maroon wl clothMetal, Plans, Instruction (740)256-1652.
top ..
, Miles-1 04.500 .
Book, Slider, Free Delivery
Excellent co ndition. $5,500.

m

.send resumes to :
Pleasant Valley Hospital
cfo Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550

New 1 bedroom apt. Call
(740)446-3736.

rlb

Love Always,
Kim

Excellent salary, holidays,. health
insurance single/family plan, dental
plan, life insurance, vacation, long
term disability, an,d retirement.

MOdern 1 bedroom apt. Call
(740)446-0390.

J«ii

~......

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a full-time
LPN-PH or
Medical
Assistant/
Medical Receptionist. Applicants
must have a current WV license.
One-year experience in a physiCians
office or hospital related area,
working with direct patient.care.

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed:
room apartments at Vlhage
Ma nor
and
Aiverslde
Apartments · in Middleport.
Frain $295·$444. Call 740·
992.5064. Equal HousinQ
Opportunities.

Small 2 bedroom mobile

').

LPN-PH or Medical
Asst./Medical Receptionist

Furnished 2 &amp; 3 roqm apts.
Clean, no pets. Reference &amp;
deposi~
.required.
Call
(740)446-1519.

:EjiH,iO;..._~----.,

~~~

'

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

,FORRENf

{740J388-0159.

Till we meet
again, I'll miss
you, Dad.
~l.,.*,~

Appl iance &amp;
Repair-675-7388. For sate,
re·condilioned aulomalic
washers &amp; dryers, refri gera-

Bulaville Pike. Appliances,
mattresses.
dressers.
couches, dinet1es, recliners.
grave mon umen1s, much

.I t

LMNrocK
__

Thompsons

· owner.

APARIMENili

Pilot Program- Renters
needed. Call (304)736·
2BR unfurnished .. 10-min.
3409.
Jrom town. Suitable fo r 1 or 2
people.
No
pets . •THE MAPLES
Reasonable rent. (740)256- 100 MEMORIAL DRIVE
6176.
EAST
POI-1EROY, 740-992-7022 •
2BR, 28~, close to Tycoon Subsidized
·Residential
Lake on 1/2 acre lot. No Housing for 50 years of age
pets,
parlly
furnished . and older. Priority Givan to
$~5/mont h includes water,
Applicant• with Income at
$250 deposit (740)379- or below $10,900.00
9297.
Maximum Income effective
3 bedroom mobile home in 02/ 11 /2005 for 1 person
Midd lepo rt,
no
pets $18,150.00.
(740)992-5858
Muot meet.HUil/120218 crttart• for houaehold com3 bedroom, 1 112 bath, poalllon. Managed by
Handicapped Accessible, Silval'heels. lncorpc'lrated, A
$480 month plus deposit Realty · Company Equal
w/good references , No Pets, Hous1ng Opportunity
(740)992-2146
:.___:________ Twin R1vers Tower is accept·
For rent: 2 bedroom mobile ing applications for waiting
home~ $400 montl;l $350 list tor Hud-subsized, 1- br,
deposit (740)388-9905 or aparlmen1, call 875-6679

Thomas
Sprouse Jr.

r == lr. .__

Buy or sell.
Riverine
Antiques, 1124 East Main
anSA 124E.Pomeroy, 740992.·2526. Russ Moo1e,

4 rooms and bath. 52 Olive Efficiency apt. $300 month
St. No pets, $300 month. plus utilities . No pets. Call
(740)446-3945.
(740)446-4313.
5 rooms and bath in
Middleport Gas heat, No
pets, deposit (740)742-2424
or (740)992-3439
::._:__:::_:.::_.::__::.__ __
Clean 2 Bedroo m, Ground
Floor, WID Hook Up, Ref.
Dep. No Pet s. (304)6755 162
-----'----Nice Large 3br Home in
Town. Upstai rs Laundry. 1Year Lease. $550/morith
plus Deposi1 (304 )675·4030
9·5

Happy
Birthday
Otarles

.

...r~o_H..~----.1

PETs

POLICIES: Ohlo .\lalley Publl1hlng reserves the right to edit, reject. or cancel an_y ad at any time. Error• muat be reported on the fl.-.1 d.y of
Trlbune-Sen tlnei-Aegltter will be responsible 1or no more than the coat ot the eptce occupied by the error and only the tlrlt lnNrtlon. Wa
any loaa or expense that reaulta from the publication OJ omiaalon of an advertisement. Correction will be made In the llrat avallabltl edition. • Box
ara alwaya eonftdantlal. • Current rate card applies. • All rea1111111 advertisements sr• aubject to the F.cltrlll Fair Hou,lng Act of 10&amp;8. • Thle ........,,.
ecce pta
help wanted Ida meeting EOE standards. We will not knowingly accept any advertialng In violation of the law.

Description • lnc:lude A Price • Avoid Abbrevllitions
• I nclude Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

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,~
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• Start Your Ads Wit!;'! A Keyword • Include Complete

\\\(ll ' ( I \II 'IS

The Mildred
..,. Hubbard Family~~

Oecultirfhf'

Happy Ad

!fi
CaUia Co-,nty, OH

\!Crtbune

Daily Sentinel • Page 85

'

Meigs, aatU.:

To Place

The

.

m:rtbune - Sentinel - 1\,egtster

•

Items

www.mydailysentinel.com

1981 Otds 98, 4dr, Runs
Good, Call (304)675· 1264
1989 Crown Vi&lt;: , new tires,
new bat1ery, new trans. Very
nice car. 10~ ,000. miles.
$2.200.00 OBO. (740)9925532
1994 Chrysler Concord.
95,000 miles, runs great,
crU1sefti lt, power everything.
$1 .600 080. (740)256-1233
or (740)256-9031.

Loaded
$B,OQO
(3041593-5073

'""'

SUVs

4WHEt:l.ERS

200 1 Lmcoln Navigator.
AWD, 5.4 va . 3rd row seating. cassette/CD-charlger.
heated/cool6d-seats. low
m11es . excellent cond1t1on.
$23 ,900 1740)453 -5535

2000
Harley
Dav1dson
Sportster 883 Hugger, 6,350
m11es. new t1res , extras,
SS.500 Neg. Day: (7A0)645·
3248. evening alter 7pm
(740)256-6589

2002 Chevy Avalan che Z71
Fully loaded, onster. heated
seats. 29 000 miles . moon roof 4-wheel -dnve . CD,
523.400 OBO. (614)9896448.

2003 Suzuki 400. all-skid
Plates. wh1te brothers pipe
$3.200 (304)576-2668

2004 Honda Pilot EX, rated
best tull size SUV. Red Pearl
ext. tan cloth int., all options,
ma1nta111ed and babied. 21k
miles $26.900 304·773·
6062

2__79_0_ _ _ _ _ _ __
2004 Harley Davidson 883
cuslom, black, 4 ,500 miles,
$ 7 .500 . (7401441 .t583."

2003 Su1uk1 V1nson 500, 4wheeler. 340 m1les. Red 4
WD. $4800. 080 304-675-

94 Harley Davidson Ultra
Classic, to.oOa miles. bluE!.

99 Jeep Grand -C heroKee

excellent condition. $t3,500 ,
Laredo Loaded, 6 cy linder.
excellent conditiOn, 97 000 17 4019 49 · 2217
miles,
$7,900
080.
Jk)I\TS &amp; MOTORS ·

~17=4:;0:,;15,92;.;.·;.29;.4,;.8~---,

i

4x4
FoR SALE

lw--iitlJiliiR·S·A·f,iE-_.1
ii

-

1995 Ford F-150 ·XLT. 8 ft.
bed, excellent condition.
Asking S6,800 OBO. Call 1978 Jeep CJS 8 cy 304
(740)992-1777. ·
engine, white fibe r gl_ass
'-...::..:.:.::_ _ _ _ _ _ body, black top &amp; biKini top,
1998 Ford t ton Cube Van. padded roll bar. sharp.
12ft. alum box, a).Jto- A.C., Excellent
condit1on.
V.G .C., sharp, garage kept.

Phone (740)446-7787.
t 999 Chevy 1 ton with 1 1 ft .
•
utility bed. AC, cruise. tilt,
350 gas, 5 speed trans ..
69 ,000 mlIes. Exce II en t condillon. Call (740)256·1526 or
(740)645 -0446.
2000 Chevrolet-Silverado
1500 l:.S, fully-optioned.
·
4x4.bedliner ,t rallenng,pkg., P.ewter ' ext.,Charcoal
h
·1
int., 1OOk hig way m1 es.
b
'
$
2
900
syn.oi(. below oo" 1 .
.
·
2
304·773-606
2000 10-LS, Ext-cab. 3rd
5 d AC CD
Qoor. 4-cyl, ·sp ·
·
·
48.000
miles.
Ask ing
$7,900.00 OBO (74d)949 -

s

2621
2002 Chevy 1500, VB.
29,080 miles, sspd, PS/PB.
AC, tiltlcrUise, ·CD, $12,000 .
Recon !tile. {304)634-5131.
2004 FORD F-t50 Lariat.
Super Crew,
tO ,OOOmi
2yr/20,000mi warranty left.
loaded/extras ,
$30,000.

MOTORL'YCLESI

«l

mR SALE

2002 Stingr'ay 20 ft. open
bow. Red/ White. 5.6 liter V·
8 . Hustler tra iler. excellent
cond .. garage kept. price
new $24:000 sell $15,700 .
call Troy Krebs 304-6758828
;;;;,::.______, _ _

·CAMPERS

(740)367·7147

&amp;

L_,.;M
iioii
mu
iiiiiiR.;,Hiiiior.
iiiill'iti
'S;,.
2001 Jeep ·Cherokee Sport
4X4 ~mce reduced . loaded 1998 30" fifth wheel 1ravel
CD ,towing package 54.000 trailer. double slide •. exc~l­
mo
'les 304-675-1314
lent condit1on. $13.900
phone:
(740)698-9319
86 Bronco XLT, 4 WD 302 , 4
BBL, auto, new t1res , raters,
2001 Hornet Bunkhouse 32'.
$1 '100, 1740)992-3679
12· e)(pando. sleeps 1Q,
~9 Jeep Cherokee Sport. excellent condition. $16.800.
4x4 , EC, gold, auto, PW Pl, (740)441-1501.
V6.
CD
CC .
new
$5 ,995.
rotorsl brak,es ,
(6 t4)231-1355.

i

v"'~s

FoR SAJ.E

19_93 Chevrolet Astro Van .
good
cond1t1on
phrine
(304 )675-5077 '
2000 Ford WindStar LX ,
91,000 miles, 2 sliding
doors. powtt w1ndows &amp;
cruise $6,300 (304)675·
4014

2op0 Ford Winstar LX, 81K
2/sliding dt')Qrs. seats 7, all
(304)523·3500: (304 )654- power, rear air, ti nted win9318; (304)886· 1668
dows,
asking
$6 ,600.
2004 Silverado ' tsoo. Z71 . (740)669-5653
4WD. Loaded, still under
«l M01URCY&lt;.l.f.~
warranty, 29.000 niites. ask4WHEELERS
ing 526.000 1304)675-4917

18

10

HOME
IMPROVll\IF.NI'S

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional litet1me guarantee . Local references lurnished . Established 1975.
Call 24 Hcs: (740) 4460870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

Culverts
plastic and metal, 6" 1nches·
60 inches in stock. Ron
Evans Enterprise, Jackson,
OH 1(800)537-9528

82 John Deere 450C Dozer
6way blade. new under carr~age , new paint, runs and
looks excellent. $15,000.
12 ton dual Tandem Pintel
trailer. Sold with or alter the
t979 Honda 750 lOth .
dozer. $4,000. (740)38SSUVs ,
Anniversary L1mi1ed Edition.
1S79.
FORSAI.E
ign11ion
work .
Needs
3380. '
Evemng
(740)256-6870.
Chevy Monte Carlo SS, '84 , 1999 Eddie Bauer Explorer Low mileage, $2,000.
$6.500 neg. Call (740)377- AWO, loaded, leather, 6 disc
9943.
CD
changer,
sunroof, 1982 Honda 500 Trike
Faring w/stereo system. Dk
Must sale, 1984 Corvette, 92,000 miles. $9,500 OBO.
blue. Even1ngs (740)256(740)446-7777
.
350 engine (740)9.92-6797
6870. $3,000.
2000 Jeep Grand Cheroke'e
Limited 4x4, 4.0 automatic. 1996 Honda Goldwing 1500
Cassette, CS changer. sun Aspecade . 23,700 miles.
excellent condition, 2 match·
roof,· heated- cooled seats,
ing helmets. Asking $8.000.
low miles. E)(cellent condi·
(740)388-8047
tion. (740)367-7147.
B7 CheVy 112-ton . 2WD 350engine, "81 ,000-mlles good
condi!IOn, PW.IPL, · o"rig. 4
new
t1res .
Red/b lack
$4,700. (740)506·1367

02 Honda 400 EX . Excellent
conditiOn, rode little. 53.000
neg ·Call (740)256·1526 or ·
{740)645-0446.

r

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASStFIEDS

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

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

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Reaeh 3

.

i

~ounties

••

i
•

I
i
•

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

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'

I

.

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 11, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, March 11, 2005
ALLEY OOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87
NEA Croasword Puzzle

BRIDGE
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, Merch 12,
2005, at' 10:00 a.m., a
public sale will be
held at 211 w Sacond
St, Pomeroy, Ohio .
The Fatmers Bank
and
Savings
Company is selling
for cash in hand or
certified check the
following collateral:
2000
DODGE
N
E
0
N
4DtB3ES46C6YD5096
85
1994 MAZDA 626

and seventy-ana (71) Wolf, and was sold by following lot of land and with the lands of
links to a stone In the the heirs of Mary C.
situated In North one- said Link and followcenter line of 100 Bentz to George L. half or 1oo A. lot No. Ing generally the cenAcre lot No 261;
Wolf, bound and 261 and 100 A. lot No. ter of said Route No.
thence East twenty- described as follows, . 262 being that por- 336, as follows: North
two chains and forty- being In North one- tion of land in the 37. deg. 35' East 733
six (46) links to the half of 100 A. lot No.
Eaot part of said feet; North 48 deg. 06'
North 112 of 100 A lot East 194 feet; North
East line of 100 Acre 261 and 100 A. lot no.
lot No. 261 ; thence 262; Commencing at No. 262, &gt;vhlch was 60 deg. 35' East 220
willed by Jonas Wolf feet; thence, leaving
North on said East South West corner of
line of 100 "Acre lots the Wolf Cemetery at
conjointly to his five the center of said
heirs, to wit: Peter" A., Route No. 338 and the
Nos. 261 and 262 to . a stone in the center
lands of said Link and
thQ North East corner line of tOO A. lot No.
Daniel B., John ~­
of 100 Acre Lot No. 26 t ;· thence North 17 and George L. Wolf severing the Ianda of
and Mary C. Bentz, the subject owner, as
262, being the place dog. East three (3)
of beginning. Except chains and fifty-nine and was In the divi- follows; South 26
10 feet on the North . (59) links to North
sion of said hill land deg. 12' East 60 feet;
South 64 deg . . 28'
side oft oo Acre Lot West corner of said allotted to Mary C.
Bentz and by her West 119.20 feet;
thence
No. 262, being the cemetery;
L
X two lots dtawn in the North 86 deg. East hairs sold to George South 57 deg. 12'
4DYVGE22C4R51779 names of George L. two (2) chains and
L. Wolf, bound as fol- West 102.35 feet;
41
'
lows,
to•wlt: South 51 deg. 56'
Wolf and Peter F. Wolf eighty (80) links to
The Farmers Bank willed by Jonas Wolf North East corner ·of
Commencing to a West 98 feet; South
and
Savings to his five heirs of cemetery; thence a
stone
thirty-seven 40 deg. 25' West 125
Company, Pomeroy, that portion of the Northerly course to a (37) chains and two feel; South 37 deg.
Ohio, reserves the
lands
owned .by sweet cherry tree and .(2) links West of the 18' West 637 feel to a
right to bid at this Jonas Wolf at his 'on same course to
North East corner of point In tho center of
sale, and to withdraw death which lies East the road reading from
100 A. lot No. 262 at a said Township Road
the above collateral of the bottom land racine to Letart entire stone; thence West No. 214, said point
prior to sale. Further,
willed to David B. distance eight chains . thirteen (13) chains being In the line or
The Farmers Bank
Wolf by said Jonas and seventy~seven and seventy-six (76) the lands of said Link
thence, with the lands
and
Savings
Wolf, and situate in (77) li_nks; thence fol·
links to a stone;
Company reserves
the North 1/2 of 100 lowing said road thence South thirteen . of said Link and the
South 46 deg. West (13) chains and sev- center
the right to reject any
Acre lot No. 261 and
of · said
enty-one (71) links to
or all bids submitted.
100 Acre Lot No. 262, three (3) chains and
Township Road No.
The
above · the said Peter F. Wolf seventy-six (76) links; · a stone In center line ' 214; North 86 deg. 23'
of 100 Acre Lot No.
Weal 72 feet to the
described collateral
having sold his por- thence South 35 deg.
262; thence East thirwill be sold "as is- tion of hill land to West fcjur (4) chains
place of beginning,
where is" , with no
1.45
George L. Wolf, con- and eighty-nine (89) teen (13) chains and
containing ·
expressed or implied
tinuing in said two
links; thence South
seventy-six (76) finks
acres, more or less,
warranty given. The lots
30-893/1 000 34 deg. West six (6) to a stone; tf:lence of which 0.82 acre Is
collateral must be
Acres, except 10 feet chains and fifty-eight
North thirteen (13) . Included In the existmoved from property. on N. side next North (58) links to point
chainS: and seventyIng right of way for
line of 100 Acre lot where center line of one (71) links to place Ohio State Route No.
For further infor·
mation, or . for an 262.
100 A. lot " No. 261
of beginning. Except 338. The bearings
8ppointment
to Lot No. 2: Also the crosses center of 1o feet next .t o north· used herein _are referline or 100 A. lot No. enced to tha Ohio
inspect
collateral , following lot of land ro&amp;d; thence Etist two
prior to sale date con· which was willed (2) chains eighty- 262, reserved as · State
Coordinate
right-of -way road. System, South Zone
tact Diane Rector or
direct to George L. three (83) links to
Containing
18- (Page's Ohio Revised
Randy Hays at 992- Wolf by Jonas Wolfe: place of beginning.
2136 .
at
With reference to 865/100 Acres.
Commencing
Coda, Sactlon 157.01
' 319,10,11
South East corner of Lot No. 2 and Lot No.
With raferen'ce to Lot to 157.07 lncl).
the Cemetery known 3, same is subject to
No. 1, Lot No. 2, Lot
The
above
as the Wolf Cemetery the following restricNo. 3 and Lot No. 4,
described tract Is a
of Letart Township tive covenan1 as
same is subject to a pert of the same land
Public Notice
West ninety (90) specifically set forth
warranty deed of as that described In
Sheriff's Sale
chains and twentyIn
conveyance easement
to the an
Affidavit
lor
Real Estate
nine (29) links from recorded In Volume
United . States of Transfer and Record
America as contained
Case Number.
.the center of the East 301 at Page 631 of the
of
Real
Estate
04 CV 006
line of 100 A. lot No. Meigs· County Deed in Volume 234 at Page Inherited,'
from
Mariam Compliment
261 , Town one, Range Records:'"As a part of 899 of the Meigs George
L. Wolfe,
eta!
No. 1; thence Nonh .the consideration for
County
Deed deceased, to Edna L.
Plaintiff vs
17 deg. East three (3) this conveyance and · Records, the rear
Foster, dated October
George C. Foster eta!
chains and seventy- in consideration of estate
conveyed
17, 1934 and filed for
Defendants
four (74) links to the incorporation of therein blling desig- record October 17,
Court of Common
North East corner of the same covenants, nated as Tract No 205 · 19~4, and nacordad In
Pleas, Meigs County
said
cemetery; the Grantee, lor her- of the RAcine Locks Deed Volume 138,
Ohio
thence
.Northerly self, heir heirs, sucand Dam Project,
Page 330, ln. the
In pursuance of an
course to a sweet cessors and assigns, being described as records of Meigs :
Order of Sale to me . cherry tree and same · agrees, for the benefit
follows:
· County, Ohio.
directed from ·said ·course to road dis- Grantors, their sucA certain tract of Auditor's. Parcel Nos.
Court In the above tance from North East cessors and assigns,
land situate in the 08-00215.000,
08entitled action, Will
corner of cemetery t and · every other perState of Ohio, Meigs 00216.000,
08expose to sale at pub- road is eight (Q) son who becomes the
County,
Letart 00217.000,
08lic auction on the
chains and seventy- owner of said real
Township, Township 1 00218.000,
08front steps of the seven (77) links; property, or any part
North, Range 12 00219.000, and 08Meigs County Court
thence North 49 . 112 thereof, that only
West, Section 18, 00220.000.
House on Friday,
deg. East two (2) structures
perms~
being a part of The TRACT TWO: Being
April 8, 2005 at 10 chains and twenty- nenlfy affixed to the
Ohio
Company . Lot Number Thirteen
a.m .. of said day; the four links to a rock;
real estate shall be
Purchase, and more (13)
"In
Bum 's
· following described thence South thirteen erected or maintained
particularly bounded Addition In the Village
real estate:
(13) chains and sev- upon said property, It and described as fol- of Letart Falls, Ohio.
enty.-one (71 0) links being the Intent of the . lows:
Foster Panltion:
Auditor's Parcel No.
Exhibit"A"
to a stone lri center Grantors that mobile
Beginning at a point 08-00221 .000
TRACT . ONE: Being l-Ine of t 00 A. Lot No. homes, trailers, and
at the Intersection of Reference
Deed:
situated in the North 261; thence , West other
temporary
existing Ohio State Volume 336, Page
one-hall of 100 Acre eleven (11) chajns structures by 'specifiRoute No. 338 and 471, Meigs County
lot. No. 261 and 100 and seventy (70) links cally prohibited , from
Township Road No. Deed Recorda.
Acre lot No. 262 of to place of beginning. use on the real prop214, said point being T R A C T T H R E E :
the Town One (1) Except 10 feet along erty herein above
a corner common to Situated in the Letart
Range No. Twelve (12) the North line of 100 described.
This
the lands now or for- Township,
Meigs
Lot
No.1 : A. 262, containing 12- covenant · shall run
merly owned by Fred County, Ohio, and
Commencing at the
34/100 Acres.
with the land con- M. Link, Trustee, and beginning at a point.
Nonh East Corner of
Lot No. 3: Also that veyed and shall be
the subJect . owner on the South side of
100 Acre Lot No. 262; portion of land lying binding upon the
having
an the public river road
end
· thence West twenty- East of County Road Grantee, her heirs, approximate coorditeecllng from Laten to
two (22) chains and
leading from Racine successors
and
nate
value
of
Racine, Ohio near the
forty-six (46) links ·to to Letart, which was assigns, until June 1, N333.407 and E 2, tum In the road in
a rock; thence South wilted direct to Mary· 2085."
168, 412; thence, leav- front of the residence
thirteen (13) chains
C. Bentz by Jonas · Lot No. 4: Also the
Ing said lntersecUon of G.L. WOH and runnlng south with the . ·
west side of the Free
Methodist Church to
the south and of said
church; thence east
26 feet to the southeiat corner of said
church. Thence north
with the east side of
said church to the
south line of said
road; thence west
with the south fine of
the public road 28
feel to the place of
beginning, containing
1175 square feet be
the same more or
less. Said described
land being In Range
12, Town No. 2,
Saettons 5·12·18, Lof
100 Number 262,
Ohio
Company's
Purchaoe.
Auditor's Parcel No.
We.'ll run your classified line ad to sell your Boat, Camper, Motorcycle, 4- Wheeler,
Van, Pick-Up Truck, or Automobile for the low price of only $25.00.

Tbis special is only l;'Vailable to private, non-commerCial individuals.
Wt'll nm your classified line ad In 25 eonsecutlvuditlons of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
the Pomeroy Sentinel and the Point Plea.'lllnt Register. Your ad willm~cb over .·
13,500 homes. In addition, your ad will appear in our weekly Tri County Marketplace

'

.

Which is delinred to 17,000 homes. If ~ou sell your vehicle within 25 days, just tall
and we'll cancel your ad, if your vehicle didn't sell, juSt tall prior to the end of 25 days
and we'll extend your ad another ZS days.'
•••You must c:all prior to the end or Initial 25 day period to el&lt;tend.
•••Limited to one, 25 day e"tensiou. (Mnimum of 50 days)
•••classified ad limited to IS words or less.
for each additional word over ·lS words.
•••Typographical corrections must be made within first3 ·days of publla~llon.
•••Only one Item per classlned ad.
n•Pre-payment Is Re&lt;julred and non-refundable.
•••Available only to private, non·oo mme~latlndlvidllllls.

•••:zst

-

~-000

Reference
Deed:
Volume 7, Page 139,
Appraised
at $114,000.00
Torma
ol
Sale:
Cannot be sold lor
less than 2/3rds of
the appraised value.
tO% down on day of
sale, caah or cenlfled
check, balance on
confirmation o( sale.
Ralph e. Truaaell,
Meigs County Sheriff.
Attorney for Plaintiff
Crow &amp; Crow
Attorney at Law

110

w. 2ftd. Pom.oy,

OH 45769
740-992-t059.
Meigs County Official
Recorda
Subject to all laaaeo,
and '
eaaementa
rights-of-way
or
record.
(3)4,11,18, 25

Call us today at 304-675-1333 or 740-992-2155 or 740-446-2342

Due to popular demand the deadline
for this deal has been extended to

APRIL 1st. 2005
'bt 49allipoli5' Jailp lribunr
,4&amp;-448-234~

.

~

~

oint flmant l\rgistrr
~~3S

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The
Village
of
Pomeroy
will
be
accepting
ground
maintenance propooale for Beech Grove
Cemetery. All proposall mull be received
by 12:00 pm on March
26, 2005 In tha Clerk'a
Office, 320 Eaet Main
~meroy,

Street,
Ohio.

------'---·- ------

The

malnte-

ACROSS

Phillip

I
4

Alder

Rocky Hupp Insurance

~® ~ ~@ll' lb®'~~~~

and Financial Selirices

~ t~, ~~~a~~

Nort.b

Buyers of standing timber
Also Land Clearing

Ask for Art .
1-888-321-0311
740-682-6188

U3-1Hl5

• J 8 5
¥AJI0964

41800 SR #7
Tuppers Plains, OH
1~:!:~ 45783
flome • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401K Rollovers"• Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • cancer • Accident

.

•

.r

Q

East

•

.AK

.107632

+ AI0852

•

·•

f5
16

7 3 2

• 76 43
.. 7 6 4 3

9 82

17
19
21
22

South

• Q94
• KQ8 5

740-667-0700 1·888-HUPP234

+K 9

23
26
29

o1o A K 10 5

High and Dry

Storage
Phone
(740) 992-5232
SxiO, IOxiO,
lOx 15, 10x20,
10x30

Janet Jeffers
33795 Hiland Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

- choose a raSI'~ng
tribute to your loved
une'~· ,~ellulry.

\1 Rl-l-.

\10"\l \IE"\ I'
(

0~11'\"\,

39728 SRI43
Pomerov, OH

740-99i-9922
Mon-Sa t IOAM -5PM

llni'•Smd
Bllgllle Repu

Complete small
engine repair
James A Will Jr.

YOUNG'S

• Eleelrlcal &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; GoHers
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patlo.and Porch Deckil

r;

992: 6215 WV 036725
Pomeroy, Ohio

FREE ESTIMATES

Brian Reeve ~
New Home Conslmction, Remodeling,
Renovations. Decks. Garages, Pole
Buildings. Roofs. Siding. Windows &amp; All
Other Residential Needs
Phone: 740-742-3411

740·992·7599

for a free estimate.

• Rcplaccmenl

Windows • Ruonng
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

Take the PAIN

out of PAimNGI
Le: me do ;t for you'

UNII'S PIINnNG

work

740·742·2293

• leave a messa e

OF Tt-lf

Pf(OC~S'S

0 0 ....... '

New' shipment of
100% Cotton
Materiai...Patriotic
&amp; Quilters Prints

'

: THE BORN LOSER
P"

.

.

...

fll( CKU~C.f\ED Hlf.~U~..

Hrs.: Thes-Satll-5

,'

I"

N--10

ll'~

1-{0\o.J OFflC..li'&gt;-L...

Sunday &amp; Monday
Closed

Barn~

Stop &amp; Compare

Athena

Whaley's Auto
r
Parts
St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH

Sun. Closed

50 't'OU 1LL !-lAVE
TO GET OFF!

MYERS PAVING
Henderson, WV

178-2487

handling today. Bti careful not to get
ott on the wrong foot with any deal·
ings you have with co-workers.
friends or associates.
lEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Unless you
are diligent about keeping your prior. itles in order today, you are apt to
achieve only a SmaH portion of what
you set out to do. EstabUsh your priorities and means of doing them .
VIR,G O (Aug.,..23-Sept . 22) ~ !he
outcome of a venture that could exert
an Influence over your future financial
picture may be Up tor grabs today.
Don't be mistaken about taking anything tor granteo.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 -0ct. 23)- Hasty or
harsh means of operating with your
associates tpday could lead to your
undoing. You might accomplish your
purposes. but alienating others in the
process won't be worth it.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 22) - If you
expect co-workers to be cooperative
and share the workload with you
today, you must ftrst leBd the way by
setting the proper example. They
won't gtve what they don't get.

. SUNSHINE CLUB
a-l. L()Oj(' ~fi-1¢-'S
~RG~RE-T

: GARFIELD

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Beto~e becoming too deeply InVOlved

IN THIS SPACE .
FOR $52 PER MONTH

Hours

B.\l l\1 l,l l:\IBER
Scorpion Tractors

PICTIJRf
THIS!!
ProfessiOnal Photogr-aphy
&amp;: \ 'idrogr•ph)
Any Ol'[IISion-Portrait
SeMion~ WeddlnJs.

hmiUe~, Enaa~tements,

Rabit!s

Calllan Carpenter .
7411-74l-Jll6

" Taking

Th~

Sling Out Of

Hard Work!"

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

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

- ···--- - ----------- -.1:_ __

by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created lrom quotations by femous people. past and
Eadllelter in the cipl\er standg lor !V'tOiher

.: GRIZZWELLS
I

'

01-\E' PA'f J. ~ Ul' ~ 'N?I-II-'Eim:&gt; It' T 'M6
Cot-\TEKr 't-Im\ ti\Y \.PI
1\-1 \..\IT

pr~

,Today's clue: Pequals J

"ZAA

RO

SC

(PSWGGII

BWS

HZIDSG)

OIYKYGTYID .

. BY

KWY

SC

AFXYD

TZJFT

HZLY

ZCKYt

ZIY
&amp;FAA

WFL

GSK

DYY

•

ZEZFG ."

AYKKYILZG

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "He had it all .. wit; charm. A little bit ol deviL a
whole lot of angel.' - Bette Midler, on J~hnny Carson
(c)2005 by NEA, Inc. 3- t 1
WOR~

.

UMI

I

DRAMEN

I I' I' I I

I CLATH I
I I' I I"
.~H=E=C~"=B~~
"
. -,':~
s I I

I

I I

Secretary to psyc~iatrlst,

.

~~=~==~~..,
T E CC I H

"The•e·s a man in the waitrng
room who sa¥s he is invisitlle. ~
Tbe psychlatrisl rep~es, "So
te'll him I ·--'· see --- ..

I

Il--,,..:--';lr'l:&gt;:.....-i:l6,-!-!-,.,11~-. 0
e
.

.

.

.

.

.

.

Co:~!~ ·e .. :he, ::-o~c~l.e cvo:e~

by •n ung ll"' In ~ 1"'1'~''"9 words
i10~ sr~p vo. :l be low.

'---'--'---'-__._.._...J yQu ce•·eio:.

•
' "·
' ! !' I'
i . ! II' ISE I I

PR\Ni Ni..'MBEKEO t: i ~~~S !l
!N TH:s: SQ 1JAR!:S

f) UNSCR;.MSLE

.i

lE'TTEiS

FOil ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS ;~ l '• &lt; '
Trauma - Mecca - Round- Violin - LOUD£R

During a very heated town counsel meeting one voice
could be heard 'above the re~t. My friend made this
observation, "People who are wrong usually talk

LOUDER than anyone."

ARLO &amp; JANIS
WOK WHATWE.UOI Al/l!f,
LAWil A!.lD IAA~LW 5TOIIE.!

AllD ~E-11£.'SA CA~DIIJAL ...
J.IJD A C~ICKAD~£ •.,

liability,. not an asset.
C APRICOR N {Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Be
open and frank today with persons
yoU love and trust , but when It comes
to others you know only casually. be a
bit on guard . They could use what you
tell them to Bt your expense.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) Forego any thoughts of trying to

ADVERTISE

Now Available At

mo . ~

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - While
your motivas in your dealings with
others today may be pure, those with
Whom you are involved might not be
, operating on tha same wavalength as
you . Be careful What you ,Bgree to.
GEMINI (May 21-J!Jne 20)- Do not
make any hard commitments with
cotleagues today It you feel dubious

with someone you meet today. take
time to get to know the individual bet ter. This person could turn out to be a

-.h:tcr
111 4/1

Stay

People In general require extra tactful

• Driveways • Tennis Courts
I Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets

CELEBRITY CIPHER

-'llrlhdllf:

about the outcome, regardless df how
much pressure they put on you to do
so. Use your own judgment.
CANCER (June 21.·July 22) -

740.949-2217

7:00AM· 8;00 PM

When you have ace-king-doubleton and
partner leads the suit, Will with th·e ace,
then cash the king. Or, if you are the
leader, start with the king, then cash the
ace. (In each case. you do the reverse of
the plays you would make when having at
least one more card in the suit.) On the
second round, partner should signal suit
. preference, so you will know how to get

beyond your ·s cope of data or your
control. you 'll find yourself in troubte .

l SUPPOSE I SI-IOU~D TELL
YOU TfliS RI6~T HOW ... IN OUR
I-lOUSE, ANIMALS ARE NOT
ALLOWED ON THE COUCH"''

Sat. 8:30-Nonn ·

DODGE

tofO'UO'

. ...

Tl\11.£.·1-\()1-f\E. PI'&gt;-'&lt; l';) 1-{0\
. ::OUrflC\~t-1\TO C.O\JC.Il-.11\Y
LEA-l/(· kOt-1£ U\'ffi5t.5!
1'\'(

sphere of knowledge and Influence
today. If you try to mediate issues

PEANUTS

• Gallipolis
55 Evenings

45771

I"

within the confines of your own

and Arter Mo rkel Paris
Sec Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00 .

Public Notice

29670 Bashan Road
Racine . Oh io

...

43

More recent
PLO blggle,
onea
Make
a speech
45 Auto-body
'woe .
46 Columbus'
home
47 1960s
hairdo
46 Hat featuna
49 Kind
of pickle
50 Clopton or
Savareld
51 After
deductions
54 Commotion
40
42
·
44

the ace and a sPade ruff sink South.

desire to think less of you.
ARIEs' (March 21-April 19) -

7407992-70 13 or 740-992-5553
Restockf'!CJ l.a&amp; ,\ lodel Sa.lwtge

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Hill's Self
Storage

36
36
39
41

S•tun:llly, M•n::h 12, 2005
By Bemlce Bede Oeol
Your prospects for accomplishing
your gOals ih the year ah~ad look
encouraging, provided you have the
necessary patience and endurance It
takes to see things through . Be a. finIsher as well as a starter.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Do
f"!OI swap your high ideals In order to
gain your ends today. Find another
way, because poor behavior will
cause those whose respect you

IMPOm

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

140-992-1611

34

Most pairs spend far more time discussing bidding than defense. But 'since
you defend on half the deals, il should be
'apparent that giving defense some attention would be a good idea.
Would you and your partner combine cor·
rectly to defeat this tour-heart .conlract
after West leads his fourth-highest
spade7
In this auction, North uses a Texas transfer at the tour-level. But if you employ·
translers only at the two-level, then, when
North bids two diamonds, South should
jump to three hearts. This superaccept
shows a maximum with four-card support·
and {probably) a doubleton somewhere.
West guesses well to lead the spade
three. (The club nine is a feasible alter·
native.)
.
Holding only a doubleton, East should
win with the spade ·ace (the abnormal
play), then eash the spade king .
Now the spottight tums to West: He ·m4st
tell partner where his entry lies with a,
suit-preference signal. Since it lies in diamonds. he should play his highest avail·
able spade: the 10. (Note that il East
shifts to a club at trick .three, declarer
takes the rest of the tricks.) A dlafnond to

'

Racine. OH
740-247-2162 or
740-416-3508
14 yrs. Experieflce

Remodeling

32

Pass

~Graph

:BIG NATE

"No Job To Snwlf"

• Garages
• Complete

. Pass

~Astro- .

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

• Kitchens • Baths

• New Ho01es

Pass

him an lead to receive a third-round ruff.

• Room AJd . • Mini

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

~'tiP ELIMINATION.

A LOTTA TH' L't'RICS AIN'T
REL.AVINT TO LI'L TATER, SO
I ..lEST CMANGE 'EM II
~--~ ·

All Your Home
Impro veme nt NeedS
· • Sidi ng • Windows
• Decks • Porc hes
• Carport.-. • G arage!'~

IOxiOxiOxlO

Of

: BARNEY

Cailstructlon

MANlEY'S
SElF STORAGE

The . Village
qf
Middleport Is offering
lor bid one 1994
Whitley Trailer, 12' x
40' long. Hu AC and
heat. Trailer hal been
uud lor class roomo
and are 11' x 19' each.
They have axles but
no Wheels, hoe baH
on the tongue.
Can be seen at tho
Middleport
Elementary School or
calf 992-5711 and aak
for Don.
Bids will be accept·
eel until 4:00 PM on
March 23, 2005 at
Middleport
Village
Hall.
The Village has the
right to rejeCt any &amp;
all bide. Minimum bid:
$!1,000.00. ·,
Sandy
lannarelll,
Mayor
Village of Middleport
(3) 11, 14, 18, 18

YOU··· IT'S
ALL- PA{(T

n

must .Provide their .
own
Insurance.
Cemetery . must be
maintained 2 to 3
limes per month in'
wet periods and 1 to 2
limes per month In
dry
periods.
Contractor will be
peid on completion of
each complete mowlng and with the sells97 Beech Street
faction of Pomeroy
Middleport. OH
Village
council.
Pomeroy
VIllage
council reserves the
right to accept or
992-3194
reject any or all proor
992-6635
posals.
Kathy Hyull
"Middleport's only
Clerkfl"reasurer
Sell-Storage"
iflllage of Pomeroy
(2) 25 (3) 4 11 18
•
• '

East

4t

discussing defense

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
Call Gary Stanley

Pass

Sorth

Spend more time

.fU{(E, ~'L-L GO
OUT wiTtl

Sunset Home
Construction

New Homes • Vinyl

Sid ing • New Garages

i/2:-

IJ

'ence

BUILDERS InC.

Pass

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

V.C. YOUNG Ill

jwill45769 @yahooxom

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Board of Trustees
of Letart Twp. Meigs
Cou~ty. will accept
sealed bids for a 85
Dodge pickup, and 2
(two) ,8 ft. spreader
boxes separated at
the office of the Clerk
at 23238 Hill Rd.,
Racine, Ohio 45771 .
Mark sealed bids for
truck;
spreaders;
until 12:00 noon ·pm
on March 21, 2005.
The trustees reserves
right to accept or
reject any and .all
bids.
(740) 247-3125.
(3) 11, 1l, 14

Bucket Truck

BISSELL

West

I NT

30

Opening lead: • 3

We do It oil except
furnace work

25 Years Local Ex

South

4.

Top • Removal • :rrim
• Stump Grinding

• New Garages

32119 WelshtownRd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone; 740-992-2432
F.-mail

Public Notice

Tree Service

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling

. Owner

Public Notice
nonce
seasons
begins in the last pan
of April through mid
September. of 2005.
This
will include
mowing, weed eating,
etc. with contractor
providi~g their own
equipment and suppile~. Also contractor

Dealer: Suuth
Vulnerable: Both

·JONES'

CARPENTER
SERVICE

8
11
·
12
f3
14

' +·Q J

West

44 Abova,
to poeta •
Wentflrll
45 Cook In
Meta'
embers
46 Get wider
otadlum
To and52 TV band
lnatlll
53 MHchall
aleetrlclty
mansion
Goldie 55 Paaslon
altha
56 .Boot-camp
movies
sentence
Not high
onder
Son
57 Prevent
of Venus
erl'llta
Country
58 Found
addra.
a perch
Lemon
59 In ~ddHion
coolel
60 Chariot race 10 TV lawyer
Drega
locale
- Marshall
Pale
61 What RNa
11 Armed .
Really liked'
dlapenoe
conflict
Bamy,ard
18 Big flops
DOWN
20 Not for
lema e
Wielded
22 Damage
Left
t Cement
23 Cry
Land a hand
component
of disgust
German
' 2 Winged god 24 Debt I8CII'8t'
industrial
3 Make fun of 25 Concept
region
4 Monsleufs 26 Sallied up
Daoktop
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degree
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toll on
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manipulate others to do your. bidding·
today. Even if you have ll tlle belief that
they may be hurt. pulling too many
strings could end up entangling all.

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Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, March u,

2oos:.

ALONG THE RIVER·

Miami (Ohio) grounds Falcons, 85-65.
BY TOM WrrHERS

· Associated Press
CLEVELAND
Seconds after tl]e opening
tip, an assistant sports infermat ion director was sent
· sprawling to the floor,
knocked ·out of his courtside
chair by a flying Bowling
Green player.
.
It was JUSt the first stgn of
elbows. pushes and shoves
to come.
"We knew it was gpiitg to
be a physical game," Miami
of Ohio coach Charlie Coles
saic,l. "We wanted to make
sure we would hang ,in
there."
·
Danny Horace scored a
career-high 28 points, Chet
Mason added 21 and the topseeded Redhawks muscled
their way into the semifinals

72 in the quarterfinals, will
.face defending tournament
champion Western Michigan
in Friday 's second semifinal:
The third-seeded Broncos
,advanced with a 66-60 over.time win against No. 6 seed
Akron.
.
John Rei mold led Bowling
Green with 24 points and:
Jash Alman son · had 16.Reimold was coming off
38-point performance in an
opening-round win over Ball
State.
With the Redhawks leading by 10 points early in th6
second half, Nathan Pea·vy.
scored on a dunk, Horace
nailed a jumper imd then
made two free . throws .
Mason, the league's top
defensive player this season;
showed some of his offen-:
sive prowess .with a driving
layup to make it 49-33.

of
the
Mid-American of the suspense out of this
Conference tournament with quarterfinal matchup early,
an 'ugly 85-65 ';Yin over bolting to a, double-digit
Bowling Green on Thursday lead in the first half and
night.
pushing their advantage to
The MAC's No. 1 seed for 20 in the second half on
the · sixth time overall and Mason's 3-point play with
first time since 1999, the 11 :06 remaining.
Redhawks ( 19-9) had little
At
that
point,
the
trouble handling the eighth- Red hawks were 19-of-31
seeded Falcons (18-11), who (61 percent) from the field .
beat Miami by one point just With i'ts big cushion, Miami
12 days ago.
spent the final 10 . minutes
· It wasn't pretty, though. running time off the clock
The teams were whistled for and forcing the Falcons to
a combined 58 fouls and foul and chuck up 3:pointattempted 66 free throws in ers.
a game that got a little nasty
Miami improved to 7 -I in
at times. Miami went 33-of- tournament play against
· 39 from the free-throw line. Bowling Green.
"It was a very, very physiThe Redhawks will play
cal game," Coles said, "and J No. 4 seed Ohio in the semiknew it would be that way. I finals . The Bobcats beat
don ' t . think any of it was Kent State 62-55 to advance.
dirty."
· No. 7 seed Buffalo, which
The Redhawks took much . beat No. 2 seed Toledo 85-

House of the Week:
A home that is bright and sunny, Dl

..

un

a

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs .c ounties
l'nmt't'O) • ~liddlt-pm·t • (;allipoli' • 1\lan·h 1;1. :wo:;

Ohio\ alit•) l'uh!i,hing Cu.

SPORTS
• Eastern's Cozart named
OVP player of the year.
See Page 81

AP photo

Ohio's Jeremy Fears (3) is chased by Kent State's Scott Cutley
· (1) on a first-half ,fast break in their Mid-American Conference
tournament quarterfinal game Thursday in Cleveland ..

Bobcats claw past
Kent State, 62-55

$t.:;o • \'ol. :~&lt;J. ;\lo. H

Local dentist buys Super 8 motel
..

.

.

.

.

1992, and underwent a significant for several years to one day be able were not able to do what I'll be able
expansion in 1998, when 16 rooms to purchase the motel.
· to do," he said. " I intend to function ·
were added. bring''I've been in contact with them for as a general manager and do what
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
ing the total to 64. some time, andTve been looking at needs to he done to that end' '
Commissioner and local denrist Dr.
Since then, the the pmperty for longer than that," he
Hi' patients, however, need not
David K. Smith announced Friday
South Dakota com- said.
worry about looking for another denthat he has purchased the Super 8 on
pany ihat built it · Recently, Smith said he noticed tist.
Upper . River Road from Kohlerhas decided to shift that the previous owners were not
"I enjoy being a.dentist and I have
Thares of South Dakota.
its business to checking on their bu siness very a lot of patients who are counting on
"We feel this is a good business
assisted
living often. He said a representative was me:· he sai d.
facilities and get co ming lo Gallipolis only once every
that will benefit from local ownerThe 15 employees will remain at
shi'p and involvement," Smith .said.
out of the motel three or four months.
the Super 8; including Sharon Smith
"I have observed for some time this
business.
Even though he said he plans to of Meigs County, who is the m311ager.
At one time , the continue his dentistry practice on
facility with out-of-state owners and · · Dr. David Smith
David Smith said he would use the
how it would benefit from local own. Gallipolis Super 8 Monday through Wednesday, Smith motel to the· benefit of the communiership aod involvement. I look for-. was one of 30 motels owned by said he will take an active role in ty. He said it could be used to host a
ward to this challenge."
Kohler-Thares.
managing lhe motel.
The Gallipolis Sup~r 8 was built in
Smith said that he had been hoping
"The people I purchased it from
Please see Dentist, Al
BY TIM MALONEY

TMALONEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM

Students send care packages to local servicemen Gallia native
to address
chamber
ADDISON - With the help of the ·
PTO, students at Addaville Elementary
reaching out to local servicemen in
banquet
Iraq to show their appreciation.
·
BY IAN McNEMAR

CLEVELAND (AP) No.
5
Leon Williams scored 14
· Kent State
points and added
16
( 2 0- I 2)
rebounds to outmuscle Kent
beat Ohio
. by . 17
State and lead Ohio into the
Mid-American Conference
points just
five days
tournament semifinals with a
62:-55 win on Thursday nig~t. ago, but the Golden Flashes
Williams, the MAC fresh- never found their shooting
man of the year, made the touch and were a dismal 7play of the game for the of-28 (25 percent) .from 3fourth-seeded Bobcats ( 19- point range.
10) when he took a hard foul · Jay Youngblood led Kent
underneath with 8:39 left.
State with
16 points .
He had to be restrained by DeAndre Haynes scored J I.
an official, but hit two free · Kent State's leading scorer
throws to complete a 4-point Jaso·n Edwin didn't score
play after Nate Gerwig was until more than three minutes
called for an intentional foul. into the second half and finIt was part of a 12-0 run that ished with four points.
opened a 49-38 lead with
It was an early tournament
7:01 remaining .
exit for the Golden Flashes ,
Mychal Green scored 13 who' have been in the title
and .Jeremy Fears added 12 game the last four years and
for the Bobcats.
five of the last six. A raucous
. Ohio will pliiY No. 1 seed Kent State crowd that trav- ·
Miami of Ohio in the semifi- elect from' just an hour away
nals. Miami beat Bowling left grumbling about a numGreen 85-65 to advance. No. ber of non-calls by the offi7 seed Buffalo will face cials.
·
defending tournament chamOhio got reven·ge for Its
· pion Western Michigan in 2003 loss to Kent State in the
Friday's second semifinal. ·. semifinals.

IMCNEMAR@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

OBITUARIES
Page A6
• Elder Ray Delbert
Benson
·
• Freemon! 'Pete'
Brandum
• Floyd William Clark
• Sybil V. Freeman
• Alfred Gabrielli
• Beulah N. Hickman
• Annetta Genevi~ve
O'Dell
• Kenneth L. Stanley
• John T. Trotter
• Be1va Wells

,
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BHA"tD Nf;W

l71 Off R01d Sut,IIIIDn, flndtr Flirt
Met•lntt, A.."!iDUm Whtll

• Livestock report.
See PageA3
• Changing concepts of
mowing hay. See Page AS
• Grants available for
wildlife habitat creation.
See Page AS

WEATHER .

Friday, the students,and PTO packed and
mailed nine boxes bound for Sgt. Matt
O' Brien, a Syracuse native and a West
\;'irginia Army Guardsman, in Iraq , who
will distribute the care packages to the other
local servicemen once the packages arrive.
. Since the second week of January, students at Addaville have held bake sales to
raise money for shipping costs and donated the items to put into the care packages.
The nine boxes, weighing a total of 347
pounds, contained magazines, . playing
cards, toiletries, phone cards, bibles, jelly
beans Ul)d peeps, w, share the Ea,ter sc;a~. ·•
son with the soldiers.
The students did all the work and had
· guidance from the ;PTO.
"The kids put a lot of heart into it,." said
Steph(lnie Campbell, PTO member.
"They're proud of what they're doing."
It is the second year for the project at ..
Addaville.
Care packages Of the same sfze were
sent to ·the local servicemen last year.,
...The project seems to work out well,"
Camphell said. "They've been really
excited."
·
Students also brought in photos of their
family members who have served_in the
armed forces or who currently are serving
and put together a "Wall of Honor" to ·
commemorate them.

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

-

Addaville Elementary student.s and PTO
members ready packages bound for local
servicemen in Iraq Friday. Since January,
the school-wide project raised 380
pounds. of supplies, nearly all donated
from the students and their families.

·#tl/calOfftce ·eel(tet4'
'(

LMNG

. Finding Common Ground:
Pomeroy's coffeehouse church offers
alternative worship environment, Cl

'

~

Please see Cha•ber. AI

lan McNemar/photo

_,......

~- 0,860*

r,_

Internal Mt;diehu.·

.

BY BETH SERGENT

AlkMIIlll "

DR\1\D NF;W 2005 (:Ill\\'\'
(;OI.OR\00 I.S CREW (;,\B 4X4

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2005 BUICK

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INDEX'

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PA~ES

© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishlns Co.

W.. ll Flirt Met.llll

MONDAY · SATURDAY 9 am · 8 pm • SUNDAY 1pm · 7pm • 422-075&amp; • TOLL FREE 1-800-82:2-0417

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Tlee- fall(t'(, of Pt"ofe-ut~!fak

. •"

SECI10NS-

J.

A:3
C4
D Section
insert

A4
A6
.A6

AB
B Section
A2

RACINE - This time of year, trying to take a
walk outside is nol for the faint of heart with the
March wind, rain and snow to contend with.
One solution to this problem is a visit to the First
Baptist Church of Racine's Community
Multipurpose Building.
· Inside the building is an 84-foot long basketball
court (87 feet is high school regulation) that is being
used as a walking path from 7:30 to 10:30 a.m .,
Monday through Friday, and 5:30 to 7 p.m. on
. Monday and Thursday.

University's Institute for
Local
Government
AO!lministration and Rural
MIDDLEPORT
- A Development td identify the
local committee believes a shopping district's needs
multi-screen movie cinema, · and to formulate a plan to
a restaun\nt offering deli- revitalize the shopping area. ·
catessen and bakery items, The group has stated its
and more antique and arti- miss ion to be "to develop
san-related ·shops would the business district into an
help fill retail gaps in down- attmctive and unique retail
Pluse sH R•clne, Al
town Middleport and attract area that makes Middleport
shoppers. from surrounding an inviting destination."
Beth S.rt~ent/photo
commumttes.
A market survey is the John lhle of Racine finishes a lap around the bas. The committ~e, ma~e up · next step in identifying ketball. court at the First Baptist Church of Racine's
of elected offictals, busmess needs in 1he area defined as . Community Multipurpose Building which has begun
pw.ners and local ·residents,
·
'
staying . open for community members who wish to ·
ts working with Ohio
Plene SH Retell, IU
use the facility 's basketball court as a walking path .
BY BRIAN

REED

BREED®MYDAILYSE~TINEL .CO M

BKJ\ND NI!.W 2005 CIIEVY
t\V:\1.,-\N(;UE Z11 &lt;&amp;X4

• Taxes, Tags, TI~e Fees exira. Rebale induded In sole prke of new nhidellsled where apphtable.
*"On approved credit. On stlerted models. Nor respale lor typographkol en01s.
Prltes giiOd Mardi I Olh through Monh 131ft.

•

I

Around Town
Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Region
Sports
Weather

$22,93
2005 CIII&lt;.'VY

BSERGEN'l@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Dotallo on Page A2

4

Bllt\ND NEW

Middleport committee Radne embraces indoor walking
identifying retail needs ·

$10110 liMlC

'

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County native Dr. Nancy
Lusk Zimpher. now 'serving
as the . 25th pre~ident of the
University of Cincinnati, will
be · the honored guest and
speaker at the 68th annual
Gallia County Chamber of .
Commerce Banquet on
March 24 at the
of
Grande.
The banquet will~
in
the
Student
Ce .n ter
Annex on
the URG
campus at 7
p.m.
Zimpher
blazed . an
Dr. Nancy Lusk am a z i n_g
Zlmpher
path.
111
higher education at Ohio
State University.. her alma
mater. where she served as
the first female dean of the
College of Ed ucation and ·
executive deari of the
Professional Colleges.
Then. for five years. . she
was chancellor · at the
University of Wisconsin,
before coming to the
Uoiversity of Cincinnati In ·
October 2003 as UC 's fust

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