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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March 29,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2005

Hot wings, shopping
spree: Soldiers
seek favorites on first
dayback,A6

Funk's spunk makes him Players champion DouG FERGUSON
Associated Press

Bv

PONTE VEDRA BEACH,
Fla. - I! took live days for
The Pla'yers Championship to
resemble a major. Fred Funk
had io wait .even longer to
show he's a big-time player.
A former college golf coach
and .career grinder, -Funk delivered clutch shots over the
water and the only par pun that
mattered, a 5-footer on the
·fmal hole that gave him a oneshot victory Monday in the
toughest final round the TPC at
Sawgrass.has ever had.
·
"! can't believe it." Funk
said, choking back tears. '"I
didn't fathom this happening."
He dosed with a !-under 71,
then had to wait unti I Luke
Donald missed a 20-foot birdie
pun from just. off the ·green
before ce lebratmg the seventh
- .and by far the biggest victory of his career.
. Funk, 48, became the oldest
winner uf The Players
Championship with a final
round that aged him even
more, with conditions that
were tougher than most majors
~cause of 35 mph wind.
He had three-putt bogeys on
consecutive holes to lose a

two-shot lead. He got it back
with a bold fairway metal from
234 yards that narrowly
cleared the water on the par-5
16th and set up a two-putt
birdie. He found land on the
island-green 17th, a victoty in
itself, only to three-putt for
another bogey.
And after a 'bold tee shot
over the water and a bad shot
into the bunker on the 18th. he
saved par with a 5-foot putt
that ultimately spared this
wacky week from stretching
into a sixth day.
·
"Yes!" Funk screamed out as
the putt disappeared, giving a
quick thru st of his fist and
slamming his cap · to the
ground.
Funk finished at 9-under 279
and eamed $1.44 million from
the ri chest purse on the PGA
Tour, nearly three times as
much as his previous largest
_
-· ·
paycheck.
Without that putt. it could
have been a four-way playoff
with no daylight remainmg.
Scott Verplank, who earlier
Monday ·watched best friend
Bob Tway take a 12 on the par3 17th, watched in disbelief as
his 10-foot par putt caught the
left lip on the 18th. He shot 70,
one shot behind.
Donald, the 54-hole leader,

recovered from a 40 on the
back nine and had a chance to
force a playoff until his putt up
the slope and down toward the
hole stayed slightly to the left.
He closed with a 76.
·
Funk became third player to
win before a home crowd at
The Players Championship,
joining Mark McCumber in
1988 and David Duval in 1999,
He was followed around by a
group of friends called "Funk's
Punks," and he kept them on
the edge of their seats.
·
"I never made anything easy
·on my self," Funk said.
Nothing has come easy for a
guy who once coached at the
University of Maryland until
deciding to give the PGA Tour
a try. He had won six times on
tour, but always against weaker fields - two victories were
opposite-field events; two others are no longer on the PGA
Tour schedule.
He was criticized last year
for skipping the Briti sh Opef!
and .instead playing the B.C.
Open, with hopes of ean1ing
Ryder Cup points.
But he showed plenty of
spunk at Sawgrass by beating
the strongest and deepest field
in golf, playing 32 holes
Monday on a course that was
the hardest it has ever be.en.

The wind was the strongest
since the tournament moved in
1982 from Sawgrass Country
Club across the street and next
to the ocean. It nearly blew
tlagsti cks out of the hol e,
swept sand from the .bunker
and produced the highest finalround scori ng on the Stadium
Course.
There were 16 rounds in the
80s, more than two dozen balls
in the water on the island-green
17th and never a du II moment ·
during a marathon' Monday.
With so much attention on
the Big Four at the still1 of the
toumament. none finished in
the top 10.
Vijay Singh was within four
shots of the lead until he threeputted from 8 feet for a double
bogey on No. 15. He closed
· with a 72 and tled for 12th,
enough to retain 'his No. I
ranking by finishing ahead of
Tiger Woods.
' Woods tied for 53rd by
shooting a 75. Phil Mickelson
dropped out of contention with
two balls into the water on the
17th in morning, and another
one in the aftemoon. He shot
75 and tied for 40th.
AP pho!Q
Emie Els started his day with
a double bogey and a triple Fred Funk celebrates after sinking a putt on the 18th hole dur' ·
bogey, but closed with a 69 to ing the final round of the Players Championship Monday in
Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.·
tie for 17th.

ToM WITHERS
Associated Press

WINTER HAVEN , Fla.The Indians' bullpen blew
leads, half a season atrd probably any chance Cleveland
had of winning the AL
Central last year.
Say this for them, though.
before the All-Star break ,
Cleveland's relievers were·
consistent consistently
bad.
"It was tough on the guys,"
said closer Bob Wickman ,
who missed the first three
months while recovering
from an elbow injury. "We ' re
not goi·ng to let that happen
again."
They ' d better not.
I! would_be difficult for any
relief staff to replicate the
Indians' atrocious tirst half

Big Ten
from Page 81
wide."
And the Big Ten is watch·
ing to make sure . ·it does.
Delany said his office' has
monitored the national

Cavs
from Page 81
'

and Lee Nailon each scored
15 and Chris Andersen II ,
Leading 53-42 at halftime,
the Homets hit all II of their
free throws in the third quarter

Tribe
from Page 81

last season. By mid-July. the
bullpen had wasted 21 saves
in 36 tries. posted ~ majorleague high 5.60 ERA and
sabotaged the club's·ciimb to
contention,
At one point, a member of
the reeling bullpen printed out
copies of the ' pen 's statistical
sins and taped them up in the
lockers of every pitcher. If his
intent was to motivate, it didn't work.
·
"You don't want to hear all
that," said David Riske. who
had a 12.27 ERA in eight outings as Cleveland 's closer
before sliding back into the
comfort of his usual set-up
role. "It's a pride thing,"
Although
the bullpen
rebounded with a solid second
half in ' 04, it still finished
with 28 blown saves and a
4.90 ERA-- the AL's third
highest.
broadcasts on CBS . and
ESPN. When he 's seen
. 's omething unfair, he 's
called the networks to point
it out.
Delany said he's only
done it a " handful" of
times. But even a handful is
too many, especially with
all the attention paid to the ·

Dukes. North Carolinas
and Connecticuts.
"I have a lot of respect
for basketball in the East
Coast," said Delany, an
East Coast native. " I just
don 't think there 's two levels: A level in the East and
a level everywhere else."

and pulled further away with
acrobatic driving layups and a
breakaway dunk by Smith.
Notes: Hornets reserve
guard had to leave the game
brietly after he was hit in the
face and started bleeding
from hi s lower, lip .
Cleveland is 5-8 this month.
... Cleveland has beaten New

Orleans in five straight meetings .... James' missed 3 with
I :52 left in the fourth period
was Cleveland's first missed
field goal of the ·quarter. ..
Tray lor came in averaging
4.9 point s but scored I 0
points in hi_s first IO ·minutes
off the bench against his former team.

seven runs and nine hits in
four . innings. In the fifth,
Jones homered off Arthur
Rhodes.

'·'

" I told him to save a couple
of those," said Atlanta pitcher
Mike Hampton, who allowed
seven hits in five innings.
''Every game he seems to hi t
one or two."
The Braves didn ' t always
· keep detailed spring training
stats. but Jones ' 10 homers
are the team's most in training camp since 1990. Jones'
previous high in a . spri ng
traini'ng was seven in 2000.
"That's the year I hit .300,".
said Jones. who batted .261
and had 91 RBis last season
but was di sappointed with his
results. "My main goal this
year was to be more consistent because last year I was-

comeback from three injuryprone seasons, was a late
scratch from the starting lineup with a tight left hamstring.
· The Indians kept Gonzalez
on their · roster over top
prospect Grady Sizemore on
the hope that the two-time
AL MVP can stay healthy.
But already he's already
missed a game.
"He's lioton the shelf. It's
day-to-day thing," Indians
manager ,Eric Wedge said.
"We· re going to be carefu I
with him. This is a guy who
hasn' t played a lot in the last
. two or three years."
,
Jones hit an RBI double in
the first inning before con- n't."
Raul Mondesi and Marcus
necting for a solo homer in
Giles
hit two-run homers and ·
the third off Cleveland starter .
Cliff Lee. who was tagged for Pete Orr added a solo shot for

Blasts
from Page 81
Mauer finished 1-for-3
with a walk, an RBI and a
run in six i,nnings before
being replaced at catcher by
Mike Redmond. Mauer is
scheduled to start Tuesday
niPht in ""'"'ola a~ainst the

The Indians are expecting
"With this bullpen, we have
better things after rebuilding enough guys who can pick up
their bullpen during the off. the slack. Somebody isn ' t
season by adding .veteran left- going to make this team who
handers Scott Sauerbeck is one hell of a pitcher."
(recovering from · shoulder
That was Brian Tallet, who
surgery in '04) and Arthur was optioned on Monday to
Rhodes (with Oakland). Only Triple-A Buffalo despite posttwo relievers Rafael ing a 0.87 ERA in six appearBetancourt and Riske ances and outpitching every
remain from the anything-but- reliever. Tallet was battling
magnificent s.even relievers for one of two linal spots in
who opened on Cleveland 's · the bullpen that ultimately
25-man roster a year ago.
went to Matt Miller (8.38
The bullpen is new. It ERA) and Betancourt (.308
remains to be seen if it's opponents batting average).
improved.·
Wedge gave the two right"People say this bullpen handers the nod over Tallet. a
isn' t the strength of this team, lefty, based on their experibut I have confidence this ence and reliability last seayear," said Wickman , whore- son. Before he began to tire
signed for one year as a free
agent. "I know that if I got
hurt, someone could step jn as
the closer and they ' re not
going to !!liss a beat.

the Braves, who have homered 36 times this spring:
Ben Broussard had three
hits and two RBis for
Cleveland.
Notes: Indian s ace cc.
Sabathia pitched two innings
in a minor league game,
all_owing one hit- a, home
run. Sabathia is on the 15-day.
disabled list with strained
oblique muscle and won ' t
start on opening day. As long
as he doesn' t have any setbacks, Sabathia will make his
season debut on April 17
against Minnesota. 'T II just
look at the 17th as my open- .
ing day," he said. "It's against
the Twins, and you know I
.hate them. And they know it.
I' ll be fired up." ... Mondesi
also doubled and singled in
hi s first game· back after
missing a week with a hamstring pulL ... The Indians
·
had won five straight.

a

Reds, his first back-to-back tomorrow night, and we 'II go
from there."
starts of the spring.
Noles: Gardenhire said RH
The club still is being caureliever
Grant Balfour has
tious with Mauer, who had
arthroscopic surgery on his been cleared by doctors to
left knee and missed all but start hi s throwing program.
35 games in his rookie sea- Balfour was placed on th~
son. He had swelling ami 15-day disabled list Saturday
soreness in the knee the first wit h a strained forearm ....
week of March but there have Before the game, Donald
been no setbacks since.
Fe hr. head of the players '.
"I felt good. No problenis.:t union, met with the Twins for '
Mauer said. ''I'm ready to go almost two hours.

from overuse, Betancourt was
Cleveland's only dependable
reliever, appearing in 68
games and serving a variety
of roles.
Miller earned his manager's
confidence in 57 appearances
last season, emerging as a
dependable set-up guy after
spending nearly a decade
bouncing around the minor
leagues looking for steady
work.
"I' ve been in spring training
a number of .times when I
pitched really well and it didn't matter," Miller said. 'Then
I came here feeling like spring
training was · the only thing
that mattered. I was a little
down about the way I pitched.

But I feel like I've got a bunch
of zeros (shutout innings)
ahead of me."
Wedge is counting on his .
relievers to keep things
together thi s season. When
the bullpen door swings open,
he doesn't want the tloodgates to follow.
''The experience- we have,
the complementary arms we.
have down there now, it's just
night and day from last year,''
he said. "But they 've still got
10 go out and do 'it on the
field. They've still got to go
out there and perform and
feed off each other. But it's.
definitely a stronger situa"
tion ."

.

) 11

l l ' \ l ...,•\1 1 1 -; ..j,

Bcu1ebc.#-ll

"\, ,,

t) )

\\1]1"\]....,ll\',

. • Tressel aiming for
national title.-See Page 81

tl)

HHnnnd.nh"'t'lltlnel~ ·~· m

..2ltt))

Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

plan for an Integrated
Gasification Combined Cycle
coal-burning power plant.
GREAT · BEND - If wliich the company would
American Electric Power like to build on a 1.200-acre
proceeds with plans to con- site it owns near the
struct a $1 billion power Ravenswood Bridge. AEP
plant at the Great Bend site, expects the PUCO to render a
further development in the decision on its plan to recovarea will likely depend on . er costs of construction later
infrastructure ·improvements this year.
there,
Meigs
County
L9cal officials hope the
Economic
Development
Director Michael Gulliver construction of the plant expected to begin in . 2007
said.
AEP has asked the Public and continue for three years
Utilities C01nmission of Ohio - will , create a "domino
to approve_ a cost-recovery
Please see Gulliver. A5

Submitted photo

This aerial photograph taken by Economic Development Di rector Mic hael Gulliver on March 17
shows the 1.200 acres where AEP hopes to locate a $1 billion power plant. The Ravenswood
Bridge is seen in the background.

Southern school boardvotes against .d ual routing
OBnuARIES

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSER~ENT@MYD~ILYSENTINEL,COM

Page AS
• Lois Diles Bush, 85

INSIDE
• For Red Lake
chairman, shooting
becomes more personaL
SeePageA2
.• National TRIO Day to
be observed at ou.
See .Page A3
• Teachers hear from
STRS Board candidate.
See Page A3
• Local briefs.
SeePage AS
• For the record.
See Page AS
• Meigs County transfers
posted. See Page AS
The Southern Local School Board meeting was preceded by a
presentation on dual ·bus routing and public comments.
Several of the district's bus drivers attended the meeting to
voice their concerns about the policy which' would result in the
elimination of two ,routes. The school .board later voted against
dual bus routing but the ultimate' authority rests with the
Financial Planning Supervision Commission which oversees
Southern's deficit reducing plans. The commission meets
today at 10:30 a.m. at Southern High SchooL

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

This special is only available to private, non-commercial individuals.

_***You must call prior to the end of initial25 day period to extend.
***Limited to one, 2S d!ly extension. {Maximum or 50 days)
***Classified ad limited to 15 words or less.
***25!! for each additional word over 15 words.
***Typographical corrections· must be made within first 3 days of publication. ·
•••Only one Item per classified ad.
***Pre-payment Is Required and non-refundable.
***Available only to ·private, non-commercial individuals.

\l\R.l11

Gulliver: Development in Great Bend depends on infrastructure .

SPORTS

WEAmER

We'H run your classified line ad in 25 consecutive editions of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
the Pomeroy Sentinel and the Po.int Pleasant Register. Your ad will reach over
13,500 homes. In addition, your ad will appear in our weeki' Tri County Marketplace
which is delivered to 17,000 homes. Ir you sell your vehicle within.25 days, just call
and we'll cancel your ad, if your vehicle didn't sell, just atll prior to the end of 25 dliys
and we'll extend your ad another 25 days.

.

Miami shuts out
Rio Grande, Bt

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Indians feel relieved by offseason bullpen acquisitions
BY

Ria

'

RACINE - In a four-to. one vote, the Southern Local
Board of Education voted
against a policy of oual bus
routing during Monday
night's meeting.
Preceding the vote was a
presentation by Southern
Superintencte'nt Bob Grueser
on dual bus routing followed
by public comments.
Grueser's presentation consisted of projected figures that
showed the school district
':"Ould ~ ave $88,000 by eliminating two bus routes but this
elimination · of bvs routes
might result in additional
costs that totaled $96, I08.
Due to students being delivered in shifts, these additional
costs included hiring of part·
time staff, additional fuel
costs, bus driver ·· salary
increases, 1!\.Por and equipment for food services and the
extended operation of library
and computer services.
·According to Grueser's figures. · these additional costs
·would send the district over
$11,000 in the hole if dual bus
routing was implemented .
However, those numbers
~ere just projections.
"Until we start doing it we
won't really know what it
really will cost," Grueser told
the audience; several of

-Please see 'Southern. A5

Helping seniors maintain their in.dependence
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX '
2 SI!C110NS- 12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Dear A,bby

A3

Editorials

A4
As
As

Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

B Section
A2

© aoos Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Beth Ser&amp;ent/ photo
Betty Spencer, Opal Tyree, Geraldine Cleland and Carol Hall sit
at their table known as "the club " at the Meigs Senior Center.
All four ladies are capable of getting out on their own unlike
homebound seniors who receive help from programs through
the center like PASSPORT which may face .some cutbacks.

Hoeftlch/photo
Kelly Grueser, veterinarian, and Margie Lawson , dentist, are
new members of the advisory board for the Meigs County
Tuberculos is Clinic. They are pictured here with other members, left to right. seated, Melanie Weese. Judy Pate and Kathy
Cumings, and standing, Gayann Ctay, !:dna Wood , Grueser, ·
Tom Reed. Chuck Riffle, and Lawson.
'
, C~arlene

.

.

Thberculosis remains
controlled·in Meigs County
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY - No active
cases of tuberculosi.s were
found in Meigs County in
2004, according to a report
from Nancy B'roderick. R.N.
of the Meigs County
Tuberculosis Clinic,
Broderick said that during
the year 2.998 skin tests were
done with four positive
results. In addition to giving

tests at the office in the Meigs
Multipurpose Building, there
were a total of 4 1 outside and
evening clinics.
Two of those patients with·
positi ve results were placed
on preventive medication.
Four chest X-ray clinics were
held with a total of I08 chest
X-rays being don.e. The
nurse said thai early detection
throu gh skin tests "keeps the

Please see Meigs, A5

AEP5 donationfor education to bmqi( Meigs
POMEROY
Meig s
County is one of several
Southern Ohio counties
which will benefit froiu the
American Electric Power '&gt;
(AEP) gram of $25.000 to the
Foundation for Appalachian

Ohio (FAO).
The gram will support the
Foundation's efforts to begin
to promote its goals of
greater access opport unities
Please see Donation, AS

POMEROY
Maintaining a level of independence can become dimcolt for anyone, but especially for the elderly, many of
whom see nursing homes as a
last resort.
"Nothing against nursing
homes b.ut there's no place
like home.'' Meigs Senior
Center visitor Betty Spencer
said about maintaining her
independence and own home .
"My husband has been· gone·
since 1960 and this (main·
taining her independence) is
just a way of life."
Although Spencer keeps Jane Hart. AEP's vice president of external affairs. presents a
her own house. some seniors check to Marianne Camp_beiL chair of the board or trustees for
the Foundation for Appalachian Ohio. and Ron Strickmaker.
· Please see Seniors, AS
vice-chairman of the board of trustees.

ibe ,tloint l\1leasant l\egi~ter
~4-675·1339" '
' llaM

~~r ~al!ipoli~ iailp ~ribunr . ~

740·44&amp;-2342
'

I

____

....__

.

�PageA2

NATION • WORLD .
For Red Lake chairman, shooting becomes more personal

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 30, 2005

few moment s later. The campaign. A picture on
ASSOCIATED PR.ESS WRITER
hearing WaS closed t!) Jourdain's
Web
site
reporters. Loui s Jourdain describe s Louis as "my
ST. PAUL. Minn .
did not respond to ques- pride and joy."
Hours after the school tions afterw ard. and hi~
Jourdain. a youthful-looks hootin~ that devastated his father politely declined to ing man with muscular arms
reservatiOn, Red Lake Tnbal . comment beyond hi s state- and a long black po,nytail , .
Chamnan Floyd "Buck" ment. .court official s would has been the public face of
Jourdaiti said the .Indian not comment on the pro- the Red Lake reservation .
!;tbe was m the . m1dst of ceeding becau se it was a since the shootings. ·
the darkest days m the h1 s- juventle matter.
"Our community is devasThe 40-year-o\d Jourdain tated by this event ," an
tory of our people."
A week later. it grew . took office about eioht anguished-looking Jourdain
darker s till for Jourdain . tllOnths ago, becoming the said the day after thl! attack.
when ht s teenage son was Red
Lake
Band
of "We have never seen anyarrested in the shootings Chippewa's youngest-ever thing like this in the history
that left l 0 people dead.
leader. During the cam- of our tribe. and without
Authonues refused to say paign"s final days. he jogged doubt these are the darkest
what role Louts Jourdmn 80 miles through all the di s- days in the history of our
may have played in the trict s in the reservation - a people. We are in utter disattack . . but a government place beset by poverty, a\co- belief and shock."
official who was briefed on holism. suicide and despair
Red Lake High principal
the inve stigation and spoke - and talked openly about Chris Dunshee said Louis
on condition of anonyri1ity hi s 20 years of sobriety.
had not been a discipline
said prosecutors . were c9nJourdain grew up on the problem . ."He. was a pretty
templatmg chargtng the \6- reservation in a tarpaper good student. to tell you the
year-old with conspiracy to shack. with an outhouse and truth."' Dunshee said.
commit murder. The official an outdoor .woodpile to feed
He also praised the tribal
said authorities began inves- th e · furnace in northern leader as a parent. "I just
tigating Jourdain after deter- Minnesota's brutal winters. feel sorry for Buck," he
mining that he and the gun- His childhood wa s filled said . "If it could happen to
man , who were schoolmates. with days of chopping his son. it cou ld happen· to
had exchanged e-ri1ails.
wood. hauling water and anybody because Buck is a
The arrest came as a sur- reading as many book s .as
prise · not on ly because of he ·cou ld get his hands on. good parent." .
the prominence I of the sus"As a 5th grader I read
pect's father, but because everything in site,'" Jourdain
authorities had initially sa id wrote on his. Weh site. "'I
the rampage appeared tq be cou ld spew a ton of useless
the work ot smgle gunman information at kids that thev
- a \6-year-old loner who wou ld get sick of rather
took his own life during the quickly."
killing spree.
·
Jourdain graduated from
The tribal chairman issued Red Lake High. the same
a statement Tuesday 111 · schoo l where live students,
which he called his son "a a security guard, and a
good boy with a good heart, teacher were shot to death
who never harmed anyone by 16-year-old Jeff Weise
. in his entire life.""
on March 2 L
"Last week, I spoke on
Jourdain and hi s future
behalf of the Red Lake wife, Alberta, moved to
Nation as its l~ader and a Duluth, where .he attended
. sadde ned member of, this college and started to work
community. Today. I speak in drug and alcohol recovas a . father," he said. "I ery programs. On his Web ·
know my son, and he is· site, Jourdain writes of
incapable .of committing becoming more interested in
such an act. ... I strongly worki ng with young people
believe my son will be and helping to bridge the
generation gap between 'the
cleared of these charges."
Louis · Jourdain, hand- tribe's elders and its youth.
The Jourdains returned to
cuffed and wearing a black
hooded sweat shirt, was the Red Lake Reservation in ·
escorted into a federa l the 1990s to raise their
courtroom in Duluth on three sons - Louis, teenag.
Tuesday. and his father er Phillip. and Andrew, who
elll~red the courtroom ·a was 3 during last year 's

Community Calendar
Outreach Mini"ries and a and their in.teractions.
donation will be taken to go
toward building a church in
Saturday, April2
PORTLAND
The Malawi ,' Africa. Singing will
Friday, April I
Lebanon Township Trustees be Earthen Vessels. Together
for
Chri
st,
and
Proclaim.
REEDSVILLE
- Customer
will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the
Appreciation Day at Reedsville
township building.
'
Post Office. Refreshments.
and

Other events

Floyd Jourdain Jr. , chairman
.of the Red Lake Band of
Chippewa addresses the
medii! Tuesday, March 22 in
Red Lake, Minn., one day .
after the fatal shootings at
Red Lake High School.
Jourdain 's teenage son
Louis , i6 , was arrested
Sunday in an ongoing investi·
gat'ion into a potentially wider
plot. The office of U.S.
Attorney Tom Heffe lfinger,
left , has decli ned to say any
mo re a bout the investigation .
Floyd Jou rdain , Jr. in ·a pre·
pared statement Tuesday,
said: "I know my son and he
is incapable of committing
such an act. "

ACI- 41.15
AEP- 32.83
Akzo- 43.31
Ashland Inc. - 64.16
AT&amp;T -18.47
BLI-11.60
Bob Evans .,- 24.05
BorgWarner - 48.26
Champion- 4.06
Charming Shops 7.90
City Holding - 29.28 .
Col- 46.89
DG -21.68
DuPont - 50.29
Federal Mogul - .34
USB- 28.32
Gannett- 79.30
General Electric 35.53
GKNLY- 4.93
Harley Davidson 57.32
JPM -34.58

Kroger - 15.70
Ltd.- 23.63
NSC- 36.38
Oak Hill Financ.lal 33.43
OVB-33
BBT- 38.66
Peoples - 25.83
Pepsico - 52.29
Premier - 11.05
Rockwell- 57.70 .
Rocky Boots - 26.09
RD Shell - 59.27
SBC- 23.33
Wai-Mart __.: 50.77
Wendy's- 38.86
Worthington - 18.96
Daily stock reports are
the 4 ·p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
day's transactions, pro- .
vided by Smith Partners
at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

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NewsCha
Wednesday, March 30
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)

Temperatures will rise to 69
with today's low of 45 occurring around 6:00am. Skies
will be mostly sunny with 5
MPH winds from the southeast turning from the south as
the morning progresses.
Afternoon ( 1-6 p.m.) .

Temperatures will stay near
73 with today"s hi gh of 75.
occurring around 4:00pm.
Skies will be sunny with 5 to
I 0 MPH winds from the
south .
Evenilig (7 p.m.-Midnight)

Temperatures will hold
steady around 64. Skies will '
range from clear to mostly
clear with 5 to \0 MPH winds
from the south . .
Overnigltf(l-6 a.m.) .

by the end of this overnight.
Temperatures will linger at
61. . Winds will be 5 to I 0
MPH from the south turning
from the southwest as the
overnight progresses.
Thursday, March 31
Morning (7 a.m.-Noo11)

Li ght rain is forecasted .
The rain fall should end
around 9:00am with total
accumulations for this event
0.22
inches:
near
Temperatures will climb from
60 to 66 by late this morning.
Skies will be sunny to cloudy
with 5 MPH winds from the
southwes! turning from the
west as the morning progresses.
Ajtemoo11 ( 1-6 p.m.)

Temperatures will ri se from
67 earl y this afternoon to 69
by 3:00pm !hen drop down to
64 late afternooo. Skies will
be sunny . with 5 MPH winds

It should be a cloud y
overnight. We are predicting
light rain. The rainfall should
begin around 5:00am. The
r:-tin ,.. .,,.... lrl f'"P~:u-- h n I ? in ~ hP ' fmm
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Friday, April I
POMEROY
- Meigs
County PERI Chapter 74,
noon luncheon at Meigs
County Senior Center with
program following : Charles
Ritlle discussing medications

Thursday, March 30
MIDDEPORT Freda
Edwards will observe her92nd
birthday on Thursday, March
30. Cards may be sent to her at
677 South Fourth Ave.,
Middleport, Ohio '45760.

agerial decisions. He also srioke
briefly on the health care system. He distributed information
?n his qualifications for the job
and told why he was running.
Storyteller Donna Wilson told
of how she became interested in
storytelling six years ago and
then told several stories including "Old Dry Frye·· a story
about an old preacher man.
. During the business meeting it
was announced that the
Southeast ORTA spring .area
conference is to be held at the
Ohio University inn on April 13;
Candidates for· the STRS boarct
will be speaking and there will
be infonnative workshops.

'

.

DEAR ABBY: My husband, a middle-aged minister,
can rarely perform in the bedroom
witho ut
weari ng
women's Iingerie. I have put
_up with it because he seems to
- need it.
· Lately he has begun wearing a bra around the house
, every day. He tries to hide it
by wearing a heavy shirt or
coat, but I can feel it when I
. hug him before leaving ·for
: work. I suspect he's even
· worn it to church. What
would the parishioners think
if they knew their preacher
was delivering his sermo n
wh ile wearing a bra?
It's starting to affect our
, marriage. He rarely speaks to
- me lately. and when he does,
· it's usually in monosyllables.
I know he's not gay. Until
now, our marriage has been a
happy one.
I know many men have this
: problem. Maybe it shouldn't
~ bother me so ·much, hut it
does. I don 't know who to
talk to. Everybody else takes
the ir problems to their minister. but my husband IS one. If
I go to his superiors, I'm
. afraid I' II get him into trou : ble, which I don't want to do.
Why do men wear women's
clothes? Is it wrong? I appreciate ariy insight you can give
me. - NEEDS TO KNOW
IN THE SOUTHWEST
DEAR NEEDS: Men wear
women's clothes for a variety
: of reasons. For some it's a
· sexual feti sh: others do it
because they say it calms
them and relieves stress. It
isn' t "wrong," but it is different. Some wives go along
with it and help their hus: bands to crdss-dress. Others
: ha~e a difficult time adjusting
to tt.
This is not something that
shou ld be discussed with your
husband 's superiors. More
important than talking to anybody right now is for you to
: Jearn all you can about trans: ve s ti~m and ' cross-dressing.
An excellent · place to start
would be to contact The
Society for the Second Self,
Tri-Ess National , P.O. Box

Dear
Abby

980638, Houston. TX 770980638. Write to the society or
visit its Web site: http://triess.org.
DEAR ABBY: 1 am 14 and
hope you can help me. My .
parents have been married
for, I think, 14 years - · but
they ha ve been together as 11
couple for 15.
During the last four years
Ithey hav~ do,ne ts ~rgue .. It
has gotten so bad I IMve h&lt;td
to call thl! police to take my
dad away. The main reason
they fight is because of my
dad's drinking. The last time
they got into a tight, Dad got
in trouble because of what he
did. Now he has 'to go to
counse ling about the alcohol.
Hopefully. that wt\1 help, but
they stt ll argue about small
th\ng~~~ed help becau se my,
grades have been dropping.
and I think one of .the reason s
·may be the stuff that's going
on with my parents. I don't
know how to tell my mom
that 's the problem, because

a!

·
·

I' m afraid she' ll think I'm
making excuses. Please help
me . - .DEEPLY FRUSTRATED, CORTLAND, N.Y.
DEAR
FRUSTRATED:
Explain your problem to a
trusted teacher. counselor or
administrator at school. An
edLrCator can not only ex.plain
to your parents what's causing your problem. but also see
that you get the help you need
10 improve your grades. ,fn
addition to coaching, you will
need a quiet. conflict-free
zone i1~ whic.h to study. If no
place ts ava tlable at school,
the home of a friend or a publie library niight be more conducive to concentration.
Sadly, many you ng people
are affected by their parents'
drinking. Support is available
f
·
rom AJateen, whtch . has
groups every~ here. (Thetr literature ts avatlable m 30 Janguages.) Vtstt the Web site at
www.al-anon.alatee n.org.
Please don't wait. You will
find that you are not alone.
known ~s Jeanne Phillips,
and . was fou~ded by. ?er
mo~her, Paulme Phillips.
Write
Dear
Abby
at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los A11geles, CA'
90069.

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Ayann u Jord an. O.U
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this fuel cannot be harnessed Joe Robinson. the deveklper,
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engine so that 22% fewer · engine life by cleaning out
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drive the same distance.. it to increase gas mileage
After a five yea r study, or to raise octane."
the government concluded: For ftuther infonnation call:
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Tuesday and Thursdays
April 12 to June 16
·
Time: TWo Sessions
9:00 to 10:00 a.m. or
·3:00 to 4:00 pm
Where: Meigs Wellness Center
who: Open to ages 40 +
$35.00 for 1o week session and
.Cost:
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700 East Main Street

gather with the president
and first ladv to ce lebrate
the opportunities afforded by
TRIO programs nationwide .
Arnold
Mitchem.
President of the Council for
Opportunity in Education,
states tlwt. "In ·many communities
throughout
The
TRIO
America.
Programs are the on ly programs that help low-income
Americans enter ' college.
graduate, and move on to
fulLy
m
participate
America 's economic and
social life." TRIO programs
enable Americans, regardless
of economic circumstance.
race. or ethnic background.
to successfull y enter college.
graduate, and attend graduate school.
TRIO services include:
assistance in preparing for
and choosing a coll ege or

Defer Taxes~

Exercise Class
Powell's
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ATHENS - Since 1965,
over
I0.5
million
Americans, most of them
from low-'income and working fami lies. · have benefited
from the services of th'e
U.S.
Department
. of
Education TRIO programs.
At Ohio Univer~ity atone,
approximately 5,000 students have benefited ' from
TRIO program s. To celebrate the educational ·access
provided
by
Ohio
University's three TRIO pro- .
grams, Upward Bound, the
College Adj ustment Program·
(CAP) and the Ronald E.
McNair Scholars Program.
President and Mrs. Roderick
J. McDavis wi ll host a
· National TRIO Day reception in their . home on
Saturday. April 9.
Students, staff and supporters of these programs will

Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also

RET IREr.lENT MONEY

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Members were reminded to·
keep track of their volunteer
hours. · ·
It was noted that the April
meeting will have a service project. Paper product~ and personal care items are to be brought
for Serenity house women's
shelter. Eye glasses, hearing aids
and costume jewelry are being
collected and can be brought to
any meeting.
Gay Perrin ·presided at the
· meeting which was preceded by
a luncheon. Gtrds were signed
for Nadine Goebel, Barbara
Tripp and Helen Maag. Next
meeting will be April 21 at
Trinity Church. · ·

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Saturday, April2
MIDDLEPORT -. Aspecial
service will be held at 7 p.m.
Saturday at the Hobson·
Chri stian Fellowship Church
at Hobson. The service will be
a part of World Miss ion

:Wife
c(:zn
't understand her husband's love of lingerie
.
.

·'-'

304-675-4340

Birthdays

Teachers hear from STRS Board candidate

AP Photo

PLEASANT
.VA~LJ:"Y.
HOSPITAL

Local Stocks

Church events

Clubs
organizations

POMEROY-· Dennis Leone
of Chillicothe. candidate for the
State Teachers Retirement
System (STRS ), spoke at a
recent meeting of the Meigs
County Retired Teachers at
Trinity Church.
Leone, a retiree. was the
recipient of the "First
Amendment Award in 2004"
from the Ohio Society of
Professional Joumalists for
uncovering in 2003 the inappro. priate spending practices at the
· STRS.
· . He talked of the past problems
of the group and pledge il. elected to monitor the internal operations and ·insist on proper man-

Wednesday, March 30, 2005

National TRIO Day to be observed at OU

Public meetings

BY PATRICK CONDON

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

.

~alltpohs iailr ~rluune

446·2342
The Daily Sentinel · ~oint ~leasant l&amp;egister
675·1333
992·2156

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street ·• Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.coln
·

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make 110 law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging ,the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday. March 30. the 89th day of2005. There
are 276 days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History: On March 30, 1981, President
Reagan was shot and seriously injured outside a Washington, '
D.C .. hotel by John W. Hinckley Jr. Also wounded were
White Hou se press secretary James ·Brady, a Secret Service
. agent and a District of Columbia police ofticer.
On this date: In 1822. Florida became a United. States territory.
In 1842. Dr. Crawford W. Long of Jefferson, Ga .. tirst used
ether as an anesthetic during a minor operation.
In 1867, U.S. Secretary of State William H. Seward reached
agreement with Russia to purchase the territory of Alaska for
$7.2 million, a deal roundly ridiculed as "Seward's Folly."
· In IS70, the 15th amendment to the Constitution, giving
black ·men the right to vote. was declared in effect.
In 1870, Texas was readmitted to the Union.
In 1945. the Soviet Union i.nvaded Austria during World
War II.
In 1955. "On the Waterfront" won the Academy Award for
best picture of 1954. while its star, Marlon Branda won best
, actor; in an upset, Grace Kelly won best actress . for "The
. Country Girl ," be&lt;lting ouUudy Garland for "A Star Is Born." , .
In 1979, Airey Neave, a leading member of the British parliament, was killed by a bomb planted by the Irish National
· Liberation Army.
· In 1986. actor James Cagney died at hi s farm in
Stanfordville, NY, at age 86.
In 2002, the Queen Mother Elizabeth of England died in her
sleep at Royal Lodge, Windsor, outside London; she was I 0 I
years old.
Ten years ago: Tens of thousands of Rwandail refugees ,
fleeing violence .in BuruJidi , began a two-day trek to sanctuary in Tanzania. Pope John Paul II issued the II th encyclical
ofhis papacy in which he condemned abortion and euthanac
sia as crimes that no human laws could legitimize:
Five years ago: In the mid,st of the 2000 presidential cam. paign. Vice President AI Gore broke with the Clinton administration, saying he supported legislation to allow 6-year-old'
Elian Gonzalez to remain in the country while the courts
resolved his custody case. Ru ssia's Alexei Yagudin won his
third title in the World Figure Skating Championships.
One year ago: In a reversal, President Bush agreed to let
National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice testify publicly
and under oath before an independent panel investigating the
Sept. II terrorist attacks. British-born broadcaster · Alistair ·
Cooke tlied in New York at age 95.
Today's Birthdays : Singer Frankie Laine is 92. Actor
Richard Dysart is 76. Actor John Astin is 75. Game show host
Peter Marshall is 75. Actor-director Warren Beatty is 68. Rock
musician Graeme Edge (The Moody Blues) is 64. Rock musician Eric Clapton is .60. Actor -Robbie Coltrane is 55. Rap
artist MC Hammer is 42. Singer Tracy Chapman is 41, Actor
Jan Ziering is 41, Singer Celine Dian is 37. Actor' Mark
Consuelos is 35. Singer Norah Jones is 26.
Thought for Today: "God is th e sum of all possibilities."Isaac Bashevis Singer, Poli sh-born American Nobel Prize- 1
winning a uthor ( 1904-1991 ).

You don ' t have to be a
women's soccer fan to
remember when Brandi
Chastain was everywhere,
in her · sports bra. It was
1999 and she had just .led
Kathryn
the U.S. women· s soccer .
Lopez
team to their World Cup
victory, stripping on the
field in celebration. Soon
we were told she couldn't
have done any of it without · exactly - even if 60 perTitle IX .
··
·ceni of the female .students
While mo$t of the ESPN don '.t want to play sports.
viewers may have stopped · The fallout has hit men 's
paying attention somewhere sports hard. As of a 2001
after the bra dose-up and General Accounting Office
the tirst mention of educai · audit, in the years since
tion law,. Title IX is widely . 1972, .. over 170 men 's
considered a "triumph" wrestling programs, RO
among many women ath- · men's tennis teams, 70
letes and wom·e n's-sports men' s gymnastics teams,
advocates. It's the stuff of and 45 men's track teams
laudatory Lifetime specials. have been eliminated. At
As Welch Suggs, an editor at the same time, women's
"The Chronicle of Higher sports programs increased
Education" describes it in nine fold.
For women 's-sports advohis new book "A Place on
the
Team," · (Princeton cates
like
National
University Press, 2005) the Women~s Law Center, Title
1972 law "requires schools IX has just entered an early
and colleges not to discrimi- midlife crisis. On March 18,
nate on the basis of sex." · the
Department
of
But the reality of the law has · Education issued a "clarifibeen grim for male student cation" on Title IX enforc.e athletes caught in its net.
ment, which will allow
As Jessica Gavora tells in· schools to usc interest surher 2002 book "Tilting. the veys to gauge the sports stuPlaying Field" (Encounter dents want. The surveys
Press), the mom,and-apple- will help schools determine
pie type law crafted after who's interested in what,
the Civil Rights Act "to end and will provide' easy evidiscrimination
against dence 'when schools are
women"· has devolved into · challenged -their first
a reality that is "causing instinct won't be to cut
discrimination . against teams for fear of lawsuits.
men." Under a later-added
Marcia Greenberger of
"proportionality" mandate, the National Women's Law
if a school's student popu- Center, however, calls the
lation is 60 percent women .riew guidelines "an under-.
and 40 percent men, the hmided way to weaken Title
sports programs have to IX and make it easy for
reflect that breakdown schools that aren't interest-

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

Reader Services

cusPs 213-960)
· Ohio Valley Pul!llshlng Co.

Correction Polley ·

Our main concer.n in all stories iS to be Published ev8ry afternoon, Monday
accura\e. If you know of a:n error in a through Friday, 111 Court Street,
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992 ~ Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage

2156

· Our main number Is .
(740) 992-2156.
Department extensions are:'
'•
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'•.

News
Edbor: Charlene Hoeflich , Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed , EXt. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent. Ext. t 3

Advertising
Outside SaliMI: Dave Hwrls, Ext. 15·

Out•lde S81H: Brenc:Ja Davis, Ext 16
C~oJCin: .:.

•

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paid at Pomeroy. •
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Ohio Newspaper Association .

Poetmuter: Send addiess corrections
to The Da ily Sentinel. 111 Court Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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Dally ..... ,, , ,,,,;,,,,,50'
Senior Citizen rates .
One month .... . . . . ... .'8. 70
One year ·............. o96.70
~IS shoUd remit W1 advance &lt;he!
to lt1e Dolly S&lt;!n";lee. No subscription by

Circulation

mail ·permitted In areas where home
carrier service is availabte.

District Mgr.: Jason Pa«erson . Ext. 17 .

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12

E-mail:
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Web:
www. mydail~sentinel.com

13

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lnolde Meiga County
'32.26

w-s .:. ·.

. ..

26 Weeks .
. . .. '64.20
52 Weeks . ......... , .'127.11

Outside Meigs Cou~ty
13 Weeks .. .. ......... '53.55
26 Weeks . .
. .. ' 1 07.1o
52 Weeks . . .

. .'21 4.21

2005

·

POMEROY · -Meigs
County Recorder Kay Htll
reported the following real
estate
transfers:
MIDDLEPORT - Lois Diles Bush, 85, Columbus, died on
Ztrkle to Christina
Nellie
Monday, March 28, 2005, from complications due to lung
Lrnn Coglietti, deed, Vt!Iage
cancer.
o Middleport.
She was a resident of Columbus for 43 years, where she was
HKGC, LLC, to Amazing
a longttme member of the Ftrst Comm~nity Church and a vol- Grace Community Church,
unteer at Riverside Methodist Hospital.
deed, Qrange.
Preceded in death by her husband, Fred C. Bush, and a
Patrick
Lawson,
Julie
daughter Susan, she was the da~ghter of Lisle and Lucille Lawson, to Byron Bolin,
,
Bowman Diles of Middlepor!.
Shiela Bolin, deed, Columbia.
Raymond L. Milard, Lisa C.
,Family· includes a sister, Marjorie Mitchell, brothers
Milard,
to Joshua R. Milard,
William (Mary) Diles and David (Kay) Diles, all of Athens.
deed,
Scipio.
Another sister•. Phyllis Jividen, lives in Lynchburg, Ya. ·
Raymond L. Milard, Lisa C.
Mrs. Bush JS survtved by three daughters: Sharon Bush
M
ilard, Olive Milard, to Tonia ·
.Harvey of Irvine, Calif.; Judy Donaldson (Michael ) of Gulf
Breeze, Fla.; and Martha Graf (William) of Terrace Park, K. Radcliffe, deed, Scipio.
Otha Ellsworth Millard to
Ohio. She also leaves live grandchildren, Tracey' Derek, Rarmond L. Millard, affidavit
Daniel Derek. Lindsay Graf, Ryan Harvey, and Lauren Graf exunguishing life estate.
Seamon, as well as many loving nieces and nephews.
· · Gary Jordan to Alfred H.
A memorial servi ce will be held on· Friday, April I , 2005, at Lyons, Jr., deed, Village of
I p.m. at The Plains United Methodist Church, 3 North Plains Racine.
,
Road, The Plains. lnterincnt will be at Riverview Cemetery in
Kathy J. Lambert to Jimmie
Hobbs, deed, Salem.
Middleport. at the convenience of the family.
·
Patrick J. Mullen to Tuppers
Donations may be made to the American Cancer Society,
P.O. Box 102454, Atlanta, Ga. 30368-2454; or Alzheimer's Plains-Chester Water District,
Association, · 225 North Michigan Avenue, Suite 1700,' right of way, Olive.
Marvin L. Cooper to Taylor
Chicago, Ill. 60601-7633 . · .
.
Offnick, Austin Brooke
Nicole
On-1 ine condolences may be sent to www.tisherfuneralOffnick,
deed, Sutton.
home s.com.
Dallas R. Janey, Dorothy B.
Janey, to Paul J. Janey,
Kimberly Barrett, deed.
Susan Elaine Wells, Harold
Wells, Jr., to Rex H. Briggs,
Mary E. Nelson, deed,
Rutland.
Vickie L. Tooker, Steven R. ·
Tooker. to Vickie L. Tooker.
MIDDLEPORT - . Middleport Volunteer Fire Department Steven R. Tooker, Tooker
will hold a fish fry from II a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday at the
firehouse.

l
•

Local Briefs

Plan fish fry

GuUiver

effect'~

Highway Patrol
flORTLAND. - A two-vehicle collision on County Road 31 .
(Bald' Knob-Stiversville) on Sunday sent a local man to the
hospital with ·injuries, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Hi ghway Patrol reported. ·
.
Malvin R. Bailey. 47. 52597 Ohio 248,. Long Bottom, was
transported to Jackson General HospitaL Ripley, W.Va., by
Meigs EMS fullowing the 7:55 p.m. accodent, the ; patrol
reported.
Troopers said a pickup truck driven by Bradley A. Crouch,
18, 413B Elm St., Racine, was westbound, 10 feet west of
Lebanon Township Road 30 (Durst Ridge) and traveling in the
eastbound lane when he attempted to slow for a curve.
Crouch was unable to navigate the curve, slid through it in
the eastbound lane and collided .with Bailey's eastbound pickup, the report said.
Crouch's vehicle had disabling damage, and severe damage was reported to Bailey 's pickup. Crouch was cited for
unsafe speed.
·

evaluation. " All of this,"
said Broderick, " is paid for
through levy funds - skin
tests; chest X-rays, the med- .
ications, laboratory te sts,
·
and physician consu 1ta-

'

tions.''
·
The las t time a case of

&lt;

'
'

. ·-· .....

skin test comes back positive, they can be put on
medication .
" TB is spread from
breathing in droplets in the
air from a person with
active tuberculosis. These

,
clinic on top" of what tS happening ami catches probable
cases in plenty of time to germs can be released into
avert a real problem.
the air by coughing and
She explained . that pre- snee.z ing. The usual site of
ventive· medic~tion can the disease is the lungs.
keep the disease dormant Symptoms .of ·active puland is especially effective monary TB include fatigue,
. with the elderly and those weight loss , night swe~ts,
with compromised immune fever. cough with or without
h ·
blood, and a cough producsystems. S pecial emp aSIS, ing phlegm. Tuberculosis
she said, needs to be on the can also affect other sites in
elderly, particularly those
who have a history of fami- the body," said Broderick.
· h h d
·
However, she pointed out
ly member w 0 a active that "tuberculosis can be
tuberculosis.
" Having a positive skin cured and controlled with
test does not mean a person effort. and resources. Any of
has tuberculosis, only that the se symptoms should not
You should
they have been exposed to be ignored.
the tuberculo sis germ," said contact your private physithe clinic nurse. "What the cian or the TB clinic," she
positive skin test result added.
She noted that skin testing
. does mean is that the indi. vidual needs to have a·chest is available at the TB Clinic,
X-ray. If the X-ray is nega- Monday,
Tuesday,
tive, then the individual Wednesday and Friday from
may be put on preventive · 8 a.m. to noon and I to 4
medication."
p.m. No testing is dohe on
The medication is taken Thursdays but the office is
for nine months, then anoth- open. Tests must be check
er chest X-ray is taken for 48 to 72 hours after being

One wrong turn deserves another
I am never going to catch
" Where are , you?" he
Even when they get the .
the !light. My plane is leavasked.
signs right, the local highing in 20 minutes and I'm
" You tell me," I said, "I way departments seem to
still on the freeway 20 miles
just passed a Home Depot have unique ways of placing
out of town. Even if there's
and an Olive Garden. Wait · them. In the town I was vis- .
no traffic, even if I get off at
Jim
a minute, there's a Pizza iting, the words "Next
the right exit, even if I make
Mullen
Hut and a Wendy 's coming Right" seem to mean
every light, I will still have ·
up . . Does that ring a bell " Previous Right." "Next
• - - - • . with
to return the rental car,
you? Am I getting Exit" means "Previous Exit"
check my luggage, get
close?" Apparently even and "Left Lane Ends" means
through security and then
these distinctive landmarks "Have a Pleasant Near Death
run through the terminal but can't tind the hom. I couldn't tell him which · Experience."
I ike a madman. What's the angrily double-swish the direction I was going or
" Men Working" pretty
point? I' II hyperventilate if windshield wipers at him. what town I was in.
much meant what it does
I keep thi s up. I will just That ought to shut him up.
I did make it, but it everywhere, ·
· "Long,
slow down and catch the
After a few wrong turns L seems as if there must be Random 'Delays for No
next flight and admit that I finally ended up on the an easier way.
Visible Reason." "Detour" .
have been defeated once eight-Jane highway that · I don 't expect road signs means "Abandon All Hope
again by road ~i gns.
would whisk me out of town to say things like " Bob's Ye Who Enter Here."
I should have known this to a vacation paradise an House" or "Stephanie's .
Now, on the reverse trip I
·would happen . . When · I hour away. I called my host · Wedding Reception" or knew I would have the same
arrived the rental car people on the cell phone and told " That Little Place You . trouble ali' over again. So I
gave. me a local map and a him I was headed west as Liked So Much the Last left an hour early. I failed to
card with directions on how fast as I could and I should Time You Were Here" but make one . ·correct turn ,
to get out of the airport.
be there in an hour.
then
'' Exit
9,
West failed to take one . correct
"At the airport exit, 'go
"How long have you been Moletown" really· doesn't exit , I even over-shot the
north two blocks to Exit 6." going west?"
help much eit her if you're. entrance to the airport and
"Oh, about half an hour."
At. the airport exit there is
not from West Moletown . ha4 to make a U-turn on a
no sign that says "North" · "Good, that's not too bad. Can't there be smile sort of six- lane highway.
or "Exit 6 ." A quick glance Now take the next exit and happy medium? After all ,
· But I did make the flight.
at the map . My ' final desti- get .o.ft.,., You should be going sign s ·are for people who The flight crew
was
nation is not on it. It is get- ·.r.~f:III!I'Ve' re ph the east side don't know where they 're delayed. Seems they got
tiAg dark. I am in a ' car l. of to\'i11. We'll hold dinner going. not for people who stuck in traffic .
have never driven before"'il\ for you."
do. Going 65 mph on a
(Jim Mullen "' the author
town I have never lieen in
What is' wrong with my bu'y freeway is not the · of "ft ·Takes a Village Idiot:
before. What could possi- · mental map? How did I get place to be looking at a Complicating the Simple
so ·twisted around? A half map. It 's not where I want Life" and " Baby :i First
bly go wrong?
The guy behind me starts hour l~ter my host called to to have to make spli t-sec- Tattoo." You can ceach him
to honk . I try to honk. back find out how I was doing.
ond decisions .
at jim_mullell@myway.com.)

from Page A1

For the Record

from Page ·A1

,.,,

MEIGS · COUNTY TRANSFERS POSTED

Lois Diles Bush

thing we've accomplished
in 30 years."
This argument was nothing new, in 1.995, when now
Speaker of the House Dennis
Hastert (a former · highsc hool wrestling coach)
merely convened a congressional hearing looking at
Title IX, Republicans were
vilitied. Never again would
Congress go there.
But U.S. Secretary fer
Education
Margaret
Spellings has jumped irito
this hoop of controversy by
becoming the public face for
these guiLielines. Expect her
to take a lot of heat from
women 's groups who feel
especially betrayed with a
sista doing the administration 's
reform
work.
Meanwhile, · Spellings is a
new heroine to folks like
· Jonathan Plante, who in 2001
had his gymnastics team at
Michigan State cut. And to
Beverly Brandon , whose
son,
Barrett,
had
his
University of Nebraska swim
team cut that same year.
The new interest surveys . ·
are a light shone on the
often-confusing controversy
ove'r Title IX, many reformers believe. Jessica Gavora
predicts that feminists "are
afraid of what interest surveys will show," because
they know the surveys will
show that women are not
underserved in college athleticism. Surveys may let the
secret out: Brandi doesn't
need to hurl Barrett to win a
World Cup.
(Kathryn Lopez is the editor of National Review
Online
(www.nationalre. l'iew.cum). Shf can be contacted · at klope:@national'
review.com.)

active tuberculosis was
diagnosed in Me igs County
was in 2000.
In the eve nt a case of
active
tuberculosis
is
detected, there is a strict
proced ure ·to see .that it is
not spread. " It is recommended that the pati_ent stay
in one ·r oom of the home for
two to four weeks of diagnosis while on medication
or to a time when they are
not considered contagious,"
said Broderick. If they have
to be around other people,
they are a s ked to wear
mask s. keep tissues in one
cont~i ner, and practice good
hand -washing. The other
family m·e mbers are encouraged to be tested so if the

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

I

Meigs

.

The Daily Sentinel

ed in I'roviding equal
opportunity for women to
skirt the law." But. in truth,
as Eric ·Pearson, executive .
director of the College
Sports Council. a coalition
o.f coac he s, parents and ath·
letes, points out, Title · IX
has just gotten a little of the
wisdom that often comes
with age. Pearson calls the
new guidelines, · while not
perfect, "a viable, common sense alternative tO the gender quota that has wreaked
havoc on college athletics."
For many advocates of
Tit.le IX reform, the new
guidelines came as a surprise, if not a sllock. They've
beei1
burned
before.
President George W. Bush
set up a blue-ribbon commission during .his first term
to review the law and how it
is enforced. While the ISmember commission leaned·
more to the side of bean
counte~s than reformers, the
members
recommended
changes, which were, for tpe
most part, ignored by the
administration in 2003,
when the issue was last was
broached.
· At the time, some argued
that (he administration tiad
sold out to feminists who
wanted a federally mandated, unfair crutch to remain .
in
place.
Meanwhile,
women''s groups decried
the president anyway for
minimally diluting what,
they sa id, women want and
need . Donna Lopiano, the
head of the Women's Sport
Founoation, · . falsely
claimed that the. commission was "stacked" against
women and argued that the
White House was "basically trying to undo every-

Wednesday, March 30,2005

I'M SORRY
~T CONGRESS HAS
RULED THAT YOU'RE
M&gt;T YET DEAD. .

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

~

Wednesday, March 30,

Tweaking Title IX

The Daily Sentinel

··

PageA4

gi~~~- clinic staff consists of

Dr. Joseph Freeman, DO,
physician; Broderick; Carol
Little, deputy director; and
Jill Blake, clerk.
There are 13 members on

h

d ·

b

d

· t

t e a VISory oar appom •
ed by the Meigs .c ounty

in terms of new business and industry in the area.
Gulliver said a host of busi. nesses will be needed in the'
immediate area of the plant's
construction,
· including
restaurants, lodging facilities
and convenience stores .
" Do we expect more de velopment in the area if AEP

Living Trust, deed.
J.J. Detweiler Enterprises to
Sara Cullurns to Terry Rex Acreage Investments, Inc.,
Cullums, Don Brent Cullums, deed, Scipio.
Ginger A. Six, deed, Chester.
Robert · Charles Holliday,
Brian J. McClintock to Vera Jane Holliday, to
Valerie L. McClintock, deed, Matthew
A.
Metheney,
Salisbury.
Heather M. Metheney, deed,
William A. Grim, Ann L. Village of Rutland.
Grim, to Ronald Gary Davis,
Leslie Kidder to Randy
Lady Dawn Davis, deed, Kidder, deed, Orange. ·
Village of Pomeroy.
Beverly A. Scott to Bryan C.
Tiffany D. Shaffer, Donald Baur, Nancy L. Bauer, deed.
W. Shaffer, to Paul ·F. Columbia.
Amberger,
Dorothy
D.
Martha B. Hoover to
Amberger, deed, Sutton.
Thomas A. Hawley, Karen E.
James R. Blain, Rowena G. Hawley, deed, Bedford.
Blain, to Tuppers PlainsNanette Kali s to Theresa
Chester Water District, right of Carter, deed, Columbia.
way, Letart.
Alpha Butcher to Robert A.
· Jerry Ward Welker, Kim · ·McMurray, deed, Scipio.
Scott A. Williams, Bonnie
Arlene Welker, to TP-CWD.'
Williams, to Rodney E.
right of way, Bedford.
Jeffrey 0. Peckham, Vicky Reeves, Kathleen Reeves,
K. Peckham, to Vicky K. Baet, deed, Salisbury.
cjeed, Sutton.
Geneva Clark to Dixie I.
Gene Jeffers to Robert Stanley, deed, Sutton.
Lowell Jeffers, Marco Reed
J.P. Morgan Cha~e Bank to
Jeffers, Reed Lowell Jeffers, L. Ron G. Scheer. Dorothy ' A.
·
R. Jeffers, Reed Jeffers, afti- Scheer, deed, Sutton.
davit, Columbia/Scipio.
· Bruner Land Co., Inc., to
Family Resort, Inc., Royal Jack L. McCormick, Betty L.
Oak Resort Club. Inc., McCormick, deed, Orange.
Heartland Family Resorts, to
John L. Bechtle. Ruby L.
Lazy T Royal Chapparal, deed, . Bechtle, Darrell L. Bechtle,
Chester/Sutton.
Sarah A. KlontZ, Russell
Melissa D. Johnson to . Klontz, deed, Village of
Kendell
Ch1,1rch.
Rachel Middleport.
Church, deed.
Angela D. Long to Robert
J.J. Detweiler Enterprises to Payne, Stephanie Payne, deed,
Acreage, ,Investments, · Inc., Salisbury/Village of Pomer?Y·
deed, SctpiO.
.
.
Lysle Edward Meyer, Kan B.
Rhonda Sue Cole to Gregory Meyer, Heather Meyer; L. Erik
Cole, deed, Olive.
Meyer, Timothy E. Meyer, to
builds there? Absolutely,"
~ulliver said Tuesday. "Do
we need additi,onal infrastructure to accomplish that?
Again, absolutely."
Gulliver said rural water
service is in place in the
northern Lebanon Township
area near the AEP site, which
consists primarily of farm
land, but development will
require sewer service, natural
gas access and three-phase
electric service.
"If construction of the AEP

Richard A. White, Lorie A.
Buckley, deed, Salisbury. . .
,Scott Hennington, Btlhe
Jean
Hennington, Henry
Edward Rife , Michael T.
Evans, Alvin Troy Rogers,
deed, Salem.
William E. Rife, Christine G.
Rife, Billie J. Hennington,
Scott Hennington, to Michael
T. Evans, Alvin Troy Rogers,
deed, Salem.
Betty L Farra to Kimelea
HilL deeil, Village of Racine.
Countrytyme ALC. LL&lt;:;. to
Anthony Land Co.. Ltd.. to
James B. Goldcamp, Kimberly
Goldcamp. deed, Letart.
Melissa Keffer to Robin D.
Toctan. deed, Scipio.
Franklin Real Estate Co. to
Columbus Southern Power.
easement, Salem.
Mason County E Corp. to
Columbus Southern Power.
easement, Salisbury.
Kathy Bush. Kenna Bush, to
Columbus Southern Power.
easement. Bedford.
Howard a.nd Lawson, Ltd. to
Paul
Bosscher, Elisabeth
Bosscher, deed. Columhia.
Patrick
Lawson.
Julie
Lawson, to Paul Bosscher.
Elisabeth Bosscher, easement.
Columbia.
Riding Masters. Inc. to
Ronald W Meredith. Faith F.
Meredith, deed, Bedford.
Michael J. Anderson. Susan
M. Baer. to City Ice &amp; Fuel
Co.:
deed.
Village
of
Middleport.
·

plant materializes, work there area and investing in busiwill require a whole host of nesses there ," Gulliver said.
businesses to support the conAEP estimates that as many ·
struction," Gulliver said. as 2,000 workers wi II be on
'There will also be a need for the si te during the construcmobile home sites and rental tion period. The plant, when
homes for tho~ working on the ceompleted, will employ
constructiQn phase of the plant. around 150.
"There will certainly be a
The AEP property is locatpotential for local entrepre- ·ed in the . Southern Local
neurs and local ofticials, the School District, but Gulliver
Community Improvement said the Eastern Local and
Corporation and developers Meigs Local districts also
to make a joint effort in stand to benetit from develacquiring real estate in the . opment if the plant is built.

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

Seniors
from PageA1
need a little help. Some meet
the requirements for t.he
PASSPORT Home Care
Program, which is meant to
provide long-term care serCommissioners. They are
Tom Reed .• Pomeroy village;
Talmee · Andrew,
Rutland village; Gayann
Clay, Chester and Orange
townships : Melanie Weese,
Racine
village;
Kathy
Cumings, Sutton , Letart and
Lebanon townships ; Chuck
Riffle, Salisbury, Salem ,
and Rutland townships ;
Edna Wood, Chester, Olive,
and Orange Tpwnships;
James Acree, Salisbury,
Salem and Rutland townships:
Jane
Walton,
·Pomeroy village,
Judy
Pape, Syracuse village;
Carol Tannehill, Middleport
village ,
Helen
Swartz ,
Bedford, · Scipio,
and
Columbia townships; and
Lois Steffeit, Sutton, Letart
and Lebanon townships.
In Ohio last year there
were 219 cases cif active
tuberculosis reported. In the
United States there were
II, I 78 reported cases of
tuberculosis. In the world
among infectious diseases
tuberculosis remains· the·
second-leading killer of
adults with more than 2 million related deaths each
year.
· Last
Thursday
was
observed
as
World
Tuberculosis Day. It served
as a reminder of the severity
of the disease and the toll it
still . take s on lives. It was a ·
time set aside to raise
awareness about the international health threat from
tuberculosis .

vices fro the elderly to allow ·
them the necessary degree of
independence to stay in their
own homes.
In his $51.3 billion, twoyear state budget proposal,
Gov. Bob Taft ts trymg to .
redistribute funds from longterm care facilities like nursing homes to in-home health
and personal care programs,
like PASSPORT
Despite Taft's efforts to
save money in Ohio, federal
cutbacks may result in a .
groWing waiting list for
PASSPORT, according to
Meigs Senior Center Director
of Homecare Men Zeiner.
"We might be able to keep
the PASSPORT consumers
we h'ave now but no new consunlers may be able to come
to us ," Zeiner said, explain-

ing that if the federal cuts are
approved the senior center
will only be able to sign people up three months out of a
year for PASSPORt as
opposed to daily. '

Southern

Donation

The
Foundation
for
Appalachian Ohio is committed to improving the social
and economic well being of
the region's residents. This
includes helping all children
of Appalachia .gain access·to
the education they need · to
build the lives that sorne
never knew were possible.
Leslie Lilly, president and
CEO of the Foundation for
Appalachian Ohio said,
"AEP is an. important company in Appalachia Ohio.
AEP not only provides
employment and regionwide economic opportuni- ·
ties, but they're also active
comt)lunity partners, investing with corporate philantl'\ropy."
For more information or to
establish a fund, contact the
Foundation . for Appalachian
Ohio at (740) 753-1111 or
visit the Foundation's website

www.appalachianohio.org. It
is
headquartered
on
Nelsonville's historic Public
Square in the heart of
Appalachian Ohio ..

from PageA1
to education for the region's
children and families.
AEP has a long history of
educational investment in
area communities, recently
reporting its mini-grants program awards grants to fund
academic project to improve
student achievement. AEP
has a special interest In science, math technology, electrical safety and the balanced
study of energy and the environment.
Marianne Campbell, board
chairwoman
of
the
Foundation for Appalachian
Ohio said, "We are extremely
grateful to have a prestigious
organization like American
Electric Power recognize the
value of the Foundation for
Appalachian Ohio by giving
their generous financial SUP.·
port. AEP's involvement Wlll
help the Foundation to provide access ·tO opportumties
through education initiatives."

,...--------r-.,....;_----:--"!""-:o:::---"!"":::--::::---:::--:-..,

which were bus drivers.
Public comments included
PASSPORT pays for home
dehvered meals, provtdes concerns of wear and tear on
homemaker and personal care buses and how to dismiss both
workers from three to seven the elementary and high school
days a week, provides for students during · inclement
minor home moditication and weather with fewer buses.
transportation to name a few.
Despite the board defeat"PASSPORT is one of the ing dual bus routing. t)le
most important programs we final word rests with the
have," Zeiner said.
Financial Planning and
A client must be referred to Supervi sion
Commission
which
oversees
Southern· s
the PASSPORT pro~ram by
their physician and then has a deticit reducing plans.
The next commission meetchoice of service providers such
as the Meigs County Senior ing is today at 10:30 a.m. at
Southern High School.
Center or Holzer Hospital.

196 E. Second 992-3381 P~meroy

1 :20, 3:20, 7:20 &amp; 9:20

'

We'reBack!

I

~Middleport Flower Shop

If you owe Uncle. Sam some more tax dollarS
this year, you· might want to consider buying
a tax deferred IRA.
You can still deposit up to $3,500.00 per
person, until 4-15-05, and deduct it from your
gross income. Thus reducing your tax
burden. Insurance IRA's are paying interest
at the rate of approximately 3'/, percent.

I)()WNING o-IUDS
MULLEN MUSSER INS~ANCE

from PageA1

Has moved back
to its original~'"""~"-1'"'1
(Beside Dairy Queen)

Same OWners...
Same Great Service!
784 North 2nd Avenue

•
;;-; . l

....-;~-~
y

.Teleflora

'

Middleport, OH
740-992-3533

-

- _.,...••

•

�PageA6

OHIO
Hot wings, shopping spree: Soldiers seek favorites on ftrst ,day back

The Daily Sentinel

Bv JAMES HANNAH
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

After 13 months of heat.
sand and danger in Iraq, Mmy
Sgt. Melanie Barnhart had one
thing she wanted to do first
when she caine home to Ohio.
Sitting · a table at Buffalo
Wild Wings with her husband
and 9-year-old daughter.
Barnhan took .her time eating
barbecue hot wings she had
craved for more than a year.
Soldiers head straight for
their favorite ··things on their
first day back after dreaming
of the comforts of home in
Iraq when they tire of cramped
quarters, outdoor bathrooms
and cafeteria-style food.
Barnhart. 33. only ordered
the kids meal - four wings
and some smiley-face French
fries - because her appetite
had shrunk from eating less of
the repetitive meat loaf, chicken and pork meals served in
the mess hall.
"I savored them," she said
of the wings.
·
· Barnhart, of Troy in southwest Ohio, was among a large
wave of soldiers returning
since February as part of the
regular troop rotation. There
were about 143,500 U.S. soldiers in Iraq on March I, down
from 159,000 a month earlier.
After hugging their loved
ones, soldiers arriving home
want to go to restaurants for
burgers dripping with cheese
or grill steaks at home. They
go shopping for jeans and Tshirts. They take walks in the
park. savoring the greens of
grass; trees and shrubs that
contrast with the neutrals of
the desert.
"I went to Target. I wanted
to walk around a department
store and just see stutT," said
Army Pfc. Charlie Maib of
Wichita, Ka.n. "It's about normalcy -just the feeling that I
want to be normal now."
Maib, 29, picked up a pair of
Levi 's jeans and a gray cotton

Wednesday, March 30, 2005

T-shirL He bought Grand
Turismo 4, a $50 race-car
video game,
"It was a weird feeling getting back." Maib said. "It was
a numb. surrealistic feeling.
It's like yo u traveled through
time."
Army Pfc. Tanya Juarez of
Emerald Isle, N.C., had trouble adjusting to the interstate
traffic and its 65-mile-an-hour '
speed when she went out for a
cheeseburger her. first day .
back. In Iraq. she had gotten
used to slow-moving vehicles
and light traffic.
"I was a little paranoid of
the cars around me ," ,She said .
For Army Maj . Tim
Schroeder of Harker Heights,
Texas, coming home meant a
reunion with his wife's homemade barbecue sauce, a
melange of ketchup;molasses,
mustard. liquid smoke and
.
vanous sp1ces.
The 34-vcar-old Schroeder
smothered. rib-eye steaks with
the sauce and threw them on
the grill. His wife, Erica. presented him with a bottle of
Chimay, a dark Belgian beer
Schroeder loved.
·· " I was able .to enjoy that for
the first time in a year," he
said.
Much of Wade · Yuellig 's
first day back was spent playing with his 7-month-old
daughter. Yuellig , 29, of
Cincinnati, had been home
-briefly when Eva was born in
July, but he had to return to
Iraq and hadn 't seen his first
child since.
Yuellig fixed coffee .and
read the newspaJ)er while Eva
.sat next to him in her high
chair. · soaking up his daughter 's facial expressions and the
tangle of toys and baby bottles
scattered around the house.
" I was pretty much like a kid
at Christmas," he said.
In Iraq. Barnhart had to
shower in stalls with drains
that backed up covering her

wuo -PR

Army Sgt. Melanie Barnhart
holds a cup of coffee inside
her home in Troy. . After 13
months of heat, sand and
danger in Iraq, Barnhart had
one thing she wanted to do
first when the came home to
Ohio. Sitting at a.table at
B~ffalo Wild Wings with her
hust1and and daughter,
· Barnhart took her time eating barbecue hot wings she
craved for more than a year.
Soldiers head straight for
their favorite things on their
first day back after dreaming
of the comforts of home in
Iraq when they tire of
cramped quarters, outdoor
bathrooms and cafeteriastyle food.
AP Photo/At Behrman

feet and shower shoes with
na~ty water. Her first shower
at home was a barefoot one.
'That was the greatest
thing," she said.
Branhart. · who wore tan
cammies her entire time in
Iraq, grabbed her 9-year-old
&lt;.laughter and headed for
Kohl's department store.
She didn't look at the price
tags, picking out a pair of

tight \&gt;lack cotton pants and
a light blue sweater.
"I wanted them and I bought
them," she said. "I wanted to
be a girl again, I wanted something girlie."
She outfitted her daughter
Ariana. 9, with a skort, tank
top and jacket- all .pink.
"She'd been with her father
for a year, and I had to girl her
up a bit," Barnhart said.

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Preschool registration for the
2005-2006 school year wit be held
MONDAY, APRIL 18,2005
·at Bradbury Learning Center.
Appointments are necessary.
To schedule an
contact Betsy at

499 Richland Avenue
Athens, Ohio 45701

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I

Cavs sink Clippers, Page 86

Wednesday, March 30, 2005

AT

I

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

Prep Schedule
Today's games
Baseball

Meigs at Vinton County
Trimble at Eastern
Federal Hocking at Southern

Smith must make restitution, sit out game
BY RUSTY MILLER

Associated Press

Softball

Vinton Cou'nty at Meigs
Trimble at Eastern
Federal Hocking at Southern
Thursday's games
Baseball

Southern at Meigs
Eastern at Wellston
Softball

Southern at Meigs
Eastern at Wellston

COLUMBUS - The NCAA told
Ohio State on Monday that starting
quarterback Troy Smith can return to
the football team if he pays restitution
and is held out of the· Buckeyes' season
opener.
Coach Jim Tressel confirmed on
Tuesday that the NCAA had called the
university and that the "issue was solidified" by the NCAA .

Smith was
suspended
from the team
· for its game
against
Oklahoma
Stat.e
in
.
· December 's
Alamo Bowl because he took money
from a team booster. Athletic director
Andy Geiger said at the time of the
suspension that NCAA precedents
pointed to a two-game suspension.
meaning that the junior would also be

held out uf the game Sept. 3 against
Miami (Ohio). Monday's call contirrned that Geiger's opinion.
Geiger said that Smith would be
required to pay "around $500" - the
amount of money Smith accepted from
the booster- to a charity lis restitution ..
The investigation into Smith's acceptance of the money from the booster
was only one aspect of an NCAA probe
into allegations of academic fraud. payments to players and high-paying noshow summer jobs for student-athlete,.
Tressel said he has not spoken to the

NCAA sinc-e November and had no
idea when the investigation would
wrap up. ·
"Now, are they still asking questions'' I would assume. Just like we're
still asking question&lt;· Tre"el said.
He said he has met individually with
players in h&lt;iur-long sessions where he
asked them. "How c:an we do a better
job in handling the realities of negative
outside intluences and things that are
out there''" ·
' .
·.Please see Smith, Bl

Rio's Olding
claims AMC top
player hcmor
CEDARVILLE
University of Rio Grande
right fielder Jenny Olding
was named the American
Mideast
.Conference
women's softball player of
. the week, for the week.' of
March 21-27.
Olding,
the
Fairfield
native, batted .429 in I0
gaines for the · Redwomen,
She produced 12 hits in 28 atbats with two doubles, two
·triples and six runs scored.
Olding had four games
with two or more hits . She
also walked four times and
drove in a pair of runs on the
spring ,trip.
·
Rio Grande went 4-6 over
the 10-ga,me span and currently possesses a 5-9 record
overalL

Fountain adds
another post·
season honor
ATLANTA - University
of Rio Grande Redwomen
power
forward
Alkia
Fountain has added another
post-season . honor to her
basketball resume. The
Columbus native was named
to the WBCA Kodak NAIA
All-American team·.
Fountain earned honorable mention honors for her
play in the 2004-05 season.
. The 5-10 senior led the
Redwomen in scoring (I 0.8
points) and rebounding.
(8,'/g) for a team that finished 25-9 and was ranked
the NAJA Division Top 25
for all but one week of the
regular season.
Fountain is the fourth Rio
Grande women's player to
achieve this honor. Lori
Hamilton (1994 ), Stacy
Riley ( 1996) and Misti
Halley (2000) are all previous recipients. All four
players are in the 12 in scormg all-time at Rio Grande.
Fountain is lOth all-time
in scoring at Rio Grande
with 1,484 points and is the
all-time leading rebounder
with 1,196.
She was also I st Team
AII:American
Mideast
Conference South Division
and gamered an AMC and
NAJA
All-American
Scholar Athlete Award for
the 2004-05 campaign.
The 25-9 record for Rio
Grande was the third best in
school his.tory.

MISL Cleveland
Force on
auction block
CLEVELAND (A P)
The Cleveland Force franchise of the Major Indoor
Soccer League is for sale and
won't compete next season if
a buyer cannot be found, the
team announced Tuesday.
The franchise was put up
for sale by its operating company,
North
CoaSJ
Professional Sports, accoroing to Richard Dietrich , chief
executive officer.
The cumj:mny purchased
the team from George
Hoffman
and
GSH
Enterprises in 1999.
The franchise, known as
the Cleveland Crunch until
2002. currently is in fourth
place in the league standings,
I';, games ahead of Chicago.
with nine regular-season
games remaining. The top
four teams advance to ·the
playoffs.

,

Ohio State head coach Jim Tressel reacts during a Northwestern touchdown drive in ·the fourth quarter Oct. 2. 2004 in Evanston , Ill.

AP File
I

Tressel aiming for national· title~
Bv RusTY MtUER
Associated Press
COLUMBUS - Jim Tressel isn't following the
ages-old coaching rule of putting a lid ort expectations. As a matter of fact, he's fanning the flames.
In preparation for the start of spring football practices later this week, the Ohio State head coach said
Tuesday that he wants his players to consider themselves contenders for the 2005 national champi-

onship.
"(The) question is would it be outlandish for this
group to consider the possibility of being the best
team in the land, and I don't think so at all,'' Tressel
said. "We have talented guys, we have bright _guys.
we have experienced guys."
Ohio State returns 18 staners from a team that
went 8-4 during a rocky 2004 season. including last
year's freshman sensation. Ted Ginn Jr. There are.
nine starters on each side of the ball.
How strong are the returning Buckeyesry It

appears their biggest loss might be a place-kicker,
All-American Mike Nugent .
They also are without their leading rusher (Lydell
Ross, with a meager 475 yards)._punterKyle Turano
(42.8-yard average). three-year starter at cornerback
Dustin Fox. guard Mike Kne and defensive end
Simon Fraser,
The Buckeyes like hearing their coach talk about
being No. I,
·
·
Please see Tressel. 81

Ohio State Basketball

Miami shuts
Sullinger pleads guilty 6ut Rio Grande'

•to reduced charge
COLUMBUS (AP) - An Ohio State
basketball player pleaded guilty to · reckless operation of a motor vehicle in a deal
to avoid prosecution on a drunken-driving
charge,
.
J:J. Sullinger, 22, of Columbus. was
placed on two years' probation and fined
$250 Monday by a Franklin County
Municipal Court judge. Sullinger's attorney, William R. Meeks, said hi s client also
completed a counseling program after the
arrest.
Sulling'er was stopped by Columbus
police early Sept . 4 after he was observed

driving erratically, according to a police
report. His blood -alcohol level was measured at 0.099, above Ohio 's legal limit of
0.08.
.
Sullinger. a guard with one season of eligibility left. averaged .9.7 points in 32
games thi s season . He tran sferred to Ohio
State in 2002 after one season at Arkansas ,
Sullinger was J)OI suspended for any
games because of the arrest but he said
coach Thad Matta made him run five miles
every day at 5 a.m. for 15 days last fall. He
said. he apologized to people affiliated
with the team and Ohio State.

NFL

Broncos to take·a shot on Brown
BY EDDIE PELI.S

Associated Press
DENVER - On their defensi.ve line. the
Denver Broncos are staning to look more
and more like the-Cleveland Brown s. Given
Cleveland's recent past, it 's hard to know
how good a transformation that will be,
The Broncos are close to signing forn1er
Browns defensive end Courtney Brown, who
will join forn1er Browns· defensive tackle
Gerard Warren and former Browns defensive
line coa~;h Andre Patterson in Denver next

•

season.
. Brown and Warren - Cleveland\ firstround draft picks in '2000 and 200 I - were
both known as underachievers. Brown. who
will sign a one-year deal with an option for
more, . according to The Denver Post. has
missed 33 games over his five-year careerincluding 14last year - and has a total of 17
career sacks.
,
Cleveland finished 15th in the league in
defense last year, averaged two sacks a game
and won just four games. which led to the
PleaH -

Brown, Bl
I

BY MARK WtWAMS

Special. to the Tribune
OXFORD - NAJA No. 22 Rio Grande was in the game
for five innings before running into. &lt;.lifticulty against the
Miami RedHawks on Tuesday afternoon at .McKie Field.
Miami shutout' the Redmen diamondmen U-0.
Rio Grande ( 16-8) had only live singles and committed
three errors, A questionable call on a bases loaded walk in
the fifth inning ope.ned the floodl1ates for the RedHawks. Redhawk
lirst baseman Paul Frietch wa~ the
beneficiary· of two borderline calls
in the fifth, the fi nat one allowed a
JLJ
b
U run the Score and _gave MU a 3-0
J : J n-se
a
lead. Right fielder lYlcr Tabler followed with a two-run single to make the score 5-0.
Miami (12- 10) would score &gt;ix times in the sixth to blow
the game open . RedHawk lead-off hitter Ryne Robinson
keyed the fateful sixth inning with a two-run ho1ne run oftRio righty Dustin Gibbs,
Rio committed three errors in the seventh inning tn help
the Miami cause.
.
·
'
Senior southpaw Soloman Alam took the los; for the
Redmen . Alam (2-2) lasted 5 2/3 innings giving up seven
run&gt; and seven hits while surrendering tive base on balls,
Jeff Day ( 1-3) got the win fur Miami. Day went seven
inning. scattering four hits and striking o'ut four.
Miami collected 12 hits against Rio pitching. Tabler went
3-for-4 with three RBI and Jason Brown was 2-for-2 with
three runs scored.
"Thev are a good ballclub." said Rio Grande Head Coach
Brad Wamimont. "h was a game for fi1'e innings." ·
"We hadn't been on the field for five davs and it showed,"
Wamimont added.
·
Rio Grande will return home to face Alice Lloyd (Ky.)
College on Thursday at Rot&gt;en Evans fiield for a single nineinning game, Game time is set for I p:m.

0.

•

'

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March

www. mydailysentinel.com

Former Steelers lineman indicted
on fraud and arson charges
PITTSB U RGH (AP) Former NFL h nem,m Ten y
Long fr,tud ul en t l y secured
loans t o r a chrcken-processm g plant t hat h e eve ntu,il l y
bt~nted t o th e grou n d t or
rnsur.tnce m om!y. federal
authonlles stated 111 ,111
rndrctm e n t
unsc,tlcd
Tuesday

Long

a

stdt lln g

11 ght

g u a rd f01 the PrllsbU!gh
Steelers fro m I &lt;J84 tu I t)t) I_
turned hrm se lt rn to .unho n tres on Tuesd.ty
Acco rdrn g to th e e tg ht -

cou nt rnd tctment Lung, .JS
p1 m tded the sta te wrlh false
documen ts to get more th,m
$1 m rllr o n 10 busmess Jo,ms,
.rnd t.!lse b td docum ents to
obt,un a $75.000 gr ant to buy
tood processmg equtpmen t
Scve t a! months o~t tcr 11111n m g IIl lO ICS!StdllCe h o m
ncrg h bors
w ho
o p posed
p la ns to open a c ht ckc n
sJ,ru g ht erh ouse 111 the basement ot the p10cessrng plant
Long se t lue to hrs Value
Added
Fot)ds
G10 u p,
clestroyrng 11 on Sept 25.

Brown
from Page 81
ouster ot co,rch Butch D.r•.rs Wrlh
Bro wn .rnd W anen o n the •ostet the l,ts t
f o ur se,tsons, Cleveland wen t 25 39
Broncos coach Mtke Shatt.~han,
thoug h, smcl Brown the !lrst prck of the
2000 dralt, can be ,, g reat player rt he
stays healthy
"' Here 's the g uy who was the hrst ptck
ol the draft. h e wants to get to ,mother
l eve l ' too," Shanahan smd at the NFL
meetmgs last week " H e "s ured o f bem g
hurt "
Brown w as pursued by Denver,
Washrng ton , Seattle and Jac k sonv tllc
after ht s release by the I;l row ns earlrcr
thts month but d ec rded t ~ n wnh the
Broncos. a source close to the team told
The A ssocrated Pre ss o n condnton of
anonymrty
Brown 's agent. M,trvm. D e moff. d1d
not tmmedt atel y return phone m essages

Smith
from Page 81
Sm1th w1ll work out w1th the
Buckeyes when they begm
spnng practrces on Thursday
Justm Zwtck_ whq started the
first stx games and the bowl
game , ts hsted No l on the
depth chart
After a February workout
wtth hrs teammates Smtth sard
he dtdn 't know what the word
"reslltutton" meant but Tre ssel
satd Snuth would repay the
money 111 order to meet the
qualtficatrons set on hts retut n

2001 ,

accordrng t o the
rnd rc tment
The charges .c arry a maxrmum po sst bl e penalty o f 55
ye.us rn pnson and a frn e o t
o~s much as $2 mtlhon
Long was no t held o n the
tcd c t al ch ar ges but remained
rn the Allegheny County Jatl
alter he w as arrargned on
t he ft c harges f ro m Mts soun
ste mmm g from an ,1llegeu
b.td check A c tt y magts trat e
se t L o ng's bond at $25,000
o n th at c h.rrge
Long wrll be ,11 'a rg ned on

l ett ,It hr s o ttr ce by the AP, but he told
The Gazette ot Co lor.rdo Spnngs. I
thrnk (Dem et) h.rd ever) thmg he w,ts
l ook rn g l o t It he had ,r lr st o f I 0 thmgs,
thcvh!lon.r!JIO
W,uren .tcquned by the Broncos m a
trade e.rrlret 1n the o l t seaso n. w .ts th e
thrrd ptck o l the 200 I draft Ltke B rown,
he ne;er hved up to the hype, totaling
o nl y 16'· sacks m tour seasons H ers m
the fmal year of hts co ntract, however,
and Shanahan s.11d he. too, IS worth a
c hance
" H e's got a lot ot athletic abtlrty and
the g uy who coached hun really thmks
he's got a lot o f upstde,"' Shanahan smd,
c ttmg Patterson 's recommendatron " W e
thought he was worth d chance, Once
you 've got a coach who feels good
about som ebody who has lot ot athletr c
abrlrty. you don ' t mmd takmg a chance"
Denver 's other key offseason acqurst
tlon on defense w as the re-stg nmg of
Jmebac ket Ian Gold, who pl ayed tor the
Btoncos f10m 2000-03, but left last season for the Tampa Bay Buc caneers

by the NCAA
''Troy wtll t.rke c.rre of those
thmgs and wtll be ready to go
after ano ther game suspenSIOn," Tressel smcl
Smtlh played spmmgly the
first five games of the 2004
season for Ohio State, then
stepped m alter Zwtck and the
Buckeyes lost the1r first three
games m B1g Ten play Oh1o
State won three of Its next four
games before Srruth became a
star 111 the annual showdown
with nval Mtch1gan
He
rushed for 145 yards and a
touchdown and passed for 241
yards and two more scores m a
37-21 upset of the No 7ranked Wolvenne s

the f ede r,JI c harges Apnl 5
but 1t h,r s not been determm ed whether he will f 1rst
returll t o M tSsoun to fac e
the
c harge
th ere,
sard
MMgare t Ph1lbm , spok eswoman
tor
the
U S
Attorney's
Ottrc e
111
Pttt sbUJ g h
Pttt sburg h .tttorney M,uk
Ru sh , who ha s represented
Long and hts bu srness 111 the
p.tst , sa rd 11 was uncl eat rf he
would rept ese nt Long on t he
cn mr na l
c h ar ges
He
declmed to comment

The Broncos lmtshed the seaso n
r.rnked toutth m de fe nse, but h.rd trouble
cre.r1111g turno; ets and g~ltrng to the
yu allerb.rck Alter bemg ptckecl o~pat t by
the lndr ,m,Jpo h s Colt s &lt;incl Pey ton
Mann111g !01 the second stlat ght year 111
the pl ayotts, they o~re Jookmg to revo~mp
The 3-4 tormat10n wrll be p art ot the
changes, and Brown and Warren w1ll
both have a chance to start
" I thmk the 3-4 over the last f ew years
has really been good because you never
know whtch linebacker I S commg ,"
Shanahan satd
The Bro ncos lost last year' s Jead111g
pass rusher, Regg1e Hayward, m tree
dgency
Still m hmbo IS the future of Trevor
Pt yce, who nllSsed most of l ast year
wtth a back InJury
Pryce" sc heduled to count $9 mtllron
agamst D enver 's cap thts season If the
Broncos can get a ftrst - or second-10und
ptck tor Pryce, they ' ll lrkely take the
deal If not , they ' ll try to rework the
contract and bnn g hnn back

Tressel
from Page 81
Evet y team shou ld go mto
every season wrth that ment.JI rty th,tt .they can wrn t he
natron,tl champ10nslup," wtde
recei Ve r Santomo H olmes
satd " Wnh the players v.e
h,Jve o n o ur team, w hy not se l
tiMt '" a goa l ,md go tm 11 1"
Lmebacket
Anthony
Schlegel satd despite fmtshll1g
tred tOt trtth rn th e Brg Ten a
year ago, e\er yone rs exerted
by the way the Buckeyes lm rshed the seo~son
The Buckeyes tocked No 7
Mtcht gan 37-2 1 to rum the
Wolve11nes ' hopes ot dll outn ght Brg Ten tnle then toll ed
over Oklahoma Sto~te 33 7 rn
the Aldmo Bowl
' Everybody has those last
tw o games in then mrnd
Those wet e gt eat g.1mes I or
us," Sc hlege l sa rei "Eve • y
year Oh10 State seem s Jrke 11
has that goa l ot bemg ,r
natlono~l champiOn And why
not have that ? It JUSt makes
you work that much hru der
and helps p eo ple focu s on the
mtSsron at hand "
Holmes satd !he bold t.rlk
doe sn 't put any added he.rl o n
the Bu ckeyes
" There shouldn't be any

30, 2005

p ressure We've been .rround
eo~c h otltcr long enough to
know hov. c1 c t yo ne pL\)'s.
wh.rl to expect ,md wh,ll we
can ,til uo ,rs .r te.rm We JUst
need 10 put .rll tltnse thrngs
toecthcr ,md go lot 11 ' he

one-o n- o n~.!

the

SPE1246394
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company, Pomeroy,

Home
National
Bank, Plamt1ff, vs

passing an 1ron ptn
set for reference at

Ohto, reserves

Frank R Nelson, Jr ,
et al
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio

184 38 feel conlamlng 1 025 acre

sale, and to Withdraw
the above collateral
prior to sale Further,

The above descrip-

The Farmers Bank
and
Savings

In pursuance of an
order of sale to me
dtrected from sa1d

court in the above
enlilled action, I will
expose to sale at
public auctton on the
front steps of the

Metgs

County

Courthouse

on

Fnday, April 22nd,
'2005 al1000 am. of
saod day, the following described real
estate.
The following real
estate, berng
tn
Section 19, Town 4,
Range 12 of the Ohio
Company's Purchase,
Chester Township,

Meigs County, Ohio,
and bemg a part ol
the Albert L and
Francrs Eileen Martin
property described In
Volume 257, Page 273
of the Meigs County
Deed
Records,
bounded
and
described as follows.
Begmntng

at

a

point in the center Of
State Rou1e 7 said
Point
being
the
southwest comer of

The Albert L and
FranciS Eileen Martin
property ;
thence
along the center of
State Route 7 North
26 degrees 55 minutes o seconds East
144.25 feel, thence
South 85 dagrees 50
minutes 28
oeconds Ea81 111 .32
feet to a point in the
center .9.f a small
stream; thence along
the center of the
small stream South

n

degrees 25 minutes 55 seconda East
78 91 leet &amp;nd North
88 degrees 40 minutes 22 seconds East
62.17 feet, thence
South 26 degrees 55
minutes 0 seconds
west 239,89 feel fo an
iron ptn, passing eron
pins oel for reference
at 15 00 feel and
213.58 feet, thence
North 62 degrees 12
minutes 0 seconds
\

tion was based on an
actual survey, under

the

nghl to bid al this

Company

reserves

Randy Hays at 9922136.
(3) 30, 31 , (4) 1

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
SHERIFF SALE
Case

04CV146
HomEq

Number
Serv~crng

the supervlston of
Eugene Triplett R S
6766 on June 13,
1990. Bearmgs are
based on grantor's
deed and discovered

the nghlto re;ecl any
or all bids submitted
The
above
will be sold ' as ISwhere IS ', With no

Pleas, Metgs County,

monumentat1on and
are used to denote

expressed or tmplled
warranty given The
collateral must be

In pursuance of an
order of sale to me

directed from said

moved from property

court 1n the above

For further Information,
or
for
an

enlllled actron, I Will

angles only
Reference Deed
Volume 14, Page 771
of the Meigs County
Offic1al Records.
Parcel
Auditor's
No_ 03-00814 001
Property Address.
37900 SR 7, Pomeroy,
OH 45769
Current
Owner:
Frank R Nelson, Jr,
et al

Property at 37900
SR 7, Pomeroy, Ohio
pp 103-00814 001
Prior
Deed
Reference

Volume

14, Page 771
Appraised
at
$21 ,000
Terms of
Sale, Cannot be solo
for less than 2/3rds ol
the appraised value
10% down on day of
sale, cash or certified
check, balance due
on confirmation of
sale

Robert E Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney lor Platnllff
&amp;
Little,
Sheets
Warner

213 East Second
Street
Pomeroy, Ohib 54769
(740)992-6689
(3) 16, 23, 30

descnbed collateral

appointment

to

mspect
collateral,
prtor to sale date con·
tact D1ane Rector or

Randy Hays at 992
2136,
(3) 30, 31 (4) 1

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE' IS hereby
that

on

Saturday, Apnl ~.
2005, at 10 00 am, a
public sale will be
held at 211 w_ Second

St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company is selling
for cash 1n hand or

certified check the
fllilowlng collateral
2003 Jayco Travel
Tra1ler 305 BHS Eagle
IUJCJ02R331L90192
The

Farmers

Bank

and
Savings
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohto, reserves the

nght to btd at this
sale and to wtthdraw

the above collateral
pnor to sale Further,

The Farmers Bank
Savings
and

Public Notice

Company

reserves

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE is hereby

the nghl to re1ect any
or all b1ds submitted

given

The
above
described collateral

that

on

Saturday, April 2,
2005 at 10 !10 am , a will be sold " as Ispublic sale will be where Is ', with no
held at 211 w Second ' expressed or implied
St , Pomeroy, Ohio
warranty given The
The Farmers Bank collateral must be
and
Savangs moved from property
Company is selling
For further l nfor·
for

vs. Floyd H Cleland,
et at
Defendants
Court of Common
OhiO

expose to sale at
public auctton on the

front steps of the
County
Meigs
Courthouse
on
Friday, May 6th, 2005
at 10 00 am of said
day, the foltowmg
described real estate·

Public Notice

geven

Corporation, Platntlff,

H&amp;RBLOCK'

n"' rlitltoo:l t, )l~)i. lioN "'A l.N' leUr l.n.t od "'"llho~ I) "-.!
rJ""-Ji i • •C!"P .,. ~ T1~o.t -~.illlt... r&gt;( f.. l-1 \I OY j ~IQ "'llbfr f T I d-rl'( &gt;I 1 .,. .....,.....,.,..
d - ~Ull lf. l)lll' (1.., - I'Ull&lt;lll"" (~.-i.L&gt;'- ~Oil·~~.,.""" , .. 1
..

........ . . . I • &lt;!wl - 4 • • .,~....,

for cash In hand or

mat1on , or

an

certified check the
1ollowing collateral.
1994 Redman Mobile
BH
Home

appomtment
to
Inspect
collateral,
prior to sale dale contact Diane Rector or

SITUATE IN THE
COUNTY OF MEIGS,
VILLAGE OF RUTLAND, STATE OF
OHIO AND BEING IN
SECTION NO
8,
TOWN 6, RANGE 14,
OF THE OHIO COMPANY'S PURCHASE
BEGINNING ON THE
EAST SIDE OF THE
ROAD IN THE LINE
OF A LOT FORMERLY
OWNED BY MINTA
COLLINS, THENCE
NORTH
26112
DEGREES WEST 178
FEET,
THENCE
NORTH
63112
DEGREES EAST 142
FEET;
THENCE
SOUTH
13112
DEGREES WEST 229
FEET TO THE PLACE
OF
BEGINNING
CONTAINING 291100
ACRES, MORE OR
LESS. SAVE AND
EXCEPT THE FOLLOWING BEING IN
SECTION 8, TOWN 6,
RANGE 14, BEGINNING ON THE EAST
SIDE OF THE ROAD
QN THE LINE OF THE
1ST
FORMERLY
OWNED BY MINTA
COLLINS, THENCE
NORTH
261/2
DEGREES WEST 115
FEET,
THENCE
NORTH 60 DEGREES
EAST 95112 FEET,
THENCE
SOUTH
131/2
DEGREES
WEST 154 FEET TO

I

POINT OF
BEGINNING conlaintnQ 1.04 acres, more

thru Fnday between
the hours of 8 am to 1
pm. Please direct any

or less
Current

quest1ons or com ments to D1stnct
clerk Jam Fisher at

for less than 213rds of

degrees, 59 mtnutes,
42 seconds West,

the appraised value
10% down on day of
sale, cash or ceriifie~
check, balance due
on conftrmatton of
sale.

Robert E. Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney for Ptainliff
Retnmer &amp; Lorber
PO Box 968
Twinsburg, OH 44087
(330) 425-4201
(3)30, (4) 6 &amp; 13 3T

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
She'nff's Sate, Real
Estate, Case Number
04CV016
ABN AMRO
Mortgage
Group,
Plaintiff YS
Clifford Thomas Ill,
et. al, Defendants
Court of Common

Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohto
In pursuance of an

Order of Sale to me
dtrected from said
Court In the above
entitled action, I will
expose to

sale at

Northeast corner of

Thomas

Property at· 43219
Frank
Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
PP# 03-00400

sect1on lme of the

143, Page 473
Appratsed
at
$75,000
Terms of Sale.
Cannot be sold for

THENCE North 89
2 262 2 feet to an rron
ttl, wh1ch sa1d iron

ptn IS South 99
degrees, 59 minutes,
seconds

42

East,

31.20 feel from the
center of MEIGS
COUNTY ROAD NO
26,
THENCE from the
said iron pin South 15
degrees, 55 minutes,
42 seconds East,
54 03 feet,
THENCE South 20
degrees, 29 minutes
East, 97 95 feel,
THENCE South 24
degrees, 08 minutes
Fast, 87 86 feel ,
THENCE South 28
degrees, 38 minutes
Fast87 51 feel ,
THENCE South 33
degrees, 58 minutes
East, 92 9 feet;
THENCE South 36
degrees, 58 mmutes
East, 324 75 feel to
PLACE
OF
the
BEGINNING of lh1s
lot, said PLACE OF
BEGINNING
being
marked by an iron

public auction on the
front steps of the
County
Meigs

pm ,

Courthouse

East, 135 feet to an

on

Fnday, May 6, 2005 at,
10 00 am. , of said
day, the following
described real estate
The land referred
to In this policy is situated In the STATE
OF OHIO, COUNTY
OF MEIGS, CITY -QF
POMEROY
and
described as follows.
Situate In Chesler
Township,
Meigs
County, State of Ohio
and being In Section
5, Town 2 North, and
Range 13 West, of the
OHIO COMPANY 'S
PURCHASE
and

Owner.

Clifford &amp; Michelle

the Wesl one-half ol
Section 5;
THENCE South 00
degrees, 00 manutes ,
18 seconds East
along the East half

set,

THENCE South 36
degrees, 58 minutes
iron pirt;

THENCE North 62
degrees 04 minutes,
17 seconds East,
287 13 feel to an iron
p1n,

THENCE North 8
degrees, 22 minutes
55 seconds West,
125.9 feel to an Iron

Pnor
Reference

SHOP THE
CLASSIFIEDS!

10% down on day of
sale, cash or cert1f1ed
check, balance on
conftrmation of sale.

Robert E. Beegle,
Meigs County Shenff.
Attorney
for
the
Plaintiff:
Lerner,
Sampson &amp; Rothfuss ,
P.O
Box
5480 ,
Cincinnati, OH 45201 5480
120 East
Fourth
Street, 8th Floor
Cincinnati,
Ohio
45202-4007
(513) 241-3100
(3) 30, (4) 6, 13

Notice

is

March 31, 2005

hereby

given that the annual
meeting of the shareholders of Farmers

Bancshares, Inc will
be held at the
Middleport Church of
Christ, Fan\IIy Life
Center, 437 Main
Street, Middleport,
Ohio, on the 1hird
Wednesday of Apnt ,
2005, at 4;00 p.m
according
to
its
bylaws, for the purpose
of
electing
directors and 1he
transaction of such
other business as

may properly come
before satd meeting
Jo
Ann
Cnsp ,
Secretary
(3) 30, (4) 3, 13, 19
Pu~Jtc

Nottce

The Syracuse Racine
Regional

West, 96 4 feet to In
Iron pin ,

reports

Sewer
which

EASTERN ATHLETIC
BOOSTERS
Basket Btngo

are

available lor public
Inspection tn the
Dtstrlct Office at 5th
and Main Streets,
Racine, OH Monday

74

Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sund•y Display. 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays

• All ads must be Pll!Paid*

KIT
YARD SAl FPoMEROYIMtnuu;

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publlehlng retervee the r1ght to ed1t reject or cancel any ed at any time Errore must be reported on the first day
Tnbune-Sentmel Register will be reepona1ble for no more than the &lt;:oat ot the epece occupied by the error and only the t1rst lnMrtiOn We
any Ioiii or expense thai re.uha from the publication or omiaaion ot an advertisement Correction will be made 1n the firer available edmon
are alwaya confidential • Curref'lt rate card appllea • All real estate advertisements ere
to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968
acet~pta only help wanted 1d1 mMtlng EOE atandarda We wiU n01 knowingly accept any
I In Ylolatlon or the law

&amp; CARLYLE

fl'lJ
lwr1ght@1c

N~ghborhOod garage sale
Fr day &amp; Saturday Apnl 1st
&amp; 2nd Bam ? ram or sh1ne
clothmg ant1ques glass
ware Fenton old crocks &amp;
IUQS guns &amp; kn vas Sl iver
dollars Red Ryder BB gun
ol d V1ctrola old walnut roll
top desk old oak dresser
Estate Sale Lots of new old p1ctures &amp; com cbooks
Amencan Esk1mo Spttz
Items added 25 35% off all nd1ng mower ,lour 16 ~ Jeep
while not good wtth k1ds
6 m11es below Gallipolis St !1 res old hallseat lots more
housebroken fe male 6 yrs
AI 7 3/31 411 4/2 9 5 &lt;;all app rox1mately 5 rrnles north
old (740)742-1080
ol Pomeroy on St At 7 turn
{740)446 121 1 1nfo
at Me1gs Memory Garden
Yard Sale Apn l 2nd Bam 1/4 m1le \740)992 7599
Free pupp1es Adorable and
3pm Corner of SR 160 and 076
healthy 6 wks old Mother
YARD SAL!'CBuck R1dge Rd Ra tn or
Collie/Boxer
Father
Pr.
PU: o\SANI'
Sh1ne.
Siberian
Husky
Call

DIRECT TV Free 4 room
hookup Free HD B1g Screen

YAR!l SALE-

I w1t1 not be responsible for '"--,.;GiiA!Loiiiiiiii'OiiiiliiiiSiioo_.l
any other debts but my own
S1d ney V Watson
4 famtly yard sate Ap nl 1st
&amp; 2nd at 68 47 State Rou te
588 Gall1polis Hours are 9
Needed 1ov1ng and ca nng 5 Items for sale Home &amp;
foster parents Please con Garden 1tems Am er~ca n
tact TranSitio ns for Youth at Cancer Soc1ety Relay for
17401985 4349
L1te
1tems
glassware
Tupperware and many-more
1tems

(7401384 4187

'ffiA-r W-4'&gt;

TV 800 263 2640

!:&gt;tiff~R. ~u-r
'fo~ ~li£.1-- f-IAVG"
A V~fl.~ fH-U:K,

Aa.ErNT.

074

Y AR!l SAUC-

Amerrcan Leg1on Post 128
Middleport, Ohro
Come out and
support the boosters
For tnfo
Marcra Guess 740-667-65 t 3

Pomeroy Eagles
Thursday &amp; Sundays
Doors Open 4 30 p m
Btngo Starts at 6"30 p m
Pays $100 00 Game
(Guaranteed)
Progressrve Cove rall for

1,000 00
Bonanza Game 46# or less

1,000 00
Starburst 1,000 00
Smrly bal l ~ 00 00
$22 00 all pack you can play

Must be 18 to play

Kitchen Open

\

5

Fam11y Yard Hartford
PmiEROY/MIIliHL Comm Bu1fdmg Apnl 2nd 8
? Plus s1ze clothes To ys
Full blooded black P1t Bull
MJcrowaves
pup female 5 months old Apnl 1st &amp; 2nd Keith F1tch s Glassware
morel
lots
Call
(740)441 0459
or res idence 55599 AI 124 FurnJture
Portland
O hiO
Sa m ?
erwa re Fl B lbs
(740)441 9291
Benefits Relay for L,lfGU

3088

Garage Sale 3/3 1 &amp; 4/01
K1ds adult clothmg toys
Longaberger Tupperware
Du rsL
ap phances b1kes
Noble-Summit 8am-3pm

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4's For Sale _
, .. 725
Announcement .
,,,,,030
Anliques ,
-- .... 530
Apartments for Rent
440
Auction and Flea Market
, , , _ 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ___
, 760
Auto Repair
_ 770
Autos for Sale
, , 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale------ -_750
Building Supplies,,,______
,,,,,...,550
Business and Buildings ,,_., .. , ,
, ,, 340
Business Opportunity ... , .,, .. , ,, ..,,,,, ..210
Business Training ,,,,,,,
,, t40
Campers &amp; Motor Hom••---, .. 790
Camping Equipment ___ ------__ )so
Cards of Thanks
010
Child/Elderly Care
__ 190
Electrical/Refrigeration
, 840
Equipment for Rent___ ____ , ,
,, ____ , ____ 480
Excavating , ,
, _____ ,,,
, • , , .. 830
Farm Equipment ...•.•....... ,_, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,610
Farms for Rent. __ , _______ , , . , ,--------------430
Farms for Sale
------------,
, ,,330
For Lease _
, ______ ,,
, ... .490
For Sete
-- .. 585
For Sale or Trade.. _
.590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables
580
Furnished Rooms _
450
General Hauling. •
850
Giveaway
040
Happy
Ads
------------_
-------------------050
Hay &amp;
________ ,___ _
_, __________,,, .640

'

) - }.

b.J?vWr

© 2005 by NEA, Inc

www comtcs com

110
_
1
Flea
Market
Souths1 de
Commun ty Center ms1 de
and outsiCie set up lor $5
Saturda A nl 2nd

lli:LPWANlm

AVONI All Areasl To Buy or Earn a salary wh1l.e ga1mng
Sell
Shirley Spears 304 SkillS 1n patient care fitting
675-1429
eyewear and medical test
mgl We are a well estab
Chnstlan heavy metal Duo llshed Ath ens Optometrtc
needs drummer and bass Pract1ce and w1ll prov1de on
playe r If you are a young the lOb tratn~ng fo r a career
Absolute Top Dollar U S Chnslian mus1c1an and look m opt1c1anry We offer a
Si lver and Gold Co1ns
ng to JOin a band call dynamtc work envtronment
Proofsets Gold R ngs U S (740)4 41 1236
ask
for w1th a great te am of profes
Currency M T S Com Shop Joseph
s onals No expenence nee
151
Second
Avenue
Cl mcaVSecreta nal pos itlor'l essary applicant must be
Galhpohs 740 446 2842
1n a very fast paced med1cal detail onented sell motivatoff1ce
Computer off1ce ed and possess good com
Older us ed school band
and great people municat1on sk1lls G1ve us
mach1
nes
Instrumen ts
Trumpets
sk1lls a must Must possess the opportunity to d1scuss
Saxophones
Trombones
a willingness to cross tra1n how you can be a VItal part
etc Older N ntendo games
our team wh1le gam ng a
Large lo ts only {740)388 and be a team player Apply
career as a lfcensed opt1
1n
person
at
the
offiCe
of
8692
John Wade MD Pleasant c1an
I \11'1 0\ \II'\ I
Valley Hospital Su1te 112 Fax resumes to 740 594
o.,J IH It I...,
Poml
Pleasant
WV 2270 by Apnl 6 2005

$$$ BELIEVE IT $$$
Call for somet hmg you
be lieve m and make
great money domg ifl
We pay up to $8/hour
Week ly pay P81d tra1n.ng
Excellent benefi tS
Stable work Professtonal
enwonment
Call TODAY to se1 up an
Interview'

1-8n-463-6247
ext 2457
www rnfoc1S10n com

ACTIVITIES
DIRECTOR
Scen1c H1lls Nursmg Center
a Tan dem Health Care
Fac1hty 1s seekmg a select
few I J JOtn our outstandtng
team We currently seek a
full t1me ActiVItie S 01rector
Mu st have expenence m
actlv1t1es plannmg
With
strong emphaSIS on creatiVIty and t1me management
Cerl1f1catl0n a must We
offer excellent benefits and a
wond erful work env1ron·
ment Please apply to
Attn Dianna ThomptOJ",

HR
SCenic Hilla NuraiF'Ig
Center
31 1 Buckrldge Road

Bidwell, OH 45814
Ph 74()(446-7Hii0
Fax 7401446-2438
Email edmln thn 0

tlrndemheelthcere com

Applications taken ONLY
Wednesday Marc h 30 from
8 am to 3 pm and Thursday
March 31 from 8 am to 12
pm No phone ca lled Will be
accepted
Davshltt Openings
Par1·tlme
Week ly pay Saturdays of1
Stable work ProfessiOnal
enwonment
L1 m1ted number of
pos1t1ons available

SFIDFIEOE

existing clients m southern
and central Oh10 Succeed 1n
Call Now\
a prest1g1ous bank enVIfon
1-877-463-6247 ext 1901
mem wtth a strong cl ent
referral base and expert
Dominos now H1ring
product and sales support
Safe Dnvers
Se r1es 7 and 66 ctes1gna
All locations
t10ns and Oh iO hie health
Apply 1n person
and
vanable
an nu1t1es
1304)675 5858
licenses are requ1red You
Dnve
w II recetve excellent com·
pensat1on and benef1ts plus
profess1onal
BEST DRIVING JOB contmuous
tram1ng
and
development
to
AVAILABLE
leverage
your
ca reer
Fam1ly-Qnented Carner w1th Excellent compensation and
Open Door Polley lookmg for benefits mclud1{1g profll·
OTR Class A COL dr1vers shanng/401 (io.) Send your
resume and salary reQUire·
w1th one year e~epenence
ments to Qak Hilt Banks
"Start at 40 cpm all miles Attn Human Resources
P 0 Box 688 Jackson OH
*Potential 60K
•Late model Frelghtllner 4564 0 Please relerence Job
Condos with Automatic Code #515E EOE MIFION
Tranamlttlon
Fostercare G1vers Neecled
"No forced NVC
Become a TherapeutiC care
•gs% No touch freight
grver you will be reimbursed
"Paid Vacation
'Hooplhillzatlon end 401 K $30-$45 a day tor the care of
a child m you r home
"Homattma on
ktndt
Tra1nmg beglne 1n April for
more
nto
call
Ouls
lnterttted partlaa cell 800TherapeutiC
Fostercare
652-2382
Albany On Tall Free 1 877Dnver War'lted 1 year exp 325-1558
Tractor Trailer Home most
n ghta $500-$700 a week GAMESTOP Nt:YVV HIRING

w..

An Excellent w8y to earn
money The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304·882 2645
Appalachian T1re IS looking
for a Sale Assoc1ate Send
Resume to PO Box 327 PI
Pleasant WV
25550 or
Stop by our location 0 4.26
V1and St Pt Pleas for a
Application

Drlvera Needed
COL Dnvers willing to drtve
for local ready·mn1 compa·
ny Experience 11 prelerred
but not necessary Ortver
must be willing to do pre·
ma1ntenance oo trucks &amp;
equ1pmen t yard work &amp;
other miscellaneous chores
Experience operatmg equ1p
ment &amp; extra sk1lls sue~ as
welding a plus

Ca\1 (304)937-34 10

(7401662 1222

Kelly Home Care Services
A Fortune 500 Company
has 1mmed1ate open1ngs lor
exper1enced Home Heal th
A1des and CNA s Must be
reliable h1gh quality cam
g1vers preferably With an
ava table automobile an d
proof of msurance
If you
enJOY work1ng w1th the elder
ly or phys1cally challenged
you have what 11 takes to
work tor Kelly We offer flex
1ble schedules very compel
1t1ve pay, and ass1gnn1.ents
throughOut
Mason
&amp;
Putnam Counties Weekday
&amp; Weekend sh1fts currently
ava1lable Come see what
Kelly Home Care has to
otter Call1-866 755-5182
Expanenced mediCAl OffiCe
Kelly Serv1ces IS an Equal
worker billi ng clencal and
Opportunity Employe r
recep110r;a1st dut1es Leave
message for John (740)388
McClure s Restaurant now
0086
h1r1ng all locations full or
par t t1me p1ck up applica FINANCIAL ADVISOR
tion at locati On &amp; brmg back
between
10 OOam
&amp;
GroWing S1 bUI1on commum
11 OOam
Monday
thru
ty bank has a dynam1c
Saturday
opportunity serv1ng new and

Call j7401378-6400
HftOtlndemhlllllhcare com

Home Health Care of SE
Oh o IS currently h r ng
Home Health Aides competit ve
wages
call

BabySilhng
Very 1740)645-6365 or (740)446
Reasonable Rates Ages 4 3080
and under Call C ry stal
(740)441 -9654 or (740)590
TURNED DOWN ON
2590
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
No Fee Unless We Wm
DH K
1 BBB 582 3345
Cleanmg &amp; RestoratiOn Let
Ill II I ' I I II
Us-Help You Clea n-er upll!
No Matter What The Job Is
We W•ll Get-er-Donel l For
HOMES

FlO

All You re lnsidefOutslde
Needs We re the Ones for
YQu Call Karen qr Dave at
740 985-3633 Busmesses
Res1de ni •al / hom es,
Contracts
Anyt1me
Anyplace
Clean
All
Powerwash1ng Remodelmg
etc
No Job Is To D1rtylll

FDRSALE
'"---iiiiiiiiiiiiiiioo_..l

'
1900 sq uare ft hOuse 3
bedroom 2 bath lull base
menl totalelectrc new heat
pump sets on 3 acres SA 7
two outbUIIdmgs Eastern
School D1str•ct (740)985
4321

2 story 7 roo m house 4
J1m s Carpentry
• bedroom 2 bath 2 po rches
We do remodeli ng and most (1 closed tnl deck 213 acre
any unlm1shed work also flat lot Heat pump Rtver
small
tree
remova l Valley
School
D1Sinct
(740)446 2506 (740)367 B~lav111e P!ke
$69 500
0437
(740 )367 7272

Mike Pope

3 Bed room 1 &amp; 1/2 bath
new wmdows &amp; roof locate d
Decks Ph one (740)388
12 Sm 1h St K1ngtown area
8329
Arver v1ew ava11able No
Down Payment
$425 a
Weekend Tree ServiCe Tn m
month (304)675 2749
&amp; Removal Call (740)256
Aoof1ng

S1d ng

Porches

1883 or (740)6 45 4458
W1ll do Eng tne Change
Engme Repa1rs and other
Automotive
work
ASE
Cert fled Call (740)441
1306 or (740)645 1794-cell

4 bedroom 1 112 bath gas
heat ale soft water system
fully furntshed f nancmg
ava1table
$65 000 • ca11
Gu1do (740)992 2529 or
740 992 3650

50 acre farm With hOuse and
barn
$62 500
Call
(740)256-ro&lt;J5

"'

t

0

r

25550

Ray Tech for doctors
office 4 or !5 days per week
8 30-5 no weekends holl
days or evemngs New grad·

~

uate a may apply Please
apply at Medical Plaza 936
Rt

180

Gallipoli s or

phone 17-40)446 9620

Golllpollo Co- Collogo
\Careers CJose To Home)

Call Todayl 740-«6-&lt;367

l-800-214-o452

.,.._ QlllipOHICarHrco&amp;ege oom
ParamediCS
&amp;
EMT s
needed Apply at 1354 lt,ccr•cllted Membt1 Accredltmg
CouOCII lof lndependant Coll-vJackson Pike , Gallipolis
and School. 127 &amp;8

10

rrow Sf711rt Contact rn
hlo O!v11lon or Ftnanc1a
Office
o
onsumer
Atfa r
EFORE you rettnanc
ur home or 00:1a1n a foan
EWARE of requests to
ny large advance pay
ants ot teas or Insurance
the
Office
o
all
onsumer Atla1rs toll fre
t 1-866-278 0003 to tear
the mortgage broker o
ender Is properl~ llcef\Sfd
11 IS A publiC Wrvlc
nnouncement from tn
hlo Vallev Publ1shm

•

All real ellate advertising
In thla newspaper Ia
to the Federal
F.. r Houalng Act or 1968
which malcea It Illegal to
lldvert1u •ny
preference, l•miletlon Of
dlacrlmmatlon besed on
r•c•, color, religion , ux
f•mlll•l atatua or netlonal
origin, or any lnt•nUon to
ma«e eny such
pret.nlnce, 1\mllltlol'\ or
di.crimlnatlon
aubj~t

Thla newapa.per wilt not
knowingly accept
edv.niaementa for rHI
ntatw which Ia In
vlol•tlon of tM law Our
rNCMn •ra herllby
Informed that all
dwelllnge ltdvertleed In
thl• 1'1111111 pap- are
•vllll•tM on 1n llqU81
opportuntty btl...

'

HOM~:"
IURSAU

Racme On 1 1/2 story cape
cod farmhouse w/ctormers &amp;
wrep around porch 4 bed
room 3 beth unt1n1Shed
basement
Situated
on
appro~e 3 acres 24x 36 pole
barn garage small barn
wlloft fenced area for hve
stock dog kennel stocked
pond perenn a! tlower beds
$ t 75 000
tor
evem.ng
appomtment
(740)985

Jewelry Buy Sell Gold
Gemstones 3377
Advertise your busmess 1n D1amonds
Repa
r
Appra1sals
Gem
Pomeroy area Ca ll lor
Te stm g
Graduate
defa1ls (740)992 6396
Gemolog st
Jeweler

Sales
person
needed
www mcoenterprtses com
Furn1ture store Full t1 me
sales exper1ence preferred
MUNE\
Immediate open1ng Apply 1n
TO LOAN
person Lrfestyle F urn1ture
856 Th1 rd Ave Gall1pohs
OH 1Oam-5pm No phone
ea mg tnanc1a
calls please
1nst11Ut10n approv1ng Small
Business Mortgage
Personal and Vehicle
Sec retar y needed must
Loans lmmetttate
have computer sktlls &amp;
respon¥l
excellent commun1cahons
giVe us a call at
SkillS Send Resume by
t-668-228 7063" 01 apply
Apr~ I-Bth to TSC28 cJo Point
online at
Pleasant Register 200 Ma1n
www lnwatmenrtlnanc•al o
St Pomt Pleasant WV

taX

5023

w~vrnv
1
,
ToDo
' " - - - - - -...-,J
180

"'

Send your resume to
petemonell Ogamestop com
or
to 3().(-842 9019
Help want ed Darst Adult
Group Home
(7 40)992

DIAECTV
Free EqUitment
Free ProfessiOnal
mstallat1on
Free OVD player
Call 1 BOO 523-7556
call for Free HBO/C1namax
&amp; Show t1me

8U1Id1ng lor lease Gallipolis
Attention'
Fe rry Area
Ideal tor
Local company offering NO
Restaurant! Etc (304)675
DOWN PAYMENT
pro
7531!
grams fo r you to buy your
Need 10 people to sell Avon
hOme mstead of ren11ng
Cal l (740)446 3358
H\0 VALLEY PUBLISH • 100"., fmancmg
• Less lhan perfect creclll
accepted
u do busmess w1th
Overbrook Cen ter IS current
ly acceptwtg applications for
le you know and NOT 1 • Payment could be tne
same as renl
end money through th
full !tme STNA s all posiLocators
tions and all sh1ft are avai l
tl unhl you have nvest1 Mortgage
(740)992-7321
ated the offenn
able If you are mterested
please come 11'1 and fill ou t
Reai1St1c-t Ok: per month
an application at 333 Page
potential mcome Tralnmg
Street
Mi ddleport
Oh
prov1ded 24hr u'lfo mes45760 EOE
sage 1 8CJO.B29 2056 or go

New Store optnmg 1n
St
Galhpoll&amp;l Now h1rlng for all

positions!

PROF£S'iiON•I
SEK&gt;IC],;~

net
4 cemetery plots R1verv1ew
Cemetery lot #5 Aow 10
Sec -0 $625 for all four

r'..

Gra~n,

6 30 pm

;l.

All Display: 12 Noon .2

Indoor sale
Rver Valley
Worsh1p Center 803 S
Third Middleport MarchJt
Apnl 1st 2nd 10 00 4 00

~

Help Wanted ...,........ ,, . , _______ _, ___ ,_,,- .110
Home Improvements, ,,,, ..,,,,,,,,,,, __ __ _.810
Homes lor Sale , _________ , ,, ,, , ,,,,,,,,,,,310
Household Goods.,,,,,,, - ,, - ,,,..,,,,,,5t0
Houses for Rent
. ..410
In Memoriam , ,_, ___ ,__
___ .. 020
Insurance
, , __ , _
-130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment
,,, .660
livestock
__ ,., 630
Lost and Found
, , 060
Lots &amp; Acreage
.350
Miscellaneous ________ ,
_----- ------- -- 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise. ,,, ----------- 540
Mobile Home Repan. , _ , , , ____ ___ ,, 860
Mobile Homes for Rent
. ,, ..... , .•.•..•. .420
Mobile Homes for Sate, ., _, __________ __ __ ___ ,,320
Money to Loan ____________ ,, ,, ,, ,,,,,,,,..,... , ... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers , __________ , ----- , 740
Musical Instruments ... _ _
, _____ 570
Personals _ ,, _ ----- .
, __ ,, ... 005
Pets for Sole
_ _-- 560
Plumbing &amp; Healing_____
,,,,,, , .,820
Profo ..lonot Sarvlces
,,, --- _ ,,, 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair . ,,. ___------------- , 160
Real E81a!e Wantlld----- ,, , ,, ____ , ______ __ ___ ___ 360
Schootl tnetrucl\on,. ___ ,___________ __ ___ _ 150
Seed , Pl•nt &amp; Fertilizer , , , _, , ..,_____________650
Slluatione W•nt•d---- ,..,,..,,..,,,,,,,,,,,, ___ , .120
Space for Rent ________ ,_,,,,.................... _480
Sporting Goodl--------- ,,, ,,,........., ... , .... 520
SUY'I for Sale................ , ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, .720
TruckaJor Sale--------------... ,,,,,,... , ......... 715
Upholalery ,,,,, __________ __ __ ,, __ , , ,,,,,,,,,__ 870
Yon a For Sal•-----.. --· , __ ,,________ ---- ... ,, . 730
Wantlldlo Buy. ___________ , ,
-- _ ----.090
Wonted to Buy- Farm Suppllea. ____ , __ , .620
Wantad To Do
--- 180
Wonted to Rent , _
__ ,, , ,, _
470
Yard Sale- Golllpoila _ _ --- , ,__ __
072
Yard Sale-Pomoroy/Middle ,,,,, .., .. --- 074
Yard Sale-PI Pleasant .
, ..,,,, , .076

20 games for $20 DO

Public Notice

District has completed 2004 year end

30 seconds West
260 6 feet to the

ANNOUNCEMEI&gt;'fS 1

Dally In-Column . 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for- In5ertlon
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column 1 00 p m
Friday For Sundays Paper

• Start Your Ads W1th A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

YARDSALE

Male ta n Pug
Los t m
• Bashan-Mornmg Star area
: Aac1ne
Answers to Toby
Reward
Call (740)949

less than 213rds of
the appra1sed value

THENCE South 82
degrees, 15 minutes

degrees, 01 minutes

949-2416
(3) 30

r~====::~::=~

Fnday &amp; Saturday 1st &amp; 2nd
n ewborn~sx adult 341 Page
Middleport fU St past
LOS T Ladles Bulova Watch St
Reward Ca ll (304 )675·2052 Overbrook on left ra1n or
shme 9?

Deed
Volume

p1n,

THENCE South 58

r

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
j.
m
Borders $3.00/perad
E!'-11
Graphics SO¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Display Ads

..

Clii11-800-HRBLOCK or
vrs1t hrblod&lt;.com for an
offrce near you.

berng described as
follows
THE POINT OF
BEGINNING
being
located as follows
COMMENCING al the

West one-half of
Sectton 5, 412.5 feet
(25 rods) to 1n non ptn

t

'

(740)2 56 6817

THE
PLACE
OF
BEGINNING,
CONTAINING
12/100
ACRES, MORE OR
LESS
PROPERTY
ADDRESS:
554 Main
Street,
Rutland, Ohio 45775
PROPERTY OWNER
Floyd H Cleland
PRIOR DEEO REFERENCE
Volume 186,
Page 617
PP#
1
2
00048 000
Appraised _ at
540,000, Terms ol
Sale- Cannot be sold

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

992·2157

Oeatl£irU"

r

'

West along the north
line of Marvin &amp;/or
Sheila Taylor lo the
pomt ol begmmng,

Or Fax To

Ofpee llo~~
HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

l\egtster

Sentinel

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Call Today•••

on gdme ddy 111 the class

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
PUBLIC NOTICE
SHERIFF SALE
Case Number
04CV037

Your Ad,

.tboul w h.rt needed to be do ne
t o rc,rch them
- I thrnk Jl w,ts Anthony
Schle~el, when I .rsked htm
v,;h,ll'~ our g1e.rtest ch,tllenge
111 200S who saKL M akmg
e1 e1yo ne under stand w hat 1t
l.rkes on the I Ie ld 111 practrce

618 East Main St
Pomeroy, OH
n3-992-S674

1-.
)-

urrtbune

To Place

c,\C h o~bout then ~o.tl s .md

100111 OUtSIUC o l c,lllljJUS- to
be .r ch.rmpton
' l thmk we h,Jve gu)S rntet
estecl 111 dom g th,tl

Cuu nty OH

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

po~si i iHJ mo nth s -He asked

111th a r~fund aut!&lt; IJ Ml!Oll 1&lt;&gt;~ 11 d H 1 k b vuur ax g11y l h.tl fils!"

There will be a free breakfast of eggs,
sausage and biscuits beginning at
7:30- sign up time for golf 8:30-9:00.
Rain or Shine!
Breakfast will be served.

MelpCI&gt;Unly 011

G~llli

exchdm!es ove1

Can Your Tax Guy
Get Money This Fast'?

Senior Friday Golf Scrambles will begin
the 1st Friday in April (April 1st).

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

CLASSIFIED

L1ncb.tckcr
Bobby
C.u pcntcr s,ud tt"s only natur,tl to ,\1\ll ht gh
- W e w .1111 to be u p there
You nevc1 so~y. Well I hope
we go 7-4 thr s year' We want
to go 11-0 We w o~m to "111 a
n.rtwn.r l title Thdt' s been my
goo~ I every year smce I" ve
bee n hete --he sdrd ""Evenrt I
drdn'l thrnk we necessa11ly
w h rch
h,rcl the best t.rl cn l thiS )e,rr I thrnk we do - you
sui! w.rnt to be No I when the
d.ty s over
Tt csse l mel w!l h most o tlm
veter.rn p l.ryers rn l engthy

\~llh h1stanl Moru.·y y r1u ca11 "'Ilk lll V.J jil )j!l!r lriX!'" iitul \\a[k lr ll!

o!-'P~

www.mydailysentinel.com

S,\Jd

Instant Money. Nobody gets
you money faster.

Pine Hills Golf

Wednesday, March 30, 2005

MosrtE HoM~~
t"ORS~E

1979 Fa1rmont Claudena
14x70 2 br 1 ba 304-675
5954 or 304 779 2353
2 Payments down 4 years
let1 on note (304)736 3409
2001 Oakwood 16x80 3
bedroom 2 bath v1nyVshm
gle appl ances central neat
&amp; a~r S16 900 {304)633 •

6536
2002 Clayton 16x80 mob1le
home
Shtngled
roof
$25 999
Call (7 40)446
7817
96 Norns 14x76 CIA 2 bed
room 2 bath sale S16 000
Rent
$450
no
pets

(740)446-1062
For Sale
bedroom

1979 Homene 2
w/centcal atr

$3 495 00 Call 1740) 31!5
4367
For Sale 14)(70 3 bed
room sel up m Country
Homes $6 995 00 Move 1n
today l Call (740)385-4367
Fo r Sale
Clayton S1era
28 x56
Double
W1de
Modular Home Buyer must
move Home to their s1te 3
bedrooms MBA w1th full
ba1t1 and 6 Soaker Tub 2
Ad I Bed Rooms With full
bath Includes all up grade
Appliances
also
Refr igerator Washer/Drye r
m Mud Room Llvmg Room
has 45 Surround Sound TV
System With 6 Change r
CO/DVD Player 3 ton 3600
BTU Heat Pump Pnced al
$54 800 tor mtormat1on and
v1ew1ng call 1304)675 7137
11 no answer leave message
w1th name and phone num
bar
Inventory Clearance New 3
bedroom
home
S239 OO/mon1h
Includes
NC Delivery and Set up
Call M1ke (740)385 7671
Inventory Clearance New 4
bedroom
Home
$319 00 1month
Includes
NC Deuvery and Set up
Call Harold (740)385·9948
Mov1ng Must Sell
14x70 Noms set up on tot
$10 900 (740)446 9480 or
(740 )446 3266
Nauonw1de aYa1 lab1l ry AU
Aepos 1999 and olaer halt
pr1ce W111 br~ng m from out
ol state 10 I II custome r
demand 1st come 1 serve
(304)736 3409

SAVE SAVE SAVE
Stock modl!ls at otd pnces
2005 moaels arnv1ng Now
Coles
Mobile
Homes
15266 U
50 East Athens
Oh iO 45701 (740)592 1972
"Where You Get Your
Moneys Worth~

s

Several mobile homes latE
70s 80s and 90s call for

prices (740)388 8371
(740)388 9686

r

or

Lors&amp;
ACREAGE

For Rent Tra1ter Lot No Pets
StOO Plus Deposits Roush
Ferrel Dr of Camp Conley

No down payment posstb!e 1 Ad 130-&lt;1675-261•
3 oectroom 2 b8tn dm1ng
room 11vmg room w 'f1re
place
newly remodeled Lot tor sa.Je 4t X:1 07 Beale
attached 2 car' Land Clenden1n District Lot
kitchen
garage 28x32 pole Darn all ~55 accord1ng to tax deed
appliances Included approx
Larry Edwards (740)742
6 acres $89 000 (740)742
2535
7200

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentinel.com

.t. ,_...,REA•~oi~ii~i[i~iEi il•ll-'1 r

Hous~
mR Rmr

It

full

basement. Approx , 1600 s'l . It each . 1

Gallipolis Ferry. $700 month . or .2 baths. Lease price
negotiable to encourage
(740)446-3481
new
bus1n-eSs .
Call

c_au

1999 Eddie Bauer Explorer
AWD. loaded, leather, 6 disc
CD
changer,
sunroo t,
92,000 miles. $9,500 OBO.
(740)446·7777

1997 Chrysler Concord LX.
Air , good tires, 100,000
miles. V6, good condition.
Must satl, Call (740)4468627.

2001 Lincoln Navigator.
AW D, 5.4 V8, 3rd row seat·
ing, cassette/CD·c han ger,
heated/cooled-seats, low r--:J.:'IID'""'~'•
miles, exce llent condition,
•

3 or 4 bedroom house in (740)446-4425 01 (7401446·
Pomeroyr $500 per mo .. 3936.
Poodle puppies· tiny toys,
$500 deposit, no animals 1
AKC , white &amp; cream. 2 male. 1999 Red Pontiac Grand·
WA!VI1lll
4x4
years Je~se , (740)949i7004
1 female. {740)401-0327
m Rmr
AM GT, 2DR V6-HO, PL,
FOR SALE
Sunroof,
Autq,
4 rooms and bath _ 52 Olive
UKC Toy Rat Terrier puppy. PW,
St. No pets, $300 month . Looking for a home or trailer Shots &amp; wormed . $100. Call AMfFMfCO w/ equalizer &amp; 2001 Dodge Ram 4x4, 46K.
AC.
Spoiler
Exce llent
(740)446·3945.
to rent in Gallipolis School (740)256·6824.
28 months on 19K remainCondition
still
under
II 1741&gt;14&lt;&lt;1 -012R
ing
factory warranty, new
Attention!
Warranty 70, 000 miles,
&amp;
long bed, quad ca b,
tires,
Local company offenng ~ NO
$8.500 (304)882-3236
V EGETARLE;&lt;;
tow" package. am·fm-cass·
DOWN PAYMENT" piOc
2000 Kia Sephia 4-door, cd. loaded, one owner,
grams for you to buy your
Kessel 's Produce
$17r500, (740)992·2459
Amish cheese .&amp;. luncti automatic. very easy on gas,
home Instead of rentmg
·L
• 100% financing
mBats, fres h fruil &amp; veg . 70,000 miles, runs like new, 200 1 Jeep Cherokee Sport
purple in color. $4,500 or
• Less than perlect credit Maylag dryer, $95: Whirlpoo l
4)(4 price reduced, loaded
washer. $95, Tappan gas Open Thurs. Frt, Sal. 1 mil.e best offer. (740)441 ·9378.
accepted
CD ,towing package 54,000
west of Holzer Hospita l on ·
• Payment could be the range. $15o: GE refrigerator, Jackson P.i ke. ph. (740)4462002 Cac:tillac Deville, white miles $9,200·080 304·675$ 150; small lreezer, $150:
same as rent .
7787· 740 339·2131 .
diamond,
tull y equipped, 1314
Mortgage
Locators like oew side·by·Side refngfactory wa rranty, 22,900 2003 Dodge Duly, 4x4,
erator. wh ite, $375: Westing
Fo R SALE
: (740)992·7321
miles, like new. $24,995 black, 4 door, 6 speed.
House co rdless swellper,
{740)256· 1428.
• Nice country cabin on 33 $75: assorted chairs, $5
Cummins engine. nerf bars.
: acres references required , each.
ATV used very · lit1 le with 2002 Pontiac Grand AM SE. stainless body moldin gs,
· 25 mmutes· from Athens ,
Skaggs Appliances
newly painted trailer, $5,000 Red, AJC, CD, loaded, 56k diamond plate tool bo)( &amp;
good hunting, (740)698·
bed
sides,
retract able
76 Vine St .. Gallipolis
Troy built tiller, $400. Call mites.
Euro
ta"i llights, gooseneck ball, 59,000
7244
(740)446·7398.
·chrome accents, $8.995.
m;les. $29,000. (740)256·
1 \lnl...,l 1'1'111"
Excellent condition. Call 9247 01 (740)645-0870.
Renoyated !arm house .
Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark
( 0)
.
6 ..
74 256 881
,\11\I"HIII\
. Country selling , Bidwell
Chapel Road. Porter. OhiO
88 Ford F- 150, 6cyl. 5spd,
• area. 3BA: 1BA, · 5500/mo
4 4 1
·87?·830·
(7
40)446·7
4
10
FARM
93
Uhcoln
Town
Car.
81
,000
4x4, $2000.
After 5pm,
• $400/deposit
(740)446·
62.
Free
Estimates.
Easy
""'"Uli'MENT
m11es.
Ver
y
n1
ce,
$4,5.00.
l~ave
message.
(740)949·
9
f
: 0116 01 (740)709-9069 .
linancing, 90 days same as L.,-,.;""'iiiiiliiiiliiiiiOiooo_.l (740)446-1 759.
2524
cash. VISa! Master Ca rd.
- - - - - - - - - ;:;;:~--~----,
MoRn £ HoM.:s
Drive·
a·
little
save
alot.
Knig
ht
model
2250
Reel
95 Buick Century Wagon. . r_..,;,iriiiiViiMSiii
.iiiioo_.l
llJRR£1\'r
Auggie Forage feede r with Under 48 ,000 mi les, new
• FoR SALE
Thompsons Appliance &amp; scales. Good co ndition Call tires, brakes, battery, muf2 bedroom mobile home in Repair-675- 7388. For sale, (740)245-5047.
fler, alter riator. $3,600,
1983 Ford Van 6 cyl .. $450
· M1c:tdleport, all electric, re-conditioned
automatic - - - - - - - - - Excellent. (740)446-2739.
· $375/month + deposit. No washers &amp; dryers. refngera- Vermeer ro und bater 8 11.
1985 Fo rd Van V8 460,
: inside pets (740)992-3194 tors. gas and electric d1sc mower. Hession 3900 95 DOdge Cirrus LX. Very $600. Call (740)446·0 194
ranges. air cond1ttoners, and side delivery rake. (740)245- clean, ma roon, 4 door,
1993 Chevrolet f\,stro Van.
2 bedroom mob1le hOme wringer washers. Will do 5064.
garage kept, 30mpg. list good
conditio n
phone
Close to
town. Call repairs on major brands in
$3.400. sell S1 ,aso .
(304)675-5077
(740)256-6574.
shop or at your h_ome
LJVFSrOCK
Pool pump &amp; sand tiller,
used 3 weeks. $175. 2000 Ford WlndStar .LX,
3BR, 4 miles from Holzer Used Furniture Store. 130
9 t ,OOO miles, 2 sliding
(740)446-1127.
. $350/monl h plus security Bulav1lle Pike Appliances ,
1 very fnendl y, t yr "old mal e · :-:--::-- '"- :-:-:::--:--::--:--:- doors, power wi ndows &amp;
deposit and relerences. No mat1resses.
dressers. Pygmy goat. Bl ac!Vwhite. 99 Chevy Malibu LS. V6. 4· cruise $6,300 (304 )675pels. (740)37_9-2923 or couches. dinettes. recli ners,
.
Good
wllh
ch ildren. door.
automatic,
fully 40 t4
(7 40)446-6865
grave monuments, much (740)44 1-1590
loaded , CD, aluminum
ar LX, 81K,
more:
(740)446-4782,
wheels, 65,000k. $4,795. 2000 Ford Win st_
Rent to Own. 2BR Mobile
2/sllding doors, seats 7, all
Gallipolis. OH. Hrs. 11·3 (M- 3 AQHA registered quarter (740)379·2748.
Home (304)675-2359
power, rear air, tinted winhorses, 1 sorrel gelding, 2
S) We buy used furniture .
dows.
askin g
$6,600,
bay
mares,
$1500
ea.
OBO,
BMW
Z3,
'99,
Specia
l
Trailer for rent 2 bedroom ,
(740)669-5653
(740)965·4321
Edi
tion,
22.000
rrliles.
dark
$300/mo. pl us deposit. On
A NTIQUES
green, $t 9,999 (304)41 2·
At. 7, 1/2 mile from
3 reg. black A.n gus. 2 years
3380.
Middleport exit across from
1
Buy or sell. Alv"Etrine old. Cows $800 each. Call
sawmill, next to KC Auto
Must sale , t 9B4 Corvene,
Antiques, 1124 East Main (740 )367 ' 7295 ·
Sales.
(740)446-81-72 :
350 engine. (740)992·6797 02 Honda 400 E)(. E)(ce llent
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy. 74Q- ·
4-H Pigs for Sate
(740)256·6251.
condition\ rode little. $3,000
992-2526 . Russ Moore, Begin farrowi ng 1120/05 and
SELL YOUR CAR
neg. Call (740)256-1526 or
owner.
still farrowing . Pure bred
(740)645.0446.
Yorks
and crossbreds.
New Antique Mall Opening Please call (740)448-2002
04 Yamaha Rhino after mar·
(740)541-7491
or
1 &amp; 2 bedrqom apartments Soon Off 177 &amp; US Rt 33 in or
ket wheels, speed-o-meter,
Ravenswood. (740)541 -747:0
on
Beech
Street
in Downtown
$6,800. Call (740 )339-1620 .
Middleport furnished , utili· WV. Dealer spaces available . ' - - ' - - - - ' - - , - - - 4th Annual
reasonable
charges
for
1982 Honda 500 Trike
ties pa1.d. deposit &amp; referOhio Valley Pig Sale
Booths Don 't miss this
Faring WJstereo system Dk
ences required, no pets.
Chance. Information, call Gailia County Fairgroun ds
WITH A PHOTO!
blu e. Eve nings (740) 256·
(7 40)9g2-D165
Fred (304)532-2710 . or
April 2. 7:30pm
6870. S3,000.
. .
90 p1gs sired by many ot
1 and 2 bedroom apart- (30 4)273-2746"
Call (740)44 6·2342 ·
the nation's \op A. I. Sires
1982 Yamaha Exciter 185,
men ts, furnished and untur·
For Details
942 actual miles, last tuneM
ISCELLANEOUS
Contact: Kyle Deal's Club
nished, security dep osit
up Spring 2004, $750 OBO,
MERCHANDISE
,·
Pigs
required , no pets, 740-992·
740·388-PIGS (388· 7447)
(7401696·1227
TRUCKS
2218.
740-441-5460 (cell)
FOR SALE
6 It pool table, like new with
1993 Suzuki 600 Kantana.
Guest Consignors:
2 bedroom apartmen t lor ace.
New paint last fall . Great
Bodimer
Brothers
Show
rent, Racine, OH. Deposil Amish oak glider, like new,
1993 Chev y 3500 Turbo shape. Asking $1.800 080.
Pig s
requ1red , no pets. (740)992- real nice·. (740)446-2506.
Diesel. Red Pickup. Dully, (740)366-01 72
Graham Blessing Farm
5174, !ea"ve message.
Power Windows, Locks,
Treg Ulmer
Beige lilt chair. like new,
Load ed
$8,000 ·
firm 1998 Buell 53 Thu nderbolt
Beautiful2·story townhouse , $200, (740)992-7655
Harley Davidson engine,
(304)593-5073
Hatching April 6th
overlooking Gallipolis C1ty . ----=~--very last sport bike, great
~l ack Australorps
park Kitchen-fam ily. 0 .A.,
JET
1995 Ford F-150 XLT, 8 ft. shape. $5100.. (740 )965·
. Pullets$1.60-each
L. A. 3 B.A. , study, 2 baths,
AERATION MOTORS
bed , e)(cellent cond itiOn. 9657
Rhode
Island
Red
Pullets
laundry area . . Reterences Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In
Asking $6,800 OBO. Call
$1.50-each
2001 Harley Road King. Teal
required. security deposit. Stock. Call Ron Evans, 11740)992· 1777.
Austra Wh ite Pullets
in color, many extras, one
no pets ." $900 per mo . .800·537·952.8.
$1.50-each
(740)446-2325 or (740)4461999 Chevy 1 ton with 11 ft. owner, excellent co ndition,
Buff Orphington Pullets
4425.
· utility bed. AC. cruise, tilt, 29,000 miles . $16,000.
$1 .60-each
Large Indoor Swimming
350 gas, 5 speed trans., (740)446·02 13.
Now Taking Orders
BEAUTIFUL
APART- Pool with all Accessories
69,000 miles. Excellent con- 2003 H.D. 663, $6,300 ; 1996
(304)593·5073
MENTS
AT
BUDGET mcluding Gas Heater/.Cover
dition. Call (740)256·1 526 or Honda 300 4x4, $2 ,500:
PRICES AT JACKSON &amp; Liner excellent condition - - - - - - - - - (740)645-0446.
1986
BMW
K1 000 AT,.
ESTATES, 52 Westwood (304)773-6000
Q~arter horse, Palamino. 3
$2,500. (740)245·57 47.
Drive lrom S344 tq $442.
.
years old, very gentle, ~ld- 2000 Chevrolet-Silverado
Walk to shop &amp; movies . Call M·t Garand 30 · 06 $725 ing, 5650. Call (740)256· 1500 LS, full y-optioned, ~004 t-Jarley Davidson , 200
Model
29
740-446-2568.
Equal firm .
4 )( 4 ,b edl i ner, t railen ng · Custom Sportster. loaded.
6824
Hous1ng Qpportumty.
.. Smith &amp; Wesson 44 mag. ___· - - - - - - - pkg ., Pewter ext. ,Charcoal $9, 900 0 80, 304-593-3542,
- - - - -- - - - $525 fi rm. (740)992-1529 . Aeg1 st ered Black Angus int. , 100k highway miles, 773-5 182.
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· No Sunday calls
Bulls 12 to 16 months. syn.oil, below book $12, 900.
94 Harley Davi dson Ultra
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
(740)446-9656.
304·773·6062
Classic, 10,000 m11es, blue,
ToWnhouse
apartments. NEW AND USED STEEL
and/cir small houses FOR. Steel Beams, P1pe Rebar Suffolk Ewes fa r sale. Call 2000 51 0-LS, Ext-cab, 3rd excellent condition, Si3.500.
.
Ang le, (740)44 6-4836
•
Concrete,
AENT. Call (740)441-11 11 For
door, 4-cyl, 5·spd. AC, CD, (7&lt;W)949·22 17 .
for applicatiOn &amp; informat1on . Channel. Flat Bar, Steel Yearling Angus Bulls, Mostly 48,000
mile s.
Ask.i ng
97 CABO. Race ready, runs
Gr.ating
For
Drains ,
A I. e)(cellent blood lines, $7,900 00 080 (740)949- great must see to appreciEfficiency apt. $300 month Dnveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
pnced reasonablyr Slate Run 2621
ate. $1,()(X). Gallipolis area.
plus utilities. No pets. Ideal Scrap Metals Open Monday.
for 1 or 2 people.· Call Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; Farm, Jackson. (740)286- 2002 Chevy 1500, VB , ce ll {740)645-087 3.
5395
(140)446-4313.
Friday, Bam-4:30pm Ctosed
29,080 miles, 5spd, PSIPB,
www.slaterunfarm.co m
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
AC, titucruise, CD, $1 2,000.
Help Wanted
Furnished 2 &amp; 3 rOOm apts. Sunday. (740)446-7300
Recon title. (304)634·5131 .
HAv&amp;
, Clean, no pets. Reference &amp;
GRAIN
deposit
required .
Call
2004 FORD F-150 Lariat .
. (740)446-1519
Super Crew, 10,000mi
10001t bales, $7.1)()-$10.00 2yr/20,000ml warra nty left,
&amp; $15 .00, pick up load or loaded/extra s,
$30,000.
semi-load ,
good
hay: (304)523-3500; (30 4)654·
(740)696-2765
93 18: (304)666-1666.

--------,J

r

FRurrs

r.

Dil'!l;'_______

r

r~4~=rust

r ~~~

.I

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

-:S.::'IJid---:::-,
lrnfln• · · -

James A Will Jr.
Owner

. Gracious livmg. 1 and 2 beQ·
· room apartments at Village
. Manor
and
AiveFstde
Apartments in Middleport.
From $295·$444. Call 740·
992-5064. Equal Hous i r;~g
Opportunities.

Buildlnga -Final
Steel
Clearance AU Must Gol
Aepo 's,
Damaged,

Orchard grass hay round·
bales, 1.000"1bs. 2004, b~un
kept , $20 each. Arou nd 40
left. (740)446·0223 alter
5pm.
-'--------Tobacco Plants lor sale. Call
(740) 446 7843
•
'

Cancellations! Use your T..
Retum1 to build your dream
building. Call 800-.t05-l50 1 72~ Carroll fi nish mower.
New 1 bedroom apt. Call ext. 1558
(740)446.·3736.
Good shap e. $600. Ca ll
Westerns Will Trade or . ~~0 1 446 " 9355 ·
•
, One BR apartmef)t 1n Spring E)(change (304)675·5884
_
. Valley. $265 per month plus
FORAUTOSS••
depoSit.' WID hookups.

r

(740)339-0364
. (740)3880017.
THE MAPLES
1DO MEMOR IAL DRIVE
EAST
POMEROY. 740-992-7022
Residential
Subsidized
Housing lor 50 vear~ pt age
and older. Prlortty Olven to
Appllcanta with lncam11 1t
or below $10,800.00
Maximum InCome effective
02/ 11 /2005 for 1 person
$18,150.00.
•
Mutt mHt HU0/120218 crtterl1 tor houHhold com· ·
poeltlon.
Managed by
Silverh'eels, Incorporated. A
Realcy Company Equal
Housing Opportunity

BSIJIU)
UPPL~

I~10

~~-----·=--.
.

~

~

j

AKC" Registered German
Shepherd. pups, e)(cellent
bloodlines. large boned
$225 (30&lt;4)675-5724
Beautiful lull·blooded Pit
Bull puppies. Needs a good
home. (no papers) $150tem~l e ,
'$200-male
(740)245·5102; (740)8455990.

93 F d p u
· a·
or
• Wl:tendcab,
~ . XLT, loaded, 1,14,000
miles, $2 195· Reduced Ia
$1895.00, (740)992-1721
99 Dodge Dakota Club Cab
SLT, Load ed V·8, 4)(4, Bedline r,
Aunnirig-Boards,
Tonneau Cover, 95Kmi.
$9,50Q (304)882· 2845

.
I

Block, brick, sewer pipes, $5001 Honda's, Chevy'S,
wtndows, lintels, etc . Claude
Jeep's,
Ect.
~once
Winter&amp;, Rio Grande, OH
lmpounds l Cart from $500
Call 740-245-5121 .
for li stingS 800~39 1·5227
EX'l 3901
Pris

L---I'ORIIiii.SiilliALE
ilii._.,J

:2~
004
~-:S~ilv-e-ra-d:-o-:1 500=-.-:ZJ:::-1,
4WD, loaded,' still Under
wartanty, 29, 000 miles, asking $26,000 (304)675-4917

1969 Fold XL, Galaxy 390, .
automatic, powe r stHrln g
and brakes, AC, interior
excellent, MechaniCal l.llc&amp;lient, body good . Needs
minor repair and paint.
$3,300.00 OBO. (740)6961373. (740)591·5866.•
1994 whne Thunderbird,
loaded, SlCCellent condition,
VB . $3,200 or best offer.
(740)388-9875.

Card ol Thanke
I would Uke to
tMnk CM!IYOIIe
who gave mea
l:llrtlxMy party,
gifts and se~t
cards for my
90th birthday.
I rect!!lved over

90cards.
May God bles$
each one.

Ruby Burnside

2§Years Experience

32 11 9 WelshtownRd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phon•: 740-992-2432

David Lewis
740-992-6971

E-mail
jwill45769 @y:.~hoo.com

rlloA~~s~ID~ I

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

2002 Stinljray 20 ft. open
bow, Red/ Wh1te, 5.0 liter V·
8, Hustler trailer, excellen t
cond ., garage kept price
new $24.000 sell $15,700.
call Troy Krebs 304-675·

• Room Additions &amp;

Rerriodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutter!
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Pallo and Porch"Decks
We da It all except
furnace work

03-30·0S

Rocky Hupp Insurance

#.0 8754

¥ K·Q J 9

and Financial Services
41800 SR #7
Tupp~rs Plains, OH
~~~~ 45783
Home ~ Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
.Medicare Sup. • cancer • Accident

992-6215

"03" 34' Jayco 5th whee l. 1·
12' sl1de out. like new, many
e)( tras. (740)339-02 18.

1998 30' fifth wheel travel
trail er. double slide, e)(cellent condition. 513,900
phone (740)698·9319

New Homes • Vinyl
• ~cp l acc m c nt
Win dows •

2001 Hornet Bunkhouse 32',
, 2' expando, sleeps 10,
e)(cellen t condition. $16,800.
(740)441· 150 1.

._, 1 ll\ H I ._,
11'1~--~----,

rio

HOME
IMPROVEMEN'I'S

Roofing

COMMERCI AL an d
RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599
IJ:I!I

L.------.. . . . . .

1..,-oiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiil;,...
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifeti me guaran tee local references furnished. Established. 1975. ·
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me do 1t for youl

LINDA'S PAINTING

Culverts
plaslic and metal , 6" Inches·
60 inch es in stock . Ron
Eva ns Enterprise, Jackson.
OH 1(800)537-9526

#.O AKQJ I O

JONES'

South
I o!o
4o!o

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

10x10x10x20
992-3.194
or 992-6635
"Middleport's only
Seii-Storase"

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTIUCDOII
• New Homes
• Garages

• Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

.I tMV~
wOfll&gt; WITti

MAY

LIJ

· Sunset Home
Construction

, . , . t:l...

Saturday April, 23,
·2005
9:00 A. M.
Mason VFW

Refundable Deposit)
Cal 740-992·9444
or Email p&lt;rson6@verizon. Net
WV, O H and aillegal
states must be 21 .

A

·you? ' ·......'-'7

IF'

..

G)

••

•

Brian Reeves
New Home Construction, Remodeli ng,
Renovati ons. Decks, Garages. Pole
Bui ldings, Roofs, Sidi ng, Windows &amp; All
Other Residential Needs
Phone: 740-742-3411
for a free estimate.

•u t:DIIt:UIM

BARNEY
TH' LAST PLACE
I LOOK !!

RELAX, MAW,
HALP, PAW!! I CAN '
T'S ALWAYS IN
RECK'YMEMBER
.WMAR I HID· MY
TH' SAME PLACE
EGG
!!
MONEY
11

Let li S

choose a lm'fi."'g

tribute to your loved

on e's memory.
\I 'IH F
\10'\l \11•. '\"1
( '0\11'\'\)
~9728

SRI 43
Pomeroy. OH
740-992-9922
Mon-Sut IOAM-5PM

v.M'i '10-'(0
01'\L'i '10'::,

!

- BIG NATE
50

l OACt 1
.JO HN "'
W't-Jt:RE "S
A LL TtiE

IMPORTS
.
Athens

Whaley's Auto
Parts

St. Rt. 68 1 Darwin. OH
740"992-70 13 or 740-992-5553

PEANUTS

Restockin.g /,ate Model Salvage
and After Market Parts
See Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed·

'1'ES. MA'AM .. [ NEED
TO RUN ~OME SEC AU 51:
IT'S RAININ6. AND I'M
AFRAID MV D06 15
· 6ETTIN6 WET.. .

'(E5. ~E HAS A
NO, HE DOESN'T HAVE AN
D06HOU5E . BUT
UMBRELLA ..I DON'T KNOW
HE NEVER 60E5 ~ IWHAI HE OOES WHEN ITRII:IN5 ..
IN_ I_T_···1__

v- ~

MYERS PAVING
. Henderson, WV

875-2487
SUNSHINE CLUB

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

.· • Driveways • Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets

•

PLEASANT VALlEY HOSPITAL

i1

GARFIELD

RADIOLOGIC TECHNOLOGIST

For more information :
Pleasant Valley Hospifal '
c(o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
304-675-4340
AA/EOE
www.pvalley.org

Pass

Pass

Pass

33 Metallic

HE CIRCL.ES ANP CL.OOE5
IN UPWINI7. ..

HE

SINC.l.ES

IACO ...,

•'•

''

ADVERTISE -IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

740-949-2217

Now Available At

Scorpion Tractors
" Taking Th e Sti11g Out Of
Hard Work!••

Mid-Size 4Wheel Dhve Tractor
wi th 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 C hester 985-3301
\

I
I

GRIZZWELLS
~ ~ ~']

'7\tJ.CE 'tbU
Cf5l \.\.IC\('(,
1"\'i-R~\-1.1'"

(\ ~t~\{

OUT

THE WEAKEST

6 Eucalyptus

eater
sound
Quaint hotel 7 Lhasa a C'urblng
RNs
9 Santa
provide it
-winds
Yard tools
10 First-down
Born
yardage
Cartoon
11 koch and
shriek

Pass

35
37

38
39
40

- pay

lor lh1s l
45 Besides
47 Pamplona
shouts
22 Mugs
48 Choke or
·oke ·
24 Whisk
25 Sugarbush 49 ncan
trees
treasure
26 Have
so Pul the
moves on
poison i vy
27 Food
52 Seine vista
53 Rorem· or
steamers
Beatty
28 Batman
creator
54 Mdse.
29 Knock flat
book
19 Adapt
20 Box up

l

34 Tempen!IUre
scale

36 Handy

42 Yielded
territory

·

The danger IS that West Wlll play a third
diamond, thinking that East can overruff
the dummy. To deflect· West toward the
winning defen§e, East should discard the
club king - the top of h1s sequence
when he will not win th e tnck.
Now West would probably continue with
the ace and another club, giv1ng his Side
the 1irst four trieks However. it is bener to
lead a -low cl ub. East wins with the n1ne
and continues With the queen, but West
overtakes with h1s ace and, leads a dia·
mond, hoping declarer will ruff low on the
board ·
Finally, notice that 11West does start with
three rounds of diamonds, declarer can
make the contract with an overtrick. He
ruffs the third diamond with dummv's
spade seven . draws trumps, and runs the
hear ts , co llecting five spades, four
hearts, the diamond queen, and tt:le dia-

.

V H ...

3/30

Racine, Ohio
4577 1

East

2 o!o

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
C!lebrity Ci~1 cryploglams are crealed lrom qoota~&lt;Y~s by famous people. past and presen~
.
Eactlletler m 1he CIJ)"le l stand~ tor aflOth&amp;l

Today's due· N equals \'

" VA

Ap

G

s

VY
DX

TOSAVUVXW

ZVAL

A LX

ZLXK

XEHXGGXKA
-

ASYAX

ZOXAHLXW

CXWVPHDVAN

mond ruff in the dummy.

e

29670 Bashan Road

North

43

Wynn

13 Account

Yesterday, I highlighted that if a defender
is the 1hird hand to play to a trick that he
cannot wtn , he may drop the top of ~
sequence of honor cards. In that deal ,
East played the club queen from O·J-3-2
under West's ace-lead. West continued
w1th a low club at trick two to put Ecisl on
lead tor the telling shift. Today, we have a
different example of this type of play.
How should the de1enders ca rd •to defeat
tour spades? Wha t do you th ink of the
auction?
LEn'S look at the second question first.
SoUth'&amp; lou r-spade rebid is onl y a tad
optimis tic, and one loves to shoot tor a
vulnerable-game bonu s
West starts w1th his two top diamonds.
What shoul9 East discard on the sec·
on~n

Help Wanted

Hill's Self
Storage

West
2•

Echo of yesterday,
yesterday

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Pleasant Valley Hospital, a non-profit
healthcare facility, has a position
available for a. part lime Radiologic
Technologist
Applicant must meet the registry ·
requirements by the ARRT. Applicant
must have a WV license.
Excellent salary, holidays, health
insurance single/family plan, dental,
life insurance, vacation, long-term
disability and retirement. Join our
family of professionals to be the
resource for community health
service needs.

Q 10 7 6

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

(740) 992-5232
.5xl0, lOxlO,
10x15, 10x20,
10x30

97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

A 3

•

41 Family mem.
42 18601
lnHIIII •
1 Third
dlmen• lon. 43 Birthdayno.
6 Martial art 44 Observe
46 PQOh 's pal
12 Real
14 Premiered 48 lose control
( 2 -.)
15 Hockey
51 Bleach
player
55 Sound the
16 People
·
trom India
alarm
17 OA's degr8e 56 Gave
18 WoH Man
a holler
portrayer
57 Spurred on
19 Jeans
58 Goes
go-with
downhill
21 Brownie's
org.
DOWN
23 Computer
giant
I Mr.
26 Fleming
Hammar·
of 007 novels
skjokl
27 Soaked
2 K ind
wHh water
olsystem
28 Work clay
3 '_' Harper
Valley - "
30 - -tac·toe
31 Raw metal
4 Ball-gown
32 DumbIabrie
5 Ice pallets
founded

Openi ng lead: • A

Phone

MANlEY'S
SElf STORAGE

•

"' 5 4

Storage

Pomeroy, Ohio

"' KQ .J 109

South

Blgh and Dry

Janet Jeffers
33795 Hilan,d Road

• 4

A. a '"

Dealer : South
Vulner able: Botp

$75.00 ($25.00 Non·

17401 985-4180

o!o 632
¥1 0.1"62

A KJ 532

740•667-0700 1-888-HUPP234

BUilDERS InC.

Sidi ng .• N ew Garages

7 3 2

8 5 4

WVI}36725

BISSELL

9 8

East

POmeroy, Ohio
25 Yearsloeat Ex rlenee

1997 Coachman Catalina
lite 24' loot, Front Bedroom.
many
extras
phone
(304)675·2039 $6,995 080

•
•

9

V.C. YOUNG Ill

I

r

£EWIS
CONCR£T£
CONSTRUCTION

Complete small
engine repair

HERE

r

NEA Crosswo r d Puzzle

BRIDGE

1987 Dodge Diplomat,
excellent -condition, 70.000
miles. clean inside/ out ,
garage kept. $1,500 l irm,
(740)992·1493
.

1998
Pontiac
Sunfir"e $24,500. (740)446·7484 or
Convertible.
97, 000 (740)441-7411 .
miles/auto, 2.4liter eng1he, 99 Jeep Grand CherOkee
all power, CD player, new Laredo. loaded, 6 cylinder,
tires.
Bl ack
w/Aed e)(cellent condition, 97.000
Pinstripes.. $3,500 Firm . miles,
$7,90 0
OBO.
(740)245·9266
(74(1)592·2946.

3 bedroom Condo with nver tiOn . Downtown Gal11polis

,VIew,

suvs

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, March 30, 2005
ALLEY OOP

tUIISALE

$23.500.(740)453-5535.
1998 Chevy. Cavalier Runs
great. A.T, AC, lilt, looks 2003 Chevrole1 Trailblazer
EXT LT 4x4. 3rd row seating,
great. $3,200. (740)388·
loaded,
ga1age
kept.
8360 or (740)208·0004.
'Excellent
conditio n.

For Lease: Office or retail
spaces in very good condi-

Wednesday, March 30, 2005

GVXY

J y."

OXUPO X

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'His work and lhe example ol a llle lived
dignity are each an inspiratiOn.~ - David Marne\. of Arthur Miller
(c)2005 by NEA. Inc. 3·30

AstroGraph

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THAT DAILY
PUUL(I

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Thuraday. March 31 , 2005
By Bernice Bede Oeol
You r Inhere nt 1m pulse to b e an adventurous person w ill be accentuate d in
the year ahea d and you'l1 open up
ma ny new avenues lobe explored. By
looking to do things on a gran der
scale you'll advance your interests.
AR IE S (March 21· Ap ril 19) Although yo u may at first be a bit
unsure of you r th in king 'and be more ·
of a listener in co nversations with olh·
ers today. you ·n b e a major contributor
once you get into the fray.
TAURU S (April 20-May 2 0 ) - You'll
i unct10n better as a cou nter-punche r
Ieday, so don't b e the fi rst to exp ose
your ha nd when it comes to financia l
or commercial dealings wi th othe rs .
Hold back your aces.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20) - Don't
. be bashf ul abo ut posing probin g
questions today t o as many people as
you can in.o rder to f1n d your answers .,
In doing so, yo u'll unear th pertinent
information you didn't know e)(!Sied.
C A NCER (June 2 1-July 22) It
wou ld be wise r in 1he tong run t odaY
not to anem pl p rojects on your own
w h ere an ext ra p air of f1ands is
required You 'll only stumble about
witho ut the necessary h elp
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) II isn 't
always the best fo rmula to mi)( busi·
, ness with pleasure, bul today doing
so could turn out to be a winner.
Figure ou t a good way lo h ave fun
white advancirl g your agenda .
V IRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22) - In order
t o get a p roject in which you 're
presently ~nvolved off dead·center, 1t
may be "necessary Ieday to be willing .
to make changes. even if they involve
bol der measures than you 'd like.
After
LIBR A (Sept . 23-0cl . 23) you 've successfu lly taken care or all
your ser ious obligations and du.ties
today, erase them from your mind and
focus on the lighter things m lite , such
as getting together with your friends.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-N ov. 22 ) Opportunmes tor marer1a1 or financial
gain Ieday are likety to come through
somewha t veiled circumstances. It'll
be up to you 16 keep your eyes open
tor !hose hidden advantages .
SAG ITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0 ec, 2t) ·
Today, associates may think you 're a
bit lao inlo you r personal Involve·
ments. However, It'll be you who 'wi"ll
be advancing your interests and they
who w ill be frivolously wasting time .
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan . 19) You may lind yourself mired In some
sticky situations wilh which lo contend
Ieday, bul don't lei that disturb you .
You ·n come up with ingen ious ways to
e)(tricate yourself when needed .
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb 19 ) - You
must be car8tul to keep an open m1nd
and not negatively prejudge a new
associate you meet today. When you
gel Ia know this person bener. you
may find him or he r a va luable
acquainfance .
PISCES (Feb. 20· March 20) - The
best formula to follow todav. is to keep
everything in proper balance . Be .sen·
ous, prac;tlcal and conscientiOUS
when conditions merit it. but treat lha t

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�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 30, 2005·

www .mydailysentinel.com
'

NBA

Cincinnati Reds Baseball

Freel valuable in,role Cavs sink Clippers, 94-84he'd rather relinquish
"-It's hard as a .
utility player. I
. • J
Fr~~~~r~Y:hi~,:~,-e, Ryan cou ld. def rmte y
Moved to the outfield for
contribute if I
the
timeinfielder
in Class made
A ba ll.a played everydav,.
the first
speedy
1
sensational di ving catch that
but
at
thiS
time
turned heads. The next day:
he made another.
in the season I'm
He had no idea it was a
t , t be
preview of how he'd make it nO g01ng . 0
to the major leagues.
. playing as much.
Freel, 29, e merged last
W. e'II see,,
season as one of the maJ·Of
BY JOE KAY

Associated Press

The setbacks left him
resigned to the ro le he fiiJ.s
so well but wishes on someone else . Teams need reliable
res·erve . players. but ·Freel
would rat her not gertrapped
in that niche.
1
"It' s hard as a utt·1·lly Pay-

er.'' he said. "I could definitely contribute if I played
·everyday. bu t at this time in
the season I' m not go ing to
be playi ng as much. We' ll
see. It 's kino of hard to set
·those ~xpectut ion s and goa ls
h
'
· ·
h
W , .en you re Slttmg on t e
bench. "
leagues' most versatile players, handling five positions
- Cin,cin~ati's Ryan Freel
Free l got so much playing
for the Cincinnati Reds. He
time last season because of
led the t~am in steals, triples, in nine gan\es for Toron to at injurie s and the lack of a
infield hits and a number of the stan of that season. then depe nuable third baseman .
other categories, becof[li ng a got sent back to Triple-A. The Reds signed Joe Randa
fan favorite in the process.
The Reds signed him as a in the offseason, shoring up
He also became the first free age nt after the 2002 sea- the position that Freel played
major leag uer to start at least son.
mos.t often - he started 5 1
10 games at five positions
Free l got fo ur stints with games there last season. ·
since Tony Phillips did it for the Reds in 2003, hitting
Outfieluers Ken· Griffey Jr.
the Tigers in 1992, unC\er- .285 in 43 games. When · and Austin Kearns hav e
scoring how difficult it is to · injuries gutted the lineup last recovered from · injuries that
move around and still be ' season. Freel emerged, hi t- limited them to lialf of a seasound.
ting .277 in 143 games while · son, and Wily Mo Pena is the
He inadvertentl y started moving fro m posi tion to primary bac kup in the outcarving hi s role during his position - third' base. sec- field.
third se!lson in the minors,· ond , left field , center and
As lon g as everyone is ·
when hi s manager at right.
healthy. Freel will ha ve lim"That was another freak ited chances.
Dunedin ran into a problem .
"Something happened with thi ng," he. said. ''It was one
" I can still come off the
our center fielder that da y. of those situations where I benc h. pinch-run and play
and we had nobody to play got to play a lot. There were defense here and there,"
there," sai d Freel. who had a lot of positions th at needed Freel said. "We' ll see ."
played second base and a to be fi ll ed."
Reds fans look a liking to
few games at shortstop .
He was hoping to compete Freel, who runs hard on
'They were like, ' Let's see for a start ing job this spring, every hit and di.ves for ball s
what he can do out there."' ' but wasn' t fully recovered without hes itation, even if it
It turned into hi s first taste from surgery last November means taking oir the outfield
of what it 's like to become a to fix torn knee cartil age. He waiL
utility player.
was getting close to normal
'The fans have been just
"I made a diving catch on last week when he pulled tremendous," Freel said .
the· warning track, then made thi gh muscles while running -'They say, ' You remind me
a diving catch the next day the bases. forcin g him to of .Pete Rose' and this and
and started go ing back and take a few days off.
that. They know how the
forth ," he said.
Freel pinch-hit Tuesday game is supposed to be
He finally made it to the night against the. Twins and played. It doesn't take talent
majors in 2001 ; his seventh drew a walk. le av in g hi s to run everything out or to
year in pro ball. Freel played ave rage at .379.
play your heart out"
I

.

Twins beat Reds in 10
SARASOTA,· Fla. (AP) Joe Mauer went 3-for-3 with a
two-run double and Matthew
LeCroy homered in the I Oth
inning, leading the Minnesota
Twins to a 12-11 victory over
the Cincinnati Reds · on
Tuesday night ·
Mauer. ·making back-toback stans behind the plate
for the ftrst time this spring,
also singled twice .before he
was replaced by LeCroy in
the fifth inning. Knee su rgery
limited Mauer -to 35 games
last year, and the Twins have
been cautious with him this
spring.
Tor:ii Hunter and minor leaguer Josh Rabe hit two-run
homers for the Twins, who
piled up a spring-high 20 hits
off a cast of pitchers trying to
secure
bullpen
roles.
Outfielder
Michae l
Restovich. hoping to secure
the last roster spot, also had a
pair of run-scoring si ngles.
The Reds rallied for fi ve
runs off two minor league

pitchers in the ninth to tie it at I'm there now. I feel comfort! I, but LeCroy led off the able."
lOth with a homer off Jeriome
Besides playing . 'solid
Robenson.
defense, Randa has,gone on a
Ken Gri!Tey.Jr. went 1-for-5 hitting tear - 9-for- 17 with a
with a fir st-inning double. pair of homers in the last six
Griffey, who is coming &lt;iff games.·
hamstring
surgery
last
"I' ve felt good the whole
Augost, is hitting .282 with- spring," Randa said. "I wasn't
out' a homer this spring. He striking out early in camp,
smoothly ran down a couple just hitting balls at guys. I
of long tly ball s in center, didn't get frustrated . I just
showing no problem with the . stayed with the plan. I think
leg.
it's going to work out ."
The Reds were paced by
Reds left-hander Brandon
third baseman Joe Randa, Claussen gave up four hits
who hit a three-run homer in and three runs in the first
the tlrst inning off Joe Mays, inning , struggling at the outsingled and walked.·
set fo r the second straight
Randa signed a one-year, appearance. Claussen_ is
$2. 15 million deal last expected start the season in
December. The Reds haven't the bullpen, and could be used
had a rCiiable . third baseman as a fifth starter.
since they traded Aaron
David Weathers, one of the
Boone to the Yankees midway rei ievers signed by Cincinnati
through the 2003 season.
as part of a bullpen overhaul
'il just wanted to get adapt· in · the offseason, gave up
ed and fit in," said Randa. Rabe' s homer during a fivewho sPent the last six years run seventh inning that put
with Kansas City. "I feel like Minnesota ahead 11 -5.

"We want the playoffs and
CLEVELAND (AP)
LeBron James was not about we want to be at home, too,"
to let a sore left ankle, lack of said point guard Eric Snow.
sleep or blown layup affect "Every team is fighting for it
now and we're right there. We
him .
James hit two key 3-pointers have to keep winning."
Corey Maggette scored 26
down the stretch and scored 22
points to lead the Cleveland points to lead Los Angeles, but
Cavaliers past the Los Angeles the Clippers have lost four
Clippers 94-R4 Tuesday night. straight on · the road, where
" I thought we would be a lot . they are 7-26 with eight of
more tired," said James, who their final II games away
got treatment on hi s ankle from home.
The Clippers were without
before the game and shot just
starter Bobby Simmons for the
7-for-20 from. "I fe lt OK.
"We ran earl y and just first time all season. The forjumped on them. We · worked ward, averaging 16.6 points,
together defensively and were bruised hi s left leg Sunday
just playi ng complete basket- against Minnesota.
ball."
·
·
"Bobby's the 'X' factor for
Cleveland had lost five of us," Magette said. "He brings
six before rallying for a one- another edge to our team. We
point overtime win Monday ih had to try to weather the storm
New Orleans. The win and (Quinton) Ross was hurt,
~uesday gave the Cavaliers but that's no excuse."
Ross went. scoreless in nine
victories on consecutive nights
for the first time since Nov. minutes and did not play in the
26-27 and revitalized their ·second half because of back
quest for home-court· advan- spasms.
"LeBron wasn't even hitting
tage in the playoffs.
"We got to bed at three or shots," Magette said. "But
four thi s morning, but I other guys did. They played .
thought we had an awful lot of
eilerg(' said Brendan Malone.
3-2 stnce replaCing ·the fired
Paul Silas as Cavaliers coach.
"We pushed the ball and ran
off our defense. Our defense
was very good.''
Zydrunas Ilgauskas had 19
points, 15 rebounds and three
blocked shots as the Cavaliers
moved within I 1/2 games of
Washington for fourth place
overall in the Eastern
Conference. The top four
teams get the home-court edge
in the first round and
Cleveland is 26-9 at Gund
Arena.

KISSIMMEE, Fla. (AP) Brad Ausmus hit a sacrifice fly
in the bottom of the ninth
inning to cap a three-run rally
and give the Housto[l Astros a
7-6 victory over the Cleveland
Indians on Tuesday.
Cliff Bartosh squandered a
two-run lead, allowing three
hits.- then was traded to the
Chicago Cubs for minor league
right-hander Ronald Bay. ·
Willy Taveras had an RBI
double and Chris Burke a runscoring single to tie it 6-all .
before ·Ausmus drove in
Taveras.
Chad Harville gave up runscoring singles to Ronnie
BeUiard and Travis Hafner in
the top of · the ninth to put
Cleveland up 6-4.
Brandon DuckWorth, who is
competing · with Ezequiel
Astacio to be Houston's No. 5
starter, allowed eight hits and
four runs with tour strikeouts
in six innings.
,
Whether Duckworth will be
a starter or ·a long reliever ·
remains unclear. He is 1-1 with
a 3. 12 ERA in 20 2-3 innings.
Astacio is 1-0 with a 0. 79
ERA. ·

Spartans strive for elite status

,.

seven seasons - stack up
with any program in college
basketbalL
The Spartan s have been to
more Final Fours since 1999
than Duke or Con necticut. In
2000. Michigan State won the
schools second national title,
and first since 1979.
North Carolina was the last
team to maj(e such frequent
trips to the national semilinals, making it . there four
times from 1995-2000 . ·
When Michigan State (266) t.ips ' off Saturday night
agai nst the Tar Heels (3 1-4),
lzzo wi ll joi n former Ohio
State coach Fred Tay lor as the
only coaches in NCAA history to advance to four Final
Fours in their first I 0 seasons.
Michigan State is in the
NCAA tournament for an
eighth straight year and it has
advanced to at least the round
of 16 six times during the
stretch, trailing only Duke in

abi lity to survive the first
weekend since 1998.
"I look at '(the accomplishments) and say, 'Wow,"' lzzo
said. "But they' re never as
impressive when they're
about your own program as
they would be if they showed
those same slats about somebody else.
·
. "A ll of those things are just
stat;, but they do help you get
the goal I want to achieve and
that's to put this program on a
level that people won't say
we're impostors if we have
one down season."
Gus Ganakas, Michigan
State 's head coach from
1969-76, said the Spartans
have already reached elite
status.
"With this grm1p going to
the Final Four, every player
that has come to play for Tom
and stayed four years will be
able to say he went to a Final
Four. That's impressive," said
1

Ganakas, an analyst on
. Michigan State's radio broadcasts. "Tom is way to humble
to admit it, but he's reached
the goal for this program that
he's always talked about
striving for."
As Ganakas predicted, lzzo
insisted Michigan State has
not yet reached the lofty sta-.
tus enjoyed by the likes of
North . Carolina and Duke.
But lzzo acknowledged an
unexpected trip to the Final
Four brings him closer to hi s
goaL
"Thi s is definitely another
giant step in the right direction," he said. "Now. if we
win another national champi·
on ship, that's another step .in
the right direction."
.
If the Spanans win a third
national title, they would join
UCLA ( II ). Kentucky (7), .
lnd1ana (5), North Carolina
(3) and Duke (3) as the. only
schools to reach that total. .

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
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•.Eastern tames Tomcats
in opener. See Page 81

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAtLYSENTtNEL.COM

POMEROY - The Meigs
County
Community
Improvement . Corporation
has purchased the former
· Pamida building on Ohio 7
near Pomeroy, and plans to
lease it for use as a "upscale"
Ilea market.
CIC President Paul M.
Reed said the non-profit CIC
closed the purchase on
Tuesday from MRG , Ltd: of
Palm Beach, Fla.
The CIC is governed by a
volunteer board which acts

as an economic development. arm for county gov.
ernmen!. It paid $500,000
for th e 20-year-old build ing, Reed said. The former
owner offered a redu ced
price to the CIC as .a nonprofi t group .
"The CIC purchased the
building because of its potenti al value to Meigs County,"
Reed
said
yesterday.
"Because of its location at the
intersection . of two busy
highways, the CIC board
feels the building has much
potential in terms of develop-

$

0.$ 50,000

APY*
Rate
o.so% o.so%

s 50,000 • s 99.999·99 . 1.85%

1.870fo
$1oo,ooo • $249,999·99 2.15% .2.17%
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Please see Pamlda, AS

POMEROY -. T~o new tech-prep
programs geared to educating
"today's students for tomorrow's
careers" are being introduced into the
.
curriculum
of the Meigs Career and
Page AS
.
Technical Center at Meigs High
• Betty Jane Lowe, 74.
School.
• Clara Tipton, 90
The new programs are Medical
Office Management taught by Eleanor
McKelve~ and Carol Crow, and
Health Technology taught by Jackie
Newsome.
Both programs have a four-year
• Accident hans traffic on career pathVo~ay which equips students
to enter the employment field right
l,J.S. 35. See Page A3
out of high school or ha ve adequate
• Dinner and auction set. credits for acceptance into a university or technical college.
.
See Page AS
Beginning
in
the
freshman
year and
• Girl Scout cookies
through the four years of high school
available. See Page AS . both programs include technology
• Absentee applications
studies in the chosen field but also
all of the college preparatory
include
available. See Page AS
courses.
• Agency proposes fees
This means the students enrolled in
for developers, coal mines. the two new tech prep programs now being integrated· into the former
See .Page A&amp; .
. office management and nursing pro'
• Pay-for-performance
grams - have more choices when
plan for doctors draws
they complete the programs as to
whether they go onto a job or decide
national attention.
to expand their horizons by enrolling
See Page A&amp;
in college.
.·
"Thi s gives the students more
choice," said McKelvey. "Our purpose 1s to get students to a place where
they are capable of working on the
business ·side of the medical field
when they graduate ... she added.
"Medical office managers perform
highly specialized work requiring
·knowledge of technical terminology
and procedures. Students will be. able
to enroll in classes that include medical terminology•. business management, medical transcription, pa'tient
scheduling, medical billing, and CPR
and first aid."
Details on Pa&amp;e A&amp;
Please see Pro1rams, AS

. Free e-statements and check imaging
. Free debit card and debit purchases
Free first order of so checks
Free checks for 55+

WEATHER

·

.

Ohio .crash
BY

A3

www~peoplesbancorp.com ·
"Ar111u1l P!rcentlp Yltld fJ#'('J, 1\ttoUnl tlfnslnltrlflt. Curtt!nl r1tes 1nd AP'f arl IWirltt u of ,

02/17/o5, but subjlct to thanp. A dlllly balance of$1,000 IS ltQUIIed to a1101d • monthly ftt of S15.
A'-• of$100 11 charpd If thl "count 11 cloMd within tht "rst 12 months.

Hoeftlchf photos

the new health technology program to be offered at the Meigs Career and Tec~nology
Center at Meigs High School in the 2005-06 school year. Here Jenny Bowles. left. and
Clare Sisson look over the study guide and practice equipment on ph lebotomy .t6 be
used in the program taught by Jackie Newsome. ·
·
.
Right: Gerald il1intz
prepares a patient
chart with Valerie
Diddle, standing.
and Amber Handley
as part of his training in the medical
office management
program ·which will
be fu lly integrated
into the curriculum
of the program's
four-yea r · pathway
beginning· this fall.
Carol Crow and
Eleanor McKelvey
are the instructors .

B4-6

Comics

B7

Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
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Places to go
Sports
Weather

A3
A4
As
As
AS

B Section

A6

© 1005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

RUTLAND - A you[!g
man fro m Mason was -killed
Wednesday in a single-vehicle accident on Strongs Run
Road in Meigs County.
Warren "Zack" Faulk , 18,
was thrown from a vehicle
driven by his brother, Clinton
"Ty ler Faulk,
20, of
Langsville in Meigs County.
He was pronounced dead at
the scene by Meigs County
Coroner Dr. Douglas Hunter.
Tyler Faulk was transported from the sce ne by the
Mei gs Co unt y EMS .and
transferred to Med Flight
he Iicopter, which took him to
St. Mary's Hospital in

Please see Crash, AS

Crow rules
LeMasters
is not se:Xual ·.
predator
BY BRIAN

Financial Planning
BSERGENT@MYDAtLYSENTINEl.COM
McARTHUR - A psychiand Supervision Commissio.n
atric report on the Meigs
member Bill Wolfe said .
RACINE
During . Superintendent
Bob County woman accused of
Wednesday :s fiscal manage- Grueser told the commission ki lling . Marvin Hunt ()f
'ment meeting of . the that he supported the board's Ewington in January is due to
Financia.l Planning and decision not to implement arrive in Vinton County Coun
Supervis ion
Commission
within the. next few days.
whi'c h oversees Southern's dual bus routing as · a cost
Ruth Ann Wood, 38, of ·
deficit-reducing plans, the saving measure at this time.
31\029
Carpenter Hill Road.
Instead, Grueser proposed
commi ssion decided against
Dexter,
pleaded QOt guilty by
overriding the school board's a Permanent Improvement reason of insanity on Feb. 14 to
decision not to implement a Levy and reductions in "other a charge of aggravated murder.
areas" as possibilities to gen- · Currently being housed in
policy of dual bus routing.
erate
revenue for the district. the Ross County Jail in.
"We don't anticipate overriding that decision anytime
Chilli cothe on a $1 million
Please see Southem, As

evalu ati on by psychiatrists
from the · Shawnee Forensic
Center in Portsmouth .
With a period of 45 days
allowed by_the coun for completion of. the report, it i~ now
due. Johnna Shepherd, legal
assi stant to Vinton County
Prosecutor Tim GIeeson. said a
representative of the Shawnee
Center called the prosecutor's
office to say that the repon was
nearly complete.
"They just had a few more
question s
they
wanted

POMEROY - Judge Fred
W. Crow 111 has ruled that a
man convicted in 1993 of the
murder of a
Gallipolis man
and his son is
not · a sexual
predator, but
did not rule on
whether
he
should be classified as a
c hild'- victim
William
LeMasters predator.
At
· the
request of the . Ohio
Department of Rehabilitation
and Corrections, and following a January hearing, Crow
ruled Monday (hat William
LeMasters II should not be
considered an &lt;1ffender who
has committed a criminal
offense with a sexual motivation.
LeMasters is in the London
Correctional Institution. He
was convicted of three counts
of aggravated mu rder, two

'Please see Rulings, AS

Please see LeMallhn, AS

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Commission agrees with Southern Rulings pending in ·murder cases
BY
MIILONEY
School Board on dual bus routing
bond, Wood has undergone

INDEX
.C alendars
Classifieds

1

The Meigs County Community Improvement Corporation closed on its purchase of the 20-yearold Pam1da butldmg on Tuesday. It will be leased by 'the CIC to an undisclosed lessee for use
as a flea market.

INSIDE

Ultimate Checking Balance Interest Paid

o

CIC buys Pamida building; plans lease for flea market

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Astros
edge
Indians

NCAA Tournament

EAST LANSING, Mi ch.
(AP) Michigan State
wants to be considered an
elite program, worth y of
being mentioned wi th the two
teams the Spartans beat to get
to the Final Four and the one
they'll face in St. Louis.
Michigan State became the
first team to knock off Duke
and Kentucky in the same
NCAA tournament. winning
the Austin Regional· and earning a Final Four matchup
with North Carolina.
''I' m really excited about
the opportunity to play the
third giant," Michigan State
coach Tom lzzo said Tuesday.
The Spartans would have to
sustain the excellence they : ve
achieved · under lzzo fo r
decades to approach the status of the Tar Heels. Blue
Devils and Wi ldcats. But
Michigan State's recent
accomplishments four
Final Four appearances · in

harder than we did."
James scored 44 points and
played all 53 minutes Monday
night in a 108-107 overtime
victory. He missed nine of his.
first 13 shots Tuesday, including an uncontested fast-break
layup midway through the
th1rd quarter - a play he normally , finishes with a power
dunk. .
That miss gave the Clippers
a glimmer of hope and came. ·
shortly after the Cavaliers
opened a 19-point lead. Elton
Brand scored eight points as'
the Clippers closed the quaner
with a I5-8·spurt.
Los Angeles continued to
chip away and got wi.thin 8075. Then James swished a 3pointer with 3:48 to p•lay.
James hit another 3 with 2: 13
left for an 88-77 advanta~e .
"Some teams underestimate
our shooting," James said. "!
have no shame in pulling up
for a three-pointer."
Chris Kaman had 18 points
and Brand finished with 15
points and 12 rebounds for the
Clippers.

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