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                  <text>.GARDENING

iunba~ ~imes -ienttnel

PageD6

&gt;

(AP)- Just what is it about to grow. he &lt;ays. That may
[ems that makes landscaping come from the mistaken belief
)Yith them so' popular'~ Arc . ferns only can be grown from
people ht1ngry for plants that spores .
appear fres~ and green after
"Spore growing .is time contrudging · through another sumi ng and a proress that
long . monochromatic winter'' requires a great amount of
Or are people simply hu'ngry · care and. patience ... Mickel
for fresh greens ''
says. "Dividing plants from
. Ferns are among the r.rst other pe\Jple \gardens or buy• perennial s to show growth in ing the p lants themselves is
!he spring. They send up small · much easier. Simply take a
stems with tips curled tightl y spade and split' the plant,
in the shape of violin scrolls bringing with it as much .root
(tlddleheads) that straighten and soil as possible."
gradually into delicate. feath ·Plant ferns in shade- dap:
pleu shaue is best. Few ferns
erlike fronds. ·
: More than 12.000 species,of 'tolerate full sun although
·terns have been identified. there are exceptions.
~orne dating back 300 million
"Ferns arc like a lot of
years. Ferns .come in every shade-loving plants,:· Mickel
Imaginable shade of green . says. 'The amount ohun they
Some come variegated and a can take i s directly proporfew
come . . tri-colored tiona! to the amount of soi l
\Japanese) in a hybrid display moisture. Marsh ferns and
¢f purple, gray and green. other swampy things can do
ferns vary in size from the well in full sun · if they get
aptly named mosquito fern. plenty of moi sture.:'
Ferns are resilient if handled
which has fronds only about
one-sixteenth of an mch long. properly. says Judith Jones. a
to the tree tern, Wllh tronds · &lt;:ommercial grower from
extending 12feet. But it is the Gold Bar. Wash. "Most woodostrich fern that's so eminent- . land ferns that are commerly edible · when young. or cially avai lable are remarkwhen in the "fiddlehead'' ably tolerant of widely varystage.
"All ferns have f1ddleheads
as they mature at the-base· of
!he tip . But the ostrich fern is
the oni,Y one that can be safely
eaten,' says John Mickel , a
sen ior curator at The New
York Botanical ·. Garden.
author of "Ferns for American
Gardens," and a fiddlehead
fancier. "Many other varieties
are eaten. but many of those
!lfe believed carcinogenic."
Aficionados describe their
taste as a combination
asparagus, spinach, nuts and
wild mushrooms. Left growing too long, howe ver, the tla·
. vor of a fidd le head can
become grassy and bitter.
. ~Harve st them young and
wash off the scales," Mickel
says. "Boil or steam them five ·
minutes, then add them to a ·
salad or have them as a

rmpasse on msamty;
mistrial declared, A6

...

at

• •••

AP Photo
This woodland fern is in the young "fiddlehead" stage, curled tightly"into a shape resembling
the scroll of a-violi n..The tips gradually unroll into long, feather-like fronds.
ing conditions when grown in hair-like roots dry quickly and
light shade with modest mois- , are easily damaged if mishanture in humus-rich soil." says dled," Jones says. "It takes a
Jones, who ships her plants bare-rooted plant at least a
season or two to recover and
nationwide.
She believes ferns should continue growing whereas
only be sold with well-devel- one that .has a nice root ball
oped root sys tems. "They settles in and starts increasing
d,on 't do well when shipped in size immediately."
bare-rooteq because their
Ferns look great when used

as stand-alone plants in shaded
comers, as foundation foliage
masking the drab look qf concrete blocks, as the centerpiece
in foliage or shade gardens, as
bird and animal habitat around
trees and fences, as ground:
cover for otherwise eroding
slopes and in hanging baskets,
displayed inside or out.
·

Are you having problems
with your...

~nack."

Middleport • Pomeroy., Ohio
;;o CENTS • \ ' nl. ;;4. No . tN;l

SPORTS

• Tornadoes -sweep South
Gallia. See Page B1

On the Net
For more about ferns, look tq
the American Fern Society
·Web site: http://www.amerfemsoc.org; or scan some sidebar information from the Fancy
Fronds Nursery Web site at:
· www.fancyfronds.com.
You can contact Dean
Fosdick at:
deanfosdick(at)netsc~pe.net.

Occupational Therapy
Servic&amp;s
.
are available at the following
locations:

r

OBITUARIES

740446-5447 .

your doctor .for a referral to our rehab
staff or for more information, please call one of

Holzer Clinic
Jackson

INSIDE

our locations

740-395-8868

Contac~

Holzer Clinic Sycamore

www.holzerclinic.com

J. REED

youth pastor. said the youth
grou p will rea lize 01 er 53.000
from the 30- Ho.ur Famil)e. The
MIDDLEPORT - Imag ine fund s which will be dnnateJ to
skipping dinner t01~ight.Then . · World Visi01l to. help with
-skip breakfast, lunch and din- hunger relief effort' wnrldner tomorrow. Yes. you would wide. World Vision estimates
be hungry, .and t~e 30 hours that 29.000 ch ildre n worldyou fast could well be among wide die from hunger and di sthe longest ever.
ease every day. That\ over
For growing teena~ers. 5,000 more children than there
whose appetites seem 1nsa- are people in Meigs County liable, anyway, a 30-hour fast is dying needless ly. day after
a major challenge - and a day.
major accomplishment. Twenty . The. youth collected pledges
teenagers andtheiradultleaders from friends and famil y M' ddl
Ch h r Ch · particularly $3 0 pledges ,
at 1 epon urc 0 · · nst which will feed a child in a
completed a 30-Hour Famine
for World Vision last weekend.- developing nation for a.month.
The fost, which hcgan at 8 a.m. Some ad1&gt;its Joirred in. includ·d
d dd 1
ing church 1i1e ml;ler Jim
on Fn ay an en e at p.m. on Roach. He admitted that the
. Saturday, is a worldwide event
famine was a challenge for
Brian J. Raedlpholo
designed to raise funds for him. too.
These teenagers and adult leaders from the yo_uth group at Middleport Church of Christ complet·
world hunger.
ed a 30-Hour Famine for world hunger last weekend. They raised $3,000 for World Vision.
Josh Ulm, the church's
Please see Fast. ·AS
BY BRIAN

BREED@ MYDAILYS~NTINEL.CO M

Crowned king and queen

• For the record .
Page A2
• Local Briefs.
See Page A3
· • Agricu~ure clubs trying
to broaden reach.
-See-1'age ~6

:see

Holzer Clinic Meigs
740-992-0060

"ww.mydnil~· ..-nthwl., - .,,,

1\IONllAY. l\1 :\Y &lt;), 2005

Youth group compl.etes 30-hour fast for charity

c

Page A5
• Robert Patterson
• Charles S. Wheeler
· • PhyNis Braden
• Nicholas lhle

• Shoulder • Elbow
• Wrist • Hand

of

: Ferns have an undeserved
teputation for being difficult'

Recommended ·reading
For more about landscaping
with ferns. try: "Ferns for
American Gardens," by John
T. Mickel. Timber Press. Lisi
price: $~4.95. For a pocketsized reference book, try "A
Field Guide to the Ferns," part
of the Peterson Field Guide
Series. Houghton~Miftlin . .
List price: $18.
'

Ohio Valley
Christian School
perforntances, .A3

~t

"They 're -also deer-proof. •
Mickel· says . . "Hostas and
tulips rate high on the menu
for foraging deer. but ferns an!
pretty much the last browse
chosen."
There is a great deal 10
appre,iate in a fern , M,ickel
says. "Ferns are great because
they' re thriving and· fresh
throughout much of the year
while other · flowers have a
couple of weeks wit!J their
showy acts and then _they go
down and out''
·

Feather-like ferns are nature's
original foundation plants

.......

Hif?bway shoo~gs j!llJ

Sunday, May 8, 2005

HOLZER
CLINIC

JOHN 0t::ERE .

• Students \JSe artwork
to combat smoking.
See Page A2

NOTHING RUNS LIKE ADEERE'"

Charlene Hoefltch/photo

J. R. Hawk and Aman(Ja Hoyt were named prom king and queen
in ceremon1es wh1ch climaxed the 2005 prom at Meigs High
Meigs Intermediate School recently recognized top archers 111 ·their new -after school archery · School Saturday night. "The Magic Moment" was the theme of
program. Pictured left to right. first row, Amanda Grant. Sharon Wright, Megan Dyer, McKenzie the p.rom with decoratiohs in royal blue and white featuring a
Whobrey, second row, Ala8 Peoples, Thomas Klein, Brandon Marci nko . Timmy Wise. third row. castle re plica . ·Hawk -is the son of Mary Hawk of Rutland, and
Taylor Jones, Samantha King, Kassandra Mullins, Travis Mitchell, Paige Gussler. The .archers Hoyt in the daughter of Charlene and Steve Chaney and Jim
are joined by instructors Jeff Jones and Dan Thomas. Not pictured Jacob Nitz. Mackenzie Hoyt. Pomeroy. .
Sellers, Qevin Fahey.
Submitted photo

WEATHER
Get up to $300 off with purchase
of any 2 implements, excluding loaders
and 3000 TWENTY Series tractors.

Archery program a success at Meigs
BY BETH SERGENT .
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Details on Page A&amp;

INDEX
2 SECrtONS- 12 PAGilS

GET INTO A JOHN DEERE.
.

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INTEREST FOR 2 YEARS.

Get a John Deere 2210 Compact Utility
Tractor starting at just $139 a rnonth.
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OFFERS END SOON. GET TO YOUR JOHN DEERE DEALER TODAY!

.

.

www.JonnDeere.com/Homeowners

A3
B2-4

Bs
A2
A3

A4

As
Bl
A6

© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishin1 Co.

•I
CARMICHAEL EQUIPMENT. INC. ·

CAIIMICHAEL EQUIPMENT. INC.

~ EIIUII'MfNT.INC.

CAI!MtCHAEL EOU!PMENT, INC.

ASHlAND, K'l

WINFIElD, WV

GAWPDUS,OH

HUNTINGTON, WV

16061833·1408

13041586·9099

17401·446·2412

13041736·2120

lOCATED ON US HWY 23

lOCATED AT US 35 &amp; RT 34

lOCATED MIDWAY BETWEEN RIO

lOCATED OFF 1-64 AT EXIT 18

GRANDE t!o GAlliPOliS ON OLD RT 35

8 MilES WEST OF ASHlAND

'

~

.

'

·-

Bookman went on to say Grant ,
second
place
that the archery program has . McKenzie Whobrey. third
had a positive effect on his place Megan Dyer.
students
by
decreasing
Fourth grade boys trophy
absences and- detention s shoot otT, first place Brandon
amongst the archers who Marcinko. second place
signed a Code of Conduct.
Timmy Wise, third place Tom
"If they were absent · or Klein. .
received a detention while in
Fifth grade girls trophy
school they got a score a zero shoot off, first place Chelsey
for the after school practice:· Eads, second place Kassandra
Bookman
explained. Mullins. thin:! place 'Paige
"Suspension resulted in being Gussler.
Fifth grade boys trophy
dropped from the archery program."
·
shoot off, tlrst place Jacob
In all 72 fourth and fifth Nit z. second place Tay lor
graders, both boys and girls, Jones, third place Macken~i e
pariicipated in the after Sellers.
school archer~ program.
.
Fourth grade high score
·" These kids found their honorable mention. Allen
niche with archery and Peoples. Timmy Wise.. Devin
worked hard to keep them- Fahey. Sharon Wright.
·
~e lve s involved,'' Bookman
Fifth grade high score hanadded.
orable mention . Taylor Jones.
Those receiving awards Chelscy Eads.
were:
Overall high score trophy.
Fourth grade girls trophy Travis Mitchell. Samantha
shoot off. first place Amanda King.

· 'Stamp Out Hunger'·

Charlene Hoefllch/photo

Pomeroy John. F. Musser signs a proclamation designating
Saturday as National Food Driye .Day. Pomeroy Office Carriers
will pick up food donations place near mailboxes . With Musser
at the signing were Tom Sanders , postmaster, Carl
Carmichael. Mark Ewing, arid Jim Pullins, left to right

Nurses Week
is. May 6 •, 1 2
Nunes: Many Roles,
One Pi ofession."

11

U "Otftr .. tnd Junt 2] , 211b5 S~b1t~t to I PilfGvtd crt~rt ~~~ JOhJ' Dure Crtdrt lns tttlr'litnt Pit h r ,.n, lrt rUI'It, 11fu p tnd ~ti!VIr\' cl'lt rgu could tlltrtiMill'fllltnt ,&amp;.,.. lllllt tl ptrflcrptlrng dttltrt "for t rt c tor only SYIIIttel to tpprovtd e n eli! 011 Joftra D~t r t Crtdrt Rtwolvrn'll Plen, 1 ,.rvtcttl FPC Fint ntlll. 1.1.11
~' ptnon•l ~~~ only Promotrontl llt Vmtnt ol Sll' bauo ~~~ tottl tmount f•ri t nct!l not to u cted SID,it! ,ruth t7 1'\ "-Pfll Allrntroduclory onmtnu 111 fi lltd lor thtllflt :ll.montht only After 3&amp; rwo nt ht tht mrnrmum rtQUtrtd peymtnt wilf btltrgtr tnd Will bt c.lc:ultttd u Z'\ of tht otitintlamaunr l1ntnc1d
W•th 7 t'\ Af'R ASa ~0 per mon t ~ mon1mu m h n• n~• cnerge mav Ill req~:rad So mt mo11a11 mt v not ~t t ilQ • fllt ,p,,eu and modt! ave•llb•hty may ve ry by ~•••r Or.lyont impltmtnt bon ~• ~., !rlctOI Will bt ac.:tptad Olftr u cludll lllldlnlnd JDOO T.WENT't' S.r1u tnctoll. Otntr apecial r1t111nd ttrmtmey IN
IVIIIIb/1 Jol1n Ottrt I l,lf U II I MI ya ll tr lll color IChtmt . t h~ I.. PH"~Q dttr 1~rr1bol . 1nd JO it N OEEAE lrl trtdt mlfh of 01111 I Co"' pt ny

KJJCUCNDJD!Il!011b-Oll'l2!&gt;4

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
:Community
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
;sports
Weather

RUTLAND
Meigs
Intermediate's experiment
into archery ended on a successful note with a recent
awards ceremony for students
j,vho participated in · the
archery after school program.
Meigs Intermediate School
Principal Rusty Bookman said
ihat the program was· so suc_cessfulthat it will return in the
fall for a nine, week instructional period for fourth and
fifth grade students.' This
instructi_on period will be followed by the assembly of an
archery team that wi II meet
after school as an extracurricular activity. The archery season
will last into March of 2006.
"Our goal next year is t&lt;)
take a team from here to the
Archery ·
. Nationa.j
Championship in Louisville,''
Bookman said.

Interm~diate

Q_._....;'-*

Holzer Medico! Center salutes and honors
all of our nurses during this special week.

•

"

· Please see A5 for 'story

..
MEDICAL CENTE -R

"Hcalthcarc in Your
Own Badn m a··
••

www .holzer.org
•

�..,

Redden . to Norman C.
Nester. deed. Salem.
Ronald Gary Dav1s to Lady
Dawn Davis. Stephanie D.
Brewer. Ronnea L. Hudsqn.
deed. Village of Pomeroy. ·
Laura Dellvalle to Jason
Della1·alk. Ta1Vre · Dellavalle.
deed. Salem.
Dorothy
L.
Hysell.
Lawrence Hvselt. to Richard
Alan White. 'ueed. Salisbury.
John W Gaus. Delores
Gaus. to Marv Ann 'l}nbanks.
deed. Rutland.
William J. Bias, MichaelA
.Reed. to Ohio Department of
Transportation, deed, Letart.
William J. Bias to . ODOT.
deed.
J.J . Detwilter Enteprises to
Acreage Investments. Inc .;
deed. Scipio.
Robert Thomas Calhoun,
Jr. to James R. Sheets,
Scipio. deed .
Floyd
E.
Williams,
deceased, to Jane Williams..
affidavit. Salem.
Donald E. Roush, Ellen Jo
Roush. to Barry W McCoy.
Carolyn J. McCoy. deed.
Syracuse.
George Napier Family
Trust, Joyce A. Napier..
George Napier. tu George
Napier, Joyce A. Napier
Family
Trust. affida~t.
Orange.
Nanette Rorick. Timothy
Poston, to Donald Runyon.
Pamela
Runyon.
deed,
Bedford.
Timothy ~oston. Nanette
Rorick. to TP-CWD. right of
way. ·
Nicky R. Barber. Donna
Cartwright, to . Dani el L.
Thompson. deed. Olive.
G. Shawn IngelS. to R0berta
J. Pauley. deed. Village of
Middlepon.
Jacky Coughenour. Betty
Coughenour, Rita A Lewis.
Rita A. Matthews, Robert
Matthews,
Jr.,
Robert
Matthews, Jr., Ronald L.
Will.iams, Wanda Williams.
William R. Silkey, Julie A.
Gilkey, Stephen D. Scarberry,
Stacie E. Scarberry, George
W Pullins; Linda S. Pullins.
to Family Homes, Inc. ,
agreement, Salisbury.
Larry Laudermilt, Sr..
deceased.
to
Harriet
Laudermi'lt, affidavit, Letart.

Community CaJendar

$
•
Employees,
Independent Contractors, Vendors and their immediate family
not eligible.
.
.

SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Chief of Police Kevin' Dugan
reported the arrest of
Carroll, · 49,
Benjamin
Portland, on a charge of theft,
after allegedly taking money
from the cash register at River
Way Cafe on April I 8. Carroll
entered a plea of not guilty in
Meigs County Court on _the
charge of thefi on April29.

Dissolution
POMEROY - · An action
for dissolution of marriage
has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
by Neal B. McMeeken,
Portland, and Judy Ann
McMeeken, Portland.

Divorces

POMEROY -. An ahion
.
POMEROY - According for divorc~ has been filed in
to the Pomeroy Police Meigs County Common Pleas
Departmem the following Court by Minia R. Boggess,
traffic accidents were recently Racine, against Gary L.
Boggess, Racine.
investigated:
A divorce was granted to
On May 3, Jessica L.
Justice of Pomeroy' had come Danielle Suzanne Layne from
to a stop in a 1999 Pontiac on Kenneth Lee Layne.
West Main Street when her
vehicle was struck in the rear
by David A. Tucker · of ·
.
.
Pomeroy who was driving a
POMEROY -The Meigs
1995 Ford. Tucker was cited County Grand Jury will confor assured c leared distance. vene on June 21.
Patrolman Josh Ridenour was ·-An. indictment filed against
the investigating officer.
On May 3, Lisa J. Johnny Thabet was dismissed.
Cunningham of Pomeroy was
driving a 200 I Pontiac when
she slowed down and stopped
in traffic on East Main Street
POMEROY - A foredoWendy's.
Kent
E.
Smith
sure
. has been granted in
near
of Letart. W.Va. who was dri- Meigs'County Common Pleas
ving a 1992 Ford failed to Court to Federal National
slow down and struck Mortgage
Association,
Cunningham's vehicle. Smith · against Ralph E. Steinmetz:
was cited for assured cleared and others.
..
.

'

Wednesday. May 11
POMEROY - The Meigs
Monday, May 9
County Board of Health wil-l
LONG
BOTTOM
meet at 5 p.m. in the confer- Revival services will be held
ence room of the Health at 7 p.m . through May I 3 at
·
Department.
the Faith Full Gospel
Church at Long B.ottom.
Dave Dailey witt be the
speaker and there will be
special s inging each evening.

donation suggested but not
required.

Clubs .arid
. organizations

Thursday, Mal' 12
POMEROY ._
. Alpha Iota
Masters will meet m · 6:30
p.m. at the St. Paul Lutheran
Church. Hostesses will be

immunization records. insurance or medical cards. $5

·Birthdays

Tuesday, May 17
POMEROY ·- · Charles E.
Blakeslee. longtime resident'.
of Pomeroy, will observe his.
95th birthday on May 17.
· Car&lt;t may be se nt to .him at
t)le home of his daughter,
Jennifer Butcher, 3400 West
Tuesday, May 10
Ridgewood Dr. , Rockport,
· POMEROY -· Childhood Ind. 47635.

Other events

.

.

Ohio Valley Christian School peifOrmances

PRESCRIPTION

Pomeroy, Ohio

OXYGEN

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-HOLZER
CLINIC

.

2605 Jackson Ave.
Pt. Pleasant. WV

DEAR ABBY: I'm in love
get tll pract!l:e on time.
with the perfect guy, but I
I ln \'t' Ill\ tTc\\. hut it ha&gt;
have a ,gnawing worry.
takl.!n n\ l'f "my Iif\.' l'O mpkre"C iayton'' and I have been
ly. I lall a'kep in eta" and
dating for three month s.
•
,am tull tired 111 do anything
We're so convinced we are
wuh Ill)' ~irlfric nd &gt;. 11lu.,
Dear .
- mwine t' rn too
. c
meantto be toget her
10rever
when I'm not
'that we have already
Abby
busy catchi ng up witt1 &gt;c.honlannounced our plans to marry
work to do anvthing fun . t
in a few months.
·
feel like I'm m1s&gt;ing out on
So whythe ~orry\ Clayton
my own li(e
has been married twtce. Both and as fast as you have. emoI' can 't llll&gt;S · praL· t'1ce
marriages ended because he tions rule and it 's difficult 10 because that wou ld let the
was ·unfaithful. Clqyton think rationally. The •·tittle gi'rls on my team down and
swears he's a changed man. I
t. "· h b. k · disappoint my coac h. plus it
believe him. He looks me in ques IC)ns m 1 e ac o1 your
mind are your common sense would make my teammates · .
the eye and says I'm the one
·
b k h
h h goa ls unattainable . I feel ·
to . rea · t roug t e
he has Searched t'or and need- trymg
fog
·
· trapped. Abb)'. Quittin" is
ed his entire life .
' Although
·
·
you say you're umhinkable: rowing is my" life
I am 30 and have never. afraid to tell your fat her about nght now. But I also want to
been married. I can hardly your boyfriend's history for have more of a "teenage"
wait to have children with fear "he won't understand," 1 experience while I still can.
Clayton so we can raise them ·suspect the opposite is true, -TRAPPED IN MY SPORT
together. He 's excited, too, You're afraid he WILL under- IN NORTHERN CALI FORwhich surprises me because · stand. And while ,no one has NIA
.
.
he's in his mid-40s and has said anything directly 10 you· DEAR TRAPPED: You
two teenagers. He's very - aboUt Clayton. the comment ARE having a teenage ex peri. active in their lives . (He and "There goes the Casanova of ence. Because you have not
his wife paned amicably.)
Cleveland" carries a pretty learned to budget your time.
! sometimes sense odd direct message. ·
you have overextended yourMy advice is to slow down. self. Please discuss thi s· with
vibes from his co-workers
and · acquaintances. but I'm become engaged for a year. your teachers and your par- ·
new in town and no one has and get to know Clayton ents. because you have some
come out and said anything much t&gt;etter before rushing to important decisions to make .
abbt4 him. I did overhear one the altar. And please don't try Your studies must take preceperson comment as we passed to keep secrets from your dence · over your sport,
by, "There goes the Casanova father. When someone is as because if they don't. you ' ll
of Cleveland."
famous -· or infamous - as find
yourself
padd lin g
.As I write this, I have even Clayton has made himself. the upstream alone when it's time
more doubts. Does it mean · truth has a way of coming out. for college.
· anything that I'm afraid to tell
DEAR ABBY: J:m in the
Dear A,bby is writte11 by
my father about Clayton's lOth grade. Academics are Abigail Vall Bureu, also
marital and sexual history for important to me, but so are kiiOW/1 as ]ea/1/le Phillips,
fear he wori't understand? my friends and hobbies. 1'!1'1 a . a11d was fouuded by her
Please hurry your advice. -· member of the rowing team, motl1er, Pauli11e Phillips.
CAN'T WAIT IN OHIO
which practices every mom- Write . Dear Abby
at
DEAR CAN'T WAIT; You ing at 5 a.m .. and two days www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
have been swept off your feet. a(ter school. That means I Box 69440, Los A11ge/es, CA
When. someone falls ·as hard have to wake up at 4 a.m. to 90069.
· .
·

PERl
meets .
,
POMEROY - PERI Meigs
County Chapter 74 will meet
for a luncheon meeting at
II :45 a.m. on June 3 at the
Meigs County Senior Center.
Mary Powell will present a
program on Ohio Chautauqua.
Those attending should make
a lunch reservation through
the center at 992-2161.
·

675-4498

HELlOS
HEUOS · Eosy to ~ny.

.

..... ~ ....,........ • Cool, qu1et operation.

16" 1 Toppi
.

·PLEASANT
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VALLEY
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• Requires no electricity or batteries.
• Lasts up to 10 hours at a setting of 2.
• Takes about 40 seconds to fill.
• Operates upright, on in back or in any
pOsition in-between.

740-446-0007
Toll Free 877·669-0007
70 Pine Street • Galllpolis
Locally owned by the Bowman Family ,

. 446-9800
HOURS: Mon - Fr19-7; Sal.

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304-675-4340

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326 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45li31

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l
7 40-446-8500

fmm Po ~ Oftlco: 1

- Thurs. 8;](}-5pm

446-7619

PIKETON -Moreandmore
Ohio farmers are goi ng to the
pondsforincreased protitabili·
tyontheirland.
. The counties in the southern
panoft()estatearecollaborating
to sponsor a prvgram for those
farmers interested in increasing
profitsby growi·ngfish.The program will be held at the Ohio
State University Piketon
Aquaculture Development
Center in Piketon.
From 9 to noon. there will be
programs'on ponds, vegetation
control, fish stocking and
species selection, correcting
poor fish and reno vating existingfishpopulations.andavoid,
ingfishkills.
Follow· a noon luncheons,
there will be program on.intro-

duct ion to aquaculture, things
you should know about aqua-·
cu lture planning, markets, and
permitting, as well as production aquaculture .systems,
ponds,recirculation,andcages.
fish specie s selection, .and a .
question and answer period.
This field day is presented by
the
Ohio
Center
for
Aquaculture Development,
Ohio State University South
Centers, OSU Extension, the
Pike County Soil and Water
Conservation District and· the
USDA Natural Resources
Conservation Ser.vice, Cost is '
$ 10 for the lunch. For more
information
call
Kelly
9'Bryant(740)289-2071 or 1800-297-2072 (Ohio only),
robens622@ag.osu.eduiN

~- Moore

Diane McVey

&lt;!PaHipolis j@ailv

MARIETTA
The
regional Ad.visory Council
for the for the Area Agency
on Aging will meet Friday.
May 20 at 10 a.m at the
Lafayett hotel in Marietta. ·

Alumni Banq~et
tickets on sale
RACINE - The Southern
Alumni Association Banquet
will be held at 6:30 p.m. on
"May 28. Tickets may be purchased from the Home
National Bank. Southern
High School. or from Shirley
Johnson for $12 each.

·

(740) 446-2933
Hours:
M-F lOam-Close 1:11:1•

On dean's
list at UC
CINCINNATI ·- The following
students
were
named to the dean's list at ·
the
University
of
Cincinnati: Erica Poole and
Thomas Tirado. both of
Middleport, and
Karen
Markins of Pomeroy. .

Proud to be a
part of your life,
Subscribe today • 992-2155

Aquaculture/ Pond Clinic Field Day

•

High gas prices helping some businesses

Regional
meeting
announced

School ·News
.On SSU
dean's list

.

Monday, May 9, 2005

.Woman in love with 'peifect'
guy still has nagging ~oubts

These kindergarten through
second grade ele-·
mentary students
at the Ohio Valley
· Christian School
were many who
performed iri 'the
spring show, ·A
Musical Journey"
written and directed by Christi
Perkins. music
teacher. Here
PORTSMOUTH
Benjamin ·
Suzanna L. · Henderson of
Rutherford leads
Pomeroy was named to the
Marshall Hood,
winter quarter dean's list. at
Annie Bowman,
. Shawnee State University.
and Mckenzie Barr
Students on the dean's
in singing "Jesus ·list must be . full-time and
Loves Me."
have achieved a grade point
average of 3.5 or better.

7am-1 Opm • 7 Days A Week

PERSONAL
OXYCENSY-SreM

PageA3

Local Briefs

· Cross Country was the theme ofa musical drama presented recently by third to sixth graders
at tne Ohio Valley Christian School under the direction of Christy Perl&lt;ins. The program taught
the lessons · of trust, courage, love . faith and obedience. Pictured front are Ben Tillis ' Allie
Hamilton, Jordyn Benson·, Alex Lashway, and Alex Hadded, and back Tom Gladden, Winnie
Gtoden, Madison Crank, Terrence Tiuttle and Sarah Absten.

740-992-5252

Specializing in:
tl Bankruptcy
tl Divorce
t1 Charge OWs

.

•

Foreclosure

Last week regular unleaded
gas averaged S2.137 in the
Morgantown area, according
to AAA.
No matter what ·store they
go to, shoppers may see. higher grocery prices. said Jan
Vineyard, executive director
of )he West Virginia · Oil
Marketers And · Grocers
Association. " When gas
prices go up. it costs you more
to run errand,. The same thing
happens to e' cry item on a
grocery ,heIr. It cost&gt; more to
get it to the shelf"
Car !'!eaters say they are.
selling more hybrid and fuelefticiern vehicle,.

immunization clinic. '1- I I
a.m.. I -3 p.m.. at Meigs
County Health Department.
I I 2 'E. Memorial Dr..
Pomeroy. Bring &gt;hot records.

Church events

Grand jury

MORGANTOWN , W.Va .
(AP) - Morgantown-area
grocers and car dealers say
high gas prices are bringing
them more business.
"People.are less inclined to
drive long distances to go, to
big box retailers when they
have to add seven. I0. or 20
miles ·to a shopping trip.'' said
Carole Bitter,. president of
Friedman' s. which owns a
BiLo groce ry store on
University
A'enue
Ill
Suncrest. "People fend to
stick closer to home. especially when you have a full-service supermarket. wi th a bakery, deli, butcher, tlorist. etc ."

Clarice Krautter. Charlotte
Elberl'etd. and Norma Custer.
CHESTER - Shjlde River
Tuesdav. Mav I 0 ·
Lodge
453 will meet at 7:30
POMEIWY. - . B~dford
p.m.
Relfeshments.
Township Tfllstees. 7 p.m ..
the town hal I.
·

..

Call the Loan FOOD FAIR
Dodorat:
700 East Main Street

Prescription
Oxygen

Woodland Center Complex

Arrested

'''
•••

Powell's

3084 State Rolite 160

distance. Sgt. Ronald Spauli
was the investigating officer.

Public meetings

submitted photo

(740) 441-0202

For the recor(J

Accidents

2005

The Meigs County Tobacco
Prevention Coalition recently recognized the artwork of county stu·
dents that participated in the Kick
Butts Day Artiest which had a
theme of "Clearing the Air:
Secondhand Smoke - Danger
Zone." The contest was open to all'
school. aged 'children in Meigs
County and out of 385 entries, 15
were recognized as winners. Front
row (from left), from Meigs
Elementary Makayla Barrett, Dylan
Haynes, Kelsie Powell, Jessica
Deem. Second row, Matt Spurlock
Eastern Elementary. Cassidy Hood.
Meigs Elementary. Chelsea Eads
Meigs Intermediate. Beth Sprouse
Mid Valley Christian, Kateland
Hurlbw Mid Valley Christian. Th ird
row, Brenda Curfman Meigs County
Health Department (MCHD). Todd
Tucker Holzer Tobacco Prevention,
Drew Hoover Southern Elementar¥.
Judge Scon Powell Meigs County '
Juvenile Court, Kyle Ord MCHD. Not
pictured Casey McConnell River ·
Valley Christian. Chelsea Imboden
Southern Elementary, Brad Crouch
Southern High, Chelsea Pape
Southern Elementary, Dylan
Hickman Meigs Elementary.

•

BY TH·E BEND'"

The Daily Sentinel

Students use artwork to combat $moking

Transfers posted

·.

Monday, May 9,

'

'

POMEROY
-Meigs
. County Recorder Kay Hill
reponed the following real
estate transfers:
Laverne G. Chase. Gail J.
Chase, to Scott B. Chase,
deed. Scipio.
Mark Allen Combs. Vickie
CoiJibS, to' Matthew Combs.
deed, Letan.
Timothy Bentz to Fannie
Mae,
Federal
National
Mortgage Corp.. sheriff's
deed. Village.ofPomeroy.
Peggy Cummins. Jackie L.
Cummins to Jennifer Jill
Riffle, Jennifer Jilt Cummins.
deed, Le.tan·.
Alan D. Stout to Wachovia
·Bank, Mortgage Electronic
Registration System. deed.
Rutland.
Rodney George Holman,
Peggy Holman. to Rodney
George Holman. Peggy
Holman, deed. Sutton.
Robert
Golda Roush.
·Roush, to Tuppers Plain sChester Water District. right
of way, Bedford. .
Debby Mirgon, Debra A.
Fitch, John Mirgon, Tammy
Fitch, to TP-CWD, right of
way, Lebanon.
Prentice Hess. Carol Hess.
to TP-CWD, .right of way,
Bedford..
Freedom Gospel Mission
· to TP-CWD, right of way.
Lebanon.
Donna Burns , Ru ssel l R&lt;lY
Burns. to TP-CWD, right of
way, Lebanon.
Carolyn Y. Christopher.
Maynard Christopher. to
Charles W. Morrison, deed.
Olive.
Virginia D. Smith. Elmo F.
Smith, to TP-CWD. right of
way, Bedford.
Pauline Zeigler .to Candice
E. Akbar, deed. Scipio. ·
Eric James Moss to Eric
James Moss: Jean Barbara
North, deed, Sutton.
·
. Donald Geary Ill. Max
Geary, Charlie R. Geary, to
Holly Geary, deed. Village of
Middleport.
·
·
Old Canal Financial Corp.
to Deron P. Campbell, deed,
Lebanon.
John H. Seckman, Lovia
M. Seckman. to Columbus
Southern Power, easement,
Lebanon.
James T. Redden, Iris J.

PageA2

COMMUNITY·

The Daily Sentinel

.'

makes membership .
in Angus Association

· . POMEROY - · Gerald L
The Associa1ion records
: Moore of Pomeroy is a new . ancestral information and
: member of ·the Ame,rican keeps production records on
: . Angus Association,. reports indixidual animals for its
-. John Croucp, execuuve vtce members. These permanent
president . of · the n~tional records help members select
: breed regtstry orgamzatton and mate the best animals in
: · in Saint Joseph, Mo..
their herds to produce high '
" The
American Angus
ff ·
· d'
Association, with more thah quality, e ictent . bree mg
cattle which are then record34,000 active adult and junior
members, is the largest beef ed with the American Angus
cattle registry Association in Association. Most of these
the world. Its computerized registered Angus are used by•
: records include detailed infor~ the U.S. farmers and ranchmation on more than 14 mil- ers who raise high quality
lion registered Angus.
· bj:ef for U.S. consumption.
w

•

t~

the Castrop Center Open Hous~.
..
Please join us on Sunday, May 15, 2005
from 2:00 to 5:00 p.m.
Tours will include.,
0' Bleness Memorial Hospital Outpatient Services
Athens Cancer Center
Athens Surgery Center • Physician Office~
American Cancer Society Resource Center .
'

�.

.

•''

•

.~

OPINION
Monda;:~~~
. ------~----------------~------------------------------------~~~~~~
TheDailySentinel

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

•
Congress shall make no law respe~ting an
establishment of religion, or proltibiting 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

READER'S

VIEW

Tyranny .
Don't abolish thefilibuster

•

Dear Editor:

.

In the next few days the Republicans will try to use the
"nuclear option" to se ize absolute power to appoint judges
who will roll back decades of progress in protecting worker
ri ghts. the environment and privacy.
James Madison, 4th President of The United States said,
"The accumulation of all powers, legislative, executive, and
judiciary. in the same hands, whether of one, a few, or many,
and whether hereditary, self-appointed, or elective, may just· .
ly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny."
The Republicans have established a majority in the
Executive and Legislative .branches of our government. Now,
they are attempting tb fill the Judicial branch of government
with Bush loyalists.
·
The only way they have a chance of establishing the tyranny they desire is through changing the Senate rules to abolish
the filibuster, thereby assuring that all of their loyalist judges
will be voted in by the majority of Republicans.
If this is allowed to happen, we will all be living in dicta·
torship, our voices forever silenced.
·

Robert Pattenon

IT WASN'T THE WOLF ...
IT WAS THE REAl ESTATE

.

.

I

I

Letters to the editor are welcome. They slzould
·- 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. Lette-rs should be in good taste,
addressing ·issues; not personalities.

The Daily Sentinel
·Reader Services
Correction Polley

,

(UsPs 213-9601

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

· Our main concern in all stories is to be PubliMec:l every afternoon. Monday
accurate . If you know of an error in a through Friday, 111 Court Street,
story, call the newsroom at {~40) 992· Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-ctass postage
2156.
paid at Pomeroy.
Member: T.he Associated Press and the
Ohio Newspaper Assoclatlon. .Our main number Is
Po.tm.t.r: Send address corrections

(740) 992-2156.
Department ex1enslons are:

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich , Ext 12
Reporter: Brian R~ed, Ext. 14
R8porter: Beth Sergent. Ext. 13

.

Advertising

Outside Sates: Dave Harris,· Ext. 15
OUiolde sales: Brenda Davis, Ext 16
CIIII.ICirc.: Judy Clark, Ext 10

Circulation
Diatrict Mgr.; Jason Patterson , EXt. 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich . EX1. 12

. E-mail:
newSOmydal lysentlnel.com

Web:
www.mydailysentinel .com

to The Daily Sentinel, 11 1 Court Street,

Pomeroy. Ohio·45769

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•.

WEST COLUMBIA ; W.Va. - Cnarles S. Wheeler, ·so.·
Columbta, W.Va., passed away on Friday, May.6, 2005,
at his residence.
·
He was a retired employee of Foote Mineral Corp., and was
a ~e tc ran of the U:S. Army during World War II and member
, ot the Stewart-Johnson Post 9926, Veterans of Foreign War.
He was born Dec. 29, 1924, in West Columbia. son of the
late William. H. Wheeler and Addie Tate Wheeler. Also precedmg hun m death were a son, John Michael Wheeler; sisters: Rulh Wheeler, Lula Wheeler, and E;ula Ferguson; and
brother.s: Shirley, Woodrow, Harry, Robert and John Wheeler.
Surviving are h.is wife. Bertha Clark Whee'ler. West
Columbia: a daughter, Helen Kay Gagnon of Van, W.Va. : a
daughter and son-in-law. Carolyn and Terry Michaels of
Pomeroy; a son, Charles W. Wheeler of West Columbia; seven
grandchildren: John Michael Wheeler, Jr., Brad Wheeler, Amy
McKinney. Angel McKinney. Crystal Harrison, Matthew
Gagnon, and Michelle Nottingham ; seven great grandchildren; a sister and brother-in-law, Elizabeth ''Sis" and James
Roush of West Columbia; and several nieces and Aephews.
. Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. on Monday at Fogel songTucker Funeral Home in Mason, W.Va., where services will be
held at I :30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 10, 2005, with Pastor James
Lewis officiating. Burial w.ill follow at Kirkland Memorial
Gardens, where a military graveside service will be conducted
. by VFW Post 9926 and American Legion Post 140. Friends
may e- mail condolences to foglesongtucker@myway.com.

~·

.
Figuring · out

.
who your
parents are used to be a pretty simple proposition. They
were the people who kissed
your forehead when you
headed out to school and
signed you up for Girl
Sco~ts and barked at you for
leaving your bike in the driveway.
Now, forget it.
In this . age of high-tech
fertilization and conception,
&lt;,leciphering parentage can
be a. complex computation
for which there is often no
reliable formula. Is the parent the person who, knowingly or unknowingly, contributed his or her genetic
material? The person wllo
carried the ·fetus in her
womb? The person who
pours the Cheerios in the
morning and reads "Good
Night, Moon" at bedtime?
The case of Californian
Susan Buchweitz points oiu
the messy consequences of a
20th-century legal system
grappling with 21st-century
technology. ·
She was a 48-year-old
interior decorator when she
gave birth to a boy who grew
from a donated egg fertilized
by donated sperm. She had
tried in her early 40s to have
a child, according to news
accounts, and after two years
of counseling, decided time
was running out. She chose
the egg and sperm donors
carefully through her docto~.'
She saw herself and her baby
as a family with all that the
concept implies: relatives,
traditions, values, unbreakable bonds and unconditional love.
But when· her son was 10
months old, she found out
the wrong embryo had been
i m~lanted in her womb. ·It
was one of several frozen
embryos belonging to a married couple who 'had an
appointment for implanta-

... .. .

,.

'

.. .•.

.

Joan
Ryan

tion the same day as
Buchweitz.
Buchweitz's
baby, and the girl born to the
married couple, were born
lO days apart. .
The doctor knew of the
mistake right .after both
women were implanted, but
he covered it l!P until a whistle-blower alerted authorities. (He is about to lose his
license, and he had to pay
Buchweitz $1 million in
damages.) When the husband of the married couple
discovered he was the biological father of Bucliweitz's
son - the wife used a donor
egg - he sued for full custody. .
· Last month, a judge mediated a settlement in · which
the biological father, who
had temporary visitation
rights for almost two years,
gets to share cu'stody of
Buchweitz's son. who is
now 3. Buchweitz, who did
not return phone calls, must
· send her toddler to the man's
home sev~days a week.
· Think abo'iit this.
· Because this man's sperm
· was accidentally implanted
in a woman who is a com- ·
plete stranger. he has· the
right under current law to
step into her life and the life
of her son. He can make
decisions about how he will
be raised and where he will
sleep and what schools he
will attend.
Here'·s the kicker: Under
California law, if the Wbman
. had been married at the time
of implantation, her husband

..
.._

'

.

would have been the presumptive father, · no matter
what the DNA tes.ting
revealed, and the biological
father would have no claim
to the child.' But as a single
mother; Buchweitz didn ' t
have · full parental rights to
decide who should and
should not be part of her
child's life.
·So the courts give lots of
weight to genetics but only if
there is a ·single mother
· .
involved.
David Magnus, co-director of Stanford's Center for
Biomedical Ethics, has been
following the Buchweitz
case · closely. Thougii what
happened to her an(! her son
is a horrible (luke, he says
the permutations of parenthood that arise from fertility
treatments demand new
legal and social models.
It :s too simple to rely so
heavily on genetics to determine who should .be mothers
and fathers. "We are such a
gene-centered . culture,"
Magnus said. "There is an
assumption that we · are our
genes."
Don Kilmer, Buchweitz's
attorney during the custody
battle, agrees that courts
give too much weight ,to
biology and not enough to
what's best for a child like
Buchweitz's, who now has
to live a divided life.
''Genetic
material is
cheap," Kilmer says. "But
the judge had no choice in
this case but to give the guy
legal standing. We need legislation that takes up issues.
like these that lead to confusion for the child and trauma
for the parents. ... . There
needs to be certainty and
finality to some things, and
one . of those is establishing
who your parents are (early
on in life).''
These are the murky.
unfamiliar waters that

judges today have to · navigate. Britain, the country
that produced the first in
vitro
baby,
has
a
Fertilization
and
Embryology Authority ere- .
ated by Parliament to oversee· the many complicated
questions that must be
answered as technology hurtles forward . The United
States has no counterpart. ·
"There is · no controlling ·
body to reflect all the clinical, ethical and legal issues
around fertility technology,"
says Susan Wolf, professor
of law and medicine at the .
University of Minnesota.
"So because everything has
been all over the map state
by state, judges get cases
that defy any statutory
scheme. There's been a good
deal of despair about
whether this country is capable of centralized reflection
much less centralized legislation."

RACINE- Nicholas lhle, 49, of Racine. died unexpected,
lyon Sunday, May 8; 2005, at the emergency department of
Jackson General Hospital in Ripley, W.Va.
·
Funeral arrangements are under the direction of Cremeens
Funeral Home in Racine and will be announced upon c9mpleuon.
·
.
spend 30 hours dwelling on
their lack of food, and to keep
them from getting discour·from Page A1
a~. the church hosted a
I~ in, and a night's worth of
"I decided to do it, and trust activities to keep their minds
, in the Lord," Roach said. "The occupied. At exactly I p.m. on
Saturday, students enjoyed
Lord saw me through it."
, . The fast, of course, is lunch at the church before
.. designed to give youth a taste heading home.
"There was very.little com. -so to speak - ofthemisery
'of famine. So they didn't plai'ning," Ulm said.

Fast'

:·Carleton employees
,.:complete certification

·

In the meantime, a moil!er
relinquishes her baby several days a week to a man she
dOesn't tcnow and, accord·
ing to several people famil ·
iar with both parties, to
whom she has almost noth. ing in common. I understand a man 's sense of connection and responsibility
to a. baby that carries hi s
genes. I Uf!derstand a moth-·
er's desire to raise her child
~ith stability and .consistency, in one home, with one
set of values.
We need laws as sophisticated and complex as the
lives we live today, ones that
recognize that families are
defined by. and bound to
each other, by much stronger
stuff than double-helixes.
(Joan Rmn is c• cult~inilisr
for th e · Scm Francisco
Chronicle. Send comments
to h ~r in care of this newspaper or send her 'e -mail at
j01i11rya11 @s[chro11 ickcum. )

was don ated to local food
banks. pantries and shelters.
In a proc lamation signed by
Pomeroy J oh~ Musser designating Saturday as National
Food C,ollection Day, he
encouraged resident s to support the effort of the letter car·
riers in their ·goal of helping to
feed needy fa.milies in Meig s
County.

·ruo Grande .graduates class of 2005
·'

URG graduate
Deanna Lemley, of
Pomeroy, receives
. her diploma from
· br. Herman Kotly,
chairman of Rio
Grande Community .
College Board of
Trustees. at the
University of Rio
Grande Saturday.
This year's graduating class marked
the largest ever
from the university,
448 students . .
.ian McNemartphoto

Law you can use
Federal Law Restricts
Telemarketing and
Unsolicited Fax
Advertisements
Q.:

Nicholas lhle

.

letter carrier to arrive. It will
be taken to the Post Office and
then delivered to the Meig s
Cooperative Parish for distribution to local needy familie&gt;.
Last year over 1.175 pounds
of food was collected. Across
the nation th e Ol'er 1500
branches of postal workers
· collected a record of,70.9 million pounds of food. All. of it

We~t

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - Phyllis Parrish Bradeh, 73, of New
Haven, W.Va., died on May 8, 2005 , at Overbrook Center in
Middleport .
· ·
·
She was born Jan. 8, 1932, daughter of the late Garry
Parrish and Mattie Randolph Braden. She was preceded in
death by her husband, Harold S. Braden, Sr,
Services will be held at 2 p.m . on Tuesday, May I 0, 2005,
at Anderson Funeral Home in New Haven, W.Va., with Rev.
Mike Finnicum officiating. Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m.
on Monday at the funeral home, and may visit the guest register online at www.andersonfh.com.

Ulho ~ . baby is it,.anyway?

POMEROY - Again this
year the Pomeroy Branch of
the National Association of
Letter Carriers in conjunction
with the United States Postal
Service will p~rticipate in the
National Stamp Out Hunger
food drive . .
Carriers· will be collecti ng

non-peri~hable food items
like canned meats and fish,
canned so up , juice, pasta,
ve t&lt;etables. cereal and rice on
Saturday. May 1-+. They asked
that out-of-date items and
glass containers of foOd not be
included.
Resident s are asked to ·placc
their donations n.ear their
mailbox before time fo r the

Charles $..Wheeler ·

Phyllis Braden

TODAY IN HISTORY

...

HENDERSON, W.Va. - Robert Wi II iam Patterson 81 of
Henderson, W.Va., died Saturday, May 7. 2005, at Ov~rbr~ok
Center m Middleport.
· ·
He was born Oct. 11, 1923. i.n Henderson. to the late Miry
L. Leport Pat.terson,. Besides hts mother, he was preceded in
, d.eath by hts l!rst wtfe, Haze l Roach Patterson in 1983 .
. Rnhcrt wa; a retired chief e.nci nee r for the Ohio River Co.
y.'tth 35years of service,: and 1vas a U.S. Army ve teran serv:
mg dunng World War II, and a member of the American ,
Le~ion Post #23, Point Pleasant, W.Va. He enjoyed cooking,
anllqumg and the company of his cats.
· ·
Surviving are his wife, Mary 'Lou McCloud Patterson of
'Henderson; son and daughter-in-law, Robert L. and Patricia
. Patterson of Point Pleasant; two grandsons, Robert and Adria
Patterson of Pmnt Pleasant and Bryan Patterso n of
Hunllngton; a brother and sister-in-law Howard 'E!i and Mae
Patterson of Henderson: and several ni~ces and nephews.
. A graveside service will be held at l p.m. on Monday; May
'9 .. 20,05.. at Concord. Cemetery with Minister George Topping
offietatmg, and buna~ following . Memorial contributions may
be made to the Amencan Red Cross in Huntington, W.Va. ··
Arrangement s are under the direction of Wilcoxen Funeral
·Home in Point Pleasant.

Deaths

Sherry Atllerto11
Long Bottom

.LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLI C H ~MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

•

a

Today is Monday, May 9, the !29th day of 2005. There are
236 days left in the· year.
·
Today's Highlight in History: Twenty-live years ago, on
. May 9, 1980, 35 motorists were killed when a Liberian
· freighter rammed the Sunshine Skyway Bridge over Tampa
Bay in Florida, causing a I ,400-foot section to collapse.
Today's Birthdays: CBS News correspondent Mike Wallace
is 87. Actress-turned-politician Glenda Jackson is 69.
Producer-director James L. Brooks is 65. Singer Tommy Roe
is 63. Actress Candice Bergen is 59. Actor Anthony Higgins is ·
58. Singer Billy Joel is 56. Rock singer-musician Tom
Petersson (Cheap Trick) is 55. Actress Alley Mills is 54. Actor
John Corbett is 44. Singer Dave Gahan (Depeche Mode) is 43.
Rapper Ghostface Killah is 35. R&amp;B singer Tamia is 30. Rock
musician Dan Regan (Reel Big Fish) is 28. R()l:k singer Pierre
Bouvier (Simple Plan) is 26. Actress Rosario Dawson is 26.
Thought for Today: "It i.s not the fact of liberty but the way
in which liberty is exercised that ultimately determines
whether liberty itself survives." - Dorothy Thompson,
American journalist and author ( 1894-1961 ).

.Local letter carriers to help 'Stamp Out Hunger'
.

Court justice together at Rivers. Splashing into the
Lovely Laura Bush: yukChippendale's. waving dol- media mainstream to join the
yuk, or just yuck1
lars bills at male strippers. deri sive fun. decoupling
. The event under considerEven jokes that make a fateful words from mortal
ation - the. first lady 's
"Mommie Dearesi" out of purpose. is a risky proposimonologue at the White
former first lady Barbara tion for the wife of a superHouse
Correspondents ·
Diana
Bush. Such material won't power leader. One 'day, ·'endDinner - weighs in alongWest
pull more than a PG rating ing tyranny'' is Mr. Bush 's
side .flotsam and jetsam, but
these days. but a first lady in raison d'etre; the next day, it
the question has hefty ramiany
era should be mature is Mrs. Bush's punch line . .
fication s. It may be the ulti. The day after that - who
enough to avoid all :'adult''
mate " litmus test," a chance
knows?
'The lingering air of .
to reveal something more in-chief. In these explosive material.
Once upon a ·time. such uncertainty is . hardly worth
vital than mere politics, and times, with tens of thousands
di
scretion
was a no-brainer. · the media snickers, even if
certainly less easily defined: of soldiers under arms.
the state of public taste and Which is a sobering thought, an obvious rule that needed the first lady did manage lo
no articulation, much less ''humanize'' her husband, as ·
judgment. .
or should be.
conscious
thought. No more The New ·York Times so
Thi s should come as
In other words , fee t of clay
something of a reliefto those are .. fine, but there 's rto rea- - which is why there seem ,admiringly 'put it. Certainly,
among us weary of the well- son to bring the barnyard to be more people, including she knocked him down·some
worn Red State, Blue State into it. Whoopi Goldberg · Conservatives, applauding pegs. which in our age is
divide. Better to carve up the steered a Democratic fund - Mrs. Bush than sitting on much the same thing. . But
world between those who raiser into the gutter last their hands. We live in a ~m;i­ imagine other presidencies,
. found Laura Bush's jokes summer with a crude pun on ety that prizes the guffaw pqrti cu lijrly in wartime .
fuQny, and those who didn't. the Bush family name, above all. where "lighten up': Would we have said Eleanor
Or, rather, those who found · prompting Republican accu· is a commandment and any- humanized ' FDR by doing a
Laura Bush's jokes an orna- sations that John Kerry did- thing really does go.. But it stand-up routine about
ment to tne White House , n't "share the same values" goes for no reason. That is, I . Franklin always "fearing
and . those who ·wished a as the rest oKAmerica.
can think of no reason to fear itself"? Or that Pat
grownup had happened by · But what about the rest of motivate a tirst lady to mock Nixon humanizecj Richard
the East Wing to yank them the Bush family ? Laura a president in front of a by wondering wh~re the
from the script and throw in Bush is no stand-up comic, White House press corps that heck the peace was that Dick
some nifty new adventures but that's all the more reason makes a career of doing so said was "at hand"? Or that
certain sorts of "jokes" on a daily basis. "George," · Nancy Reagan l:mmanized
of Barney.
Why ? When a woman should be automatically, she said, "if you really want Ron by teasing him about
happens to be first lady, reflexively, unquestioningly to epd tyranny in the world, tearing down that old wall?
"Lighten up," they say, in
"funny" at any expeQse isn' t ruled out for her public you're going to have to stay
a
programmed
response. No
delivery.
Jokes
that
link
the
up
later."
The
hilarity
of
her
part of .the job des£ription,
not when "funny" oomes at · president's hands and . the moment p;~sses, but ·some- thanks. A laugh-track nation
doesn 't really offer serious
the expense of her htisband's underside of a horse, for . thing has .changed.
·
Exactly what it is that has comic relief, ·
image . . And I don'l mean · instahce. Jokes that .create a
regrettably
indelible
image
(Diana
West
is
a
colwnnisr
changed is difficult to
"image" as in public relations product. I : mean of the first lady, the vice explain. After all, the whole for Th e Washington · Times.
"image" as in public symbol. president's wife, the secre- thing was "j ust" a joke. But She can be comacred via
World leader. Commander- tary of state, and a Supreme Laura Bu sh is not Joan diana •vesr@ ve rizan.ne I.)

BUBBLE!

The Daily Sentinel• Page-As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

Laura Bu~h: No laughing matter

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Monday, May 9, 2005

My home ' phone number is on the do-not-call list,
but I 'still get telemarketing
call s. Are these calls illegal'
A.: The Federal Telephone
Consumer Protection Act
·(TCPA) protects residential
and cellular telephone customers from most unwanted
telemarketing calls, such as
calls you may receive from a
business advertising goods or
services. Assuming your
number has been on the donot-call list for three months,
telemarketers. who continue
to make calls to your number
to advertise for-protit businesses are violating the law.
In addition ; most commercial
advertising calls to a home or
cellular phone made by a
· recorded voice violate the
law, regardless of whether
your numb.er is on the donot-call list.
Q.: Are there other rules
that telemarketers must follow? ·
A.:
The
Federal
Communications Commission
(FCC) has added the following rules for telemarketing
calls:
Recorded- voice messages
must, afthe beginning of the
message, identify the person·
or business responsible for
making· the call.
·
Recorded-vpice messages
must provide a telephone
number for the person .or
business responsible for making the call.
No telephone solicitations
may be made to resid,ences
after 9:00 p.m. or before 8:00
a.m. Those who make telemarketing calls to residences
must maintain their own donot-call lists, must have . a
written policy available on
. demand, and must train their
employees.
Residents can .demand that
a telemarketer add their number to the caller's own donot-call list. The caller must
honor this request within . a
reasonable time (not mure
than 30 days), and for
the following five years.
Q.: Are some kinds of telephone solicitations allowed 1

A.: Some calls are exempt been made. Not every illegal
Note: At · . pre ss time,
from portions of. the TCPA . . call makes a good court case, Congress was considering
One exception is for callers however, and otien, it is diffi- chat1ges to the unsolicited fax
representing tax exempt non- cult to ..eve n identify the ·portion of the TCPA.
protit organizations, although caller. Contact an attorney
some unscrupuiO\tS business- .with speci fic legal questions. ·. Law Yoi1 Can use is a
cs hide behind non-profits to .. Q.: What about unsolicited weekly cousumer legal infor· ·
tonceal the true bu siness pur- faxes to my home or office' matiou column provided by
'pose of their calls. Another
A.: The TCPA currently· tile
Ohio
State
Bar
exception is for -calls that are prohibiis unsolicited advertis- Association (OSBA). This
not ads' or solicitations (for ing . to
fax
machines. article was prepared by Greg
elt:ample, political calls or Beginning July I, 2005, in Reiclle 11 bacl1, a11 attorney
legitimate survey s). Other order to legally se nd an practiciug ;11 Mamfield
exceptions include . telemar- advertising fa x, a business Articles appearing ; 11 this
keting call s to bu sinesses, must have a written statement colum 11 are ;11te 11 ded to proemergency -call s. non-com- showing that the recipient vide broad, ge 11 eral i11formamercial calls. andcalls to peo- agrees to . receive such fax · lion about tile law. For
pie . who have an established ads, That statement mu st 111Jormat1011
· .F.
·
·
a bout · a vanety
buIIstnessIfrelationship with· ·the include the recipient 's signa- OJ,, . 1ega1 fiOpiCS,
· VISit
· · (,e
~
ca er.
you are r.eceivmg ture and fax number.
OSBA's Web · site at H:ww.
unwanted calls from. a · busiQ.:
What
.
c
an
1
do
when
.
1
h ·
olliobar. org. Before apply·
ness you have deatI wtt .Ill receive an unsolicited fax ad? ing this i11[ormatiou to o
d th e
.the · past. yo u1 can
A.t You can tile a com- specific legal problem, read·
·
hen
·
b
busmess re at10ns
Ip
Y
plaint
with the FCC at the ers .a re 11rged to seek advice
·
b dd d
h
dem an d tng
to
e
a
e.
to
t
e
aboVe
address. Private suits from a11 attar
·. ney.
• d
11
1·
company s o-not-ca tst.
for statutory damages . are
Q.: Where can I file a com- also av'ailable for ·unsolicited
plaint about illegal telemar- fax ads. The fax provisions of
the TCPA apply to fax ads
keting calls?
A.: You can add your home received both at homes and
number to the federal do-not- businesses.
call list, or file a complaint
Q.: Are there. other rule s
with the · .Federal Trade that fax advertisers mu·st fol·
Commission (FTC)
. ythrough .1OW ?.
II
d
www. onotca gov. ou can
A.: There are also fax
also file a complaint with the identification requirements
FCC at http:Hsvartifoss2. fcc- that government officials can
or: enforce. These rules require
gov/cib/fcc475.cftn,
Federal
Communications
Commission; Consumer &amp; the following information on
Governmental
Affairs either the first page, or in the
Consumer top or bottom margin of each
Bureau.
page: the date and time the
Complaints, 445 12' h Street, fax was sent; the identity of
Subscribe today • 992-2155
SW.
Washington ,
D.C. the sender; and the telephone
20554.
number of the sender's fax
The FCC occasionally
issues citations or · fines machine.
against violators. States also
have the authority to enforce
the TCPA. but generally, governments do not have the
resource s · to deal with the
large number of violations.
Q .: Can I sue a telemarketer for violating tlie TCPA?
A;: Yes. The TCPA allows
a private suit for most commercial advertising calls to a
residence or cellular phone
from us
made by· a· recorded voice.
..
The . plaintiff can recov~r a
All nrle• ol carpet are Included:
minimum of $500 damages.
BERBER CARPET, SAXONY CARPET,
and the court can increase
thai to as much as S I ,500 per
TRACitLESS CARPET, SHAG CARPET,LEVEL
violation if the caller acted
LOOP CARPET aad SCULPTURED CARPET.
willfully or knowingly. Live
tell!marketing calls also can
No utra cbarae for aaoWI&amp; furaiture
resuIt in damages up to $500
or ra10,taa old carpet.
to $1.500 per violation. when
more than one illegal call has

Proud to.'be a
part of your life.

Traffic cameras get red light

SubmHted photo

Employees at Carleton School and· Meigs Industries recenlty
completed , course work for certification· by the Ohio
Department of Mental Retardation. Those employees included
(front row, from left) Richard Justice, Marilyn Young, (back row,
from' left) Christine Schaefer, Joyce Hollon, Tom McKay,
Debora Barnhart, Ruth Ann Masters , Cathy Grady. Not pictured
Ron Grirom , Cindy McGuire.
·
·
-·--

CLEVELAND (AP)
Plans in several Ohio cities to
mount" cameras at intersections to nab traffic offenders
'may be stymied by a legislative roadblock. '
A House committee has
approved a proposal that
would require cities to post
police officers at intersections
with traffic cameras. Only
those officers could issue tickets to drivers caught by the
cameras.
·The measure would make

~--·-- ---

the cameras impractical for
cities. officials smd.
·
"We don't have the budget
to station police at intersections,'' said Cleveland City
Councilwoman Merle Gordon.
Cleveland , Cincinnati and
Toledo already have posted or
are in the !lfOCess of mounting
cameras at crossroads to cut
down on drivers running red
lights or speeding. Police
would review t~ e photos
before tickets are issued aml
sent to drivers.
.,

Call Ul or stop 'in.
We'D come to your boaae aad meuare
for a free no obllpdon quote.

.

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.PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE:

Monday, May 9, 200'5

SE District tournament schedule, Page 82
Reds lose to Dodgers, Page 86 .
·
Surprise winner in Kentucky Derby, Page B6

Highway shQotings jury at impasse on insanity; mistrial declared
hi, para noid ,..:hitorhrenia. not have all of the meui..:al
The defetbe psychiatri&gt;-t information he has now.
,aid McCoy 11 as d..:,pcratc
f\kCoy.
who
has
Jurors to rio him,df of humiliating remained s.to ic th'roughout
COLUMBUS '
'
could not agree whether the voi..:es in hi ' heau tha't the trial. stared s tr~a i~ht
admitted
Columbus-area c:lllcd him a "W imp'.' t(J r not ahead as the jurors we re
.,
highway shooter was insane sta nding up to mocking distili,sed. He cried onl y
- so with no verdict possi - from telcv i,ion programs when his parents testifi ed
ble, the· judge declared a and commerc ials. He also abnut the staJ1 of hi s mental
mistrial Sunday on the, .said McCo y hdie1·ect others illness.
fourth full day of delibera- could read lii s thou~ht s and . The jur6rs. who were tlrst
lions. .
.
dtd no t stop hiii1 fro m sum moned April ~ - and
. heard ei!!ht davs of testimoThe JUrors earlier told the , hootrng ,
judge they had voted tw tce · The prosecution\ expert ny. were~ escoried out of the
on insanity and could not s,.id that despite the dclu- n :JUrthouse at their request
reach a unanimous de'tision. sions. McCoy showeu he ·and l)id not comment.
''I'm very di sappointeu."
Franklin County Common knew his aL·tions . were
Pleas
,Judge
Charles wrong by steps he tonk to saiu juror Bobby Collins. a
Schneider sent them, some avoid capture. such as leav- retired Grove City police
in tears. back m keep trying. ing for Las Vegas when his officer r!ached by teleThe jury deliberated about guns were turneu over to · phone. who dec lined to disan hour longer before police. He was arrested a cuss deliberatioos. '"There
": deClaring the .final impasse. .few days later. on March will be another trial and I
County Prosecutor Ron 17. 2004.
don't Want to taint that."
McCoy could have faced
The shootings frightened
O'Brien said he would retry
Charles McCoy Jr.. 29. who the death penalty if con1·ict- commuters and residents for
pleaded innocent by reasot;t ed of· aggravated murder for m01ith s. as bullet s struck
of insanity 10 aggravated the N"lJvember 2003 death ca rs. trucks, school · buses
murder and 23 Qther of Gail Knisley, 62. the only and houses at varying times
AP Photo
charges for the · 12 shootings person ~truck. If declared of day and nioht and differ"'
Charles McCoy Jr. wait for a.
· 2003 insane. he would. have been ent spots· along
over · fitve mont I1s In
or near Chuck itnd Ardith McCoy, the parents of highway shooting suspect
·
verdict in their son's case, in Columbus. McCoy, 29, of Columbus. has pleaded innocent by
and 2004.
committed to a mental hos- . Interstate 270. the highway
h
With the defense admit- pi tal until a judge ruled he that encircles Columbus. reason of insanity to 24 counts in 12 shootings over five mont s in 2003 and 2004 .
· ting McC,oy was the shoot- was no longer a danger.
About 77.000 vehicles trav- this time that this &lt;'vi ii she was being driven to a Dr. Mark Mills, the defense ·
er, the case pitted two psy- . Schneider will meet with el daily on the beltway and change," the note said.
doctor's appointment.
expert. believed the defen:
chiatrists who disagre~d the attor'neys Tuesday 'to 'I nearby highway.
Kntsley's son Brent read a
McCoy's father.. Charles dant's story without check'
whether he met the . lega l . determu~e ':"hat
happen · Two ,J Urors stghed and had brief prepared s!atement by ~cC~y Sr.\ sta~dmg vnth ing it against police reports
.
ht s former. wtfe, Ardith . . and other evidence, prosedetlnition of in sanity: that next. 0 Bnen satd he .had tears tn thetr eyes whew· phone.
"We are extremely disap- thanked the ury for 1ts hard
·
a 'severe mental illness not dectded whether to keep the)' were sent back to con.1 .
. . • . , cutors argued.
•
'
kept him from knowing seeking the ~~:nh penally on tinue deliberations. They pointed in the outcome," he work and s,ud ~ts laf!1tly s
But the defense countered
.
.
right from wrong. McCoy the most senous charge. He had voted on Friday and said. "If there's another trial thoughts were With thetr son
wasn't taking medicati on said that when the charge Sunday. according to tlie and another trial and anoth- and the Knisley family. .
that thatprosecutwn expert
duripg the shootings for was originally filed . he did jury note read by the judge. er trial. we will still be
During closing arguments Dr. Phiiitp Resmck focused
without reaching unanimous there ."
prosel·utors and defens~ only . on McCoy's actions
decisions on in sanity on · Gail Knisley, 62, of attorneys attacked the oppo- that mdtcated evaston , and
each count.
Washington Court Hol!se, site side"s expert.
ignored ways Mc.Coy ·)eft
"We have no indication at was killed Nov. 25. 2003. as
Prosecutors argued that himself open to capture.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel
• j

'•

Bv CARRIE SPENCER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Monday, May 9, 2005

Prep Schedule
Monday's games
Tournament BaMbaU

Me1Qh at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
SOUtheastern at South Garua, 5 p.m.
Southern at ~iller, 5 p.m.
.

Tournament SOftball
AiYer Valley al Alexander, 5 p.m.
•
r
-ball
· Point PJeasant at Roane Co., 5:30p.m.

Tueaday•a gem"
Tournament BIHball
ButfBb'St. Joe at Wahama, 5 p.m.
SOuthern at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Point al Ritchie Co., 5:30 p.m.
Track
TVC Meet at Vinton County, 4 p.m.

Wod-y'sgomH
• Toumament SOftball
WaYerty at GaUia Academy, ~p. m.

Sdotoville at South Gallla, 5 p.m.
Ma'igs at Marietta, 5 p.m.

Crooksville at S0Uthl!'_n. 5 p.m.
Tl&gt;urodoy'o

Mlllef/Southem at Eastern, 5 p.m.
· Meigs/Gallia at Warren, 5 p.m .
Ravenswood at Point-Pleasant, 6 p.m.
ll'ack
TVC Meet at Vinton County, 4 p.m.
.w.va. Reglonats at Ritchie Co., TBA
·
Tennla
Sectional at Portsmouth, 4 p.m.
W.Va. State Tournament, TBA

BEAVERCREEK tAP) -·
Uvemigllt (1·6 a.m.)
It 's going to be a cloudy . Fed up with constant. call s
ovemight There is a slim chance and visits · • from military
that it could min. Temperatures recruiters seeking to nieet
will stay near 62. Winds will be monthly enlistment quotas,
5 MPH from the southwest turn- some parents are unawar'e
ing from the so uth as . the · the military gets their contact information fron1 their
overnight progresses.
children's schools.
'1\tesday, May lO
· For nearly two years,
Moming (7 a.m ..-Noon) .
Cloudy
morning. recruiters showeu up at
Tempemtures will climb from · David Ant'oon's, Beavercreek
61 to .75 by late this morning. home 10 try to persuade his
Winds will be 5 to I0 MPH oldest son to join, and · their
from the south tuming from the presence . was n()t appreciatsouthwest as the morning pro- ed, he said.
After
some
re search,
gresses.
Antoon found the recruiters
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
A few lightrain showers a(e has gotte n his son's address
on the way. Expect 0.04 inches and phone number from his
of rain by the end of this after- school. and he could "opt
noon. Temperatures will hold out" by asking Beavercreek
steady around 77 : Skies will Hi gh School not to release
be partly cloudy to cloudy the information.
"Before kids are shown
with 5 to 10 MPH winds from
· movies. they bring (consent)
the southwest.

forms home for parents to
sign ," Antoon said. " Yet;
schools give my address,
phone numbers and (stu· dents') grades to recruiters
without my. knowledge."
· Starting in the fall, as a
result of Antoon"s efforts.
Beavercreek sc hools will
start sending home opt-out
forms along with other documents parents receive at the
"beginning of the school year,
Denny·
Superintendent
Morrison said.

Today's games
a8aeball

Rio Grande at Ohio. 6 p.m.
Wednesday's games
Region IX Tournament
· at Ohio Dominican
Rio \IS. TBA , TBA

Lady .'Does
win annual
legends game
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM

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Dedication to Vitus Hartley, Jr. , new entrywtiy. renovated main lobby,
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Redwomen volleyball adds third recruit

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,,

RACINE - In preparation
for its upcoming tournament
game against Crooksville on
Tuesday, the Southern Lady
Tornadoes
defeated
the
Alumni 7-5 in its annual
"Legends Classic" at Siar Mill
Pari&lt;..
..
Twelve veteran Alumni
players ranging from 19812004 pmicipated in the game.
Alunmi team members were
Tonja Salser Hunter, Mel
·Brad Sherman/photo
Weese, Rachel Chapman, Kim
Sayre, Katie Sayre, Debbie '
South Gallia's Paul Combs, left, slides home safely in front of Southern pitcher Wes Riffle during game two of Satuday's doubleheader at Star Mill Park In ·
Michael, Laren Wolfe Riffle.
Racine. The"Tornadoes swept the RE!bels.
Ashley Davis, Tainmy Smith
Chapman,
Darla
White
Tucker, Regina Manuel and
Jenny Bentley Wahn.
·Alumni hitters were Hunter
who went 3-for-4, Katie Sayre
2-for-4, Chapman 2-for-3,
while Weese had a single. and
Freshman Ryan Chapman ·went strike out. John Wells was hit with a three RBis. then he himself rode ·
Bv ScoTT WoLF£
Bentley a single. Davis and
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
five innings to pick up the win with pitch to load the base s. Josh ,Wrighi home on a single· by Crouch, the
Michael also had a couple
had a two-RBI double. and .Steve score 4-3 Southern.
relief help from Brad Crouch hard-hit balls. ·
Pelfrey a safety bunt single, the
Southern added two more runs in
together
they
scattered
seven
hits.
· Southern Coach Scott
RACINE .
The So~thern
Wolfe said, "This game is an
3-0.
·
score
the fourth inning. Nick Buck drew a
walking five , hit two. and struck out
Tornadoes stormed over the South seven in a great effort.
inspiration to both me and my
Somhcrn came back with four runs full-count walk. then sprinted home
Gallia Rebels in a big way Saturday
players . . My players were
In the first· game of the 'weep. in the bottom half of the .third intiing on an RBI double by southpaw Wes
Impressed with how hard the
afternoon at Racine 's Star Mill Park , Southern had to come from behind when Jake Hunter reached on an Riffle. Marnhout then picked up his
Alumni played and how serisweeping· an afternoon non-league to post th,e important non-league error. Wes Riffle reached on a field- fourth RBI of the game with a hit of
ously they took the game.
win. South Gallia took the earl y lead er's choice. and Derek Teafo rd the single variety, the score 6-3.
doubleheader 7-5 and 9-7.
They have great desire and that
The Rebels rallied in the fif,th
Southern is now 8-14 going into in the third .inning when Micah ' reached on an error to load the
· WI!S what made them winners
bases.
Butch
Marnhout
then
hamCardwell
and
Seth
Williamson
drew
today's
sectional
tournament
.game
in their careers. Also, it was
Please see Sweeps, Bl
at Miller. South ·Gallia fell to 6-12 . back-to-back walks. then after a mered a base-clearing triple for
fun to see the enthusiasm these, .
great athletes put into · this
game. lid like,to thank all the
Alumni for hel~ing us out with
this game."
Southern hitters were
Whitney Riftle with two singles, Brooke Kiser two singles .
' .
.
l'licki Tucker two singles,
last two sea·· excmng. for ·me to tell the Stevens is up to the chal- at this time we do not know
BY l't'IAR~ WILLIAMS
Lindsey Buzzard a single,
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL
sons as welL kids today tha t I'm sig ning len ge of playing college val- but she's definitely going to
Ashley Roush a triple, Joanne··
She is also with college.'' Stevens ~a id . lev ball at Rio Grande. "She fit into our program.'"
Pickens twd singles and
very accom- "To actually play vo lleyball , is.just a great aihlete. versaFields likes the· fact that
RIO GRANDE - The
Bonnie Allen a single.
plished , in I never.. thou ght that thi s tile. anything you need she Steven s· academic prowess
. Bethany Riftle pitched a
University of Rio Grande
the
class- opportunity wouJd·come."
can do," Hammer said . "I afforded her the Ohio First
great g~e for the wm.
Redwomen volleyball pror
o
o
m
·.
Stevens plans to major in think Rio · Grande is v~y Scholarship. "Those are the
Southern had the opporturuty
. gram has been busy stockpi lBecause of early childhood education .
lucky to have her coming people, you find that are
to see pitching frdm two of the
ing young talent for the 2005
her
stell
ar
going to stay in your proThe scholarship offer ulti- in ."
all-time Southern hurlers in
season. The latest addition is
work
in
acaFi.
e
lds
had
earlier
gram."· Fields said. "If you
Chapman and Kim Sayre.
mately made the dec ision to
Amanda Stevens
from
demics
she
Both pitchers had 20-win sea- .
aitend Ri o Grande just too addres:.ed the middle hitte r can get the kids there with
Riverside High School in
Stevens
comes
to good to pass up: "Fi nding and outside hitter positions the Ohio F,irst and the
sons in their careers.
·
Bellefontaine.
Rio Grande out about the Ohio First with her previous two sign- Atwood. we feel that they're
inch
Stevens,
a
5-foot-7
as
class
valedictorian
and
ings. In addin g Stevens. going to stay for the four
Contact Information
left-handed setter. has the wili receive the Ohio First Scholarship, that was the Fields thinks she ·s got a . years ..
Fu-1 ; 7~-3008
abiliiy to play all over the Scholarship, which covers thing that made it really hard solid. all-around player with
Stevens joins Westfall
court and can provide Rio full tuition . Sh e will also to turn down,"' Stevens ;,aid. the added luxury of her
E-meii-'SpOrtsOmydatlytribune.com
had.
a
chance
to
go
w
"
I
being
left-handed.
"You
ate
High
School's
Jessica
Grande head coach Patsy receive some grant-i n-aid
Sports Staff
Wiuenberg
pos,ibly.
but
lookin
g
for
that
(leftRod
gers
and
Riverview.
always
Fields with some versatility. frnm the vnllevhall oroQraltl.
Br.t Sherman, Sporla Editor
Fields
said . High School's Stephanie
She has outstanding 'teapitig While at Riverside- she there was no way that l was hander) ...
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
going
to
play
on
the
volleywhat
a
coach
die s Lapp as the three recruits
'"That's
ability
and
should
be
able
served. as Student Council
bsherman@mydailytrlbune.com
team
and
I
that'
s
not
for."
sig ned for the Rio Grande
ball
help in the hitting depart- President and' is a member of
"We· re looking at maybe a vo lleyball program to this
Brpn Watt.ra, Sports Writer
ment for the .Red women .
the National Honor Society . what 1 wanted.
6-2
(74(1) ,&lt;46-2342, ext 23 ·
"I
wantel\
to
go
to
college
(formation) th is year. she point in the recruiting seaStevens was the Riverside
Stevens is looking forward
bwalters a rirydailytribune.com
to
get
m~
education
and
to
can jump. we know that. son.
Most Valuable Player in both to the opportunity of moving
she·, very quick. and very
Amanda is the daughter of
play
vo
lleybalL"
.
the
2003
and
2004
seasons
on
to
the
next
level
of
comlMrj Cn~m, Spans Wrtt.r
athletic
."
Fields
added
.
Chuck
and Lori, Stevens of
Ri
ve
rside
head
coach
Amy
and
was
selected
first
team
the
petition
and
happy
have
!304) 675-1333, ext 19
·-what
role
'
he:
ll
play
rig
ht
Bellefontaine
.
k:rumOmydailyregister.com
believes
that
aU-conference in each of the signing behind her. "It 's very Hammer

Southern sweeps.South G

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

·~

. ·..

PrEp BasEball

Rio Schedule

membership. This year, Ohio
FFA ·has 21 ,531 members in
317 chapters.
In addition. to FFA; several
. universities (\re trying to
revamp their images .to
include. broader aspects of
agricultural science . The
University of Nebraska's
College . of Agricultural
Science
and
Natu'raJ
Resources is thinking about
dropping "Agricultural" from
its name to be more attractive
to a wider base.of students.

'

Please see Rio, Bl

Tennla
Sectional at Portsmouth , 4 p.m.
W.Va. State Tournament, TBA

federal funding must give
military recruiters the same
information they give to colleges. A separate federal law
says parents should be notitied before schools distribure
the information, but the nolification can be made in a
student handbook or other
mailing. Parents also must
be told how they can prevent
the · information's release.
Several other schools say
they send home opt-out
forms.

\

CANTON .- ''I've never
been in a game like thi s Rio
'it"s
unbelievable."
Grande head baseball coach
Brad Warnimont said following one of the most amazing
ga·me s ever played in
American
Mideast
Conference· tournament history.

Rio Grande (30-19) !.!01 the
game· Started in a b,ig Way &lt;I S·
jun ior second ba se m;m Mike
Golom led oiT wi th a so lo
home run. The Redmen held
leads of 8- 1 in the second
and 9-3 in the third onl y to
see Malone battle back to
take an 11 -9 lead in the
·
eighth inning.
Rio had some big rnnin 2s
in the game as well: scoririg
seven ~r un s in the second.
four in the . ~ollom of ·the

' Track
CNC Meet at Fairland, 4 p.m.

VISit us online at

PVII

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

Rio Grande won the dec iding ga me in the best-of-three
series with Malone Col lege
on Saturday afternoon. IR16, in 10 innings.
Rio Grande right fielder
Charlie Kahealo had one c:v·
his best days .ev'er. going·, Sfor-6 with follr RB Is and a
game-win nin g
walk-off
home run in the extra frame
·that sent the ·Red me n . to
' NAJA
Region
IX
Tournament. ~

doubl es and three RBI, Scott
Peterman added three hits
with iwo double s and ·three
RBl s to go along with the
'aforementioned day that
Kahealo posted.
All tolled. the seniors went
11-for-15 at the plate. "They .
stepped up when we needed
•
it." Warnimont said. "It's
was just · an amazing day,
we' re all still in a fog. just
. can't believe it."
Golom . and junior catcher
Jorge Morales also delivered
two hits each for the
Redmen.

Frlday'l gamea

want to join the military and
do not intend to pester uninterested students.
High school recruiting "is
the most helpful and effective way to fill the ranks of
our military," said Maj .
David Griesmer, public
affairs ofticer for the · Marine
Corps Recruiting Command.
Military officials say the
Army and· Marines fell short
of recruiting goals for the
last four consecutive months.
Navy
and
Air · Force
The No Child Left Behind
Recruiters say they under- recruiters are meeting their
Act says schools receiv_ing stand some people don't goals.

••
•• Pleasant \'alley Hospital &amp; tbe
••
•••
••
••
••
•

BY MARK WILLIAM's

eighth to regain the lead at
1.3- 11 and three in the i1 int h
to o n e~ again tie the game Jt
16-16.
Ri o was fortunate to be
ahle · to se nu the game to
ex tra innings. The Redmen
hit &lt;i routine double play thai
:vou·ld have ended the game
and given the Pioneers the
win. but the re lay throw was
droppeJ b) the Malone first
basem&lt;m for an error allowing the tying run to score and
se tting up Kabealo"s heroics
in the lOth .
The seniors played a huge
role in the win for Rio. Kri s
SChuler was 3-for-5 with two

Toumement 811eball
Raven~ at Point Pteasant: 6 p.m.

.Parents can keep military recruiters from contacting kids
Monday, May 9
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will rise to 74
with today 's low of 50 occurring around 6 a.m .. Skies will
range from mostly sunny to
cloudy with 5 MPH winds
from the southeast turning
from the south as the morning
progresses.
Afternoon (1·6 p.m.)
Temperatures will remain
around 78 with today's high of
80 occurring around 4 p.m ..
Skies will be mostly sunny to
cloudy with 5 MPH winds
from the southeast.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Temperatures will fall from
77 early this evening to 62.
Skies will range from mostly
~lea'r to partly cloudy with 5
MPH winds from the southeast turning from the southwest as the evening progresses.

aomoo

TottiTio'ment Boaeboll

Agriculture .clubs trying to broaden reach
no i ntenl.ion of becoming a
farmer.
.
··wa have to get away. from
the stereotype to keep our
chapter alive." said Van
Carnp. who is the Ohi0 FFA's
state treasurer.
The group 's membership
peak~d around 24,000 in tHe
1970s before struggles in. the
1980s left the group's membership around 15,000 in the
early '90s.
The FFA's refurbished
image has led to increasing

Red!!len win wild game . Redmen CR-...
three, 18-16, over Malone ·Baseball . -~

Bltltltball

\1''"

COLUMBUS (AP) - As are starting to rebound. Now
fewer people are making their in addition to training new
living on farms. organizl(tions farmers. · the group also
intended to pique interest in emphasizes
·scien tific
f&lt;u·ming among high school . research and other aspects of
·
students are broadening their agriculture.
" A need for more science in
focus to include wider aspects
of science and agribusiness.
the classroom became eviFFA dent." said Steve Gatz. execuThe . National
Organization,
formerly tive secretary nf the Ohio FFA
known as Future Farmers of program.
America, is widening its
Canal Winchester High
·scope to maintain member- School senior Debra Van
ship numbers. which . had . Camp belongs to an FFA protaken a hit in the 1990s but gram, though she says she has

Rio advances to Region IX tourney

~

'

•

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www .m yda1lysentmel.com

TOURNAMENT SCHEDULE
CH
Mtam Trace at Un oto
Saturday May 14
MT/Umoto
w nner
at
H llsbo o/McCia1n/Wash CH wmner {w n

DiviSion II

•

SOutl'l Section
Monday May 9
Waverly at Rock H II

ner adVanr.es to d stnct tournament at
Unoto)

V nton Co at Jackson

Thursday May 12
Waverly/AH winner at JacksonNC

Norttt Section
Wednesday May 11

wn

ner (w nner advances to dlst ct tourna

Logan Elm at C rclevllle
Sher dan at Fa r1 eld Un on

ment at Chill cothe)

Saturday May 14
Sher dan/FU w nner at LEIC rclev1lle
w nne (w nner advances to dlst 1ct tour
nament at ljmoto)

North Section
Thursday May 5

Logan E m 4 Fa rfteld 3
Monday May 9
Logan Elm at Sher dan
Circleville at New LeKington
Thursday May 12
New Lexington C rclevllle w nner at
Logan Elm/Shendan wmner (w nner
advances to d str ct tournament at

Chillicothe)

Monday May 9
Mceta n at M am Trace
H Ucboro at Wash ngton CH

Thursday May 12

McCia n!MT w1nner at H•llsboro Wasil
CH winner (w nner advances to district
tou rnament at Ch ncothe)

Eaat Section

Tlluraday May 5
Athens 21 River Valley 3

Monday Moy9
Athens winner at Warren
Meigs at Gall a Academy
Thursday, May 12
Gallla Academy/Me gs winn er at
Athens/Warren Wlnner (winner advances
to district tournament at Chillicothe)
Division IV

Eut Section
Monday May9
Southeaste rn at South Gall a
St Joseph a t South Websle
Thursday May 12
Sl Joe/SW w nner at Symm9S Valley
(winner advances to dlstr~ ct tournament
II R IO GrBflde)
SoutheaatemiSouth Gall1a wtnner at
Green (winner advances to d strict tour
nament at Rio Grande)
W11tSacllon

South Section
Wednesday May 4
V nton County 13 Jackson 3

Wednesday May 11

V nton County at Northwest
Waverly at Ga t! a Academy
Saturday May 14
Waverty/GA
w nner
at
JacksonNC/Norlhwast w nner (w nner
advances to d StriCt tournament at Zane
Trace)

Weat Section

•

Mondly MayV
Western at Manchester

East Section
Wednesday May 11
Athens at Warren
Me gs at Mar etta
Saturday May 14
Meigs/Mar ett a
w nner
at
Athens/Warren w1nner (w nner advances
to d stncttournament at Zane Trace)
Division Ill
Norttteast Section
Monday May 9
River Valley at Alexander
Fedma Hockmg at Wellston
Thursday May 12
Hock/Wellston
w nner
at
Fed
RV/ A aKander w nne (w nne advances
to district tournament at R1o Grande)

Division IV
Northwest section
Wednesday May 11
Wes tern at Eastern P ke
Pa nt Valley at Adena
Saturday May 14
Western/Easte rn wnner at Fairfield
(wmner advances to d stnct tournament
aloMtnlord)
Paint
Valley/ Adf!na
win ner
at
Southeastern (wi nner advances to district
tournament at Minford)

Thurodoy Moy 12

Western/Manchester winner at Falrv ew
(winner advances to diStriCt 1oornament
at Rkl Grande)
Peebles at Whiteoak (winner advances
to district tournament at Rio Grande)

South Section

Moncloy May 9
Sclotovltle at Eastern Pike
Thursday May 12
Sclotovllle/Eastern winner at Notre
Dame (winner advances to distr at tour
nament at Aio Grande)
New Boston at Clay (w nrlBr advances
to dl81r ct tournament at Rio Grande)
North S.Ctton

-oy,MoyV

Southam at Miller

Waterford at Crooksville

Tllu-¥ May 12

SOuthem/MIIIer winner e.t Eastorn Metgs
(winner a~ancea. to d1striel tournament

Soulhweet Section
Wednelday May 11
Manches ter at Cl ay
New Boston at Wl'l teoak
Saturday May 14
Manchester/Clay wmner at Notre Dame
(wmner advances to d1stnct tournament
at M inford)
New Boston/Whiteoak winner at Valley
(wlnn-t advances to diStrict tournament
It Minford I
Soulheaat Seclion
Wedneldoy M1y 11

Sclolo"Yille at South Gall a
SAturday, May 14
Sc10IO"YUiaiSG winner at Symmes Valley
{w nner ad\lances to d1str ct tournament
a1 Minford)
South Webster at Green (w nner
advances to district tournament at
Minford)

ot RK&gt; Grll!1de)
Watertord/Crooksville Winnw at Trimble

tnnmg when With one out
V&lt;Ince Fe ! lu re w Is h n w n h 1
p ttc h Josh Wrt gh t do ubled
S te\e Pelt1ey had a sacrtfice
lly 10 lelt Jnd Jos h T homas
had an RB I sing le th e sco re
6 5 Ci o uc h 1eco1 ded ,1
stpkeo ut to e nd the 111 11111g
A P&lt;i lrt ck J oh nso n R B I
st n g1c broug ht ho m e De 1ek
Te.ttord " ho h.td wa lked

wh1le gl\ mg up nme

111 111 11 2:

tw o s1n gles and a sm.:nf1ce
tly Be uu e F u l k~ a double
a nd T ho m as a nd B rod y
G reen smg les
In the seco nd g ame o t the
d ay Solllh Galh a pl ated two
ru n 111 bo th the first a nd sec·
ond m nmgs to take a 4 0
lead J o hn Welts w as h1t w ith
a pac h a ft er Southe rn s tarter
R1ttle struc k out the fi rst
ba tte r Pe lfrey reac he d o n an
e rro r the n Wn ght d e li vered
a tw o run d o ub le th a t g a ve
the G a l !ta ns a 2 0 ad ' a nlage
In the seco nd w ith tw o o ut
P a ul Co mb s s m g led and
Wil li am so n
a nd
W e lt s
w a lke d to load the bases
Pe lfrey was hit with a pitch
to fo rce ho me a run the n
Wn g ht d1ew the th1rd w alk
o f the mmng to pu s h ye t
a noth e r run across for a 4 0
tall y W1th R1ftl e stru ggling

from Page Bl
B re nt Wa tte rso n starte d the
g ame and las led fl\ e mmngs
fo r R 10 He lett wnh a 9 8

Pupp es o G veaway 3
Female 2 Male ava able
after
June
1st
Rottwe ler Chow
m 11.
(304)895 3853 ahe 6pm

Acceptance
Corporation

Plaintiff
vs
Sandra Carnahan et
II
Defendants
Case
Number
04cV042
Court of

Common

Pteaa Metgo Counly
Ohio

East

line

of

tho

vey thence along tho

line of the Patrick

mont attuatod In tho
Vlttage of Syracuse

and/or Mary 0 Brian

Sutton

properly thence leav
lng the Nonh line of a

Meigs Counly In the
State of Ohio 100

40..foot wide easement along the East

acre

expose to sale at
public auction on the
front steps ol the
Friday

deacrlbed real estate

TRACT NO 1 The lol
lowing descnbed real
eatate situated 1n the

VIllage of Syrac~se
Sutton
Townahlp
Metga County In the
State of Ohio 100
acre

lot

288

Townahlp I North
Range 13 Weal of1he
Ohio
Company
Purchase and being a

new parcel created

Qu1 of the Judith A
and John T Williams
properly
(Molgo
Counly
Official
Records Volume 68
Page 883) bounded
and deacrtbed ado
follows Commencing
references at the
internct1on of the
centarllne of Ohio

Jor

Stale Rou1o 124 and
the Eaat line of the
Patrick and/or Mary
0 Brian
propeny
(Meigs Counly Deed
Roconl1 Volume 313
Page 439) 11 Statton
1+83 80 1honce teav
lng the canlarflntl of

Ohio State Route 124
along lhe Eoslline of
the Patrick and/or
Mary 0 Brian proper·
ty South DO 41 03
Weal 1 dl1tanca of
312A3 to on Iron
111n 111 on the Ea11
line of Nid 0 Brtan
praparty, JMHing en

Iron pin found by thlo
MKWt II 11134 utd Iron pin baing

that the existing right
of way Is to be used

feet to an Iron pin
found by this survey
passmg ~ron pins

85 38 feet to an Iron
pin set by th1a aur

survey thence along
an Iron pm set by this
survey on the North
line of a 40 foot wide
easement North 82

survey on the East

on

understood by and
between the parties

lng 7 calls south 82
DO 10 East 382 84

following described
20 foot wide ease

89 18 53 East a dts
lance ol180 DO feet to
an Iron ptn sot by this

entitled ectlon I wtll

Houae

sa1d right of way It Is

lows
PARCEL NO 1 The

by lhls survey Sou1h

09 19 West a dts
lance ol181 41 loe1to
an Iron pin set by this

June 3rd 2005 at
10 DO am of said
day tho following

the other users of the

found by this survey
al 90 71 feet 181 42
feet and 272 12 feel
South 81 01 27" East
329 91 feet to a potnl
North 71 39 18 East
130 93 feet to a point
Norlh 51 27 14 East
53 02 feet lo a point
North 47 56 51 Easl
37 56 loot 10 a poln1
Nonh 40 15 08 East
26 51 loot to a polnl,
Nonh 28 18 21 East

Patrick and/or Mary
0 Brian
properly
along a line created

In Pursuance of an
order of sale to me
directed from said
court In the ~bove

Meigs Counly Coun

l

the true po1nt of
beglnmng for the par
eel of real estate
herein
described
thence leav1ng the

line of the Patrick
end/or Mary 0 Brian
properly Nonh DO 41
03" Easl a d1stance of
230 70 feel to the
point of beginning
containing
1 0000
acre more or less

All Iron pins set by
this survey are 5118
x 30 rebar with ptas
tic ID cap stamped ' E
Tnplett !Hi7(;6"
the above description was made in
accordance wh:h an
actual survey con
dueled under the
supervision
of
Eugene Triplett, S
6766, on June 20 and

In common w1th all
adjacent
property

owners

their heJr•

and assigns and all
persons for the bene-

Ill of lhe adjaconl
owners Said right of
way Is for Ingress
egress and utilities
purposes and 11 more
tully described a a tol

Township
Lot

297

Township 2 Norlh
Range 12 West and
1 00 sere Lot 296
Township 1 Norlh
Range 13 West of the
Ohio
Company s
Purchase and bemg
a pen of the Judith A

Wltllama and Anna M
Chapman propony
(Volume 42 Page 415
Meigs County Official
Records). bounded
and described as fol
lows Commencing at

an Iron p1n found by
this survey 1~ the
East line of the

26 2000 Bearlngo are

Patrick H and Many
0 Brian
prOperty
(Volume 313 Page
439 Meigs County
Deed RecOrds) sl the

asaumed and are
used to
e1press
angular
measure

intersectton with the
South line of the
WaHer Floyd and

mont only Being pan

Anna L Roush propany (Volume 6 Page

of Auditors Pai cel

East boundary of the
20 foot wide ease
ment and the West

line of Marina Drive
Nonh DO 05 07 East
42 07 feet to a point
thence

along

the

Nonhern boundary of
the 2Q-fool wide ease-

to Iega in h is earlier t orm
Sou\hern hu rler Marnh o ut
came o n 111 re lie f and put o ut
the !tre
South e rn came bac k " 1th
three run s w he n M a rnho ut
le d o tt w ith a d ouble Enc
Ze mer s m g le d him home
Anthony
Sh a m b ltn
and
walke d R J Leac h then had
d o ubl e
as
a
tw o run
S o ut h e rn fo ug ht bac k to
withm one at 4 l
South G a lha .tdde d s m gle
run s 111 the thtrd and fifth
mnmg to wtde n the le ad to
6 3 In the top o t the s1x th
mnm g sophomo re Z einer
c ame 111 to re ti re th e s 1de 111
order fo r the Tornadoes
Then So uthe rn s o ffe nse
became h1 s best fn e nd Th e
To rnadoes score d s1x t1mes

lead Ft ve other hurlers fo l
lo w e d Watterso n to the
mound w 1th fres hma n C hn s
Brown p1c kmg up the v1cto
r) Brow n (4· 1) ente red the
g ame With the bases loaded
a nd rw o o ut a nd md\Jced a
g ro und ba ll for the th1rd o ut
m the to p ot the 1Oth

ment the followmg
seven calls South

28

28

21

Wool

100 33 feet to a potnt

South 40 12 08
West 23 10 feel lo a
po1n1. South 47 56
51 West 35 59 feet to
a poont Soulh 51 27
14 West 48 84fee11o
a poont South 71 39
18 West 122 50 feet
to a po1nt North 81
01 2T Wast 325 25
feet to a poont North
82 09 19 West
365 54 feet to a point
1n

the East line of the

0 Brian

properly

thence along the East

hne of the 0 Bnan

property South DO
41 03 West 20 18
teet to the

pc~unt

and roghts of way

heirs: and assigna do
further grant unto the
Grantee herein her
heirs and assigns

also betng on the

The above descnptron was made In
accordance with an
actual survey con
dueled by Eugene

Triplett PS6756 on
November 7 1896
Bearings
aaaumed

and

fHt to an Iron pin

tntendad

to

found by lhla Iurvey
and lhe point of
beginning of the 2IJ.

expreaa
angular
meaaurament
PARCELNO t the

covenanta

foot wj da aeMment

1nd agrsoa tho1 oho
will ahara In tha
oxpenN of maintain·
lng tha axlatlng rlgtrt
of way logalher wtth

daacrlbad
haraln
thence along tha
Southarn boundary
of the 2CJ.foot wide
11111111n1 thl follow

following d1ocrtbed
11umant 1ttuo11d In
tha
Village
of
Syrocuoa
Sutton
Townohtp
Motgo
Counly. In the State

I

Off1ctal

Records

Volume 68, Page 882)
bounded
and
described as follows

Co"\menclng lor ref·
erencas at the intersection of the center

ttne of Ohio State
Roulo 124 and lhe
Eas1 line ql lhe
Patrick and/or Mary
0 Brian
property
(Meigs Counly Deed

ere
are

only

-...c:.

43 Page 783) and the
North line of the
Patrick and/or Mary

0 Brien
property
(Meigs
County
Official
records
Volume 46 page 813)
North 82 09 19 lme
ot the Patrtck and/or
Mary 0 Bnan proper
1y passing an Iron ptn

found by this survey
at 90 71 feet, thence
along the East line ot

the Patrick and/or
Mary 0 Brian proper
1y North DO 41 03
East a distance of
40 15 feet to the point
of beginning SUB
JECT to all legal
easements and right
otway

The above descrip-

Page 439) at Station

tion was made In
accordance wtth an
actual survey con
dueled under the
supervision
ol

1 +6J..80 thence laav

ing the centerline of

Ohio State Route 124
along the East line of
Patrick

and/or

Jl!lary 0 Brian proper
fy South 00 41 03
West a distance of

Eugene Triplett

S

6766 on June 20 and

26 2000 Heanngs are

6 Propeny Is to be
kept welt groomed
This Is lor tho benefit
of the adjacent real

estale owners their
heirs and asstgns
7 No smgle wide
mobile home Is to be
placed on the proper

ly
8 The value/cost of

the homo buill or
placed on property
will be equal to or
greater
th•n

$60 000 DO and shalt
have a m1n1mum ol
1500 square feet
excludtng garage
9 II a pre constructed

unit Is placed on the
properly the year of
construction will be
2000 or newer
10 Maintenance of

property

shall

be

Ing and trash hauling

an Iron pin set by th1s
survey thence along

a line crea11d by this
survey South 00 41
03 We1t a distance of
40 18 flet lo on Iron
pin found by lhlo ourvey 11 1he NorthWMt
comer of the Bl'ln&lt;lll
Dtlrst pr_.ty (Molga
Counly
Olltclot
Recorda Votuma 47
Paga 773) thonce
along lhe North line
of the Brande Darst
property
(Matga
Counly
Official
recorda Volume 47
Page 773 and Volume

porary nature auch
as but not 1tm1ted to

and the South sides
of
the
property

Should Granlee her
hairs and assigns
wish
Jo
enclose
drai nage
area

her heirs

to be determined by
an engineer
to be
burled and. are the
12 UtiiHH!S are

Grantee her
and ass1gns

hens

13 Rshalt be lawful
lor
an
adjacent
landowners and/or
grantors thetr heirs

used as a residenttl
3 No motor vahlclas
or obatecles are to be

and assigns 10 pros

or placed on

lhe rlgtrt of way ....
menl

or

driveway

longer than 24 houra
4 No Inoperable
motor vehlclea may
be 11ft on propeny In

vlaw

5

commarclallbuelneee

andii.Ora ora pormh·
tad on real aotata
howevar an ••cep

lion ohelt .,. macr.lor
dey care

acute for any viola
lion of these con

venants
14

The

eaMment

heroin shall be a
beatc li.,..tono road
to loot p.rcel Allor
al1obttahmonl tt Ia
undlrotood lhlt ootd
KCIII right of w.y Ia

No

ers the1r heirs and
BSSIQnS Shall main

taon said road wtlh
sellers their heirs
and ass1gns or their
assignees retalmng
authentic control
Sa1d restrictions are

lor the benefit of the

In Memory

Grantors their hetrs
and ass1gns as well
as the Grantees her
heirs an assigns as
well
as
future
the
grantees for

above mentioned IOf
Current
Owner
Sandra Carhaham et

al
Property

al

2444

Deed
Volume

terms of Sale Cannot

be sold lor tesa than
213rds
of
lhe

Robefl E Beegle
Meigs Counly Sheriff
Attorney

for

the

Pla~ntitf

James P Dally Attn
1014 Vine Slreet
Suite 2320
Help Wanted

In umng 'Jemory
of

Bob Gilmore
Whom passed away
6yeanago
Nothong can ever
away the love a

heart holds dear
Fond mtmones

longer everydJly
Remembrance keep
you near.

Sadly mossed by
Jean, K1d and
Grandkids

l~ife

Help Wanted

rasponalbltlly of lhe

a tent trailer shed
gara:ge barn or out
building shall be

~rked

Cincinnati OH45202
513-38t 4888
Ext 4242
(5) 2 9 16

stone road All own·

appraised value 10%
down on day of sale
cash or certitied
check balance due
on confirmation of
sale

Grantee

properly

Onve/Riverwalk Dr1ve
and the baaic hme

ditches on the Wesl

and assigns agree to
use the correct dlam
eter culvert/tile as
required to connect
to existing pipe same

0 Brian

na

121 Pago155
Appraised al $60 000

veyance the Grantee
her
hei rs
and

1 No buttdlng Is to be
closar lhen live (5)
feet or any properly
line
2 Structure of 1 tom

i

11 Grantee her heirs
and ass1gns agree to
allow an eaaemenlfor
the purpose of the
existing
drainage

allan lor lhls con

restrictions anached
to said real estate

connecting

Pnor
References

and an Iron pin sat by
this survey at 852 42

foot wide easement
heretn
described
Jhence leaving the
East hne or the
Patrick and/or Mary

owners

Mar

PPt 20 00052 D06

menta
In further consider

assigns does hereby
agroa to the following

I.-. l"""oo,j ~ """' s l~._ .. ., ~ - -.
l-.• • • • ""'"••---•- IL&gt;c.. &lt;»...,

regard 10 grass mow-

Iron pin found by th1s
survey at 56 34 feet
said tron ptn

.:.C.I g

maintained no less

tho right lo grant
additional
ease

beong the true point
of beginning lor the
boundary of 1he 4Q-

the Redm e n will tra ve l to
Athens o n Mo nday to ta ng le
wtth the Oh10 Bo bcats ,11
B ob Wre nn S tadiUm Game
tune IS set fo r 6 p m
The two squad s hooked up
last ye ar a l Wre nn Stadtum
a nd th e Bobcats he ld on for
a n II I 0 v tc tory

than l&gt;i.,.onthly Vlllh

ner of a 4Q-foot wjde
easamont passing an

feel

Game Two
Southern 9 South Gallla 7
Sou tllGalla 221 010 1 - 7 7 3
Soutllen
030 006 )( - 992
Wes A file Butch Marnhout {2) Er c
Zener (6)and Anthony Shamblin John
We i s Steve Pelfrey (7) and Josh Wr ght
WP - Er c Zener LP ..._John Well s

Rlverwalk Drive
Syracuse Ohio

at the Northwest cor

said o Bnan propeny

w gilt

1""oooooc.--.l ~..,s

1&gt;~ 11- ~ • ~ d

assumed and are
used to express
angular
measure
menta onty
Grantors their hetrs
and assigns reserve

1 083 12 teet to an 1ron
pm 'set by th1s survey
on lhe Easl line ol

Game One
Southern 7 South Gallla 5
SouthGana 003 020 0 - 574
Soutl'1en
0 04 2201 - 7 9 1
Ryan Chapman Brad Crouch (5) and
Butch Marnhout Josll Wnghl and John
Wei s WP- Ryan Chapman LP - Josh

'
M a lone e nd s th e season
With a 26 25 record
The Redmen advan ced to
the
N A IA
Reg 10n
IX
Tourna m e nt a nd Will pla y the
firSt g ame o n Wednesday at
Oh1o Dom1mc an agam st an
undetermmed o p ponent
Pnor to the reg10n tourn ey

~£.-._.a,11..,

111

lo be uNCI In com·
mon with grantora
!hair
ttelrt
and

aulgna, and graniM

har
helra
and
INigna and other
adjacent
properly

3413

r

Ze tne r a St 1gle, N1ck Buc k a
si ng le C h a pm an a s m g le
a nd Cro u c h a sm g le
So uthe i n goes to Mil le i
toda) lo r the sectto na l tour
n a men t a nd trave ls to
Eastern fo r a leag ue ma ke
u p Tu esdlfy So uth G a ltt 1
pl&lt;~ ys ho st to Southeas te rn
to day m a DIVI Sio n IV se c
t JO na t to urney gam e

m the bottom h,t!t o t the
111111n g to g 1ve Ze m e r hts
fir st va rs ll~ w m
Ze m e r Iss ued a lead o tt
wa lk to Wn g ht 111 the sev
e nth as So uth G alh a fo ught
to pull ""f the w m Fulks
reac hed on !111 e rro r then
Fe llure h&lt;Ill a n RBI s mg le
and G ree n s m g le d before
Ze mer could sty mie the rail)
a nd secu1e the 9 7 Win fo1
the To rnadoe s
South Galha h1tters were
Williamson a do uble Wn g[lt
a do uble Fulks a double
Fe !lure a s m g le Pa ul Combs
a sm g le and G1een tw o s m
gles
S outhe rn
hitte rs
we re
M arnho ut a d ou b le a n d sm
g le Leach a double Johnso n
a doubl e J R Hup p a slflg le

....,;:.-.c:.""'-

Records Volume 313

toy this survey Sou1h
82 09 19 East a dis·
1anco of 181 41fee1to

to all legal easements

aaalgna

lhe Judith A and
John T 'lltlams prop·
erty !Meigs County

beginning SUBJECT

oald Roush properly

lhe rlghl to use the
extotlng right of way
connecting Morino
Drive and e111endlng
IJom Marino Drlvo In
• Southerly dl,....lon
1o the oak! rMt 1111111
h1ratn Tho Grantaa
h-n her heirs 1nd

a 40-loot wide ease·
ment created out of

along a llf'le created

Me1gs 'County
Oflic1al
Records)

Sou1h right of way of
what woo the Ohio
River Electric Hallway
and Power Company
thence along the Eaot
ttno of tha 0 Brion
propeny South DO
41 03" _ , 10611 34

Purchases and being

of

121Hl0052 000
TRACT NO 2 The
Grantors herein. their

275

Fit.I-...EI-. t:

of Ohto 1DO acre Lot
297 Township 2
North Range 12 Wesl
of the Oh10 Company

the

To good home 7 wk old
pupp es 1 2 BoKer 1/2
Go den Aetr eve (7 40)446

Brad Sherman/photo

Sout he rn s Butch Ma rnho ut throws a pttc h d unng So ut he rn s sweep of t h e Re be ls Saturd ay
Rac1ne

..._..-c:. ._ • .-

Sherlflo Sale of Real
Estate
Stale of Ohio Ma1gs
Counly
Oakwood

GIVEA\1~\

5 Rott m ICed pupp es 2
mates 3 tamales they look
like Ieddy bea s l Must go
ASAP (740)367 0248

th 11d

Sou th e111 hitters
were
M trn ho til w n h t tnpl e ,md
s m g le Ril llc .t uo u ble a nd
s m g le Jolmso n two sing les
Buck a doub le ,md s m g les
by CJOuc h ,md Hunter
Wn gh t had mo dou bles
to r the Re bels Pe lfrey had

110

r

htt s

th t ee 111 ,1

momentum dr,u nmg

Slturday May 14

Wedneaday May 4
Hillsboro at McClain
Wed0101dly Mly 11
HiHsboroiMcCialn w nner at Washtng10n

Or Fax To (740) 446 3008

The Re hel de tense had lou t

Rio

M ll!erf'Naterford wmner at Eastern
Me1gs (w nner advances to diStrict tour
nament at Minford)
Crooksv11a/Southern at Trimble (wmner
advances to district tourn ament at
Minford)

Dlvlalon II
Welt Section

tun

Ihe SIXth
Josh W11gh t Clesp tt e a
good etl01 t was tagged wtt h
the loss m the o pe ne1 So ut h
G,tl ha p1tch 1ng "tl ked JU st
to ur tnd stru c k out stx

enors J!lcl udmg

ster

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
JUST SAY
m::rthune
Sentinel
~egts'ter
CHARGE
lil
Your Ad,
1 VISA I
can Today••• (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333 -

In

Miller at Waterford
CrooksVIlle at SOuthern

Softball

msurt~nce

lor" Sou rhern

The Dally Sen hn el • Page 83

m::rtbune Sentinel
CLASSIFIED

from Page Bl

NortheHt section
Wednelday Moy 11

(winner advances to district tournament
II Rio Grande)

www mydarlysentmel.com

Sweeps

SOUTHEAST DISTRICT
Baseball

Monday, May 9, 2005

Monday, May 9, 2005

WANTED
Postllon available to asstst an
tndtvtduals With me ntal retardation m
Meigs Co unty 28 h rs / wk 3 t 2 pm
M/Tu/W High school dtploma/ GED
valtd qrove rs hcense three years good
driVIng expe nence and adequate
automobile Insurance required
S7 00/ hr Send resume to
1Bu1ckeye Community Servtces, p 0
604 Jackson, OH 4564D
Deadltne for apphcants 5/ 13/D5
Pre-employment drug testtng
Equal Opportunity Employer

rn,,

ANil
FOUNil

FOUND

Black fema le cat
w1th ye lloW eyes
We 1
Ira ned A o Grande a ea
(740)245 9782 after Spm

l ost Female Tabby long
t1a red cal V c n ty of K neqn
Dr Coli (740)4 46 0350

YARD SAl·· ·G ALIJI'OI IS

'

Huge yard sale 31am ly
prepa ng to move 519 05
5 13105 9? Morgan Center
Ad Bidwell 1 5 m les off
554
La ge Yard Sale Saturday
7th Sunday 8th Monday
9th Tuesday Oth Mens
women s ch ld en ~ c otnes
p ctu res household tams
lots of m1sc House bes de
Marathon stat on n Ro dney

YARD SAl F·
l'oMF.Rm/MIIJOLI
4 Fam y Thurs 5/5 Sat 5!7
Mon 5/9 Wed 5/11
202
South Sycamore Street
Rae ne Oh o Baby k ds
clothes and more
Carper Sale Wednesday
May t t
Clothmg some
new lots of mise
N ce
Items Lee res1dehce Tyree
Racne

1

~II

r WAN"llll

I.,1

EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT
Grow ng $1 b on commum
ly bank llold ng com pany
has career opport un ty n
Jackson tor an e)(per enced
p otess onat to prov de
adm n strahve support to
Cllanman
and
CEO
Requ res eKcellem nterpe
sonal sk tis ab t ty to handle
conhdent al n ormat1on and
p ol c-ency n Wo k and
Exce F ve years off ce
e)(per enca requ red prev
ous bank1ng e)( per ence
and/o deg ee pre lerred
Excellent co mpensat on and
bene! ts nclud ng prof t
shar ng and 40 1(k) Pre
employme nt d ug test ng
requ ed Send esume and
sa ary requ remen ts to Oak
H II F nanc!a
nc Attn
Human Resou rces PO Bo)(
688 Jackson OH 45640 or
to
h @oakll llbanks com
Please refere 1ce Job Code
#522E MIF DN

_.II'

11 0

70

_ _"_El
_ J'
_W_A_N"fED
_

Pos tlon 5 yrs RN e)(per
ence 2 yrs Management
exper ence(prele ably
n
LTC)
Team P ayer We i
organ zed Flex be w th
schedule
Dependabel
Excellent assessment sk Is
Knowledge of tederal and
state reguta t ons AN Un t
Manage to manage 50
beds n LTC an d the employ
ee
to
that
un t
Respons b It es
AN Un
Manage to man age the
care of 50 res derts the r
employees and lac hJate
comm un cation
between
pllys c an res1dent and fam
ly Employee eva uat ons
Employee
educat on

Employee
d sc phnary
act on Employee skI s test
ng Evaluat on of res sent
ca e Attend fam ly meet
ngs Mult p e areas of track
tng and rend ng Employee
schedul ng Chart ev ews
P
0
I
I
C
Y
eva l uat i o ns
Mo nday
through Fnday 8-4 30 On
ca
otat on Compeht ve
wages health and dental
benefits an d 401K ava I
able Con tact
Shell y
He p wanted Oars Adult Mecum RN D recto r of
G oup Home (740)992 Nurs ng at Rocksp mgs
Aehabll fallon Center 740
5023
992 6606 to schadu e an
Holzer Cl n c
Extend c are
mte vtew
Heallll Serv ces Inc Is an
Human Resources
Equal Opportun ly Employer
Manager
that encou ages Workplace
Ho zer Cl n c s seekmg an D vers ty MIF ON
HR Manager to manage all
HR !unci ons nc ud ng but Prep Cook and De ve ry
Flex ble Hours
not I m ted to employment P~;~ son
emp oyee relations bene! ts Apply n Person J manett s
appra1sat program pol c es P zza A10 Gfande
and p ocedlires wo r ker~
co mpensa tion and unem Seekmg energ et c b g ht
ploymenl Th s person w II co ecUon spec al st Dental
also be respons ble for man background helpflJ I Fax
ag ng all processes w lh n resume to (740)446-4840
HRIS
database Sty! st wanted Smart Style
the
Bachelors degree requ ed Salon Futt 11me or part t1me
Tllree to fwe yea rs of HR hourly rate vs com m ss on
exper erK:e
p eferred Pa d vac at on nsurance
Cand dale must have stro ng ava labia Please cal 1 888
organ zat ona commun ca 888 7778 8)(1 1294 ask for
tlon teadersh p and com Darlene
pute sk tis
TRUCK BODY REPAIR
Qual I ed appl ca nts may
One of Oh o s lead ng motor
apply to
ca ners has an mmed ale
Holzer Clln c
openmg for a heavy_;Jjuty
Human Resources
truck body epa technfc an
90 Jackson P ke
Gall pot s Oh o 45 831 1562 w th mechamcat expe r en ce
Work
exper ence
w1th
F8JC 740-441 3593
Internal onals
and
Appl cations may be
Fre1ghthners IS des rable
retr eved from
Five day work week pad
www holzeryl n c yorn
Equal Opportu n ty Employe vaca tiOn pe sonal days
health 1nsurance paJd hoh
Local lum beryard seekmg days ave t me pay 40 1K
Class B COL dr ver must be plan and un form s a re
exper ance d
full l1me among the many benefits of
w!benef1ts app y n person work ng at Arctc E11.press
at
555
Park
Stree t Inc W II pay top ckllla for the
M ddlepor1 Oh
gilt person The pos1t on s
McC ure s Restaura nt now open now and you can begin
h r ng all tocat ons ful or work mmEid ately ~:: a x ema I
pa r1 I me p ck up app11ca or n person appl cants are
1on a local on &amp; br ng back welcome

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CLASSIFIEDS

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SAVE SAVE SAVE
Stock models at old pr ces
2005 modes arriVIng Now
Coles
Mob le
Homes
15266 u S so East Athens
Oh o 45701 (740)592 1972
Whe re Yo u Gel Your
Moneys Worth
3br Double W de 2 full --:~:--~-~--, ,
Baths on 1 3 acres on At 2
Lots &amp;
toward Pauls Exxon
1
ACRF.AGE
Outbu dmg w ap around l.o~---- ijiiii-,..1
Porch Cent a
Heat/Ai r
(304)675 10 19 aher 6pm
2 Ac lot Tycoon Lake on
Eagle Ad Co Wa ter (not
3br House D n ng Room lake
1 on t)
$7 500 oo
K tchen Hot water heal &amp; (740)247 1100 or (304)532
Electr c C ty Water &amp; Dnlled 6271 cell
Wei Br ck &amp; V nyl Ext -:-:~~--~-:---,~(304)586 4858
100 x 150 Lot Gall pol s
Fe ry Black Top Rd C ty
5 Bedroom 2 Bath 1 8
Water (304)675 751 1
miles ou t Sandhill Road
I rep ace decks 24FT pool 12 40 acres utltes aval
appliances ncluded ask ng abte 960 Ro ad frontage
$95000
(304)674 61 18 Road to s Ia
Close to
after 5 30
Syracuse
740 992 2800
7 Homes under $14000 or7404161960

iJ!F

W II del ver 740 385 4367
Bradbury Ho use for sale
w th acreage Cal 740 992
7335

..

2 acres more or ess a I utll
paved road 2 m les
from Chester $16 000
(304)483 7550
it es

28 bass pro pontoon Ira Ia
Route 33 Bu ld ng
lot n Mason With old house
could t x up or tear down
$40 000 304 773 6130

900 00

Improvement ..i.\_0 yea s
e11.per enca CuSttfmer sat
faction gua eneed Anyt ng
w th home Improvement
Compare ou pr ces Free
est mate (740)256 6878 or
(740)441 0342

All raaleatale advertielng
In this newspaper I•
subjecl to th1 Fedaral
Fair Housing Act of t968
which makes It Illegal to
advertiSe any
preference limitation or
dlscrlmtnallon based on
race color religion aelt
tamUial elatua or natlon11t
origin or any lntantlon to
make eny such
preterance limitation or
dlacrlmtnallon

Georges Portable Sawm II
Oon t haul your logs to the
m111 JUSt call 304-675 1957
Handyman for Repa1rs and
Small
Improve ment
P OjeCIS (304)882 2755
I w II clean houses or offmes
Rete ences ava tab le For
the best m clean I ness call
Mal nda at 304 531 1794 or
740 992 5805

This newapaptr will not
knowingly accepl
advarttsemenla tor real
astsla which Ia In
violation of tha taw Our
readers are hereby
Informed d'lat sll
dwellings ad\lartind In
this new•paper are
avllllable on an equal
opportunity b"M

I W II do Adult Care n your
Home or Pr vale Duty

(304)675 6781

r

Want to buy a 3 bed oom 2
bath llome Garage base
ment 3 10 aces s des r
able
A cash
Me1gs
Gall a or Ath ens County

740 992 6300
!U '\I \I...,

-;,:--~----,
HOU&gt;Il&gt;

r

:10

~

FOR RENT

1 bedroom house 11
Garfield Ave $350 month
Call
{740)441 01 94 o
(740)441 1184
1 bedroom house lor rent n
Gall pol s Central A r/Heat
$350/ month
1 bedroom
apartment lor rent n Pont

New 3 BD 2 Bath Home men! garage 1 mde !rom
town $650 month Call
Only 198/mo Includes ale
(740}441 0194 or (740)441
del ve y and set up 740
11 84
:lil5 9948
2 Houses (1) 3 bed oom
New 3 BA 2 Bath Sect ona
(1) 4 bedroom $900 &amp;
Home
Only
249/mo
S1 000 plu s depos t Call
Includes AJC del very &amp;
(740)256 81 52
setup 740 385 7671
remodeled
New 3 BR Home Only 3 bedroom
1B9tmo Inc udes ale dellv house n M dd aport 371
ery and set up 740 38 5 Broadway St $425 ptus
depos t no ns1da pets
4367

Brand New Method
Dry In 1 Hour
No Steam-or Shampoo
Free Est1mates
Clearly Clean•
304 675-(IQ22

I 1\ \ '\t 1 \I

1740)992 31 94

For Sale Oean e s P zza
Great Bus•ness Opportun ty
Call (740)367 7474 lor more
nforma110n Senous UlQU es
only

•NOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
NG CO ecommends tha
ou do bus ness w th pea
~e you know and NOT t
end money through til
~a I unt I you have nvest1
ated the oHering.

r

MONEY
roLoAN

New Haven Bank Owned
Home 112 Seventh Sf
M ke Slack Old Colony
GMAC Reality $ 10 900
(304)542 5888

Home liStings
L st your home by calling

arrow Smart Contac
he OhiO D v SIOn 0
lnstttut on

17-t0)446-3620
VteW photosfmfo onl ne
bedroom 3 bath 4 5
cres 2 5 car garage
ackson OH $250 000

story Ranch 3 bedcom 1 314 bath UR
Fill 2 car garage
anced n back yard t /2
re Close to town
132 500 Code 4505 or
II 740 446-8325

r

l'lr"""::"~~~o:-~., [

f!

~SI:JMcEo;

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We W nl
1-888 582 33ol5

I

MOIIIUFOR"~
~

1971 2 bedroom trailer New
carpet new kitchfln cab
nets on rented lot $3 500
(740)441 9683

oeo

!.: I \ I I . ., I \ I I

i

H OUSI HOLD

N ca 3 bedroom mob le
home n Cow'l ry Homes 1n
he Shade area Wate f
sewer trash me uded $325
a month No pe ts allowed
(740)685 4019
Very clean 3 BR 2 Ba Db
w de Ref glstovalga b d sp
WID hook up gas heatlcen
tral air Attached 1 1/2
garage No pets Dep Ref
req water ncl 1 m le from
Hotze Hosp tal (614)763
05 18 or (61 4)208 5840

r

L,-------_.1
A PARTMENTS
FOR RENT

and 2 bedroom apa rt
men ts rurn shed and unfur
n sh ed secur ty de posi t
requ red no pets 740 992
22 18

Mollollan Ca pel 202 C ark
Chapel Road Porter Oh o
(740)446 744 4 1 877 8~0
Butterfly Kol
9162 Free Est mates Easy
f nanc nQ 90 days same as 3 to 9 nches Lots of Coo s
casll V sa Mas e Ca d Healtlly
also
Water
Dr ve a I tile save alot
Hyac ntll s Phone {304)675
Thompsons Apphance &amp; 5043

......

Repa r 675 738B For sale
re cond t oned automa1c
washers &amp; d yers refr ge a
gas and elec tr c
tors
anges a cond t oners and
wr nger waslla s W II do
epa rs on mato brands n
shop or at you r home

t

Gracousl v ng 1 and 2bed
roo m apar ments at V liege
Manor
and
RIVers de
Apartments n Middleport
From $2 95 $444 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Hous n9
Opportun I es

books
8965

$360

(740)3B8

B an d
New
K tchen
Cab nets slit n bo~tes lo Ask about our AQHA
sale (304)675 6154
Memt&gt;er D scoun1s on new
John
Deere Equ pment
Fr ck Sawm1U 3 Head B ock
Equ pmant
6 cyl Case Power unit 56 Carm cllael
Modern 1 bedroom apt Call nch Saw Bade 24 FT (740)446 24 t 2
(740)446 0390
Alum Dump Bed 7FT has Yearl ng Angus au t s Mostly
h ~gh s des w/ llo st $2 500
A I e)(cellent blood I nes
N ce 2br Apartment wiGas
(304)773
5095
pnced reasonably Slate Run
HeatiAC
located n Pt
Farm Jackson (740)286
Ptea Retrl dg!Gas K tchen
JET
5395
Range Furn shed
WID
AERATION MQTOAS
Hookup
$300/Month Aepa ed New &amp; Rabu It In W-NW s aterunlarm com
$2001Depost(304 )675 7628 Stock Call Ron Evan s 1
HA\&amp;
800 537 9528
One BR apt m Spr ng Valley
GMAIN
WID hookups $290 pe
monttl + dep (740)388 0017
Tobacco Plants for sa e Cat
or {740)339 0362

r

STEEL
Sleet Beams P pe Reba r
Fo
Cone ale
Angle
Channel Flat Bar Steel
Grat ng
For
Ora ns
Onveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday
Tuesday Wednesday &amp;
Fr day Bam-4 30pm Closed
Thursday
Sa turday
&amp;
Tara
Tow nhOuse Sunday (740)4 46-7300
Apartments Very Spacious
2 Bed co rns CIA 1 1 2 Orlanr:toiD•sney area 7 day
Bath Adult Pool &amp; Baby tam ly vacation Pa d 5600
Pool PatiO Start $385/Mo sell to $199 Call (614)399
No Pets
Lease Plus 0040.
Secur ty Dapos11 Requ ed
SP-\ OunET
(-lt0)446 348 t
Super Sale

i

us 60

SPACE
llJR RENT

Cannonsbur;-Ashland
(beh nd Mr Gattis)

o..-l~!606·6~)99o;2o.2·.;.17s18i05......!1
Wolff Tanning Beds
Huge select on
tmmed ate Del very
Fnanc ng
1 800-894 6997
(740)446 6579

r

r16

HedEHOLD

r

llJR~

AKC Registered Beagles
9wks tri-color wormed
shots
$100
Steve
Stapleton (740)446-4172 or

(740)256 1619
Beautiful full blooded Pitbul
pup p ~es S100 each
12
weeKs otd t 650 Cherry
.Rodge Rd 1740)245-5102

~6~~
~~~~----~ ~

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

John Dee•e A•d ng Mowe s
starling at $1 399 F nanc ng
ava able subject to John
Deere Cred t approval You
payments could be as low
as $39 month w th SO down
Carm chae
Equ pmenl
(740)446 2412
Zero Turn Z Trak. Mowers
from John Deere ava table at
4 9%
hxed
rate
tro
CarmiChael Equ pment wllh
John Deere Credit app Q'tal
(740)446 2412
www carea com

ro

II(\ '"' I'( II( I \1\CI'\

A!JIU)

IL.o~--m-IIS--pl
Au:

_r_e_
Je_re_n_ce
_ •_
•,
r
must
(740)446
3413
~
2 CKC Eng! sh Bull dog
~-,;.oiiiiiiiiiiii--,..1 pups
~mae
1 1emae
Small 2 bedroom house
Champion
Bloodlines
Vet
$475 month 1 mtle from
checl&lt;ed S1 500 1304)532
town Call (7 40~ 1-(l 194 CK
6005
(7-t0)441 11 84

Appliance

Mowe s Landscapers and
Contractors Ask us abou
G een Fleet mull un t d s
counts available on new
John Deere Equ pment
nclud ng commerc at mow
ng equ pment compact uti
ly tractors sk d steers com
pact e)(cavators Gate til ty
vell1cles X Se •es tawn 1ac
tors and John Deere tr m
mars blowers and chan
saws Ge t John Dee e
equ pment
for
less
Carm chael
Equ pment
!740)446 2412
Craftsman Zero turn 1Shp
50 nch mower never tiSed
S3800 value pncea $2300
(740)682 6051

New Locabon
11am-7pm Monday Frday
12pm Spm Saturday
Sunday

For Lease OffiCe or retail
spaces n very good cond
BlJII.JJING
tton Downtown Gall pol s
Approx 1600 sq H each ~ '"~--oiiiiSui'Pl.ID;iiiiiiiiiiiiio-_.1
or 2 baths Lease priCe •
negot able to encourage Block br ck sewer p pes
Call wtndows ntels elc Claude
new
business
W nte s R10 G ande OH
(740)441!-4425
or
(740)446
Responsible couple to rent 2
Celt 740-245 5121
Bfl home t m1l41 from 3936
Gait1poh s off State Rt 588
$400 per month S40D secu

3-

,;..~

r

In town location 1 2 BR
Ranch home mce yard AC
References
requ red
$450fmo rent &amp; $450 Sec
Dep You pay all ut titles
AvallttHe
6115
Call
(740)446 3644

r~~~

r

couc hes d nettes ree l ne s
bunkbeds g ave manu For Sale Used llot water
much
mo.re healer used Lennox fu r
ments
(740)446 4782 Galllpo s nace and p~l et stove Call
•
2 Bedroom
Apa tm ent OH Hrs 11 3 (M S) We buy
used
li
.
J
n
t
re
~\I(\ I "l 1'1'1 II"
$400 a month no pets call
~'\II\ I "lOt 1,
740tt824 11 9 ask
tor Washer S95 d yer $95
Mage
refr gerato $95 e eclnc
fARM
range $95 ke new washe ~lO
2BA apt State ROIJte 160
f..QLlPMEN" I'
$4001monl h stove/rafr gera $175 wr nger washe I ke
new
$200
Kenmo
e
s
de
to ndudad washe r d ye r
by s de 5295 tw 1 s ze bed 425 John Dee e t act01 20
hookup (740)44 1 0194 or
$75 love seat $50 ve ry n ce hp PIS hydro I It Good
(740)44t 1184
round table w/4 chars $150 cond ton $3 400 (740)256
Skaggs Appl ances
62 13
3 bedroom apar tment
n
76 V ne Street
M ddlepor No Pets 992
L 2500 Kobota 650 hrs w th
(740)446 7398
5858
Loader 5 foo t t Iter posthole
d ggar $9500 00 I rm 740
AN'11QUFS
378 62 16
1es pd No Pets Oepos t
Your
used
egu pment
and rei 740 992-0 165
Buy o
sell
R vel ne source
Carm chael
BEAUTIFUL
APART Antques 1124 East Man Equ pmant (740)446 2412
on SA 124 E Pome oy 740 or VIS I www careg com
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
992 2526 Russ Moore
PRICES AT JACKSON
owner
ES'rATES 52 Westwood
LI\ ESIOCK
Dr ve !rom $344 to $442 """ MISCELLo\NEOUS
Walk to shop &amp; moves Call
MEROlANDISE
t 8 yeal ng ewes $125
740 446 2568
Equal
each 740 388 9747 o leave
Hous ng Opport"" ty
16"11.7 A umnum Awnng
a message at 740 669
CONVENIENTLY LOCAl P:O I Excellent Cond I on 9905
(304)675 68 10 afte r 6pm
ED &amp; AFFOROABLEt
Town house
apar tments 22 Oak acto y padded 4 H p1gs 2 g lis 1 B uebutt
and/or small houses FOR Chu ch Pews 11 It tong &amp; 1 Yo k $150 each
(740)44 9551 0 (740)709
RE NT Call (740)441 1111 good cond !ton $125 each
for appl cat on &amp; nfo rmat on 40 new Hymnal Church 6800

• -----· 1759
·
House lor Rent Rt2 c ose to 2 ca mp s1tes on r ve rt oni
Locks Mobile Home lot for w th full hooks WE Sewer 1
f\enl close to Green Acres camp s1te w thOut hook ups
(:lo4)57S 2642
(740)992 5956

ty~oo.c,.po~•~_'

Donkey for sale 3 yo spot
ted 1enny small s1andard
44 Up to da1e w vet shots
&amp; hoofs we I cared for Has
been e)(posed to my 33
spotted Jack Cat (740)3B4
5267 or (740)4 18 2296 on
weekends

Used Fu n tu e Store 130
Fo R S\LE
Bu tavllle P ke Appl ances
ma ttresses
d essers ._
_________

Brand new 2 bedroom
house m town $600 month
Call
(740)441 0194 or
(740)441 11 84
For rent Furnished t bedroom house $325 Located
on Aaa:oon Ad 1740)446-

P t:rS

'--oiFO
iiiiioRoiiRfiiiM
-_..1 '--...iiGoo
iiiiiliill&gt;i- _.J L.,_..,;FioiiJi ioRioiSi i\JiJ;;,;,..,J
i

1982 Fleetwood 14K70 trail
• 3 bedroom 2 baths Cl A.
ayetem
washer
dryer
Warehouse
..
r.io_..,;FORiiilloME&lt;iiiiiSAu;iiiiiiio-rl stove ref r~erator d•&amp;h
remodeled
-.
wuner Must be I'I'IOY8d 2 bedroom
n HondorSQn WV
Pre
mobile home all electnc no owned appllcanes starting at
S59 000 New Haveo 2 800 58000 (7 40)645-6734
Inside pets $375 moolh plus $7.5 &amp; up 111 uncter warranty
sq n 10g cab n as s w l3-!§
acres Call Mike (513)3 t 4 1995 Clayton Double W&lt;1e depOSrt (7-t0)992 3194
we do &amp;efVICI 'NOfk on all
2754
24)(52
2 Bath 3 bedroom mobile home tor Make and Modllls (304)675Cenlral A r Total Electnc rent m Flomeroy arfla No 7999
3 Bedroom
1 Balh (304)675-2907
Pots 992 5858
Remodeled Full Basement.
ome 3 Br 2 Ba Moolle Home
Appt ances
mcluded
K1ten.n T P/ C
Water Eastern
Outbu ld ng &amp; 24FT' Pool
Bu klings Air See
Schools Call t 502 943188 Park Onve (304)675-

7460

10

F HOMES

Pleasant Valley Apartmen t
Are now taking Appt cat ons
lor 2BR 3BA &amp; 48R
Apptlca!IOns._ a e taken
Monday tllru F day !rom
900 AM-4 PM Offce 1s
3 bedroom located al 1641 Located at 115 t Evergreen
Un Hgts Pomeroy Lease &amp; Onve Po•nt Pleasant WV
Oep No pets Call (7 40)667 Phon e No 1s (304)675
0762
5806EHO
3 Bedroom 2 full Baths
Basement Fam ly Room 2
Car Garage Leon a ea t 0
m les from Buffa o (304)458
1997

No Down Paym ent Poss ble
1900 square ft house 3
bedroom 2 bath full basement new heat pump sets
on 3 acres SR 7 Eastern
Scf10ol 0 slnct {740)985
4 rooms &amp; bath $300
432 1
month 52 Olive St Call
(740)446 394 5
Ready to move 1n 3 BR
Home n country settmg only Beech Slreet M ddlepo t 2
198/mo w•th 10% down bedroom
un furnished
740-385-4367
house no pets depos 1 &amp;
references (740)992.0165

wwworvbcom

Moon

~~~~~~;! :p
e; ~!~tepu~~t

KR S Lawn Mow ng serviCe
and hauhng D scount for
senors (7 40)245 9240 or House for sale at 648 4th peasant (740)446 2200
(740)339 0066
Ave Call (740)388 8164
2 bedroom hoi.J se base

liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioioio-ol

l.so ~ I

675-5234

2 story 7 oom hOuse 4
bedroom 2 bath 2 porches
(1 closed 1n) deck 213 ace
flat ot Heat pump Aver
Va lley
School
Distr ict
Bu av I e P1ke
$69 500
(740)367 7272

MOVING SALE Two '8X10
Bu ld ngs compute r desk
horse tack ho sas I ans
AM Formula car and body
parts Eng nes host al gn
ment machme AND tams
too numerous to men t on
740 992 2800 or call 740
41 6 1960
WANTED

AACQ yard sale lor scholar
shp fund at Star M l Pa k
Racine on May I 0 and 11
from 9 to 4 and May 12 from
9 to 2 Thursday al terns
half priCe and clothmg $1 00
a bag Sofa &amp; Cha r sleep
ar sofa m crowaves reel n
er b cycles I nens d silas
glassware e)(erc se equ p
ment a nt ~que table coffee
tables hoi day decorat ons
toys d shwashe walkers
rw n bo)( spnAgs !lower con
tainers &amp; vases baskets
lots of m sc Thanks for yo ur
belween
support 949 2031 o 949
11 OOam
2656
Saturday

1o ooam
&amp;
Monday thru Denver Fann n
M aintena n c e
Supennlendent
WANTED
Need an ora surgery a s s 4277 Lyman Or ve
ruBuv
1an t tor every Saturday n Hltl ard OH 43026
M ddteport
Ohm F8JC 614 527 4 11 4
Absol ute Top Dol ar US Expenence n dental f eld Ema I
nley@ aret cex
S lver and Gold Coms w II help please fax resume press com
PrQ(Ifsets God Rmgs U S to 6 t 4 890-7507
E 0 E /Drug free workplace
Currency M T S Co n Shop
ENGLISH
151
Second
Avenue NEED ESTIMATES ON VACANCIES
&amp;
PAINTING
INSTRUCTOR
Val
d Oh o
ROOFING
Gallipolis 740..446 2842
BUILDING P04)675-1333 Cerl ficatell cense or I cens
Wanted to Buy
Locust 9AM TO 4PM
able Integrated Language
posts Call F40)446 6464
Newt ReportM
A s prefer ed (prevtausly
Gall pols Oa1ly T bune
C o m P r e he n s •v e
Will pay up to $50 each to
has an mmed ate open
Comrnun cat on) Mull pie
unwanted or JUnk vehiCles o
ng tor a tu 1 t me News
cart 1 cat ens
des rable
haul away (740)992-Q413 I
Aepo
ter
Please
send
PBECJSjON
and
CNC
.no answer leave message
resume
wr t ng and
MACHI NING
INSTBUC
I \11'111,\ 11 '\ I
cover letter to J1m I.O.B... Certlf able as a
..,, 1-{\ IC I ...,
Freeland 825 Th rd Ave
Prec SJOn Macll n ng or Tool
Gall pohs OhiO 45631
and De Mak ng Instructor
CONTACT Gatha JackSOn
V nton JVSD (740)245
Now accepting resumes at
5334 ext 20 1 DEADLINE
Court Gr !I for pan 1me cook
5/12105
EEO
(Wanted) LJcensed Phystcal &amp; bar1ender
Therapy Ass•stant for hOme
WANTED Part tJme positiOn
health servas Please send Ora Surgery Assistant lor B'Ja 1able to a••·st
...., ~-~v~
•1\11 .......,·
resume to McGraw PhySICal every
Saturday
n ats with mental retardatiOO
Therapy Inc P.O Box 983 M ddleport
OH
Fax at a group home n Bidwell
Jackson OH 45640 or call Resume 10 1614)892 7507
35 11rs /wk 11pm 8 30 am
~(7_.ro
_:)_:2_
86~663-'-::-c===ThursiFr
Sat 7prn 9am
100 WORKERS NEEDED .-P-ar_a_m-ed"c-s~-&amp;~-;:EM
:::T:OOs Sun
High
school
• ---m~ecralls
dploma.IGEO valid dnver's
1354
~ ..,
needed Apply at
liCense and throe years
wood tams
Jackson P1ka Galt poliS
Matertals provided
good drvog &amp;xpenence
eqwred ~ 57 00/hr Pre·
To $480/wk
Part Time LPN Monday employm811t Drug Testmg
Free tnformat10n pkg 24 hr F 1day no wee ,...ends no ....,
•·nd re•_..,...
.. - · 1o ....._....,
o .~- ..
80 1-4l8-4649
Hoi days no sh ft work CommuMy Serv~ees P 0
.. An Ex~leflt way to earn Apply n person Mad cal Box 604 JackiCin O H
moo~ The New Avon
Plaza 936 Stale Route 160 45640 deiitdl nt lor appl
~all Mantyn 304 882 2645
Gall pols
cants
5113/05
Equal
Opportumly Employer
.. Anwar Eye Center nas afl
lrnmed ate opemng tor a Pa.r1 tune Ml t straight days
no weekerids no holidays
NeepUoni&amp;t In the~r optomet
tic office 1n Pl Ploasant Apply In person at Th e
Four days a week Past MediCal Plaza 93e St A1 GoiUpalil
Colloge
t60 Gall polls OH
~penence m optometnc or
(careers Close To Hm1e)
m«k:a( office very helpful
Celt Today! 740-446-4367
but W!H t!'!lln trte r ght per50fl f\H Part nme to !uoerv se
1 OI.AJ";( i'H..I'KU
Amta nu slflg ser'oi!Ces lor ndiVJdu
Send resume to
-~·~f;Uill
pwens
PO Bolt 195 als with devel0pme1'1 tal dis "'"
ed ll'd M.,nbe• ~fin~
abilities
1n
JacksOn
County
Cwnal
~ ,, J ;
dwt4 CohgM
HamsYIIIe wv 26262
and surround ng areas and~ :Z7A8
Duties assessments sell'
medicai!On programs MAR
set uplmonitonrlQ slatflfami
... .. Cook needed appy tn per 1y lrSJOing Pay based on
Please call
• eon HOOday Inn ot Galllpol s axper ence
(31}4)373-1011
No prone call&amp;

Or Fax To (740) 992 2157

$500 Horda s Cllevy s
Jeeps
Ect
Pot ce
lmpoondst Cars from $500
tor hst ngs 800 391 5227
EXT 3901

1969 Volts wagon Duma
buggy F ber glass body
legal
$2 500
street
1740}441.fJ157 or (740)645
5141
19n MGB Conver1 ble tor
reslo at on w th another
comp ele MGB tor parts
$1 000 (740)441 0542 or
(740)441 7603
t99El Olds Cera 4dr 96 CXXl
mHos St 800 (304)575-3231
2000 Monte Carlo 48 000
m es V 6 Eng E.11c Cond

S8000 (304)675-5305

�'
'

'

.
T -Page B4 • The Daily Sentipel .

~ F~o

Avm;

,

FOil SALE

TRtlck~

15

...

Monday, May 9, 2(105

www.mydailysentinel.com

.

;_Monday, May 9, 2005

·

Help Wanted

" I'OR SALE

.

www.mydailysentinel.com ·

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5'

· "LLEY OOP

1993 F1SO. No dents, no
6, good con d., 133.000 rust, 95,000 miles. $3,200
mil es. Asking $4,000 080 Call
(740)245·5815
or

Hop.740·992·6079

HIRING AT
COOLSPOT #1
Coolville, Ohio

(740)41 S·9026.

. 1997 Saturn station wagon . 1998 Chev. Silverado. Ext.
E)(cellent cond1 lion. 35 Cab 4x4. all power Auto,
: MPG ,
69,000
miles 4.3l. V-6-Vortex , Alum . rims ,
Pewter/Charcoal,
.. PS/PB/AC ,
$3.495 topper.
98 000
m1
Excellent
(740)245·5617
Condition $9,900 080
1999 Mazda M1ata 6 sp. Phone (304 )675-2039 after

trans. convertible

."silver-

s ~oopm .

black top. 46000 miles Call
'after 5:00 P M. 740-992- '998 Dodge Ram 1500
Quad cab. 4 dr. 4x4 V-8,
6991 Asking $9000.
loaded . trailer tow package,
• 2000 4 door Neon. auto. 4 8' bec:l. $8,495.00; 1998
CO disc changer, sunroof:. Dodge Dakota club cab, 1
.: $1 ,800 080. (740)256· 4x4. V-8 , loaded. $7,995.00,
Riverview Motors 2 blocks
1652. •
-~-~----- , above McDonalds. Pomeroy, ·

N a tional Nursing Home Week
on May 8·14
Fun events planned all w eek
· including:
Elvis Tri.bute Performer·
Dwight Icenhower on
May 12 at 2 p.m .
Public is cordially invited.
Please call 304-675-5236 for

. ---------

2000 Grand Marq LS 58.000 Oh (740)992·3490
m ites very clean, garage
kept. 304-675-3069 after 2001 Dodge 1500 Sport VB.
quad
cab.
$ 16,900.
5pm ..

(740)645·6734

Group

d iamond, fully equipped,
factory ' warranty, 22,900
mile s. like new. $24:995

r·

--------2002 Dodge Ram 1500 SLT.
Red , 4 dOor, 360 automatiC,
37.000 miles. $15.900.

Mils' 94 · Montero SUV.
· l03,000 miles, fully loaded,
excellent condition , CD,
Sunroof
(304)675-7965
Kenmore Dishwasher.

2002 Cadillac Deville, white

(740)256~1426

(7 40)256-1618 or (740)256·
6200 .

r

suvs

Guest speakers:

IUKSALE

r

4x4
FOR SAU:

(304)67,·43 )8 or (304)208: '4128
·. ~----

3000 GT Mltsubishi, 2000 Dodge Durango 4,.;4,
Garjlge kept. A Looker
AfT Sport. 5.9L VB, 67K
$7.000 Firm (304)675-3631
miles. loaded, leather. cowl
induction hood. cus tom
99 GT Sunlire, $3,300 080
pamt.
$ 11 ,300 • .OBO.
99 4dr. Sunfi re. $2,600
(740)245·0395.
.
080.
2002
Chrys ler
Se~r i ng,
$4,650
0 80. · 2001 F-350, crew cab, _4,.;4,
(740)256-6169.
diesel. auto, flat·Oed, and

HERE .

2001 Harley Road King. Teal
in color. many extras. one
owner, excellent condition,
29,000 miles. $16.000.

(740)446·0213.

Call (740)446-2342

·r

BoA-:m&amp; SALE
MOTORS

~

Ii

$1.400

1996 Stratos bass boat, 115
fast str ike. 2001 Soft ride
trailer. custom cover. excellent
condition .
$6500.

(740)446·4987

(740)446·8138, .

evening: {740 )446 -4799 ext.
249 days. ·

'

Ex

CAVATING

Repair
3 miles west of

Pomeroy,OH
on State Rt. 124

992•5682

Commercial
Equipmenl
.
• Workout on your own
huurs 24n
Serious Inquiries 'only
740-992-0955

Ut us help y11u
choose a lasting

tribute to your lo11ed
Ollt 's

inemory.

\ ( REI ·

\10\l \11'\1
( '0\11'\ \\

on

SAYINGS

·25 Years Experience
David Lewis
740·992·6971

2004 Ford F15\) Supercrew
4x4 , FX4 package, fully
loaded, 5.4. V8, bright red,
6CD changer, Tonrieau
cover, tow package, 20, 000

~::F:or:D~e~la~ils::~=m:ile=s~.. P~h~
; (740)446-8217.

2004 RedCat/110cc, 4Wheeler,
Paid
$1 ,600
Asking
$1,100
Helmet
included
(304}675-4262
(304}593-4290 (304)593-

Ar

Free

starting at '27 horse · 57 horse
with shuttle transmission
4·wd, remote hydraulics 3 yeur warranty'
****Also available**.. .
• Task Master Tractors 26 horse • 38 horse,
4wd (I year warranty)
• Farm Pro Tractors 20 l)orse • 30 horse
loaders, finish mowers, tillers
NEW ·A-RRIVAL ZTR Di•on (Zero Thrn .
Radius Mower) 30 inch cutting width to 50
inch cutting width 3 year warranty

Construction
All Your Home

Improvement Needs
• Siding • Windows
• Decks • Porches
• Ceramic Tile &amp;

Public Notices t'n N&lt;ow•:ps:pc.rs.
You .. Right to Know, Delivered Righi to Your VO&lt;&gt;r.

WHAR I

])ISORIENTE'D,
DOC

&lt;J85.43H4

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Lei me do 1: for youl

The Parish Shop

UNU'S PAINnNG

CommUnity Center
260 Mulberry Al'·e.

GtT

Formerly at 108
W. Main Pomeroy
IS NOW OPt:N AT
The Mulberrl

es, what would you respond?

DISORIENTED

When you have decided, mo'e into lhe
South seat and pla n the play in six hearts.

))

·~

!!

f

--N~~

..
•

l! li\
~

Svrac use, OH

740·992-5776
Flowers &amp; Vegetablt;:
phtnls Flat $6.95

.s- 9

.. THE .BORN LOSER

.....__ _,_;;.,;;_..__,,__ _ _.;;o._--..Q

10'' Hangin g Baskc:;ts-

20 Var. $5 .95-$7.95
Perenni al s 6"- I"

and Smilit!g
Friendf:;· Faces.

FER

J
J

NtJW open
HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

Same GreaJ !.JJw Price\'

'I'D

SPELLS

· right In dte heart of Chester

'

f rr-"'7-...,.---.....,::--r-?-r---,, .
1
AN' TI•IIS
at least a tive-ca·rd suit. After West pass·

I ' VE 8EEI\I HAVII\I'

])JZZV AN'

p:

$2.95 - $5.95
Potted Plants 4:· - 12''
$ 1. 25.$ 12.95
· 12" Ferns $ l 0.95
Open Daily 9-5:
. Closed Sundn

PH: '19l·418J

· 0840 leave message

BARNEY

:f&amp;U TRAC!'OR SALK'! &amp; EQUIPMENT

9B:m lo3pm

2709).

Tf.\P.,\'S N..L W~~G,
KIMI\R.! TI&gt;J&lt;.C:. Fill£
MI~\Jl'E.S ~~ \1-\(
PEI-If&gt;..L\'(

'

~--,

Js

""'q

1--11-\i\1'5 WI if\
F/V£&lt;- 'JE.E.BlHE.Sl:E.IZ 7

BOX!

~

II

me.!i'

1-\(.1-\fo.SN\ 1\C&gt;.l\J~\E.O TO
&amp;.11'\G ® Sl'!&gt;-1-\L('(

w,-,_

CUP TI\1~ '&lt;E.NZ.!

&lt;

Storage

by--

deed to Verner H. See
and Iva M. See of
!@~~n! In Volume 199,
page 371, and Volume
273, page &amp;54, Deed
Records of Meigs
County, Ohio.
Save and Expect the
following real estate:
Parcel No. 2: Situated
In the VIllage . of
Middleport, County ol ·
Meigs and State of
Ohio and know as
being the easterly
haH of the following
cleocrlbad real aatata:
Being a part ol Lot
157 In Bosworth's
Addition tot he VIllage
o1 Middleport. Malga
County, Ohio, com·
menclng at Mary E. ·
Pennington's corner.
running 40 _ lee!
along Main road ;
thence acro11 said
I at to back fence i
thence
to
said
Pennington's corner
43 feet; thence across
..td k&gt;t to place of
begiMing. Being part
Dl the same property
convayad to the said
The Buckeye Savings
a Loan Company, ol
Bellaire, Ohto, by
Harry Stevena and
·Florence Stevana, hll
wtfe. by dead doted .
July 24, 1935, record-

.••

Page
ed
Vol. 139,
528. In Meigs.
County
Deeds.
Parcel
Nos:
1501237.000
a
ts01238.000
Current
Owner:
Pamalll Bantz. at II
Property II: 341 Grant
Street, Middleport,
Ohio 45760 Prior
Deed . Refarancaa:
Volume 11111, Page
371 ; Volume 139,
1'191 528. Apprallld
at $12,500.00; Terms
of Sala.: Cannot be
sold lor Ia. . than 213
of the appraised
value. 10% down on
day ol ' aata, caah or
cartlllad
check,
Belanca due on conflrinlllon ot ..la.
Robert E !laagla
Meigs County Sherllf
Lerner, Sampson
Rothfuaa
POBox 5480
Cincinnati,
Ohio
45201 -5408
513-241-310Q.
Attorney
for
thil

a.

Pllitntllf

• Kitchens • .Baths
"No l ob ToSmafl "

l0x30
Janet Jeffers
33795 Hiland Road

;,"TSK 1;.• ... BEHII\NY IS
HAVING ANOTHER S.PAT
WITf-1 C.REC. WHAT DoES
SHE SEE IN TI-IAT

IMPORTS

Athens

Pomeroy, Ohio

Racine, OH
740·247-2162 or
740-416-3508
14 yrs. Experience
1 mo

HOWARDL
'IIRfTESEl &amp; SONS
Residential -

Commercial
All types of roofing:•
Shingle, Fla1. M etal •
New or RePair
Seamless GutterD.ownspout - Siding

*Fne hllnlltll*
949-1405
STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality

'

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

10xlOxlOx20
992-3194
or 992-6635
•Middleporfs only
Self· Storage"

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRICniN
• New Homes
• Garages
··Complete
Remodeling

Whaley's Auto
Parts
S1. R1.68 1 Darwip, OH
740-992 -701 3 or 740-992-5553

Re.rtocki'!9 Late Model Sttbage
· and ANer Market fbrts

Slop &amp; Compare

·PEANUTS

·~ ,

I

M - Fri 8:30-5:00

1 ,

Sal. 8:30-Noon

It

was a

dark .

and stormy night.

NO WONDER YOUR STORIES
NEVER SELL ...THE'( ALL
6EGIN THE sAME WAY ..

It was a dark
and stormy noon.

ATV'S •GO .KARTS • CYCLES
Sale:s &amp; Warranty Service De•alltr
• Lnwn &amp; Tractor Sen:lce
• Pickup .&amp; Delivery Available
• Warranty ServiL-e D~ler
for Rt!dmax Equipment
• I 0,000 &amp; 12,000 Wutt Bngg,• &amp; Stratton
standby Generator Syslems
Hou"n 8-!

748-992-1&amp;n

.

See Brent or Brian Whaley

M- ~~

1-l Set, CkiHd S• Ddlly,

l!~ludd

..
'

SUNSH.INE CLUB

loours hiiQ&lt;&gt;d wqUw .

TERRY'S ENGINES

Warranly Sales &amp; Ser'\olce
820 Easl Main St. •
OH 45769

I

•

•

work ·
.• Affordable Rates
• References·
Available .
• Free Estimates

'

Call Gaty Stanley
740-74l·U93 ·

·======e::=
Hill's Self

.. u

loser hand is texlboo&lt; tor a limit raise.
South , buoyed by 1he big tit, launch,es into

H8

Blackwood.

~

29670 Bashan Road
· Racine , Ohio
45nt
7411-9411-2217

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH
got you
17-17·1 7~

$265 ton (While Suppy Last)

·Mushroom Compost
Available .
.
$35 - i ,000 lbs Appro;~~_ weight ~~~E]
18 spreader buggies available for use

Airway pasture renovators and seeders ·
rent.
·
_
Liconsed agronomist on staff available for
co·nsulting.
·
available to

SHADE RIV ER AG SERVICE
Pomeroy, Ohio

~ow Available At

ABEYOAW ,

MFOUMKP .
' OAB

TEVB

" Taking Tht Sting Our Of
Hard Work !" .
Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

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

'.

OM

AEGB

NEKO

OM

OM

·vBEGB

TDERBSCYYW. "

EKTBYP '

OUV

· PEYVMK

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' I like the lact.tha11 no longer lit the young beauty
Cybill Shepherd
(c)2005 by NEA. Inc. 5·7 .
tHAT DAILY
I'UlZLU

TueiJday, May 10, 2005
By Berni c e Bede Osol
Your instincts :n the year ahead
rega rding your co mmercial affairs will
be especially keen and co uld guide
you to some very good deals. When
you get a strong hun ch, resea rch it
out.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)- A:s long
as your nobler qualities run your
affa irs today, a ll w ill run smooth ly.
However, if you s tart to be i::o mt~ mort!
proJective o f you r self-in--rests than
necessa ry. it'll be anoth e r story. '
GEMINI (M ay 21-June . 20) - · Even
though you migh t be incqnvenienced
In s ome mahner today, yqu:111e;e1 bet·
ter about things if you let your com·
pass ion rule ydur e motion s a n d
ac tions. He lp where you can.
CA N CE R (June 2 1-J uly 22) Consideration and .to lera nct~ for others will further your goals far Basler
today than would fle)(ing your mus·
c les, raising your vqice or laying on a
guilt trip. Let your gentler side prevail.
LEO (July 23-Aug, 22) Ho nes t
praist~ or r8cognition for good work
done by othe rs has it s place, but don't
use them as a toot today to man i pu~
la te others. De c eitfulness w ill be
detected. so stick to your high standards.
VIRGO (Aug . 23~S ept. 22) - It yo u
take a little time to do so today, you
can bolster your ln'ner be liefs by see king out positive sources of thinking or
q uietly meditating on ways to be a
baUer person. It'll do wonders for you .
LIBRA (S&amp;pt. 23-0ct. 23 ) - This may
be one of those days where it might
be wiser not to bog yourself down
with comme rcial mane rs, Put away
the account books and immerse yourself in the lighter side of l_ifa.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2 4-Nov. 22) - When
interacting with others today, th ink
aboul them and !hair needs as well as
your own. If you ge t too conc9rned
about your own self-Interests, you 're
ap t to 8ncounter 5lizable o ppos ition.
S AGITTARIU S (Nov. 23-Dec . 2 1) There may be 11 number of hurdles to
be cleared away ,today concerning
your w ork. It's smarter to get them out
of the way early. so you don't have to
contand with them later when you 're
tirad .
·
-

U

RMKOOUHcOB,.

type - people take ·me more seriously now." -

-...~:

1 ~)

OM

O Rt~arrange

lett&amp;rs of the
f our scr ambled wo1ds below to 'form four sirnple words .

0

BTMOT

I I 1I I
1

2

S L UPH

I I' I
S H y U K ~~
I
I I' I I .~ ·
·

·

8

U

-

5

·

T

1

M

From the didJa ever wonder
depar\menl. ·why does the
sign of wet cement bring out the
child in • • • • of • • T
·

. If--'1'1Ts""11--;.,I-,'""11;_.,.1-J1 O Complcle

!he chud le quoted
?'~' fil!ing in th~e missing words
L -.l.._.J.-.J.-.J.-.J........J yov de..-elop
lrom .slep No. 3 bel ow,

e

@)

PRIN1 NUMBERE D lETTERS IN
lHESE SQUARES

~~;c:~~~~~ lETTERS

To

1 . 1 1 1 1OF 1 1 1

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

s ··;- os

Grower· Fancy· Linen , Iodine~ IGNORANCE
My un cle was always in an argum.e nt and usually he
would. lose . My au nt told him thai silence was l he best
way t o hide IGNORANCE .

ARLO &amp;JANIS

II

you're going to speculate on anything
today, be sure it in vo lved something
about whic h you feel strong ly.
Gambling on propositi ons of others
about which you know liHie isn't very
smart
AOUAAIU$ (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - Oon"t
invite guests to your hom&amp; this
evening you have to worry about
en tertainitlg. Should you be more
tired than you realized, it'll turn o ut to
• b8 burden rath8r than fun .
P ISCES (Feb. 20-M arch :20)- Try t o
s urround yourself today with fnends
and acquaintances whose conVtirsations, are upbea t and inspirational. If
yOu're saddled with a pessimist. it
cou ld make you depr8SS8d as welt.
ARIES! (March 2 1-April 1~) An
acquair'nance r:-ay sugges r , getting
involved in a mon ey~ma king proposi·
tion today, but if it is not in accortl with
your way ·ot doing things. you might

!'II. rAKiklu
A "WUflfU\. DAY.'

1;\

be better off to pass the action.

B.\l '\1 Ll : \II~ER
Scorpion Tractors

•
I
----~--------------------------------------------------~---------------~--- ------

NE~O

Y .. E.

AstroGraph
. .

by Luis Campos

.

two diamonds and one club. An eigrit·

C APRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan.

Storage

. 35537 SL RL 7 North

(5) I , 1&amp;, 23

MANlEY'S
SElF STORAGE

Today's clue: Tequels G

.•

•
~·
.··
BIG NATE

SxiO, lOxiO,
10xl5, 10x20,

• Room Add. • Roofin g

you have e1ght: 1hree spades, two hearts,

••

(740) 992-5232

Hardwood Flooring
NOTICETO BIDDERS
Department
of or all blda, or to
according to the Plat
Recorda, fronts 45
Seated proposals will
Natural Resources,
accept the btd which
upon receipt of a embrace• •uch com~
be received at the:
leal along
Grant
DIVISION OF MIN-ER·
check or money order . btnallon
alternate
Street,
Middleport,
In the amount of
AL
RESOURCES
Ohio, and runs at that
propoaala ••. may
MANAGEMENT ,
$20.~ made payable
promote the beat . width In a Northerly
DEPARTMENT
lntereot of the State .
OF
to
the
Ohio
direction to an alley.
Department
ol . 5I 2, 9, 2005 '
· Tho property haretn
NATURAL
conveyed Ia bounded
· RESOURCES. 2045
Natural . Resources
(ODNR) and mailed to
Morse Road Building
on the Wast by the lot
H·
Third
Flood,
ODNR, Dlv!ston .ol
Public Notice
now
or
formerly
Mineral
Resources
COLUMBUS, OHIO
owned
by
Harry
Stevena and on the
Management, · 2045 Sheriff Sale~~
43229·6693
unlit
Morse Road, Building ca.. No 04CV057
Eaat by the lot now
THURSDAY, MAY ~.
Ocwen Federal Bank
H-3, Columbua, Ohio
owned by Verner S,.,
2005 AT 1:30PM and
Plaintiff
opened thereafter for
43229-6693 attention
and Iva M. See
Miller
furnishing the materi~ · Julia
Vo
e•cepllng therefrom
(Telephone Number:
Pamela Benl2, et at
that portion o1 tend
als and performing
(614) 265-6629). Plant
Delendlnta
lhe labor for the axe·
known aa Parcel 2
specifications
conveyed to Blaine D.
cutlon and construc- · and
Court of Common
tion
of:
COGAR
become the property
Plaaa,. Melga County,
Walbum and Vonda
RECLAMATION PRoof the prospective
Ohio
M. Walburn In Vol. 223,
JECT, MEIGS COUNbidders
and
no . In pursuance of an
pg. 69, llted ,1/26/1995
In Meigs County
TY, OHIO, RECLAMA·
refunds will be made. order of sale to me
TION PROJECT NUM·
For
Information
dlracted from aold
Recol'deill Dlllce.
BER MG·ST•10 In
Tract 1 being the
regarding the project, court tn the above
11me reat estate
the primary contact · entitled action, t wltl
acc9rdance with the
plama and speclfh::;a- · parson Is. the ProJect
e•poselo ..Ia at putJ.
described In deitd to
lie auction on the
tiona prepared by the
Engineer,
Tom
Vemer See and Iva M.
See
recor&lt;Md · In
DEPARTMENT
OF
Barnltz;
tn
his · front slepa of the
NATURAL
absence you may Matga
County
Volume 194, pago 11,
RESOURCES, Dllil·
contact the Project
Courthouse
on
Deed Recorda of
StON OF MINERAL
Frtd.y, June 10, 2005
Meigs County, Ohio.
Officer, Barb Flowers,
RESOURCES MAN·
or
the
Design
at 10:00am, of said
Tract II: Situated In
· 'AGEMENT, COi.uM·
day, the following
Specialist,
Scott
the
Village
ol
daacrtbad _ , _ :
BUS. OHIO. BIDS
Davies. They . m.y be
Mlddteport, County o1
WILL BE · OPENED IN
reached
In
the · Tract 1: Situated In
Meigs and State ol
THE SECOND FLOOR
Jackson
District the
VIllage
ol Ohio, and In 100 Acre
CONFERENCE ROOM
Olllce at (740) 286· · Ml-.,ort, County o1
Lot No. 157, being a
OF 1855 (BUILDING
6411. Each bid must Melga, and Slota ol
tot fronting 45 teet,
more or leas on Grant
, H-2) OF THE FOUNbe accompanied by, a Ohio, known and
TAIN
SQUARE
BID
GUARANTY,
described and baing
Slreet In said Vlttage
OFFICES ·OF THE . meeting the requirea part of Lot numand running beck at
OHIO DEI'ARTMENT
ments of Section bered
157, that width to the alley.
OF
NATURAL
153.54 of the Ohio · Boo..Orth's Addition.' Said
tot
tytng
Revloed c ·ode.
RESOURCES.
The
commencing at Mary -..Conner and
· Untied States Olltce
E. Pennington's cor•. the Martin Iota on
CONTRACTORS ARE
ner running 40 _ 1M! aald street and being
ADVISED
THAT
,, of Surface Mining
that lot conweyed by
Reclamation
and
EQUAL
EMPLOY· ' 11ong Main road;
Enforcement ·Ia sup-MENT OPPORTUNITY
thenCIIICn&gt;U lltd lot
A.P.
Mlttor,
CONDITIONS
ARE
to back fanca; !honea Admtnlatrator ol the
plying 100% of the
lunda·for thto project.
APPLICABLE TO THIS
to satd Pennington's
~state ol John Moont,
BID tN ACCORDANCE
corner 43 teet; tt.nce
clecaaoad, by deed
THE ESTIMATE FOR
WITH THE PROVI- across said lot to
THIS PROJECT AS
deled September '2,
DETERMINED
BY
SIONS OF SECTIONS place ol begln~lng • . 1811 , and recorcled In
THE DIVISON OF
Volume .1011, · p11ga
153.59 AND 125.111
Being p.ort of the
OF
THE
OHIO
same property con·
246, Meigs County
MINERAL
REVISED
CODE. v.yed to the said The
Recorda ol Daeda.
RESOURCES MAN·
WAGE
RATES
Buclulye. Savlngo and
AGEMENT
IS
Being also the oame
$74,010.00.
ESTABLISHED
IN Loon Company of
property convaYad to
A MANDATORY preACCORDANCE WITH
Bellaire, . Ohio, . by the aald Buckeye
SECTION
1513.18 Harry Stavano and
bid meeting will' be
Savings
a
Loan
AND 1513.37 OF THE
F1oranca SMvana. hla Company o1 Bellaire,
held on THURSDAY
MAY 12, 2005 AT
REVISED CODE ARE
Ohio, by R - 0.
w"-,
ALSO APPLICABLE
July 24 , 1135, and
!O:OOAM at the prOjFowler, Sheriff of
recorcled In Volume
Malga County, Ohio,
ect aile. NO PI.,IINS TO THIS BID.
Blda are to be IBIIed
OR SPECIFICATIONS
139, 5211, lhlga
by
!Mied
ond clell-ed tq the
County Recorda of. October 20, 1.t 38, and
WILL BE SOLD AT
THE PRE· BID MEET·
- • gtvon ei&gt;Ova. Peeclo. It ia the ln18n- recordad In Volume
No bidder m.y with- tlon of U.. grantor
lNG.
143, 83, Mllga
draw his bid within
herein, to convey to
County, Ohio Recorda
Copial ol the plano,
sixty (60) daya 81ter
the aald grantee all ol
Deeda, be the same
apec:iflcatlona, . and
the act1111l date of the . that portion ol Lot No. 1110r11 or laaa, but auiJ.
propoaal lorma will
opan,lng !hereof. The
157,
Boaworlh'a
)let to all legit high·
be forwarded from
Director ol Natural
Addition, now owned
woya.
the
Dlvlalon
of
by · 11id
Grantor,
Mineral Re~~ourceo
Resource• reserve•
Being the Jlma real
the right to reject any
Managament ,
whtch
oald
tot, eatata deacrlbad In

Celebflty Ci!toer CI'I'PtOQrams are createcl from quotations t1v lamous oeople. past and pmsent.
Each letter in the cipher s1arm lor M\Oiher

CELEBRITY CIPHER

club to establish the last card In that suit.
You lose only one heart tric k."

"
'.

Phone

There are two ways to evaluate that North
hand. When you have at least a nine-card
fit, you add three points for a s1ngteton
(a nd one for a doubleton or five for a void).
That brings your total to 11 - sufficient to ·
make a limit raise of three hearts.
Alternatively, c;oul')t losers. Look at only
the fi rst three ca rds in each suit and cO unt
a loser for ~my top honor missing. Here,

The !&gt;ay is straightforward. Win trick one.
draw tvio rounds ot trumps (getting the
bad news), and cash your top clubs, dis·
carding dummy's spades. You rulf your
spade loser on the board and trump a

•

High and Dry

• Garages

~~~~~:~~

have primarily aces and kings, we feel
optimistic. but if our honors are mainly
~quacks," we become more cautious. Long
suits are promising, but the key !actor is
'how well our hand fits with ~artne r's. lf we
have a big trump fit, we should overbidtits are fantastiQ . eut if we m1sfit with partner. we should underbid - f!Jislits are
miserable.
Start by. looking only' at the North hand.
Your partner opens One heart, promising

New Dealer lor Montana Tractors

OPEN
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1984 Skamper pup-up, 25th
Anni versary Edition, excel~
lent coridit!on, 16' box, AC
and h8at, stove icebox ,
dinette, $2,000, (740)949·

'

When we evaluate the sttenQth of a hand.
initiEdly we count high-card points. If we

F: slimal~

M~~

42 Common

letters

Integrate the f1t
into evaluation

Pomero)'

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repair needs, mofing,
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'

Bucket Truck

IMured

AedCat/110cc. 4· Bass Tracker ' 14FT. wfTrairer
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11

• Stump Grinding

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dually bed also. (740)446· 2004

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mes·
dition, 28 ,000 miles Call
1
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".

Pomeroy, Ohio
25 veers Local Ex rlenee

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$3.200 980 (304)675·8056

~.

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1 Slain filler
4 Sandwich

,.
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. Pomeroy. OH

84. Bayllner 19FT, wltraller,
Cubby Cabin, Runs Good

Will\ Il-l 'I" AN!) NOT

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L-~~!:::.~"-_J
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Bl ade Good Undercarriage
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unknown, $18.500. 740-992·
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• Patio and Porch Decks
We do It all except

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CARPENTER
SERVICE

Concrete Removal
and Replacement
• Accepting New
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~~~~ 45783 .
Home ··Auto • Life • Retirement
• 1RA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicilre Sup. • Cilncer • Accident

ACROSS

wildflower
45 Orchard
7 Deep
produce
10 Physique
48 Gel 11 Dust the
of that junk!
49
Griffijh
or
cake
pan
North
05-09-05
13 NavaJo foe
Zola
,. 752
14 Hoosegow 51 Double
• A 9 5 4
t5 Charge
helix
. i\ifi32
ahead
53
Search...
16 Type
engine lind
Wf' St
East
of overalls 54 Reuben
4 , KQJ8
4 '1096 3
17. Instinct
purveyors
• Q ,) 6
• 3
19 Designer
55 NASA
• 10 ij '5 .
t KQJ 9
item .
maker .
35 Implement . ,,
thumbs·up
4 9 4:1
.. .11087
21 Umbrella ·
(hyph.)
9 Cyberspace 37 Some bank
·
• pail
South
56 Casual
sites
notes
14 A ol
22 ~stuary
11 Water or oil 38 Pleyed )IIIIth
farewell
23 Trlcked
57 Fast plane
12 Fixed up
39 Scruffs
. Kl0872
26 Chunkier
58 CEO degree 18 Ha~ ol sels 41 Rip
• 4
'30 Dangerous
20 Dust cloth . 42 Beat
4 AKQ52
March date
OOWN
22 Roughhewn
decisively
Dealer: South
31 Pentagon
23 Vassal 's
43 Br..zy
Vulnerabte: Both
grp.
1 Alphabet
tand
44 Not
32
·FBI
trio
24
Smell
employed
South
West . ~urth East
counterpart 2 Type
25 Warrior
·45 Has a fever
t¥
Pass
Pass
33 L·D-n·g time
of shark
46 Mild cheese
princess
HT
Pass 5 ¥
P&lt;~s S
34 Beluga ·
3 Milfay or
26 Motel ptus 47 Social
Pass Pass
P &lt;1Si:i
. delicacy
Ferber
27 Treated a
climber
35 Circus arena 4 Book jacket
sprain
50 "Bonjour,
Opening lead: o!o K
36 Geometric
ad
28 One, In
- amis!"
5 Solitary·
bresden
52 ·Rap-sheet
\
pattern
·
• . 39 Twig
6 Pull hard
29 Ship
acronym
7 Grease Job .
deserters
40
8 Elevator
31 Tow

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and Financial Services ..

YOUNG'S

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONS'I'RUC'I'ION

I·

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2000 Bayliner 21 ft. cuddy w/
2001 H~nda CAB0 •.. $1 ,200. trailer. many extras, very
1998 Kawasaki · KX250, clean 304-675-5563

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WITH ~· PHOTO!

Auto &amp; Truck

;;r:;:10~.--::8:-0·ME-.

·d

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740~992-7599

GHRHGE

1997 Ford Conversio·n Van, 2005 Honda CRF250. Never
----,
74,000 miles, excellent con- been raced. Call (740)245dition . new tires, $9,800, 5815 or 1740)418·9026.
,
IMPROVEMENTS
740 992-2945
94 Harley Davi dson Ultra
Classic, 10,000 miles. blue ,
BASEMENT
excellent condition. $13,500,
WATERPROOFING
(740)949·221 7
Unconditional lifetime guar1998 Buell S3 Thunderbolt
antee. Local references tur·
Harley Davidson custom low
nished . ·establis.hed 1975.
Harlf;)y Davidson engine.
rider. Black ·w/chrome, tribal
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COMMERCIAL and
FREE ESTIMATES.

•

Coleman Camping Trailer
12FT, 2 King Beds, $5,500
call fo r Detail s (304)675·
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Sidi ng._ Nt.:w Guragcs
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E-mail

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phone: (740)698·9319

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Phone: 740-992·1432

..,1 In II I...,

1740)441·0991 .

95

CAMPERS&amp;
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V.o\NS
FOR SALE

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excellent con dition. Call

: 9 1 Sentra $ 1,200 Good
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Jr.

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Stephan Serfon1ein ,

2001 Harley Oavidson·Dyna (740)985·3677.

:- 89 Buick Ri vera 3.8 engine
• Runs good, looks good. alot
extras. Asking $1 .000. Call
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A Will
Owner

James

1992- 29' Airstream !;xcalla.
Very good condition, twin

a -J~

I.

- 2002 ZX2 Ford Escort 5
speed. 4 cylinder. 30,000 1991 Chevy S-10, 4.3, V6,
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. 5141 .
1998 Chevy Silvera do Z71 ,
2003
Toyota
Spyder extended ca b, 350 Vortec,
Convertible E,.;cellent condi· ·$10.000. (740)446-6689
lion , 7,000 miles, 6-speed,
Sequential Shill , in storage,
~. from Oc tob~H 10 Apfil

SELL YOVR CAR

.

MD (Internal Metficine)
Jim Strumn (Pfizer Pharmaceulical

FlO

engine repair

jw i1 1 45,769@ .yah uu.~·um

May 12: 2005 3:00 pm Aerobic's Room
PVH Wellness Center
Light refreshme nts ··

$8,500 (304)882·2845

llm'•Bm.S
ltJJg#Jie Rep.U
Complete small

Applications
available at store
NO phone calls
please

2000 Nissan Ouest SE Mini-

Van . 671&lt;: miles, sharp black 99 Dodge Dakota Club Cab
SLT. Load9d V-8. 4x4, Bed·
. exterior, leather. sunroof,
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liner. ·
loaded plus VCR . (740)441 ·
Tonneau Cover. 95Km i.
~ 1912.

Phillip
Alder

2· 12am-8am
Fuel desk cashier
1· 4 pm· 12am
Fuel desk cashier
.1- 3pm· J 1pm
Dishwasher
13pm· Jlpm
Server

VALLEY
&amp; REHABILITATION CENTER
Will Celebrale

NEA Cro,ssword Puzzle

BRIDGE

1996 Wh1te Firebird, auto, V-

SOUP TO NUTZ

a

:t:''le. CCIJM~L111!n&gt; 'NI'Ro
aN S~NSL ~ T•Me...

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If

'lbo Wl'-L"·

�.

'

-

......,.. ·-

"T

.

•

'

.

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Reds lose for ninth time in 10 gam~s
homer tied him with Eddie
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Murruv for 19th on the
career
~li~L
.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
The homer ulso extended
East Division
CINCINNAT I LeftGB
L10
Str ' Home Aw ay
w L 'Pet
Griffey's hitting streak to 12
hander Eric Milton blew out Baltimore
z-7-3
L-1 11-6 9·2
20 10 667
games. his best in ri ve sea2', 7-3
10-8 .
L-1 8-5
Boston
18 13 581
an anguished breath and Toronto
z-5-5
11-7
16 16 .500
5
L-4 5·9
. &gt;ons with his· hometown
stared ahead, hi s eyes wide New York
13 19 .406
8
4-6
W-2 9·11 4-8
team. und provided more
10 :3·7
11 21 .344
L·3 10-11 1~10
with disbelief, while Jason Tampa'Bay
cviUem:e that he's starting to
Central Division
Phillips rounded the base s
· w L. Pet
GB
L10
Away
St' Home
round into form afrer ham24 7 774 ' W-8 , , -3 13-4
Chtcago
8·2
and changed the game.
..
633
string.
su rgery .last August.
4',
z-7-3
W-4 9-5
19 11
10·6
Again: a home rl(n hall, Minnesota
9', l -4-6 W-2 6-8
14 16 .467
8·8 .
Detroit
Griffey fail ed tu homer in 48
9-10
done Milton in.
Cleveland
12 18 .400
11
4·6
L-2. 3-8
spring:training
at-bats. and
16 3·7
W-1 2·12 S-11
8 23 .258
Phillips' first ~areer grand · Kansas City
West Division
went
71) at-bats before hitslam topped a stellar perforL10
Away
w L Pet
GB
St' Home
ting his first this season - .
z-6-4
18 13 .581
L-2 9-7 . 9·6
mance by Ken Griffey Jr. Los Angeles
17 15 531
8-10
Texas
6·4
W-2
·
9·5
longest opening drought
·the
1
''
and rallied tfte Los Angeles Oakland
14 17 .452
4
z-4-6
L·2 7·8
7·9
of
hi
s career.
z-3-7
13 18 .41 9
5
W-1 4-10 9·8·
Dodgers to a 9-3 victory Seattle
Hi s first homer .barely
Sunday night over the strugNATIONAL LEAGUE.
cleured
the
wall , in
East Division
gling Cincinnati Reds.
Milwuukee.
and
the
second
GB
w L Pe1
LIO
S1' Home .Away
' The NL West leaders over- , Atlanta
•
1·8·2 ' W-5
13-5
7-6,
20 11 .645 never mude it that t:ar. ·
607 . 1'' 6-4
canie a pair of contrasting Fjorida ._
L-1 10-7 7·4
17 11
-bouncing off the · top of the
10-8
17 14 .548
3
6·4
L·1 7-,6
solo · homers - Milton 's Washington
wall · in center at Great
New York
17 15 531
L-1 11 -5 6·10
3'• 6 -~
first, Griffey 's 504th - and Philadelphia
6', 4-6
14 18 .438
L-1 6'7
8·11
American Ball Park before
Central Division
sent the Reds to their ninth
being incorrectly ruled · a
GB
uo · S1' Home Away
w L Pet
loss in 10 games. Philli'ps St. Louis
z-5·5
10·3
homer.
19 11 .633
W·1
9·8
-4 z-8-2 W-1 ; 9-8 6·7
had four hits and drove in , Milwaukee
15. 15 .500
No. 3 left the bat with an
6·10
z-3-7
W-1 7-7
13 17 .433
6
- authoritative "cra ck" .and
five for the first time in hi s Chicago
PittSburg,
13 17 .433
6
5·5 . W·2 3·9 . 1Q-8
7'1,
career.
z-2-8
W-1 8-7
Cincinnati
11 18
.379
3·11
headed for the seats while
.367
11
8
3-7
L-6 10·5 1-14
Houston
Phillips hadn't hit a grand
took a couple of
Griffey
· ~ . West Division
slam since he was a senior in
Home
Away
steps
and
adm ired it. Two
Pet
GB
L
10
su
l''·
w L
9-6
L·1 9·5
.18 11 .62 1
5·5
high sc hooL He 'couldn't Los Angeles
innings later. the first pitch
j' ,
4-6
Arizona
18 14 .563
L·2 12-7 6·7
remember ·a game like thi s San
from Weaver hit him in the ·
2', z-8-2 . L-1 10-4 7-11
17 15 .531
Diego
6·7
one, not even as a kid.
San Francisco
15 15 .500
3''' z-6-4 W-1 9·8
leg , drawing the warning.
to '~
2-15
W-1 5·6
Colorad.o
7 21
.250
1·9
"I don't recall that Griffey wasn't available to
ever," said Phillips, 28. " I'm z-Jirsl game was a win
•
comment after the g~ me .
smiles right now.' It was a
Milton had to improvise a
very. lucky night ~'
son . I feel bad r·ur the fan s. out.'' Weaver said. "In the home run trot in the third,
As it often happens, this It 's .all mime. I've got to fig- sixth, I just had to make when he hit one that barely
one got away 'from Milton ure something out and turn something happen ."
, . c'leared the . wa ll in left. ll
(2-3) because he got a pitch th is thing arou nd. It can't ·get · Weaver also drew a warn- was his first homer in 97
up at the wrong ti.me.
worse." ·
ing after he hit Griffey on career at-bats.
Trailing 2-1 , the Dodgers
Jeff Weaver (4-2) doub led hi s surgically _repaired right
Notes: Phillips ' grand
loaded the · bases with none home a run and pitched out · hamstri ng the next time he slam was the first off a Reds
out in the ·sixth on three con- of a bases-loaded threat dur- faced him after the homer. pi tcher thi s season.
secutive singles: After
Olmedo Seanz tlied out to ing his 6 2-3 inning s. He Griffey smiled at Weaver as Phillips also had four hits on
Griffey in center - much , gave up &gt;ix hit ~. including he walked to first base, and June 27. 2003, again st the ·
the two solo homers. and plate umpire Terry Craft Yankees .... Weaver is the
too shallow to get in a run Phillips hit a belt-high, first- had a season- hi gh eight pointed to both benches. 319th piicher tha t has given
·
There were no more prob- . up a 'homer ,to Griffey.
pitch fastball into the seats stri.keouts .
His . biggest test came in Iems.
Griffey had ~cen 0-for-11
in left field for his first
the
six
th
.
wh~
the
Reds
Until
Phillip
s
turned
it
ofT the right-hander. ...
homer of the season.
Last yea r. Milton gave up loaded the bases with one with one swi ng. the ·game Griffey's · longes t hitting
43 homers, most in the NL. out. Weaver go t Joe Randa was a showcas t!' for Griffey, streak was 16 ga me s in
Milton Bradley also home- on a tly to shallow center, who stretc hed to catch 1999 .... OF J.D. Drew was
red Sunday off Milton, who the n struck out Rich Aurilia Bradley 's drive at the top of out .vf the Dodgers lineup.
· getting a day of rest. ... Reds
has given .up 13 so far, the to end Ci ncinnati's last. be st the wall in the fourth .
In the bottom of the . I B Sean Casey hit into hi s
chance .
most in the majors.
"Wit
h
.
that
lineup
they
inning,
he hit hi s first no- ninth and IOth double plays,.
"I'm at a loss right now,"
Milton said. " I've tri ed ha ve, there's going to be one doubt homer of the season. a most in the majors .... The
about everything: I've let the or two innings where you're drive estimated at 4 17 feet to Reds are 7- 13 in Sunday
team down early in the sea- going to have to grind it center. .Griffey' s 504th night games on ESPN.
BY JoE KAY

•

Monday, May 9, 2005

www .mydailysentinel.com

Baseball Expanded Standings

1
2

-·

..

HorsE Racing -

Superintendents pucker
up for Southern
Mini-Relayfundraiser, A6

Kentucky DErby

Giacomo stuns the field
to win Kentucky Derby·
.

"

The horse, named for the
rock star Sting's 9-year-old
son, was ridden by Mike
Smith, who, at long last,
grabbed hi s fir st Derby victory in hi s 12th attempt;
Smith was also aboard Holy
BulL Giacomo's sire, wheQ
he finished 12th in the 1994
Derby.
Bellamy
Road
never
mounted a serious threat ill
the Derby. the richest ever .
run .
Clos ing Argu'ment, anoth- ·
s;r long shot, finished seco nd
with Atleet Alex third in the
largest Derby field since 20
started in 1984.
. The wild results prod uced
the second-highe st win pay ~
o ff in Derby hi story.
Giacomo ret urned $ 102.60
on a $2 win · ticket. The
Derby record is $ 184 .90 by
Donerail in 1913. )

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)
- Not this time, Nick. Not
·eve.n wi th five horses .
Giacomo defied the odds
and won the $2.4 million
Kentucky Derby i n a ~igan­
tic upset Saturday, running
do.wn a game Afieet Alex in
the fina l strides and ge nerating a hu ge payoff.
Even though trainer Nick
Zito had five horses in the
field of 20. including the
·
George
favorite ,
Steinbrenner's
Bellamy
Road, this Derby belonged
to a 3-year-old colt who had
won just once in se ven
races .
.
. Giacomo , who aLways
managed to stay in contention, fi ni shed second in
the Sitnta Anita Derby, and
trainer John Shirreffs was
confident his colt would run
we ll in the I 114-m ile Derby.
Did he ever.

'

; ' 1

l l '\ I ' • \ • d. ) ~ . '\ ~ ). t :'..,!.

ll .l .S)) \\ . ' ' \\

ENOUGH S TEE 1.:.
TO BUILD A TANK •.

TANK" M48-KW

S183/rnonth
SALE '6,599'

TAt4K" t-.454-KW

S199/month
SALE '7,199'

• Meigs burned by Blue
Devils. See.Page 81

By BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
•

Rice
will
replace Laur.ie
Reed,
'who
resiuncd
from
e
.
counci l
in
but
January.
later rescinded
her resignation,
Shawn Rice and agreed .to
serve until after.
the May ~ primary. The top Republican vote
getter, Sandra Brown, declined
the scat after a visit from
Mayor Saf)dy lannarell i late

MIDDLEPORT - Shawn
Rice of Hudson Street was
appointed to replace Laurie
Reed on Middleport Village
Council on Monday evening .
A week after a five-candidate Republ'ican primary,
Middleport Vi II age Council
began at the .top of the ticket
and worked to the fo urth candidate before finding thei r
sjxth meinber.

,- '

A NEW CABlER?· ·.·
·.

S208/month
SALE' '7,499'

• Potential income 40-60k
·Work At The #1 Dealership

r

• 40.1 K Retirement Plan
• Health Insurance

Call To Schedule An Interview.:

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

BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENT!NEL.COM

OBITUARIES
fage AS
: • Muriel Bradford, 84
: • Amanda Hoffman, 4;3
: • Nicholas lhle, 49 '
: • Helen J. Lyons, 67
.• Kenny Norris, 51
::. Loretta Rogers, 82 .

• Kneen presents
Riverview program.
See Page A3
. • Church plans revival.
.See Page AS
.• Cissy Welch named •
~nfoCision's top April
employee. See Page AS
• Public invited to open
· house at Castrop Center.
See Page A6

• 19 'HP' Kawasaki" V-Twin
OHV engine
• 48" Command CU1 System"
• Three-year limited warranty-

• 231:tP' Kawasaki" V-Twin
OHVengine
• 54" Command Cut System"
• Three-year limited warranty";

,

Beth Serceftt/photo

· Brennan Klein (left) ani! Jarea Long· cash In reading points
for prizes at Meigs . Primary School where students have
read 20,144 b.ooks this year. The boys accumulated points
by not only reading but comprehending th'e books they had
read this school year as part of Meigs Primary's Accelerated
Reading Program.
·

WEATHER

S183/month
SALE *6,599'

A

'

• 18 HP' Kohl~ Commantr
V-Twin OHV engine .
• Front-w!teel fully independent

• Push button contnHs

2 SECI10NS -

FULLY WELDED STEEL FRAME • HEAVY-DUTY MARBANE• BLADES
'

R'•TI!.THAT'S TOUGH TO BI!A·ri ~5 ..OR ~6 WON I HS**
.

.

'

•.

1830 OLD LOGAN RD SE
'
LANCASTER, OH 43130
(740) 653-2827/ (BOO) 710-1921 (T9J!L FREE)

• Ptadllct Pmt - Morttn payments lhO~ do n01 reflect ~~~oilcable ta~s or I!Own oavma1ts flctual reta~ DfiCU m set tJv lll!ater 11no may Wl'f Tuts. frl!gl'i1. setu~ a~ nandllng cnar~u m3'! De edd,tlonal and mav Yar! Modtls su*ct to 11rl'lttd •~de~IIIY
m H)fl. .Jii MONTMS O!ltr 11 sutJttct to crtll~ ~PDI'!l'o ll by GE Capital Ccnsur~er Card Co 1\jlpbeii to purc~ain ct 1',500 cr wort 111adt unDI OS.'»200!i em your Pow•r Ctedrt Card Mnmi.ITI tO"ilo down pa'fllllrt 11 rtQLIIrtd. The mtnmJm nYJmhly PIJ'flltm
shllllll/15al ttw pllfthM 1mount. aJJd r'l(l ~nancf't:htrgts o111~ ~wu11 ()11 ourc~J585 untlll:h' e1porauon dJ11 ol th :.-mom!l pr~~ooaljnlnod. u ond1cated on vour statement At the ~lpllilnoo rJ thts specoal tllilll. the 51andard rii{B will11~ly to any roo-det~uert outttlroflg tlsl·

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Pwctnt't91 Rail fa- 9111'CI18£41 illl "" Ill W!i fl'trJ:mumr ii5 of liMl~ . ~lid 111y v~rv tl't~ r :1111dnti Mn·murn ~ a nc11 Chil r~ i S1 APf\ o12•15" WI~ app'v ~ yvu l1rl to pay your r111rnt111Jm Pil,mtntb'j )'Dl!t.dJI dati fiX 1WC Cll'1stCilllYt momlll. Fi!l1nbng tlfllmcnion tor Comp1ct. TanK.

12 PAGES

A3

'Ciassifieds

82-4

In a Columbu s-based conference call with Ohio journali sts. Strick land said he
changed hi, mind about seeking the nomination after. his
fellow Congressman, Sherrod
Brown. D-Lorain, announced
last week he would not run.
·"!Brown) and I are very close
friends.'' Strickland said yesterday. "For many months, he has
encouraged me to consider a
run for the govemor's oftice. If

Columbus Mayor Michael Coleman met with Meigs County
Commissioner Mick Davenport, left, on his visit to Pomeroy yesterday. Along for the trip was Mary Holman Funk, a Middleport
native who now works in Coleman's office in Columbus . .

.... Undlt lltfmS oflflos llfllttd warr1nty. ptrts IIlii 'Ill del@t'••e ,. -ra:e·,~·s

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N'lfkma• .~ p a~ lt"E an: : all?d ~~jr cl •he pilftJC rlar repN art C(Wfrtd !lilflllg lhll ~~~~yEar of orrg,n•l cwnersh p Year.~ two 1M uvaa covtr dt'tctrve oarts and/or workmilnstnP

SH rtanltr lot W1rrtntv OtlldS
t IS rtted by angmt m•nutacturer
Cub Cpdt! CommerCIII P/GilJctl ,,. 12f$jOnBG tor Jrotessron•l ust CU3191 ll 57856

I

•

Pomeroy Village
Council hears
police officer
complaint
BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY -·
A confrontation .
between
a
Pom~roy pol ice otficer and a
cirize1rover a traffic ~top was
discussed during Pomeroy
Village Cou ncil 's reg ular session last night.
Pomeroy resident Charles
"Sonny" Gloeckner addressed
counci l with his concerns over
what he called the "unprofessional" behavior of Pomeroy
Police Officer Alan Queen
during a ' recent trafftc stop.
Gloeckner said Queen waited
"an excessive amount of
nme" proceeding with the
stop, and later made ·what
Gloeckner considers "unpro.
fessional" remarks.
Queen was not present for
th e discussion though his
written statement concerning
the incident was read by
Pomeroy Police Chief Mark
E. Proffitt who had conducteel his own investigation of
the incident.
Gloeck ner was subject to

, Please see Pomeroy, AS

he had chosen to run, I would
have been an enthusiastic supporter of his candidacy. but
whi le his decision not to run
was a factor in my decision, it
was not a critical factor."
Strickl and traveled across
the slate late last year to test the
waters for a statewide campaign. He said constituents and
OhiQans outside his massive
Sixth Congressional Di strict.

Please see Strlckland, A5

(;omics
Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As
B Section

A6

•C 2005 Ohio Valley Publl.shinJ! Co.

.Employees at Overbrook
Center in Middleport representing Service Employees
International Union District
1199 held an . inform,g~ ti ona l
picket Monday, JUSt outside
the facility 's entrance. ·
Employees have been in contract negotiation with Dr.
Harold Brown, owner of the
center, since May, and are
asking for improved benefits
and working conditions,
according to a union press
release.

'

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEO®MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

.

'

POMEROY - Riding in a
tour bus used by President Bill
Clinton during his 1996 reelection campaign. Columbus
Mayor Michael Coleman visited Pomeroy Monday afternoon to promote his campaign
for the governor's office.

Coleman was scheduled to
speak before the Gall ia
County Democratic Party on
Monday evening . He visited
Common Grounds Mission
coffee shop, met with local
Democrats and . visited merchants along Main Street,
buying a "Pomeroy, Ohio"

Brian J. Reed/ photo

Pleue seti Coleman, AS

National Hospital
· May 8- 14
Celebrt:~iing

33 Years on iackson ·Pike

1

tnd~Alit't V•htcllti/Stomtrsonlv

Please see Rice, AS .

J. Rood/photo

Bs Coleman bus tour visits· Pomeroy

Weather

ALLP()WER EQUIPMENT

B~an

Calendars

'Sports

BBBO UNITED LANE
ATHENS, OH 45701
.(740) '593-32·7 9/ (BOO) 710~1917 (TOLL FREE)

lannarelli.
Rice wi ll serve on the. ordinance. gra nt, recreation,
inst1rancc, ~rieva n ccs . and
investments CO mmittees.
Other business
ia&lt;~~~arelli
recognized
·Richard and Wendy Hill of
Racine fonheir purchase of the
Vaughan's Supermarket, which
· opened for bu~irtess on
Wed nesday. She said she appreciuteu the ·'faith" the Hills have

Overbrook Center employees hold informational pic~et

INDEX

susperlSIOil •

7-GAUGE STEEL SKIRT WITH SOLID-STEEL REINFORCEMENTS • CAST-IRON PUlLEYS

.

RUTLAND.-. When was
.the last time you received a
prize for reading? This week
450 students at Meigs
.Primary School are reaping
the rewards of not only
reading books but comprehending them.
The rewards are in the
forin of prizes like portable
compact disc players, basketball s, footballs, bracelets,
jewe lry boxes and new
stuffed animals.
Money for the prizes came
from a combination of donatim\s. book fair proceeds and
an Ohio Reads· Grant.
Apparently, the added
moiivati'on - ol'"";'prizes is
wl)rking,' resulting in some
second graders read ing on a
fifth gmde level.
·
"We want · to eniphasize
reading carefull y and reading for comprehen sion."
Meigs Primary Accelerated
Reader C&lt;lordinator Connie
Halley said.
Meigs second grader
Matthew Smallwood picked
. up prizes fo r reading the
most books in his class this
year, 239, and for consistent-

POMEROY -U.S. Rep.
Ted Strickland, D-Lucasvil lc,
will seek the Demm;ratic
nomination for Ohio governor
next year, · he annol1i1eed
Monday morning.
"Ohio is it) trouble. The current administration has fai led to
lead us. I can't stand by and let
that happen," Strickland said.

0% for 36 monthsu - Visit your lo ca l reta1ler 1oday.

BVI!RYTHING ABOUT
THE TANK" IS TOUGH.

and app01111111g a new mem ber: Moore came in secund in
Jast week"s pri.ma ry.
Rice. whu . said he hadn' t
been ~ontactecl before he \VOIS
asked at loLst night's meeting .
accepted the sp1~1. after aumi'iting he was fourth hehind
Bcri1aru Gilkey. who did not
altend and did not respond to
a phone call fro111 Houchin·s
during the meeting.
Ricc accepted, and wa&gt;
appoitttcu unanimously :md
was· sworn inhy Mayor Sandy

ly scoring the highest tln his
reading comprehension tests.
Smallwood said that his
favorite books are about
football and animals with
his favorite animal being an
armadillo.
"Armadillos have long tails,
they are very defensive, th&lt;;y
can run very fast and can·hold
tl1eir breath," Smallwood said,.
denionstraiing knowledge he
has gained from reading. "I
made my .own book ahout
armad illos on the computer."
Smallwood cashed in
points he had accumulated on
reading tests for a base ball .
bat and foam ball, a portable ··
CD player. a battery-powered
truck and a football.
"We try to give fhem
every opporrfi'hity to cmiiinue reading," Meigs Primary
Librarian Marge Barr said.
Barr ensures that the chi!·
dren have both easy· and
more challenging books to
chose from wi th the intention of keeping them inter"
ested in reading something .
"Every year we have at
least one student that just
. blooms,'' Halley said about
kids discovering their talems for rea'ding, and her
favorite part of the job.

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO®MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

0% tor 36 months•*- VISit your local reta1ler tod ay .

BIG COUNTRY 4X2 UV

\ l ,,m

·Strickland turnaround: Will make '06 governor's bid

• 27 HP' Kohfer8 V·Twin
OHVqine .
• 60' Command Cut System"
• Three-year limiled warmy.

last week . Browh said· last
night she declined hecausc she
wanted to "\tart fresh wi th · a
new cm111d 1." and had sc , ,·ral
ongoing per-.onal . projects.
including the restoration of the
Mary Jane Rcstawant locat ion
on the "T" for her antique
shop.
.Ferman Moure refused
when Cotincil Presidetit
Stephen Huuc hins ~allecl liim
on Sunday. he said, because
he questioned the legality of
council's method of finding

The rewards of reading ·

Wonderful opportunities are available in Tom Peden
Country. We are expanding our staff and need more
salesmen and saleswomen. No Experience is required,
only a willingness to learn, work as a team and have a
strong initiative .

0% for 3b months " - Vis it your local retailer today.

. TANK" M60-KH

\\ ''" . n1\ d. n h .. ,.l, IHH

.

0% for 3b months" - Visit your local retailer today.

WAIT, WE DID •.

ll) , :.!t-. t).l

Rice fills Reed's MiddlePort council seat

SPORTS

INSIDE

1P*''"''K""~..

'

· Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

TIRID Of JUST HAVING
. AJOB? LOOKING fOR
.

,.

at

··,:).

'

..

funds,Aa

•

\..

"
'

Book sale raises

We would like _to recognize those who make
!-:loiter Medical Center Sl!Ch a special
place - our staff. This week, and every week,
you hejp us make the difference to .those we serve.

MEDICAL LENTER

...

''Healthcare in Your
Own Backyard"
www .holzer .org

�</text>
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