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Page B8 • .The Daily Sentinel

-www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, April2s, 2006

Poll! Most fans have·doubts about steroid policy and Bonds
~'(. W1u. LEs:rER

said no.
.
·
ASSOCIATED PRESS ..,_
Cll1111.1111nld•lltllemll0rl ·
However, the other half of the sample was
~--Arecenopollahowsbaseballfans'viewsonsloroidsaodooM•
asked if he should be allowed in the Hall if he
WASHINGTON - Most baseball ~s think
pOiformance-anhancfngdrug. :
ShouloS..,.Bondobeoll~
was found to have used such drugs only before
Major ~gue Baseball could do more io curb
Into"''"'" orFomeot ..
, baseball enacted rules against them in 2002, and
11 .,.,"11 ...
1110 "" 010 ""' uHd
the use of steroids, and they have doubts about•
LUfuo :
.
.
,.
57 percent said yes. Casual fans were most likeAbout the
. steroids? (Asked ol ha~ ol sample)
sIugger Barry Bonds as he chases the sport s roo mucto 5,. """''~"'
v..
No
ly to shift their opinion about allowing Bonds in
career home run record.
I
.,,.
the
Hall, dependjng on the timing of steroids
11
Baseball has fallen short on keep in~ the sport
Noo...;.,.,.
Noo '""' .,. . .. ..
use.
drug-free, according to 53 percent m an AP... ••••round 10 ""'" ,...
Norwhites were twice as likely ·as whites to
AOL Sports poll. Those most likely to feel that
~.!:,:;:~·:,l~r:;·.:;o~:rv
,,.,oldo, buoonlybefo••
say the black outfielder should be allowed into
way are fans 30 and older and those with more
._.or ... ..., '"""'"o . ~::!'~~;:f~~~, ...,••, · the Hall of Fame if he's fo und to have used
education.
.
Gfonto?
" '"dfeelings iAs&gt;&lt;ed.olo&lt;.... r ellol ..mplol
steroids.
1""""""' 1
Almost two-thirds of fans have ·unfavorable .
,.,,,.,~
v,,
'f'
One longtime Opponerit of Bonds on the playor mixed feelings about Bonds, the San WJN
i!W I •~ 'ing field says the Giants' outfielder detinitely
Francisco Giants star who is chasinf!: the home
""'"o'"''" ··' Not '"'•""·'
Noo '"'""" ·-·' belongs in the Hall of Fame.
1
run record_ while fending off accusauons that he
NOTl' """""'~"''""""',."""'' '· """'"" '"'"·-·'""" "'
"He was the best player in our lear&gt;ue,
the
tNI...oe l leos polled Apnt 1Q- 12 and April1 8·20.
9
. used sterotds.
AP
National
League,
for
a
long
time,"
srud
,Mike
I the home run record of . ' SOURCE '-P·AOLSpo11s
Hank Aaron. hods
Sciascia, a former Los Angeles Dodger who
755, followed by Babe Ruth with 714. The 41- stances were· steroids.
now manages the Angels in the American
year-old Bonds is closing in on Ruth's record. · Major League Baseball is investigating League. "What he might or mightnot have done
For many baseball fans, suspicion about Bonds' possible involvement with performance- doesn't lessen his Hall of Fame stature."
steroids is stealing the joy from watching . enhancing drugs. Almost twQ-thirds of fans say . The first rules against steroids agreed to by
Bonds' bid for history.
they think baseball is treating Bonds fairly.
management and the union went into effect in
"It 's upset me," said William Dobney, a
Many fans say Bonds should not be allowed September 2002. Testing be~an in spring trainretired school superi.ntendent and baseball fan into baseball's Hall of Fame if he's found to ing 2003, but penalties for failed tests weren't in
from Grandy. N.C. "You see guys go out there have used steroids or other such drugs. But the place until 2004.
, .
on the field and you don't know if they 're using timing of any steroids ·use could be crucial in
Last fall, major 'league players and owners
God-given strength or drug-enhanced strength.'' public support for Bonds getting into the HaiL agreed to toughen penalties for steroid use to a
·Bonds has denied in sworn testimony ever
Half the fans in the poll were asked if Bonds 50-game suspension for a ftrst failed test, 100
using steroids, although he acknowledged using should be allowed into the Hall of Fame-if he is games for a second and a lifetime ban for a
two substances that he says he didn't know were found to have used steroids or other perfor- third. Under the ·policy, players are given urine
steroids. Prosecutors say they believe the sub- mance enhancing drugs, and 61 percent of them tests at least twice during the season and could
·

.

1

:

•oLL

a.._ .........., .. _ .

7~»

face more random testing.
. .· .
One crihc of baseball's drug pohcy ts Dr.
Gary Wadler, a steroids expert based at New
York University Medical School. Baseball
should do blood testing, expand the list of. prohibited substances and have a more ambthous
schedule of random testing, he said.
Wadler said it appears that baseball is more
committed to getting rid of steroids, but he had
reservations about the current policy.
·"It's better than no testing at all, but it's significantly short of the gold standard," he said.
Major League Baseball spokesman Richard
Levin responded: "We have the toughest drug
testing program in professional sports right
now.'-'
Almost tw~-thirds of baseball fans, 63 percent, say they care "a lot" if players use steroids
Th
or other performance-enhancing drugs.
ose
most likely to care a lot were fans who closely
follow baseball, were more educated and older.
"The new baseball rules are sufficient, but
they had to be dragged kicking and screanting to
this," said 60-year-old fan Samuel Spear of
Mount Vernon, N.Y. Spear said his view of
Bonds is "basically unfavorable.''
"If he took steroids, he's a cheater," Spear
said. "It's as simple as that."
·
The AP-AOL Spot'tS poll of 793 baseball fans
was conducted by lpsos, an international polling
firm April I 0-12 and April 18-20 and has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage pomts.

Ukrainians remember
Chem.obyl tragedy on
mournful anniversary,.A2
.. .

M~ddleport
;;o CENTS • \'ul. ;;;;. Nn . t~H

PITTSBURGH (A P) Celebration's over.
The Pittsburgh · Steelers
are still selling truckloads of
Super Bowl gear. Their
players are vacationing all
over the globe - Hines
. Ward is back from Korea,
and Ben Roethli sberger is
headed to Switzerland. And
such is the team 's popularity
that three former players
were recruited to campaign
for three different companies competing for a downtown slot machines parlor
license.
But to coach Bill Cowher,
that Super Bowl victory in
Detroit nearly three months
ago is fast becoming long- ·
ago history.
·
The Steelers will be· recognized June 2 at the White
House, but Cowher plans to
officially put the Super
Bowl in his team 's past by
. then. When his players
arrive for their three-day
minicamp May 12, he plans
to tell them there will be no
further talk about what they
accomplished last season.
He doesn 't want to rum
anybody's Super Bowl party
- especially not the one
planned in Washington ,
D.C.
but , he ' said
Monday, it's time to move
on.
To Cowher, it 's easy to
forget now how close the
Steelers came to not making
the playoffs after needing to
. win their final four regularseason games· last season to
finish II c5. The difference
was that, unlike the season
before when the Steelers
went 15 · 1 but lost big. at
home to the Patriots in the
AFC champ io nship game ,
they peaked when it cou nted.
"We weren't the best team
tn the National Football
League, in my opinion,"
Cowher said . "We played
· the best at the right time. If
you don't play with an edge
and if yqu don 't play with
the same sense of purpo se
and commitment, then
you're not going to be there

Wizards pull even with
Cavaliers. See Page 81

BY BRIAN J.

''

.

.

POMEROY - After 16
months of supervisin~ repairs,
inspections and watting for
news, Sheriff R&lt;;Jbert Beegle
will host an open house Sunday
before re-opening the Meigs
County Jail on Monday.
Beegle has received notification from the Ohio Department
of
Rehabilitation
and
Correction, allowing the jail to
begin receiving prisoners as a
12-day, minimum-risk facility.
"The jail facility appears to
have substantiall}' reached a
level where· the Jail can start
receiving and servicing prisoners," Bureau of Adult Detention
Chief Charles Bailey wrote to
Beegle.
The county jail will be able to
accomodate up to I 0 prisoners
overnight, but only up to five
for the 12-day maximum holding period, Beegle said.

""" · "' ~ d:oil"c nt iow L•·" "'

Beegle said the re-opened jail putside the county," Beegle
will be able to accomodate said, "but these figures tell the
"most of those we arrest," but story of how expensive it has
said women and those who are . been for the county to operate
considered "high risk" because without a county jail."of serious 'medical conditions,. Beegle said he and his oftisuicidal behavior and high cers have driven 7,000 miles
escape risk will be taken outside this year alone to transport pristhe county.
oners to and from jail facilities
Beegle said county commis- in other counties. He said he is
sioners will be asked to consid- responsible for an av.erage of l6
cr renewal of a contract with 'county inmates per day.
Washington County Jail for
The jail's reopening will not
those prisoners this week. The affect staffing in the sheriff's
county now has a contract with department, Beegle said. A
the Washington County facility video monitoring system · and
for a negotiated f'dte of $55 per intercom installed as part of the
day, per prisoner.
·
renovations will allow dispatchFormer Sheriff
Ralph ers to watch prisoners, and
Trussell closed the jail in frozen meals will be ser¥ed,
October, 2002. The county eliminating the need for a fulls~nt $27,100 that year for out- time cook.
·
stde housing, $61 ,890 in 2003,
Beegle said an arrangement
$123,767 in 2004, and with the Pomeroy Police
$160,000 last year.
Depanment will allow the sher"That doesn't include the cost
of gasoline ~d m~ hours SJ?Cnt
Please see Jell, A5
10 transportmg pnsoners to J3lls · .

OBITUARIES

BY BRIAN J. REED

Development Director Perry
Varnadoe, Community College
Trustee Michael Swtsher and
POMEROY -. Meigs Local Community · College VIce
Board of Educauon authonzed President Luanne Bowman disthe Meigs County Community cussed status of the construeImprovement Corporation to tion project
.
complete core drilhng and surThe $2 million project will
vey work on,the district campus take more land than was origiat R,ocksprings i.n anticipation nally expected - · seven ' acres
of fall construction of a new in6tead of five, which the dis:
centerfor the University of Rio trict will provide at no cost. The
Grande/Roo
Grande area will also include a parking
Community College.
· lot for 144 vehicles and a packMeeting 'J?esday. evening. age sewer plant.
the board reviewed stte renderThe board reviewed several
ings and proposed plans for a potential issues, including traf12,000 square-foot butldmg the fie now and safety issues, as
CIC hopes to build and lease to
.
the university. Economic
Please see Rio, AS

INSIDE
Port workers to undergo
terror, immigration
background checks.
o

_ _f.J!9.t. ,-~---

t'"-""" .

~·H.61zer Hqrne:~ealth
~~CEJ.S empleyee of

h!bmh.

See Page A3

Charlene Hoeftlchjpllotoa

Evan Shaw who will leave this weekend to begin a summer internship with NFL Films tn Mt. Laurel,
N. J. shows Coach Mike Chancey and Tech Prep teacher Suzanne Bentz some of his clips of OU,
football. It was during his years at MHS that Evan developed a love of sports and videography.

Life Line Screening
coming to Middleport.
SeePageA3
·• Storyteller honors Molly
Pitcher at DAR.
SeePage AS
• Public participation
needed for funding.
SeePage A&amp;

WEATIIER

Details on Page A6

INDEX

• Menopausal Symptoms •

Cervical Disease •

'

'·

·-

-.

,.......--

Jack~n .

Preventive- Services

To schedule an appointment, please call:
Athens: (740) 589-3120
Gallipolis: (740) 446-5381
Jackson: (740) 395-8801
Direct Line (740) 446-5065

--

Craig Strafford, MD
Gynecology

.AI H·~LZER
It!/ CLINIC

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

'Dear Abby

A3
A4
As

Editorials
Obituaries ·
. Sports

..

12 PAGES

B Section
A6

Weather

© 2006 Ohio .Valle~· Publi.\lhlng-Co •

'

.

J

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH&lt;l!&gt;MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - "It seems
almost too good to be true,"
said Evan Shaw, a senior at
Ohio University majoring .ip
video production, as he talked
about bein~ selected for a
summer mternship with
National Foot ball League
(NFL) 'Films.
Evan leaves for Mt. Laurel,
N. J. this weekend and forthe .
next three moflth~ will be
working as an intern in the
NFL. television studio. He
was one of 30 college seniors
from across the nation selected from over 300 applicants
for internships - the only
one from Ohio.
Evan will be working in
the television studio, will
have an opportui1ity to shoot
practice games. get to visit the
NFL l:leadquarters in New
York, and to edit some special
features for use on· television
shows on the NFL'station.
"This is a real opportunity
· for me.'' said Evan .. "I love
sports, and I love video."
His .hope is that during his
time there he will have a
chance to shoot a short feature
. on a MHS grad turned professional.
Mike
Bartrum,
for
the
longsnapper
Philadelphia Eagles.
Evan' s enthusiasm for
sport&amp; and video began as a
student at Meigs High School
where he played football
under Mike Chancey and was
enroll ed in Suzanne Beillz.'
tech prep program/ He credits
Chancey and Bentz with giv-

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

renewal levy the monies generated will fund utilities,
transportation, salaries, textbooks, and any other necessary item ~ for the general
operation of the district.
Southern Local Schools
Superintendent
Robert
Grueser said there will be no
increase in taxes upon · the
renewal of \he levy. He added
that residential and agricultural taxes will not change
whether it passes or fails.
However, he said if it fails
it may stall the progress the
district has made in reducing
, Please see Levy, AS

· Middleport to use water
improvement fund for qebt retirement
BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Clip from WOUB "Gridiron Glory" video by Evan Shaw
ing him the . encoura~ement videography fa ll and winter
and support he needs. 111 pur- quarter of thi s academic year.
suing his career .choice.
Last summer he interned
At OU Evan has had lots of with Ondi Timoner of
experience as a videographer ' Interloper Films as a producand producer. He works for tion assistant un a 111m about
WOUB on the Fridey late- the Chicago outdoor rock fes'
night show "Gridiron Glory," tival Lollapolooza. and as .a
a weekly live show about videographer on another dochigh schoo l football in· umentary where some of his
Southeastern Ohio. When he video made the. cut ;rnd was
returns to OU in the fall, he actually used in the documenwill be director of that show. tary. It has not been publicly
Also this past year he was the released yet . smce Ttmoner
remote location producer for ' plans to submot otto Sundan ce
the Zanesville studio.
for 2006.
· Evan also ·works as techniShaw has also done free cal director for the evening · lance work including a series
Newswatch on WOUB and
Please see NFL. AS
has been in charge of sports

'·
' '

.

RACINE- The passage of
a renewal levy is the latest
challenge and concern for the
financially strapped Southern
Local School District that
stands to lose $144,000 . in
revenue if the renewal levy
fails during next week's t;'lection.
The renewal levy was originally passed in 1990 and has
been renewed every three
years since . .
According to the "Show
Your Spirit"· Committee of
Racine that supports the

o

.

Grneser: (Renewal
'levy critical for district'
..

2 SECTIONS -

Dr. Craig Strafford is accepting new patients in A~hens, Gallipolis, and
Or. Strafford practices gynecology with a focus on:

J. Roedfplloto

Sheriff Robert Beegle is pictured inside the newly-renovated ·
cell block in the Meigs County Jail. After 16 months of repairs
and waiting, the jail will reopen on Monday. An open house will
be he.ld for the pub Iic on Sunday.

BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

1

P.XPERIF.NCFD .. COMPASSIONATE .. QUAI.IFIED

B~an

Meigs Local authorizes site
work for new Rio Center

Page AS
o Okey Brady

Have you spent yqu~ life taking care
of others? Now zt zs zmportant to ~ake care of yourself. .

•

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

NEITEl Cup Series
.._

Pomeroy, Ohio

\\'EDNESDAY , .\I'RIL 26 , 2006

o

sEruEs

and we are no exception.".
. BY JENNA 'FRYER
too much .
Cowher points to the
AP MOTORSPORTS WRITER
"We utilized the first 200 NASCAR TOP 10
Steelers' 6-10 · season in
(laps) real wisely to get to
2003, which came after they
CHARLOTTE, N.C .
the front"
Following race 8 ol38
went 13-3 and reached 'the Tony Stewart is in champiTop Wks
Prev. Driver
Stewart is a notoriously
rating
Rk Driver
Points Wins lOa ToptO rank
AFC title game in 2001 and onship form, Greg Biffle has slow· starter every year, usu109.6
1
.
Matt
Kenseth
1
,21
8
5
7
2
had a I 0-5- J record and the worst luck imaginable ally needing until midsumf
~
'
"
.
,,_..;...
:loo-n
1
2011
·
e
a
·
't9;!.2'
reached the second round of and Kyle Busch ts eerily mer to hit his stride. Not so
~ -·"~
'
6
7
102.7
3. Kasey Kahne
1,167
2
3
the playoffs in 2002.
similar to his big brother.
this season: He's got five
;;.··,o· 5' :#' 7
1
'10;!';5
4.
tJI!irk;r;Aartm:
"
1,152
''The foundation is set in
" '
.
All that became dear at top-five. finishes - includ116.6
5. Tony Stewan
1,141
1
5
5
the offseason. at training Phoenix
International ing a victory - through the ,):e: .Jail Gorilon"''· . ,.
045
8
''\i~
922\
4 •.6
0
.. '" .,
.,
.
'.
camp,'' Cowher said. "We're Raceway, a race in ..which the first eight races.
·
(lie) Dale Earnhardt Jr. 1,045
6
88.1
0
3
7
starting 0-0 · with a big drama surrounded the driThat's bad news to the rest ·~ ~· l&lt;f!VIi)..;f:itr.Vi.9k . j'l.~~
1
4 '· , . 2 '· ' ~.i;~'l., !It~
bull 's-eye on our chest We . vers who didn't win .
of the field . Although
9. Kyle Busch
1,010
0
4
7
91.0
6
have a tough schedule and
It started hours before the Ste.wart is only in fifth place
8
10
71.7
1.0. ca~l\)\"'"r'
9&lt;18 "' o ' 3
it's not going to be that easy. first night race of the season' in the points standings, hisAdditional championship-point earners
If we understand that, then even began , when Stewart's tory has shown he should
11 . Dale Jarren 934; I 2. Clint BoW)(er · · 31. Robby Gordon en: 32. Dave
we'll be fine. If we think it crew realized it had made a surge this summer and put 910; 13. Jeff Burton 879; 14. Elliott Bfaney 878; 33.Kyle Petty 855; 34.
will get done by showing serious error that would cost himself in position to be the Sadler 861 ; 15. Manin Truex Jr. 841 ; Je_remy Maytield 635; 35. Michael
up, then we' re badly mistak- the defending Nextel Cup driver to beat in the Chase 16. CaM Edwards 822; 17. Kun Busch Wanrip 595; 36. David Stremme 551;
813; 18. Denny Hamlin 808; (tie)
37. Scott Wimmer 523: 38. Terry
ing ourselves."
champion his third-place for the championship.
Brian Vickqrs 808; 20. Jamie
Labonte 516; 39. Travis Kvapil419;
While a number of players starting position.
Biffle, ·meanwhile, would McMurray 796: 21 .Greg Biffle 785; 40.
Kevin Lepage 408; 41 . Brent
already are working out at
NASCAR requires drivers probably kill for some of 22. Ryan Newman 757; 23. Jeff
Sherman 372; 42. Tony Raines 303;
the team 's practice complex, to begin each race using the Stewart's karma right about Green 751; 24. Reed Sorenson 744: 43. Stanton Barrett 199: 44 . Paul
most veteran players aren't same tires that were on dur- now.
25. Bobby Labonte 743: 26. J.J. ·
Menard 148; 45. Kenny Wallace 128;
Veley
736;
27.
Ken
Schrader712;
28.
46. Hermie Sadler 114; 47 . Bill Elliott
required to report until the ing qualifying, and, Stewart
Adding Phoenix to the list
1t1; 48. Kirk Shelmerdine 103; 49.
Joe
Nemechek
707;
29.
Scon
Riggs
minicamp.
After
that, no longer had his . A crew of races he's lost this season, 684; 30. Sterling Marlin 682;
Mike GaNey 98; 50. Chad Chaffin 92
Cowher wants the veterans member
accidentally Biffle has now seen at least
staying · around for 14 days · returned the set to Goodyear. · four wins slip. away. And souRcE, NASCAA
AP
of coaching sessions that which promptly destroyed this was the most devastatthem .. The punishment was ing one yet.
But as long as Biffle keeps chance· to win ,when contact
run through June 8.
He led six times for a race- · runmng well,. he should ~e with Casey Mears sent him
"We condense it to a very being sent to the back of the
field,
a
drop
of
40
spots
on
.
high
lS.l laps, only to lose . able to make up some sen- spinning and into the walL
short period of time so
On the same lap, far behind
everybody's here," Cowher the starting grid at a race the lead when Harvick ous _ground shortly.
with
little
room
_
or
passed
him
with
to
go.
.
Btffle
can
also
take
solace
Busch's spin, ~ larger acci.track
said. "Hopefully, we'll get
10
Biffle still had a shot at fin- 10 the fact that teammate dent ·occurred that forced
some
productive work time- for passing.
done."
Stewart quickly dug him- ishing second, but his luck Matt Kense~h was al_so 21st NASCAR to stop the race to
ran out the same way it has m the stand10gs at th1s _pomt dean up the track.
Once the coaching ses- self out of his hole.
He
advanced
almost
33
ali
season: He ran out of gas last season, and he rallted to
A red-flag means drivers
sions end, the players will
m~ke the Chase.
, can't do anything.
have seven weeks off until spots in the first 100 laps, no with two laps to go.
He went from second to
I have no doubt Greg s
Busch seemed to have fortraining camp starts July 28 small feat considering he
or 29 in Latrobe, Pa.
·
started at the back · of the 16th in a matter of seconds going to make the Chase," gotten that rule.
.
pack
alongside
error-prone
leaving
him
21st
in
th~
Kenseth
said
..
':He's
runni~g
He
sought
out
Mears
on
Four veteran players may
not be ready for minicamp: 'drivers who could have easi- standings and 166 points out so strong th~re s no doubt 111 · the track, gave him a retalia, of qualifying for the Chase. my mmd he s gomg to be 10 .tory nudge, then drove his
linebacker Andre Frazier, ly wrecked his car.
But
that
wasn't
enough
for
,"It's frustrating as hell," the top 10 at the end of the car to the garage for repairs.
who broke an ankle in the
It earned him a five-lap
AFC championship game; Stewart, who raced his way .said crew chief Doug year.
lead
on
lap
218.
Richert,
·
f
orced
to
speak
Tor
·
"He's
got
th~
cars
that·
~an
penalty
from NASCAR, and
into.
the
.
wide
receiver
Quincy
Morgan , who injured an Although he couldn't hold it the tea,m because Biffle was do It and he s not dotng a meeting with officials after
ankle in the AFC playoffs for more than six laps, he so upset he left without com- nothing wrong, so : I don ' t the race.
think he needs tochange any
Busch did himself no
against Cincinnati; , right held on to finish second to menting.
tackle Max Starks (postsea- winner Kevin Harvick.
"Our whole year has been of hts approach or the tear:n favors with his behavior. He
son
arthroscopic
knee
"We did what got us to a like this .. 1 feel a little needs to change their and brother, Kurt, are
surgery) and defensive back championship last year," snakebit."
approach."
already two of the least popChidi lwuoma (shoulder).
Stewart said. "We worked
There is a silver lining for
That might not be true for ular drivers in NASCAR and
And that right thumb that o'ur way from the 43rd spot Biffle, though.
Busch, who wi~l likely find Kurt earned his status
quarterback
Ben and finished second, so I'm . He's now led the most laps htmself 111 · senous trouble through stunts like the one
Roethli sberger injured in pretty happy. We just never in three different races, only ' with NASCAR later this Kyle pulled Saturday night
late November against the gof in a hurry. we· got in . to lose a strong finish week when the sanctioning
Kyle Bus~h once said he
Colts, ca using him to wear a spots to where we weren '·t because of a mechanical body issues its penalties.
planned to use every misstep
glove and a protective splint really catching people any- failure, accide.nt or other
NASCAR officials were Kurt has made o~er his
the rest of the season?
more, and couldn't get by freak mishap. Had his team furious with Busch, who career as a lesson in what
"He 's fine," Cowher said . people and we had to work' been struggling, his season S\arted from 'the pole not to do. Perhaps he needs a
'-'He's probable."
too hard and punish the tires might be. in bigger jeopardy. Saturday night
but lost any refresher course.
'

o

Meigs ·c ounty jail to ·r e-open Monday

SPORTS

The White House ·cans NAScAR '
cup
but Cowher ready to ' Drama in the·Desert: Stewart, Biffle .and
put Super Bowl in past Busch all have up-an.d-down day in Phoenix
NEXTEI"

Juveniles do Earth
Day project, A6

"'

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
approved using funds in the
village's water improvement
fund to pay off a half-million
dollar loan from the Ohio
Wat er
Development
Authority.
.
.
The $500.000 planning
loan was . taken in 2000, in
order to complete ~ng ineering
work, purchase real estate atld
complete site preparation
work for a proposed $2 million water treatment plant on
Page Street. Construction on
the plant was scrapped in
January. after village counc il
determined funding could not
be obtained for the project.
Most of the $500,000 loan
was used to pa'y the engineering firm Floyd Browne
Group, and subcontractors
who worked on the project.
At Monday evening 's regu-

lar meeting, council approved
a repayment plan recommended
by
Village
Administrator
Bradford
Anderson, who ·has worked
with OWDA on means for
retiring the debt. Anderson's
plan includes a $3 15 ,000 payment this · month from the
water improvement fund, a
$90.000
payment
in
December, and a final
$1 00.000
payment
111
December, 2007.
The water improvement
fund was ·begun by village
council to secure the funds
neces&gt;ary to secure and match
gram and loan funds for water
infra.&lt;:tructure . All water customers in the village pay $5
per month to the fund.
,, The loan retirement plan
approved Monday night will
also use funds set aside for
engineeri ng this year and next ,
year. Anderson said.
.

'

Please see Fund, AS

�.

.. .

.

•

.

j
1·

.

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

.The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel·

VVednesday,April26,2006

BY ANNA MELNICHUK
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Public meetings

show, charges were pending
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
against Dixon in a checkcash·
ing scheme.
.
WASHINGTON - Keshia
, Gornstein said that a VICtory
Dixon claimed , her abusive for Dixon could open the d&lt;X?r
boyfriend woke her UP. three to more claims by drug earn·
years ago with a gun to her ers and other~ that they should
head, a punch in the face and a not be put in prison for wrong·
demand that she break the law · doing because they were
and ~uy him more weapons.
coerced.
Dixon was convicted of fed·
Dixon's lawyer had asked
era! guns charges, and the · the court to decide ·if the trial
Supreme Court considered judge wrongly barred a wit·
Tuesday whether she was ness who was gomg to tesufy
given a fair chance to make on Dixon's claim she was suf·
the case that she was under fering from battered woman's
duress at the time.
syndrome. Instead, ,j ustices,
Her lawyer, "J. Craig Jell of when they agreed to hear the
Dallas, said that Dixon, with a case, said they would look at a
busted lip, accompanied the limited issue: whether the burboyfriend to a Texas gun show den should have been on
while his accomplices stayed Dixon to show she was under
home with her teenage daugh· duress or on the government
ters.
to disprove it.
"As far as she was conGornstein
repeatedly
cerned, there was ·somebody referred to the duress claim as
there with a gun to the .head of an ''excuse." Justice John Paul
her children," Jett told jus- · Stevens, sounding irritated,
tices. ~'What was most impor· said that the word ·~ustifica­
tant to her was the safety of tion" might also apply. ·
her children."
Chief Justice John Roberts
Bush administration lawyer said .that defendants can come
Irving Gornstein said that up with explanations for their
Dixon knew she was breaking crimes, like "I was on drugs
the law when she provided an and didn't know wt\at I was·
incorrect address and state4 in doing."
.
the weap&lt;ins paperwork that
Justice Antonio Scalia said
she was not ·facing criminal that Dixon, who was sencharges. When she purchased tenced to nearly three years in
the weapons at a Dallas gun prison, had a choi~e.

8Y GINA HOLLAND

KIEV,
Ukraine
Ukrainian mourners carried
s.ingle red carnations and
flickering candles during a
solemn ceremony . early
Wednesday to remember the
I 986 Chernobyl explosion"
an event ~ h ;u continues to
scar this ex-Soviet republic
20 years later.
The April 26, 1986. pre·
dawn explosion became the
world's worst ever. nuclear
accident, ripping off the
nuclear power plant's roof
and spewing radioactive fall·
out for 10 days over 77,220
square miles of the then·
. Soviet Union and Europe. It
· ca·st a radioactive shadow
over the health of millions of
people; many believe it also
contributed to the eventual
collapse of the Soviet Union.
"My friends were dying
.
AP Photo
under my eyes," said
1
Konstantyn ..Sokolov, a 68- Ukrainians light candles to commemorate those who died after the Chernobyl nuclear disaster,
year-old forme!' Chernobyl during a cerembn~ at the memorial to Chernobyl firefighters in the city of Slavutich, Tuesday.
worker whose voice was Ukraine m!!rked the 20th anniversary of the Chernobyt nuclear .disaster, which was the world's
hoarse from throat and lip worst ever nuClear accident. Some 50,000 Pripyat residents were evacuated after the dlsas·
cancer. ,Sokolov was among ter, taking only a few belongings. They never returned, and workers and their fam ilies now live
hundreds gathering for a in the new towr of Slavutich, 60 km (37,5 miles) from the plant. The city of Slavutich was built
middle of the night ceremo· following the evacuation of Pripyat, which was just 1 .5 km (about one mile) away from, the
ny Wednesday in the Chernobyl plant.
Ukrainian capital, which
At least 31 people died as cer, one of the only intetna-· their 'infant son were forced
President Yiktor 'Yushchenko
a direct result of trying to tiortally accepted illnes ses to evacuate their home in the
attended.
Sokolov said hi s memories keep the fire from spreading linked to Chernobyl. and the Chernobyl workers' city of
of that time "are very terri- to the plant's three other U.N. health agency said Pripyat, leaving behind all
operating reactors. One plant about 9,300 people were their belongings. They were
ble."
In Kiev, bells tolled 20 worker was killed instantly likely to die of cancers shuffled around, first to a
'
nearby village then to a relatimes starting at I :23 a. m., and his body has never been caused by radiation.
Some · groups, however, tive's house.
marking the. time of the recovered. Twenty-nine res"Every day, I would watch
explosion at Reactor No. 4 cuers, firefighters and plant including Greenpeace, have
at the Chernobyl nucle ar workers died later from radi- warned that death tolls could television and expect to hear ·
power station. Orthodox at ion poisoning and burns. be I0 times higher and when we could come back,"
priests led the mourners in a and another person died of accused the U.N. of white· Valel)tyna Abramovych said.
an apparent heart attack
washing the long-term "When they said we co.uld
somber procession. '
Mykola Malyshev, now effects of the accident in never come back, I burst
Closer to Chern.obyl in
Slavutych - the town built . 66, was working in the con· order to restore trust in the into tears ... We feel like outto house Chernoby I workers trol room of Chernobyl's safety of atomicpower.
casts. No one needs us."
Reactor No. I at the time of
Around 350,000 people
displaced in the accident ·Ukraine hosted competing
the
explosion.
He
said
the
were
evac·uated
forever
from
the commemorations began
scientific conferences on
an hour earlier to coincide .lights went off and on . and . their homes, leaving the Tuesday as this nation of 47
with Moscow time, which the room shook. The work- · whole city of Pripyat and million and the international
was used in the then-Soviet ers were ordered to the dozens of villages to decay community tried to make
Republi~ of Ukraine at the destroyed reactor, but when
and . rot away. Experts say sense of the catastrophe.
time of the accident.
· they got there, their co- some may not be habitable . Some Ukrainial)s, howevResidents laid flowers and workers ordered them 10 flee again for centuries.
er, sought out more private
placed candles at a monu- and save themselves. "They
. Some 5 million people live places to remember.
ment dedicated to Chernoby I !Old us, 'We are already in areas covered by the . "The
whole
country
as sirens blared.
dead. Go away,"' Malyshev radioactive
fallout,
in grieves and the whole world
Death tolls · connected to recalled at the Kiev ceremo· Ukraine, ·
neighboring joins us in this grief," Lena
.the blast remain hotly debar: ny.
Belarus and Russi~t.
Makarova, 27, said as she
:ed, as do the long-term
Thousands have been
Valentyna Abramovych, visited the Chernobyl . muse·health effects.
diagnosed with thyroid can- now 50, her .husband and um in Kiev.

·Port .workers·to undergo terror,
.immigration background·checks
BY LARA JAKES JORDAN ..

six American ports. An outcry cheeks. Those cards were supin Congress led the Dubai posed to be issued to port
company, DP World, to decide workers beginning in August
WA6HINGTON - Seaport to sell the U.S. operations to 2004. By that December, the
workers will undergo back- an American lirrn.
·
Government Accountability
·ground checks fdr links to ter. Congre~s is considering port Oftice said, bureaucratic
:rorism and to ensure they are security legislation this week, delays and poor planning were
:legal U.S. residents, the Bush prompting some to question hampering development of the
administration said Tuesday.
the sincerity and ·timing of card.
Tile announcement came Chertoff's announcement.
Cargo industry officials
after months of scathing criti·
"It appears that DHS steps have worried that a federal lD
:cism about security gaps at the up to the plate to protect our system aimed at boosting
·nation's ports.
national security only when security could cost many port '
: The heightened scrutiny the cameras are rolling and the workers their jobs - leading ·
·which will begin immediately whole world is watching,'' said to bottlenecks in the flow of
- drew praise from some Rep. Bennie G. Thompson, D· goods destined for vfrtually
lawmakers and port associa- Miss., the top Democrat on the every U.S. community.
.tions that said the checks were House Homeland Security
"It seems to us that the
:long overdue. Others jeered Committee. He gave tepid biggest security threat is com- .
·the security measures as either praise for the push for lD ing from the outside, and not
:roo weak or too invasi've of cards, which he said should from the workers who live and
:workers' privacy rights.
have been issued years ago.
work iri those communities,"
· Names of an es_timated
In 2002, Congress ordered said
Steve
Stallone,
400,000 employees, who . work the Transportation Security spokesman for the San.
.in the most sensitive areas of Administration to issue bio- Francisco-based fnternational
.ports will be matched against metric ID card to workers who Longshore and Warehouse
government terror watch lists passed criminal background Union.
:and immigration databases,
Homeland Security Secretary
~1!111!!!!!
Michael Chertoff said. They
will, be among roughly
Notice to
750,000 workers - incloding
truckers and rail employees Salisbury Township Voters'
.who have unrestricted access
When you go to 1he polls on May 2, you
'to ports and will be required to
will notice that there will be a Cemetery Levy ,,
carry tamper-resistant identifi- ·
on the ballot. This levy will support the live cemeteries
·cation cards by next year.
"What this will do is it will
that arc located throughout Salisbury Township. The
elevate security at our ports
cemeteries include Rocksprings, Bradford. Howell Hill,
themselves so that' we can be
Austin and Bunker Hill. Every township in Meigs County
sure that those who enter our
has a cemetery levy, except for Salisbury,and one mher
.•
ports to do business come for
township.
Withuullhe
support
of
a
levy,
it
makes
it
legitimate reasons am;l not in
extremely
difficult
to
maintain
the
proper
care
that
each
order to do us harrn," Chertoff
cemetery deserves. The money generated through the levy
said. He called the safeguards
part of a "ring of security"
will go toward the costs of m'oiving and weedeating, tree
around U.S. ports.
and bush trimming, aqd general upkeep and maintenance.
The background checks will
'fhe levy would cost the taxpayers in Salisbury Township
not examine workers' criminal
.05 on every $100.00. .We need your help in keeping our
history, although Chertoff left
townshipis cemeteries looking respectable and presentable
open that possibility for the
.to the public who ·visiL' them.
future. '
How much the background
Pleuse support this levy and vote YES on May 2. ·
checks · will cost was not
;
· Salisbury Township Trustees
immediately available.
John Hood
· The Bush administration has
Manning Roush
been under tire for months for
Bill Spaun
what critics call holes in secu:
Richard Bailey, Fi.scal OtTicer
rity measures at ports, which
were highlighted after a Dubai
company's purchase of a
British lirrn gave it CQntrol of
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

'

••

Wednesday, April 26
RACINE Southern
Financial
Planning
Sllpervision Commission,
regular meeting, I0:30 a.m.,
Southern High School.

VFW Post 9053, 7 p.m . at the
hall. Officers to be elected.
REEDSVILLE
Riverview Garden Club will
meet at 7:30p.m. at the home
of Janet Connolly. J,anice
Young and Kila Frank. cohostesses.

Saturday, April 29
MIDDLEPORT - Special
meeting of Middleport lodge
363, F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. for
work in Mas ter Mason
.~egree
at
Middleport
1
Masonic Temple. All Master
Masons invited. Members to
take food items for Grand
Master 's food bank program.
Monday, May 1
Refreshments.
REEDSVILLE -Olive
'
Township Tru stees, regular
Monday, May 1
meetin g, 7:30 p.m., township
POMEROY
Meigs
garage.
Band
Boosters
wi
II
meet
at
SYRACUSE Sutton
Township Trustees 7 p:m. at 6:30 p.m. Monday in the
band room.
Syracuse Village Hall .
RACINE
Racine
Chapter 134, . Order of
Eastern Stars, wi 11 meet at
7:30p.m. at the haiL
' Thursday, April 27
RUTLAND - Leading
Creek Conservancy District',~
rescheduled monthly board
meeting, 4 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
spec ial meeting, &lt;1 p.m . .

Clubs and
organizations

Tuesday, April 25 .
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Pool Committee, 6:30p.m. at
the home of Bob Wingett.
RACINE - Racine Area
Community Organization,
6:30 p.m. at Star Mill Park.
New members welcome.
Wednesday, April 26
POMEROY
Meigs
County Cancer Initiative,
Think Pink kick off event,
6:30 . p.m.. Meigs Senior
Center.
Thursday, April 27
RACINE .
Racine
American Legion Auxiliary
Post 602, 7 p.m. at the hall.
Plans will be made for basket
for Girls State Fund.
CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge 453, special meeting 7
p.m. for the purpose ol' conferring fellowcraft degree on
two
candidates.
Refre shments.
TUPPERS PLAINS -

SmMar Now )OOU c•n uwn u-,0. plc ll.or• ot lhl!ll unlor~qottablo
momoonl o-pturtu:l In the new-.paper. PhC&gt;to. t:Jeeorne ttm•tewhen fr•rned or prlnled on a mug or mou ..-• p10d.

ond ollok the blue button .

Experience Is greatl
Experience, proven leadership abilities,
friendliness and efficiency are even greater!
If you would like to have all of these qualities
In the auditor's office, then .

BYTHEBEND
Illiterate school custodian
resists goi.ng .back _to class
VVednesday, April 26,

C9mmunity Calendar

Supreme Court takes up claim
of domestic abuse coercion

181118111berCIBIIOINI -11111-IIIUI

PageA3

p

Church events
Wednesday, April 26
POMEROY
Community prayer and praise
setvice, 7 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ on
West Main Street in conjunction with the Enterprise
United Methodist Church.
Special music by Joe
Mct;loud . Everyone welcome.
Friday, April28
MIDDLEPORT - A free
ham dinner will be served
from 4:30 to 6:15p.m. Friday
at the Middleport Church of
Christ as ·a part of the
church 's free community dinner program.
Saturday, April 29
PORTER - Clark Chapel
Free Will Baptist Church will
have special services with
Rev. Bernard Ferrell and Rev.
Pete Justice of Columbus.

ELECT

Service at 6 p.m.
RACJNI;: - Gospel meet·
ing at Red Brush Church of
Christ, 7 p.m. on Saturday, 6
p.m. on Sunday, with Denver
Hill as speaker.
Sunday, April 30
The
CARPENTER
Humphreys in concert at Mt.
Union Baptist Church, 6:30
p.m.

Other events
Thursday, April27
POMEROY - A Meet the
Candidates Night will be held
at the Mulberry Community
Center at 6 p.m Thursday.
POMEROY - Caring and
sharing suppoJ1 group, I p.m.
Meigs Senior Center. Topic,
''Alzheimers, What's New."
MIDDLEPORT - Blood
pressure ·screening, 9:30 to
II :30 a.m. at Hometown
Market by Lenora Leifheit,
Meigs County Cooperative
Parish nurse.
Friday, April 28
POMEROY- Blood pressure screening, 9:30 to II :30
a.m. at Powell 's by Lenora
Leiheit, R.N ., Meigs County
Coopetatiye Parish nurse.

Birthdays
Friday, April 28
POMEROY Shirley
Appleby who is contined to
the Kime s Rehab-ilitation
Center at 75 Kimes Lane,
Athens, Ohio 4570 I will be
95 on April 28. Cards may be
sent to her at the Center.
• Wednesday, May 3
POMEROY
Doris
Thomas who is a resident of
The Inn at Lakeview in
Groveport will oberve her
90th birthday on May 3.
Cards may be sent to her at
The Inn at Lakeview, B-2 I,
4000 Lakeview Crossing, ·
Groveport, Ohio 43125.
•

\

Holzer Home Health announces employee of month
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Home
Health
Services
announces its April ' ~light
. employee of the month,
Peggy Fulks, business office
manager for· Holzer Extra
Care.
Fulks graduated from
Gallipolis Career College in
1999 as a data entry specialist
and was previously employed
by local physician oftices as a
receptionist and billing clerk.
She began Iter employment at
Holzer Extra Care in 2000.
· "Peggy is an asset to Holzer
Extra Care. She is always
courteous to our clients and
goes out of her way to be
helpful to anyone in the community who may have questions about our program or
other community resources,"

Your Vote Needed and Appreciated!

Are you .a Victim of
Housing _Discrimination?·
Fair Housing is Your Right!
If you have been denied your housing rights .... you
may have experienced discrimination!
You have the right to live where you choose. You
'
may not .be refused housing· based on Race, Color,
National Origin, Religion, Sex, Familial Status
( families with children) or Handicap.
The Meigs Fair Housing Office is researching
possible fair housing discrimination practices in
Meigs County. If you think you ar~ a victim of
housing discrimination, please complete this form
and return to the Meigs Fair Housing Office, County
Annex, 117 East Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
We_re you denied housing of your choice? ( Denied
Rental, Purchase, Home Loan, House Insurance, or
denied Housing due to handicap or children).
Do you feel it was based on anyone of the following
factors?
Race __ Color _ _ National Origin __
Religion
Sex _ _ Familial Status __
Handicap
.
You have the Right to file a Housing
Discrimination
complaint., Forms are available at
.
the Meigs Fair Housing Office. 740·992-7908
Please stop in for your free Fair Housing
lnfor~ational packet and receive a free gift!
Jean Trussell
Fair Housing Coordinator

. Peggy Fulks ·

said Vicki Nottingham , RN,
manager, Holzer Extra Care.
"My employment at Extra
Care is very satisfying to me ,"
said Fulks. "I enjoy fe eling
that I help someone everyday,

even· with a' small .matter. It
gives me a sense of purpose."
Fulks resides outside of Rio
Grande on a farm with her
husband, Rodney. She .has a
son, Randall (wife, Raina),
and &amp; daughter, Vanessa. She
attends Salem Baptist Church
and enjoys gardening, cook·
ing and corating cakes for
family a d friends.
Hp
Extra Care provides
home aking, housekeeping,
perso al care and respite ser·
vices in Southeastern Ohio
and Mason County in West
Virginia. A physician'&amp; referral is not n;quired, allowing
everyone to take advantage of
Extra Care's services. . For
more information call locally
at (740) 441 -39 14 or toll free
at 1-800-920-8860.
'

DEAR ABBY: · I have
been dating a nice guy for
two years. We started out as
good friends and the relationship progressed from
there. He 's truly all that you
could ask for. My dilemma
is, he doesn't know how to
read ahd write.
This is a very se~sitive
subject, for him. He is 33
years old and works ·as a
custodian for the sc hool
district. He eanis a fraction
over minimum wage and is
making ch ild support payments. ·
I have been very patient
with him, but any time I
raise the subject of hi s
going back. to school, )Ve
end up argumg. Now he has
decided to take a part-time
job in the evenings - so
there will definitely be no
time for schooL What am I
to Jo ? He thinks my pushing him to learn to read and
write is about the money.
It's notl He keeps say ing
he's leaving his reading and
writing "in God's hands."
How can I help him ? WITS' ENp IN MIAMI
DEAR WITS' END: Your
boyfriend' s unwillingness to
reach out for he! p may stem
from embarrassment. Please
e'xplain to him that there
are program·s especially for
people like him, and that
they are easy to access. All
you have to do is call your
county library and tell the
librarian you are looking
for a referral to a literacy
coalition so your friend can
learn to read. Your friend
will be treated with dignity,
I promise.
DEAR ABBY: I would
like to thank you for more
than 10 years of a happy
marriage. Let me explain:
I am an active-duty soldier with only 14 months
left to retire after almost 20
years of service, including
two tours in· Iraq.· In
October 1995 , 1 was
deployed to Kuwait· and I
received three letters from
Operation Dear Abby. One
of them was from a beauti·

around the world in the military know that they're in
our hearts toclav, tomorrow
and every day. They'll love
hearing from you - and
you'll be glad you did.
Pear
DEAR ABBY: My boss 's
·Abby
mother pa ssed away recellt·
ly and the funeral is thi s
weekend. I had spo~en to
"Mrs. White" on several
·
.,.
occasions and · met hu
fullady from California. On twice. My question 1s,
Feb. 17, 1996, I met the should 1 attend the visita·
young lady and married her. tion , as it is my boss' s
Now, more than I0 years
?
later. .I am the proud father mother who passed away . I
of three wonderful children. don't want to commit
I'm wnung today to "career suicide" by not
thank you for co ntinuing attending but on tl'le
the
program
with other hand, I don't think I' d
OperationDearAbby.net. feel · comfortable being
This was the first holiday there.
MISSISSIPPI
season in two years that 1 MAIDEN
was home with my family.
DEAR
MAIDEN :
and 1 want to thank you fo r Funerals are for the living .
sending me my angel. You attend not only as a
STAFF SGT. ROB G., gesture of respec't for the
FORT LEWIS, WASH .
deceased, but by your presDEAR STAFF SGT .. G.: ence, to offer comfort to 'the
Thank you for an upper · of living. To a\lend would be a
a letter. 1' m pleased to kindness. and I'm sure it
know that Operation Dear would be appreciated - so
Abby brought you not only go.
.
a pen pal, but also a wife,. Dear Abby is written by
children and happiness. You Abigail Van Buren, also
deserve them aiL
known as Jeanne Phillips,
Readers, why wait for a and was. forinded by her
holiday? How about spread- mother, Pauline 1Phillips.
ing some j?y by logging on Write Dear Abby at
to OperatwnDearAbby.net , www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
and letting our young men Box 69440 Los Angeles
and . women
stationed CA 90069. '
'

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minutes or less to complete .. A communities. These non-invacomplele· vascular sc~eening . sive ultrasound tests help people
package,
including
the identify theirtisk for stroke, vas·
Stroke/Carotid
Artery, cular diseases or osteoporosis
Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm ear!y enough for their physiand Ankle Brachial Index (hard- cians to begin pre'Ventive proceening ~f the arteries) screenings dures.
is $109. Sign-up tor a complete
For more infonnation regardvascular package; inc.lude the ing the screenings orto schedule
osteoporosis screening and the anappointment,calll-800-697cost is $129.
9721.
Pre-registration is
Life Line Screening was required. ,

Danny Harmon
'

for Congress
.

'
We are surrounded by heroes every day.
Ordinary people w1th extraordinary power to
ma'ke a difference as an organ and ti ss ue donor.

LIFE
,.

'

·Be a hero: Be an organ and tissue donor.
Join the Ohio Donor Registry. www.lifelineofohio.org

C/!f/um d{9AiQ

I

~!:},zofing Chgan ! f ,md ' l'l.'i'lte ! &gt;onution

Tile public IS tllVI!ed toattenrl aCelebration of L1fe. Hope &lt;llld

R elllen tb r~ ll ce

SUNDAY. APRIL 30 1006 1 DO PM @) YO CT AHGEE PARK. CHILLICOTHE

FOR MORE INFORMATION , VIS ,IT WWW .LIFELINEOFOHIO .ORG

•

.._st

·Life Line Screening coming to Middleport
MIDDLEPORT - Life Line
Screening will be at . the
Middleport Church of Christ
Family LifeCenterat4337 main
Street·in Middleport on May IU.
Appointments will begin at 9:30
a.m.
Screenings involve the use of
ultrasound technology, and scan
for potential health problems
related to: blocked .arteries
which can l~ad to a stroke, aortic
aneurysms which can lead to a
ruptured aorta, and hardening of
the arreries in the legs, which are
. a strong predictor of heart dis·
ease. Also offered for men and
women, is a bone . density
screening to assess their risk for
osteoporosis.'
.
A stroke, also known as a
"brain attack", is ranked as the
third leailing killer in the world,
and the second among women.
Through preventive screenings.

I .

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•

2006

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•

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, .Ohio ·

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

Ohio Valley Publishing.Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress slaall make. no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise tlaereof; or abridging the freedom
~ "of speecla, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
du Government for a redress of grievances.

~

- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution .
'

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, Apri I 26, the !16th day of 2006. There
arc 249 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
Twenty years ago. on April 26, ·1986, the world's worst
nudear accide nt occurred at the Chemobyl plant in the Soviet
Union. An explosion and fire killed at least ·31 people and sent
radioactivity into the atmosphere. ·
On this date:
In 1785, American naturalist and at1ist John James Audubon
was born in Haiti.
In 1865. John Wilkes Booth, the assassin of President Lincoln,
was surro"unded by tederal troops near Bowling Green, Va., and
killed.
In 1937, planes from Nazi Germany raided the Basque town
of Guernica during the Spanish Civil War.
In 1964, the African nations of Tanganyika ~and zanzibar
merged to form Tanzania.
· In 1968, the United States exploded beneath the Nevada desert
a !-megaton nuclear device called "Boxcar."
In 1970, the Broadway musical "Company" opened at the
Alvin.Theatre in New York. ·
·
In 1980. following an unsuccessful attempt by the United
States to rescue the U.S. Embassy hostages in Iran, the Tehran
government annou nced the captivet were being scattered to
thwart any. future rescue effort.
In 1994, a Taiwanese jetliner crashed in Nagoya, Japan, killing
.
264 people .
. ·· In 2000, Vermont Gov. Howard Dean signed the nation's ftrst
bill allowing same-sex couples to form civil unions.
Ten years ago: After 16 days of bloodshed, Israel and
Hezbollah guerri lias pledged to end the worst fighting in the
Mideast in. three years,' agreeing to aU .S.-brokered truce.
·
Five years ago: Ukraine's communist-dominated parliament
dismissed refonn-oriented Prime Minister Viktor Yushchenko
and hi s gove rnment, plunging the nation into political chaos.
Junichim Koizumi was elected as prime minister of Japan in a
vote by the lower house of)apan's parliament.
One year ago: Syria's 29-year military presence in Lebanon
ended as Syrian soldiers completed a withdrawal brought about
~ by international pressure and Lebanese street protests. Actress
Maria Schell died in Preitenegg, Austria, at age 79.
Today's Birthdays: Actress-comedian Carol Burnett is 73.
Rhythm-atld-blues singer Maurice Williams is 68. Songwriter- .
musician Duane Eddy is 68. Singer Bobby Rydell is 64. Actress
Claudine Auger is 64. Rock musician Gary Wright is 63. Actor
Giancarlo I;sposito is 48. Rock musician Roger Taylor (Duran
Duran} fs 46. Actress Joan Chen is 45. Rock musician Chris
Mars is 45. Actor-singer Michael Damian is 44. Actor Jet Li is
43. Rock musician Jimmy Stafford (Train} is 42. Actor:comedian Kevin James is 41. Actress Marianne Jean-Baptiste is 39.
Country musician Joe Caverlee (Yankee Grey) is 38. Rapper TBoz (TLC) is 36. Country musician Jay DeMarcus (Rascal
Flats) is 35. Country musician Michael Jeffers (Pinmonkey) is
3~. Rock musician Jose Pasillas (Incubus) is 30. Actor Tom
Wdling is 29. Actress Jordana Brewster is 26. Actress Mamette
Pitterson is 26. Actor Aaron Weeks is 20.
·:Thought for Today: "For .those who do not think,· it is best at
least to rearrange their prejudices once in a while." - Luther ·
Burbank, American horticulturist (1849-1926).

VVednesday,April26,2oo6

As moviegoers began to
pretend everything is OK."
see trailers for ' the riew
Unfortunately, we can't just
movie "United 93" in thewish an Axis of Evil away
aters a few weeks ago, audi- though some of us cerence members cried "too
tainly do try.
soon"- so me of them literBut "I. was horrified" one
Kathryn
ally crying, as if victimized
. woman told NBC, talking
Lopez
by a mere movie trailer.
about the movie trailer. Not
Why? Because ne;rrly five
by anythin g she saw in it.
years later they still don't
Not by anything in particuget it. We still don't get it.
lar about it. It's just easier to
Americ;ans
who
are the opening weekend's rev- just pretend everything is
"shocked" by moviemakers enue to the Flight 93 OK.
.
dramatizing the heroism of National Memorial.) But it 's
We' ll I'm horrified, too, as
passengers on the airplane notable that .not one family so many of us are ~ thai
that
went
down
in of Flight 93's victims there are people determined
Shanksville, Pa., on · the objected to · the making of to kill us, and our allies,
· morning of Sept. ' II, 200 I, the movie, according to its because of who we are . I am
. are as asleep as legislators producers, who got their go- also horrified that so many
who aren't serious about ahead for the film.
of us go on as if what happrotecting our borders,
Others of us are more for- pened won't happen again.
diplomats who want to make tunate than those families. Perhaps they ' re right. As
nice with the terrorists who We ca n delude ourselves one official
intimately
run .Iran and oppress its peo- that we aren 1t at war, that . familiar with the threats we
pie, and those who would nothing changed on Sept. face recently predicied, mathave left Saddam Hussein in II, and we '[e not as vulner- ter-of-factly, in conversapower. We're a nation' that able as innocent Isrpelis who tion, "Sept. II won't happen
should be shocked when know that every bus they get again: It will be I 0 times
reporters reveal classified on or pizza place they grab a worse."
national-security strategy, slice at could be a suicide
We're told that our emobut award them Pulitzers bomber's. next target.
tions may be too "raw" to
instead of condemning their
"United 93" and efforts make the ex istence of a
irresponsibility.
like it remind us of what movie about the events of
For sure, not everyone happened that day, of the Sept. II appropriate.
who has reservations ·about kind of people we are, and
Damn straight the emo"United 93" can be dis- of the war we're in. In a TV tions are raw.
missed as clueless. Some interview, David Beamer,
The war we're in is in the
.worry about the ethics of father of Todd Beamer, presenf tense and it will be
making a movie off of known for his "Let's Roll " for a long haul. We had bettragedy .
legitimate , declaration on Flight 93, ter get used to it. We owe,it .
decent concerns. (Universal recalled seeing a bumper to ~ our heroes - to those who
has pledged 10 percent of , sticker that advised, "just died on that Boeing 757 that

Reader Services
Correction Polley
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accurate . lf you know of an error in fJ
slory. call lhe newsroom at (740) 9922156.

Our main number Is
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(usPs 213-960)
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through Friday, · 111 Court Street ..
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
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Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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SPEEDING?

crashed in a field and to the
111ilitary men anfl women
and families who are committed, with their very lives,
to freedom. If you commute
in a major American city
Monday throu gh Friday,
how can you not have some
real , eve n personal, sense of
the threat? The raw emotion
needn't be a debilitating
emotion, but a knowing one.
So many familie s who liave
lost and ~re sacrificing in
this war know it best. And
it's only normal and healthy
- that our culture would
.respond to these realities. A
movie highlighting a brave
group of Americans in this
·war on terror - I can think
of a lot worse.
Until we face th~ naked
truth of the brutality of what
we're up against, we're
more vulnerable than we
n~ed to be. One headline
about moviegoers' outrage
at the "United 93" trailer
described audiences as "jolted" by the existence of the
movie. Well, as were about
to hit the five-year mark in
this war on terror, it' s about
time we're jolted already.
(Katluyn Lopez is the editor of National Review
Online
(www.nationalre·
view.com). She can be con·
tacted at . klopez@nationalreview. com.)

SPEED

DIAUN6. ·

...

.

Loeal Briefs

Storyteller honors Molly PitCher at DAR

POMEROY
Mo.lly Revolutionary War, a name
Pitcher was remembered by given her by the soldiers
Donna Wil son, Meigs County because she carried pitchers
•
storyteller,
in stories of her of water to the many soldiers
RACINE -A disruption of water service in Racine is
COOLVILLE - Okey Brady, 76, Coolville, died Monday,
life at a recent meeting of in the war and actually
Apnl 24, 2006, at Charleston Area Medical Center in scheduled from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. tomorrow for parts of Third,
Meigs helped them man the cannons
Charleston. W.Va.
Fourth and Fifth Streets. The disruption is due to the installa- Return Jonathan
Chapter,
Daughters
of
the during, battles. John L. Hayes
·. There will be no services and no visitation. Arrangements tion of new water lines.
American Revolution.
recovered and Molly continare under the d1rection of Whitc-Schwarzel Funeral Home in
. She describe Molly Pitcher ued with him in the army,
Coolville.
'
as an amazing woman of the nursing the ·sick and wounded
---· --------------~------------Revolutionary War era, using and making herself generally
'
POMEROY - A Meet the Candidates Night will he held at ' as sources Kemdall Haven 's useful.
the Mulberry Community Center at 6 p.m. Thursday. The publication,
"Amazing
At the close of the war,
event is not a debate but ail opportunity to meeting the candi- Women of the American John Hayes and Molly
dates fur the respective offices they seek.
Revolution" and Arthur M. returned to Carlisle to carry
Schlesinger, Jr.'s autobiogra- out their lives together.
phyof Molly Pitcher. Return · However, John died shortly
Jonathan
Meigs DAR April · after. Their son John L.
POMEROY- Staff from the Meigs County TB Clinic will
POMEROY - Preparations 27, beginning at 7 p.m. Those
are being made now for the who plan to be involved, or be giving TB tests from 4:30 - 5:30 P..m. on Monday, May I . mee~ing at the Meigs Library. Hayes, was a sergeant in the
Wtlson satd that Molly fol- old infantry Company Of
community-wide vacation who believe they would like at the Pomeroy Library. The staff wtll back to read the tests
lowed
her husband John Carlisle and was in the war of
Bible school to be hosted this to participate, are invited to from 4:30- 5:30p.m. at the library on Wednesday, May. :3.
Hays! a sergeant of artillery; 1853.
ear by Trinity Church of attend.
.
hts request, to battle.
On February 21, 1822, an·
at
Pomeroy, June 5-9.
.
''This year is unique, too,
Dunng
the
battle
of
act
wa' signed by Governor
"Our churches are really because ~ we will also have
Monmouth,
June
28,
1778,
Joseph
Hiester, which provioexcited in making plans for a something specifically for
Jasting thn&gt;ugh one of th e ed for the state treasurer to
Fiesta, the program theme
older kids, 6th grade and up,"
hottest days ever known pay Molly $40 immediately ·
this year," .says vacation Bible
Noble
continues.
"We
will
whe~ soldters were dying of and an annuity of forty dolschool coordinator Michelle
GALLIPOLIS
"The script we have found is heat and thrust. As her hus- Iars to ·commence on the first
Noble. "Our Fiesta program have a teen rally with live
bands
and
other
activities
will provide fun and memo~
Auditions for parts in the perfect for our venue. It's · band .was knocked down of January, 1822 of $1 ,822 .
rable Bible-learning activities geared toward that age group. production of Snow White magical and mysterio11s. It msenstble but not killed, payable half yearly during
It's going to be awesome."
for kids Of all ages."
and the Seven Dwarves" will . will entertain the young and Molly stepped to the front, her life for her services dur,
seized the rammer and con- ing the Revolutionary War.
The
Bible
school
is·open
to
The first lraining · session
be helil at the .Ariel Dater the young-at-heart alike."
to assist in serving the Molly Pitcher died on ·
tinued
fo'r vacation Bible school vol- everyone . Those with ques- Hall on Sunday, May 7 from
The script . calls for all
cannon
effectively till the January 22,1833 at the age of
unteers will be held at Trinity tions can Noble at Trinity 2 to 4 p.m.' and Monday, the traditional characters, but
Church · this Thursday, April Church, 992-3172.
May 8 from 6 to 8 p.m.
with
a
few
twists. close . of the battle. It was 79.
In conclusion, Wilson said,
The classic will be pte- Approximl\tely 20-25 actors said, Wilson continued, that
General Washington was A monument to her erected in
sented as part of the Ariel- will be cast in the produc"
'
attracted . by Molly and he the old cemetery at Carlisle
Date Hall's summer per- lion.
Additionally, high
complemented her and made bears the following inscripschool students are encour- . her a sergeant on the spot and tion : "Molly McCauley,
forming arts events.
Area youngsters, with or aged to sign on for technical
the soldiers thereafter called renowned in history as Molly
without stage experience are roles, sucb as; lighting, speher Sergeant or Major Molly. Pitcher, The Heroine of
encouraged to audition for cia! effects, and more.
Molly died in Carlisle in Monmouth, Died January
the magical production,
Actors planning to audi- 1455. Her birth name was 1833. aged 79 years."
CLEVELAND (AP) - The Postgraduate Fellowship to help which will performed for tion should he prepared· to .
Ludwig and she sometimes Erected by the Citizens of .
!~est corporate gift ever to minorities get promoted to factwo weekends in mid-July.
have availability throughout went by the name Molly Cumberland County, July
University Hospitals Health ulty positions and to train stu- .
rehearsal
process.
Joseph Wright, executive the
System will go toward increas- dent~ seeking advanced degrees. director of the Ariel - Dater Rehearsals may be . sched- M'Kolly ; however, Wilson 4,1876. America's history
ing diversity in the medical pro"The health care industry Hall will direct the produc- uled for Monday, Tuesday, said, she was known as will always be.richer because
"Molly Pitcher" during the of the name Molly Pitcher.
fession and supporting a new needs to do more. to encourage tion. · Wright has produced Thursday
and
Friday
cancer hospital.
diversity at senior administrn- and directed various Ariel Jr. evenings,
as
well
as
Henry L. Meyer Ill, KeyCorp tive levels, and we are plea$ed Theatre, and Ariel Pliiyers Saturday mornings. Limited
sought approval of the buildchairman and chief executive to take a leadership position productions.
ing's design and positioning on
Along with availability exceptions will
officer, Thesday presented a through this initiative," said serving the Ariel organiza- be permitted.
the land near Meigs Middle
~
$1.5 million Key Foundation Thomas F. Zenty lll, president tion, he teaches creative
·
School.
from Page A1
Actors will be.. asked to do
grant to the Cleveland-based and CEO of UHHS.
The
board
hopes
the
proximdrama programs thoughout a spontaneous movement
ity of the new Rio center to the
health system.
The UHHS Ireland Cancer the United States, and is a exercise, as well as a selectUnder its diversity program, Center will be housed within a seasonal cast member for the ed reading, on stage. Actors they relate to the operation of Meigs Local school buildings
UHHS will establish the l)ew, 200-bed cancer hospital. Walt Disney Company.
may complete the audition the Meigs Middle School and will afford more opportunities
for post-secondary option stuKeyBank Minority Medical Construction begins this fall and
"Snow White. is one of forms in advance and pick high school.
St.
Albans.
W.Va.
Architect
dents in grades II and 11, who
Faculty Leadership Program is scheduled for eoinpletion in my favorite stories, and one up copies of the audition
Jerry
Goff's
building's
design
. I've wanted to bring to life sc~nes, by calling the Ariel can etimll in college courses
and the KeyBank Minority 2009.
was
conceived
to
complement
while still in high school.
for some time," said Wright. Dater Hall at 740-446-2787.
those
of
the
school
buildings
on
''This is a win-win proposiagainst being too optimistic
the
propeny,
Varnadoe
said.
tion
for students and the comtoo soon saying that . these
increase
for
Baker,
who
will
In addition to sccldvg per- munity to take classes in a firstplants will have, "Little or no
now
be
paid
$24,000
per
mission
for preliminary site class facility," Superintendent
tmpact during this three year
from PageA1
work,
Sandy
Iannarelli
the
CIC delegation also Bill Buckley said.
year.
Mayor
period.''
said
the
police
wages,
by
law,
from.
Page
A1
its deficit.
In fact tbe prospect of
are paid through the village's
''The · district, through financial help from the power
ting the jail re-opened. The
general fund,· while Baker.'s
reductions of expenditures of · plants may be' five to six
work of Beegle's employees,
salary is paid from all departOther busif\ess
nearly $500,000 annually, years away according to
including Sgt. Bill Gilkey, Sgt.
Council gave third and. mentfunds .
has managed to reduce its Grueser.
·
Rick
Patterson
and
from Page A1
"A pay increase (for Baker)
deft cit to $41 ,000 for fiscal
According to "Show Your final readinss and approved
Mary·
Administrntive
Assistant
xear 2006," Grueser said. Spirit" Committee literature. ordinances mcreasing rental will not adversely affect the
Kimes, in preparing a policy
'This is tremendous progress the most imponant point that propeny fees to $-20 per year, condition .of the village's iff's office dispatcher to for- and procedures manual, was
and there are p tans for funher the voters should know about and increasing the fee sched- general fund," Moore said. ·
also very important to the .
Brown asked about the sta- ward calls to that department process.
reductions that will not hin- this renewal levy is taxes for ule for building permits. ·
when he is needed in the jail
der the educational programs residential
(homeowners)
Council voted 3-2, with tus of .the modular office area.
Beegle said the public is
that exist. But, the renewal and agricultural propetties . Councilman
Robert units on the high school propThe reopening of the jail was invited to attend the open·
·levy is critical for the district will not increase or decrease·. Robinson abstaining, to erty. The units were sold two made possible, in large part, house, from I to 3 p.m. on
to avoid tumbling backward with passage or failure of the approve a $6,000 pay years ago but have never because of donations made by Sunday, to see the finished jail
on the progress made."
renewal levy.
increase for Fiscal Officer been moved. They are, Baker organizations and private resi- and celebrate its reopening.
When asked about any
Voters in the Southern Susan Baker. Councilman said, still titled in the vil- dents.
Beegle
collected
financial benefits the district Local School District get . a Ferman Moore, who made lage's name.
$10,967 in donations toward
may receive from the power chance to let their voices be the motion for the payrai:;c,
Peckham said he had the project, and thousands
plants proposed in Letart . heard on the renewal levy cited Baker's work m bring- received complaints from more in donated materials and
Township, Grueser cautiomid issue on Tuesday, May 2.
ing the village's books into residents on Lincoln Street ' labor.
·
compliance with state stan- about stray cats.
The windfall of donations
Council also:
"It's a tremendous opportu- dards, after a 2003 audit by
began when the Sonshine
nity for· Evan ," said Coach the Ohio Auditor of State
• Approved renewal of the Circle of the Bethany United
Chancy who spoke highly of rev.ealed a number of ,irregu- village's liability insurance Methodist Church donated
his athletic ability as a four- larities.
policy with Ohio Municipal proceeds f~om a noodle sale
from Page A1
year football player at Meigs
Council members Stephen League Self-Insurance Pool, toward the renovation project.
High School where he Houchins and Jeff Peckham with Kinder Agency as agent, Other organizations and indi victuals soon followed with do
. called Recyclemania for the received !he Archie Griffith voted against the pay at a cost of $30,655.
national· recycling campaign Sportsmanship Award. "Evan increase, and Council mem• Approved an increase in nations of their own.
"I never asked anyone for
that OU participates in, the has always been a hard work- bers Moore, Sandy Brown the mileage rate paid to
production of television com- ing dependable young man. and Jean Craig voted in employees to 40 cents per money for the project." Beegle
said.
mercials, and documentaries The special thing about him · favor.
·mile.
That level of community
. on Well spring of Albany on is his character and great per• Approved payment of
Houchins cited the need for
support,
Beegle
said,
sonality.
I
found
him
always
its work with cu lt survivors.
· The Ariel-Dater Hall
increases for pol ice officers bills in the amount of
impressed Bailey a nd jail.
When, Evan app lied for the very respectful of coaches in voting against the pay $6, 195.45 .
428 Sec. Ave. G
OH
inspectors, and helped in getNFL Films internship, he and helpful to teammates."
Bentz · was also very comsubmitted a highlights reel of
Columbus Children's Theatre Presents
plimentary
about Evan. "It
some of his football' footage
used on "Gridiron Glory "and was because of his interest
Little Red Riding Hood
Newswatch . . It co ntained that the video program was
Karr AudiologisJs
April 27, 2006 7:00 PM
. footage of high school and started here," she said .
along with
at Rejoicing Life Church
·college football games which "Everything he did he did
GN ReSound
Middleport, OH 740·992-6249
WOUB .sent him .to cover well. He always scored well
Sponsored by:
Manufachmr Representative
including Ohio State games in· the tech prep showcases.
And
he
always
took
the
time
and OU home and away
Presents
Mid-Valiey Christian School
to assist students who needed
games.
Informational
Meeting
on Hearing Loss
Admission $5.00
After NFL Fi lms reviewed help ....
·Free
Continental
Breakfast
· Tickets Available At The Door
For Evan having a chance
his highlights reel and internFUN FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY
ship application, they con- to spend the summer at the
Date: May 12, 2006
Thank yo~ for your support. .
. tt~cted Evan about coming to NFL Films headquarters
Time: 9:00a. m.· 11:00a.m.
New Jersey for an interview. associating with NFL footLocation: Wild Hcwse Cafe
Accompanied by his parents, ball players and other videog- ·
251 Wes t Main Street, Pomeroy, OH
Lynn and Uz Sh~w, E~an raphers is a dream come true.
RSVP: lly May 9. 2006
went for the llltervtew whtch "What an experience this will
594-6333 or
. .1-800·451-9806
was held in the impressive be .....and just think how this
NFL Films complex. He was will look on my resume when
Afternoon Session
I graduate;." he quipped.
accepted into the program .

Disruption of service

Meet the cand.idates night set

Commu_nity tvide vacation
Bi~le School coming ·

I

l

TB tests

.

Ariel holding auditions for
Snow White produc~ion

Hospital system receives
$1 .5 million grant

Levy

Fund ·

Jail

NFL

Driving _Miss ·Crazy
woman ~s putting on her have absolutely seen everyI just saw a report that said
make-up while she's driving. thing! They ' ve stopped their
eight out of I 0 car crashes or
That is so wrong! What is cars to eat l.unch! They can't
near-crashes .are cause.d by
. she thinking about? Those eat French fries and drive at
"distracted" drivers. Thank
aren't her colors at alii · the same time? How did they ··
goodness I had the TV on in
Doesn't stie know bright red ever get a driver's license?
the car on or I might have
'Jim
is SO over? She should be Isn't that part of the test?
missed that. It's one of those
Mullen
usi ng pastels and soft, soft, Being able to eat and drive at
stories that can change your
soft
translucent colors. They the same time? If it isn't part
life. So I called Sue to tell
should take away her license. · of the test, · it should be. It
her, but the cell phone recepNo, not her driver's license, would keep n)Jtta&amp;es like
tion was bad out there on the
interstate, so I· told her I'd ing. I couldn 't really see t~at . her beautician's license . that off the road.
I've eaten peel 'n' eat
get back to her when I was , well, tt's hard to look out the Doesn' t she read Vogue? my
eyes
window
and
keep
While she 's driving.
shrimp while driving and
pn one of the surface roads.
Hang on , what's this? The playing a video game at the
. I wonder though, do we on my GPS map at the same
traffic's slowing down to · same time, and these people
really need a study to know time.
It's a good thing I know nothing. Probably an acci· can't choke down a hamthat distracted drivers cause
accidents or. is it like one of how to touch-type or I'd dent. But there's nothing on burger without ha·v ing to
those $1 million studies that never be able to meet my the local TV station about it park their car? What's the
takes years of Yesearch to deadlines and run my yet. Let me click through the matter with them? They're
shock us with the news that errimds at the same time. But channels. Nope , nothing. disrupting traffic. They
mother's milk is OK for those hunt-and-peck typists Why are we drivers always could cause an accident.
babies to drink? Anyone who behind the wheel, they ' re a the last to know?
Uh-oh. A cop. Now that's
to
society.
menace
Wait, this looks serious. . a distraction . All those lights
drives a car h.as seen drivers
I know a lot of people There . are two cars over in and sirens pulling up behind
doing insane things ' at 60
mph. Isn't that common work out of their cars now. the disabled lane . An acci- me. The loud speaker telling
The front passenger seat is dent? Road rage? A fender- me to pull over. Twice in one.,
knowledge?
Hang on, I've got to stop their entire ·office. It' s got the bender? Has anyone been day. That's four times this ,
typing and pay attention to computer, the filing cabinet, ' hurt? Will an ambulance lie week . It's making me a ncrthe guy in front of me. He's water cooler - everything showing up in my rear view , vous wreck. When are they
driving ermtically. I think he you need to run a business mirror soon ? , No, it looks • going to do a study about
may be drunk. Or worse, he right there beside thein . The like .. . I don't believe this! that?
(Jim Mullen is the author of
may be distracted. Fiddling back seat is the conference They"ve pulled off the road
with his CD player. Or his room. I suppose the most to eat lunch! They are sitting "It Takes a Village Idiot :
DVD player. Whew! I just common business to be run behind the wheel eati.{lg in a Complicating the Simple
flew past him and I think out of a car is car insurance parked car. No wonder there Life" and "Baby 's First
is rubbernecking. What is the Tattoo. "·..You can reach hin1a1
he's OK. It looks like he was tlai ms adjuster. ·
Oh,
look
at
that'
That
matter with them ? Now ' I 'jim_mullen @myway.cam ) .
just doing some routine fiJI

'

Obituaries

The Daily Sentinel, • Page As

Rio

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentiqel.com

Okey Brady

•

:Letters to the editor are ,welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be signed,
a&amp;d include address and tele"p hnne nwn/Jer. No unsigned let·
l&lt;'.rs will be published. Leiters should be in good taste,
' a/Jdressing iss(les, !JOI personalities. Letters of thanks to organizations and individuals will no/ be accepted for_publication.

Wednesday, April26, 2006

Vfk carz 't wish ,away the war

The Daily Sentinel

.

PageA4

•

I

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~~~&amp;tSlT~ATtON

lXnl'i!WY!L!!.&amp;L.
ORDER NOW!

Payment Pl~ns Available
or present,this ad ·ror 10% discount
and register for a free monument
'

The Athens-Meigs Educational Service
Center Pi eschool registration for the 2006. 2007 school year will be held. Monday,
May 1, 2006 at Bradbury Learning Center.
'

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Appointments Are Necessary

Serving Mejgs Co. for OJ'er J years!

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2411 Jackson Ave.

Toll Free

45065 Eagle Ridge Kd.

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PageA6

OHIO

'fhe Daily Sentinel

Juvenile~ do Earth Day project
POMEROY - Litter from
the Racine sandbar was picked
up by tive Meigs County
Juveniles, supervised , by
Juvenile
Officers
Rick
Weisenmuller and Ron Vance,
Saturday as an Earth Day project
The area is a popular recreation spot for Meigs Countians
who come there to fish , camp
and swim on the privately
owned area just ·south of the
Racine Dam. Unfortunately
some leave their litter behind.
Vance said that Keith
Woods, fish and game protector, approached him about
helping with the cleanup work.
The Ohio Department · of
Tmnsportation agreed to haul
the garbage away. .
·
The juveniles collected 25
bags of trash, eight discarded
tires, bed springs, luggage, and
an odd assortment of other

.'
Wednesday, April26, 2006

Local stocks
ACt - 97.56
AEP -33.35
Akzo - 57.40
Ashland Inc. - 72
BLI -

Sears - 142.34
Wai-Mart - 45.63
Wendy's - 61.59 .
Worthington - 20.40
Dally stock .reports are

14.38

Bob Evans - 29.26
BorgWamer - 60.33
CENX - 48.92
Champion - 6.30
Channing Shops _:_ 13.72
City Holding - · 35.69
Cot - 59.35
DG -17.23
DuPont - 43.96
Federal Mogul - .35
USB- 30.39
Gannett - 53.95
, .
General Electric ---;; 33.97 ~~
GKNLY - 5.55.
..,
Harley Davidson - 51.25
JPM - 42.22
Kroger - 19.42
Submitted photo

Teenagers gather up trash at the Racine sandbar as an Earth
Day project.
·

Ltd. -

Public participation
needed for funding

r

POMEROY 1 School districts and County Boards of
Mental Retardation and
DevelopmentaL Disabilities
in Southeastern Ohio are in
the process of developing
applications for preschool
. and school age Row Through
Funds.
Thesefunds are based upon
the number of children with
disabili~ies served by the
school districts and are provided by the federal government. These funds "flow
through"
the
Stute
Department of Education to
the school districts.
Public participation is
required by the federal government. If individuals wish
to participate in this process,
they should contact their
local school district.

Local
weather

the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day's
transactions, provided by
Smith Financial Advisors of
Hilliard Lyons In Gallipolis.

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

Rio Grande inks Leesburg Fairfield's .Fouch

The Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce and
The River City Players

.

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

LocAL SCHEDULE
GALLIPOLIS - A schedule of 1.4)C0mlng college
· and high school varsity sporting e11ents involving

!&amp;ams from Gallia. Meigs and Mason counties.

"Cruis-e Into M.u rtl er"

gamea
Baaeball

Wednt~day 'a

Gallia AcadeQ'ly at Point Pleasanl, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Watertord , 5 p.m.

A Murder-Mystery Dinner Theater

Wahama at Poca, 5 p.m.

Saturday, April 29th, 2006

Meigs at Belpre, 5 p.m.

NSC Oak Hill Financial
28.15

Softball

Eastern at Waterford, 5 p .m.

Aiver Valley at Fairland, 5 p.m
Wirt County at Wahama. 5 p.m .
South Gctllia at Hannan , 5 p.m.
Meigs at Belpre. 5 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Southam, 5 p.m.
Tennis
Point Pleasant at Gallia Academy. 4:30 p.m.
Ravenswood at Wahama, 4 p.m
Pt Pleasant at Herbert Hoover, 4:30p.m.

The mystery begins at 6:30 pm
Tickets are $25 per person
Includes a delicious catered meal,
entertainment· and prizes for top sleuths .
Tickets are limited.

items. The live were rewarded vided by the Meigs County ·OVB - 25.20 ·
with pizza, chips and pop pro- Juvenile Court.
BBT- 41.71
Peoples - 30.12
Pepsico - 57.50
. Premier 16
Rockwell - · 75.65
water resources."
of
NACO. Rocky Boots - 26.04
Officer
Ridenour wants to help Conservation districts ac(oss
people in Meigs County the country help landownlearn how important it is. to ers, homeowners, and busihelp conserve water but nesses learn how to conhow easy it can be.
serve water, . from simple
~
To celebrate Stewardship lifestyle adjustments to ·
Week; the agency has spon- large scale projects. People
· Su!lscritie _totl~y • 992-2155.
')
.
.
sored a first grade coloring can contact their local discontest, fourth grade poster trict for a wealth of useful
contest, and a sixth grade information.
essay contesi.
Every person can help
Meigs Soil and Water conserve
water,
says
Conservation District is a Ridenour. It's easy, it helps
member of the National the _environment, and it usuAssociation of Conservation a\ly saves money. She asks
Districts (www.nacdnet.org), that residents JOin Meigs
which
oversees
the Soil and Water Conservation
Stewardship Week program. District during Stewardship
Stewardship Week is one of Week to tind out how.
the largest national annual
For information about
pfograms to promote con- Stewardship Week and conservation. NACO represents servation, contact the Meigs
the national 3,000 conserva- Soil and Water Conservation
tion districts, which were District at (740) 992-4282.
established . to encourage You can learn more about
resource conservation across NACO and Stewardship
the country.
Week at www.stewardshipWater is one of the most week.com. "You don't. have
pressing resource issues fac- to be .a wise old owl to
mg our country, said Krysta find out how to be water ·
Harden, Chief Executive wise," concluded Ridenour.

College Softball
Rio Grande

Softball

740-992-5005

Track and Fktld
River Valley, South Galli's, Southern at
Vinton County Quad, 4:30 p.m.
·
•. Tennis
Galli a Academy at Athens. 4:30p.m .
Huntington St. Joe' at Pt. Pleasant, 4 p.m.

Friday'• "Pirog
B$1Bball
.
Gallia Academy at Wellston. 5 p.m.
Wahama at Buffalo, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Wayrie , 7 p.m.
Aiver Valley at Sl)uth Point, 5 p.m.

Meigs at Federal Hocklflg, 5 p.m.
Southern at Vinton County, 5 p.m.
Softball
Academy at Warren, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Logan, 5 p.m.
Alver Valley at South Point, 5 p.m.

~allis

Meigs at Federal Hocking. 5 p.m.
Southern at VInton County,.S p.m.
Track and Field
Point Pleasant at Ripley. TBA
Eastem at Federal Hocking, 4:30 p.m. ·
Meigs at Federal Hocking Ogg
Invitational, 3:30p.m.
,
Tennis '
St. Marys at Wahama, 4:30 p.m.
Vinton County at Point Pleasant boys,
4:30p.m.
College Baseball
Mount Vernon' Nazarene at Rio Grande
(DH), 1 p.m.
Satyrdgy's aamQB

B11ebaU
Wirt County at Easlern, noon
River Valley at WS.rren (OH). noon
South(nnvs. Oak Hill (at Alexander). TBA
Softball
Hanrlal"l at.Southern (DH), 4 p.m.
River ValleY at Warren (DH}, noon

mLc
I I Ie·.
..

·The ·oslly 'Silntui~fi~ SubS&lt;:itqe~1'lld~y. j!~2·2~5~ , ·

p.m.'

3:30

Galtia Academy at Alexa nder, 5 p.m.
South Gallia at Wahama, 5 p.m.

.'

Proull.to be af14tt obpur'1~. t . ..

at Marietta,

Thursday'!!! ggmes
Baseball
GalHa Academy at ~ari etta , 5 p..m.
Point Pleasant at Ravenswood, 5 p.m.
South Gallia at Wahama, 5 p.m.

Buy yours today
Call

ProUd to b~ ~parto/,1
- yow life. · '. . ·

.

Federal Hocking at Southern, 5 p.m.

Riverside Golf Club
Mason, WV

24.90
54.25

.

Track and Flefd

13allla Academy at Marietta Invitational,
10
River Valley al Pikelon lnvilationai, .TBA
College Baaeblll
Mount Vernon Nazarene at Aio Grande
(DH), 1 p.m.
Coll,ge Softball •
Rio Grande at Ohio Valley, 1 p.m.

a.m.

' ..

~fu.e
.
,,

Elect

Y~-:

Marty L. Cline

·~
'

,'

'

~

TVC Standings

Meigs County

BASEBALL

Auditor

Ohio Division

The Middleport ckhid-· :I
788 North $econd Street;"

· Education
1987 Salutatorian Meigs High School
Bachelor of Business Administrat.ion Ohio University

f.•,

r

Work Experience
Certified Public Accountant, Auditor, Tax and
Financial Consultant, Independent Business Owner,
Business Management, Business Planning,
· United Way Loan Executive
·
"Let me pitt my experience m1d
t. :om1mmic:ation skuts to work for Meig s
Coumy, thank you for your support" ·

Wellston
Alexander
Belpre
Meigs
Vinton Co ,
Nels-York

''

Middltjport, OH 45}:60
· 1

1

'

'

•

.'

, .. _

.'

'

6-1
. 5-2
4-2
3-4.
1-6
1-5

llcoe;tllf/' ,e,;,atielft~. .eall.~r 4/(';o/'ld/I((Hrt-~ft.·

Fed Hock
Trimble
Southern
Miller
Eastern
VVaterford

740.992-8484 ~P304;fi1£S·2229

7-0
4-3
4-4
3-3
3-4
0-7

SOFTBALL

Before Your
C8 HWTH
PROJEO
•

Ohio Division

Hocking Division

, ~,.ad

THIS
BROCH
.

.

(

1-304-865-4205 •

.

,

'

k"'1 "'

·.-

'
'

.,.-

'

'

www.c8healthprojec,.org

.
\~

Scorellne (5 p :m-'1

a.m.)

.Ae;d

th~ broohur~ :n total. •
..

(Meigs Co.)

Pax - 1-740.446-3008

-~

· E~mall-: sports@mydailysentlnel.com

If you're a marr1e0/dlwrced
nrir\n your marriage ·
i ...:a,l'u•"' or divorce decree.
'

For more information, please visit

CoNrAcrUs
· or 992-5287

•

417 Grand Pari&lt; Drive, Vienna, WV 261.05

7-0
6- 1
3-4
3-5
2-5
1-7

1-740-446-2342 ext 33

C8 HEALTH
........... -~~. ~ ....... d~~~lnll-~

'

OVP

\;$;;

BROOK.MAR, INC.

.

' .

'

1-800-551 -7658

';,./:

A water bill with 'your na,rne .
arlc;fJ)fiysicttl address is ONE ·
f~,. oJJtl~ b~st ~~ys· to 'd~cument ·.
, water e.ol')sumptlon. ,'

Pick one up today at a senior
center, library, or PAR MAR Store
in the affected ,,water districts only.

Conducted by:

.; Trimble
· Waterford
Fed Hock
Southern
Miller
Eastern

brochure, "·

~ ~,,. !-w~:.

I,I~C)JI:CT

6-1 .
5-2 •
4-3
3-4
2,4
0-6

Wellston
Vinton Co
Meigs
Alexander
Belpre
Nels-York

•••

Wizards

$Q.Otl&amp;..Sl~ff

·Brad Sl:lerman, Sports Editor
(740) 446-2342. ext. 33
bshe rman@ rcydailylribu ne.com

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer

I

(740) 446-2342 , ext 23
bw·alters@mydaitytribune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342. ext. 33
Ierum @ niyd_a11yregister.com

l----'--

father, Kevin, is also her basketball coach.
Fouch was a three-sport
performer for Fairfield, having played in soccer and softbaJI as well as basketball. In
soccer, ~he was part of the
inaugural girls soccer team
and recorded the first save in
school history. In softball ,
she is an outstanding pitcher
and landed on the All-

Southern Hills League team
last year as a junior as well as
being named to the AllDistrict 14 team.
In basketball, the 5- 11 forward was an Al\-SHL and district 14 performer this past
season while leading her team
in rebounding. She was also
second in the league in
rebounding. Fairfield won
two consecutive sectional

•

11 even

1ers
BY ToM

WtTHERs

ASSOCIATE'O PRESS

CLEVELAND
Gilbert Arenas scored 30
points, Antawn Jamison
added · 21
and the
Washington Wizard s bottled up LeBron James on
Tuesday night to down
the Cleveland Cavaliers
89-84, evening · their
Eastern
Conference
senes at one game
apiece.
Caron• Butler added 21
points ·
and
was
Washington's primary
defender on James, who
recorded a triple-double
in his playoff debut but
played like a mere mortal
in !lis second postseason
game as a pro. ·
James finished with 26
points on 7-of-25 shooting, matched his career
high with I 0 turnovers
and made some mental
err6rs, including a costly
one late when he made an
out-of-bounds save under
his own basket that was
picked off by Arenas for .
an easy layup.
The Wizards, who
· returned to Washington
after· Game 1, came up
with all the right adjustments
to·
snap
Cleveland 's
12-game
\¥inning streak at home.
The best-of-seven serie s
shifts to the Verizon
Center for Game 3 Friday
AP photo night
Washington Wizards' Brendan Haywood (33) looks for help as Cleveland Cavaliers' Zydrunas
Drew Gooden scored
llgauskas (11), from Lithuania, applies defensive pressure in the second quarter of Game 2 of
Please see Wizards, B&amp;
an NBA basketball first-round playoff series Tuesday in Cleveland.
·

NFL suspends ·Ricky Williams -for 2006 season
STEVEN WtNE
AssoctATEO PRESS

BY

:t'

Fouch

brings a good
basketba\1
acumen , to
the Rio program
as
might
be
expected ·,
due .to the
fact that she
is the daughter • of a
coach. Her

·~ PLAYOFFS

Hocking Division

,, 1',

Wednesday ... Mostly
sunny. Cooler with highs in
the lower 60s. North winds 5
to 10 mph. .
Wednesday night..Mostly
clear. Lows around 40. North
wjnds 5 to I 0 mph.
Thursday ... Mostly sunny.
Highs in .the upper 60s ..
Northwest winds.S to 10 mph.
Thursday nighLPartly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
40s. North winds 5 to I0
mph.
Friday
and
Friday
nighLMostly clear. Highs in
the mid 60s. Lows in the
lower .40s.
Saturday ... Partly cloudy
with a 30 percent chance of ·
showers. Highs . in the mid
60s.
Saturday night... Part! y
cloudy with a 50 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the mid 40s.
·
Sunday and Sunday
night...Mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the mid
60s. Lows in the upper 40s.
Chan~e of rain 50 percent.
Monday ... Mostly cloudy
- with a 40 percent chance. of
showers. Highs in the _upper
60s.
Monday night...Mostl y
cloudy. Lows in the upper
40s.

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
women 's basketball program
has signed its' third recruit for
the 2006-07 season as
Leesburg Fairfield High
School's Allyson Fouch to a
national letter of intent.
Fouch, who prefers Ally,

r

'

.

BY MARK WILLIAMS

presents

·MSWCD calls for residents to be 'water wise'
POMEROY - The Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation
District (MSWCD) wants to
show you how to be water
wise, during its annual Soil
and Water Stewardship
Week celebration.
The National Association
of Conservation Districts
(NACO) has proclaimed
April 30 to May 7, 2006 as
Stewardship Week, with the
theme Water Wise.
''Many ' of us may take
our water supplies for
gra,nted. But a large network' of private and government ·agencies help protect,
treat, and deliver our
water,"
said
·Jenny
Ridenour, educatioal coordinator for MSWCD. "In the
United States, over 53,000
community water treatment
systems deliver drinking
water to millions of people.
Over · I 3,000,000 private
wells provide water to families
and
businesses:
Agriculture, electric power
· generation, industry, and
transwrtation all depend oli

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

. .
MIAMI
_.. Miamt
D&lt;:lphms runntng back Rtcky
Wtlliams was suspended for
the 2006 season ~y the NFL
on Tuesday for vtolatmg the
league's substance abuse policy for the fourth time.
The .league announced the
suspenSion after Williams'
appeal of his latest positive
drug test was denied .
Williams met with NFL
counsel Jeff Pash on April I0
in an attempt to have the

league overturn the test.
"I'm disappointed with the
1
decision. but I respect it,"
Williams said in· a statement
· released by the team . "I'm
proud of my association with
the National Football League
d k f · ._.
·
an 1oo orwar':' to retu~~ung
to the Dolphms m 2007
- .
, - .
.. .
WI I!tams prevtous p_ostttve
tests were for manJuana,
whtch he acknowledged
u&gt;i'ng. The latest test apparently involved a drug other
than marijuana.
Williams had been partici-

pating in the offseason train- of the 2005 season for his
ing program at the Dolphins' · third violation of the drug
complex and was there work- program. then ran for 743
ing out shortly before the yards and averaged 4.4 yards
league announced its deci- a carry while sharing playing
sion.
time with rookie Ronnie
The 1998 Heisman Trophy Brown.
. .
winner · at Texas and '2002
News that Will tams had
NFL , rushing champion, failed another drug test surWilliams retired and sat out . faced · tn February; whtle he
.
d'
.
·the 2004 season then was m 1n Ia studymg yoga
returned last year tq play for and holistic medicine.
new Miami . coach Nick
Saban · repeate,dly has
Saban.
prat sed Wtlltams conduct
Williams ser_ved a four· game suspension at the start Please'tpe Williams, B&amp;

titles and tinished runner-up .
in the SHL in each of the last
two seasons.
FouC'h is also a -very civicminded individual, coaching
little league basketball and is
active in church and teaches
in Vacation Bible SchooL
Her academic exploits
include Students Against
Please see Rio, .B6

Reds take
another
fromNats
BY HoWARD FENDRICH
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON - Edwin
Encarnacion ·drove in four
runs, and the Cincinnati Reds
took advantage of Billy
Traber 's wildness to take an
early lead TUesday night, then
held on for a 6-5 victory over
the·Washington Nationals.
The Reds have won six of
their last seven to improve to
14-7, the first time they've
been s,even games over .500
since July 4, 2004.
Washington, meanwhile,
dropped to 1-6 at home.
Traber (1-1) lasted onJy 1 1-3
innings, and the NationaJs had
to go deep into their .bullpen,
using tive relievers . .
Cincinnati starter Dave.
Williams (1-2) wasn't brilliant
but was good enough for the
win, aJiowin'g four runs and
nine hits in tive-plus innings.
He gave up rookie Ryan ·
Zimmerman's two-run homer
in the second . and Alfonso
Soriano's solo shot in the fifth.
Traber faced 11 batters, and
seven reached base - four
hits, two walks and a hit bats~
man. A ni~ht after scoring·
three first-mning runs off
Livan Hernandez, the Reds
scored four in the opening
frame off Traber, who walked
in a run and gave up
Encarnacion's two-run single
and Brandon Phillips' sacritice fly.
.Traber began the .second by
walking Williams, drawing
some boos. After Felipe LOpez
followed by singling to center,
Traqer was removed.
It · was a big falloff from
Traber-'s debut with the
Nationals last week, when he
~av.e up ~wo hits ~n 5 2~3
tnnt ngs tn a wm over
Philadelphia. That was the
lefty 's first start in the majors
in more than 2 1/2 years; he
missed all of 2004 after having reconstructive elbow.
surgery
the
previous
September.
The Reds went up 6-2 in tile
fifth on Encarnacion's tworun
double off Felix
Rodriguez. Left fielder
Soriano appeared to misjudge
the ba\1, moving fo rward
before having to l:&gt;ackpedal,
Please see Reds; B&amp;

Earnhardt will honor father by driving replica car
JENNA fRYER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

BY

s ine~ his 2001
de:j,th.
· "The
car
looks good, it's
a cool way to
honor
mr,
d a d , '
Earnhardt said
Tuesday. "It's
going to be a
lot of fun to be
Earnhardt behind
the
wheel of that
car. and see the reaction it
gets from other drive,rs on the
track."
The tribute is part of a larger salu1e at Dale Earnhardt
Inc. , which is celebrating
Earnhardt 's Thursday night
inducti on- ' into
the
Motorsports Hall of fame, his
overall accomplishments at
Talladega and hi s 55th birthtlay. which would have been
Saturday.

CHARLOTTE, N.C .
One object in any NASCAR
driver's rearview mirror that
may have appeared closer
thim it actually was: Dale
Earnhardt's · black · No. 3
Chevrolet.
Especially
if
"T he
Intimidator~ was gain ing.
· Gentlemen, sta11 your trembling. There's an Earnhardt
back in black.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. will
mark his late father' s birtl1day
this weekend at Talladega
Superspeedway by driving a
likeness of the No. 3 car• his
father made famous.
Junior's trademark red
Chevy will be · painted · pre.
.
AP phOIO (Jominantly black; w1th white
lettering and silver and red
In this phOto provided by HHP Images Teresa Earnhardt stands with all Dale-Earnhardt lnc.cars stripes. Junior wil\ still use
· at the team 's headquarters in Mooresvi lle, N.C . Tuesday. Dale Earnhardt Jr. will mark his late his No.8 - his father :s No. 3 ·
father' s 55th bi'rthday by driving an all-black car this weekend at Talladega Superspeedway. The has not been on the track Please see Earnhardt. Bfi
car is a replica of the famea No. 3 Dale Earnhardt drove to 10 Talladega wins .
·
!

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.

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�r

{[rtbune- Sentinel - 1\_e

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

Wednesd~y. April 26, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

www.mydallysentinel.com

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83 .

t~ter

CLASSIFIED

It

Lms&amp;
ACREAGE
1 1/2 acre of land all level on
Pleasant R1dge Rod $5,000
{304 )675·4893 or {304)593·
3707

Word Ads

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

*POLICIES*
Ohio Valley

Publishing reserves
the right to ed1t,

reject or can.;el any
ad at any time.
)-Errors Must B
sported on the firs
ay of publication an
he Tribune-Sentinel
eglster
will
b

espons1ble for n
ore than the cost o
he space occuple
y the error and onl
he first Insertion. W
hall not be liable to

ny loss or expens
hat result&amp; from th
ubllcalion or omls
ion of an advert\
nt Corrections wll
made In the firS
allable edition

.,Box number ads ar
lways confidential.
Current rate car

\'\'\ (1\ "\f I \ II '\I"

r

ANNouNCEMENTS

• All ads must be prepaid'

rI

Spaniel

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

I'

GIVEAWAY
Type

1,•10-IIELP-•W.-ANJID
_ _.

DOQ

PHYSICAL &amp;
OCCUPAnONAL
THERAPY &amp; SPEECH
PATHOLOGY STAFF
POSmONS

t

(')

0

r
r

3 fam1ly, 1/4 m1les SA 218,
Fn·Sat Vera Bradley, apph·
Real
Estat
All
ances name brand clothes,
dvertlsements ar
I 111 '111\\1 1 ' I
2 male red Heeler pups 6 alls1zes
ubject to tho Fodera
mos &amp;. 2 mos 1 2 orange
' lin I( 1'
Couch wlmatch cha1r Zemth
air Housing Act o
male k1Hens, (740)742-2380
TV,
glass
top
coffee
table,
968.
lamps, m•sc clothmg , tools,
HELP WANIED
Adult Male Box Face Black
sew1ng machme w/table,
This
newspape
Lab Good Natured 740slates
(for
patntmg)
coopts only hal
742·2860
Charcoal gnU, vanous other
$$ DELIVEA $$
anted ads meetln
Yellow Book
1nterestmg Items 102 F1rst
Beagle dog to good home
OE standards.
Avenue (rear), Apnl 28thTelephone Books
Call (740)446 9251
29th, a 30am·3 ,00pm '
·work own hours
We will not knowing
'must be 16 yrs or older
Free
lo
good
home
m1xed
Garage Sale 9 00-5 00 ' must have valid license &amp;
y accept any adver
breed pupp1es black/white Fnday &amp; Saturday Roush
laement in vlolatlo
Insured vehiCle
med1um s1ze Call (740)446 Lane Cheshire
I tho law.
1·800 247 4"(0a
6233
www sddsmc com
Garage Sale Multiple fam•lles 5/5106-5/6/0B 9am·
100 WORKERS NEEOED
5pm 1631 Cora M1U Ad
Assemble crafts,
Furniture, ant1ques appli 4x4'o For Sale .............................................. 725
wood 1tems
ances, Home lntertor dishAnnouncement ••..•• .•..••...•...•.•...•••..•.•........... 030
To $480/Wk
es etc
Antiques... .. .......... ..................... ........ .. 530
Matenals prov1ded
Apartments lor Rent ................................... 440
4
Free Inform ation pkg 24Hr
YAKI) SAIEAuctiQn and Flea Market ............................. 080
BOH2a·4649
.
PoMEROY/MiDDLE
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ........................ 76Q
Auto Repair................ . ............. .......... . ... 770
An Excellent way to earn
Autos lor S~le .............................................. 7t0
April 28-29, 9 00 am to 7 00 money The New Avon
Boats &amp; Motors tor Sale ............................. 750
pm Pomeroy P1ke Road Call Manlyn 304--682·2645
Building Supplies . .. •............................ 550
Gray House bes•de H1gh
AVONI AU Areasl To Buy or
Business and Buildings ............................ 340
School
Sell
Sh1rley Spears, 304Business Opportunity ......................... ........ 21CI
B1g Garage Sale K1tchen , &amp; 675· 1429
Business Training........... ...................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
........•..••.• ,...•• 790
bath 1tems pnnter scan ner
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
knickknacks and many more
Carda or Thanks ... •.••.•........•.•••.•• ..•....•..•.,010
household Items all must
Child/Elderly Care .................................... 190
Go Very low pr•ces-··8-5
ElectricaURelrigeratlon ....................... ..... 840
each day···Apr~l 26 27·2a
Equipment lor Rent ... ..................... ............. 480
365 ~0 Sk•nner Ad
off of
Excavating.... .. ........................ ., ................. 830
Flatwood
Farm Equipment . . . ............. ... . ..... ...... .. 610
' NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
B1g Yard Sale' Fn 28th &amp;
Farm a lor Rent ............................................430
' FULl TIME CLASSES
Sat 29th, HyseiiRun Road
• COL TRAIN ING
Farms lor Sale ..: .......................................... 330
' FINANCING AVAILABLE
3rd Dnveway Past Church
For Lease.
•..............:....... .. ... . ......... .. .. 490
' .DB PlACEMENT
on Left
Lots of Kids
For Sale...... .. .. ................................. . . .585
• ENROl liNG NOW
For Sale or Trade ....................................... 590
Clothes. Large Baby Items
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ................................. 580
Womens Clothes

GIVEAWAY

"'l='______...,

~~-------.,
110
1110
HmJ&gt; WANrnD
1
•

Holzer 8enlor Cere
Center
It you are Interested 1n work·
1ng 1n a nurs10g fac•hty who
focuses on team work and
res1dent care we have hmfted open1ngs for the lollowmg
positiOns
STNA
Dietary Aide

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Please stop by and see us at
380 Colonial Onve Bidwell,
OhiO or g1ve Barb Peterson,
Director
of
Human
call
at
Resou rces
a
(740)446·5001

1'"

Furnished Rooms .........................-......•... .... 450

Insurance .................................................... , 130
Lawn &amp; Gardon Equlpment ........................ 660
Llvestock ...................................................... 630
Lost and Found ...........................................
Lola &amp; Acreaga .......................................... .. 350
Miaceilaneoua ....................................... ....... 170
Mlaceilaneoua Merchendlae ....................... 54CI
Mobile Home Repair..... :..............................880
Mobile Home• for Rant ............................... 420
Mobile Home• for Sale................................ 320

Clothes, Oak Pedestal
Table, lawn furniture, 30 mch
TV 72 Pike St Sayre Res
Hartford Apnl 29th Only
Wed Thurs and Frl , Multi
Behind Masonic
Famlly
Lodge 1n Racme Lots of
clothlng··smail boys to
Mov1es,
women's plus
C D s Treadmill, Toys ~ 98,2
Dodge , lots of m1sc

oeo

Money ta Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycle• &amp; 4 WhHiera .......................... 740
Muoicallnetrumenta ................................... 570

Pereonala ..................................................... 005
Pete far S.le ................................................ 580

Aucllon: Modular House
and Tools &amp; EQu tpment.
Buckeye
Hills
Career
Center, R1o Grande, Ohio.
T&amp;E, fa rm tractors 11t
11 ooa m, House at 12 oo
May 6 2006
Noon on
740 245·5334

w~
TO BUY

Plumbing &amp; Heating .................................... ~0
Profllllonalllarvlcal ................................. 230

R•dlo 1 TV • Cl Rep•lr ............................... 180
Ileal Ellate Wantad ..................................... 380
SChool• lnatructlon ..................................... 150
S..d, Pl•nt &amp; Fertlllzer .................. ,........... l50
81tuallone Wanted ....................................... 120

1p1oe for Aen1 ............................................. 480
Sporting Ooode ....................................... ,,,,l20

IUV'• far Sale .............................................. 720
Truck• for 1111 ••• ,........................................ 715

Upholaltry ......................... .:......................... 870
vane For late............................................... 730

W•ntad to luy ............................................. oeo

.

I buy Junk Oaro {304)7735004
1 will bUy Juok .QJa Call

-

'

- · - - - - . - - - --··-

Part Time
Interested Cand1dates
apply at
380 Coloma! Dnve
Bidwell, OH 45614
or call
Teresa Wilson or
Trlsh Shtelds at
{740)446·5001
For more Information or to
schedule an mtervlew

WYTHEVILLE, VA

1-800-334-1203
www alllanoetrilctonraller com

Desk Clerk pos1t1on open
1mmed1ateiY Profess•onal
attitude &amp; friendly personalt ty a must Please apply In
person at Holiday Inn,
Gallipolis
NO PHONE
CALLS PLEASE

HELP WANJ1iD

Insurance Agency lookmg
for a motiVated, licensed, or
Willing to become licensed,
Customer Serv1ce Rep.
Salary and beneilts, depen~
dant
on
experience
Interested applicants please
submit resume to The Oa•ly
Sentinel, PO Box 729 6,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Nurs1ng Ass1stant Classes
beginning May 9, 2006 11
you enjoy elderly people and
want to become a member
of our health care team,
please slop by Rockspnngs
Rehabilitation center at
36759 Rockspnngs Road,
Pomeroy, Oh10 45769 and 1111
out an apphcat1on for the
classes
Extend1care
Health Serv•ces, Inc IS
equal opportunity employer
that encourages workplace
diverSity M/F ON
Overbrook Center IS currer:~t­
ly accepting applicatiOns for
AN's 6 and 12 hour shifts
available
Competitive
wages and benefits package
ava1lable
All mterested
appliCants should p1ck up
an applicant at 333 Page
Street Middleport. OH For
addlt1onal
1nformat10n
please contact Hollie at
(7401992·6472 EOE
Overbrook Reh abllil811on
Center IS currently accepting
applications for a dietary
cook Part ttme positions
available
All interested
1
applicants should plck up an
appllcat•on at 333 Page
Street, Mkjdiepor1, OH

•

Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center 18 currently accepting
applications for LPN's
Equal Opportunity
Avallabje shifts are 7A·7P
Employer
and 7P-7A All Interested
appl1cants should pick up an
application at 333 Page
Housekeeping Supervisor
Street. Middleport OH For
Healthcare Services Group, further lnformatioh, please
Inc Is looking for a career contact ~oll i e at (740)992·
onented, aggressiYS hands· 8472 EOE
on manager In the Marietta
area As the leading provider
Part time Dental Assistant &amp;
ot housekeeping and laun·
Part time Receptionist
dry services to the long term
Please send resume to CL.A
care Industry we are seekc/o Gallipolis
Ing lndlviduale who wil l Bo•
Tribuna, PO Box 469
effectively represent our
Galllpolla, OH 45831.
company and manage our
on-tlte operatlone.
provida a competitive ulary, Pan time pooltlon to Manega
paid training and bonollto Country Homae rental com·
p•okagt. Plllei tax retume munil'y In Shada Area·
lncludoo a houoa to live ln.
to: H14·~77.Qt2&amp;
Send r11ume to Country
- - - - - - - - - Homao, PO Box 1033
Logan, Ohio 43138 .
'
Paid Training
lndlvlduolo willing to train lor
clerical or driving poeltlone Parts
Clerk
wanted
Mull be AGE 55 OA OVEA Computer experience and
and meet ellglblltty require· knowledge of farm equip·
manta Additional training mant Send resume to CLA
poslllono available c,u the Bo• ill c/o Gallipolis
Senior Employment Canter" Tribuna, PO Box 469.
(886)734·230 1. Gallipolis, OH 45831

Direct
Sales
Fantastic
Opportunity,
501&lt;
no
~Firoblem Must be Motivated
and Self Starter Call Ken
(740)992·7440
LOOKING FOR
A COMFORTABLE
CAREER?
The leading bedding retailer
m the trt·etate Mattress
Warehouse Is seeking a
full·tlmo SALES A6SOCI·
ATE to work In our new
Galllpolle, OH location
Prevlcn.tl r1t11l and/or com·
mlaalon 11111 u:perltnce a
pluo, but no1 raqulrod Saloo
Auoelatea art r"pontlblt
lor porlormii'Q aoill ralotod
dutloo whllo aalllng mor·
chandllt end product• to
.lndlvlduolo In 1 otora ahoW'
room Medical, dental 111d
li fe Insurances available
alter 90 days Plaaee email
resume to lpbaOojgagon.

License plate fmme from old lhebest cpm or fax to 304·
EOE
Blaennar auto car sales. 588·4442 Attn HA
M!FIDN
17 40)949·8900

---- -

Must have mdependent
contracto r's license

TRAINING CENTERS

Yard Sale· Oalllpolla ....................................072
Yard 8ale-Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074
lfard Sai•PI. Pl••••nt ................................ 078

,I

Holzer Sen1or Care Center
IS currently seeking
a L1censed BeautiCian

ALLIANCE

(740)388·9303.

'
. .

Absolute Top Dollar U S
Sliver and Gold Colno,
Prooiaoto, Gold Alngo, Pro193e
US
Currency,
Solllalro Dlamonclo· M T.S
Coin Snap, t51 Second
Avsnuo Galllpollo, 740-448·
2842.

Equal Oppqrtunlty Employer

TRACTOR· TRAILER

Buy· Farm 8uppilee ................. 820
Wanted To Do.,............................................ 180
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
Wanted to

--~----

An eKcellent opportunl1y for
full andlor pa.rt ttme Phys1cal
Therapists,
Physical
Therapist
Assistants,
OccupatiOnal Therapist aOd
ASSIStants and Speech
Patholog•sts. due to eKpan slon of serv!ces 1nto
So~.:~theast Oh1o In addition,
we ha'/8 pos•t1ons available
In one of our freestanding
Outpatient
Rehab
&amp;
Diagnostic Center, as well
as our Hosp11a1and Nursing
Home contract facilities
EKcellent salary and bene·
fltS Fringe benefits Include
hohday and vacation pay,
401(k) p~o17am, health and
ltfe Insurance, paid annual
licensure fees, eemmar
expense acoount, a sign on

FOUND Leon area Cattle
Concealed P1stol Class ldent1fy pay damages &amp;
Ohoo WV, May 13, 2006 board by 5/2/06 {614) 302·
$75 00
9 OOam VFW 1a73
Mason WV Ph (740)843LOST 2 ca lves Red 300 to
5555,
350 lbs 1n Letart/Board
Fight the coet of gas' Car Church Ad area (304)695pool from Pomeroy to 3442
Gall1pohs (Bam-5pm)
I
dnve, you nde split gas
YARDSAJ.F.
Smokers welcome
Call
Melissa (740)446-2342 eKt
14
or
YARD SALE·
mvancooney9043 @ct:ta..r:
GALLIPOLIS
lorJ]jl

General Haullng ........................................... 850
' Giveaway ................................................... 040
Happy Ads...... .. .............. . . ..................... oso
Hoy &amp; Grain .................................................640
Help Wanted ................................................ 110
Home Improvements.. .... .. ........................ 81 0
Homes for Sale ....................., ...................... 310
Household Goods ....................................... 510
Houaea lor Rent .................................. ........ 41 0
In r,.1emorlam ................................................ o20

=

POLICIES· Ohla Valley Publllhing re•ervee tf'l right to MH, rt~ject, or cancel any ad .. 1n~ time. Error'* mu.t bt re~rt~d an the flrwt
Trlbu~nei-Regllter will btl r. .pon•lble tor no mDI"e tl\en the CO*t of ltlt apace occupltd by the IIITor •nd only the tlr•t Insertion
1ny toea or expenH that reiUita from tl)e publlclltlon or omtulon of en •dvertlHment. Co"""'lon will be m11de In the flret av•llable edlllon
al'!l alwaya confidentia l. • Current rile card appiiH. • All,.., Ht.le actvertiHmenta eN •ub)ect lo the FedMal Fair Housing Act at 1968
accept• only help wanted ed• meeting EOE atan&lt;t,lrdf. We will not knowingly ecc.pt any advertl1lng In violation of the law

• Start Your Ad1 With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avold.Abbrevl•tlonl
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 D•v•

w.

w•

bonus will be considered
Hours sre Mon·Frt with NO
after hours call Fax resume
to (740)687·2490 or mall to
Oh10 Rehab &amp; Diagnostic
Center, 2660 Kull Road,
Lancaster, Ohio 43130, attn
Jsne Schooley

POSTAL JOBS
$15 67·$21 9Blhr , now hlr1ng For application and free
governement job , tnfo, call
Amencan AssoC. of &amp;:"abor 1·
9t3-599·6042, 24/hrs emp

Experience preferred
Apply m person
Thomas Do· It Center,
At 2 ~yp• a~s

Senior FacUlties &amp;
Purchasing Officer
Grow1ng $1 bilhon co mmunity bank has a full-lime
career opporlun1ty 1n our
Jackson
headquarters
Responsible for plannmg
B C QUIS t t l o n
construction/renovation and
ma1ntenance of all facilities
and bank1ng related eqUIP·
ment
Superv•ses,
Maintenance, Purchasmg
and Custod•al superv•sors
and staft Excellent com mumcatlons and orgamzatiOnal
skills are reqUired Four-year
college degree plus mm1·
mum of l1ve years faCilities
construcl1on antJ/or pur·
management
chasmg
required, In banking pre
fer.red
Proficiency In
Microsoft Word, Excel and
Power Point
El(cellent
salary and benefits, mcludmg health/life Insurance, and
proflt-shanng/401(k) Preemployment drug lasting
required Send resume and
salary requirements to Oak
Hill Banks, Attn Human
Resources, PO Box 647,
Jackson, OH 45640. Please
reference Job Code lt57-4E
EOE, M/FION
SHOWyPUR

pAmiOIJ8M
RaiQe man~ for the
NRA and a Major
Polillcal Partyl
Up to $8/hour

L.,li..
io-IIELP-•W•A•N'IED-_.11

r

MONEY

TO LoAN

The C tty of Point Pleasant 1s IJIII•IIIIIIIIIIIIII~-~~~~~
accepting applicatiOns for
**NOTI~E1r*
lifeguards Current lifeguard
and CPR certllica__Mn 1s
arrow Smart Contac
reqUired
Appllcallons are
he OhiO DIVISton 0
EWaiJable at City Hall 400
InstitutiOn'
V1and Street, Point Pleasant
ff1ce of Consume
or for students of PPHS, at
Ha1rs BEFORE you raf1
Point Pleasant Htgh School
ance your home o
Applications
must
be
ta1n a loan BEWAR
returned to the C1ty no later
f requests for any larg
than 4 00 pm Wednesday
dvance paymen ts o
May 12
ees or msurance Cal
he Off1ce ol Consume
Equal Opportunity Employer
t1a1rs toll free at 1-866
6..()()()3 to team 11 th
Tired of work1ng all holtortgage broker o
days? Tired of workmg 12
ender
IS
proper!
hour shirts? Come home
l'ensed (This Is a publi
and Join us at Med• Home
Heelthl Opening for a PAN
RN and/or full t1me AN poSIlion EOE Full time posttlons
mcludes Oenef1t package,
401K, and sign on bonus
J'ROI'ESSIONAL
$2,000 Call Jud1e Reese,
SERVICE'S
RN, C, Cllmcal Manager, at
(740)441-1779 or 1~800TURNED DOWN ON
fi4:il81ilo-6;;;3;;34~~---..., SOCIAL SECURrrY ISSI7
ScHooLS
No Fee Unless We Win•
INsm.ucnON
1·868·582-3345
1·--iiiliiliiiiliiiiliiiiii_.l
HI \I I ._, , \II
=i~;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,
Gallipolis Career College
HOMES
(Careers Close To Home)
~SALE
Call Todayl740·446-4387, "'---··viiiii~iiiiiii--'·
1·8()()-214-0452
"
wwwgatltpollacareercollegecom
112 Pleasant Street, Po.nt
. Ac&lt;&gt;eclll&amp;c ::,;,p;;,d,;Acc redltlog Pleasant, wv (304(675·
1
m
t Colleges
;~~~t.li~~=-=~ 4034 or {304)675·041a 3
bedroom, 1 1/2bath, fam1ly
MlicEu.ANF..ous room, dlnmg room, new windows, ne'&lt;" AC , new water
tank, fenced yard
LennoK 'Heat Pump/AC
$750 00 Call to see work 1900 sq It 3bd 2ba home
mg
Ready for you to w1th basement s1ts on 3
Haui/Remstall May1sl 740- acres , Jt,!St off of Rt 7,
Chester Township, Eastern
949·2445 9 AM-9 OOPM
School D1stnct Also regisMower lor Sale •Troy Bit - tered quarter horses for
6HP·26 ~-3
speed-high sale Call (740)985·4321
wheels 19~ , 3 5 HP Mower, atter6pm
Motor Lift 4 5 Cycllnder wit 0
ft reach, 12 HP Wheel 20 acre farm with 2500Sq ft
Horse w/36• Tiller 740-992- custom 1999, 2 story home
2201
located between Rio Grande
and Jackson, 3-4BR, den, 3
Richmond Tickets tor Sale
lull bath w1th master JBCuzzl,
2 Busch and 2 Cup T•ckets
huge wrap-around porch,
Face Value·$250 00
Celt
large kttchen w1th Island, 3
74D-992-6634
car garage foundation ready
to frame, private sett1ng with
WANIED
great hUnting, $234,900
Do
(740\384·5182

r

1150

rm

r.

I'

7

To

Care tor your loved one 1n
my home Open1ng for i
lady
Expenenced
Call
(740)38B·Q11 a

2br House 1n Rlp ley,wfcarpN t New carpet windows,
$59,000
roof &amp; pa1nt
(304)532 3447 or (304)3723447

Complete yard work, garden
til bng and srn.all home repa1r _3_8_0-._2_B_a_f_lf_ep-la_c_e_,-4-0-x60
20 years exp Call (740) 446• barn, a flat acres. Pleasant
Valley Ad R1o Grande
3682
Computer Troubleshoot &amp; $120,000 {740)709·1 166
Repair Cell (~ 40)992 . 2395 3BA 2 Caf'auached Garage

lniO Ci!JIDIEC·~\' I~n
•

~

t 06 acres
. (304)675·6331

$60,000

~------

3BR, 2ba, LA, FA wlwood
burner, gas furnace, new
CA, attaChed 2-car garage
w/posslble upstatrs apar\~
ment plus another attached
1·car
garage/workshop,
large outbulld1ng, above·
ground pool, 3 acres m/1
Askmg $110,000 Near Rio
Personal Care for elderly Grande (740)245·0372
couple All shifts In couple's
home Call 740~992·7180
Between a·ooP -e OOP

Child Care provided by education major! Mommy of G
year ofd lov1ng, Christian
envlroment,
educat•onal
act•vllles and wholesome
n)eais provided Call Apnl
740·992·7920 to find out
morel

Benefits

4 year old Colonial on 3
acres, apprOx 1,900 aq. tt 3
bdr, 2 bathe, 2 car QB!rage,
master bdr Ia 28x24 with a
(acuzzl tub
$125,000
(740)448·7029
7BR !BA, Fbracloaura, 0111y
$18,000 For listing• call
800·3i1-e228 ext F2e4.

a

Tri·SIIto area daalerohlp In
need ol qualllltd ATV &amp;
Motorcycle Mechanlea To
be considered Pleaea send
raaume &amp; references to
4367 State Aoule 160.
Gslllpollo, Ohio 46631

I

'

'

AJOB
ORA
NEW CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFI6DS

AHontlonl
Looal company offorlng ' NO
DOWN PAYMENr' pro·
gr1m1 lor you to buy your
home lnattad ol ranting
• 100% financing
• L111 than perfect credit
accepted
• Payment could be the
same 11 rent
Mortgage
Locators
{7401367·0000

thla newspaper are
available on an equal

f

3 bedroom, cia nice clean
house, small yard, QUiet
street, good neighborhood,
$475
plus
(740)843-5264

deposit ,

County Realty
Call Paul 3BR 2 1/2 bath unlurn
Hemann (304)736-0710 or $600 per mo Oep req ref
(304)733 9000
Good location (740)446·
3667
Gallipolis Ferry 2br 1 bath ,
large level lot, fenced yard, 4 bedroom house, 2nd Ave
garage and more A must Galhpohs Ohio Call for
see at $45,500 call Paul Tri- details (740}441·0194 or
County Realty (304 )736· (740)441-1 184
0710 (304)733·9000
1n
Syracuse,
4br
Maple
Street
Mason
Perfect location 4 bedroom
walk 1n closet, 2 full bath , 2
lots w/privacy tence Great
Ne•ghborhood
$69,000
(304}n3-5268

Newly remodeled 3 or 4
bedrooms, central a1r, full
basement hardwood floors,
detached garage, large COV·
ered pat1o, fenced back
yard, close to schools , Point
$69,500
Pleasant
(740)709 13B2
No
Down
Payment
Requ1red Owner sellmg two
hqmes m Gallipolis Easy
Qualifying Payment as low
as $400 (740)446·2422

r

APARI'MENI'S
FOR

RENT

"'---------'
~ and 2 bedroom apartments, fum1shed and unfurmshed , secunty depos•t
reqUired , no pels, 740-9922218
1 bedroom apt Stove,
refndg, water, sewer trash
p~1d Porter OH (740)367,
7015 '
1 BR aptlcabm all utilities
peld Call (740)441-0117

lion Bnck, 3 bdr 2 bath
attached Garage
Many
extras Preler older couple
Ref, Deposit, No Pets
(304)675·5162

I

r

Twm R1vers Tower 1s accept~
lng applications for waiting
list for Hud·subs1zed 1- br,
apartment, ca ll 675-6679
EHO

1.

fUR

r

I

i

r

~=

...r_~_RI'IN_G_..I r

2 Bdrm 14M70 Mobile Home
$4.500 Or Best Offer
{304)675·8323 evenings 6·9

on your home delivered
'subscription!

••
•••
••
•

~ 999 Harley Fat Boy 9 400
n'11les lots of extras new
tires $ 13,000 (740)441
1794 or (740)339 3528

'

. -------------- .---

(740)446
•

Two

1997 th ree seater
Sedoo 's on a tw1n alum1num
trailer One 85HP GTI &amp; one
110HP GTX under 86 hrs on
both PWC s Garage kept
EJ&lt;cellent as new cond1t1on
Call dayt1me (740)446-94J6
or evenmgs &amp; weeker.Qs
(740)441 1724

790

CAMI'fllS &amp;
Mm'OK HOMES

02 Wildcat 28ft 5th whee l
sltde out fiberglass ~1dq_s
S18 000 Excellent cond1
tiOn , clean (740)245 9109
(740)441 7632
•
--------.,.-1983
Nom ad
Century
campe r by Skylms , 24
good cond1t1on , sleeps 6, ac
needs repa 1r all else ~vorks
good (740}667-3655

r

gas m1l eage, excellent con
d1t1on.
6 000
m11es
{7401446·0626
3·Bpm
even1ngs

'\lin It I'\
10

HOMF.

IMI»ROVEMENIS
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UnconditiOnal l1fet1me guarantee Local referer1 ces fur
n1shed Established 1975
Call
24 Hrs (740) 4460870, Roge rs Basement
Waterproofmg
Casto Contracting
Commerc•al
Res1dentlal
Remo deling 'We do it all "
Phone (740)446 0306

ss
I•

Ad Deadline is
Mav11,200&amp;

Phone __________~
Mall or drop off thle ooupon along
with a copy of your photo ID to
Ohio Valley Publl•hlng P.O . BoJC 48&amp;. Galllpolle. OH 4583"1

Pontoon Boal
154&gt; '

Hurrv, time is
running out!

City/State/Zip

•'

200 1 Blazer LT 4x4
91 OOOm1
loaded
N ~w
Goodyears, Onstar, Leather
All Power $7 500 1740) 245·
9245, (740)367·0624

2001 Partkraft 24ft Pontoon
by Godfrey Man ne CanoPv
2 stroke 40HP Yamaha tra1l·
er beautiful boat Gafage
kept approx 42 hrs on boa!
motor
Call
dayt1me
(748)446 9416 or evenmgc;
&amp; weeken ds (740)441-17~

Health ~re Edition
to be published
Mav18,200&amp;

~·~---------------~------

--1

...

Bass boat w1th 90 horS'e
power Johnson motor slam
less steel prop tro llmg
molor 2 batt er~es 2 depth
hnders, m excelle~ cond1t1on and garage kept IQr
$6 ooo (740 )9~2 2?68 .

1JBailp ttrribunr
l)~int ~leasant l\egister
and Daily Sentinel

Address ___...:_________~--------------.,.---.---

Nice 14x70 3 bedroom only
$1 o 995 Will help W1l h delivery Call {740)385·9621

MonJit~

~allipohs

------------Subscriber's Name

16' 'w1de
Brand new
vinyl/shingle $~81/mo Call
{740)385·7671

Bo,11s &amp;

'---~t.,R.s.,
·A·L•I_

Don't miss this
opportunitv to reach
over 16,000 homes ·

cti$alltpoli- }Da.llp Qtribune
~oint ~lea-ant B..eut•ter
The Daily Sentinel
&amp;un·b a1! m::tme~ -&amp;:entinel

'86 Skyt1ne front kitchen
Cash · price $8,995 Wi ll
deilvBI Call (740)385·9948

$995 080 {304)576·2934

'

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon
below and drop off or
mail it with a.
copy of your photo ID.

1996 and Up, 14 and 16
Wide Mobl!e Homes lor Sale
In eKcellent Condttlon Day
740·388 0000 or 740-3888513 EYenln!1S 740-3886017

r

Buy or
sell
R1ven na
Antiques, 11 24 East Mam
Asparagus
on SA 124 E Pomeroy, 740- Homegrown
992-2526 Russ Moore available at McKean Farm
Centenary Road, (740)446 owner
9442

Senior Discount*
•

Orlgmal $2,500 00 F1rm
$500 1 Pol1ce lmpoundsl 740 742 0519
Cars from $500 For hst•ngs -:-:-:---:--.,.---800-391~5227 ext 3901
t999 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Laredo , Burgundy 4 0, 4
04 VW Bug GLS 16·300 wheel dnve ' 135 000 miles,
miles BOFW, auto all good conditiOn $6 BOO oo
power, $ 16.100, average F1rm '740 992 7599
re tail $18,600 {740)350
2003 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Backhoe attachment for 9977
Larado, 59,000 m1tes 4&gt;:4
tractor, w/24 ~ &amp; 12~ buckets
1989 Toyota Tercel Does $11,900 080 (740)256
Reach 8 1/2' deep $1,850
run, needs wo rk $350 Call 6200 or (740)256-16t8
OBO {740)256·1545
r,7~":30ir""-~~--....,
(740)367 7057
VANS
John Deer 650 tractor w/60"
1994 Camry 2 door 4 cyl
.J'tlR SAl.:
belly mower 1,040 hrs, 209,000 m11es very good
$5,500, call {740)949·2169 condition,
runs
great
1996 Mercury V llager mmr
Load Tra1lfload Max Trailers- $2 800 More mto call
van leath er !oadAd welf
(740)44
1·
1651
Goes en ec ks/D u m p s/
rnamtame!l 'new 11 res 1101&lt;
Utll1t1es
Car~1chae1 1994 Ford Aerostar $1 500
ask1ng $4 000 (740)245
Equ1pment (7,40)446·2412
{304)576 3202
i934
Massey
Ferguson
135 1997 SUlek Park Avenue
&lt;10 MUIUKCYCLES/
Tractor w1th Howes Bush Leather, loaded, all ma1nte·
4 WHEELERS
Hog Ford 2000 Ford 6610 nance records, well mam·
John Deere 1520 740-286- la1ned. 1~ 6k, ask1ng $4,600
1972 Yamaha XS650 ong1
6522
(740)245·5934
nal pa1nt $1 200
1997 Toyota Avalon XL 2004 Honda Trail 70 Clone
LIVJ&lt;NTOCK
as
new
$750
hunter green CD changer 90cc
auto, NC, 84 000 m1les n1ce (740)245·0611
$5,000
l1rm
Angus Bulls, two X·breds 4 co nd1t10 n
1999 Harley Davidson Ultra
days
ha1fers Excellent breed1ng {740)4 41 - 1971
Class1c Loaded Excellent
(740)441
·08169
evemngs
Slate Run Farm
See
cond111on , 29,000 to tal m1!es
www slaterunfarm com 1998 Plymouth Voyager Pnce $ ~ 3 500
Call 740·
(7 40)286·5395
$3 495 OBO 1989 Cors1ca 949--2217 until 7 pm

MUSICAL
fN&gt;TRUMENIS

.

I

1 1979 Ford F ~SO Custom All 1995 16 1/2 It Hydrosp6rt

FOR ALE

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

If so, you qualify for a

14X70 Schultz 3 bedroom,
2 bath , 6 x20 ellpando,
bU1Id1ng
porch $10,500
(304)675 5911

s

4x4
F'OR s.,.E

FOR~

•

14K55-'97 Fleetwood MH·
2BR , 1 bath, elec heat/AC·
good cond1t1on $10,500 Call
(740)446·:3644 tor appt

I

Used
Beauty
Shop
Equ1pment 2 Stations w1th
Want a relaxmg summer' Bowls and 2 hydrauhc
PhOne (304)882 ·
Rent
an
Oh10
R1ver CHa•rs
3253
Camps1te Enjoy a beautiful,
sandy beach. cool shade for
your camper ancra conven1
Ient locat•on Call 740-992
5782
;:,k, bnck, sewer pipes,
GRAIN
\II IU II\ \111"'1
wmdows lintels, etc Claude
Tobacco Plants for sale Call
to
HOUSEHOW
W1nters R1o Grande, OH {740)446· 7843 or {740)645·
~
GooDs
. Call740·245-5 121
1660
I \\\\ ,\(, \ IWI \ I DI II'
Free est1metes Mollohan
Carpet Berber $5 95/yard
(740)446· 7444 76 V1ne St
1 male AKC English Bulldog
puppy, 9 weeks old Call
Refngerator, almond large (740)339·2745 or (740)339
fre ezer at top mce, $150 2753
Washer heavy duty, $95
dryer,
$95
Gene AKC reg m1nl dachshund
App liances 76 Vme St puppies 2 htters 1 ready now
(740)446 ·7 100 -a m veFy unusual colors and
dapples 350 00 and up 740·
(740)441·8258-pm
256·1498, cell ~5781 056
Thompsons Appliance &amp; -,---~,.--::--­
Repa1r-675-7388 For sale, Lab puppies AKC, papers,
re-cond111oned automatiC shots, wormed Only 4 left '
washers &amp; dryers refrlgera- $100 {W4)675~7.652
tors, gas and electnc - - - - - - - - - ranges, a1r conditiOners, and Labrador Retrievers AKC
wringer washers Will do reg1stered Different color.
repa1rs on ma1or brands in ages &amp; price (740)256-6463
shop or at your home
or (740)645-6527

· Qr Ol'd·er,~· · ·

mRSALE

...

j

2001
Harley
Dav•dson
Superglide $11 500 Call
2003 Jeep Liberty L1m1ted {740)446-1414 0' {740)709
22 000 miles $10 200 080 1460
1986 Coachman Ford 4l50
(740)2Sa·6200 o' 1740)256
Eng1ne 40 OOO/m1les Nev.
200 t Harley Davidson
161a
generalor new pa1nt &amp; stnp
Oinawide Glide Blue and
(304)675·4356 ' or
2003 Mazda Tnbute 4x4 Sliver
Very n1ce many mg
4
7
1 _ _ ___
3
0
6
leather lnter1or, 26 000 eKtras
14 OOO/m1 1es _1_ _ _)_ _5-_0_8_1_
miles
$10 900
OBO $14 500 (304)675·1310
1999 Starcraft ~of t S1d e
(740)256 6200 or (740)256
m
2006 SofMa1l Standard V&amp;H 13FT Truck Camper Sell
16 !8
304 B95&lt;l577
Pipes
T Bars
Chrome contained Furnac~ sleeps
Reg Angus bulls and he1fers 2003 PT CrUiser Turbo Controls Stage 1 K1t 4100 4, Clean E:c. Cond•!IOn
ct Uise
a1r M1les Low prof1le seat {304)675·4082
11 to 17 mo Above average automat1c
EPD's (740)446·9856 or $4 ,600 OBO Call (740)256· Ongmal
Equ1pment
For rent camp1ng tra1ler
1652
Included Exc Cond111Dn
s1tes
full hook -up 740·992·
{740)446· 7:'1:&amp;
2004 Mercury Marqu1s GS $15,000 f1rrn 740 709-8673 5956
Gold color 4 door, VB good after 5 OOPM

RF.Nr

-.:re·You ·65.

MOBILE HoMF.~

NIGel 2002 PatriOt, Spec1al
Edition 16 X 80 all electnc
3 bedroom, 2 bath w1th
Screened Front Porch Heat
Also large s1zed
Pump
propane heater Included
House-Type Gutters AsklnQ
$29 500 740·949·2543

riO

P1e Sale, Sellers K1tchon
rARM
cupboard Table and chairs,
EQUIPMENT
.
1800's Oak Secretary, and
Bedroom Suite
740-286- 4 row Corn Planters John
6522
Deere 7200 No T1l vacuum·
John Deere 7200 No Til
Mlsa:u.ANEOUS
~lateless· wh1te 5100 No Till
MEROIANDJSE
atr planter (740)446-24 12
--• Carmichae l Equipment

JET
AEAATION MOTORS
Aepa1red, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock Call Ron Evans, 1·
Newly re novated 2 bedroom 800-537 ·952B
8 pt Downtown GallipoliS,
$475/mo, no' ut111t1es 1nclud·
NEW AND USED STEEL
ed Deposit re qUired lnqu1re
Steel Be8ms, P1pe Rebar
tn person at French C1ty
For
Concrete,
Angle ,
Ch1ldcare 300 Th1rd Ave or
Channel.
Flat
Bar,
Steel
call {740)446·4467
Grating,
For
Dra ms.
Dnveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
Ta ra
Townhou se Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Apartments, Very Spac1ous,· TUesday, Wednesday &amp;
2 Bedrooms. CIA, 1 1/2 Fr~day, Sem-4 30pm Closed
Bath, Adul1 Pool &amp; Baby Thursday , Saturday
&amp;
Pool PallO Start 5425/Mo Su nday {740 )446-7300
No Pels,
Lease
Plus
Secu r.~ty OepoS•t Reqwred , Pace- saver 3 wheel scoot(740)367·7086
er, charger &amp; basket- $800

I•

Attention
Construction
$600/month &amp; DepOSit Workert 2 sp6c1ous apts •
Water/Sewer Included, No ·furnished witBble and utililies- weekly and monthly
Pets (304 ) 675 •5332 or
rates 740-992-0031 or 304(740)591.0265
~:2::.:..:..::=~--- 682·3449
4br newly remolded near
APART·
Ritter Park Great for Grad BEAUTIFUL
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
Students (304)593·8890
PRICES AT JACKSON
Attention I
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Local company oHenng ~No
Onve from $344 to $442
DOWN PAYMENr' proWalk to shop &amp; mov•es Call
grams tor you to buy your
740-446-2568
Equal
home mstead of rentmg
Hous1ng Opportumty
• 100% flnanc•ng
• Less than perlect ' credtt Brand new 2 bedroom Apts
accepted
on State Roule 1BO Call for
• Payment could be the details (740)44~·0194 or
(740)441 · 1184
same as rent
Locators
Mortgage
7:_:
0 _ _ __ CONVENIENTLY LOCATc(7c_4:.:0:c
) 3:_:6::_
"0:_:00
.:::_
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Behmd Go-Mart 2br House Townhouse
apartments,
$375/month Ty (304)675 and/or small ho ~:~ses FOR
4030
AENT Call {740)441-1 t 11
Country Settmg, New cond1· for application &amp; mformallon

Spac1ou s home for sale.
close to town and close to
c1ty schools NICe QUiet
Ne1ghbarhood Call for more
deta1is (740)645·5058

..,,....____..;.._., "r,.o:-....;;;;A;;;uros;;;;;;;;;.._.,

3 diamond p1erced eamngs,
$30 each Small satellite
w1th 2 receivers &amp; 2
remotes , $90 2 VCR's w1th
rem otes , hke new $30 each
(740)245-5601 lv message

Call

Grac1ous living 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at VIllage
Manor
and
R1vers1de
Apartm ents m Middleport
From $295-$444 Call 740House for rent (7 40)446- 992-5 064 Equal Housmg
Patnot· 3 87 park·llke acres. 4234 or (740)208 7861
Opportun1t1es
3 BR garage 40x60 dream
deck,
pool,
workshop,
$150,000 Century 2t H&amp;L
{304 )634·2290

9/1 Oth of an acre tor sale on
t 43 2 mob •le homes 7 40- 992·5858

AmlQui'S

Boer Goats for sale
Pronto M-91 electnc wheel
chair almost new, heavy 6 full blood, 1 year old reg•s·
duty, $2,000
{7 40)446· tared mates Ready to
breed Champ1onsh1p blood 4083
Call (740)245·0485
SlmpliCIIy rtdmg Mower
u ets or a e
hydrostatic 4212, Celeatron
Rll ode Island Red s
WEEKLY AVAILABLE
Telescope 111ew Stars &amp;
Blac;k Au s1ral orps
n c 1 u d e s Mpon (304)675·5096
White Leqhm ns
Refr1ge ra tor / M1c row ave
Ill ill Orpmg tons
Mobile horne Sites for up to From $175 To $250 College Speed
Queen • Wr1nger
:? weeks olri
16x60 1n Country Homes Hill Motel Call (740)245- Washer Excellent Condition
qunn t1i y discou nt s
{740)385·40!9
5326
$tOO {304)937·3348 or
SI.BO eac h
~ve-r~y-c-le_a_n--14-x-64__2__b-ed-- Cp&amp;D~~--~SP~~-CE------ (304)937-2705
(30.~)593·5073

room Only $7,995
3 bedroom, large yard (740)385·069a
Vill~ge of Patnot Available

':::o::ppo:rt:":"l:ty:b:•:":":·::=-. now No pels (740)379·
~
2540
•
Crab Creek area 2~ acres ·" ' - - ' - - - - - - - with 3 br 2 bath, 2 .~00 sq ft 3BOR + 2 1/2 baths 2 car
home, stone f•replace, barn, garage, furn1shed, closed to
some pasture, creek front Holzer
$850
month
and more $167,000 Tn (740)441 -0310

•I

-·-·~- - ----c---------------~---------~-----------------------~---~--~--------------~ -'#~
.. . . . . •
'

-

advertiselfienta for real
estale whlch lain
violation of the law Our
readers are hereby .
Informed that all
dwelllnga actvertlaed In

'8B Crestrtge 14x70 2BAI 2
bath, $6 995 Call (740)3as9948

tl\ \\1 l \ 1

Vacations
Complete training
PrQfesalonal work
atmotphere
lntervltw tomorrow
Stai'tll eoon 11 next
WHkl
CA~L H77-4B3-G47
oxt. 2321
rolophone
lntorvlowor,
....uont comp~r
com·
munlcatlon oklllo, luil·tlme,
no bonofitl, S1 0 per hour
after 4 wookl trelnlng , S8
per hour during trtlnlng, In
Pomoroy, olart lmmodlatoly,
oall Mork BOO·ee6·3e83 •

Riverview vacant lot 98x75 Stop ren t1ng Buy 4 bedroom
Front Street, M1dCieport, foreclosure $15 000 For hst
Br.ck home 4BR 3BA,
logs 800-391-5228 ext
garage, basement f1 te place, askmg $25 000. (740)992- 1709
2849
nice lot w11h storage bldg,
ca rp ort, pa tio pool and Wanted Pasture &amp; Hay
fenced backyard Excellent ground to lease or ref1! Call 1liJ MOBil£ HOMF.S '
locat1on on Jackson P1ke {740)256·9250
IUR RENT
{740)446·7903,
ce ll
(7 40)441 -7098
REAL FErATE 1 '2 bedroom, total electric, m
Syracuse new carpel $400
r----~---~
monthly plus depoSit &amp; ut1l1Need to sell your home? t1es, (740)992-7680
Late on payments, divorce,
job transfer or a death? I 2BR, all electriC w/ C/A no
can buy your home All cas h pets. takmg applications
and qu1ck clostng 740-416~ $360/month (740)379-2923
All real elllata advertising
3130
or (740)446·6865
In this newapaper Is
I( I "\ I \I ._,
subject to the Federal
3BR 2ba doublew•de, close
Fair Hcualng Act of 1968
to A V high school No pets,
which makes It Hiegel to
refe rence
reqUired,
advertise 'any
HouSES
$500/month, $550Jdepostt
preference, limitation or
FORRENf
(740)367· 7025
discrimination baaed on
race, color, religion, aex
1BA house- t1 Garfield Ave , 3Br Aefndg &amp; Stove,Washe r
familial atatua or national
Gallipolis $350 month Call &amp; Dryer 1ncluded (304)576origin, or any mtentlon to
lor dela1ls (740)441·0194 or 2934
make •ny •uch
{740)441-1 ta4
prefer~nce, limitation or
Mobtle Home lor rent 3br,
dllcrlmlnatlon '
2 or 3 bedroom house for 2ba 3·mtles out of Pmnt
Plea san t
on
At
2N
Thfe newspaper will not
rent in Racine area no pets
(304)675·3a18
knowingly accept
(740)992-5858

L~---.iW.iiAO.rom:tlliliii0'-_.1.

iJr.

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2
Bu•lne•• Days Prior To
Publlc.tlon
Sunday Display: 1:00
Thur•day for sunday•

dow AJC $650/month re~~­
$650 sec dep you pay u 1•
Illes Available 1st week m
Apnl Call (740)446~3644 fo r
_a_
n_a~pp:._l_
lc_at_lo_n_ _ _ __

r

Now you can have borders and graphics
.IL-1o
added to your classified ads
.m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SO¢ for small
$1 .00 for Iorge

Display Ads

White/Tan Female Frl9ndly
Classmates, Colleagues ot 740-69a·9252'
us A , etc 1 Zelda W11son,
need financial help obta1nmg
l&lt;NfAND
house from owner lor com·
FOUND
munity serv1ces lor all th at
need help, before a public
E~pens1ve pair of
sale the middle ol May 2006 Found
prescnpt1on
glasses on
Contact
Mordecat
D
Mulberry
He1
ghts
Sunday
W1lson Owner, All ma11 PO
afternoon
Call 740-992Box 73. Lula, GA 30554.
005~
telephone .1-770-869-3937

t

pplles.

Oetui/Jire.f'

Dallv In·CoiUmn: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for lnaertlon
In Ne!'t Day•a Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper

House tm rent 4 bedroom, New 2BA apts Watson Ad
washer &amp; dryer hook-up Rodney Plke/850 area
Deposit
(740)256·6803
anytime Reference/
{740)645 3261
1 OOpm· reqUired , no pets (740)446
' 9 OOpm
1271, {740)709-1657

22 acres, wonderful view,
ndgetop property close to '
main highway pe~ect for 4 ~
wheeler trails, (740 )707•
21 09

To Place
{[rthune
Sentinel
1\_egtster
Your· Ad,
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Office 11o~~

Ir

t /2 acre Lot on Redmond
Ridge w111 cons•der Land SA 75- 4BA 1 bath home
Contract (740)245-5087 or garage basement, nver
(740) 208-0028
access Propane heat , wm-

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APART111ENTS
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www.mydallysentlnel.com

84 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, April 26, 2006,

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALLEY OOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85
NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

•·•'

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder
Sheriff Sales
Cah

05CV056
Nallonal

':~~

Number
City

'1,5

Ohlld McKibben 81 al
Defendants
Court ol Common
Pleas, Meigs . Cunty,
Ohio.
In purauance of an
order of sale. to me
directed from said
court In the above
entitled action, I will
expose for sale at
public auction on the
Front Ste.ps ol The
Meigs County Court
House on Friday, May

26, 2006 at 10 a.m. of
said day, the follow.
tng described Real
Estate:
And Whereas, tho 3
.daya of aforesaid
have fully expired,
and the said judgments and costs
aforesaid have not
been paid, or any part
th;ereol, as appears to
us ol recorcl:
We
Therefore command
you, that you pro,::eed

without delay to
appraise, advertise
arid sell, according to
th8 st81utos regulatIng judgments and
executions at law, the
. following described

lands and .tenements,
situate , in · Meigs
County, Ohio to-wit:
Situate
tri
the
Township
ol
Columbia, County of
Melgs and State or.
Olllo, ahd aescrlbed
as follows:
Parcel No. 1: being
the
Southeast
Quarter
of
the

ceedlnga to our said
Court within sixty
days from this date,
and have you then
and there this writ
,Current owner: Chad
McKebbln
at
al
Property at: 38676
Staneart
Rd,
Pomeroy, Ohio PPf
05.00667.000 Prior
Deed
References:
Volume 1D3, Page 327
at
Appraised
SIIO,DOO.DD Terms of
sale: Cannot be sold
tor less than 213rds of
. the appraised value.
10% down on day of
sale, cash or ce111fled
check Balance due on
confirmation of sale.
· The appraisal did not
Include an Interior
examination of the
house.
Robert E. Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff.
Attorney
for
the
Plaintiff
Lerner, Sampson &amp;
Rothfuss
P.O.
Box
5480
Cincinnati, Oh 452015480,
'
120 E 4th St, 8th Floor
Cincinnati, Oh 452024007
513-241-3100
(4) 19, 26, (5) 3

Public Notice
!\heilfl Sales
Case
Number
05CV08D
J.P. Morgan Chase
Bank NA
Plaintiff
Vs
Dennis Whitlatch at al
Defendants
Court of' Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio.
·
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me .
dlractecl from said
court In the above
entitled action, I will
expose to sate at pub-

Northwest Quarter of
section 8 of Town,
County , ar.d State
aforesaid estimated
at 40 acres, more or
less.
EKceptlng from the
lic auction on the
front steps of the
above described real
estate 3.9418 acres Meigs County Court
as conveyed by Asa
House on Friday, May
li. Stansbury and 26, 2006 at 10 a.m. of
sold day, the followGolclen
Faye
Ing descrlbecl real
Stansbury, to Wancla
Lou Oxley by deed . estate: Situate in
recorded In· Volume Columbia Township,
· 247, page 637, Deed
County of Meigs,
Recorcls
Meigs
State of Ohio, and
County, O~io. .
being Jot 15 in Rolling
Further Excepllng the
Me a d o w s
Subdivision of ··said
1 following: Being situated In the Southeast Sections 23 and 29 as
ol
the set forth In the
quarter
Northwest Quarter of recorded plat of said
Section 8, ol the subdivision In JPiat .
Cabinet 7-A, Meigs
Township, , County
ancl State aloresalcl ·County, Ohio, Plat
and is described as
Records.
·Parcel
Township ,
County ID~D5-DDB51 .DOO. To
and State aloresaicl
make the sum of
and Ia cleacrlbed aa $97,299.02
Dollars
follows: Beginning at Ninety
Seven
ThOL!S&amp;nd
Two
il stake In tho West
corner of land owned
Hunclred' Ninety Nine
by Thomas Price and
Dollars
and Two
Delbert Turner, thence
Cents.
North along said line Currant
owner:
of the land owned by
Dennis Whitlatch et al
Tho·mas Price 450 Property At: 28275
feet to the Southeast Old St Rt346, Albany,
Corner of the land
Ohio
PP•
05conveyed , by deed 00851 .OOD.
Prior
from
Thelmore Deecl
References:
Stansbury and Minnis Volume 1 23, Page
Stansbury , to Asa 833. Appraised at
Dale Stansbury and $105,000.00 Terms of
Golden ' Stansbury, Sole: Cannol be sold
his wife, thence west lor less than 213rds of
along said line 250 the appraised value.
feet to a stake: thence
10% down on day of
South 570 teet to a sale, cash or certified
stake In the center of chec~, balance due
the
Dyesvllleon c.o nflrmation of
Carpenter
Road; . sale. The appraisal
thence East by North did not Included an
280 teet to a place of
Interior examination
beginning, containing of the house.
2.64 acres, more or· Robert E. Beegle,
less.
Meigs County Sheriff.
Further
excepting
Attorney
lor the
o.348 acres conveyed
Plaintiff
Lerner,
to the Trustees of Sampson,
&amp;
Columbia Township, Rothfuss, P.O. Box
Meigs County, Ohio, 5480,
Cincinnati,
for the benefit of
OHio 45201-5480 120
Rawling's Cemetary.
E. 45h St, 8th Floor
Parcel No. Two: also,
Cincinnati, Oh 45202the following piece or 4007 513-241-3100
parcel ot land tying (4) 19, 26, (5) 3
ancl being in ·lhe
County of Meigs ancl
Public Notice
State of Ohio and in
Columbia Township,
and descrlbecl as fol- She;lff Sal's
lows: Beginning In Case
Number
the center of -the roacl 05CV135
leading
troni
Credit Express Inc
Dyesvltle to School Plaintiff
Lot, 15 rods South of Vs
the North line of the Ryan Foster at al
Northwest Quarter ·of Defendants
Section 8 and about
Court of Common
31 rodo ancl 20 links Pleas, Meigs County,
East of the Wall line Ohio.
of said quarer section ln . pursuance of an
running thence East order of sale to me
about .22 rods; thance directed lro.m said
south 67 rods; thence court In the above
west about 4D rods to entitled action, I will
the center of the road expose to sale.at public auction on tha
leacllng ·
from
Dyesvllle to School front ateps of the
lot; thence along the Meigs County Court
center of said road to House on Friday May
place of beginning, . '19, 2006 at 1D a.m. of
containing about 6 said day, the followacres ancl 22 rodo, be Ing described real
the same, ·more or estate: •
Situated
In
the
less.
to make the sum of County of Meigs,
$123,827.1D doll,ara State of Ohio, Village
Judgment with the of Racine and within
.s aid Interest theron, ' Section 16, Town 2,
and costs aloesald; Range 12 and Lot 12
the
Ohio
and that you also pay of
the costs or this writ, Company's Purchase,
and all ln~rease and to-wit:
accruing coato; and Beginning a distance
the reslclue, If any. ot 78 feet east of the
there be, you bring eoutheaat corner of
what was Marlin
Into thla Court to
and ' Elva
abide · the · fu"'her Young
order of the Court, Young's lot on the
Jlnd that you make ' North aida of a 25 loot
return of your pro- otreet North 89

d!if.

I

E11t a dl...nce of 758
feet from thlllntai'I8CIIon of the North olda
of Vine Street wHh the
center &lt;11 Seventh
St'"t; thence North a
dlatanca of 178 '"t to
an Iron pin located on
the North line of Lot

12; thence East a distance of 7D feet to en
Iron
pin;
thence
South s dlatanc, of
178 feet to an Iron pin
located on the Eaot
extension to VIM
Street; thence West
along the East eitenslon to Vine Street a
distance of 7D ' " ' to
the place of beginning, containing 0.28
acre, more or

leaa.

SubJect to all legal
highways,
easements, right of ways,
•onlng ordinances,
rellricttons and conditions of recorcl.
Reference
Deecl:
Volumne 203, Page
555, Meigs County
Official
Recorcls.
Auditor's Parcel No:
19·DD187.0DO
Property
Acldress:
817
Vine
Street,
Racine, OH 45771.

referrH

to

above

which will henNifer be
fllecl In the office of
Thll Melga County
Recordat; Thence In a
Weaterly direction 80
'"'; Thence North 53
deg.5' Eaat to the
Public Road; thence
Following the South
Line of the Public
Road 'to the Westerly
Boundary of parcel
No. 1; Thence South
53 Dog. 5'Weat to the
Place of beginning,
containing approximately. 15 acre.., Save

and except the coat,
which has heretofore
been reserved, and
subject to all easementa ancl rights-orway
of
record.
Further
excepting
and reaervtng to the
Grantors ·sufficient
Real Estate along the
atreel to construct a

two-car

garage,

together with the
right to make such
excavation and to
enter upon the pram·
lses lor the purpose
of constructing said
garage. Said Garage,
II constructecl, shall
Current owner: Ryan
be constructed of
concrete ·or concrete
Foster at al property
At 817 VIne Street,
blocks with a conRacine, Ohio PP• 19- crete roof and said
00187.000 Prior ~d
roof shall be covered
with soli so as to
· References: Volume
203
Page
555
make the surface I
Appraised
at above the garage
$4D,DOO.DD Terms of conform to the gener·
Sale: Cannol be sold ar aurface of the
lor less than 213rds of remaining portion of
the appraised value.
the lot conveyed
10% down on day of hereby,
It
being
sale, caah or certified
u~cleratood that the
check, balance due Grantors reserve the
on confirmation ol ' " almple ownerahlp
sale. The appraisal of the' parcel or Real
did not Include an Estae reserved her•
Interior examination by, HowiWIIF, tho ganof the house. Robert
teea are granted an
E. Beegle, · Meigs Hsement lo maintain
County
Sheriff.
the surface of the
Attorney
for
the alrea reaerved above
Plaintiff, Lillie Sheela the garage, provided
&amp; Werner, 213 E 2nd
lhat they shall not In
Ave, Pomeroy, Oh
their use Interfere
45769 740-992-6689.
with sold garage. Aa
(4) 12, 19, 26
currently set forth In
Deed Book Volume 79
at Page 255 and
Public Notice
recorded 12-4-98.
CUrrent owner: Carol
Shariff Sale
Y.Southtm
Case
Number
Property at: 124
05CVD85
Falrlane
Drive ·
Mortgage Electronic Middleport, Ohio PP•
Registration
15-01 293.DDD.
15Systems, Inc.
01294.00 Prior Deed
Plaintiff
References: Vol~me
VS
191,
Page
223
Carol Y. Southern aur Appralaecl
at
· Defendants
$45,000.00 Terms of '
Court of Common · sale; Cannot be sold
Pleas, Meigs County, for leas than 213rds of
Ohio.
the appraised value.
In Pursuance ol an
10% down on day of
order of sale to me sale, cash or certHied
dlrectecl from Said check, balance due
Court In the above on confirmation of
entHied Action, I . will sale. The appraisal
expose to sale at did not Include an
Public Auction on the • Interior examination
Front Steps . or the of thll house.
Meigs County Court
Robert E. Boogie,
House on Frlclay, May Meigs County Sheriff.
19, 2006 at 1D a.m. of Attorney
for the
said day, tha follow· . Plaintiff
lng described ·Real
Reimer, Lorber, &amp;
Es181e: Situated In the
Arnovltt,
Village of Middleport, PO
Box
968
County of Meigs ancl Twlnaburg, Oh 44087,
State of Ohio: Parcel 33D-425-4201
No. . 1: Beginning (4) 12, 19,26
North 21 Dog. 57'
West 76.15 Feet from
Public Notice
an Iron pin located on
tha
Southeasterly
cornt~r of the M.D.
Legal Notice In the
Brlcklea. 262 Acre Court of Common
Lot, which said Iron
Pleas Meigs County,
pin Is located on the Ohio
Northerly Line ol Notice by Publication
Grant Street In the Shawn Earls, whoae
Village of Middleport, laat known adclresses
Ohio; thence North 2D are 835 · S. Oakely
Deg. 28' West BUD Avenue, Columbus,
Feet to a point;
Ohio
and
1604
Thence North 36 Deg. Highway 70 East, Lot
55'
West
37.15; 4, New Barn, North
Thence North 53 Dog. Carolina 28560 and II
5' East 135.9 Feet; to deceased, all he'lrS,
the public Road; devisees, legatees,
Thence South 58 deg.
executors, executrix3' eaat 117.5 feet;
es, administrators,.
thence South 37 Deg. aclmlnlotratrlxes ancl
27'West 113.51eet, to assignees and the
M.D Brlckles line;
unknown guardians
thence North 63 deg.
of minors and/or
8' West 29.4 Feet to Incompetent heirs of
the M.D~ Brlcklea Shawn E01rls and
Comer, thence South Jane Doe, unknown
4D de g. 31 ' Weat80.35 apouae of Shawn
feet to the place of Earls,
and
If
beginning.
deceaa,d, all hairs,,
Save and except the devisees, legatees,
coaf~
which
has
executors, executrix, her~tofora .
b.-n es, administrators,
reserved, and subJect aclmlnlatratrlxes ancl
to all easement• ancl aaolgneea and the
rights-of-way
of unknown guardians
record.
ol
minor
and/or
The abova descrlbecl Incompetent hairs of
real estate will be the unknown apousa
designated ·aa lot No. of Shawn Earla, all of
10 · qn a pial of whose addreaaea and
Fairland Subdlvloon, realclencea
are
which will ouboe· unknown will hllrsby
quenlly be flied wHh take notice that on
the Melga County De.cember 13, 2D,D5,
Recorder. Together Harbert Wallman, flied
with a right of way Ita ·Complaint
In
over the public -road. Foreclosure In the
leading to said prop- CommQn Pleas Court
erty, which will be ol Meigs county, Ohio
dedicated aa a public being
Harbert
street when the plat 11 Wellman, Plaintiff va,
filed. Parcel No. 2: · Shawn Earls at al
Also the following Defendants, Case No.
descilbed
Real 05CVD95 praying lor
Eatata, oltuated In the Juclgment
In . the
Village of Middleport, amount of $11,864.94
County of Melga al'ld with lntereal thereon
Stale , of
Ohio, according to the
Bounded
and terms of the nota
described aa followa: : from July 3D, 2005
Beginning ai the until paid and lor the
Wouthwaaterly cor- foreclosure of salcl
ner of Parcel No. 1 at Mortgage Deed on
a point which will be the
following
at the bounclary of the descrlpted
real
Streel Contained on •tate, of which said
tha plat which Ia Delenclant,
Shawn

Earle lathe owner of:,
Commonty knowa as
parcel number 1300623.002,
Salem
Township, . Melga
County, State of Ohio
and further described
In a mortgage Iliad
July 3D, 2001 In volume 129 at page 537
of the Molgs County
Official
Records ,
Meigs
County
Recorder's Office.
And that Defendants,
Shewn Earle, and If
deceased, . all heirs,
devisees, legatees,
executors, executrix·
es, adm~nsltrators,
admlnlstratrlxea and
assignees
and
guardians of minor
and/or Incompetent
heirs of Shawn Earls
and
Jane
Doe,
unknown spouse of
Shawn Earls, and II
deceased, 'an heirs,
clevlseea
legatees,
executors, execUtrix·

es, and asslghees

General ConslrucUon
and Excavallon
Sf1U6t&amp;1~

1.. Se~tte S.~te.•

At ~e4U'&lt;41U ~&lt;U'a
'
New Construction
·
and Remodeling
Aat Roofs A Sped.alty

HOME CREEK ENTERPRISES

Parking Lots • Ball Courts • Private
Roads • Driveways • Streets •
-Free Es1imatas Playgrounds

304-675-2457

w/Fries
$5.99 Ev'O'Ydny
(made with Choire Fresh
Black Angus Sliced Ribeye)
Breakfa~t

Speciaf

All l)ay
2 eggs, sausage or bacon
1tomefrif-s &amp; toast $4.99

-Daily Luuclt Spt•cia/s ·
~4.99

'Salads- Chef· Grilled
Cl1icken &amp; Chicke11 Tender

All Burgers made from freslr graund d1uck ftaturirtg
Jutl!J K11ys Sprci11l Burger ·Chat'lie Brown B11rger
&amp; Carali~u1 lJurger

and ' guarcllana of
inlnor and Incompetent heirs of Jane
·.:Judy '](ay's '.Restaurant
Doe,
unknown
195
N _Second Ave. • Midd leport, OH
spouse of Shawn
Earls be required to
set up any Interest
:t!!B...~l!!.....I:Lut!:l!!t!!S!!!
that they may·have In
said premlsea or be
forever barred, that
upon failure of sold
Delenclants to pay 'Or . ..... 11uu &amp; Truck
to cause to be psi~
said Judgment within
Repair
All types of roofing: .
three days from Its
New or Repair
rendition that said
3 miles west of
·Seamless Gutter ·
rear estate be loreDownspout
Pomeroy,OH
closed and. that an
Orcler of Sale be
on State Rt. 124
FREE
Issued to the Sherfll
ESTIMATES
of Melga · County,
Ohio, to appraise,
(740) 949-1405
advertise In the Dally
l!:!LI!I!!!:!IS.....:uLUI.!:"I.!L~
Sentinel and aell aald
real estate pursuant ·
to foracloaura, thai
the premises be sold
free and clear of all
claims Ieins and
Interest of any of the
parties herein, that
•
the proceeds from the
l4hr Emergency
sale of said premises
Service ,
be · appllecl to the
Licensed Insured
Over
Plaintiff's Judgment
and for such other
relief
to
which
Herbert Wellman Ia
entitled.
Salcl Defendants are
97 Beech Street
dlrectecl
to
the
Middleport. QH
Complaint wh~reln
"Carpet Guy"
notice under the fair
10x10x10x20
debt collection pracFree Measurements
tice act Ia given.
992·3194
You
are
hereby
Ray Martin
or 992-6635
required to answer
installer
the Complaint within
"Middleport's only
28 days affer the last
Carpet
Self-Storage"
publlcetlon of this
Ceramic
Tile
Notice, which will be
Hardwm'ld • Viriyl
published once each
Open For
week for six consecu·
Ca'J'el Restretch
Spn'ng Stason!
tlve weeks. The teat
Laminates
*Fints $7.50
publication wll be
74D-517-3704
'Hanging Basketl
made on May 3, 2006,
*Pots and Tubs
and the 28 days lor
74D-992-o6so
SPRING
SPECIAL
answer by you or any
of you will commence
large 10" Ferns $6.95
on that date. You
Shrubs·nnd Perennials
must file an answer to
HUBBARD'S
ihe Complaint wl,\ h
GREENHOUSE
Marlene
Harrison,
Syracuse, OH
Clerk of the Meigs
740-')92-5716
County Court of
Open Mun-Sal I0-5
Common l&gt;reas, 100
Closed Sunday
West Soconcl Street,
4 52 mo.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
In the c'ase of your
26 Years Experience
failure to · answer or
YOUNG'S
otherwise respond as
David Lewis
required by the Ohio
740-992-6971
Rules
of
Civil
Insured
Proceclure, Judgment
Room Addttlons &amp;
Free
Estimates
by default will be renRemodeling
dered against you for
New Gar•g11
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
the relief demanded
Roofing &amp; GuHere
STANLEY TREE
In the Complaint.
VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
· TRIMMING &amp;
Submitted
by:
' Patio and Porch Deeka
GENERAL
Carson
WV036725
Crow(0009392) I 1D
CONTRAOING
V.C . YOUNG Ill
West Second Street, • Prompt &amp; quality
9G2-02 1 J
P.O. . Box
668
work . .
l--'nll11'r0Y Ohn1
Pomeroy,
Ohio • Affordable llates
:: s Ye 11s Loc~l Exp('rt£' 11 ~ t
Telephone:
,, .
•
Referen~es
740.992.5132 Telelax:
Available ·
740.992.7303
Free Estimates
•
Attorney
for the
"Insured''
Plaintiff
(3) 29, (4) 5, 12, 19, 26 · Call Gary Stanley
(5) 3
740-742·2293.
29670 Bashan Road·
• Leave a message
Racine, Ohio
45771
74D-949-2217

ROGER HYSELL
GHRHGE

: r 'I 'I I

20YII
OP.

I •1 · l ' • 1 t

.

TRI-STATE nJOBILE POWER WASH
An[) lAWn CARE
LAWN CARE
Mowing- Tree .

Trimming . AerationFertilization- plantingMulching

.

DriveWays - Equipment
Degreasing- B'oats-

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

(

I I

(740) 992-2804

.I l&gt;tl~AM~l&gt; LAST
N IGf'tT Tf'tAT .I WAS
IAC:Ii: .I N tHGH SC:f'tOOL,
/
ANI&gt; .1 O'!Q'"GOT
-.":-Vfr "'
~
'"'
MY LOC:Ii:~Jr ~
£~•"-'t. :.....\7'. C:OMIINATI_ON. ~ -

staining or paintmgSpecial rates for

IAN~

lll:il &lt;l [li •.'/ l ' i ' ) l lil '

(74 0) 517-6883

Jeff Stethern

Owner

H.l. WrftBSBI

~

~

~~~~:~~!~~§~§§~§~~~~

4ft'

Hardwood Cablne~ry And Furniture
www.tlllllwlr....,...cablllmy,OOIIO

Hill's Self
Storage

Hours .
7:00AM- 8:00 PM

AdvertiSe
in this
'
space ·

for
ss4 per

month
ROBERT
BISSEll
CDNmtcnDI
, • New Homes
• Garages
• Complete .
Remodeling

140·992-l&amp;n
Stop &amp; Compare

·

t _

~!!!!!!~:::;~[!~~!:::!::!====j:~~!..J

;.

BARNEY
wHATTA YA bOIN', PAW 1'!!
l WUZ GONNA SELL THEM
OAK LOGS TO TH' SAWMILL !!

992-5682

CARPENTER
SERVICE

:&gt;

T1

ami Sons

MANlEY'S
SElF STORAGE

.

• •-

f

r-==---7

I

'

1

Owner

• New Homes • Additions
• Remodeling

'hou&gt;o~ ... '&lt;ou
'(0\J t&gt;QI

(740) 992-0496

i

SIG~

II, TOO!

spades doubled. This is bizarre. How
could South not bid live hearts with a
solid nine-card suit? Strangely, though,
four spadeS doubled can cost 500, the

defenders geHing one spade, one h,an,
two diamonds, a diamond ·ruff and, even-

BIG NATE

•

IMPORTS

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

' Celebrity ClpnBr ayptograms are aeated from \lJOiatiorts by famous people, put 1 rw;1 ~
EeCh letrM In ll'e ci~r stands !of anoltlef.

Today's clue: Mequals R

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hesitant about launching a new project or
enterprise that you have conceived. Your
Ideas are good, and they wariant being
given a chance to prove themselves.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -They inay .
not say " anything, but concerned friends
are waiting in the wings to go to bat for you
the moment you signal for help. Don't hesltate to requ,sltheir aid.

lEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -

GNKO

GXKII

the

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GENILO .

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NOCHC

1--r---:---'rT-~

o

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Take

Should an

@ PRINT NUMBERED

lETTER&gt;
IN. THESE SQUARES

objec·

tive you had considered to be relevant to
your success lose Its luster, know that it
can be replaced by one of far more siQnil·
lcance. Thft reason for change may be
unusual.
'·

how outlandish or strange it may sound.
keep an open mind regafdlng a.propo'sal
brought to~ by an intimate friend. Upon
review, It'll make sense and you'll love it
LI~AA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) - An opportunitY of an unuSual nature - which has the
potential of producing a second source. of
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SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)- An unusu·
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close union.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-.0 ec. 21)- There
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cha'nges concerning your work or career.
The remake will eventually produce several new beneficial opportunities.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 19) - There
are strong 11'\dlcatlons that something
unique and exciting could be stirring for
you on the social level . Some new, fun
people may be about to enter your life at
this time.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -

LECTURE

roommme. "Some people never convers~. they only
LECTIJRE.·

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A cutie came home after a blind date and told her

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JONES'

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of

The year ahead offers some great promise
for you, but .thai doesn't mean you can
afford to coast or be indifferent about 11.
Continue to do all you can to achieve success. and It wilt find you in a most significant way.
'

Athen•

--de-aim~

47 Bearded
llo48 'Pull apart
by fOI"Q
49 Blg bird
50 Parsmedlc'l
skill
52 Schu11
!3 Always, to
Whitman
54 Rx givers

RJJ)A-~t-~S' ::::
Astro- · T~~:~~T S©,UiNI
"" ClAY l . 'OUAH - - - - - Graph 0 four
~eOI'ffHIQt ~fftn
sere mbitci . wo:d5
Thuradoy, April 27, 2006
By Blmlce Bodo Oool

-Economy Beef $8.25
-Shade R1ver Beef $8.75
-Whole/Shell Coin $7.25/Bag
·Cracked Corn $8.25/Bag
-Soybean Meal $13.25/Bag
·Shade River Hog Feed $8.85

45

ruffeCI a diamond high in his hand. After
hea!l ace removed the m1ssing
trumps, declarer played a heart to

:)IG~ ""~

l€:.5:'&gt; /&gt;..fTE.~ \.

around

,the

ter than 450 but worse than 510.

WV 038912
OH 38244

1

42 Wolf, at
time• .
43 On the
i·
money

with the
ace on thediscarding
board, cashed
the and
two
lOP.
diamonds,
clubs,

tually, a club. For North·South, this is bet-

Q.~sldenlial

bases
36 OrdenKI

.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.....- - . dummy's seven and . discarded t'lis
1 HEARD THEY'RE PAYIN'
remaining club on an established· diaPREMIUI'tl FER
mend. Winning all 13 tricks was worth
BIRCH !!
510.
West should overcall one spade - bid
species every chance you get. If you
catch a fit, partner can elevate the auction, and the opponents must go up one
level to outbid you. The overcall wouldn't
be underwritten by Lloyd's, but it satisfies
a modem maxim: if you might do something, do do something.
West should have led a low club. Even if
East and West pass throughout, a club
start looks bet1er because the suit is
shorter and the honor higher. True, it only
·saves two overtricks, but that is important
in a duplicate.
D\Ot(T
,.-jl.(.\Ur&gt;-LL'(, IT'LL&amp;. WORT!-\· '""' Some Wests bought the Contract in four

H\1:'&gt;-1 T'S WOR\f\l.E.S) U~TIL

Licensed Home Builder

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34 Fresco

Looks

Campers- Trucks- Deck

Trucking compames
F!I'[ • F c.. tlll l i! l

·

tOrOHI

••

POWER WASHING
Homes- Decks -

number

48 Kick back
16 Pounds
51 De81royed
17 Way back
data
when
55 Gat
• J.
18 Make do
In the way
West
East
wfth
56 Haggle back
4QJ8 32
.K10 974
19 Dull routine
and forth
¥
I0
21 Patrlcle
57 Ship's
"• 8Q 10 •
• J 53
Neal film
officer
10 Elac.
.to : K 8 7 4
23 Bsdger
A A !0 9 3
58 Beglna to
measure
26 Opaning
move a bit 11 Former JFK
South
27 Low-tech
~rrlvala
cooler
DOWN . 13 Island
¥AKQJ9643 2
28· Subway
welComes
hangar
1 Telephone , 19 Seldom
o!oQ 52
30 Cen.
trio
aver
fractions
Dealer: East
2 Home page 20 Positive·
31 Doctrine
addr.
Vulnerable: Neither
· aspact
32 L81e
.
3 --Magnan 22 Reveal
South
West North Ea1:1t
bloomer
man
24 Studio
Pass
33 SH on thll
4 Jeweler's
renter
1¥
, .
2f
••
throne
measure
25 CaWs
Pass Pass
Pass
35 College
5 Fawn's
language
parent
26 Pita tree!
Opening lead; ??
degs.
'-~-'---"-__::.:._:___:_ _.J . 37 Sefne villa
6 Cut timber · 27 Helsinki
38 Bygone
7 E•pedltton
cHI'"n
38 .Hefp signal 8 Uses a
uninteresting,
28 Got smart
40 Fam. meni·
compass
wHh
· bar
9 Gear
but is Instructive
29 U.S. leader
Some' deals appear uninteresting on the
surface, but when you look more deeply,
you lind instructive hidden facets.
LookatontytheWesthand.Doyouagree ·
with your one-spade overcall? What
would you toad againslllve hearts?
This layoul appeared on Bridge Base '
Onlinet&lt;&gt;n March 26.
West led the spade queen. Declarer won

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ot-26·06
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1 Evadeo
6 Ails the
shelveo
12 Misprints
14 ~:ybow

41 Poanlve
response
42 Giveatha
go-ahead
43 List
shortener
44 Slump
46 Countdown

�. .. ... . . ...

-

'•

I

J

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel
tied it at 36, James stole
Washington' s
inbounds
pass, spun in the Jane and
from PageBl
hit a hanging shot as
Cleveland took a 38-37
'
24 points on 11-of-12 halftime lead.
Down by 11 early. the
shooting and added 16
rebounds for the Cavaliers, Wizards started to play
who trailed 85-77 with I :34 rough with James . First,
left following Arenas' gift Jared Jeffries wrapped him
layup and free throw. A free up.on a drive. Then Brendan
throw by James. two by Haywood committed hard
Gooden .and Larry Hughes' . fouls to stop ·drives by
· jumper ~ade it 87-82, and James,· who took exception
James made two more free . to the second horse collar.
Gooden's fqllow gave
throws to pull Clevel and
Cleveland a 23-8 lead, but
within three.
Billy Thomas then missed the Wizards closed the quara pair of free throws for ter with a 13 -0 run 'capped
Washington. and the Cavs by Arenas' uncontested 36looked as if they would get footer at the horn that
even closer when James pulled Washington within
found Anderson Varejao in 23-21.
Notes: James also had I 0
the lane.
.
But as Varejao was gath- turnovers March 28, 2005,
·ering him se lf for a shot. against New Orleans ....
Arenas stripped the ball Brown , who led the club to
away.
Varejao
fou led 50 ·wins in his first year, .
Jamison, who made two ' received one first-place
free throws to iCe it as the vote and finished eighth in
Wizards ·bounced back with coach of the year balloting
a better performance than in won by Dallas' Avery
John son . "He deserves it,"
Game I .
Unable to slow James Brown said. "A big-time
much in the ope ner, coach, great team, terrific
Washington decided to bang season. He 's one of the guys
him around in the first half. I would have voted for." ...
The Wizards held him to Wizards coach Eddie Jordan .
just two points in the sec- is impressed by the giant
ond quarter, and he went Nike banner of James that
hangs across from the
17:40 between field goals.
At one point, Cavs coach arena. "It's pretty intimidatMike Brown rested James ing , frankly, for a 51-yearfor 2: IS of the second quar- old . man like me," he said .
ter. During a timeout, center "1 don't know if it's intimiZydrunas llgauskas offered dating to Antawn or Gil or
some advice to James, who Jared, but it 's pretty intimiwas just 2-for-9 with zero dating to me. ' It happens to
be right by the hotel where
assists and four turnovers.
After Eric Snow's basket ' everybody stays."

Wizards

Williams
from Page Bl .
and performance last season
and supported him in the
appeal process.
"This is a league decision,
and we are disappointed in
what it means for Ricky and
the team ," Saban said in a
stateme nt. "Ricky did an
outstanding job for the
Dolphins. not only as a
player but arso whai he
added as a person to the
team's chemistry and to our
overall success." .
Attorney David Cornwell
represented William s in his
appeal.
"We rai sed substantial
and legitimate issues arising
out of the application of the
NFL's policy and program
for substances of abuse,"
Corn we II said in a state.·
ment. He urged the players'
union and ownership to
"review the iss ues we raised

Rio

on the appeal ... and restore
the original intention of the
NFL's . policy to put equal
focus on helping NFL players as is put on testing and
suspend.tng th'em. "
The suspension represents
a financial
blow for
Williams , who owes the
Dolphins $8.6 million for
breaching hi s contract when
he retired in 2004. His
return last season was motivated partly by the need for
a paycheck, and that cnay be
a motivation for him to
return in 2007.
It 's possible the suspension · could mean the end of
the . mercurial runnin'g .
back 's career. If he. does try
to return next year. he'll be
30 years old and will have
prayed a total of 12 games
in the previO\IS three seasons.
"Ricky is obviously disappointed," sa.id his agent,
Leigh Steinberg. "He'll
need to work hard .to get
back to the league in 2007,"

for Ally, the player and Ally,
the daughter. "It's a special
day for us," K,evin said.
from Page Bl
"She 's worked very hard to
improve her skills in hopes
Drunk Drivers (SADD) club, that she'd get to play at the
ne~t level.
Spani sh club, class officer,
"[' m ~oing to say, that
Lion/Pride Card winner all she's gomg to go down and
four years and was a she's going work. hard and do
Citizenship Award nominee her best and 1 think everythe laSt two years.
pody will . be satisfied,"
Fouch said that signing to Kevin added.
play college basketball was
Rio Grande head coach
the realization of a dream .
''I'm so exc ited, thi s is such a David Smalley was pleased
dream come true," Fouch to bring in a player that has a
said. "When 1 was little 1 good understandi!lg of the
went to Rio Grande with my game. "Ally's a great kid,
dad for basketball camps, so good student and has a very,
it's a been a dream to play very good understanding of
there.
the game of basketball,"
"When he told me that I Smalley said. "One of things
made · the team , it was a that was broughi to our allendream come . true," she tion was her fundamental
added.
development and her knowlThe familiarity with the edge of the game.
campus through the time , "T've known Coach Fouch
spent at the basketball camps for quite a while, he's does a
during the summer played a great job, teaching the game
big role in he~. dCCidmg to to students and Ally is no
play for RIO. I JUSt fell In exception to that rule,"
lov_e m the campus (on the Smalley added. "I' m excited
VISits there) and everybody for Ally because she's going
was . so nice an~ Coac?. to come into our system with
(David)..Smalley was such a an opportunity to work her
sw~etheart when.! was there, way into and up into our varso It was perfect.
· 1 1
"
Her dad agreed. "I think.it sity ~ve program .Jayed a big role, s)Je always
Smalley also. commented
Lked Rio Grande," Kevin on. he~ work et~,tc a~d where
Fouch said. ·"She's been she will fll m. Sh_e sa solid
there with me with team worker, a ~ood InSide player,
camps when she was j~st a has a physical element to the
little girl and she grew fond game: posstbly could pia~ on
of it at that point in time and the wtng, but more than likeever since then she said that ly will play down on the
she would like to go and block," he said. ·
Coach Smalley has _offered
Fouch joins Greenan High
her an opportunity to go and School's Stephanie Sandlin
. we certmnly appreciate that." and ~ane Trace Hfgh
Fouch has not entirely set- School s Courtney Con~rove
. tied on a major, though she as the three recruits s1gned
.. indicated she is Jeamng for the 2006-07 season.
toward the social sciences.
Ally is the daughter of
Coach, Fouch was pleased Kevin and Kim Fouch.
.\

•
www.mydailysentinel.com

'

was. There's some things required to work the draft.
that come and go without a He has five victorie s at
b1i nk of an eye. But there are Talladega and two at
other things that come and Daytona.
fromPageBl
go that you want to point out
But none compare to his
anjl
you
want
to
.
recognize
father 's last victory, when he
All three DEl cars will
and
you
do
appreciate."
charge&lt;!
from 18th place with
have the same paint scheme,
Junior
's
car
will
be
the
five
laps
to go to cross the
which Junior views as an
most
dramatic
of
the
three
finish line first.
appropriate celebration of
DEl
entries.
After
all,
it's
at
"I was running second
tne seven-time champion. He
Talladega
and
Daytona
I was in a position
thinking
seemed uncomfortable in
two
biggest
and
fastest
the
to try to get me a win, and 1
February marking · the fiveyear anniversary of his tracks in NASCAR- where can see him and his line
father's death, but birthdays Junior bears the clo sest formed on the outside coming up, getting closer and
resemblance to hi s father.
bring haJ?pier memories.
Dale Earnhardt was . the closer;" Junior said. "Every
· "His birthday is something
I do enjoy pointing out or greatest at re strictor-plate time I look in the mirror,
especially
at he' d moved up ,a few more
celebrati ng or recognizing racing.
because that was always a Jot Talladega, where he scored feet toward us and was comof fun with him," Junior said. I 0 wins and notched the 76th ing on. So everybody was
"When he was getting a little and tina! victory of his career sort of in a panic mode as if,
older we was always think- in October 2000.
' Wait a minute now, this
ing about what his real age
Junior inherited the skill thing ain't playing ·out like

Earnhardt

.

Reds
from Page Bl
and the ball sai led over his
glove.
The Nationals chipped

.

. Wednesday, April26,

.

2006

we had in mind."'
Junior said drives Iike that
Talladega victory :-vere the
ones his father chenshed.
"He would do all kinds of
stuff like that, make big
comebacks or big, great
saves or just crazy passes ,"
Junior
remembered.
"Everybody always said he
could do a Jot of things with
a race car a lot of other people couldn't. He'd take pride
in those things personally.
"Never would get out and
jump up and down and brag
about it. But when it was all
said and done and over with,
and everybody went home,
he would take pride in doing
those things . I think that
comeback was one he really,
really enjoyed."

Homecoming
starts Friday, A7

London Pool $~,000
closer to filling, AS

•
•

•

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;,o C I·:N T S • \' ol.

:&gt;:&gt;.

""'" . m ~ d a il • &lt;~•·• 11 in •·l.,·o n •

'llll ' I{SI&gt;A Y , APRIL 27, 2410 b

N o . 179

.

SPORTS

away at the Reds~ lead, scor- ners by hitting into three douing two in the second, and ble plays.
one each in the fifth and sixth · David Weathers pitched the
off Williams, then another in ninth for his sixth save.
the seventh off Todd Coffey,
Notes: Nationals RHP John
an unearned run thanks to Patterson will mi ss his next
shortstop Lopez's "throwing scheduled start because of a
error. But Washington could strained flexor muscle in his
have had more, erasing run- right forearm. Patterson orig-

'

inally was slated to start the
series finale against the Reds
on Wednesday, then was going to
be pushed back a day. RHP
Ramon Ortiz will start
Wednesday.... Washingron fell to
1-4 in one-run games.... William~
had allowed SIX earned runs in
each of his previous two outings.

• Lady Tomadoes lose
slugfest. See Page 81

.

Meigs Local Board of Education-begins hiring process
Tesar, and Shannon Thomas.
Hired . on three-year contracts were Matt Fields,
POMEROY - Numerous Whitney Haptonstall, Alyson
oontracts for certified and non- Lewis, •J feawana McCaulla,
certified personnel, including Susan Miller, Ron Vlasak,
a five-year contract to David and Nicole White.
Gaul as assistant ·principal of
Given five year contracts
Meigs High School, were · were Tammy Chapman, Lisa
awarded at Tuesday night's Froehlich, Kelly Harmon ;
meeting of the Meigs Local Sharon Hawley, Joni Jeffers,
Board of Education.
Nikki
Lambert,
Barb
All of the contracts are Mathew s Crow. Tom Werry,
effective with the 2006-07 and Carol Wolfe.
·
school year. Awarded one
Shawn Bush was given a
year contracts were Denise continuing .co ntract as a
Arnold,
Jessica . Bolin, · guidance counselor. ,
Danielle Dugan, · Marjorie
Non-rene.wed long-term
Gibbs, Lauren Hardgrove, ·substitute contracts, effective
Melanie Myers, Scott Needs, May 31, were those of Missy
Jackie Newsome, Jennifer Contle, Darla Boggs, . Misty
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFUCH&lt;il&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Rosister, Roxanne Williams, ·
Carrie Towne, and Vicki
Griftin. Hired as tutors for
health handicapped students
at $20 an hour not to exeed·
five hours per week were
Gloria
VanReeth ,
Rita
Simmons and Lynn Carley.
Don Romuno was given a
one year contract as drug free
·coordinator pending the
'avai lability of grant funding.
Superintendent
William
Buckley noted that the program is contingent on grant
money being avai lable.
"There is no local money to
fund the program. So if there
is no grant money, there wi II
be no program," he said.
Non-certified personnel

hired, effective with the 2005- . Supplemental
contracts
06 year, included Steven were awarded to Kathy Reed,
Cotterill, a two-year contract junior class · advisor, and
as mainenance/groundskeep- Dav.id Shuler. assistant varsier; Joyce Frye, John Gaus, ty wrestling coach.
and William Taylor, bus driAll contracts awarded at the
vers; Dennis Tillis, custodian meeting were by unanimous
effective June I , 2006.
vote with the exception of
, Hired as substitutes for •the those on a continuous basis.
remainder of thi s schoDI year Board member Victor Young
were Tammy. Andrus, cook, voted "no" in those instances.
Dawn Kopec and Michele
Other business
Vanaman,
aides:
and
The Board approved a
Michelle Smith, teacher.
power supply coordination
Chris Baloy and Mary Lou service agreement extension
Moegling's resignations ·for with
Strategic
Energy
retirement purposes were L.L.C.in partnership with the
accepted as was the resigna- Ohi&lt;:&gt; School Pool , to continue
tion of . Cliff Kennedy as purchasing electricity for the
eighth grade boys· basketball coach.
· Please·see Meigs, AS

RACO Flower Festival Saturday
BY BETH SERGENT

[french City

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Open Mon·SaiiO···; Sun 1·5

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Home Oxygen
Portable Oxygen
Nebulizers
Electric Beds
Wheelchairs
Diapers
Chux
Medicare/Medicaid

PLEASANT
VALLEY
.
HOSPITAL
304-675-4340

BINGO
Now PIIIIDD Evtrv
Frldav &amp; Mondo Nluhts

M9ntin • FREE Drinks

! llQ.SdlV: $1 00 oHany Dinnor
W.v.lf.nQ.S!I.QY Hall Rack Dinner
$7.99 · 10 Wings $3.00
Ituu:lcll!Y · Hoi! Chrcken Dinner

740·446·0007
Toll Free 877·669·0007
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

frid.e.v · Plo nar s $5 99
/l. Rrb Dmner
$9.50

124 HIGHLAND AVE.
PT PLEASANT, WV • .
(Old Carolina l umber Building Across
from CSX)

.H OLZER
CLINIC

$5.99
SI.IJir~l!Y · Chicken

l!llll!.I'Y · Pori&lt; Chop D1nner
1 pc. $5.99 2 pc. S7 99
HitS; 1tQn.:Stl.JI ,f'el• t l1fTl bm..Utm • e111T'1
1308 YSTE~N AV{. CAll/POll~ 0# 4~31

0BI1UARIES
Page AS
• Johnny Mathews, 76
• Clara Schultze, 93

We do the billing locally

oWned. We care ab!uu~IZ~

Wilt
.IIIII
FIURdlllla

Gerlach named
Middleport .
revitalization
coordinator

Medical Excellence.
Local Carina.
Ever11where
www.holzercllnic.com
Diane McVey
..\

~~·'' ··en
OwHer &amp; .\.udhti11Pl

INSIDE
• Senate Committee
demands oil companies'
tax records; Republicans
propose rebates.
See Page A2
• Senate panel
recommends abolishing
FEMA. See Page A2
• Family Medicine.
See Page AS
• Delays expected as
state begins intersection
work... See Page AS
• OU students to
participate in building
HaQitat hpuse.
See Page A6
• Election day dinner.
·See Page A6
• Senators want to
·remove privilege granted
by Supreme Court.
See Page AS

WEATHER

RACINE Normally
April showers bring May
BY BRIAN J. REED
flowers but this year spectaBREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
tors don't have to wait for
those flowers when the
MIDDLEPORT -The
Racine Area Community
Middleport
Development
Organization's
(RACO)
has
appointed
Michael ·
Group
Flower Festival gets underGerlach
as
the
project
coordiway this Saturday.
nator for the downtown reviThe festivities are· from 10
project.
"
talization
a.m. to 5 p.m. at Star Mill
Gerlach
is
a
retired
teacher,
Park. In case of rain the event
former retail business owner,
will be held in the Southern
and owner of
High School ~ymnasium .
.
a storefront
The entertathmel'!t schedule··
building on
is as follows: ·
the
corner of
At 10 a.m. the parade will
Mill
· Street
start at the old firehouse. .
South
and
II a.m. to 11 :45 a.m .. the
Third
Avenue.
Southern High Band will perHe is also a
form.
respected
· II :45 a.m. to noon, crownlocal historiing of Flower Festival Queen.
an,
havi ng
Noon _to· I p.m ., Athens
guided
tours
.
of'
historic
Dixie Land Jazz Band.
·
downtown Pomeroy,
I p.m. to 2 p.m .. Freed By
The development group
Christ.
appointed
Gerlach at last
2 p.m. to 3 p.m., French
week's meeting.
City Barb~rshop Chorus.
The development group will
3 p.m. to 5 p.m., variety
file a Tier II downtown revitime featuring local entertaintalization grant application
ment.
next month, sceki ng$400,000
The festival will also feafor streetscapc improvements
ture several craft booths and
and
matching funds for facade
of course flowers. Flowers
Beth Sereentjj)hoto
improvements.
The appoint·
will be sold by Southern FFA One of the traditions of the RACO Flower Festival is the crowning of the queen. Candidates for
and supplied by many other this year's festival queen are Southern fjigh School seniors (standing, from left) Bethany Riffle. ment of a coordinator was the
final requirement for the comlocal growers.
Kasie Sellers, Caitlin Nease, Betty Holman; (sitting, from left) Andrea Parsons, Nicole Writesel. pletion of that application
Southern FFA Teacher . Hanging baskets supplied by Southern FFA.
package.
,
Butch Mitchell said his stuGerlach
will
be
paid
on
a
dents will be selling hanging organizations,
including lighted country scene pic- RACO's general fund whiCh
part-time
basis
by
the
develbaskets, bedding plants and a RACO will be selling con- tures.
finances improvements in opment group· using funds
variety of perenmals. .
cessions as well.
Once again the kids wilf be the town, park s and sur- raised from its member
Southern FFA and the
An auction of selected · k!!pt busy with special kiddie rounding .area.
. businesses.
Southern High School Band items will take place as will a games.
rf there ute wty questinns If the grant application is
will also join forces to offer drawing for a signed
By supporting the festival abnut the event ca ll KQthrvn
· chicken barbecue. Other Middleton . Doll and two r"sidents are supporting Hart at 949-2656.
·
Ple.a se see Gerlach, AS

Relay for Life receives donation
Mary Grace
Cowdery stands
111 front of the
plaque to
Riverview Grade
School at
Reedsville. The
museum recently come Into
possession of
the plaque now
in the museum's "School
Days " display.

Heor w/lat otheN ord Sttylng

about Olkon Syncro.

Dti.FS

IIJ.. \I~J'\( ;

C~-:~

n:t&lt;

GALLlfQ.lJ.S

4.,5'/ 1 S&lt;"ond l%•·cnu•
1,\ ,:t l),, l n

w !\ ·~~ ~'lll •'f ~
~ :J n .. ~ P" '

l)jx•n M1•u. · Tl nu'&gt;.

I
o.tallo on Pap AS

Powell's

OHIO

FOODFAIR
700 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
740·992•5252
www.foodfairmk.com

WHY PAY MORE??
·EVERY DAY
LOW PRICES!

Come in for our
noaily Lunch
Specialsn
10:30 am-2 :00pm
5 great sandwiches
to choose from ...
only S2.99

875-1812
Point Pleasant, WV
173-5538

I!IVINO GAU.IA II
.llllltOIINDINO COl1MTJD
Complet• Abov&amp; &amp; lnground Repair
AbQve Ground &amp; lnground Saln
8r tnstall.-tlon
ComJ».OU l.1n•J2L
• 0PfiiW'IIjl1
• ,Ch~mtcalf. a S: uwl!n
• Ciottnljle.
• FI'Oi! Walar Afldty•M.

• l in itiS

• f:'lf!,ndog ll vl)otuble

• 1\Jma•
• ft!\l!r•

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ru"'

VALLEY
·BANK.

EopouMnc•

DRDEIIIIDW niR

740·441 ·9896
l80 State Rt. 7 N. •Gatllpolla; OH

..

- ---·-~---

---

Beth Sercontfphoto

INDEX
2 SECfiONS -

16 PAGllS

A6
Calendars Classi fieds
Bs-6 '
Comics·
B7
A6
Dear..Abby
Editorials
A4
Obituaries
,As
Places to go
A7
B Section
Sports
AB
Weather .
T£)

..

.

.

aoo6 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

•I

Meigs Museum display
celebrates schools of the p~t
'

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY ·- Ask chil dren today about the public
The Meigs County Relay for Life fund got a big t&gt;oost Tuesday when the Holzer Center for school s in Meigs County and
Cancer Care in partnership with Holzer Clinic and Holzer Medical Center. presented !3 check they would probably rattle
for $1,1500. The presentation was made to Ste~e Beha of the Meigs Re lay comm ittee. left, off names like Meigs, Eastern
by Ken Moore of Holzer Center for Cancer Care. From the left with Beha and Moore are and Southern while names
Missy Combs , tt;~am captain of the Holzer Clinic relay team, Diana Jeffers, the t&gt;ranch man- like Orange, Sh.umway and
ager, and Jodie Grlndstead, a team member. The Relay will be held at the Rock S prin~s Riverview Schools mi ght
Fairgrounds oh May 12·13.
register blank stares.
Cha~one

..

~

.J

Hoeftlchf photo

•

•

For thi s reason the Meigs
County Museum decided to
asscmhle a "School Days"
di;play to remind both young
and old and in-between of
the county's past by celebrating long gone schools that
served as foca l points for
small communities.
Mary Grace Cowdery and
Please see Museum, As
'•

•

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