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                  <text>Workerwho·killedone
at plant met·with bo5ses
day before, A8 . ·I

la••iu still loyal
to
B:t
Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Hotel Lafayette

to again host

Thursday, January 27, 2005

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Teddv Morgan

the Pistolas

POMEROY
Teddy
Morgan and the Pistolas will
be coming to the Court
MARJETIA ~· The third Street Grill this weekend to
annual· Blues Night Out will be shake the shack on both ·
Friday, Feb. 18 at 9 p.m. in the Friday and Saturday nights.
Hotel Lafayette. 101 Front St.,
Special guests fo.r the two
Marietta, presented by the Blues,
~
1·11 b
h
Jazz &amp; Folk Music Society.
per.ormances w
e t e
Admission is $5. For more Haymakers,
the
Wailin'
information call John at (740) Elroys, Bernie Nau on accor·
373-6640 or Visit the BJFM web- dian, and Johnny ·~or. Tone"
site
at
www:bjfm.org Borchard on lap steel.
.f
Morgan recently' returned
&lt;http/lwwwb
:
. ~ m.org/&gt;.
Shaun ll&lt;Xiker &amp; New Breed from a tour of Europe with
from Columbus will be.perfonn- Kelly Pardekooper. While
ing for Blues Night Out Shaun there he produced a new CD
did a recording of her petfor- at
Y sland
Studio
in
manoe at the Marietta Stemwheel Amsterdam, and another in
Blues Party in September 2004. Frankfurt, Germany.
and has produced a dynamite
More recently he has been
double CD from this recording in Nashville where he was a
entitled HShaun Booker Live in part of ·Troy Ols~n's new
Marietta," which will be released album where the two collabo·
at Blues Night Out.
.
rated on some new songs for
Cost of the double CD will be a recording where Morgan
$25 . For evecy CD sold, $5 wtll . plan~d guitar.
go. to:-vard the ongom1; flood ' The music . at the Grill
relief m our area followmg our starts at 9 p.m. on both
record 40-year flood tl) nights There is a .$5 cover
September 2004 and our recent .
·
· ·-~
•
flood this month. The $5 ccver charg~;. For more huQrmat10n
gets you in and there will be our call 992 •6524•
usual door prizes and 50/50 raffle.
This year. organizers. plan to

en

Blues Night Out

ro;~Jts;d~in~ ~:"'t~ oh:

relief. Merchandise and limited
edition, one-of-a-kind, special
BNO 2005 T-shirts will be on
sale.
"So be sure to come out on
the 18th ofFebtuary and suppon
a vety good cause and you just
might also have a great time too,"
organizers said.
Blues Night Out is the kickoff
to the River City Ohio Blues
Competition the · next .day,
19· at the same
Satwday,
Feb. Lafayette.
plare,
the Hotel
Eighteen bands compete for
prize money and sponsorship to
the Intemational Blues Challenge
in Memphis. Starting at noon and

.,
,

_

• Cincinnati beats South
Florida. See Page 81 ·

Bluegrass star Rhonda
Vincent returns to Ariel
Lewis, (740) 286-3473 or
The Village Haircutters, 151
Broadway St., Jackson, Ohio,
(740) 286-5465.
A flyer listing local hotels
and restaurants will be available for those who want to
tum this dance into a special
weekend event.
.·.
The Valentine· Dance is
being sponsored by the
'
d K'twartts
· Cl ub
new Iy-.orme
of the Jackson area. Proceeds
from the dance will go to the
Hall Hoqse, a ·group home
for youth in Jackson County.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. ~ ning car will remain by the
Hard hits, twisted metal, and end of the night.
a complete obliteration of
Cash and prizes will be
vehicles, it's all included in awarded to the top two
"Auto Annihilation II," West places in each heat. The top
Virginia's only indoor demo- three finishers · in the
lition derby which returns to evening:s feature event grab
Huntington' s Big Sandy larger cash ·prizes and
Superstore Arena.
awards. D(ivers interested in
· Keaton 's · Collision Center participating may secure an
of Barboursville presents the application and list of rules
annual · event by
logging
on
to
second
Saturday, Feb. _5, at 7 p.m. www.bigsandyarena.com.
Area drivers will compete is Information can also be
.a series of heats with the top obtained at the Arena offices.
two . places in each heat
"This was a great addition
advancing to the feature to the arena schedule in 2004
event.
and we certainly wanted to
The final event is a battle do it· again in 2005," Arena
for
demolition
derby .· Director of Marketing Heath
supremacy as only one run- · Brown said. "We ex pect

some very good drivers to be
a pan of the show and Tri- .
State fans should really
enjoy this 11nique event that
is the only one of ils kind in
the state of West Virginia.
Tickets are available now
at the arena box office. all
Ticketmaster locations, and
on-line at www.ticketmas-·
ter.com.
Adult
general
admission tickets are $15
while children 12 :and .under
will be admitted for just $li.
For more information on
"Auto Annihilation II," presented by Keaton's Collision
Center of Barboursville, and
other upcoming arena events,
fan s may visit www.bigsandyarena.com.

Trillium Trio to peiform

I OBITUARIES

J.

REED

the Brahms ViQlin Concerto
with the orchestra.
This is the second concert Monek and Turizziani
have collaborated on in presenting the Mid-Ohio Valley
combined choruses and the
River Cities Symphony
Orchestra.
· Corporate sponsors · for
this concert are Advantage
Bank and Creative· and
Beyond of Marietta. The
performance is · also funded
i'n-part by Artsbridge, the
West Virginia Commission
on the . Arts!West Virginia
Division .of Culture and
History and ·the National
Endowment for the Arts.

Page AS
• Jerry Hawk, 69
• Jack D. Sorden, 83

I

Classifieds
Comics ·

Bs-6

.Dear Abby

A6

Editorials

A4

Faith•Values
Movies

87

A2-3

As
As

Obituaries

POMEROY- After not 'paying parking meters for more
than two ·months, motorists
should be aware that st~rting
today the meter reader is back
on her beat.
Meter heads, removed when
the flood waters came up, were
put back on the poles alon·g
downtown streets Thursday by
village workers.
From Thanksgiving through
New Year's Day the meters
were "freed" as the village's
holiday gift to merchants and
their customers.
By that time flood waters were
moving into town and the .meter
heads were removed so they
wouldn't be damaged.
The threat of a second Januaty
flood further delayed getting the
meters back into operation, giving motorists additional time of
parking without paying.
But today it's all over. Motorists
are reminded that meters are
being read and tickets will be
Cho1tooe Hoeftlch(phato
issued to those ·parked at meters Village worker Charles Fitchpatrick puts a meter head on a pole along Main
where the time has eJ!:pired. .
Street in Pomeroy.

B Section

AB

"

. held Wednesday night at the library
was disappointing. Only three residents attended. The hearings are
geared toward getting communi ty
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
• input on what improvement projects
HOEFLICH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
residents want to see carried out in
their neighborhoods.
Jean Trus'sell. Meigs County's
POMEROY With up to
$300,000 in grant nioney for com- grant administrator who is handling
munity improvements at stake, details · of the application for
Pomeroy Mayor John Musser is Pomeroy, was there to explain the
appealing to residents to contribute . process of applying for grant money.
to the process of creating ·a vision what qualifies in the way of neighborhood projects, the leverage
for the village.
and the competitive selecrequired
. The turnout at a second hearing on
Pomeroy's application for an Ohio 'tion. The application . deadline 1s
of
Development
Department
Community Distress Program grant

,. r ,

~,

GALLIPOLIS

M.A., CCC·A
435'/, Second Avenue
Ow.tr A AlMIIolnlid
{1\crou from Post Office )
' • Open Mon . - Thuu. 8:JO.Spm

(740) 446-7619

.--------·;-----

------------'---------~.

..

Pluse see Bellevlll•. AS

Pomeroy Police crack
·down on wtpaid fines
and :p arking tickets ,
STAFF REPORT

POMEROY ~
. The threats of cracking
down on unp3id parking tickets and fines will
now become a reality in Pomeroy· according
to Pomeroy Police Chief Mark E. Proffitt.
Individuals with unpaid traffic or misdemeanor citations and unpaid parking tickets are subject to arrest and/or the loss of
their driver's license. Beginning immedi.~
ately warrants for arrest are being issued
and license ~uspensions are being sent to
Plus~

see Pollee, AS

BY BETH SERGENT

ATHENS
23~ Huron Stnet
(McGr1w P'tl y ~ic 1l Therapy Bldl!

275 West Union Shut
1

Open Mon.· Fn

~ : .30- 5pm

Open Tues .• Wed .. Thun. IV\0-5 pm

Saturday hy AJlpoinlme nl

(740) 286-.1430

(740) 594-3571

•

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM ·

POMEROY- When a Mason cornfield . was turned into a Wal-Mart
Supercenter five years ago, there was.a
mix of trepidation and antici pation
about its effects on the local economy
on both sides of the river.

Plose- M111011, A5
The Mason Wai-Mart has been donat·
ing pet food to the Meigs County
Humane Society. Pictured from left are
Wai-Mart claim associates Linda
Schultz. Kim Peavley and store manager Kit Roberts .
Beth !iercenl/ phatO

Call or come in to receive a
FREE CD or VHSTC1pe qf
actual user comments!

Dticon Syncro

lJro·Gpnutnltnt 1 ,_,,. • .,.* ~

--~

REEDSVILLE ~Only two gates at the
Belleville Locks -and Dam remain blocked
by sunken barges after salvage contractors
moved another · barge section out of the
Ohio Ri ver late Wednesday afternoon.
The No. 7 dam gate was cleared just
before 5 p.m. Wednesday. Gates 3 and 6 are
still blocked by sections of sunken barges,
the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers said

Village to apply for
community distress grant

otlcon

· - - · -- - - - - --r--- - - - --

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

,.,ww.syncro.oticonus.com

Diane

J.

Pomeroy mayor appeals for participation · Mason !#11-Mart donates pet food to Meigs Humane Society

© 2005 Ohio Valley Publl.ohi"'l Co.

• Maon, WV 25210
Phone (H4) 77M323

'

!

HOEFLICH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

• Meigs County to
organize charitable giving
foundation. See Page AS
• Plan baSkeibal~ ·
tournament. See Page AS
• WOUB finalist for
bluegrass statio(! of the
year. See Page A6 .
• Cr~ical blood drive at
HMC on Monday.
See Page M
• Dip in demand offers
relief to BREC users.
See Page A7

Sports
Weather

Ohio 48831 .
. (740) 448-1711

Two gates remain
· blocked at · ·
Belleville Locks ·

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

INSIDE

a SECfiONS- 16 PAGES
Calendars ·
A6

G.SIIpol~.

BriM J. Reedjphato

Tony Durm. left of Ohio Department of Transportation. conducted a
public hearing on ODOT's plans to close Ohio 338. Also pictured are
some of approxi mately 15 landowners affected by the closure.

BY BRIAN

INDEX

24CIO EllllrnAw.
· 1/4 -Noiltl
Cf:otl8 ffom Killft) .:~IMeaon _
tJrlclge

~

I

being read

Detal'- on Pace A8

Trillium Trio
MIDDLEPORT ~ · Trillium Trio, a chamber .musi~ group
from Parkersbur~, W.Va., wtll perform at 7:30 p.m. on Friday,
Jan . 28, at the Mtddleport Church of Christ family Life Center.
Ttckets are $5 at the door, and proceeds will benefit United
Fund for Meigs County. The performance is underwritten 'by
Middleport Community Association.
·

Please see ODOT, AS

meters

WEAmER

.

The roadway is· now closed tClo public
traffic because of erosion and damage to
the pavement along the Ohio River. T'he
state plans to abandon two additional sections of the highway, on either end of the
vacated portion. and r.urn those sections
over. to the county's highway inventory.
The county could then, in turn, transfer
those portions, eight-tenths of a mile in
all, over to Lebanon Township. ODOT
will construct turn-around areas• at each
end of the abandoned highway.
The plans will affect 15 property owners, and approximately 12 attended yesterday's public hearing. conduc ted by
ODOT's Tony Dun~1. ODOT is now meeting with those property owners to determine proper compe nsati on. ODOT could
purchase those parcels. but most landown-

Parking

Symphony to present concert
The

BY BRIAN

PORTLAND - Landowners whose ·
access to riverfront properties in Lebanon
Township will be affected by the state's
closing of what remains of Ohio 338 met
with Ohio Department of Transportation ·
officials
and
Mei gs
County .
Commissioner&amp; Thursday afternoon to
consider recourse.
The state plans to vacate, or dose. just
over I .5 miles of the highway, from just
over a half-mile from the intersection of
U.S. 33 at the Ravenswood Bridge to twotenths of a mile south of the intersection of
Ohio 124. The state's right of way will be
transferred over to the adjacent property
owners, and they will then be responsible
for creating and maintaining access to
their propenies.

........... ~ ....&amp;.Mil

GALLIPOLIS - Reigning third release . on Rounder
·
female vocalist of the . year · Recoi'ds.
Vincent started her performRhonda Vincent · will be
returning to the Ariel stage on ing career at' the age of 3 in her
Thursday, Feb. 3 for two parents' bluegrass band and on
shows at 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.
local television at age 5.
One of the best and brightest Honing her skills on mandolin
of today's bluegrass stars, ·and fiddle, she had recorded
Vincent captured the presti- eight albums with her family
gious International Bluegrass ba(ld by age 23. After a brief ·
Music
Association's stint in . country music in the
"Entertainer of the Year" mid-'90s, she returned to her
award in 200 I. She also won roots in bluegrass and has been
!he "Female Vocalist of the gaining immense popularity
Year" for 2004, for the fifth smce.
consecutive year.
All seat.s are reserved and
Vincent's last single, "If tickets are $15 in advance and
Heartaches Had Wings" and the $18 at the door the day of the
video of the same title received show. Tickets can be purheavy airplay on CMT. Before chased at the box office
that was the single' and video Monday through Friday 9
"You Can't Take It With You a.m.-3 p.m. or by phone. The
When You Go" from her latest Ariel
accepts
Visa.
CD ·"One Step Ahead" which Mastercard and Discover
features guest appearances by credit cards. The Ariel Theatre
is located at 426 Second Ave.
bluegra~s greats Ricky Skag~s.
Stuan Duncan, Aubrey Hayme, in Gallipolis. For more inforBryan Sutton and Vincent's mation call the Ariel Theater at
brother; Darrin. This CD is her (740) 446-2787 (ARTS).

•

,'.\,.·~:.&lt;-~...: ""..:. toll-;

.ODOT outlines plm;ts to.close Ohio 338

Rhonda·Vincent

direction of Pat McCoy.
Uptown Jazz ·will. play dance
music from the 1930s
through 1950s.
The Valentine Dance will
be held at the Memorial
Building,
corner
of
Broadway
and
Walnut
streets,
m
downtown'
Jackson.
The dress is semi-formal
and hors d'oeuvres wt'll be
served .. Admission is $25 per
couple and $ 15 for singles.
Tickets can be purchased
prior to Feb. 4 from John

MARIETTA at the door prior to the conRiver· Cities Symphony . cert;
or
online
at
Orchestra, conducted by ' www.rcso.us.
Tickets are
music
director
Robert $15 for adults and $8 for
Turizziani, and combined students. For additional
choral groups of the Mid- information telephone 3040hio Valley, directed by Dr. 375-1812
or
email:
Daniel Monek, assistant pro- info@rcso.us. · lr special
are
fessor of music and chair of accommodations
the Department .of Music of required, please call 304·
Marietta College, extend an 485~7068.
invitation to the community
The concert program will
to attend a winter concert 8 open with Antonin Dvorak's
p.m. Jan. 29 at Marietta Czech Suite; fbllowed by
High School auditorium,
Brahms Nanie, a choral
Tickets may be purchased work featuring · the comin advance· at ·Third Street bined Mid-Ohio Valley choMusic, O'Brien's Photo ruses. The program will also
Center and Sound Room, in feature soloist , violinist
Marietta .and Peoples News; John Harrison, performing

..

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

f~~?tb~:ra~ ~~~~ Total vehicle destrodion returns to.arena

The River City Ohio Blues
Competition is presented by the
Blues, Jazz &amp; · Folk Music
Society. $10 for current BJFM
members and $15 for non-mem·
bers. Doors open at 11 am. with
general seating.
Tickets are available at the
door. For more information call
John (days) at (740) 373-6640 or
Peg (evenings) at (740) 376-0222
or visit the BJFM website at
http: II ww w. b j f m. or g
&lt;httpJ/www.bjfm.org/&gt; .
Last year's competition saw a
full afternoon of great blues acts
. from all over Ohio, West
Virginia, Michigan, Pennsylvania
and New York rompete for sponsorship to the International Blues
Challenge, and organizers said
this year they are expecting to
again showcase quality regional
· blues talent
The first place· winner of the
River City Ohio . Blues
· Competition will receive $1,000
in cash and BJFMS sponsorship
to the Intemational · Blues
Challenge in Memphis early in
2005, where they can gain valu·
able exposure to record label representatives and blues industry
professionals and festival promoters capable of providing real
career advancement for a serious
blues musician.
The second place winner will
receive $200 in cash and .the third
place winner will rereive $100 fll
cash.
The big winners, however, are
the blues fans who enjoy a day of
great blues entenainment rarely
available in southeast Ohio.
More detailed infOITllalion on
these . events is available at
http://www . bjfm .org
&lt;hup:/lwww.bjfm.org/&gt; .

__

SPORTS

Valentine's Dance featu-res live orchestra

JACKSON ~. Are you
looking for a way to make
your valentine happy? You
can treat your mate to .a night
of romance with a special
Valentine Dance in Jackson.
Those who like to fox trot,
waltz or ballroom dance will
have a chance to rumba the
night away on Saturday, Feb.
12, from 8·11 p.m.
The dance wt'll 'eature
a
,,
live orchestra, Uptown Jazz,
from Athens. They are an
eight-piece orchestra with a
female vocalist, under the

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

With Syncro you ~n talk on the phone or get a
hug without worrying about the age-old problem
of whistling . Syncro continuously searches for
unwanted sounds and .removes them before they
.ire even heard.

..

.

�'

FA l'l'H ·•

The J?aily Sentinel

Pastor
Thom
Mollohan

VALUES

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Friday, January 28,2005

Court: Columbus violated activist's rights

- A Hunger For More
In the beginning, God created the Heavens and the
Earth. With those words we
are swept from bo'undless
darkness into the glorious
illumination of the countenance of God; from the
brooding silence of an empty ·
cosmos we are made the audience· of the indescribable
melody of God's voice as He
spoke Creation into being.
And
though
deceit.
destruction and death entered
His world through the very
ones He lovingly created to
walk with Him in bliss, the
gnuid and· etemal themes of
restoration, reconciliation
and redemption triumph
again and again ..
From Adam to Peter,
from Nineveh to Jerusalem ,
God's hand ev'er seeks to
bring forgiveness and relationship
with · Himself
through what are at times
discouraging, depressing
and even painful trials.
In Genesis chapters 37,
39-41, God begins to work
mysteriously in the life of
Joseph, one of the sons of
Jacob whose father Abraham
had been the recipient of a
special · covenant with God.
Because they choose to drink.
the sour elixir of jealousy,
Joseph 's own brothers cast
him into a pit and sell him
into bondage, delighting in
his hu(lliliation. Joseph could
be ruined by resentment and
defeated by' hopeless ness
after such an ordeal, but God
has other plans.
Though rejected, .Joseph's
trust in God remains and God
blesses him. He works hard
and with integrity follows this
new path on which his feet
must trod. But suddenly he is
beset with false accusations
and is punished as a criminal.
Joseph could be poisoned by
discouragement and broken
by despair after this second
wave of failure in his life, but
God has other plans.
Profoundly . moving in the
faith and character of Joseph,
God takes him from the bottom most pit of his life and
sets his feet on the path
toward renewal. Surely you
see the hand of God moving
Joseph closer to where God
would most use him. By
allowing him to be falsely
accused and imprisoned,
Joseph finds himself in the
company of Pharaoh 's royal
prisoners. Then, as God
works through Joseph to
reveal Himself ·tO the royal
attendants, word is ultimately
taken to the most powerful
leader in the world at that
time and Joseph becomes his
closest adviser and chief
administrator!
Although things are not the

PageA2

unfettered fellowship wit~
Him through faith in His Son,
Jesus . Christ. Keep in mind
that this reconciliation is
supremely centered upon our
relationsh'ip
with
God
Himself. "For if, when we
were God's enemies, we were
reconciled to Him ,through
the death of His Son, how
much more, having been reconciled, shall we be saved
through His life" (Romans
5: 10). But it spins off for us
both a capacity and a desire
to love one another as He has
loved us (John 15:12).
Redeemed? Yes! Our
Father hates that we have
been
overpowered
and
enslaved by sin's soiled
enticements. Even now He
yearns for our release and
works in human hearts to
break the bonds of selfishness
and self-satisfaction so that
sin may no longer be our master. " ... He entered the Most
Holy. Place oncp for all by His

same as before trials invaded
his life, Joseph is ushered into
an amazing restoration! Once
rejected, he is now held in
very high regard indeed. Once
falsely accused and wrongly
punished as a 'liar and phil anderer, he is so thoroughly
trusted now that the supreme
leader of the land entrusts him
with power nearly equal to his
own. Though the wounds of
his past have left deep scars,
Joseph has been -restored
beyond his or anyone's
wildest expectations..
Joseph deeply suffers at his
brothers' hands, but a day .
~
finally comes when he and his own blood, having obtained
brothers are reconciled. eternal
redemption"
Unbelievable that after such (Hebrews 9: 12b). Christ came
suffering at · their hands, and died and lives again that
Joseph one day falls on their the .world may have hope in
shoulders, weeping with joy spite of its brokenness and
over receiving again the helpless condition.
brothers he had lost.
Are you in the midst of a
discouragement
or
And because of his faith in pit
God's promises and his abe- doubt ? Are you haunted by
dience to God's will for his humiliation and defeat?
life,
Jose ph's
suffering Have you . been falsely
becomes the means by which accused or feel abandoned?
the "world" is redeemed from You might be discouraged.
famine and God's covenant. You' might even be defeated.
people are preserved in order
But God has other plans for
to ultimately inherit all the you. For any life that is sur-·
promises that God bad made · rendered to Him through
to their forefathers.
Jesus His Son there is reconToday. God's heart still ciliation
re~toration and
beats with the pulse of rec - redemption. As you allow
oncthatton, restoratton and God to unfold His plans for
redemption for H1s creation you, his power transforms
today. And we do well to your life and the lives of nthlisten to words spoken by ers in eternal ways.
" I consider that our present
the Savtor to a people. wh,o
thought that · God dt,?n I sufferings are not worth comcare a~ymore
My paring with the glory that will
Father ts _a lways at H!s be revealed in us. The erework to thts very day ... " ation waits in eager expecta(John 5:17 NIV).
Restoration? Yes! God tion for the sons of God tobe
grieves · over the brokenness revealed_: .For the creatton
of our lives and desires that was subJected to frustration,
we be lifted up and restored to . not b~ tts own chmce, .but by
the high and noble life for the fill o_f the One who subwhich He created us . "If a Jected tt, m hope that the ereman denounces his frie.nds for ation itself will be liberated
reward, the eyes · of his chi!- from its bondage to d~cay
dren will fail. My steps have and brought tnto the glonous
held to your paths; my feet freedom of the children of
have not slipped. I call on God" (Romans 8:18-21).
(Thom Mollohan has
you, 0 God, for you will
answer me; give ear to me and ministered in ' southern
hear my prayer. Show the Ohio the past 9-112 years
wonder of your great love, and is the pastor of
you who save by your right Pathway
Community
hand those who take refuge in Church. He and his wife
you from tl)eir foes." (from are the parents of four chil·
Psalms 5:5-7).
dren. He may be reached by
Reconciliation? Yes! God email at pastorthom@path·
desires to renew again our waygallipo'lis.com).

CINCINNATI (AP) -The Festival on June 8, 2002.
Glenn Redick, an assistant
city of Columbus violated the
city
attorney for Columbus,
free-speech rights of a
Christtan evangelist by eject- said he would consider
ing him from a public street appealing the ruling. ·
The city had issued a permit
that had been barricaded .for
an arts festival, a federal to the Columbus Arts Council
appeals court ruled Tuesday. to bring in artists for events
Threejudgesofthe 6th U.S. that were free and open to the
Circuit Court of Appeals public. Parks showed up
ruled unanimously · for evan- · wearing a sign bearing a religelist Douglas R. Parks, gious message and began disreversing a 2003 ruling in tributing literature in support
favor of Columbus by U.S. of his· Christian beliefs.
District Judge James Graham. according to testimony.
Parks left after an off-duty
The appellate court sent the
case back to Graham to deter- police officer working for the
mine whether Columbus festival's sponsor said he
should pay damages to Parks could be arrested if he did not
for ordering him out of an leave . City attorneys later
area that had been blocked off told' Parks that he would not
for the Columbus Arts have had traditional free-

Fellowshiu
Apostolic

speech riglits there because it
was in an area being used by
a private organization for its
•
own purposes.
The appeals court rejected
the city's position. noting that
Parks was ordered off a public
street and that his actions were
protected by the Constitution.
"We find that, by distributing literatu.re, displaying a religious message, and preachmg
to those interested, Parks was
engaging in religious activity
that has been recognized as
protected speech under the
First Amendment," Judge
Damon Keith wrote' for the
appeals court.

Church of Jesus Christ Apostolic
VBJ'lZahdl and Ward Rd., Pas1ur: Jam~
Miller, Sl.lnday School - 10·30 am ,
Evening- 7 30 p m

River Valle)
APQstolk Worshtp Center R7l S lrd
Ave . MlddiCJXltl, Kevin Konkle, Pastor. '
Sunday. 10·30 a.m
Wedne sday, 7 UO
p.m , Youth Fri. 7:30p.m
Emmanuel Apostoli~; Tal&gt;ernade Inc.
Loop Rct' oft' New Ltma Rd Rutland,
Services. Sun 10.00 am. &amp; 7:30 p.m.
Thurs . 7:00p.m. Pastor. MartyR Hulton

Assembly of God
Liberty AS!lembly of God
pc} Box 467, Duddmg Lane. Mason,
W.Va., ,Pastor. Ne1l Tennam.
Serv1ces- IU·OO a m and 7 p n1

On the Net:
http://www.ca6.uscourls.gov

Baptist .

Bill would require religious leaders to report child abuse
· ministers who felt they had a
COLUMBUS (AP)
Religious. leaders would have separation of church and state
to report suspected child issue, and some that had told
abuse under a bill that was nie that they pre~ch from the
pulpit that parents should reprireintroduced Wednesday.
The legislation passed the mand and punish their children
Senate last year but died in a and they didn 't want to come
House committee after fun - back the following week and
damentalist religious groups report them for child abuse,"
argued that it established a said Sen. Robert .Spada, a
chu_rch. and state relationship. northern Ohio Republican who
"We had some evangelical proposed the bill.

Carpenter Baptist Church
Sunday School - 9:30am. Preachmg
Serv1ce
IO.JOam, Evening St:r~ile
7:00pm. Wednesday Bible Study HIO pm ,
Interim Preacher - Royd Ross

The bill , which is essentially unchanged from last year,
would not apply to . the
"sacred trust" of a confession
or to something · said confi.
dentially to a minister.
Other religious groups.
including Roman Cathohcs
and Methodists, supported the
bill last year. Doctors, teachers and other professionals
are required to report abuse.

Chefihlre Baptist Churcj:J
Pastor: Steve Lt t!le, Sunday St hool· 9·30
am, Muming Wo~hip : 10.30 am, Sunday
evenmg· 6·30 pm Wednesday 6·10p m
llopt Baptist Churth (Southern)
570 Gram St .. Middlepon. Sunday schOO l
-9 3b a.m, Worship· I I a m a~d6pm .
Wednesday Ser\ice- 7 p.m
Rutland First Baptist Chun::h
Sunday School - 9:30 u.m .. Worship ~
10 45 am

Religion Briefs
Mexican priest stepping
down after 64 years leading
Legionaries of Christ · ·
VATICAN CITY (AP)- The Legionaries
of Christ have elected a successor to the
Mexican priest who has headed the embattled
religious order since its founding 64 years ago.
The Rev. Marcial Maciel Degollado, 84,
declined re-election, but a spokesman for the
order said the · decision had no tie to recent
reports that the Vatican has reopened an
investigation into allegations that Degollado
sexually abused seminarians.
The accusers have tried for years to call
their accusations.to the attention of Pope John
Paul II . Maciel and the order have vigorously
denied the allegations, saying the men are
·
conspiring to defame him.
In N(lvember, Pope John Paul II /praised
Maciel on the 60th anniversary of his ordination, citing his "intense, generous and fruitful
priestly ministry." .A week later, JY!aciel's
accusers were told the Vatican was reopening
a canon law investigation of their claims that
stalled in 1999, according to The Hartford
(Conn.) Courant and the National Catholic
Reporter, an· independent newsweekly.
Maciel cited his age and,his wish to be present during a transition under the new general director, the Rev. Alvaro Corcuera
Martinez· del Rio, a fellow Mexican, the
order's spokesman said. "He had been planning this for at least three years," said the
Rev. Tom Williams.
Corcuera has been rector of the
Legionaries' international seminary in Rome.
Its.U.S. headquarters is in Orange, Conn., and

Pomeroy Fim Baptist
Pastor Jon Brockert. East Mam St ,
Sunday Sc hool - 9.30 am ., Wm slup ,10·30 am

it has a seminary in .;=heshire, Conn.
.
Maciel founded the order when he .was. 20, m
1941. It claims a membership of 65,000 people, including some 600 priests in 18 countries.
David Clohessy, national director · of the
Survivors Network for Those Abused by
.Priests, said Maciel's decision to step down
"does not, we believe, absolve Vatican officials from investigating the serious sex a~use
charges ·against him."

First Southern Baptist
4 1812 Pomeroy Pike , Pa~tor . E. Lamar
O' Bryant, Suflday, School - 9 m 11m .
Wo~hip - 8 15 a.m., 9 45 am &amp; 7.00 pm .
Wednesday Scrv1c~s- 7 00 p m
First Baptist Chnn:h
Pasw r: Mark Morrow, 6th and Palmer St
Middleport, Sundny Schonl · 9·1 'i u m
Worship - 10: 15 a.m .. 700 p.m.
Wednesday Semce-, 7 00 p m

British report: Evangelical
schools worse at teaching
tolerance than Muslim ones

Racint First Baptist
Pasmr· Rick Rule. Sunday School - 9:30
a m , Wo~ship - 10 40 a. m , 7 00 p m .
Wednesday Servtces - 7.00 p.m

LONDON (AP) - Day s after the head of
B'ritain 's education watchdog criticized
Muslim schools for failing to promote tolerance ; a report from his own agency said
evangelical Christian schools have a worse
record.
Inspectors from the Office for Standards in
Education rated 42.5 percent of private evangelical Christian schools as failing to help
pupils learn to respect other cultures and promote "tolerance and harmony," compared to
36 percent of Muslim schools, the Times
Educational Supplement reported.
The office's chief, Daviq Bell , angered
Muslims la~t week when he said Islamic
schools could threaten the coherence of
British society.
A spokeswoman for the education office
defended Bell's comments as a contribution
to" important public debates.'' She noted that
Muslim sc hools educate 14,000 pupils in
Britain, compared with 5,000 students in
Evangelical Christian schools and 9,500
pupils in Jewish schools.

Slher Run Bapllsc
Pastor John Swanson, Sunday School IOa .m.. Worshtp - lla. m . 7:00 p m.
,Wednesday Semccs- 7 00 p rn

Mt. Union Baptist
Pastor . Dav1d W1se man, Sunday Sehoul
' 9 45 a. m., livcmng - 6.30 p.m ,
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.
Bethlehem Baptist Church
Great Bend, Route 124. Radne. OH.
Pastor · Damcl Mecca, Sunday School 9:30 a.m.. Sunday Worsh1p - 10.30 a.m,
Wcdne~y B1blc: Study- MXl p m
Old Bethel Free Will Bapti&lt;~t Church
28601 St. Rt. 7. M1dd\epon, Sunday
School - 10 a.m , Even1 ng - 7·00 p m ,
Thursday Scr:t ces- 7·00

Hillside Baptist Church
~, Rt . 143 JU S\ ol! Rt 7, Pastor Rev'
James R. Acree. Sr, Sunday Untried
, Service, Worship - 10 30 am. 6 p m,
Wednesday SerYices -7 p.m.

SUNUAY
M•tthrw
l2 •ll·SO

26 years In /ocs/. business
Roofing &amp; Building Work

Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg
.
1-740-667-3156

Pomeroy, OR
740-992-6215

"Still small enough to care"

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear
before God and man."

209Thlrd

Racine, OH

740-949-2210

Acts 24:16

"A Home Bank for

TiiURSOAY
I\OIJIO:t.U

29670 Bashan Rd.
Raclne, ·OH

7 40-949-2217
Sizes available 5x1 0 to 10

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......-

~ulolp
'

x20

If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide 'in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done unto you.
'
John 15:7

a qoMt o•t"fac.

TIM prime time _ . . II aMut to ...,.., In
Sod'lnlf··· "kap tuM4w- ollltlon loralpiiWII
.,.._.,... no. nad"""" WMIIIH Mnko Is poo~"l ttft to
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CaoKelt.tleM wiH Joe uonounced • tiler ..ulftd.~
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the

4!!" Richland Avenue, Athens
740-594-6333 '
1-800-451 -9806

Overbrook

Rehabilitation Ctr.
"A Cdcbratioo of Life"
333 Page Street
Middt.00rt OH
Warm Friendly
A tmosphue

H ours
6am-8pm

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

507 Mulberry Height•
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ' ~~
(740) 992-3279
.'-!!Y
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

.

·~

Pomeroy Westside Churth of C hrist
33226 Ch1ldr~n 's Home Rd , S unda y
St· hool - 11 tl.TII, Wor!Jltp - IOt~. m .. 6 p m.
Wcd11csday Servtt:cs- 7 p m
Middleport Church or Christ
5th and Mam. Pastor· AI Han so n. Youth
Mm1stcr. Josh L.l lm, Sunday Sc hool • 9 30
a.m. Worshi p- B: 15. 10 30 a m.. 7 p·m..
Wcds1esdu y Sc rv1ccs- ,7 p m
Keno Church of C.:hrisl
Worshi p - 9 .~ 0 a.m . Sunday School
10 30 am .. Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace, I st and
3rd Sunday .

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

your light so shine ...,.fnr,e.l
that ' they may see
works and glorify
IF:oth,,r in heaven,"

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

W~rshtp-

Sunday School - 10 u m.
IJ am , Wcl.lne&lt;;(Hy Ser11 K e~ - 7

Congregational
Trinity Church •
Second &amp; Lynn. Pomeroy. Pastor· Rd·
Jon:lthan Nohk. Worsh1p 1U 25 am .
Sund1ty School 9· l 5 a. m

Episcopal
Cract' Episcopal Church
320 E. Mam S1.. Pomeroy, Sunday School
and Holy Eucharist I l ·00 am

Holiness
Co n~munlty Churrh
Pastor Steve Tomek. Mrun Street.
.
'
Rutland, Sunday Worship- 10•00 a.m ..
Sunday Scn:tce-71' m

Uanville Holint.'Ss Church
3 1057 State Route ~25. Langsv llc. Pa stor ·
Vtctor Rou~ h . SunJu.y 'iChoul - 9 30 am ,
Sunday Wllr~h tp- 10,30 tun &amp; 7 pr'n.:
\\icdn~~Ja y pmyer scrv1cc - 7 p.m.
Cu:lvary Pilgrim Chapel
Hurn sonvi lle Road. Pastor· Charles
Mt KerlZie, Su11day Sdmul 9 30 a. ill ,
Wor11 h1 p - II a ln, HJO p m . Wedneliday
Ser\'H:c- 7·00 p.m
Rose of Sharon Holiness Church
l.eatl1ng Creek Rd. Ru!land. Pastor Re\'
Dew~:y Kmg. Sund11y sdioul·. 9JO am,
Sunday
worsh1p -7 p m , Wedncsdu~
prayer mcc1ing- 7 p rn.

a 111
Wonhip - 10 30 .1.m, 6::10 p m.
\\ocdn.:.-sdny S e rv r cc~ · ()']() p m

'l1Un Chun'h orr:hrist
Porncmy. H:lrri sonvtll e Rd . {Rt . l4 3).
Pastor Roge r Watst}n Sund.ty Schilol 9:30 a. in .. Wor~ lup - I0 '0 a.m , 7 00
p m . Wednesday Sci'\ ll'CS - 7 p m

Wesleyan Dible Hollnes" Church
75 Pearl St, Mu.kllcpon Pa~tor Rr ck
8oumc. Sund&lt;~y School - 10 a.m. Wor~ hip
- 104S pm. Sunday En· 700 prn .
Wednesday Servu.:e - 7 10 p 111

Tuppen l'lain Church of Christ
Instrument al. Worship Scn'ke - 9 am ..
Cnmmun11J11 - 10 .t m . Sundax School 10. 1~ .un .,YoUih - 5 JO pm Sund;ty, B!hle
Study Wedne;;day 7 pm

Hysell Run Comn~unit y Church
Rev Lany Lcmlq. Sunday s~·hool
- cj.10 il.m.'Wors h! p- 1045 ilnt. 7 pm .
Th01 sday Bihle Stu~y und Youth - 7 p m.

Bruu:

Tcrr~ .

Church of Chri!il
Sunday Sthool -9 30

P:t ~ltll

Rutland Church of Christ
Su nda) Schon l - ') ·30 a rn, Worsb1p and
CommUnion - 10.30 a.m .. Bob J. WelT)".
Mmt sler
Rradford Church or Chriqt
Corner of St Rl 124 &amp; Bradhury Rd .
Mtrn~tcr Doug Sharnblm Youth MmiSier
Bill Amberger, Sun day School - 9 .~0 am,
Wnrshrp - ~no a .m , 10·3 0 a m , 7 no
p m ·. Wednc!-.d.ly Scrv1cc~ - 7:00pm.
llickory Hills &lt;;hurch of Christ
Evangcl1st M1kc Moore , Sunday Schll()l 9 a.m, Worshtp - 10 am, 6 JO p m.
Wednesday SCr\IICC~- 7 p rp
Ri!Ws\'lllt: CHurch or t:hrist
Pa!-.tor: Philip Stuml. Sunday School· 9.30
am. Worship Sc rvrcc JO·JO am. B1ble
Stud). Wednc'iday. 6 30 p. m

Dexter Churth of Christ
. Sund.ty s~o; hool 9 ~0 a.m, Sunduy wor~ln p
- IO ·JO a. m
Chun::h of Christ
lntcrscc uon 7 and 124 W, Evangelist
Denm s S~ rgen t . Sunday Hthk Study ·
9.30 a. m., Worshi p: IOJO am. and 6..10
p m , Wednesday IJ1 blc Study- 7 p rn

Christian Union

..

Mt. Moriah Churth or God
f\.hle 11111 Rd , Rac!nc. Pastor. Jame s
Sullerfil:ld, Sunday S~.: hnol - 9 45 il.m.,
Evcmng • ti p m . Wednc~day Services - 7
p.m.
Ratland Churth or GOO
Pastor· Ron Heath, Sunday Worshi p · 10
a.m., 6 prm., Wednesday Serv1c~ - 7
pm
S)·racuse First Churth of God
Apple and Second Sts. Pasto r Rev Dav1d
Russe ll , Sunday Sc hoo l and Worship- 10
am Eve mn g Scrv1ces- 6 JO p p1 ,
Wedne~day Services - 6·30 p.m

K&amp; C JEWELERS

.

212 E. Main.Street
Pomeroy
992-3785

N. Second St. ' Middleport, OH

ClifT Frw Methudi~t Church
Glenn Rowe. Su.nday S~.: h oo l 9 ~0 am. Wur ~h ip - 1 0.~0 .1m ilnll 6
pIll ,\\&gt;ednc!iday ScrvtLe- 7'110 p m
Pa ~l or

Latter-Day Saints
rhe ChuKh of Jesus
Christ of ·L.auer-Day Saints
St Rl 160 ~46-6247 or 446-74Kb.
Sunday St·hmll 10 ·20 ~ 1 1 a.m .. Reli ef
Soc lcty/Pnesthood 11 ·05· 12 00 noon.
Sacrament Service 9- IO: p am,
Homem.tkrng mcctmg. 1st Thurs - 7 p m

KEBLER
AGENCIES Inc

BUSINESS SERVICES
An Income Tax &amp;

Lutheran

Our Su\·ioor Luthera n Churth
Walnut 11nd Hcnr) Sts . RElvemwood.
W.V~ .. P11s1or Dav id Ru s.-sd l. Su nday
Sl·hnol - Ul:OO am .. Wnrsh1p - II a. m

•

FinanciJJI Services Firm
618 E. Main Street • Pomeroy

(740) 992· 7270

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

•

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667·311 0

Enlerprisl•
l'astor Arl,mtl Km g. Sund.ty Sdwu l ltUO a.m.. W(11~lup - \UO am B1hle
S!udy Wed 7 30
Flai~IHids

ron•st Run
I'Hsto r· H1)h Rohl nsnn Sunday Sehuol - 10
il m.. Wmsh1p. 9 a m.

Comrnunily or Christ
Kt! Pas tnr· J11n Profttll .
Sunda~ School
9 ~~~ u.m.. Worship
10 1n ,1 m W~dnc~day Service-. - 7 00
r m.
Betht!l Worship Ctn ler
Cheqa School. Pasuw Roh Barber.
Ass1stant Pa ~to r K.trt': n Dav 1 ~ Sunday
Wm sh1p, 10 am. Evcn tng \\.'orsh1p 6 pm.
Youth grnur () pm. Wednc~day · Powt•r m
Prayer, and B1hle SIUdy - 7 pm
1-' ortl &lt;~nd - K annc

Heath (Middlfj)Urt )
P fl~H•r Rrwn Dunham StmtL I)' Schon] Q ~Oa m. Wllrship - II (Xl a.m
Minersl'ille
P11Sll1r llnh Robm~on. Sund.1y Sdu1ol ·
,, m.. Wor~h1p - 10 -.. m..

CJ

Pearl ('hapel
Sundlly SclllXll · IJ am Worship· Hl am

Ash Strt'et C hurch
A'h St. M1ddlcport · P il ~ to r Greg Sears
9·30 am .. Mornmg
Sunday 5l'hool
Wor~hip - Ill JU ;J m &amp; 6 pm. \Vcdnesday
Sen•1ce - 6·3U p m .. Youth Service- 6·30
pm
Ag~:~pt Life Center
"Full -Gu,pcl Church". ' pa~!Or~ John &amp;
Puny 'Wudl.'. 6(H S~t·onU Al'e. Mason, 77l
5017 St: TVilC lirn~· SurH.l.t) 10 3{1 ~ m .
Wedne~ tiY 7 pm

Porn~ roy
Pas tor· Briun Dunham. Wnr~htp - IJ .JO
a.m. Sunda) Schot1 l- l 0 J5 a m

Rotk Springs
Pastor Keith Rader. Su nday Schoo l - f.J 15
:t m . Wor, htp
- IU :1m , Youth
FellowshiP. Sunduy - 6 p.m.

Rutlund
RKk BltLirne. Sundi.ly Sd1ul'l 1.) Jt) ol rn. Wnn;h1p - 10 'O i1.111., Thun;d,ty
SCI\' ICC~ . 7 pIll
Sa lem l:cnrer
Pa~tor
\\oillt&lt;~m K. Man.1mll. Sunda)
School· IO. I'i am .. w,, rslup · 9 I~ .tm.
B1bk SlllUy Mom.lay 7.!)0 pm
Pa ~ tor

St. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer S~· cam orc &amp; Second St., Pomeroy.
Sunday Sthi'Kll - 9 ~.5 a m., WnNhlp - II
a m Pa~tor James P. Brady
SoH 7 00 pm Con lcmpmary Scrvrcc

United Methodist ·
Graham United Methodist
'Worshtp - 9 JO a. m (I ~t &amp; 2nd Sun),
7·JO p m. l] rd &amp; 4th Sun),Wednesday
Seait:c- 7·30 p m

Faith Full GosJWI C hurt;&gt;h
Lntlg Boll om Pa ~tnr· Slew Rt&gt;:cd. Sunday
Sc hool - 9.30 .1.111. Worship · IJ .]O a.m .
.:1nr,i 7 p m . Wcdnr,Jay · 7 p m . Frrd.l)' fel lowshi p '-CT\K'C 7 p m

Bet han~
Pdsltlr' Jnhn Gtlmmc, Sunday S.:hool - to
a 111 .. Wtlr~h 1p - l) a m.. Wcdnc~tlay
,StJr.~'I Ct'~ - 10 ol rn '

Harrisonville Community Church
l'hl'r,m IJurham . Sund.1 y - LJ 10
a Ill ~md 7 p.m . Wcdneo;dny - 7 p m

• t:armei-Sutton
Carmd &amp; Ba~han Rd ~. Radn c. Ohto,
Pasto r John G1 l.mnre . SLinday St'ht'lul 9 ..~0 a rn. ~rsh 1p 10:&lt;15 a m.. Bihlc
StuUy Wed . 7 tlo p m

Middh:porl Community Chul'&lt;'h
'i75 Pc.trl St. Middleport . Pa~ lor Sam
•\n dc rson, Sunday Sc hool 10 il m.
Evemn,g- 7 10 p m . Wed nc~d uy Scnrce7·:i0p Ill.

Mornit~Jl Slar
John Gilmore. Sund ily St·hool - II
a m . Wur,lup - 10 a m

P~sto r :

Faith Valle~· Tabernacle Churth
Ba1ky Ru n' Ro,ad. Pa~tor Re\ Emmell
Rawson, Sunduy Ev{'ntng 7 p.m.
Thursday Sen.·ice· 7 p m

F..~t'&gt;l

l.etlllrt
Pastor Bill Mo rshu ll Sunday School 9a rn .. Wor~h1p - 10 il 111 • I st Sun day
every month e\·cmng service 7 00 p.m .

Syr.atul'ie Mis!iion
1411 Bnd g" mnn St . S)"rill'Us{'. Sunda y
Sd1 ool . Ill il. m. E~l." m ng - 6 p 111.
Wedne sday Scrv!~e - 7 p m,.

'• Radn~
Past.1r· Pete S lt.~11 cr Sunda~ S.chnol - I 0
Won;h1p - I I :1m .. WcJm:,d.w I

Hazel Community Church
011 R1 1.24, P01stm . EU~d Han . Sunday
S.:boo\ - 11' 10 u.m . \\Jors hi p 10.30 a m .
7 JO p.m.

am ..

pm

Cool1'ille Umted Method 1st Parish
Pastor. Helen Khnc. Cunh 1llc Church
M ;u n &amp; Ftflh St . Sun.lay St:honl - IL}
a.m .. Worsh!p 9 a m.. Tue~d;.~y' Sen ll'CS ·

Oyes,'ille Communil y Chun.:h
Sunday Schon ] · Y·J() am. Worshi p 10.30 a.m.. 7 p.m

Mt. Oli"e Unitfll Methodist
OfT 124 behind Wilkesville. Pilstor: Re\'
Ralph Sprres. Sunda) SchlXJI · 9 .10 am
Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 7 p m . Thursday
Scr\iu:~- 7 p. m.
Meigs Cooperative Parish
Nonhcast C'lus1cr. Alfred. Paslor Jan e
Beattt e. Su nday School - 9:JO am ..
Worship · I I a m , 6:30pm
Chester
Pastor Jane Beattie. Worship 9 a.m .
Sund ay Sc hool ; 10 am . Thursday
Sel".'lees - 7 p.m.

Joppa
Paslor Bob Randolph . Wor shtp · 9 ·JO
a.m. Sunday School - 10 ..~0 am .

Long Bonom
Sunday Schoo l • 9 30 am, Worsh1p 10 30a.m.

RffilswiUe
Worship - 9.30 a m.. Sunday School
10 30 a m. ." F1rst Sunday of Month · 7 UO
p. m. SCf\'ice

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

. .1llbn .funeral •omr

\.

.......... ··._L..... _

-~~~--

Pomeroy

\1om Chupel Church
Sunday ~chn\11 · 10 il m . Wnr~ h 1p - I I
a m , Wl.'dn~sduy Scl'\"lce .'7 p.m

Bethel Church
Town~htp Rd .. 4ti8C. Sund:t) Sc hool · 9
a.m. Wo n lu r - l 0 ~ m. Wednc~ay
Scmcc~ Ill n. m.

Failh Gospel Churth
Lon g Botwm. Sunday Schoo.1 l · IJ ~0 am
Wors h1 p · IU.4.i am, 7.30 p.m..
Wcdne-.:lay 7 JO I'm

Hockingport Churth
Gr.md Strt.~t. Sunday s~h(•nl - 9 )il a m.
Worsh1 p- lO·JO u m . Pustor Ph tll1p Bell
Torth Chun::h
Co. Rd . 6J, SunUay Sd1t11JI - 9
Wor.; h1 p- lO· lO am.

~0

Mt. Ulhe l'ommun1ty Chu~h
Pastor· L.a.wrcnl·e Bush. Sunda y Sc hool 9 .'0 a rn. Elenmg - 6·30 p m. Wcd~day
Service - 7 p. m

am.,

Nazarene

rull Gospel Lighrhouse
;I,,WS Hrland Road, Pomero)', Pastor · Roy
Hunter. Sundny S~hoo l - 10 am .. Evening
7 .~0 p.m , ~ueMiay &amp; Thursd.t~ - 7,30
pm

Middleport ChuKh or the Naz,al'('nf
Pastor. Allen M1 dc;1p. Sunday Sc hunl IJ JO a m .Worsh1p - IO·JO a rn·. ti Jl) I'm .
Wednes!Jay Servu;e~ - i p.m . ,Pa stm
Al l.!n M1dcap

South 8tthel Community Church
Silver R1dgl'· P.tslur Linda Dame'&gt;l.ood,
Sunda y S.:hnol - IJ a m Worship Sei'\'ICC
10 a.m . 2nd and 41h Sunday

Retdsvllle Fello"'ship
Church of the Nularcnc. Pa stor. Jamie
Petit I. Sunday S'hool- 9 JO am, W~ns h•p
10:4."\ am. 7 p m.. Wcdnciiday Sm tees
•7pm

S) racuw Ch un::h or the Nazarene
Pastor Mike Adkms. Sunda) School - 9 .' 0
a.m . Wot ~h• r · 10 .' 0 ilm. f&gt; pm.
\\ ednesda) Scmces- 7 p ,m
Pomcro~·

Church of lht Nay.arent
Pa~ tor. Jan U!vcnder, Sunday School 9 30 n m , Wor~htp - 10 ]0 a.m. ,ilnd 6
p m , Wcd ne!'llay Sl."n.icc~ · 7 p m
C hest.~r

Chu n: h uf th~ Naz11rfne

ROCKSPRINGS
REHABILITIION CENTER

Wor-.htp - lfl 10
- 7 p.lll

dill . Wedn c ~dll&gt;

Scn1cr

Fairvle~· BlbW Church
Lc1,trt. W Va Kl I P.t~tor· Bn.m Ma) ,
Sumhi} School - 9 ~() am , Wor~ lup - 7 IN)
pm . Wcdn~'rJ&lt;~} lithic S1ud ) · 7 !~I p m
Faith Fellowship Crusade for ~ hri~t
Pa~tor He\
J·;,mk lln l11tko.:n ~ Scntte
Fnd~~ 7 p m

Cah·ary Bible Church
Porncruy P1h Co Kd p,"l"r· l{ e\
Bla~kwood. Sun da~ S ~ h , tol · 9 ·~ () a.m .
Worsh1p
Hno
&lt;o m
7 10
Jllrn .
Wedne~da~ SenK~ - 7.,'\tJ p.m
Sliversville Co mmunity Apustuli&lt;'
Chon:h
Pas10r Wayne R Jev.cll. Sunda~ Sen in!·
fl'{HJ p m. Wedne~da~ - fl Ull p m
R..joking Lift Church
500 N 2nd &gt;\vc . \11ddlc~m . PaMor:
M1kt': 1-nn:man . p,,,tur !:.mcntu'
L~wrence Foreman. ~~~r~hi'p 10 I.M/ilm
WOOne~day Scr\ I( e' · 7 )l m

Clifton Tabernacle Church
Cl11ton. W: Va, Su ndil) S~ hool .' 10 &lt;1m .
Wohh1p - 7 p m . Wednc,da) Sen. ttt: - 7
pm
Nt'w Lire Victor~ Cenle r
3773 George' Creek Road. Gallp()h l&gt;. OH
Pa~tor · B1ll Staten. Sunday Serv t t:e~ - 10
am &amp; 7 p m Wedne~day - 7 p m &amp;
Youth 7 p m
Full Gospe l C hun:h
of the Lh·ina Sa,·ior

Communill' C hun·h
W Va om Ll l'\' tng
Ro&lt;~d. Pa ~l or C h il rl c~ Rou'h iJ[).lJ 675 ·
228R. Sunday Slhool 9:30 am. Suflday
C\CIIIII!&gt;\ ~crVKt: 7 00 pm. B1f'&lt;l y SIUd)'
Wed n'esda~ scr.K"r 7 00 pm
Sal~:tn

-\bundant Gr~:~ce R.F. I.
~1J S TI111d St . MiUUicpu1t , Pa~tor Tcli!'':J
Da\'1 ~
Sundil) ~crv1cc 10 am ..
Wcdnc~day ..crvil'C, 7 p.rn

Sno¥~\'ill e

Back of West

Co l umbi~.

Hobson C hn stia n Fcllow,'ihip Ch urrh
Pastor Her~l·hc\ Whuc. Sundu y Sdl\Jol10 am su.nday Churc h ...c~ \C~ . 6· .\1 ) pm
Wed nesday 7 pm
Re~~toration C bri~tian Fello\!oship
Y'6'i Huope1 Roo:1 d, Alben~. P a~tor
Lonmc Coat ~. Sund.ty Won;hip IO·iMl am,
Wcdnrsd a) · 7 pm
l .~tng.ni lle Christian Church
Full Gospel. Paswr· Roben Mu s ~r.
Su nday Sch•lOI IJ ]0 11m wodh•p 10 JIJ
am 7 00 pm. Wednesday Service 7.00
pm

Pentecostal
Pentecostal Assembly
St. Rl 124, Racme.' Pas10 r. Wllham
Hoback. Sunday School · Ill a m
E\em ng 7 p m. Wcdn c~dny Sen ices- 7
pm

Presbyterian
Syracuse J.' int Unitoed Prnb~· terian
Pasto r: Robert Crov. . Wor~h1p · 11 am
Harrisonville Pltibytcrian Churrh
Pi.lstor. Roben Crow, Worship - 9 a m
Middleport Prnbyterian
Pastor. Rober Crow. Worship - 10 am

Seventh-Day AdveQtist
Mulherr; HI ~ Rd . Pomeroy. Pa stor
, BenneH L,ucklc sh. Salurday 'Savil:e~
Sahbalh Sthtlul- 2 pIll . Worship - ] p m

United Brethren
Mt Hermon' United Brethren
in Christ Chun:h
Texas Commun1ty ' .M il W!ekham Rd
Pastor· Pe1er Mllflindale. Sunda~ Sthool 9:30 am . Wor~h1p - IU:JO am , 7 00
p.m. Weduesda; Sen' l tc ~ - 7.00 p m
Youlh group mrelmg ~ n d &amp; 4th Sund&amp;) S
1 pm
Eden L' nlled Brethren in Christ
Stale Route I 24, Reedsv ille Sunda)
School - JJ. a.m . Sundil~ Worsh!p - 10 00
!!. m. &amp; 7 00 p m. Wedn ~sday s~r\'Kes .
7:00 p m . Wcdr~r sday Youth Service

7.00 p m

Carleton lnlt'rdenominationlll Church
Km g~ h u r y Roild l't~stor Kobert Vance
Sund:l\ School - Q· JO am .. Wors h1p
Sen ICC 10· JO am El•cmng Sen·K·e 0
pm.

'

•·rentom GosPt'.l Mi!!Sion
Bald Knob. on C'o Rd J I. Pa~tor · Re\'
Roger Willford: Sunday School - 9·30 a.m
Wt,rshtp- 7 p m
White's Chapel Wf'sltyan
Cool\ tile Rt1ad. Pa~wr Rev. Phill ip

Let your fi ght so shine before
me'l, that they may !Jee your

The care you deserve. close to home good worh and glorify mur
36759 Rocksprings Rd.·
•n"""' in hea\'en."
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Matthe"' 5:16

740-.992-6606

•til ut c1rw:l yo•Jr thoughIt with ~~lal ca"'"

740.992-2644

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
dod so hJI'ed the world
PHARMACY
he gm•e !tis mt/r
We Fill Doctors'
I b;~ ~ r.• t1 e· 11 s011.. .
Prescriptions
Jolm3:16
992-2955
Pomeroy

740.992~298

MY arace is
for thee: for mY
strenath is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. i 2:9

lltnourltr'•
Office Service &amp; Supply
Blessed are the pure ''So I strive alw ays to keep
:firt
&amp;
&amp;aft!!'
ANDERSON
TO........
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
FUNERAL HOME
in -heart; for they my conscience clear before
...............
,
God and man."
174 la!nt Stlftl • PO Box !70
..,.
Middleport, OH
shall see God.
Nt"" Ha,en, WV l5l6S
• IIH1Ma..M71
Acts 24:/6
Andtl10•. Uttnstd Funeral Director
''ld~r~n, !",&gt;rtll&gt;oo!:ht i' aneral Planning
.._._......._..,,...... ..... .._.,..
Matthew 5:8
992-6376
C'
. .~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~. . . . . . . ~
.. .~~-·. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
I11Th

..

•

.. - -- ...

Oa~i~ Christian rellowshlp
I ~!\ll · IIL!lOilllllatloln,ll IL·IIoWShlp)
Mcclmg m the ull l Arncnu m Legum !1.111
. Sou1h I uurth A\1'1\Uc M1dLllcpon
P.t,lor Chn' Slt· ~an HI 0011111 Sunday
Other nK-c;mt;!~ 111 h1•rnc~

Kc ilh R.adc r Sunday Sl'houl • 10
a.m . Worship - I I a.m
Pa~tor

7 pIll

If ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
Insurance words abide in yo11, ye shall
Products + ask what ye will, and it shall
SERVICES
Financial
214 E. Main
be done unto you.
Services
992-5130
John 15:7

Bill Quickel

Other Churches
Ama7.in!,l Cruet! &lt;.:omrnur~it! Church
Pus!m W,tync IJu nldp, State Rt fiR!.
Tup pc i ~ Pl :.~i n ~. Wor, hil~ 10.00 am,
Thur'illay B11'&lt;k Siudy 7·1Hl pIll

Wednesd&lt;~y- 7 p '"

St . .John 'L utheran Churc:h
P111e Gw w. W01sh1 ~- ~ 00 am. Sufl(h y
School
10:00 am Pastor James P.
Br.tdy

Davi(!·Qulckel Agency Inc.
Full line of
·

Tuppers Plains St. 11Hul
P a~tor JUlie Beott1e, Sunduy 5l'honl - t)
a rn W11r•h.1p • Ill &lt;t m ·1uc,do~y Sen tee ~
- 7.]0 p m
c:entral Cluster
Ashur~ !Syro~cu ~ c), P.1Mor. Bob Ru hin~on.
Sunday School • 'V4'i am . w,)f,lllp · 11
a rn . Wcdncstla}' St:r\ llC" - 7 \() p m .

Pa~to1

l.au~l

Bradbury Church of Christ·
Mmi stcr: To m Run~on. JQ5~,1'! Brudhury
R11ad, Middk:port. S unda~ Schuol - 9 JO
am.
Wor ~ hip · 10 30 am.

Matthew 5: 1

740-992-6128
Local source for trophies,
Ia ues !-shirts and m r

Ch~prnan.

Pine Grov~ Bibl~ Holiness Church
IIf n11le ott Rl 125, ~ts!nr l{ev U IK: II
Manle~. Su nday School - 9.30 a m ,
Worship • 1U 10 ,tm . 7 10 pm
Wcdnc sd a~ Sen t\.'e - 7 ·JO pm

Hurwa.llo~idgr
Pa ~lo r

Church of God

Rutblnd Fr'ft Will Baptist
Sa lem .St . Paslor: Jamie Fortner. Sunday
School - 10 a.m . Evening • 7 p m.,
Wednesday Sel'\ 1ces • 7 p m

..

•

Pomero} Church of Christ
2 12 W Mntn 51 . M1m stcr : Anthon)
Morns- SLJ nduy School - 9·30 a.m,
Worsh1p- 10·10 a.m, 6 p m., Wednesday
Services · 7 p m.

FOI'HI Run Baptist
Pastor : Anus Hun. Sunday School - 10
a.m, Worshi p - 11 am

·
MEIGS FAMILY EVECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

Hemhxk Gro\e Chrl'itlan Church
Mini ste r. L.nry Bmwn, Wursh1p · 9.30
a.m Su ndoy Sehoul - 10 1\J a.m.. B1 bk
Study- 7 p.m.

F11lth Baptist Church
Railroad St , Mason, Sunday School 10
Q.m .• Wor sh!p - II am., 6 p m,
Wcdnesd~y Servtccs - 7 p m

Antiquity Baptist
Sunday School - 9.30 a.m , Worship 10 45 am . Sunday Evcmng - 6:00 p m,
Pastor: Don Walker

!Mi[[ie's !J?...estaurant

1~0

Church of Christ

Hartford Chun::h of Chri~t in
Christian Union
Hartford . W Va , Pastor Da vid Gree r.
Sunday School - 9:.10 a.m .. Worshtp 10 30 am . 7 00 p. m . Wedne§dlly
Servi ce~- 7:00p.m.

Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Mam Sl., Middlepon. Pastor.
'Rev, Gilbert Craig, Jr , Sunday School ·
9 30 a rn, Worship · 10 :45 a.m

(740) 992-6472
Fa&gt;&lt; 174o\ 092·7406

' 740-992-7713

Hills Self Storage

P.O. Box683
P.omero Ohio 45769-0683

·

Homemade Desserts Made Daily
Home Cooked Meals&amp;: Dally SpecliJis
Open 7 days a week

Home People"

SA11JliDAY
il&lt;lo6•1·U

Community Services

Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 minutes from

MONIMY
Ro......
111-..1·17

Michael L. Crites
Director of Family &amp;

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

Cathol~c

Paslvr Rn . Herhcrl Grate, Sunday School
IJ 30 u.m .. Wor'&gt;htp - II a.m. 6 p m
WeJr~c-.day Sen' Itt:' - 7 p m
Rulland ( hurrh or the N1:1Z11.rene
Sund;J y S~hoPI - 9:30 a. m .. \Vur~lup 10 10 .a m . 6:30 p.m . Wcdnc~a&gt;
Servile" - 7 p m ·

Church or GOO of Prophety
0 J White Rd otf St Kt lhO. Pastcw P 1

pm'.

Sacred Heart CathOlic (:hurch
161 Mulbe rry Ave .. Pumcroy. 992-5!N8,
Pu sll'll'. Rc\' • Walter E. Hem?. Sat Con
4 45-5 15p.m .. Ma ~s - 5.30 p.r11 , Sun
Con - 8 :4~-9 ·1 ~ a m , Fl un \1ass - ? · \0
t~. m , Datly Mi!.~ S- 8·30 u m.

Victory BaPII!!IIndependent
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport, Pastor James
lOam .. 1 p.m..
E Keesee, Worsh1 p
Wednesday Serv ices - 7 p.m.

The sponsors of this.church page do so with pride in our community
Young's Carpenter Serulce

Sunday

, Stcond Baptlsl Chul'&lt;'h
Ravc nswoc.ll.i, WV, Su nday Sd1uol 10 urn, Mommg wor:&gt;htp 11 um E'·cntng - 7 pm .
Wt..-dncsda) 7 p.m

�OPINION

The· Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992~2157
www.mydailysenllnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co. ·
Jim Freeland ·
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager· News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of tile press; or tile riglit of tile
people peaceably to assemble, and to..petition
the Government for a redress of grie1•ances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constit11tion

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, Jan. 28, the 28th day of 2005. There are
337 days left in the year.
· Today's Highlight in History:. On Jan. 28. 1915. the Coast
Guard was created by an act of Congress.
On this date: In 1853, Cuban revolutionary Jose Marti was
born in Havana.
·
'
In 1878, the first commercial telephone switchboard went
.into·operation, in New Haven , Conn.
In 1878, the first daily college newspaper, the Yale News.
began publication in New Haven, Conn.
In 1909, the United States ended direct control over Cuba.
In . 1916, Louis D. Brandeis was appointed by President
Wilson to the Supreme Court, becoming its first Jewish member.
In 1945, during World War II, Allied supplies began reaching China over the newly reopened Burma Road.
· · In 1973, a cease-fire officially went into effect in the
Vietnam War.
·
In 1980, six U.S. diplomats who had avoided being taken
hostage at their embassy in Tehran t1ew out of Iran with the
help of Canadian diplomats.
In 1982, Italian anti-terrorism forces rescued U.S. Brig.
Gen. James L. Dozier. 42 days after he had been kidnapped by
the Red Brigades. .
.
In 1986, the space shuttle Challenger exploded 73 seconds
after liftoff from Cape Canaveral, Fla .. killing all seven crew
members.
Ten years ago: President CHnton was host to a 5 1/2-hour
"work session" of governors, legislators and local officials,
both Democrats and Republicans, to discuss welfare reform,
Five years ago: Sister Jeanne O'Laughlin, the Florida nun
selected by Attorney General Janet Reno as a neutral party in
the custody battle over Elian Gonzalez, sought unsuccessfully to persuade Reno to change her mind about returning the 6year-old to Cuba.
One year ago: British Prime Minister Tony Blair won vindication when a judge said the B-BC was wrong to report the
government had "sexed up" intelligence to justify war in Iraq.
Former U.S. ·Navy commander Lloyd "Pete" Bucher, who
helped his USS Pueblo crew survive brutal captivity in North
Korea, then faced criticism back home, died in Poway, Calif.,
at 76.
Today's Birthdays: Musician-composer Acker Bilk is 76.
Actor Nicholas Pryor is 70. Actor Alan Aida is 69. Actress
Susan Howard is 63. Actress Marthe Keller is 60. Actresssinger Barbi Benton is 55. Actress Harley Jane Kozak is 48.
Rock musician Dave Sharp is 46. Rock singer Sam Phillips is
43. Country musician Greg Cook (Ricochet) is 40. Singer
Sarah McLachlan is 37. Rapper Rakim is 37. DJ Muggs
(Cypress Hill) is 37. Actress Kathryn· Morris ("Cold Case") is
36. Singer Joey Fatone Jr. ('N Sync) is 28. Singer Nick Carter
(Backstreet Boys) is 25. Actor Elijah Wood is 24.
Thought for Today: "S uccess and failure are not true opposites and they're not even in the same class; they're not even
a couch and a chair." - Lillian Hellman, American author
and playwright (1905-1984).

LETTERS TO ·THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All letters are subjeci to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No 11nsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,,
addressing issues, not personalities.

The Daily Sentinel
cusPs 213-96DJ

Correction Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Our main concern in all stories is to be Published every afternoon ,· Monday
accurate. If you know o1 an error in a · through Friday. 1t 1. Court Street,
story, call the nB'Nsroom at (740) 992·

Pomeroy, Ohio. Second·ctass postage

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paid at Pomeroy.

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Ohio Newspaper Association.

Our main number ts

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Department extensions

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EdKor: Charlene Hoeflich. Ext. 12
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·Friday, January 28,

Friday, January 28,

2005

A letter came in the mail
recently from Rev. Robert B.
St. Clair. That wasn't · too
unusual. St. Clair conducts a
mail ministry from his home
on the Methodist Camp
Grounds in Lancaster. Ohio.
Every month those on hi s
mailing list get a copy of his
mimeographed "Fireside
Chat."
These are chatty littl e letters. · Bible games and
quizzes .that bring the church
home to about a hundred
people who live alone and
who eagerly await every letter that. comes in the mailespec ially St. Clair's,' which
come complete with "typos"
and occasiona) dangling
modifiers and St. Clair's own
brand of whimsy: '"Be careful of your tongue. It's in a
wet place and it's easy to
slip. "
For many readers of the
"Fireside Chat" their favorite
part is this country parson's .
down-home letter:
'"I still walk . daily at the
mall where I often talk with
folks who need prayer · and
direction in their lives. Last
week I took one young man
to get a haircut and bought
another a pair of tennis
shoes. I needed a pair for
myse lf and the discount
store where I go had a sale
- buy one pair and get
another for $1. .. "
Well, the "Chats" w{ln't be
coming again for' a while.
The letter from St. Clair
brought news that he is in a

George
Plagenz

nursing home and it will be
so'me time before he returns
to his editorial duties.
The letter doesn't. go into
details except to say he had
been in the hospital for 22
days in December and may
need "nlore surgeries,"

Now 83, St. Clair thought
he had retired 20 years ago.
A widower since 1981 , he
bought a year-round cottage
on the Lancaster Camp
Grounds where he volunteered his services arranging
the summer vacation worship serv ices.
Occasionally he would
preach or play the piano in
the huge tabernacle auditorium where Billy Sunday,
William Jennings Bryan and
President William McKinley
had spoken to mammoth
·
crowds.
Then 15 years · ago, St.
Clair had a heart operation
that further curtailed his
active ministry. But when
some neighboring church
would invite him to fill in,
he was always ready to
oblige. On Sundays when he
wasn't in the tabernacle pulpit, he could be found pour-

ing lemonade and iced tea
The heart and soul and
for those standing in the long strength of Christianity is
cafeteria line on the old not found in the big-city
campground.
. cathedrals or in the fashionIn the pulpit, St. Clair has . able churches with names
his own style. One Sunday like St. Martin's-by-the-Sea, .
last summer, he preached on with their magnificent paid
"'Tradition vs. Change." He choirs and expensive floral
took issue with some of the arrangements on the altar.
. "snappy 'tunes'" many con- The heart and soul and
·strength of Christianity is
gregations use today.
Ironically, he said he likes found closer to the grassthe idea of "snappy ser" roots level where two or
mons."
..
three are gathered together
'" I · have tried to achieve · and the t1owers in the plain
this when I preach," he said. glass vessel in the chancel
"People tell me they like it. I came from Elsie Lugibill's
suppose those who don't like backyard tulip garden.
it say., nothing. I use stories
The surroundings of such
·and illustrations folks will a church may be unimposing
remember and some things both inside and out but the ·
that will make them laugh. foundation is as solid as the
Of course· all this is done in Rock of Ages, Christ himself ·
the name of the Lord."
being the chief cornerstone.
St. Clair isn't too happy w.ith
Nothing on Earth has done
the new '"dress-down'" code in more to spread Christ's fame
vogue in many churches. "I've abroad than the unheralded,
seen people come to church," unsung corner ~ hurch and its
he says, '" in clothes I would unheralded, unsung clergy.
only wear to mow the grass or
If you would like to get on
work in the garden.'"
the mailing list to receive St.
St. Clair is a member of Clair's "Fireside Chat" when
that great and glorious band it resumes publication, send
of unsung clergy who are the a word of greeting to Rev.
heart
and
soul
of Robert B. St. CJair, 2151
Christianity. These enlisted West Fair Ave., Lancaster.,
soldiers of the· cross receive Ohio 43130. Enclose a
little if any recognition, nor stamp, or two or three.
do they seek it, satisfied as
(When lll)ade this "offer" a
they are to be in the service few · years ago, St. Clair
of the Kin g. Though dis- received responses from readcouragement and a sense of ers of this column in 37 states.)
emptiness may sometimes
(George Plagenz is an
come, it does not linger long. ordained minister and veterSoon, with head erect, they an newsman based in
are back at their posts.
Columbus, Ohirj.)

Police

Jack D. Sorden

from PageA1

RUTLAND - Jack D. Sorden, 83, Hill Street, Rutland.
passed away Jan. 26, 2005 at the Rocksprings Rehabilitati&lt;;m
.
Center, Pomeroy.
He was born Nov. 30, 1921 in Richland, Ohio to the late
Clarence Sorden and Lola Krantz Sorden Zwilling. ' ·
. He was a member of the Harrisonviii.e Presbyterian Church,
and was a safety engineer at NASA. He was an Air Force
flight engineer during World War II and the. Korean Conflict
with 97 missions. His name was taken to the moon on the
lunar landing module during the NASA Apollo program.
He is survived by his wife of 58 years, Joan Finlaw Sorden,
of Rutland; four children, Dan Sorderl. of Middleport, Debbie
Tanner of Enterprise, Fla., Dave Sorden of Little Hocking, and
Dawn Tucker of Severn, Md.; a special nephew, Charles Sorden
of Connecticut, several grandchildren and a great-grandchi Id.
. Besides his parents he wa~ preceded by a brother, Ralph Sorden.
Memorial services will be heJd at II a.m. Sunday, Jan. 30.
2005 at the Harrisonville Presbyterian Church' with Pastor
Bob Crow .officiating. Burial will be Beech Grove Cemetery.
Pomeroy. Arrangements were handled by Birchfield Funeral
Home, Rutland.

the state of Ohio BMV for
those with unpaid fines.
Indi vid ual s that have
rece ived post card reminders
or letters for unpaid parking
· tickets are reminded that the
full · amount. shown on those
·post cards and letters are due

Belleville
from Page A1

Thursday . .Six of the eight
dam gates are now clear.
Four barges sank during
the most recent Ohio River
flood on Jan . 6. affecting
five gates of the dam on the
Ohio River. Until all the
gates can .be closed, the liavigation
pool
between
Belleville and Willow ls.land
Locks cannot be restored to
normal levels, and those low
river levels have halted locj(POMEROY - Jerry Hawk , 69, Pomeroy, died Thursday, ing at the Bell eville Locks
Jan.-20, 2005, at his residence, following an extended illness. and Dam.
A memorial service will be held at I p.m. on Sunday, Jan.
The low river level also has
30, 2005, at Fisher Funeral Ho!Jle in Pomeroy with Charles caused problems onland. The
Hargraves officiating.
'
Ohio
Department
of
Memorial contributions may be made to Holzer Hospice. Transportation has closed
Meigs County Branch, 100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

Deaths

Jerry Hawk

by the due date.
Not. paying parking tickets can result in vehicles
being towed and remaining
impounded until all outstanding parking tickets are
paid in full.
Pomeroy Clerk of Courts
Tammy Smith will be available 9 a.m, to 3 p.m. Monday
through Friday to assist · with
any questions. Smith can be
reached at 992-6411 .

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

ODOT

During their meeting. comrnission·ers:

• Acknowledged a donation
from Frank and Delore'
Cleland of Racine toward the
c,ounty jail repair project.
• Referred a bid for bituminous materials for February
from Asphalt Material , , Inc.,
Marietta. to Engineer Eugene
· ·
Triplett
• ·Recessed the meeting
until I 0 a.m. on Monday, for
payment bf bills .
Present
were
Commissioners
Mick
Davenport and Jim Sheets
and Clerk Gloria l:(loes.

from PageA1

ers are expected to retain
ownership of their real estate
in exchange for compensation from the state"for loss of
access to their properties.
ODOT has set a deadline of
Feb. 6 for comments on the ·
closure plans, and expects to
formally declare the hi ghway
closed· on Feb. 7. The state
both Ohio 124 .between will begin processing claims
Reedsvi lle
and
Little for damages from property
Hocking and Ohio 144 from owners on March 9. ·
Hockingport to Cool vi lie
because the low water in the
navigation pool has caused
bank failure on those riverside routes. Reedsville residents and others who use
Ohio 124 to travel upriver to
Belpre,
Marietta
and
Parkersburg, W.Va. must now·
travel Ohio 681 to Tuppers
Plains and Ohio 7/U.S. 50 to
reach those destinations.
Residents along the Ohio
River and Hocking River at
Hockingport and ~Coolville
also have reporte signifi. cant property dama due to
those slips.
"
·
OOOT
ODOT is closely monitor- This ODOT map shows the portions of Ohio 338 to be vacating the area for additional ed, or closed to the public , and abandoned to the county's
highway inventory.
slips and bank failures.

Mayor

community center, street
The criteria to apply applying for $300,000 must
lighting, more street parking, includes having at least 60 have. leverage of $150.000 to
&gt;enior center, child care cen- percent of the res·idents in the qualify. She said lots of profrom Page A1
ter, demolition of abandoned low and moderate income jects which will be coin,
strucrures, fire equipment and range. Musser said Pomeroy menced after distress grants
June. A third and final public facilities, storm drainage qualifies in that respect since are .awarded can be used as
meeting will be held in March improvements,
improved 70 percent of the residents leverage, and that things like
at which time residents will sewer facilities, improved are in that income category. . Issue 2, CHIP, water and
have another opportunity to water facilities. and parks and
Trussell explained that sewer money, planned reno,
POMEROY - An ·organizational meeting for the Meigs have input on projects.
recreation. The grant money grant money allotted can be vations at senior and youth
Meanwhile the emphasis is ·cannot ·be used for downtown . used for many things includ- centers and a variety of small
County Philanthropy Index charitable foundation will be held
un Wednesday, Feb. 2 at 2 p.m. at the Meigs County Annex being turned to getting 'hun- projects. Name. and address of ing historic preservation, projects can count toward the
located on Mulberry Heights behind Hol zer Clinic.
dreds of surveys completed the person completing the acquisition of property to be required leverage.
This organization will be able to help garner gifts and by residents. About 320 of · survey is optional.
followed by demolition and
Trussell and Musser both
bequeaths to provide lasting resources for the improvement of the more than I ,900 residents
The survey forms are avail- development, construction of stressed the importance of
the community. The purpose of this· meeting is to. determine of Pomeroy have completed · able at the Pomeroy Water handicapped ramps, public public · participatjon through,
the group's name, fiscal agent, officers, grant-matching docu- surveys where they indicate Department, in some down- utility installation but not the meetings and surve ys. and
what 'improvement~ they town businesses, the Senior large water and sewer pro- also getting agencies invo.lved.
mentation and organizational structure.
·This project is a pilot effort of the Foundation for would like to see in their Citizens Center, the Mulberry jects, youth and senior cenJer
Once the meetings are over
Appalachian Ohio and Ohio State University Extension, neighborhoods.
Community Center, and The expansions, along with the and the surveys have been
.Meigs· County. For more information, contact Becky Baer at
The one-page form titled Daily Sentinel office, or from development of parks and tabulated, then Trussell said
740-992-6696 or baer.29@osu.edu.
"What's Your Vision for Our any Pomeroy official.
recreation centers.
she will meet with Pomeroy
Trussell said for this fiscal
"Grant recipients will be Village Co unci I and se lect
Community" lists 13 possible neighborhood revitaliza- year there is approximately $3 selected on the basis of points the projects to be included in
tion ac ti vities residents million available for distribu- scored on the application the application.
STEWART -A double-elimination All-Star Girls Youth might like included as a part .tion to eligible units of local up to 20 points for distress, 20 . Meanwhile, the mayor is
Basketball Tournament will be held Feb. 25:27 at the Federal of the program.
government · through the points for leverage, 50 points . asking residents to tile out a
Hocking High School Complex, with brackets for teams in
Residents are asked to give Community Distress Program. for program impact and I0 for survey. "It takes just a minute
grades 4-6 . There is a $100 entry fee per team. Awards will be their opinions on what should She explained the money will citizen participation.
or two and it could make the
given for the first three places in each bracket.
be iRcluded. They are street be distributed in one competi- . · As for . leverage, Trussell difference in whether the vilTeams are not considered registered for the tournament until repairs, sidewalk repairs, tive funding. round.
explained that communities lage qualifies for a grant."
. the entry fee has been received by F. H. Athletic Boosters, P.O.
.
Box 134, Coolville, Ohio 45723.
Meigs County Humane as "a good neighbor."
''Anything we donate we
Information is available from April Russell, 667-0248, or
"It helps people," Humane make sure it's something
Society. These donations
.
Kristine Furner, 667-6021.
·
occur afmost weekly with Society Member Vicky Baer someone can use," Peavley
.
from Page A1
thi s week's donation includ- said of the food .donations, ·said, "and we want people to
know we have a heart."
ing t1ve 30-gallon trash cans "and they're grateful for it."
"We're ·people helping
Everyone has an op1mon and four shopping carts full
The dog food also is
·
donated to local animal res- peopl~ here," said Schultz,
on how Wal-Mart has affect- of dog food.
ed the local economy, but the
Besides dog food, kitty cuer Janet Ambrose ·· of who said. she believes in the
fact is that last year the litter is included in the Pomeroy, who has rescued Wal-Mart ads on television ·
Mason Wai-Mart . donated donations. as is bird seed, and found homes for nearly that show a sense of ,ommunity and fam ily. "People think ·
POMEROY - An action for dissolution of marriage has $58,000 to charities in which · is disbursed to 800 dogs.
''It's
a
good
feeling,"
said
that's
just TV; well, it 's not. "
been filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Timothy Mason. Meigs and Gallia Overbrook in Middleport
Parsons, Albany, and Kimberly Parsons, Albany. ·
· counties. Thi s number does and local Girl Scout Troops Schultz about being able to
"This is our store,"
·
give donations back into the Peavley added, "and I don't
not include the more than in Meigs County.
just say I work for Wai-Mart.
"We
don't
throw
it
away,"
community
. .
$100,000 worth of merchandise that was donated to local Schultz added, "that's not
One of Schultz's favori.te I say I work for the Mason
charities is Serenity Hou se in Wai-Mart."
POMEROY- An action for foreclosure has been filed in organizations like the Meigs right. That's wasting it."
Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Vanderbilt Mortgage County Humane Society. ,·
Although his store is locat- Gallipolis, which offers shel When
the
·Mason
Waland Finance, Inc., doing business as J.P. Morgan Chase Bank,
ed in West Virginia, Mason ter to· battered women and
Greensboro, N.C., against Elberta C. Cleland, Rutland, alleg- Man receives a shipment of ·wai-Mart manager · Kit their families.
Schultz and Wal-Mart
ing default in the amount of $70,440.95, and seeking .recovery dog food that contains ripped Roberts recognizes that his
.of a manufactured home offered as coUateral. .
."
· bags or dented cans the store customer base includes the claims associate Kim Peavley
takes a loss.
residents of Meigs County credits Roberts with putting
&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
"It comes out of our bot- and attempts to di stribute c ~ildren and senior citizens
tom line," Wal-Mart claim charitable funds and mer-• first on the list of store donaSALES/RENTALS .
associate
Linda Schultz of chandise evenly throughout . tfo.ns. . Recently the store
POMEROY - Thomas Karr, Pomeroy, reported the
SERVICE
donated an entire pallet of
attempted theft of fencing from the Wesam Construction Co. Hemlock Grove said.
the bend area.
Roberts wants the· resi- merchandi se to Serenity
Instead of throwing out the ·
warehouse on T.R. 382. ·
,
According to Sheriff Robert Beegle, two subjects were otherwise uncontaminated dents of Mason and Meigs · House that consisted of coats,
observed loading the fence in.to a red F-I50 ~nd a white pet food they donate it to the counties to think of his store clothes, diapers and food.
~
5:erving
Dodge truck, but put the material back in its place when they
Meigs
realized they had been seen.
~old
County
Beegle asks that l!nyone With infgrmation contact his office ·
part ~your
GALLIPOLIS State
• 9 a.m. at the "Community
for DVI!f
at 992-3371.
Subscribe today • 992-2155
Rep. Clyde Evans (R-Rio Building in McArthur, Vinton
Other incidents:
20 Yeal'll!
• Do,_rothy Stone of Pomeroy reported that she heard some- Grande) will be holding open- County.
• II a.m. at the Wellston
one yelling near her home ori Seneca Drive. Deputies found door publiC meetings for conCity flail in Jackson County.
one of Stone's neighbors had fallen, and had been yelling for stituents in southern Ohio.
Home Oxygen
FRI1128/05 • THURS ;113105
The meetings will provide
• I :30 p.m. at the Bossard
help. She was not injured and was helpetl inside by friends.
Box 0tn&lt;o Oponr 0 ~:30PM,Nightly
Portable Oxygen
&amp; I2:30PM tor SOt &amp; Sun llalln4101
o Karen Cerbus of Pomefl)y reported the possible theft of an opportunity for the gen- Memorial Library i.n Gallia
Free Back Up Oxygen
HIDE &amp; SEEK (R)
era! publi~ to discuss their County.
her mail by a subject riding a four wheeler.
1:20 3:20 7:20. 9:20
Portables
Delivered when
• 4 p.m. at the Eastern
• Joel! a Young of Reedsville reported the theft of a Hi-Point views and opi ni ons with
ALONE IN.THE DARK ~R)
you want theni
Evans on state government Briggs Lawrence County
..45 caliber handgun frorri her home on Eden Ridge Road.
1:10 3:10 7:10.9:10
7 days a week 24 hrs. service
· THE AVIATOR (PG13)
Public Library in Proctorville.
• Alison Houtz of Athen·s struck a tire in the roadway while trav- issues.
Complete line of respiratoty
1: • 7:
The meetings will be held Lawrence County.
eling on Kingsbury Road, causing damage to ·her vehicle ..
ASSAULT ON PRECINCT 13
products
Deputies investigated the incident and discovered the tires had at the following times and . All are welcome and
R 9:00
Nebulizers,
C-pap, Ventilators
been rolled over a hill by a juvenile, who left them in the roadway. locations on Monday, Jan. 31: encouraged to attend.
and much more.
1:20 3:20 7:20. 9:20

Local Briefs

· Meigs County tQ organize ·
charitable giving foundation

WHAT

DO YOU
KNOW

ABOUT

THIS

www .mydailysentinel,com

2005

Obituaries

Unsung clergy

The Daily.Sentinel

Reader Services

PageA4 .

~ILL,

DEAR? .

Plan basketball tournament

-.

Mason.

.

For the Record

Dissolution

The me4ning of th~ inaugural address
President Bush managed
to baft1e a lot of people with
his · seeond
inaugural
address. Everybody agrees
that it was· downright elo~
quent, but what exactly did
he mean when he declared
that "it is the policy of the
United States to seek and
support the growth of democratic movements and institutions in every nation and
culture, with the ultimate
goal of ending tyranny in our
world"? Is he really going to
insist on the development of
opposition parties in China?
In fact, what Bush has
done is take a major step forward in the exposition of a
policy that has played an
important role in the history
of the United States. ·
In a highly persuasive article in the January issue of
Commentary,
·David
Gelemter argues that ihe socalled "American civil religion,': the set of principles in
which the nation is rooted, is
not ·'"civil" at all, but a true
religion, which "has been
incorporated into all the
Judea-Christian religions in ·
the nation." It originated
with the Puritans, who
derived it from the Old
Testament. Believing that·
the Bible was God's word,
they drew from it two
premises: that every member
of the comm unity has his
own individual dignity, and
that the community has a
divine .mission to all
.1.

William
Rusher

mankind .
From
these
premises emerged the conclusion that every human
being everywhere is entitled
to freedom, equality, and
democracy. "Deriving all
three from the Bible, theologians of Americanism
understood these doctrines
not as philosophical ideas
but as the word of God."
Gelernter identifies four
"crucial turning points" at
which Americans '"spoke
explicitly and simultaneously abou t the religious
content and the world mission of Americanism." The
first was at the time of the
Revolution. The second was
in the Civil War, and especially in Lincoln's· Second
Inaugural address. The third
was in World War I, under
Woodrow Wi.lson, the son
and
grandson
of
Presbyterian ministers. (In
asking Congress for a declaration of war, Wilson asserted that "The world must be
Jnade safe for democracy,")
The fourth turning point
was the Cold War, which
Harry Truman heralded by

· declaring that "it must be
the policy · of the United
States to support free peopies who are resisting
attempted subjugation by
armed minorities or outside
pressure."
Gelernter's article was
written before Bush's second
inaugural address, .but the
. latter unmistakably signals a
fifth turning point. The president invokes the war on ter:
rorism to sanction a major
extensiqn of Wilson's argument: 'Fhe world must not
only be made safe for
democracy ;
ultimately,
democracy must prevail
everywhere. In the words of
a Bush critic, Pat Buchanan,
that is "Wilson on amphetamines." .
But there has always been
an argument over what the
"American mission'" (assuming· it exists) obligates
.(\merica to do in regard to
other countries. John Quincy
Adams made an important
distinction early on: '"We are
the champion of freedom
everywhere," lie declared,
"but. the vindicator only of
our own." On this basis, it
has long been the rule that
the lives of American fighting men would be put at risk
only
where a "vital
American interest" was at
stake.
The first president to disregard this rule was Clinton,
who committed American
forces to battle iri places like

..

Bosnia and Kosovo, whose ·
attraction for liberals was
precisely that they offered
opportu.nities for "doing .
good" where . no vital
American interest was
involved. In attacking Iraq
on the· ground that its supposed
possession
of
weapons of mass destruction
represented an intolerable
menace, however, Bush met
the "vital interest" test. But
when Iraq fumed 0 ut to have
no· WMDs he quickly
advanced the liberation and
- democratization of Iraq as an
alternative justification for
the war,. though this could .
hardly qualify as a "vital
· American interest." And
now, in his second inaugural
address, he has justified this
step by significantly expanding Wilson's concept of the
"American mission,'' to call
.for the growth of democratic
movements in every nation
in the world.
This does not, as administration ·spokesmen were
quick to · say, commit
America to any military
action whatever. But it puts
Bush squarely in the
Wilsonian tradition, and
indeed far ahead of it, in
defining the "American mission" regarding the other
nations of the world.
(Wi lliam Rusher is · a
Distinguished Fellow of the
Claremont Jn sti1111e for · the
. Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.)

.

Foreclosure

OXYGEN

Complaints

Evans to

public meetings

Proud to be a

life.

WHt NOISE (P(l13)
1:15 3:15 7:15 &amp; 9:15
RACING STRIPES (PG)
1:00 3:00 • 7:00
COACH CARTER (PG13)
1:00, 3:30, 7:00. 8:30

�•

PageA6

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

REGION

. Th~ Daily Sentine.l

Friday, January 28, 2005

PageA7

.
.
Friday, January 28, 2005
•

Roushes announce birth

Mather won't act to stop girls online exploitation

· RACINE - Jeremy and Jane. Maternal grandparents
Jenni · Roush of Raci ne are Marvin and Jan Hill.
announce the birth of their Paternal grandparents are
son, Jake Charles Hill Roush. Gary and Teri Roush. GreatThe infant was born on . grandpare nts are Jean Alkire
Dec. 3 at St. Joseph Hospital. · and the late Charles Alkire,
He weighed 8 pounds, 3 the late Jane and Dale Hill,
ounces.
Charles and Ann Findley,
Mr. and . Mrs. Roush have Carrie Roush, and the late
two.other children, Riley and Lester Roush.

DEAR ·ABBY: My brother
old .one, for that matter - is·
recently discovered that his
to demonstrate, demonstrate.
16-year-old stepdaughter has
Practice makes perfect, · and
been chatting online with a
the time to approach it is
man in another state, up to
soon after he makes his next
Dear
attempt. .
and including plwne sex. He
Abby
DEAR ABBY: I'm recent- .
went into her e-mail without
her permission to see what
ly divorced after a four-year
was going on after she ran up
separation from my husband. ·
a $300 phone bill.
My ex treats me like dirt and
When he confronted her
cannot speak to me without
about the bill , she lied and www.missingkids.com, which becoming angry and abusive.
said she had been talking to a provides information regardI was n' t the cause of the
girlfriend. Her mother - my ing ex ploited children and an breakup. He ' cheated on me. l
offered to rebuild the trust
brother's wife - thinks her opportunity to report it.
daugnter would never do anyDEAR ABBY: I am a sin- and work it out, but he
thing wrong and gets mad at gle woman, and while l have refused. I j ust want to know
my brother if he implies oth- kissed a lot of men, only a few why he is angry. I have tried
erwise. He doesn 't want to do were great kissers·.. You don't to ask him why he gets so
anything about the situation . want to give up on a great guy defensive. He is living with
for fear· of her wrath.
because his kiss is only aver- the woman ·he cheated with.
l say, the girl's safety is age. I gently tried to provide a Why does he carry so much ·
more important than a fight bit of coaching with an .ex, but anger toward me? He is supwith his wife. Do you k,now it.made him defensive.
posedly happy with her. if there's a task force that he
How do you teach a mid- PUZZLED AND HURT IN
could e-mail this informatiop die-aged man to kiss? Before KENTUCKY ;
to and remain anonymous? I I get into another relationDEAR HURT: He would
would like to sec that man ship, a little advice in thi s rather aim his anger at 'you'
caught before something hor- area would be helpful. Also, . than face himself. He knows
rible happens to this beautiful would you approach it early what he .did was wrong, and
young girl. - I:'ROT'ECTIVE on - or after there. is an it's easier for him to bl3111e you ·
IN COLORADO
· established relationship? than take responsibility and
DEAR
PROTECTIVE: WANTS A GREAT KISSER accept himself as a cheater. It's
DEAR WANTS : Since dif- called blaming the victim.
The girl has been victimized
by a predator. Your brother 's ferent people are turned on
Dear Abby is written by
wife is doing her daughter no by different things, no one Abigail Van Buren, ·also
good by behaving like an sliould expect to get· it right known as Jeanne PhiUips, and
ostrich and pretending thi s on the first try. A considerate was founded by her mother,
incident never happened.
kisser wants to please.
.
Pauline Phillips. mite Dear
There are several things
The best way t know ofto Abby aJ www.DearAbby.com
your brother can do. He '"leach" a middle-aged man to or P.O. Box , 69440, Los
should contact his local FBI kiss - or a young one or an Angeles, CA 90069.
office and/or visit the Web
site www.fbi .gov and check
II you or someone you know ha~t lakin
out the area devoted to cyber
crimes - specifically crimes
against children under "What
We Inve stigate." If he is
•
referred to his locai police
department, he should contact
call John Ellem to learn ·
them immediatel y so they can
about your legal rlgllts.
62460N
investigate further. The
National Center for Missing and EXRioited Children also
has an ihformative Web site,

Jake

Roush

WOUB.finalist for bluegrass station of the year
ATHENS - WOUB has
been named a finali st as blue, grass station of the year by the
Society for the Preservation
of Bluegrass Music ·of
America. The SPBGMA is a
non-profit group that is
designed to preserve the traditional spirit and art form of
bluegrass music .

Sunday. afternoons from I to ·
5 p.m. is "Bluegrass Day" on
the WOUB Radio Network.
D2 8+5 i ~ a program that
focu ses on bluegrass music
and exhibits a form of music
that is tradiqonal for southeastern Ohio. On · the first
Sunday of each month, D28+5
presents a live broadcast that

consists of local and regional
bluegrass and old-time music
bands in concert on the fifth
floor television studios 'of the
WOUB location in Athens.
The title of the program is
all about the popular instruments that make this music the D28 Martin guitar and the
five-string .banjo or mandolin.

Critical blood drive at HMC on Monday
GALLIPOLIS - . The trauma at any one of the
For more information or to
American Red Cross is I 00 hospitals in the I 00 register for a time, please call
appealing to 0 negative and co unties that we serve could the . hospital 's lab at (740)
all other el(gible blood type deplete the entire supply of 446-5171.
donors to come to a blood the 0 negative blood type,"
Individuals at least 17
drive Monday at Holzer she said.
years of age, who weigh at
Medical Center's French 500 . Oechslin explained that it least 105 pounds, and are in
Room from I to 4 p.m.
take s about 48 hours for one generally good health may be
At the American Red voluntary unit of blood to able to donate blood.
Cross Greater Alleghenies be te sted, proces sed and Normally, individuals can
Region , Type 0 , A and B placed on the shelf of a give blood every 56 .aays.
negative blood types are at local blood bank. ·
Individuals with specific
critically low levels . As of "Accideill victims, trans- . e'tigibility questions should
· Jan. 26, inventory of 0 nega- plant and cancer patients call (800) 542-5663.
· ti ve showed only 46 units on ca n' t wait for blood to be · The Greater Alleghenies
the shelf.
donated ,
tested
and Region directly serves hos"Type 0 negative is the processed. For them the · pitals, patients and donors
universal blood type tradi- need is now." she added. "If in a ., 00-county area in
tionally used during emer- . ,collections are impacted hy · Kentucky, Maryland, Ohio,
gency situ.ations," stated low inventories. a patient's Pennsylvania, Virginia and
Taunia Oech slin. semor long-term care may not West Virginia, and also supdirector, donor resources and be met. " ·
ports blood need s experi communications.
Blood donation is the most enced by patients elsewhere
"An inventory of only 46 important step in helping to in hospitals served through
units could me11n that one save a life.
Red Cross Blood Services.

Community Calendar

Dip in demand offers relief to BREC users
STAFF REPORT
NEWS®MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

RIO GRANDE - Good
news and bad news for members , of Buckeye ~ural
Electric
Cooperative
· (BREC) this winte~ are high
heating co,sts due to extremely cold periods, but a reduction of the demand rate in
next month's bill s.
"Our consumers are going
to see sizable bill s for winter
heating," BREC spokesman
Steve Oden said. "This has
been a much colder winter
than last year, and we are' not
out of the woods yet. Our
members who rely on electric
heat will see kilowatt-hour
consumption shoot ~p. and
their bills will be higher."
· January was a month of
· single-digit temperatures on

COLUMBUS (AP) - American Electric
Power Co., the nation's largest generator of
electricity, said Thursday that gains from its
exit from the United Kingdom energy market ·
boosted earnings to $177 million in th~ fourth
quarter, compared with a loss of $762 million
during the same period of 2003. ,
Per,share earnings jumped to 45 cents,
compared with a loss of $1.93 a year ago.
Excluding one-time gains, AEP.earned $ 167
million, or 42 cents per shru;e, in the quarter
that ended Dec. 31. Analysts surveyed by
Thomson First Call had exp,ected earnings of
43 cents per share.
. Quarterly revenue increased from $3.4 bitlion to $3.5 billion.
For the year, AEP earnings increased to
nearly $1.1 billion , or $2.75 a share , on revenue of $14.1 billion. compared with $ 110
million, or 29 cents per share. on revenue of
$14c7 billion in 2003.
Excluding special item s, the company
earned $924 million, or $2.33 a share. missing analysts estimates by a penny.
"We 90mpleted a series of major divestitures as we returned our strategic focus to our
traditional utility business," AEP chairman

IOXX

ELLEM LAw OFFICE

tiffiv~'JP

Saturday, Feb. 9
ALBANY
. -Carroll
Lamp, fnrmerly of Tuppers
Plruns, will observe his 92nd
Friday, Jan. 28
RACINE Village of birthday on Feb. 9. (ards may
Racine will nave a water be sent to .him at Russell
Home,
5176
: board meeting at I 0 a.m. at Nursing
Washington Road, Albany,
: the municipal building.
Ohio 45710.
Saturday,Jan. 29
PORTLAND Lebanon
Township Trustees will meet
at 7:30 p.m. itt the township
· building.
·
~onday,Jan.3l
POMEROY
- The
Friday, Jan. 28
Veterans Service Commission
CHESTER
Special
will meet at 9 a.m. Monday at meeting of Shade River
the office on Memorial Drive Lodge 453 wilt be held for
in Pomeroy.
the purpose of annual inspecWednesday, Feb. 2
tion. Dinner at 6:30 p.m.;
PAGEV ILLE Scipio meeting at 7:30 ·p.m.
Township Trustees will meet Members to take a pie.
Saturday, Jan. 29
at 6:30 p.m. at the Pageville ·
· town hall. '
CHESTER -· The Chester
Hi storical Association will
meet at I p.m. Saturday at the
Chester Courthouse for a discussion on early roads' in
. Saturday,Jan.29
MIDDLEPORT - Ralph Meigs County. Anyone interMcCune will observe hi s est.ed in the topic or with
· 90th birthday Saturday. Hi s information on early roads is
fa mil y will entertain with asked to attend.
an open house from .- noon
Monday, Jan. 31
to 4 p.m. at the McCune
POMEROY - OH-KAN
ho me,
800
High St. Coin Club will meet at 7 p.m.
at the Pomeroy. Library. There
. in Middleport.
will be ari auction at the
~onday,Jan.31
CHESTER - · Pauline open meeting.
Ridenour will
observe
Thesday, Feb. I
GALLIPOLIS - Practices
her 9~rd birthday on Jan. 31.
Cards may be sent to her at for the French Colony Chorus
Box .
155 ,
Chester, where women sing in fourOhio 45720.
part
harmony
in . the

·Clubs and
organizations

Birthdays .

'

barbershop style. are being
held at 6:30 p.m. every
Tuesday ·at the Grace United
Methodist Church, Third
Avenue in Gallipoli s. The
chorus is open to all area
women. Director is Susan
Russell at 446-2675.
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
lodge
363,
F&amp;AM will meet at 7:30
p.m. at the temple.
MIDDLEPORT The
Community . .
Middleport
Association will meet at 8:30
a.m. at Peoples Bank in
Middleport . .
Saturday, Feb. 5
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878 wi]\ meet in regular sesson for a potluck supper
at 6:30 p.m. followed by a
meeting at 7:30p.m. Interested
members
meet at I p.m. to
work on ABC quilts and
stuffed boy projects.

Church events

Ad Deadline 2-17-05 ·

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The public is cordiall y invited to an

Open House &amp; Ribbon Cutting Ceremony:
"' Friday, February 4, 2005
"' 8 a.m.

..
~
"' Refreshments will be served

The Daily Sentinel

The Middleport Cllnlc
Timothy P. Metzger, DQ.
788 North Second Avenue
~ldc:lleport, OH 45760 ·

~ 1QCIW • 11112·2155
www.m,ciiii~Mt-.com

Sponwred by PleaSant Valley Hn~pltal &amp; the Meigs CQUnty Chamber or Commerce

•

· CLEVELAND (AP) - A
pregnant woman who survived her car being crushed
by a tractor-trailer that fell
from an overpass said
Thursday that she was sore
and stiff and uns.ure
whether to laugh or cry
over the ordeal.
"I'm healthy. I' m sore arid
stiff. The baby's fine," said
Anna Martinez, 25, of suburban Cleveland Heights.
. She saw the truck slide off
. the Interstate 71 overpass and
fall about 35 feet onto her car
on state Route 176 near
downtown early Thesday.
"Well , there's an element
of the ridiculous about a semi
flying through the air and
landing on a car," she said.
"It is kind of funny. It's not
something you'd think would
ever happen. It was just SO'·

Call:
3~

~-r ,...,Cl

®allipoli~

'
,·

tric water heater a little
lower. Turn off lights in
rooms that .aren 't occupied.
Weatherize tyour home Wi th
insulation, cau'lking or plastic over windows . Air these
things can help."
Some co-op members are
doing even more, Odensaid.
"Ther'e are some phone
banks going in communities," he sai&lt;j. "When folk s
hear or read about the peak
alert s, they ' call re latives.
neighbors
and
fe ll ow
church members to pass the
word. We certainly apprec iate the assistance :"
serves
over
BREC
20.000 electric accounts in
a nine -co un ty ·are a of
southeastern .Ohio.

random. And the other pa'rt of
it is I was really terrified and
I wanted to cry."
Martinez, who is fivemonths pregnant, made an
emergency call from her cell
phone about I a.m. Tuesday
and told a di spatcher: "A
semi flew off of the interstate
and landed on top of me!"
· "I did slam on my brakes
and tried to avoid it,"
she said.
The truck . smashed her
car's roof and demolished the
rear of her Honda Accord.
She was wearing a seat belt,
which would not· release in
the wreckage.
Martinez called her husband to tell him she was
trapped and smelled gasoline.
She eventually freed herself
and spent about 15 hours at
MetroHealth Medical Center.

"Once 1 freed myself,
crawled into the back seat
and got out on the right rear
passenger's·side," she said.
. She recalled she was not
sure ·how to react.
"t saw a truck falling from
the sky and spark.s fl ying
from it," she said. "That part
was definitely in slow motion
and so was the . impact. My
first thought was, ' l's thi s
real?' It didn't seem like
something that really happens, outside of movies. I
thought, 'Oh my {]od!'"
The truck driver, Patrick
McCray, 35, of Bay City,
Mich., was treated at
MetroHealth and. released.
He said he lost control of his
truck when it skidded on ice.

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Van, Pick-Up Truck, or Automobilefor the low price of only $25.00 .

This special is only available to private, non-commercial individuals.
We'll run your classified line ad in 25 consecutive editions of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
the Pomeroy Sentinel aod the Point. Pleasant Register. Your ad will reach over-. . .
13,500 homes. In addition, your ad will appear in our Wl'fkly Tri County Marketplace
which is deliveml to 17,000 homes. If you sell your vehicle within 25 days, just call ·
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***Typographical corrections must be made within first3 days of publication. ·
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coming home from work,
of over half.
The actual amount of PCA cooking, bathing and using
reduction mi individual bills · appliances, or in the mornwill depend on consumption ings when they are gettin g
and rate class.
ready for work or school ,"
''The' key is to stay. in con- Oden sajd, "These are the
trol of demand through ener- times of highest energy use."
gy conservation during
"A peak alert doesn't
potential ,peak periods," mean there is a shortage of
Oden said. "This is why we electric ity. It means that , ·
have done extensive newspa- unless we cut back so me at
per and radio advert ising of these peak times, we could
peak alert warnings."
face increased demand
BREC uses the Gallipoli s cost," he added.
· Daily Tribune , The Daily
BREC members can help
Sentinel of Pomeroy and · reduce demand with simple,
local radio station s to convenient measures, accord- ·
advertise warnin gs abo ut ing to Oden.
possible peaks.
"Turn the thermostat back
"Peaks usually occur at a few degrees in the morning
two times of the day : and evening," he said. ''Set
Evenings when fo lks are the t emperature on your elec. . .--"""'-"""'..----~

and chief executive Michael Morris said.
The company also released its, earnings
guidance for 2005, estimating it would make
between $2.30 and $2.50 a share.
On Wednesday, AEP announced it would
pay $81 million dollars to settle a lawsuit and
avoid criminal prosecution by federal investigators, who accused the utility of manipulating natural gas prices,
The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading
Commission 'sued the company in 2003,
accusing Several traders of sending thousands
of false or misleading reports to industry publications from 2000-2002. The lawsuit said
AEP made about $63 million as a result of the
false reports.
.
AEP fired five traders in 2002 imd reported
their conduct to federal regulators.
AEP .shares were trading up 60 cents,at
$35.10 in late morning trading Thursday on
the New York Stock Exchange. The stock has .
traded . in a 52-week range of $28.50 to
$35.53.
AEP has about 5 million customers in II
states : Arkansas , Indiana, Kentucky,
Louisiana, Michigan, Ohio, Oklahoma,
Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and West Virginia.

Pregnant woman frees herself from
car crushed by plunging truck

will

Saturday, Jan. 29
MIDDLEPORT The ·
Proctaimers of Parkersburg,
W.Va. will be singing at 7
p.m. at the Middleport
Church of the Nazarene.
Refreshments will be served.
Sunday,Feb.6
SHADE - A gospel concert featuring Kevin Spiencer
will be held at 7 p.m. Sunday
at the
Shade
United
Methodist Church.

peaked again.
"In fact," said Oden, "we
were able to redu ce our
demand rate."
This translates into a savings for consumers in the
future "if we can get through
the rest'of the winter without
peaking," Oden said.
The new demand, based on
the Dec. 20 peak event, is tor
62,360 kilowatts.
·
"The effect of this reduction will be to substantially
lower the wholesale power
cost adjustment (PCA) on
·consumer bills," Oden said.
"The PO\ is where demand
cost is recovered." .
· For a BREC consumer
using 1,591-kilowatt hoursof
electricity, the December
demand cost was $24.07. The
January 2005 demand cost
shrinks to $11.40, a reduction

.Asset sales, exit from UK
market help AEP reverse loss

~,f';Ll_ MII ' •

Public meetings

several dates, wi\h high temperatures staying below ·
freezi ng for almost a week.
When similar conditions
occurred in 2003, BREC set a
new peak of record.
· Unfortunately, this 'record
demand
coincidentally
occurred when BREC's
wholesale power supplier
set a system peak. }'he ne't
result was higher wholesale
electric costs passed on to
consumers.
The'
67,908-kilowatt
demand peak resulted in over
$ 1 million.in additional annual wholesale cost to BREC.
The good news is that,
thanks to BREC consumers
· who responded to peak alert
warnings, the co-op avoided
setting a new demand
record on Dec . 20, 2004,
when the statewide system

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The Daily Sentinel• 992-2156

• Location:

• Oftice Hours:

The Middleport Clinic
788 North Second Street
Middleport, OH 45760

• Mondays:

(9 a.m. to 5 p.n1.)

~Tuesdays:

(II a.m. to 1p.m.)
• Wednesdays: (9 a.m. to 5 p.m.) .
(9 a.m. to 7 p.m.)
• Thursdays:
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(II a.m. to 5 p.m.)
• Fndays:

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The Daily Sentinel

Page AS

..

Friday, January 28,

2005

Worker who killed one at plant met with bosses day before
BY JOHN SEEWER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

TOLEDO - A day before
an auto worker shot and killed
his supervisor and wounded
two other employees at a Jeep
assembly plant, he had met
with his bosses to talk about
his job performance.
He wasn't disciplined,
though, and his bosses thought
the issue ended amicably, said
Mary Beth Halprin, a spokeswoman for Chrysler Group, a
division of Jeep's parent company DaimlerChrysler.
"We had been given no hint
that something like this
would happen," she said
Thursday.
Myles Meyers, 54, a metal
finisher in the body shop,
entered ·the plant that makes
the Jeep Liberty during the
second-shift lunch break
....~::::~:~ shot the three
offices near the
plant's
""·~- police said.
He was targeting three
supervisors, two of whom
were shot, police said.
Company officials said
they had no idea what led to
the shooting. They a.Jso
would not say what was dis- ·
cussed · at the meeting
between. Meyers and his
supervisors or what led to it.
"It was a discussion on
issues in the body shop," said
Frank Ewasyshyn, executive
vice president of manufacturing for the Chrysler Group.
"It wasn't just him."
Meyers· wasn't disgruntled
·or a problem employee,
Ewasyshyn said. Jeep plant

officials would not talk about
whether Meyers had any .past
discipline problems.
All production shifts at the
plant · were halted Thursday
and scheduled to resume
Friday, Halprin said.
Ken Berry, a Jeer worker
who was a, friend o Meyers,
said the 21-year· plant
eJ.llployee was mild-mannered and never 9ot angry. "I
never thought he d do something like this," Berry said.
· Meyers had strapped the
gun to his body with wires
and concealed it under his.
jacket. He first pointed the
gun at a woman and ordered
her to summon three other
people, telling her he did not
plan to hurt her, police Chief
Mike Navarre said.
"He gave her three names,
He told her who he wanted
and who he was going to
shoot," Navarre said.
She summoned one of the
three men, Michael Toney, an
area manager, who was shot
and wounded. Supervisor
Roy Thacker, who also was
on the list of three. was killed
after he went to the office on
his own, while a third man
who was no't on the list, Paul
Medlen, was wounded later,
authorities said.
Meanwhile, the woman
then nin out of the office and
warned co-workers over the
radio, police said.
Medlen, 41 , was wounded
in the chest and in critical
condition, and Toney, 45, hit
in the arm, was in fair condition Thursday, said a nursing·
supervisor at St. Vincent

Medical Cc;nter.
Meyers, of Toledo, did not
show up at work as scheduled
Wednesday but used his
employee access card to get
into the plant, police Capt.
Ron Spann said at a news
conference Thursday.
Dispatchers received 15. to
20 calls from people inside
the auto plant atter the shooting, and employees were running out of the building when
authorities arri,ved. Officers
chased them, not knowing
who the shooter was, and not
realizing he was already dead.
A woman who answered
the telephone Thursday at a
home listed as Meyers' said
she had no comment, and no
one answered the door at
the house.
A neighbor, Lizzette ·King,

said Meyers and his wife,
Angie, separated about two
years a~o . The couple have
four children, two daughters·
who are married and two sons
. who live at home,King said.
· After news of the shooting,
Meyers' wife was "in a daze.
She didn't know what to do,"
said King, who has lived next
,to the family for about 10
years in their middle-class
neighborhood of ranch homes.
. "He was very nice to me;"·
said King, 87. "If he saw me
carrying something he'd get
it for me."
She said he owned land in
Michigan where ·he liked to
hunt and fish. ·
On the Net:
· http:!!w'w.w.daimler-'
chrysler. com

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Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
It will be a cloudy
overnight. Temperatures will
remain around 23. Winds
will be 5 to 10 MPH from
the southeast.

Saturday, January 29
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
It's going to be a cloudy
morning. There . is a slight
chance for a bit of snow.
Temperatures will rise from
26 to 32 by late this morning. Winds will be 5 MPH
from the southeast.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
It should remain cloudy.
There will be nothing more
than . a
few
flurries.
Temperatures will stay near
32. Winds will be 5 MPH
from the southeast turning
from the east ·as the afternoon progresses.

AP photo

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Harley Davidson JPM -36.75
Kmart - 94.25
Kroger- 17.29
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~---~- ~-----

NSC-34.1
Oak Hill Financial- 37.93
OVB-34.5
BBT-38.99
Peoples - "26.83
Pepsico - 53.46
Premier- 11.2
Rockwell - 55.80
Rocky B~ts - 28.7
AD Shell - 57.94
SBC-23.87
Sears - 50.08
USB-30.31
Wal-Mart - 53.08
Wendy's - 39.31
Worthington - 20.36
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes ot
the previous day'a tranaac,·
tiona, provided by Smith
Partners at Adveat Inc. of
Galllpolla.

Delgado finalizes deal with Marlins, Page B4

Friday, January 28, 2005

·Prep Schedule
Today's Games
Boys Basketball
Gallia Academy at Warren
Belpre at Meigs .
Eastern at Waterford
Federal Hocking at Southern
South Gallia at Hgnnan
Cross Lanes at ave
River Valley at Wahama
Girls Basketball
Cross La~es at ave

UC mauls So.uth Florida
BY FRED GOODALL
Associated Press

TAMPA, Fla. - Cincinnati
coach Bob Huggins shrugged
off another lopsided victory
over South Florida.
"It's the time of the year,
, Saturday's Games .
man, you just want to win and
Girls Basketball .
River Valley at Eastern ·
go· home. We've got another
Notre Dame at South Gallia
game on Saturday," Huggins
Southern at Waterford
said Thursday night after the
Boys Basket~ll
21st-ranked Bearcats beat the
Athens at Meigs
Bulls 74-48 to retain a share of
Miller at South Gallia
first place in Conference USA.
Ironton at River Valley
Enc Hicks had 19 points and
Marietta at Gallia Academy
II
.rebounds, and Cincinnati
Wreetllng
rebounded
f(om
last
Gallia Academy, River Valley at
Saturday's four-point loss to
John Deno Classic (Athens)
No: 5 Wake Forest by playing
Monday's ·Games
stifling defense, holding South
Boys Basketball
Florida to 26 percent shooting
ave at Teays Valley Christian
and a season-low point total.
Girls Basketball
"That's really what we've
Eastern at Gallia Academy
done
all year," Huggins said.
Meigs at Southern
"This
is not one of our best
Symmes Valley at South Gallia
offensive teams; but considerave at Teays Valley Christian
ing our lack of size inside
South Point at River Valley
we've really done a good job
defensively."
Cincinnati (16-3, 5-l)
improved to 14-0 against
South Florida under Huggins,
a- streak that began in ·
Del;ember 1991. South Florida
(8-9, l-5) has lost five straight
· AMHERST, N.Y. (AP)after an 8-4 start, and the
.Yassin ldbihi had 25 points
res.ults are getting progressiveand eight rebounds to help
ly worse.
lead Buffalo to a· 78"65 win .
Since losing to .UAB,
over Marshall Thursday.
,
Marquette and Memphis by a ·.
Turner Battle added 20
total of nine points, the Bulls
points and nine rebounds and
have been held to their' two·
Calvin Cage chipped in 18 . worst offensive performances
points, including five 3of the season, scoring 50 in a ·
. pointers, as Buffalo (12-5, 512-point loss to Houston and
4
Mid-American
struggling even more against
Conference) won for the
Cincinnati.
third time in four games and
"You have to come out and
improved to 8-1 at honie ..
prove yourself every night,
The Thundering Herd (3and espeCially against a Top
14, 0-8) led 50-43 after Joe
20 team," South Florida's
Miles hit a 3-pointer with
Brian Swift said. "You have to
I 3:53· to go, but saw their
.. come out and show that you
lead quickly evaporate when
belong there .... It was a rude
t~e.y went scoreless during an
awakening tonight for us."
etght-mmute span.
.
Hicks had 15 points and four
The Bulls were able to put
blocks in the frrsi half, and
the game away with a 17-0
Cincinnati broke the game
run during the Marshall
open with a 24-5 run that gave
.drought, capped by Battle'~
the Bearcats a 37-15 halftime
two free throws with 57 .6
lead. The closest South Florida
seconds left that gave them a
got after that was 14 points .
71-581ead.
with 8:25 remaining.
Miles had 14 points, and
South Florida missed 25 of
A. W. Hamilton and Ronny
30 shots in the opening half,
Dawn each contributed 13
with Swift -. the Bulls' best
AP
points for Marshall, · which
Cincinnati guard Chadd Moore (1) puts up a shot in front of South Florida's
lost for the fourth straight
Please see UC, Bl
Brian Swift (3) du,ring Cincmnat1's 74A8 win Thurscay in Tampa, Fla.
time.
·
The Thundering Herd have
not won on the road this, season.

Flyers soar over
Rhode Island

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Local Stocks
ACI- 37.16
· AEP-35.27
Akzo-41.28
Ashland Inc . ....,. 60.86
AT&amp;T-19.6
BLI ....:. 11.22 .
Bob Evaila - 24.64
BorgWarner - 53.09
Champion - 3.86
Charming Shops - 8.00
Clty·Holdlng - 32.92
Col-42.82
DG -20.21
DuPont - 46.97
Federal~ul· .36
Gannett - 79.90
General Electric - 35.61

·

·Buffalo goes on
17-point run to
down Herd

lUND NEW 2005 POIITIIC SUNFIRE
SE COUPE

Friday, January 28
.Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will diminish
from 12 early this morning to
the low for the day of 12 at
7:00am as. they rise back to
27 late morning. Skies will
be mostly sunny with 5 to 10
MPH winds from the northeast turning from the east as
the morning progresses.
Afternoon (1·6 p.m.)
Temperatures will linger at
29 with today 's high of 31
occurring around 3:00pm.
Skies will be mostly sunny
with 5 to 10 MPH winds
from the east.
Even(ng (7 p:m.-Midnight)
Temperatures will hover at
25. Skies will be mostly
clear to · cloudy with 5 to 10
MPH winds from the east
turning from the southeast as
the evening progresses.

Two Wackenhut
Security workers
lower the flags
at the entrance
to the Toledo,
Ohio Jeep ·
assembly plant
to half staff, -·
Thursday. Myles ..
Meyers, 54, an
employee at the
· Jeep plant in
Toledo, shot
three co-workers, one fatally,
inside the plant
~~~;;,;::j;~···· .;.;:1 Wednesday
night. then fatal·
ly ·shot himself
in the head.

Girts prep basketball pairings, Page 82
Prep Scoreboard, Page B3

..,. ..,.
2004 CIIEYY
'

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.PiiciS good .lanuGy 27th throu;, January 30th. .
.

MONDAY · SATURDAY 9 am · 8 pm • SUNDAY 1pm · 7pm • 422 ·0756 • TOLL FREE 1·800·822 ·0417

•

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

SOUTH KINGSTON , R.I.
(AP) - Monty Scott scored
16 points and Dayton fmished the game with an ll-2
run, beating Rhode Island 5649 on Thursday night.
Parfait Bitee 's 3-pointer
capped a 7-0 run and gave
Rhode · Island (4-I3, 2-4
Atlantic 10) a '47-45 lead
with 3:18 to play. That was
the Rams' last field goal of
the game.
Marques
Bennett
of
Dayton ( l Q-5, 5-1) hit a 3pointer to give the Flyers
back the lead, 48-4 7, and ·
then made two free throws
for a 50-47 lead with 2:41
left.
Scott Hazelton led Rhode
Island with 14 points and
Terrence Mack added 12.
Dayton led 27-24 at halftime.

Cleveland State
beats Butler
CLEVELAND (AP) Raheem Moss had 21 points
and five . assists, and
Cleveland State held Butler
scoreless for nearly seven
minutes at the beginning of
.the Vikings" 77-57 win
Thursday night. .
Moss hit three 3-pointers
during the Vikings" 16-0 run
in the game's opening minutes. ·
Butler (7-10, 2-5 Horizon
League) went scoreless until
Brandon Polk, who finished
with 20 ~ints, hit a· jumper
to make 1t 16-2 with 13:08 to
plf in the first half.

High School
Girls Basketball

Southern
subdues
Spartans
Bv ScoTT WoLFE

Sports correspondent
ALBANY - In on:e of its best team .
efforts of the year, the Southern Lady
Tornadoes defeated Ohio Division foe
Alexander Spartans 62 -51 Thursday
night in a varsity high school girl's basketball contest. ·
Southern (6-9, 1-7) was led by senior
Brooke Kiser, who had a spirited floor ·
game with 21 points, three assists, and
five rebounds in. downing Alexander (512, 3-5) in the Tri-Valley Conference
interdivi~ional game.
Behind Kiser's 21 points were two
other ·Tornadoes in double-figures.
Kristiina Williams was next in line with
Please see Southem, Bl
'

Eagles
pounce
on Rebels·
STAFF REPORT

sports@mydailysentinel.com
'

·~.

- ... ......

TUPPERS PLAINS . Morgan
Weber scored 24 points, 13 more than
the entire South Gallia roster, as Eastern
. rolled to a 63-ll victory Thursday in
high school girls basketball.
Weber, who also pulled down eight
rebounds, helped lead the Eagles to a
39'6 halftime advantage. Eastern had 28
rebounds on the night.
The next highest scorers for Eastern
was Cassie Nutter and Jenna Hupp with
seven points each.
South Gallia was led by Ashley ·
Cremeans, Chelsea Stowers, Jill Swain,'
Please see EaaJes, Bl

OSU women down Badgers Larkin still
·

· MADISON, Wis. (AP) Ohio State's Caity Matter
understands the Buckeyes are
at their best when they keep
Jessica Davenport involved in ·
the offense.
"Getting the ball to her
earl~. and often bodes well for
us,'
Matter said · after
Davenport scored a careerhigh 36 points to lead No. 3
Ohio State to an 86-67 victory over Wisconsin Thursday
night.
Davenport stayed active
from · start ro finish , scoring
18 points in each half to help
the Buckeyes (20-2, 7-1 Big
Ten) roll 'to their ninth straight
victory. She. was 15-of-2 1
from the field as the
Buckeyes used a 56-24. scoring advantage in the paint.
•:1 was just taking what the
defense was (!;i vi ng me, ·
Davenport
sa~d.
"That
wOrked out well tonight. We
just kept moving the ball and
my · teammates found me in
good position to make shots."
Ohio State also features a
solid perimeter attack, but the
Buckeyes didn't need it.
·"We feel we're an insideoutside team and we're going
to have that mentality,". said
Ohio State coach Jim Foster,
whose team tied a season low
with just two 3-pointers. "Our
team is patient on offense and
I think the patience created a
. lot of good opportunities for
Jess."
Matter added 14 points and
Brandie Hoskins had 12 for
AP
Ohio State. Ashley Allen had Ohio State's JesS~ica Davenport shoots past Wisconsin's
eight assists for the Buckeyes, Danlelle Ward during the first half of Ohio State's 86-67
win Thursday in Madison, Wis. Davenport had a gam~
'
Please ... osu, B3
high 36 points.
'

'

loyal to Reds
BY JOE KAY
Associated Press

the point
t h

a

t

spring
traiping
Cl.NCINNATI Barry
• starts and
Larkin 's loyalty is nudging
I'm not
him toward retirement.
playing, then it will be obvi. The All-Star shortstop would ous. 1 want no big fanfare, no
hke. to play anot~er season, ~ut major announcement. ..
can t. commit · htmself to play . , Larkin hit .289 in Ill games
for anyone .·Other than h1s last season and was chosen for.
hometown team.· He has spent his 12th All-Star team, prompthl.s enure career wa~ the ing him to re-evaluate his deciC.mcmnau Reds. who reJected sion to retire after 2004. He
hts ·overtures to return for a wanted to stay with the Reds
20th season..
.
for anQther season, but they
Larkm sa1d Thursday nt~ht decided to tum the position
that he has turned down offers over 10 younger players.
to start for sever.J.! other teams
Larki h bee
·
· · h"tmbee ause he can •t env1ston
rts n as 1 n· managmg
Orl d a
self playing for anyone but the spo . comp ex tn
an o,
Reds.
·
worktng tn a developm~nt
"I tho ht
1 all 1,d be management group. spendmg
. bl 10 ug eaheveni cuan dyo th·s ., time with his family and
a e say, y ,
t ,
· h'
h"
·
&amp;
1
Larkin told The Associated welg mg ts options .or Pay· a phone ·mterv1ew
·
mg One more season.
Press m
from his home in Orlando. Fla.
He could have been a good
"But I"m big on loyalty. 1 fit with the NL champton St.
couldn't come to grips with Louts Cardmals. who lost fn;e.
making a 100 percent commit- agent shortstop Edgar R:entena .
ment (to another team)."
to B~?ston. Larkm srud one
Several teams are still inter- ~men~an League team offered
ested in Larkin as a reserve. htm a JOb as a starttng second
giving him a chance to help baseman, and two ~ teams
develop younger players. were mterested m him as a
Larkin 40 sounded on startmg shortstop.
Thurs~y like . he's going to
Larkin told them he couldn't
retire instead. He said he ·s commit because he sull sees
"pretty close" to a final deci- himself as a Red.
s1on.
'
· ' "I just couldn't," he said.
'"I simply haven't made an "M~ybe it cost me ~ job•. but
announcement that I' m not that s JUSt the way I m wired,
suing to play or retire because how strongly I feel. To my
tt 's not that pressing of an soul, to my core, I JUSt could ·
issue," he said. "If it comes to . not make that. commitment."

--- -·--'--------

�I

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, January 28, 2005

Friday, January 28, 2005

Prep Scoreboard

National Football League

Brady uneasy with comparisons.to Montana
BY HOWARD ULMAN

Associated Press
FOXBORO, Mass. - Tom Brady
played in his driveway 20 miles south
of San Francisco and pretended to he
·Joe Montana. He even tried to spot the
49ers' quarterback at Super Bowl victory parades ..
Today, Brady is often compared to
the HaJJ of Farner and children look up
to the New England star the way he
did to Montana.
.
"It's reaJly neat on Halloween when
you see those jerseys," Brady silid
Thursday. "I had a little kid come up to
my door with· a No. 12 jersey on: It's
like, 'Oh, man.' It's just come such a
long way."
From part-time starter at Michigan
to sixth-mund.draft choice to two-time
Super Bowl MVP, Brady has made
huge strides in a hurry. He's just 27,
but 'is in. position to help the Patriots
become only the second team to win
three Super Bow,ls in four years.
. But he's still behind Montana's four
Super Bowl wins and eight Pro Bowl
selections. Brady, headed tu his second Pro Bowl, admits he's uncomfortable with the comparisons.
''I'm very tlattered," Brady silid. "I
don't think I'm on that level (and) I'm
still trying to get better."
But he's not easily distracted once

Bmdy has completed 61.6 pen:ent
of his passes in five seasons, including
his rookie year when he played just
one game, and is 8-0 in the playoffs.
Mori~'llla was 7-1 in his first eight
. postseason games before finishing at
16-7.
. · 'Tom is as competitive as
he sets his goals.
Montana," said Patriots . third-string
· He had a fever last weekend but still quarterback Jim Miller, a 10-year vetplayed brilliantly in the Patriots' 41-27 eran. ''I just think Tom's got a great
over Pittsburgh in the AFC champi- feel for the game. He just has a great
ohship game. But he said he ·never feel when to move in the pD(,:ket, when
came close to missing the game and a certain guy's going to he open."
downplayed the illness.
·
Brady has improved his accuracy
"There's a lot of guys who were sick and game management since he took
and a lot of guys aren't feeling good the starting job after Drew Bledsoe
'and a lot of guys are probably rlayin~ was hun in the second game of the
with tougher ililments than was,' 2001 season.
·
Brady silid. "Guys have been doing
"When he's in the zone, I don't
that aJI year.
· '
think there's anybody better," tight
"Everyone plays with great tough- end Christian Fauria silid.
ness and never complilins. A little flu
The charismatic star has made such
bug. Like that's a big deaJ. You know , an impression that his teammates hear
·
(the attention it got) takes away from about it at home.
what those guys do."
'Troy Brown tells me his little kid
He wouldn't say how sick he was says I'm his favorite pjayer," Brady
but said he was feeling better silid. "So when you hear stuff like that
Thursday.
from your own teammate you get the
Montana completed 63.2 percent of biggest kick out of it."
his passes and is seventh in NFL hisAs his achievements pile up in a
tory in touchdown passes and eighth career that should last many more
·in yards passing in 13 full seasons. years, more fans will wear· his No. 12
Elbow problems sidelined him for the jersey and admire the kid who once
entire 1991 season and limited him to tossed a football in a driveway not far
one game in 1992. ·
from where Montana was becoming

Associated Press
MOBILE, Ala. - Phil Savage got
an early lesson in scouting NFL
prospects, watching a Senior Bowl
practice with his elementary school
classmates and spottmg a ltttle-known
rese1ver from Alabama AfcM · ,
Everyone was ltke, Who s ~.~!
guy makmg all those catches·
recaJls Savage, now gene~~ man~ger
?f the ~leveland Browns.. I was ltke,
I don t kn?,~· some guy named John
Stal,lwonh.
.
Stallwonh went on to _star With the
P!tlsburgh ·Steelers and IS a member
of the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Savage has gone from wide-eyed kid
to the man in charge of rebuilding the
Browns, from watching the NFL big
shots and future bjg shols who visit
his hometown of Mobile every year to
being one of them.
The 39-year-old Savage. who was
named GM on Jan. 6, has heen busy
scouting players, meetin~ with his
staff and visiting old fnends who
show up at Senior Bowl practices.and
. events. He's also gotten handed plenty of resumes· from people seeking
jobs, bul his most imponant hiring
decision won 't he · made at LaddPeebles Stadium.
He has interviewed New England
defensive
coordinator
Romeo
Crennel for the team's vacant coach-

ing posilion. Crennel is busy preparing the Patriots for the Super Bowl
against Philadelphia.
"Obviously we're waiting until
after the Super Bowl," Savage said.
"Thankfully, we made it clear at the
beginning of this process we were
willing to Y{ait if we felt like the right
coach was not going to be avililable
until that time. We're holding steady.
"l think we feel good about where
we are. We feel like we did a thorough
search." .
The No. 2 priority Is preparing for
the upcoming draft, a Savage forte
during his nine seasons with the
BaJtimore Raven.s, the past two as
director of player personnel. He
helped the Ravens build a roster with

Eastern 63, South Gallla 11

SouthOallia
4 2 0 5 - 11
Eastern
20 19 13 11 - 63
SOUTH GALLIA -:-- Ashley Cremeans ·1 00 2, Chelsea StOwers 1 0-0 2. Jill Swain 1
0-2 2, Stacie Fellure 1 0-0 2, Jessica
Cantrell 0 2-6 2, · Krlsten Halley 01 -2 1.
TOTALS- 4 3·10 11.
·
EASTERN -

Morgan Weber 7 9-12 24,

Erin Weber 2 0-0.4, Jen Hayman 2 1-2 5,
; Jessie Hupp 1 2-5 4, Krista White 3 0-0 6,

. Cassie Nutter 1 5-6 7, Katie Hayman o 1-2
1., Janna Hupp 2 2-2 7, Hannah Pratt 0 3·
6 3, Darcy Winebrenner 0 2-4 2. TOTALS

- 18 25-39 63. .
3-point goals - SG o, Eastern 2 (MWeber,
JenHupp) .

.

Southern 62, Alexander 51

. Southern
18 14 16 14 62
13 13 9
16 51
. Alexander
• SOUTHERN - Whitney Wolfe-Riffle .1 0·0
· 2, Brooke Kiser 6 9-14 21, Kasie Sellers 1
0-0 2, Ashley Roush 2 4-4 8, Joanne
Pickens 3 4-8 10, Kristlina Williams 3 5-10
11, Jordan Neigler 1 0-1 2, Ashley Robie 3

0·0 6. TOTALS -

Defiance Tinora 49, Antwerp 34
Delaware Christian 67, Gahanna
Christian 56
Elida 47, St. Marys Memorial 36
Elmore Woodmore 56, Millbury Lake 53
Enon Greenan 55 , Bellefontaine
Benjamin Logan 51
Fairborn 53, Day. Stebbins 37
Findlay 39, Napoleon 30
Frankfort Adena 57, Piketon 51
Franklin Furnace Green 67, Latham
WeStern 59
. Frpmont Ross 56, Huron 45
Fremont St. Joseph 68, Old Fort 23
Ft. Loramie 45, Russia 37
Ft: Recovery 52, Delphos St. John's 33
Georgetown 80, Wil liamsburg 28
Glouster Trimble 68, Belpre 59
Gorham F8yette 40, Hilltop 27
Green 68, Copley 63
Har-nler Patrick Henry 75, Montpelie r 30
Harrison 62, Batavia Amelia. 41
Hicksville 47, Edgerton 37
Howard E. Knox 78, Loudonville 62
Hubbard 45, NeW1on Falls 43, OT
Hudson WRA 42, ·Gates Mills Hawken

28 ·
Ironton 54, Boyd County, Ky. 23
Ironton St. Joseph 44, Wayne , W.Va. 30
Jackson Center 45, Sidney Lehman 33
Jeromesville Hillsdale 50, W. Salem
NW40
Johnstown Northridge 36, Danville 32
Johnstown-Monroe 48, FredericktOwn

2o

22-38 62.
ALEXANDER.- Jamie Turrill 4 0-0 8, Amy

. Smith 2 0-1 4, Jessica Shaulis 1 0·0 2,
· Stephanie Bach 1 0-0 2, Wendy Sewell 1

~:~ ~: ~~~~:en~~r~4°~o08,N~~~e RS0a~~= ~

:
. 0-2 2, Lacey Shaulis 5 5-9 15. TOTALS -

35

3-polnt goal$ -

Southern 0, .Alexander 1

(Rouse).

Ohio High School
Girls Basketball
Thursday's Results

·
AP
New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady signals froni the line during the
AFC divisional playoff game against the New England Patriots at Gillette
Stadium Sunday in Foxboro, Mass.

an idol.
Hey, you got that Tom Brady quality.
"Hopefully," Fauria said. "people That would he more of a compliment
will he comparing other people to him. than anything."

draft picks turned Pro Bowlers like
Jonathan Ogden and Ray Lewis.
"It's going to he very imponant
because any time you' re taking a first
step, and that's going to he kind of
what we're doing hiring a coach, in
free agency and in lhe draft," Savage
silid. "If we can string some solid
decisions together, then it 's going to
build confidence within the entire
organization and he able go forward
with a new attitude that we do have an
idea what we're doing."
.
The Senior Bowl is part of that
process. Savage, who began his NFL
career with the Browns as a ·~oach's
assistant breaking down . lilm and
making copies, estimates he's been to
every one of the games since 1971 .

"What makes me feel good is a lot
of people I've seen down 'here this
year are a lot of the same people I saw
I0- 12 years ago," he silid. "Their feeling is that ·I haven't changed and still
have a friendly smile and handshake
for them in 2005 just as I did in
1992."
He also has tried not to snub
strangers who've approached him
about jobs now that he's a generaJ
manager.
"I can appreciate the fact that this
time of year is ut'lcenilin for a lot of
people," Savage said. "I have empathy for guys that are out of jobs right
now. We all want to be gainfully
emr,loyed. I'm not offended by that at
all . '

Ada 44, Paulding 40
Akr. E. 62, Akr. Buchtel 23
Akr. Ellet 67, Akr. Central-Hewer 51
Akr. Firestone 53, Akr. N. 37
Akr. Hoban 48, Cle. JFK 41
·Akr. Kenmore 44, Akr. GaFfield 29
Akr. Manchester 86, Cuyahoga Falls
GVC~53

Anna 46 ..Botkins 28
Arcadia 55, Oota Hardin Northern 46'
Arcanum 70, Tipp City Bethel 24
Archbold 59, Wauseon 44
Arlington 46, Cary-Rawson 37
·Ashland
Crestview 60, Ashland
Mapleton 45
Ashtabula Sts. John and ~au I 41,
Willoughby Cornerstone Christian 37
Baltimore Liberty Union 48, Lancaster
Fisher Cath. 45
Beaver Eastern 60, Glenwood New
Boston 40
Bellbrook 48, Germantown Valley View

46
Kings Mills Kings 44, Goshen 28
Lafaye11e Allen E. 66, McGuffey Upper
Scioto Valley 42
' Lebanon 46, Springboro 41
Lees Creek E. Clinton 61 , FelicityFranklin 48
Leipsic 41 , F indlay Liberty-Benton 36
Lewistown
Indian
lake
37,
Bellefontaine 36
Lexington 41, Ashland 29
Lima Bath 54, Wapakoneta 49
Lima Perry 60, DeGrall Riverside 43
Little Miami 64 , NorwOod 33
Logan 46. Athens 32
Lyndhurst
Brush
67,
Ashtabul~
lakeside 51 ·
Mansfield
Christian
60,
Galion
Northmor 49
Mansfield Madison 82, 'Mansfield Sr. 50
Maria Stein Marion Local 67, Coldwater

45
Berlin Hiland 73, Malvern 24
Bloomdale Elmwood 56 , Kansas
Lakota 21
Blutfton 65, Spencerville 40
Bradford 27, Ansonia 23
Bryan 44 , Delta 34
Caldwell · 56, Old Washington ·Buckeye
Trail 45
· Carey 42, Fostoria St. Wendelin 36
Carlisle 50, Northridge 44
Casstown M iami E. 73, Spring . Kenton

Ridge 58

.

Chillicothe Huntington Ross , 75,
Chillicothe Unioto 66
Chillicothe Zane Trace 75, Bainbridge
Paint Valley 45
Cin . Anderson 52 . Mason 48
Cin. Hills Christian 70. Cin. Country
Day 16
Cin. ln di~n HUt 45. N . Bend Taylor 43
Cin. Mariemont 64, Cin. Deer Park 27
Cin . McNicholas 71, Hamitton B!=ldin 43
Cin. Mercy 42, Cin. St. Ursula 41
Cin. MI. Notre Dame 75, Cin. McAuley

43
Cin . N . College Hill 57, Cin. Christian 33
Cln. NW 51, Hamilton Ross 33
Cin. Shroder Paideia 34, Cin. Jacobs 31
Cin . Ursuline 54, Oin. Seton 50
Cin. Walnut Hills 43, Cln. Loveland 37
Cin . Winton Woods 56, Cin . Glen 'Este

HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS BASKETBALL
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO DISTRICT
SECTIONAL PAIRINGS
Division I
•Logan, Chillicothe to Central District
"Marietta to Northeast District

Nelsonville-york vs . New Lexington, 8
~m .

Federal Hocking vs. Alexander, 6:15p.m.
Belpre vs. Adena, 8 p.m .
at Unlverwlty of Rio Granda
·
Thursday, February 10
Monday, Fabruory 7
Oak Hili vs. Huntington/Piketon ·winner,
Meigs \IS. River Valley, 6:15p.m.
6:15 p.m ..(winner advances to district tourWaverly vs. Rock Hill, 8 p.m.
nament at Waverly)
saturday, February 12
Minford vs . N-Y!NL winner, 8 p.m. (winner
Galha Academy vs. Meig&amp;'AV winner, 1 · advances to district tournament at Waverly}
p.m. (winner advances to district tournaSaturday, February 12
ment at Chillicothe)
Zane Trace vs. FH/Aiexander winner, 1
Warren vs. Waverly/AH winner, 2:45 p.m. p.m. (winner advances to district tourna(winner advances to district tournament at ment at Waverly)
Chilllcothe)
,
Westfall vs. Belpre/Adena winner, 2:45
at Adena High SchQ(JI
p.m. (winner advances to district tournaMonday, February 7
ment at WaVerly)
Logan Elm vs. McClain, 6:15p.m.
at Valley High Scho&lt;&gt;t
Washington Court House vs. Hillsboro, 8
.
-Monday, February 1
p.m.
Wheelersburg vs. Peebles, 5 p.m.
Thursday, Fellruary 10
Lynchburg Clay vs. Wellston, 6:45 p.m.
Unloto vs . Northwest, 6:15 p.m. (winner
Coal Grove vs. West Union, 8:30 p: m.
advances to district tournament at
Wec:tnaaday, February 9
Ch1Micothe)
Portsmouth vs. Portsmouth West, 6:15
Miami Trace \IS. CircleOJille, 8 p:m. (winner p.m.
advanceS to district tournament at
Chesapeake vs. North Adams, 8 p.m.

.
•

·

. Chllicolha)
Saturday, February 12

Thursday, February 10

Fairtie!d Union vs. LEIMcCiain winner, 1
p.m. (winner advances to ·district tourna·
ment at Chillicothe)
Sheridan vs. WCH/HiiiSboro winner, 2:45
p.m. (winner ~ances to district tournament at Chillicothe)

.

IIOak Hill High School
Thursday, February 10

Vinton County vs. Fairland, 6:15 p.m.
{winner advaOGes to district tournament at
Chillicothe}
Jackson vs. Athens. 8 p.m. (winner
advances to district tournament at '

Ironton vs. Wheelersburg/Peebles winner,
6:15 p,m. (winner advances to district tourna,ment at Waverly)
LC!Wellston winner vs. CGNVU winner, 8
p.m. (winner advances to district tou rna·
ment at Waverly)
. Saturday. February 12 ·
South Point vs . PortsmouthJPW winner, 1
p.m. (winner advances to district •tournament at Waverly)
Eastern (Brown) vs. ChesapeakeJNA win·
ner, 2:45 p.m. (winner advances to district
tournament at Waverly)

Ghilicolhe) ·

Division IV

Division II
et WeHeton High School

at Athena High School
Monday, Febru11ry 7
Southern vs~lronton St. Joe, 7 p.m.
Wednesday, February 9

Monday, February 7
Huntington vs. Pik!:!IOn, 6:15p.m.

Cin. Wyoming 57, Finneytown 41
Clark Monte ssori 61, Day. Stivers 46
. Clarksvme Cllnton-Massie 49, New
Richmond 45
Cle. Cent. Cath . 56. Rocky River
Lutheran W. 37
Cle. Hts. Lutheran East 64, Cuyahoga
. HIS. 48
· Cols. Harvest Prep 62. Liberty Christian

Thul'lday, Fellruary 10
Trimble vs. Southern/ISJ winner, 6:15
p.m. {winner advances to distriCt tournament at Wellston)
Southeastern vs. Eastern (Meigs). 8 p.m.
(winner advances to district tournament at
Wellston)

Saturday, February 12
Waterfor~ vs . Crooksvil!e/Miller winner, 1
p.m. (winner advances to district tournament at Wellston)
Symmes Vall8y vs. Green/SO winner,
2:45 p.m. (winner advanCes to district tournament at Wellston)
at Northwest High SchOOl
Monday, February 7
PainfVatley vs. Manchester. 6: .15 p.m.
Sciotoville vs. Notre Dame. 8 p.m.
. wednesday, February 9
Weste rn Latham vs. New. Bostofl. 6:15
p.m.
Whiteoak vs. South Webster, B p.m.
Thursday, February 10
Portsmouth Clay vs. PV/Manchester winner, 6:15p.m. (winner advances to district
tournament at Wellston)
Valley vs. Sciotoville/NO winner, 8 p.m.
(winner advan~s to district toumament at
Wellston)

·News and information
for your retirement years.

~dl

L9!J
I February Il, 2005
~alltpotis -~ailp

31
Marion Elgin 65, MOrral Ridgedale 41
Marion Pleasant 52, Cardington Lincoln 49
Mayfield 60, Bedford 49
McComb 41, Vanlue 35
'McConnelsville Morgan 60, Crooksville

51

I

39

30
Millar City 63, Ft. Jennings 38
Minford 67, Waverly 58
Monroe 51, Trenton Edgewood 27.
Mt. Orab Western Brow n 52, Bethel·
Tate 44
MI. Vernon 50, Marysville 40
N. Lewisburg Tr iad 48, Jamestown
Greeneview 37
Nava rre Fairl ess 71 , Massillon Tuslaw

40

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Nelsonville· York 76 , Corning Miller 41
New Bremen 55, Rockford Parkway 34
New Lebanon Dixie 36, Brookville 34
New Madison Tri-Village 63. New P.9ris
National Trail 54
New Riegel 49, Bascom 'HopewellLoudon 45
New Washington Buckeye Cent 53,
Bucyrus 20
Newco merstown
55,
Bowerston
Conotton Valley 32
Nor1hwood 53, Tot. Ottawa Hills 40
Norwalk St. Paul 66, Greenwich S.
Cent 35

Oak Hlll71 . S. Webster 13
Oakwood 52, Eaton 30
Oregon Stritch 50, Lakeside Danbury

38
Ottawa-Giando·rt 44, Lima Shawnee 42
Oxford Talawanda 66, Franklin 37
Pemberville Eastwood 61 , Gibsonburg

Pitsburg Fra nklin-Monroe 76 , W.
Ale)(andria Twin Valley S. 30
Preble Sha,wnee 48. W. Milton Milton

Pett1sville 42, Edon 37
Pickerington N. 43 , Olentangy Liberty

24

81

. Stacie Fellure and Jessica Cantrell with two
· points each.
· Eastern jumped on lop early with a 20-4

osu

from Page B1 ~
who were equally impressive
on the defensive end.
Kim Wilburn matched a
. career high. with seven steals
· and Matter added five as Ohio
: State forced 22 turnovers.
· Freshman Jolene Anderson
scored 24 ·points to lead
Wisconsin (7-10, 1-6), which
. has lost its last 18 games
against ranked opponents.
. The Badgers tned VIrtually
: everything lo stop Davenport
· but ~ere simply outmatched.
Davenport also had mne
rebounds, including five of
Ohio State's 21 on the offensive glass. ·
"It was her strength and her
: height, she could back us
· down," Wisconsin coach Lisa
· Stone said. "We did not neutralize her."
Davenport matched her
season scorin~ average by
halftime' as Ohw State built a
45-291ead.
The Buckeyes started slow
: before using a 17-2 run to
take control of the game .
Davenport scored nine points
during the run. which gave
Ohio State a 19-7 lead with
10:061eft in the first half.
. Wisconsin began the sec. ond haJf with a 9-2 run to pull
· to 47-38, but Davenport
ended Wisconsin's hopes of
an upset. Davenpon "ored
...
.

Reading 33 , Cin. Madiera 32
Reedsville Eastern 63, Crown City S
Gallia t1
Reynoldsburg 52, Galloway Westland

46

'

S. Charleston SE 39, W. Liberty-Salern
30
S.1Point 56. Coal Grove Dawso·n-Bryant
37
Sarahsville
Shenandoah
69,
Woodsfield Monroe' Cen1. 48
Seaman N . Adams 50, Fayetteville ·
Perry 48
Shelby 46, Fostoria 39
Sherwood Fairview 57, Defiance
Ayersvitle 55
.
Spring. NE 50, Cedarville 48
Spring. NW 61 , St. Paris Graham 53
Spring . Shawnee 56, Tipp City
Tippeca noe 55
Stewart Federal Hocking 41, Wellston

35

.

Stow 76, Ma ss,i llon Wash ington ~4
Strasburg-Franklin 57, Magnolia Sandy
Valley 34
Stryker 63, Pioneer N. Cent. 33
Styker 58, Pioneer N. Cent. 19
Sugarcreek
Garaway
30,
Gnadenhutten Indian Valley 15
Swanton 50, MetamOra Evergreen 40
TaMas Deaf 39, Ohio Deaf 35
Tiffin Calvert 69, Attica .Seneca E. 47
Tol. Christian 64, Tol. Emmanuel Bap1ist

35
Tontogany Otsego 40 , Genoa 37
Troy Christian 44, Day. Miami Valley 36
Tusca rawas Cent. Cath. 50. W.
Lafayette Ridgewood 37
Union City Mlsslssinawa Valley 56,
Lewistown Tri-CQunty N. 31
·
Upper Sandusky 84, Galion 32
Urbana 48, New Carlisle Tecumseh 44
Utica 57 , Ce nterburg 48
Van B.uren 53, Pandora-Gilboa 39
Van Wert 68, Kenton 50
Versailles 48, New Knoxville 37
Vienna
Mathews
76.
Andover
Pymatuning Valley 44
.v incent Warren 40, Gallipolis Gallia 33
W. Jefferson 5S,·Caledonia River Valley

50
Waynesfi e ld-Goshen 62. Ridgeway
Ridgemont 30
Waynesville 40, Middl~town M~d i son .

26
. William spo rt Wes1fall 58 , Richmond
Dale SE 53
Worthington Christian 74, Sparta
Highland 46
Zanesville 49, Parkersburg (W:Va .) S.

39
Zoarv ille · TuscarawaS
Coventry 50 , L

Valley

56 ,

Ohio High School
Boys Basketball
Thursday's Reaulls
Baltimore Uber ty Union 48 . Lancaster
Fisher Cath . 45
Chesapeake · 72,
Cabell {W.Va.)
Midland 42
·
Cle. Horizon Science 69, Elyria FBCS

57

.

Cols. Harvest Prep 62, Liberty Christian

32
Continental 54 , Columbus Grove 38
Delaware Christian · 67, Gahanna
Christian 56
Gates Mills Hawken 55, Middlefield
Cardinal 40
Hillsboro 73, London Madi son Plains

43
Howard E. Kn(»;.78, Loudonville 62
Indiana Deaf 69, Ohio Deaf 22
Johnstown Northridge 36, Danville 32
Jo hnstown-Monroe 48 , Fredericktown

II points and a great lloor
game, Joanne ·Pickens added
I0 points and a game-high
eight rebounds, and Ashley
Roush netted eight points, two
assists. and a great lloor game.
Fre~hman Ashley Robie
added six points and six
rebounds. Jordan Neigler
.added two. Kasie Sellers two,
and Whitney Wolfe- Riffle
added two points and five
rebounds. Neigler, Sellers,
and Riftle were all integral in
making big plays at important
points of the.game. ·
Lacey Shaulis led the
Spartans with IS poi'nts, while
Jamie Turrill , Nikki Ro[lse,
and Brandee Hart eaG h added
eight, Amy Smith had four,
with two each from Jessica
Shaulis, Stephanie Boch, Allie
Sayre, and Wendy Sewell
each had two.
Southern came out with a
super-charged attitude to put
18 points on the board in the
first quarter. Ashley Rubie had
the first four points from the
post, then Kristiina Williams
came on strong with six twisting lay-ins. Joanne Pickens
had three points in the drive .
while Sellers and Riftle added
key buckets. .
Southern played a near perfect first quarter, and as a
result led 18-8 with 31 sec-

onds left. Southern. however, . shot. The Meigs Countian s.
nearly 'quandered away the had only nine turnovers in the
lead and its momentum with game. Roush , Kiser, and
some shabhy play late in the Williams produced great
frame . The poor Southern guard play,_ while Pickens
decisions allowed Alexander made some solid .passes
to score on a Shaulis tield goal against the press.
and seconds later score a three
Southern pu shed to a 15
(Nikki Rouse) to cut the SHS point .lead, but Alexander
lead to·five points, 18- 13.
twice .cut the lead to nine
Alexander came out of the · points with goa ls from Shaulis
liuddle in the second period and Turrill. Jurd&lt;Jn Neigler hit
much like Southern started· the a .big lay-up, as did Ashley
gan)e. Jamie Turrill . hit two Robie and Joanne Pi ckens
conse.:;utive goals, then after a each had big offensive scores.
Southern turnover on the After three rounds Southern
press, Turrill split the SHS led 48-35.
defense and hit a twisting lay
Southern utilized the clock
in that gave Alexander its first very well in the tinal round,
lead at 19-18. Southern called forcing Alexander to pick up ..
time to make adjustments.
the defensive pace. Southern
In the ne xt six minutes. cashed in on great foul shootSouthernfs Brooke Kiser went ing, hitting 12-19 goi ng down
on a mission . The senior the stretch, Roush went 4-4 in
guard hit a lay-up. then stole the last minute to help prethe ensuing·inbounds pass and serve the win 62-51 win.
drove it in for the score to give
Southern hit 20-51 overalL
Southern a lead it never relin- hitting 20-49 two's , 0-2
quished. Kiser continued with three 's, and 22-38 at the line .
the offensive assault and capi- Southern had 24 rebounds
talized on great passing from (Pickens 8, Robie 6. Riffle 5),
Ashlev Roush and Tex eight steals. nine turnovers,
Williams. The three Southern six assists (Kiser three). and
guards worked the Alex 16 fouls.
defense for great shots with
Alexander hil 22-57 overall,
Kiser cashing ,in on 5-6 free 21-50 two's, 1-7 three's, and
throws to go with three tield S-14 at the line. Alex had 34
rebounds (Hart 9, Rouse 7),
goals.
The Lady Tornadoes came · had nine steals (L. Shaulis 4,
back to outscore Alexander in Turrill '3), 24 turnovers, 5
the frame 14- IJ to lead 32-26 assists (Turrill · 2), and 25
fouls .
at the half.
There was no reserve· game.
Southern continued its hest
passing game of the year and
Southern goes to Waterford
worked the offense fur a good Saturday afternoon.

uc

game was played. We just points.
.
didn't respond to how physiCincinnati began the night
cal they were .."
'
ranked second nationally in
Leather, who had been field goal defense, and the
from Page B1
averaging nearly 19 points Bearcats made South Florida
outside shooter - gomg 3- and nine rebounds per game, work for everything it got.
for-12 and leading scorer fouled out midway through The Bulls shot less 17 perTerrence Leather heing held the second half, picking up . cent in the opening half and
sc·orclc'-s while accumulating hi s fifth . foul just seconds finished 15-for-58 (25. 9 perafter spending the previous 9 cent).
four fouls in 12 minutes.
Armein Kirkland scored 12
."Obviously from the start, minutes on the bench .
Th
e
South
Florida
star
poi'nt~
and Jihad Muhammad
not :much went right." South
missed
all
five
shots
he
look
added I0 for Cincinnati . .
Florida
coach
Robert
and finished with threl'
Swift was the only South
McCullum said.
"There was one area that I . rebounds. The night would Florida play~r in double figthink .sort of sums up the have been even longer for ures, finishing 9-of-26 from
entire game. They were far the Bull s if Swift hadn 't the field. Solomon Jones was
mo·re physical. I thought that warmed up in the second . the Bulls' next-highest scorer
set the tone for the way the half to score 20 of his 27 with six points.

35
Lancaster Fisher Cath . 47. AmandaCiearcreek 34
Lima .Temple Christian 64, Day.
·
Christian 43
Madison Christian 56, Grove City
Christian 54
Mansfield
Christian
60, ·Galion
Northmor 49
Maribn Cath. 83, Lima Temple Christ1an

eTo

It's

31

GINESt••• ·

Marion Elgin 65, Morral Ridgedale 41
Mari on Pleasant 52, CardingtonLincoln 49
MI. Vernon 50, Marysville 40
Pickerington N . 43, Olentangy Liberty

24
. Reynoldsburg 52. Galloway Westland

46

Eagles
Pag~

51

.

Medina Highland 43, Shaker Hts.
Lau rel 30
Miamisburg 50, Day. Carroll ·31
Middletown Christian 41, Hamillon New
Miami 39
Middletown Fenwick 57, W. Carrollton

from PageB1

Union 44
Racine Southern 62, Albany Alexander

.

42

from

Southern

Mechanicsburg 57, Spring. Cath . Cent.

41

'

LA QUINTA, Calif. ( AP) - Phil Mickelson Dunes. "I'd say technically he's probably
exp\!cts Joe Ogilvie to win a tournament any leadin9. Score-wise, I am, but technically I'd
day now. He just hopes it's not this Sunday.
say he s leadmg.
·
Mickelson, going for his second consecu." That's Duke math," the former economics
tive Bob Hope Chrysler Classic win and third major said, grinning.
in four years, is three shots behind Ogilvie
Mic)&lt;.elson summed it up differently.
heading into the third round of the five-day
"I feel like I' m three back," he said.
tournament.
Fred Couples and Billy Mayfair. were in a
Ogilvie shot a 9-under 63 on thursday to go group of five at 13 under, four shots off the
to 17-under 127 through two rounds. pace. Couples had a 66 and Mayfilir a 64.
Mickelson had a 64 and was tied for second
Ogilvie began the t')urriament with a 64 and
with Fredrik Jacobson of Sweden, who had a was at 127 for two rounds. His 17 tmder is the
62.
third-most shots below par through 36 holes
Mickelson thinks Ogilvie is due.
in PGA Tour history.
.
.
"I thought he was going to win New Orleans
Tom Lehman was 19 under after two rounds
last year, the way he played," Mickelson said. at Las Vegas in 200 I, after Joe Durant was 18
"He lost by a shot to a very hot Vijay Singh, under 36 holes on his way to winning the
but I think he's ready to win now.
Hope earlier lhal year. Le~man's 125 tied him
"It's going to take all I can do to fight him with Tiger Woods and Mark Calcavecchia for
.off."
low 36-hole score, with Woods' coming on a
Ogilvie, whose tie for second at New par-70 course and Calcavecchia's on a par-71
Orleans last year was his best finish on the layout.
tour, was not conceding that he was the secOgilvie, 30, wasn ' t surprised by the low
ond-round leader of the Hope,
total through two rounds of the Hope .this
Players rotate among four courses the first· time, although he chuckled and said/ Tm just
'
. four days of the 90-hole event, with some of surprised that I did it.
lhe layouts more difficult.
· "You look at the history of golf- 1 don't
"Mickelson shot a 64 !!)day at La Quinta," think I'm going to he in any encyclopedias of
~ said Ogilvie; who . had his
at Bermuda golf," he said .
J

Marietta 56, Jackson 43
Marion Cath. 83, Lima Temp le Christian

Convoy . Crestview 41. Van Wert
Lincolnview 32
Crestline 48, Lucas 42
Day. Meadowdale 84, Cin. Woodward
Day. Oakwood 52, Eaton 30
Defiance 45, Celina 38

Joint Jleasant J!egii1ter
:£he Daily S tinel

p.m. {winner advances to dlstrk:t tournament at Wellston)
. Eastern (Pike) .vs. Whiteoak/SW winner,
2:45p.m. (winner advances~ district tournament at Wellston)
• Pairings for Division 1 tournaments will
be determined at a later date.
It Games originally scheduled for
University of Rio Grande, but has been
moved to Oak Hill 'because ot Akl GrandeCedarville men's and women's 1J1&amp;keup
games.

47

32

Saturday, February 12
· Fairfield Leesburg Vs, WLJNB winner, 1

Mickelson hopes Ogilvie waits to win

63t

46

Crooksville·vs. Miller, 6:15p.m.
Green vs. South Gallia, a p.m.

Wednesday, February 9

. Divlelon 11

.

.

.

Kettering Alter 53, Cin. Purcell Marian

22 6·14 51 .

Brovvns' Savage goes from wide-eyed spectator to N-FL GM
. BY JOHN ZENOR

Girls boxscores ·

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

.

Texas Deaf 39, Ohio Deaf 35
Ulica 57, Centerburg 48
W. Jefferson 58, Caledonia River Valley

50
Worthington
Hig(llan·d 46

Christian

74,

Sparta

lead before holding the Rebels to just two
points over the course of the following two
quarters.
·The Eagle,&gt; also won the JV contest, 30-16,
led by Darcy Winebrenner's nine points.·
Eastern plays host to River Valley
Saturday, while the Rebels entertain
Portsmouth Notre Dame.

I0 points to key an I8-4 run State to move into a tirstthat gave Ohio Stale a 65-42 place tie with Penn State,
which lost at Northwestern on
lead with II :48 left.
"For the first time I think all Thursday night.
"We're still a relatively
year, we came out i.n the second half and jumped on young basketball team in
them," said Wi sconsin's terms of experience." Foster
Stephanie Rich, wh(\ had 12 said .. "I won't have a senior
points. ~· It was just a big ener- until next year, so we're still
gy 'boost for us. But they're a in a teaching mode. I like
great team and they didn't where we are, but I think
were still on an upward· spireally back down to that."
.
raJ."
The victory allowed Ohio

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Race tor the Nextel

Preview

Februarv 18, 2005
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Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Leagu~

Major

·www.mydailysentinel.com

2005

'&lt;ltribuhe - Sentinel - ll\egi~ter
CLASSIFIED

Baseball

Delgado' finalizes deal w1t. or1 a; · tops
Ordonez makes offer toT1gers
Wake
in·OT

BY RONALD BLUM
Associated P ress

NEW YORK Carlos
Delgado is taking his ·anti- war·
protest to Florida.
While Delgado finalized his
$52 . million, four-year : deal
with the Marlins on Thursday.
Magglio Ordonez made a
counteroffer to th e Detroit
. Tigers and Barry Larkin said
he is leaning toward retirement
Delgado , who acce pted
Florida' s contract Tuesday.
said at hi s introductory news
conference that he will continue not to stand during the
play ing of "God Bless
America."
He refused to· stand when
"God Bless America" was
played last season. Instead, lie
would stay on the Toronto
Blue Jays bench or go into the
dugout tunnel.
"I wouldn't call it politics.
because I hate politics,"
Delgado said. "The reas.on
why I didn 't stand for ' God
Bless America' was because I
didn't like the way they tied
'God Bless America' and 9- I 1
to the. war in Iraq in baseball."
· Marlins ofticials; who gave
Delgado the richest per-se·ason contract in the team's 12year 'history, made no objection to his war protest
"The Marlins don ' t support
it, and we don ' t not support
it," team president David
Samson said. "He's an adult
The club's position is that
·what he does is up to him."
Ordonez, the last remaining
premier free agent, told age nt
Scott Boras to make the counterproposal to Detroit The
outfielder met Monday with ,
Tigers owner Mike Hitch,
team
preside nt
Dave
Dombrow ski and manager
Alan T(ammell.
· "Mike llitch indicated he
was interested in making a
move that would dramatically
affect the Franchi se," Boras
said.

AP

.'

.

ATLANTA (AP)
Although it' s still January,
Georgia Tech needed thts
game in the worst way.
The Yellow Jackets had
lost three in a row, squandered a 17-point lead over
Wake Forest and were on
the verge of a crushing
defeat when Jarrett Jack
stepped to the free-throw
line with 4.4 seconds ·]eft
in overtime.
" I told myself that I had
to coine through for my
team," Jack s aid. "The
mark of a great team is
being able to put the past
behind you."
.
After gathering himself
with a stroll toward the
opposite foul line, Jack
calmly made both free
throw s to. give No. 22
Georgia Tech a I 02-1 0 I
victory over the fifthranked Demon Deacons
on Thursday night
Wake Forest got the last
shot, but Chris Paul
mi ssed at the buzzer. He
al so had a chance to win it
at the end of regulation,
but that attempt . (ell off
the rim, too.
"Coach said, ' Get the
ball and try to get to the
basket ,"' Paul said. " I just
missed it"
In 'other games involvin g
rank~d
teams
Thursday, it was: No. 1.1
Arizona 91 , . No . 10
Washington 82; No. I 5
Mi chig an
State
64,
Michigan 53; and No. 2 1
Cincinnati 74, South
Florida 48.
Georgia Tech (I 2-5, 33) built a 34-l?lead in the
firs! half, but Wake Forest
( 16-3, 4-2) raHied behind
Eric
Williams,
who
scored 27 points and was
nearly un_stoppable on the
inside .

Carlos Delgado, right, smiles as he answers quest ions from the media as Marlins owner Jeffrey Loria, center. and Marlins president David Samson , left, look on during a news conference anouncing Delgado's $52 million, four-year contract Thursday.

Ordonez made $ 14 million
last year with the Chicago
White Sox and had been seeking a five-year deal before he
became a free agent
"Mike d id a really good job
in hi s meeting of expressing
where the Tigers can be,"
Boras said. " He thought the
Tigers have a very good
c hance of winning the AL
Ce ntraL Magglio is very
familiar with the AL Central
and with Detroit."
Ordonez hit .292 last year
with nine homers and . 37
RB!s; mi ssing most of the
season with knee injury that
needed two operations.
'They talked to the doctors
and were very comfortable
Magglio is healthy," Boras
said.
Larkin said he has turned
down offers to start for severa l other teams because he
can ' I envi sion himself playing
for an&gt;'one but Cincinnati.

"I thought eventually I' d be
able to say, yeah, I can do
this," the 40-year-old · sh011stop said. " But I' m big on
loyalty. I couldn ' t come to
grips with making a 100-percent commitment (to another
team)."
Several teams are still interested in the former All -Star as
a rj:serve; giving him achance .
to help develop young~r playe rs. Larkin sounds as if he 's
· going to retire. and says he's
"pretty close" to a fin.al deciston.
" I simply haven' t made an
announcement that I' m not
going to play or retire because
it's not that pressing of an
issue," he said . " If it comes to
the point that spring training
starts and I'm not playing,
then it will he obvious. I want
no big fanfare; no major
announcement"
A Iso Thursday, pitcher
Hideo Nomo . agreed to a

minor league contract with
the Tampa Bay Devil Ray s
that would pay him $800,000
if he is added to the big league
roster, and Japanese infielder
Tadahito Iguchi fin alized hi s
$4.95 million, two-year deal
with the White Sox.
Infielder George Arias, a
former star in the Japanese
leag ue s, agreed to a minor
league contract with the
Washington Nationals. reliev er Rick White agreed to a
minor league contract with
Pittsburgh ($475,000 if added·
to the roster) and reliever Jay
Powell reac hed a· preliminary
agreement on a minor league
deal with the Atlanta Brave s.
The New York Yankees
reached preliminary agreements on minor league contracts with utilityman Damian
Roll s ($600,000) and .outfielder
Doug
GlanviHe
($550,000).
.
Houston outfielder Lance

Berkman was among five
players in salary arbitration
who settled, agreeing to a
$ 10.5 million, one-year contract .Houston will continue
to .work for a multiyear deal
with the All -Star, expected to
mi ss the start of the season
after injuring his knee playing
flag football.
Arirona right-hander Mike
Koplove got a ,$2 million.
two-year deal, Milwaukee
outfielder Brady Clark agreed
to a $ LIS million, one-year
contract and At·lanta righthander
Kevin
Gryboski
accepted a $877,500 , oneyear contract. Anaheim backup catcher Josh Paul settled at
$450,000, leaving 26 ,players
still scheduled for hearings
next month.
(AP Sports _Writers Steven
Win e in Miami alld Joe Kay in
Cincinnati contributed to this
)
report.

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DESCENDENT, ALL
OF WHOSE NAMES
OR ADDRESSES ARE
UNKNOWN
TO
PLAINTIFF, JOHN H.
WARNER, JR, IF UV·
lNG, THE! SPOUSE IF
ANY AND TO THE
WIDOW,
HEIRS,
DEVISEES,
AND
NEXT OF KIN OF
DESCENDENT, ALL
OF WHOSE NAMES
OR ADDRESSES ARE
UNKNOWN
TO
Pt:AINTIFF,
MARY
EMMA KING, IF Ltv·
lNG THE SPOUSE IF
} ANY, AND to TjtE

WIDOW,
HEIRS,
Public Notice
AND
DEVISEES,
NEXT OF KIN OF
LEGAL NOTICE
DESCENDENT, ALL
Thomas
Dartt,
OF WHOSE NAMES
Jane Doe, Unknown
OR ADDRESSES ARE
Spouse, If any, of
UNKNOWN TO THE
Thomas
Darst,
PLAINTIFF,
AND
*Yvonne Darst, •John
DOROTHY A . HILl IF
Doe,
Unknown
LIVING THE SPOUSE
Spouse,
If any, of
IF ANY, AND TO THE
Charles Whittington,
WiDOW,
HEIRS,
whoM last known
AND
DEVISEES,
address Is P.O. Box
NEXT OF KIN OF
70 Smithfield. PA
DESCENDENT, ALL
15478-0070 and •118
OF WHOSE NAMES
Union
Avenue
OR ADDRESSES ARE
Pomeroy, OH 45769·
UNKNOWN TO THE
1000, but whose presPLAINTIFF.
THE
ent place of resiOBJECT OF THE
dence Ia unknown
COMPLAINT IS TO
will take notice that
PARTITION
THE
on August 12, 2004 at
REALTY
PARCEL
2:12 p.m., LaSalle
NUMBER
Bank,
N.A.,
fka
11.01196.000,
LaSalle
National
11.01193.000,
Bank, aS Indenture
11.01197
trustee under that
11-01192.000, AND
certain
Sola
and
THE PRAYER IS THAT
Servicing Agreement
SAID REALTY BE
dated December 1,
PARTITIONED
OR
1999, among AFC
ORDERED SOLD IF IT
Truat Sarles 1999· 4
CANNOT BE PART!·
aa laauer Superior
TIONED, FOR AN
Bank FSB, as Sellar
ALLOWANCE
OF
and Sarvlcer, and
ATTORNEY
FEES
LaSalle
Ban~
HEREIN AND COSTS.
Natlonai Aaaocletlon,
YOU ARE REQUIRED
• Indenture Truat.,
TO ANSWER THE
COMPLAINT WITHIN · AFCMartgaga Loan
A...t Backed Not•.
28 DAYS AFTER THE
Serlea1999-4 flied Ita
LAST PUBLICATION
Complaint In Case
NOTICE .
OF THIS
No. 04 CV 110 and on
WHICH WILL BE PUBflied Ita Supplemental
LISHED ONCE EACH
Complaint In the
WEEK .FOR SIX sucCourt of Common
CESSIVE
WEEKS.
Piela Melga County,
THE LAST PUBLICAOhio alleging th811he
TION WILL BE MADE
abova-namad
ON FEBRUARY 18,
Dalandenl(a), Thornaa
2005 AND THE 28
Dartt, Jane
Doe.
DAYS
FOR
AN
Unknown Spouse, H
ANSWER WILL COM•
any, o1 Tho.m aa Darat.
MENCE ON THAT
*Yvonne D1rat, •John
DATE. IN CASE OF
Doe,
Unknown
YOUR FAILURE TO
Spouse. If any, oi
ANSWER OR OTHER·
Yvonne
D1rat,
WISE RESPOND AS
•chartn Whittington,
REQUIRED BY THE
. •Jane Doe, Unknown
OHIO
RULES OF
Spouaa, If any, of
CIVIL PROCEDURE,
Charles Whittington,
JUDGMENT
BY
hllva or clolm to hew
D,E FAULT WILL BE
an lnteraat In the ,..,
RENDERED AGAINST
. .tote
described
FOR
THE
YOU
!Mtow
" The
lond
RELIEF DEMANDED
ralarrad 10 In thla
IN THE COMPLAINT.
commitment Ia altu81·
(t) 14, 21 ,
(2) 4, 11, .
ad In the Stota of
18
Ohio,
County
of
Meigs Situ- In the

.ooo.

aa,

VIllage ·of Pomeroy,
County of Meigs .and
Stale of. Ohio:
Beginning at the
Southeast corner ot a
lot formerly owned by
Lucinda Starkey _on
Union Avenue In said
VIllage of Pomeroy;
thence north 20 deg.
eaat along the north
line of said lot 100
feet; thence south 70
deg east . 50 feet;
thence south 20 deg
west 100 feet to the
line of said Union
Avenue; thence along
the line of aald Union
Avenue, North 70 dog
west 50 faet to the
place of beginning,
..td premlaaa being a
part o1 Lol No. 425 of
said
Village
of
Pomeroy, and being
the same premises
deeded by Margaret
Nurat to Theodore
Elaalataln by dead
dated November 16,
1885, and recorded In
Votuma 81, Page 224
and 225 recorde,
Meigs County, Ohio,
and
deaded
to
George
Elaalateln
and wHe to Elsa S.
LH by deed dated
November 19, 1891,
and
racorded
In
Volume 73, Page 211
and
212
of the
Recorda o1· Dead o1
Melga County, Ohio.
Save end except a
email tract of Real
Eatata conveyed to
LOUII Reibel, begin·
nlng at Point 26 fut
North 20 deg. from
the Southeast corot tha M.E • .Church
Parsonage
Lot:
thanes North 88 112
deg,- 3 faet and 9
Inches; thancoo north

hereby
con,veyed.
Parcel No.: 16·01943
and currently set
forth In Deed Book
335,
Page
95,
Recorded 5111/93,
Also
commonly
known as: 118 Union

IW"~~

.Righ~

f"ooii~-l!il-p.._.-.-c.-8.
~c:.

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, January 29,
~005, at 10:00 a.m., a
public sale will be
Avenue,
Pomeroy, held at 211 W. Second
Ohlo, .45769.
Pomeroy,
Street,
The Pelltloner fur- . Ohio. The Farmera
ther alleges that by
reason of default of
Bank and Is Savings
Company
tielllng ·
the Defendant(s.) in
for cash In harld or
the paymen.t o1 a
promissory
note,
certified
check the
following collater111:
according to Ita tenor,
2003 CHEVROLET
the conditions of a
MONTE
CARLO 2 DR.
concurrent mortgage

deed given to secure
the payment of said
note and conveying
the
premises
described , have been
broken, and the same
haa
become
absolute.
The
Petitioner
prays
that
the
Defendant(s) named
above be require to
answer and aet up
their Interest aald real

estate or be forever
barred from aaurtlng
the same, tor toracl~

sure of •aid mort·
gaga, the marahallng
o1 any IIana, and the
aale of aald real
eatate, and the procHda of sold sale
appllad to the payment of Petitioner's
Claim In lhe proper
order o1 Ill priority,
and for auch other
and further relief aa Ia
)uat and equitable.
The Defendant(a)
named above are
raqulrlid to anawer on
or before the 11th day
of March, 20011.
By: 'Raimer, Lorber &amp;
Amovlt.t Co., L.P.A.
Ro~ald J. Ghernak,
,Attorney at Law
EM·CMortgage
Corporation
Attomay for PlaintiffPetitioner
P.O. Box 968
Twlnaburg, OH 44087
.
(330) 425-4201
(1) 14, 21,28, (2)4, 11 ,
18

20 deg. - · 17 faet
and 4 lnchH; thence
south 88 1/2 deg.
3 faet ond 8 Inches;
thence oouth 20 deg
weal 17 fut and 4
lnchao to lhe place of
beginning, and con·
talnlng
about 65
aqua.ra faet, more or
leas; and It Ia further
undaratood that no
part o1 tho wall on
aald paroonage lot lo

•••t

' I

\
I

Yc&gt;ILir D o o r.

r

Jack Russell Terrier Black/

White, 1 Blue fYtJe, GallipoMs
Ferry area 304~676-6991
anSwers to Patches.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Antlques .......................:................ ,, ............. 530
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market............................. 080
Auto PartS I Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair .. , ............,, .......................... ,,.,,,, 770
Autos for Sale .............................................. 71 0
Boatel Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles ................................ ,....... 550
iluolnell and Buildings ............................. 340
Bualnesa Opportunlty............................. ,,,,21 0

Buelnaaa Training ....................! .................. 140
Camper8 1 Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment .............:...... , .............. 780
Carda ot Thanks ........................... : .............. 01 0
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Electrlca11Rafrlger811on ............................... B40
Equipment lor Rent ....................................480
Excav811ng ...............................................,... 830
Farm Equipment .......................................... 61 o .
Farms lor Rent ........................................: ....430
Farms for Sale ..........;.................................. 330
For Lea ......................................... , ............. 490
For Sale .. ....... ,.................................. ,........... 585
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruits I Vegetables ...............:... .............. --.. 580
Furnlahed Rooms ........................,, .............. 450
General Haullng...........................................850
Giveaway ....................................,, ........ ,...., ..040
Happy Ada ..........................·..........................050
Hay I Grain ....................... ... ,........ ,..............640
Help wenlad ................................................. tto
Homalmprovemanta ...................................810

Are.you..G.' _5

_.1,_.

or ' ol , er? ·
d.

F I~

If so, you qualify for a

Senior

2

Discount~,
on your home delivered
subscription!

. 2003
DODGE
4
DR.
NEON
1B3ES26C03D108775
The
above
described collateral
will be aotd "II Ia •
where Ia" , with no
expressed or .Implied
warranty given. Tho
collateral muat ba
moved from property.
For further lnlor-

Home• for Sale ... - .......................................310

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

mallon, or lor an
appointment
to
ln~p~~ct
collateral,
prior to sale date contact Dlanll Rector or
Randy Haya at 8922316.
(1) 26 , 27,28 3TC

Houlllhold Goocta ........................... :...:....... 51D
Hou-tor Rent ......................................... ,410
In Memoriam ................................................020
lnaurance ..............................:..... ,, ............... 130
Lawn I Garden Equlprnent ........................

eeo

UVMtock ......................................................830
Lolt and Found ...........................................oeo
Loll Acreage ............................................350

a

Ml-lleneoua............ ,,...........: .. , ................. 170
Ml-ltaneoua Merchlndlaa......................,540
Mobile Home Repalr......,.. ...........................
Mobile Hoinaalor Rent .............................:.420.
Mobile Homu for Sale ................................3aO
Money to Loan ...............................:............. 220
Motorcycles 14 Whaelero ..........................740
Mualcal lnatrumantt .............. : .... , ........... ,, .. 570
Pereonala ........~............................................oos

eeo

cSJalltp•U• J9ail!' tltdf:June
t)ohd ~leatlant B.egftlte~

The Daily Sentinel
6unba!' Cime• -6enttnel

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The 2004 Annual
Financial Report of
the
VIllage
of
Middleport for the
yaar
ending
December 31 , 2004
haa been CGIIIplated
and Ia avallabla for
public lnapectlon at
the ClerkiTreaourer'a
OHica In tho VIllage
Hall at . 237 Raca
StrHI, Middleport,
Ohio 45760 betwMrt
the houro of tam and
4pm Monday tllrough
Friday.
(1)25, 26, 27,28 4TC

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

4x4'a For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement ............, ...... ~ ............... ,,,,,,,.! 030

TrY the
C lassifieds!!

Peta far Bille ................................................ 580
Plumbing a Hutlng ....................................820 .
Protaaalonal Sarvlcea ..... ............................230
Raclio, TV I CB Ropalr ...............................160
Raal Eatata Wanted ..................................... HO
Schools lnetructlon .., ,,.. ,;, ... ,.., ........... .. ,...... 160
Seed, Plant 11'111111zar.............................. 680
Sltuatlona Wllntacl .......................................120

p•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Subscriber's Name ---------'- - - - - - Address ___________________________

Space tor Rent .............................................4e0
Sporting Goodo .......................... ,................ 520

City/State/Zip ~---~------

••
•1

Phone•----------------~-------------

M•ll or drop off thle coupon •lang
:
with • copy of your photo ID to
• Ohio V•II•W' Publl•hlng , P.O . Box 488, O•lllpoll•, OH 4031

•

·----------------- ----- -------'

-

•
••
'·
•••
•
:
1
1

••

IUV's tor Slle..............................................720
Trucka.for Sale ............................................ 715
Upholatary ,, ................................................. 870
Vana For S.le ............................................... 730
Wantacl to Buy ............................................. 090
Wllntacl to Buy- Farm Suppllel .................. 820

'

W•ntlld To Do ••- .. ~....................................... 110
Wanted to Atirtt .......................................·..... 470
Yard Sale- Galllpollo.................................... 072
Yard Sale-PomtJrOYIIillddle ................. ,, ...... 074
Yard late-Pl. Plelaant ................................ 076

Display Ads

Dally In ~ Column: 1:00 p.m.
Mon~ay-Frlday for Insertion

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Bu•lness Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display : 1 : 00 p.m .
Thursday fOr Sundays

In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1 ·: 00 p . m.
Frlld••Y For Sundays Paper

How you can have borders and graphics
~
add~d to your classified ads
(.~
""'
Borders 53.00/per ad
f!itll
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

• All ads must be prepaid*

POLICIES: Ohio V•M•y Pubtl•hlng reMrns the right to ltdlt. rtj1ct, or e~~nc:-' 1ny 1d •t any tim•. Error• mu1t be r•poried on the flr1t diY of
Trlbune-SenUnei-Aeglster will bl relponllble tor no more then the coat of the epece occupied bv the error and only the tlretlneertlon. We •tJ.ell not
aPy to.. or expense that results from the publication or omiHion of en •dvertlaement. Correction will be made In tnt flret avaltabl1 •dillon. • Bo,;
art alwaye confldenUat. • Current rete card applies, • AH reale1t.te advtf11Hmtntt art tub)act to the Feder~ I Fair Houtlng Act ot ·1968. • Thit '"
acoept• only help wanted ad1 meftlng EOE •t.ndarda. We will not knowingly acc:ept 1ny adverti1ing ~n violation of th• law.

••••P•I,.' I

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

HOME&gt;

..., 1 It\ H I..,

L--------

Wanted!!! Dealer candidales
interested in diversifying and
selling Dixie Chopper. Zero
turn
lawn
equipment.
Attractive program. To
inq u ire
www.DixleChopper.com or
502-558·7937.

An Excellent way to earn
money. The New Avon.
Call Marilyn 304·882-2645
~re

you wuung 10 traveo

or steildy work, good
~ay and benefits~

,

r

a

()

aborers. Operators.
·
~elders. COL Drivers arid
oreman needed for .
ipeline ~rK .

AVON! All Areas! To ~uy or
Sell. Shirley Spears. 304 ~
675-1429.

'-------------------------=-------'
il:&gt; 2005 by NEA, Inc .

www.comics .com

l'l:ll"'"_ _ _ _ _.....,

_.~IIuo

r.I1~'~W~-----l;ll.tO_ _
__
__
lb..l.JI WANI'ED
liELP
WANJID
• _ _ _ _ _ __...
Local electrical distributor is
now hiring a coun ter sales•
Person._Previous experience
or basic electrical . know!·
edge is pr'eterred. Please
send resums to HR
Department- P.O. Box 6668
Huntington, WV 25773 or
rax to 1(304)697-81 15
EOEIM!F/DN

AN POSmDNS
AVAILABLE

n'",,J"I..l
· .:.~
., .•

u
..
IULr

r.u

I

Wanted: Receptionist for
doctor's office. MUst like
working with people, be effi·
cient and type well.
Experience helpful, but not
necessary. Excellent workr
ing condition. Good salary
and
fringe
benefits.
Outsianding career opportunlty. Send resume to: CLA
Box 558 c/o Gallipolis
Tribune. P.O. Box 469,
Gallipolis OH 45631.

t..------_.1

l

YII Brl ~~;OrlumJNm~=~llll:::~~

:::~mer~~u~dvinto~u~:~
~;e:'1 .

·--iiiiiioiiiiial-rl
.

DIRECTV
Free OVO Player
Free HBO &amp; Cinamax
Free Professional
Installation
up to 4 Rooms
Call 1·800·523-7556
for details
- - - - -- - - Jewelry. Buy Sell Gold,
Diamonds.
Gemstones
Repair, Appraisals, Gem
Testing.
Graduate
Gemologist.
Jeweler
(740)645·6365· or {740)446·
3080.
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1-888-582-3345

3 br. localed at 109 l1berty
St. washer/dryer. nO pe!Q
304-675-4655

· CHECK OUT THE CLASSIFIED ADS

4br. in New Haven. center of
Town , $500 a month. $350
de;pos11 No indoor Per ~
(304)882-3652

All real eslllte edvertitin~

In lhla newspaper Ia
subJect to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes It Illegal to
advertl,. "any
preference, limitetion or
discrimination baaed on
race, coktr, religion, sex
familial atatUa or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such
preference, limitation or
diserlmlnattcn."

For Rent 2br home in New
Haven. must have Dep P.
Ret. (304)934-7462
House lor rent in Syracu se.
3 bedrooms. 2 baths.
S500.00 a month. call afte•
4pm. (740)667-0674

r

This newsp8per will not
knowingly accept
advartlsementa for real
estate which ia In
vlolatton of lhe law. Our
readers are hereby
informed that.all
dwellings advertised In
thit newspaper are
available on an equal
opponunlty IH!tes.

HOMES

FOR ALE

r

2 bedroom mobile home for
sale , (740)992·5858
2001
28x52 Fairmont.
$26,500: 1996
14x70
Fleetwood, $8.500. Call
(7 40)709· 1166.
'-----'----------82 Brookwood Mobile
Home, '14x70, 3br, 2ba.
Remodeled , in Gallipolis.
OH (304)675-5069 leave
message

2br
House
in Wes t
Co1umbia, call (304)773- Immediate possession! Only
5284
----~c::-~--:·$213.68 per mo. New 3 bed~
room. 2 bath mobile home.
3 bedroOm 2 b·ath with t1re.
Only minutes frof1) Artlens.
place, 7 years Okt. in county l -800-83 7_3238 ·
on 4.3 acres. $75,000. Call
(740)709 1166
'--'--·--..,· --~-- SAVE: SAVE-SAVE
3 bedroom, 2 bath, fireplace. Stock models at old prices,
on 1.6 acres. Aio Grande 2005 models arriving Now,
$85 .000.
Call Cole's Mobile . Homes,
area.
15266 US. 50 East, Athens;
740)709-1166
1
·
OhKl45701 . {740)592·19n,
3 bedroom, 3 baths, 30x50 "'Where You Get Your
steel garage. $90,000. Call
740 256 9197
&lt;
1 '
·
Bidwell-Porter area . 3 bed·
room, 2 bath , 5 acres. custom Oak cabinets &amp; wood
work.
$138,500 . . Call
(740)367-7181 .
au·slnell Opportunity·
Three rental properties for
sale Duplex, each with 3
8/FI, LJA, DIR, Kitchen, Bath
&amp; Porch~ House 3 8/R, UR,
Kitchen, Bath . Cottage SIR,
Kitchen, Bath.
Rental
income for all three·,.l.pPJox.
$900 per month. Price for all

r

cMo~n•;.:Y.;.'.;W.;:o:-rth
;.."_ _ __,

Bl.5!NENs

I

. AND 8UII..J)JNGS

..._
Convenience/Grocer, store
business lor sale or~leaae.
Includes building , 2-acres ol
land and all eqUipment
Excellent opportunity to be
your own boss. Localed in
Gallipolis-Ferry
area.
Formore into and price cell
Bobby Muncy, Prudenliat
Bunch Realtors,(740)367·

throe-- $75,000
Located ~--0:~~~-~
104·1 06 7th Street, Point
p•--oant
(304 )875 2495
a;;
6 a&lt;:re more or less. in
countr'v. Waterlelectric on
. . - - - - - - - · property. All mowable.
Beautiful
tlomeslte.
www.orvb.com
~
Homo Llotingo.
Liot Y""' homo by caiHng
t740)44t-3120

e:OO

2 bedrooms, I bath. den .
Completely
refurbrs hea .
located 1n Point Pleasanl.
Deposi t · &amp; reference~ .
$450/month Call (304 )675- .
3423
2 br. trailer washer I dryer
$300.00 a mon. 740-441.
5725
- - - - - - -3Br. Trailer w/Refridg &amp;
Stove included (304 )57.6- .
2934

ble
on 2,h,
beautiful
room.
bath
home.32bedcar
garage. Deck overlooking
beautitul 111eW. F1ve Po1nts
area. (740)992-6667
-'--'----- - -- SSI! Social Security
$ 1 ~300 Net , We Can fiilance
you a home. cau (304}736· ""------~-34
;:00~~--~--., For re nt: 2 and 3 bedroom
tv
mobile homes starting at
MOBilEFORs~ I $260.00 per month. Call
___ .
IV£
• (740)992-2167

bedroom, set up in Country
Homes. $6.995 .00. Move in
today!CaU(740}992-2167or
(740)385-4019 .

S

~'

2 bedroom, ·1 bath , 12 mile:..
from Gallipolis. Large pn11ate
lot.
$325/month.
3251deposit (740}446-91 16.

-:':~--=::----., For sale : 14X70 WindsOr, 3

PlriD

MOBILF. HOME'&gt;
IURRENT

2 bedroom trailer for rent
(740) 446-0722

No Down Paymer11 is possi·

· ·

i:rr-AP.~IUlThffN1'S-----,
FOR RENT

1 and 2 bedroom apartments. furnished and unturnished. security deposit
reqUired. no pets. 74Q-992·
2218.
- - -- -- -1 bedroom apartment for
rent in Pomeroy. no pets,
(740)992·5858
'-'--------,2 b&amp;droom apt with washer
dryer hookup. appliances
furnished .
t bedroom conage utilities
1ncluded. (740)441-0117 or
(740)441-D124

~lu~:~~oo;75l~~~~an~~:
deposit
2 Bedroom, fully fur nished
&amp;
includes utilities
cab1e
$700/month plus deposit
BOth in New Haven call
(304)882~3131

238 First Avenue, 1BR . 1
bath, kitchen furmshed .
Ri110r v1ew. New ce.rpet and
paint. Easy walk downtown .
No pets. $350 month plus
utilities._ Reference, depoSit.
1&lt;40)44E-4926..
~-R-'--a-pt-.-S-ta-te- R-ou- te-1. . ,.60.
$400/month. stovelrefrigerator' included. was'herldryer
h k
(740)441.0194
(': :0):·1-1184.
or
- - - - ---2BA upstairs apt 238 First
!tve. Stove/refrigerator, no
pets. $385/month +utilities+
deposit (740)-448--4926
3
room
and
bath,
stovelrefr igerator, down~
s1airs. all utilities patd. 46
Olive
Street.
$450.

28

·

(7~)44E-3945

,Beautiful 2-story townhOuse,
overlookmg Gatupo1 1s City
park. Kitcnen-famlly, ·D.R. ,
L.A. 3 B.A.. stucry, 2 batf'IS,
laundry area References
required , security deposit,
no pets . $900 per ·mo.
(740)446-2325 or· (740)&lt;46U25.

IIAUTII'UL
A""IIT·
MENTS
AT
BIJDQET
PAICES AT JACKSON
Bedroom, 2 Car unateched garage , ~I main· 1 bedroom house , near ESTATES. 52 Westwood
stores, gas tteat. (740)4o46- Drtvo from $3« to 5«2 .
alnect home in Gallipolis.
0974.
Wa~ to shoP &amp; movies. Cal!
1101 Of call
........
740.446-2568
Equal
740)24S'Y"W7
1 to 5 bedroor;n apartments Houa/ng Opportunity.
and houses for rent, nice _ ...:_.:...,.c..;.__-::'---aM clean, No Pels .
Clean tumlshed Studio~
(740)992-3702
Apartment, S325/m0nlh
All
gol
include&amp; water~ruh , ·
OakWOOd
"Homes
2 or 3 bedroom hOuse In
Socurll)' D!opooit and
13041736 Pomeroy tpr rent. no pets.
Aeterencea required call
(7 40)992-5868
after 5pm (304)675-2970
VIew phoiOOilnfo online.

;(7!:40~)388-0396-::,..,.,=le,.,a::-vo.,.a~mo=s~-;,E~mptoy~
;.•~r.:-:::-:--:-::-:~~ted~thia~o=ff~e~rin~.E===: ...._______.

pany
Orlver/ Wa retlouseman
needi. saga.

Gallipoll&amp;, OH

PROf~ONAL

0

·rto

~o;:: ~:;~~:~~g ;!:

:rll:&lt;:o~"'l"~a!'l']_
~n::::::::==~
SERVICES

Holzer Senior Care Cen t ~u
Domino's Pizza is now hir·
is a 70-bed lo_ng~te rm care
ing, Management ~rsonal
facility. Due to internal trans·
lor Gallipolis &amp; Pomeroy
fer/promotions. we are seek·
Ohio. . "pt. Pleasant, &amp;
ing nursing staff. We offer
EleanonWinfield, WV. Apply
competitive wages and ben·
in Person at The Spring
efifs. If you are a person whO
Valley
l,.ocallon
1200
values matdng a difference
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis. OH . MANAGER~N- TRAINING in the lives of others and
or call (304)593-5365
working with e dedicated,
Health Care Servlcea curEstablished Heating-Cooling rently has a laundry/house- commilled team, you may
Company in Gallia Co. look· keeping supervisor-in-train- be a candidale for one oi 1§)
SOtOOt.S
I
these positions:
ing
for
Experjenced
~-nlUCilON
ing position open. Rotating
1
installers &amp; technicians. It schedule with on-call duties
'--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-"·
interested send resume to : requi red . Must P,Osses RN-UNIT MANAGER
•
Gallipolis Career College
CLA Box 548 , c/o Gallipolis strong supervisory skills. be FULL TIME RN'S
(Careers Close To Home)
Daily Tribune, P.O. Box 469 , hardworking and depend- FULL TIME LPN
DIETARY AIDE
Call Today! 74().446-4367,
Gallipolis, OH 45631
able. Benefit package avail.
t-800-214-1)452
able. EOE.
GET READY FOR
PleaSe stop in and lalk to _.,.,_gtt~l poliSCarMrCOieQe. com
Send application/resume to: Phyllis Canltell, AN. DON 01 Accre&lt;iled Member · AccrEKIIting
SPRING BREAK!
Ttle Arbors et Gallipolis
Lose Weight with Herbalile.
Teresa
Remv.
RN , Council tor ln&lt;:lepel"ld«!nt Colleges
170 Pinecrest Drive
Call Tracy (740)441 -1982 01
Administrator
at · 380 a%~ 8 12 749·
Gallipolis, OH 45631
(800)201 -0832
Colonial Drive, Bidwell, Ohio ltl)
~A NDolfiJ
I
ATTN: Linda Dennis
hHp://www.famousnutrition.c
or give them a call (740)446.,
FaX: 740.446·9088
om
500 1.
Assisted living for your loved
Mason
Cou nt~
Action
Immediate
Openings: Group. Inc . is .accepting
one in my home. Private
Residential
Trea!menl applications for I n - Ho m.~
rooms, 3 hot meals
.n 1• 8.
Faciliry for boys, now hiring Personal Care Assistants.
(740)38B -v
•
Youth Worker positlon. Paid bur service area includes al!
Medical Insurance. Call of Mason Counry. Staning
Day care has immediate
bpenings in Five Points
between 9:oqam-4:00pm rate $6.15 per hour, plus .50
&amp;rea.. Call
Dawn
at
(740)379-9083.
per hour additional for Sub(740}992.0117 for details.
Pay, plus .35 per mil~ for
Immediate position ava11able tra11et. tor shOpping or t(avet
Furnace and air condition
fo r installation-service teen- client to client. Apply at 22 1- ::-:--'--~---:--:-­ change outs, heat pumps
niclan
tor
secur.ity 112 Main Street. "Pomt Wanted and needed in ana duct work. Certitl&amp;d.
Alarmtvideo systems, com· Pleasant from 8:30-3:30pm Pom6roy, Ohio, Full time live
(740)245-~108 .
merclal telephone systems or 304/675·3300. MCA.G , in care taker for specialty
and satellite T.v. systems. Inc. is an EOE, M!F.. AlA bed and breakfast, if you are Hardwood floor, ceramic tile.
Previous expe'rience and/or . employer.
ol -English, Welc:tl, . Irish pole barns, remodeling,
fe d b 1 .:..,;:__:_________ decent, and an accent, additions or a new house.
eduCation pre r.re
u M&amp;di Home . Health Agency, enjoy cooking, house keep·
company will train the right Inc. seeking a full~tlme AN
I
I to llcensed &amp; Insured. Top
candidate.
ing and genera car ng r Notch Building Contractors
Case Manager for the :others this position-is made 304·615·3042 or 593-1115.
Reply with res ume to;
Gallipolis. Ohio location . tor you. we offer a salary
Consolidated security
Must be licensed both in plus and upsc81e environ· Snuggle Bugs Childcare disServiCes,
Inc.
Oh1'o
and West Vlrn,·n,
" '"
k'mg, counted private rates based
Rive Rd
• ·a. ment lifestyle. ,_.n-smo
on income, capay, public
240 Upper
r ·
u in&gt;"mum two year&amp; suporvi" ed
GaiHpolls, Ohio 45631
sMion , managemanl and non drinking cuuur
per- rates. Follow ·county guide·
son( a) desired. Please con- lines. Hourly rates: Infants·
hpme health experience. We tact us at: Or. and Mrs. M
. LICENSED SOCIAL
after a competitive salary. Dellivalle, 8227 Blueberry $5.50; Toddlers- $5; PreWORKER
.benefits p&amp;ckage. 401K, and Drive, New Port Richey, Fl, schOOI·$,4.30 &amp; School ageOverbroOk Rehabilitation
County
licensed.
tle11 time . E.O.E. Please 34653 ,.
727·808~4021 , $4.
(740)446-7122,
Gallipolis.
Center Is now accepting
send resume to 352 Second DADOKTAOattJlet
resumes for the position at · Avenue. Gall!polls, OH
OH.
Director of Social Services. 45631. Artn: Aud1oy Faney.
Will dO engi,_ chan,.,.s and
WANTED: Part-time poaitiGO
"Y
~
The qualified candidate
R.N. Clinical Manager.
available to assist tndlv1du- otner auto repairs . ASE
must be a LSW. possessing
als wittl menrat retarcunton Certi fied. Call (740)441New Yu~ New c .....r
strong verbal and written
Christian baaed Tech Co. at a group home ln Bi ~el l. 1306.
communication skills,
35 hrslwk : '11pm-8:30am
Expanding In yout area·
Medicaid, Medicare anO
ThursJFri; Sal. 7pm~9am
Managers/Sales Rep.
MDS knowledge. Long
Sun.
Must have high ~ool ~l'r.~-~Buitloi:-----,
Needed
ter.m care experience prediptoma/GEO,
valid driver's
Call
~70-6843
ferred but'flOt required.
(24 Hours)
Qualified candidates may
licensedriving
and three
goOd
experience.
send resumes to: Charla
Paramed!c:e
&amp;
EMT's $7.00/hr., Prt-employQ'Ient
10
01
Brown-McGuli-e. RN. LNHA,
needed. Apply at 1354 Drug Testing. Send resume
HIO
VALLEY
PUBliSH
Administrator 333 Page
A ctooon Pike, Gallipolis.
to: Buckeye Comm\)nlty NG CO. recommends the
Stroot. Middleport. Ohio
Serlliees , P.O. Box 604,
do business with
45760, EOE
10
Wanted: Person dean ·my Jackson .
OH
•&amp;640. le you know, and
home. Experience and Deadline tor applicants: end money through th
Local ~·lld&gt;' ng supply com Aeieren..•s needed . Can
"""
·
.......
2/3105. Equal Opportunity
il until you haw IOYaati

&amp; ablttty to pass DOT. Drug '

TO LoAN

~orrow Smart. Contact the
p hio DiviSIOn of Financia
Institution's Ollice
o
E?nsumer
Altair
~EFORE you refinancE
tJour home or obtain aioan
~EWARE of requests Ia
ny large adva nce pay
~ents ollees or insurance.
t:all
the
Office
o
~ons umer Aflairs toll lreE
t 1~866-278-0003 to lear
I the inortgage broker o
ender is properly licensed.
This Is a PUbliC servic
~t:nnouncement from th
l[&gt;hio Valley Publlshin

0

Personnel
C J Hughes Construction
PO Bd'x 7305 '
Huntington , WV 25776

7

MONEY

0

end res.ume to·

oentai-Assisant, Part-time.
Point Pleasant . Experience
preferred . but not necessary.
(Reply to) Point Pleasant
Register Box TSC26. 200
Mairi St. Point Pleasant, WV
25550

HOUSES
FOR RENT

FOR S.&lt;\LE

P.I1'1~0-HELP--W-ANIID--"""'I

Buying Junk Cars, paying up Car salesmen needed at
IO $50. (740):ie8-0011
loc:al dealership, sal,ary comFosler Molher looking for missiOn ba~eS. send resume
to: Daily SentineL PO Box
Baby Furniture &amp; Clothing
729-2
1. Pomeroy, Oh 45769
(304)675-3765
.

$200 Reward lor informa'1100 leading to recovery of a
short red hair female
Dachshund lost in Herman
RdJ Ingalls· Ad . area on Jan .
Will pay up lo $60 each for
17th. Call (7401446-7732.
unwanted or junk vehfcles to
Found black i::at wltlea collar haul away, (740)992-0413 If
near Nappa in Middleport, no answer leave message.
(740)992-3114

,

1997
HARLEY
DAVIDSOtj MC FWG
1HD1GEL1XVV3t 342

Lost: Female dog . Collie and

r

r(~1L)2~8~====~;;;~~~~;;;;~~~~;

rG1WX12~8394225~

1

Chow mix , reddish color.
Happy Hollow area . Call
(740)742-2653
----------,-Missing half-grown Black
V
and White female Border
GIVFAWAY
Collie. Four White boots,
. L _ _ _ _ _ _ _,... grayish dot on top ot right
...,
front leg Reward 304-675Free puppies· 8 weeks old. .7545 or 304-593·0348.
Adorable Cocker~Lab mix.
REWARDII
Looking for good home. Call
Lost- 2 cats, 1 neutered
{740)446-7696 before 1pm
orange male, other one Is
or arter 9pm, or (740)446black female. Bidwell area.
4491 .
(740)388-81 66.
Free to good home. ·three 8 ir~-~W.~----,
mo. old black Lab/German
AN'IID
Shepherd mix pups. 60-651, L---TOiiiitiBiiuviioo_....
loving. sweet pups, excellent ~
companion . good w/other Absolute Top Dollar : U.S.
dog &amp; children , only dog Silver and Gold Coins,
lovers reply, all shots, vet Proofsets, Gold Rings, U.S.
Currency,-M .T.S. Coin Shop,
chocked, (740)742-2377
151
Second
Avenue,
Gallipolis. 740-446·2842.

Annual Financial
Report
of
the
Township
of
Salisbury Is complete
and Is available at
olflce of Richard
Bailey, Fiscal officer,
at 463 Hooker Street,
Middleport, Ohio.

•

~~

No ATV'S or vehicles of any
kind permitted dn Zuspan
property near' Mason I
;CC
IIftro~n:;,;,WV,:,:._ _ _ __,

ANew

Public Notice

ANNouNCEMENIS

rI

I \11'1 Ol \II\ 1

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Word Ads

e Start Your Ads With A Keyword e IRclude ComPlete
, Description e Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviation•
• Include Phone Number And Addre11 When Needed
• Adl Should Run 7 Day1

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

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
I~L•bllc-

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

.~;·:::=~

FOR BARGAINS,.BARGAINS, BARGAINS! ·~~ourovll lo.

•

r----

�I

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel
Help Wanted

No Experience is required, only a willingness lo learn, work
as a team and have a strong initiative.
· • Excellent Pay ~nd Bonus Plan • Great Benetlls

AIThe #1

Dealership

Call To Schedule An

Interview:

Tom Peden Country
1-8()0.822-0417. 372·2844
475 South Church Streel • Ripley, WV 25271

r~.,_. .AP.:;;::.R.~-~-~.s-.~1
. t

'

m~PA~ I

Clean, Ground Floor, 2br, For Lease: OffiCe or retail
W/0 hookup, Ref &amp; Dep, no spaces in very goo'd 'condi·
Pets (304)675-5162
lion . Downtown Gallipolis.
, Approx . 1600 sq. ft. each. 1
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- or 2 baths. Lease · price
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
negotiable to encourage
Townhouse
apartments, new
business.
Call
and/or small houses FOR (740)446·4425 or (740)446·
RENT Call (740)441·1111 · 3936.
'
lor application &amp; information.
·
Retail
Downtown Point. Pleasant Storefront,
space/Commercial Buildings
Modern 1br, . appliances tor rent, very nice, (740)992·included , Adults .only, no
3702
pets (304)675-3788
\IIIU 11\\lll ~ l
Extra nice 2 bedroom apt.
with garage in Gallipoli s. i10
HOUSEHOLD
$400/month + deposit. No
Gooos
pets. (740)446-1082

L.--..:.•iiii-_.J

MiscELLANEous

Ii

UllL-------.,J

i

-

ijiiiio;;,;;:.:;.;;;..::,;:;.;.;.__,.

i

Antique drop leaf cherry din- Himatayan, female, CFA
THE
MAPLES,
100
nlng room tabiO lor sale. Call registered, 5 month old Ted
Drive
Memorial
East,
{740)446-9455 attar 4pm.
Tabby, male, flat faces .
Pomeroy,
740-992· 7022,
(740)992-9947
·
work
Subsidized
Residential Buy or sell . Riverine (740)742-3144 Reward
Housing for ® years of age Antiques, 1124 East Main
and
older.
PRIORITY on S.R 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- f.KC ~ack Lab puppies, 7
GIVEN TO APPLICANTS gg2·2526. Russ Moore, weeks old. All shots and
WITH INCOME AT OR owner.
wormed. $150.00 each .
336
'-'.._2_ _ _ _
BELOW $10,650. Maximum ~~~~-----, (,7_4_0),__9_;_85_-_
tncomeeffective01·28-2004
~ ~ for 1 person $17 ,700.00.
MEROIANDISE
~~~s ~~:~~- Shepherds .
Must meet HU0/20218 critewww.tristatek-S.com
ria tor household composi- 4 Busch &amp; Nextel Cup tick· (304)937 _
2310
tion.
Managed
by ets for the Spring Bri stol - - - - -- - - AKC Lab puppies, 2 lltack
Silverheels, Incorporated, A Race. Call (740)256-9197.
Realty Company Equal
1
1
1
Full size Sharp Slim cam ema es and 1 yellow mae.
· Housing Opportunity.
recorder, cheap. {740)667- Vet checked and papers.
0 166.
$300.00 each. (740)985Twir) Rivers Tower is .accept· "-"=-----,-- 9829.
ing applications for waiting X Box, 11 games, DVD, - - - - - - - list for Hud-subsized, 1· br, remote , 2 controllers, $225. Full blooded Lab ' puppies.
apartmenf, .call 675-6679 In great shat:;~e. (740)446- . no paperS. Phone (740)446EHO
9853.
.
2460.

Low mileage, $2,500.
-1-98_1_ 0-ld;_s-9-8-,-4-dr-,-R-u-ns
Good, Condilion fair $1,000
Cell (304)675-1264
_ __:.;_:__:~~.:__ _
1995 Chevy Monte Carlo,
auto, air, 811 power, leather,
new tires, very.nice, $2250 •
740 992 75114
(
)
'
1996 Pontiac Firebird, Troof, excellent condition.
Asking $5."000.00
1986 Chevy Silverado, asklng $2,000.00. (740)992·
_60_7_9_ _ _ _ _ __

01·28-05

5
¥ A J 10
+K J653
• Q 10 9 8

American Legion , Middleport
.
'

January 29

West

6:30 prn

1!1 Q J
• 4

First Pack $10.00
All After 1st $5.00
Paying $100.00 a Game
$200.00 lor the X
$300.00' Picture Frame
$1,000.00 Coverall
Crank It Up $16,000.00
20 Numbers Left
Starburst $1 ,050.00
. i

t
•

Al!TOS

r'.

5

t

$3!000; 99 Mere. Tracer,
$2,500, 95 Lumina, ,$1, 195;
93 Buick LeSabre, $1,400;
93 Ford Crown Vic. $2.095;
99 Taurus, $2,995; 97
Dodge Intrepid, $2,595: 97
Grand Am, $1,900:01 13uick
LeSabre. $6.200; 01 Mere.
Gr. Marquis, $5,900: 97 Ford
Conv. Van, $2.700: 98 Ford
Windstar, $2 ,500: 97 Jeep
Grand
Cherokee, 4x4,
$3,800 98 Ford Explorer
4x4, $4,000: 95 Goo Tracker
4x4, $1,995; 97 Dodge PU
4x4, $4,000; 95 Ford PU
4x4, $2,600: 95 Chevy PU
4x4, $3,400: 96 Dodge ex.
cab, $4,000; 92 Chevy PU,

[40 M010RCl'UES/

4 WHEELERS

I

2001 Ar'ctic Cat 500 4)(4,
2000# Warn winch . only
1000 miles, garage kept,
excellent condition. $3,000,
(740)992-3600 or 740-5918975.
-20_0_1-Ya_m_a_h_a_R_1_
, -8-,0-Q&lt;lmiles, al arm, new tires &amp;
exhaust, . garage
kept.
$5,500.
(740)441 -157B,

~~~

I
•

$2,395; 95" Ford· F250, Dark blue fiber glass truck
$3,000; 9'
GMC PU, 1opper, cxce
•
II en t cond't.
I tOn,
$1 ,99 5 ; 02 Ford PU, $ 5 ,~; $300. Fi1s up to 97 Ford lull
97 Dodge Dakota ex. cab, size truck. 740 245-5047.
$3,000; 99 Ford 'Ranger,

$3~

s&amp;o Auro
HWY

160 N_
4
44
17 01
6 - 686 S

Class C Dutchman Mobile
Home 2000 · Model, New
CLIFF'S usE:p CABS
tires,
all
accessories.
99 Durango, 39,000 miles, sleeps-a 1304)675-7368 to

The best
habit to kick

AFTE~ FO~TY

DAYS Of
SttOVt.t&gt;.

/ fl.AIN. Tt-le~rE
G~eAT

MVl&gt;{

RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

Phone: 740-742-3411

740-992-7599

ror a rree estimate.

ARE YOU
SHORE?

AW, THAT'S
.JEST A SILLY

SUP'ST1TION,

JI.\MEY !!

CROSS MY
HEART AN'
\ HC:&gt;PE TO l)IE !!

L.------.WU

Ta~e

the PAIN
out of PAINTING'
Let me do tl for yout

liNDA'S Pltrnlll

llbinllon
Malp Ca. Rnld.aam

BUCmE Saailalioa
SEPTIC TANK PIJMPING $95.00
PORTABLE TO/liT RENTAL .
CAll FOR APPOINTMENT TODAY
992·3251 OR 59f-8757

THE BORN LOSER
,..WI&gt;.'&lt; 1:'&gt; lf.IE-lt--I:'&gt;URt&gt;NCE:- r'\m"""
CQ'&lt;\\t-1(:, 01/t.R?

....

.,...

H.E-'~

""wf\f...\ FO!Z 7 "-R£. '(Ol) /&gt;.Hi:AlD

GOII'IG \ 0 saL U~ f\Ot-'E
I1'-I':JUKI&gt;.I-\C.t: I

:&gt;Ot&lt;\E.Ot-lt. 1-\IGI\\ .
SltP-.L OUR \&gt;.OJSE?

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING&amp;
. GENERAL
CONTRAOING
• Prompt &amp; quality

work

HOW AM I
SUPPOSED
;· TO PSYCH

. our

97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

10x10x Ox20
992·3194
Of 992·6635
"Middleport's only

MY

'

HI ' NAil.. '
KNOW WH Y
I ' CAL L

ACrUA.L.LY I THiS IS
5TRAN6ELY EFFECTIVE!

you NAIL ,
'CAUSE
WE'RE .
t;,ON N,O,

OPPONENTS.
IF COACH
WONT LET ME

740-742-229}
• Leave a messa e

MIJILEY'S
SELf STORAGE

G

· BIG NATE

• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
Call Gary Stanley

WHAT

IS '(OlJR

R08LEtf?
'

1-4 A I'll\Ell.

TR ~ ~H-TALK'

"(OU~

0
0

•

Whaley's Auto
Parts
St. Rt.681 Darwin. OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
l~te

Restocki'!lJ

JWodel

Satwwe

and Arter Market fhrls

See Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8: 30-Noon

PEANUTS
FORT't'- TflREE, AND NINE ,AND
TWENTV-SIX, AND TI-IIRTEEN,
~ND FIFTV-5EVEN .. J.lMM ....

YES. Ml'iAM WELL, ALL

TI-lEY SURE ADD
VP, DON'T THEY?

I CAN SAY 15 .. -

~ ~;;;S;e;lf;-;St;o;ra;g~e;·;;;;~ Sun. Closed

$9,900; 03 PT Cruiser,
37,000 miles, $9,500; 00 ~
Mustang, 29.000 miles,

$6.900; 98 Mustang, 71.000
1998 C hrysler Concord miles. $5.500: 66 Ford LTD,
1 11 ,000 miles, clean car, 390 motor, 42 ,000 miles,
$3500 OBO. 1740)256-6169 $4,550; 96 Subaru Legacy,
all wheel drive, $3,250. Call
2002 Dodge Stratus 4dr, (740)256-9090 or 1 01 _
74 256
63,500 miles. $6500 or rea- 6200.
sonable offer. (740)2561539 or ('40)256-1343
N~ssan
Sentra
1990.
Original owner, 153.000
miles.
$1,250. Call
(740}44-6-3352.

r15 ~~
93 CheVy fu ll-size. Good
tires, new brakes, Ssp., VB
vorte)(. Runs great, cheap
on gas. (740)667-G186 .

rlO •· _:~~­

JMYJ&lt;Uw•~,.,

BASEMENT .
WATERPROOFlNG
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. l ocal references fur-.
nished. Establish'ad 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Basement
Waterp roofing.

ADVERTISE
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

ROBERT
BISSEll
COimUCTIOI
• New Homes

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

J40-982-1m
Stop &amp; Compare .

Now Available At

BAlll\1 LLJI\IBER

~corpion

Tractors

"Taki11g The Sting Out Of
Hard Work!"

Mid-Size 4W)lee1 Drive Tractor
with 3&lt;'lhp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

SUNSHINE CLUB
'&lt;10-S .. GLAD-6. ITs M£.. ILL
BE.~ IN 1EN M/NJ7f.S
~

BAUM LUMBER

E:XCU.sE. ~~R ... BVr
tt.ERE, ',(X) ~.&gt;T TAU&lt;J~
IWTO '1UR CME. ~

'rES, 1

St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

WAS

~N

-~

GARFIELD
r

I NEVER Gr£01" INVI'I"ED

NORTHUP BODIE

Upper River J:.oad • Calll~lis
740-446-0841 • 949·1155 Evenings

Hill' s Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio

45771

7-40-949~2217

ADVERTI
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $50 per month

1'0

PAR-riES

1 Claw badly
S Asian
export
8 Prof's
·degree
11 Yard
.Planting
13 De&lt;:lde
14 Sugarloaf
locate
15 Ballroom
number
16 Hoedown
honey
17 Ma Batt
18 Island near

40

Summar job
seeker
41 Conk out
42 Stately tree
43 - the watt

45 Territories .
47 Quinn rote

50 Huge,
In c ombOs
51' Cato' s hello
52 Sib
54 Suitably
58 Tip of a pen
59 Mauna 60 AI no time
61 fabric

as a picture
36 Arrogant
20 Yawning
10 Pixels
person
12 Ravel
' 38 Motto
gutr
end
22 Bemused · 63 Wilts
classic
44 Old tate
19 Deputy
(2 wds.)
46 Cottar sites
' DOWN
· -sheriff
47 Sttty
24. Solar - know
21 Canary
48 Classical
poet
. 25 Pipe joint
1 Santa Fe · 22 Falcon's
hrs .
home
49 Yanks'
26 Boxing
venue
2 Gotchat • 23 Land,
adversaries
28 "Kon·Tikl"
3 Coffee
to Pierre
50 Sigh lolldly
·server
24 Worry, plus 53 Outback
eraft
32 Goof It up
4 Fast .sleds
25 Experiment
jumper
5 Tlberius'
27 Ship
55 Water33 Mixed bag
ol1492
power org.
34 Designer
garb
29 Actress
Iabat
·
6 Smog
56 Limb
35 Business
monitor
Anouk 57 Birthday no
• salutation
7 Ayn's
30 Thwarts
a villain
37 Lodgtrig
shrugger
places
8 Devoutly
31 Crop,

Over the last lew days, we have been
looking at bad bridge habits that players
get into when they proceed on autopilot.
Today, though, we have .a non-habit:
something that mariy neglect when it
should be ·routine on every deal.
Move into the East chair. You are defend·
ing against four hearts, knowing that
South has at least 5-5 in the majors . West
leads the club ace, under which you drop,
the seven, starting a high-low (echo) to
show your doubleton. Your partner is
watching , so he continues with the club
king and a third club, which you ruff.
declarer followin g throu_ghout . What
woyld you do now?
When South repeated his second suit
(hearts), he guaranteed having (at least)
five cards there. North considered opting
fo r three no-trum p, but it was nalural to go
with the known eight-card major-sun fit
(Three no-trump can be defeated in sev·
eral ways.)
II is time to Qo some co unting. The bi~­
ding told you that South is (at least) ~-5 in
the_majors. Si n~e he has no~ shown up..
with three clubs, he must be void in diamonds. So, -there Is no point in trying to
cash the diamond ace. Instead, shift to a
tru mp. Declarer will probably win the triCk
on the board and call for a diamond. Do
not waver: Play low. After that, South
must lose one more trick.
Note that if you don't return a trump,
declarer can cash his spade' Winners and
crossruff home.

·

39 1002,

Corsica

wish .

9 Sellouts

meas.
.62 Years on

·cedures."

BARNEY
WALKIN' UNDER
A LADDER IS
BAl) LUCK, .JUGHAID !!

•

Puzzle

Hannah Arendt wrote, "PrediQtions of the
future are never anything but projecHons
of present aUtomatic processes and pro-

~reAt.LY

Sunset Home
Construction
Brian Reeves
New Home Construclion, Remodeling,
Renovations, Decks, Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs, Siding, Windows &amp; All
Other Re&gt;idential Needs

1

SAtEs

wow!

BE SOMe

BUILDERS InC.

1!17'1!4~01;,.7":09_-_11_sa":.::""'-~..;.,
AA~PAins....,&amp;
~J.:I.U.LI.L:I.U..LL~

j

' '

BISSELL

1998 Dodge Dakota Sport
extended cab 4x4, V6. automatic, 63,000 miles, $7,000.
(740)441-0337 or (740)645·
6 153.
.

97 Mere. Cougar; $2,500; 99 96 Ford Explorer Eddie
Ford Contour, $2,000; 00 Brauer. 4x4, New s h oc~s.
Cavalier, $2,895; 00 Neon, "new tires. (740)667·0 186.

..·' -·.- . ...

PomeroY, Ohio

COMMERCIAL and

A

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

25 Years Local Ell: rlem:e

Windows • RooJing

· Pass
All pass

Opening lead: •

992-6215 wv 006720

• Replacemcm

East
Pass

Pass

V.C. YOUNG Ill

New Homes • Vinyl

West

Pass
Pass

• New Garages • Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Rdoflng &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Skttng &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks
We do It all except
furnace work

Sidi ng • New Garages

J 52

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: East-West

• Room AddUiona &amp;

speed, 29,000 mil~s. air, long bed $8995.00. 1997
one owner. Nice (740)441· Dodge Dakota. slcab, 4X4.
0157 or (740)645-5 141.
$8495.00.
1994
Ford
Ranger
sfcab,
4X4,
2003 Dodge Neon STX 55395 _00 , Riverview Motors.
4door, 4cyl., automatic, . 2 blOcks above McDonalds,
power everything, 11,000 Pomeroy, Ohio (740)9 92·
miles, $6,500 . (740)441- 3490
0337 or (740)645·6153.
-------F350 Ford 1-ton duMy, 5th
2003 Strauss. $8·995 : 01 wheel hitch/reese new
$5,995;
02
l k &amp;
d
Strau ss.
Cavalier, $4,895; 01 Rio , motor_ oo s
runs goo
$2,995: 99 Malibu, $2,995; (740)379-9098 .
98 Breeze , $3,495: 98 For sale Chevy Silverado
Escort. $3,495; 96 Vision, 350 1/2 ton, 4)(4 with 4" lift ,
$2,495 : 98 Con tour, $3,195; stainless nerf bars, alum.
97 Saturn , $2&gt;,995; 2000 tool box, no rust great shape
Grand Prilc, $3,995: 98
304-675-1935
'
Monte Carl o, $3,995: 98
Voyager $3 195· 99 Grand
4x4
•
,
·
Caravan $4 495
·
FOR
SAIL
· •
·
1(888)777· 1343
· (740)866·1343
1987 Ford F-150 4x4 with 3"
Rome Auto Sales
b.ody lift 14x35x15 Monster
Mudder tires, motor out cov85 Ford Crown Victoria.
ered in garage with tots of
Southern ca r. 1 owner, like
new parts fo r motor,
new. 82.000 miles, $1,200.
(740)247 -2581
Call/740)643-2285.
96 Ford Taurus, maroon , 4door.' auto, V-6 , air, power
seats
and
windows
$2,000.00 or willing to trade,
(740)247-2028

-

CARPENTER
SERYICE

FOR SAU:
FOR SALE
· - - - - - -. .,.1 L---iiiiitiiliiiiii-,P
.. .\
2002 Ford Escort ZX2, 5 1998 Dodge Ram. 4dr, 4X4,

.
•

YOUNG'S

Rem~llng

?; 3 2

+AI0 974
• 73

1!1 A K 9 0
¥KQ9 .8 6

· and

TRUCKS

•

South

740-843-5264

!:'::~-~----., ~~-~=-----,
10

Q .H 2
AK 6 4

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

Broad Run Gun Club
Sunday, January 30th
· Outlaw-Slug Match
12 Noon

East
• 7 2'

tO 8 6

Crossword

for Caesar

•

-

rlO

r

'

North

PETs

, For Lease: One bedroom,
n~ce 2nd floor apt . Corner
Pine and Second. Lar.ge
Appliance Rare jumbo peanut butter jar
kitchen with din1ng area.
collection, 17 different jars, 1000# round bales 'mi)(ed
New range , refrigerator.
Water 1ncluded . References
Warehouse including 3- 112 oz. Elephant hay some alfalfa/orchard
decanter, some with orig. grass,
$8 .00-$20.00,
required . $3001mo_ Security
. lids. These are differen t rt 40)S98·?765
deposit. No pets. Call
in Henderson. WV. Pre- $1,200. (740)533-3870
(740)446-4425 or (740)446·
owned applicanes starting at
4~~:5 rou nd bales oats &amp;
3936.
$75 &amp; up all under warranty, Remington 1100, 16 ga.,
clover, barn kept. $16; 4x5
we do service work on all vent rib $550; also black
round bales mixed grass.&amp;
Gracious living . 1 and 2 bed- Make and Models (304)675- bear rug has felt backing,
.
with
head
and
claws,
ideal
a)falfa,
first cutting. $12; 4x5.
room apartments at Village 7999
for gun show display, e)(cel· round bales wheat hay, $12:
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments in · Middleport. Double door refrig erator. lent $200. Would take $700 4K5 round bale fescue $12;
4115 last years hay, $ 5 .
From $295-$444 . Call 74D- alinond- deluxe, $175. tor both items. (740)533- ·
(740)245-5047.
Phone
1740)446-7731.
3870.
992-5064. Equal Housing
Opportuni ties.
Hay for Sale: Good qual ity
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
SPA fACJ11RY OUTlETS
Timothy &amp; Alfalfa. $3-$4 a
Chapel Road. Porter. Ohio.
New Shipment
bale: Taylor Farm (740)643Modern 1 bedroom apt. Call . (740)446-7444 1· 877·83D20-tubs in-stock
2285.
(740)446·0390.
9 162. Free Estimates, Easy
Cedar Knoll Mall1
financing, 90 days same as
Kentucky Trading Post,
Hay for sale: Square and
New 1 bedroom apt. . Call cash. Visa/ Master Card.
Ashland .
bales.
Delano
round
Drive. a- linle save alot.
(740)446-3[36.
1606l922-7185
Jackson Farm, 304-675·
- - - - - - - - - ThOmpsons Ap pliance &amp;
1743.
Frigidaire, .
Pleasant Valley Apartment Repair-675-7388. For sale, White
I I{ \ \"'1 '1 II&lt; I\ If( 1\
Are .now takirig Applications re-conditioned automatic Refrigerator, runS great.
for 2BR , 3B A &amp; 4BR ., Washers &amp; dryers, refrigeia- clean inside &amp; out $40
Applications are take n tors. gas and electr ic (304)937-3348 call after
AUIOS
Monday thru Friday, from ranges, air conditione rs, and 4pm
..__ _FORiti i iti iSi Al,E
i i-_..1
9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Office is wringer washers. Will do l!!l:"-~-----,
located at 1151 Evergreen repairs on maier brands in
BUILDING
$500! Honda's, Chevy's,
Drive Point Pleasant , WV shop or at yoUr home.
SUPPLIES
Jeep's,
Ect.
Police
Phone No is (304)675 -5806: :::::.:_:~:_c::::_:_:=:::___ ·--tiiiiiiiiliiiiii--,.1 Impounds! Cars from $500
E.H.O
· Used Furniture Store. 130
lor listings 800-391 -5227
Bulaville Pike. Appl_ianct3s. Block. br~k. sewer pipes,
windows. lintels. etc. Claude EXT 3901
Tara
Townhouse bunkbeds, twin , full , queen, Winters. Rio Grande, OH
Apartments, Ve ry Spacious, king mattresses, dressers. Call 740 _245- 5121 _
.03 Mitsubis hi Lancer. 02
~=tally Edition. 18,000 miles,
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1 couches, dinettes. recliners,
t /2 Bath, Newly car'peted, grave monuments. much
- PETs
auto, · $6,200
OBO.
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, more.
(740)446-4782. ·--iiiURiiiiiiiSAUliiii--,.1 (740)256-161 8·or (740)256Patio, Start $SB5/Mo. No Gallipolis, OH, Hrs. 11·3 (M- 6200
·
Pets, Lease Plus Security S)
6 Pit Bulls, tun txooded, 6 -1-97_9_H_o_n-da--7-50--tOt-h
o8posit Requi red, Days:weeks. Shots/wormed. Call Anniversary Limited Edition.
74().446·3481 ; Evenings:
AN'I1QlJEs
{?40)6S7•0186 ·
Needs
ignition
work.
740-367..()5()2.
cB_we__:_e_k_s_o-ld-F-Ia_m_e_Po_ln-t Evening
(740)256-6870.

Lw-------"

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder
..; ,1

.

•r=_...;._____,

NEA

BRIDGE

fOR SALE

JET ·
Miniature Schnauzer's
8
AERATION MOTORS
weeks old AKC registered,
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In $300 each (304)895-3745
Stock. · call Ron Evans, 1Parrot w/cage and play
800 _537_9528.
stand
$700 00
Call·
·
·· ·
·
- - - - - - - - (740)992·1987
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams Pt'pe Rebar
·
For
ConCrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
Gtating
For
Drains,
LIVESTOCK
Driveways &amp; Walkways.
Scrap Metals Open Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
to
Friday, Bam-4:30pm . Clpsed "ii:F:O..~::;::;::~:;::;;-.,
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; a
Sunday. (740 )446--7300

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

.BULLETIN BOARD

!::::;:::::~-:;;:::;:::~
L~--MERiiiiiiiaL\NDiiiiiiliiiiiSEiiiO_.l. ____

www.mydailysentinel.com

Gil Your Me..a_g•~
.
' Willi A DeifY sentinel'

An equal opportunity employerM/F/D/V

r

Friday, January 28, 2005
ALLEY OOP

Help Wanted

American Electric Power
Company's
General James M:'Gavin Plant,
located in Gallia County, Ohio,
is seeking personnel in the
iNSTRUMENT AND CONTROL
DEPARTMENT.
Minimum · Qualifications
are
Associate Degree in Electronics m
Equivalent.
Regular full-time
positions. Overtime and rotating
shift schedule as required. Entry
level wage rate of pay is $18.05
per hour. Benefits include Medical;
Dental,
Vision,
401 K and
Retirement. Interested candidates
should caii1-B00-300-18S8.

Wonderlul opportunities are availa~e in Tom Peden Country.
We are·expanding our staff and need more sales people.

• Work

Friday, January 28, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

-r----,--,.--------,
IOVERYONE
eLSE 1'HANK!I

Me

0

0

AstroGraph
-

'lllrthdiiY:

Saturday, Jan. 29, 2005
By Bernice Bade Osol
The developrrient of a far more positive
attitude will be the reaso n why you'll have
bener-than -average chances at reaching
your ~reams ln !he year ahead. The
words · 1 ca n'l" won't be In your vocabu. lary.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -.- Your
powers of observation and yo ur ability to
probe beneath surface facades will be
two of your greatest as~ts todav. You' ll
know just how. where and when to use
them to your advantage.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - The helpful information you're seeking can be
found today through in-depth tliscusslons
' with associates who do not limit their
thinking to traditional concepts. Get your
head together now.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)- Act in har•
monv with your ambitious Impulses today
where you·r wo rk or career Is concerned.
You havw the intelligence needed to
adVance your position in life if ydu'll use
your Ideas.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)- Your mind,
·not your muscles. will give yo u the edge
in competitive activities, such as athletic
events, today. Conceive a good game
plan and follow through with it to the let·
ter.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- The lnstghtlulness you" possess can see meri t in
changing cond itions which other~' find
confusing or unneeded. You'll know just
how to adapt and put a progressive situa·
lion to work tor you.
·
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - YoUJ
upbeat and coopei-ative spirit is contagious and your positive anltuele will prove
to be very helpful to those who are strug·
gling. Thev·u be encouraged to apptv your
successful ways.
LEO (July 23--'ug. 22) - It won't be
through lucK, but through mindful conSid·
erat;ons that will help you reap large
gains toda~ in your work. You'll be S.ble to
show a tidy protit you wouldn't have oth·
, erwlse.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ~ Being
friendly to those with whom you mingle
Will be responsible for adding to your
social schedule today. Your warm , gi-egarious mood will be a welcome addition to
any group.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Although
others might attempt to c0811 you to do
otherwise. you'H tl,ink better of discussing
any sensitive or confidential information
. you may have about friends . How wise of
you to keep mum.
SCORP IO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Seek
companionship with those who mentally
operate on the same wavelength as you
andfor st:~are your sphere of interests
Everyone will trigger each other's think·
in g.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dac. 21) - As
today's events slowly untold, you may be
8KPOsed 10 a number of small opportunities for adding to your resources Keep a
mental list it you don't have lime to cash
in on them all now,
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. \9) - The
eKact Information you 've be'tl seeking
pertilinu1Q to someth•ng outside of your
usual sphere at operations mAy- come
your way today, not by accident, bul from
your persistenl probing.

SOUP TO NUTZ

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebflty C1phe1

are aeated from QUOtations bv lamo\.IS people, past ar.:J ~esert
Each 1ette1 •n the clltler stands lor aoother.

"Y~rams

Today's qlue: Xequals P

" W

OHMWHEH

V WRY L

SM· M

Cl

GKVEWEH

WT

CT

LYH

LC

GXHDW.HG

LYWG

'M H C T S V U C

UWEWTH

XMSTHL ."

UWDSX VWC

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "The anlst must say it without saying it."
- Duke Ellington ·
·
"Art's most effective/When co ncealed."- Ovid
(c) 2005 by NEA, tnc. 1,28

THAl QAILT

wan

PUliLII

UMI

sccr\\~)A-ztt-ff~·
- - - - - ' - - - !dittd by CLAY • . ~OLLAN
0

~eom:m_,e letters of
lo~,~r sc rcmbled wordi

the

be-·

low to lcrm four wads

LNAWSKY

ll' I' I I I

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C I E [ •,"·'

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that di-

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r----------,nasty

lh:ngs

tn the -- - : ·- ---

T R YT i G

SCRAM·lETS ANSWERS

1- 27- o 5

.Jocufld- Etgllt- '/en om- R,egret- E!I.'OUGH
Doltt•c•ans know vou ca1'1 tool all the peop le al l the
~ !ni f' but they f1gur0. on::e every fJUI r·eCHS is go_od
Lr-~;· )uC.H 1

ARLO &amp; JANIS
Flf!lf, YOU lf.Jbf'W

1Ut C011K...

�Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

.

www .mydailyse~tinel.com

Friday, January 28,

NHL labor talks conclude, with
promise of another meeting
.

BY IRA PoDELL
Associated Press

\

Safin ends Federer's .
winning streak in ,
·semifinals at Aussie

.

pub!~

eye.
·
During a two-day meeting last week in
Chicago ll!ld Toronto, they tried unsuccessfully to get together in secrecy. Botb
There's no telling how the NHL labor parties believe they will have a better
negotiations are going behind closed chance of getting something accom·
doors.
plished if they can talk in private.
..for that matter, tbere's no telling where
"After meeting today, we have agreed to
those doors even are.
continue discussions and will not be makSo closely g11arded are the minutest ing any further comment at this time,"
details from the league's latest round of players' association senior director Ted
taJks with the players' association, exactly Saskin said Wednesday.
what they're still taJking about is still any·
Daly told The Associated Press on
one's guess.
· . .
. · . . Tuesday tbat discussions were at a critical
The s1des held theu third meetmg m less . stage and that only days remained to reach
than a week Wednesday m Toronto and · a deal that would save the season. The fact
~ere successfulm keepmg the exact l~a- that more. talks have been set up provided
!JOn a secre_t. After the 5 11?-hour negot1at- at least a glimmer of hope that the NHL
mg sessmn, the &lt;_~nly detaJI revealed w~s won't become the frrst North American
that another meetmg would take place th1s sports league to lose an entire season to a
week. ·
.
.
.
labor dispute.
Although nothing had been offic1ally
The lockout reached its J33rd day
scheduled by Wednesday m~ht, the s1des Wednesday and has wiped out 713 of the
were leaning toward. gettmg together 1 230 regular-season games, plus the All·
either Thursday or Friday in New York.
slar game.
··
·
There is no secret that' time is runnmg
The small-group fonnat began last week
out to save the hockey, season . How the with- the hope that the sides could find
· NHL and the players assocmtmn are ' common ground that would lead to a new
working to prevent that has become a very colleGtive bargaining agreement. AJl three
big mystery. Talks were held m small sessions were -held without commissioner
groups a~ain on Wednesday, three people Gary Bettman and union chief Bob
representmg the umon and four on the Goodenow.
·
le~Pue si'!e.
.
.
,
Although no details were available, nei,'We w1ll meet agam this wee~. ~HL !her side planned to make a new proposhl
chtef legal officer B1ll Daly. sa1d. ,We on Wednesday because the participants
have no further comment at th1s tune.
wanted to generate ideas through an open
. Before getting together thiS week, lJ?th dialogue instead of working on a fonnal
stdes took a ught·hpped approach, addmg proposal.
·
they wanted negotmtmns to be out of the . "We're in a critical stage, and that

'

2005

means we're down to days," Daly said
Tuesday night. ·
It was Vancouyer cent_er Trevor Linden
who c~e _up w1tb the 1dea last week to
talk w1th JUSt SIX people m the . JV?m.
Ltnden, the NHLPA pres1deht, mv1ted
Harley Hotchkiss - the chamnan of the
. board of governors.
.
Tht.! structure was successful m produc·
ing discussion, but it did nothing to close
the gap in the philosophical differences.
The same group that met last week
gathered again: Lmden, Saskin ll!ld out·
. side counsel Joryn McCambridge as well
as Daly. HotchkiSS- a part·o.wner of the
Calgary Aames - and outside counsel
· Bob Battennan. · ·
..
The only change was the add1Uon of
New Je{Sey Dev1ls general manager Lou
Lamoriello, a member of the NHL board
of governors, who JOmed the league s1de
for the meetmg.
.
"I really don't have any comments,"
Lamoriello said in a phone mterview from
New Jersey on Thursday. "When this
process is on I think the comments should
come only from the . people who are
spokespeople.".
.
The 11/HL still wants cost certamty, a
link between player costs and team revenues. The players' association wants a
free-market system.
No proposals have been made since.
early December, when the players offered
a 24 percent rollback on ex1stmg contracts
as part of a luxury-tax and revenue-sharing system. The NHL turned that down
and made a c?unlertJroposal five days
later that wasreJected m a matter of hours.

. MELBOURNE, Australia Lindsay
Davenl?ort.
(AP) - Roger Federer was Williams' 2-6,7-5, 8-6 vlctoon his hands and knees, his ry over Maria Sharapova in a .
racket gone after he tumbled rematch of last year's
chasing a shot,
, · ,
Wimbledon final . produced
All he could do was watch about as much draJ;Oa as
as Marat Safin tapped a gen- Federer-Salin.
tle forehand into an open
Williams saved three
court to cap a thrilling 4 1/2- match points, then leaped
hour Australian Open semifi· three times after ending it
nal and end the top-ranked with a winner.
Federer's 26--match winning
The top-ranked Davenport,
streak.
who contemplated retiring in
Safin fended off a match 2004, came back to beat No.
point in the fourth set, then 19 Nathalie Dechy of France
needed seven match points 2-6, 7-6 (5), 6-4. In the douof his own before .pulling off bles final Friday, Svetlaria
a 5-7, 6-4, 5-7, 7-6 (6), 9-7 KuznetsovaandAiicia Malik
upset of defending champion beat Davenport' and Corina ·
Federer and advancing to his Morariu 6-3, 6-4.
third Australian Open firial in
With Federer trailing 8-7 in
four ~ears.
.
·
the fifth set and .serving on
"Its always. going to hurt, match point, he lunged tO
no matter how great the . retrieve a deep shot wide to
match was," Federer said. his forehand stde. He swatted
"But at least you can leave back a desperation shot, but
the place feeling good about slipped and dropped his rack·
yourself, because I gave it all et. Satin convened the put·
I had."
. · away.
.
"It's like a brain fight. ...
The fourth-seeded Safin
next meets No. 2 Andy It's more mental than flhysi·
Roddick or No. 3 Lleyton cal against Roger." said
Hewitt, whose semifinal is Safin, who smashed his mckFriday..
.
et to the court two points
The women's final is set, before he lost the third set
featuring past champions and later belted a ball into the
Serena
Williams
and stands.

ALONG THE RIVER

LiviNG

In disaster's wake:
'37 flood still standard for all others, Cl

Hous~ of the Week:
~piral staircase a focus of this

'

a
I lhio \alit·~ l'uhJi,hin~ &lt;·o .

Pouw•·o~ • \liddlt·po•·t • ( ;allipoli' • .Janu;u·~ :;o. :!Oo~

'

Catch all your sports in...

'

• Rebels win in two OTs.
See Page 81

OBrtuARIFS

INSIDE
. .,
..

.

. .,.. ................. ..........

~

~:.,..

"'"",......,.~..,.

'

• Gallipolis Proclaims
February as Heart Month.
See Page A2
• Emergency funds
coming to Gallia, Meigs.
~PageA2

.

, • TNT plant display set for

2004

Nls:s~n

River Museum.
See Page A3
• Livestock report.
See Page A&amp;

Xterra XE 4x4
~':lfi"~l
.... $ 25,100

t .•21,157
· Altlma 2.5
J• . . ~F&lt;•

-

$. 1,500

17,870

WEATIIER

issan Sen·tra 1.8 S

- s 2,500

NEON SIT

12,770

12t998*

Ntssan Titan

the region," said Ken Moore, the ifenter's
executive· director. "This new center will
provide high quality physician services
. GALLIPOLIS -· Work is nearing and state-of-the-art technology to treat
completion -on the building that will even the most complicated cases."
house a $12 million investment in area · The center is a partnership between the
health care.
clinic and HMC to bring cancer treatment
Officials for Holzer Medical Center and care to the immediate area. The cenand Holzer Clinic said construction on ter offers service in a ·more nearby locathe Holzer Center for Cancer Care struc· tion, making the recovery process easier
ture fronting Jackson Pike will be com· for local patients and families no longer
pleted in February and the center open
having to seek treatment in Huntington
for business by spring.
General contractor on the project is and Columbus.
Featuring the latest in equipment and
Stockmeister Enterprises in Jackson. It
complete
care, the two-story structure on
was designed by .. Columbus-based
the main hospital area will offer radiation
Karlsberger and Associates.
This will include services pro·
oncology.
"We are very ·excited about the new
cancer center and look forward to serving
Please see Center, Al
Bv KEVIN KELLY

A view of the
front of the
Holzer Center for
Care Center
reveal s how
close the build·
ing is near to
completion . A
partnership
between Holzer
Medical Center
~ ,.,..., -and Holzer
Clinic, the $12
_ ....,. million center is
expected to be
operational by
spring.
Kavln .Kalty/photo•

KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBONE .COM

J. REED

Corps: 35
boats awaiting
resumption of
river traffic

REEDSVILLE -Only
one barge remains in the
way of closing the dam
gates at Belleville Locks
· and Dam, after a salvage
crew removed one of two
barges blocking the dam
on Friday morning.
Chuck Minsker of the
U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers said the only
sunken barge which contin·
ues to cause problems for
the salvage crew could be
removed by the end of the
weekend. After the remain·
ing barge is removed from
the number three gate, all
gates can .be closed
·
. and. the , na.vigatiQ.n.. l~~·•
· between the Willow Is
Locks and Dam at Newport
and the Belleville project
can he restored.
"We were especially
pleased to clear gate six
today, because the barge Above: The Ohio River is
blocking it was considered ·noticeably lower on the north·
the most difficult to ern side of the Belleville
locks and Dam in this aerial
remove," Minsker said.
shot
taken Friday afternoon.
Nine barges from the
Tim MlloneY/]IhotO
B&amp;H Towing Company's
Jon J. Strong tow, carrying
coal and aggregate materi ·
als, broke loose during high Right: A salvage crew loads
water on Jan. 6. Three of ·equipment onto a repair
the nine went through the barge at the Belleville Locks
dam undaJTiaged and were and Dam on Friday afterre-captured immediately. noon , shortly after another
Four others sank immedi · ' barge was removed from the
ately on the upper side of Ohio River.
the dam and two others
B~an J. Reed/photo
•
Pluse see Belleville, Al

BY BRIAN J. REED
·: BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

REEDSVILLE -At least
3,5 towboats carrying coal,
chemicals and other raw
materials are waiting on either
side of the Belleville Locks
and Dam, ready .to proceed up
or down the river once the
navigation pool is restored.
The order those . boats will
proceed to their destinations
once the Belleville project is
re-opened for navigation probably early next week Will he detennined by the river
navigation industry itself, a
tJ .S. Corps of Engineers
spokesman said Friday.
The 42-mile pool has been
closed to all commercial traf• .
fie since Jan.- 19, when it
reached a six-foot level for
navigation, maj(ing it unsafe
for tows and their barges.
Chuck Minsker. a public
affairs officer for the Corps of
Engineers, said the Corps esti·
mates 22 boats awaiting pas·
sage down river from the
Willow hland Locks and' Dam
pool at Newport, and 13 awaitmg to travel upriver from the
Racine Locks and Dam.

Pl.... see Corps, Al

Fruth's Pharmacy proactive against methamphetamine Schuler faces grand jury this ·week
BY BETti SERGENT
BSERGENT®f&gt;1YOAILYSENTINEL.COM

•Allllebololto Dealer
•
~

•.

Around Town

A3

Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics

C4

Ple8se see Fruth's, Al

~~~

Karl returns to the ·NBA,
this time in Denver

4 SI!CilONS -24 PAGES

'

D Section

Fruth Pharmacy made a co,rporate, pn:iactive decision that all of their stores would
take Sudafed and cough syrups ~;ontaining
coricidin off the shelves and place.them
behind the counter for sale. Pictured are
employees from the Pomeroy Fruth's store
.pharmacist Ron Hanning, pharmacy techn~
cians Nancy Kearns, Debbie Davidson and
store manager Clinton Goad.
Both'SerJonl/]lhoto

insert

Editorials
A4
Obituaries
As
.
.
A2
Region
Sports
B Section
Weather
A6
© 0005 Ohio Volley PubU.hln&amp; Co.

---""'
·

WASSII,ftl ·

WM$11,. .1

NOW

NOW
114,991

16,494

1

Adlens

250 Columbus Rd.
740-594-3528
1-877-716-8685

BY TIM MALONEY
TMALONEY®MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

POMEROY - The highly addictive
drug methamphetamine has been· rearing
its head into rural communities including
Meigs (:ounty. Last year both the .Meigs
County Sheriff's . Department and
Pomeroy Police Department arrested
individuals for possessing the ingredients
to make meth.
· The ingredients to tm\ke m~th are com-

OOOC!I E
C HRV·L··

GALLIPOLIS- A Gallia County grand jury will decide on
Friday what charge Denis R. Schuler. 42, of Laf!gsville in
Meigs County, will face for the shooting death of Vinton resident Bennie F. Cardwell.
Schuler has a~mitted in a videotaped confession that he shot
the 73-year-old Cardwell, but said it was in self-defense:
His attorney, William Eachus, said in a preliminary hearing
Jan. II in Gallipolis Municipal Court.that the facts of the case
support only a voluntary man.slaughter charge. and not the .
murder charge for which Schuler has been bound over to a
grand jury.
·
·
On Friday, the Gallia County Sheriff's. Office released a
statement saying Schuler's versiOn of events are in doubt.
According to sheriff's Capt. John Perry, Schuler's claim that
Cardwell shot fll'St. and that Schuler only shot in self-defense,
is suspect due to Schuler's differing accounts of known facts,
and what Perry called a "Jack of credibility" he has shown in
his statements to investigators .
Initially, Schiller told investigators that he had been shot
outside a local bar by an unknown assailant. He did not tell

Pl..se see Schuler, Al

MANY MORE
·TO CHOOSE
FROM!
'

_ I{_ _ _ _ _ _.. _ __

n

:t&lt;J, No . 2

Only one barge now blocking Belleville dam gates
. Page AS
:.• Nellie Virginia Tripp
.Bumgarner, 93
• Kenneth Dale Davis, 80
: • Donald A. Jeffers, 65
: • David E. Kleinhans, 90
~ Betty Jane Rathburn
Manley, 71
• Vivian 1.. Richards, 90

Associated Press

1.2:; • \'ol.

·New C8)1cer center edging closer to reality

.SPORTS

BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BY TOM WITHERS

DENVER (AP) - George Karl was hired as Western Conference after adding All-Star power
head coach of the .Denver Nuggets on Thursday, · forward Kenyon Martin to a team that was com, returning to the NBA after nearly two years to ing off its fust playoff appearance in nine years. take over a team that has failed to live up to lofty
The . Nugge~ still. hav~n'l lived up to that.
potential, entenng Fnday s game 17-25 and 12
expectations.
The deal ~as finalized Thursday morning and 112 _games Cl"l of fust place in the Northwest
annoiinced m Milwaukee,. where the Nuggets DIVISion.
·
·
play the Bucks on Friday night.
Hit hard by injuries and inconsistency, Denver
Karl is ex_pe&lt;:ted to be on the bench for that got off to. horrible start and neve~ ~ly recovgwne.. making his debut w1th the Nuggets ered, costmg coach Jeff Bzdelik his Job on Dec.
against the team that fired him in 2003. Interim 28. The Nuggets have shown some improvecoach Michael Cooper will stay on as an assis- ment under Cooper, particularly on defen~. but
tant
.
still only seem to play well in spurts, winning
"We are very excited to be adding a coach of just four of 14 games since BzdeHk was. fired.
George's stature to our organization," Denver
Karl brings plenty of credibility with him.
general manager Kiki Vandeweghe said in a
He has won 708 games m 16 NBA seasons statement. "He bas won everywhere he !Jas been 13th in league history- and helped Seattle .
and his track record speaks for 1tself. We also reach the playoffs m 1991-92 after a 2()..20 start.
want to commend Michael for the job he did . Karl also took the Sonics to the ~BA Fmals in
under difficult circumslll!lces."
·
1996 and led them to,at least 60 wms thtee limes
Denver started the season as a ;avorite in the in five years.
../ -

!-;
,.1

Bv BRIAN

so I don't think this one is as
bad."
James, , who'.s averaging
27 :s points, 9 .3" rebounds and
CLEVELAND- President
.9.2 assists in his last nine
Bush wa~ 't the-only notable
games, felt good enough after
leaving the floor to pui presfigure at the Cleveland Clinic
on Thursday. Lebron James
sure on the tender ankle
learried that starting forward
th h k
d d
neJe e ano der c ec ufp. h
Ira Newble will be out at least before getting to the locker
ames un erwent urt er one week with an Achilles room. Once' there, he watched
b .
d the game on TV as his a_nkle
medical tests on his sprained . .
left ankJe, which is not as IDJUry. The c1..11 1s a 1rea y
bad~ hurt as it looked when thin up front with ·forward was re-taped. Then, it was
.
1d
Anderson Varejao sidelined time to get back t,b work.
the av a! lers
star&lt; crump
e to for at least one month w1"th a
The Cavalt"ers w·ere leadt"ng
·
th
rth
the 11oor m e .ou quarter
103-97
and in a timeout
when
Wednesday night. .
high ankJe sprain.
.
th
James traveled with his
The CavaJiers are lqoking James jogged back to e
teanamates to New York and . to sign a veteran forward to a · Cav~· bench to a thun~erous
the Cavaliers said he could 10-day contract.
. ovation, plopped h1mself
play in Friday night's game
After hobbling off tbe floor down in a seat and told . a
against the Knicks. About the . assisted by teammat~s. James stunned S1las that he was
.
same time Bush was pitching limped back for the final 4:53 re~dy to go.
his health agenda during a to help the Cavaliers close out
I was JUSt trymg to figur~
forum at the hospital, James a 114- Ill win over the out who I was gomg to play,
had a thorough examination Grizzlies.
said Silas, who had a "bunch.
which did not reveal any
James usually draws com- of losses" flash before his
more damage to his ankJe.
parisons to Michael Jordan, eyes ~fore his star's sudd~n '
He'll be re-evaluated by Magic Johnson and Julius return. I was glad to see h1m
trainer Max Benton on Friday "Dr. J." Erving. On this night, come back."
and is currently listed as a the 20-year-old had a little
So,_ too, were the. 17,057
game-time decision on the Willis Reed in his game. Reed fans m ·Gund ~mi, who had
team's injury report. He came inspired the Knii:ks by limp- let out a collective gasp when
. .
down on the· foot of Memphis ing onto the court in the 1970 James went dow~.
forward Dahntay Jones and NBA finals against the Los , Although by h1s estimation
rolled his ankle with 9:33 Angeles Lakers.
.
he was only at "75 percent," ·
remaining on Wednesday
It looked as if James had James was detennined to get
taken his last shot for a while back to help his teanamates.
night.
"You kind of see your life when ·he twisted the ankle. He Simply, he wouldn't let them
pass before your . eyes," said immediately grabbed it and lose.
rolled around, slapping his · James, who just missed his
.Cavs coach Paul Silas.
The Cavaliers delayed their hand against the floor several third triple-double in a week
departure so James could join times only · a few feet from with 27 points, a career-high
them. Silas said he doesn't where he had his left cheek- 15 assists and nine rebounds,
think the second:year forward bone broken by an accidental had an impact almost as soon
will be ready Friday.
elbow
from
Houston's as he returned. He grabbed a
"From the looks of things, I Dikembe Mutombo last rebound, drove the length of
doubt very seriously if he'll month.
thetloorforalayup-offthe
play tomorrow," Silas said.
"It hurt, but I knew it wasn't wrong foot - and added a
"We were hoP.ing 'and praying as bad as last year," James steal and his 15th assist as the
that it wasn t anything -seri- · said referring to a right ankle Cavaliers held on.
ous."
··
·
sprain that sidelined him for
"Just my, presence on the
. While the Cavaliers got three games last January. "I court helped us get the win,"
good news on James, they couldn't even walk last year, he said.

-

Hometown News for GaJJia 8i. Meigs counties

NBA

James' ankle injury

Colonial-style home, Dl

I

•

'

J

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