<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="4992" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/4992?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-15T06:51:49+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="14920">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/30fb04920c43be025b92ea5ce28e4599.pdf</src>
      <authentication>34b6d48277a332bcd7e280839a68d220</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="17079">
                  <text>.Southem .California
·tries to clear roads1

check shaky homes m
wake of heavy rain, A2
~....

'

SPORTS

Meigs offers expanded career and technical training

• Cavs rop·e Bulls. See
Page B1

mation out to students who the programs in the absence
. HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
are finishing junior hig h of
principal
Dennis
school so they can begin Eichinger, tles,ribed them as
POMEROY - Information exploring opportunities. The a ''strong component of what
on new and revamped career program is open to &gt;ttrdents we have to offer here."
and technical opport unities of Eastern. Meigs and
New this year to the career
offe'~ed in the Meigs Career Southern Local schools.
and teclimcul program is
and Technical Ce nter at
Moegling encouraged stu - medical \lffice managem.cnt.
Meigs High School was pre- dents and parents to attend which prepares students for
sented
by
Mary · tou the Ski lls USA competition. employment in a variety of
Moeglirig at Tuesday· night's ' whicil wi ll take place today at · medical office and health
meeting of the Meigs Local Meigs High from 4 to 7 p.m. care management sett ings..
Board of Education.
to offer a first-hand look at
Moegling alw spoke about
Moeglin g stressed .the the progralns.
the 11ealth technology program
importance of getting inforMoegling, who talked on ' (formerly called nursing) and
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Prayers are.answered

its expansion to a two-year
program including training in
general laboratory procedures
and completion oHhe 75-hour
Ohio Department of Health
Nurse Aid Competency
Training Program required to
set for the state license.
'Brochures on each of the
program s incl ud ing welding , health technology,
medical office management.
informatio n
techn ology.
cosmetol ogy. automotive
tec hnology,
interactive

BSERGENT@MYDAI LYSENTIN EL.COM

CHESTER
When
. Michigan native SFC James
Schagel left ·for Iraq on Feb.
15, 2004, his son Cooper was ·
four months old.
One year later, when
Schagel returned stateside
with his Army National Guard
unit, his son had grown into a
16-month-old but the two
knew each other thanks to emails. phone· calls and videos
that bridged the distance .
Schagel 's wife, Carrie
(Morrissey). is originally from
the Chester area, and said the
last year has been a roller
coaster of emotion ·where she
said a lot of prayers.
Schagel's National Guard
Unit is a group of combat
heavy engi neers that have a
home base in Chillicothe .
Ho wever.. Alpha Company
· has spent the last year in Iraq
near Tikrit. where they .did

Page AS
• Wayne 0. Roush, 83

INSIDE
.Page 20 •

GaUipoli&amp;. Polal Pit et, Pemeroy, 9

.

.

Tired of painful, numb feet? ,
.

.

'

• Carmichael Equipment
to host John Deere Day.
SeePageA3
• Veterans enjoy WWII
memorial presentation.
See Page A3
• Local legislator proposes
military service purchase
option. See Page A5
• Upcoming art exhibit to
showcase local artists.
See Page AS

WEATHER
~he

Betll Sargent/photo

r

Anodyne Therapy System is a~ f:OA approved
.

ODNR announces
FEMA reps come to Meigs to discuss flood damage
spring trout release
for Forked Run Lake POM EROY - Public facility

infrared medical device that increases circulatio~ and decreases pain

-

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

in diabetic patients who suffer from peripheral neuropathy
.

.

.

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

(a major cause of loss ofbalance,foot wounds and amputations) . .
Detalla on Page A&amp;

An estimated 50 percent.of patients with diabetes have some form

STAFF REPORT

of peripheral neuropathy.
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

Anodyne therapy may be used safely with metal implants,
.·

'

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B2-4
'

Comics

·pins, screws, pacemakers and defibrillators. There is no electrical
.
'

electrical and Carpentry work
as well as constructed concrete barriers to protect buildings and fellow soldiers .
Schagel said he missed his
family most while overseas,
and
simp ly being on
American soil. ln .March he is
traveling back to Mici')igan
wi th Mrs . Schagel and
Cooper to visit with hi s three
sisters and brother. Afterward
the Schagels plan to relocate
in Chillicothe.
Jean Harri s and Sara
Carleton are employees of
Dan 's clothing store in
Pomeroy and friends of Mrs.
Schagel. Harris and Carleton
'ustom-made a special shirt
for Cooper to wear when he
greeted his father this month
.with the embroidered message
"my daddy is home from
Iraq." Schagel's name and
rank also was embroidered
onto the back of Cooper's shirt
to make sure the world knew
they belonged to one another. ·

When SPC James Schagel .reiurned stateside from Iraq this
month he was greeted by his wife Carrie (Morrissey) and son
Cooper. Cooper was wearing a custom-made ·shirt that simply
stated "my daddy is home from Iraq ... The shirt was made by
Mrs. Schagel's friends, Jean Harris and Sara Carleton, who
work at Dan's in Ppmeroy,

Step into our Neuropathy Care Center
.

Please see Melp, A5

Dad is home
Bv BETH SERGENT

OBITUARIES

media and marketing education were distributed . ·
Material on career pathway .
lines for the four years of
high ·school showing ihe
integration of academic core
cia"
requirements
and
career and technology courses was di scussed . ·
Moegling also reported to
the board on the success of
the new accelerated reader
program . in the high school

Dear Abby

'

Bs
A3

current or deep heat associated with this device. This revolutionary ·

Editorials

'

Obituaries

A4
As

Places to go

B6

.

program usually involves 10 to 24 therapy sessions.

Sports
Weathe~

Anodyne therapy is painless, and is covered by most
c

•
.

.

REHABILITATION SE.R VICES

304-675-8639

A6

© zoos Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

insurance companies and Medicare. A physician referral is required.

PLEASANT VALLEY HO.S PITAL

B Section

REEDSVILLE - With snow on lhe grou nd and
bare limbs on the trees, its hard to imagine that
spri ng is on the way as is the spring trout release
from the Ohio Department' of Natural Resources into
Forked Run Lake on March 25.
Mo~e than 80,000 ra inbow trout wi ll be re leased by
the ODNR Division of Wildlife in 45 Ohio lakes and
ponds frbm March through May, to enhance pub! ic
tlshing opportunities. The daily catch limit for inland
lakes is five trout per angler.·
"Fi'shing is a family activity that brings many
Ohioans hours of enjoyment" said John Navarro. tl sh
hatchery administrator for the ODNR Division of
Wildlife. "These releases enhan'ce the opportunity
for all anglers to make a great catch."
Special youth-only angler events will be featured
at some of the scheduled release locations on the
Please see ODNR. A5

and infrastruc ture d·amage in
Meigs County caused by the
January tlooding has been estimated to be more than
$350.000.
Tuesday officials of local subdivisions met with representatives of the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (fEMA) at
the County Annex to talk about
their loses an11 discuss the procedure for filing for assistance.
· The scope of assistance · and
the different programs for which
the county, vi llages. and \OWnships might qualify were outlined at the meeting .
·
Laura Adcock of th.e Ohio
EMA explained the procedures of
filing claims with FEMA for damages. and talked about. when the
repairs can be started, and what

.

C h - Haelllcll/ pllolo

Laura Adcock of the Ohio Emergency Management Agency explains
to local representatives the ·procedures in applying for funding to
repair damage caused by recent flooding .

.

can be expected in the way of
funding for qualifying projects.
'The federal share is 75 percent of eligible costs ,'' said
Adcock, "and the state may or

may not con.tribute to the nonfederal share."
She said that in the past the
Please see FEMA. A5

�PageA2

I

NATION • WORLD

The,Daily Sentinel

Thursday, February 24,

2005

Southern California tries to clear roads., check shaky homes in wake of heavy rain
were working 24-hour shifts
• wit h little time to eat or even
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
---~-----'---use the restroom. . On
LOS ANGELES- The sun Monday, the heaviest day of
began poking through the rain , the dt;partment received
· clouds . Wednesday
.as nearly 2,000 calls - twice ·
normal
amount,
California emergency crews the
Humphrey
said.
shifted Into cleanup mode
Rain fell· early in .the day
atler a six-day drenching that
killed at least nine people, Wednesday across part of
destroyed dozens of houses Southern California but was
and tlooded roads and airports. expected to taper off as the
The
Transportation storm's center headed east
Department hurried to clear along the California-Mexico
at least 20 major roads closed . border.
The storms began last
by mudslides and tlooding,
and in Malibu. crews pre- Thursday, bringing 9.14 inchpared to destroy .a boulder the es by Wednesday mornin g to
. size of a house that dangled a city where the average for
precarious ly
above
the an entire . year is about 15
Pacific Coast Highway. held inches. Damage in Los
back by only a retaining wall. Angeles County alone since
Crews also worked to fill Jan . I was estimated at $52.5
million, including up to $ 10
thousands of potholes million in damage caused by
some the size of cars.
Engineers fanned ou t the latest storm .
In Ventura County, the
across Los Angeles to assess
small
Santa Paula airport
whether houses on ·slipping
so il were still habitable. More reh1ai ned closed after more
than I00 homes were tem- than 155 fee t of runway
porarily uninhabitable or safe crumbled into the rushing
Santa Clara Riv~r. Mudslides
only for limited entry.
Los Angeles city fire forced Amtrak to suspend
spokesman Brian Humphrey train service between Los
sa id some ambulance crew.s Angeles and Santa Barbara
had been diverted to work as through at least Thursday.
Among those killed were a
reconnaissance team s to
spot signs of tlooding and man who was driving when a
eucalyptus tree fell on his
mudslides.
Firefighters, meanwhile, pickup truck in San Diego

BY THE BEND·

The Daily Sentinel'

FAMILY MEDICINE

Pre-hypertension needs
treatment to avert complications
.

Bv GILLIAN FLACCUS

BY MARTHA A. SIMPSON, D.O., M.B.A.
ASSOCIATE. PROFESSOR OF FAMILY. MEDICINE
OH IO UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE

Questi.on: I went to .the doctor last week
. and he said my blood pressure was too high.
: It was 130/85. Last year that was a fine blood
pressure: now it is too high. Can you give me
more infort1lation about what my blood pressure should be?
·

.,

. AP photo/Lol Angeles Tlmao, Wally Skallj

Art Weeks. of Los Angeles, carefully walks down a path with a cup of coffee to the ski rental shop at Mount Baldy Ski Resort
in Mount Baldy, Calif.. Wednesday after the resort received at least 10·feet of snow from recent storms.
County and a 16-year:old
girl who was doing homework in an apartment bedroom when boulders hit her
home near Irvine.
Rainfall since July I, when

California begins its yearly
rainfall measurements, tJOW
totals 34.36 inches - . more
than Seattle or Portland and
the most in Los Angeles since
1889-90. The record for a

single year - 38.18 inches
-was set in 1883-84.
South of the border in
Tijuana, Mexico, authorities
rep011ed at least seven homes
had collapsed in landslides

and more than !50 people
were evacuated.
Associated Press Writer
Rya11 Pearson contributed to
this report.

Pope·makes longest public appearance as he addresses pilgrims by video hookup
Top Vatican officials took ,
. said. expressing the hope that charged from the hospital,
part
in the launch of the
the Lenten season leading up . the Vatican made clear he
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
t.O Easter in late March will would decide on his schedule pope's new book,, which went
VATICAN CITY - Pope "lead us to a profound and . in consultation· with his doc- on sale in Italy on Wednesday.
tors. He has Parkinson's dis- Passages regarding the I981
John Paul Il, appearing some- sincere conversion."
·ease
and crippling knee and attempt on his life apparently
The audien(:e lasted · 30
what gaunt and wheezing as
fanned public interest.
he spoke, made his longest minutes - the longest time hip ailments.
~.'Memory and Identity;"
He has a number of
public appearance Wednesday the pope has appeared in pubJohn
Paul's fifth book, was
since his hospitalization, but it li c since returning to the appointments on his agenda,
was broadcast by video · Vatican on Feb. I 0. Fully but the Vatican was holding
. hookup after the Vatican can- alert, he waved and gave his off immediate confirmation
of the pope 's par:ticipation,
celed his planned appearance blessing at the end.
at hi s apartment window after . Several thou;arid pilgrims deciding a day at a time.
Among planned . events
rain and winds lashed Rome. were brought into a Vatican
The chang~ was in line auditorium, where the pope's were audiences with Israeli
with the .caution the Vatican weekly public audience is · and Palestinian tourism minhas been showing since the held. The crowd, viewing a isters Friday and the president
84-year-old pontiff was giant screen, applauded when of Azerbaijan on San;rday.
On Thursday, he was schedrushed to the hospital Feb. 1 he spoke.
uled
to participate in a Vatkan
The Vatican had originally
with breathing difficulties
following a bout with the flu. planned for the frail pope ·to meeting to approve cartdidates
Flanked by two aides as he address pilgrims in St. Peter's · for sainthood - cine of the
sat in · his studio, he read a Square from his apartment hallmarks of his papacy. John
window but decided instead Paul has proclaimed more
statement in six languages.
"I greet with affection all of ·on a video hookup due to the saints in his 26 years as pope
than all his predecessors in the
you gathered for the usual poor weather.
When John Paul was ·di s- past 500 years combined.
Wednesday meeting,"' he
Bv VICTOR L. SIMPSON

featured .in windows of book- Square. "That' s pretty good,
stores near 'the Vatican after a . a real sign of interest."
The Ri zzoli publishing
major promotion .in newspapers and television broadcasts. · house hopes that the work
"We sold about 20 copies that includes John Paul's first
in less than hour this morn- public description of the
ing," said Salesman Igor moments after he was shot
Bodnar in the Ancora book- can become an international
store at the edge of St. Peter •s best seller.

Answer: You are right to be a bit confused
: about your blood pressure reading. In the past
: your reading was considered "a little high"
· but not something that would be .treated just watched . But new guidelines have come
out concernin g the management of blood
pressure and the level at which a reading is
considered to be high blood pressure.
Let me give you an overview of the current
: recommendations , bearing. in mind th at these
may change again a s scientists learn more
abou t how various levels of blood pressure
atfect our health.
The new guidelines for blood. pressure consider a blood pressure to be normal if it is
helow 120/80 mmHg. Both the systolic (top
. number) and the diastolic (bottom number&gt;
need to be lower than 120 and 80, respectively. There is even a push to consider a normal
blood pressure to be 115/75 mmHg . The reasonin g behind these new lower levels is that
your risk of cardiovascular damage may
increase at level s as low as even 120/80.
There is a new classification called "prehypertension" for people whose blood pressures are between I 20 and 13\1 systolic and SO
and 89 diastolic. In your case, bot~ of the
·numbers YQU report are in this pre-hypertension range. However, according to the guidelines. you arc considered pre-hypertensive

.

GALLIPOLIS
· Carmichael · Equipment of
. Gallipolis, Ohio, will hold its
: annual John Deere Day cele: bration ' Saturday, Feb. 26,
- 2005,.. at the Gallipolis location off of Jackson Pike .
John Carmichael, owner.
. said this year 's event will
: highlight incredible product
:advance ments ·and change.
: Carmichael Equipment is eel·
ebratin g
their ! I 0-year
· anniversary in 2005.
"We have an entirely ·new
line-up of productive equip: ment for . large farms,
. - acreages and residential use."
Carmichael sai&lt;;l. "We want to

show folks how we can provide the right solution s for
their · operation and home~.
Hosting a John Deere Day
gives us this opportunity and
lets us bring people to share
ideas as well as show our
appreciation."
Each year. John Deere Day
at Carmichael EquiP,ment
gives area producers and
their families the chance to
see old friends, .meet new
neighbors, learn more about
the latest agricultural tet;hniques and ideas and lopk at
the new equipment . being
offered by John Deere.
"Thi s year. we' II be show-

ing the new model lines of
tractors and other equipment and having a parts and
service expo." Carmichael
said . "We' re also · going to
show case our Ready-toMow · truck that can service
custo mers ' equ ipment at
their homes.';
John Deere is the world's
pre miere 'producer
of
agric ultural equipment: a·
leading manufacturer of
cons truction , forestry, commercia-l a nd consumer
eq uipment ; and a husiness
leader in parts. engine s;
financial services and spe'
cia l technologies.

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

REEDSVIlLE
dinner 'Viii be served from
Riverview Garden Club will ·4:30 to 6:30 p.m. at · tlie
meet at 7:30p.m. at the ·home Middleport Church of Christ.
Friday, Feb. 25
of
Nancv Wachter. Members Fifth ·and Main.
POMEROY - A special
meeting will be held by the are to take fruit for baskets to
·
Meigs Coun'ty Board of be delivered to shut-ins.
TUPPERS PLAINS Elections at 2 p.m. at the
Post 9053 will meet
VFW
Wednesday, Feb. 23
board office to certify the
at
i
p.m.
at
the
hall
in
POMEROY
Liba
validity
of .candidates'
Tuppers Plains.
Watson, formerly of Meigs .
petitions.
Friday, Feb. 25
·
Saturday,Feb.26
County, will observe her 80th
CHESTER
- Chester birthday on Feb. 23. Cards
. PORTLAND - Lebonan
Township Tru stees will meet baseball signup 6 to 8 p.m. at may be sent to her at Apt. 3.
Chester .firehouse. 2354 Hi!ather Glen Court.
at 7:30 p.m at the township the
Business.meeting.at
7 p.m.
Beavercreek, Ohio 45431 .
building.
Tuesday, March l
Thursday, Feb. 24
Monday, Feb. 28
MIDDEPORT
RUTLAND - The regula~
SYRACUSE
Betty'
Middleport
.
Lodge
363
board meeting for Leading
Curfman will be 80 years old
Creek Conservancy District F&amp;AM . bu si ness meeting. · on Feb. 24. Cards may be
7:30 p.m at the Masonic sent to her at Box 245.
has been changed to 5 p.m.
POMEROY - Veterans Temple .
syracuse Ohio 45779.
Service Commission will
Saturday, Feb. ·26
meet at 9 a.m. at the office, ·
POMEROY -Mami e M.
II 7 Memorial drive .
RACINE
Andy and
Stephen will observe her
Thursday, Feb. 24
Wednesday, March 2
Kendra (Norris) Heck of
82nd birthday on Feb . 26 ..
SYRACUSE - Re v. Brian . Cards may be sen t to her at
PAGEVILLE . Scipio
Gahanna announce the birth
Township Trustees will meet Dunham of Pomeroy and 39520
of their first child. a daughter,
Union
Ave ..
at 6:30 p.m. at · Pageville Heath United Methodist Pomeroy. 45769.
Abigail Marie.
Churches to speak at commutown hall.
The infant was born on
Thursday, March 3
nity · Lenten services at
Dec. 8 and weighed 8
SHADE - Katie Biron
Asbury Gnited Me thodi st will be 90 on March 3. She is
pounds, 4 ounceS. Maternal
POrviEROY - A partx was
Church,
Syracuse.
grandparents are Gary and held recently to honor !'{ , C.
now residing wit h her
Oonna Norris of Racine. Faulk on · his completion of
daughter and son-in-law,
Paternal· grandparents are the the paramedic program at the
Don . and Jane Frymyer. and
VVednesday,Feb.23
Rev. and Mrs. Terrance Heck University of Ri o Grande.
cards m·ay be sent to her
POMEROY - The OHof Westerville. Marie Norris
It was held at the Mason Fire
Friday, Feb. 25
there. 42199 Gilkey Ridge.
of Middleport is a maternal Station and hosted by Linda · KAN Coin Club will meet at
MIDDLEPORT - A free Shade. Ohio 45776.
great -grandmother.
and Kini Blake and Linda 7 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Faulk. Relatives and friends Library. There will be an
presented him with gifts and auction.
Thursday, Feb. 24
refresh ments were served:
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Faulk works for the Meigs
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy is authorized
Masters
noon luncheon at St.
County Emergency Medical
to accept utility payments for:
Services Jt the Racine Station Paul Lutheran Church.
POMEROY - Caring an
and ai the Mason County
Sharing
Support group. l
EMS. He is the. son of Linf]a
American Electric Power- 74• fee
Washington. These motorcy· and Chuck Faulk, . and the p.m. at th e · Meigs Senior
cles travel from all over the grandso n of Richard and Ann Center. Linda Kin g. speakVerizon fee
United States and Canada Rupe and Betty ;uid Charles e r on food pyramid and
Columbia Gas - 65• fee
each Memorial Day weekend Faulk of Pomeroy.
guidelines.
to Washington ·to draw attention to and in remembrance of
Payments by check must
those who can •t.
Dc:m't miss a BINGO
made out to that utility.
They ride .for those missing
in action and prisoners of war.
UTILITY PAYMENT HOURS:
Other Gallia County bikers
making the trip were: Bill and
Monday- Friday SAM.:. 6PM
Joy Beaver. and son Aaron.
Saturday 8AM- 3PM
and- Gary
and
Rosie
McClaskey. Along with the
Vietnam veterans. severa l
World. War II veterans were in
attendance at· the. meeting for
the presentation of the memorial dedication.
Get hom e delivery today
Anyone wishing to know
'
more about the local Vietnam ·
Veterans Association may'
contact Preside nt Larrv Marr
at 446-9627 .
-

Birthdays

.

***\'ou must call prior to the end of initial25 day period to extend.

.

_

AP photo

Pope John Paul 11 . seen on a giant screen. blesses the faitfhul gathered in St. Peter's Square
at the Vatican. Wednesday. The Pontiff greeted pilgrims by video hOokup Wednesday after the
Vatican canceled his appearance at his apartment window after rain and winds lashed Rome.

.Keeping

Meigs
County
hlfotmed
The Daily Sentinel

***Limited to one, 25 day ex~nsion. (Maximum of SO days)
***Classified ad limited to IS words or Jess.
***25~ for each additional word over IS words.
***Typographical corrections must be made within first 3 days of publication.
***Only one Item per cla!&gt;'lified ad.
***Pre-payment Is Required and non-rcfundable.
'**Available only to private, non-commercial individuals.

\

Call us today at 304-675-1333 or 740-992-2155 or 740-446-2342
Limited time offer expires 3-l-05

'~e ~.all~olis Jail' ~ribune

740·446·2342 .
The Daily Sentinel
740·992·2155 ,

[iii

~~e Joint J~a•ant ltgister

304-675·1333

,,,.,

304·675·1333

•
------------------- -·-~---'------------

Church events

Clubs and
organizations

Abigail Marie Heck

Other events

NOTICE

Veterans enjoy WWII
:memorial prese~tation
GALLIPOLIS
The
Gal lia County . Vietnam
Veterans Association, Chapter
709 held its monthly meeting
.at the VFW Hall in Gallipolis
. on Jan . 29.
The members and guests
· enjoyed a meal of so up. sandwiches , and dessert. A business meeting was held following the meal. Donna
DeWitt gave a slide show pre: sentation on the World. War II
: Memorial dedication· held on
May 29. ·2004, in Washington.
DeWitt
traveled
to
Washington for the dedication
ceremony wi th her husband,
· Flem Meade, a Vietnam vet: eran. They joined the motor: cycle
group
··Rolling
Thunder" and "Run for the
Wall " at Kanawha Falls.
enroute
to
W.Va...

you no longer ha ve "warm .
fuzzy feelings" for him . I
ag ree that you must. It's not
unreasonable ur unforgiving .
it is rational.
DEAR ABBY: This is my
Dear
seve
nth year of marriage to a
Abby
wonderful, loving anu caring
man. We were hoth widowed
when we met. He has four
sons and one daughter. The
"Victor" eight months ago. I daughter does nut approve of.
have insisted on paying for · .me, which is fine since she
my room and board even lives out of town.
thou gh I wa' between jobs
My problem is none of his
·and mon.ey is tight.
chil dren know how to intro· Recently. over my objec- duce me,. Th~ y alway.&gt;
tions. Victor emptied. a room proudly introduce their
of my personal eflects to father, and then they 1ay. ·· ...
make room for his guests. He and thi s i&gt; 'Doris. '" It makes
has put me in a smaller room, me feel ,like I am a live-in
. which he al so wants to make instead of his wife.
avai labl e to his guest's
Could you please tel l me
guests. Mind you, by "per- what the correct introduction
sonal effects· I mean my sh_ould be so he can pass it on
underwear. jewelry. bi ll s and to his children? They are all
personal papers, etc. There is grown and married. so they
only one full bathroom in his don ' t want to say. "Thivi s my
hou se, so this room is also stepmother.'' and that's OK,
where I dress and take care of too. I guess. My children say.
''This is my mother and he r
. private matters.
The "guests" are usu&lt;tii Y husband, )ohn; · or my stepVi ctors grown sons and their .dad. 'John,.. Please help. ~
girlfriends. I no longer have STEPMOM
IN
warm. fuzzy feelings for this CHARLESTON. S.C.
man. Am I being unreasonDEAR STEPMOM: The
able or unforgiving'' Victor correct in troduct ion should
says I don't need to go. but I be, "Th is is my father and hi s
think it's time I move on. wife. Doris ...
Wh at do yo u thin k'' Dear Abby is written by
UNFA IR IN FLORIDA
Abigail Vall Burell, also
. DE.AR UNfAIR: By mov- k11own as Jeanne Phillips, and
ing your belongings over was founded by her mother,
your objection, Victor · has Pauline Phillips. llTite Dear
se nt you an important mes- Abby at www.DearAbby.com
sage. He may think yo u or P.O. Box 69440, Los
don 't need to go, but since Angeles, CA 90069.

Public meetings

honors
student

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

2005

Community Calendar

Birth announced Party
We'll nm your~la!&gt;'!ified line ad to sell your Boat, Camper, Motorcycle, 4-Wheeler,
Van, Pick-Up Truck, or Automobile for the low price of only $25.00.

Thursday, February 24,

Son's mischievous friend may
benefit from mom's guidance ·

DEAR ABBY: My son,
"Adam." is 9. He's very
bright ttnd earns straight A's
eve n if you have on ly a s.ingle number in one in school. Adam gets in trouof these ranges. Therefore, you are at ble now and then for goofing
increased risk for a cardi &lt;tc even t, and you of( but nothing serious.
should be treated .
Adam has become friends
Pre-hypertension is treated in many differ- wi th a boy in his class named
ent ways. Li festyle modifications, such as a "Sean," who has been in troulow-salt, low-fat diet anJ physical exercise,' ble quite often and has even
such as bri sk' walking 30 minutes .daily, are been suspended from sc hool.
great places to start. II' you are overweight. I happen to know that Sean 's
losing weight is a must. If you are over SO. parents have drugs in their
your physician may want to start you on
home and have been in troublood pres sure medicatitins while you arc get- ble with the' law. ·
ting up to speed on the lifestyle changes.
,Although allowing my srin
Peo ple who are pre-hypertensive arc much
·
to
go to Sean 's hou se is out of
more likely to develop hypertension - persistent blood pressure over 140/90. Keeping . the question, I have considthe blood pressure lower and havi ng an active ered permitting Sean to come
li festy le may ·prevent or delay, the develop- here aild play where I can
keep a close eye on him. I
ment of hypertension. ·
·
You shmild have you r blood pressure ca n' t help but see that Sean is
cl1e1=ked at least every six months and work an innocent child who needs
with your · phys ician to maximize your a positive influence . Would I
lifestyle changes. In the past, physicians · be wrong to allow Adam to
used to ·'watch" your blood pressure ·until invite him over? Or should I
it gotinto the truly hy'pertensi'le range, The discourage ' thi s fri endship
recommendation ·now is to ·tteat blood pres-. altogether" I'm unsure how
sure probl'ems early to preve nt compl ica- to handle th is. - PROTECtions later.
TIVE MOM IN ILLINOIS
Family Medicine® i;· a weekly colum11. To
[)EAR MOM : You are in a
submit questions, write lfl Martha A. position to make an imporSimpson, lJ.O., M .B.A., Ohio. University tant difference in that child's
College of OsteopatlliL" Medicine, P.O. Box life. You could be the intluJJO, Athetls, Ohio 4.'i701, or via e-mail to encc that turn s . hi s life
readerque Hiom @f ami lymedici11 e!I ew s. org. around. The more time Sean
Medical informatioll .ill this mlumn is prospends in yo ur home , the
vided as a11 educatio11al service o11ly. It does
more ,he will be able to experwt r:eplace the judglnmt of your . perso11al
physician, who should be relied 011 to diag- rience what a healthy family
/lose a11d recomm e11d treatment for any is like. As long as your son\
medical co11ditions. Past columm are avail- friend follow s the rules at
able tin/ir(e at www.familymedicillellews.org. your hou se, I see no reason
why he should not be invited
over. So be an angel and
throw the boy a lifeline .
DEAR ABBY: I moved in
with my _gentleman friend

CARMICHAEL EQUIPMENT
·TO HOST jOHN DEERE DAY

PageA:3

7 4•

be

.number and your

••• CHANCE TO WIN

The Daily Sentinel
992-2155

�The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of tl1e press; or the right of the
people peaceably to ,assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution·

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday. Feb. 24. the 55th day of 2005 . There are
310 days left i_n the year:
·
.
Today's Highlight in History: On Feb. 24, 1868, the House
of Representatives impeached President Andrew Johnson· following his attempted dismissal of Secretary of War Edwin M.
Stanton; Johnson was later acquitted by the Senate.
On this date In 1821, Mexico declared its independence ·
from Spain.
In 1863, Arizona was organized as a territory.
In 1903, the United States signed an agreement acquiring a
naval station at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba.
In 1920, a fled gling German political party held its first
. meeting of importance in Munich; it became known as the
Nazi Party. and its chief spokesman was Adolf Hitler:
· In 1942, the Voice of America went on the air for the first time.
In 1945, American soldiers liberated the Philippine capital
of Manila from Japanese control during World War II.
In · 1955. 50 years ago, the Cole Porter musical "Silk
. Stockings" opened at. the Imperial Theater on Broadway. · .
In 1980, the U.S. hockey team defeated Finland, four goals
to two, to clinch the gold medal at the Wimer Olympic Games
in Lake Placid, N.Y.
In 1983, a congressional commission released a report condemning the internment of Japanese-Americans during World
· War II as a "grave injustice."
,
In 1989, a state funeral was held in Japan for Emperor
Hirohito, who had died the month before at age 87.
Ten years ago: Under pressure from farm-state Republicans,
House leaders abandoned a campaign promise to disband the
food stamp program,
.
Five years ago: The state of Texas executed Betty Lou
Beets, 62, by injection for murdering her fifth husband after
Gov. George W. Bush refused to intervene. The U.N. Security
Council approved a U.S.-drafted plan to send an observer
force into Congo to monitor a fragile cease-fire. Pope John
Paul II arrived in Egypt on a pilgrimage to retrace some of the
· most epic passages from the Bible.
One year ago: Democrat John Kerry defeated John Edwards
by large margins in Utah and Florida, and also won in Hawaii,
· where Edwards ran third behind Dennis Kucinich. President
Bush urged approval of a constitutional amendment banning
gay marriages. A 6.5-magnitude earthquake 'devastated an iso. lated region of northern Morocco, killing more than 600 people. Character actor John Randolph died in Hollywood at age
88.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Abe Vigoda is 84. Actor Steven
Hill .is 83. Actor-singer Dominic Chianese ("The Sopranos")
is 74. Movie composer Michel Legrand is 73. Actor James
: f'arentino is 67. Actor Barry Bostwick is 60. Actor Edward
James Olmos is 58. Singer-writer-producer R).lpert Holmes is
58. Actress Debra Jo Rupp is 54. Actress Helen Shaver is 54.
News anchor Paula Zahn is 49. Country singer Sammy
Kershaw is 47. Singer Michelle Shocked is 43. Movie director Todd Field is 41. Actor Billy Zane is 39. Actress Bonnie
Somerville is 31. R&amp;B singer Brandon Brown (Mista) is 22.
Thought for Today : "It's a complex fate, being an
: American."- Henry James, American author (1843-1916).

LETTERS TO THE '
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All letters ai:e subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned leiters will
be published. Leiters should he in good taste,
addressing ,is sites, not personalities.

The Daily Sentinel
. Reader Services
Correction Polley

(usPs 213·960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our main concern in all stories is to be Published every afternoon, Monday
accurate. If you know of an error in a lhrough Friday. 111 Court Street;
s~ory, call the newsroom at (740) 992· Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class P&lt;ktage
21 56. ·
paid al Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and the

Our main number Is
(740) 992-2156.

Oh10 Newspaper Association.
. Postmaater: Send address correctioOs

Department extensions are:

to The Daily Sentinel , 1 1 1 Court Streat ,
Pomeroy, OhiO 45769.

News

Subscription Rates

Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed. Ed. 14
Reporter: Beth SerJJent, Ext. 13

Advertising
Outside 5alea: Dave Hams, Ext. 15'
Outside Sales: Brenda Davis , Ext 16
ClanJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ex1. 10

Circulation
Dl.trtct Mgr.: Jason PaHerson, EX1. 17

General Manager
Cha~ene

Hoe11ich, Ed. 12

By carrier or motor route
one IJ'IOnth . • .........'10.27
One year ...... · ......~123.24 ·
Dally .............. , ...50'

Senfor Citizen rates
One month .•. . ........'8. 70

One year ...... . . : .. . .'96.70
Subscribers should reinit in advanoo dir9ct
to the Daly Senti~ . No subscription by
man permitted in areas where home
carrier service is awilabfe.

Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks . . . . . .... ... .'32.26
26 Weeks . . . .
. . '64.20
52 Weeks .. . ... . : . ... '127.11

E-inan:
news 0 mydailysentinel .com

Web:
www.mydailysentinel.c.om ·

Outside Melgo County
13 Weeks ..•.. . ... .. ..'53.55
26 Weeks . . . . .
. .'107.10
52 Weeks
....... '2 14.21

PageA4

OPINION

Thursday, FebruarY, 24,

keeping, but the money was receive variable recomexcluded from Bush's bud- pense, even for injuries that
get.
appear to be quite sim ilar,"
That money now has been the JCAHO report found.
Experience from the states
added to the 2005 supplemental budget for lraq and indicates that the kind of
Afghanistan, and Bush's caps Bush proposes on jury
2006 budget calls for $125 awards do result in fewer
million in health information lawsuits being filed and
technology demonstration reduced medical insurance '
projects -- but this ·is still premiums .
well short of a "moonshot. "
Bur the study found that ·
In addition, the adminis- ''an unintended consequence
!ration has called for no of the tort system is that it
increase for the Agency for inspires &gt;Uppression of · the
·Heitlthcare Research ·and very information necessary
Quality, which gathers and to build ,afer systems of
di sseminates best-praCtices health care delivery."
information for'doctors and
"When it tomes. to
patients.
acknowledging and reportDentzer's segment on PBS ing medical error, there is
addressed extensive efforts too often silence between
at Veterans' Affairs (VA) practitioners and patients,
hospi tals to avoid errors, practitioners and their peers,
including "wrong site " surg- practitioners and the organieries ., The VA official in zations in which. they praccharge of quality told her tice and health care organithat 44 pe'rcent of incorrect zations and oversight agensurgeries involved opera- cies."
lions on the w.rong side of
The group suggested pasthe body. And 36 percent sage of leg islation to guard
were on the wrong patient.
providers who report and
This is not only a problem apologize for medical errors
for the VA. One California from having their statements
ex pert
told
Dentzer, used aga insttheni. plus mea"Everybody -- every doctor.. sures to encourage mediaevery nurse; every hospital - tion and early settlemenl
- knows we have a terrible offers to keep ·cases out of
problem and they are really court.
Democrats. even though
desperate. Just think. if a
jumbo jet were crashin g· they are &lt;iosely tied politievery day what we would be cally to the trial lawyer
doing about the problem. ...
lobby. have suggested some
If medical errors kill compromises on the medical
98,000 Americans a year. malpractice front thai medthat's about 270 people a day ical groups and Republicans
roughly the number should ~onsider.
aboard a Boein~ 747. ·
Both sides should consider ·
Medical errors .are ·the rea- a higher cap than $250,000
son that patients or their on non-economic damages if
families slie doctors and hos- that will produce an agreepitals, but the ~CAHO report ment. Last year. it was ·not
noted that several studies enough.
But even beyond seeking
haye shown that litigation is
an ineffective means of deal- bipartisanship on controlling
· ing with tpe ·problem.
lawsuits, it's long past time
One Harvard study found for ·a major effort ·to stop
that only 2 percent of negli - medical errors. There are
gen.t injuries resulted in sue- better, easier and cheaper
claims· against · ways than litigation to precessful
providers and only 17 per-. vent removal of the wrong
cent of claims appeared to limb or breast. Congress
involve negligent injury.
·ought to fo ster them . .
(Morton Kondracke is
"Few injured patients
receive
compensation executive editor of Roll Call,
through the medical liability the newspaper of Capitol
system, and those who do Hill.)
·

Ulho won the Iraqi election? Not us

.

By my count, recent TV
euphoria over the Iraqi elec. tions constituted the fifth
American victory celebration in fewer than two years.
First came the ·toppling of
Saddam Hussein's statue in
April 2003, followed by
President Bush's swaggering
"Mission Accomplished"
aircraft carrier photo op.
Saddam was dragged from
his underground hidey hole
and placed under arrest in
December
2003. . The
Coalition Authority's hastily
improvised transfer of sovereignty to Prime Minister
Ayad Allawi took place on
June 30, 2004. Then came
last month's election, with its
emotionally charged images
of ordinary Iraqi citizens
courageously lining up to
vote.
On each occasion, we
peasants have been urged to
kneel in tribute to the brilliant foresight and steely
resolve of George W. Bush.
Never mind those imaginary
weapons 'of mass destruc- .
tion. Ignore the thousands of
Ameriq.n and Iraqi dead.
We're not even supposed to
remember that the election
wasn't Bush's idea, but was
basically forced upon him by
Grand AyatoUah Ali Sistani.
An Iranian-born Shiite cleric
· who won't even talk directly
to foreign occupiers, Sistani
demanded it to · pacify his
followers ,
·
It's also basically .thanks to
Sistani that Bush himself has
quit soundi ng like Pat
Robertson and more like "a
dorm-room Marxist," as
' Michael. Kinsley put it after
the State of the Union
speech. Conservative pundits who had ridiculed persons· naive enough to blame
terrorism on anything other .

_,

.

charged with appomttng a leader Jalal) Talabani js very
transitional government and close to Tehran ... , In terms
writing a constitution.
. of fegional geopolitics, this
In combination with the is not the ·outcome that the
Kurds, Iraq's Shiite majority United States was hoping
f'
"'
c.ould seek revenge if they lOr.
Gene
chose to. Both have been
It also could be bad news
Lyons,
victims of Sunni oppression for Iraqi women. As near as I
under the Ottoman Turks, can make out from the aya. the post-World War I British tollah 's English-langu·age
occupation and the U.S.- Web site (sistani.org), for
than sheer, implacable evil backed (until the 1991 Gulf example, temporary mar•
suddenly heard Bush talking War) Saddam reg)me. And it riage is OK, except that "due
about "eliminating the con- . does appear that roughly 80 to probably committing sins
ditions that feed radicalism percent of Iraqi voters voted (it) is not permissible" to
and ideologies of murder."
mainly on the basis of eth~ actually talk to the girl first.
"If whole regions . of the nicity, . including Turkmen The decision's up to her
world remain in despair and and .Assyrian Christian father or brother. Veils are
grow in hatred," Bush said, · minori ties ..
mandatory. Also, no music,
"they will be the recruiting
The temptation for people no dancing, no chess playgrounds for terror, and that like me who thought invad- ing . Sistani sounds like
terror will stalk America."
ing Iraq was a terrible mis- James Dobson on crack. ·
Well, yes. Exactly as take is to mock. After all, the Islamic canon law also
thinkers 'like Anonymou s same neo-conservative ideo- . 'offers scant consolation for
(a.k.a. Michael Scheuer, the logues who p·redicied that boosters of American-.style
former CIA agent who. wrote Iraqis would strew flowers free enterprise.
·
the book, "Imperial Hubris: in the path of American
But you know what?
Why the West Is Losing the inVaders also envisioned That's none of our business
War on Terror") have insist- tur~ing the country over to a and never wa:s . . Sistani's
ed all along. See, human hand-picked secular. govern- admirers depict him as a
beings are human beings. n:tent. Headed by a well- scholar of judicious rem-·
Humiliate people, corrupt financed, Westernized politi- perament who, like Thomas
their governments, mock cian like Allawi, the interim Jefferson, believes that clertheir faith, steal their proper- prime minister, the new Trail ics ·holding power corrupt
ty, bomb their children, and was supposed to be pro- both church and state. It's
soon they .start hating you. Israeli and to serve as a bul- anticipated that he'll seek an
Charismatic extremists like ·wark against neighboring Iraqi constitution respecting
Osama bin Laden then get a Iran's Shiite theocracy. ·
minority ,rights in the hope
following . The United States
Instead, we've .turned the of avoiding a civil war. Then
didn't create today's Middle place over to an Iranian-born it's further anticipated that
East, but neither are we ayatollah wearing a beard · Iraq's new government
entirely blameless . .
and a turban . At Supreme would ask Americans to
Sin~e the Sunni Arabs Council
·
·
for
Islamic leave.
(who constitute roughly 20 Revolutio n meetings and
If it takes an ayatollah to
percent of Iraq's population, during Friday prayers, bring that off, then more
and maybe 90 percent of the crowds ;ometimes chant, power to him.
anti-U.S. insurgency) boy- ' "Death to Israel!"
(Arkansas!
Democratcotted Iraq's election, exact"This is a government that Gazelle columnist Gene
ly as he'd anticipated, Sistani will have very good relations Lyons is a IU1fi01wl ma~:a­
also·emerged as the hig win- with Iran. " Juan Cole. a '::. ine award winner ·tmd coner in ihe election. The aya- University of Michigan author of "Tiw Huming r~(
tollah wasn't on the ballot. expert on Iraq , told The tlu• Presidem " (St. Martin's
but his followers won more Washington Post. "The Press, 2000). You can e-mail
than half the seats in Iraq's Kurdish victory reinforces Lyons
at
R&lt;'nelyons2
275-member
assemb ly, this conclusion. (Kurdis h @ c.l. com.)
·
"

'www .mydailysen tinel.com

2005 .

. The Daily Sentinel • Page As

2005 .

Combating .medical lawsuits and errors
Once again this year, it
looks as though . Congress ·
will fail to pass medical malpractice reform -- or do ·very
much about its twin problem, the medical errors that
Morton
kill or hurt thousands of peoKondracke
ple every year.
As has happened . in the
past, the House is likely to
approve caps on non-economic damages ("pain and says, "the stifling specter of
suffering" ) in malpractice litigation results in the
litigation, but the legislation under-reporting of adverse
will be stymied in the events by physicians and
Senate.
avoidance of open commuThat body did just pass a nications with patients about.
major item on the GOP/busi- error."
ness tort refonn agenda -In a landmark 1999 study,
· limits on class-action law- the National Academy of
suits -- . but knowledgeable Scie.nce's
Institute · of
lobbyists say that the trial Medicine (TOM) reported
lawyer lobby retains enough that 44,000 to 98,000
power
among
both Americans die every year
Democrats and Republicans · because .ofpreventable medto kill medical malpractice ical errors.
re form, despite President
That report has led to
Bush's urgent campaigning.
heightened consciousness
Bush speaks frequently about quality control in
about tl)e need to control health care, outcomes-based
"frivolous lawsuits" and medicine and the need for
surging malpractice insur- medical · records to be coniance premiums that are puterized.
. blamed . for driving emer- · However. as one of the
gency room doctors , obste- authors of the !OM study,
tricians and · neurosurgeons Lucian Leape of Harvard
out of business.
University, recently told corMalpractice reform
· respondent Susan Dentzer
principally, a $250,000 cap on PBS' "NewsHour ,w ith
on non-economic damages - Jim Lehrer," the report
- is a key item on Bush's "called· for a national comagenda for containing dou- mitment, a moonshot, a serible-digit . increases in health ous effort to reduce medical
care costs.
errors."
An administration study · "We said we could reduce
showed. that about $28 bil- . medical errors by 50 percent
lion is spent each year on the in live years if we had that
combination of malpractice kind of national commitlitigation and the "defensive ment." But it has yet to hapmedicine" that doctors and pen. Leape said, "There's
hospitals perform, including been a bill before Congress
extra tests and unnecessary -e.very year for the past four
procedures. to protect them- years to provide protection,
selves against lawsuits. .
·and we just don't seem to be
· Opponents point out that able to get it passed. "
while this is a huge sum, it
Mainly, what Congress
still represents only a sliver , and the administration have
of the nation's $2 trillion done is to authorize pilot
annual health bill.
studies and demonstration
But a new study by the projects on qu&lt;).lity control
Joint Commission on. the and information re·chnoloAccreditation of Healthcare gy.
Organizations
(JCAHO)
A Y€&lt;ar ago, then-Secretary
suggests there are other of Health and Human
downsides to the current Services Tommy Thompson
malpractice system. Among asked for $50 miilion to
other things, the commission advance electronic record-

Thursday, February 24,

Deaths

Local legislator proposes military service purchase option

COLUMBUS
, State duced House Bill 71, previRep. Jimmy Stewart (R- ously recognized as House
Athens) introduced legisla- Bill 46g in the !25th
' tion last week to permit the General
Assembly,
tn
RACINE - Wayne 0. Rou sh, 83, Bashan Road, purchase of military service response to a coiwe rsatio n
Racine, died Wednesday, Feb. 23 , 2005. at his . residence. credit by state retirees.
he
had
with
Mike
Under House Bill 71, Canterbury, a constituent in
Funeral arrangements will be announc.ed by Cremeens
Funeral Home.
inactive members of. the .his district, who is cttrrently
Ohio National Guard and employed by the Athens
reserve. components of the · Cou nty Engineers office.
armed forces could purchase
"It is my feeling that serservice credit with the vice 'classified as 'i nactive' :
Publi.c
Employees should be recognized as worRetirement System.
thy of PERS' service credit."
Stewart sai d · he intra- said Stewart. "The men and

Wayne 0. Roush

For the Record

Divorces filed

POMEROY -Act ions for divorce have been filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Kelli Dawn
Mc~arty, Pomeroy, against Jason. McCart;t. Well sto n;
S.helta D. Patterson; Portl and , against Larry R. Patterson,
Fort Dix, N.J.; Amy M. Conley, Middl eport,'llgalnst Bryan
Conl.ey, Pomeroy; Ronald E. Hawley, Racine, against Judy
L. Hawley, Middleport. ·
.
·
·

Divorce granted
POMEJWY -A di vo rce has been granted in Mei gs
County Common Pleas Court to Shannon A. Bumgardner,
Springdale , W.Va., against Michael E. Bumgardner,
Nelsonville.

Civil suits
POMEROY -A foreclosure action has been filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Citifinaflcial
Mortgage Co .. Coppell. Texas. against James W. Fox,
Reedsville , and others, alleging default on a mortgage
agreement in the amount of $27,633.96.

Marriage licenses

women serving our country law allows active members to
as members of the National purchase at ·only 50 percent
Guard and Reserves should · of additional liability.
no longer be considered only
"We (military service per'weekend warriors .· They sonne l) are essentiall y state
sacrifice extended weekends. emplovees and we deserve
'
holidays and time away from and should
have the same
their homes and families and benefits that are afforded to
this sacrifice shou ld . be state
employees."
said
acknowledged.''
Canthbut'). · "It's a . very
The new legislation would important piece of legislation
allow individuals to purchase that I've ~upponed for a long
the serv ice credit at. a cost of time, and I' m really glad
75 percent of the additional Rep. Stewart looked at it and
liability to PERS . Current realized how .important it is.'·

Holzer Hospice to host annual volunteer training
GALLIPOLIS ,- Holzer Hospice
will host its annual volunteer trafning
on Thursday, March 3. from 4 until 7
p.m.' at the hospice offices at 288 1 Ohio
I60 in Gallipolis.
Anyone interested in becoming a·
volunteer for Holzer Hospice is invited to attend this free training . Dinner
also will be served and everyone is
encouraged to bring his or her fatorite
cove red dish .
Training will include information on ·
the hospice program, proper I ifting techniques for the office and ',\Cith patients,
bereavement/grief training , and an
opportuniiy to meet hospice staff. .

Current volunteers
also will share their
experience s of being
a volunteer for Hol zer
Hospice·.
Holzer
Hospice volunteers
serve as team memhers with a group of
specially traine·u pro'
fes sional s who· proAnita Moore vide support and care.
to patients and .family members.
Anita· Moore, Holzer Hospice volunteer coordinator, said that "without vol unteers, we could not provide the scope
of services so urgently needed."

.Volunteer serv ice s include errand,.
lawn care , office work . cooking and
delivering an occasional meal or helping
with repairs. Many times. it is simply
sitting with someone to talk and listen.
read or hold a haml.
''We will help .new volunteers identify .'
their special talents and match them
with an appropriate patient and family...
noled Moore .
Hol zer Hospice &gt;erves Gallia . J4ck son.
Meigs and surrounding .countie s. For
more information on the training program, to register, or for directions to
training, cal l Moore at (740) 446-5074 or
toll free at (800) 500-4R50.

Upcoming art exhibit to showcase local artists
BY .NICOLE FIELDS

NFIELDS@MYDAILYREGISTER .COM

Mason County Public Library. photography, pti nts and waterJudy Alleman, a member of colors. Each individual who
the AAUW, said the group is . enters may display four items. .
encouragil]g all \ocal profes:
Alleman added that there
si~;mal and amateur artists to
will be no fee to enter or view
display their work.
·
the exhibit. and the exhibit is
"We wanted to highlight the open to residents in the triarea artists and give th~m some countv area. The
. deadline for
recognition ," Alleman said. registration ts Thursday,
"We hope that this event will . March 10.
grow throughout the years."
A "Meet the Artists" recepAlleman said artists can tion will be held 2-4 p.m.
enter their work in a variety of Saturday, April9, at the library. ·
Individual s who are intercategories,
including
oiVacrylics, pasiels/drawings, ested in the exhibit should

POMEROY - Marriage licenses were issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to William Mark Francis, 26,
POINT PLEASANT Reedsville and Michele Lee Hupp, 23, .Pomeroy; Matthew . Local artists and art enthusiL.,ee Lewis, Langsville, and Amanda Grace Roush , 20, asts won't have to travel to
Letart, W.Va .
the big cities this spring to
see some impressive talent.
In honor of National Artists
Month in April, the Point
Pleasant b.ranch of the
American .Association of
University Women (AAUW)
is sponsoring its first annual
GALLIPOLIS
Dr.
month-long art show at the
Joyce Manuel-Wolfe was the
invited guest speaker for a
recent soci ology class at ·
Gallipolis Career College.
Wolfe 's address centered
on "Time Management"
with the focus on organizing
and prioritizing to help ere·
. NEW YORK (AP).- The
Since the attacks 3 1/2 sic effort ended.
ate a balance between academedical examiner's office years ago, the medical · Robert Shaler, director of
mic , social and personal
has largely ended its effort to examiner's office identified forensic biology for the med1,600 . victims, . ical examiner, has said that
schedules.
identify the remains of those nearly
killed
at
the
World
Trade
although
progress
had the DNA effort could be
Wolfe is the director of the
Center on Sept. II, 2001. slowed considerably in reopened if new scientific
Learning Center at the
'
Submlttod
,photo
leaving more than a thousand recent
Since processes were developed.
months .
University of Rio . Grande.
Pictured
with
Dr.
Joyce
"If three years from now
victims
unidentified.
September,
only
eight
vicwhere she received a bacheManuel-Wolfe,
left,
is
Shawnn
"They told us they've tims have been identified. A somebody comes up with
lor of arts degree in social
Caldwell, business instructor exhausted all current tech- few inconclusive tests are something ... that really looks
, · studies and French. She at Gallipolis Career College.
earned a mas(er of arts during Manuei-Wolfe"s recent nologies for identifications," still pending that could yield like it's going to work. then
Diane Horning, who lost her a' couple of more identifica- we' re going to be poised to
degree in special education address to GCC students.
26-year-ol.d son, Matthew. tions. they told families.
go after it." ·he told The
from Marshall University,
The city has about I 0.000 Associated Press in 2003.
West said Wednesday.
and holds a doctorate in disabilities from
Horning
said
the
medical
unidentified
bone and tissue
Some identifications were
administration and learning Virginia University.
examiner's office called her · fragments
that
cannot made quickly in the weeks ·
Tuesday morning.
be matched to the list of after the Sept. II. 2001.
The forensic effort failed the dead.
attack . To identify smaller
$11 for residents and non to identify any remains of
The medical examiner's remains. the medical examresident s, and can be · more than I, I 00 victims, or office will contact all vic- iner had to rely. on DNA
redeemed for credit toward almost half of the 2,749 who tims' families who had asked matching. drawin g resu lts
from Page A1
the purchase · of an annual died there.
to be notified when the foren- from shreds of bone and
fishing license.
Residen.t anglers born on
day of release . The fish
being released at all loca- or before Dec. 31, 1937 may
read accelerated reader to Moegling. ,a total of 464
books and take the quizzes days were made up and taken
tions measure I0 to 13 inch- obtain a free fishing license
which come with the pro- off attendance records for the
where · licenses are sold.
es in length.
from
Page
A1
gram
to _make .up absences.
66
and
older
first semester.
Anglers
age
Anglers age 16 and older
Oth.er business ,
must have an Ohio fishing who were born on or after
Moehling said th at the
In other business. the
li ce nse to ·fish public Jan . I, I 939 and ha.~e · and how it is used not only to school was looking for an
waters. A 206-5-2006 fi sh- resided in Ohio for the past improve reading but for st~- effective and productive way board hired Mike Chancey
of making up absences and as assistant high school
ing lice-nse is required on six month s are eligible to dents' makeup attendance.
March I and can be pur- purchase the reduced cost
According to figures pre- enhance student learnin g and · track coac h, accepted the
chased
o nline
at Resident Seriior License sented by the librarian, the -the acce lerated reader pro- resignations of Darin Logan
program has been highly · gram seemed a solution ..
as. girls varsity basketball
ohiodnr.com or at any of for $10.
Additional
information successful with primary and · Students reading at gra,de ·coach, and Jeff Wayland. as
the 1,200 license vendors
about spring trout · releases is intermediate · students. To . level or below read a book of seventh-grade ,girls basketarouncl the state.
An annual resident fishing available at .wildlife district encourage more participa- 250 to 300 pages and score ball coach. and approved .
licen se costs $19 and is offices by calling 1-800- tion ~t the high school level , 70 percent or better on the
valid through Feb. 29, 2006. WILDLIFE., or visiting Eichinger initiated a pro-. accelerated reader quiz to
gram where students could make up one day. According
A one. day fishing license is ohiodnr.com.

.

URG director addresses
class at Career ·college

call Kresta· Harri s at the
Mason
County
Public
Library at 304-675 -0894 .
The AAUW is a non-profit
organization that stri ves to .
unite gradu~tes of accredited .
educational institutions in
order to promote equ ity. education, intell ectual growth
and opportunities for women
and girls. Membership is
open to all female graduates
who hold a baccalaureate or
higher' degree from an accredited college or universtty

Medical examiner ends:forensics at ground
zero with 1,161 victims still unidentified

ODNR

Meigs

slips, debris removal, and Recovery grant of $500.000. meeting were Salisbury,
Byer received a letter this Olive. . Rutland , Sutton.
·emergency measures that had
to be taken at the time" said week from the Goven\or's Chester townshi ps : Racine
from Pa~eA1
Bob Byer, director of Meigs Office of Appalachia aboll,t and Pomeroy villages ; the
County's Emergency Agency. that grant money. It says that Meigs County Hi ghway
Meigs ·
state has paid 12.5 percent of · He said he is optimistic that · "this funding will be used in Depapment. the
the balance, 'that FEMA has . most if not all of the projects counties that qualify for pub- County
Emergency
lic assistance from the Federal Management Agency, the
provided 3 percent for grant will get funded.
administration, and the
On small projects, under Emergency
Management Racine/Syracuse
Sewer
receiving entity has paid the $55.500, after the paperwork Agency (FEMA)" and listed District. the Olive Township
balance of 9.5 percent.
is tiled, the repairs can be Meigs along with 16 other Fire Department and Meig&gt;
She emphasized
that started, said Byer. However, counties.
Count y Commission .
At Tuesday's meeting, 6ffiFEMA has the authority to on major projects. he sugChristi
Lynch
of
approve or disallow ,projects gested waiting for FEMA cials said no other local meet- Congressman Ted Strickland's
basea on the paperwork and approval. Byer said it's ques~ ings are planned but . that office attended. FEMA repreexplained the steps to be tionable whether the state FEM A will be contacting the -sentatives here for the meeting
taken to move toward will kick in the 12.5 perce·nt. individual townships and vil- were Norn1 Nerland, Alan
· Aiches and Rob Conwell.
receiving aid.
although he said the state's lages· about their claims.
Political subdivisions and Adcock of the Ohio EMA
''Most of the projects deal share could come from the
with road work, culverts. Appalachian Ohio Flood age ncies represented at the presided at the meeting.
....
•

FEMA

tissue . Te sts were often not
possible becau se the DNA
was too damaged by heat ,
humidity, and the passage
of time .
"I'm still driven by the
families," Shaler said in
2003. "When I see these
people, they look at me
with eyes that say, 'Did you
find her yet?' But when
you're only turning· out a
couple a week or four. fiv'e
a month , it's hard .''
In most cases. victims
whose remains were not
identified have been legally
declared ·dead by the court .
anyway. based on documentation that they were , at the
trade center or on the
~ijackcd airplanes.
overnight trips for the fifth
grade at Meigs intermediate
School to northern Ohio.
May 16- 19 and SkillsUSA
competiti on March 5 to New
Philadelphi a.
Attending the meeting
were
Superintendent
William Buckley. Mark
Rhonemu s. treasurer and
board
members.
Scott
Walton.
Victor Young.
Norman Humphreys. Ron
Logan and Roger Abbott.

�'

PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, February 24,

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

2005

Discount carriers, location key to small airports' success
BY JOE MILICIA
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

GREEN, . Ohio ·The
relaxed pace at AkronCanton Airport doesn't
reflect that it's one of the
fastest growing airp~rts in
the country.
Akron~Canton and other
sihall to midsize airports
are taking business from
larger hubs with a formula
for success that starts with a
discount airline. Add in
proximiiy to a big metro
area, light traffic and short
lines and the pilssengers
seem to follow.
·
"I love this airport," said
Elaine Smolka of suburban
Chicago after landing at
Akron-Canton
on
Wednesday . . "I came from
O'Hare and this airport is
such a pleasure compared
with what you have to go
.through there."
Smolka's not alone in her
admiration
for
AkronCanton, which has tripled its
number. of passengers _in the
last I 0 years to nearly 1.4
million last year. Except for
200 I , Akron-Canton's passenger traffic has increased
every year since AirTran
Airways began flying from
there in 1996.
"We couldn't do it without
them," airport director Fred
Krum said.
· Low-fare' airliners have
been the key to success for
~maller airports, said Richard
V. Butler, professor of ec'o- nomics at Trinity University
in San Antonio. Passe ngers
are attracted to the low fares
and rival carriers then are

, Thursday, February 24, 2005

Bobcats hold off
Eastern Michigan

AP photo
An AirTran Airways airplane takes off from Akron-Canton Airport Wednesday in Green, Ohio .
Akron-Canton· Airport and other sma'll to midsize airports. are taking away bus·iness from larg.er
hubs .with a formula for success that starts with a discount airliner. Add in proximity to a big
metro area, light traffic and short li nes and the passengers seem to follow.
dr&lt;~wn

in to c&lt;;&gt;mpete ·for the · Cleveland. Bishop is 70 mula, drawing _from Logan
traffic that 's been ge nerated.
miles from Detroit' and the 1nternational
Airport in
It 's the sa me story at closest_ airport to booming Boston 50 miles away.
Bishop International Airport Oakland County:
Congestion at and around
in Flint, Mich. , which
"These are airports ·•hat Logan and Manchester 's
lopped 1 million passengers have repositioned them- addition
of Southwest
last year.
selves as, secondary _\(ccess Airlines - have helped 'it
"They called us the big points to a big area," said grow from one million pa swhite elephant in the field ," Mike Boyd, president of The sengers .in 1997 to 'four milairport spokeswoman Pat Boyd Group, an Evergreen, · lion lasi year.
Corfman said. " Without Colo.-based aviation con"We truly have become
AirTran, we would still be sulting firm.
_
Boston's other airport," said
the big white ' elephant in
Smaller airports are com- assistant airport director J.
the field. "_
patible with discount airlines Brian O'Neill.
AjrTran
spokeswoman because they can get passenBut the formula can ' t be
Judy Graham-Weaver said gers in and out faster, limit- repeated everywhere. Many
the company chose Akron- _ ing downtime on the runway, small airports are struggling
Canton and Flint because which is· crucial to the air- and aren ' t located near a popthey were in underserved lines' low-cost model, ·said ulation base that's large
markets with,high fares.
Hugo Burge, president of enough to attract a ' discount
carrier, Boyd said.
"Akron-Canton and Flint Cheapflights.com.
·
are both airports . that have
"There's an unre·cognized
For the ones that are, the
been very s uccessful fur battle 'going on between sky's the .limit. Krum said
u s," she said.
smaller airports and more tra- that Akron-Canton could
Both are blessed with a ditional ~irports," Burge said. eventually grow nearly four- ·
great location . .Akron-Canton
Manchester Airport in New fold to five million passenis just 50 _ miles from Hampshire follows the for- gers a year.
'

Competency hearing starts for accused business school gunman
BY M.R. KROPKO
ASSCCJATED PRESS WRITER

· CLEVELAND - A judge
began hearing · testimony
Wednesday on whether a
man accused of a deadly
shooting rampage at Case
Western Reserve University
is mentally competent to
stand trial.
Biswanath Halder, 64, is a
former business graduate student accused of killing one man
andwoundingtwootherpeople
during a S!!Ven-hour standoff
nearly two years ago. Nearly
100 people hid in offices, cla~srooms and closets at Case's
Peter B. Lewis 13uilding.
. He has pleaded innocent to
338 charges. Prosecutors
want to seek the 'death penalty if he is convicted of aggravated murder. Separately, a
terrorism charge could lead
to the death penalty, because .
it specifies aggravated mur- ·
der as part of the crime.
Cuyahoga County Common
Pleas Judge Peggy · Foley
Jones must decide whether
Halder is able to understand
the charges and assist in his
defense. Forensic psycholo-

.
'
ATHENS (AP) - Leon
Willi &amp;ms scored 16 points
and grabbed 11 rebounds to
help Ohio hold off Eastern
Michigan
68-65
on
Wednesday.
Sonny Troutmun · and _Jeremy Fears added 14 poif\IS ·
aptece for the Bobcats (15-9.
·
Mid-American
9-6
Conference), who out.rebounded Eastern Michigan
41 -31.
James Jackson led the
Eagles ( 1.2, i 4, 5-l 0) with 15
. points. Markus Austin and
DanAy McElhinny scored 12
points each.
_
A dunk by Fears gave Ohio
a 45-28 leatl with 16:02 left
but
Eastern
Michigan
stormed back . McElhinny
conriected on a 3-pointer to
tie the game at 55 atthe 7:35
·
mark .
Troutman hit four free
throws and Fears had a dunk
to push .the Bobcats' lead to .
63-58 with 3:59 remaining.
Eastern Michigan's Derek
VanSolkema mi ssed a 3pointer and Fears had a crucial block in the final 30 seconds to help Ohio hold on.
The Eagles -had just one
field goal in the final 10:30 of
the first half, and Ohio led
38-23 at the break.

gist James Eisenberg, testifying for the defense. said that
based on three meetings with
Halder and letters Halder has
-written, there is clear evidence
he is delusionaL ·
·· In several handwritten
motions from jail since his
i).frest, Halder requested that
his defense lawyers be disqualified. He alleged two
public defenders and a private attorney were helping ·
prosecute him. .B tit on
Wednesday, he sat calmly
with his attorneys, frequently
taking notes or shuffling
AP photo/The Plain Dealer, David 1. Andersen
through papers, dressed in a
Biswanath Halder list~ns during a court hearing before Judge
dress shirt, tie and sport coat. Peggy Foley Jones to determine if he is competent to stand trial
Halder's .· trial was sched- Wednesday in Cleveland. Halder is accused of killing one m~n
uled to begin last September, and injuring two others during a seven-hour standoff in which
but was delayed. In August, .nearly 100 people hid in offices, classrooms and closets at Case
prosecutors claimed the Western Reserve University. At right iS his attorney Robert Tobik.
judge in Halder's case then
Wa5 ])iased against their con- 2003, with two guns and university computer Ia])
· tention that Halder was com- . killed
graduate
studen't employee who was in the
petent to stand triaL
Norman Wallace, who was · building but escaped during
The prosecutors asked the
talking with friends on the the standoff. Halder, a native
Ohio Supreme Court to
first
floor arid did not know of Calcutta, India, accused
remove Judge Judith Kilbane
the employee of destroying
Koch , but the issue became Halder.
who
graduated
Halder,
his Web · site devoted to
rrioot when Koch took a medfrom Case in 1999 with a· helping fellow · India natives
ical leave of absence.
Police said Halder entered master's degree in business form businesses. The lawsuit
the campus building May 9, administration, had sued a was dismissed.

Thursday, February 24
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
If will be a cloudy morning .
A slushy mix of rain and wet
snow is predicted. Expect
accumulations of around one
inch . . Temperatures will hold
steady around 32. Winds1will
be 5 to 10 MPH fron1 the
northeast turning from ' the
north as the morning progresses. ·.

Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
It will continue to · be
cloudy. Expect a mix of wet
snow and rain. The snowfall
is expected to end around
3:00pm with total accumulations for this event around 2
inches. Temperatures will
linger at 33 with today 's high
of 35 occurring around
!2:00pm. Winds will be 5 to.
10 MPH from the north turning from the northwest as the

afternoon progresses.

Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Expect a few snowflakes
here and there. Temperatures
will diminish from 30 early
this evening to. 24. Skies
will be clear to 'cloudy with
5 to 10 MPH winds from
the 'northwest.

Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
Temperatures will hover at
20 with today's low of 20
occurring around 5:00am.
Skies will be cl'ear with 5
MPH winds from the northwest turning from the north
as the overnight progresses.

I&lt;' riday, February 25 ·
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will rise from
22 to 33 by late this morning.
Skies will be sunny with 5
MPH winds from the northeast turning from the ·west as
·the morning progresses.

Prep Scores

Local Stocks
ACI-42.12
AEP-32.50
Akzo-44.84
Ashland Inc. - 82.89
AT&amp;T-19.32
BLI-11.85 ·
Bob Evans - 22.55
E~orgWarner - 52.89
Champion - 4.04
Charqtlng Shops - 7. 77
City Hotdtng - 30.65 · ·
Col- 45.60
DG-21.20
DuPont - 53.31
Federal Mogul - ;35
Gannett - 79.45
General Electric - 35.27
GKNLY - 4.850
Ha~ey Davidson - 60.90
JPM-36.48
Kmart - 97.02
Kroger- 17.67

Ohio High School_
Boys Basketball
Wednesday's Results Tournament

Ltd.- 23.72
NSC -35.19
Oak Hilt Financial - 35.54
OVB-33.49
BBT -38.89
Peoples - 26.43
Pepsico - 53.43
Premier - 11.47
Rockwell - 58.91
Rocky Boots - 31.;!3
AD Shell - 62.07
SBC..:... 24.14
Sears - 49.87
USB -29.68
Wai·Mart - 51.60
Wendy's..:... 37.37
Worthington- 20.74
Dally stock reports ·are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the prev~
cius day's transactlona, provided
by Smith Partners at Advest Inc.
of Gallipolis.

DIVISION I.

Brunswick 70, Lakewood 55
Can. GlenOak 66, Massillon
Jackson 45
Cle. Gklnville 85, Mayfield 45
E. Cle. Shaw 72, Eastlake N. 62
~indlay 51. Bowling Green 55
Fremont Ross 65. Mansfield
Madison49
Galloway Westland 69, Cols.
Marion-Franklin 55
Lancaster 63, Cols. Walnut Ridge
43
Massillon Perry 51, Marietta 47
Olmsted Falls 50, N. Olmsted 46,
OT
.
.
Oregon Clay 53, Tel. Whitmer 48
Perrysburg 52, Maumee 47
Tiffin Columbian .60, Sandusky 52
TeL Libbey 57, Sylvania Northview .
37
.
.
Tol. St Francis 66, Tol . Woodward

44

.

TeL Start 75, Tel. Bowsher 65
Wadsworth 55, Akr. Ellet 36
Wooster 69, Kent Roosevelt 41
DIVISION II ·

Akr. Buchtel 88, Akr. Coventry 53
Canal Fulton NW 77, Minerva 46
Chagrin Falls 68, Jefferson 54
Cin. Taff 81, Norwood 36
Cin . Turpin 63, Cin. Purcell-Marian

47
Cle. Benedictine 61 , Akr. E. 51
Day. Chaminade.Julienne 56-, ·
Kettering Mer 30
Fairvklw Park Fairview 64, Sheffield
Brookside 49
Hamilton Ross 38, Bellbrook 37
Lima Shawnee 54, Elida. 51 , 20T
Medina Highland 56, · RichJield
Revere 47
Napoleon 63', Bryan 33
Oak Harbor 43, Clyde 39
Painesville Harvey 68, Mentor Lake
Cath. 57
·
Parma Padua 62, Vermilion 55
Paulding 51, Defiance 49
Port Clinton 60, Sandusky .Perkins
51
Salem 61 , Youngs. Chaney 41
She!b¥ 64, Ontario 60
St Marys Memorial 49, Lima Bath
33 .
Streetsboro 63, Mantua Crestwood
45
.
Willard 66, Lexington 57
Wooster Tnway 75, Can. Cen. Calh.
51
Youngs. Wilson 56, Hubbarcl40
DIVISION Ill
Atwater Waterloo 53 .. · Lisbon
Anderson 33
Brookfield 55, campbell Memorial 54
Brooklyn 55, Sullivan Black River 53
Cin. Madeira 48, Cin. Mariemont 37
Clarksville ·clinton·Massie
57,
Versailles 56

Fa11ners Bank
-TraditionaiiRAs

Jamestown Greeneview 67, New

Paris National Trail 47
Lorain Clearview 48, COlumbia
Station Columbia 28
··
Reading 63, Cin. Jacobs 48.
w . Salem NW 74, Jeromesville
Hillsdale 45
Warren Champion 73. Newton Falls
. 70, OT
Youngs. Mooney 65, E. Palestine 62

GS.

DIVISION IV

,.

Ashtabula Sis. ·John &amp; Paul 57,
Southin!Jion Chalker 46
Cols. Africentric 57 , Delaware
Christian 30
·
Cols. Wellington 41 , Marion Cath. 37
E!Yria Open Door 58 , Warrensville
His. lntemalional Prep 22
Fayeneville 64, Cincinnati Christian

47

Fs
J

• flU I Llelj
• ••• llft

•C lph
•lt.. $ I$ FQ 'JIIA!

IIR.2136
173,6400
.a ~a•

--~*

•

Kidron Cen. Chr. 58, N. Ridgeville
Lake RidQe 45
Lancaster Fisher Cain. 56, Newark
Cath. 48
Lockland 63, Clark Montessori 60 .
Lordstown 47, Fairport Harbor
Hardrng 45 ·
LoweiMIIe 46, Youngs. Chris~an 40
Milford Center Fairbanks 65,' Cols.
Tree of Lffe 49
Russia 65, Mechanicsburg 55
Sebring McKinley 41 , Can. Heritage
35
Sidney Fai~awn 60. Houston 55
\

-

Gonzalez denies Cahseco's allegations
BY FRED GooDALL
used performance-enhancing drugs
Associated Press
· and. that Canseco lied about intra- - - - - - , : - - - - - - - - - - ducing 'the two-time AL MVP to
steroids in the early ll)l/Os.
WINTER HAVEN, Fla. - Juan
· " It's not true .... 1 never saw neeGonzalez
hasn't
read
Jose
dles .. 11tever S;lW pills. I never saw
Canseco's book and qoesn't want
_anything. ... The only g uy s who
to.
ha ve put needles in my buoy are
The Cleveland sl ugge r ·became doctors," Gonzalez said.
the lates t player lo refute allegaIn his new book, Canseco claims
tions made by hi s former teammate. he ed ucated Gonzale~.
Ivan
saying Wednesd ay he has never Rodriguez a nd Rafael · Palmeiro

about steroids after bein~ traded to
Tqas in. 1992 . Rodnguez and
Palmeiro al so have denied usin g
performance-enhancing drugs.
Got\zalcz. joined at a new s conference by agent Alan Nero. said
his comments following a workout
at Chain of Lakes Park would be his
last about Canseco , who sa id he
injected Gonzalez and others with
.steroids.
"1 fee l sorry for Canseco . . :. Hi s

comment s hurt my feelings ,"
Gonzalez. said. a~d in g that he's
willing to take a te st to prove he's
clean. " Peopl·e who know me a long
· time in thi s game (know ) I've never
had problems with anybody .... I
have a- clear mind and clear heart."
Gonzalez said he is not angry
with Canseco and he has no plans to
pursue-le gal action .
Please see Gon1alex, 12

NBA

Rijo, Davis
voted into
Reds' Hall

_coach

suspendshimself ·

BY JoE KAY
.Associated Press
-cJNClNNATl
Outfielder Eric
Davis
walked into the visilors'
clubhouse in St. Louis that
day m 19H4, as excited as
a - ny
rookie
getting
hi s ftrst ·
.ca'll -up
to the
mtuur leagues.
·It didn't take lung for the
Cincinnati ·Reds' hotshot
prospect to figure they
weren't quite as excited to
see him
"[ got called up and 1
don 't know if they told (the
clubhouse manager) that 1
was corning or not," Davis
said. "When 1 got there, 1
made my appeamnce in my
first game was with no
name or number ori my
back.
·~ 1 guess I caught them by
surprise. I felt I had to make
a name and lind me a number. "
From now on, hi s name
will be listed among the
greats of Reds history. ·
Davis and pitcher Jose
Rijo - the driving forces
behind Cincinnati's 1990
World Series sweep of
Oakland - were voted into
the team ··s Hall of Fame on
Wednesday. the culmination
of two careers that crossed
at the ri9ht moment.
·
Davis homer in the first
game of the 1990 Series set
the tone for a 7-0 drubbing
at Riverfront Stadium. Rijo
won that !lame, and the
clinching fourth game as
well. the highlight of his
injury-shortened career.
Both repeatedly overcame health problems to
prolong their careers, eammg the estee m bf fans and
players alike. But it was
thetr one championship season together that will
.always link them.
, Rijo was the MVP of the
series. shutting . down a
powerful Athletics lineup
led by ''Bash Brothers" Jose
Canseco
and
Mark
McGwire. Davis was the
leader with his tirst-game
~omer and di~ing catch in
the fourth game that sent
.
.
.
Please see Reds, 12
'

AP '
Chicago Bulls' Andres Nocion i, right, from Argentina, fouls Cleveland Cavaliers· · Robert
Traylor late in the fourth quarter, of Cleveland's 100-91 win Wednesday in Cleveland.

Cavs rope Bulls
BY

Cavaliers improved to 2 1-5 at home .
"We ' re the two All-Stars on the team,''
James said, "and we ' re All-Stars for a reaCLEVELAND - The Cavaliers' All.- son. We showed why tonight. "
.
Trading shot for shot and basket for basStar twosome refuse to take any break.
ket, llgauskas and James combined for 24
·
·
·
·d
Zydrunas llgauskas a nd LeBron James
scored 41 of Cleveland's 57 points in the of their team 's 1_o pomts m the thJr !lensecond half as the Cavaliers .- came back od when the Bulls, who beat MtamJ Jn
from a few days off with a 100-91 victory overume _onT,ues~ay, began to look llred ..
over the Chicago Bulls on Wed. nesd~ The llgauskas-James Show contmued m
· ht
·
he tourth quarter. and at one pomt, the
nt g '
'
.
b' d
35
.
llgauskas scored. 33 points _ 26 after patr com me _to &amp;core
consecunve
halftime - and added eight rebounds and P~~nts for Cleveland. .
.
,
seven blocks, matching a career high.
You kmd of expect 11 out of LeBron,
James f.inishco w ith 27 points. 11 assists,
Please see Bulls, 11
six rebounds and five steals as the
TOM WITHERS

Associated Press

Vikings -agree to deal Moss -to Raiders BY JoN KRAWCZYNSKI
Associated Press·
MINNEAPOLIS Randy Moss'
electrifying talent was no longer e npugh
for the Minnesota Vikings to put up with
his distracting antics.
· Dante DiTrapano, Moss' agent. told
· The Associated Press on Wednesday that
the Vikings and the Oakland Raiders had
"come to an agreement on Randy play. ing for Oakland next year."
.
Neither the_ Vikings nor the Raiders
would confirm the deal, which was first
· reported by The St. Paul Pioneer Press.
"We have had discussions with the
Oakland Raiders , but there's nothing to
announce,"
Rob
Brzezinski ,
Minnesota 's vice president uf football
operations, told The Assoc)ated Press.
Raiders spokesman Mike Taylor sttid,
"1 cannot comment on the deal, speciti-

'

Please see Moss, 11

Temple's

AP tile
Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Randy Moss points to fans as he celebrates a
. touchdown against the New York Giants in Minneapolis on Nov. 19. 2001 . ·

PHILADELPHIA (AP) Temple coac h John Chaney
suspended himself Wednesday ·
for one game and apologized
for putting a player in against
Saint Joseph's a day earlier for
the sole purpose of rough play
·
and quick fouls.
Chaney 'offered -the self_imposed one-game suspension
after meeting with Temple
president David Adamany and
athletic
director
Bill
Bradshaw. He will be replaced
on' the bench bv assistant Dan
Leibo:;itz for Saturday's game
against Massachusetts.
"1 wo~ld like to apologize to
Saint Joseph 's Umversity, its
fans, student-athletes and head
coach Phil Martelli for my
reprehensible behavior during
Tuesday
night 's. game,"
Chaney said in a statement. "1
spoke with Coach Martelli
today to voice my apology to
him and hi s team."
Chaney said he was. not surprised
by
reaction
to
Tuesday's home game.
" I'm either good or bad in
some people's eyes," Chaney
said_in a brief telephone inter_view with The Associated
Press on Wednesdav. "There's
no gray area.' I apalogized to
the people that matter most."
Adamany also reacted to
· some Teinple students spitting
in the direction of Saint Joe's
players and cheerleaders. He
said the first few rows of the
student
section
at
the
Liacouras Center would be
empty for Saturday's game as
a reminder they should uphold
the standards uf good sportsmanship.
Upset by what he thought
were illegal screens by Saint
Joseph 's that were not being
called by the officials, Chaney
turned to seldom- used 6-foot8, 250-pound Nehemiah
Ingram to "send a message."
1ngram started throwing his
arms around and . tossing
elbows. once connecting hard
to the· chin of Hawks center
, Dwayne Jones, and had a hard
foul on John Bryant that left
him sprawled on the court for
several minutes.
Ingram fouled out in 4 min- ·
utes. his average playing time for a game this season. He has
playe&lt;) in 14 games, averaging
0.4 points and 0.9 rebounds. ·
Chaney said after the game
he was going to send in a
"'goon."

·"lngmm was not the only
person 1 put m there," Chaney
said Wednesday. " 1 put three
or four players in there and
were telling them to make
hard fouls_ .. ~
Chaney. called for a technical in the second half after .
bemting the officials, said he
never w;:tnted hi s players to
hurt anyone:
,
·'J believe that I was certainly responsible and that I victi!llized my athletes by telling
them to make hard fo.uls Without telling them how a hard
foul should be committed," he
said.
· Atlantic 10 corrunissioner
Linda
Bruno
supported
, Chaney's decision to suspend
himself.
·
"Coach Chaney's behavior ·
was uncharacteristic of the
way he runs his program and I
expect that a similar occurrence will not happen again," ·
Bruno SaJd .
\

�Thursday, February 24, 2005

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, February 24,

www.mydailysentinel.com

www.mydailysentlnel.com

2005

-'

Moss
from Page 81
call y. however, th1s 0\ gamz.ttion has always heen lt emendously aggresSive and Randy
Moss rates with the great players of all time. Great players
want to play for the Raiders"
DiTrapano sm d he didn' t
know the terms ot the deal, but
the Pwneer Press reported the
Ytkings would get linebacker
Napoleon Harris. along with
the seventh overall ptck and a
late-round pick in the upcoming draft
The deal cannot become
oftic1al until March 2, the start
of the NFL's tiscal year ·
" It's JUSt like any other contract. There's a meetmg ot the
mmds between the people

who negot1ate for the Yikmgs for Reggie to be commenting
and the people who negotiate at this point" because
for the Raiders," D1Trapano McCombs still owns the team
said. "lt just hasn' t been and is making all the decireduced to wriung and it won't sions.
be untl!March 2."
Trade rumors have surMoss is due to make $7.25 rounded the flamboyant Moss
m1llion next year. Harris 1s due all offseason He struggled
to make $5 41 million .
wnh a hamstring inJury, but
Oakland's renegade owner still timshed with' 13 tquchAl Davts has long embraced down catches last season He
combusttble players and the was fmed S I0,000 for preverti cal passmg game, so tendmg to pull down IllS pants
addmg Mo'Ss seems to be a and moon the Green Bay
pertect fi t
crowd during Minnesota's
The 111111ng of the move playoff wm. He al so drew
comes as a b1t of a surpnse crit1ctsm for leaHng the field
Wi th the Y!ktngs 1n the midst wtth 2 seconds left in a reguot an ownership change. Red Jar-season
loss
against
McCombs has agreed to sell . Washington
the team to Arizona busmessTeam leaders Matt' Birk and
man Reggte Fowler, a deal Da11nte Culpepper confronted
that st1ll needs to be approved Moss after he wal~ed off at
by the NFL.
Washington. and the organizaA spokeswoman for Fowler tton's patience with the
said 11 would be "'inappropriate recerver seemed to dwindle m ·

Reds
from Page 81
htm to" hosp11al w1th a lacerated k1dney
"'It was defimtely special for more than
one 1eason," Dav1 s satd Wednesday. "It
had been ( II ) years smce they'd been to
the playoffs. To be part of something that
brought glory back to a city that had pretty much dominated for years. that was
special "
Da\IS spent mne of h1s 17 seasons wtth
the Reds. from 1984-9 I and agmn in 1996.
ln I 987, he became the first player m Reds
history to hit 30 homers and stea\30 bases
tn a season He also played for Los
Angeles, Detroll, Baltunore. St. Loms and
San Franctsco.

Bestdes the World Senes title. Davis got
to see. Pete Rose break Ty Cobb's hits
record 111 1985 and Tom Browmng pitch a
pe1t ect gat)1e m 1988
"My career m Cincmnau was a neverendmg saga of great thmgs that happened," Davts smd.
Davts made two notable comebacks He
retrred followmll neck surgery in 1994,
but resumed hts career with tl)e Reds two
y,ears later He also overcame colon cancer
m 1998
RtJO also made a remarkable comeback.
overconung five maJor elbow operation'
and a six-year absence from the majors
He teJo111ed the Reds in 2001 as a reliever,
and was back 111 the rotation a year later
He started the final game at Cmergy Fteld
in 2002, and more elbow problems fmally
ended his career a year later.

"We had some cement
shoes we were walking
around in," Bulls coach Scott
Skiles said. "We were way
from Page 81
too slow."
.
The
Bulls
did
a
nice
job
Ca~ a liers coach Paul Silas
containing
the
7-foot-3
said "If Z c&lt;intmues to pla'y
like that m the second half of llgauskas m the first half,
him to JUSt seven
the season, we' ve got.a good holdmg
pomts. But it was a different
chance to do s ome~ing real- story m the second half as
!y special."
Cleveland's btg man dtd
Ben Gordon scored 21 almost anythmg he pleased.
pomts, 13 in the fourth quarLeadmg by four at half, the
ter. to pace Chtcago. which Cavaliers began to take conhad 1ts winnmg streak trol mtdway through the
stopped at four Kirk Hinrich thtrd quarter wtlh Ilgauskas
added I 3 p01 nts and Tyson and James, who helped the ·
Chandler and Eddy Curry 12 East wm Sunday 's All-Star
apiece for the Bulls: v.ho game in Denvet , domg most
didn 't have much left in of the damage
reserve after their game
Ilgauskas scored eight
agamst the Heat.
pomts in the f1rst six minutes

Cavs

the past year or so. .
"He 's my good friend. but
you almost get to thmkmg that
maybe enough 1s enough,"
Culpepper said earlier th1s
month at the Pro Bow I. "And
maybe the Yikt~gs orgamzatton has had enough."
Last year's transgressions
were the latest 111 a long line of
head!! ne.grabbi ng negative
behavior for Moss that mcluded bumpmg a traffi c control
officer with his car m 2002,
verbally abusing corporate
sponsors on a team bus in
200 I and squtrtmg an official
with a water bottle 111 I 999.
But when he was focused
and healthy on the tield, there
was no denying his considerable abtlity.
His 9,142 career receiVIng
yards are the most by any
player over his first se;en seasons.

RtJO was returning to the Domtmt~m
Republic and unavatlable tor comment on
Wednesday
Unlike past years, when the local baseball wnters voted for Reus Hall of Fame
candidates, the club let fans do the choosmg thts year. Nearly 12,000 ballots were
cast, with Davts and Rijo gettmg the most
votes.
Harry and Geccge Wnght, who helped
estabhsh baseball 's ftrst professional franchtse, also will be inducted. Harry, the
older of the two brothers, was the Red
Stockings' manager in thetr maugural season of 1869. George played shortstop and
was elected into baseball's Hall of Fame in
1953.
The four mductees will be honored
before a game against Baltunore on June
11.

and James ended an 11-4
spurt with a 3-point play as
the Cavaliers opened a 60-47
lead. Chandler was the only
one back for Cpicago after a
steal. but he did a poor job of
wrapping up James, who was
able to muscle m his otT-balance shot whtle bemg fouled.
Ilgauskas followed wtth a
three-point play and the
Cavahers pushed their lead
to 73-62 after three.
Gordon heated up from
the outside and Curry's
dunk brought the Bulls to
79-72 with 9.12 left. But
Ilgauskas and James then
traded baskets wllh James •
3-pomter from the top of the
key makmg 11 86-74.
The Bulls closed to 90-79
but Ira Newble scored

underneath on a sweet pass
from James with 3:54 left,
the first basket scored by a
Cavalier other than James or
Ilgauskas since the 7 20
mark of the third
"You stop LeBron and he
finds people ," Chandler
said, shakmg hts head
"He 's dehmtely amaz1ng
out there."
Both teams had trouble
~haking off some All-Star
break rust m the fmt half
The Cavaliers made JUSt
I I -of-17 free throws, committed 19 personal fouls and
shot 36 percent from the
floor Chicago, meanwhile,
h1t only 28 percent (I 1-of39) of its field-goal attempts
and were 15 -of-23 from the
I me.

GonZdlez has a $600,000,
one-year contract and has
the chance to earn $1.65
mtlhon more based on plate
appearances and $300,000
based on time on the act1ve
roste1.
T·he Indians would like
Gonzalez, who ha s 439
homers, to be thetr regular
right f1eld er. He could
restore some of the pop
that's been mtssmg smce he
batted .325 with 35 homers
and 140 RBis to help the
Indians make the playoffs in
2001.
" I believe he has a complete understandmg of what
he needs to do earn a spot
on thi s club. And, I thmk
it' s safe to say that everybody' s rootmg for him ,"
lndtans
manager
Enc
Wed~e satd. "There's nci
denymg what hts abi!tty ts.
If he ' s healthy, and he ' s
motivated !tke I beheve he
ts, he' s going to have an
impact on our ballclub."
Gonzalez 1s excited about
being back m Cleveland and
confident that hts tnJunes,
1ncludmg the lower back
problem that s1delmed most
of last year, are behind
"The last three years is
ht story Th1s IS '05, "
Gonzalez smd "I'm here,
ready to work hard and help
thts team "

Gonzalez
from Page 81
"If you are gomg to consider legal actton , you really have to determme how
you ' ve been harmed , and I
think that 's a difficult thmg
to do," Nero said. "Juan's
attitude the whole ttm'e tS he
feels bad for Jose and JU St
hopes that he's going to be
OK . . There' s no anger or
retaliation in thi s man's
tmnd "
Asked if he feel s there are
a Significant number' of
baseball players who have
used stemid s. Gonzalez
replied: "i don't know about
the rest of the people. I
know about myself."
O'ne of baseball' s most
feared hitters before InJUries
limited his production the
past three years. Gonzalez
has played a total ot 18,5
games the past three seasons. He appeared in JUst 33
In 2004, when he batted
.276 wtth live homers and
I 7 RBls.
The Indtans protected
themselves fmanctally by
gtvmg Gonzalez an illCentive-Jaden contract that provtdes htm an opportunity to
make up to $2 55 mtllion

CLASSIFIED

G.llh ~

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

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response...

r

j

~

I Robe rt 0 Wtllls Jr am

-

tlfO~ an y

GM:AWA\
2 Rottwell ar pupp 1es 3
• me
old
had shots

- (7 40)843 5281

Floo r model • 23 1nch TV
cable ready needs a l1tUe
work 304-675·2620

Pit Bull m1x pupp1es to gtve

away Carl (740)388·9783

To good home 1 mate 1
- fema le: cat both declawed
- fl)(ed &amp; shots u'p·to-date
· Must
go
together

(740)388-0038

r

Pomeroy,

1-800-837-1094

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE is hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, February
26, 2005 at 1o:oo a_m,,
a public sale will be
held at 211 W. Second
Street, • Pomeroy,
Oh1o The Farmers
Bank and Savmgs
Company IS sellmg
for cash In hand or
certified check the
following collateral:
2000 FORD PT F2S
SRW
SUPERDUTY
1FTNX20F6YED18771
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company, Pomeroy,
Oh1o, reserves the
right to bid at this
sale, and to withdraw

the above collateral
prior to sale. Further,
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company reserves
the nght to reject any
or all b1ds submitted.
The
above
described collateral
will be sold "as is·
where is.. , with no
expressed or implied
warranty given. The
collateral must be
moved from property.
For further Information, or for an
appointment
to
Inspect
collateral,
prior to sate dale con·
tact Diane Rector or
Randy Hays at 992·

2136.
(2) 23, 24 &amp; 25 3TC

Public Notice
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Settled propouto for
the Purchase and
tnotsllatlon of steel
garage
lnoutatad
door
for
the
Middleport
Fire
Department, Meigs
County, Ohio will be
rece!ved by the Meigs
County
Commissioners
at
their office at the
courthouse ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
until
1UJQ
p.m ,
Thuroday, March 17,
2005 and t~eh at 1: t 5

pm at said office
opened and read
aloud for the following: ·
Purchase and Installation of steel insulated garage door lor
the Middleport Fire
Department.
Spec1ficat1ons provided 1n bid packet.
Speclficattons, and
btd forms may be
sec;ured at the office
of the Me1gs County
Commissioner ,
Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 740-992-2895.
A deposit of so dollars will be required
for each set of plans
and specifications.
Each bid must be
accompanied
by
either a bid bond in
an amount of 100% of
the bid amount with a
surety satisfactory to
the aforesaid Meigs
County
Commissioners or by
certified
check,
cashiers check, or letter of credit 1upon a
solvent bank in and
amount of not less
than 10% of the btd
amount in favor of the
aforesaid
Meigs
County
Commissioners. Bid
Bonds
shall
be
by
accompanied
Proof of Authority of
the official or agent
signing the bond.
Bids shall be seated
and marked ae Bid
for Middleport Fire
Department heating
equipment
protect
and matted or dellv·
.._lg1
ered
to:
County
Commleelonera
Courthoule ,
pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Attention of blddere
le called 10 all of the
requirement•
con-

the reqwrement for a
payment bond and
performance bond for
100% of the contract
pr1ce No bidder may
Withdraw his bid withIn thirty (30) days
after the actual date
of the opening thereof The Meigs County
Commissioners
reserve the nght to
reject any or all bids.
Mick
Davenport,
President
Meigs
County
Commissioners
(2) 24, (3) 2, 9

Public Notice

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for
the Purchase and
Installation of overhead heaters for the
Middleport
Fire
Department, Meigs
County, Ohio will be
rec;eived by the Meigs
County
Commissioners
at
their olfice at the
Courthouse ,
Pomaroy, Ohio 45769
until
1:00
p.m.,
Thursday, March 17,
2005 and then at 1: t 5
pm at said office
opened and read
aloud for !he followIng:
Purchase and lnstattalton of overhaad
heatera
for
the
Middleport
· Fire
Department.
Speclflcattona pro·
vlded In bid packet.
Speclflcatlono, and
bid forma may be
secured at the otttca
of the Metge County
Commloatonar,
Courthouae,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 740-992-28V5.
A depoatt of $0 dottare will be required
for each set of plans
1
and spectflcatlone.
the Federal Labor Each bid muot be'
Standards Provlelone accompanied
by
and
Davis-Bacon either a bid bond In
Wagaa, varloua Insur- an amount ot1 00% of
ance requirement&amp;, the bid amount with a
varlouo equal oppor- ourety oattsfactory to
tunity provisions, and · the aforesaid Meigs

~~~:~, ~~rtl~t t!r~::

Rigl-.ll

I(.-.

"1&lt;•-.••vv,.

P u b l i c Notices in Ne""spupers ..
l"&gt;eli, e • -ec:l Rlgl-.ll. ll..-.

C o u n t y water produced 1n
Commissioners or by association with oil
certified
check, and natural gas. The
cashiers check, or let· location of the proter of credit upon a posed Injection well
solvent bank in and is the Woodyard #1-G,
amount of not less Perm11 #3319, 295'SL
than 10".0 of the bid &amp; 1550' EL, Frac. 34,
amount in favor of the Salisbury Township,
aforesaid
Meigs Me1gs County, OhiO.
C o u n t y The proposed well
Commissioners. Bid will inJect Into the
Bonds
shalt
be Ohio Shale Formation
accompanied
by at a depth of 2500 feel
Proof of Authority of to 3150 feet. The averthe official or agent age inieclion ls eStisigning the bond. mated to be 300 barBids shall be sealed rels per day The maxand marked as Bid imum Injection presfor Middleport Fire sure Is estimated to
Department heating be 730 psi. Further
equlpmant
proJect Information can be
and mailed or deliv- obtained by contactered
to·
Meigs ing Herald 011 &amp; Gas
C o u n t y or the Division of
Commissioners Mineral Resources
Courthouse,
Management.
The
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
address
of
the
Attanllon of bidders Division Is: Ohio
Is called to all of the Departm~nt
of
requlremants
conNatural Resources,
tained In this bid Division of Mineral
packet, particularly to Resources
the Federal Labor Management, 2045
Standards Provisions Morse Road, Building
and
Davis-Bacon H-3, Columbus, Ohio
Wages, various Insur- 43229-6693,
(614)
ance raqulrements, 265-6922. For full
all
various equal oppor- consideration,
tunity provisions, and comments and obJecthe requirement for a tions
must
be
payment bond and received
by
the
performance bond for Division, In wrttlng,
100'.0 of I he contract within fifteen eaten·
price. No bidder may dar days df the dale
wtlhdr- his bid, with- of thla published
In thirty (30) days legal notice.
after the actual date (2) 24
of the opening thereof The Malgl County
Public Notice
Commlealonera
reaarva the right to
ratect any or all btdl.
The 2004 Annual
Mlck
Davenport, Financial report for
VIllage
of
Preoldant
Melga ' the
C o u n t y Syrocuu to complete
Commleslonere
and ovalllble for
(2) 24, (3) 2, 9 .
lnepectton In the
Cterk/Treaourere
Office, VIllage Hall,
Public Notice
2581 · A Third Street,
Syrecuu, OH 45779
'
PUBLIC
NOTICE
Sharon C. Cottrill
Herald Ott &amp; Gas, Cterk/Treaaurer
36394 Leading CrNk (2) 24
Road,
Middleport,
Ohio 45760, (740)
11
}tl
742-2160 Is applying
to permit a well tor
the Injection of brine

II

JJI

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Board o!Trustees
of Letart Twp. Me1gs
County, w111 accept
seated b1ds for a 85
Dodge pickup, and 2
(two) 8 ft. spreader
boxes separated at
the office of the Clerk
at 23238 Hilt Rd. ,

Vt~-. ...

•-

1~.-...- •• ~_

Rac1ne, Ohio 45771.
Mark sealed bids for
truck;
spreaders;
unlit 12.00 noon pm
on March 7, 2005. The
trUstees
reserves
right to accept or
reject any and all
bids.
(740) 247·3125.
(2) 24

r--·--11!--.

.

;

ro Buv

:

Wol'&lt;lertul Ofli!Orluml~s "' available mTom Pooen Country
We are expan&lt;flng ou1 ~\aff and need more sa~s people
No Expenence IS requ1red, only a WIOmgness to learn, work
as a team and ha11e a strong mrt1a11ve
• Excellent Pay and Bonus Plan • Great BeneHts

·Work AtThet1 Dealership
Call To Schedule An Interview:

Help Wanted

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL .
Cytotechnologist
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a full-time
Cytotechnologist. Baccalaureate
degree in Cytotechnology and
certification by ASCP. WV license.
Excellent salary, holidays, health
insurance single/family plan, dental
plan, life insurance, vacation, long
term disability, and retirement.
Send resumes to :
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Pl. Pleasant, WV 25550
AA/EOE
www pvalley.org

fiND AJOB
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS
.
.I

I

I

DIFFERENCE IN A
CHILD'S LIFE
Foster Parents needed
To learn more about
fos tenng and free trammg
opportunities contact
K1m Romau at

740·894-4360
1-877-50-NECCO

An E: Kcellent way to earn
money Th e New Avon
Call Manlyn 304·882·2645
Are you a sal es person?
Audtt and se ll Cable TV
Excellent Commi SSIOns

1-800·270 1780
re you w1111ng to travel
or steady work, good
ay and benefits?

aborers Operators
Welders. COL Onvers ·
nd Foreman needed for
1pel1ne work
Send resume to
Personnel
C J Hughes C onstruction

AVQN t All Area sl To Buy or
Sell Shtrley Spears 304675-- 1429

4x4's For Sale .. ............................... --....... 725
Announcement ............................................ 030
Antlq ues ....................................................... 530
Apartments lor Renl ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market...............~ ...........080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair. . .. .......................................... 770
Autos for Sate .......... . ......... .. ......... .....'.710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale,.,_,_....................... 750
Building Supplies ..................................... 550
Business and !lultdlngs ............................. 340
Business Opportunity ................................. 21 0
Business Training ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Thanks .................... ..................... 010
Child/Elderly Care .......... -....................... .. 190
Electrt.caVRefrtgeratlon.......... ........ . . ...840
Equipment for Rent.. ............ ............
...480
Ex cavallng •.... ....... .. .......... ... ...•... ...... ...... ....830
Farm Equipment.. ........................................ 6t 0
Farms lor Renl.. ........................................... 430
Farms for Sate ............................................. 330
For Lease .... ............................................... 490
For Sate ................................. ............... 585
For Sate or Trade... .. .. ........ ................. 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables .....
.. .............. .... 580
furnished Rooms ............ ......... ,............. 450
General Hauling ...........................................850
Giveaway .......................................'...............040
Happy Ada ........... • .......................................050
Hay &amp; Grain ..................................................640
Help Wanted ................................................. 110
Home lmprovements ...................................810
Homes for Sate ............................................ 310
Household Gooda ....................................... 510
Houaealor Rent.. ........................................ 410
tn Memoriam ................................................020
Insurance ,.................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ........................660
Ltvestock .................. ,...................................630
Lost and Fo,und ........................................... 060
Lola &amp; Acreage ........... ................................ 350
Mlacellaneous., ............................................ 170
Miscellaneous Merchandtse .......................540
Mobile Home Repelr ....................................860
Mobile Homes for Rent ............................... 420
Mobile Homaa for Sate................................320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycle• &amp; 4 Wheetera .......................... 740
Mualcal lnatrumanla ................................... 570
Pereonale ..................................................... 005
Pall for SataJ ............................................. 580
Plumbing &amp; Haallng .................................... 820
ProfessiOnal Sarvlc81 ................................. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............. ., ................ 180
Real Eotate Wanted ..................................... 360
Schoote tnotructlon ..................................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer ..............................850
Sltuatlona Wented ....................................... 120
Space lor Rant ............................................. 480
sport! ng Qooda ........................................... 520
SUV'a for Sate.............................................. 720
Truck• for Sata ............................................ 715
Upholstery .......... ......................................... 870
Vena For Sale.............................. .............. ... 730
Wantod to Buy ............................................. 090
Wantod to Buy· Farm Suppllll .................. 820
Wanlod To Do .............................................. t80
Wanlod to Rent ............................................ 470
Yard Sate- Galllpotto ....................................072
Yard Sete.Pomeroy/Middla ......................... 074
Yard Sate·PI. FI'IHoent ................:............... 076

®.

.

"'*"'"'NECCO"'""** "

CLASSIFIED INDEX

HIOo-822-0417 • 372·2844
475 South Church Street • Ripley, WV 25271

Sbop
,,

Display AdS

Dally In-Column : 1:00 p . m .
Monday- Friday for ln•ertlon

In Next Day' s

l

Sunday Dl•play: l:QO p.m.

Frl,dav For Sundays Paper
Thursday for
• All ads must be prepaid•

oew•

ito

Publication

Pape~;:

Sunday Jn-Colurnn: 1:00 p.m.

A Keyword • Include complete
Detcrlptian • Include A Prite • Avoid Abbreviations
• Indude Phone Number And Addrest When Needed
• Ad• ShoUld Run 1

.

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Sundays

11'... \\tl\1

HELP WAN11'D

lwright@ic.net

Bales Bros Amu sement
Co Spnng1 Summer, Must

I \V.;IV!)Sj:Z. WHAT 14Nr:.
A- De'AL IH£ l&gt;t;V/L
Wt!I!J.,f) MA t&lt;e Fo(l. If

CA'f'5

5cut...

E

Floor Care Gall {740)367
0255

Ohio 45760, EOE
Management
Opportunities

!he

I

MONEY
TO l.O-\N

--Leaarng t" lnanclal
lnstttut1on approving
Small
Bus1ness , Mortgage
Personal and VehiCle
Loans lmmed1ate
response
g1ve us a call at

Help Wanted must haiJe
Dnvers Lice nse Senous
cal ls o nly Comme rc1 al

Mamtenance D• rector
Overbrook Rehab•l1tat1on
Center ts now acceptmg
resumes for the pos1tton
of Ma tntenance D1 rec tor
The \lUaltfJ ed cand1date
must possess strQng ver·
bal and wntte n communi ·
calton sk1ll s 1nclud1ng
techn1cal report wnting
and record keepmg Must
have exper1ence 1n gener·
al mamtenance 1ncludmg
ca rpentry pl umb1ng etec ·
tncal telephone and cable
Insta llation, pa1ntlng
grounds work evaluation
and 1nspect1on ot emer·
gency eqUipment item
assembly and bo1ler system operation Must have
knowledge of O SHA Life
Safety Code HVAC and
Building Code Long term
care expenence preferred
but not reqUtred Ouallf1ed
candidates may send'
resumes to Charla
Brown -McGuire, RN
LNHA, Admtnlstrator, 333
Page Street, Middleport

an

pHerlng.

GM Dea lers hiP, lookin g for
sk1llfu l Mechantc Please
send resumes to P O Box
989 Galhpohs OH 45631

o6am
4OOpm (740)379 9083

you

NOT

SITIONS FOR YOUTH
(740)985-4349

Immedi ate
Opemngs
Res1dent ml
Treatment
Factllty for boys now h1 rmg
Youth Worker pos1tmn
Pa1d Med1cal Insurance
Ca ll betwe en 9

I

[0 0PPOilTUNm

lNG CO recomme nd
hat you do busme ss wit'
eople
kno w
\0 se nd mane
hrough the mall until yoll
~ave
Investigated

&lt;*'

Foster P~ re nts Needed l
M a ~e a d1fference For
more 1nfo cont act TRAN·

PJA

BLSINES'&gt;

"'LISH
PHIO VALLEY PUB

2950

lmm edrate openmg lor
pa rH1m e D nver a t the
Mason County ActiOn
Group INC Must have
current dnvers l1cense
have a cl ean dn v1ng
record and be w1lllng to
work
fleKtb le
hours
Start1ng Pay 1s $6 15 per
hour S ubmit resu me w1th
references or appliCations
ca n be p1cked up from
Mason County ActiOn
Group
INC
Please
respond ASAP App ly m
confidence to Ruth A1ce ,
Transportat1on Manager
by February 14 2005 Ma11
or del1ver to Mason County
Ac!lan Group INC PO
Box 12 Pomt Pl easant WV
25 550 No phone ca ll s
M!F

HoMES

1·866-228· 7063' Or
apply onhne at
www inllestmenlfln anc•!ll org

**NOTICt:u

IIFJP\VANTW

McClure s Reslaurant now
h1rtng al l locations full or
parH1me p1ck up apphca·
11on at locahon &amp; bring
back between 9 30am &amp;
11 OOam Monday thru
Saturday
Now accephng resumes
lor Cost Techn1c1an pos 1
liOnS Re quires good E11cel
sk1lls, gene ral co mputer
knowledge, W1llmgness to
travel and work. overt1me
Startmg pay S15 00 hour
App hc.a11t needs not to
have (:!xper1ence
must
have good wor~ ethiCs and
the w1lhngness to learn
Tra1n1ng prov1ded
Fax
resume to !614)7 16·2272
Now takmg app llcatlons for
Truck Dnve.rs Also h1r1 ng
seasoned garden center

help (740)256 9247 or
(740 1645 0870
Office Clerk· Sell-starter
and energe ltc n-:dtvldual
sktlled 1n M1crosott Word
and EKcel Musl posses
supenor oral and wr1tten
commun1catton sk1Us and
knowledge ot general
off1ce
procedures
Reqwremenls
depend·
able h1gh school d1ploma
and one ( 1) year eJCpen
ence 1n off1ce and compu t
er sk1lls Sen d resume bv
March 1 2005 to FACTS
45 Olive Street Gallipolis
Ohio 45631 or Fax to

{740)446 8014
M/F/H

EOE

Overbrook Center IS current ly accept ing app lication s
for
N ursing
Assistant s Please call
Hollie at (740)992 6472 or
come 1n and f1ll out an
appl 1catton
333
Page
Street Middleport Oh

EOE

011erprooK Rehab Center
•s cu rrenlly accepting
applications lor anyone
In terested In th e STNA
ctas·sas The class w1 11
beg m on February 22nd
and appl1cat1ons ahould be
turne d m• by February
17th Class space 15 ltmlt·
ed, &amp;O 11 you are mterested, please stop by and f1lt
out an appllca t1on at 333
Page Street Middleport

We seek career oriented
Individuals who wil l strive
to acl'1 1eve the be st In custome r sat isfactio n and
team work If you have a
des1re to be successfUl
with a goal dn ven and
grow1ng company, we
offe r· health dental, life
Insurance,
prescnpt1on
• card bonu&amp; program , pa1d
vacatton, 40 11&lt; and man ~
agement
apparel
Adva r'ICement from wlth1n
AN frlltmtDl.Miu:H
II you are Interested 1n
Due to an upgrade 1n the
Or
GallipoliS
• OH
actlv1ty le11el at Arbors the
Charl eston
WV area
, tac•hty Is seektng an AN.
Apply m parson at the
Treatment nurse to worK
Burger King Rest aurant
FT Monday· Frtday Our
located at the OhiO R I~Je r
faCility oilers competitive
Plaza Gallipolis or mall
wages 401 K, and an
resu me to Burger K1ng 65
excellent benefits peck Upper
R tver
Road.
age, w1tl"t the opportunity
Gallipolis OH 4563~ or fa.~~;
lor advancement
Apply ln ptvson or call
Judy Barcus ANIOON at
Pa ramediCS &amp;
EMT s
needed Apply e-t 1354
Jackson P1ke Galhpotts

Oh 45760 EOE

304-529.(\()55

(740)..6-7tt2
EOE MiFION

FOR SALE

SAVE-SAVE-SAVE

Gl

Borrow Smart Co ntac
Oh iO DIVISIOn 0
F1nanc1al , lnslttuflon's
Off1ce
of
Cons ume
HELP
Afla1rs BEFORE you rel1
1.
a nee your home 0
bta tn a lo an BEWARE
Ut1hty Contractor seekmg . f reque sts fo'r any larg
experienc ed buned teledv-ance payments 0
phone foreman operators
ees or Insurance
and laborers COL expen ' he Otl1ce of Consume
ence a plus Trav.el 1s
f-\flatts toll free at 1 866
requtred
1278·0003 to learn tl th
Beneltt s Include oPtiOnal
bro ker
0
~ G rtg age
Health Denta l short &amp;
proper\
ender
long term dtsab1hty 401K
1censed (Th1s 1s a publt
and L1fe Insurance
en1tee a nnounc emen
Ouahf1ed
appli cants
rom the O h10 Vall e
1
should send resume to
PubHsh1n~ Company)
Gud enkaut C orporalton
Attn Mike Fraley
PROfESlliO~\L
2679 McKinley Avenue
SER\1CFS
Columbus Oh10 43204
OrEma1 l
OIRECTV
mf rale y @g udenkau~ com
Free DVD Player
ex t 229
6 14·488 1
Free HBO &amp; Ctnama ~~:
Free Protess1onal
InstallatiOn
Wa l')ted and needecl m
up to 4 Rooms
Pomeroy Ohio Full t1 me
Call 1-SOD--523-7556
ltve 1n care taker lor spefor detailS
Cialty bed and breakfast 1f
J ewelry Bu y Sell Gold
you are of !:nghsh, Welch
Diamonds
Gemstones
lnsh decent
and an
Repa1
r
Appraisa
ls Gem
accent
en1oy cooKm g
Tes tm g
Gradua te
house keeping and gener
Jeweler
Gemolog1s t
al car 1ng for others th1s

he

110
.1 HELP W ~NTEIJ
SASSY SCISSORS
Stylist wa nted Salary/
Comm iSSIOn 740--441 ·
1BSO or 740·2 56·6336

STNAs
Arbors at Galltpolts IS cur·
re ntl y
see ktn g
Sta te
Tested Nurs1ng Ass1stant s
lor PT and FT pos•t1ons
We offer master schedul·
1ng heal th d ental v1s1on
and l1fe msurance Please
stop m to co mplete an
applicatiOn
Co nt act
Jess1ca Harnson/ Tma
F1sher SOC at (740)441 ·
8320' with questiOn s
EOE M/F/DN

r uea or oo

ng

under appreciated?
and under paid?
Searching for a job
wtth a fixed work
schedule and great
benefits?
If you are looKmg for a
better career opportun i-

1y

we may have a pos1t1on
for you

We offer·
•Up to S81hr
•Fuff.ttme &amp; Part~tlme
shifts
•Full benefit• package
with both shltta.'
•Weekly paychecks +
weeklybohu•
potential
•Paid vaeatlonl Paid
holidaY•
• Friendly, professional
onlca environment
C all today to fmd out
how you can JOin our
team

1-877-463-6247
ext. 2456
www mfoc1slon com

:10

WAN1'ED

Cal

"

.,_.

ns

EOE

pOSit iOn IS made for YOU
We otter a salary pl us ancl
upscale
enwon ment
hfestyle
Non·smokm y
non cl rm kmg cultured per·
son(s) clewed Ple ase
contact us at Dr and Mrs
M
Dellavalle
8227
Blueberry Dnve, New Port
R1c hey, Fl 34653, 727·

80 8· 40 2 1
OAOOKTACatt net

150

SaJoou;
~-ffiocnDN

1

Gallipolis Career

Collego
(Careers Close To Home)

Call Todayl 740-.,.6-4367
t-800-214-0452

www galllpotltclreercoll,ge com
Accr.cjtled MemJJ.r Acc....::ltting
Council lor lndependenl Collegia
• nd Schoola121•B

180

.
1

Wt.~&gt;-rnn

ToDo

(740)645 6365
(740)446 3080

All re1l e•tatt advertising
In thle newspaper Ia
tubject to the Federal
Fatr Houaing Act of 1968
which makes It tltegal to
edvertlse 'any
preference, limitation or
discrimination bBsed on
race, color, religion, sex
familial status or national
ongln or any Intention to
make any Juch
proterence limitation or
dtscrlmmat1on '
This newspaper will not
"' , knowingly accept
advertieementa tor real
estate which 11 m '
vlolat1on of the i1w Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwelhnga advert1aed In
this newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases.

Wanted 23 iTiore people to
lose up to 30 lbs Dr recommend Call Darlene or

Gerol (740)384-3377

Independent
C areg iver
witting to take ca re of dis·
able? or elderly with all
home health needs 740·

245-0335 or 740-3393246

Jim's Carpentry
We do remodeling and
most any unfini Shed work
al so small tree removal

(740)446·25011. (7&lt;0)367-

0437

15

www.orvb.com
Home Llstmgs
List your home by cal!

&gt;ng (740)446-3620

V1ew photoS/I nfo online
Potnt Pleasa nt WV 4
Bedroom 1 Bath Many
f8 mentttes Open House
arch 12 1Oam-6pm
ode 2165 or call

304)675·4125

Redwood Cape Cod
orne 9 5 Acres, 4
edroom , 2 Bath 2 Car
ara ge, Above Ground
Po o ~ Bidwel l, OH

Stocked Pond Code
14 or Call (740)388·

10

1 888 582-3345

MOBDJ'HOM~

~ 980 14)(60 Nausha
2
bedroom remooel bath room , new porch rbol wid
stove refngerator $6 000

(740)992.0925

l&lt;\lll,l\11

~993 14x70 Noms 2 bed·
room 2 bath garden tub
di shwas her 8 K8 deck,

HOME'l
FOR SALE

Stt ,900
136 Grah am Street for
Sale by Owner 3 bedroom
house 1 car garage large
to t Rodney V tllage II

!740)245-991 7
(740)446·3644

or

28K56 home on 6 acres
28)148 barn • m ground
pool Millstone Rd. 304
000

576-2920 $95

3 M rm 2·1 / 2 batt! LA·
OR I( FA wlfplc fenced

yard storage blag In City

(740)446-1 945

location

3 bedroom 2 ba tn fireplace, on 1 6 acres Alo
Gr&amp;ode area $85 000 Call

(740)709·11 86

Located on Graham
School Road
3 Homes w!th 7 acres

(740)446-9480

1995 Skylme ~ 4 )(70 vmyl
s1dmg .
shmgle
roof
S13 995 00 Call Karena

(740)385-7671

Avatla ble for •mmediBte
occ upancy m Coun try
Homes
10%
down.
S1 75 44 per month Call

Harold (740)385 4367

For Sale 1979 Homette 2
bM room w/ce ntral a1r

S349500 Call 1740) 385"
4367
For Sale 14X70 3 . bedroom eel up m Country
Homes 56 ~95 00 Move

I BUY

HOMES

Need to sell )lOur home
qu1ck!y bec au se of a
divorce bankruptcy, JOb
transfer or death Don t let
the b a n~ foreclose and
ru1n your cred1t Local person buys houses Fast
clos1ngs All cash Jtm
(740)992 6300 No ca ll s

--HOLISt:s
RENt

1 bedroom house 1005
Th1rd Ave GalltpoJts $250
plus ut11tttes and deposit

(740)256 6661

1-2 bedroom house n1ce
&amp;
clean
no
pets
Storef ront
Reta il
sp-ace / Co,mmerc1al
BUIIdmgs
ver y
mce

(740)992 3702

3 bedroom Condo w1th
rtver v1ew lull basement
Gallipolis Ferry
$700
month Call [740}446

3481

4 rooms and bath 52 Olwe
St No pets $300 month

(740)446 3945

Small house one m1le tram
Mason WaiMart M pets
$250 a month (304)77 3
5163

...., M&lt;lBII E HOME'i

I'ORRf:r..,
2 bedroom mobile home
all electnc 1n Middleport
$350 00 plus depoSit No
1ns108 pets
(7 40)992

3194
3 bedroom mob1 le nome In
Midd leport
no
pets

(740)992-5858

Mobile home R10 Grande
area 2 oeoraom 2 bath
room
$300/deposlt
$400/.montn
No pet&amp;

Phone, (7401367-7025

r
~

APAII'IMEr&gt;TS

mRRf:r..T

1 and 2 bedroom apart
ments, turmshed and
unt urn1shed
security
deposit reqUtred, no pets
740·992·22t8

t BR apartment tor rant In
Spr~ng Vall ey S350/month

Immediate
possesston 1
Only $213 68 permo New
3 bedroom 2 bath mobl18
home Only minutes from

plus deposit water &amp; trasn
1ncluded {7 40}388-001 7
or (740}339·0362

38R House, 1 batl'l
2 car garage
3BR Ooublt wlde
2 bath , a~ve ground
pool, central a!r
3BA, 1· 112 bath Mobile
Home wttn 1dd1t!on

• Inventory
Cl ea rance
24X80 3 bedroom 2 bath
Delivery and set·up Includ-

(740)441-0219

1740)446·

4367

Alhens t ·80().837-3236

(740)..8·3184

lot w1th 28 ft 5tn
wheel camper &amp; outbUtld
1ng
281124
shelter
Beaut1ful 111ew of Raccoon
Creek Access1bte to the
Oh10 R1ver l'.lth boat Call
Askmg S23 000
pnce

In lodayr Calr (7 40)385-

$165.000

(740).U1.Q&gt;Q74

60~";100

Clean 2 bdr Ret Dep Na
Pets {304)675 5162

mRSAI F

No Fee U nless We W1n 1

.I

FOR

TURNED DOWN ON

E)C cellent

Town of Hartfo,d will be
gJVmg out App i1cat 10n6
between the hour s of 9am
to 1pm
M onday thur
Friday tor a Clas s I Water
Operator

No [)own Payment need
ed even with less than per
feet credit on this 3 bed
room 2 1/2 bath home 4
years old basement
ac re s garage wtth a beau
IIIUI VIeW 14x70 mobile
home on prope rty used as
rental pays lor large part of
payment (740)992-421 2

or

SOCIAL SECURITY
ISS\?

Stock models at old pnces
2005 models amv1ng Now
Coles Mob1l e Homes
15266 U
50 East
At hens
Oh1o
45701
Wh ere
(740)592- 1972
You Get Your Moneys
Worth "

s

www.comics.com

© 2005 by NEA, Inc.

110

MOHILE HOMR~

FOR SALE

~

To Travel Lale Ma rch-Late
Septembe r, Weekly Pay
L1v1n g Fa c1 hl1es, Bonu s
Contact Us At 740·2 66·

EOE

Now you con have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclasslfledads
(.~
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SO¢ for small
S1.00 for large

POI.ICIES Ohio Valley Publlahtng rnervee 1"- right to edit, ...j.ct, or cenc .. any ad at any time Errore mu.t be rtporttd on tht liret de~ of
Trlbune·Senl l nei·R~Iet.- wl!l be r. .ponelbtelor no more thin thl coet ol the ep.ct occupied by th' trror 1ne1 only tht l!ret lntertlon We
any loee or e11penee that JWeulte froltl the publlc1llon or omt..lon of en edvertl ..ment Corree11on will be made In the tlret evelleble edition
ere alway• confidential • Currtnt rate carelapplltl. • All r•l eallta tdvtr'Jiatmantl are
to the Federal Ftlr Houalnt Act of 1968
EOE 1tendard• We will not
I
violation of the law
accepta only fletp wanted ade

Be 17 Or Older And Able

Hunt1naton WV 25776

Tom Peden Country

Need a
Done?

HELPWANliD

PO Box 7305

• Wantmg to buy 48K40 InCh
- woo den
pallets
L
: W1ll 1amson Pallets 304·
675-2716

TIRED OF JUST HAVING
AJOB? LOOKING FOR
ANEW CAREER?

Help Wanted

l

WA!\'l'FD

: Absolut e Top Dollar U S
:. Stiver and Gold Co 1ns
• Proo fset s Gol d Rmgs
U S Currency -M T S Co1n
Shop
151
Second
AV"enue Gallt polts 740 ~

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
. ..
. ..
.

ho
MAKE A

Don Tate Motors
OH
e

ANNOUNCEML!'JTS

446-2842

V.-.._.. ~

I \11'1 11\ \ 11 \I
-.,1 I{\ II I \

.

Pua ,teatW, tNt tk ~.

740-992-6614

Oear16iru

:-:~;-3T~oi"iWVlRI~TijE:}A~NM~A~DD-.::st:.~
..~v:.:u~rA~•=•~W:Ith
Successful Ads

Service Technicians
please apply in person.
Experience preferred
but others considered.

e

(7!~~ Togg~:~~ ~6 (304) 675-1333

Word Ads

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

l\.egister

5

ca~f;~::v... (7!?a~ To44~:~~~2

SERVICE
TECHNICIANS
NEEDED

East Main Street

Sentinel

{!tribune

To Place

\\"\01 '\;(I \11'\ts

~~ .t~

Coun ty 011

ed Cell

9948

M1ka {740)385-

SSII Social Sec:urttY
$1 ,300 Net 1ncome we
can finance you a hOme

Cell

1304 I736·3400

2 bedroom apt Second
Galllpollt
$450
month stove/ref rige rator
mcluded
wu her/dryer
hookup central a1r 740
44 1-0194 or 740~441
1~84 ••

~ Ave

2BR apt State Route 160
$400'rnonth stove/tefng·
erator
1ncluded
wa~t'ler tdrye r
hookup
(740 )44 1·0194
or
(740)441·11.84
Modern ,

bedroom apt

Call (7401446·0390

�Page B4 • T he Daily Sentinel

r

Ai'ARfMENTS
FOR RENT

\l\1(( 11\'lll'll

I

' 1"

Housmow

Gooos

3
room
and
bath.
stove/refrigerator, downstairs, all utilities pa1d 46

Olive

Stree-t

$450.

(740)446-3945.

Applianc e

• Applications being taken
• tor very nice, clean 2 bedroom apartment in country
setling, yet close to town ,
on
C~n tenary
Road,
Washer, dryer, stove,

• fridge. dishwasher provld-.
~

ed. Total ejectric wi AC.
·, Tenant pays electric. No

pElts. no smOlsing . S400
deposit, $475 per month .
Water mcluded. 740-4462205 or 740-446-9585 .
Ask for Virginia.
Beautiful 2-story town house,
overlooking
· Gallipolis
City
park.
Ki_
tchen-tam1ly, D.R. , LA. 3
B.R., stul;ly, 2 baths, laundry ar.ea. Re!erences
reqyired, security deposit,
no pets. S900 per mo.
(740)446-2325
or
(740)446-4425.

BEAUTIFUl
APAR'rMEN.TS , AT BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from· $344 to $442.
Walk to shop &amp; movies.

Call 740-446-2568. Equal
Housing Opportunity.

CON VENIENTLY U)CAT·
· ED 8, AFFORDABLE!
: Townhouse apartments,
. and/or small houses FOR
· RENT. Call (740)441·1111
tor application &amp; intorma·
· lion.
For Lease: One bedroom.

nice 2nd floor apt Corner
. Pine and Second: large
· kitchen with dining area.
: New range. refrigerator.
• Water

includet:1

: References
re quired.
· S300/mo. Security deposit.
No pets. · Call (740)4464425 or (740)446-3936

Warehouse
in Henderson. WV. Preowned appllcanes starting
at $75 &amp; lJP all under war·
ranty, we do service work
on all Make and Models
(304)675-7999
Furnit~.Jre :

Sola- chair sets,
5399: Sola- love seal sets,
S499. Mollohan Carpet
(740)446-7444
or
(740)388-0173.

Mollohan Carpel. 202
Clark
Chapel
Road.
Porter, Ohio. (740)446·
7444
1·877·830·9162.
Free Estimales. Easy
financing. 90 days same
as cash .. Visa/ Master
Card. Drive- a· little save
atot.
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Aepair-675-7388: For sale,
re-conditioned automatic
washers &amp; d ryers.~ refrigerators, gas ai1d electric
ranges , ai r conditioners.
and wringer washers. Will
do repairs on major brands
in shop or at your home.
Used Furniture Store, 130
Bulaville Pike. Appliances.
mattresses.
dressers.
couches. dinettes, recliners, grave monuments.
much more. (740)4464782, Gallipolis. OH. Hrs.
11·3 (M·S) We buy used
furniture .

upstairs, . newly Gecorated,

·. Gracious living. 1 and 2
bedroom apartments at
Village
Manor
and
Riverside Apartments in
Middleport. From $295$444 . Call 740-992 -5064
Equal
Housing
Opportunities.

New 1 bedroom apt. Ca ll
(740)446-3736.
.
. Pilot Program - Renters
needed . Call (304}736·
3409.
Pleasant Valley Apartment
Are
rlow
taki ng
Applications for 2BR , 3BR
&amp; 4BR., Application s are
taken Monday thru Fnday,
from 9:00 A.M.-4 P.M.
Office is Located at 1151 ·
Evergreen Drive Point
Pleasant, WV Phone No IS
_ (304)675-5806. E.H .O

Buy or sell. Riverine
Antiques. 1124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy,
740·992-2526 .
Russ
Moore. owner.

Ml&gt;CElLANEUUS
MERCHANDl'iE
Beautiful 2004 gown by
Xcite , fuchsia. size 6,
matching opera gloves,
worn once al Wahama
prom . Orig. $550. sale
$350. Call after 5:30pm,
M-F, (740)446-8967.

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt
In Stock. Call Ron Evans,
1-800-537-9528.
l Shaped Oak Computer
Desk 68~x74" w/hutch 32"·
heightx48"-width excellent
condition $400 (304)8823570 attar Spm

Twin . Rivers Tower IS
.accepting applications for
NEW AND USED STEEL
· waiting list for Hud -subSteel Beams, Pipe Rebar
sized, 1- br, apartment, •
For Concrete, · Ang le.
.call 675-?679 EH O
Channel. Flat Bar. Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
SPACE
Driveways &amp; Walkways.
FOR RENT
L&amp;L Scrap Metals Open
Monday,
Tuesday,
For 'Lease: Office or retail
Wednesday &amp; Friday, Bamspaces in very good condi·
4:30pm. Closed Thursday.
lion. DowntoWn Gallipolis.
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday..
Approx. 1600 sq. ft. each . 1
(740)44 6-7300
or 2 baths. Lease price
negotiable to encourage
Pole Barn 30x50x10FT
new
business
Call
56795 . includes Painted
(740 )446-4425
or
Metal, Plans, l ns t r ~.J ctio n
(740)446-3936.
Book, Slider, Free Delivery
Garage/Body shop 2500
(937)559 -8385
sq. ft. garage, 2500 sq. ft.
pa rking ·lot, in Gallipolis,
SPA f ACTORY OUTLETS
Upper River Rd . Call
New Shipment
(740)645-5785.
io-tubs in-stock
Cedar Knoii ·Mall,
Kentucky Trading PoSt,
Ashland.
(606)922-7185
Professio nal, non-.smok-

t

ing, non-drinking. non drugs, young .w oman
seeks house on land contract or long term leaSe.
preferably close to Holzer,
yet country. Peace/quiet a
must.
NECESSITIES·
.sAE.f
area, al l electric, Central
A/C ,
closets/Storage,
tub/shower: washer/dryer
hook up, 1-3 bedrooms,
garagefcarpo rt-,
Ranch.
Partee• references. stable
job. Own refrigerator/
stove. Call (304)593-3207,
ple.as&amp; leave voice mall.

r
Golden Retrie\ler pups
AKC. 6 wks, shotfwormed,
parents on pram. M-$325 ,
F-$375.(740)256-1084.

We would

Titf.3ny design Prom dress.
worn once . Pink with layered bottom. Size 24 . Cost
S350 new- sell $150 OBO
Call Kristen (304)675·
5979 or (304)675-5671 .

Bl1UJING
SUPI'LIES
Block, brick, sewer pipes.
wmdows , lintels,
etc.
Claude
Winters.
Rio
Grande, OH Call 740-2455121

Bison stock !rail er, 18 fl.
goose nee~. excellent con·
dition .
kept · inside.
(740) 446-2075.
John Dee re 2040, diesel.
EC , new tires. $8,950.
Ford 3000 diesel. $5,995.
(614)419-2781.
Spec1als of the Month on
Farmpro Trac tors
. Farmpro 20hp, 2·wheel
drive, diesel utility tractor,
$389~ . Farmpro 25hp 4·
wheel drive, diesel utility
tractor wfloader, $8999 .
More units available, all
with 1 yr warranty, call tor
more details. (740)6960358

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
March 5, 2005
Meigs County Fairgrounds
Auctioneer
Capt. Billy R. Goble, Jr.
740-992-5794 Home
740-416-1164 Cell
Lunch by Southern Local
Band Boosters

I

FOR SALE

1

While male Llama , 4 years
old. $100. Call (740)2561652.
Yearling . Angus Bulls,
Mostly A. I,. excellent blood·
li nes, priced reasonably
Slate Run Farm, Jackson.
(740)286-5395 .•
www.slaterunfarm.com

Wanting to Buy
48 x 40 inch ·
Wooden·pallets
L. Williamson Pallets
304-675·2716

2003 Dodge Neon S'TX
4door. 4cyl. , automatic.
power everything. 11 ,000
miles, $6,500. (740}441· ·
0337 or (740)645·6 153.

Am erican Le gion Middleport
February 2 6
6:30pm
First Pack $10.00 All Afte r 1st $5.00
Paying a $1 00 .00 a Game
$200 .00 for the X
$300 .00 picture frame
$ 1,000 .00 covera.ll
Crank It Up $16,000 .00
17 Numbers Ll'lft
Starburst $ 1,300 .00
Weather Permitting

93 Ford Escort LX. Auto,
PS. PB. AJC . 88.000 mites,
$1 ,800 080 (740)446-

B MW Z3, '99. Specia l
Edition. 22.000 miles, dark
gree n, $19,999. (304}4 12·
3380.
Chevy Monte Carlo SS,
'84, $6,500 ne~. Ca ll
(740)3.77·9943.
Jeep Grand Cherokee 00
La'r edo,
65K
miles.
Excellent condition. 4x4,
remote
star!.
extras.
$13,000neg .
{304 ) 617~
1380.
M'ust sale, 1984 Corvette.
350 engine.
(740 )9926797
·Toyota Aav-4, '97 all wheel
drive. Loaded. · 1 owner,
$5,700. Ca ll (606)923- .
3259 or {304) 429- 803 2 ,
leave message.

Dry &amp; wrapped round
bales lor sa le. Delivery
availab,le. (740}245-9557.
Round bales of hay, mixe.d ,
stored inside. $ 15-$20.
!740)446-1062.
Wa nting · to rent summer
past ure. lor beef cattle in
Gallia Co unt y. Ca ll after
6pm, (740)446-3375

15

L

TRUCKS

FOR SALE

FOR SALE
$500! Hon da's, Chevy's,
Jeep's,
Ect.
Police
Impounds! Cars !rom $500
tor lis tings 800-39 1-5227
E;XT 3901

1981 Olds 98, 4dr, Runs
Good,
Condition
fa ir
$1 ,QOOCall (304)675-1264
1989 Lincoln Town car,
exc.cond. 304·773-5326
t 993
BUick
Centu ry.
Burgundy, body in very
goOd condition. runs great,
very dependable. $1 ,900
(740)446-2048.
1995 Ford F-150 XLT. 8ft
bed, excellent condition .
Asking $7,500 060. Call
(740)992-1777.

llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllr:

East

... K 7

... 8 6 5 4

4(&gt; 108753
• Q 10 7

• 10
4(&gt; A 4
. K6532
7 ' '

1988 Ford F150, 79,300
'miles. Excellent co ndition.
5
speed ,
ove rdri ve.
(740)388-0140.
1 989 Ford F-250 diesel.
2WO, automatic, many
new parts, 130,000 miles,
ru ns good, body great
shape, no rust. $2 ,800.
Phone (7 40}44 1-9378
1995 F350 Dually Power
Stroke· aluminum bed w/
extras. 66,000 orlg. miles.
$ 15,000. Ca ll (740)2566746.
1997 Do dge Ram 1500,
4x4, truck, $4,900. Call
(740)446-0924.
1998 S10- 59,500 miles. 4
cyl, 5 speed, PS·PB·AC.
(740)441-9160
87 Chevy 1/2-ton. 2WD
350-engine. 81,000-miles,
good condition, PW/PL.
orig .
4
new
tires.
Aed/bl9.ck.
$4,700.
(740)506-1367.

I.

Tree Service

• Room Additions &amp;

'

COMME RCIAL and .

TRUCKS

FOR SALE

740-992-7599

for a free estimate.

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

91 Chevy 1500 4.3. V6 ,
black 2 WD, sha rp !ruck,
runs great , $3,500 OBO
(740)682-6236 .

r

suvs
FOR SALE

1995 Jeep
Cherokee
Sport, 4.0 automatic. air,
excellent cond . $3495.00
304-727-6924.

4l MaroRCYcLEN/
4WHEELER'i

4x4
·

FOR SALE

2004 H onda 450 -A. Front
·rackiback six-p ack rack,
full underneath skid plate.
co mplete shock covers
se t.
$4,500.(740 )446·
0350.

• Dcds • Porc hes
• Cu rports • Garages
• Ro&lt;Hn Add . • M in i
Barn s

• Kil chens • Baths
'"No /.VfJ To Sma/J"
Raci ne. OH

740-241-2 162 or
740-416-3508
14 yrs. Experience

r

VANS
FOR SALE

1993 Chevrolet Astro Va n,
QOOd con dition phone
(304)675-5077
1994 Chevy Astra Van. 7
passenger, excellen t con·
dition, new tires, 74,000
$3,200.
Ca ll
miles,
(740)256-8395.

"03" 34 ' Jayco Eag le 5th
whee l. Lo ts ol extras.
1740)339-021 8
1998 30' fifth wheel tmvel
trailer, double slide, Bxcel·
lent Co ndition. $13,900
phone: (740)698-9319

Buyers of standing timb·er
Also Land Clearing
Ask for Art

WJ!~I&lt;...~,lf'\1&gt; \9~, 1\tNEHI\JR.E:.

"'I.

C.P..LL(\)"GUtiG.i&gt;.
I"LOOSE.L'&lt; e,P6t:\)
01-1/1. \&lt;:.Ut11'~\) K\1'\.\~G

i

O£LL,Tf-1./-NK, '{OU,
LEONN':.C&gt; ('\1\L\1~ I
&amp;JT l J\J:)\ W~TEI&gt;
TO l&lt;.\'-l()I'.J 11\E\1\l£ 1

P..&amp;Af'i t&gt;llt&gt;\€.TE.tl&gt;IT\-\
it&gt;\\:&gt;1/1. 1 U1., -

Roctw..;:M~,"

BIG NATE

Hupp

wE iGHT

IMPORTS
Athens

T i ME TO·
· BRUS H U P
ON M'&lt;

PAP It&gt;
GAI N" '.

1HEIMLI CH
1

1'\J\NEllVER.

HE Y,
YO U
GON NA
F !Nl "&gt;H

THOSE
T AT ER

TOT'S?

•

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992·6635
" Middleport's only

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTIUCDOII
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
. Remodeling

140·992-1611
·Stop &amp; Compare

1998 Coachman motor

sAuto

!

P~uts

~~~~~~~~~~~

St. Rt.68 1 Darwin, O H
740-992-70 13 or 740C992-5553
/?estockiri!J f.nl£• Model Stli•D!Je
and Aft£•r Ma.r•ket Parts
See Brem or Brian Whaley
"M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon
Sun. Clos.ed

PEANUTS

I

I LOVED'f'OU~
~EPO~T TODA'! ON

RAINWATER,SIR ..

I !40PE

T~ E

TEACMER 6AI/E
"'*~ '(OLI A 600D
GRADE..

Now Available At

BAUM LUMBER

1

~

ANOTHER.

D- MINUS !

~~~~~~~~it~~~~

Scorpion Tractors
"Taking Th e Sti"g Out Of
Hard Work!"
Mid -S izl' 4Wheei Dri ve Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Eng ines

SUNSHINE CLUB
. MY FA1l-IJ:.R USEP 10 'YW I

BAUM LUMBER

TALKEDlOO MU&lt;H .. MY HIJ:S6Ao')D

St. Rt. 124 Chester . 985-3301

SIGN OF PR:f,LE.MS

SAID"fAU&lt;iNC, A t.m WAS A

GARFIELD

r4~~w.V I
1979 Hondo 750\ I O!h
Anniversary
Limited
Edition. Needs lgnltjon
work . Evenl nQ (740}256~
6870.
Low
mileage,
$2,500.
1986 Honda Foreman, 4
wd, excellent condition.
garag~
kept,
$2000,
(740)992-0413

. ~ 995

Harley
Softall
Custom, $9,995. Call
(606)232-8319.

.1998

Yamaha Warrier..
Excellent
condition ,
$2 ,600. 4-wl'leele r' tiresvarious sizes and condi·
lio~s. (740)446-0048.

BU&lt;L.T A
5NOWCAT!

. BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional
lifet ime
guara ntee . Local refer·
ences
furn ish ed.
Establi shed 1975. Call 24
Hrs . (740 ) 446·08 70.
Basement
Rogers
Waterprooling.

Hill 's Self
Storage
29670 Basha n Road

Culverts
plastic and metal, 6~ InCh·
es-60 Inches In stock. Ron
Evans
Enterprise.
Jocloion , OH 1(800)5379528

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINES
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

I UL.IEVf HE
HAC.K"P UP A

L.OOK, JON! I

Racine, Ohio
45771

740-949-2217

SNOWBAU.

ADVERTI
IN THIS SP~CE
FOR $50 per month
GRIZZWELLS
1&gt;k&gt;Ul\1 'PU L"1tH 10 l\\A1 ?

By Bernice Bede

. EGFKOFKV

ATYCMGOT

45

·
47

p~SI

ard J)(esent

L GAT

oc

F0 ' X

I
'

•

GK

AT D T K-X F B T

GKA

GVGFKXO

JTGECK
E.

KCO

FX

GEGMOLTKOX .

~ DDTKXFBT

OWT

TKTLP ."

EFYG X XC

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - :Firsllhought, b&lt;ls11houghl . - Jack Kerouac
"Do not ~ek expressions, seek thoughts to be expressed.' - H.D. Thoreau
(cl2005 by NEA. Inc. 2-24

Oaol

! NTHEW

. ~-,:..;.I;...;..I~I
t ~,~I

I

DEGEW ~~:' .
1--r---'r.--r--r--1

I. ., r-I . I -::
1

"'

-M--,1

True happiness is fir,dir.g

~OUl that the coy in high school
voted most likely 10 succeed,

~~-A-0-U-R~A

that
be" will
be21-June
supportive
GEMINI
(May
20) of
- your
'"Theefforts
faiths
today in endeavors where you are try1ng

@ P11NT

NUM!!I ED l!TlUS IN
TMES ! SOU ~RE S

I} UNSC IAMOL!
.:.

A&amp;OV!
TO GET AN SWE!

l!TTE15

SC~ETS

ANSWERS I -u- l l

Lu n~ey-Ixto 1- Viper - Oueesy- EXP ENSE
I now k~ow that holiday shopping makes ilharder than
ever 10 laugh at your own EXP ENSE.
·

ARLO &amp; JANIS
!11411JKT~E'- IW i!l ~ U!Jife;
QUAtJf Utll MU:HA!JIC!J,

of friends' or associates today who think
in peny 1er.ms and tend to be argumenta. 11ve. YotJ need allies who are congtmial
and can see things on the same grand
scale as you do.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - There's a
good chance today !hal you will benefit In
some manner from someth1ng worth·
while originated by a close trlend. The
deed cotJ id be spoiled. however. if you
lorget to say. "Thanks ."
SCORPIO {OCt. 24-Nov. 22)- Although
you may be cognizant oi 'the• fac1 !hal life
seldom offers sure things , lhings are apt
to· Qo yow way if you can keep the faith
and not get sidetracked .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . 21) Fortunately. today you are a bener doer
than you are a thinker. 11 you become
doubtlul. over what you 're doing, chances
are you'll easily sweep away your qualms
and stay Of! track_
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 1 9) It's
Important today that you allow the size ol
&amp;n Idea lc lake priority In your lhinkinliJ.
Don't settle for miniscule goats when you
haw an oppo~tunity to accomphh somethin" really meaningful .
AaiJARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 1 9) - Joint
ventures should work out qulle we ll for
you tOday. especially It you are affiliated
wlih aomeone who is a go-getter, as well
as a positive thinker. Clrcum\lent any

MIO...

Proff§~ l n n all 'flotoj~raphy

740-742-32 U,

" KC,

There's a strong possibility thai you will
have a tar greater number of career
oppo rtunilies in th e year ahead than y01.1
may ever have experie nced in the past.
Eac h will have excellent cha nces of
working ou t to you r satisfactio n .
PJSCES (Feb. 20- March 20)- Much to
your credit. you will be in clined to treat
friends l:lfld associateS: qu ite generously
today. You may even be willing to share
things with some peopl e who haven'!
earned yo.ur ki nd ness.
AR IES (Ma rcil 21-April 19) - The out- .
come will b e ·favom ble for you today in
situations where you use your own muscles 10 accomplish your goals. However,
you coul d go adrift .if you depend upon
others for reS ults .
TAUR U S (Ap ril 20-May 20) - II ,you 're
invited to participate in a friendly compelitive sport ioday, don 't make the score
more important than tlie game itself. Play
tor the· pure enjoyment of !he social interac1;on

CRusH

C&gt;N

eoaa,

8UT $-!&amp;. SW T IGNORES

Ra hleJ;

38
41
43

. Thursday, Feb. 24 , 200 5

I. G6T A HVO.IO
111aTGIRL ,-

PICTURf THIS!!

Calli an Car penlt r

37

rARTtCL~ r~~IC6AiJD GRAVITY.

f T!-101!6HT1J.IAT 'MlUW GH
YOUR A1TE:IJTJOIJ,

SOUPTO NUTZ

A"11\EM

famlllt.!l, f:niJaMemenl:'i,

34

. naysayers.

~EO'!\~ 17 AC1UAu:Y ~~' A
\liP II* ~\cl-1 c~; 1W&lt;. HA~I.L

&amp; \'ld~niphy
Any OCfl!lion· Portrall
Sessions. Wtddl ngs,

29
30
32

shockers
49 Slack
50 Avo.
erossers
51 Natalie' s
father
conve52 Unseal,
nlence
to Blake
Balon Rouge 53 - Braun
campus
of rockets
Weight54 Food ·
addlllva
!!her's pr ide
Vane dor.
Got wind of
Chase the
puck
Troubles,
to Hamiel
Songster
- Adams

Today's due · M8(/uaJs R

V IRGO (Aug. 2.3 -Sept. 22) -.S teer clear

,miles •. 2 sliding
doors, power windows &amp;
cru ise $6,300 (304 )675 4014

IMPRoVEMENTS

48 Underwater

respon se
Continent
divider
Parroted
Impair
Banking

27

a

ly.

home, 1 own er like new,
30 ft. 12,295. miles phone
304-675-'(892

2000 ·Col eni an (pop·u p)
AC/Iurn ace, lrl a. sink, 2
stoves, extra storage unit,
canopy. like new, $4,200.
(740)245·9268 call afl er
2000 Ford Winstar LX , · . 4pm.
81K, 2/elidlng doors, seats
-.. 1 H\ H I ...,
7, all power, rear air, llnted
wi.ndows, ask ing $6,900,
HoME
(7 401689-5853

25 Admirer's ·

by Luis Campos

· to develop something lor the benefit ol
others and not just tor yourself . Be a c:oo·
tributor.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- Show a
willingness to overtOOk the little things
that others say or do today which You
might find annoying, and In return they
will ove rtook any o f the silortcomings that
you tend 'to have.
.
LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22) - Today, il you 're
attempting l o do a big JOb tllat might ga1n
you recognition and rewa rd, don 't gel
hung up over insignificant small points
Let the big picture taU into place natural·

\.IH'o/-1r!-t-'-''tk:Hf-l'(l ,\Ill\

j,j

~ Precious
2 Tempo
3 Pointed
arch
4 Skulks about
5 Brown of
big bands
6 Coger's
offense
7 Wasinaplay
Taaso
9 Yale
alumnus
10 VIP's carpet
11 Rappar
Tone 12 - bag
16 She loved
Lennon
18 Poet's eye
20 Lawn tool
21 Gets boring
22 He and she
23 Bowling
score
24 Ollie.
of slapstick

'lbur 'lllrthdB(y:

r,:===== :::;-l !
• MOST

OOWN

Celebritv Cipher Cr}'l!IOgrams are C188ted frO!!', quotarons by lamous peopl!
Each letter fl lhe ci,t1er stand5 tor aootnel

AstroGraph

See

55 Moonshot
m ission
56 Movie frames
57 Camping
gear
58 Heavy tilers

CELEBRITY CIPHER

'

2000 Ford. Wi ndS tar LX.

200 1 Dodge · Caravan
Sport, 70,000 mile s, excellent condition . sliding
doors-both aides, auto, V6,
AIC , power everything,
time/temperature gaug e.
, $1 1,000.(740)256-8S43.

Pass
All PB.BS

percent.

0

Self-Storage"

MvroR HOI'&gt;IES

2 .,_
3 NT

1· Facetious
6 Impostor
·11 Sports
dtvlalon
t2 Easily
handled
13 Posse pies
14 Surpassed
15 Running
wetar
18 Stare rudely
17 Nlgh1club
number
19 Govt. branch
23 Jack of,"Barnoy
Miller"
26 Acuff snd
Bean
28 Oil opposite
29 Poise
31 Aerie builder
33 Harem head
34 Recently
35 Sooner than
36 Hwys.
39 Fem.
honorific
40 Wildlife
refuges
42 Unwelcome
obligation
44 Quicksand
46 Stays fresh
51 Many
·
bostsellers

Here is another quotation lrom "Either/Or"
by Soren Klerkegaard: "I ... begin with thC
priru':ip le that all men-are pores. Surely no
one will prove himself so great a bore as ·
to contradict me in t hi s .~
When you have only _
one chance to m3ke
a contract:- perhaps either a 3-3 split or
a fi nesse - yoo live or die by that result.
It is bori ng: there is no excitement.' Much
more fun are tHe deals in which you can
m3ke the contract when eh her A or 8
exists and you can try both.
1
In today's' deal, you are South , in three
no-tru mp. West leads the spade king.
Over to you
South's two-no-trump rebid is game-invitational , showing a good 10 to a -poor 12
high·card points. (It isn't ideal with only
ace-doubleton of spades, so three dia·
mends would . be preferable. ) Here, No'rth
has an easy raise to game. B.ut if he had
three-card heart support, he would show
it en route, as it were. keeping four hearts .
in the picture.
As always in no-trump, start by counti ng
your top tricks. Here. you have seven: one
spade. two hearts, th ree diamonds and
on e club. The extra tricks can come from
• eithe r a .3-2 diamond split or the club
finesse. And b ecause yQu have a hand '
entry in the heart king, yoU can try both of
them.
After taking the first or Second trick with
your spade ace, play on diamonds. When
the bad split is ·uncovered, return to hand
with a heart .to l ake th e club finesse . Your
chances have risen from yesterday's 67.8
percent (a 3-2 diamond break} to 83.9

• Siding • Win dow~

200 1 Jee p
Cherokee
Sport 4x4 power windows
&amp; locks, CO ,towing package 54,000 miles 304-675131 4

CAMPERS&amp;

Pass

East
Pass ·

Improvemt nl Needs

2002 Stingray 20 ft. open
bow, Red/ Whil e, 5.0 liter
V-8, Hustl er trailer, excel ~
lent co nd., gara ge kept,
price new $24.000 se ll
$15,700. call Troy Krebs
304-675-8828

99 Jeep Cherokee Sport,
4x4, · EC, gold, auto, PW,
PL, V6, CO, CC, keyless
entry, $6.500. (614)231. 1355.

~ .t~~~\!i)Q·Jn® .

All Your Home ·

MANlEfS
SElF STORAGE .
EArs&amp;M~~
FOR SAUl

1"2 new trailer axles with
brakes, wheels and tires .
740 992·7651'

s~.v~U®r 16®,®~111®

TO

2005 Kawasaki V·Twin 750
Vulcan
Cycle.
never
dropped, garaged, 50mpg.
$4,400 (3'14 )675-2942

4 BBL. auto, new tires. rot·
e-rs. $ 1, 1oo, (740)9923679

NOW IF I COULD GIT HER TO
QUIT I&lt;ICK1N' TH' HAND THAT
MILKS HER '!
,__.....-~

Construction

1997 Chevy B lazer. Auto,
2dr, 4 whee l dr, power
win dows. mirrors &amp; door
locks, rear wiper &amp; defrost .
A/C , AM/FM CO, CrUise, tilt
alloy wheels $5,500 ca ll .
after 5pm (304)675-294 9

86 B ro nco XLT, 4 WO, 302,

BARNEY

1-888-321-0311
740-682-6188

1999 Ho nda· Z50R great
$700
. OBO.
shape,
(304)675·5200 ask lor
Doug or (740 )44 1-0931.

1998
Jeep Cherokee
ClaSsic, 4.0, automatic;, ,
fully loaded $5495. 3042004 Harley Davidson 883
727-6924
4,500
custom.
black.
mi
les.
$7,500.
(740)4412002 Chevy Ava lanche
1583·.
Z7 1. Fully loaded , Or:J Siar,
heated ' se ats, . 29,000
miles, moonroof , 4-wheeldri\le, CD, $23,400 0 80.
(614)989-6448.
.

UNDA'S PAINTING

1999 Honda ES 4"w heeler. Excellent -cond ition
$4,000 080 . (740)2566655.

2003
Kawasaki
KDX
200cc 2 stroke. excellent
condition, $3, 000.
2003 H qnrta fja nch er ES,
2 WD, excellent co ndition,
$3.0 00. (740)446-8402.

Brian Reeves
New Hom e Construction, Remodeling,
Renovations. Dec ks. Garages, Pole
Bu ildings. Roofs, Siding, Windows &amp; All

FREE ESTIMATES

Ta~e

~

Sunset Home
Construction

Other Res ident ial Needs
Phone: 740-742-3411

RESIDENTIAL

Pass

+,

Two chances are
better than one

· ~ llUN OVT Of MONeY
/ leFOilt ~ llVN OVT
Of MONTt4.

-IN

Fei((VAilY...

V.C. YOUNG Ill

• Rep lacement
.Win.dpws • Roofing

I

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
~VeN

New Homes • Vi nyl
Siding • . New Garages

North

Opening lead: • K

furnace work

BISSELL

West

2NT

Top • Removili • Trim
· • Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

R• modallrtg
• New Garages
• Ef•ctrical &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Gutter•
• VInyl Sid ing &amp; Painting
• Patio m d Porch Decks

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: Both

South

91.000

·'

West
4(&gt; K Q J 2
• J 98
• ,J9 • s

South

JONES'

CARPENTER
SERVICE

I

•

1985 Chevy Silverado. 300
miles on rebuilt 350, but
won't hold oil pressure.
$700.
Ca ll
Asking
(304)675-5979.'

YOUNG'S

Let me do it for you

Ir

II{\ '\'1 1'01{ I \114 l '\

A~J~U;

Ho!Jie • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 41)1 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicare Su • Cancer • Accident

BUILDERS InC. ·

BINGO

2003 Mitsubishi Eclipse.
Excell ent
· .Condition
$14,500
99 Dodge Intrepid good
shape 54,000 (304}6756986

If

... A103 2

We do It all except

98 Cadillac Catera. Fully
equipped, reether interior,
low miles, iflint condition.
$7.900. Ca ll (740)7043751 .
'

parts &amp; service,
specializ ing in Massey
Ferguson , Ford. l ong ,
and Belarus . ( 740)695 ~
0358

"

• A 4
+ AKQ5 3

•

6304.

Tr·~cto r

n2-2...05

... Q J 9

2002 Ford Escort ZX2, 5
speed, 29 ,000 miles, air,
one owner. Nice (740)44 10 157 or (740)645-5 141 .

2000 M.F. 231 S Tractor
235 hrs. $9 ,500 Call
(740)256-6746.

GIWN

Th e Family of
Cora M; Folmer

Honda Civic LX
Coupe. Green, automatic,
exce ll ent conditi on, ve ry
clean, 73,000 highwaymiles, $8,395 negotiable
(614)3 13-7096.

EQ\JJPII!ENf

r

Sonshine Cirr:;le
Sponsoring "Classic Color"
Family Portraits on
March 5 &amp; 6
10x13 Portrait $10.00
For inio. or apt. call
Hart - 949-2656
Sterrett- 949-0032

200~

FARM

..
i

North

1996 Buick Century, 4 dr.
Maroon iri color, 94.000
miles, good conditi on
$2 ,995(304)675- 1506

I \I( \I ". I 1'1'1 II s
\'\I I\ I S it)( h.

HAv&amp;

Phillip
Alder

appreciation

Aura;

54 Survived
(2 wds.)

ACROSS

grandmother Cora M.
Folmer. To Home
Heal th Services and
Hospice for all 1hcir
care and suppon. For
the food , flowers ,
cards, prayers and to
Rev. Steve Tomek and
Fisher Funeral Home
for all thei r kindness.
Wit h Q Ur sincere

M USICAl

LIVESTOCK

to

great grandmother,
gr.eat
grea t

Shellie pups: 2MI2F, AKC ,
Born 12131, Vet Chk'd,
shots &amp; wormed . S600.
POP.
(740)473-2785,
(740)236-0028

Complete family of Ohio
River Bears.- $100.
Antique Goosenec~
. Rocker, newly upholstered· $200
Rocker Recliner- $100
Complete set of
Budweiser X-mas mugs. $100
AmiSh Rocker· $ 150.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

apprcdation upon the
recen t death of our
Mother, grandmother.

Purebred Border Collie
pups. Imported bloodlines ..
tst shots/wormed . Classic
colors. $100 each. Call
(740)379-911 0.

r

i i k~

The Daily Senti nel • Page B5

www.mydailysenfinel.com

express our sincere

Miniature Schnauzer puppies, AKC , salt/pepper.
black/silver, 9 wks, 2 shots.
vet/ , S400, (740)696-1085

151Q

Thursday, February 24, 2005
ALLEYOOP
.

Card ofThanks

Inside · sale: MiSy items,
IN&gt;TRUMINIS
such as clothing, some fur·
niture , pictures. lamps, all . Need old string instrureasonable priced.
ments. Repa1rable or lo(
Skaggs Applia nces
arts. Call 740 256· 1335.
76 Vine Street
FOR SALE
(740)446-7398

Furnished 3 rooms &amp; bath.

: clean, no pets. Relerence
•&amp;
deposit
requ 1red .
: (740)446-1 519

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Yo.) G~~D l-t.T ~ kNOW

IN

SoME SUt&lt;ILE

~~JC8L

Wa'/ 1\&lt;;[1 '~bu. L\k£ ~£!!

X

\&lt;1$8

t'~

.9ND

11&lt;1'/&gt;o.l - ' : ' AT &gt;&lt;£R...

�Pope undel"goes
successful tracheotomy
·after being rushed
to hospital, A2
.

Look inside today's
edition for 2005 Bridal
special section
. Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel
·~

artoo ,.

.....

-

~ ea

www:mydailysentlnel.com .

Thursday, February 24, 2005

\

\...

.quarters return s to f\rlel Saturday
'

By lan McNemar
IMCNEMAR@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - For the second year in a row,
Cartoon Headquarters will be performing at the
Ariel Theatre this Saturday.
The show is made up of 25 cast members
dressed as different cartoon characterS
and will bring a fun, interactive and
energetic experience for kids of all ages.
The shows are at 2 and 6 p.m. and will
be jam packed full of every child's favorite
cartoon characters. . Shrek, Spiderman,
Batman and Robin,. Cinderella, Care Bears,
Sully and Mike, Winnie the .Pooh and Tigger, the
Incredible Hulk, Scooby Doo and friends and many
more.
"It's a wonderful · show for the whole family," said
Christine Coger, administrative assistant at the Ariel. "It's
fun, raw energy. There is never a dull moment."
The company hails from Clarksburg, W.Va., and has done shows all over
the tri-state area.
The show was a big success last year at the theatre. Nearly all
seats were sold out for both shows and they are close to surpassing
that mark this week.
The show child and family oriented.
Tickets are $10. Tickets are becoming limited and they
are close to selling out, according to the Ariel• .
.For tickets and more information,
contact the Ariel Theatre
box /.
,
o
office at (740) 446-2787.
·
. .
I

Dwight Icenhower
returns to Down Under
GALLIPOLIS
On
Friday
and
S&lt;!turday
evenings, March 4 . and 5,
Dwight Icenhower, the well·
known and popular Elvis
impersonator, wiII return to
the Down Under, performing ·
two dinner shows on Friday
evening, and again, two din·
ner shows on Saturday
evening.
The first each evening
wifl be seating at 6 p.m.,
with rhe second seating at
8:30 p.m. The re~ taurant is
now accepting reservations
·
for both evenings.
Friday evening 's dinner
performances will · feature
music ofthe 1950s and '60s,
while
Saturday's dinner
shows will be Los Y~gas
show music.
When Icenhower appeared
at the Down Under in
January, his 'dinner shows
were total sell-outs. As
David Rice, manager, and
Dwight Icenhower .
Jeff Nelson, bar manager,
point out, early reservations he appears.
will guarantee seating. The
"We are really pleased to
restaurant is now accepting have Dwight make a return
reservations · for either or appearance .by
p,opular
both nights featuring these demand at the Down Under,
unique dinner shows.
presenting two totally differIcenhower is not only a ent shows, Friday and
re~ional favorite as an enter- Saturday night," Rice said .
tamer. He has achieved "A fast sell-out is expected.
national
recogmuon. A We urge people to make
native of Pomeroy, he began their reservations immediate·
his "Elvis career" when he ly for either or both nights,
was only 16. He is one of . to enjoy this great entertainer
very few Elvis tribute a.I;lists during a dinner show."
who has made a full-time . Reservations are available
career keeping the Elvis leg- by calling (740) 446-2345,
end alive.
between 5 and 10 p.m .
He is known for his amaz, · Tuesday .through Saturday
ing voice and good looks, evenings, when the Down
sometimes being mistaken · Under Restaurant is open.
for Elvis himself. Traveling Combining an outstanding
aJI over rhe country, he often dinner with great entertainperforms four to five shows ment is the ·perfect way to
· weekly. He attracts ·fans from spend a Friday or Saturday
rhroughout the area wherever evening.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio .

GALLIPOLIS
The
French Art Colony, 530 First
Ave. , Gallipolis, presents its
2005 fund-raising campaign,
"Everything's A Game," to be
held Saturday, Marth 5 from
6:30 to 9:30p.m.
This fun-filled night will
include scrumptious food,
along silent auction and raffle
items. The evening has been
made possible, in part, by a
donation
from
Century
Aluminum of Ravenswood.
Tickets should be purchased in
advance. Call the FAC at 4463834 for ticket information.

A sneak preview at some of of Rio Grande's Lyne Center;
the silent auction items up for a "Pizza Fest" packa~e
bid are as follows: Two Ohio (Lorobi's,
Jimanetti s,
State football tickets (Jan Domino's, Giovanni''s, Pizza
Thaler): an ·office chair and Plus and Pizza Hut); "Chinese
blanket both done in Gallia dinner for 8" prepared by Nian
Academy
l3lue
Devils Hong Yang an outstanding
(Graham's.Upholstery); wash- Chinese chef: "Bowling/Pizza
ing, wax and cleaning of rhe party for 10" (Skyline Lanes);
inside of a car/van (Gene week get-a-way to Emerald
Johnson Chevrolet); a 16-foot Isle, N.C. (Kay Cameron) and
flagpole and flag (Thomas Do· more.
It Center); a signature spa 1 Besides the numerous silent
facial (Mane Designers) ; auction items up for bid you
hand-painted vase (Bonnie can also try your chance to win
Penix); two one-year family ·numerous raffle items. Many
memberships to the University more silent auction/raffle

items are being confirmed.
The French Art Colony, a
non-profit organization, has
several fund-raisers during the
·year to help support the facility. A special thank you is
offered to all businesses and
individuals who have donated
items to make this event possible.
Tickets for this fun-filled
night are $25 a couple and $14
a person. Please ca11446-3834
for more information. All FAC
programming is offered
through sul'port of the Ohio
Arts CounciL

UWGC's 'Hot Time' b~nefit slated for this Saturday
STAR' REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - United
Way of Gallia County has set
the date for the annual "Hot
Time in the Old Town" dinner
benefit for Saturday, Feb. 26,
from 6 to 9 p.m. The
Gallipolis Holiday Inn will
host the event.
Th,e benefit will ' feature
entertainment by the Freeman
bal)d, a roast beef and chicken
dinner buffet, celebrity waiters
and many prize opportunities.
All auction and raflle items
were donated by local busi'nesses,
including
a
YCR/DVD combo from WalMart. All items will be displayed with an identifying
card in gratitude to the
donors.
'
Last year's Hot Time was a
success, raising money for the
United · Way agencies ·while
United Way members and
Jlffiliates enjoyed fun and fellowship. The II agencies that
provide UWGC funded ser-

vices include: American Red
Cross of Gallia County,
Arthritis Foundation-Ohio
River Valley Chapter, Boy
Scouts of America, Tri-State
Area
Council,
Family
Addiction
Community
Treatment and Prevention
Services (FACTS), Gallia
County Council on Aging,
Galli a-Meigs
Community
Action Agency, Girl Sd:JUts,
Seal of Ohio Council . Inc.,
Holzer Hospice, the Outreach
Center: Serenity House and
Woodland Centers. ·
The United Way of Gallia
County members . and affili·
ates w!'luld like to encourage
the community to step out for
. an evening o( celebr.ation
while supporting local humaf1
service agencies. Seating is
limited, so reservations are
requested. Tickets are on sale
now for $25.
Reservations may be made
by calling 446-2442, and
Submitted photo
reservations left via voice- Retired United Wa~ of Gallla County Executive Director Jean
mail will be accepted until all Houck, left, dances with Jay Tatum , current campaign chairman,
at the 2004 "Hot Time in the Old Town " fund-raiser for UWGC.
seats are claimed.

\\\\\\ . nf\d,llh ..,•· utuwl••&gt;~• •

Davenport 'hopeful' about Meigs AEP project

SPORTS

'

• Eastern looks to tame
.Bobcats. See Page 81

. .

'

J.

dent electric transmission provider, to
evaluate transmission interconnection
feasibility for three potential sites: the
POMEROY - Meigs County Great Bend site, a site adjacent to
Commissioner Mick Davenport said AEP's Moul)taineer Plant. in New
he is "hopeful " about the chances of a Haven , W.Va., and an Ohio River si te
new power plant coming to Meigs in Lewis County, Ky.
.
County after attending a meeting in
Davenport attended a meeting in
Columbus last week.
· · Columbus last Friday to . discuss the
At Thursday 's regular meeting of ·environmental concerns associated
Mei gs County Commissioners, with each of three sites AEP is now
Davenpon said he remains optimistic · giving serious consideration . AEP
that American Electric Power will engineers and the U.S. Army Corps
choose a site along the Ohio River at ·. of Engineers, Ohio Department of
Great Bend near the Lebanon/Letart · Natural ~e sources , Ohio Department
Township line for the new clean-coal of Tran sportation , Environmental
plant. Earlier this month, AEP Protection Agency and Ohio
announced it has asked an indepen- Historical Society participated in the
Bv BRIAN

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

meeting to discuss what permits will Belleville and Racine .
be necessary and how the environOnce . operational, the. facility
ment might be impact~d by the con- wot)ld employ approximately I00 .
struction of the plant.
· people, and would be an economic
The
Corps
of
Engineers , boon to the county, especially the
Davenport said, would oversee the Southern and Eastern Local School
issuance of all permits relating to the . Di stricts. It would provide "thouconstruction.
sands' ' of jobs during its construction ,
·'The meeting went very well , and AEP has said .
it appears that the Great Bend si te. is , The three sites named are consid·
a good one in terms of environmen· ered front runners because they are
tal impact," Davenport sa id . "We're already owned by AEP, and because
still hopeful. "
of their acreage, contour and wate.r
According to Davenport,, the Ohio proximity. The proposed plant is a
River sediment . pool at Great Bend .co mmercial -size ·
Integrated
makes the Mei gs County site particu- Gasification
Combined
Cycle
larly good for the project, because it (IGCC) clean-coal plant, and would
is located between two dams be the first of its size in the U.S.

Community manual .will help people help themselves

3664th
members
•
coming
home
'

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

0BmJARIES
Page AS
• Wayne 0. Roush, 83

'EVERYTHING'S A GAME' FUND-RAISER SET FOR FAC

11(11)\\ , IIBI{l ' \I{,~.J .:!. UO.)

.•o(I'\IS•\ol ·.1 \.o . l't;t

INSIDE"
• Yeager assists in New
Horizons operation. See
Page .A3
' AE P discusses futur-e
investment at Mountaineer.
See Page AS
• Meigs Area Holiness
Association to hold indoor
camp meeting. See
Page· A6
• Mason Police
Department receives two
new police officers. See
· Page AS

WEATHER

POMEROY - Local agencies are joining forces to create a data base of information
that .will link the people of
Meigs County with the proper resources.
This information is being
collected into a manual called
the
Meigs
County
Community
Resource
Manual. The guide will be
used by professionals to refer
clients to proper agencies,
including health-care facilities
in and around Meigs County.
The guide does not limit
itself to focusing on healthcare but also acts as a reference guide for those searching fo{ aging , children's, edu. cation, government, financial
and volunteer services.
The committee that is
assembling the guide come
from a variety of different
fields. They are Billie Bently,'
Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce; Andy Brumfield,
County
Health
Meigs
Department (MCHD) cardiovascular grant coordinator;
Sharon Bushong, Family and
Children First coordinator;
Connie Little, MCHD Child
and Family Health Services
project director; Tom Reed,

Bv BRIAN

· Details on Page A8

J.

2 SECTIONS- 16 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
·Dear Abby
Editorials
Faith•Values
Movies
NASCAR
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A3
Bs-6
B7
A3

A4'
A6-7

As
B4

As
B Section
A8

© auos Ohio Valley Publishing,Cu.

.

BY KEVIN KEU.Y
KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

POINT PLEASANT - It's
official: Members of the
3664th
· Maintnen;~ce
Company of the West Virginia
Army National Guard, based
in Mason and Putnam coup- ·
ties, are returning home on
Monday following a year's
deployment to Iraq .'.
Maj. Michael Cadle, public information officer for
the . National Guard's headquarters in Charleston, confirmed that about 150 memBeth 5ergemjphoto
A grou·p of professionals from various agencies. have combined forces to compile the Meigs bers of the company are
scheduled to return .
County
. Community Resource Manual which will be available on the Internet in the hopes' of linkThat 's. the entire unit, he
ing people with the Correct resources . Pictured are members of the manual work group going
over the data they have collected, Sharon Bushong, Norma Torres. Andy Brumfield and Connie added.
Little. Not pictured are Billie Bentley, Lenora Leifheit.
· They will arrive in
Charleston around II :45 a.m.
Gallia-Meigs Community of collecting and editing data group that the Meigs County Monday and will be treated
Action
· director: Norma'
which will then be transferred Economic Development and to a homecoming celebration
\
Torres, previous Meigs into manuals for professional · Tourism board will offer Web at the !30th Airlift Wing at
County health commissioner; agencies as well as onto the space on the Meigs County Yeager Airport, Cadle said.
and Lenora Leifheit, Meigs Meigs County Supersite web- Supersite free of charge for
The troops have been at
County Pari sh nurse.
site for all to access.
'Please see J664th, AS
Please see Manual, A5
Bentley reported to the
The group is in the process

Convicted car thief
sentenced to 18 months

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

INDEX ·

.

BY BRIAN J. REED ·
BREEIJ@MYDAilYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY -Individuals
and community groups have
donated $1,734 toward the
completion of renovations at
the Meigs County Jail, and ·
County Commissioner Jim
Sheets said he is confident
the state will allow the facility to be re-opened once renovations are completed.
At Thursday's regular meet·
ing of Meigs County
Commissioners, the Racine
B~an J. Reed/ photo
Area C'Ommunity Organization Betty Sayre and Elizabeth Rsher, representing Racine Area
donated $500 to the project and Community Organization·. and Victor Young Ill pr~sent Sheriff
Victor Young lll donated $100. Robert Beegle and County Commissioners Jim Sheets and
Mick Davenport with donations toward the renovation of the
Meigs
County Jail.
Please see Donations. A5

POMEROY
-A
Chillicothe man was sentenced Wedne~day ,to I 8
months in prison for grand
theft auto. a week af~r a .iury
convicted him.
A Common Pleas Court jury
convicted Lawrence Legg, 21.
of grand theft auto on Feb. 15.
and acquitted him on charges
of breaking and entering and
vandalism in connection with
the Nov. 7 attempted theft of a
Ford Explorer owned by
Wesley Karr.

Legg and a co-defendant.
Craig Karr. were charged in
November indictments in connection with the incident. A
burglary charge against Legg
was dismissed prior to trial.
Judge Fred W. Crow Ul sentenced Legg to 18 months in
prison on the charge. 'and Legg
also is subject to potential
charges resulting from a probation violation in Ross County.
Legg 's cousin, Craig Karr,
21. also of Chillicothe,
entered a plea agreement just
prior to Legg's trial, admit-

Please see ConYided. A5

'
0

'

t

I

.Otleoa Syauo•s .

,24CIIO Eutlm AvL ·
1/4 Mile Nortta
,cro... hom IC'? 51) Pomeroy/MuOn Bridge

GIIHpollt, Ohio 11lt1

M,ton, WV 21280

(740) 448-1)'11

Phone (304) 773-5323

ability to justautly and
automatlealiy ahatyze aud
adjust the SC)UDd Is made
possible by state-of-the-art
application or microchip
proceSsing.
·

DILES HEARING CENTER

Two Corritn!tnt ' osetfrew:

Diane McVey GALLIPOLIS
M.A., CCC·A
(hnaer lr Aud~l'

43S•!J second Avenue
( AcrtJ!o~ rrom Pu~1 Of'li.;:c)

. Open Moo. 1 Thur~ . 1D O-:"ipm

(740) 446-7619
u

.232AmoN
Huron Street
t M{'(i raw Phyq ct J ThCrlltJY Bldg. I

Open Tucli .. Wed .. Thu ~ .

R ·.m.~rm

(740) 286-1430

•

ATHENS
275 Wtst Union Street
Open -Mun. - Fri. 8:30-5pm
Saturda y h)' Appnintmc nt

(740) 594-3571

aina~laa

.

'

•

WORLD LMDa iN HIIJtiiiG I ICS ffOi.OGY
MIIIODUCIIWOI'I M HalT

INTELLIGENT HEARING AID

The goal was to create an instrument that processes sound the way the human
-brain does. We call it Artificial Intelligence . it selectively responds to voice levels
and background noises; amplifying, suppressing and actually managing sound for
better
and
comfort.
'l

- ------..

,,
-

-·---

•
--~-----------

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="501">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9952">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="17081">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="17080">
              <text>February 24, 2005</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
