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                  <text>"Tuesday, March 8,

www .mydailysenthiel.com

· Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

College

•
2005

Syracuse Police
Deparbnent makes

Basebaii · --~-------.,----

RiO Granpe splits twinbill with Miami-Hamilton
with a two base hit.
Barry Roe improved to 2-0 on the
season as he lasted five innings on the
hilL Roe struck out seven and walked
seven while yielding only one hit in
five shutout innings:
Miami-Hamilton · scored its' only
run off senior reliever Soloman Alam.
The bats went missing in game two
as the Red men dropped a 4-2 decision.
Rio missed out numerous scori ng
opportunities; it left the bases loaded
in the fourth inning and could not
score after getting runners at second

STAFF REPORT
sports@ mydailytribune . com

Red men
•
offense going
2-for-3 with a
double and
HAMLLTON -The University of
triple. Senior
Rio Gmnde Redmen baseball returned
T~~6-seb~zU center fielder
to the dian10nd on Sunday. splitting a
.s c 0 t t
doubleheader with Miami-Hamilto~. Peterman collected two doubles in
The Redmen won the lirst game 8-1 four plate appearances and drove in
and dropped the second game 4-2:.
three runs . . Junior tlrst baseman
Rio Grande (8-3) spent a lot of time Michael Branon and junior catcher
in the gap in the first game as it ripped Jorge Morales went 2-for-4 each with
live doubles and one triple. Junior sec- a double and sophomore third baseond baseman Mike Golom led the man Michael Warren went 1-for-3

0'

and third in both the third and fifth
frames. The Redmen would also
strand runners in the sixth and seventh
innings. Rio hitters struck out eight
times.
Peterman went 1-for-4 at the plate
and knocked in both Redmen runs ..
Golom was also 1-for-4 with a triple
and scored a run and junior shortstop
Matt Martin was l-for-2 with a double.
.
Junior lefty Brent Walterson · had
one bad inning and it cost him.
Watterson ( l-1) went the distance,

Division I-ll All-Ohio (iirls Teams
COLUMBUS (AP) -The 2004·2005 Associated Press
Division 1 and II girls All-Ohio h1gh school basketball
team . based on the recommendations of a state media

panel:

·

DIVISION I

FIRST TEAM: Shana Andrus , Barberton . S:loot-11.
senior, 19.0 points per game; N1ki McCoy, Sylvania
Northview, 5-11 , sr., 16.7; Jessica Minnlield, Tol. Cen1.
Cath., 5-6 , sr. , 14.1; Kate Verhoff, Elyrta. 5- 10, sr .. 20.6: ·

Magan Skouby, Mentor. 6-6 . sr. . 23.1. Maria Getty. Dayton
Chaminade-Julienne. 5-9. sr .. 14 .6. Michelle Jones, C1n.

Mt. Notre Dame. 6-2. sr., 16.3. Marshae Dbtson, Cols.
Mi111in,. 6-0, sr., 18.9: Star Allen: Cols. Independence, 511, sr .. 21 .1.
Players ot the year: Michelle Jones, Cin. Mt. Notre.
Dame; Maria Getty, Dayton Chaminade-Julienne; Megan
Skouby, Mentor
Coach of the year: Manny May. Tol. Waite.
SECOND TEAM: Abby Bunstine. Chillicothe , 5-7, sr ,
22.8; Jessica Moore, Youngs. Boardman. 6-0 , sr., 15.0;
Janna SchOn~ . Pickerington North , 5-7. "sr. , ' 12.5; Carlee
Roethlisberger, Findlay. 6-0, soph .. 16.5. Jacy Schulz,
t.1idpark. 5-8, Jr., 20.3; Aisha Jefferson , Dayton
Chaminade-Julienne, 6-2, sr., 14.2; Denise Tate, Cleve
GlenVille, B-1 , sr., 15.4; Carly Hawkins, Stow. 5-7, sr.,
13.5
'
THIRD TEAM: Maddie McGarvey, Zanesville, 5-7, Jr.,
19.9: Shareese Ulis. Tol. Waite. 5-6 , soph., 11 .3; Special'
Jennings, Cleve. E. Tech, S--6, soph., 17.8; Leslee MasonCox, Ciri. Winton Woods , S-9, Jr., 20.1: Amber Will , N.
Canton t-1oover, 5-5 , jr., 12 0'.
Special Mention
Jennifer Bushby, Gahanna L1ncoln ; Jodie McClain ,
Westerville SoUth; Allison Lawyer, Zanesville ; Brittany
Wells , Miamisburg; Britney Brooks, Harrison : Jessica
Harris, logan: Megan McAuley. Marietta ; leah Mottayaw,
Mansfield Madison; Jenny Kohr, Painesville Riverside ;
Audra Mihalic. Amherst Steele ; Kourtney Brown. Solon;
Cassie Schrock, Wadsworth ; Ta-myra Davis , Akron
Firestone. ·
· Honorable Mention
Tammy Anderson, Galloway Westla nd: Ashleigh Brown,
Delaware Hayes: Stephanie Foster. COi s. Brookhaven;
Mlk~ Marteina , Cols. East; Cydnei Stoudt, Pickerington
North;
Angel Morgan. Sprihgfield North ; Rachel Fiely,
Greenville; Amber Gray, Lal&lt;:ota West: Knsten Richardson ,

.Oxford Talawanda; Catherine Bove. Cin . Ursuline; Ashlee
Bridge, Cin. Princelon:
· .
Krissy Koester . Wapal&lt;:oneta; Stephany Johnson, Tol.
Bowsher; Tatyana McNeal, Tol. Waite; Allison Florian, Tol.
St. Ursula: Tia Simms, Fremont Ross;
Cassie Barandi , Painesville ' Riverside: Klerstin Fill a.
Chardon : ·Jamie Henry. Garfield His.; Jihann Williams.
Glenville; Ashley Barnett. Cleve. Lincoln West; Megan
Wydra, Norlh Roya l ton~ Ashley Carney, Solon; KeyAuna
Jenkins, Cle. John F. Kennedy ;
Sahar Nusseibeh. N. Canton Hoover: Brinany Mingo,
Barberton; Ashley Veal, Wadsworth: Brittany Orban. N.
Canton Hoover; Jen Uhl. Wadsworth; Abby Kacsandi ,
Wooster: · Jasmine Baity, Brunswick; April Melquist,
Youngs. Boardman.

DIVISION II
FIRST TEAM: lindsey Gaul, Navarre Fairless, 5-5,
junior, 21.3'points per game; Tan iesha Holland. Youngs.
Rayen , 5-8. sr.. 25,0; Shelly Bellman, Ottawa-Glandorf, 5·
10. sr.. 13.6; Kerri Kraus. Upper Sandusky; 5-, 0, sr., 20.0;
Radhele Fitz, G'arfield His. Trinity, 6-0, Jr., 27.0; Jessie
s 'lack. Thornville Sheridan, 5-1 1, sr., 16.4: Oennale
Speakman, Chillicothe Unloto, 5-7, sr., 25.5; Na'lalie
Miller, Dover, 5-9, sr., 20.3: Tricia Smith, Dre sde n TriValley, 5-11. sr.. 14.3; Lynzee Johnson. Bellbrook, 5-10,
jr .. 21.6; Christine OiSabato,.Cols. DeSales, 5·7, sr., 13.3
Player or the year: Rachele Fitz, Garfield Hts. Trinity.
Coaches of the year: Jim Miranda. Cols. Eastmoor
Acad .; Marty Bice, Dresden Tri-Valley.
SECOND TEAM: Kristin Daugherty, Warsaw River View,
6-0. soph., 17.9; Bree Hinkle, Cols. Bexley, 5-7, jr. , 16.4;
Jessica Hoeh, 51. Bernard Roger Bacon, 5-11, sr., 14.8;
Rachel Green, Canal Fulton NW, 6-2. sr., 17.7: Tori Arndt,
Beloit W. Branch , 6-2, sr.. 12.5; Amanda Mondrach,
Parma HIS. Holy Name, 5-9, sr., 20.2; Teresa Scott. Cols
Eastmoor Acad ., 5-7, jr., 15.2.
THIRD TEAM: liz Aepella, Sle4benville, 5-1 1_, sop)l.,,
22 .0. Kim Yourig, Pemberville Eastwood, 5-4, Jr., 18.5;
Allie Clifton,' Van Wert. 5-11, jr.. 19.9; Haley Kapferer,
Jef1erson Area, 6-3, soph., 21.1 ; Bayley Nosal, Chagrin
Falls Kenston_, 5-6 , sr., 15.6: Michele Derr, Urbana, 5-9,
jr .. 20.7
SpeCial Mention
Alethea Lamberson. london; Cherise Daniel, Cols
Eastmoor Ac_ad.; Kelly Polen, ~ad iz Harrison Central:
Lauren Flood, Ai~hmcind Edison local; Sarah Van Horn,

McConnelsville Morgan; Tiffany Youel, Byesville
Meadowbrool&lt;:;. Lauren Sharpe, Tipp City Tippecanoe;
Sakara House, Spring. Kenton Ridge; Oeseree Byrd, Cin .
Taft: Kristen Bradshaw, McDermott NW; Jackie Wamalay,
Gallipolis Gallla · Academy; Sam~ntha Leach. WCH
Miami Trace; Marissa Groves, Lancaster Fairfield Union;
Elaine DiCesare, FostOria; Paris Pugliese, Bay VIllage
Bay; Alexis Korovich, Geneva; Kealy McNally, Rocky
River; Oayna Smith, Garfield Hts. Trinity; Jessica Wood,
Warren Champion: Serena Farage , Medina Buckey;
Kathleen Gladstone. Cuy. Falls Walsh Jesuit Sarah

Bengals RB Rudi
Johnson signs
one~year contract

Hamilton. Salem:Tenishia Benson, Akron Hoban; Br;ttany
Cl.NCINNATI (AP)
'
HonorobleMonllon
Running _back . Rudi Johnson
oomin~que Daniels. cots. DeSales; Ayana Dunning,
signed a one-year, $6.3 milcots EaS1moor; carla Lawls, Sunbury Big Walnut; It' on contract Monday to. stay·
· Deanna Pickett, New Albany; Ashley Trimble. Cols.
HamiltonTwp.;
·w ith the Cincinnati Bengals
Mallory
Yaiko,
lisbon
Beaver
Local;
Amanda
Bryan,
this season, a year after he set
Carrollton; Trisha Uhl, Millersburg W. Holmes; Rachel
Poorman, Zanesville Maysville; Alana Pavol,. the team' s single-season
McConnelsville Morgan ; 'Lauren Valentjne, Byesville · recofd for .rushing yardage.
Meadowbrook; Whitney Williams, Warsaw River View;
Kirstin Wright, New Philadelphia;
Johnson set . a Ben gals
Emily Noble. Franklin; Jessie Carmack, unto Miami; record last season with ] ,454
Katie Schneider, Western Brown; Erica Richardson ,
·
f
Wilmington; Janna Smith, Indian Lake; Sydney Huntley, rushing yards. He is still ree
Gin. Purcell Marian;
.
to negotiate a long-term conKayle Waller. Thornville Sheridan; Brlanna Davis,
t
· WhIC
· b he
Proctorville Fairland; lauren Justice. lancastar Fairtield rae t WI·tb th e tearn,
Union; Sammy Pierce, Pomeroy Molgo; Victoria leali, sa~s he wants to do. He was
Jackson;
Heather Ellis, McDermon NW;
prud $1..8 m1lhon 10 2004..
Melissa Goodall, lexington; Paula Wargo, Port Clinton;
Megan Sellers. Norwalk; Tori Foltz, lima Shawnee; Carla
Johnson . became . a free
wf~~~n.g~~t~. Chardon Notre Dame-Cathedral Latin; agent on March 2, but the
Daniello Vala, Cleve. His. Beaumont; Ka~ie Fulkerson, Bengals designated him their
Parma His. Holy Name; Ainnie Mayer, Fairview; Hannah franchise player on ' Feb. 15,
Ryan, Perry; Nltasha Keyes, Warrensville Hts.; Eulise
·
h
ld
·
.Dickerson, Warrensville Hts.; Alexis Karel, Mentor lake meantng t ey COU
retain
cath.,
him by matc hing any offer
Carrie Dyer, Copley; Brinany Tabron. Caoton Cent. sheet he signe. d with another
McGarry, Salem,Alex D'Amico, Akron Hoban; Kristin May,
Cuy. Falls Walsh Jesuit: Kara Murphy, Akron St. VincentSt. Mary; Laurel lawson, Navarre Fairless.

team.

, rushing games in a season and

Under the NFL's collective led the Bengals with 12
bargaining agreement; a fran- touchdowns.

H&amp;R B!ud. you cau walk in
Get the money Yt:?u 're loo~ing
to pay off bills and other dctn f11st.

With.right planning, inheritance can help realize

goal~

Receiving an inheritance is not as simple as it sounds, and it"s important to handle the gifl the right way because often it's a once-in-alifetime opportunity.
,
An inheritance, whether from parents or a long-lost relative, can offer people the chance to realize lifelong goals -or to friuer away the

Need ~oney to
pay Taxes?
'VIsit the Problem
Solvers!!
Quick declsl.-ns!!
Walk out with
your Check!!

li fe time savi ngs of a loved one.
·
'
.
''II \ definitely a mixed blessing.'' says Greg Jacobs, regional managing director of Wachovia Wealth Management based in Atlanta. Ga.
··Inheritances almost always have emotional issues and most people feel an obligation to pass it onto their children, or at least not watch it just

disappear."
·
.
A
lump
su
m
of
money
typica
ll
y
resuhs
in
a
myriad
of
investment
opportunities,
from
family
members
with
"can'tlosc"
propositions fur
IM~Ioc:k.comfor an office near you .
the_ir ~mall busines~es to un~avory finanCial advisors who promise to doubl'e the money.

"There are so many people offering 10 help that il can be overwhelming," Jacobs said. "And·it's extremely difficuh to differentiate people who
arc looking 10 sell you something from those who are really looking out for your best interests."'

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Before making any in vestment decisions, spend some time considering the tax. implications. In m'ost cases, the estate will pay whatever
taxes arc due before. dispersing funds to heirs. but it's wise to confirm that, notes Pau·l Browner, execu_tive director of the AssoCiation of

Pr&lt;!cticing CPAs

.

If the inheritance incl udes stocks, contlrm that the cost basis has been changed to reflect new ownership, said_ DaViQ Berman, 3. Certified

Financial Planner (CFP) in Baltimore, Md. For instance, if an uncle left I00 shares of IBM stock, the tax basis is their value on the day he
died, nol what he paid for them 20 years ago. Thai information should·be detailed in the estate's paperwork, but if it isn't, il could cause
significant tax problems when th~ stock is eventually sold.
.
Depending upon the income, if any. derived from the inheritance, some people may need to stan paying quarterly estimated tax es, Browner
adds.
.
Take it slow
While most people who inherit money probably will want to re-invest il, experts advise moving slowly. "I usually recommend that people
buy a six-month CD- th at gels them off the hook so they can think through these very important decisions." Berman Said.
It's generally not a good idea to leave the money where it is. because the goals are likely 10 be very different than those· of the deceased

IFal

~Bank

PomerOy, OH

ITullPO''" Pll•lns, OH
Gallipolis, OH
Mason, WV

7401992-2136
7401667-3161
7401446-2265
304-n3-6400

74...992-1771
860-866-1771 .
124 West !"lain Street
Pomeroy, on·

"Some people feel like 'if it's good enough for Dad, it's good enough for me,' but that's not always true," Browner said. "Chances are good
that they were lookin g primarily for income. while someone younger might be looking for growth:•
Many people will automatically think of pay ing off their mortgage, bullhat's nol necessarily a good choice either.
"It.'s not an investment, because you'll still make the same profit on a house whether the mortgage has.been paid or not," Berman said. Apaid,
for house is less liquid than other investments so the money will be more difficult to access in case of an emergency. Berman recommends

working with a professional planner 10 create a three-legged portfolio that addresses growth, income (current or future) and salety.
"One of the biggest mistakes people make is looking for income and putting {he entire pot into bonds, but if interest rates go up, bonds may
lake a hig hit." :
·
For most people, mutual funds are a better choice than individual stocks. "Your ·mom always said never pUt all your eggs in one basket, and
mutual fund&amp;are the easiest ways 10 gel .in as many ba•kels as possible," Berman said.
Any portfolio should he based on personal goals and objectives, ·says Bryan Lee, CPF of Strategic Financial Planning in Dallas, Texa:•.
"E.vety new client meeting includes a discussion on what life would be like if you had all the money you ever wanted and how it would be
different from the way you live now. The answer 10 that question helps us figure oul the best answers to your investment decisions."
· Clients also are asked abnullheir tolerance for risk so Lee can recommend a portfolio that they' ll be comfortable with as the market
·changes. A client whose needs are relatively simple- children's ed ucation and enough to retire- won't need a risky portfolio designed to
earn a 10 percent return.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CGM

version of tlie National Endowment for
the Humanities ami has picked Meigs
County as the location of their latest
POMEROY - The Meigs County Chmnaqua, which will focus on "The
Chamber of Commerce was introduced Roaring Twenties."
to Chautauqua at their "business mind- · The Chautaqua will take place Jqly 12ed" )uncheon , held Tuesday at the Wild 16 at the Chester Commons in Chester.
Horse Cafe.
The Ohio Humanities Council wil l proChau1a4ua is a Native Americ:an word vide a lent and $500 c~airs for the event
describing the shape of Lake Chautaqua that is estimated to cost $50,000. The
in New York, the one-time site of educa- Chester-Shade Historical Association is
tional lectures and theater. Chautaqua 's responsible for raising $7,500 to· support
lectures, and , theater prolluctions have local entertainment that wi l) perform at
been modernized to create a 1'a gather- the Chautaqua.
ing" of living history, according 'to ,Fran · Actors . will portray notable historical
Tiberzio . director of public relations for figures, including Henry Ford, Babe
the Ohio Humanities Council, who spoke Ruth, Zora Neale Hurston, John Dillinger
to chamber members about the upcoming and Zelda Fit. zgera ld. After delivering
event, to be held in July in Chester.
Tiberzio said her organization is Ohio's
Please see Chamber.- AS

. Beth Sargent/photo

Fran Tiberzio, left , director of publtc relat1ons for the Ohio Humanities
Council. and Billi Bentley, Meigs County tourism coordinator, unveil the
new Meigs County 2005 Visitors Guide. Tiberzio's organization will bring
an Ohto Chautauqua to the Chester Commons in Ch esler July 12-16.

Injured Village worker .
released from hospital
OBITUARIES

BY BETH SERGENT
Tattcrson was injured when
. BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTIN ELCOM he and
fellow Street
Department employees were
· POMEROY - Pomeroy clearing brush on West Main
Street Department employee Street. He received a head
· Steve Tatterson of Racine is injury after being struck by a
al home recupe.rating after tree that they were removing .
being injured on the job last
Friday in Pomeroy.
Please see Worker. AS

• Named branch manager.
SeePageA3
• Scarberry prQITloted at
OVEC.. see Page A3 .
• UMW meets. See
Page A3
• Greer Museum to
display works of Randall
Enos. See Page AS
•: Breakfast tickets on
sale. See Page AS
• Brooks-Grant Camp
meets. See Page A5

WEAmER

Detcrmirting when the money will be needed helps planners decide whether it should be placed in aggressive -investments that may nucJuate ·
over a period of years or more stable alternatives with a lower n;turn. .

.

,

"We can't lei I what an inveslmcnl.will do from year to year, but we can pretty well tell over a 10- or 15-year hori zon, within a percent or two,
what the return will be," Lee said.
Planning chrldren's
inheritances

.

GET
STUCK

HERE!

While an inheritance is still a taboo topic in many famil.ies, haby boomers are more likely to be proactive in planning their children's
inheritances, Jacobs said.

"People inheriting money now don 't necessarily have a good idea of what their parents wanted done with the inheritance. I see that starting to

Detalle on ~ page A6

INDEX

www.ovbc.com

shift now because baby boomerS are much more willing to talk to their children about money."
It 's a good idea to di scuss the issues involved with an inheritance with childrei-1 , so everyone can be clear on What the plans are.

2

SE.CilONS -

~2

PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B2-4

.Comics

Bs

D~ar

A3

Aliby

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As
B Section

Sports
Weather

"You have a plan whether you know it or not- if you ·don't make your plans clear, you've planned to let someone else make them for you,"
Jacobs said.
Karl Keblerlll*
Certified Public Accountant
e-mail:kkebler@charter.net

· • Eastern falls in regi.onal
semifinal. See Page 81

Ask About
Our On-Line
!;tanking

www.ovbc.com

·~-e·

·

The Chamber mee~ Chauta~qua

SPORTS

relative .

Investme nts also may be divided into various "pots" with specific goals tied to time horizons such as ·college education or-retirement.

'hnrBank/n~.

··n.

INSIDE

1-800-HRBLOCK or visit

618 East Main St.
Pomeroy, OH
740-992-6674

..

Page AS
• Art.hur Yeater, 62

'

with your taxes and walk out with
a refund anticipation loan check.

donation, Aa

chise,flayer is p'aid the averf
age o the top five salaries.o
players at the same position
the prior season.
The deal allows toe Bengals
to keep Johnson while they
see whether Chris Perry. their
top draft choice in 2004, will
develop into ' their running
back of the future, Perry was .
'd · d f'
h f ~·
Sl ehne
or muc o ••IS
-rookie season by injuries.
· bro ke the team
Johnson•
rushing record that Corey
Dillon, now with the New
England Patriots, set with
1.435 yards in 2000. Johnson
set another Bengals record
with 361 carries, exceeding
D'll • 340 · 2001
I On S
1.11
·
Johnson also tied the team
record with fiv.e 100-yard

Taxes: Tips SPECIAL EDITION
mof1e)'

lab awarded
accreditation, Aa

scattering eight hits and four runs
while fanning five.
Up next for the Redmen: Tuesday at
Bluefield College.
REDMEN NOTES: Rio's games
on Saturday versus WVU-Tech and
St. Vincent at WVU-Tech were rained ·
out. The make-up date with
Cedarville has been set. for April 18 at
Robert Evans Field beginning at 2
p.m. The Redmen and Yellow Jackets
were only able to play two games of
their scheduled four-game set, Feb.
25-26.

Mayle, Mantua Crestwood.

Cath .; Ka lie Rock, Wooster Triway; leah Seaman.
Louisville; E¥elyn Woods, Beloit W. Branch; Katherine

Holzer CHnic

A.6

© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

T~~~cy~seven

ep1ployees
la1d off at Rockwell .

BY TIM MALONEY
TMALONEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE . COM
GALLIPOLIS - · Twentyseven hourly emp loyees of
ElectroCraft
Engine'er~u
Solutions. a division of
Rockwell Automation, have
been laid off from the plant
on McCormick Road m
Gallipolis.

Students compete
in Speech Meet
MIDDLEPORT- The tear of speaking in front
of a crowd is one of the most common social phobias, but students at Mid-Valley Christian School
are working to overcome the fear before they have
a chance to acquire it. ·
At a speech competition held Friday, students in
kindergarten through sixth grade recited poetry,
patriotic readings, fables, and Scripture passages
before an a~dience of parents and friends - and a
panel of three judges.
Linda Rowe, Gladys Cumings and Norma Torres
were judges for the event, and tirsl and second
place winners were selected from each class: Grade
l, Brandon Johnson and Wesley Reitmire; .Grade 2,
Jcnna Thompson and Andrew Briles; Grade 3, Kyle
Johnson and Tanner Riffle, Tyler Qualls and Nick
Sprouse ; Grade 4, KarHe Hall ru1d Jesse Vaughan;
Grade 5: Beth Sprouse and Colton Stewart; Grade
6, Kateland Hurlow and Jayme Vaughan, first
place, and Kevin Jamison, second place.

"We notified the employees
tWO week s ago that they
would be laid off last week:·
said Steve Smith, spokesman
for Rockwe'll at its corporate
oftlces in Milwaukee, Wis .
After the layoffs. 181
hourly and 80 salaried
employees remain at the
Please see Rockwell, AS .

Rotary begins March food drive
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTI NEL.COM
- The
POMEROY
Middlepori!Pomeroy Rotary
Club has kicked ,off· its
"Nelghbors
Helping
Neighbors" food drive. and

Powell"s Foodfair and several
local organi zations are taking
the iheme 10 heart by joining
in the effort to stock local
food pantrie,.
The Rotary Club will
Please see Rotary, AS

place in

New Smokey Bear license plate.now on sale
STAFF REPORT
on the Internet, according to promoting wildfire preven- - -- - - - - -. the Ohio Department of . tion, and now Ohioans can
tak~ that pledge a step furPOMEROY - Ohioans Natural Resources.
can · proudly display their
"Ohio is proud to be the ther . by purchasing one of
support of wildfire preven- first state to initiate a special SmQI;.ey's plates."
Each Smokey plate sold in ·
tion and education by pur- Smokey Bear license plate ,"
chasing the new Smokey said John Dorka, chief of the Ohio costs $25 above the price
Bear specialty license plate, ODNR Division of Forestry. of a standard license plate,
now available at deputy reg- "Smokey Bear has long
Please see Plate, AS
istrars across the state and been admired for his role in

Brion J. R -/ photo

Braden and Tyler Petry, front, were the fi rst to contribute to the
"Neighbors Helping Neighbors" food drive, and are joined by Lee
Powell, manager of Powell's Foodfair. Rev. Walter Heinz, Rotary .
president and President-Elect Brenda· Barnhart Rob Edwards of
Chester built the special house used in the grocery store display.

618 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Phone: 740-992-7270

NO MORE ... with Lifeline there 24 hours a day, I know she is safe and
can enjoy the independf]nce she cherishes so much.

Kehler Business Services
Income Tax &amp; Financial Services
' Karll&lt;ebler, Ill . CPA, Registered Rl'lpresentative of H D. Vest Investment SeiVteeS"'
Securit~ offered through H.D Vest Investment Service!~ ... Member SI PC
·
Advisory services offe red througtl H D Ve!ll Advisory Servlcea"'. Nor!-bank subsidiaries of
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740-992-9J)OO

refer a family member or loved one, call:

40 446-5056

------------------------------

•r

,.

.

Another service provided locally by:
- - - - - - - - - - - _ , ____

_

_:__

_ _ _ _ __ _-:r_ __ : _ _

••

�J

.PageA2

·OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

St:tte executes kill~r who .
trJed tO prove braJfi damage

Wednesday, March 9,

Bv JOHN McCARTHY
would be responsible for subcontracting
AssociATED PRESS WRITER
different tasks.
Bv ANITA CHANG
.
Gov. Bob Taft has includec.) a provisi'filn
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
COLUMBUS - . Pubhc colieges and for gSneral contracting in his two-year
umversities .m Oh10 want to bnng down budget proposal, but it likely won'tmake
LUCASVILLE - A murtile price of construction of new build- , it back to his desk. Senate President Bill
derer who said a brain abnorings, but they may have to come up with Harris on Tuesday said the idea should
mality may have affected his
a new plan to do it.
be debate.d in a separate bill .
behavior when he stabbed . ·
"I would suspect it doesn't stay in the
A repon suggested by the Governor's
then raped a bleeding woman
Conurusston on Htgher Educauon and the budget," Harris, an Ashland Republican,
was executed Tuesday after
Economy found that reducing the number said. "In the past, the policy has been it's
courts , decided tests did not
of
contractors for projecrs and paying less an issue that ought to have lots of disprove brain damage .·
than the union-based wages required by . cu·ssion and ought to have testimony
William H. Smith, 47, died
law
would save the schools money.
before committee."
by injection at I0: 19 a.m. at
AP Photo/Ohio Department
However, a prominerrt legislative
The future of the prevailing wage idea
the
Southern
Ohio
of Correction and
leader
and
the
chief
of
Ohio's
biggest
is
less clear. Under state law, publicly
Correctional Facility for the
Rehabilitation, File
union
have
reservationsabout
the
plans.
·
financed
construction projects must pay
death of Mary Bradford, This undated photo released
whom he met at a bar in 1987. by the Ohio Department of . The report, which also found that the wages based on local union contracts.
The defense did' not chal- Correction and Rehabil itation colleges cut at least $28 Lmillion in costs However, in 1-997, the Legislature
. lenge Smith's conviction but ,shows William H. Smith. over the last four .years. was released carved out an exception for primary-secsaid a brain lesion detected Smith, ·a convicted murderer Tuesday by the Ohio Board of Regents. · ondary school construction amid an
after he fainted in pri son
The colleges can save by moving uproar by construction unions. The
who had claimed that a brain
could have spllred him from
away from "multiple prime contracting" same can be· expected if lawmakers conthe death sentence at hi s abnormality may have affect- on construction projects. Last month, sider exempting college construction,
ed his behavior when he
1988 trial.
the Legislature approved $405 million said William Burga, president of the
Smith started his tina! state- raped .and killed a woman in construction spending for colleges 750,000~t'nember Ohio AFL-CIO.
ment that lasted four minutes was executed Tuesday.
during the .next two years.
·
"It would be just another nail in the
with a deep sigh and said, overturned a stay of execuConstruction of new campus buildings coffin of reducing wages on people.
"I'm off." He took responsi- tion. saying the tests did not typically involves many contractors th in That's the only reason they want to
bility for the crime and said he prove brain damage. On bid for services such as plumbing and change it," Burga said.
had given himself to the Lord: Monday, Gov. Bob Taft electrical work. The regents' report rec,
House Speaker Jon Husted said he's
" ! hope you have the declined to commute Smith 's ommends hiring one general contractor gathering . information
for
his
capacity to forgive," he said, sentence to life . in prison for each proJect. The general contractor Republican caucus on the issue.
addressing
the
victim's without possibility of parole ,
grandson, Timmy Bradford, and the U.S . Supreme Court
who watched with his hands rejected his appeal.
. clutched at his chin.
Ohio has executed 16 peoSmith and Bradford drank ple since resuming executogether at the bar for sever- tions in 1999. ·Last year, only
al hours before going to her Texas has more executions
Cincinnati apartment, where than Ohio.
they used cocaine and had
Appeals judges overturned a
sex, police said. The two decision by U.S. District Judge
argued when Smith accused S. Arthur Spiegel, who ruled
Bradford of owing him Feb. 28 that Smith's execution
money for cocaine.'
should be postponed to allow
· Smith, also of Cincinnati. for more medical tests.
told police he grabbed a knife
Tears rolled down Smith's
away from Bradford, and she face aft~r he finished his
was stabbed during the strug- fin al statement.
gle. Bradford. 47, had 10 stab
"I cannot control anything
wounds in the neck and chest, from this day on. Find the
and Smith had sex with her right way. Be a better person
again as she lay on I:ter bed than I ani. Don't wait until
. bleeding, police said ..
it's too late to try to save
He then made three trips somebody else," Smith said.
to hi s car to steal her stereo . As the drugs took ~ffect,
HELlOS
and two televi sio n sets, Smith took one deep breath .
PfRSONAL
pol ice said.
OXYGEN SYS1£M
and several shallow ones ,
Smith's attorneys argued then was sti 1.1. ·
'
HEUOS • Easy to cany. .
an independent analysis was
................... • Cool, quret operatron.
Three family members
'
• Weighs just 3.6 1bs. I
needed of tests on his brain, had asked to witness the
Requires.no elertricity or batteries..
including a CT scan in execution, but Smith did not
· Specializing in:
Lasts up to 10 hours at a setting of 2.
December after Smith faint- want them there. · A minister
Takes about 40 seconds to· fill.
Bankruptcy
• Operates upright, on its back or ir any
ed when told his execution who was Smith's spiritual
' ..- .
position in-betllveen. ·
date ·had been set.
adviser watched . .
Divorce
Prosec utors had a more
After
the
execution,
740·446·0007
Charge OWs .
'
'
precise magnetic resonance Smith's cousin Gary Dorsey
Toll Free 877·669·0007 '
vAnd MORE!!
imaging test done on Smith expressed his family's condoon Feb. 25 as recommended lences to the Bradford family
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
Locally
ow11ed. We care about you!'
by doctors.
and said the execution
was brought more pain and death.
The
abnormality
deiected in the cranial nerves
"The true killers are not
that control facial muscles here today. The true ki.ller is
Broadband Wireless
Diane McVey
and the sense of taste and society," said Dorsey, 28, of
Internet
Access
M.A.,CCC·A
relay sound and balance Cincinnati.
Owner &amp; Audioloxist
information from the ear to
Bradford 's
grandson
Now Availgble
the brain, prosecutors said,
declined comment.
·
Current
&amp; Future Access
. 'Th'is condition does not in
Before the execution,
Areas Include:
any way explain why Smith Smith visited family, chatted .
Crown City, Mercerville, ·
stabbed Mary Bradford 10 about Cincinnati sports with
Centerville, Pomeroy,
times, carried his bleeding the execution team and
victim to the bedroom and shared a cherry cake recipe
Gallipolis, Pt. Pleasant,
then raped her." 'Attorney with them. prisons spokes&amp; Bidwell
General Jim Petro 's office woman Andrea Dean said.
said in a federal court filing.
"He (Smith) was consoling
On Sunday; the 6th U.S . famil y yesterday, telling them
2605 Jac~son
Circuit Court of Appeals to be strong," Dean said.
· ~r¢&amp;Uafll

www.kasplat.com~
·
740-446-8500

328 2nd Ave.

435'1&gt; Second Avenue

°

'

GALLIPOLIS

0

Gallipolis, OH

uss

(Across from

l'o~t

Office )

Open Mon .- Thurs. 8:30-5 pm

446-7(;19

Syracuse Police
Chief Kevin Dugan.
right, presented a
$500 donation to
Sheriff Robert
Beegle from the
Syracuse Police
Department tow~rd
renovations at the
Meigs County Jail.
Brlan J. Reed/ photo

Named branch manager

GALLIPOLIS
The
Holzer Clinic Laboratory has
·been awarded an accredita_tion by the Commission on
·Laboratory Accreditation of
·the College of American
Path()logists (CAP). based on
the results of a recent on-site
. inspectio n.
· The Iaboratory 's director
:was advised of this national
·recognition and congratulat.ed for the "excellence of the
services being provided ...
The
Holzer
Clinic
Laboratory is one of the more
.than 6,000 CAP-accredited
:laboratorie s
nationwide.
:During the CAP accreditation
·process, inspectors examine
:the laboratory's records and
quality control of procedures
for the prccedi ng twb years.
CAP in ~pectors also examine the entire staff's qualifica.tions, the laboratory 's equip:ment. fac ilities, safety pro. gram and record, as well as the
:overan management of the
laboratory. This stringent
inspection
program
is
.designed to S(Ji!citically ensure

'''
•••

MERCURY

446-9800

PRESCRIPTION

: Public meetings

OXYGEN

Wednesday, March 9
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Board of Health
nieeting will take place at 5
p.m. in the conference room
of the Meigs County Health
112
E.
. Department,
:Memorial Drive in Pomeroy.
: REEDSVILLE -· Regular
:meeting of Olive Township
Trustees, 6:30p.m .. township
garage on Joppa Road.

THE AREA'S ONLY
AUTHORIZED
HELlOS PROVIDER.

HEUOS
Pcnonol O•rtcn

S~1tc~t

(740) 441.0202 .

615-4498

3014 SUite Route160
Woodl•nd Center Comple11

www.holzerclinic.com

(Aero•• from Hol:r:er ~leal Cenler)
Gtlllpolla, Ol'llo

•

..

COLUMBUS &lt;AP)
· motorists at night if they
Front license plates would approach a parked car or
remain on Ohio vehicles abandoned vehicle on an
under the Senate version of unlighted road.
the state's transportation bud"The people that we
get, Senate President Bill charged to provide public
· sa!'et,Y and security for us
Harris said Tuesdar
The House versiOn of the conststently tell us that the
state's $5.6 billion trans- front license tag enables
portation budget would them to do their job better,"
remove the front plates over Harris said. "That's good
the objection of the State enough for rne."
Highway Patrol.
House Speaker Jon Husted
The patrol said eliminating said removing the front plates
the front plates could hurt the would save the state about $2
ability of !olice to 'solve million over two years.
House lawmakers tried to
crimes an of people to
report suspicious vehicles.
remove the front plate two
They also say the reflective years ago but Senate lawmaklicense plate helps warn ers restored the provision.

.

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Mareh 10
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters will meet at noon at
· St. Paul Lutheran Church for
.a salad potluck luncheon.
: TUPPERS PLAINS -The
· VFW 9053' will meet 7 p.m.
at the hall.

11bar
18•••

Birthdays
. Saturday, March 12
CHESTER
Wilma
:Ginther Sewnan, fonnerly of
' Chester, will be 88 years old on
March 12. Cards may be sent

Powell's

Cold weather puts brakes on
maple syrup harvest, again

700 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
740·992·5252

16" 1 TO!&gt;pirlg
· Hair Car~ 1!.. Makeup

*9.99

Car~

· Fadals &amp;. Waxing ,
• Massag~
·' Body Treatment

• Spa Packages

675-1812
Point Pleasant, WV
173-5536

516 Second Avenue

WHY PAY MORE??
EVERY DAY
LOW PRICES! .

(740) 446·2933

Save Time
Save Money
Shop Locally

. .,

Pvwalrt FOODFAII
PIIMMACY

C•IUpolls, OH 45631

AWeek

the highest standard of care for
the laboratory's patients.
The College of American
Pathologists is a medical
society serving nearly 16.000
physician members and the
laboratory
community
throughout the world. It is the

Scarberry
promoted
at OVEC

-UMWmeets-

to her at I0720 State Route
550, Vincent, Ohio 45784.
Sunday, March 13
LONG
BOTTOM
Henry Bahr will be 80 on
March 13, Cards may be seht
to him at 37837 Greenup
Lane, Long Bottom, 45743.

world 's largest association
composed exclusively of
pathologists and is widely
considered the leader in laboratory quality assurance. The
CAP is an advocate for highquality and cost-effective
medical care.

. MASON - A committee
meeting for the Town of
Mason sesquicentennial celebration was held on Feb.. 22
at the City Building.
Officers were elected, subcommittees were formed 'and
fund-raising ideas were discussed. Filling the officer seats
were Mindy Kearns, chairFriday, March l l
LONG
BOTTOM
woman; Bill Davis, vice chairRogie B'issell and Headed man ; Brooke Pauley, sec_retary;
Home will be singing at the and Aaron Grate, treasurer.
Faith Full Gospel Church at
Students at Wahama High ,
Long Bottom, 7 p.m .
School currently are competSunday, March 13
ing for a $50 savings bond in
MIDDLEPORT ·
an effort to find a logo for the
· Harmony, a mu sic ministry of town's birthday. Upon selecGod's Bible School and tion, the logo will be used on
College, Cincinnati will be the cover of a cookbook conappearing at the Wesleyan
Bible Holiness Church, 75 tainirg residents ' recipes and
Pearl St. , Middleport at 7 recollections from generations
p.m. For more information past. The cookbook,' overseen
by Kathy VanMeter, will be
call 992-200 I.
sold
and profits will go toward
POMEROY .
Randy
Parsons will be speaking at the event currently scheduled
the 10:30 a.m. worship ser- for June 16-18, 2006.
The committee will be
vice and Jerry Frederick at
the 6 p.m. service at the preparing for a hot Clog/bake
Larrel Cliff Free Methodist sale at the annual Easter Egg
Cliurch . At the 10:30 a.m. Hunt as well as selling candy
March 20 service, Bollby bars and discount cards for
Siders will be singing.
Pizza 1-lut .ptzzas. Residents

Church events

Sa"e
$5.00
Rent By Mar 31.

CHESHIRE - Bruce 0.
Scarberry of Thurman has
been promoted from equipment operator to unit supervisor in the . operations
department at Ohio Valley
Electric Corporation's Kyger
Creek Plant, Plant Manager
E
Amburgey
Ralph
announced .

.

.!Yew Styles
!Yew Fabrics

~~~~-------~---2-28~4--------~-------~

who are on the town's water
system are encouraged to
bring ideas to the next meeting at 7 p.m. March 8 at the
City Building.
Attending the meeting
were: Mindy Kearns. Kira
Kearns. Delores Cundiff, Ray
Cundiff, Kathy VanMeter,
Nick Northup. Aaron Grate,
Brooke
Pauley.
Sarah
Shielcls, Bill Davis, Ray
Varian and Lois Test.

~

TUPPERS PLAINS
St. Paul United Methodist
Women met. re ce ntly at the
•·
church .
The meeting was oepened
with a prayer by Joanna .
Weaver. The UMW Litany
was read by all. It was agreed
to order a Prayer Calendar
book. The group had cookbooks made and sales have
been successful.
The group recently brought
items and packaged care
· packages to be sent to servicemen: Members agreed to

Mason holds planning
·meeting for celebration ·

110 West Main • Pomeroy, OH .

....

I have been struggling with
my weight for two years. I
have tried Weight Watchers
and other weight-loss programs, and I try not to eat
between meals or co nsume a
Dear
lot of junk food - but I ju ~t
Abby
can' t stop.
My parent s kee p pre'-suring
me to Jo,e· 40 pound&gt;. Even
my friend ' say I ' hould lose
weight. They "'Yif I do, my
I agree that it 's &lt;.:ri tic ally crush would notice me more .
important for folks to protect Can you give me any tips fo r
th.emselves and their loved losi ng weight'' - CHUBBY
ones from sex ually transm it- ' IN CLEVELAND
ted diseases (STDs) . In order
DEAR
CHUBBY:
to do that, they must act Everything ha' a price . If you
responsibly. By that, I mean want to lo., e weight. the price
they must refrain from you'll have to pay is abstainunprotected s·ex unless both ing from high-carb, high-fat.
parties have been screened empty-calorie food for a
for HIV and are negative. whlie. If you get hun gry
and. of course. remain strict- between meal s. ha ve so mely monogamous.
thing to eat. but make it fresh
I am appalled that there has fru it or veggies and ai1 ounce
actua lly been "debate" about of lo w-fat protein .
whether the public should
Losing weight is like bankhave been warned so quickly ing: If you eat more calories
about wha\ appears to be a than . you "s pend. " you'll
new, more virulent strai.n of have fat in _y our "sav ings
HIV that is drug-resistant. I acco unt.'' If you spend more
hope the announcement will calories thanyou save, you'll
re'lnind everyone about a.sub- gradually become lean and
ject that see ms to have been mean . So exercise every day,
forgotten in· the last decade. and go back to Weight
For theic own safety, sex ually . Watchers. I have seen miraactive people must keep their cles occur on thm program, ·
wit s about them and alwavs and there is no reason why it
use condoms. And for those can't work for vou. too.
who say condoms aren't 100
Dear Abby Is written by
percent effective, when prop- ' Abigail Van Buren, also
erly
used . they
are known os. Jeanne Phillips,
EXTREMELY effective in a11d was founded by her
preventing STDs. especially mother, Pauline Phillips.'
HIV. Not using them is play- · Write Dear Abby at
ing Russian roulette.
www.DearAbby.com or P.O .
DEAR ABBY: I'm 16 and Box 69440, Los Angelts,
a sophomore in high sc hool. CA 90069.

Submitted photo

The Fabric Shop

Store Hours:

7an•-"'""'
,.

.

DEAR ABBY: The recent
news of a possible new strain
of HIV that is drug-resistant
to three of the four classes of
anti-HIV drugs and may
progress to AIDS in months
rather than years, should provide a ·wake-up call to those
who are not practicing safer
sex end/or are still sharing
neeqles and syringes.
Time after time. I hear
young people say they're not
worried about being exposed
to
HIV/AIDS
because,
should they get infected, they
can take.the appropriate medicine and they ' II be fine .
Unfortunately, they could be
dead wrong. If .they become
infected , the medicines they
will have to take can cause
serious side effects and must
be taken for the rest of their
lives. Also. not all people
ben,tit from the medication s,
especially · tho se who are
·unfortunate enough to be
infected with a strain of virus
that's already resistant to one
or more classes of drugs.
Abby, people need to
understand that HIV is not
spread through the ·air, or
fron1. shaking hands or hug. ging:someone who has the
virus. If you have unprotecte.d sex or share needl es
and : syringes you · could
become infected. If you
'don :t, you won ' t. ·
It's up to all of us to protect
ourselves and our partn ers.
- MERVYN R. SILVERMAN , M.D.&lt; , FORMER
PRESIDENT, AMERICAN
· FOUNDATION FOR AIDS
. RESEARCH
. DEAR DR. SILVERMAN:

Holzer Clinic laboratory staff, above, have been congratulated
by the Commission on Li3boratory Accreditation ofthe College
of American Pathologists . for the laboratory's recent ·accreditation award .

.++TUXEDOES ++ '

· www.foodfalrmk.com

• Nail

.High School and a 1991 graduate of Hocking College,
Gilbride has completed industry training seminars through
the Federal Home Loan Bank
of Cincinnati and Metavante,
the bank's third-party credit
card provider headquartered in
Milwaukee, Wise . . ·
Gilbride is a member 'of
Sacred Heart Church in
Pomeroy. She and her husband, Rich, have two children, Scott and Nikki.

7~?~S~

FOOD FAIR

PIZZA

ATHENS - Barbara Lisle
Gilbride of Reedsville . has
been promoted to branch
. manager · ·and · lender . at
Hocking Valley
Bank's
Coolville office.
With the bank since 1997,
Gilbride is responsible for
busine ss development, all
areas of real estate.• commer. cia! and consumer lending, and
supervision and training of the
bank 's Coolville branch staff.
A 1989 graduaie of Southern

:community Calendar

Pt. Pleasant. wu

2005

.

·Holzer Clinic lab awarded accreditation

Ave.

Wednesday, March 9,

Too muchfaith in medicine
puts people at risk for HW
.

Barbara Lisle Gilbride

HOLZER
·CLINIC

stimulate sap flow.
Another cold snap that was
forecast to start Tuesday could
delay production for. at least
another week. Temperatures
are expected to plunge near or
be.low freezing and stay there
through the weekend.
"The forecast is not in our
favor," said Gary Graham, an
Ohio
State
University
Extension specialist. "The
cold is going to put the brakes
on everything ... again ."

Police
Department . ·
makes donation

ha~e

. 304-675-4340

CHARDON
(AP)
Anxious maple syrup producers are worried that a predicted cold spell this week will
cause another delay in the
maple sugaring season .in
northeast Ohio.
Maple trees were tapped for
the sugar-laden sap when temperatures rose Sunday and
Monday, but a lingering winter
has pushec;l the harvest about
two weeks behind· schedule.
Trees need warm days to

Syraac~se

"We
been meeting with the interested parties on both sides of those
issues. to gather facts and informations~
we can make .an mformed dec1smn,
Husted, a Kettenng Republican, satd.
Regents Chairman Edmund Adams
said that lawmakers should act if they are
interested reducing construction costs.
"The Legi~lature. has .the pressure on
the colleges and umversitles to cut costs.
Here are two examples of how costs can
be cut simply by legislation," Adams
said. "They can demonstrate they can do
what is necessary."
The regents ' report also surveyed
Ohio's public eolleges and universities
primarily to answer questions lawmakers had about financial accountability in
higher education, Adams said:
." Our committee was very much concerned about the delivery of cost etfective results in a very cost effective budget climate," Adams said.
The responses in the report represent
only part of the savings the regents
found, said Darrell Glenn, the regents '
director of performance reporting. It tallied savings of at least $190 million in
administrative costs, primarily from
July 2001 through June 2004, and more
than $91 million in savings on academic
programs, most of it in the past .three
budget years ..

PLEASANT
.VALLEY
HOSPITAL
.

v
v
v

Senate president: Front
license plates should stay

2005

Report: Changes in law would save money

.PageA3

BY THE BEND
.

The Daily Sentinel

sponsor Barb Rou sh and
Connie Rankin for the
Multiple Sclerosi s Walk to be
held in Marietta on April 16-.
Tere&gt;a Lemons presented
a program to the group. The
meetin g wa s clo sed with
prayer, and Sharon Louks
served refreshment s. Those
in atten'den ce were Betty
Cheviler. Joanna Weaver.
Connie
Rankin ,
Judy
Kennedy, Barb Roush ,
Sharon Louk s, Anna Rice .
Teresa Lemon s and Jane
Beattie .

. Gene H. Abels, M.D. :
MedicaLAssodates of Gallipolis
is now accepting a limited number of new patients.
Practice is preventive cardiology.
. The following patients would be covered:
1. Hypertension
··
,
2. Lipid or cholesterol abnormalities
3. Known coronary disease
4. Heart failure
·
5. Type II diabetes
.
6. Peripheral/Carotid Artery Disease
7. On-site same day lab results
8. X-Ray services

Insurance's accepted: Most insurances accepted
lncludinl! OH Medicaid

�,

OPINION

The ·oaily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157

.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Pu91ishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
. General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday. March 9. the 68th day of 2005. There
are 297 .days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in Hi story: On ·March 9, 1945, during
World War II, U.S. B-29 bombers launched incendiary bomb
attacks against Japan.
'
·
On this date: In 1661. Cardinal Jules Mazarin, the chief minister of France, died, leaving King Louis XIV in full control.
In 1796, the future emperor of France, Napoleon Bonaparte,
married Josephine de Beauharnais. The couple divorced in
1809.
In 1860, the first Japanese ambassador to the United States.
Niimi Buzennokami . and his stall arrived in San Francisco.
In 1862. during the Civil War. the ironclads " Monitor" and
"Virginia" (fortnerly "MetTimac'') clashed for five hours to a
draw at Hampton Roads, Va.
In 1916, Mexican raiders led by Pancho Villa attacked
Colu_mbus, N.M .. killing more than a dozen people.
In 1933, congress. called into special session by President
Roosevelt. began its " 100 days" of enacti_ng New Deal legislation.
'
.
.
In 1954, CBS newsman Edward R. Murrow critically
reviewed Wi s,onsin Sen. Jose ph R. McCarthy 's antiCommunism campaign on an episode of "See It Now."
In 1975, work began on the Alaska~&gt; oil pipeline.
In · 1977, about a do zen armed Hanafi Muslims invaded
three buildings in Washington. D.C., killing one person and
taking more than 130 hostages. The siege ended two days
IU~&amp;
.
In 1981 , Dan Rather made his debut as principal anchorman .
&lt;;&gt;f "The CBS Evening News.''
Ten years ago: House Republicans unveiled their longpromised tax cut for familie s. businesses and investors.
President Clinton sharply eased travel restrictions on Sinn
Fein leader Gerry Adams and invited him to the White House
for St. Patrick's Day. Los Angeles police detective Mark
Fuhrman took ' the stand at the O.J. Simpson murder trial.
denying ever meeting a woman who'd accused him of making
racist remarks.
Five years ago: John McCain suspended his presidential .
campaign. conceding the Republican nomination to George
W. Bush. Bill Bradley ended hi s presidential bid, conceding
the Democratic nomination to Vice President AI Gore. .
. • One year ago: Convicted sniper John Allen Muhammad was
senten~ed to death in Virginia. Former United Nations official
Gerard Latortue was named Haiti 's new prime ministe&amp; .
Today's Birthdays: Actress Trish Van Devere is 60. Rock
musician Robin Trower is 60. Singer Jeffrey Osborne is 57.
Country musician Jimmie Fadden (The Nitty Gritty pirt ·
Band) is 57. Actress Juliette Binoche is 41. Rock musician
Robert ·sledge (Ben Folds Five) id7 . Rapper C-Murder is 34.
Actor Emmanuel Lewis is 34. A'-'tress Jean Louisa Kelly is 33.
Actor Kerr Smith is 33: Rapper Chingy is 25. Actress Brittany
Snow is 19. Rapper Bow Wow is 18.Actor Luis Armand
·
Garcia is 13.
Thought fm Today: "Conscience is the perfect interpreter of
life."- Karl Barth , Swiss theologia n (1886-1966).

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Wednesday, March 9,

Wednesday, March 9, 2005

2005

'

Sue asked me to write a
letter to our insurance company. I can't tell you what a
vote of conlidence in me this
was . Since she's made it
quite clear over. the years
that I don't take out the trash
the right way, I don't hang up
the towels the right way, I
don't play with the cat the
right way, I don't watch television the right way. I was
kind of surprised that she'd
trust ·me with the huge
responsibility of writing a
letter to an insurance company. That's not to say she didc
n't give me some very
explicit instructions. And, as
always, she ended with the
encouraging words, "And
don't try to be funny."
Yes, we wouldn't want
that. They would most certainly raise our premiums.
Still, I was honored to be
given such an important
task. I've got the fastest computer in the world and I ·
know how to type. l could
launch. a moon mission with
this thing, turn on the garage
lights and hack Paris
Hilton's cell phone all at the
same time. What I would do
with all the phone numbers
of her friends I can't imagine. Just call them and start
talking'
"Hi, this is Jim. You don't

www.mydailysentinel.com

RIO GRANDE An
exciting new exhibit is coming to the Greer Museum at
the
University of Rio
COOLVILLE -Arthur K. Yeater, 62, of Coolville, died
Grande/Rio
Grande
Monday, March 7, 2005, at his residence.
He was born May 3, 1942. in Coolville, son of the late Community College.
Beginning March 15, the
.
Corbett and Mary Ellen Wilcoxen Yeater.
A memorial service will be held at 2 p.m. on Wednesday, works of nationally-known
Murch 9, 2005, at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home in illustrator Randall Enos will
Coolville with Pastor Dave Cogar officiating. The family will be on display in the museum.
receive friends for an hour prior to the service.
Admission is free to the
exhibit, which will continue
until April 5. Gallery hours at
the museum are from I to 5
p.m. Tuesday through Sunday.
This is the tirst time Enos
will have an exhibit at Rio
Grande, and it is the tirst time
POMEROY- Tickets for the Middleport/Pomeroy Rot ary the museum is presenting a
Club breakfast, to be held from 7 to II a.m. on April 16, are display of illustrations. The
. now available. The cost is $4 for adults and $2 for children
under 12. The breakfast will include pancakes and sausage Greer Museum is generally
gravy and biscuits. The breakfast will be held at the Meigs known for its fine arts exhibits.
County Multipurpose Senior Center. Tickets are available · "We're deve!oping a graphfrom any Rotarian, through -Rotary Club President Rev. Walter ic de sign program at Rio
Grande, and we thought it
Heinz at Sacred Heart Rectory, '992-5898, or at the door.
would be good to have an
illustrator's work in the mu se. um ," said James E. Allen,
MIDDLEPORT - Brooks-Grant Camp, Sons of Union
Veteran s of th~ Civil War and Maj. Daniel McCook Circle
Ladies of the Grand Arrny of the Republic will hold a regular
meeting at 7:15p.m. on March 15 at the Middleport Masonic
Temple. Civil War program will be on Civil War nurses.
Visitors are welcome.
/
from Page A1

Arthur Yeater

read ·your . stupid message,
tered . I hit Print.
,
How long did that take? A now print.
Success! I see the paper'
minute? Ninety seconds?
Well, a little longer than that, get sucked up into the printbut any second now it will er, l near the electric whir of
be printing. Why is it npt the cartridge going back and
Jim
printing? I can see that the forth across the page. My
Mullen
printer is on from here. What letter pops out on to the tray,
· the ... why is the printer printed upside down. l must
cable not plugged into my have put the blank stationary
laptop'! OK, let's try that . in the wrong side up. Which
way diq I put it in to begin
know me, but l stole your again.
phone · number from Paris
Nothing. There's paper in with? I can't {emember. I
Hilton. How you doing? Xou the printer, everything's easily could have typed this
wanna go get sam·e pizza or hooked up, the printer appli- letter eight times by now on
cation is beeping, I reboot a regulm old -fas~ioned, ,nosomething?"
.
I start to bang out a "To the computer and start again. memory-whatsoever type Whom It May Concern" let- I could have typed the stupid . writer. I pu t the blank stater to the insurance compa- letter twice on my old 300 tionery in upside down and
ny. The computer's already pound Selectric by now. backwards. It comes out
saving me time. In the old Computers. Who thought printed upside down and .
days, I would've ·had to they. were a . good idea? · backwards. I try it rightretype the whole thing every Bringing computers into the side-up, facing me . It comes
time I made a mistake. And . home? Let's find those guys .out printed upside down and
when I. retyped it I would fix and beat them with slide backwards. I try right-sideup, facing away from me. It
the old mistakes but add in rules and vacuum tubes.
new ones. I think my record
At last, the computer has comes out right -side-up and
fat retyping a business letter booted up again. Hit Print. backwards. Three more tries
in the pre-computer day s The printer starts to beep. It's and I gel it right. Triumph 1
"Never mind," Sue says
Otlt of ink. No, it's just kidwas eight times.
ding.
It's
not
really
out
of
when
I hand her the fini shed
I loaded some blank stationery into my printer . ink. it's just reminding me copy, "I just got off the
(See, I had originally typed that someday, not today, and phone with them. We don't
"stationary" but Grammer not tomorrow, but someday have to send them a letter. " ·
(Jim Mullen is the author
Check caught it for me), the. cartridge inside will run
and look at Print Preview · .qut of ink. Isn't it time I ran of "It Takes a Village Idiot:
on the computer screen. Oh. to the store and bought Complicarirtg rhe Simple
that's way too high on the another $30 ink cartridge? Life" and "Baby's First
page. A few keystrokes and "Press 'Print' when you have Tartoo." You can reach him
my letter was perfectly cen- read this message." Yes, I at jim_mul/en @myway.com)

--""!!"-•

Local Briefs

Breakfast tickets on sale

Brooks-Grant Camp meets

Chamber

For the Record
Dissolutions
POMEROY - An action for dissolution of marriage has
been filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Linda
Ryan and Michael R. ,Ryan, Sr., both of Syracuse.
Dissolutions were granted to Keith A. Kinzel and Lori A.
Kinzel and Timothy Parsons and Kimberly Parsons.

MOM,·
EILLY USED

Complaints

THE:.FCC .
WORD...
HE SHOU~D

POMEROY - Meigs County Sheriff Robert Beegl~ is
investigating the following complaints:
• Nara Hartman, Long Bottom, reported money stolen from
her home. There was no sign of forced entry.
• James Will , Pomeroy, reported someone had vandalized
his fence post .at hi s property on Willow Creek Road ..
• Robert Klein, Park Road, Shade, reported his mobile home
had been burglarized. Forced entry was made through the
front door. Nothing was reported missing.
• Bmbara Doczi, Middleport, reported that her Oldsmobile
was vandalized while it was parked at the Park and Ride on
Ohio 7 at Ohio 124. A sharp inslrument was used to make several scratches on the vehicle.
· .
• Rita Reed of Reed's Country Store, Reedsville, reported
the theft of $45 in gasoline.
• Ronald 'Phillips, Langsville, reported · his 1992 Honda
Foreman stolen from his residence.
• George Morrison. Long Bottom. reported the theft of a
registration tag to his utility trailer. ·

BE FINED!

. The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

Greer Museum to display works of Randall Enos

·eeaths

.Another labor-saving device

The Daily Sentinel

.

PageA4

their monologue in character,
these actors will' answer
questions as the historical
figure they represent.
Other business
Gary Walker of the River
City
Players
informed
chamber members about his
organization's latest product-ion, Frumi Cohen's "The
Little Princess," which will
be performed at 7 p.m. ·an

director of the Greer Museum.
Rio Grande students and
area residents have shown an
interest in the graphic design
program that Rio Grande is
developing, and it is natural
that students and area residents also will be interested
in the exhibit f~aturing Enos' .
illustrations.
' "It 's wonderful to have ·
someone of his caliber presenting his work at Rio ·
Gratide," Allen said. "1 think
the visitors to the museum
will-really enjoy looking ov~r
Enos' work."
Enos, who is from
Connecticut, works with a
number of i1ational magazines and newspapers for hi s
illustrations. For the past 46
years, his illustrations have
been ·featured in· magazines.
newspapers, books, album
covers and animated films.
His clients have included The
New York Times , NBC-TV,

Playboy, National Lampoon,
Boy's Life, Atlantic, Time,
Sports Illustrated, Fortune
and Forbes.
Hi s illustrations come in a
variety of styles, as some are
light and fun, while others are
more complex and filled with
meaning . His work is amazing to see, and it is easy .to see
why he is such a well respected illustrator who has
been featured in some of the
most prestigiou s and wellknown publication s in the
country. For 12 years, Enos
also did his own comic strip;
"Chicken Gutz," for National
Lampoon magazine.
Bro.oks Jones, who formerly
lived in Jackson and is a longtime. Rio Grande supporter, is·
friends with Enos and encouraged him to bring his exhibit
to the Greer Museum.
"He was very helpful fn
getting us this show," Allen
said; adding that Jones is a,lso

a strong ~upporter of the arts.
Becau'e of Enos' busy
'chedule, he will not make it
to Rio Grande· while the show
is on di splay. so there will not
be an opening reccpti'on (or
the e.xhibit.
"He is very. very excited
about having hi s work on display here ,".Ailen said. ·:And
we ' re excited to have it our
·museum. "
For more information on
the Randall Enos exhibit or
for information about future
exhibits at the Greer
M~seum, cal l Allen at (800)
282-7201. Add ition al information about Enos can be
found on his Web si te at
www.randallenos.co m.
Information about upcoming . events at Rio Grande. as
well as inform~tion about the
wide vmiety of academic and
professional programs offered
at Rio Grande, can be found
on-line at www.rio.edu .

March 19 and at ;z , p.m. on ChamberofCommerce.
to benefit . Meigs County
March
20
at
Meigs
Other chamber announce- Relay for Life on March 29.
Elementary
School
in ments inciude:
• Annual dinner dance ,
Rutland. Tickets are $6 for
• Spaghetti . Dinner for social at 6 p.m., dinner at
adults and $5 for children .
Meigs Historical Society, .II 6:30 p.m .. auction at 7:15,
·walker also announced that a.m. to 2 p.m. on March II.
.dance at 8 p.m. on April 2, at
rehearsals for the musical
• Heaith Fest at Southern Royal Oak s Resort. The
" Bye, Bye·, Birdie" will begin Elementary from 10 a.m. to 2 chamber invite s anyone to
this summer.
p.m. on March 12.
the dinner and bring an item
. The Meigs County' 2005
• Hog Roast at Mulberry for auction.
The . next "business mindVisitor's Guid~ was unveiled Community Center at noon
ed" luncheon will be at noon
at the meeting and di stributed on March 13 at God 's NET
bW'feigs County Tourism · • Soup Dinner from II a.m. on April 12 at the Wildhorse
..Coo.roiliator Billi Bentley. to 2 p.m. at Star Grange Hall. Cafe. featurfn g keynote
speaker
Lissa
Jollick .
Bentley announced that . the call Opal, 742-2805.
Development
tourism guides also are avail•
Basket
Bingo
at Bu sine ss·
able at the Meigs County Middleport American Legion Group, Voinovich Center.

have recall rights if any jobs . Electro&lt;;:raft in 19811, and the Rockwell International purare restored, he said.
two businesse·s combined chased Reliance Electric and
It is impossible to speculate resources to maximize the its subsidiary companies.
from Page A1
whether more people will be engineering and manufacturIn the 1990s. the Eden
laid off, or if workers will be ing processes for which both Prairie facility focu sed on
had earned strong reputations. providing complete automaGallipolis plant. The hourly called back, Smith said.
ElectroCraft Engineered
In the mid-1980s, brushless tion systems for its industrial
employees are not representSolutions, an endors.ed brand · DC motors and digital con- customers, and the Gallipolis
ed by any union . .
Smith said the market for . of Rockwell Automation, trois were developed. As part facility developed close rela- .
small motors, as produced in makes sub-fractional horse- of the consolidation of the tion ships with a number of
Gallipolis, always has been power premium AC. DC two bu sinesses, facilities in medical equipment manufaccvclical in nature, and that servo and brush,less . DC · Wis~onsin were closed, and turers and produced high voll~yoffs of hourly employees motors, gear motors and manufacturing of DC brush- umes of motors for hospital
. tran saxles for original equip- type servomotors moved to beds and electric mobility
have occurred regulmly.
"As any good manufactur- ment manufacturers in a vari- Gallipolis, where Robbins &amp; scooters and wheelchairs.
. The Gallipolis business
er would do. you need to ety of commercial industries, Myers was manufacturing its
constantly monitor and· inCluding medical mobility, AC product line successfully. adopted a more contempoIn 1991, Reliance Electric rary trademark and logo in
adjust your· staffin g to meet general 'mobility, floor care,
your production demands," . and air/fluid movement and purchased the Robbins &amp; 200 I and now goes to market
Myers Motor Group, which as ElectroCraft Engineered
Smith said . "In March and office automation.
RACINE - Kelvin Hoover. Racine. 'was arrested on a war- April, we see a need for less
a
Rockwell
Robbins &amp; Myers built the included ElectroCraft in Solutions,
rant from Licking County Sheriff's Office and a charge af production ." ·
Automation
business,
your
motor manufacturing plant in Eden Prairie, Minn., and' .
unauthorized use of a motor vehicle through Meigs Co,unty
None of those who lost Gallipolis in the · !'960s. It Robbins &amp; Myers m "most valued global engic
Court. Sheriff Robert Beegle reported.
their jobs last week were grew rapidly in the 1970s. Gallipoli s. Three years later. neered solutions provider.''
longtime employees, Smith with two extensions built onto
·Their names now will the plant, bringing it to its
said.
Heinz. Items collecied will
after the injury occurred.
be given to the · Meig s go on a call-back list, and current size. Robbins &amp;
Paramedics on the helipurchased
Cooperative Pari sh Food those who were laid off w'ill Myers
fromPage A1
copter
were "really nice,"
Bank at the Mulberry
from
Page
A1
and told him to enjoy the
Community Center, the food
ride. Tatterson .laughed and
About I,000 wildfires occur
match the cash value of all pantries at Rejoicing Life
said
he didn ·r get to see
each year in Ohio, mostly in The tree had become entandonated
non-perishable Church in Middleport and
the state's heavily forested gled in grapevine and acted much scenery. and that it was
food .items, dollar for dollar. Hillside Bapti st Church in
from Page A1
southern and eastern regions. like a ''sling-shot," according a cold ride.
toward additional food for Pomeroy, and the Golden
For no'~\&gt;, Tatterson is at
Since 1998, there have been · to Tatterson.
· the · food banks. The Harvest Food Bank at th~
home
recuperating , having
"I was standing ._in the
National Honor Society at Fellowship Church of the with $15 of that amount going 76 injuries and six deaths as a
to the ODNR Divi sion of result of wildland tires in the wrong place at the wrong al so injured hi s leg and eye
Eastern
High
School, Nazarene near Reedsville.
during the incident. Unsure
Lee Powell , manager of Forestry for wildfire preven- state. Most of these fires were time." he said.
Student. Council at Southern
High School, Skills USA ·Powell's Foodfair, said the tion and education · programs. caused by human.carelessness. . Timerson said he lost con- of when he will return to
ODNR spearheads a num- sciousness briefly and was . work. he said he is waiting on .
program at Meig s High store abo will accept cash The plate can be ordered at any
School , employees at the donations at each of its deputy registrar office, on the ber of programs to educate flown by helicopter to St. the OK froni his doctor.
Tatterson has been with the
Hospital
in
Department of Job and aheck-outs throughout the Internet at OPLATES.COM, or Oliioans about the threat of Mary 's
village
of Pomeroy's Street
by calling toll-free. 888- . wildfires. including Smokey Huntirtgton, W.Va. for treatFamily
Services,
and food drive period .
Bear community school visits ment. He was released a day Department for 24 year~.
"We' re asking customers PLATES (752-8373).
Meigs Primary School are
Smokey 6ear has been the and Firewise. a wildland lire
joining the Rotary Club by for a dollar to go toward the
providing drop-off-lw&amp;)ions food drive effort, but of national symbol for wildland prevention program for homecourse we'll gladly accept fire prevention since 1944. owners in high-risl&gt; areas.
for food.
The food drive will contin- any amount our customers
ue through March 23, said · would like to donate,"
Rotary President Rev. Walter Powell said.

Rockwell

Arrested

---

.I

Liberals' 'rich' conspiracy taxes logic
BY DONALD lAMBRO

WASHINGTON - · Tax
time is fast approaching and,
with· it, the need for an honest re-evaluation of who
comprises the middle class,
and who pays most of the
income taxes .
Perhaps no other area of
public policy is more clouded by "myth conceptions"
· than our federal tax system.
That's why ·last week's latest
"Tax Watch" study from the
nonpartis~n Tax Foundation
is a timely breath of fresh
air, and should be required
reading on Capitol Hill and
in every news bureau, ·
For example, did you ·
know that, this year, a record
44 million Americans will
file tax returns, but will not
have to pay any income
taxes (because of growing
deductions and credits that
have .effectively r!nioved
them from the tax base)?
Did you know th'at as a
result of this the richest 20
percent of taxpayers - people milking · more than
$68,000 a year - ~ill pay 82
percent of all federal income
tax revenue, also· a record?
These are among the littleknown facts a!x&gt;ut taxation
in America that Scott Hodge,
the Tax Foundation's president, includes in his eye- ·
opening report. Hodge offers
another compe\ling tax fact:
"Despite the charges of critics, President Bush's tax cuts
further reduced the tax burden of low- and middleincome taxpayers, and shift.e_d the tax burden onto
wealthy taxpayers."

The president has named a income , married working
bipartisan commission to couples.
"With
two
incomes ,
examine the tax code and
come up with proposals to today's typical families no
make it simpler, less expen- longer reside in the statistisive and more conducive to cal middle of the income
economic
growth · and scale (those earning roughly
$25,500 . to $42,000 per .
investment.
But here's the dilemma the year). On the contrary they
commtssJOn faces , says are the rich, at least statistiHodge: "If the goal of funda- cally by IRS standards," the
mental iax reform is to Tax Foundation reports.
expand the tax base and
These are the taxpayers
lower rates, how do you who pay most of the income
craft a tax reform plan that taxes and, thus, received
(I) doesn't rdise taxes on the most of Bush's tax cuts.
44 million Americans who
Few in the . Washington
now pay nothing, and, (2) news business understand
dramatic
income
doesn't 'cut taxes for the rich' . the
who now pay everything? changes that are occurring in
'fl'\ere is no easy answer."
today's ·changing economy.
This, of course, raises the We keep seeing stories on
interesting and rarely asked the nightly news about "the
question (at least.in the 0 ews disappearing middle class,"
media) about who makes up as.if these taxpayers fell . off
the rich in today's economy? the income scale and 'into an ·
If you believe Democratic abyss·of poverty.
leaders, who continue to say
However,
The
Tax
that Bush's tax cuts favored Foundation's analysis show s
the rich, you might think that that these people iJ-re not di sthe country is awash in mil- appearing, but for the most
lionaires. But tne taxpayer part have risen to a higher
profile put out by · Hodge's income level.
group shows that a growing
"By most a.ccounts, the
number of taxpayers in middle 20 percent of income
today's two-income family earners today no longer
economy have left the statis· , squares with . traditional
tical middle class and have notions of a middle-class
America," according to the
'become, well, sort of rich.
In · other words, · says tax study.
Hodge, "today's middle class
"Today, only 18 percent of .
isn't what it used to be. "
married couples · fall in the
The days when the typical statistical middle of the
married,
single-earner income di stribution, while
household dominated the tax more than two-thirds are
base is long gone. It has fllund in the top two income
been largely displaced in the group,. The largest share of
nation's tax demographics married couples - 35 perby a wealthier income class cent,- earn enougf\,to be in
made up. of 32 million dual - the top 20 percent .of tax pay-

''

Rotary

ers, which begins at about
$68,000," the report states.
Contrary to Democratic ·
rhetoric, almosi 90' percent
of the richest taxpayers are
married, and most are working couples, according to
IRS tigures. Their numbers
have shot up by more thari 7
mi II ion in the last IS years
and now make up 67 percent
of all working age couples.
Individually, th,eir incomes
are typically middle class.
But when couples combine
their income. they are
pushed into a much higher
tax bracket and they become
the so-called "rich."
· The Tax Foundation dramatically illu stralel;.J)lis: ..
"A young factory worker
earning $17 an hour -. or
$35,000 per year - clearly
falls in the statistical middle.
But if she married a man
earning the same income, ·
their combined income of
$70,000 thru sts them up into
the wealthiest 20 percent of
Americans. "
All of thi ~ has huge political implications for the antitax•cut Democrats, who may
be losing their core middleclass base as dual -earner
couples (who pay 69 percent
of all income taxes) are
increasingly drawn to the
GOP's message of broadening the tax base a nd lowering the rates.
So the next time you see a
news story about. "the disappearing middle class, "
remember:. The: middle-class
hasn't lost ground, it's .moved
up to a higher income level.
and, unfortuna!ely. a higher
tax bracket.

.,

Worker

Plate

McClure's Restaurant

Cek6rating Our
4BtftJ1lnniversaryl ·
Monaay tliru Saturaay
March 7tli tliru March 12, 2005

.i"Y ®~e f••ff•~1
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�PageA6

·NATION

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 9,

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Prep Scoreboard, Page I;J2

2005

Bush says authoritarian rule in Mideast 'has begun to thaw'
.

BY DEB RIECHMANN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.

WASHINGTON
President Bush said· Tuesday
that authoritarian rule in the
Middle East has begun to ease,
and he insisted anew that Syria
ml!st end its nearly threedecade occupation of Lebanon.
"Today, I have a message
for the people of Lebanon:
All the world is witnessing
your great movement of conscience," Bush said during a
speech on terrorism at
National Defense University.
"The American people are at
your side."
Nearly 500,000 pro-Syrian
demonstrators in Lebanon,
however, had a different message. The mass protest in
Beirut by people cha.nting
anti-American slogans and
carrying placards that . read.
"America is the source of terrorism," far outnumbered the
. 70,000 protesters who shout ed "Syria out" on the. streets
on Monday.

The Bush administration
brushed aside the antiAmerican sentiment, saying
it was happy to see p~ople
peacefully express their
views. Bush. undaunted, listed nations- Russia, France,
Germany and Saudi Arabia
- that have called for Syria's
withdrawal from Lebanon.
"Freedom will ·prevail in
Lebanon," he said.
"History is moving quickly
and leaders in the Middle East
have important choices to .
make," Bush said. "The world
community .c. has presented
the Syrian government with
one of those choices: to end its
nearly 30-year occupation of .
Leb;mon or become even
more isolated from the world."
The war on terrori sm was
the theme of Bush's re,elec. tion campaign, yet he has
focused in the early days of
his second term on reforming
Social Security. His wideranging speech was filled
with what he called "weicome signs" of democratic

reform in the Middle East, cy will mean Jess terrorism.
including
elections
in
"President Bush's democraAfghanistan, Ir~q and the cy-promotion policy will be
Palestinian territories. .
appropriate and laudable at
"The chances of democratic the right rime in the .right
progress in the.broader Middle nations, but it is not the cure
East have seemed fr.ozen in . for terrorism," Clark, the forplace for decades," he said. mer top counterterrorism
"Yet, at last, clearly and sud- adviser to Bush, said in a
denly, the thaw has begun."
recent opinion piece. He said
Bush said America was grqwing resentment is breed'
safer because dozens .of ing terrorism, "but it is chiefly
nations have stepped Up their resentment of us, not of the
efforts to fight terrorists.
absence of democracy."
Bush cited Pakistan's capture
The speech by Bush did not
of more than 100 extremists have the unilaterialist overacross its nation, Britain's tones of previous addresses.
arrest of an al-Qaeda operative . He trained his most forceful
who had provided detailed cas- rhetoric on Syria and Iran, ·
ing reports on American targets nations that he said have long
to senior al-Qaeda leaders, the
')~ &gt;"'0.&gt;--'t,} ~ -)~
German atrest of extremists
planning attacks against U.S.
and coalition targets 'in inK).
and 'the Philippines' new AntiTerrorism Task Force's success
in helping captllre more than a
dozen terrorist suspects.
Former White House security adviser Richard · Clarke
disagrees that more democra-

College Schedule

'.

···;! ' "

!

,\,-

Rio Grande at Shawnee State
lnvirational , t 2:30 p.m.
·

Rio Grande at Cumberland
College (DH), noon
College Softball

.

J

'·

..

HUNTINGTON.
W.Va ..
(AP) - Marshall's Sikeetha
Shepard-Hall has been named
to
the .
Mid-American
Conference women's basketball second team by the
league 's coaches. · Forward
Crystal Champion was named
to the honorable mention team.
Shepard-Hall, a junior
guard, leads the Thundering
Herd in scorin~ at 15.2 points
per game and IS making 37.5
percent of her 3-point
attempts.
· Champion. a sop)lomore forward. ended the regular sea5on
tied for third ·in rebounding
with an 8.0 aver4ge. She is
scoring I 0. I points per game
and shooting 55.6 percent
from the tie!d.
·
Third-seeded Marshall ( 189) will play No. 6Toledo (14- ·
14) in the quartertinals of the
conference tournament on
in
Wednesday · night
Cleveland.

oNL~

,·:· ..~-~ ''

::•
Actual Size 1x3
~)

from the west turning from
the southwest as the morning progresses .
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will rise
from 35 early this afternoon
to 38 ' i;&gt;y 3:00pm then drop
down to 32 late afternoon.
Skies will be sunny to partly
cloudy with 10 MPH winds
from the southwest.

~'~

Run date Fri.,

'

:,·. March 25, 2005
~~
· Deadline Fri.
!'..
"'';..: March 18, 2005
l

'

.

.

Evan &amp;.. Adam Rodgers ·

' •

Happy Easter
Love, Mom &amp;. Dad

"'

''·.
" ...
·~-~·
·~
/~

Mail to P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, OH 45769
or drop off at The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45769
•

ALL·Mt0:.AMERICAN
CONFERENCE WOMEN'S
BASKETBALL TEAM

HUNTINGT,ON, W.Va. (AP) The aii-Mid-Ameri~n Conference
women's
basketball · team
released Monday:

. ·,

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••A•

Rockwell - · 61.13
Rocky Boots - 31.43
RD Shell .:... 84.59
SBC- 24.17
Sears - 52. 72·
USB- 29.81
Wai-Mart - · 52.42
Wendy's - 39.70
Worthington - 20,68

· COLUMBUS - For 16
minutes, Eastern proved it
could play with the No .. I
ranked Division IV teain in
the state of Ohio . The
Nubians (24-1) needed 2:35
in the third" quarter to prove
why it was the Associated
Press' s top choice.
The Eagles (20-4) held a
hard-fought 22- 19 halftime
advantage, but 13 unanswered points out of break
an
ultimately
led
to
Africentric 56-39 win in the
regional semifinal at the Ohio
Expo Center.
.
. Africentric hit seven of 12
field goals in that pivotal
third frame, scori ng as many
points in the quarter as it did
in the first half.
Conversely. the Green and
White made just four of 12
shots in the third. cooling off
from a blistering 47 percent
effort during the first half.
Afterward. EHS coach
Howie Caldwell talked about
the momentum shift out of
intermission .
" I thought we did what w·e
wanted to do in the first half.
Our game plan was good and
the kids executed." he said.
"They just didn't seem to
have that same fire in the
third quarter. The first three
minutes of the first and second halves are very important. They put 13 straight on
us. and that was pretty much ·
the ball game."
The Purple and Black hit
12 of 24 field goals in that
decisive seco nd half and
sealed the deal at the foul
line, converting 12 of 14 free
throws to secure a date with'
South Webster Friday for a
chance at going to the
Schottenstein Center.
Eastern netted only six of
25 attempts and were outrebounded I 7-12 over that
same span.
The Eagles. which had
eight of its 20 turnovers in
the final two frames, outrebounded Africentric 32-28,
. including a 10-7 edge on the
offensive glass. in the contest.
"We thou ght that if we kept
our turnovers . down to
between 1'2 an~ 14, we· d be
in good shape. We ended up
with
20,"
elaborated
Caldwell. "I did think our
offensive rebounding was

Two Marshall
players earn
MAC honors

'$ 00
·•.•

Sunday's game
College Baseball

COLUMBUS - Eastern's
Morgan Weber was named .
Associated Press Division IV
All-Ohio girls' honorai;&gt;le
mention, released Tuesday . .
Complete Division IV and
IU lists can be found on B2.

• • &gt;,.

·:i

bwatiers@ mydailytribu ne. com

Weber named
honorable
mention All-Ohio

'-·v
-'1.~
.......

FlriltTeam

,,:•
~

.

•
••

Ryan
Coleman,
Eastern
Michigan; Melissa DeGrate, Kent
State: Kate Endress, Ball State;
Carri~ Moore, Western Michigan;
Lindsay Shearer, Kent State .

Child's Name~-----,--.:___ _ _ _...__ __
From __________________
Your Name _________________
Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

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Phone# _ _ _ _~~-----~----'
Ads
Must Be Prepaid
.
.

Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the
previous day's transactions,
provided by Smith Partners
at Advest Inc, of Gallipolis.

Second Team

Honegger, Bowling Green;
Sikeetha Shepard-Hall, Marshall;
Kelly Koertler, Western Michigan;
Ali Mann, .Bowling Green; Cindi
. Merrill, Miami.
Liz

•

······•···················•···································
,

.

Farmers Bank Education IRAs

All-Freshman Team

Reds top Pirates,
Bay injured
·

'

Fs
L_

..&amp;..

....._

....._

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company
....

· orca a

• Pomeroy
• Mason
• Gallipolis

• Tuppers Plains

992.2136
773.6400
446.2265
667.3161

1••

.,

L.'

Substantial iniE!rest penalty is required for ear1y w~hdrawal.
Consult your lax advisor regarding eligibility.

-- -

-- -

..

Crystal Champion, Marshall;
Carin Horne, Bowling Green;
Amanda Jackson, Miami; Simone
· Redd, Ohio; Matika Willoughby,
Kent State.
Kate Achier, Bowling Green;
Julie DeMuth, Ball State; Simone
Redd, Ohio; Olivia Terry, Toledo;
Heather Turner, Buffalo.

TAX-FREE Contributio·ns
AND Distributiofls.

- - - ---------· -- ----

good toni ght and we weren't
intimid~ted by them at all."
Cody Di II led the Eastern
cause with 25 poin". 13 of
whi&lt;:h came in the first half.
Dill also hauled down 15
rebounds and added three
blocks in his fi'nale.
And whi le the sei1ior veteran had an incredible individual performance for the
leading
sco rer
Eagles .
Nathan Cozart (22.7 points
per game) was limited to just
six markers.
·'Cody has been a four-year
player in this program. and I
though\ that he really stepped
. up tonight ," said Caldwell. "I
thought they did a good job
on defending Nathan."
·
Overall Eastern hit 15 of 44
trie' from the field, in cluding
one of nine from behind the
arc. Only two other Eagles
scored in the contest.
Seniors Chirs Carroll and
Robert ·Cross each had four
points in the setback. ·
Classmates Adam Dillard,
Derek Bawn, Chris Myers
and Ed Beatty did not score
in their tinale, but did combine for four rebou nds, three
steals, an assist and a block.
"These kid' have devoted a
lot of work, a lot of time to
this season. I am proud .of
everything that they did this
season. I'm proud of the fact
that they wer~ sixth in the
~ouches' poll. proud that they
won section al and district
championships and that they
were one of the last 16 teams
left." said Ca ldwell. ·Tm
more proud that they were
never intimidated in playing
the number one team, I think
that says how far Eastern basketball has come." .
David Sue! paced the
Nubians with 28 points. 18 of
which came in the overwhelming second half. and
nine caroms. Sue! was also
13. of 15 at the charity stripe.
Lance Sullivan followed
with IIi markers while
Ttavante Leftenant ended
with four. Nick Bush.
LaQuawn Perry, Isa iah Carter
and Pierre Peterson rounded
out the ·Scoring column with
two apiece.
Africentric hit 1·9 of 49
shot attempts and also managed 13 takeaways on the
evening .
South Webster defeated
Fremont St. Joseph 54-46 in
Brad Sherman/photo the second semifinal. The
East~.rn·s Cody Dil l dunks the ball to close out the first.half during the Eagles ' regional 'sem i· regional. final is slated to start
final game against Africentric. The Eagles led 21-19 at halftime. out lost the game. 56-39 .
at 7:30p.m .. Friday.

Third Team

Danielle Bishop, Toledo; Erika
Ford, Eastern Michigan: Karin
Hoogendam, Toledo; Nikki !&lt;napp,
Eastern Michigan; Stephanie
Raymond, Northern Illinois.
. Honorable Mention

.

BY BRYAN WALTERS

Rio Grande at Shawnee State
tnv., 1 I a.m.

OSU-Newark at Rio Grande
(OH), 1 p.m.

.

··~

UBIANS SPEAR EAGLES

Saturday's game
College Baseball

~~t

a Daily Sentinel

- - - - Division IV Boys Basketball Regional Semifinal

· Friday's game
College Softball

GREETING!!
.

...

.'

•

Gannett - 78.83
General Electric- 36.06 ·
GKNLY- 5.05
Harley Davidson - 60.55
JPM -36,94
Kmart - 109.24
Kroger - 16.85
Ltd,- 24.61
NSC -37.62
Oak Hill Financial - 35.35
. OVB-33.35
BBT -40.70 ·
Peoples - 26.24
Pepsico - 53.84
Premier - 11.25

Wednesday, March 9, 2005

-~EGGS'-TRA SPECIAL.~·:•

Local ~tocks
ACI-44,83
AEP- 34.63
Akzo-44.67
Ashland Inc. .- 66.04
AT&amp;T-19,50
BU-U.91 .
Bob Evans - 23.25
BorgWamer - 51.77
Champion - 4.05
Charming Shops - 8. 79
City Holding - 31,53
Col- 47,80
DG -'21,80
DuPont - 53.77
Federal Mogul - .345

histories of supporting terror- withdraw for the Lebanese
ist ~roups determined to sow elections in May to be free
division · and chaos in the and fair.
.
Middle East.
At the White House, Bush
"The time has come for received support from former
Syria and Iran to stop using presidents Bush and Clinton
murder as a tool of policy and as they provided.an update on
to end all support for terror- aid for tsunami victims in
isni," the president said.
South Asia.
Bush again rejected Syrian
Former . President George
President Bashar Assad's H. W. Bush said events in
pledge for a partial pullout of . Lebanon, the recent elections
troops in' Lebanon. The plan · in
Iraq and Egyptian
sei no deadline for a com- President Hosni Mubarak's
plete withdrawal of the recent promise to allow
14,000 Syrian troops and · multi-candidate presidential
intelligence agents.
elections are encouraging.
Bush 'has said that all · 'There's still a lot of work to
Syrian military forces and do. But my own view is, it's
intelligence personnel must positive," he 'said .

Make :s~theone Feel

NewsChannel
VVednesday, March 9
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will rise from
23 to 32 by late this morning.
Skies will be mostly sunny to '
mostly cloudy with 5 M Pf-!
winds from the northwest
turning from the west as the
morning progresses.
Afternooll (1-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will rise
from 34 early afternoon to
the high for the day of 35 at
3:00pm as they drop back
down to 31 later this afternoon. Skies will range from '
. mostly sunny to ·mostly
cloudy with 5 to I0 MPH
winds from the west.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight) Skies will be' clear with 5
Temperatures wi II hold MPH winds from the northsteady around 26. Skies will west turning from the west ·
be clear to mosily clear with as the overnight p(ogr~sse s.
5 MPH winds from the west
Thursday, March 10
turning from the northwest' Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
as the evening progresses.
Temperatures will clirrib
Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
fro m 22 to 34 by late this
Temperatures will linger at · morning. Skies will range
23 with today's low of 23 from sunny . to .mo stly
occurrmg aro und 6:00am. sunny with 5 MPH winds

..

.

BRADENTON', Fla . (AP)
- NL Rookie of the Year
Jason Bay jammed his left
wrist diving for a llyball and
lefi the game in the fifth inning
of the Pittsburgh Pirates• I 0-4
loss to the Cincinnati Reds on
Tuesday.
.
Bay was injured when he
attempted to make a diving
catch on Adam Dunn's drive
near the left-field line. He.
immediately clutched his wrist
and was removed after manager Lloyd McClendon conferred with trainer Brad
Henderson.
Bay was taken to Manatee
Memorial Hospital for X-mys.
"I think Jason was scared
more
than
anvthing,''
McClendon said. "When we
were coming in, he didn' t say
anythin~ bad at all. He wanted
to stay m the game, but at this
point you want to make sure
everything is OK."

.

.

Browns signTrent Dilfer to 4-year deal
ToM WITHERS
Associated Press

BY

CLEVELAND - Trent Dilfer plans to be more
than a one-year fix at quarterback for the Cleveland
Browns.
Dilfer, acquired in a weekend trade from the
Seattle Seahawks, signed a four-year contract on
Tuesday with Cleveland, taking over a position the .
Browns haven't gotten right since coming back in
1999.
The 32-year-old Di!fer - he' ll turn 3:1 Sunday .brings a Super Bowl ring and a world 'of experience

to Cleveland after enduring person- more time into Dilfer. seeing him a;, not only a
al . and professional hardships dur- proven veteran. but as ;,omeone who can win games
ing _his NFL career.
and tutor young 4uarterbacb Luke McCown and
" [ feel like I've got a lot of foot- Josh Harris.
b&lt;ill left," Diller said. " I love this
"He·, a winner," said Browns general manager
game. I love the traveL I love the · Phil Savage said. "and he 's a tremendous man. You
way Mondays feel a tier a win or a look at the mountain-top highs and valley lows he
loss. I love the pressure . There's has struggled with ./But through hi s career he's fig not a guy who loves football more ured out what it takes to win in the NFL"
than I do. I feel like my best footFinancial terms of the deal were not immediately
ball is ahead of me."
..
available.
Dllfer
Dilfe.r came to the Browns with.
Sava ge and Dilt'e r have ·been reunited m
. one year left on his contract at $1 .2 Cleveh~nd . TI1ey were together in Baltimore m
million . The Browns. though. decided to invest 2000. winning a Super Bow l with the Ravens.

Cavs stop six-game skid
BY ToM WITHERS
Assoc1ated Press

CLEVELAND - LeBron James scored 23
points and Drew Gooden had 23 in his re turn to
Cleveland 's starting lineup as the Cavaliers
snappeLI a six-game losing streak with a 111 -92
win over the Orlando Magic on Tuesday night.
Cheered on by R&amp;B superstar Usher. one or
tl\eir new owners. the Cavaliers wnn for the first
time si nce Feb. 23 . But it seemed much longer ·
ago as .Cieveland's Ionge'! losing skid this season 'had dropped the club back in the En,tem
Conference standi~g s . Some began to wonder il"
AP theCa\'' were NBA -playoff worthv.
Orlando Magic's Dwight Howard, left. gets called for chargJame~. thou gh. made &lt;ure the .Cavalier; got
. ing into Cleveland Cavaliers' Anderson Varejao in the sec- back on tratk , adding eight aS&gt;ist;, and ~ven
. and quarter Tuesda)'.
ret&gt;ound' in40 minutes. Gooden finished 10-of-

__ ,__

13 from the field and added five rebounds and
live as~isl:-..
,
Gooden's inconsi&gt;tency had pro1,11pted Cavs
coach Paul Silas to replace him for two games as
a &gt;tarter by Robert Traylor. The benching
seemed to awaken Gooden . who had one of his
best all-around games this season against the
team that traded him last summer.
Zydrunas llgauska-. added IR points and Jeff
Mcinnis IJ and eight assi&gt;t' for Cleveland.
Steve Fmncis scored 21 points and rookie
Jameer Nel-.on had 17 for Orlando. which had
it&gt; 'win streak stopped at three . ,
.The Magic were without All-Star forward
Grant Hill. who i' nursing a 'ore left shin after
getting kicked last week. Hill. averaging 19:3
pomts per game. is abo expected to miss
Wednesday's game in Torontq.
'

--

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-

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'

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 9, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

{!Cribune - Sentinel -

•

March 9, 2005

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C L .A S S I F I E D
Amus

Housm o w
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but not required. Qualilred
candrdates may send
Dnve
resum es lo · Charla BroWnMcGurre, AN, LNHA,
BEST DRIVING .JOB Admi nistrator, 333 Page
Street, Middleport, Ohio
AVAILABLE
45760, EOE
Famrly-Onented Carner w1th
McClure's Res taurant now
Open Door Polrcy look1ng for
hiring all locatrons, lull or
OTA Class A COL drrvers
part-trme, prck up applica· w1th one year experrence
tion at locatiOn &amp; bring back
between · · 9:30am
&amp;
•start at 40 cpm- "II miles
1 ~ ooa m, Mo nday thru
'"Poten1lal &amp;OK
•Late model Frelghtllner Saturday.
Condo s with Automatic ParamediCS
&amp;
EMT's

_...I-j

MONEY

AeqjsJAred Nyrse (AN)
Overbrook Center is current·
ly acceplrng applicatrons lor
a Full-Time AN for the shift
of 7p-7a Anyone interested
please co me rn and fill out
an applicatron at 333 Page
Street. Middleport. Oh EOE

TO LoAN
ea rng manaa

Institution approving Small
Bus1ness, Mortgage
Persona l and Vehicle
Loans. Immedi ate
response.
grve us a can at
1-866·228· 7063" Or apply ·
online at

Wanted
Manager
and
www.inveslmentfmanCial.o
Experrenc ed Auto Body
man. ColltSIOn painting &amp;
frame experifmce necessary Call {740)446-4466 to
'set up an appor ntment.
· Borrow Smart Contact t

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement .........................:.................. 030
Antiques ....................................................... S30
Apartments for Ren'-------·-·-··-----·-·····-··-··-·· 440
Auction and Flea Market ... :........... ,.............oso
Wanted- Licensed Physicar
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Therapy Assistant for home
Auto Repair .....··· ------·-····-· - -----·····-· ·------··-··· 77D
health servrces Please send
Autos for Sale ... ,............... :.......................... no
resume to McGraw Physical
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Therapy. Inc., P.O. Bo)( 983,
Building Supplies .............. .......................... sso
Jackson , OH 45640 or call
Business and Buildings .................... ,........ 340
(740)286-6631
Business OpportunHy ...... ,.......................... 210
Business Training ........... .. .......................... 140
Srnoou;
Campers &amp; Motor Homes---·---····· .. ·--·------·-· 790
INsrRUCilON
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Thanks ......,................................... 010
Gallipolis Career College
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
ae
(Careers Close To Home}
Electrical/Refrigeration ............................... 840
Call Today r 740-446-4367,
Equipment for Rent... .. :.:............................. 480
1·800·2 ~ 4·0452
Excavating ............ :.....,............................... .830
www gallipoliscartKucollege com
Farm Equipmenl.. ......... ,.............................. 610
Accredited Member Accrad•l ,og
Farms for RenL ........................................ ..430
CouncH tor lnoopendenl Colleges
Farms for Sale ............................................. 330
For Lease .................................................... ,490
&amp;oooo
For Sale ........................................................ S85
For Sale or Trade ......................................... S90
FruHs 8o Vegetables ..................................... sso
DHK Cleanmg. Do yo u
Furnished Rooms ........................................ 4SO
need? Hol,lse Cle aning or
General Haullng...............................:...........850
Elderly
Ca re,
Outsid e
G lveaway. ------·-. _..............................,............040
Marnter]ence {powerwa sh·
Happy Ads ....................................................oso
;ng. elc) Call (740)985Hay &amp; Grain ............. ..................................... 640
36 3 3/(7 40)4 16-1823
Help Wanted .................................................1tO
References avarlable Ask
Home lmprovements ............................ ....... 810
for Karen/Dave.
Homes for Sale ............................................310
Household Goods ....................................... S10
G eorges Portable Sawmill,
Houses for Rent .......................................... 4t0
don't haul your logs to the
In Memoriam ............................................... 020
mtll just can 304-675-1957
Transmlaeion
lnsurance .... .. .....................................,......... 130
needed. Apply at 1354,
Jrm's Car pentry
"No forced NYC
Lawn &amp; Garden EquipmenL ..................... SliO
Jackson Pike, Gallipolrs
We do remodeling and most
Livestock ...................................................... 630 · •gso/o No touch freight
any unfinrshed work, a lso
PARTS DEPARTMENT
*Paid Vacation
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
small
tree
removal
•
Ho
spitalization
and
401
K
Lots &amp; Acreage .................................. ,......... 350
(740)446-2506,
(740)367Miscellaneous .............................................. 170 · •Hometime on Weekends One of Ohro's leadrng motor
earners has an' rmmediale 0437.
Miscellaneous Merchandise ....................... S40
opening for a quali11ed Parts
Interested
parties
call
800Mobile Home Repair·-------···------.. ····-· ·----- ---··860
Person .
E)(perrence.
652-2362.
Mobile Homes for Renl-.. ............................ 420
top pa~
required.
We
offer
Mobile Homes for Sale ................................320
Immediate Opening ·
and benefrts for the ri~ ht
Money to Loan ........................................ .....220
Part Time Help Needed
Very
per~n . Three and a half defy BabVsitting·
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ..........................740
work
week,
pard
vacatron,
Re~onable
Rates.
Ages
4
Musical Instruments ................................... 570
We have an 1mmedrate
personal days, health Insur- and under Call Crystal
Personals .....................................................oos
openmg rri ou r customer ance, pard holrdays, over- (74V)44 1-9654 or (740)590Pets for Sale· ·------··-····------···-····: .................. 560 · servtee departrTtent at the
time pay, 401 K plan and 2500.
Plumbing &amp; Haating .....•............•. :...............820
Pomeroy Darty Sentmel. work un1 forms are among
Professional Services .................................230
Approximate work schedule the many benefrts Thrs posJ·
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... teo
IS 9am· 1pm. Monday-Frrday. tion IS open now 8nd you
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
Please stop by office located can begrn work Immediately.
Schools Instruction .....................................150
at 111 Court St , Pomeroy,
Apply by fax, email or you
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Ohio to apply.
may walk rn
SHuatlono Wanted .......:............................... t20
Licensed Pract1cal Nurse
Space lor Renl-.. ..........................................460
Arctic Ell.press. Inc
!.l..eNl
Overbrook center rs
Sporting Goods ........................................... S20
joHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
42n Lyman Drive
a~pt ing applicaQJrrently
SUV's lor Sale ....., ........................................ 720
lNG CO recomm ends tha
Hlllrard , OH 43026
tions for Full· Time and Part~
Trucks lor Sale ............................................ 715
ou do busrness wrth ~eoFax·
614-527-4
114
Trme LPN's. Anyone interUpholstery ................................................... 870
Pie you know and NOT tc
Email mJox@arctiCQK·
ested
please
come
m
an
fill
Vans For Sale ...............................................730
end money th rough the
m ess com
out an applicatron at 333
wanted to Buy .............................................090
m all until you have investr
E O.EiDrug Free
Page Street Middleport, Oh
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies .............. .. .. 620
ated the offering.
Workplace
Wanted To Do ..............., .............................. tao . EOE
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
SASSY SC ISS ORS
Yard Sale- Galllpolis ....................................072
Stylist wanted Salary/
Yard S.le-Pomeroy/Middle .................. :...... 074
Commrsslon.'740-441·1880
Yard Sale-Pl. PleasanL .............................. 076
or 740-256-6336

it"~

~~~

"'

"'

FIND A JOB
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

on sumer
EFORE you refman
ur home or obtain a loan.
EWARE of reque sts to
ny large advance pay
nts of tees Qr rnsu rance. ·
all
the
Ofl rce
o
onsumer Affa irs toll fre
t 1·866-278·0003 to lear
f the mortgage broker 0
ender rs properly lrcensed
This is a public servrc
nnouncem ent from th
ht o Vall ey Pubh ~h rn
om an

~~~~::::::::==~
A

lr.,__J'R_r.~."""-~•N•A•L_.I
DIRECTV

Free Equrtment
Free Profe sstonal
1nslaliation
up 1o 4 rooms
Free SO + premrum
channels
Free DVD player
call lor detarl s
Call 1-800-523·75$6

Jewelry Buy Sell Gold
Diamond s,
Gemsto nes
Repair, App ra1sals, Gem
Graduate
Testin g.
GemoiQgr st.
Jeweler
(740)645-6365 or (740)4463080
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
N o Fee Unless We Winl
1-888-582-3345
l ~l

\ I 1 .., 1 \II

HOMES
FOR SALE
26 15 Mt Vernon , 1 story. 2
br .bsmt. w/ fam. rm, bedrm.
bath. large det , garlshof:L
charn link fence, grea t loca-"
tion $79,000. 304-675-6682

2 bed roo m apt · Seco nd

HOUSES
FOR RENT
2 bed room
house
rn
Pomeroy
$275 00
plus
$275 00 depo sit (740)992 6215 or (740)59 1-0195

•

6176c
Applrc atrons berng taken for
very nice. clean 2 bedroom
apa rtme nt m country setting,
yet clo'se' lo town. on
Centenary Road. Washer,
dryer. stove. frrdge drshwashe r provided. Total else·
trrc w/AC Tenant pays el ec·
tnc No pets. no smokmg
$400 deposrt, $475 per
month. Water in cluded 740·
446·2205 or 740-446·9585
Ask for Vr rgmra.

2 bedroom house. Stove &amp;
re lr~gerato r mcl uded
No
Country senmg on 2-acre s, pets $275 month, $150
2,240 sq-H, 4 bedroom, 2 depos1t Cali {740)446·9061
baths, fireplace, garden tub 2/3 bed room house rn
$105,000 00 Mrddleport, carpeted. 1 car
w/4
Jets,
(740) 742-7434
Beautiful 2-story townhouse,
garage, (740)992·7.501
ove rlookrng G a:llrpolrs Crty
Lov9 iy 3 bedroom home
3 bedroom Condo with river park K1lchen- fam1IY D.R.,
overlooking Hocking Rrver,
vrew,
full
base ment , L A 3 B A , study, 2 baths
Coolville, $12 9,000, call
Galllpolrs Ferry. $700 month. laund ry area References
Magg1e Gifford 740-591 reqUired, secunty deposit,
Call (740)446-3481.
722 1, Hayes Aealestate.
no pe ls $900 per mo
3Br
hou se
for
Rent (740)446-2325 or (740) 446Near Hol zer Hosprtal. Good
$675/month ,
plu s One 4425
Neighborhood. 3 bedroom.
Month Oeposrt 1n Advance.
1· 1/2 baths, large famrt y
BEAUTI~UL
APARTroom , trreplace, central arr. Fenced·rn Yard , Srngie Car
AT
BUDGET
Garage Attached (304 ) 531~ MENTS
garage Newly remodeled.
PRICES AT JACKSON
11 97 or (304 )5 31•1198
crty schools
$123,000
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
(740) 4 4 6-7~81
4 rooms and bath 52 Olive Orrve from $344 to $4 42
St No pets, $300 month. Walk to shop &amp; movres. Call
Neat, clean ranch style
(740)446-3945
740·446-2568.
Equ al
home located in Aacrne, Oh
Thrs home has 3 bedrooms, 5 rooms and bath in Housin g Opportun ity
1 bath, one car garage, star- Mrddleport Gas heat, No
Chec k out a clea ll 2BR
age barn. large deck, applr· pets, depoSit (740)742·2424
co untry settmg wrth WID
ances stay, call 7 40-949.. .or (740)992-3439
~ ook up No pets $350/mo
3090 anytime af1er 5pm
deposot (7 40)256- 1245.
Clean 2 Bedroom. Ground
MOBFOILERSHALEOI\~
Floor. WID Hook Up, Ref CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
Dep No Pets (304)675- ED &amp; AFFORDABLE I
5162
Townh ouse
apartments
1973 Grandville' 14x70,
and/o r small houses FOR
bedroom, with stove &amp; Nrce Lar ge 3br Home rn RE NT Call (740)441 · 111 1
refn gerator. $3 ,000 OBO Town. Upstai rs Laundry 1- for applicatron &amp; rnformafion
Year Lease. $550/mo nth
Call (740)446-01 94
plu s Oeposrt (304)675-4030 .EffiCiency apt $300 rilont h
1980 14x60 Nausha, 2 bed· 9-5
plus uttlitres No pets. Call
room , remode l bathroo m,
(740) 446-43 13
MOBILE HOME'i
new porch roof w/d, stove.
For
Lease·
2
Floor,
ll&gt;R RENT
$6, 00 0,
refrigerator,
Spacio us.
Totall y
(740)992:0925
Remode led, 2 Bedroom, 1
2 br. mobrl e home cny limits
1982 Schultz 14K70, 2 br , 1
1/2 Baths, Unfurnrshed
of PI Pleasant 304-675bath, askmg $5000 304·
Apa rtment
New Water
2359
675'6349
Heater and App liances
Gall ipolis
1993 14x70 Norris. 2 bed- 2BR unfurnished 10-m1n Downto wn
and
Key
Depostt ·
Security
room, 2 bath, garden tub, from town. S~ rt abl e for 1 or 2
Requ ued
No
Pets.
e.
No
.pets.
peopl
deck,
drsh washer,
8x8
Requi red
Rea sonable rent. (740)256· References
$11, 500. (740)446-9480
(740)446-6882, M-F 8:006 176.
5:00
1995 Clayton Double W1de,
52X24, 3 Bedrooms, 2 Bath , 2BR, 2BA. close to Tycoon
Furnished 2 &amp; 3 room apls.
Tota l Electnc (304)675-2907 Lake on 112 acre lot No
·pets,
partly
furni shed. Qlean, no pets Reference &amp;
requ1red
Can
For Sale - 1979 Homette, 2 $365/month incl udes water, deposit
bedroom, wlcentral ai r, $250 deposit (740)379- (740)44 6·1519.
$3.495 00. Call (740) 385- 9297
Gracious llvmg 1 a'nd 2 bed·
4367
room apartments at Vr llage
3 bedroom mobrle home rn
For Sale, 14X70, 3 bedManor · and
Rrve rside
Mrddlepo rt,
no
pets
Apartments m Middlepor t
room, set up in Country
1740)992-5856
From $295-$444 Call 740·
Homes.. $6,995 00 Move in
lodayl Call (740)385-4387
Mobile Home on Prrvate lot 992·5064 Equal Housrn g
Spring Valley area Like Opportunrtres. ·
Home avail able for im medi ~
new~ 3 bedroom, all electrr c
Modern 1 bedroom apt Call
ate occupancy! Already s:e t·
2 bath, central a1r, refrigera- (740)446 -0390
up on rented lot. 3 bedroom,
tor, stove. wfdryer hook up,
1 bath, 10% down, $209.00
water New I ' bed room apt ·catr
attached 9arage
mo n,th.
Call
Harold,
rnclu ded 2 mrles from (740)4 46-37~6
(740)385-9948
Holzer hospr tal $585, ref
P1 lot Program· Renters
lmmed rate possession! Only and deposit req No pets
needed
Call (304)736·
$213.68 per mo. New 3•bed· Cal 614-763-0518/614-2083409
roorn, 2 bath mobrle home. 5840.
On ly minutes from At hens.
Twm Arvers Tower is accept·
Small 2 bedroom mobile
1·800-837·3238
rn g applicatrons lor wartrng
home In Racrne, $225 per
Ir s! for Hud-subsized, 1- br.
Inventory Clearance
month. $225 deposit , years
apartment. call 675-6679
5 used homes under lease. no pets. no calls after
EHO
$2,000.00
Call
Mike, 9pm. (740)992-5039
(740)385-767 1

i

r

SUPI'UE'i

r

Wolf tann1 ng
(740)667-6 164

r

FUR

RENT

, and 2 bedroom apart·
ments, furnished and unlur·
·n1shed, securrty deposri
requrred , no pets, 740-992·
2218.

(740)541-7470
For· Sale Day old Rh; de
Island Beds St run on ly
$1 00 each (304)593·5073

1 994 Mrtsubrshr 3000 GT,
new transm1ss ion CD play·
er, great cond. 304· 773·
5177 or 304·593-3619

Yearling AngUs Bulls, Mostly
A I exce ll ent bloodl rnes,
pn ced reasonably Slate ·Run
Farm, Jackson (740 )286·
5395

1996
Cadillac
Sedan
Devrl le. Maroon w/ c loth·
top.
Miles-1 04,500.
Excellent condltron $5,500.
Ph. (740)256- 1946. cell
(740 )339-2724

ped.

$600.

pao

I wr~wslateru:~m~om

1998 'Pontrac
Sunfrre
97 •000
Convertible
m rleslauto, 2.4Uter engine,
1000# bales. $7 00-$ 10 00 all power, CD player, new
tr res,
Black
w/Red
&amp; $15.00, p1ck up load or
Pin stnpes $3,500 F1rm .'
~em1-load,
good
hay,
(740)245-9266
(740)698-2765
1999 Ford Contour SE- 4
Square Bales mllced Hay $2 door, 24,300 mrles, excellent
each leave message rf no co nd 1110n . $5,500
Call
an swer (304)67 5-11 18
(740)44 6·077 1 alter 6pm.

-

GRAIN

II(\ \O,: I'O[{ I \110\

lO

r

.

A1JID'ii

2000 Chrysler Crrrus 4-door
sed an, au to matic pow~r
, se ats,wlndows,door-locks,

..___.iFOiiiRiiSALEiiiiiii,- · ·1
-,
$500! Honda's, Chevy's,
Jeep's,
Ect.
Pollee
lmpoundsl Cars from $500
for lr slings .800·391 ·5227
EXT 3901

00 Ford F~ 150 XL 4 door, V2, auto 2WO, mrles077 411
$8.900
99 Chev Silverado PU Z-7 1
VB . auto, 4K4, short bed,·
mrles-094 491 $10,900
99 Dodge Ca ravan Mrles·
Jotin De ere - 2040, diese l
085. 960. $5,995
EC, new trres, $ 8,950 Ford
98 Ranger ext cab 4x4 4 0,
3000
d1 ese l,
$5,995
V6, auto, 4)(4, m1 les·
(6 14)419-2781
120.946. $7.500.
- ,. .
Southern AutQ Sales
Specials of the M onth on
(740)446-8554
Farmpro Tractors Farmpro
20hp, 2-wheel drive , dresel
·1952 Pl ymouth 4d r eng1ne
utility tractor, $3&amp;99.
runs good, bOdy exce l! , a ll
Farmpro 25hp 4-wheel
orgmal, no ruS1 32, 000 mrles
dnve, d1eset utility tractor
304-57&amp;2532
wlfoader, $8999 More
1969 Ford :XL, GalaXy 390,
un1ts available. all wrlh 1yr
automati c, power steer1ng
warranty, call for more
and brake&amp;,, AC . rnterr or
detarl s (740)696·0358
excellent, Mechanical exce l·
Tracto r pa rts &amp; serv1ce, spe· lent, body good Needs
ci al izrng
in
Massey mrnor reparr and parnt
Ferguson , Ford, Lo ng, and $3,300.00 080 (7.40)696Belarus. (740)696·0358
1373 (7401591-5888

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
.
r

.

Srl ver excell cond 63, 000
mrles $6000 304-67 5·6047
2000 Chrysle r LXI Town and
Country All leathe r, 66,000
mrtes, excelle nt cond itiOn,
$10,500. Ca ll (740)2459088
2000 Kia Sephra 4-doo r.
automatic, very easy on gas,
70,000 m tles, run s like new,
purple 1n · co lor. $3, 800 or
best offer (740)4 41·9378

2000 Chevroiet·SIIverado
1500 LS. tully-optioned ,
4x4 , bed II ne r, 1ra 1ler r ng ·
p~g Pewter eKt,. Charcoal
rnt ,1OOk hrghway miles
syn oil , below book $12,900
304-773-6062

.2003
, Pont rae
Sunfrre
approx . 20,000 mrles $7900 2000 S10·LS. Ext·cab. 3rd
door, 4·cyl. 5-spd AC . 'co
(3,04)458-1881
48,000
miles
Askrng
93 BUICk $1900 304-576·
$7,900 00 OBO (74019492383
2621
93 Lincoln Town Car 81 OQO
2002 Chevy 1500, V8 .
mrles Ve ry nrce, $4,500
29,080 miles, 5spd, PS/PB,
{740)446- 1759.
AC lriVcruise. CD. $12,000
98 Cadtllac Calera Fully Recon title . (304)634·513 1
equrpped, leather rnter1or.
2004 FORD F-150 Lanat.
IQw mrles, mrnt condition.
Super
Crew
10.000mr
$7,900 Call (740)704-3751 .
2yrl20,000ml warranty left,
BMW Z3, '99
Spec1a1 · loaded /extras.
$30.000
Edrtron , 22,000 mrles, dark (304}52.3·3500, (304)654·
green , $19999 (304 )41 2- 9318,(304)886· 1668.
3380.
87 Chevy 1/2-ton, 2WD 350·
Chevy Monte Carlo SS, '84, engrne 81 .DOO-m lies good
$6,500 neg Call {740)377- condition, PWIPL, orrg 4
9943
new
tr res
Redf black
$4.700 (740)506-1367
Jeep Grand Chero kee 00 -.;::--~~~~--.,
Fi
Laredo. 65K m1les. Excellent
SlNS
cond1tron. 4x4, remote start,
S

i

extras
$13 ,000neg
cl3_0_4;..
16_1_7-_1_38_0_·- , - - - Must sate. 1984 Corvette,
350 engrne (740)992-6797

· - -Foi'OiiiRii'iiiAiiiLiiir.-_.1.

[725
I

(740)367-7147

2003 SuzuKr Vrnson 500 4·
wheeler 340 m11ss Red 4
2001 Jeep Cherokee Sport WD $4800 OBO 304·675·
4K4 pr1ce reduced, loade€l 2790
CO ,lowmg package 54 ,000
2004 Harl~y Davidson 883
mrles 304-675-1314
custom black 4.500 · miles
86 Bronco XLT, 4 WO, 302 4 $7 .500 1740)441 ·1583
BBL. auto, new trres raters,
2005 KawasaKr V· Tw1n 750
$1 ' 100, (7401992-3679
VUlcan
Cycle
never
dropped, garaged 50mpg
99 Jeep O·erokee
Sport
! '
4x4 . EC. gold, auto, PW. PL, $4 .400 (304)675-2942
V6 ,
CD.
CC
new 94 Harley Davidson Ultra
rotors /brakes
$ 5 995 Classrc, 10,000 m1le: blue.
(6 14)231 1355
'·
excellent cond1tron, $13.500 .
740 949 22 17
VANS
)
-

I(

~---FiiOiiiiiiSil'illli,Ei-i-.,J ~ · BoATS &amp; .M oroRS

....,
FOR SALE
1993 Chevrolet Astra Va n
good
condltron
phone 2002 Strngray 20 tt open
(304)675·5077
bow. Red! Whrte 50 liter v.
SEL L YOU CAR
8, Hustler trailer, excellent
1998
Jeep
Che rokee 2000 Ford WrndStar L~
HERE
cond.. garage kept. pr1ce
Classtc, 4 0, automatrc, fully 91 ,000 m1les. 2 sl1drng new $24000 sell $15700.
loaded $5495 304·727- doors, powe r wmdows &amp; call Troy Krebs 304·675. 6924
cruiSe $6 300 (304)6758828
4014
2000 Jeep Grand CheroKee
Lrmrted 4x4, 4 .0 automatic 2000 Ford Winstar LX 81K.
CAMPERS &amp;
Cassette. CD changer, sun 2/sl1drng doors. seats 7. all
WITH A PHOfO!
MotOR Ho~ll:li
roof, heated· coo led seats, powe r rear arr, tinted wrnCall (740)446-2342
low mil es · Excellent condr· dows.
ask:rng
$6 600, 1998 30' frlth wheel travel
Ir on . (740)367·7 147.
For Details
(740)669-5953
trarler. double slide. excel~
2001 GMC J1mmy SLE. CO
lent cond ition . $13,900
MmoRcvcu
:s/
pl aye r, all power 4x4, great
phone (740)698·93 19
TRUCKS
4 WHI::E1£ RS
cond . 304·773·5177 or 304·
FOR SALE
593-3619
.
02 Honda 400 EX. Excellent 2001 Hornet Bunkhouse 32'
198 8 For d F1 50, 79,300 200 1 Lmco ln Nav1gato r
conditron, rode little $3,000 12 expando, sleeps 1o.
m1les Excellent cond1!ion 5 AWD, 5.4 V8, 3rd row seat- neg Call (740)256·1526 or excellent condrtro n $16 ,800
speed, overdrive. (740)388· rng, cassette/C D·changer. (7 40)645-o446
(740)441-1501
01 40
heated/co ol ed~se at s,
low
- _ _ _Che"',-'Y-_ _ _ _T_u-rb_o.. m1 les. exce llent condrtron , 1979 HOnda 750 10th
"' K' l« I ...,
199 3
350 0
Dresel. Red Pickup, Dully, $23,900.(740)453·5535.
Annrve rsary Lrm1ted Edrtron
1gnr1lon
Powe r Wrndows. Locks. 2002 Che\1)' Avalanche Z7 1 Needs
work ~to

40

2000 Kra Sephra, $3, 100:
1999 Ford Ranger XLT,
$3.800; 1999 Dodge Dakota
ex ca b, $4,800: 1996 Ford
Aero Start van , sha rp,
$2,300, 1998 Chevy Z-24;·
$3,295: 1999 Ford Contour.
$2, 100
58 ,000
Loa ded
B &amp; 0 Auto Sales
(304)593-5073
(740)446-6865
2001 HOnd a C1v1c LX
Coup e. Gre en , automatic,
excell ent condrtron , very
clean, 73,000 highway·
mrle s, $8 ,395 nego tr able
(6 14)313-7096.

99 Jeep Grand Cherokee 1999 Honda Shadow 750cc
Laredo. Loaded, 6 c:ylrnder , 6,200 mtles. excellent condi·
excellent cond1!10n . 97,000 Iron. $4 .000. Call (740)446·
m1les
$7 900
080' 1948
(740)5\)2-2948
2000
Harley
Oavtdson
X
Sportster 883 Hugger, 6.350
44
FuK SALt:
mrres. new t1res. extras
·--ioiiOiiiiiiiiiio•rl $6,500 Neg Day (740)645
'
J248 . even1ng after 7pm
1978 Jeep CJ5 8 cy 304 (7401256-6589
engrne. whrte fiber glass
body black top &amp; brkrn1 top, 2003 Suzuki 400 all·skrd
plates, whtte brothers pipe
padd~d ro ll bar, sharp
Excellent
cond illon S3,200 (304)576-2668

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1995 Jeep Cherokee Sport ,
4 0 automatrc1 arr, eKcellent
cond. $3495.00 30.4-7276924

4 WHEfl.HIS

frrm Fully loaded, onstar, heated
seats, 29,000 m1les, moonroo f. 4-wheef-drlve. CD.
1995 Ford F· t 50 XLT, 8ft. $23.400 0 80 (614)989bed. excellent condrtion 6448
Aski ng $6,800 0 8 0 Call
2004 Ford Expedrllon 4x4
( 740)~92 -1 777
XLT Power w/d s9at crUise
arr, AMIFM cassette CO
199 8 Ford 1 ton ~ ube Van .
lilt , 5 4L, Trrton, V8, tow pkg
12 H alum bO)(, auto- A C .
V G C , sharp, garage kept Red &amp; grey color, 35,000
mrles Excellent condition
Phone (740)446·7787
$25,500 (740)245-9162.

2002 Ford Escort ZX2. 5
speed, 29,000 miles. a1r,
one owner. Nrce (740)441 0157 or (740)645-5 141
1999 Chevy 1 ton wrth 11 ft
1981 Olds 98. 4dr. Ru ns
utrl
1 ty bed AC, crUise. till ,
2003
Dodge
Neon
STX
Good. Call (3041 675-1264 ·
4door, 4cyl., automati C, 350 gas. 5 speed trans ,
1994 Mercedes 220. Good powe r eve rything. 1 t .000 69. 000 m1les E)(cellent con·
cond1t1on ,
$6. 800
Ca ll mil es, $6,500 (740) 441 · drtto n Call (740)256·1526 or
(740)245-9088
(740)645-0446
0337 or (740)645-6153

Evenmg
(740)256-6870
Low mileage. $2.000

HOME

hiPROVEMt~~I'S

1982 Honda 500 Tr1ke
BASEMENT
Farrng w/stereo syste m Ok
WATERPROOfiNG
blu e Evenrngs (740 )256, Uncondrtronal hfellme guar ·
6870 $3,000
antee Local references fur·
nrshed Established 1975 ·
1986 Honda Fo reman. 4 wd . Call
24 Hrs (740) 446·
excellent cond1tron, garage 0870 . Rogers Basement
kept, $2000, (740)992·04 13 Waterproofing
1995 Harley Softarl Custom
$9,995 Call (606)232-6319

2004 Honda Pilot EX. raled
best full SIZE! SUV Red Pearl 1996 Honda Goldw1ng 1500
ext tan cloth tnt , all ophons. Aspecade 23,700 m1 1es,
marntarned and bab1ed, 21 k excellent con drfiOn 2 matchm1les $26,900 304-773· Ing helmets Askmg $6 000
(740)38~- 8 047
S062

Culverts
piastre and metal 6' lnches60 1r1c hes 1n stock Ron
Evans En teronse. Jackson .
OH I (800)537-9528

. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... .1
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Reaeh 3 Counties

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Featunng Home &amp; Garden Products
Tuesday, Ma rch 15th

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis
Daily Tribune,
Point Pleasant Register, or
.
.
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE -In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

Middleport American Legion
Doors open at 5:30 pm
t=l':::h·:cc..ot info call Amy 740,698-1808

BASKET BINGO
March 11th, 6PM
P.P.M.S. Gym
40 Door Prizes
$20.00/20 Games

Help Wanted

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RENT
YOUR
APARTMENT
WITH A
CLASSIFIED

FO~~

_1994 Chrys ler C~cord
95 000 mrles, runs great.
crurse/trll, power everythrng .
$1.600
(740)256-1233
or (740)256-903 1

2002 Pontiac Grand AM SE
Red , AJC, CO, lqaded. 56k
miles,
'Euro
ta1111ghls.
chrome accents, $8.995
EKcell ent condrtion Call
(740)25&amp;8816

1r

40 M&lt;mJR&lt;.Ycu:s'

SlJVs
fUK SAI .E

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3

APAKIMENTS

B UlLDL'M;

1989 Crown Vic, new trres ,
new battecy, new trans Very
nrce car. 101,000 miles
$2.2QO.OO 080. (740)992·
5532
- - - - - - - - -1990 Ford Thunde rbrrd
$700. 304-675-4949- .....

4-H Pigs for Sale
Begrn farrowrng 1/20/05 and
still farrowmg Pu re 'bred
Yorks
and
crossb reds.
Please call (7401448-,2002
(7401541-7491
or
or

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.1992 Dodge Stealth. 24
M/1F, AKC, Born 12/31,
va lve tu ~bo . $4 000
~at
Chk'd,
shots ~ ~
Early 90 s Gehl IQader
~arm ed. · $500. PO P.
Appliance ·$10.500
740)473-2785, (740)236
3i black Angus Bulls, $2,000
po28
each·
Warehouse
2001 Cargomate cargo trarl·
UKC To y Bat Tern ers 6
rn Henderson , WV
Pre· er. $8.500 (740)256-9247 or weeks, ta1ls docked , $100
owned apphcanes startrng at (740)645 -0870
i740)256-M 24
' $75 &amp; up all under warra nty, Aylce -20 04
Ball
we do s8rvrce work on all
I \l~\l"ill'l'lll"'
Ye ll ow
Gown#16387.
Make and Models (304)675·
,\II\ I "ii(H h.
w/Sequeins
srze
6,
7999
Excelle nt
Co ndrtro n ,
FARM
Fu rmture. Sofa- chair sets, (304)593·4659 after 6pm or
leave
message
EQuiPMENT
$399: Safa- love seat sets,

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3 Bdrm Ranch. 2 bath . LR,
FA, baseme nt. 2 fireplaces,
2 car garage Centenary
(740)448· 1035.
SAVE·SAVE-SAVE
Stock models at old prices,
3 Bedroom 1 &amp; 1/2 bath, 2005 models arrr\lrng Now,
new-wrndows &amp; roof ,located Cole's
Mobile
Homes,
12 Smith St t&lt;ings town 15266 U.S. 50 East, Athens .
area River-view available No Ohio 45701. (740)592-1972.
Down ·Payrnent
$425 a "Where You Get Your
Money's Worth"
month (304)675-2749

uS. 60
Cannonsburg-Ashland
(behrnd Mr. Gatti's)
. (606)922~7185

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$499
Mollohan Carpei For rent· 24'x32' 3 stall Pole
(740)446-7444 or (7401388- Barn Private. AI. 7. $2 00/
0173
(740)446-4782
monlh .
Gallrpohs.
Kenmore
washer.
$95.
. Whirlpool d(ye r, $95 GE
JET
electnc
range,
$95
AERATION MOTO RS
Whr rlpool refrrgeralor, $150: Reparred , New &amp; Rebuilt In
Like new Whirlpoo l dry er, Stock Call Ron Evans, 1·
$250: L1ke new Magrc Chef 800-537·9528
was her, 5250 , Octagon end
tables. $15 each: Tapp an
Locust Posts- 7~ 1 /2 to 8 fee t
gas range. 5175
long , 4" to B" d1amete r
Skaggs Appliances
F1rewood· All hard woo d
76 Vrne Street
Large load. Cut and split
(740)446-7398
W ill deliver. Call (740)256Molloban Carpet, 202 Clark 9115 or (7 4 0)256~6605
Chapel Road Porter Ohio.
(740) 446· 7444 1·877·8 30· NEW AND USED STEEL
9H52 Free Est1metes. Easy Steel Beams. Pip e Rebar
Concrete,
Angl e,
frnanci ng, 90 days sarne as For
cash. Vrsa/ M as ter Card Channel , Flat Bar, Steel
Grat1ng
For
Drains.
Orrve· a ~ litTle save alot
Dnveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
· Scrap Metals Open Mond ay,
Tuesday, Wed nesday &amp;
Frrday. 8am-4 ~Opm. Closed
Saturday
&amp;
T hursday.
Sunday. (740)446-7300

Ave., Gallipolis. $450 mon th,
stovelrefrrgerator rnciuded
I BUY HOMES
was her/dryer hookup, cenNeed to se ll your hom e
tral arr 740-441-0194 or
qurckly because of a
740-441 -1184.
dt vorce, ba nkruplcy. JOb
transfer. or death . Don't let · 2BA apt State Route 160
the ban k foreclose and rwn $400/monttj, stove/retngera·
your credrt Local person tor included, washer/dryer
buys houses Fast closrngs. hookup. (740)44 1-019 4 or
All cash. Ji m (740 )99 2· (740)44 1· 11 84
6300 No call s after 9 m
5 rms. 2 blocks from down·
town Water. sewage, trash
pa1d No pets. (740)256·

This newspaper will not
knowingly act=:ept
advertlaamenla for real
••tate which Ia In
violation of the law. Our
readare are hereby
Informed that ell
dwelllnga advflftlaed in
thle naw..,aper are
available on an equal
opportunity buea.

©

HEI.rWANTED

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All real estate advertlalng
In thls newspaper Ia
subject lo the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes it Illegal to
advartiae "any
preference, limitation or
dlacrlmlnetlon baaed on
race, color, religion, sax
familial atatua or national
origin , or any Intention to
make any such
preference, llmltalion or
dlacrlmlnatlon."

r

FIND
BARGAINS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

FUR SALE

A PARI'MENTS

We have · approxi mately 13 2 bedroom apa rtment. S275
use d homes for under per month plus deposrl plus
ut1iltres, 3rd Street. Racin e
$2,000, 1-800-837 -3238
(740)247-4292

FoUND

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.:.~.s.~-.,.....I

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3 bedroom, 2 bath , frreplace.
SSII Sac ral Securrty
1 bedroom apt. rn Gallipolis
on 1.6 acres. Rio Grande $1 ,300 Net in come. We can Reference
&amp;
deposrt
area.
$85,000
Call finance you a home Call requr re d Ca ll (740) 446·
(304)7 36-3400
2468 after 4pm
(7401 709- 1166.

Puppoes 7 weeks old
German/Austrian Shepherd.
Call (740)367-7947

$500-$1 ,800 moJPT
$2,4DO-S5.500
mo/FT LUST AND
Work from your Home or
Office 1nternati onai
NRA Concea led Frrearms
Company need s
Brown/black With grey male
Class
Sup ervrsors &amp; Assrstant s
Coon
Hound
Found
m
Now Forming
One-on-One training,
Crown Crt y Own er call to
March 19th 9 OOam
Vac atrons.
idenl ify (740)256-1746
Cost $75
www.TrueProsperlty4U.eom
$25 (Non- Refundable
1·800·949·4561
LOST: Orange long-haired
Deposit)
cat near Vine Street CASH
Call (740)992-9444
...... NECCO .......
REWARD (740)441 -8285.
Cell PhOne
MAKE A
(740)4 1 6-332~
Rewa rd for rnformat1on or
DIFFERENCE IN A
E~mai l
return of Cal reo cat, Monkey
CHILD'S LIFE
NRAINSTRUCTOA@OH IO· Run area. (740)992-5896
Fost er Pare nts needed
HI LLS COM
To learn more about
fostering and free trarntng
WV. OH AND ALL LEGAL
opportunities contact
STATES
Ktm Romeo at
Abso lute Top ·Dollar. U.S.
740·894-4360
MUST BE 21
Stive r and Gold Co in s,
1-877-50-NECCO
Proofsets Gold Rmgs, US
Currency ·Nl.T.S. C01n Shop, An Excellent way to earn
GIUAWAY
151
Second
Ave nue. money. The New Avon
Call Marrlyn 304·882·2645
GallipoliS, 740·446-2842
Beagle, 8 mo, femaie1 ~ i rst
Are you ttred of your
shots, wormed. heartwo rm Wanted An Inexpensive rel1 ·
CUfrent job and looKing
able
automobile
Please
call
tested. Runs rabbrt &amp; cats
lor something better?
(740)379-9465. (740 137 9- Gary after 3pm at (740)446·
We offe r excellenl
8398
9445
employment opportunities.
You can make up to
Free puppres to good home
, $8/hour calltng on .behalf
only Australran Shep herd
of major non-profit and
m1x. 9 weeks old (740)256·
politrcal orgamzalions. We
6623.
'
also offer paid tram1ng,
Puppies to give away,
holidays and vacatrons.
Mother-reg rstered Golden
Take advantage of lhe se
Retrr ever, Father-Bl ack Lab
opportumties and call us
8 weeks old. Good home
todayr
only (740)367-7708
1-8'17-463-6247 ext. 2454.

_

MOBILE HOME'&gt;

·

5PA 0un£r
Grand Opentng
Saturday/Sunday
11 am-7prn
Open Darly

1 Quarter horse mare, 4 yrs
old Green broke, ' $400
(740)256- 1652.
'"
. 3 yr old Guildrng quarter·
horse Green broke $500
(740)367-741 3 after 6pm

Sheltla pups:

POLICIES: Ohio VaHay PubliahiMJ reaervea the right to edit, reJect, or cancel any ad at any time. Errors muat be reported on the tlrat
Trlbune-Sentlnei-Aeglater will be reapontlble tor no more than the coat of the apace oc Cupied by the error and only the first Insertion.
not be I
·any loaa or expense thll!t results from the publication or omiaaion of an advertisement Correction will be made In the linJI available edition. • Box
are alway• confidential. • Currem rate card applies. • All real estate advertlumenta are autJtactto the Federal Fair Houalng Act of 1968. • Thia newwop;operl
I
ada
I EOE standarda. We will not knowingly accept any advertlalng in violation of the law.

. KIT &amp; CARLYLE

GooDS

Pole Barn 30x50x 10FT
$6795 mc ludes Parnled
Meta l, Pl ans: Instruction
Book Slider, Free Delivery
(937)559·8385

Bloc!(, bnck', sewer ptpes,
wtndows, lintels, etc Cla ude
·
Llama 45 cal ACP, Duo Wmters, RI O Grande. OH
:Fo r Le~se· Oft1ce or reta.li
Call 740-245·5 121
.spaces rn very good condr·
· ·t1on. Downtow n Gallrpo irs.
Approx. 1600 sq. ft. tach. 1
ANnQu~
~
or 2 baths Lease pr rce
negotrable to encou rage
Dac hshund pupp1es AKC
new
busrness.
Call Buy
or sell.
R rve t rne 1st 'st;.ots, 1st w,orming,
(740)446 4425 or (740)446- Antiques 11 24 East Main S350 .Call (740)446-4446
-3936
on SA 124 E Pomeroy, 740·
992·2526. Russ Moo re, Purebred Border Co lIre
'IIIH II\ '\IHS I
pup s Imported bloodlrnes
owner.
1st, shots/wormed. Classrc
colors $100 each . Call
(740)379-911 0

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All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication

FridaY For Sundays Paper

IL
i
·1~._-..,;,;,FOiiiiiRi.RiiiiENliiiiio
. - -;,.t. ---

SroRTING

SPALl-.:

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(.
.1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics'SO¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
Next Day's Paper

P2:0

T RUCKS
FOR SAU:

IURSALE

Help Wanted

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
LPN-PH or Medical

Assl/Medical Receptionist
·Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a full-time
LPN-PH or . Medical
Assistant/
Medical
Receptionist. Applicants
must have a current WV license.
One-year experience in a physicians
offi ce or hospital related . area,
working with direct patient care.

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Excellent salary. holidays, health
insurance singhi/lamily plan, dental
plan, life insurance, vacation, long
term disability, and retirement.
Send resumes to :
Pleasant Valley Ho.spital
cfo Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550

304-675-4340
AA/EOE

wv.w.pvalley.org

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~alltpoltslailp mrtbune The Daily Sentinel t)otnt t)Ieasant l\egister I
L_. _.Q~2!.~:~~·-..- ..- .. -·~~.~=.~·-. - . -··-~~. ~:~~.-. .-.J
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Wednesday, March 9, 2005

www.mydallysentinel.com

Pa9e B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 9, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Dail Sentinel • Page B5

'

ALLEY OOP

BRIDGE
Publl4..~

Your Right t o

Know~

NottceN In NewNpo.pers.

Deli ventd Right to Your Door.

PUBLIC NOTICE
Ralph E. Truaael , the bid amount with a entitled action, I will
between 100 acre ~ot
expose' to sale a\ pubSHERIFF SALE
No. 290 and 291 ; Meigs County Sheriff. surety satisfactory to
lic auction on the
Case'
Number thence north at right
Attorney
for
the the aforeaaid Meigs
C o u n t y front stepa of the
02CV125
Plaintiff
angles with said road
Meigs
County
Branch Banking &amp; and along said line Carlisle McNellle Rlnl Commissioners or by
Courthouse
on
certified
check,
Trust Co., Plaintiff, vs. 100 feet; thence west
Kramar &amp; Ulrich
·steven/Stephen
&amp; · 126 feet ; more or
24755 Chagrin Blvd., cashiers check, or let- Friday, April 15th,
ter of credit upon a 2005 at 10:00 a.m. of
Elizabeth Jenkins, et less; thence south
Suite 200
said day, the followal. Defendants Court
100 feet to the place
Cleveland,
Ohio solvent bank in and
ing described real
amount of not less
of Common Pleas , of beginning. being a . 44122
Meigs County, Ohio.
than 111"A. of the bid estate:
lot with a frontage on (216) 36D-7200
Situate In the State
amount In favor of the
In pursuance of an
public
road
of (2) 23, (3) 2. 9
Buyers of standing timber
aforesaid
Meigs of Ohio, County of
order ol sale to me approximately
126
Also Land Clearing
C o u n t y Meigs and In the ·
directed from said feet and a depth of
Commissioners. Bid VIllage .or Middleport.
court in the above
100 feet.
Public Notice
Ask for Art
Being
Lot No.
Bonds
shall
be
entitled action, I will
Excepting 50 feet
Fifteen (15) of proexpose to sale at pub- off the west end
by
NOTICE TO CON· accompanied
posed
PLAT· OF
lic auction on the thereof, conveyed . to TRACTORS
Proof of Authority of
RIVERVIEW ACRES,
front steps oi the
Norman Arnott and Sealed proposals for the official or agent
Middleport, Ohio, to
Meigs
County · Oma Arnott by deed the Purchase and signing the bond.
be filed In the Meigs
Courthouse
on
Installation of steal Bids shall be sealed
recorded in Volume
County Plat Records,
insulated
garage and marked as Bid for
Friday, April 8th , 2005
159, Page 206 of the
In Volume 4, Page 39.
Fire
at 10:00 a.m. of said deed
o1 door
for
the Middleport
records
YOUNG'S
High aad Dry
Current
Owner:
Meigs County, Ohio.
day, the following
Middleport
Fire Department heating
Darrell R. Brailey, et
project
Department, Meigs equipment
described real estate:
Tract:
Second
County, Ohio will ·be and mailed or deliv- ai .Property at: 109
Situated In the Village
Exhibit A
Park
Street,
received by the Meigs ered to: Meigs County
of Syracuse, County
Legal Description
Phone
• Room Additions &amp;
Middleport, OH
of Meigs, and State of C o u n t y Co.mm Iss I oners
Situated in Letart
Remodeling
(740) 992-5232
pp #15.()()()31
• New Garaga1
Township,
· Meigs Ohio, and described Cqmmlssloners
at Courthouse,
• Electrical &amp;"Plumbing
Prior
Deed
County, Ohio, b2lng as follows: Being in their office at the Pomeroy, ()hlo 45769
SxlO, lOxiO,
•
Rooflng &amp; Gutter11
Reference: Volume 4,
100 acre Lot No. 291, c o u r. t h o u s e , AHentlon of bidders
part of a 10 acre par~VInyl Siding &amp; Palnllng
lOxlS, 10x20,
Page 39 and Volume
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 Is called to all of the
cel of real estate Town 21 Range 12, of
• Patio and Porc h Decks
until
11:00 p.m ., requirements • con· 22 Page 47
the Ohio. Company's
described in deed
We do It all except
10x30
furnace work
Appraised
at ·
Purchase ,
and Thursday, March 17, talned In this bid
recorded in Volume
Janet Jeffers
2005 and then at 1 :15 packet, particularly to ·$26,000. Terms of
bounded as follows:
251, Page 183 of the
V.C. YOUNG Ill
Beginning at the. pm at said office the Federal Labor Sale: Cannot be sold
Meigs County Deed
33795 Hiland Road
992-6215 wv a36725
Records and being northeast corner of a opened and read Standards Provisions for less than 213rds of
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy,
Ohio
Davis-Bacon the appraised value.
part · of 100 acre lot tract of land now or aloud for the follow- and
25 Years Locil Ex erience
ing:
Wpges, various Insur- . 10% down on day of
formerly owned by
no. 257.
sale, cash or cartllled
Purchase and Instal- ance requirements,
Beginning
7315 Frank Arnott, on the
us
feet west from the east line of 100 acre lation of steel insulat· various equal .oppor- check, balance due
choose
a lasling
on
confirmation
of
tunity provisions, and
. northeaSt corner of
Lot No. 291 and the
tn'bute
to
your loved
the requirement lor a sale.
north of tho road
said lot 257 ·on the
one's
memory.
·
Robert E. Beagle,
leading
· from Department. payment bond· and
north tine of lot 257;
\!'IH.L
Pomeroy to Racine ; Specifications pro- partormance bond for Meigs County Sheriff
New Homes • Vinyl
thence west along
Attorney for Plaintiff
\10'\l \II- '\T
100% of the contract
said north line 208'. thence rtorth follow- . . vi.ded in bid packet.
Sieling • New Garages
Lerner, Sampson &amp; ·
('0\11'\'\,
ir,g the_ east line of Specifications, and price. No bidder may
thence. south along
• Replacement
100 acre Lot No. 291, bid forms may be withdraw his bid with· Rothfuss
' the west line of said
39728 SRI43
380 feet to the lot now secured at the office in thirty (30) days P.O. Box 5480
1 0 acre lract of real
Windows
• Roofing
Pomeroy, OH
Ohio
or ,formerly owned by of the Meigs County after the actual date Cincinnati,
estate 487.5'; thence
740-992-9922
COMMERCIAL .and
45201-5480 .
commissioner, . of the opening thereSnowball;
east along the south Thomas
RESIDEN:riAL
120 East 4th · Street,
line of said 1o acre thence west alohg the Cour. thouse , of The Meigs County
8th
Floor
Commissioners
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769
south line of the
tract of real estate
FREE ESTIMATES
reoerve the right to
Cincinnati,
Ohio
208'; thence north Thomas Snowball Lot Phone 740.992-2895.
740·992·7599
45~02-4007
parallel with the west 773 feet to where said A deposit of $0 dol· reject any or all bids.
(5.13)
241-3100
·tars
will'
be
required
Mlck
Davenport,
line of said 10 acre
line intersects the
Meigs (3) 9, 16 &amp; 23 3T
tra'ct of real estate road leading to the for each set of plans President
487.5' to tho place of cemetery; thence fol- and specifications . C o u n t y
Public Notice
beginning, containing. lowing the. meander- Each bid must be Commissioners
2.32 acres, mare or ings of the cemetery "' accompanied
by (2) 24, (3) 2, 9
aale.
Public Notice
less.
road In a southerly
either a bid bond In
Robert E. Beegle,
Let me do ;\ for you'
Excepting
and direction 362 ,feet to art amount of 100% of
Meigs County Sheriff
PUBLIC NOTICE
reserving all coal, oil, the northwest corner .the bid amount with a
Public Notice
AHorney for Plaintiff
SHERIFF SALE
gas and other miner·. o1 a tract of land now surety satisfactory to
Frank &amp; Wooldridge
Number Co., 600 South Pearl
Case
or formerly owned by the aforesaid Meigs PUBLIC NOTICE
ala with the right to
Thomas Dully (deed C o u n t y
. NOTICE: Is hereby 02CV102
remove same, which
Street,
Columbus,
Mortgage Ohio 43206
that
on
have not already
recorded in Volume Commissioners or by given
been excepted or
Page
319);
119,
certified
check, Saturday, March 12, EIQctronlc (614) 221-1662
Sys. , (3) 9, 16 &amp; 23
thence in a south·
reserved.
cashiers check, Or let· , 2005, at 10:00 a.m., a Registration
Being part of the 10 easterly di~lon fol- ter of credit upon a public sale will be Plaintiff, vs. Gall
McAbee
fka Gall
acres of real estate lowing the north line solvent bank in and held at 211 w Second
et
al.
amount Of not less St, Pomeroy, Ohio. Zirkle,
described in Volume of the Thomas Dully
251, Page 183 of the
tract 350 feet; thence than 10% of the bid The Farmers Bank Defendants Court of
Public Notice
Savings Common
Pleas.
southerly along the amount in favor of the and
Meigs County Deed
Records.
east line of the aforesaid
Meigs Company is selling Meigs County, Ohio.
LEGAL NOTICE
Reference Deed : Thomes Duffy lot 150 C o u n t y for cash in hand or
In pursuance of an
Title 1 of the
Volume 327, Page feet to the northeast Commissio'ners . Bid certified ·check the or'der of sale to me Workforce Investment
A II Your Home·
345, Meigs County · corner of a tract of. Bonds
shall
be following collateral:
directed from said Act of 1998 (WIA)
land now or formerly accompanied
DODGE court In the aboVe requires each local
hnprovcmcm ~ ee d s
2000
D$d, Records.
by .
E
0
N entitled action, I will
owned by Thomas Proof of Authority of N
• Siding • Window10
Premises commonworkforce investment
ly known as:
Dully (deed recorded the official or .agent · 4DIB3ES46C6VD5096 expose to sale at pub- area to establish a
• Decks • Porches
47670 Adams Road, in ·volume 98, Page signing the bond. 85
lie auction on the one-stop system to
• Carpons • Gar.:tges .
1994 MAZDA 626 front steps of the provide support and
Recine, Ohio
440): thence in a Bids shall be sealed
• Room Add . • Mini
X Meigs
45771
northerly direction and marked as Bid lor L .
County
educational services
'Barns
Current
Owner : following the north or Middleport
Fire 4DYVGE22C4R51779 Courthouse
on
to their community.
• Kih.:hens • Bath ~
rear line of the prop- · Department heating 41 .
Stephen/Steven
&amp;
Friday, April 15, 2005 Eacl&gt; area Is to sub"Nn Job Tn Sma!f"
Elizabeth Jenkins, et erty now or formerly equipment
project
Tho Farmers Bank at 10:00 a.m. of said mit a buslnesa plan •
Racine. OH
al.
·
Savings
owned by the follow- and mailed or dellv· and
how
It
day, the following detailing
740-247'
2162 or
Proparty at: 47670 ing persons; Anna ered to: Meigs County Company, Pomeroy,
described real estate:
intends to accom7411-416-3508
Adams Road, Racine,
Dalton, Bert Weese, Commissioners Ohio, res&amp;rves the
Situated in the pllsh this goal. The
14 yrs. Ex
Royal Thomas and Courthouse, right to bid at this
DH
State of Ohio, County ·plan
Is effective
pp j!()8.()()294.001
Frank Arnott to the
pomeroy, Ohio 45769
sate, and to withdraw of
Meigs
and beginning July 1,
Pilor
Deed . place of beginning , Attention of bidders the above collateral
of
2005. Services are
Townahlp
Reference: Volume
containing about six
is called to all of the prior to sale. Further,
Salisbury and being targeted to youth, dis327, Page 345
and one-half acres (6
requirements
con- The Farmers Bank further described as located workers who
Appraised
at 112), more or less.
tained in this bid and
Savings follows :
have been laid off,
$60,000. · Terms of
Reserving unto the
packet, particularly to Comp~ny reserves
Being all of Lot and adults. To provide
said C.H . Williams, the Federal Labor the right to reject any ~440 and 15 feet these services localSale: Cannot be sold
97 Beech Street
lor less than 213rds of Trustee, his heirS, Standards Provisions or all bids submitted,
ad]olnlng part of Lot ly, Ohio's Area 14
the appraised value. successors
and
The
above N441 and being a part consists of Meigs.
and
Davis-Bacon
Middleport. OH
1 O"A. down on day of assigns, all. minerals
Wages, various lnsur· described collateral of the same real
Alhens, Vinton, Plrry.
sale, cash or ceirtifled underlying said prop- ance requirements, will be sold "as Is- eslate conveyed by and Hocking coun10x10x10x20 ·
check, balance due erty with the right to various equal oppof· where Is", with no James R. Eads to ties. Some services,
992-3194
on confirmation of mine and remoVe the tunity provisions, and expressed or Implied James II Allan by
such as job search
sale.
same al~o, reserving the requirement for a warranty given. The deed recorded In and use of resource
or 992-6635
Robert' E. Beegle,
unto the said C.H. payment bond and collater.al . must be
Deed Book 197, Page rooms, are universal
Meigs County Sheriff
Williams, Trustee, his pe.rformance borld for moved from property.
•Middleport's only
65, Deed Recorda of servlcea available to
Attorney for ,Plaintiff
heirs,
successors 100% of the contract
For further -inforthe general public.
Meigs County, Ohio.
Self-Storage•
McNeilie, and assigns, the right price. No bidder may mation, or for an
Carlisle,
Parcel No. 15· Other services, such
Rlnl, Kramer &amp; Ulrich of way over said withdraw his bid with· appointment
to
01407-000
&amp;
15· as tuition assistance
Co.
premises, for the pur- in thirty (30) days Inspect
collateral, 01408-000
and support services,
24755
Chagrin
pose of laying a pipe alter the actual date prior to sale date conKnown aa: 760 are contingent on ell·
Boulevard Suite 200
line, with the right to of the opanlng there- tact Diane Rector or Laurel
Street, glblllty crHerla.
Cleveland,
Ohio · construct,
repair, of The Meigs County Randy Hays at 992- Middleport,
Ohio
A . DRAFTof
the
44122-5690
replace and renew Commissioners 2136.
45760
Business Pan for the
(~16) 36().7200
the said line and that reserve the ·right to 319,10,11
Current
Owner:
Workforce Investment
(3) ~.9,16 3T
no damages are to be reject any or all bids.
Area 114 will be avail·
Gall McAbee lka Gall
• New Homes
paid by the said C.H . Mick
Davenport,
Zirkle, e) al
able for review and
• Garages.
Williams, Trustee, his President
Meigs
Public ·Notice
Property at: 760 comments ln. the
• Complet~
Public Notice
heirs,
successors C o u n · t y
County
Laurel
Street, . Meigs
Remodeling
and assigns for suctt Commissioners
PUBLIC NOTICE
Middleport, DH 45760
Com m Is sl one r s'
Sheriff's Sale
privilege , with t~e · (21 24, (3) 2, 9
SHERIFF SALE
PP 115-D1407 and
office at 100 Second
Real EBtate
right o1 ingress and
Number 15-01408
st.. Pomeroy. Ohio
Case
Case
Number egress at all times.
04CV098
Prior
Deed
45769 for
30-dey
Stop &amp; Compare
04CV066
Excepting therePublic Notice
Countrywide Home Reference: Volume
period
beginning
from a lot sold to
Citi'Group Mortgage
Loans, Inc., Plaintiff, 197, Page 65
March 9, 2005 thru
HSBC Bank USA
Norman E. ArnoH and NOTICE TO CON· vs. Darrell R. Bralley,
Appraised
at
April 8, 2005.
Oma I. Arnott by deed TRACTORS
Plaintiff
et al. Defendants $30,000. Term a of For more Information,
dated August 18, Saaled proposals lor Court of Common
vs
Sale: Cannot be sold
contact Mike Swisher,
1947, and recorded In the Purchase . and Pleas, Meigs County, · for lesa Ulan 213rds of Director of Meigs
James &amp; Deborah
Volume 159, Page 506 Installation of over- Ohio.
Barker
the appraised value. County Department
Defendants
of the deed records of heed heaters for the
In pursuance of an
10% down on day of of Job &amp; Family
Court of Common
Meigs County, Ohio.
Middleport · .
Fire order of 18le· to me aale, cash or certified Services. (740) 992Also excepting a Department , Meigs directed from said check, balance due 2117.
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
lot sold to Royal
County, Ohio will be · · court In the above on confirmation of (3) 9, 23
Thomas and Ural received by the Meigs 17"-~!::::'r-o:-:""1':,.--:-;-~-:r-----:...:..--:----:-..,
In pursuance of an
Order of Sale to me
Thomas by deed C o u n t y
directed from said
dated May 7, 1946, Commissioner•
.at
Court In ,the above
In their office at the
and
recorded
•'
Volume 158, Page 127 Courthouse,
entitled action •. I will
of the deed records of Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
expose to sale at pub.,
Meigs County, Ohio.
until
1:00
p .m.•
lic auction on the
Also excepting .32 Thursday, March 17,
front steps of the
Meige county Court acre• sold to Lee 2005 and then at 1 :15
House on Friday, Sayre and Ruth Sayre pm at aald office ·
.April 1, 2005 at 10 by deed recorded in opened and read
a.m., of said day, the • Volume 239, Page aloud lor the follow'·
Ing:
following described 837 . of the deed
Purchal8 and lnataireal asteta:
record• of Meig1
County, Ohio.
iatlon of overhead
Legal Dtlscrlptlon
heaters . for
the
Fila Number : 304- . Current Owner:
29670 Bashan Road
Jamal &amp; Deborah
Fire
Middleport
1936
Racine. Ohio
Barker
Situated In the village
Department .
45771
Proparty at:
of Syracuta, County
Specification• pro740·949-2217
2982 Third StrHt
vided In bid packlt.
of Melli*· State of
Ohio, · tO-wit : Firtt SyracuH , Ohio 45779
Sr.ecificltiOnl, 1nd
PPI 2().00565.00
Tract: SltuaMd In
b d form• may bl
2G-0015e8.00
Heured at the otnce
sr,riCUII
Spacial
Prior
Died of the Malg1 County
D 1trlct: Beginning
Hourt
• 303 feat , . .1 Ql
Reference: Volume Comml111on1r,
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM
Thom..
Duffy'a 318, 1'1118 13
Courthouaa,
111"11 mo.
aoutha1ot corn1r of
Apprailld
II Pomeroy, Ohio 45711
the north olda of the 130,000.00
Phon• 740-112·2111.
of
S1ie:
A dapoolt of 10 dol·
public ro1d Ieiding T1rma
Cannot be oold for Iars will bl required
from
Pom1roy to
Pn fe11lonal Photogr.phy
la11 thin 213rda of for Hch Ill of pl1n1
R1clne: thine• •••t
A Vldeoa:r•phy
AnJ octulon·PortraU
along aida road 128 the appraiHd v1lua. and lpaQiflc•flono.
Seulon1, Weddlnp,
10% down on day of Each bid mu11 be
IMt, more or 1e11, to
Famllle1.
Ena•aementl,
the wall Una of W.O. 1ala, caah or Clrtlflect •ccompanied
by
B•bln
check, balance on aithar a bid bond In
llouah'l . 'p roperty
Calllan Ca nter
confirmation of aa11. an amount of 100% of
whlcll 11 a110 the tina
740-74l·l I~

S®~U®ll' Jl.®,~~(J\l~
~ '~~~~~(J\l~
1-888-321-0311
740-682-6188

Storage

Phillip
Alder

I

•
•
•

COIISTRICnON

a

740-992-1m

•
•

wv

Vulnerable: North·South

JONES',

Tree Service

'

P/f.TURE THIS!!

(

South

West

North

2•

Pass

Pass

1t

1•

East

· pass
Pass

Opening lead: t A

Top • Removal · Trim
• Stunp Grinding

FRANK &amp; EARNEST ·

• Bucket Truck .

•

41
42
46
48

I1

lap.

10 9 8
9 6 5 4

Dealer: West

If partner asks,
keep him happy

39 Stiff
41 French I
verb
43 Kayak's kin
44 Della or
Pee Wee
45 Blister or
scrapa
47 Cravings
48 Gam or
Rudner
49 Poker stake
50 Pass near
Pikes Peak
51 That girl
52 Tiny
amount

When your partner g1ves you a signal ask· ·
ing you to lead a particulat suit, you ought
to have an infallible r·eason for ignoring
him. Otherwise, you will lose the post-

mo rtem and make partner extremely
unhappy. If you do honor his request and
it tu rns out 'that another play wouki have
been more succe~lul , then you w1n the

Sunset Home
Construction

post-mortem.

Brian Reeves
New Home ConstruciiOI\, Remodeling,
Renovations, Decks, Garages, Pol~
Buildings. Roofs. Sjding, Windows &amp; All
Other Residential Needs ·

In this deal, look only at the North and
East ··hands. Aga1nst two spades, your
partner leads the diamond ace. You drop
the six, starting an e.cho (high-low) with ·
your doubleton. Partner. an observant toiler. cashes the diamond king, then leads
the diamond 'jack. After you ruff away
dummy's diamond queen. what would you
do neXt? (South has played the eight, nine
and 10 of diamonds )
South's two-spade jump was invitational
but nonforcing. North, who had made an
anemic overcall. wasn't tempted to go
higher.
When one defender gives his partner a
ruff, th e card he leads delivers a suit·pre t·
· erence signal. Here. the diamond jack,
C~LEBRITY
West's highest-remaining diamond. asked
by Luis Campos
for a heart, the higher-ranking of the other
Celt!t!rity Clfh!r cryp~ograms au! createo hom OlKII&amp;~on!l ~ famOIJ'i peo!)le past&amp;nd present
two side su1ts. But Ea,st, playing lor the
Eld\ ~ rn lhe qY!flr stands rOf anoth!r
Netherlands in the final of the 2004 World
Toda](s clue: Requals L '
Open Team .Oiympiad(!),·decided that he
knew better. Instead, he exited with a
" MIYWZ
FN
XMP
NM' WGL
l"'l WA.S TJ.\E KII&gt;ID OF
TW: "!l trump. So, the Italian declarer took !pur ,
rounds of spades, then attacked clubs,
0'1'\\(R LO:&gt;E:R:S ~USED TO
VSNWZSPZ
WT
RFTP.
FX
MPRHN
getting home with six spades and two
1\~~0(\J&gt;..TE: Wlif\ !
clubs.
IN · XVLP
XMP · SRWUN. "
It East shifts to a low heart, South has to
ruff, but runs out of trumps before he can
scare two club tricks.
HPBBA
OWWOVO
It doesn't matter whether you "win or lose;
.PREVI.OUS SOLUTION - 'Amuililude ol small delights conslitule happ1ness.'
it's whether ·dr not you prevail in the post-

BARNEY

Phone: 740-742-3411

for a free estimate.
STANLEY TREE
DIMMING&amp;
GENERAL
CONTRAcnNG
• Prompt &amp; quality

work
• Affordable Rates
• References

Available
• Free

Estimates

Call Gary Stanley
740-742-2293
• Leave a messa e

CIPHER

New shipment of
iOO%

. THE BORN LOSER

Cotton

LOS\:.~

'WI-lEN YOO irJ(R£.11&gt;1 :&gt;i.f\OOL,~
'(Ol) 11'1 11-\E:. GROVP TI-\E f'OI'ULf&gt;.R
'-\:~':til STUOffi\:i COO':&gt;\tQ:,ED

Materiai ...Patriotic
&amp; Quilters Prints
Hrs.: Tues-Sat 11-5
Sunday &amp; Monday

\0 BE i\\E. I.J)~I1:,&lt;:,?

Closed

.Astro-

mortem!

,

Graph

qw,. 'lllrthdii.Y:
I

JUST

C:ITHEQ.. TM AN ARTISTIC
6ENIIJS. . OR MR ROSA. IS

TOTI',LLY
RUINED

IMPORTS
Athens

A TOTAL HAC.K .

1'\Y
PAINTIN&amp;.

Whaley~s ·Auto

Parts

St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553

PEANUTS

Restncki"!] l.ate tltxlel Sahage

· o.nd Arter Mnrket Po rls

HE'S LEAVING ME~
I'M BEIN6 ABANDONED:
M'&lt; LI~E 15 RUINED..

See Brent or Bri an Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:3Q-Noon
Sun. Closed

Advertise
in this
spacefor$1 04
per month~

IS(U'f tvfr''N \.VA1'(~1~
IN 1-\N..F

/

(((

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

..
GRIZZWELLS

R\l l\1 Ll l\IBFR
Scorpion Tractor$
"n.kirtg T/11 Slirtg Owt OJ
liard Work/"
Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

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

I

oH, Milt\ I f.\.a-9 ~~H A
~va.~oF

ll-\5ol-l\\lto..

I.MT WAI\T

~ERE'S T~E WV"ICV
FLYIN~ ACE
BEIN6 LED OFF

WAR I

TO PRISONER OF
WAR CAMP ..

tu.U . Flk'S"f11111\lG ~ SA'IS

GARFIELD

Now Available At

COME ON. D06 .. LET'S
60 INSIDE ... .

SUNSHINE CLUB

. BUSINESS

Hill' s Se lf
Storage

4 3

·-

'

OM ntiS PAGE FOR
AS LOW AS

A

740-667-0700 1-888-HUPP234

'I'D

ROBERT
BISSEll

•

.A J962
• 6 4
• Q8 7 2

South
• A K Q 10 6 5

·construction

MANlEY'S ..
SElf STORAGE

9 8 72
K 8 4

tA KJ73

BUILDERS IDC.

LINDA'S PAIIDNG

t:ast

West

MONTY .

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

CARPENTER
SERVICE

TaKe the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

o:Hl!I-O.l

• J
. Q I 0753
• Qj 2
-" K J 10 3

41800SR#7
Tuppers Plains, OH
...,.....,_,_
45783

BISSEll

~:e g~;~~~p~~~! F:~~

North

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

Fret letter 1
Not theirs I
1 Common
Eight blta
rental
" Balcony
6 Origin
scene"
11 Prom
· swain
anendee
49 More
12 More
crowded
sluggish
52 Neater
13 Renew,
53 Flammable
as a subgas
scrlptlori
54 Bllko's
14 Historlcl l
bellow
records
(2 wds.)
15 lntersec s 55 Sock
16 Import
hoppers
56 Wolfgang 's
vehicle
16 Enough
. 17 On strl~e
thanks
18 Where Hong
18 Say mo a
19 Math c ursa
DOW~
Kong Is
23 Artifice
20 Annoy
1 Perturbed
21 Keogh
25 Dublln'ls
land
relatives·
2 Computer- .
chip maker 22 Mineral
26 'Lb. or
finds
29 Resen.ment 3 Happy loser
4 Many, many 24 Chacl&lt;out ll
32 Hasty •
years
26 Exec. aide
33 ~~~':i:e
5 Aiport code 27 Pacilic
paradise
34 Mllke
tor O'Hare
waterproof .6 Wall Street 28 Unable to
decide
35 Curvy letter
purchase
30 Wrist-to36 Browse the 7 Catch fire
elbow bone
lntem.t
8 Narrow Inial
38 Dna rr/pre
31 Just
9 Utll. bill
time
10 Paycheck
sCrape by
abbr.
40 'Yothers
,37 "Tumt,le
Looaa"
.of " Family .11 Big rig
12 Commend
sL&gt;lger
Ties"
ACROSS

Thursday, ft,1arcti 10, 2005
By Bernice Bade Oaol
A number o f new associations can be
9stabllshed. ln the year ahead with
In dividual s who share your icteals.
Several of these re latio nships will
prove to be quite import ant to you In
ways you ·may least axpect.
PISCE S (Feb. 20-March 20 ) By
c hanging your tactics today. you can
get someone who haS n o t been in
accord wi th someth ing that ls impo rtant to you to back you. Give a little in
order to get back in return what you
want .
ARIES (Mar ch 21·Aprll 1 9) You
might h ave to deal wi th someone
today who ha s displeased you in · the
pa s t , but sin ce you know what to.
expec t fro m this person. you should
now be prepared to handle him or her
quite w e ll.
~
TAURU S
(April 20- May
20 ) Ci rcumstances may place y o u in a
grouP today whe re an individual you'd
rather not be around might be in
a tte ndance. Rise above the circum·
s tances and use your .c harm to s hine
with o th e rs .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Don "!
allow som eone to make you believe
you mus t place his or her selfish con·
cerns above your ow n a ffairs . There's
no n eed to feel guilty; go ~head and
fu rther your own a mbitions.
CANCER (June 2 1-J uly 22) By
observ ing the behavior o f another
today, YO!J might get the opportunity
to examine your owl") habits and how
you u se them . Thi s co uld give you a
new insight into who you want t o be .
LEO (July 23-Aug . . 22) Joint
invo lvements today co uld cha llenge
your generosity and tug at h o w far
you"re wi lling to go to sac rifice you r ·
sel l for anoth er. Much will depend
upon who the person is and what tha t
person wants.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) S hould
you f ind vourself up against s.omeone
who ts constantly demeaning you r
objectives today. sweet talk the person into being gra c ious to ge l him o r
her o H you r back.
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) Be help·
ful to rhose who require your aaststance today, but don "t allow yourse lf to
ba jockeyed into a position where this
person's duties become y o urs. Know
when to c all it quits.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24~ Nov. 22) - Don't
let making a. point with a pal be more
Important than the relatio nship. An
understanding ca n be reached with o ut compromis ing your s t e.ndards end
jeopardizing the friends hip.
S A GI TTARIUS (Nov. 23- Dec . 2 1 ) Alth ough you may . be adequately
compensated for your eHorts today In
matertal ways. this might not be so
when it comes to recognition tor whAt
you accomplished. Knowing Is a ll that
matters.
CAPRICORN (Dec , 22..Jan 19) Hammering home your message In
hopes o f sw~ying someone to your
position will do nothing but turn the
person o H. If you want acceptance.
sugarcoat your presentation instead .
AOUAR lUS (Jan. 20-Feb . 19) - You
can have a tendenc y to pLjrchase
what lookS: good snd ignore the
underlying val Ue. Today, weigh the
quality with the cost of an Item and lei
the worth o t the merchandise take

- Baudelaire
' Betler to be happy lhan wise.' - John Heywood
(c) 2005 by NEA, Inc 3·9

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"You can liiJe to be 100,' tne
old timer told his teenage
grandson. "if you give up all
the tnings that make you want

f--rW~HrO"TR-'-iG-;-T-r.-11

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to live .... .••• :

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lHTERS IN SCl:&gt;.R;'S

SCUM-LETS ANSWERS

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Purely · E1act · Crest · Mainly · T.~XPAYER
"Our government ,' grumblec 1he speaker at a political
rally , "is based on not orily the separalion of church
and state , but the separal1on ol money anc the T,I.X·
PAYER .'

ARLO &amp; JANIS

SOUP TO NUTZ
MY 1\&lt;&gt;-k 1\•roRT

WOlD

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precedence.

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'1bu ~r S8'!'TH9T

aNYMORE .IT ISNT
fbullCI'ILLY ~T

�Page B6 • The Daily, Senijnel

O~io

(AP) - The 2004-2005 Associated

Press Division Ill and IV girts AII-Qhio high school basket~
ball teams, based on the recommendations of a state
media panel:

DIVISION Ill
FIRST TEAM: Lauren Prochaska, Plain City Jonathan

· Alder. 5-foot-i 1, sophomore . 24.3 points per game : Jessica
McKenzie, Zanesville W. Muskingum, 6-0, sr., 25.8; Alyssa
Hammond, Oak Hill, 6-Q, sr., 28.0; Carla Jacobs, S. Euclid
Regina, 5-7, jr. 18.5; Jantel Lavender, Cle. Cent. Cath .. 6-4.
soph., 22.0: Micki Kuns, Castalia Margarena. 5-11, jr., 17.6:
Cachet Murray, Girard, 5-8, sr., 25.1; Ty~a Grant, Youngs.
Ursuline, 5·11, jr.. 26 . ~ ; Danielle Denlinger. Casstown
Miami E., 6-Q, sr., 17.1: Whitney Dubbs, Cin. Hills Christian
Acact .. 5· 10, sr.• ~ 8.6.
'Pieyera of the year: Jessica MCKenzie, Zanesville W.
Musklngum: Alyssa Hammond, Oak Hill.
Coaches of the year: Rick Schwleberl.· Hamler Patrick
Henry; Melvin .Burke Sr., Cleveland Cent. Cath .: Jack Van
Aeeth, Zanesville W. Mus~ingum .
SECOND TEAM: .Andrea Rudmann, Ironton, 5·10, sr.
15.0; Aleshia Bors, Waynesville, 5·10, sr., 13.0; Erica ShOrt
Orrville, 6-3, sr., 13.0: Hanna Scherger, Sidney·lehman, 6·
O, sr., 13.9; Ashley Vavrek. Bellaire. 5-B, jr., 28.0: Shay
Selby, S. Euclid Regina . 5·8, fresh .. 15.1: Gwen Edwards.
5-11, sr., Cle. Cent. Cath .. 18.0
THIRD TEAM: Emily Miller, Belmont Union local, 5-7,
sr., 22.0; Erin limes, Tontogany Otsego, 5·9, sr., 17.4: Kelly
Wagner, Bloomdale Elmwood, 5·9, sr., 16.3; Cera Bedard,
Atwater Waterloo, 6-0, soph ., 18.4; Amanda Patrick, Collins
Western ReSBfVe . 5·7, sr.. 14 .~.
Special Mention ·
Rachel Bennett; Marion Pleasa.lt, Sarah Clapper,
Newark Cath.: Ashley tutz. Cots. Ready : L.auren Rivers,
Worthington Christian: Abby Nolan , Beverly Ft. Frye:
Chandra Myers, Sugarcreek ~araway : Ra chel Cruz.
Sarahsville Shenandoah: Hannah Nelson. Old Washington
Buckeye , Trail : Darcy Rusiecki,, M~rtin s Ferry; Arnie
Riethmiller, Martins Ferry; Jill ,Cropper. Geo·rgetown:
Rachel Dixon, W. libertY-Salem : Whitney M ~iden ,
Nelsonville-York: Karen Diehl, Chillicothe Zane Trace;
Katie Donahoe. Minford: Cindy Reeves . Sardinia E.
BrOWn; Codi Hatten. lynchburg-Clay; Tanya McKenzie,
Portsmouth; Abby LaVione. Swanton : Amanda Coressel,
Hamler Patrick Henry; Brittany Skolnicki, lorain Clearview;
Angela Groves, Shaker Hts. Hathaway Brown : Angela
Manfredi, Burton Ber1&lt;.shire: Lydia McCully, Cle. VASJ:
Hailey Staubs, Manchester: Ashley Hawley, Sullivan Black
River; Amber Brodrick. Youngs. Mooney: Jessica Butzer,
Orrville; Stephanie Schwartz, Cortland Maplewood.
Honorable Mention
Caitlin Graessle, Cols. Ready ; Erin Kuma, Marion
Pleasant; Audrey Mitchell. Carroll Bloom-Carroll: lindsey

Rooney, Milford City Fairbanks; Jessica Williams ,
Johnstown Monroe; Justine Raterman, Versailles ; Emma
Jande!, Day. Oakwood; Catherine Cain, Day. Stivers;
Diondra Holliday, Cin. Clark Montessori; Ashley Falknor,
Arcanum ; Ashley McCracken, Cin. Mariemont
Tessa Pohovey. Zoarville Tuscarawas Valley; _Rachel
Kimberley. Coshocton ; Laura Bardell, Sugarcreek
Garaway; Kayla Picana, S.t. Clairsville ; Amy Kittle, Old
Washington Buckeye Trail ; Molly Cruz, Sarahsville
Shenandoah; Nikki Driscoll, Bellaire; Sarah· Kendziorski ,
Steubenville Cath. Cent ; Sarah Huck, Beverly , Ft. Frye;
Missy Basks. Ontario: Sarah Grime. Archbold ; Oanielle
Sidell, Collins Western Reserve ; Katie Fisher, Lima Cent.
Cath.; Megan Abbey, Elmore Woodmore; Kendra Robbins,
Coldwater;
Kara Cayton, Minford; Kendra Massie, Wheelersburg;
Whitney Blackburn, Belpre; Chelsea Markins, Coal Grove
Dawson-Bryant: Sara Hacker. Ironton: Alisha Bridges,
South Point Keisa Davis, Oak Hill; Jess Rodgers.
Williamsport Westfall ; Heather Stagge, Lynchburg-Clay;
Katie Kovacs, Elyria Cath.; Lauren Gray, Cle. VASJ ; Tiffany
Tyree, Shaker .Hts. Hathaway Brow!'; Jackie Palus,
lndepe!1dence:. Jen Kershner, Independence; Jessica
Moses, Rocky River Luth. W.: Nicole Feher. Rocky River
Luth. W.; Brooke Hinkle, Wellington ;
Carly Pavlick, Louisville Aquinas ; Lindsay Johnson, NeW
Middletown Springfield ; Vannessa Dickson, Youngs.
Ursuline; Kelly Zuercher, Apple Creek Waynedale; Chrissy
Summers, Doylestown Chippewa : Whitney Goist,
Columbiana; Erica Jarvis, Atwater Waterloo; Aarika Knepp,
Warren JFK; Chelsea Jones, Jeromesville Hillsdale .

DIVISION IV
FIRST TEAM: Megan Frazee, Xenia Christian, 6-foot-2,
senior, • 32.7 points per game; La una Hochstetler, Berlin
Hiland, 5·7, sr., 13.9; Gretchen Polinski, Mans. St. Peter's,
6·1 , sr., 18.5; Maria Moeller. Maria Stein Marion local. 5·7,
1r., 18.8; Jackie Maries, Cardington Lincoln , 5-11, sr., 20.4;
Jennifer Gr8.ndy, Glouster Trimble, 5-5, jr., 30.7; Amanda
Nero, Lowellville. S-8, sr., 23.1.
Player of the year: Megan Frazee, Xenia Christian.
Coaches of the year: Ron Carter, Thompson
Ledgemont; Dave S~lllabach, Berlin Hiland.
SECOND TEAM: Jodi Matsko, Fairport Harbor, 5-6, sr.,
2 1.4; Melanie Williams, Willoughby Andrews School for
Gi rls, 5-9, soph. , 25.3; lindsay Stucky, Berlin Hiland. 5-8,
Jr., 17.0; Rickey.a McElroy, Cols. Africentric, 6·2. sr... 21 .3:
Karen Brackman, Minster, 5·9, sr .. 12.3; Amanda Ritzier.
Tiffin Calvert. 5·5, sr., 21 .6; Alison Lemon. S. Charleston
SE, 5·7, jr., 23.6; Tara Ford, Vienna Mathews, 5·6, sr., 23.0.
THIRD TEAM: Shayta Holenka., Shadyside, 5·8, sr., 19.1;
Jessie Miller, Strasburg-Franklin, 5-11, sr:, 17.3; lynette
Thiel , Morral Ridg6dale, 5-10,. sr., 15.4; Becky Babione,
Fremont St. Joseph. 6~1. sr.. 17.6; leanne Lu~lus, N~

·Riegel, 5-10, sr., 16.6; Alicia Cross, Cle. Hts. Luth. E., 5-6,
jr., 19.0; Katy Arick, ~Canton, 5~11, jr., 17.7; Stacey
Wannemacher, Qnovil ' 5·11, jr., 16.2.

·

·

2005

E·mail us your local sports news:

Division III-IV All-Ohio Girls' Teams
COLUMBUS,

Wednesday, March 9,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Mount St~ Helens

sports@mydailysentinel.co.m

Dan Rather signs off as
'CBS Evening News'
anchor,A6 ·

releases large ash-

t.1 Mention

plume,A6

Kayle lutsch, Cols. Tree of Ufe; Susan Roose. Marion
Cath.; Megan Oollings, ZanesviMe Rosecrans; Jasmine
Richardson, WeHsville ; Mallory Moore, Toronto; Tressa
Ramsey, Caldwell; Erlan Buckman, Day. Jefferson; Chrissy
Smith, Cin. Lockland; Michelle Meyer, Covington; Courtney
Reed, Ft. loramie;
Christina Harvey. Ironton St. Joseph; Kr;~ylee Helton,
Latham Western; Katie Ouduit, Portsmouth Clay; Julie
Trace, Glouster Trimble; Haley Drayer, Water1ord; Ashton
Hice1, Richmond Dale· SE : Rebecca Day, Beaver Eastern;
'Jessica Waugh , Glenwood New Boston: Stacey Niese,
Miller City; Rachel Stac~. Cuy. His.; Dana Palivoda,
Willoughby Cornerstone Christian;. Kaitlyn Tin ney, ·
~shtabula Sis. John &amp; Paul : Katetyn Prince, Thompson
Ledgemont;. Melissa Greco, Kirtland; Ashleigh Tendo,
McDonald; Ali Roach, Windham ; Tamara Meyer, Kidron
Cent Christian.
Honorable Mention ·
IJI'
Mariah Alford. Gahanna Christian; Chassidy Faucett,
Howard E. Knox: L,auren Flowers, Marion Calh .; Liz Gliem,
CardingtOn Lincoln; Tyeasha Mas~. Cols. Africentric; Molly
Frazee, Xenia Christian ; Anita Bulcher, Russia ; Abby
Davenport, PitSburg Frapklin-Monroe: Emily Weber, Cin.
Seven Hills; Mary Jo Wiesenbarger, Troy Christian: Angela
Bethel, Miami Valley:
Bre B\:Jrkhart. Shadyside; Natalie Burchfield, Toronto;
Leah Hochstetler, Berlin Hiland; Kate Bonvechio, New
Phila. Tusc. Cent. Cath.; Sam S~~ercik, Caktwell; Shanna
Swan, Hannibal River Local; Maggie Brunoni, New
Matamoras Frontier; Whitney lindsay, Mansfield St. Peter's;
Stephanie McCord. Gorham Fayette; Janna BarhOJst,
Maria Stein Ma(ion Local; Brandi Chaffins, Plymouth;
Rachel Youngpeter, Spencerville; BrGoke Bowers, Delphos
Jefferson; Kortney Kin , MI. Blanchard Riverdale; Brittany
Bogart, Northwood.
.
Leslie, Floyd, Willow Wood Symmes Valley; M~gan
Weber. Ae,edsvllle Eastern; Kyle Sears, Leesburg Fa1rf1eld;
Kara Gustin, Leesburg Fairfield; Leigh Ann Williams,
Franklin Furnace Green; Amy Nordrum, lucasville Valley;
Hope King, Waterford ; Bridget Bear, Sciotoville Community
E.; Jessie Looman , Ashtabula Sts. John &amp; Paul; Rebecca
Heller, Thompso~;J Ledgemot'lt; Tylar Hartfield, Cle. Hts.
Lutheran E.; Brynn McNicholas, Kirtland ; Angela Notte,
Ashtabula Sis. John &amp; Paul; Tiffany Oster, Newbury; Alex
Hansen, lake Ridge Academy: lynne Miller, Elyria Open
Door: Melanie Roscoe, Vienna Mathews; Ke!H Pollock,
Mogadore: Sarah Linville, Canton Heritage Christian:
Caitlyn Sharp, E. Canton: Lana Kiko, Da lton; Alison
Summers. Leetonia.

•

at
Middleport • _Pomeroy, Ohio
.; ot I \:TS•\ul. .1 -1 . '\u . qt

'"'"· "'Hh"l " ''"1i,.·Lt·o"'

111\ ' HSil .\\, 1\1 .\I(('Jito. :! oo:;

Parking fees imposed at Forked Run,.other state parks

SPORTS
• Getty's biggest numbers
show up in the win column.
See Page 81
·

Prep Scoreboard

.

'

J. REED

.

.

forth by the Ohio Department funo to support day' to-day Ohio S tate Parli s are
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
o.f Natural Resources to . operati ons and maimenancc known."
said
ODNR
impose parking fees and a in all 74 state parks.
Director Sam Speck .
REEDSVILLE - It will "Parks Pride" pass in order to
" Whil e ge neral revenue · Fac&lt;::d with increasingly
cost $5 to park a vehicle at · help pay operational costs fund s and user fees generat- difficult budget cha llenges
Forked Run State Park thi s associated with the state's 74 ed from camping, boat dock and · cutbacks in state fund summer, and more for out-of- Ohio State Parks.
rentals and concessiona ire ing over the las t five years.
state visitors.
According to ODNR, a contracts have traditi ona ll y th e park system has
A legislative . committee majority of money gen~rated supported the cost of oper- responded with significant
made up of members or of the from the sale uf passes 'will ating the state parks , th ose reduction s in
staffing.
Ohio ·
House
·of be returned to the park where sources are no longer suffi- maintenan ce and visitor
Representatives and the Ohio · they are collected. The hal- . cienl to ensure the standard services. Ohio Stale Park s
Senate approved a proposal set · .ance will go into a special or excellence for whic h employed 607 full-time

staff niembers in 2000 , but
cut that number to 490
employee s last year. Only
-12 of 1he system's 74 parks
now have nn - ~ire managers.
"Despite staff reductions
an.d other belt-tightening, the
co...,h a..,...,ociateU with main·
winine ·and operating state
park facilities have "eadily
increased." Speck said.

Enduring Freedom proves soldiers are never forgotten

Fire
destroys
home in
Syracuse

BY BRIAN

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAI LYSENTINEL.COM

Ohio High School

Akron. Dayton vs. Columbus.

Boys Basketball
Boxscore
Division IV Regional Semifinal
at Fairgrounds Coliseum, Columbua
Atricentrlc 56, Eastern ~9
Eastern
11 11
10
7
39
Africentric

12

7

19

18

-

Saturday. 7:30p.m.
Slate Tournament Pairings: Canton V5
Fairborn : Athens vs. Bowling Green.

DIVISION II
At canton ctvk: center

56

Tallmadge (18-6) vs. Painesville Harvey
(23-1 ), Wednesday, 6 : ~5 p.m. ; Poland
Seminary (22·2) vs. Wooster Triway (21·3),
Wednesday. 8 p.m.
Finals
Saturda')l. 3 p.m.
At Ohio University, Athens

°·

·
Uhrichsville
Claymont
(1 8 ·5)
vs.
EASTERN (20-4)- Derek Baum 0 9·0
' Zanesville (13-10). Wednesday. 6:1 5 p.m.:
Nathan Cozart 2 1·2 6, Adam Dillard 0 0·0. Greenfield McClain {23·2) vs. Cols.linden
o, Chris Carroll 2 0·0 4, Chris Myers 0 0-0 McKinley (9·l4), Wednesday, 8 p.m.
Robert Cross 2'0-0 4, Cody Dill9 7-8 25.
Finals
TOTALS - 158-10 39.
.
7
AFFHCENTAIC (24· 1) - Bernie Agf)ew 0
Saturda~t tf:V~r8lty af Dayton
0.0 0, Brandon Bower 0 0·2 0, Tykiem
C' ~ f
Moss 0 0 •0 o, Tim Mapp 0· 0 • 0 o, Antoine
Whitehall-Yearling (14-9) vs.
m. at
Drakeford 0
0; Marquise Hamler 0 0·0 (21-3), Wednesday, 6:15p.m.; Day. Dunbar
o, Pierre Peterson ~ 0 . 0 2 , Travante (20·4) vs. Day. Chaminade·Julienne ~16·8) ,
Leftenant 2 0-1 4, Lance Sullivan 6 2·3 16, Wednesday, B p.m.
Finals
Isaiah Carter 1 0~0 2. Donald Suel713·15
3
28, LaQuawn Perry 1 0-o 2, Nick Bush 1 0·
Saturda~t Jn~erslty of T~edo
0 2. TOTALS- 19 15·2t 56.
goals:
Eastern
Akr. SVSM (17·6) vs. Parma Padua (13·
3 .point
11 ), Wednesday, 7 p.m., at Canton
Fieldhouse; Upper Sandusky (23-Q) vs. St.
(Cozart);,Africentric 3 (Sullivan 2. Sue!).
'
Marys Memorial (21-3) , Wednesday, 7
· Boys basketball regional pairings
p.m., at University of Toledo.
COLUMBUS- Regional pairings for the
Finals
2005 boys state basketball tournament.
SaturdaY. 3 p.m.
DIVISION I
State Tournament Pairings : CantOR vs.
Regional Semifinals
Athens; Dayton vs. Toledo.
At University af To'-do

o.

o-o

Solon (24-0) vs. Tol. Sco11 .(20-4) .
Thursday, 6:15p.m .; Lakewood St. Edward
(17-6) vs. Mansfield Sr. (23-1), TMursday, 8
p.m.
Finals
Saturday, 7:30p.m.
.
At University of ~kron
Can. McKinley {23·1 ) vs. Bedford (18-6).
W~nesday, 7 p.m. ; Cle. Glenville (20·5)
vs. Hudson (19-5), Thursday, 7 p.m.
Finals
Saturday, 7:30p.m.
At University of Dayton
Trotwood-Madison (21-4) vs. Cenlerville
(23-2), Thursday,·6: 15 p.m.; Troy (14·9) vs.
Cin. St Xavier (19-5) , Thursday, 8 p.m.
Flnala
Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
At Columbus Fairground Coliseum
Galloway Westland (22·3) vs. Cin .
Moeller (2D-3) , Wednesday, 7 p.m.; Cols.
Brookhaven (21 -4) vs. Cols. Mifflin (17-4),
Thursday, 7 p.m.
Finals ·
Saturde,y, 7:30 p.m.
State Tournament Pairi~gs : Toledo liS.

DIVISION Ill

.

DIVISION IV
At Canton Fk!ldhausa
Zanesville Rosecrans (23·2) vs. Cle. Hts.
Lutheran E. (19·5}, Friday, 7:30p.m.
At University of Dayton
Lockland (23·2) vs . Minster {20-4),
Friday, 7 :30 p.m.
At BawllnS Green State Unlveralty
Tiffin Calverl {20.4) vs. Continental (21 ·
3). Friday, 7:30p.m.
At Columbus Fairgrounds Collaeun1
Cots. Africentric {24-1) vs. ·s. Webster
(23-1), Friday, 7:30p.m.
State Tournament Matchups: Canton vs.
Dayton; Bowling Green vs. Columbus.

Tuesday's Results
Regional Semlftnals

DIVISION IV .

.eta. Hts. lutheran

E. 60. Windham 56
Cols. Africentric 56, Reedsville Eastern
~9
Continental 47, Ottoville 40
lockland 58, Cedarville 48
Minster 67, St. Bernard 55
S. Webster 54, F'remonl St. Joseph 46
Tiffin Calvert 33, Holgate 26
Zanesville Rosecrans 55, Sebring
McKinley 52

W.Va. prep basketball scores

At Canton FleldhauH
Loudonville (20·3) vs. Leavittsburg
LaBrae (20·4), Thursday, 6:15 p.m.;
Rootstown (20·3) vs. Cle. VASJ (21·2),
Thursday, 8 p.m. .,.
Finals
Saturday. 7:30 p.m .
At Wright Slate Unlvertlty; Fairborn
Ciri. N. College Hill (23·1) vs. New Albany
(18·6), ThurSday, 6:15p.m.; Reading (19-4)
vs . Middletown Fenwick (20·4) , Thursday, 8
p.m.

Finals
Saturday. 7:30p.m.
At Ohio Unlvenlty, Athena
Bellaire (19·5) vs. Carroll Bloom-Carroll
(16·6), Thursday, 6:15p.m.: Ironton (23·0)
vs. Chesapeake (22·1 ), 8 p.m.
Finals
Saturday, 1 p.m.
.
At Bowling ·Green Stale University
Archbold (22·1) vs. Elmore Woodmore
(2~·2) , Thursday, 6:30 p.m.: Cuyahoga
Falls CVCA (17-6) vs. Bloomdale Elmwood
(18-5), Thursday. 8:1 5p.m.

Finals

'Tueeday's Results
Boys regional&amp;
Buckhannon-UpstJur 55 , Bridgeport 51
Capital 79, Parkersb.JJrg South 57
· Huntington 51 , Cabell Midland 36
Jefferson 71 , H_ampshire 47
Morgantown 74, Brooke 65
Preston
Fa irmont Senior 41
South Charleston 55, St. Albans 54
Woodrow Wilson 80, Greenbrier East 45
·
Girls regular season
Mou nt de Chantal 92, Oak Hill Academy,
Va.58

so.·

W.Va. girts tournament glance
CHARLESTON, W.Va. - Pairings for the
girls basketball tournament starting
Wednesday al the Charleston Civic
Center:

CLASSAAA
Quartertlnals

WednOiday
No. 4 Parkersburg South (16-8) vs. No. 5
Hedgesville (21·3), ·11 :15 a.m.
No. I Morgantown (22-2) vs. No. 8 Elki['IS

(16·8). 7 :15p.m.
Thursday
No. 3 'South Charleston (18·4) vs. No. 6
Greenbrier East (16· 8}, 11 :15 a.m.
No. 2 Huntington (21 -3) vs. No. 7
Fairmont Senior (15·8). 7:15p.m.
Semifinals

Friday
ParkerSb!Jrg South-Hedgesville winner
vs . Morgantown -Elkins winner, 5 :30 p.m.
South Charleston-Greenbrer EaSt winner
vs. Huntington-Fairmont Senior winner. 9
p.m. Championship
Saturday
Semifinal winners, 7:15p.m.

CLASSAA
Qua~lnals

Thursday
No. 3 Magnolia (20·3) vs. No. 6 To!sia
(15- 10), 9:30a.m.
No. 2 Wyoming East (18·5) vs. No. 7 Oak
Hill (20-3), t p.m.
'
No. 4 Summers County (20-5) \IS. No. 5
Winlield (16·B). 5:30p.m.
No. 1 Petersburg (22·2). vs. N.o. 8 Ritchie
County (18·6) , 9 p.m.
Semifinals

Ultimate Checking Balance Interest Paid
$'

0 -

$ so,ooo

.

$. so.ooo . $ 99.999.99 1.85% 1.87"/o
Stoo,ooo · $249,999.99 2.15% 2.17% .
$250,000 • $499.999·99 2.25% 2.28%
2.50% 2.53%

$soo,ooo and Up

Interest-bearing checking account

.....

Frl~ay

Magnolia-Tolsia winner vs. Wyom ing
East-Oak Hill winner. 11 : t 5 a.m.
Summers County-Winfield winner vs.
Petersburg-Ritchie County winner, 7:15
p.m.
Chsmplon•hlp
Saturday·
Semifinal winners. 2:30 jj.m.

Free unlimited check-writing

.....

Free Internet banking

.....
Free on-line bill P&lt;W

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

CLASS A .
Quanertlnale

WednHday
No. 3 Wheeling Central (17 -7) vs. _
N o. 6
Tug Valley (t5-t0), 9:30a.m.
No. 2 Charleston Catholic {23-1) vs. No.
7 Montcalm (20·3) , 1 p.m.
No. 4 Notre Dame (19·4) vs. No.5 Hamlin
(19·5), 5:30p.m.
No. 1 Parkersburg Catholic (23·1 ) vs. No.
8 Tucker County (12-13). 9 p.m.
·
Semifinal•

Rate
APY* ·
o.so% . o.so%

'

Free e-statements and check imaging
Free debit card and debit purchases

Friday

~

Wheeling Central-Tug Valley winner. vs. ·
Charleston Cathol!c-Moritcalm winner,
9:30a.m.
Notre
Dame-Hamliri
winner
vs .
Parkersburg Catholic-Tucker County win·
ner, 1 p.m.

Free first order of so checks

Championship
• Saturday

RACINE
Although
local soldiers serving with
the 3664th Army National
Guard Maintenance Unit
recently retUI"ned home froin ·
Iraq, others remain behind .
·This fact is not lost' on
Racine 's Enduring · Freedom
Support Group that recently
assembled mure care packages for soldiers serving their
country both abroad and
stateside.
Danny and Dee Brown of
Racine are members of
Enduring Freedom · and
Friends with one the group's
Page AS
founders, Jan Cardone.
'
• Norman J. Evans, 67 .
"We depend on her," Mrs .
• Terry A. Hamilton, 65
Brown said about Cardone.
"And I depend on them,"
• Waid B. Hayman, 93
Cardone answered.
• Stanley C. McKean, 86
Mr. and Mrs . Brown
ex plained that what appeals
to them about Enduring
Freedom is the group's dedication and compassion
toward the soldiers, as well as
• Road closed .
·the harmony and enthusiasm
that comes out of the group 's
See Page AS
fellow ship.
• Lodge to meet.
The latest care packages
See Page As .
are being sent for Easter with
• Pomeroy Legion
each box packed in Easter
grass. Items in the packages .
birthday party.
include Girl Scout cookies,
See Page A5
Beanie Babies, baby wipes.
• Benefit dinner planned.
trail mix and candy . .
Local soldiers as well as
See Page AS .
soldiers that · members of .

OBITUARIES

INSIDE

Free checks for 55+

Semifinal winners. noon

Conference USA holds last tourney
before six head to new leagues
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP)
Cincinnati counts down the
.days until the Bearcats officially JOin the Big East on July I on
its Web site, and Louisville's
media guide proudly .proclaims
that's where tt's going as well.
But before six members bolt
for new conferenceS', there's the
minor detail of one final
Conference USA basketball
touritament featuring ~e original mem hers before five
_schools depart for the Big East
and . a sixth returns to the
Mountain West Conference.
That would make winning
this tournament that much
more special to Louisville
coac_h Rick Pitino.
" I never thought when ltoolo
the Louisville job that we'd be
· in the Big East. This wa~ a total
shock for me. Coming here, I
came here with the 1dea we
would be in Conference USA,"
·he said.
This leasue lias been dominated by Cmcinnati since teams
from the Great Midwest and
Metro conferences merged for
the .inaugural seao;on in 199596. The Bearcats have won the
regular season and tournament
titles in the same season four
different times, including last

Louisville and Cincinnati come
.in with six-game · winning
streaks.
The exodus .includes South
Aorida, Marquette and DePaul
to the Big East and Tex as
Christian to the Homed Frogs'
previous home in the Mountain
West.

•

· "Being that it's the last round,
it should be an exciting aunosphere," UAB coach Mike
Anderson said. "I know our
team is lookin~ forward to participating in it. '
·
No. 8 seed Texas Christian
( 18- I 2) opens the tournament
WedneSday against ninth-seed-

ed Marquette (19- 10) followed
by No. 5 seed DePaul (18-9}
and I 2th-seeded Tulane (I 017). No.7 seed Memphis (1614) plays lOth-seeded Saint
Louis (9-20) and No. 6 seed
Houston ( 18-12) wraps up the
first round against II th-seeded
South Aorida (12-15).

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

SYRACUSE
Fire
destroyed th e horne of John
Harmmi and family at I 275
Lee · Circ le in Syracuse
Wednesday.
Lt. Joe y R1ftle of the
Syracu se Volunteer Fire
Department reported that his
department was notitied of
the fire at I 0:08a.m. Six firefighters from the Syracuse
Depanment responded to the
call and were joined by five
from
the
firefi ghters
Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Department.
Ri ftle said that when his
Beth Sergent/photo
deparlment arrived on scene
Members of the Enduring Freedom Support Group delivered their care packages to Racine the fronl half of the one-story
Postal Clerk and US Marine Corps veteran Larry Wilcoxen yesterday. The care packages will be · home was •full y engulfed and
delivered to active soldiers serving in the military both abroad and stateside. From left Dee spreadi ng rapidly to the rear.
Brown, Jan Cardone, Wilcoxen. Danny Brown.
No one was home at the time
of
the tire except .the family
Enduring Freedom have revealing that her mailing Ji st Wilcoxen is a veteran of the
dog,
which did not survive.
never met will receive pack- includes soldiers from Ohio U.S. Marine Corps, having
No other surrounding homes
ages . Cardone and her group to California. with the latest served in the first Gulf War.
were
damaged. The cause of
have created a mailing list addition being tram Albany Although all mail receives
the fire is unknown and
that includes strangers as in Galli.a County.
·
special treatment at his remains under investigation.
well as friends.
Racine Postal Clerk Larry
, Riflle thanked the Pomeroy
"We don't care where Wilcoxen processed the latest office, those going out to Fire Department for their help
they're from," Cardone said, care packages yesterday.
Please see Freedom, AS
in extinguishing the blaze.

Peoples Bancorp Foundation makes
· donation to Chautauqua fund

WEATHER
Free ATM use

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM

POMEROY - A $1'.000
donation to the ChesterShade Historical · Association

toward expenses of bringing
the Ohio Chautauqua to
Meigs County ·has been made
by
Peoples
Bancorp
Foundation.
The Foundation is a · non-

1·800•374·6123
www.peoplesbancorp.com
"Annual Percentage ~d (APY). Accounl nr,nslnU!rtsl. Cuuent rates and AP't' are atcurale ts of , ·
o2/17/05, but subject to change. A daily balance of $1,000 Is required to mYoid a monthty fee of $15.
A fee ol $too Is c.hai'Jtd lftfle account is clasNI within I he first i~ months .

•

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 16 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

Bs-6

Comics

B7 .

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4 ·

/

dbituaries

As
AS

· Places to go
Spor:ts

B Section

Weather

A7

© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Please see Parking. AS

Cha~ene HOllftlch/ photo

Joan Wolfe , People 's Pomeroy office rnanger. presents a
check for $1,000 from the Peoples "Bancorp Foundation to
Brenda Merritt, representing the Chester·Shade Historical
Association.
The money will be used to help pay for bringing
. .
the Ohio Chautauqua to Meigs County.
.

pro.tit corporation formed to
make donations in Peoples
Bank ,s market areas.
"One of our goals is to provide grants to organizations
that assist with local community programs," said Joan
Wolfe , Peoples Pomeroy
oftice manager.
"The ·Foundation is committed 10 supporting touri sm
and making donations to
community events that . will
help- build our economy. This
donation will provide funds
for !he Ohio Chautauqua
event which is planned for
July in Chester."
. ·ohio Chautauqua is a special social event that began in
the 1800s before radio and
television to express differences in t:ulture. faith, values
and . politics through music,
dance, recitation and theater
performance. The performers
in this program assume the
costume and the character ill
different historical ligures.

Please see Peoples, AS

Gallia's jobless rate
jumps in January ·
The Ohio Department of
Jobs ·and Family ·Services
released January unemployGALLIPOLIS - · The first ment data Wednesday .that
month of the new year in' showed the jobless . rate in
Ohio didn' t get off to the Gallia County jumped to 10.1
greatest start. wilh unemploy- percent. an increase of 3.1
ment in some southern Ohio percent over December's rate
counti es pos1ing a · sharp of 7 percent.
·
increase while. oti;]ers saw a
Please see Jobless. A5
decrease.
BY KEVIN KELLY

KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Zoning change passes by slim margin
BY DIANE POTTORFF
DPOTTDRFF@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

POINT PLEASANT After much debate .. · Point
Pleasant City Council JXISSed
a zoning change for a portion
Jefferson Avenue to allow the
construction of a banking

oflice.

By a 5-4 ·vote. the area will
be rezoned from R2 ( residen tial ) to B2 (business).
The debate began .when ·
Farmers
Pomeroy -b;ised

Bank and Savings Co.
expressed an interest in property along Jefferson Avenue
10 bLtild a branch oftice.
Purchase of the property
from !he owner, CWF LLC,
wa&gt; contingent upon the zoning change.
Council initially rejected
th e city planning commission's recommendatio n to
.,now lhe rezoning bacli in
January.

Please see Zoning. AS

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•
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season.

Of the I 2 schools that qualified for this tournament at the
new FedExForum. five are
gone after June 30 and two
have ftrSt-round byes: .No. 9
· Louisville· and 21st-ranked
Cincinnati along with U AB and
No. 25 Charlotte. Both

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