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                  <text>Page B.6 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, May 22_,

2007 •

·Agent says 'Henry drug test clear Giambi picks a lousy time to.say sorry ,
BY DAN SEWELl
ASSOCIATED PRESS

·Beng• waive tB Nicholson

CINCfNNATI
COVIN'GTON, Ky; (AP) - The Cincinnati Bengals
Prosecutors say more test· waived Jinebacker.A.J. ,Nicholson on M~rida~. hours.a~ter
ing will be needed to deter- he pleadetl not guilty to a charge accusmg htm of htttmg
mine whether Cincinn ati his $irl(riend.
- ·
.
Bengals wide receiver Chris
Ntcholsoll' was- a. ft.fth-rou11d dritft pick ft:om Florida
Henry, who has been sus· State in 2oo6 but played in only two games because of a
pended by the NFL and is hamstring injury.
·
on probation in criminal
Nicholson wa6 charged with misdemeanor assault on
cases in two states, fai led a Friday after his jlirlfriend, Victoria .Johnson, to!~ PQli~
drug screening.
that Nicholson htt her. On Monday, she asked a JUdg~ m
Hemry is on probation in Kenton County District Court to allow her to make a stateKentucky for letting mi·nors ment recanting the claim, but a judge did not allow it.
drink in a hotel room he
rented and 111 Florida · for screeni ng was part of times over 14 months, but
carrytng · a concealed Henry's two·year probation had avoided jai l time on the
weapon .
in Florida, where he pleaded other three charges.
Henry's agent, Marvin guilty last year to a con·
The Bengals wa ived
Frazier, insis,ted that the cealed weapon charge. Nicholson. who pleaded not
drug test was negative and Henry is also on probation guilty Monday in Kenton
the· Bengals said they were in Kenton County after County court to a domestic
awaiting more informa tion pleading guilty to a charge violence charge . His girlfrom authorities in Kenton of letting minors drink in a friend tried to recant her
County, Ky.. where the hotel room he rented.
claim that Nicholson hit her,
screening took place.
After reports circulated but a judge would not allow
"With respect to the early Monday that Henry it. Nicholson remains free
northern Kentucky proceed- · had fa iled a drug test, the on $5,000 bond, with a
ings, reports to date may not chief prosecutor for Kenton hearing set for May 31.
be based on complete infor· County said . authorities
The fifth·round draft pick
mation." the Bengals said in were awaiting the final from Florida State in 2006
a statement. "More informa· analysis.
was. hampered by a ·hamtion is expec ted to be made
··we have to wait for con· string injury last season and
available shortly, once all firmation from the state lab. appeared in only two games.
the procedural tests are We have suspicion on a field Bengals spokesman Jack
complete. and the club will test," Ken Easterling told Brennan said th e team had
await any action until that The Cincinnati Enquirer. no comment on the decision
information
has bee n · "We camiot confirm or deny to waive Nicholson.
released.''
(Henry's test sample ) con·
Nicholson had previously
Meanwhile, the Bengals. tains a controlled sub- pleaded no contes t to bur·
plagued by a series of off. stance.''
glary and grand .[heft in
Failing a drug test could Tallahassee, Fla., and was
field problems for more
than a year, waived line· resu lt in Henry's current sentenced to two months in
backer A.J. Nicholson hours NFL suspension of .eight a work program . He was
after he appeared in court. games bei ng ex tended. He also placed on two ye3:rs'
Monday on a domestic vio- could also face more jail probation, which could be
lence charge.
time in Kenton County, just jeopardized by his arrest last
A spokeswoman for the across the Ohio River from Friday on the domestic vioKehton Coun,ty attorney's Cincinnati.
lence charge.
Henry served two days
office said there would be
The Bengals, who ha&lt;!
more testing . in Henry 's tltere after pleading guilty to nine players arrested in a
case.
the charge to letting minors nine-month span, were part
"We know that there are drink in a hotel room he of the reason NFL commis·
inconsistent reports about rented. The judge suspended sioner Roger Goodell intro·
the routine drug screen· 88 days of the 90·day sen· duced a conduct pol icy last
ings,"
spokeswoman tence.
month that stitlens penalties
Melissa Pryor· Reed said.
A message seeking com- and holds franchi ses respon·
"As a result of these incon- ment was left with Henry's sible when their players get
sistencies, further tests are attorney, Robert Lotz.
into trouble.
·
currently pending." .
The Bengals said to the
Henry, a third·year pro,
Frazier, citing information club's knowledge, Henry and former West Virginia
he received from · the had been complying with teammate Adam "Pacman"
Bengals and Henry, said an legal and NFL-required pro· Jones became examples of
initial screening, which he cedures.
the
crac kdown,
with
compared to a home·pregHenry, the Bengals' No. 3 Goodell suspendin g Henry
nancy test, had been fol · receiver, has shown big· for eight games and
lowed up with one that con- play ability, and the offense Tenneesee's cornerback for
firmed there were no dru gs struggled last year when he the season.
in Henry 's system.
was benched one game by.
"I must emphasize to you
"It's negative," Frazier coach Marvin Lewis and that this is your last oppor·
said. "They _iumped the gun suspended two more by the tunity to salvage your NFL
on it."
NFL.
career," Goodell wrote in
Frazier said the drug Henry was arrested four letters to the players.

Indians
.from Page Bl
Mariners.
"The more ga me s we
knock out, the better we ' ll
all feel ," Mariners manager
Mike Hargrove said. "It's
not any more pleasant for
tbe Indians than it is for us.
You just have to deal wiih
it.,,
Blake's fourth homer, a
tWO·OUI shot off Cha Seung .
Baek (1·2), snapped a 1-1
tie in the sixth and
Barfield's 'two-run double in
the seventh gave the Indians
a 4;1 lead. Grady Sizemore
added a sacrifice tly in the
seventh.
Cleveland impruved to .
17-4 at home, with two of
those wins coming in
Milwaukee when the club
had to move a three-game
series against , the Los
Angeles Angels under
Miller Park 's retractable
roof in Apri I.
Tom Mastny (3-1) took
over for starter C.C.
Sabathia and got the win.
Sabathia allowed one run ·
and eight hits in five
innings. He walked one and
struck out four, recording
his I,OOOth career strikeout
in the fifth when he fanned
lchiro Suzuki for the second
time.
The· Marin~rs loaded . the
bases in the ninth on a dou ble, walk and single . off
reliever
,
Roberto
Hernandez. Closer Joe
Borowski came on and got
Suzuki to hit into an RBI
forceout before getting Jose
Vidro to pop up and Jose
Guillen to ground out for
his 14th save.
Seattle began a 6,273·
mile, four·city trip with its
fifth loss in six games.
The Indians billed th e
del ayed
matchup
as
"Opening Day 3" and the
club even tried to duplicate
some ofthe blustery conditions that transformed

Jacobs Field into a colossal
snow glebe last month.
Artificial snowmaking
machines, ·perched atop the
pedestrian walkway beyond
left tield, produced tlurries
tha) tumbled softly onto
fans - a few of them wear· .
ing Santa Claus hats - as
they arrived.
".1 saw the fake snow,"
Sabathia said. "I can do
without seeing that again.
Besides that, it felt like a
normal day:"
There were ice sculptures
in the plaza between the
Jake and Quicken Loans
Arena, and the club gave

Ja~on Giambi sure·picked a
lousy time to finally come
clean.
Mired in a deep slump, his
team in an even deeper funk,
Giambi cou ld have been
excused for doing what he's
been doing so well the last
few years - collecting more
money than some small
countries have while pre·
tending the wh0lc messy
steroid thing never really
existed..
So it was a bit surpri si ng to
hear Giambi 's de facto
acknowledgment the other
day that, yes. he was juiced
and that he and baseball owe·
everyone a big apology for
the sins of the past.
Actually, Yankee fans are
more concerned with the ·sins
of the present, which in
Giambi 's case ce nters l!ll the
fact he has just live home
runs and only one hit in his
last 26 at bats. There 's more
than a few New Yorkers who
wouldn't mind · making a
midnight run for some
human growth hormone jf it
would get his bat going
agam.
Whi le they're at it, maybe
they can lind a miracle drug
to repair an aging pitching
., tafT that gets even older
when the $28 million man
arrives in the next week or so
to earn his money six innings
at a time. Yes, Tyler Clippard
helped 'ease some of the sting
of a weekend series gone bad
at Shea Stadium, but there's
only so much a rookie pitch·
er can do.
Giambi sat quietly in the
dugout Sunday night, waitil)g
to be called upon to pinch hit
if necessary. It wasn ' t
because the· Yankees got a
good perfo rmance from
Clippard and some timely
home runs to avoid yet
another
embarrassment
against thei r CrOSS· IOWil
National League rivals.
Giambi is making $21 mil·
lion this year, so maybe he
felt it was his duty to make
some noise at a time when
hi s bat was so sileut. Or
maybe he couldn't sleep at
night knowing the onl y con·
troversies in the Bronx were
whether Roger Clemens
should be allowed· to come
and go as lie pleases and
whether Joe Torre and Brian
Cashman should simply go.
Giambi. of course. has
apologized before. He spent
an .entire press conference

OVCS graduates, A7

Yankees take
one from Boston
Tim

Dallilberg

NEW YORK (AP) Alex Rodriguez an~ the
New York Yankees have
quite a hike if they hope to
get back in the AL East
race, and they took an
important step in the right
direction Monday night.
Rodriguez, homered for
the third straight game
and Chien· Ming Wang
stymie\~ Boston, sending
the Yankees to a 6·2 victo·
ry that moved them within
9 1/2 games of the divi·
sion·leading Red Sox ,
who still own the best
record. in the major
leagues at 30·1 4.
Jason Giambi snapped a
1-for-26 slide with an
upper·deck homer and
leadoff batter Johnny
Damon got the Yankees
started all game again s~
his former team. New
York improved to 2-5 thi s
year against its biggest
rival. with both wins com·
ing against knuckleballer
Tim Wakefield.

prior to the 2005 season saying he was sorry, though he
l)ever really explained what
he was sorry about. Besides,
hitting lots of home runs
means never having to say
you' re sorry to Yankees fans.
What was must interesting
about Giambi's latest comments to USA Today is the
timing. Though he reportedly
admitted to the BALCO
grand jury in December 2003
that he used steroids, Giambi
has refused to address the
issue publicly and the media
has been so busy bashing
Barry Bonds that he's largely
been given a free pass.
The fact that Giambi said
anything might make the
more conspiracy minded
wonder if he has some inside
knowledge of upcoming
developments in one or more
of the various steroid probes. which likely wotdd have
What other reason would he happened by now had
have to ri sk a possible 50- George Steinbrenner not
game suspension onhe pos- mellowed with age. There's
si bility of having the rest of frustration over the team's
his lucrati ve contract voided? inability to consistently hit,
That said, he's not the first and I'{Orry about whether
baseball player to say some- Mariano Rivera might finally
thing he would later regrei.
be losing his m~terful touch
Giambi may have inadve.r- at the age of 37.
tently done Jhe Yankees a The Yankees will get bet"
favor by taking some of the ter, because they have too
heat off his underachieving much talent to languish
teammates, who can 't pitch , below .500 all season Jon~.
can't field, and lately haven't But if they don ' t turn tt
even been able to hit much. around fast, there's a good
They are so desperate they chance they'll not only fail to
not only signed Clemen s~ but win their division for the first
.have been burning through time in 10 years, but miss the.
one rookie starting pitcher a playoffs entirely.
week.
As for Giambi, his best
And while it may be too days ate already behind him.·
early in the season to panic, Hi s power numbers have
all $195 million has done so fallen and he doesn't hit for
far this year is buy· the average. He's also at an age
.Yankees a losing record and a . where things like the bone
tie for second place, 10 112 spur in his foot that caused
games behind the Boston him to miss several games
Red Sox.
· are occurring with increasing
"It's definitely embarrass- frequency.
ing." Johnny Damon said.
Worse yet, the 2000 AL
"We definitel y know that we MVP is at a point in hi s
are better than we've career where he reali zes his
showed."
accomplishments will always
Sports talk shows in New be tainted by being linked to
York are tilled with specula- the BALCO scandal.
.
tion that both Torre and
And forthat, he's really got
Cashman could be fired , something to be sor:ry about:

,)II

CL:\TS • \'nl. ,)h, No,

BY KEVIN KELlY
KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Joy Kocmoud/photo

Emergency personnel took to their boats .in a search for a Gallipolis City Police officer who
drowned while pursuing an individual who allegedly fled from police and jumped into the
river. As of late Tuesday, the officer, whose name was not re leased, had not been located.

• Lopez exacts
revenge with slam,
Nationals double up
Reds. See Page 84

WEATHER

"Your ·h eart works as hard as you do!

Your lola
Counts!

~allipolt~

Jlatlp mrtbune

Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
~oint -'lea~ant l\egt~ter

O'Bleness' HeartWorks program for cardiac and pulmonary
rehabilitation helps patients with heart or lung Jis~ase recover more
quickly and improve their quali ry of life. A customized care plan for
each patient helps reduce risk factors and slow d,)wn or reverse tne
;

Details on Page A7

Memorial Hospital

An affiliate of the O'Biene~ s Health System

American chestnut
makes
•
return to Meigs County

SEcnoNs- 16 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox

A6
A6
B4-6
B7
A2

J. REED

BREED@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Only one
complaint alleging a violaCalendars
tion of the state's new smok·
ing ban has been received in
Classifieds
Meigs County, according to
Health Commissioner Larry
Comics
Marshall.
Marshall said the owner
Editorials
of the business subjeci to
Sports
B Section · the complaint has been contacted arid asked to comply
Weather•
A7 with the new state · Jaw,
approved by voters in
Novemtier. Two other busi·
. © 0007 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

nesses have also been asked
to comply. .
The .complaint was made
·through a toll·free number
to the 0hio Department of
· Health\ the . · enforcing
agency,. Marshall said.
The state. began enforcing
the law earlier this month.
This new Jaw requires pub·
lie places and places of
employment to prohibit
smoking on the premises.
These businesses and orga·
nizations must also post
"No Smoking" signs that
contain a telephone number

for reporting violations and
remove ashtrays and other
smoking receptacles.
The Jaw imposes fines of
$100, $500, $1 ,000 and
$2,500 against owners of
public places who do not
comply, and $100 fines
against smokers who refuse
lo comply when asked by
the business owner.
"It . is important for the
public to know this is a
'complaint·driven ' law,"
Marshall said. " It is also a .
civil law, rather than a crim·
ina! matter."

Area jobless
rates mixed
during April
BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLYII!&gt;MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Marshall said the local
health department is hoping .
that businesses which are
not now complying with the
ban will do so with~ut tines
being imposed.
·
"We have some latitude in
enforcing · the
Jaw,"
Marshall said. "It is the
local board of healtl) 's posi·
tion that we should work to
bring all businesses into
compliance without impos·
ing fines, if possible.'' ·
Marshall said perso nal ·

Please see Smoklna. A:S

Please see Jobless. A3

.

Bv BRtAN

RACINE- J. Scott Hill,
classified staff member of
the Southern Local School
District has been suspended
for five days without pay by
the. school board for
allegedly violating a district
policy pertaining to outside
activities of classified staff.
Board
policy
4231
includes th e clause "staff
members should refrain
from expressions that disrupt
the efficient operation of the
school and/or interfere with
the maintenance of disci·
pline by school officials."
Hill' s suspension came at
this week's board meeting:
Superintendent
. Mark
Miller advised against
Hill's decision to have the
personnel matter discussed
in open session but as the
employee in question Hill
reserved the right to the
public hearing.
Mil ler then referred to
remarks Hill made in a recent
article that appeared in The
Daily Sentinel concerning an
audit of the district
Hill's direct quote from
that article is as· follows:
"The truth should be told. L
Pleise see Employee, A:S

GALLIPOLIS
Unemployment in are'!
counties represented a
mi xed bag during April a'S
Ohio's jobless rate for the
month increased, the state:
Department of Jobs and
Family Services found.
Gallia County saw !(
three· tenths of a percent
drop, from 5.9 percent itt
March to 5.6 percent last
month,
while
Meig ~
County's unemployment
remained unchanged at 8.6
percent. The state released
county·by·county rates fot
last month on ·Tuesday.
·
Athens County decreased
slightly, from 5.7 percent in
March to 5.6 percent iq
April ,
but
Jackson
County's rate shot up five~
tenths of a percent to 8.8:

Health department
reports one complaint on p_ublic smoking
.
.

INDEX
2

O'BLENESS

RACINE - Tony Deem
was hired as. superintendent
and Roy Johnson-as interim
assistant treasurer of. the
Southern Local School
District · at the school
board's recent meeting.
Deem, currently the prin·
cipal of Southern High
School, was hired on a 260
day contract at the same rate
of pay as 'current superinten·
dent Mark Miller who.has an
annual salary of $70,000,
according to Johnson who
.
Jim Freeman/photo
has been working in the trea·
surer's office since May 14. Fifth. graders from Meigs Intermediate School near Rutland Ia sf week planted approximateMiller told the board Deem ly 175 American chestnut trees at the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District's
would be taking over at the· Conservation Area. Two of the students are shown here planting saplings with assistance
end of next month With the from Jason Crislip, a soil conservation with the U.S. Department of ·Agriculture's Natural
board approving Deem Resources Conservation Service.
working 20 extra days in
July as needed at the same
per diem rate as Miller's.
· The board accepted
•
Miller's resignation effec·
tive July 31: Deem's first
official day as superinten·
dent is Aug. I .
BY JIM FREEMAN
approximately 175 blight- help bring the American
The board also accepted
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT
resistant American chestnut chestnut back to our
the resignation of certified
saplings, with assistance from · forests," said Jason Crislip,
lntermin Treasurer Cindy
RUTLAND- A hundred Meigs SWCD and Natural NRCS soil conservationist.
Rhonemus effective May years ago . . the might y . Resources
Conservation "This is a very unique pro·
14 and hired Brian Swann, American chestnut tree was Service staff. Later, an addi- ject to have ongoing in the
who is also certified, as known throughout the east· tional 25 trees were planted at county, and We look for·
interim treasurer at a rate of .ern United States as "Queen another location on the prop- ward to monitoring thi s pro·
$35 an hour, effective May of the Forest," but a fungal erty for a total of 200 ject for years to come."
14. Johnson will be consult· disease from Asia all ·but American chestnut trees.
The American chestnut,
or
ing with Swann until obliterating the massive
Castanea dentata, was
The trees were obtained
Johnson receives his certiti · trees, leaving forests full of through the Buckeye Hill once abundant across much
cation by Aug. I. Johnson standing, dead trunks.
Resource Conservation and of the eastern United States,
was hired effective May 14
Today there are few peo· Development Council ·and particulru:ly along dry ridges
at a per diem rate of $125, pie who can recall seeing the NRCS Plant Material where, according to some
plus benefits.
American chestnut trees in Center in Alderson, W.Va. accounts, the tl owering
Johnson, who lives in the wild, but a group of fifth Their locations were marked trees would make the moun·
Syracuse, comes to the dis· graders from . tile Meigs and recorded so their growth taios appear snow-capped
trict from the private sector, Intermediate School helped . can be monitored as part of a during early summer.
The trees were large ;
specifically
Children's to change that last week.
long·term project to reintro·
mature chestnut trees aver·
Hospital in Columbus.
. The 63 youngsters attend· duce American chestnu(.
Johnson said he is happy to · ing a field trip at the Meigs
"We are very excited to aged five feet in diameter
working in Meigs County Soil and Water Conservation have the opportunity to be and were up to I00 Jeet tall,
Please see Southern, A:S ~a near Rutland planted involved with a project to Please see Chestnut. A:S

..

counseling. Talk to yntir dnctor.ahout heart services at O'Bleness and

o•m.r- HNrt s.rvtc•
. A Heartbeat Away

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

re

includes exercise as w~ll as education, nmrition and stress management

'

BY BETH SERGENT

BY BETH SERGENT

• Local Briefs.
See Page A3
• Carmel-Sutton U.M.
Church honors ·mothers.
See J)age A3
• Holzer Medicai ·Center
hosts rehabilitation
'
nursing
seminar.
See Page A6
• Thompson
anniversary.
See Page A6
• Family Medicine.
See Page A7

the importance of rehabilitati on in your trearinent."

Southern
employee .
suspended

BSERGENT@MVDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Director, HeartWorks

In The Tri-County
Gallia • Meigs
&amp;Mason

GALLIPOLIS - Dive
teams and resc uers were
expected to work through
the night into today in
search of a Gallipolis City
Police officer believed to
have drowned in the Ohio
River on Tuesday while
pursuing an individual who
reportedly fled from police.
As of an II :30 p.m. press
briefing, the officer had not
been found and his identity
was not being released.
City Police Detective Jeff
Boyer, speaking in somber
tones, said the officers were
conducting an investigation

around 5 p.m. in the vicinity
of the 900 block of Second
Avenue that led to a foot
pursuit with an individual
who was apparently part of
the investigation.
· Officers reportedly pur·
,sued the individual to the
bank of the Ohio River near
the 900 block of First
Avenue, where the individ·
ual entered the river to con.
· tinue his flight.
.
The individual , who was
not identified as of late
Tuesday, swam in the direc:
tion of Gallipolis Island,
Authorities said one of ·the
officers went under the water
Please see Officer, AS

Southern
•
vacancies
are rilled

Tom Murray,

Voice your opinion by voting for
all your favorites!

W\\\\.m~dail~-.·ntiowl.&lt;·um

211117

drowns

INSIDE

disease process. Progress is carefully monitored through a program that

\\'EilNJ ·: SllAY, MAY 2;1,

:!11.)

SPORTS

.

SOD !

goes to Cowboys'
new stadium, B2

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

away snow tractors and ski
weekends at a nearby resort.
A couple fans even got into
a snowball fight outside the
park's gates.
·.
Hargrove remains di s·
pleased with Major League
Baseball's rescheduling of
the series. Seattle has to
make two more trips back to
Cleveland, and the clubs
will play a doubleheader on
Sept. 26 when the Indians
make their only trip to
Seattle.
"I think we got the short
end of the stick," he said.
:'The way they decided to.
make it up is not good.''

COlliNG

.2011 Super Bowl

.

"'

�'

.OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

I've come to hate immi:
gration, which is an awful
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
thing for any American - ·
www.niydallyaentlnel.com
and one named Lopez at .
that
to
admit
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Immigration should be an
Kathryn
inspirational topic about
Lopez
Dan Goodrich·
"huddled masses yearning
to breathe · free." . But in
Publisher
2007, it's not: It's a contentious, unserious, dangerCharlene Hoeflich
ous topic.
fundame·ntal questions in a
General Manager-News Editor
Maybe I've caught Bush country where there are
Derangement Syndrome. already an estimated 12
I'd like to believe I have, million illegal immigrants.
since thiu will alleviate my ' And yet, the president,
Congress shall make n11 law respecting an
guilt a little.. I hate being instead of taking such con·establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
one of the Bush administra- .cems seriously, engages in
free e~erdse thereof; or abridging the freedom tion detractors. There's a immature name-calling. .
war going on, and the
On the day a deal
of 'speech, or of the press; or the right of the
stakes are just too higb to between Senate leaders and
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition be fooling around and com- the White House was
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
promising a commander in announced, President Bush
chief's authority unneces- said that the bill will be
without "animosity." He
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution sarily.
I'll compromise where I aimed that at this Lopez have to. I'll put up with bad a critic. Supposedly, the
judgment here and there: attitude goes, if you're not
Harriet Miers? The incom- with Jorge Arbusto, you're
petent
Alberto Gonzales? filled with anti-Hispanic,
Today is Wednesday, May 23, the 143rd day of 2007.
Torching
the
First anti-immigrant "animosity."
There are 222 days left in the year.
Amendment by signing
. Today's Highlight in History:
Speaking tp a Hispanic
On May 23, 1934, bank robbers Clyde Barrow and campaign-finance reform? group earlier this year, key
Bonnie Parker were· shot to death in a police ambush in Things like the war. are so amnesty proponent South
Bienville Parish, La.
·
important that it is easier to Carolina senator Lindsay
On this date:
. look past previous gaffes. Graham
proclaimed:
In 1533, the marriage of England's King Henry VIII to He knows there's an enemy "We're gonna tell the bigots
Catherine of Aragon was declared null and void.
. ·
out there that hates to shut up."
In 1701, Captain William Kidd was hanged in London America.
That condescending attiafter he was convicted of piracy an&lt;) murder.
But Immigration is about tude has led the White
In 1788, South Carolina became the eighth state to ratify the war, too. It's literally House to cast aside many an
the United States Constitution.
our first line of defense. ally - most ·notably Texas
In 1906, Norwegian playwright and poet Henrik Ibsen Who gets in and out? Who senator John Comyn, who
died in Christiania, Norway, at age 78.
is here? These ;u-e pretty stands out among senators
In 1937, industrialist John D. Rockefeller died in Ormond
Beach, Fla.
In 1944, during World War II, Allied forces bogged down
in Anzio began a major breakout offensive.
In 1945, Nazi official Heinrich Himmler committed sui. cide while imprisoned in Luneburg, Germany.
. In 1960, Israel announced it had captured former Nazi
officiw Adolf Eichmann in Ar~entina. (Eichmann was triedr
in Israel, found guilty of cnmes against humanity, and
hanged in 1962.)
.
·
·
Ten years ago: The defense at the Oklahoma City bombing trial suffered an embarrassing setback when one of 'its
own witnesses provided testimony potentially dii!D&amp;fing to
defendant Timothy McVeigh. The Senate dectsively
approved a carefully constructed deal to balance the budget
and cut taxes. Iranians elected a moderate president, ·
Mohammad Khatami, over har4-liners in the ruling Muslim
·clergy.
·
·
Five years ago: During visits to Germany and Russia on
the same day, President Bush told wary European leaders
"we've got to use all means at our disposal to deal with
Saddarn Hussein," and he denounced anyone who would
appease terrorists or ignore threats to Europe. Golfing legend Sam Snead died in Hot Springs, Va., at age 89.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Betty Garrett is 88. Pianist
Alicia de Larrocha is 84. Bl!iegrass singer Mac Wiseman is
82. Actor Nigel Davenport is 79. Actress Barbara Barrie is
76. Actress Joan Collins is 74. Actor Charles Kimbrough is
71. Rhythm-and-blues singer General Johnson (Chairmen
of the Board) is 64. Actress Lauren Chapin is 62. Country
singer Misty Morgan is 62. Country singer Judy Rodman is
56. Singer Luka Bloom is 52. Actor-comedian Drew Carey
is 49.Country singer Shelly West is 49. Actor Linden Ashby
is 47. Actress-model Karen Duffy js 46. Rock musician Phil
Selway (Radiohead) is 40. Actress Laurel Holloman is 39.
Rock .musician Matt Flynn (Maroon 5) is 37. Singer
Lorenzo is 35. Country singer Brian McComas is 35. Singer
Maxwell is 34. Singer Jewel is 33. Actor Adam Wylie is 23.
Thought for Today: ~· You can tell the ideals of a nation by
its advertisements." - Norman Douglas, British author
(1868-1952).
.
..
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

TODAY IN HISTORY

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time to address such serious ·
concerns in a serious man·-·.
ner - especially when they'
are raised by respected
allies like Comyn. Inste'ld,
he announced. a plan that
met .with the approval of
pro-amnesty groups, one.
that could cost the U.S. taxpayer $2.5 trillion in retirement benefits alone, according to the Heritage
Foundation's Robert Rector.
. Nice deal if you're not a
law-abiding American .
As initial details emerged
about the immigration deal,
conservatives were demoralized. Readers of my conservative Web site e-mailed
me using the ''I" word impeachment. Most weren't
serious; but all were genuinely concerned. When
Republicans like George W.
Bush, and even the beloved
conservative Sen. Jon Kyi
of Arizona, give in to a vast
amnesty plan, how much
worse could the Democrats
be? I hate the immigration
issue for many reasons, but
'most practically because it
may have just won the
Democrats the presidency
in 2008.
(Kathryn Lopez is the editor .of National Review
Online (www.nationalre·
view.com). She can be COli·
tacted at klopez@nationalreview.com.)
'

as a smart conservative who
defends the White House
ably on the cable news
rounds. And yet, during
negotiations toward the deal
that was eventually struck,
Comyn's concerns were not
taken seriously, if the buzz
is to be believed.
Instead of being the loyal
ally the White House so
badly needed, Comyn was
forced to be skeptical within hours of the deal's
announcement: "I simply
cannot, and will not, support any legislation that
repeats the mistakes. of the
1986 amnesty." Even before
the details of the compromise became clear, a source
close to Comyn told me that
the senator had serious
reservations; the implication
was that he had absolutely
no reason to trust the judgment of the White House.
Comyn wanted to see real
enforcement safeguards in
the bill - targeting busi.
nesses that hire illegal
aliens. He wanted, in other
words, to be confident there
would be sonie law enforcement in this bill. But his
pleas f~)l on deaf ears.
This deal carlle just days
after Newsweek reported
that .three of the four suspects who plotted to kill
u.s. troops at Fort Dix in
New Jersey were in the U.S.
illegally. You'd think the
president would take the

'53.55
'107..10

'214.2t

I ran into my neighbor
Barbara Ann at the . supermarket. We chatted for a bit
and she dropped the news
that she was going to Maui
for two weeks. I don't know
Jim
whether she had something
Mullen
in her mouth or 1 had some.thing in my ears, or something got lost in the general
hubbub, but she actually
said she was going to Mali, locked," Barbara Ann slUtnot Maui.
tere.
Mali is an impoverished,
"No, it's an island all by ·
landlocked sub-Saharan itself. There's water everycountry in ·north central where. If you take the Hana
Africa; Maui is a' beautiful Highway, there's a waterfall
Hawaiian island full of at almost every tum in the
tourists and honeymooners, road.
"But the desert .. .':
resorts and spas. But think"What dessert? Wait until
ing Barbara Ann was going
to Maui, 1 exclaimed, ' you taste the food. The
"That's · wonderful! Ypu'll roasted pig is great, you'll
love it!"
love the fish, you can pick
She gave me a very puz- the fruit right off the trees."
· zled look because, although · "You're kidding. 1 was
she had never been to Mali, told they don't eat pork and
her minister had described ~h~.'people are going hunit as one of the neediest,
"Going hungry? Some of
poorest countries in the the natives are enormous.
Third . Worl.d. Barbara Ann Like sumo wrestlers. 1 don't
was going as part of a . know, maybe it's all that
church group to help build a Sparn they eat for breakfast.
high school there out of Going hungry? Well, maybe
mud bricks and tin. "You'll some of them are, but those
Jove it" simply did not fit in aren't the ones you see out
with her mental picture. .
surfing or golfing.''
"It's so beautiful," I yarn- · Barbara Anne was as conmered on. "Every time you fused as I had ever seen her.
tum a corner there's another "I wish you would talk to
spectacular view. The · Reverend Tompkins aboui
ocean, the volcanoes, the this. He's under the impreswhales ... "
sion that everyone's starv"1 thought it was land- ing and that they could use

.,

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/ Local Briefs
'

PORTLANP - The Ohio River Producers (FFA alumni)
will be hosting its ftrst horse show of the season with exhibition to start at I 0 a.m. and the show beginning at II a.m.
on·May 28 at the Portland Community Center. .

I

I
I
I
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'''

•

I

Announce reunion

Schools dismiss

HARRISONVILLE - The annual reunion of the
Harrisonville-Scipio Alumni Association will be held
Saturday at 6:30 a.m. at the High School Alumni. Center
located near Harrisonville on S.R. 143.
.
The dinner is $12 plus alumni dues of $2, with children
under 12 $8. For reservations call Harold Graham, 7423033, or Gladys Cumings, 992-7131 .

· TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern Elementary School and
Eastern High School will dismiss at I p.m. on Friday. .

Registration underway

Icenhower performs
· PORTLAND - Dwight Icenhower, Elvis tribute artist,
will .be performing at 7 p.m. on Friday at the Portland
Community Center. Tickets are $1 0 at the door. There is no
. advance sale. The proceeds will benefit the C~nter.

Scrapbooking·workshop
. MIDDLEPORT - A heritage scrapbooking workshop
will be held at the Riverbend Arts Council, Second Avenue,
Middleport from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. on Tuesdays, May 29,
June 5, 12, 19, 26, and July 3.
To registe.r call Paula Pickens at 992-5502 or Rhojean
McClure at 992-3842. In honor of Cecil D. Staneart, A
World War II veteran and father of instructor Paula
Pickens, the class is offered free to anyone compiling an
heirloom album about any World War II veteran:
As a Creative Memories consultant, Paula, and assistants
Jeannie Taylor and Teresa Gibbs will be leading in the
preparations ?fheirloom albums which can be passed down
from generallon to generatton.
·
The heritage workshop provides 18 hours of instruction
(six sessions) at cost of $10 per session. You· may purchase an album, page protectors, adhesive. back fine tip
pen, heirloom· stickers and legacy paper pack as a kit for
$60. Other products are also available for purchase. Those
enrolled will be able to complete a heritage album in the
six-week period, according to Pickens.

a

Plan Memorial services

Cannel-Sutton tJ.M.
Church honors mothers

.

POMEROY - The junior partnership golf league for
youth 9 to 17. can pre-register from 9 a.m. to noon
Thursday, May 24 and Thursday, May 31 at the Pine Hills
Golf Course. There will be no league play on those dates.
The first league play will be Thursday, June 7 at 8:30
a.m ..Cost of league is $20 at registration and $5 to play
nine holes each week. Those planning to take part must be
pre-registered before league starts. For more information
call Marty Cline 992-6604.

RACINE - In observance of Mothers' Day, the
Ladies of the Carmel-Sutton
U. M. Church , along with
friends
and · relatives,
enjoyed a night out at the
Carmel Fellowship Hall.
Judy Harrison gave devotions including a reminder
us to take time for our families before a dinner was
served. · Wanda
and
Stephanie Shuler presented
a slide show and talked
about their missionary trip
· to Qua Qua, Africa, in the
summer of 2006. They visited many African homes and
learned their customs while

Class outing
POMEROY - ·The Meigs High School class of 1997 will
have a 10-year reunion at 7 p.m. Saturday a( the Riverside
Golf Course in Mason, W.Va. Cost is $15 for singles and
$20 for couples. Finger foods and beverages will be provided. All MHS 1990-1999 graduates and teachers ar&lt;: mvited.

Center activities
COOLVILLE-·Lottridge Legacy Foundation will sponsor a karaoke contest by DJ Johnny of Mid-Ohio Valley
DJ/Karaoke Entertainment on June 8, July 13 and Aug. I0.
Those 10 and under and II to 16 will receive free admission. Others Will pay a $5 entry fee . Trophies will be
awarded at the Aug. 10 show.
The contest will be held at the Old Root's Store in
Coolville. Concessions will be available. Bring lawn chairs.
The Odessy Youth League, a division of the foundation, .
will host a game night on June 14, July 12 and Aug. 9. The
public is invited to bring games and share skills. The night
will be held from 6:30 to 10:30 p.m.

MIDDLEPORT- Feeney-Bennett Post #128, American
Legion, will hold Memorial Day tributes as follows oil May
28: 8:45 a.m., Middleport Levee; 9 a.m., Riverview
Cemetery; 9:15 a.m., Bradford ·Cemetery; 9:30 a.m.,
COOLVILLE -Grace Brethren Church of Coolville
Middleport Hill Ce~etery; 10:15 ~.m., Addison Cemetery; will hold a bake sale from 9 a,m. to 3 p.m: on June 2 at The
1.0:30 a.m., Cheshtre Gravel Htll Cemetery; II a.m .. Cool Spot. Pies, cookies, bread and other items will be
Middleport Gravel Hill Cemetery; II: 15 a.m., Stell' art- offered. The church will have a rummage sale from 9 a.m.
Bennett Memorial Park; 12:30 p.m. , Howell Hill Cemetecy; to 3 p.m. on June I at the Torch Community Center on
County Road 62. Proceeds from· both sales will benefit
I : 10 p.m., Burlingham Cemetery.
children attending church camp.

spreading the gospel message there. The. program
was very interesting.
Ethel Bentz was presented a potted plant to brighten
her room at Overbrook
Nursing and Rehab .Center.
Several other ladies won
flowers as door prizes.
The following weekend
on Mothers' Day, Betty
Hayes and Jean Alkire were
honored at Carmei-Sunon
Worship Servic.e as mother
of the year and presented
gifts. Their names were
placed on the church plaque.
All mothers were given
flowers and small gift.

O'Bleness offering
breastfeeding class
ATHENS - O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital in
Athens will offer a breastfeeding class for expectant
mothers in June.
The class, which is held
in conjunction with the lactation program sponsored
by the O'Bleness Birth
Center, will take · place
Wednesday; June 6, from I
p.m. until 3:30 p.m. in'
O' Bleness' Lower Level
Room 010.
Michele
Biddlestone,
0' Bleness:• international
board certified lactation

consultant, will lead the
class. Topics to be discussed
will include: advantages of
breastfeeding for mother
and child, anatomy of the
breast, physiology of breastfeeding , preparation for
breastfeeding, maintenance
and management of breast- .
feeding, and advice for
working mothers.
The class is provid~d
free of charge; no registration is required. · For more
information,
contact
Michele Biddlestone at
(740) 592-9364.

Officer

Cabell County, W.Va.,
Mason , W.Va., Pickaway
County. and the Ross
Cou)1ty water rescue unit,
which employed a hovercraft in its .search. ·
·The cooperation and support of those departments
was encouraging in a diffi cult time, Gallia County.
Sheriff David Martin said.
"We're like a family," he
said. "They came out to
help us in any way they can,
and we would do the same."
The name of the officer
'Was not released, nor were
details surrounding the
investigation. The man who
allegedly fled from officers
was booked into the Gallia
County Jail following his
capture at around 7 p.m.
Martin,
Boyer
and
Highway Patrol Lt. Troy
Johnson, who conducted the
late Tuesday briefing, said
more details were expected
to be released this morning.

Plan bake sale

from PageA1

while pursuing the individual and did not resurface.
The man pursued by officers was found by police on
the island with the help of a
RACINE- The Racine -Southern Alumni Association's
search dog from the State
SYRACUSE -London Pool season passes will be Highway PatroL
annual alumni dinner is Saturday, 6:30 p.m .. at Southern
High School. Tickets are $15 e11ch in advance and $20 at sold from 4 to 6 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday and 10
City police, Galli a County
·the door. Advance tickets can be purchased at Southern a.m. to 2 p.m. on Friday at the pool. Cost is $40 for indi- sheriff's deputies, the
High School and the Racine Home National Bank during viduals, $100 for families of five or less. and $150 for , patrol, local volunteer fire
regular .business hours. The alumni awards scholarships to businesses. The pool opens Saturday with a· free swim departments and West
day, noon to 6 p.m.
Southern High School seniors.
Virginia State Police swung
into action in a search of the
river between the island and
· felt ne_xt year was the time to sor; Jennifer Holt, I Oth grade in the Health and .Fit in the parkfront, where a stagextend these contracts.
· advisor; Kelly Drummer, var- Southeastern Ohio Initiative. ing area was established.
As nightfall approached,
The following supplemen- sity girls softball coach;
The board accepted a
tal contracts for the 2007-08 . Daniel Otto, teacher mentor; donation of $2,000 from dive teams and water rescue
from PageA1
Municipal · units arrived to assist in the
school year were approved: Brent Smith, junior high foot- . American
Power-Ohio
to
be
used for search. These included the
Richard
Cooksey,
varsity
ball
coach;
Kim
Roush,
high
and is looking forward to
four
scholarships
for
gradu- Cottageville (W.Va.) VFD,
boys
and
girls
track
.
~oach;
school
yearbook
helP.ing the district get back
Ohio Department of Natural
The board approved the ating seniors.
on 'solid financial footing." Ryan Lemley, assistant varsiPortsmouth,
Membership into the Resources,
The board approved a two- ty football coach, varsity district's participation in the
boys
baseball
coach;
Mick
COG-SEOVEC
dental
conOhio
High
School
Athletic
year contract extension for
Shawn Bush, elementary Winebrenner, golf coach; sortium effective July !- Association foe 20Q7 -08
school principal, Scott Ann Ohlinger, Southern High June 30, 2008. The district's was approved.
A second reading of new
Wolfe; administrative assis-· School National Honor rate was discounted I0 perand
revised board policies
tant, Ed Baker, tech. coordi- Society, Southern Lead cent from last year for a savwas approved.
nator, through the 2009-2010 Mentor; Koste El-Dabaja, . ings of $6,450.
from PageA1
The next board meeting is
school year. Board member quiz bowl; Don Dudding, · The $10,000 grant from
. Don Smith voted against the student council, ECHO; April the OSteopathic Heritage scheduled for 8 p.m., June
extensions, saying it was· King, 12th grade advisor; Foundatio.n of Nelsqnville ·25 in the media room at contacts are being made
with business owners when
nothing personal and that he Brent Smith, II th grade advi- was ·accepted to participate Southern High School.
complaints are received. A
follow -up visit is made
within 30 days to check
wildlife, and a source of harvested for timber and out western Meigs County, compliance, and if the busiincome for many families sold as "wormy chestnut."
may be ideal locations for ness is still· not in compliwho would sell chestnuts
Today, according to the American chestnut planti- ance, a letter is sent. After a
. during the holiday seasons.
American
Chestnut ngs as the trees prefer well- third offense, the business
from PageA1
The trees made up approx- Foundation, the American drained, slightly acidic soil owner is called before the
and there were reports of imately 25 percent of the chestnut is threatened with like that found on old strip board of health, and a tine
forests in the eastern United extinction because very few mines and ridge tops.
can be imposed.
·
larger trees, so big that the States
and their nuinbers trees are producing · nuts,
The students and their
Fines range from $100 to
wood from a single tree were estimated at 4 billion however dead stu!JlpS still teachers also participated in
$2,500· for business owners
could fill an entire rail car.
trees from Maine to continue to grow shoots a 1.5-mile nature hike, and $100 for smokers who
The wood was straight: Mississippi, and then within (which alsQ catch the blight); learned about streams and refuse to comply with a
grained, lighter and easier to a lifetime they were gone .
surviving large trees are rare. built crafts, activities geared business · owner's request
work than oak. and rot resisA fungal disease known as
The American Chestnut toward helping them meet that he not smoke. Only a
tant as redwood. The wood chestnut blight, accidentally Foundation and .other state science · requirements. business owner can ask a
is commonly found in old introduced from Asia, was groups are trying to save the They analyzed how all patron to comply with the
barns and is often salvaged discovered in New York remaining trees and develop organisms, ·
including law, Marshall satd, and the
and "recycled" as a valuable, City in 1904, and by 1950 a blight-resistant American humans, cause changes in local health department will
' their ecosystems 'and how only visit businesses to
antique wood. American the trees had almost totally · chestnut tree.
these changes can be benefi- e.nforce the law if a comReclaimed
strip
mines,
chestnut trees were a source disappeared. Many of the
plaint is made to the state
cial,
neutral or detrimental.
like
those
located
throughof food for people and standing dead trees were

Passes available

health department. There
will ~e no '.'spot checks" or
surpnse vtsttS by health
department staff to ensure
compliance.
·
There is also an appeals
process included in ihe legislation. Marshafl said those
who are fined under the law
can appeal their case to the
Franklin County Common
Pleas Court. That court has
jurisdiction, Marshall said,
because
the
Ohio
Department of Health is the
enforcing agent and is located in that county.

Smoking

I

all the help they can get,
over there."
"Maybe the Reverend
goes to places that are .off
the beaten path, places
tourist like me don't see. I
suppose the resorts and
hotels could always use
inore help. There's no way
th~y can keep up with all
the Japanese tourists."
"Tourists? They've got
Japanese tourists?"
"Tons of them. They
come because the prices are
so .low. They come to buy
all the Prada and Louis
Vuitton they can carry. I
guess compared to what it
would cost them in Tokyo,
it's a bargain."
"They sell Prada there?"
"Well, I haven't been in a
few years, but they used to.
They've got all the fancy
stores there."
"Then why am I going
over there to build a high
school? If they can build a .
Prada store and a golf
course, they can certainly
build a high school. It
sounds to me like they
should come over here help
us build things."
Barbara Ann had a good
point. I don 't remember
seeing any high schools on
Maui, but then, I wasn't
really looking . for them. I
was doing the normal
tourist stuff. Riding bicy- ·
cles down the volcano,
whale watching, eating,

.

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Southern

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The Daily 5entinel • Page A3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Alumni set

•
r .

. . Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Portland horse show

He gets ·an 'IJ for Mali

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Our main concem in all stories is to
be accurate. If you know of an error
in a etory, call tho newsroom at (74Q)
992·2156.

Wednesday, May 23, 2007.

·The newly .troubled immigration policy

The Daily Sentinel

Reader Services ·

PageA2

Chestnut

shopp.ing. ·
"Are you sure you're
going there to build a high
school?" I asked."lt seems
to me that's something
you'd be better off doing insome a poor African country."
"But I am going to Africa.
I'm sure of it."
"V
•ou ' ve · been m1sm-.
formed. It's in the middle of
the Pacific Ocean. Trust
me, I've been there, l
know.''
"And you went to
Timbuktu while you were
there?"
"Timbuktu? I don't think ·
so. Maybe that's on one ol
the other islands. Molokai,
maybe. I didn't get there.''
Weeks later, ·I again ran.
into Barbara Ann after
she'd finished her humanitarian mission, and she
informed me icily that Mali
is certainly not in the middle of the Pacific, and there
are no Spam-eating natives·
or spectacular waterfalls
and that Rev. Tompkins ·
doesn't seem to rely on her
the way he used to;
"It sounds like you could
use a vacation," I told her.
"Have you ever been to

Maui?"
·
(Jim Mullen is the author
of "It Takes a Village Idiot.:
Complicati11g the Simple
Life" and "Baby's First
Tattoo. " You can ~ach him
at jim_mullen@myway.com)'
l

mayor of Racine and associate of Debra Michael and
Dennie Hill.
Miller referred to Hill's
from PageA1
remarks as "inappropriate"
and ••insubordinate" and
don't know how people on that Hill's actions "went
the school board sleep at outside that (district) polinight after letting Debbie cy."
.
and Dennie take the. fall.''
Hill responded by saying
Hill's quote was preceded he was asked his opinion as
· by his identification as the mayor of Racine in the iuti-

Employee

·Jobless
from PageA1
Jackson's March jobless
rate was 8.3 percent.
· Lawrence Countr was
also stable at 5.2 percent and
Vinton County saw a seventenths of a percent jump
from 8. 7 percent in March to
9.4 . percent in April.

cle, not as an employee of
the district. He then said he
was not aware of board policy 4231.
·
In a three to two vote.
· Hill was suspended for five
days without pay · for his ·
alleged violation of the policy with .suspension to
begin today, Thursday and
the first three days of the
2007-08 school year. Board

Washington County's rate unemployment rate in April
dropped from 5.4 percent in ·reflects a seasonal influx of
March to 5.2 percent last job seekers entering the labor
market looking for work
month, ODJFS reported.
Ohio's unemployment along with a slight decline in
rate was 5.7 percent in employment," said Helen
April, up from 5.2 percent · Jones-Kelley, director of the
ODJFS. "Most of the decline
in March, the state said.
The national unemploy- in employment was in serment rate for April was 4.5 vice-providing industries."
The · number of workers
percent, up slightly from 4.4
unemployed in Ohio in
percent in March·.
"The increase in Ohio's April was 339,000, up from

..

members Jim Freeman and
.Don Smith voted against
the suspension, while board
members Peggy · Gibbs,
Susie Grueser and Richard
Hili. voted for it.
"The union plans oil filing '
a grievance over his suspension," said Anthony Vemell,
regional director of the
Ohio Association of Public
School
Employees/
307.000 in March as the
size of Ohio's work force
decreased by 5,800 workers to 5.43 million. The
number of workers unemployed ' has increased by
19,000 rn the past 12
months from 320,000. The
Aprll unemployment rate
for Ohio was up from 5.4
percent in April 2006.
(The Associated Press
co11tributed to this story.)

American Federation o'f
State,
County
and
Municipal Employees Local
4/AFL-CIO, Hill's union.
Vernell 's statement came
after.the meeting.

HffW-Inslrlnc!
HffWII'MI

113W.2nd St.
Pomeroy,OH 45769
(740)991-5479

wamerjl@nationwide,rom

·

A~~~l·\
Auditions:
"Captain Fantastic"
May 22&amp; 23
Tri-County Gospel Sing
June 2 at 7J!m
Auditions: "The
Unsinkable Molly Brown"
June 322m, June 4-56 ~m
Yoga Class Begins June 4
The Ariel-Dater Hall
428 Sec. Ave. Galli~~~~ ?H
· •un

D

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Nation~de·

On YOur Side

7

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counts
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:1st Annual

I

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I

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2007
_.:.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _--:--------,

_
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FAVORITE FOOD .SERVICES

I

1
1

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.

ala
Fat·Your

•

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,

ou Can
75'
or

.

~-----------------------,,

Favorite Barbecue

Belt Convenience Stoll! .. -·.

Favorite Lunch Soot

Favorite Catering

1.

1.

1.

1.

•

Favorite Breakfast Spot

Beet French Fries

1.

1.

Beat Wings

1.

1.

.

Belt Fried Chicken

Favorite Pizza

Favorite Resteurant

1.

1.

1.

1.

Favorite Chinese Food

Favorite Grocery Store .. :

Beat Seafood

1.

1.

Best Dell

Favorite Italian Food _. ~ - :

B!Bt Steak

1.

1.

1.

t.

1.

)

AUTOMOTIVE
Niw G

Favorite Auto Repair Shop

and Senior Coverage

· .·..

Favorite Mexican Food

Beat Burger

Anthem.+.t

ttiDIVIDUAL
Your Source for Individual, Family

!· ,

Fivor'lte

•

t!ialer

Best Seryice Station

1.

1.

Amanda Brannon

Favorite Auto Parts Store

Favorite' New ;rruck Dealer

Favorite Tire Store

740-566-4282
Toll Free 8811-730·2809
Fax 740-5116-4291

1.

1.

1.

Beet Collision Repair

Favorite 0!! Change Provider

Favorite Ua8d Car Dealer

1.

1.

1.

Favorite Towing Service

Favor!te!Ayto:Giau.

1.

1.

Favorite Car
Wash/Detailing

Email amanda.brannonOanthem.com

1.

BEAUTY,
APPAREL
&amp; ACCESSORIES .
IoBuv
N8n §12!! ·

~-+1
·
BEND AREA

Favorite Place
Children's Clothing

CHIROPRACTIC
. CENTER
(304) 773-5773 .
.
Kelsey M. Henry D.C.
lfeather Edwards, LMT
Massage Therapist

1065 South Setond Street • Mason, WV 25250

Best
1.

Favorite Place to Buy
Men's Clothing

1.

BQ8tTann!M9a!on .

1.

Favorite Consignment
~_
·

1.

Favorite Shoe Store

Favorite J!tW!Ir:yStore

1.

1.

1.

Favorite Place To Buy
Women's Clothing

·

·

· Best Hair Salon

1900 EASTERN AVE. • GAUIPOLIS , OH
1-877446-2282

. 2 Commerce Dr. .• Glatllpolta, OH • 740-441 ·1845
33105 Hiland Rd ••• Poll1!lf'Oy, OH • 740-992-6906.

FAMILY
Senior .Care, Inc.
2 COmmerce o.: · Gelltpolle, OH • 740-441-1377 - .

·

MISC.

446-2282

City Ice &amp; Fuel Co.

1.

"Our FAMILY In
Your HOMETOWN "

ELECTRONICS

FavOrite MoteVHotel

Beat Place To Work

Best Cellular Servlc:e

.

N ursirig C e.nter

"The Alzheimer's Experts"

33105 Hllland Rd. • Pomet'oy, OH • 740-002-0992

1.

YOUR CAR &amp;TRUCK SUPERSTORE NEXT TO WAL·MART
ToU Free

HOMEJ:OWN Medical Supplies, Inc. ·SCENIC -HILLS
311 B11ck Ridge Rd.
Bidwell, OH 45614
Te/:(740) 446-7150
Fax : 740-446-1248 ·

Best Electronic Store

. 1.

1.

Favorite Internet Service .
1.

740-446-5000

Favorite Accounting Firm .

SERV.1CES
FivOrNI ·CifDit ¢1886er

1.

1.

Favorite Bank

Beet Tatt001nq c.

1.

1.

1.

Favorite Day Care Center

Favorlt![fU!I!Illl -Home

Favorite Real Estatn

1.

1.

1.

Favorite Dry Cleaners

Favorite Plgmber ~ :

Favorite Finance Co.

1.

1.

1.

Favorite Electrician

Favorite lneuPance Office

1.

1.

"Your Home Decorating Headquarters"

Favorite Lew Firm
1.

:·

Favorite Pet Groomer

106 West Main Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769 "'" M-s.t
(740) 992-1702
Sun~~oHd

'

Pt. Pleasant • M8Son
New Haven • Ripley
~4-.t~

Favorite Photographar
1.

~

7~~Z'~

Favorite Check Caahlng
l.

HOLZER CLINIC
· Get Back Into Action With Dr. Kelly Roush
Chiropractic Physicillil

Gallia
Auto -Salas

kaa~

1.

favorite Apollance Store

Favorite Gilt Store

Favorite Dentist Office

1. .

1.

1.

Best Place To Buy Carpet
l Flooring

Hardware Store

Favorjte Doctor's Office

1.

Favorite Place for Home .
Qeco!)tlng

Favorite Horne Improvement
1.

PLEASANT VALLEY NURSING
&amp; REHABILITATION CENTER

~

.

. Favorite Home Medical
. Equipment

1.

Favorite VIsion Center

: ~.

Favorite Dlacount Store

Favorite Veterinarian

1. .

1.

1.

Fllllor!te Swimming
POol/Spas Provider

1.

Favorite Vlclto St9ra.

Favorite Golf Course

Favorite Night Spot

1.

1.

BUY, SEll OR TRADE

lfEw-VSED MIIM AMP IIIPIGTRIAI. EOIII/IIIEIT

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~

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II~

Bi ~ &lt;&gt;I' Sma II • I Ioullost~· h· :\lt•a Is

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M&lt;.\;~~tH

" . " · h • "• ,. , ,, ,_,. • " .... • ·' ..... •

~==============~!

OHIO VALLEY BANK

A Lasting Trust with our Community!

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

lk f,W~ of P+ttilfalt
.

.

Favorite CM!t{Satefltte
Provider

Bast Place To Buy SDOrtlng
Goods

1.

1.

636 East Main Street
Pomeroy, OH
740·992·6121

1. Only ballots cut from the Dally.Papers will be counted. No Copies accepted. ·
2. Businesses nominated have to be In the T,..C::~ty Area.
3. Entries may be mailed to or dropped off to one ofDur daily offices:
Readers Choice c/o P.O. Box 469
Gallipolis Dally Tribune 825 Third Ave., Galllpolls; -Qt145631
Point Pleasant Register 200 Main Street, Point P.Wasant, WV 25550
The Daily Sentinel111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45631 ·
4 N
I
. ewspaper-emp oyees are not eligible to enter. · ~ : ·

Our PliJsicians 5t.re 'Everywliere You 5t.re _

S•·•·yi ....

.

BALLOT: RULES

HOLZER CLINIC

Member FDIC

¥OUR

David R. Deal Dir&lt;c:tor/Li&lt;ensH ioi Charge
Charlie Huber. Direc:tor

vo~e~
OUNTS'.
1;,. - C·

.)

www.ovbc.com :Phone#=------------~------~-I

·--·-

-----·---- -

-

Tom Wilson · As&gt;ociate

• C.ri"9

(304) 675-6100

.:__

' @ c:;t;;J II€J&amp;I!ii @

·;~~··s--- =~"""'
t41H

Phooo~40)

Mark Porter-Dealer

Kanawha st. Pt. Pln . .. nl

www.markporter.com

........

Toll Free (800) 837·1094

~============z=~~===============

&amp;&gt;un.;,:-ri!:ti~· At.

oprnMon-Tbur

257W.
Main St.
On the Ohio River

-----------------------__________ _________
•

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

.kfW

You Could Win 1st$15~ 2nd $50 or 3rd $25
Your Name: __________. . ;_____. . .;.__-:-.....Address:·________..,;.__ _ _ __
.

Sale Runs
5123./6/1)7

304 &amp;75-3331
HOURS Mon,-Frl.
&amp;.$, Sat. &amp;-1

1.

Favorite Bowling banes

rouradael

w.purtllasf
of 4New Till!

ENTERTAlNMENT

1.

I '( )( ... l',Y t,\:, ( ' a b

Sll 011 Alignment
or
Flft Alipm!DI

1.

Favorite Radjo $talion

. • Pllllllllllllrl •1111111 • FillA ....,.

All Major Brand Tires
Camp/ere 4 Whee/Afignment

· Favorite Fanm Equipment
Supplies

1.

• hllllle•rs • Plewa •llscs• C1111W..rs

f'llMt~ ofP~fo.s'.ftlll(a~

.Marlin I Nancy Rose - Owners
4147 St. Rt 160 • Gallipolis, OH
446-2107

1.

' 1.

. •

1.

Tk

.

HAFFELTS MILL·OUTLET

: FaVorite home Health Agency , Favorite Place To Work

favorite Lumber Yard- :· . ·

1.

(304) 675-7400 .

- Favorite Nursing Home
1.
Favorite Pharmacy

1.

1.

. 1.

Furniture

DILES HEARING
CENTER

'

Favorite Massage TheraPY

1.

Favorite Floral Shop

Oticon • Delta
Wear Dalta an,.

F1vorlte Chiropractic Office

1.

1.

David Mink - Owner

~

favorite Garc!en Centera

Favorite Antique Store
: 1.

2147 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS, OH
446-0724

BUSINESSES

-SHO.PPING

P~lnt Pleaunt, WV
(Rt. 2 Bypass •.05 ml.le an h ill bllllnd Smo~e Shlk)

. 124 Highland Ave. •

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
HOME HEALTH SERVICES

=:~~Sat Jlam-llpm
740·992-0099

OHIO VALLEY
CHECK CASHING
&amp;LOAN

•

216 Upper Rher Rd., Gltltlpolis, Ohio
'I• Mile south of the SIMir Brklga

446-2404
U... CC1'11001l.eat ... lOt
~ CI7--aot

.__

-·

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.

-

ANNIE~S

~

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must move out. You should
rent the space to someone
whose companions do not
Dear Annie: I renl one of require that you have police
~y bedrooms to "Kirby.·· He protection.
Dear Annie: I was a
~:~ays his rent 011 time every
week wtthout fat!: He dnnks leader of a youth organizaa little too much, but it does- tion for five years. the last
n't seem to interfere with his · two serving as city chairperson. The council's represenjob or his rent payments.
tative.
"Bev," was on the
The problem is, Kirby
awards
committee and sugbrings his girlfriend over, and
she has no job and no way to gested we all nominate each
pay her way. I have no inten- other for "Outstanding
tion uf letting her perch her- Leader. .. Each woman needself in my house and run up ed two letters. and Bev said
my utility bills. Plus. she has she would write the second
a drug problem - crack letter if there was only one
cocaine. Kirby says he loves submitted. I wrote a letter
her and wants to help, but .I Jor each of. the other five
refuse to have this woman on leaders, and at least one per· my property. I have threat- son was supposed to write a
letter on my behalf.
ened to call the police.
The awards ceremony
I've known Kirby for 20
years, and he has never came; and all .the others
stolen from me. I feel bad stood up to get their pins
about his girlfriend, but I while I was left alone at the
don ' t trust her. Am I within table wondering why no one
my legal rights to keep her nominated me. I tried to put
off my property? What on a happy · face and
should I do? - Confused assumed it was an accidental
oversight, but no one said
in Pensacola, Fla.
Dear Confused: As the anything. I excused myself.
owner, you get to determine to use the bathroom, had a
the rules of your house, and little cry and went home.
·I actually thought one of
that includes who rents the
space and who comes and them . might nominate me
· goes. We suggest you tell the next year to make up for
j(irby that either the girl- it - after all, that's what I
~riend . stops visiting or he . would have done. So I

J

'

atte.nded the awards cere~
mon y the following year,
but there was no pin for me.
Not one of those women
ever said a word about' it. I
quit the group after that.
It's been five years, and I
still haven't gotten over the
hurt. It certainly feels intentional. How do I stop letting
this bother me ? - Just
Want to Be Acknowledged
Dear Just Wanted:
· Whether or not it was intentional, one of those women
should have spoken up and,
at the very least, expressed
sympathy. Hurts like this
can last ·a long time because
they are never addressed
and resolved. If this incident
enters your mind infrequently, consciously substitute more pleasant thoughts
and move on. If you think of
it obsessively, please consider counseling. ·
Dear Annie: I have been
married for 22 years to a
beautiful woman. We have
four children, and the kids
and I all love her madly. The
only · problem- is, she has
been an alcoholic for the past
12 years. She doesn't work
and has no friends left. She
has gone to rehab, but the
moment she come.s home,
she starts drinking again.
She wants a divorce, but J.

Street Church, 398 Ash
Street, Middleport. Special
singers each evening. Pastor
Jeff Smith invites public.
Saturday, May 26
LONG BOTTOM
Hymn sing, 7 p.m. at the
MI. Olive Church featuring
"Dayspring."
Everyone
welcome.

Middleport; Josh Queen of
Middleport; Thelma and
Conard
Belcher
of
Pomeroy; Tim, Stephanie,
and Abbie Fife of Cheshire;
Shannon ·and Alexis Taylor
of Pomeroy; Tamra O'Dell
of Athens; and Tom and
MaryEtta Burnside of
Pomeroy.

The seminar was facilitated by Lisa Pervin, RN,
CRRN, PhD, Clinical Nurse
Educator for RehabCare.
She has over 30 years of
·experience in healthcare, 25
of which 'in rehabilitation
nursing care.
For more information,
call Cremeans ar (740) 4465072.

Thursday, May 24
POMEROY - . The /
Meigs County Huma;6. '
Society will meet at 6 p: · .
at the Pomeroy L\br:irY to .
di sc uss fundrl9sers. The
public is invited .
RACINE _ American
Legion Auxiliary Post 602,
R ·
'II
7
acme, wt meet at p.m.
at the hall.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW 9053 will meet at 7
h h 11
p.m. at 1 e a ·
Friday, May 25
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Al umni Association will
mee t at Meigs cafeteria,
6:30 p.m. 10 decorate for
alumni banquet. .
Monday, May 28
POMEROY - Regular
meeting of Meigs County
Jkes scheduled for tonight,
has been canceled.

Other events

Friday, May 25
Marcy Sugar, longtime ediMIDDLEPORT
-:- Free
tors of the Ann Landers
Ch
rch
events
U
community
dinner
will be
column. Please e-mail your
served
4:30
to
6:15
at the
questions to amriesmailWednesday, May 23
Middleport Church of
box@comcast.net, or write
LONG BOTTOM Christ Family Life Center,
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O. Revtv
al se rvices wtll be Fifth and Main. The menu
Box 118190, Chicago, IL held at the faithful Gospel will be hot dogs and sauce,
60611. To find out more Church, May 21 -25, 7 p.m. baked beans, chips and,
about Annie's Mailbox, each evemn~ with Dave brownies.
and read features by other Da1ley preachmg. .
Creators Syndicate 'writers
Thursday, May 24
and cartoonists, visit the
Youth events
MIDDLEPORT
Creators Syndicate Web Revival 7 p.m. nightly, May
page at www.creators.com. 24, 25 and 26, at the Ash
Wednesday, May 23

Wednesday, May .23
POMEROY - OH-KAN
Coin Club meets at 7 p.m.
on Wednesday at Pomeroy
Library. Dues are payable.
POMEROY - FeeneyBennett Post 128, American
Legion, Auxiliary to meet at
I p.m. at the Meigs County
Library.

'

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Medical Center rece ntly
hosted a seminar entitled
"rrinciples
of
Rehabilitation
Nursing
Level II : Introduction to
Rehabilitation Nursing."
Holzer Medical Center
was able to provide training for the majority of the
Inpatient Rehabilitation
Unit nursing staff. The
course provided advanced
knowledge in caring for the
rehabilitation patient by
Identifying nursing princ-iples and concepts critical to
the rehabilitation process.
The course included an
Overview of nursing assessI):lent techniques and interventions throughout the
rehabilitation process. Care
issues for .the patient with
vain, neurological , pulmonary, and musculoSkeletal disorders were diseussed as well as geronto- ·
logical rehabilitation, copIng skills~ immobility,
~liminatiori, communica- .
rion, and community re~ntry details.
: "We are very excited to be
able to provide these educational opportunities free of
¢h!rge for our staff as well
as the community," stated
Lori Cremeans, MSN, RN,
CRRN, CWOCN, CDE,
fiMC
Inpatient
Rehabilitation
Nursing
Manager. "These courses
are extremely beneficial for
ourses seeking certification
in rehabilitation.''

Public meetings

Clubs and
organizations

Holzer Medical Center hosts
rehabilitation nursing seminar
'

. Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Wednesday, May 23
don 't think she understands
POMEROY _ Board of
the consequences. However,
the children and I are fed Directors of Gallia-Meigs
up. My 16-year-old calls her Community Action Agency,
mom "a lush," and my 6- Inc. meets at II :30 a.m .,
year-old hides from her. We Wild Horse Cafe.
Thursday, May 24
are all being destroyed and
POMEROY _ Meigs
she doesn't see it. - Help
Us, Please
Soil
and , Water
Conservation
District Board
Dear Help: Your wife
Supervisors,
II :30 a. m.
of
may want a divorce because
at
the
District
Office,
3310 I
she is trying to cut you loose.
but you are right, the conse- Hiland Road.
quences for all of you could
Friday, May 25
be severe. Please contact AIPOMEROY .Mei gs
Anon and Alateen (a l-anon- Cou'nty Commissioners,
alateen.org) for you and your rescheduled regular session, ·
children. The number is 1- 10 a.m. , Meigs' County
888-4-AL-ANON ( 1-888- Courthouse.
425-2666). You also should
Wednesday, May 30 .
consider family counseling.
RACINE
The
Planning
An addicted parent can seri- Financial
ously damage everyone Supervision Commission,
regular meeting, I0:30 a. m.,
around her.
Annie's Mailbox is writ- Southern High School,
len by Kathy Mitchell and media room.

Workman celebrates birthday
· POMEROY - Jessica
Paige Workman; daughter
of BJ and Lacy Workman of
r'omeroy, celebrated her
t;hird birthday on May 6.
· A Supergirl pizza party
was held at the home pf her
grandparents, Albert and
Sandy Banks of Pomeroy.
Attending or sending gifts ·
were Jeanie and Martina
Arms of Racine; Marcia,
Sonny, and David Shankle
of Frederick, Md.; Kelli and
Isaac McCarty of Pomeroy;
Butch, Bonnie, and Jerry
Lightfoot of Pomeroy;
Dorothy Day of Pomeroy;
Art, Amy, Nick, and Allison
Fleming of Fairmont,
W.Va.; Amber and Brittany
Mann of Fairmont. W. Ya.;
Dan, Fonda, Danielle,
Michelle, and Heather
Thomas of Ashville.
Shawn Workman of
Athens; Allison Beck of
Athens; Albert, Sandy, and
Jeremy Banks of Pomeroy;
Shannon and Addison
Whitlach of Cottageville,
WY; Bob and Belva
Workman of Rutland; Cathy
Titus of Pomeroy; Bob Day
of· Pomeroy; Linda Rapp of
Racine; Jim, Denise, and
Melissa
Holman
of

..

......... .. '

POMEROY Meigs
County Health Department,
free vision clinic, children
ages birth to 21 , call 9926626 for appointment.

Birthdays
Friday, May 25
RACINE Margaret
·Yost, formerly of Racine,
now residing in North
Carolina, will celebrate her
92nd birthday on May 25.
Cards may be sent to her a~
P.O. Box 245, Davis, N.C.
28524
Friday, June 1
POMEROY
Don·
Rea
of
"Catfish"
Minersville will celebrate
his 87th birthday June I.
Cards may be sent to him at
P.O. Box 422, Pomeroy,
Ohio, 45769.

Bob and Allee Thompson

THOMPSON
-ANNIVERSARY

Her
life

is
being

POMEROY - Bob and Alice Thompson of Thompson
Way, Pomeroy, are observing their 65 anniversary today.
. They were married on May 23, 1942. An open reception
in celebration of the occasion will be held from 2 to 5 p.m.
Sunday at the Senior Citizens Center on Memorial Drive.
They are the parents of four children, Louella Roush of
Huston, Texas; Marianna Mitchell of Middleport, George
Thompson of Pomeroy, aild Fred Thompson of
Hendersonville, N.C.
A veteran of World War II; Thompson for many years
operated Associated Fabrications. in Pomeroy. His wi fe
was a homemaker and very involved in community
affairs including 4-H, the Meigs County Fa,ir and a
Pomeroy garden club.

torn
apart.

Dover
Saturdav. Mav 26th ·

NIV

.Saturdav. June 2nd
Check out our weekly lineup!

There are currently not enough foster or
adoptive homes in our county. Children are
being forced to go to homes.outside our area, .
leaving school, teachers, and friends behind.

Call to offer yoar help, or yoar home.

99l•CARE
.......................

Thursday· Ladies Night w/DJ

Monday· so~ Draft
Karao~e w!Ron C'ampbell
$1 .oo Cover 9pm- 1am
Wednesd!ly· Mens Night ·Pool tournament
$5.00 entry 8pm - SOQ off all drinks 1Opm· 2am

Iutsd!IY·

Wednesday~ May 23, 2o0,

FAMILY MEDICINE

OVCS graduates

'Tube plugging' new, non-surgical form of sterilization
Question: My husband
and I have decided that we
4on 't want any more children. He does not want to
get a vasectomy, so I was
thinking of getting my tubes
tied. My friend told me
there is another procedure,
like having your tubes tied,
but without the surgery. Can
you tell me about that as
well as about having my
tubes tied'? )Vhich. on~;
works the best?
Answer: One of the primary things tO understand
about having your tubes tied
or non-surgically obstructed
is that this is not reversible.
You cannot change your
mind and have this undone.
It is permanent.
With that in mind, there are
currently three methods of
permanent sterilization for
women.·The ftrst is a hysterectomy. This is not performed as a means of sterilization, but it does make it
impossible for a woman to
bear any more children.
The other two are tubal
ligation (getting your tubes
tied) and tubal plugging.
Tubal ligation is a surgical
method of cuttin~ and tying,
burning or bandtng the· fallopian tubes so the woman's
egg can not pa~s to be fertilized. . Th1s
procedure
involves general anesthesia
and is done with a scope
through the navel (belly
button). The recovery is
fast, usually two or three
days. There is minimal pain,
and the scar is very tiny.
Many women have th1s
done.while still in the hospital after having a baby. If
done at other times, the
woman may have the procedure don~ on Thursday or

Friday and be back to work
on Monday, assuming her
job is not too strenuous.
·The newer method, as I
mentioned, involves tubal
obsbUction rather than tubal
cutting and is considered a
non-surgical
procedure.
While there is still light
anestliesia, a catheter is
threaded throUgh the uterus
into the fallopian 'tube opening ' inside . the uterus. A
spring-like coil, called .a
micro-insert, is placed in the
fallopian tube. Over a period
of about three months, your
body develops scar tissue
around the coil that becomes
a barrier inside the fallopian
tube. Until this tissue forms
and completely blocks the
fallopian fube you could stifl
.become pregnant.
This is why you need a
follow-up ellam with the

tubal blockage procedure
that's not nonnlilly required
after a tubal ligation. About
three months after the coils
are placed, your doctor will
want to do a procedure
called a hysterosalpingogram. This in not as complicated as the name might
imply. It is simply a special
X-ray where dye is put into
the fallopian tubes to be sure
they are ~rnpletely plugged
up. Once this is confirmed,
you can have. the same
degree of corifidence , that
you would with a ruballigation. Statistics show that
both of these procedl1fl!S are
more than 99 percent effective in preventing pregnancy.
I suggest you talk with
your family physician or
obl~yn doctor about your
·opuons. While the tubal
blockage procedure is not as

widely available as tubal
ligation, it is becoming
more common.

Family · Medicine® is a
weelcly co(umn. To submit
questions, wriU to Martlul
A Simpso11, D.O., M.B.A..,
OlaW University Colkge of
Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
Box 110, Athens, Ohio
45701, or via e-mail to
readerquestions@jamilyftU!dicinenews.org. Mediclll
informtJtioli in this column
is provided as an edlleational service only. It dots
not repliu:e 1M jllllgrunt of
your personal pliysiciall,
wlw slwuld be relied on to
. dillgnose 111111 recomtrU!ml
treatment for any ftU!diclll
cotuliiWns. Past columns
are available online at
www.familymtdicinenews.org.

__

......,

Graduation ceremonies for 13 sixth graders, students of
Cheryl Jarvis, at the Ohio Valley Christian School, of Gallipolis
was held recently. Dr. Fred Williams, administrator, made
opening remarks about the success of the school· s academic
program and thanked the parents for their support of Christian
values in education. Jarvis presented certificates of awards to
left to right, front, Elise Long, T.J. Metzger, Josh Radvayni,
Sarah Walker; second row, Caleb Curry, Alex Haddad, Josh
Blevins, Caleb Lewis; and back, Madison Crank, Sarah
Absten, Oliwr Lentz, Richard Bowman, and Chance Burleson.

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The Daily Sentinel

Spurs take 2-0 lead on Jazz, Page 82
Cowboys to host 20 II Super Bowl, Page 82

Nationals double up Reds, Page 84

Wednesday, May 23, 2007
DMSION IV BASEBAlL- REGIONAL PREVIEW

.

.

Tornadoes, Eagles facing very
tall tasks at regional tournament
If each wins, a rematch means a
state qualifier for Meigs County
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.CDM

LANCASTER
Anything can happen in the
postseason, even a much·
anticipated rematch.
That's one of the main
scenarios shaping this
week's Div·ision IV regional
baseball tournament at
Beavers Field across from
Lancaster High SchooL
Meigs County will have a
pair of entries · in that fourteam field, as both Southern
and Eastern captured district
championships this past
Saturday. Newark Catholic
and Berlin Hiland also won
district crowns last Friday.
The Tornadoes (21-5)
meet NCHS in t~e first
semifinal Thursday at 2
p.m., while the l::agles ( 1510) take on the Hawks in the
second contest - tentatively
scheduled for 5 p.m.

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If both teams from Meigs
County prevail, it would set
up perhaps the biggest game
of all-time in the heated
Southern-Eastern rivalry a battle in the regional final
.for a berth to the state tour·
·nament. The finals will be
on Friday at 2 p.m. Southern
won both regular season
match ups.
There is also a lot of hype
surrounding this bracket,
and for more reason than
just the Meigs County perspective.
Ofthe 16 teams remaining
in Division IV, only four finished the regular season in
the top-10 of the · final
coaches' poll. Threeoftbose
four are in this bracket,
including both the defending state champion and the
highest-ranked ball club
remaining. Neither of those

.:J;Hvision·IV
~onalgames
All 'ssmfflflal """"'' on Thunday;
F11111ls on Ftlday at Z p.m••
Roglon 13. BYrto .
Ci,lyahoga Holgh1s va. Wlndhilm, 2

p.m.

GreenMch South Central vs. Kinsman
Badger,~ p.m.,

.

.

.151llancMau

· t10 Southern vs. 18 Newar11 Co1hollc,

2p.m.

" - n VI. M llel1in Hiland, 5 p.m.
Roglon 18 at H.- Holglllo

twnnoiiSt
·Fort j..oramie·w. MtnstO&lt;, 2 p.m.

M . Nor1!1 ~~~~ Trlacl v$. Cln.
Summit Country Day, 5 p.m.

11og1on 14 at lllmltr
(-ttonryHSI
Kalida vs. Fremont'S!. Jo&amp;eph Control

patholie, 2 p.m.
.
,
T - Otlawa Htlls vs. Slryt(ar, o p.m.
.

·State Final Four. .

Pluse see Reatonal, 12

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Olfiu:
. Pleasant Valley Hospital
Medical Office Building
Suite 211
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

AP photo

Portland. Trail Blazers' Brandon Roy poses with the card showing Portland won the NBA
draft lottery, giving them the No. 1 pick in the upcoming draft, Tuesday in Secaucus, N.J.

lfil"'~~"-·

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BY BRIAN MAHONEY
AP BASKETBALL WR ITER

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SECAUCUS, N.J.- The
Portland Trail Blazers beat
the odds and won the right to
.senle the Greg Oden-Kevin
Durant debate.
·
With just a 5.3 percent
chance of winning the No. I
pkk, the Blazers won the
NBA's draft lottery Tuesday
night, earning the right to
draft a potential franchise
player from what's consid. ered to be an excellent class.
Repres~:nted by Rookie of
the Year Brandon Roy, the

Blazers got a head start on
landing next year's top rookie. They will almost certainly choose between Oden, the
Ohio State center, or Durant,
Texas ' high-scoring forward .
"They 're going to help us
right away," Roy said.
"The.y can come into the
NBA right away and play.
I'm just excited about sitting
back and knowing our general manager has the choice
of drafting either Kevin
Durant or Greg Oden. Either
one, you can 't go wrong. So
I'm excited we have the

opportunity to choose
between the two."
The 7-foot Oden is the
likely top pick, because
dominant centers are harder
to find.
Regardless of who goes
No. I, both players are likely headed to the Northwest,
as Seattle also moved. up
into the second spot Atlanta
got the third pick - and
needed it. Falling put of the
top three would have meant
sending the pick to Phoenix.
The lottery determined the

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LocAL ScmtnuLE
POMEROY -A schedule of upcoming high school varsity sporting'events

1nvo1v1ng teams from Meigs CoUnty.
Joday't qamea

99 Cildillae Srd• n Ot•Villc

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.._,~Gt.CfnCit!

w.. sJ"" Now

• Event:

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• Date:

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Rl)gl¥frlltion be~ins at II a.m. &amp; Rid~ begins at Noon

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Track and Fteld

• Price:

Division Ill Regional qualifying at

· :~ '1o·&gt;

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s··· ·

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Dlvlalon IV Regional Baleball

sr Beavers Field In Lancaster
(21•9), 2 p.m.

• Info:

. Eastern (15·10) vs Berlin Hiland (26-

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Fo~"nJe,~flJ:non please call,,(104) ~75-4340. E)(tl326
Proce~ds i4htfi!~F~tion· &amp;: local charities

3). 5 p.m.
Track ancl Field

Division II Regional qual lf•iing at

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Frldn'• gam11
DlvJalon IV Regional Bll&amp;ball
at Beavers Field In Lancaster
Southern· Newark Catholic winner vs
Eastern·Hiland winner, 2 .p.m.

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Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

~.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, May 23. 2007

- Wednesday, May 23,2007

Spurs.take 2-0 lead Oden, Durant set to join U.S. team.
SAN ANTONIO (AP) - games will be in Salt Lake
Tim Duncan and Tony City, where the Jazz are 6-0
Parker are making the this postseason.
Western Conference finals
"They're a much better
look way too easy.
horne team," Duncan said.
Duncan had 26 points and "We're looking for' a dog
14 rebounds, and Parker fight"
lived up to . his pledge of Boozer led Utah with 33
givin~ the Utah Jazz "no points and 15 rebounds, and
hope' by sinking all six of Deroo Williams had anothhis first-half shots, helping er strong game with 26
the San Antonio Spurs build points and I 0 assists.
a big half~ime lead that Andrei Kirilenko had 15
turned into a 105-96 victory points and Mehmet Okur
in Game 2 of the series scored I I • but the Jazz
Tuesday night.
rarely had two players
Parker finished with 17 clickmg at the same time. •
points and 14 assists, his
The Spurs controlled this
most ever in a . J.llayoff game almost as easily as the
gamt;. Manu Gmobl11 added opener, which ended with a
. 17 points as the Spurs took deceivingly close I 08-100
a 2-Q lead, moving halfway score. The Jazz had a big
to reaching the NBA finals finish again~! a tired, disinfor the third time in five terested team, which is why
years.
Parker said Monday that
They got this close by San Antonio needed to keep
outlasting the Phoenix Suns Utah from picking up
in a tense second-round where it left off. ·
series many considered the . Leading only 33-29 in the
de facto conference finals, second quarter, the Spurs
if not the NBA finals - broke the ·game open by
and, so far, Utah has done getting easy baskets in the
little to dismiss that theory. lane or sucking in the
The Jazz never led in this defense and passing it back
game, and haven'tled since out for wide open 3-pointthe seventh minute of the ers; Brent Barry hit three
opener. While Carlos and Michael Finley added
Boozer bounced back from another. A 15-5 spurt was
a poor game and the club · followed soon after by an 8start.ed strong, a second 2 run to end the halfleading
straight
second-quarter 58-41. The Spurs could've
meltdown left Utah trailing had more but Duncan
by I7 at halftime and 22 a missed a last-second shot
few minutes into the third that he and Robert Horry
quarter. They got within walked to the locker room
seven in the final period, laughing about
·
but were always turned
The Jazz, meanwhile,
away by big baskets froin were just shaking their
San Antonio's playoff-test- heads. After a 31-16 rout in
ed veterans.
the second quarter of Game
Now the Jazz are headed I, they were outscored 32home trailing 0-2 for the 17 this time. Their futility
second time this postsea- was best summed up by
son.
. Okur hitting the side of the
They fought back in the backboard, getting the
. first round against Houston, rebound, then shooting an
but Yao Ming, Tracy air ball on an 8-foot hook
. McGrady and the Rockets shot
· are no comparison to
Utah made a couple of
Duncan, Parker and the dents in the second half, but
· Spurs, champions in 2005 never enough.
and '03. Plus there's this bit
After getting within ll
of . history to overcome: late in the third quarter, the
Only two of the previous 57 Jazz let Ginobili get free
teams to lose the first two for a layup, then a buzzergames of a conference beating 3-pointer that Sf.nt
finals have advanced.
Duncan jumping off the
Utah coach Jerry Sloan bench to give his teamhas several days to come up mate a congratulatory sli1p
with some way to do it on the rear. Duncan also
Game 3 isn't until Saturday pointed to Barry, acknowlnight and the next two edging his assist

Blazers
· from Page Bl
top three spots, with the rest
of the teams going in
reverse order of a team's
finish.
Memphis and Boston,
which had the worst records
in the league and the best
chance of landing in the top
two, slipped to fourth and
fifth, respectively. .
Milwaukee will go sixth,
followed by Minnesota,
Charlotte and Chicago,
which had the rights to New
York's pick . through the
Eddy Curry trade.
Sacramento goes lOth,
followed by the Hawks,
Philadelphia, New Orleans
. and the Los .Angeles
Clippers.
· With Oden and Durant
highlighting a draft that
inCludes the core of
Florida's
consecutive
, NCAA
championship
teams, the June 28 draft in
New York is expected to be
one of the NBA's best in
years.
"Tonight we 're looking at
what's probably going to be
the deepest draft in a couple
of decades," commissioner
David Stern said earlier
Tuesday.
_
Portland had a great draft
night in 2006, landing Roy
and LaMarcus Aldridge
through trades. They won't
need a deal this time thanks
to some lottery luck.
The SuperSonics will get
a player that m many otl1er
years would have gone N&lt;&gt;,
1, and maybe whichever
player it is can help save the
NBA in Seattle. The Sonics
haven't been able to get a
new arena and aren't guaranteed to be in Seattle past
next season.
The Hawks were the other
big
winner . Tuesday,
Moving up one spot saved
them from having to send
·their pick to the Suns as a
result of the Joe Johnson
trade. And Atlanta also
picked up Indiana's pick,
No. II, from the AI
Harrington deal since the

•• • - • •

-

-- ( -

--

' r

Pacers stayed put
.
The presence of the two
freshmen superstars added
more hype than usual to this
year's lottery. There were
nearly 100 media credential
requests, far more than
usuaL
It also led to speculation
that some teams didn't try
their best to win games,
hoping to improve their
chances of landing a toptwo pick. Because of all the
tankmg talk, Stern said he
wants NBA owners to look
at the lottery this summer to
see if a new system is needed.
But the losing didn't pay
off. The Grizzlies had a 25
percent chance of winning
No. I after finishing with
the .league's worst record,
but they will pick fourth in
Jerry
West'sTen
lastyears
draft after
with ·
the team.
missing out on Tim Duncan,
BosJon had more lottery
heartbreak, falling from the
No.2 spot
Oden averaged 15.7
points, 9.6 rebounds and
3.3 rebounds while leadfng Ohio State to the
national championship
game, even though he was
limited for much of the
season while recovering
from right wrist surgery.
Durant was even better
in his only season at
Texas, becoming th~ first
freshman in NCAA history to win player of the
· year honors. The 6·foot-9
forward led the . Big 12
with 25.8 points and ILl
rebounds per ~arne, and
was the AP nalional play,
er of the year.

Vegas, where the A~ericans Durant in the NBA draft, he
will train 'and compete this fills Colangelo's desire to
summer in the . FIB A add another shot blocker
Americas tournament · ' and rebounder.
Jason Kidd, Mike Miller · So does Chandler, the
and Utah teammates Carlos New Orleans center who
Boozer and Deroo Williams was second in the NBA in
also will be in camp in July rebounding. Prince is a top
with a chance to make the defensive forward who
roster for the Olympic qual- helped limit LeBron James
ifier that runs from Aug. 22- to 10 points Monday night
Sept. 2.
in the Pistons' victory over
Oden, who entered this Cleveland.
year's NSA draft after his
Wade and Chris Paul
freshman season at Ohio were key contributors on
State, was at camp last sum- the U.S. team that won the
mer after completing high bronze medal at the world
school but wasn't able to championships in Japan,
play because of his brok~n but are sidelined after surgwrist Expected to be one of cries. Also unable to partiethe top two picks along with ipate this summer because

BY BRIAN MAHONEY. .
II' BASKETBALL WRITER

Greg Oden and Kevin
Qurant are in, and Tayshaun
Prince and Tyson Chandler
are joining them.
USA Basketball is makin~ a number of changes to
th1s summer's roster, with
the Americans adding the
two college stars and a coupie of defensive specialists
but losing Dwyane Wade
and some key players
because of injuries.
Managing director Jerry
Colangelo is set to
announce the additions to
the roster at a press conference Wednesday in Las

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B3 -The Daily Senti~el

FUN, GAMES AND PUZZLES

of injuries are Paul Pierce,
Lamar Odom, . Gilbert
Arenas, Joe Johnson and
Brad Miller.
Pierce and Odom also
were sidelined last summer.
Kidd was a member of the
Olympic gold medal-winning team in 2000 and
Boozer played for the
Americans in Athens i)l
2004, when they wo.n
bronze.
The new additions join 17
players eligible to participate from last year's original pool Colangelo picke(l
for the world · champtonships
through
th!
Olympics.

Gizmos
someone call
forme?

2011 Super Bowl goes to Cowboys' new stadiu~
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
- Seats matter.
The 2011 Super Bowl will
be played at the Dallas
Cowboys' new stadium in
Arlington, Texas, where
more than I 00,000 fans will
be able to watch the NFL's
showpiece game.
NFL
owners
voted
Tuesday for the North Texas
group, which had Hall of
Farner Roger S_taubach lobbying on its behalf. The
Cowboys' $1 billion stadium will open in 2009 and
will have about 27,000 more
seats than those in
Indianapolis or Arizona the other finalists.
Cowboys owner Jerry
Jones said the actual .crowd
ticketed at the game could
reach 120,000, with fans
being able · to watch video
screens at each end zope.
"Everyone has always
told me, 'I wish we could
get more fans in the Super
BowL I wish we could do
that,"' he said. "I think the
fact we can have I 00,000
people in the stadium is
Important . because
it
includes that many more
people in our biggest event
m the NFL."
During the NFL's one-day
spring meeting, commissioner Roger Goodell:
-Met with owners to
review medical standards
for managing concussions.
That means protecting anyone who anonymously
reports doctors pressured to
clear players or players
pressured to play.
-Said the league will
work with the players'
union, the NFL Retired
Players Association, NFL
Alumni Association, NFL
Charities and the Pro
·football Hall of. Fame in an
alliance to coordinate medical support for former players.
-Briefed owners on paring down the time in takes
to complete the first two
rounds of the draft.
Pittsburgh's Dan Rooney
said he doesn't think teams
need 15 mlnutes per pick in
the first round.
-Talked about player
conduct, including situalions involving Tennessee
cornerback Adam "Pacman"
Jon~s. Chicago d&lt;;fensive
tackle Tank Johnson and
Atlanta
quarterback
Michael Vi.ck.
Indianapolis' bid for the
2011 Super Bowl featured
the Colts' domed stadium
opening in 2008 and was
backed by a Top 10 list by
David Letterman with a presentation by Colts coach
Tony Dungy. Arizona hosts
the 2008 Super Bowl on
Feb. 3 and hosted the I996
Super Bowl in Tempe.
Tampa, Fla., hosts in
4009, followed by a return
to South Florida in 2010.

·

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Not yet approved for use on US highways.
Ubber Go dachshund food pellets and Ubber
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.
. '
. .
AP phot~
Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones, right, answers questions after It was announced
Tuesday at the NFL owners' meeting In Nashville, Tenn., that the 2011 Super Bowl will be
played in Arlington, Texas. Hall of Faine quarterback Roger Staubach, left, lobbying on th~
behalf of the bid. The Cowboys' new $1 billion stadium will seat more than 100,000 and
will open in 2009. Indianapolis and Arizona also bid for the game.
·
:
Texas has hosted the Super big events like Final Fours,
Bowl twice - in Houston in the Indianapolis 500 and
2004 in the Texans' new sta- Brickyard 400 with track
dium and in 1974 at Rice president Tony George. on
Stadium.
hand. Letterman's Top 10
Jones said the vote went · was capped by No. 1: His
to a fourth ballot, when the mom's tailgate party.
winner needs oply a majoriStaubach countered with
ty.
,
· Texas' long football history,
"I think every other aspect especially his 2-2 record as
of our bid candidly was a player in Super Bowls.
stronger than Dallas' but for Temperatures can be ·chilly
the size of the stadium," in February in Arlington,
said Fred Glass, president of but the Cowboys' new stadiIndianapolis' bid commit- urn will have a sliding roof
tee. "So based on that, that's that can protect fans.
the only thing I can think of ."We're going to work real
that was the deciding hard to live up to the responpiece."
sibility we have of winning
Indianapolis also lost to this bid io make it the best
Minneapolis in bidding for Super Bowl that's taken
the I 992 game, and Colts place in 45 years," said
president Bill Pol ian said Staubach,. chairman of the
owners told him and teain bid committee. "We're
owner Jim Irsay that Indy thrilled about it"
should bid again.
Arizona didn't tap any big
"I don't think those were names in making its bid to
idle words of consolation," become a part of the Super
Polian said. "They were true Bowl rotation like Miami,
feelings. The committee .did which hosted the game in
as good a job as anyone February and is on tap for
could possibly do. We just 2010. Mike Kennedy, chaircame up a little short."
man of the Arizona Super
Indianapolis came in with Bowl host committee, said
a strong bid, apparently visitors can enjoy the
overcoming· winter weather weather.
with its downtown walk"Arizona is the best Super
ways. The committee also Bowl venue in the United
came in with $25 million States year in and year out,"
already committed to help he said.
pay the costs associated
Unfortunately, Arizona's
with hosting the game.
bid may have been hamDungy helped tout the pered more by staff probcity's experience hosting lems for the game in

February and asking th-e
NFL to pay for improv~
ments to a stadium tluit
opened last August
Player conduct remains a
big topic, especially in th~
town where Jones has been
suspended for the. 2007 sea;
son for off-field conduO
·'Goodell deemed detrimentlll
to the NFL last month.
:;
Jones appealed that suS:
pension in a hearing May
II . But a decision is not
expected this week because
Goodell said he had beeii
busy prepping for the own;:
ers meeting.
:
As for Johnson, who met
with Goodell last week after
a two-month stint in jail for
violating probation, the
commissioner said: "I d()
not believe there's an~
information I'm still waiting
on. I might be able to move
on that faster."
Goodell said the league
office was monitoring the
case of Vick and the ques,,
lions of dog fighting of)
property he owned unt~
recently. Goodell said he It;
writing back to U.S. Rep·.
Tom Lantos (D-Calif.) who
asked him to act swiftly in a
letter to the commissioner.
. "I do share his concern.
On the other hand, I want to
make sure we understand
the facts before we make
any decision oli this and the
acts are still unclear,''
Goodell said.

Can you help Pa
find the cheese,
two flags and his· glasses?

When a well defined source of light is included
in your image, the lighting effect must emanate from
that source. The thinnest line weight will be
closest to.the source.

FIDD
CITY INDICATED.

----.,--~-------------------.,----------'----_;.

Regional
from PageBl

Unscramble ihe letters to form ordinary words. Then place them in the
[MioH I crossword grid. Then unscramble the circled INtl!f l
.- · ·
letters to form todays coded message.

latter two are from Meigs
County.
There are also .seven
schools making repeat trips
to the regional tournament,
including both Hiland and
Newark Catholic. Those
same two programs met in
last year's regional final,
where the Green Wave
score on 'their way to the
2006 state HHS
championshif..
defeated
by a 3-2
Newark Catbolic (2 -9),
ranked 8th in the final
coaches' poll, is appearing
in its fifth regional semiff·
nal over the last six years.
The Hawks (26-3), ranked

·

~~~~i~i~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~i~
fourth, are making their sec- wins this s_pring.
years, while the Purple
ond straight regional
Eastern IS making fts 'Sec- Gold are making their
appearance and have also ond trip ·to the regional · regional appearance sinci
set a single·season record in dance tn the past three 2000.

..
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. "..... ...
~

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6,loi81Riol I tilUIMI'sf lol QJol l'olwiRIRIAfEIHIAI lcii
@Jol IMibl FIRIALJfT I lol &lt;1lol INIDIRI ill -1·1 I I lo1
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@cl liGINfslblEII I r lo) @JoiFIRII!Ej 0 EIDI SINiol
&amp;JolJIIvlsiEIEIRIRI lol @or rrliiNIPI [t lloi.

�•
Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

.

SPORTS BRIEFS

1

Sign-ups for Eagle
Basketball. Camp
start May 22

I

I

I
I

Wednesday, May 23. 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

www.mydailysentinel.com

Lopez exacts revenge with slam, Nation~s double up Reds
CINCINNATI (AP) ' Felipe Lopez hit a grand
slam m the eighth inning
agamst hts Fonner team, rallymg
the
Washmgton
NatiOnals to an 8-4 vtctory
Tuesday mght over the
Cmcmnau Reds
Lopez and outf1elder
Austin Keams were part of
an e1ght -player deal between
the teams last July 13, one
that the Reds now dtspute
Jbe Reds filed a gnevance
over the trade this month,
contendmg that NatiOnal s
general
manager
Jtm
Bowden fatled to fully
mfonn then'l of reliever Gary
Majewski's sore shoulder
dunng the trade talks
Bowden was slltmg behind
the
NatiOnals
dugout
Tuesday, weanng sunglasses, when h1s end of the bargam came through
Lopez, who was an AllStar
shonstop
with
Cmcmnau, connected for hts
thtrd career grand slam off
left-bander Jon Coutlangus
!2-1 ), snapping a 4-all lie
H1s drive to left-center landed m the Reds' bullpen, one
that could use a healthy
MaJewski
Lopez also had an RBI
double and a run-sconng
groundoUl, matching hts

TUPPERS PLAINS
The ninth annual Eastern
Eagle Basketball Camp w1ll
be held for all boys and girls
in grades four through s1x
from May 29 through June
I at the EHS GymnasiUm
The camp w1ll feature
fundamentals essential to
produce
winn1ng
basketball
and w1ll
be taught
by current
coache s
and players, as well as Fonner players The camp will run
between the times of 9 a m
to noon
All partiCipants Will
rece1ve a camp t-shin and a
camp basketball, as well as
other md1v1dual awards
being handed out throughout the four-day camp.
Early stgn-ups are scheduled for Tuesday. May 22,
and there w1ll be a $30 registration fee. The cost of the
camp is $40 for those who
sign-up on the first day of
camp.
All checks should be
made payable to Eastern
Athletic Boosters and
returned to Eastern High
School, Coach How1e
Caldwell, 38900 State
Route 7, Reedsville, OH
BEREA (AP)- As far as
45772.
Charlie Frye ts concerned,
Registrations may also be he's sttll the Cleveland
sent to Howte Caldwell, Browns' No I quarterback.
40878 Old Seven Road,
Brady Quinn, grab a seat.
Reedsville, OH 45772.
Frye began battlmg
Qumn, Derek Anderson and
Ken Dorsey for ltis startmg
JOb on Tuesday as the
CoNTACT US
Browns kicked off three
weeks of orgamzed team
OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 a.m.)
actlVlty (OTA) practices, the
1-740-446-2342 ext 33
first full-team workouts m
preparation for the 2007
Fu -1-740-446-3008
season
E-mili- sportsOmyda11ysent1nel com
After spendmg an extra 40
lii!Orlll.Siall
nunutes workmg after pracBrad Sherman, Sports Editor tice wtth the other QBs,
(740) 443-2342. ext 33
Frye walked off the field
bshermanO mydally1nbune com
and stated without hesttaLarry Crum, Sports Writer
llon that he expects to be
(740) 446-2342, ext 23
under center when the
lcrumO myd&amp;llyreglsler com
Browns open on Sept. 9
agamst
the P1ttsburgh
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
Steelers.
(740) 443-2342, ext 33
bwatlersO mydailytnbune com
"I really can't predtct the

APphoto

CinCinnati Reds' Ken Gnffey Jr. (3) 1s congratulated by third
base coach Mark Berry (55) after Gnffey h1t a two-run home
run off Washmgton Nationals pitcher Matt Ch1co 10 the
fourth 1nn1ng of a baseball game on Tuesday 10 C1nc1nnat1.
career high wtth six RBis
Washmgton's eight runs
were a season htgh.
Jesus Colome (4-0) took

over m the seventh mmng
and
got
the
wm,
Wash10gton 's e1ghth m 12
games. It was a reversal of

pitched in eight days. He
up stx htts 10 5 1-3
mmngs, turnmg a 4-3 lead
over to the bullpen after hts
stamma was tested by 78
pitches
Chico remained winless
on the road thts season - 04 in five starts with a 6.31
ERA He gave up only three
htts in 5 2-3 inmngs
Tuesday, but two ,of them
were homers by Gnffey and
Ross.
Lopez's double and
Cnsttan Guzman's single off
M1ke Stanton m the seventh
Notes: Nal!onals LF Ryan
Church was out of the hneup
for the second straight day
by a sore left foreann. He
was htl by a pitch from
Baltimore's Erik Bedard on
Sunday. The ann bothered
htm when he h1t off a tee
Griffey's I 0 homers are one
shy of Adam Dunn for the
team lead. He has hit e1ght
of h1s homers smce manager
Jerry Narron moved htm
back to hts accustomed spot
at third in the order May 3
Griffey made a divmg
catch in nght field tq rob
Kearns in the founh uming
. OF Josh Hamilton went
on the 15-day DL with an
upset digestive system He's
scheduled to see a specialist
Wednesday.

the· senes opener Monday
ntght, when the Reds rallied
for three runs in the eighth
innmg and an 8-7 win.
Ken Gnffey Jr. lted
Harmon Ktllebrew on the
home run list with hts second 10 two games, but couldn't lead the Reds to thetr first
back-to-hack wms of the
month Gnffey 's two-run
shot off left-bander Matt
Ch1co matched Ktllebrew at
etghth on the Its! wtth 573
homers, tratlmg Mark
McGw1re by 10
He also leapfrogged Emte
Banks 10to 19th place on the
career RBI list Gnffey has
driven m I,637 runs Next
on the hst 1s fonner Reds
first baseman Tony Perez at
1,652
Davtd Ross also had a
two-run
homer
for
Cmcmnau, whtch has lost 15
of 1ts last 20.
Cincmnau 's
bullpen
couldn't suppon a stan by
right-hander Ktrk Saarloos
that surpassed expectations
Saarloos made his first start
of the season m place of Eric
Mtlton, still bothered by a
sore elbow
Saarloos hadn' I gone more
than two mmngs during any
of hts 20 relief appearances
th1s season, and hadn't

~rtbune

low rookie Eric Wright, who
made a dt ving Interception.
Two plays later. Qumn
made a weak throw toward
the stdeline and was intercepted by linebacker Matt
Stewart.
"As usual , the first day
was not very pretty," said
Browns coach Romeo
Crennel, who called the
practtce "ragged."
Frye satd he's confident
he' ll get a fatr shake from
Crennel, and that all four
QBs are starting at the same
level.
"I don't thmk
he
(Crennel) hands jobs to anybody," Frye satd. "He's a
very fatr coach. The best
player will play."
Frye expects that to be
htm. He has tmmersed htmself in Chudzinski's playbook, and he's confident the

experiences of the past two
seasons will make him a
better player this season.
"I know what I have to
do," he satd. "I'm going to
go out and get 11 done and
hopefully have a lot of success this year. When I visualize thts year, I don' t see
myself having a so-so year
Thts IS Year Three for me,
the bar has been rat sed."
Frye satd that after the
Browns ptcked Qumn,
Chudzmski told him to vtew
it as a positive
"Chud said it might be the
best thing that happened to
me JUSt because the competition is going to push me,"
Frye said. "Obviously you
want to push yourself
because you want to win.
But I think the compeUUon
will bring out the best m
both me and Brady."

- Sentinel - 31.\e tster

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ALL KCHS ALUMNI SEC
OND ANNUAL REUNION.
MOOSE LODGE MAY 26
2007, 8·1 00 ENTERTAIN
MENT (3041675 4831 OR
(7401446·3486

POLICIES Ohio Vsllay Publlsh!ng reHN" the right to Mit ,..~ Of cane.! any ad at any time Etrort must be reported on Ike first day of
will be rnponslbl!lllor no more than the cOst of lha space occupied by the error and only the flr11 ln1ertlon We
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Trlbun•Sentlnel Register

• Ads Should Aun 7 Days

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r::i:\"',;,;,.~-----,

~

~

Plaintiff
Lerner, Sampson &amp;
Rolhfu11
P.O. Box 5480
Cincinnati, OH 45201·
5480
Court of Common 513-241·3100
Pleae, Melge County, (5) 16, 23, 30
Ohio
In pureuanca 01 an - - - - - - order of sale to me
Public Notice
directed from aald - - - - - - - court In the above anti· Sheriff Sales Case
tied action, I will Number 06CV119
expoM to aele at pub- Dale Thoene, at. at.,
lie auction on the front Plaintiff, Va.
atepa of the Meigs VIcki J. Haley, et.al.,
County Court House Defendants
on Friday June 22, Court of Common
2007, at10 a.m. of said Pleas, Meigs County,
day, the following Ohio
delcrlbed real estate. In purtuance of an
Sllullled In the VIllage order of sale to me
of Pomeroy, County ol directed from said
Meigs and State of court In the above ant~
Ohio and bounded and tied action, I will
delcrlbed as follows: expose to sale at pubBaing part of Lot No lie auction on the front
255, beginning on the steps of the Meigs
Weal aide 01 the County Court House
Pomeroy and Chester on Friday, June 22,
ROild at a point South 2007, all 0 a.m of said
23.75 degrHa East164 day, the following
feet from the North deacrlbed real estate:
corporation nne of said All Olthe following real
VIllage of Pomeroy; estate or tract of land,
thence South '62.25 a~uate In the VIllage ot
degrMa Weal 150 fMI, Pomeroy, County of
Thence South 23.75 Melga and State of
degrees Eaat 100 feet, Ohio, bounded and
Thence North 62.25 deocrlbed aa follows,
degrees East 150 feet, to-wit
Thence North 23.75 Beginning at a point on
degrees West 100 feel the North aide of
to the place of begin- Pleuant Hill Avenue N.
nlng, being the same 46 E. 70 feel from the
preml- conveyed by N.E. corner of John
Either Batlerson to Schloaaer'a lot, thence
The Buckeye Salt N. 17 W. Eight Hundred
Company.
forty (840) feet to
Current owner: Pamele George Meier's land,
Bentz
thence N. 43 E 188 foot
Property At: 1608 Nye to Baueraland,thence
Avenue
S. 50 E. 93 feet to a corPomeroy OH 45769
ner; thence S. 17 E.
PPt11Hl1634.000
Seven Hundred Elghty11Hl1635.000
lour (784) feet to
Prior Deed References: Pleasant Hill Avenue,
Volume 159, Page n1 and thence S 54 W.
Appralaed
at Two Hundred Twenty·
$15,000.00
five (225) feet to the
Tlfllll of sate: cannot place of beginning,
be eold for feaa than containing lour Acres,
2l3rda of the appraised more or le11.
valua. Ten percent Subject, however, to
down on day of sale, the joint uaa of the
caah
or
certified rights of way, here·
chick, balance due on lnlflar delcrlbed, with
confirmation of aele.
Barbara Smith, her
The appralaal did helre and asalgna, aa
InClude an Interior follows: The joint UH
examination of the with Baftlara Smith of
houae
a right 01 way alxtaen
Robert E. Beegle, fMI wide, the center
Malga COUnty Shariff line of which beglna on
Attorney
for
tha the north aide of

~·

--- -- I

I

Pteaaant Hill Avenue,
S. 54 W. 32 feet from
the S E. corner ot the
Eight acres formerly
owned
by
John
Hatchle and being the
S.E. corner of the
above described tract;
thence said center line
bears S. 88 W One
Hundred Eighty-seven
(187) feel to the line ot
the four acre tract
devised by the said
John
Hatchle
to
Barbara Smith. Alao,
the following joint right
of way with Barbara
Smith, to-wit: Being 25
foot wide to connect
wHh tha Bauer right of
way on the eastside of
the E1ght acre tract of
land formerly owned
by John Hatchle and
deVIeed by him to h1s
Barbara
daughtere,
Smith
and
Uzzle
Rousher, at a point
about480 feet from the
S.E. corner of said land
and to extend across
said Eight acre tract In
a westerly direction to
the line of Wm.
McKighl'aland
The above description
lncludea lot 81, which
Ia connected and made
s part of this conveyance
Beginning North 46
degrees east 70 teet
from the northeast cor·
ner
of
John
Schlosser's lot at a
point on the north aide
of
Pleasant
Hill
Avenue, thence North
17·114 degrees Weal
840 feet to George
Meler'a land, thence
South 43-114 degrees
Weal 138 loot, thence
South 180 feel to the
northeaat corner of the
St John Cemetery,
thence South 35·114
degrMs Eaat 315 faal
to the northwest cor·
nor of Henry Raep'a
lot, thence North 68
degrMa Eaat tOO feet
to the northeast comer
of John Schlosser's
101, thence North 46
degrMa Eaat70 feet to
the place 01 beginning,
'ontelnlng Four (4)
Krea, more or leas
Subject, however, to
the joint use of the
right of way hereinafter
deocrlbed with Lizzie
Rouoher, her heirs and
aaalgna, as lolfowt.

Also the JOint use of a
right of way sixteen
(16) feet Wide, lhe cen·
ter line of which begins
on the north s1de of
Pleasant Hill Avenue,
South 54 degrees West
32 feet hom the south·
east corner ollha eight
acre
tot
formerly
owned
by
Jehn
Hatch1e and be1ng the
southeast corner of
that part of said lot
which was devised by
said John Hatchie by
will to his daughter,
Lizzie Rousher, thence
said centerline bears
South 88 degrees Weal
187 teet to the line of
the above descr~bed
lract.
Also following jomt
right of way with Uzzle
Rouaher, to-wit: Bemg
25 feet w1de to connect
with lhe Bauer rlghl ot
way on the east s1de ot
the eight acre tract ot
land formerly owed by
John Hatcher and
devised by him IQ his
daughters,
Barbara
Smith
and
Llzz11
Rousher at a point
above 480 teettrom the
southeast corner of
said tract and to
extend across said
eight acre tract In a
westerly direction to
the line ol William
McKnight's land
Sublecl to the United
States of Amer~ca ' s
right of redemption
under 28USC Section
2410(C).
Current Owner· Vicki J
Haley, el. al
Property
at:
130
Plaasarrt Ridge
Pomeroy, OH 45761
PPI t6-00558.000
16-Q0659.000
16-oos&amp;O 000
Prior deed references.
Volume145, Page 747
Appralaad
at
$12,000 00
.
Terms of sale Cannot
be sold for less than
213rds ollhe appraised
value Ten percent
down on day .of sale,
cash
or
certified
check, balance due on
confirmation ol sale.
The appraisal did
Include an Interior
a.amlnallon of the
hOuM
Robert E. Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney
for
the

-----11'-----~-----...:....

Plaintiff
Little, Sheets &amp; Warner
213 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
74().992-6689
(5) 16, 23,30

prepared from the
results of an actual
survey
made
November, 1999. Ohio
Mining Consultants
240 Huron Street,
Jackson, Ohio 45840
- - - - - . . , . - - W. Royce Horton PS.
Public Notice
54$5.
- - - - - - - Reference. Vol. 75,
Sheriff Sales Case Page 77, Meigs County
Number 05CV090
Deed Records
J&amp;M Lands
LTD., TRACT TWO: Be1ng a
Plaintiff Vs
tract ofland shuated In
Carol L. Gilmore, et.al., the South one-half of
Defendants
Section
2,
Salem
Court ol Common Township, T.OB-N, R·15Pleas, Meigs County, W, Meigs County, Ohio
OhiO
and being a portion of
In pursuance cf an the lands conveyed to
order of sale to me J&amp;M LTD, as recorded
directed from said In OR 75, Page n, and
court in the above ent1- be1ng
further
tied action, ,I will described as follows:
expose to sale at pub· Beginning
at
the
lie auction on the front Northeast corner of the
steps of the Meigs Southeast quarter of
County Courl House Section 2; Thence S 05
on Friday June 22, Degrees 13'51" W,
2007; at10 am of said 815 87' to an Iron pin
day, the lollowmg set, Thence N 84
described real estate · degree 44' 07" W,
TRACT ONE: Bi!lng a 1090.53' to an Iron pin
tract of land situated In set; thence S 04 dog.
the South one-hall of 58 25" w. 1223 58' to a
Section
2, Salem P.K. Nail setln the can·
Township, T.OB-N, R·15· ternne of Slate Route
W, Meigs County, Ohio 124, thence along the
and being a port1on of centerline of State
the lands conveyed to Route 124, S 81 deg.
J&amp;M LTD, as recorded 37' 34" W, 25 00' to a
In OR 75, page 77, and P.K. Nail set; thence S
be1ng
further 84 deg 44' 08" E, 25 03
described as follows: feet to an Iron pin set;
Beg1nmng at an ~ron thence N 04 deg 58' 26"
pm set which bears S E, 741 .66' to an ~ron pin
60 dog. 25' 53" W, set in lhe 1/2 Section
1534 36' from the line, thence s 86 deg
Northeast corner ofthe 00' 12" E, 1094.33' lhe
Southeast quarter of po1nt of beginning and
Section 2, Thence S 85 conlalning
20.879
deg 09' 23" E. 144.72' acres. The above
to an ~ron pm set; description Is subject
Thence S 04 dog 56' to all legal easements
31 " W, 1170.00' toaP.K. and lights of way on
na11 set; thence along record. All courseo are
the centerline of State corrected
magnetic
Route t24, S 81 de,g. and are for angular
37' 34" W, 227 40' to a purposes only All iron
P.K. Nail set, thence pins set are 112" In
departing said road N diameter with id. Cap
08 dog. 3t' 36' E, • OMC 5465:'
1224.52' to the point of This description waa
beginnmg and contain- prepared from the
lng 5.002 acres. The resulla of an actual
above description Is survey
mads
sublect to all legal November, 1999. Ohio
easements and rights Mining Consullanta
of way on record. All 240 Huron Street,
couraee are corrected Jackson, Ohio 45640
magnetic and are for W. Royce Horton P.S.
angular purposes only. 5465.
All Iron pins set are The real estate Is to be
1/2" In diameter with sold as the property of
ld Cap " OMC 5465"
the parties to the
This deacrlpllon was above action, upon an

I . - -

Order of Sate In
Partition from the
Court ot Common
Pl..s of Meigs County,
Ohio,
as
upon
Execution, and direct·
ed to me, the under·
signed Sherlf1.
Terms ofsale: 10% on
day of sale, balance
within 30 days upon
delivery of the deed
Meigs County Sheriff
Current Owner · Carol
L. Gilmore
Property At: Vacant Lot
Section 2
St Rt 124
Langsville, OH
PPH 13.00712 000
Prior daad references·
Volume 75, Page n
Appraised
at
$60,000.00 terms of
sale: Cannot be sold
for tess than 213rds of
the appraised value.
Ten percent down on
day of sale, cash or
certified check, bal·
snce due on confirmslion of sale Land Only
Robert E. Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney
for
the
Plaintiff
Jeffrey Griffith, Atln.
James P Salyer &amp;
Assoc.
t 14 West Main St.
P.O. Box 466
McArthur, OH 45651 0466
740-596-5291
(5) t6, 23, 30

Being the wast part ol
Lot Number 7 In the
Fallon Addhlon to the
VIllage ol Rutland and
consisting 01 approxlmately ,28 acre.
Current Owner: Owen
E. WIMman
Property at: 134 Long
Street
Rutland, OH 45775
PPt 12-1)(1387 000
Prior Deed references.
Volume 91, Page 625
Appraised
at
$50,000.00
Terms Of Sale: Cannot
be sold for fell than
213rds altha appralaed
value. Ten percent
down on day of sale,
cash
or
certilled
check, balance due on
confirmation of sale.
The appralaal did
Include an Interior
examination of the
house.
Robert E. Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney
for
the
Plaintiff
Stephen D. Miles
18 W. Monument Ave.
Dayton, OH 45402
937-461-1900
(5) 23, 30 (6) 6

RESOURCES DIVISION
OF
MINERAL
RESOURCES
MAN·
AGEMENT 2050 EAST
WHEELING AVENUE,
CAMBRIDGE,
OHIO
43725
LEGAL
NOTICE
INFORMAL CONFERENCE
UNDER·
GROUND COAL MIN·
lNG AND RECLAMATlON PERMIT APPLI·
CATION
110362,
GATLING OHIO, LLC
430 HARPER PARK
DRIVE, BECKLEY, wv
25801.
The Division of Mineral
R a s o u r c e s
Management hereby
gives notice that an
Informal conference on
the above under·
ground coal mining
and reclamation permit
application will be held
on Wednesday, June
13, 2007 at6.00 pm al
the location stated
below;
RACINE MUNICIPAL
BUILDING 405 MAIN
STREET RACINE, OH
45n1
Paraons who are or
may be adversely
affected or any officer
or heed 01 any federal,
Public Notice
atete, or focal government agency or authorSTATE
OF
OHIO lty may atland to presDEPARTMENT
OF entthelr vlowa.
N A T U A A L (5) 23

Public Notice
Sheriff Sales Case
Number 05CV172
Beneficial Ohio, Inc.,
Pla1ntlff Vs.
Owan E Wiseman at
al , Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me
directed from said
court In the above ent~
lied action, I will
expose to oale at public auction on the front
steps of the Meigs
County Court Houae
on Friday June 29,
2007, atiO a.m. of said
day, the following
described real estate·
SKuat&amp;d In the County
of Meigs, In the State of
Ohio and In the Village
of Rutland:

~OTI::&gt;RC:RO!~S RACE

SAT. MAY 26, 2007
6:00PM
MASON CO
FAIRGROUNDS
RT. 62 N.
PT. PLEASANT, WV
(Practice 3:30 PM)
675-5463

--'-·~----------l-~~t-..;.

of baby clothes, toys
LongabElfgel. adult clothes
_d'-~_w_as_h_er_________

SA 2t8 Crown City

.

725

Announcement ..................................... 030

Antiques. .....
.
.
. 530
Apartments lor Rent ...........•...••••.......••. 440
Auction and Flea Market
... ...080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .••. .. .. .. . ... 760
Auto Repair
.
..
. .... .....•770
Autos for Sale ....................................... 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ...................... 750
Building Supplies ..................................550
Bualnaos and Buildings ... ....... .. • •.•• ...• 340
Business Opportunity ............................ 210
Buolness Training. . ...................... ...... 140
Campers &amp; t.lotor Homes ......••.••••••.••....•• 790
Camping Equipment ................................ 780
Carda of Thanks ................................... 010
Child/Elderly care ••......•••.•....•..•.•........•• •190
Electrical/Refrigeration ... . .. .. ... ... • .,....•.. 840
Equipment for Rent. .......... .. .......... ........ 460
Excavating ........................ ................. 830
Farm Equipment. .••.....•••.......••••. ......•• 610
Farms for Rent.... •. .....•• .. •..•.......•. .... . 430
Flarma lor Sale ..................... ................. 330
For Lease.... .• ....... .. ...... .. .. ......
. 490
For Sale .....•....••.... .: .. ... ....... .... .• 585
For Sale or Trade •. ....•. .. .. . .
590
Fruita &amp; Vegetables .......•.•....••.•......•••..sao
Furnished Rooms ..•••.,.. .. .
.
.. 450
General Hauling •• ........•• ....••... ....••••......• 850
Giveaway.......... .. ••..... ..
.
. 040
Happy Ada•....••....•.••.....•..........••.....••....050
Hay &amp; Grain ....•.•. ....... . .
. 640
Help Wanted •...••••.....•.......•.••.....•.••.....• 110
Home Improvements
.
...... 810
Homes lor Sale ... ...... ......• ........... .... 310
Household Goods
.
. ....• 510
Houses lor Renl ... .. .... •....... • ....•. . .. 410
In Memoriam
. ....••.... 020
Insurance. ......... .... .. .. .. ....... .. .......... • • 130
Law~ &amp; Garden Equipment .... .. ....... • • .660
Livestock.... ...•...•.....••....••.....• .....•• •. 630
Loot and Found .
. . .....•••......•....••.. 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ...•••. .. ...•.....• .. ..... . . .... 350
Miscellaneous . .. .. .. •... .. •• ... . .... .. 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise. . . . ....... 540
Mobile Home Repair .. ...•.•. .. .•.•... .. • .•.... 860
Mobile Homos tor Rent ......... •• •••.... .. . 420
Mobile Homes tor Sale ..........................320
- Money lo Loan. ..••... •• ....... .. .. .... .
220
- Motorcycles &amp; 4 WhMiers •.......•....••... 740
Mualcallnstrumenla.. ••. ...•••• .. ..... . . .. 570
Personals .••.•..•...•.•... •••...•.•••.....••....•••.005
Pets lor Sale . .• ••...•. .. .. . . .. . ..
. 560
Plumbing &amp; Healing ....................... .......820
Proteaslonal Servlcea .
..
. .. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................ 180
Real Estate Wanted. .. .. . ....•...........•. 3611
" Schools Instruction •.••..••.•....•••....•••.....•.150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer . . ............•••..•.. 650
Shuollona Wanted .................................. 120
Sp... for Rent-. .. . . ......•••• .. .•...• ••.. 480
Sporting Gooda ....................................... 520
SUV'alor Sale.. .. .......•.••......•.••.....•.••••. 720
Trucka for Sale .......................................... 715
UpllofeiMY .............................................870
Vena For Sale...........................................730
Wanted Ill Buy ...........................................090
: Wonted to Buy- Farm Supplies ... ·······-· .620
- Wanted To Do ..................................... ,.. .. 180
Wanted to Rent............. . -···· . . ..... 470
Yard Sail- Galllpolla ................................072
Y1rd Sale-Pomoroy/Middle .. . ........... ...074
Yard Sala·PI. Pleosent .............................. 076

Roush Lane Sat May 26 &amp;
Sun May 27 Beautiflll teen
gtrl clothes, newborn 3
mths gtrls clothes tJoys &amp;
mens clothes Tupperware
wood coal burner plus mint
gas stove old smk lpts ot

m1sc MUST SEE
i5 251 Sam 4pm on Maddy
Cemetery Ad (off Georges
Creek) Power Wheels Jeep
toys stroller playpen, btkes
scooter
ctothtng
col
lechbles child lable/chatrs
household ~ems
Yard Sale May 25th &amp; 26th
8-3 ktds and adult ctothmg
Longabarger
baskets
wrought 1ron housewares
and morel 15 Fauf1eld l n

iCenlenary Ad)

r

~

YARI&gt;SALE-

Call Today!
t -877·463-6247 ext
2321

Pr. PLEASANf

4 Famtly Yard Sale/Ra1n or

Shme 8·3 Fn&amp;Sal May 25th

o;;:,;;.;;.;.;~~--...,

I_

Good expenenced gnll and
food prep cook 31 4 2nd
ave No Phone Calls

Help wanted at Darst Adult
Assemble crafts
wood Group Home some lifttng
1tems To $480/wk Matenals 7 5 shlh, 740 992 5023
provtded Free tnformatton
local Insurance Co looktng
pkg 24Hr 801-428 4649
for representative to servtce
Accept1ng apphcattons for local areas. Guaranteed hrst
cash1ers and sub shop work yea r tncome plus comm1s
Mtntmum
$1950
ers Must be avatlable to ston
v.ork al! shtlts No Phone monthly Please call 740

100 WORKERS NEEDED

&amp; 26th Children s clothtng
stzes newborn 14 sltm
women s clothmg stze-0-1 0
Home lntenor household
Items
toys
tool s
Somethtng for everyone!
Gallipolis Ferry bestcle Little
John s Par Mar

P:

calls please Apply al Par
Mar 42 t5054 SlAt 160

WAI\'l'ID

TO BUY

AOsolute Top Dollar U S
St iver and Gold Cams
Proofsets Gold Atngs Pre
1935
US
Currency
Solitaire Dtamonds M T S
Co1n Shop 151 Second
Avenue Galltpolls 740 446·

2842

IiFLPWANTID

Accredited Member Accred11mg

t-868 974 JOBS or

less than
perfect credtt IS ava1lable on
th1 s 3 bedroom 1 batll
home Corner lot fireplace
modern kitchen JaCUZZI tub
Payment around $550 per
month 740 367 7129
- - - - - - -1989 Clayton Mobtle Home
14 x60 2 Bedroom 1 Bath
With a 12x 18 additiOnal bed
room 12x6 muddroom on
112 acre lot wtth cham ltnk
fence &amp; IOKIO buildmg

Restdentlal Team Leader
M1ddleton Estates IS looktng
for qualilted applicants to ftll
a management pos1t1on
Appltcant must possess
computer sktlls tncludtng
E~~:cel WtU be responstble
for staff development payroll and va nous othe1
ass1gned duties You wtll be
part o\ a team that provides
serVICeS tOIndiVIduals With
mental retardation and
developmental d1sab11it es
Interested appliCants may
apply at 8204 Carta Dnvo
Galhpohs Monday thru
Fnday Sam 4pm

knowledge

ol

Workers

" I H\ H I"

Now offering a

CompensatiOn OSHA and
wage and hour regulattons

~;;;;;;;;;.;;;;.;;;;.;;;;.;;;;.;;.,

expenence $12-S15 per

$300 Hiring

compuler

Bonus!

I hour

,HEi...P WANTED

1
~------~
AVON! All Areas' To Buy or
,
s 1 Sh 1 s•
304
e

An Excellent way to earn 675 1429

money The New Avoo
CaII Man 1yn 304.882 .2645

--tE'QIR"'-I

r

TO DRIVE
ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRAILER

TRAINING CENTER S
• FULL TIME CLASSES

• COL. TRAINING'
• FINANCING AVAilABlE'
JQ9 PLACEMEI'fl '
Ctlebrltl!li a• r•n 1n eu.. ""•

Wyth9VI!Ie VIrginia

L--=·~"!!!'~~r::""~'~""=""~::::....J

""'' .ears

--------

l ocal retail establishment
looktng for permanent sales
assoctate Must be a htgh
school graduate wtlh 2 years
eKpenence worktng wllh the
pubhc Must be motiVated,
se~ starter With a knowledge
of !ashton Send resume to
PB 150 Dtllon Rd Galltpolis

Oh 4563t
Hallmark Card Shop at Ohto
River Plaza Gallipolis wtll
tntervtew for all postttOJ'I on
Tuesday May 29 12 2pm

__,_ _ _ ________,'--------- -

Wednesday
May 23rd
1o·.ooam·3:00pm

sk1lls

at 740 446 _7t 50 EOE

hours M F Call 304·529
7378

www lrdoclalon com

Newly remodeled bathroom
New heat pump Cell 304
682 _3773 for detatls

I

t!::~":""--::~-"1

j

Mo!ILER,SHALEOM!S
n'

.

1984 Spnng Harbor 14x7.0

3 BA 1 5 Bath Pop·OUI

Beauttlul M1ddleport homet
3BA 2BA full basement
Many NEW features" Must
see lhts one•74b 416 -1 548

to qualified buyers

The Home Show
Ashland, KY
888·928·3426
2007 Doublewtde

3BR 2BA
Deltvered &amp; Set $39 999
The Home Show

Ashland Ky
Toll free 888·928 3426
Great used 2005 3 bedroom
16K80 w1th vtnyllshtngle
Must sell Only $25 995 wtlh

lNG CO recommends
that you do bustness wtth
people you know and
NOT to send money
through ttie matl unhl you
haiJe mveshgated the
offenng

r

NO DOWN PAYMENT

All real estate advertising
in this newspaper Is

delivery Call(/40)385 4367

subJect to the Federal
Fa1r Housing Act of 1968
wh1ch malles It Illegal to
advert1ae any
preference tlmttatlon or
discnmlnatton based on
race color re1tg1on sex
familial status or nattonal
ongm or any mtenhon to
make any such
preference, limitation or
discrimination

New 3 Bedroom homes from
$214 36 per month Includes
many upgrades deltvery &amp;

Tttla newspaper wtll not
llnowlngly accept
advertisements for real
eatate whtch isln
violation of the tow Our
readers are hereby
lnfotmed that an
dwellirfgs advert1eed In
this newspaper are
avllllabte on an equal
opportumty ba5es

MONF\
roLo~~

EnJOY th1 s spactous 5 BR 2
Ba home located 1n Gall1a
Co on the banks of
Raccoon Creek Well land
scaped 1 33 acre yara w th
paved u shaped dnveway
Deta ched pole garage large
enough for car and boat
storage Many extras tnclud
1ng hot tub momtored secu
nty system and covered pte
mc areas by creek Direct
access to Ohto Rtver and

Borrow Smart Con ta ct
the OhiO DIVISIOn Of
Fman c at
lnstttutton s
Otltce of Consumer
Affatrs BEFORE you ref1
nance your home or
c:btatn a loan BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments of
fe es or Insurance Call the
Ofh ce ol Consum er
Affatrs toll free at 1 866
278 0003 to learn 11 the
mortgage broker or
lender
JS
property
licensed (Thts 1s a public
serv1ce announcement
from the Oht o Valley
Pubhshmg Company)

sel up (740)385 2434
Ntce used 3 bedroom home
vtnyVshmgle W11l help wtlh
deliiJery 740 385·4367

OWNER FINANCING
Ntce 312 stnglewides
From $1 800 down
payment

Scolli740182B 2750
SPECIAL FHA FINANCE
Program $0 Down If you
own Land or use Fam1ly
Land We own the Bank your
Approved 606 474 6380

FA~IS
H&gt;RSALE
Brand new log home w1th 60
acres M/L $160 000 Call
740 256 9247

l.o rs &amp;

·--iiiiiiiiiiiiiio_,.,
ACREAGI-:

t 0 acres located on Broad
Run Road 1n New Haven

$36 500 304 773-588I
REALF..'iTmc
WA~

Need to sell your home?
Late on paym ents d1vorce
JOb transfer or a deatfl? l
can buy your home All cash
and qutck closmg 740-416

3130
PRo~O~Al

SERVICES

localed 1n N'tro

IH ' I \I "

Pnvate country set11ng Call
740..441·8257

.;;::=;===~

For Sale by Owner 2000 sq rto
ft Home less than a mtle

HoUSES
FOR Rmr

out Sandhill Ad large pn
vate lot As Is 304 675 3779 $15&amp;/mol Buy 4bd home

HUD I 5% dn 20yiS @ 8%
For sate/land co ntract 3 BR For listings BOO 559 41'09
TURNED DOWN ON
house m Gallipolis W/0 x 1709
ServtceMasfer has 1amtonal SOCIAl SECURITY /SSI? connection $1500 down _
_ _ _ __ __

If unable to attend
SKI 425~
to schedule an
tntervtew

0n Matn St New Haven wv
Well kept New appliances

(7 401367 0000

Excellent commumcatton ~w-..,;iiiiiiiiiia-,.1
skills are a must EKpenence Mbbtle Home set up servtc
1n a long term care settmg ts
es wmdows doors, steps &amp;
preferred 11 1n1eresled
please. contact Dtanna Ftlch supplies
(304)3~H,-5863

pOSitions available tn the
Apple Grove area Full hme

please call

:..130_4
_:)_88_2_3_02_1_ _ __

• Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
locators

•NOTICEOHIO VALLEY PUBLISH

etc

242 Third Avenue
GallipoliS. OH

1 877 463-6247

New Haven 4+ acres, 3 br
2 ba total elect gas tog
ftreptace frtg stove dtsh
washer hot tub outs 1de
great
vtew
$55 000

accepled

Ot1'0KIUNnt

Responsible female to stay
m home wtth
older
Dem en tla f AI:zhetm e r s
female 1n the Cheshtre area
Evemngs ntghts and wee~
ends Pay and scheduling
neg dependmg on refer701 2557
- - - - - - , - - , - - ences and exper ence Valid
Ohto Valley Home Health dnver s a must Call 304
INC hmng Per D em or 675 7518 Mon-Fn 8 4 30
Contracted Medtcal Soctal - - - - - - - , - Worker Apply at 1480 Scen1c Hills Nursmg Center

• INTERVIEWS

Mtn1a1Ure farm Untbutlt
home on 4 acres on SA
160 3BA 1BA Peadles
bernes grapes. Swtmmmg
pool New applta nces Wood
burner $88 000 740-368
0815

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

o Down even wtlh

www 1888974Jobs com

Machtne Sh~ &amp; Fabncatton
knowledge 10 years or more

1-800·334 t 203

4109 tcF254

$9 hr after patd tratntng + ~;;;;;;~~---,
Beneftts Contact us today!
10
HUSINFSS

Vmton or Par Mar 43 56
Vtne Street Gall1pohs
-----'---Ambrosia Machme Inc
POint Pleasant WV (304)
675 1722 (304)675 1723 Jackson Ptke Galhpohs OH IS currently accep\lng applifaK Machmtst 5 years or or phonE; 740 441 1393
cahons lor a Human
more eiCpertence $8 $12 per
OPEN
AesotJrces
Manager
hour
Appltcants mll$1 posses

On Hand Shop Foreman
I \ 11'1 II \ \ II \ I

110

LIS Foreclosure• t-4 bed
homes from 199/mo 5%
down, 20 years at 8%
More homes available For
loca listings call 8D0-559-

HOM!li
FOR
SAlE

~...oiiiiiiiiiiiiioo_.l

Gallipolis Career College DOWN PAYMENT' pro· 2574
(Ca1eers Close To Home) grams for you to buy your - - - - . , - - - - Call Today' 740 446 4367 home ~nslead ol ren11ng
200? Clayton
1 800·214·0452
• 100% hnancm9
5BR/38A 2000 Sq Ft
www ga llpOIISCar!leroolege com
• less than perfect credit
Start ng at $33 00/s p It I

;

needed
Duties to tnclude repa11 and
tes11ng of portable eqUipment Travel nvolvod m the
$300 HIRING BONUS! testmg of equ pment
throughout West Vtrgtnta
Kentucky and Ohto Prefer
Plu8 much morel
someone detatl or entad
t Up to $8 50/hour
mechamcally tnchned self
t Weekly bonuses
starter and dependable
t Weekly pay
t Patd Holidays vacatiOns W1lltra111 Matt resume to P
0 Box 339
and tra1n1ng
Ravenswood, VVV 26164
t Full beneftts
t Professtonat work
atmosphere

Yard Sale Thurs (5-24) Fn

6

~,1'._11E_IJ'_W_AN•IID
_ _.III'IO

""S269fmo• Buy GALLIPO-

oiTOioj,;Doiiiio-_.J

FOUND Apple Grove area Guns tOOls fiShing poles
M1.1le call to tdenllfy 304- glassware &amp; much more B
mtles out 218 on left 7847
576 2002

4x4's For Sale.. .

~

by NEA,Inc

Medt Home Prtvate Care Courocl fOf lndependenl Colleges
Direct Care Staff
and Schools 12749
Mtddleton Estates IS now
now accephng apphcahons "1:~~:'!':"---,
htnng d~rect care staff You
for dependable STNA CNA rlfiO
CHHA PCA for more tnforWANThD
wtll be part of a team that
provtdes servtees to mdtvd malton please contact Laura ,__ _
'
uals wtth mental retardatton at7404464148
Do you need a Care gtver
and developmental dtsabtll
lor a elderly man 111 the
ltes Must have valid drtvers
POST OFFICE NOW
Mason/G allta area? Call
license and htgh school
HIRING
740 576 1109 after 7pm
dtploma or GEO We pro
Avg Pay $20/hr or
vtde on the JOb tratnmg 11
$57K annually
you would like to take
lnclud ng Federal BenefitS lawn Care Servrce MoWing
&amp; Tnmmtng Call (7 40)441
advantage of th1s opportunt
and OT Patd Tram ng
t333 or (740)645 0546
ly you may apply al 6204
Vacat1ons-FTIPT
Carla Dnve Monday lh1u
1 800 584 1775 Ext •8923 Small Home Repatr Also
Fnday 8 00 4 00 An Equal
USWA
Brusll cuttmg pa1nt1ng Ref
Opportun1ty Employe•
- - - - - - - - available Over 15 yrs e)(p
FIMIDN
Profess tonal Fundratsers (740)44 &amp; 3662
nee ded Part/Full ltme 3
I I\ 1\t Ill
Full lime repa1r techntc an shtfts datly 7 days a week

Lg Yard Sale Salurday. 8 ?

CLASSIFIED INDEX

MF

1·0--H·O·M-I
:&lt;i..._. riO
H&gt;R SALE

LA/DR 12x8 Good Out
bwldmgs &amp; otd farm house
on property In colJntry w1th
rural water &amp; good sepltc
system on 1 acre of land II
Attention!
Local company olfenng "NO mterested call (740)379

10

:::::~~::: b,:::,~t::: l,r_lllibiii~iiiiSiiALEiiwi·-~1.

I

Wanted Dtrect SuperviSIOn
employees to oversee male
youth m a staH secure rest
denltal environment Must
pass phystcal
tratnmg
reqwement Pay based on Asking $40 000 (7401379
expenence Call (7 40)379 2668
9083 between 9-3 Man Fn
3 BA 1BA large Famtly
Room fr1dge WID Large
lot Call 441 5826 or 446
9664

s "

I,

IIF.Lr WANTill

- - -- - - '- - Truck Drtvers needed Must
have good dr1v1ng ret:~ord
Please send resume to Twtn
A1ver Hardwood 2612 US
HWV 35 Southstde WV
25 187

Ai'loii\ e;;,.:.
HDVIZ- ~

com

any advertising tn v1olat1on of the law

8 3Qam-4pm

ISN'T f~I2-

WWW COffiiCS

ac:c~t

i304)722·21 B4

!2t;S6jl.V'Ailo ~

Small tnstde apncot teacup
,poodle, answers to the
name Spunky He has a bad
back leg and cant really
Jump Was last seen around
1pm at the Hartford Apts on
Mothers Day Reward offered
1t found Gall 304·593 6802

4 year old female cat or 882 3702
spayed declaw~, shots up
to date Call 304 675-2948
Chihuahua Female Long

I

Truck Drtvers COL Class A
ReqUired mtntmum of 5
years dnvtng exp 2 yrs
Flatbed Expenence MlJst
have good Q-tvmg record
Earn up to $2 000 weekly
For
appltcahon
Call

• card 740 246 460t

GIVF.AWAY

"--'""'r----,.1

a ... :r-oile~spapers­
.:=-ell_.e.-ed I"lt..lght tc:» ""'k"'c:»._..- I&gt;~c:»r-

atsndardl We will not

~r:------....,1 Has OSU key nng Kroger
~

l'il~tlc:es

EOE

0
KfiiT;;t,;:&amp;z;;C;;:iA;iR~L.:~Y;;;LE~;rt,:;;;----~------~1"
tr~ 1

Taylor Family Reun1on
June 3rd at Krodel Park, set of Ford keys found on
Shelter House 2
Racme ext! ramp off At 33

knowin!Jil
Sherlfl Sates Ceae
Number 06CV057
'Nelli Fargo Bank NA,
Plaintiff va
Pomell Bentz, et. at ,

I

- - ' - - - - - - - 9pm

mulch (740)992 3969
~ ...

wanted ads

Reward-yellow&amp;whtte male
cat mtssmg smce 5111 from
Concealed&amp;Carry Class Gavm Street m Rodney
NRA Cert lnst Bam sharp Village 2 subdiVISIOn Famtly
June 2 Mercervi lle Ftre pet named •JIMMY" Missed
Dept 740-256-6514 or
very much Any mfo call
starkey @t nboK com
675 2046 between 9am

exp•n•ol I

(.:iL

All Display: 12 Noon z
Buslnes• Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Stut Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • AvOid Abbrevlattons
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed

Items

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for Iorge

Display Ads

Old hay good for feed or May 25&amp;26 8am-3pm Tons

..,.......-• ._• .- w:&lt;t.lgh.-

www myda11ysentmel com
www myda1lyreg1ster com

Oearl~lte&amp;

Wot'd Ads

_304_·5_76_·2_3_99_ _ _ _ 2813 Lmcoln P1ke Fn&amp;Sal

.PLabllc

Webs1tes
www myda1lytnbune com

To Place
~rtbune
Sentinel
31.\egtster
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday... or Fax To (740) 44&amp;-aoos
or Fax To (740) 992-2157

Frye confident he'll start for Browns, at least at the start
future , but I'm prepanng try10g to get ready and play,
like I'm the starter," satd JUSt puttmg yourself in postFrye "I never knew I lost ltorr to play." satd Frye,
Jt ,
entenng h1s third season
On draft day last lll.Onth, "He's my teammate and we
Frye was ms1de Browns' are gomg to work together
headquarters when the club and just take II from there."
selected offenstve tackle Joe
Frye and Qumn both
Thomas wtth the No 3 showed they needed a lot of
overall ptck and later moved work dunng the pracuce,
back 1010 the first round to whtch was open to the
select Qumn, the Notre medta for the ftrst lime
Dame quanerback who was because of new access poiiexpected to go htgh but tum- ctes pultn place by the NFL
bled all the way to No 22
this season.
Frye satd Qumn 's selecRunmng a new offense
uon d1dn 't surprise h1m He mstalled by first-year coor-.
had anllctpated the Browns dmator Rob Chudzmski,
bnnging m another quarter- Frye tned to force a pass to
back to compete w1th htm, wtde receiver Joe Jurevtcius
and now that Quinn IS a mto tnple coverage and got
Brown, Frye plans to do ptcked off by Devon Holly
everything he can to help.
Later, Frye was mterceptcd
"I remember JUSt a couple by Justm Ham1lton
Qumn, too, looked shaky
of years ago I was a rook1e
and I knew how hard 11 was as he was ptcked off by fel -

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Truck Driver needed must
have a good dnvtng record
Send Resumes "to Twin
Atver Hardwoods Inc 2612
US Route 35 Southside
WV 25167

No Fee Unless We Wtnl

$400/mo Also 1 BR m
Galhp olts
$750
down
Rl \ I I -.. 1\II
$200/mo Call Wayne 404
~~-:-:----., 456 3802 for Information
1

io

888·582·3345

HOMES

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

-

'
FOR SALE

I

HUD HOMES• 4 bedroom
• only $ t 99/mo 3 bedroom
$203/mo More 1-4bed
2 bedroom &amp; bath for sate homes avatlable 5% dn 20
1665 lmcOin Heights yrs @ 6% For IISttngs 800
Pomeroy 740-949 2476
559 4109 eKt F144

r...,

1 br cia w/d stove refngerator water &amp; gas tnduded ,
$400 per mo $200 dep
negotiable located on 143

Pomeroy

(7401992·4163

leave message

..:.::.c.::....=="----2br House for Rent qUtet
ne~ghborhood
depostt
requtred no pets, plus utiiittes 740-446 6939

�.

~

..

.

'

•. •t ••

'l
www.mydailysentinel.com

I

I
l

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

HOUiE'l

·. mRRmr
3 Bedroom House in
Syracuse. SSOO/month +
deposn No Pets. (304)675·
5332 weekends . 740-591 0265

New Haven 3 br. , 2 ba.,
trailer, cJa, $450; 2 br.. 1 ba.,
trailer. S365; 2 br_1 ba trailer, c/a, ~ ; 2 tl:r. 1 ba. trailer, $375: all includes appll·
ances and Washer &amp; dryer.
references
&amp; · deposit
requ 1red . (304)773·5601 ..
740-41 6·6629. also available furn 1shed.

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments. Very Spac1ous,
2 Bedrooms. CIA. 1 1/2
Baltl, Adult Po&lt;; &amp; Baby
Pool, Patio, Star1 $425/Mo.
No

Pets,

Lease

COOK MOTORS
puppies, $250. Call 740- 2002 S-10, 5 speed AIC
256-1 429
2004 Stratus. 1999 Taurus
Aeg1stered Golden Retriever

Teacu p Chihuahuas pup· 1999 Jeep Wran~jjler, 4 cyl,

3 bedroom. 2 full bath hoose
in Pomeroy. newly remod·
eled. ilice hardwood floors,
ale. full basemen!. plenty of
kitchen cabinets. nice half '1::::""-:"-----,
acre yard, S685 per p-10nth, ·C
APARThlE.Y\1"S

Security Deposit Required, (740)992·7335
I \ tn I 'I !'PI II '
~-.::--.:-:--­
,\tl'l" lfl l l\

(740)949·2303. 740-591·

apartment,lor

FORR£\T

3920

i740)367-7Da6.

Twin Rivers Tower is accepting applications for waiting
Nst for Hud·subsized, 1· br.

speed. 2001 Grandam 2d
se, 1998 Ford Windstar van,
1999 Plymouth van . Pricing
starting at $2500. 3
months/3000 hlile warranty.

i ,.

•--ioilioiliiiito,__

miles,

Phillip

$5900.

1740)388-0281 ' 1304)773·
5079

125,100

miles.

$62qo.

Gllllpolls, OH 45831
Cornp!N Tr• Cl,.

Top • Trlm•Htullng • stu1119

Orlndlnll• euc:Mt TniiCk

$4000.
(740)446-8 172,
(740)446-8 172

• Top • Removal
• Trim • Stump

Repo- 04 Harley Davidson

Grindin!,! • Bucket
Truck

r

85 Toyota PU X-Cab. AT-00 740:367 _5055
bucket

doubllul
' need
12 Mllcea UM . 46 Loop tr1lns

Astro Van, A/C, PiS, PNI, r~~........~~~.,

Johnson's Tree
Service

Full insured

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

Dis'-'ount

I

seats. Good !;;;;"""~:"'"'----'::'"-,

30 Yrs. Exp. Ins.

Owner Ron nie Jones
Free Estimates

NyeAve
Pomeroy, OH
5xl0, 6xl0, IOxiO,

lO\&lt;,I HLl 110"\

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

unit in Mason. wood lloors.
new..windows, appliances &amp;
water included. references &amp;
depos~s reQu ired. $425.

740-416-6622,

(740) 742-2690

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

David Lewis

Houses in Syracuse and
Minersville. 2 and 3 bed·
rooms. 740·992·3702 and

740-992·6971

west Nortb

Pus

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors. Windows.
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room :
Additions

'Ill\ II I'

we STI~L tMV~

Free Estimates

740·367-0536

"F.HV/lfl/
TO SfNI&gt;fF.~

...
BARNEY
HERE COMES TH' SHERIFF !!
LET ME DO TH' TALKIN' !!

www.timbo!'CII'IIekeabllletry,oom

homes available. 5% dn, 20
yrs @ 8%. For listings BOO·
559·4109 ext. F144. ·

740.446.9200

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
nished. Established 1915.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) · 4460870, Rogers Basement
96 Dodg'e 1500 Ciub Cab, Waterprooling.
4x4 , 318 auto·, short bed ------~­
w/topper, 79 ,000 miles, like Top soil $10.00 per ton .
new in/out. SBOOO 7 40·37~- Dozer &amp; Excavating work.

2723

Cai740-352-Q015

YOU AN' YORE DADBURN
HABIT OF INTERRUPTIN'!!

2459 St. Rt. 160. · Gallipolis ,

UnconQitional lifelime guaranies .' LoCal references fur-

Land Contracts: 3 Bedroom,
2 Bath, 1 acre in country,
Oak Hill · &amp; Jackson,
$600/mo with down pay·
men!. 1-800-951·2060

Hill 's Self
Storage

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
4577 1
740·949-2217

' Prompi and Quality .
Work
' Reasonabl e Rates

Room Addition• &amp;
Remodeling
New Geragaa
Electrical &amp; Plumbing

*lnsurCd

VInyl Siding &amp; P•lntlng
Pallo and Porch O.cka

11

~~s&amp;'s'iio.~Jw.·illl

1 · to
'

ttrx30·
l!f~
o&lt;t? :,,, --n

Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00PM

*Ex perienced

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Roofing &amp; Gutter•

t' t&gt;

t\1/... Tl-'£'(
\JE.~ c;rniUSE.S
IFTI\E'( ~~I&gt;

WV036725

References Available!

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Call Gary Stanley @

9926215

740-742-2293

Pornrtoj Ohl•'
25Ye,JISLOl1 E1p•1otto1•

/

1/ 1411 mo. pd

HUGE SAVINGS
ON ARCH STEEL
BUILDINGS.

Mushroom Compost
$35 A Scoop
T·Pos1 6rt. $3.29
.Wide Vorie1y of
Lawn Seed,
Fertilizer ond
Showmaster Show

2004 Supreme lawn and
garden tractor. 25 HP. 50"
cut, auto trans. only 198

hou!S, Uke new. $1700 DBO.
740-441 -1202 or 740-709·
6179

Canceled Orders· 3 Left. ·
25'x36'x44' No Reasonable
Offer Refused! Call Today!

I I{\ \"iPOIO \110\

t ·866·352-0469

10

A /liJBifll

STAMP C.ONG/lfSS --ONLY NOW
IT SAYS

740-367-0544

·Hartlwood Cabinetry And Flmialre

HUD HOMES! 4 bedroom

only $199/mo. 3 bedroom,
$203/mo. More 1-4bed

1-JITI\ .....,..'.... -~

ROBED
BISSEll
CONSlRUCTIOI

&amp; deposH required , 5300,

740-4 16-6622,

740·4 16-

6629. also available fur·
nished.

3 BA. 2 BA. mobile home lor

'

!

rent. $400/mo &amp; $400/dep.
Water &amp; Trash paid. No pets
and ref. req . Also, large com·
mercia! building w/ show·
room type area. $400/mo.
$250/dep + ulilllies. has
large parking area. Good for
storage or Ilea marll;et type
Nice 2 BA mobile home.
AJC. Located at Jollnson
Mobile Home Park. 446-

2003

Auction

BENEFIT AUCTION
FOR WEST COLUMBIA UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
315 Ash Street Mav 26,2007 10:00 A.M.
Wf. HAVE MOVED THIS'AUCTION TO
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO tU:CAUSE THERE IS NO
ROOM A.TTHF: CUURCH FOR PARKING . Till-:
MILLER UMII ,\' HAS LET THE C HI~ Rt: ll STORI-:
ALL ITEMS UNTIL THE I&gt;AY OFTKEA UCTION.

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

LOCATION: MIIJ.ER HUil.DING ·M IDDI.EPORT,
OHIO· COR NER OF DEECH ANJ) ASH Sl'RF.F.T
Watch for signs.
ANTIQUES: 1970 Mtl~s Hl~h School Yc~triKHik , nmsil'al
lnslrume nt : p!'Hilery nu1de hy Clyde Sayre, dr c~o;er,
wooden barrels, sleigh, wu~o:u n, tin l'tUI ll(h'ertising, uln
old wt»den box l ~rel!n ), nit•e nld white wood hnx-ml)(ht
De W11.nes Clllllinl(, nu•JII c fk.!.k ~ nd c h11ir, plow, old
photos. trucks. silver Chrislm :.s T.u, &amp; mure. IJROW NS
Football card collectiun 400+. Ncmt! doubled • .sell all for

one price, dean In 11 bnuk just need a new owner. We also
han old wl ndo" ·s, ~trill, pop crales,air conditioner, Items
art arrivin g d11ily. ·
Many items domufd fmm kK.'Ill business !iUCh as: Family
Dollar-Middleport, Pkkem Hardwart-M11son, MASON
Furnllurt· Mason, llOO E\'AI'IlS, CRACKE R lJARREL,
C URVES-POMI-:ROY, POWI-:I.l.'S FOOD FA INPOMEROY, KFC/ I.ONG JOHNS-POMEROY,
R:J:VERSIDE GOLF CLUB. VIDEO TOUC H. MILl .
STREET ANTIQtlF.S. PARTS 8AkN-GA tliPOUS

OHIO. BACK STRHT VARIETY-POMEROY.
FRANC IS FLORIST-POMEROY, Wll .D HORSE
CAFE'·POMEROY. MCIXlNALDS-POMEROY.
PIZZA HUI'-POMEROY. WF.~VING STITCHESPOMEROY, DE'ITWILI. ER I.UMHt: R (AL) •
POMEROY, PIONEER HUN TING Df.POT·POMt:ROY
AND SEVF. RAI. ANONYJ\.fOUS G IV ERS
· AUCTIONEER CAPT. RILL,Y R. GOBI. F. JR.
U CENSED AND BONDED IN FAVOR OF TilE Sl "i\TF.

.

QFOHIO

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
LPN-PH OR MEDICAL ASSISTANT
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a full·time
LPN-PH or Medical Assistant for our
new surgeon Dr. Atif. LPN applicants
must have a current West Virginia
license.

All applications should have at

least one year experience in a
physicians office or hospital related
area, working 'with direct patient care.

[.MA IL capthiii6S@hotmall.Nlm

Phone:740-416-11 tp4
Brina 11 rrlend, a chair &amp; a aood 11ppetlte.
GOD RLFSS YOU ALl.
Terms : c:uh or cherk "'·lth po!iith·e idenlinCIItion.
NOT RESPONS IBLE t'OR LOSS OR ACl:'JUt:NTS.
ANNOUNCE~fENTS MADE THE DAY Of TH E St\ U :

TAKE PRECEDENCE OVER ALl. PRINTED
MATERIAL. PASTOR WILt HAVE PRAYER PRIOH
TO STA RT OF AUcTION.
The CHURCH members will be servlrig lunch. NOH::
WE WIJ.t BE SEJ.J. ING OlJTSIDE lA PORT-A-JOHN
AVAII.ABI..E).

I.

Send resumes to :
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant,

AA/EOE

wv

25550

www.pvalley.org

....,._
ceo•o101ty
Pipe fitting

s.ncl,. or

Ruby

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

CeletJity C4riJ ~s are Cf&amp;ated tromqUOiaoonsby lamous pe&gt;p~e past aro pr_...
Each lei:!« in ltleopilef slards for another

TOOay's clue: Jequals W

"FLBVDDFMVLPV
TNH

GVPCMLFKVH

JTNB

TNZZVLVI . MVLFOH
~

GVPCMLFKVH
• ZCVB

UCTL

JTNB

JFDD

TNZZVL."

PFNGIF

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'No hero is mortallill he dies.'· W.H. Auoen
'Show me a hero and I wil.wrrte you alragedy.: • F. Scon
Fitzgerald

~ .~~.)P1:!§'11~dP.!I§"~'Ito·

less 1rom tHe above
described Parcel 2 as
conveyed to . Donny
Ray Cottrell and Vonda .
Lee
Col1rell
and
rec'orded In Volume
268, Page 679, Meigs
County Deed record.
Sublect 1o all leases,
easemen1s and right of
way o1 record.
REFERENCE
DEED
Volume 255, page 3t7,
Meigs Coun1y Deed
Records.
PARCEl
NO : 05·
00133.00
Parcel No.: 05·00t32·
000 &amp; 05-00t3-000
Known As: 42955
LeMaster Rd., Albany,
OH 45710
curren1 owner: Cindy
J. Crabtree
Property a1: 42955
LeMas1er Rd.
Albany, OH 45710
PP# 05-00t32.000
05-0133.000
Prior deed re1erences:
Volume 255, Page 317
Approised
at

~:~~0ti~Sale: cannot

1

I-lOW OLD DO VOLJ
'(OU KNOW, 1M .
THINK
YOU'RE GOING
t-IOT ALWA'lS. GOING
TO
8E
BEFORE VOU
TO 8E AROUND ·
WON'T HEED ME ANVMORE?
TO HELP YOU ..

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
.70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007
.

house.

Robert E. Beegle,
Meigs coun1y Sheriff
Attorney
for
the
Plainlill
Lerner Sampson &amp;
Roth1uss
P.O. BOK S480
Cincinnati, OH 4520t·
5480
513·24t·3t00
(5) 23, 30 (6) 6

CANCER (June 21-July 22) - If you
don't anticipate potential probtems, you'll
be m prepared for dealing wtth 8 crisis,
should one arise; It's tar better to plan
things out well In advance so events
don't overwhelm you.
LEO (JUly 23-Aug. 22) -Avoid Involvements with frlencts who are reckless and
extravagant with whatever resources are
at hand. Unfortunately, It might be you
who ends up supporting their foolishness.
VIAGO'(Aug.23-Sept. 22) -Agreeing to
something wHhout giving it much forethought could be a mistake. Unless you
reason things out carefully, no one will
know
what
the
rules
are.
Misunderstandings can arise.

LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) - II you promIse to take care ot something for another
and dOn, fOllow through on It, you will not
only cause disappointment but possibly
Mn leave the person In a whole lot of
trouble·.
SCORPIO ~Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Make a
concerted effort not to play fBvorlles or
appear fickle In your social Interactions
.with others. A s&amp;nsill\19 friend's feelings
may be hurt, making you look Insensitive
end crude.

I·

1

r

1

1
...

AstoR clerk bad been 'very
rude. I responded by telling her
that life was not so short that

DO G L 0 Y , . there was no time for--·-.
7
I~ f C001plo1o oho chocklo quotod
'--'-·-'-·..0.1-...J.L.-I•.....l
· by lillln(l In one mlalnil WOldt
-

1 I ·I I

.:. PRINT NW&lt;eER£D
~ lETTERS IN SQUARES

I'

0 UNSCitAAIII.E l£1TERS. I
FO~ ANSWU

yell · ~ioJl

SCR.UWITS ANSWERS
s•n•o7
EgoiSm - Bilby - Rumor - JeSter - YOUR BEST
Professor til pbiloaopby class, "It is important to rcmt11W that a
problem is a elwlce fur you to do YOUR BEST."

ARLO &amp;JANIS

·

CAPRICORN (De&lt;:. 22-Jan. 19) - Don't

Manier.' B

GARFIELD
GISSZ, t Dlli'N'"f KNOW
COFFISIS HAI7 eo MANY
PlfflSRISN"f
NAMee NOW!

Racycl ng
5111.1 II.• lllllll•n. II.,.
1411-182-3114

'!"HAT COUNTeR GUY LOOKE17
AT Ml&lt; L.IKI&lt; .l WA5 A
"fOTAL. lt:'IOf•. •

L-IKE THAT!
..IU5T L.IKE "fHA"f.!

think your creditability won't suffer If you
tell tall tales·about accomplishments that
can easily be verified for truth or llctlon.
Don't anempt to embellish the facts.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - It Is
always a bad lckla to countyour chickens
befOre they are hatched. 11 you should do
that , you could end up sorely disappOinted. Don't Dank on ple-IMtle·sky happenIngs.

PISCES (Feb. 20·March

-

Everybody Is vulnerable to flaHery at
t!mea, and you could succumb to sweet
talk by one who lo emplovlng trickery to
gel hl1 or her way. Don't let your guard
down or be manipulated.

ARIES (Morch 21-April 19) -

. . . . . .lltfl'llll!ll:tllll-l:ll ..
. . . . . . . . . . .1Z:t11•

20)

II yoo

allow olhal'll to follt on you their dutiM
and r. .ponalbllltl••· thlnga they thould
bo hondllng "'""'....... don1 expect to
get all that you d11lred aocomp llthed.
Thoy'M hovo to woH.

PlYING TOP PIICES M

GRIZZWELLS

.e.·~. ~UMM~
'~MY

TAURUS(Apnl 20-Mey 20)- Allhough It
might turprtH yoy whtn aomtonl you
wo111 dtponcllng on molcot 1 qukli&lt; ull, H
rHIIy ohoiJidnt Th!O poroon gavo yoo
meny oluoo ho or oho woon'l otloklng.
oround.

SOUPTONUTZ

tAt-I''T l

loiA'Ji ~

or~E

WJI'
W\1-1611"

"

•

from Mill Nc. 3 bllaw.

I I I Ill I I

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Re&amp;tle88ness can cause yoU to be agl·
tatoo and lrrt1abl8, which, In turn, could ·
wreak all kinds ot havoc, disrupting
something in the household that has ..
been running smoothly.

be sold for less than
IIIIIIII•CIII·-•11111111
213rds of the appraised
CIIIIIUCCinlrtWI•CII..
value. Ten percent
.............
down on day of sale,
ICIIIIIICimltJrlclll
cash
or
certified ..__ _ _..;;;;;;;;.;;;;.;:;.;;::;:;,;.;;;:;;;;;._ _ __,
check, balance due on
confirmation of sale.
The appraisal did
include an ln1erlor
examination of tho

ECNUL ·

)!CU.

3.737 acres, more- or

area. 740·388·0855

Auction

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homeflll System
• Helios System
from
1he
above
described Parcel 2 as
conveyed to Danny
Ray Cottrell and Vonda
lee
Col1rell
and
recorded In Volume 49,
Page
293,
Meigs
Official
County
Records.
ALSO
EXCEPTING

new appliances. references

Winding

cum

GEMINI(May 21-Jure 20)- It Is going
to take a lot more than loving the project
at hand to brtng It to completion. You can
offset some of the problems that artse,
but disruptions from others could stymie

BLIC
NOTICES ·

2 br., 1 ba . trailer in Mason,

There are some unoommort de1ensive
ooups In bridge. And to make matters
worse, when a delender haa a chance
lor ooe o1 thesa brilliancies, ~ is usually
not clear-art to make the winning play.
Bu1 this deal is different Waet ought to
see the ~ling defense.
Take his hand and decide what you
would do. Aft&amp;r South opena one heart,
you overcelltwo no-trump, the Unusual
No-Trump, showing at least 5-5 in llle
minor sult8. North compeles by bidding
lhree hearts, Easl passes, South raises
1o lour hearts, and Mryone passes.
You lead the cl(b ace and continue with
the dub ~ng . Knowing lrom partrer's
hi!1t·loW signal 1hal he s1arted wi1h a
do~ble1on dub, you cash lhe club
queen, Eas1 discarding the diamond
three. Judging that partner Is more likely
to have started with three diarrmds than
one !with two, ha would have s1arted
another high-low), you sh111 to lhe spade
nino. Dedarer wins with the king on the
board and plays a heart 1o his quaen.
Whal would yoo diSCO(d and what is
aboullo happen?
Your discard Is no1 imporiant! Throw a
dub, a loW dlamord or a spade. But you
mus1 be reac11 at lhe nex1 trick. Declarer
is pained by the .4-Q heart split To pick
up Easl's king, he needs lwo dummy
emries 1o lake 1wo more heart finesses.
He will conlinue with his low diamond,
and Hyou play se&lt;ond hand low, South
will call lbr dummy's jack. Thai will win
the Irick and declarer will make his.conlract. You rrusl put up the diamond
queen · 10 kill the second diamond
dummy entry:

chompl·

Ollllllp

Joint endeavors k:lok promising for yc)u,
but they must be handled with considerable akll. Should .one be mlsmanaQed,
you could find obstacles starting to block
your path Instead ot trailS being blaZed .

2803

$40Qimon + dep.,740-645·
3115

A clear-cut case
of an unusual play

~ out

Tacldo 1
elope
Gel the

Thurwdoy, Moy 24, 2007
By Bernice Bede Oeol

Repaired; New &amp; Rebuilt In
04 Buick Rendezvous CXL,
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·
120,000 miles, leather, DVD
800·537·9528.
player, $7000, 740·742·

with a large yard in Vinton .

East
Pus
Pass

Wi1h, 10
Mairice

W~!r!,

HJRSALE

2 ·Bedroom , country setting

13 Foul-ups
45
19 Musical
rattle
47
1 Uris novel 20 Did as101d 48
"The - •
22 Shari&lt;
2 Magda's
hl1chhlker 49
sl1ter
24 Lathered up
green
3 Besgle fe.. 25 EMs'
28 Proboecll
lure
home1own 50
30 Vexation
4 Dlecover 26 Derrick
31 Suffix for
(2 wdl.)
anns
52
hero
5 Job"'**ttl 27 Disguise
32 Hanging
6 Hln1
28 Klncl
53
open
7 Knock - of caa11e
54
33 Gremd the
loop
29 Technical
moon
8 Wearing out
word
35 PosHn
9 Aemlng of 34 Sign
37 Each
apydom
36 Enlarges
38 Dlvlion of a 10 Antlered
42 Seize
Dlay
anlm,ol
forcibly
39 J:,.. of
tt Home 1ol.
43 lnvaa1ment
DOWN

~Astro-

·New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Au~,

JET
AERATION MOTORS

Pus

oitglnell1y

21 POlito
II18Ck
23 11, to Frllz
26 Quick
punch
27 Blue or

Opening lead: 4o A

Local Contractor

Insured
Free Estimates

• 74

zNT a•

user

58 l.a&lt;klng

floor

Deale~ South
Vulnerable: Neither

26 Years Experience

6629

K 8 52

t 843

•AQJI0 9
t K5
• J 65

'AU J)'P,H 01 , '

740-416-

•

Soulb
• A Q 10

Concrel&lt;i W\)rk

740·707·0030.

'

Tile only storage
units within the
jurisdiction of the
Pomeroy P.D.

18 lnetall
carpe11ng
t9 Clean lhe

• J 6 53

tQ10 976
+ A K Q 10 3

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

10x24
I I Ill'.
l O\lHIII

2 br.. 1 ba .. upper

·-

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Stor~ge

East

West
• 9 BI

48VHr

51 At wtthln
55 Hugs'
companion•
t6 Tricks
.56 "Remington
t7 Ma. Hogen
- "
of films
57 An1enna

• K 1 Z

rJamihJ i•UNM•
East 'End

of
14 F of mind
15 Ungo

,._.....,

• 16 43
t AJ 2
• 982

Senior Ci ti zen

int.Body/good shape, needs
CAAIPEIIs &amp;
engine. $200 446-9322
~ MOTOR Homs .

Duple~.

North

740-446·0007 Toll Fre&lt; 877-669·0007·

740-367-0266/
1-800-950-3359

Sl8lely tree

41 Do . . . . .

42 Big blnkroll
"'*'1lolt 10 43 Fun
6 More
44 Rowboat

1999 Chevrolet Conversion

AMIFM Radio w/Cassette
TV wNCA, towng package,

40

1 Gl-

Alder

XL 883c. Will be auctioned
on Thursday May 24th at
4:20PM at Kyger Creek
Power Plant Minimum bid
$6000. For more, details call

wl

, NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PW. DL. Air, wheelchair lift,

0% Financing· 36 Mos. .,..--~---~
ln•u'-;!::.~~~'"
4 WHFJl~~:RS
available now on John ~15
TRU&lt;Xt;;
Rlcll Johnton-OwMr
Deere Z Trak Zero Turns &amp;
tUR SAlE
~Dr-•~
1998
Kawasaki
850
Vulcan
L--;.;.;;;;;;;.;;:;o-.;.......1
5.99% Fixed Rate on John ·--iiiiiiiii;;,_
1
Deere Gators Carmichael 03 Ranger Edge. 3.0 L;V-6. Saddle Bags. Windshield ,
Equipment(740)446·24f2. 5 spd. 36,000 mi. $8000 Low m11es, Super Sharp, .l o lll'' ln•t• Sl'l'\ kt•
740-256-6144 after 5pm.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

BRIDGE

1)
the .__ _F.Qum.iiliiiiii'ii11iitrr
:Niioo_.l 740-446-0103 329 Jackson (740)367-()622
~
i;:;~:-:----:-':""1
elderly/disabled call 675·
Pike
4) l\1aroRCYd..f.S/

6679
Equal
Housing
1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments Opportunity
for Rent. MBigs County, 111 ~::::"---::-----,
town , No Pets. Deposit
SPAO:
Aequ1red, (740)992·5174 0 1 ___
fol)K RfNr

3 bedroom. 3 miles !rom
Pomeroy on 143. D-wide
with atlached garage, no
pets. parhal furnished, $375
mo. plus deposit. (740)992·
(740)441-0ttO
7401

;;jtl;;;llO;;;,;;;~F;;ARJ;;~;;l;;;;;;;

Malibu, 2002 Cavalier, 4d, 5

www.mydallysentinel.com

t 998 Chevy Astro Van,
AMIFM Cassetle.. TVNCA.

2005 Sunlire Sport, sunroof 72,900

Plus pies, 6 weeks Old, call , 5 speed, cloth top. 1999

Wednesday, May 23, 2007
ALLEYOOP

•

�..............

---- - - ---------------~--------~-------.
Page 88 - The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May

23~

2007

'

Movie review: 'Pirates
of the Caribbean:
At World's End,' B6

SHS alumni royalty

candidates, As
'

•

en
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.)0 ('F:\'TS • \ 'ul. ;,f&gt;, :\'o. 206

SPORTS

Contractor selected for new Rio Meigs Center

• Division Ill regional
track meet under way.
See PageB1
.f
-.

BY. BRIAN

j

•

':

.,$ ...

~

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

J
.;

"'"' · "'~tlail~"·nlin,· L,·um

TJll iRSD .\Y, MAY 24.2007

)

Never before seen '.
Rolls' of new U.S. Gov't
dollar
being·handed over to the public

POMEROY
A
Parkersburg, W.Va. firm has
been selected to build the
new University of Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College Meigs
Ceriter at Rocksprings.
The
ly1eigs
County
Community Improvement
Corporation mel Monday to
sign a construction contract
with Phoenix ·Associates of

Parkersburg, W.Va., in the
amount of $2,342,756. The
n~w center will be built
with funds from private
donations, grant funds and
loan funding from local
banks.
according
to
Economic
Development
Director Perry VarnadOe _
The CIC opened seven
bids on the construction
project in March. Other bidders
were
Grae-Con
Construction, Steubenville;
Portco, Inc., Portsmouth;

Karr Contracting, Chesler;
BBL
Carlton ,
LLC,
Charleston, W.Va.; Trimat
Construction, Inc .. Bidwell;
and Kinsale Construction.
Pomeroy.
Varnadoe said construction
on the new center is expected
to begin in early June. The
new center is expected to be
ready for students sometime •
in March , 200K.
The center will be constructed next to Meigs
Middle School on property

provided at no cost to the
CIC. It will be leased to the
university. The site was
seiecled because of its location on U.S. 33 and its proximity to the Meigs Local
schools. which university
and school board official s
hope will encourage stu·
dents there and in other districts 10 take advantage of
the post-secondary option
which · allows students to
take college credit while
still in high schooL

Free coins go to all who cover the s88 vault release fee for the mammoth 'Ballistic Rolls'
~SHAWN

OYW

ltfM~LMWIA

SYttlUCA. ll

faces when you hand them one of these. It's
like you just gave the~ a Million Dollars.
"We can't stop people frOm breaking the
sealed tubes open and banding tbe Presidential
Coins out inclividually. But anyone who does
would be an absolute fool. So, to keep that
frOm happening we are giving away a free
Presidential Dollar Coin with each Ballistic
Roll. That way everyone can stiU examine
and show off the individual free coin without
breaking the seal on the valuable BaUistic
RoDs," Milton said.
"Just think it you had saved the Eisenhower

DoUar Coins. Right now. you'd be tempted to
cash them in for a huge jackpot. Now that this
free coin giveaway is being so wideiy advertised, everyone is practically clawing each
other's eyes out to beat the on!er deadline for
the sealed Ballistic Rolls," said Milton.
Beginning today at 8:30 a.m., the National
Order Hotline opens to the public for only 72
hours. Readers must dial I-80()..9U.'I946. If
the lines are buBY, keep trying.
"We have to put limits on dealers. But every- '
one else who calls should be able to get what
they need," Milton said. •

It's like a run on the banks. The phones just
keep ringing off the hook.
For the next 72 hours the public is actuaDy getting never-before-seen Ballistic Rolls
of the U.S. Mint's• dazzling new Washington
Presidential Dollar Coins.
"The mammoth Ballistic Rolls captured in
these world exclusive photos are being handed
over to eve.,One who calls the National Order
Hotline beginning at 8:30 a.m. this morning and those who beat the order deadline
are actuaUy getting a free coin with each
roll," confirmed Timothy Milton, Chief of Coin
OperatioiiB for the World Reserve Monetary
Exchange.
The U.S. Mint barely got started minting
tbese new coiiiB and by law were required to
stop prOduction ,forever. There wiD never be
lliiY more.
"Fint issye coins like these are higbly sought
after, but we've never seen anything like these '
;·'• H/
sealed Ballistic Rolls being put into the pubRe&lt;iders have 72 ho~r~ to call the. tollfree National Order
lic'l! hand! direct from the private vaults of
the World Reserve. Coin values always fluctu. · Hotline at 1~~9.24:-7945 b(!ginning at 8:30a.m. today. ·
The Woti&lt;(Re$erve has just announced that It-Is
ate iiDd there are never any guarantees, but
giving away 'the Presidential Doll~r ·-coin .to
ordinary Eisenhower Dollar coins as recent
as 1973 haw already increased in value by an ·who. beitts;the ·72 h5JU'r orde~ de~diJ!ll!dor · ·
eaeM~I;IIIstlt Roll. Tlje,c~yst.al clear se11le~ :
astonishing 1,200 percent," Milton said. ·
·
Balli$tic Roll.&amp;.are .being released ffi)(n
"So just imagine what these gigantic fifty
·the Vault '"'·these 'imilre$'~ive vautt ..
coin roDs of new Presidential Dollar Coins could
bricks for the special fee -of.
bring 110meday. 'l'beee are not ordiriary comsss plus shipph')g. That's
mercial bankroll&amp; You can't get these Bsllistic
whopping 425 grams of
' Rolls at the U.S. Mint, at the Federal Reserve or
coins·
in all.
at any local bank. You just can't lind these sealed
Those.
Who mi$5 the
tubes anywhere because they remain sealed in
deadline
will·
be.'tumed
the crystal clear Vault Tubes that show off the
. away and required to coins' edge markings," he said. ·
wait .for futue art'IOU1CeEacb sealed Vault Tube is then encased in
ments.authorized by the
its own gold foil Vault Brick to preserve the
World
Re5erve Monetary
coins' ·radiant, four metal aHoy in brilliant
Exchange
'In this or•
never-circulated condition.
publications.
other
And ))ere's the best part. "We are releasing
'
'
.
the entire board of these sealed Ballistic RoBs
Tt£ ·'US. ~ IS A !SISTER£!) ~ · Of l}IE·
from the vault in the Vault Bricks for just the
UNITED
STATtS MINT. THE.
*88 fee for each. They
so heavy they feel
WORLD
.IIESEIM
MONETARY
lib soHd bars of.999 pure gold. So be careful,
EXCHANGE
IS
Nl&gt;T
~LIATtll
you may need both hands to pick them up,"
WfTlj
Tf£ ttmll.STA'JtS,OO,.I- .
be said.
ERtt.fNT (J! Nf( ~
•Remember, these coiiiB have never been in
AGENCY, All TRANSACTIONS
the bands of the public. Never-circulated coins
. LESS Sfl'lltNG, ARE Jl,IC)(ID 8Y, ,
are among those most likely to increase in
Tt£ Fill VAULT CON1mts Of '
value," said Milton.
Til 'MJlD !1SE1M '-OfJARY
You would expect that these Vault Bricks of
EXCIW«lE WITH AIQEY tw:K
GJAIWITE~ tf TO $1000:&gt;.00.
never-circulated Ballistic Roils would never
leave the vault. But now, you can show them
oft' like a dia111ond ring or a brand iiew car. You
just won't believe the expression on people's

Horse shows
begin second
season Monday

The coin's
edge markings are
superb.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGE NT@MVOAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Janet Kronenbitter, 69

INSIDE
• Southern honor
roll._$8$ Page A2
• UMW hears report
on consumer spending.
See Page A2
• MSWCD extends
day camp registration.
See Page A3
• Beegle shares ID theft
. info. ·See ,Page AS
• Bikers set 'run' for
Sunday. See Page 86

..

WEATHER

.

are

Details on Page A3

INDEX
2 SECfiONS -

12 PAGES '

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3·4

Obituaries

Bs
A4
As

Places to go

B6

Comics

Editorials

Sports
Weather

B Section

A3

© 2007 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

• .a UCUIII¥E: These are the only known photos capturing the early morning secured delivery of the U.S. Government's new Presidential

Dollar Coins for the public uhv~iling in New York City. Now, the World Reserve Is releasing its hoard of the never-before-seen Ballistic Rolls to
the general public. You can"t get these massive crystal clear Ballistic Rolls at,the U.S. Mint, at the Federal Reserve or at any local bank. Only
those who call the Hotline at 1-800·924-7945 and beat the 72 hour order deadline can get them.

.,

·&lt;

The new center will
replace Rio Grande's branch
in Middleport, which is also
space leased to the college
by the CIC. The expanded
facilitv will allow Rio
Grande to increase course
offerings to 55 per semester,
add 10 bachelor's degree
courses in three years. add
five master 's degree courses
in classroom teaching.
expand associate degree
programs and add a general
studies certificate program .

Dave Poling

Local officers
·mourn loss
of one of
their own ·
Bv KEviN

~y

Beth sergeni/Photo

KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - Dave
Poling was remembered as
a respected and well-liked
law enforcer by his colleagues as they begin the
task of dealing with the loss
of one of their brethren in
the line of duty.
Poling, 32 , a probation
officer
for
Gallipolis
Municipal Court, was
recovered from the Ohio
River by water rescue teams
at 2:29 a.m. Wednesdtn:,
nine hours after pursuing a
man who allegedly fled
from him and a Gallipolis
police officer by jumping
into the river.
A massive search of the.
river was launched by local
and regional authorities
between the 900 block of
First Avenue, where Poling
went into the water, and the
city parkfront where a staging area .was established.
"Officer Poling . was a
well-respected and wellliked member of the Gallia
County 'law enforcement
community, and his death
comes as a hard blow to his
fellow law enforcement
officers," Gallipolis City
Police
Chief
Clint
Patterson said.
"We will deal with it and
move on," he added.
Police said a city officer
stopped Joseph Harris, 22.
Springfield, around 5:17
p.m. Tuesday in the vicinity
of upper First Avenue.
Harris was a pedestrian at
the time of the stop ,
Patterson said.
The officer was assisted at
the scene by Poling. During
an investigation, Harris
allegedly fled from Poling
Please see Officer. AS

Kids attending the Health Wellness Fair attempt to score a goal on this goalie provided by
the Meigs County Juvenile Court The fair promoted Mental Health Awareness month and
healthy lifestyle choices.

Working toward
better ntental health
· "We are hopin g· to vention , young people can
increase the community's take control of the sympneed for "healthy" mental toms as sociated with menPOMEROY - Mental health and the services we 'tal illnesses like depreshealth issues are often over- have in this community," sion, ADHD, anxiety and
shadowed by physical prob- said L Wesley Crum, Ph.D. eating disorders :
lems though they are often of Woodland Centers in
It's estimated 15 miUion
connected .
Pomeroy.
chi ldren and adolescents in
In Meigs County, the
May is Mental Health the United States suffer
recent Health Wellness Fair Awareness Month and from a serious emotional
organized by Woodland according to · the American or
mental
disorder.
Centers, attempted to bridge Academy of Child. and Because of toe stigma, the ,
that gap by offering fr~e Adolesc;nt
Ps~ch1atry, high cost of treatment , and
depression screenings and chr ldren s mental Illnesses · a shortage of appropriately
"kid time" to promote are common, ur~enl and trained mental health
healthy lifestyle choices to treatable. Prevention 1s a
·
younger people_
key and with early interPlease see Health. AS
BY BETH SERGENT

SSERGENTII!&gt;MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

.. ..

Powell's Food Fair donated
$1,436, a percentage of
their sales for a day and
other fund raisers. to the
Meigs County Relay for Life.
a program of the American
. Cancer Society. Accepting
the check from Lee Powell
were Jo Ann Crisp. chairman, and Steve Beha. trea. surer. The Relay will be
held June 8-9 on the midway of the Rock. Springs
Fairgrounds. In the event of
rain it will be moved into
the Thompson-Roush build. ing there.
Cha~ene

PORTLAND - After a
. successful first season , the
Portland Horse Fun Show
Series will make a return to
the show ring to begin its
second season on Monday.
The shows are organized
by · the
Ohio
River
Producers (ORP) which
·consists
of
Racine
Southern .FFA Alumni.
Shows are scheduled for
June, July, September and
October at the show ring
behind
the , Portland
Community Center.
"We feel, as well as
everyone else I have talked
to who participated or was
involved in any way feel ,
that last year was very successfu l." said Leanna
Beegle, member of the
ORP. "Commissioner Jim
Sheets made the comment
before the first ·show last
year even started that from
the enthusiasm of the
crowd and the number of
people who had come that
he would declare it a success right then. We hope to
build on our experience
from last year to make thi s
year even better. ..
Exh ibition begins at 10
a.m. while the show starts
at II a.m. in the horse show
ring behind the Portland
Community Center. There
is no need to pre-register.
En!ry fees are $2 per class
. with the exception of open
poles and open barrels
which has a $5 fee , though
there is an 80 percent pay- .
back in these two classes
with $50 added. Ribbons
will also be awarded in
each class.
There is an event for everv
age group, including the
lead in event for the small
fry and pee wee barrels.. ·
"The shows provide an
arena for · the local 4-H
horsemen to gain experience and of course the
money ORP takes in goes
to help the Southern FFA
students," Beegle said .
"Al so it · provides the
Portland
Community
Center with an opportunity
to serve concessions which
brings in some revenue for
them as welL"
. A complete show bill is
as follows: Exhibition , halter: showmanship, lead-in
(under 10) , walk trot ( 12

Hoofllch/photo

Please see Shows. AS

• PUIUC IEIUIE 118111: These are the Ballistic Rolls
In the heavy 'Vault Bricks' that everyone Is trying to get
for themselves and to give as gifts, They look and feel
like heavy solid bars of .999 DUre gold.

· ------ -~
· --~-.------~r------

'
•. .
.

""

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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