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DOWN ON THE FARM
Ag Viewpoint: United we stand against eminent domain abus~
iunba~ Utimt~ ·itnttnel

ment. Regardless of geographical. partisan or other
In these days of razor-thin demographic differences,
election margins, red states Americans were : unifi eq
· and blue states, and separate two-to-one against govern· Republican and Democrat lc ment use nf eminent domain
· talk shows, it' s a watershed to take private property.
event when ·an overwhelm: unl ess the publi c at large
ing majori ty of Americans would clearly benefit from a
can agree on somethin g. new road. electric utility or
si milar project.
Howe~er, a recent poll
Building
new
road s,
shows th at Americans by
and large agree that govern- schools and simil ar inframent should not be able to structu re components that are
· take a person 's property and n~ce ssary for ·communities
give it to someone else, j ust has been the traditional use of
· because another owner eminent domain . However,
might be interested in deve l- the government's ability to
oping the propeny and is seize property has been
able to generate more taxes expanded now that ,the U.S.
Supreme Court ruled last
from it.
Such widely popular opin- summer that economic devel ions are usually reserved for 'opment aho could be considthings ·concerning mom . . .ered a public use.
· The rulin g put all private
patriotism and apple pie.
The poll showed that 83 . property at risk of governAmericans htent se izure. FarmerS' land
percent
of
opposed the use of emineni is especially vulnerable. The
domain for private develop- ruling "sounded a justified

Bv

Sunday,Februaryt2,2006

'

JiLL SMITH

alarm in farm country,''
according to American Farm
Bureau Federation President
Bob Stallman.
Farmland already serves
many important public uses :
providin g food, fiber and
fuel production; helping to
· maintain open space; and
eve n providing wildlife
·habitat. But everyone knows
that same land would probably generate ·more local tax
revenue if it we(e developed
into, say, a shopping mall or
a condominium development. We don't need a poll
to tell us what · a loss that
would be .
· Farmland is already disappearing because of estate
taxes and economic and
development pressures. This
ruling will certainly make
things worse. The Farm
Bureau poll also showed that
95 percent of Americans disapproved of . the Supreme
Court ruling. When was the

last time 95 percent of us
agreed on anything?
It is no surprise that
Americans would express
concern about this expansion
of government 's ability to
take property away from citizens. Still. it was surprising
that so many agreed.
The next surprise may be
the extent of the backlash. At'
the federal and state levels,
legislators are working to
define "public use" in ways
that exclude economic de vel-

opment. withhold Jederal divi siveness, we can stiU
funds from govern,nents that · come together and agree
government
ha~
use eminent domain for that when
purpose and maybe even out- attempted to overstep its
ri ght prohibit such me of bounds and put one of our
eminent domain. Oh io has basic American rights - the
already passed .a law which right to own propeny and nQt
tempmarily stops using emi- have to worry about govern•
nent domain solel y for eco- ment taking it away - :flt
nomi~ development. The law
risk.
, also establi shed a task forc e,
(Jill Smith is the organiza.
which will propose penna- tiomil director' for tht
nent solutions later thi s year. Atlle11s,
Gallia
anti
It 's gratifyin'g that, even in Lawre11ce counties' Farm
.these times of great political Bureau.) ·
·
:·

OVCS inducts new
members,A2

ne
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o CENTS • Vol. :;5, No. 127

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@ MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM

• Eastem beats Meigs.
See Pag~ 81

POMEROY - The longterm transportation needs of
the Long Bottom vicinity
after, years of soil instability
and flooding are being invesby
the
Ohio
tigated
Department
of
Transponation (ODOT) and
Highway
the
Federal
Administration (FHWA).
After gaining public input
in. September 2005, . ODOT,

The candida.te
eoll1es to ·you!

"W.,(r,lkino
and T.cil~iJtg ''an .
over tHe"'\ · · · ·
He1S

6th Distn~t of
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for by Ginter for Congress S
.

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NEW 2006 SIENNAS

$1000

, CASHBACK
FROM TOYOTA'**

NEW2008
HIGHLANDERS

$1000

NEW 2006 COROLLA
·sEDANS

CASH BACK
FROM TOYOTA***
(GAS MOORS ONLY)

NEW 2008 TUNDRAS Capable of around 400 highway miles per tankful.tt

.
500

CASH BACK .
FROM TOYOTA***

OBITUARIES

INSIDE
• Meigs Girl Scout Diary.
See Page A2
• NFO urges dairies to
cull cows. See Page A2
• Marshall to launch Q&amp;A
Web site on plane crash
movie. See Page A2
• Literary members
•
hear review of King novel.
See Page A3
• ODNR proposes
extra hunting weekend.
See Page A3
• Sonshine Circle
discusses fund raising
projects. See Page A3
• Cheney accidentally
.
'
.
shoots fellow hunter in
Texas. See Pa9e AS
• Observers: Ohio
lobbying laws hard to.
enforce, full of loopholes.
See Page A6
·

WEATHER

with consultant R.D. Zande
&amp; Associates Inc., has refined
the study area in order to
shape preliminary alterna- ,
tive.s for the project, according to a release Ftiday from
Stephanie M. Filson , public
information officer
for
District ) 0.
She noted that s.ihce
September, ODOT · has
mapped the area and con'ducted field visits. Based on
thi s information and com ments from the public , she

said ODOT developed 'two · • No-Build Alternati ve: No the I 00-year llood plain . This
corridors within the 8,000 changes to Ohio 124 other alternati ve will likely require
feet from the Swan Road to than the regular seasonal some bla,ting io remove porOhio 248. ·
maintenance activitie s.
tions of the rock cli ff.'
Corridor I fol lows . along
• Alternative A: Repair the
ODOT is considering two
the Ohio Ri\&lt;er, and Corridor roadway in its current loca- preli'minary alternatives with2 lies on top of the sandstone tion . Thi s would in clude in Corridor 2. ·
rock cliff. The rock clitf runs drilling over 600 60-foot , • Alternative C: Relocate
parallel to Ohio 124 up to deep shafts along with paving 124 on top of the rock cl iffs.
200 feet higher than the and regrading .
To the nort h, the alignment
• Alternati ve. B: Relocated follows roughl y 3,000 feet of
roadway.
Fil son said ODOT is cur- Ohio 124 uphill between the Mount Olive Road and then
rently considering three pre- existing 124 and the rock shifts east of Swan Road, fo lliminary alternatives, within cliff. This option will remove
Corridor I.
much of the roadway from - Piease see ODOT, A5

Joan Jett to headline Mega Bash 2006 in May

"'59
36 '1999
&amp;
~

/MO. .

MOS.

DUE AT
SIGN

DUf AT %NING INCllJDfS: $1340 DOWN PAYMENT+ $0 SECURITY DEPOsiT +$2591 ST MONTH PAYMfNT
· · . · t $400 ACQUISITIOO fH. TAX, TAGS M-lD INSURANCf ARf fXTRA.
·

QUARIEI' TO PERFORM

.

NEW2006
HIGHLANDER HYBRIDS

NEW 2006 4RUNNERS
INCLUDES MODELS WITH
3~ ROW SEATING!

INDEX

2 9%APR . ·
·SUPERIOR TOYOI

2 SF,CTIONS -

. .

.5YEARS

GET

CASH BACK FROM TOYOTA'..

LOW.

•

FINANCING• ON NEW 2006 4RUNNERS

~ -

-

-

---.-

-

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics

3101 EAST SEVENTH STREET
PARKERSBURG, WV • 304-424-5122
.
.

'i.ISEO ON11 1'\JU CY iEGIST!AflONI fiJi I998, I999, 1000, lOC' 1003, 2004, 1001."[PI Eln~l[D HIGHWAY IIRG fOR 1006 MOOHI CJM~ 2\U 111'1[0 AUTO, (IJRIJUAIBOI, IIENNAI3262WD, HIGHIAJIDER 69101WD. OTY ,\1'6 'ORHIGHlANDER HYBIIO MODEl 6960AC1Uil MiillGE WIU Vl$1 . . P\JROIAIEII
(AN REaiVE CASH BACK fROM fOYO!A OR rAN AmY LIIHBilK lD GOWN PAYMtNI '3.9'd•W fiNANCING UP 10 60 M
ONTH\ AVlJIABl[ TO OUAUflfD BU!EII!HRU TOYOTAflNANCIALIER'IIai.TOIAl fiNANCED CAll NOT EXmD MIRPPlUS OPIIINI, TAX ANDU(lNIE FHI.60 MONIHlYPAYMENT I Of 118.37 fOR EACH Sl 000
BORIOWfD 1m AU IUTEIS WIUQUAUIY. ' MIUAn f'fR flUlFUl (AI.CUIATED BY MUlOfl.YINHPI HIGHWIHITIIIATED W'G BHUE.]INWPACITY ACTUAl MlliAGE Will VARY ANDDEPENDS UPONIMNYfiCTOi\ NOT CON\ID!RIDINEPAHilS ... TUNDRA liAIE OFIIR CUSTOMER II Rr\PONIIBlffOifX([ISN! •
Wf.AIIBAS!D ONlOYOlA STANDARDS fOR NO~ USE AN D15CENI\ fU MilE OV!R 41,000 1/Jlrl PIY!IJ:NTIIJ.YVARY BlltD ON 'INAI. i!GOIIA!ED I'IICE 1101 AU CUSICMIRS WIU QUAUIY. TUNDRA 0 fJE IRS lr\S!P SJJ))OO fOR OEI~ll, CAU 1 801J.41 HOYOll •29"&lt;1i'!1 fiNAN CI NGUP 10 60 MONTHS
1\'~I.ABlf TO OUAUfl£0 BUmS fH!IJ TOYOTAflNANCllliEIVICEI lOfll fiNANCED [.IIINDI I'ICEEO !\SIP PlUS Of'IIONI. TAX ANO UCENir f£tl60 MOIIfHlYPlYMINTS Of Sl7 91 fOR [A(]I\1000 BORROWED NOT AU.IUYIRS WILL QIJAUfl AU GffiRI END l/18/06..
.

.

Eastern board
approves .contracts
STAFF REPORT
. NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

Details on Page AS

Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

12 PAGES

A:3
B3-4
Bs

A:3
'A4
As
B Section
A6

(C) :r.n06 Ohio Volle}' Puhli.rthinK Cn.

Upcoming
men's .health
screerung
could save lives

POMEROY - · Amongst
the motionless angels and
stone monuments in Beech
BY BETH SERGENT
Grove Cemetery is also the
BSERG ENT@MYDAILYSEN TINEl.COM
moving tigure of Bill K.itchen.
Kitchen who lives in
POMEROY
The
Pomeroy is retired from the
11pcoming men' s health
DuPont Plant in Chillicothe
sc reening at the Meigs
and spends his time volunCounty Health Department
teering in the cemetery, pickcould save a life by detecting
ing . lip trash and debns as
prostate cancer in its earliest
well as placing flags . on the
stages.
.
headstones of veterans on
While a $10 donation is
Memorial Day as part of hi s
requested and appreciated
duties with the Pomeroy
even .that isn' t required .to
American Legion.
participate in the agency"s
The placing of Amer.ican
screening to be held from 5 to
flag s on graves was what
7 p.m . on Tuesday, March 21.
drew Kitchen into becoming
The men·s health screening
the volunteer caretaker of·
is a collaboration between the
.Beech Grove ,
health
department
and
Kitchen said he is luckv to
Pleasant · Valley Hospital
be retired and be able tb pick
(PVH) which will be providwhat he spepd's his time
ing staff to collect blood samworking at now. including
, pies. and Plea,ant Valley
volunteering at the Pomeroy
Hom·e Medical Equipment
ball fields.
• Both Sercont/ photo
which is donating clinical
Part of what keeps hini vol- Pomeroy volunteer Bill Kitchen has become the unofficial caretaker of Beech Grove Cemetery supplie s for the urinalysi s
unteering hi s time at the and hopes that the village will help fill sunken graves and reset .headstones that have toppled. and colon i:ancer screening.
cemetery is the quiet and The graves and headstone s are so old there appears to be no family left to restore them. Here
Appointments are limited
peaceful surrounding s.
to
50 Meig s County males
Kitchen kneels against one of many headstones that have toppled, the headstone 's base is
aged
50 or older who have
. Please see Volunteer, A5
seen in the foreground . ·
not been diagnosed previously with prostate cancer or
have not underwent such a
health scree ning in the past
month s. and those aged 45
8v KEviN J&lt;Eu.y
'The Children's ·Center of the winner of one of the prizes, Bird tickets for Friday's draw- or12 older
who are at high risk
KKELLY@MYDAILYTR IBUNE.COM
Ohio is a 24-hour residential a Harley Davidson classic ing for the Harley motorcycle. for developing the · disease .
treatment facility i::ariog for · Screaming Eagle mqtorcycle.
Each $10 Early Bird ticket Appointments may be schedGALUPOLJS - Rock and boys and gi rl s in a variety of
Saturday, May 27 includes allow s the purchaser a chance uled by phoning 992-6626.
roll headliners Joan Jett and the crisis situations. accordingto cas h and prize drawings on Harley motorcycle and
In addition to a Digital
Blackhearts will be the main the center's Web site.
every five minutes from noon admission to the lett concert . Re ~tal Exam (ORE ). other
ente.rtainment for · Mega Bash
·
Holders of \i1egabash tick- health service' will include ·
until 7 p.m. for such items as
,
the
fund-miser
for
the
Many
of
the
children
served
2006
a
2006
Retro
Mustang
to
two
.
ets
for Saturday's evenis can height and weight measureChildren's C~nter of Ohio to by the center me referred to the
bring guests for an additional n(ent. urin alysis . body fat .
be staged at the Gallia County center by the courts and social plasma televi sions.
Ti ckets for the May 27 $20, but everyone attending analv sis. body mass index .
Junior Fairgrounds May 26-27. service a~enc ies to receive
Jett. referred to by some . treatment tor problems m thm drawings are $ 100 and are the Saturday evem musi be co lorectal cancer screening,
te tanus vaccinations. ·
critics as "the queen of punk," ~ome, or legal '.ssue.s resulung referred to as the Megabash 18 and older.
Prosta'te Specific 'Antigen
is the national recording artist from troubled histones.
. . · tickets . Ti ckets for the Fridai ·Locally. tickets can be pur- (PSA
) blood work will be
promised for the event by . its . The center operates facilt- events are called Early Bird chased at the Gall ia County · conducted
by ~ppoi ntment
organizers·. who are looking to lies near Patno~ for boy s and tickets and go for S I 0. To get ·convention and Vi sttors from 5 ' 7 p.m. on Monday,
an Early Bird ticket. howev- Bureau. 61 Court St ..
use the proceeds from near ~ill s Htll tor girls.
March 13 by PVH staff at the
Megabash to help build a
Jett .s perlonnance wtll be the er, a $ 100 Meg abash ticket Gallipolis, or by calling health department so that he
(740) 446~ 6R82 or (740) .179· .
school for children served by highlight of the Friday, May 26 mu'st be purchased.
will be available for
For every $1 00 Megabash 9086. "For mrre information results
the Children's Center of Ohio, portion of Megabash and is
physician review durin·g the
improve its existing ,programs scheduled for around 7 p.m. ticket that is bought . the hold- on the el'ent. go to
Please see Screening. A5
and update its facilities.
She is expected to announce er can buy up to five · Early www.megabash .ne(

-OR LEASE_;_
-

"'""' · mydaily•cntind.com

"

Gallia &amp;Athens CQun~ ·
.

:wn6

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDA ILYSENTINEL .COM

:Ginter Win be hi!&gt;
.

t;~.

Volunteer hopes for help at Beech Grove

Page AS
• Terry Ashbum

Best selling car in America • 7 of the last 8years'

MONDAY, FEBRUARY

ODOT accepting public comment on Long Bottom project

SPORTS

Farmers not exempt from annual tax
GALLIPOLIS
The receipts are not taxable to make payment of the first
Commercial Activity Tax receipts, such as the wages quarter tax .at · that time.
(CAT) is an annual privilege most persons earn for doing Taxpayers having over
tax measured by gross work. Such .wages are also ' $150 ~ 000 in taxable gross
receipt s on business activi- not part of the S 150,000 receipts are required to registies in this state . Thi s tax !hreshold for having to regis- ter for the CAT. A one-time
applies to all types of busi- ter for this tax. The tax does regi stration is required for all
have limited exclusions for taxpayers. All registrations ,
nesses.
. The CAT applies to all enti- certain types of businesses are subject to a one-time. fee.
Farmers are not exempted
ties regardless of form , e.g .. such as financial institution s.
sole proprietorships. partner- dealers in intangible s. insur- from this tax law. If farmers '
ships, .LLCs and all types of ance companies and some gross receipts are less than
$150,000, they do not need to
·corporations. A person with public utilities .
For the 2006 tax year, all file the CAT.
· taxable gross receipts of
For additional' information
more than $150.000 per cal- taxpayers .will be required to
on
thi~: i111portant · new tax
pay
the
annual
privilege
tax
endar year is subject to thi s
tax, which require s such per- of $150 for $150,000 to $1 change, visit the Website,
son to register with the Ohio . million in taxable gross ta.i.ohio.gov, or call toll free
Department of Taxation as a receipts by May I 0, 2006. (888) 722-8829. This inforTax payers subject to quarter- mation was taken from the .
taxpayer.
Please note that certain ly tax reporting will also have Web site.

Meigs students place
in competition, A6

TUPPERS PLAI NS - The
Eastern Local Bnard of
Edutatinn approved supplemental contract' fnrc,,acltin£
staff and .oth ~r po,ition' acl
. last week\ meet in~ .
The board appn;w~ Child
Milliron a' high '~hool '"'i'tallt trac k ,.,,ach. Sam
Thompson. 2006 junior hi~h
fouiball
cnat:lt.
Hr7ld
Brannon . \\ei!!ht rnn m :-.upervisor. and Brent Bi "cll. \O Iunteer ba,eball ''""'h .
Deborah Kerwo&lt;&gt;d . Rohe.rt
. Neal. Pat Newland and K ir ~
Reed were "" ardcd co nSubmitted plloto
trac" for hidt ":hn&lt;&gt;l afterValentine's Day is all about love and the Park 4Quartet's repertoire will include many of the old school. inten~enll&lt;&gt;n . at a rate
love , songs in performances around the county tomorrow. Gera ld Powell and Gera ld Kelly of nr S.15. per '''"ion. through
Pomeroy, Vinton Rankin of Vinton . and Michael Ed leman of Oallia County. left to right. will be Buildin~ Bln c ~ ' !nler\cllsinging to residents of the Roc kspnngs Rehabilitation·. Center. to those attend!llg the Meigs l inn funLlln g~
County Chamber of Commerce luncheo~ at the Wildhorse, and to employees in many business
Cnllecn A'h"&lt;&gt;rth and
·
T~re'a
L. Carn1ll 11ere
. o~fices about town .
c

appmved a, sub stit ute teac h- .
er' for the remainder of the
school year.
The board approved military lea1·e for Chad Griffi th.
beginning Feb . 21. concluding with hiS di;charge from
the Arm) He will be mobi li1ed for Iraqi Freedom for
:-~:; days.
The board also:
• Approved the purchase of
a new school bu' from Edwin
Davi' &amp; Son and one from
Mari etl a Truck .Sale,.
• Approved irai"fer Df five
percent of home high school
foo tbal l game receipt&gt; for use
b' the band.
· • Amended kindergarten
admi,,ion hirth date re'q uin'ment' to rnclude children
whn arl' fl\ e 'on or
All~ .

befnr~

1.

The hnard ·' nn t meeting
1\ ill he al 6:.10 . p . lll . on
Mardt I _'i .

�PageA2

'REGIONAL

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, February .13, 2006

Meigs Girl Scout Diary
POMEROY -Southern ing Thinking Day event. The
Elementary will be the loca- girls have been working hard
tion for this year's Girl Scouts on getting ready for thi s
Thinking Day, 6 to 8 p.m. on event. We would like any one
Feb. 18. Area troops have . that is available at I p.m. on
selected countries to represent Feb. 18 to come to Southern
at thi s annual
event. . Elementary cafeteria to see all
Information is available from the work we have done.
Deb~ King at 949-2004.
Please bring plenty of pen-.
nies to cast your vote for the
girls' hard work.The girls will
receive a banner and bragging
rights for the most votes. The
money will go into the Julielte
Gordon
Lowe fund.
The iroop has been very
We also have been very
busy on Thinking Day. They
have been helping the busy selling our cookies
Brownies prepare for this throughout our community. If
event. The girls have been you did not' see a Girl Scout to
busy earning their petals also. take your order than be sure to
We would like to take this time contact Brenda Gra~y at 985to in'vite the other girls in the 4475 .or .Robyn Parker at 985kindergarten classes to join us. 342 1. We will be selling up a
We wi ll rneet on Feb. 14 booth at the Mason Wal-Mart
and 28. If we don't have on from 10 a. m. to 2 p.m. on
sc hool that day due to.weath- March II.
·
er or because the school is
closed for one reaso n or
another, we - will not have a
meeting.

Eastern Daisy
-Troop 1334

Southern
Brownie Troop
1120
Southern Daisy .
'
The troop met Jan. 2, 16,
Troop 1292
and 30 at the Syracu se

Community Center. Girls
have been reviewing the. Oirl.
Scou·t Law, working on
the second half of Make- It
Eat It, and the first,half of Eat
,Right Stay Healthy Try-its.
Girls have had fun making
their. own covers for cookbooks , as well as bringi ng in
their own recipes to share and
put into the cookbooks.
They also made a healthy
·snack treat of their own by
adding fruit or granola toppings to yogurt.
Sixteen girls from 11 20
.partic ipated in the annual
'Cookie Kickoff' event on
Jan. 6, where they had fun
earni ng the 'Smart Cookie'
Try-it, as well as participating in a cookie-eating contest. Girls have been very
busy selling cookies thi s
Troop members have · been month also. Thank you to
busy preparing for the upcom- everyone in the community

Girls have earned the
"Responsible. For What I Say
And Do" petal by disc ussi ng
helping words versus hurting
wo,rds, and always wearing
safety .seat belts. Girls also
demonstrated what to do if
they found money or a wallet
on the· ground, and how to
divide a bowl of apples among
themselves, the reby earning
the "Honest and Fair" petal.
Pine-cone birdfeeders were
also made and take n home to
observe . what happens.The
jlirls are excited about upcommg participation in the
Thinking Day eveflt, with the
country of Egypt:

Eastern Brownie
Troop 1316

for helping support us.
The girls are now getting
ready for the Thinking Day ·
event Feb. 18, by learnin_g
about Kenya.

Meigs Daisy
Troop 5870
The troop met twice during
the month of January. An
investiture ceremony was
held and each Daisy received
her "World Association" pin
and her Daisy pin.
An article and photo were
published in The Daily
Sentinel last mon th. Dur.ing
our second meeti'ng, the
girls worked on thei r light
blue petal, which encourages Daisy' Girl Scouts to be
honest and fair. After a brief
discu ssion about the importance of honesty and. fairness, the girl s participated
in two games, being careful
to take turns fairly, play
nice ly. and to report their
scores honestl y.
We also began work on
Thinking Day by learnin g
about our country." Ukraine.
The Daisieo were assigned
"lwmework," .to make a
Valentine for a sister Girl
Scout to be exchanged at the
next meeting.
Meig s Daisies ·include
Olivia . Davis, · Kimberly
Duncan, Tiana Frechette,
Peyton Humphreys, Melyla
Mash, Elena 'Musser, Mikayla
Schwendeman, Kaleigh Scott,
Anann Stzemore, and Lauren
Stew~rt. If Y?U would like
more mformatton, please contact one of the troop leaders,
Heather Humphrey or Barb
Mu sser.

Reedsville Giri
Scouts ·
Reesville Brownie, Junior
and Cadette tr,oops have been
very busy this month. We
have sold Girl Scout cookies,
and have earned several

patches and are ·working on
our Thinking Day countries.
Holland and Scotland. We
meet from 6 to 7:30 p.m.
every Tuesday at the
Reedsville Church of Christ.

The following night, the
troop met with Pomeroy
troops and caught rides with
them. At the last minute one
of our drivers couldn 't go and
Pomeroy asked us to go with
them. They had extra seats.
'
Hooray for Pomeroy! Rachel
Payne joined us on the trip.
Kim my Deaver brought in her
secret code for. the . girls to
· For our first meeting after solve. More work was done
Christmas break we met . at on our two badges and Megan
Carleton School. After dues McGee served refreshments.
At the Jan 16. meeting, we
anf) attendance were taken,
found
that cookie sells was
the girls gave a report on the
.
sleepover held at Racine First going well. .
Thinkin g . Day was disBaptist Church.
The girls earned . two cussed and what requirebadges during the evening, ments we would be doing.
Local Lore and Toymaker. Girls will be looking for picThey said they enjoyed the tures of people from other
act ivities and getting togeth- countries for a collage for a
er with old friends from requirement on Celebrating
other school s.
Brittany People . Deb King and Terri
Cogar, Kim Deaver, Sarah Houser he lped the girls on
· and Tara Eakins, and Megan more requirements for the
Girl Scouts of USA.
McGee attended.
Two badges are now done.
New officers were elected
Work
will be started on two
for the next · 3 months:
Pres·ident Megan McGee, more that go along with
Vice
President
Kimmy Thinking Day activities.
Brownies came to the meet"
Deaver,
Treasurer
Tara
Eakins, Secertary Sarah ing to work on their Bridging
Eakins, and Activity Director . requirements. Kimmy Deaver
served refreshments. ·
Brittany Cogar.
Girls
evaluated their
At the Jan. 23 meeting, the
Christmas Party and found · girls . turned in ' their co.okie·
they did better this time . sheets. It looks like they did
The Mall Lock-in was dis- well. They decided to have a
cussed and premis~ion slips cookie booth sale and told the
were signed. '
.
leader what cookies to order.
We started on cookie sales
Sarah and Tara Eakins
with training and cookie found a magazi ne with pic·badge. Reports on a woman in tvres in it. Other girls told
history and how she solved they were ha ving trouble
her or a problem were com- finding magazines that had
pleted for the' Creative pictures in them. The presiSolutions badge.
dent handed out tlyers for
Girls found that with deter- Thinking Day and Valentine
ruination a lot of things can be Dance for girl s ·.and the ir
done. Tara Eakins served guy s. Both events will be in
February.
refreshments.
On Ja:n. 9, girls told about
The Code of Conduct w.as
their busy week. First the made up for girls to try to live
Cookie Kickoff was enjoyed by for a week. They had to
by Megan McGee, Tara and make up five . rules as a
Sarah Eakins, Kim Deaver, requirement for a badge.
and Brittany Cogar. They had Brittany Cogar taught them a
different cookie activities and game that CO\Ild be played at
Thinking Day.
a cookie eating contest.

Southern Junior
Troop 1204

NFO urges dairies to cull co~s
consider taking another step . assuming your average proto reduce milk supplies.
duction is 60 pounds per cow
"The Coopemti ves Working per ~ay? $ 13,500.00.
POMEROY -As produc- Together (CWT) program has
What would the loss of
ers have watched their fore- been an excellent resource for income be for one month's
casted pay price for milk on dairy men, but as we face milk if you culled one of
· the farm fall by nearly $2 lower milk price predictions every SO cows in your herd? ·
'from year"ago levels, a once more, l think it may be $270. What would your
national . dairy marketing time for producers to consider monthl y income be if you
·group is urging farmers to taking another step toward didn't cull that cow ()nd your
~flke another step in their sup- additional supply manage- mailbox price dropped to
ply management efforts.
ment," said Rach.
$13? $11.,700. $1,800 loss of ·
"With predictions as low as
A simple supply manage- income for one month's pro.$11.50 per hundredweight for ment option the organization duct ion for one cow.
Class Three milk this year, ·. recommends to producers is
For 12 months that equals
prices could easil y drop two ' that they cull one cow for $2 1,600. For a 500-cow herd,
dollars," said Bradley Rach. every 50 in their herd, help- ,the annual lo ss would be
dairy division director for jng to reduce domestic milk $2 16,000. For a 5,000 cow
National
Farmers production capacity. But the herd, the annual loss would
Organization. "This, com- group underscored the fact · be $2. 160,000.
bined with increased fuel and that a majority of producers
"Cheese
prices
have
fertilizer cqsts will severely nationally would need to par- dropped 13 cents in the past
strain dairv farm families ticipate in the program to week alone, and are 52 cents
economicaliy."
maximize its effectiveness.
· lower than a year ago," Rach
Because butter stocks are
The organi zation provided noted. "That , along with the
27 percent higher than last the following example for fact that Decemb~r milk proyear. and American cheese every SO Cows in a herd: At a duction was. up 4.3 percent
inventories are eight percent mailbox price of $15, what should signal to producers
greate r. the national milk would your monthl y totaf that it:s time to act together to
marketer is urging producers income be in a 50 cow herd reduce the milk price slide.'.'
STAFF REPORT

NEWS@MYDAJLYSENTINEL.COM

Sarah
Eakins
served
refreshments.
At the Jan . 30 meeting, girls
learned that they had sold
I ,003 boxes of cookies. They
ordered 85 cases, to fill I their
orders and got stx more cases
for a booth sale .
,
The president asked girls if
it was easy or hard to go by
their code of conduct rules.
Sot)le found it rea lly difficult,
but Moms said they did their
best. All we wanted was for
them to think either before or
after their actions.
Premission slips were
turned in for Valentine Dance
and Thinking Day.
Girls hope to attend the Day
at the Castle in Marietta in
April. More work was done
on Thinking Day. Brownies
came agai n and they worked
more on . their activity.
'Britiany
Cogar
served
refreshments.

Meigs Cadette
Troop 1280
The troop has been ·
preparing for Thinking Day.
on their own, and working
·on individ ual interest project awards.
. Ashley
Bateman-Lee
attended the Cookie Rally. We
did fairly well on our cookie
sales. Ericka Cogar was top
cookie saler.
Ashley Lee is' earning hours
for her spec iality pins by
helping Brownie Troop l 120.
The next meeting will be
held at 6 p.m. Feb. 10 at the
home of Shirley Cogar on
February IOth at 6 pm.
A preside nt , on a monthly
te rm basis, has been elected to ·
set up . meetings, contacting
the troqp niembers, find the
meeting place, and runnin g
the meetings plus other sm'all
duties. February's President is
Ericka Cogar. ·
. Troop leader is Jerrena
Ebersbach. More information
can be obtai ned by calling her
at 992-7747.

Marshall to launch Q&amp;A Web
site on plane crash movie

With a continuing increase
in production anticipated
HUNTINGTON , WVa. (AP) - A Web site will be been set
through spring, and industry up for people interested in a film to be shot in Huntington
needs fulfilled until Easter, about the l 970 Marshall University plane crash.
the organization expects price
"Everybody wants to be a star. and nobody knows. what's
levels will continue to fall going on," said J.P. Linkous, a member of the Huntington
unless some action is taken by Regional Film Commission.
dairy farmers themselves.
The commission is working with the West Virginia Film
National
Fariners' · Office and Marshall University on the Web site, www.marLivestock Division is offer- shall.edu/movie.
ing the use of its marketing
The Web site, which is still under construction, will contain
facilities so .the cull. cows ·can information on the plane crash, a mo vie timeline, press releasbe marketed in an orderly es &lt;tnd information for prospective actors, technicians and
manner. Cows ' that are . mar- interns. Cars that were built in the years lead,ing. up to the
keted through National crash will be needed, and car owners can use the Web 'site to
Farmers are guaranteed to be find out more information.
slaughtered and will not
More than 100 ca:st members and crew are set to arrive
return to dairy farms.
March 20 to begin filming in Huntin gton and o n
For more information call · Marshall's campus._
1-800-247-2110.
The crash was the worst disaster in U.S. sport s hi story.

.

He

OVCS INDUCIS NEW MEMBERS
W Blood Pressur:e Screeninv!ilt
WCholesterol &amp; Glucose
Screenings {Non-Fasting)

WBody Fat Analysis

WHeart Healthy Food
Information

WSmoking Cessation Info
.

'

.

W Holzer Cardiovascular
· Institute Information
WAnd Much More!!

, Submitted photo

Megan Mahan . Drew Scouten, and Kalee Edmonps were inducted into the Ohio Valley Christian
School Honor Society in recent ceremonies at the school. Jay Jarvis, Society advisor, spoke on
how a sucessful Christ1an is one that goes, does. and is what God wants. Following the chal·
lenge . current members the three students for the Society, bringing the n:embership to 11.--.-.

-

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

Special Presentation at
11:30 am

Heart Disease
Update
by Michael Swanson. DO.
Cardiothoracic Sr1rgeon 1.1t1d
Michael A. Englund, DO, Curdiologisl.
both from the Holzer Cardiova.,·cular Institute

A box lunch, provided by Pftzer
Pharmaceuticals, wi ll be avai lab le

'to those who attend the presentation.
All qre welc-ome!

The Daily Sentinel

BYTHE BEND

Domestic assaults have
nothing to do with love

Community Calend~r

PageA3
Monday, February 13,2006

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

Youth events

Township Board of Trustees
monthly meeting. 7 p.m.,
Chester Town Hall .
RUTLAND - . Rutland
Village Council, regular session, 6 p.m., council chambers.

Thursday, Feb. 16
DEAR ABBY: Thank you
RUTLAND
- Rutland
for YO\Ir continued support of
Youth
League,
7
p.m : at the
victims of domestic and duting
-Rutland Fire House. Anyone
violence.
Tomorrow
is
interested in coaching ball to
Valeutine's Day, a day filled
attend.
with romance for many ·couDear
ples. Unfortunately, for some,
Abby
Thursday, Feb. 't 6
it is like any other day - filled
SHADE
- Elmer Bailey
with. fear, anxiety and ~iolence.
will celebrate his 85th birthThe sad truth is, every year.
Monday, Feb. 13
on Feb. 16. Card may be
day
close to 4 million American ·
CHAUNCEY -Region 14
sent
to him at 40063 S.R.
·women experience a serious has an on-again , off-again Youth Counci l ·meeting, 9
assault by someone who said father who has beaten up her a.m:, Athens County DJFS, 681, Shade, Ohio 45776.
Friday, Feb. 17
they loved them. I wo!l lcllike mother on more than 'one Ohio 13 .
POMEROY
-· Cora. Mae
TUPPERS PLAINS to remind your readers that occasion. And there has been
domestic and dating violence a new baby in the house since Tuppers Plains Regional Smith will be 84 on Feb. 17.
is not just physical abuse. It November. Should l suggest · Sewer District regular board Cards may be sent to her at
Rocksprin gs
can also be sexual, emotional,· counseling? - WORRIED meeting, 7 p.m., at the sewer the
Center,
builcjing.' The district needs . Rehabili tadtion
economic or psychological IN ST. LOI:JIS
Room
136,
36759
five volunteer board membets. ·
abuse. It is actions, or threats
QEAR WORRIED: Andrea
Rocksprings
Road,
Pomeroy,
RUTLAND . -·
Rutland
of m:lions, meant to frighten, appears to be a very angry litintimidate, terrorize, manipu- tle girl who is using her dolls Village Cou ncil, special ses- Ohio 45769.
late, hurt, humiliate, blame, to channel her aggression. She sion, 6 p.m., counc'il's chambers.
injure or wound someone.
· may feel displaced by her ne w
Thesday, Feb. 14
Domestic violence can hap- sibling. It might help to sugPOMEROY
Bedford
pen to anyone of any age, gest to Rose that she and her
Trustees
will
meet
Township
race, sexual orieptati on, reli- , daughter give Andrea more
at
the
hall.
Thesday, Feb. 14
gion, gender or socioeconom- attention because you are conCHESTER
-Chester
POMEROY
Meigs
ic background. It can happen cerned that she might take her
to couples who are married, resentment out on the baby. If
li vi ng together or dating.
that fai ls to improve the child's
With Valentine 's Day only beha-vior, then point out that a
a day away, let's work to visit with a child psychologist
keep ot~r loved 'ones safe. might be in order.
SHERYL CATES, EXECUDEAR ABBY: Two years .
TIVE
DIR ECTOR , ago, a male fri end and 1decidNATIONAL DOMESTIC . ed to save our spare change in
POMEROY
Dana the wife of the govern or of
VIOLENCE HOTLINE
a jar for a road trip. There are Kessinger . and
Jeanne Alab ama, and Lanier, a
DEAR SHERYL: Thank ·no w three large jars, and Bowen presented a joint nurse, also se parated from
you for your important letter. they 're all at my house.
review of "The Same Sweet her husband and estranged
As readers of my column
During the time that we've Girls" by Cassandra Kin g from her two children.
. know; your organization is been saving, my friend and l published in 2005 at a recent
At the opening of the
. one l have relied upon for have grown apart. It 's not that meetin g of the Middleport novel, Lanier is preparing for
years to help victims of we don't like each other any- Literary Club held at the · the summer get-together of
abuse. If anyone reading this . more. but sometimes that's Pomeroy library.
the SSG's at her cabin on
column today fee ls she is the way things go.
Cassandra King is the wife Dauphin I sland on Mobile .
being abused, or know of
There is nearly $300 in the of the author Pat Conroy who Bay. The reader does not
someone who . is bein g jars, and r d like to'give him his . wrote "Prince of Tides'·' and learn as much about the other
abused, I hope she will call share, but I have no idea how to other novels. The reviewers three. Rosanelle · was the
the · · Na'tional
Domestic do it. There is no way of know- said King, who taught writ- Maid of Cotton when in colViolence Hotline. The toll- ing how much of the money is ' ing on the college level as lege, Astor Is a retired dancer
free number is (800) 799- his and how much is mine. • well as conducting writing from Broadway with a sharp
7233 (SAFE) The number There isn't an even amount in seminars and working as a tongue, and
Byrd
is
for people with hearing dis~ the jars, and I'm considering reporter, was born in described as "plain and simabilities .is (800) 787-3224 givi ng all of it to him. What do Alabama, the setting for "The' pie " and loved by all. or
(TIY). You can also log-onto you suggest'1 - TRYING TO
Mama Byrd as the others call
Same Sweet Girls.'' .
the
Web
site
at BE FAJR IN N.C.
Her third novel, "The her. She gives them all
www:ndvh .org. There is help
DEAR TRYLNG: Either get Sunday Wife" was a Literary advice and she is generally
available 24 · hours a day, a neutral friend to help you Guild and Book-of-the- loved by all. The story deals
seven days a week . The dan- count the money, or "gw!sti-. · Month Club selection. "The with what has happened
ger is great, so please don't mate" the amount in the jars S'ame Sweet Girl" is her · since .they left co llege, and
wait. to contac.t them . ·
and write the man a check for fourth and most recent novel. ends a t the October meeting
DEAR ABBY: My dear half. It's better than cheating
The story centers around of the women at Corrine's
friend "Rose'' has a 3-y'ear- yourself out of your share of
six women. close friends house in Blue Mountain, Ga.
old greatcgranddaughter I'll what you have accumulated.
they all attended the
Both reviewers thought that
caJ I "Andrea." l am con- Or, ·with your friend's since
Methodist
College
for the beginning of the novel
cerned because the child does approval, the entire amount
Women in Alabama. Over the seemed to be a stereotype of
not play nicely with her dolls. could be donated to charity. ·
nearly 30 years since their southern women. But as the
s·he cholres them. bashes their
Dear _Abby is written by
grad
uation, they have man- author develops the story, the
heads against the wall and Abigail Van · Buren, also aged to get together twice a stereotypica'l feeling fades
"drowns" them in the bathtub. klwwn as Jeanne PlliUips, and
year. They have takep the and the women and their lives
Rose and her daughter was founded by her mother,
think it is funny. I think Pauline Phillips. mite Dear na·me 'The Same Sweet ·become more real. There are
Abby at www.DearAbby.com Girls" as ni ckn,ame .for their some serious issues Kin g
Andrea needs help.
weaves into her story. and
The little girl doesn' t get or P.O. Box 69440, Los gro up, SSG's for short. .
Ironically, they know that some parts which are hilari'hit or abused herself, but she Angeles, CA 90069..
tl;ley are not the same now ous, while other parents are
as they were when they somber.
were just gi rl s and they cerFor roll call there was a
tainly are not now. and ·di scussion of some of the
never have been, swee t. The issue s in 'the novel and preaction of the novel stretches dictions of po ss ible outacross the five months comes for the SSG becau se
STAFF REPORT
vide more opportunity for between their summer meet - the reviewers did not revea l
N£WS@MYDAILY·SENTINEL.COM
hunters to get out and hunt for ing and the October meeting the ending .' Tiny packets of
gotird seeds were given to
another weekend," Risley said. in one year.
Three of the characters, the members since at the end
POMEROY
Deer
The additional weekend
Corri
ne, Juli a , and Lanier, of the novel Corrine gives
.hunters may_have an opportu- would fall on Dec. 16 and 17.
nity to hurit with a gun two Regu lar deer-gun season will tell us the Sweet Girls' story the five other SSG's a gift of
addi ti onal days this fall, and begin on Nov. 27 and run as they narrate a lternating similar seeds'.
chapters. The reader learn ~
Next meeting will be Feb.
archery season could run thro ugh Dec. 3.
the
most
about
those
three.
15
· adt the Library. Olit a
three more days to include an
Archery season would run
'Corrine
is
an
artist,
Heighton
will,
rev1ew
extra weekend day, under fro m Oct. 7 through February
divorced fro man abusive "Obsessive Geniu s: The Inner
regulations· recently .proposed 3. 2007.
to the Ohio Wildlife Council.
Statewide muzzleloader husband and ali enated from World of Marie Curie" by
Ohio's deer-gun hunting season would open on Dec. her teen-aged so n: Julia is Barbara Goldsmith.
week is very popular but tra- 27 , and run through Dec. 30.
ditionally onl y encompasses
The youth deer-gun season
two weekend · days , .snid is proposed for Nov. 18 and 19.
During the 2005-2006 seaDave Risley, wi ldlife man .
son,
w,hich · · concluded
agement
and
research
for
the January 31; hunters bagged a
admi ni strator
prelim inarx record of ·more
· Division of Wildlife.
. "This proposal . would pro- than 207,000 deer.

Birthdays

Public meetings ·

Cou nt y
Chamber
of
Commerce busines&gt;-minded
luncheon, noon , Wildhorse
Cafe .
·
Wednesday, Feb. IS
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Literary Club will
meet at 2 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Public
Library.
Olita
Hei ghton
will
review
"Obsessive Genius; The inner
. world of Marie &lt;;:u rie" by ·
Barbara Goldsmith . · Je.anne
Bowen wi II be hostess.
Thursday, Feb. 16
RACINE Porneroy-

Racine Lodge 164, f&amp;AM ,
7:30p.m. regular meeting.
Friday, Feb. 17
RACINE
Annual
inspectin of 1Pomeroy9Racine Lodge 165, F&amp;AM .
Dinner 6:30 at Methodi st
Church followed by in spection in fellow craft degree at
lodge hall.
Saturday, Feb. 18
RACINE -, Racine Youth
League. yearly organizational
, meeting. I p.m.. Ra cine
Legion Hall.

Clubs and
organizations

Literary members hear ·
review of King novel_

a

.ODNR proposes extra
hunting weekend

liOLZER CLI NIC

Urgent ·care
'

Open 7 Days a week , with
locations in:
convenient
•

Sonshine Circle discusses
fund ra.ising projects
RACINE. - Fund rmsmg Campbell the t~ea sure r 's
projects for spritig and sum- . report . Edie Hubbard reportmer were discussed at the ·cd on receipt of seven thank
recent meetm g of Bethan y- yoiu notes. and 12 cards se nt
· Dorcas Sonshine Circle held out prior to the meeting with
at Bethan y Church.
59 more cards being sig ned
The mother-daughter · ban- to be. mailed . '
quet was set for 6 p.m. on May
Attending were tl10se named
II using the theme "Rose and Evelyn Foreman . . Judy
Garde n Party." Prayer atid Gilmore. Nondus Hendri.:h,
devutiot~&gt; by Ruth Simpson Deni se
Holman. Meli ssa
opened the meeting with Holman . Hat.el McKelvey.
Simpson. Lillian Haymun,. aml Betty Proffitt. Letha Prnflitt.
Bernice Theiss presenting the Blondena Rainer. um.l a guest.
program on "the Impact of Frannie Morri,.
Godly Love'' with selection s
The i1cxt meeting will be .
be ing re&lt;td by members.
held on at 7 p.lll . on Murch Y
Jackie White gave the sec, at the Bethany -Dorcas church.·
retary's report and Ju lie All are·,, women are invited .

Gallipolis
Jackson .
Athens
Meigs

740.992.0060
,

'/

.Medica/. Excellence.
Local Caring."
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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

'

Pagei\4-·

111Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

"responsibility" and "sensi- tions mav not seem .so out- ,
We need to learn a new
tivity." We even congratulate landi sh 'if we assess till~
word: dhimmitude.
for having the "edi- extent to which encroaching ;
ourselves
I've written about dhimmitorial jud~ment" to make sharia has already changed
tude periodically, ·Ia, these .
"pluralism'
possible . the Western way. Cal ling
many years since Sept. II,
"Readers
were
well-served
... these cartoons "unacceph.
but it takes time to sink in.
Diana
able," and censoring our,:
without
publishing
.
the
carDhimmitude is the coinage of
West
. toons," said a Wall Street selves "in respect" to Islam
a brilliant historian, Bat
- - - - • Journal spokesman, "CNN brings the West into compl iYe'or, whose pioneering
has chosen to not show the ance with a central statute of
studies of the dnimmi,,popucartoons in r.espect for Islam," sharia . As· Jyllands Posten's .
lations of Jews and Christians
vanquished by Islamic jihad, dhimmitude doesn ' t only reported the cable network. Flemming Rose has noted,
have led her to conclude that . exist in lands where Islamic On behalf of the BBC, which · that's not respect, that's sub-did show some of the car- mi ssion. And if that s not .
a common culture has existed law rules.
dhimmitude, what is?
·
through the centuries among
This is the lesson of toons on the air, a news editor . The publication of the .
apologized.
the varied dhinuni popula- Cartoon Rage 2.006, a cultur- subsequently
adding
:
"We'
ve
taken
a de~t ­ Mohammed cartoons solicil·
tions. From Egypt and al nuke set off by an Islamic
Palestine to Iraq and Syria, chain reaction to those 12 sion not to go further .. . tn ed by Denmark's Jyllahqs,
from Morocco and Algeria to cartoons of Mohammed order not to gratuitously Posten was an act of anti·
no
Spain. Sicily and Greece, appearing in a Danish news- offend the significanl numc dhimmitude.. Since
Danish
artist
·
would
dare
of
Muslim
.
viewers
·
ber"
from Armenia and the paper. We have watched the
Balkans to the Caucasus: Muslim meltdown with worldwide. Left unmentioned illustrate a PC children's
Wherever Islam conquered, shocked attention, but there is the understanding (editorial book about Mohammed for"
surrendering dhimmi, known is little recognition that its judgment?) that "gratuitous fear of Islamic law · (and
to Muslims as "people of the poi sonous fallout is fear. offense" leai:ls to gratuitous Islamic violence), '·the. news·
book (the Bible)," were toler- Fear in the State Department, violence. Hence, fear - not . pape'r boldly set out to
ated, allowed to practice their which, like Islam, called the the inspiration of tolerance reassert the rule of (note
religion, bUt at a dehumaniz- · cartoons unacceptable. Fear but of capitulation - and a Islamic) Danish law. It \ as&lt;
simple as that. And as vital.
ing cost.
.
in Whitehall (where British coni:lition of dhimmitude.
·
,
The
cartoons ran to establish ·
How
far
does
it
go'?
Worth
There were literal taxes government offices re s id~).
or re-establish
(j(zyaJ to be paid: these which did the same. Fear in noting, for example, is that on
as basti on Clf
Denmark
bought the dhimmi the right the Vatican, which did the the BBC Web site, a religion
to remain non·Muslim, the same. And 'fear in the media, page about Islam presents the Western-style liberty. But in
price not of religious free- which have failed, with few, angels ·and revelation s' of · tryi'ng to set up a force tk ld .
dom, but of religious identi- few exceptions, to reprint or Islamic belief as historical against encroaching shari~!; '
ty. Freedom was lost, sorely show the images. With only a fact, rather than spiritual con ~ Jyllands Postl!n and tile
circumscribed by a bo&lt;)y of small roll of brave joumals,' jecture (as is the case with its Danes have ·showed us that
Islamic
law
(sharia) mainly i!l Europe, to salute, Christianity· Web page); plus. no single bastion of Wcste~jl
designed to subjugate, deni- we have seen the proud it follows every mention of liberty can stand alone. · •
So, how do you say soligrate and humiliate the Western tradition of a free Mohammed with :'(pbuh),"
darity
in Danish? If we ·don't
which
means
"peace
be
upon
dhimmi. The resulting cul- press bow its head and subture of self-abnegation, self- mit to an Islamic law against him" - "as if." writes Will find out now. our future is
censorship and fear shared depictions of Mohammed. Wyatt, former BBC chief. more dhimmitude.
(Diana West is a col111im ist
executive, in a letter to the
· by far-flung dhimmi is the That's dhimmitude.
for
The Washington 7iiii&lt;'S.
Not that we admit it:. We limes of London, "the corpobasi s of dhimmitude. The
She ca n be colllactecl del
extremely di stressing, but dress up our capitulation in ration itself were Muslim."
dicmmrest@verizmt./11'1.)
Is
it')
Are
we?
These
quesfancy
talk
of
"tolerance,"
highly significant fact is.

-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

VIEW

Unacceptable
Budget needs revision
Dear Editor:

The Bush administration's budge! released this week turns a
blind eye to the needs of families in Ohio. Let's hope our
Congressional delegation understands that critical supports for
the most vulnerable citizens of our state shouldn't be on sale.
President Bush's budget proposals fornext year, and the next
five years;. finance huge, unfair arrd ·irresponsible tax cuts by
· ~lashing programs many Americans rely on. Help .fo~ wor~ing
families. children, semors, and people wtth dtsabt!tttes are all
oll'the chopping block in the President's budget, while more
tax cuts for the well-heeled and well-connected get a pass.
For example, many working families in Ohio depend ·on
funding for child care•assistance so that t~ey can go to work
to support their families .and so their children can be wellcared for and safe. However. the Pr~sident 's budget effectively cuts child care funding for the fifth year in a row.
Our Senators and Representatives. must stand ' up for the
families of our state and ensure that the budget doesn't shortchange children or working families. The budget that
Congress passes must do better.

' I'

..

"
"

· WHOA! ... DID h
'IOU CHECK THEIK
CORPORATE .
ROMANCE ·
POLICY FIRST?

.

BY LYNN BREZOSKY
AND

NEDRA PICKLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS
;rerry Ashburn, 32. Vinton, died Saturday, Feb. II , 2006, in
Holzer Medical Center.
CORPUS CHRIST( Texas
·'Arrangements will be announced by the McCoy-Moore
Vice President Dick
F'.imeral Home, Vintonl
· I I'
'
Cheney
accidental ly shot and
,.
wounded a companion during
a weekend q).lail hunting trip
in Texas, spraying the fellow
.hunter in the face and chest
with shotgun pellets.
Harry Whittington, a millionaire attorney from Austin,
.'RACINE -· The annual Girl Scout Thinking Day will be was in stable condition in the
frbm l to 4 p.m. on Feb. 18 at Southern Elementary intensive care unit of a Corpus
Christi hospital Sunday.
Cafetorium.
.
··
. "He is stable and doing
·. . The. cost is $2 for registered Girl Scouts. The general public
well.
It was almost Iike he
IS lnVtted.
·
.
..fresentations ·will demonstrate how Girl Scouts live was spending time with me in
around the world, including continents and countrie s, cus- my living room,:• said hospitoms and cultural norms, and samples of the colors and tal administrator Peter Banko,
who visited Whittington.
t~stes of foreign lands.
''J'here will be a "penny per vote" contest for the most out- · Banko said Whittington
standing presentation and booth. All donations will go to the was in the intensive care unit
because his condition warJlflit;tte Gordon Low fund.
.
ranted
it, but he didn't elabo··'Information is available from Debi King at 949-2004.
rate. Whittington sent word
through a hospital official
that he would have no com·
ment on the incident out of
respect for Cheney.
The accident occurred
"
Saturday
at. a ranch in ·south
.,.,
Texas where the vice president and several companions
;'POMEROY - An action for dissolution of marriage was were hunting quail. It was not
tiled in Meig s County Common Pleas Court by Linda . Sue reported publicly by the vice
P.ucke tt, Radcliff. and Sidney Darrell Puckett, Radcliff.
president's office for nearly

·local Briefs

:· . Thinking Day event planned

~or the

Record

Dissolution

Volunteer
from PageA1
;." It 's qui et here bu1 there's
work that needs to be done ,"
h!: said.
Part of that work as Kitchen
sees it is resetting some of the
• old headstones that have toppled as well as filling in some
of the sunken graves.
He hopes that with the

renewal of the cemetery .eartn· near the actual graves.
levy, the village of Pomeroy
As for the headstones that
will help finance some of have already toppled Kitchen
hopes the \iillage will approthese repairs.
The graves Kitchen are con- priate money from the ceme.cerned with are so old that no tery fund to reset a limited
family appears to remain in number of headstones each
the area to reset the headstones year until several of them are
eventually reset.
· or take care of the graves.
"It's
about
respect,"
. By refilling the grave~ with
dtrt Kttchen believes tht s wtll K:itchen said about why he
stop some of the tilting and . volunteers at the cemetery.
eventual toppliog of head- "It's about showing respect to
stones that are falling into the people who went before."

·''

•

• 'l

'
. I

Carolyn Snively
. ·
.
Corporation for Ohio Appalachian Development
Portsmouth

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, Feb. 13. the 44th day of 2006. There are
321 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History : On Feb. 13, 1935, a jury in
Flemington, N.J. , found Bruno ~ichard Hauptmann guilty of
first-degree murder in the kidnap-death of the son of Charles
qnd Anne Lindbergh . (Hauptmann was later executed.)
·
· One year ago: Final results showed clergy-backe~ Shiit~s
and independence-minded Kurds had swept to vtctory m
Iraq 's landmark elections. ,Ray Charles' final album, "Genius
Loves Company," won eight Grammy awards. The AFC won
the Pro Bowl, defeating the NFC 38-27.
Today's Birthdays: Former test pilot Charles E. "Chuck"
Yeager is 83. Actres s Kim Novak is 73. Actor George Segal is
72. Actor Bo Svenson is 65. Singer-musician Peter Tork (The
Monkees) is 64. Actress Stockard Channing is 62. Talk show
host Jerry Springer is 62. Singer Peter Gabriel is 56. Singer
Robbie Williams is 32. Actress Mena Suvari is 27.
Thought for Today: "To go against the dominant thinking of
your friends, of most of the people you see every day, is per- ·
haps the most difficult act of heroism you can have." TheOdore H. White, A.merican political writer ( 1915-1986).

OliiORIVER

CJfAHLER.
COLUMSUS D!SPAKK

~1:.

20Cb·

Nothing can touch the flu season·

· ·Dr. · Lawrence Posner sits
down to his usual breakfast
. of a toasted bagel with
LETTERS TO THE
almond butter and honey in
EDITOR
the kitchen of his Mill Valley
home,. He drinks a cup of .
Leiters to the editor are n·dcome. Thi'Y should he less than
Peet' s half-decaf coffee.
300 words. All/etters are .whject to editing, must be signed,
Then he chooses a carton of
arui include address and telepft qne number. No unsigned let- .
yogurt from the refrigerator
ters will be prlblishrd. Leuers should be in good taste,
and drops it into a paper bag.·
addressing issue.\, not persrma/itieo. Letters oft/tanks to orga- ·
Thai will be lunch. No
time
for anything else.
nizations and individuals •rill not be accepted
for publication.
.
Not during flu season.
He parks his . 1990
Volkswagen Cabriolet out- .
side hi s office near the
Safeway on Camin.o Alto in ·
(USPS 213-960)
Reader Services
Mill Valley. When he walks
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
cOrrection Polley
in at 8:30 a.m., coughing,
Publ ished every afternoon , Mond'ay
Our main co ncern in al! stories is to be
sneezing patients are already
through Fnday. 11 t Court Street,
accurate. If you Know of an error in a
flipping through National
Pomeroy, Oh10 . Second-class postage
story, call ttle newsroom at (74Q) 992· pa1d at Pomeroy
Geographic and Newsweek.
2156.
Member: The Assoc1ated Press and the
Sometimes people arrive in
Ohto NewsPaper Association .
their bathrobes.
Postmaster: ' Send adoress corrections
Our main number is
Behind the glass partition,
10 The Daily Sentinel , 1t1 Court Street,
' (740) 992-2156.
Gayle
Violett - in her I6th
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
'
Department
extensions are: .
flu season as Dr. Posner's
receptionist - has the day's
Subscription .Rates
By carrier or motor ro.ute
patient files stacked in a
News
One month .......... .'10.27
holder
by her computer next
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich . Ext 12
One year ............'123.24
·to her Pure li e antibacterial
Reporter : Brian Ae~d . Ext . 14
Dally ....... ..... ..... ~ 50'
gel·. She braces herself every
· Reporter : Beth Sergent Ext . 13
Senior Citizen rates ·
morning wi\h a multivitamin,
One mo.nth .. . .........19.24
One year ............'1 03.90
plus E. C, B-12 and calcium.
Advertising
Subscribers should remrt 1n advance direct
"You don't even have to
Outside Sales; Dave Harris. E,~~t 15
to ttle Daity Sentinel No subscription by
ask
what they're coming in
Outside Sales: Brenda Da111S , Ext 16 ma11 p~rmittfld in areas where home
for,
"
'Violett says. "You can
carrier service Is ava11a01e .
Class./Circ.: Judy Clark , Ext -10
hear it ·over the phone ."
Mall Subscription ·
Dr. Posner is a family
Inside Meigs County
General Manager
practitioner in the midst of
13 Weeks .
. ... ' 32.26
Charlene Hoefltch, Ext . 12
his 44th flu season. Flu sea26 Weeks
.. ' 64,20
son
approximately
52 .Weeks
'· _, 127 .11
E-mail :
November to March - is to
news@mydailysenttnel com
Outside Meigs County
famil y practitioner' what tax
13
W
eek
s
... ~53. 55
I
season is to accountants. or
'26 Weeks
.. ' 107.10
Web :
Chri stmas season to retail·
I www.mydailysentinel
52
Weeks
.
. ' 214.2 1
.com
ers: a daily sprint from
I

.

The D~ily Sentinel.·

· seems more at risk for the llu c~n1oo n . by Gary Larse n. is a ~
than these men and women: mother chicken feeding ·
They ' re depl eted from chicken soup to her chick. :
. working such long hours "Number I , it's good for.:
taking care of. everyone else you,'' she says. "Number 2, .
·
with the tlu, and they have it's no one we know.··)
Joan
·
It
is
5:30
p.m.
and
uark.
sick people coughing on
Ryan
outside now. Dr. Posner si ts. ;
them all day.
"When your hair starts to . in his ti-ny office with stacks :
. blow back from the coughing, of chans to complete, lab
it's ·a problem." Violett jokes. work to evaluate and phone
Last month . despite hi s calls to return before he
morning to night. They don't
precautions
and a decade of leaves . The last patient. the
schedule vacations. They ·
ignore their own coughs and being flu-free , Dr. Posner 17th of the day, has just left.
sniffles. They have an under- got some weird 11u strain. He Not too bad. Some davs he
standing with family and was sick for two weeks, bu1 sees 25. He has tQ stop ,-m his
friends that they ' ll see them· he came to work every day way 'home at the Red womls
because a family practitioner senior center aero." the
again in the spring.
.
during
flu season doesn ' t street to see four mo re ·
Across the country every
slay
home.
patients and back to the con·
year, between 5 percent and
"I had the e nergy level of a valescent home s in San ·
20 percent of the population
IY54
VW bus going uphill ." Rafael and Tiburon.
will come down with the flu .
he
says.
''Yow just ·hope
His office manager ta ps on·'.
They will miss 70 mill ion
workdays, costing employ- you ' re not giving it back to the door. She's in her coat.
She tells him she's le;iving ·
ers nearly $8 billimi in sick yottr patients."
and to rem ember to dcadbult
·'
On
this
day.
he
is
fully
leave, according to one esti·
recovered.
and
for
the
ne
xt
the door.
mate. The rest of us do what. If he h:.i&gt; the energy. he' ll
ever, we can to · keep their nine hours, he grabs file&gt;
and
examines
patients.
He
put
.in 10 minutes .nn the ·
j;errns away. I've heard of
dashes
out
during
what
he
rowin
g machine at home
JUdges barring anyone with a
call
s
hi
s
·'alleged
lun
ch
while wa tch ing a ··scin feld'1
cold from their courtrooms.
Grocery stores now hand out hou r:' to see more patients at rerun . He'l l have dinner
antibacterial wipes ·for the Marin Convalescent . in around 9 when his wife. a
handles of their carts. Tiburon and Fifth Avenue p'yc hoanal y, t, is fin isltr d
Churches skip holding hands Convalescent in San Rafael. see in£ her la&gt;. t p;1tic1\t.
during prayer through the He knows we're all looking Maybe he 'll play the c l .trin~t
winter months. Politicians for the secret remedy that until around II .
Then. a · few hour' l;,lcr,
slap backs instead of shake. will get us back on our fee l
hy dinnertime.
he'll to·a,t hi s hagel. pour his
hands if they can help it.
"After all these years and coffee and 'tart agai 11 . "ailBut family practitio.ners
pl!lnge headlong every day all the controlled studies , ing for '-~P rin g .
( } nun Rrw r t .~ o cofwnni\'f
into the soupy swirl of there's not much · mnre
germs. armed onl y \vith &lt;t tllt known abou t the common (or til( . s·on Frond vc'o
vaccine and an immune 'Y'- cold and the flu than v. he n I Chn111iclr•. Send COJI/!111'1/ f.\'
tcm that they hope over the &gt;I anet.!... Dr. Pu&gt;ner "t" . !rJ her 11/ .("UI'(' r~f th'i'· ll( ' ll '\"f't'· ·
years has bui It up some "Chi cken soup i&gt;as effectt\ c . f'l ~ r o r .\ end her e ~ mntl or
resi stance. Sti ll , no one a' anything." IHi &gt; tavnni L' inannnn(a \(chrnnidr com. )

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Cheney accidentally shoots fellow hunter·in Texas
Terry Ashbum

,

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom ,
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government .for a redress of grievances.

www .mydailysentinel.com

Deaths

Monday, Feb~ary 13, 20~!

Submission is all in your dhimmitude

The Daily Sentinel

READER'S

'

~onday,February13,2oo6

.

AP Photo

Attorney Harry Whittington, 78, is sho.wn in his office in Austin, Texas. on Jan. 25, 2005.
Whittington was accidentally shot by Vice President Dick Cheney during a hunting trip, Saturday.
24 hour&gt;. and then only after another hunter got out of the
it was reported locally by the vehicle to shoot at a covey
Corpus Christi Caller-Times of quail.
Whittington shot a bird and
on its Web site Sunday.
Katharine Armstrong, the went to retrieve it in the tall
ranch's owner, said Sunday . grass, while Cheney and the
that Cheney was using a 28- third .hunter walked to anothgal!ge shotguti and that er spot and discovered a secWhittington was about 30 t;md covey.
yards away when he was hit
Whittington "came up from
in the cheek, neck and chest. behind the vice president and
. Each··ef the · hunters was -the other hunter and didn' t
wearing a bright orange vest signal them or indicate to
at the time, Armstrong told them or announce himself,"
reporters at the ranch about Armstrong sai d..
60 miles southwest of Corpus
"The vice president didn't
Christi. She said Whittington see hin\ ." she continued.
was "alert and doing fine."
"The covey flushed and the
Armstrong
told
The vice president picked out · a
Associated Press emergency bird and was following it and
perstmnel traveling · with shot. And by god, Harty was
Cheney tended to Whittington in the line of tire and got pepbefore an ambulance - rou- . pered pretty good."
tinely on call because of the
Whittington has been a privice president's presence vate practice attorney in
took ·him to a hospital .in Austin since I950 and has .
Kingsville. From . there. long been active i·n Texas
Whittington was flown by Republican politics . . He 's
helicopter to Corpus Christi been appointed to several
about 40 miles away.
stale boards. including when
· Cheney's spokeswoman, then' Gov. George W. Bu sh
Lea Anne McBride, said the named him to the Texas
vice president met with Funeral Service Commission.
Whittington at the hospital on
McBride said the vice presiSunday. Cheney "was pleased dent's office did ·not tell
to see that he 's doing tine and reporters about the accident
in good spi rits.'' she said . .
Saturday because they were
Armstrong said she was deferring to Armstrong to hanwatching from a car while dle the announcement of what
Cheney. Whittington and happened on her property.

Armstrong, owner of the
Armstrong Ranch where the
accident occurred , said
Whittington was bleeding
afte r he was shot and Cheney
was very apologetic .
"It broke the ski n," she said
of the shotgun pellet s. "It
knocked him silly. But he was
tine . He was talking ..His eyes
were open. Jt didn't get in his
eyes or anything like that,.
"Fortunately, the vice president has got a lot of medicaJ
people around him and so
they were right there and
probably more cautious than
we would have been," she
said . "The vice president has
got an ambulance on call, so
the ambulance came."
.
Cheney is· an avid hunter
who makes annual trips to
Sout~ Dakota to hunt pheasants . He also travels frequently to Arkansas to hunt ducks;
among other places.
,
Arn1 strong said Cheney is a
longtime friend who comes to
the ranch to hunt about once a
year and is ··a very safe sportsman." She sai d Whittington is
a regular. too. but she thought
it was the first time the two
men hunted together.
"Thi s is so mething that
happens from time to time.
You know, I've been peppered pretty well· myself,"
said Armstrong.

·screening
from PageA1

screenin g. Participants are
required to receive both the
PSA and DRE to ensure an
accurate assess ment .
Tne cause of prostate cancer is unknown. but certain
risk factors arclinked to the
disease.
The c~ance of gelling
prostate cancer goe s up as a
man gets older it . is recommended . For unknown reasons , prostate cancer is more
common an1ong African- ·
American men than among
white men. Men \vith close
family members (father or
brother) who have ha(l
prostate ca ncer are more
likelY. to get it them&gt;el ves.
especially if their relatives
were young when they got
the disease.
Men who eat a lot of red
meat
or a lot of high-fat dairy
Proposed alternatives for the Long Bottom vicinity project
"
products seem to itave a
greater chance of getting ·
the decision -making process through Feb. 24, 2006.
''It is early in the project prostate cancer. These men
of se le cting the preferred
development proce ss. but also tend to eat fewer fruit s
alternative. Filson said.
and vegetable&lt;. The best'
ODOT encourages any that is exactly why public advice is to eat five or more
from Page A1
interested comrimnity member input is so valuable at this servings of vegetabl es anp
lowing the rock cliff. This to forward comments regard- point in . the project," said fruits each day and to eat less
alternative will remove the· ing thi s project to District I0 Collin s. "It is important for red meat and high -fat dairv
majority of 124 out of the · Deputy Director George M. us ·. to hear from those who · products . Getting ·enough
Collins by mail at: 338 travel this area regularly. exercise and maintaitJing a
100-year flood plain.
• Alternative D: Relocate Muskingum Drive. Marietta. Public feedback helps us to healthy weight may help
124 on-top of the· rock cliffs. Ohio 45750: or by e-mail at : make informed deci sions that reduce prostate cancer ri &gt;k,
This alignment follows George.Collins@dot.state.oh . will best serve tl1e communi , but the link it not L'iear. ·
Prostate cancer can be
Mount Olive Road and Swan us. Comments will be received ty in the long run."
R,oad, leaving the existin g
alignment in a few locations
to· smooth 0 ut sharp curves .
This alternative will,remove
the majority of 124 out of the
IOO·year fl ood plain. · .
,Wilhin the next le•\·
months. ODOT will .condu ct
eiwironmenta l studies wit hil)
the two corridor&gt; and further
refine the alternative, . Thi s
·information wil l be .used in
developing a cost c'timate
for each alternative as wdl as
. identifying their impact and
benefit.
This information will be
provided at the · next puhlic
Qitality .~ince 1959
meeting planned lor late
212
Eust
l\1uin
•
Pntn&lt;&gt;rn~·
. Ohiu
sprin g 200(). Public input
740-992-37HS
from the meeting wt ll atd tn

ODOT

Submitted photD

The upcom i'ng Meigs County Health Department's (MCHD)
Men's Health Screening may save a life by detecting prostate
cancer. Pleasant Valley Hospital is providing testinl supplies
and staff to take blood samples for the screening that requires
an· appointment by calling 992·6626. He re Dwight Haskins
makes his appointment fo r the screening with MCHD Assistant
.Administrator Courtney Sim.
treated effect ively. if it i,
detected
earlv.
The
American . Cancer Society
recommends that males have

an annual PSA blood test
beginning at age 50. Men at
high risk should begin testing at age

4~ .

ers

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

OH • 992-3671

�•

.PageA6

LOCAL • STATE

The Daiiy Sentinel

Meigs students place in competition

~onday,

Local Weather

POMEROY - Four Meigs
High School marketing education students placed in the
Southeast District H DECA
competition held at the Old
·Dutch Restaurant in Logan
last week.
C hanning Burge, dau'ghter
of Charles and Penny Burge
of Middleport, placed fourth
in Restaurant and Food
Service Management Series.
Joe Nottingham , son of
Edward
and
Vickie
Nottingham of Racine.
placed
fourth
in . the
Petroleum Marketing Series.
and Bryce Davis and Josh
Buzzard earned the third
mo" poinls in the Sports and
Entertainment
Marketing
Team event.
Dave
DECA advisor.
Kucsma, accomp'anied the
gfoup to Logan.

LocAL SCOREBOARD

February13,2006

Bl

Saturday's gamoa
High school boya bllkelball
Wood County Christian 75, Wahama 55
Eastern 55, Meigs 32

High school glrta beakelball

Today's Forecast
Forecast lor Monday, Feb. 13

City/Region
High I Low temps

Gallia Academy 58, River Valley 37
Waharna 39, Wood County Christian 31
Point Pleasant at Herbert Hoover, ppd

~onda~February13,2006

r,)ldH.

EAsTERN
Toledo•
27" 118'
Youngstown •
30° 118"

-=est Break
'

Dayton o'~
'

.·

t:____:)

33' I 19"

LocAL SCHEDULE

*Columbus

GALLIPOliS- A schedule ol upcoming cOllege
and high school varstty sponing events Involving

' 33 '' 121 ''

teams from Galtia. Me1gs and Mason counties

Mondav'a gam11
Girls Tournament Ba.aketball

Cincinnati

'

• 36~ t21 '

MeiQs vs. Athens (at LOgan H.S.). 7 .p.m.
·South Galli a vs. South em (at Athens H.S.),
6: 15p.m.

Boys Basketball
Wirt County at Wahama, 7:30p.m."
Girls Basketball

Poca at Point Pleasa~t, 7:30 l?·_m.

iii""

L---~

Panly

Cloudy .

Cloudy

B
~-, ; ' /
-.#

Jyesday'a gamn
Boys Basketball

~"'- Tnunder- ~~ Flurries ~-....;,__...._
storms

' ~.,.,

Showers

~

~ ~~~

''''
Ram

~

.:C. ~.Y ...·. ·
.• ·

*

Ice

~~

Gallia Academy vs. River Valley (at Rio
Grande), 8 p.m.

~~·. • • ,

South Gallla at Hannan. 7:30p.m.
Jackson at Point Pleasant, 7:30 p.m.

Wealh&amp;t Underground • ~p

Rio Grande at Shawnee State, 8 p.m.

Snow

College Basketball

Women's College Basketball

Monday.•• Mostly cloudy · 30s. · Southwest winds 5 to
with a 20 percent chance of I 0 mph.
Wednesday
_and
snow showers. Highs in the
mid 30s. West winds ·I 0 to Wednesday night ... Partly ·
1.5 mph with gusts up to 25 · cloudy. Highs in the lower
50s. Lows in the mid 30s.
mph:
Thursday and Thursday
Monday night ... Mostly
cloudv. Cold with lows in the night. .. Mostly cloudy with a
mid :iOs. Southwest wi nds 5 50 percent chance of showers. Highs j2) the upper 50s.
to 10 mph .
Thesday... Partly cloudy. Low s in the upper 30s ..
Friday ... Mostl y doudy
Not as cool .wi th highs in the
mid 40s. Southwest wimls 5 with a 50 percent chance of
to 10 mph with gusts up to 20 showers . Much cooler with
highs i1i the lower 40s :
mph.
Tuesday night ... Mostly Teinperaturc fa ll ing into the
dear. Low s in the lower upper 30s in 1he afte rnoon.

Joe Nottingham

Channing Burge

Observers: ()hio lobbying laws
hard to enforce, full of loopholes
COLUMBUS (AP) - A tions on can:tpaign contribustate official in charge of reg- . tions from those who hold
istering lobbyists says Ohio state contracts ..
. Ohio has had a law on the
law s governing lobbying and
disclosure are difficult to books for 30 years that bans
enforce and con!ain loop- agencies from awarding large
holes that' allow violators to unbid contracts to companies
avoid penalties.
· · whose. owners donated
Tony Bledsoe, the state leg- $ 1,000 or more in the prior
islative inspector general, two years to the · politiCian
said Blockbuster Inc. movie overseeing the agency.
But no one has formally
rental stores have more power
alleged
.a violation of the Ia~
to enforce their late-return
policies than he does to in recent years, said Phi lip
· enforce some lobbying laws.
Richter. executive director of
Ohio
Elections
Despite being ranked .lith- the
best in the nation by the Commission.
Washington-based Center for
Richter said he isn't even
Public Integrity, Ohio's. lob- sure if the law applies to the
bying· laws.ate only strong on age ncies, the companies or
paper, observers say.
both .
"It's frus trati ng that when . Confusion about the lobbypeople GOmplete·Jy fai I to ing laws is common because
comply with Ohio lobbying ·legislators l)nd. lobbyists are
laws we don 't have the required to submi t fi{lancial
administrative au thority to disclosure forms at different
remedy
the
situation." times and ru les vary on what
Bledsoe said.
must be reported. For examFor example. two compa- ple. reporting requiremenis
nies th at employ lobbyists begin at. $50 for meals. but
did not fi le the required S25 for gifts.
forms · detailing lobbying
Sen. Marc Dann . a
.activities last year, but they Youngstown Democrat who
were able to register and con- has called for stricter lobbytinue lobbying at the begin- ing laws. said .gifts are not the
ning of 2006, Bledsoe said.
biggest problem.
Bledsoe ·said he couldn't
fine the companies because ·
they have to be officiall y
notified of the offense first,
and they both refused the certified letters he sent . Even if
he could punish them, the
maximum fine is $ 1()()
·
Gov. Bob Taft, stung by
disclosure rules last August
for failing to report severa I
gifts, has proposed banning
any gifts to statewide 'officials, department heads and
. their employees from lobbyists and consultants. seeking
to influence state contracts.
Taft was convicted of four
misdemeallj)r ethics violations
for the unreported gifts, which
'included rounds of golf from
Tom Noe. the ~epublican
fundraiser given $50 million
.to invest in rare coins by the
state insurance fund for
injured workers. About $ 13
million of that investment i&gt;
unaccounted for.
Democrats .have seized on
the scandal to call for restric-

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Hannan at Hamlin, 7·30 p.m

PREP WRESTLING

Meigs is
seventh at
TVCmeet

Attention:
Basketball
coaches

Ohio Valley Publi&gt;hing
(Gallipolis Daily Tribune, The
Daily Sentinel and Point
Plea sa nt
Register) is
· curre ntl y
co ll ecting
.
ba sketball
season statisti cs and nominalions for OVP 10 and AP All District.
As soon as your team plays
its tinal regular season game.
please send us. your informa-.
tion.
You can fax to (740) 4463008, or email them . to:
sports@ myda ilyt1;ibune.com.
Deadline
is ·Monday.
February 27.

Phone -

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Medical Excellence.

Local Caring:

BY BRYAN WALTERS

'

BWALTERS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE .COM

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern had a simple goal
Saturday in its countyrivalry matchup with vislting Meigs - . prove it
could win without Nathan
Cozart.
The . Eagles not only
s howed thai they could
prevail
without
the
senior 's 28.6 points-pergame
average,
they
demonstrated rather convincingly during a 55-32
pounding
of
the
Marauders '(1-18) in TVC
non-conference action.
Eastern ( 11 -8) started
~:.-_-..,~
-~:~:,~~ the game
-.,..,. with an
11 -0 run
a n d
;~
i· ,, "'' 'i~" qui ck ly
;~--),
~~j- jumped
out. to a
13-4 first
;·&lt;·.'
quarter
advan\
tage, then
Owen
forced

...

~

BY SCOTT WoLFE
SPQRTS CORRE SPONDENT

'-·

·~ I

~7 . .~;

n

1

n e

BRIEFS

Fax -

Dr. Reaves is oortified tJy the American Board of

Waterford
winsTVC
·Hocking
outright

Eagles soar past Marauders

turnovers and allowed
o nly five shot attempts in a
pivotal second quarter that
gave the hosts a comfortable 27-,14 halftime edge.
The Maroon and Gold
battled back to within six
STAFF REPORT
points (27-21) three min:
SPORTS@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM '
utes into the third quarter,
but the guests would never
' WATERFOiW
come closer.
Nelsonville· York won a pair
The Green and White
of we ight classes and t'in·
reeled off the next nine
ished at least second in six
points and closed out the
others en rou te to the .Trifinal 4:25 of the third periValley
Co nfere nce
od on a 15-5 run for a
commanding 42-26 ·lead
wrestling c h iunpio~ s hip on
headed down the stretch.
Saturday.
.
MHS · went without .. a
Tire ~ Buckeyes ' amassed-·
field goal (0-for-10) over
203 points followed by
the
final eight minutes and
Belpre with 159 and Vinton
the
Eagles closed strong
Cou'nty with 12 1. Host
with a 13-6 run to secure
Waterford (97) was fourth ·
.
the
23-point triumph .
followed by Trimble (72).
Afterward
EHS coach
Wellston (60.5) and Meigs
Caldwell
was most
Howie
(54.5).
pleased to see his team
Any Legg and Cassidy
respond
in such a positive
Wilford were the top indifashion,
especially early
vid ual placers · fo r the
o
n.
Maraude rs. Legg was se:c"We got out to a good
.o nd in the 130-pound class
rhythm at the start and it
and Wilford was second in
seemed to stay with us the ·
the Heavyweight di vision .
rest of the evening," he
Meigs goes to Athens on
said. " It w~ a great team
Friday and· Saturday to comeffort and tt · was a verv
pete in the Division II secimportant wi!1 for us." ·
tional tourni'ment.
Converse ly.
Meigs
coach Travis Abbott was
not as impressed with hi s
own club's performance.
"Everything that could
go wrong . went wrong .. We
couldn 't take care of the
ball, we couldn't make

.CONTACfS

,.

55 I MEIGS :J2

(7 40) 446-2342, ext 23
bwalters~m~Oallytnbune

com

Larry Crum, Spor1s Wriler

(740) 446·2342. exl 33

Ierum@ mvdaily r eg1~ter c~m

Please see Eagles, Bl

'
Bryan Walters/photo

Eastern's Nathan Carroll releases a jumper between Meigs· defenders Andy Kinnan (24) and
Eric VanMeter (20) dunng the first quarter of Saturday's contest in Tuppers Plains.

RACINE - It waiin 't without an early ti ght, but the
Waterford Wildcats claimed
the Tri -Valley Conference
Hocking Oivision title .cMright
with a 70-35 win over the
Southern Lad y Tornadoes
Saturday night during girls
varsity make-up action.
Waterford placed II players
in the scorin g column, led by
Hope King with 14 points and
. 12 rebounds for a double-double, Jocelyn Lang with II ,
Britany
Brown nine.
Bethany
Amrine nine,
Angela
Martin
seven, Jessi
Drayer eight,
Chantal Kern
three. Lauren
Greene four,
Kaitlyn
Williams
Stewart two,
Tiffany
Wallace two. and Ashleigh
Tornes one. Senior Haley
Drayer was out with a
sprained ankle.
Southern · was led by
. Kri stiina Williams with eleven ·
· points, sophomore Sarah Eddy
nine, Whitney Wolfe-Riffle
six, Virginia Brickles three,
Linda Eddy two , As hley Robie
two. and Rachael Pickens two.
Southern took .an early lead
and stuck to its game plan, a
strategy that left Waterford
struggling and eventually
forced a time · out midway
through the frame with
Southem ,leading 6, 2.
Southern led 8-6. but an
Angela Martin tllree . pointer
gave Waterford its first lead at
9-8 with 2:30 left .in the initial
·. round . Southern led I 0-9 then
Waterford went on to leads of
15-10 and 17-12, the score at
the end of. the tirst round.
Although Southern had
Waterford reeling and · in foul
trouble . Southern played
timidly in the. second round.
The resul t was Waterford
hlasted to an 1.8-6 second period to lead 35-18 at the intermission.
The second half was academic , although Southern did
make a minor run early in the
third quaner that cut the lead
to II . The rest of the game
belonged to Waterford. who
flex ed its muscle and showed
· its true championship form.
Southem hi t 12-of-5 ~ o,·erall. hitting 11 -of-45 twos, 1of-9 threes. and I0-of-20 at the ,

Please see TVC. B1

NASCAR I DAYI'ONA 500

Burton wins .Daytona pole
BY MIKE HARRIS

AssociATED PREss
DAYTONA BEACH. Fla.
Richard Chi ldress locked
Jeff Burton in a bearhug and
didn't want to let go.
The NASCAR Nextel Cup
team owner made a big finah cial and emotional investment
during the winter to get hi s
team back to the sport's top
echelon. The changes paid
.their first dividend Sunday,
with Burton putting hts
Richard Childress Racing
Chevrolet on the pole for the
Daytona 500.
"It's big.'' said Burton, who
hadn't won ,a pole in more than
five years. ''Hopefull y. it's
another sign that thi~ team is
gett ing ready to turn things
around."
Childress had one of the
strohge't teams in the .sport
untillongt tme driver and friend
Dale E;u·t.thardt was k1lled in a
crash dunng the 2001 Daytona
500. Kevin Harvick had a good
s~aso ~ for RCR after replacmg
. E.rrnhardt the followmg Week
~t R(x:kmgham,. but the team
has . 'lfuggled 111 the yea rs
~

..

-··-

--

since.
Daytm\a 500 winner Jeff
Childress was detem1ined to Gordon. one of the last drivers
turn thi ngs around, making to take to the track on the
numerous personnel changes windy aften:10un. came close to
and radically· improving the knocki ng Burton's Chevrolet
team's equipment since the end otT the top spot with a lap of
ol the 2005 season. Th1s was · IRR.877 in a Hendrick
the first big test.
Motors ports Chevrolet.
'' Yeah. it' s . emotional."
Harv1.: k. the star of the
Childress said. "We've strug- team's driving t'rio. was among
gle&lt;;l for the last few years. the fastest in practice· oli
We ·ve got to put 1t all together Saturday and wa' one of the
.and we've got to stait win- favorites to win the pole. llut
ning."
· he wound up 13th in qualifyBurton out ran 57 other com- ing. Teammate' Burton and
petitors to eam the top •tarting rookie Clint Bm\ yer both
spot for the Feb. 19 race. his made it into the top I0, though.
third career pole and lirst , ;nee
BoV.yer led the large 2006
the fall 2000 race in fir,t -y ear .:Ia" at 187.7R6.
Richmond .. when he was dri- good for sevcmh.
vin~ for Roush Racing.
"RCR has alway' been_prct- .
His tasl lap nl 189. 1·51 mph ty )!Olld at plate ranng, the
on a windy. .:hilly day at you ngstc'r sa1d.
Daytona
International
NASC AR requires horseSpeedway was the taste,lqual- poweHapping
,·arburetor
ityin g run on the 2.5-mile. restrict or plates at Daytona and
high-banked oval \i nc~ Dale Talladega to keep the cars
Jarrett's . 191.0lJI itJ Fehnwry under :'00 mph .in the intere-t
2000.
.
of ,afL'I'
"We knew we had a fast .:ar
Burt,in·, 'uccess in Sunday\
· yesterday. we just didn't kno" qualifymg c;unc·as no surprise
hov,. tast these other' guy' r~ al - tn the pole "mner. .
ly wac." Burton-,aid.
NASCAR auto racmg driver Jeff Burton. nght.
Three-lime anJ defcnJing
Please see Burton, Bl
CG!f owner Richard Childress 111 VICtor y lane .
''

AP photo
IS

hugged by

�Page B2' • The Daily Sentinel

~onday,Februaryt3,2006

www .mydailysentinel.com

Monday, February 13, 2006

Reds trying to fiX pitchirtg in Florida

- Sentinel - l\egi1)ter
CLASSIFIED

BY JOE KAY
r

team .

"If ~ II the stars !me up,
we're gomg to have a pttchfng staff that's a lot better
than it was last year,"
Castellini sa'id at ht s introductory news conference last
month.
The problem There aren ' t
enough stars on thts staff to
form a !me.
"It's pretty obvious where
we were on pitchmg last
year," said Krivsky. who
joined the team Wednesday.
"I think it's pretty common
knowledge that the pitching
needs to tmprove."
But can tt 0
The Reds wt ll start getttng
an answer Thursday, when
pitchers and catchers report
to camp tn Sarasota, Fla.
They'll be mtercsted to see
how
right-hander Paul
Wt! son ts recovering from
shoulder surgery. They'll be
curi ous about how left-hander Dave Wt!hams fits tnto
the rotation. · .
And. they· II be trymg to
tigure out how to make sense
out of a bullpen that wasn't
much better than the rotatton
last year.
It all starts with Wilson,
who tried to pnch through
pain last season and went I-5
with a 7. 77 ERA before he
had surgery June I7 for a torn
'rotator cuff and labrum .
Wilson asked trainer Mark
Mann to go to Sarasota early
to supervtse his rehabtlttation .
"Paul ts such a btg part of
our team and our pitchmg
staff, you couldn 't say anything but yes," Mann said
"Tht s was something that had
to be done."
Wtlson has been throwing
fastballs and butldmg arm
strength. Earher thts month,
Wtlson esttmated that he was
about halfway back to full
strength, hoping to be ready
for the start of the regular
season Ht s spnng trammg
performance wtll dectde that

r

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

~ribune

ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI 'Bob
Castelhni has owned the
Cmcmnatt Reds tor less than
a month. Wayne Knvsky has
been thetr general manager
for less than a week. Both
newcomers know exactlv
what needs to happen when
their team opens camp this
week.
Somebody has to do something about that pitching
staff
It doesn't take much time
to figure that the Reds wt ll go
as far as their pttching takes
them. Last year, it took them
to a tifth straight Josmg season - their longest slump in
50 years.
The pitching staff already
was on Castel!tm's tmnd the
day he took control of the

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Bryan Walters/photo
Metgs ' Aaron Cordell relea ses a short Jumper over Eastern
defender Derek Roush dunng the second half of Saturday's
contest tn Tuppers Plains.

Eagles.
fromPageBl

SOURCE
Major League
Baseball

"Sometill)eS yo u want to
get out o! Dodge when
you ' re there." Williams said.
"Like Coors Field, it's the
same game. You want to keep
the ball down."
The Reds also need a
rebound season from Jefthander Eric Milton, who is
coming 'off a horrifie tirst
year in Cincinnati. He went :
8-15 with a 6.47 ERA- the
second-hi ghest in NL history
for any player w1th 30 starts.
Milton also leci' the maJors by
givi ng up 40' ho111ers.
In hts first spnng traming
as the Reqs manager, Jerry
Narron wtl! have to try to
make some sense out of the
bullpen. whtch had the
fewest saves and gave up the
second- most runs in the NL.
Opponents hit .288 off the
bullpen last season, the ht ghest average in the majors.

David Weathers became
the closer after Danny
Graves was let go m May.
and Jed the bullpen with I 5
saves. The Reds added leftbander Chris Hammond and
n ght-hander Rick White m
an offseason overhaul.
An offense that led the
league in scoring last season
returns virtually intact The
most notable change is Adam
Dunn moving from the outtie!d to tirst base, Casey's
vacated spot. Newcomer
Tony Womack plans to chal'lenge Rich Aurilia for the job
at second base.
Otherwise, it's all about the
pitching. It if can improve,
the Reds think they can be
competittve.
"We 're lookmg at the glass
as half-full," Castellini said.

No. 19 Buckeyes upset No. ,10 Illinois
BY RUSTY MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS - It dtdn ' t take any
late drama thts ttme
Jamar Butler ' scored 22 poonts,
Terence Dtal s had I 9 and 15 rebounds
and Je' Kel Foster I8 pomt s to lead No.
19 Ohto State to a 69-53 victory over
No. 10 Illinois on Sunday.
A year after ruining .top-ranked
Illinois' perfect, 29-0 season on Matt
Sylvester's 3-pomter wtth 5.1 seconds
left, the Buckeyes rehed on thetr outside
marksmanship and Dials' muscle inside
to win their fourth game 111 a row and
remain in a virtual tie for first place tn
the Big Ten.
The Buckeyes (I 8-3. 7-3) htt I 3-ot-23
3-potnters three days after.makmg 15of-24 in a vtctory at No 22 Michigan. It
was the first time in five years Ohio
State had heaten two ranked opponents
1n the same week
Dee Brown scored I 2 potnts to lead
lllinoi s (20-4. 6-4) but was stymied all
day by Ohio State' s suffocating pressure James Augustme added II points
- all in the first halt - and 13
rebounds.
In a matchup of the Btg Ten 's top
offenstve (Oh to State) and detenstve
(lllmois) teams. the Buckeyes excelled
at both ends. The lllmt shot only 37 percent from the fteld and. desptte a hetght
advantage. were outrebounded 36-32.
After building an I I-point lead at the
half. the Buckeyes didn't vary from
thetr approach m the openmg minutes
of the 'econd half Foster stole the ball
on Jllinoo s' ftrst possesston by diving
over the llltm bench and mto the first
row of tans. the hall gomg tn Butler
who pulled up to htl a 3 wtth , two
defenders between htm and the ba;ket
and no [Cam mate on · h ts halt ot the

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

court .
The next time OhiO State had the ball,
Butl er htt another.
The Buckeyes led 53-32 after Ron
Lewis' 3 at the I3 40 mark, making the
Buckeyes I 2-of-17 on 3s But lllinois
began to make head ':'lay wtth freshman
Chester Fra zter dogging Foster, and
frustratmg htm wtth hi s phystcal play.
Frazter htt two foul shots with 9:46
left to cap a 12-0 run - Brown scored
five points, Frazter fo ur and Rtch
McBride three - th at cut the lead to
53-44 and quieted a raucous, capac tty
crowd.
Ohto State, dormant on otfense for
more than 4 mmutes. responded with a
I0-0 run that ended with Foster hmmg
a fallaway 3 from the right corner for a
16-poi nt lead with 7 1/2 minutes left.
The lllim continued to attack but
never cou l&lt;;l fi_nd a crack 111 the
Buckeyes defense, with Butler shadowtng Brown wherever he went
Brown htt just 5-of- I 3 fteld- goal
attempts
Ohio State is tied w1th Iowa. each
team wtth three losses 111 Btg Ten pia¥,
although the Hawkeye s haye played
one more game
The Buckeye s tmproved to 9-0 when
they htt at least etght shots behind the
arc. They did that by halftime. Jeadmg
37-26 at the break
, In the first half. Foster htt all ftve of
hi s shots behind the arc foo 15 pomts
Butler made both of hts tor the
-Buckeyes, who were 8-of- I 2 When the
llltm dtd match up wtth Ohto State's
penmeter shooters, th~ ball went into
Dials, who had sub-par efforts in three
of hts last live games. He had I 3 points
and seven rebounds to balance out
Augustine's I I potnts and "x bo,trds
The Bucke yes led 3 1- I6 alter Foster
and Butler each htt back -to-back 3,

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c~:

"I know what's expected of
me," said Wilson, 33. " It's
not like I'm a young kid anymore. There are responstbi!tties and there are obligations,
not only to me and my famt- ·
ly. but to thts orgamzation
and this team. I want to live
up to that."
Williams is the newcomer,
obtamed from Pittsburgh in a
trade for popular tirst baseman Sean Casey. A spot in
the rotation opened when the
Reds let Ramon Ortiz leave
after one disappointing season.
Wtlltams went 10-11 tor
the Ptrates last season with a
4.4 I ERA in 25 ~tart s He
also gave up 20 homers, and
knows he has to be careful in
Great American Ball Park,
whtch yielded the most
homers m the maJors last season.

..

Offtee !!oar~
0

.. c(&gt;Untr. O li

Ohio State women
defeatlowa,SS-77
COLU MB US - Iowa did everythm g tt needed to do when it had the
ball aga in st No. 7 Ohto State in a
match up of the Big Ten's top offenses.
·
The Hawkeyes JUSt couldn ' t slow
down the Buckeye s on the other end
of the court.
Brandie Hoskins and Jesstca
Davenport keyed a second-half run
that broke open a close game and
sent Ohto State to an 88-77 wm
Sunday.
"Usuall y when you shoot 56 percent (overall ) and 53 percent from 3pomt range and score 77 pomts, you
win," Iowa coach Lisa Bluder satd .
"But we dtdn 't do well enough
defen sively at cructal times or
rebound the ball as we ll as we needed to."
With the score lied at 50 nearly 5
mmute s after halfttme. Ho sktns
scored six pomts and Dave nport had
!tve as the Buckeye s outscored the
Hawk eyes 20-9 over the next 7 minut es
Iowa hun g around, twtce cutt tng
Ohto State's lead to SJX, but lOu ldn't
get any closer desp tte shootm g 56
percent tram the fte!d
Ohio State made its ftrst I I shots.
but Iowa stayed 111 it by mak ing
seven of its ftrst I0. The Buckeyes
shot 7 I percent in the first half. outdotng Iowa's 63 perce nt
"I thtnk (the ~uckeyes) lei! mto a
mmdsel of thtnktng rt would be easy.
but we know that Iowa ha ' a great
offenSJve basketball team and that
they would answer we do," Ohto
State coach Jim Foster said

Jay-ups and our shot percentage was horrible," Abbott
commented "We never got
in a game flow and we never
recovered from that start "
The btggest blow to the
Marauders came at 5:07 in
the second quarter, when center David Poole picked up hi s
third foul on an offenstve
charge. Poole was assessed a
technical for disputing the
call and weot to the bench
with four tirst half fouls. ·
Poole didn't return until the
tina!' frame and fou Jed out
with 5:04 remaining m the
contest.
Eastern connected on I 8of-38 floor shots for 47 percent in the triumph, while the
guests shot JUSt I0-of-39
from the field for 26 percent.
The hosts also htt half (Iof- 2) of their 3-point
attempts and sank I 8-of-28
charity tosses for 64 percent.
Meigs mtssed all li ~e of its
shots from behmd the arc and
were 12-of- 22 at the fo ul !me·
for 55 percent.
The Eagles also outrebounded Meigs 25- I 7 overall

Burton
fromPageBl
"After we tested down here
(in January), I went home and .
told my wtfe, 'You know, we
have a shot at the pole m
Daytona.' She satd I was
crazy," smd Burton,t whose

on! y vtctory dt Daytona came
m the July race in 2000 "But
we were a httle lucky, too We
caught the wmd JUSt nght 1
looked up and saw one !lag
was almost Jaymg t1at and the
other one was blowmg across
the track I thought . 'Thts
could be btg.'"
Only the top two qualifiers
locked 111 starting postttons m
the 500 The rest of qualitymg
results are used to set the lineups for Thursday's two I50mtle qualtfymg races.
The top 35 teams m last
year's standmgs are guaranteed starting positions m the
race, Je'avmg just etght post- ·
ttons tor the rest of the entnes.
The two top-finishing nonqualified dnvers !rom each of
the Thursday 's races wtll
make the field. Hlong wtth the
fas test remammg dnvers Irom
Sunday's ttme tnals
Robert Yates Racmg teammates Jarrett and Elliott Sadler
JUSt mtssed the front tow wtt h
laps of 188 849 and I 88 810

TVC
from Page 81
•

line. Southern had onl y 26
rebounds (Sarah Eddy 5,
Williams 4), 8 steals (Eddy
three) 23 turnovers, five
asst&gt;ts iVBnck les 3 J, and 24
fouls

and R- 7 on the offensive
glass

Mtchael Owen led all players wtth I') pomts and stx
rebounds for EHS . Alex
McG rath was ne xt w ith 12
markers , Bryc~ Honaker
chipped in · I0 and Nathan
Carroll added stx to the
win.
Andy Kinnan paced the
Marauders wtth mn e potnts.
whtl e both .Poole and Aaron
Cordell contributed seve n
apiece to the setback.
Corde ll also had a teamhtgh five caroms
. Metgs salvaged a split
v,ith a 43-24 ~ ictory in the
junior varsity ttiL ·
' C hns Goode led MHS
and all scorers with 16
points. while Jordan Kimes
paced the Eagles with seven
markers The Marauders led
17-9 at the half
Metgs plays tts regular
season final6 Fnday when
it trave ls to Albany to take
on Alexande t 111 a TVC
Ohto contest. Game ttme ts
slated for 6:30p.m.
Eastern return s to action
Frid ay when it ho sts
Federal Hockmg on sen ior
night Ttp-off of the TVC
Hocking ftna le is scheduled
for 6:30p.m.
m a patr of new Ford Fustons
They were followed by
Gordon's teammate Jtmmie
Johnson at I 88 762 m a Chevy
&lt;md Bobby Labonte . makmg
his first start for Petty
Enterprises. at 187.935 111 a
.
Dodge.
Among the other bi g names,
top 2005 rookie Kyle Busch
was IOth, followed 111 II th by
older brother and former senes
champton Kurt Busch, makmg
his debut for Penske Ractng
South. Reigmng Cup champton Tony Stewart was I8th,
2005 runner- up Greg Btftle
25th, thi rd-place Carl Edwards
26th and fan favorite Dale
Earnhardt Jr.. 39th
The fastest of the dn vers not
guaranteed a starting position
was two-time Daytona 500
wmner Btll Elliott. eighth at
187 715 Travis Kvapil and
Hermte Sadler. 19th and 20th.
were next tastest among the
entnes who must dnve into the
race
Those three wtll make the
4 3-car fie ld, either by racmg 111
on Thursday or because ot
thetr qualtfy mg speeds
To,yo-time Cup champton
Terry f..abonte. v,ho qualified
28th. ts also guaranteed a spot.
If he doesn't make 11 m. one of
the top 14 m his quaiifymg
race, he wt ll get th e 43rd spot
ds the most recent serie s
champton not 111 the top 35 111
pmnts
Waterford hit 25-of-55 overall httting 24-ot-50 for nearly ·
50 percent on twos. I-of-5
threes . and 19-ol -3 1 at the
line. Waterford IMd 38
rebounds (Kmg 12 ). e t~ht
steals. 16 turnovers, six asSists
dnd I R louis
There IV .ts no resetve game.
Southc1 n plays South Gallta
111 the SectHHial Tournament at
Athens at 6 15 Monday mght.

-·-------.---...-: ___.____ _ __:_________________________!.,___..,,
_
•

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These rte111~
To Help Get
\'\\01 \(I \II\ l..,

i

ANNOUN(.'£MENrs

r

!Jearl/1ir~

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

All Dlapl•y : 12 Noon 2

Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Dav•s Paper
Sunday In- Column: 1 :00 p . m .
.f!rl;dav For Sunday• Paper

Bualn••• Daya Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dlapl•v= 1:00 p . m .
Thuraday for Sunday•

• All ads must be prepaid•

• SUirt Your Ads With A Keyword • lndude Complete

De1crlptlon e Include A Price e Avoid Abbreviation•
• Include Phone Number And AddreSI When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Day•

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1 L.~--lii:ill:,_-" ""'r==-..,
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I \ ll'ltn\11 \I
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·

POUCIES · OhiO Yallty Publlthlng rtMf'\181 tht rig ht to ec111. reject. or e~~ncelany ad at any tune. Error• mutt be reported on tM flrat day of
Trlbune-SentlneJ..Regla.t., w11i be , ..pontlble for no more than the cot! of lt1e tptce occupied by the ernK alld only the tiral maertlon Wt tht11 not be
t ny lots or tllptnu thll1 rnuNt rrom the publication or omlttlo n of an adver1itement Correctton Will be made In the rirat ava ilable edttton • Bo• -,wopoo~; l
ere alWays eonlldantla.l. • Current rala card appll" • All real a.t.lte advertltaments are tUbJect to the Federal Fair Hou1111Q Act of 1968 • Th•• '"
acc..,tt only halp want ... ad. mntlng EOE tlandardt We will not
I I
a'ny advertiSing In violation of the law

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

r"o

Wolf Run Ad near Buckeue
'
Aural&amp; Southwestern Elem
Call Pal1y (740}379-9145
Lost Border-Collie around
Lyons
Add
Mason
Answers, 10 Oreo Mate,
rTeutered&amp;mtSSiflg bottomMalnlv
front
tooth
1

bla~&amp;whlte w/some brown
on back paws Has been
mlssmg
s•nce
app rox
begtnnmg ..,.of Jan
Often
seen at Walmart
If you
have any/info Please call-

t304)773-6061 m (304)5931'857
Sadly mos sed by
Owners &amp; Children

r

WA!\TFD

Lw-ll li--iili--,.1
TO BUY

b

A solute Top Dollar U S

Si l"er and Gold Co1ns
•
Proofsets Gold Aongs Pre
'
•
·
t 935
US
Currency

Sotttatre Diamonds- M TS
Com Shop. 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-446-

_28_4_2_______
Wanted To Buy
Metgs
Cou nty Store Scnpl Store
TOkens and currency from
Rac 1ne
Pomeroy
and
Middleport Banks 740-9926040
.....,.--....,...--.,---,

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We W1nt
I 888 582 3345
IH\IISI\11

Shop Cl' assif'ledS

CLASSIFIED INDEX

675·1429

It:&gt; 2006 by NEA, In c

www.comlcs.com

SOtool.s
INsnUJCI10N
Gallta County Counctl on
Ag1ng
ts
aeek1ng
an
Executtve
D•rector
Aesponstbtl lltes
mclude
tmpleme('llaMn ot pohctes
and programs, staff employmenUi:levelopment
fiscal
management ,
proposal
preparation, program evalu·
abon, ma1ntam rela!IOnshtps
w1th other agenc•es , 9)(·0ffi·
c•o member of
County
Council

A new career m
Medical Office
AdmlnlatreHon
starts wtth career
tra1mng @
GelllpoUa Career
CDIIIQt
(740}446-4367
800·214-0452

Help wanted at the Darst
Adult
Group
Home ,

(7 40)992 -5023

-------Home Health Agency lookmg for Full· T1me AN,
General Hours Mon-Frt Day
Shift We oHer beneftts such
as vacatiOn and health CI!~-"11~2;,;.74
;::B;,__ _.,
•nsurance
Please
call r=IUii
W

1 06

acres

$6 2 000

3BR 2 lull bath 1 900 sq tt
ful l basement
2 car
attached t~arage 3 acres
Chester Townsht p, Eastern
school d•stnct Ott Rt 7 near
Memonal Gardens Calf
'(740}985 -4321 aHer Spm

4 bedroom 1 5 bmh 5 mm
to Holzer hospital S850 plus
deposit &amp; uttt111es 1740)256

8152
--------

4br
1n
Syracuse
$600fmonth &amp; Deposit
Water/Sewer included , No
Pets (304 )675-5332

pels (740)440·3945
New Haven, WV
4
Bedroom. 2 Bath 2 Ca
9arage
Outbu1ld1ngs
Fl.ose to town PRICED
0 SELL ' Code 6505 o

a) l (304)882 3368
IHome of DlsllncfiOn 3 bed
oom 3 bath 2 acres . ~
ar 2 story unattachec
arage gas well 1f ree gas
Rutla nd
OH
Cal
740 ) 740 3230
V'-PPO•ntment s on ly CodE
306

320 M01111 f. HOM~
tuRS,\LE

38A, 2 Car attached Garage
on

Rmr

5 rooms and bath stove and
rel r1gerator 44 Olive St
$385/mo
$385/dep , no

,V 1ew photoSI•nfo online.

3 4bd partial brtclo; house
7acres 646 Sand Htlt Ad
PI Plea sant Needs som~
repa 1r S75 ooo (740 )388

(304)675-8331

Home LtStmgs
home by call1ng

~our

(740)446-3620

8366

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
BEUEVE ITt
An nouncemenl.. ......................................... 030 1 ·
Antlques ....................................................... 530
Work for a local company
Apartments lor Rent ................................... 440
that offers a professional
emmonment With career
Auction and Flea Market.. ...........................OBO
adilacement oppor1untt1es
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
·:.Week(y Pay + Bonus
Auto Repair .................................................. no
·:.Full
Benef•ts at 90 days
Autos for Sale ..............................................710
&gt;!· Pa1d on-stte Tratn1ng
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ..,.......................... 750
•:.0 Plus much more
Building Supplies ........................................550
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Interested Appl1cants Call
Business Opportunity................................. 21 o
Bachelors degree 1n Soctal
(740)446-7442
Serv1ce/Bus1ness or related
Business Training ....................................... 140 .
Ext 2455
field with a m1ntmum of three
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
soc1a1
(3)
years
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
servlces/busmess expartCards of Thanks .......................................... 01 0
ence reqwred BaSIC knowlChild/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
edge of semor Citizen needs
ElectricaVRefrlgeratlon ...............................840
and available serv•ces needEquipment for Rent.. ................................... 480
ed Demonstrated orgamzaIIOnal managenal, admtniS·
Excavatl ng ................................................... 830
• NO EXPERIENCE NE CESSARY
' FULL TIME CLASSES
trat1ve eXpenence reqwred
Farm Equipment.. .......................................61 0
• COL TAAININO
Computer sk1lls tncludlng
" FIN.-.NCING AVM.ABLE
Farms for Rent.. ........................................... 430
Microsoft Word and mternet
"JOe
Farms for Sale ............................................. 330
• ENROLLIN G NOW
nav•gatton reqwred Mus) be
For Lease .............•...................................... 490
bondable and have a valid
For Sale ........................................................ 585
ALLIANCE · . dnver's hcense
For Sale or Trade .........................................590
TRACTOR TRAilER
Submit applications w.i1h
Fruits &amp; Vegetables .....................................580
TRAINING CENTERS
resumes
to GCCOA Attn
Furnished Rooms ........................................ 450
WYTHEVIllE VA
Counci l President
1165
General Ha~llng .....................,.....................850
State
Route
160
PO
Box
1-800-334-1203
Glveaway. .... ...............................................040
44 t GallipoliS OhiO 4563 1
Happy Ads ... ,................................................050
by 3 JOpm on February 22
Hay &amp; Gratn ..................................................640 Desk Clerk needed Please 2006 GCCOA 1s an Equal
Help Wanted .................................... ,............ 110 apply ·at Budget Inn. Opportunity Employer
Home Improvements ...................................81 0 Jackson P1ke GallipoliS No F;;.;.;;..,.;.;;_;...;,_ _'l
Homes for Sale ............................................ 310 phOne cal ls please .
Great Career
Opportumty
Household Goods ....................................... 510
Drivers Needed·
Houses for Rent.. ...................................... 410
COL Onvers wllhng to dnve
lzer Health Syateml I
In Memoriam ................................................ 020 for local ready-m1x-concre1e eeking
an ExecutiY
company ~llpenence ts
Insurance ..................................................... 130
Director
tor
Holze
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment........................ 660 preferred but not necessary aslsted L.tvtng I
Med msurance &amp; other
Ll vestoc k......................................................630
ackson, Ohlo
benef•ls available afler wa•l·
Lost and Found ............................ .'.............. 060
tng penod Drwer must be
Reqwements for thts post
Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
wtllmg to do pre-ma•nle·
1on mclude
MIscellaneous.............................................. 170
nance on trucks &amp; eqwp·
A licensed nursmg home
Miscellaneous Merchandlse.......................540
ment yard work &amp; ·other
admtmstrator
mtscellaneous chores
Mobile Home Repalr ....................................860
Or'
Mobile Homes for Rent ............................... 420 Experience operating equtp· A Registered Nurse With
ment &amp; extra skills such as
Mobile Homes for Sale................................320
2000 hours of d1rect oper·
welding a plus
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
at1ona1 reSpons 1btl1tyfor a
Call(304)937 3410
sentor care fac111ty
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers..........................740
Located 1n Ma son County
o,
Musical instruments ................................... 570
near Buffalo WV
A Baccala ureale degree tn
Personals .. .................................................005
nurs1ng marketing or
Pets for Sale ........................................... 560
bus1ness adm1ntstrat10n
Local bus1 ness looking tor
Plumbing &amp; Heattng .................................... B;!O
Secretary/ReceptiOmst
Professions I Servl ces .................................230 Must have good teleph one and•date must posses
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr ............................... 160 sktlls &amp; -good wllh the pubt1c. trong lea~rShlp , commu
Real Estate Wanted ...................... ............... 360 know ledge 1n' compu ters &amp; ICa!IOn marketing an
Schools Instruction .................................,... I50 all other otltee machmes •nanc•al skills and mus
and mamtatn del1ne
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertillzer .............................. 650 Hours Bam 5pm Monday, Mainupancy
levels It yo
Friday 8· 12 Saturday
Situations Wanted ....................................... 120
re an energet•c, seH matt
PO Box was pubtlshed
Space for Rent ............................... .............. 460
ated ca nng mdtvlctual a
wrong please resubmit
Sporting Goods ..............,............................ 520
en! to schedule a person
resumes to
I and confidential meetm
SUV's for Sale .............................................720
Local Bustness
•\h Terese Remy, LNHA,
Trucks for Sale ....... ...... :............................. 715
PO Bmc 755
HA BSN RN . Syste
G&amp;ll ipolls.OH 45631
Upholstery .................. ........................... 870
dm tmstrator f€:1r L.on
Vans For Sale ............................................... 730
.
erm Care cafl 1740)446
Wanted to Buy ......................................... 090
1
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplles ...... ............ 620 Need Cash ' Don't let ttl1S
Wanted To Do ..........,.................................. 180 opportu mty pass you by L &amp;
Equal Opportunt ty
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470 A Wholesales IS nOw need·
Em 10 er
Yard Sale· Galllpolls....................................072 tng licensed dnvers for local
deli very and sal.e s
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ....................... 074 meat
co mpany
Ca ll 740·949
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant. ............................. 07.6 108 t for tn formal•on
~C EM O: N T

www.orvD.com

3 Bedroom hOuse 6 years
old nas two baths new
washer and dryer also stove
and relngator
Large
garage storage bwldmg
has app rox 2 40Qacres SitS
on corner ol Eagle A1dge
Road and P1negrove Road
m Me1gs County Eastern
SChool DistriCt 1/2 m•le oH
Route ~7 Appra•sed Va lue
$97,000 740·992·1 527

(800)462·9365
AVON• All Areas• To Buy or
Sell
Sh•rley Spears, 304·

1082

2 Unll Apartment Building
Newly Remodeled 1n Po1r1t
Pleasant Re ady to Accept
Renters (304)675 8635

HouSFS
FOR

Syracuse 3BA attached
DBLGar block Utility bU ild·
mg new roof 7 acre lot
740· 4 t6·2786 or 740·949·

Ltst

w.e

10

Ho~tF.~

roRSAu:

HoM~
tuRSALE

A keyboard player needed
lor new Chr1st1an rock/pra•se
and worsh•p band We are
not teenagers and
are
seasoned muSICians Great
sound system and hght
show wtlh fog machtnes wtll
be rn place Studto record·
•ng wtth CO sales 1n add1tton
10 hve shows
7 40-3877129 Jtm
-------,--An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Call Man!yn 304·882·2645
Attentton Dr~vers ,
A&amp;J
Truclong IS IOOktng for
Dr~vers
w/ 1 yr
OTA
Expenence for Reg •ona l
Hauls AverAge pay 40s to
m1d 50s Home every
Weekend
call
Kent

SERI'IC~

l.wrlght2005@comcast.net

80 1·428-4649

Female Black Lab to a good
home t4·16 months old,
very
good
natured
(740)446-7595
Found · Basset Hound on

10

I'ROF'ES'&gt;!ONAI.

Reward' I Lost male Enghsh
lbl..P WANTED
Pomter Centenary area ..__ _ _ _ _ _ _,.
Mothe r's Day Bus Trtp Orange collar, mtss1ng s1nce Dresden,
Homestead 2/3106 Call (740)446·9395
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Saturday May 6th Payment
Assemble crafts,
March 1st VI's Beauty Shop
wood ttems
$65 (304)675 5503 or
To $480/wk
304 675-6937
Matenals prov1ded
Free 1nformat1on pkg 24Hr
lfliTANil

FOUNU

Now you can have borders and gr'aph ics
~
added to your classified ads
Jj~
.m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
S 1.00 for Iorge

Display Ads

.

'

'

10 used homes under
$3 000 00 Must Go• Ca ll
Elame 740 385·0698
- -------16x80 homes star ting a1
$25995 00 Includes vmyl
, Sldmgl Shingle roof Ca ll
Russ 740 ·385· 24 34
1954 lOx 50 Rembrandt Wllh

3BA 2bath ran ct'l .style lurnt sh mgs Sl 000 0 8 0
home
25x30
atta ched 1937)981 211 1 day s
garage 30x30 Pole bar n ---~---1 33
,;~cres
555 000 1995 Schu ltz 16x80 tor sa le

7 acre count ry home 3 bed·
2 full baths w/d
range electnc &amp;
water pa1d free yard mow·
1ng propa ne heat &amp; woodburner newly remodeled
$1 200 per month plus
depos•t call be tween 9-2pm
at (740)67-4·6951
room

refr~gerator

96 doublew1de Easlern
Schools TPC water 3 bed
rooms
2 baths
ca ll
1502)943·0386
AHenliont
Local company ottenng · NO
DOWN PAYMENT
pro·
grams for you to buy yo ur
home mstea d o1 rent1ng
• 100°c f•n ancm g
• Less than perle ~: t cred1t
accepted
• Paymenl co utd be the
same as rent
Mortgage ·
Locato rs
~(7:_4~0:::
136~7:_·~0000=---­
Stop renttng Buy 4 oedroom
foreclosure $15 000 For list
mgs 9.00 391 5228 met

1709

Tw o
Bedroom
House
Delu xe Kttchen Appliances
Furm shed
$ &lt;~7 5 00 pe r
1nformahon
4bdrm 2 5 bath tla rowood 2006 16 \\1d e Spec1al Pnce Month S475 00 Secunty
Leas e R equ1re~
Certtft ed Ch11deare Provtder floors new root app roll $181 /m o Ca ll 174013 85· DepoSit
Kasplat Inc IS lookmg for a
740·992 542 r
mo ... ad m Green School 3 OOOsq It A1verv1ew At 7 7Q7 1
Computer Tech only A+
D1stnct Has openmgs. hot south $125 000 No land
Certtfted or greater need
'96 FleetwOOd 3 BR Only I""' MOBil£ HO\tl~
meal. ref (740)446-6340
contracts (740)709·0299
apply For more lnf(Hmatton
FllR Rf~o
5169/mo Ca ll (740 ]385call (740)446-712 1 ask tor
Computer Trouble Shoot 7BR 5BA Foreclosure only 9948
Carl
2 Bd Rrn Mob1le Home 1n
and Repatr Expert Servtee $18 000 For ll5tmgs call
L•lo,e new 2002 Ctayt oti Middlepo rt S250 a Month
B00-391·5228 ellt F254
740-992·2395
14•52
$148/mo
Ca ll and $250 depos•t
Nursmg Mgml
Year
Anenttonl
(740 )385-9948
J&amp;C
Tree
Serv1ce
&amp;
Lease
No Pet s and No
Heartland ol Jackson has an Excavating 25 years exp Local company offenng NO
740
New Doublew1de Repo Calls att er 9 DO PM
p~ o
excittng caree r opportun•ty Free esttmetes 304-675· DOWN PAYMENT
-992
5039
grams tor you to buy your 'lever lived ' owre• klnce
2213
ava•lable for an
OP 1 :; JC "!&gt; 8 •n••e::, no•th 2 oe\1roorn mobile home 1n
home •nstAad of rEnttng
MOS NURSE .
I I \ \ \ t I \I
c~' ho1ze1 ' )::'~ •t&lt;~ 3i 150
• 100°o fi nanCing
qac1ne S350 mo plus $350
COORDINATOR!
' Less tnari perfe~,l cred•t , ~40)4..)6 ~[-·~
depos•t.. years lea,se no
8 USINE'iS
accepted
ADON.
pets no calls af1er 9pm
Ot'l'uR't\JNrt1'
• Payment could b.a the NICe 14x70 Snultz 3br 1 1740} 992 5039
Quahflcattons tnclude a cur·
bath ne\\ Fndge Wate·
same as rent
rent AN hcense 1n OhiO, 2
Mor tgage
Locato rs heater carpet Porch 1 34 2 bea room 1ra1ler lor cent No
yrs old long term care expe:
acres 5 m• nute s from Town pel s (74 0)256·6803
•NOTICh
1740)367·0000
nence and pnor supervtsory
&amp; scnools E~ cAIIen t cond•
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
exper1ence Strong managehO n (304)593 092 1 le ave 28R all elednc A C stor
lNG CO recommends tha
ment and commun1cattons
Message
age owld•ng 2 acre tot Very
u do business w•t h peo
sktlls are a must' MOS expe~!'"";..":""_~---, .ntce no oet s Rooney OH
le you know and NOT t
nence preferred
l.m-; &amp;
17401•46 1409
end money through th
"SIGN-ON BONUS
AOIHGt:
a1l unt1l you have ~nvestt
Mobile nome spaces m
OFFEAEOI'"
ated the offenn
Count')' Mobile Home Park.
All
real
estate
advertising
We offer compet1t1ve pay a
22 acres v.o,Oerful v• ew 1-40)38, 4019
10 th1s newspaper is
comprehensive
benet11s
ndgetop property close to
nRED OF GAS PRICES &amp;
subject to the F=edoral
package mclud1ng 401 (k)
mam h.ghway perfect tor 4 Newer 2 Bd Rm tra ler
COMMUnNG?
Fair Housmg Act ot 1968
w1th company match tuttiOn CAREER DISTURBED?
wt&gt;~eltor
rra s ~7.10\707· Centrat fJeat and a•r .which makes 11 1t1egal to
assistance and more 1
Covere-a parer, ana pat iO
Chnsttan Owned Company
ad ver11se 11ny
.?1s.J~
Part ly turn •shed
$425 00
pretertnce
hm•tat•o
n
or
Offenng A Home Managed
360
Rt .\1. l·st \If
Please lorwarr:1 resume to Bustness Part tune or Full
740 243 58i.
d•scnmi nallon bastd on
\\wrm
Deborah Thomas
AN
race color rehgton se•
!•me. Full Support a nd
ADNS at Heartland ol Trarnrng
\P\Rntf:.'TS
ramih"'l status or national
Fully l •nan c ed
Jackson 866a St Rt 93 opportun1ty 1f quahf1ed
origin , or any tnt.ntton to
HIH RfXI
Approx 1 acre or •and
make any such
Jackson OH 45640 Fax 1·800·946·7572 Pm 00 (If
Rea dy tor House 10 be bu•lt
preference, limitation or
740·286·0295,
www he r· no answer please leave
w•thm 10 miles of Potnt 1 anct 2 bedroom apart
dlacrlm•natlon "
manorcare com
Pleasant
Rural Sepmg ments furn1St'led and unfur·
message)
EEO/Drug-Free Employer
secluded &amp; qwet
000 or n•sn'ed securlt) depos•t
This newspaper will not
~Strength
less Please call (3041593 reqw red no pets 740·992·
knowingly
accept
MONF.l'
Commttmanr
3207
2218
advartittments for real

(7 40 )441 · t377 lor tu,1he'

Overbrook Center •s currently seeking a beautician to
wor k 1n the tac1hty s bea uty
salon
Candidates shO uld
possess a vahd manag tng
cosmetologist
license
Salary IS based on c6mml&amp;·
s•on Interested candtdate&amp;
should co ntact the admtn•s·
trator at (7110 )992 -6472

EOE
AN (Home Health)
Full Time per VIS it or hOurly,
401K catete na pla n,
mlfeage Un.form allowance
CEU re•mbursement Sam s
Club Health &amp; Ute Ins PTO
whiCh accumulates !rom
urSt work da~ Top pay 11"1 Tn
State Srgn.()n Bonus 600-

759-5383
EOE

T~

"--------,.1

r

(74 0}388 8380

(740)949 2072

sa

m iAJA.~

ettate which 111 In
vlol1t1on of the law, Our
readera are hereby
mformed lh•t all

dwell ings advertised in
this newsl'•per ere

available on an equal

opportunity bases
New Douo1ew1de Repo
never 11ver:1 1n owner f1a nce
~ o n 1 3 acres B miles north
of Holze r Hospital on 160
(7 40 ~46-35 70

Resto red farmhouse sits on
1Oacres w1th a heated
mground s wtmm1n~ pool
stocked poM barn &amp; 3 car
garage 4 huge bedrooms 2
baths \3800 sq It) 3 fire·
olacos hatdWOOd floors 30
m•nu tes trom GallipOliS
10365 Co Ra 4 Waterloo

1140)643·201 9

Need to sell your h0me 7
La1e on payments, d•vorce
10b transfe' or d death? I
~a" tvr \ CU' 'lome AI! cash
anu .. uu,; ~ ... losmg 74().11 16·

t BR apt close to Holzer
W 0 hook up Deoos•l)refe rence reowrecl 174Cl339·
0352 eel numb€1

For Lease 2 Floor. spa·
CiOUs totally remodeled 2
IU'\1\1"'1
bedroom 1 1 '2 baths l.llfur
n1 shed apartm ent' New
water heater and apph·
ances $600 a month plus
ut111t1es
Downtown
Galhoohs Secunty ano '-ley
t:ieoos1t reou1•ed No pets
2 Bd Am house w•th large
Refe rence s ' · reqwred
k.•tchen OH street oar1.: 1ng
1740)446 6 882 M· F 8 00·
and
stor age
Aslo.mg
500
$425 00
Poss1ble '1UD
"'40-243·5811
Beautiful 2 story townnouse
overlooil. mg Gt;tll.lpollS C• T ~
3 bedroom 2 , 2 oaths 2 oart.. KITChen D A l q
ca• garage tur.,,shed close stc~dv 38R 2 t&gt;atf'l~ M J'1ol
to
Holze'
Hosp1ta• 1\rea Rete renee!&gt; rp j
$850 month 1, 40111 4 \ ·031 0 secunt) depcH;,r no [ets
$900 mo Cau 17401 44 0
3 to 4 bedroom horne 1n
2325 or 174 0\446·44 25
fortleroy HUD ava d.able
$450 mo $450 oepos1t call Modern , beQroom apt
1740)446-0390,
(7 40\992·2979

3130

ISHOP CLASSIFIEDS FOR BARGAINS I

•

�'-'onday, February 13, 2006
ALEYOOP

Il l'

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page 84 • Th e Daily Sentinel

r~,_.A_~.~-Rm.~.-...-.. r
1

1ST MON . FREFRENT
WITH PAID DEP. NEW
ELLMVIEW
TOWNHOUSEIAPTS
NOW LEASING !

SPACIOUS
2 &amp; 3BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;

TOWNHOUSES
AVAILABLE
'ALL ELECTRIC
'CENTRAL AC &amp; HEP:T
'STOVE, REF. ,
'DISHWASHER

'GARBAGE DISPOSAL
'WIND BLINDS
'CEILING FANS
'WATER, SEWAGE,' &amp;
•TRASH INCLUDED

PETS CONDITIONAL
(304)6.82·3017

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

APAR'IMEN11l
roRRmr

www.mydailysentinel.com

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

.E MPLOYM E N T

Apartments 1n Middleport. 1 ~:;====.:.J
From $295 ~$444 Call 740- 1~
992·5064. Equal Houstng

I~~~~~~§±~~~~~~
ROGER HVSELL
GHRHGE

deposit. and previous rental
references. 740-992-0165.

r

I !':~~'=

3 miles west of
Pomeroy, OH .
on State Rt. 124

RENT

Downtown Offi ce Space- 5
room suite $650/mo: 1 roorn

992-5682

off ice:· $225/mo.; 2 room.

suite

$250/mo.

I

A uto&amp;Truck
Repair

SI"A(;E

FOR

Security

.

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

•

•
•

Middleport, OH

Allro PAJUS &amp;
ACCESliORIFS
4 Tires for sale P265.75R- t 6

301 75· 1643

C~ &amp;

MmOR Hm.ws
1997 Hornet 23ft. 5th wheel ,
wla~r, awning, self-contained, light weight, $6,000
OBO. (740)2 45·9t 09 or

Appliance

VANS

~

Insured

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Beech Street •
Middleport. OH

'

10X 10X 10X 20
992-3194
or992·6635

-

'

•

2

•

~ 'i'

i~~

. ii &amp;
~ ~~

" Middleport's only

provided. WAter &amp; garbage
paid. DepOsit required. Call
(740)446·4345 aher 6pm.

CLASSIFIED$

~~

ii

~- '1
~ ~~

"

0

zn

IMrROVEMENIS

-~.... ·3
•

~

• •

=··=
· '·~~~~~~

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime 'guar·antee. local references fur~
nished . Established 1975.
C~ ll
24 Hrs~ (740) 4460870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofi ng.

..-- -::S"'H'""'Q=p=-.,--,

2·1'

Hardwood Cablnecry And fumltuN ·

WAKE UP, PAW -THAR ' S A VARMINT
ON TH' ROIOF

www.tlmbtrcft:&amp;IUabbsiJtey.com

740.446.9200

GO BACK TO
.S LEEP, MAW !!

YO'Re 'DREAMIN' !!

THAR AIN 'T B EEN N O
SHINGLES ON THAT

~ ..,...._,..,~

ROOF FER YEARS !!

~

.,------LLI.--.j.li

~'----;:~ .

]ttdy Kay's IIa.~ Re-ope11ed!
menu i.lS well a:-. your 'old favorites
'
Homemade desserts • B r~akfast· ~e~:ved all t.by

, • Dai ly lund1 specials

I
j

~

Stop by &amp; .check out our ne~~.· additions to uur

1;

~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~_w~~~~~~

J

·

~YOU5f'El\IDSO MU~

'fwi-\Y
:nMe:.
~t:&gt;JUST I~&amp; Tf\1&gt;..1 t&gt;\lRROR?
I

r

P'WE'. f.\.r..\1 UO &amp;. 1\l:&gt;lL TO ~"1
WI-\1\T~ &amp;.1\it-\0 U~, GLN'&gt;Y:i !

SEARLS TOWING

~

Wl-\1\\

FOR! 5((1\1 Tf-\E.R(.,

DONE. \ 1-11\\!

,.----- '"1 IR f;~~~~~~~~~;~~

MOVED

J

--~=~J,-'1"'"':-'\

1

~
~
•

(formerly Ma rathon Service ·
Center, Pomeroy)

has moved to
39515 Bradbury .Rd .,

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Hartford, wv

93 Columbus

New Selection
.
Sterling Silver

Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L

.

I

Sunday 1740)446-7300

r

81 Malibu Classic mostly
redone. nice car. too much ·
to list. Ask ing $[3,000
(740)379-9297.

(304)937·2705.

.

-

[1'15

TRUCKS

'

ONTHISPAGE·
.fOR
.
AS.LOWAS
·$26.00. -PER MONTH!
'

.

.

1989 Dodge Dually 2WD,
Cummins Tu rbo Diesel. New

batteries. Runs exce l1 9nt,
133.000
miles · $5 ,000
(740)446·3413
1999 GMC w/ extended cab,
loaded, 305 engine, auto
transmission , 67,000 miles,
good clean, solid truck,
e;.:cellent condition, $8,500
(740)44 t·t0t4.

ADVERTISE YOUR
·BUSINESS
.

2001 4dr V-6 Dakota auto·
matic, 90.000 miles, 4WO.
$6,500. (740)339·1620.

2001 Dodge Ram truCk
2500 SLT Heavy Duty,

,.J

springs. ca,mper special. 10ply tires . $7.500. Call Ed

(740)367·0624.
93 Chevy Silverado ext cab

150.000 miles. excellent
condition . Asking $3 ,200 .
(740)386-0006.
Chevy Colorado Ext. Cab
·as ·Auto, 2WO, w/be&lt;JIIner,
excellent condition . _Kell y
Blue Book $14,600, will self

r

for $13,600. (304)523-1t79

SUVs
!URSAU:

2004

Chevy Trailblazer
4WD w/tow pkg ..
Kelly

The Daily Sentinel
992~2155
r

Bluebooks 0
$22 ,000.
many e11tras 10.500 miles,
.eMcellent condition . garage
kepi
$17,900 (304)675t408
4x 4
FOR SAl •-.
~~
....,.;,iiiiiiiiili~iiio..',.l

I

Black Hl94 Ford F150 , 5.8L.
shOrt bed . great condition .
$3,500. 1740)367-7245

"

NOTICES

~~-. . . .- . . . . . . . mi.,. needs body work and NOTICE TO BIDDERS

ings on Steel Buildings! 3 part Arabian gelding. $500
available 24 x 34 . 20 x 24 , to a good home. (740)256wlll sell tor balance owed! ct.:65:.:2::..- - - - - - ' Call ·Now 1 1·800-222-6335. Pigs Ready to Butcher. 220·
ext. 6000
290 lbs. [740)·388-7447 .

446-3484

Storage

BISSEll

Hours
'7:00 AM - 8 :00 PM
1114/1 mo pd

-90---,-· B-u-ic'--k-L_e_S_ap_r_e_9_7_,000-'-

-:---- - - - - - - - - -·I
FOR SALE
Steel Buildings: Huge sav- 7yr old part Quarter hOrse, . . . . . . . . . . .iiiiiiioow

In the Silver Bridge Plaza

ROBERT

f:lotlce is hereby given
lhal the Board of
Education • of the
Meigs Local School
District,
41765
Pomeroy
Pike,
Pomeroy, Ohio '45769,
will offer for sale by
sealed bid at 1:00 pm,
Tuesday, February 14,
2006, the following
vehicles:
1990
International
Bus' #3
1990
International
Bus#4
1990
International
Bus#5
1990
International
Bus #1 5
1982
International
Commodity Bus #9
1997 Ford. Econo Van

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(2) 3, 7. 9, 13

Public Notice

. NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE
OF
OHIO
DEPARTMENT
OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
Olllce of Contracts
L1'9al Copy Number:
060132
Sealed proposals will
be accep!ed from pre. qualified bidders al _
the ODOTOfllce of
C.ontiacts until 10:00
am on March 8, 2006.
Project 060132
is
located
In
Meigs
County, USA 33_
-9 .40;
SA 7-6.1 7 - Part 1 &amp; ·2
il69
and Is .an Interchange
All sealed envelopes
protect. The date set
c ontaining bids are to
for completion of this
be marked clearly -on
work shall be as set
the outside. Terms of. forth In the bidding
sale will be cash or
proposal. Plans and
money order. Said
Specifications a,re . on
Board reserves the
file In the Department
right to waive Inforof Transportation.
malities, to accepl or
(2) 13. 20
reject any &amp;fld all, . or
parts of any and all
b ids. Questions c an
Publi c Notic e
be answered by, Mr.
Paul
Mc Elroy,
In coinplla nce with
Transportat i on · Amended
Section
Super vi sor . at (740)
319 .1t of the Ohio
742-2990.
Revised Code, a full
All bids must be
and complete copy of
received In, and bid
the annual financial
specifica ti on sheets
r eport
of
Meigs
may be Obtained from,
County Ia available for
Treaaurer ~ s
Office,
public ln opectlon al
41765 Po meroy Pike,
lhe olllce of the Meigs
P.O.
Box
272 ,
County Auditor, Me igs
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
County Courth ouse.
o r by ca ll ing (740)
The Audit or 's office
hours are Monday ,
992-5650 .
Mark E. Rhonemus.
through Fr-iday , 8 :30
a.m. to 4:30 p.m . and
Treasurer
Meigs Lo cal Board of
the telephone number _
Education
is 740·992·2698 .
P.O. Box 272
(2113

TH I S~
\-~H AT'S

Pass

5•

Pass

6•

Pass · Pass

DOES t i&lt;.ONY
COUN T AS

• NATE
Wi(tGHT,
L I FE
SK ILL- S

A

COACH "~

"

· ~ANUTS

·New Homes
• Garages
Remodeling

WHO ARE THE\'

WI-IAT WAS

DOES YOU~ SISTER
EVER AGGRAVATE YOU?

· Complete

LI FE

St&lt;.t t..t..,

SA"&lt;~

CONSTRUCTION

QUE5TION 7

TALKINGABOUT.

140-992-1&amp;11

Author and critic Efizabefh Janeway
wrote. "As long as r)lix.ed grills and cot,:nbination salads are popular. anthologies w111
undoubtedly continue in favor."
In today's deal, you shou ld mix up a combinatlon of chances.
As you are well aware, a finesse supplies .
in theory at least, a 50-50 shot at an extra
trick. In this six-spade deal. finesses are
available in all three side suits. Once your
· salad dressing: is prepared. how would
·you toss the finesses? West leads a trump
and East follows
North makes a limit raise because he has
eight losers (two in each sui!) . 11 1s a lad
caulious wilh a brace at aces and 12 highcard points .
Alter turning on the grill, draw trumps ending on the board and play a heart to your
jack.
If this finesse wins. you are up to 11 tricks .
Then . you should taKe !he heart ace ,
cross to dummy's diamond ace, ruff the
heart queen 1n hand, cash the d1amond
king. and play a diamond toward dummy's
jack. This m aximizes the chance of th ree
diamond tricks, and if E ast proves to have
four diamonds 10 the queen, you can take
the club l1nesse.
, H ere1 though, the heart finesse loses .
Let's assume West returns a hearl. W1n ·
wilh your ace, ca~h the oiamond king ,
· play a diamond to dummy's ace, and dis·

card
last
on When
the heart
queenyour
. Next.
ruffdiamond
a diamond.
the
su11splits 3-3, you can claim since you will
jettison the club queen on dummy's established diamond Jaclot. But if the diamonds
are unfriendl~. · you still have the ciU~
finesse wBIIing patiently on the back burn-

You are likely to develop two add1tional
. good friends "1n the year ahead, wno will
WAY TO · in troduce you lo many peop le a,nd oullets
that will take you down a number of new
DET E t&gt;JT tO N 1
pa1hs. Several wilt prove to be exceptiOn·
ally lucky for you
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 1 9 ) •
""PrOceed. not postpon~e .. should be your
motto today and the code that you live by.
especially if the re are some important
. ObJeC1ives you'd like to achieve . Big goals
are reachable at this time .
PISCES (F.eb. 20-March 20) :...:._ Your
active , Creat1ve m 1nd will be pumping out
lots of bnght ideas today. The1r brilliance
may be recogmzed , ~nd their worth apparent 10 one whO kn ows how to turn them
1nto po ts of gold.
ARIES (March 21·April 19)- SOmeone
may present you with an usual offer today
of a work-rela ted nature which will t&gt;e worthy o f prob1ng a bit further. Even thoUgh it
might sound a bit bizarre at first , c heck 11
TAURWS (Aprl t20-May 20) - Be sure to
hang out with as many people as p o s~ible
loday, .because tho se wnh whom you
assoc•~te could be lucky tor you . A portion
ot wher occ:urs tor them will be allott ed to
you also.
GEMINI (May 2 t -J u ne 20) - Upgra"d1ng
your methods or techniques 1oday w•ll do
much to enhance' your producll\llly and
quality at work at th is POint in lime. Loo k
tor as many ways as possible to do ltlings

SUN$HINE CLUB

bener.
CANCER 1June 2 1-J uly 22)- Se1ze as

RU£Diill, MY W\ISTWJES

£XPA~DIII6

AND W -.VIIV ~

LiiJG IS DISAPPrPRiffi...

~ARFIELD

..•
p

•
•'

· Ohio 457(•9

Complete Tree Care
A CE TREE SERVICE
179 Rand St.
Gallipolis, OH
Rl~k Johns on • Jr. '
Owner
Ins ure d Free Est .

~

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GRIZZWELLS

HAUJ\11 LUMBER

\1~ l&lt;t.t~ N\.lli~I NCr

l

111? Til' J/&gt;.1&lt;
B£1'0~ \\f
SAY'?
A\o\Y\1\1~ .

ASk WA~~t:t1

~R.

Scorpion· Tractors
" Taking Tire Srir1g Out Of
Hard'Work!."

'

'fl.\ ~'5 ~~ LAST liME

No w Availab le At

AWICE

A!:!aU\

. "

base

29 Geln'o
47 Be "It"
opposite
50 Sl uggoro '
3t Stool
otat
pigeon
52 Myrna
of old
35 "Bicl&lt; in
Black" group
movlu

alol
Ode, e.g.
In lhat case
(2 wde.l
Opening s
Adjust th e
length
Citrus !run
Adobe
Wane

37 Run a fever
38Mountalr&gt;-

eer'sald
(2 wde.)

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebn!)o Cipher cryptograms are cruted lrom quotaU()1S by lall'l(lJ51)(!0ple. pa!il a~ pment
Each letler io tile opher slands 101 arolher.

'

rooay·s Clue· I equals u
'" OLWFP

MZW

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NLNWYFP .
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BZLPF -

PREVIOUS SOLUTIQ~. - ·1 pretende&lt;l to be somebody I wanie&lt;1 1o be until
I became lhat person . Or he ~arne me: - Cary Grant

finally

':~~:t~~r S©tt~1A-~£zrs·
::::.·
by ClAY l . IIOLlAN _:.__ _ ___:.
~flit•..t

0

horronge

leuen , cf

four tcrornbled words
low to form four ~imple wo' d't_..

many opportunitie S a s possible to meet
il nd mmgle wit~ both Old and new lnend s
today. There is a strong possibility that
somethin g opport un e could develop
through a social enc o un ter
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - Focus )lour
though ts and energy on your per sonal
' materi al desires. bac a ust:J yoU r p osslblhlleS of rea lizing them Ieday are much
greater than usu al Be a b1g dreame r w1th
a purpoSe 1n mind
: VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept · 22) - Tr y to
an ange yq.u r schedule today so that you
will ha\le ' plenty ot t1 me to run around
freely Even mundane erra l" dS or com mumcat1ons could tu rn 1nto lucky events
.
LI BRA 1Sep1 23-0ct 2~ ) - M a len al
oppottunll•es to be tter your 101m l1le could
cp m e 10 you 1n an unu suJI man nor 1oday.
E•pect l he unexpec ted so you won 't
un kno wmg ly 1g npre luc ky S1! uat1011S
5 fAY UPWIND
dr opped •nto you r lap
SCO RPIO (Oct 2 4 -N ov 22~ - You have
remarkable resllienc y today. w hiCh Will
turn ou1 to be a t reme ndous a sse t In
enablong you to bounce back successlully
tr am a "s1tuahon ""'he.re you pre\IIOUsly
tailed
SAGITTARIUS t NOv 23 ·0ec 2 11- To
you r cred1!. you w 1ll d1splay a co mpaSSIOn·
al e 1ntere st today 1n !t)ose who are less
tortuna1e 1n hie. Surpr iSingly. what ~ou g•ve
w!u turn ou t to oller ta r goeat ~ r rewa rds lor
you m re turn
CAPRI CORN (Dec. 22 ·Jan 19) - . Be
careful hOw you labe l groups to whiCh you
__:~~::::::::::~:::::J do not belo11 g. b9Cause today you co uld
· be thr ow n 1nto con tact ~· 1th one ol lhem
and sh ar e 1n the frUit S ot l he1r past ellorts
and l nu mphs

I
I~---r-;-1,-,-----,1I'~I
NAGMY

T 0 S HI

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5

"If you want to w in an

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know vou --- -----.''

RITPEII

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2/!Jo1l6

Com ol e1e the d'IUeid~ quot~d
by fdlin9 in 1he miu i ~g war th
you ce-ve lop from step No , 3 be low.

HINT N ~MSERED

Lt r1[ ~ s IN saul~ ~rs

SCRAML.ET8 ANSWERS 211 ~'116
Lav i~h- Uil.sic- fairy -- Gyrate - FIGHT
.
I think llmt a person can be a true pacifist if they

eM attend a peace con fercncc
into a FIG! iT ·
ARLO~

without

getting

JANIS
COUt.D f'£ .'
JU~f

l.OOI&lt;.

OUT '!I(E.Rt.•

•

OF THE'
t.E:FTOVE:R
SAUERKRAUT

"

Shade Ri ver AG Service, Inc

t2
18
20

41 Theorem ·
ender

morsel

6 .Run .oround
.7
·8

jg Dlspel ches
4t Wharvu
42 Ho otlle,
11 a crowd
43 Not e'en
once
44 Businesa
VIPo
45 Expensive
46 -.O millat

NOW ! I' I'\
ON MY

ocl

J SAID MY HA\~UI-tS .

5 Old-time
oath

lgf'orer'a

40 Gross!

By Bernice Bede O•ol

T AL K

23 Box
24 Inkling
·
25 " Kon -Tikl"
craft
26 Schools
ol whales
27 Eari y movie
dog
28 Kebab

canceler
4 Sea wall

36 Holds on lo 9
39 Strike
11

Tuesday, Feb . 14, 2006

C AN 'T

Stop &amp; Compare

Beef $7.35
Beef $8.10
Corn $6.45/Bag
I·Cracked Corn $7.45/Bag
I·So~·bean Me111 $13.25/Bag _
River Hog Feed $8.85
Why Drive Anywhere Else?

con veniences

Pass

AstroGraph

IT

Advertise
in this ·
space for $1 04
per month.

35537 St Rt 7 N •

C AN'T
EVEN

REAP

IMPORTS
Athens

Hill's Self

size$ 5'x10'
~~Jc&gt; 1O"x30' ·

Cell# 114o)208-0495

Scrap Metals Open Monday, radi ator, new tires, batt ery,
TuesdayJ
Wednesday &amp; 6 White Rock Hens 4 brakes and rotors. $1,500
Friday,. Bam-4:30pm. Closed months old ready to Lay. 1 080. (740) 446-9632 ,
Thursday.
Satur day
&amp; Susse11 Rooste r , $4-each ~~..;.....;,:~..;.;.....;._..,

KARAT PATCH

Ad.

29870 Bashan Road
Raci ne , Ohio
45771
74Q-949·2217

PL. CD. 80,000 (mostly highway) miles. $9,500 OBO

4 NT

31 Walch poc11at
32 - Paulo
33 - Wiedersehen
34 Gllags
, 35 Banki ng

&lt;¥our~ :

H!JPP . ..

New and Used Furnaces. t836
In stallation
available. _:::_::_~-~~~-Massey Fergusonllleloti ·4:.:4
(740)44t -2667.
trac tor with bac~ hoe &amp;
blade, 8ft. reach , 1,000
NEW AND USED STEEL hours. TD7E dresser dozer,
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar good shape. Best olfer or
For
Concrete.
Angle. trade. {740)388·8228 .
Channel. Flat Bar. Steel ~~;;.:;..;;;:;;;;;.;;;;;;;;_..,
Grating
Far
Drains,
LIVESTOCK

East
Pass

BIG NATE
•

Roc!&lt;Y ~:·~J"

Call (740) 992- 1393

Grill guard to fit John Deere
790 traCt.or $100. (740)256- 2002 Suzuki L X7 4ll:4, PW.

North
3•

•

--· see ill~::

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1800-537-9528

West
Pas5

K

~

Middleport, OH
&amp; 750 Pike St. ,

NOW TAKING
RESERVATIONS!
Washington DC Trip
4 Days/3 Nights
May 4, 2006
$460/person
lnc;ludes transportation,
· hotel &amp; Tourmobile
'
ticket -Families welcome
Cash, checks and credit
cards accepted. Please
call (304) 675-4340,
Ext. 1326
Limited seats!

Sout h
1•

22 Robin -

DOWN
1 ET craft
2 Stac k
3 Dele

production

AQ

If you ·finesse
a lot, watch out

.

~, . ..-F.oia._S•"•Idi-. . . . r•o
~
~~7~::::F:re:e:E:st:im:"~";'~:::;S;el;f:-S:t:or:a:xe:·::~:
H ME

Angus Bulls, two X-breds. 4 1998 Windstar 92,000 miles,
heifers. Excellent breeding. good condi tion $4,500. Call
Slate Run Farm. See (740)367-0394 .

23 Getlosti
28 Arcade
.
game
30 Stage _

Opening lead: • 2
97

relative

45 Numskulls
48 Command
to a mule
49 Vet to come
51 Hair goop
53 Zodlo~ sign
54 EA pictures ~~--1-'!
(hyph .)
55 Eart h,
In combos
56 Can .
fractions
57 Almost
grad s
58 Starry vista

22 San
Francisco hMI

KQI0874
A J
I

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

Concrete Removal·

740-992·6971

19
2t

:t

t K 6 2

&lt; 0\t 'IH IT

~ WIII'k -~
David Lewis

17

•

9 76 3
• Q 10 7
II&gt; J10942

.

1.1:1\IS

i 6 Yeor s E xperience

F.ar;;t

•

.
•

740~843 - 5264

'lfi'~IJ J1jli1)l'11'~

15
16

South

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

and Re pJacem ent

o4

• 98 5
... K 7 6 3

45760

( 0\S IR! ( '1'10\

2BR apartments. Starting at
$375/month. Located on SA
t60,
SA
850.
Bob
McCormiclot , Rd . · Call
(740)44t -Ot 94 or (740)44t 1184

52
K 6

42 Male

FedEx rival
Limb
Pork source
In ohspe .
Majestic
Ghost - chance
Pamplona
yell
Sid estep
Mind
reader's gilt
Deli neated
Notes
1865 yielder

14

AJ\16

"' 8 5

West

Ii'!ONTY

Box 189
':

o2-1:1 oo

• Q 10 2
t AJ ~ 3

2 room furnished efficiency ·de.pos11 req uired . You pay

'apartment, clean , down - utilities. All spaces very nice.
stairs.
utilities
paid . Elevator·. Call (740)446·3644
(740)446-15t9.
tor

.apart ment. Range &amp; refrig .

1
4
7
10
tt

13

North

Mtddlepon 1 and 2 Bedroom
lurnished Apts. No Pels. 1"'"' c.:"''~"

Twln Rivers Tower is accept·
in~ applications tor waiting
list for Hud·Subs1zed, i- br.
apartmenl. call 675- 6679
EHO

N EA Cr o ss w ord Pu zzle

BRIDGE

CI .ASSIF,.E:OS

GraciOUS living 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Village
Manor
and
Awers1de

Opportunttles.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

.

WoMEH! .

SOUPTO NUTZ
..._ _

"WE

_

ccm

Have liMe To

1NTet&lt;RoGale THe fi&lt;.ISONef&lt;
-- a11ac4 T•ese e~«:~
To• HtS ~Mf'ln;

Mid -Sit.e 4Wheel Drive Tr'aCIPr
with 3 1111p &amp; ~ &lt;J hp Kuhnia Engi nc:s

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 C hester 985-3]111

•

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

�AOV'ERTISEMENT 3939 Eve•hard Rd., NW Canton 0H 44109

ADI'£RTII£M[NT

fJ2006 UNM~ MEOIASYND1CATE'" ADVERTISEMENT

Troopers zero in
on problem areas
in attempt to cut
traffic deaths, A()

Monday, February 13, 2006

www.mydailysentinel .com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 86

Demand soars for·newly approved .diet pill

"

Saddam back in
courtroom, lashes out
at Bush,judge,A2

Public has 12 hoursto get free plUs that were the subject of ConsumerLab test featitred on NBC, Today Show, CNN, Oprah Magazine
lost was from body fat in just 8 weeks'.
Now, this massive national stop-gap
Regional Health Hotline operators are effort has been organized to dispense ·
dishing out a full month's supply of free remaining supplies of the newly approved
· diet pills to dieters from all across the diet pills direct to the general public for free.
country.
A company,spokesman confirmed th!lt
Today, for just 12 hours only, consumers extraordinary steps were required. By the
will flood Regional Health Hotlines that have. time pharmacies could place new orders
been set up for each time zone.
through normal distribution channels, it
They'll be trying to beat the clock in would take months before shelves could be
order to get a free s upply of a qiet pill that restocked.
is newly approved for quality.
"Even though it was not my fault,
This massive support effort is now it's my problem," said Matthew
being coordinated to provide a free full Woods, Chief of Health Supply Services.
month's supply of PatentLEAN® to every , "No one saw it coming. So we had to take ·
adult over age Hi who calls the toll free hot- these steps to make sure everyone gets
line. They will only be asked to cover the their supply of the recently approved
diet pills . We are still providing the first
cost for just the.second month.
This effort was launched to make sure' of a two month's supply free, even though
consumers can get PatentLEAN" now until a sudden national shortage exists,"
new shipments are ·able to reach over Woods confirmed.
22,000 pharmacies nationwide.
. "Some may be lucky enough. to find a
The ·generous program provides the pharmacy with a supply still on hand. We '
first montli free for those who beat the urge readers to go to their pharmacy'first.
deadline. But, the free program faces possi- We've heard reports that CVS/Pharmacy
ble cuts due to supply chain shortages.
and Rite Aid still had some stock. If you
It all sta.rted when a highly publicized find it there, by all means buy it and then ·
. ConsumerL11b.com report appeared last send us the receipt so we can send you
morith approving the quality of the diet pill your free additional month supply,"
called PatentLEAN"'.
.
Woods said . .
All the publicity following the feature
"Chances are they . will be sold out.
stories about Consumer Lab's Tests on That's why we're bracing for all the calls.
NBC, Today Show, CNN, and in "0" the But those who call must use the designatOprah Magazine' is expected to totally ·ed phone number set up for their time
deplete national pharmacy supplies of zone to get the free supply. If the lines are
PatentLEAN®.
busy, please tell tliem to keep trying,'' he
The well respected report showed added.
that PatentLEAN® is the ,only diet pill
"We'll do whatever it takes to be sure
"approved" with "the dose found to be effec- everyone gets through, but we can't help
tive,'' and without health-risk stimulants.
you after the phone lines close. We can
With 4 U.S. Patents pertaining to only guarantee stock for twelve hours.
weight loss, Clinical studies and now • After that, when its gone, its gone, and
this new Consumer Lab quality approval, callers will be turned away until our labs
PatentLEAN®gives readers the assurance can produce new supplies,'' Woods said.
that this product is safe a!ld effective' .
Everyone wants to get the full 8 week
· Two clinical studies showed that with supply, because that's what the clinical tri"
PatentLEAN®, proper diet and exercise als used to achieve the remarkable weight
people lost up to 3 times more weight than loss results.
those who . tried diet and exercise alone.
The phone lines will be open for 12 full
Remarkably, 80% of the average weight hours with extra operators brought in to
· support all the calls.
------.-,.--"Now, there's going to be a lot of excit• IMPRESSIVE PILL:
ed people shedding pounds," said Woods.
"We're.pulling out aU the stops to k-eep up .
with demand."·
. That's why the next 12 hours · are so
critical. It is important that readers use the
special telephone number for their time
zone to beat the deadline. • ·
_, - - - - - - ·------BY MARK STODDARD

You can take the weight loss test

' Umversal Med1a Syndi cate

Circle 'True' or 'Fals'e' after each. question. If you answer TRUE to 3 or
more, you could achieve good results with newly approved Patent LEAN•.

_
•QUESTION

------ -

·TIME ZONE

TIME ZONE

nME ZONE

TIME ZONE

·------~----:-------~

2.

1 have failed at dieting more than once.

T

F

3.

I want to lose ·at least 12 pounds.

T

F

T

F

T

F

T·

F

1made a resolution to lose but it was too hard to keep with it.

.I

7.

I am a victim of Yo-Yo dieting.

T

F

8.

1 am concerned about the health risks of being overweigh!·

T

F

9.

I want to see good results In less than 8 weeks.

T

':,. F

I would rather eat five times a day than 'st~rve.'

T
F
·- - -

• Lady Tornadoes eam
rematch against Trimble. ·
See Page 81

j

'

BY MARY BETH ANDREW~

"

a1

12:1111 p"
Linf' 'i CIH-;r "'

12:1111 HI

1-800-236-5223

Bt•c:i'u j 'all i Ill!

111 .

II :1111 ,1\1
Li nt ·..

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1111111'. \f

1-800-601-3407

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1-800-781-3346

!Hill

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1-800-207-1748

I

OM. JOS£PH C. 0i£Tl
Answer: Dr. Zenk It starts working immedi· I
DIRf.CTQR Of RE5£ARCr',
ately, 'however it · is important that y'ou use Joseph
c.,
P:.rtNrHE ALTH LlC
C. D1etz. PhD
PatentLEAN for the full ·eight weeks. This is a realistic
.
time frame to see good weight loss results. The clm1cal studies we re conducted over an eight
week peri ~d. Once you have achiev~d your desired we1ght loss, we recommend
Pate ntLEAN to help mamta1n your new we1ght.

1
I

I

Ask for Dept. H450U
On the web: wwwpa tentlea n.com

I

CNN 1, a reg is tere d t radem ar k or Cable Ne w s Netwo rk LP. L\.L P. 0, Th e Oprah Magaz1ne. 1s a rugrster(:!U traQemark of.Ha rp o
Pri nt.LLC. Con sum er la b.co m . r ef er ence d he rern also as .. Consumerlub ... and the CL Seal are 1eqrstcred t rade
marks o f Consu me'r lab com , Ll C. St atements he re1n art ho.,,.d upon puhl1'&gt;hl'd. PIJllh-:: rnl orm-Jt1 0n ,and do no t
'1 m pl y aff1 l1 at io n . .sponso r stu p o r endorsem~n t of PatentLEAN ' by NRC 'foda-; Shan. CNN ,Q_ lh!" Oprah
Maga n n e. CL, or an v of t he i r a ffil iat es cu arent cornpan1&lt;&gt;:..
·

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THIS

P~~ooucr

'.

H'•"ENor hFfi·. lV '· tUl.fE11 fl.Y THI
(I.Jt[ t-J IJ! D ~o [)IA!.~. 1 ) f, r~rfl'

1.:;. r~or

fr·~·~U
I

~Rt

• White House defends
federal Katrina role, says
critics are rewriting history.
See Page A2 ;.
• Iran proposes k!lY
nuclear negotiations with
Moscow. See Page A2
• ACS offers camp
scholarships to cancer
survivors. See Page A3
• RACO discusses Flower
Festival plans.
.SeePageA3
• MSWCD announces
coloring eontest winners.
SeePageA3
• Lake County leaders
trying to save .historic
lighthouse. See Page AS ·
• O'Bieness annual giving
campaign underway.
SeePage AS
• ODH wams of potential
scam. See Page AS
• Surveillance company
workers voluntarily have 10
·chips embedded.
SeePage A&amp;

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CdM

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport .Village Council
approved a one-mill levy
renewal for street light operation at Monday eve ning 's regular meeting.
The levy will appear on the
May primary ballot, and will
help the village meet the
$30,000 annual cost of operating 250 lights. It will not,
however. . meet the total
expense ol the lights. according to Fiscal Officer Susan
Baker. Baker said last week
the. village will have to con'
sider making cuts in several

Photo courteoy Syracuoe VIllage

This Photo shows the Ohio River's attack .on the London Pool in September 2004 which caused
signlfica:nt damage to the structure.

Fundraising effort underway to reopen
London Pool for Memorial Day
BY BETH SERGENt
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM .

depanments within the general fund in .order to operate the
lights and bal imce the ·budget . ·
. In November, voters rejected a 1.5-mill levy for the
same purpose, and the village
will be forced to cancel its
contract with American
Electric Power for the lights
and their maintenance in
June , Mayor Sandy lannarelii
has said, unless the latest levy
attempt is successful.
Council appointed a seven- '
member Design Review
Bo;ud in conjuncfion with an
upcoming application deadlin e for Tier II downtown

Please s.- Levy. AS

Parking meters and fees spark
debate at Pomeroy Council
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - A batch of
new parking meters· and the
new fees that may accomt:mny
them was a contentious topic
at last ni ght's meetin g of
Pomeroy Village Council.
Several of the council
members reported that they
had received phone call s concern ing the new meters and
the proposed new rates, many
of which were negative comments and many that carne
from downtown bu sin ess
owners. ·
Councilman Jim Sisson and
Councilwoman
Mary
McAngus said some of the

business owners that had contacted them were against the
meters. saving that when consumers go across the river to
shop at store like Wai-Mart
they don't have to pay to park
Iike the y do in downtown
Pomeroy.
Mayor John Musser. also a
downtown business owner,
said that it would be "chaos" if
the mele" were taken out
beca use of employees in
do-intown businesses parking
as clo&gt;e to their business as
po~s ible. therefo re leaving no
parking space s for potential
custom.crs at other surrounding bus.inesses.

a

SYRACUSE . Mark
Twain once said. "Reports of
my death have been greatly
exaggerated ." Reports of the
death of the London Pool may
be more reality than exaggeration if the fundraisi ng efforts
of some local citizens are not
successful.
However, the first week of
that fundraising effort has
been successful with a total of ·
Ple•se see Pomeroy, AS
$6,000 havi ng already been
raised from pledges and donations . . This money will go
towards the goal of reopening
the pool in time for Memorial
.
'
Beth Sergent/ photo
Day weekend.
Over
$6,000
in
donations
have
been
raised
during the first
Syracuse
Councilrimn
Mike Jacks and Syracuse res- week of the fUiidraising effort to reopen the London Pool by
ident Judy Williams are Memonal Day weekend . Seen here are the first two contribuspearheading a campaign to tors (standing, from left) Dick Owen , Dorothy Sayre. and the
raise funds for that reopening most recent contributor Bob Wingett (sitting, center) with Judy
and were appointed to a Williams (left) and Syracuse Counci lman Mike Jacks accepting
London
Pool
Steering Wingett's donation .
Committee by Syracuse
Box 176, Riverwalk Dhve ,
CounciL Jacks and Williams matching funds.
Syracuse,
45779 .
were also appointed by coun:
This . village obligation
Checks are to be made out
cil to officially be in charge of amounts to $16,270 which is
collecting the money for that money the village does not to Vi.Uage of Syracuse reopening .
. have, making rai sing thi s London Pool Fund.
Each donor will receive a
Jacks and William s said amount priority number one
they hope to raise at least for the London Pool Steering receipt that allows them to
specify if they wt\ul d prefer
$16,000 to bring the London Committee . .
. .
Pool back to life thi s summer,
Jack s and William s have their donation be r~t.u rned if
with hopes that more can be drafted a letter t)lat each for some unforeseen reason
raised for startup and repair · member of . coun cil and the pool would .not reopen. If
costs not covered by an award Mayo r En c Cu~ nu~g ham the pool would not reopen the
from the Federal Emergency s1gned venfy1ng .th'w support donor can also specify it' they
Management
· Agency · for the .[undra. smg effort. wo.uld prefer their donation
Submitted plioto
(FEMA) meant for structural These olhCial letters Will be go 'into the Syracuse Park
repairs to the pool.
presented to potenti al donors Fund rather than be returned . Meigs County Commissioners procla imed this week "Through
Wh atever the donor choos- with Chew Week." discomaging the use of smokless tobacco . A
FEMA agreed to pay 75 who can then make a donapercent of the estimated toon
towards reopenmg es they can be assured exactly number of events are planned ., includ1ng oral health screenings
whe re their money will be by local dentists and the distribution of Informational materia l .
$75.000 to repair the inside of London Pool.
the pool and part of the tonAll donations can be made going on.:e the donation i' about the dangers of smokeless tobacco products. Picturd are
Nancy Barker. Gallia·Meigs Commun ity Act1on Agency/Tobacco
crete decking that surrounds by cont acun~ Jacks at 992- made.
Once the ' tru.:tural repairs Prevention . Brenda Curfman. Me1gs County Heal th DepjTobacco
the structure. The state will 4568 Of W1lliams at 740-416also pick up 12.5 r.ercent .of 554 7. or by mailing the dona- begin on the poo l it is c'timat- Prevention. Kyle , Ord . Meigs County Health Dept/Tobacco
the repair costs wlule the vii - lions to M1ke Jack&gt; P.O. Box ed that the w&lt;irk wil l take two Prevent1on.Lora Rawson , Holzer Me,d1ca1 Cente r/ Tobacco-·
!age is obligated for the 305 , Th1rd Street, Syracuse ,
Prevention . Dent1st Nick Huston . and Commi SSIOners Jim
PleBse see Pool, AS
remaining 12.5 percent of 45779 or Judy Williams. P.O. .
Sheets and Mick Davenport are also p1ctu red.

'Through with Chew

I

Detolta on Polio A8 ·

2 S~ONS ~ 12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

,.

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

-1
'I

'
,
•

:..r,rJ hh' '• ~~:Jt~11NI':;l~;;··ri'(l!~· j
\)., PRf\.f ·.r t.r1~ n1StA ,f :

' .

contacted by dozens of people funds the facilit ie' is designed
who objected to the propos- to provi de newly-released
al." .
offenders with housin'g and
Stewitrt, who live s in near- job opportunitie s to aid in
by Albany, said he was per- their transition to · life o'utside
sonally . concerned about the of prison . Those placed in the
proposed facility.
faci li.ty wil l have already
"It was very important .to completed prison programs, a
me and to hundreds of others halfway house· expe rien~e or
in the area that this not hap- other programs and are conpen," Stewart said.
·
sidered "stabilized" in terms
Last week, Linda Janes of of the ir readiness to li ve outthe state's community sanc- side of prison , Janes said.
tions program, sa id the faciliVarney had sought permisty proposed would. primarily sion from Mei gs County comhou se felons from Meigs missioners last year for a simCounty who had been ilar faci lity in the former ·
released from Ohio correc- Veterans Memorial Hospital
tional facilities and who b\Jilding in Pomeroy, but sim-'
would otherwise be homeless. · ilar public opposition stopped
The state program which those plans, as well.

Week' proclaimed

DR, ZENK SERVES AS THE THE CHIEF MEDICALpO f- FIC ER OF THE COMPMJY, \AJHICH PAl!:.NlED fHE AC fiV E INGREDIENT IN l
PATENTLEAN. DR. DIETZ CURRENTLY CONDUCTS r !-.H.L·TIME 01 1:. T AND /'~iP.RMACEUTICAI. RESEARCH FOR PA rn..:TLE.AN
.!

i~rsFSrAlEMENl -~

of Rehabilitation has agreed
to complete a -"close review''
of the standards used to d~ter­
mine if a site, would be appropriate for such a facility, in
light of the recent controversy
surrounding Varney 's plan.
"T)le state has agreed in the
future to take into consideration the availability of public
transportation, as well as the
opportunity for jobs for those
served by such a facility, and
issues of community security
and
law
enforcement,"
Stewart said .
"I'm proud of the communitjes here in Athens, Meigs
and Vinton Counties for
pullin~ together on thi s
tssue,' Stewart said. "I was

INSIDE

WEATHER

Question: What about exercise?
Answer: Dr. Zenk Even a simple ex-ercise plan with PatentLE·AN is the most effective
way to keep the body from going into a phys1ca l response to bemg st4rved . In clt nical stud ·
. ies of PatentLEAN participants diet included one thousand eight hu ndred calones a~d one
hundred eighty minutes exercise per week including ~N a rm up and cool down, so consult
your physician to develop your program.
·
~nd of'lnterv&lt;
eW
Wel l, I have. to admit that even I was impr~ss ed wi th th.ese doctors and the1r easy to
understand explanations in simple laymen's terms on how PatentLEAN can wo rk and help
lose weight and keep it off. And it's a really good bargam since covering the second month
gets you the full first mpnth's su pply free . •
·By Mary Beth Andrews

~- 1- N;C and 'Tod ay ' Sho~-ar~ reg 1s te red t r ad ema: ks of t he Nat1on~l Broadt.CIS~m!) Compa :w. lr1c.

ALBANY - There will be
no temporary housing of
released felons in Columbia
Township, State Rep. Jimmy
Stewart, R-Albany, said
Monday afternoon.
Stewart said the Ohio
Department of Rehabilitation
and Correction has withdrawn
plans to award a contract to
William Varney for the operation of a temporary housing
facility in t.he former Southern
Ohio Coal Co. office complex
on Ohio 689 . He said the
department· has also agreed to
review its criteria for locating
such facilities,.
·

· Residents in Athens, Mdgs
and Vinton Counties met
Friday to challenge Varney
and his plans to operate the
facility in the rural northwest
corner of Meigs County.
'
':The official reason the
state has cited for canceling
plans for the contract with
(Vamey) is a lack of community support," Stewart said,
"but it was clear that this area
was not equipped to serve as a
site for th1s facility."
· Stewart said he and State
Senator Joy Padgett, RCoshocton, met with officials
with Correction department
representatives to share residents' concerns about the proposal. He said the Department

't-

1

I

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Page .AS
• Terry Dale Ashburn

' ·I

I

"'"' · "'~dail)"' nliol&lt;'l.mm

:1011b

OBITIJARIES~

1I

. Question: Willi have to starve myself while using PatentLEAN?
'
Answe~: Dr. Dietz Absolutely not. We actually recommend 5 balanced, reduced ca l o~
rie meals a day. What most of us don't understand is that d1ets by them selves often stall
our metabolism. The body goes into 'a physica l response of being starved and over time
resists 'Ieising fnl)re weight as a defense mechanism. It is not uncommon. to' see Resting
Metabolism drop by 3% or more as a result o.F this response. But th~ participants in one
double blind clinical study who took Patent LEAN on a calorie restricted diet .Without exer·
cise actually experienced an average of a 5.3% increase to their resting metabolism' . That
1s why it can be important to continue ta king Patent LEAN even if you 'slip off your diet for
a while. It may help com bat the effects of decreased metabolism from past Yo·Yo dieting.

Ht•i!in fa ll inc:

l'liESI&gt;AY. I·EIII{I I·\R\ q ,

Middleport street light
levy goes on May ballot

Question: What. is PatentLEAN?
.
1
Answer: Dr. Zenk PatentLEAN is an effective and trusted dietary supplement that i "
has been clinically.tested as a method of losing we1ght primarily th,ough the red uctio n of !'
body fat ' .
Question: Does PatentLEAN contain any stimulants?
Answer: Dr. .Dietz No. PatentLEAN contains abso,l utely no stimulants or vasoconstrictors such as Ephedrine, Caffeine, Green Tea or PPA (phenylpropanolamine).
Question: What I$ the active Ingredient in PatentLEAN capsules? Does it have
·any negative side effects?
·
·
Answer: Dr. Zenk The active ingredient in PatentLEAN is called 3·Acetyl·7·0xoDehydroepiandrosterone. Clinical results show no serious adverse side effects when used
I '
as directed '.
Question: What Is it?
Answer: Dr. DietZ This complex compound is a natural substance which is produced
by the body.
''
Question: Is PatentLEAN natural?
"PatentLEAN 15 an
· Answer: Dr. Zenk Yes. PatentLEAt:J begins as
effect1ve and trust·
~atura l organic plant material. It is manufactured to
~d dietary supple·
rn ent that" has been
a very high level of purity. It's potency was approved
•
d inically tested as a
by Consumerlab.com's report.
method of losing
we 1 g~t primaril y
I
Quest.ion: Why do I need to take PatentLEAN
through the reduc·
~·
· . if nfy body makes it naturally?
ti on of body fa t"
Answer: Dr. Dietz As we age, our natural pro·
DA. JOHN l. llHK, MD
:::.
duction of this complex compound declines. This
IIHERNAl MEPICIII£
Jphn L. Zenk, MD
decline is most dramatic after the age of 30. By age
40,' we produce only half as much of the material
"Participant s of
needed to make 3-Acetyi·?·Oxo· Dehyd roepiand ro·
cl1ruca l stud1e s who
sterone as we did at age 20. By taking PatentLEAN,
used PatentLEAN
lost up to 3 t1mes
you are simply putting back something that declines
I
m ore weig ht than
as we age.
those wh o used
diet and exercise
Question: How long until PatentLEAN starts
alone."

i

1:11!

Stewart:'State reverses course.on Varney proposal

SPORTS

Clinical studies back safe and effective, quality
approved diet pill that has now been awarded
four United States Government Patent!f
After reading Consumer~ab.com's repdrt approving the quality of Patent LEAN, I was
intrigued to find out why diet failure may not be the Qieter's fault. So I sat down with two
distinguished medical researchers, Dr. John L. Zenk and Dr. Joseph C. Dietz , to understand
. ' how to help lose weight and keep it off.

I
EASTERN

:; o CEN 'IS • \'of.:;;,, No .

TRUE
FALSE
CIRCil N'
F
T

, Universa l Media Syndicate '

2. It has· been reported that a supply of PatentLEAN exists at Rite· Aid and
CVS/Pharmacy. If you can . fmd a pharmacy that has PatentLEAN, lUSt pick up 2
bottles and then send your sales receipt to the address provided and you' ll receive
another full month 's supply. Call the Regiona l Health Hot line to get an
au thonzat1 on code to write on, your rece1pt.

CENTRAL

-

~--~-~----1-

DOctors tell us how to lose

'

MOUNTAIN

-

As I ag&lt;;&gt;, it is ha&lt;der for me to lose weight.

10.

1. Begin calli ng at the exact time using the designated telephone l1ne shown below for

PACIFIC

- .-

6. · 1don't want stimulants like c~ffeine, green tea or ephedrine . .

To assure the orderly movement of the sup plies of Patent LEAN un ti l drug stores ar.e able
to restock their shelves. a Regional Health Hotl1ne has been set up.
You can now call 'du r1ng the times that are listed in your ti me zone. Simply call the nu m·
ber to get your full month's supply free. you will only be asked to cover the cost of the sec ·
and month's supply w1th shipping so you' ll have it 1mmed1ately.
'

If you live in the: .

---

Midc:ileport • Pomeroy, Ohio

1.

5.

When to call to get
-Free Supply

This is the phone number you should call for your time zone

_..____

4. I want visible results that will be noticed.

--,

your time zone.

_,.

.'

Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© 1006 Ohio Valley Publl•hlng Co.

.

"

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