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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailyselltinel.com

This·year's

Mon!lay, December 18, 2006

gift: 'Bricks' of money

.ast-minute Gift Guide
inside today's.Sentinel

•••
6

·····~······
Sponsoredby:
"Shop Locally' .:

I

Middleport
Community
Association

onfy

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

General public has only 72 hours to walk away with the real 'bricks' of money

/ )a)'S

till Christmas
~~,..._,.~("

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
I l I S ll \\ . Ill C I \Ill! I&lt; 1•1 . -' OOh

;;o ( I :'\TS • \ ol. ;;h . '\ o . 'l .'i

SPORTS
• Meigs upsets Eastern.
SeePageB1

• THIS YEAR'S MUST·HAVE GIFT:
These are the 'bricks' of 20 spec1al
rolls of Never·Circulated Jeffersons
that everyone is trying to get They are
heavier than solid bars of .999 pure silver. And in only two years,
new nickels just minted in 2004 have already increased in value by. ah astonishing
1,098%. Va l ~es of air coins fluctuate and there are never any guarantees. So. to get in on
this one readers better hurry, because the first 10.000 ca llers who beat
the Christmas order deadline are getting the bricks along With
six free rol ls included inside each official vault box.

""" ·"" &lt;l. tih "'ntind .,·nm

Middleport finances to end 'o6 in black
BY. BRIAN J. REED
faced in 2006, Councilman
BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM · . Ferman Moore, who serves
as chairman of the council's
MIDDLEPORT -II will . finance committee, said
be dose, but the Village of council action last week to
Middlepon will "ride out the transfer funds within the
year" financially, the finance general fund appropriations
chairman said, and end in will make it possible for the
the black.
village to make payroll and
Next year, however, poses pay necessary expenses
financial problems far worse through the end of the year.
than those the village has However, the finance com-

mittee decided to postpone
payment on .some invoices
until the new year.
· Moore credited Fiscal
Officer Susan Baker with
managing the village's bills
in light of dwindling revenue, working with the
finance committee to find
funds in various accounts to
pay those bills, and determining what bills might be

delayed without penalt y cushion of $93,000 in estate
until the village begins oper- tax revenue this year. Next
ating on a temporary 2007 year, that money won't be
appropriation .
·
· available.
Earlier this year, Baker
Most crippling to the viipredicted a shortfall of !age next year will be the
$15,000
and loss of an estimated $26,000
between
$20,000 by late this year. in revenue from a long-time
Council
appropriated levy which voters refused to
$517,250 into the general renew in November's elecfund in January. and has
benefited from a financial Please see Finances. AS

Students suspended,
.one expelled for dmg
activity at Southern
BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAiLYSENTINEL.COM

By ilRANDoN DAILY

Universal MedUJ Syndicate

It's like a run on the banks. The phones
just keep ringing off the hook.
That's because the U.S. Mint~ leaked
plans to release these new Jefferson Nickels
t"Q months early.
·
"Evt!ryone wants them. It's a miracle we .
have. them. Now, for only the next 72 hours
·we are handing them over to everyone who
calls the National Order Hotline beginning
at 8:30 a.m. this morning," confirmed
Timothy Milton, Chief of Coin Operations
for the World Reserve Monetary Exchange.
"First issue coins like these are highly
BOught after, but we've never seen anything
like this. Coin values fluctuate dramatically
and there are never any guarantees so it's
like comparing apples to oranges, but a
forty-coin bankroll of 1913 Buffalo nickels
are now worth up to $26,000.00. Even
more iinpressive are the new nickels just
minted in 2004. In only 2 years these new
nickels have already increased in value by
an astonishing 1,098%," Milton said.
•so just imagine what ·these special
twenty-five coin rolls of new Jeffersons
could bring someday. ·These are not just
the ordinary commercial forty-coin bankrolls. You can't find them at the U.S. Mint,
at the Federal Reserve or at any local
bank. You cllfi!t get them r&lt;Jiled this way
anywhere," he said.
. In fact, these twenty-five coin rolls are so
special because they remain sealed in the
Official Vault Boxes. Each sealed vault box .
contains a 'brick' of20 rolls of new Jefferson
Nickels in Brilliant, Never--Circulated con·
dition with mint contact markings, 500
coins in all.
And here's the best part. "We are giving
· up all the rolls for just 17 each. The full
Vault Boxes weigh more than a heavy solid
bar of .999 pure silver. So be careful, you 'II
need both hands to.pick them up," he said.
"Remember they are Never-Circulated
and have never been in the hands of the
public. Never~Circulated coii)S are the only

ones likely to increase the most
in value," said Milton.
These full Vault Boxes of
special Never-Circulated Rolls
ar~ the most impressive gifts
to hand out to children or grandchildren, family members or anyone special that you want to impress. You just won't believe the expression on people's faces when you hand them
out. It's like you just gave them a Million
Dollars.
"The most impressive way to give them is
in the full sealed Vault Boxes, but we can't
stop people from breaking the boxes open
and handing them out individually. So, to
keep that from happening we are paying
out a tremendous discount for each full
vault box. That's why everybody seems to
be taking at least 4 full boxes while they
still have time to call to get them," Milton
said.
•Just think if you had saved several rolls
of the 2004 Nickels. Rignt now you'd be
tempted to cash them all in for a huge jackpot. So for heaven's sake, don't ever get left
out like that again," urged Milton.
Beginning today at 8:30a.m., the National
Order Hotline opens to the public. For only
72 hours they'll be handling the large number
of calls. Readers must diall-800-326-3092
ask for Dept. JF2354. rr the lines are busy,
keep trying.
·
·The World Reserve has just announced
that it is also giving away the value of
6 free Never-Circulated rolls of the new
Jeffersons to everyone who beats the order
deadline for the Official Vault Boxes.
"We have to put limits on dealers. But
everyone else who calls within the next 72
hours should be able to get what they need,"
Milton said. •

0BITUARIFS
Page AS
• James Folmer

INSIDE
GUARANTEED DELIVERY FOR CHRISTMAS

How to ·get the money bricks
with free rolls
The World Reserve has just ann,ounced that it is also giving away 6
free Never·Circulated rolls that will be includeq inside each vault brick to
everyone who beats the Chr istmas order dead li ne.
Beginning at 8:30 a.m . today readers can get them immediate ly by
calling the National Order Hotline toll·free at 1-800-326·3092 and ask ing
for Dept. JF2354 . .
Those who beat the deadline and cover delivery will get each new Jeffer.son
roll for only s7. Each sealed vault brick contains 20 special sized rolls of twenty·
· five !effersons in Brilliant, Never·Circulated cond ition, that's 500 coins 111 all.
· THE "U.S. MINT" ~ ISAREGISTERED TRADEMARK OF THE UNITED STATES MINT THE WORLD
RESERVE MONETARY EXCHANGE IS NOT AFFILIATED WITH THE UNITED STATES GOVERN·
MENT OR ANY GOVERNMENT AGENCY. ALL TRANSACTIONS ARE BACKED BY THE WORLD
RESERVE MONETARY EXCHANGE WITH A MONEY BACK GUARANTEE UP TO $10,000.00

On the worldwide web at: www.CoinVau.ltBox.com

• Pres, cons of smoking
rules debated.
SeeP~A2

• PractiCal nursing
students receive
certificates. See Page A3
• Lighting contest
winners announced.
SeePageA3
• Barnetts announc!'l
birth. See Page A3
• Birth announced.
SeePageA3
• Investigation into
decoration damage
snowballs into arrests.
See Page AS
• Gates warns of
'calamity' HIraq effort fails,
as Pentagon reports
further surge in Iraq
violence. See Page AS
• Egg-toss prank turns
deadly for Ohio teen . .
·See Page AS

WEATHER

Detail• on Page A2

INDEX
2 SllCJ"IONS - 12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Annie's Mailbox

Bs
A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Comics

Sports

B Section

• OIUI EIICI.USIVE These are the never·before·seen vault photos that show the heavy bricks of real money that everyone is try1ng to get These bncks conta1n Brilliant, ~ever·Circulated Jeffersons

Weather.

·that are now being .released to the general public. You can't get these 'bncks' of 20 rol ls anywhere else. Not from the U.S. Mint Not from the Federal Reserve. Not from any local bank. You can't get
them in the twenty·five com rolls anywhere. Only those who beat the 72 hour Christmas deadl ine can get the.m along with six rolls 1ncluded free ins1de each officia.f va ult bn ck.
·

© 2000 Ohio Valley l'ubl,lshing Co.

I

•

;

A2

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLiCH@MYDAILYSENTiNEL.C9M
POMEROY - A two-story house
constructed of popsicle sticks took first
place in the annual holiday craft contest
of the Pomeroy Merchants Association .
Matthew Durham of Pomeroy was the
creator of the winning craft when judg-

ing took place Saturday at Farmers
Bank in Pomeroy, host for the contest.
He will receive a $200 savings bond.
The second place winner was Tim .
Hill of Racine with a large Ohio puzzle
map, while Mary Ann Shultz of Racine
took third with a lighted Christmas tree
novelty. Hill will receive a $100 savings
bond while Shultz will receive a $50.

RACINE - Four students
from Southern High School
(SHS) have been suspended
while one ·has been expelled
for their involvement in taking and/or selling prescription pills at school. The
administration has attempted to send a signal that this
type qf behavior won't be
tolerated in the district by
involving not only parents
but the Meigs County
Sheriff's Office.
According to Southern
Local
Schools ·
Superintendent Mark Miller,
last week a teacher noticed a
student acting sluggish and
after questioning from SHS
Principal Tony Deem the
student admitioo ·rotmiig-'Clonazepam piUs as well as
selling them to four other
students ,
Miller said the parents of
these five students were
called and after the parents
arrived the Meigs County
Sheriff's Office was called
to assist in the situation. One
of the students (the one who
was acting sluggish and had
sold the pills) was taken by
his parent to a physician
while four others were transbond.
ported by the Meigs County
Numerous entries.including a painted Sheriff's Office to · Meigs
bucket, holiday towels, decorated bas- County Juvenile Coun. The
kets, carved flowers, snowmen, a paint- rumor that there was a drug
ed bench and creations with ornaments, overdose at the school in
were judged by a Farmers Bank relation to this situation was
employee team. The host bank provided not true and simply a rumor.
Please see Contest. AS
Plene see Students. AS

Meigs Cooperative Parish
meets growing holiday needs
BY BETH SERGENT .
Food Fair and Hometown
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM . Market where ornaments
were displayed wit!\ ages of
POMEROY - The need children
and
needs.
only continues to grow in Customers took the ornaMeigs County for Jess fonu- ments home and brough~ the
nate families in need of food, toys .back to the stores which
wintercoatsandholidaygifts then brought them to God's
for children which is why the NET for distribution.
safety net s of the Meig s
God 's NET also distribCooperative Parish and it 's uted 200 new winter coats to
food bank, Parish Clothihg children which were supShop and youih ministry plied by Joy FM and their lisGod's NET remain full.
teners.
Last year God 's NET pro"This has been our busiest
vided toys for 65 children week 9f the year,"· Dunham
while this year that number said last week when the toy,
rose to I !"7. Jenni Dunham coats and food giveaway
who is a God 's NET youth were happening at the
coordinator and. Kitchen Mulberry
Community
Facilities Planner at the Center, home to the Meigs
Submitted photo
Mulberry
Community County Cooperative Parish
Members
of
the
Eastern
Quiz
Bowl
teams
presented
a
program
recertly
at
the
Ohio School
Center said, "The need is not and all its other appendages.
going down."
Last week the Meigs Boards Association conference.
Dunham added; "We get a Cooperative Pari sh Food
lot of working poor who Panty di stributed over 630
make enough money each bags of grQCer~ valued at
month maybe to just pay their $35 a bag io less fonunate
STAFF REPORT
Association
Conference
Eastern 's qui z bowl team
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
bill s but make too much to families over a three day
Student Achievement Fair showcased their e xp~ rie nce s
qualify for other government period . Families were also
showcases exemplary pro- through a ·slideshow about
TUPPERS . PLAINS - grams that are improving the teams and giving sample
programs. There is a·whole provided with a ham.
new class of people trying to
Dunham said thi s year an Six Eastern High School student achievement in academi c· quest ions . Tadd
make it lik e grandparent s anonymou s donor matched students represented the dis- school districts.
Ki1tl e. Andrew Bissell,
who, are still working but . two separate $500 donations trict at the Ohio School
One hundred groups from Darci Bissell. and Michael
now find them selves rai sing from both Powell's Food Fair Board Association's Student school . distri cts across the Scyoc de mnn;,traled the
grandchildren ."
and Hometown Market Achievement Fair.
state were chosen to high- hu uer
syste m.
wh ile
Eastern Local students light out stan.ding initiatives. Morga n Hall and Zari Roush
· At least three gifts were which resulted in $2,000
provided forthe 117 children worth of groceries going to were chosen lo represent The conference acts as a handed tlU I brochures about
quiz bowl teams to demon - storehouse for information their tecum . .
who qualified .for the toy the food pant1:y.
giveaway whi ch was funded
Resident s sign up for strate student achievement and additional resources
Ea,lcrn ha, t\\O high
at the conference .
through local donations from
dedicated 10 "Helping Kill&gt;
Please see Eastern, AS
people who shop at Powell 's
Please see Holiday, AS
The Ohio School Board Succeed!"

Eastern quiz bowlers present at conference

..

�The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

LOCAL • STATE

Tuesday,Decernber19,2006

Tqday's Forecast
Dec. 19

Accept these children
into your family

clty/Reolon
High

II.Ow temps

'

BY KATHY MtTCHEU
AND MARCY SUGAR

Toledo •

.l

38' 128'
Youngttown •
39' 127'

PA

Mantfleld • .J"!:!.._,_

l

.

Dayton• ~

*Columbus

~

42' l 25'

~

38' 127'

42" l 30'
'\

Cincinnati
• 47° I 34°

.

1
~-~

f":?....c

L.__2&gt;
Partly

Cloudy

Portemouth•
47' 135'

Cloudy

~

'.

~

~

Thunde
. r·
StOITTIS

~·
.

///,·/
.. "·
~ Showers
~

'

The Holzer Medical Center ·Lifeline staff consists of Dawn Halstead , Lifeline Program Manager, Kay Beaver, Alice Gilbert,
and Amber Young.

service
GALLIPOLIS - · Lifeline,
a service provided by.Holzer ·
Medical Center, is a unique
personal
emergency
response system that provides people of all ages with
around~e-clock access to
em~cy assistance simply
at the press of a button.
It is a service which has
been offered by Holzer for
23 years servin~ 1500 subscribers in Galha, Jackson,
Vinton and Meigs Counties
in Ohio and Mason .County,
W. Va. Currently the program has more than 425
,subscribers, according to
Dawn
Halstead,
the
Hospital's Director of
Volunteer Services, who
also manages the Lifeline

Program locally.
For ·people with health
limitations, physiCal challenges and persopal security concerns, Lifeline offers
the sec1,1rity of 24-hour
monitoring in the comfort
of their own home,"
Halstead said.
Lifel'ine connects individuals to the support of neigh·
bors, friends, family and
emergency services in the·
community. By pushing a
button worn around the
neck or wrist, subscribers
have rapid and direct access
to a traine.d Lifeline staff
member 24 hours . a day,
seven days a ~ek.
"Not only is Lifeline the
industry's leader, but the

inils23nl

of
personal
pioneer
response service,"· Halstead
commented. "Our mission,
which 'began 20 · years ago .
with the initial gifts to
establish the program provided by the late Emerson
E. Evans and C. H. "Casey"
McKenzie, has remained
unchanged ... 'to help older
adults remain in their
homes, independently, with
security and peace of mind',
she added.
Halstead noted that in
recent years, Holzer have
seen consistent growth in
the demand for services
which assist older individu- ·
als, as well a~ their families
and caregivers. The ability
to live at home and maintain .

independence has a sij$nificant positive ·emottonal
impact for both the elderly ·
and their family members.
She shared comments
from subscribers who ·subscribe to the program: "My
Lifeline service means
peace of •mind. lt's like a
warm blanket, It's there
when I need it." Another
commented
"Lifeline
means I can stay and live at
home. I know all l have to
do is eush. my button and
help Wlll be here."
For mot:e info'rmation on
the Lifeline Program, con·
tact the Lifeline Office at
Holzer Medical . Cenrer in
Gallipolis ·by calling (740)
446-5056.
'

Pros, cons of smoking rules de~ated
BY JULIE CARR SMYTH
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

COLUMBUS
Nursing homes, bowling
alleys, VFW clubs, restaurants and city health
departments all brought
different concerns to a con·
fab on Ohio's new smoking
ban Monday.
Whether they liked or disliked the outcome of
November's election - in
which Ohio voters approved
a statewide smoking ban everyone had questions on
the rules for carrying out the
• ban as drafted by the Ohio
Department of Health.
Will unsightly no-smoking signs really have to be
posted so abundantly, even
in nursing homes?
Could employees of pri•
• vate clubs smoke on the
premises if the clubs make
them members?
Don't no-smoking window stickers . on vehicles
break Ohio traffic law?
Shouldn't cities have the
right · to post their own
phone number on the sign,s,
rather than forwarding all
calls to the state?
The second meeting of
the Smoking Ban Advisory
Committee was merely for
the Health Department to
gather information, but at
times it got testy.
The ban took effect Dec.
7, but it is not being
enforced until the rules are
worked out. State· officials
said Monday that they are
moving as quickly as possible, with the next meeting
scheduled for Jan. 4: ·
David Corey, a lobbyist
for the bowling industry,
said the department's draft
rules are overreaching and
could hurt affe cted bu sinesses even more.
"The bowler is to the
point o f bein g afraid to
co me out -o f hi s house,"
Corey said . " He can ' t
drink , he can ' t smoke .
We ' re ht&lt;coming the state
of no fun ."
Socrat e&gt; Tuch , leg al
co un se l to th e de partment ,
said rul es will always
have criti cs.
"Thi s is standard, " he
.said . " We' re ovc rreachi ng
to .some. und e rre achin g to
oth ers. It all co rnes down
t,o perspecti ves and op1 n-

Draft rules on Ohio's smokin~ ban
How the state has proposed settling some gray .areas in the Ohio smoking ban
·
passed by voters in November:
• Complaints would be filed by mail, e-inail, telephone orthrough ,a designee, such
as a local health department. Filing complaints out of retaliation would be prohibited.
• State health officials would investigate complaints, but local health departments
would bear responsibility for enforcing the law.
• In public places, no-smoking signs would have to be posted conspicuously in all areas
affected by the ban, including at entries and exits and in all high-use areas such as waiting
rooms, dining areas, meeting rooms, resttooms, stailways, warehouses and break rooms.
• Only the state Health Department's phone number would be listed on no-smoking
signs arqund the state.
·
• The ban would not be in effect in private residences, which might provide intermittent workplaces for some individuals, such as baby siners, plumbers, electricians,
emergency medical technicians, home health care workers and housekeepers.
• lnves!Jgations could include a paper review of the complaint, a teview of evidence,
· telephone or on-site interviews or on- site investigations.
• Confirmed violations would carry these penalties for proprietors: first otfense,
warning letter; second, $100 fine; third, $500; fourth or more, $2,500. Fines could be
waived under certain circumstances.
• Penalties for retaliation would be: first offense, warning letter; second, $1,000 fine;
third, $2,500 fine.
·
.
(AP), Source: _Ohio Department of Health
ions and we' re taking it all
. into -account."
He said the rules may be
revised based on comments
gathered Monday from
advisory board members
and other interested people.
But, he said, certain things
are required- by the ballot.
language, such as the fact
that the state - not local
health departments - must
be the first responders to
complaints.
As a result, ihe proposed
state rules call for every no-

smoking sign to carry the ed no-smoking signs that
Health Department:s phone would have to be changed
number exclusively - a under the new rules.
requirement
Columbus
environmental- health
administrator Keith Krinn
said is cumbersome and
unnecessary.
"There's no need to reinvent the wheel here,"· Krinn·
said, noting that the city
already has a smoking violation hot line operating to
enforce its own smoking
restrictions. He said about
9,000 businesses have post-

.

Rurrios

~

loo

• •• •••

~

~ ~~

'

Aaln

Submitted photo

•

e • Snow

•• • • •

Weather Uriderground • AP

TUesday... Partly cloudy
in the morning .. .Then clearin~. Cooler with highs in the
m1d 40s. Northwest winds 5
to IO.mph.
·
TUesday night ••• Mostly
.clear. Lows in the mid 20s.
North winds around 5 mph.
Wednesday ... Mostly
sunny. Highs in the u'pper
40s.
Southeast
wmds
around 5 mph.
Wednesday
night ...
Mostly clear. Lows in the
lower 30s. Southeast winds
around 5 mph.
Thursday•••Partly cloudy
with a 50 percent chance of
rain showers. Highs in the
lower 50s.
Thursday night... Mostly
·cloudy with .a 50 percent
chance of showers. Lows in

the :upper 30s.
Frtday... Mostly cloudy
with showers likely. Highs
in the upper 40s. Chanee of
rain 60 percent.
. ·
Friday night ...Cloudy.
Lows iri the upper 30s.
Saturday ... Mostly
cloudy. Highs in the upper
40s.
Saturday night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
30s.
Sunday•.. Mostly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 40s.
Sunday · night ••• Partly
cloudy witb a 30 percent
chance of·. rain showers.
Lows in the Jower-30s.
Christmas · Day... Mostl y
cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of rain showers.
Highs in the lower 40s.

Local Stocks ·
-51.06
Oak Hill Financial (NASDAQ) - 28.30
'
Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
81.83
(NASDAQ),.... 25.15 .
Bll Lo~ (NYIE)- 23.88
BBT (NYSE) - 44~18 ·
lob Ivana I NASDAQ) Peoplea (NASDAQ)33.5'7
28.54
lor,Warner (NYSE)tteptlco ( NYSE) - 62.87
57.14
Century Aluminum I NAS... · Premier (NASDAQ)- ·
DAQ)-43.35
13.92
Champion (NASDAQ)Rockwell (NYSE) - 63.07
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - .
7.56
Charming Shops (NAS..
17.30
DAQ) -14
Sears Holding (NAsCity Holding (NASDAQ)DAQ)-171.84
38.58
.
Wal~Mart (NYSE) - 46.37
Wendy's (NYSE)- 33.55 .
Collins (NYSE)- 62.80
Worthington (NYSE) Dollar General (NYSE) 15.67
19.92
DuPont ( NYSE) - 48.73
Dally stock reports are
US Bank (NYSE)- 35.95 the 4 p.m. ET closing
Gannett (NYSE) - 61.04
quotes of tranaactlons for
General Electric (NYSE)
Dec. 18, 2006, provided
by Edward Jones Invest-38
Harley-Davidson ( NYSE) ment representatives
69.58
. Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at
JP Morgan (NYSE) (740) 441-9441, Trent
48.23
Rou11h In Pomeroy at
Kroger (NYSE) - 23.58
(740) 992·3875, and
Limited Brands (NYSE) Lesley Marrero In Point
30.23
Pleasant at ( 304) 674- " Norfolk Southern ( NYSE)
0174. Member SIPC.'
AEP (NYIE) - 42.13
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 80.30
Alhland lno. (NYIE) -

Adult C8 Health Proj~ct Participants: ·
Tbe CB Science Panel Needs You!
If you were one of the 6!l,ooo who participated in the C8 Health Project,
and were 18 or over at the time you took pan in the project, you may
have been asked to sign ii Consent Form to allow the Science Panel
to contact you personally for future studies.

's Domino

••w Brooklp
Stylai'IDII

· If you did not already sign, you can still do so, and be eligible to be paid
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Tuesday, December 19,2006

ANNIE'S MAILBOX Community Calendar

Local Weather
Forecast for TueadJIY,

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

•I ,

decided to step out of my
comfort zone and now work
as a nurse on a cruise ship.
Dear Annie: I have a 22- · The problem? I am totalyear-old daughter, "Jane," Jy burned out. I would
from my previous marriage. rather eat glass than pracShe is a senior in college tice nursing for another 20
and engaged to " Don," a 31 - years. I'm so ready to
year-old carpenter.
change careers , but haven ' t
Jane and Don have moved a 'clue as to where. to go or
in . together and · plan to what to do next. How do I
·marry soon. Don has cus- go about discovering my
tody of hi s two children, nex! working life? Do I
.and is fighting for custody need a career counselor?
of his 3-year-old girl by a · H.ow do I find one? different mother. The older Bewilderedly Yours
children are an absolute
Dear Bewildered: A
delight - a credit to Don's. qualified career developparenting. The mother of ment professional will be
the 3-year-old neglects the able to assess your abilities,
girl terribly, which is why uncover your interests and
Don wants custody. My guide you in the right direcdaughter loves the children, tion. To find someone, try
and they adore her.
. your local libraries, colleges
"Although Jane's relation- and universities, and also
ship was difficult for me to the
National
Career
handle at first (and I voiced Development Association
my concerns very clearly), I (ncda.org) at 1-866-fORdon ' t see any choice but to NCDA ( 1-866-367-6232).
accept it now. If she is Good luck.
happy, I am happy. .
Dear Annie: I read the
The problem is rriy live- letter from "Out of Ideas."
in partner of seven years, · whose co-worker suffered a
"James." He is vehemently brain injury.. 1 supervise 13
aga·inst Jane's relationship employees in my workwith Don and does not place. It's a pity the, cowant to have anything to worker suffered such a terrido with the children. They ble accident, but it does not
are not allowed to set foot change the fact that her
on our property. James erratic behavior affects the
believes that accepting the workplace. Businesses are
children is not in their best required to make REASONinterest, since the relation- ABLE accommodations for
ship between Jane and Don people with handicaps. It is
coufd end and then the not the co-workers ' place to
children would be emo- adapt to unacceptable
tionally harmed.
behavior that causes disrupJane has invited James tion and unpleasantness .
and me to her apartment for
The correct solution for
Christmas dinner. l want to this problem is to order a
go, but James refuses, He "Fitness For Duty" medical
says . he will instead volun- evaluation. If the co-worker
teer in a soup .kitchen .. J is determined to be unable
think his position is irra- · to function as expected, the
· tiona! and is causin~ dam- company can place her on
age to his relationship with short-term or long-term disJane, which was formerly ability, then replace her with
very good . It also makes 1t someone who can perform
extremely awkward when all the necessary duties. Jane wants to visit me. I've Not Politically Correct
tried talking to James and
Dear N.P.C.: Many peoeven- went to a counselor. pie wrote to say we bent
James said he would · do over too far backward for
whatever the counselor said, the ])rain-damaged cobut the counselor would not worker. You are right that
voice an opinion. James if she is incapable of
reads your column faitl\ful ' doing her job, the others in
ly. What do you think? the office should not be
penalized.
.
Caught Between a Rock
Dear Rock: We hope
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
James is paying attention ten by Kathy Mitcllell and.
because this is for him: Marcy Sugar, longtime ediKNOCK IT OFF 1 There are tors of the Ann Landers
no guarantees in ma\riage. column. Please e-mail your
For the foreseeable future, questio11s to anniesmailthese children are part of box@comcast.net, or write
Jane's family. If you can to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
ac~ept and love them with Box 118190, Chicago, 1L
an open heart, all of your 606JJ. To find out more
lives will be enriched.
about Annie's Mailbox,
Dear Annie: I am 46 and read features by lither
years old and have been a Creators Syndicate writers
"registered nurse for over 20 and cartoonists, visit the
years. I spent the majority of Creators Syndicate Web
. my practice in the ER, but · page at www.creators.com.

Public meetings

p.m.
Refreshments.
Members and Masons invited.
Tuesday, Dec. 19
Wednesday, Dec. 20
RUTLAND - Leading
POMEROY - Oh-KAN
Creek
Conservancy Coin Club will meet at 7
District,
rescheduled p.m. at the Pomeroy
December board meeting,- 4 Library.p.m.
MIDDLEPORT
Wednesday, Dec. 20
Feeney Bennett American
TUPPERS PLAINS Legion · Auxiliary 128,
Eastern Local Board of membership meeting 2 p.m
Education meets in regular at the Meigs County
at 6:30 p.m. in the elemen- Librll.l'}'.
tary library conference
room.

Church events

Clubs and
organizations
TUesday, Dec. 19
MIDDLEPORT
Special
meeting
of
Middleport Lodge #363,
F&amp;AM, with work 111
Fellowcraft degree, 7:30

Cooper Daniel Bamett

Barnetts
announce
birth
TUPPERS PLAINS
Steven and Allison Barnett
• of Tuppers Plains, announce
the b_lflh of a son. Cooper
Daniel Barnett . born on
Nov. 14. at Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipoli s
The in fant weighed 6
pounds,l 5 ounces . Maternal
grandparents are Tom and
Judy Gannaway of Salem
Center, and ·the patern al
grandparents are Ron and
Carol Barnett of Tuppers
Plain s. Mary Gannaway of
Draper, Va. is the maternal ·
great-grandmother. Edward
Rakowiti of San Antonio,
Texas and Clarence Barnett
• of Mineral Wells, W.Va. are
Cooper's paterna) greatgrandfathers.

Tuesday, Dec. 19
SYRACUSE
Christma-s play at the
Syracuse
Community
Church, 7 p.m.
Saturday, Dec. 23
KANAUGA
A
Christmas play will be presented at 7 p.m. at the
Silver Memorial Free Will

Monday, Dec. 25
POMEROY - Christmas
Mass, 9 :30 a.m ., Sacred
Heart Church.

Youth events
TUesday, Dec. 19
POMEROY - American
Legion, Post 39, at the
meeting room in the former
Salisbury building. dinner
at 7 p.m., meeting to follow.
2007 dues payable.

Birthc;lays
Sunday, Dec. 24
RACINE- Vinas Lee will
observe her 92nd birthday on
Dec. 24. Due to health problems, she is staying with her
son Jerry, and cards may be
sent to her in care of him at
7434 Wyndle Court, Dublin,
Ohio 43016-8243.

Practical nursing students receive certificates
· GALLIPOLIS - Fortyone students in the 2006
class of the Practical
Nursing School of Buckeye
Hills Career Center recently
received their certificates
and school pins.
The invocation was
delivered
by
Julie
McDougal, class treasurer.
After opening remarks, the
class sang "Do I Make You
Proud." Featured speakers
were
class
president,
Melissa Collins; Class vice
president, Julie Folden; and
class
representative,
Ashley Malone, who also
led the class in the Practical
Nurse Pledge.
Sharon
Carmichael,
Health
Careers
Administrator, introduced
each graduate while the
superintendent, Kent Lewis, .
. and board president, Cary
Montgomery, awarded the
certificates. The graduates
were each ·presented a gift
and their. school pin by
instructors, Gwen Phillips,
RN, BSN, Jeanetta Shriver,
·RN, BSN, and Amanda
Strickland, RN, BSN.
Three students received
recognition for their acade-

mic and overall achievement. The highest academic
award was presented to
Melissa Collins of Jackson
who received a $500 schol-·
arship from Holzer Medical
Center. Second highest academic award was preSented
to Tammy Woodyard of
Albany, presented $1 00
from Sue Hussell, BSN,
RN, on behalf of Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Outstanding student of
. the year award was presented to Bethany Weatherholt
of Vinton who received a
$500 scholarship · from
Arbors of Gallipolis presented byTeresa Wood,
Staff
Development
Coordinator.
Other awards presented
were a one-year memtK:rship in LPN AO to Lanita
Clonch; the following ten
students were presented
awards fpr perfect attendance: Carla Diehl-Neville,
Lisa Elkins, Vickie Frye,
Sarah
Hudson,
Erica
Hughes, Ashley Malone,
Julie McDougal, Charlotte
Satterfield, Patricia St.ump,

RACINE -Winners in
the
Racine
Area
Community Or~anization's
Christmas lightmg contest
have been announced.
Taking first place was
Billy, Jr. and Vicki Hill, second went to David and
Mickey Kucsma, and third
to Robert and Sherry
Kincaid. . The
winners
received prizes of $50, $30
and $20 respectively.

and Christi Walter. Shannon Roese, Gallipolis; Carla
Smith was selected by her . Diehl-Neville, Gallipolis
peers as the student .who Ferry, W.Va., and Christi
most exemplifies the quality . Walter, Oak Hill. .
Stacie Davis, Patriot;
and spirit of tlie licensed
practical
nurse.
She Julie McDougal, Crown
received a gift certificate City;
Dawn Coleman,
donated by . The Uniform Wellston; Scott Lallier,
Store in Huntington, WV.
Albany; James Cottrill,
A reception was held hon- I:.ogan; Eddie Simpson,
oring the graduates follow- · Wellston; Vickie Frye,
ing
the
ceremony. Lan~sville; Tracy Ste~er,
Graduating were
Karie Gallipolis; Lisa Elkms,
Shotts, Jackson; Brittany Wellston, Sarah Hudson,
Wolford, Jackson; Crystal Middleport; Brandi Clark,
Ingalls, Wellston; Ashley Thurman; · · Charlotte
Malone, Oak Hill; Patricia , Satterfield,
Langsville;
Stump, Bidwell; Mollie Erica Hughes, Jackson;
Chesser,
McArthur; Alexandra
Courtney,
Shannon Smith, Pomeroy; Mi?dleport; April Knopp,
. ole Ph'JJ
'
R tland Po tnt Pleasant, W, Va.;
NIC
1 •ps,
u
; Tammy Woodyard, Albany;
Melissa Collins, Jackson; Robin Moon, Waverly, and
Donna Reed, Mason, WV; Allison Oliver of Jackson.
Kelly Nolari, Crown City;
and Jessica Hawks, Vinton.
@ I J ,.£],,1 1 , 1 _.,,, .
Paula Large, .Jackson;
Karen McFadden, Jackson;
Sharon Cox, Wellson; Dani
Donahue
Francis,
'
.,
.
Gallipolis; Julie Folden,
The
Dail,i'S"entiMI
:;:
.
Jackson; Meredith Dupree,
Sub~f'ihiito,!.fa.t,,~!/9~-2~~5 '
Wellston;·
Bethany
wwW.mydailyuntl•el.com
Weatherholt, Vinton; Lanita
.
',t_.
.. !'·
.
Clonch, Gallipolis; Angela

. PROUD'ItfBEi -·~

'PARt OFYOURLJFB.:;
··~-~-

'

'l

H YSPECIILS

Lighting
contest winners
announced .

Birth announced
POMEROY Jeremy
Stone and Erica Drummer
announce the birth of their
daughter, Ava Gabri~Jle
Stone, born on Oct. 20. The
infant weighted 6 pounds, 4
ounces.
Maternal grandparents are
Shirley and Roger Johnson of
Racine, and the late Darrell
Dugan .. Patemal grandparents
are Sarah and Elmer Stone of
London, Ohio. The infant has
a brother, Logan Drummer.

Baptist
Church
in
Kanauga.
POMEROY
Confessions will be heard
at Sacred Heart Church,
4:45 p.m. to 5:15 p.m. on
Saturday. and 8:45 ~.m. to
9:15 a.m. on Sunday.
Sunday, Dec. 24
CHESTER
Silent
communion, 5 to 10 p.m. at
the
Chester
United
Methodist Church .
MIDDLEPORT
Victory Baptist Church children's Christmas play on
the real meaning of
Christmas, 5 p.m. at the
church. Nursery will be provided.
POMEROY - Christmas
Vigil Mass, 5:30 p.m.,
Sacred Heart Church,. with
children's
part1c1pation.
Midnight Mass, with choral
presentation beginning at
11:15 p.m.

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'

•

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

Tuesday, December 19~

'

'

retreat. By muddling that
choice and by providing
the media wilh opportunities to say thai Bush's ·policies were "repudiated," the
. group has made the president's task more difficult.
As Sen. John McCain, RAriz., said when the report
came out, it is really recommending "retreat - the
most . difficult , military
· maneuver of all to execuie." McCain - along
with an impressive list or
retired generals, some of
whQm opposed the war in·
the first .place - contend
that what's needed is an
increase in American troop
level s to decisively establish security, as well as a
· declaration that the United
States will not abandon the
mission until Iraq is stable,
something that could take
five or more years to occur.
Buried on page 73 of the
group's report is the statement that while the panel
reject&gt; sending in I00,000
or 200,000 more U.S.
troops, "we could, hoi.vt;ver, support a -short-term
redeployment or surge of
American combat forces to
stabilize Baghdali or speed
. up the training and equipping mission."
I hope that Bush, when
he starts picking and
choosing
among
the
group's recommendations,
selects that one and runs
with it, trying- for what's
likely to be one last timeto pacify Baghdad and
show Iraqis that they can
have a secure future. ·
Bush also should accept
the group's recqmmendation
to
significan.tly
increase military aid to
Iraq. One of the most
damning paragraphs in the
report says, "Congress has
been generous in supp0rting requests for U.S.
troops, but it has resisted
fully funding Iraqi forces.
"The entire appropriation
for Iraqi defense forces for
FY 2006 ($3 billion) is less
than the United States currently spends in Iraq every
two weeks."
As the report suggests,
Bush needs to gain leverage over the 1raqi government to induce it to work
toward national reconciliation and to eliminate sectarian militias from its

security forces . The Iraq
Study Group wants to use
threats of withdrawal of
economic, political or military support.
In the end, that may be
necessary. Bul first Bush
should try - and is trying
- to persuade Iraqi Prime
Minister Nuri al-Maliki to
reform his government and
oust radical Moktada alSadr in favor of moderate
Shiites. And when Bush
meet s with Sunni leaders,
he should tell them: If we
have lo, we will side with
the Shiites and Kurds, who
account for 80 percent of
the population, so you had
better cooperate with the
government rather lhan trying to bring it down.
On the diplomatic front,
Baker believes that it's
possible to "flip" Syria
from being an enemy of the
United States and an ally of
Iran and turning it into a
force for peace in the
reg10n.
Baker. told me in an
interview that he believes
Syria would give up trying
to topple the government
of lebanon, stop supporting Hezbollah and persuade Hamas to recognize
Israel's' right to exist if il
· could get back the Golan
Heights, which has been
occupied by Israel since
the 1967 war.
Bush should appoint
Baker as a special envoy to
Damascus to see if he can
bring that deal to fruition. I
doubt Syria would trade its
territorial ambitions in
Lebanon for the Golan, but
Baker would deserve a
Nobel Peace Prize if he
could produce a lasting
agreement.
Even
Baker
and
Hamilton admit thar Iran is
not likely to be a constructive player on Iraq, but
they nonetheless advocate
"dialogue." It won't work.
Bush was right to welcome the Iraq Study Group
report. It was the politic
thing to say. But he has to
fashion a new policy to try
to win this war. Retreat and failure -will be catastrophic.
(Morton Kmrdracke is
executive editor of Roll
Call, the newspaper of
' Capitol Hill.)

Distributing -schoolchildren by s~in tone

.

It

The Daily Se~tinel

I

Tuesday, December 19, .2006

2006

Baker-Hamilton panel can solve domestic issues, not win wars

Now that the graybeards
on the Baker-Hamilton
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
commission
have proposed
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
consensus solutions for the
www.mydallysentlnel.com
Iraq war, they should be
kept on to tackle entitleMorton
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
ments, energy
policy,
KorJCh aclce
health care and education
Dan Goodrich
--· domestic issues more
Publisher
appropriate to bipartisan
deal-m'aking. Seriously.
The prestigious Iraq tion: an Iraq that can susCharlene Hoeflich
Study
Group, headed . by tain, defend and . govern
General Manager-News Editor
former Secretary of State itself and serve as an ally
James Baker and former in the war on terror. It
Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-lnd., avoids 'Bush 's old goal,
· a magnificent job of democratizing the Middle
did
Congress shall make no law respecting an ·
reaching unanimous agree- East.
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
ment by splilting differThe panel dismi sses all
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of ences and finding middle- three of the most politically disputed strategies for
· speech, or of the press; or the right of the peo- ground solutions.
A bipartisan panel of Iraq - "precipitate withple peaceably to assemble, and to petition the such
distinguished elder drawal," "staying lhe
Government for a redress of grievances.
statesmen could very well cou(se" and "more troops
outline the "grand bar- for Iraq" - in. exactly 14
gains" it will take to break lines of type each.
-The First Amendment
to
the
U.S.
Constitution
.
.
domestic logjams.
Then, it recommends a
For instance, to finance "way forward" that calls
the retirement of the baby- for removal of all U.S.
'
boom
generation
and combat troops by early
2008, "subject to unex pectachieve
long-term
fiscal
Today is Tuesday, Dec. 19, the 353rd day of 2006. There
balance, we need a deal by ed developments in the
·
are 12 days left in the year.
·
..
which
Democrats agree to country."
Today 's Highlight in History:
shave
promised
Medicare
But
it
also
envisions
On Dec. 19, 1843, "A Christmas Carol," by Charles
and Social Security bene- maintaining a "considerDickens. was first published in England.
fits
and Republicans agree able military presence in
On this date:
the region," including
In 1777, Gen. George Washington led his army of about to increase revenues.
It's just the sort of thing unspecified numbers of
II ,000 men to Valley Forge , Pa., to camp for the winter.
In 1813, British forces captured Fort Niagara during the that former Democratic combat troops in Iraq for
War of 1812. ·
White House Chief of Staff force-protection, training
In 1932, the British Broadcasting Corporation began · Leon Panetta and former and anti-terrorist activity.
transmitting overseas with its Empire Service to Australia. GOP Sen. Alan Simpson
The evident, but unstatIn 1946, war broke out in Indochina as troops under Ho (Wyo.) could put their ed, purpose of the troop
Chi Minh launched widespread attacks against the French. minds to. The same goes withdrawals is to lower
In 1972, Apollo 17 splashed down in the Pacific, winding for education. Democratic American casualty rates
up the Apollo program of manned lunar landings.
lawyer Vernon Jordan and . and prevent a total collapse
In 1974, Nelson A Rockefeller was sworn in as the 41st retired Supreme Court of domestic support for the
vice president of the United States.
Justice
Sandra
Day war, which in turn could
In 1986, Lawrence E. Walsh was appointed independent O'Connor could fashion lead to "precipitate withcounsel to investigate the Iran-Contra affair.
and sell the bargain under drawal" and a series of dire
In 1986, the Soviet Union announced it had freed dissi- which teachers get more consequences that the
. dent Andrei Sakharov from internal exile, and pardoned his pay but have · to accept group foresees, including
wife, Yelena Bonner.
being promoted, hired and regional civil war and a triIn 1998, President Clinton was impeached by the
umph for Iran and other
Republican-controlled House for perjury and obstruction of fired on the basis &lt;;&gt;f perforradical Islamists.
mance.
· juslice (he was later acquitted by the Senate).
The group tried to buy
War
is
another
matter.
Ten years ago: The television industry unveiled a plan to
time and patience among
rate programs using tags such . as "TV-G," "TV-Y" and The Iraq Study · Group composed
entirely
of
civilAmericans . for a one-year
"TV-M." The school board of Oakland, Calif., voted to recognize Black English, also known as "Ebonies," in a deci- ians - basically produced transfer of combat respon~ion that set off a firestorm of controversy (the board later a plan designed to split the sibility io Iraqis and to
. between prod the Iraqi government
modified its stance). Actor Marcello Mastroianni died in differences
America's hostile political into making the reforms
Paris at age 72.
·
Five years ago: Argentina's president, Fernando de Ia factions, not produce victo- · necessary to avoid all-out
civil war. Members of the
Rua, decreed a state of siege as his country's economic cri- ry in Iraq.
By design, in fact, the panel observed correct! y
sis triggered violence. The fires that had burned beneath the
ruins of the World Trade Center in New York City for the group's report does not thai a president can't run a
previous three months were declared extinguished except mention President Bush's war without domestic supfor a few scattered hot spots.
oft-repeated goal - "vic- port.
One year ago:. A Chalk's Ocean Airways seaplane tory" - or the common
However, in war, what's
crashed off Miami Beach, Fla., killing 18 passengers and Democratic term, "quag- more important than conboth pilots. President Bush forcefully defended a domestic mire." It proposes . to sensus is decisive leaderspying program as an effective tool in disrupting terrorists achieve "success" in Iraq, ship. You win wars or you
and insisted it was not an abuse of Americans' civilliber- · using Bush's new defini- lose them. You advance or
ties. A video posted by an 'extremist group on a Web site
purponedly showed the killing of American contractor
Ronald Allen Schulz. Afghanistan's first democratically
elected parliament in more than three decades convened.
Southern California running back Reggie Bush was named
The Associated Press Player of the Year. Mob boss Vincent
Before the Dec. 4 oral
"The Chin" Gigante died in the federal ,prison in
arguments at the Supreme
Springfield, Mo., at age 77.
Thought for Today: "And so, as Tiny Tim observed, God Court - on using racial
Bless Us, Every One'"- The closing line of "A Christmas classifications for assign- ·
Carol," by Charles Dickens (1812-1870).
ing students to public
schools in order to achieve
Nat
racial diversity - editoriHentoff
LETTERS TO THE
als in favor of the plan in
•
The New York ·Times, The
EDITOR
Washington Post and, later,
''
: Lerters to the editor are welcome. They should be less USA Today ,grimly warned
lhan 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be the justices not . to betray decide on the use of race in
hgned. and include address and telephone number. No the Court's landmark 1954 K-12 public schools not to
lmsigned letters will be published. Leuers should be in ruling in Brown v. Board end official segregation,
good taste, add•'e»ing issues. not perwnaliries. Letters of of Education that state- but rather to bring about
(hanks to o~~ani~ations and individuals will nor be accept-. approved racial segrega- diversity in classroQms.
rd for publicatitm.
· The bedrock issue in
tion of public schools is
inherently unconstitution- these
cases
is
the
al.
Fourteenth Amendment to
Those editorial writers the Constitution, which
and other troubled watch- guarantees to every citizen
(USPS
213-960)
ers miss the constitutional of the United States "the
Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
violations now before the equal protection of the
Co.
Correction Policy
Court in this racial balanc- laws ." That means every
Published every afternoon, Monday
ing of school districts in individual, not groups . And
Our ma1n concern 1n &lt;!-11 stones is to
l hro.ugh Friday, 111 Court Street,.
be accurate If you know of an error
Seattle
and Louisville. the late Supreme Court
Pomeroy, Oh10 .
Second-class
Those districts have insist- Justice William 0. Douglas
1n a story. call!he newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
ed
on certain percentages - who persistently and
992-2156.
Member: The Assoc1 ated Press and
of blacks and whites in vigorously' opposed disthe Oh1o Newspaper Assoc1ation.
certain schools to prevent crimination in all it~ forms
address
correcPostmaster:
Send
Our main number Is
tions to The Da1iy Sentinel. 111 Court
"racial isolation" of blacks. - emphasi;zed:
(740) 992-2156.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
By contrast with the . "The Equal Protections
Department extensions are:
cases that led up to Brown of the Laws clause in the
Subscription Rates
v. Board, there is no offi- Constitution commands the
By carrier or motor route
News
cial discrimination against elimination of racial barriOne month
'
'1 0.27
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blacks in the two school ers - not their creation in
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
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Dally
50'
districts before the Court. order to satisfy our theory
Reporter: Bnan Reed , Ext 14
Senior Citizen rates
These are well-intentioned on how society ought to be
Reporter: Beth Sergent. EJ&lt;I. 13
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black and while children
During the Dec. 4 oral
Advertising
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can
learn
together
in
a
time
arguments,
.a
lawyer
Outside Sates: D(l.ve Harns , Ext 15 direct 10 the Da~ Sentinel No sub·
of increased residential defending the use of race
s'cnption by mail permidet.l in areas
Outside Sales: Brenda Davis Ext 16 where home carrier ~!Vice 1s avail·
segregation imd subsequent to obtain diversity pointed
ClassJCtrc.: Judy. Clark, Ext 10
able.
racial imbalance in many out that "students as a
schools.
·
whole do not suffer any
Mail Subscription
However,
the
1954
harm" because every stuGeneral Manager
Inside Meigs County
Supreme Coun ruled unan- dent in the Seattle school
Charlene Hoeflich. Ext 12
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imously that under the syste m got a seat 26 Weeks
'64.20
Constitution,
admission to though not necessarily the
52 Weeks
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Ou1slde Meigs County
must be "on a nonracial ents) preferred. There is no
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basis' ' And the present intent to stigmatite b.y
Web:
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is the first in which race, said the lawyer. It's
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w'Nw myda11ysent1nel com
the Supreme Court will not '·a selecti,,c or merit-

TODAY IN HISTORY

PageA4

based system."
But it is a collective
race-based system. As
Chief Justice John Roberts
said in response: "Saying
that this doesn 't involve
individualized determination simply highlights the
fact that the decision to
distribute (students), as
you put it, was based on
skin color and not on any .
other factor. " And it is
required by the school systems.
In a revealing account of
this diversity process in
· action, . syndicated columnist George Will reported:
"When registering children
for high school (in Seattle),
parents were asked to specify each child's race. If
parents did not specify, the
di strict did so based on
visual inspection of the
parents ' or the child's pigmentation .
"The school hoard president has said, ' skin tone

matters.'''
Wa s thi s "skin tone"
form o.f racial classification - with its echoes of
America before Brown v.
Board of Education what the justices intended
in 1954?
Very significantly, during
the oral arguments, Justice
Anthony Kennedy noted
that after a school district
proved to the courts that it
no longer engaged in official racial segregation as
barred by Brown v. Board.
then "we turn around and
use intli vidual skin color as
a basis for (student) assign ment. That sets us on a perilou s path.''.
With regard to the actual
effect of the celebrated
1954 Supreme Court deci-

sion intended to end racial
isolation; there are now
more largely racially segregated schools around the
nation than there were in
1954. Private residential
segregation is the primary
cause, but un~erlying that
dynamic · is a far from
inconsiderable degree of
racism in the nation.
Furthermore, the national
"racial gap" in learning
scores is undeniable; but
that gap has substantially
decreased among "disadvantaged"' students in public schools where the
emphasis is on structured
learning and concentrated
attention on individual students not imposed
diversity in the classroom.
A~ William 0. Douglas
counseled, education decisions should be made "on
the · basis of individual
attributes, rather than
according to a preference
solely on the basi s of
race .. ,

,.'Skin tone'' is still a discriminatmg factor in many
situations in this society,
but state-required diversity
in classrooms is not a substitute for effective individuated teaching in public schools where there is no
permissible exc use for any
child to be left hehind.
(Nat Hemoff is a nationally renowned authority on
the First Amendmem mrd
the Bill of Rights and
author of many books,
including ''' Th e War an the
Bill of Rights and the
Catlrering
Resistance"
(Se1 ·en
Stories
Press ,

2003 ). )

Obituaries
James Folmer
MIDDLEPORT -James Edison "Jimmy" Folmer 69
Middleport, formerly of Chester, passed away Mo~day
Dec. 18, 2006 at hts residence, following an illness.
.He was born Feb. 19, 1938 in Pomeroy, to the late
George W. and Cora Cunningham Folmer. Jtmmy worked
at Federal Mogal in Gallipolis for 25 years, was an avid
NASCAR fan, pulled garden tractors and was a member of
the S.E . Ohio Gard.e n Tractor Ss~ociation for 25 years.
He served In Korea as a member of the U.S. Army, and
was a graduate of Pomeroy High School.
Besides hts parents he was preceded in death by his
brother, Donald "Sonny" Folmer; brother and sister-in law,
William "Billy" and Erma Folmer and his father in law
Pearl "Penny" Edwards.
.
Surviving are his wife of 46 and a half years, Elsie Marie
Edwards Folmer; daughter, Cheryl Folmer Browning; sisters and brother: Linda (Pearl) Edwards, Lorrg Bottom,
Dick (Sharon) Folmer, Po":Jeroy, and Shelby ·(David)
Davts, Mtddleport; mother-m-law; Gertrude (Blanche)
Ed~ards, Middleport; special pet, Lexy; special kids:
Whrtley, Bnttany and Joey; brothers-in-law and sisters-inlaw: June (Fred) Thomas, Ralph (Joan) Edwaros and Joe
(Betty ) Edwards.
·
Funeral will be at l p.m. Thursday, Dec. 2'1, 2006 at the
Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Homes with Rev. Larry
Lem~ey and Rev. Steve Little officiating. Burial will fol·
low m Metgs Memory Gardens. .
Friends may call from 2-4 and 6-9 p.m. on on Wednesday
at the funeral home. Military Graveside services· will be
conducted by V.F.W. Post #9053 and Feeney-Bennett Post
# 128 American Legion.
.
Online condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.

Local Briefs ·
Holiday break
POMEROY - The Meigs County A&lt;lult Basic and
Literacy Education (ABLE) and GED learning centers in
Middleport, Bradbury and Tuppers Plains will close for the
holidays after regular hours Wednesday. All centers will
reopen in January.
More information about the ABLE/GED program is
available by calling the Middleport Center al 992-5808, the
Bradbury Center at 992-6930, or the Tuppers Plains Center
at 667-0441.
·

Investigation into decoration
da111age snowballs into arrests
fallen victim to two earlier
attacks.
The inflatable, the biggest
figure in his Christmas display in suburban Colerain
Township, was punctured
with a screwdriver Sunday
night, for the third time.
Williquette had used
white masking tape to patch
over Frosty the first two
times.
"The question I have is,
'Why me?' And why
Frosty?" Williquette asked.
"I had more · (decorations)
to put out there but with
Frosty going down, I wasn't going to chance it."

where the basket is now displayed and the drawing will
take place. The winner will
be notified by telephone and
from PageA1
can pick up the gift basket on
·
Tuesday.
the prizes.
A second coinest sponThe craft display wrapped sored by the Pomeroy
up the three holiday contests. Merchants is for a get-way
annually sponsored by the trip. Signup boxes are availMerchants Association on able in several businesses
the first three Saturdays of and the sign up will continue
December. Candy and cook- until Valentine's Day at
ie contests were held earlier which lime a drawing for the
this month.
trip will take place to select a
As apart of the Merchants' winner.
holiday events, a gift basket
The three•day vacation
created with contributions destination
get-away
from various businesses will includes lodging, a $25 dinbe awarded on Saturday. ing gift card, plus a digital
Shoppers are invited to sign camera to capture memories.
up at the various businesses The winner can choose from
in Pomen:&gt;y through Friday. 70 resort destinations in
All of the.slips will be picked Hawaii, Mexico, Canada ,
up Saturday inorni ng and and throughout the United
taken to Farmers Bank States.

Contest

Students
from PageA1
Miller added all five students may now be facing
unspecified charges in juvenile court as well as their suspensions from school. The
student who admitted to selling the pills has been
expelled from SHS.
Clonazepam · which is
commonly sold under the
brand name of Klonopin is a
prescription drug with a
sedative effect commonly
used to treat anxiety disorders, seizures, restless leg
syndrome and even epilepsy
and is found in medicine
cabinets across the country.
It is classified as a benzodiazepine as are the drugs
Xanex and Ativan.
In addition to involving
parents and the proper
authorities to co mbat the
issue of drug abuse by high

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Egg-toss prank turns deadly for Ohio teen

'

CINCINNATI (AP) - ·
Two Christmas grinches
were arrested Monday,
accused of stabbing a 12foohtall inflatable Frosty
the snowman with a screwdriver.
The Hamilton County
Sheriff's office said two
18-year-olds were charged
with criminal damaging,
and the investigation continues to snowball.
The assault on Frosty was
caught on tape when homeQwner Matt Williquette set
up a motion-sensitt ve video
camera in a tree in his yard
because the snowman had

www .mydailysentinel.com

school students, SHS is also
attempting to be proactive.
"We have many good students in the Southern Local
School District," Miller said.
"It is our goal to provide the
best education and in the
safest environment possible.
We have reached out to local
ireatment agencies and pharmaceutical companies to
provide in ser~ice training
for teachers and assemblies
for students. It is our hope to
educate students as to the
dangers of digesting prescription medication not prescribed by a doctor."
SHS also has an after, school mentoring program
coordinated bY'the Division
of Community Services as
part of Health Recovery
Services.
As for what parents can
do to help the situation?
"Parents can help by
stressing the severity of drug
abuse on a student's health
and academics," Miller
added.

Bv ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

Crawford's death was
Family and schoolmates
reminiscent of a shooting said Crawford called
in lndiarla last year when a D.J. by his family - was
motorist whose truck had fun to be around and made
been egged by teenagers a point of helping other
chased the youths and kids, cheering them up if
OP.ened fire in a parking lot, they had a bad day.
ktlling one boy and wound"Danny was a nice kid,
ing another.
he doesn't get in a lot of
Three years ago a young trouble," said 12-year-old
man in northeast Ohio was Cyril Butler, a seventhshot to death after throwing grader at Westmoor Middle
tomatoes at passing vehi- School who played pickup
cles, a common prank in football with Crawford.
the Amish community.
"He ·was hanging around
"We're just wondering the wrong people, honestwhy it happened to him ly."
and why would somebody
The boys shouldn't have
even think to do that?" lieen throwing eggs at cars,
Hannah Pulse, 13, a friend, said other teens from the
said of Crawford's slaying. area. But they also· said ·
Cars give people a sense nothing the boys did justiof anonymous power that ·fied a fatal shooting.
helps explain such con"That's whal kids do,
frontations, a type of road they have fun on the weekrage, said Northeastern ends," said K won Wright,
University criminologist 16, a sophomore at nearby
Jack Levin.
West High School. "That's
'.'People are reacting from what him and his boys was
their gut in the heat of the up to - having fun doing
moment and if they had a what they do."
little time to think about it
The father of one of the
aQd cool off they mig_ht not three boys hanging out that
respond at all," he satd.
night defended the late
The shooting happened hours kept by the boys.
Dec . 2 in · a struggling Although it was after midneighborhood of century-· night when the shooting
old homes plagued by happened, the teens were
poverty and drug abuse. It's .. on a lighted church parking
common to see prostitutes lot where it was common
after dark and hear late for kids to play basketball
night gunfire.
or roller-skate, and adults
The church parking lot were nearby.
where Crawford and his
Someone showed up -with
buddies were hanging out eggs, and the kids started
that night is about a mile tossing them at each other,
from his father's house, said Bobby Messer, 43,
and friends said he didn't whose 14-year-old son,
know the layout well.
Devon, was among the

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS - It was
misbehavior certain to raise
drivers'
blood-pressure:
kids, out after midnight,
egging cars along a busy
thoroughfare.
The mischief turned
deadly when the driver of a
gray Jeep barreled down an
alley ·after the boys .. and
pulled a gun, firing multiple shots that killed 14year-old Danny · Crawford.
A police detective says · it
was another boy who threw
the egg that hit the Jeep.
' ·Police are still seeking
the gunman two weeks
after Crawford's death.
They have interviewed the
Jeep's owner but aren't
saymg if that person is a
suspect.
"This guy was such a
man - he could chase a
child and shoot him in the
back, and now he's hiding," said the teen's mother, Kelly Crawford: 35, a
Fredericksburg, Va., office
worker.
'Td like to know where
he is. I'd like to know why
he won' t come out and
admit what he did."
raised ·in
Crawford,
Virginia where he lived
with his mother, had
moved io Columbus over
the summer to be with his
father: He decided to stay
for the school year, attending eighth grade at a middle school a few minutes
walk from his house.

teens that night. At some
point, police say, the boys
began lobbing the .eggs at
cars along a busy four-lane
city stretch of U.S. 40, the
old National Road that
divides Columbus in two.
"It' s just one of them circumstances - nobody can
believe it," Messer said.
Devon's sobbing voice
can be heard on the tape of
a 911 call obtained by The
Associ~ted Press through a
records request.
"A II I heard was the kid
turn around and threw an
egg at the car," Devon
Messer says on the tape. "I
took off running because I
thought I would get in trouble for it and then I heard
the gunshots." It's unclear
which teen Messer was
referring to.
.
A note seeking an interview was left at the home
of Crawford's father. Other
family
members
say
they' re forced to acknowledge he was out that night
with the other .teens, though
they say the prank was out
of character for Danny. ·
Every boy needs to be
with his father, which is
why they agreed to let him
stay in Columbus, said his
grandmother, Gayle Shiner,
65, of Fork Union, Va.
"We had hoped that he
would graduate frotn high
school, possibly go to college," Shiner said. "We
hoped he wo.uld date and
marry and have children,
and of course all of that
was ended because of
somebody's stupidity."

·Gates warns of.'calamity' if Iraq effort fails, as
Pentagon reports further surge in Iraq violence
.

Bv ROBERT BURNS
AP MILITARY WRITER

WASHINGTON On
his first day as defense secretary, Robert Gate&amp; warned
Monday that failure in Iraq
would· be a "calamity" that
would haunt the United
years.
States · for
Underscoring eroding security there, a Pentagon report
satd the number of insurgent and sectarian· attacks
had risen to the highest
level in years.
Sworn into office as the
Bush administration moves
toward revamping its strate•
gy in Iraq, Gates sketched
out an agenda of reversing
the downward spiral in Iraq,
attending to resurgent violence in Afghanistan and
pushing for the military
modernization that was a
priority of his predecessor,
Donald H. Rumsfeld.
Gates said he intends to
travel soon to Iraq to hear
commanders' assessments
of the situatio.n on the
.ground and to gain their
advice- "unvarnished and
straight from the shoulder"
. - on how ·to adjust u .S.
war strategy. He &gt;aid he
would give President Bush

Holiday
from PageA1
these free services and are
screened in November
which makes it hectic to collect money for food and toys
all in time to distribute them
but somehow, th;mks to a lot
of volunteers and late hours.
it gets done.
These services are also

Eastern
from Page A1
school quiz bowl teams that
will compete against Meigs,
Southern, and Wahama
teams and two middle
school teams, grades 7 to 9.
who compete against Kyger
Creek, South Gallia. Vinton
and other local schools.

'

been finalized.
Moore said he expects the
village to operate through
th e early months of next
from PageA1
year, but said running current expenditures with revtion. Counci I President enue projected at $120,000
Stephen Houchins , who less than last year's will
also serves on the finance cause problems, sooner or
·
committee, has set hopes on later.
"We'
II
be
all
right for the ·
the sale of the Middlepon
Hi gh School and Central first few months, but by
buildings to 'help the vi ll age Jul y or Augu't. we're goi ng
financially. but no &gt;ale has to run short ... Moore said .

Finances

.

honest advice and listen to on Iraq policy.
More broadly, Gates has
mUitary commanders - a
contrast to critics' com- said he will keep an open
plaints that Rumsfeld was mind about other issues at
an ideologue who paid scant the Pentagon, including
heed to top officers.
proposals by the heads of
"All of us want to find a the Army and Marine Corps
way to bring America's sons to increase the size of their
and daughters home again," services to cope with the
Gates told a few hundred strains of war. Last week,
people in a Pentagon audi- Gen. Peter Schoomaker, the
torium, including Bush, Army's lop commander,
Cabinet secretaries, mem- warned thlll his force "will
bers of Congress, the Joint break" without thousands
Chiefs of Staff and Gates' more active duty troops and
wife and mother. Rumsfeld, greater use of the reserves.
who handed off his authoriRetired Army Brig. Gen.
ty earlier Monday in a pri- Kevin Ryan, a senior fellow
vate event, did not attend at the Belfer Center for
the ceremony.
Science and Internation'al
"As I he ~resident has Affairs
at
Harvard
made clear,' Gates said, ·University, said in an inter"we simply cannot afford to view Monday that he feers
fail in the Middle East. certain Gates will have the
Failure in Iraq at this junc- latitude within the administure would be a calamity tration to push for a bigger
that would haunt our nation, Army and Marine Corps.
impair our credibility and "The question is going to be
, endanger Americans for how high" to go, Ryan said.
decades to come."
At the Pentagon ceremoGates has not tipped his ny, Bush said he is confihand on the. kinds of dent Gates, 63, will bring a
changes in Iraq strategy he fresh perspective to the Iraq
thinks may be needed. He problem.
said that since his Senate
"He knows the stakes in
confirmation
in
early the war on terror;" Bush
December he has held in- said. "He recognizes this is
depth discussions with Bush a long struggle against an
enemy unlike any our
made possible by local resi- nation has fought before: He
dents who make donations to understands that defeating .
the Meigs Coorerative the terrorists and the radi,
Parish such as a toea woman cals and the extremists in
who remained unidentified Iraq and the Middle East is
last week. She was carrying a essential to leading toward
new $1LO bill into the peace."
Mulberry
Community
Bush made no mention of
Center and wanted to donate his plan for changing Iraq
it. When asked why she strategy. which he has said
chose to give her money to will be unveiled next
the parish she said. "I don't month.
.
know anyone that needs it,
Amid growing speculabut I figured they did."
tion that Bush will choose
"to send 'tens of thousands
The teams are ·coached by more U.S. troops to
Melissa Barker Yoho and
Melissa Scyoc. Through
this experience they were
also able to visit other
schools at their showcase
booths and watch other
schools with their performing groups.
·
"The conference was definitely a tremendous learning opponunity that these
students will never forget,"
· Yoho said.

Baghdad in a reinvigorated
" attempt to quell the sectarian violence, a leading
Democrat in Congress cautiqned against that move. ·
"Everything . I've heard
and everything I know to be
true lead me to believe that
this increase at best won't
change a thing,' and at worst
could exacerbate the situation even further," said Rep.
Ike Skelton, the Missouri
Democrat who will become
chairman of the House
Armed Services Committee
in January.
Gen. James Conway, the
new commandant of the
Marine Corps, told reporters
in Missouri on Saturday that
one option Bush is considering ts to add five or more
combat brigades -roughly
20,000 troops . He said he
bel.ieves the Joint Chiefs as
a whole would support
adding ihat number in Iraq
"if there is a · solid military
reason for doing so." He
stressed that adding troops
just to be "thickening the
mix" in Baghdad would be
a mistake.

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THE WORLD'S MOST PERFECTLY CUT DIAMOND•

Promises like"".other diamond.

�'
•

Page A6 • T

'

Tuesday, December 19. 2006

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Still time to get this year's hottest Christmas gift:

'.

Bank books filled with real sheets of money
Free money sheet gjveaway helps solve everyone s last minute shopping list
By BRANDON DAILY

(UMS) Everybody loves the gift of money.·
But now people ~re .getting full sheets
of real money and it feels like· winning the
Lottery.
And here's how everybody wins.
At precisely 9:31 a.m. today, the .National
Hotline opens. Those whose last name begins
with A-N have i special number to call and .
those with last names beginning with 0-Z
have their own number to call.
"The phone lines are jammed with everyone trying to order the Bank Books full
of these precious $2 bills so they can have
their Christmas .sl]opping done. And those
who get through before the deadline are in
for .a big surprise. The World Reserve has
just announced that everyone who beats the
order deadline and gets the Official Bank ·
B_ook will actually receive a full four-up uncut
dollar sheet for free. Please tell everyone to
just keep trying until they get through if the
line&amp; are busy. We promise to do our best to
get to everyone," says. Stephen Speakman,
National Director of Hotline Operations at ·
the World Reserve Monetary Exchange.
"All this money is being offered up on a
first come first served basis," Speakman
said. After the deadline, callers will be
turned away. That's because the National
hotlines will only stay .open for readers of
today's newspaper until midnight tomorrow
to take their calls for the valuable sheets of
real money.
The full uncut sheets of real nioney, including these rarely seen $2 bills, are now being
served up. Not to banks. Not to dealers. Not
just to the rich and famous. But directly to
readers of today's newspaper and only until
midnight tomorrow.
"Money is the best gift because it always
has value. If times get tough you could
actually cut the full sheets apart and spend
them. It's real money. But anyone would be
foolish to cut them apart because they are
already worth so much more," Speakman
confirmed.
"We're bracing for all the calls. With just
hours left, we're doing our best to make damn
sure everybody .gets through," Speakman
said.
But the government is not the one to thank.
This 'free-for-all' is happening because the
private vaults of the .World Reserve do not
have additional capacity to store the large
volumes required to fill everyone's shopping
list.
Those who get in on this now will be the
really smart ones. Just think what they could .
be worth years from now.
Values of currency always fluctuate and it's
· difficult when you are comparing apples to
oranges. But, one rare uncut dozen $2
bill sheet from the first printing seventy
eight years ago recently sold at auction for
$27,600.00. "At just fifty-nine dollars the
Bank Book is a real steal," Speakman said.
"You would expect to-only see uncut money
sheets on display in the Oval Office or under
guard at the Smithsonian," he said.
"'fhey are so rarely seen, banks don't
even have them. Until now, only government
offices in Washington or those lucky enough
to be 'in the know' could get their hands on
them.
U.S. Savings Bonds used to be the hot
ticket. But now full sheets of real money are
what everybody wants to receive as a gift.
There's going to be a lot of excited people
when they unwrap the massiye Bank Book
filled with these valuable full sheets of money
this Christmas. It looks like a ton of money.
"These sheets of money make it so easy
to take care of everyone aU at once without
having to waste your time shopping. You can
take care of parents, grandl'arents, children,
grandchildren, dergy, the mailman and even
the hardest person to buy for. They will
all be 'so impressed w,ith your generosity,"
Speakman said.
But, it is important that the general public
follow the local time clocks and call the Toll
Free numbers to ·heat the deadline. Because
when it's over, it's over.
So, on your inark, get set, go. Now you'll
· be the first to have your shopping done this
year. •
~t •m"/dwit)e

LocAL

31 I EASTERN 24

SCHEDULE

POMEROY -A schedule oJ upcoming college
and hi{tl school varsity spor1mg events iwolv~
leam&amp; frttn Galia end Metge counties.

Universal Media Syndicate

Orr th e

Thesday, December 19, 2006

1rrb ai:

· e·'·

7.
,,

7
:

\o

Tugsday'e garnet
Boys Basketball

.

6

Southam at Waterford, 6:30p.m.
Meigs at VInton County, 6:30p .m.
Trimble at Eastern. 6:30 p.m.
Waham a at South Gatlia, 6 p.m.
Miracle Cily at OVCS . 7 p.m.
Girls Basketball
Miracle City at' OVCS , 5:30p.m.

SPICJIHN

.

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Bv BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN®MYDAILYTRIBUN E.COM

ROCK SPRINGS . Meigs
slowed itself down,
I
and Eastern too.
R1ver Valley vs Gallla Academy (at R1o
Grande), 5 p m.
And in the process, the
Wreatling
Lady
Marauders found the
Gallia Academy at Wellston tri -match
formula that may just bring
an end to their Jekyll and
Hyde season.
INSIDE
Meigs, with a new-look
slower pace, handcuffed the
Eastern
Lady
Eagles'
offense and held on for the
31-24 upset in girls high
school basketball action
Monday night at Larry R.
Morrison Gymnasium.
Coach Carl Wolfe\ club
held Eastern star Erin' Weber
to only six points, and just
one point in the second half.
No Lady Eagle reached dou·
ble figures, and they . combined for only eight field
goals the entire night.
"We decided that we were
going to mix up the defenses
and play a little slower, try
to control the ball and win
on the defensive end,"
• Keep Your Foil&lt; resuhs.
explained
Wolfe. - "We
See Page 82
couldn't ask for a better job
defensively ... we didn 't let
them hurt us inside." ·
Meanwhile, Meigs' Catie ·
SroKISBluEF
Wolfe went for 19 points in
leading ht:r club to a satisfying victory over its in-county rival. ·
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) It was also a very .imporManning to Harrison is the tant win fot the confidence
surest way to get- the
Indianapolis Colts out · of a of a Me~s team that was
coming o.f a horri6Ie loss at
funk.
The .most prolific pa~sing previously-winless Belpre
duo in NFL history tore apart last week. The Maroon · and
the Cincinnati Bengals, com- · Gold, which has played rip,
Brad Sherman/photo
all
season, Meigs Lady Marauders' Catie Wolfe (20) dribbles past Eastern Lady Eagles' Jenna Hupp
bining for three touchdowns in and-down
a 34-16 victory Monday night. improved to 4-3 overall. during a girls high school basketball. game Monday in Rock Springs. Meigs won the game
Even the Colts' maligned Eastern (6·2) lost for the 31-24.
defen~ woke up aftel' Indy. first time since its season
dropped three of its last four opener and saw its six-game Containing Weber, who ' Guard Jenna HUpp, aneth- 5:54 mark. Milam hit a three
averages
double-double, er top scorer for the Lady and Hayman followed with a
games and yielded an incom- win streak snapped. ·
"I
think
we
shot
16
per.
was
the
top
priority for Eagles. made just two free short jumper to swing the
prehensible 375 yards rushing
cent, and I'll give Meigs coach Wolfe. Meigs played a · throws for two points. Jillian momentum.
a week ago to Jacksonville.
"A week or so ago, we
But it was vintage Peyton credit, the defense bothered box-and-one defense with Brannon had four points and
would have probably have
Manning throwing . to his us ," added Eastern coach Brittany Preas! and Melissa Kay lee Milam three.
As badly as Eastern folded," Carl Wolfe admitfavorite
target,
Marvin Dave Weber. "They took Grueser sticking to the 5·
Harrison, that dominated what Erin away inside; we had to foot-1 0 senior post player.
played, though, it was still in ted. "When someone made a
was expec;ted to be a shootout. have somebody knock down
"We assigned a person to the game and made it inter· run ·at us, we sort of panThe AFC South ~hampion some shots and we Just her to keep her from catch· esting in the fourth quarter. · icked. Tonight they played
Colts (11-3) did their part, couldn't shoot it tonight. '
ing the basketball ," said Weber drew an offensive like they are capable"
while the Bengals (8-6}
Katie Hayman led the Wolfe . "They did a great job foul on Wolfe, which
Coach Wolfe's daughter,
slipped back in the wild-card cold-shooting Lady Eagles of denying her the ball, then seemed to spark Weber' s Catie, answered with a big
race with their first loss in five with only nine points fol - we had the ball covered on club to a 5-0 run to cut the
Please see Meigs. 81
weeks. They'd allowed 33 lowed by Weber's six. the weak side."
Meigs lead to 25-20 at the
points in those four wins. one
less than fudy scored Monday
night

S P f C.l M £ N

,\

over Eastern

UIIS

·

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SPEC IIHH
W..""""""'.D-C"
, I

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' '.IJ•

Colts beat Bengals

a

Redwomen down Ohio Valley at home·

CoNTAcrUs
OVP Scorellne

BY MARK WIWAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

(S p.m.-1 a.m.)

RJO GRANDE - A 9-1
run midway through the secand half gave the University
Fu- 1-740-446-3008
of Rio Grande women's basE-mail- sports@mydailysentinel.com
ketball team the lift it needed
Sports Staff
to get past a scrappy Ohio
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
Valley University on Monday
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
.
.
evening
at the Newt· Oliver
bqherman@ mydaitytribune.com
Arena.
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
Rio Gmnde (9-5 ) ha~ the
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
opportumty·
to run off and
Ierum @ mydailyregister.cam
leave. Ohio Valley at the
·Ashley Shaw, Sports Writer
beginning of the game, but
(740) 446-2342, ext 23
had difficulty putting the ball
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33

• THESE ARE THE RARELY SEEN FULL UNCUT SHEETS OF $2 BILLS EVERYONE WANTS FOR CHRISTMAS: It's impossible to predict
how much these four-up uncut sheets of historic $2 bills will be worth in the future; but a full uncut dozen from the first pnnting years ago is now worth $27,600.00.
So, at just flfty-n1ne dollars these Official Bank Books are a real steal because they are loaded with a full sheet of $2 bills and the free full uncut do llar sheet for each
g1ft order.
·

When to call to get the ·books of money

sponsOmydailytribune.com

DEPT. US2583

LAST NAMES A·N

LAST NAMES O·Z

START CALLING AT
9:31A.M. TODAY

START CALLING AT

1-800-781-3346

1·800-207-1724

in the basket Sophomore forward Erin Kume came off the
gave the
bench
and
Redwomen · just what they
needed, someone who could
put the ball in the basket. She
scored a quick eight points
tmd Rio Grande grabbed a 147 lead. at the 12:04 mark .
Kume ended up with 14
points and seven rebounds off
the bench.
. Ohio Valley (3·5) was able
to weather the storm and
. stayed within four points of
the Redwomen at halftime,
28-24.

In the second half, the scoring began to pick up. The
Fighting Scots fought back to
tie the game at 30-30. The
score would be tied two more
times in the second half Rio
led 48-42 with 9:33 tm play
and it was at that point that
fatigue caught up with the
Fighting Scots.
Ohio Valley scored only
9ne point in a span of 4: 16
which led to the 9-1 run by the
Red women and ultimately the
difference in the game.
Senior center Candace
Ferguson nailed a three-point-

er at the 5:00 mark to sound
the death knell for OVU.
Ferguson's triple gave Ri o a
59-43 lead.
Rio would get the lead as
high as 21 points at 74-53 in
the waning moments of the
game.
.
Rio senior guard Carlesha
Chambers led the Red women .
with 17 points and five steals.
Chambers hit 8-of-9 at the
charity stripe. Kume was the
only other Rio player to score
in double figures. Rio had two
other players on the verge of

Please see Rio, 81

Alexander
tromps
Tornadoes
Bv ScOTT WOLFE
SPORTS. CORRESPONDENT

RACINE Behind a
25-8 fir st period blast , the
Alexander Spartans blitzed
th e
Southern
Lady
Tornadoes 7 1-35 Monday
ni g ht durin g Tri -Vall ey
Conference interdivisional
girls basketball action in
Hayman gymnasium.
Southern
falls to 3-5
on the seaso n
and
Alexander
remain s
undefeated
at 8-0.
Midway
through the
g a. me ,
Southern
Turley
pla ye d
even with the hard-fi ghting
Spartans, but the 25-8 first
period tally could have
been worse off that seems
possible.
Forme r AllLeaguer Keilee Guthrie,
coach Denton Guthrie's
daughler, suffered a shoulder injury nearly six minutes into the game and did
not pla~ the last three quarters. Still the talented eager
had already put nine points
on the board.
Whitney Smith paved the
way for the winners with a
game-high 22 points, while
J ami Turre ll added 14.
Heather McClain nine ,
Kara Endick five , and four
each from Lauren Raine s,
Amy Smith · and Lacey
Shaulis.
Southern was led by talented freshman Kasey
Turley with 16 points. No
other Tornadoes hit double
figures. Next in line was
Virginia Brickles with six ;
Whitney Wolfe-Riffle four . .
Sarah Eddy four, Emma '
Hunter three, and Rachael
Pickens two. Mallory Hill
and Cheyenne Dunn saw
action but did no( hit the
scoring column.
After the tumultuous first
pe riod. Southern battled
much harder in the second
fram e .
Down
25-8.
Southern cut the score to
25-11 before fadin g to · a
42-20
halflime
tally.
Turley, behind some great
feeds from Wolfe-Riffle
had I 0 points at the hal f.
For Alexander. Guthrie and
Smith each had nine points
and Turrell had all uf he r
14 points in the first halL
Alexander raced to a 5526 third period tally. then
on to the 71-35 triumph .
Soulhern hit 13 -of-4 1
ove ralL hitting 1-of-3
threes, 12-of-38 twos. and
8-15 at the line . .Southern
had 25 rebounds (Pickens
6. Turley 7. Wolfe-Riffle
5), 29 turnovers. Ys teals,

Please see Southern, 81

.CINE

9:31 A.M. TODAY

u 'W\.1 •. Rart'M 011 eySha H.rOm

BOTH LINES ARE OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT TOMORROW
' ·'

How to get free sheets of money

I

C .B. !LARES, MD··,:
C ~RT Dl.Llt~{W, MD

-

• BRACING FOR THE FLOOD OF CALLS:
Hotline ope rators at the World Reserve
Nat1ona l Control Center are mann1ng the1r sta-

tions. They will •mmed1ately process money
cla~ ms for all area reSidents starting at 9:31
am today. The hotl1ne closes tn JUSt hours at

The World Reserve ha~ just announced that everyone who beats the order deadline
and gets the Official Bank Book will actually receive a full uncut dollar sheet for free.
All readers of this newspaper whose lasl name begins with tpe letter A-N start calling I he National Toll Free Hotline at 9:3 1 a.m . today until midnight tomorrow. Your
· number is 1·800-781·3346.
Those whose lasl name begins with 0 -Z stan calling lhe National Toll Free Hotline
at 9:31a.m. today until midnight lomorrow. Your number is 1-800.207-1724. ·
The Official Bank Books are a real steal al just fifty -nine dollars loaded with
the full sheet of $2 bills and the free full four- up uncut dollar sheet. If you miss ·
this deadline for thi ~ publication you will be turned away and required to wait
for future public announcemenls authorized by The World Reserve Monetary
. Exchange in this or other publications. Unclaimed Bank Books available after
the dead line wi ll not include the free giveaway and are subjecl to price increases.
THE WORLD RESERVE MONETARY EXCHANGE IS NOT AFFILIATED WITH
THE UNITED STATES GOVER NMENT OR ANY GOVERNMENT AGENCY. ALL
TRANSACTIONS ARE BACKED BY THE POWER OF THE WORLD RESERVE
MONETARY
. EXC HANGE. WITH A MONEY BACK GUARANTEE UP TO $10,000.00 .
~ WAMI: P0023ll OF0014lR·1

m1dn1ght tomor(Qw.

•

'W&lt;l&gt; '. " c'

J.9ffJ11J

praJYt ·e, adults &amp; ptdigtr.lcs and o}J)ce:.pl!Jcedures
~ }:~,

I

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l· ,,.:,

WITH MONEY: These are the OffiCial Bank
• LOADED
of realmoney that eve rybody 1s trying ' get from the World
I1 Books
Reserve because they are the rerfect g1ft for everyone. The secret
I

~

J

of how to get these impress1ve Bank Books IS to _beat the deadline
I by calling the National Hotline at 1·800-781~3346 . Here, Off1ce r
1 Robert Graybill makes frnal checks before releasrng the nch an d
impressive Bank Books f1 lled w1th real sheets of money earmarked
for locJI residents who beat the deadline.

.

~

'').

'

"' PVIlHedi._. Oftit.&gt;t.' Centt·r
13tb St:Nd &amp; Jt'ft'crson .bt'nnc
Affiliated with Pleasant Valley Hq~pital

PfJiufPil'a.liallt. WV 2:i:S:)0

-·--~----------------~-- -

�Tuesday, December 19,2006
Page 82 • The' Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

POMEROY - This year
181 runners and walkers
not only crossed the fi ni sh
line in the annual "Keep
Your Fork" 5K race in
Pomeroy but they also benefited the Brandi Thomas
Memorial
Scholarship
Fund.
,
In fact. the runners and
walkers helped fund two
$ 1.000 scholarships which
will be awarded to runners
who are either on or ha ve
run on the Meigs High·
School Trac k Team.
Fini shing with the best
overall time was Michael
Owen who ran the race in
17 minute s and 15 seconds.
Following Owen was Brad
. Gilders, 17:27 and Nathan
Miller, 18:30.
The overall female winners were: Teresa Ranck;
first place, 20:49, Kimi
Swisher, second place ,
23: 07 , Bea Morgan, third
place, 23:55.
First place medal win ners in age groups, male
Ken
Holley,
winners:
22:55, 60 and older; Marc
Barr, 25:07, 18-22 ' age
group; Chris Dodson,
23:34, 23-29 age group;
Kody Wolfe, 25 :)5, 6-13
age group: Kyle Goode,

20:00, 14-17 age group :
Neil Braque, 20:56. 30~39
age group; Jon Perri n,
22:20, 40-49 age group; Pat
Story, 21:57, 50-59 age
group.
First place medal winners in age grou ps, female
winners: Sharon Knight,
29:36, 60 and over age
group; Lauren Anderson,
25:40, 23-29 age group;
Jess ica Holliday, 24:47, 1417 age group : Renee
Bailey, 29:49, 18-22 age
groug; Donna Graham,
33:4 , 50-59 age group:
Kristie Howard, 28:38, 4049 age group; Madison
Ranck, 29:29, six-13 age
group; Amy Perrin, 28:44,
30-39 age group.
·
Cheryl Thomas, who is
one of the many volunteers
who organize the race each
'year, said runners and
walkers weren 't just · from
Meigs County and even.
included a 73-year old man
from England who was visiting a relative in Athens.
Runners also came from
Gallia and Athens counties,
Xanesville, .
.Galena,
Cincinnati ,
Columbu s,
Glou ster,
Lowell,
Parkersburg ,
W.Va .
Herndon ,
Va.,
North
Carolina and Florida.
Runners
and . walkers
ranged in age from six
years old to 74.

fromPag~

CLASSIFIED

I

double figures in scoring with Ka'Yanna
Feaster and Sarah Drabinski each tossing in
nine points. Drabinksi had 12 rebounds to
lead the Redwomen in that category.
Ohio Valley was led by Jayne Davis off the
bench. The Pomeroy native netted .a double·
double with 13 points and 12 rebounds. Nine
of her 12 boards were on the offensive end:
Britney Brooks also scored 13 points and
Rachel Deaton chipped in I0. Brooks also
dished out· five assists.
Despite a 1-for-15 effort from the field,
Natasha Holloway pulled down I0 rebounds
for Ohio Valley.
"It vras a good outing coming off of a nineday rest and coming off maybe one of our
poorest efforts against Wilberforce," said Rio
Grande head coach David Smalley. ''I'm
pleased with where we are."

Gallia
County
OH I.\.-""'

I

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photo
Submitted photo .

Overall male winners in the "Keep Your Fork " 5K race were
(f~om left) Nathan Miller, third place, Brad Gilders, second
place, Michael Owen, first place . Owen also had the race's
best time at 17:15.

First place medal winners by age groups, male, in the "Keep
Your Fork" 5K race were (from left) Ken Holley, Marc Barr,
Chris Dodson , Kody Wolfe, Kyle Goode, Ne il Braque, Jo~
Perrin . Not pictured , Pat Story. ·

••••
Or Fax To
-.r---------------~~~

446-3008

Or Fax To

992-2157

Oeatt'tir~

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(. ~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
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Monday thru Friday
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To Help Get Response ...

Submitted photo

. *POLICIES*

First place medal wlnnars by age groups, female, In the
Overall female winners In the "Keep Your Fork" 5K race "Keep Your Fork" 5K race were (from left) Sharon Knight,
were (from left) Teresa Ranck, first place, K,lmi Swisher, sec- Lauren Anderson , Jessica Holliday, Renee Bailey, Donna
Graham, Krlstle Howard, Madison Ranck, Amy Perrin.
ond place , Bea Morgan, third place.

fromPageBl

Bl

.

.

Southern

Rio

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

m:rtbune - Sentinel- l\ ister

Owen has best time at
'Keep Your Fork' race
BY BETH SERGENT
NEWS@MVOAtlYSENTINEL.COM

www.mydallysentlnel.com

'

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

six assists (Wolfe-Riffle
three) and 12 fouls.
Alexander hit 29-of-67,
hitting 3-of-5 threes , 26of-62 twos, and 10-of-17
at the line. Alexander
had 35 rebounds (Shaulis
6, Turrell ten, McClain
6), 13 turnovers, 24 steals
(Smith 6) , 7 assists and
16 fouls.
In the abbreviated twoquarter reserve contest,
Alexander won 19-16.
Kathy Kasler·had nine for
the winners, while Emma
Hunter and Cheyenne
Dunn each had six for
Southern.

. Submitted photo

Southern hosts Hannan,
W.Va.
in
·Racine
Thursday. Then goes to
the
Bob's
Market
(Wahama)
Holiday
Tournament
on
December
27-28.
Southern was the '2003
champion of the event.
ALEXANDER (71)

Whitney Smith 9 4·6 22, Emily
Skidmore 0 0-0 0, Lauren Raines 2

0-0 4, Kara Endlck 2 0· 1 5, Jaml
Turrell 6 0·0 14, Kellee Guthrie 2 5·6
9, Amy Smith 2 0·0 4, Jennl Pylo 0

0-0 0, Heather McClain -. 1-4 9,
Lacey Shaulis 2 0-0 4. Totals 29·
10· 17 71 .
SOUTHERN (35)

Mallory Hill 0 0-0 0, Whitney Wolle·
Riffle 1 1·2 4, Sarah Eddy 1 2·5 4,

Rachael Pickens 1 0·2 2, Kasey
Turley 7 2·3 16, Virginia Brickles 2 2·

2 6, Emma. Hunter 1 1-1 3,
Cheyenne D.unn 0 0-0 0. Totals 13
8·15 35
Three point goals -Jamie TUrrell
2, Kara Endick 1, Whitney .Wolle~­
Riffle 1.

.,·

Meigs
from Page Bl
layup ort the other end while being
fouled. Grueser then hit a short baseline jumper to extend the Meigs lead
back to nine with 3:10 remaining. ·
Catie Wolfe gave Eastern fits the
entire night as she was repeatedly
successful getting to the basket to
score herself, as well as set up her
teammates with good looks at the
bucket.
"She's a nice player, but I was a little disappointed in our ability to
defend her," coach Weber said of the
sophomore point guard. "She took it
to the hole, we gave some good help,
but our help was a little bit late."
Hupp hit a pair of free throws to
end a _four-mmute Eastern scoring

Ohio Volley
Pubtl&amp;hlng reterVes
the right to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any 11me.
Errort Muat B
aported on the. fh'l ·
wt of publlcaUon an
he Trlbune.Senllnel
will
eglster
sponalble for n
ore than the coat o
he 1pace occuplt
y the error and onl
he flrwt Insertion.
hall no1 be lloblo lo

drought before Brannon had a steal
and layup to pull the Lady Eagles
· back to within five , but with only 28
seconds left in the contest.
Megan Clelland and Amy Barr each
had three points for Meigs. Cayla Lee,
Amber Burton and Grueser all had a
bucket apiece.
Meigs was also winner in the
reserve game, 26-17. Shannelle Smith
·had six in a well-balanced scoring
attack for the winners. Audrionna
Pullins had 10 for Eastern.
Meigs faces a big test Thursday at
Waterford. Eastern will try to get back
on track when Nelsonville- York
comes to town, also on Thursday.

bllcation or omls
lon of an advertlll
ent. Correction• wM
made In the fft'l

EASTERN (24)
Katie Hayman 3 3-4 9. Kaylee Milam 1 0·0 3, Morgan
Werr y 0 0·0 0, J iHian Brannon 2 0-0 4, Erin Weber 2
2-4 6, Jenna Hupp 0 2-2 2. Totals- 8 7-10 24.
MEIGS (31)
.
Cayla Lee 1 0-0 2, Meghan Clelland 1 D-2 3, Catie
Wolle 9 1-3 19, Amber Burton 1 0-0 2, Amy Barr 1 12 3, Brittany Preas! 0 0-0 0, Whitney Smith 0 0·0 0,
Melissa G rueser 1 0-0 2. Totals- 14 2·7 31.
Three point goals- Milam 1, Clelland 1.

All

Eotat
ar
ublect to the Fede
air Housing Act o

968.

'

'

Real

dvertl1ement1

This
newapap1
ccepta only hel
anted ad1 meetln
OE atandarda .
We will not knowing
accept any advlf
laement In vlolatlo
f the law.

each

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~alltpolis

1!\atlp. \Erthune
The Daily Sentinel
~otnt
L---~(~74_0~)~4_4_6-~~-34_2____~-(~7_40~)_9_9_2_-2_1_5_5______~(~~~~~~
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• Box
.,.. atwaye coufkleutlll. • Current"* urd appiM. • All ....,1 ut... ~trtiMmtnt1 ll'tl eubject: to the Federtl Ftlr Houtlng Act or 1981. • Thlt ,....,.,..,.
1ccept1
ldai'MIIfniiOI lltllndlfdl. W. will not knowingly eccepl.ny advertlalng In violation ot tn.llw.

1r

flor,m;
FOR SALE

MONEY
TO LoAN

test range.
•..a.b~

Christmas Wreaths &amp; Grave
Blanlets . $5-$25. (740)949·
2115, 740·949·3151, Sue's
Greenhouse.

I0 years related and recent
hands-on work u.p~rien cc

•

e~a m

the Ohio Division ol
Financial
lnstitutjon's
Office of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
nance your home or
obtain a loan . BEWARE
of requests for any large
a dv~nce payments of
fees or insuranCe. Call the
Office of
Consumer
Affairs loll free at 1·866278-0003 to learn if the
mOrtgage
broker
or
lender
·Is · . prop ~r ly
licensed. (This is a public
service announcement
from the Ohio Vaiiey
Publishing Company)

and US citizenstlip

~uired. Srnd COve r kller and
rt':§IJme to ujohs@u troninc.com
or fax to 866-2J t ·2~67

,!16
"-·~· •
.
~~ 1

t

I

Conceai9d Pistol Class
Ohlo/WV, Jan, 6. 2007,
$75 .00.
9:00am . VFW
Mason WV., 740-416-3329

FOUND: A bolt action piece
for a high powered Riffle in
the Peniel · Church area.
4 bags of tO)IS &amp; girl's cloth - (304)895·3590
ing, 1 flOor modal TV. must
lake all. (740)992·7335
Found: Pocket kn ife at

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Haskins Park. Call to
4 female, 2 males, puppies
describe (740)441 ·0500.
112 black Lab, 112 Golden
Retriever to good home.
Found: .Pure bred Beagle on
(304)743·5753
Roush Lane, Cheshire. Call
6 week old puppies, mixed (740)367-7328.
breed. 3 males, 3 females.
(740)368-9956.
NEA, I nc.
Lost black and white Jadl
Russell Terrier in vicini!)' of•
free pups· born 9-6-6, old
400 S.R. 160. Answers 10
enough to be spayed or
1
110
liEu&gt; WAN1lill
neutered, mixed breed, dOni name of "Mallie". Family .I0-·11Eu&gt;--W.·AN1lill--·11
member. P16ase call Dotty at
bOther . chickens or cats, (740)446 1737 Or (740)446
·
•
good watchdogs , (740)992- 1721 . •
ARROW CONCRETE
MECHANICAL DESIGNER .
5275, 416·5653, Email·
Huntington, wv .,..
~essednohio2000@yahoo
Last in Bidwell, small black Hiring eKp. Mechanic, FfT
&amp; PfT position
Small dog. Call (740)245· dog w/ green collar. Please
R&amp;D contractor seeks to
COmpetitive wages
call (740)388·7561 .
5140.
hire skHied , innovative and

i

Call Today! 740-446-4367.
1-800·214·0452
WIINI.ge,llipollsca feercollege.com
Ac:credil&amp;d Me~r Accredllng
Coord for llldft!lendflnt Colleges
and School&amp; 12?48.

W-.comlcs.com
""

1..:1

Borrow Smart. Contact

including hardware design
and/or project rnanagemem
des ired. Clear bad:.g round

Perennial Cat Shelter
8 months old
female. Loves to be pet, but
nol hold . Call (740 )645·
7275.

r

.~

**NOTI£1l**

...

• Laverne ~

This ntWiptlper will-not
knowingly accept
lldvertiHmtnll tor real
11t1te which II In
viol Ilion of the ltw. Our
readers ,,.. het"eby

PKoB~IONAL
St:Kvtc~

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1 068 _582 • 3345

Nursing Assistant classes
b 1 1 J
2007 tt
eg nn ng anuary,
·

ltl rMI ..tltlltdvlf'tlalng
In this newaptlper Ia
aubj-.:t to the Fede... l
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which mtkn It lllev-1 to
ldvertiH "any
,p,.,.....,ce, llmllltion or
diacrlmtnatlon bated on
race, t;:otor, religion, sex
ftmlllal status or nationll
origin, or any Intention to
mtke any IUCi'l
preferance, llmltaUon or
diiCrlmlllltlon."

"OQ

Informed that •II
dwelling• advertised In
· thll ~p•per tre
available on •n equal
opportunity tM"IP.

r
I --

ll"ll!"""-----...., ..,.-------. 11"11.-------. :~~~~oy:;:~ P::~~~e~ ~~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

l

Womens
clothes.
(740)367-7216

oso

17,

POUCI!9: Ohio YJIIty Pubbhlng l'tiMf'f. . ttM rlght lo ~tt. . .. or ctnceltny eel 11 any lime. Errore muat btl ntport.cl on tt'le th..t d1y
Trtbu~nel A al bN wHI be rwpon.IIM fQr no~ tNn the c01t of the ap.ce oc:cuptecl b\1 the tn'Df and only tht flret lnMrtlon. We
eny • • 01' expenH thet ,..,"' trom tnt pWMtolion or omlatlon or 1n Hver11ument. Con'tctlon will bt maiM In thl tlttl avellttllt .cthton.

kllncorlyloflcomcnt.nel

Farms tor Sale ........................: ............... ..... 330
For Lease,,,,,,,,,, ,,,, ...............,,.................. 490
For Sale ......... ,,,,,,,,, ....................... :.............. 585
For Sale or Trade ............... .......................... S90
Fruita &amp; Vtgatables ... ,................................. SBO
Furnlahed Rooma ............................. ........... 450
General Haullng ...................... ..................... BSO
Glveaway ... ................ .................. .............~ ... 040
Happy Ada ................. .......... ,_ .. ........... ... ......
Hay &amp; Graln ................................. :................ 640
Help Wanted .... .......... ,.................. ........ ,, ,, ,., 110
Home Improvements ......... ,,,,,,, ,,.,,,,,,,,, ......81 0
Homes lor S.le ............................................ 31 0
Houaehold Goods ................. ............ .......... 510
Houses lor Rent .......................................... 41 0
In Memorlam .......,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ........ .... ....... 020
Insurance ................................... .................. 130
Lawn &amp; ·Garden Equipment ..... ........ ........... 660
Llveolock.,,,,,..,.,,, .. ,,,,,..... ; .....................630
Lost and Found ................ -.......................... 060
Lola&amp; Acreege .................. : .................... ..... 350
Mlscellaneoua ..... ....... ................. .. ......... .. .. .. 170
Miscellaneous Merchandlae ....................... 540
Mobile Home Repalr ............................. ....... 860
Mobile Homeo for Rent .............. ................. 420
Mobile Homeolor S.le ................................ 320
Money to Loen ............................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .......................... 740
Mualcollnatrumento ......,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,, ... 570
Personals .................... .................. ............ ... 005
Pellfor Sole ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heallng ..... ............... ................ 820
Profeaalonal Servlcea ...........................,. ..... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ................ ............... 160
Rail Eollte Wanted ..................................... 360
Schoola Instruction........ : .......................: .... 150
Seed Plant &amp; Fertlll•ar .............................. 650 ..
Situations Wanted ...... ,, ............: .................. 120
Space lor Rent ............................... .............. 480
Spol'ltng Gooda .....................;.;.................... 520
SUV'alor Sale .............................. ,............... 720
Truckolor Sole ............................................ 715
Upholstery ....... , ............................. .............. 870
Vane For Sale...............................................730
Wented to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy - Farm Suppl[es .................. 620
Wanted To Do ...................... , ...................... 1 BO
Wanted to Rent ........,,,,,,,,,,,, ...................... 470
Yard Sol• Golllpollo,,,,,,,,,,,, .................... 072
Yard Sai•Pomeroy!Middle ................ ......... 074
Yard Sai•PI. Pleoaant.. .............................. Q76

Mark~tiPiaca

• All ada must be prepaid'

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

I \II \I"

oeo

Run For
FREE In ,.he )

S~~:.~~ In-Column: 1:00 p,.m • .
E
For, Sunday• P•par

• Include Phone Number And Addrest When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

CLASSIFIED INDEX

l
·.
Place Y · Paid Classified
Ad Ia Wadaasday's Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, Point
Ragisler or D•ily

In Next Day•• P•per

• Stlrt Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
oucrtptton • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevl1t1on1

Call LOST: 6 Month old Boxer,
w/red collat at
Point
Pleasant
McDonald's.
Sunday (304)675·7 153 or
(304)444·3288
4x4's For S.le ...,,,,,,, ,,, ,,,,,,,,;,·........ 725
Announcement ...... ,,'"""",, .. """"",, .. , ....... 030
Tan short haired female dog
Anllques ......... ........................... ............... ..... 530
Kllcher Road . Ca ll (740) 446Apartments lor Rent ................................... 440
6630.
Auction and Flea Market ............ ............... ..
Auto Parts &amp; Accaasorles ......... : ................ 760
Auto Repalr .................................................. 770
Autos for Sale .. ,, ......................................... 710
Boals 1c Motors for Sale ......................... :... 750
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S
Building Supplles .......................... ........... ... 550
Silver and Gold Coins.
Buslnesa and Bulldlnga ............................. 340
Proofsets. Gold Rings. PreBusiness Opportunlty ................................. 210
U.S.
Currency.
1935
Buaineu Tralnlng ....................................... l40
Solitaire Diamonds- M.T.S.
Campers lc Motor Homes .......... ................. 790
Coin Shop, 151 Second
Camping Equlpmen1 ................................... 780
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740·446·
Cards of Thanks ........................... ............... 010
2842.
Chlld/Eid811y Care ....................................... 190
EleetrlceURelrl geratlon .. , .......... , , , .. , , ........... 840
Buying Junk Ca rs,Trucks &amp;
Equipment lor Renl.. ................................... 480
Wrecks, Pay Cash J D
Excavatlng ....... .......... ,,,, ,,,,,,,,,.,, .......... ... S30
Salvaga
(304)773·5343
Farm Equ lpmenJ,, '"""",, .. , ... , ,,,,,,, ........... 61 0
(304)674· 1374
Farmalo1 Rent,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ..................... 430

. '

Monday-Friday for ln-rtlon

.'--r_..~OOID-suv..__.l

11116 liEu&gt; WA-om,:D

Experienced &amp; qualified
Mixer Dri vers, FfT &amp; PfT
positions must have at
least a Class B COL _
Must be willjng to travel ,
travel eKpense paid
Competitive wages
Please appfy at:
1505 Eastern Ave
Gallipolis, Ohio
(Apply in person . No phone
calls please)
EOE
AVONI All Areasl To Buy or
Se!l. Shirley Spears, 304·
675-1429.

Tyler's Used Parts and salvage wants to buy junk cars
and salvage pay cash . 740698·4104 740·416·1594
Wanted to buy, distressed
homes, land contracts,
(740)992·2059

I

r.=====
·==='il
New Ytlr, New
Cereerl
Start your new career at
lntoelsion lind earn up
to S8.501hour.
We also offer
• Weakly Pay +
Bonuses
•Paid Training
•Paid vacations
•Paid Holidays
•Full benefits package
•401k.

HurWANml
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts,
wood 1tems .
To $480/wk
Materials provided. .
Free Information pk'g. 24Hr.
801·428·4649

players to join us. If you
have these qualifications
pleSie
apply .
to:
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Center, 36759 Rocksprings
Make calls you believe
Road,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
' In, earn up to
45769 . . Extondicare·Heanh
S8.501hour, and start a
Services, Inc. IS an equal
new career you can be
opportunity employer that
proud of.
workplace
encourages
·diversity. WF ON
lnfoCi1lan. It's Better
:::.:::.::::~:::_.:::;,:.._ _ _
Htrel
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Cenler ·provldes res ldenle
txt 2321
with outstandi ng nursing
care and rehabilitation servOhio Valley Home Health , lett helping them return to a
life of Independence at
Inc. hiring RN 's, CNA ,
PCA. home. We currently have
STNA ,
CHHA,
etlllv. Wag.. .nd opportunities for AN's and
C
Including
LPN'S at our facility In
Insurance and Mileage. PomerCJII, Ohio. We offer •
Apply al 1480 Jackson Pike. COMPET!VITE SALARY
.Gatllpoll8 or 2415 Jackson SCALE, an excell ent bene·
Ill packana and a supportive
Avenue . Point Pleasant, WV
"'"
work .
environment.
orphonelollfreo 1·666·441 ·
candidates
Interested
1393.
shOuld
apply
to:
Rocksprings Rehabilitation,
POST OFFICE NOW
36759 RocKsprings Aoad.
HIRING
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Avg. Pay $20/hr or
Extendicare
Health
$57K on nual ~
Services, Inc. Is P.l'l eque.l
Including Federal Benefits
opportunity employer that
and OT,Pald Training,
workplace
encouriges
Vacatlons-FT/PT
dli18raity. M!F ON
1·800·584·1775 USWA
=s.=.
-EN-:G:-J.
Rei. tP8923

Abbott Home Care. Inc. are
hlr1ng for the following positions. AN 's. LPN 's, Home
Health Aides. Per Diem, part
time, lull time. Compe tttive
wage&amp;. Apply af 680 1/2
Eesl Main Street , Jackson,
Ohio. Telephone 1740)288.7031 or Toll Free 1-888 -288·
4151 .

B~~~lts

FEDERAL

POSTAL JOBS
$t5 67-$26. 191hr., now hlr·
ing. For application and free
governcment job Info, cell
American Assoc. of Labor 1913·599·8042, 24/hrs. omp.
serv.

c.

.2 001 Skylin e. 3br. 2ba.
1+acre, LA/FA. Kitchen,
Dining Room Must Sell
ASAP
only
$65,000
(3041593-0852

I

llro

h~alth

::
ME':-:c.::.;H:. ,AN.tc:..: :.A_L
NEER

Machine Transcriptfort
Medical and Professions;
documents,
manuals.
(740)441-9338, 10:00am3:00pm ,
Monday-Friday.
References.

UTRON is an award·wirmmg
R&amp;D ~:ompany with en ex.em-.
plaT) his10ry ilf provid1ni
advanced u~choologkal iqno·
vations to NASA. BMDO.
DoE, NSF. Amw Navy and

the following shifts: 3am- Sales
People
t1me positions available for
3pm , 7am·7pm, &amp; 7pm· (740)441·9711

mher organizations The Sr.
Mechanical Engineer v,ill
Design mcchankal and dec\ro-

CHII.D'ELDCAREERI.Y

:..:.:==----- job transfer or a death?

I

same as rent.
M 1
L
1 s
or gage
oca or .
(740)367 0000
-• ·..;:::::::.:...:·
Will care for elderly in their Beautiful Home on Cedar St.
home. 16 yrs exp .. ref . avail. Wrap· around porch . 3BA.
(740)388-9783 or {740)591· 1.58a, furnished kitchM .
9034 .
DR, LR, Den, FP, t;&gt;Ut-bulld·
ing $1 18.000 (740)4464639.

=:..____

"il"""-::-....,......--,

r'o

BtSIN~

OPPOR'Il.INITY

t..-oliiilillliiliii-_.1

.--~!!"!!!--.

•=-:--;--;----,

on
SAVINGS

•NOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLI SH·
lNG CO. recommends
that you do business with
people you know. and
NOT to send man~y
through the mall until yOu
have investigated the
offering.

r.:~~~;;;;~~

r

S)'Stems

.

·~ ~

'

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Workpl~~oce

....

Move in today! New 2007 3
Only
bedroom 2 bath .
$199.86 per rnonth. Set up
minutes from Athens and
ready lor immediate occu·
pancy. Call 740-385·4367.

4BR , Home, 2 acres, New ~--aiAiiiiCRFAiiiiiiiiGiiE-.,.1
Haven
area
$148,000 '
(304)674-5921 0' (304)593· Mobile Home Lot for rent
8871
near Vinton. Call (740) 441 ·
111 1.
5 Plus Acres, 2 Br., Kit.,
Din., Front Rm ., Full base.,
RFAL fsrATE
story and 11'2., AC, single
Wo\Nfll)
garaga/20 X 20. shop. '----tiiiiiiiiii-_.1
Racine, Route 124. 740· Need to sell your home?
949-225 3.
Late on payments, divorce,

SHOP
~~~~~~~~!:::::::J~~~~~~~J
7am . lnlerestod applicants
FIND A J B
mecham¢al pruduct§ and sys· CLASSIFIED$
can pick up an application
1ems by dmloping ond """I
specification5 and ml':thod.s for
fOR
M·F9a·Spat333PageSL,
OR A NEW CAREER dc\'elopment·
Shop
.
of ad,·aoc:ed
Middleport, OH. EOE &amp; a
Classlfleds!
weapon
for lhl': Ocpl of
BARGAINS
partldpanl of the Drug-Fraa
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS ll&lt;fense
Program.
aL UTRON'• 300 acre L - - - - - - - 1 L - - - - - - - '
wanted

Great used 3BR home onty
$9,995. Will help wnh doliv·
ery. Call (7401385·7671.

I
can buy your home. All cash
and quick closing. 740-4163130.
I~ I '\ I \I ..,

=---=----- riO

HunllnfllOn. WV '"'

An Excellent way to earn Little Caesar's is coming to
Point'Pieasant . Now H1ring
money. The New Avon .
all positions. Management
~all Marilyn 304-882·2645
&amp; Crew, Full Time &amp; Part
Overbropk. Center Is current· Time. Open. interviews, 319
ly aCcepting app tlcations ·tor Viand St Thursday 12-2 1 &amp;
s iATE ' TESTED NurSing Wed 12-27 or Fax Resumes
Assistants Full time &amp; part lo- (740)886·7425

Good used 1989 14x70
Front Kitchen 2 bedroom 1
bath. Only $8.995 .00. Will
help with delivery. Call'740385·9621 .

In Gallipolis. Call Wayne =.--~-~-....,
(4041456·3802.
lurs &amp;

P r o f e s s I o n a t About $3000 down. 812 S.
Office/Housecleaning. 3rd. Ave,, Middleport. Totally
References (304)675-2208
remodeled . 3 bedroo ms, 1
bath. Perfect credit not
U SAVE heating, coo~ng &amp; required Payment $525.
water heaters. Will work on Appraised $70,000. 740·
atl .m odels 15 years eKPeri· 367·71:29.
ence, 24 hr. service. will beat
anyon e's price. (740)388Attention!
9039
Local compa ny offering "NO
W I
d
p f
.
I DOWN PAYMENT~ pro·
II
o
ro esslana 'grams tor you to buy your
Cleaning, Business and home inst-ead of renting
Homes.
Flexible hours.
1
Excellent
References :
credit
Please call (304)812·8024 accepted
or(740)367·7328
• Payment could be tho

llW

···- ·-r .. - -- ... ·----.. -· --- -·--:----

M~U:s~

14X70 Mobile Home, furnished $15,500 (304)576·
.89 Acre. 3 Br .. Kit , Liv.R., 4014
Din.. laun dry. bath, Tuppers
Plains water. A
comes 2001 Clayton Lighthouse,
·with 4 lots, large porch. 16x52, 2BR, 1 tlath, VG:C..
River front. Bucktown Road, $8 ,500 OBO. Must move
Letart Falls. 740-949·2253. (740)256·1636.

ed compassionate State and Hickory split. You haul
Tested Nursing Assistants. or I haul· Take CAA&amp; HEAP
Competitive wages, health 740·949·2036
and dental benefits, and
WANIID
401 K available. We take
To Do
·pride In our facility and residents and need great team

U..======:::!J

'-o

36759 Rocksp ri ngs Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 and fill
out an application for the
classes. Extendlcare Health
Services, Inc. is an equal
opportunity employer that
encourages
workplac e
diversity. MIF DN
Profelalonal Karate
Instruction
All ages.· Books , uniforms,
supplies .
Open
Daily.
Bltanga's
Martial
Arts
Center. (740)992-5715

HOMES

HJR SALE

3 bedroom, 1 314 baths,
kitchen, living room, family
room, . heal puQ1p, deck,
16x24 storage building, 2.13
MB:nLANmts
•
. acres, .located about 1 mile
from new Gallipolit · City
opportunity employer that
encourages
workplace Antique Crystal Electric High Sc~ol on Chris Lane.
$145.000.
Ph
Unique Asking
Chandelier
diversity. M/F DN
(740)245·5909.
Beautiful . 304-377-6428.
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Center is looking for dedi cat· Seasoned fire wood, Oak 4 rental hOuses "For Sale~

1..an.;.ws-e2_,

I \ 11'1 l J\ \II '\ I
"' ' f, \ It

outgoing professionals for·
FIT employment. Effective
oral and written communlcation is a must. Vast experience with AutoCAD and
Mechanical Desktop, 6+ yrs
recent related eXpf'ri&amp;nce,
clear background and US
citizenship required. Email
cover letter and resume to
ujobsCutroninc.com or fax
to 1-866·231 ·2567

Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Center Is looking fOr dedicated compassionate State
Tested Nursing Assistants.
Compet~lve wages, health
and dental benefitS, and
401K available. . We take
pride in our facility and resl dents end need great team
players to join us. If you
have these qualifications
please
apply
to:
Rocksprings Rahabllltatioll
Center, 36759 Rocksprings
Road,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769. Extendlcare Heanh
Services, IOc. is an equal

of our haahh care laem . rto
please stop by· Rocksprings
Rohabllltalion Center at

'llr"':~--:~--,

R

HoLJSES
RENT

FOR

1..,-..iiiliiiiiillii-.-J
$182/mo.J Buy 4 bedroom,
2.5 bath HUDI-4% dn . 30
~ 8" F 11 ,.
800
•

~~sg_;,09~~xt~; 7~~ngs

2 badroo m · house 59
Garfield $450 rent , $500
daposlt,
references.
(740)44.1 ·0583 .. (740 )256·
6718.
-------2 or 3 Br. house, no pets,
740·992·5858.
_.:..__,_---2·3
Bedroom
Duplex.
$4.20/mo plus deposit &amp; utl\i·
ues In Downtown Gallipolis.
No Pets. (740)44 6-0332
8am-5pm .Mon-Sat.
3 bedroom house c~&gt;nven­
ient 1ocat1on, close 10 library
and schools No pets
(740)4 46·1 162.
3 be·droom. 2 :bath , Evar')s
Heights,
garage ,
CIA,
5550/mo. plus deposit. Call
!51 4)975·0769.
3 bedroom, full basement
carport, 2004 1/2 Chatham
Ave . Gallipolis $500fmo.
HUD approved. (740)446 ·
4543. Deposit required .
3 be&lt;I&lt;OOmo, Clifton, $400
per month plus deposit,
(7401742·1903

�Tuesda~December19,2006

Middleport EIHch Stroot, 2 Assortment of wedding decbedroom furnished apart· orations. center pieces, dec·
ment, depOsit &amp; pre-rental oratlve vines, lights, 2
references, no pets; utilities pedestals &amp; lots, 1o1a more
$250 !of an. (740}388.0115
pe~ (7-lll)992.0165 or (7-lll)388·9053.
Middleport N 3rd Ave., 1 &amp; 2
~
Br. furnished apts., no pets,
2317 for more into.
L.~--oillii'ORiiliiiiltlio-rJ prevlout rental reference.
• 740-992.0165.
3BR home- SR 554. Bidwell- '
1
and
2
bedroom
aplr!·
$575/mo- sec dep. referments, furnished arld untur- Modem 18A ap!. (7&lt;10~
ences, all elec. (740)446·
0
n•shed, secunly deposit ~
3::90:::...- - ' - - - - 3644.
requ1red. no pets, 740·992- New · 2BR apanments. NEW AND USED STEEL
3BR. 2 bath home- Plants 2218.
Washer/dryer
hOOkup, Steel Beams, Pipe Reber
SubOiv. $850/mo plus sec.
2 bedroom apartment avail· slove/re~igerator included.
For
Concrete, . Angle.,
depooit.
NO
PETS.
able in Syracuse. $200 Also, unitS on SA 160. Pets Channel Flat Bar . Stet!
(740)4.46-3644
deposit $350 per month Welcome! (740 1441 .0 194· ·Grating' For
'oralns,
Townhouse Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L
4 bedroom • 2 bath rooms rent. Rent Includes water, Tara
house for rent in M1dclleport sewer, trash . No pels. Apartments, Very Spacious, Scrap Metals Open Monday,
• Deposit - No' Pets. 740- Sufficient income needed to 2 Bedrooms, CfA, 1 1!2 Tuesday, Wednesda~ &amp;
992-2783. $450 per mo.
quati1y. 740·378-8111. .
Both, Atillt Poot &amp;· Boby . Friday, 8am..-:30pm. Ck&gt;oed
3 rooms 8. bath, stove, Pool,. Patfo, Start $395/Mo: Thursday, Saturday &amp;
Ahentlon!
No r:tets, lease Plus sunday. (740)~7300
Local company ottering "NO refngeralor, utilities paid.
wnsrairs . 46 Olive St Security OeP9.sit Required , Oak firewood tor sale.
DOWN PAYMENT' pro- Do
740}367-7086·
Delivered
or
pickup.
grams for you 10 buy your $450 month , no pots. 1
home Instead of renting .
1(40).446-3945.
Twin Rivers Tower Is accept- (740)441-09-41 . (740)645·
• 100% nnancing
ing •""'lcations 1or waiting 5948. CAA HEAP aooep1od.
A Hidden Treasure. Largest
~
• Less than perfed credit apartments in the area. list lor Hud·subsized, 1- br,
8unJJiNG
accepted
Newly renovated, brand new apartment .. call 675-6679
St.lPPuEs
• Payment could be the every1hing, starting at $-425. Equal Hou~ng Opportunity ~
same as rent
Call today betore they are all
S
Mortgane
Locators.
FORPARfNrCE
Precifi;lon Parts24X32X10
w
gone. Laurel Commons
Pa•nted
I-'"d ool
(740)367-QOOO
Apartments (304)273-3344 ~------· 1 ' 1 s12eo10-X8san hr d.
------~~
•
·en ry. •
over ea
HUO HOMES! 3 bedroom, 2 Apartment tor rent, 1-2 Commercial .bulldiflg •for doors 12• overhang aU insu·
bath , $141/mo. 4 bedroom. Bdrm., remodeled . new car- Renr 1600 sqvare teet, ott !Bled 2-windows wlsMutterS,
$193/mo. 4% dn, .30 yrs @ pet. stove &amp; lrlg .. water, street parking. Great loca· seamless guner. Concrete
8%. For listings 800-559· sewer. .trash pd. Middleport. tlonl 749 Third Avenue n floor and 10' approach.
4109 e~et. F144.
$425.00: No pets. Ref. GallippHs. Rent $47.5/mo. Erected price $13,889.00.
required. 740-843-5264.
1
30'X40'X10' Painted staal
In Pomeroy, 3 Br. , 2 bath .
sides and roof 1 -entry,
newly remodeled. 740-843- BEAUTIFUL
APART14'X10' sliding door insul
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
5264.
~~~
roo1s_eamlessnu"erereded
PRICES AT JACKSON
~
•
.,..~
pnce. $10,350.00, 7-lll-742Nice. Clean , Economical,
ESTATES,
52
Westwood
...
.
--ttti"""""iitiiiii;.,-,.1
4011
or
8()(1.369·3026.
No
2br, wlbasement , central Drive lrom $349 to $448. · •
Wva. Calls
heat. Reg , Dep. No Pets
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call Entertainment center and
(304)675-5162
740-446,2568.
Equal 2s• GE TV $100. Call
Hous1
ng
Opportunity.
!740)446-3988.
tOR
Prerty 3BR. House for Rent

i

I \I \ I '

riO

I

"

\

riir,;;;;;:.,':l'll:-"IS---,
SALE

Phillip
Alder

Fif'aneing- .36 Mos..
avattabfa now on John
Deere Z TrU Zero 1UrM &amp;
l.tt% AJCed Rate on John
Deere Oltorl Carmichael
EquiPment (?40}446·241 2,
Flnandng as tow 88 0%- 36
Mos. on John Deere 7
Series 4x4, 4x5 &amp; 5x4
Bound llottr./500 Seriao

MOCoi/Squll'e
Also

Baler~.

•~aflable &amp;.I% on

Uaed Hay Equipment. All
rates thru John Deere
c·
redlt.
Carmichael
Equipment (7-lll)446-24t2.

Keifer 8\J!It- valley~ · BisonH9rse and Llvastoctc:

~~~~-=-~~~ ~~l,.,.!'l"'lP'I!'!'P~·
You'll be pleaSed to
know Mary Kay offers

products everyone will

love. From the latest
I k t0 d
d
00 s a vance

T
h
·
1own ouse
apar 1men 1s,
an dJor smaII houses FOR
RENTAL - 556 3rd Ave,
$400/mo. $200 deposit, ~ENT. Catl ·t740)441-1111
lor application &amp; information.

clean. ready to . move into.
No pots. VL Smith (740)3888828.

14xBO,

2 bedroom

fu r-

nished. Mason area. in the
counlry 10 minutes from
Power Plant Waler included
(304)773· 5332"' (304)6742274
'

used twice, Cal (740}367·
. 7328
- - - -- - - Like new 2 year old Oak
. Amish made dining room
set. Table, 8 chairs, 2 leafs,
china cabinet, bench seat.
$1,500 firm. (740)388-0115
•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments or (740)388-9053.
·
•Central heat &amp; IVC
Mollohan Carpel, 76 Vine
~Washerldryer hookup
Street, Gallipolis. Berber,
•All elactric- averaging
$5.95/yd, Cs!l for free quote.
$50.$60/month
(7401446·7444
•Owner pays water, sewer. Thompsons Appliance &amp;
trash
Aepair·675·7388. For sale,
re-conditioned automatic
washers &amp; dryers, relrigerators, gas and electric
ranges. air c:ondltkmers. and
wringer washers. Will do
repairs on major brands in
- ' - - - - - - - shop or at your homo.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartmenls at Village
SPOKilNG

Ellm VIew
Apartments

(304)882·3017

tBA with stove, refrlgeralor,
dinette, washer/dryer, covered porch out building, 1/2
acre lot. nicely remodeled,
aU cherry wood flooring, no
carpet, includes water &amp;
trash,' you pay eleclric. Dep.
$215, rent $385, off
Manor
and
Riverside ~--tttiGooo;iitiiiii;.,_p
Raccoon Ad ., .Gallipolis Apartments in Middleport. '
(740)256-1106.
From $295·$444. Call 740.. New 50 Cal. in line muuel
992·5064.
Equal Housing loading rifle. $90.00 74D2 bedroom moone home in
.
Middleport. $300 pet month, Op-'-'p_o_"u_n_it_ie_s. _ _ _ _ 742-2766

· .1i)
-~~

$300 deposit, years lease, Honeysuckl e
H• s
no pets, no calls after 9pm, ApartTT1en!s now (e.cceptlng
(740)992-5039
applications for 2BA apts.
No rental assistance avail2 bedroom, AJC, porch &amp; able at this time. Bent starts
awning. No pet&amp;. In a! $340 month. Equal
Gallipolis. 1740)446-2003, HOusing
Opportunity.
(740)446·1409 or {740)446- (740)4 46-33 44 .
2692
In Gallipolis, clean, ups!airs,
2· twn bedroom mobile i2 bedrooms, 2 bath, dlshhomes, clean, well main- washer, WID hookup, $500,
references.
tained. (740)367-0654 or deposit. ~
(740)645-3413.
(740)446-9209.

r

pup,
Females.
(740)245·9142

Keifer Built· VaMey· BlsonHorse
and
Livestock

Tralllra·

r ..

)446-0080.

NOTICES
Public Notice
The Board of Trustees
at Letart Towns~lp
Melga County, _will
accept eealed bids on
1988 Ford Dump Truck
until 12:00 pm on Dec.
29, 2~ at office of
Clerk at Joyce White
49916 Manual Rd.,
Raclna, OH 45771 at
which time bids will be
opened. Truck . will be

of each Individual llal· given that on Friday,

ed below be and hare·
by Is revoked. The revocatlon shall be elfec.
tlva October 6, 2~.
Kallam, Billy N DOB:
0311011976 3471 Settle
Bridge Road Stoneville
NC 27048
A copy of this Order
moy be obtained from
Stephen C. Hombach,
Ohio Department of
sold 11 Is. Truataea lnaurance, 2100 Stella
reoarvea the right to Court, Columbua, OH
accept or reject any 43215·1067.
and all blda.
As eel torth In D.R.C.
247-3125
119.12, an appeal ol
(12) 18, 19
thla Order may be
taken by filing a notice
of appeal with the
Public Notice
Department
of
Insurance. A copy of
FINDINGS
AND the notice of appeal
ORDER OF REVOCA· shall aloo be flied wllh
TION
the appropriate court
The Superintendent of ·of
common
pleas.
lnaurance Josued a Such notices of appeal
Notlce of Opportunity shall be flied within Ill·
lor Hearing to each of teen (15) days ol the
the Individuals · listed third data of publica·
below; The Notice was lion of this notice and
urved on each lndl·· Ordar. Each Individual
vidual pursuant to sec· listed
above
may
lion 119.07 ol the , appeal to the court of
Revised code. More common pleBI ol the
than thlrty(30) days county In which hla or
have elapsed lrom the he• buslnaaslolocated
date of service or from or the coun.ty In which
the last date or publl- he or she Ia a resident.
cation and each of the II ha or aha Ia not a
individuals
listed residant of and has no
below has not request- place. of bualn88a In
ltd a hearing.
Ohio, he or aha may
Alter r'viow ing the appeal to the Court of
records In these cases , common
Ple01
or
the
Superintendant Franklin County. Tho
finds that:
notice .of appeal ahall
1 . Each of the indlvldu· set forth the order
ala
lis!
below
is appealed from and lho
-licensed In this state grounds 9flho appeal.
as an lnauranca agent This Order Is hereby
2. Each of the lndlvldu· entered In the Journal
ala listed below .failed of
the
Ohio
to comply with the Department
of

Superintendent
Insurance
(12)5,12, 19

INSURED
FrweEitilnllle
Phone: (T40) 441.f317

&amp;

1996 Dodge Cargo van, V6,
auto, air, 86,000 miles.
$1,800 OBO. (740)256·
1233.
~--~-~-2002
Pontiac:
Sunfire,
73.000 miles.
Cruise,
CDIAM-FM,
Sunroof!Moonroof
plus
extra~ $9,000.00 080 740508-8074 740-667-6552
TRUCKS

&amp;IS

FOR SALE '

lw-..iliiiiiiiiii;.,_.l

Great Dane puppy, mate, 7 ·
wks old. (7-lll)379-2282.
1979 Jeep CJ- 5, 360
Mini Vork&amp;hira Terrier, m, 1 Engine, 3 speed. New 3500
· 112 yrs. old,. AKC reg ., $.550, Super Swampak tires.
call (740)992-5017 after $5,000 (304)675-3824
5:30pm
1994 S-1 0 4x4 extended
Miniature Dachshund pup- cab, · Vsix, aut, 2900.
pies AKC, 1at shots; 1st (740)446-8172.
worming
$350.
Call
(7.40)645-7009.
2001 Toyota Tacoma 4x4,
" - " " - - - - - - - good condition. 90k miles.
Miniature Pinschers, 3 $9,200/080 (304)276-2790
males black/tan. Christmas
pups. $300. Call any11me
4X4

IN THE

CLASSIFIEDS.

expressed
or
warranty

For part of me
went with you the
&lt;kly God called
you home.
Forever loved and

missed by

Hu~band

K.l' ll and famil)'

,I

HOME
11111'ROVEl\IFNl'S

1

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFtNG
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references fUrniShed.' Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870. Rogar s BQsemen t
Waterproofing.

South

FRANK &amp;EARNEST

on

BARNEY
AN' SO

JONES'

Tree Service
THE BORN LOSER

~ou\JE ~ t~1~ W~l'-1(,""'~

pt_ I&lt;.I&gt;IOW,~IEF! t Tl-\ll&lt;IK. l'IJE....

~It-\, \1-\~I&gt;?PI..£'

Lti•S{~tl&gt; i'\JJ&gt;..I 1'1&lt;\ Pro~e.
TO~\WI.T

t&lt;\1:)\/o..KE.!

47 Submorlno
51 G!Dpo

G

ODimUCDII
BIG NATE

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

WHERE' "RE

WE sur-

THE HOLIDAYS
DO STR...NGE THINGS
TO PEOPLE .

POsED TO HANG OUT' ,

.IMPORTS

740-992-1611

Athens

Stop &amp; Compare

We Deliver To You!

L&amp;R
Variety &amp;
Thrift Store ·
Of»nl"'l
-1,2006/
Wt buy, Hll 1 a trade
Now &amp; Uud ltomot
Late otovorythlngl
STOP IN AND

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Hometill System
• HeUos System

Deer Processing

MAPLE
WOOD LAKE

fiamiltJ- .~~.)"':"iT~'~ll!'3"4!!1'9:""•

Skinned • Cut
Wrapped

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

_,

...

70 Pine

1·740-949-2734

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

All Types Of
Concrete Work
26 Years Experience

David Lewis ·
740-992-6971
lnaured

FrM Eetlmates ·

Street • Gallipolis
446-0007

.
-:;;·:.\~·.

..

:";

.~~
.-.
' ..

~·

PEANUTS
ONE OF TJ.IE 6REAT
JO'fS IN LIFE IS
SUDIN6 ON AN
IC'( SIDEWALK ..

JOE'ICE FOLLIES:.

Cornerstone
Construction

I I\\ I '
\ 1 l \ l I\ I I I
( ()\ .... 11\l i, Ill )\

Residential • Commerl'ial • Gt:neral Contraclln1

Pa·inting • Doon; • Windows • Decks

• Siding • Roofing • Room Additions • Remodeling
WV 038992
OH 38244

• Plumbing.• Elcmical 740-367-0s..t
• Ac~.:oustic Ceiling J 740-339-3-412

Marcum .c·anstrucHon and
General.CoatraCting

II/

1111

~~#-1

L....---.:!!---'

SUNSHINE CLUB

! 1/iMf 'FAT FAW&lt;~.~: . .
1-ER ~ tuAS'fAT 111MV'1'
,,MAIJD~

Mike W. Marcum, Owner
Additions
Roofing

1

'

Garages
Vinyl Siding

Decks
Porches
Residential &amp; Commercial
740·985·4141 Office
740.416·1834

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

e

Manley's
Rill cycling
1103 U It •lldtltllft.IH41J111
148-992-3184

. NURSING ASSISTANTS
Pleasant Valley Hc;&gt;spital is currently
accepting applications for full -time
Nursing Assistants. Previous nursing
assistance experience preferred. Primarily
evening and midnight shifts.
Holiday, health insurance, single/family
plan, dental ,plan, life insurance, vacation,
long term disability and retirement.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Qrive
Point Ple asant, WV 25550
Or fax:

Pass

55 Not her

56 Felling that
Olden drnea 57 Horlzonlll
Ploy
IUpporl
Previous to

Pat on
Pupe
Riverbank

dweller

Riding .
whips
21 tnaect resin
23 My
!IOOdnestl
24 Ancient

58 Bungle
59 Film dlroc·
tO&lt; Splke60 Overfeed
61 Place
DOWN

1 Change
decor
cosmetic
2 Latin I verb
27 Cold-3 Outstanding
Icicle
amount
29Hasate
4 Spendex
32 llontand of
fiber
the movlee 5 Sigh
33 _Study hard
of delight
34 Body pa~
6 !lobby of
35 Bear-end
tho NHL
36 "Thla muat 7 lalat
welgh--1" 8 Cognizant
37 S1tentat:1or 9 Big leland
38 High
port
mountain
10 Minor
39 Shape up
mlltake
40 Sen.14 Supermen'•
Cranaton
1111blem
41 Hull . .elant 17 Tobtoeu

ca

37 "Hold the

-1"
41 Giggle
(hyph.)

43 Ditty
44 Sonnat
coueln
45 Cutle-ple
46 Bx dlroctlva
48 Skippers'
okays
49 Horror·fllek

atapla
50 Bound

30 111.

Bombock
dwelling
31 llutlnt
52 NBC rivet
heroes of . 53 Big green
comics
porrot
lhyph.)
54 Chow
38 Arcada
namt

down

by Luis campos
e.tlb'ty ~ ~ . . tt-lrOI'fl ~l*nl ~Wn!MIIIOPII. Plf ftl P'W'R.
Eld't leGel lrr h CiJNr atwmiOr ln'JI'ilf

r!KIIIy"S clie: XGqUIIS P

"0

RPYBOL

GARFIELD
11''5 FROM 5/&gt;.N'I'A ... "Pf!j);R
'GARFI E:LD, I OOT YOUR LE:"M'ER
feLLING ME HOW GOOP t,IOO'VI!
&amp;eE:N ALL t,lf!AR ...

-WHO D'O YOU 't'HINK .
&lt;,10U'R6 'I'R'&lt;'ING 'fO KIP?'

JUST KIPDINC:.I
11''5 tHe GAS BILL

I
·

.r

DTRPYN

N Y P V R". " -

C 8 G S GR l

...........12:10111

PIYIIII TIP PIICES Fll

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

·--·-···1111
CIIIMICCtlllflftiii•Cill•
ICII r. Clrrii11'11C11l

- "I'm (Us1o gatbageman. I come itto a game and

PREVIOUS SOlUTION

C11i'i11l 4\'\. I - /) "C ~Q.•
J."'"'J ~~ (,l:J J:J q• i:'

Astro-

- - - - - - l~ito~ ~y CLioY I, POI.U.N

Graph

lotlll$ of
0 R•arro"V'
fovr scro}!lbled wordt

'bJr&lt;JIIrthdor:

Wednesd.y,' Dec. 20, 2008
By hrnlce Ieete Osol
.
New projects or fresh endeavOrs you
personalty or!gtoate have greater potential than usual for turning OL•t successfully 1n the year ahead. When you get an
idea you think might work, implement it
and see it all the W8/j through.
.
SAGITIARIUS {No~o~. 23-Dec. 21)- No
one can handle your personal Interests
better than you can, so do as little dele·
gating as possible. Doing things the way
you want guarantees they'll turn out the
way you like_
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 -Jan. 19) Conditions are ripe for things to start
falling into place. This could enable you
to finally fuiflll a sucret ambition you've
peen nurt~ring . Make yo'ur move s when
you get the signals.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19)- Yes, it's
Important to be a rational thinker. but. by
the same token, it could also he smart
not to put limitations on your hopes and
desires. Optimism can furnish. what you
envision
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - By putting yourself out e~o~en just a little. it ca n
upgrade your social status, which would
also help you achieve new heights where
your career is concerned . It's up to you.
ARIES (March 21 ·April f9} - You're still
in a favorable period for asslmll8ting and
expounding information for reasons that
could benefit you gref!ll~. What you do
with it and how mu ch you'll use It wilt be
up to you.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - The timing
is ripe and the con ditk&gt;n s are conducive
for making thOse important new changes
you'~o~e been anxious lo implement.
Instead ot conceptualizing any ftJrll'ilel',
start executing them .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - A new
union or partnership Into which you enter
·at this time could have tar-reaching
ef'fects upon your life. It won't maner if
the alliance is formed for personal or
commercial reasons .
CANCER (June 2.1-Juiy 22) - If there is
something new you've wanted to t.y, now
is an excellent time to give it a go.
Chances are you'll be very successful
with it the first time out o~ the boJC .LEO (Juty 23-Aug . 22) - Give expression to any inclination you get to reorganize you r personal affairs with some·
boc:tY in order to make your life mora rea·
sonabte. Big improvements can be
made.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) - You should
be able to lie down and finalize to your
satis1action.once and tor all a personal
matter o! importance to you and your
family. especially if you continue to work
on it in positive ways .
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23)- Your lngenu·
ity and creativity continue to be trending
' upward. Don'l hesitate to capitalize on
your cleverf;1ess to upgrade a number o1
things you've been thinking about for
some lime.
SCORPIO {Oct. 24·Nov. 22) - !-ady
luck has decided to be your ally; pufling
you ,in an extremely profitable cycle at
th~ time. Be alert for large opportunities
of a new nature. which you know you can
handle.
·

loW to fofm

WOlO

GAMI

•

Ihe

be·

fD~o~r simple wordt,

r I -!1

f

I

S\ILYT

i 'l

r----------,

''The g.(I\H.I th i n~ ;1hout Jit1tlr
h;rnJwtilittg is lhal )I'U can'ttcll
if.! l!\' \Wiler is

l'''•'r at- ··· ···· .

I T F DS

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS" 12118106
J\nyonc - Tweak .. Emend . Mira_cc- TAKING ONF
."lnvesling in the slu&lt;k m:lrk~t is too tisk)','" my husband
mused. '"llhinl," I

r&lt;spmitlcd. ""th:rt Ill\' ~r&lt;alcr risk is tltll

TAKIN&lt;i ON E.'"

ARLO &amp; JANIS

So e¥en

as O&lt;JR B:M8s

1/aininG Down en

f\eR 1/iLLaGe, llllinGi&gt;JG
Dfr.&lt;&gt;CRaC"/ ,. Sl-\e' Ll
1&lt;1-'low Tt4e :Jo'i OF
C~iSTt-~as ...

AA/EOE

,,

·

PUUIIR p~

a~

I

XM PS XL G Y G X

clean up alter people"s messes. - Reiel ~Ichor Dan Quisenberry

SOUP TO NUTZ

304-675-6975

GYYKROME .R

YYBAOE

II
1

. . . . .11tf111............

NMB

YGAP V DIIEAPT YMIIAGEF NMB

Or apply online at:
www.pvalley.org

,.

19 Plumbing
bends
22 Conqueror
23 Januery
blrthatone
24 Aclreaa =k
25 Jell
n
shape
26 Rope ftber
28 By and by
29 Skiing mac·

CELEBRITY CIPHER '

TKATOAILT

BISSEll

Ws nuks 6ummM

••

higher position, wrth, usually. grea1ar
remuneration anached. Of course, if we
were In a competition for the promotion.
the loser would feel unhappy.
II is the same al the bridge table.
Promotion - trump promollon - Is
good lot one side and bad !of the other.
In this deal, you reach lour epedes sftor
East overcalls In hearts. Weal leads the
heart nine. How would you plan the
·
play?
Tho One·spade retiJlOnse by South guar·
antsed at least a five·card suit. With only
four spades, he would have made a neg·
atlve doultla.
You have three top losers: one spade
and two hearts. Since the minor suits are
sotld, the only denger Is losing a second •
spade tnd&lt;, which could happen If tho
opponents gain a trump promotion.
Win lhe firsllrld&lt; on lho board and call
lor a low epede. After Eaal plays low ~nd
you taks the trld&lt; with your king, hoW
would you con11nue?
II you play a spade to dommy'a queen ,
you will go down. Easl will win, cash two
heart trkiks, and play another heart. II
you discard or ruff low, Wesl oveouffs; II
you roll with your spade jack, Weal dis·
cards and scores h~ spede 10 In a
moment. West's trump has been promoted.
Instead, at trick three, lead the spade
jack from you'r hand ..East wins wit~ his
ace ·and takes his two heart tricks. If he
then plays anOther heart, ruff in your
hand. It West discards, you ·draw his last
trump. If West overruffs wilh his remain· ·
ing trump, you overruff whh the board's
queen.

ROBERT

Advertise in
this space for
$27 per
month

' Pass

44 Mont out of
lht ordinary

We normally consider promotion to be a.
good thing. We have been moved Into a

2A59 St. Rt. 160

Bucket Truck

16

Promotion can be
a bad thing

740.446
• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding ·

We..st

Opening lead: ¥ 9

FORTH AN'
SO ON ...

West Shade Barber Shop
Owned &amp; operated by
· Chri.1 Parker
17 yrs, experience.
First Barber Shop on
Texas Road ofT Route 7
740-9115·3616

BAD CREDIT?
NO CREDIT?
Bankruptcy?
We Can Helpl
Call Credit Hotline
740-446-3570

.

Dealer: North

www.--ltlaoCr)'.oam

$5. $25

Betty L. ·
Young
the

HardWood C8blnecrr And r.JI'IIHUre

Grave Blankets

Oakwood Home•

20

Vulnerable: Both

Christmas Wreaths

Sue's Greenhouse

ADVERTISE

of given.
1 For further lnforma~
tlon, or lor an oppolnt·
men! to lnopect colla!·
oral, ptlor to ule date
Public Notice
contact Cyndle, Ken ,
or Randy at 992·2136.
PUBLIC NOTICE
(12) 19, 20,21
NOT ICE : ts hereby

' I

..........-

Rtck Johnson Jr.· Owner

080.(740)794·0231.

r

requirements of sec- 8 a n J a m I n , Implied
lion 3905.481 of the
Revised code for the
2003·2004 compliance
period.
It Ia Thorolore Dfdored
that pursuant to sec·
lion 3905.482 of the
Revised Code, the
Ohio insurance license

Crane• ~lk'lg • ~lllp Grlndlnt
17t Rind Strtti•GI!IIpolll, OH

740-949-3151

December 22, 2006 at
10:00 ·a.m., a public
sale will be held at 211
W.
Second
St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio. The
Farmers Bank and
Savings Company Ia :_17_:40-")388-'-".-8::..1.::.24.:_
.- - FOR SALE
selling lor caoh In
hand or certified chick Teacup &amp; Toy Poodles, RN UNIT SUPERVISORApple Head Chihuahua.
the following collater·
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Registered.
Snuggle lap Center is a leading provider
al:
into the Holidays .
1995
Nlnan
KXE baby
(740)446- 9428
•·
of sub-acute, rehab~itatlve,
P
I
c •k
u
p
short-term and long term
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healthcare.
Rocksprings
1997
Ford .
F150 .
Rohabllltalion is currently
2FTDF1824VCA44031
accepting applications for
2001 Ford Explorer
experienced AN's to add to
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our Management Team. We
2002 Dodge Ram 1500
are looking 1or talented-lndlI D7HA 16K52J135038
~=======
vlduals who have good
2001 Dodge Intrepid team-building, strong clinical
2B3HD76V81H7028&amp;7
In Memory ·
and system s~l~. and a stn2002
VW
Jetta
~;::=====;;:.
cere commitment to per3VWSK68M22M058267 r
formance improvement and
ID Loving
excellent. We are offering
2004 Pontile Grend
A
M
Memory of
an eKcellent salary and ben1G2NF52E44M672186efit paclcage to individuals
2000 Ford Explorer .
Who have a demonstrat&amp;d
1 FMZU84P8YZB04822
record
of
success.
2000 Chevy Blaur
Interested
candidates
should · applyto: RQC.K:
t GNDT13W6Y2148849
SPRINGS BEHABILITA·
1895
Ford
F1 SO
She went to be
TIQN CENTER, aa.z.9
1 FTEX15NOSKA40596
with
Lord
Rqekaprlnqa
Rqod.
1995
Ford
F250
POMt;RQY OHIO 45769.
4
years
ago.
2FTHF26F7SCA67716 •·
Extendlcare
Heill!h
1995
FORD
F150
Dec.I9,2002
Services. Inc. Is an equal
1FTEX14N2SKA48076
opportunity employer tha1
1999 Dodge Dakota
encourages
workplace
1B7GG26YXXS243851
diversi . MfF ON
The Farmer. Bank and
Savings
Company,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
reaervoa the rlghl to
bid at lhle tale, and to
Dirt bike, 2001 Suzu~ 80.
withdraw the above
runs good, $1000, (740)992collotaral prior to Nla.
6239
Further, The Farmero
Bank and Saving•
Suzuki 250cc 4 Wheeler,
Company raurvao the
Quad Runner. good cond1·
right to reject any or all
II broke my heart to tion, 'runs good, racks and
blda oubmlttttd,
. lights $1,000 (304)593-3810
lose you,
The above doecrlbed
'I !{\I ! I \
But you didn 'I
collateral will be eold
"as Is-where le", w~h
go .alone,

continuing education Insurance. Ann Womer no

Top •trim •Cible Rtmoval

IG 8 7 3

.740-446-0oo7 Toll Free 877- 669-0007

-

Comolete Tree Care

4 A3
9KQJ 76
• J 9 6
• Q6 2

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

'I • P•"r"l''

ACE TREE SERVICE

• 10 9 8
• 9 2

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

44/-h, I '1
,liJi&lt;l

7

South
"•KJ762
• 10 5 4
t AQ 5
4 K 3

NewGal'llg&amp;l
Electrical • Plumbing
Rooflnll &amp; Gutter.
VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
Patio ei'KI Porch Deckl
WV036725

""~'"

g

Ea,t

• J 8:; 4

Remodeling .

,

JZ·It-O&amp;

5.

Wrst
t

100% Financing W.A.C.

Room Addition• &amp;

door, automatic, fair condl·

aut, (lice. 4200; 1994
PonUac Bonneville 4 dr, V6
nice 2100; 1998 Ford Escort
4 dr, black, aut, 4 cyl, $2100
nice many more to choSB
from. Buy here, pay here 1/2 ·
down. (740)446-a172.
.:..:c.:.:_::.:_::_.:_;:.:_:.:::_;_
1995 Saab 9,000 CS,
30mpg highway, looks great.
runs great. Asking $2,800 or
will trade tor Cdt firearms.
(740)794.0088.

MONTY

2 BR. 1 Ba••59,800

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Q

4 A 10

rfamihJ l•l:ild#:l

(740) 992-0496
New Homes
3 BR. 2 Ba. from $66,000

ly

YOUNG'S

tion. KBB· $1180. Sefl·$700

I .

Scarlet
Fix lht oyea

11
12
13
15
16
18

9 A8 3
t K 42

Chuck Wolfe
. Owner

rase

740-949-2115

t995 Ford Mustang GT V8.

"--iiiliiiliiiiiliililil_.l

I .-

1989 Honda AccOrd OX, 4

(740)256- _16_7_7_.- - - - - -

I

~

pons on
5 11 Sto
•

I' l l'f'IP'\

1977 white Corvette with 1_
tops, less than 28,000 actuat miles. For sale best offer.
Call after 5pm {740)3677547.

AKC mg. Beagle pups, al!tri 1994 Lumina, white, 4 door,
colored, wormed, shots, 3.1 , V6, runs and looks
$100. Steve
Stap~ton great $900-0BO. (740~441·

AKC reg. Blue Tlc::M Beagle
puppies' $50. CKC Basset
Hound puppies $150. All
,shots &amp;, wormed. Great
Christmas gltt. (740)388·
3
lYIL''J\
...U..I.AI'U!A,.I\.0
MFJI_C1IANDISE.
---·9 27.
AKC Registered Golden
Retrievers, Parents ha-ve
had ONA/O~A approved.
3 lndu~~~~ ho12wa,er ~s· Female, $350, Male. $300.
sure w-ftltt. seta UIUa- (740)38S-890S
print drawers, landscape '--'------~
trailer. (740)645·2729 or AKC Yellow Lab pups.
(740)379·2544.
· Excellent pedigree. $400.
(740)44 1-o 1so or (74o)441 •
Hot Tub Outlet, Red Tag 725 1.
·sale. Top quality, warranty, - - - - - - - delivery &amp; installation. can Beautiful AKC Pomeranian
.
3
1
(606)32,6·0777 anytime. ·
pups,
rna es, 3 lomato.
Reedy to go $350. {740)3888642
-------Bird dogs English Pointer
pupS. t.tales &amp; females.
Ready 1or Christmas $250.
1740

992·6635

•Middle

•

VC YOUNG Ill

Loadma;~~-

'--'--'--'---'-~

(740)446-4172,
1619· ·

Or

Nortll

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1OX,1OX 10X20
gg] ..3194

LMisrocK

~

AKC Australian Shepherd
I
puppiQs,
re!!'dy
for
Christmas $150 male, $200 Jml""-"':'----~
lemale. ( 740) 2 ~5-.1 217 .

taking Deposits. Males only.
$300.001 740-696·10851
AKC ~b puppies $300 _
17401256 _1686.

eech Street
Middleport, OH

97 B

Htll's Self
Storage

$200, Thlllert· B&amp;W Gooseneck
Hitches.
Carmichael

AKC
Golden Retriever
Puppys. ~ed or Cream, Vet
checked shots. M. and F.
$350.00I AKC Doberman
Pinscher Puppys 1 M, 1 F.
Black anctRust $400.00!
AKC. Blchone Frish puppys

·

skin care.
Ask me about out
exciting product line
today!

Cedar Str. Central Heat/air, CONVE~IENTLY LOCAT- Exercising
Equipment,
Gooseneck, Dumps, &amp;
8. week old Great Pyrenees Utility· Alum a Aluminum
FP. $695+UW ahd dep. Call ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Electronic Treadmill, loaded,

(740)446-4639.

IIIIIIJrS
SRf SJIIIBE

Troll.,..
LoadmaxJuanita Grueser
Goos,neck, Dumps, &amp;
Utility· "luma Alumlnu' m
740·949-3027
~
Trallerl- B&amp;W Goosened&lt; www.merykay.coml]gruser
Hitches.
Carmichael
Equipment (7 4 0) 446 • 241 ~
_.:__;,__ _;__:.__..::.:_..:_
New John Deere Compacts
and 5000 Series Utility t~actors 00% Fixed for 36
months through John Deere ·
Credit.
Carmichael
Equipment (740)448·2412

r

1

4

8 Hippy
alghl

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

'-nswer to Prwloua Puute

W~h

1,

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ACROSS

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BRIDGE

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The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

3802.

APAKli\=

j

www.mydallysentinel.com

Comm8rcial building ~For
Sate• 1600 square teet: off
street parking. Grell loca·
tloo. GaH Wayne (-404)466-

3... bdrm, 2 bath hoose "" Mobile Home Lot In Johnson
rent , S650/mo plt,JS utilities Mobile Home Park. in
lnd depo~t 1 year lease Gallipolis, OH . Phone
and references required. No (740)446·2003 or (740)446Pets. Includes stove, refrig- 1409.
erator. washer, dryer, pool,
and outbuilding. Call 379· C::I!"'""!---....- ,

r

Tuesday, ~mber 19,2006
ALLEY .OOP

I

�Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

_________

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

Tuesday, December 19. 2006

Gizmosads.com proud to support local business!

•

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Gizmos DGadgets

PRESENT OPENING DEVICE

To advertise in this space •
The Gallipolis Daily Trib,un~_,
446-2342

.

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.·

For the kid who's
got everything

CD

When you first draw a turned view of a head,
you are defining the depth of each facial feature.
Both turned views, "B" &amp; "C" are correct versions
of drawing "A': This is especially noticeable
on the nose and chin.
Note how the nose is located on the "T" but
projects out from it.

Can you help Gizmo find the cheese,
two flags and the photo of Gadget?

••

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must add ~p to the #'s shown.(diagonals can repeat
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advertise in this
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Sentinel

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