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'·

Eagles downed at
Waterford, Bt
Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

'

See The Puzzler inside
today's edition

Thursday,'January 13,2005

YIWW.mydallysentlnel.com
......... ,

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Latest report estitnates $211K in flood d~rnage

SPORTS
• Belpre soars past
Marauders. See Page 81

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'ALLIPOLIS - The well-known and popular Elvis impers~mator Dwight
'
Icenhower will be featured in two dinne_r shows at the Down Under Restaurant
'
on Saturday eventng, accordtng to Davtd Rtce, restaurant manager. · .
. . ''·l~·-.
The restaurant will accept reservations for two seatings on Saturday evemng. The ,
.
''
first will be at 6 p.m , and the second at S:30 p.m. ·
.
.
I.
Icenhower, a native of Pomeroy, began his Elvis career by singing karaoke. at a
local fair when he was just 16 years old. Now, he is one of the very few Elvis tribute artists who has made a full time career out of keeping the legend of Elvis alive.
His popularity takes him all over the country, often performing four to live .shows
·~
ti
weekly. He ·is re~ognized for his good looks and amazing voice, sometimes even
!
being mistaken for Elvis himself. Born four years after the Ktng passed away, he has (
~:~.
studied e~c;l)', move that ~:I vis made and has mastered the '50s, '60s and '70s eras of ' '
I
I'·
Elvts career.·
.
\
This outstanding Elvis impersonator continues to awe audiences of all· ages, and
his fans enjoy him both on and off stage. He considers it a dream come true to have
such a wonderful job, offering the opportunity to meet so many people.
Rice points out, "Because of the generosity of the Wiseman Agency, no cover
charge will be made for Down Under dtnner guests to enJOY thts outstandmg show
at the Restaurant on Saturday evening. The Wiseman Agency is covering the expense
for these two perfoiinances by Dwight Icenhower."
He added, "To make a dinner show reservation for the 6 p.m. or the 8:30 p.m.
seating for Saturday night, call 446-2345, and be assured you will have a truly enjoyable evening, combining excellent food with top drawer entettainment."
It is suggested immediate reservations be made.

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j

Dallas Brass
peiforms Jan. 20

REED

may delay those estimates.
In addition to damage to ·
physical property, the flood
left between live and seven·
families in the·Leading Creek
and Shady Cove areas of
Middleport isolated, . the
assessment reports.
Damage reported includes
$24,000 to public buildings,
$2,000 to public utility infrastructure, $106,000 io public
roads and· culverts, $23 ,000 to

•

Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

.

BREED@MDAILYSENTINEL .COM

Dwight "Elvis • Icenhower

I ~·

II

D.

.., , .

,.. ' ···&gt;!"~

,.:1~-···

students from local high -school
bands, who will join the Dallas Brass '
ons1age, for· the Dallas Brass Concert
concert's grand finale. These students
will spend Thursday afternoon attend· ·
ing a workshop and seminar at the ;
University of Rio Grande,' ref6rred to .
as "Brass Day," have d_inner iri the •
University DiniAg Hall, then attend
the concert at 8 p.m.
,
During the finale of the concert, all .
participants, along with the University ~
Symphonic . Band, will join the Dallas I
Brass on stage to play the closing
number, "American Tableau."
Valley Artist Series season ticket
holders already have their tickets for
_ __
the Jan. 20 concert. Additional tickets .. .... ..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ .

-......
..--QU s . th

em sets
:Brown Bag concert series

will be availabie at the door for $20 :
each, as space permits. To reserve a i
ticket, call (740) 245-7364 or 1-800- 1,
7364
282 7201
• ext.
.

OU

,At the Movies: ·coach Carter'
(AP) - You pretty much ing moments and breathless
, know what you're · getting buzzer-beating action. It's also
1when you walk into a sports . full of the obligatory speeches
· movie that bills itself as "an about turning athle~ intO··stuI inspirational account
dents and turning boys ·into
' inspired by a true story."
men.
..
.
· And ·with ''Coach Carter,"
"Coach Carter,'·'.a ~itnt
you pretty much get that: The Pictures release, is rated
13
story of Ken Carter, the bas- . for violence, seltual content,
ketball coach at Richmond language, teen partyilig and
High School in a tough section some drug material. ~ng .
of the San Francisco Bay Area, time: 137 minutes. 1\vo,alld a
features rousing, crowd-pleas- half stars out of foui.' ·,,· - :

·ro.

of evolution stickers from
textbookS in Georgia school
district. See Page A2
• Man charged in
highway shootings left town
because 'it looked bad.' See
Page- As· - ...• State completes audit of
county treasurer's ~ffice.
See Page A5
• Camp sets dinner. See
Page AS

~IOIIIMm Ave.

Beth Se.gentjphutus

New Horizons Child Enrichment Center recently opened their doors to children ages three to five. Kaitlyn
Taylor, left, and Marissa Brooker are pictured breaking-in the facility. When asked what their favorite part
of their new school was, both replied,"playing."

POMEROY - "Miss Susan, your school is
beautiful,'; 4-year-old Marissa Brooker said to
Susan Eason, teacher at New Horizons Child
Enrichment Center.
"I .think I'm going to cry," Eason replied to
her new student at the facility which ·officially
opened on ·Monday within the Mulberry
Community Center.
Eason along with colleague Patty Taylor shared
a dream of opening their own school for 3 to 5 year
olds. Those separate -dreams were brought. together by Jennifer Bartrum of Pomeroy.
.
"Jennifer is the link,'' Eason said,~ childhood

-onP1CtA8

INDEX
Calendars

A6

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

·oear Abby

A6

Editorials

A4

Faith• Values
Movies
Obituaries ·

Sports

.

··,

Bv B.ETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

A2-3

As
As
· B Section
A6

© ao04 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Conytnlfnt I

Please see Pcilldes, A5

Please see New, A5

Chester Fire Department
organizes for 2005 ·

Eastern teach~r qualifies for national certification
COLUMBUS
Sandra
Needs, · a teacher at Eastern
Elementary School, was one of
211 teachers in Ohio and the only
one from Meigs County to qualify to join the prestigious group of
National . Board
Certified
Teachers in 2004.
According to the Ohio
Department of Education . Ohio
ranks IOth for the highest board
applicant volume in the country

and now has niore board-certified teachers than the rest of the
Great Lakes states . combined.
These teachers represent 120
school district and teach in near·
ly 180 Ohio schools.
Susan Tave Zelman;-'"superintendent of public instruction,
praised the new board-certified
teachers for their commitment to
excellence.
"These teachers are true lead-.

Please see Eastern, AS

1/4 Mlltl MNoirlrlhlll
Pomeroy/Muon -Bridge

tlllllpOI.., Ohio 45631
{740) 44t-1711

Mleon, WV 21210
Phone (304) 773-5323
'•

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___;c...:.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __;__.:.._....,.__ _ _ _ __

STAFF REPORT

TUPPERS PLAINS - John Rice was re-elected
president of the Eastern '"ocal Board of Education
· when the board organized on Wednesday night.
She\ia Taylor was elected vice president and
Charles Taylor legislative liaison, Taylor was also
named student achievement liaison.
Play time is a
The following committees were appointed:
favorite pastime
Curriculum
committee, Greg Bailey and Rice;
at New Horizons.
building and grounds, Bailey and Weber; finance
where children
can take advancommittee, Rice and Weber; personnel , Howard
tage of cosCaldweli and Taylor; transportation, Caldwell and ·
tumes, toys and Taylor; communications, Taylor and Weber.
various games
' '
in-between
Please see Rice, A5
academic and
social exercises.
.Pictured is teaching f!SSistant
Lois Hawley with
Hannah Evans
dressing the
part of a
princess.
CHESTER -· Officers for 2005 for the Chester
Volunteer Fire ·Department have been elected and calls
ansWered and various activities for last year reported.
Larry Cleland was re-elec~ed chief· with Jobn
Ridenour being named first assistant chief, and
Bruce D . Myers, second assistant chief: Other offiers in our education community,'' cers named were Elmer Newell, captain, Charles
said Zelman. "By successfully Radford, Pearl Edwards, Marvin J'aylor, and Roy
completing the rigorous process lee Bailey, 'lieut~nants ; Larry Lee, ATV-in-house
for National Board Certilication, equipment lieutenant; Leonard Koenig, Jr. safety
they have demonstrated their officer. and Leonard Myers, arson investigator.
-Department officers elected were Bruce A.
dedication · and commitment to
quality teaching in Ohio class- Myers, president ; Robert Woods, vice president;
rooms."
Ma.ryin Taylor, secretary: Charles Radford, treasur·
National Board Certification is er; Elmer Newell , news rep.orter. and John
the highest credential in the Ridenour, board of directors.

I"

c,.... h'on'l KMirt)

Rice re-elected Eastern
board president

A new day for New Horizons

WEATI:i:ER

Weather

Twp

POMEROY - For the first time ever, Meigs
·County employees will be subject to the terms of a
policy' .and procedures manual adopted by the
Meigs County Commissioners.
Meeting Thursday, commissioners approved the
county's first-ever employee manual. It is the prod- ·
uct of months of meetings with county officeholders and the Columbus consulting lirm Downs and
·Hurst, Board President Mick Davenport said.
"I think it's a good thing," Davenport said. "The
county needs it."

INSIDE
.Judge orders removal

-·-

: IRONTON - Ohio University Southern has announced that
its Brown Ba~ Concert Series began Jan. 12.
.
: Concerts wtll be held at 12: IS p.m. in the Mains Rotunda of
· the Riffe Center each Wednesday during January· and February
and on March 2. To open the series, Ohio University Southern
student Josh Early performed.
i The concerts are free and open to the public. For lldditional
' information on the Brown Bag Concert Series. contact CQOrdinator
' Nina Queen at 740-533-4602,740-533-4612 or 800-626-0)13. ·
The schedule is as follows: Jan. 19. B.J. Wurts, vocal/guitar;
Jan. 26, Erica Hayes,. vocal; Feb. 2, Derek ,and Anthony,
. vocals/guitars; Feb. 9, The Goodness Sllk:es, vocals/guitars; Feb.
16, Alisha Qualls, vocal; Feb. 23, Ohio .University Southern
Activity Band; March 2, Ironton High School Varsity Singers.

- ·- _ _ _ _ _ __

public recreation facilities, and three pri vale homes were
$8,500 to storm sewers. Byer destroyed, three others' suffered
·said most damage appears to Jnajor danmge, 17 minor darn-.
have occurred in Racine .
age and 16 otherwise affected.
:ro date, the county and iis
Gov. Bob Taft added Me.igs
villages and townships have County and six other counties
spent $24,000 on debri s to a list of 49 earlier-declared
removal, and $1·8,200 on pro- counties on Tuesday, making
tective measures; such as bar- local residents affected by
ricades, emergency tempo- last week's flooding eligible
rary repairs and search and for cash assistance through
rescue efforts·
the Ohio Department of Job·
The report indicates that and Family Services.

Commissioners
approve policies for
county employees

The Dallas Brass
quintet with a full complement 'of
drums and percussion, creating a
performing entity of extraordinary
range, from classical masterpieces
to Dixieland , swing, Broadway,
Hollywood , folk and patriotic
RIO GRANDE - The nationally- music.
•
recognized Dallas Brass will · perform
"The performance is much more
il) the Fine and Performing Arts than a concert: It is a show. complete
Center, the University of Rio Grande, with lighting, staging, witty narration
and audience participation," Stewart
at 8 p.m. on Jan. 20 .
This is the fourth in the Valley, said. ''A Dallas Brass concert is
Artist Series of concerts, kicking off . intended for ages 5- 105."
. the 2005 season, ac.cording to Gary . A special feature will be young
Stewart, president' of the VAS.
"Since its founding in 1983 by
Michael Levine, the Dallas Brass has
become one of America's foremost
musical ensembles, performing solo
concerts throughout the • world,"
Stewart said.The group combines a brass

J.

Agelli.Y on Thursday.
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Meigs
County
EMA
Director Robert Byer'filed the.
POMEROY- Last week's assessment using information
Ohio River flood caused ·at from township and village
least $211 ,000 ' in damage to officials, although some politipublic · roads, bridges and cal subdivisions have not yet
other infrastructure, destroyed reported damage estimates.
three homes and damaged at . Byer said continuing J)roblems
least 20 others, according to a with 'high water have caused
damage and needs assessment delays in collecting damage
filed
with
the
Ohio estimates. The threat of anoth'Emergency
Management er flopd this weekend also
BY BRIAN

v

.'

Please see Chester. A5

�..

• VALUE·S

FAITH

The Daily Sentinel

Judge orders removal of evolution stickers
from textbooks in Georgia school district
Bv DOUG GROSS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRI TER

ATLANTA ~ A federal
judge Thursday ordered a suburban f\.tlanta ·school system to
remove stickers from tls high
school biology textbooks that
call evolution "a theory. not a
fac t." saying the disclaimers
an
unconstitutional
are
endorsement of re ligion.
·'By denigrating evolution,
the school board appears to
be endorsing the well -known
prevailing alternative theory,
creation ism or variattons
' thereof, even though the
sticker does not speci fically
reference any alternative theories," U.S. Di strict Judge
Clarence Cooper said.
The st tckers were put
inside the books" fro nt covers
by public school officials 111
Cobb County 111 2002. They
read: ''Thi s tex tbook contains
material
on • evol ution.
Evolution is a theorv.' not a
fact. regarding the Ongin of
living things. Thi s material
should be approached with an
open mind, studied carefully
and criticall y considered."
"This is a grem day for
Cobb County students," said
Michael Manely. an attorney

Religion briefs
.
A judge's quotation of a Judge Paul Malia wrote for the majority.
The ruling reverses a 2003 deci sion by a
federal judge who ruled Arnett deserved a
new sentenGing hearing or release. Arnett's
lawyer argued that the U.S. Supreme Coun
has fo rbtddcn trial .couns to use factors suco
as religion when sentencing defendants.

Community of
Christ receives donation
INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (AP)
The
t'community of Christ announced that it has
received $40 million from a family that placed
no restnctions on how the church can use the
donation, which exceeds the church's annual
operating budget by about one-third.
The Independence-based church, formerly
known as the Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints, reported details of
the gift in the January issue of its magazine.
Church spokeswoman Linda Booth said the
largest previous gifts to the · denomination
have been less than $5 million. This donation
wtll become part of the church endowment.
The Community of Christ traces its origin to
Joseph Smith, who founded the Mormon
church in 1830. The Community of Christ
split from the much larger Utah-based
Mormon church. known as the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, in 1860 and
· changed its name in 200 I.

Ftllowshio
Apostolic

week, 1 was deeply
reminded of what Jesus said
in Jol)n 13:20, "I tell you the
truth, whoever accepts anyo.ne l send accepts Me; and
Pastor
whoever accepts Me accepts
Thom
the One Who sent Me."
Mollohan
While thi s .certainly has to
do with receiving the good
news of Jesus Christ and
entering into God's great
Salvation, it is also an the New Testament) is that
admonishment for any who all 'life is precious? Every
are Believers to humbly life, even that in the womb:
receive God's love through is an amazing work of God,
the loving administrations of a gift to the world that no
caring people.
one else has a right to mar
For months of uncomfort- or destroy.
able ~nd perilous ''expectDid 1 say a "Biblical pering, " my family has been spective?" Absolutely! For
the object of a great out- does not the 'Scriptute say in
pouring of love and support Genesis I :27, "So God crealfrom family, friends and ed man in His own image, in
church family. And then , the image of God He created
the Thursday, before last, as him ; male and female He
our new daughter arrived on cre.ated them." We are crealthe scene dangerous·ly early, ed in the image of God
'!IY wife 's &lt;,loctor · support- whether our bodies are sound
j vely walked with us and whole or crippled with
through the difficult situa- dtscase. Black and white,
tion while nurses in the male and female, yve were
maternity area gently and created in the divine image,
attentively tended to our our first ·ancestor receiving
famtly . We know indeed the very breath of God and
that each loving gesture and becoming a living soul.
every caring word was sent · Dear one, you also are
from Him. We thank Him marKed with the image of
for all those who had a part God. What the · world has
in the arrival of this won- done to deface that. image in
derful new life .
you with the horrid "graffiti"
Oh , and how we now cele- of hurt, hate, fear, and bitterbrate this precious little girl! ness, cannot erase God 's
"Little hands and little feet; image and the fact that you
a fragile life when first we have unimaginable wonh.
meet
'' Naturally, we
"Biblical perspective," , did
already kriew our new addisay? Trulyt The Bible is
tion in so many ways before God 's megaphone as He proshe
even
"arrived." claims, " ... before I formed
Ultrasound picture s, for you in the womb ·I knew you,
example, helped to introdttce before you were born I set
us. These "wmdows on the you apan ... " (Jeremiah I :5).
inner world" settled for us, Dear one, you have "Godby the way, the age-old given purpose" .and a divinequestion, "Do babies suck ly appointed sjgnificance .
their thumbs in the womb?"
We live in such a strange
In case the answer interests age though. This is an age in
you , this one "did. She also which life is not really
practiced gymnastics and did esteemed as all that impmsome occasional "kick-box- · tant. It seems so ' bizarre to
ing" (much to my ,;,ife's me to know that we live on
vexation). Also, all of our the very brink of an era in
children occasionally had which human embryos can
the hiccups in the womb, be harvested for stem cells as
thi s little girl bein·g no though each tiny life were
exception (m uch to my nothing more t)lan a labamusement).
grown culture of bread mold
Did . you kn9w that the for penicillin.
Biblical perspective on life
But I don't buy it. God
(Old Testament as well as doesn 't look at any human

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Ri ver Valley

Wr.-dnc~Jay, 7:00

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Lnop Rd olf New Ltmo Rtl Rulland.
So:1v~c~ . Sun 10 ()(I am . &amp; 7.JO p.m ,
'I hurs 7 UO p m • P..i'slor M.my R. Huuon

Assembly of God
Litwrty Assembl} of GO&lt;I

26 year~ In locst business
Roofing &amp; Building Work

Pomeroy; on
740-992-6215

"So I strive always to keep
my consci(mce clear
before God and rrian."

Acts 24:16

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

Located

Coolville , Ohio
less than 30 rrunutes from

Athens; Pomeroy or Parkersburg
1-740-667-3156

"Still small enough to care"
209 Third

W.Va.. P:t~ t or· Nell Tcnnwll. Sunday
Scrvil:cs- 10 UO am . and 7 p m

Baptist
Carptnt~r baptist tJmrch
SU1uL1y

School

- 9 JOam

Racine, OH

10::\0.un. Evcnmg
~n1cc
ServiL'C
7 ()(Jpm: Wcdncsday B1hle Study HIO pm,
lntcnm Preat:her - Fl11yd Ross
t:h~s~ire

Baptist Church

Stnc Llltlc , Sumh1y S~.:h oul. 9 J[l
.mi Morn mg Worsh1p 10 30 a m, Sund.1y
C\C nmg· 6 1(J pm Wcd ncsJay 6 J0pm
l'a ~ ll'' ·

Hop~:

II 11 .111 and 6 p m .
Wcll nc~ du y Si.'I""\KC- 7 p.m.

740-949-2210

N.utland l'irst Baptist C hurch
Sund.1y School - Y.JO ~ m., Wor~ tn p
lfl •45 u 111

Pa~wr

-

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Tll-·

""- ......... ""'"""
1!1..14

·~ ·~ 1)

--

VR-Y IIIIIISO.Y
f li4-U

t:17~lt

P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohto 45769-0683

499 Rithland Avenue, Athens
740-594-6333

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

--

·-

Morri s- Sunday

S~.:hoo l

- 4 10 am ,

Worsh1p- Hl l O am , tl p m,
ServiCes- 7 p m.

Pomeroy Wesbiidt! Chun-h uf christ
J l226 Chd dn::n·~ Home RJ, Sunday
Sc huo l - II ilin , Wo rshi p· lOa m . 6p m.
Wt:!dn~sdu)

ScrviL'Cs. 7

"A Home Bani&lt; for
Home People"

Hnl

South~m

Kaptist
41 t!72 l'omeroy P•kc . . P;~st t• r E Lamur
O ' Hf'&lt; ml , Su nday SchM I - Y• 30 an\
Wor· ·•P · f\ · 15 n m . 945 am &amp; 7 00p m ,
Wcd,1csduy Scrvu:cs- 7 (M') p m
First Baptist Church
Pa!oi\IT. Mark Morrow, 6th and P ~ lnK.: r St ,
M1ddlcpurt, Sunday Schl)OI - Y 15 am ,
Wor,hlp •. I 0 15 a m , 7 U~ p m .
Wcdnt·"-.fuy Srn 1rc- 7 00 p m

RIK'lne First Baptist
Pastor R1 ck Rule, Sunda} School 9::10
(I m, Worshtp - 10.40 am, 7 00 p.m ..
WcU ncsilay S~rvllt:l&gt; · 7 {XJ pIll
Sii'Ver Run Baptist
PrJ. tbr John S'.l.an..on, Stmdn) Sthnnl ·
IOnm. Wnr~h•p- I lam, HIO pm .
.Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.

Mt. Union B11ptist
P u~tor

D,1 V11J WI !;C imm , Sun da) Sdtt ooi-

a nl. ,E \e mn g. . .6 :\0 p m .
Wt·d nl·-.day Sav1ccs · fi ~Up . lll

IJ 4 :i

Sizes available 5x10 to tO x 20

If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide i11 you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it. shall
be done unto you.
"John 15:7

Old Reibel Fret Will HaptL~t Church
2RMJI St R1 7. Mtddle port , Sunda y
Sl·ho01 · 10 a rn , Evening - 7.00 p.m..
Thul'!lduy S~n lt'CS 7.00
Hil~idt'

Baptist C hurch

St .Rt I·B JUSt off Rl 7, Pastor Rev
J ames R Acree, Sr. Sunday Un llicd

Scmt e. w.,rshlp - 10 ' 0 a.m . Q p.m..
Wednesday Scrvu:cs 7 p m.

We dn c~lla) Scrv~te~ -

MEJGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

I

Keno C hurt'h

orChri~l

~rd

Sum.l:iy

M1ddlepo~.

•

lnde~ndent

·-·---

p m,

PastOI' 4.nu s Hurt. Sunday Sl·hool · I0
&lt;1m, Worshi p· II a.m
Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St , f..hddlepon. Pastor
Rev Gllben CrJ ig. Jr., S unday s~·hool ·

Burwallow N.id~~;e Church or C hrist
P.tstQr ·Brucc Terry. Sunday Sc hool .l;i J O

p m.

Antiquity Baplist
Sunduy School • 9·:\0 am ., Wor ~ h•p )() 4.'i am , Su nday Evemng - fi.OO p.m ,
Pastnr: Don Wa lke r
Rutl•nd Fret Will Baptist
Sale m St . Pastor. Jam1c: Fo nner, Sunday

"Let your light so shine bef&lt;Jrel
men. that they may see
good works and glorify
Falher in heaven\'
Matthew 5:

OH

Ptarl C hapel
Sunday Slhool - \)am .. wtrs h1p · 10 a m

Rose or Sharon Uollncss Church
Leudmg Creek Rd . Rmland. Pa stor: RL·v
De we}' Kmg. Su nduy f&gt;~:hoo l - 9 ~0 ,1 rn ..
worshi p -7 p rn, Wcdncsdu}
prayer mccttng- 7 p. m

(740) 992-7270

7 ~0

p.m ,

Sc1vicc - 7 10 p rn

Wesleyan H1ble Holine§s C.IIUrch

q '0

- 10 4'i p.m.

.1

m . Worsh1 p - I0 10 ,1m , 7 00

Wcdn esd~ y

p m W, •JnesdH) Serv11.:cs - 7 p tn

Pa~rnr· William K
}ichool- 10 15 am,

Scrvir.:e

Hysell Run Community Church
Pastor. Rl.'v Larry L.·m ley, Su nday School

Pa~ to r

Com munior\- }0 a.m., Sunday S~.: hOOI 10 d a.m , Youth- 5 .10 prn Sunday, B1b lc
Stud y Wednesday 7 pm

· 9 JU a m. Worsh1p · 10 45 am. 7 p m ,

~

· Luurel
Bradbury Church of Christ
MmJster Tnm Runyon. ~9558 Bradb ury
Roud, Middl cpo n . Sunday School 9 ~ 0
a.m .
Wo rs~1p-

10 JO am

Rutland C hurch or Christ
Sunday SciH KJ I - 'V\ 0 am , Worshtp und
10 . .10 am .. Boh J W~ri} .

Com munion
Mm1stc r

Bradford C hurch or Christ
Corner ol St Rt 1::! 4 &amp; Hradb ur~ Rd.,
Mm1stc r· Doug Shamblin, Youlh Mm1 ~tc r
R1ll Amhergcr. Sunday School - 9 30 a m.
Wo rslup . ~too am. 10 30 am, 7 00

p. m. Wedne sda y Serv1ces - 7{10 p m

.n

or Christ

.~nd

Bdhany
John Gilmore. Sun day School · 10

Cliff f&lt;' tTe Methodlsl C hurch

m

Reeds,·Uie (:hurch

Pastur. Ph11ip Sturm, Sunday School: tJ:30
a.m., Wurship Scrvm~ 10 30 a.m, Bible
St udy. WcdncM.Iay. 6 30 p m
Dexler Church or Chr;ist
Sunda y school ~ 'Jo a. m . Sunday worship

- IO ..lO a.m

9·l O am . Wor sh1p - 10 45 a m
Sl udy Wed 7 00 p m

Latter-Day Saints

B•blc

The Church or Jesus
C hrist of Latter-Day Saints
St. Rl 160 . • 446 -6247. Of 446-74B6.

Pastnr Rtll Mar~ hall ~u nday Sc hoo l -

Lutheran
St. John l.utheran Chun·h
P111~ Grove, Wu r~hip • 9.00 a 111 , Sunda}
Sc hn ol - IU OU a.m l' a~ tor Jame s P
Brady

30 am .

Wor~h t p

Racine
Pete Shlllfc r. Su ndu y School - 10
m . Wor~ h1p · 11 am . Wednesday 7

J

Coolville United Methodist Parish
Pastor . Helen Kline, Coolv1tit: C hurch,
Mam &amp; F11'1h St. S undJ.f Sc hoo l - 10
a m . W0r~ h•,r - 9 am , Tucsda~ ServKes7 pIll.

Come r Sycamore &amp; Second St , Pnmerny.
Su nd ay Sc hool - 9 4.'i am . Worship - I I

Belhd C hurth
Township Rd. 468C. Sunda y School · 9
a.m. Wuah1p · 10 am, Wet.lnesda}
Servtees- 10 a m.

a m Pastor: James P Brady

.

Sal. 7 00 prn Cuntcmpor.H) Ser''lte

Unit~

Vlorship - 10:30 a.m .• Pasw r Ph11l1p Be ll
Ton-h C hun-h
Co. Rd 6J. Su nday School · 9 JO am ,
Worshtp · 10 JO a m

P a~tor Re''
Ralph Spm.•s. Sunday School - 9 30 am

Church of God

Wnrsh1p · IO·JO
Serv 1 cc~ - 7 p m

Nazarene

Meigs Cooperalin Parish
NortheaM Cl 1.1 stc: r, Alfred, Pastor. J,anc
Be awe, Su nd ay s~ huo l
Wm sh1p- I I a.m .. (dO p.m.

-·- ... . - ---·.

--·

Agape IJfe Center
"f ull Gospel Church", Paswr ~ John &amp;

Reedsvillr Fellowship

Saucrfidd , Sunda} School · t) 45 11 m .
E.vcmng · 6 p
Wednesday Scf\' K'£~ - 7

- 10 45 u.m .. 7 p.m , Wednesda) Sen·kes

Thursda)

6

~0

p. m ,

21'2 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

iiffij
ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME
174 Laynt Strnt • PO Boll70
Nr• H1vrn, WV 25265
James H. Andtrson. Lktnsecl tune111l utmtor

Road Pus1or ·

am.

10

Communi(~·

Ch urch

('h a r k~

K ou-,h 1l0-l) M''i·

2::!K~.

Sunda) Sc hnol ').If! am .Sunda~
cvemng SCT\ ICC 7 00 prn. IJ1hl) Stud)
\\'ci.lnc!-tday ~e n Ill' 7 00 p11

Failh l-ull Gospel Church
P&lt;1 ~l or Steve Reed. Sunday
School - 9 10 am . Wor ~h •p · 9 \U &lt;t m

Pa~ tnr

and 7 p m . W~ dnc~d ay · 7 p m
lellowsh1p sc rv1~·e 7 p m.

Wedncsdu~

Long Bo!tom.

llobsoo t:hristia.n 1-' el.lowship C hurch
Ht:r,chc l While . Sund,l) S,chool

10 nm. Sundn; Church ,~mce -.fll(l pm

Fnday -

7 pm

Restoration Chri'lti~:~n ft'llo wship
9365 Hoope r Road. Athcn~. Pa1.tor.
Lonmc CoJt§ Sunday \-\np.h1p I 0 00 am.
WL'( Inesd &lt;l): 7 pm

Pastor T heron Durham. Su nda}' - 9 30
.1 rn and 1 p m . Wednesday · 7 p m
Middleport Commu nily Church

515 Pearl St , Middleport . Pa stor· Sam
Anderso n, S umla) Schoo l 10 am .
7 30 p.m.

W~dneM.Iu y s~n

Langsville Chl-lstian Churth
Full Go~pcl. Pastor Rohcn Musser.
SundHy Schl!lil 9 ]0 am .. Wu r~h1 p 10.10
am - 7 00 pm. Wcdnt::-da; Scnu.;e 7 00

ICe .

7·Ju p.m

p~l

Pa~ tor

Pentecostal

Rev Emmell

Rawson. S und n} Evl!nmg 7 p m
thursday Scmce 7 p.m

Pentec~tal Assem~l~

St
1~11

Syracuse Mission
Bnd grman St. !'yrucuse

Wc d ncma~

E vc mn ~

R1.

Hu ~ack.

124. Raune. Pa ~lo r. W1lham
Su nda} School · 10 am,

E~en mg - 7 p m .
pm

Sund&lt;ly

- 6 p m,

SCI""\'ICC · 7 p m.

Wedne!&gt;da~

Sef\ ILCS - 7

Presbyterian

Httzel Communit y C hurch
Synll'USt' First l!nited Pmb~· terian
Pasto r Roben Cro\1., Wor!ilup · II a.111

r ..

Harrisonville Preshytenan C hurch
Pastor Roben Cro"-. Worshi p . 9 a m

Dyesville COmmunity Churth
Sunday School - 9 :.10 am .. .Worship
10:30 a.m, 7 p m.

Middleport Pmbylerian
Pastor Rober Crow., Worship - 10 3

Morse Chapel Church
Sunday school - 10 am, Worship am , Wedne~day Sc:rv1ce - 7 p m

111

Seventh-Day Adventist

II

Sevenlh· Da~

Mulhrrry Hts
Lu nl' Bottom. Sunday Schoo l · 9.30 a.m ..
Worship · 10 45. a.m ., 7 30 p.m.,
Wednesda) 7 30 p.m

Rd

Ad,·entisl
P ome ro~

Pastor ·

Benne tt Luck ies h. Sawrda) Ser~tas ·
Sahbath S~hool · 2 p.rn., Wor.;;hi p ·.~ p . m .

United Brethren

Mt. Oli\·e Comm11nity Churth

Mt. Hennon United Brethren

Paslor: Lawrence Bush. Su nday S;hool
9.30 a.m.. E\·ening - 6·.\0 p m. Wepneda}
Ser•m:e- 7 p m

in Cbrisl Ch urc h
Texas Commumty 3M 11 Wkkh~m Rd .
Pa~l ur . Pett:r Martmdale, Sunda' School ·

,

Full Gospel Lighthou§e
JJ045 ~ h land Road, P.,meroy. Pa sw Roy

.m ~- m , Wors h•p . 10 JO am .. 7 00
p m . Wednesday Serv 1 ~es · 7 UO p.m
Yo uth gmup mec1111g '!nd &amp; 4rh Sundays

Eden Uniled Brt1hrtn in C hriS!

South Bethel Comm unily C hurch
Silver R1dge- Pa~ tor Lmda DamewoOO.
Sunday School - q am . Wor~h lp Servrcc
10 a m 2nd and -hh St11"!8)

70J pm

SyracuM" C hu rch of the Nuarene
Pn~lor M1ke Adkm s Sunday School - 9·30

Kmgsburr Road, Pastor Rohert Vance,
Su,nday School · 9 30 a m , Worsh1p
Scrv1ce 10 30 a m.. E\ ~nmg Sen•1ce 6

a m Sunday School - I0 30 a m

a. m, Worship

p.m

10:30 a.m, 6 p .m ..

7 p m.

Slate Route 124. Reedmlle. sUnda y
S~.:hoo l - I I a.m, Sunda~ Worsh1p - 10 00
&lt;1m &amp; 7 00 p m Wedne~ ay Sen 1ces 7 00 p m . Wednesday Yt"luth Sl'f\JCC -

Jopp•
Pastor IJ ob Randolph, Wonhtp - 9 30

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m
Sund~ y

Long Bonom
St·huol ~ 9..10 a.m.. Worship •

Pomeroy Church or lhe Naurene
Pastor Jan Lavender. Sunrla) School •

10.30 am
Keednille
\\'orshlp - 9 .lU am . Sunday

{
S~.:hool

-

9·.\0

~

m . Worship · !0 lO a m and 6

Flftdom C.ospel Mis.&lt;iion
Bald Knob. on Co. Rd ~I. Paslor· Re~
Roger Willford. Sunday School- 9·.10 am .
Won;lnp- 7, p.m.

p m , Wednesda} Services - 7 p. m

10 JO am F1r~t Sunday o ~ Mu n~h - 7 DO

. ..
..............
:1t•brr :tunnal Jlomt

............... zl'

14111MMI:...

.... l .........

.liZ....

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992-5130
Pomeroy

Whtte's C haptl \\esk)·an
Chesler Church of the

p m SCf\ ICC

K&amp; C JEWELERS

Sunday ~erVll'C.
Wt:UncMiay 'il'nile, 7 p.m

Ca rirt~n Interdenominational Cfiurch

,m

Evening Serv1ces

Don! ~.

. 7 p.m

pm

Wednesday Services · 6.30 p.m.

SalunJa; ::! 00 p 111

Salem

p.m

Sen 1ces - 7 p m . Pas tor

Sunda)' School - 10 a. m.
Sen•ices- 7 p.m.

am

.~3X

Buck o f Wc ~ t Co lumh1a_. W \Ia um LI C\ 1ng

Wednc~da)

Chu rch of the Nazarene . Pastor : Jam 1e
Pctul. Sum,lay Schnol - 9.30 a m.. Worship

Syracuif Fin;t Chun:h of God
Apple and Second Sis , Pastor Rev Oavt d
Russell. Sunday School and Wor ~h ip - 10

Rt

or tllt' l.hing Sa,·iur
Ar11 14Ull) . P a ~1t1r J c ~~,_. Murnl&gt;.

St:rl ' lce~

A1mndant Gr11rf' R.F. I.

t

H u nl ~. Sunday School - I 0 a m . Evenmg
7:10 p m .. Tu e~day &amp; Thursday - 7 ]()

Chester
Pastor Ju ne Bent II ~. Wor ship - 9 a 111

Rutland, Chun:h or God
Pastor: Ron Heath. Su nduy Wo rs hip • 10
a.m., 6 p. m., Wedne sday Scn•Jces - 7

t-"ull C.O!ilpt'l C hurch

Patty Wade , 6;(P Sc~o n d Aw Ma~un, 77:150 17. Scn1cc t1mc Sund.1y 10 .~0 a 111,
Y..cdncsd11y 7 pm

Middlept•rfChurch of the Nazarene
Pas10r Allen M1d&lt;..: ap. Sum.lay School •
Y .'10 a. m ,Worsh1 p - 10 3U am , 630 p m ..

L•

,Coo lville Road, •P asto r

N~azarene

ROCKSPRINGS .
REHABILITTION CENTER

Ler you~ lighr so shine before
men, that they may see your

The care ) 'OU desepe, close to home good &lt;&gt;arks al1d glorify your

36759 Rocksprings Rd .
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740·992-6606

Farher in heaven. "
Matrhe&gt;r 5:16

Meigs C'oumy 's Oldes1 Flonst

352 East Main
Pomeroy, Oh

7 40-992-2644

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
For God so loved th e world
PHARMACY
he gave his o11ly
We Fill Doctors
JbeROI'Ie/1 S0/1 ...
Prescriptions ,
Joh11 3:16
.992-2955
Pomeroy
I

Blessed are the pure "So I. strive always to keep
in heart; for they my conscience clear before
God and man.''
sha.ll see God.
Acts 24:16
Matthew 5:8
•

-.-

pm

Allen Mukap

9 30 a m .

Wcdnc,du1 · 7 Jl.lll &amp;

l}

.a in , 7 p m , Thnr&lt;.da)

Mt. Moria.h Chun-h of God
M1lr Hill ' Rd, Raw')C, Pastor Jamc)

0. ,

am &amp; 7 p m
~'t lll !h 7 pIll

Faith Gospel Churc h

Hockingport Church
Graod Street, Sunday School - 9·30 ~ m .'

Methodist

Life \ ' k lor)' ('e-n trr

Gcotg&gt;.:s ( f('C k Kn~d. Gallir&lt;•h'. OH
Pa~tnr Bil l State n. ~U11ll~1 S~:TI IH''
10

Off Rt. 124, Pa ~t or . Edsel Han , Sun da ~
School · 9 30 a m, 'W orsh 1p - 10 30 am.
7-.lOpm

pm

OtT 12-J bc hmd WilkcsvJ lle,

-

~ew

~7 7~

St. Paul lutheran Church

Mt. Olhe

••

P.l~tor

Our Saviour Lutheran Churth
Wa lnul and Henry Sts. Rave nsWood.

7 30 p m t 3rd &amp; 4th Sun). Wednesday
Se rvtce - 1 ~0 p m.

~·

pm

School - 10 am

Dcnnts Sargent. Sunday IJ•hlc Stud y 9·lO am, Worsh1p JO· lO am and 6 lO
p m Wednesda) Bible Study - 7 p m

a,m . 7 00 p m . Wcdnc'idny

Pra)cr. &lt;J nd Btbl c Stud) - 7 pm

9a m . Worship - 10 am . 1st Su ndny
everY month evcnmg scrv1ce 7·00 p m :
Wcdnesd.ty · 7 p m

Graham United Methodisl
Wo rsh•p - 9· 30 a.m ( bl &amp; 2nd Sun ). ,

Su nda) School ·

Cliftou T:.l"'nt:.dt• ('hun h
lli llun. \-\\Ia, Sund&lt;.~ y S&lt;.l11~il J(l J ill,
Wtlr"h•P. - 7 p m . \l.co.Jm,o.J ••, Scrti~ ~. 7

BB 1lcy Run Rtmd,

rm

I (I · (~ am

7pm

10 am. Evcn 111g Wo 1 ~ h1p rl pm.
Ynut h group fi pm . Wl'dnc..Jay p~.,\l.t"r In

Faith Valley Taherna.de Church

Easll.klart

Su nda ) Schuul _10 20- 11 a.m, Rc l•cl
Sonct y/Pi'u:sthood II 05-12 OU no con.
S.tc rame nt Srrvtcc 9 10 15 am ,

Wt •r~h•p-

Ser. 1lu

Pa~ tor

Wtor ~ lup

um , Wmsh1p · 10 a.m

United Methodist

Church or&lt;' hrisl in
, Christian Union
Hartford. W Va, Pastor DH\ Itl Greer,

w~uuc..d~'

E\'CIIIIlg-

Morning Star
Pastor John G il more, Sunday School · II

Church of Chri~t
ln 1e rsec 1ton 7 and 124 W, Evangeh~l:

Christian Union

LIY..rcncc l·orcnnm

Belhe\ Worship Center
Ch c ~IC 1 Slhuul , P .1~ 1or Rnh Barhcr
A• s1stan t P.l ~tm · Kt11en Da1i ~. Sumlay

Harrisonville Communit) Ch un·h

Carmei-Sullun
Ca rm el &amp; B&lt;!,, h;m Rds Rac me, Oh1 n.
Pastor John G ilmor e, Su nday Sc hool -

PasiUf- Glc11n RoY..c, Sunday SL houl 9 30 .t m.. 'Worsh1 p- 10 30 am an d 6
p m ,Wcdnc~drt) Scrvu.c - 7 ()(I p 111

W Va, Pastor Oav1d Russell. Sun da}'
Schuol - .10 00 a m , Wurshtp · I I a.m.

or Christ

p.m

Lift Ch unh
2nJ AH: , ~ hddlcpon
1-urcman

W~n.-::sda y

M1k e Moo re. Sunday School -

9 a
Wors htp - 10 a. m . 6 JO p m.
Wednesda y SctTiccs- 7 p m

10 30

Marshall . Sund&lt;~y
')· l'i am .

Wor~h1p -

Worshtp - 9 a m .
Se rvice~ 10 a.m.

Youth · 7 p m

Hnmemakmg mcclmg. 1st Thurs - 7

M1k~

n lliJ p m

,,Wl'd n~~d,Jy

R~joidng

9::!3 S T hird Sl . Middleport. Pa .,tor T( re~a

Snu wl-ille
Sunday Schwl ·' 10 ;~ . m, Worship - 9 u. m.

7:.m p m.

Thursday B•hlc Study

Pa ~lo r·

B1hle SIUd y· Monday 7 00 pm

Sunday E\c. 7·UO p rn ,

Tuppers Pluin Church of Christ
lnstrmm.:nla l, Wursh1p Se rvice - 9 a m..

Bill Quickel

61 K E. Mam Street • Pomeroy

Rolland
Pasttll. R1 ck Auu rnc, Sunday School 9 JOa m, Wt) r~ hlp · 10 )() .1.111 , Thun;llay
So: rv 1c~·~ - 7 p m

9 10 a. tH .

75 Pearl St M1ddkpnn l'astClr RKk
Rou mc Sund ny School - 10 a 111 Wl\r;h1p

+.

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
e Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667·3110

M:ml cy. Su nd ~y Sdtool
Wursh1p
10 JO u m.

Rev 0 Dell

Zion C hurch of Christ

Davls-Qulckei Agency Inc. If ye abide i11 Me, and My
Full line of
words abide ifl you, ye shall
Insurance
Products+ ask what ye w.ill, and it shall
'
Financial
be done unto you.
ENCIES Inc . Services
John 15:7

Financial Services Firm

~25, P a~ l or

Communi!\ J\~ h1lit'
Churt'h"'
W,1ync R Jewell Sundn) Sen 1~e

I0 30 a m . W.-dnl'&lt;,duy Sen 1cc' · 7· 0(1

Sunday Sc hool -, 9 JO ~ m. MUJnlllg
Y..or"hlp - 10 '!(]a m &amp; 6 pm , Y..cdnc~da }
Scr\'lLe - h 11). r m . Youth Sen II'('· 6 1[)

Pine (iro\'e Dible Holiness Ch11rch
1/2 mil e ull Rt

p m.

73()

Stivrrs\·ill~

~

a m S unday

a rn.

~~~~ .

R~\

1:1 ~0 a.m ..

Sdltkll

10'0

~ 1)1)

Ash Stret&gt;t Ch urch

, Rock Sprinw;
l'a&lt;;tm Kc11h Rad..: r, Sunday SdiCIQI - 9. 15
.mn
Wor ~ h1 p
· I U a m , Youth

S und ~y

SunU&lt;~y

pm

A~h St . M •d;_Hcpun - l•a~IUr Greg Sl'~r.,

10:35

Rlhlt-.,--hure h
Rll P 11~t11r

l:om munit y nf C hrist
Ponla ild-l{acmc RCI . P.t ~lor Jun Prollin.
Sunday S&lt;..:hnn l - ~ l() ,, 111 Wt•rshlp

Pomeroy
S~ honl -

7·ri(J p.m

c..

(J t ~ J

Pa~tor Brian Dunham. Worsh ip- 9 ~~0

Sc r\'llt' - 7 lXJ p m

Pomaoy, Ham sv n\·dk Rd . jRI 14.3),
Pa!ltor Roger Wal son. Su nd ~y SdtO&lt;.JI -

INSURANCE

KEBLER

----------

Pa~ tnr ·

Minernille
Bob Roh m ~on. S untlay Sc hool - lJ

Sa lem Center

992·3785

An Income Tax &amp;

..

rm

R1 1aU, Pustur
Chu r lc~
McKenzie, Su nd ~y Sdmol 9 ]0 &lt;1 .111 ,
Wo r~ h1p -. II ,, 111 , 7 lXI p 111 . Wc dllc ~d .l}

Wt"llnc ~d a y

9 30 a.m .. Worsh•p · 10.45 a. m.

BUSINESS SERVICES

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(740) 992-3279
To\ Free 1-877·583·2433

•

6

I0

• S" hoo l - 10 a m , .E~e ntng · 7 p m.
Wednesday ServK:es • 7 p m.

Local source for trophies.
Ia u s t-shirts and more

Wednes day pra)c r serVICe- 7

m.

re llo"'sh1 p. Sunda y- 6 p m

. Service~. 7·00 p m .

Daily Speckl/s

74o-992-6128

Ht!ath (Middleport)

7 pm

Forest Run Baplist

iJv(i{[ie's 'l{estaurant

190 N Second Sl

l'.•stor Bnan Dunha111 . Sunda} Slhoul 1:1 JOa
Worsh1p - lllMia .m

, H&lt;~Iri ~o ll \lllt·

Middleport Ch urch of C hrist

Evan ge h ~ l

Great Be nd . Ro ut e l24. Ra'' ln e. OH.
Pastor Darnel Me~·ca , Sund a y School 9 ...'10 ~. m , Sun da} Wd rship • !0.~0 am ,
Wcd nl.'sJay B1blc Study- 6 OIJ p.m

Hours
6 am· 8 pm

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

Danvil.le Holiness ChurTh
11U57 State Ro ute 32.'i, Lan g~\ lie, Pastor
V1c1or Roush, S unday sc hool - 9 .10 &lt;1 111 •
Sund!ly· wor~ht p - 10·30 &lt;lin &amp; 7 p 111 ,

.

~

am . Worshl p - I(Jam ,

Slh and Mam. Pastor· AI Hanson. Youth
Mnmtcr. J11 ~ h Ulm , SunUav Sl·hnul - 9 ~0
u m , Worsh1p- H 15, 10 30 am , 7 p·ll l.,

Hickory Hills Church
Bethlehem Haptlsl Churrh

Open 7 days a week
740-992-7713

740-949-2217

a.m . Wnrsh1p - 9

Stud.)

Wcdnl·-.d~\ Scr'l ll c- 131\ Jllll

m.

Rut land, Sund.1y Wor.&lt;h1p-IIHK( am
Sunda y Sc rvlce- 7 p m

pm.

Wo r~ h1p - 10.1 0 ll m. fdO
Wedncsda) Services. 6 ~0 p.m

9 _,30 a.m.. Wnr~ h1p

~

Y..or~hip

Ottsis Christian 1-'ellowship
l Non-dcnnmmalwnal lcllm.. sh•pl
Mee tmg 111 the old Amcn~·an Lq11nn HaV
South Founh ll.vcnuc . M1ddlcpon
Pa~tor · Chm Stcw.1rt l f) UO &lt;illl Sund.1~
O ther rnce ung~ 111 hom~ ~

Fortst Run
Pasfor · Hoh Rnh msnn. St.~~tda y Schc1ol- 10

Stn::et

Cll har~

Pomeroy Pih-'Blad:.\.\ood.

Calvary Pilgrim Chapel

E ~~c~l!c. Wo rshtp · lOam , 7 p m ,
Wt·dnesday SerVIces- 7 p m

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
'
Matthew 5:8

Holiness

B1hl~

•'ailh FellowshiP C rusade ror C hrist
Pa~tur . Rc ~ Frankhn D1&lt;.: i&lt;t:m. Sen 1ce
l·ndily, 7 p 111

W . r ~lrip 10 o(J ~m.
Thu rsi.lay B1bl e Sltldy 7 · (~) p m

Flatwoods
Kei th Rader, Sunday Schoo l - ]()
.1rn. Wur,hlp - II am

Wedne&lt;;d~} S~n ICt:

· I{) 3U am ,

111

p.m . Wcdne ~da y

Tupper~ Pl a m~

Pa~ t lll

and Holy Eucharba 11 00 &lt;t m

Wcdne~dny

•1m

10 3t1a m.

"Do not steal. .Do not lie. Do not deceive one another."
Leviticus 19; II

,,

(;rare l&lt;: pi'K'opKI Chun.·h

Pom~roy first Haptist
J{'l n Brol'ker1 F.n~ t Mam 5 1

Su nd ~y School

333 Page Street
(740) 992-6472
MiddlePO~ OH Fax l740i 992·7406

~

1-~ nlerprise

.~26 E. M~ m St . Pomcmy. S unll~y Sc huol

l'.tst\W

Fatr view Hible Church
l..clarl. W Va Rt I ra ~ tor · Bn5n May.
Sundu) School - ') ~0 am . Wur~l11p 7.00 .

Ar l,md Kmg, Su nday Sch(JO I 10 10 am ., Wnrsh1p - 9 :\U am l11hk
Study Wed 7·3(1

Hemlock Grove C hrislian Churrh

Pomeroy l'hun-h of Christ
212 W Mam St, M 1n 1s1e~r Anthony

Rutland U10n-h of the Nauaren~
Sunday Sc hool · Y JO a rn .. Wor~ h1 p 10·3 0 a m . f1 ·30 r m . Wt•d ne~day
Servlt'CS 7 p m

7p

Antaz1ng Grace t:ommunity C hurch
Pa:;tm Wa yn~ Dunl11 p. Stale Rt 6M 1

P. 1 ~ 1or

Community Church
Slc~·c
Tomek. Mam

Wor~h1p

Other Churches

10·25 a.m ..

Church of Christ
a rn Sunday 'school - 1010 am. B1h lr
Srudy . 7 p Ill

S~rv1ces

Pastor Rev. Herben Grate. SundU)' SchiMII
· 9.30 a.m .. Wnrsh1p - 11 am .. 6 p m.
Wedne~da y S~n' l les · 7 p m

Sunday St·hool . 91'4.5 am . Worship -. 11
a.m, Wednesday Servtccs 7 30 p m. '

Trlnily Church
&amp; Lynn. Pl.m1eroy. Pastor Re\'.

Episcopal

Mmtsler: Larr} Brow n, Worshi p - 9 :\ll

Bca 111 e, Sunday Sc hool - 9

Central Ch1sler
Asbury tSyra('U.CI, Pastnr Aoh Rohinson ,

- 9 .,\ () a. m.. Worship

Michael L. Crites
Director of FaiJ!IIy &amp;
Community Services
.
Overbrook
Rehabilitation Ctr.
"A Celebration ol We"

Hom_e Cooked Meals

Pa~lor J ~n~

am, Da1l y Mass - 8:30 a.m.

· 9:3 0 11 m . Sunday Sch.ml 10:30 a.m, Pas1or-Jcffrey Wallace. 1~1 and

570 Gran! St . Middleport Sunday schrMll

Tuppers Plains S1. Paul

Congregational
Se~·u nd

Wo r~ lup

Bu.ptist Church (Southern)

Homemade Desserts Made Datly

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

IUIIDAY

l'•ca,·hm g

Faith Bapllst Churrh
Ra1lrood St.. Maso n, Sunda~ School

Atmo.ip}u•f't'

.7JUpm.

J uuathan Noble, Worship
SunJuy S~ h ulli'J . I 5 a.m .

~lar:tford

Warm F riemflv

Hills Self Storage

boart k J!:od, Md my &amp;Iori&lt; njoiccth. Mr ft1sh thall .tbo ... t In hotot."
With God b)t .ur sid~ '" haw peace and It~ as wt1 r.e thl'
c-.naos ol our n.... KHp GcHI dote to rour hurt • JOII co tf1n1u111 U&lt;h
UJ- Stvdy Hk Won! Md - n of Hit wilt lor 01 • rou WOtShip 1tiit - k at
, _ Joal or.,._... -~ you ......., your dodtiOflfw God!

M.L~on ,

·PO .Box 4b7. Dudd1ng I anc,

r

r

pm

5 30 p m. Su n.
Con -8 45-9 15 a.m ..'Su n Mass - 9 30
4.45 -S·ISp.m .. Mass

Emmunuel &lt;\.pnslolir Tllbl'rnacle Inc.

(Thom Mollohan has
ministered in Southehz
Ohio the past nine and a
half years a11d is the pastor .
of ·pathway Community
Church. He and his wife
are the parenis of four children. He may be reached by
email at pastorthom@path. waygallipolis.com),

r

i! m, Worship · 10 u. m., Tuesday

161 Mulbe rry Ave., PomcrO). ~92·5!'198.
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. HcmJ. Sal Co n

525 N 2nd St Mu:kllepon, Pastor. James

Young's carpenter Serulce

a.""""

Catholic

Churc h of God of Prophecy
Whne Rd off St {&lt;1 160 Pas1nr r J.
Chaprn01n, Sunday Schnol
10 a.m ..
Wursh 111- 11 a.m .. We&lt;t!ncsday Scrv 1 c~s 7

9i

pm , Ynuth Fn 7ltJpm

a.m . Wo r ~ h•p
I I a.m,
WcUncsda y ServKc s- 7 p 111.

should marry lis a move arrou country ri&amp;ht lor my ll.tt'u,.r Is thft. the riJbt
time lo umsider a career chMt&amp;tP
Deckiorrs ..-c Urtuful; difftrln&amp; opinions can ewn lntnme our
conf~n .tnd we:i&amp;h ovr splrit down. W~t now? Why not ,.,, aMut itl
lodudo God in your docislon. ~ulm 16:8-9 ..,.,, " I .,_, t&lt;t tho lord alw&amp;yO
bot- ....
H• lut my·riJI!t l!and, I tllall not bo m-.r . ....,.,.,.,.. my

1rd

Ave . Mu.kllcpon. Kevin Konkle., Pastor.
~u nday. Hl J ll u m.

pm.

.S arrtd Htarl Catholic C hurch

Apostolic Wor~h tp ' Center, 87] S

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community

Dtdtions, de-dsiom ... our livet art fufl of them. What Is the rllflt way
to tw\dle this ... shoufd I .allow my teenas,er to do th.at? lt this the penon l

, Morning worship I I am Evening. 7
Wedne ~daY 7 p.m.

Miller, Sund,\y Sc hool • 10. 30 a. m .

Evening. 7 30 p

•

·r

Second Baptist Church
Ravenswood WV, Sunday Srhonl I0 am·

Church or J~sus Christ AJHislnl!c
VanZ.mdt ~ ml Wa11.l Rd., Pa~ tor : James

life as a cbmmodity whether
we're speaking of slavery or
aborted unborn children.
Each life counts in God 's
Book. "For You (oh, God)
created my inmost being;
You knit me together in my
mother's womb. I praise .You
because I am fearfully and
wonderfully made; Your
works are wonderful, I know
that full well. My frame was
not hidden from You when I
was made in the secret
place. When I was woven
together in the depths of the
earth, 'Your eyes saw my
unformed body. A\1 the days
ordained for me were written in Your book before one
of them came to be" (Psalm
139:13-16). '
How wonderful! How
amazing! . God knew you
before you came to be! He
saw you while your body
was just taking shape in your
mother's womb! You have
had value and purpose in the
heart of God all along!
Many churches will be celebrating this Sunday the
"Sanctity of Human Life"' ...
the · life of the healthy and
the life of the sickly; the life
of the wealthy as well as the
life of the one who has no
home; the life of the · strong
and the life of the crippled;
the life of the seeing, the life
of the blind; the life of the
young and the life of the old:·
not to mention both the life
of the born as well as the life
of the unborn .
Each life is · sacred, even
the life that seems to have ·
so little to give to our shortsighted and narrow-minded
eyes . Each life is sacred,
even when the world tosses
it aside, calling it worthless
and unwanted. Each life is
sacred, each with a world of
beauty inside just·waiting to
be tapped by God to show to
the world . Each life is
sacred, d~ar one ... including yours.

L~st

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

\'idory Baptist

·r

www.mydallysentinel.com

Friday, January 14, 2005

A Hunger For More.

for the parents who sued over gious activism.
"Science and religion are
the stickers. ''They're going
to be permttted to learn sci- related and they're not' mutu- .
ence unadulterated by reli- 'ally exclusive," school district attorney Linwood Gunn .
giou s dogma."
In a statement. the school said. "This sticker was an
bom·d said it was disappointed effort to get past that conflict
by the ruhng and will decide and to teach good science."
But the judge disagreed:
whether to appeal A board
spokesman said no decision "While evolut ion is subject
had been made on when, or if, · to criticism, particularly
the sltckers would be removed. with respect to the mecha"The textbook stickers are a msm . by which ' it occurred,
reaso nable and evenhanded the sticker misleads students
guide to science instmction and . regarding the significa'nce
encouraging students to be crit- and value of evolution in the
scientific community."
ical thtnkers," the board said.
The •case is one of several
The stickers were added
after more than 2,000 parents battles waged around the
co mplamed that the text- country in recent years over .
books presented evolution as what role evolution should
fact, wi thout mentioning play m the teachingof science.
Last year, Georg1a's educariva l' ideas about the beginnin gs of life, such as the bib- tion ch ief proposed a science
curriculum that dropped the
lical story of creation.
Six parents and the word "evolution'' in favor of
American Ctvil Liberties "changes over time. " The
Union then sued, contending idea was dropped amid
the disc laimers violated the protests from teachers.
A school district in Dover,
sep,mttion of church and state
and unfairly singled out evo- Pa ., has been locked in a dislution from thousands of other pute over a requirement that
sc ience students be told about
scientitic theories .as suspect.
At a trial in federal coun in "intelligent design" - the
concept that the universe is so
No~e mber. the school system
. defended the stickers as a complex it must have been
show of tolerance. not reli- created by some higher power.

. CINCINNATI Bible pa'5age in sentencing a co nvicted rapi st
to pri son doe s not warrant settin g aside the
penaltx, a federal appeals court has ruled .
The 6th . U.S. Circutt Court of Appeals
voted. 2-1 thi' mDRth to reject James Arnett's
argument that a Hamilton County judge violated hi s ri ght s by citing the . Bible as an
influence when. she sentenced him to 51
years m pn son .
Arnett had pleaded guilty in 1998 to raping
a child under age 13 and pandering obscenity
involving a minor.
· During sentencing. Cominon Pleas Judge
Melba Mars h Cttetl Matthew 18:6: ''And
whoso shall receive one such \iu\e child in my
name. receiveth me. But whoso shall offend
one of these little ones which believe in me, it
were better for hun that a millstone were
hanged around his neck. and he were drowned
in the depth of the sea."
Marsh also referred to trial testimony and
statements by the victim and her father, v.ho
requested a tough sentence, the appellate
coun\ majority wrote. There was no indication that Marsh used the Bib.le as her tina\
source .of authority. and Arnett's sentence was
in the lower half of the range al lowed by Ohio
law, the appeal s court ruled.
"We reach this conclusion despite · the fact
that reasonable minds could cenainly question
. the propriety of the trial judge making mention
of the Bible at all in her sentencing decision ,"

PageA2

. Fr.lday, January 14, 2oos

6nouflrr 1t
:firr &amp; 6altl!'

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(7M~m

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o-.NMNJ

A,

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7 4Q-992-4;298

MYI!race is sufficient
· for thee: for mY
strenl!th is made
Perfect in weakness. ·
II Cor. 12:9

Office Service &amp; Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH-

992-6376
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OPINION

·The Daily Sentinel

· .www.mydailysentinel.com ·

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
'•

'

Char.lene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday. Jan. 14. the 14th day of 2005 . There are
35 I days left iri the year.
·
·
Today's Highlight in History: On Jan . 14, 1784, the United
States ratified a peace treaty with England. ending · the
· Revolutionary War.
·
On this date : In 1639, the first constitution of Connecticut
·
. - the "Fundamental Orders" - was adopted.
.. In 1858, French emperor Napoleon lll escaped an attempt
on h1s hfe.
·
In 1900, Puccini's opera "Tasca" received a mixed reception at its world premiere in Rome.
·
In 1914. Ford Motor Company greatly improved iis assembly-line operation by employing a chain to puJI. each chassis
. along.
·
In 1943, President Roosev.el t and British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill opened ·a wartime conference in
· Casablanca.
·
In 1952, NBC's ·"Today" show premiered, with Dave
Garroway as the host. or "communicator," as he was official. Iy known. \ &lt;"
· In 1953, )osip Broz Tito was elected president of
Yugoslavia by the country 's Parliament.
In J 963, George C. Wallace was sworn in as governor of
.. Alabama with a pledge of "segregation forever."
In 1969, 25 crew members of the U.S. aircraft c'arrier
; Enterprise were killed in an expiosion that ripped through the
' hip off Hawaii .
.
; · In 1970, Diana Ross .and the Supremes performed their last
; concert together, at the Frontier Hotel in Las Vegas.
· Ten years ago: Russian troops in the breakaway republic of
Chechnya captured the Council of Ministers building, a key
rebel pos1Uon m the capital Grozny. Pope John Paul II
addressed a huge r~lly in Mani.la, urging young people to
. reject cynicism.
· ·
: Five years ago: In a massive·demonstration demanding the
c return of Elian Gonzalez, tens of thousands of Cuban women
t marched to.the U.S. mi ssion in Havana. A U.N . tribunal sen. te~ced five Bosnian Croat militiamen to up to 25 years in
pnson for a 1993 murder rampage that emptied a Bosnian village of every one of its Muslim inhabitants.
·
One year ago: Forrner-·Enron tinance chief Andrew Fastow
pleaded guilty io con~piracy as he accepted a 10-year prison
; sentence . J.P. Morgan Chase and Company struck a deal to
: buy Bank One Corporation for $58 ' billion. A female
.~ Palestinian suicide bOmber killed three Israeli soldiers and a
private security guard at a Gaza crossing. U.N. ofticials
announced that Libya had ratit1ed the nuclear test ban treaty.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Faye Dunaway is 64. Actress
Holland Taylor is 62. Actor Carl Weathers is 57. Rock singer
. Geoff Tate (Queensryche) is 46. Movie writer' director Steven
: Soderbergh is 42. Actor Murk Addy is 41. Rapper Slick Rick
: is 40. Actor J:?an Schneider is 39. ~ctress Emily Watson is 38.
· Actor-comed1an Tom Rhodes IS 38. Rapper-actor LL Cool J is
:. 37. Actor Jason Bateman is 36. Rock singer-musician Dave
. Grahl (Foo Fighters) is 36. Actress Jordan Ladd is 30.
· Thought for Today: "Too clever is dumb." -Ogden Nash,
: American author-humorist ( 1902- 1971 ).

Man charged in highway shootings Local Briefs
left town because 'it looked bad' ·

tt

ation. But the idea never
rea lly caught on . An abbreviated Monday evening service (40 minutes) was found
to be successful in only a
few churches.
The early Christians, like
the Jew s, met for worship in
the evening . It .was sometime later that Christian
churches began worshippjng
on Sunday morning.
The earliest Scriptural reference to Sunday as a day of
wors hip for Christian s
occurs in the Book of Acts .
Speaking of Paul's visit to
Troas in Greece, the King
James vN, io n' says, "And
upon the first day of the
week, when the disciples
came together to break
bread , Pau l preached to
them .''

Most modern translations,
however, su bstitute "on
Saturday night" for "the first
day of the week." This could
mean . that the early
Christi ans held thei r worship services on Saturday
night.
Would we be wise to copy .
their lead?

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CELEBRITIES.

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Letters to the edito-r are welcome. They should
. be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to ·
: editing and must be signed and' include address
' and telephone number. 'No unsigned letters will
. be published. Letters should be in good taste,
: addressing issues, not personalities.

· The n ·aily Sentinel
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&lt;;orrectlon Poll~

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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• · Edltor: Char1ene Hoeflich, Ext . 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13

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Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks . . .
. .. ' 30.15
26 Weeks ...........· .. '60.00
52 weeks ... : . .. ... . .. •11e.ao
Outside Meigs County

13 Weeks ............. '50.05
26Weeks ...... . . . ... '100. 10
. .'200.20

52 Weeks .

Harper's Magazine has
been around for a long time,
and was once a respected
presence on toe American
literary and joumalistic
scene. For a good rna ny
years, however, its editor has
been Lewis H. L~pham. and
its principal editorial feature
has been an essay by him in
each monthly issue, printed
up . front and entiiled
"Notebook." ·
'' Notebook" comments on
the passing scene, w.hich (as
observed by Lapham) consists of little but a series of
political outrages perpetrated by conservative villains
of various stripes. It seems
somehow pitifully inadequate to describe hi s view_point as "liberal ," but that is
the only word th;ll wil l
serve. Careful students of
Lapham tell me that he has
come into con siderable
wealth, and that hi s stentorian liberali sm is hi s way of
expiating the sins, real and
imaginary, .that this money
tinances . But I have no personal knowledge of the
facts, and merely report the
speculation.
For at least six month s
preceding the presi\lential
election, Lapham devoted
himse lf to denouncing
George W. Bush. At least, if
he di scussed ~ny other topi c,
I mi ssed it. I was, therefore,

•

.New

Louisburgh, Kan. and, after
being signed by the Green
Bay P.ackers continued hi s
teaching in the off season
from 1995, 1998.
Although currently a long
snapper and tightend for the
Philadelphia Eagles, Mr.
Bartrum was searching for a
way to connect with kids and
their parents once again in his
hometown of Pomeroy; the
kind of connections that last
long after football career
has ended.
When Mr. Bartrum heard
about the idea of the
Mulberry Community Center
he stopped and talked with
God's NET Director Rev.
Keith Rader about his ideas
for New Horizons finding . a
home in the building.
Mr. Bartrum along with
Taylor' s husband Greg and
Eason's husband Huey volunteered their 'time renovating room ~)n the center. They
tore down walls, built a new
bathroom, an otfice, painted
the rooms, added two windows, new carpet~ tile, doors
and trim work.
Other volunteers pitched in.
around the community as well.
"It's good to have friends,"
Eason said.

Now nine months later, the
time it takes a child to be born,
New Horizons has opened it 's
doors to provide children with
an opportunity . to develop
their social, emotiona_l, physi011 and language skills in· a
Christian based atmosphere.
Both Taylor and Eason
believe what sets them apart
is the fact that they are a
Christian based facility.
Prayers and "Bible time" are
incorporated into the school
day that l a~t from 9: 15 a.m.
to II :30 a.m:
Mr. 6artrum said although
the school is Christian based
the stall is sensitive to the
concerns of parents and want
them to feel comfortable with
their children ·saying prayers
in the classroom.
·
'Besides spiritual goals ,
academic goals are also met
to give children a solid foundation . These includes prereading skills, science, art,
math and music .
Taylor plans to stay in close
· contact with teachers from
Meigs County schools to be
aware of what curriculum and
environment new Kindergarten
students will face.
"Things yoll used to do in
first grade you now do in

a

Meli ssa Matthews, Amanda
Parry, Ashley Russell , Tina
Bobo, Courtney Cutchall,
.from PagecA1
John Hanson, Jessica Moore,
Brian Plow, Erica Seaver,
Regular meetings will be Amy Bubenzer, Sandie
Linda
Lee ,
· held at 6:30p.m. on the third Gaertner,
Kimberly
Noone,
Rena
Wednesday of each month, in
the elementary library con- ·Ransom, and Angela Weeks.
The following · classified
ference room.
The board approved the substitutes were approved for
bond . for Treasurer Lisa the remainder of the school
Ritchie in the amount of year: Christina Carroll, food
service ; Caroline Kreaps.
$50,000 .
food
service; Christina
Regular meeting
Meeting in regl!lar session Ritchie, food service and cusfollowing ·the organizational todial; and Darla Haning,
session, the board approved food service and bus driver.
The board approved the
the following as substitute
teachers for the remainder of · following supplemental conthe school year: Amanda tracts: Brian Bowen, head
Berent, Marcus Crabtree, baseball coach; Bryan Durst,

Rice.

·Lapham explains what .happened

LETTERS TO THE
. EDITOR

POMEROY - Real estate
taxes collected for the ftrst
and second half of tax year
2003, payable in 2004, · was
$9,156,916:49, according tti
figures released this week by
Meigs · County Treasurer
Howard Frank.
Frank also reported that the
state audit of the treasurer's
otl'ice has been completed.
Each year the stat~ · audit
reports show the amount of
taxes collected and certitied
to the Mefgs County Auditor
to be distributed to the subdi visions based on the millage
of each subdivision .
The report also shows that

For the Record
(

Foreclosures

A foreclosure was granted to
all money earned on the
Mortgage
Electronic
investment of the inactive
accounts have been properly
Regi stration Systems, Inc.,
POMEROY
-A
foredo·
·
against
Pamela G. Bentz, and
accounted for and paid into
the general fund of the county. sure action has been filed in others.
The interest earned ·on the Meigs County · tommon
investment must be paid into Pleas Court by Mortgage
the county · general fund . Electronic
Regist~ation
POMEROY -A marriage ·
within 24 hours from the Systems, Inc., Frederick·,
date it is received . by the Md ., and others, against license was issued in Meigs
Thomas J. Buckley, Pomeroy, · County Probate Court to
county treasurer.
All state audits are com- .and others, alleging default Edward .Morris· Siek, Jr., 41,
pleted in compliance with,the on a mortgage agreement in Middleport, and Jana Renee
the amount of $45,075 .85.
· Williams, 43 , Middleport.
. laws of the ·State of Ohio.

Marriage license ·

Camp sets dinner
MIDDLEPORT .
Modern
Woodmen
of
America, Camp 6335, will.
have a dinner from 4:30 to
6:3Q p.m. Tuesday at Millie's
Restaurant. The camp will
pay $2 on each meaL
kindergarten," Taylor said.
Helping with t~e daily
challenge of caring -and edueating small children are
teaching assistants Lois
Hawley and ,Cindy Eblin.
" I want everyone to enjoy
it (New Horizons)," Taylor ·
added, "kids and parents, and
it should be fun."
· As for Mr. Bartrum's role '
he is a member of the
school's board of trustees. He
hopes to help out in a mentoring role to the kids as well as
a supportive role to · parents
while Taylor and Eason · run
the day to day show.
Operating under the belief
that the family is the primary
unit in a child's life, New
Horizons considers themselves a· supporting cast in the
unfolding drama of that
child's life.
New Horizons Child
Enrichment Center is a nonprofit organization with a
· board of trustees. that
includes outside advisers
from the community. These
advisers are from tlie religious, educational, legal and
accounting backgrounds.
New Horizons is a ,state
- licensed facility and can be
reached at 992-6245 .

Policie~
from Page 'A1
Until now, county officeholders have set their own
policies with their depart-.
ments, without a consistent,
coUJity-w ide manual to
guide them. Dave nport said
county officeholders must
now individually adopt the
manual for thei r. own departments if the poli cies are to
apply, but said ~e believes
all will do so .
·
"Officeholders . have the
option of adopting the manual as it is, making changes to
suit their offices, or not
adopting the manual at all,"
Davenport said, "but regardJess, the ofticeholder will be
respon sible for policy in his
or her office."
·
The manual addresses
issues including classified
and unclass i_fied job positions, probationary periods
·for
new . employees,
absence and wo\ k attendance policie s, sexual harrassment policies and compensated leave.
Employees under ·negotiated contracts, such as those at
the Department of Job and
Family Services, Board of
Mental Retardation and

·Proud to be a
part of your life.

Developmental Disabilities, .
and the co unty highway
department are exempt from
the terms of the man ual
because their . contracts
indupe
such
policies, .
Davenport said. Other county .
departments, including the
health department, already
have adopted manuals.
All employees, including ·
new hires. will be required to
sign off after reading the
manual, Davenport said.
Other business
Commi ss ioners also:
• Reviewed 11 request from
the Ohio Division of Liquor
Control for the transfer of a
C I/C2 carryout beer license
from Spencer 's Market, LLC,
to William Buchanan, doing
business as B&amp;D Market,
Tuppers Plains.
• Approved appropriation
requests for the county sheriff,
engineer, Soil and Water
Conservation District, recyling
office and grants office.
AI so
present
were
Cttmmissioner Jim Sheets
and Clerk Gloria Kloes.-

OXYGEN

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

SALES/RENTALS
SERVICE.
Locally owned and operated
Serving
Meig~
County

•
•
•

friend's car she was riding in .
McCoy, who has paranoid
schizophrenia, pleaded innocent by reason of insanity to
24 counts, including aggraVated murder and murder.
He coufd . face the death
penalty if convicted of
aggravated murder.
Franklin County Prosecutor
Ro_n O'Brien intends to present the interview at the trial
scheduled to start in April.
When
lead detective
Zachary Scott asked · McCoy
why he left Columbus,
McCoy said, ''Urn , 'cause· I
gue.ss it. looked bad for me."
After McCoy said he was
not responsible for the shootings, :Scott told McCoy,
-"Well , I guess what I have to
say to you Charles is I didn't
fly all the way out here
because I· didn't think the
guns would match .. We know
the guns match.".

friend of Mrs. Bartrum and
speech language pathologist. .
Mrs . Bartrum is also' the
wife of Meigs County native
and NFL standout Mike ·
Bartrum and Taylor's sisterin-law.
Taylor was an elementary
school teacher with 13 years
experience in the West
Virginia public school 's
system. · ·'
Last April , Taylor and
Eason along with their spouses were invited to dinner with
the Bartnims in Parkersburg ;
W.Va. By the time the caravan had niade the drive to the
restaurant they had hatched a
plan to open their own schoo.l
for young children.
Mr. Bartrum shared in the
enthusiasm. Besides having a
career in football he · earned
hi s bachelor of science
degree in elementary education with a minor in special
education from Marshall
University in Huntington,
W.Va. He had been employed
as a fourth and fifth grade
special education teacher in

STA~l£R.

State complete$
. audit of county
treasurer's office

COLUMBUS (AP) -The
man .charged in · a series of
~ighW!!Y "shootings
told
mvesugators
he
fled
Columbus before his arrest in
Las Vegas because "it looked
bad for me" when his father.
!!ave police his _guns, accordmg to an mterv1ew transcnpt
released Thursday. ·
Charles McCoy Jr. initially told a Franklin County
sheriffs detective after his
a:rrest in March that he didn't think the guns would
match evidence from the
crime scene "because I didn't shoot or anything." .
McCoy, 29, is charged in
12 shootings from October
2003 through February 2004
that took place mainly along
the Interstate 270 outerbelt
on Columbus' south side.
62 , of
Gail
Knisley,
Washington Court House,
died when a bullet struck the

from PageA1

(George Plagenz is WI
ordain ed ministe r and veteran newsman based in
ColumbftS, Ohio.)

•
I

The Daily Sentinel • Page As ·

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, January 14, 2005

cia! darkn~ss and the fuckering cand lel ig ht in some
churches can produce the
same hypnotic effect.
Spiritual truths planted in
our
minds in such a setting
George
will grow more easily. If we
Plagenz
go to bed with these truths
still fresh in our minds, they
will reach deep into our subconscious while we sleep
way we spend the rest of and find their way... as one
Sunday.
writer puts it , "To the hidden
B.ut there is another reason hallways of the mind where
why we should go .back to powerful and silent .an&lt;.!
evening services for our unseen forces gather. With
sbul's health. joining the few the morning they will
churches that have such ser- ad vance into the wakened
vices.
mind, bringing pleasa nt
Public speakers · .liave moods, healthy thoughis and
noted that when they speak creative ideas.
in the morning or aftemoon.
Most clergy men say there
their remarks don't make as . is no theological objection to
great an impression on audi- choosin g a day other than
ences as the same speech Sunday for worship, and an
given in the evening.
hour other than I0:30 or II
Psychologists explain this a.m. · Sunday is trad itional
by saying that earlier in the because it is the day on
· day our mental fac ulties are whi ch Christ rose.
keenest. We are more alert
The success of Saturday
and not as likely to accept masses in the Catholic
unc ri tically what a persorr Church 40 years ago caused
speaking to us has to say.
Protestant ministers, to give
But when we are tired and serious thought to the idea
the darkness has its relaxing of holding midweek sereffect on us , our minds are vice~ for those who premore receptive to what is ferred to keep Sunday free
presented to . us. The artifi- . as a day of rest ai1d relax·-

S.unday would seem to be
an ideal time to go to church.
Because xou don't have to
get up -to go to work. you cari
sleep late, have a leisurely
breakfast, read th ~ Sunday
paper, and still get your family to church on time.
.
Except that surveys show
that b~tw ee n 60 and 75 perce nt of Americans · don't
attend .church on a regular
basis. Presumably, they have
something better to do on
Sunday. But don :t blame
Sunday for this state of
affairs. Blame Sunday mornmg.
\
Psychologically, .a morning worship service is all
wrong. This ·is esp~cia ll y
true for our cultufe. because
the mood of peac~ and quiet
created by one hour of
church on Sunday morning
is soon broken by noisy
crowds at the mall , impatient
drivers on the highway. and
excited football fan s.
As long as people went
home after church to spend a
and
restful
afternoon
.evening. the good effects of
the morning lingered. It is
not so with the modern
Sabbath. Much of the mood
built up in the church in the
morning is canceled by the

·

(740) 992·2156 • FAX ('740) 992·2157

'

Friday, January 14, 2005

Should we go to .church on Saturday?

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

PageA4

quote various liberal s who count it as a loss of face if it .
subscribe to the authori zed cou'ldn't. further serve God's
version, but di smisses that will by fixing ' a presidential .
bru squely : election."
·
explanation
"Wh y is it moral to deny
So Lewi s H. Lapham conmedical care to 40 million cludes that' "of the two bestWilliam
people who can't pay the se lling fiction s explaining
Rusher
loan-shark prices demanded the Demo,ratic Defeat, I
by the insurance companies found myself more at home
but to allow 12 million in the one about the robbery.
American familie s to go Although not without its
interested to see how he ·hungry in the winter? What flaws, at least it was consiswould react to the election's is moral about ali adminis- tent with what I know of the
result. The ·answer . awaited tration that never goes cotintry in which I was born.
me in Harper's January before a microphone · to ... If the Democrats don't
issue.
·
which it doesn't tell a lie?"
spoi l it with a Bible and a
. I should ·warn you that
As for the "flotsam" on nag, maybe they can regain·
Lapham , though his prose is the Internet, on · the other the courage, traditional and
lapidary, doesn't achieve his hand, it was admittedly culturally conservative. to
effe&lt;;ts by understatement. · "hard to know. who or what steal the next ele:;tion."
Here is how he describes the was telling the truth," but "a
.The robbery theory is
dilemma of honest liberals good deal of it bore the al so,'yo u will note ,. the less
in the wake of George W. stamp of reliable witne ss painful of the two explanaBush's. re-election: Who, he and' incontrovertible fact. " tions Lapham felt forced to
demands, "could fail to see After citing various exam- choose between . If he had
President George W. Bush . ples ("'n 10 of the II swil1g opted for the other (or for
as a dishonest and self-glori- states the final result dif- .any of th e many other
fying bru ggart lost in the fog fered from the predicted exp lanations on offer after
of a quack religion ." · result, and in each instance Nov. 2), he would have to
Swiftly, "the tale of the the shift added votes for admit. that hi s many
Democratic Defeat was Bush") , Lapham opts for demented denunciations of
packaged in both an autho- their credibility because "If Bush failed to serve their
rized and an unauthorized we know nothing else about purpose. In stead, he can
ve~sion. The main stream
the governme nt now return- console him se lf th at he
print and broadcast media in g to oftice in Washington , - was merely cheated of a
reported an election decided we know that it doesn't hes- victory that was rightfu ll y
on 'the moral iss ues'; the itate to cheat and steal and h1 s.
Internet blogosphere lie. ... (1\)n administration
I William Rusher is a
brought word of an election capabl e .of perpetrating the Distinguished Fellow of the
stolen by God-fearing murderous
fraud
of Claremo/11 ln.1titute for the
·thieves."
·
Operation Iraq i Freedom Study of Statesmanship and
Lapham then goes on to almost certainl y would Po/iriwl Philosophy.) .. ·

ations and other documentation ·to affirm ,their knowledge of the subject they teach
from Page A1
as well as their ability l!l
teach effectively and measure.
teaching profe~sion. A volun- student learning.
tary process established by · The process also includes a
The National Board for lengthy comprehensive exam
Profe ssionql
Teaching focusing on classroom pracStandards, certification is tices, student assessment and
achieved through an exten- the teacher's content area.
sive'
performance-based Certification candidates mu st
assessment
thin
takes hold a bachelor's degree· and
between one and three years have at least three years of
to complete and measures classroom experience.
All 50 states and more than
what accomplished teachers
and school counselors should 500 school districts across the
nation have implemented poliknow and be able to do.
cies
and regulations to recruit,
Candidates .must submit
portfolios of student work, reward · and retain National
classroom videotapes. evalu- Board Certitied Teachers.

Eastern

'
valedictorian,
salutatorian
and honor students.
• Approved . financial
reports,. transfers and the
2004 ' tax budget as submitted.
·
• Approved donating a
to
· the
showcase .
Historical
Chester/Shade
Association for use at the
Chester Courthouse.
• Approved roof replacement at the administrative
by
Wesam
building
Construction of Pomeroy.
• Set the next meeting for
6:30 p.m. on Feb, .16.

fot ovet

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Portables Delivered when
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ed to 14 automatic alarms ,
20 motor vehicle ca:lls, six
water rescue s, 8 service.
. from Page A1
calls, and 13 calls for mutual
aid. The total number of
A totaJ of 22 ftre calls were miles put on the trucks duranswered by the department ing •the year was 2,353.
The volunteer firemen put
in 2004. They included 14 for
structures, live for grass, and in 494 hours in training, 724
on runs, and 120 on truck
three for vehicles.
The firemen also respond- maintenance.

Chester

• Beginner Pilaus Classes starting at RoCks~
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• Starts January 16th and las~ for 6weeks
• Sundays and Wednesdays at 5 p.m.

• Only $1~Jor the entire session

Come in and play for your dw)ca to clo&amp;ell your rwflnll

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99UI606 to sigD Up

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OtMr Hours ay At!P•tn==--oo:::~:::.o.:.c:::;.:;.-:.:.-=~-c. ~.:. :;:..~~"': .u.":'.1':'~~--cco..::.7:::.~-...,..:~. :" .......

Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;8

.

1·

-ifJIIJ,.o

assistant baseball coach; Sam
Thompson, assistant baseball
coach; John Fogle , head track
' coach and Heather Wolfe,
junior class play director.
Teresa Lemons ; Wanda
Shuler, Sharon Wickershrtln,
early Haye s and Bethan
Bowen were hired as after.school intervention teachers
for the remainder of the
school year. ·
The board also:
• Approved an amendment
to the high school student
handbook, relaling to the
selection of the senior class

· Subscribe today • 992-2155

~ .. -

... ... _

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

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,.~

�'

PageA6

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, Jaouacy 14, !005

·-~------------------------------------------------~--------~-INSIDE ·

Local Stocks Community Calendar

.

--~~·~----~--------------------~
POMEROY -Special serACI- 34.86
Library. · Planning will begin
AEP - 33,92
vic.es at the Old. Bethel
for
the
pron\.
Junior
parents
Akzo .,... . 42.40
Freewill Baptist church at S
are encouraged to attend.
Ashland Inc. - 57.11
Friday, Jan. 14
p.m.
Guest speaker, .the Rev.
AT&amp;T- 1~.67
POMEROY
.
Annual
BU - 11.50
Herman VanMeter.
·
meeting of Meigs County
Bob Evans - 24.70
BorgWarner - 53.29
Trustees and Clerks Assoc., 6
Chemplon- 3.72 ·
p.m.;·
Meigs
County
Friday, Jan. 14
Chermlng Shops - 7.92
Multipurpose Senior Center.
BIDWELL -· A gospel
City Holding ~ 33.20
.
·Monday, Jan. 17
sing will be held at 7 p.m. at
Thesday, Jan. 18
Col~ 40.39
Letart the Poplar Ridge Church at
POMEROY - Evening
. LETART
DG -20.43
DuPont' - 46.87
Township Trustees will meet Bidwell.
Singers
will clinic hours will be held at the
Fedora! Mogul - .345
at
5
p.m.
at
the
office
building.
include
Ray
and
Delores
Meigs
County
Heal.th
Gannett - 81 .55
Thesday, Jan. 18
Cundiff, Eart~n Vessels, Department from 4 to 7 p.m.
General Electric - 35.23
POMEROY -A college and Sharon Faye.
Services available
will
GKNLV - 4.80.
Harley Davidson - 58.87
finanCial aid workshop for
LONG BOTTOM - Dan include childhood and adult
JPM - 37.77
seniors who are planning to Hayman and the . Gospel immunizations, prenatal serKmart' - 93.84
attend college in the fall and Hymntimers will be at the vices, WIC, blood pressure
Kroger - 16.56
Ltd.- 22.06
their parents will be held at 7 Faith Full Gospel Church, and sugar assessments; head
. NSC .- 35.65
p.m. in. • the Meigs High . Long Bottom, at 7 p.m.
lice screening, environmental
Oak Hill Financial - 38.00
School
Hbrary.
A
representaSaturday,
Jan.
IS
health issues. vital statistics
OVB- 32.66
tive from the University of
POMEROY _ Services at and answers for general
BBT- 40.17
Peoples - 25.50
Rio Grande will Qe speaking. the Clarks Chapel Freewill health-related questions.
Pepsico - 52.92 .
MIDDLEPORt' -- Brooks- BaJ?tist Church, 6:30 p.m. · ·
· Saturday, Jan. 15
Premier - 11.51
Grant Camp Sons of the Bnan
and Connections
MIDDLEPORT - lyteigs
Rockwell - 53.15
Union Veterans 'Of the Civil singing, with his father doing County Humane· Society, free
Rocky Boots - 29.98
RD Shell - 56.13 .
War and the Major Daniel the preaching.
giveaway of straw for pet bedSBC- 24.43
McCook Circle, Ladies of the
Sunday, Jan. 16
ding, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., behind
Sears - 50.22 ·
Grand Army of the Republic
POMEROY _ "Pack a Thrift Shop in Middleport.
USB - 30.10
will meet at 7:15 p.m. at the Pew Sunday" will be held at
Wai·Mart - 53.64
w,ndy'a - 38.1 o
Midd!'eport Masonic Temple. 9:30 a.m. at Hysell Run
Worthington - 20.24
~Thursday, Jan. 20
c
·t Ch h
Dally stock reports are the 4
POMEROY - Junior class ommum y urc · ·
p.m. closing quotes of the preThesday, Jan. 18
·o . POMEROY - Rev. Dr.
vious day's transactions, proparents are to meet at 6:3 Thomas M. Brown- of Port
MIDDLEPORT ·
Vlded by Smith Partners at
p.m. in the Meigs High School Clinton, formerly of Pomeroy, Josephine Smith will observe
Advest Inc. ot Gallipolis.
will speak at the \0:25 a.m. her 95th birthday on Jan. )8.
service at Trinity Church. It Cards may be sent to her at
will be his first official sermon Overbrook Center, 333 Page
St., Middleport 45760.
since his ordination.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Lady Buckeyes down Iowa, Page B2
NFL Playoff look, Page B6 ·
.

..

.

Public meetings

Friday, January 14, 2005

.Church.services

Other events

~··~CW;;;;·~C;;~.=3~~~~~ar~o:u.~,d~2;3~·~with today's low of 23
'.&amp;,ewsC'p.h_a!n,..n..el - . .

~N

occurring around 6:00am. Skies will
be rllosrly clear with 5 MPH winds
fmm the northcasl ,
Saturday, January IS

Friday, January 14

Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
T!!mperaturcs will rise from 22 io
:12. hy iale !his morning. Skies will
range from ·mostly sunny to partly
cloudy wirh 5 MPH winds from the
northeast turn'ing from the eas t as rh~
morning progresses.
Afterrroon ( 1-6 p.m.)
Tcmperatun::s will rise from 34

Afternoon (1·6 p.m.)
Temperatures Will · rise from 33

early afternoon to the h1gh for the
day of 34 at 2:00pm as they drop
back.down.to 27 \mer thi s afternoon.
Skies will be sunny with 5 to I 0
MPH

winds fromthe north.

E.vening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
TemPeratures will stay near 25.
Skies will be clear with 5 MPH winds
·from the 'north turning from the
northeast as the evening progr!!sses.
Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
·

Birthdays

early this afternoon to 35 by 3:00pm
then drop down to 28 late afternoon.
Skies will be partly cloudy to mostly
cloudy wrth 5 MPH winds from the
east turning from the northeast as the
afternoon progresses. ·

. Temperature~ will hold steady

Husband's gender confusion triggers wife's selfd9ubt
DEAR ABBY: I am
ashamed to admit this, but
after 20 years of marriage, my
husband told me that he was
meant to · have a woman's
body. My self'confidence is
destroyed. Our children are
suffering in every aspect of
their lives. I cannot grasp my
husband's revelaiion:as I love
·him still. I also accept that this
is something I cannot change,
but ever since we ·separated, ,
the men I have dated have all
ttimed out to he gay.
Is it me? Am I cursed? Or
do I curse others?-. DEYASTATED IN DETROIT
DEAR DEVASTATED:
This has nothing to do with
you, and there are no curses
involved. Your husband was
born the wrong' gender, and
it's nobody's "fault"
Counseling can help you
come to grips with this issue.
Sine~ your husband is considering gender reassignment, it
follows that he is seeing a
therapist. You need help, too.
I recommend that you ask his
therapist to refer you to a psychologist or psychiatrist who
is knowledgeable about transgender issues.
DEAR ABBY: I am in college, and four out of five of
my roommates smoke, About
two-thirds of my friends are
smokers, too. They all know
it's bad for them, but it is
hard to quit.
I see cigarette packs. and
lighters lying around and I
am very tempted iO start
. smoking. I don't know why,
· because I know
it's
· unhealthy. I have never

Dear
Abby ·

.
smoked, but I'm. afraid that
I'll start soon. How can I
make the right decision? .NAIL-BITING
IN ·
ROCHESTER, N.Y.
DEAR NAIL-BITING:
Making "the right decision"
will be easier if you remove
yourself from temptation.
Request a change of living
quarters to accommodinions
that are strictly nmtsmoking,
because researclr'has•proven ·
that secondhand smoke can
make you sick.
"A stitch in time saves
nine," arid the sagest advice I
can offer is not to start smoking in the first place. Tobacco
is a nasiy addiction to kickwitness your friends and
acquaintances who would
quit if they could. When the .
urge is strong, picture your-

self attached. to an oxygen he proposes. You are only 16.
tank trying desperately to It's time t\) step back and
inhale oxygen into tobacco- consider how you plan to
damaged lungs. Not a pretty Faise your son. It is vital that
picture. Be smart; don't start. you complete your education
DEAR ABBY: I am 16 and so you are able to support
the mother of a beautiful little yourself and your child. Only
boy. His father. is no longer in when you are financially
the pidure.
independent should you conThere is a man in my life sider marriage to anyone.
who. loves my son and me
·Dear Abby is written by
very much. I'll call him Joe. Abigail Van· Buren, also
Joe and I have been together . known as Jeanne Phillips, and
for eight incredible months, wasJounded by her motluir,
and he recently proposed to Pauline PhiUips. Knte Dear
m~. One week later, I caught Abby oJ www.DearAbby.com
him cheating on me. I was or P.O. Box · 69440, Los
heartbroken and didn't · Angeles, CA 90069.
know' what to do. Joe told
me how sorry he was and
begged me to give him
another.chance. I agreed.
B'ut, Abby, things don' t
seemwlhe·· same · anymore. It
feels like I'm the only one try·
ing in this relationship. I realize I also have to consider my
son. Was I wrong to give him
a second chance?, - CONFUSED IN RENO, NEV.
.
DEAR CONFUSED: Yes.
A mao who is sincerely in
love, and mature enough for
marriage and fatherhood,
does not cheat a week after

Good Times

A Oassic Rock/Country Band

Saturday, January 15th
9:30 PM - 1:30 AM
, OH . 740..Q92-7986

SOOGREN~OOJ - ~Wt/16!01

Joint Jleasant 1\.egister
The Da.~Jy

uaMIOINWVIOti

~'""'"' ·;. , )
'

NOTICE TO DOG OWNERS

DEADLINE FOR PURC!iAS~F 2005 DOG LICENSE IS JANUARY 31. Fees are Four Dollars
r female. Kennel Fees are Twenty Dollars ($20.00). To obtain
llcenaa by mall, complete nd return •ppllcatlon to: Nancy Parker Grueaar, Meigs County
Auditor, 100 E. Second Street, Pomeroy, OH · 45769. ·Enclose a self·addressed, stamped
envelope with a check .for the price ol the license.
($4.00) for nch dog; male

----------------------·--..
OWNER OF DOG

--~----------·-------------"'!------------.------------------

ADDRESS
~LEPHONE

•

AGE

TOWNSHIP
SEX ·.

Year Month Male

COLOR

Fem~le

1l

"'" :c
;:

.!1!

Ill

e"' .,
3
c
·c

l!l

"'

•

HAl"'
c
{!

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if,

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To adVertise
in this speci~l

Retirement
Edition
.

BREED FEES
IF KNOWN PAID

· t:

"'c ~

.3

, ..,.

"~-

contact your
AdVertising ·
-~--~···.

'.

'

&lt;"

.

.

..
'

•

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.

NOTICE: License must be obtained no later than January 31, 2005, to avoid paying penalty. After this
date, penalty wilt be $4.00 for single tag and $20.00 for Kennel license.
100' E. Second Street
.
NANCY PARKER GRUESER
Melge Cou11_ty Auditor
Pomeroy, OH 45789

.

•

.

~allipolis

JBailp

~ribunr

740-446-2342

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Southern .

13·1,
9-4
7-6
7·6
5·8
3·8

7·1
5-1
4-2
3-5
1·5
Q-6

Prep Schedule
Today's Games
Boys Basketball .
Vinton Co at Meigs, 6:30 p.m.
Miller at Eastern, 6:30 p.m.
Trimble at Southern. 6 p.m.
Gallia Acad at Athens, 6 p.m.
River Vallet at Rock Hill, 6 p.m:
South Gallia at Cross Lanes
Christian (W.Va.), 6:30p.m.
Girls Basketball
South Gailia at Cross Lanes ·
Christian (W.Va.), 5 p.m. .
. Boys Basketball
Eastern at . Southeastern. 6
p.m.
,
Girls B!llketball
Meigs at River V&lt;tlley, 6 p.m.
Pike Eastern at Eastern
Miller at Southern, 1 p.m.'
. Gallia Acad at Unioto. 1 p.m.

Belpre.50, Pomeroy Meigs 30
Trimble 48, Miller 36
Nels-York 69, Wellston 31
Fed Hock 55, Southern 34
Waterford 56, Eastern 23
Athens 37, Gallipolis Galli a 35
.Jackson 41, Logan 37

.

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caH I o-n Elltlli to lurn .
1bout your leg1lllgllts.

Tornadoes lanced by Federal Hocking

VInton Co
Belpre
AleKander
Meigs '
Nelsonville· York

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[ _Fe;tt~atj II; 200$.' j

IOXX

BoYS 8ASKETBAU
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\

News·,a.nd"information ·
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)

Athletes, Griffin
on committee
seeking next
Ohio State AD
COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio State President Karen
· Holbrook has appointed a ISmember search committee to
find a replacement for retiring athletic director Andy
Geiger,
the
university .
announced on Thursday.
The committee includes
two ·athletes - football player Brandon Mitchell and vol- ·
leyball playerJackie Schardt.
Two-time Heisman Trophy
winner · Archie Griffin, a .
longtime associate AD and
currently the president of the
alumni association, is also on
the committee.
Geiger said last week he
will step down on June 30.
The committee's chairman
is joe Alutto, dean of Ohio ·
State's college of business.
The coaches oh the committee are men's lacrosse coach
Joe Breschi and women's
soccer coach .Lori Walker.
The
other
members .
include: Tami Longaherger,
chair of the board of trustees;
John Bruno, athletic faculty
representative and professor
of neuroscience and psychology ; Beverly Moss, academic
Jiwson with athletics and professor of English; Christian
Zacher, professor of English;
Deb Mason, vice president of ·
undergraduate student gov"
ernment; }3rian Jose_rh, professor of linguistics and
Slavic and East European
languages and literatures;
Susan tienderson, associate
director of athletics; Janine
Oman, an athletic trainer and
a clinical instructor; and
Richard Hollin¥sworth, associate vice president for stu.dent affairs.
Holbrook also said that a
search fmn has bcien hired to
assist the cQ!lllllittee.
''

BY SCOTT WOLFE .

Sports correspondent
RACINE _

the Federal ·

Hocking Lancers posted
strong first and third quarters
and a dom.inant rebounding
game to defeat the Southern
Lady Tornadoes 55-34
Thursday night in girls TriValley Conference Hocking
Division play in Hayman
gymnasium.
·
'
Federal Hocking (7-6, 4-3)
was led by junior post
Amanda Stover, who posted
a solid double-double with IS
points and 14' rebounds.
Stover . also had seven
blocked shots.
Senior guard Terri Wolfe

had · fmtr
assists and
14 points to
go
alorg
with a nice
floor game,
while Ashley
f o hns0 n
added
ten
points, and
K e I' s e y
Kiser
L a c ke y
. added four
points .and seven rebounds.
Lindsay Garrett had four,
Natalie Williams three, Ali
Deddens three, and Summer
Hatfield two.
·
Southern was led by
Kristiina Williams with nine
points and three steals. Senior
Brooke Kiser tossed in seven

points, Ashley
overall, hit·
Roush
stx
ting I ~-41
· poir1ts and three
two's for 45
steals, Ashley
percent, 3-6
Robie
five
trey 's, and
points and njne
I0-24 at the
r e b 0 u 11 d s ,
line .
joanne Pickens four points,
Southern
.and Whitney Riffle three.
started out in
The difference.in the game
a zone am!
boiled down to two phasesexcept for
rebounding an!l shooting.
Williams
the
threeFederal had 38 rebounds to
three pointSouthern's 25, and made er's Federal hit played a good
twice as many field goals at half court game. The Lady
18 to 9..
Tornaddes, however, gave up
Southern shot II-55 overall r len points on eleven first
for a frigid 20 percent, going quarter turnovers against the
9-41 on two's, and 2, 14 on press. Overall, Southern had
three's, with a miserl!lile 10- 24 turnovers. Federal led 1824 at the line (41 percent) . . 6 after the first period. ·
Federal Hocking shot 21A7
Terri Wolfe had two .

three's and a two pointer in
the sti nt and Amanda Stover
and Natalie Williams took
advantage of steals under the ·
Lancer bucket to account for
the
Lancer ·
scoring.
Southern 's lone point~ came
on a .Roush trey and free
throw and a bucket from
Joanne Pickens, wtto was ·
11.1.aki ng her·· return after a
shoulder separation.
.
Pickens. was · later reinjured and had to 'leave thegame·.
Southern picked up the
intensity a~d cut their
turnovers to three in the second canto, outscoring Federal
13-7 .to cut the lead to 25-19
Please

see Lanc:ed, B1

'

Belpre,soars .past· Marauders
BY BI!VAN WALTERS
bwalters@mydailytribune.com
ROCKSPRINGS
Senior night . d'i dn't go
exactly · as
plann~d
Thursdl!y
for
the
Meigs girls
basketball
team.
T

h

Please see Meigs, Bl

STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailysentiriel.com
WAJ'ERFORD - · Haley
Drayer scored 19 points and
Hope King added 13 as
Waterford
claimed a 5623
victory
Thursday
over Eastern
in Tri-Valley
Conference
Hocking
division play.
· · The Eagles (7-6, 3-5) lost
their third straight contest
'with a seven of 4 7 perfor- .
. mance from the floor, led by
Erin Weber's 10 points and
18 rebounds.
The Wildcats (9-4, 5-l)
remained tied for the
Hocking lead with Trimble in
the triumph.
WHS led 13-8 after eight
minutes, 30-15 .at half and
44-20 through tiu'ee quarters
of play.
Darcy Winebrenner followed Weber with five mark:
ers, with Jenna Hupp adding
three in the setback.
Amber Willbarger and
Hannah Pratt each had two
points, while Ryan Davis
rounded out the EHS scoring
with a free throw.
Eastern returns to full
strength Saturday when they
host Pike Eastern in a makeup contest.

e

Marauders
(4- 10, 2-5)
went 10:50 without scor. ing and allowed Belpre to
~m a 25-18 halftime lead
into a decisive 50-30 victory
in
Tri' Valley
Conference Ohio division
play.
.
The Maroon and Gold
were decent defensively,
· holding the league-leading
Eagles (9-4, 6-1) to just 28
percent shooting for the
game (18-64 ). However,
the quarter-plus drought
hampered the hosts to just
eight of 41 from the floor.
BHS also claimed a 3732 edge on the boards,
including an impressive
13-3 discrepancy on the
offensive glass in the first
half, that catapulted The
Orange and Black to viet~
ry.
MHS coach Darin ;
Logan thought the Eagles'
rebounding was key early
on in the emotion-filled
contest.
"I thought our girls really hustled and handled
their press pretty welL I
also thought we played
some ' pretty
good
defense," ·he said. "They
hurt us ori the boards in the
first half and that was tiow
tliey got the seven point
lead."
The hosts hit five of 18
shots in the opening half,
while Belpre connected on
just 9 of 38 tries. ·
Trailing ?3-16 with.

t

Eagles
slip to
Waterford

Wot.rfonl 51, Eoolem 23
Eastern

Waterford

8

7

5

3

-

2'3

13

17

14

12 -

56

EASTERN (7-6, 3-5)- Hannah P111tt 0 2·
2 2, Qa.rcy Winebrenner 2 1·2 5, Amber

Willbarger 0 2·2 2. Erin Weber 4 2-6 tO.
Jenna Hupp 1 ~ 3, Ryan Davis 0 1-2 1.

Kalie Hayman 0 o-o 0. Morgan Werry 0 DO 0, Georgana ·Koblentz 0 Q-0· 0, Jessie

Hupp 0 0-0 0. TOTALS: 7 8·14 23.

WATERFORD (9-4, 5-1)- Haley D&lt;ayer
8 0 ·0 19, Bethany Amrine 2 0-0 5, Chantal
Kem 1 0·0 2, Lauren Greene 3 0.0 6, Kytie
Robinson 1 o-o 2, Tiffany Wallace 0 1·2 1,
Shana Hill 1 ().() 2, HoPe King 6 1·2 13,
JocEII)'n lang l 0-Q 2. TOTALS: 25 2-4 56.
3-polnl (ICNIIo: E- 1 (Jen. Hupp}, W.- 4
(Drayer 3. Amrine)
·

Bryan Walters/photo
Meigs guard Meg Clelland (40) drives to the bucket during Thursday's contest with Belpre.
The Marauders lost their .final home game of the season 50-30.

- - - - - - - .· NATIONAL. BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION
.

.

Lakers .down Cleveland, 98-94
8\' JOHN NADEL
Associated Press

X-rays were negative, · but bit by mistake and basically fell
Bryant will have an MRI on into him ,as my momentum was
Friday.
going that way." Newble said. ··1
. Lamar Odom had 24 points. was trying to catch myself and he
LOS ANGELES
The eight rebounds and seven assists; came down on his ankle funny .
Lakers won without Kobe and Caron Butler added 21 lt'sjust an accident."
Bryant, and it might be quite a points and II rebounds for the
Bryant immediately grabbed
while before they'll get thelf next. Lakers, who- won for the third his ankle hefore teammate Brian
chance to win with him.
time in four games.
Grant and tr&amp;iner Gary Vitti
Bryant sustained a severely
James led Cleveland with 28 helped him off the court and into
·
sprained right ankle and had to
be helped off the court early in a points, a •season-high 13 the Staples Center tunnel, where
98-94 victory over LeBron rebounds and nine assists to just Grant and injured Los Angeles ·
James and the . Cleveland miss his first career triple-dou- forward Devean George carried
ble. Jeff Mcinnis added 20 points him into t~e locker room.
Cavaliers on Thursday night.
"I'm , guessing it might be . and ~ydrunas Ilgauskas had 13 . Bryant had two poi.nts and
weeks, it just doesn't feel like a points and I.S · rebounds for the three assists before leaving with
day-to-day thing," Bryant said Cavaliers, who had their four- the game tied at IS .
afterward when asked how long game winning streak snapped.
"There's no fracture. I'm
he thinks he' ll be sidelined.
Bryant, the NBA's second- happy about that," Bryani. said. '
"ft hurts, it l)urts a lot," Bryant Ieadmg scorer w1th 'a 18.2-pomt ··rn just rest, guys will hold
said. "It's the worst one I've had · average, was tOJUTed when he down the fort no doubt and I will
- I am in a lot of pain right now. lan~ed o~ Ira Newble's right foot , cQme back ready to play."
I am just trying to stay off of it while got~g f?r a rebou~d under
Bryant injured his right shoutright now."'
the ~aval1ers basket wuh 5:39 der· late in the first quarter of a
AP photo
On crutches with hi s ankle left m the first quaner. Newble game against the Cavaliers last
wrapped, Bryant said he felt was called for a foul on the play. ·January at Staples Center when Cleveland Cavaliers' Jeff Mcinnis drives toward the
basket while Los Angeles Lakers' Chucky Atkins
"crunching and instant throb"He went up for a the rebound
defends during the first half Thursday night In L.A.
bing" when he went down.
and I kind of nudged him a little
PluM - uken, U

.

.

•

'
---·---~-

�;

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, January 14, 2005

www .mydailysentinel.com

Friday, January 14, 2005

wwwJ171ydailysentinel.com

m:rtbtine - Sentinel C L A S S I F I E ·D

Lady Buckeyes down Iowa
BY RUSTY MILLER

Assoctated Press

COLUMBUS - Two overlooked pl&lt;~yets ltnall y got
some .tttent ton tor No 5 Oh10
State
M .trscJlla
P,lcker
and
Michelle Munw
the
Buckeyes ' mnth- and sevemh-leadmg scoters - had
all of th po111ts 111 a11, 11 -0
first-halt n to power Oh1o
State to an 0-57 rout of No
21 low.t on hursddy mght
"We have lenty ol people
on the team, ne throug h 14
who can score." capt.un C.uty
MAtter satd ' 'V we1e dll
the leadmg sc01e' n then
h1 gh school teams They go t
us some e&lt;1sy b.tskets,.
The H c~wkeves ( I 1-1 2-1
Btg Ten) have· lost th1cc 111 "
row after opem ng I 'l-0
Coach L1sa Bluder (hdn ' t
thtnk the loss could be
bl.tmed on her te.un's shdttcomt ngs
"Ohio State s .1 ;ery good
basketb,tll te.tm she s.ud
"They de set ve thctr rankmg
They JUSt don't have a lot ol
weak nesses T h c~ t s a te.u11
that I thtnk has the opportun 1ty to go very, ' ety la1"
Jess1ca Davenpoll led Ohto
State ( 16- 2, 4-1) whtch won
tts ftfth consecutive ga me
w1th 19 p01nts Matter .md
Brandte Hoskms eac h had 13
pomts. and Muttoz scored 12
Packer htt her IJrst three 3pomters and IJntshed wtth
n111e po111ts
Munoz, the daughte1 of Pro

Lanced
from Page 81
at the half Twtce Southern
had cut the lead to JUSt hve
potnts and had possesswn,
but could not shorten the gap
Kristuna Wtlltams had five
and Ashley Rob1e had four
pomts 111 the dnve
Federal Hock1n g was
mtense m the thtrd penod and
Southern was sl u gg 1 ~ h A s1x
pomt defictt qmckly turned to
14 and Federal was back 111
control despite two Southern
t1me outs to stop the momentum
Fedetal outscored
Southern 21-8 m the' frame to
lead 46-27 after three rounds

Footb.111 Hall ol Fame'
Amhony Munoz, has started
every g.1me but seldom JS a
star on offense She came 111
ave 1ag 111g JUSt 4 5 pomts a
game
" I have to take advantage of
the opponumtlcs when thex
come,'' she satd "Coach says
1 h,JVe to be agg•ess tve at both
ends 1 he great th111g about
our tea m ts that tf somebody's
not ge tttng the JOb do ne,
somebody else can come 111
and do tt."
Tile Buckeyes unpro ved to
11 -0 at home th1s se.tson
J&lt;ttme C.tvey had 17 pomts,
Joh,tnn d Sol, erson added 15
anti Crystal Smtih had I 0 tor
the Haw keves. who had as
m.m y turno'vers (2 1) as f1eld
go.tl s
'That's been a staple ot thts
tea m," Ohto State coac h Jun
Foster sm d of the Buckeyes'
· defens.ve mtenstty "We play
hard We ge t alter tt and -.. e' re
.tble to m.tke adJustment s
And one ol the reaso ns -.. e' re
.1 pretty good defens1ve team
" because out offense has a
lot 111 1t and we have to de lend
aga mst ourselves everyday 111
pracllce "
Ohto State led 15-1 3 mtdFederal roiled on to the 5'5-34
Will

Southern had 25 rebounds
led by freshman Ashley
Robte wtth n111c, and four
each from Joanne Ptckens,
Wtlltams, and Whttncy
Rtffle
Southern had II
steals (Williams 3, Roush 3),
24 turnovers, seven asststs,
and 22 louis.
Federal Hockmg had 38
rebounds (Stover 14, Lackey
7 ), seven steals (Stover 5), IS
turnovers, seven ass1sts, and
20 fouls
Federal Hockmg won the
reserve game 36-29 led by
Chelsea Bail ~m mne and
e1ght ap1ec0 rom Brittany
Kmg and Summer Hatfield.
Southern was led by L111da

.w.1y through !he halt, then
went on an 8-3 run, wtth
o.~venport sconng the flfst
tour pmnts tn the spun
''Everyone can play defense
(lor them), and then th ere's
always somebody else on the
team who can score," Cavey
said
After the Hawkeyes' Smith
htt " lay up' to end a 2-mmute
sconng
drou ght ,
the
Buckeyes ran off II pmnts tn
.1 row Packer, just in from the
bench, hit two 3-pomtet s and
Munoz scored on a layup and
a 3 ot her own to push the
lead to 34- 18
" It 's ltke they smell blood,"
Bluder sa1d "When th ey
force d a turnover, it got them
all ex~ 1t ed to get some more "
Down 39-24 at hallttme,
Io-..a drew to 54-42 w1th a 92 run - the last ltve pomts by
Sol verson But Ohto State
pounded the ball mstde to
Davenport and her three-po111t
play at the II 31 mark preceded another 3-po111ter ~
Packer, . touchmg off a 12-0
streak
:
Iowa was scoreless for
more than 4 mmutes as the
lead cltmbed
''We were talkmg a lot on
defense, gettmg 111 the pass111g
lanes, com111g up w1th loose
balls and 'trymg to d1srupt
thetr offense," Hosk111s satd.
The Buckeyes lut 54 percent of thetr shots from the
fteld and were 9-of- 19 from
behmd the arc They converted Iowa turnovers into · 25
pomts
Eddy wllh 12, Sarah Eddy
s1x, and Bethany Vance w1th
f1ve

Southern
Saturday

hosts

Miller

Fed Hock 55, SOuthern 34
Fed Hock 18
7
2t
9 - 55
South ern 6
13 8
7 - 34
Southam - Whitney Wolfe Riffle 1 1 t 3
Brooke K1ser 2 2-2 7 Kas1e Sellers 0 0·0
0 L1nda Eddy 0 0-0 0 Ashley Rous h 2 12 6 Joanne P1c~ens 1 2·2 4 Knst1ma
W1ll1ams 4 1·7 9, Jordan Netgler o o-o o
Mallory Hill 0 0·0 0 Bethany Vance 0 0·0
0 Ashley ROble 1 3-10 5 Amber Hill 0 ().
Three Pomt
0 0 Totals 11 t0- 24 34
Goals K1ser one Aoosh one
Federal Hocking - Ashley Johnson 2 5
8 10 Natalie W illiams 1 1-2 3 Tern Wolle
6 0-3 14 Lmdsay Garett 2 0-2 4 Amanda
Stover 6 3·4 15 Kelsey Lackey 2 0·1 4
All Deddens 1 1·2 3 Ashley Ford 0 0·0 0

Ryan F1eler 0 0 2 0, Summer Hatfield 1 o0 2 Brittany Kmg 1 0 0 2 Totals 21 10
24 55 Three Po1nt Goals Wolle tWo
Johnson one
I

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

Meigs
from Page 81
under a m111ute left m the
second quarter, Amber
Burton htl two free throws
to pull the' hosts to wlthtn
f1v e. It was as close as
Metgs would come.
From that po111t unttl the
5 59 mark of the final stanza, Belpre went oh a I 6-0
run that ali but ended any
hopes of makmg the final
home gam~ for three semors
memorable
The Marauders honored
upperclassmen
Renee
Batley, Justme Dowler and
Sam P1erce before the start
wtth a wann hand and an
apprectation of the hard
work the girls have put tn
over the years at Larry R
Momson Gyrnnasmm.
"The one thmg you
always look for out of a
set;)wr class is leadership.
These three girls are leaders
not only on the floor, but off
the floor as well," said
Logan "They gt ve a )lundred percent m games and
give just as much m the
classroom. That's what you
want from semors "

Pierce led the Marauders
w1th IS pomts, whtle Bailey
and Dowler added five and
two markers , respectively, 111
thetr finales
Dowler and Cole each
grabbed mne boards, w1th
Batley contnbutmg four caroms and a block
Burton and Bntanny
Hy sell chtpped 111 three
aptece for Metgs, and Cayla
Lee rounded out the sconng
wtth a tield goal.
Whttney Blackburn and
Shawntae Cltne led the
Eagles with I 6 and 14
pomts,
respectively.
Mtranda Baker added six
markers, mne rebounds and
three steals to the tnumph.
Belpre's Heather Welsch
had four blocks m the second hall
Desptte the loss 111 the
home finale, Logan 1s suB
lookmg down the road for
hts Marauders as the tournament draws closer
" We sull have a lot of
games left. We may not be
play111g for a league IItle, but
we are defimtely sull playmg for somethmg," com mented Logan.
Belpre elatmed a sweep
on the night With a 32-28
wm 111 the JUnior varstty ttlt.

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

Whttney Smtth paced Metgs
wlth seven po111ts, wh1le
Heather Welsch had II for
the Eagles
Me1gs starts a stx-game
road stretch at Chesh1re
Monday 111 a contest with
Rtver Valley Game ttme I S
scheduled for 6 p m
'--Belpre

Belpre so, Meigs 30
10
15 13
12 -

Me1gs

6

0

12

12 -

•
50
30

BELPRE (9·•, 6-1) Wh1tney
Black burn 7 0 -0 16 Shawntae Clme 4 4
5 14 Shawna Mincks 0 0 0 0 Aubree
Miller {) 0-0 0 M1randa Baker 2 2 3 6
Madison Stephens 1 0 0 3, Meredith

Miller 0 2 4 2 Heather Welsch 0 0 0 D
Tessa Duckworth 2 0 0 4 Rachel
Canada 2 0 0 4 Tabitha VanDyke 0 1 2
1 TOTALS 16 10 20 50
MEIGS (4-10, 2-5) - Cayla Lee 1 0-0 2
Renee Bailey 1 3 4 5 Justine Dowler 1

0 0 2 Sam

~terce

5 s-a 15 Amber

Burton 0 3 6 3 Les ley Preece 0 0·0 0
Meg Clel)and 0 0 1 0 Amy Barr 0 0 0 0,
Whitney Smit h 0 0-0 0 Brlnany Hysell 0
3-4 3 TOTALS 6 14-23 3D

3-polnt goals· 8 - 4 (Blackburn 2
Cline Stephens) M - None

Team etatlatlcallndMdualleadera
BELPRE· 16-64 FG (261) 420 3PG
( 200) 10-20 FT ( 500) 37 rebounds
(Baker 9) 18 offe nsive rebounds (Baker
4) 8 ass1sts (Cline 3 Mmcks 3), 13
steals (Baker 3 Stephens 3) 8 blocks
(Welsch 4) 13 turnovers 22 fouls
MEIGS 6·4 1 FG I 195) 0·6 3PG ( OQO)
14·23 FT ( 609) 32 rebounds (Dowlel 9
Cole 9) 14 offens1ve rebounds (Dowler
5) 3 ass1sts (Dowler 2) 5 steals (Cole 2
Clelland 2) 4 blocks (Dowler 2) 25
turnovers t7 fouls

HOW IQ WRITE A!t!. AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...
\ "\"\ 41 ( "\ t I \ II '\ I '-,

~c.:.._._

Doe,

Unknown

Spouse, II any, of
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Doe,
Unknown
Spouse, II any, of
Yvonne
Darst,
·cnarles Whthlngton,
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Charles Whittington,
have or claim to have
an interaet In tiMI real
a1tate
deocrlbed
below " The
land
11lerred to In this
commltmonllo sttuat·
ed In the State of
Ohio,
County
of
Meip Sltuat.d In the
VIllage of Pomeroy,
County of Melga end

Public Notice
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT

OF

1~1..-..:;ht

te&gt; _I&lt;..._c:._ ...

r-.l&lt;:»tl~e,.,tsfl,

.:&gt; !C' II"~-~d

TRANSPORTATION
public highway shall doned
shall
be Dorothy Roseberry,
Legal Copy
revert to the abutting approximately
0 8 Clerk
No. 01-12-04
property owners at miles, as measured 30348 Valley Belle Rd
In accordance with such time that the along the centerline Racine, Ohio 45771
the provisions of Director has com· of the roadway, and (740) 843·5474.
Chapter 5511 of the plied with the provl- specifically Identified 1/14
•
Ohio Revised Code , slons of Section by the above-relerand Chapter 23 of the 5511.07 of the Ohio encod Straight Line
Code
ol
Federal Revised Code
Mileage points
Public Notice
Regulation,, 771 .123,
Maps, drawings,
The tolal length of
the Dtrector of the S.R. 338 to ba vacat- environmental data,
Probate Court 01
Ohio Department ol ad shall ba approxl- other pertinent tnlor- Meigs County, Ohio
Transportation will mately 1.52 miles, as mation developed by In Re.change of name
hold 'a pub he hearing IJl&amp;&amp;sured along the the Transportation of Lolsann S. Bartlett
on Thursday, January centerline ol the Department, and any to
Laura
Alyson
27, 2D05, beginning at roadway, and specllt· written • comments Bartlett.
1 :DO P.M In the Meigs cally ldentHied by the received as a result
Notice Of Hearing
C o u n t y above-referenced of coordination wlth On Chenge 01 Name
Commissioners' Straight Line Mlleags stale
resources, Applicant
hereby
Olllca which Is locat- points
recreation, planning gives notice to all
ed tn the Courthouse
federal ))eraona Interested to
PROPOSED, THE agencies,
at Pomeroy, Ohio, for ABANDONMENT OF agencies, local public that the applicant has
lhe purpose of hear- BOTH
REMNANT officials and agen- flied an Application
Ing atatements on the SEGMENTS
OF clea, and public aclvi· tor Change ol Name
proposed
highway STATE ROUTE 338 IN sory groups wilt ~ . In the Probate Court
vacation and aba'n- LEBANON
TOWN- made available to the of Meigs County,
donment of State SHIP. THE ACTION public lor viewing al Ohio, requesting the
Route 338 wllhtn WILL INCLUDE THE the Ohto Deparlmenl change of name of
lebanon Township, CONSTRUCTION OF of Trtlnsportatton's Lolsann S bartlen to
Meigs County, Ohio
T U R N A R 0 U N D DlllrtCI Olltce, 338
laura Alyson Bartlett.
The proposed action FACILITIES AT THE
Muaktngum
Drive, The hearing on lhe
specifically pertains TERMINAL ENDS
Marlena, Ohio 45750. application will be
to the section o1 S.R.
Said abandonment
Anyone wishing to
held on the 14th day
338 currently closed of the southern rem- submit a wrllten of February, 2005 at
to traffic due to ero- nant shall begin at statement or exhibit 1:30 o'clock p.m. In
SIOn and damage
the Junction of S.R. concerning this proJ· the the Probate Court
along the Ohio River. · 338 and U.S. Route eel may do so by pre- of Meigs, County,
PROPOSED, THE 33, being tdentHied as
senltng It at the hear- Lolsann s. Bartlen
VACATION OF A SEG· SLM 19.40, thence tng or mailing It to the 27270 Happy Valley
MENT OF STATE elllend tn a northerly
Ohto Department of Road
ROUTE
338
IN direction along SR
Transporlallon,
Albany, OH 45710
LEBANON
TOWN- 338 a distance ol ' District
Deputy 1/14
SHIP.
0.6 Director, George M
approximately
Said vacation shell miles to SLM point Collins,
338
begin at a potnl along 20.00, and thare terMuaktngum
Drive ,
Public Notice
S.R. 338 lc:lenltlled as minale
The aban·
MarteHa , Ohio 45750
Slralght Une Mileage donment o1 the north· The final date lor subNOTICE BY PUBLI(SLM) point 20.00, ern remnant shall mission of slate· CATION ON DEFENsaid point being 0.80 begin at SLM point menta
will
be DANTS
AND
miles north of the 21.52, said point February 6, 2005
UNKNOWN HEIRS. IN
tntersactlon with S.R. being located 2.12 Gordon Proctor,
THE COURT OF COM·
338 and U.S. Route miles from the June- Director
MON PLEAS, MEIGS
33; thence elllend In a lion of S.R. 338 and (1) 7 &amp; 14 2T
COUNTY, POMEROY,
northwesterly dlrec·
U.S. Route 33, thence
OHIO. THE CITIZENS
lion along S.R 338 to extend In a northerly
BANK OF LOGAN VS.
a point lc:lenttlled as direction along S R
Public Notice
ESTHER
MAE
SLM point 21.52, said 338 a dlllance of
FRANKLIN , Et. AL.
02
point baing 0.2 miles approximately
The
Lebenon CASE NUMBER 04aoutheaat of the mllea to SLM point Towns~tp
Annual CV·142
lnllrsactlon with S R
21 .72, and there tor· Financial Report 11 TO: ESTHER MAE
338 and S.R. 124, and mlnata.
completed and avoll- FRANKLIN, IF LIVthere terminate
Tho
abandoned abla lor tnapectlon ot ING, THE SPOUSE IF
Tho .. cated por- portlone oholl revert the home o1 lhe clerk ANY, AND TO THE
ln to the Metge County by oppolntment only.
tion,
eltuated
WIDOW,
HEIRS,
Lebanon Township, Highway
Syatom Lebanon Townahlp DEVISEES,
AND
Melga County, Ohio, once the line! oban· Truateea:
John
NEXT OF· KIN OF
not neceaaary lor the donment Ia oulhor· Krider, PrMident
DESCENDENT. ALL
conetructlon or main· !zed by the Director Charllo Weddle, VIce OF WHOSE NAMES
tenenc:e of the cor,. of Trenoportetlon.
Prealclent
OR ADDRESSES ARE
epondlng lecillty or
TIMJ Iolii length of Donold
Dolley, UNKNOWN
TO
needed lor eny other S.R. 338 to be aben· TrUIIM
PLAINTIFF, JOHN H.

.....

'FC.I~I-..t

ra.J~--~-s:a..,

IL~

-w'.-..._..-

WARNER, JR, IF LIVING, THE SPOUSE IF
ANY AND TO THE
WIDOW,
HEIRS,
DEVISEES,
AND
NEXT OF KIN OF
DESCENDENT, ALL
OF WHOSE NAMES
OR ADDRESSES ARE
UNKNOWN
TO
PLAINTIFF,
MARY
EMMA KING, IF LIV·
lNG THE SPOUSE IF
ANY, AND TO THE
WIDOW,
HEIRS,
DEVISEES,
AND
NEXT OF KIN OF
DESCENDENT, ALL
OF WHOSE NAMES
OR ADDRESSES ARE
UNKNOWN TO THE
PLAINTIFF,
AND
DOROTHY A. HILL IF
LIVING THE SPOUSE
IF ANY, AND TO THE
WIDOW,
HEIRS,
AND
DEVISEES,
NEXT OF KIN OF
DESCENDENT, ALL
OF WHOSE NAMES
OR ADDRESSES ARE
UNKNOWN TO THE
PLAINTIFF
THE
OBJECT OF THE
COMPLAINT IS TO
PARTITION
THE
PARCEL
REALTY
NUMBER
11-()1196.000,
11-()1193.000,
11-()1187.000,
11-0t192.000, AND
THE PRAYER IS THAT
SAID REALTY BE
PARTITIONED
OR
ORDERED SOLD IF IT
CANNOT BE PARTITIONED, FOR AN
ALLOWANCE
OF
ATIORNEY
FEES
HEREIN AND COSTS.
YOU ARE; REQUIRED
TO ANSWER THE
COMPLAINT WITHIN
28 DAYS AFTER THE
LAST PUBLICATION
OF THIS NOTICE
WHICH WILL BE PUB·
LISHED ONCE EACH
WEEK FOR SIX SUC·
CESSIVE
WEEKS.
THE LAST PUBLICA·
TION WILL BE MADE
ON FEBRUARY 18,
2005 AND THE 21
DAYS
FOR
AN
ANSWER WILL COM·
MENCE ON THAT
DATE. IN CASE OF
YOUR FAILURE TO
ANSWER OR OTHER·

HAS
SOMETHING

fOR YOU!!

Thur•day for Sundays

Poit&gt;er

POUCIES Ohio Vallew PIJbllehing rHervea the right to edit. rejKI, or canceJ any. ad at any Hme Errore muat be reported on lhe 111'81 d.y of
Trlbune-Sentlnei·Reglater will be re1ponalble tor no more than the co1t olthe apace oc:oupted by tne error and only the ftl'8t lnurtion We
any lo.. or upenae that reeulta from the publication or omlsaton of an advertisement Correction will be made tn the 111'81 avaHable edition
era alway a confidential • Current rate card apptles • All real estate advertlaementa are subject to I he Federal fair Houalng Act of ~ 968
accepts onty
EOE atandarda We will not knowingly .ccept any adver11alng In violation of the law

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

No ATV S or v8h1cles of
any ~tnd perm1tled on
Zuspan property near
Mason 1 Cl1fton WV

r

1 Lab Pupp~ must go thiS
week to a good home
(304)662 3554
Female black Lab m1x 9
..monlhs
old
-wormed/shots very lovrng
j')eeds room to run
.(740)245 9677

•

Absolute Top Dollar U S
Silver and Gold Cons
Proof sets Gold Rmg s
U S Currency ·M T S Co1n
Shop
15 1
Second
A~enue Gallipolis 740
446-2842

·
•

•

4x4's For Sate ..............................................725
Announcement . ..... . . ........ .. ..... . ..... ...030
Ant1ques .. ...... .. ........................................... 530
Apartments lor Rent.. ............................ . 440
Auction and Flea Merkel.. . ........................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair... . ................................... 770
Autos lor Sale ...................... ............... 710
Boals &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplies.................................550
Business and Bulldmgs ............................. 340
Buslnell Opportunity... .... .. .................210
Business Training .. . .......................... . ,, 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ............................... 780
Cards of Thanks ..........................................01 0
Child/Elderly Care .................................... 190
Electrlcal/Relrlgeratlon......................... 840
Equipment lor Rent.. ................................... 480
Excavating .... ....................... ..................... 830
Farm Equipment............... .......................... 61 0
Farms lor Rant ..........................................,. 430
Farms lor Sale ......................................... 330
For Lease ......... .....................................:... 490
For Sate ................. ................................... 585
For Sale or Trade.. ....... . . .... ,_,,, ........ 590
Fruits I Vegetables ........... , ........................ 580
Furnished Rooms .......
.................... 450
General Hauling.... ,,,...... ............ , ,, ,,,,, .850
Giveaway............. .. ... . .. . ........... ......... 040
Happy Ads .. ............. ,..... .......................050
Hay &amp; Grain................ ............................... 640
Help Wanted, ............................................110
Homelmprovementa ...................................810
Homn lor Sale ............................................ 310
Housahold Goods ................................. ,,,, 51 0
Houaas lor Rent .......................................... 410
ln Memorlam ..........~ .............................. 020
tnaurance ... ,, ............................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment.. ...................... 880
Llveetock ......................................................630
Loat and Found ........................................... 080
MlactJIIaneoua.............................................,170
Mlacella1110u1 Merchondtsa.......................540
Mobile Home Repair ...................................880
Mobile Homes lor Rent ....................., ....... 420
Mobile Hom11for Sale.. ............................320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
MotorcyclM &amp; 4 WIMlller&amp; ..........................740
Muatcaltnatrumenll .................................. 570
Pereona11 ..................................................... oos
Peta lor Sale ................................................ !510
Plumbing &amp; Heating .................................... 820
Profelllonal SarvictJe .................................230
Rodlo, TV &amp; CB Repalr ...............................180
Rut EtW. Wonted .................................... 380
Schoolalnatructlon ....................................150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer ............................. 1150
Sltulllono Wanted ..................................... 120
Space for Flenl .............................................410
Sporting Goods........................ .................. 520

SUV'I for Sale ..............................................720
rruckelor Sale ........... ........................... 715
Upholatery ............................................... 870
Vono For Sale ............................ • ............. 730
Wonted to Buy ..........................................OliO
Wonled to Buy· Ferm SuppliM .................. 820
Wonted To
110
Wanled lo Renl ............................................470
Yard Sar. Golllpolla............................. ......072
Yard s.r.Pomoroy1Mlddfe .........................074
Yord s.t..PI. Pleoeant................................ 076

Do................................ ........

'

FOR SAL•

Jewel ry Buy. Sell Gold
D1 amonds
Gemstones
Repa1r Appratsats Gem
Testmg
Graduate
Gemologist
Jeweler
(740 )645 6365
or
(740 )446-3080

0

Ass stan! Manager local
electroniC/cellular store
pa1d vacat1on &amp; holidays
salary plus commiSSIOn
send resume to Da11y
Sentmel PO Bdx 729 11
Pomeroy Oh 45769

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY
/SSI?
No Fee Unless We wmr
I -686-582-3345

Or

AVON• All Areas! To Buy
Sell Shirley Spears 304
675 1429

Dom1no s P1zza ts now hlrmg
Management
Personal tor Gallipolis &amp;
Pomeroy
Oh10
PI
Pleasant
&amp;
Eteanor/W1nf1eld
WV
Apply m Pe rson at The
Spnng Valley Locat1 on
Jackson
P1ke
1200
Gallipolis O H or ca ll
(304)593·5365

Heating

Established

C oohng Company m GaiiiCl

Wanted Land In Gallla Co
H1lls &amp; valleys· okay Call
{740)388 8226

SERVICES

Free HBO &amp; Cmamax
Free Proless1onal
Installation
up to 4 Rooms
Call 1 600-523· 7556
for data1ls

1740)388-8166

GIVEAWAY

MOBILE HQME&lt;;

OIRECTV

An E~~;ce ll ent wa~ 10 earn
money The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304-682·2645

MISSing on 1·9·05 Black &amp;
Whtte
Border
Colhe
Female Pup 3/months old
stU needs two ser~es of
shots last seen al home
on Henrys Ad across from
Beale School She was a
Ch ild s Chnstmas·Gift &amp;
became mtss tng on that
Ch 1ld s B~r thday
Please
help Nlkk l~ find her way
home Reward (304)6757545 or (304)593 0348

I'ROF'E'iSIONAL

Fr8e DVD Player

Lost· 2 cals 1 neutered
orange male other one 1s
black female Bidwell area

Mof'ley for Information D1d
, you Witness or has some·
one bragged about cutt1ng
or keying a new recl N1ssan
350Z sports car? The
crime occurred at Skytme
Bowlfng
Lanes
last
Saturday n1ghl There IS a
reward Be anonymous
PLEASE
call
Debbie
(740)446-2 451

Lot• a Acreage ............................................ 350

... THE

Sunday Dl•play: 1:00 p.m.

Frldo1y For Sundays Paper

IC I ._,

Addresses wanted 1mme·
d1ate lyl No expanence
necessary Work at home
Call toll (405) 44 7·6397

Public Notice

WHAT YOIJ.J&lt;"I
STYLE ..

._, , 1{\

Information
on
As ot January 1t 2005 , stolen Scooter, Stereo,
we are not responsi ble for Surround Sound wiDVD
• any ones clebts other th an
player and CD'a, In
ou r own Roger &amp; Lmda
Galllpollo area. (740)645M11ler
6042

WISE RESPOND llllio
REQUIRED BY TAE'
OHIO RULES OF
CIVIL PROCEDURE,
JUDGMENT
BY
DEFAULT WILL BE
RENDERED AGAINST
YOU
FOR
THE
RELIEF DEMANDED
IN THE COMPLAINT
(1) 14, 21 , 28,(2)4, 11,
18

NO MA.TT~J~I

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

Cath Reward!

__

Middleport VIllage
Rental Fees ol $12 00
per rental ar&amp; due by
February 1, 200&amp;. II
you own and rent
property In the VIllage
of Middleport, you
must pay this lee.
Thesa lees must be
paid no later than
February 28, 2005 or
a line of $1DO will be
Imposed.
Sandy
lannarelll,
Mayor
VIllage ol Mlcldleporl.
1/10,12,14

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Bualne•• Days Prior To
Publication

For

__ _

~._.._.

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

• AI! ada must be J&gt;repald'

I \11'1 c 1\ \ II"\ I

l.o&gt;TAND

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(. ~
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for Iorge

DisPlay Ads

• Start Your Adl With A Keyword • lnclude Complf::te
Descrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
• Ad1 Should Run 7 Day1

FOUND

;
. - .... . , • • ~

and currently set
forth 1n Deed Book
335,
Page
95,
Recorded 5111193
Also
commonty
known as 118 Un1on
Avenue,.
Pomeroy,
OhiO, 45769.
The Pet1tioner further alleges that by
reason of default of
the Delendant(s) In
the payment of a
promissory
note,
accordtng to its tenor,
the conditions or a
concurrent mortgage
deed given to secure
tho payment of said
note and conveying
the
premises
described, have been
broken, and the same
has
become
absolute .
The
Petitioner
prays
tha1
the
Delendant(s) named
above be require to
answer and set up
their mterest said real
estate or be forever
barred lrom asserting
the same, lor foreclosure of said mortgage, the marshaiiRg
of any hens, and the
sale of said real
estate, and the proceeds ol said sate
applied to the payment of Petitioner's
Clatm 1n the proper
order of tts priority,
and lor such olher
and further relief as 1s
Just and equitable.
The Defendant( 1)
named above are
required to answer on
or balore the 18th day
of March, 2005
By Reimer, Lorber &amp;
Arnovltz Co , L.P A,
Ronald J. Chernek,
Attorney at Law
EMCMortgoge
Corporation
Attorney lor Plaintiff·
Petitioner
PO Box 968
Twinsburg, OH 44087
(330) 425-4201
(1) t4, 21 , 28, (2) 4, 11 ,
18

Oeacltir~

Word Ads

CLASSIFIED INDEX

State of Ohio·
Beglnnmg at the
Southeast corner of a
lot formerty owned by
Luctnda Starkey on
Unton Avenue 1n sa1d
Village of Pomeroy;
thence north 20 deg.
east along the north
line of said lol 1DO
feel, thence soulh 70
deg east 50 feet;
thence south 20 deg
west 1DO feet to the
line of said Union
Avenue, thence along
the line of sa1d Union
Avenue, North 70 deg
west 50 teet to tho
place of beginning,
said premises being
a part of Lot No 425
of sa1d V1llage of
Pomeroy, and being
the same prem1ses
deeded by Margaret
Nurst to Theodore
Elselatam by deed
dated November 16,
1885, and recorded In
Volume 61 , P&gt;ge 224
and 225 . &gt;cords,
Meigs County, Ohio,
and
deeded
to
Elaetsteln
George
and wHe to Elsa s
Lee by deed dated
November 19, 1891 ,
and
recorded
In
Volume 73, Pege 211
and 212 of the
Records of Deed ol
Meigs County, Ohio.
Save and except a
small lract of Real
Estate conveyed to
Louis Reibel, beginning al Point 26 feet
North 20 deg. from
the Southeast corner
of tho M.E. Church
Parsonage
Lot
then~'&amp; North 66 1/2
deg wa1t 3 laet and 9
Inches; thence north
20 deg. east 17 loet
and 4 Inches, thence
10ulh 66 1/2 c:leg. east
3 tae1 and 9 Incites;
tiMJnce oouth 20 deg
weot 17 laet and 4
Inches Jo the place of
beginning, and con·
talntng about 65
square feet, more or
tell, end It lo further
understood that no
part of lhe well on
laid p1r1on8ge lot Ia
hereby
conveyed .
Perc:el No.: 18-01943

5

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

Bry8Jl Walters/photo

Me1gs sen1or g~rls basketball players, from left, Renee Batley, Sam Cole and Justine Dowler
parttcipated m the tr ftnal game at Larry R Mornson Gymnas1um Thursday versus Belpre The
tno combtned for 22 po1~ts, 22 rebounds, two asststs, three steals and three blocks m a
50-30 loss to Belpre.

1\egister

Sentinel

ca~r;~::v.e. (7!~~ 44~:~~~2

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

LEGAL NOTICE
Thomas
Darst,
Jane Doe, Unknown
Spouse, 1f any, of
Thomas
Oarsl,
*Yvonne Darst, •John
Doe ,
Unknown
Spouse, 11 any, of
Charles Wh1ttmgton,
whose last knowr,
address 1s P 0. Box
70 Smtlhlteld , PA
15478-0070 and •118
Unton
Avenue
Pomeroy, OH 45769·
1000, but whose present place of resl·
dance is unknown
will take notice that
on August 12, 2004 at
2 12 p m, LaSalle
NA ,
lka
Bank,
LaSalle
National
Bank, as mdenture
trustee under that
certam
Sale and
Servicmg Agreement
dated December 1,
1999, among AFC
Trust Senes 1999-4
as Issuer Superior
Bank FSB, as Seller
and Servlcer, and
LaSalle
Bank
National Assoc1atlon,
aa Indenture Trustee,
AFCMorJgage Loan
Asset Backed Notes,
Series 1999-4111ed Its
Complaint llf Case
No, 04 CV 110 and on
filed Its Supplemental
Complaint In lhe
Court of Common
Pleas Meigs County,
Ohio alleging that the
above - named
Detendant(s) ,
Thomas Darst, Jane

~ribune

Place

looktng

Co

for

hpe[ieOcftd mstallers &amp;
techniCians If 1nteresled
send resume to CLA Box
548 cia Galhpohs Da11y
T(tbune P.O Boll 469,
Gall1pol1s OH 45631
Full l1me front desk positiOn Must have outgo1ng
personality Apply 10 per
son Holiday Inn No phone

calls
HELP
WANTED
Customer Serv1ce Supporl
Clerk PIT needed tor
growmg local busmess
Please stop by or send
resume to
McD1sh LLc,
2 12 1 Jackson Avenue
Po1nt Pleasant
Home health aid needed

for local area full·tlmelpar1
t1me please ca, ll between
6AM-4 30PM (740)992
2971
tmmed1ate open1ng to"r
part t1me denial ass1stant
for Me1gs County Dental
Sealant Program Will tra n
Call (740)643 5268
Immediate
Openmgs
Res1denhal
Treatment
Facility for bqys now hmng
Youth Worker pos1t10n
Paid Med1cal Insurance
Call between 9 OOam·
4 OOpm (740)379 9083
Laborers- liike trees out
from so1ll process tor sh1p
p1ng mm wage starting
Feb
15th
Clements
Nursery 304-675· 1620
LICENSEO SOCIAL

( r----r---

IH \I I ..,I\ II

HQME&lt;;
FOR SALE

I-I of

~

e 2005 by NEA, Inc

to

I
I

.

To Do

candidates may send
resumes to Charla
Brown-McGutre, AN
LNHA, Admln lstre.tor 333
Page Street, Middleport
Ohio 45760 EOE
Local trucking company II
IHklng semi-truck driver
w1th COL:&amp; for k&gt;cel run
Good
driving
record
reqwred Call (740)2'5
0416
Need
tmmedlatalyl
Looking for dependable
person lo run estab'ltheel
route 2 days per week
Needs dapend&amp;bla car
Good pay
pluS an
allowance For informallon
cell (740)508-()330
I

2000 Oakwood 32x76
home for sale W1ll sale on
land contract Owner Will
l1nance w1th 20% down
Call lor details (7 40)446
3481

1BR Apt 1n Sprmg Valley
$290 per month+deposlt
WID hookup
Pets wei
w1th
additiOnal
come
deposrt {740)339 0362

For sale 14X70 W indsor 3
bedroom
se t up m
Countr y
Homes
$6 995 00 Move 1n today I
Ca ll (740 )992 2167 or
(740)365-401 9
Immed iate
possession
Only $213 68 per mo New
3 bedroom 2 bath mob1le
home Only mmutes from
Athehs 1·800-837·3238

New Year· New Career
Chnstlan based Tec h Co
Expanding m your area
Managers/Sales Rep
Needed
Call BOO 470-6643
(24 Hours)
Now h1nng Sm1img wa1t
resses Apply m person
Holiday Inn No phone
calls
NOW HIRING· ResCare a
lead1ng provider to mdiVId·
uals w1 th mental relardaMn and developmental
d1sabtl1t1eS IS looking for a
AN/SuperviSOr If mterested please call Kelly Cline
at (7 40)645 1539 or lax
resume to (740) 446·3987
An Equal Opportunity
Employer F!MION
Oh10 Operat1ng Engmeers
ApprentiCeShip &amp;
Tra1nmg Program
Local 18
4 Year Apprent1cesh1p
2005 APPLICATION

QAifS
Jan 242526 &amp; Feb 345
9 ooam to 3 OOpm
Operallng Engmeers
are the men and women
who operate and rep81r
the equ1pmen1 that bu1lds
Amencal
Eam AI You Learn'
We w1ll be accept1ng
applications w1th a
$1 o 00 cash non refund
able fee
at the following locat1on
Logan Training Center
3GUO Strawn Road
Logon, OH 431 3a
1-818-385-2587
EOE

Wanted and needed 111
Snuggle Bugs Ch1 ldcare
Pomeroy OhiO Full t1me
1140 2nd Ave GalhpOhs
l1ve 1n care taker lor spe
Openmgs all sh1fts secun
c1alty bed and breakfast 1f
ty VIdeo ca meras for every
you are of Enghsh WeiCh
ones secunty Insta lled m
lnsh dece nt
and an
latte r January
Open
accen t enJOY cookmg
house every Sunday after
house keepmg and gener
church t pm to 5 30pm
al canng for others thiS
Please call (740)446 7122
pos1tron 1s made for you
for brochure InformatiOn
We offer a salary plus and
upscale
env1ronment
lifesty le
Non-smok1ng
non drtnk ng cu ltured per
son(s) destred Please
cont act us at t::lr and Mrs
Daycare provtder has
M
Dellava lle
8227
open1ngs Spnng Valley
Blueberry Onve New Port • area Ho me cerbf1ed CPR
Richey Fl 34653, 727·
lenced yard meals Call
4 0 2 I
1740)446·6340
6 0 6
DADOKTfl,@an net
Lovmg hcen sed pro~1der
'
3 openings day or avemng
hours F1ve mmutes from
• Me1gs Elementary School
readmess
emphasized
Gallipolis Career
Melissa s Ch1 ld
Care
College
{7 40)992· 0070
(Ca reers C lose To Home)
W1ll take care of your loYed
Call Todayl 740-446:...$367
on e m your home 15
1 BOO 214 0452
.vears expenence
10www ga ll~rsca rev!OO ege com
years state tested Cajl
A.ccr!!ldrted Member Accrttdlllng
Yvonne at (740)9491092
Counc•l fof Independent Coleges
end Schoola 12746
or (740) 992-9661

I

11 "\\"\ CI \ 1
High
School Jumors
SeniOrs and Pnor Serv1ce
you can 1111 vacant posl·
t1ons 1n the West V1rg1nt8
Army NatiOnal Guard If
you are between the ewes
of 17 35 or have pnor mif1·
tary sen~~ce you won I
want lo pass lhiS up For
OpportunltiBS 1n your area
cell 304-675 5637

ParamediCS &amp; EMT 8
needed Apply at 1354
Jackson Ptke Gallipolis
T.;hnlclan W.nlld
Securl~

Alarm CCTV,
Satelllta TV Installation
and aervtce tecl"tnlclan
Ftrevlous tnduatrlal maJnt•
nance electncal or electroniC ttxpanence andlor
education
dtslrabte
Soocesslul candidate must
be honest dependable
and self motiv ated Full
ti me poa•tlon Pay and
advancements
based
upon experience and Job
duties performance
Reply with re1ume to
Southeastern Ohio

Satellite
240 Upper Atver Ad
GolllpoHo OH 45631
WANTED Satellite and
Broad Technicians Must
hl\4 own truck, gooa drlv
log record F[T 1nOvltry
competitive wa~ea Please
call or stop by McDtan
2,21 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant, 875·51 00

OCAL ESTABLISH£
USINESS (15 YEARS)
EAY UNIQUE/NO COM
ETITION. WILL TRAIN
7&lt;10)1112-&lt;1238 (7&lt;10) 992

.sa
.,

or

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
Assisted 11vmg for your
loved one m my home
P rivate room&amp;
3 hot
meals (740)3811-()116
eBay cons1gnmentl
I Wlll sell your stuff on
aBay My S"erv1cea 1ncluda
PiCk up of the Item valua
t10n professional photog
raphy
wntlng
clear
dascnp11ons of the item
handling questions lnvolc·
inQ and payme 11t cotlec·
Uon, and ultfmate!y 8hiP·
ping the ltei'n All you have
to do 15 wan tor a ch9d&lt;l A
minimum expec1ed va lue
ot S50 11 the only reqwe·
ment U you are Interested
please contact me at
t7&lt;0)645-0!l65

hat you do business
eople you know, a'n
OT to 5end mane
rough the mail until
ave Investigated th
fferin

r

Business OpportunityThree rental propertieS for
sale Duplex each w1th 3
BfR UR 0 /R Kitchen
Bath &amp; Porch House 3
BIR UR Kitchen Bath
Cottage BIR
K1tchen
Batt1 ~ental 1 nco m e lor all
thre e Approx $900 per
month Pnce for all three
$75 000 Loca ted 104·1 06
7th Slreet P01nt Pleasanl
{304)675 ~95 after 6 00

3
room
and
bath
stovel refr1gerator downs1a1 rs all utll1t1es pa1d 46
Olive
Str eet
$450
(740)446-3945

4 room apt WID hook up
bath Porter $400 month
(740) 367 70 15 (7 40)367
7746 (740)388-0 173

H!llJSES
FOKRI:Nr

0

-

2 Oedroom 1 bath $300
month Call (740)446·
3461

n

Pomeroy for rent no pets

(740)992 5658
3 bedroom 1 1/2 bath
house 2 story $350
(740)446-7620
depOSit
references
reqwred
(740)441 9872

3 br hOuse $450 00 a
mon + $300 00 dep 3046112-2656
A.ll rNI estate advertlslni
in thl1 new•paper Ia
sub/eel to the Federal
Fair Koualng Act of t HI
which m11kn It Illegal to
adwrtiH eny
prefererw::e, lhnltatlon or
discrimination baeed on
race. color; religion, HX
flmillal 1tatua or natlonel
origin, or any Intention to
make any auch
pl'.terenc:e limltetlon or
dlacrimlrndlon '
Thle new.paper will not
knowingly accept

advertlaemente fof' , ...
..tate which I• In
violation of the law Our
ruder* are hereby
Informed tha1 ..1
dwelllnga advertlaed In
this newspaper ere
availabfe on an equal
opportunity bun
Inventory Blowoull
All single Wldes must gol
Homes
Oakwood
Barbou rsville. (304)736·

Jol09
No Down Payment IS pos
Sible on th is beauti ful 3
bedroom 2 bath home 2
car garage Deck overlook·
1ng beautiful v1ew Frve
Potnts area (740)992
6667

Spong vaney
3 Bedroom t·112 baths.
Large
Family
Room
Fireplace
&amp; Garage
Recently
renovated,
lmmedrate Posse1110n
(740)446 7681

rrow Smart Conta
he Ohio Dlviaion o
lnanc1al
ln1t1tut1Dn'
ff1ce of Consu me
nalrs BEFORE you refl
ance your home o
tat.n a loan BIEWAA
r requeatt for any Ia
dvanca paymtnts o
es or maurance Cal
e OffiCe ot Consume
ffa1rs toll free at 1-866
78-oo03 to ~arn il th
bro~er
o

Middleport (740)742 1083
or (740)698-6502

2 or 3 bedroom house

SSII Social Security
St ,300 Net, We can
flnara
• nome Call

t982 Shuftz 14x70
eoll {304)e75-6349

se 500

1995 14xn lnd1et Sultan
All electric CIA compjetety turntahed 2 bedroom 2
beth k)ts of e~&lt;tras Rented
lot-Can- stay Leu than 2
m!JH from town on State
Route ,,, $12,500 Call
or
(H0)441-1 583
(304)5 93-5393

--·-----

238 F1rs1 Avenue 1BR 1
bath k tchen fur nished
R1 ver v1ew New carpet
and pamt Easy wa l ~
downtown No pets $350
month
plus
ut11i t1es
Relerence
depo611
(740) 446 4926

5pm

Rl "\ I \I ._,

bath
Green
area

2 or J bedroom apartment
1n Middlepor t no pets
(740)992 5656

3 br $300 a mon +utll
$300
dep
no pets
Jac~son Ave Pt Pleasant
304 675 7499 ca ll after

SAVE SAVE SAVE
Stdc~ models at old pnces
2005 models arnvmg Now
Coles Mob1le Homes
15266 u ~ 50 East
Oh1o
4570 1
Athens
(740)592 1972
~wher e
You Get Yo ur Moneys
Worth"

2 Oedroom house lor re nt

WORKER
Overbrook Rehab tlltahon
Center IS now accept1ng
resumes for the posrtlon
of D1rector of Sooal
5ervtOOS The qualified
candidate must be a LSW
poasess1ng strong verbal
and written commumca
tlon skills Medicaid
MediCare and MDS knowl·
edge Long ter m care
axparlenca preferred but
not required Qualtfled

3 bedroom
detac hed garage
schools
n1ce
(740)441.()818

WANmJ

HELPWAI'mD

2br
House m West
Columbia call (304 )77352B4

r

I

APARTMENJ'S
FOKRENI

Rac 1ne
$500 depOSit
$500 rent plus gas &amp; elec
trrc (water trash sewer
Included 1n rent) 4 becl
room &amp; 2 full bath calheat
must bave relerences
(740)949 2217
7am

l()pm
Racme 3 or 4 bedroom
house 1 bath gas heat
AC washer/ dryer large
backyard $450 depos1t
$550 renl plus ut111t1es
HuD accepted (740)992
2335

1br complelely turn uttl
pa1d $350 a mon -+ 5350
dep 304·862 2858
3 bedroom 2 bath all
electrtc small building
Porter area $350 month
deposit and references
requ1red (740)446 4514
6 4 30pm
3 br $350 00 a mon
$250 00 dep 304 6B2
2658
For rent 2 and 3 bedroom
mob1le homes starting at
S260 00 per month Call
{740 )992 2167
N1ce 2 bedroom mob1le
h0(11e No pelS (740)446
2003 or {740)446· 1ol09
Ntee 2 bedroom 4 miles
lrom Holzer Hospital
(7(0~(6 -686 5
or
(740)379-2923

Two Mobile Homes lor
Rent Bolh two-bedrooms
One wtth 'den &amp; pullOut 1n
l!vln~·room $350 &amp; ~50
No Pats Deposit &amp; reter
enoes reqUired Loceted
In Point Pleasant
Call

r~
(304)675-3&lt;23

1

1 and 2 bedroom apar1

manti

furnlahec:l l(llnd
security
deposit required no pets
•
740-992· 2218
unrurnia~ .

Modern J bedroom apt
Colll740)«6o(l390

Apartment for Rent $350
plus deposit
Wate r &amp;
Sewer
pa1d
phone
(304)675-6666
BEAUT\FUL
APARTM~NTS
AT BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood
Dnve from $3« to $442
Walk to shop &amp; mo111es
Call 740-446-2568 Equal
Hous1ng Opportunity
Clean ~urmshed StudioApa rtment $325/month
1ncludes water/trash
Security Deposit and
References reqUi red call
after Spm (304 )675·2970
Clean Ground Floor 2br

WID hookup Re f &amp; Oep
no Pets (304)675 5162
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE I
Townhouse apartments
andlor smaU houses FOR
RENT Call (740)441 1111
for application &amp; 1nforma
tlon
For Lease One bedroom
nice 2nd floor apt Corner
P1ne and Second La rge
kitchen w1th d1n1r19 area
New range refngerator
Water
mcluded
References
requir ed
$300Jmo Secunty depos1t
No pets Call (7 40)446
4425 or (740)446 3936
GraciOus h\MQ 1 and 2
bedroom apartments at
V1llage
Manor
and
A111ers1de Apartments 1n
Middleport From $295
$444 Call 740-992 -5064
Equal
HOUSing
Opportunitie s
N1ce 2 BA apt Centenary
Ad weter/lrash pa1CI fur
mshed
kitchen
washer!dryer hookup no
pets deposit/references
reqwreel
$375 ,month
1740)446 9442
Ta ra
TownhOuse
Apartments
Very
Spac1ous 2 Beelrooms 2
FlOOrs CA 1 1/2 Bath
Newly Carpeted Adu lt
Pool &amp; Baby Pool POliO
Stan $385/Mo No Pets
Letllse
Plus
Security
Oepos1t Reqwed Days
740-446·3481 Evenings
740 367..050.2
Twlf'l

Rivers

Tower

11

a:cceptlng appliCatiOns lor

waiting hit for Hud·sub·
s1zed t· br apartment
call 675 6679 EHO

t

SPACE

·~RFM

For Lease Office or retail
spaces In .,..ry good condi-

tion Downtown Gallipolis
AppfOX 1600 lq f't lid'\ 1
or 2 bathl Lean pnce
nagotusble to encourage
new
buatneas
Call
{7 40)U6 "26
or
(740)446·3936

�TRI-COUNTY RECYCLING
.

is having

Hours: M-F

9·6, Sat 9-=4~:3:!0::!!!!1

\ II IH II\ \DI'il

. MISCEUANEOUS
MEROlANUillE

HOUSEHOLD
Goon&lt;;
SPA fACTORY 0UTL£r.i
Cedar Knol! Mall.
Kentucky Trading Post.
Ashland .
Milton , WVA Flea
Market
606 922-7185

Blue/whi_te plaid sofa.
$500: self cleaning stove
(a lmond) $75: re frig erator
with ice maker, $75; washer &amp; dryer $150 pair: 2
recliners . All good cbndillon (740)339-3207

Block . brick , sewer pipes,
windows , lintels,
etc.
Cla"Ude
Winters ,
Rio
Grande, OH Call 74Q-245 5121 .

Mollohan _ Carpet, 202
Clark
Chapel
Road,
Porte r, Ohi o. (740)446·
7444
1-877-830·9162.
· · Free Estimates, Easy
&gt; tinancing, 90 days same
. as cash. Visa/ Master
· Card. Drive- a- little save
. alot.

1'1-."IS .
FOR SALE

4 male puppies. 1/2 reg .
English Bu ll dog &amp; Bea r
Hound. $100 fir m. Call
(740)441-0712.

Thompso ns Appliance &amp;
R9pair-675-738R Fqr sale ,

5 full blooded Rat Terrier
puppies. 6 weel&lt;s old,
wormed/tails docked. $ 100
each. (740)367-7058.

re-conditioned automatic
washeirs &amp; dryers, refrigerg~s

and elecHic

· 'ranges, air conditioners,
: and wringer washers. Will
· do repairs on major brands
· in shop or ~~ your home.

i

ANn~

.

Buy . or sell. Rive rine
Antiques. 1124 East Main
on SR t 24 E Pomeroy,
Ru ss
740-992-2526.
Moore, owner. ·

r~~~~
For Sale: Size 7- Marquise
cut diamond ring. Weight
.41
Carat,
colorless.
Clarity Sl (1), yellow band.
· stone is set in Platinum.
Insured appraisal .$2,395,
paid nearly $1,400 1or this
ring approximately 1 year
ego~ $1 ,000 takes it home. .
Call (740)446·7375.

JET
AERATION MOTORS

Repaired , New &amp; Rebulll .
In Stock. Call Ron E\lans.
1-800-537-9528.

5 male Jack Russell puppies,
5 weeks
old.
(740)446-3413.
8 weeks old Flame Point
Himalayan. lemale; CFA"
·registered, 5 month old
Ted Tabby, male, nat faces.
(740)992 -9947
work
(740)742·3144 Reward

AKC

male Pekingese:
shots. wormed. black and
white , $250. (740)4461000, leave message.
AKC Stud Doberman, 4
years old , $125. (740)388·
0182
American Pit Bull puppies,
5 .weeks -old, No papers.
Dad registered. Red nose.
$11Xl00 (740)247-3006
Full blooded Lab puppies.
no
papers.
Pt1one
(740)446·2460.
Golden Retriever AKC
male puppy. Parents on
premises. have shots.
S195. (740)245-5358, No
Sunday Cans.

NEW AND USED STEEL

Miniature Schnauzer's , 8
weeks old AKC registered.
$300 each (304 )895-37 45

Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
Reg. American Rottweiler
For Concrete, Angle. · puppies for sale. Mother ·
and father on premises
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Call (740 )288-1592.
Driveways &amp; Walkways.
Reg. English Saner pups,
· L&amp;L Scrap Metals Open
7 females , $275. Will be
Monday,
Tuesday,
.
ready
112.1/05 . Taking
Wednesday &amp; Friday, SamQeposits. (740)388-0 182.
4:30pm. Closed Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday.
(7 40)446-7300
Solid Oak Entertainment
Center,
Video
Cam
Corder, all Assessories ,
Book Shel1 (304)895-3129

r
I

S.ll\ 1 .., 10&lt;"

FOR SALE

10

: used- $450.-li sted around
: $1100. (740)992·3487

ators,

AAIEOE
AIJill!i

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

F'ARM

1985
98 Old s. 69.000
miles, Garage Kept $2,295
(304)773·5394

EQUU'MENr
Dr Westmoreland selling
Ford 8000 Tractor, 103HPtotally rebui lt with cab,
$5,900 spent on worki ng
parts by Keefer's . Cabin
rebl.li lt. Call for specifics
Best Reasonable Ofler

Like new
daytime (304)773-533.3
PM 304 773-6000

·LIVISTOCK
Min1-Rex
Rabbits .
Breeding Age , All Colors;
!3ucks and Does. $5 .00·
Each.
After 5:30pm
(304)895-357 7
or
(304)593-5073-anyli.me
Reg . Quarter and Paint
horses. Priced to se ll. Also
Hallingers.
(740 )446·
3413.

r

HAY&amp;
GRAIN

Ear r:orn , $3.00
(740)247·3042

Bu.,

Hay tor sale: Square and
round
bales.
Delano
Jackson Farm, .304-675 1743.
Hay- · 1st &amp;. 2nd cunings,
square bales. ~ st cutting$1.25/bale ; 2nd cutting·
S2.00/bale. Call 740-2561995
·Round bales for sale,
$5.00 a bale, (740)992·
2067

AIJTOS •
FOR SALE
$5001 Honda's, Che\ly 's,
Jeep's,
Ect.
Police
Impounds! Ca rs from $500
for li stings 800-391·5227
EXT 3901
03 Mitsu bi shi Lancer. 02
18,000
Rally Edition.
miles, auto, $6,200 080.
(740)256· 1618
or
(740)256-6200
1981 Olds 9~. 4dr, Good
work car ca ll (304)6751284 $1 ,000
69 Dodge car, V-6 3.0 liter,
1
$600. (740)446·4426

1996 Geo Tracker Convert,
4 Wheel Dr .. 5-speed, AJC,
$3,000 (304 )773·5~33
1997 Chrysler Sebring
JX1. loaded $5.000 Call
or
(304)675-2888
(304)593·5659
2000 Neon. red , $3000; 98
Neon, $2,000; 99 Pont Gr
Prix, $4,000; 93 Ford
· Crown Vic .. S2.095; 97
Dodge Intrepid, $2,595; 96
Chry. LHS, $2,495; .97
Dodge Caravan. $2.495;
98 Ford Windstar van
$2,595: 01 Buick LeSabre,
$6.500: 97 Pont. Gr. AM
$1,995; 99 Ford Taurus
$2.995; 00 Chevy Cav
$3,695; 93 Buick 51 ,400;
95 Chevy lumina 51.195;
·97 Jeep Gr. Cherokee,
$3,995; 98 Ford Explorer,
$3.995, 9.7 Dodge 4x4 P.T
$4,295; 97 Mere. Cougar,
$2,595; 96 Ranger e)(. cab,
$2,500: 97 Ford F1SO 4x4,
$2 ,600; 96 Ford Conv. van
$2,500; 96 Dodge van .
$800 ;
92 Chev. P.U.
$2.495: 9 1 GMC P.U.,
$2.000; 96 Neon. $1.095;
95 Ford F250 3/4 ton .
$3,095 .

B &amp; D Aulo Sales
Hwy 160 N.
(740)446-6865
85 Ford Crown Victoria.
Southern car. 1 owner, like
new·. 82,000 miles, $1 ,400.
Call (740)843·2285.
96 Neon $1,500
(304)675-7074

4dt

99 Pontiac Grand Prix SE ,
V-6 , Aulo, NC, 27mpg.
Family car, ve ry clean.
runs very good, asking
$2.800 (304)675-6440
CLIFF' S USED CARS
99 Durango, 39,000 miles,
$9,900; 03 PT Cruiser,
37,000 mile s, $9,500; 00
r-(lustang, 29,000 miles,
$6,900; 98
Mustang,'
71,000 miles, $5,500; 66
Ford LTD, 390 motor,
42,000 miles, $4,550: 96
'Subaru Legacy, all wheel
$3,250.
Call
drive,
or
{740)256-9090
(740)256-6200.

North

Reach 3

••

of Pt. Pleasant

. I

Welcomes
Eve Hendricks

•

+

call 67 5-5503
508 Main St. ·Paint Pleasant, WV

American Legion Middleport
January 15th 6 :30 pm

TRUCKS
FOR SALE
1979 GMC 4x4, 1/2 ton
pickup and a 165 Massey
Ferguson diesel tractor.
(740)256' 1671.
~997 Dodge Ram 1500,
4x4. 1994 FOrd • 150,
61,000
miles.
Call
(740)446-0924.

2000 Dodge ext. cab dual·
ly diesel; flatbed, 5 sped, 4
wheel drl\le . $18,500.
(740)446-9317.
2001 Ford Ranger extra
cab, loaded, 2 wheel drive.
(740)441 -1583
or
(740)845-3230.
79 Ford truck F-150 4-WD
$2,800.00 Call (740)992·
2070

40 MOTORCYOl'S/
4WHEELERS
1996 Yamaha XT350 Dual
Sport. 76 1 miles, like new,
$2250 080. (740)4411034

2000 Honda XR So, good
co ndition,
low
hours,
$1250 080
(740)44 1·
1034
For Sa le; 2000 Honda ·
Rancher ES 4-wheele r:
350-CC. 2 WD, excellent
cof]dilion ,
$2 ,200.00.
(740)985-4395.

~ATS &amp; )\'loroRSI
.L.:.....

.

89 U-Haul bass tracker
40
horsepower
boat
mo tor, flip down trolling
mo tor. batteries, 2 fish
finders, $2.700. (740)4469317.
..,, H.\ If I "i

ro

BUILDERS IRC.

the PAIN
out of PAINTINGI

Sidi pg • New Garages
• Replacement .
Windows • Ruoring
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

youl

liNDA1 PAiniNG

BARNI;Y

i HARD 1'\EWS !!
~~ f r-----. ..---,----STICK TO TH'

FREE ESTIMATES

r -"··•

1

740-992-7599

I

I

-JJ-l.-6...11
-.---1~

..:.:.L,.L.-1

A

THE BORN LOSER
11"\o.lf\'1' t&gt;o~'T &gt;JE. &gt;J~Cllol 'lOUR.~ ri-\OW :'&gt;HQULC&gt; t &amp;G\t-.1; DOC?"" YfORS\"P.,\&lt;:.\U:.S,STOH(fE:I(.~~
I TO '10\J~l-f'o'\-.lf\F\~-f\\S·t\N"i'!

SELF· E.5TE.E ~ \!l!&gt;UE.&lt;:&gt; TODP.,'1,
1'\\&lt;:. n\00\N'\'l£ ? .

Get A Jump
on
SAVINGS

l

1\ CO IC. &amp;oo~&lt;. • WELL,
THEN, 'f'Q_U GOT WHAT YOlJ

FOR
DETENTION
AGA.I N ,
NATE ?

Unconditional
lifetime
guaran1ee. Local references
furnished .
Established 1975. Cqll 24
Hrs·.
(740 ) 4.4§·0870,
Rogers
Basement
Waterproofing.

DESERIIEt&gt;!

YOU KIDS

S.HOULDtfT BE LOOK IN G
1\T SLXH Rii.CY Tli:I\SH'

Whaley's
Auto
,
Parts .
St. Rt .681 Darwin, OH

740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Ret&lt;toc-kitlfJ l.a te Model Stthage
·and Arter .llarkel Parts

Shop

Clossifleds!

See Brent or Brian Whaley

· PEANUTS
~-!ERE'S 50METiliN6 YOU

PR06AeLY

M-Fri 8:30-5:00

••·-···-···-···-···-···-....1 Sun.
Counties
!'---~-~-.

~OULD

KNOW ..

COOKIE BREAK!

IF '(OU WANT SOMETI-IIN6.
THE TEACHER 5A'f5 TO
JUST RAISE YOUR !-lAND...

SaL 8:30-Noon
Closed

Hill 's Self
Storage

----=---..i

Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

29670 Bashan Road

Racine , Ohio
~5771

SUNSHINE CLUB

74Q-949-2217

" -.sx~~j
to 10'll30'
'

wr 'IU... IM OOIA.X:&gt; 10

Olf,(J&lt; -nE. ((WIIJ'IER::IPI.S

Nl'

"'

().)~ lV E.leJ"~ '-lWS
FIRST 10 ~ Wf..VU llf.\,1

Hours .

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7:00 AM - 8:00 PM
1/141 1 mo. pd

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hy NEA. Inc

GARFIELD
ANNA·ONE,
ANNA-TWO-,
&gt;

1

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I
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·- 1

Locust, Oak
Maple 45 Delivered
$ Slack ·
Bill

I· =~,__.._....,

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740-992-2269

1· Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per_
J)ailp mrihune The Daily Sentinel
l\egtster
month
F4o~.~::~-.. - .. ---·~74ot~:.2~~·-.. - .. - ...-.~304}..ill:~~._..
,.
•

~otnt ~leasant

. Pass
Pass

Norlb
Pass
Pass
Pass

3.

East

Pass

DbI

Pass

Family mom.
Took lhe risk
Deoerted
Back when
Unfeeling ·
Ea~y

Peruvian

As we all know, sometimes linding the.
best defense involves ~u esswork. But
occasional ly partner can tell you what to
dci - if you give him the cnance . This
deal from last year's Generali World
Indivi dual Masters Championship is a
good example.
When South, Jan Baldursson from
Iceland. continued wlth fo ur spades, .
North. Marc Bompis from France. must
have been wondering if he shOuld have
doubled tou r hearts. And il he had known
t1is partner had the heart king, he would
have doubled.
West, Canadian Fred Gitelman, Who now
lives in Las Vegas, led the diamond ace:
fou r, two, eigt1t. What should he have
done next?
What could East. Boye Brogeland from
Norway, have lor his double? The logical
answer is club. tricks . But perhaps East
had doubled purely on the auction (or
maybe he thought West's pass was fore- .
ing because they had btd·a game at unfa·
vorable vulnerability).
At the table, West shifted immediately to
a heart. Declarer won with his king.
played a heart to dummy's jack, and discarded his club loser ol'l the tleart ace.
Then, When South gave up a diamond
trick, he couldn't be stopped from rutting ·
his last diamond on the board. Declarer
lost one spade and two diamonds . Plus
590 was worth 11 ,5 matchpoints out of
12 .
It West had cashed his second diamond
trick immediately. ,East .would ha~~e sig·
n{lled with tne three, his lowest remaining
card, as a suit-preference signal tor
clubs. Then, a shift to that suit would have
deleatett the contract,' giving East-West a

-

37 Mldealt VIP
40 Reckteu
23 Ryan or
42 Help~
44 Fountain
Tilly
24 Ubra's
treala
atone
45 Pate on
25 Ski resort 46 Chills and
fever
26 MD
employera 47 Sub(secretty)
27 Mr. Mo1o
48 to11, ·
remark
(2 wda.)
•• a coin
49 DINg,_
28 Kennel
able teak
sounda
31 Mountain
50 Mountlee
51 Forty wln,kl
r.ange
near China 54 Pizarro's
33 Vote In .
qiHiflt
, favor
.
..35 Weak, aa .
22 .Adull.

an excuse

CELEaRITY CIPHER
by

Luis Campos .

Celebrity Cipller ayptogr•ms are aeatedtrom ~:~ucxauons oy t~mcus PI!JOPIB, past and l)'ftlnl
E!ld\ letter 1n 1he Clpl\sr stal"\0! Ill'~ .

Today's clue: K equals J

" XDW

UDEZW

XDJCF

TWWY

UEVTJCF,

BEEC

XDWG ' ZZ

HCI
XDJCT

KHAT

FE E I . "

JB

XE

YYWXXG
GEN'YW

CJRDEZBEC

PREVIOUS SOLUTI O~- -How Strange when an illusion dies I ~·s aslhough
you've losl achild .. .' -Judy Garland.
(c) 2005 by NEA. Inc. 1·14

BIG NATE

! .High&amp; Dry

' ~allipolis

ACROSS
·

Canyon
56 Motor
state
coach
13 Workout
57 Tune from
locale
an opera
14 Peeks near 58 "Forrest-"
Bem
59 Body
15 Sari wearer
of water
16 Loan abbr. 60 Fizzy drlnkl
17 Curtain trim 61 Sixth sense
19 Dapper
OQWN
21 Thoae
eleCted
22 Best
1 Maut dance
medlclnu
2 Foul callers
23 Relocaled . 3 Tabloids
" monster"
26 Prime
4 Flings
29 Pollullon
control org. 5 Sorority
letlers
30 No different
6 Ceiling
32 Green
..wool" on
fixture
7 Sparsely
clay sheep
8 Jr.'s exam
34 Devera or
Sheehy
9 Cllen1 mtg.
10 On gu!Jrd
36 Sole
38 Dangerous 11 High In
job
calories
18 They may
39 Pack
animals
be spltt
20 OK in any
41 Etk kin
oullel
43 -1al

top.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

ADVERTISE
YOUR .
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIED$

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Ta~e

Let me do 1t for

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ask partner to help

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HOME
)MPROVEMENIS

i

•

FRAN!_( &amp; EARNEST

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

BISSEll

,.••

10

Opening lead: t A

il}'lf &amp;

Notice of public meetIng and Information
repository for a Clean
Ohio Assistance Fund
Gran1
·
The
VIllage
.of
Pomeroy ·Is applying
for . a gran! from the
Clean Ohio Assistance
Fund for a Phase II
Environmental
Assessment of the former Midwest S1eel
properly located al
736 Main St. The application Is available for
review 81 1he Meigs
County Library, located at 216 West Main
Streel untH March 9,
2005. A public meeting
to discuss and sollcll
comments1o the gran!
application will be
held on March 8, 2005
at 1he Meigs Counly
Library localed at 216
West
Main
St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio al 11
am. Any q.u estlons
may be referred to
Mayor John Musser at
740-992-2246.
(1) 14

I

L ..

Paas

V_C, YOUNG Ill

40 MmoKCYCLES'
4 WHEll .ERS

FOR S.'\LE

••

furnace Work

Mizway Tavern
Karaoke Wed &amp; Fri
BandAMIX
Saturday 9-1

Dr. Westmoreland selling
2000 Firebi rd. V6 tol ally
redone , like new . T-Top,
69,000 miles, must see to
belie'ole, Best Reasonable
Offer Tires 2/wks old .
Dayt1me {304)773-5333
PM (304)773-6000

4
34
I

• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

Public Notice

AQJ9513

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: East-West

We do It all excepl ·

Broad Run Gun Club
Sunday, Januay 16th
12-noon
Stock Gun/Slug Match

7 6 3 2

t J 10 B
•

Top • Removal • Trim

992-6215 wv 006725
Pomeroy, onto
25 Years Local Ex erlence

•

¥ KB

Tree Service

• Room Addition• &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garag••
• Electrk:al &amp; PlUmbing
• Roofing &amp; Guttara
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• "Patio and Porch Decks

7 2

9 65

South

JONES'

CARPENTER
SERVICE

First Packs $tO.OO - All after first
Paying $100.00 a Game
$200.00 for X
$300.00 For Picture Frame
$1 ,000 Coverall
Crank it up $16,000
23 numbers left
Starburst $1,000 .00 ·
No1e: Cove ral l should have read
$1,000 in Thu~rsd.avs

•

•

4 A K 75
••

Soutb

YOUNG'S

r

I

AK Q9
J 4

-5264

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's .. i 740-992-5232
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register, or I
i
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
j
J
I
j ·
The Tri-County Marketplace!
I

I

•

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

~

Amu;

East

K 8

. Q 1 0743

experienced iri hair cutting, perms,
'
,,
color &amp; ect
,
1

tuRSALE

10 6 ·
A) 2
• s4
.Q9B 632

West

1
1

I

01 -1&gt;1-05

•
•

··-··-···-··-···-:·-···-··-··-·~·~··-···-···-···.

•

44
45
't"-"rb~rlan 48
4 t1olll
52
8 Rabbit foot 53
· 11 Seethe
55

"';(

12 Bryce

Pleasant Vall~y Hospital Private Duty is
accepting applications for nursing assistants
to provide home ca(e to clients residing in
Meigs, Mason, Gollia and Athens Counties.
Applicants should have one-year experience
,or received a nursing assistant certificate of
training or be a slate-tested . nursing
assistant .
• Excellent Pay
• Mileage Reimbursement.
• Flexible Scheduling
• Primarily Days
Applications will be accepted
9:00 om - 3:00 pm Mon-Fri. at:
lOll Viand Street, Pt. Pleasant, WV ·
or appointments can be scheduled from
9:30 am - 11:30 om at our Middleport, OH
location by calling:
304-675-7404 or 1-866 -992-6916
Applicants may also contact this number for
questions or to arrange a specific time to
·
apply .

I \I{\ I"'' 1'1'1 II""

NEA Crossword Puzzle .·

BRIDGE
Phillip
Alder

SUI'I'IJK';

: of Norta:ki China-.closed
·pattern in·' 1.995 -Never

The Daily Sentinel ~ Page B5

www.mydailysentinel.com

NURSING ASSISTANTS

BUILDING

· For Sale: 12 piece sening

'Friday, January 14, 2005
ALLEY OOP

0

•

CUSTOMER APPRECIATION DAYS

for the month of January, 2005.
We will pay 60~ a pound for
aluminum cans - also top dollar for
· catalytic converters, aluminum .
wheels, #1 &amp; #2 coppe_r, as well as,
cast alum1num &amp;alum1num sheet
If it's aluminum, we pay
top dollar for it!
Located at the corner of
St. Rt #7 and St. Rt #143
Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-5114

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Announcements

Announcements

Friday, January 14, 2005

www. mydailys~ntinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

I
I.
I

_..J

IOIEIT
BISSEll
CIIISTIICTIIN
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

GRIZZWELLS
I~LI-~.

1\IM S\IOUlP

!'E"Al'll~U.

1V.MCA.U£D

lHE

~~

740-882-ltm
Stop &amp; Compare
I

Saturday, Jan. 15, 2005
By Bernice Berta Oaol ..
Advancement and recognition in your
chosen ·fleld of endea\lor is a strong probability in the y~;~ar ahead. There Is Plenty
of room tor you on the top tier If you are
a go-getter and haye the necessary stayIng power.
·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) - ~a
boos ter of your friends today, e\len if
you"re well aware of their shortcomings.
Noll:"'ing will be gained by rattling skele·
Ions In the dose!, but lois can be gained
by dressing them up .
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-~eb . 19} Substantial accomplishments are possi·
ble today. provided you're able to work at
your own pace and use your own meth·
ads. Interference from others could get
you off course.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -Be tactu·
al and realisltc today in eslfmating the
cost of your potential social plans loday.
If you put blinders on or gel careless over
your involvement, you could quickly run
past your limit.
ARIES (~aret1 2 1 · April ,9) - There is a
chance you aould start to let down lust
when Vic1ory ' is within your sigh ts today
and thereby deny yoursen the success
you would ha"(e otherwise had. Be con·
Sistent and persistent.
TAURUS (April 20~ M ay 20) - To have
any hope of succeeding today it'll be
imperative -that you keep the big picture
in mind at. all tlrlles when it comes to
important matters. Don't overlook small
but slgniUcant factors .
GEMINI (May 21 -June 2.Q} - Wisdom
dk:tatei:l that you remain closemouth8d at
this time about all your financial dealings.
By broadcasting your intentions or posi·
tlon to outsiders, you could gel outmaneuvered or outsmarted.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22)- By piBCIng your Interests above those of your
cohorts today In sifuaUons where t:ooperatlon is required to be a team player,
you'll shoot yourselt in the toot end bring
everybody down.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)- Semantics and
grand phrases from others ·upon whom
you're depending will be of little \l&amp;lue to
you Ieday. What really eounts l·s not what
they say but what they"re prepared to pay.
VIRGO (Aug. 2.3-Sept. 22)- In social sit·
uatlans with friends ·1oday, .don 't splil
hairs over the checM. nor be a penny
pll"lcher. When the _bill comes. happily pa)l
yo ur fair share and then some if need be .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - El'lchange
views with )lOUr mate today when It
comes to perple)(ing !amity situatloos .. It
doesn't matter if his or her judgment
turns out to be better than yours, as long
as lt is right.
SCOAPIO(Oct. 2.t-Nov. 22) - tt 'may be
lmpossitNe 10 gain the goodwill o f e\lflry body you encounter today, so don't give it
a second thought. WMt realty counts.
however. is Ia wln OYer ·mose who are
Important to you .
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21 ) - A8
long as you operate along sensible lines
today. you're not apt to e~~:per i ence any
financial problems. However, If you
should depart from yOur prudent course,
the results will be negatl11e.

nAsra ...
,cr IF l
i2:1UU&gt;
ilUS'T
Fl~~

~--

SOUP TO NUTZ

r-N--:-A--:V~
.C. A:-·-::T:------,1

0
e

I
t

.·1 17 I

"I had it rough whe~ I was
voung.' one middle aged fellow
gnnned to a colleagqe . 'I had
Ia walk across the room to
change .lhe teleVISIOn---·· ~~!'

e

Como le!e the chuckle qvoled
bv l•ilmg •n the m•UltHJ words

-'-'"'--'---'---' yO\. develop ltOI?I Jl~p No .

J below.

PI1NT NUM8f1EO LETIEII 1

IN 1Hf5f IOU.• US

ft UNSCRAMBlE lfllERS 10
GH ANSWER

'='

I

SCRAM-IUS ANSWERS

Cuckoo. Grant ~ Lowly · Wrlder • WOPK lor !i
As a k1d grow1ng up. I was taught l~al the val~~ of
money was that someone exchanged WORK lor I;

ARLO &amp;JANIS

'oiiiO "A'!''!&gt; 'fODA'!''!&gt; Cll,.,IC'!&gt;
1\lZf. VO?T fAt~IIJG ~?

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, ·J anuary 14. :zoos

www.mydailysentinel.com

Manning vs. Patriots looms large in quarterfinals
Bv DAVE GoLDBERG

Associated Press

injury and Mora as the coach,
they . have reversed last season's record. They also had
wins over two AFC playoff
teams, San Die'go and Denver,
and Vick on a fast track. ml!kes
them .extremely dangerous
from anywhere on the field .
The Rams, of course, love
an artificial indoor surface,
although they would prefer
to be in their own dome.
They also have won three
straight games and believe
they are returning to the
elite status·they enjoyed for
most of the last five years .
Coach Mike Martz now says
Marc Bu Jger might be better
. than Kurt Warner was from
1999 ~0 I, when he won two
MVP awards.
The defense is coming on,
h.elped by the emergence of
tackle Jimmy Kenned)', who
played little as a first-round
draft choice last . season,
then missed seven games

rematches of regular-season
games, and all are at the same
venue as the lirst contests.

Is there any NFL playoff
game this weekend other than
the one in New gngland? ·
Indianapolis (13-4) at New
' You wouldn't know it from England (14-2)
the
buzz
surrounding
Sunday's contest in Foxboro
Manni rig threw 32 of his 49
featuring
MVP
Peyton TD passes indoors - 26 at
Manning and the Colts home in the RCA Dome and
against the Patriots, winners six more at Detroit's Ford
of two of the last three Super Field. The temperature ·in
Bowls and five straight games · Foxboro ori Sunday is likely
over the record-breaking to be in the 20s.
quarterback.
"People make a big deal of
yes, there are eight teams that." he san. "I think it just
St. Louis (9·8) at Atlanta
left in the playoffs and three depends on who plays the
(ll-5)
other games this weekend. best, whether you're at home
They are outside the spotlight, or away in a dome or in
The Rams were the first 8-8
though.
weather or whatnot."
"We just worry . about us,"
"Whatnot'' in this case team to advance in the playsays Atlanta coach Jim Mora, might be the Patri'Ols ' crowd offs, and the Vikings became
whose Falcons (11-5) are the and New England's J9-game the second the next day,
NFC 's second-seeded team winning streak in Foxboro. demonstrating how weak the
· th'IS s. eason .
and face visiting St. Louis on The Pats also are one of only NFC IS
The
Falcons also ·are a bit of
Saturday.
three teams to finish 14-2 for
a question mark, although
"Eventually we will be a two straight seasons.
blip on the radar screen. We
The crowd? Manning calls with Michael Vick back from
certainly want to make sure more pl.ays at the line of
we're on the radar screen for . scrimmage than any quarterthe right reasons· if we ever do back in the NFL. :
get above ground."
"It's always a huge advanTnie enough. If there's a tage for us playing at home,"·
second game gaining allen- Brady says. "I know going on
tion, it's n9t for the right rea· the road, it's. real. tough when
sons. It's because Randy it's loud. From an opposing
Moss pretended to moon · team's view. it's . awfully
Green Bay fans after scoring a tough when the other crowd is
touchdown last week for the very loud - and our fans are
Vikings,
who . play at loud.''
Philadelphia in Sunday's
Previous meeting: Patriots
early game.
27-24. Sept. 9.
Even Pittsburgh. -· which
had the NFL's best record at
New York Jets (11·6) at
15-1 and unveiled the most Pittsburgh (15·1)
successful rookie quarterback
ever in Ben RoethlisbergerLike the Falcons, the
has been carrying a low pro- Steelers seem content to be
file as it waits for the Jets in . ignored. And Roethlisberger,
the opening game of the I3-0 as a starting quarterback
. weekend.
111 the NFL, seems content to
Those games build up to ·. let Manmng. Brady, Daunte
late . Sunday afternoon for Culpepper, Donovan McNa~b
Coils-Patriots.
and the other lugh-prof1le
The rematch of last year's guarterbacks · take . the spot-...
AFC title game pits Manning, ~~~~h . rttl b t f
who broke Dan Marino's sin- sure ~~t s ~h~re e ~b~ioE~~s­
gle-seas.on record for to.uch- because you l~se, you /(,
down passes w1th 49. ~gamst home," he said after some
Tom Brady, who .doesn t have relaxed horseplay in the locklUND lEW
CHM
great stausucs but has two er room this week. "But 1
Super Bowl n~gs.
.
don't want to go out there and
SILVERADO SHORr lEO PICKUP
. The compansons: Manmng have too much pressure and
Air C.O.....ltt. YOflt&lt; Y-6 Po~, DIIV• tolo C.Otw
IS Marmo, who set tons stress on me."
recof4s but neyer won a Super
The Jets' Chad Pennington,
Bowl. Brady rs Joe Montana, whose sore shoulder seemed
who was so cool and collected healed in last week's overtime
and won four championships. win in Saw Diego, had a virus .
But that's a bit deceptive - infection this week. Coach
Manning is only 28 and has Herman Edwards, who had a
plenty of time to accumulate touch of the same, looked at
hardware.
that' as a potential positive.
"I still consider myself to be
"Generally when guys get
a young quarterback, believe sick they have ·good games,"
lUll lEW
CHM
it or not, even though quarter- Edwards said. "I thought one
COLOIIDO 171 414 PICKUP
back years are. kind of like time Michael Jordan got sick
dog years," he says. ''I'm in and he had, what, 100 points
l7l OllloM
llor........ Alooolo.. w...
my seventh 'year and l'in or something like that?
known as kind of an old man Maybe that's a good sign
as far as quarterbacks go in when guys get sick."
the NFL." ·
Previous meeting: Steelers
All four quarterfinals are I 7-6, Dec. I 2.

AFC

NFC

2005

2005

*""''"' ,...

with a broken foot this season.
"Jimmy has just amazed
me," Martz says . "What he
did quietly while he was
away is pretty remarkable."
Previous
meeting:
Falcons 34:17, Sept. 19.
Minnesota
(9·8)
Philadelphia (13·3)

·at

The Eagles are also a bit
out of the spotlight, in part
because they tanked their
last two games ·after clinching home-field "advantage,
and in part because they
were off last week. while
Moss shared top billing with'
Manning and the Colts.
Philadelphia also has been
downgraded because Terrell
. Owens is out with a leg
injury and won't be back
unless the Eagles make the
Super Bowl -· and rriaybe

not even then.
. But they do have Brian
Westbrook, the other playmaker, whose absence from
the playoffs last season was
probably why they lost their
third straigh,t NFC title
game.
.
Moss, whose . two . touchdown catches in Green Bay
were overshadowed by his
antics, was limping this
week on a sprained ankle
after being • hobbled for
much of the season by hamstring problems. But he will
play.
Even Minnesota owner
Red McCombs got into the
act by demanding that Fox
Sports remove play-by-play
annou ncer Joe Buck fr()m
the ielecast for denouncing
Moss' antiCs.
Fox declined.
. Previous meeting: Eagles
27-16, Sept. 20.

•••'- a,,, .... ,..., sr... ~OJ s,,,., Ail c........,

IUIDIEW
CHM
COLOUDO EITENDED CAl LS 414
D., Tlol Gtou, Y111t&lt; 175 ~p l ....o,l.... Moot lololop

· House of the Week:
A home full of pleasure, Dl

:

u ·n a

•
Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
l'ollll'J'o~ • ~liddlepm·t • ( .allipolis • .JamHJJ} 16. :!Oil;)

Ohio\ all&lt;'' l'uhlishing ( o.
J

• Devils sweep Bt,llldogs.
See Page 81

ba.ck in business
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY- Although the Ohio River threatened to
spill onto Pomeroy 's streets for the second time in one
week the water never made it out of the parking lot.
At 3 p.m. on Friday the Ohio River was at 44.2 feet in
Pomeroy before receding into this weekend, falling short
of the 46 feet required for flood stage. The nearby
Racine Locks and Dam reaches flood ~tage at 38 feet
and saw the river crest at 42 fel;!t at I p.m. on Friday.
Now the that the river is shrinking back into the confines of its banks (knock on wood) life and business is
getting back to normal in Pomeroy.
"We're grateful,'' employee of City National Bank
Jeff Martin said about the receding water. "It's such an
inconvenience for our customers ... we hate that."
The bank reopened on Thursday fo'r part of the day
but had their first ful,l day of business on Friday.
Martin and his fellow employees se.em to take the
chaos in stride.
·
"When you live along the river you never know,"
Martin added about having to move the bank's belongings to higher ground. "We've gotten our (moving) routine down pat."
Anderson's Furniture took on over a foot of water last
. ·w~·but the store is back open for business.
·-' "We're ready," Anderson saict to customers, "come
on down."
Anderson said it took iwo to three hours to empty the
store and two days to put it back in order.
Anderson also owns The Fabric Shop where employees were busy throwing out the old carpet and readying
the wood floors to be refinished.
Despite the work on the floors .and the process of
moving the merchandise back into place the store is
open with employees operating under the motto, "if we
can find it, we'll sell it." ·

Please see Pomerey, A1

BetiJ Sargent/photos , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - . . , . . , . . ,
Abov~:
Pictured are

employees of The Fabric ·
Shop in Pomeroy preparing their hardwood ftoor
to ·be refinished after
being forced to dispose
of their carpet that was· ·
ruined by flood waters.
The store was open for
business and operating
under the motto ·if you
· can find it, we' II sell it."
Right: People in Pomeroy
have learned to make
adjustments in exchange
for living close to tlle.Dhio
River. Pictured are Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Spencer, .
who were out for thei'r .
daily walk despite the
water lapping neartJy.

Meigs receives $69K
HomelanJ .Security award

White

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

.
POMEROY - Meigs County has received another $69,000
for homeland security, but Meigs Emergency Management
Director Robert Byer said Friday he doesn't know yet how it
will -or can- be spent.
.
Ohio Gov. Bob Tait announced last week the award of
$69,295 in Homeland Security fundin g to Ohio counties, totaling $32.7 ,million. The awards are part of a larger allocation of
$77.8 million in Homeland Security riloney awarded to Ohio.
Other funds will go to Urban Area Security Initiative projects
in Columbus, Cleveland. Cincinnati and Toledo, Emergency
Management Performance Grants, Metropolitan Medical

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Local doctor experiences tsunami

24 PAGES

Around Town

Editorials

Jan McNemarjphoto

Dr. Balusamy Subbiah. right, talks with his LPN, Beverly Ross, at the Medical Plaza on Ohio
160. Subbiah'spatients and co-workers became worried when they heard of the tsunami hitting the southern shores of India while he was there visiting family.

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SPORTS

Page A5 .
• Chet Adkins . .
• Martin (Marty) Frances ·
Daines
• Glenn 'Epe' Edwards
• Byrt Griff in
•. Raymond .Leach
Jennings
. • ~ulie Lynn Johnson
•. Norman Laudermilt
• Gussie Marlene
MCGuire .
• Rebecca N. Moore
• Wetzel Phillips
• William 'Bill' Powers
• Barbara Lou Smith
• George C. 'Pete'
Sommer
• Pauline Stewart
• David Chester 'Doe'

Lakers

be waiting for him. This team
has guys who can play."
Butler said when Bryant
was
injured, his teammates
from PageB1
simply competed harder.
"You felt it - guys just
he collided with former took the challenge," Butler
Cleveland guard Kedrick
Brown, causing him to miss said. "The second he went
down, everybody knew they
six games.
..
had to take their game up
James visited the Lakers' another
notch."
locker room at halftime to
Robert Traylor scored his
check on Bryant.
first four points of the game
"I just went in there to see · during a I0-3 run that gave
how he was _doing,'' James the Cavaliers a 67-61 lead.
said. "He told me that he was Atkins then got his first seven
likely going to be out for a during a I0-4 Los Angeles
little bit, but I hope he gets spurt to finish the third quarwell soon. (He's) like an idol ter that tied the game)l·all.
to me."
'"
After a basket by James
Eric Snow's 3-pointer gave Cleveland a 32-24 lead
his only points of the game - largest . of the ·game for
-gave the Cavaliers an 87- either team . - the Laker&gt;
861ead with 2:41 to play. But went on a 16-5 run to put
a basket by Odom and two them ahead 40-37, and they
free , throws by Chucky led 49-47 at halftime.
Atkins puJ l)le Lakers on top
Notes: The Lakers are the
90-87 with I :38 left.
only NBA team with a winllgauskas made a free ning record that hasn' t had a
throw to draw the Cavaliers three-game winning streak
within two points, but Atkins this season. They've won two
and Butler made two foul in a row seven times. Other
shots each to put the Lakers teams who. haven't won at
ahead 94-88 with 22.4 sec- . least three straight are
onds remaining.
Portland (15-19), New Jersey
Mclnni s and 1ames . made (12·23 ), Charlotte (8·23 ),
3-pointers to move the Atlanta (6-26) and New ·
Cavaliers within one point Orleans (4-30) .... The Lakers
with 9.8 seconds to go. Butler have beaten the Cavaliers
made a foul shot before four straight times and have
James missed a 3-pointer that won J0 of the last II games
could have given Cleveland between the teams.
the ·lead.
.
Luke
Cavaliers
rookie
' "All the shots I took Jackson underwent surgery
tonight felt pretty good -:;- Thursday for a herniated disc
in his' back. He will 'miss the
es~ially that one," James
S81d.
rest of the season, but is
Qdom 's' two free throws expected to fully recover....
with 1.8 seconds to play Mcinnis went Ill minutes
completed the scoring.
over four games without a
"We played . without the turnover before committing
best player in the league and one with five minutes left
still won," Odom said. "We'll before halftime.

Mul~rry Community Center
officially opens to unite Meigs County, Cl

OBITUARIES

lUll lEW 2005
PONTIAC VIlE 5 DOOR

.LMNG

ALONG THE RivER

• BY IAN McNEMAR

report of an earthquake that had happened
IMCNEMAR@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
off of the east coast in the Indian Ocean. .
'
.
·Everyone on the street was acting like norGALLIPOLIS - Dr. Balusamy Subbiah, a mal, though.
doctor at 'the Medical Plaza in GaUipolis, landIt was not until around I0 · a.m. that
ed in Chennai, India: at about 5 a.m. Sunday Ba)usamy and his family heard a television
Dec. 26, not knowing the devastation that the report of the tsunami that had hit the
would hit southern India in the coming hours. southern end of the country.
Balusamy, his wife, Vela. and daughter,.
"The tsunami was the talk of the people all
.
'
· Shanth.i, then traveled by taxi to their hotel
room. Alo~g the 'way, the driver mentioned a
Please see Doctor, A&amp;·
.

Please see Awerd, A1

.

.

. Ohio Valley Christian School
undertakes 'Operation Tsunami'
· GALLIPOLIS - . Ohio
Valley Christian School students are giving a free-will
offering to forward to those
who l)l'e on .1he front lines
helping victims of the Asian
tsunami disaster.
For students at OVCS, thi s
is an opportunity to help others
See Christian love in action.
Dr. Fre&amp; Williams. the
school administrator, challenged the students to think
of perhaps giving the price of

a meal in America (about $5).
No prizes· are being given for
thi &gt;. effort. It is just something . students who want to
help can do . ·
The students at the school
really want to help. They have
seen. some floodwaters around
Gallipolis and they have seen
the report&gt; on television.
"We're going to get mil·
lions for ·the rsumommy,"

Pluse He SchooL A1

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