<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="4963" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/4963?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-01T20:00:07+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="14891">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/7f3fc299ca353092cfa4f40dc883bd48.pdf</src>
      <authentication>9a64faed68dd0c109f7644258a4829b4</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="16992">
                  <text>Sentinel

· Schools wary·oftax

·Buckeye women use

changes as voters face
record levy requests, As

defense to top Indiana, Bt

AY,

en
'
'

,' • ' I

I

.

• •1

. I

,,

.

...

•

.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
I HIU \\

.J \ :'\J I

\1{\ _. .

! UU'

\0\ 1 "

i l \ ..

1'

I, .

I

'

'

'

Meigs_County Jail renov~tions now underway·

· SPORTS

STATE ROUTE 7 AND STATE ROUTE 1241N POMEROY

• To S1eelers, Belichick's a
good coach with a good
team. See Page 81

(740) 992..;9160

J.

jails and bac.k again.
BREED@MYDAILYStNTINELCOM
The Sonshine CirCle of Bethany
United Methodi st Church presented a
POMEROY - ~hile awaiting a check f9r $634 to Beegle arid county
report from the state'~ail irspector as to commissioners Thursday toward the cost
what will be required to re-open the of the needed repairs. Beegle said he is
Meigs County Jail, Sheriff Robert unsure at this time what wi"ll be required
Beegle is overseeing . minor improve- before the jail can be re-opened. He said
ments there.
a state jail inspector has looked at the
When Beegle took office earlier this I00 year-old facility, and is expected to
month, he announced plans . to . re-open issue a report outlining what is ·needed to
the jail in order to save the county money re-open it.
now spent on outside housing .costs and
Former Sheriff' Ralph Trussell closed
time ·officers are spending on the road
Please see .hill, AS
transporting prisoners to out-of-county
BY BRIAN

MON. 1/11- .. SIT~ 1/22

REED

5:00A.M. TO 8:00 1.1.
FREE CUP OF COFFEE

Greg Satterfield,
a community
service worker
for the county,
has been busy
painting cells in
the Meigs County
Jail' as part of .
Sheriff Robert
Beegle's efforts
to prepare the
facility for .
r~H&gt;pening. .
B~an

J. RHCI/plloto

Spreading sunshine
hallmark of Sonshine Circle

AND DOUGHNUT

Another project just completed was
making homemade noodles to be sold
with the proceeds to be donated to the
RACINE - Doing things for those Meigs County , Sh~riff's jail renovadiscoutaged or cau·ght in unfortumite tionJund.
situ;itioQS seems to be the hallmark' of
Several days earlier this week memthe Sonshine Circle, a group of commu- bers met at the church to turn 40 dozen
nity-rninded churchwomen who meet eggs and 175 pounds ·of flour into 320
. every month at the Bethany Church.'
bags of noodles . which were put in
They send cards to the homebound freezer bags and sold for $2 each.
and bereaved, they remember the aged
With what seems like much ease the
·and intlrm on holiday s and special women move from one fund raiser to
· occasions with gifts, and they raise . another so that their charitable work
money for special .programs of assis- remains ongoing.
They are working on a cookbook
tance and improvement projects in
Bend area communities.
'
which will be ready to sell in the fall and
' Their goal is to bring stinshine into the plans are moving forward to have a pholives of others while working in their tographer come to the church to take
Circle to make the Son of God shine family pictures. Those projects will prothrough in their' deeds of dedication.
vide money for remembering families
Their January project was one of who need a lift at Christrnastime.
"Whatever needs to be done is what
preparing fruit and goodie plates and
delivering them to 37 residents who we do," sai9 Kathryn Hart who is just
needed ·encouragement on a cold ·win- . one of about 35 women from area
On a cold winter's day 37 Bend area residents received encouragement with a visit .ter 's day. They do it twice every year. In churches included on a roster of enerl
and tray of fruit and goodies from a member of the Sonshine Circle. Here Sheila addition . members signed 47 cards of
cheer to be sent to area residents. .
Please IH Son1hi~~,A5
Theiss, left, and Mattie Beegle work on preparing those trays.
'
BY Cl:tARLENE HOEFUCH

HOEFLICI:t@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

0BITUARIFS

EE SLICE Of
WITH ANY

Page AS
• Colonel James Harlan
Jewell, 95
• Jerry Hawk, 69

INSIDE

21st

. -.

• Trustees organize.
See Page "A!; ..
• Route closed.
See ~ge AS .
• Applications accepted
for homestead exemption.
See Page A5
• Global conference aims
to help pastors' wives deal
wtth stress, expectations.
See Page A6

...

*FREE $100
GAS CARD

* 17 INCH RCA

.*FREE $50
GAS CARD

*.

TELEVISION
DVD PLAYER
.

TWO TO 81 GIVIN AWAY

*FREE $10
GAS CARD

* (llX·BOX

*

TWO ORANGE COUNTY
* CHOPPER BICYCLES *

*

Preparing for snow. ODOT salt trucks are ready.for busy weekend

"

BY BETH SERGENT

WEATHER
..'

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

l

** ,..
SPIN THE.
PEPSI PRIZE
WHEEL!!!.

**

POMEROY - Winter weather
has tlnally arrived with more forecasted to follow this week'end.
Brett Jones, County Manager for
ODOT in Meigs ,County said !tis
guys are readt and the. sail trucks
. are loaded.

BY BRIAN

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Faith•Values
Movies
Obituaries
SportsWeather
@ aoo4 Ohio

J.

Meigs County has 13 salt
trucks with 16 drivers ·and Jones
expects them to pull an all-nighter
on Saturday into Sunday morning .
Jones asks the public to be
courteous of the salt trucks by
staying back from them as they
plow and treat the roads.
HGi ve us room to, work,"
Jones said .

The trucks will be busy according to Andy Roche meteorologist
with the National Weather Service
in Charleston, W.Va. Roche predicts one to three inches of snow
for Pomeroy on Saturday if a low
pressure system heads nonh. If it
heads south Pomeroy could

REED

BREED®MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

12

POMEROY
Meigs
County·
Commissioners will seek $50,000 in
enhanaement grant funds from the Ohio
Department of Transportation for addition- ·
al work at the Buffington Island Civil War
Museum at Portland.

p ~GES

. A6
B3-4

Bs
A6

Pleese see Crenl. A5

A4

. tkt•n J. RHdj photo

A2-3

A5
-

,A,5

J.• RHCI/pllotO

Moving slowly and cjeliberately, and carefully
watching traffic on Second Street below, Brian
Nitz of Pomeroy chose a cold and windy day to
trim branches from around an electrical wire just
outside the Meigs County Courthouse..
·

B Section

A6

vlilley Publuhlna eo.

Kathryn Hart and Mattie Beegle, left. pre·sent a check for $634 to Beegle's son,'
Sheriff Robert Beegle, and Meigs County
Commissioners Jim Sheets, Jeff Thornton
and Mick Davenport. The contribution to ttie
. jail renovation fund will be used in Beegle's
efforts to make repairs needed to repair
and r~H&gt;pen the co~nws 100 year~ld jail.

www.syncro.oticonus.com

ot:1eon
r

'

!

• '

Call or come in to receive a
FREE CD or VHS Tope of
actual user comments! .

Oticon Syncro
(((Gef -ring Ernp&lt;&gt;wnd)))

JACKSON

ATHENS

232 Hul"l'n Street

27!! West Union Street

(McGraw Phy1lcal TherapJ BldJ.l

()prn Mon.- Fri . 8:30-Spm

Open Mon.- Thuri. 8:30-Spm

Open Tuei., Wed., Thurs. 8:30.5prn

Sa!uniH)' by Appointln('nl

·(740) 446-7619

(740) 186-1430

(740) 594-3571

(N;:ro~s

from Poll Office \

· With Syncro you can talk on the phone or get a
hug without worrying about the ag~ld problem
of whistling. Syncro continuously searches for
unwanted sounds and removes them before they
are' even heard.
.

..

· Please see ODor, A5

�The

FAITH =• VALUES

The Daily Senfu\el

·woRSHIP GOD ThiiS WEEK

Friday, January 21, 2005

Ftllowshio
Apostolfc

Luckiesh are ~ew pastoral team at the
Pomeroy Seventh-day Adventist Church

.

'

- A Hunger For More
There was no doubt that
Kyle and Bryana's Uncle
Breu was a strange bird. For
instance, Uncle Brett liked to
play corny jokes on his
guests·. His jokes were always
harmless since he was very
careful about causing neither
injury nor humiliation to his
victims, but they sometimes
had a point to them that was
intended to make 'you think.
On · one occasion, their
uncle had 'given Kyle ·a baseball cap with the logo of his
favorite team, the Boston Red
Sox (sorry to all you Yankee'
fans out . there). However,
when. Kyle put the cap on his
head, it was several sizes too
big, no matter how much he
tried to adjust it to make it fit
When it was brought to Uncle
Brett's attention, he .just
laughed and said that he had
gouen it that size on purpose.
"Why?" Kyle asked with a
puzzled look on his face. His
uncle
leaned
solemnly
toward's him and quietly
answered, "Just between you
and me, Kylie-boy, both our
victories and our failures are
just building blocks for more
to come 'later on. Always
remember that what God does
in the here-an.d-now has got
meaning for what's to come
afterwards. Besides that, this
hat here is a warning to us all
to not let our heads get too
big. Mind that when you have
your share of winning."
·
· It was during that particular
summer that Uncle Brett was
diagnosed with a kind of c~­
cer that was very hard to treat.
Still, he remained upbeat, full
of faith in the goodness of
God, and a shameless vendor
of bad jokes.
At the end of his nephew
and niece's .visit, he gave Kyle
a pocketknife that had been
given to him by Kyle and
Bryana's grandfather (their
uncle's father). "Wiiatever
you cut with that knife, Kyle,
make sure first it ought to be
cut~" he barked as he tasseled
Kyle's hair. He· then gave
Bryana a bright red maraca
decorated with pictures · of
cacti ·and a howling coyote.
Bryana thought it a strange
gift and waited for some sort
of explanation ... but none
came. She felt too awkward to
ask about · it so she simply
thanked her uncle, hugged
him goodbye and climbed into

Page.A2

knelt down to the h~!fdwood
tloor and sighed. Taki!lg a
deep breath, she rapped if
sharply on the floor. Her first
Pastor .
try was not hatd enough. She
swallowe'd and tried again.
Thom
Mollohan This time the maraca cracked.
She repeated the movement
and the crack turned into a ·
.
. narrow gap in the harl;l shelL
her parents' car which would She waited for the seeds that
take her and her brother home . llQI'mally make the rattling
A few months later, Uncle sound to fall out, but instead
Brett left his body behind to of seeds, a strand of three tiny
be with the Lord. Kyle and white balls attached 'to one
Bryana cried, of course, and another dangled freely from
there was no wrong in it for the hole in the maraca.
"What are these?" she murthey would miss the special
part that he had played in their . mured barely loud enough for
lives. Their mother reminded her father to hear.
them that God understands
"Those? Well. if I'm not
grief and· loss, too, and that mistaken, those are your
even Jesus had wept for his. grandmother's wedding pearls.
friends who had lost their She gave them to your uncle
loved one. They wept and the but he never married. I think he
tears brought healing. ·
· warited you to have them."
A couple of days after the
Bryana was speechless.
funeral, ·Bryana's father gave Inside a plain maraca that
an envelope to her. "It's from could' have been picked up .at
Uncle Brett. He gave it to me any tourist trap out west, was
to give to you not long before hidden a priceless treasure ...
he died, honey." Her father 'sat priceless not because of their
beside her while she opened retail value but because of
the envelope with trembling their history. She smiled at
hands. Inside the plain white her fear of "letting go" of the
envelope was a plain sheet of maraca and how she might
notebook paper. On it was never had known its special
Uncle Brett's handwriting, cqnfents had she let that fear
saying. "Bryana, I want you to master her.
take the maraca I gave you and
'In a ·similar way, God
break it. Always remember Himself has so much in store
that God · loves you and has for those who will trust Him
wonderful things in your and are willing to "let go" of
future . You and Kyle and your things that hinder a relationfolks are some of the wonder- ship with Him through Jesus
ful things that God had in store Chri st. " ...As it is written, 'No
for me. Love, Uncle Brett:"
eye has seen, no ear has
At first, Bryana was heard, no mind has conceived
bewildered. Break the last what God has prepated for
gift he'd given her? "What those who iove Him' ... " (I
does he mean, dad?" she Corinthians 2:9).
asked her father. ·
Better than pearls is the ·
" Oh, you know your surety of the presence of God
uncle," he replied with a twin- in your life. More priceless
klein his eye. "He was always than any treasure is the peace
pulling some sort of stunt."
that comes from having peace .
"But how can I break it? He with . God through Jesus
gave it to me before he died, ·Christ More eternal than the
daddy." Bryana's eyes began to heavens is the good w~ll of
blur with moisture. One by one, God towards all who will
.tears began to flow down her trust Him and will give Him
cheeks. "I don't know why he.'s ftrst place in their daily lives.
asked you to do it, Bryana,(Thom Mollohan~iws minishoney, but I know my brother tered in southern ~ liJhio (he
well eno\!gh to kno~ that he past 9-112 years and is the
had a good reason for asking it" pastor of Pathway Community
Bryami slowly stood up, Church. He and 'his wife are
walked overto the table where .the parents of four children.
the . maraca lay so she could He may be reached by email
see it. She picked it up and at pastorthom@pmhwaygalgazed at it wistfully. She .then lipolis. com).
~·I

POMEROY- Bennett and
Colleen Luckiesh are the new
pastoral team at The .Pomeroy
Seve!lth-day
Adventist
Church on Mulberry Heights
in Pomeroy.
The couple comes from
Western Kentucky and are
longtime members of the
Madison
Seventh-day
Adventist
Church · in
Madisonville, Ky.
· He is a native of Iowa and
his wife is a native of
Missouri. They met at Union
College in Lincoln Nebraska
in the summer of 1982 and
were married on the day of
graduation in 1984. Bennett
has a B.A. in theology from
Union College .located in
Lincoln, Neb. They have ·
been in the ministry of the
Seventh-day
Adventist
Church for 20 years.
· His experience includes lay
in
the
pastoral
work
Kentucky-Tenne ssee
Conference covering several
churches without a pastor, as
an interim pastor to the Sand
Hill Seventh-day Adventist
cliurch for six months.
Bennett
has
held
an
Evangelistic . Series · studying
the Word of God.
·
He ls a ~tate-tested nurse
aide employed at Arbors of
Gallipolis Rehabilitation and
Nursing Cente,r, and has been
a certified nurse aide in
Kentucky and employed by
Senior Citizen Nursing Home
located iri Madisonville, Ky

River Valley
Worship Cemer. .8 73 S. 3rd

Ave., Middlepurt, Kevin Konkle. Pas10r.
Sunday, 10:3U a.m.

r

r

r

r

r

r

r

r

r

r

r

Lihe1·ty Assembly of God

P.O ._ B(lx 4!l7 , Dlidd~tg L;m~. Mason.
W.Va.. Pa~or: Neil Tenn11111, Sunday

Services- 10:00 a.m. imd 7 p.m.'

Baptist
Carpeilter Baptist ChurCh
Sunday Schoo l '_ Y:3011tn, Prc11ching
Sen·icc

IIUOam,

26 'yurs In focal business
Roofing &amp; Buildmg Work
•

Pomeroy, OR
740-992-6215

tdatywa•

tetJ

lo

-."You' Do,_ _ _ ..... ,.,..

did..,. IDI tllllu.;uw•t

.............
.., .....
............ ..,,_
......
""'' I ,_loolllll ap

-Acts 24:16

................. &amp;'lid

J'ID'ielrora.IIIMw,..'lk

• lllllllllf ..... ..,,jlltol"

...... ,, ..... ....
~?Pill,..

.... . _

(740) 992-6451

;

.......
,
......,.....
til

. . . . .. _ . .

IH

t

I

...... -

I ulell•'J F

•

,

3

••• ,

P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769· 0683

.... ......

... - , . . . . . . . .

11'1 ra . . I • &lt;II II
IIMw ..... wC!IIIId .. . , .... . , . '

lillld_or_

..twd.,,,1'

pw:n I

IOI'II!IIallftaJw... ....., • • • -

a....,

lit llllrl&amp;• rar..,

.... , ;:''

:Get~-ub....,....,,....

_..CIIIIIICII 'C'*HIIpwj

w....
p

.._,.Dowtllatle
....
..,....., ....

.,

.

,...n·~ot

.,,.Cad's...,.

If

lt ....... ,._.

'

t

.

tput · ~ted~ ()~ 7'UJDfl4-1

'

740-!94-6333

I·Soo-4!1·91186

Blessed are the pure
in heart; fo': ihey
· shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

2 12 W. Main St .. Mini ~ t cr : _Amh nny
~forri s- Sunday School - 9:30 a.m..
Won; hip- 10:30 a·.m ., 6 p.m.. Wednesd ay
services. 7 )J. Ill . -

Holiness

Baptist Church (Southern)

~.m. ,

.13226 Chi ldre n's HCllhe Rd ., Sun d&lt;~ y
School - II u.m., Wor.;hip - l !la.m., t'-t p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

a.m .
Worship -

a.m :, 6:]0 p.m.

!0:30a.m.

Pastor Bennett and Colleen Lucklesh

f'lrst Southern Baptist
4 1872 Po meroy Pike, Pasto r: E Larnar

She dresses them up in differ·
ent outfits pertaining to the
seasons and then visits each
of the residents who like dogs ·
in thei r rooms at the nursing
centers ,
They ca n be reached at
(740)388-0389 .

· O'B ryant, Su nd11y School - 9 :3 0 11.m ..
Wol'!\hip - 8;15 a.m., 9:45am &amp; 7:00p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

C ommuni o n - 10 a.m . Sunday School 10:15 a.m .. Youth- ~U n pm Sunday, Bihl e

First Baptist Chul'\:h
P11stur: M!lfk Murrow, 6th and Palmer St.,
Miililleptll1, Sunda y Sc,hoo l - 9: I~ a.m.,
Worship - 10 : 15 a.m., 7:00 p.m .,
Wcdncsdny Service- 7:00p.m

a.m
Radpe First Baptist
Pastor: Rick Rllle, Sunday Sc hool · 9:30
a.m ., Won; hip - 10:40 a.m,. , 7:00 p.m.,
Wedne~a y Service$ - 7:00p .m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,

Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30
Wednesday Serv-ice - 7·30 p.m.

Silver Run Rapllst
' Pastor : John Swan~un , Sunday Schnol IOn .m .. Worsh ip
! !a .m .. 7:00 p .m .
.Wed nesday SerVices- 7:00p .m.

r

·r

r

r

·r

·r

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville,. Ohio ·
Located less than 30 minutes from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg

1·740-667-3156 '
"Still small'enough to care"

209 Third
Racine, OH

7 40~949-221 0
"A Home Bank for
Home People"

Hills Self Storage.

740-949-2217
Sizes available 5x1 o to 1o x 20

words. abide in you, ye shall
ask whai ye wil4 and it shall
be done unto you.
John1S:7

9:.30 a. m.,

~unday

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

S07 Mulberry Hel11hts
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769 l"'ii:'.
(740) 992·3279
~
Tol Free 1·87'M83-l433

Dradrord C hurch or C hrist
Coma o f 51. RL 124 &amp; Bradhury Rd,

28601 St. Rt. 7. Middleport . Sunday
Sc hoo l - 10 a.m .. Even ing · HIO p.m ..
Thursday Scr\'il:cs- 7:00

Service, Worship - !0:3 0 o.m., 6 p.m ..
Wednesdny Services -7 p.m .
Victory Baptist Independent
!1,2'5 N. l nd St . ~iddlepon , Pastor: Jame s
E . Kee see, Wo rship · Hla.m., 7 p.m ..
Sen1ces -7 p.m.

- II

Sen i ct: ~-

a.m .• 6

-

10

p.m.

7 p.rn

Pastor ~ Arius Hllrt. Sunda y School • 10
Worship -,'! a.m.

a.m .

.
.
C

ML Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St. , Middlepurl , Pastor:
Re \'. Gilberl Craig , Jr., Sunday School -

mmn F,·ie11dh·

Hnurii

Antiquity Raptisr
· StJnday School - 9:!0 a.m ., Won;hip -

Atmosphen.' ·

flam -8 pm

10:45 B.m.. Sunday Evening • 6:00 p.m.,
Pastor: Doli Walker

Mi[fie's 1{estaurant

Rutland FIW WUI Baplitl

Homemade Desserts Made Daily

Salem St. , Pastor : J.a"'ic Fq rtner, Sunday
School - I 0 a.tri., Evenirl g - 7 p.m .,

Hnm e Coob.d Meals ·&amp; Daily SpecUds

Open 7 days a week

•

740·992-7713

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

W~nesda~·

Sen·!ces - 7 p.m.

Youth ~

a.m., Worship Service: 10 :30 a.m .. Bible

KEBLER
BUSINESS SERVICES

618 E. Main Stn::cl• Pomeroy

(740) 992-7270

•

Rutland
Pastor· R ick Bo urne, Sunday School -

50 17, S e r vic~ time: Sunday 10:]0 'a.m ..
Wednesday 7 pm

Oa\'is . Sunday ser., ic e .
Wednesday ser.·ice . 7 p.m.

•

10

W~nhip ~

B.ethany
Pastor: John Gilmore . Sunday Sc hool - 10
a.m., WorshiP · 9 a.m ., Wednesday
Services - I0 a.m.

7 p.m.

9:30 a.m ,, Wonhip - 10:30 a.m . and 6
p.nL ,.Wedne:«dfly Service - 7:00 p.m .

228R. Sunday School ':1:30 a m. Sunday

Pil ~tor:

fellow~hi p

Wednesday 7 pm

sen.·ice 7 p.m.

C arme i-S uuon

Harris:onville Communhr C hun:h
Pastor: Theron Dur ham, Sunday - 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m., Wednesday- 7 p.m .

Carmel &amp; Bas han Rds. Ra cine, Ohio:
Pastor: John 'G ilmore. Sunday School -

Middlepor1 Community Church

Restoration Chris tian Fellowship
936~

Hooper Roa_lj , Athen s, Pastor:
Lonme Coat s. Sunday Wo rship 10:00 a m,
We dn c scl ~y :

Faith Valley Tabe~acle Cbun:h
Ba1ley Run Roa d, Pa stor: Re.v. Emmell

Sunday Schnnl 10:20- 11 a .m.. ~ e lic f
Socicty1Pricsth01ul I I :O::i- 12:00 ooon ,

East Letart
Pasto r: Bill Mar5hall Sun·day School -

Rawson, S unday

Sa c rame nt Se r.v ice 9- 10: 15 a .m ..
Homemaking meeting, I st Th urs .- 7 p.m.

9a.m ,, Worship - 10 a.m ., 1st Sunday
every mo'nth evening servi ce 7:00p .m .:

Langs"ille_Christl!ln Church
Full Gos pel , Pastor: Ruben Musser,

Evening - 7:30p.m. , Wednesday Service -

Sunday

7:30p.m.

am - 7:00 pm, Wedn esday Servil: e 7:00

· School - 10 a .m. En: ning

a.m., Worship - 9 a.m., .Tuesday S~rvices 1 p.m.

Pentecostal
-r '~. ..

., .P.enlfS~.l A-Ji~IP.-~b.' ....,...~ .~~.... h, .... ~-~,. 1
St. Rt. 124. kacine. Pasto r: William
.··
Ho back, Sunda~ S ~: hool - 10 a.m.,
Evening. - 7 p.m.. Wednesda)' Services· 7 ·
p.m .

6 p.m .,

Sef\·ice - 7 p.m.

Presbyterian

'
Hazrl Community Church
Off Rt . 124, Po ~tor : Ed sel Hart. Sunda y
School - 9 :30a.m.. Worship -. 10:30 a.m ..

Syracuse First United PreNbyterlan
Pastor: Ruben C'ro~o~. Won.hip - II a.m.

7:30p.m.
llarrlsonville PrHbyterian C hun:h
Pa stor· Rohen Crm11. Wor.hip · 9 a.m

D~ville

Community Church
Sunday Sc hool - . 9 :30 a.m .. Worship IJ

Middlepon Presbyterian _

10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.

'

St. Paul Lutheran Churth '
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy,

Pa stor: Rober Crow., Worship - 10_ a.m.

Bethel &lt;..1au~
Township Rd ., 468C , Sunday SchOOl - 9
a.m. Wors hip • 10 a .m ., Wednesday

a. m. Pastor: James P. Br.tdy
Sat . 7:00pm Contcmponuy Service

Services - 10 a.m.

Christian Union'
Christian Union
Hart ford , W.Va .• PJ~ s iOr: David Gree r,
Sunday School -

9: .~0

a.m.. Wo rship -

10:30 a. m .. 7:00 p .m ..
Services- 7:00 p.m.

Wednesday

Church of God

Methodist

Graham United Mettlodioit
Worship - 9:30 a.m. (I st &amp; 2nd Sun ), , ·
7:30 P - ~ - (3rd &amp; 4th Sun J.Wednesday
Service- 7:JO p.m.

Morse Chapel C hurch
Sun'day school - 10 a.m .. Worship -

Seventh-Day Adventist

II

Seve nth · Day Ad,·e ntist
Mu lberry Ht s. Rd .. Po me roy. Pastor

a.m., Wednesday Servi .:e • 7 p.m.
.

'

Hocklngpot1 C burth
Grand Street. Sunday School - 9:3 0 a.m ••
· Wursh!p - 10:30 a.m., Pastor Phillip Bd l

Lon g Bottom. Sund11y Sc hool · 9:30a.m .
Worship - 10: 45 a.m., 7 :1 0 p. m..

Ton:h Chun:h
Co. Rd 63 , Sunday School - 9:30a.m.,

ML Olin Communit~ Chul'\:h
Pas tor; Lawrence Bush , Sunday S~ hool 9:30 a.m.,•Evening ·(dO p.m .. Wedneday

Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Mt. Olive United Methodist
OfT 124 behind Wi!k('svillc, Pa.stor: Rev.
R11lph Spires, Sunda y School - 9:30a .m.,
, Worship - 10:30 ll.m.. 7 p.m .. Thursday

Benn ett L uckic ~ h . Saturda y Scr\' ices:
Sabbath School - 1 p.m.. Wo rship - 3 p.m.

Middleport Chun:h of lhe Nazarene
Pastor: Allen Midcap, Sunday School 9'..\0 a. m.,Wnrship · 10 :30 a.m.. ti:JO p.m ..

Meigs Cooperathe Parish

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m., Pastor ·

Norlht'J:I St Cluster, Alhed , Pa~ to r: Ja11e
Be attie, Sun day School - ~ :J O a.m .,

~lien

Reedsville Fellowship
Chun.:h of the Na:r.arene, Pastor: Jamie
Pettit, Sunday School -9:30 a.m., Wofship
- 7 p.rri.

Carleton lntrnlenominationalll Ch u-rch
Kingsbury Road, Pastor: Ruhen Vance.

Joppa
Pastor: Bob Randolph , Worship - 9:30
a.m. Sunda y School - 10: ]0 a.m.

Syracust C hurch of tbe Nuarent
Pastor Mike Adkins. Sunday School - 9 :30
a.m ., Wm_ship - 10 :30 a.m., 6 p .m.,

Sunday Sch ool · Q:30 n m .. Won hip

17Ha"" Srml' PO 11M !70
Ne~· H•,·m. W\' 1~165

J...., H. ~od&lt;noa. Uo:t,... Fu-.1 Dl""or
HridiS. A•Micr...,r..,.uor~glot r,,,.,~ll Plannin1

7:00 p.m.,

Wednc ~day

Ynut h Sen

i~·e

-

7;J10 p.m.

Sen ·ice 10:30 a.m.. Eve ning Service 6
, p.m.

WedneM!ay Servkes - 7 p.m .
LonR Bottom
Sunda'y Sehoul - 9 :30 a.m., .Wors hip ·
\ 0:30 a.m.

Pomeroy C hurC-h of the N•zartne
Pas1or: Jan La\·e nder, Sunday School 9:30 a. m.. Wo rship - 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m .. Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

'

Reeds"illfWorship - ,9:30 a .m .. Sunday School ·
1 0: .~0 a.m .. Fir sc Sunday of Month - 7:00
p.m. service

Chalet Chur.:h of the N•zareDt

Freedom Gospell\1iMion
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. ) I. Pas1or: 'Re\ . ·
Roger Wi!Uord. Sunday School - 9:30 am.
Worshtl?- 7 p m.
Whilt-'s Chapel Wesle,-an
Coolville Road, Pastor: R ~\ Phillip
- 9.JO a.m.,

Let your light so shine before
melr, that they may see ,vour
The Cart you deserve, cwse to home good works and glorify you~
36759 Rocksprings Rd .
Father in heaven . .,
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Matthew 5: /6

992-3785

ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME

School - I I a.m.. Sunda} Worship - I0:00
a.m. &amp; 7:00 p.m. Wednesd a y Se r \ ice~-

10 a.m. 2nd and 4th Sunday

ROCKSPRINGS
REHABILITIION CENTER

illlli

F.dtn Uniltd Brethren in Chri.&lt;o~
· Stat e Ro ute 1:!4. Ree ds, ille. Sunda)

· 10:45 a.m .. 7 p.m.,. Wednesday ServiceS

p .m., We dne sday S e rvic e~ - 7

WedneM!ay Servic1=s - 6 :30p.m.

Yo uth group meeting 2nd &amp; 4th Sund~y s
7 p.m.

South Btthrl Community Ch1,n~h

Services.- 7 Nil -

a .m . Evening Se rvic es- 6 :30 p .m ..

9 : 30 a. m.• Worship - 10:30 :t.m ., 7:00
p.m., Wedn esda y Sc r\ ices - 7 :00 p.m.

Silver Ridge- Pa.~ tor Lin da Dam ewood,
Sunday School - 9. a.m., Worship Servicf

E\·ening - 6 p.m., Wfdne sday Servkfs - 7
p.m.

Syracme Flnt C hurch of God
Apple and St.&gt;cond St ~.. Pastor: Rev. David
Russell, Sunda y Schoo l and Worship- 10

Tcus Cnmmumt y 364 11 Wick ham Rd.
Pastnr: Pet er Mmindale . Sunda y School -

Midcap

Worship - II a.m .. 6 :30p.m.
C hester
Pa stor: Jane Beani e. Wo rship - 9 a.m ..
Sunday St·houl - 10 a.m . , Thursday

'

Mt. Hennon United Brethren
in C hrist Church

Full GOipel Ll!lhthouse
33045 Hiland Road. Pomeroy. Pa51or: Ruy
Hunter, Sunday School · I0 a.m., b"e-nmg
7:30 p.m .. Tuesday &amp; Thu rsda} ~ 7: 30
p.m ..

Mt.,Moriah Church of God
Mile Hill Rd: . Rafine , P.a s l or ~ Ja mes
Sauerfi old, S unda~· School - 9:45 a.m.,

Ruthmd C hun:h of God
Pastor: Ron Heath , Sund!j y W?rsbi p '- 10 ~

United Brethren

Wedn~sday 7:30p.m.

Service - 1 p.m.

Nazarene

Services ; 7 p.m.

9:30am .. Won.hip 10:30

Even in g 1 , p.m ..

Syracuse MissiOn

Wedne~ay

S ~: h oo l

P'"

1411 Bridge~an St:. Syracu se. Sunday
Racine

7 pm

Anders on, Sunday Sc hoo l ·I 0 a.m ..

, ':~

Wednesday -. 7 _p.m

School- 10:00 a.m ., Worship- II a.m.

Hobson C hristia,n Fellowship C hu rc h
Hcr;chel White. StJnday S&lt;' hool 1Dam. Sunday Church .e'n·1ce - 6:30pm

School ~ ~ : 30 a.m. Worship - 9 :30a.m.
and' 7 p.m., WednesdHy - 7 p.m.,- Friday -

a.m .. W'orship - IOa.m

Lutheran

Saturday 2:00p .m.

service 7:00 pm, Bibl y St udy
Wt: dncsday ~ rv 1cc 7:00pm

MorningStar
Pastor:' John G il more , Sunday School - II

C hrist of Latter-Day Saints
St. Rt. 160, 446-624 7 t:H 446-7486 ,

&amp;

e \enm~

515 Pearl St., Middleport , Pastor: Sam

Saints

- 10

Salem C ommunity C hun:-h
Back nf Wes1 Cnlumhia, W.Va.om, lic\•in g
Road , Postm : Cha r le.~ Rnush 1304) n7~ -

a .m ..

9:30 a.m ., Worship - I0 :45 a.m .. Bible
Study Wed. 7:00p .m.

Un~ted

9:30a.m ., Worship: 10:3 0 a.m. a nJ 6 :30
p.m., Wednesday fJihle Stud y - 1 p.m.

a.m., 6
pm.

Se rv i~:es

Faith Full Got~pel Church
Long Bottom, Pasto r: Steve Reed . Sun day

9 a.m

Ser'!c c~

Wcdne~da~·- · 7 p.m

Full Gospel Chul'(h

Failh Gospel Church

Chu rTh of C hri!it
lnier~e(; tio n 7 and 114 W, E\'angclisL
Denn 1s Sarge nt, Sunday Bible Study -

,

of the _Living Sanior
Rt.338\ Antiquity, Past or: Jcs~ Murri-'&gt;,

Abundant G race R.F. 1.
92 3 S. Third St., Middlepon . PastnrTerc &lt;.a

Ridenour, Sunday School

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
. 740-667-3110

.An Income Tax &amp;
Financial Services Firm

Agape Life Center
" Fu ll -Gospel Church". Pastors John &amp;

Youth

Snow,illt

Su nday ·SchOOl -,9 :45 a .m .. Worship - I I
Du:ler' Churdl of Chri st
Sunday school 9:.10 a. m.. Sundu y worship

Youth 7 p.m.

Fe llowship, Sund ay· 6 p.m.

10 · a .m .,

'
Coolville
Uniltd Methodist Parish
Pastor: Helen Klin e, Cool ville Church,
Main: &amp; Fifth St , S unday Schoo l - 10

Study. Wedr esduy. 6:30p.m.'

Serv ice - 6:30p.m,, Youth Scrn.:e - 6:30

P-111 ·

-

Sunday School - 10 a.m.,

Hysell Run Community C hul'(h

'DJursday Bibl e Stud y and

a.m . &amp; 7 p.m .

Pastor": Keith Rader. Sunday School -· 9: 15
Wor shi p

P&lt;tstor. Hill Staten, SundaJ

Sun duy School -. 9 :30 a .m . Mo rn in g
Worship - "10 :30 a.m. &amp; 6 pm , W~.-"\\nt:lida y_

a. m .,

Our SaviUur _Lutheran Church
Wa lnut and Henry St s., .Ravenswood,
W.Va,, Pastor: David Russell, Sunday

Davls-Qulckel Agency Inc, If ye abide in Me, and MY
Fu ll line of
Insurance words abide in you, ye shall
Products+ ask what ye will, and it shall
Financial
be done unto you.
·services
AGENCIES Inc.
John 15:7
Bill Quickel
992-6677

7411-992-6128

New Life Viclury Ct nter
377] Georges C reek Road. Ga ll i)XIh ~. OH

9 a.m., Wors-hip - · 10 a.m .. 6:.'0 p.m.
Wednesdoy Services- 7 p.m.

light sp shine before
that they may see
good works and glo[ify
Father in heaven."
Matthew 5: t6

Middleport, OH

Ash St reet Churc h
St ., Middlcpun -Po stor: Greg Scars

Bible Study: Monda)· 7:00pm

Service · 7:30p.m.

your

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEEs

A ~h

p.m.

9:30a.m ., Worship - 10:45 a.m.

(740) 992-6472
Fax {740i 992·7406

Pomeroy
Pa stor : Urian Dunham, Worship - 9:3 0

Brady

Foreil Run 8aplilit

Michael L. CriJes
Director of FamUy &amp;
Community Services
Ov.crbrook
Rehabilitation Ctr.
"A Celebration of Life"

Worshi p - 7 p.m.. Wcd ne~;&lt;l~ y Sen.' IC'&lt;' - 7
p.m .

Hickor}' Hills Church of C hrist
E\·angel ist Mik e M.oorc, Sunday St hbo l ·

lbrtford C hurch of Christ in
Faith Bapclst Churth
Railroad St .. Mason. Sun day ~ c hool

Youth ~roup 6 pm , Wednc~ da~' : Power in
Prayer , and B1ble St udy · 7 pm

Pastor: Pete Shaffer. Sunday School - 10
~;~ . m .. Worship - I I a.m .. Wednesday 7·

- IO:JOo.m.

St. Rt 14J just off RL 7, Pastor: Rev.
James R ~ Acree. Sr., StJnday Unified

Pearl C hapel
Sunday School - 9 &lt;~ : m .. Worship •_ I0 a.m.

St. John Lutheran Chul'\:h
P1ne liro~· e, Worship · 9:00a.m., Sunday
Schonl • 10:00 a.m. Pastor : Ja mes P.

Reeds"ill,e C hurch ol C hrist
Pastor: Philip Stum1 . S unday .S~.: hvol : ':I :JO

Old Bethel Fm- Will Bap1l111 Church

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

.,

Bub J.· Werry.

Wor§hip - 10:30 a.m.,

.Wednesday Bible S_tudy - 6:00p.m.

r

190 N. Second St.

&lt;~ . m .•

p.m., Wednesday Scrvice5 · 7:(10 p.m.

a .m ., Wors hip

333 Page Street
Middleoort~OH

Cmnmuniun - 10:30
Minister

au d

9 :45

Bethlehem Baptist C hurth
Grca l Bend, Ruute 124 , R11cint!, O H,
Pastor : Danid Mecea, Sunday Scht iOI -

Clifton lilbernacle t:hun-h
Clifton . W'Va.. · Sunda y School - HJ il.nl

Sulem Center
Pastor: William K. Marshall, Sunday
School- 10:15 a·.m .. Wq rship - 9:15a.m .,

Tht C hurch or Jesus

Wor~h ip

Bill Amhe rgcr. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wo rship - 8:00 a. m ~ IO:JO a ,m ., 7:00

p.m .,

Karen Dav is. SuJ!day
Worship: 10 am , Evenin g Wurship: 6 pm,

9:30a.m .. Worship - 10:30 a.m .. Thursday
Services- 7 p.m.

p.m .. .
'

Pastor: Rev. Larry Leri'J!ey; Sunday School
- 9: 30a.m., Worship - 10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m ..

Rutla nd C hurch or Christ
· Su nday Schoo l - 9 :30 a .m.,

Mt. Union B1ptist
Pastor : Da vid Wiseman, Sunday Schoo l-

a .m .. E ve ning - 6 :30
Wedne~a y Services - 6:30p .m.

As ~ istant P&lt;~ s tor:

p.rn .. Sunday Eve. 7:00 p.m.,

Wednesd~y

Minister: r&gt;oug Sha mblin . Youth Min i$ter:

.

r

· 10:45

Latter~Day

Worship- _llUO a.m.

Wedn esda y Se p tee s- 7 p.m.

Patt y Wade, 603 Second Av e. Mason. 773-

Laurel ClifT Flft Methodist t:hul'(h
Pa stllr: Glenn Rowe, Sunday s'chool -

Minister: Tum Run yon, 3955 8 Bradbury
Road, Middlepon , Sunday s~·hoo l - 9 ::-0

N

a.m., _Worship - 10 a.m.

Study Wcrlnesdny 7 pm
Bradbury C hurch o(Chrisl

2nJ A\'e .. Middl epon. 1-' t~stor ·
Mike Fore ma n .
Paslnr· Em entu s
Lil wre ncc Fo reman. Wo rship- 10:00 am

Bethel Worshlp'Crnrer

Pine Grove Bible Holi1Jess Chun:h

75 Pearl St.. Middlepon . Pas10r: Rick
Bo urm: , Sunduy School - 10 a.m. Worship

Tuppers Plain Church ofChrlsl
In strumenta l, Wors hip Seryicc · 9-_a.m.,

Rej oicing Life C hUrch
~00

Che ste r School , Pa sto r· Rob Ba rbe r.

Rotk Springs

112 mi k ' uiT ~t- 325, Pastor: Rt'~'. O' Dell

Pomeroy. H ar ri~ o nvill e' Rd . 1Rt.l43).
Roger Wlllson, Sunday School -

Church
Wuyne R. Jewe ll. Sunday Servtce6:00p. m., Wednesday " (d)O p.m

Minersville
Pnstor: Hob Robin son, Sunday SChool - !J

a.m., SuncJay School- 10: ]5 a.m.

Sun day
wnrship -7 p.m.. Wednesday
· prayer meeling- 7 f&gt;.m.

Wesleyan Blhl e Holiness Chul'(b

Pa~tor :

p.m ..

Pa.~ tm :

p.m.

!lost of Sharon Ho!i~teS~S Chui-ch
Leading C~ck Rd., Rutland, Pastor: Re\· .
Dewey King, S~nd&lt;~ y school- 9:3'0 a.'m.,

Zion Church of Christ

9:30 a.m .. Wo rship - 10:30 a.m ., ' 7:00
p.m .. Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

7JO

~ . m ..

Sti11ers11illt Community Apostolic ·

• Community of Christ
Portland-Racine- Rd .. Pastor: Jim Proflil1 ,
Su nday School - ~ : JU a.m .. Worsh1p :
10:]0 a.m.. Wed nesday Se rv i fe~ - 7·00

a.m .. Wo rship · II :00 a.m.

10: 30

Wedne~Jay_Scrvlct: ·7:30 p.m.

Worship - II a.m .. 7:00 p.m., Wednesday

Manley,
10 :30

Wm ~hi p

Worsh1p - 9 a.m.

~ : 30

Wed nesday Serv ice s - 7 p.m.

Rtarwallnw Ridge Church nfChrist
Paswr :Bruce Terry. Sunday Sch ()(ll -9:30

Cah ·ary Rihle Church
Po meroy P1kc, C·~· R~ .. Pa~ t nr : Rt:\'.
Bl t~c kwoOO , Su nda y Sclux1l - 1):30 a.m ..

Oasis Cht·istlim Fellowship
(Non-denominational fellowshi p) ·
Meetin g in tht: old Ame rican Legio n Hall
So uth Fourth Avenu e. Midd leport
Pa stor: Chris St e wart 10:00 am Sunday
Other meetings in hom ~s

Pastor: Brian Dunham, Sunday School -

Danville HoJint"S!i Churth
3 1057 St11 te Rni1te 325, L·mgsvlle, Pastor:
Vic tor Roush, Sunday school - 9:30 a.m.. ·

3rd Sunday

Pasto r Rev Franklm Dick.ens, Service
Fnda)·, 7 p:m

Tuppers Pla.ins, Worsh1P: I0:00 a m,
Thur.;day Bible Stud y 7:00 p.rn _

Heath (Middlepor1)

Sunday worship - !0:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.:
Wed nesday prayer service - 7_p.m.

Keno Church of C hriNI
Wmsh ip : 9 :30 a.m ., StJndlly Sl: h011l 10 :~0 a.m., Pastor-Jellrey Wallace, I stand

Other Churches

p.m .. Wednesday Bibl e Stud y-7:00 p.m.
Faith 1-' t llows bip Crusade for Chrisl

Graet' Com munity Church
Pastor: Wayne Dunlap , Sla te Rt . 6!:! I.

Sunday Scrvi cc - 7 p.m.

Service - 7:00p .m.

6:30pm

Le ton. W.Va Rt I. P!ll&gt;tor : BruHl Ma)'·
Son day School - 9:10 a.m.• Wor~ hip - 7:00

Fumt Run
Pastor: Bob Rohinson , Sunday School - 10

Cnmmunily Church
,Pastor
Steve Tomek, Main Street.
Rutland, Sunday Worship-- 10:00, a,!ll ..

Pomtro}' Westside Church of C hris t

1-' a!rView Diblt C hurch

,

Sch ool - 9 30 a.rn .. Wur~ hip 10 :30 a .m .. CJ :.\0 p.m ., Wednesday
Services- 7 p.m.

Pasmr: Keith Rader, Sunda y School - 10
a.m .. Worship- I I a.m.

Minister:-Josh Ulni . Sunday School - 9:30
Worsh ip- !U5 , IO: JO a.m., 7 p .m ..

Wednc~day

We~nesthi y

Amtizin~

and Holy Eud111ri st II :00 a.m.

~ :tn.,

Pa swr Jon Brockert. Eas t Main Sr ..
Sun day Se houl - 9 :30 a.m .. Worship -,

,.....,..,-._..._Cad•••Jooa

•aww ' '» MS b'a•u, • ,_.dlclleoo u -

'

499 Rlcblaud Avenue, Athens

Enterprlst
Pasto r: Arland King, Sunday Sehoul 10 :30 a. m., Wo rship · 9 :30 a.m .. Biltl e
'
Study Wed. 7::30
' Flatwoods

Hibl ~

Wednesday St.:r&gt;'ict:s - CdO p.m.

If ye abide in Me, and My

'

Sunda y S,c hoo19: 15 a.m.

Pomeroy First Baptist

,_....., .. ! ...... .

77r t.. -

Sunday School - 9:45 a.m .. Worship - II
a.m., Wednesda y Se n.·ices ~ 7 :30p . m.

Study - 1 p. m.

Serv ices 7 p.m.
Rulhand Churth ul the .' iar.are.w

· 7 pIlL

S und&lt;~y

Trinily Ctiun-h
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy, Pi'tstor Rev.
Jonatha n Nob le, Worship 10:25 a.m.,

Grace Episcopal C hun:h
326 E. MairJ Sl.. Pomeroy, Sunday School

Mini ster : Larry Brown , Worship - 9:30

a.m. Su nduy _Sc huol · 10 :]0 a.m.,

Worship · 10:]0 a.rn : WeJnr ~u.iy Ser~ ice

Pastnr: Rev _Herhfn Grat e. Su nda y School
- 9:3 0 a .m.. Worship - II a.m .. 6 p.m..

Cealrwl C luster
Asbury (.Symcuse), Pastor: Bob Robin so n,

Congregational

C heshlrt Baptis t Church
Pastor: Steve little, Sunday School: 9:30

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m ., Wo~hip 10:45.a.m

29670 Bashan Rd,
Racine, OH

......

- 7:30p.m.

Episcopal ·

Service

N.utJand First Baptist C hu'rch

BaJ ...,,..,

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear
bet'bt'e God and m&lt;jn."

p.m.

Middleport C hurch of Chris t
5th and Mai n, Pa ~ t or: AI Han son , Youth

Hopt

The Daily Sentinel• Subscribe today • 992-2155

Young's Carpenter Service

1\lpperll Plalru St. Paul
Pastor · Jane Beatl ie, Su nda y School - 9
a.m., Worship - 10 a.m.. Tuesday Servi ces

7:00pm. wCdne!iclay Bihl&lt;l Study 7:00 prn,
Interim Preacher - A oyd Ross

Wednesday

•

Evt'nlng

570 Gr.mt St.. Middlepon. Sunda y schoo l
- 9:30 a.m.. Wors hip - I I a.m. and 6 p.m..
Wedncsdlty S~rvil:e - 7 p.m.

.'

r

Chnpman, Sund;t)' S(·hool · 10 a. m.,
Wnr~hip - II a. m., Wednesday Services- 1

Cal"8r}' Pilgrim Chapel
Harri sonville Ro11d . Pastor : Ch ar le ~
McKenzie; Sunday School 9:_, 0 a.m ..

e vening: 6:30 prn

Proud to be a part of your life.

r

- 9:30

am, Morning Worship: 10:30 lim, Sunday

.'

r

Ma s~

Pomen1y C hun:h QfCt'!rist

Hilbide Baptlsl Churth

r

Con. -8:45 -!J: 15 a. m.., Sun.
, a.m., Da}ly Mass - B: .lO a.m.

Assembly of God

Friday, Jan. 21
Bob Thompson preac hing .
MIDDLEPORT - Randy
GALLIPOLIS
Mike For more in formation, call Parsons of JoyFM will be
Bowling will be in concert at . 388-8075.
preac hing at I0:30a.m. war·
7p.m. at the New Life Church
ship serv ice and 6 p.m ..
evening service ' at the Ash
of God. There will be a preSunday,Jan.23
concert pi'Qgram at 6:30 p.m..
BIDWELL - Special ser- Street Church, 398 Ash
featuring The Glorybound vice, 5 p.m. , Old Bethel Street, Middlepon.
'
Quartet. Refreshments will be . Freewill Baptist Church.
served. For more information Singing by Briari and Family
Thesday, Jan. 25
call (304) 675-3538.
Connection.
Rev. Jerry
POMEROY - The Meigs
Fredrick preaching.
Area Holiness .Association
Saturday, Jan. 22
BIDWELL - Special ser- will have its monthly rally at 7
BIDWELL - Special ser- vice; 6 p.m., Springfield p.m. at the Pomeroy Nazarene
vice, 6:30p.m., Clark Chapel Baptist Church. Rev. Lucian · Church. Allen Midcap is pres·
Freewill Baptist Church. Rev. Nelson preaching.
ident of the Association.

r

Pu sttJr: Re V. Walter E. Heinz, Sat . Con.
4:45-S: ISp .m .; Mass- 5:30 p. m.. Suu . ;

Hemluc:k Gro,·e C hristian C hurch

Loop Rd ofT NC":· Li ma Rt1. Rutland ,
Services: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7•30 p.m.,.
Thurs. 7:00p.m.. Pas10r Many R. Hutton

Church Calendar

'.

Catholic
Silcred Hea11 Catholic C hurt:h
!6 1 Mulberry Ave., Po meroy, 992-S!MI.

Church of Christ
E mmanuel A(Klstolic TabernaCle IrK.

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our comm .,ity
'

Wednesday, 7:00

Wednesday 7 p.m.

Church of God or Prophn:y
U.J Whllc RJ . ofi' St . Rt. 160. Pastor: PJ .

p.m .; Youth Fri. 7: 30p.m.

Wcdne~y

r

Sa-trnd Baptist Chun:h
Ravenswood, WV, Sumby Sdtoul Hl am ·
, Mom tng worshi p l l am1 \'e ning - 7 pm,

Churth or Jesus Chri st Apostolic
VanZ1ndt &lt;lnd Ward RJ ., Pastor: Jame s
Miller, Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.•
Eve nin[i - 7:30 run

Apostoli~·

for nearly 12 years., ,
His wife is a member of
Therapy Dogs International.
She has served the community of Madisonville by bringing the · couple's Collies
named Windy and Shadow to
several nursing home centers.

A3

Meigs County's Oldest Flori st
EastMain
~
Pomeroy, Oh

W

"l11 u1 Wid ~ u t tl'loughl1 with cpecl• l eatt.•

740-992-6606

&amp; LOHSE

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES'

PHARMACY We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions

214 E. Main

992·5130
Pomeroy

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

992·2955

MY llrace is sufficient
./ for thee: for mY
strenllth is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

God so lo1•ed the world
he gave his only
lbc~g£1tfe•n son.. .
•
John 3: I(&gt;

Pomeroy

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear before
God and man."

~--------._

740.992-21144 740-992-6298

.......

Office Service &amp; Supply
137-C N, 2nd Ave,
Middleport, OH
992-6376

6nouffrr••
:firt &amp; 6afrtp

________._________________
Acts 24:

putur JJa

.,...._~"l!!'a'='_......,.

'

~

�;'

•

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992~2157

www..mydallysentlnel.cqm ·

Ohio Valley. Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene 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 grievam:es.
- · The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

VIEW

Coun
I

Jail should remain closed .
Dear Editor:

Judging from the spectacul'lf success of the end-ofthe-world series of novels,
"Left Behind" (70 million
copies ah'eady sold), much
·of the world ·is waiting for
George
- the world to end. A recent
poll shows that 17 percent of
,Piagenz
Americans think the end will
I "
come in their lifetime.
It's been a bumpy ride for
millions upon million s of bolically or metaphorically.
years. Now are "Ye all going
.Other authors put an even
. to have to get off? What different spin on the end-ofcomes next? Well , it the-world stories .
depends. According to a
Take Nico1e Hunter,
cover story in Newsweek author of the new novel ,
magazine (May 24, 2004), "Waiting for the World to
"The end won't.be pretty for End" (iUniverse, Inc., 2004).
those who are left behind. " She is unlike the evangeliBut those who "li sten up in cals who write of the end of
. time" will be taken to heav- the world, They are speaking
en in something known as . of global destruction· in
the Rapture-- from theLatin which the entire world will
word meaning to seize or be destroyed. with the excepcarry off -- when Jesus tion of "the · believers."
removes the faithful from Hunter's end of the world is
the Earth.
written in a more personal
All this is taken from the vein that many can identify
. Bible -- primarily the book with.
.
of Revelation and the letters . Her main character, Tom
of St. Paul to the early Olsen, is popular and sueChristian church.
cessful (he is head of the
Other Bible ~lievers criti- English Department and
cize the likes of Tim LaHaye basketball coach at an
~nd Jerry Jenkins, authors of Indiana high school) but he
the "Left Behind" series, for is troubled by an unending
"over-literalizing"
Bible loneliness because of a devprophecies which are, they astating secret he is hiding.
say, mean! to be taken sym- . He and his fiancee,

It took me three years to get the state to close the Meigs
County Jail and l saw on the news that Bob Beegle is going to
open it up again, even though it is a health hazard.
Beegle knows he· has the EPA and the state to deal with
before that dump he calls a jail cari open. If county commissioners let him open that dump up they, too, will have to deal
with state and EPA. He can count on that.

Friday, January 21, 2005

I

Obituaries

Alexandra. agreed on an
abortio11 during their graduate school years.
Olsen called their Vo~edding
off, leavi ng Alexandra
behind -- and leaving him
with the guilt weighing
heavy on his shoulders.
"For every serious choice
in life that we regret, we feel
we have done damage too
. great to repair," said Hunter
in an· interview, "so all .we
.can do is wait for it all to be
over."
In the end, an accident that
· no one could have foreseen
changes Olsen's life.
While this is Hunter's first
novel, she has been writing
since she was 12.
At age 13, slie wrote "The
Story of Two Gods" after the
death of a young friend. Her
story is in the form of a letter
to the boy's father.
The question that tormented her was, "!:low could a
loving. all-powerful God let
such a thing happen? Maybe
there isn't a God after all."
Gradually, however, the
clouds of bitterness and
bewilderment. began to lift
and a ray of hope shone
through. She · took up pel) .
and began to write.
"I believe in two Gods."
she wrote the boy's father.
"The God of · Lost Hope

'

MT. tLEMENS, MICH. -Colonel James Harlan Jewell,
M.D., a native of Meigs County, Ohio, passed away Tuesday,
January II , 2005 at St. Joseph's Mercy Hospital in Mount
Clemens, Michigan. He was 95 years of age.
· .
He was born November. J4, 1909 in Harrisonville, Ohio to
. the late Elisha and Angelina (Vance) Jewell and was a 1927
graduate of Harri sonvi lle High School. He joined the Citizens
· M1iltary Trammg Corps in lll'l) and later entered the Reserve
Otficers Training Corps.
. ·
He. received his undergraduate education at Oh_io University
and 1s a 1934 graduate of Case Western Reserve University
College of Medicine. He .was commissioned First· Lieutenant
in the United States Army Medical Corps on June 13, IQ34
and completed his post-graduate education in obstetrics ;md
gynecology at University Hospitals in Cleveland.
Jewell volunteered for active duty and ·entered the
United States Army Air Corps on January 10, 1940 where he
served .as Command Surgeon with the Eighth Air Force
F1ghter Command and Commander of the Base Hospital. He
was ass•gned to Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary
Forces and spent 27 mbnths in the Europea11 Theatre of
Operations at British-American Headquarters, where he was
responsible for developing the plans for air evacuation of
casualties from D-Day operations. Dr. Jewell retired from the
military with the rank of Colonel in 1969 after 35 years of
commended service.
·
Dr. and Mrs. Jewell resided in Mount Clemens, Michigan,
where he was a member of the medical staff at St. Joseph's
Mercy Hospital, serving as both Chief of Staff as well as
Chairman of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology.
He was president of the Macomb County Medical Society
in 1958, a Fellow of the American College of Obstetricians
and Gynecologists in 1952, a life member of the Michigan
State Medical Society and American Medical Association.
Dr. Jewell was a member of the Retired Officers Association
of the United States Air Force, Alpha Kappa Kappa Fraternity,
and the Mount Clemens HI-12 Club, and the Drew Webster
American Legion Post No. 39 in Pomeroy.
In addition to his parents, Dr. Jewell was preceded in death .
by his wife, Nellie Rowley Jewell ; son, James Robert.Jewell;
and brother, Clayton C. Jewell. He is survived by a host of
family and friends in both Ohio and Micbigan .
A memorial service will be held at the Harrisonville
Presbyterian Church, State Route 684 at State Route 143,
Harrisonville , Ohio on Saturday, January 29, 2005 at I p.m.
Interment and graveside services will follow at Wells
Cemetery, Harrisonville: In the event of inclement weather,
services will be postponed until spring.

or

is

(George Plag en z
·an
ordaihed minister and veter-

an

newsman

based

Schools wary of tax changes as voters face record levy requests

Colonel James Hartan Jewell

makes people cry and moum
.because he takes away their
most important possession -·
life. Sometimes he takes it
from th e people who are
most deserving of life . But ·
there is lio getting around
him. In a million years we
will sti ll feel his spear of
death . .
"But then there is the God
of Hope. He dwells in those
who re member -- send cards,
bring tlowers, express sympathies ... The God of Hope .
makes thi s world a better
pla~e ' Although there is
always the emptiness which
the .God of Lost Hope leaves
behind, the God of Hope
does a good job of filling
that emptiness ... "
. Let ·learned theologial)s
wring their h~nd s over the
idea of two Gods. The fact
remains their rheologies
have too often proved comfortless.
Dean Willard Sr:&gt;erry of
Harvard Divinity ' School
once· said, "If I had to make
a choice. between the
omnipotence of Qod and the
goodness of God, I would
take the goodness and let the
omnipotence go."
m

Columbus, Ohio.)

·. Jerry.Hawk .

IN MIND THAT THE

Pomeroy

DOLlAR!S DOWN,

THf DEFICIT'S UP AND
FOREIGN RELATIONS
.ARE IN DISARRAY.

D•

POMEROY - Jerry Hawk, 69, died Thursday, January 20,
2005 at his residence following an extended illness. He was
born February l, 1935 in Pomeroy, son of the late Charles
Jerome &amp; Goldie Burton Hawk. He worked for many years
for Ohio Pallet Company in Pom!!roy. Besides his parents, he
was preceded in death by his wife Geraldine Hawk, a son
Steven Paul Hawk, brothers Rollin and Gene Hawk, sister
Ze)da Jeric, brothers- in-law Ewing and Everett Hutton, Dale
Snider and Dale Faulk.
,
He is survived by:• son, Michael (Laronda) Hawk of
Pomeroy; grandchildren. Jodi, Scott, Nina, Stacy, Heather &amp;
Dylan; three great grandchildren; two sisters; Mary Jo (Tony)
Beliveau of Columbus, Mar~aret (Tom) Custer of Columbus;
brothers- in-law, Jim Custer of Columbus, Manford (Peggy)
Hu.tton of Middleport ; sister-in-law, Margie Snider of .
Pomeroy ; special nephew ; Kay Hawk; special friend, Cindy
Thomas; several nieces and nephews.
Cremation arrangements will be announced by Fisher
Funeral Home in Pomeroy ..
On-line condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.

BY ANDREW .
WELSH-HUGGI~S
.
.
.
AP STAT~HOUSE cqRRESPONDENT

COLUMBUS - As voters
face a record number of school
levies for the third time in six
months, the Department of
Education wants to make sure ·
lawmakers carefully consider
the impact of,any budget proposals .that could lead to further funding cuts for districts. ,
The departmenr's top priority
during the coming debate over
AP pboto
changing Ohio's tax system is Instructional assistant Nicole Sears, center, moves children along at Hopewell Elementary
protecting' schools, said Paolo School on Tuesday as many parents drove their children to school as the Lakota Schooi·District
put .new busing rules in .place since a levy failure in November. As voters face a record number
DeM~ria, director of the depart- of school levies for the third time in six mo.nths, the Depa(tment of Education wants to make
ment s school finance office. . sure lawmakers.carefullycons.ider the impact of any budget proposals that could lead to furIn the short term, that bmls · ther funding cuts for districts.
·
down to finding. money to
replace any dollars lost election since at least 1984, mal position on elimimiting it. efforts in the Senate to revamp
because of taxes being elimi- according to records kept by
Districts on the ballot next the 'tax system.
mited, he said.
the Education Department and month are facing tough choir"What we need to do is
The department's goal is to education policy analysts.
es. Lakota schools in southwest make sure there's some stabi l-.
"make sure people stay aware
Last year, voters also faced Ohio cut.bus routes after failing ity for them in this transiof the impact of tax reform on record levy and bond requests at the bailor in November.' tion," he said Wednesday.
schools and deal with it for November and ·August Medina schools have cut $9.2
Reg&lt;\[dless of what happens
appropriately," DeMaria said. elections.
million and I02 staff positions with the tax system, however.
·Preliminary figures released
One tax ripe for elimination after voters rejected an operat- districts need more immediate
by the Secretary of State's .is a state tax on companies' · ing levy three elections in a relief, as illustrated by the
.office show that 59 districts equipment and machinery row last year.
hi gh number of school s
have placed 64 issues on the that funds local governments,
South-Western city schools returning to the ballot each
Feb. 8 ballot to raise money for including schools. Businesses in suburban Columbus will cut election, said John Brandt,
operating costs and fund con-· say the tax makes Ohio less all extracurricular activities, executive director of the Ohio
struction projects. That's ih_!! competitive with other states, including sports, and .lay off School Boards Association.
highest number for a February most of which don't have an 80 teachers and more than I00
"We want to respond to the
equivalent tax.
secretaries, custodians and bus concerns the business commuThe tax raises about $1.14 drivers if a levy that.failed in nity raises, we want the tax
November doesn't pass. ·
billion for. schools this year,
structure to be fair and foster
•
. A committee created by Gov.
Lawmakers will do their best competition ," Brandt said .
from .Page A1
Bob Taft to study school fund- to keep schools' concerns in "But the transition is very difirig agreed the tax was prob- mind, said Sen. Ron Amstutz, ficult, and we need to have our
getic and enthusiastic mem- lematic but didn' t take a for- a Wooster Republican leading revenue sources protected."
bers whose purpose is to let
the "Son" shine by their
.
deeds of doing for others.
allowing housing for ujY to mon area of the jail ·and the
Many ·have berlefited from
·five days ·- will allow local construction of a new booking
the work of these dedicated
housing for those serving· area and a visiting area just
from Page A1
Christian women in the
short-term sentences, such as outside the cell block.
Sonshine Circle . who make
DUI · offenders, and would
He said he will probably ·
contributions to Serenity the jail in 200.1, and since allow the county to temporar- work with the welding proHouse, God's NET, the that time, the · county con- ily hold men who are await- gram at Meigs High School
United Fund and other orga- tracted with other facilities , ing court appearances or to install new metal doors ·as
Middlepor\, . prison terms.
nizations, who console trau- particularly
are required, and will use
Beegle said he is aware of those . ordered to perform
matized children with gifts of Washington County Jail and
stuffed animals to hug, anq . Southeastern Ohio Regional some needed repairs, such as community serVice work as·
who touch the lives and Jail, to house local inmates. the repair of some cell bars part of their criminal senhearts of many elderly, .dis- Beegle has said re-opening that were damaged from years · tences in completing as much
couraged and disadvantaged the local five-man jail as a of water exposure, installation of -the work as possible, in
with their remembrances.
temporary holding facility of new lighting in the com- order to save on costs.

Sonshine

Jail

.

ODOT
· from Page A1

Local Briefs·

© 2005 by

NEA, Inc.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor 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 shou!d be in good t~ste,
addressing issues, noipersonalities. ·
·

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction

Polley

Our mBin concern in all stories is to be
acet.Jrate. If you know of an error· in a
story, call the newsroom at (740) -992·

2156.

'

&lt;usPs 213·960)
Ohio Valley

Publishing Co.

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 11 t Court Street,
Pomeroy. Ohio. Second-class posrage

paid at Pomeroy.

Our main· number Ia
(740) 992-2156.

O,pa..-nt extensions ara:

News
EdHor: Chartene Hoeflich, Ext 12
Reporltr: Brian Reeo. Ext 14
Reporter: Beth Sergenl, Ext 13

Member: The Associated Press and the
Onio Newsp·aper Association.
Poetm11ter: Send address corrections
to The Dally Sentinel, 111 .COUrt Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio •5759.

Subacrlptlon

Rates

By carrier or motor route
One month .. . .........'9.57
One year . . ..........'114.40

Dally ..................50'

Advertising
Outalde s.IH: Dave Harris, Ext..15
Outalde Sales: Brenda Davis. E•116
CIHI./Ctrc.: Judy Clarlc, Ext. 10

Circulation
District Mgr.: Jason Patterson , 'Ext. 17

General Manager
Chartone Hoenicll , Ext 12

-:

e....."'

newsOmydaUysentinel.com

WNW.mydsilysentinel.com

•

I

Senior Clllzen rates

one month .. ..........'8.70
one year .............'16.70
Subecribers shouk:t remit in advance
&lt;Ired to tho Daily-· No SIJboalption by maw permitted in areas where
home aorrier service is avdable.

Mall Subscription

.tn1tde Melg• Counly
13Weeks . : . . , ........'30. 15
26 Weeks ............ .'60.00
52 Weeks ............ '118.80
Outalde Meigs Counly
13 Weeks . ........... '50 .05

26 Weeks .. : . . .......'11JO.io
52 Weeks ....•....... '200.20

\

The meaning cfjan. 30
· It isn't oft!!n that we are
treated to the spectacle of
some group doing its level
~st to prevent an election
from happening. Most political activists, whatever their
particular stripe, prefer to
give lip service to the concept of elections, and confine their criticisms of the
process to charges o(fraud,
~tc. But the . terrorists who'
are currently waging a
bombing campaign against
the Iraqi government's plan
to hold an election for a conStituent assembly on Jan. 30
make no bones about their
intentions: They are dead set
against the current Iraqi government, against the election
of a constituent assembly to
draft a constitution, and
determined to prevent the
election from being held at
all , by frightening the Iraqi
people into, being too scared
to vote.
Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad
Allawi, on the other hand, is
determined that the election
will take place. He concedes
that there will probably be
"some pockets" of the country in which it will be too
dangeroos to vote . But he
denies that there will be
enough ofthel]l to render the
election
fundamentally
unrepresentative, and , there-.
fore, meaningle ss.
In thi s, he has the wholehearted support of the

••

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com
"·

PLfA)f KEEP

Anna M. Barnes

...

Friday, January 21, 2005

Choices and faith

The Daily Sentinel

READER'S

PageA4

that he would not be greatly
upset if Jan: 30 turns out to
be an .undeniable disaster for
Allawi and Bush.
Much depends on how
many
Iraqis turn out to vote.
William
In the recent presidential
Rusher
election in Afghanistan , the
hijlh vuter turnout bespoke
the enthusiasm of the a.verage Afghani for the political
American government, espe- freedom such an election
cially .President Bush. Ever reflects. In Iraq, turnout ,is
since Saddam Hussei n bountl to be affected by the
turned out not to have any fear many people have of the
weapons of mass destruction terrorists' avowed intention
(or at least, n.;,t anymore), to post snipers near voting
Bush has hailed the Iibera- ·booths, bo_rnb voting location of Iraq , and its conver- tions, and so forth. But if,
sion to a free and democratic . despite their fears, su.bstan·society, as our chief objec- tial numbers of Iraqis do
tive. in going to war there. show up to cast their ballots,
·The election on Jan. 30 is a that will be dramatic testikey step in that process, and rnony to their desire for a
it absolutely must go reason, deinocratic_society.
Analysts are fond of pointably well if he is to argue
plausibly that the democrati- ing out that, while the Shiite
zation of Iraq is on track. Muslims (who number about
In domestic · political 60 percent of the populaterms, therefore, Bu sh has a tion), and the Kurds ~who
lot riding on the success of constitute perhaps another
this election. No doubt the 2'0· percent) have every reaDemocrats will publicly son to vote , the Sunni
insist that they, too, hope for Muslims. who · used to run
a happy outcome. But their the country under . Saddam
most formidable spokesman, Hussein, are sure to receive
Sen. Ted Kennedy, just a proportion of lhe votes that
recently denounced the Iraq" will leave them wiih far less
war as a "quagmire" in a influence than they used to
· speech to the Nat~onal Press enjoy. They may respond to
Club, and went on to call it this prospect by obeying the
"George Bush's Vietnam," so terrori sts' order not to &gt;JOte,
it is reasonable to assume or they may dcc itl,- to cast

their ballots and opt for such
influence as their numbers
entitl.e them 'to. In any case,
the Sunni population is concentrated in only three or
four of Iraq's 18 provinces,
and it is principally there
that turnout may be low.
!(the election .is relatively
.successful, Iraq (and the
Bush adminisiration) will
'have turned an importan't
corner. The momentum of
victory will encourage the
democratic forces in the
country, and is bound lo discourage the terrorists. After
all, they are human, too, and
failu re will surely diminish
their appetite for suicidal
feats of daring. The next steps -- ratification of the
draft constitution and election of members
of
Parliament -- will be that
much easier, and even the
most reluctant Sunnis will
gradually conclude that this,
however much they dislike
it, is the way of the world .
· Until Jan . 30, however, the
tempo of terrorist attacks
will increase to a crescendo.
' The very sound of the bombs
going off will testify to the
high stukes of this banle, and
to how very much depends ·
on victory.

(William Rusher is a
Disti11guished Fellow of the
Claremont /nstitrae f or the
Studr of State.H!lallship and
Poliiical Philo.wp!rr.)
•

the roads.
• Check weather reports
prior to departing 311(\ allow
extra travel time .for weather
and traffic delays.
• Know how your vehicle
reacts on slick roads. Frontwheel drive vehicles· generally· handle better than rear- ·
wheel drive.
• If the vehicle is equipped
with an Anti-lock. Braking
System be sur~:; to ' stomp
firmly and depress the brake

'

pedal. Stay on the brakes
without pumping them and
steer where you want the
vehicle to go. With ABS it's
normal to hear noise a(ld feel ·
the brake pedal vibrate while
applying continual pressure.
• Clear. all windows (inside
and out), head, tail, brake and
backup lights and tum signals.
• Allow ample stopping
distance from the .car ahead
of your vehicle. Stopping ·
time .and distance increases

greatly on wet and slippery
surfaces.
• Stay alert for black ice
and other . slippery road Sl}rfaces on bridges.
• If severe weather is possible it's · best to stay off the
roads. If you must leave be
sure to advise those at your
destination of a departure time,
anticipated arrival time. aod ·
the planned travel route. Also
provide a cell phone number in
ease they' need to contact you.

receive freezing rain or a
mix. Either way both scenar~
Hocking, State Route ios create slick conditions.
Trustees organize · to124'Little
Although driving
in
back to State Route 144.
. treacherous weather is not
TUPPERS PLAINS - ·
Roger Ritchie was elected Purchase dog tags · recommend~:d there are some
tips from the .Ohio lnsuranc~
president of the Orange
POMEROY
Nancy Institute that you can use
Township [3oard of Township
Trustees, and John Rankin Parker Grueser, Meigs County should you find yourself on
was elected vice president Auditor, would like to remind
when the board held its orga- Meigs County residents that
nizational meeting on Jan. 12. the deadline to purchase 2005
funds awarded through Swisher, Director of the
' Wilbur Robinson . is the dog tags will be•Monday,Jan.
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
ODOT would be use~ to pur- Department of Job and Family
31 t. After Jan. 31 an additionthird trustee .
446-4524 . '
.
chase additional display Services, to join the County
Regular meetings will be al penalty fee will be charged.
from PageA1
Dog licenses may be purheld at 7:30 p.m. on the first
materials and display cases, Commissioners Association
Tuesday of each month at the chased at the Meigs County
and pay for a mural to be cre- ofOhio, at a cost of $250.
home of the clerk, Osie Follrod. auditors off ice during the
~ ·Tabled a request . fronl
Commissioners approved a ated on one of the museum
hours of 8:30 a.m. to 4:30
p.m.; or from Tim Lawrence, ·resolution Thursday after- room's wall. at an estimated Triplett to vacate Ski Run ·
. Reports B&amp;E
noon to apply for the grant, cost of $36,000 for all of the Road in Orange Township,
Meigs County Dog Warden.
Commissioner Jeff Thornton remaining items.. The balance pending. the . receipt of easeMIDDLEPORT
said the grant, if awarded, of a $50,000 grant would be ments between two land·
· RA.CtNG STRIPES (PGI
Applications
Middleport Police Department
1
· will be ·used .to complete the used for operating expenses. owners on the road.
is investigating a breaking and
accepted
for
renovation of a classroom
·"The state has begun to pro• Recessed the . meeting
entering at the Manley
Recycling Center, 532 Mill St. ,
homestead
mote the Buffington Island until ll a.m .. on Friday for
spac~ in the former Portland
Police Chief Bruce . Swift
Elementary School for u.se as site with road signs imd other · payment of bills as submitted
exemption
reported Thursday that Roger
a museum recognizing Ohio's efforts, and it's irnportantthat by the county auditor.
Manley, Jr. reported that the
something be created for visiAlso
present
were
POMEROY - Nancy Parl&lt;er
center had been broken into. Grueser, Meigs County Auditor, only Civil War battle site.
Mick
Commissioners , have tors to see once they jliTive Commissioners .
Reporting Officer
Ben is currently accepting applicaDavenport and Jim Sheets
already spent $20,000 in here," Thornton said.
Davidson found entry had
In addition to funds se! .a~ide and Clerk Gloria Kloes.
been made by breaking a tions for the Homestead Real Community Development
window on the· South Fifth Estate Tax Exemption Program. Block Grant funds on ·the by · the commissioners, the
This state-reimbursed proAve. side of the building .
pro;vides real estate tax ·museum project. Those funds · Portland ·Community Center
A black fireproof safe with gram
were used for the replace- ·orgahization raised $10,000
a gray door was removed reductions for senior citizens ment of windows in · the
the disabled .
for a new roof on the building.
from the building by individ- and
In
order
to
qualify,
a
homeOther businesS
uals using atwo-wheel dolly. owner must meet the following school building and the
Comll)issioners also: ·
installation of a security sysApproximately $800 in cash
(1) be at least 65 tem. Commissioners also set• Approved a request from
and other items were reported .guidelines:
years of age during 2005 or be
missing.
permanently ·and totally dis- aside $5,000 from the CDBG County Engineer Eugene
Anyone with information abled (2) have a total income formula award for historical Triplett to place a portion of
about the incident is asked to o( not more than $25,400 for photographs and displays for' Hanif!g Ridge Road (CR 232)
contact Swift at the police tax year 2004 (3) own and the museum room,
Eamed Income Tax Credit. You could
on a non-maintained status.
department.
·
occupy the home as the princi- · Thornton said any grant
.i ncrease your refund by up to $4,300.
• Authorized
Michael
pal place of residence as of
[Jid you knnw )'OU mil(h1 qnallry for tfw EH.rnrd IIH·f•~lll' Tax
Route closed
Jan. I, 2005. Applications are
(r&lt;'tlif'! If vou dc1, yotiA.:otJitl ~ i~mfkantly llllTNL'W yo ur rt' flll ul.
11~lt Blo~k Jtlwxy~ ~N~ you Lh&lt;' .maximum t1•hmd ycH I ,II'
also available for owners ·of
ATHENS - The Ohio manufactu~ homes with the
('J\lillc•d 1o. teuaranh·c·d ·
·
Department of Transportation qualifications being ~e SfUYU!
District
10
announced as for real estate.
Call 1.aOO·HRILOCK
or wlt!t lwb4ock .&lt;Om
Thursday that State Route
The deadline . to apply for
144, located between the junc- this program for the taX year
. far .. """" .... tion of U.S . 50 (Coolville) and 2005 will be June 6. Anyone
•lllnt
Hockingport, is closed to traf. who thinks that they may qual111 E..t Main st
..... ,..~ep~ .....
PornerO)I OH
fie because of pavement dis- ify is· asked to visit the Meigs
740-892.el74
placement resultint from a County Auditor's Office or call
slip along the Hocking River. 740-.992-2698. Office hours
II. lt,tt tc. tl&amp;l&lt; tl l~..,kll ~ """11ft l"n:..llo.ool 10 ~ ,_,,..,. . .. ~u1 d (&lt;;" •-....111'1
hr.h..l), ;J,., • h..,! M
~ II&lt;'·~ ,,,.. !. " , " .1: ro'f"l.'lo! wno• ""-' Llt~~ x1 ~ 1· fw 1t..ot. ,. h.,..._ .0.: ~IJiool.ll\11 J~~r:""~ Jl,·~• •.r~ ~l:vr"'l l
Motorists are advised to use are 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
iooW!UIIU1 7fl§ 18 "" WV ~01 · uaHIII) nH 01t
" """' h :oodr
m .. I\. -It liw t...... " '•M-: . ..,,..
; ~ : lu.R flltadl 0:., 1'\·o!'l~ lrl
the following decour: U.S. 50 Monday through Friday.
1

Grant

7

. Clll,...·ELLEM lAW OFFICE

"

'

'

llQ

�'

'

J

·

PageA6

BYTHEBEND
Global co11-ference aims to help pastors' Much·-married man's charm
~~~~A?,e~~i~.,~!~~~;~;~e;~~on!..;,.,. blinds women to his faults

. The Daily Sentinel

\,

of names reads like a who's
who
in
.- evangelical
Christianity: Osteen, Jakes,
LaHaye. , ·
But the focus of a. ministry
conference in Florida next
week isn't megachurch pastor Joel Osteen, or televange. list and filmmaker Bishop
T.D. Jakes, or best-selling
author Tim · LaHaye of "Left
Behind" fame.
Rather, it's their wives:
Victoria Osteen, Serita Jakes

Friday, January 21,

each planning to address ticial and unpaid · - that is
more than 2,000 women,.. often fraught with· unrealistic
from all 50 states and more expectations, constant demands
than 20 nations, at the Free to and even loneliness.
Soar pastors' wives confer"Most pastors' · wives just
ence .in West Palm Beach, don't feel qualified. That's
Fla. Thousands 1)1ore are really a sad situation," said
expected to watch parts of . Lois Evans of Dallas, presi· the meeting at 80 satellite dent of the Global Pastots'
locations across the nation. · Wives Network. "And· the
Organizers bill the confer- guilt that they feel can be
ence, set to begin next Thesday, immense, sirhply because
as the fu'st-ever global event to they are expected to have it
help .pastors' wives deal with a all together."

'

Community Calendar·
Public meetings
Monday, Jan. 24
POMEROY Reg11lar
meeting of the Meigs County
Li~rary Board will be held at
3 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Library.
.
Tuesday, Jan. 25
CHESHIRE - Board of
Directors of the Galtia-Meigs
Community Action Agency
will meet at 12 noon in the
Cheshire Office.

Clubs and
organizations
Friday, Jan. 28
CHESTER
Special
meeting of Shade River
Lodge 453 will be held for
the purpose of annual inspection. Dinner at 6:30 p.m.;
meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Members to take a pie.

Church events
Friday, Jan. 21
GALLIPOLIS Mike
Bow ling will be in ~oncert at

7 p.m. at the ' New Life
Church of God. There will be
a pre-concert program at 6:30
p.m.
featuring
The
Glorybound
Quartet. .
Refreshments will be served.
For more irifonnation · call
(304) 675-3538.
Saturday, Jan. 22
BIDWELL - Special service , 6:30p.m., Clark Chapel
Freewill Baptist Church. Rev.
Bob Thompson preaching.
For more information, call
388-8075 . .
"'"- Sunday, Jan. 23
BIDWELL - Special service, 5 · p.m. , . Old Bethel
Freewill Baptist Church .
Singing by Brian and Family
Connecti\)n. Rev. Jerry
Fredrick preaching.
BIDWELL - Special service. 6 p.m., . Springfield
Baptist Church. Rev. Lucia,n
Nelson preaching.
. . MIDDLEPORT - Randy
Parsons of JoyFM will be
preaching at 10:30 a.m. worship service and 6 p.m.
evening service at the Ash
Street Church, 398 Ash
Streetr Middleport.
Tuesday, Ja11. 25

POMEROY - The Meigs
Area Holiness Association
will have it~ monthly rally at
7 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Nazarene Church . Allen
Midcap is president of the
Association.

Support groups
Thursday, Jan. 27
POMEROY- The Caring
and Sharing Group will meet
at I p.m. at the Meigs Senior
Center. · Darleen Vandine.
Area· Agency on Aging caregiver advocate will speak on
what is available in. Meigs
County in the way of relief
for caregivers.

Other events
, Tuesday, Jan. 2S
POMEROY - Childhood
immunizaiion clinic ·will be
held from 9 .to II a.m. and I
to 3 p.m. at the Meigs County
Health Department. Take
child's snot records, and
bring available medical
cards·. Parent or guardian
must accompany child. ·

out it. In fact, he has yet to
DEAR ABBY: My brothmention that his "hair" is
er-in-law, "Fred," is on his
.actually a piece. I often wonfifth marriage. We know it
der if' he thinks I'm an idiot
won't be his last. Every time
for not realizing it isn't real.
he is courting his next unsus~ ,
peeling wife, my husband and
Sometimes. w~en Ralph is
Dear
in a hurry, it looks like he
I wish we could tell his new
Abby
'slapped
it on a' little crooked .
fiancee what we know about
It is those times I wish I could
Fred, but of course, we can't.
bring myself to say something
And they neyer ask.
to him about it. I don't want .
The questions we wish
my boyfriend to be embarthese nice women would ask: older, wiser ladies.)
(I) Ask how tnany times he
(7) Have you ever won- rassed by his appearance, but,
has been married. Multiple pre- dered why nothing is his at the same time, I don' t want
vious marriages . are a big red fault? The di'vorces? The to embarrass him by. saying
anything, either. I am at a loss.
flag. Don't think you are differ- bankruptcies? Think again!
(8) Does he tell you that his Please advise. - KEEPING
ent from the others. You're not.
(2) If you wonder how he accountant a4vises him to make QUIET IN NEW JERSEY . ·
DEAR QUIET: Years ago, I
affords the expensive wines, expensive purchases (that he
the five-star restaurants and can't afford) on the basis that knew a hairdresser who specialthe trips to Europe on the they're tax-deductible? Don't ized in styling hairpieces for
salary that someone in his believe everything you heitr.
men. She confided to me that her
line of work ' earns - the
We know that Fred is attrac- boss told her, ''Once they start,
answer is he can't afford it.
tive and channing. But· please they're ours for life!" A hairpiece
(3) If he wants to buy a take off the blinders before you can be a vety touchy subject, so .
house with you and asks you walk down the. aisle. My hus- it's not surprising that your
to buy it in your name alone, band and I are just glad Fred's boyfriend hasn't brought it up.
Consider this: If your slip
then add his name after you creditors have finally stopped
obtain a loan, run for the calling us because we share the was showing or your ·pantynearest exit. His credit is bad. same last name. - SORRY IN hose had a run, wouldn't you
(4) "Went to" a college and THE NORTHEAST
want someone to tell you?
"graduated from" a college
DEAR SORRY: Stop apol- The same holds true for your
are two different things. What ogizing. You have done noth- boyfriend's toupee. You don't
a shame that someone would ing to be "sorry" for. I'm sure have . to say. "Honey, your
my readers will be grateful toupee · is -crooked." Just
even lie about that.
(5) If he hasn't been able to for the reminder that before telling ·him that he might
hold a job because he was making a lifelong commit- want to recomb his hair
"smarter than" every boss he ment, it's imperative to know should be enough of a tip:off.
ever .had, don't count on hav- well with whom one is havDear Aliby is wriJJen by
ing his income in your budget. ing the pleasure.
Abigail Wm Buren, also known
(6) Are you much younger
DEAR
ABBY:
My as Jeanne Phillips, and was
than he is? Does he try to boyfriend, "Ralph," ~Years a foul.ded by her mother, Pauline
control your every move? (He toupee. We have been dating Phillips. »Hte Dear Abby at
likes the young ones because for more than three years, and www.Dew:Abby.com or P.O. Box
he can no longer fool the I have never seen him with- · 69440, lni Angeles, 01. 90069.

In Honor Of

~aht to sur~ 0\\onth

Hancock birth

Petition for Ufe 2004-2005

E--

'Chemplon - 3.80
Channlnc Shops - 8.33

Hotdllltl - 32.93
Col- 40.96
City

DG-20.&amp;&amp;
DuPont..:.. 47.23

.34

OaniMitt -110.66
a-rat Electric - 35.37
.QKNLY- 4.80
Harley DavkiHn- &amp;8.50
JPM- 37.25

Kmert - 92.'38
Krocer- 16.96
Ltd. - .23.02
NSC-35.43

,

Oak Hill Financial- 37.45
OVB-34.24
.
BBT-39.22
Peopl• - 211.91
P..,.tco - 53.55
Premier - U.18
Rockwell - '64. 73
Rocky llootl - 30.15
RD

Shell- 55.57

SBC-24.47
INn-49.97
USB-30.32
Wei-Mart -

Aaron Wolle
Adrianne Tilley

K,athleen M. Clel.and
Kathy A. Baker
Kathy Buckley

Aimee Steele

Dolores Donohue

Kaye Fick

AI Hartson - ·

Donna Brooks

Kim Betzing

Alicia Myers

Donna Crump

Kimberly Reynolds

.Aiyson Lewis
Amanda cadle
Amanda Maynard
Amanda R. Johnson

Donna little
Donna Richmond
Doris Richmond
Douglas Hunter

Kristen Caplinger
Kristen.Johnson
Kristin Barley
Laraine Lawson

Amber Perkins
Amondal Wlson

Dr. Margie Lawson
Elizabl!tl'l Lathey

la\Nrence Foreman
leona Girolami

Donald Wright

Amanda Yeager
Amber Bauerbach

Angel 0. Burns
Angel Nitz
Angela Arnold

Friday, January 21
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will drop
from I 0 early this morning to
the low for the day of 9 at.
7:00am as ~ey ris~ back to ·
20 late mornmg. Sk1es w11I be
mostly ·sunny to mostly
cloudy with 5 to 1-0 MPH
winds from the northeast.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will rise from
22 early this afternoon to 25
by 3:00pm then drop'down to
18 late afternoon. Skies will
range from sunny to mostly
sunny with 5 to lO MPH
winds from the northeast.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Temperatures ·will stay near
14. Skies will be partly
cloudy to cloudy with 5 MPH
winds from the northeast
tumi11g from the east as.the
evening progresses.
Overn1ght (1-6 a.m.)
It's going to be a cloudy
overnight. Look for a mix of
rain and wet. snow. The snow
should start by 2:00am. Total
accumulations for the day

53.37

Wendy's - 37.63
WortlllnCton - 18.97 ·
Dally stock reports are tile 4

-

p.m. cloalnc quat• of tile prevl-

···v-t~ons.
~
br Smltll
Partners aiAclvast
Inc.

olllalllpilllls.

~

t

Glenda ·K. Hunt
Gloria Whaley

Marcia Elliott
Marie Jones

Barbara L Tatterson

Grace Griffin

Marlene Putman

J

.

'

•

'

Lynette Aeiker
Mary McAngus
Marilyn Epple
Marty Short
Mary Cook ·
Mary K.Voung
Mary Sheets
Mary Teaford
Mary Ellen Hunt

Helen'J. Brown

Maxine .Rose

Bob Miller
Bonnie R~~

Henry E. Cleland
Henry Hill

Melanie K.Holman
Melissa Barrett

Brenda DeQuasie
Brenda l. Davis
Brenda WoHe

Herb Elliott

Melissa Barton

Howard Cladwell

James D. Huntiey .

Bubby Arthur
Burtina Klein
C. R. King ·.
C.rissa Bailey
carl Stewart
carol M&lt;Cullough
CarolS. Brickles
carol Vineyard
C.rolee Richards

James E. Keesee
Jan Boyce
Jane Beegle
Janet F. Hill
Janet McKee
Janice Curry
Janice Young
. Jeff Miller
Jeff D. Newell

Carrie Wolfe
carroll Ann Harper

Jennifer Grady
Jennifer McKibben
· Jennifer Schaeffer

Edwards

Jenny Doai

Jessic.a A. Tabler

Melissa Brown

Melissa Herzog

Michelle Hupp
Michelle Imboden
Michelle Roush
Michelle Stahl
Mike Lawson
Mindey Durst
Mischelle Beeler
Misty Porter
Misty VanCooney
Mollie B. Johnson
Monica Baker
Myftie Cramer

Norma Torres
Nora Nitz
Norma Blevins

Josh Haning

Debra Grueser

Karen Haines

Delmar G. Pullins
Deloris Gaus

Ora Ba55
Pam Franklin
Pam Hartenbach
Pamela Ru55ell
Pat carson
Pat Moore
Patricia A Arnold
Patsy A. O'Bryant

Patty Asbeck ·
Patty Pickens
Patty Roush
Paula Brewer
Paula Dillon
Paula Justis ·
Paula Stanley
~ Carpenter
Pegsy Klein
Penny Reynolds

Peter E. Martindale

Karen Spencer
Karen Werry

Rhonda Haggy
.Rick Edwards
Robert A. Bailey
Roberta Pauley
Rodney Wooten
Rodney Wright
Robert Richmond
Robert l. Richmond
Roger Epple
Roger Partlow

Rose Ashworth

Samantha Tilley

Sandie VanVranken
Sara Harris
Sara Mansfield
Sarah Grueser
Scott Bauerbach
Serena Diehi-Williams
Shane Donohue

Sheena Morris

Sheila M.Partlow
Shelley Rutter
Shelly Languell
Sherri L Grad\&lt;
Sherry Riffle
Stacey Hilton

Stacey Mills

Tamara Bachner
Tami Putman
Tammi lavender

Tammy Cowdery
Tammy Fry
Tammy K. Chapman
Tammy McClellan
Tammy S. Klein
Tammy Staats

TammyWoije
Tara Norman

Polly Curtis
Rachel Blackwood

. Theresa Bell
· foffany Shaffer
Tina M.Geary
Tina SUtton

Todd Bi55elt
Tom Lowery
Trad Houdashelt

·

Travanna J. Moore
Travis Brewer
Trina Lee

Vicki l.lshton
Virginia L Cleek
Virginia Jenkins
Virginia lee
Walter Heinz

WJnda E. Shuler
WandaWoH
Wendi Chandler
Wesley S. Thoene
William Qonahue
William F. Asbeck
Wilma Mansfield

'

'

.
.•

Sponsored by Meigs County Right tq Life

4 'Sbilidaz . . . .

ls +'&amp;LiliLJ . . . . 4s'S£ili&amp;ar+ t(ll
•

"

·Bl
'I

•

Friday, January 21, 2005 .

Prep Schedule
Today's Games
Boys Basketball

. Jackson at Gallia Academy
Meigs at Nelsonville- York ·
Trimble al Eastern
·
Southern at Waterford
South Gallla at Ironton St. Joe
Ohio Valley Christian at Grace
River Valley at Coal Grove
Girts Basketball

Grace at Ohio Valley Christian
Saturday's Games
Boys Basketball
Southern a1 M~igs
·

Ohio Valley Ch r. at Wood Counly
Marietta at Gallia Academy
Girls Basketball

Gallia Academy at River Valley
South Gallia at Coal Grove
Ohio Valley Ctlr. at Wood County
, Monday's Ga~ell
Girls Basketball

Ironton at Gallia Academy
Eastern at Miller
Southern at Trimble
Sciotoville at' South Gallla
Fairland at Ohio Valley Christian
River Valley at Athens

Wellston
knocks off
.Marauders
WELLSTON -Wellston
held Meigs to ll points in
the second half to overcome
the Marauders, 51-46, in
Tri- Valley
Conference
0 h i 0
Division
high school
girls basketball
play
Thursday.
.
Meigs was
only able to
score two
· Pierce
points in the
third quarter
after leading 35-25 at halftime.
That allowed the ·Golden
Rockets to cut the Marauder
lead · to one going into the
fourth.
In the fourth quarter,
Wellston went 7 ~ for-9· from ·
the free-throw line to sneak
past the Marauders for the
win.
' .
Meigs (4-13, 2-7 TVC
.Ohio) was led by Sammy
Pierce with 19 points .. all of
which came in the first half.
. Amanda
Arroyo
led
Wellston (2-14, 1-8) with
1-5 points, while Whitney
Patnck added 13 points and
Erin Sturgill II.
Meigs isn't scheduled to
play again until Jan. 31
when the Marauder~ travel
to Southern.

ATHENS - Ohio head
football coach Frank Solich
has been elevated to the
position of head coach of
the Aina squad at the 2005
Hula Bowl Maui All-Star
Classic, the game's committee, announced Thursday.
The move comes follow ing the withdrawal from the
game by Georgia head
coach Mark Riehl earlier
this week.
Former
Iowa
coach
Hayden Fry. a member of
the sel'e'ction committee,
has now been added to the
staff.
"It has been a fun week so
far," Solich said {lf his four
days on Maui. "I have been
working with Chris Hatcher
(Valdosta State) as the
offensive coordinator and
Northern
Illinois'
Joe
Novak as the defen sive
coordinator. We are simply
looking forward · to the
game now: ·
The Hula Bowl will be
held 7 p.m. (EST) Saturday
at War Memorial Stadium
on the island of Maui. ,The
59th annual classic will be
televised nationally by
ESPN.

Stephanie Brewer

Stephanie Cleland
. SuAnn Powell
Sue Adkins

Tracy ~•If

Prep Scoreboard, Pag!l 82
NFL playoff picks, Page 86

Ohio's Solich .
named head
coach at
Hula Bowl

Shannon M. Taylor
Sharon Jewell ·

Tessie Henry

Jim Clifford, Jr.

loy Padgett
Joyce Burke
Juanita Griffith
Juanita Grueser
Judy Garrett
Judy Miller
Julee Athey
Julie Spaun
June Epple
June Mar&gt;hall
Justin Gilkey

Rhea Fa~h Hayman
Rhonda Cullums
Rhonda Foster

Nancy Thoene

Jim Moore
John Bentx

Cynthia Aeilter
Cynthia D. King
Dale Colburn
Darlene J. Bailey
Darrick StClair
o..,. Rutter
David Cox
David Stump
Debbie Hal
Debbie McNeil
Deborah Mohler

Rev. Glenn RoWe

Teresa K.Blackwood

Cedric McConnell

John Brogan, Sr.
John Dean
Josefina Myers
Joseph D. Marcinko
Joseph K. McCall
Josh Ashley

Retha Day

Nadine Hudson

Charles Eggers
Charlotte WamsJey

Chasidi Brewer . ·
Chasity M.' Rose .
Chelsea Ray
Christi Bartimus
Christi Deemer
Christi Lisle

·

Greta carr
Grover C. Sal5er. Jr.
Guy W. Harper
Harold Cook
Heather Collins
Helen Grace Ruschel

lisa Minshell ·

Blake Arnott

catina Werry

,l

Gordon Randolph

Remi Franckowiak
Renee Fish
·

Sandy Evans

Audelle McCain
Barbara Flaisig

Gary Griffith
Gladys Cum mini!'

Randy Bing
Randy Birchfield

Rosemarie Singleton
Roxie A. Marcinko
Russell Carson

Lois Lake
Lois Sterrett
loretta Stover

catherine A. Elliott

..
$UbiCI1be today • ~2-2155 ',,
www.m,dal~l.com '

'

Linda Vaninwagen
Usa Heater
Lisa v. Lewis

Aloyd McClellan

Cathy

'

linda Bates
Linda.Keesee
linda Stiles
linda Teaford

Frances L Burns
Ffances Reiber
Gail Fitch

Sea Wood ,
. Becky Parsons
Belinda K. Dean
Bethany Gaul ·
Bethany Tobin
BiU Hawk

The Daiiy Sentinel

Larry Boyce
Larry Sayre

Angela Young
Angelina R. Gilkey
Anne E. Scarberry

Cindy Glate

..

Elizabeth Yeager
Eloise Watkins
Emily Miller
Eric Spencer

Kelli Ballard .

Angela Parker

· Barbara Grueser

Saturday, January 22
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
It should be a·cloudy morning. W,e are predicting light
rain. The rain should reach
0.11 inches by this morning.
Te'mperatures will climb from
37 to 44 by late this morning.
Winds will be 10 to 15 MPH
from the south turning from
the west as the morning pro·
gresses.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
It will remain cloudy. Look
for a mix of rain and wet
snow. Total accumulations for
the day should reach less than ·
an inch. Temperatures will
fall from 41 early this afternoon to 28. Winds will be 10
tp J 5 MPH from the west.

Douglas Juda
Douglas Shamblin

Evelyn Randolph
Everett Grant
Faith Varney

·. Anthony D. Grate
April Ritchhart

should reach less than an
inch. Temperatures will rise
from l9 .with today's high of
35 occurring around 6:00am.
Winds will be I0 MPH from
the s04theastturning from .the
south \IS the overnight progresses. ·

Kasi Smith

Dennis Garrett
Diana Tripp
Dick Sterrett

Aja.Biackwell

Local Stocks

Federal Mogul -

Dennie E. Hill

Anna Norman

A.E. Ruschel, Sr.

Amy DaVis
Andrea Wright
Andy Francis
Ane55 Wolfe

ACI-34.41
AEP-34.70
Akzo -41.06
AUdand Inc.- 57.60
ATAT-18.07
BLI-U.12
Bob
24;87
lloi~-- 52.99

.

. 32f!d ' '
' Ann~
. ol .
R.oe ~.Wade,

Weihe undersigned, call upon our elected offiCials to enact /awsio protect and defend
humaN life against abortion, infanticide and euthanasia. We recognize and uphold IM
unalienable righl w life as proclaimed in our nation's De.&gt;/aratio" of lndeperulence.

•
GALLIPOLIS - Michele · grandparents are Mike and
and . Brett Hancock of Debbie. Lawson of Vinton,
Gallipolis are announcing the and Ben Hancock- of
birth of a son, Logan Avery Charlotte, N.C.
Hancock, on Dec. 3. 2004.
Maternal great-grandparHe weighed 7 pounds, 12 ents were the·late Richard and
ounces at birth, and was 20- Thelma Slone, antl the late
112 inches long.
Cecil and · Vema Mehl.
Maiemal grandparents are Paternal · gr~at-grandparents
Nanci Slone of . Gallipolis, are Joe and Sadie Jones of
and Michael . Mehl of Bid well, and the late Jennings
·Splendora, Texas. Paternal apd Phyllis Hancock.

Lopn Avery Hancock

fOOS

The Daily Sentinel.

INSIDE

"

~--,----AFC

Championship

Preview ~·----

· NHL -

.TO Steelers, Belichick's.a
Talks
.good coach with a good team
end,
no end
in sight
BY ALAN ROBINSON

Associated Press

• PITTSBURGH - Maybe his 5-9
record against them · allows the
Pittsburgh Steelers to talk sornewhat
less reverently about New England
Patriots defensive mastermind Bill
I;lelichick than many NFL teams do. .
Certainly, they admired his imaginative schemes that reduced NFL MVP
Peyton
Manning
into a frustrated, headshaking
shell of his
normal
touchdownmaking self
during New
England's
.
20-3 divisional-round victory.
They are ·impressed that Belichick
and defensive .coordinator Romeo
.
Crennel consistently manufacture ways
to shut down teams with a secondary so
injury-depleted · that ·Troy Brown , a
w1de receiver and kick returner, is the
nickel back.
But while Belichick is considered a
great NFL coach for winning two Super
Bowls in three seasons, the word
"genius" isn't heard in 'the Steelers'
locker room. In their minds, Belichick ·
became a much better coach when he
got much better players in New
· England than he had while going 3-8
against Pittsburgh as the Browns' coach
from 1991-95.
What Belichick does is "not overrated- he's done some great things when
it comes to coming up with great game
plans," Steelers wide receiver Antwaan
Randle El said Thursday. "I wouldn't
say it's overrated; it's just a matter of
adjusting to it. And we've adjusted all
year.''
Steelers coach Bill Cowher is flow. ery in praising the Patriots coach's style
and system, even acknowledging that
he'6 borrowed from it. But he seemed
to dismiss talk Belichick can design a
game plan so unique and daring that
rookie quarterback Ben Roethlisberger
shouldn't even bother walking o'nto the
field for Sunday night's AFC championship game at Pittsburgh. ·
To Cowher, there's nothing "mystic"
about Belichick at all.
"I ~on't think they'll show him any. AP
thing that he hasn't seen· at any point
this year," said Cowher, who is 8-4 New Engl;md Patriots coach Bill Belichick reacts in the closing moments of the AFC
against Belichick. "Maybe something divisional playoff game against the Indianapolis Colts Jan. 16 in Foxboro, Mass. The
Pittsbugh . Stealers take on the defending Super Bowl champions New England
PI. .H He Bellchkk. Bl
Patriots in the AFC championship game on Sunday.
•

Buckeye
women use
defense to
top Indiana
BY MICHAEL MAROT

•

_ After two days of negotiations, the NHL and the players' association appeared no
closer to a deal that could
save the hockey season ..
Representatives from the-·
league and union met for 4
1/2 hours Thursday in
Toronto, the second straight
day the sides held discussions
in an attempt to end the fourmonth lockout.
· The sides also held a fivehour meeting in Chicago on
Wednesday,
but
they
remained divided on the idea
of cost certainty, a concept
the players, association says
is an unacceptable salary cap.
As was the case on
Wednesday, there were
breaks in the negotiations so
each group could huddle separately.
"We've had two ~ood . days
of communication,' said Bill
Daly, the NHL's chief legal
officer. ·"But we still have
very strong philosophical differences.
"I can't say we're any closer."
Following the two-day session, the only thing tlie sides
appeared to agree on was that
they are still far apart.
"We clearly have ·some
strong differences of opinion
that we've had for some
time," said Ted Saskin, the
players ' association senior
. director. "We continue to
look for ways to .bridge the
gaps. We have not been sue, cessful in doing so.
"We have no current future
meetings scheduled, but the
lines of communications continue to be open ."
More than half of the regu-

Pl..se -

Ttlks, Bl
'

Williams
blossoms
lnto UC's
top shooter

Associated ·Press
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. - Ohio
State's usually reliable shooters were off
Thursday night. So the Buckeyes adeptly shifted to Plan B. ·
.
No. 3 Ohio State used a' balanced
scoring attack&gt; getting 12 points each
from Jessica Davenport and Michelle
Munoz, and a dominant defense to rout
Indiana 52-30.
·
'They work exb'emely ·hard, so our
goal tonight was not to get outworked,"
Buckeyes coach Jim Foster said . ,
"Otherwise, we knew it was going to be
a long night."
·
The ,Buckeyes (18-2, 5-1 Big Ten)
never gave Indiana a chance .
They coasted to a seventh straight victory, protecting the highest ranking in
school history. Ohio State also ended a
four-game skid in Bloomington that
dated to Jan. 15, 1999, by clamping
down on Indiana's shooters.
The Hoosie~ (8-8, 1-5) scored a
school record-low eight points in the
first half when they were JUSt 12.9 percent from the floor. The 30 points also
broke the school record for fewest
points in a game. The previous records
AP
.for fewest points in a half and a game
were both set earlier this month against Ohio State's Jessica Davenport, left, puts up a shot over
Indiana's Jamey Chapman during the first half in Bloomington,
PleeM - Bucbye. B:J
Ind. Thursday.

BY IRA PODELL
Associated Press

Bv JoE KAY
Associated Press

CINCINNATI - In hi s first season ' at
Cincinnati , heralded shooter Nick Williams
got lost in the shuffle. ·
The Bearcats were so desperate for a point
guard that they moved Wilhams to the unfa.
miliar spot. Not surprisingly,
he failed miserably.
f Back in his accustomed role,
the quick guard with the soft
touch has blossomed into the
20th-ran Iced : Bearcais' best
shooter. He made all five of his
shots from beyond the arc in
the second half Wednesday
night, leading Cincinnati to an
Tl 80-58 win over.Charlotte.
"This is the best I' ve ever·
shol the ball," said William·s, who had a
career-high 22 points.
It 's coming at the right time. for him and his
team.
Williams arrived at Cincinnati after transferring from Kansas State, where . he start~ 25
games as a freshman and averaged mne pomts.
The .Bearcats already had two outsi'de shooters
last. season -· Field Williams and Tony
Bobbitt - but badly needed a point guard.
They moved Nicli; Williams from his accustomed spot as a shooter, turning him into a ball

•
•
,
•• I 1

.Pl••·--......

:a

I

�Friday, January 21 , 2005

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Prep Scoreboard
Jeromesville' Hillsdale 57 Creston
Norwayne 42
Johnstown
Northndge
47
Wel!lllon 51, Meigs 46
Fredencktown 32
Meigs
15 20 2
9 - 46
Johnstown-Monroe 35 Danvllle 33
Wellaton
14 11 11
15 -51
K•dron Central Christian 46 Mansheld
MEIGS (4-13) - Renee Bailey 3 1-6 7..
Justine Dowler 2 2-2 6 1 Sammy Pierce 6 5- Temple Chnatlan 38
5 19 Cayla Lee 1 0-0 2, Meg Clelland 3 0Lafayette Allen E 62, Lima Perry 43
1 8, Brl11any Hysell 3 o-o 8 TOTALS - 18
Lakeside Danbury 52, Tot Christ•an 29
8-14 46
, Lakewood 53 Lakewood St Augustine
WELLSTON (2·1 4) - Katy Stabler 2 0·0 4 39
Whitney Patnck 6 1-4 13, Melinda B1shop 1
Lancaster 52, Newark 40
1-2 3, Peggy Ftem1ng 0 2-2 2, Amber King
LeipsiC 48 Cary-Rawson 34
i 0..() 2, Enn Sturgill 4 1-2 11 , Charity
Lewistown lndtan Lake 61 New
i.xllne 0 1-2 1 Amanda Arroyo 4 7 9 15 Carlisle Tecumseh 41
TOTALS - 18 13·21 51
Lima Shawnee 111 , Van Wert 61
3-polnl goals - Me1gs 2 (Pierce 2)
Logan 52, Manetta 48
Wellston 2 (Sturgrll 2)
London 48 , W Jefferson 34
Macl•son Chnst1an 42, Mt Vernon
Ohio High School Girls Baakalball
Acaclemy 25
Thurad.y'a Reaulta
Magnolia Sandy Valley 62, Malvern 32
Akr Centra~Hower 49, Akr Buchtel 44
Mansfield Sr 58, Bellv•lle Clear Fork 47
Akr E S., Akr N 47
Mansf1eld Sl Peter's 63 Lucas 40
Akr Ellet 50 Akr Kenmore 44
Mar1a Stem Manon Local 46 Ft
Akr Frrestone 57 Akr Garfield 21
Recovery 34
Akr Manchester 73 Massillon Tuslaw
Manon Cath 77 DeGraH R•ve rs1de 30
48
Mayfie ld 62 Ma.cedama Nordonla 39
Andover Pymatun~ng Valley 56 ,
McArthur Vmton County 68, Belpre 62
Kinsman Badger 41
McGuffey Upper Scioto Valley 80 Ada
Arlington 44, Vanlue 26
46
Bascom Hopewell-Loudon 41 . Fostona
Medina 52, Br.ecksvllle 51 , OT
St Wendehn 14
Mlltord
Center
Fairbanks
59,
Balo1t W Brandl 58 Canal Fu~on NW Waynesfield-Goshen 26
•
38
Millersburg W Holmes 48 Ashland 21
Berlin Hiland 67, Bowerston Conotton
Minerva 47, Akr Spring 33
Valley 8
Minster 51 , New Knoxv11le 38
Bloomdale Elmwood 52 Pembe rville
Monroevtlle 55 Greenwich S Cent 34
Eastwood 38
Morral Ridgedale 41 , Bucyrus Wynford
Bluffton 39 Paulding 29
35
Byesv1Ue Meadowbrook 61, Old
Navarre Fa~rless 49 Akr Coventry 32
Wash•ngton Buckeye Tra•l 50
New Washington Buckeye Cent 41 Mt
Caldwell 49 Barnesv•lle 35
61anchard Riverdale 32
Can GlenOak 46 Youngs Austintown·
Norwalk St Paul 61 , Ashland Crestv1ew
Fitch 31
34
Cary 54 Sycamore Mohawk 27
Old Fort 51 N Baltimore 38
Casstown M13m1 E 84 Spr1ng NW 52
Oregon Stntch 71, Tal Emmanuel
Cedarv1lle 50 Mechamcsburg 36
Baptist 33
Centerburg 51 Howard E Kno.~~: 39
Orrville 62, Ma:nsf1eld Madison 45
Cm Glen Este 45 Cm Walnut H1lls 29
Ottawa-Glandorf 50 Celina 18
Cin McAuley 59 Cm Seton 48
Ottoville 62, Ft Jennmgs 45
C1n NW 72, Norwood 28
Painesville R1vers1de 55, Chardon 49
Cin Oak HillS 49 Milford 27
Pandora-Gilboa 45 McComb 33
Clayton Northmont 46 Vandalia Butler
Pettisville 43 P10neer N Cent 28
27
Plymouth 57 New London 47
Collins Western Reserve 58 Ashland
Pow611
Vil lage
Academy 49
Mapleton 37
Muskmgum Chnstlan 34
Cots Harvest Prep 77 Cots Wellington
Rayland Buckeye Local 53 Cad12
34
Hamson Cent 50
Crestlme 51 , Gallon 40
•
Aldg~way Ridgemont 47 Lima Temple
Day Carroll 83, Day Stebb•ns 36
Chnst1an 46, OT
Day St1vers 80 C1n Jacobs 41
Sarahsville Shenandoah 77, Beallsville
Defiance 49 L1ma Bath 48
26
Delaware Chnst1an 70 Northside
Spencerville 43, Convoy Crestview 40
Chnstlan 31
Spring Kenton R1dge 45 Belletontame
Delphos Jefferson 48, Columbus Grove BenJamin Logan 43
Spring SE 78, Spnng NE 45
38
'
Delphos St Johns 62 ROCkford
Spring Shawnee 71, Bellefontaine 57
Parkw,ay 19
St Henry 84, Coldwater 66
E Can 67, Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 34
St Marys Memor•al 54, Kenton 33
Ecton 45, H1lltop 31
Thompson Ledgemont 42 Newbury 35
Elida 50 WapakOneta 46
Tol Bowsher 49 .Tal RogBJs 21
Fairport
Harbor
Harding
59,
Tol Cent Cath 64, Tol Start 82
Beachwood 35
Tol St Ursula 59 Oregon Clay 37
Findlay L•berty·Benton 43, Dola Hardm
Tol Waite 64, Tol Scott 52
Northern 32
Tal Whitmer 49 Tel L1bbey 44
Fremont St Joseph 73 Att1ca Seneca
Tontogany Otsego 45 M!llbury Lake 33
E34
Tuscarawas
Cent
Cath
44
Gahan Northmor 39 Bucyrus 29
Newcomerstown 33
Gallipolis Galla 55 Jackson 46
Uhrichsville Claymont 48 Zoarville
Genoa 41 Kansas Lakota 34
Tuscarawas Valley 38
G1bsonburg 43, Elmore Woodmere 42
Upper Sandusky 54, Norwalk 29
Gorham Fayette 41 Stryker 30
Utica 62 Loudonville 61
Heath 54, Caledoma River Valley 28
Van Buren 57, Arcad•a 30
Hicksville 49, Antwerp 34
W Llberty·Salem 59, N Lewisburg
Hudson WRA 53, Akr Elms 26
Tnad 45
Girls Boueore

•

Talks
from Page B1
lar season 671 of l ,230 games through
Thursday - has been Wiped out so far, plus
the All-Star game.
This latest setback agrun pushes to the forefront the possibility that there will be no
hockey played thts season.
"We all know time is not an ally," Saskin
said
If the season IS Wiped out, the Stanley Cup
wouldn't be awarded for the first time since
1919, when a flu epidemic canceled the final
series between Seattle and Montreal. The
NHL would · then become the first major
North Amencan sports league to lose an
entire season because of a labor dis pute.
There was hope that progress could be
made this time Without the presence of NHL
commissioner Gary Bellman and umon chtef
Bob Goodenow, who were kept out of the
meeting in an attempt to have discu ssions
without acrimony that has butlt up between
the two leaders.
,
This two-day meetmg marked JUst the third
time the league and players' association held
face-to-face talks smce the lockout was
un~sed Sept. 15 .
' Obviously, everybody understands that the
window of time we have in terms of playing
hockey th1s season ts very s hort, so hor,efully
we can have some more discu ssiOn s, ' Daly

said.
Each side had a three-man team m place on

Belichick
frQm Page B1
different than we've prepared
for, but that's all part of football."
Cowher IS shown consoling
a dejected Roethlisberger at
his locker m the Steelers
Digest. team publicatiOn this
week, a photo taken shortly
after the rookie threw two
costly interceptiOns dunng
Pittsburgh's 20-17 overtime
v1ctory over the Jets on
Saturday.
Roethlisberger said. he was
down on himself at • the
moment but felt better wtthm
minutes and i s n ' t worried
about becommg sunilarly di straught or rattled by whatever
Belichick throws at h1m.
"I know what I d1d wrong,
the mistakes I made," he said .
" You can't dwell on the past;
you've got to move on. This
game's too big."
No matter how exolic the
Patriots become in thetr blitzing or pass coverage schemes
to confuse the rookie QB, the

Williams
Wadsworth 65 A1chf1eld Revere 50
Wellston 51 Pomeroy Me1gs 46
Williamsport Westfall 70, Piketon 50
Wmdham 47, Rootstown 44
ZaA&amp;svllle Maysvtlle 62, Lanpaster
Ftsher Catholic 41
Ohio High School Boye Baeketball

~~~~::r~~ ~a~~~~~e~ry

ArchbOld
44
Ashtabula Sts John &amp; Paul 66
Youngstown Chr 56
Clyde 49 M1lan Ed1son 48
Delaware Buckeye Valley 59 Manor.t
Etg1n 55
Delta 61 Swanton 34
Hu ron 65, Port Clinton 47
Liberty Cente5. 28
Metamora
Evergreen 27 OT
Manon Pleasant 45 Gallon Northmor
28
'
Montpelier 59, Bryan 53
Mt G•lead 47, Cardmgton·Lmcoln 45
Mt Orab Western Brown 82
Williamsburg 39
Mt Ver non Academy 43, Mad1son
Chnst1an 34
Oak Harbo! 146 Sandusky St Mary 35
Powell
Vlllade
Academy
82
Muskmgum Chnstlan 49
Richwood N Union 41 , Spar)a
.Hrghland 30
Sandusky Perkms 64
Castalia
Margaretta 62

'
W.Va. prep basketball
•cores
Thursday'l RBIUhl
Girl•

Bellaire Oh 10 73 Wheeling ~ark 68
Doddndge County 48, St Marys 39
East Hardy 46, Berkeley Sp r~ng s 42
John Marshall 67 St ClairsVIlle Ohio

from Page B1
handler.
H e never got comfortable,
and It showed
William s' shootmg percentage dipped and he averaged only 6 7 pomts and 2 1
asststs per game. H1s wors t
moment
came
aga m s t
crosstown nval Xavter, when
he threw the ball away m the
closing seconds to seal the
Musketeers' wm.
" We put htm m a bad s pot,
probably, a year ago by trymg
to make h tm a pomt g uard, "
coach Bob Huggm s satd " I
JU St thought he w as reall y
tentauve to s tart the season .
He wasn't aggressive e nough
or assertt ve enou~h. "
With Field Wtlliams and
Bobbitt gone, the Bearca ts
moved h1m back to shootmg
guard this season. A thumb
InJUry set htm back , and hts
shot was out of whack dunng
the first 15 games, when he
went only 12-of-47 (25 6 percent) from behind the arc

M

Madonna 47 Bridgeport, OhiO 33
Magnolia 48, Tyler Consolidated 45
Montcalm 58, Liberty Raleigh 36
Oak Glen 60, Wellsville, Ohio 44
Pnnceton 87, Woodrow Wilson 62
SteubenVIlle central, OhiO 44 Weir 38
Sleubenv1lle, OhiO 63, Lmsly 57
Valley Wetzel 55, Clay-Battelle 40
Boyo
Braxton County 53 C&amp;fhoun County 50
Bndgeport 53 Lewts County 38
Doddndge County 60 St l1arys 35
Grafton 62, Gilmer County 47
Jefferson 62 Bowling Brook Md 51
Lmcoln 83 Liberty Hamson 57
Morgantown 67 Fairmont Senior 46
Oak HUI 64 Fayetteville 45
Parkersburg 79 Cabell Midland 55
Parkersburg Catholic 57, Poca 56, OT
Philip BartQur 70 Buckhannon-Upshur
61
Preston 41 , Un1vers1ty 35
Alvers•de 57 A1piey 56
Steubenville, Oh10 56 John Marshall
55
Tygarts Valley 74, Pendleton County 58
Wahama 55, W1rt County 53
Williamstown 85 Alt~hle County 62
Woodrow Wilson 80 Princeton 59
Poetpoi1emente
Glrto
Buffalo at Cross Lanes Christian
Fayettev1Ue at Independence
P1keView al Bluef1eld
Tols1a at Burch
Wmfteld at Herbert Hoover
Boya
Buffalo at Cross Lanes Christian
George Washington at Capital
Huntington at Nitro
Shadv Spnng at James Monroe
Spring Valley at South Charleston

-

Friday, January 21,

He worked a ht tc h out of
ht s sh ot last week, and went
6-ot-8 from behmd the ate 111
a loss to Lou iSV Ill e o n
Saturday Willi a m s m ade SIX
m ore 3s agamst Charlotte,
which packed in a zone
defense to s top the Bearcats'
fro nt
!me,
leavm g
the
perime ter open.
Once Williams
started
makmg s h ots, the Bearcats
had m ore options t o score.
" In thts leagu e, you ' re not
gomg to be able to do It wtth
JUSt one g uy,~' Charlotte
coach Bobby Lutz said " And
they certaml y don ' t h ave JUSt
one g uy. To , beat the b e tter
team s, you have to ha ve bal ance, and they certainly had It
m the second half "
Wt!llam s has scored 40
pomts in the las t two g ames,
the best stretc h m ht s career
Hu ggm s thmks most 1f It has
to do with Wtlli a ms' comfort
level.
•
" The other day, we s pent a
lot of tnne trymg to f1x hi s
shot," Hugg m s sa td "It has
really h e lped him A lot of 11
IS conftdence "
Hts teammates are quickl y
gammg confidence m h1m ,

Buckeyes
from Page B1
Purdue.
And although the Hoosters
were better in the second half,
they still wound up shooung
JUSt 24 1 percent, thetr second
worst effort of the season.
" We had to be so much more
pauent and execute so much
better," Hoosiers coach Kathi
Bennett srud "I thought we d1d
that m the ftrst five mmutes,
but our shots didn' t go down "
The Buckeyes, who lead the
Btg Ten m sconng at 75.8
pomts per game and the nation
wtth a 52.2 pen:ent field goal
percentage, were forced to take
a different approach Thursday
because of Indiana' s harassmg
defense
Caity Matter hu JUst one 3pointer and was one of three
Ohio State players to fini sh
wtth seven pomts. Davenport,

try m g to get him the b all
w h enever possible
Until
William s started htttmg out·
s ide s hot s. the B earcats' only
rehable option was to get the
ball m s tde to power forward
J aso n Max1ell, who is usually
double-teamed
" It 's more of a relief," satd
Maxiell , who had 23 pomts
aga m st Charlotte.
The B earcats h ave one of
th e na tiOn 's top defenses,
allowmg an ave rage of only
62 4
point
p~r
game
Opponents a re s h ootmg only
35 9 percent trorn the fteld
Much of that IS a result of
Huggms' e mpha s 1s m practice.
"So much of o ur practices
are
d e fe n se-one nted," .
William s sajd "lt wears yo u
o ut. Yo u 've got to be motivated to get m the gym on
your own and work on
offense."
H e thmks he 's f1xed hts
s hot. N ow, u 's JUSt a matter
of continum g to play wuh
confidence.
" It' s a combmation of a lot
of thmgs:" Willi a m s sa td
' 'I'm JUSt trymg t o stay m a

Steelers still plan to pound
twm pow~r backs Jerome
Betus and Duce Staley
repeatedly, JUSt as they did m
beating New England 34-20
on Oct. 31. Staley ran for 125
yards and ~ett1 s 65, while the
Patnots mana~ed only 5
yards rus hing wtthout injured
star Corey Dillon
Jets runnmg b ack Curtis
Martin, a chess fan, refers to
the deep-thmking Belic hick
as the Bobby Fischer of foot·
ball, but the Steelers said no
game plan can make that b ig a
difference 1f a team controls
the line of scrimmage.
Behchick " ts n ' t playing,"
wtde receiver Plaxico Burress
said . "All he d oes is call the
plays, and he puts his players
m good pos tlion to make
plays. That's why they've
been so su ccessful and ~n
able to WID so conststently."
Patriots tight end Christian
Fauria srud much the same
thing Thursday, suggesling no
game plan can compensate if
the opponent is executmg better.
•
The
Steelers
"haven't
changed the way they line
up," he said. ' 'Their lineback-

ers are still distuph ve and
bemg aggressive and knocking everybody down The
defensive hne IS getting up
the field ,' disrupting things
and putting people on the
ground"
The Steelers are m much
better shape than they were
for their 24-17 upset loss to
New England m the January
2002 AFC championship
game, when Bettis' serious
groin lllJUf)' effectively left
them without a running game.
Bettis, severely limited by the
mjury, was held to 8 yards on
nine cames.
•
Still, they aren't making a
big deal about being underdogs ,at home, despite hav mg
a better record than New
England (15-1 during the season to 14-2), a higher-ranked
defense (No. I to No. 9) and a
9-0 home record.
" We don ' t know what
they're going to do, but they
don 't know what we're going
to do, either," linebacker Joey
Porter srud. "They've sull got
to play u s in our back yard
We 're undefeated at home ,
and we like o ur chances."

GaUt. Covill): OH

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

.when that happens, you 've got
to tum around a nd ptck up
your defen se or you're gom g
to d1g a deeper hole "
For the Buckeyes, 11 dtdn 't
seem to m a tter what Indiana
dtd
Ohto State wiped out an
early India na lea d with a 22-0
spurt dunng a 15·23 stretch o f
the first h a lf When the drought
finally e nded, o n Gathing 's
short JUmper wtth 13 seconds
le ft in the half, the Hoosiers
lrdtled 26-8.
Munoz dommate d early m
the second halt , sconng s ix
pomts m the first five mmutes
to he lp the Buckeyes bmld a
35- 10 lead Indiana never'thalle n ged the rest of the way.
" It didn't surpri se m e
because I thought the shots
they got · were difficult and
the ir philosophy was to rotate
back o n defense," Foster S3ld.
" So the s hot s they were getting
were dtflicult and they were
only gettmg one s hot, so I wasn't s urpn sed "

G NE~...... '

\!Cribune

TO Place
Your Ad~

Ofpee llowe-.f'

Word Ads

Mo"nda:y thru Friday
8:00 a.rn. to 5:00 p.rn.

r

'\(I \II ' ' "'

ANNouNCEMENrS

rI

~~

11110

,;;ed11ck 1 Walker coon
dog, lost near Seiter's Ridge
No ATV'S or vehicles of any
Por tla nd
Rewa rd
kind permtned on Zuspan (740)247 2584
property near Mason I
Found
around
Cl1fton ,WV
Netghborhood Ad /S A 218
area Large ~ack male dog
GIVF.AWW
~anng a purple collar
(740)446-7495
3 white female cats All ' - - ' - - - - - - spade Inside homes need Found dog w1th Purple collar
ed
(740)446-2700 or near locks &amp;dam on At 2
(740)446·0650
call to cla•m 304 576 2642

r

6 male &amp; 2 female Black Lab
m•x pupptesr 6 wks aid
(740)992-()(197
Cats to g•veaway Older
male declawed, needs tQ be
kept inside neutered very
friendly
Female
black/orange
gorgeous
about 1 yea r old Male
while/ora nge
neutered
about
mon ths Male yel·
low stnpped
fnendly
appro.~~:
2 yea rs 'O ld
(740)446·2700 or (740)446·

'0

0650

Lovable

4

m9nth old
needs good
home had shots (304)882·
Lab/Bo.~~:er,

3437

Wurlltzer hQme organ Fun
maker "deluxe
model
(740)446 8327 ask for Pat

Feb arv 18, 2005
~allipolii Jaailp otribunt
446-2342

Joint Jlea,ant l\.egi•ter
'

675-1333

The Daily Sentinel
992-2156

"

Don't miss out on this great opportunity
to have your business jncluded!
.\dH·rtising Deadline is Frhruan• 10.200.

..

All

Monday ~ Prlday

Bu•lne•• Day• Prior To

for Jn••rtlon

12 Noon 2

Publication
Sunday Dl•play~ 1:00 p.m.
Tht-~r•day for Sunday•

• All ada must be prepaid•

All about You Full Ser,ce
Salon Corner of S1xth St &amp;
Ma1n' SI (304)675·1411 Jan
28 to Feb 28 Tennrng·$25
Need 2 Cosmetolog sts and
1 Nail Tech Work on
Percentage 65%-35%

r--------_.1

BANKING
Customer Service/Teller
HELP WANf1iD
Oak Hill Banks has lull I me
Lorr
..F·OI·JND·AN·iD-_.1 tO
opportunity In our Gallipolis
offtce for a fnendly energetiC
$100 Reward for mforma!IOn Act Nowl! I need 29 people person to provide supenor
lead1ng to recovery of a to lose 20 pounds Senous customer serv•ce process
short red hmr fema le mqwes only!
customer transacM ns and
Dachshund Lost 1n Herman www 2bef1tandlr1m com
promote bank serv•ces
Adl Ingalls Ad area on Jan 1-888 227 2770
Should have customer servt71t1 Call (740)446 7732
ICe or cash1er e.~~:penence
preferably 1n a' bank or cred·
-Found Black &amp; Whtle dog on An E.~~:celie nt way to earn 1t umon We oHer opporlunlty
f-41 Vernon Ave Please call money The New Avon
for advancement excellent
(304)675-6825
Call Mantyn 304--882·2645 compensatiOn and benef•ts
and a great work envirOn·
ment Apply m person to
~ r-----------------~--~-----,
CLASSIFIED INDEX
Oak Hill Banks 500 3rd
4x4'a For Sale... ....................... .............. 725
Avenue GallipoliS, EOE
Announcement ............................................ 030
M/F/DN
Anllquu ........................................... 530
Car salesmen needed at
Apartmenta for Rent...... ...... . ..... . ... 440
local dealetsh•P salary com·
Auction and Flea Market. ............................oeo
m1ss10n bases send resume
Auto Parle &amp; Accessories ........................ 760
to Dally Sent1nel PO Bo.~~:
Auto Repair............... . ............... ...... . .no
Autoa lor Sate .............................................. 710 J,29 21 Pomeroy Oh 45769
Boahr &amp; Motors for Sale ........................... 750
COL DRIVERS NEEDED
Building Supplies ............... ................... 550
Local company needs class
Buslneaa and Buildings ............................. :MO
A COL dnvers local and
Buolneoa Opportunity.................. . ....... 210
reg•onal JObs ava1 table Must
Buslne" Training .................................... 140
have good MVA and 1 1/2
Cllmpers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
years dnvmg expenence
Camping Equipment. ...... .. .. ............... . 780
BenefitS available Please
Cerda of Thanka .......................................... 010
call 800·821·4870 .11:24 ask
Child/Elderly Care ................................. 190 ~ for Mary Beth
EtectrlcaiiRefrtgerallon . ...................... 840
Diesel _Mechanic and
Equipment for Rent ..................................... 480
Excavating....... . ....... ......................... 830
Trailer Technician
Farm Equipment...................................... 610
$300 Sign On BOnu1
Farms for Rent .............................................430
One of Ohio s leading motor
Farmalor Sale. .......... . .......... ....... ...... 330
earners has an open1ng 1n
For Lease ...................
.......................... 490
our extremely act!W grow1ng
For Sate ..... .................................................. 585
shop for both a D•esel
For Sale or Trade.. .. .......... . . .... . .••.. .590
Mecha mc and a Traile r
Frulla &amp; Vegetables ..............................580
TechniCian The succ:essrut
Furnished Rooms .......................................450
apphcant must have a h1gh
General Hauling......... ....... . ....
........850
level at mechanical aptitude
GlvHway....................................... ...... .040
and be able to work WJth
Happy Ada....................................................050
dnvers Three and a half day
Hay &amp; Graln ........ :J. . ....... ...................640
work week pa•d vacation·
Help Wanted ......................................... no
personal days health msur
Home lmprovamenta ..................... ..............810
ance, pa•d holidays over·
Homes tor Sate ....... .. .. ... :......... ....... 310
t1me pay 401 K plan and un•
Household Goods ...................................... 510
forms are among the many
Houaealor Renl ........... .............................. 410
benefits of work1ng at Arct•c
In Memoriam. ...... . .. ...................... 020
Express Inc These pos•lnourance ................................................. . 130
Mns are open now and you
Lawn &amp; Garden EqulpmonL ,....... ......... 680
begm work 1mmed1ately
u..ttock.... ........... ................... ...........630 can
Fa.~~: ema1ls or 10 person
Loot and Found ........................................... 060
applicants are welcome
Lohr &amp; Acreage ... . ................................... 350
Mtscelloneoua................... .................... 170
Denver Fann1n
MIKellaneouo Merchandise..................... 540
Mamtenance
Mobile Home Repair ............................. 860
Supenntendent
Mobile Homes tor Rant.:.... . ...... . ..... .420
4277 Lyman Dn'o'e
Mobile Homes tor Sate................... , ...........320
Hilliard b H 43026
Money to Loan .........................................~20
Fa~~: El14·527-4114
Motorcycle• &amp; • Wheelere ...................740
Email mfoxCarct1cex
lluolcal tnatrumonto ................................. 570
press com
Personate .......:........ .................................... 005
E
0 E I Drug free workplace
Pete for Sate .............. ........ ....... .... . 560
Plumbing &amp; Heallng .................................... 820
Dominos P1zza IS now htr·
Profeootonat Sarvlcea ...... , ....................... 230
1ng Management Personal
Redia, TV &amp; CB Repair ........................... 160
for Gallipolis &amp; Pomerov
Rut &amp;hrto Wonted .................................... 3110
Oh10 Pt Pleasant, &amp;
ScfloOII tnolructton .................................... 150
Elear1orM'tnl1eld WV Apply
Seed , Plont &amp; Fertltlnr .......................... 650 , 1n Person at The Spring
Slluallona Wanted .................................... 120
Vallev
Loca110n
1200
Spece tor Rent.... ........ .......................480
Jackson P1ke, Gallipolis OH
Sporting Goods ................. .................... 520
or call (304)593 5365
SUV'o far Sate..............................................720
Female vocalist &amp; drummer
Trucks tor Sale ............................................ 715
looking for a guitar &amp; bass
UphOlstery........... ..................................... 870
for an atternatiV9 rock
v- Far Sale..............................................730 player
band F&gt;lease call (740)645·
Wented to Buy ........................................... 0110
5048 &amp; leave a message for
Wented to Buy· Farm Supplies ............... 820
MoniC&amp;
Wonted To Do ............................................ 180
Wenled to Rent... ....................................... 470
Full t1me front desk position
Yard Sale- Gattlpotla............................... 072
Must have outgo1ng personYard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ....................... 074
alltv Apply •n person,
Yard Sale-Pl. Pteaoant ................................ 076
Holiday Inn Na phone calls

..

Dl•play:

Dally In- Column: 1.00 p.m .

I

'I

.

t•

------···--~·.1..

How you con hove borders and graphics
IL-l
added lo your classified ads
(. :;,._
1m
Borders $3 .00/per ad
l,!ii4
Graphics SOC for small
$1 .00 for large

Dlsolay Ads

In Next: Day' s Paper
"':.::;::~,~~.~n-Column: 1 : 00 p m.
FJ
Sunday• Paper

Appalachian T1re IS looking
for a Sale Assoc1a1e &amp; a
General Serv1ce Person
Send Resume to PO Box
327 Pt Pleasant WV 25550
or Stop by our location @
426 V•and St PI Pleas for a
Found Set of keys by the Appbcahon
playground bestde the City
pool Call (740)446·4915 to Are you a computer sawy
mus1c lover? If so, we are
tdentify
- - - - - - - - lOOking for a computer expe
Lost· 2 cats, 1 neutered nenced person E)lcel &amp;
orange male other one Is Ou•cken expenence nEK:es·,
black fe male B•dwell-area , sary..an1 ~tru l e)lpenence a
(740)388·8166
plus Applicant must 6e 1 "~ '
...,,...-.,.,.,-----., self starter and able to work
WANlFJ)
In a pleasant but last paced
TO Buy
environment ThiS IS a permanent part t1me pos1t1on
starting at $9 00/haur With a
Absolute Top Dollar U S ra•se after 30 days tnal pen·
S1lver and Gold Co1ns od Please send resume to
Proofsets Gold R.ngs US Fur Peace Ranch PO Bo.~~:
Currency MT S Co1n Shop, 389 Pomeroy Oh10 45769
151
Second
A'o'enue AT-TEN Director
Galhpohs, 740 446-2842
AVON• All Areas• To Buy or
Sell Sh1rley Spears 304I \I I'II J\ \1 1 '\ I
675-1429
-.1 IH It I -.

I·

Oead'lfite.f'

lliuWANrnl L,l1_tO_HEL
__P_W·A·t\'l·"EI·'' • L,ltt_O_l__
liu w_ANIED
__,.~II1iJ

.

Race tor the Naxtel Cup Preview

l\.egi~ter

Sentinel

(740) , 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
..,..c_a.;._I_I_T_o_d_a_v_._·_·_~o:...r...F,;;,ax. -To (740) 446·311o.,os....,__ _~o_r_Fa~x_,:_o,!._.:..:_s_s2_-2_1_s7.........

groove now "

mthative "
Daly JOtned Hotchkiss, and outside counsel
Bob Batterman in representmg the NHL' on
Wednes day ; Lmden, Saskm, and outside
counsel John McCambndge represented the
players.
" There was more of a give and take about
elements of the system and the way tt oper·
ates and the leverage points," Daly said. " I
gt ve Trevor Linden a lot of credit, enormous
credit, for getltng us together.
"I thmk the dynamic of the last two days
has been the best dynamic we' ve had to date."
Hotchkiss 9idn't go to Toronto because he
was attendmg the funeral in Calgary of J .R .
(Bud) McCaig, another member of the
Flames' ownership group who died last week
Sa'skm took part in Thurs day's meetmg ,
despite the death of his mother a day earlier

·\!tribune - entinel - l\.e
CLASSIFIED

r~..___

Wednesday, and the only change Thursday
was the absence of Calgary Flames partowner Harley Hotchkiss.
"We didn' t reach an agreement. We didn't
exchange proposals, nor was that the intention," Saskin said "The intenlton was to have
d1alo$ue which we did achieve here."
Umon president Trevor Linden, a center
with the Vancouver Canucks, 1mtiated the
talks wtth Hotchkis s on Wednesday, and
enough progress was made to quickly schedule a second meeting. But that good feeling
appeared to be somewhat lost in Toronto, the
same place talks broke off last month. ~
"I think everybody knows the players have
been very mterested in finding a baSIS on how
we can move forward," Saskin srud. "We recogmze that to do so we have to do 11 through
discussions, and that's why Trevor started this

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

2005

\ '\"\1 )\

one of the B1g Ten's top post
players, grabbed 10 rebounds
and dtshed out a career-high
five assists, whtle Munoz
matched her season-htgh by
htttmg 5 of 9 shots and two 3pomters
The team approach worked
perfectly
" Jessica has gotten really
good when she sees double
and tnple teams of find111g the
o pen person," Munoz satd.
This one, was every btt as
!ops tded as the score mdtcated.
Only two Hoos iers reached
double figwes Cynd1 Va lentm
scored 15 po111ts to become the
mnth player 111 lndtana history
to top I ,000 p01 nts 111 her
IUntor season. Janue G athmg
added I 0 po111ts
Oh10 State held a 48-28
re boundmg
advantage,
blocked seven shots, and the
Hoos ters' first half funk was so
bad 11 seemed contag10us
"I think people tend to lose
confidence when that happens," Va lentm satd " B !JI

www.mydallysentlnel.com

GET READY FOR
SPRING BREAK!
Lose We~ght with Herbal\le
Call Tra.cy (740)441-198:! or
(800)201 0832
httQ /lwww famousnutntiOn c
om

UNIT MANAGER
POSmON MANAGER
HOLZER SENIOR CARE
CENTER Is a 70 bed lang
term care nursmg facUl ty
located n rural Galha
County whose m1ss 1on
focuses on quality care tor
our rest.d.l.nll.....

roRSALE

Snuggle Bugs Chlldcare dis
counted priVate rates based
on 1ncome, capay, public
rates Follow county guidelines Hour1y rates Infants
$5 50, Toddlers- $5 Preschool-$4 30 &amp; School age$4
County
licensed
(740)446-7122 Gallipolis
OH

H1rlng e~tpenenced/hcensed
Installer &amp; Serv1ce Tech lor
HVAC w1th knowledge on
""1111"'"~-~---,
lij) Clm.AIEL.DERLCARE¥
serv1ce &amp; installation ol
~::~
~lum bmg Send or drop ott
resume to 300 Fourth Ave AN·
oreleHE!d.
Gallipolis, OH 45631 or call
Home Child Care Prov•der
(740)446·1637
WE ALSQ HAVE LIMITED
County
Cert1hed Any hours
' PARI·DME PQ$1JJONS
Immediate
Openmgs
Located at Colon1al Park
Residential
Treatment
AVAILABLE FOB•
Apartments
Pomeroy
Fac1llty for boys now h• nng AN position
(740)992·0150
Youth Worker po81t1on Paid STNA pos•t•on
Lovtng licensed provider 3
Medtca\ Insurance Call
openings day or evemng
between 9 OOam 4 OOpm BenefitS Include
•Competitive Wages
hours F1w. m•nutes !rom
('740)31'9~!;l0'!3•M,
•E.~~:pe nence Credit
Me1gs Elementary School
Laborers take trees out •Health Insurance (FT)
readiness
emphasized
from so111 prooess for shlpMelissa
s
Child
Care
pmg m1n wage slarhng Feb •Life Insurance (FT)
(740)992-0070
151h Clements Nursery 304 •401K{after 1 year)
•Equal Opportunity employ·
675 1820

I

r

LICENSED SOCIAL
WORKER
Overbrook Aehabdrtat1on
Center IS now accepting
resumes lor the pos1t1on of
Otrector ol Socral Serv1ces
The qual1lled candidate
must be a LSW possess1ng
strong verbal and wntten
commun 1cat1on sk11ls
Medtcald Med1care and
MOS knowledge Long
term care expenence prefe rred but not reqUired
Ouallhed candidates may
send re$umes lo Charta
Brown· McGu1re RN LNHA
Admm 1st~ator 333 Page
Street Middleport OhiO
45760 EOE

If workmg
m a fnendly "team
,on
entad~ faCility appeals to
you please come see us at
380 Coloma! Dr Bidwell
Ohro or call (740)446-5001
and ask for Phyllis Cantrell
AN

~ifiU;t;

All reale•t.te advtrtl .. ng

Jr thla newapaper Is
subject to the Federal
F•lrHoualngActot1968
which maku It lllepl to
•ctv•rtiM •nv
preference, limitation or
discrimination biiHCI on
ntCfl, color, religion, MX
t•miHat atMull or n8'11Gnlll
origin or any intention to
make any 1uch
preference, llmttatlon or
dltcrlmlnatlon.'

OCAL ESTABLISHE
USINESS (15 YEARS)
EAY UNIQUE/NO COM
ETITION WILL TRAIN
740)992-4236 (740) 992

Thll ntwapaper will not
knowingly •ccept
advertlumente for real
.,,... which Is In
vlalation of th• l1w Our
rud•r• are hareby
Informed th•l all
dwellings .ctvertiHd In
thla MWI!MII)IIr are
tnllabl• on an equal

456

"'

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
ou do business with peo
le you know and NOT 1
end money through th
Ut•htv Contracto r see kmg
e~~:p~nenced operator for
underground
waterline
placement E .~~: pert1se 1n
plac mg PVC and ductile
Travel IS required
Benef1ts 1nclude opt~qnal
Health Dental Short &amp;
Long Term Disability, 401K
and L•fe Insurance

Mecll Home Health Agency
seeking a full·tlme AN
Case Manager tor the
Gallipolis Oh•o location
Must be 11censed both 1n
Ohto and West V1rgm1a
M1mmum two years superv•·
slon management and
home health expenence We Qualified applicants should
otter a compet1t1ve salary send resume to
benefits package 401K, and
flex t1me E 0 E Please
Gudenkauf Corporation
send resume to 352 Second
Ann Curt Nolan
Avenue Gall1pohs OH
2679 McKinley Avenue
45631 Attn Audrey Farley,
Columbus Oh•o 43204
A N Clln•cal Manager
Or Ema11
coolanOgydeokayt com
New Vear· New Career
614/488-1776 exl 230
Chnst1an based Tech Co
EOE
E)lpand1ng 1n your area
Managers/Sales Rep
Scuools
Needed
l!osnlucnoN
Cell 800-470-6843
(24 Hours)
Galllpolla Career College
Now hiring Srrull ng waitress (Careers Close To Home)
es Apply tn person Holiday Ca!l Today! 740 446--4367
Inn No phone calls
1-800·214·0452
NOW HIRING· ResCare a wwwgalllpollscareercollegecom
Accredltiii.O ~ember Accred ling
leadmg prov1der to md1v1du· CouncH tor tnoeoen&lt;t!lnl Co11ege1
als w1th menial retardal1on ~·""~"';::""':::::.'~"~":::"~--..,
and develo pmental disablh· r:I11D
ltes
1s lookmg
for a
Mlsc:EJ.ANEC'X5 •
AN/Supervisor
!I Interested .
pteas9 call Kelly Cline at
(740)645· 1539 or tax H1gh
School
Jumors
res ume to (740)446-3987
Sen1ors and Pnor ServiCe
An Equal Opportunity
you can f1ll vacant positions
Employer F/MJON
m the West V1rg1n1a Arrrry
Nat1onal Guard 11 you are
ParamediCS
&amp;
EMTs between the ages of 17 35
neeOed Apply at 1354 or have pnor m1htarv serv
Jackson P1ke Gallipolis
•ce, you won t want to pass
A 9 c e p t 1 0 n 1 s t . th1sup ForOpporlumbes ln
Ctmgregahonal
Care you r area call 304-675
Coordmator $6 25 per hOur
30 hours a week Bnng
resume to Grace Umted
MethOdist Church 600 · - - - - - - - '
Second Avenue Galhpoils Ass1sted IMng lor your loved
weekdays between the one 1n my home Private
hours at 9 OOam and rooms 3 hot meals
4 OOpm Resumes ln by (740)388.()1 18
January 28, 2005
Security Officers Needed!' eBay consignment!
Inc

SAVE SAVE SAVE
on 1 6 ac res Rio Grande Stock models at old pnces
area
$85 000
Call 2005 models amv1ng Now
(740)709-1166
Coles Mobile Homes
15266 U S 50 East Athens
Bu~slnaes
Oppcrtunlty- OhiO 45701 (740)592· 1972
Three rental properties for "Where You Get Vour
sale Duplex each w1th 3 Moneys Worth"
BIR UA D/A K1tchen Bath
&amp; Porch House 3 SIR UA
IH \1 \I ...,
Kitchen, Bath Cottage B/R ,
K1tchen Bath
Rental
1ncome tor all three-Approx
H~
$900 per month Pnce for au
FOR
RENT
three·· $75 000
Located
1 04-106 7th Street Pomt
Pleasant {304)675-2495 1 Ia 5 bedroom apa rtments
and houses lor rent ntce
aHer 6 00
. - - - - , - - - . . . ,. and clean No Pets
(740)992 3792

~~~Owotm!Nm':::~=~

...

=11"-u"'
nti:::.l.::yo:;.:u=ha,.v_e_
•n_ve_s_.h
ated the
offenn

11

Wantedl" Dsa1er candIdates
1nteres1ed 1n drverslfy•ng and
selling D1x1e Chopper Zero
Iurn Iawn
equ•pmenI
Attractive program To
• n
q u I r e
www Dlx1eChopper com or
502-558-7937

r

MONEY

Secuntas IS now hlflng lor
the Gallipolis OH area
Competitive wages
Un•forms and tra1nmg
prov1tjed
Please apply between the
/:lours ol 9 OOam 3 OOpm
Monday-Fnday
6354 At 60 East Suite 4
BarboufSVIIie WV 25504
For more Information call
t ·888-577·2723
EOEIM/F/DN

FIND
AJOB
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Home listing•
L1st your home by calltng
(740)446-3620

.

V1fM photoslin!Q online
~

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Wtn!
I win sell your stuff on eBay '
t ·888·582·3345
My serviCes Include Pk:k up
I ~ 1 \ I I " I \II
of the 1tem valuation pro
less1onal phOtograptr;, writ·
mg clear descrlpt1011s of the 10
HOME';
1tem handlmg questions, ...,
FUR SALE
.
InvoiCing and payment COl· "---iiiiiiiiioo~(
lecOOn and ultimately shiP· 2br House m West
pmg the 1tem All you have to Columb•a. call (304)773
do Is wa11 for a check! A m•n 5284
•mUm expected value of $50 ---~---­
IS the only requ~rement If 3 bedroom 2 baltl Wlltl tireyou are mlarested please place, 7 years old 1n county
contact me sl (740)645· on 4 3 acres $75,000 Call
(740)709·1 166
0065

r

Will do engme changet and 3 bedroom.
other auto repairS ASE detached garage
niCe
COrtllled Call (740).41 · schools,
(740)« 1-()8 t 8
1306

..

Bedroom. 2 Car unatached garage well ma1n
amed home 1n Ga tllpoll~ .
~ode 11 05 or call
740)245-{)437

i

I

bath
Green
area

Want&amp;d to 00 Weelcly or bl· 3 bedroom 3 baths 30x50
weekly house cleaning stHI garage $90 000 Call
(740)446·1137
(740)256·9197

~--~~.-~·~ - ~ ---

SSIJ Soc1al Secunty
$1 300 Net We can finance
you a home Call (304)73&amp;
3400

www.orvb.cilm

3080

Furmshed 1 bedroom house
AJC, available Feb 1 $325
month
plus
depoSit
(740)446 H59

14x70 $400 rent, $400
deposf 6 month lease, no
pets Call (740)367 n62 or
(740)367·7272

SERVI~

Jewelry Buy Sell Gold,
Diamonds
Gemstones
Aepa1r Appra1sals, Gem
Testing
Graduate
Gemologtst
Jeweler
(740)845 6365 or (740)446

For Rent 2br home 1n New Clean Ground Floor 2br
H ~ven must have Dep &amp; WID hookup Ref &amp; Dep no
Rei (304)934·7462
Pe1s (304)675·5162

Handyman Special, 3br,
House on 2 lots $18 000
OBO 2120 Madison Ave
(304)51 2·9005
Inventory Blowout!
All s1ngle w1des must go!
Oakwoocl
Homes
Barboursville " (304)736
3409

SQ[!OQ Yalley

DIRECTV
FrM OVO Player
Frwe HBO &amp; Cmamax
Free Profess•onal
lnstallat•on
up to 4 Rooms
Call 1 800-523-7556
for ctet&amp;IIS

3
room
and
bath
stovelrelngerator
down·
sta1rs all ut•l•ties pa•d 46
Ohve
Street
$450
(740)446-3945

i

3 Bedroom 1-t/2 baths
Large
Fam1!y
Room
F~reptace
&amp;
Garage
Recently
renovated
Immediate
Possess1on
(740)446-7881

l'llorusloNAL

2BA apt State Route 160
$400/month stovelrefngera·
tor mcluded washer/dryer
hookup (740)441 0194 or
(740)441 11 84

~==op:':':"":":lly=bo:..:'::~

Spill level home 3-bedroom
1 1/2 bath ~ car .anached
garage 1589 sq ft Located
m Meadowla nd Estates
$89 000 Call (3040593
3866

I :~~======~

238 F~rst Avenue 1BR 1
bath kitchen furmshed
R1ver Vlf!W New carpet ancl
pa1nt Easy walk downtown
No pets $353 month plus
ut1llt1es Reference depos•t
(740)446-4926

4 room apt WID hook up
2 bedroom house on 70 bat~ Porter $400 month
acres Ve ry mce $500 [740)367-70 15· (740)367·
. ._ month Call (740}44&amp;-3756 7746· (740)388-0173
2 or 3 bedroom house In BEAUTIFUL
APART·
Pomeroy lor rem no pets MENTS AT BUDGET
(740)992 . 5858
PRICES AT JACKSON
-------~ ESTATES, 52 Westwood
3 bedroom, 1 bath located Drive hom $344 10 $442
10
R10 Grande area Walk to shop &amp; moVIeS Call
$400/monl h
deposit 740·446·2568
Equal
requ.red Renter pays all utll· Housmg Opportunity
•bes Ca ll (740)367 7774
after Spm
Clean furn1shed Stud•o·
Apartment $325/month
4br 1n New Haven center of
Includes water/trash
Town $500 a month $350
S&amp;cur1ty Deposit and
deposit No mdoor Pets
Reterences reqUif~ call
(304)882-3652
ah•r 5pm (304)675 2970

No Down Payment IS POSSI·
bte on thiS beautiful 3 bad
room 2 bath home 2 car
garage Deck overlook•ng
beautiful v1ew F1ve Pornts
area (740)992-6667

TO loAN

orrow Smart Contact th
h10 D1v1S1Dn of F1nanaa
nstl tution s Off1ce o
onsumer
Atta1r
EFORE you rehnanc
ur home cr obta1n a loan
EWARE of requests to
ny large adwance pay
ents of lees or Insurance
all
the Office o
nsumer Affus toll fre
t 1 866 278-0003 to lear
f the mortgage broker o
ender IS properly licensed
ThiS IS a pubhc servte
nnounce ment from th
hlo Valley Publ1sh1n

j

M~O:s~ IL,r__AP._FOK_:o.RTMINI"S_rw.rr_._.

3 bedroom. 2 bath fireplace

~r~1ar---~~~~--.,

er

Ir

HOME'i

WANf1iD
To Do

~ lfoMEs

FOR SAL£
L,~---iiiiriiiiiiio-_.1
1995 Clayton Double W1de
52X24 3br 2bath Total
ElectriC (304)675-2907
2 bedroom mobile home for
sale, (740)992·5858

~----,.----

2001 28.~~:5~ Fairmont
$26500 1996
14x70
Fleetwood sa 500 Call
(740)709- t tM

-Fo_r_sa-le_t_•_X-70-W-rnd_so_r_3
bedroom, set up 1n"Country
Homes $6 995 00 Move In
today! Call (740)992·2167 or
(740)385-40 19 '
- - - - - - - - -.
Immediate posseulOnt Onty
S213 68 permo N'ew 3 bed·
room 2 bath mobile home
Onty mlnu18s from Athena
.1 ·800-837·3238

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

MOIJIILFORof.!.~
~•

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Town house
apartments
andlo r small houses FOR
RE~T Call (740)441·1111
fo r applicatiOn &amp; mformatiOn

I. For Lease

One bedroom
mce 2nd floor apl Corner
Pme and Second Large
kitchen w1th d1mng area
New range refngerator
Water mctuded References
14x72 furmshed 2BA 2 full reqwed $300Jmo Security
baths 2 mtles from down depos1t No pets Call
town outbulld•ng $400 6· (740)446-4425 or (740)446
12 lllQnlh lease (740)441- 3936
1525
Grac1ous llvmg 1 and 2 bed
2 bedroom tra•ler fat rent room apartments at V11tage
Manor
and
RIVerside
(740)446 0722
Apartments In Middleport
2 br tra1ler washer I dryer From $295 $444 Call 74Q..
$30000 a man 740441 992·5064 Equal Housmg
5725
Opportuniltes
3 Bedroom Mobile Home 1n Modern 1 bedroom apt Call
Ga1t1pohs Ferry $350 per (740)446.0390
month w1th S350 depos11
No Pets Call (304)674 4833 New 1 bedroom apt Call
(740)446-3736
For renl 2 and 3 bedroom
mobile homes slartmg at N1ce 2 BA apt Centenary
$260 00 per month Call Ad walerlfrash pa•d fur·
mshed
kitchen
(740)992·2167
washer/dryer hookup no
N1ce 2 bedroom mob1le pets, clepos!t/relerences
home No pels (740)446- reqwed
$375 month
2003 or (740)446 1409
(740)448·9442
Ntce 2 bedroom 4 m•les N1ce 2br Al:lartment wtth
lrom
Holzer Hospttal Gas Heal &amp; AC located 1n
(740)446 6865 "' (740)379- Pt Plea Aefndg &amp; Gas
2923
Kitchen Ra nge Furnished
$250
a Mof1th + $100
Or sale 14X52 tra•ler 2 bed
Oeposn
(304)675
7628
room on lot 1DO.X t 20 m
Syracuse Oh1o Also other Pleasant Valley Apartment
n...er front lois for sale Are now taking ApplicatiOns
(7 40)992·5888
to r 2BA 3BA &amp; 4BR
ApphcatiOns are taken
AP~'lli
Monday thru Fnday from
FOR RENT
9 00 AM 4 PM OffiCe IS
Located at 1l 51 Evergreen
l and 2 bedroom apart Dnve Pomt Pleasant WV
men ts furnished and unfur PhOne No IS (304)675 5806
rns hed secunty depos11 EHO
requned no pets 740.992
Tara
Townhouse
2218
Apartments Very SpaciOus
1 bedroom ap1tr1ment lor 2 Bedrooms 2 Floo~ CA 1
rent fn Pomeroy no pels 112 Bath Newty Carpeted
(740)992 5858
Ad ult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
PatiO Start $385/Mo No
t BR Apt 1n Spnng Valley
Pets, Lease Plus Secunty
$290 per month+depos•l Deposit ReqUired Days
WID !'lookup Pf;tls welcome 740-446·3481 Evemngs
w•lh add•honal deposit 74()..367.()502
(740)339·0362
MAPLES
100
2 bedroom apsrtmen1 lor THE
Orlve
East
rent In Syracuse $200-00 Memonal
depos1t
S330 00/month Pomeroy, 740 992 7022
Bes•dentlat
rent •nctudes waler sewage Subsld•zad
Housing
lor
!iQ years of aae
and trash Mus! have sufh·
PRIORITY
c•ent mcome to quahly and older
GIVEN TO APPliCANTS
(740)378-6111
WITH INCOME AT OR
2 Bedroom apphances BELOit' $1 D650 Max•mum
rncluded $275/month plus Income eltectlv.e 01-28-2004
tor 1 person $1 7 700 00
cteposl1
2 Bedroom fully turmshed Must meet HUDI202/8 erne
Includes ut1hfles &amp; cable na for household compos•·
Managed
by
S700Jmonth plus deposi1 t1on
Both •n New Haven call SliY&amp;rheels Incorporated A
Realty Company Equal
{304)882-3131
HOUSing Opportunity
2-Apts for rent upsta1rs, 2br
Twin Arvers Tower Is accept
$350/monll'l +deposit
Downsta•rs 1br $250/monltl •ng appi~OOns fOr wafting
+ deposit Located on Mt list for Hud·eubllzed 1· br
Varnon A...e Pt Pleasant apartmenl call 675·6679
(304)773-6061
EHO

t

. ·- ------

�Friday, January 21 , 2005

Www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daify Sentinel

Friday, January 21, 2005
ALLEY OOP .

Help~ted

Help Wanted

u=o

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.com

"'EA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE"

'

TRI-COUNTY RECYCLING

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

is having

CUSTOMER APPRECIAnON 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 topper, as well as,
cast aluminum &amp;aluminum sheet.

PHYSICIAN PRACTICE OFFICE MANAGER
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
seeking a physician practice office
manager. Prior physician · office manager
experience required, including accounts
payable, payroll and general office
management. ·Associate
Degree
m
Accouniing pr~ferred .
·
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. WV 25550

If ifs aluminum, we pay
top dollar for it!
Located at the corner of
St. Rt. #7 and St. Rt. # 143
Pomeroy,.Ohio
740-992-5114

\

HOUSFJIOI.D
GOOilS

Card of Thanks
The Children Of Debbie

Thompsons Appliance

Melinda .Northup wish to

I·
&amp;

r ==ItSib~rlan roRs;L

r

Fogelsong-Tucker
Funeral Home, Vocalist
Heather
Susan Petry.
Roush and Jill Dowis, the

We truly appreciated t h ~
cards &amp; beauti ful n ower
the
arrange ments.
delicious food. the ·kind
words. and 'mosl of all
your p·resence anJ )'UUr
pmyc rs:
Lucy, M ar)·. Carolyn,

p30

GOOC6

....

A"''l~

r

~

Buy or sell. Riverine
Antiques, 11 24 East Main
on SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740992·2526. RUss Moore.
owner.·

or 2 bath s. l ease price
negotiable to encourage
Call
new
business.
(740)446·4425 or (740)446·
3936

I :::=====:::;

'r

8 weeks old Flame Point

Himalayan, female , CFA
registered. 5 month old Ted
Bridal Veil never worn .
Tabby, male, flat faces.
Pearls &amp; Crystals. Pd $200
(740)992·9947
work
se ll for _$751304)882·2704
(740)742·3144 Reward
-------'GE Kitchen Stove $65, . AKC Black Lab puppies, 7
workS good (304)675-6986 · weeks old. All shot s and
worm~d . . $150.00 each .
(740)985·3362
JET

For
Drain s.
3 piece matching living room Gra ting
suite; also couch, loveseat &amp; Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;l
chair; (740)992-1442
~:~:~lal~~:;s~~;da~
_ _;;:....._.:._____
Friday, Bam-4:30pm . Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300

.

LIVISTOCK..,;,.J

firm . Call R8g. Quarter and Paint
horses. Priced to selt. Also
Haflinoers. 1740)446-3413.
5 male Jack Russell pup- 111411
HAY &amp;
pies. 5 weeks old. (740)446- .- ·Gn.~o. n.:r
3413.
~'

AKC Chocolate Lab pup·
AERATION MOTORS
Storefront.
Retail
AepaJ·r~d. _New &amp; Rebuilt In pie s. 1st shots and worn1ed.
space/Commercial Buildings
Stock. ' Call Ron Evans, 1· $300 _Call (740)286-3064.
tor rent, very I) ice, (740)992·
800-537·952~
.·'
.
3702
AKC MiniatUre Schnauzer
puppies .
.black/sli ver,
\II IH II\ \ Ill"' I
NEW AND USED STEEL salt/pep per. AKC Black
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar Pomeranian , female. Vet.
For
Coocrete,
Angle , checked. $400.00. 740-696!085.
Channel. Flat Bar. Steel ..c:_:c:.c..._ _ _ _ _ _

Appliance

MUSICAL
IN;TRUMENTS

1OOOit round bales mixed
hay some alfalfa/orchard
grass ,
$8.00-$20.00.
(740)698-2765
Hay for sa le: SQ!Jare and
roun d
bales.
Delano
Jackson Farm, 304·675·
1743.

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K·Roll overs • Major Med •
Medicare
• cancer • Accident

YOUNG'S

~~9~/bale

Call 740·256·

Tree Service

L---F·OR·S·AL·E-,..1

• Room Addlttcina &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Elet:trlcal &amp; Plumbi{lg
• Rooting &amp; GuHers
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Palntlng .
• Patio and Porch Oecka
We do It all except ·

Top • Removal · Trim
.• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

riO IMPR~~..NIS

1.,.--'iiiiloiiiiiiii-_.1

EXT 3901

Warehouse (Vent Free) Gas Heaters or Full blooded Lab puppies, 03 Mitsubishi lance r. 02
$30 on a11 5-Ptaque Gas no papers. Phone (740)446- Ratiy Edition. 18 ,000 miles;
Heaters. (Limited -to stock on
,
auto,
$6,200
080.
in Henderson, WV. Pre- hatld)
=24.:.:60:.::_.- - - - , - (740)256·161 8 or (740)256·
owned app licanes starting at
Paint Plua Hardware
Min iature Schnauzer's , 8
6200.
$75 &amp; up all under warranty,
675-4084
weeks old AKC registered,
we do service .work on all
$300 each (304)89 5-3745
1994 Firebird V-6 auto,
Make and Models (304)675- ---,.------'-'~.~7999
Solid Oak Entertainment Parrot w/cage and play 150K, driven daily. A title
Center. Video Cam. Corder, stand.
$700.00 .
Call : $1,800.00 080 (740)742·
2357. After 5:30
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Cla_rk all Assessories, BoOk Shelf ' (740 )992-1987
C hapel Road, Porter, Oh10. . (304)895·3129
1996 Geo Tracker Convert, 4
(740)446-7444 1·877·830-- 11'!!-'!!"'.....'!!"'........ Reg . Engli sh Saner pups, 7
Wheel
Or., 5-speed, AJC,
females, $275. Will be ready
9182. Free Estim ates, Easy
SPA FACTORY OIJTLEI'S
$3.000 (304)773-5733
1/2
1105.
Taki
ng
deposits.
financing, 90 d ays same as
Cedar Knoll Mall, •
(740)388·0182.
cash. Visa/ Master Card.
Kentucky Tradi ng Post,
2002 Dodge stratus 4dr,
Drive- a- li tlle save alot.
Ashland.
Siberian Husky female, 11 63,500 miles. S6500 or- reaWhit Reid advantage pellet
Milton, WVA Flea Market
weeks ok::l, ·AKC registered, sonable offer. (740)256s1ove. $175. (740)446-1759. 11!..-,1;60:;;:6~922~-7~1,::_85:;.....1 . blacklwhtte. (740)446.0350. 1539 or (740)256·1343

IT'S YOU/l b-

992·6215

~l&gt;ITO(( •

=~~~·

.

DATE. IN. CASE OF
YOUR FAILURE TO
ANSWER OR OTHER·
WISE RESPOND AS
REQUIRED BY THE
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
.

New Homes •

Viny l

Siding'• New Garages
. • Rcplacc mcnl
Window~ • Roofing ,

COMMERCIAL a nd
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIM,ATES

740·992-7599

Bri an Reeves

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Thomas . Darst,
Jane Doe, Unknown
Spouse, If any, of
Thomaa
. Darst,.
*Yvonne O.rst, •John
0~.
Unknown
Spouse, if any, of
Charles WhiHington ,
whose last known
'address Is P.O. Box
70 Smithfield, PA
15478-0070 and •118
Avenue
Union
Pomeroy, OH 457691000, but whose pres·
ant place ol realdance Is unknown
will take notice that
on August 12, 2004 at
2:12 p.m., LaSalle
Bank,
N.A.,
fko
LaSalle
National

Bank, .ai Indenture
trustee under that
certetn Sate and
Servicing AgrMR181!1
dated December 1,
1999, among AFC
Trust Sarles 1999-4
•• lasuer Superior
. Bank ·FSB, a1 Seller
and Sarvlcer, and
Bank
LaSsila
Natlonel Auoclatlon,

BARNEY
DON'T SNUFF'(
I&lt;NOW '(A CAN'T
TEACH OLD DOGS

Other Residential Needs

Phone: 740· 742-3411
for a free estimate. '

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

•• lnct.nlunl Truat8e,
AFCMortpge Loan
AIHI Backed Notee,
Sarles 1999-4 filed Ito
Complaint In Caee
No. 04 CV 110 and on

Nurot to Theodore
EIHiotaln by deed
dated November 16,
1885, and recorded In
Volume 61 , Page 224
and 225 . recorda,

NO,NO,NO,OL
BULLET !! STA'(
ON TH'

NEW

MANLEY'S
SllF STORAGE

Let me cb 1! for youl

• UNDfSJAINTINI

97 Beech Street

I

ump
on
SAVINGS

Middleport. OH .

10x10x10x20

THE BORN

992-3194
or 992-6635

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
·coNTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• R~ferences
Available
• Free Estimates
Call Gary Stanley

LO~ER

~

~

I :)1\W YOUi&lt;. OLD &amp;AU, ~0
5C.f\U I-\P-~ 5\ILL 1-\~ 1\ Nl((
1-\U.,t&gt; OF AAI I(!

"Middleport's only
Self-Storage•

f11-1t&gt;..T'5 /&gt;..t-1 1~1\1~.€:. TI-\I~G,
TO ~/&gt;..Y IN I'ROOT Of ei,UTUS!

r

IJEf::&lt; \oJE.Ll:'-l.JI.l, .•. BWTU~
/&gt;.. ~I(.E.I-\E.P..I&gt;Of":&gt;Kit-1!

-q

wn~oo

.

'

J
~

.'

Meigs County, Ohio,
and
deeded
to
Goorge
Elselsteln
and wife to Elsa S.
Loe by ,deed dated
November 19, 1891,
and
recorded
In
Volume 73, Page 211
and 212 of the
Records of Deed of
Meigs County, Ohio.
Save and except a
small tract of Real
Estate convey!Bd to
Louli Reibel, begin·
nlng at Point 26 feet
North 20 deg. from
ttie Southeast corner
of the M.E. Church
Parsonage
Lot :
thence North 66 112
deg. west 3 feet and 9
Inches: thence north
20 deg. east 17 feet
Snd 4 Inches; thence
aotith 66 112 dog. oast
3 feet and 9 Inches;
thenco south 20 deg
west 17 feet and 4
lqches to the place of
beginning, and con·
tolnlng about 65
aq~are feet, more or

less, and It Ia further
understood that no
part of the wall on
said parsonage lot Ia
hereby
conveyed.
Parcel No.: 16~1943
and currently aet
forth In Deed , Book
335,
Page
95,
Recorded 5111193.
Also
commonly
known as: 11 B Union
Averiue,
Pomeroy,
Ohio, 45789.
The Petitioner fur ther allagea thltt by
reason of default of
the Delendant(s) In
the .pay ment of a
promissory
note,
according to It• tenor,
tho conditione of a
concurrent mortgage
deed given to aecure
the payment of aald
nota lind conveying
the
premises
deacrlbed, have been

Pass

Pass

Remember the problem s of the past that
you've leBrned to overcome, vow never to
repeat them and success will be yours in
the year ahead. This includes both career
and personal situations that gave you
trouble.
AQUAR IUS (Jan. 2Q-Feb. 19) - Any ·
problem that you mi ght encounter today
is apt to be of your own doing, unless you
are cons t,anUy on guard. Don't make
things harder on yourself than necessary.
PISC ES (Feb. 20-March 20) - In social
repartee with friends t~y, make it a
point not to introduce cont roversial topics. Casual conversations co..uld lead· to
heated arguments , with everyone at

1"1ENACE."

~ 1.

P~ll'tS
or 740-992-5553
RL-stocki"9 /.ate ModeI Sa h'll.'Jl'
turd Arter !\;i1rket A..rts
See Brent or Brian Whaley
740-992-70 IJ

PEANUTS

odds-

W~EN I WAS UTTL.E AND

1 SAID M'f

STOMACft HURT:
MDM USED TO 9RING ME
MILK AND ~ONEV ..

Hill's Self
Storage

l I-lAD AN EARACI-IE ,
M'( DAD USED TO 9LOW
CIGAR SMOKE IN Mt( EAR ..
IF

1 WONDeR W~ERE ~E
GOT THE CIGARS ..

....•

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio.

4577 1
740.949-2217

il:i;llf"~

33795 HilandRd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

' SUNSHINE CLUB

,..111,

I-lOW LOI/EL.Y

TO 5££ 'TOO.
Wt.lA

Hours
7 :00 AM - 8;00 PM

740-992·5232

111411 mo. pd

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per months

· l4.QJLD

I1'{X) (.QRE: 10

t:;ilN(£, ~A? .

/

, GARFIELD
L.tKe 1
CAN 51"0P
SHEPPINGr

ON

COMMANC'!

~f@~~®~
Locust, Oak
Maple $45 De/ive&lt;ed
Bill Slack

double elate
50 Grad
52 Heavy metal
53 Amato!
lngrediant
54 Senor"a son
55 Kind
of bean
56 Sonnet kin
57 Price tickets

9
10
tt
t9
·
21
24

Hera's son
Low-cal
MS readers
Hot time
In Quebec
18-wltaatera
Blol . or
astron.
Farfetched
E~rthen jar
One of the
Slmpsons
Ponlng soil
Conse·
quently
Was willing
(2 wda./
Runel or
Olin
Wine and
dine

DOWN
Larry King's
channel
2 Schlep
· 3 Nobel Prize
city
4 Salad
. w~h apples
5 Parch
6 Grass beard
7 Firefly
cousin
8 Rippling

25
26
27

28
29

31
33
35

36 Serf
3B Bogging
down
39 Drab color
41 Repeat
verbatlm
42 Andes
nation ·
43 Hit (discover)
45 He directed
Marlon
46 Ladder part
47 Kipling
·.
classic
49 And ,
. to Fritz
51 Yr. lractlons

..

740.9\12-2269

Public NC?tice

~RIZZWELLS

Public Notice

6UI-I1\\ER, WllAT
Mt '1llll tl:l'ol-16

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celeblity Cipher cryptogram~ !I'll o-e~1ed tro,m qUOlalkns bV lamollli people, past and l)l'esenl
Each !etler ., ~,Cipher Sl!ri4S tor ~

TOday's due: Uequals P

" B' X

ZPPF W

GXLAW

Z H F· X . "L

A PD XG

VBP

UP. XEGT .""

NPBt

YLZFPCHKB

LKEPG

NlCHXG

PI

WUL1HWB

ARIES (March 21 -APril 19)- Unless you
clearly define your objectives today, you
are not apt to have too much to show tor
your effo.rts. You could waste your time
hopping trom, one job to another, finishing nothing.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) EYe'ri
tt1ough vou might start out feeling very
industrious today, it would be smart not to
l$kt on anything that Woutd be consid·
ered a t1eavy 'workload . Your concentration may not be up to it.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20)- tf yolJ butt
Into a situation today that is none of your
business, you could get vourselt wrapped
up in something quite serious. Don 't
needlessly cpmptic"f!te things tor yourself.
CAt»!CER (June 2 1-Juty 22)- Make it a
policy to avoid all domestic disagree ments today, because even a small
squabble COUld lead to cl chain reaction
and draw the entire tamily ~nto a quag mire. Ke'p a lid o n all conflicts ·
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Even though
this may be your only day to do so, it is
not a· good flme for you to tackle any taSk
that requires your full concentration. Your
atten tion span won 't live up "to its usual
standards.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22)- It is OK "to
pamper or treat yourself a bit today, but
not to the point of extravagance. Once
you get in over your head, you may not
De able to put a lid on it.
LIBRA {Sept. 23-0ct. 23) · - Being too
bent on gratifying your own desires tOday
couk:t cause you to be less considerate of
ott1ers than you usually are. It you see
yourseH becoming too self-serving. get
baCk in character.
,,
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)- Normally
there Is no one better at keeping sf3crets
than you. but today you might ~ care- ,
less with your talk and blurt out something confidential that could hurt another
quhe ba~. Keep mum.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec 21 I - II
m,ght not prow to be to your advantage
today to request any faVors !rom others.
Someone who complies could haw an
ulterior motive that would end up working
against you .
C APRICORN (Dec. 22--Jan . 19)- When
wi th per•ons who you woold like to
Impress today you'll have to be especially ·careful not to put on any aftectahol')s.
Instead ot being viewed faVorably, just

RLGAXY

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "The only lime you real~e you have arepU1a1ionts
when you're not living up ta it" - P1an1st Jose lturbi
•
(c) 2005 by NEA, Inc. 1·21

Rl!c~~onglt let:ers
0 .lour
scrambled

01 the
be·

woTO:S

low 10 forfTI leur wordt.

By Bernice Bede Oeof

St Rt 68 1 Darwin, OH

Seff·StOrage,

5·

Sat~"'-Y,Jan.22,2005

DREAM WAS F"Of&lt;ttED
SEFOII;E SAID 11~ LLK"S
MADE A MOCKERY
OF THE "STAR WARS""
FRANCHIS E BY CREATING

Whaley•s. Auto

~~~ .
High&amp; Dry

Pass
Pass

Astro:.
'Graph

Of c.OLlRSE , THAT BoYISH

Mrf

Athen•

Sat. 8:30-Noon.

Tho
Annual
Financial Report of
Letart
Township,
Meigs County for
2004 Ia now complete
and available ror
review at tha home of
lhe clerk, Joyce White
by appointment only
call (740) 247·3125.
1/21
'
.

3 NT

Easl.
Pass

'blr&lt;Jiirthde,y:

THIS MA.Y SU
YOU, KID, B-UT I DIDN 'T ·
OUT TO ~ECOI'\E A

IMPORTS

Stop &amp; Compare

broken, and the same
has
become
absolute.
Petltlon~r
The
prays
that
the
Delendant(s) named
above be require to
answer and set up
thalr lntorest said real
estate or be forever
barred from atiHrtlng
the same, for foreclo-sure of aald mortgage, the marahltllng
of any liens , and the
sate of said real
estate, and the proceeds of Bald sale
applied to the payment of Petitioner's
Claim In tho proper
order of Its priority,
and lor such other
and further relief as Is
just and equitable.
The Defendant(&amp;).
named above are
required to answer on
or before the 18th day
of March , 2005 .
By: Reimer, Lorber &amp;
Arnovltz Co., L.P.A.
Ronald J . Chernek,
AHorney at Law
EMCMortgage
Corporation
Attorney for PlalntlffPelltloner
P.O. Box 968
Twlnaburg, OH 44087
(330) 425-4201
(1) 14, 21, 28, (2) 4, 11,
t8

2•

BIG NATE

M-Fri S:30-5: 00

Notice

Pass

•

740-992-1&amp;11

Pu.b lic

I NT

~orth

Byron 's dog.

~

"'EPISODE I . 1HE PHMTOM

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Dbl.

Here is the start of an· inscription tO
whom or wh &amp;:t? "'Near tt1is spot are
deposited the remains of one who pos·
sessed Beauty without Vanity, Strength
without Insolence, Courage without
F~rocity, and all the Virtues of Man with·
out his Vica.s.~
Bridge can be a game of spots ..Which is
the critical spot-card in ftlis deal? South is
. In three no-1rump. Wast l~ad s a low heart.
East puHing up the queen. How sho uld
the play proceed? What do yOu think ot
the auction?
First, the bidding. North is strong enough
to start w ijh a takeout doubl e. South has
an easy adva.nce of one no-trump, showIng the same ~Jalues as a 'One-no-trump
response . North's two-spade rebid prom·
ises at least a five-ca,rd suit and some.18·
20 points. South, holding two lop honors
and knowing that West ts in a North-South
sandwich, jumps to three no-trump.
There are only 15 points missing, and
East has already played the heart queen .
So, West must have the rest (except perhaps lor a jack). Your basic plan Is to lead
twice toward dummy's spade honors. But
what about trick one?
Often, It -~~ right to hold up when your only·
'&lt;I stopper· appears to be the ace, but not
~ here. You also have that critica l spot-card,
the heart 10. When West , is in with the
spade ace, that spot will be a second
stopper. So, take the fi rst trick and play a
spade to dummy's quEien. Back to hand
with diamond, you lead your second
spade. You are not a lock to get hOme, but
·
here you w ill collecl an overtrick .
The . inscription is to Boatswa in. Lord

&amp;

• Leave a messa e

ROBERT
BISSEll
COISTRUCnON

West
l•

48' HaW I

a

~

740·742·2293 '

92 Ford F-600 Dump Truck
90 : lsuzu Ca r nice $800
(74ql446·9177

the" ••m• premiHB
deeded by Morgerot

2

15 zero
16 She loved
Lennon
17 Plunging
necklines
18 Ore . .
deposits
20 Watch site
22 Sluggor
Met 23 Beat
the field
24 Reaerve
eupply
27 Amaze
30 Baby
elephant
31 Serious
conflicts
32 Sitcom
planet
34 Under par
35 Grow com
36 Magazine
part .
37 Walt over

Anowor to Provlouo Puzzle

1·21

Home Construclio n. Remodeling.
Renovations. Decks, Garages, Pole
Buildings, R'oofs, Siding, Windows &amp; All
New

Ta~e

91 Ford Ranger with Topper,
A-1 condition , !304)773·
5835, 207 Zuspan ·St,
Mas'o n $1 ,200

Defenclllnt(s), Thomas
Darst, Jane Doe,
Unknown SpouH, ,II
any, of Thomas Darst,
*Yvonrle Darst, *John
Doe,
Unknown
Spouse, If any, of
Darst,
Yvonne
"Charles WhiHington,
• Jane Doe, Unknown
Spouoe, If any, ol
Charles WhiHington,
have or claim to have
an lntereat In the real
estate
deecribed
below "The land
relerred to In thla
commitment Is ahuat•
ed In · the State of
Ohio,
County
of
Meigs Situated In the
VIllage . of Pomeroy,
County of Meigs end
State of Ohio:
Beginning at the
Southeaat comer of a
lot formerly owned by
Lucinda Stork.y on
Union Avanue In llald
VIllage of Pomeroy;
thence .north 20 deg.
eaat along the north
line of said tot 100
teet; thence south 70
deg east 50 loet;
thence aouth 20 deg
weet · 100 feet to the
tine of oald Union
AV8nu.; thence olong
the tine of ..ld Union
AV8nue, North 70 deg
- • t 50 to the
place of ,beginning ,
said premiHo being a
part of Lot No. 425 of
aald
Village
of
Pomeroy, and being

MY Fl/lST
PllAFT.

Sunset Home
Construction

BUILDERS InC.

79 Ford truck F-150 4-WO
$2,800.00 Call (740)992·
2070 . .

above~namad

1'110/l~ING ON

/

BISSELL

1998 Ford Ranger, 85,000 'c -=--.,.-,.------,
miles, 5 speed, . e~~:ce llenl
condition. $3,200. (740)3792675 or (740)645·4494.

Iliad Its Supplaniantal
Complaint in the
Court of Common
Pleaa Melga County,
Ohio alleging that tha

4 3

Lots of spots,
one vital trick

T~t.L tt~ll ~·,._,

........_

WV036725

Sun. C losed
Haled blda for 29, alx OF WHOSE NAMES
foot
Boca
park OR ADDRESSES ARE
benches, cedar color,
UNKNOWN
TO
MARY
recycled .
plastic PLAINTIFF,
de•lgn, along with
EMMA 'KING, IF LIV·
five traeh ·recepta- lNG THE SPOUSE IF
clea, 32 or 33 gallons, ANY, AND TO THE
HEIRS,
recycled
· plastic WIDOW,
DEVISEES,
· AND
design.
.
Any and all bids NEXT OF KIN OF
must be saaled and
DESCENDENT, ALL
be
. In
the OF WHOSE NAMES
Clerk/Trouura r's OR ADDRESSES ARE
Office, 320 E. Main · UNKNOWN TO THE
Street,
Pomeroy, PLAINTIFF,
AND
Ohio, where they will
DOROTHY A. HILL 11:
be read aloud, at LIVING THE SPOUSE
noon,
Monday, IF ANY, AND TO THE
February 28, 2005. A . WIDOW,
HEIRS,
M C F W G 'bid bond Is not DEVISEES,
AND
1HOI GEL 1XVY31342 required. The VIllage NEXT OF KIN OF
2
of .Pomeroy reHrv.a DESCENDENT, ALL
The Farmers Bank the right to accept.or OF WHOSE NAMES
and
Savings deny any and all btda.
OR ADDRESSES ARE
Company, Pomeroy, (1) 21,28 (2) 4 3TC
UNKNOWN TO THE
PLAINTIFF. ' THE
Ohio, reServes the ·
right to bid at thla
OBJECT OF THE
sate, and to withdraw
COMPLAINT IS TO
Public Notice
PARTITION
THE
the above collateral
REALTY
prior to sale. Further,
PARCEL
The Farmers Bank
NOTICE BY PUBLI· NUMBER
and
Savings CATION ON DEFEN- 1Hl119UOO,
DANTS
AND
Company reserves
t Hl1193.000,
the right to rejeCt any UNKNOWN HEIRS. IN I 1-411197.000,
THE COURT OF COM· 11-111192.000, AND
or all blda aubmltted.
The
above MON PLEAS, MEIGS THE PRAYER IS THAT
deacrlbed collateral COUNTY, POMEROY, SAID REALTY BE
OR
wtlt be sold "as Ia· OHIO. THE CITIZENS PARTITIONED
wh•re Ia", with no BANK OF LOGAN VS. ORDERED SOLD IF IT
MAE CANNOT BE PARTI·
axpreaaed or Implied ESTHER
TtONED, FOR AN
warranty given. The FRANKLIN, ET. AL.
OF
collateral muat be CASE NUMBER 04· ALLOWANCE
ATTORNEY
FEES
moved from propoorty. CV·142
For further lnfor, TO: ESTHER MAE HEREIN AND COST&amp;
matlon, or for an FRANKLIN, IF LIVING, YOU ARE REQUIRED
· appointment
to THE SPOUSE tF ANY, TO ANSWER THE
tnepect
collateral, AND TO THE 'WIDOW, COMPLAINT WITHIN
prior to .... dale con- -HEIRS, DEVISEES, 28 DAYS A~R THE
tact Dl- Flec:lor or AND NEXT OF KIN OF LAST PUBLICATION
DESCENDENT, ALL OF THIS NOTICE
~ Randy H.ys at 99~OF WHOSE , NAMES WHICH WILL BE PUB2138.
OR ADDRESSES ARE LISHED ONCE EACH
(1) 19, 20, 21
UNKNOWN
TO WEEK FOR SIX SIJC.
WEEKS.
PLAINTIFF, JOHN H. CESSIVE
THE LAST PUIIUCA·
Public Notice
s':O:fsi'Y,; TION WIU BE MADE
ANY AND TO THE ON FEBRUARY 11,
WIDOW,
HEIRS, 2005 AND THE 21
PUBLIC NOTICE
FOR · AN
AND DAYS
The Vlltllfla
of DEVISEES,
Ponlerc&gt;J, Ohio, Ia cur· NEXT OF KIN OF ANSWER WILL COM·
rentty
accepting DESCENDENT, ALL MENCE ON THAT

10 9 R 4

10872

.

Pomurtty, Ohio
25 Veers Local EK rJence

Publh.: Notices In Ne~spapers.
Vour Rlg.:ht. to Kno"".. Delivered Right to Your Door.

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
that
· on
given
Saturday, January 22,
2005, at 10:00 a.m., a
public sale will be
held at 211 W. Second
St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company Is selling
tor . cash In hand or
certified check, the
following colletarat:
2003
Chevrolet
Monte Carlo 20 MSS
2G1WX12KB3942250
1
1997 Harley Davidson

10 9 7
Q8

. FRANK &amp; EARNEST

v,c. YOUNG Ill

1997 Dodg e Ram 1500, Ca ll
24 Hrs. (740) 4464x4. 1994 Ford •1-50, 61,000 0870, Rogers Basement
miles. Call {740)446-0924.
Waterproofing.

2000 Chevy Si lverado Z71,
4~~:4. LeathBf. Loaded, Hardbed Cover. Extended cab.
RUnning Boards, Excellent
Condition,
46,000-miles,
Books-for $19.500, asking
$17,500 (304)675-3899"

+

&amp;-- "

Opening lead; •

furnace work .

...:.::.::_______
~
•
Round &amp; squar~ bales in 1996 ford F-150, VB 351,
BA.SEMENT
barn, never wet. (740)388- 4 WD, 5 speed, 25.000
9703 or (740)446-3230.
miles on Jasper Motor and
WATERPROOFING
Clutch (304)675-2961 leave · Unconditional lifehme guerantee. Local references fur..,,...._ _ _ _ _......, _m_es_sa_g:_e_ _ _ _ _ _ nished. Established 1975.

F'O

•

South

SERVICE

i

FoR SALE

•
•

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: Both

1'1'=""--4-:-x-:4---,

(740)379·28 18; (740)379·
2929.

I

• A J 2
. K J 953
• J 3
.. Q J 5

South

JONES'

CARPE~TER

89 Grand Prix, needs some
Engine work $55_0 (304)675- 1994 Tracker 5 speed. 4X4
Red w/cloth top, . Looks and
6486
runs good, 113,000 . mites.
93 Thu nderbird, V6 , 5
$1,800.00 (740)742·235 7
speed, supercharger. $900.
Call (740)256·1331.'
1998 Ford F1 50 XLT, 4WD,
white 'pkg. w/ grey cloth inte·
96 Ford. Taurus. maroon, 4rior. 3rd door, 112,000 miles.
door, auto, V-6· , air, power Extremely good looking .
seals
and
windows
Truck in excellent condition.
$2,000.00 or willing to lrade.
Will sell for pay .off, $1 1,800.
47--·:..20.:.2.:.8_ _ __
~17..4.:.0:::
)2..
(740)446-8'402 after 6pm.
99 Pontiac Sunfire. 2 dr.,
green spoiler, good shape,
VANS '
54.500
negotiable, L---FiloiiRoiiSiiAiiii"iiE-,..1
(304)593·4292 , 740·591·
0679
1995. Dodge Conversion Hi
Top Van Like New. VB .
CLIFF'S LJSEp CARS
Queen
bed,
TVNCR.
99 Durango, 39,000 miles. $6.000
or
$9,900; 03 PT Cruiser,
37,000 mile s, $9,500; 00
Mu stang, 29,000 miles,
$6,900; 98 Mustang, -71,000
miles. $5,500; 66 Ford LTD.
390 moto r, 42,000 miles, For 'Sale: 2000 Honda 350
$4;550; 96 Subaru Legacy, Rancher. (ATV), good co ndiall wheel drive, $3.250. Call lion . ,, $2.250.00
Phone

TRucKS

Eal'll

13
14

... 9 613

85 Ford Crown Victoria. 1994 red Chevy Ext. Cab zSouthern car, 1 owner, like 71. 1/2 ton , 4x4. Excellent
new, 82,000 miles, $1,400. co ndition . Aski ng $5,900 .

F'5

West

·¥ A 10 7
t K6 5

Hay- 1st &amp; 2 nd cuttings, · (740)256-9090 br (740)256- ~
square bales. 1st cuning- ;,
62,;00;;..
. -.,..---......, ;:~;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
$1.25/bale; 2nd cuning-

American Pit Bull puppies, 5
AI.JI'Oi
weeks old, No papers. Dad
fUR SALE
registered.
Red
nose.
$ 100.00 (740)247·3006
$500' H d ·
Ch
'
.
on as,
evy s,
American Pit. Bun Te rrier Jeep's,
Ect.
Police
'pups for sale, watch Dog Impounds! Cars from $500
Bloodline. 5 112 wkslold for listings 800-391·5227

Save $20 on all . ~-Plaque (304)675-7638

6:30 pm

IC

Call (740)64J·2285.

Hound. $100
(740)441-0712.

lr~ I

For Lease: Office or retail
spaces in very good condition . Downtown Gallipolis.
Appro~~.. 1600 sq. tt. each. 1

FOK SALE

mR SALE

[

KQB65
6 4
.
A Q 7 2

.... A. K

First Pack $10.00
All After 1st $5.00
Paying $100.00 a Game
$200.00 for the X
$300 .00 Picture Frame
$1 ,000.00 Coverall
Crank It Up $16,000.00
22 Numbers Left
Starburst $1 ,0 50.00

l..,..a--A-u-ros-...,

4 male puppies. 1/2 reg . · L_ _ _ _ _ _
Engl ish Bulldog &amp; Bear •

..

Garv

mRRENr

SPOKllNG

· January 22

Block, brick, sewer pipes, Baldwin Console Piano.
windows, lintels. etc. Claude Good condition, asking
Weight set. over 250 l~s. Winters , Rio Grande, OH
cast weights; 45 lbs barbell, Call740.245·5121.
I \ H\ 1 "' ' 1'1'1 II "'
$75 .
bench &amp; stan d.
,\1 1\l\lt)( h.
PE:rs
7401446·4600

Rev. Mary Cook and
Rev. Larry Gilland For
their comfo rting ~o rd s

SPACE

rI ~,__.k.UDJJ-~.G rr

t

American Legion, Middleport

Husky pups. AKC
Registered. Black &amp; white
male-$300.
solid white
female-$500. Ph: (740)7970154.

reQalrs .on major brands in
shop or .at your home.

,PVNRC for the l o.ving
provided,
care
they

•
•

www.pvalley.org
AA/EOE
L . . . _ _ . . __ _ _ _ .

Repair-675-7388. For sa le,
express our appreciat1on
to our family and friend s re-conditioned j!lutomatic Warm Morning Botlle Gas
washers .&amp; dryers, refrigera- .50,000 BTU, Heating Stove,
fo r the love and kindness
gas and electric 32 inch long, 26 Inch t1igh ,
tors.
shown during the loss of
our dear mother. We , ranges, air conditioners, and 18 inch wide, 2 controls
would li ke to thank wringer washers. Will do $100 (304)675· 1545

s
a
12

01 ·21~$

North

(304) 675·4340

Hours: M-F 9-6, Sat 9-4:30

t

39 Brat, ptuo
40 Bluo chip
lllaek·
·
giant
tongued dog 41 Sine - non
Tea...
42 FoodUse hlp
prOCBStJ9r
boot•
eanlng
Space
44 AI of Indy
atatlon org.
lame
Atherla's
41 French
symbol
Legion
Very dry
headgear

R A MK E B

·

I'

1 r:-rl
" I -.-~I
If.-.--r:l.l--,--:.

A fnend, who is an accoUn·
tant has lh1s sign hung m h1s
office: "T rulh hurts especially at
~~-'-------, - - - · - - -- - l1rne ."

COVE OJ

0

compr~le rhe chut:kie QIJoted

bv hll•rog '" the min,,g wordl
yoU .d~velop ircm !lep No j below.

Deputy· Btink

-Rock v- Urchm · F'IGNIC

A CIJIIe was walkmg through the rar' v111i1 her b~;;u
She slopped suddenly and satd , "Ants work t1arc oul
t11ev find ltrne to ao on a PICNIC" .

ARLO &amp; JANIS

the oppoSite may resuh.

SOUP TO NUTZ

.RI~ ~ -:&gt; .

IS NORTHUP DODGE

252 Upper River Road • GaiUpolis
740· 4U·Q842 • 949·1155 Evenings
800· 446·0841

-

·----

'
•
_ _ _.

- ·'Th.-lo.o-

�.

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

'

www.mydaillysentinel.com

Friday, January 21,

2005

Big Ben turns hometown into Steelers fans
BY JOHN SEEWER

Associated Press
.

FINDLAY - Marla Coppler's
barbershop is a shrine to her favorite
hometown quarterback.
.
A Ben Roc;thlisberger clock is
tacked to the wall. Newspaper clippings detailing his breakout rookie
season are taped to the mirrors. And
a replica of his Pittsburgh· Steelers
jersey greets everyone who walks in.
Across town, Tony's Restaurant
has its own black and gold disptax
and serves up the "Big Ben Burger. '
All of this would have been considered treason a year ago in a town
that sits in the middle of Cleveland
Browns territory, the Steelers' hated
rival.
Not anymore.
Roethhsberger's success - he's
won his ftrst 14 starts and could
become the first rookie quarterback

to take his team to a Super Bowl with
a victory over New England Sunday
-has captivated his northwest Ohio
hometown.
"Everyone on this side of the
Pennsylvania line used to be a
Browns fan," Dick Denman said as
he got his hair trimmed this week. "1
defy you to find one anymore."
Still. there are some Browns fans
still around. But ·even they've been
caught up in the ex.citement, covertly
buymg Steelcrs gear.
·~we give them a little hassle," said
Ronnie Romero, a salesman at Finish
Line, a sports store at the town's
mall. "They always say they're supporting the hometown guy or they
say it's for someone else."
Browns fan Frilz Wink, general
manager of Buffalo Wild Wings, a ·
restaurant where fans gather to
watch the Steelers, admitted to buying a Big Ben stocking cap last
week.

"That's as' far as I'll go," he said.
"I'm a big Browns fan, but Ben's a
good guy. I'm rooting for him not
the Steelers. Ai least that's the way I
rationalize it."
Anything with Roethlisberger's
name, face or No. 7 jersey is 'selling
- magnets, bobblehead dolls, blankets, flags, mugs, toy cars, hats (pink
ones too) and even a Steelers birdhouse.
Big Ben merchandise accounts for
about three out ·of four sales at
SpgrtsMania, said clerk ~ebecca
Foltz.
·
''I could write Steelers on a piece
of paper and they'd buy it," she said.
His appeal has grown nationwide.
His NFL jersey is the top seller this
year, according to Finish Line and
Reebok.
Roethlisberger's popularity has far
surpassed that of the.last pro football
player to come from Findlay, punter
John Kidd who played for five teams

before retiring in 1999.
bought them a mansion in town. ·
"We just rolled over lau?hing at
"That was a kicker," Foltz said.
"This is a quarterback." .
that;" Snodgrass said. "That s so not
Those around the town of about them."
The hometown fans say they like
39,000 who know Roethlisberger
and his fami l~ say their down-to- how Roethlisberger is always willearth personalities are a big reason . ing to sign an autograph when he has
why everyone is pulling for the the rare chance to come back home,
quarterback.
about 100 miles west of Cleveland.
· They know him from church or
He hasn't been back yet, though,
they remember when , he played on to eat the monstrous "Big Ben
the high school team with a grand- Burger" since it debuted at Tony's
son,
Restaurant iri November. .
"We've always said he is so midThe burger comes· with two halfdie America," said Jerry Snodgrass, pound beef. patties, lettuce, tomato
Roethlisberger's basketball coach at and' barbecue sauce. Cheese js an
Findlay High School. "He's what extra 7 cents. It's topped off with a
middle America wants to root 'for. Steelers flag attached to a toothpick.
You want to wear his jersey.
· Even· the signs advertising the
, His father, Ken, and ste~mbm, burgers on eaclr table have become
Brenda, and sister, Carlee, sull live coveted items, ·said Tom Brown,
in the same three-bedroom house. ' owner of Tony's.
.
,
.
There was a rumor this fall that
"They keep swiping them," he
their son, who starred at Miami of said. "We had to replace 19 last
Ohio before goi'ng to the NFL.. weekend."

· lhe·play's the thing:

Associated Press

.
The P1ttsburg~ St~elers got
some extra mouvauon when
odds were released for the
AFC championship game:
They were 3-point underdogs
to New England despite having the NFL's best record,
despite being at home and
despite having beaten · the
Patriots.
Some were surprised by the
perceived slight, given that Atlanta (plus 5)
Pittsburgh carries a I 5-game
,
winning streak into Sunday. . at Philadelphia
· ..'The Steelers love it, though. ·
What's better than being able
The Eagles demonstrated in
to trot the old "We get rio their win over Minnesota lasi
respect" line?
week that they don't need
In other words, no one Terrell Owens to be effective
wants to be the.favorite.
on offense. That game also
"They
deserve
it," showed why Philadelphia lost
Pittsburgh cornerback Chad its third straight NFC title
Scott says. "They're the game last season- they di~­
champions. They played' very n't have Brian Westbrook,
well against the Colts and we who like Owens is a threat
just barely beat the Jets. from anywhere on the field.
That's why they're favored."
The Falcons have a guy like
True, though the odds seem that, too.
His name is Michael Vick
to ignore the Steelers' 34:20
victory over the Patriots on and he plays quarterback \\(ith
Oct 31. Then again, the his' legs as mucli as with his
Patriots played that game arm. In fact, he might be the
without Corey Dillon, who answer to the Eagles' blitzes:
ran for 144 yards against They might be able to get by
blockers, but Vick is an
Indianapolis last weekend.
This is the first time the vis- . escape artist like no one else.
iting team is favored in the
Still, no one man can beat
AFC title game sinc.e the Philadelphia by himself. And
1997 season, when Denver Donovan McNabb is a pretty
was favored by 2 1/2 at good escape artist at QB for
Pittsburgh. The Broncos won the Eagles.
·
24-21 and went on to win the
The Eagles probably. have
Super Bowl.
'
the most to fear from their
. Minnesota was a 2-point own psyche - those three
road favorite against the New straight losses have their fans
York Giants four years ago in scared. But Philadelphia
the NFC and that didn' t work should win this one, especialvery well: The Giants won ly if it snows, as is forecast.
41-0.
The Falcons are an indoor
In· Patriots-Steelers, the team, and indoor teams have
spread reflects the quarter- trouble in elements (see,
·
backs.
Minnesota above).
Tom Brady has been the
Unless Vick is even more
· Super Bowl MVP in two of slippery ons lippery footing .
his three seasons as New
Probably not. ·
England's starter, while the
'Steelers' Ben Roethlisberger
EAGLES. 24-13
is a rookie whose two inter• • •
ceptions almost did in his
LAST WEEK: 3-1 (spread),
~
team last we!!k against the 3-1 (straight up)
Jets. .
~;'LAYOFFS 5-3 (spread),
Yes, Roethlisberger is· l4'0, 4-4 (strai ght up)

.

un a

.

Lehman leads onslaught
on easy North course
SAN DIEOO (AP) - Tom
Lehman was so locked into
his ~arne Thursday that he
didn t realize until after his
round he had birdied the last
six holes · for a I0-under 62
and ·a one-shot lead in the
Buick Invitational.
One thing was clear: He
must have been on the North
course at Torrey Pines.
In a tournament that takes
two days to figure qut who's
. playing the best. Lehman
matched his career-low round
on the easier North course
with a steady diet of fairways
and greens. He birdied nine of
his final 12 holes for a oneshot lead over Dean Wilson .
''I'm doing a lot of things
right that you need to do right
out here," Lehman said. "Jt

would hav,e been nice to continue to the fust tee on the
South course and keep
going." ,
Or maybe not.
All but two of the 19p 17
scores came from the North
course, which · played nearly
three strokes easier.
Aaron Baddeley (66) and
Peter Lonard (67) had the best
scores on the South course,
which plays at 7.566 yards
and will host the U.S. Open in
2008.
Among the top six players
in the world at· Torrey Pines,
only Ernie· Els played the
N9rth course (6,873 yards).
He also took advantage, ; ing n.ine birdies and get g
away with a few sloppy s s
f~ra 7-unqer65.
,

'
CD/1113 St- Sp""" Powor s-1,
Alr C...tli. .

Y11tec 21001.._ Alr cdk!

' 1 zn s..,

I

•S14,99P. •. ... .
~

'

..

'

"

.

..

~

'

lUND NEW 2005 CHEVY
MALIBU SEDAN

lUND NEW
SILVEUDO

. Pow• Soots &amp;l.ocl., F.W DNw- ~*"CD Sym.

4JOOYHtoc• o,.~z.. Alrc 1111 • 1 Dn.. t.nc-

llhin \alit·~ l'uhli,hing( o.

• Pruett to speak in Point
Pleasant. See Page B1

BY BRIAN

J.

t

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY- Meigs County real
estate owners will likely sec increases on their 2004 tax bills when they
come out in a few weeks, because of
. a six-year revaluation of the county's
26,800 real estate parcels.
The rewaluation of all of the co unty's real estate was recently complet-

AEPworkers
offer grants
to schools
STAFF REPORT

.

NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

INSIDE
• FFA adds new building.
SeePage A2
• Toll workers negotiating
contract in tough labor
climate. See Page A2
• Sponsors, teams
needed for WalkAmerica.
See·PageA6
• Local breeder included.
in sire evaluation report.
See Page A6
• Livestock report.

WEATIIER
BUNDNEW
RENDEZVOUS Cl

CHESHIRE - American
Electric Power's · Gavin,
Mountaineer and .Sporn
plant s supported employees'
. volunteer efforts recently by
awarding 42 grants totaling
. $4,200 to local schools and
organizations • in · West
Virginia and Ohio in 2004 in
honoi of the 42 AEP employ-.
ees and retirees.
The · AEP
Connects
Volunteer Grants, a program
of the Gavin. Mountaineer
and Sporn plants' parent
company, AEP, were created
'to, recognize the employees'
and retirees' significant volunteer service to the organi zations.
·The AEP Connects program recognizes th~ commitment of AEP employees
ana retirees to their cqmmunities an~pports the caus. es they beWlve in , according
to Michael Morris, chairman, president and chief
executive ot'ficer. More than
780grants were made company-wide last year represent ing more than . 130,000
volunteer hours donated by
AEP employees and retirees
. and their families .
" Although no monetary
grant can compare to the

Please see AEP, AS

Powor Wllolowe &amp; l.ocl-. 1-l•ylesi llt!J CD s.
lym.

1110 H 1..-Pow•WW.We &amp;IN-. CD St-IM 6 ......

l'olllt'l'O) • ~1iddkpm·t· (;allipolis • .Janua11 :q. :!oo;;

ed after nearly a year 's work, Meigs
The revaluation was ordered by the
CoJ.!nty A~ditor Nancy Parker Ohio Commissioners of Taxation ,
Grueser said Friday. and is designed and involved two physical assessto equalize property va lues through~ . ments of each parcel of real estate.
out the county.
·
Appraisal Research Corp. completed
"The objective of the revaluation is the revaluation . Eac)l parcel was
equalizing values to make sure tha.t physically inspected, and data on the
each property owner pays his or .her parcel's tax card was compared with
fair share of taxes," Grueser said the findings and updated to reflect a .
Friday. "'In general, that objective more accuraie valuation. Another
was accomplished."
appraiser then re-visited each parcel

IUIID NEW 2005 CHEVY
TAHOE lS 414

.

Clleck 1111 Tile Great

r....., Sillll; o.,,. s-tty Sysl•

leals! •• aua1111 IM 1:er1111e• used ve111c1es1

2004Cim
MAUll CWSK Sllll

UIIDAI

• All&amp; W\tele • · · - ........
• CJ sto SyL •

• hly Pier. E....... • Ala W\tele
• CD StwR Sys.
• Cnho &amp; Ill

•-loth ·

l• ~ I

lEGAL

2004
U IIIIIDID VII
• low Ht11 &amp;M. • CD 11- Syo.

• c... &amp; lit

• lliyleu ltlry

2004 POITIIC
GUID PIIIGtP

,'\1) .

:\o. 1

Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics Editorials
Obituaries
Region
Sports
Weather

C4

" messy .mix.''

Temperatures are expected ·
to inch toward or past the
freezing mark in southern
Ohio · on Monday. the
National Weather Service
predicted.
Light ·snow that fell
through Thursday became
heavier and beg&lt;)n sticking to
surfaces late Thursday afternoon as temperatures fell.
Road conditions rapidly
became tricky, sending the
State Highway Patrol and
loc al emergency crews on the
go dealing with .accidents .. ·
. The patrol . and Gallia
County's EMS rescue truck
were dispatched to U.S. 35
Charlene Hoefllch/photo
near Gallipolis at 4:49 p.m. Playing in the snow isn't just for kids. Craig and Bobbi Jo Wolfe who live at the corner of
Fourth and Palmer Streets in Mipdleport braved the below-freezing temperarvres to go out
·
.....
and built this eight foot snowman in their front yard.
Please see Winter, A2

D Section
irisert

A4
As
A2 ·B .S ection
A6

...

. '.•

© aoos Ohio Valley Publ18hing Co.

.

1JAfLIPOLIS
Any
doubt that it 's not winter,
should be erased ·by the end
of this weekend as officials
and citizens alike contemplate new snowfall and slick
road cond'ition s.
Steady snowfall Thursd;iy
night into early 'Friday left
two to three inches of white
stuff on the ground, the most
snow seen in the area .in
some time .
But more was expected
·.from a system that came
through the area Saturday,
bringing freezing rain and
r4in along with it for what
area forecasters labeled a

24 P.wES.

A3

Please see Melp. A5

KKELLY@MYDAI LYTRI BUNE .COM

INDEX
Around Town

'

to ensure the changes are accurate.
"The market valu.es on the new
property record cards reflect an estimated market value of the parce ls as
of Jan. I , 2004," Grueser said.
"Taxes on the new values are
payable this month .''
Grueser urges taxpayers to contact
her otlice at 992-2698 before they

Bv KEVIN KELLY

.

4 SECTIONS -

\ 'ol.

Winter makes itself k'nown in area

Det~ilo on Page A6

BUNDNEW
SILYEU.DO 3/4 1011 HD m. CAl 414
.... v-a Eo;. D•IZ• Alr &lt;e..lth ' , All/fM h.

i&lt;;I.:.!,) •

Meigs six-year_property revaluation completed

SPORTS

See~geA6

lUND NEW
PONTIAC GUND Pill Gl

'&lt;':,

•1!1

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

I

lUND NEW 2005. CHEVY
COLOUDO. EXTENDED CAl PICKUP

,

tmt

'

Page AS
• Lester Black, 83
• Mary K. Blake, 81
• Kennith Gordan
Evans, 60
• Stanley Mooney, 70
• Dick Thomas, 83
· • Elizabeth Mildred
Thomas, 93

lUND NEW
SUNFIRE SUN &amp;

House of the Week:
Home with growing family
in.mind, 01

to sbJgeoaft, Cl

OBITUARIES

'far better than any rookie
quarterback ever fared in the
league, and he was a unanimous choice for NFL
Offensive Rookie of the Year.
. But "rookie" and "champi. ,
,
onsh•p are words that don ~
mesh. _And yes, the Patnots
r.art~ hne about Pittsburgh IS,
. We re play•~~ the best team
10 the lea~e.
.
. Not until proyen otherwise,
PATRIOTS, 20-19

BY DAVE GOLDBERG ·

.

Ariel Juniorlheabe exposes kids

NFL Playoff Picks -

Being·an underdog
is extra motivation
for PittsbUrgh

LiviNG

ALONG THE RivER

Pictured is Janet
Ambrose who has
rescued nearly 800
dogs from being
thrown away or
euthanized, including
.Kenzie, a Labrador
Retriever who was
lOu nd by hunters
after being shot
during deer season.
Ambrose made sure
Kenzie r~ceived
medical &lt;;lttention
and has dec ided to
make her part of the
family. In the background. are two
rescued dogs, from
local shelters whom
Ambrose is trying to
place either in foster
or permanent
hOmes.
Beth Ser&amp;ent/ photO

To the rescue: Giving dogs a second chance
worked for Golden Endings for three
years. a Golden Retriever rescue organiBSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
zation.
POMEROY -· "Everybody has a purDog rescues find homes for throwpose and mine ·is to sl!ve lesser crea- away, unwanted dogs through network·
tures," dog rescuer Janet Ambrose said.
ing with others who transport and proShe has rescued nearly 800 dogs from vide foster homes for the animals until a
shelt()l's, abusive homes, and the sen- · permanent placement can be found.
Ambrose feels there is a need for dog
tence 9fbeing chained, o~what Ambrose
called "a living death." She often gives a rescues because animals are one of the
new leuse on life to elderly dogs who few members of our society that have
woulcl' ve peen put down for· the sin of virtually no advocacy groups. She also
growing old, including her beloved Fred pointed out that studjes show when
and Ginger that found a permanent home there's animal abuse in a home the abuse
of children is often prevalent, linking
with her before their deaths.
"She is so dedicated," fellow rescuer animal advocacy to · protecting those
Sharon Beauchong said about her friend, children.
Ambrose's latest reM:ue is a Labrador
"thi s is her passion."
Ambrose became a rescuer as a result Retriever nained Kenzie. An acquainof her involvement in dog shows Lnd her
Please see Rucue. A2
love of tile Golclen Retriever breed. She
BY BETH SERGENT

• Tt)tly....... • · · - ....
• Pe- Scot , • 3Hf V4 Pt-

• Taxes, Tags, 1ltle feel exlro. llhatt !ndudtd in salt price of ,_ Yfiiiida listed ne opplitoble.
••an opprVYad aadil. On selidad models. llot riSpllldJie lor typographkal errors. . ·
Prices good ~ 20th llr~ January 23rd.

MONDAY · SATURDAY 9 am · 8 fllll • SUNDAY 1fJm · 7pm • 422 07 56 • TOLL FREE 1-800 ·822-0417
'•

~.

•

·- - ---...

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

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="500">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9951">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="16994">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="16993">
              <text>January 21, 2005</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="137">
      <name>hawk</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="923">
      <name>jewell</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
