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Lawn &amp; Garden 2005

Hospice social workers
recogilized,As

inside today's Se~tinel

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o l r:\ IS • \ ol. .) -1 · :\o
. . lb-

.

NEW CARS
2005 FORD TAURUS 2005 FORD MUSTANG

NEW TRUCKS/SUVS/MINIVANS
2005 FORD ·EXPLORER 2005 FORD F150 414

2005 FORD RANGER

$16,7

2005 MERCURY SABLE

•"

I

BY BRIAN J. REED
BY BREED@MYDAILYSENTtNEL:coM

24

2005 FORD CROWN VICTORIA

.......
;·,.,..•.

,. . "'

~.~., ,

.. ·

:'V

.

-

·-

CITY

29
HWY

2005 MERCURY MOUNTAINEER

Davenport and Jim Sheets
discussed their plans to gauge
public support of either a halfpercent sales tax in cr~ase or a
50-cent su·rcharge on local
phone bills as a means of supporting a 911 operation. A
survey will be prinled in The
Daily Sentinel next week, and
the results will be considered
before either charge is placed
on the November ballot,
Davenport said yesterday.

Other counties pay for 91 1
operations both ways, but a
sales · tax would generate far
mor.e funding per year than a
phon~ charge. according 10
information provided commissioners by 911 Committee
member Dean McKnight. The
sales tax would generate an
estimated $480;00 per year.
while the phone charge wou ld
generate on ly $64,264.32.
Commissioners said yester-

"" "'

. day either means. of finan cing
a 911 center would be placeu
on the fall ballot before being
imposed, although they have
allthority to impose an additiona! half-percent sales tax
witholll votcr 'approval.
The 9 11 committee esli mates operating costs of
$350.000 per year. .after the
first year. for a 911 sen·ice.
but propose the construc tion
of a .new 9 11 center to be

shared wi th ·the Meigs
Emergency
Management
Agency. rather than operating
th~ service from an existing
location .
The
Meigs·· .
Emergency Medical Services '
would remain in. place to
operate emergency squad services, and none •of'! he village
po l ke departments have indic&lt;lted they would elim inate
Please see 911, AS

Seniors express concerns
· . at town hall .meeting .·
Panel of experts on aging issues listen

, ~~:h,., HS A$ HIGH AS

the proposed privatization of
Social Security, -tO .. decisions
they make about buying food,
MIDDLEPORT
.
tilling prescriptions, or payCo~cems. about serv1ces \O . ing uti lilies because of inadesentor ctttzens, today Jnd tn quate income, to the menu
the future , were cured 111 a . ·selection for senior meals in
town hall ~eeting hosted by the nutrition program .
. a panel of ex perts (ln. agmg
The Middleport meeting was ·
1ssues held a! the Mtddleport the second of five town hall
Famil y Life Center Thursday.. meetings in all' eight-county
Hosted by the Area Agency area of southeast Ohio being
on Agtng and cmce~d by · conducted to gather infonnaJoetta. L. Lane. dtrector. the tion which will be presented to
open toru ~ ~tlended by wel l the White House conference
over I 00 restdents lasted fo r . on Aging Committee. That
over. two hours as the semors committee will then compile
detmled some of t.he ptob- information to be presented 'at
!ems they face . m rural the White House Conference
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYDAtLYSENTINEL.COM

2005 MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS

2005 LINCOLN AVIATOR

2005 FORD FREESTYLE

it
I
$11,555~)
STARTINGAT I
.

.

2005 FORD ESCAPE

$ STARTING
. AI
19,

STARTING AT

$40
2005 LINCOLN LS

. 2005 FORD EXPEDITION 2005 FORD FREESTAR

$19250
DISCOUNTS UP TO' .

STARTING AT

~,9

2

2005 LINCOLN TOWNCAR .2005 liNCOLN

OBITUARIES .
.· Page AS
• Geneva Avis, 81
• Leonard Erwin, 76
• James Quivey, 86

INSIDE
.STARTING AT I ~ I
2
6
.f
HWY

2005 FORD THUNDERBIRD

"'"" · "'~·dail~-.·ntind

.

.;.

$1 5,

2005 MERCURY MONTEGO

.

:!oo:;

•2005 FORD FOCUS

~ ·;o

STARTINC:. Al

2005 FORD FIYE HUNDRED

POMEROY
Meigs
County Commi ssioners will
survey the public to determine
how a 911 serv ice would be
financed , before placing a measure on the ballot in the fall.
· Meeting Thursday with
members of a 9 11 committee
they appoi nted · tas t year,
Commissioners
Mick

STAR'nl\liG At

~.

.

1,) .

Collllli.issioners to survey public on 911 financing

SPORTS .
• Marshall gets its man.
See Page 81

. STARTING A1

I RID \Y. \I'RIL
.

STARTING AT

$20,995 20051ERCURY MARINER
2005 MERCURY MONTEREY

• Fifth annual Leading
Creek Stream Sweep set
See Page A3
·• ·Intelligence experts
coming to Ohio University.
See Page A3
• Strickland signs on to
gasoline bill.
See Page AS
• Center plans Fun Night
·April 22. See Page A6

WEATIIER .
STARTING AT

$~3~81
5
.
J

DISCOUNTS UP TO

$1
.

.

DISt:OUNTS UP TO

~000

STARTING AT · 2 2

$19122I

CITY

?-Sf

A~:~~c~~a;~;~~a~~db~!~~~- ~~tAfi 1~~jn washington D c ..

Cha~one

.

Hoontch/photo

Joetta L Lane, director of the Area Agency on Aging. moderated a town hall meeting on aging issues
Thursday at the Middleport Family Life Center. Among the seven mem):ler panel were pictured, Rep.
Jimmy Stewart and Subha Lembach of the Ohio Association of Area Agencies on Aging.

ttons m the open forum related 10 the prescription drug
program which becomes a
part of Medicare in 2006. to

·. 3 t ·
. .
1
. t ts. here t~at recommen-

dattons wtll be developed to
Please see Seniors. AS

Commissioners approve Crossroads completing plans for May Appalachian celebratirn
May 14 eve nt. Hop ing to Denver Rice will perform
J.
new landfill fees
BREEOOMYDAtLYSENTI NEL.COM '
encourage greater attendance, Appalachian and bluegra ss
-

BY BRIAN

J.

BY BRIAN

REED

REED

MIDDLEPORT Li ve
BREEOOMYDAIL)ISENTINEL.COM
Appalachian music, demonstrations of Appalachian crafts
POfv!EROY -. Meigs County's on ly lanofill for
and a parade and race with a
building materials will be subject to new fe·es effecdefinite country theme - are
tive Friday, under new state legislation and a resoplanned for the second a nnual
lution approved Thursday by · Mei gs County · Appalachian
Heritage
Commissioners.
.
. _ Celebration in Middleport.
House Bill.432 imposed new regulations relat- ·
The event will be held on a
ing to the collection of fees from construction, Saturday th is year, and staff
debris and demolition landfills, whic h· collect from the University or Rio ·
building materials such as shingles, drywall mateGrande Crossroads program
rials and plaster and other by-products of building are fin~ li zi n g plans ror the
demolition.
The onl y such landfill in the county is operated
by Bob Jeffers of Pomeroy, just off Hiland Ro~d.
Jeffers previously paid a $1,500 annual licensing
fee to operate. Under the new regulntions, Jeffers
must pay 30 cents per cubic yard of material, or 60
cents per ton. Meigs County Health Commissioner
Larry Marshall said the health department will col· lee! 20 cents of the per-cubic-yard fee; the Ohio
EPA-three cents, Salisbury Township Trustees four
cents, and county general fund three cents. Those
distributions d,buble under · the per-ton rate,
Marshall said.
Other business
.
Commissioners signed a proclamaiion declaring
April 24-May I Soil and Water Stewardship Week,
at the request of Jenny Ridenour. education coordinator for the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District. The week promotes conservation, and
locally involves a coloring contest for lirst graders,
a poster contest for fourth graders, and an essay
. comest for sixth graders:
The Meigs SWCD is also coordinating . the
Leading Creek Stream Sweep from 9 a.m. until
noon on April 23. and a Watershed Day Camp from '
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on June 15 and IQ.
Commissioners
acknowledged donations .
toward the counfy jail renovation project from
Chris Wolfe, i{acine; Charles Salser, Racine; Ida

organi zers have moved the ce lebration from Friday to the
weekend. The street fes.tival
will be held from 10 a.m. to 3 ·
p.m., on South Second Avenue ,
from the . former Judy Kay 's
location to the "T," and will
i.nclude demonstrati ons of
Appalachian crafts, food, and
displays, and live . entertain ment on a· stage to be set up
near Peoples Bank.
Bob Bence and · Kendra
Ward, Creek Road ,Boys, . and .

mu sic throughou t the festival.
New to the fe stival this year:
ou th ouse race s. Local. teams
are invited .to co nstruct an outhouse, dress .in team costumes,
and co mpete for prizes fo r best
cost umes, mos t humorous
entry, best use of the theme;·
and most creative entry. The
race will begin at I :30 p . m ~.
preceded by a 12:30 p.m. out·
house parade.
·
Please see May, AS

KIDS TAKE FIELD · TRIP -

Detalla on Pace 1111

INDEX
2 SECI10NS- 16 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds ·

A3
B4-6

Comics

B7

Dear ,Abby
Editorials ·

A3
A4

Faith•Values

A6-7

MovieS

As

NASCAR
Obituaries

B2

Sports

As
B Section

AS
•
© zoos Ohio vo~~cy Publlshins .eo.

Weather

Preschoolers from
Carletori' School in
Syracuse took a tour ·
of the Meigs County
Sheriff's Office and
Pomeroy P'o st Office
to learn about their
community and the
. people who keep it
running. Their teacher,
Angie Weeks, said the
class had 'recently
been learning .about
. 'community helpers"
and felt it was good
for her students to get
out of the .classroom
and actually see they
do at their jobs.
· Weeks and her stu'
dents were joined by
teachers aids and parents on the tour:.
Beth 5ergent; photo

- PIH• see Lltnclflli. A5

In observance of Nation'a t Library Week
Holzer Medical Center, in collobor ; "

A&gt; tift

•

uthcr community programs, wiH'provide free

Non Fasting Cholesterp'l a~d GIU(~ose Screenin.gs • Heo'.th lnformution
I

t

I I

Soiurday, April J6 • l 0 AM - 2 PM
At BOssorcl Memorial

in Gallipolis •

to the public
•

-·
•

�, i'

'

The Daily Sentffiel

·PageA2 ·

•

'•

Friday, April15, 2005

AsTRONAUTS, COSMONAUT
BL\ST OFF FROM KAzAKH
STEPPE TO INTERNATIONAl SPACE STATION
.
.
BY JIM HEINTZ

A police officer with a dog
on gunrd as
the Russi&lt;;~n
Soyuz rocket
booster with
the Soyuz
TMA-6 spaceship is taken
to a launch
pad at the
Baikonur cosmodrome in
Kazakhstan.
The next ISS
(Internationa l
Space Station)
crew.
American
NASA astronaut Jo hn
Phillips.
Rus·sian cosmonaut Sergei
Krikalev, and
Italian ESh.
astronaut
Roberto Vittori ·
are scheduled
to blast off
early Friday.
AP Photo

haw been sthpentkd NAS .-\

aim-., to rL"' i\c 'lluuk fli~hh
a!-o · t:arh a~ ~~~L\ 15. with a
· BAIKO'-Jl1R. KaDikhstan mi..,..,iOtl h'. Di..;~·o,· en. to tl11..'
- A Smut. rm:ket llhtst~d into ..;pa~..: t' . . tallon.
th...: rosinu~ as the ~un rnse
The Columbia di,aster was
mw th~ Central Asian steppes caused l11 a chunk or insulat .).SSOCI A.lED PRESS V&gt;IRITER

Frida). · ·1•.'arrying a Russian. in ~ J'nam.ti\at kllnff the. tan'
Amcric''lll and Italian to the dtlrin~ lil'wll and uashcd the
int~rnaliona\ s p~\ce station a shuttle \ 'vim.!.
...
month before NASA revives a
In Cape (' :rnaver:rl. Fla..
shuiLit' program gro undeJ· NASA on Thursday suc·cc·.ssaftcr the Columllia disaster fu ll\ tested a 1:~des i ~1icd
I\\ U \'t~ar-.. &lt;t!.!O .
C.\tc:m:rl fuel t:rnk. ,,1,ic·h
~n·r m~)re'" than two years. underwent major modificaRll~ sia's space program has tions aft~r the Coltnnbia disasb.een the only lifeline to the ter. NASA removed f&lt; •am
st:ttion. delivering fresh sc ien- from s&lt;mie places on the tal'k
tists and supplies to the orbit- and applied the .insu lation difing laboratorv.
f~r~ntl y to prevent tiig chunks
Ru&gt;Sian se;·gei Krikakv anu from breaking otT.
.American ,John Phillips were
Heaters als~1 were in stalled
hcaoed for a six-month stay to prevent the fonnatioil or icc
on the spac:e stadon wh. ilc at :-.pots that no l.o ngcr have
their European Space Age ncy insulation. ·
colleague. Italian Roberto
A kev task for Krik;1lev and
Vit tori. was to ret urn 111 I0 Phillips wi ll be to observe the
days wi th the i:urrent . station cond it io n of the i nsu l a tin ~
crew.
tiles as the Discover)•
Russian Salizha n Shari pov approaches the space station.
and American -Lero y Chiao
"Our p;trticular part wi ll be
have been aboa rd the space conducting a photo surn~y of
station si nee October.
the ex terior of the sltuttlc
Jets of fire and billows of whik it is maneu've rin ~ immesmoke accompanicu the diately belnw '" prior"to clockli ftoff. whic h wa&gt; bei ng mon- ing."' Phillips saiu Thtirsday at
itored at Russian Mission Baikom1 r. in the winuswept
Co ntrol outslck Moscow. steppes qf the Centra l Asian
Applause ri pple-d throug h the nation of Kazakhstan.
hall as space eng ineers
"I think the eves of the
watChed th e launcl1 on a large world nre going to -be upon.th~ ·
screel1 and an annUum.:cr -~'~d shun le crew at that moment .
th e Soy t1 z hau r'eached orbi ~ and wil l be a lit tle on us. too.
with all systems workin g fine. and I'm really pro ud to be a
The three-stage rocket pro- part in that. ..
pelled the Soyuz to l.l.-110
Krikalev said he expected to.
mph within 7 111 minutes of be m0vcd by the sh uttl e
th e !au nch.
arrival.
As the Soyuz crosscu the
"When the shuttle cmi1es it
hori zon . . Mission Con tro l will be a big celebration.
wished. Phillips "Happy They're mit only bringing
Birthday'' in Russian . . He material for experiments,
turned 54 Friday.
material 'for the st'at ion. food.
His wife. La ura.. and water, gas, but t h ey' re~ br in g­
teenage dau ghter, All ie. ing emotions.'." he said, speakwatched
at
Baikonur in~ li ke the others from
Cosmoclrome with a crowd of heJ1inu gl a" in .a se pa rate
official s bundleu up against room to avoid contami nation.
· the cold. Temperatures were
Vittorl. alt h iJu~ h he will not
just abo'{e freezing ..
be aboard for" the ·shuttl e
"I had never seen a Soyuz arrival , ex pects to sp ice up the
launch before an u I agree it space station's cuisine.
V.JS very beautiful. I didn't
"One of the particularities ·
know what w expect but th e of thi s mission is that we also
SLinrisc, wit h the beautil\li have so me food coming from ·
rocket launch ... it was just Ital y," h~ ' aid. "'The idea is to
out standing," Laura Phillips brin g a little tlavor of Ital y to
said·,"adding th at she already the internation al space stamissed her husband.
tion. "
A main task f for the new
Krik alev..nt 46, is one of the
crew will be \velcoming a most experi enced space tlyU.S. space shuttle to the sta- ers. ha.ving made mis sions
tion after a two-yea r absence. both to tile space station and
Since th e space shuttl e the RusSian space ,'\tatio n·Mir.
Columbia di sintegrated as it At the end of the new mission.
return ed to Earth on Feb. I. he will lu1ve spent more· time
2003, killing nil seven ns tro- in spuL'C th an -uny humun -'. nauts on board, shuttle rli ghts mnre tha n 800 day.s.

Shelled eggs inside female dinosaur offer
glimpse at creature's reproductive biology
WASHINGTON (AP) The scient ists stud ied a
The rare discovery of eggs dinosaur from a group of
inside a dinosa ur has given dinosaurs ca ll ed ovirapscienti sts new clues about the toros'auria ns. This type of
reproducti ve biology of the dinosaur - probably 10 fee t
· creatures and more ·support to 13 feet ion~ - is a subfor th e theory that birds came group of th~e theropods.
from dinosaurs.
tho ught to have been the
'fhe pa ir o(she lled eggs is an,cstors to modern birds.
the firs t of its kind found
The remains of the shelled
inside a di nosaur. . sa id eggs looked like pineappleresearchers who reported the sized potatoes. The similar
discovery in Friday\ iss ue of size of the eggs suggests the
creature's two ov iduc ts each
the journal Science.
found
the produced a single, shelled egg
Scientis1s
dinosaur produced eggs in at the same time, th e report
some ways like a crocodile said .
and in mher ways like a bird . . Matt Carrano, curator of
Crocodi les and similar primi- dinosaurs at the National
live repti les have two ovaries Mllse um of Natural History in
enabling· them to l'ay a clutch Washington, said the findin gs
of eggs. Birds have a sii1gle provide greater insights into
ovary and can only lay one the biology of the dinosaur
egg ·at a time .
·
and the evolution of birds.
·"It's a window imo a particThe dinosaur's egg-producing capability lay somewhere ular stage of evol ution,'' he
in betwee1i , suggesting a link said . "Thi s particular dinosaur
wit h the modern bird, has characteristics that are
researchers said. It could pro- birdlike but retains reptillianduce more than one egg. but like features."
only one from each ovary at a . , "You have oviducts but
time .
they're only doing one egg at.
The theory rhat birds came time . Its biology is half way
from dinosaurs has hctn sup- there between a bird and rep.
ported by mt~n y researche". tile ."
sa id Tamaki" Sato of the
Carrano also said it tell s
Canadian Muse um of Nature something about birds.
in Ottawa. But thi s la\e&gt;; t
"Th e emlution of on e " eg~
research helps advance it. she at a time happCI\Cd ve ry early,
added . calling it "strong evi - before birds could lly. and
depce."
. ~ then the evolution of only one
There have been previous oviduct happened later," · he
finllin gs of round objects said .
around dino&gt;aur skeletons and
"That might be related to
&gt;cienti&gt;ts have su,pected they the origin of !light." he said.
r)light be eggs but beeau'e explaining that maybe birds
they did not ha ve shell,, there wanted tn ligh1en their bouy
wa\n·t certainty. Sa to said.
and 'o deve loped one"oviduct.
" You ha'c egg shell s with
rhi s ooc ... she saiu o ft he. ' PC\.' On the ;\let
Science: I! lip :Ill\ .., .., ,.1ciimen at the \iationa l \1u ,etlill
of '-Jatural Science in Taiwan l! ncenw~. 1)f;'t!,
that was excavated' from
Nationul
!vlu., eum
of
China. ''This is the lir't time Nil/ural Hisror\":
for 'ure ...
if IIp ://w1I'II : 11i I Iif.Si.n/u/

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Clubs and
. organizations

lTaft degree .

7390 for inf&lt;&gt;rmation .
Thursday, April 23
Sunda)', April 17 ·
RACINE
Racine ,
REEDS VILLE - Unity
American Legion Post 60::! Singer~. under direction or
wi ll meet at 6JO p.m. at the Su~ Matheney. 7 p.m . at Eden
Monday, April 18
POMEROY - Rioht to hall for &lt;I meeting followed L:niku Brethren Church.
Life meeting will be held at by a dinner. Officers will be
Thursdl1y, April 21
,
elected.
7:30 p.m . at · the Meigs
MIDDLEPORT
County Pomeroy Librury.
Ch1istian Golf League will
Danny . Harmon will be the
begin '1 t 5: 15p.m. at the Pine
guest speaker.
Hills Gu lf Course. The .
·
Thcsday, April 19
le;tgue is op~n to anyone 14
Saturday. April Hi
. MIDDLEPORT - A .speBIDWELL - Gospel · sing years ·old through adult. For
ctal meeting of Middleport with "New Horizon " .. and ·more information call 9'12Lodge 363, F&amp;A.M. will be ''Christian Echoes:· 7 p.m .. 1070 for details. Sponsoreu
held ·at 7:30 p.m to practice Poplar Rid~e Freewill Bapti st by the Middleport Church of
tor mspect1on in the fellow- Church, off Ohio 554. 593- Christ.

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Church events

Fifth annual .Leading Creek Stream Sweep set

co~ng · to

Ohio University .

Getting ·active

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HELiOS

Public meetings

Submitted photo

umber·
iS...
THE AREA'S ONLY
AUTHORIZED
HELlOS PROVIDER.

DEA'R ABBY: I met a ~reat
guy two year.., ~tgo. \\'c h~\ L' a
lot in common . We tfoth Ju, c

. Monday, April 18
RACINE
Mei"s
County .Juberculosis staff~tt family. our cuiiUI\.'' anJ peo•
Racine Are Dept., 4:30 to 6 ple in general. We're hnt h
p.m. Call 992 :.3722 , for compa .~,~il)!lall'. \Vc care
Dear
' abuul, l;ach other. communiinformation.
Abby
l:&lt;lte often via e-mail and sec
· each other a cc&gt;upic'uf t rm es .a
. ma y ~o'"und l iJ..c a
yea r. Tl ll~
cliche. but we connect ~ll l a
\\'Iunday, April 18
"differen t·: le\el. He unde rRA C INE
- Racine .
gets mad :ltr.nc an'd tells the 6- .
Village Council regular busi- ' tands me . •
We
aren't
uatin2
.
but
\\
e
re
year-old th at I don 't love them
ness lneeting. 7 p. lll.. counci l
interested
"
in
being
and
l'rn makrng them move.
hath
chambers.
together. There are few peo ple or C ULI\S\,'. thi s"makes Adam
in my life that ·I c·:ul truly "I)' I · mad at me because I am .
h.ave 1~1ad e an honest cmlnec- .. breakin g up th~ fami ly."
t1un wtth , as opp&lt;l.&gt;cd to 'nmeI ha ve ~ i ven them deadthin
g
silly
~r
:1
pi
pe
dre:un.
I
I
i.nes
to 111~1\' C. and they tell
.
.
'
RUTLAND - The · fifth Park by the Civic Center for
Groups and inui vid uats' are work gloves, w'ere suppl ied by kn ow . 1nt1rn:~cy dlanges me they can't wai t to ge t out
a nnual Leading Creek Stream th e St reanl · Sweep , which invit ed to participate iri the ihe Meigs County Office of everything. He' th e one per- - h&gt;rt thev're sti ll here. I
son in my life I ha\ ~ wanted to .haw told them 1 will mo.v e
Sweep will be held April 23 ~ t wi ll continue until noon . end- Stream Sweep by stopping at · Recycling
and · Litter
the Rutland Firemen's Park in ing with a luncheon at the the 'tvkigs SWCD ofl'ice in . Prevention. Rutland Township share that with . I don' t want to and the y can live here and·
sound slutty. because he :md I pay my mortgage. They tell
conjunction with Earth Day.
park . Volunteers .will be · Pomeroy. or at tile p&lt;irk is assisting with collection of are no1 111 a relattonshrp. I me they h:ne it here . .
The event is sponsored by deaning up along Leading beforehand. and fi lling out a lllled garbage bags.
know that makes things tough
1 love iny daughter, Abby,
' tl'te Meigs So il and Water Creek and Little Leading registrat ion form and waiver. . Bauers said the Stream sex with no 'trings but I am really at the end of
Conservation District in part- ~reek at sever1rl pre-selected Children under 18 will need Sweep. modeled after tire attached . What are your my rope. By the way; she's
nership with the U.S. Fish and sites. said Cy nthia Bauers. the ir form s signed by a parent Ohio River Sweep. which is tlw~gh t s? -: "CONNECT- expecti ng another baby in
Wildlife Service, Rutland sweep coo rdinator.
or guardian. Bauers said.
held in June.• targets differe nt ED IN ERI E. PA .
Ju ly. What should I cto ·) 1'111
Towns~ip Board of Trustees
Last year. approximak,y 50
Stream Sweep T-sl1irt s will areas of the Leading Creek
DEAR "CONNECTED" : at'1aid I may have to do someand ·Rutland Volumeer Fi're j)eople . participated in the be give n to the li rst 50 partie- watershed each yea r. For Sex .. without stnngs is se .x thing legaf. - STRANGER
Department, Meigs County event , Bauers said. Groups· ipants to turn in their registra- more informati o-n· · on th e with no commill i1cnt and lit- IN MY OWN HOME
Recycling and Litter Control parti cipating inCl uded scouts' tion forms.
Stream Sweep or th e Leading · tie. · if any. affection for tl1c
DEAR
STRANG ER :
Office, and other agencies. . and youth groups, along wi th
Oth er organi zations .arealso Creek Improvement · Projec1, other party. Why. if you bo th Unle ss yo u want to lose your .
Volunteers will meet at 9 students and oth er interested . assisting. Ckan matcri&lt;ils. comaq the Meigs. SWCD at feel thi s "connection:· arc home, do not move o ut and
you NOTdating'' .lf your kc l- depend on your daughter and
a.111 . at . Rutland 's Firemen's indi viduals, he said . ·
inducting garbage bags and 992-4282.
·
ings are one -siueu. you arc her ·boyfriend to take respon------~-----------.
heading for . a pa inful fall. sihili ty for paying the mort_You ' re co ntemplatin g having gage. Your daughter is using
sex on the ga mhle that th e you and shamelessly man ipuobject of yot~· affection' will lating her chi ldren. The
ATHENS - An all-star Auditorium.
panel discuss ions. Sche uer rang€ of views a~d perspec- fall in love with you after- .longer you tolerate thi s, the
lineup of nationally promiThree panel discussions will be available to speak tives to gather in ·panel di s- ward. According to the mail I longer it will co nti nue and the
nent ex perts will e~plore how ,tack ling the past , present and with the med ia at noon . cus&gt;;io ns and debate · these receive from both men and worse it will get. For Adam's
effective .U.S. intelligence future of U.S . intelligence directly foll owing the first imp"rtant topics. The confer- · w,omen. it do~sn ' l usu:rlly sake and you r LJ W\l sanity,
agencies are in protecting the will take place on Friday. p&lt;inel and Kay will be avail- ence will cover a variety of turn otrtthat way.
please discuss thi s wi th · your ·
·nation's citizens from terror- April 22 , in th e Baker able to .speak to the media cont rove rsial issues. inductDEAR ABBY: I have a 26- lawyer. It may, indeed. take
ism during the Baker Peace University Center Ballroom from 2:30 to 3 p.m. prior to ing U.S. intelli gence. terror- year-o ld daughter who h:rs legal action - or th e threat of
Conference · at
Ohio between 9:30a.m. and 5: 15 . hi s di scussion. Other expert s ism and · homeland security, been li ving wi th me fo r moi·e it -- to get th ese freeloaders
University 6n April 21 "22.
p.m. Mi chael Scheuer, past t also may be ava ilab le· to . and · it will include discus- than a year. She and her out of vo ur house.
As to the mind . games that
Former CIA Director chi ef of the CIA Counter ter- speak wi th the media follow - sions on the Patriot -Act and ' boyfriend, who is 30 , both
ha
ve
jobs.
However,
thev
have
been played on Adam, it
· Jame s Woolsey will deliver rorist Center's Osama b.i n ing each panel.
civil liberties.
the keynote address at 7:30 · Laden Unit, and David Kay,
Thi s year' s Baker Peace
A full sc hedule of the Baker don ' t pay bills or buy food. maytakethehe lpofa.childpsyp.m. Thursday, April 21, in ex, weapons inspector in Iraq. Con fe rence offe rs· a rare Peace Conference is available My utility bills are sky- hig h chologist to undo the damage
the Templeton-Blackburn are among the luminaries opporttinity for U.S. intelli- online at www,ohiou.edulcon- because they u.sc a lot of elec- · that his mother has caused- so
tri.city for video games, the ir please be prepared. and ask
.Alumni
Memorial who wil.l participate in th e gence speciali sts with a wide histlevents. html.
co mputer and so und -s ur- your physician for a.referral.
round systems.
·
D ear Abby is writteti by
My daughter has two sons. 6 Abi~ail Vatl Buren. also
and 10:· 1 h&lt;tVe custody of the ·known as Jeanne Phillips,
10-year-old . "Aditrn." I am and wa;· founded by her
trying to give Adam a better mother, Pauline Phillips.
Iife with security. I dnn't want Write
Dear Abby
at
my grandso ns to hate me. but www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
I am fee ling ve ry used. When Box 69440, Los Angeles,
I say anyt hin g, my uaughter CA 90069.
"Get Moving, Get
Groovin', Get Active" ·
was the theme of this
year's vis it from
Ronald McDonald al
Ohio Valley Christian
School. Ronald's goal
The Daily Sentinel
was to motivate the
Subscribe today .' 992-2155
element:;~ry students
www. mydai lysentiJzel. com
to get up and get
some exercise.
Ronald and his ass.is·
tant , Joe Hornbeck,
accompl is hed this
goa l using songs,
exercises and magic
tricks. The students
look forward to
Ronald McDonald's
lessons each year.
Pictured are kinder·
ga rten students with
Ronald McDonald.

Todav's tucQ

~
E

Other events

Couple connecting at one level
could be tripped up by .next

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.

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Amliolo~i~t

740-992-5252
www.foodfairmk.com

Sat 9am-1pm .

675-4498
www.holzerclinic.com

700 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Open M-F 9am-6pm

2605 Jackson Ave.
.Pt. Pleasant. WV

Friday, Apri115, 2005 ·

Community Calendar

Intelligence .experts

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GALLIPOLIS - Patrick
Corbin, a junior at Tulane
:University in New Orleans,
· La., has been chosen to take
part in the Mathematics and
.Computing
Research
Experiences
for
Undergraduates
program
:sponsored by the National
Science Foundation.
.
Corbin will spend eight
weeks this summer at Iowa
State University worki.ng on a
·research project in conjunction
:with the Mathematical Systems
:Theory group at the university.
· The research group consists
of 13 faculty members from
the departrn~nts of mathematics', statistiEs, physics and several engineering departments.
Corbin will be involved in
. research concerning the basic
· theory of non-linear ' dynamic
systems and chaos.

Corbin is completing hi s
junior year at Trinity College in
Dublin, Ireland, thmugh Tulane
University's
Junior · Year
Abroad
program .
At Trinity
Co ll ege,
Corbi n 1s
st ud y in g
mathemat. ics, is a
member of
Patrick Corbin the
col,
lege's football (soccer) ream, and a co-editor of the Metaphysical Joumal.
Corbin graduated as valedi.ctorian of the class of 2002 of
Alexander High School and is a
recipient of a Tulane _Foundcrs
Scholarship. He is tl1e sun of
Lou and Shelly Horvath of
Athens, and Michael 11nd Linda
Corbin of SJallipoli s. ·

'Celebration of Life' scheduled
to honor Capt. Bert Shearer

that's fast tn&lt;'I1(V.
618 '.East Ma in St

Ppmeroy, OH

740 -9~2-06 74

The Point Pleasant River
The. Point Pleasant River
Call 1·800-HRBLOCK or
Museum is havi ng a ce lebra- Mu se um Founpation di'recvisit1hrblock.com for an
tion of life to honor Capt. tors will host a reception in
office
nelr you.
Bert Shearer, who passed . the museum library.
away Jan. 27. 200 1, at the
The · mu se um will be
age of 94.
.
closed for tours while the
o»t:l- d .. "' ' oMJ...
1,1 !t;;)&lt;o ' IJt..&gt;"' . ' A ""'
(. mn" l
oo
1'\&gt;"., ,.,
•
Shearer will be honored by program is in progress from
lOIII m • •r dr .,. Q,..&lt;I') ,\ r
t !llo'1 fl;.ll ilb • _,..,..., -.,.. !,.
hi s many friend s. fello w 1-2 p.m.
Rudder tw isters and family.
Anyone who knew Capt.
Shearer is in Vi ted to . anend.
The day will provide ·an
opponunity to visit. with family members, and t.h e gospel
group. Etcniity, will start the
activities along with a pictorMeigs County Counci1 on Aging, Inc.
ial presentati on · of the·
Shearer family .
Kinship Navigator Program
I,!!~WG&lt;JU(N
ct~-11: ~· ' 'I''"*""

riJt , ,~,.,~~
lr-~ fk' r
~' ~l;otulot , &lt;fJ :ob ~VIi fno h~~:a&lt;~ucr o·w 'l· "~ohly/M ~' rfi1111~ ...O M ~ bon

~~ 4~ 1P·"JJ..: h•;•tn•"

Keeping Meigs
County informed
the Daily Sentinel
'

Subscribe today
992·2155

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H&amp;RBLOCK'

It is an .informati on and referral program des igned to
assist people,who are rai sing children othc( than thei r own.
linking them to services ,uch as: Legal. Child Care. Kespite
Care. Training, Fi nancial A~""i' t :t t H'C L\\'llilat.ilitv
and Evaluation oTunmct iw-.·li
For more information call Joy Matthe,vs,
Kinship Navigator «.:oordinutor at 992-2161

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NIO

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

..

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

..
Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prol1ibiting 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 ofgrievances.
-. The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friduy. April 15, the 105th duy of 2005. There are
260·dayc; left in the year.
·
· Today·s Highligh t in History: In the earl y hours of April •15,
1912, the British luxury liner Titanic sank in the Norlh
Atlantic off New.foundland, less than threl' hour&gt;after slriking
all iceberg. About 1.500 peopledied.
.
On th is ·date: . in 1850, the cit v of San Francisco was '
incorporated.
.
' ·
In 1861. three days after the Confederate attuck on .Fort
Sumter," President Lincoln declared a stJte of insurrection and
·called out Union troops.
,
In ·J865, President Lincoln diet.l. several huuTs a!'ler l&gt;eiug
shot at Ford's Theater in Washington by John Wilkes Booth.
Andrew Johnson became the nat ion's 17th president.
In 1945. during World War II, British and Canadian troops
liberated the Nazi concentration camp Bergen-Bel sen.
In 1945, President Roosevelt. who had died April 12. was
buried at the Roosevell family home in Hyde Park , N.Y.
In 1980, existentialist philosopher·Jean-Paul Sartre died in
Paris at the age of 74.
In 1989, 95 people died in a crush of soccer fans at
Hillsborough Stadium in Sheffield, England.
·
In 1990. actress Greta Garbo died in New York at age 84.
In 1998. Pol Pot, the notorious leader of the Khmer Rouge,
·died at age 73, evading prosecution for the deaths of two million Cambodians.
In 2002, retired Supreme Court Justice Byron R. White
died at age 84.
Ten .vears ago: In his weekly radio address, President
Clinton asked Congress to protect a short list of key legislation, say ing he was giving the highest priority to welfare
refom1, targeted tax cuts and a crime bill preserving the
assault weapons ban.
.
.
.
. f .
Five years ago: The world's leading financial official s,
meeting in Washington, pledged cooperation to promote global prosperity. Meanwhile, anti -globalization protesters
swarmed through the heart of t.he nation's capital. Cal Ripkel'l
of the Baltimore Orioles became the 24th player io reach
3,000 hits when he lined a clean ~ingle to center off Twins
reliever Hector Carrasco. (The Orioles won the game, 6-4.)
One year ago: In a videotape, a man identifying himself as
Osama bin Laden offered a "truce" to European countries that
did not attack Muslims, saying it would begin when their soldiers left Islamic nations . Iraqi militants freed three Japanese
hostages after holding them about a week. In the finale to the
first edition of the. NBC reality show "The Apprentice,"
Donald Trump "hired" Bill Rancic over Kwame Jackson dur- .
ing a segment that was telecast live.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Michael Ansara is 83. Co'untry
· singer Roy Clark is 72. Rock singer-guitarist Dave Edmunds
is 61. Actress Lois Chiles is 58. Actress Amy Wright is 55.
Columnist Heloise is 54. Actress-screenwriter Emma
Thompson is 46. Singer Samantha Fox is 39. Rock musician
Ed O' Brien (Radiohead) is 37. Actor Flex Alexander is 35.
Actress Emma Watson (''Harry Potter" films) is 15.
Thought for Today: "Hi sto ry would be an excellent thing
. if only it were· true ." - Leo Tol stoy, Russian authoc
(1828- 1910).
.
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Friday, Apri115, 2005

Friday, April15, 2005 .

For people of all backgrounds , Pope John Paul II
was a svmbol of will and
courage . Undeterred by illnc&gt;&lt; and frailty in his latter
years. the pope's message of
love and peace will havb a
1
:
histing)egacy.
I accompanied him on his
first wur of the United
States in 1979 . In Boston .
the first stop on hi s tour. he
kissed babies like a politi - ·
cian, but he was not doing it
for votes. He didn't have to
run for re-e lection. He did it
because he lik ed babie.s.
And al'l people.
Before a crowd of 400.000
on Boston Common , he said ,
"I come to tell you God
loves you ."
I suppose l had heard
preachers say that a htu1dred
times before . But this was .
different, The October night
was cold , but I felt a
warmth go through my
body when Pope John Paul
II said it.
When he said. ''I want tu
tell you the pope ts your
lriend," a rqar (yes, a roar)

George
Plagenz

went up from the thou:;ands
who shoutel.l. "Long live 1he
pope!" It was &lt;t shout you
usually hear only at a foot ball game.
"I greet you, America the
beautiful." lie said, and . the
cheers went up agaiti .
Pope John Paul II was &lt;tn
expert 'l;' ith . audi ences . He
worked the &lt;.: ro wds with his
playful gesturin g and good
hunwr. He had time fo r the
people.
The late Dean Willard
Sperry. who was a longtime
dea n ·of Harntrd Divinity
School. once said . 'The difference b~: tween the great
men and the near-great men
I have known is thi s: 'The
gr:ei.l~

men · have always
seemed to have a11 infinite

Strickland signs· on to gasoline bill

James Hilber Quivey

\\ h)' they came to see the
pope. some referred to Po'pe
spend with 111e ...,
John
Paul II a&lt; a saint.
That was John Paul II . No
He said all 1he right things
mancr how his aides tried to
push . him through the to hi' audiences.
throngs . he stopped to 11a\·c . Tu the vmnh of America
: a word with llw people. and fi11ding e~cape in "sexua l
·reach oul to them. It affect- · p1easurc . in moral mditlcrco everybody 111 the aut.li - ence or cynical attitut.les,"
encc . Everybody was polilc tlic pope said, ") · propose to
to one another. Those who yott the op1ion of love."
. We rt~ _afraid the large gather- · Hi s g~ntle humor \ hone .
ings wou ld become unruly through everything he did or
and unsafe need not have said. In Washington he asked
wprried. I never felt safer in a man what nationality he
was. "Irish,'' s.aid the man.
a c1:owd .
When ·Mahatma Gandhi "ll 's not Polish. but it is very
dict.l.
the
Manchester good.'' said the pope.
When he forgo! to' give
Guardian newspaper wrote
the
be nediction after one
that, "He was a great man .
But he was more than a great outdoor Mass, he stopped
m hi s tracks as lie · was
man. He was a good man."
Those of us on the pope's · leaving the altar, turned to
the congregation
U.S. tour were aware we face
aga111
.
and shouted the
were wa lking with one ofthe
through
greal men of the world. But benediction
we ~e re more · aware of hi s cu pped hand s.
He aven ·s angels are in"for
goodn ess. I never gof within
a hundred feet of him. Yet l)e a treat.
(George PlagfiiZ 1s mt
touched me.
When I asked people on (Jidained mini.lfer and veter- .
the streets - of Washington . . an . newsman based iu .
Chi cago and Philadelphia CohmJ!Jt~s, Ohio.)

•

l' OMEROY - James Hilber Quive,y, 86. of Cook ·Road.
Pomen&gt;y. dted un Wednesday. April 13. 2005. at O' Bleness
Memonal H&lt;hjli tal in Athens.
He was l&gt;orn on Jul y II. 1918. in l:lcdford Township: son of
the. late Jo,cph Clive Quivey and Florence Edna Bryson
Qutvey. He worked at Imperial Electric in Middleport and
retiret.l in 19HJ from t11e Ohio Dcparlment of Transportation .
He was ·a 19.\fi graduate of Shade High School. '
·
He was a World War II Army ye teran and a member of
l'eency Bennett Post 128 Ameri can Legion of Middleport. He
also was a ni~mbe r br Modern Woodmen of America and
· Hemlock Grove Gran'ge 2049 ant.l Meigs Pomona Grange 45 .
He was a membet of the Heml ock Grove Christian Church .·
In addition to ·l1is parents, he was precedet.l by .his inlaws: Dana and Edna Haning, Hampton Johnson, Harl ey
Haning and John Warner
He is surv ived by hi s wife, Helen Haning Quivey, one son
and daughter-in-law, James Rodney (Connie Jo Slusher)
Qut v.ey of Shade, and daughter Barbara. Jane at home; grand~
daughters. Kathie (John) Hanning and Christina Lee; four
great grandso ns. Charles J. (C.J .) Estep, Charles Brandon
Hanning, Du styn Tyler Lee and Cody Au stin . Hanning; two
gre at-great grandsons: Eth~n Lee McCoy and Morgan Ka-le
Browning; two sisters. Virgie Jo'1nson of Athens and Charlene
(Ed) Slater of 1\iew Marshfield; half-brother. Josep h . C.
Quivey and half"sister, Debra (Lany) Rogers; two sisters- inlaw. Evelyn Warner of . Florida , and · Margaret Haning,
Pomeroy;· several nieces and nephews.
Services will be held at II a.m. on Saturday, April 16.2005,
at Fisher Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Officiating will be Larry
Brown, and burial will be in Hem lock Grove Cemetery.
Military services will be conducted by Feeney Bennett Post .
128, American Legion. of Middleport. Friends may call on
Frid&lt;iy, .April 15. from '6 to 8 p.m. at Ihe funeral home.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may .be made to .
the Heml oc~ Grove Christian Church, c/o Marge Ban·, 39186
Hemlock Grove Road, .Pomeroy, Ohio "45.769 or to a charity
of choi ce.
On-line condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneral homes.com

Geneva·Avis

INTI\~ N~R FUUJ~...

RACINE- Geneva Doris Avis. 81, of Racine. passed away
at I0:37a.m. on Thursday, April 14. 2005, at her residence.
She was born Jan. 13, 1924, in Ethel, W.Va. she .was. the
daughter of the late Allie and Beatrice. Urwin Stamper. She

W"A1?0AVIS
l\AS AB\ONIC ·
A~M? OU,

5l~t~~~ I'M

MlSSIN0 n.lG

GOODOWDAYG
OFSTEROlO
. ASUSE!

C'MON''

will increase based on U.S.
production and use of th·e
WASHINGTON. D.C.
fueh. and economic and
U.S . Rep. Ted Stri ckland environmental impact.
joiend a bipartisan group of
The legislation also encourlegislator~ to introduce the
ages federal agencies to use
Fuel s Security Act of ~005, ethanol and biodiesel in their
designed to lower gasoline fleets. It was cosponsored by
prices and reduce U.S. 25 House · members. A cQmdependency on foreign oil.
panion bill which has · 19
"Increasing the use of bipmtisan cosponsors has been ·
renewable fuels in the United ' introduced in the U.S. Senate.
States is every · bit as impor"The development
of
tant to America's energy, eco- renewable fuels · is a win-win
nom ic and national security situation for Americans: from
as it i ~ our environment.'" said farmers
to
consumers,
Strickland. "That's .why thi s Strickland said. "As members
legislation is embraced . by of Congress continue · to hear
mambers of both political from constituents about the
·parties. It just makes sense." hardships Americans are facThe bill requires the use of ing as gasoline prices skyrock4 billion gallons of renewable et, I hope this legislation will
fuels per ·year in 2006, and 8 receive the support it deserves
billion ga llons by 2012. After and .become an integ ral part of
that point. the requirements our national energy pol icy."
STAFF REPORT

amount o! ki"u~·e time to

F.or the Record

•

~hnold' strikes

-

again

road repair and on a whole Schwarzenegger seemed (to
You 've got to hand it to
flock of .other things; firing his · delighted enemies) lo
this
guy
Arnold
the unnecessary intermedi- buckle just slightly, when he
. Schwarzenegger.. First, the
ate bureaucrats and focusing announced that he was withfamou s muscle-man sur- .
on the quality of state ser- drawing the proposal for
prised the dayiights out of
William
vice.
everybody by announcing
pension reform from this
that he would run for goverRusher
• Drastically re~ising the year's package. It will be
state pension system (pas- revived, i)e promises, .in
n(lr of California.. as a
sionately defended by score s 2006. But the crafty rascal
Republican no . less, in the
of public .employee unions). stands to benefit greatty
election that accompanied
the recall of Democrat Gray whehningly, so at the last under which it is possible for from thi s move because it
Davis. Then he beat three- minute they crumpled, in some state employees !O ends the need of most unions .
dozen rivals, including the return for a few concessions. walk away after 20 years tb spend huge · sums of
anointed Democratic choice,
That was last ye~r. This with 90 percent of . their money on defeating· the
Lt. Gov. Cruz ·Bustamante, year the Terminator (who highest year's salary.
remaining package. On the
in a state the wise men had Democrats are beginning to · Unless you live in contrary, they must hoard
long written otl as perma- . suspect earned hi s nick- California, ahd maybe · not those millions for next
nently Democratic.
name) quadrupled the bet. - eve n then, you can 't imag- year's battle .over the truly
Naturally it was assumed caliing for no less than fo ur ine· the uproar these propos- _crucial issue of pensions ..
!hat, having made his for- . major reforms:
als have ·caused in the quarSo
Arnol11
tune in ridiculous movies, he
• Ending the drawing of ters that benefited mightily Schwarzenegger is• demonknew nothing about politics, legislative districts by the under the old rules. If strating not only that he has
and wouldn't know the dif- legislature itself (a cozy · Schwarzenegger had merely enormous personal appeal '
ference between an initiative practice that has made all ·proposed the reforms to !he among the voters, but that he
and a garden-'v;1riety p,ass. incU1i1bents invulnerable) , leg·islature, they · would, of knows exactly what reforms
lnste·act, he turned out to . and turning it over to a course, have beeti 'ki lled on tb
propose
to make
know all the moves (in poli- bipartisan panel of •retired Day One of the debate. But California a sane and healthy
tics, that is), and scared the judges.
·'
the governor is o~ce again .state again. Worst of all, he
hell ou~ of the Democratic
• Ending Califor-nia's ·· lay ing plans to put inilia- is putting that personal .
majorities in the legislature debilitating "single salary" tives
mandating
these appeal on the line. in support
by collecting signatures to system (under which good reform s before the voters o( those reforms. It is a
put an initiative before the and bad teachers receive this fa ll , if the legislature breathtaking performance.
voters if the legislature exactly the same pay), and faib to enact .them. So the and one that deserves the
refused to put legal limits on replacing it with. a "merit cry went up: The initiatives thanks of every citize n, of
its own wildly-abused power pay" system (under which must be. killed at all costs! California.
to spend more than the state good· teachers are paid more The unions alone-have been
(William Rusher is . 'a
takes in . Havin'g just racked and the bad ones are fired).
planning to sperid scores of Di.l'li11guished Fellow of the
up a deticit o,f $35 billion.
• Imposing serious con- millions of dollars to uefeat Claremont lnstitwe for the .
the legislators knew the ini· troi s on swte spending: on them in November.
Study of Statesma11ship and
tiative would pass over- e~ucation, on health care, on
Just
this · ' month, Political Philosophy.)

..

from Page A1
dispatch service s from their
respective departments if a
911 services is implemented .
Commissioners said yesterday they have been assured
that grant funding through
. the Appalachian RegiOnal
· CommissiOI\ ,Or other sources
would likely be available for
the purchase of dispatching
equipment.
Commissioners set May 6
as the, deadline for . public
input on the two funding proposals, and expect a survey
form lo be published in The
Daily Sentinel on April 20.
"We feel ·thi s is the best
way to determine how the
public wan ts to finance this
serv.ice," · Davenport sa1d
yesterday.
" We want to make sure

PROUD TO BE APART .

OF YOUR LIFE.

The Dailv Sentinel
Su/•;cribe today • 992-2155
www.mydailysentinel. co~

'

'

I

Judgment

•

Seniors
from Page A1

some forin of long term ·care. Department of In surance ,
. Some will be &lt;thle to pur- Ohio Senior health Program ;
cha se long-term care insur- and William Demjan of the
ance. but many won't. Cost American · Association of
containment will be an issue. Retired Persons.
Nine put . of 10 will ·want to
Much
co nce rn
was
continue living in their own expressed by the: se niors
home s. They will want to age about the proposed privatizain place. Helping them to do tion of the Social Security
that is the challenge," said system arid how it would
•
affect recipients now and in
Lane .
"Today is your day to tell the future.
·
us what you want, to let us
LaMotte of the Social
know what we can do as an gecurity office said the sysagency to provide the ser- tern "is generating more than
· vic~ ~ you need." Layne said. · it is paying out and that the
"We are here to get direction extra money is not being
on what you want for today spent but invested in governand tomorrow."
ment. securities which ar~
Serving on the panel ·and accruing interest and will pay
answering questions and back into .the system."
addres~~ing conct;rn,s were
Demjan expressed the
State Rep. Jimmy Stewart, AARP's . opposition to any
Jennifer Fralic of ·LifeCare privatizatio.n.
"Social
Alliance and an officer with Secu(ity," he said, "is not
Older Ohioijns Nutrition going broke as it now stands.
Network; John LaMotte of It is good until 2042. What
the
Social
Security · · we want to do is see it
Administration ;
Heather strenglhened for our children
Reed of the Rural Health .and
grandchildren.
Ohio Privatization will weaken
Seclion
at
the
Department of Health .
Social Security and the only
Subha .Lembach, director ones to benefit will be Wall
of the Advocacy . and Street. This is a strong and
Education, Ohio Association solid program."
of Area Agencies on Aging ;
An explanation of how
Jon Hackathorn, outreach ·the new prescription benefit
specialist with the Ohio in Medicare will work was
1

May
from PageA1

we do so mething that will
B~an J. Reed/photo
pass the approval of the
public,'' . Sheets said. " We Jenny Ridenour, educat~on . coordinator for the Meigs Soil and
. need ·to do somethmg we . Water Conservatton D1stnct, presented a proclamatton to
can be sure will pass with " Meigs County Commissioners Jim Sheets and Mick Davenport ,
the voters, · because if it declaring April 24-May 1 Soil and Water Stewardshtp Week.
doesn't pass. it will be
Ll
Appro'ved a bid from Ace
another year before we can
Truck Equipment Co. for
propose anything again.
equ 1pment for new trucks at
" We will approve one
A1
means of funding or the other
from Page
the county highway departfor the fall baUot, but it wiH
ment, opened last week. ·
be up to the public to tell .us Diehl, Pomeroy; Richard
• Approved appropriations
for
the. Ohio
Publie Works
Whl.ch they support as a ballot Bailey, Middleport; Ch ares
1
1me ·ttem ap d postage.
d
p
grant
·
. ,,
measure. "
Port 1an ;
au 1.
n arris,
• Ta bl e d ac t'IOn on an
. Me.igs County is on,e of Beegle, Ra.cine; and Charles
· only four counties in !he state
ap propr1'at1'on request from
without
911
service. . Lewis, Pomeroy. Cash dona- Coroner Douglas Hunter. ·
According to McKnight, 99 tion s to the project total
• Approved payment of
percent of all Americans have $5,829 to date.
bill s in the amount of
,access to-911 service .
Commissioners also:
$152,4 18.91.

.
an df"ll.
I

Crossrmids staff to reserve
space. There is no fee to do
so, Hartson said. although
vendors will be required to
-provide their own table.
Detail s about the outhouse , races and other
events 11re available by con!acting the Crossroads
. office at 992-0000.
SPRING VALlEY CINEMA7

446·4514 ~, 1 0VIF HOTIIr\.::FRI4/15/05- THURS 4121105

Boa Office Opens C 6:30PM NlgllUy
&amp; 12:30PM for Sat &amp; Sun Matinees

THE AMITYVILLE HORROR (R
1: 0 :0 7:00 &amp; 9:00
FEV·ER PITCH (I'G130
1:15", 3:30,7:15 &amp; 9:30
SAHAR.A (PG13)
1:10, 3:10,7:10 &amp; 9:10
SIN CITY (R)
1:20 3:30, 7:20 &amp; 9:30
GUESS WHO (PG13)
1 :00, 3:00, 7:00 &amp; 9:00
MISS CONGENIALITY 2 (PG13
7:00 &amp; 9:30 .
ROBOTS (PG)
1:00 &amp; 3:00
~~CIFER (PG13)
t :20. 3:20, 7:20 &amp; 9:20

GRADUATESt~ ..

hiqh school. so much to do to g·el ready for life out on
VQur own. Oeod;ines, pressures... but we con.help n

one oreo though, you still have plenty of time to
our wide vority of styles to choose from. you con custom taylor your order to suit your style tnsted of sel1111"9101' what ..Verone este has.
order your senior annoncments and acessories. With

New Styles
New Fabrics

How Open
Note open foSaturdoy from 9-12 for your convimlence. Mon-Fri 8:30-5:00
Since 1948

Open Mon-Sat.:
9-~

Since 1948...

QUALITY PRINT SHOP, INC.

The Fabric Shop
110 West Main • Pomeroy, OH
992-2284

given by Hacka thorn . He
said there will he choi ce in
se lec tin g the benefit and
that tho .se li,·i ng at poverty
level or below will be el igible for spec ial assistance,
and could hav~ both the
premium and· deductible
waived .
LaMotte noted that mail - ·
ings O"n the choice pro -.
grams will begin the last
week in May and also that
· information will be on the
website, www.socialsecurity.com He also advised that
there will be extensive
information avai lable to
new spa p~ r s
and other
media
to
familiarize
seniors with .th e choices.
There was a lively di scuss
on .the senior center's nutri·tion program and the choices
of food selections available.
Lane noted that the numbers
of congregate meals being
served a•:e decreasing and
several seniors attributed that
to the lack of variety and the
food preparation. She agreed
there need to be changes an.d
volunteered to come to
Pomeroy to discuss changing
menus whil~ retaining the
nutritional value with the
nutrition director.

Ufe goes by prelty lost, especially you tosl year of

++TUXEDOES ++
Til7le
Save Money
Shop Locally

Donna Hartson , one of
the organizers of the event,
said the outhouse competilion is limited to 12 entries. .
A $25 fee will be collected
for each entry, ·with proceeds
going
to
the
American Cancer Society
Meigs County ReillY for
Life, which will be held
the same day.
The committee also plans
an apple pie baking contest.
Space will be made available for local artisans who
wish to demonstrate their
craft and sell their wares.
Already, broom makers, rug
weavers, candle makers and
quilters.have volunteered to
participate in the festival ,
and · ot·hers who offer
authentic,
quality
Appalachian crafts are
invited to contact the

2005

7k9~S~
S~ve

'

Divorce

guide the presidenl, Congress
and Federal agencies in formulating and funding prow us a homemaker.
grams
to serve ·current
She married Floyd Thomas Avis on Dec. 23.1943, in Logan
County, W.Va., and he preceded her in death on Dec·: JO; 1945. . seniors and the baby boomers
as they move into the elderly
A sister, Jeanette. Lawson, also preceded her in death. ·
population.
.
"
·1 Surviving are a daughter, Kay (Larry) Spencer of Raci ne;
In
her
opening
remarks,
and three sons: Richard (June) Avis and Thomas (Judy) Avis.
both of Coolville. ;md Robert Avis of Caldwell; five grand- Lane gave the mission statechildren and three great grandchildren; and a sister, Arbutus ment of the town hall meeting series: "To · offer feasible
Wallace of California.
suggestions
to the White
There will be no funeral and no calling hours.
on Aging
House
Committee
Creniation arrangements are under the direction of
regarding the integration of
Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine.
baby boomers into !he current service population,
accommodating the needs.of
both generations, in the areas
POMEROY - Leonard Erwi~, 76,' of Pomeroy, died of access to care; long-lerm
Wednesday, April 13. 2005, at Rocksprings Rehabilitation care,' continuum and nutrition
Center in Pomeroy.
·
.
.
. programs
in
rural
He was born Sept. I I, 192X, in Boone County, W.Va., son of Appalachia."
the late Sheila and Mabel E. Burn s Erwin. He was a carpenShe said that the size of the
ter, master gardener. hunter and fisherman. He was a member se nior population in . this
of the Cameron, W.Va. Masonic Lodge and the C.hester United · country will double in size
'
Methodist Churcli.
between 2000 and 2020 and
He is survived by his wife of 54 years, Ruth Erwin; a son the need for assistance will
and daughter-in-law, Steve and Carol Erwin of Chester; a grow with the numbers.
, daughter and son-in-law, Crystal and Steven Figiel of Royal
';They will need assistance
Palm Beach, !'Ia.; a brother, Clifford Erwin of Hurricane , with their · hou se work and
W.Va. ; a sister, llelen Ellis of Hurricane, W.Va.; two grand- meals and will require persons, Paul Erwin (Heather Long) of . Che~ter and Jonathan sonal care. Many will require
Rayburn of Rbval Palm Beach, Fla.; two granddaughters , .
Jamie (Scott) Newell of Chester and Juli Figiel of Royal Palm
Beach, Fla. ; four great grandchildren: Jessica, Kylie, Gavin
and Mackenzie; and a special friend, James Nance, with
whom he shared his birthday.
·
.
Besides his parents; he was preceded in death by his brother and sister-in-law, Edward and Wilma Erwin, and a · ~pecial
·
brother-i n-law and hunting buddy. Mervin Ellis.
A graveside service will be held at I p.m. on Saturday, April
16, 200~. at (~ester Cemetery with ,Denni s Sargent officiating. There will be no calling hours.
.
Memorial contributions may .be made to the ·Amencan
Cancer Society for research.
.
Arrangements are under the direction of White-Schwarzel
Funeral Home in Coolville.

911

·HOSPICE SOCIAL .,
OWORKERS RECOGNIZED

Holzer Hospice proudly observed National Social Work Month
during March . Pictured . from left are Pat Hamad and Connie
Sexton·Gibeaut. Licensed Social Workers· for Holzer Hospjce.
The theme for this year's campaign, "Social Workers: Help
POMEROY ~ An action for divorce has been filed in S~arts Here ," invites people to start with social workers when •
Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Robert F. Bi »hop. ' seeking help. It reinforces the point that social workers can con·
Middl.eport, against Stacy J. Bishop. Pomeroy.
nect people to a variety of resources in their commun ity. Holzer
Hospice provides services to patients and families 111 Gallia,
Jackson, Meigs and portions of surrounding counties, who walk
the difficu lt journey of dying, death and bereavement. Social
•
POMEROY - A foreclosure has been" granted in Meigs Workers for Hospice. provide emotional support, counseling arid ,
County Common Pleas Court to Peoples Bank. N.~ .. against assistance with community resources. 'For· niore info rmation.
call Holzer Hospice at 740446-507 4 or 800·5004850.
Kim D. Mitchell, and others.

Leonard Erwin

~o? .

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

'

Obitu·aries

Remembering the peoples pope

.,

'
..
www.mydailysentinel.com

255 Mill Street

-.r

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

•

Middleport, OH 45760

(740)992-3345
FAX: 740 992·3394

�•

PageA6

H
The most important thing t~ do

The Paily Sentinel

(Matthew 22:34-40)
To the modem reader.
e&gt; pecmll y one who IS un f.tnllhar with the cultural millieu of Palestme 2,000 vears
ago. the question the la-wyer
asked Jesus m1ght seem l1ke a
rather s1mple one He wan ted
to kn oY. , ''What's tilG.._ most
import an! co mmandn~ ?"
In other words. "Out of
everyth mg we re supposed to
do. or not do, what's the most
important''' On the s urlace,
at least, th1s would seem hke
a fa1r question bemg as ked ol
a recogmzably great l&lt;!ache'r
You w11l not•ce. howeve r,
the mtent of the questJon was
ro "test" Jes us or to "trap"
Him , as one translation has 11.
Th1s question was asked w1th
mahcc and, as far as the
Phansees were concerned. 11
was a tough question they had
debated many, many tunes.
Some thou ght the law of CircumciSion was the greate st.
some the command to keep
the Sabbath holy. some that
sacnfJCtal laws were more
1mportant ; SJIII others argued
tor other d•vme . lecrees
Jesus an sw&lt;!red. though. by
quoting two s1mple commands found 111 Deuteronomy
and LevitiCUS He sdid , ·'Love
the Lord your God w1th all
your heart, all your soul , and
all your m111d ... " And the second command 1s hk~ the fu st
"Love your netghbuur as you
love yourself " And then He
added something very Important - the coup de grace, you

'

So 111 .m . . wen ng thi"o hotl y
Rev.
deb,ned quest iOn , Jesus was
Jonathan clfcct,ua lly tedc hmg the
Noble
unpo1tance of ,Ill the co mnundment s, because 11 you
love God h rst and f01e most
and your ne1g hbor as yourse ll . then you will stnve to
.
please Hun by obey mg H1m
.
m1g hr ~ay, the knock-out m every way And to see th1s
punch All the law and d1 e . cl ea rl y and prac ti ca lly we
wnt1ngs of the prophet s onl y have to look at the great
depend, on these two com- Dec al o •uc ot the Old
mands.
g
Now. tim was re.tlly a very !ft'ament and a~ k ourselves,
we love God. will we not
bnlhant answer becau se of
course. t! we truly love Cod ohey these comm,mdments'''
wnh all ou1 heart. mmd and
As Chn st.an s we are called
soul _ th at is with our to an altogeth er d1fferent outwhole bemg _ th'en naturally look on hi e '" .~h1 s world: one
we will stn ve .to keep Hi s th.Jt 1S God-centered ,rather
commandments , hvm g the tha n me-centered It s ,Ill
w&lt;ty He Intends tor us to h've, ,1bout lovmg H1m hea11. nund
and tryUJ g to please Hlm . You and so ul, serv111g and obermg
see. 111 His answe1 to tillS sly Hun ,rs fmthtull y as poss1ble.
attorney. the Lord ac tu,Jil y and It IS pos&gt;t ble or the Lord
wraps up all ot the d1vme reg- would 1101 re4u1re 11 Th1 s ts
ulat1 o ns and de&lt;.:rees ol God the m o~ t 1mportant thmg to
111 these two· short commands. do. ,md the second most
wh1 ch serve as il summary ol 1mpo11ant thmg IS like u It 's
the whole Law.
abo ut lov ing other peopl e
Th1 s was a bnlhant an swe1 , because they ,1re un1que eretoo. because there was etfec- auons made 111 the 1mage ot
uvely no argument aga111st 1t, God and He Jo, es them w1th
the Lord Jesus left thts entity an eveli,1stmg and undym g
atto1ney absolutely no w1 ggle love "On these the whole law
room After all ; whdt co uld .md th e proph ets depend ..
pusst bly b&lt;! lllllle nnpu1tant And ou1 blessed l1fe m Ch11 SI
than lovmg God w1th yuUI' J ~s u s out Lord also depends
whol e bemg? No obl1gat1on on ou1 fultlihng these two
could poss ibly trump thiS commandment s
obhgat10n, and so the only
Let\ pray we do

·center plans Fun Night April 22

only a fraction of the follow mg It once d1d
Now, a!te1 several years of
change, Prom1se Keepers has
schedul ed 20 events th1s year
around the country, behevmg
ItS message 1s JUSt as relevant
now as 11 was 15 years ago
All are at arenas except tor
the Arkansas event m June
"We ' re at a crossroads,"
satd Dave Wardell, who cofounded the orgam zatton 111
1990 with Iarmer Umversny
of Colorado football coach
B1ll McCartney. "I thmk we
can see a resurgence agam.
because It's sttll the age-old

www.mydaily sentinel.com

pong tou1 nmuent, the cot n
hole game and a euchre card
game
A short devotional wtll be
he ld sometune dunng th e
evenmg For more mtormatl on, contact Robm Caudill at
245-5919

.

sc!Js.ttlons tlldl tl ood the ex perie n ce The green ol ~pnng '"
un l1ke th.Jt ot ,my othe1 t1me
ot ye,u, the d.Jif ouli s and
tuhps show thetr shy he.1ds.
dnd the buzz mg ot hu gs
begms its p1e-summer Lhone
0 1 c OUJSC. bugs arc not th e
onl y th1n gs buzz• ng about
The yearl y phenomenon ol
spnng sports .tlso startafres h, w1th the ene1gy anu
zest that th ose too long 111 the
gloom ol wmt er' s tw1 light
emhuSJastlc,lily embrace As
socce1 and baseball 111 paruculm get underway, children
and the1r parents (who &lt;11 e
otten much more pa'SIOilate
,Ibo ut the gdmes than arc thc1r
k1ds) w11l !me the llelds and
wtll then p&lt;1ss1onntely chee1
.1nd jee1 then way through the
season
PasSion . &lt;1 word so nddl ed ,vnh va11ous me,1111ngs
that 11 c.tn be used a!must as "
d1rty word yet st gmllcs that
remarkable quality by wh1ch
we summon up untapped
energies. Je011ent our mmds
wnh new dreams and amb•llon s ' and then beg 111 the
whole-he,u ted puJS ui t of ou1
heart 's destre.
Naturall y. pasSion can be
an .~m az in g thmg; amazmgly
f1 unful when 1t rocket s us
towdrds helpful and tnnttul
goal s; amazmgly destructt ve
and dan gerous when 11 drags
us Into the p1ts ot lust, greed
and proud ambitiOn
Chn sti&lt;tns mu st contm'ually guard then own hearts m
th1s regard It ts easy tor ou1
eyes to be drawn by the acti Vit y of ·'wmnmg teams" and
the ove rl y- mtlatcd lustet ol
"beatmg out" other k1ds (by
which we determine that our

p10blem'of men. Plus we have
new ge nerations comilig in "
At tts peak in 1996, the
orgam zallon dreY. about 1.1
mliilpn men to 22 stadmm
conferences nallonwtde. Its
rall y the followin g year 111
Washmgton drew hundreds of
thousands ot men tor speeches, stad1um-style "waves" and
thundenn g chants ot, " Dear
God, I am a smner . Please
torgtve me and change me."
Thts was typtcal stutl from
the
conferences.
Men
cheered. sang and even
bounced beach balls through
the crowd as they li stened to

Pastor
Thorn
Mollohan

own children .1re supen or to
others) In 1ecent yea1 s. 11 has
repeatedly o~c urred that lans
ot spo1ts 1e,rct to loSi ng (or
willlll ng) by resorting. to
extre me vwlence and destru c
uon Nothmg neY. m many
ways , but I wo nder sometunes 1f It h.ts been escalatmg,
espec mll y Y.hen l hear more
and more mc1dents ot parents
dSSd Ul tmg oth er pa re nts rlt
then childre n's sp01ts events
Wh.ll IS wrung w1th us tha t
we would let 11 get that tar!
And 11 shoul d be clear too
tJ.lat tillS 1sn't 1e.tll y about
spm ts. Playmg sports IS a
great source of exercise. tun
.1nd exc itement, the learnmg
of teamwork. and &lt;tn opportunll y to develop uuttattve
1\lthougb dthlet1 c e' e nt~ are
so metnnes an obv10us forum
m wh"h some lolk s make
spectacles ot themselves. tht s
1s really ,1bout anythmg that
supplants God's place ol p1eemm cnce as Lord of our li ves
Thmgs l1ke career achtevement , fn1an cral aftluence ,
phys1cal ecstasy and soc1al
appro val (to name only a few)
too easily and too often
become our hearts des1re s.
M!Spla&lt;.: ed pass1ons always
reap b1tter harvests though
Whether we' re talkmg about
gettmg sw.tlluwed up by the
hghtnmg- t,rst pace of the corporate world, keepmg up with
the Jones mto Cl\apter II ,

Ftllowship
Apostolic

Sl'l o nd Bapllsl C hurch

chemical , add1 ct1 on or STDs
m even co-de pendent re lationships th at repeatedl y t,ul
and le,1 ve us he.trt -broken.
whateve t we all oY. to come
before God w mes to nothmg
Ill the end ThiS IS why It IS
ume nght NO W to seek .Jitel
God Th iS IS why IllS lmp&lt;!nltl ve th,\1 we begm to p&lt;\SSionately pw sue fthe most nn portant thmg ol all before the setting of another sun
"Remember th1 s, th 11 111
yu u1 mmd. t.1ke 11 tu heart
Remember the tormer thmgs.
those ot long ago; I am God,
,md ther e 1s no othe1. I am
God, and there ts none like
Me I make known t~ e end
from the beg mning. from
an~1en r tunes, what 1s st1ll to
come. I say: My purpose shall
stand , and I w1ll do what I
please" (l samh 46 .8-10,1)
Are we wlihng to hve "'1th
the ''end 111 mmd"' I hope so.
It' s " shame to think that we
1m ght pursue all our uwn purposes. not behevmg perhaps.
that only Hi s purposes and
plans wdl !,rst f01 etermt}
"The path of the nghteuus
ts level; 0 upn ght One, You
make tbe w&lt;ty ot the nghteou s
smooth Yes. LORD. w,tlking
111 tne way ot 'rou1 law s. Y.e
wan for You ; Your name and
renown are the dem e of ow
hearts. My soul yearn s for
You 111 the mght ; 111 the mornmg my s ~1rit longs for You "
{lsa1ah 26 7-9a).
(Thorn Mollohaul1as miuistered ill muthem Ohio the
past 9-112 years and is the
pastor
of
Pathway
Community Church. He aud
his wife are the pareuts of
four children. He may be
reached by e-mdil at pastorthom @path wayga/lipolis.com).

\ l llkr Sumt •• &lt;;;d1n" l
F.•t! mng ., ll) r rn

\•~

Gospel sing set

L(~lp Rd

REEDSVILLE - Umty
Smgers, under direction ot
Sue Matheney, w1ll perform

111 r-.~v. L HnOJ ~d

Rutbnd

~;, 1! 1~ 1111

'\

Dlnl 1 )\ [,b, r-: 111

11

Con
.1

:-:

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W V,t

·Ul7

1 ~ 1111

Net!

Sun cl ~\

ml

IOOU ll nl,md7 pm

1 111

Suml~i

Cttrpt ~ l c r IJuptiSI Chun:h

S~. l n l\J I

Sun day
So.:n t ~.c

P r~.: a l.ht n g

I.J ;o tm

Iif ~o~u n

~I~

E v~ntng

S HilL~

lmc n m Pre Kllcr F-l mil R t t.~
C h eshm · Bap tist C hurch
P:.tstnr StC\l l,lltk Su nd .l) SLhoo l I.J ~ 0
M on~ng Wtl[);hlp

Divine
~v. hat~

Young's Carpenter Seruice

•

av1

26 years In local business
Roofing &amp; Building Work

Pomeroy,OH
740-992-6215

up.•. lftiSI Milt

c&amp;o-u?!"
Yoo illiPf josl q-loo tiM .

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

Hopt.• Huplt st Church 1So u1hern1
Gt:.tlll

St

\\Jor~ lu p -

9 1 [) ll !11

Sund.1y s~h tlll 1

Mtddk pnrl

w~ d n c~ d IY So.: rV I l ~

11 .t

rm

md 6

l1l

lJ 10 .t m

10 \0

') \tJ

I Ill

F 1rsl Southrrl'l IJaplt st
41H7 ! t'o nu:ro) Ptl " l' a ~tur 1: L 1111 u
0 Rt }.tn t Sum\,1} S ~ h ~~~· l 9 1[) am
H l :'it m lJ I:'i a m&amp; 7 UUpm

Sw l l &lt;:~ 7 04) p m

Coolville, Oh1o
Located l e ~ s than 30 m1nutcs ft om
Athens. Pomeroy 0 1 P.1rkcrs hu rg
1·740-667-3156

Ftl'!ll H11p!tst C hun:h

"Shll small enough to care"

333 Page Slreel
M1ddleoon OH

(740) 992-6472
Fax 1740\ 992-7406

w~ um.:~ day S av •l ~

7 0 () p m ,

7 00 p m

~nltllfe. ..,ISR'IIIIb. bur
N......, Utdiyvblilt. 1ft ol 1f11' lly'

209Thlrd

Wbo . . yoo 10 ~too IMt' Yoa
bt...~&lt;L kiddi"«- I h.,.!"
WtoniOlq......,io&amp;Mr.
Ncw101t't ...,.. AI thr btll! !ia)S. t'-li
. .jft1: k.,. ol'"dn-iM trldl )"".

Racine , OH

140-949-221 o"A Home &amp;mk for

Home People"

Thb_..,c doa _......,.. oa

_., ,... or,..,.._,,ct..,m

-

Wur~ lnp

':,Vnr ~ htp

.tm

Hills Self·Storage

-. . .....................
-,_ .,

wmt,~doaotila•ob&gt;

29670 Bashan Rd •
Racine, OH

..... ltdlq

-.;-or-......·.Of,....,"'

.... ,

PO Box 683

U\t l'dli il Cod"l •i..oidMt and tle

Pomero . Oh1o 45769·0683

-pliol-1 olllk •ill io oor
U""H.t
toDtil1t to .ww. 1(1(

'* .....

......w...... ......
.,-~

io lllrlinll.....
Psolollll-"' olllllft op 'l"'
uOllbe Ull. r... ....... • r help

"""""""ill&lt;
wth.., "'•'• '4:)1

..,_ ..r-coo

4911 Rt(hland Avenue. Alhens
740·594·6333
1·1100·45 t-91106

. , . . , 1M tH
oCfw up ,r _. 50UI Wt;Gd~, dhiM
fO'I tr ll •orslip dais w:Hii~ \01r
spirk wII ar • • 'lMIJi,«)l)lr
linn to ~ 01r Uta•mt) hthtt .....

.. , ...,.., .._... •il !ldl "'
)W dmt ••

..

\fU.."IO n AY

~~.~

J.! ! l

:Mi[fie's 1(estaurant
f-lomemade Desserts Made Dally
Humf! Cooked Meab &amp; Dtuly

,...

FRIOAf
II , 1·1 fl

\ATI 'RIJAY
I...
IH 1-U

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

740-949-2217
S1zes ava1lable 5x 10 10 10 x 20
If ye abide i11 M e, a11d My
words abide 111 you, ye shall
ask what ye will, a11d it shall
be do11 e 11111o you.
Joh11 ~5:7

'
MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSO,r. BAILES, 00

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ~
P 41ll 992-.1279
""""
Tol F...., 1-877-5113-2433

s\ r' 1 1.~,

\\ u ..h1 ~,J w

7 0 0 pm

P~ sl1 11

0 .1\ld Wt~c m ~ n Sunday Sd mu1
F l ~.:lltn g

.L Ill

Wc dnc ~ d.t} Sen tle.,

~0

6

jl lll .

Keno ( hun; h o f l hn ~t
~

10 lll

1),"~1

1s t .md

Gr&lt;.' .lt llcn d

1 ~4

R,u.:t lk

0 11

Su nday Wo r~ h 1 p

P11 m~rtl\

H l r fi~P tll t l l c

t ill

R ~l

\Rl 14 \J
W,tt ., n n Sunda} Sd to 11

Ru~l: r

~tl

\\'or, h1p - 10 \ II 1 111 , 7 1)0

\V~ tltlL•d,\y S\ 1'\ I ln

(1111

111

Y .1111

p,,,tnr Rd
'I I() t m

Hradhur} C hurch of Chr1st
To m H.un)nn 1&lt;J'iSK Brarlhur)

M tllt ~ k r

9 ' ()

111

7 Ill

l

Rt 7

Midd lepo rt

Hulun s~

S um!~ \

p 111

~m kv

Sc hno l
10 ·• r\t E\ cn m g
1 h nr~ 1 l •Y Fi c n Hm~ 7 00

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Pa , w r G lenn R ov. ~

1111 7p 111

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p m Wl d t w ~d ::~ y s ~n ll ~

5 1 Rl
J a m ..:~

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S ~hm• l

St

Rt

160

446-6::!4 7
~ ~~

Su ndn} S d llll•l 10

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Sr

w ,• rsh1p

Bra dford C hurth of C hrtsl
C ntnu o l St Rt 124 &amp; IJr,Jdhur) Rd
H1ll Ant hc rgcr SunJ.l} $c h11tll
Wo~ htp

r Ill

H 00

W~.:Jnc~\l .t )

~)

ll l:S 7 r

Wcd n~.:~d .l\ s ~ n

m

Ill

~

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~0

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N 2nd St
Keese e

1\ lldd l~ purt P&lt;~ sto r

1 0~

Worship

m

~ 111

Wl lf S ~ t p

II

Wal n ut .111d Henry Sts

Wor shtp s~r vt~l: 10 1U ~ 111

I'

Pastor

R;t, cnsv.onJ

D.wttJ Russe ll

JO 00 u m Wo rsh tp

Sdlt.&gt;ol

Suni.l.ty

Corner S&gt;o.:.unnrc &amp; Scc 0nJ St

111 SunJa} wu rslup

Serv ll:t:S • 7 p m

Wonh1 p 10 30 "m and 6 30

P.t ~ to r

'0 u nt ! l"t &amp; 2nd Su n1

7 ~ 0 r m O n l &amp; 4th S un ) Wcdm:sJay
S(.'f\ lu 7 30 p m

Sen

M tl~

7 ou

p m

Wednt: roa)

~ 'i

a m

f'l p 111 \\o ednesd •y Sen tl t'S 7

.1 Ill

1045 .t m Sunda} EHmng

pm

Ytc i.lncstl &lt;~y Scr\ Jl l ~-

b c nmg

7 p Ill

R.t~o:t n ~.:

RJ ,

Jt, lm Giln w rc Sund,ty
W111 ~h 1 p

m

.t

Nort hcust Cluste r A llrcd PasHir Jan&lt;:
S urtd .t~

Sc hoo l

9 30 n m

(J

Wt:J n~ ~day S~ n t o.: l'~

p Ill

10

S u nd ay S chool
Se r V Ic e~

IU u m

9 a m
rhur~ua~

7 r Ill

A ndCh\&gt;11

13 ttl lc

S &lt;! n 1 c~~

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Wl: dJksda) St. r1

ll ~0 p m

Local source for troph1es,
Ia ues 1-sh1rts and more

Wor~ htp

9 ~U

Su nd u\

S~ hoo l

~

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BUSINESS SERVICES
Bill Quickel

K&amp; C JEWELERS
212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy
992-3785

S untla} Sd1nnl
]Q

10

'I ~ 0 1 nt

iirrli

Coolville, Ohio
740-667-3110

ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME
174 LayM Simi• PO Box 270
Nt• Ha n n. WV 2!265

Jama. H. Anderson. Ltctn.wd Funent! Dirtelor
Htidt .

P\anoing

P

~~~X

Sund 11 Sellon! 9

.,.r

~II

? I MI pn

1 ,~n t&lt;l 7 IMI

till Sundt\
B h i;

o;;;tLJJ\

pm

Hobson l hn ~ ll.l n h llu11 ~ lup ( hun:h
p-..~,tut

\\ h ll SunJ 11 Sd1nul

ll ~ t -.~. h d

10 1111 Sund t; C hu rdt&gt;t l\lct:
\\ c d !l~ 1t l.p,

7

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~Opm

rm

Rt stnrllllnn ( hrl slinn ).t!l o "sllljl
H tll &gt;p ~ t
~ 11 td
\ 1 1 1&lt;:11 ~
ll,l'lll t

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l.mn c; ( l 1h Sun,la\ \\ 1w..h1p JIJIJJ) 111

I lm~s,mt' ( hn~tum ( hurch
Full Gn~r-...: I f' 1'tor 1.!. 1h• tl Mu~~ll
Suu J t) SLh&lt;ll •1 t; ~() tm \\ u 1 ~ h1 1 ' IU i()
7()(111111

Tabt.•rnndr (; burch

Sun d l)

Thurs d~ )

~ll \ l l ~

\\ Ld n~''l"

S&lt;: tl lll.' 7U0

Sen tu

Pentecostal

F m 111 ~ 11

E VLil lll !!

rIll

7

P~nl l' l'tts lnl

7pm
St

S~racmt' 1\hs._~lnn

SLn ILL

S un , !~ )

fl 1' Ill

\ sse111hh
I' 1&gt;t1t1r

RIll Ill

'\un&lt;lt\

Ehmn~ 7 I' Ill

Wtll taw '

S, l\,all

Itt

till

Wcdnc~cl t) 'S~n..t,o '

pm

7 p 111

Presbyterian

Hazt l C:ullllllulllty lhun h

Ill

\\Ld ncsd ty 7

I '-1

Rt

~h •h t&lt;k

1-1 11 Bn dg Ltnlll S t S)ra dN
S~ h 1&gt;o l
]I I ,\Ill EH III Ilt:

7 00 pm

7 pm

I I 1m

... r\ 1"

Ld s~ l

Oil Rt 124 P tslor
St h ~ l lll

H 1rt S untl.t)

9 ~0 I Ill \V(J(" Illp

10 30 .t Ill

SHII(USt'). trst Umltd

Prt!~ ln

p~,tor i(t'lh, n C11111 \\nr ~ h tp

tcn a n
I I am

Hurnsmni!lc Prt'shvtt•nnn C hurch

Cooh•llr United Methodtsll'e~rtsh
p~ , tt r Hd t: n Klt m c ,,,,l ,t llc Chun.h
M till ,1:,: h lth St
Wor ~ h tp

Oycsv ill c Comn1un11~ ( hur(h
Sundov Sl honl

10

Su nJ.t) Sd w u l

9 10 1 111

Rd

\\ o r .. ht p -

~~

Sund t}

-16k( Sund ay School

Ill\

Ret&gt;d S\tlle
Wo rshtp

Ruht:rt Crn \\

9

Pa,tor

Jtm oS i l) J~ r

hoo l

IU a m

Wvr,h tp

II

10 4 ~

Wo r sh ip

B t nn ~: tt

till

9 '0 1 111
7 10

pm

wcdncsd'y 1 1op m

GmnJ Stt cct S uudny Sd1uo l 9 3U a m
Y,.or~ h tp 10 IU 1111 Pasto r Phtlltp lk ll

Seventh-Day Adventist
t-. ! ulh~: rr )

t"mth G ospei C hun.:h

ll()(klllgtmrt C hurch

Torch Church
C o RJ 6 I Su nJ a) Schoo l - 9 I{)

~

[11

9 30 a m Eve nmg

Wcdne ~ U.ty S c n K~ s

7 p 111

6 1() p m Wed rtcdt)

Pastor Peter

We d n&lt;:~·I Y

Sen tees

Pu~ l or \ohk ~.: A J km~

Youth gm up m~ c tm g ~rtcl &amp; -l !h SwHia\\

\0 a m E\l: ntng

T Ue$dav &amp; Th ur~tl.t y

7 ~0
Eden Untied Hrt'lhren 111 C hrist
Sid!.: Ro utl 1 ~4 R ~ &lt; d'' l1k

P .t ~ h lr

S und~ y S ~ hoo l

IV Sen l&lt;:l:'

L tn Ja !Jalll• "''-) tx!
Wo r,htp Su \IL~

!! .1 111

10 a m 2nd and 4th Sund Jy

Sund t \

SLhovl II til\ S und t) \\&gt; •1 :\htp " I() OU
a m &amp; '7 rJu p m \\ ~ d n ~,tf t \ Sl: l \ l l: ~
7 ()0

r Ill

WeJnLsd I\ '• Htlh s ~ rV IL ~

7 UUp m

Carleton lnterdenomtnatwnal Chun:h
Ro 1d P11 s\or RubCrt Y,ml c
9

Scrvrcc 10 1() a 111

Sunduy S Lhool ') lO

Wors h! p • 10 \0 am

Su ntlll \ Sd lflul

7r m

K t!Jg~bur y

ra r uli': C hurch of th e N azarene

M ,!rt m dnl ~

Hun t~ r S urnla~ s~ hoo l

Pasw r

Ret&lt;dsvlllt f'cllo" ship
C hurd 1 nf th~ N n l u rc n~ P u~ tnr Jamte
Pc1111 Surtrlct v S~ hnol ') 1() u m Wt)r~ htp

Com muml\ ;6 -lll Wtd.:h.t m RJ

9 ' 0 a m Wo rsh tp
10 10 u m 7 00
p m Wcdn c ~d :n S ~ntc c ~
7 n n p 111

South Bethel Commumty Church

I 0 ~ ~ I Ill 7 p 111

Ill Christ ( hurc h
Tc x ~ s

pm

\1t d~a p

p 111 W1 J r~!u p '\ I' m

3304-5 Htl nml Roa d Pom ~roy Ptl stnr R0;
7 30 p Ill

Surt Jav Sdwo l
1010 i.im 6301!111

:::!

t ~ l tll

S il tii d t\ St: l ll ll'

\lt. Humnn l lnilt'd Hn:thrcn

Full Gospel lighthouse

M td ~~p

I'

lh l , l'u utUill

United Brethren

Sund:l\ St: honl

Serv tce - 7 p m

IU I{) am

Nazarene

t\ll en

B u ~h

HI~

Lt d.. tn lt

S thb tth St. lu&gt;l•l

Mt. Olin Community Chun:h
Pustor Lawrem e

\\, r, lllp -1 1 t m

7 p 111

10 . t m , Wctlne~tl!l}

ro 1111

'i 1111

:\hddlt•pnrl l'rt~ b, It' n a n

W~ d l\t: )J a) S e 1 v 1~ L

am

\\m ~h t p

Wrmh tp

10 3\l a m 7 p m

9 a m Tucsdav Scr. t ~cs

Retht•l Churc h
Tu\\ n~ h t p

P~ ~tor

~0

1.1

m.

Wor~ h tp

E 1cnmg s~ r' llC 6

cxlttend S!utwA
f/legtdat:lg.

pm

6 pm
frt'edom G o!i)M'I i\lis.'&gt; ton

7 pIll

Aald Kno b o n Co Rd 3 1 P~ ~lor Rl'\
\\nt sh tp

1J 10 ~ m , 's und.t} s~ h (lol
ltr ~ • S unJ ~y ol Mouth
7 ()(I

Roger Wilt lo rd SunU IV St htKll • 1:1 10 a m

Pomemv C hun:h o( the N a zanllt'
Pa~wr Ja n LaHn dcr S u ml ~} St.: hou l
lJ':ItJ.tm W1•r ~h1p
IU ,O:.~ m an J 6

Worshtp- 7 p m

p Ill \\hl n~&gt;.J .Iv S&lt;:r\llC'

Whit e ' s C hapel Weslt) lln
(OOII t]k KoaJ l'a~ tot l-1.~1 Ph 1l l tp

(he~ t er

7 p Ill

C hurch of th e N1narene

Rtdcnour Su ntl ay Sd J11ol
10

~0

am.

\) ~() a m

Wt' d n~·~ da) s~ J \ILt

. . . . . .... . l.
.fgbtr .tunml~omt

ROCKSPRINGS
REHABILITTION CENTER
Th e t are you desent, dose w home
JU 1'1111
. .l . . . . . .
36759 Rocksprings Rd .
~~·­
Pomeroy, OH 45769
MIIIZitt4
740-992-6606

M e tg s Count) " U l tl~~t F lom t

East Ma1n

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

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

992-6&amp;n

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street

V~tlley

B.ult:) Run Rn.t d Pa sto r Rn

ustl ct a rt

Worsht p

' lilt (It ric\ 1\!IU&lt;,h 1\114 1 (17 "i-

R1 1 1d

am

Fa1th

11

P tslm P~ l e Sh . tll ~ • Sund11y SL hon l

a 111

p m scr\ t ~c

If ye abide i11 Me, a1rd My
words abide in yo~, ye !hall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be do11e u11to you.
Joh11 15:7

KEBLER

7 pm

wl un~&gt;d tV Sl: l lll &lt;:

7lU p m

Paq 1&gt;1 lh ll M~ r , h .tll Sun J .1y Sdtuul
1)u 111 \Vur., lu tJ
10 .1 111 1st Suntl::ty

w~ Jnl:~d

10 I O 01 ttt

~ 6~'0 p Ill

Rt ' ' S c\ll ti.Jllt t\ P "h't
k·~~ ~ h • ttt ~
S~I\I H1 Su tut dt\ ~ ll(l p m

pm

\\m shlp

your hghl su sh1 ne hel'onel
th ai they may see
works and glonfy
• Fnlhf" m heaven '' '
Matthew 5:

Wcrl nc ~ dt )

Sund .w Sdw &lt;l 10 a m

R ~Y. s\l n

S~

a ru Su nd .1y S( ht»c) l 10 '0 u 111

S und ll) Schnn l and Wor.. h tp 10

F. v~ n1 ng

l) ~(I

Sum\1 \

Slar

I nng Honnm

R u ~sc ll

olth~ l n tn~ ~\)\ \Ill

.1\l•flcllcport ( 0111111111111\ Churc:h
Pl' .trl S1 Mtddl cpllrl P t ~l t&gt;t S 1111

bcm n.!!

mt•nth l' \ t: lltng

]!l

7 pm 1\:

\\ cthlc,dl\

)uutll 7 p m

"i 7 ~

7 p Ill

- 7

.S)r" ( use First C hurch of God
Appk artd S ~l ll rtt.l S1s Pas10r Rev Da\'td

7 r m

rm

S th cr R1 Ugc

Ches ter
Pa slu r Ja rtc H ca tll ~ 'W uhhlp

Pa ~tor Bob' R.md u1ph

P • ~tor Ro n ~k a th Sunda y Worship

a m

D urh~111

lh&lt;: ron

m nnQJ

Oh lll

rn ,1 m
)&lt;

tm c\:-, pm

Harrison, lilt' C nmmuml\ C hurch

S~ h n t l l

10 4 'i u m

GtlmM~

\hlf~li tp

1-' t~l&lt;lf Btll S\11&lt;11 'innJll ~t1\lu'

\'H•tl nL'il I\ 7 pill

pm

Anlll{u•l' Ouphst
S unduy Slho11l 9 ~0 am Wo rsh tp

I() a m

t ~ h .tl t

(" .. rg~' lru \.. ~ n td (, til tp,lt- 0 1-1

Ill

Wc J n"J:.n

Pusttlr

~ 1\lam \o\,. r ~ht p

Joppa

f&gt;nn Wulker

1 Ill

~

S unt.lay Sdm n \

Rutlttnd Chun.:h ufGod

7

pm

n ~u l ll :'

7pm

m \V,Ir, htp •J 10 1 m
~nd 7 p n L Wt:dr 1 e ~ t.la~ - 7 11 111 l ml a~
j~ lluwslup ~en Ill' 7 p 111
4 l{)

Sdwo.•l

I I\ I

Middleport Church of the N..zarene

Mei gs C ooperatlvt: Pari sh

IU 4 '\ .t m

6 OU r m

~

Ill t Ill

Pustor All en

Bcn ll ll

9

Il l t 111

\\1!d11~1d.t1 ~~'fllll

7 ]l Ill

Faith Full G ospel lhurc h

\\ o r~ lu p

'I

1m

L1111g ll1&gt;ll1&gt;111 P,t• lm Slo.:\l H.H d SunJ J\

\\ orslup - 11 a m 6 \ 0 p m

Mt. Moriah Chur~ h of God
ll tll Rd R ~( tnC Pastor Ja m c ~

be nm!!

7 pm

R:ell

Wursh 1p

s,ut crftC !d Sundav Sl hoo l

r.. t tddlcport Pus!Or

P~ · tm

Wor~h t p

Oh ve Umted Method 1st

Pa stor D1tv 1d Gree r

Church of God

u m \\o orstu p 11 .1m

Ptt ~ tor

~

Ralph Sp n es Su nd.ty Sdwo l 9 30 am
Wu rshtp
I0 ;10 a m 7 p m Thursd a;

Sun da} Sl h• lnl • 9 10 n n~

\\ Pt•htp

w~ u n ~

~

1 111

Hartford C hurrh nf C hrist in

Ill

1\11. l\loriah HHpll sl

]()~ Ill

10

1'i a lit

.l 11hn ( od ttl ll ro.: Su nJ ,I\ Sd t•'&lt; ll

s~ r'l lll ~

Christian Union

IU 3 0 a m

A11m Hun Su nUa) Sl110ul

9 JO ,, m Wor~ h1 p

Wo r~ Jup

~11.

Run Dapbst

Fou rt h &amp; Mum St

II

OfT 124 bc hmJ Wi lkes' tile Pastor R ~'

WVn

( hft&lt; Jn laht•rmnl t. ( hm t. h

Slll cml tlLll ii!UIItt\ ( httl t h
H t• k nl \\ l:,t ( 1llnmht t \\ \ 1 , 1111 I 1c \ ng

1\lorsr Chapel Chunh

Graham Umted \oldhod1s1

7 ond 124 W Ev ange li st

Scrv tc;cs • 7 0() p 111
tu~s l

. t)

\\- or ~ lur

United Methodist
C hurch of Christ

H art fo rd

\\i.i M•Il 771

S\ll ld,t\ 10 l O Ill\

Ltmg Butto m Sund.1y S~:hm •1

111

l n le r~ cll wn

7p m

Fu l\(,, ~pt l lhun h

.. .: r ltl~

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Sund.t\

1\t ~hlr

p,lllll' rt•}

~ d 1 110I

Chr1st1an Umon
10

til

S t Paul luther a n C hurch

Oibk

Sal 7 00 pm Co ntt Ill ]lil t .try So.:r. ~ ~ ~

~0 &lt;1

P 1"1 &gt;I
l m~nw'

Cltlt&lt;.Jil \\ \ ,1 Su11d 11 Slhnu l

Pasiw , J t lm &amp;

7pm

p m Wed nesday Bt ble Smdy 7 p m

p Ill

i\ ltr ~ h

.\ m

am

I I .t m

S und ay Slh oo l • Y 4 ~ •• m Worship
.tm Pustur J mn c~ I' Httul v

9

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t

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f-l t ~ t or

\ \1ddlqll•rl

l"t&lt;lll tn

7 10 pm

Jaml: s

6

s~ hHII I

Wcdn~~d a~

Our Sa\iour l.uthl'ran Chur~h

pm

Stu dy \\b htcsd.ty 6 30 p m

'nJ All

\

r-.'u r m

Almndtml &lt;.run• R. F I

pm

W Vot

7 p Jll ,

11 111

K

I I) I 'i tl \l \\11t ~l u p
Bthk SHah ,\ Jpnd J\ 7 j M) pm

c1 ~ r )

7 pm

pIll

ty 7 1'1 11

IJ LVI•

s , llou l

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Br.1Jy

7 pm

'ii H)

1, 77 ~

7 I I] tJI II

'I 00 .t J\1 Sundav

Wot sh1p
10 00 ,t m

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Rdtd

9 10 l 'i

s~ I \I H

w~ du l sJ

S~hoo l

M1h Mnurc Sunday
10

1 ut

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7\1)

l(J

7 pm

H1blt Sluth

f,{ l lSClt llltl ~\ ll

P tll\\\ tdl

S11nd .t ) o;;;dl0\&gt;1
JU11)alll lhtlr, J t)

St John [uthHun C hurth
Pme Groh

De n nts S ::~ rg c nt S unday Btble StUd)

Bupllstlndr!)elldrnt

(J p 111

Stud\ \h d 7 00 p m

Lutheran

Re i

r

7pm

l'.t, lor J&lt;l hn

Ho memaki ng lllCt ttng I•H T ht us

Y 10 u m

7 uo r m

ScrVIll: S

Wcdncsd,ty Services

SunJH}
Il l 30

6

S L n&lt;~'

9 11)

I I 0 ~ 12 00 noo n

Sc nt ~c

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10 lU ,, 111 , 7 00

111

t

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Ap;upl! l1fe Ct nler

4-4&amp;-74 1!6

Ul

II

\\ •t.,Jup 6 pm

( urm~I·.Sultun

1 he C hurc h of lt.-sus

Bo l'l J Werry

I 0 IQ a 111

Suuda'

\\ L'Jn ~~U 1 1

1 ull till ~ I'" I ( hun. h

1

C hnsl o f I ulttr· Ua~ Sumts

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7 00 p m

Pa ~ tor

1/ , ll t lll

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7

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lltth ll ll\

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Htllsldt l\apt1st Lhurch

A'h S1

IJ {t!

SnmH tile

Sundt \ Sd lo&lt;ll

1 0~ ~

l lll

7

t\ 'ic•n l~L

1{,·\

11 ~I !

Stl\ tors\tll r tummun tl\ AJlt"tult t.
( hu rd t

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1\,ou ~ n

li ~c l B Hll n~

7011 p m

7 &lt;tl pm

Lan1 I

71 HI

Ash .S i r'H'I l burch

~ UI7

P.,~h u

( hurrh

h~

Wo r~ l np

9 ~0 .t m

~nd

PrJHr

1111

S 11r111~s

Mnr•1m~

Ret:ds YIIIt C hun.h of C hrtsl

Sund ,JY

l ll

Kt•k • Sutttl t} Sl hlll.•l LJ J-,
\\ ur., litp
\t ) a 111
) t tllh

l'.t ~ lor

111

Pastor Phtltp Sturm S umlt \ SchtKl1 9 Jr:l
2l:l60\ St

\\t~r '&gt;hlp

p~,tt1r K ~ t t h

1 111

Latter-Day Saints

740-992-6128

" Do nut steal. Do not he . Do nut dcce 1ve one another.''
Leviticus 19; II

\~ ~thll'&gt;d,L I

H\ sell Run C nmnmmi\J Chuf(h

Sund ty Sdm ul

\\ ul ll ~'&lt;i

\ltl ~

\\ o r, lup

10 101111 ~t:: (I ~ l!pm Wo.:Jn ~~d l \ s, n i L~

Pe tri St , Muh l l ~: tlllrt Pa~wr R t t ~
Btllllll&lt;:, SunJ,t) Sd1uo l 1() t 111 \\Jo l., lnp
11 14 '1 pm

l(l~tl

\ \ (t'hL]'

l&lt;d . P.t~IIIT

\1

Rej mung ltrt { hu n h

Sd\lll'

l'a• l &gt;r

Pt~wr

Ytr 1rth gn, up 6p m

( ha pl'l

.tt l!

Kt,.;k

1 111

tuun:l C hiT Frt'~ 1\lcthmhsl Clmn:h

Midd lep o rt O H

618 E Mam Streel • Pomeroy
(740) 992-7270

~)

7~

luppt•r s l"hun C hurch of Chn~t
Ill OJ

81hl c

Wcdm stl t\ S~:n t t c

7 pm

ln , trumc nt,tl Wtlt,1Uil Sttl tlt:

W, Jnc sJ a} ll•l'lle Study 6 00 r m

S.tk m St . P.t~ t m Jumt c F-nnncr Su nJ uy

An Income Tax &amp;
f"'m ancwl Services Finn

7 pIll

t

'I lO t m

Cltl ' kr S.dl lP I

.s'al t.· m { e ntH
W~ !&gt;I~\HII

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(

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112 nnk n iiKI ,,&lt;; l' t~ l\)r ~., 0 1),11

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Pt l ~

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10 ~0 &lt;~ m

Old Betht'l Free Will Baphsl C hun:h

&lt;J

'i~l'l' ~

n\..ltll l)tchll•

) I

Ut'lht'l Wors htt• Lt•nh r

Rut1 ,md l't'-h•r R.. \

J(l ~ (I

10 1111 &amp;

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10 10 .1 m . r1 10

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Sum l~ 1' SL h t~ l l

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t•~.1rl

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10

B\lh R• l•tn.,, n S umJ.1 ; St hool 9
\\ tl(,htp

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IJ ~0 a m

~II

KHtg Sund1 1 .,du•t•l ')

Suud,n

f( \

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t1f Shu n1n li (ll tn cs~ l h unh

Sd10ol

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1)

Ill L
)l:f Ill ~~ Il lig 7 p 111

l rd Sum! IV

llt£kury tlllls Chord• of lhrts1
R~th1 e hrnl

~liliiOI

Llachngl l{t l Rd

S unU ty S~ht&gt;o l

1 111

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740-992·7713

St

s~ r lll L

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South f-n urth lH&lt;Il U&lt; \ l tJU I1f'l ' ~'
J'a ,tl&gt;l (ftrt, S(l\l,trl HI 00.1111 Suncl 11

Ill

\ Ia\

111

(,ran t n mmunth ( hu n.:h

l uppa~ l'l i.J m' fiun \\. nr .. h

6 &lt;u rm

Hrt

Fan h h ll tm ~ lll p ( ru,,ult !urI hrt~l

rm

7 Jl lll

I I a 111 7 011 I' 111

M m tsll:: r Ooug Slt.lml;lhn Yuulh M m t ~tc r
Rupll~t

1\.11 Umun

l

~!]and frt'e \VIII Ra pt1 st

1 90 N Secon d

7 pm

,.

Pu•l •r Bna n D un II un S u nJ t\ s~. h unl
l) ~ ~~ t 111 \ \ o t,lp p I I I ~J a tll

( hu n h

l Ill

Soltc ty/Pm sth um l

Open 7 days u week

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

IO IUJ m

Mtn t~t r r

Spedal ~

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

Rl'i

S utn.l Jy Sl hotil

l l &lt;~ nt

lluhn~ o;.~

Sllll\l.t\

\\u ln,,di\

I I' " I 11

J\ "~~~~~~~ 'I l[l 1 Ill \\llt,IIIJ' -.
\\ nfnnd 1\ l~lhl, )ltul\ - t~t pIll

l um mumn uf C hrtst

.

\\.or, Jup

10

lJ

p 111

6 IO

7pm

7 pnt

Cuh 11n Ptlgnm ( lm[ll' l
B.lrrt,o n' ti ll
~ ~~.td
P t' h ll
( h trlt,

nf Chr1st

St111U.n St.htlt&gt;l
9 \() .tm Bt hk

Vt~ h

ML K ~Il/ l l

Sund.t)

,"it h er Run Bapti st

'k hoo l

.... .,oillll llltilodt.
Sill'uUotn ad tlalii ill our

...........-

Hours
6 am - 8 pm

Wwm f rwmlh
A111w1phere

hur~ h

(

IO.t 111 6 p Ill

1m

\\,11\hip

P t•lOI \\ 1\n ~ IJL.In l.ip St tl~ 1&lt;1 6X l

llr .tth !i\l ttld1tporU

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7 00 r m

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tnt

10 1!1

1111

f't~llll

•ur~ t Run

\ \ " 'li t[' lll lkt

"U\Il]

'I •II

h un tl" Hthlt I hur d1

Other Churches

Pt'&gt;ll r lit•h K11h1thtlll Suntl~• s~h..ul
I Ill \\ p r.ht jl 1J t ill

Slh ll

Sdu~t•l

.\ nHi lm ~

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1111 \ \ 1ll •htp II t m

\1 1111

p ill

Sund~\

7 \IJp 11

P~-tu t

1111

SunJJI 'idu~ I
ll a Ill (l r Ill

\\oiT'-htp

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S.r\it~~

Fhu\wod ~

I

t\

M tmsl.r Jo.,Ji l il m S u tu l~ ) S d11 ~1l

Cum mun wn
John

S~:nt,,

'ith md M u n P:h lo r A I H trhotl Yout h

P tswr Rtl k Ru k Su nU.t y Sl hoo1 !J ~ 0
tm Worshtp
10 40 ,, m 7 0 0 p m
Se n 1 ~e~

~urul t '

Rttt lm1l
Suml t;

7 pn 1

l(o ttl Mtdd lo.: {'IL&gt;rt Su nd .t) Schnnl

Ra(tnC F1rst Buptisl

We dnc ~ d.t )

~tht&gt;t

Snalv W~ tl n~ .,(],,y 7 pm

!;l: cv Gdbrrt Cr.ng J r Sun do&gt; Sc ho o l

ptiii&lt;WIIIOiatlllo""' oil ..

1m

\\ ~ Jn ~· J

p 111

\\tll " lliJ1

1\ 1\dfll~ptlrl

Y 1'i .t 111

10 ] 5 ,, 111

t ~)

lo 1 mc~

Sl'"-

lllllntll t'

, t 11 1

(ulll llH\Ilt ll /1

Director of Family &amp;

C

{l

Anthwn

11 10

I' tSI(IT M 1rk Mnrru1\ 6th tml P tim e r Sl
WM slup

'iundJI

Holiness
P,t, \111

I tl I S t m Youth 'i l() pm Sund,Jy B1hlt

Mtddk po rt Sund.ty Sc ho jJI

PPn~&gt;.rm

\\ nhi ~\J t ) ]llt\ &lt;: 1 '&lt;: 111\ &lt;:

P • ~ tll r

W~ dn l·~d. t y

M trtt~ r ~ r

\\ ~ dn~.:~tl t \ s~(\11~~

1)

Wu r~ h t p

( h unh

am

\\nr,h1 p

1 111

•\ rl1m l 1\t ll~
10 1!1 t 1n \\,,._li t)'

Pt'l'l

1 -h r~~n GrJt~

i.1 111

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Rutlu nd ( h un h nr t h ~ \ ulllrt nt

nt~ l)llt ~l

I

pl ~l: UJM I

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1111

111

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, 11 1

mJ I lui 1 I u, h trt•l I I

H1hk

l'.t:&gt;lur llnh l l ~ rr) S und 1) ~l h t111 l 'I ,o

Worshtp

'
Puml'rov
Ftrst 8opt1st
Jo n ll w d:~ n E.t ~l M .u n St

P ~'l ltll

f

\261 \I 1m St

Ut'ar\\ tlllfm Rtd ge (hurt h 11~ C"hrtsl

Ruthmd hrst Ue~ptlsl t.:hun. h
Sund .t) SdmoJ
1 04 ~ 1 m

Ill~~

1 1p'i7 Si lk Kvutt ·~~ I m ~•\ l lt P t,l&lt;&lt; t
1 ~~' ll'lt Stmd ; 'l h&lt;l&lt;.ll lJ ~0 t 111
SunJ.ty \lllt ~ lu p
Ill I ( I Ill! (..: ~ p m

r Ill

7

\\o11'-h1p

l J I~ 1

(,r~u

l hu ~ h oU hnst

Wnr., lu p - 1J I (I
~70

1{,\

l'om cm \ \\t-st...ldt&gt; l hunh ol t.:hn st
' ( luld 1e 1L' Hom ~ Rd Stllld J Y
tl~~ (,

., J,,,

c~c n mg

Wc d nc ~d.t y

Community Services
Overbrook
Rehabilitation Ctr
"A Celebration of Ufe"

hnol

&lt;\ " '-

l' t•llll

Episcopal

') liJ

,Jill

Sund ti Sduml

10 lO ant Su mlt )
6 lO pm W~d m.
6 1Upm

Rrulrnad Sl M tson Sundoy Sch ool

Michael L. Crites

Sun.!

tJ\llllcfo \

tn

10 lfl

\\ u r, lu p 10 1() ,\ 111.

7 OOpm \'v nh 1t!~1 kl y 13thlc SmJ\ 7 00 I' m

am

Slltt)IJ]

W M .un Sl

Morr h

Failh Ba.pli!it C hurch
'

\,hi,

7pm

Stulh

Wednc!;J,ty SCrvll:C 5 7 p 111

.

J1'lltlh 111

Strl lH' 7 pm

Baptist

E

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

\: 1 ~lUI

f u~~c f l\

I 111

\ .. hUll tSiratU\CI J&gt;t,l•'r ll••h I{ ,Jhtlt--t•ll
SunJ 11 Sch1111l •J .l~ till \\ nr .. htp 11

Trm m (tltun h
S~c\&lt;1\J

ill

( OPIIII IJ il lh ( hu rd1

~~ h&lt;~n

Dm.idmg Lull'

J&gt;:Jsmr

S~.: l \ ~c~

~25

·r

'tl

'J

L::trn lir1ll\ll \\nr.,lt tp

') 30 .1m

·r

\I "'

G nn t' (_ h•• shan l huJ ~h

Pomt'nn

L t be rh •1\ ~ mhl l of ( ,ud

f'U

\'1~t u r v

i'

1

lhhtfl
1' 111

\\

( r ntrlll (

Congregational

'~Y~

&lt;i!NS
Hltll/ S.u (on
~ 111 p m
Sun

\Ill

~ ~~~

( hu n: h

Pnmc11•1

Pt •l"l lh• \\ tlt•r!
-1 4'&gt; ~ I ~ 1' 111 , \ I t •~

Assembly of God

\lkdn~ ~ltt) S~.:i\ ~~·c ~ 7 00 p 11 1

MIDDLEPORT
Chnsttan Golt League wli I
begin at 5: 15 p m Thursday
at the Pine Hill s Golf
Course. The league ts open
to anyone 14 years old
through adult For more
inform,ttJon call 992-2070
tor detmls Sponsored by the
Middleport Church ot Chn sr.

A1~

'ltlll•l'~

1'111

Church of Christ

l hur.. 7ll()pm i' hl&lt;&gt;r ,\ l ~!l\ R Huthlll

P 1s!Cir

Unity singers
to perform

S •r,l
p,,h,,
Wc d n~MJL\ 71111

S~ntu.:~ Sun IIIIKl t m &amp; 7&lt;1! ~ pm

10.1 111

Golf league to
be organized

U ee~ rt l athoh ~

•

o,;;~h·~"l

P t• l•ll JIll&lt;' ll tl\1&lt; \nnd 1\
i I 1m \\llin,,d,tl

\\,,1\h tp

Catholic

E mm ll nmi AJlnslnltc l " ht rnac lc lm

9 4 :'i

BIDWELL - A gospel smg
W1th "Ne" Hon zon" and
"Chnstian Echoes" w11l be
held at 7 p.m. SatunJay at the
Poplar R1dge Freewill Baptist
Church. off Oh1o 554. Call 5937390 for more mfonnallon.

~71

7 !'Ill

R ~\

Pu.,tor
Lj 1,(1

lu ppu .. l'l am ~ St 1•" ul

pIll

161 \ lulbl:rrl

\\ o\J'I II ' (Lnl&lt;.: r

Jill

p m Youth I rt 7 'I ! 11 111

P ,l ~ le~r

at 7 p m Sunday at the Eden '
Umted Brethren Church.

cl ll&lt;:•J~\ ~

Saufd

" I L li~J k tlt• LI Kl· l m K nn ~ l ~

Sund.t) 1 10 111' am

\\ ,

10 •I) ..t m

1{,, t r \ aile'
\p•"hoi LL

lhunh ul t.ud ur ,, ruph{'t:,\

R 1\&lt;:lh\\otl&lt;.l \ \ \ ~und 11. ~•ht•ol Hl

l hur( h of J~~u' ( hn ' l .\pos1uhc
\a n/ .mdt .11111 \' 1r I RU P l•tor J um,

Church events

speakers llrglng them to
dccept Jes us ChtlSl 111 thei1
hves Stm ,Jthletes , Chn stwn
rockers ,md comedmns asked
the men to better set ve thetr
fami!Jes and commumt1es
using the Btbl e as the1 r guide
Men' s relauon ship with
women was a common theme,
thou gh women typ1 cally
weren · t seen
"We could till ,; stadium before
we could get the brochures out,"
said Tom Fonson, the orgamzatlon's prestdent and chief executive ofticet. Blll "we dtd not have
the orgamzauon ()r ablltty to sustrun the growth."

The Dally Sentinel • Page A7

WOR-SHIP GOD THIS WEEK
\1tlnlln~ '' •lT,htr II tm huun~

Promise Keepers planning stadium event after years of declining attendance
DENVER (AP) - A small
SJgn m the Prom1se Keepers
headquarters reads "70,000"
- the number of people the
Chnsuan men's orgamzatmn
needs to fill Razorback ,
Stadt urn m Arkansas for one of
tts revtvals th1s summer after
years of dwmdlmg attendance
Back 111 the 1990s, tens of
thousands of men crowded•
football stadiums across the
Umted States to hsten to the
Promtse Keepers' message,
hopmg to become better husbands, fathers and Chnstmns
Yet by the end of the decade.
the evangehcal group had

Friday, April15, 2005

A Hunger For More
W uh ~p 1 111g t:o mc~ d Lolldge of ~ r g llt:-.. sound!\, li nd

"

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

Friday, ·April15, 2005

reply the lawyer could make
was. · You .tre ng ht , Teacher.''
wh1ch IS wh.tt we read 1n the
Gospel ol Mark.

RODNEY - The staff of the churc h
A wemer roast ts bcmg
Rodney Umted Methodt st
Church Commumty Center ts planned, and there will also be
pla11mng a Fun N•ght for Fnday, pop and chips furni shed
Apnl22 from 7 to 10 p m , open throughout the mght
to youth ages 10 to 19 '
There are lots ol actiVIties
The event will be chaper- planned, 111cludmg basketball .
oned by adults from the . horseshoes, sack races, a pmg

'

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

•

•

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

Pomeroy, Oh
740-992-2644

God 50 lo ved (he world
he gave h1s onlv
l nt' P {.Ifft~ll

John 3: !6

6noufftr'•
::t1n &amp; 61ftl!'

" So I stri ve alwa ys to keep
my conscience clear be fore
God and man ."

Acts 24:16

SOi l ...

auUPo ...

t7..J.M6.&amp;nl

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740-992-6298

MY erace is sufficient
for thee: for mY
streneth is made
Per:fect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

Office Service &amp;Supply

1f'I..C N. 2nd Ave.

=~~~ ··, .~,Middleport, OH
992-6376

�., .

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The DaHy Sentinel

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Page AS .

0Hl

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Friday, Aprilts, 2005

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Bl

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Cavs stumble to Knlcks, Page 83
MLB returns to DC, Page 84
Indians beat White Sox, Page .88
.
Big 33 moves to earlier date, Page 88

State welfare agency Counties again hdve choice of systems
to review Medicaid s:s~~~T~D~~~~~~~E~y :~~~~omed
mana·g·ement
Th:rrsd.!y"s direc-

.
The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

.
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.,

"It only confirms C~yahoga
COLUMBUS- Electronic · County ' s original decbion
. voting ·machines re-emerged and its cominue" pnsitio'i!'that
·
.
Thursday as an option for local election boards should
managed
car~.
local elections boards that have options:· Vu said .
COLUMBUS (AI' )
While Family Services mu st approve new svstems in
Vu .said .he would like to
Ohio's welfare Jirector has
ordered a re.view of how administei's the program, the time for nex t year's.May pri- pb&lt;t.sc in usc of the machines
· .
thi s. fall. when many of the
Medicaid is managed while budget call&gt; for consolidating mary.
· Secretary of State Kenneth · coun.ty' s 59 communities
state lawn)llkers debate ways elements by ~008 _in the
of
Aging. Blackwell , .ill a directive to· h;tv e primaries on varying
to control its spiraling costs · departments
Hea
lth
,
Mental
Health
and Ohio'·s ~8 boards, sa.id touch- dates.
·
a nd prepare to create a new
sc reen
machines
from
"We' Je alway$ said the
agency to consolidate its Mental Retardation.
Among th e outside studie.&gt; Diehold Election · ,'!iyste'm s n_m i1icipal elettion year is the·.
scattered prognims.
'
Barbara Rile y. director of that have focused on way s · would be available for boards be st tim e to roll out a new
to choose in addition to opti- election svste m:· he said.
the . Department of Job and Medicaid lo.ses money:
·
cal-scan
unit &gt; previously cerFaq1ily Services, has ordered
- The Ohio Comniission to
The Po(lage·
County board
a 90-day review of the more · Reform Medicaid , which rec- tified under the 1-lelp America also challenged Blackwetrs
Act. :
'
·
direc·tr've. bur' 110 dec,· •.-,·on has
than $1 0 billion state portion om men d. ed 1he managed care Vote
The e lectronic machines
'
· of .tlie state-federal insurance switch. ;•lso called for using
been made about selecting a . r-"5.~~~~::·:~·1;~; ~.::
program for the poor and dis - large contracts to obtain vol- · were certified after heing fit- vendor or system type.' elecabled. The review was ume discount s on medicines ted ·with a paper printout that tions director Lois .Enlow ·
spurred by &lt;md will bui-ld on and supplies and • othe·r voters tan check before hit, said. Matt Damsc hroder. the
. C
t
recent outside scrutiny, Riley changes 'that t.he group •aid tin g the vote hutton , as director 1·n Fr kl 111
~
,
required by Ohio law. The
· ·
an
oun y,
said .. ·
could save ahout $1.3 billion .
the third to take Blackwell to
- A consultant's repo(l for state also was able to negoti - court over the January'di .r ec- ·
"We have been busy
resoJving some of the verv the comn1ission found more ate an affordable price of uve. sc1id that while he wel. _.
specific thing s that were t.han $600 million in ' unusual $ 2 ·700 per machine - $ 264 comed the new option. it did
·
less than a previous price. not really address the. issue of
raised. but l.' m very interest- pharmacy
payments ·111 'OOJ
~
,
without th e paper Bl k II'
h ·
d'
ed in looking· ac ross the such as nine or more doctors quoted
rintout
: requirement,
ac 'We s aut onty to lCP
board," Riley said.
· writing prescriptions.· for a
tat'" '"h'tt type ot· votJ·ng sy
· ·s·
Blackwell spokesman Carlo
' n '
.
• . The team will examine all single nursing home resident LoParo said:
tein counties mu st. use.
practices and recomme.nd
Blackwell in January .told
Even if all 88 co un ties
- Ohio Inspector General
changes. The agency did a Tom Charles · said the pro- counties the state couldn't chose
Diebold's
·touch
similar study of the · state gram failed to collect mils"re~ ,, s ·1bout 4&lt;
would
the touch cscreen sys- ' ' · · '
-' •
child support system a few lions of dollars in overpay- afford
tems; so thcv ·mu. st choose be needed , LoParo said.
years ago . .
ment s for incorrect or fraudu- systems in wt{ich voters mark DiebQid could. handle such em
The· next two-year st.a te lent bi lis from doc tors and
order· n1arkett.11g dt'rect
· ·
paper balfots that are read by
·
or
. budget that passed the ho spitals. .
.
'1 ar k RaJke sm·d · ·
machines
at
the
precinct.
"
.
House thi s week and heads _ -. The Scripps Gerontology
Sta.tes must replace outdat..'we · do have an inventory
AP Photo
to the Senate .targ ets Ce nt er at Miami University
of touch scree ns that can be Mark Radke, the director of marketing for Diebold election sys- df
d
3 200 · ed voting systems by the first
Medicaid spending - elim- ·m 0 xlor
oun · that ,
ol federal election s of
deployed quickly. We have tems, Stands With the COmpany's new electronic V€lting 's tation
inating some coverage for the 73 ,900 nursing home res- . under the Help America 2006
Vote our own in-llouse manufac- in North Canton. The state elections ch ief will allow counties ·
adults, reducing payments idems on Medicaid, or 4 per- · Act. .
·
turing , so that ,kind of requireto buy touch-screen voting machines, a reversal of an order
to hospitals and requiring cent. don't meet the proThe state has about $ l' l 5 ment can easily be achieved ,
that required them to purchase optical-scan machines in order
all recipients to shift into gram's medical standards.
. .
.
.
Radke s·aid.
m1 11 ton 1n federal money
·
to get federal money.
-~--'------"'-0---------------- available for upgrading the
While critics · of tow:h"It's worked
machines in all 88 counties, screen machines have said is secure.
Allen .
"We have an audit traiL So County ·
which LoParo said would thev are vulnerable to comsince
1995,"
cover . the cost Of buying puler hackers and others who that if something hap.pens,
Cunningham said:
touch-screen machines in all would commi t voter fraud, we'd have the ability to have
counties once inactive· voters Diebold' s machines have a hand recount," Fedor said.
are purged from the rolls, passed state and federal secuAllen County plans to slick
On ~he Net
with optical scan·, elections
WASI-IINGTON (AP)
.offense against a child.
meaning less machines would rity ·te sts, Radke said.
Ohio Secretarv of State:
More than 10,000 fugitives,
Gonzales said more than 70 be needed.
State Sen. Teresa Fedor, a director Keith Cunningham http://www..ms. state.oh. us
many wanted for violent pen;ent of those arrested had
· Blackwell had estimated Toledo Democrat who ..urged .said: The county has tested
Diebold Electioi? Systems:
crimes, were rounded up over prior · arrests for ·violent about $140 million for touch- the passage of the law requir- · hoth systems, but the board
the past week in a coordinated · crimes.
screen mochines under the ing. the paper printout, said saw no reason to ·abandon hIIp: 1/w ww. die bo Id. com/d i '' b
nationwide effort led by U.S.
"We kndw t:rom history old price, co 1npared with -" she is satisfied that the system optical scan, he said.
.
oldes/
marshalS, law enforcement and from the bitter experiences $} OQ .lllillion to use trye optiofficials announced Thursd&lt;)y. offartoo many victims -that a .· cal-scan machmes and allow
Officers from 960 federal, fugitive with a rap sheet is mme one touch ~screen voting
state and local law enforcement desperate, more· predatory, and mac·hine for ·disabll!d voters
agencies took parr in the search, more likely to commit the ,in each polling place. ·
which coincided with Crime crimes that plague citizens and · ." '''C15t'mues .are expected to
· Victims Rights Week. The communities," hesaidatanews make .a mix of choices ,
dragnet caught 10.340 people, conference \vith US Marshals LoParo said.
some who had two or more out- Service director Ben Reyna.
Cuyahoga County's board
standing arrest warrants.
The dragnet was the largest previously selected Diebold
In northern Ohio, the mar- ever in numbers of arrests and touch screens and Michael
shals arrested 487 people, involved local, state and federal Vu, the county's elections
. including five wanted for authorities,saidMarshalsService director, said the board likely
· homicide, 17 sought for rape spokesman David · Turner. will reaffirm thai choice.
· and sexual assault and 140 Pre~ious coordinated roundups Cuyahoga was one of three
v.:anted for narcotics viola- resultedinarrestsinthehundreds, counties that had challenged
tioris. More than 80 percent of but did not involve as many offi• Blackwell's directive to pick
those arrested had prior crimi - cers oragencies, he said.
an optical-scan vendor. Vu
nal histories.
Marshais also arrested 59
Columbus·- area fugitives, 47
in the Cincinnati area and 29 in
'
the Dayton area during the
weeklong roundup. ,
Among those picked up in
Ohio was Danny Casey, 46. of
Toledo, who authorities say
. rQbbed a bank. carjacked a
customer in the parking lot and
Friday, April 15
northeast turning from the
bragged at a bar about what he
Morning· (7 a.m.-Noon)
southeast a~ the evening p~o­
did. Following an anonymous
Temperatures will rise to gresses.
· tip, authorities went to an area 63 with today's low of 39
Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
hotel where Casey was hiding occurring around 6:00am.
Temperatures will decline
only to find it empty. ·
Skies will be sunny with 5 from 50 early overnight to
"He was back at the same MPH winds from the north 40. Skies will be clear with. 5
bank, robbing it again," said turni·,~g from the east as the MPH winds from the southPete Elliott, U.S . Marshal for mornmg progre~ses.
east
the northern Ohio district.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.) .
Several law enforcement
Temperatures will remain
Saturday, April 16
agencies worked with hi s around 66 with today 's high
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
office for nearly 48 straight of 68 occurring arourtd · Temperatures will c;limb
hourstotinallyarrestCaseyin 4:00pm. Skies will range from 39 to 57 by .laie this
Fort Wayne, Ind.;Eiliott said. from sunny to mostly .cloudy morning. Skies will be sunny
"We have a firm belief in the with . 10 MPH winds from the. with 5 MPH winds from die
Marshal Service that it's the north.east
.
· · southeast.
same people who keep victimEvening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Ajternoon (1-6 p.m.)
izing society," Elliot said.
Temperatures will [all from
Temperatures will stay
"The more accountable ,you 64 earl.y thi s evening to 52. near 63. Skies will be sunny
can make those people, the Skies will be clear with 5 to to mostly sunny with 5 MPH
·more of.those people You can 10 MPH winds from ·the winds from the east
get off the street, the better. We . ~------'----------'--c-----­
look at it as diminishing-the
number of potential victims."
Nationwide, more than I 50
of those arrested were wanted
Ltd. :._ 23.04
for murder, another 550 were· ACI - 41.78
34.72
.
AEP
sought on rape or sexual assault
Nsc - . 31.so
.
charges,and more than 600 had Akzo - 44.06 Oak Hill Financial
outstanding an:est warrants for Ashland Inc. - 63.63
32.46
armed robbery, officials said. AT&amp;T -·. 18.98
OVB -. 33.49.
.,
Among those captured were BLI - 10.64
BBT- 37.37
150 gang members and 1.00 Bob Evans - 21.36 .
Peoples - 26.19
unregistered sex offenders, BorgWarner - 46
Pepsico - 55.14
.
Attorney . General Alberto Champion - . 4.13
Premier - · 10.86
Gonzales said at a news confer- Charming Shops - 7.24
Rockwell - 53.95
ence announcing the results of City Holding - 28.46
Rocky Boots - 27 .15. •
Coi- 45.03 ·
"Operation Falcon ."
RD Shell - 59.77
· Among those arres.ted was DG -21.75
SBC- 23.65
Eddie Kelly. 24, accus.ed by DuPont -· 47.36
Wai·Mart - 47.96 '
Dallas police of shooting a Federal Mogul - .58
Wendy's - 38.99
man live times after leavi ng a USB - 28.07 '
.
Worthington - . 17.94
'
drug hou se on Feb' . 13. and
Gannett - 79.29
Dally .stock reports are
Marce l· Bald win. 2 1, of General Electric - 35.50 the 4 l).m. closing quotes
Atlanta. wh o wa s found GKNLY - 4.75
of the previous day's
beneath a trap cjoor in his Harley Davidson - 47.20 transactions, provided by
kitchen. He wa.\ wanted on JPM - 34.19 .
Smith Partners at Advest
c harges of assault and sexual Kroger
15.89
Inc. of Gallipolis.
·

Friday, April15, 2005 .

Today's games
Baseball
Federal Hocking at Meigs
Ea:stern al Belpre
Southern at Vinton County
Softball
Federal Hocking afMeigs •
Eastern at Belpre
Southern at Vinton County
. ~
·
Track
Eastern at Coal Grove
Meigs at Vinton Co Invitational

....

..

s

Don't miss this
oppor~nitv to reach
over 16,000 homes

®alltpolh~

11Batlp \!tr.fbune
l)otnt JHeasant l&amp;egt5tfr
and Daily Sentinel·

Health.care Edition
to be published ·

Local Stocks

Mav20,2D05

Hurrv, time is
running outl
Ad Deadline is
Mav13,2005

)I

.

Saturday's Gamos

'

Basobatt

Meigs at Wahama (OH), n9on
south Gallia at Easte~n (OH),
noon
Vinton· Co1,1nty at Gallia Academy
(DH). noon
River Valley at Fort Frye (DH),
noon

Softball
. Warren at Eastern (DH), noon
·Ports. Notre Dame at South Gatlia
. .
(DH), noon
Track
Gallipolis Rotary Relays, t 0 a.m.

oo·o

•
among 1..0'OOO
ohlOans
caught
1.n r·0 U ndU·p
fu. gt" tt" ves
. .
·

H·erd hires Snyder
as footbatt ·coach

PREP SCHEDULE

Rio Grande·
· S.chedule
Saturday ·

•

Baseball
Rlo at Tiffin (DH), 1 p.m.
Softball
Rio at Urbana (DH), 1 p.m.
Track
Rio at Taylor lnvitatlon91

.

Sunday

Softball
State at Rio, 2 p.m .

Aprll1 B
BaaabaU
Ceciarville at Rio (OH), 2 p.m.

.

Olding named
NAIA Player
of the Week
OLATHE, Kan. - ·In addition to winning the American
Mideast Conference Player
of
the
Week
award,
University o.f Rio. Grande's
Jenny Olding has been
nan-ted the NAJA Player of
the Week for the week ending
April I 0.
Olding, a junior right fielder from Fairfield, Ohio,
helped Rio Grande to a 7-1
week. She batted .625 ori the
week, recording 15 hits . .
including four homeruns and
17 RBL
Olding tallied 12 runs for
. the Redwomen artd recorded
· one st0len base. Rio Grande
is 14-12 overall and 3-3 in
the AMC South Division. ·

.OSU creates
$165,000-a-year
job for AD's wife
'

COLUMBUS (APl
Ohio State University is ere-.
ating a $165,000-a-year job
for the wife of incoming ath. letic director Gene Smith.
University spokeswoman
Elizabeth Conlisk contirrned
on Wednesday that Sheila
Smith will become an associate vice president in universi-ty
development
a
fund raiser.
She held .a similar positi~n ·
at Arizona .S tate !Jniversity
while her husband was there.
Coillisk said the $165,000
salary is comparable to that
of other associate viCe presidents of similar departments.
lier husband's..base 'salary is
$450,000.
Although the job is a new
one, il would have been created soon because the university is about to begin a major .
fundraising
campaign,
Conlisk said. The last major
· campaign ran from 1995 to
2000.
.
"Her experience met our
needs," Cenlisk said. "The
timing worked out really
welL"
Conlisk said Gene Smith
was hired with the 'under- .
standing that the university
would try to find a job for his
wife . He starts at Ohio State
.
· op Friday. .
Sheila Smith's new position won 'fbe certain u.nril tffe
· school's board of trustees
votes on it, probably ·in ,May,
Conlisk said.
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AP photo .

New Marshal! coach Mark Snyder speaks during a news conference Thursday in Hu.ntington,
W.Va. .Snyder, a former Marshall defensive back and Ohio State defensive coordinat~r. returns
tp the university where he set a school record for int~rceptions. He replaces Bob Pruett ..who
,et ired in March af\@r nine-seasons.
·

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Public ·Schools investigatiOn
submitted to the . 01-ISAA
COLUMBUS The confirmed
that
se ni or
team that knocked Eastern LaQua'-"n Perry played in
out ·of the Divison IV boys · al\ the Nubians' 28 game-s ..
·basketball
tournament th1s season even though he
Columbus.
Africentric
ineligible.
·
.
, will was
.
be stripped of its 4005
The investigation found ·
Division IV state champi- that former Africenrric athonship for using an ineligi~ letic director Larry Marshall
ble player, · ~ccording to failed to sign and submit an
nfedi'l reports Thursday intradistrict tran sfer form
night.
for Perry; who used to
The Columbus Dispatch attend
Columbus
and
the
Ohio · News Brookhaven. Petry scored
Network, citing source s 17 points in the champithey did not identify, report- onsh1p game.
ed that the Ohio High · The investigation also
· School AthletiC Association · found that Africentric prinwould force Africentric to cipal Kamal Ansari signed
· forfeit its 74-66 title game documents indicating Perry
win over Cleveland HeightS was eli gible to play when he
Lutheran East on March 19 was not, the DispatciJ
in Columbus.
reported.
It was not immediately · The newspaper said · the
· clear . whether Africentric's school district planned to ·
forfeit would give the discipline Marshall · and
Division IV champiopship Ansari.
to Lutheran East. .
A Coiumhus schools
Eastern gave Africemric spokesman told tlie AP on
perhaps it toughest te st Thursday night that the disalong the tournament trail, trict would · appeal if
as the Eagles held a 22- 19 Africentric lost its champihalftime lead.
onship.
Goldring,
a
"The students' perforBob
spokesman for the OHSAA, mance on the court should
the governing body for high not be impacted by an error
school sports in the state·, made by adults and · we
said an announcement about believe they should be able
keep ·their
title,'·'
Africentric .was expected on to
Friday. He. declined to tell . spokesman . Greg Viebranz
The Associated Press what sa1d.
01-ISAA commissioner Dan
Africenttic won the state
l]ad
decided
about
championship
in only its
Ross
..
·
· . .
·
· ·.
· Brad Sherman/OVP Fite
Afric'entric's first state bas- second year as a schooL It
Africentric's 6onald Suel (33) pulls down a rebound in front of Eastern's Chris Carroll and
ketball crown.
specialiies in African studRobert Cross during the Division IV regional
semifinals at the Ohio. Expo Center in -Columbus.
.
~ '
Results of a Columbus ies, history and culture .
FROM. OVP AND AP REPORTS

Rio at Tiffin (OH), 1 p.m. ·

M~mday,

He

Report: Africentric to be stripped of title

Baeeball
Mountia~

1-IUNTINGTON, W.Va.
" Our goal is simple to do
(A P) - Ohio State defen- thi s: We want to win the
s ive
coordinator
Mark conference· championship.
Snyder was hired as We want to get to a (Bowl
Ma.rshall 's footba ll coach Championship Series) bowl
Thursday, re~urning to the game," he said. "We want to
university where ~e set a graduate'all our players."
. school re~ord fo~. mtercepSnyder's contract feature s.
a base salary of $144,200 a
tions .
received a five-year' year. ' With promotional ·
contnict and replaces Bob work and incentives. he
Pruett, who retired in March· cou ld earn up to $4 78,000 a
after nine seaso ns. Marshall year. l-Ie also received a·
went 6-6last year and lost to · $50,000 bonus from a boostCincinnati in the Fort Worth · er group.
BowL It was the school's
Larry Kueck had served as
first nonwinning season in · interim coach after Pruett
21 yearsc
retired. l-Ie also interviewed
"We want to be the class for the job · and ran . the
of college football," Snyder team's spring practices .
· said. "We will be the class of Pruett and several former
cQllege footbalL Thank you . players, including quat1erso much for bringing me back Chad Pennington,
home."
· wanted Kueck to· be hired.
Snyder takes . over as · Sny•r was Ohio State's
Marshall prepares to play in defensive coordinator last
Conference USA after eight season and its linebackers
Midseasons
in
the
Pliiie se_;; Snyder, iii
American Coni'cfence.

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·Fountain closes o'ut prestigious
hoops career at Rio Grande .
~

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BY· MARK WtLLtAMS
Special to the Sentinel

RIO
GRANDE
University of Rio Grande
power
forward
Alkia
Fountain ended her career
with the women's basketball program with loss to
Roberts Wesleyan in the
American
Mideast
Conference
Tournament
semi-finals,
Feb .
26.
Fountain leaves lhe program as one of the best to
ever suit up in the Red &amp;
White Unifoqn.
·For her career she scored
1,484 points, which places
lOth on the all -time scoring
list and she pulled down· a
staggering I, 196 rebounds :
That total makes her the
school ' s all-tiwe leading
rebounder.. She is one of
·only -. two players in program history to surpass the
l ,000-mark in both points
and rebounds.
Fountain . ' led
the

a

Red women to a 25-9 record
in 2004-05 , which is the
third best record . in school
history. She averaged 10.8
points; 8.6 rebounds and
shot better than· 50 percent
(144-of-286) from
the
field. She was named I st
Team Ali-AMC South
Division for ~er effort~ on
the court.
The ·columbus native
was also named to the
WBCA Kodak NAJA AllAmerican team . Fountain
is the fourth Rio Grande
women's player to achieve.
this honQr. Lori Hamilton
(1994), Stacy Riley ( 1996)
and Misti Halley (2000) are
all previous recipients. All
four players are in the I 2 in
scoring all-time at Rio
Grande.
·
.Fountain · earned her secand cQn secutive NAJA AllAmerican Scholar Athlett;
award for her stellar work
in the class~oom with a
3.79 grade point average i-n
Information Technology. · ·•

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" We could not have made
a better choice_, four years
ago .when we brought her
into the program.'' said Rio
Grande Head Coach David
Smalley. "We are extreme- ·
.ly · proud of her and her
accomp li shments."
"She is just a quality person," Smalley added .. ."A
•tremendous s~udent, very
conscientious about w.hat
she does in the classroom.''
Fountain also had the .
additional responsibility of
being a residence assistant
(R.A.) all four years.
She was . AII-AMC all
.fours and made the All Freshman team· as a rookie
in 2001-02. ·
Rio Grande posted a 78.52
rec'o rd
during
Fountain's four seasons.
She will reh1ai'n the program and take over as the
women's junior · varsity
cqach.
.
Wotlen/OVP Ill•
Alkia is the daughter of
Rio
's
Alkia
Fountain,
ri&amp;ll,
releases
a
short
jumper
in the lane
Curtis Craft and Alice
during an AMC South tournament game .in March .
·
Fountain .

-·

�•
·-

'--;---"-

~~----

--- -.
Friday. April 15.-2005

B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, Aprilts,

2005 ·.

•
w~w.mydailysentinel.com

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

"NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION
,'

Cavs stumble to New York, 95-89
BY ToM WiTHERs
Asspciated Press

II&gt; If you have a question or a C&lt;Jmmen.t, write: NASCAR Th1s Week.
All rime~ Eastern ·

N~~t~ti_Qup· _ _

~amsung(Radio Shack
500, 12:30 p.m.,
April17

!{iJ
II • •

Busch Series,_ _
O'Reilly 300,
2 p.m., Saturday

I:MI

Tru~k Serie~
Dodge Ram Tough 200, CH~i

2 p.m., April30

• Race :
Samsungj Rad 1o a Cup race but llas now fmShack 500
is Ired secor:1d SIX times . Gor·.
Where :' Texa s Motor Speed- don, m winnmg lor the sixth

,,

Rac e record : Terry Labonte.
Chevro let. 144 ..276 mph .

Gorp on·~ Martinsville victor)\ was his sixth at the track. but
more -iniporta~tly, it was the
71st of his ·career. That leaves
him five shy of the late Dale
Earnhardt and sixth place al l·

·

·

on ly· reason GortiOn d1dn'l
do mi nate th e Advance Au to

Parts 500 from stall to f1nish

Last' week : Jeff Gordon be- was tile fac t that llC fal l tluee
came .the season's f1rst tWo- IJps down before some of
tirne-w1nner. caPtunng the Ad- tile fans ha d settled into
Vance Auto Parts 500 at Mar- their seats. A v1bratlon from

Kahne ., Kahne has never won

Where : Gateway lnternauon-

· al

Raceway. Mad iSOn. Ill.
(1.25 miles). 160 laps/ 200
miles.
When: Saturday, April 30
Last yea·r's winner : David

Starr
Qualifying • record: .Jack
Sprague, Chevrolet. 133.227
mpll . 2004.
·

Ford. 127.417 mpt1. ·MarCil

Ra'ce record . Jack Sprague,

27,1999.

Clievrolet, 113.726 mph,

·

Last race : _Kevrn HarVrck ~von
th e .Sharpie PrOfeSSIOnAl
250 at Brrstol (Term ,) Motor
Spt;edway on April 2.

t1 nsville (Va .) Speedway by a loose right-front w11eel sent
.593 of a second over Kasey

The Gaston Gazette. PO. Box 1893. Gastoma, NC 28053

__Race : Dodge Ram Tough 200

Wh.ere: Texas Motor Speec1

way, Justin 11. 5 miles (. 200
: way. Justin (1.5 miles ). 334 · time at Mart1nsville. led only· laps/300 m1les.
·
1' laps/501miles.
·the final361aps ahd chalked When: Saturday, Apnl 16
When: Sunday. April17
up career victory No. 71. last year's winner : Matt
last year's winner: Elliott Mark i-1art in finished third. Kenseth
Sadler
Ryan Newnian fou rtt1 Clnd Qualifying record:' Jerf
Qualifying record: 8111El l1ott. Rusty Wal lace f1tth Po1rts Green. Chevrolet. 193.483
Dodge. 194 .224 mph. April leader J1111n11e Johnson fin - mph. Apnl 5. 2002.
5. 2002.
ished e1g11111. Pe1h.aps tile Race record : Ma rk Martin.
March 28, 1999. ·

1&gt; Jeff

Race: O'Reilly 300

cjo

Ma~·}. 2000.

last race: Bobby Labonte,

1n

a Cl1evro!et, won til e Kroge r
250 at Ma rtmsvil le Speedway.

Gordon lirnpmg to the p1ts on
the 47th lap.

time.

.,. Gordon was three laps behind
early in the race and only took
advantage of a free pass
(NASCAR's so-caller;llucky dog
rule) once .
.,. Teammates Tony Stewart and
Bobby Labonte were both con·
tenders until they fell victim to

. . _,

art led 24 7 laps, moro than
one else. Gordon led only the
final 36.
1&gt; In both of Gordon's victories so
far. Stewart led the most laps.
first repe~t winner.
.,. La bonte won the Craftsman
TrucK Senes race, and here's an
amazmg note Not only ha S
Labonte won races in al l three

· of NASCAR's national touring.series, but he's won races in all
three senes at Mart insvil le

Speedway.
~ Gordon's victory was No. 133
for Hend rick Motors ports, and
that total includes all 71 of
Gordon 's career victories . Gordon has prod uced siK of Hen·
drick's 12 victo ries at Martinsvil le.

.,. Gordon is 33 years old and will
turn 34 in August. All SIX races ;
so far have been won by· drivers

34 and younger.
.. Ricky Rudd and Joe Nemechek
produced the ir first top-10 f1n·
1shes of the year.
Kasey Kahne still har;n't won a
race. but Martinsville marked

111-

his sixth second-place fin ish in
two seasons of Nextel Cup rae·
ing.
..- Vjpto ries

1n

the past two races

have lifted Chevrolet to an eight·
point edge (48·40) over ~o rd in
the manufacturer standmgs.
Dodge has 26 points.
, I

II&gt; Who's

hot -- Jimmie Johnson.
who has UQ,.,
ished in the
top io in

every

ra ce,

is now 160
points ahead
in the points
race.
...

Mark

Mar·

t in·s

third-

place finish JOHNSON
at
Mar·
tinsville
vaulted him siJ; spots 1nto fourth

place in the points race.
.,. Who'• not.- Kurt Busch has
fallen from first to n1nth in a
span of only three races .... Je·
remy Mayfield still hasn 't f1n·
ished in the lop 10 this season.
He's currenUy 17th in the points
standings.
·

It's been a long time- 118 races

E
R

•

on a

three times as many as any·

v

CINGULAR WIR ELESS CHEVROLET

1!1

attrition late ln the mea. Stew-

Gordon became t he season's

No. 31

:JEFF BURTON

s

1n

since Burton's last victory

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week
MARTINSVILLE, Va. - Jeff Burton , a form er Raybestds
Rookie of the Year who has 17 career victories, hopes toreturn to the form that had him competing for championships
just a few years ago.
Now an established veteran, 37-year-old Burton moved
from Roush Racing to Richard Chi.!dress Racing last sea·
son. According to teammate Kevin Ha rvick, Burton has
been a constructive presence since joining the organization
last summer.
A span of 118 races has passed since Burton's most re. cent victor y, which occurred on Oct. 28, 2001, at Phoenix
International Raceway. He fini shed 16th in the Advance
Auto Parts 500 at Martinsville Speedway, which is only
about an hou r's drive from Burton's hometown, South
Boston, Va. He has four top-20 finishes in the season's'first
six races and ranks 22nd in the Nextel Cup points standmgs.
Burton has seen the fram ework of stock-car racing
change during his career, with a number of young drivers
moving almost immediately into top-notch rides.
.
· "When you were a young driver in the past , you didn't
drive cars good enough to stand yo ur ground,'' he sa id .
''The way· you stood your gr~und was that you got the heck
.out of the way, because they were so much faster. Your
team knew you didn't have a good .car; your sponsor knew
you didn't have a good car. When I was a rookie, they said,
'Look, we know you're not going to win, we don't expect you
to win, and if we can finish in the top 25 jn points, it will be
great, ' You earned respect in a different way.
"You do have to come into this sport and earn respect.
There's a right way.and wrong way to do that ... The way you
I'ace and conduct yourself on the race track is what gains you
re spect. That's what makes the veterans and the yo unger
guys know what kind of driver you are, who you are and what
you're about It's not about what you say."
Burton considers himself a student of the sport's hi story.
His older brother Ward, currently inactive, is a former
Daytona 500 winner. J eff talks with conviction when he
John Clarkj NASCAR Tn1 s Week
speaks glowingly of the level of competition in the sport to·
Jeff Burton has won 17 races on NASCAR senior circuit, but his last
day. ·
·
"I love the past of our sport," he said, "bur if you want to . victory was in 2001.
compare the racing and the competitiveness today versus
20 years ago, 20 years ago doesn't stand up. If you want to pass him right now, because if yo u don't pass him right
'talk about how close the cars are and how competitive the now, it will be 30llaps from now before you get a chance lo
cars are, if you put 43 cars at Bristol and separate them by pass him. The cars are so competitive. T)lere are no junk
three-lOths of a second , you're going to have wrecks, cars in there. They're. all good cars with good drivers, and
.There's no way around it
that creates competitiveness on the track, and that creates
"The drivers are responsible for those wreck~ . Not a sin- . close racin~ action, and that creates the wrecks."
gle race car caused a wreck at BristoL Not one ·race car.
Drivers caused those wrecks, but you get into such a mindContact Monte Dutton at
set that when you get a fender up orr a guy, you'd better
.hmdutton50@aol.com ·

u

Jeff

Gordon

s

Busch

Jeff Gordon

.vs. Kurt Busch
Gordon's victor.y in Ma rtinsville
carne a bit at Busch's €xpense, since

the two clas,hed late in tne race and
.the incident removed the Nextel Cup
champion from contention. ·we fin·
ished 19th, but that's the way it
, goes." said Busch . "We'll bounce
back from it." Gordon replied: "The
last thing Iwanted was to intentional·
ly get 1nto somebody. I would hope
Kurt would rea1 1ze that 1t'S ha rd ra cmg and ... rt's JUSt us two ra cr ng for
posit ron."

NASCAR This Week 's Monte
Dutton gives his take: "Gordon had
gotten h1s car under Busch's going
into turn three. and when Busch· dove

into the corner. the two got t'ogetrer.
Sure, maybe Gordon could've backed
out. IJUt backing out might have cost
him a lot of ground late 1n the race.
It's hard to assign blame. Alterca·
tions like this one are almost impos·
Sible to avoid on a sho rt track."

Where are all the foreign
cars in NASCAR?

W

hy are there ~? Honda, Toyota
or other fore1gn cars 111 the

NASCAR CirCU it? I notice the
Indy Rac1ng League uses a lot of Hon·
da eng1nes and (Honda) wins a lot of
Robert E. Ware
Carroll, Iowa
Stay runed. 'Toyota has been com·

peting in the C(aftsman Truck Series
for the past two seasons and is likely

to ;om Nextel Cup withm a few years.

.Defending Gordon not
a difficult thing to do

T

his letter is ... in regards to '(a)

letter in the March 30, 2005.
ed1tion of 'NASCAR This Week:

For your information ... that is.
what-teamrnates are for: to help their

teammates wh~n they don't have the
car to win.

· Pretty boy- Go rdon (as you call

h1"m) does not crY nearly as much as
some of the other drivers ...
. .. Because Gordon is such a
good competitor. no one wants h1m to

say a word about anything. ·But what
he does say is always said in a nice

... professional manner. .. :

Juanita Enlow
HodgenVIlle. Ky.

St

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.

Cavs owner slaps down LeBron rumors
BY ToM WmiERS
Associated Press
CLEVELAND
Cleveland owner Dan Gilbert
is .tired of the rumors, innuendo and talk about LeBron
James possibly leav ing the
Cavaliers.
"Frankly, I don 't know why
he would leave Cleveland,"
Gilhert said Thursday.
In recent weeks, Jame s'
futu,re in Cleveland .has
become a to~ic of speculation
as the Cavaliers have faltered
· · in their push toward the club's
first NBA playoff appearance
since 1998.
Gilbert, who took over the
club on March l, addressed
the speculation surrounding
James and other topics before

Th u r s clay
ni ght's game
again st the
New
York
Knicks.
"It 's defi nitely
surprising
to
me ," Gilbert
said of the
almost dail y
·rumors. "You
James
don ' t
hear
people say, 'When is Carmela
(Anthony) leaving Denver''
Or when is Dwyane Wade
leaving Mia.mi ?' It seems to
be . what is going to happen
with LeBron?"
· James, in his second season,
has two more years left on his
rookie contract · and can
become an unrestri cted free
agent after hi s fifth pro sea-

son.
. But Gil ben. an online mortgage m;1gnate who pun.:hased
the Ca,al iers for $375 million
from Gordon. Gund, has no
inten~ion oJ letting James
bolt. With James as the centerpiece, Gilbert 's plans are to
buil d a team capable of winning multiple titles.
·'Let\ get it right , LeBron is
here for three more years,"
Gi lberl said. pounding a fist
into his openliand for emphilsis. " People don't understand
th e co llective barga ining
agree ment or how it wo rks.
We hope he 's here for hi s
whole career and we' re going
to do what we can to ma ke
that happen. We' re very optimistic ."
The Cavaliers · entered
Thursday 's game in the No.7

Fans still buying :autographs,
cards despite steroids cloud
BY JOHN SEEWER
Associated Press

out of mind player" since
hi s 200 I retire ment. Klein
said.
e former S t. Louis
TOLEDO· - Se IIe~s 0 f . sluTh
gge r refused to an swer
baseball ca rd s and auto- whether he used ill eoal
grap hs say _the_ . sport' s ste roid s during the c;nsterotds scandal ha sn t hurt gressio nal hearin g that ha s
the mulumdhon dollar ce nt ered the·pitblic's a1tenmarket tion on steroids in basememorabi11a .
becau se co ll ecto rs .stt II ball
focus on hi t and home
·
Estima
tes vary on how
run s.
Yet there .is co ncern much is spent on baseball
among both groups about memorabilia.
B.e cket t's ·
marketing
what the future holds.
" Peo pl e collect their resea rch g roup· s urveyed
heroes,"
said
Ke vi n dealers and hobby experts
. Savage , one of the nati on' s three years ago and est i'biggest card dealers. "It mated that whole sale sales
will be interes ting to see ofhew spon.s card s totaled
down road if they're still $350 million to 400 mil . going to be their heroes."
li on a year. .
Those .who track pnce s
But that does n' t incl ude
inside the industry say sa les of older cards at trade
sales and pri ces ' have show s and hobby ·show s or
rema-in ed steady in the sa les of aut ographs . and
month since Congress held game-used jerseys and
hearings on steroids in bats.
·
ba seball - even tor stars
The steroid iss ue also
such as Mark MeG wire and didn ' t stop the ' Topps Co.
Barry Bonds who have from signing Bond s to a
been at the center of the , two -year
deal
last
iss ue.
De cember Jhat gave the
"It comes down to the . company exclusive right s
performance ," to hi s trading cards.
oncfield
said Rich Klein , a pnce
Savage. who se ll s mostly
guide analyst. for Beckett vintage ca rd s and col magazine, con srdered by lectibles th rough auction s
many coll ectors and deal- and the Internet froni hi s
ers to be the official source business in Maume e in
of baseball card valu.e s.
northwest Ohio . said tie's
· Bonds' baseball cards been a little surpri sed there
have held their xa lue has n' t been more fallout.
be ca u s~ " he had another
" It' s hard to figure why
reat
yea
r"'
last
season,
people
· collect what they
2
"-k in said.
do." he sa id.
·
, lark McGwire's ca rd s
Randall Hahn. who has
have , slipped 111 recent filled
hi s
hou se
in
Pa .,
with
years not because of Horsham ,
stero'ids but because he has McGwire
co ll ec tible s
. ~ecome an "out of stght, inc luding jerseys and home

OSU releases J.ackson-Wilson

COLUMBUS (AP) Seldom-u se d Ohio Stale
playoff spot in the Eastem forward Jerlllyl Ja ckso nConference, and Gilbert . is
Wilson has been releas.ed
· upset with the perception that
from hi $ scho larshi p sn tha t
he and hi s ownership grou p· he can tran sfer tq anothe r
have .been hurting the Cavs
school after spring quarter.
since tak ing over.
the
school · s &lt;~id
nn
Gi lbert fired coach Paul
Silas on March 22, a move he Thursday .
Jack so n-W ilson , a 6said was essential for the
Cavs to make the postseason. foot-5, 2 10-pound fr es hman., wants more playi ng
Gilbert also denied having
titTle. the universi ty sa id .
.direct involvement in decidJackso n-Wil.sun play ed
ing which players are on the
in just II of Oh io State 's
fl~~\ame rrum the fin ancia·l 32 ga m ~:s anti avCragcd 2.3
minutes.
world and people don ' t print
fal se rumors," he said . · , J.ackson- Wilson came to
Ohio State ~ Iter a year at
"There are things being writFork Union (Va. ) Military
ten on a daily basis ihat are
comp letely fal se. We don' t Academy.
He gradu ated in 2e03
meddle. We ha ve n't ever told
a coach who to play or who
to sit down."

race s.

·

&amp; Supply
Co.·

Kurt

in .the Eastern Conference. fourth qu arter:
64.
But the Cavs wou ld ·lose a
"We just turned the ball
James made two free
tiebreaker to the 76ers. who over 'do.wn at the end ." said throws to give the Cavs a 70CLEVE!
. ND
A defeated Miami 126- 119 in Cavs inte ri m coach Brendan 69 lead and then pulled dow n
. ' sA
.overt ime.
Malone. "We didn' t handl e it another rebound. his nimh or
pronmtng seaso n has turned
Cleveland leads idl e New wel l. "
the period. before Eric
into something ~lse for the
·
CleveHmd Cavalie rs. Panic ._ Jersey (38-40) by two ga mes' James, though. n]ade a pair Snow's layup put ' Cleveland
in the standings with four of 3-po inters' and fed Robert Lip 72 -70 go ing into the
N 1
·
at ong ago, the playoffs games left , btlt three of thqse Traylor . for a dunk as fou rth.
.
·
looksd ,li ke a sure thing. Now, are on the road . Also , the Cleveland cut· it to 93-89 wi th
Note~:
With
fi
lmmaker
nothmg abou t the Cavs ' futuro
·
• Cavs would lose a· tiebreaker
I :26 to go. 13Ltt James coukl- Spike Lee fantasiz ing about
is cer1ain.
·
Jamal Crawford scored 25 to the Nets, which is why th is . n' t come up wi th a big 3- him in a Kni"ks uniform and
game, the Cavs' third stra ight pointer. and tile Knicks held
points and Maurice Taylor against a non-playoff team. on despite makin g just 2-of-8 daily rum ors swi rling that
had 16, including II in the was one they couldn 't let sl ip free throw s in the ri nal he'll ·demand a trade, James
said he's on ly focused.on getfourth qu'arter, as the New away.
minute .
ting
the Cavs to the playoffs.
·York
Knick s
damaged
But now thm thev have, the
The Knicks. who were beatClev~ l and's playoff chances Cavs, • wlio
play
m en here by 25 point s on Jan . 8, "He's a good elude." James
with a 95-89 win over the was h'mgton on FTIC
· 1ay, are ·Ill snapped a seven-ga me losing said o f Lee . whom he filmed a
Cavaliers on Thursday night. · a spot they never imagined streak in. Cleveland.· They did commercial with last year. "I
· " It was like we were just possible a month ago when it by making James beat thein don"t want to get into that.
I'm more worried about wearplaying to . play," LeBron they seemed destined to make from the outside. ·
.
ing
the Cavaliers uniform
James said. " It wasn 't like \~e th etr
· r·rrst tnp
· .1o th e P1ayo 1·1·s · ·'We wanted to make him
every night." ... Cavs ow ner
were playing for a· 'playoff sr'nce 1998
·
"I
,
.
·
·
into
a
J·llmiJ
shooter."
said
Dan Gi lbert di smi ssed the
spot.. We had no sense of
· l ,s got tlg
. to
. bet o· u ~ h now, New York coach Herb spec ulati on about Jame s'
urgency and I don ' t know man , sa id Cavs forward W' ll '
. -' W
1 1 t
why. Hopefull y, this game Drew Gooden . "Our backs are · k ·t 1 'h1 ~ls .
~ hw,lm e~. 0 fu ture. "Le Bron is''here fo r
won ' t C0\11e back to haunt us." against the walL It 's like tlie eep 1 1~ ou l 0 1 t e ane. · . : three more years ," he said,
With · guard
Stephan NCAA tournament for us _
AII -Stdl' ce nter Zydnrn,ts pounding hi s fist inro his hand
Marbury watching from the one loss and we· re out "
ll gauskas returned to the for emphasi s. ''We hope he's
The Knicks who ble~ a 12- Cava liers' starting linet&lt;p after here for hi s who le career. and
bench for the entire fourth
.quarter, the Knicks held off point lead in the third quarter missi ng four gari1e s w1 th a we' re goi ng to do wha t we
Cleve land's rally and handed when James had II points and diS located ngl)t nng linger. can to make tha t happen." ...
the Cavs a loss they couldn 't nine rebounds, took control in · He fin ished wi th 13 points in · Malone was twice an assistant
cmic h on New York 's staff.
afford with Jess than a week the fourth behind Taylor. He 27 minutes.
left in the regular season.
made five of hi s first six shots · ' Dow n by 12 points midway Hi s son, Mi"hael , is a Knicks
Ja111es scored 27 point s on to open the period to help through the, third quarter. assistant. .. : James has played
• 7-of-25 . shonti n~ -- 4-of- 13 . New York build an 87-77 1ead Jame s ami the Cavaliers fina l' 3.200 minutes thi s season~
un ' pui n cr:, - - and had a wi·th 4:57 len . .·
.ly began playing as if their .breaking Wes ley Person's
career-h igh l8 r~bounds for
During New York 's spurt, season w&lt;is on the line. )-le hit team record (3 , 198) set in
photo
th e Cavaliers (4r-38) ; who · the Cavalier&gt; turned the ball a 3-pointer and . scored on a 1&lt;,1&lt;,1 7-98 ... : New York's pre- Cleveland Cavaliers' LeBron James (23) pulls down a rebound
are tied with Philadelphia (40- over five -times, !hey hud du nk during an 11 -2 run th ut vious win in Cleve land was . over New York Kn ic ks ' Mi chael Sweetney In tile fii'St quarter
38) for the No. 7 playoff spot eight turnovers overall in the brought Cleveland within 6~ : on March 20, 200 I.
Thursday in C l ev~land.
'

they decide they do n' t l-ike
this. the prices are going to
drop like a bri ck."
'John Bl oom, au't hor of
th e book " House of Cards"
about base ball card co llecti ng, slli d the ho bby and
th e sport ha ve survived a
run ba ll s, said he's been number of cr i s~s over the
watching price s online and years.
.
~a s not spoiled any down" Baseball has never been
· i'nnocent ," said Bloom, a
ward tre nd s.
" People ar'en.' t going to hi story
profe sso r
at
unload their st uff beca use -Shippensb urg Univ·ersi ty
it wa' st ill exciti ng to in Pennsylvania . " It isn't
watc h him ," he sa id . always dependent on the-.
" Price s arc no t any bit player being a nice guy or
lower."
an admirab le person."
Plus 1 .he sai d·. " people '·He sa id he wouldn't be
who foll ow baseball know surprised if the steroid
sca ndal
provided
an
steroid s were there ." ' ..
Rick Fo ndrick. who sel ls intri gue that cou ld · make
sports "cards at a fl ea mar- so me · cards more c.o lket near St. Louis, said he lectib le.
still has no trouble se llin g'·. " People re'al ly involved
McGwire items. But nearly in sports collec ti ng are
all of hi s customers ask if hard core fans anyway," ·he
(he va lue of the slu gger's . said . They have so m~ch
rookie card will fall.
inv ested ih it. They're not
" It just depends on w hat going to give it up and
the fan s think." he sa id . " If throw it out the window:"

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senior and hel ped th'e team
go . 26-b ·. and w1 n . the
Wiscon sin state championship.
•.
A phone num ber for
Jac kson -Wil so n could not'
be found .

5. COVERALL ................... SlOOO
6..Regular Bingo .......................$I00
7. Postage Stamp ..................... $100
B. Crazy L ................................. $200
9. Regular Bingo .......................$I00

12. Sma.II Diamond ............ $100
13. Letter X................................$200 ·
14. Regular Bingo ...................,$100
15. Outside 4 corners ............. $100
16. Regular Bingo .........,..........$100
17. 4 Leaf Clover ...... ,..,....... ..12000

~·--l
Tlris weeks do11atio11 will go to
Pt. Pleasli11t ''Boy Scout Troop #259"

124 HIGHLAND AVE.

PT PLEASANT, WV ,

(Old Carolina Lumber Buold1ng Ados• from CSX)

675-3877

�-------.--~ ~

-

www. mydaily senti nel.c~m

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

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

•

Friday, Aprilts, 2oos

Friday, April 15, 2005

www.mydailysentinei.Com

'

An all-day celebration ma~rks Unwelcome reception expected
for Carter's. return to Toronto
baseball's return to DC
BY

JOSEPH WHITE
Assoc1ated Press

•

the ..:cremomcs had been
J\dd.tble well m advance
Then .1 lineup ot Sen&lt;~tors
took pos1llons s lug ger
Frank Hll\\atd 10 left field,
got the b1ggest ovauon as he
t1pped h1s c.op - ,md handed
gloves to the Nauonals players when the modern-day
lineup ro~n onto the f1eld
'Tm numb I'm rakmg 11 a ll
lfl ," SU ld lW O-t Jllle balttng
champiOn M 1ckey Vernon,
wi:lo turns R7 next week and
was shtlloned at first base
It 's been a long wh1le comtn g. but for those with
pauence
somethlllg good

WASH INGTON It was
.m .111-day pany am1d c heers,
c hant&gt; and popp1ng tlashbulbs,
h1ghhghted
by
Pres1dent Bush's zinger p t a
f1rst p 1tch and old-time r s
y1eldtng
the
hel,d
to
Washmgton's new team
M&lt;tJOr
league
baseball
returned Thursday to a c1ty
that had gone 12,250 days 1
smce the Senators lett 1n
1971 "'nhout hostmg a
regular-season game
The
W.1shmgton NatiOnals ' home
comes along .,
opener agmnst the Anzond
F l&lt;tshbu lbs sparkled when
0Jamondbacks was a JOyous
Wash1ng ton 's
L1van
exdamat1on pomt for ce leH e rnandez threw the first real
brations that bega n 6 1/.2
pilch. a stnke to Cra1g
months
ago
"' 1th
4 he
Counse ll The ball was 1mme
a nnouncement
th at
the
d1ately taken o u t of play to be
Montre.tl Expos were headpreseo ved for postenty
m g south
The tun s tarted seve n hours
''B.tseball IS back , and
befOte g.tme tune, when play
happy d&lt;tys are here agam 1
ers were sere naded wilh
procldlmed 77-yeM-old torchants ol ·Lets go. Nats'' at
mer Sen.ttors public address
•
announcer Charlie Brotman, 1 $1 500-per-table YIP lun
who returned to pres1de over cheon hosted by NBC's T 1m
Russert The N.!llonals p lay
o ne more home opener
ers.
trave l-weary after a rn vEven the resu lt was a happy
one, a 5-3 v 1ctory th at moved ong the mght before toll owmg
the N,ltlonals mto so le pos- a mne-ga me road tn p ch ucksess iOn of first place m the led and otherw ise rolerated
NL East The stands literally end less photo-o ps w 1th bigshook .ts ta ns cheered a three- name s ponso1 s before bemg
led mto the ha ll b y a htgh
run rally m t h e fo urth mnmg
Wa s hmgton basGball t.ms sc hool march1ng band to the
waned 34 vears for baseball cheers o l I 000 of the cltv's
to tetut n, and Bush restored a top buslllessmen and polittcal
95-year-old t radit iOn of prest- ligures
dents throw m g out the cereNeedless to say. the playe1 s
mama! f1rst p1tch a t the local never got th os k llld of treat
team s first home game He me n t 1n Montreal. where
was c h e~rt!d as he waved to crowds were s mall a nd some
home' games were farmed
the c rowd an d to pla}ers
w hd e wa lkmg to the mound , out to Puerto RH;o to boost
then he toed the rubber · and revenue, b ut they a lso looked
qmckly fired a pttc h over the ltke a g roup that couldn't
plme s h g htly htg h , per- wmt tor the h ype to d1e down
" It 's a lot of s tuff we're not
haps - to Nattonals catch e t
u sed to, " outf1elder Brad
Bnan Schne1der
Many who had toug h-to- Wd kerson sa1d " Montreal
get tt cke ts fo r the ga me seemed so much eas1er It 's
mts sed the moment because taxmg, but l' d r a the r h av~ 1t
secunty lmes for th e metal that way than no recogmtoo n
detec to rs, m stall ed JU st for at a ll "
the prestdent 's VfSlt. were st1ll
There a li eady have been
29 deep when the game s tart- numerous mtlestone dates 111
return
to
ed Anyone watchmg o n tele- baseball 's
VISIOn also m1sscd t h e presi- W.1shmgton, w hoch had been
dent's pitch beca,use It cam e wothout a team s mce the
expa nsiOn Senators departe d
dunng a commerc1al break eve n thou g h the umeline for for Texas 34 years a go There

BY CHRIS SHERIDAN
Associated Press

was the rcloc.tllon announcement on Sept 29 folio\\ ed
by the opemng of 'P"''g
tra1111n g and the first spnng

tr(.lll1111g gttme 111

Febru~try

Vuu:e CMtet 1s •elllrnu-. g
to Toronto for th e fmt tune
sm&lt;:c bemg tr.tded. and the
receptoon • he II
rece1ve
Fnd.ty noglll 'hould be.1s tcy
as wmtefllfllC 111 Wmmpeg.
"They're ' p10bably gotng
to le t hom l1.1ve 1t ," lnrmer
teammate J.tkn Rose pre dicted
Ne.trly lour months h.tve
gone by ,mce the Rapto n
deah the or d tsgruntled superst,lr to the Ne11 J erse1 Nets
but the pa"1ng of tunc has
done lml e to mend the hurt
feelmgs m ,t count r) whose
averdge fan 1sn't q une the
same .ts ho s b,t&gt;ketb,illlov
m g brethren south ot the
border
·canad o.t ns tend to be a
litt le mor~ person,\! ,\bout
l heor sports We don I get
attached to l1anch"e' or
progr,uns the 11 ay they do 1 n
the state s. n 's more ol" personal thon g' R.1pto" broad caste! Norma W1 c k s,uu
"We f.1!1 111 lov e With th e
person
and V 1 me 11 as
someone who was easy to
love e&gt;pe&lt;: mlly w hen the
team was domg v.e ll But
th e n when he began to
shnnk tram the court and
hom th e t.o ns th en uh,m,lle ly rCJCCted them, thai WU li
paontul And what you II see
on htS 1etu no wtll be thcte Jn nants a t .tll tho,e feelmg' ..
Not all tll.ll long ago,
Toronto and Canada had a
love affau Wtlh Carter. a
comb in ation of adorut oon
.md m f.Huat Jon that gave the
Amencan the sense he had
almost been adopted as an
honorar y C anadoan
Yeah, l dtd see that, and
ot 's not li ke yoo te becommg
a new member of a ftaterntty," Carte r sa1d
" They' 1 e
cons1denng you an honorary
c1t1ze n so ot was d1tferent.
but II was pretty neat "
Carter spent the forsl soxplus se asons of ho s NBA
career as the face of th e
Raptors, a fra nch1 se whose
ro se cltmaxed one basket
s port
of the
Eastern
Conference tmals 111 2001
and whose subsequent fall

(m

exhlblllO n g.1mc agamst the
Ne" York Mets .1t RFK
Stad1um on Apnl 3. then the
season opener a t Philadelphm
.1 day l.ttet
But the last of the we lcome hack par11e' was the
b1ggest l1cke1s tor 46 000seat RFK were h ard to come
by. even fo r some well
he eled
Washmgtontans
Leaders
1n
Congress
anno unced there v.ould be no
votes after 5 p m so lav.ma\;ers and statlers could attend
th e game. and the event
ollered n.llural opporlumtoes
tor
some
tnendly
Republican - Democrdt banter
Sen Joe Lieberman . DConn .t New York Yankees
l ans. noted the Nat1onals
opponent hatled tram the
home &lt;l&lt;~te ot Republican
Sen John McCatn
"And,
ol
course •
L1eberma n satd, 'I wouldn't
m1ss a chance to see •Sen
McC.un 's team lose "
Presodent Bu s h's lust pitch
came 95 years to the day alter
Wlili,un Howard Taft to"ed
out a b.oll befo1 e d Se n.ttotSA th leHcs game on &lt;\pn l 14.
1910
Bu s h u former purl -owner
o l the Tex&lt;~s Ran gets. was the
12th p 1es1den t g1ven th e
honot o f thro'&lt;' tng out a fu st
pitch m Washwgton. and the
f1rs l smce R1chard N1xon 111
1969 Alter the Senators left.
presodents performed the ceremony m other c1 11es. Bush
dod the honors 111 S t Louos
las t yea1
The Nauonals h ad th e
scoreboard ready The n ame
G~o rge W Bush was wntten
w1th the "W ' 111 cuoly scnpt ,
mtmtckmg the des1gn o n th e
NatiOnals hat s
''Somebody sa1d, ' H ow do
you descnbe the pres1dency 0 '
I satd lt 1s a dec!Slon-makmg
JOb I' ve got a dec1s1on to
make today Do I go w1th a
fastball o r do I go with a shder?" President Bus h sa1d at a
mecllng o f the Amencan
Soc1ety ol Ne'&lt;'spaper E d1tors
before the g.une

ulum.uely led to C.trte • ·,
dep.trtute :1 df\ot(;e th.u
!ell .t sou o ,tftert.tste 111 the
mouths of thme who lldd
cheered the player nockJldmed A1r Can.td.t Th e e nd of th&lt;tt era came
qu1ckly. Caucr's phySic.tl
bre.tkdml ns a nd mental d1'en~.ogement
se ndon g i he
h.iitdme 1nt o .t dOIVn\\,trd
,ptr.ll that culmm.Jted 111 h1 s
exil e w Nev. ' Jersey
Fnda} ntght 1' the first
ch.mce tor the fans Cuter
lett behmd to make their
tee ltng s ktlown
- St - Aug.usune used to say
.oil h&lt;ttred 1s dtsnrdeted lo1e
,md wh.tt you re gumg to see
from Raptot s fans 1&lt; really a
response to a broken he.nt, •
Sdid W1ck •• t C.madwn Cllfzen "I thm~ Ymce Carter
Je,tvm g - ,u!d by not be ong
the Vmce everyo ne beheved
he cou ld be before he lelt was he.trtbreakmg
And then IllS ad mi sSion
lh,ll he d1dn't a lw.tys try
h.ud was a Je,tl slap m the
l.t&lt;:e , s,uJ WKk '' te leoen ce
to Carters acknowledgment
that he didn't always push
htmselt .ts hard as he cou ld

heloed contnbute to tbe
R.tptu"- denme. though the
te.tm (llnlinues to draw well
a nd nw1y ol us g.tmes are
tele1 1scd na1wnw1de
On the Raptors ofllcJal
Web su e " chat board e ntry
from a fan postmg as "TechTom&lt;: seemed to sum up the
oeneral post-C.trtet mood
1
"' 'Th.mk you Ymce. for
makmg l'oronto the laugh1ngstock
ot
the
NBA
Th&lt;tnks l o 1 thmk1n g you
own the place ami try mg to
make your mom seem like
she h,ts a due, and thanks
tor demandmg a trade a nd
thanks lor s l.tck mg 11 (it S ~at
.oc ceptab le .u all), a nd thanks
for f,tl lmg o n the floor a nd
nymg
over ,md over a nd
(l\et ag.un "
[arter ha s often s t ruggled- m front of hostile crowds
and Ill b1g games •• md hts
challenge Fud.ty will be to
try to tond a way to 1gnore
ne.trly 20.000 .mgry ~o1ces
Teammate Jason K1dd has
expenenced pl.tyong 111 front
of u comb.tt ove crowd, havmg endme d t.tunts a nd
worse when he returned to
Phoemx for the first tune

Jn To10nto
Mak1ng the boedkup hatd-

after the S u ns traded h1m to
Nev. Jersey
' You starr to see the faces

er t or Raptors t.m s to come
to g 11ps wnh C.t rter h.1s
expe 11 enced a 1esu t gence ot you t ex-te,tmmates, a nd
w 11 h the Ne ts , scon ng 30 or reniembeflng .til the m e momore pomts 21 tune s 10 or 11es you've had," K1dd sa1d
mme 45t Jmes tm S3 games)
It 's .t m.ttte l of keeping
- and e.u mng Pia ye t of the y ow emotio ns m check, but
Week hon01 s last week atter th.lt s (e.Jsle l ) sat d than
,J ver&lt;~gtng 34 7 pomts .ts the done
Nets went 3-0 to stay alive
Rumma g tng th o ugh hts
on th e playoff oace
duff e l bag earli er th1s week,
Wednesday mght s loss to C.trter came &lt;~cross a wad of
lnd1 ana left New Jersey l $400 on C.madoan c u rre n cy
1/2
games
behmd that he n eve r exc han ged
Philadelphia for the Eas t's after be1ng traded
The
e1ghth and f1oal p lay oft spot
money was &lt;1 remtnde r of the
The Carter Er,l ~'&lt;as "ltlne place he left belund, a co unwhen he capture d the unagt- t ry Carter g 1ew to enJOY
Asked 1f he had any ruesnati on of sports f ans 111
hockey's hom e land , warm
sage to se nd to hos former
mg them to ba s ketball w h1lc fans. Carter s tumbled to
becomong one of the most choose the nght words
popular players m the sport '
' I don' t know w hat to tell
- a perenmal A ll-Star who the m I s till have t1es w1th
garnered more votes m fan Toronto a nd Can ada, I still
balloung than anyone m the h ave fn ends there tha t I tal k
NBA, at leas t unto! Yao to frequently, Carter satd .
Mmg came a l ong
" It 's not like l hated Toronto
Cartel 's absence fro m 39 I IO\ed Toronto but 1t was
games tn 2002-03 and nm e JU St one o f those thmg s
more • gd m es last season w he te 1t was tune"

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Party on the Patio!!

The Iron Gate
Grille

NOTICES

opens up the season on the
pat1omk1 Bar
w1th the first off1c1al

THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
FOREST RUN BAPTIST CHURCH ,
Plaintiffs

vs
PROGRESSIVE
SCHOOL ASSOCIATION,
Its

Unknown

Heirs

and Assogns
And
WESTERN
METHODIST CHURCH
Its Unknown Heirs
and Assigns
Addresses Unknown

Case No
05-DRLEGAL NOTICE
Defendants
Progressive

School

Association , Western
Methodist Church and
Wesleyan
ME
Church,
Methodist
whose last known
address was 104 Kerr

Street, Pomeroy, OH
45769, are hereby
notified that on the
1st day of April, 2005,
that

Forest

Run

Baptist
Church,
Ptalntllla, hied theor
complaint to qlioet
title to the real Htate
described on the complaint and other relief
'" the Court of
Common Pleas of
Meigs County, Ohto,
bearing Case No 0!&gt;DR
This notice will run
once each week for

s1x success1ve weeks,
the last publication
beong on tile 13th day
of May, 2005. !he
Defendants will have
days
twenty .. tght
from the day of last
publication 1n which
to answer sa1d com-

plaint
Dent.. L
Bunce
(0042121)
Attorney lor Plaintiffs
105 N Second Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
(7401 992-5730
(4) 8, 15, 22, 29 (5) 6,
13
"
•

Public Notice
The
VIllage
of
Middleport •• offerong
lor bid one 1994
Whitley Trailer, t 2 x
40' long Has ACand
heat Trailer has been
used for class rooms
and are 11 ' x 19' each

They have axles but
no wheels, has bolt

on the tongue

"

Can be seen at the
Moddleport
Elementary School or
call 992-5711 and ask

Pig Roa~t
April15 &amp; 16

CHICKEN BBQ
Racine Fire Dept.
Sunday, April 17th

• Highly motivated individuals
• Courteous and well mannered
• Desire to earn ~n excellent income
while having fun!
• Best pay and benefits in the area

Come and enJOY live
entertainment and great spec1als
on a ll beverages Also en1oy th e
Iron Gate Steakhouse for a cas ual
atmosphere w1lh great seafood
and steak spec1als by Chef Dan
601 and 615 Ma1n Street
Po1nt Pleasa nt WV
304-675-7030
or 304-675-2200

Servtng begins 11 00 am
Speed and
11 CllntC
Fndays 6 7 pm
WILL POWER TUMBLING
$10 per class Ft rst t1me fee of $ 12
Formore Information
ca11441 -1570

~rian Ross or Pat Hill in person:
195 Upper River Rd., Gallipolis, OH

for Don

Btds will be accepted
until 4.00 p m April
22, 2005 at Middleport
VIllage Hall
The VIllage has the
roght to refect any &amp;
all bids
Sandy
lannaralll ,
tMayor
V1llege ol Middleport
(4) 14, 15, 18, 19 4tc

COMMERCIAL GAS STOVE
1 0 Burners 2 Large! Ovens
Make us an offer'
Can t&gt;e seen ;ot
SACRED HEART CHURCH
Pomeroy 992 5898 lor appotnlmenl
New one would cost $5.000

Monday thru Fnday 9 00 a m to 7 00 p m
Saturday - 9 00 a m to 5 00

140 4146-9800 •1-800-212-5179

Be Sure To Stop

""'

MERCURY

By the

IFIND A 'JOB IN THE CLASSIFIEDS I
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

A local financoal msututoon 1s seeking a
full lime collecwr nus ondovodual must
possess good verbal and wrmen communocatJo n sk11ls abil1ty to work Wtlh ex ostong
loan officers and Ch1ef Lendong Officer to
deve lop an understandmg of all as peels of
!he CollectiOn Departmenl This mdovoduallnust have a ho gh school d1ploma or
I
eqUJvalem and 1wo to three years expenence m collectiOns ts desored A valod
. drivers ltcense 1' also reqwred Pay scale

w1ll be commensurate w1th expenence
lntere,led mdt\lduals may pl&lt;k up an
apphcatoon a1 or 'end resume to Human
Resource s Adm1mstrator. 2 J I W Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohoo Member FDIC and
Equal Opportuntty Emplover

Help

Wj~nted

Help Wanted

Grafters' Loft
at the

Middleport
Department Store
For all your spring &amp;
Summer 1tems

1

1
I

Sales oxpmence Ji&lt;faltd but not rtquited

Coonauousnauns Jl08I'IIII offered
UR"IIIC BotN!-Ltvd f"rooiano-

• (M sales profcssiollls ft btpfy plid
1

q

l dly weebnd evay lllOillh i day of!' per week

Please stop ia for an iaterview.

252 Upper River Rd , Galhpohs, OH 4563 I

BINGO
April 16th 6:30pm
American Legton
Middleport

'

110 people or more
$1 ,000 00 coversfl tf not wtfl
pay accordtngly
Crank It Up $3,000 00
Starburst $1 . 150 00
Door Pnze $J 00 00
Broad

Run Gun Club

12 Gauge 680/
12 gauge slug
Sunday, Aprt l 17th
12 Noon

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

i!:iter·

-m::rtbune Sentinel
CLASSIFIED

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
·youR AD NOW
IN
To Place
\!Cribune
Sentine
Your Ad,
can Today..• (7 40) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156

(304) 675-1333 _

~~~!---------~
O~r~F~a~x~~~o~(~7~4~0~)~9~9~2~
-2~1~5~7~~...

Ofcfee llo«r.sMondav thru Frid
8:00 a.m. t:o 5:00

'

\\ \Ot \ 0 \11-.e\1'

~ ANNOUNCE.\IENl~

Ray &amp; Sons Complete Car

'
~12

s

G ALl

II'OLIS

Clean ng 26 15 i f2 Jackson

{304)675 7375 2650 Mtll Creek Ad Sat
Monday Fnday 8 5 Saturday Apr 116 9 3 Baby gtrl cloth
92
tng 0 24 mos Baby 1tems
i:F.!:~~~::...--., ap ple kttchen decor house
hold 1te ms mason Jars

Spr ng Cleanout 2 famtly
household ttems clotht ng
300 Sprmg Ave Pomeroy
Sat 4116 8 3pm

Ave

·------_.1
GJVI :.AWA\

;3 tam1ly yard sale ftrst yard

76

YARDSA.LE-

Pr. I'LFASANl
Large Yard Sale Sandhtll
Rd Letart watch for stgns
Aprl 15 16 from BOO ?
Some thing for. everyone
Lot s m sc TV Clothes
Furntture Toys

2

sate a t the season
2 temale We1maraner1Collle
Thursday Apnl 14 Fn 15
m x 1 year 2 female Rat 16 Ch!tdren s ctotn ng
Terr er1Wire ha1r Tenter m1x womens &amp; mens clolh1ng
f1xed 1 Rat Terner Jack/Rat mtsc 1tems also 2018 1/2
n11x
1 112
year
old Eastern Ave across !rom GIQ8r')IIC Flee Merkel all
Proceeds go to the March of
(740)379 9098 1740)379 Wal Mart 1n alley
Dimes Old Dollar General
23 16
9am 4pm Sat 41'1 6/05 1155 Store Hot dogs 2/$1 00
Drmks
Somethmg for
Adorable 8 week old pup
pieS Brown With 'short hair 2nd Ave Pnmlt ve crafts everYone Fn Sat 9 6 Sun 1
Longabe rger
household
992 6315
- - - - - - ' - - - - Items glassware clothmg &amp; 5
Free puppy 7 weeks old baby 1tems a~r cond1t1oners Yard Sale Bes1de of
gray &amp; white female w1th
Bruml eld s Garage Ashton
Fnday 15 Saturday 16 15th &amp; 16th 9 00 am-?
blue eyes (740)256 681'7
Sunday.! ? 9am-? 3719 St
Old round bales ot hay Call At 160 1ust past hosp1tal &amp;
AUC110N AND
(740)446 2724
Browns Market Clothing for L,_.,;F,;Lii;EA;:;;,;MAiiiiiiHIIKEII"iol.J
To G1veaway Gu nea P1g to everyone lots of brand
Good Home (304)675 5265 name plus srze me ns &amp; Carolma Flea Market Now
women s baby furnitu re Open Outsrde Accepting
house plants lots of mrsc Vendors
UNlAND
Yard Sales
__
FOUNU
Too much to I1st
Produce
Fn Sat Sun
3041675-5516
Spruce ~7::..;;.;::,~---.,
Slack wlbrown male puppy Fr1day Saturday
Street Ext Bam ? Toys j090
WANIED
Found m Porter area Furniture baby girl clolhes
TO BU\'
(740)388 0173
toddler boy clothes mrsc
Pound Black male dog Lab household
Absolute Top Dollar U S
m1x wired col lar near - - - - - ' - - - - Sliver and Gold Coms
Roosevelt Schoo 1 area Ram or Shme Sat4/16 Proofsets Gold R1ngs uS
1478 Green Valley Drrve Currency MT S Co1n Shop
(304)675 11 38
Old glass ant1ques linens 151
Second
Avenue
Found 1n Alfred Elk Run hOusehold 1tems
Gallipolis 740 446 2842
area Boxer tn poor cond1
liOn descnbe to c1a1m Saturday ~/ 1 6 12 m1les out Older used school band
St Rt 141 Gall poliS Amish mstruments
(740)965 3540
Trumpets
like house (but rs not) Lots of Saxophones Trombones
Found rna te Yellow spayed &amp; mce baby things Little Tlk:es
neutered older Cat around car bed horse saddles etc Older N1ntendo games
Dollar General m New much more Ra•n or Shrne Large lots only (740)388
8692
Haven (304)882·3218
lqst 2 Jack Russe (I...1errrers Women s summer clothes Want to b"u
.. , acreage on
krtchen utensils Gallla Co Mrnrmum 1 5 2
1 Brown/while male
1 out11ts
brown black whte female m1sc nems 103 Green acres (740)4,8·7000 leave
lost 1n Flat Rock area Sun Terrace
Ct message
Aprt 10th Reward (3041675 Saturday/Sunday 9am 6pm
I \11'1 0\ \II\ l
7474
"'-lin \1 I"'Yard Sale 1294 Kemper
Hollow Rd Gallipolis OH ~;,;;;;...--------...l
110
F S 15th 16 h
" &amp; al
I
HELP WANim
1
4
YARJ) SALE.
~
PoMEROY/Mu&gt;DLE
1OO Workers Needed
Assemble crafts
Pomeroy Fruth s Fnday
wood Items
selected rtems 75%
Matenals provided
To $48 0/wk
Free mtormat1on pkg 24 hr
801 428 4649
CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4 s For Sale ••
725
A grow1ng H VA C company
Annquncement. ..
030
1s lookrng for an all around
Antiques...
530
person to do haatmglcool
Apartments tor Aent ..... ·:.:·:.:.:·:.·:::::.:·.·::··-··440
Auct1on and Flea Market. ..
080
rng The person must have 1
Auto Parts &amp; Accessones
760
year or more of e11penence
Auto Repatr
770
1n mstallatiOn and techmcal
Autos tor Sale
710
ShOuld be or wrll be cerh
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale
750
l1ed Pay on expenence 11
550
Building Supplies
Interested n be1ng the Best
Business ant:( Buildings ... .
340
send resume IG CLA BoK
Business Opportunity
210
548 c!o Gallipolis Tr.bune
Business Training
140
790
PO Box 46{1 Gall1pol s OH
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
Camping E~ulpment
780
45631
010
Carda of Y.hanka
An Excellent Wfro! to ea rn
190
Child/Elderly Care
money The New Avon
Electrical/Refrigerat ion
840
Equipment for Rent
480
Call Marilyn 304 882 2645
Excavating
830
Apphcat1ons for Secretanal
Farm Equipment
610
Position avarlable at 2309
Farms for Rent
\ ..430
Farms tor Sale
330
Jackson Avenue Pt PI
For Lease
490
Must be-returned 1n person
For Sale
585
bY 4pm Fnday Apnl22
For Sale or Trade ..
590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables..
580
AVON! AI! Areas• To Buy or
Furnished Rooms... .
450
Sell Shirley Spears 304
Genaral Hauling .••..
850
675- 1429
Giva1,way .. ..
•. ..040
Happy Ads.
.......050
Door to Door Sales
Representatrves
and
Hay a Grain. .
. .....640
•..... 110
Satellite Installers Great
Help Wanted ..
Home Improvements
...••... 810
Comm1ss 1ons ca ll Today
Homes for Sale
.
. •• 310
(304)675 7105
Household Goods •
. ................
510
:::::~_::__:.::.:__ _ _
Houses for Rant
410
Drivers Needed
In Memoriam..
• 020
COL DriVers wrlhng to dnve
lnourence .....
130
tor local ready m1x compa
660
Lawn &amp; G.arden Equepment
ny EKperrence rs preferred
Livestock ..•.•
...... 630
but not necessary Dnver
lost and Found
..... 060
must be w1llmg to do pre
Lota &amp; Acreage
.•.•. 350
maintenance on trucKs &amp;
Miscellaneous
.... 1.70
equipment, yard WOf'k &amp;
Miscellaneous Merchandise
540
other miscellaneous chores
Mobile Home Repair ..•..•••
860
Mobile Homes for Rent . , .••..
420
Expenence opera11ng equrp
320
Mobile Homes for Sale. --- .
ment &amp; extra skills such as
Money to Loan ••.
220
weld1nlj1 a plus
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers.
740
__
c::.'::."_:l::,304:_c)9_3_7~34-I_O_r
Musical Instruments
.. 570
Fostercare Givers Needed
Personals •.•
...... 005
Pets tor S.le..
.560
Become a TherapeutiC care
Plumbing a Healing
...• 820
grver you Will be rermburfieel
230
Profeaalonal servlc:es ..
$3D $4 5 a day for the care 01
Radio, TV &amp; CB Rop.alr .......
160
a chrld In your home
Real Estate Wanted .
•• 360
Tralnm_g begrns m ~nl for
Schools Instruction.... .••....
150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer . •
.... 850
more Info call 0 asls
Situations Wanted
•....••• 120
Therapeutrc
Fostercare
Albanv Oh Toll Free 1 877
Space for Rent.....
.............. 460
'
325-1558
520
Sporting Goods
SUV's for Sale
~~~
rap c• • gner
Trucks for 5ale ···------·····-alhpolis Da1ly Tnbune 1
Upholstery
870
ccephng resumes lor
Vans For Sale
730
ull
lime
Graphtt
Wanted to Buy •.
090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies
. 620
es1gner Please subm•
Wanted To Do
180
ur resume 1cover le«er
Wonted to Renl------- 470
nd references to J•
Yard Sale- Gallipolis •.
072
reetand 825 Third Ave
Yard Sale-Pomeroy!Middle ... l
074
lis 01'11o 45631
··· 076
Yard S.le..Pt. Pleaaanl •. ........

r

IT'S

YARD
SALE
TIME

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

tJ71

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
lr1'&gt;
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢for small
$1 .00 for large

Display Ads

Dally J:n-Colurnn 1 00 p rn
M onda y - ~rlday for J:n•er-tlon
:rn N ext: Day • Paper
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T hur•dav f'or Sunday•

• All ads must be prepaid•

HELr WAN"nn

ARil ALE

YARD SALE·

Word Ads

-~~~~6~7~5~-~52~3~4~~--------~------_.

Oead'tf;,~

HELP WANTED
STAFF
HARDWARE STOREILUM
DEVELOPMENT
BER YARD seek1ng qual1
l1ed sales person e11pen COORDINATORIR.N
enced m hardware &amp; bu1ld
SUPERVISOR
rng malena!s (740)992
2709 ask for John
Scen•c H1lls Nurs ng Center
a Tande m Health Care
Help wanted Darst Adult
Group Ho me (740)992 Fac•lily 1s seek ng a select
few to JOn our outstandrng
5023
Staff
Development
Help Wanted General Coord1nator&gt; to educate
nurs1ng personnel on rest
Labor Call {740)245 9559
oent care pol c•es and regu
Home Health Care of SEQ IS 1&lt;:~1 ons Cand date wrll have
accept ng app11ca110ns for a valid Prof9s51onol Nuromg
Adm ss1on
Nurse License and at least two
Compelll1ve wages w1th years expenence 1n a sk1lled
benefits call (740)662 1222 nurs1ng facrhty We offer
lmmed1ate Open ng lor Part exrellent benel1ts and a
T me Dnver at Mason wonderful work enwon
County Act10n Group INC ment Please apply to
must have a current Dnver's
Licenses have a clean Attn Dianna TAompson
HR
DrN ng Record and be wtll
Scenic Hills Nursing
ng lo work flexible hours
Center
Subm1t
Resur'ne
w1th
311 Buckndge Road
References or Applications
Bidwell OH 45614
can be p1cked up !rom
Ph 7401446-7150
Mason COl.lnly Action
Fax 740/446-2438
Group INC
Please
Email admm shn@
respond ASAP Apply m
landemheafthcare com
Confrdence to Ruth Alee
TransportatiOn Manager by
SFIOF/EOE
Apnt 15 2005 Mall or
HR
Ctandemhealthcare
com
Del1ver to Mason Co unty
Ac11on Group INC PO Box
THE CHARLESTO N
12 101 2nd Street Pt
GAZETIE
Pleasant WV 25550 No Newspaper Carner Needed
Phone Calls Please EOE
From A1pley to
MIF NA
Polf1t Pleasant
Local Plumbing and Healing Earn about $1200 monthly
before expenses
Company m need of a
Plumber wtth a m nlmum of Approximately 4 to 5 ho urs
a day
5 years exper~ence Salary
based on experrence Dependable vehicle a must
Interested applicants please
Call1 BOO WVA NEWS
send resume to Plumber "!!~....;;"';;;'.;'.;.70;;;9;,_
• --,
PO 80)( 122 Jackson OH 150
~.-...rw-.LS
45640
""~
r.:l

1.,-------_.1
ill."ffiUJCnON

HoM~
FOR SALE

W\IVrm

HELP W,\NTID

To Do
Need a Break? Here 1s you
OpportuOI!y to go on
Vacatron Need Mom Dad
or Hand1capped loved One
cared lor
I have one
Openmg for a Female Full·
trme Call (304)675 6183
II\\\( ·1\I
10

BUSINFSS

OtrotmJNnT

PHIO'"vAL't:E';v~u':usH
CO recC.Htl~i elldS tha
ou do busmess w1th pee
le you know and NOT 1
end money through the
ma11 un111 you have 1nvesh
ated the ollermg.

1('-i t'J

r

real estate advertising
lh111 newspaper I!I
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes It 11tegel to
advertiSe any
preference limitation or
drscrlminatlon based on
race c~or religion, seY
familial status or national
orrgln, or 11 ny Intention to
make any suck
preference limitation or
discrimination
All

m

This newspaper will not
knowtngty accept
advertrsementa for reel
estate which Ia In
violation of the law Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advertised In
thl&amp; newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases

MONE\"
IU LoAN

ea mg 1nanc a
tnsl1t utron approvrng Small
Busmess Mortgage
Personal and Vehicle
Loans lmmed1ate
response
g1ve us a ca ll at
1 866-228 7063~ Or apply
onl1ne at
www mveslmenlfinanc1a1 o

Grandvrew Estates subdrv1
s10n JUSt off At 160 3 BA 1
3/4
baths
remodeled
k1tchen w!Maytag bu1lt 1ns
tam lyroom w/bu1IHn bar
uti lity
room
w1th
washer/dryer updated Windows and doors fenced
backyard $132 500 0%
Borrow
Smart
Contact
th
1
phro D1v1S1on of Financ•a Down ShOwn by eppornt
P•ctures
at
lnstltutro n s
Office of ment
ns ume r
Affair www orvb com code #4505
Call (740)446 8325
FORE you refmanc
r home or obta n a loan M1ll Creek Road GallipoliS
sEWARE or requests fo Excellent Cond111on &amp;
Location
Brlck Front
:~~nt!a~~~e:do~a~~~ra~: w1th!Vmyl
S1dmg Storage
Call
the Off1ce o Bldg No Land Contracts
Eonsumer Afla rs toll fre After Spm (304~675 5038
~I I 866 278 0003 to lear
11 the mortgage broKer o Must Sale Repossessed
ender s properly l1censed Homes Locations GallipoliS
(Th iS rs a public servic &amp; Crown C1ty Contact NICk
nnounceme nt fro m th Huffman 800 333 6910
h10 Valley Publlshm New 2 bedroom home only
om an
$, 72/month Includes ale
delivery and set up 740·
~85 9948
.,
PRo~=oN L

~

1

McClure s Restaurant now
hrnng all locations full or Gallipolis Career College
part time ptck up appllca
(Careers Close To Home)
non at location &amp; bnng back Call Today' 740 ~6 4367
between
10 OOam
&amp;
1 80G-214 0452
Monday th ru www galllpoMscaraercoHege com
i 1 ooam
Sa!urday
Accredited Member Accred 11ng
Need10peoplelose11Avon Counctl
!Of l(l(!OpOlldonl COIOQO&amp;
nnd8cloo1BI2748
l ' l..o...'-.~J A
c!'!
al• l(·7~40!!')4•4•6~3•3•
58--. . : 70
SERVICE'&gt;
1 News Reporter
•
ML&lt;;CELLANF.OUS 1
1
Gall1pohs Daily Tnbune
FREEDIRECTV
OVO PLAYER
has an Immediate open DIRECT TV Free 4 room FREE Equipment &amp; Install
1ng Ior a fu(I lime News hookup Free HO B1g Screen
upto4 Aooms
A epor (er P( ease sen d TV 800-263 2640
call
today tor FREE
resume wntmg an d 1110
\\EA.I'I{J'£l)
HBO Ma11 &amp; Starz
cover letter to Jrm
"'O
Do
I BOO 523 7556
t
FreeIand 825 Third Ave
1'
Gallipolis Oh10 45631
lor Details
IOiiiiii\;;;;;;;;.;;;;;.;;;;;;o...l AU Types Masonry Br ck
TURNED DOWN ON
ParamediCS &amp; EMT s 81oclo; Stone Free Est1mate SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
needed Apply at 1354 (304 I773 9550 304 593
No Fee Unless We Wml
Jackson P1ke GallipoliS
6421
1 888 582 3345
IH \I I "'- I \II
- - - - - ' - - - - - - · 8abys1ttmg
Very
Part ttme posft1on ava•lable Reasonable Aales Ages 4
merchand1s ng
greet1ng and under Call Crystal
HOME;
cards &amp; related products 1n (740)441 9654 or (740)590
FOR SALE
local retail stores Prefer 25ilQ
mature rndiVlduals lnleresti 112 Story 2-Bedrooms
ed tn working up to 20 hrs COYOTE CREEK QUILT's Bath
Full-Basement
per week Call 1 800 543 &amp; CRAFTS, custom long w'Work Bench Hardwood
4110 ask lor ter~tory ext arm machme qwlt1ng crafts Floors New Heatrng &amp;
to order Call Cooling 2614 Lincoln Ave
~658 Amencan Greetmg made
(740)669 3509 L1lhan Hale (3041675
CorporatiOn EOE
42 17
or (740}669 4535 Mae
1997 Palm Harbor Double
Secunty Officers needed Puckett
Wide wrth 5 acres land lived
Mason Cour.~ty $6 50/hr
m one year 1/2n Drywall
Call M F 9am Spm 1 800 DHK
275 8359 EEO
Cleaning &amp; Powerwash1ng must see $30 000 Jtm Htll
Road Mason County call
- - - - - -- - Let Us-Help-You Clean er (304)675 6118 or 1304)576
uplll No Matter What The
Sports Reporter
Ohm Valley Pubhshrng Job Is We Wrll Get er 3389 for Appt
Company has an 1mmedlate Don' " I For
2 bedroom 1 bath lrvmg
open1ng tor a lull lime Sports All You re lns1de/Outsrde room drmng room krtchen
Reporter The 1deal cand1· Needs Were the Ones lor basement In New Haven
date W!ll have sports report You Call Karen or Dave at ~ 523 500 {304) 882 2350
Bus nesses
lng/wntlng skills quark and 740·985·3633
A
es
1
den
tt
a
llho
me s 2 story 7 room house 4
photoshop knowledQB a
Anytime bedroom 2 beth 2 porches
willingness to work evemngs Contracts
Clean
All (1 closed 1n) deck 213 acre
and weekends Please send Anyplace
resume wrlt1ng samples Powerwash1ng Remodelrng flat lot Heat pump Rrver
Valley School Dlstr1ct
cover letter w1th salary etc
Bulavtlle Prke $69 500
reqUirements
to
J1m No Job Is To D1rty lll
(740)387 7272
Freeland 825 Thrrd Ave
Gall1pohs Ohro 45631
- - - - - - - - 3-Bedroom
1 Bath
Georges Portable Sawmill Remolded Full Basement
mcluded
WANTED
Emergency don t haul your logs to the Appliances _
Retlel Workers (Subsllfutes) m11l JUSt call304 675-1957 OutbUilCI•ng &amp; 24FT Pool
needed to work wtth people
188 Park Dr1ve (304)675·
wtth mental ?etardat10n In Lawn care All types 7460
tl'1e B•dwell area Hours are Dependable eKpenenced
scheduled as needed No JOb to small Call -403--c:S-pn_n_~_A_v_e_Po_m_eroy9297
Kara
Ohro One famrly 1'1ome lor
evenmgs weekends and (740)379
80 years St1ll l1ke new 3
midnights Hig h school
Lawn Care
d1ploma/GED valid dn\ler's
bedrooms 1 1/2 baths
Cut &amp; Trim , Reuonable $50 000 992 2426
license anel three years Rates. Free Estimates, 11
good dnv1ng expenence yeita experience, many
reqUJreCI $7 00/hr Send rafarences (304)593-&amp;&amp;M 50 acre farm w1th house and
ba.m
$62 500
Call
resume
to
Buckeye
CommuOI!y Serv1ces PO --~--~--'- (740)256-6005
Box 604 Jackson OH Lawn Care B g &amp; small
varas wu do mowmg and
Attention!
45640 Deadline for apph
f 4/22105 p
1
can s
re emp oy tnmm1ng Ciill anytime no Local company ortem~g ~No
ment drug testmg Equal answer leave messl!;ge DOWN PAYMENT" pro
Opportunity Employer
(740)441 9128
grams for you to buy your
hOme rnstead ol renttng
M1ke pope
Wanted Front Desk Clerk
• 100°/o llnancrng
Full lime pOSIIIOn happy Aoofmg S1d ng Porches • Less than perfect cred t
face a must and possess De-'&lt;s Phone (740)388· accepted
good people SkillS Apply 1n 8329
• Payment could be the
person at Holiday Inn of
1
Ganrpolls No phone calls Will stay with Elderly any
Locators
please
time (304)675-6781
t7401992 7321
1

l

r

t..------_.1

I

.:.::.:=.:...:.:"--'===--

:::.~~~en
•

'

laegi!:iter

New 3 Bedroom Home only
$198/month Includes ale
delivery anel set up 740.
385-9948
New 4 bedroom 2 bath
home only $49 098 00
Includes ale delivery and
s_e:c1.::u::_p_7c_4.::0-.::3:c85::...:c
99'-4-"8-Newer ranch style home 3
BA 1 bath House 1'1as cen
tral a~r heal new carpet and
hardwood floonn~ 819 deck
on 1 acre of ground Super
clean Must see Kelly Or off
of Georges Creek $78 500
(304)210 8238

20 Mono F HO\
FORRnrr

MOBIU: HoM~
FOR SALE

t 093 Mans•on mob1le home
14x60 2 bedroom 1 bath
tolal electnc good cond111on
central a1r stove reingeralor
must be moved SB 000
(740)949-0016

Small house tra1ler w/ed t1oh
1n the country lor rent Ideal
for 1 person S250 month
Call after noo n (740)256
6958

1994 Clayton Noms 14K70 r&gt;"' APART!\ I~ NTS
FOKRENI
2 BR 2 bath ref/stove
v1nylJunderp nn1ng 2 decks
$14 500 080 [740)388 1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments
on Beech Stree1 m
6739
Middleport furn•shed ut II·,
2002 Clayto(l 161180 mob1le l1es pa d depos 1 &amp; refer
home
Shingled
roof ences reqwred no pets
$25 999 Call [740)446 (740)992 0165
7817
(
1 and 2 bedroom apart
Deluxe 1997 Paino! 16)(40 ments !urn shed and unfur
1 bed1oom vmyl s1dn1g mshed
secunty depos 1
shmgte roof thermopane reqwed no pets 740 992
w1ndows ?JC!G eKter or walls 2218
pat10 door wrlh appliances
w/d hp 9K24 shed porch 1br Apartment for rent
9lC 12 add on room storage Downstasrs 10 700 Block
References
bu ld1ng
membership V1and St
Resort Area Racme Oh1o requ red ava labia May 1
!304)675 3654.
$22 000 (740)992 0018
For Sale 1979 Homette 2
bedroom w/central a~r
$3 495 00 Call (740) 385
4367

bedroom 3 bath 4 5
cres 2 5 car &gt;;~arage
aekson OH $250 000
rrm Cocle 2255 or call
740)266 4750

2 bedroom apartment lor
rent Aacme OH Depos11
reqwred no pels {740)992
5174 7404410110 leave
message

For Sale 14 )(70 3 bed
room set up n Country 3 bedroom apartment m
Homes $6 995 00 Move m Middleport No Pets 992
5858
today' Call (740)385 4367
Inventory Clearance New 3
bedroom
home
$239 00/month
Includes
AJC Delivery and Set up
Call Mrke (740)385 7671

Apt lor rent $350 00 plus
de posit All utilities ncluded
No oets allowed 740 992
2274

APART
Inventory Clearance New 4 BEAUTIFUL
bedroom
Home MENTS AT BUDGET
$319 00/month
Includes PRICES AT JACKSON
NC De livery and Set up ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Call Harold (740)385 9948 Dr ve lrom 5344 to $442
Walk to shop &amp; mov1e'S Call
SAVE SAVE SAVE
740 446 2568
Equal
Slack models at old pnces Hous1ng Opportumty
2005 models arnv ng Now
Coles Mob le Homes CONVENIENTLY LOCAT15266 uS so East Athens ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
apartments
OhiO45701 (740)592·1972 Townhouse
"Where You Get Your and/or small houses FOR
RENT Call (740)441 11, 1
Money s Worth"
for applicatron &amp; rnformat1on

Downtown Pt Pleasant All
El~c tn c
one bedroom
Apartment
lor
rent Deposrt
MEDICAL OFFICE SPACE
&amp; Refere nces requrred
la~rly new lac11tty approx
1200 sq ft n Athens (304)675 3788
Amp le parkmg ~va11able For Lease
2 Floor
1mmed1ately lnqu res send Spac1ous
Tot.:111y
lo P: O Box 121 Athens Remodeled 2 Bedroom 1
Oh1o 1 45701
112 Baths Unfurmshed
REAL .Est\TE
Apartment New Water
Heater and Appliances
.,
Downtown
Gallipo lis
Security and Key Deposit
Want to buy a 3 bedroom 2 Requrred
No
Pets
bath home Garage base References
ReQUired
ment 3 10 acres ts des~r (740)446 6982 M F 8 00
able All cash
Mergs 5 00
Galha or Athens County
740 992 6300
Furn1shed 2 &amp; 3 room apts
Clean no pets Refe re nce &amp;
HI \1 \I"'
deposrt reqwred
Call
(740)446 15 19

rL.---WiiANliDi lil--_.1

N1ce clean 3 or 4 bedroom
2 story Ranch appro11 5
ac res of land Country setHOUSE&lt;i
ting yet JUSt 10 min from
FOR RENT
town Located on Wh te Rtl
Call lor appl (740)446-6275 3 lledroo m Condo w•lh nver
full
basement
Nrcely remodeled 3 bed v1ew
room house 1n Rutland "Gallipolis Ferry $700 monjh
$32 000 call Auffell at Sol &amp; Call (740)446 3481
Bloom (740}541 3251
3BR brick house tn
No Down Payment
Mercerv lie 1BR apt •n
4 bedroom 2 Bath 3 car Crown C ty Cable electnc
garage country setting water tur (740)256 8132
B•dwe ll area (740)388
4 rooms &amp; bath $300
8560
month 52 OIIVB 51 Call
Ranch Bnck Home 3Br 1Ba 17401446 3945
2I C a r· Ga ra Qe
Attention!
Basement!Sunroom
All Local company otfenng ~ N o
Appliances Included By DOWN PAYMENr pro
Appomtment (304)882 2239 grams for you to buy your
or (304)533 6636
home msteael of rent1ng
• 1OOC'/~ lrnanc1ng
• Less than perfect credrt
www.oJVb.com
accepted
Home Listings
• Payment could be the
L1st your 1'1ome by calling same as rent
I
(740)«6-3620
Mortgage
Locators
(740)992 7321
Vrew phOtos/into online
RICE REDUCED•
edwOOd Cape Cod
ome 9 5 Acres 4
room 2 Bath 2 Car
arage Above Ground
I Brdwell OH
locked Pond Code 814
r Call (740)388-()410

u.,

Grac1ous 1 vtng 1 and '2 bed
room apartments at Vtllage
Manor and
A1vers de
Apartments m Middleport
From $295 $444 Call 740
992 5064 Equal HoUsmg
OpportunitieS
Modern 1 bedroom apt Call
(740)446 0390
N1ce 2br Apartment w!Gas
Hea!IAC
located 1n PI
Prea Aetr Clg/Gas K1tcnen
Range Furn1shed WI D
Hookup
$300/Month
$200/Daposll\304)675 7628
One BR apartment 1n Sprmg
Valley S290 per rpont h plus
deposit WID hookups
(740)339 0362 1740)388
0017

Pleasant Val ley Apartment
Are now takmg Appl1cat1ons
for 2BA 3BR &amp; 48A
Applications are " taken
Monday thru Fnday !rom
900 AM 4 PM OffiCe IS
Located at 115t Evergreen
__
IUHIUNI
_ Dnve Porn! Pleasant WV
Phone No Is (304 )6 75
5806 EHO
2 bedroom m0b1le home on
TownMuse
Pole Cat Act S425 month Tara
plus uttht1es $425 depos tt Apartments Very SpaCIOUS
2. Bedrooms CIA 1 112
Call (740)446 4107
Bath Adult Pool &amp; Baby
2 bedroom all electrrc very Pool Pa110 Start $3851M0
nrce rn c1ty no pets PhOne No Pets Lease Plus
(740)446-1409 or (740)446- Secunty Depos1t Aeqwred
2003
(740)446 3481

i

~OBILE HOM~

I

2 bedroom not pets $265
month Includes waler/sewer
$150 deposit Jeterence
(740)446-3617

Three beautiful unlurr~~shed
apartments
o11ertooklng
GallipoliS C1ty Park One BR
$400 Two BR $600 2 story
ml Pleasant WV 4
town
house 3 4 BA $900
room 1 bath Many
3 bedroom mob118 hOme tor Refe rences
reqU1reO no
me01t1es Code 2165 or
rent 1rt Pomeroy area No oets sP.Cunty depos1! Call
II (304)675-4125
Pets 992 5856
"~0 -t.t
,)~) !;
740 446
·25
c.
..
'
-a75
3
Bedroom
all
E
P1
tr
1.
~~~~~~==~
~r
Remold ed
s ~~.,
'l
T rP ( ..- 'fiS accept
(304)675 3332
1ng apphcat ons tor wa1t1ng

SHOp
CLASSIFIEDS

Clean 3 bedroom mob1 le list Jor Hud subs•zed 1· br
hOme In the country Call apartment call 675 6679
EHO
(740)256-6574

�..

'

I '.

Page B6 • .The Daily Sentinel

-~--r:riday;

· www.mydailysentinel.com

April r5, 2005

Friday, April 15, '2005
ALLEY OOP

AL~US

HJH

•

~----

S.-\1£

www,mydailysentineLcom
'
.

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

AND ·

SACK.!.'

Phillip
Alder

Middleport or Pomeroy_ Call 6 male. 3 female. Ready for listings 800-391·52:27
992-:;492
soon . w1th shots $300 eadt EXT 3901

Now tak1ng $150 depos11.

1969 Ford XL . Galaxy 390,
will return' calls it leave mes- automatic, powe~ steering
and brakes. AC . interior
sage
e)(cellent, Mechan1cal excellent. body .good. Needs
minor repa1r and pamt
. . . _ Butterfly Kol
$3.300.00 060. (740)6961373."(740)591·5888
For PICkS call (740)339·0715

For Lease: Office or reta11
spaces in ~ery good cond1t1on. Downtown Gallipolis.
Approx . 1600 sq . ft. each . 1
or 2 ba!)1s . Lease price
nego!lable 10 encourage
new
business. , Call
(740)446-4425 or (740)4483936 ·

-

3 tQ 9 inches. Lo ts of Colors, 1979

Marqu iS.
, Healthy Phone (304)675- Good LooK•ng Ctass•c Car.
5043
-.:__:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ 112.000 .on Or•gmal Motor
ca ll (304 )6 10-4650 leave
Male black Lab. 1 year old . message 5900
neu tered , very lr1endly, ....:.c::.c:..:...:..:.cc.____
m1nds well , had all shots, 1991
. Mazda
M1ata
575.00. (I40)992-3973 lv. Convertible. 30 MPG . beaumessage •
t1f ul new pamt and lop.
$4 .750. (304)6 54-5211 or
P11t Bull pups . W1ll be ready (740 )446 _7484
on 4-9-05. Tak•ng depos1ts. c.__:__ _ _ _ _ __
Call
(740}388-8901
or 1992 Ford Taurus Wagon .
(740)388-8596
160.000 miles. Books at
;n~;;;.;.~~----, $1450. well ma•n ta1ned ,
ML'SICAL
good condition $10991090
lw--IN'&gt;·m-L'Ii~lllEi
": 'iinii
~_.J (304)882-3640
:.::..::.:.:..::.::...:..:.cc.____
1995 ·camaro. Silver. T· Tops .
Black Interior. P1oneer CD
Play!;lr. 5-Speed. 6-Cylinder.
Runs &amp; looks Great
150.000 m11es 53.400 OBO
call (304}593-69~ 7

\IIIH 11\'\IH'I

Housrnow
Gooo;

,
MOllohan Carpet . 202 Clark
Chapel Road. Porter. Ohio.
(740)446-7444 1-877-8309162 . Free Est•mates. Easy
linancin~. 9.0 days ~me as
cash. V1sal Master Card.
Dn.ve· a· little save alol.

Produce
Am1sh cheese &amp; lunch
meats, fresh frUit &amp; veg.
SPOimNG
Open Thurs. Fn. Sat. 1 mtle
Gooo;
west of Holzer Hospital on
Jackson Pike, ph . (740)446S&amp;W 44mag 6"brl bluecl 7767· 740 339-2131 .
•
$475: S&amp;W 357 6"brl bjoecl
$450; H&amp;K usp 40cal 5550 :
FOR SALE
Stevens 12ga. double brl .
$250; Franchi 4BAL 12ga.
2brls $525. Marlin 17HMR 6 rental units On 4 lots .
with scope $250: Norinco Vecirly income over $26,000 .
Mac
90sporte.r
5350 Some owner financing pos740 446·2905
sible. (740)446-4313

r

I

'--------...J

Bedroom furniture . end
tables, microwave stand . a1r
conditioner: treadmill, wed
Buy or sell. R1verme din"g r1ress , prom dresses,
Antiques , 1124 East Main ou tdoor
shutters.
Call
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy. 140- (740)256-1304.
992-2526
':fuss Moore,
I \ l{\ 1 ' I 1'1'1 II '
owner.
•\ - II\ 1· '\ IOt h.
Solid Oak Virgi~ia House
China Hutch. Exc. Con.
FARM
$550 .00 Solid oak table &amp; 5
EQun'I\UN T
chairs $200.00. Comp. Sat
china &amp; glass, also lor sale. 11 OQ gai liquid manure
~
C;:al~l~
74;;0:.;·2:;4~7.;·2;;4;,
75;_·~...., spreader: 4 · rw Notill corn
Ml5cE:u.ANEoL~
planter ; 40 ' Little Giant
1\fFRCHANDISE .
Elevator : JD Semi mount 3
___
• 14" pltlws: 1 row carousel
Holland Transplanter: Hyd
.
1 H.P. Start Convertible tobacco press w1t· h 3 boxes
deep well pump. StOO. in line: APP 3000 tobacco
·(740)446-0232.
sticks; New Holland grinder
14 loot PQOI slide and 6 loot mixer 2 1/2 ton; 10 FOrd
diving board. Call (7 40)446- Trasport disc; 3000 lb cattle
scales new; 4 young Angus
4536.
bulls; . tobacco
seeder.
24'-32', 3 staii_Pole Barn . For (740)256-1352
storage
only.
Pri11ate.
$200/rrio. on At. 7, Gallipolis. 9N Ford Tractor wl brush
hog, $2.500. New Sf! . brush
.(740)446-4782.
hogs- $400. Blades. $175.
JET
Southern A/S ·. (740)4.46·
AERATION MOTORS
8554.
Repaired. New &amp; RebuJn In
Sleek. Call Ron Evans. 1· AuGtion Saturday, Aprii 16,
! O:OOam
800-o37-9528
Over. 50 Lawn Tractors
GatorsiATV's
Kirby Sweeper Like new
OVER
30 FARM
been used very lew times, In
TRACTORS
good . condition . · has
BALERS/RAKES/TED·
Shampooer with it been
DEAS
used once Make me an offer
(740)446-2412
Midway
Call {304)675-3864
between Gallipolis and
NEW AND USED STEEl
Rio Grande on County
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
Road 35
Cont:rele,
Angle,
For
Carmichael Equipment
Channel, · Fla t Bar. Stee l
Grating
For
Drains. · Bale wago n 19 tt. Stollus
Driveway s &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l k1Cker wagon . Rem ovable
Scrap Metals Opell Monday, steel racks. like new tires
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp; and bed. (740)245·0485.
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Thu rsday,
Saturaay
&amp;
LlvrnucK ·

°

2000 Ford ContoUJ. tully
lo aded. Ask•ng S3.500 f1rm
Ca'll 740-742·22 15.

rlO

I

r

r

Sunday. (740)446-7300
Or1ando Disney/Beach area.
7 days/6 nights Pa•d $600.
sacrifice.
$249.
Call
(614)320-0300.
Pole
Barn
30x50x10'·
$6,795 includes Painted
Metal. Slider, Free Delivery
24x32x1 0·
$4 .595.
40x64x12·
$13.995 .
(937)599·7740 httoJ/natjonw!deoolebarns com .Pool j:ilJmp &amp; sand filler. for
large pool, used 3 weeks.
Cost $300 . sell $175 .
(!40)446- 11 27.
Ranch Kin~ 22hp lawn tractor Kohler eng1ne SOin cut.
ru:cellenl cohdition , S1.200.
16ft. dual axle car trailer.
excei\Bfl.l condition $1.100.
(740)446·6630 after 7pm

SPA OlfllET
Super Sale
New Locabon
1.1am-7pm Monaav-Fnoay

1

12 pn;~-5pm ~lurday­

Sunday ·

u.s so.

Cannonsburg-Ashland
(~h~~~ Mr Gatt•'s)
(606)922-7.185

Wom Tanning Beds
HLJge selectiOn.
Immediate Dehvery.
Rnanc•ng
1.aoo-894·6997
(740)446-6579.

i

___

2000 · Mercury Mystique.
While. 4 door, sedan.
58.000
miles.
$4.600.
(740)645 -2359 after Spm.
.
'
2000 Monte Carlo 48.000
miles. V-6 Eng., Exc. Cond
$6.000 (304)675-5305

_)

I~ \'\' 1 '1 11~ 1

~~"12~
0

•

\II! I'\

A t:IUi
FYlR SALE
Must sale. 1984 Corvette
350 enn ne '1 740 )992-6797
::rl

2001 Red Dodge, V-6. 2WD. S1lver Fox Go CarL 6.5 HP. 2
4 new Ttres, 80,240 m1les Seater. L1ke New 5750
$8,000 (304)895-3088
1304)773-6136

SUVs

Bo,\TS &amp; MOTOR~

fUR SALE

FOH SALE

2001 Lmcoln - Nav1gator
AWD. 5 a VB , 3rd row seat·
ing, casse lte/CD-chari'ger.
heated/coated-sears. low
miles .. excellent con dition.
S23.500. 740 453-5535
725

i.e--------"
4x4

FoHS,LE

dition. (740)379-2740.

992-6215

r

40

I

. 9:HIL\.M . .

:\1ason ·\' F\ \ ·
$75,,MI I$ 25.00 ~on ~
Refundablt' Deposit 1

Sidi n~

t?

pl· r ~

RESIGENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

Sl a t t'S must be .21.

:;::;=::;:::;==~

ps1W. Au!omatic. Runs

1,...·

~ ood .

Code A25 or Call
·
749&gt;446- 3620 ·

1993 Ford Mus!ang LX, 4
b-;1. Automatic. Runs
F3'ooa. Code A26 or Call
740)446·3620.

200 1 Harley Road King. Teal
m color. many extras, 'one
owner. excellent ·condition.
29 ·000 m•les. $ 1B.OOO.
&lt;740)446-02l3.
2004 683 Harley Davison.
black, 4.700 miles. $7,500.
(740 )645 _3230 ,

HOWARDL
WRITlSll &amp;SONS
Residen1ial Commercial

Let me do it for you!

UNDA'S PAINTING

I

roofing:
Shingle. Flat. Metal New or Repair
Seamle~~ Gutter-

Downspout - Siding

' ' 1{\ H I ..,

)810

•fi'H Elllnllleh

949-1405

HOME
L•IPROVEMENIS
BASEMENT ·

Unconditional filetime guarantee. Local relerences; fur:
nished. Established 1975.
Call 24 H rs. t740) 4460870. Rogers Basemen!
Waterproofing.

r uns Good, New Parts
Online or Call
.
740)446·3620.

Culverts

NO MATTER
WHAT YOUR
STYlE. ..

Phone
. (740) 992-5232

5x I 0, IOx 10,
IOxiS, 10x20,

Fll~QU~NT

Alll&gt;IT- · ·
PllOGilAM.!

New Dealer tar Montana Tractors·
starting at 27 horst- - 57 horse
with shuttll' transm is$ion

.f-wd. remote hvdraulics 3 \'ear warrant\'
****A.Iso a' 'ailable****
·
• Task., Mast er' Tractors 26 horse- 38 horse.

4,,.d (I

~·ear warrant~··)

BARNEY

• Farm Pro Tractors 20 horse - 30 horse
h:~adcrs, finish mowers. tillt•rs
NEW " ARRIVAL ZTR Dixon (Zero Turn
Radius Mower I 30 inch culling width to 50
inch cutting width 3 year warranty
T&amp;D TRACTOR SALES &amp; EOlHPMENT
right in !he heart of Ch&lt;ster

WE AIN'T GONNA
FIGHT NO MORE,
UNCLE SNUFF'{ II
PARSON SttZ

.· «

Hubbard's Greenhouse

~
•

iI

Syracuse. OH
740-992-5776

I RECKON
. THAT'S RIGHT,
BOYS !!

·VIOLENCE
AIN'T TH'

98.'4384

ANSWER .:!!

-1"

f

~

Flo"ers 4: Vegt&gt;lable planb Flat-$6.95
10" Hanging Baskt'ls-20 Vlrielies
$5.95 . $7.95
a;g
Perenmals 6'' • 10" $2.95 • $5.95
'/9
Pottl'd Plants 4"- 12" $1.25- $11.95 ~.
•
12" Funs $10.95
!tf)_

THE BORN LOSER

"'

.
i&lt;:£1\LL'\?
1-\0W

~'&lt;

ro&lt;smt&gt;

i\LL OF Tfi.EM j'!l

I

I
!

Janet Jeffers

33795 Hiland· Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

. MANlEY'S
SElF STORAGE
97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

IOxiOXIOxlO
992-3194
or 992-6635
Self-Storage•

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCnON
• Complete
. Remodeling

J40-992-1m
Stop &amp; Compare

•
see· "-·~
•Rocky "AJ'1'
Hupp

Sizatl 5'x1 0'
to 1D'x30'

High cost of fertilizer got you worried?
17-17·17~.

$265 lon (Wh ile Suppy Last)
• More stable form of Nitrogen
• Made with White Potash

· (less dust, More conststent )
• Includes secondary nutrient sulfur
I~

sp,eader buggies av~ilable for .use

• Atrway pasture renovators and seeders
available to rent ·
• licensed clgronomist on staff available for

consulting.
SHADE RIVER .\ (; SER\'ICE
35537 St. Rt. 7 ~orth
Pomeroy, Ohio
7-111·985-3831

22 Windy City
. trains
.23 ·· wolf Man"

¥

A Q 9 7
.K 53

•

7 4

West
Pass

Pnss

~orth

Ea'il .

1•

Pass
:All pass

~

•

· Today's 11merick was subm1tted by Fred
Augspurger, from L1nc'otn , 111.
The deal that you gave is delightful. I But
the bidding turned out to be frightful. I
Though the contract was sane. I II wi ll go
down the drain, I If West makes a lead
thai'S InSightful.
N6w guess what this deal is .all aboul!
Look only at !he Wesl hand. What would
you lead against lour spades?
Note North's "unfrighttur four·spade
rebid. He knows th~!l his side has !he val·
ues lor gB.me with an e1ght-card major·
suit fil. so, not beating around Sydney or
'the bush, he j~mps straight to that game .
What would you lead? If you select the
supertictally anractive diamond queen ,
declarer .will win with dummpis ace and
call lor a club. The play will continue: Club
to West, trump to declarer, club to We'st.
trump to declarer, dub ruff on the board .
heart to hand, final club trumped in th e
dummy, and a diamond exit In a moment,
South ruffs a diamond in hand . draws the
missmg trump, arid claims 10 tpcks: four
spades. three hearts, one diamond and
two club ruffs.
·
However. with your strong clubs over
South's f1rst-bid Slltt. you should lead a
trump. And keep leading trumps every
time you win a club trick . Now declarer
gets only one club ·ruff and finishes one
down. He w•lllose one diamond and three
clubs.
Finally, yes , even after a trump lead ,
South can make the co.ntract, bul he
won·r, becaus·e he cannot see through
the cards. If you would li ke to work out the
wmning ltne. that is your 1a)(1ng task on

·· Astro.
· Graph

BIG NATE

~

AS ·pRINC.I PAL FoR. THE
PAY: IT 'S MY Joe. TO
PATROL THE. CORRIDORS
AND DEJ'o.L \oJITH POTE N T IAL TROUBLEM"'-KERS r

IMPORTS
Athens

WHAT WE HAVE HERE
IS

A

COI1PLETE

L,6.CK

OF

RESPECT f'OR
AUTt\ORITY .

Whaley's Auto
Parts

,,

St. Rt.681 Darwin , OH
740-992-70 13 or 740·992-5553
Restockfri!J /11 te .\hfel
and ,\/ler .llarkPf ~rls

PEANUTS

See Brent or Brian Whaley
M·Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

W~EN YOU

LET 60 OF
T~E COOKIE!

.Advertise
in this
spac~ for $1 04

SUNSHINE CLUB

.-~
( ~~
1W'-S5AGt-

p~rmonth.

IN BRI\IUE

1. tPISI, BUT

1!-lf.R'. WAS 00
MISIAKING WHAT
-~WI(; WI~

I

GARFIELD
ELLEN ,VOO~OO ~OLL~

DON•-r REALL-Y WORK

45771
740.949-2217

•

2

formation ,
44 Make glad .
47 Kind
of surgeon
48 Paramedic 'S
skill
50 Pitfall .
52 Ceremonial
lire

53 In addition
54 Soothe
55 Glimpse

from afar
56 Fam . .
10 Proceed
member.
11 Droop57 Abominable
nosed flier
Snowman
19 Famou s
cathedral

Chaney
DOWN
town
24 Grimy
..
21 Raid
27 Newsstands 1 Salesperson 24 Phone
30 Depot info · 2 Eurasian
button
31 Penny
range ·
25 Mo.
32 Eyebrow
expense ·
3 Orange peel
shape
4 Aerie
26 Graceful
34 Fragranl
halchlings
wrap
t1ee
5 Badlands
27 Follett and
35 Ditty ..
6 Oklahoma
"·Norton
36 Sundance
town
28 Klondike Kld "s girl
7 Toying with 29 Mex. miss
37 Peps up
39 Spread
f~lse

8 B1idge

9

31

standing
38 Geographic

feature
39 Pa 11

ol RSVP
41 Biru:ry dlglls
42 Teetotalers
43 O.K. Corral
name
45 Loyal

46 Compass
heading
47 Unfold ,

to a poet
49 Luau fare

51 Frat leHer

in touch ·
33 Airport rental
35 Thrilled

towers
Baker s

need

charges

Gels

36 Under-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
C&amp;k!tlmy Ct:lller crypt~ rams !r~ crtalea lr~ quotat!OI\S Oy famous~. put &amp;M p~eser'll.
Eac11 1elter mlhe ophe&lt; starm !or another

Today'sd11e: 0 equals X

"C.HDWI

HXW

JW

GHR

Z.l

TWTNWXIFKG

CFW

LZX _ CFW

ZXOHMKYWS

SAW!

CFHC

GXKUKBWOW

KM

HM

IZVKWCR ."

LXHMEBKM

S . . ' XZZIWUWiiC

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Heaven and hell1s nght now . you make it

1

29670 Bashan Road
Racjne, dhio

7:00AM - 8:00 PM

... THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

20 Towliead

j

42 River-mouth

Tax D?Y- good ILJckl

Hill 's Self
Storage

94 Harley Davidson Ultra
ClassiC 10.000 m•!es. t)lue,
excellent conditiOn, $13.500.

Honda CA250A. hke new.
less than 20 hOurs S2 .500
200Q ClieVrolet·S•I~erado OBO Call (740)256·6817
1500 LS. luHy·opiiOned.
4x4 bedl•ner.t railer •n g· Motorcycle tor sale 2003
pkg .Pewter e:wt.CharcoaJ Honda Snadow 750 Sp•nt.
tnt 1OOk h t gn~~~oa)' rntles. Exceuenl ConditiOn. 4', 500
syn 011, ~low book S12 900 M11es.
Extras
$.4,800
304- n3-6062
1304)675-8089

l0x30

Hours

-::::=;:===~ •7_7_3-_5_,6_2_.- - - - -

97 CABO Race ready, runs
great. musl see to apprectate 51 .000 Gallipolis area.
cell (7 40)645-{)873.

FOil DUll

!)IV.

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

740-742-2293

'

6

From lime·rick
to leading deal

N~WS IS
YOU ~UALIFY

/fiE (iOO£&gt;

' Leave a messa

2004 Harley Davidsorl 1200 '
Custom Sport~ter, loaded,
$9,900 OBO. 30f-59l-3542,

040)94~2217

I __;..--:-

• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
Call Cary Stanley

b960 Willys Jeep Truck,.

I ~;ew

l/&lt;.5'
AUI&gt; IT

work ·

plastic and met~l . s· ·rriches·
60 inches 1n stOCk. Ron
Evans Enterprise, Jackson .
OH 1(800)537 -9528

•

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

·storage

·New Homes

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING lo
GENERAL
" CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality

... AQIOfl i. '·r

Opening lead:?'!

High flDd Dry

• Garages

WATERPROOFING

K 86 3

,'"'.

l:ri*.t;.~;;,:;~i1

•Middleport's only

t y~s·of

-All

J 10 8 6

South

the PAIN &amp;!.~~li+it'OO.-"@.~~·
NOW OPEN
~
out of PAINTING! ~ •
Ta~e

--

·~

24FT 1976 Star Craft
Camping Trailer/No T1tle.
$1,500 (304)675·6319 or
(304)682-2230

G

\\'i1ldll\\ :.. • Roo fi ng
COMMERCIAL and

sn n6 @\t'rit.On. Nt' l
W V; OH und alllt'ga'l

24 foot Leisure Times
camper. Everything works.
ready to camp. S1,200.
(740)256-6656 01 (740)2569226.

Garag~s

• R~.·rlacl'lllL'Ill

Cal 7 ~0-991-9-U~

2004 Sunseeker 25 tt. Class
C. motor home. loaded.
$45,000. (740)545-3230

H (IITK'S • Vi n)' l

• N~w

6 ~

EaSt

." -"K J97

Top · Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

pesI

•

•

Tree Service

41 Energy

•
t

\\I f'St ,
• 5 :1 2

South

.JONES'

1 One in
a million
5 Big bankroll
8 Loud noises
12 Essay
byline
13 Spud st. .
14 First name
In fashion

• 91
• Q .I I 0 !1

"' 4 3

•

W\'0)1;725

BUILDERS InC.
1\('w

· 14 yrs. Experience

Home ·Auto • Life • Retirement ,
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Me~icare . Sup. • Cancer • Accident

40 Kitchen

15 Twinge

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Neither

BISSELL

April. 23,
2U05

or Emn il

Dl ~FERE'..t"-T t..IN.E
OF WORK~

· PomeroY, Ohio
25 Years l ocal Ex rlence

Suturda~·

1993- 22 .5 lt. Chaparral
boat. 235hp. Mercruiser
eng . cuddy cabin. portapo!ti. stove,' bimmi top. new
cockpit cover, lull boa! cover.
Eagle trailer. Excellent con-

I THINK. 1T 16 TIME..,.---,
I WENT INTO A

45783

furnace work

NU CDIICDIIIed
Firearms Class

1987 20' Pontoon boat Wtlh
19:96 trailer &amp; 50hp M&amp;:rc
motor. 53.500. (740)9926914

..

V.C. YOUNG Ill

992-5682

1984 Fourwinn$ boat 20
foot , Mercrulser. 7o hOurs,
loaded. Call (740)446-3200.

1 ~;!~Tu;ppers Plains, OH

2

ACROSS

16 Chemist's
lair
17 Let borrow
1 8 Keptlhe
engine
running

41800 SR #7
I~

0~· 15- 05

K J l .O 8

¥ A Q7
t A 5 2

We do it all except

·on Stale Rl. 124

2002 Stingray 20 ft . open 14.
bow. Recti While . 5.0 liter V·
Ltllll' help yo r'
8. Hus1)er trailer, excellent
chooSe a lllsting
1995 Jeep Wrangler. rebuil t cond .. garage kept. price
tribute to ytmr lm•ed
automatic transfer case , new $24 .000 sell 515.700.
lJ;u!'s mrmof)'.
new brakes. 3" body lift hard call Troy Krebs 304-675\CREE
top. S4.200. sal~ag.e t1tle. 8828
\IONl
\IE"&lt;T
(740)992-2143
•
("()~11'\l'i\
21 foot Cabm Crutser boat.
2001 Jeep CherOkee Sport
39.7 28 SRI43
1979. 350 motor. Runs
411.4 pr1ce reduced, loaded
POITI\!f() V, OH
good, .needs work. S1,300
CO .towing package 54.000
740-991-9922
(740)256-8856 . (740)256 ·
miles $9.200:080 304-675·
Mnn-Sa1
IOAM-5PM
9228 . .
1314
'
\ \ ,
I\\, l~o&lt; 1 1lh
lf[l.'l
11•&gt;11 ' ,\Ill lh&gt;lll&lt;.
2003 Dodge Duly. 4)(4, 84 Bayliner 19FT. wit railer.
11 'lh •1111111&lt;'111~ II Ill&lt;'
black, 4 door, 6 speed. Cubby Cabin, Runs Good
,!1111
11.' 1.&lt;111\&lt;.111&lt;.'1'~~
$3,200080
(~04)675-8056
Cumm•ns eng•ne. nerl bars.

•
'.

3 miles west of
Pomeroy. OH

4 WiiEEu:R~ .

Farrowed Jan 22 thru Marcn jj3;;,38;;;0~.:"
· ~~~~~~ 1965
GL 1200
· Wing
10, call ~er--ln or Ike (Kevm)
SE LL YOUR CAR
Aspencade, blue. new tires.
at (740)698-6231
HERE
new progressive front anct
.rear suspension. CB radio.
Fair Pigs lor Sale Wallis
AM /FM Cassene. lots of
Farm Souths1de {304)675chrome . 8s.ooo miles, very
4087
good cond itiOn.' $4.000.
phone (740)541-0537
Need nde for mm1 horse .
fro'm Rutland. O!'lio to
1996 Yamaha Royal Star
Wardensville , WV. Can you
Tour Classic. Under 10.000
WITH
A
PHOTO!
help? (304)874-4 f69
miles, ask•ng S5.i00 Call
992-1325
Palommo mare, 17 years
Call (740)446·2342
old, well brokeri . but for
For Details
expenenced r1der only.
$1 ,500 (must see to apprec•·
1998 Buell 53 Thunderbolr
ate) :
Harley Davictson engirie.
15 year .old Bay geldmg, like
www.oivb.com
very fast sport bike. great
to pace (naturally) . Also
Auto Listings.
shape, $5 100. (740)985needs expenenced nder
. ~1st your auto by callmg
9857
S1.200 .
(7lOJ"6-3620
3-112 year old Sorrell (red)
2001 Harley Difl\lldSOn Dyna
gelding. Broke to lead, lie
Wide Glide. 'Low m11eage,
V•ew photoslirifo onhne
and very gentle. SBOO. Call
excellent cond•t1orl. Call
(740)256-1330.
(740)441 -0991 .
1984 Foro F-150 XLT,

AKC triCOlor Btlagle pups.
Shots, &gt;NOrmed. $'100 each.
Sut~~e Slapleton (740)2561619 or (740)446-417:2

yr

40 MOTORCYCI.u;/

THL'l"I&gt;S
I"OR SALE

•

and Financial Services

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrica l &amp; Plufnbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutlet's
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks

Repair ·
15

Rocky Hupp Insurance

CARPENTER
SERVICE

!

Auto .&amp;Truck

"-==-="-----

I_

:ROGER HYSEll
_GHRHGE

YOUNG'S

'

North

Insured
Fre'-' fs tlnuu es

Construction

RAIN
• Tobacco Plants for sale. CaH ~IS.
·
~
40
7843
TRUCKS '
2 male Toy ~fes. 9 wks,
·
Fl&gt;R S..U..£
'*i. 1st shots and wormed.
(740}441·9478 or {740)446- ·craftsman 42" Mowe t 15 1986 c hevy neavy 314 ton
2210.
1/2-HP ...~hte&lt;ennme. e&lt;cel- 1
J5()
"""
"'
p u.
engme 30 .OCXI
lellt
cond1t1on.
5700 miles smce rebUilt auto .
At&lt;C Lab pups." ChOcolate. 2 (3041 675-4875 alter Spm . 4 K4 great war k 1ruCk ... body
tt!male- $200 ucn. Call 22~Aemn·'lg1oo .Speedmaster rough. $2,500. (7 40)992(740)418-5522
S200
214J

Male Bo&lt;e&lt;. t
(740)985-3431

11 01 College Road
Syracuse, Ohio 45771
(740) 949-1 0?3

'I'D

YeaHing Angus Bulls. Mostly

FORSALE

David Lewis
740-992-6971

r~

A.I. excellent bloodlines ..
priCed reasonably. Slale Alln
Block. briCk, sewer ptpes. Farm. Jackson. (740)286
W\l"ldows, lintels. etc. Claude 5395.
,
.
, .
Winters, Rio Grande OH www.slaterunfarm.com '
Cali .740-245-Pm5121.
&amp;

j

Ohio ~5769
l'hunc: 74U-992-24J2
E-mail
j" 1ll~.:i 70l}(a ~ allt•ll:~.,·(Jil l

Ponu·ro~ ;,

-

"--------rl

G

25 Years Experience

.\2 119 \\'cl:...ht1m nRd.

'98 2 door OheVy Caviler.
MOTORC\'O.f.S/
white , ac.
disc c~ chang- .
4 WHF.f_LF.RS
er, automatic. new t1res. new ..,
brakes. e)(cellent conditiOn , 04 Yamaha Rhino after mar53.500.
call
Heattler. ket wheels. speed-o-meter.
4·H Market Meal Goats. (740)949·2249
$6.800. Call (740)339·1620.
Mason County born and
raised {304 )882 •31 44
99 Chevy Malibu LS. V6 . 41982 Honda 500 Tnke
door:
automatic ,
tully
Fanng w/st~reo system. Dk
Boar 8 1
'11Y goat . 15mo. gen- loaded.
CD. · alummum
blue. Evenings {740)256·
tie. $ 125. Young Billys &amp; wheels. 65.000k . $4.795. 6870 S3.00Cl.
Wea.thers meal goats. $60. (740)379-~748
(740)446·4 172 . (740)256· BMW z~ '99. Spec;ial , 1984 Hohda Magnum in
1619
Edition. 22.000 mile.s. dark e)(cellenl condition . Call
~ Double!$ Club pigs
green. S19.999. (304)412- (740 )2 56-65 74 ·

r ""''

All Types Of
Concrete Work

2001 Cavalier, 5 speed.
$3.895; Two 1999 ·Saturns,
53.495 &amp; 53.695: Two 2000
Stratus. $4.195 &amp; .54.395:
1999 &amp; 1997 Avengers .
S2.895 &amp; $4 ,995: 1&lt;995
Dakota ext. cab V6, auto. stainless body moldings.
CAMI'l':R~ &amp;
AJC, 52,895. Others in s!ock. diamond plate tool bo)( &amp;
Call B.D. Cons!,
·MOTOR
HOME'S
3 montQs/3.000 miles' warbed
sides.
1etrac!able
for all )'QUr home
ranty.
gooseneck ball. 59.000
repair
needs. ·mofing.
M03" 34' Jayco 5th wheel. 1·
Cook MOtors
mi tes. $29.000. (74.0)256·
siding. add-ons.
1t
sl
lde
out.
Like
new,
many·,.
(740)445·0103
9247 or (740)645-0870.
1
remodeling etc.,
€)( tr~s . (740)339·0218.
_ _;3::2::8.:J::ac::.k::so::n:..P:..i::k•:.__
frcl' eslimatt's
V&gt;\NS
2002 Cadi llac Devill.e, white
(740) 992-2979
1984
pop-upi
'
·
Skamper,
FoHSALE
diamond . fully equipped.
leave messa e
excellent condition. a/c.
factory warranty, 22,900
heat.
sleeps
6,
$2.500.
miles. like new. $24,995. 1997 Ford Conversion Van. (740)949·2709
74.000 miles. excellent con(740j256- 1428.
dition, new tires , $9.800,
1992· 29' Airstram Excalla.
2002 Dodge Ram 1500 SLT. (740)992·2945
All You r Home·
Very good condition, twin
Red. 4 door, 360 automatic,
lmprO\'Cmcm Needs
37,000 miles. $16,500 090. 1998 Astr a van. 48,000 beds. Ph. (7 40)645-4454.
• Siding • Windows
(740)256-1618 at (740)256-. miles. wheelchair lifl. ac.
• Deck~ • Porche~
1998 30' fifth wheel travel
6200.
• Ceramic Tile &amp;
cassette player. (740)742 ·
trailer, double slide, excelH ardwood Flooring
8612
93 Lincoln Town Car. 81.000
lent corrdition. S13,900
• Garage~
miles . Very nice. $4,500. 2000 Ford WindStar LX, phone. (740)698·9319
. • Room Add. • Rt:ooting
(740)446-1759 ·
91,000 miles , 2 sliding - - - - - - - - • Kilche ns • Baths'
"No Job To Small"
95 3'000 GT Mitsubishi , doors. power windows &amp; 200 1 Hornet Bunkhouse 32' ,
12' expando: sleeps 10.
R&lt;~c in ~. OH
Garage~- k&amp;pt, A Looker ·cruise ~6.300 (304)675excellent conditiOn. $16,800.
740-247-2162 or
$7,000 Firm (304)675-363 1 "40;,1,.4_,;·.,...----.,..., (740)441· 1501 .
. 740-4t6-35li8

AegtsI ered 01aCk Angus Bull
lor sale. 5 years old. Dayt1me
(740)532-6520 ,
e\len •ng
(7 40)S43-0836

BLli.DING
SumJES

James A Will Jr.
Owner

Complete srnall

1976 CJ· 7 Jeep. Soft top.
factory
v-e. automat!c.
2000 Jeep Grand Che(okee runs/dnves Qrea!. fancy
Laredo. S1lver. Leather rims. $2.500
(740)441 ln te nor,
10-D;sc
CO- 9389 .
Changer. automatic windows &amp; locks. cruise control. 199t Chevy 5·10. 4.3. V6.
76 .000 miles $15.000 Call 4X4. $4.600 080. Call
(304)675·5612.
1304).593-6957

;;;:;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

engine repair

LEWIS
CONCRt:'I'E
. CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

Engine Repair

Mercury

1997 Mustang Converlible.
New Top. ·4 new-Tires. Front
end Alignment &amp; Sticker. A1r.
Cru1se. Ttlt. .Power Windows
&amp; Seats . Factory Stereo.
CO/Tape. V6. Automat 1c.
E)(cellen1 Cond•tton 85.000
·1 1304 ) 576 2383 S6 900
m•es
.
1999 Dodge Intrepid, Good
Condition . Clean 54 .000
(304)675-6986
"-''-'-'---"-''-'----'--2000 Chrysler Concord
Nice car .. 54 ·800 08 Call
(740)256-1539 or (746)2561 3 4 3·

Kes sel '~

•t
Rm'sSmaU

NEA Cr'o ssword P_uzzle

BRIDGE

Dowr Ca.\£

Wanted to rent. Smallunfur· Bluetick puppies UKC regis- $500! Honda's, Chevy's,
nlshed apartment. I have a tered w1lh papers Elicellent Jeep's.
Police·
Eel.
small dog
Location in bloodlines, whelped 2126105 Impounds! Cars from S500

.·'-

ADVERTISE

'

IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH
Now Available At . ·

'Your 'lllrlhday:

Saturday, April 16, 2005
.By Bernice Bede Osol
Your sell-Interests can be advanced in
the year ahead thro\Jgh sound think·
ing arld the proper usa of your erealive talents. Use your mind in ways
that will fu rth er your goals and turn
them into rea littes.
ARIES (March 2 1·April 19) - Your
outgoing, friendly aHitUde draw·s oth erS to you, so having a COllple of people anracted tci yoU is a probability
, t6d9.y However, one may be more
after your money' than _your friendship.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Try not
to be too prejudiCed today when dealing with persons who appear to be dif·
ler ent from you. Draw upon your sen·
sitivities to direct your thlnk1ng and
behavior toward others.
GEMINI (Ma&gt;t 2 1-June 20) - ' ae
equally co ncerned about the work you
put out today when on the }Ob as you
are about your social Interests. Failing
lo keep things in ~rsPective cou ld
work against your best .interests.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) -You're
likely to be rather creative today in fig:
urmg out wa')ls to add to you r
resources . But, by the sarhe token ,
make sure you're npt stepping on
someone else's toes to get more in
the process.
LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22) - It's grand of
you to stick up tOr the underdog today.
but don't make excuses or cover up
for someone who doesn't deserve it.
Let \his type of person stand Oil his or
her own two feet.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep t. 22) - Give
plenty of time and tho'u ght to maHers
which can be impbrla,nt to your commer,c!al alfatrs today and don't let arw ·
body rush you Into maktng a deCision
you're not ready to make.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)- II is best
that you don't talk about your negotiations. with associates today in front ol
someone who could be jealous of
your dealings. Thai person could try to
lind ways to spoil your g~ mood.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - When
11 comes to career matters today.. once
you have reasoned things out arid
desiglled a good game plan. follow
through •on it to the 1e ner. Don't let
grandstanders lead you astray.
S AGtTfARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . 21) Do not take everythtng you hear to
heart today, especially When dea ling
with friends . II you are a shade £0o
senstl!ve, you'll misinterpret the intent
of their commen!s and end up hurt.
CAPAICORN (Dac . 22 -Jan. 19) ~You
shOuldn't have tO be told tOday to keep
within the conttnes o t )lour household
rfiatters that are per1inenl to your famlty oniy. Do not discuss these. affairs
whh outsiders. no manor wtiat.
AQUARIU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) ...... You 'll
be awarl:l of ·what's required Or you
today, yet unleSs you have someone
who will bOlster you or give you a
push, you could merely ijloit on your
laurels. Be a sell-starter.
·
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Before
you hire anybody to perfOrm work or
sarvlce for you to,day, make It a point
to check out the bottom ltne ot the
total btl!, You could be naited w1~h e)ltra
costs you didn't count on.

it hell by your actions.' - George Harrison

heaven or you make

[c)2005 by N,EA.Inc

T~~::t:~' s©~JJ~\-~t-~s·
_ __.:.:.:.::__::._;: EAi~ed by CLJ.Y I . POLLAN
0 ;eorronge :e11e r1 ;f l'!e
Jour "romb;ed word~ be.
lt:w

lo forll'l four

ESKU .~T .

·I
R A CS

I' I I
Q

L 0 D u h'

I'

h 1s

love

!~a:

:om-

pilments pleased 9'' 5 nore
than Dowecs and t~ey - - - .

~ U~~~~.!..I..', SI: FORl
'

..

L:1.,.1ty- Dough- Rurai- Victor, DIGITAl
."\ :; .;:1 :::JI H~e t1mes You can 't exp!a 1~ c:;:.;nter c Jck

..v·se to some:Jne With a DIGITAL wat ch
•'

.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

YOU G.IRL-IJ WA~I
TD PLAY ROUG.H,HUH!

MOR~ AJ!OUf fH~ 1995 S~RI&lt;S

"PARTY ?I'L.ASH(R?" M
WWW.ARI..OAlJDVAlJI?.COI'o

Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines
0

St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301
.;
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The father !c id

s:ruck !eenace sor

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Hard Work!'"

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Scorpion Tractors

BAUM LUMBER

WOlD
UMI

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SOUPTONUTZ

B:\ l':\1 Ll ':\IBER

4-15

�J

Pa~e

--------

BS • The Daily Sentinel

-·Friday, Aprilts,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2oos

Cora's single sparks Indians past White Sox,·8-6
CLEVELAND ( AP) Alex Cora's tiebreaking sin gle barely Ttached the outtield
- but it gave the Cleveland
Indians a needed jolt.
Cora gro unded a ball
through a ho le in the Chicago
infield and Travis Hafner tollowed with a two-run double
to. help the Indian s beat the
White Sox • 8-6 Thursday
night.
"That was savvy . baseball
by a real professional:· said
Indians third baseman Aaron
Boone of Cora's strategy-foil• ·ing hit. " We needed a run and
what he did is just the kind of
thing to give the whole team a
b11rst of .energy. It was a big
lift. You could feel it."
Victor Martinez hit hi ~ tlrst
homer of the season and
drove in two . and Hafner and
Ben Broussard also· had two
RBls apiece as .the Indi ans
pounded out I0 hits to avo id a
three-game sweep. They came

in with the lowest batti ng .
p,itch, sending through. I know how they like
·That was good for Victor
heren 's sacrifice fly put
average 1.21.1) and fewest
Peralta to sec- to play. TI1ey took a gamble and great for us." said Wedge . Chicago ahe.ad 1-0 in the first.
runs (J I) , in the Anwrican
and
before and so did 1."
"He put a good swing on that . Hernandez gave ' up five
League .
walking Coco
Guillen credited Cora for ball.''
runs and eight hits over fiveWhite Sox left fielder Carl
·Crisp.
winning the game.
Brou,ard\ two-run triple plL" inning; The right-hander
Everett leflt in the first inning
Cora fouled
"He had a tremendou s keyed a lour-run first that put struck out one and walked
with " brui sed left shoulder
off :1 bunt game. making a couple of big Cle vel,:nd ahead 4- l.
.
four..
after runnling into the left- attempt. On Cons' next pitch , defen sive plays. too.'' he said.
Martmez snapped an 0-tor- •
d fi
~
16 s 1ump \\'t·th an RBI ,smg
· 1e . Elarton
fie ld walt tryin g to catch with third baseman Joe Crede ·AI
· ex cora "eat
us. .. .
. allowe
. . . tve4 runs
2- 3·
Hafner · foll owed 11 ith a &lt;u1d Brou '""·d followed \vith - d llli '1 111 e hits over
Br\Ju ssard's two-ru n triple .
charging in ·and short stop Jose
"I think he 's OK ... titanage r Uribe movin g to cover third double off tiTe "all in left for a drive tJJat carri ed over the mn'mgs. He walked two and
h~ad of Everett. who stum- struck out fo ur.
Ozzie
Guillen
said . base, Cora sw ung away and an 8-5 leau:
Paul Konerk o hi t a time- bled into. the 1vall trying to
Noles:. Chicago OF Scott
" Hopefull y he' ll h'e re ady grounded the hall through the
run hnmet·. hi ' fourth . to tie m a ~e the catch. Two run s Pod sedmk tm ssed ht s second
tomorrow."
hole at short stop.
Rafael Betancourt ( 1-0)
'·He did that on hi s own." the swre at -1 in the third after s&lt;.:iH·~ d b~fore center fielder game \\ith a str.ained right
pitched two innings for hi s saiil Indian s manager Eri c Indi,ut s starter Scon Elarton · Aaron Rowand cou ld retrieve gro in. ... Betancourt re tired
first win sin ce Aug. 5 at · Wedge. "He recog ni zed the issued t\l u "a\~s .
· ) he bal l and keep Broussard the ·rir' t 18 batters ~e faced
Toronto. Arthur Rhodes ga,·e play and was aggressive. Hi s
" I d\Ht 't mind gi •·ing up th.e fro m an inside-the-park thi s season before walking
· up an unearned run in the instincts are fan tastic."
homer so much . but the two homer.
·
Uribe in the sixth , He then
eighth and Bob Wi ckman . Cora said he inten_ded to try · free passes were the 'probTeam
trainer
Herm retired the next tive men he
worked the ninth for hi s third and bunt the second pitch. lem .'' said Elarton.
Schneider attended to Everett faced . · ... Hemandez is 4- 1
save.
too. then changed hi s mind
Wi llie Harri s' RBI single in for severa l minutes before
'
a head Gut.llen· sent Tt.ttlo Perez 'tnto with a 2. 25 ERA in seve n
. Cora's simple grounder wlfen he saw the infielders tI1e I.ourt h put Ch tcago
tied
it
with
a the game as a replacement. April s,tarts since 2002. ···
5-4.
but
Martine
L
snapped a 5-all tie in the sixth. move .
·.
Jhonny Peralta drew a walk
'·]took a chance.'' he admit- li ne shot hm\ter to right in the Everett 'slowly walked off the Rowand went 3-for-5 and is
field by himsel(.
-1-for-7 after an 0-for-9 streak:
off Orlando Hernandet '(l ei) ted. " It was luck that it went fifth.
to open the inning. Rdiever r~T":!'!~':'.':"":"'-~-"!"'....;__""'!"_____"":"~---~---.-~S"~:"""'l==:,::::=~
Neal Coqs then threw a wild 'I
· · • '·

'(fuWffi· ~ ~'

Big 33 moves ·to
earlier date in
future summers'

Idol..,..

fuwJ ~- ~""' ...,.,~..,...'"'!

jump on their academics.
NCAA rules change, ar" That could mean a dilu ted talprompting Big 33 officia ls to ent pool for the Big 33 game .
play the summertime all-star
"We don't have much of a
high school football game choice if we want to get the
earlieF in future years.
best players in the sta te:·
This year's Ohio vs. Minnich said. "I know we
Pennsy lvania
game
in could be running into some
Hershev. Pa.. is set for Julv (high sc hool) grad uati ons
23. bui next year's game Is ·with that d&lt;tte, but we've prettentatively sc.heduled for June ty mu.ch got to have it then
17 .
.because most summer sesThe late July ,date ha.s been sions at colleges start th at folfairly stahdard. even though · lowing week ."
the . game's format has
Players normally report for
changed numerou s times practic'e a week before the
since first being held in 1958. Big 33 game. Previously. the
The change allows colleges late July date worked out well
to pay for summer school for because many players reportincoming freshme n. In the . ed for their colleges' training
past, a fres hman couldn' t camps a week or two later.
begin using his sc holarship
··1 always thought the best
until the fall. ·
date for us was in early
· Big 33 executive director August because that's · when
Mickey Minnich said co llege everybody was starting to get
coaches told him they will try ready for footba ll .'' Minnich
to get as many incoming said. " But this is a case where
freshman as possible into we are going to have to
summer school to give them a change wi th the times.''
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WVU expels 11 for
rowdy behavior .
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. the Mountaineers lost to
(AP)
West Virginia Louisville 93-85 in the regional .
University has expelled II stu- final on March 26, the universidents and disciplined several ty said.
o~ers for 'setting street fires.
Sixteen students have been
public drunkenness or other charged or cited for alleged parrowdy behavior after two ticipation the post-game chaos.
Mountaineer appearances in the The charges range from illegal
NCAA men 's basketball tour- burning to public intoxication,
narnent.
the university said.
Disciplinary measures mnged
."Unfortunately. bad fan
from probation to suspension, . behavior has become .a problem
the university said Thursday.'
nationwide," said Ken Gray,
, About so·street ftres were set vice president . for stuilen.i
and Morgantown police were affairs. ''We in Morgantown
forced. to use Mace to control will not tolerate it. and will -d o
crowds after West Virginia· everything we can to keep the ·
defeated Texas Tech 65-60 on ~potlight on the success of our
March 24 in a regional semifi- teams and the safety and enjoynal. The victory moved the ment of the thousands of loyal,
Mountaineers ,to the regional responsible fans who support
fmals for the first time since · our Mountaineers.".
University officials had
Jerry West led them to the
championship game in 1959.
warned · students through eWVU
Student · mails. public service announceThe
Government Association and ments and other means that
community members are con- post-game rowdiness would not
. ducting a fund-raiser to buy a be tolemted, Gray said.
· new vehicle for a student whose
'The bottom line is thai this
CU1' was burned in the mayhem. ·disciplinary action should come .
No one was. seriously injured as. no surprise to the students
althou~h several firefighters affected: We cannot- and will
were hit by bottles or cans. ·
not - .tolerate this type of
Street ftres also erupted after behavior.'' he said.' ·

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Snyder

for interceptions in a season
with I 0.
He was on the Buckeyes'
staff when Ohio State won
from Page B1 .
the 2002 national championship.
coached against
coach for three years before Marshall He
last fall when Ohio
that. He also was an assistant
State
beat
the Thundering
, at Minnesota. Central Florida
on Mike
Herd
24-2.1
and Youngstown State, where
Nu~nt's 55-yard tield goal
he served under current Ohio with
no time left.
State ·coach Ji'mTressel from
al so was with
Snyder
1991-96.
Young stown State when it
To replace Snyder, ·Tresse l won the 1991 and 1993 I-AA
promoted defensive line title games against Marshall
coach Jim Heacoc k to l:lefen- and lost to the Thundering
s-Ive coordinator. He -also pro- Herd in the 1992 champimoted linebacker' coach c:lnship game .
Luke Fickell. a former Ohio
Snyd\r said the success of
State nose tackl e. to be Mar-. ha\1 football will hinge
Heacock 's co-coordinator.
in part or fan support.
"We need that 12th man
Snyder lettered one season
. - 1987 - at Mar;,hall. He out there every Saturday in
still hold&gt; the &gt;c hao\ record that stadi um." he said.

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''On approved credil. On seletted modeh.,Not responsible for typographical errors.
l'rites.good April 14th through April 17th.

MONDAY· SATURDAY 9 am · 8 pm • SUNDAY 1pm - 7pm • 422-0756 • TOLL FREE 1·800-822-0417

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