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Tuesday, February 3, 2004.

www.myd~llysentinel.com

Page 86 • The_Dally Sentinel

.Rio's 'second platoon' Marauders run
gets the job done, Bt down Rockets, Bt

News About.. Senior Citizens
In Meigs ~ounty
.

EVENING MEALS
The Meigs County Senior the meal is S5.00

Take out

THURSDAY
3

5

Baked Steak
Mas hed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Mixed Vegetables
Spice Cake
Biscuit

Broccoli Soup
Ham &amp; Cheese Sandwich
Waldorf Salad
Brownies
10

.

Lincoln Logs

White or Brown Bread

Baked Pori&lt; Chop
Augratin Potatoes
Peas
Stewed Apples
Roll

26

Sadie Hawkin's Soup Beans
&amp; Ham Dinner
Garden Cottage Cheese Salad
Apple Pie
Cornbread

Blush1ng Pears

Roll

Wh1te or Brown aread
Cook's Choice

Chars Salad

Cook's Choice

Work&amp;

Fresh Oren go

R1ce

Spaghalli &amp; Meal Sauce
Bullered Italian Vegetables
Applesauce

13aked Steak
Potatoes a Ia Cupid
Love Apples
Sweett1eart Cak~
Roll
Grilled Chicken Salad

Cnsp Baked Chicken
Baked Sweet Potato
Seasdned lirna tw.ans

Middleport • Pom~roy, Ohio

• Wildcats don't know
what to expect from OSU.
See Page86

Roil

Cook'o

Ham Loaf

Johnnie Mar.::etti

Creamed Po1atoes
spinacJ1

PerfeCtion Salad
· Apple Juice

Purple Grapes
Roll

Garlic Bread

Cook's Choice

HQt DQQ With Sauce

Bishop

r.&lt;:~ke

Cook's Choice

Sloppy Joe
Cheese Potatoes
But!Bred Mixed Vegetables
Pineapple Rings
Hot Ham Croissant

r·························--·······················~
Your paid membership to the Meigs County Council on Aging, Inc. is a mea~ure of s~pport for the :
1 Multipurpose Senior Center and the services provided to older adults res1dmg '" Me1gs_County·
1
1 Each paid membership received verifies to regional, state and nat1onal fundmg agenctes that the 1
1
1
Multipurpose Senior Center is providing needed senior programs.
I

1
1

•

1

.Red Hat

. What started a~ group of
friends, inspired by 'lhe_eoem
entitled "Warning" by Jenny
Joseph, has grown to in(:lude
llroups of women nationwide
who are embracing ag ing. with
warmth and humor. II is a SISterhood similar to the "Ya-Ya"
girls, only w1th a dress code.
After years of caring for others.
r)lembers see this group as a
rime to have fun and enjoy
~hemselves. A line from the Red
aat Society theme so ng by Mike
Harline says, "All my life, I' ve
done for you. Now it 's my turn
to do for me."
· Women over the age of SO
wear red hats and purple outf1ts.
while those who have not yet
ae lebrateil THE BIRTHDAY
wear pink hats and lavender
clothing . Red and purple anire is
not required. but is suggested. At
this first meeting, it is acceptable to come in reg~lar clothes,
as we will be gening organized
and some will just want to check
out the group before deciding to
jo,in . .
'The first meeting was held
with 23 Ladies in attendance .

•

\
Th~ next meeting is sc heduled
for Tuesday, February 17 at 6:30
p.m. at the Meigs Senior Center.
The meeting time was changed
from 5:00 p.m. to 6:30 p.m . to
enable others to participate that
are unable to come so early in
the evening. So, if you couldn't
make it to the first meeting, plan .
on attending February 17.
There will be a luncheon at the
Center on February 27 ""all of
yo u '·Red Hat Ladies' • "! ho can
anend : Lunch will be served at
nmm . Call Beth Shaver at 9922l6 1formoreinformation. '
Fall and Winter hours for serving will be from 4:00p.m.- 4:45
p.m.

Membership

City/State/Zip Code•- -- - - - - - - -- -

Regular Bingo will be held on
February 19atll :OO a.m.

Health screening

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

Vision
rehabilitation

Lifeline Screening will be at
the Center on Friday, February
Dr. Sus&lt;m Quinn, an optome13. Watch the Daily Sentmel for
all of the details about this trist from Athens, wi II be at the
Center on Thursday, February
event
26 at ll :00 a.m. She will speak
on eye care and will be ac_co mpanied by an o~cupat10nal
Paint classes arc held· each
Friday morning from 9:00 to therapist
II :00 at the Center. The instrucDr. Quinn is a spec ialist in
tor is Michelle Garretson vis ion rehabiliwtion and has
Musser. If you are interested in

Paint class

joining, stop by any Friday to
see what you need to g~t started.

bee n an ·educator on lo\\' vision

Thursday evening, February
26 we will host a Sadie Hawkins
Part y in honor of Leap Year.
Come in your "Dogpatch"
clothes ror a real down-home,
country good time. The party
will begin at5:00 p.m. followin g
the Evening Dinner.

until noon.

All ages ore invited to attend
the activities sc heduled. Join us
for lunch and select what you
want from the ala carte menu, or
you can enjoy the regu lar meal.
Ala carte items are individually
priced. The suggested .donation
for the noon meal is $2.00 for
those 60 or older.

~(/
We appreciate the financial support received from the
followin_g churches, organizations, and indi viduals: ·
Olive Orange Memorial Post Bingo Fund
Racine Baptist S. S. Class ff4
Rocksprings United Methodist Women
Pomeroy United Methodist Church
Racine United Methodist Church
Tuppers Plains Church of Christ
In Memory of David Sayre
- Dorothy Sayre
In Memory of Ray &amp; Rose McDade
- Robert &amp;
Wilson

member of the MCCoA you will
receive u 50% discount on the
cost of the classes.
Ciuss size is limited, so please
regi ster early by contacting
Ta111 my Queen at 992-2161 .

Library ladies

Wendy and Amanda will be
.cuming nn February 10 al 10:30

On February 12 we will hold a a.m. for th eir regular monthly
combined Valentine and ·l;rafl session.
Birthday party for the February
sweethearts. All par11es begm at
11:00 a.m. Come and joi n in the
1
fun .
Representatives from the
Athens Social Sec urity Office
will be at .th e Meigs Se mor
Ce nter 1o a"ist pwple with
S,&gt;c ial Secu!lt'y pmblems and to

Social Security

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Pauline Rife, 93
• Alice Mills, 88

State auditor to
address Meigs

• Lyle B. Baker, 74

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INSIDE
• Inflammation marker
might signal colon cancer
risk. See Page A2
• Bush orders new
measures to protect food
supply from terrorist
attack. See Page A2
• Sons of Union Veterans
install officers. See Page
A3
• Holzer sets heart fair
for Valentine's Day. See
Page A3

WEATHER

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

--

Support Groups
The Cari ng and Sharing
Support Group meets on the
fourth Thursday of each month
at the Meigs Multipurpose
Center at I :00 p.m. The meeting
date is February 26.
Contact Lenora Leifheit at
992-2161 for more information .

ENJOY
ALL THE
ACTIVITIES
AT YOUR
SENIOR
CENTER

Detail•

on Page AS

INDEX
SECfiONS- 12 PAGES
Calendars
A3
2

Classifieds
Comics

HEAP
The Home Energy Assistance Program (HEAP), is one of several programs alTered by the Ohio Department of Development
(ODOD) to help low-i ncome Ohioans pay their ·utility bills.
Households may be eligible for assistance if the household 's
income is at or below the 150% federal poverty guidelines.
Below are·guidelines for the 2003-2004 HEAP program :
Size ofl-lousehold .... Total Gross Household Income
1.... .-.: .... ,..... up to$ 13,470
2 ........ :........ upto$18,180
3: ................. up 10 $"22,890
4 .................. up to$ 27,600
5 .................. up to$ 32.3 10
6 .................. up to$ 37.020
7 .................. up to$ 41,730
8 .. ................ up to$ 46.440
For households with more than 8 members , add $ 4,710 per
member.
If you -need more information ab&lt;;&gt;u tthe I-lEAP Program , contact Kathy Goble at the Meigs Multipurpose Senior Center at
740-992-216 I. !f you need assistance with completing a HEAP
application, please· call to sc heq,ulc an appointment. Kathy is
also avai lable to make home visits for individuals that are d1S·
abled or homebound. _.

~&amp;Oit5'
.'Q'J~~elen,
J 212 EAST MAINInc.
ST.
POMEROY, OH

992-3785

WE HONOR

l~l

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS

Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports

BOWMAN'S

Weather

B1-2, 6

A6

© aoo4 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY
State
Auditor Betty Montgomery
will be the keynote speaker
. at the annual Lincoln Day
dinner of the Meigs Cdunty
Republican Party to be h,eld
at 6:30 p.m. on Feb. II in
the Meigs High School
cafeteria.
Others at the meeting who
will be speaking briefly will
be Damn Klinger, executive director for the
Bush/Cheney ticket in
Ohio, Kristen Stapleton
with U.S Sen. George
Yoinvoich 's office,
and
Jonathan Gramley, who
represents the southern
region of Ohio for the
Republican Party.
Montgomery 's background is filled with activities which have focused on
protectin~ Ohio's most vulnerable cttizens.
·
She has prosecuted criminals, helped victims, protected taxpayers, reshaped
Ohitt law, and continues to
provide professional services to local government
agencies as Ohio's first
woman state auditor.
Sworn in as Ohio's 30th
state auditor in January

OXYGEN

~on
~sqtns -hole,

Betty Montgomery

2003, Montgomery has also
served the public as a criminal prosecutor and state
senator.
Montgomery is
dedicated to meeting the
commitments she has made
to the people of Ohio to
serve as a watchdog of public funds by aggressively
rooting our fraud and_waste
of public dollars and to provide taxpayers with the
highest level of professionalism, serv'ice and accountability.
Tickj!ts for the dinner are
$12 and can he purchased
County
from
Meigs
Republican Party executive
committee members or at
Farmers Bank, Peoples
Bank or Racine National
Home Bank .
'

whereat)$~~· will
I~,S&lt;ecr•~t;· and d(i!J:ed at
l'~~~b;;d holes in ke they
I'·
as eight to 10 inches
mormng. ·
said the ice ' was
strong enough to hold
two 'men, even an automobile,
if necessary..
.
S~aff~r satd the sec~et to. Jce
fishmg ts to fmd the nght spot
~n the lake becaus~ fish travel
m schools. He satd a ,fisherman could drill seve~! holes
all day and catch nothmg, but
a, couple of holes drilled in the
nght spot could keep someone
busy.
fior the first hour or so, neither Shaffer no~.~g_ner had
any luck. The ~. crappie and bass. were snug below
in the near-freezing waters,
probably watching Spongebob
Squarepants oil television and
!.!~!~~~~at the two fisherman
above.
· s !I good year for ice,
good year for ·fishsaid Shaffer.

p

a

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
The
Rutland Volunteer Fire
Department was busy with
one wreck and two structure
fires during the past week. ·
There was a single car
accident a.t around 9 p.m.
Monday night on Ohio 325.
Fire Chief Dave Davis said
the car struck a tree and two
passengers were transported
to Holzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis. They were later
released.
The names of the two passengers have not been

lations re gardtng pnvacy.
Ill two hours.
The State Highway Patrol
In late January, Davis said
is investigating the cause of a tire destroyed a two-story
the accident. Davis said a!co- garage owned by Joe Grueser
_hoi was not ~ factor. The on Depot Street. Units from
Salem
Volunteer
Fire Rutland,
Middleport ,
Department assisted with the Pomeroy,
and . Scipio
inctdent.
responded to the tire. · ·
A trailer fire at 6 p.m.
No one was hun and the
Saturday on Loop Road incident is still under in vestibrought both Rutl and and the galion.
Scipio Township Volunteer·
Davis said his depa11ment,
Fire Department to the scene. , which has betwee n 30 to 3'5
Davis said tire and smoke . members. has been very busy
destroyed the home. The fire these last few weeks. He said
department is investigating it takes less than three p1inthe cause of the fire. No one utes to respond to a .call for
was home at the time and the help.

I

.

·

CO~UMBUS- ·Ohio's
Governor's
Office
of
Appalachia will receive a
portion of the $66 million
appropriated by the federal
govern ment to support ceonomic and community development
in Ohio's 29
Appalachian counties.
Officials welcomed representati ves 'of the Appalac hian
Regional
Comm ission
(A RC), who traveled to Ohio
Monday for a1i annoulicement on federal funding to

I

help create economic opportunities in Appalachia.
The ARC chose to make
the announcement at the
Dollar-Ge11eral Distribution
Facility in Zanesville. citing.
the stale's et'fol1 s to create
jobs in Appalachia.
"Securing good jobs in all
parts of Ohio is our number
one priority," said Ohio
Development Director Bruce
John son "That the ARC

Please see ARC, AS

•

Dining with ·Diabetes in Meigs

• HOSPITAL BEDS

A special three-class series for those with diabetes

February 12, 19 and 26

• CPAP MACHINES . • WHEELCHAIRS

~

• NEBULIZERS ·

Fortunately, the
was warm enough so
maggots the
using for bait
be warmed _
up
before
that fateful
swim with
fishes.
"A bad day
ing is better than
. good day at work "
Wagner.
'
At first the
were uni~pressed
the line they were
offered but sooner or
every 'fisherman has his ·,·
day. Something nibbled at
Wagner's rod. A bluegill
took the bait. By walking
on water the men had out- .
witted th~ fish and brought
home dinner.
"If you hit it right,
can pull one right in
the other " said Shaffer.
'
After drilling at
17 holes,
enced angler
wagner Qiltches
fish of the day, a ulut•Kl"•
Despite the wind, the
and raln, Wagner and his
ing partner Don Shaffer would
go on to catch several fish
Tuesday morning: (J. Miles

.R~,~~~~fire~~~!~~.~!~,.?~,!,~~JI.~- At0RC.dfu~dbing
COtlJling
Q/ JO c·rea IOn

"We Care For Yo11 Like FaiiJily"
~HOME

ngo

GOP Feb. 11

prnvide information . The dates
are February II &amp; 25 frnm

for over twenty years.

Computer classes available

Wednesday from 10:00 a.m.

Birthday ~nd ·
holiday parties

Evenlng
· d'lnner act'1Vl't1'es

Fall and Winter hours !'or
serving will be from 4:00p.m . 4:45p.m.
We will cel'ebrale Mardi Gras
on Tuesday, February 24 at 5:00
p.m. after the Evening Dinner.
"Make and Take Craft We will have traditional New
Workshops" will be held on Orleans rood. games and prizes.
February 5 at 10:30 a.m. _in the
Center Room. ,
Co me and make something
you can take home with you.
February S &amp; 12 at 10:00 a.m .
Beth Shaver, Activity Director,
- Excel Basics. This is a two-day
will be the instructor.
class where you will learn th e
basics of creating a spreadsheet
The cost is $15.00 for both days.
NOTE: If you are a 2004

Craft classes

1.
1

2004

Address -------------------------:---

ACTIVITY SCHEDULE
The Meigs Multipurpose
Center is open Monday through
Friday from 8:00a.m . until 4:30
p.m. Regularly sc heduled activities held throughout the week
include sewing. quilting. bingo,
checkers, and games.
Dance team practice is held
eac.h Monday at I :00 p.m. Cost
is $1.00 per session attended.
The Knining Circle meets on

The cost for each membership is $5.00. You may purchase your membership at the Senior
Center or by mailing to: Meigs County Senior Center, 112 East Memonal Dnve , P.0. Box 721,
Pomeroy, OH 45769. If possible, please Include a stamped, self-addressed envelope ..so that we
can forward your membership card to you. Thank you for your support. .--~------,
Name _______________________________

BINGO

·Chapter ·

MIDDLEPORT -- The
Middleport
Community
Association may revive its
annual block party.
In discussing 2004 events at
Tuesday morning's monthly
meeting at Peoples Bank.
association
membership
appointed an events committee, made up of Vice President
Tom Dooley, Secretary Sue
Stone, Treasurer Dick Owen,
Brenda Merritt, Susan Baker
and Jane Harris, to proceed
with a number of seasonal
promotions.
The committee was asked
to consider revt vmg the
block part~ m its old

September time slot.
town shopping district.
The block party was an
Other upcoming events
annual event for several discussed Tuesday include
years in the 1980s and '90's, the Bunny Hop Bake Sale.
and centered around th e to be held in conjunction
downtown shopping distri&lt;;L with Easter, and the annual
It featured bands, contests Yellow Flag Yard Sale,
and other el)tertainment and which has traditionally been
concessions.
planned for the tirst weekSeveral other festival-type end in A pri I in cooperation
events have failed to draw with
· the
Pomeroy
significant community sup- Merchants Association .
port, incluqin g a Catfi sh
Members discussed holdFestival, which replaced the ing sidewalk sales for the
block party, and a Honey Bunny Hop Bake Sale.
Bear Festival held in Dave which provides an opportuDiles Park in August of 2000 nity for local or~anizations Poochie Brewer, one of the Middleport Commun1ty Association's
and 200 I.
to hold tund•ratsJng bake ,individua l members, renewed her membeship dues with
Treasurer Dick Owen at Locker 219. The association hopes all
The association hopes a sales on the village streets.
revived block party mi ght
A costumed Easter Bunny 40 of last year's members renew their members hip ior 2004,
serve as another means to
and that new members interested in the community will also join
draw traffic into the down- Please se!! Association, AS and participate in association· ac$iv1ties. (Brian J. Reed )

•

Thare•u Marcinko

I

•

REED

'

If $2.00 . For lngredlimt
Info-rmation, Contact
Belfndo Wellington Or

Blood Pressure Check Feb.24 3:30-4:00
I
Mardi Gras Party Feb. 24 5 OQ·?
Sadie Hawkins Party Feb. 26 5:100-?

•

J,

Suggeated Donation Per Meal

\

•

BY BRIAN

BR£ED@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Thank You for Your Oonationti

1

•

Association may revive Middleport biQck party

SPORTS

Banana

Cheese Sandwich
Tomato CeJer; Soup
Orange Wedges
Chocolate Chip Cookie

Pfz.za

Ham Loaf
Sweei-Potato Casserole
Green Beans
Pineapple Upside Down Cake
Roll

Mardi Gras Dinner
Jambalaya
ColeSlaw
King Cake

Cheett

,seasoned Babf Peas

Sliood R&lt;J~sl 8eef
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Buttered Grll!en Beans

Chicken a Ia King

Garlic Bread

Washington's Chilled Cherries

19

24

Peanut Butter Sandwich
Tropical Fruit

First President Carrot Coins

Buttered Peas
Whole Grain Bread
Lemon Lush

BBQ Chicken
Baked Beans
Potato Salad
· Blac~berry Cobbler
Roll

Beef Vegetable Soup

Scalloped Chicken
Mashed Po!aloes I Gravy
Pickled Beets
Roll
Fish Sandwich

12

17

Taco Salad

Whi1e or Brown Bread
Cook's Choic:e

Tangelo

Salmon Patty
Twiced Baked Potato

Lasagna
Tossed Salad
Hot Fudge Sundae
Garlic Bread

8iscu1l

Slioed Peac~e s

Thursday. Fall and Winter hour&lt; to eat at the Center. Stop in
for serving are from 4:00-4:45 between 4:00p.m. and 4:45p.m ...
p.m. A suggested donation for and a;k for a take-out meal.

en

Menu IS Subject to Cha111,1e

LO

Ham Salad
Potato Soup
Carrot Penny Salad
Green Grapeo

Be6f &amp; Noodles
Monroe Coumy Broct:oll

Ci ti zens Center evening meaL is meals arc availab le for those
served on Tuesday and evenings when you ca nnot stay

TUESDAY

February 2004

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR NUTRITION PROGRAM
The Senior Nutrition Meal is served Daily at 12:00
!F~o~r~~~ia1~t Information contact 6etlnda

.

6:30 PM · 8:30 PM

• OXIMETRY

OSU _Extension Office, Meigs County

24 llotlr Emergency Service • Free Delil•ery

$15.00 fee for the series

Health prafessionals will be present for questions qnd
a. variety of foods will be orl hand for sampling.
To

call

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holze:r.org

Boer ot (7401 992·6696.

4K E. Slim"illn ,\ vc.·.
~_,__---"--~--------~--

·'t·

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•

. ..J

~

..- _.,. ..

·J!'~""""""'=~~··" --~

�NATION • .WORLD.

'The Daily Sentinel

Parents plead for return of missing girl
..

, Bv VICKIE CHACHERE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

SARASOTA, Fla. - The
FBI joined the . search
Tuesday for an. 11-year-old"
~ gir l whose apparent abduc. tion . was videotaped by a
car wash surveillance cainera, and the youngster's
parents pleaded for her
safe return.
"Please release Carlie.
Please give me my baby,"
· begged Carlie Brucia's
mother, Susan Schorpen.
The sixth-grader was
seen on · videotape · being
led away by a man as she
took a shortcut behind a
closed car wash on her
way home from a friend's
house Sunday night.
The sheriff's department
is working with the FBI,
state
law
enforcement
authorities and the Center
for Missing and Exploited
Children. More than I00
calls from the public have
come in, and an unidentified company offered a
$25,000 reward for informatibn.
"Carlie, if you can see
and hear this, please know
we will stop at nothing,"
Kevin
sheriff's
Maj.
Gooding said at a news
conference, telling the little
girl to run and get help if
she can. "We won't stop
· until we find you. Please,
· Carlie, don't give up."
The surveillance tape
showed a white man in his
late 20s or early 30s
approach Carlie. The blond,
blue-eyed girl did not
appear to know him.
The man, who was wear, ing a mechanic's shirt with
a name patch on one
. breast, spoke to her for a
few seconds, then grabbed
_her by the arm and led her

Page~

Steven Kansler, the step-father of missing 11-year-old Carlie Brucia, talks with reporters after a news
conference at Evie's Car Wash in Sarasota, Fla. Brucia, whose apparent abduction was caught on
a security camera at the car wash , has been missing since Sunday evening. (AP.Photo;steve Nesius)
away. Her parents said they
do not recognize the man .
Gooding said efforts were
being made to enhance the
images from the tape in
hopes of lifting more clues .
The girl's father, Joe
Brucia, implored anyone

who might have seen anything to come forward.
The Center tor Missing
and · Exploited Children
began distributing 16,000
fliers with Carlie's picture
throughout the region, and
a national hot line was set

up 1-888-382-6237 to gather information.
The
family's
modest
home on the edge of a
busy, commercial section of
the city, about a mile from
the house where Carlie was
visiting J'ler friend.

Wednesday, February 4, 2004

Inflammation marker might
signal colon cancer risk

Tessa The Cat

•

•.

~

-~

*f-~~~~ ~;;,,~;I~ ;h~~--~~~-l~r~-w~t~ ;o~;p·a;n:e~;t~: ·~
~
~

Valentine Pets c/o .The Dally Sentinel,
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

' i;

For more Info: 992-2155

.

'

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Pet's Name:

:\),

~

.

..
~

·

6

Owner's Name:
.
~~
••~~--------------------------------'

•&lt;

,

~-

.· VALENTINE PETS

'};• Address:
. ~ City/State/Zip:
Amount Enclosed: ·
• i · .For _ · .

- ~----------------------------------------~
- ....

..

~'&lt;;

~..
t.,

.

~

740-441-2151

Clubs and
Organizations
Wednesday, Feb. 4
RACINE
Southern
: Athletic Boosters, 6 p.m. 111
tlte hi gh school. cafeteria.
Thursday, Feb. 5
POMEROY -A Leading

TUPPERS PLAINS The Tuppers Plains VFW
905,3 Auxiliary will meet at
7 p.m. at the ha ll .
Friday, Feb. 6
POMEROY - PERl No.
74 to meet at Meigs Senior
Center. Iuncheon at noon
with meeting following.
James Fuller of Snvder.
Fuller. Porter and Associates
to speak about "'Golden
Opportunities."
Saturday, Feb. 7
TUPPERS PLAINS
Tuppers Plains baseball and
softball first signup, 9 to
noon , at
the
Eastern
Elementary School.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville . Lodge 411
meets at 7:30p.m. at temple,
with practice for inspection
on Feb. 27. Offcers are
asked
to
attend.
Refre shments.

Saturday, Feb. 8
STlVERSVILLE - The
Stiversville
Community
Church will be having a
two-night revival with Harry
Bush of Florida speaking.
Services will be held at 6
p.m. Pastor Wayne Jewel
mvites the public.
Monday, Feb. 9
RUTLAND Revival
serv ices will be held at the
Rutland FreeWill Baptist
Church, 7 p.m. through Feb.
14. Tim Simpson and
Ronnie warrens will be the
evangelists. There will be
special singing each night.
Pastor Jamie Fortner invites
the public .
•

Other events
Saturday, Feb. 7
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
County Humane Society free
straw . giveaway for pet
boxes, l 0 a.m to 2 p.m.
behind the Thrift Shop in
Middleport.
·

Birthdays
Thesday,' Feb. 10
POMEROY
Frances
Carleton will observe her 79th
birthday on Feb. I0. Cards may
be sent to her at 32741 Rosehill
Road. Pomeroy, 45769.

GALLIPOLIS - In conjunction wi'th February as
American Heart Month ,
Holzer Medical Center's
annual Heart Fair will take
place from 8 a.m. to noon
on
·Valentine's
Day.
Saturday, Feb, 14 in the
Hospital's Education &amp;
Conference
Center
m
Gallipolis.
The event is free and
open to 1the public.
Screehings will include
blood pressure, non-fasting
glucose ' and cholesterol,
body fat analysis, etc.
Gerald Crawford, new commander of Brooks-Grant Camp Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil Information regarding nutriWar, presents a past commander's pin to retiring commander, James Oiler, left .
tion, stress, physical activity, cardiac catheterization
produced and smoking will be availtrol over is the Gettysburg independently
MIDDLEPORT Th~
"The able 'as well.
2004 · officers of Brook s- National Battle Park, it was Civil War movie,
Greatest
Adventure
of
My ·
Grant Camp Sons of Union noted. Resolutions asking for
A special feature , "Ask
Veterans of the Civil War the termination of member- Life." is going to be released the Cardiac Surgeon", will
were installed by Terry Frost ship will be sent to the area's on DVD this year to di scount also be available for interof Athens, past Ohio Congressiona] representa- centers. Two camp members, ested community members.
James Oiler and Keith Michael Lewis, MD. will
Department commander. at a tives, ir was decided.
recem meeting held at the
Two new members were · Ashley, participated in the be on-hand to answer
Riverbend Arts Council accepted into the camp. They movie. Another Civil War heart-related questions or
building .
are
Earl
Willford of movie film is being planned concerns to those who
· Installed w"ere Gerald Somerset who joined on Pvt. this spring in Virginia.
attend the Heart Fair.
Crawford of Letart Falls, William Prine .Tedrow of
Displayed at lhe meeting
A special lipid profile
commander ; Alan Holter of Company A, 2nd W.Va. by a member were two origscreening
will also be
Pomeroy, senior vice com- Cavalry; and Carl Bobo of inal Civil War pistols. One
mander; Gregory Michael of New Albany who joined on was a Navy Colt and the available at the Fair at no
The lipid profile
Huntington. junior vice COJTI- Pvt.
Brown Davis of other a 9-shot LeM at charge.
measures total . cholesterol.
mander; James Mourning of Company K, 77th Ohio revolver.
HDL
(good cholesterol).
Middleport, treasurer; Keith .Volunteer Infantry.
Plans were discussed for
(bad
cholesterol) and
LDL
Ashley of Rocksprings. secThe camp held memorial the marking of .the last living.
retary and historian; Franklin services in memory of David Union veteran of Lawrence triglycerides. ·To participate
Sisson of Pomeroy, patriotic Sayre of Antiquity, who died County and for the grave of in this special screening.
,instructor and camp council- November 20.
Henry Dixon, the last Union you must pre-register by
ca,lling 446-5055.
man ; Donald Swisher or
It was reported that an soldier of Meigs County.
Thurman, chaplain; Thomas
Galloway of Huntington,
guard; ~i nd Thomas Gorrell
of Sandyville, guide.
Frost presented Crawford
with the commander's badge
and Crawford presented the
past commander's ·badge to
reg~lar\y S48.99 &amp; up
Oiler.
•
During the meeting the
camp voted to support a resolution that asks that the
Ullited States government
terminate its membership in
the
United
Nations
Educational, Scientific, and
haircare products
Cultural
'Organization
(UNESCO).
UNESCO members was
terminated under the Reagan
administration when · the
10 tans for
organization advocated a
takeover of major ' U.S . hi sSale Ends March 6, 2004
torical landmarks, licensing
•
of news · ~Jledia , and other
'
Mon-Fri
8-8
·sat
8-6 Sun 10-5
eliminations of U.S. soveren!· ,,.~.,,. white piaes or visit www.Restasalon$-&lt;:Om tor a siton Ot!!41t,you
ty. One of the · U.S. landmarks UNESCO wants co'n1

....

GALLIPOLIS, OH

Tuesday, Feb. 10
POMEROY -The Meigs
County Agricultural Society
will meet at 7 p.m. at the
office .

POMEROY
Holzer
Hospice Meigs County "di nner with friends" 6 p.m. at
Crow's Restaurant. Call 9927463 for more information.

Church services

DEAR ABBY: Two years
ago, my S,year-old daughter
and her friend were molested
by a teenage boy from our
church . My daughter came to
me and told me about iL I
immediately took her to the
hospital and called the police.
This began a year of talking to detectives. district
attorneys and therapists.
During all this time, we wer!
urged by friends of the boy's
parents and other church
members not to press
charges. We ha!l to move
twice to avoid conflict with
all the people who thought he
was innocent.
When the c~mn date finally
arrived, my daughter and her
friend took the stand separat~ly to tell their stories
. while the boy and hi s parents
stared at them.
My daughter showed
rem~rkable courage. When
the public defender tried to
twist her words, she stood
firm . At one point, she told
the public defender that he
was a liar when he said
something untrue. She actually made the judge laugh :
I will not tell you she wasn't upset when she walked
out of the courtroom. She
went to her friend and gave
her a big hug. Then her friend
went in to testify. The boy
was ·convicted.
I am sharing . this story
because our children are
stronger than we give them
credit for. Profe ssionals have
told me that the reason '11 y
daughter is OK now is
because I let her stand up for
herself and I believed in her.
I encourage parents and

1

WALK-INS ACCEPTED

WAL--MART VISION CENTER

REEDSVILLE . -O live
_Township Trustees will hold
their appropriations meeting
at 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, at
the township building on
Joppa Rd. , with the regular
meeting to follow.

I

EVENING &amp; SATURDAYS AVAILABLE

LOCATED IN

SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Council will be hosting an open door meeting
with residents to listen to
any proposals for changing
the street names in the village at 6 p.m. in Council
chambers with a ·council
meeting followin g at 7 p.m.

i'-

CONVENIENT EYE EXAMS

INDEPENDENT DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY

T-hursday, Feb. 5
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township Trustees will meet
at 6:30 p.m. township build. ing at Rock Sprin gs.

Monday, Feb. 9
CHESTER
Meigs
County Republican Party
will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the
Chester Courthouse,

Dear
Abby

guardiarls of molested children to let the children stand
up for themselves. Don't try
to shelter them from the legal
process. It is hea ling for them
· to assert their rights. STANDING UP FOR CHILDREN'S RIGHTS
DEAR STAND IN G UP:
Thank you for the great letter.
When you encou raged your
daughter to fi ght back using
the legal system. you
empowered her and gave her
closure . Too many innocent
vict ims remain silent otlt of
shame and fear - and by
doing so, they carry wounds
thai can I&lt;I'l a lifet ime.
DEAR ABBY: I have a 10year-old daughter from a previous marriage. She thinks
my husband is her real father.
She eve n carries hi s last
name. Her real dad ivas an
abusive drug addict who has
hall no contact with us·.
Should I te ll her the truth
now'' One day'' Ever'! I don 't
want him in her life. hut I'm
afraid that someday someone
may sl ip and tell her. and
then she will neve r forgive
me.
Abby. this is so hard. I
don't want to hurt my daughter, my husband or my other
kids. :_ NEEDS HELP IN

TEXAS
DEAR NEEDS : Tell yo ur
daughter no1&gt;.• that you were
married once l&gt;efore . She wi ll
have question,. Answer them
honestly. The longer you put
thi ' off. the greater her shock
will be. So do it now.
DEAR ABBY: I'm a single
father of an Ill-month-old
ond Jm wondering why so
many public places have no
hahy -changing statiom. available in areas where men can
use them. I find it hard to
· shop .or go out to eat because
of this. I hope somebody can
rectify this problem. or a lot
of &gt;ingle dads wi ll be looking
for other places to spenu their
money - SINGLE DAD IN
NEW YORK
DEAR SINGL E DAD:
Ove:· the past I0 years. I have
not iced more and more
fathers Dut with their babies
and small children at shopping cemers. reswurants. etc .
Businesses that fa il t&lt;l recog nize this culture &lt;.:hangc &lt;tre.
shDrtsighted when they make
it difficult for single clads or
fathers who have th eir li ttl e
ones fur

vi~Hat i on.

A word to

the wi se ...
Dear Ahhr· is H'l'itren /11·
Alngail Vi111 l111ren. a/so
knmm us .lt' li l/11 &lt;' . Phillips.
"'"' 11·as ji11111ded /}1' her
wolhn Pa11line Phillif&gt;S.
Ahhr
ar
Write
Dear
11'1\ 'H'.LJearAhbr.mm or PO.

Box 69440.. Los Angeles. CA
90069.

Holzer sets heart fair
for Valentine's Day

'

EDWARD C. BEITER, O.D.

Wednesday, Feb. 4
PAGEVILLE Scipio
· Township Trustees will meet
. at 6:30 p.m. at the Page ville
township hall.

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

Creek W ~ tershed meeting
wi ll be held at 6:30 p.m .
Thursday at the Megs Soil
and Water conservatio'n
office. Jim Freeman will be
the guest speaker and will be
discussing projects that have
been done to restore Leading
Creek. For more information
contact Cynthia Bauers at
the Meigs SWCD office,
992-4282.

Sons of Union Veterans install officers

WASHINGTON (AP) ply and the economy and bly would .not be listed three
departinents and
President Bush is ordering to help the nation recover under the program because EPA, working with the
three Cabinet departments after an attack. And he its long incubation time CIA and other · government
and the Environmental ordered the agencies to makes it a poor tool for organizations, would look
Protection
Agency
to help agribusinesses devel- terrorism, Stump said.
for weak spots in the agridevelop new procedures to op plans to protect themThe
Agriculture culture and food sectors
. protect the nation's food selves. ·
Department is working on and develop ways to
"We should provide the a national animal identifi- repair them. This would
, supply from terror attack.
An
executive
order best protection possible cation system that could include heightened screen. released Tuesday involved against a successful attack track infected livestock. ing of foods entering the
, the departments of agricul- on the United States agri- The animal ID system set United States.
ture; health and human culture and food system, to be phased in for liveThe plan also tells
services and homeland - which ' could have cata- stock starting in ·July 2005 Agriculture Secretary Ann
security, as well as the strophic health and eco- would require 48 hours to Veneman to develop a
. Environmental Protection nomic effects," Bush said locate cattle and other ani- plan within 120 days to
· Agency, in the response to in the executive order mals. Stump said drugs encourage "self-protection
potentially calamitous agri- signed last Friday.
could be made ready at for agriculture and food
. cultural terrorism.
The plan calls on the various locations in 24 enterprises vulnerable to
"It's from farm to fork," Agriculture Department to hours and given to . ani- losses due to terrorism."
. said
Jeremy
Stump, develop
a
National mals . once the 10 system
If' there is a terrpr event,
USDA's director of home- Veterinary Stockpile that tells authorities where the the Homeland Security
. land security.' "It's a pro- would hold enough animal animals are.
Department would be in
. tective shield· around the pharmaceuticals "to approThe executive order says overall charge of the agripriately respond to th,e USDA also must create a cultural response, Stump
whole sector."
The directive calls for most damaging animal dis- National Plant Disease said.
creation of systems to eases" within 24 hours of Recovery
System
that
The directive also lets
contain any outbreaks of an outbreak. This would could respond within a Homeland Security take
plant or animal disease include such diseases as single growing season to charge of a peacetime out, that result from terror foot and mouth, which can "a high-consequence plant break of a major disease
: attack, and to prevent or spread rapidly and make disease" with pest control that threatens widespread
cure the diseases them- herds
unsalable ,
and measures or disease-resis- risk to human health or
selves.
anthrax', which can kill tant seed~ The paper gave the economy, Stump said.
The president ordered people as well as animals, as examples soybean rust The new plan could allow
the .. agencies to plan ways Stump said. ,
and wheat smut.
a faster and more coordiMad cow disease proba· to stabilize the food supUnder the new plan, the nated response, he said.

•

Public meetings

BYTHEBEND
·Girl stands her ground
against molester on trial
Wednesday, February 4, 2004

Community Calendar

inflammation, the researchers
examined medical records of
. mostly white ad ult s in
Washington Couniy, Md.,
taking part in an unrelated
study. Colon cancer was
diagnosed in 131 people during the study. Twenty of the
diagnosed patients had the
lowest initial CRP level s. By
contrast, 50 co lon cancer
patients had CRP leve ls in the
highest. range:
Colon cancer will be diagnosed in more than IOO,CXXJ people this year, . according to the
A.meric:m Cancer Society. It is
one of the most common types of
cancer in industrialized nations.
Screening tests include
colonoscopies, which allow
doctors to examine the entire
colon through a narrow tube .
Eating lots of fruits and vegetables, avoiding smoking
and fatty foods, and getting
plenty of exercise can lower
the risk of colon cancer.
In an accompanying editorial, ~xperts noted that the
study does hot rule out the
possibility that high CRP levels are a consequence of early
colon cancer rather than a
risk factor for the later development of cancer.
Giving aspirin to people with
high CRP and watching the outcome could clarify the issue, said
cancer specialist Dr. Boris
Pasche
at
Chicago's
Northwestern Uni versi ty and
researcher Charles Serhan at
Harvard's
Brigham
and
Women's Hospital.

CHICAGO (AP) - High
blood levels of a protein linked
to heart attacks might also be
an early warning sign of colon
cancer, a study found.
The substance is C-reactive
protein, or CRP, wh.ich is produced in the liver in response
to infection or inflammation
anywhere in the body. In recent
years, doctors have come to
believe that high levels of CRP
in the bloodstream raise the
risk of a heart attack by damaging blood vessel walls.
In a study of 22,887 adults,
those with the highest level s of
CRP were more than twice as
likely to develop colon cancer
over an 11 -year period as those
with the lowest CRP levels. ·
High . CRP levels were
strongly linked with colon cancer even after other risk factors
such as age, family history,
being overweight and smoking
were taken into account.
The study was led by Dr.
Thomas 'Erlinger of Johns
Hopkins Medical Institutions
and appears in Wednesday 's
Journal of the American
Medical Association.
People
with
4iseases
involving chronic intestinal
inflammation,
including
ulcerative colitis, are known
to face an increased colon
cancer risk, .and studies have
shown that aspirin and other
anti-inflammatory drugs can
reduce that risk. ·
The new findings suggest
that elevated CRP levels
might be a risk factor even
without overt signs of colon

PageA3

The Daily Sentinei

~..

~.,
~

.
·
· Pictures at $8.00 eac;h. ~

J .. _..__.. ~-. -.:-~ ,~-" • .... _...,.--- .......... !&gt;.)0 ,__.,. .... 00·
00 &lt;0 .&lt;;?""~ &lt;0 tO ~~-· tO ,-r"'V oCJ &lt;0 .

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-··

The screening includes a
I0-hnur fast beforehand and
those whci register for thi s
special screening are asked
to not cat or drink for the
1.0 hours prior to their
scheduled scree ning . except
water and necessary medications.
Those who arc
interested in tliis special
scree nin g arc e m.:ouraged to

and Holzer Medical Center.
will take place after the
Heart Fair at 12 Noon in
the
EdLt&lt;.:ation
&amp;
Conference Center.
Hi s
presentation will be open to
any community member
who would like to atlend.
Boxed lunches will be provided for those who hear
Dr. Englund's program.
The American
Heart
.Association reports the fol lowing as most com mon
warning signals of &lt;1 heart ·
attack: un~omforlable pres- ·

call early for atl appointment since there is limited
sp&lt;tce.
The Heart Fair is sponsored
by
lht
HMC
Community
Hc ltlth and sure, fL1IIness. sq ueezing or
Wellness Department and pain in the ccmer .of the
the Cardiopulmtlll!ary Units chest last ing more · than a
at the Hospital. Also col few mfnutes~ pain spread ing
laboratin g are the Gallia
to
the shoulders, neck or
County Health Departmcni.
Holzer Cltnic.
FACTS. arms: and chest dis.:omfon
Cardiovascular Coa lition or with lightheadedness. faint Gallia Co unt y \llld the ing. sweating. nausea or
Cardiovascular shDrlness of breath.
Less
Holzer
Institute .
Hearl
Fair · common warning signs of a
Pianning Committee mem- heart atta&lt;.:k include: at_vpi bers include Shelia ' Ct&gt;zarl. cal chest pain. stomach or
Jenm· Dovya k·- Judy 1HaII cy. abdOJn1nal 11&lt;1ill'. nausea or
Faye Hammoild , Bonnie dizziness~
shortness
of
McFarland.
Mltrianne breath and difficulty breathMetzler: Sheri Pyks. Pam ing~ unexplained atixiety.
Samons.

Brenda

Stewart weakness or fat igue: and

and Karen Stocker.
A specia l prcscnt/tt lt&gt;n.
"Cardiac Ri sk Factors '. by ,
Michael A. Englund. · DO.
cardiologist at Holzer Clinic

palpitations. cold sweats or
paleness.
The AHA abo
reports that coronary heart
di sease is America's numhcr
one killer.
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REDKEN
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s·zo

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~

•

'·

.

•

H &amp; ~ Block.
618 East Main St

Pcmeroy,Ohic 45769

H&amp;RILOCIC"

Phone 992·6674

Hour~: ·Mcn·fri, 9 to 6, S.lt 9 to 5

Other Hours by Appointment

!

�f

OPINION

·- The Daily Sentinel

Ever hear th,e fable about
the blind men and the elephant'? It goes something like
this:
Once upon a time, an elephant found its, way to" vi lJoseph
lage where there lived six
Perkins
blind men. As none of them
had ever encountered a
p;~ehyderril, they thought
they would go and touch it.
So the firsI blind . man that rei nforced their anti-war, :
approac hed and touched the anti-Bush biases.
Kay's remark about lesselephant's slornach, concluding that the beast was like a than-perfect pre-war intelliwaiL The second felt the tusk gence o n Saddam Hussein's
tlnd decidt;il the elephant was weapons of mass destruction
. ' It turns out we were all
like a spear.
The third grabbed the wrong' - was deemed by
squ irming trunk and figured those who report , who interthe elephant was like il pret the news to the
snilke. The fourth groped the American people as the
leg and was conv inced the bi ggest highlight of his Q&amp;A
with the Senate Armed
elephant was like a tree.
Committee.
Services
·The fifth chanced to fee l
The ne xt biggest hi ghlight,
the ear ami declared the ele·
phant like a fan. And the judging from the evening
sixth ,&gt;cizcd the swinging tail newscasts and the morning
and decided that the elephan.l newspapers, was Kay's suggestion that there ought to be
was like a rope.
an outside inquiry as to why
E&lt;~c h of the blind _men
thought he had figured the pre-war intelligence was as
elephant out. But they (Ill far. off as it appears to have
were wrong. Because not one been.
But Kay said some other
had the complete picture.
This fable comes to mind lhings that for some reason
amid the stlund and fury this or another eilher didn't make
week that followed the it into news stories or broadSenate testimony of David cast accou nts , or were menKay, the former chief U.S. tioned almost as an· after·
thought.
weapons inspector in Iraq .
Critics of the Iraq war on
l·ndeed.
the
former
Capitol Hill ; and in much of weapti ns in spector remindthe U.S. media, are so blind- ed Se n. Ted Kennedy, Ded by their contempt for Mass .. that they talked on
President Bush, their down- severa l occasions prior to
right hatred in more extreme the wa r, and that ' my view
ca.,es. that they focused was that the best evidence
almosl exclusively on those thai I had ~ee n was that
snippels of Kay's testimony Iraq indeed had weapons

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor ·

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

-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

.

Moderately Confused
IS 7:55 TliE

TIME THE MOVIE STARr'S
OR THE TIMt Tli~
P!\EVIEW5&amp;- ADS Do?

,,'
I

'
I

IIIIo",,.,,
~
II\ ...... 1\lo
llttt\•
,....
...
~'''l

Wednesday, February 4, 2004

David Kay and Bush's blind cri,tics

:· The Daily .Sentinel
.' .

Page A4

..

.,... ..

of ma ss .destru, tion.'
Yet. Kennedy and other
Democrats . including presi·
dential candidates John
Kerry and Wesley Clark ·
wildly accuse President Bush
of intentionally misleading
the American people about
Sadctam's buildup of WMD
to j ustify going to war with
Iraq .
And Kay's .statement thai
'we were almost all wrong·
included not just those who
supported the war here in the
United States, but also those
outside the United Siates
who opposed the war.
'Certainly,' Kay testified.
' the
French
pres·ident
(Jacques) Chirac . as I recall
in April of last year. referred
to Iraq's possession of
W MD. The Germans certainly · the intellige nce service believed t~al there were
WMD .'
An&lt;' · hil e I e Iraq Survey
Grm.
team · or 1.400 sci·
emi s, and experts that Kay
headed until stepping down
last week. did nol uncover
any major stockpiles 'of
che mical.
biological
weapons, their work found
that 'Iraq was in dear viola·
lion of the lenns of (U.N.)
Resoluti on 1441 ." which. as
he noted. gave Iraq 'one last
chance to come dean about
what it had.'
Saddam's re gim e refused
10 take advantage or thai one
last chan ce, according

lo

Kay.
Hi s team di scove red 'hun dreds of cases, based on documents, physical evidence
and the testimony or lr;tqis.
or aclivities ihat we re pro-

r

hibited under the initial U.N.
resolution tiX7 anJ that
should h&lt;ive been reported
unde r 1441 . with Iraqi testimony that not on ly did they
not tell the United Nations
about this , the y were
instructed not to do it. and
Ihey hid mat eriaL '
The bottom line of Kay's
testimony, which anti -war
criti cs on Capitol Hill, and
. Bush-haters in the media.
chose· to either underplay or
ignore ali ogether. came in
response to questioning from
Sen. Jo .. n Warner. the
Virginia Republican . the act iqg chuirman or the Armed
Services Committee.
Iraq was ·even more dan ge rous than We tht\ught.' said
Kay. despit e the fact that
caches of WM D ha ve n·ot
been found in the country
(lhe U.S. wea pons inspector
previou sly suggested th at
Saddam's stocKpi le mi ght
have been spirited to Syria):
·I thi nk the world is far
st~fer with the disappearance
and re moval of Saddam
Hu sse in.' he said. which
sounded very much li Ke an
endmsement o r President
Bush\ decision to turn
Saddam and bi s rnurden)us
reg ime ou t uf pow er.

Of course . the ant i-wa r
cn lt l'S, the Ru sh-hltters
refuse to sec Kay's testimony
as anything other th •lll vali·
dation of iheir views. They
are ju st like the blind men
a/llJ the elephant.
(JoseJ&gt;b Perkins is" cnlwn·
nisr jill· T/11· S&lt;111 Diego
UrJ ion-7i"iiJ/IIII' a11d call /Je
r&lt;'ttclwd ar .hmpiJ. Perkills @
U11io11Ti"i/J. COlli)

-.,. '" lloo

HE'S STILL

.'

REVIEWING
JACKSON
TAPE.

INSTANT
REPl.f\~

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the. editor are welcome. They should

;·be le!;s than 300 words. All leiters are subject to
''
· ,editing and must be signed and include addren·

Card counting·

·;and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
good taste,

'.

' How's the decorating .
· of th e card that said fered from BADD
business?' I as)ced Bever.ly
'Culture.Com' was raised, Business Attention Deficit
on her last visit.
printed on a thick card stock Disorder?
'Oh, didn't I tell you,· she
that made one think the
I decided the next time
said pawing around in her
business had . been around Beve rly handed me a new
purse, 'It was just too much
since men wore buckled · card with some new tly- byJim
running around. And the
shoes. You 'd never know the night venture sbe'd got herMullen
customers were driving me
firm was born, flourished self involved in that I was
crazy. I can't deal with peoand died between her Easter goi ng to say something. I
ple who can't make decivisit and her Labo r Day didn't know whit~, but somesions. I got so sick of peopte
visit, taking several million thing .
changing their minds, I just her other business cards that dollars of other people's
Sure enough, she' showed
couldn't take it anymore. On I've been collecting for the money with it.
up last weekend and
Tuesday they wanted the last few years.
The one that said 'Ciao announced · she was out of
granite counters, on Friday
Beverly's never had the Down Contemporary Itali an the cell phon e consulting
they'd want soapstone. I've same job twice, but she's Catering' screamed ultra- business .
moved on.'
always working. I have modern. It was printed on , 'Those people are crazy,'
She found what she was business cards touting her as clear plastic, the typeface so she said. ' I was spendin g all
looking for and handed me a a 'Mentor for Professional space age you'd think she dljy on the ~hone!' Hmmm .
business card. It read:
Women. ' One that says she's had just been beamed to thi s Hard to belt eve that would
BEVERLY FERGUSON
a 'Personal Shopper,' anoth· planet from. the distant happen in the phone busi·
Cell Phone Consultant
er one proclaims she is a future. That too, tanked.
ness.
·Beverly doesn't know any 'color consciousness coorSome of the cards had
'So now I've found somemore about cell phones than dinator.' In the past four logos on them, some were thing I think I was meant to
I do. But she has a business years she has been a 'pro- simple, some were baroque, do,' she said handing me a
card. It reminds me of that active self-realization facili- all fitting her fantasy profes- brand new, beautiful busi·
scene in 'The Wizard Of Oz' tator,' a skin care expert, a sions perfectly. Beverly may ness card.
I was gelling ready. to tell
when the Wizard tells the · personal motivator, a public have been totally unsui ted.
Tin Man that he doesn't · relations executive, a ,real for all the jobs, but her busi- her that she had to stop all
need a brain, he needs. a estate appraiser, a vpice · ness cards ·· were quite this nonsense when I read
.
what was written on the new
diploma. ·Beverly doesn'l coach, a window tre;.ltment ' impress ive.
need to know anything specialist, a stock cltib orga, · , Still, she was becoming a card. 'BEVERLY FERGU·
Bu si ne ss
Card ·
about cell phones, she just . nize'r, a grief counselor, an menace to society. What if SON
needs a business card that ·interior decorator lind an some poor sucker actually Designer. '
I wonder "if she'd do one
says she does. It means that exercise clothes designer. hired her? · I .wondered .
she can now charge for the She had also worked for a Would it be my ethical duty for me?
(Jim Mullen is the amhor of
advice I can only give for newspaper publi~het, a S~Oe to follow her around with
importer
and
•
a
plastic
sur·another
business
~ard
that
'It
Takes A Village Idiot: A
free. My advice is tQ look
.
. • .
.said 'Please. ignore the pre- ,Memoir of Life After the City'
around for the best d~l you gepn.
lier
business
cards
,
were.
Vious business card.' Should (Simon and Sch~ter, 2001).
can get and take it, At l~ast
that was her' advice to-me. so things of great beauty.··The · J become a one-man Be~~ He also contributes regularly
thought and precisiQn that , Business Bureau and wjiro •to Entertainmen"t Weekly,.
I'm passi ng it along'tq yo\1.
I added her Cell •Phone . went into them was breath- ·people that they wete deal-' where he cim, be reached ·qt ·
Consultant card to ·a stack of ta\9Qg. The int.of the letters . · 1~g witll a person who suf·. jimJtlu/len@eiV.com)

·,addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in this column are the
of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. :~
.··consensus
'
: editorial board, unless otherwise noted. .
'

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Your guide to weekend
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Appropriations
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Police: 14-year-old Student found dead
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POMEROY
Cases Landers, .Middleport, driving phy.controllunder intluence, Washington, W.Va., speeding,
resolved in the Meigs County w/former owner plates, $20 $200 and costs; Pa.ul W $30 and costs; Susan· A.
Lewis, Racine. seatbelt , $30 McCue, Ravenswood, W.Va.,
Court of Judge Steve Story and costs;
GRI EFIN, Ga. - Mrs. Pauline A. Rife, 93, of Rehoboth between Dec. 6 and Jan . 25
N.
Lane, and costs ; Craig A. Lightle. pass ing bad checks, costs
Tommy
Ro;~d, Griffin, Ga ., passed away on Friday, Jan . 30, 2004, at are as follows: Michael R. Middleport, non support of Vinton , speeding. $ 15 and only ; Herbert M. Mcintyre,
her residence .
Jarrell, Racine, speeding, $30 defendants, $235 and costs; costs; Aaron P. Loel, Racine, sealbel( $30 and
Mrs. Rife was born in Kyger on Oct 23, 1910, to the late and costs; Geoffrey C. Karen Lascell es, Oak Hill. Gallipolis, $20 and costs; J.P: costs; Jenna S. McVey, Cross
·
Harlan Athey ·and the late Phena Rife Athey.
Jenkins, Jackson, seatbelt, disorderly conduct, costs Maas. Long. speeding, $30 Lanes, W.Va., speeding, $30
She was preceded in death by her husband, Walter W. Rife, seatbelt, $30 and costs; Gary onl y; Jason L. Laudermilt, and costs;
and costs:
·
and her brother, Clair Athey.
M. JohnSOI), Racine. speed- Racine, seatbelt, $45 and
Raymo nd J. Michael,
Antonio
J.
Maddox.
Mr.s. Rife was an elementary school teacher and elementary ing, $100; Jennifer K. costs; Michael P. Laudermilt, Detroit, menacing, $50 and Racine, driving under sussupervi sor for Gallia County Schools for 30 years. She was Johnson , Racine, seatbelt, Pomeroy, driving under sus- costs;
Vladislav
R. pension/rev ocation ,
$65
co-author of Gallia County One-Room Schools: The Cradle $30 and costs;
pen sion, $200, use of unau- Maksimov, Maso n, W.Va., and costs; Sherrie A. Might,
Years.
.
Jerry M. Johnson, Racine, thorized plates, $25; David L. . speeding, $~0 and costs ; John Pomeroy, speeding, $30 and
Mrs. Rife was a member of Athens Christian Church, Star stop sign, $20 and costs; Lawson, Portland, speeding, M. Ma nley) Bidwell, maxi · cos ts; James A. Miller,
D.
Johnson. $30 and costs; Shane A.' ' mlHll bumper height, $20 and Athens. speeding, $30 and
Grange No. 77.8. a life member of Gallia County Teachers Melissa
Association and Ohio Retired Teachers Association, Gal!ia Reedsville, passing bad Leach, New Have n, W.Va., costs;·- Gary L. Martin, cos ts; Martha L. Miller,
County Historical Society, First Families of Gallia County, checks, $25 and costs; James seatbelt, $30 and costs; James Washington. W.Va., speeding, Kernersv ille. N.C. speedOhio. First Families of Ohio, First Families of the Civil War D. Jones, Pomeroy, seatbelt, A. Leamond. Racine, speed· $30 and costs; Ida M. Martin, ing, $30 and costs; Jerrod
of Ohio, Ohio Genealogical Society, Cameo Society of Ohio $30 and costs; use of unau - ing, $Z3 and costs, failure to Middleport, speed ing, $30 R. Mill s, resisting arrest ,
Daughters of the American Revolution, Fuller Society of thorized plates, $20 and transfer ownership, $70 and and costs; Kenneth L. Martin. $100, DWI and/or dru gs of
Albany; seatbelt -passenger, abuse . $35 0 and costs $290,
Mayflower Families, and the Roush and Allied Families costs; Jennie M, Kauff, costs;
Rutland,
stop
sign,
$20
and
Gregory
K.
Lee,
$20
and costs; Thomas L. driving under suspe nsion ,
Association .
Mrs. Rife was an · active member of the Pulaski , Ga. , costs; Gregory L. Keller, Middleport, DWI. $850 and Martin, Springfield, speeding. $100 and costs; David K.
Mitchell , Junction City,
Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution; John Alden Canal Winchester, speeding, costs, left of center, $25 and $25 and costs:
$30
and
costs;
Matthew
R.
·
costs;
Joann
H.
Lee,
Portland,
E.
Micah
Martindale.
speeding,
$30 and cos ts;
Chapter (Ga.) of the Colonial Dames of the XVII Century; the
Kight,
McArthur,
stop
sign,
seatbelt,
$30
and
costs;
Erica
Pomeroy,
$30
Jaime
and
costs~
D.
Moles,
Cheshire,
Guild of the First United Methodist Church of Griffin, Ga.;
Lemons, . &lt;;:oolville, Dawn· M.
McConnell, speeding, $30 and costs.
Arthur Maddox Sunday School Class of the First United $20 and costs; Milfgaret A. R.
. Methodist Church of Griffin; Young at Heart of tile First
United Methodi st Church of Griffin; . Griffin, Ga. Chapter,
AARP; Republican Party of Spalding County, Ga.; National
Association of Retired Women; life m~mber of Walking for
Well ness Club; and Makin' Tracks Travel Club.
She was a graduate of Rutland High School in 1929, and
Rio Grande College. She received a master's degree in education from Marshall University.
POMEROY
Pyles
She is survived by her daughters, Janet Fulton and Christine
Napier. and son-in-law, David H. Fulton, all of Griffin; grand· Communications. which crechildren : Dr. Melissa Fulton Chasteen of Griffin, Dr. Kevin T. ated the new branding logo
Napier of Williamson. Ga., Steve Fulton of Federal Way, for the Meigs County
Wash., Kathy Fendel of Sylmar, Calif. , and Lark Napier of Chamber of Commerce, is
Louisville; great grandchildren, Mrs. Edward (Cara) Darden, located in Marietta, not
Amanda and Doug Maslen , and C.olter Chasteen, all of Reynoldsburg, aS' was reportGriffin, Ga.; Jordan,, David and Abigail Napier of Williamson, ed.
Ga., Lauren and Benjamin Fulton of Federal Way, Wash.,
Leigh Anne, Lark and Travis Napier of Brooksville, Fla.; a
great-great granddaughter, Jillian Athey Darden of Griffin; a
nephew. Paul Athey of Green Valley. Ariz.; and a niece, Ruth
Gan;iner of Cheshire.
Services will be I :30 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 8, 2004, at the
REEDSVILLE Olive
Bv CORALIE C.ARLSON
"The kids have to know
Southwgod opened in
Birchtield Funeral Home in Rutland, under direction of the Township Trustees will hold
what
happened
to
him
,"
A
ssociATED
PREss
WRITER
1976
as 1r1e county 's fir st
Rev. Robert Fetty, with grandsons Stephen Fulton and Dr. their appropriations meeting at
Gough
said.
"I
still
can't
magnet
school, specializ·
Kevin Napier, M.D., assisting. Burial will follow at the Gravel 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, at the
believe
thi
s
can
happen."
ing
in
visual
and performMIAMI
A
14-year-old
Hill Cemetery in Cheshire.
township
building
on
Joppa
Gough said · family mem· ing art s for students in
boy was apparently stabbed
Pall bearers are Garv D. Chasteen, Edward W. Darden Ill,
~oad., with the regular meetbers
were told by school grades six. seven and
in
a
school
bathto
death
Stephen D. Fulton, Douglas J. Maslen, William C. Maslen,
officials
that Jaime had been eight. It has more than
ing
to
follow.
room
Tuesday,
and
another
and Dr. Kevin T. Napier, Lark Nalier Jr. Friends may visit the
stabbed.
I ,5 00 studems.
student was taken i mo· cus·
ramily from 2 to 6 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 7, 2004, at the funeral
Mike Antonell , whose 12tody.
home .
On the Net:
year-old
son is a si ~lh·grader
Other
teenagers
discovMemorial contributions may be made to Christian
at
the
school,
said
he
felt
Southwood Middle School:
ered
Jaime
Rodri
go
Gough
Ministries Hospice , 62 I Carver Road, Griffin, Ga. 30224, in
REEDSVILLE Bill in a boys ' restroom at heart palpitations when he
www.dade.k 12. tl.us/south·
Mrs. Rife 's memory .
Osborne was re-elected pres- Southwood Middle School at heard the news.
wood/
ident of the Olive Township about 8:30 a.m.
Miami-Dade Police Director
Trustees and Jack Westfall
vice president at the trustees' Carlos Alvarez said that the
community project. . Brenda
MIDDLEPORT - Alice Mills, 88. of Middleport, passed recent organizational meet- boy had suffered "some sort of
Phalin of the University of
cutting incident," and that the
away unexpectedly on Monday, Feb. 2, 2004 at the Holzer ing .
Rio
Grande/Crossroads YES
Medical Center in Gallipolis,
from Page A1
Randy Boston is the third weapon was found. He would
program
said clients in her
She was born July 27, 1915, in Portsmouth, the daughter of trustee and Martha Durst is not elaborate.
As of late afternoon, the distributes treats to children program might also be availthe late Victor L. and Anna A. Davis Grimm.
the clerk.
student in custody had not during the Bunny Hop, and able to assist with the proShe worked for many years as a dental hygienist with Dr.
Meetings are held on the been charged.
ject.
several merchants said cusIngels in Middleport. She and her husband operated a Ceramic . first Thursday of each month
It was noted that the fluwOther children at the tomers had expressed disap·
Shop in Middleport where she also taught cerarnic classes.
or as announced.
school were locked in their pointment that merchant ers were donated by Bob's
She was a member of the First Baptist Church of
classrooms with their teach · sales were not part of the Market of Mason, W.Va., and
Middleport, and the Ladies Auxiliary of the Middleport Fire
planted under the direction of
ers as a precaution for most day's activities.
Department.
the Riverbend Arts Gouncil,
of the day before they were
She is survived by her daughters, Adrienne (H~) Munns
but merchants found it diffi·
sent home in the afternoon.
of Lynchburg, Va., and Rae Ann Gwiazdowsky of Mtddleport;
HARRISONVILLE
cult
to tend to the planting
a sister,' Jane Sarver of Florida; grandchildren, Kimberly Harrisonville Lodge 411 will More than I 50 worried parareas
once they were comHodges, Lee Ann Hill, James Munns, Mitzi Frady, Betsy meet at 7:30 p.;rl, Saturday at ents gathered outside .
pleted,
while others were in
In
other
business,
Dooley
Antonio Gough, Jaime's
Wilson, Mindy Long, Jenny Parks and Mark Gwiazdowsky; the temple, wit!\ practice for
announced that membership areas without a responsible
and great-grandchildren, Alison Hod$es, Scott Thacker, the Feb. 27 inspection. uncle, said his nephew was a applications are now avail· business owner to care for
good student who played
Randy Mahoney, Michael Hill, Benjamm Hill, Jon-Michael Officers are asked to attend.
baseball, the violin and the able for 2004, and that dues them.
Frady, Nicholas Frady, Wyatt Wilson, Kathryn Long, Maggie
Merritt ·announced that a
Refreshments will be flute, and was not a trouble- are payable. Dues are $10 for
Parks and Nicholas Gwiazdowsky; and a sister-in-law, Irene
networking
meeting for local
individual members and $25
served.
maker.
Lambert of Columbus.
retailers will be held at 6:30
for businesses.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her
President Dodger Vaughan p.m. Feb. 26 at the Meigs
business and created more said Girl Scouts have vo!un· County
husband , Russell "Bruz" Mills, a grandson, George R. Munns;
Chamber
of
jobs in the region, ,including leered to tend to flowers Commerce office.
brothers, Paul and Wiliam Grimm, a sister, Clarissa Grimm,
nearly 250 jobs at the Dollar pl ~ nted in the shopping disThe meeting is open to all
and a son-in-law, Leonard Gwiazdowsky.
General
Distribution Facility trict during the spring and merchants, and invitations
from Page A1
Services will be II a.m. Friday, Feb. 6, 2004, at the Fisher
in Zanesville, about 600 jobs summer months.
have been extended 10 retailFuneral Home in Middleport, with the Rev. Mark Morrow
at
the
Wai-Mart
Distribution
chose
Ohio
to
announce
The association has been ers in the Point Pleasant',
officiating. Burial will follow in the Gravel Hill Cemetery in
Cheshire. Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 5, President Bush's funding Center in Steubenville, and seeking an organization W.Va. , and Gallipolis comappropriation for fiscal yea.r more than I 00 jobs at the which would assume respon· munities, as well, Merritt
2004, at the funeral home.
·
lntermodal sibility for the flowers as a said.
On-line condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneral- 2005 shows that people are Wellsville
Park
in
Wellsville.
Industrial
taking
notice
of
our
efforts."
homes.com ·
The purpose of the ARC is
Johnson oversees the Ohio
Department of Development, to develop a knowledgeable
whtch houses the Governor' s and skilled population ,
.,
Office of Appalac hia (GOAl strengthen the region's physi GUYSVILLE - Lyle E. Baker, 74, of Guysville, and forAccording to ttle ARC, cal infrastructure, build local
merly of l?,acine , passed away at II :07 p.m. Monday, Feb. 2', "Today's announcement is and regional capacity, create
2004, in the Emergency Department of O'Bieness Mell)orial great for citi zens and bu si- a dynamic economic base,
ne sses .located in Ohio's and foste·r healthy people.
Hospital in Athens.
The GOA faci!ttates eco·
Appalachian
region," added
Born May 14, 1929, in Waverly, W.Va., "he was the son of
intertim GOA Director nomic and community devel·
the late Wylie and Virgie Windgrove Baker.
in
the
29
He was retired from the U.S. Postal Service, and was the Jennifer Simon, who attend- opmenl
Appal
ac
~ian
counties
of
ed
today's
event.
"It'
s
. retired owner of the Racine Small Engine Repair ServiCe. He
Oh10.
The
office,
involved
encouragin~ to know that the,
was well known as the "Lawnmower Man."
He was a U.S. Air Force veteran, and a member of the pre§ident ts committed to with both short and long·
Racine Post No. 602 of the American Legion and Veterans of maintaining funding so we ·term planning. also serves as
sustain economic develop· an advocate for the region by
Foreign Wars, Post No. 9053 at Thppers Plains.
\ '''
Surviving are his wife, Sharon Hoskins Baker; two daugh· ment and quality of life in developing policy and promoting
spect
fic
projects
and
·
E•1ra
Large
Capaci!'f\,
\
SA 111 E
the
region."
· Heavy Duty
ters, Cathy Lynn Baker of Columbus, ,and Marsha (Tom)
•
7
Cycles
'
ftV
proposals
that
originate
from
Using
ARC
funds,
Ohio
· 4 Cycles
Kisner of Xenia; two sons, Eldon (Susan) Baker of Syracuse,
- 4T
emperatures
'
EVEN
the
region's
residents
.
has
already
attracted
new
·
3 Temperatures
and Darrell (Debbie) Baker of Columbus; two stepdaughters,
• 2 Speeds
"'MOREll · Extra Large &lt;•!!•city
Debbie Osborne of Guysville, and Marlene Chaffer ofAstorp,
"""""" $369
'
••
Reg. $3 19
Fla .; and two stepsons, Tracy (Amy) Hein of Minersville, and
'
Buythe /
John (Sue) Hein of Jeffersonville.
, pair for
Also surviving are five grandchildren, ~had (Brandy)
-:
only
Kisner, Tiffany (Jason) Hartley, Stact (Jamte) Ktmbleton,
5
....,, . ,. experiencing he1rlng lt.JI, wt'rt hlrt to
Darrell Baker Jr., a nd Kelli Baker; six stepgrandchildten and
several great-grandchildren .
With IOdiY'I mOIIIdviiiCid harlnt technology.
Also surviving are a sister, Linda (Mitch) Mitchell of
Clll todly llld ld1ICiult an ljii)Ointrntnl tar your
Sterling, Va., and two brothers, Norman (Hazel) Baker,
. FREE HEAIIIIIICREEIIH
Parkersburg, W.Va., and Robert (Charlotte) . Ilaker of
Buckhannon, W.Va. ·
He was preceded in death by two sisters, .Ruth Parks, ijlld a
sister in infancy; and an infant granddaughter, Angela Marie
Kisner.
'
,Private family services will be conducted Friday, Feb. 6,
2004, in the Chapel of the Meigs Memory Gardens. The Rev.
L.am.ar O'Bryant will officiate . Entombment will follow.
Friends may call at the Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine
from 5 to 8 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 5, 2004.
, Mililary honors will be provided by the VFW. -Post No.
%53 and American Legion Post No. 6Q.2.
.
.·

'Pauline ll. Rife

I

~A~~ . 2121
© 2004 by NEA, Inc.

::be published. Letters should be in

Meigs County court news

Alice Mills

THE JANET

.'

Obituaries

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Officers elected

. 0

•

Wenesday, February 4, 2004

Ratea Outalde Malp County
13 Weeks . . . .... . .... .'50.05
26Weeks . ..... .... . .'100.10
52 Weeks , .. .. .. .... .'200.20

•

•

'

'

•

Other business

ARC

Lyle E. Baker

Sate

HURIII.~

S]]9

Sate

289

7 578 , 5
~'11 1~;'\''

• FREE DELIVERY • FREE SETUP
.• FREE REMOVAL

------------....-----------------,---·--·----·- --·--- -- - ..

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PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Se,n tinel

The Daily

INSIDE
Prep scoreboard, Page 82 ·
Prep notebook, Page B6

Wednesday, February 4, 2004

Wednesday, February 4, 2004

annal

Prep Standings

Eastern whips up on Southern, 67-50

Boys basketball

SEOAL

I®!!l
..
Gallia Academy
Marietta
Logan
Jackson
Warren
Athens
Poinl Pleasant

)

&amp;
8·.1 11·4
8·1 11-4
5:2 9·5
3·6 5·9
2-6 5·9
2· 7 5·9
1-7 3-12
SEQ

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

. RACINE - While the huge base
of fans filed away from the confines
· of Southern's Charles W. Hayman
gymnasium, Eastern Coach Howie
Caldwell packed away his jumper
cables as he conclu«;;ed his victory
speech that praised the Eagles for
their 67-50 triumph over arch rival
Southern during boys Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking ·Division basketball action Tuesday.
Although Caldwell's halftime pep
talk may not have involved a literal
jump start. it was indeed electric as
Eastern's intensity level q\}adrupled
that of the hapless Tomadoes during a
26-13 third period that lifted Eastern

~

:I

Olilo Division
IYQ . ALL

Alexander
5-1
Vinton County
5·1
Meigs
3·3
3·3
· Belpre
Wellston
2-5
Nelsonville· York
1·6
Hocking' Division
~

Trimble
Eastern
Southern
Federal Hocking
Miller
Watertord

A bus rolls down Euclid Aven·ue toward the Theatre District in Cleveland. Funding for Ohio transportation projects, environmental cleanup programs and Appalachian programs were included in
President Bush's 2005 budget. Cleveland would receive $11 million to create bus-only lanes and
redesign Euclid 'Avenue, downtoY;n 's major street. (AP Photo/Tony Dejak)
Bv JOE MILICIA

Mars and beyond . He called
for development of a new
vehicle carrying astronauts
overnight progresses.
CLEVELAND
to the space station and the
President Bush's proposal to moon.
NASA's . funding would
Thursday, February 5 send astronauts back to the
moon and eventually to increase by nearly $900
Morning (7:00am-Noon) Mars would increase fund- million under the president 's
25 _ 39 NE-SE 5_15 mph
ing overall at NASA but cut 2005 budget, but spending
money for the agency's on the agency's aeronautics
It should be a cloudy mom- aeronautics program, a program would be cut by
in g. Temperatures witt climb . major 'initiative at NASA almost 3 percent to $9 19
from 25 to 39 by late this Glenn Research Center.
million. ·
morning. Winds will be 5 to
The center does not
NASA Glenn would expe15 MPH from the northeast expect a funding increase rience a similar 3 percent
turning from the southeast as next year even though decrease in aeronautics
NASA's
budget
would funding, said associate
the morning progresses.
increase by 5.6 peEcent to · director Bob Fails.
Afternoon
O:OOpm· $16.2 billion for 2005.
But he said NASA Glenn
6:00pm) 38 - 42 SE 10-15 NASA Glenn's budget will would
receive funding
mph
either decrease or remain increases in other areas
It should remain cloudy. flat when final budget fig- such as space science,
funding
for
Expect a few light rain show- ures come out later this including
Project
Prometheus,
which
ers. The rain should reach year, officials said.
NASA Glenn director aims to send nuclear pow0.02 inches by the end of this
afternoon. Tem~pe· ratures wm··I..~IIII:ln .. E&lt;~.ds • ._,b.o.wev.ey. , j~ ered vehicles deep into the
optimistic about the center's solar system.
hover at 40. Winds will be 10 future, saying that Bush's
Earls said inspace power
to t 5 MPH from the sputh- exploration g9als give all and propulsion are · areas
the · ' NASA-·--eeilters ··-the where NASA Glenn could
east . '.. '" '
chance to play an integral be a major contributor to
role.
the president's exploration
"I think there are opportu- . vision.
Communications
nities for Glenn Research technology also could be
Center that we will define important for creation of a
with a w~ater degree of proposed lunar base.
Oak Hill Financial - 33.50
fidelity,"
Is said Tuesday.
"We can't predict what is
Bank One - ·51.08
Last month, Bush outlined going to be needed, but we
OVB-28.50
Peoples - 29.09
a multibillion-dollar effort know that one thing that
Pepsico- 47.65
to return Americans to the will be needed is creativity
Premier- 9.15
moon as early as 2015 and and innovation," Earls said.
Rocky Boots - 23.17
use it as a waystation to
NASA Glenn, which has
RD Shell- 47.93
Rockwell- 30.72 .
Sears- 44.50
SBC -26.08
AT&amp;T -19.38
USB-27.95
Wendy's - 38.04
Wal-Mart- 55.01
Worthington- 16.20
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. closi~g quotes of the pre. "' .
vious day's transactions, provided by Smith Partners at
"'
Advest Inc. of Gallipolis.
• ....... :"!......
•!
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Morning (7:00am-Noon)
22 • 29 W-NW 5 mph
Temperatures ·will rise to
29 with today's tow of 22
occurring around 7:00am.
Skies will be mostly sunny
with 5 MPH winds from the
west turning from the northwest as the morni ng progresses.
Afternoon
(1:00pm6:00pm) 27 • 33 NW-NE 5
mph
Temperatures will rise
from 31 early afternoon to
the high for the day of 33 at
2:00pm as they drop back
down to 27 later this afternoon. Skies will range from
mostly sunny to partly
cloudy with 5 MPH winds
from the northwest turning
from the northeast as the
afternoon progresses.
(7:00pmEvening

Glenn
Willey

Midnight) 26 - 27 NE 5
mph
Temperatures wilt hold
steady around 26. Skies will
be mostly clear to partly
cloudy with 5 MPH winds
from the northeast
Overnight
(1:00am6:00am) 26 - 27 E-NE 5
mph Temperatures will
linger at 26. Skies will
rangc!'from partly cloudy to
mostly cloudy with 5 MPH
wind,~ from. the east turning
from · the northeast as the

Warehouse
Local Stocks
ceramics are ACI-26.67
. 33.74
human skulls,· AEPAkzo - 39.25
Ashland Inc. - 45.54
doctor says
BBT-37.22
CLEVELAND (AP) - A
collection of skulls found in a
carton at a warehouse are
human skulls, a doctor on the
staff of the Cuyahoga County
coroner said Tuesday.
Dr. Heather Raaf, chief
deputy coroner, said a forensic anthropologist examined
the skulls and determined
they are human. She said
each is a partial skull that
miry at some point have been
buned.
','We had an anthropologist took
at them and he saicf tl]ey are all
definitely human, but they are old.
They are not p:ople who recently
died We think they had l:een
buried and somehow unearthed,
because they were weathered, and
there was some moss and mold
on them," Raaf said.
She said that each of the 12
skulls is partial, and in the
parts observed there is "no
sign of violence or injury."
She declined to identify the
forensic anthropologist She
said she could g1ve no further
information , because an
investigation is ongoing.
The skulls were discovered
Frida~ at a warehouse for
Marc s discount stores in the
Cleveland area. Warehouse
employees called police
when a carton of what thl!y
thou11ht was holding ceramic
figunnes revealed bone
where _!lne had cr&lt;)cked.
But Raaf said·only some of
the figurines were mtact and
some were just skulls.
The federal government is'
trying to check records to
find out the source of the
skulls, said Cheri:se Miles, a
spokeswoman in Chicago for
U.S . Customs and Border
Protection.
Miles said the items were
sold Jan. I 5 at an auction at
the Broward Convention
Center in Fort Lauderdale,
Fla., by auctioneering contractor EG&amp;G Technical
Services, which would haye
inspected an«;! priced the lot
idimtified as ' clay artifacts
and assorted items.~· She said
.the skulls were part of a lot
that sold for.about $I.~.

BLI-14.16
Bob Evans - 32
BorgWarner- 91.81
City Holding- 34.78
Champion - 4.85
Charming Shops- 6.15
Col-33.48
DuPont - 43.62
DG-22.79
GanneH - 85.46
General Electric- 33.21
GKNLY-4.95
Harley Davidson - 5Q.63
· Kmart - 26.63
Kroger- 19.03
ltd. -19.06
NSC-21 .89

lost 30 percent of its fund. ing since the early 1990s,
has been criticized in recent
years for losing research
projects to other NASA
· faci liti~ s and not doing
more to help northeast
Ohio's economy.
Earl s, who took over as
director in October, said
that NASA Administrator
Sean 0 ' Keefe is emphasizing that NASA centers
avoid unhealthy competition
which in the past led to
duplication .
"I firmly believe that is a
thing of the past. That is a
healthy sign for us as an
agency," Earls said .
NASA Glenn research
focuses on aeropropulsion
technologies,
aerospace
power, microgravity science,
electric propulsion and communications technologies.
The center has . I, 920
employees and consists of
24 major facilities on 350
acres
near
Cleveland
Hopkins
Internation al
Airport and the 6,400-acre
Plum Brook Station 111
Sandusky.

_..,•.·Co,Lin.ty inforf!led
.

•

.

I

/i)'oilySentinel
·v\fww.mydail)'sentin'el.com

=.,

&lt;.

•

TVC A!.!.

12·3
t1 -5
9·6
7-7
3·13
0-15

QYS;_

m

ovc
6·1

4-2

4·3
3-3
2·4

0~ 6

~

14·1
9-5
4·10
7-8
6·9
5·9

SEOAL

sm
9·0
7-2'
8-3
4-6
4-7
2·7
0·9

ROCKSPRINGS - Six
players on the court at. one
point, an extra minute and a
half on the clock, a key
Meigs injury during warmups - and Wellston still
could
not
stop
the
Marauders.
Meigs placed four players
in double figures Tuesday
during a 74-63 Tri-Valley
Conference boys basketball
win over the visiting
Runnin' Rockets.
Dakota DeWitt, who
turned his ankle in a pregame layup drill, s~tmk off
the minor injury to score a
game-high 24 points and
collect I 7 rebounds.
Ty Ault added 14 points to
the winning cause white
teammates Jon Bobb and
Carl Wolfe, Jr. went for a
dozen each. Corey· Woods
a!1d Rran Hannan chipped in
s1x. aptece.
Meigs coach Carl Wolfe
was encouraged by the victory; and hopes that it is the
stan of a strong stretch run
for his club.
"This is especially a good
win, because a lot of teams
start going the other way - .
they either go toward the tor,
or they're starting to fold, '
he explained. '.'I think this
was a step forward for us
tonight, and that was wliat t
·
was looking for."
Meigs ( 10-5) evened its
Ohio Division mark at 3-3,
and remained two games
back of league co-leaders
County
and
Vinton
Alexander.
Wolfe is still optimistic
about his team's shot of winning the league.
"All (league) games are
big games, here especiallY·. I
still think we can win out,
we have to believe that anyway."
Meigs plays host to the
Vikings Friday in a mustwin
situation if the
Marauders want to win or
share the crown.

m
15·1

13·4
13-5
8-10
8-9
4' 12

0-13

TVC

l
l

(.

••

Ohio Division
Team
TVC
Belpre
7-1
Alexander
6-3
Vinton County
5-4
Meigs
4-4
Nelsonville-York
2-6
Wellston
1-7
Hocking Division
IYQ
I®!!l
Trimble
9-0
6-3
Eastern
5-4
Southern
5-4
Waterford
Federal Hocking
1-7
0-8
Miller

ovc
QYS;_

I®!!l
Fairland
Chesapeake
South Point
.Rock Hill
River Valley
Coal Grove

6-1
4-3
4-3
3-4
2-5
1-6

A!.!.
12-6
13-4
5·13
9·8
2-13
1·12

ALL
16·1
11-5
13·4
9-8
4·12
3·13
AJ.l.
10-6
8·9
6·10
5·10
3·12

9·7
AU.
t6-1
12·5

8·5
9-6
2-16

Prep schedule

\

Today's aamas
Bo)rs Baakslball

Wahama at River Valley

'
'

Wreettlng
Alver Valley at. Ohio Valley Conference

I

Rates of Taxation 2003

meet (at Fairland)

In pursuance Of law. I, Howard E. Frank. Treasurer of Meigs County, Ohio. in compliance with Revised Cad&amp; No. 323 .08 of State al Oh io. do hereby
give notice at the Rates of TaMation for the TaM Year of 2003. Rates eKpressed In dollars and cents of each ona thousomd dollars ia11 valuation.

.

'

':"~.

I

~ -·~
.

Sweetheart Dance
Friday, February 13, 2004
Rutland Civic Center
8:00 p.m. - 12:00 Midnight

OJ
$15.00 per person
$25.00 per couple
B.Y.O.B. Snacks provided
limbo, Twist, ana Hullcl-HOO!l
Contest with Prizes!

Be Smart!
Slgn up for lhl1 DM!gn!!lld Drtm
Program: Be lhl1 driwr for yoi,r friends,
and raca1ve your soft drinks frHI
Sponsored by: Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce K92 FM Pepsi Distributing

For more Info call 992-5005

t I)

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HOW~RO

-

E. FRANK. Meigs County Treasurer

..
..

Redwomen
beat
Wilberforce
in thriller
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

the earlier meeting, but
was held to five through
three quarters Tuesday.
Meigs jumped out to a I04 lqd in the first quarter
before a 12-0 Well ston run
gave it· a lead midway
through . The Marauders

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
· Redwomcn basketball team
beat the Wilberforce Lady
Bulldogs, !15-82, Tuesday
night at the Newt Oliver
Arena, in a thriller that ended
with a missed three-pointer at
the buzzer by Wilberforce
that would have ti ed the
game.
Rio Grande (17-8. 6-6
AMC South) took .advantage
of their 49 percent (33 ~of- 67)
shooting and Wilberforce's
19 turnovers to gain its' 17th
victory of the season. Rio
took an early 14-4 lead in the
games' first minutes as the
contest looked like it may be
over before it started.
Wilberforce fought back
behind the strong play of
Ja,min Jones, who helped her
team take 41 -40 lead into the
half.
Both teams used streaks in
the first half, Wilberforce
went 011 a 10-0 run and Rio
ran off II unanswered points,
but neither team could pull
away. The Redwomen came
out in the second haff and
used both the inside and outside game to take control.
' Titlanie Hager led the
Redwomen with 18 points
and six rebounds. Angel
Allen tallied 15 points and
pulled down five boards and
Lauren Fox scored all of her
13 points in the second half.
Allen scored six early points
· in helping the Redwomen to
the double-digit lead.
Down by three in the last
few seconds the Lady
Bulldogs went to Shamarah
Thomas who missed the last
second desperation three.
the
Thomas
torched
Redwmnen for 23 points.

Please see Meigs, Bl

Please see Rio, Bl

Meigs junior Carl Wolfe , Jr. (14) steals the ball away from Well ston IJig man Ryan Miller (1i)
during the first quarter of Tuesday's TVC·Ohio showdown. Meigs defeated Wellston , 74-63.
(Brad Sherman)
"Vinton County, they 're
the favorite now, I don' t care
what anybody says," Wolfe
stated . "'Vinton County has
already been to Well ston,
Alexander and they've
already been to Belpre."
Well ston (5-1 t ), now
losers of seven straight, was
mathematically eliminated

.

from the title chase after
dropping to 2-5. The loss
also ensures the defending
league champion s of a losing regular season.
Brant Derrow led the
Rocket scoring attack with
l 8 markers and David
Herman scored I2.
Herman scored 26 points

Bv BuTCH CooPER

Frlday'a games

BCOOPER@MYDIIILYTRIBUNE.COM

Boya Baaketball
Gallia Academy at dackson

. "'1
RIO GRANDE - For the second
.
&amp;\
time in six days, Rio Grande and
Wilberforce met on the hardwood.
And, for the second time in six
days, the results were the same as the n't the starters, but the "second pia- .
Redmen, No. 15 in the latest .NAIA' toon" which made up of Kris Wilson ,
Division II ratings, used some solid Cedric Hornbuckle, Sean Plummer,
bench play· to down the Bulldogs Dawayne Mclntqsh and Jeromy
Tuesday, 82-67.
D" h
For the Redmen, ·it is their fifth
~~T~~n~as our better group," ·said
straight win and their ninth win in
Th
· fi
d'd
their last tO outings. It's also Rio's Thomas.
e startmg tve 1 not
sixth consecutive home win. _.
play as well as the second five we put
• ''They're a team '(Wilberforce), to . in . They came in and gave us great
be honest 'with you, we needed to lift and maybe that will hurt the
sweep," said Rio Grande head coach starters' pride a .little bit. Maybe they
Earl· Thomas. ~·They're at the bottom wilt come back and juice it up.':
of the conference and if you're going
The second group combined for 58
to have any chance at winning this points as Wilson led all Rio scorers
thing (the American Mideast with 2·1 points and Hornbuckle added
Conference South Division), you've 20. Wilson and Hornbuckle each had
goattt.?, .beat those peo. pl.e you should four
3-point goals, all of
be
Hornbuckle's coming in the first half.
"Cedric's shooting the ball better,''
Thomas and the Redmen executed
some platooning as two main groups said Thomas. "He went through a litof players were put on the court at tie slump for a while and it kind of
different times.
.
got to his head a little bit. He's shootThe strongest of these groups was- · ing the ball well now and Kris Wilson

Fairland at 'River Valley

•·

South Gallia vs. OVCS (at Rio Grande}
Vinton County at Meigs
Trimble at Southern
Point Pleasant at Athens
Wahama at Grace Christian

Saturday'• games
Boyo Baoketball
Wheelersburg at GaiUa Academy
South Gallia at Cross Lanes Christian
Gt~o Booketball
River Valley at Eastern

Wreotllng
meet (at Marietta)

........ 1

Please see Whips, Bl

111

Rio's 'second platoon' gets the job done

Gallla Academy, Point Pleasant at SEOAL.

R"llltate tax• wtllch have Mit bMn paid at the CleM of each collect\00 ca rry a penalty of ten per~nl. Tall&amp;&amp; may be paid at the offk;41 ol the County
Ttetlurtr or by mill. Pll... bring y®r Ia at tax recetpc; ancl lf you pay by mall, be su ra to tocate your property by ta.ing diatrlcland enclose ~tamped
Mlf·addre.. envelopt. AJwayt examine your tax receipt to aee thalli eovera all your property. Oftlce houl'! are 8:30 a.m. I(! 4:00p.m. Monday throu7J
Friday· Cloud on Saturday. F.aiiUfa to receive ta• at1tementa does not avoi(j any penally, interest Of chafijf!lncorred tor such delay. Ohio Revised
Code 323.13. Ching dltl March tQ, 2004.
.
.

'

Thul'tiday'a gam111
Glrlo Baokotball
Jackson at Gellis Academy
Chesapeake at River Valley
Meigs at Wellston
Trimble at Eastern
Southern at Federal Hocking
Athens at Point Pleasant
Wahilma a·t Parkersburg Catholic

GJ~a Baakolball
South Gellis vs. OVCS (at Rio Grande)

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one of his best games with II points
and a good tloor game. Derek Baum
added four and Justin Browning two .
One key to the game was Eastern's
sharp shooting. a 25-49 clip for a hot
52 percent. Defensive pressure. combined with overall aggressivene ss
also proved to be valuable aitributes.
The Eagle defense has held opponents to under 50 points on the average. and with Southern 's 50 that average remained intact.
Southern was led by their go-to
man Craig Randolph who had a
game-high 25 point s. Randolph
scored all but nine of Southern's 27
second half points. Jake Nease added
eight, Josh Smith six. Derek Teaford

BY BRAD SHERMAN

Girls basketball
I®!!l
Warren
Jackson
Marietta
Logan
Gallia Academy
'Athens
Point Pleasant

men Robert Cross
and Cody Dill much
simpler. Both scored
six apiece in the third
frame in leading the
Eagle s· inside game
with 14 and ·12
points respectively.
Additionally, Dill
earned a double-double with 10 caroms
and had six blocks,
Randolph
while Cross had six
rebounds.
With a team-high 15, Eastern 's
Alex Simpson juiced the ·nets from
the outside while teaming with Grubb
to find their talented post men inside .
Grubb notched nine points and had
three assists, while Adam Dillard had

BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM.

AJ.l.
7·5
6·6
6·7
2·10
2·11

South Gallia
Hannan
Ohio Valley Christian
Wahama
Oak Hill

from a close 26-23
tally at the half
Eastern's 26-point
harvest in the third
period involved the
entire Eagle offense,
as defensive pressure 'transformed
into offense in the
transition . In layman's terms, Eastern
Simpson
got the job done on
both ends of the
floor. The 26-13 jolt right after halftime turned a close encounter into a
second half sleeper.
Although the Southern post men
held their own «;;uring the first half, an
inside-outside game spread the tloor,
making the work for the Eastern big

Marauders run down Rockets

Others ·

Others
I®!!l
Oak Hill
Wahama
Ohio Valley Christian
}lannan
'South Gallia

·be ·today • 992-2155

r: .;..

Illlim
Chesapeake
Rock Hill
River Valley
South Point
Fairland
Coal Gmve

12-3
12-3
10·5
9·5
5·11
3·11

7-0
6-1
3·3
2-4
2-5 .
0-7

.

BY Scon WoLFE '

TVC

Wednesday, February 4

S~ntinel

Meigs junior
high girls sweep
Southern
ROCKSPRINGS The
Meigs eil!hth grade girls basketOOll
team derearect Southern, 35-18.
· Britt~hy Preas! and .Kelsey
Fife led the Marauders with
eight poi11ts each . ·
Meigs also won the seventh
grode game, 37- 13, 1!5.Carie Wolfe
SCOIW l l points for the Marauderi;,
- -·-..

---~--

'
-....,._

--

is shooting the ball much better from
the three.
"Overall , we're shooting much better from the perimeter."
Aiso fm the Redmen (16-7. 10-2
AMC South),- Piummer scored 13
points and Wil son had six assists.
Rio Grande was set" to blow the
game completely out of the water in
the first half, and easily could've
done so if it wasn't for .the play of
Wilberforce's Helie White.
White, who is second in the AMC
in scoring with 20.17 points per game
going into Tuesday's conlest, was
held to just two points j n these two
team's previous
meeting
at
Wilberforce; a 58-52 Rie win .
On Tuesday. White helped keep the
Bulldogs in the .game wiih 19 points
in the opening halL He finished with
25 point s for Wilberforce (4-21, 212).
"We did not do a very good job on
(White),'' said Thom&lt;\S. "We hold
him to two points at their place, he
doe;11 't have a fi eld goal. and I think
that must have made him mad . He
came out tonight a lot more aggressive, looking to score.
.

.

-------~--·"

"He 's an awfully good player."
Rio Granee , down 6-3 early
brought in the "second platoon" and
used a 13-0 run with the help of 3pointers by Wil son and Hornbuckle
to take a 10-point advantage.
"We went fresh ·:With the second
platoon and Kris Wilson started pushing the ball up and down the floor a
little hit and we got some things in
transition.'' said Thomas. "We were a
little sounder defensively and were
able to go on a run.''
That lead easily held later in the
half as the Redman jumped on top
32-13 and were ready to put the
Bulldogs out of action .
White. though, nailed three straight
3-poi'nters and had 13 points in the
last 5:31 of the first half. but the
Redmen still led 44-3.0 at the break.
· tn the opening moments of the sec- .
ond half. a p ~ ir of 3-pointers by
Wilberforce's Phillip Grimes made it
a 10-point game. and the Bulldogs
. got as close as nine points. But, the
Red men used some strong secondhalf free . throw shooting, going 17;

···--

· Please see Pletoon, 'Bl
_I -

--

�•

Wednesday, February 4.

j:Prep scoreboard·
•

Ea.tem 67, Southern 50

:Eastern

12

14 26

15 -

67

• Southern
15 8 14 13 50
1
EASTERN - Justin Browmng 0 2·2 2,

' Derek Baum 12 0-0 4 Nathan Lee Gruob
3 2· 2 9, Alex Srmpson 5 4-6 15, Adam
Dillard 3 4-6 1 1 Alex McGrath D 0-0 0

• Chns Carroll 0 ~ 0, C.hns Myers 0 0·2 0,
t Derek Roush o 0 2 0 Robert Cross 6 2-2
' 14, Cody Dol16 ().() 12 TOTALS- 25 14-

! 22 67
:

SOUTHERN -

Derek Teaford 2 0-() 5

• Aaron Sellers o 0-2 a, Cra1g Randolph 8 6: 6 25, Chr1s Tucker 0 0-0 0, Jeremy Yeauger
. 0 0-0 0 Tyler Roberts 1 0-0 2 Wes
Burrows 2 0-0 4, Josh Sm1th 3 0-0 6, Da.nn
Teaford 0 0-0 0, Jake Nease 3 2 2 8
TOTALS- 19 8·10 50

3-pomt goals - Eastern 3 (Grubb
Simpson, D1llard) SOuthern 4 (Randolph
:3 De Teaford)

Meigs
.. Wellston

74, Wellston 63

18 10 16

i9 -

63

: Me1gs
17 16 24 17 74
WELLSTON {5·11 2·5)- Bra nt Derrow
8 2 2 18 Ryan Miller 3 3-4 9, J 8 K1r1g 2 01 4, Dav1d Herman 5 t -2 12 Steven
Johnson 2 1-2 6 Jordan Lackey 2 0-0 6
• Steve G1Uman 0 0-0 0, Sean Rade r 3 0-0 8
· TOTALS- ~5 7·11 63
• MEIGS (IQ-5. 3·3)- Jon Bobb 3 58 12
: Jerem~ Blackston 0 0-0 0, Cart Wol le 5 1·
• 3 12 Ertc Van Meter 0 0 0 0 Dave Boyd 0
• 0-0 0, , Corey Woods 2 2-2 6 Ty Ault 4 4·5
• 14 Adam Snowden o 0-0 0 Dakota DeWitt
. 10 4-5 24 Ryan Hannan 2 1·2 6 TOTALS
- 26 17-25 74
3-po•nt goals - W 6 (lackey 2, Rader 2
Johnson, H erman) Me1gs 5 (Aul! 2 Bobb
• Wolfe, Hannan)
Ohio High School Boys Basko1bal1
TUesday 's Reaults
Akr Buchtel 78 Akr Central-Hewer 55
Akr Coventry 50 E Can 40
Akr Firestone 62 Akr Gart1eld 43
Akr Hoban 65. Barberton 54, 20T
Akr Kenmore 58 Akr Ellet 50
Akr N 75 Akr E 59
Albany AISJcander 64, Nelsonville-York 53
• Alliance Marhngton 55 , Ravenna 45
Ashta~ula Lakeside 58
Ashtabul a
Edgewood 51
Ashtabula Sts John B. Paul 58 Grand
RIVer 55
Athens 67, Chllltcothe 61 20T
Avon 73 Sheff1eld Brookside 44
Bay VIllage Bay 80 N R1dgev111e 60
Beaver EasternCS8, Latham Western 67
Beavercreek 56, Kenerrng Fatrmont 27
Beverly Ft
Frye 59 , Sarahsville
Shenandoah 49
Gahanna Cols
Bloom-Carroll 53
Acadtmy52
Bluffton 45, Pandora-Gtlboa 41
Bristolville Bnstot 80 lordstown 38
Brooklyn 69, Rocky R1ver Lutheran W 63
Byesv1Ue Meadowbrook 62 Caldwell 60
Can McKinley 75 Massillon Washington 57
Can S 61-, Umontown Lake 52
Canfield 56, Alliance 49
Carey 42, McComb 41
Carollton 55, Gnadenhutten lndlBn
Valley 52
Centerville 70 Greenville 41
Chagnn Falls 71, Chardon 62
Chesapeake 54, Coal Grove Dawson
Bryant 39
_ C1n Clark Montessori 65 Middletown
" Chnstlan 48
Ctn Landmark Trmlty 58, Ctn Countr~
Day 51
Cin LaSalle 71 St Bernard Roger
Bacon 52
Cin Shrader Pa1de1a 56 Cln Harmony
Commun tty 40
Cln Western Hills 71 , Ctn Winton
Woods 67
.
Cle Benedictme 66. Chagrin Falls
Kenston 59
Cle Hts Lutheran E 79. Cornerstone 44
Cle VASJ 67 Cle Max Hayes 33
Clermont NE 55 Norwood 45
Cols A1ncentnc 56, Cots Bnggs 48, OT
Cots Brookhaven 61 Cols Beechcroft
47
Cots Independence 77 Cots Manon
Franklin 66
Cots Linden 65, Cots E 52
Cots M1fllln 99, Cots Whetstone 65
Cots Northland 72 Cols Centenmal 36
Co~ W 75. Cols S 39
Cots Walnut R1dge 57 Cots Eastmoor
46
Conneaut 60 Patnesvdle Harvey 53
Cormng Mtller 56 Waterford 41
Cortland Maplewood 57, Andover
Pyffiatunlng Valley 33
Covmgton 80, Lewistown Tn-county N
40
CrooksVIlle 74 Zanesville Maysv•lle 64
OT
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 71 , Navarre
Fatrless 43
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh JesUit 46 Stow
44
Day Belmont 60 C1n Hughes 58
Day Carroll 66 Day Stebbins 64
Day Chamlnade-Jullenne 69, Cm
McNicholas 57
Defiance 60 Napoleon 53
Delphos Jefferson 69, Rockford Parkway
53
Dresden Tri-Valley 56
Th ornv111e
Sher1dan 43
E Cle Shaw 89, Warrensville 73
E L1verpool 48, Sharon {Pa ) 38
Edon 68, Hamilton (lnd) 48
Elyna 71, Verm1hon 46
Ene {Pa ) Mc0owell64 Youngs Ursuline
37
Evangel
Chnst1an
58,
Delaware
Christtan 51
Fa1rfletd Chr1Bt1an 53 Ltck•ng County
Chnstian 52
Fa1rlawn BS, Houston so
Fayetteville 68, Blanchester 45
FeliCity 50, Williamsburg 41
Ft Jennmgs 56 Mtller Ctty 47
Gahanna 59 Westerville N 49
Garlield HIS 58 Euclid 50
Garfield Hts Tnn1ty 59, Chardon NOCL
54
Gates Mills Gilmour 83, Cuyahoga Hts
48
Geneva 50 Jefferson 35
Gibsonburg 61 , Northwood 42

,

Glouster Trimble 65 Stewart Federal
Hocking 47
Goshen 75 New AK:hmond 54
.Green 76 Macedon•a Nordo n~t: 52
Grove C!ly 50, Upper Arlington 3B
Groveport 86, Manon Hardmg 55
Hamler Patrick Henry 57 Bryan 42
Hanoverton Untied 54 Columbtana 49
Hilliard Darby 61, Lancaster 5 1
Hubbard 61 Belo11 W Branth 51
Huber Hts Wayne 56 S1dney 51
Hudson 63, Youngs Aust•ntown F•tch 54
Hunllng Valley Untvers•ty 54 Mentor
Lake Cath 52
Independence 87 Columbia 64
Jamesto wn
Greenev1ew
60
Mechamcsburg 36
Johnstown-Monroe 67, Granvtlle 57
Kent Rooseve lt 59 Man tua Crestwood
55
Kenenng Alter 64 Hamilton Badin 46
K1dron Cent Chr 55 Jeromesvtlle
Hillsdale 40
K1rttand 58, Orwell Grand Valley 42
LaGrange Keystone 62 M1dv1ew 49
lancaster Ftsher Calh 45 Cols Tree ol
Life 38
Lebanon 69, Fa1rborn 56
Lima Bath 48 Lafayette Allen E 47
Ltsbon 59, E Palestme 41
Lora1n Clearv•ew 56 Oberlin F~reland s

54
"Loram Southvtew 64 Elyna Cath 54
LoUisville 69 Can GtenOak 66 •
Lou•svllle Aqumas 65 Cle Cent Cath
59
Lucasv1lle Valley 72 Waverly 38
Ly nchb urg -C I~y 49 Leesburg Fau11eld
40
Magnol•a Sandy Valley 80, Malvern 35
Ma ss tllon
Tuslaw
55
Zoarville
Tuscarawas Valley 36
McArthur Vmton County 67 Belpre 53
McDonald 64, N l1ma S Range 34
Mentor Chr 49, Fatth Chr 44
Meta mora Evergreen 49, Tol Emmanuel
BaptiSt 42
Mtddletown Fenwtek 75 Franlc hn 57
Mtllord Center Fa trbanks 72 Manon
Cath 40
Mmtord 84 Oak H1ll 27
Mogadore 60, Dalton 50
Mogadore Chr 62, Cle Hentage 47
Mowrystown White Oak 62 Manchester
53
Mt Orab Western Brown 64 Cm Glen
Este 38
Mt Vernon Academy 62, Madtson
Chrtsllan 48
N Jackson Jackson-Milton 66, Mineral
Rodge 50
New Concord John Glenn 66 New
Le)(tngton 58
New Knoxville 69, Jackson Center 59
New Middletown Spnng 47 Lowellvtlle
37
• Newark 46, Grove City Cent Crossmg
32
Newark Licking Valley 69, Pataskala
Watkins Memor~al 60
Newbury 7 4, Bloomfield 62
Newcomerstown
57
Bowerston
Conotton Valley 54
Oberlm 70, Wellington 61
Ottawa-Glandorf 50, L1ma Cent Cath 42
Q)(IOrciTalawanda 68, Lemon-Monroe 58
Pamesville Atvers1de 59, Maple Hts 53
Parkersburg (W Va ) S 81 Marietta 60
Plckeri 11gton Cent 62. Dublin Coffman
48
Pickerington N 70 Whitehall-Yearling 65
Pomeroy Meigs 74 Wellston 63
Portsmouth Clay 56, New Boston
Glenwood 52
Portsmouth Sctotovtlle 66. Franklm
Furnace Green 63
Ravenna SE 76, Atwater Waterloo 67,
OT
Reedsville Eastern 67, Racme Southern
50
"
Richmond Hts 1!7, Beachwood 69
R•dgevtlle Chnsttan 46 Xema Nazarene
35
Rossford 83, Millbury Lake 46
S Charleston SE 55, Cedarv1lle 34
S Point 79 ProctorVIlle Fa1rland 32
S Webster 58, ~ortsmouth W 42
Salem 68 Slrut ers 58
Salineville Sout ern 85, Leetonia 32
Seaman N Adams 59, R1pley 43
Sebring 56 Columbiana Crestview 42
Solon 53, Chesterland W Geauga 45
Southmgton Chalker 62, Kmsman
Badger42
Spring Cath Cent 63, N 1 Lewisburg
Tnad 49
Spnng Emmanuel Chnsllan 75, Spnng
Valley 47
Spnng NE 62, W Liberty Salem 45
Spnng S 80, Trotwood-Mad1son 68
Sprtng Sha"" AS 71 St Pans Graham 56
Springboro 6l. Mlamtsburg 38
Strasburg-Frinkhn 54, AtMmiJin 53
Sugarcreek Garaway 37 Tuscarawas
Cent Cath 23
Tal St Francts 64. Fremont Ross 50
Torah
Academy
66
Muskmgum
Christian 54
Troy 59 Spring N 54
Troy Chnst1an 73, M1am1Valley 49
TwinSburg 61 Copley 50
Vandalta Butler 45, Clayto n Northmont
38
W Jefferson 54 Amanda·Ciearcreek 47
W Lafayette Ridgewood 43 Berlm
Htland 42
Wadsworth 69 Cuyahoga Falls 63
Warren Howland 61 Ntles McKmley 57
Wars aw A1ver V1ew 45 Uhnch sv1lle
Claymont 42
W•cklllle 65, Mayfteld 48
Xen1a 45 Ptqua 32
Yellow Spnngs 76 Stdney Lehman 56
Youngs Liberty 66 Warren Champ1on
44
Youngs Mooney 76, Hudson WAA 60
Youngs W1lson 67, Youngs Chrlst1an 44
Zanesville Rosecrans 56, Newark Cath 43
Zanesville W Musk1ngum 42, Ph1lo 22
Ohio High School Girls Basketball
1\Jeaday's Results
Akr Manchester 55, Akr Spnng 45
Archbold 66, Petbsv111e 29
Artmgton 48 Rtdgeway Rtdgemont 29
• Bellevue 60 Huron 52
Bexley 59 Healh 25
81oom-Carroll44 Cols Hamtlton Twp 33
Botk1ns 50 Coldwater 49

Platoon
from Page 81
for-20 from the chanty stnpe to keep the
Bulldogs from getting any closer
The Redmen fmi shed 81 percent (22·for27) from the foul line.
The Redmen also easily won the battle
under the boards with 53 rebounds to

Meigs
from Page 81
closed with a run of their own, however, scor·
in~ seven of the final nine points to pull to
Within a single point.
Sean Rader was the only offense for
Wellston in the second, as the jumor swing- ·
man scored his teams only three field goals.
He finished the game with eight points, all
- within 'the.first three minute.s of the second.
After Wellston claimed its largest lead at
26·19, M~1gs finished off the half with a 16·2
run. A DeW1tt score m the paint knotted the
game for a fimll time at 28 ap1ece, then a
Bobb 3-pointer from the right wing gave h1s
J

The Daily Sentinel • Page 82

www .mydailysentinel.corn

2004

Bowling Green 48 Holland Spnng 35
Brookvtlle 51, Germantown Valley V1ew
41
Can McKmley 45, Mass•llon Perry 35
Canal
Wtnchester
48
AmandaCiearcreek 36
Chillicothe 67 Greenl•eld McCiatn 44
Chtllteothe Umoto 66 Ptketon 49
Ch illicothe Zane Trace 39, Chillicothe
Huntington Ross 36
Cln Clark Montesson 56 Ctn Western
Hills 32
O n Hughes 60, Ctn WOOdward 9
C1n lndtan Htll 52 N Bend Taylor 44
On Madetra 41 Aeadmg 29
Ctn Manemonl 55 Cm Dee r Park 36
On McAule'l 55, Cm Ursultne 48
Ctn Mt Notre Dame 79 Ctn St Urs ula
50
•
C1n Oak Hill S 52 Ctn Cole ratn 42
Cm Prtnceton 77 W Chester Lakota W
60
Cln Sycamore 50, Hamtlton 44
Cm Turpin 48 C1 n Bethel-Tate 37
C1n Walnut Htlls 47, Ctn Seven H11is 44
Cm Wyomtng 58 Ctn F1n neytown 29
Ct rclev•lle Logan Elm 54 Ashv1lle Teays
Val ley 35
Cle E Tec.h 53 Cle Joh n Mar shall 42
Cols Afrtcentr1c 68 Cols Bnggs 53
Cots Beechcroft 57 Cots Brookhaven
56
Cots Eastmoor 61 Cols Walnut Atdge
42
Co ts Harvest Prep 43 F1sher Cathohc
32
Cots Independence 85 Cots Manon
Franklm 51
Cots Linden 65 Cots E 62 20T
Cols M1ffl1n 64 Cols Whetstone 27
Cots W 67 Cols S 62
Gory-Rawson 49 Ada 31
Day Col While 57 Day Belmont 35
Day Dunba r 75 Cm Taft 56
Delaware Chusttan 63 Maranatha
Ch11shan 46
Delphos Jefferson 52 Columbus Grove
41
Fa1r11eld Unton 45 C~rc levt l le 36
Fostona 76 Elmore Woodmore 52
Gahanna 71 Wester vtlle N 49
Galloway Northland 25 Cots Centenn1al
24
Grandview 55 Sugar Grove Berne
Un1on 54 OT
Granville Chr1st1an 50 V1tlage Academy
34
Hamilton Badtn 43 Ctn Purcell Manan
24
Hebron Lakewood 53. Gahanna Cots
Academy 52
Hilliard Darby 56 Lancaster 30
Hudson WRA 60 Andrews 41
Kal1da 59 Spencerville 41
Kansas Lakota 45, Old Fort 38
Kirtland 32, Gates Mills Hawken 30
Liberty Center 49, Delta 31
Lodi Cloverleaf 50, Copley 36
Mad1son 53, Newbury 50
Marion Cath 60, Uberty Chnst1an 34
Marion F'leasant 58 Cots School fo r
Girls 34
Massillon Jackson 57. Uniontown Lake 4t
Maumee 43, Sylvama Southvtew 38
McGuffey Upper Scioto Valley 56
Fmdlay L1berty·Ben1on 54, OT
Mentor 71 , Cle VASJ 60
Mercy 48, Seton 40
Middletown 36, Fairfield 35
Middletown Chnst1an 34, R1dgevllle
Christian 31
M1llord 36. Liberty Twp lakota E 31
Millersport 68, liberty Umon 55
Mtnster 43. Ft Loramie 38
Mogadore 62, Aurora 48
Morral Ridgedale 51 , N Rob1nson Col
Crawlord 42
Mt Vernon 44, Lex•ngton 39
Mt Vernon Academy 33, Madtson
Christian 24
N Can Hoover 50, Can GlenOak 38
New Albany 75, Whitehall· Yearling 17
New Madison Tri· VIUage 56, Ealon 35
New Philadelphia 44, Cambndge 43
Newa rk 46 Grove City Cent Crossmg
44, OT
Newark Cath 64, Summ1t StatiOn Ltckmg
Hts 34
Newark Ltckmg Valley 55 Granville 49
Norton 64, Tallmadge 38
Norwalk St Paul 60 Fostoria St
Wendelln 32
Ottov111e 63, Elida 38
Pau lding 66 Sherwood Fairview 27
Perrysburg 67, White house Anthony
Wayne 42
Ptekenngton Cent 46 Dublin Coffman

Wednesday, February 4, 2004

from Page 81
Wilberforce (8- 13, 3-9 AMC South) was
led by Kamsha Coward·s 25 points. Coward
hit three crucial trifectas in the game to keep
the Lady Bulldogs in contention for the win.
Jones added 16 points, handed out e1ght
ass1sts ;md hauled down six rebounds
R1o Grande sweeps the season w1th

CLASSIFIED

from Page 81
live, Wes Burrows four, and Tyler Roberts
two.
The first half was a dogfighl, highlighted
by ti ght defense from both sides. The game
was tied on four different occasions, but
Southern won the first battle 15- 12 after
Randolph broke a 12· 12 deadlock With a
three pomter gomg down the stretch.
In the early goi ng Southern 's Randolph
was complimented v.1th four points from
senior Josh Smith and junior Wes Burrows.
Desp1le drawmg personal attention from
Nathan Lee Grubb, Randolph also attmcted
double teams and took a phys1cal beatmg ofT
hand checks and good bang-bang defense on
his drives. Still Randolph scored seven
pomts.
Eastern "s big men each tossed m four
trom the high and low post, while Alex
S1mpson drilled a freet throw and three
pmnter fur lour pomts Simpson's trey tied
the game at 12- 12 betore Rdndolph countered on the ensmng possession
Big Jake Nease picked up the slack for
Southern in the second penod w1th s1x
pomts. Josh Smtth added a bucket and that
was it offensively for the Tornadoes.
Randolph was held scoreless and for a time
grabbed a breather on the SHS bench.
Likewise, the Southern defense had held
Grubb scoreless the first quarter
As Southern lapsed 1ts defense toward the
paint, the Alex Simpson feinted the three
and drove for two mside jumpers, while
Derek Baum and Grubb nailed long two
pomters. An Eastern push late in the second
frame gave the Eagles a spark that Caldwell
fueled with his halftime adjustments.
Eastern led 26-21 before Nease h1t a reverse
hook to make il26·23 at the half
Caldwell built a fire under the Eagle tail
feathers at the half and also dtagrammed an
offense that led to the Tornadoes( demise.
Eastern spread the floor, putu~g a shooter
on opposite corners, forcing Southern's
defense to commit to one side or the other.

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washer/dryet PallO Starl $385/Mo No
hook up 5250 month + Pets Lease Plus Secun ty
depo~1 1 Call (740)446 0974
DepoSII Reqwred Days
740 446-34fb
Eventngs
Beaut11u1 t bedroom cOllage
740 367 0502
nestled m 40 acres ol
woods N•ce s•llrng 10om lg
Ranch 38R New HMen
bath roo m
uttlrly
room Tw•n A1vers Tower IS accept
W Va Vtew photost1nlorma
$400/mo
plus
ulllitre s 1ng applicatiOns tor wa 111ng
11 on online www orvb com
614 1595 7773 or 800 798 ltst lor Hud subs•z.ed 1 br
code
1 11 503
or
call
ap&lt;.-~rtm e nt
ca ll 675-6679
4666
(304)882 -2770
EHO

Ouahty brtck build home 1r1
great
n eighborhood
Conv1enent to H olzets and
R1o Grande Spac1ous 3b r
21 /2 bath fea tur es updated
k•tch en w1lh !tie floo rs lamrly
room wrth f11ep lace ove rs•ze d 1 car garage Th •s Is
A Mys t See
$ t 20 000
(740)441 1237

20

•

Knowledge o f
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or agement
Sell
Shirley Spears 304- product and ab11ity to multi·
task
essent1al
Se nd
675-1429
Absolute Top Dollar U S
Resume to
S ilver
Gold
Cams
Kawasaki Suzuk•
Prool sets Dramonds Gold
Molorsports Center
Rmgs
U S Currency 4367 Stat e Route 160
ng
Com Shop
151
M T..S
Galt•polls Ohto 45631
lnlormatto nal
Second Avenue. Gallipolis
va1lable upon req uest 740
7 40 446-2842
41-1984
Make SO"'o sellmg Avon
L1m1te d
t1me
ONLY
(740)446-3356

Wilberforce's 26 Regg1e W1lliamson led R10
wnh etght boards, while Mcintosh and
Plummer each hauled down SIX W11liamson
also scored nme pomts
Gary Moore had e~ght rebounds and nine
points for the Bulldogs.
The Redmen w1ll go on the road for their
next two games, travelmg to Mt. Vernon
Nazare11e Thursday and Malone Saturday.
Rm Grande returns home Feb 10 agamst
Shawnee State.

\DH.R IISI'\iL ISH BRI \In 201'11.

Business Days Prior To
Publication

Co Dnvers &amp; 0/0P sl We
can get you home 90% of
the weekends' M ust be 23+
w/Ciass-A CDL 2 yrs exp
w/ 1 yr flatbed clean MVR
Les (800)826-3560 x 19

m BuY

Help Wanted

II~

All Display: 12 Noon 2

20

Moun 1 Hom.,

\II IU II\ 'IH"il

HlH Rl XI

10
llm •SHlot I&gt;
2 bedroom mobrle home n1
(rlKllll'
Mr ddleport 5275 00 per
month S275 00 deposrl 1
year lease No Pets
No 3 year old GE washer &amp;
calls
alt er
9 00
PM, dryer S200 Whirlpool se t
5150 Wh~r l poo l washer.
(740)9 92 5039
575 All white Call after
1980 ltberty homes 14x70
2 Bedroom mobile home m 6 OOpm (740\446 9066
38 0 1BA As Is appra1sal
Aacme area NO PET S
$8000
Must be moved
(740)992 5858
8 PC D•nntng Room set n.ce
J
Only askmg $4999 So!•d
str ucture Well msulated 2 Bedroom mob1le home 1n wood $800 Queen Brass
Debbie (74004 46 245 I
Racine $325 00 per month Bedroom set $500 Armcll(e
150
(304)675-4004
and $325 00 depo sit 1 yea•
2000 Oakwood mob1l e l o &lt;.-~ se No pets No ca ll s after (304}675 1315
home t4X80 3 bedroom 2
9 00 PM (740)992 5039
bath Total electrt c Askmg
Bt sse ll Camsler Carpet
$21 ,500 00 1740)992-9263 8C&lt;l Uti! UI rtver VICW tdCal for Scrubber Electnc Range
one or two people No pets Phone (304 )895 3796
3 bed room new ba throorn &amp; references (740 )44 1 Ot 81
112 bat h new furnace wrap
a round deck apphances N1ce 2 or 3 bedroom mobile Good Used Appliances
and
mclu ded some lurntlure home 1ncludcs water sewer Recondtltonect
Gu arant eed
Washers
ve ry good condt!ton 740 lrash no pet s sta rting at
Dryers
Ranges
and
992 5267 or (740)247 2113 SJOO per month
call
Aefngeralors Some star!, at
t740)992 2 167
$95 Skaggs Appl iances 76
70-72 mobile home 2 bdr 1
Vme St (740)446-7398
bath electrtc heat senmg
AI•AKI~I~.:VI"S
on 501C 200 lot ha~ one stor
Good washers &amp; drye•s S95
$15 000
bUi lding
age
&amp; up WasheL &amp; dryer sets
(7401742 4011
1 an d 2 bedroom apart $275 &amp;up Ranges S95 &amp;
ments
furni
shed
and
unfu
r
New 3 bedroom 2 bath Only
up Frost free Retn gerator
secu rr ly dcposll
down
and
only n1shed
$995
reqwed
no
pets 740 992- $125 8 up Couch &amp; cha1r
$ 194 36 per month Call
$100 Overs tutted Cha ir S
22
18
Kare na 740 385 767 1
$20 II. up Ntce lull s1ze bed
wrth boJC sp11ngs &amp; ma tt ress
Very clea n used 3 bed· 2 bedroom apartment $325
$75 Queen s1ze ma11ress &amp;
room/2 bath $9995 00 W1ll per rn011tl1 ~ I Ul:i depOSit
oorc spnngs $125 &amp; up Full
help w1th delivery Call N1kk1 HUO approved 740 992SIZe bo)( sprmgs &amp; mattress
0015
~74
0)928
·494
t
740-385·9948.
$ 150
2 OOdroom apt St At 160
St..aggs Apphances
ZERO MONEY DOWN
76 Vr ne Stree t
To qual ified buyers slop 111 past Holzer $4 75 mo
1740)446 7398
today and ct1eck w1th Erme (740)441-0t94
or Lynn
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
Coles Mob ti e Homes
BUDGET Mollohan Ca qJet 202 Ciarlo..
MENTS
AT
t 5266 U S 50 Ea~t
PRICE S AT JA~KSON Chape l Road Por ter Oh10
Athen s Oh to 4570 t
ESTATES, 52 Westwood (740)446 744 4 1 877-830
(740)592 1972
Dnve from 5344 to $442 9 t 62 Free Esl1m ates Easy
Wh ere Yo u Get You r
Wal k lo shop &amp; movres Call 11nanctng 90 dAys same as
Moneys Worth
740 446 2568
Equal cash V1sa1 Mas1e1 Ca1d
Dnve a little save alot
Hous1ng Oppo rtuntty
330
E\HMS
Hill SALE
CONVENIENTL'r' LOCAT· Tho m psons Appli ance .. &amp;
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE 1
Repat r 675-7388 For sale
a~Je~rtrn e nt ~
Ullt a Townh OJ.JSE&gt;
Spnnglteld
Arm s
auto111alt&lt;
•e cond ttiOn ed
Compact 4 5 w/2 e)(fra cl p and /or small h o u sfl~ FOR washers &amp; dryers f9111geret
cltp
$500 RE N I Call (7 40) 44 1 1111 Ia rs
McCormr ct..
gas and eloc h t~,;
lor appiiCOI IOn &amp; tnforiTIJIIOil ranges a11 cond11t0ners and
1304)675-5066
wrmger washers Wtll do
13&gt;0
Oeltghtlul 1 8. 2 OR un1!S
LOIS&lt;"&lt;
reparrs on ma1or brA nds tn
t\uu _.\(,1
near H ol1er CIA htgh ell•
shop or At your home
c•ency gAs furnaces 0Utct
1 6 acres woode d IIRI spot 1oc at1on , S359 to $485 Used Furnrture Store 130
t 0x 12 bUilding water sep- (740)446 2957
- - - Bulavtae P1ke Mattresses
tiC elec tnc already on land
For
Lease
Beautifully dresse•s
couches
$ 15000 (740)384 434 1
resto·ed unJurnrshed two bunkbeds recllne•s what
no ts Grave Mon um ents
For Sale 79 106 Acres bedroom Apa rtm en t ove r
1oo k1nQ lhe C1 ty Park and (740)44 6 4782 GallipoliS
Rrve r vtew productng 01 1 &amp;
A1ver All new appl1 ances 1 OH Hrs 10· 4 (M-S) Sunday
gas wells $ 125 000 304
by appomtrn en t
112
baths
$600/mo
529-7 106 after 5pm
Secur~ t y
deposrt
N1 ce level lot 90 x200 Aeletences requrred No
located at 201 Atrhn e Road pets Ca ll 740 446 2325 or
1n th e Porter area Pncecf at 740-446-4425
Bu.,
or
sell
R1ver1ne
$15 .000
Call (7'01446
Furmslled one bed room Apt Ant•ques 1124 Easl Mcun
45 t 4 or alter Spm call
clean no pets Musl be wtll· on SA 124 E Pomeroy, 740(740)44 6-3248
mg to gtve relerences 992 2526
Russ Moo re
N1ce mobtle home s1tos Phone (304)675-1386
owner
1WBtlable $ 11 5 per month
Grac1ous llvmg 1 and 2 bed
MISCtJ 1~\NEOliS'
Includes water sewer I rash
room apartments at Vtllage
MEKOl'-NiliSI: •
call ( 740)992 -2 16~
Manor
and
Rt verslde
Ap ar tments m Mrddleport
cash
grantl
2 s,ooo
~;:::;;:;:::, Fr om $295·$444 Call 740· GUARANTEED! All US
~
992-5064 Equal Housmg residents qualify• Money for
1410
HOUSio.S
Oppo rtw,IMS
btlls bus 1ness sc hoo l etc
I"OR R ENT
_:..:_ _ _ _ _ ___ Cali 1-900·363-5222 exl
New 4 room apl Kttchen
LA 2 BR bath No pets 637
2 bedroom hou se $300 plus. (7 40)367 7746 1740)367
ut1hlles Call (740)446 4313 7015 before Spm
1986 International D1esel
Dump Truck 4cyl Gas A1r
2 bedroom 1 balh stove New Haven 1 br furnished Compressor w/Jackhammer
refuge raJor
furn ished apt dep &amp; re i no pets Phone (304)895·3796
La undry room no pets rei · j7 40)992 0165
and
de postt
erences
Two 2 bedroo m apts tor rent 48 b1g screen TV excellenl
reqUired (740)992-518 1
1n Syracuse $200 deposit condttfo n ct~.ll (740)992·
2 SA water/trash pa1d no S3 30 per month rant 1ncll/Oe 6530
pels reterences &amp; depoSit water sewer &amp; tra sh su tl1 ·
reqUired near F'orter 388 - c1en1 mcome requ1red to D rum set- $265 e l ec l r~c and
qualify lor rent 740·378· aC'custlc gu1tars (740}256·
1100\
1102 as~ for Jr
61 11
14x60 ve1y clean ready to
move
mto
Furnrs hed
rncludt ng washer/dryer &amp;
storBge bUIIdmg S11 000
(740)388 0460

wv

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

llF \IH .I'\1· H

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion

AWESOME CAREER
FOR 2004
Postal PoSition s
$14 80-$36 00+/hr
Federal hire-full be nefits
Call 7 am 7 pm CST
1-&amp;00-651· 7024 Exl 2072.

Counter Sale s person needed for local etectrrc drstnbu HEll' WANTEn
tor Electncal background
L:f&gt;"l' AN1l
~
and good commumcat1on
FouNu
SS$ UP TO $529 WEEKLYI Skill s prelerred EOE Send
Matl1ng letters from home resu me to HR Department ,
3
Year
old
Germa n Easyt Any Hoursl Fuii/Part- P: 0 Box 6668 Huntin gton
Sh eppa rd
hght
brown
25773 6668
t• me No expenence necesAn swe rers
to
'Ba)(ter "
sary US Drgest 1-888·389
Ro ad
v1c1n11y
Portl and
1790 24 hOurs
Elderly Chnst1an lady (non(7 40)843 5281 Reward
smoker) reqwres live·ln help
•• GOV'T POSTAL JOBS'•
{hm1ted)
R oom lbo8rd
ANNOUNCEMENTSPS247
ollered Senous mqUines
Found Hu sky m1x dog G1ve 9 UP TO $54 481 YEAR
only 9am -9 pm (740)446descn piiOn when ca lhng NOW HIRING SELECT
0910
(7 40) 709·0302
AREAS
FREE
CAll ·
APPLICATION EXAMINA·
EMT's/Paramed1cs
TION INFORMATIO N FEDAmb ulance
Gallla
Found ladles gl asses found ERAL BENEFITS 1-$00- L11e
1n Iron! ot Maynards 0Utll 892·5549 EXT 92 7 DAY S county statiOn, IS currently
hmng Please apply wtth 1n
Shop on Jackson P1ke Call
3 dnvers wtth COL &amp; haz· (7 40)446-7930
. (740)441 -9060
mat call (740)985 3307

'

Marauders the lead for good.
Meigs outscored 11s guests 24-16 m. an
"extended" third quarter to build a comfortable lead. Wtth approximately four minutes
left 1n the stanza, the scoreboard shut" down,
resetting the score and time.
Uflaw are -of the actual time. officials put
5:30 back on the clock. But 11 made little difference . Meigs mamtained the advantage,
which swelled to and stayed at 15 for the
lion's share of the fourth quarter minutes.
Wellston tries to snap its recent losing
streak Friday when 11 plays host to Belpre.
Wellston did manage a win in the junior varsity contest, taki!Jg a 47-38 decision Josh
Ewmg paced the winners with 19 points while
En'c Van Meter scored 16 for Meigs.

G1\'1AWA\

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
£•~~
""Borders 53.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
SI .00 for large
•

• All ads must be prepaid•

.,

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r

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Jn Next Day's Papwr
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Frldav For Sundays Paper

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

29
PICkenngton N 53, Wooster 45
Pla1n C1ty Jonathan Alder 51, London
Mad1son Pla1ns 38
Preble Shawnee 68 , Lew1stown TnCounty N 33
R1chheld Revere 43, Medma H1ghl8nd 34
Atchmond Dale SE 51 Bambrtdge Patnt
Valley 43
Rocky R1ver Magnlf1cat 59 Cle St
Joseph 13
Sandusky St Marys 39. Monroevtlle 35
Shaker Hts Hathaway Brown 84, Cle St
Augustme 24
Shaker Hts Laure! 48, Akr Elms 30
Spring Emmanuel Chnsllan 49. Spring
Valley 44
Sylvanta Northvtew 87 Rossfo rd 17
Thomas Worthmgton 56, GroveportMadiSOn 49
Tal Maumee Valley 45 Be«svtlle 7
M uskmgum
Torah
Academy 29
Chnst1a n 22
Upper Sandusky 45, Sycamore Mohawk
36
Urbana 57 Belletontame Ben1am1n
Logan 49
Van Buren 65 Hamler Patnck Henry 59
Verm1 l1on 56 Sulltvan Black Alver 31
Wadsworth 78 Green 44
Washtngton C H Mlam1 Trace 44 Lees
Creek E Clinton 34
Wauseon 43 Defiance Ttnora 24
Waynesville 42, Spnng Greenan 31
Willard 43, Gal1on 28
Wil liamsport Westfall 41, Fra nkfort
Adena 49
Worlhtngton Chnst1an 49, Lew1s Center
Olentangy 41
Yo ungs
Boardman
84,
Youngs
Austintown-Fitch 28

\ll(e(:ove

""elgsl Gallla,

Although the strategy was effective . that
was not the lone diffe1ence m Eastern's suc·
cess.
Eastern's intensity level rm sed to the dan·
ger level. The danger was targeted toward
the Tornadoes While Eastern's intens1ty and
on-floor hustle made th1ng s happen ,
Southern was lacklu ster and nonchalant. For
two possessiOns. Southern kept pace but thai
security soon proved a falsehood Cross h1t
a field goal and a pair of free throws. then
Dillard hit a long three pomter for a 34-27
Eastern lead.
What may have been the nail in the coffin,
or at least a staggenng blow was a Grubb to
Cody D11l Ph1·Siamma-Jamma, lbnng the
house-down' dunk. The b1g t1me play
brought the Easte1 n crowd ah ve and desp1te
Randolph hlttmg three free throws alter get·
tmg fouled on a trey, 38-30, Southern never
recovered.
Southern's closest bid came on s1x straight
pomts from Randolph Grubb hit a three, Dill
hit two more 1nside goals, and Cross and
Simpson each hll a cot1ple fade -away
jumpers as Eastern went on a 8-0 run to end
the penod , the score 52-37.
Generally, a team can make a hnal run.
but Southern had nothing left to give the
Eagles. Eastern's intensity never wavered as
the Eagles raced to the 67 ·50 tnumph.
Southern hit 19-52 overall. hitting 15-32
two's, 4·20 three's, and 8·10 at the line.
Southern grabbed 21 rebounds (Nease s1x.
Smith 5), had four steals, II turnovers . four
ass1sts, and 18 fouls
Eastern h1t 25-49 overall, h1ttmg 22-38
two's, 3-11 three's, and 14-22 at the line.
Eastern grabbed 26 rebounds (Dill ten.
Cross 6), four steal s. ..Jl lile turnovers, mne
assists, and 14 fouls.
Southern won the reserve game 37·31
after trailing 28·19 at the end ot the third
quarter. Southern outscored Eastern 18-3 m
the fmal quarter. Southern was led by Buddy
Young with II pomts, while Joe
Nottmgham added seven, Dusti n Bnnage1
five, aod Brad Crouch f1ve. Eastern was led
by Chris Carroll with I0, Ju stin Browning
added eight, an_d Mark Guess five
Southern ho st Trimble Friday. wh1le
Eastern play Miller at Tuppers Plams.

Whips

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

tErtbune - Sentinel - l\e ster

Wilberforce and is able to stay ali ve in the
hunt for the final pl ayoff spot 1n the
American Mideast Conference Tournament,
which will be played at the end of the
month.
."
The Redwomen will next be 111 acuon on
the road agamst the Mount Verm,J n Nazarene
Lady Cougars on Thursday. Game time 1s
set for 5:30p.m.
Rio Grande defeated Mt. Vernon. 88-68.
Dec. 13th and will ann to sweep the season
senes

Rio

www.mydeilysentinel.com

© 2004 by NEA, Inc.

www.comlcs com

s

L

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H1~J'
,
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- - - · ', '180
NORRIS NORTHUP
DODGE
Full Time 5ales Person
LOC!&gt;,TION 252 UPPER
RIVER RD
GALLIPOLIS OHIO
UNLIMITED INCOME
POTENTIAL
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REOUIREO
Must poses good people
SkillS, ambt!IOUS attitude,
and th e destre to succeed.
Paid a~&amp;lgnmenls for figure and arl models far
taate1ul poetara .. Must be
18 or older. nationally
published photographer••
$500/day plu11 expensea .•
no experience necessary.•
see www.jaguared com ..
apply to: Ed Gardner, P.O.
Box 389, Charlaaton, WV
25322 or e-mail tygard..
nerOhotmall.com

WAN"IID

To Do

HOMfS
HJKSALE

Ba ste mendmg &amp; alterations 3 bedroo m 2 bath s on
43
For
tnfor matton
cal l
Mu
st
Sellll
Call
acres
(740)446-8602 If no answer
(740)709- 1166
leave a message
Bookkeepmg 1n my home 784 State Route 588 Cape
Cod askmg$135,000 3or 4
Phone (304)675·3304
25
bath s
bedrooms ,
Chtldca re State licens ed (740)441-0504
Focus help1ng low·mcome
lamtlles obtam childcare
W1th 8hrs sleep t1me lor
non-tradtttonal shltts as Q..M.
of your BIGHTS 740·2459242
Georges Portable Sawm1ll
don't haul your logs to the
mtiiJu st call 304-675· 1957
Take ca re of elderly 23
expene nce Call
years
Sharon at (740)992 9661 or
(740)99 2 2659 Loave mas
sage
Will do babystttmg •n my
home Full or part t1me Non
smoktng Call (740)367 0429

G:t

All reel estate advertising
In this newspaper Ia
11ubject to the Federal
Fair Houalng Act oi196B
which makes It Illegal to
advertise any
preference, limitation or
discrimination baaed on
ra ce, color religion, aex
familial status or national
origin, or any lnten11on to
make any such
preference. limitation or
discrimination "

Pa rt-hm e
pos1t1on,
' This newspaper will not
clencalfbackhoe ercpenen ce W1ll do light housekeepmg
knowingly accept
helpful located close to or mosc (304)675 7070
'
adver11eements for real
Metgs Co Fairground's area,
I I \ \ \I I \I
estat• which Is in
(7 40)992 9504
violation of the taw Our
readers are hereby
BU:.lNESS
Informed that all
PART-TIME TELLER- Local
0PI'OR1lJNfi'Y
dwellings advertised m
bank 1s acceptin g appll cathia n•wspaper are
ttons lor part time telle r and LOCAL VENDING ROUTE!
available on an equal
customer serv1ce poSitions
60 vending machines f
opportunity bases
Must exh1bll professiO nal·
excellent locations
•sm, attent1on to detatl and
all tor $10,995 800-234.
enJOy prov1d1ng exceptional
For lease or sal e n1ce 2
6982
customer serv1ce Prevtous
bedroom house $25 000 or
ercpenence 1n customl:lr
trade lo r huntm g land,
servt ce and cash handlmg fJHIO
(740)698· 7244
preferred Knowledge at lNG CO recommends lha
computers a plu s Must be , lvou do busmess w1th pea Fo r Sa le Hous"e on 2nd
le you kn ow and NOT to Ave bnck 1 112 story Call
avat Jabl e Man through Sat
Please sutlmlt resumes to ~end money through the (740)446 3478
The Da11y Sentinel PO Box !mall until you have tnve stif()RECLOSUREI
729 -34
Pomer oy
Oh10 klated the offenng.
4 bed 4 bath house only
45769 E 0 E
$9 900 for llsl1ngs call
~ PRonN&gt;IONAL
1·8i0·7 19·3001 SKI 1144
SERVIO:S
Pomeroy police department
ts seek1ng pa rt-lime dis·
Gallipolis
Close
to
TURNED OOWN ON
patcher, available for al l
town/hospit al 3BR 2BA
shifts contact Tammy Smtih SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!? VIew
photo s/mfo r mahon
No Fee Unless Wg Win I
Monday thru Friday 9am online www orvb com , code
1-668-582·3345
2pm, (740)992 6411 E 0 E
60 303 or call (740)446U I \ I I o..., I \II
3032
Truck Drivers needeEI for
Home &amp;ale jn Cttv 3 bed
vans &amp; llatbeds Long hau lFOR SALE
room 2 full bat hs n1ce &amp;
Ing 2 years exper ience ,
clean great location m C1ty
good driving record ~P&amp;'/
30% truck gross (740)388- 1600Sq ft 3yearoldAanch VInyl siding Pnce to sale
style home 2 1/2 car now Phone 17401446-9539
9162
garage, 3 bedroom large
SOiooLs
kltohen, dinning room living House 1or Sale
Sandhill
INsTRUC!lON
room, 2 112 baths, laundry Road 3 Bedro om 1 Bam
$8 5,000 (3Q.4)Sl5-2507
room , front porch, all custom

"'vALLe'-tpu~liSH

Hoilffil

Ga1ilpo1io caroor conoge oak' trlm doors and cabinets
(Careers Close To Home)
Ce ll Todayl 740-446-4367,
1-800-214-()452
wwtt1 galllpollacareeroollage com
Accre~Hed Membl!rf Accr lldltlng
Council lor Independent Colleget
ana Schools 12748

I

Now Htnng fu ll and part
lime
McC lure's
Mln:LuNEOOl
Restaurants In GallipoliS,
Mid dlep ort and Pomeroy
Firewood $2 5 00 pick-up
Apply
Monday
thru
load
(you
pick
up)
Saturday 10·1 1 am •
(7401992·9263

r70

All electrtc Very well layER:t
out, beaiJfilul Interior on ,
1/2 acres
1348 Prospect
Church Road Won 1 last
long a1 only S115.000 Cali
740-446-4514 0~ 740-446·
3248 after 5pm

Ntce two bedroom aparl
ments Large roo ms Fvlly
equ lped kitchen Central
healing &amp; cooling Washer 8
dryer hookup (304 )88 2
2523

2 br ·Ranch Style House has
a 24x30 detached garage,
30,;30 bam on 4 aq-es on
Carson Ad at Mason asking
$70,000 (304)773·6187

Older
4BR
15
bath
Pomeroy Ohio V •ew photos/Information· onlme
www,prvb.com code Bq603
or call (740)992·3650

mHREN"1

.

r
f5"'
s

'

�Wednesday, February 4, 2004

e

11 week old English Setter
JET
puppies. 1-lemale. 5-males.
AERATION MOTORS
: ; Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In 'Have papers, have had 1st
•Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1- &amp; 2nd shots. $300 each .
(740)256-1671
l~537·9528.
: !HEW AND USED STEEL AKC Min . pins.cher. male
; '"'Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar . blkltan. 2 112 yrs. old. $225
! ~ For

Concrete,
Ang le,
t!&lt;;hanne!. Flat Bar. Steel
~!Grating
For
Or8.ins.
· ,o·riveways &amp; Walkwitys. L&amp;L
:~Scrap Metals Open Monday,
1 ;Tuesday.
Wednesday &amp;
:.=Ffidey, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday, Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)44EH300

cash. Call (740)245·9497.
AKC Reg. Siberian Husky ·
pups 1 5 wks/otd 1/male
1/female gray/white w;th

blue/eyes

$200 (304)773-

5730

AKC regismred German
Shepherd. black &amp; tan, 6
. Solid wood butcher block wks. old. shots &amp; wormed,
· kltchen island with drawers (740)992-3972 al1er Spm.
&amp; shelves. 44x24. excellent
condition. S350; La-z-boy Cockapoo Puppies $225
oversize chair &amp; half with each cash, 2 shots &amp;
sleeper bed and storage wormed (740)596-2121
oMoman. excellent condition, (will meet)

;. - - - - -

$500, (740)992-5Da2

Fullblood Ronweiler pupWood fr. glass top coffee pies. to a good home. $50
table: 6' couch w/matching per pup, 3 mates . 5 females .
chair; Elec. sewing machine; (740)949-2108
27" Zenith color TV; 5' wide
X6
high
Hutch . Call Golden Retriever Puppies
(740)446-0971 .
AKC $225 eaCh cash first
shots &amp; wormed (740)596·
8UJWING
2121 (will meet)
SVPI'LIES
Pitt bull pups, 7 weeks. 2
• ·stock. brick. sewer pipes, male, 1 female . Mayfeild
: ~indows, lintels. etc. Claude bloodl ine. $100. 740-441Winters. Rio Grande , OH 1275 or 740-645-11 62.
· Call 740-245-5 121.
1 \lnl..,ll'l'lll ..,

r

•

•
•
•
•

E&lt;eellenl Pay
Mileage Reimbursement
Flexible Scheduling
One Weekend per Month

• One Holiday per Year

- Primarily Days
Application~

will be a..:ccptcd 9 a.m. - 3 p.m.

M ~ F m 1011 Viand ·srree t, Point Pleasant, WV
ur appointments can be sched ul ed on February
l31h and Fchruary 271h fro m 9:30a. m. · II :30
a.m. at uur MiddJcport locat ion by calling 3046 75-7404 or 1-866-992 -69 16. Applicants may

also contact .this numher fo r questions or to
arrang~ a spcl:ifil: tim~ to apply.

ALl'O&gt;
FOR SALE

r

01 Monte Carlo, $8,500; 00
Chevy Malibu. $3,900; 00
80od1eCNeon, $$33.499955: 9996
uilA\ entury,
,
;
Olds Achieve, $2,395; 97
ForO Probe. $2,200; 94
Probe, $1,800; 01 Cavalier;
99 ,cavalier, $2,900; 95
_Monte Carlo, $2,500; 96
Chevy Lumina, $2,000; 98
Ply Breeze, $2,500; 96
Grand Am, $2,000; 89
Cadillac, $800.
.
B&amp;O Auto Sales

R.B

BISSEll

Hauling
•Umestone

Siding • New Garages

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
•· &amp; Sunday
Doo..S Open 4:30
Early birds start

• Replacement

6:30

Windows • Roofing"

•Sind•Din

COMMEF\C IAL and

740·985·3564

FREE ESTIMATES

Last T hursday of
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
SFREE

BUILDERS InC.

Trucking

New Homes • Vinyl

RESIDENTIAL

740-992-7599

.P•IIII. IIIII

rl

L-VtO-IiiiAiiiltmiii
JS__
.I_
FORSALE

.

2 Chevy Celebrity Station
Wagons 87 &amp; 89 Both run,
one for parts $600 both
(304)773-5357
--------2002 Chrysler PT Cruiser
Limited. 25,000 miles, 5
speed, loaded. Needs painted. $6,500 080_(740)2561233.
--------86 Escor t. 4 dr., 4 cyl., auto,
new tires, fuel ·pump, brakes.
engine has been replaced.
s11so. 1740)742-401 1

r
~

dows and locks. AM/FM
cass .. tilt steering. cruise.
Runs great, good condition.
$2,000 090. 740-245-5295
or 740-339-0426.

Now Available -at T&amp;D Hydrauli cs
* Form Pro Tractors
20 Hp 2 Wh eel Drive
25 Hp 2 Wheel Drive

30

Each has full 1 year warranty on parts and labur.
Priced from .$.5,000 &amp; $13.000 w/optiom anilable.
Also Ntw. Haw kline Drushogs, hox hladts. grader
blades uti lily trailers. goosenecks. and mort'.
And... ~ Massey Ferguson TrotcloFs.
Coli

- ~ba

Beneficial Mortgage
·' Co. of Ohio
Plaintiff
VS

Terry N. Waugh, et al:
Defendants
~Case No. 03CV1 01
. I .

,,

•
&gt;

;

In pursuance of an
• Order of Sole In the
• above entitled action,
1 will offer lor sale at
· public auction, at the
Courthouse
In
Pomeroy, Ohio, In the
above named County,
o . the 2~_th . day of
March, 2004, at 10:00
a.m. , the following
described real estate,
towlt:
Situated In the
State of Ohio, County
of
Meigs
and
Township
of
Sallabury and baing
. further described as
follows:
Being In section

no. 8, town 2, range
13, and bounded and
deacrlbad as follows :
Beginning at a
point which Is 150
feel northeast of the
Pomeroy
Cheater-·
Pike Road, said point
Ji!lllng tha northeast
corner of a lot sold by
former grantors to
former grantees by
deed recorded In volume 120, page 111 ,
thence In a northeast•
trly dlractloll parallel
with the east line of
..cuon no. 8 nearby
90 felt; thence In a
waaterly
direction
100 feel ; thence In -a
- aouthweaterly direc-tion parallel with the
· nld eaat line of section no. 8 nlnet_y (90)
• ,_I; thence eaaterly
along the north line
of the 101 above mentioned, aa conveyed
-IIY deed recorded In
: ¥oJume 120, page
, 111,
to
former
: grantee~, one hundred (100) feel to the
: place of beginning.
, Alao, the following
d. .ctlbed real estate
eltuated
In
the
County of Meigs,
Slate of Ohio, and In
Sac. No. 8, township
no. 3, ran·g e no ..13, of

of said .sOction nq, 8,
one hundred flfly
(150) feet ; thence In a
westerly
direction

Public Nollce
Sheriff's Sale of
Real Estate
The State of Ohio,
Meigs County
American
General
Flnan~lal Servlce"s,
Inc. Plaintiff
vs.
Rosalie
A.
Raybum, et. al.

100 feet; thence In a , Defendabts.
southwesierly dlrec· ' Case No. 03CV087
lion parallel with the
In pursuance of an
east line of said sec·
Order of Sale In the
lion, 150 feet to the
above entitled action,
north side of the
l will oiler for sale at

Po~eroy
Chester public auction, at the
PikE' Road; thence In • Courthouse
In

Thence continuing

Commencing at an
Iron ·pin set lly this

survey a·t a fence corner, said fence corner
being

at

a 50 acre parcel of the
Grantor's land and

assumed to be located at the Southwest

corner of said section

East 200.00 feet lo an
Iron pin set by this

18;
Thence along the
South line of said 50
acre parcel of land
South 86 degrees 15

survey;

minutes 34 seconds

Thence North 89
·degree~ 26 minutes
38
seconds
East
926.99 - feet, passing
en Iron pin set by this
survey at 889.06 fe~t,
to the best boundary
of a 5.8 acre parcel of
the Grantor's land

East 986.29 feet to an
Iron pin set by this

North 03 degrees 40

minutes 26 seconds

survey and assumed
to be on the South
line of said Section

18;

North

East

Pass

3NT
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: "' A

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

From honor points
to suit lengths

Buns &amp; MmuRS
FOR SALE
94 Stratos bass boat, 120hp
trolling motor, lish finder &amp;
.
)
tra 11er, 56800 1lrm , 1740 742 ·
40i1
-1

Original 2.9 Ford Engine,

$500.00 FIRM , Fiberglass
topper. Ford Ranger short
bed, ~100.00 (304)5762806 after 6 PM

Columbus,
Ohio
43206
(614) 221-1662
(1) 21, 28, (2) 4, 11,18

750 Eust Stu1e Street

Phone (740)593-667
Athens. Ohio

Ta~e

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me do 1t for youl

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

Public Notice
The 2003 Annual
Financial Report of
Olive Township for
the
year
ended
December 31 , 2003
has been completed
and Is available lor
public Inspection at
the Clerk's Office,
55498 4th Avenue,
Reedsville,
by
appointment
only.
Martha Durst, Oliva
Township
Clerk,
55498 4th Avenue
Reedsvl11e, OH 45772
740-378-6149

ROBERT
BISSELL

CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages

(740) 992-3194
. 992-6615
Hill's Self
Storage

BARNEY

• Complet e
Remodeling

(1 O'x10' 6 1O'x20']

YOU'VE SEEN STARIN' AT MY ~­

. CHART FER A LONG .TIME,

740-992-1671

45771
740·949-2217

30 Yrs.

Exp. •

I

~~7?;(27

t

ACR·o ss

!!

~
•

i!

_,.______,
A~2~-~~~--~~----~~~~~-L~

~

THE BORN LOSER
E:I-ITRE:P~I'\EUF:.IN..
51 1-.t-1\:lllOlt-1T.• ,

7;00 AM • 8:00 PM

GONNA GIT

'""-'"
~~~~~_j '_."~~
P'"Sr&gt;,'(, (}'.l(f, fl'-01'\ "-1'1

Hours

~

r~~~'

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

Racine, Ohio

WORRIEn

I'M STARTIN' TO THINK
I'M NEVER

I

Tree Service

29670 Bas han Road

DOC- -YA GOT ME

Stop &amp; Compare

JONES'

--=-""""

P""I WOUL\:l ~I\'( '(OU
/&gt;.F..f.. MOr.f. Of f&gt;N
11\\N:.T\Vf.. IYPE.. I

P'"1--JOULD YOU 'Sf\Y
I 1&gt;..11\ ['110~€. OF I\
P~Ot&gt;,.CTIVE 0~

Ins. Owner: Ronni e Jones

Free Estimates
"

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES
Backhoe, Dozer,
Foundations,
Septic Systems,
Water and Utilities

...

"·

·...,

"lfeellike
I'm out
on a lin,b!"-

AstroGraph
!'lbur 'Ill~:

uNotme!

WITH MRS . OODFREY

My money is w ilh
Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Rnanciol Services.
Box 189. Middleport, OH
Phone: 843 -5264 ."

BACK, , THE WHOLE
SCHOOL H,._S. A
ICl"UALLY,
I T HINK THEYRE
S ERVIN&lt;; E&lt;;&lt;;
SI&gt;.LAt&gt; AT LUtKH

DfSG.US.TING. ODOR TO

IT 1 SMELLS LIKE ...
LIKE ...

T Ot&gt;A Y.

-----,r--

YOUNG'S

•CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling

'
·See

• New Garages

, a~el(~ ...,.~.~ ...

• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porctl Oecka
Reduced Winter R'at&amp;s

PEANUTS

.,d~:. Mupp ..- ·

V.C. YOUNG Ill

IMPORTS

. - 992-6215
Pomeroy, OhiO
'22 Years Local

Athens

Sunset Home
Construction
, Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
Room Additions,
Garages, Pole
Buildings; Roofs,

Dean Hill

BETTY

New&amp; Used

475 South Church St.
Ripley, wv 25271

.

1-800-822-0417

'I'OU'U. Wr&lt;IJE TO DO

~mfl.-\T~Yo.l

S5Mimt6AND

47.S95 SECONDS

"W .Y"s Ill Chevy. Pontiac, Bu i ck. O lds
&amp; Custom Van

r ""'--·

t;,PORTS WAiCHES

AREN'T JUST
fOR~TS

--y-

cen-

J&amp;L

, Eledric

on

~~~

High&amp; Dry
Sed-Storage

Slanlcy fogging
and Jrcc ]rimming
•Timber H arvesting
and Management
• Residential Tree

Trimming and ·
Removal

• Free Estimates
!'all:

L:1n. Slank'.

(7-t()) 7-t2-22'U

Halesh M. Patel
MD,FACP

740·992-5232

General Contracting
Homes, Garages,
Concrete Work
-Roofing· All types

740·992·7953

.

GARFIELD
-ANPASPRIG
OF ROeEMARY!
0

~

ft'

0

J
Sl
~

.1:

, GRlZZWELLS
I 1-\AIE

Internal Medicine
Medical Oncology
530 West Union Str eet
S uile C
Athens, Ohio 4570 I
Phone: (740) 592-5918
Office Hours: flam-SJlm (Mnn -Fri)

f-,\o~PAY5

lbDt..Y I&amp;
'tl'E'OI-IESPAY,

i ~J...--..A-?Al l

with.
heart's tender touch a nd warmth of
tears and smiles along with the cu lling

~ ! dge care, well : )IOU can count on us!_ ~

.
f

\

The year ahead might be one where you 'd
be bener oil going It alone when it comes
to ventures or projects you're trying to
launch. Having sole control may be necessary in order to' realize th e success you
hope to achieve.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20·Feb. 19) ~ A bum
deal might be tough to detect tod ay even
when you go over a contract with a linetooth comb, so It might be best to give time
a chance to uncover and reveal what you
can't.
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) · Individuals
who are land of you may be willing to
assist you today. but only it they first see
that you are doing all thai you can to help
yourself. II they think you're slacking, you'll
be on your own . .
ARIES (March 21·April 19)- Should a
member ol the opposite gender be espeCially anenlive to you today, don't take it
too seriously. The flattery bestOwed on you
may inflate your ego, bu t not necessarily
your image.
TAURU S (April 20-May 20) - Seek the
necessary solutiorls to solve a family problem tOday instead of becoming involved in
a fi nger-pointing exerc1se. Nothing will be
gained except ·a lot of hurt feelings on all
sides.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) -You may be
e)(ceptionally good at making promises or
offering a lot at sweet nothings in 01der to
gain your purposes today, bu t when you're
e..:pec!ed to ante up, your voice will be hollow.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) ~ Kidding
yourself today about the worth of your
~ateria l assets could cause misjudg·
ments in your commercial dealings at this
time and put you further in the hole. Level
with yourself.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - AlthOugh your
motives may be above reproach, if you
mingle with people today who operate in a
devious fashion , you could easily get
caught up in their ill actions. Choose your
friends well.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - The1e might
be nothing wrong with your inst1ncts today_
in tuning into what is a proper course of
action. Sadly, however, you may be per·
suaded to foll ow someone else's
unscrupulous modus operandi
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) ~ You need
p6ople around you today who are sincere
and hona'st, because people who a1e pretentious or crafty could easily lead you
astray and cause complications for you .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Personal
goals ere likely today. provided you don't
allow self-dbubts to gain the upper•hand. It
may be beller to make a few mistakes
along the way than to timidly tail to try.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - Be
extremely careful to e)(ercise good J~dg·
ment todaY In all your dealings. One false
move could cause you to pull back on
what otherwise would have been a major
success.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ~ Be
constar.ttl)l on guard today when doing
business wilh people you aren't familiar
wlth and know nothing aboul. Someone
will profit from your transaction. but It Won't
be

If medical care i s all about caring

.

Gl.OP WIIH A SPRIG
OF ROSEMARY

0

~PATEL CLINIC~

Pomeroy,Ohio

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

Advertise
in this
space
· · for
$50 per
month

!

1 Rubblah
6 Dog-tired
12 Carried on
14 Maraud
15 Shrug oH
16 Popslcle
flavor
17 Legal
maner
18 Macht

ments
43 Billboards
44 Montgom·
ery's at

•

46 Drag
48 Laid-back
51 Glad
55 Threat
ender

(2 wds.)

19 Oriental
eooker
21 Havea

56 Unusual
thing
57 Laughed
loudly .
mortga~e
23 PosslbiiHies 58
26 - de
cologne
DOWN
27 All-~urpose
vehicle
I Part of TNT
28 Accom·
2 Dust doth
jllishing
3 Blyth or
30 Kindled
Landers
31 Our sun
4 Long-legged
• bird
32 PC chip
maker
5 With us now
33 Rubberneck 6 Novel or
essay
35 Elmer, to
_ Bugs
7 Dory mover
37 Upsilon
-8 Applause
preceder
9 Poor review
38 Ice-fishing 10 Breakfast
tool
item
39 Look
11 Klkl or Joey
closely
13 Hernando
40 Scr~P'I by

a.,,,.,

19 Teen's
parent's
duty
(2 wd•-l
20 Power
problem

a crow
43 Mindful
45 Ba defelle&lt;l
47 Vlk1ng name
48 Crowd
49 Pufa foot

22 Joined metal

wrong
50 Pasture

24 Tried on
f or size
25 Creeps
about
26 Famous
lioness
27 Web habitue
28 Mince
29 Paste
34 In a kingly

52 Metal
In pewter
53 List .
shortener
54 Change
color

manner
36 Seafood
tidbit
42 Emulated

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by

Luis Campos

Celebrity Ciph&amp;r cryptograms cue created born quotafiom by farrous pa&lt;~ple. past alld present
'
Elich l~ttter lfl the opher stands 101 irlO!h@r

Today-s clue: Yequals u

" HS

FM

GBUXBj "

ADG

BLZM

RHC

XBZG,

H

FT

FHLYXTR

XB

.H

KBYZG'L'X

0

Z H·X X Z T

ZHET,

XMWT

HRDDU

VJBBG .

H'G

S 0 R X T J ,"

DRHFBE

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Nature's IUies have no e&gt;eeptions."
- Herben Spencer
"Extinct is forever.· - Kurt Benirschks
(c) 2004 by NEA, Inc. 2·4

THAI DAILY

PUlZUI

C.ft\i
0~

'-~---- ' lditetl

Ofour

iltl'or ran ~; •

Thursday, Feb. 5, 2004
By Bernice Bede Oaol

mo

Thence North 03
Siding, Decks,
degrees 40 minutes
(2) 4
an easterly direction
Pomeroy, Ohio In the
26 seconds
East
Kitchens, Drywall
along said road 100 . above named County, near the center of 200.00 feat, to an Iron ' - - - - - - - - &amp; More
feet to the place of f n the 19th day of
Gook Creek Road;
pin set by this survey
Public Notice
FREE
ESTIMATES!
beginning. This Is
March , 2004 at 10:00
Thence along the
at the point of beginpart of the same a.m., the following . East boundary of said
ning of the Real
PUBLIC NOTICE
740.742-341
property that was described real estate, 6.8 acre parcel and
Estate
described
NOTICE: Is hereby ' '-----~­
deeded by F. M. Bass
to wit:
running near the
herein;
given
!hill
&lt;In
and S .E. Bass to
Exhibit "A"
ter of Goose Creek
Thence continuing
Saturday, February 7,
Emmett and Mary
Situated In · Scioto
Road
South
42
North 03 degrees 40
2004, at10:00 a.m., a
Windon, grantors, ·In Township ,
Meigs degrees 36 minutes minutes 84 seconds public sale will be
deed dated Octobar
County, In the State of
20
seconds
East
East 200.00 feet to en
held at 47250 SR 248,
3, 1917, and recorded
Ohio: 5.000 Acre
74.00 feel and South
Iron pin set by this
Long Bottom, Ohio.
Licensed &amp; Bonded
In volume 116, page
Parcel.
28 degrees 36 minsurvey;
The Farmers Bank
Ph 740-991-41933
494,
Records
of
Being In Secii!Jn
utes 20 seconds East
Thence South 88
and Savings compaCeiino-591-1
Deeds , Meigs County,
18, Township 7 North,
201.00 feet;
degrees 49 minutes
ny Is selling for cash
Thence North M
Ohio.
Range, 14 West of the
11
seconds
East
In hand or certHied
Also all of our rights
Ohio
Company
degrees 49 minutes
1085.32 feet, passln
check the following
~nd Interests In a·
Purchase, and being
11
seconds West
an Iron pin set by this
collateral :
water line running
a parcel created out
1085.032 feet, ' passsurvey at 1062.29
1986 Clayton Sun
from
the
above
of the Wande Syeth
Ing en Iron pin set by
feet, to the East
Mobile home 40285
described premises
and Robert Wellman
this survey at 23.04
boundary of a 6.8
!~: Forme~.~~~~
feet, to 1he point of
along State Highway
property (described
acre parcel of the
No. 7, to 1he Meigs
In Volume 338, Page
beginning, containing
Grantor's land riear
Company, Pomeroy,
_ Water
Company
176 Mei gs _ County
5.000 acres, 3 .213
the cen ter of Goose
Ohio, reserves the
acres out of a SO-acre Creek Road ; Parcel r ight to bid at thla
water main running
Deed Records, herl·
from Pomeroy to the
nailer referred to as
parcel
of
the
Nos.
17·00173.003,
sale, and to withdraw
11·00173.004 &amp; 17Grantor's land and
former Forest Run
the Grantor's land)
the above collateral
33795 Hiland Rd.
1.787 acres out of a
Coal Mine.
Bounded
and
00173.005
prior to aale. Further,
Parcel Number: _ 14·
described as follows :
Said
Premises
6.8 acre parcel of the
The Farmers Bank
Grantor's land.
Commencing at an
Located at 42028
00050 &amp; 14-00051 •
and
Savings
Property
Address :
Iron pin by this surSubject to legal
Gooaecreek Road, Company reserves
easmenta:
"
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
33375 State Rou!e 7
vey at a fence ~orner,
the right to reJect ay
Pomeroy, OH 45769
said fence corner
Situated In Scioto
Said
Premises
or all blda submitted.
Township,
Meigs
Appraised
at
Said
.Premises
being
at
the
The
above
County, In the State of
$17,000.00 and canAppraised
at
Southwest corner of
described colliltarel
Ohio, In Section 18,
not be sold for less
$45,000.00 and cana 50 acre parcel of the
wll! 114! aold "aa Is·
Township 7 North ,. than two-thirds of
not ba sold for leas
Grantor's · land and
where Is", with no
that amount
than two-thirds of. asaumed to be -l ocal·
range 14 West of the
· expreaaed or 1!11plled
Ohio
Company
Terma of Sale: $5,000
that amount
ed at the Southwest
warranty given.
Purchase and being a
down,
remainder
T ERM S0 FSA LE :
corner ofsald oectlon
For further Infor· parclli created out of
upon tender .o f deed.
$5,000.00 ·
down,
18;
mation, or for .an
Ralph Trussell
·
the Wanda Wyeth _and
appointment
to
remainder upon ten·
Thence along the
Robert Wellman propSheriff
of
Meigs
dar or deed.
South line of said 50
Inspect
collate,ral,
County, Ohio
erty (Described In
prior to ule date con·
Ralph Trussell
' acre parcel South 86
FRANK
&amp; t~ct Cyndle Gillilan,
Volume 338, Page
Sheriff
of
Meigs ,degreae 19 minutes
WOOLDRIDGE CO.,
Diane
Rector,
or
175, Meigs County
Gounty, Ohio
· 24
seconds
easl
Deed Recorda, here· -L.P.A.
Randy t1aya at 992·
Frank &amp; Wooldridge
986.89 feat to an Iron
Attorneys for plalntlft
2136.
lnafler referred to as
Co., L.P.A.
pin -sat by this survey
(2} 4, 5, 6
600
South
Pearl
Attorneys lor Plaintiff . and assumed to ba
the Grantor's la!ld)
Street
.
dim
. 600
South
Pearl - · on the South line of
b'ounded
and

Yesterday, I recommended tracktng the
high-card points on all deals. No, !
haven't changed my mind today I Usually,
counting points will Push you in the right
direction. But sometimes checking suit
dist,ibutions works beller - as on this
deal.
You are West, defending against lour
spacles.You lead the club ace: two. three,
rack. WhaJ: would you do next?
If you 've never seen this Stayman
sequence before, take careful -note of it.
First, with 4-4 in the majors, the opener ·
should reply two hearts. Theli, when
North jumps to three no-trump, he
announces 'that 'he has fou r spades.
Without that length, he would not have
usecl Stayma n. So, with four spad.es too,
South conv.erts to game in that suit. (Note
that three no·trump shQUid lose five clubs
and the spade ace.)
Let's start ~y counting the points. You
(West) have seven, dummy hOlds 12, ancl
declarer promised 15-17. That leaves 4-6
for partner; he has a goody or two.
Now check the key heart-suit lengths, You
have live hearts, dummy tabled three,
and declarer is known to hold four. So,
your partner. has a.singleton. (If you were
thinking about this possibtlity during the
auction, excellent .)
Shift ·to a heart, hoping East has either
the bare heart a"ce or the spade ace.
Here. East wins the first (or second)
round of trumps. puts you back on play
with a club, and receives a heart rull to
sink South
But il you cash the club king at trick two,
wave goodbye to defeating the contra ct;
you will have no re -entry to give partner
his heart ruff.
"'

BIG NATE

• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
•

the

Southwest corner of

West
Pass
Pass

r

described as follows:

Dealer: South
· Vulnerabl e: Neither

I NT

I

said sectlon18;
Thence North 03
degrees 40 minutes
25
seconds
Eaat
400.00 feet, pasalng
an Iron pin set by this
surv'\Y at 200.00 feet.
To an Iron pin set by
this survey at the
point of beginning of
the
Real
Estate
described herein;

,.4. ,.
"

740-985-4JH4

South

Publl u .N utices in Ne'"'.spopers.
Your Right to Kno'"',. De llvcr~d Right lo YQour

Street .
Columbus ,
Ohio
43206
(6t4) 22t-1662
(1) 21,28 (2) 4, t1 , 18

+

4-WDs

Ac~~

East
• A 4 3
• 10
• 10 9 5 4
... 9 7 6 5 3

4 K9 8 5
• A K 6 3
A7 2
• Q J

CALL T&amp;D HYDRAULI CS,

41 Futon
down a tent
42 1RA Invest-

exceeder

South

V~&amp;

[7150 Auro PARIS &amp;

Q J 9
K Q J 6
8 2

• 83
4 A K 10 4

r£n" detail

ask for Terry @

Q J 10 7

•

West
• 6 2
. 87542

MONTY

02·04·04 ·

•
•
•

As always we slill ha\'e hydruulic hoses, oil and
repair cylinders.

740·992· 7953
Salisbury Township ,
and bounded and
descrlbad as follows:
Beginning al a
point on the north
side of the. Pika Road
leadl ng
from
Pomeroy to Chaster,
which point Is 150
feet west of the east
line of sac. No. 8;
thence In a northeast·
erly direction parallel
with the easterly line

4 Whe' l Drive

Hp

1998 Dodge Grand Caravan
Spor1, factory loaded, e~ecet­
tent condition, 72,000 miles,
asking $6,600, (740)9494037 or 740·992-5082 .

-------------I
92 Buick Regal power win-

r .

g F.or
A New HOrne.?
Tr t he
Classl.fl.edS!!

Sheriff 's Sale of Real
Estate
'The ~tate of Ohio,
. . Meigs County
·Beneficial Ohio, Inc.

Phillip
Alder

Nor1h

10

f?lJ

1

ACROSS

Pleasant Valley Private Duty is accepti ng

applil:ations for nursing assistants to provide
home care to clients residing in Meigs, Mason,
Gallia and Athcn&gt; Co~nhes . Apphcan1s should
have one-year experience or received a nursing
assistant certificate of training or be a statetested .nurs1ng assistant.

NEA Cro81word Puzzle

BRIDGE

-

94 Mazda MX·6, 5 sp. ,' sunroof, V-6, AM/FM CO, cruise, Wrap around Brush Guard
Hwy 160 N.
fo r ZR2 S10. $350, call
C&lt;)ll (740)992·6293
(740)446-6865
(740)44 1-075 1
96 Saturn, needs work,
'11{\1(1..,
=~~~::mRSALE
1965 Mustang 200, 6 cyl,
PhiS
30 bred Angus Maineanjau
· auto. very restorable , $700 $1,000 080, (740)992-7719
1
Che~ys, fi rm; 1999Yamaha 350, 740roR S uiiiii(;' _ _.. cross and Simmental cross. $500 .Hondas. 1 POLIC
Ho~m
E 843-1 168.
99 Pontiac Grand Prix, Red
easy calling AI bred starts Jeeps, etc .
~--.,;,iiiiiiii'~
IMI'ROVE:MICNIS
calf in Feb or March also 20 IMPOUNDS Cars from - - - - - - - - - - - - , 3800 engine, 30 miles to
Full blooded Rat Terri er mature cows 14 at them AI $500. For listings 1-800-7 19- 1979 Pon tiac Bonneville: gallon , exc . shape, garage
BASEMENT
-puppy. Call (7401367 ·7468
bred (304)576-2890
300 1 ext 390 1
301, auto. needs minor kept (304 )67 5- 3986
WATERPROOFING
repairs, $400. 50 H.P.
TKUCKS
Uncondilional lifetime guarliil'::::;:::::::;::;::======="-==~:=:=='i! ··oo Taurus· $4,095; 96 Mercury outboard and extra
FOR SALE
parts, runs. $250. (304)675· . t..-•iliiiOiliiiiiiioo-,.1 antee. Local references fu r~Akin
Windstar·
$2,495:
00
Neon'
I
nished. Established 1975.
LAIV
_
$4,395: 98 Sunfire- $3.495: 5131.
95 'Chevy PU , $4,200; 98 Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
97 Monte Carlo· $4, 195: DO
Sephia- $3,995: 98 Breeze- 1988 Ford Exp. Au to, 4-new Ford Ranger, 4x.4, $3,700: 0870, Rogers Basement
$3, 195: 99 Lumina- $3,695: ttres, new-battery lots oi 9$ Ford F1 50, $2,600: 88 Waterproofing.
98 Neon- $ 2,995; 95 gdodies, run s good. $300 Chevy PU, $2,800; 90
Chevy, 4K4, PU, $2,500: 97 •,-----::;,----,:-:---:----,
Camara$2,995;
96 090. (740)379-9285.
Get A Jump
U
Con tour$2,695;
96 1997 Chrysler Sebring JXI, Olds Bravada: 97 Mazda
PU
,
$2,400:
95
Ranger.
OM
ilf
Cavalier$2,895:
95 Fully loaded (304)675-2886
$2,3oo: 94 Ranger, $2.ooo:
SAVINGS
cavalier- s2.495_ over 5o call after 5:00P.M.
98 Ford Windsta r, $2,600:
vehicles in stock.
91 Ford Explorer, $BOO:
1997
Neon
Sport
,
68K,
Rome Auto Sales
B&amp;D Auto Safes
$2,695: 1995 Grand Am . 2D,
(740)886-1343
Hwy 160 N.
99K, 52.495; 1990 Nissan ,
1995 Subaru lmpreza, 4x4, $1 ,495; other In stock .
740 446-6865
A. W.O .. 2-door. auto, $3.150 WE TAKE TRADES!
. V~NS&amp;
080
COOK MOTORS
4-WDs
2001 Mitsubishi Mirage. 2·
(740)446-0103
door Coupe, 5-spd. 26,000
miles, loaded. $5,400 080. 1999 Olds Intrigue GLS 1987 Chevy Blazer, aula,
Black
w/gray
Leathe r 4x4. new tire s. $1.500,
Phone: (740)25p- 11 69.
AT.PW,PL,PW/Moonrool
(740)992·1493
79,000 miles asking $7500
199 1 Chevy 5· 10 pickup, (304)895-3417· leaye mes· 96 F350 Power Stroke,
DieSel, 121 ,000 miles.
auto, ps, $ 1,900 080 sage
(304)675-5253
'
Phone (740)245·0331

:_· -r

The Daily Sentinel•. Page B5

•

NURSING ASSISTANTS

1500N round bales. Michael
,\ 11\1 ... 10( h.
: Pole Building Special
Burke, (740)985-4444
-~30x48x9, t-3' entry, 1- 14x9 ~r;;;tO~;;;;;;~~,-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, _F _S_ I - H- $2- 0_0__
b_l_
·· .sliding door, painted sleel, _
FARM
or a e: ay. · a a e.
; ·Qutter, erected, $8189'.oo
EQI.JIP!\1ENT
About 1'500 bales . Call
, .. ~4x32)(9.4", t-3 ' entry, 2·
(740)446·7851'.
: 10'x8' insulated overheads,
1996 John Deere Backhoe Round bales $12 .50 Square
. 12" overhang , gutters paml· 4..:4 and Ext Hoe, 4000/hrs b 1
2 d 1r·10
a es
n -cu 9 grass
S2 50 E co n $2 50 a
. ed steel, roof &amp; wal 1s Jnsulal· (740)446·8044
· ·
ar
r
·
.' · ed, erected. $9247.00
bushel. Ground ear corn
· · 30ll:40lC9.4", 1·3' entry. 2- 3000 Ford Tractor, looks $4 50 f
100 '
d
·
or
poun s.
: 10'x8', non-insulated, paint'
good, runs good. $3,800 (7401992 2623
·
·
, ed steel, 12" overhang, insuCall (740)379-2860.
; :l.!lted roof, guner. erected
• • •.nee $10. 157.00.
,~~~~;~:~~~~·
~ LMSrOCK
to
Aura;

...--,

www.mydailysentinel.com

..

Help Wanted

Help Wanled

Wednesday, February 4, 2004
ALLEYOOP

a.,

lett1rs cf

s~rombled

words
low !o form fou r words

AP TEER

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a long lecture

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NUMBERED lETTERS 1
IN THE SE SQUARES
UNSC~AMBLE LETfHS TO

GET ANSWE R
2SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Obtain · Froze - Mumps • Method - OPEN IT

l· 0 '

My elderly aunt usual l y monopolizes any
conversa tion.Gramps says he know s why she talks so
much . He says it's because it takes more energy to shut
a moulh than to OPEN IT.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

/

you'.

SOUP TO NUTZ
AS a MEMBER
OF 'TI-l£' SCHooL
saF~ PA"TliK&gt;L, li
1S /VIY DU'\T To
RE~i&lt;1" "1b..l10 Yool'&lt;
~CHeRS FoR 1~\'\S

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HAVt. YOU ;E.E.l.l
THOOt- PAI&gt;JT

CHI~!

· B~OOUKT
HOMV

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�Wednesday, February 4. 2004

Prep notebook

Two coach·es hit 500
mark in career wins
Br RUSTY MILLER
AP SPORTS WRITER

It's one thing to last a long time in a profession. It's quite another to be successful for
decades.
Tom Eibel collected his SOOth career win in
ihe Wel'lington 's boys' 71 -34 victory over
Brookside. Eibel began coaching at Mayfield
in 1961 and made five more stops before taking over two years ago for his son, Jim.
"My son had been the coach here , and when
he got the princip&lt;il joh at New London, he
told me what a great group of kids we have
here ," said Eibel, who coached at New
London for 12 years and Western Reserve for
four before taking over the Dukes. .. As long as
the young people respond well, I' II keep
going. My family doesn 't believe me when I
say I' m going to retire . One thing that keeps
me going is the dream of taking a team to the
, final four ...
Also, with a 59-34 win at Oregon Clay,
Sylvania Northview girls coach Jerry Sigler
became the fourth coach in Ohio girls basketball history to record 500 victories. In his 28th
season with the Wildcats, Sigler is 500-131.
BROTHER ACTS: Freshman John Diebler
scored 49 points to tie a Fostoria school
record and older brother Jake added 33 in a
I03-89 win over Willard: and twins Tim and
Eric Pollitz combined to score OttawaGlandorf's final 26 points in a 55-5 I overtime
win against Van Wert.
BIG POINTS: East Liverpool's 6-foot-7
Brian Kreefer scored 17 of his career-high 39
points in the first quarter of the Potters' 89-70
wil) at Massillon Washington ; East Palestine's
Brett Young had 33 points in an 88-58 win
over Leetonia; 5-foot-5 point guard Katie
Coon ran her string of 30-plus point games to
three in Plymouth's 81-4 7 win over New
London, finishing with 34 points, I0 rebounds
and six steals; and Jeromesville Hillsdale's
Chelsea Jones went for 32 points and II
rebounds in a 68-43 win at Dalton.
HEAT WAVE: Findlay; the leading 3-point
shooting team in its conference, didn't make a
shot behind- the arc against Sandusky · but

made 75 percent of its 2-poi nters (30 of 40) in
a 70-53 win: after winning thre.: games last
season, Tiffin Columbian has won four in a
row under first-year coach Derek Lewis; and
the Beloit West Branch girls have won their
sixth straight league title.
After taking almost two weeks off, Tiffin
Calven scored a school-record 123 points' in a
123-42 win over Bettsville. Six Calvert players swred in double figures. The Senecas hit
55 of 88 (63 percent) from the field and made
33 layups.
.•• AND A COLD FRONT: When
Columbus Mifflin played Brookhaven's girls
last week, Brookhaven held the ball for almost
the entire first half. Mifflin led 4-2 at the end
of the first quarter and neither team scored in
the second quarter. Mifflin ended up winning
24-21 ro"remain unbeaten.
STORK TIME: While Amherst Steele
coach Mitch Gillam and his wife, Beth,
brought their third child, Trevor Mitchell, into
the world , assistant coach AI McConihe
brought home a 53-46 over the visiting
Fairview. By the way, the baby was born at
Fairview General Hospital.
NOTEWORTHY: Mansfield Senior's
Jonathon Avery is 71 of I00 from the field this
season; Lisbon David Anderson's Meg han
Brammer hit a school-record six 3-pointers
and finished with 23 points in a 71-63, double-overtime loss to Columbiana; Lill);!l
Shawnee's Jamar Butler had 26 points and 19
assists - II assists coming in the first quarter
- of a 97-47 win over Toledo Woodward;
Van Buren's Tyler Faine became the .school's
all-time girls scoring leader, scoring 26 poil)ts
and grabbing 17 rebounds in a 62-53 win over
North Baltimore to give her 1,339 eareer
points; after winning their 46th consecutive
league game, the • New Middletown
Springfield boys have lost five of their last
seven conference games; and St. Bernard
Roger Bacon upset Cincinnati McNicholas
53-51 behind Ben Haarman 's two f~ee throws
with 9.4 seconds left.

Arlington jumps ahead in
Division IV AP boys poll

COLUMBUS (AP) - .
Ohio State's stunning upset
of No. 2-r Purdue could start
a trend or it might just be a
peak leading to another precipitous fall.
It takes more than one game
to make a turrraround, and no
one knows that more than the
Buckeyes' Jim O'Brien, who
has weathered 22 seasons as a
college head coach.
So while 0' Brien remains
·hopeful that his · team has
turned a corner, he also is
hesitant to jump to conclusions based on the 65-59 victory over the Boilermakers
on Saturday.
"Prior to that game, whenever things started to turn
against us we really didn't
respond in a favorable fashion," O'Brien said. "If this is
a sign, hopefully, of some
mflturity and that we are getting better, then that's a good
thing. But we really will not
know that until we · play a
few more games."
•
The next gut check for the
Buckeyes (I 0-10, 2-5 Big
Ten) comes Wednesday night
at
home
against
Northwestern (8-1 0, 3-4).
Historically, the Wildcats
are just a speed bump for
Ohio· State. They' ve lost the
last nine meetings regardless
of location and haven't left
Columbus with a win since
1977- a string of 24 conm O'Brien instructs his team from the
secutive defeats.
Then again, this is not a bench during a game against Maryland-Baltimore County,
typical season. Northwestern Dec. 30, 2003, in Columbus. Although O'Brien remains hopehas made inroads as it has fu l that his team has turned a corner, he is hesitant to ·jump
grown accustomed to fourth- to conclusions based on their upset victory over Purdue on
year coach Bill Carmody 's . Saturday. (AP)
backdoor-layup-and-3-pointYoung is averaging 18.5 age. The ups and downs of
er offense~ . The Wildcats points a game with 6-foot-8 for- thi s are unbelievable. I guess
opened the Big Ten with a ward Vedran Vukusic scoring I'm feeling a little bit better
nine-point win at Iowa and a 14 a game.
just because we' re winning a
10-point win over in-state
Like O' Brien, Carmody is couple of games and that's
rival Illinois, servin,g notice withholding J'udgment on his better than six weeks ago or
that these are not the
Mildcats of old.
team until it has performed two months ago."
Carmody doesn't really
. No one is taking the over the long haul.
know
which Ohio State wi)l
Wildcats lightly these days.
"I'm a little pessimistic by
That goes double for an Ohio nature," Carmody said. show up - the one that dis"
State team that lost three "We're going through some played little persevemnce and
consecutive games by a com- stretches where we're play- almost no cohesion early in
bined 34 points before van- ing pretty well then at other January, or the tough and scraptimes we're just very aver- PY Buckeyes in West Lafayette.
quishing Purdue.

Kentucky tops Florida
from the foul line, but made didn't score tlie rest of the way.
two of his last four to finish Anthony Roberson led Florida
Kentucky 's comeback from with 19 points, but missed .a
an ll-point deficit in the sec- layul? that would . have
ond half.
reclrumed the lead before rnisThe victory' was Kentucky 's firing on a tou~h 3-pointer that
fifth straight in a series that could have ~1ven the Gators
has developed into one of the the lead in the. closing seconds.
fiercest rivalries in the SEC in
Gerald Fitch. scored I0
recent seasons. Florida (13-6,- points and Hawkins finished
4-4) hasn't beaten ihe with nine for Kentucky.
Wildcats since March 2001 , Matt Walsh scored' 16
when they daimed a share· of points 'for · Florida, but the
. the S.EC Eastern Division Gators ht:ipes to force overchampionship, but none of the time with a· desperation shot
losses were more disappoint- ended when he stepped out of
ing than this one.
· ·
bounds trying to get the ball
The Gators led 65-57 with to midcourt on Florida's final
just over 6 minutes to go, but possessio.n.

•.

"Gj?fae~ f&amp; ~ f?

WildCats don't know what to
expect from up-and-down OSU

COLUMBUS (AP)
Boys AP poll
Arlington took its unbeaten
record to the top of the heap COLUMBUS - How a state panel of ' 13, Wauseon 18. 14, Poland 17. 15, Cols.
sports writers and broadcasters rates Beechcrott 16. 16 (lie), Canal Fult01'1 NW.
in Division IV of the latest Ohio
high school boys basketball teams in Cin. ·Taft 13. 18 (tie), Lisbon Beaver.
weekly Associated Press the fourth weekly Associated Press poll of Cambridge 12.
by OHSAA divisions, with won-lost
DIVISION Ill
boys Ohio high school bas- · 2004,
record and total points (first-place votes in 1, Cin. N. College Hill (24) 13·0
31i
ketball
poll
released parentheses):
2, Versailles (5~ 13·0
283
,
DIVISION
I
3,
Johnstown-Monroe
14.()
229
Tuesday.
1, Cin.LaSa11e(24)14·0
317
4,Akr. Marlcnester(1)11 ·1
201
302
5, Loudonville 11·2
131
The Red Devils, from 2. N. Can. Hoover (9) 14-0
3, Cin. Moeller 14·2
245
6, Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 12·1 ""
116
Hancock County, climbed 4,Troy 13·1
197 7, Day. Oakwood 13·2
85
152
8, 'Findlay ·liberty-Benton 12·2
62
two spots to take over the 5, COis. Brookhaven 13--2
6,Can.M
cKinleyt2·2
.
141
9.L.oUsVMeStTlmlas~(1)13-2 51
No. I position from Sebring 7, Lakewood St. Edward 11 ·3
130
10, Bellaire 11·4
40
8 , Wadsworth 11 ·1
93
McKinley.
Clayton Northmont 13·2
59
Others receiving 12 or more po in ~s: 11,
: Arlington joitis Cin\innati 9,
10.Spring.S.11 ·2
42
MiddletoWn Fen..W:k 37. 12, Archbold 25.
13, Chesapeake 23. 14, Ironton 22. 15,
·LaSalle,
LaGrange
'K - t
d c· .
t' Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Youngs. Mooney 18. 16, Coshocton 15. 17,
· eys one . an
1nc1nna I WeslervilleS.19.12,Hamilton18.13(1ie), Bedford Chanel13 .
·
North College Hill as the Dubhn Scioto. Warren Harding, Wooster .
DIVISION IV
1. Arlington (I 5) I 5·0
282
top teams in the fourth bal- 12 ·
DIVISION 11
2. New Wash. Buckeye Cent. (7) 12·1 261
Joting by a State media 1. LaGrangeKeystone(19) 15·0 292 3. Sebring McKinley (5) 12·1
222
273
4, Ft. Loramie {3) 12-1
220
ne]
2,
Akr.
SVSM
(10)
12·3
Pa ·
237 s. BerlinHiland (1) 10·2
182
3. onawa ·Giando~ 12·2
225
6, Cols. Tree of life 13-1
110
The Red Devils , have 4, Newark Licking Valley 121 9·0
214
7, Mansfield St. Peter's 11 -3
92
climbed steadily in the poll ~: g~.. r~~;~::·i 3 . 2
128
8, Lakeside Danbury 12·2
80
since debuting at No. 8 in 7, Port Clinton 13·2
11 2
9, S. Charleston SE 13-2
67
67
10, Russia 11-4
48
the first weekly voting . · 8. Shelby 12·2
9, Day. Chaminade·Julienne 9·6
36
They own a 21-point edge to. Circleville Logan Elm t3-1
32 Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 ,
Heritage Christian 20. 12 (tie), New
over No. 2 New Washington Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 , Can.
MatafTlQras Frontier, Mins1er 13. ' 14,
Buckeye Central, with Akr. Cent.--Hower 29. 12, Akr. Buchtel 21 . Mogadore 12
Sebring McKinley falling to
third. Fort Loramie and win over crosstown rival Johnstown-Monroe
was ·
Berlin Hiland rounded out Canton McKinley last week. again
third,
Akron
the top five in the small- Another Cincinnati school, Manchest~r fourth and
school division.
Moeller, was No. 3, fol- Loudonville fifth.
lowed
by Troy and defendThe two 'Cincinnati No. Is
Undefeated Keystone's
state
champion lead moved from 12 · to 19
LaSalle and North ing
Brookhaven. points ·over Akron St.
College Hill - tied for the Columbus
McKinley
dropped
two Vincent-St.
most first-place votes (24)
Mary , in
and the highest point totals spots to sixth.
Division II - which also
(317) in the voting.
In Division III. North had the same teams ranked
LaSalle's lead in Division College Hill expanded its in the same top five spots as
I melt.ed away, from 53 lead to 34 points (II more they were in the third poll.
-poipts a week ago over than a week ago) over Ottawa,Giandorf, Newark
Nofth Canton Hoover to just Versailles as the top five Licking Valley and Dover
13 points. That was due in teams retained the same filled up the rest of the top
large part to Hoover's 70-63 spots as a week ago. , contenders.

GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP)
- Erik Daniels scored 22
points and Cliff Hawkins had
a crucial steal and scored four
points in an 11-0 game-endmg run that gave No. 9
Kentucky a 68-65 victory
over No. 21 Florida on
Thesday ni~ht.
Hawkins poor · free throw
shooting kept the outcome in
doubt until Florida turned the
ball' over with I second to go,
but the guard's steal and
layup gave the Wildcats ( 153,
5-2
Southeastern
Conference) the lead for good
in the final minute.
· · HaWkins Was just 4~of- 11

The Daily Sentinel • Page 86

www .mydailysentinel.com

Teen charged with
ftrst-degJ;ee murder in
killing of classmate in

T/tJ»9c$ f&amp; 3/i),/', B6

Florida school, As

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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
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SPORTS
• Stockman leads Buckeyes
past Northwestern. See
PageBl

·,

INSIDE

•

• Local Ice Bowl raises food
for needy See Page A2
• Mass. court rules civil
unions .aren't enough,
gay couples entitled to
marriage. See Page AS
• Stopped at sea in a
1950's Buick. See Page
AS
• Judge grants stay of
execution to Texas man
with history of erratic
courtroom behavior.
See Page AS

WEATHER

It's Valen-timel

BY

J. MILES lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - A Rutland
man has bcun charged with
se_tting fire to an ui10ccupied
home at 8: I :1 p.m. Tuesday
at 236 Lincoln Hill in
Pomeroy.
Shawn J. Ratcliff. 20.
confessed ·to Pomeroy
Police Chief Mark Proffitt
and to agents with the state
tire marshal's office to starting this fire and two other
recent fires in the Rutland
area.
Ratcliff has been charged
with aggravated arson and
burglary, botli felonies, and
will be arraigned in Meigs
Counly Court I his week. He
is currentl y in custody in the
·Middleport jail.
Firefighters
fro m
Pomeroy. Middleport and
Syracuse responded wilhin
three minutes to a hlaze in
Pomeroy that witnesses said
engulfed the house owned
by Mark A. Clark of
Middleport.
,
The house was unoccupied and used l,)lainly for
storage ~tt the time .
Firefighters battled the
blaze for seve ral hours
before it was contained. No
. one was injured.
,
Proffitt said Ratcliff was
at the scene of the tire anti
offered to help. Authorities
were suspici ous then and
Proffitt detained Ratcliff
early Wednesday for questioning.
Rutland Fire Chief Dave
Davis said one of 1he fires
Ralcliff confessed In nearly

Police Chief Mark Proffitt

resulted in the injury of an
elderly woman.
He said the woman was
asleep in her hDu.se wl1en
she awoke to the 'lllell nf
and
narrow Iy
smoke
escaped injury. Davis saiu
lhe other fire involved a
storage trailer which '""
desp·oyed.
Proffitt said he will ask
the Meigs Cmnity ·prosecutor's office to sec k the
stiffest penalty be..:ause the
fires put people's li ves at
stake.
The Pomeroy ~a li ce
Department arrested
Shawn J. Ratol iff. 20, of
Rutland. who confessed to
starting a fire Tu esday at
236 Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy.
(J . Miles Layton )

Tell Someone You Love Them
In A Special Way

--Your Way-- On February 13th -With A Sentinel Love Message!
Examples ofSizes and Prices
1 INCH AD ..... $5.00
11/2INCH Al)..$7.50
(APPROXIMATELY 20 WORDS)

(APPROXIMATELY JO WORDS)

Happy
· I st Valentine's Day
Tessa!
~Mommy'&amp; Daddy

Happy Valentine's Day
Grandma, Grandpa,
Mom, Dad, Sister, and

· Brother...
Thanks for being such
agreat family!

31NCHAD ... $15.00

I Love You Very Muehl

(APPROXIMATELY 60 WORDS)

MAY WE ALWAYS
HAVE A
WONDERFUL LIFE
TOGETHER!

Page

A6

LOtTERY
Pick 3 day: 1-3-3
Pick 4 day: 9-3-42
Pick 3 night: 8-6-5
Pick 4night: 4-7-2-2
Buckeye 5: 13-18-25-26-33

SuperLotto: 3-15-19-4f-48-49

2 INCH AD ... $10.00
Happy Valentlne's Day
Cupid's arrow Is
· straight and true,
In brlngfng this thought
of love to you.
I'm sorry about the
other night.
When we had that
terrible fight. ·
A Sentlnellove message
was a good Idea.
To show you just how
much lldve you, Marla.

Details on

Bonus Ball: 34
Kicker: 0-7-3-1-9-6

(lPPROXIMATELY &lt;10 WORDS)

MY Ul"'\t,lrv
Writing this love
message gives me the
opportunity to tell you
just how much I love
you and enjoy being
your husband. I know
I sometimes
't
show It but I
do.
Valentines

ADS MUST BE
RECEIVED BY
NOON,
FRIDAY,
FEBRUARY 6,
. 2004.

INDEX
2 SElTIONS -

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Places to go

B6

Sports
1r-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-----·-·-·-·-·------------~
Write your Message Below:

12 PAGES

Weather

.61-2
A6

© 2004·0hio Valley Publishing Co.

· As her groceries were being
out
at Vaughan's by Dawna Parsons. Linda
Peterson of Rutland, left, was advised that today is "Food Che.ck-Out Day." That means the
average American family has .made enough ll)Oney since Jan. 1 to pay for the entire year's food.
(Charlene Hoeflich)

FOOD CHECK-OUT DAY 1~1
Four adu lts and two young children were traveltng down Anne
S E R V E S A S .R E 'M J N D E R aStreet
in Pomeroy when their vehicle slid off the icy road into
ditCh that trapped them inside at
a.m. Wednesday. Within
10

By Charlene Hoeflich
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - Today
is being celebrated as "Food
Check-Out Day" - the time
when-the average American
family · has earned enough
income to pay for all its food
for the enttre year.

While 36-days' wages efit from the ciTicicncy ami two minutes, the Pomeroy, Fire Department and emergency
seems little to pay for a productivily of agricultttrc crews responded to the scene. Dana Lee Bunch, his wife
year's food suppl y for a and the enlirc food produc- Mary, their daughter Colleen Bryd1e. and 11er 11usband
family, the Ohio Farm tion svste m:· · said Pat Lawrence and their two ch ildren. Lawrence and Tavian. were
Bureau Federa~on (OFBF) PetLel. ·oFBFs director of inside t11e vehicle. Pomeroy Fire Chief Rick Blaettnar ,and fire·
fighters pulled the vehicle closer to the hill and opened doors
claims it 's because food is promotion and eduGHion.
"America's- ·
greatest.
She said. food is aciUally on .both the driver's side and the passenger side so the famiresource and its greatest bar- becoming less . ex pensive ly trapped inside .could exit. No one appeared to be hurt. Mary
gain."
·
whcn , its price is compared Bunch was transported to Holzer Medical Center and later
"As consumers we all benreleased. (J. Miles Layton)
Please see.Food, AS

I

I

Annual -

I

I
I

I
I

I
I

I
'I

I

Mail Your Love Message and Total Amount Due To:

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Name:- ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - Address: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - " - - Size ofValentine: _ _ __ _ __ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ _ _~.:._TotaiAmount Endosed:_ _ _ _ _-:--------,-------~-

---------·--•--•-·-···-·-·•·---··-- ~ "

'·---.----·-- -·-

.

sponsorecf by the HMC Comm~nity Health and Wei/ness Oeparimenf and HMC CaJdiopulmonary Units

14, 2004 ·• 8 AM - 12 Noon • HMC Education &amp; Conference Center
FREE SCREENINGS - Non- Fas~ng Cholesterol and Glucose, Blood Pressure, Body Fat Analysis and more.

Free health info will also be available, featuring "Ask /fle Cardiac. Surgeon': with Michaelle,;;is, MD.

.
.
UPID PROFILE SCREENING MEASURING TOTAl.CHOLESTEROL
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8 AM - 11 :30 AM - MUST.CAU 446·5055 FOR AN APPOINTMENT

12 Noon - 1 PM ~ Special Presentation by Michael A Englund, DO.- Co~diologist

.

"Cardiac Risk Facfors" - Boxed lunc.1tes will be provided
I'

-· -

Fair

"

ReFreshments and Door Prizes! ,
For more information, please cal/.(i40] 446-5679

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