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                  <text>'Jbe Daily Sentinel

BASEBALL

PageB6
·Wednesday, February 25, 2004

'

Wagner will stay in
Reds' pen for now,.Bt

Spring training

Boston ace foCusing
on ·new season
. FORT MYERS, Aa. (AP)
because I'm paid to do that
- Pedro Martinez wants to
for nine innings and there's
forget his contract flap. hi s
no one to blame." he added,
"but tha~ was the questi~n. I
. G!tme 7 flop and his Don
wasn't really insisting on
Zimmer flip .·
The star pitcher is preparing
staying in the game. J was a
for another anempt at helping
little bit scared to leave the
the Boston Red Sox win their
game. but it really wasn't my
· first World Series title since
decision."
1918. Last year, they lost'lo
Less than two weeks later.
the New York Yankees 6-5 in ager Terry Francona said. Little was gone.
II innings in Game ,7 of the · "He'll be ready to go."
Another central figure in
AL championship series.
Last season. Martinez went that series also moved on .
"I hope ... we are the team 14-4 with a league-best 2.22 Zimmer is now with the
to beat." Martinez said ERA. In his six Red Sox sea- Tampa Bay Devil Rays after
Tuesday, "but I don't want to sops. he is 101-28 with a 2.26 eight years in New York.
say it. I want to do it."
ERA and two AL Cy Young . He got on the field in Game
For now, he considers the Awards . He also won the 3 when the benches cleared
Yankees the team to beat 1997 NL Cy Young Award after Manny Ramirez stepped
because they went to the with Montreal. ·
toward the mound when he
World Series. In . Game 3 of . If Martinez falters t.his sea- took offense at a high pitch
the ALCS, Martmez pushed son, the Red ~ox Will have from Roger Clemens in the
N~w York bench coach one of baseball s best pitchers . fourth .
Ztmmer to the ground dunng to send to the mound m. the
Zimmer charged Martinez:
a melee. In Ga~e 7, he .gave next game: Curt Sch1lhng. who had thrown behind
up. three runs m the e1ghth Boston obtamed h1m m a Karim Garcia's head in the
mnmg, letting the Yankees lle trade '\nh Anzona, a move top of the fourth . Martinez
11 5-5.
.
. that drops Derek Lowe, 38-15 erided u ushin the 72- earNow Martmez enters h1s the past three seasons, mto thli 0 ld oa ph~o th g
dy
seventh year with the Red No. 3 starting spot, and Tim
•• 1c ~· d , 1 e}roun ·1h.
1n
Sox knowing he could leave Wakefield to No. 4.
,..o any mg
. next offseason as a free agent.
"Anybody can carry the wrong. I was tryln~ to protect
He said no contract talks have load that! might not on a cer- the man, and he kmd of lned
tain day," Martinez said.
to punc~. me so I had .to l~t
been held.
'Martinez said he wants to
Wakefield had an outstand- hun go, Martmez said. I
end his career in Boston and ing ALCS until allowing was aware, totally aware, that
will give the team a chance to Aaron Boone's series-ending I did not want to hurt the
sign him - even if it's after solo homer in the lith. The man."
·
the season. If that doesn 't game wouldn 't have reached · Zimmer apologized, · but
happen, he should have sever- extra innings if Boston had Martinez said he saw no need
al suitors.
held its 5-2 lead in the eighth: . to do the same.
"Forget about what's going
Martinez retired the first
"I will do whatever to proIn happen to me. 1 don't have batter. before Derek Jeter teet my teammates," he said.
anything to prove," he said doubled and scored on Bernie
During the melee, Martinez
1'\.tesday, his first day of '!}'illiams' single. Manager pointed to hi s head while jawspring training workouts. "If alrady Little went to the ing with Posada. He said it
they don't want to sign me, mound and left Martinez in to meant he would remember
that's fine. I'm pretty sure I'll pitch to Hideki Matsui, even Posada's remarks - not that
probably get a job with some- though reliever Alan Embree he would hit someone with a
body else. But if they do, I'll was warming up.
pitch.
be more than happy to stay Matsui doubled Williams to "He mentioned my mama's
here."
third before Jorge Posada name," M~
. inez said, "in a
Martinez probably won ' t hlooped a double that tied the bad way."
throw off a mound for about a game. Martinez left, Embree
But that as four months
week. He reported three days entered- and Little was sent ago. Marti nez said he's not
after the team's other. pitch- packing in, the offseason.
worried about the 2003 seaers; the Red Sox gave him
"I was asked a question (by son or where he might be
permission to arrive late Little) whether I wanted to pitching in 2005.
because of a family medical pitch to Matsui ," Martinez
"Game 7 is over," he said.
issue.
said. "If you ask me if I could "We just competed with a
· "P~dro's got a pretty .good pitch to Matsui again, I would good team . They won. We
liistory of being a pretty good say, ' Yes.'
lost. We'll just try again this
pitcher," new Red Sox man"I would never say ' No,' year."

Larson gets rare second cttance
SARASOTA, Ra. (AP) - ,
Brandon Larson knows that
second chances don't come
often in the major leagues.
He wasted hi s first chance
to win the Cincinnati Reds'
starting job at third base last
season, playing so poorly
that he was sent to the
minors in less than a month . Conference records with 40
· The former first-reund draft honiers and 118 RB!s' in his
pick is getting another shot final season and was MVP of
at gelling it right. ·
the College World Series.
Larson, 27, has no serious
Larson has done well in
competition for the third the minors but hasn't played
base job during spring train- well enough 10 establish
ing. It's not that he has done himself in the majors . He. hit
anything to win it - the .121 in 14 games in 2001 ,
Reds simply don' t have a .275 in 23 games a year later
replace merit lined up. If ·and . 101 in 32 games last
Larson fails again, they'll season.
start looking for one.
The Reds thought he was
Second ' chances are rare. ready for his breakout season
Third chances are wishful in 2003 and 010 ved Aaron
B,oo~ to second base in
thinking.
"I know I need to make the spl1'ilg training to open a
most of the opportunities I'm spot. In stead, Larson played
being given," Larson said. "I so poorly that the Reds sent
certainly didn't capitalize on him to Triple-A on April 19.
the opportunity that was when he was hining .083.
given to me last year, for and moved Boone back to
whatever reason. I'm just third.
He hit .323 at Louisville
trying to put that aside."
Last year, the Reds - he has never had prubplanned their infield around !ems hilling in the minors Larson, who was the 14th and was called back up but
overall pick in the 1997 ama- was in an 0-for-16 slump
teur draft out of Louisiana when a torn labrum ended
Stale. The . Texan set school his season on Aug. 16. He
and
Southeastern also had slumps of 0-for-13

and 0-for-17 wnh the Reds.
Boone was traded to the
Yankees in July. opening up
the job .. at third. Russell
Branyan. who started 18
games at third base last season, was allowe~ to leave as
a free agent in December,
clearing the way for Larson
to get .another chance .
The .Roos hope ne':V hitting _ .
coach Chris Chambliss and
infield instructor Randy
Whisler help Larson tmnslate his minor league success
to the next level. +
\
"He's going to get all the
opportunitie s that we can
give him down here," manager Dave Miley said.
"We've only been down here
a few days.. but just from
watching what Randy's
doing with him and what
Chris is doing with him,
we 're hoping to see the ·
Brandon that I've seen in
Triple-A ."
Notes: The Reds' position
players had physicals in the
morning Tuesday, then participated in the · first fullsquad workout. ... Larson.
Austin Kearns and Adam
Dunn are among 15 players
who are not signed to 2004
contracts. Their contracts
can
be . automatically
renewed by the club· starting
next Tuesday. ·

I '\. I"' .. \ , d :. l "" ·

1 •

who we bring in, who plays
what position and how often
they play. My job is fairly simple: Catch the ball, hit the ball
and throw the ball. Anything
else is out of my hands."
It is a familiar story for
Wilson. Before the 2003 season, the Pirates traded for
Simon and signed free agent
right fielder Reggie Sanders.
This year, though, it
looked like it might be different. Wilson's 18 homers
last year were the most bY.
any player on the roster unul
Mondesi was signed . He hit
I 0 of hi s homers in hi s final
130 at-bats of the season.
"It's not something I'm going
to worry about," Wilson said.

I Ill ' HS!) \' . II Bl&lt;l \1\\ ~ h •••no 1

t

• Third lime is a charm for
'Does .. See Page 81

ter to Auditor Nancy Grueser
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
on Monday. They take the
lowest-paid officers to $8.81 .
POMEROY Meigs and officers with 10 years '
County
Sheriff Ralph experience. the highest on
Trussell has approved the the scale, to $12.33 per hour.
first pay increase for
Trussell said Wednesday
deputies in two years, but the increases will cost his
said there will be no whole- budget less than $1 (}.000 per
sale layoff of deputies this year. just 75 percent of one .
year.
two-week payroll for his
Trussell approved the staff.
three-percent raises in a let"My officers have waived
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

the pay increases provided ruises last year and in 2002. approved a transfer of funds
set aside for pri soner housfor in their contract for the in order to save their jobs.
Despite any added burden ing and food late in the year,
past two years because of the
financial situation in this the raises wil l . place on ·allowing the return of staff.
office .." Trussell said. "I Tru sse ll\ payroll budget. he Trusse ll said he was even
think it's acceptable to give will not impose a full-staff able to return appropri!lled
layoff like those of last year funds to the general fund
them three percent. ..
carrypver at year's end.
A · negotiated contract and 2002. he sa id .
Trus sell 's deputy staiT now .
Trussell·
was
alone
in
runbetween Trusse ll and hi s
works
two I 0-hour shifts,
deputies provides for three- ning all aspects .of his office
precent increases for the for three months last year and 'Trussell said that helps
three-year 'contract period, after he depleted his payroll eliminate overtime costs and
but deputies waived their fund.County Commissioners save payro~l funds.

MTV skateboards ·into Rutland
BY BRIAN

J. REED

RU)LAND - MTV' s
latest shock oddity, Bam,
and skateboarding pro Tony
Hawk got a crash course in
Meigs County hospitality
this weekend, as Music
Television crews, Bam,
Hawk, and other professional
skateboarders
shot
footage at Skatopia, Brewce
Martin's
Rutland-area
skateboard facility.
Bam Margera, 24, is
described by his home net work as "a skate guru who's
skidded face-first down the
vert ramp one too many
times," and stars with hi s
parents and a mix of equally-odd friends in "Viva La
Bam!" The show airs at
9:30 p.m. on Sundays as
part of MTV's Sunday Stew
lineup.
Hawk, 31, is a professional skater and role model to
skateboard fanaticS, and has
lent his name to a· video

OBITUARIES

Page As
• Dallas Hill
• John Townsend

• Seekers host an evening
of fun. See Page A3
• Hi~tory contest winners
announced at DAR. See

Page A5

game series based on his
skateboarding life and
Iitestyle.
Arriving on Feb. 19, the
duo visited the rustic skateboard bowl at Rutland t~
shoot footage for the series.
The footage will tentatively
air the first week of April on
"Viva La Bam'"
Margera and Hawk are
touring skateboard bowls
around the count,ry, and left
Rutland for Mardi Gras.
•
They also visited Athens.
,~
On entering Rutland. they
were greeted by a welcome
message at Joe's Country
Market, and braved a "hardcore Suburban ride'' arou nd
Martin's property.
Other professio,nal 'katers
participating in the show
were Tim O'Connor. Dqnny
Barley, Tim Glomb. Jason
Ellis, and Brandon Martin.
"Skatopia is the most real. ·
fun skate park in the world,''
Hawk , told Meigs County
Tourism Director Billie Skateboard celebrities Tony Hawk and Bam Margera visited Brewce Martin's Rutland-area
skateboard facility Skatopia this past weekend.
Bentley.

..

Trussell leads 1pack in
campaign spending

·

• Places to Go. See

Page A6

I

BY

WEATHER

J.

MILES LAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Only two
for
Meigs
candidates
County
Sheriff
have
exceeded the $1,000 minimum required to file an
expense report at the Meigs
County Board of Elections.
Three candidates are running for the Republican
nomination
and
two
Democratic candidates are
facing each other in the
March 2 primary. On the
Republican side, incumbent
sheriff Ralph Trussell leads
the pack in campaign
expenditures.
, Trussell has spent $1,673
so far in his bid for a second
term according to his campaign e"Jlense report tiled
last week at the Meig s
County Board of Elections.
The money comes from "inkind-donations"
from
Trussell's own pocket. He
has spent money on a wide
variety of items related to a
campaign like signs, paint,
newspaper ads, etc.
Trussell's
Republican
opponents, veteran law offi-

·
Demllo on Pace A2

INDEX
ll SECTIONS- Ill PAGI!S

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

as

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

Bt

Weather

A2

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publlshl"' Co.

cer Robert Beegle who has
more than 31 years of ex perience, and Mony Wood,
who has more than a decade
of law enforcement experience, have spent less than
the
$ 1,000
rmmmum
required to ) file a preliminary expense report.
On the-:,Democratic side,
former deputy sheriff and
former Pomeroy Police
Chief Jeff Miller has spent
$1 ,395 so far on his bid to
become sheriff, according
to his expense report filed
last week at the Meigs
County Board of Elections.
Like Trussell, Miller is
funding his campaign from
hi s own pocket. He has
spent money on a variety of
things related to the campaign like signs, paint,
newspaper ads, etc.
Miller's opponent, former
Meigs County Sheriff Jim .
Soulsby, has spent less than
t~e
$1,000
minimum
required to file an expense
report.
The candidate s will file
another expense report after
the primary on April 9.

Crow outspends competition Stolen
by 10-1 margin in bid for
vehicles
Fourth District Court
recovered ·
BY J. MILES LAYTON
JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY - In his bid to
become the fir st judge from
Meigs County to claim the
Fourth District Court of
Appeals , Republican candidate and Meig s County Couri
of Common Pleas Judge Fred
Crow Ill is outspending hi s
opponents by a I 0 to I margin in the upcoming March 2
primary. Crow is running
against four other candidates
in the primary which covers
14 counti es in southeast
Ohio.
According to Crow's campaign expense report filed
last week at the Scioto Board
of Elections, Crow has spent
$49,799 so far. This money
came from "in-house" loans
to the campaign and $11,883
in campaign contributions
from various individuals.
The bulk of that money has
been · spent on advert ising.
Crow has spent $.12,051 to
purchase print advertising
from the Brown Publishing
Company, which runs many
newspapers in southeast Ohio
including
the
Athens
Messenger.
~

Crow has spen t $8.500 on
Falcon
Design
and
Marketing. a public relation s
firm located in Pomeroy, and
$9.000
on
Lamar
Advertising. a public relations fi rm with an office in
Huntington .
Despite Crow's vast experience on both sides of bench ,
Crow is at a disadvantage
because his opponents tome
from highly populated cou nties. Milt Nuzum is a
Marietta Municipal Judge in
Washington
County.
Matthew McFarland is a
magistrate
of
Scioto
· County/Juvenile Court. Clark
Collins is an Iro nton
Municipal Judge in Lawrence
County. Robert Driscoll is an
assistant Athens County
Prosecutor. With 15 yea rs on
the bench, Crow is the only
common pleas judge running
for the position.
Even though the Ohio
Supreme Court has assigned
Crow to be a visiting
Common Pleas Court Judge
in nine of the 14 counties
making up the Fourth
Appellate District, Crow will
contend that he has a hard
'
Please see Crow, AS

NING
.-

from field
in Rutland
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM

POMEROY
Law
enforcement agents in Meigs
and Athens counties are
searching for a suspect who
allegedly stole 15 vehicles.
Athens County and Meigs
County she riff's offices are
pursuing a man for stealing
vehicles confiscated in Meigs
County. Acwrd ing to Athens
' Cou nt y Sheriff Vern Castle.
the vehicle s were being
stored in a field near Rutland
pending an Internal Reve1iuc
Service auction scheduled for
March 20.
The vehic les were part of a
large number of cars. trucks.
motorcycles, farm equipment
and other property that had
been seized from Fred Priddv
fol lowing his 1999 drug conviction in Meig s County.
Priddy i·s serving eight years
in
Noble
Corre&lt;:tional
Institution for hi s conviction

Please see Stolen, AS

Ill' ..... ,

IIDAa

'

·---------..

'"HI..tl ·,-.,,,,,,,.1 f"'''

Meigs County Sheriff approves pay increase

SPORTS

INSIDE

Former baseball player Pete Rose smiles d~rlng an interview at
the minor league New Jersey Jackals stadium in' Upper Mbntclair,
N.J., Friday, Aug. 27, 1999. Rose'will be the subject of an ESPN
movie beginning production this spring. " Hustle" will premiere
on Sept. 25, ESPN executive vice president Mark Shapiro
· announced Tuesday, Febraury 24, 2004. (AP)

n \H \

I

''!' m going to go out and try to

have the best spring tmining I
can and make it difficult for
them not put me in the lineup."
Some of Wilson's playmg
time could come in left field.
Jason Bay, acquired from the
San Diego Padres in August, is
recovering from right shoulder
surgery and might not be ready
for the start of the sea'iDn.
The Pirates also plan to use
Wilson at first base against
left-handed pitchers. And he
will likely back up Kendall
behind the plate for a second
consecutive season.
Lloyd McClendon also
thinks Wilson will ~et his share
of at-bats, even if tt might not
be in the 500-600 at-bat range.

0

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

I

, 11 t

e
. -

I

Wilson might be left on Pirates' bench

ESPN plans movie on Pete Rose
BRISTOL, Conn. (AP)
- Pete Rose will be the,
Sl!bject of an ESPN movie
bc;oginning production this
spring.
: "Hustle" will premiere on
Sept. 25, ESPN executive
Mark
vice · president
Shapiro
announced
tuesday. The two-hour
fji!JI will focus on events in
Rose's life . and baseball
~areer in the mid- to late
19S0s, including the lifetime ban he agreed to following an investigation of
gambling - a Suspension
that has kept the care~
leader off the Hall of Fame
ballot.
· '.'The saga of Pete Rose
- who in many ways epit.
omized the word ' hustler'
- . is a truly American
melodrama which has captured a nation's attention
for 15 years," Shapiro said.
. "This project continues our
strategy of presenting compelling fHms which transcend sports - a morality
iale with complex, conflictc:d characters struggling to
~o what is right."
lhe network has already
done films on basketball
coach Bob Knight and
f.Ootball coach Bear Bryant,
and has an upcoming proJ~.ct on the late auto racing
st!U Dale Earnhardt set to
air this summer.

•·

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

BRADENTON, fla. (AP)Craig Wilson is getting accustomed to watchin~ the
Pitt~burgh Pira~s brin/S. mother
people to play h1s pos111ons. ·
· Wilson can play catcher, first
base and the outfield, but after
a couple of signings in the past
week, it looks like he will open
the season on the bench.
The Pirates agreed to terms
with first ' baseman Randall
Simon last week and added
right tlelder Raul Mondesi
on Monday. In addition,
three-time All-Star Jason
Kendall returns for his ninth
season as catcher.
'"There's nothing I can do
about that," Wilson said. "I'm
not the one that determines

Jamal Lewis
indicted on federal
drug charges, Bt

.

.,

--_,...__

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,ICII~

�•
•

· PageA2~ ·

I

The Daily Sentinel

management system ·

.
s
.
anne
.
I
New Ch

L..--------------------....,--~-----.....,

Thursday, February 26
Morning (7:00am-Noon)
26 - 4Q N-NE S-1 0 mph
Temperatures wil) rise
from 26 ·to 42 by late this
morning. Skies will be mostly sunny to most.ly cloudy
with 5 to 10 MPH winds
from the north turning from
the northeast as the morning
progresses.
. Afternoon
(I :OOpm6:00pm) 39 - 45 NE 5- 10

,

Feb. 25, 2004
\( .•

;~.

.. o-.

-

Dow Jones
Industrials ·

""'.

10.601 .62 .

rt:i-r.•~}~

Nasdaq
composite

--·

2,022". 98

Poor's 500

trom~,

1,143.67

...,_ _ _ 10· 250

C:..:C,.:"3t---~
9,75C
NOV
High

+0.33

10 ,615.56

DEC
Low

JAN

FEB

Record high: 11 ,722.96
Jan . 14. 2000

10,560.0 7

Feb. 25, 2004

2,200

Nasdaq
composite

Russell

2000

,
,"()750 ···-,
'

--:-=:--=:----:-:-:-:---;:=-·9,25C

10,601.62

~.:lii""'"'
w•~
- j&lt;lil

Stand1rd &amp;

. ....__
. . ._
...._. _
. . _._.. - - - - . - ,·.···
,.=·--·

Feb. 25 , 2004

·'If~·~-; ?·

Dow Jones

Industrials

from 36 early t.his evening to
28. Winds wi ll be I0 MPH
from the .no.rtheast. ·
Ovemight
(I :00am6:00am) 26 - 30 NE-N: 5
mph . It yvill -&lt;:Ontinue to be
cloudy. Temperatures will hold
~teady around 28 with today's
low of 26 , occuning around
6:00am. Wind~ will be 5 MPH
from the northeast turning
fron-1 the north as the ovem1ght
.progresses.

mph
It sh0l1ld lle a cloudy
afternoon. Temperatures wi ll
rise from 44 early afternoon
to the high for the day of 45
at 3:00pm as they drop back
down to 39 later thi s afternoon. Winds will be 5 to 10
MPH from the northeast.
Evening
(7:00pm. Midnight) 28 · J6 NE I0
mph
It should remai n clo~dy.
Temperatures will diminish

ADAY ON WAL.L STREET

Market watch

579.04 ·

NYSE diary
Advanced:
2,175 New hlghe
129
.... _11 ~
1.08-'1
...._ n-:
New lowe.
Unohengecl:
188
e
Volume: 1,753 ,892,120

,

............ ......... .............. ..... ................................. ............ .. ............... ........... ........._, ______,,_..
Feb. 25, 2004
~ UIOO

Standard &amp;
Poor's 500

Naldaq diary
A-CI-:::VII=no:::•:=d:..:.....:2'-=0=32 New 1!11111•

-

O.OIIn.cl:

'

1 •128

.

1,143.67

Pet.=

frbmw:

,___ _ 1,010

:

+0.40

I .

..

Electing
Judge Fred Crow
will be good for
Meigs ·Cou,nty.
.

.

When you

you will:
• Bring app~ox. $2 million into Meigs County
• Create new jobs because of the new office
• Gain statewide recognition for Meigs County
• Elect the only candidate that has risen to the
level of a Common Pleas Court Judge

TUPPERS PLAINS
Parent -teac her conferences,
-1 to 7 p.m. at Eastern .High
Schoo l.
EAST MEIGS - PSEO
meeting for post-secondary
studen ts at Eastern High
Schoo l cafeteri a. It is
mandatory that one parent
accom pany each student.
Saturday, Feb. 28
PORTLAND - Lebonan
Tow nship Trustees, 7: 30
p m. at the township buildIng.

. Monday, March 1
RUTLAND
- The
Rutland Township Trustees
wi ll meet at 5 p.m at the
Ru tland Fire Stat ion.
SYRACUSE Sutton
'li&gt;w nsh ip Tru stees 7 p.m. at
Syracuse Village Hall .
Wednesday, March 3
PAGEV ILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees meeting
will be held at 6:30 p.m. at
the Pageville town hall.
J

Clubs and
Organizations
Thursday, Feb. 26
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
Ga rden Club. I p.m. at the
Sy racuse
Community
Ce nter.
POMEROY - · Bits and
Pi eces QLJ_ilt Gui ld, 6:30
p.m. at the Pomeroy Library.
For more information call
Sandra Tillis, 742-2572.
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters to meet at 12:30
p.m . in the lobby of the
Wild Horse Cafe.
Saturday, Feb. 28
MIDDLEPORT- Special
meeting of Middleport lodge
363 F&amp;AM for. annual
inspection in the Mas ter
Mason degree, 7:30 p.m.
with Roger Stephenson
in specting officer. Dinner
will be served at 6:30 p.m.
Members 1o take two pies .

Woman attracted to minister
prays the feeling is mutual

Friday, Feb. 27
POMEROY -Weekend
revival servi ces will be held
through Sunday at the
»
.
DEAR ABBY: I have a
VVednesday, March 3
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel on
MIDDLEPORT
State Route 143, Pomeroy. .serious crush on the mini ster
Middleport Youth League The services wi ll be held at at church, and I suspect he
registratio n at Middleport 7:30 p.m. Friday and has similar feelings for me.
council room 6 to 8 p.m.• Saturday, and 7 p.m. on He is divorced and seems a
Signup is for both baseball Sunday. Rev. Don Adams little shy. Is there some code
and softball for boys and wi ll be the evangelist. There of ethics that a minister must
girls, 4 to 17.
will be special singing. The follow about dating parishRev. Charles McKenzie, ioners? I' m a Methodist.
Please tell me what to do Friday, March 5
pastor, invites the public .
I'm crazy about him. .HARRISIONV ILLE
CRAZY
FOR THE REVMeigs County Pomona
Sunday, Feb. 29
EREND
Grange 46 will meet in regPOMEROY - The fifth
DEAR CRAZY: There· are
ular
session
at
the Sunday hymn sing of the
Harrisionviile Fire Station. Meigs County Churches of specific rules that prevent
from
beco ming
Final plans will be made for Christ will be held at the clergy
romlllltically
involved
with
the Grange banquet on April Zion Church of Christ on
30.
State Route 143 at 7 p.tn. their pari shioners. Those
Each ch urch is asked to pro- who break them are considered predators.
Saturday, March 6
vide special music .
If you are serious about
SALEM CENTER - Star ·
the mini ster, the first thing
Grange 778 and Star Junior
Monday, March 1
Grange 878 will meet in
MIDDLEPORT - Indoor you should do is find anothregular session at 7:30 p.m. camp by the Meigs Area er congregation. After that,
followi ng a 6:30 p.m. din- Holiness Association, 7 p.m. call him , explain why you
ner.
each evening through March left hi s !lock, say a little
prayer and invite him to din7, except Sunday at 6 p.m., ner.
at the Midd leport Nazare ne
DEAR ABBY: When I
Church. Rev. Elaine Pettit,
send
out dinner invitations, I
Thursday, Feb. 26
evangelist. The Sissons proask the guests not to bring
POMEROY - Cari ng and vidi ng the music.
ing but themse lves. But
anyth
Shari ng Support Group will
without
fail , ·my husband's
meet at I p.m. at the Meigs
mother
and
sister ca ll him to
Multi-purpose Center. Topic
say they' ll be bringing addeu
will be on heart health.
·
Friday, Feb. 27
dishes plus dessert.
MIDDLEPORT - Elaine
My husband, "Nick ,"
TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW 9053 will meet at 7 . Armstrong, Dean of Student refuses to te ll them it' s not
pi.m. adt the hall in Tuppers Affairst at the University of necessary. He says they
plains. There will be a spe- Rio Grande, and Mike don't mean to offend and
Gerlach, local historian, wi II that I am being petty.
cial drawing.
present programs in obserBut they . never ask me
what
I' m preparing, and
vance
of
Black
History
' Friday, Feb. 27
Month from I to 3:30 p.m. their food always contlicts
. HARRISONVILLE
on
Friday at the Uni versity with what I'm serving. This
Harri sonvi lle Lodge 4 II ,
of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande last time, Nick eve n asked
F&amp;A.M . annual in ~pection
at 7:30 p.m. at the temple Community College Meigs me to change the menu to
fo llowi ng a 6:30 [&gt;.. m. din - Center in Miduleporl. The compleme nt the food they
ner. All members are asked program is spons·ored by were bringing' Afterward,
URG Crossroads and is they asked me to wash their
to take two pies.
open to the public .
Elementary. For more information call Jackie Lute at
985-4308 .

Support Groups

Other events

Church services

Free
MIDDLEPORT soup and sandwich supper, 4
to 6 p.m. at the Middleport
Church of Christ Family
Life Center, Fifth and Main,
Middleport.

Thursday, Feb. 26
REEDSVILLE - Revival
services will be held 7 p.m.
nightly throullh Sunday at
the Fellowship Church of
the Nazarene, Reedsville . ·
Dr. Ron Roth of Springfield,
Mo., an evangelist for 23
Thur.sday, Feb. 26
years, will be the speaker.
POMEROY
Eileen
There will be special singing
nightly. The Sunday morn- Roush will observe her 85th
ing services will be at 10:45 birthday Thursday. Cards
may be sent to her at I00 E.
a. m.
Memorial Drive , Apt. 305,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
MIDDLEPORT
Organizational meeting to
Monday, Mar.ch l
form l?rayer team for the ·
RUTLAND Norman
upcommg
Crusade
for
Christ, 7 p.m. at the Will. will observe his 91 st
Rejoicing Life Church in birthday Monday. Cards may ·
Middleport For more infor- be sent to him at Overbrook
Page
Street,
mation call Curtis King, Center,
985-3317.
Middleport, 45760.

. Birthdays

Dear
Abby

servi ng di shes and return
them in a couple of days.
I have attended other family fu nctions where I" ve
noticed these in-laws did not
interfere with the meal s
being served . I can't help but
take it personally. I am very
offended. What should I do'l
- TIRED OF BITING MY
TONGUE ,IN PA .
DEAR TIRED: There is
no rule of etiquette that
demands a host serve food
that is brought by the guests.
(This goes for wine, too.) It
is considered to be a gi ft to
the host. T he next time
Nick's mother and " ster
bring food after having been
asked not to. transfer it to
your own containers and put
it in the freezer. Put their
dishes into a hot soapy sink .
and present them to their
owne rs at the door when
they leave. Then you and
Nick cun enjoy their gift at a
later ti me - or dispose of it
if you choose .
DEAR ABBY: I have been
married 25 years. I' m in my
early 40s and have th ree
adorable children and a good
life .
My problem is I cannot get
my previous boyfriend out
of my system. I long tu see

• Hardware
•
• Furniture .
• Appliances
• Paint
• Carpet
·• Electrical
• Construction
• Wallpaper
• Plumbing
• Banks
• Insurance
• And More ...

eaa
'

him . and when I do - eve n :
a glimpse of him - I feel
the way I did when we were
toget her years ago. I get nervo us and tingly and ji ttery. I
look for him wherever I go .
and dream of him often . It is
always the same dream: we
are getting married.
I have a good hu ~ b a nd
who doesn't drink or hecome
abusive . We go to church.
have a new house. two nice
ve hicles &lt;llld just about
everything I could wan t.
Do I need closure or do
yo u think I sti ll love him'J I
wi ll alwavs love him. I
guess. eveil though I ta lkeU
wi th him seve ral years ago
and he is co mpletely difle rent from when we dated. Do
I need counse ling or is thi s
normal'' - WO NDERING
IN WISCONS IN
DEAR WO NDERI NG I
suspect yo u are less in love
with him th an with the
IDEA of him. He can do no
wrong becau se it· s ali in
yo ur ' head - the "perfect''
love affair. If cuu nse li·ng wil l
help you feel better. I won't
di scou rage you . But I rec·ommend that you also find a
project or voluntee r ou tlet on
which
to
concen trate .
because it appears yo u ha ve
too much time on yo ur
hands.
Dear Abby is written by
Abigai l Van Buren. also
kno~vn as Jeanne Phi llip s.
and was founu eu by her
mother. Pauline Phi llip s.
Wri te
Dear
Abby
at
www.DearAhby. cnm or P.O.
Box 69440. Los Ange les.
CA 90069 .

Seekers host an evening of fun
MIDDLEPORT
- The
Bible Seekers Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ
hosted a "gala eve ning"
recently at the Family Life
Center of the church.
A dinner was served to
Dale and Norma Bing,
Raymond
and · Maryln
Wilcox, Bernard and Pat
Shrivers, Don and Cathy
Erwin, Mack and Bea
Stewart, Bill and Myrville
Brown, Jim and Susan
Richmond, Jean Thomas,
Lloyd and Anna Blackwood,
Danny and Jeanette Thomas,
AI and Donna Hartson, Jim
and Marie Snyder, Gary and
Linda Bates.
It was prepared and served

Winner of a Valentine's Day candy gift

by the Fell owship Class
members, Penny. Tom and
Katie Evans. Steve Lane, Sue
Johnson, Tom and Linda
Grimm, Mike a nd Debbie
Gerlach, Rodney. Sherrie and
Shellie
Bailey,
Debbie
Ferguson . Table decorations
were done by Pat Shri vers,
Marie Snyder, Cathy Erwin,
and Jeanette Thomas.
Cathy Erwin gave the welcome and Gary Bates, class
leader, hd prayer.

Eve nin g
ent ert ainment
included the "Time Line
Quartet", cons isti·ng of
Gerald Powell. tenor. Richard
Eubanks.
lead.
Wi·lbur
McCormick, bass, and Chad
Dodson, baritone, including
"My Wild Irish Rose". "Wait
Til the Sun Shines. Ne llie"'.
"Hean of My Heart", "'Under
the Boardwalk" , "Shine on
Me", "This Little Light of
Mine" , and "Let Me Call You
Sweetheart".

Celebrlifing_ speci11l

·dqs with you!

DON'T MISS OUT ON THIS ••••

2nd Set Free
EVERYDAY
3

.

A benefit luncheon organized by employees of Peoples Bank in

Middleport raised $2,600 to assist Angie Swift, who rece~tly
underwent a kidney and pacreas transplant. Swift, back row,
center. is pictured with the bank's Manager, Jim Snodgrass,
and bank employees Garnet Varian, Carla Jefferson, Stella
Morgan , Carla King, Sherry Robinson and Amy Jivide n.

Losers rewarded
Supplement to:
~oint ~leauant l\egtster
~alltpoUUJlatlp m:rtbune
The Daily Sent!nel

--·----

•

COOLVILLE - Pat Hall
was the top loser . at thi s
week's meeting of Tops #OH
201 3 at I he Torch Baptist
Church. She was given a basket of fruit as a reward.
· Monthly best loser was Ben
Frank s. Judy Dickens was
rewarded for ·her straight sixweeks loss. A nutrition pro-

or

•
~-·---

gram was presented by Joyce
Brown of the Athens County
Extension office. There will
be meeting on March 2 due to
election. Anyone interested
in the program should contact
Pat Snedden at 662-2633 or
attend a free meeting . The
next meeting will be March 9 ..

. Email engagement ~ing anniversary
· ·
.announcements anti phoro,s·
·
to news@mydoilysenfinel.com.
\.~

.....

4"

Doubles

$599
Any

Any Exp.

(304) '675_-1333
(740) 446-1342
(740) 992-1155
,

_____

1/2" Doubles

$399

ADVERTISING DEADLINE Tuesday, MARCH 2, 2004

•

Thursday, .Feb. 26
POMEROY
Meigs
Local Board 1j,)f Education
reg ular meeting 7 p.m. in
the board office. Changed
fro m Tuesday night due to
boad member conflicts.
·

•

Thursday, February 26, 2004

Sunday Times-Sentinel
(740)992-2155

'

.,

Public meetings

Luncheon raised $2,600

HO

'\

Go with Crow

Community Calendar

. TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains baseball and
so ftball signups will be held
fro m 9 to noon at Eastern
AP

Local Stocks

•

·

1.100

AP

ACI- 27.65
· AEP - 33.61
Akzo- 39.28
AshlaRd Inc. - 47.29
BBT - 36.84
BLI - 14.42
Bob Evans - 33.07
BorgWarner - 91 .56
City Holding -· 33.90
Champion - 4.84
Charming Shops - 6.75
Col - 31,87 ,· .
Dupont ·- 45.27
DG -2 1.71
Federal Mogul - .315
Gannett - 86.19
General Electric - 32.97
GKNLY - 5.10
Harley Davidson - 53.62
Kmart - ,28.74
Kroger 19.13
Ltd - .20.20
NSC - 21.75
Oak Hill Financial - 32.31
Bank One ..-,. 52.63
OVB - 30.00
Peoples - 28.75
Pepsico - 52.10
Premier -· · 9.26
Rocky 'Boots - 18 .79
RD Shell - 48.80
Rockwell - 30.48
Sears ·- 46.51
SBC - 24.15
AT&amp;T - 2tl.25
USB - 28.14
Wendy's - 40.08
Wal-Mart - 59.88
Worthingtqn - 17.11
Daily 'lock reports ·are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions,· provided by Smith
Partners at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.
11

CLEVELAND (AP) Eight atea hospitals are planning tp manage their medical
.·and surgical supplies by
using a method commonly
associated with discount
chains and grocery stores.
A common warehouse will
send daily shipments of supplies to the hospital s, replacing the. on-site storerooms
that have been used to
receive, sort and stockpile
the items. The idea s.tems
from the business concept of
streamlining a supply chain
to increase efficiency and cut
costs.
Universi ty
Hospitals
Health System is partnering
with a Florida medical-supplies distributor to redefine
its way of getting the thousands of products into its
hospitals.
The arrangement is a
chang~ from how supplies
distribution generally occurs .
at hospitals, said Jorge de .
Cespedes, president and chief
operating officer of the hospital system's new distribution partner, Pharmed Group
Holdings Inc. , of Miami.
Most hospital s "are stili
; I
plugging along, doing 'things
••
the way they did them 20
years ago" with su pplies,
said Robert Matevish, head
of PMG Group of Ohio Inc.,
the subsidiary that Pharmed
Group Holdings created to
run the Cleveland-area operation .
Plastic totes coded for specific departments at University
The PMG warehouse has a Hospitals Health System hos pitals move along a conveyor belt
bar-coding system capable of at the Glenwillow warehouse in Glenwillow . Scanners at the
filling orders for individual beginning of the conveyor read bar codes ·on the totes and
nu rsing units and sending direct them to one s ide or the other. When the warehouse . is
them directly to the point of fully built out, the conveyor system will be 'three levels high.
care, eliminating the need to (AP Photo/ The Plain Dealer, Eustacio Humphrey)
run the products thrqugh hos"pi tal storerooms.
ing supply operations at an with PMG and some will be
Hospitals usually buy some off-sit~. warehouse, UHHS shifted to other hospital jobs.
supplies through big distribu- hospital s could reclaim that The warehouse will be apletors and some directly ftom space for clinical services.
serve hospitals in other ways.
manufacturers. That purchas-.
With about $600 million in too, such as storin g excess
ing process can create a · annual sales in Florida, Latin equipment or old tiles.
steady stream of supplies to America and the Caribbean,
When the August blackout
hospital loading docks.
privately held Pharmed knocked out Cleveland 's
Steve Standley, who over- Group expects about $80 water system , hospitals
sees the supply chain at million in busi ness over three scrambled for drinking water.
Now, pallets of bottled water
UHHS, said store rooms years in the Ohio venture.
As UHHS phases out its stand ready at the warehouse,
typically eat up about I 0
percent of a hospital 's own storerooms, some of the out of the hospitals' way but
scarce space. By consolidat- 44 workers. will move to jobs within easy reach. ·'

1 110

104
New lowe

Unehengecl :
279
9
Volume : 1,882,849,085

BYTHE .BEND

.The Daily Sentinel.

Thursday, February 26, 20.04 ·

HospitQ/s plan-novel supply

PageA3

•

From Orlglnal110 .or 135 C-41 process rolls.
See one of our clerks for details of the
Fuji True Color Film Club c:;ard.
Jane Hawley, left, won a Valentine's. Day candy gift offered by
Peoples Bank of Middleport. Carla King of the bank made the
presentation.

0 Ll
on the number of Bingo
Cards you can play.
Cards in your Sunday,
Feb~uary 29, 2004 paper

HAVE 6 ROLLS DEVELOPED
AND GET THE SEVENTH ROLL
DEVELOPED FREE!

Try Us For All
Your Photofinishing Needs!
SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy
Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph .
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Open Weeknights 'Till9

HOURS
Mon - Frl8artl - 9pm

Sat. Sam · Spm
Sun. Closed

�~--

-

"•

..
'

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pornel'())', Ohio ·

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

Ohio Valley publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher

Charlene H~fllch
General Manager-News Editor

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

-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

•

VIEW

READER'S

Law
Village inconsistent
Dear Editor:
Why is it that anything associated with government is above
laws that mean maximum penalization for those without
money. power, influence or prestige?
At 12:30 a.m. on Jan. 26, I was sitting at home while my
girlfriend lie sleeping. While Middleport lay quiet under a
coat of snow, a startling noise occurred - the scrape of a
snow shovel. Looking out my window, I saw a village
employee shoveling snow from the sidewalk beside Peoples
Bank, though I did not know he was a public worker at thi s
time.
Within minutes, Kimmie woke up, wondering what the
noise was. We decided to call the police. Noise is noise, ·
regardless of who makes it.
I was informed an officer would be dispatched. Fifteen minutes and another phone call later. the officer arrived, rolled
down his window, and talked to the shoveler and another man
who had joined him. As the officer left, the men redoubled
their efforts, tripling the noise, as if out of spite. Within I 0
minutes, a village truck with four workers and a backhoe were
.cleaning the sidewalks at Peoples Bank and the Meigs County
Department of Job and Family Services.
As I write this, it is I :30 a.m .. and the backhoe is cleaning
the parking lots. Kimmie has been up for an hour and must be
up for work at 5 a.m. Funny how Middleport neglected to do
anything about the snow until people were asleep.
I remember an incident last summer, where we had some
friends visiting one night. At about midnight, a knock came at
the door. No less than six officers stood in my hallway, looking for a burglary suspect and investigating a noise complaint.
Living above a bar and not playing any music myself, I
inquired as to what noise was disturbing, and was told our
'laughter.' We never saw that burglary suspect, either.
·
The next complaint I get for 'nois.e pollution' will remind
·me of this night. God Bless Meigs County, land of•hypocrisy
and sycophants.

•

PageA4
Thursday, February' 26,

.~

2004

Morton

Kondracke

Ronald Reagan got on! y 30
percent. positive notices in the
network newscasts and in The
New York Times and
Washington Post during his
tirst year in oftice.
Bush's father got 33 r.ercent
positive coverage, while Bill
Clinton got 38 percent.
During January, Bush's bad
press was a combination of the
content of the news - continuing casualties in Iraq, the
David Kay report declaring
. t!Jat Iraq probably had no
weapons of mass desbUction
before the war, drooping jobcreation numbers, a· lackluster
State of the Union speech plus
coverage of the
Democrats attacking Bush,
according to Lichter.
'The Democrats didn't
spend much time attacking
each other,' he said. 'They
focused most on Bush and that
got picked up every night in
the broadcasts.'
Moreover, the spin put on
most news reports about the
Democrats has been favorable.
center data shows - 79 percent favorable for Kerry over
the course of the month, 96
percent favorable for Edwards
, and 52 percent favorable for
Howard Dean.
Prior to the Iowa caucuses,
Dean's media ·coveragewas 58
percent positive. Afterwards,
especially after his screechy
election-night speech, his coverage dipped to only 40 percent posJUve.
The consequence of this
coverage is a definite drop in

Bush's approval ratings. Bush
began the year with a 60 percent approval rating. By the
end of the month, it was at 49
percent.
Gallup's latest
February report shows a lift
back to 51 percent.
The
new
USA
Today/CNN/Gallup
poll
showed Kerry beating Bush
by 55 percent to 43 peroent
and Edwards ahead, 54 percent to 44 percent.
Kerry has become the faraway front-runner based mostly on Democrats' perceptions
that he is the most electable of
the candidates. Enthusiasm for
him seems to be based on the
notion that he can beat Bush
while others. apparently, cannot.
Exit polls in the latest primary contest in Wisconsin confirm the point. Asked about the
candidates'
strengths,
Wisconsin Democrats said they
marginally preferred Dean or
Edwards as one who 'stands up
for what he believes.'
Those who most wanted a
candidate with 'a positive
message' favored Edwards
over Kerry by 57 percent to 27
percent. Those who wanted a
candidate who 'cares about
people' went with Edwards
over Kerry by 47 percent to 30
percent.
Only on the quality 'can
defeat Bush' did Kerry sweep
- 69 percent to 21 percent
over Edwards. Interestingly,
. though, independents in
Wisconsin favored Edwards by
40 percent to 28 percent - a
suggestion that, actually.
Edwards would have a better
chance .against Bush than
Ke!l)'

Ot course. ol\'ly Kerry has
received any negative scrutiny
from the media, rival
Democrats or the Bush campaign . All three have pointed
out that Kerry, while claiming
to be a tighter against 'special
interests,' has received more

1

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I

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I

r

The Daily Sentinel
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Ohio VaiiiiY Publlahlng Co.
Correction Polley
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E-mail:

lnelde Meige County

13 Wooks .. .......... .'30.15
26Weoks .......... , .•'60.'00
52 Weeks . . ..........' 118.'80

newsC mydallysentlnel.com
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Rate• Outalde Melga County·
13Weeks ..... : .•. . '...150.05
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ee)apa t:a!CO~
pere beeshe

lmi'oodh

Crow
from Page A1
fight ahead.
Like Crow, the other candidates hav.e spent their money
on items related to the cam·
paign. According to expense
reports filed at the Scioto
County Board of Elections,
Nuzum has spent $4,474;
McFarland has spent $5,610;
Driscoll has spent $8,561;
and Collins has spent $4,710.

The lessons of the losing no1J1inees
If the Democratic presidenand abandoned. ,
derisive nickname 'Deaniacs'
tial horse race had gone the
Like Sen. Eugene McCarthy from pundits who·find excess
way l handicapped · it, right
in 1968, Dean's opposition to democracy unseemly.
about now the field would be
the war in Iraq and the extraHoping to emerge as the onrounding the clubhouse tum
ordinarily dishonest campaign Dean dark horse after New
and po\lllding into the home. Gene
of fear-mongering that led up Hampshire, Wesley Clark's
stretch with as many as four,
to it thrilled millions of campaign simply lost its ratiopossibly five, candidates still
Lyons ·
Democrdts who'd despaired of nale after the good docto~
m contention. Front-runner
hearing a forthright, declara- faded. With two war heroes in
Howard Dean would be lagtive sentence on the subject the race, Democrats preferred
ging due to his inability to
spoken by their representa- the one who's also a veteran
attract the voles of anybody
llves in Washington.
politician.
south of Boston (except col- down, but given that this colThe same was true of Dean's
That Clark the campaigner
lege kids and hopeless ideal- umn has occasionally been opposition to Bush's millions· never quite lived up to the
ists). Coming up strong on the known to adopt a satirical for-millionaires tax cuts and promise of his resume shUck
inside would be Washington tone, humility requires a full their devastating effect upon me as a function of two things:
outsider Gen. Wesley Clark . · confession.
the nation's fiscal health his late start, and n.uvete about
Or would the fonner NATO · Having done so, fm going even though his vow to repeal the media. Unlike, say, actors
Supreme Commander have to' skip the part where the even the relative pittance or pro athletes with previous
been better described as an columnist dendes the 'losers' given middle class wage earn- on-the-job experience, even
insider cc;&gt;ming up oil the out- as presumptuous fools for dar- ers was both politically dumb highly accomplished persons
side? Either way, the horse . ing to imagine they . might and practically unnecessary.
have trouble grasping that for
race metaphor- I listed Dean · have become president Domg
Dean's real legacy, however, many political journalists,
as the 4-1 favorite, with Clark so only encourages the .royalist wasn't his feistiness. More appearance trumps reality
second at 5-1 - is inadequate tendencies of the House of important were his campaign's almost every time. Having
to discuss an American politi- Bush and its media flatterers. innovations in organizing and made the rookie error of
cal contest, except to say what If we're ever going to rescue fund-raising. Pundits more answering a hypothetical
everybody already knows: my our democ\'UCY from the kind Comfortable with the top-down, question about Iraq on the first
two picks pulled up in the of
corporate plutocracy Washington-centered
style day of his campaign, Clark
backstretch and quit runilin~.
George W. Bush represents, prevalent in both major parties never regained his balance.
In·retrospect, the only thing we're going to have to quit found Dean's Internet-based
Even so, the highly-decorat~
I got right was that no former viewing honorable failure as 'meet-ups' faintly risible. An ed general's pungent critiques
governor. of Vermont: much laughable.
' ·
inlluenllal piece in the New of Bush's·big adventure helpeg
less fioward j}ean, w~ 1goirlg . Jfoth Dean and Cllll'k's York Thnes magazine pretty voters
understand
that
to win -. a . majori~ . of fgiled can~&lt;;lacies, it seems r,o ·much dismissed them as lonely- grandiose geo-political day·
Dempcranc !!¢legates nallon-.. " me,,, honorllbly ~ed thetr heans clubs for COJl!P.IIter ~ks dre!IJIIS and a president prancal!Y· · ' ' ·
·
·• ~ ruKI ''Cbilntty ili several ___., as if meeting like-minded ing around Jn a GI Joe cos;
'I imag41ed a photo finish, · m)portan~· ·ways.. Dean, '. as individuals hasn't alwfiys drawn ltlll).e can'i substitute for a
with •110 CM&lt;Ii~· seciui.ng a ~at~ eyerybody recognizes, ~le to politicS.
.
tough:IJlinded, but 8ane
majority, folio~ by'·~t . D!o-· ·gave Deinocnits back the\£
t.qually ct;ncial ~a( the · natiotial seyurlty policy.
•
kered Democrauc epnventwn · &amp;aclcboqeo'. Jie was the fust Dean · camprugn'~ abtlity to
(Arkansas
Democrat&gt;
in which Cl8rk 'stooa the best ·pt'l&gt;~t Di!'mocraJ to .shQW qlise large amoilnts of 1lJ(Ine~ ·Gazerte columnist Gene Lyons
chance of' einerging from the ·iliat st!'Origly1· criticiZing . in srnall-donor coofriblltiOiis . fs a niJiional magazille awa~
(forgive.rne) , h~trading as . ~identBushin~w~of cheaply and f~t · ~ugh ,. wi!IMr.and'crHJ!!(horof'TM
the no~ best able~ !mite · 9/1. 1, not qnly .d.idl\'t li'Use \ht. ..Internet appe.al~ ~ PI,!~ ~ t H~~ Qf t~ P~side'lt' (St:
the party and 'coun~ come . skY to fall, but ·drew ll strong poptll~ 11ack ~ ~ Mam;a ·P~ss~ 2(f(}()). You cQii .
November. The last bit I w:as res~ from .voters w~'d ·.YOU will. Hence~ hiS MW: , t-ma1
LyonJ at . ge114
clever enough not to wnf&lt;' ~' teellng ·wsel)(ranc,hised ~· ~' earrung
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Stolen
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possession of drugs .
On Feb. 16, Meigs sheriff's
deputies alerted Athens
County officials that an
~lbany woman had noticed
Several cars in her neighbor's
yard. Most of the cars were
older models.
, Sgt. Allen Flickinger and
rnvestigator Steve Sedwick,

~Page

As

Dissolutions
POMEROY- Actions for
dissolution of marriage have
been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by
Julie Ann Russell, Racine ,
and Michael James Russell,
Long Bottom; Rhonda G.
Tabor, Middleport, and
Charles
L.
Tabor,
Middleport ; and Donna R.
. Greene, Middleport, and
James E. Greene. Gallipolis.

Forclosure
POMEROY - A foreclosure action has been tiled in County winners in the PAR American History contest receiving award at a recent meeting of Return
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by ABN Amro . Jonathan Meigs Chapter were from the left, front, Brady Bissell. Travis Edwards. Hannah Miller.
Mortgage Group, In c. , Shawntay Garnes. ahd back, Andrew Bissell, left, pictured with Pat Holter. Mary Rose and Lisa Mil ler.
Jacksonv ille , Fla., against
Clifford Thomas Thotnas III ,
Pomeroy, and others. alleging
default on a mortgage agreement in the amount of
$75.346.39.
Shawntay Garnes, Meigs
Middle School student, was
first place winner in the seventh
grade history essay conPOMEROY - Marriage
test of Return Jonathan
licenses have been issued in
Meigs Chapter, Daughers of
Meigs County Probate Court
the American Revolution .
to Rodney Eugene Baker, 47.
Here she receives he r pin
Long Bottom, and Jane Ann
from Lisa Miller, Meigs
Estep, 46, Long Bottom; and
·
teacher.
Israel Lee Phillips, 23,
Rutland, and Nicole Marie
McDaniel, 17, Rutland.

Marrjage licenses

Local Briefs

" WESTERVILLE - John Franklin Townsend, age 90, of
Westerville, died Tuesday, February 24, 2004, at Columbus
Colony Elderly Care.
, He was retired from Kinnear Manufacturing Company and
Sign Painter, a member of First Baptist Church of Westerville.
I;llendon Senior Center, and Blendonaires B-Senior Citizens
Band.
' He was preceded in death by parents, Gath &amp; Nada
'fown send.; sisters. Evelyn Townsend and Hazel Stanley.
He is survived by loving wife of 66 years, Dorothy Faye
Queen Townsend: children, Sidney A. (Bonnie) Townsend of
Minerva Park, Donna J. (Joseph G.) Redwine of Lexington,
Ky: six grandchildren; nine great grandchildren and one great·
great granddaughter.; a sister, Lorene Scott of Nelsonville;
brother-in-law, Duane Stanley of Harrisonville; loving sistersin-law, brothers-in-law, nieces, nephews and beloved church
family.
Friends may call at the Moreland Funeral Home, 55 E.
Schrock Road, Westerville, from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. Service
will be held at noon on Saturday, Feb. 28, 2004, at First
Baptist Church of Westerville .
.
Graveside servic.es and burial will be held 3 p.m . at Wells
Cemetery, Pageville.
Friends, if they wish, may contribute to First Baptist Church
in memory of John Franklin Townsend.

Ia mishkakh

\

.

RACINE .- Dallas Victor Hill, 83, of the Apple Grove
fo mmumty tn Racme, died on Monday, Feb. 23, 2004, at his
·
11 0 me.
He was born on Oct. 3, 1920 in Letart Falls son of the late
Albert and Eliza ~nn Miller Hill. He was the ~wner and operator of Dallas H1ll Quahty Farms and coowner and operator of Arthur Hill
Greenhouses.
, He was a veteran of the U.S. Army Cpl.
34th Signal Co., serving in World War I!. He
was a member of the Racine United
Methodist Church; Free and Accepted
fl.1asons of Ohio, Masonic Lodge #461,
~acme; the National Rifle Association;
~mencan Legton Post 602 of Racine · and
was a lifelong and proud Republican. '
He married Donna Wolfe on Oct. 25,
Dallas Hill
1946, and she survives. Also surviving are
two daughters, Deborah Roush, and her husband, Marshall, of
East Letart Falls, and Jannette Norris and her husband
Darrell. of East Letart Falls; two sons Dallas Arthur Hill of
~acine and Dean Vance Hill of Appl~ Grove; I 0 grandchilpren: Joseph Roush, Courtney Roush Leachman, Tracy Norris
H~pp , Ryan Noms, Dally Hill , Wally Hill, Dean Hill, Jr., Jane
f.Jtll Bnnager, Autumn Hill and Andee Hill; three great grand_ch•ldren: Bay lee Hupp, Joe Joe Roush, and Jarrett Hupp; three
sJsters-tn-law, Dolores Casper of Columbus and Katie Hill
and Pauline Hill, both of Letart Falls; two brothers-in-law,
Carl Wolfe and his wife, Della, of Middleport, and Harold
Rou sh ot P1nch, W Va.: and several nieces and nephews.
_ Bestes hts parents, he was preceded in death by eight broth~rs, three sisters, and a special son, Cecil Roseberry.
, Service will be held at I p.m. on Thursday, Feb. 26, 2004.
at Roush Funeral Home in Ravenswood, W.Va., with Pastor
P.ete Shaffer officiating. Burial will follow at Letart Falls
Cemetery.
·
,; Friends may visit the family from 4 to 8 p.m. on Wednesday
at the funeral home. Masonic services will be held by Racine
Masonic Lodge #461 at 6 p.m.
,. Memorial contribution s may be made to Racine United
Methodist Church or Meigs County Humane Society.

John Townsend

(Morton Kondracke is executive editor of Roll Call, the
newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

The Daily Sentinel

For the record

Dallas Hill

money from lobbyists over his
career than any other senator.
Doubts also have been
raised about his voting record
on national security - espedally his opposition to various
weapons systems and intelligence budgets.
Edwards, by contrast, has
had a free ride. The
Washington Post editorialized
that he was the one major candidate who ha~ refused to publish lists of his top fundraisers
- the suspicion being that
they would overwhelmingly
be trial lawyers, another 'special interest.'
Going into the biggest
Tuesday of the Democratic
contest. Edwards would be
helped if major polls indicated
that he. too, could beat Bush.
Catching Kerry. who's miles
ahead in delegates, would be
diftlcult. But the race might
get interesting. .
Meantime, though. Bush is
likelY; to score a comeback in
the pOlls. Any minute now, his
campaign will begin spending
its vast treasure on ads reminding voters of his leadership in
crisis and his dedication, above
all, to keeping America safe.
And, as the Post reported on
Tue ~&gt;day that average weekly
wages have risen 4.1 percent
since Bush became president,
taxes have dropped by 19 percent and disposable income
has risen II .2 percent.
With the stock market surging and inventories falling, hiring should begin to rise shortly, helping to erase the
Democrats' biggest argument
against Bush- the loss of 2.2
million jobs on his watch.
A jobs turnaround and
decent progress toward stability in Iraq would put Bush back
in command of the ·presidential race. Of course, it hasn't
happened yet.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

l
i

www.mydailysentinel.coin

Obituaries

Herb Rose
Middleport

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in this column are the
·consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.'s
editorial' board, unless otherwise noted.

2004

·-'

Tfbnder is why Bush polls aren't worse
President Bush got such
negative TV coverage during
the month of January - and
Democrats got so much favorable attention - that one wonders why Bush's polls aren't
worse than they are.
Bush's approval ratings are
now down to the low 50s and
he loses in head-to-head
matchups with bQth the
Democratic fronbUnner, Sen.
John Kerry, 0-Mass., and his
only rival, Sen. John Edwards,
D-N.C. .
But, considering where he's
at after the pummelirlg he's
taken, Bush should ll\bound
when he starts fighting back in
earnest and when (as );eems
likely) the economy picks up.
Meantime, results froip the
Wisconsin primary show, that
Democrats are less than entirely enthusiastic about K~rry.
The Bush campaign may 1\ave
stirred up doubts about Ke\ry.
but it certainly doesn't wantlto
help Edwards, who might be a
stronger general election candidate than Kerry.
Bush's depressed polls can
be explained by what the public has heard over the past
month. A study by the Center
for Media and Public Affairs
shows that references to Bush
in January were more than
two-thirds negative on the
three broadcast network
evening newscasts, while references to Democratic presidential candidates were 71
percent positive.
A negative press isn't new
for Bush, according to the center's director, Robert Lichter.
'Except after Sept. II and during the Iraq war, he's had a terrible press,' Lichter said. 'The
fact is that all presidents do.
Presidential coverage is overwhelmingly negative, a little
less for Democrats, more for
Republicans.'
A large-scale study by the
center prior to Bush's arrival in
the presidency showed that

Thursday, February 26,

Most of these candidates
have money in reserve which
they can choose to spend in
the final days of the campaign. These campaigns were
funded by various combinations of in-house loans,
fundraisers and donations.
·Douglas Bennett, a former
Athens County Municipal
judge who is unopposed in
the Democratic pnmary, has
spent only $605 to date.
The candidates will file
another expense repqrt after
the primary on April 9.
Athens sheriff's department,
went to the property and
determined the vehicles
appeared to be stolen from
the Meigs County proiperty.
This seizure led to ·another
location in Athens County
and one in Vinton County,
where more vehicles were
discovered. Eleven cars, one
truck, two trailers were
seized from the three locations.
No arrests have yet been
made, but suspects are being
sought.

Public Meeting

History contest winners announced at DAR
BY CHARlfNE HOEFLICH

RACINE - There will be
a CDBG heari ng to discuss
the grant process regarding
the proposed water treatment
plant at 7 p.m. Monday,
March I, at the Racine
Municipal Building. Racine
Village Council will meet
immediately afterward.

Work underway
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Highway Depart1pent
will complete ditching -and
culvert replacement on C.R.
18, Kingsbury Rd, and temporary traffic delays will take
place between 7:30a.m. and
3:30p.m.
According to County
Engineer Eugene Triplett,
motorists are advised to use
alternate routes while the
work is underway.
The road will be resurfaced
later this year, Triplett said.

HQEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CDM

PdMEROY
Re,ognition of local winners in the American history
and good . citizens contests
highlighted a recent meeting
of Return Jonathan . Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution at the
Meigs County Library.
In the good citizen contest, Codi Alexia Davis, a
student at Southern High
School and daughter of Jeff
Dav'is of
and Brenda
Syracuse , w.as first place
winner in the good citizen
contest.
Runner-up was Maegan
Elizabeth .Dodson of Meigs
High School, daughter of
Russ and Kay Dodson.
The title for the essay
written by the contestants
was "Our American Heritage
and Our Responsibility for
Preserving it."
Students were given the title
after they arrived in the
essay writing room and in
the presence of a faculty
member wrote the essay.
Neatness, legibility, originality and historical accuracy were considered in the
judging. Essays were limited
to 500 words and students
were given a two-hour time
limit. After the allotted time,
the essays were collected,
sealed in an envelope and
forwarded to the judges.

'Davis' essay had been grade student &gt;. inc luding
entered in the state contest. home schoolers . . were invi tShould she win there, it will ed to participate in the congo into national competition. test. Judging wa., ba,ed on
The winners received certifi- historical accuracy. adhcrcates and medals from June encc to topic . organi zation
Citizen of material. inleresl. origiAshley,
Good
Scholarship Conteset coordi · nality. spelling , grammar.
nalor.
punctuation. and neatness .
In the DAR American
The winning essays were
History Es~ay Contest. the forwarded I&lt;Jr district comwinners wel!e eigbth grade, petition .
Local winner'
Hannah Miller of Southern were pre sented certificate'
and Andrew Bissell of and medals by Lisa Miller.
Eastern, tie for first place: Meigs
Middl e
School
fifth grade, Ashley Miller of Fac~lty
ri1ember. · ami
Eastern, .first place; Brady Patricia Holter and Mary
Bissell of Eastern, s~cond Rose. d1apter contest coorplace; sixth grade , Travis dinators.
Edwards of Eastern, first
Peggy Moore .
regent.
and Kimberly Hawthorne of congrat ul ated the meeting
Eastern, second; seventh and a memorial serv ice
grade, Shawntay- Garnes, for Eleanor Smith, longfirst, and Ethan Murphy, time member of th e DAR.
both of Meigs Local, sec· Refres hmen ts were served
ond.
to the honored students.
Topic of the essay was their parent s. guests and
"The Louisana Purchase, members by the hoste ss
Thomas Jefferson's Legacy." committee , ull the winners
Students were asked to pre· present and all those that
tend that they were Thomas participated in the contest
Jefferson writing an autobi- on their excellent essays.
ography near the end of his Following the business
life. They were asked to meeting conducted by
remember the Louisiana . Regent Moore. she conPurchase as the most signif- ducted
a
Memorial
icant event of his two-term Service
for
Eleanor
presidency us.ing that as a Smith. a long time memfocus, to expalin how and ber of DAR in Return
why the purchase came · Jonath an Meigs and in
about , what was purchased , New
York
City.
and what people and coun- Refreshments w-ere served
parents,
tries were involved .
to
s tud e nt s.
Fifth , sixth and seventh gue sts and members.

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SLEEP DISORDERS CENTER
It's Time You Got A Good Night's Sleep

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPlTAL is proud to announce the opening of its Sleep Disorders
Center. The Sleep Disorders Center can effectively treat disorders like a partner's snoring, gasping
for air or kicking in the middle of the night. Maybe you're having difficulty falling asleep or are
excessively fatigued during the daytime. The Center can help you get back to your normal cycle.
Now accepting appointments with a physician referral through the Pleasant Valley Hospital
Neuro-Physiology Center, (304) 675-2551.

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

•

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�•

..

Page A6 • The ..Daily
. Sentinel

Thursday, February 26, 2004

www. mydallysentlnel.com
.

INSIDE

·-

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Scoreboard, Page B2
Finally no spring worries for Blake, Page 86

Thursday, February 26, 2004

Wagner will stay in Reds~ ·bullpen for now

Prep
Scoreboard
Boys secllonals
Division II
at Logan High School
Monday, February 23

Wednesd.y, February 25
Vinton County 76, New Lexington 58

Athens 49. Sheridan 47

Friday, February 27
Gall ia Academy vs. Meigs, 7 p.m. (winner advances to district at Convocation

Center, Athens)
Saturday, February 28
Vinton COunty vs. Athens winner, 7 p.m.
(winner advances to district at
Convocation Center, Athe ns)
at Southeaatem High School

Wldn..day, Fobruary 25
Logan Elm 71 ,
Wa sh ington Court
. House 52
Greenfield McClain 56, Hillsboro 39
Friday, February 27
Circleville vs. Miami Trace, 7 p.m. (winner advances to district at Con\IOCation
Ce'nter, Athen s)
Saturday, February 28
Logan Elm vs. Greenfield McClain , 7
p.m. (winner advances to district at
Convocation Center, Atheris)

•

Division Ill
at University of Rio Grande
Witdnesday, February 26
Wheelersburg 66, Nelsonville-York 54
Belpre 71 , Coal Grove 66
Friday, February 27
Ches&amp;peake vs. Minford . 6 p.m. (winner
advances to dis trict at Convocation
Center, Ath ens)
Ironton vs. Federal Hocking, 8:30 p.m.
(winM r ad11ances to
district
at
Convocation Center, Athens)
Saturday, February 28
Wheelersburg vs. Belpre, 3 p.m . (winner
advances to district at Convocation
Center, Athen s)
Ale&gt;eander vs. Portsmouth, 7 p.m. (win·
ner advances to district at Convocation
Center, Athen s)
at Waverly High School

Wednesday, February 25
Paint Valley 43, Adena 42
North Adams 61 , Zane Trace 50
Friday, February 27
Vall ey vs. Wes tfall, 6 p.m. (winner
advan ces to district at Convocation
Center, Athens)
Piketon vs. Unioto, 8:45 p.m . (winner
adVances to district at Convocation
Center. Athens)
Saturday, February 28
Paint Va lley vs. North Adams, 6 p.m
(winner advances to district at
Convocation Center, Athens)
Eastern (Brown) 11s. Huntington Ross.
8;45 p.m. (winner advances to district at
Convocation Center, Athens)

Division IV ·
111 Well1ton High Schoof

Friday, February 27
Eastern vs. Crooksville , 6 :15 p.m. (win·
ner advances to district at Convocation
Center, Athens)
South Gallia vs. Southeastern , 8 p.m.
(wirff'ler
advances
to district
at
Convocation Center, Athens)
Saturday, February 28
Trimble vs. Ea~tern {Pike) , 6 :15 pm.
(winner advances to district at
COnvocation Center, Athens)
Southern vs . Symmes Valley. a p.m.
(winner advances
to district at
Convocation Center, Athens)
at Valley High School
Monday, February 23
Friday, February 27
South Webster vs. Western, 6:15 p.m.
(win ner advances to district at
Convocation Center, Athens)
Whiteoak VS. Fairfield Leesburg, 8 p.m.
(winner advances to district at
Convocation Center, Athens)
Saturday, February 28
Sciotovilte vs. Manchester, 6:15 p.m.
(winner advances to district
at
Convocation Center, Athens)
Ponsmouth Clay vs. Green , 8 p.m. (win ner advances to district at Convocation
Center, Athens)

· Girls districts
at

Division II

Chillicothe High SChool
Thuraday,. February 26
Sheridan vs. Gallla Academy, 6 :15 p.m.
Jackson vs. Miami Trace, 8 p.m.
Saturday, February 28
Warren vs. Fairfield Union 1 p.m.
Unloto vs. Athens. 2:45 p.m.

SARASOTA , Fla. (AP) - From
the moment he signed hi s fi rst professional contract, Ryan Wagner was
on the fast track to the majors.
The right-hander needed a little
more than a month to develop from a
first-round drafl pick into a major
league reliever, settling into the
Cincinnati Reds' bullpen at age 21.
His fastball and slider were impres~ ive the first time around the National
League .
Can he do it again? And , what role
fit s him best?
Wagner will open the season as the
setup man for closer Danny Graves,
who has one more year left on hi s
contract. After that, Wagner could

take over as the closer ... or do something else.
Former general m'anager Jim
Bowden sugges ted last year that
Wagner could be turned into a sta1ter
someday. Bowden was fired in July,

and the Reds haven't brou ght it up
agam.
"As of rig ht now, it doesn' t look
like I'm going to be a starter as of this
year," Wagner said. "I don' t know
what they have in store for me in
years to come. but as far as I know
I'm going to be in the bullpen."
There was never any do ubt he'd
make it there last year.
The Reds made· him the 14th overall pick in the amateur draft last June
and immediately suggested he woul d
be in the majors before the end of the
year. He agreed to a $1.4 million
bonus I 0 days later, pitc hed nine
games in the minors and was called
up on Jul y 19.

Wagner, who grew up in Texas.
was the fi rst member of his draft
class to reac h the majo rs.
Opposing hitters wo ndered why the
Reds were hurryi ng Wagner. who
signed as a sop homore fro m the
Unive rsity of Hous10n. The Reds
were so far out of contention that
they fired Bowden and manage r Bob
Boone onl y ni ne days after Wag ner
was promoted. then started a trading
spree that gutted the lineup of stars
and sal aries.
Wag ner we nt 2-0 with a 1.66 ERA
in 21 2-3 innings before the Reds
decided to let him sit out the rest of

Third time a charm for 'Does
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYOAILYTRIBU NE.COM

WELLSTON Maybe
Southern coach Scott Wolfe
should go to Las Vegas. find
a roulette wheel and bet
heavily on the number three.
He
can
not, though ,
because he
will be too
busy coaching in next
week' s girls
Division IV
district final
at Wellston
High School.
The third
Wolfe
time turned
out to be a charm for his Lady
Tornadoes, as they earned a
spot in that championship
game after knocking off tournament nemes i~ Whiteoak,
64-55, Wednesday.
Whiteoak (15 -8) had ousted Southern ( 16-6) from the
tournament the previous two
seasons.
Wolfe said he noticed some
interesting and promising
trends involving his team and
the number three, and hopes
they are a sign of g,ood things
to come. .
\
. "My grandmolher is one of
the most superstitious people,
and
I' m
superstitious
myself;'' jokingly admitted
Wolfe . "Last night I got
goose bumps because we
were talking about the threes
- our third sectional (title) ;
our third 15-win season ; and
the third time we faced
Whiteoak. "
Up next for his Lady 'Does
is a district dale with TriValley
Conference
foe Southern's Ashley Roush, with ball, posts up Whiteoak 's Jackie Hauke (14) during the
second half Wednesday, Southern defeated Whiteoak, 6 4-55, to advance to next week's
Please see Charm, 86
district fin al against Trimble . (Brad Sherman)
I

Division Ill
at Waverly High School
Thuraday, February 26
Portsmouth Clay vs. Adena, 6:15p.m.
Zane Trace vs. Ironton, 8 p.m.
SaturdQ, February 28
Oak Hill vs. Portsmouth 12 p.m.
Eastern (Brown) vs. Westfall, 1:45 r;~ . m .

at

Division IV

Wolloton High School
Wedneaday, February 25
Trimble 74, Western 59
Southern 64, Whiteoak 55
'fhuraday, February 2t
Paint Valley vs. Easlern 6:15p.m.
Southeastern vs. South Webster, 8 p.m.

Wednelday, March 3
Trimble vs. Southern, 6:15 p.m. (winner
advances to regional at PICkerington
H.S.)
PV/Eastern
winner
vs ,
Southeastern/South Webster, 8 p.1tn .
(winner advan ces to regional at
Pickerington H.S.)

Boys, girls
basketball
coaches ·
reminder

/

Crow's Family Restaurant

: Varsity boys and girls
basketball
coaches
in
Gallia.,. and Meigs counties
are reminded to send in
:their team individual player ~tatistics as sooi\ as
their regular season is
completed. These stars
:will be used in helping . to
select .all-district and OVP
Super I 0 teams in March.
: You can e-mail your stats

Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken

)!ports@mydailytribune.com,

'.

228 Main Sl.

~

or fax them

0

to 446-3008.

:You· may also drop them
pff at our Galtipotis office
on Third Ave.
: We need this informaliort no later than 5 p.m.,
;M~~h 3.

Pomeroy, Ohio
Drive·Thru Wmdow

992 ..5432
•
-·-~-

........................_....

---·-

Rockets down Cavaliers, 90-84
HOUSTON (AP) - The
future is bright for the rivalry
between LeBron James and
Yao Ming, the two most recent
No .. I draft picks. It just didn't
add up to much of a compelling game Wednesday
night.
Cuttino Mobley scored 22
points and fed the ball to
Yao for a crucial dunk in the
closing seconds as the
Houston Rockets held off
James and the Cleveland
Cavaliers 90-84.
The
loss
snapped
Cleveland's
three-game
winning streak and gave the
Rockets their second victory
of the season over the Cavs .
Yao had 17 points and
. h
b d
d
k d
e1g t re oun s an per e
up down the stretch despite
four fouls, while James was
held in check most of the

8~~· seemed like we had
wt'de open shots in the first
half but we didn 't capitalize
on them," James said. "We
can't win without hitting our
shots. We missed shots and
they made shots. That was
the difference down the
stretch."
The Rockets trailed 61-60 at
the start of the fourth quarter,
Jim Jackson's 3-point basket on a feed from Francis put
the Rockets back in the lead,
and they built a six-poinl
edge, 76-70, on a short

•

·-· ·- .

Please see Wagner, 86

_ _ _ .Ll,... .......

jumper by Yao over Zydrunas
llgauskas with 4:21 to go. ·
Mobley's 15-footer with
1:07 to play and Yao' s dunk
on an assist by Mobley
made it 85 -79 with 42 seconds left.
"Everybody was supportive," Yao said. "Everybody
worked hard to pass the ball
to me tonight. I didn 't shoot
well in the first half. But in
the . second half, I got
going."
Clarence Weatherspoon
had nine of his 12 points in
the fourth •quaner.
"As a veteran, what I try to
do is be active and give some
energy to the team,"
Weatherspoon said. 'The last
couple of weeks, I've been
able to find a way to score.
If
I've been able to get myse
going and be a part of the

offense."
Ilgauskas and Jeff Mcinni s
each had 17 points for the
Cavaliers. Boozer had 16
points and 18 rebo. unds. His
career high is 21 rebounds.
"We ~ot the lead but they
came nght back and hit a
shot to regain the lead,"
Boozer said . "After that ,
they did a gob&lt;! job of protecting the lead and in a
close game like this it comes
down to defense, and they
got the stops down the
stretch."
·
'
Ple11e see Cavs, 86

HotJst.(m Roc kets gua rd Steve Francis (3) follows Cleveland
guard LeBron Ja mes to the basket for a fo ul in the
oPr nnt! quarter Wednesday, in Hou ston. (AP)

Jamal Lewis
indicted on
federal drug
charges
ATL ANTA
(AP)
Baltimore Rave ns runnin g
back Jam al Lewis. who had
the seco nd -highest rushin g
total in NFL hi story last season. was indicted Wednesday
on federal drug charges.
The Atlanta native is
accused of trying to help a
childhood friend buy cocaine
in the summer of 2000 - just
before he signed a six-year.
$35 .3 million contract with
the Ravens. No drugs were
ever purchased, according to
the indictment.
. The running back 's attorney, Ed Garland . said hi s
client was . innocent and
would turn himself in on
Thursday.
"Mr. Lewis wants everybody to know that he did
nothing wrong. " Garland
said. "He was not pan of any
drug deal and any contention
that he was is fal se ...
Lewis is charged with conspiring to possess with the
inlenl to distribute 5 kilograms of cocaine and using a
cell phone in the commission
of the first count, according
to U.S. Allorney William S.
Duffey.
The indictment came out of
a drug in vestigation that has
led to 30 con victions and
helped di smantle a cocainetrafficking ring in the city.
Duffev said . He refu sed to
say whether Lewis was lied
to that drug ring.
In an affidavit. FBI special
agent Hoyt Mahaley said that
an informant contacted Lewis
on hi s cell phone on June 2J .
2000. 10 di scuss sellin g
cocaine to Lewis' friend . The
conversation was recorded.
accordin g to the agenl.
"The cooperatin g source
told Lewis that he/s he was
willing to se ll the narcotics to
Lewis' associates for a price
that Lewis can tax," meaning
the price co uld be marked up
for a profit, Mahal ey said in
the affidavil.
"Lewi s responded ' Yeah.'"
lhe agent said.
Hours after the call , Lewis
and the fri end. Angelo
Jackson, met with the informant at an Atlanta restaurant.
the affidavi t sai d. There.
Lewis and Jackson asked the
informant how much cocaine
the informant was capable of
distributing. the affidavit
alleges.
Jackson and the informant
met again on July 12. 2000 .
at a gas station in suburban
Atl anta, the affidavit said .
During the meeting, they di scussed drug s. but no pur,
chase was made.
Lewi s wasn't at the gas station. His attorne y, however,
said Lewis was at the restaurant, but not for the reason
alleged in the indictment.
Jackson was also indicted
and arrested Wednesday. He
faces the same counts and a
third for attempt to possess

Please see Lewis, 8fi

�www.mydallysentlnel.com

....

SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel
Prep basketball
Dlvltktn tv Dlttricl

64, WhHeoak 55

Southern

Southern

8 13 15 28
17 1 t 12 15

Wh1taoak

-

64
55

SOUTHERN (16-6)- Kahe Sayre 5 6-6

19

Brooke K1ser 2 9 12 13

Deana

Pullins 1 0--o 2 Ashley Roush 5 2-6 12
Ashley Dunn 4 1 2 9 Joanne Pickens 1
0-0 2 Jess~a Hill 0 0.0 0 Knsluna
Williams 3 1 2 7 Susan Brauer 0 0 0 0
TOTALS - 21 19 28 64
WHITEOAK (15 8)- Bonme Palmer 0 2
2 2 Jack1e Ha\JI«l tO 7 10 28 Katnna
Mtchael 0 2 5 2 Brooke Jolly 0 0 0 0
Tnsha Hauke 2 0-0 4 Brandy Wallace 2
4 4 8 Adnan Hauke 0 0 0 0 Amy
Wallace 4 1 2 9 Kay a Haunert 1 0 0 2

TOTALS -

Oh1o H1gh SchOol Boys Basketball
WedntSdiY s Resul1s
Tournament

OIVIStON I

S 3 (Say e 3) WO 1 (J

Ohto High School Girls Baaketball
Wedneaday s Results

Tournament
DIVISION I
Akr Ellet 47 Mar etta 45
Ashland 50 Oregon Clay 48
Ctn G en Este 61 Ctn Wrthrow 44
C1n Mt Notre Dame 74 C1n St Ursu a
49
Cle JFK 58 Cle Hts 48
Cots Brookhave n 48 Lew s Center
0 entangy 45
Day Cham nade JlJhenne 57 Troy 35
Fa1rborn 52 Spr ngboro 41
Garheld Hts 52 Solon 49
Hudson 60 Stow 51
Manon Hard ng 59 SandlJsky 55 OT
Mayfield 76 Cle Collinwood 47
Mentor 55 Pa1nesvJUe R•verside 43
Strongsv le 52 8 ecksv lie Broadvtew
Hts 35
Sylvan a Northv1ew 75 Tot Libbey 32
Tol Bowsher 82 To Woodward 32
Tot Seen 71 Tot Rogers 34
Tol Wa.te 62 Holland Spnng 52
Upper Arlington 46 Cots E 31
WesteN lie S 68 lancaster 48
Woo ster 67 Mad na 30
Zanesvtlle 52 Galloway Westland 41
DIVISION II
Bay V•llage Bay 54 Avon 27
Belo1t W Branch 59 Alliance 20
Blanchester 54 A pley A1pley Unton
Lew1s Huntington 43
Can C&amp;nt Cath 59 Mtnerva 44
Canal Fulton N'A 57 Alliance Mar ngton
24
Carrollton 51 Atchmond Ed1son 48
Cots Bexley 47 London 25
Copley 74 Mantua Crestwood 19
Deftance 53 Napoloeon 49
Dover 59 Steubenville 44
Dresden Tn Va lley 55
Zanes"VIIe
MayS\IIIIe 44
Elida 64 Kenton 36
Fostoria 84 Clyde 58
Grafton Mtdv1ew 62 Ober n F•relands 51
Granv lie 43 Canal Winches ter 41
l extngton 50 Gallon 24
L1ma Bath 47 lima Shawnee 44
Maple Hts 50 R chf etd Revere 36
Mogadore F eld 45 Akr Kenmore 43
PembeNJIIe Eastwood 46 Rossford 44
Port Cl nton 50 Tttf n.. Columb an 44
Willard ~9 Bel v1lle Clear Fork. 38
Youngs l 1berty 47 Struthers 41
DIVISION Ill
Andover Pymatumng Valley 51 W1ckhl1e
43
Atwater Waterloo 76 Newton Fa Is 32
Beachwood 65 Elfook11eld 34
Elyna Cath 46 Independence 38
Girard 56 Streetsboro 30
Massllton Tuslaw 49 Creston NoiWayne
47
Middletown Fenwick 60 Jamestown
Greenevlew 27
Millersport 57 Howard E Knox 54
Morral Ridgedale 61 Gahanna Cots
Academy 25
Old Wash1ngton Buckeye Trail 47
Steubenville Cath Cent 33
Poland 49 Rockford Parkway 36
Rocky A1ver lutheran W 53 Brooklyn 3a
Sm11hv111e 57 Apple Creek Waynedale 45

•

Sugarcreek Garaway 54 Coshocton 4.41
DIVISION IV
E Can 82 Kidron Cent Chr•st•an 36
GlOuster Tnmble 74 latham Western 59
Jackson Center 46 Fairlawn 37
Leetonta 38 Berhn Center Western
Reserve 22
McDonald 52 Lordstown 20
Mogadore 75 Elyria Open Door 23
Newbury 53 WillOUghby Andrews 36
Racme Southern 64
Mowrystown
Whrteoak. 55
Russ•a 79 Sp 1ng Emmanuel Ch1stan
32
Shadys de 44 Hann1bal A1ver 27
Windham 50 Cle Hts Lutheran E 44

19 16 23 55

3-potnt goals Hauke)

Page B2:

Cots M1ft n 87 Galloway Westland 54
Pickenngton N 56 Mt Vernon 47
Vandalia Butler 69 M1amtsburg 41
O!VISION II
Athens 49 Thomv lie Sheridan 47
C rclevrlle Logan Elm 71 Wash1ng1on
CH 42
Cots Linden 67 Whitehall Yearl ng 62
Frankl n 67 Trenton Edgewood 51
Greenfield McC an1 56 H llsboro 39
McArthur V1nton County 76 New
Lex ngton 58
Newark l 1ckmg Valley 88 Ubca 61
DIVISION Ill
Ba1nbndge Pa1nt Valley 43 Frankfort
Adena 42
Batavm 68 Ctn Jacobs 56
Belpre 71 Coal Grove Dawson Bryant

66
Caledoma Rl\ler Valley 54 Platn C1ty
Jonatnan Alder 47
Card nglon Lrnco n 56 Mt G ead 41
Crn Deer Park 63 C1n Shrader 60
Cols Ready 62 Olentangy Liberty 47
Day St vers 57 New Lebanon D1x1e 54
Manon Pleasant 50 Gahoo Northmo 31
Seaman N Adams 61 Chllhcolhe Zane
Trace 50
Versa1lles 68 Mtdd etown Mad1son 36
Wheelersburg 66 Nelsonv•lle York 54
Regular Season
Oola Hard n Northern 51 Ridgeway
R dgemont 43
Grand RL\Ier 84 Fuchs M1zrach1 54
W Va prep baaketball •core•
WIKin. .day • Results
Olrll Secllonsta
Braxton County 63 RIChwood 27
Bndgeport 52 Uberty Hamson 22
Clay County 49 Roane County 41
Huntington 47 Spnng Valley 45
lndependeflee 47 Shady Spnng 44
l ogan 39 Chapmanville 28
Martinsburg 61 Jefferson 4a
N•cholas County 52 Robert C Byrd 40
Oak Glen 33 We1r 21
PocahOntas County 52 Midland Tra•l 48
S1ssonv1lle 62 Ravenswood 43
Sou th
Charleston
77
George
Wash1ngton 44
St Marys 60 Cameron 53
Valley Wetzel 47 Paden C1ty 21
Wahama 49 Hannan 36
Webster County 62 Oak H1ll 53
WyomLng East 71 Mount V1ew 46
Boys
Berkeley Spnngs 67 Beall Md 47
Bndgeport 50 South Hamson 47
Chapmanville 76 Burctj 49
Doddrrdge Coonty 77 l1berty Hamson

63
East Hardy 67 Pendleton County 55
Fa1rmont Senior 57 Umvers1ty 49
Fayetteville 52 Independence 49 OT
Keyser 57 Hampshrre 51
Martinsburg 53 St Mana Gorett1 Md 44
Matewan 50 Van 47
Morgantown 72 Buckhannon Upshur 54
North Manon 78 Elk1ns 62
Phlhp Barbour 55 l ewrs County 39
R1p14y 91 Buffalo. 56
Rober1 C Byrd 70 Lincoln 66
Summers County 58 James Monroe 41
Tr nlty 72 Hundred 53
Tucker County 69 R11ch1e County 53
Umon 63 Harman 55
Wetr 79 Wheeling Central 57

But~r

W ll~amstown 55 Gilmer County 47

NCAA basketball
How the Top 25 Fared

at Yiogotowo St 76
CK'ICLnnaiJ 77 Saint LOULS 52
E Mk:tugan f5 Oh10 64
Evansville 72 lll1no1s St 56
lllti'IOIS 78 Iowa 59
Iowa St 75 Kansas St 69
N IIJrno1s 62 M1am1 (OhiO) 54
N Iowa 84 Drake 79 OT
Northwestern I~ Indiana 59
Oakland Mich 88 lnd Pur Ft Wayne

Wednesday
1 Stanford (23..0) did not play Naxt vs
Oregon State Thursday
2 Sa1nt Josephs (25-Q) beat
Massachusetts 63 S8 Next at Rhode
. 77
Island 3alurday
Ohio St 70 M~nesota 59
3 P ttsburgh (25-2) did not play Next
W Mich1gan 86 Gent Mlchtgan 55
vs Syract.Jse Sunday
WIChita St 77 $W Missouri S! 66
4 Gonzaga (2J.2) did not play Next vs
W1sconsm 68 Penn Sl 45
San D~ Thursday
SOUTHWEST
5 Duke {22 3) d•d not play Ned vs
Baylor 67 Texas A&amp;M 61 OT
Valparaiso Thursday
ChaAotte 94 TCU B6 OT
6 Oklahoma State (21 3) did not play
Lamar 63 Stephe~ F Austm 60
Next at Baylor Saturday
Texas San Antom~ 69 Texas Sl 66
7 MISSISSippi State (22 2) beatlSU 61
FAR WEST
58 Next at Vanderb•lt Saturday
Colorado 94 Okla~oma 87 OT
8 Connecticut (22 5) did not play Next
Montana 80 Sacramento St 69
at V1Uanova Saturday
Montana St 67 N f..nzona 62
9 Kentucky (20 4 ) beat Tennessee 92
Southem Cal 78 UCLA 77 OT
60 Next at LSU Sunday
10 Texas (20-4) did not play Next vs
Wednelday • WomefiS Bssketball
No 25 Te:.as Tech Saturday
EAST
11 Wake Forest { f 8 6) beat Florida
Binghamton 60 UMBC 55 OT
State 90 87 OT Next at Maryland
Boston College 87 St Johns 68
Saturday
Connecticut 79 Providence 38
12 Nor1h Carolina (16 8) dd not play
Georgetown 82 Syracuse 59
Next at No 14 North Carolina State
Hartford 71 New Hampsture 65
Sunday
Loyola Md 60 Sl Peters 49
13 Providence {19 5) dd not play Next
Ma1ne 66 Northeastern 48
at St Johns SlJnday
SIQny Brook 72 Boston U 70
14 North Carolina State (18 6) beat No
Vermont 66 Albany N Y 62
18 Georgia Tech 79 69 Next vs No 12
VtllanO\Ia 63 Seton Hall 58
North Caro na Sunday
SOUTH
15 C nc•nnat1 {19 5) beat Sa•nt LOUIS
Bowling Green 77 Marshall 67
77 52 Next at Charl otte Saturday
Georg1a Southern 64 Applllachtan St 62
16 Southern II no1s (23 2) d1d not play
MIDWEST
Next vs Bradley Saturday
Bradley 66 S IllinOIS 51
17 Artzona (177) did not play Next vs
Kans11s St 68 Iowa St 33
Washington Thursday
Kent St 80 Buffalo 53
18 Georg a Tech (19 a) lost to No 14
M1am1 (Oh10} 75 Ball St 65
North Carolina State 79 69 Next at
MISSOUri 78 Nebraska 76
€Iamson Saturday
Notre Dame 93 M1am• 58
19 Memphis (20 4) d1d not play Next
OhiO 89 E M ch1gan 61
at No 21 loUISVIlle Saturday
Toledo 81 Akron 59
20 Kansas (17 7) did not play Next vs
SOUTHWEST
Oklahoma Sunday
Oklahoma 64 Texas Tech 53
21 LOUISVIlle (17 7) lost to DePaul 60
Texas 73 Baylor 72 20T
58 OT Next vs No 19 Memphis
Texas San Antonro 71 Texas St 46
Saturday
FAR WEST
22 W1sconsm {18 6) beat Penn Stale
No major team scores reported from the
68 45 Next vs Purdue Sunday
FAA WEST
23 llllno s (19 5) beat Iowa 78 59 Next
vs Northwestern Saturday
24 Utah State (22 2) drd not play Next
at long Beactl State Thursday
25 Texas Tech (19-8) did not play NeKt
Netlonal Baakatblll AIIQCllltlon
EASTERN CONFERENCE
at Texas Saturday
Allantlc Dlvlllon
WLPctGB
Wednelclay • College Be1ketball
New Jersey
35 21 625 EAST
New York
26 33 441 10 112
Bmghamton 57 UMBC 46
M1amr
25 33 431 11
Boston College 56 Vlrg1n1a Tech 48
Philadelphia
23 35 397 13
Buffalo 82 Kent St 66
Boston
23 36 390 13 1/2
Duquesne 93 Fordham 56
Washington
17 38 309 17 1/2
Fairfield 78 Loyola Md 53
Orlando
16 43 271 20 1/2
Hofstra 67 Towson 61
Central Dlvlllon
Rhode Is and 56 Richmond 54
Rutgers 74 West Vlrg1ma 53
WLPctGB
lnd1ana
42 15 737 Sa1nl Josephs 83 Massachusetts 58
Detro11
36 24 600 7 112
Temple 74 La Salle 70 OT
Va Commcnwea th 7 1 Delaware 69
New Or1eans
31 26 544 11
Milwaukee
30 27 526 12
20T
Toronto
25 32 439 17
Xaver 65 St Bonaventure 49
SOUTH
Cleveland
23 35 397 19 1/2
Atlanta
19 38 333 23
B1rm ngham Sou thern 84 Radford 71
Ch1cago
16 41
281 26
DePaul 60 Loutsv1lle 58 OT
•
WESTERN CONFERENC~
Drexel 62 James Mad1son 59
Mldwett Dlvltlon
Flor1da 69 South Carol1na 58
WLPctGB
Furman 58 Coli of Charleston 57
George Mason 59 N C W1lm ngton 46
MIMasota
42 16 724 3B 19 667 3 1!2
Hrgh Point 76 VMI 75
San Antonto
Ken tucky 92 Tennessee 60
Dallas
36 20 643 5
MemphiS
34 23 596 7 1!2
MLSSISSIPP St a1 lSU 58
Houston
33 24 579 8 1!2
N C Slate 79 Georgta Tech 69
32 27 542 10 112
Old Dominion 79 William &amp; Mary 76
Denver
Utah
29 30 492 13 1/2
Texas A&amp;M Corpus Chnstt 82 Savannah
Pacific Division
St 69
WLPctGB
Tulane 74 UAB 69
Sacramento
41
14 745 UNC Greensboro 74 L1berty 63
l A lakers
36 19 655 5
Vanderb It 77 MISS SStppl 65
29 26 509 13
Wake Forest 90 Flcnda St 87
Portland
Seante
MIDWEST
26 31 456 16
25 31 446 16 112
Bowtrng Green 79 Toledo 76 OT
GCIIdan State
Bradley 60 lnd ana St 59
l A Clippers
24 32 429 17 1/2

Pro basketball

Thursday, February 26,
40

19

Phoanrx

322 24

lUelday • Games
Portland 94 0&lt;1ando 91 OT
Indiana 107 Golden State 96
Atlanta 86 Ph!ladelptLLa 75

New Jersey 86 Toronto 74
Mrnnesota 108 JJhlwaukee 102
San Antonro 86 Houston 77
Dallas 116 LA Clippers 9t
Utah 99 Seanle 86
Sacramento 107 New Vork 99
Wedneaday a Games
Washington 76 Toronto 74
Milwaukee 106 Boston 104
GoiOen Stale 99 MemphiS 92
M1nnesota 81 New Jersey 66
New Orleans 99 LA Clippers 93
Detro1t 107 ChiCago 88
Phoemx 113 New York 95
LA Lakers 112 DellV8r 111
Hou5ton 90 Clweland 84
Utah 93 Seattle 92 OT
Thursday 1 Games
ChiCago at WaShington 7 p m
San Antoo10 at Dallas 8 p m
Sacramento at l A lakers 10 30 p m
Fridays Game8
Toronto at Boston 7 p m
Cleveland at Orlando 7 p m
Atlanta at DetrOit 8 p m
Indiana at New Orleans 6 p m
Golden State at Mmnesota 8 p m
Memph1s at Mtlwaukee 8 30 p m
Portland at Houston 8 30 p m
Phoenrx at Seattle 9 30 p m
Utah at Sacramento 10 p m
New York at l A Clippers 10 30 p rp

Hockey
National H.ockey League
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic OIVIIIOn
W L T Ol PtsGF GA
Ph ladelph•a 33 15 11 5 a2 185146
New Jersey 33 17 11 1 78 155123
NY lslanders29 22 9 2 69 174153
N Y Rangers 22 29 7 4 55 160183
Pittsburgh
12 42 5 4 33 129244
Northeast Division
W l
T Ol PtsGF GA
34 16
5 at 208 t 38
Ottawa
Toronto
34 18 9 3 80 182162
Boston
30 15 13 6 79 163146
Montreal
31 25 6 2 70 162148
28 28 6 1 63 163167
Buffalo
Southeast OIVIIIOn
W l T OL PtsGFGA
Tampa Bay 33 17 7 5 78 180143
Flonda
23 25 13 3 62 143161
At lanta
24 32 6 2 56 172200
Carol na
20 27 12 3 55 120153
Wash1ngton 19 34 8 2 48 1481 93
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
W l T OLPtsGFGA
Detroit
35 17 9 2 81 202147
Nashville
30 23 7 2 69 159165
St LOUIS
29 23 7 2 67 144156
Chicago
1a 32 7 5 48 143184
Columbus
17 34 8 4 46 132161
Northwest Dlvfakm
W l T Ol PtsGF GA
33 15 10 4 80 162140
Colorado
33 19 1 4
162148
Vancouver
Calgary
31 23 5 3 70 149138
25 27 10 1 61 161161
Edmonton
21 23 16 2 60 139139
Minnesota
Paclllc Dlvlllon
W L T Ol PtsGF GA
San Jose
30 16 11 5 76 161132
Dallas
30 22 t1 0 71 139137
Los Ang eles 24 17 15 7 70 1671 63
22 25 g a s 1 140166
Anaheim
Phoen1x
20 24 15 4 59 157184

a

n

Wednesday • Gsmes
Carolina 2 Washington 1
Ch1cago 4 Columbus 3
Tampa Bay 4 Atlanta 2
Ftonda 4 Toronto 0
New Jersey 8 Buffalo 2
los Angeles 1 Dallas 1 tte
P1ttsburgh 4 Phoemx 3 OT
Anaheim 4 Edmonton 2
Thursdays Games
Montreal at Boston 7 p m
N Y Rangers at N Y Islanders 7 p m

Transactions
BASEBALL
MLBPA-Promoted Gene Orza to chref
ope atrng offtcer ol the Major league
Baseball Players Assoc at10n and MIChael
Werner to general counsel
American league
NEW YORK YANKEEs-Announced the
res gnalton of Darryl Strawberry player ~
de\lelopment 1nstructor
National League
HOUSTON ASTRO$-Agreed to terms
w th OF Ryan Thompson on a m1nor
league contract
MILWAUKEE BREWERS-Agreed lo
term s w1th RHP Matt K1nney and RHP
N ck Neugebauer on one year contracts
BASKETBALL
Nltlonal Basketball Assoclatlon
NBA- Fmed Seatt e G Ray Allen
$10 000 for crrtlclzlng offte als after a Feb
20 game
MILWAUKEE BUCKS-Paced G T J
Ford on the InJured hst
FOOTBAll
National Football league
NEW YORK GIANTS- Released AB KR
Bnan M1tchell and RB Dorsey Levens
Re s gned DE Ke th Washington
HOCKEY
Natlontft' Hockey League
NHL- Suspended Wash1ngton D R1ck
Berry one game for a speanng 1nc dent 1n
a Feb 23 game
ATLA NTA THRASHERS-Claimed F
Brad Larsen off wa1vers from Colorado
COLORADO AVALANCHE- Assigned
LW Mrkha1l Kuleshov to Hershey of th e
AHL
COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS-Actrvated
C Andrew Cassels from mtured reserve
Paced 0 Rost1slav Kles a on n1ured
reserve Rece ed D Zen th Komarn1sk
from Syracuse of the AHL
DALLAS STARS-Ass1gned 0 John
ErskLne to Utah ot the AHL
EDMONTON OILERS-ASSigned LW
Jam• Rtta to Toronto ot the AHL
MINNESOTA WILD-Traded C Darby
Hendnckson and an e ghth round draft
piCk to Colorado for a fou rt h round drafl
p1ck Recalled G Johan HotmqvLst lrom
Houston of the AHL
NASHVILLE PREDATORS-Recalled D
Stan Neckar and D Andrew Hutchmson
from M1 waukee of the AHL
NEW YORK ISLANDERS- Recalled AW
Er c Godard from Bndgeport of th e AHL
NEW YORK RANGERS- Announced the
res1gnatLon of Glen Sather coach who
will remam as pres dent and general man
ager Named Tom Renney ntenm coach
OTTAWA SENATORS-Ass gned G Ray
Emery to B~nghamt on of the AHL
PHILADELPHIA FlYERS-Ass1gned D
Freddy Meyer and G Antero Nntlymakt to
Ph adelph a of the AHL
TAMPA BAY UGHTNING-Acqu red D
T1m0 Helblmg lrom Nashv1l e lor a 2004
e ghth round entry draft p1ck
COLLEGE
HIRAM- Announced the res•gnallon of
Mike Meyer lootball coach Named M•ke
l azusky football coach
KENT STATE-Announced the res1gna
t on of Dan Pees footba ll coach to
become 1nebackers coach fo r the New
Eng and Palnots

SHERIFF S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
The State of Ohio,
Meigs County
Richard A Hagerty ol
al,
Plaintiffs,

vs

220 53' 19

Case No 03·CV.039
Brenda Allele, el al ,

Defendants
In pursuance of an

w

282

04

feet to a point thence
N 150 02'18' W 55 33
feello a P K nail sol

thence departtng said

Order of Sale In the

road N 65deg 06' 08 '

above-entitled action
I will otter for aale at
public auction on the

E , passing an Iron

Melg1

County

Courthouse steps,
100 East Second
Street, Pomeroy, In
the above named
County, on March 19,
2004 at 1030 am ,
the
following
described real estate
A tract of land altuated In the Southwest

quarter

of

the

Northeast quarter of
Section 31, T-D8·N, R·

Salem
Townlhlp
Melga
County, Ohio, and
being a portion of the
Ianda conveyed to
15 W,

Richard A &amp; Dorothy
Hagerty ao recorded

In Volume 45, P•a•
80&amp; of
County

the

Melg1
Official

Record•
Commencing lor ref-

erence at an Iron pin

aat

In !he 8oulh...,l1
oornar
of
tho

North111t

quarter,

thence with !he South
line ol the NorlhNI1
qu1r1er, 1. HO ot' 21"
1. 172.00 1aat to 1n
Iron pin 111 In !he
W11tllna ollha tr1ot
conveyed to Thom11
lartley (Vol.
HO,
1'111101), thanoe lol·
lowing Nld Wilt line

N.

~.

Dl' II" I.

172.H laalto 1n Iron
pin HI, Nld Iron pin
being the point ol
beginning;
lhenoe
with
dlvlelon
llnH I 730 22' 11" W
310 10 laalto 1n Iron
pin 111; thenoe N
ead1g
01"
paaalng en Iron pin
111 for reference 11
114 110 laal, lor I lOIII
dlellnce of 84 80 !HI

e now
oe·

I

to a P: K nail set In the
centerline
of
Township Road 38,
thence with the can·
tarllne of Township
Road 38 !he following
2 courses, thence N

w.,

pin se1 at 30 00 loot,

for a total distance of
162 371801 to an Iron
pin set, thence N 740
04 29' E 49396 loot

to an Iron pin set In
the West line of said
Bartley tract, thence
with the West line of
said Bartley tract S

w

n

Deed Recorda Being

the same real proper~
ty
conveyed
to
Southern Ohio Coal
Company by Deed
dated May 15, 1992

and which Daed Is o1
record In the Office of
the
Recorder of
Meigs County, Ohio,
In Deed Volume 330,
page 91 GRANTEES

are aware that the
vein of coal locally
and variously known
as Number Four Four
A
Clarion
or
Coal
Limestone
underlaytng the prop·
erty hao been mined

and that subsidence
of the surface has
occurred as a consequence

GRANTEES

040 o3 29'
417
feel to tha point of
beginning and CON·
TAINING
5 074
ACRES The abovo-

acknowledge
that
they have intpected
the property and are
purchasing It In Its
existing condition

le

GRANTEES further
acknowledge
tho!
they
have
not

deacrlbed

tract

subject to all legal

easemanls and lagil
rlghls·of

way

on

record All couraas
are rotated magnetic
and for angular pur~
po1e1 only

All Iron

plnl 1at are 112 Inch
In diameter and 30
lnchoo In longlh Thll

detcrlptlon wu pr•
pared
from
thl
riiUitl of an actUII
aurvey
made
November 1981 by W
Royco
Horton,
Regleterod
Prolloolonel
Surveyor No 14tl,
Ohio
MlnlnB
Coneultonlo,
24
Huron
llrHI,
Jlokaon, Ohio 4H40
lxoepllng from tho
~~- raal 111111 111
thot oerllln vein of
0011 IOOIIIy ond Ylf~
ouely
known
11
Number 4, 4A, CllfiOn
or Llm11ton1 COli
underloylng
1hl
l~ovt dtiC~bed rill
111111, togllhar with
111 reloted ~ghto, oonvayld to Ohio Power
Comp1ny by 1 OHd
dlltd May 18, 1888
1nd rtcordld In DHd
Volume 201 , pogo
428, Melgo County

'

received or relied
upon any represents~
!Ions
from
GRANTOR,
Ill
employeoo or agents,
respecting tho physl·
col condition of tho
property, and that
GRANTOR oholl not
bt lloblo lor ony
future loti or dim·
the! mey orloo
out of lhl IXII!Ing
condition ollha prop·
erty or ony rtpllrt
theroto undtrllkan
by ORANTI!I, 1ny
end Ill IUOh lll~lllty
being
hlrt~y
IXPrtllly Wllved
MIIQI
COUNTY
IIIITIIICTIVI
COVINANTI
1 M~ll hive Wlltr
unlflr prtllurt, 1nd 1
11ptlo
eyllem
epprovod by Melga
county
Hllfth
Dtplriment
before
moving Into rtll·
lflnoe on lot.
Only one rtlldlnoe
per lot permiHod on
loll under live ocirto
3 No junkod or unli·
cenlld vehlcltl ohlll

•a•

mulate on lot

and

containing

4 Lots muat be neat
and clean at all times
5 Permanent residences,
Including
house trallert or dou·
ble wldes, must have
underpinning with-

Meigs County
BENEFICIAL OHIO,
INC
Plaintiff
va
DENNIS BROOKS, ol
al

thence East 20 rods
and 6 feat, !hence

In 60 daya of placing

Defendant

end One-hall (2 1/2)

It on the lot
6 Campers, buses,
1enta or basements
cannot be used as
permanent
resl·
dances
7 Un111 !he property
you are purchasing Is

Caee No 03CVI03

In pursuance of an
Order of Sale Issued

acres, more or less
and being In said
above named Section

by the Clerk of Courts

17, Town 7. Rangs 14

the results of a sur·

of Common Pleas of

Last prior con·
veyance, Volume 245,

vey made by Richard
C Glasgow, R S No
5181
Deed

paid off In lull

no

trees over three Inch·
es In diameter are to
be cut or removed,
unklss permission Is
granted by the Sailor
B
Meigs
County

Health Department
must be notified
prior' to placing res·
ldence on said parcel
of sale
PARCEL 10 ~13·00·
389 002
Said
Premises
Located at 31720
Molehan
Road,
VInton, Ohio 45686
NOTE The Shorlff'e
Office
makes
no
guarantee as to the
status of the !llle
p~or lo tha day
Bald
pramloes
opprolsed st Elgh!Hn
Thoaund
Dolloro
($18,000 00) and . .n.
not be oold lor 1111
lhln IWO•Ihlrdl Of
lhlllmount
TERMS OF BALE Ten
pero1n1 (1 0%) down
on lha doy of 1111,
bll1n01 upon dellv•
•ry O l l h a 1'1111 D. Qu1no1
Attomay lor "1lntlfl
IMITH QUANCI
P.O. lox11 0
Qreenlltld,
Ohio
41121
(117)111-4142
ll1lph I Tru1aall,
lhltllf
MIIGI County, OH
(2) f2, 18, 21

a

a.

be tllowad to accu-

~ .... &lt;»_..,.

Pw..wblloe J"oolc."tloe~s 1.-. l"ooO~vvsp••poe:- s.
I &gt; e l l " e r e d ~l&amp;ht tc:» ~..-.._. ... I::&gt;c&gt;&lt;»or.

Public

Notice

Sherlll'e Sele of Real
Eolllt Aevl11d Codt,
Stc 2320 28
Tht Stole of Ohio,

Meigs County In the
above entitled action,
I will offer lor sale a1
public auction, at the
door of the Court
House In !he above

named County, on
Friday, the 23rd day
of April, 2004, at

10 DO o clack am,
the
following
described real aatata,
situate In the County

North 19 rada, thence
Woal 20 rolla end 6
feet, thence 19 rods
to !he place of begin·

nlng containing TWo

Page
489,
Meigs
County
Deed
Records Excepting
and reserving to lha
Grantors 4011 acres

aa described In Land
lnltallmant Contract
recorded In Volume

North 12 rodo to tha
lond formerly owned
by
J.P
Elorough,
lhenoo W.et 1bout 18
rodo 1nd 10 11:1 faa!
to tha north1111 oor·
ntr ol lchool Hou11
lot
In
PogeVIIII
hp11111
Df1trlot;
lh1n01louth 1 rode,
to the loulhllll oor·
ner of 11ld lohool
Haull lot; thenoe
1111 10 ltll, thenot
Iouth
rodt, thence
hlllboUI 11 rodt to
the pilot of blgln·
nina, oonlllnlng ont
1n1f on•lourth (1 114)

achool hou11 lot, ••

South111t corner of
11ld

Lot

No.

40,

described tract being

Reference

Volume

278, Page 23, Meigs
County
Deed
Records Parcel Noa
17-oD740&amp;17-oD741
PROPERTY
ADDRESS
35272

Pagevllla

Iron pin In tho south·
1111 corner ol the old

PARCIL 2: AI.IO,
the following lind
lying ! u l of 1nd
ld)olnlng Lott 40 1nd
41 tlorutld com·
menclng
11
the

coun1y
Recorder s
Office
Description
for
the
above

Albany, OH45710

of the Southeaat cor·
ner thereat, thence

1ar11, mort or leaa

Prior Deed Ref Vol
245, Page 489, Mol~•

Meigs
County
Mor1gage Records
Last Deed Reference,
Vol 276, Page 29,
Meigs County Daad
Recorda
PARCEL
3
Situated In Section
17, Town 9, Range 14
Weal, Commencing at
a
point
In
the
South...,sl Comer of
said
Section
17,
!hence east along the
lOUth line of Uld
Secdon 17, 12871aat,

a

highways and ease
ments of record

141, Page 509 of !he

ol and Stale of Ohio,
and In the Township
ol Scipio 10 WI!
Situated
In
the
Township of Scipio,
County of Meigs and
Slate of Ohio
PARCEL 1 Being In
Section 17, Range 14
of tha Ohio compa·
ny'a
Purchase
Beginning on tho
oouth Uno of oald
Section 93 rodo Eliot

o

0 4011 acres
SubJect to all legal

more or leaa, to an

recorded In Detd
Book 172, Pall 678,
In lht RtCordl of lhl
Melg1
County

Recorder'•

OHiaa,

end bllng the rill
point of beginning for
ihl
11nd
herein
dllarlbldL_ theno1
no~h 10 """lr111 00'
00" 1111 oontlnulng
11ong the lOUth line
of llld leotlon 17
1nd
the
ulttlng
northe~y right of way
line
01 Aoldemy
ltrttl
(Townehlf.
R01d Num~er 142 ,
112 00 !HI to en Iron
pin; thenoe north 0
degree 00' 00" 1111
11ong 1 line, 111.00
laal 10 In Iron rln In
lht 1111 lint a oald

achaol

houae

lot,

112.00 lui to the
point of beginning,

*Said

Road,
Premises

appraised a! $36,000

and cannot be sold
for lass than two·
thirds of !hal amount
TERMSOF SALE

Purchaser

of

the

property other than
Plaintiff or lien holder
shall be required to
deposit 1110 of the
appraised value at
the tlnle of the sale In
tho
lorm
of
a
ca1hle1 s check and
the balance of lht
proctella to be pold
within !In (1 0) doyo
of the ~111 by 12:00
noon
the Sht~ll
Should lh• purchaoer
1111 to l m1k1 timely
p1ym1n' of 11ld pro·
OHdl, II II ordered
•Uid dej&gt;oolt of 1/10
of
the
opprallld
VIIUI lhlll be wllh•
hlld by )PI,Intlff 11
1nd lor obete 111001·
lltd with' 1dvtrtl1..
mtnt 1nd rtllll of
11ld r111 111111 of
lnltrtll Ohii'GII.
Rllph Tru-ll
lharllf, Melge County
Attornoy lor Pltln1111
1
Aoberl
K. Hogen

tO

(0024811)

1

a

Jovltch,
lllook
Relhbone, LLP
102 Mlln ltraat, Suite

100,
Cincinnati,
Ohio
45202 \813) 744· 8&amp;00
(2) 21, 3) 4, II

the north line of Lo

Public Notice
Sheriffs

Sale

No 114·112, 60 feel
of

Real Estate
(Ohio Revised Code
Sec 2329 26)

The Stale of Ohio,
Melge County
CITY
NATIONAL
BANK OF WEST VIR·
GIN lA
Plalnllll

vs

No 03·CV-on
JOHN P ASH, ET AL
Defendants

In pursuance of an
Order of Sale In the
above
entitled
action, I will offer for
sale a1 public auc

tlon, at the door of the
Courthouse
In
Pomeroy, In
the
above named County
on Friday, the 16th
day of April, 2004 at
10 30 o'clock AM
the

following

described real estate
situated
In
rho
Co~nty of Meigs and
Stale of Ohio and In
the
VIllage
of
Middleport to wit The
following described

real estate altuate In
the
VIllage
of
Middleport, County of
Melgo and Stilt of

Ohio, and bounded
and deacrlbed 11 lol·
lo...
Percel One
Lot
Number 114, oltutlld
In the Vllloge of
Middleport,
Ohio,
Melge
County
l!xceptlng euoh roll
111111 I I II oon·
!lined, In Vol.
P1g1 701, I I WII I Old
10 "Oyd I . lrown, II
ux
Detd
1111erenoo;
Volume
l'lge
147, Mtlgt Counly
OHd AIOOrdl
M1111 County Audllor
PlrOII Numller: 11·
01474.000
Parcel
TWo:
leglnnlng
11
tho
norlhtllltrly corner
Of Lol No. 114•1/a,
thence In 1 ooutherly
dlrlotlon,
2&amp;
lttt
thence In • w11terly
direction perelltl wllh

thence northerly par
allel to the street, 2~
feet, thence easter!\
along the line of Lo

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
1\.egtster
~ribune
Sentinel
Your Ad,
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today•••
Or Fax
(740) 992·2157
To

Oearllf/r~

Offtee 11o~~
HOW IQ WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads

r
r -\NNOUNCEME~'TS I
\"'\0{ '\( 1· \ 11 '\ I \

L.-------_.1
30

GWFAWA\

1

To good homes only 9/wk
paper tra1ned sma I male
Boyd
Bee!
Cattle pupp1es Jacl&lt; RusseiVLong
Portormance Bu! Sale 65 haired Chihuahua m1x
Angus Bulls and 15 Polled (740}367 0668
Herelord all regrstered and ..,::--"'!"____...,
se~ le guaranteed Monday
Lo&lt;;r AND
March 1 6 ~Opm at the new
FOUND

r

OK

L,-------_.1

L•ve

Stock Auc!IOn
Kentucky For
'llOe nfocall6067636418 2 Labs yelowmaiBJchoc
female Answers to lexr &amp;
C 1 Beer Carry Out permit Luke lost Stone Harbour
area Call (740} 446 4635
for sa e Chester Township
Me1gs ColJnty send letters (Sons pet)
~1aysv•lle

of mterest to The Da1ly
Sent net PO Box 729 20 6 yr SharPeLBrown w/brown
co llar 3 mrles OlJI en
'F=' Jmeroy Ohio 45769
Redmond A dge about 3
wKs ago REW~ard (304)675
GJVLA\\1\.Y
1881

r

r·-----·
%~
\ I

I~ \

Female eel shots declawed
&amp; spayed To good home Moving Sale
Call (740)245 0442 eave a 406 21st Street
Pt Pleasant
message
Fn Feb 20th 12 6 pm
Sat Feb 21st12 6pm
Free to good home I female Thur Feb 26th 12 6pm
Golden Retr ever/ Black lab Fn Feb 27th 12 4pm
miX puppy (740)367 7708

ReferencE

""Federal Postal Jobs*•
To $43 OOOJyr Free Call No
Expenence Necessary Now
Hrnng Full Benefits 1..aooB42 1622 Ext 225
AVON• All Areasl To Buy or
Sell
Sh rley Spears 304
675 1429

15 Words

4Days

Avenue

Middleport OH 4576(

Said

Premlae!

Appraised
a
$25 000 00 and can

Offer expires 2129104 All ads require pre
paymen1 No relunds Hcanceled early
Offer Includes merchandise categones and
excludes real estate rental and

nol be sold for las!
than two thirds o
that amount, beln{
$16,867 00,
TERMS OF SALE

employment Private party advertisers only
Items under $500

Caah or certlflec
check Said premlae1
to be paid In full will&gt;
In thirty (301 d1y1
Iller IIIIo ol 1111
RALPH E TRUSSELL
Bhtrlll
Melgo County, Ohio.
Rlohord F Bentley
AHorney lor Plolntlff
740)&amp;32·7000
2)
(3) 4,11

1 al,

aae,

on

S~YINGS

au,

Your ad will reach over 33,000 people in
our daily newspapers.
Gallia County, Meigs County, and
Mason County.
~omt ~leasant

l\egtster
®alhpohs :matl!' m:nbune
The Daily Sentinel
A~ AI
~

Shop
Classlfledsl

(304) 675-1333
(740) 446-:134:1
(740) 99:1-:1155
Also your ad will be on our website

10
HfJP WANfED

POSTAL JOBS
1I 5 VfJ&lt;.Y ff'.vs·n~..41l N~
10 !?I" ft Cwa&lt;:WATcl-le:R.
y.)(-\0 (ANT -"%1.-1- 7i"'1£

$15 44 $2 1 40/hr now h1r
lng For applicatiOn and lree
governmen1 10b mlo call
Amencan Assoc of labor
1 (913) 599 8220 24 hrs
emp serv

h le loSing we ght show
mg
oth ers
how
nlormat onal
DVO/C
va•lable upon reques t 740
1 1984
I

I

•••'ANNOUNCEMENT••••
HIRING 20041 FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBSL Up to
$54 841 07+ year FREE
CALLI
Interview
&amp;
Reg1strat on Informal on
S1gn on Bonu s 1st 100
Callers Select Area 1--800.
892 5549 ext 94 7 days

Offer Ends Feb. 29, 2004

Located at 159 Nor1t

5th

lwrrght@tc net

Lw;,HELP--•W•ANTED---,.1

Februarv...
Special

Reference

Premise!

110
1.

It I ...,

Turn that Old
couch or chair
into$$$$$

Volume 282
Pag&lt;
147 Meigs Court\
Deed Records

Said

POUCIES Ohio Valt.y Publlahlng reat~rvea thtl right to adlt reject CH' eanct~lany ad at any lima Errora muat be reported on tht flrtt day of
T-rlbun...Sentlnel Register wilt be raaponalbla fOf' no rnora thltn tha coaj: of tha apltCtl occupied by the enar and only the llret naerllon We
1ny lou or axpensl that raaultatrom the publication or omlaalon of 1111 advertlaa!TMint Correction will ba made rn the f 1st available edition
lr.. atwaya conlldM~U.I • C1.11rant !Ita urd appllee • All real estate advertlaementa are
to the Feder !II Fa r Housing Act ol 1968
only help wented eda meeting EOE •tandard• We wlll not
I I
I
I
the law

Fr

Seek ng
PT Seep
Technologist
Experl;oce
pref erred but Wi ll ra rn
Med cal background a plus
Resp1ratory
Ther~p1st
encouraged to app y Ma•l
resume to EB23 200 ¥arn
St Pt Pleasant WV 25550

~·l-"

~

www comics com

CCI 2004 by N EA Inc

r~6

Me1gs County Deec

01473 000

be prepaid•

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

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

Records

Recorda
Meigs County Audlto1
Parcel Number 15

• All ads must

All Dl•play 12 Noon 2
Buslne•• DaySI Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display 1 oo p m
Thursday for Sundays

::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
::
1110

Lost Red &amp; whrte Coon
1 2 lab 1/2 Blue TICk
hound neutered male 70 ••••HtRING
20041 ....
Blackfwhrte 4 yrs old house
lbs afra•d of guns Reward POSTAL JOBS! UP TO
b oken good watch dog
lor return (740)339 1594
$1 0477t WEEKLY FREE
r-'4 0)446 1!=134
CALL FOR INTERVIEW
70
AND
REGI STRATION
YARD SALE
8 ack
&amp;
while
Ma e
INFORMATION SIGN ON
BONUS
1ST
100
LJalmat an'Biue Trek m x
hoL se broken to good .,
CALLERS
SELECT
!lone (740)4461934
YARDSAL.E·
AREAS 1·800 892·5549
EXT 92 9 DAYS
,
Pr. PL.EASANf

Volume 37, Page 432

Deed Volume 303
Page
305,
Melg•
County
Deec

For Sunday• Paper

Absolute Top Dollar U S
Silver
Gold
Corns
Proofsets D amends Gold
R ngs
US Currency
MT S Corn Shop 151
Second Avenue Gallipolis
740-446 2842
I \ 11'1 II\ \ II \I

No 114·112, 601eel lc

Prior

·~~~:::·~

.f

• Start Your Ads With A Kerword a Include COmplete
Description • Include A Price a Avoid Abbrevl•tlons
a Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
a Ads Should Run 7 O•ys

Should Include These Items
To
Get

iJ;.

Now you can have borders and graphics
'-'
added to your classified ads
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphtcs 50« for small
$1 00 for large

Disolay Ads

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

the place of begin
nlng
Being part of the rea
estate described lr

Deed

ter

C L·A S S IF I ED

Toronto at Tampa Bay 7 p m
Phtladelphla at Ortawa 7 30 p m
St LOUIS at Colorado 8 p m
Minnesota at Nashv lie 8 p m
Detroit at Calgary 9 p m
San Jose at Vancouver 10 p m
Friday • Game•
Wash•ngton al Flonda 7 30 p.m
Atlanta at New Jersey 7 30 p m
N Y Islanders at Buffalo 8 p m
Columbus at Ch cago 8 30 p m
M1nnesota at Dal as a 30 p m
Edmonton at Phoen1x 9 p m
P ttsburgh at San Jose 10 30 p m

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
,._,.c:»._..r :FI:.Igbt tc:»

hune - Sentinel - l\e

2004

110

110

1

HELP W\Nll'Il

ACE INDUSTRIAL &amp;
HARDWARE SUPPLIES
INSIDE SALES
•3 OPENINGS
GUARANTEEQI!
SALARY &amp; COMMISSION
CALl
304-675·3848

An Excellent way to earn
money lets ta k. the
NEW AVON
Ca I Manlyn 304 882 $45
Joyce 304 675 6919
Apnl 304 682 3630
re you oo ng or a
stable JOb w11h a
proless1onal atmosphere?
We have the JOb tor you
Ca ll on behaU of mater
Non Prof 1t and Po 1bcal
rganlzatrons and earn u
to $8 hour plus bonuses
Full or part 11me
shLfts avallab e
Call today to schedule
an lnterv1ew
1·877-48:H247 ext 2457
AS SEEN ON TV
INSTRUCTION r
LEARN TO DRIVE
TRACtoR TRAILER
NEW 'PROGRAM
No Exper ence Needed
Placement Dept
Financing Averl eble
CDLJTraln1ng
ALUANCE
Tractor Trailer
Training Centers
Wytheville VA
Call Toll Free
1 800 334 1203
Ann PI Pleasant
Po81al poelttone clerkalcarrl
ert/aorters
No
exp
required Beneflls For exam
salary and teatlng lnlorma
lion call (630)393 3032 ext
782 8am-8pm 7 days
AWESOME CAREER
FOR 2004
Postal Positions
$14 80 $36 00+/hr
Federa hire tun
benefl18
Call 7am·7 pm CST
1--800.1151 7024 Ext 4044
Children s Home Soclety
currently has an open tog for
a Youth Services Social
Worker In the Mason County
office Po&amp; tlon will provide
case management and eup
portlve seNices to DHHR
Yollt h
Ser~tce casu
Requlraments
Include
Bachelor's Degree and SW
license eligible eKperlence
preferred
Gompetltlve
Salary and benefits Please
send letter of Interest and
reaume to Mason County
DHHR
ATTN
Youth
SeNtc es 710 VI and Street
Point Pleasant WV 25550
EOE

1.

HEI P WANUD

110
1.

TEMPORARY
SUPER\ISOR

HEU) WANTEU

Cla&amp;s A COL Drivers
Wanted
M1n 2 years exp
Sign On Bonus
Home Weekends
34 Cents per m le
95% No Touch
No NYC Fre1ght
Call 800 652 2362

ave you ever
oug
bout help ng a ch1ld who 1
n trouble and m ght need
lace to stay lor a couple o
ays?
The
Mrlestone
Foster Care Agency s look
ng lor prov ders 1n Ga
unty to do short ter
are tor home ess runawa
CLINICAL SUPERVISOR
h1ldren ages 0 18 Fos te
lor ICFIMR FacUlty
orne hcensmg •s requ•red
A tead1ng prov 1de f to 1nd 1v1d
e1mbersement •s .ncluded
uals w1th mental relardaliOn Please call 1 888 823 753
and developmental d1Sab1h ~o~olm~o:!;oe~o~to!!C'm~at~
oo!!Cn'-...-J
lies s 1ook1ng tor a Clm ca l l ocal company seeks mot
Supervisor
Bachelors vated md vtd ua s to work
Degre e n Bus ness Health from home great pay I a n
Care Adm.n st allon or a to day start 1mmed1a1e y
Socral Sc1ence reqUired and 740 44 1 9160 or 740 441
t yea r JOb re ated QMRP 9186
experrence preferred II you
wou ld ke to 101n our team Make 50% sel1ng Avon
contact Kelly Chne at 740 lim ted
t1m e
ONlY
446 4814 or l8ll resume to (740)446 3358
740 446 3987 An Equal
Opportun1ty
Emp oyer Medr Home Health Agen~y
Inc
seeking
tu It me
F/M!ON
Physrca Therap ist and PAN
Contract PoSition Available Occupational Therapist lor
lor a Group Factlftator lor a Oh10 and West V rg1ma client
Women s Support Group base Must be licensed both
two even ngs a week and 1n 011 o and West VLrgln a
occeslona daytime sess ons We offer a competitive
at area schools Appli cants salary E 0 E $5 000 S GN
with knowledge ol VICtrm s ON BONUS and benefits lor
nghts and domestiC violence lull Ume Phys1cal Therapist
ssues
preferred
High only Please send resume to
Second
Avenue
school diploma and soma 352
additional education! tra1 n Galhpohs OH 4563 1 Attn
ng In social serv ce s Diana. Harless R N Chn1c al
reqUire d Interested appll Manager
cants
may
rep y
to
Now H ring full and part
Personnel PO Bo)( 454
t me
McCiure s
Galllpc s OH 45631
Restaurants In Gautpcl s
DelfwryM'arehouse person
needed full time !mmedl
ately opening must have
good driving r~ord apply at
life Style Furniture 856
3rd Ave Galltpolls .9-5 no
phone calls

Super 8 Motel Gall polls
has
2
openrng
for
Housekeeper and 1 open ng
for PT Desk Clerk Must
apply n persor) NO PHONE
CALLS Deadline to app y IS
March 1 2004
I

Mldd aport and Pomeroy
Apply
Monday
thr u
Saturday 10 t 1 am

CAR EER No Exp
The
Advantage ol an Employee
The Bene! ts ol Own ng Your
Own Bus ness 35 K to
50k/Year Semma Fr day
Call Ken (740)992 74 40
T AAI,N ING Starts Mar 9th
Call Ken Now (740)992
7440

ISO

SarOOIB
m--mucnoN

·.
Galllpoll&amp; Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl 740 446 4367
1 800 214 0452
wwwga llporsc 11~orcollege com
Accred t!ld Member Accrod I ng
Counc I !Qr lfldopondt11l Co tl\lll~
arid

S~l'loo

L,.,.______

1186

w

GOVERNMENT

JO'BS!

WILDLIFE/ POSTAL $13 51
to $58 00 per hour Fu I
Benefits Paid Traini ng Call
for Application and EKam
ln1'ormatlon No EKperlence
Necessary Toll Free 1.aea-.
2ee-eoto •xt 100

;M:::•:::•c::.h_4::_2
:::00
:.:_:4_ _ __
owner/Operaotr'IIFteet
Owners Needed
· Percentage Paid
·weekly Seltlements
·s1gn On Bonus
Home weekends
Call BOQ-652 2362

"'

SUCCESS \1 You Really
Want To Succeed Ca Ken
{7 40)992 7440

MoN"
lULOAN

FOH SAI..f
HOMEOWNERS'
l m1ted oller 2 95~ o loan
Rate I be eve you w I nd
th s s the lowest rate ava1l
able anywhere L1m ted offer
Any
Nahonw de Lende
c ed•t 1 888 581 3328

20 MoHILE HoM&gt;S
HlRSALE:
1990 14X75 3br 2ba cen
tral ar
deck $14800
(304)892 3682

1993 Redman 3brt2bth
only $13 995 mcludes cen
I &lt;1 a r ant! dehve y cal
N kk 740 3S5 9948
--------1997 16)(72 Redman 2 bed
oom 2 bath $10000 Call
O.pe alors 1-8QD 420 8331 {740 1709 1166
Ext 98
1999 Woodheld mob1le
home 1-h70 2 br 2 bath
ZJl PROF&amp;~ION \l
ce n1ra a r heat like new
L_ _...;S.OIIiiCR.VIIIIIiCiiiiS--,.1 S20 000 W I ent beaut1fu
country lot v.. th pend &amp;
TURNED DOWN ON
12)12 outbuld1ng S100
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI., ll)OI'J thly (304)675 1519 OR
No Fee Unless We W1nl
304 895 3595
1 898 582 3345
91 Mob •l e Home on or e
IU \ I I S'l \ II
ac e plus Ce llral a r out
burldrng arge I 01 deck In
HoMES ·
Me cen11l e nea schoo s
HlR S\LE
No Land Cant acts
For
$28 000 Call (740)256
2001 Palm HarOou 21:ho; 44 3 6663 address 2333 Cox
bedroom 2 ba th on 516 lot Ad Crown C ty OhiO
acre l ke 1ew ready to - - - - - ' - - - - $49 900 97 doublewLde 28x48 on 6
move
nto
acres near Henderson
(740) 446 3292
------~-- $26 900 (304)335 0528

SFAEE Caah Grants$
$33 217 GUARANTEED 1
YOUR AREA ar d YOUR
STATE fo perso ta brl s
school busmess Bill Neve
Repay l CALL NOW' L .-e

l ook.ng lor a g eat home
cheap? Stop rent ng I have
the home lor you Debbie
(740)446 245 1 Less lhan
$4000WOW I
New 14 w•de only $799
down and only S t 69 53 per
month call Ka ren3 740 385
7671

Vctora 1736 sq It 3bed
oo 1 2 bath Stan ess sleel
appl ances 8 It llat ce1l ngs
Ha d lap w1th'saddle 10of 5
on 12 ool p1tch
porch
Cores Mob e Homes 15266
US 50 E Athens Oh o
4 bedroom 2 t /2 bath bnck (74 0) 592 19"2 Where you
home Rt 568 Close to gel your moneys worth
town
(740)441 0504
LoTS&amp;
$t35 000 neg
AcREAGE
81 Level House 4 bed
rooms 2 baths 3 ton cen tral 16)(80 stes avalabe $1 15
a1r electr c heat large deck 2 per month ncludes water
cer attached gara ge 1 112 sewe &amp; t ash (740)992
ac es
40x30 detached 2167
garage with bath 2 ton can
tral heal propane near For Sale 79 106 Acres
garage matches hoUse A1ver vrew produc1ng 011 &amp;
paved dr veways and road gas we Is Reduced to
112 m11e ou t Pleasant A dge $115000
304 529 7 106
Road Gal polls Ferry WV after Spm
$145 000 Call Rick &amp; Judy
Hl \ 1 \ 1"
Jordan (304)576 2035

r

HouSFs
FORRENI

a 12748

Now takmg resumes for pool
manager and 1feguards for
London poot
Barn Removal
Syracuses
Resume maybe subm1"ed to All references &amp; luI nsur
clerk at 2581 Third Street enca Cal 304 373 00 11
Drivers to ttsnsport cars to
Syrac;use or rna led to PO
WAA1ID
and from Auct)ons 25 years
Box 266 Syracuse Oh
To Do
orotder Call (740}992 9716 45779 on or before NOON
_.l

EMT needed for a great
orgenlzal on!l I Securltas s
now hiring for the Buffalo
WV area You must have
EMT·B qualifications Wages
start et $8 00 plus paid
Insurance Uniforms and
training provided Please
apply between the hours of
8 00 am 11 00 am and
1 00 p m -3 00 p m 1032
12th Street West Huntington
704 F
h
V 25
or more 1n1ur
1
11 t ooo 241 7454
mat on ca -o
EOEI' "FID/F
~
--------Full time Mslntens.nce post
tlon apJ:)Iy In parson st the
Holiday Inn of Gallipolis

...

HIO VAtlEY PUBLISH
lNG CO ecommends tha
ou do busmass w th peo
le you know and NOT t
end money through th
a I u(ll you have 1nvest1
ated the offe 1n

A ead ng prov1der w th men
tal retardat on and develop
mental drsab lit es s ook ng
lor a Temporary Supervrsor
App cat1ons w be taken at
M1dd eton Estates between
the hours of a OOam and
4 OOpm or you m!ily ca ll
(740)446 4814 lor moe
approx
acre
mlorma110n
An
Equal mem
Opportunity
Emp oyer $32 000 approx 114 m e oul
BlJd Chait n Ad (304)675
FIM/DN
31 44
V llage of Mldd aport s tak
rng appl ca ti ons • fo r a A l:leoro~mA &lt;:: l:l~n
mechanic Must have own
•vervrew
ccess
o
tool s Ap pllcat ens can be~ nlo mat on
PhCotods
W'Nw orvb com
o
picked up and returned at
11 740 )446
0303
V llage Ha I 237 Race
or ca I
3
Street M dd aport no later
~5 ~''-=====~
than March 12 2004
3 bedroom 2 ba ths on 4 3
acres Close to Tycoon lake
BUSINE~
Call (740)709 t166
1.
'IiwNING

!40

HoM£&gt;;

BuSINEli'i

01~'0Kl11NITY

All types ot masonry br ck
block &amp; stone 20 yrs
Exper ence free estimate
1 304 773 9550 304 593
1007

Will do odd JObs car pentry
floor. covering anythmg you
needl Reasona bly pncedt
Paramedi cs
&amp;
EMT s
30 4 377
{304)882 2978
needs
Apply at 1354
4633
Jackson Pike Galhpohs
rebu1ld automotive
Part time sales person Must Wll
be honest &amp; trustworthy tru&lt;;k and tractor eng nes
Expenance 1a a plus Call ASE Cert fled Meehan c
Call {740 )441 1306 aav&amp; a
cl''-4.:0:.144..c.6 ..:t.:.52:::3~--- message
Position open In Southeasl
! I \ \ \ ( I \I
Oh10 with mechamcal com
pany eKperlence necessary
ssnd resume &amp; letter ol rae
uo.uru~
ommendallon p 0 Box 363 1.
0PPOR11JNTO'
The Plains Oh 45780
.:::::.::=:::.:~==-­ JOBS Don t Tell Me You
Ray &amp; Sons Complete Car
Can I Get A Job Call Ken
Cleaning now hiring valid
For In terview (7 40) 992
dnvers
hcense requlrsd
7440
(304}675 7373

iift;r;;;;;;:
ptd
8:;,;;;~;;;;;~;;;;;;;.,

All reatestele advertl•lng
In lhll new1p1per I•
eubjec:t to lhe Federal
F1lr Hou1lng Aet ol1968
which mek•• It Ulegello
ldvertl•e any
preference llmltetlon or
dlscrlmln•Uon ba•ed on
race color religion ..x
lamlllal •tatua or national
crl;ln or eny lnlenllon IO
mike any auch
pr.t'ere"c• llmllellon or
dlacrlmlnallon
This new1p1per will not
knowingly accept
.av•rtl••menta for real
estate which 11 In
vi olation of ttle law Our
readere are hereby
lntornMd ttllt ell
dw.Uinge •dvartl•ed In
thl1 new1p1per are
ev•lleble on •n aqi.UIII
opportunity b~te•

5 room hOuse w th
shower central
double garage no
erence &amp; deposrt
(740)446 1519

balll and
hea tl arr
pets ret
requ red

F1ve rooms and bath near
Holzer Hosp tal
$300
month + ut i lies/ depos 1
(740} 446 9355 (lea..,e mes
sage)
e roo
nck 1 5 baths carport
o pets No smok ng
650 depos!t references
740 446 9209
House tor rent \304)675
6720
N ce 3 bedroom house n
Tuppe s Pla1ns $450 month
pluS' utillt•es &amp; depoS!I no
pets w 11 cons1der sell ng
(7 40)667 3487

Small 3 bedroom house In
count ry
Rodney
area
For Sa e 28r Home on 313 $500/month 5500 deposit
acre lot fenced m backyard references (740)245 0380
convenient ocatton appll after 8pm
ances stay Mason WV
(304)77;3 5094
_ _F_
O_
R_
E_CLO
_S
_U_R_E_I~
3 bad only $9 500 for list
lngs cs.tl
1 a00 7193001 extl144

1r ·

1

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