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                  <text>•

Couch wants bottom
line from Browns, Bt

Struble receives
recognition, As

TO THE SECTIO
Eastern
Lady
Eagles

Southern
Lady
Tornadoes

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
-,,•l! \ ! ' • \1•l

-;~

'\1•

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SPORTS
• Marge Schott dies. See
Page 81

Meigs Dems support Kerry
POMEROY Meig s
Count y
Democrats
strongly backed John F.
Kerry of Massachusetts
as their presidential can-

dictate in Tue sd ay's pri mary, giving him 1. 185 of
2, 125 vo tes cast.
John Edwards finished
in
the
Ioca I
second
Democratic presidential primary, with 547 vo tes.
Howard Dean collected I 03

votes, Dennis J. Kucinich .
Yoler turnout in Meigs
85. Wesley K. Clark . 42. County was just over ~0 perJmeph I. Lieberman , 28, and cent. 10 percent below the
Lyndon H. Larouche. Jr., 5. · turnout
projected
by
Pres ident George W. Bush Secretary of State J. Kenneth
rece ived 2.779 votes from the Blackwell .
3.549 Republican ballots cast
Tuesday' s election resu lts
in Meigs County yesterday.
do not include 35 prov ision-

Meigs
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM ·

SOUTHERN

vs

RICHMOND DAIJE
SOUTHEASTERN
:wEDNESDAY, MARCH 3
8:15
WELLSTON HIGH
SCHOOL

0BITUARIFS

TRIMBLE
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3
6:15
WELLSTON HIGH
SCHOOL

Page AS
• Lloyd Wolfe
• William A. Carswell
.• Lorraine E. Ratliff'

INSIDE
• Meigs students return
home with medals.
SeePageA3
• Club members hear
review of bestseller.
See Page A3
• Routine traffic stop
nets three suspects
accused of possessing
ingredients used in crystal
meth. See Page AS

WEATHER

POMEROY - Voters in
the Mei gs Local School
District defeated a proposed
three-mill, five-year levy for
permanent
improvements
Tuesday by nearly 70 percent.
The le vy received L450
opposition votes and 628
votes in support.
The levy was to have paid
for books, school buses and
other permanent improvements. and was proposed as
the result of a reduction in a
five-mill levy already on the
books which will take place
at year's end because of the
district's bond issue.
Voters
in
Salisbury
Township defeated a halfmill, five year additional levy
for cemetery maintenance
and operation. 653 to 491.
Voters were more generous
i.n other township and village
levies as proposed in
Tuesday's primary elections.
The renewal of a one-mill,
five-year fire protection levy
in Pomeroy Village was
passed 275 to 74.
In Racine. voters approved
a replacement fire protection
levy. 0.7 mill, five years, 161
to 31.
.
Other levies approved
were: one-mill, five -year,
replacement fire protection,

Please see Levy, A5

al bal lots. re presenting vot ers who ha ve moved from
precinct to prec inct in
Meigs Cou nt y or county to
c ounty

a c ross .th e

s tate .

Tho se ballots will he co unt ·
ed in an otlicial count on
March 23.

Crow
loses bid
for 4th
District
Court of

local levy
defeated

vs

.. ,,

•

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

EASTERN

•

Appeals
BY

J.

MILES LAYTON

JLAYTON @MYDAILYSE~TINEL .CO M

POMEROY - Despi1e a
valiant effort. Fred Crow 111
lost his bid to become the
firS! 4th Di st nct Court of
Appeals judge from Meigs
County.
MaJt hew McFarland, a
magistra1e from Sci oto
Legendary Blues man T. J. Wheeler wailed away a few short tunes to students at Meigs Midd le County. led the pack in the
School this week. (J. Miles Layton)
Republictm primary with
13, 118 votes or more than 31
percent of the total vo tes cast.
Clark Collins. an Iro nton
Municipal
Judge
from
BY J. MILES LAYTON
program invokes the Blues as · prodigy capable of playing Lawrence County. was in
JLAYTON@MYDA ILYSENTINEL.COM
a window, not only unto itself several instruments.
second place wiih 10,276
but inclusively into the rich
"The Blues is a cross cui· votes or about 25 perce nt of
ROCKSPRINGS
Black History from which it tural thing because it is the the votes cast. Crow fini shed
Veteran Blues icon TJ . was born .
music of liberation , of in third place with 7 ,4S9
Wheeler sang songs. played
"I think anything we can do metaphor," she said.
votes or nearly 18 percent of
guitar and engal;\ed Meigs to expose these kids to differWheeler 's concert featured the total votes cast. Milt
Local students m lessons ent kinds of mu sic is phe- a variety of traditional Blues Nuzum, a Marlena Municipal
about a rriusical style that has nomenal,"
said
Metra guitars. vocals. percussion, Judge in Washington County.
influenced countless genera- Peterson , a vocal mu sic and the one-string slide guitar had 7,442 votes or about 18
tions of musicians.
teacher at Meigs Middle kqpwn as the Diddley Bow. percent of the total votes cast.
Wheeler is touring the School and a talented musi- · Wheeler broke through con- Robert Driscoll, an assislant
world as part of the Hope, cian and vocaliSI in her own ventional
solo musical Athens County Prosecutor.
Heroes and Blues program right. Peterson has taught boundaries, turning hi s one- had 3,365 votes or eight perwhich seeks to spread this Blues history at Hocking
unique American music. The College and is a musical Please see Blues man, A5
Please see Crow. AS

Blues man does little ditty for students

V·

Quality
Print Shop
992-3345

Ingels Electronics
and Jewelry
992-2635

Middleport, Ohio

.Middleport, Ohio

Baumlumber
985-3301
Chester, Ohio

Wesam
Construction
992-6466
Pomeroy, Ohio

Crow's Family
Restaurant
992-2432
Pomeroy, Ohio

Swisher•
Lohse
K&amp;C Jewelers
Pharmacy
992-3.785

Pomeroy, Ohio

·740-378-6293

Middleport Pomeroy

Reedsville, Ohio

992-5144 992-5444

The Shoe Place
&amp; Locker 219
992-5627
Middleport, Ohio

Downing-Childs
Quality Furniture
-Mullen-Musser Brogan Warner
Plus
Insurance
Insurance
1-800-200-4005
992-6687
992-3381
740-667-7388
Pomeroy,
Ohi.
o
Pomeroy, Ohio
Plai
Ohio

Middleport, Ohio

Farmers Bank
Home
National Bank Your Bank For Life"
11

Racine

Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Pomeroy, Ohio

Fisher
Construction Funeral Hom

992-6611

Beegle, Miller win sheriffs races

992-2955

D. V. Weber

Valley Lumber
&amp;Supply

Pullins defeats Smith in GOP commissioner contest

®

Syracuse ·

949-2210 992-6333

Pomeroy

Gallipolis . Tuppers

992-2136 446-2265 667-3161

INDEX
2 S ECTIONS- 12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3
A4
As

Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather
© 1004

Bt-2
A6

POMEROY
Republican Bob Beegle of
Racine and Democrat Jeffrey
A. Miller will compete in a
November race for Meigs
County Sheriff. against
Independent Joe Kirby. Sr..
Racine, follol.l(ing their
respective
victories
in
Tuesday's primaries.
Sheriff Ralph Trussell finished last in a three-way
race for the Republican
nomination. Beegle received
60 percent of the Republican
vote, with 2,039 votes to
Syracuse Mayor E. Mony
Wood's 813 votes, and
Trussell's 520.
Miller beat former Sheriff
James M. Soulsby of
Pomeroy, 960 to 913.
Following the only other

contested county-wide race.
Republican Delmar Pullins
will challenge Democratic
Meigs County Commissioner
Jeff Thornton after defeating
Ron
Smith
for
the
Republican
nomination .
Commissioner Jim Sheets of
Reedsville, a Republican, and
Paul D. Carter of Albany, a
Democrat, were unop]Josed
In . their nomination races.
Sheets received 2,431 votes,
and Carter 1,171 in their
respective primaries.
Thornton received 1,373
votes in his unopposed primary bid.
Democrat Tom Lowery of
Syracuse
will
face
Republican Kay Hill in a race
for Meigs County Recorder
after he received 139 write-in
votes in his party's primarr
Hill received 2,599 votes 111
her unopposed primary.

Democratic
races ·
Christina D. Gater of
Syracuse received 1,498
votes in her unopposed
Democratic primary race for
Meigs County Treasurer.
In a contested Democratic
primary. U.S . Rep. Ted This accident on Route 143 Tuesday resulted in only minor injuries
Strickland of Lucasville easi- to the driver, Vicki L. Canan. but heavy damage to the veh icle .
ly defeated Diane DiCarlo
Mul(lhY of Canfield, 1,753 to
265 m Meigs County.
Meigs County Democrats
supported Eric Fingerhut of
POMEROY - Vicki L Canan. 48. of Pomeroy was treated
Cleveland in his bid against and released from Holzer Medical Center for minor injuries
Norbert G. Dennerll, Jr., in received in an accident on State Route. 143 Tuesday morning.
the U.S. Senate primary, 843
According to the Meigs County Sheriff's department ,
Canan was traveling southbound on 143 when her vehicle ran
to 598.
In the race for Chief Justice off the right side of the road onto the soft berm, hit a ditch ,
of. the Ohio Supreme Court, rolled over and struck a telephone pole breaking it off. The
Democrat C. Ellen Connally vehicle landed on its top. .
Canan was transported to Holzer by a squad from the Meigs
. Please see Eledlons. A5
County Emergency Service.

Minor injuries after car crash

Information at your fingertips ...
For the latest healthcare information and to
learn more about the programs and services
Holzer Medical Center provides,
log onto our website:

www.holzer.org
,.

Discover the Holzel' Dtffe1'ence

www.holzer .org

.....-------·-·----··· ..

'-~--------

�Page~

C OMMUNITY

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 3, 2004

'

POMEROY
Quee n
Noor 's "Leap of Faith"
which has been on the
New York Times
besetseller list fur more than
four months was reviewed
by Ida Diehl at a recent
meeting of the Middleport
Garden Club.
The aut obiography was
se lected for review to fit
this year's theme of recent
bestsellers and award-winning books.
Diehl displayed a rnap
that showed the geographi cal position of Jordan in
relation ship to the other
Middle East countries. gave
a
overv iew of Quee n
Noor 's life in the United
· States
and
as
King
Hussein 's wife, and the n
related what she ca ll ed
interesting "tidbits" that
she thought gave a truer
picture of Queen Noor
than just the basic biographical fact s.
She noted that Queen
Noor had been born into a
distinguished
ArabAmerican family in the
United States, was named
becoming
Lisa
Halaby
Queen Noor, the wife and
partner of Jordan's King
Hussein whom she married
in 1978. In her book, she
spoke of the obstacles she

faced as a spirited, we ll educated you ng American
woman who naively faced
her role in the royal court .
rebell ing against the smoth ering presence of security
guards and life in a palace.
Also. she recount ed her
struggle to create a wo rk ing rule as a humanitari an

activ ist in a court thm sim ply expected her to keep
her husband happy.
Queen Noor gave birth
to limr children. found the
.'ommi tments of her position often proved difficult,
ami mostl y kept her chil dren with her even when
accompanying her husband
on hi s world-wide travels
in his relentless quest for
peace.
Diehl said most of all .
the book is a love story-the intimate account of a
woman who lost her hea11
to a king and his country.
After
Hussein' s death ,
Queen Noor remained in
Jordan with her children
and her husband's people.
Roll call was answered
by naming a favorite
monarch. For the next
meeting
Pat Holter will
review "A Knight in
Shining Armor" by Jude
Deveraux.

tec h prep informati on
tec hno logy in interacti ve
media: Vin ce MartiQ . was
awa rded a bronze medal
fo r his co mputer maintenance demonstration 111
the co mpetition.
The winners will now
compete in srute contests
on April 23 and 24 in
Columbus.
The students were accompanied to Nelsonville by
Jacki e Newsome, Nursing
Assistant instructor·' Dave
Longsworth, Electronics and
Networking
Systems
instructor: and M. Suzanne Kenny Carsey was a silver
Bentz, IT-Interacti ve Media medal winner for electron ics
technology.
instructor.

REEDSVILLE - Oli ve
Township Trustees will hold
their regular meeting at 6:30
p.m. at the township garage
on Joppa Rd.
Monday, March 8
TUPPERS PLAIN S
Tuppers Plains Reg ional
Sewer District meeting at 7
p.m. at the district office.

,,

..

Tuesday, March 9
DARWIN - The Bedford
Twp. Trustees will hold their
regular monthl y meeting at 7
p.m.. March · 9, at the
Township Hall.,

Vince Martin took a bronze
medal for computer maintenance.

•

Jessica Rosier. Steven Major and Sarah Lee we re gold medal
winners with their interactive media presentation.

Fainting not usually
cause for concern
Question: Why do people
faint? A friend of mine fainted in school last week and
another one the week before.
They both seemed fine before
they passed out.
Answer: Fainting, which
is called syncope in the medical community, can be due to
many different things. In over
a third of all fainting
episodes, no cause can be
found, and we classify the
disease as "idiopathic syncope." The word idiopathic
literally means a disease
peculiar to an individual;
thus, in the wonderfully convoluted syntax we doctors
sometimes love, this word is
used to refer to diseases that
have no identifiable cause.
Idiopathic syncope seldom
has a serious or long-term
health
consequence.
However, otheMypes of syncope can signal very serious
underlying disease.
Generally when a person
faints, it is because the brain
has not gotten enough blood
and oxygen. This is frequently associated with a drop in
blood pressure and a slowing
of the heart rate. Once the
person becomes unconscious
from the faint, he or she usually falls into a prone position. This returns adequate
blood flow to the head and
the · victim "comes to." This
"simple faint" is called vasoVl!gal syncope. Things that
can cause this are: standing
for long periods of time without moving your legs, standing up too fast. getting upset
or nervous, exhaustion. dehydration due to inadequate
fluid intake or excessive fluid
loss, coughing, usually very
hard, and bodily fun ction s
like urinating or having a
bowel movement.
Sometimes no ca~ se can be
found for this vasovagal
episode, and it fall s into the
idiopathic category I mentioned earlier. There may be
warning signs before you
faint. Some of these are a
. feeling of being too warm,
nausea, sweatiness, pallor
and blurred vision . When
ihese symptoms first appear,
fainting can often be avoided
if you lie down or sit down
with your head bent forward.
Some people seem prone to
fainting. These people should
learn what causes them to
faint and learn to avoid these
triggers, or to notice the pretainting symptoms and use ·
1the avoidance techniques I
just mentioned. Now we need
to take a look at the serious
causes of syncope. Fainting
episbdes that initially appear
to be a vasovagal syncope

Wednesday, March 3
PAG EVILLE - Scipio
Townsh1p Tru stees meeung
wi ll be held at 6:30 p.m. at
the Page vill~ town hall.

Clubs and
Organizations

Corey Longstreth, Jeremy Dingey, and Darin Horn took the silver
medal for their interactive media information technology program.

Family Medicine

Public meetings

should be a cause for concern
if they occur frequently or are
associated with chest pain, an
irregular heartbeat, slurred
speech or severe mental confusion. In these circum stances you should seek
immediate medical attention .
Also, if you have a fainting
epi sode and have an underlying health problem such as
heart disease. high blood
pressure or diabetes, you
should consult your family
doctor. This is especially true
if you are getting up in years
or are on regular medications.
In a nutshell: While most
cases of fainting in young,
healthy people are never
explained, there can be serious, even life-threatening ,
causes of syncope that should
be excluded when a person
faints .

Wednesday, March 3
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Youth League
registration at Middleport
council room 6 to 8 p.m.
Signup is for hotl1 baseball
and softball for boys and
girls, 4 to 17.

7 p.m. at th e hall.
POM EROY
- Ohio
Valley Cru sade for Chri st
fo r
plannin g
meetin g
"Freedom Ex peri ence" 7
p. m. at the First Southern
Baptist Church, at intersection of Route 7 and 33 ncar
Meigs High School.
C HESTER
- The
Chester-Shade
Hi storical
Association will meet at the
Chester courthouse 7 to 9
p.m. Public invited.
Friday, March 5
HARRISIONV!LLE
Meigs County Pomona
Grange 46 will meet in regular
session
at
the
Harrisionville Fire Stat ion.
Final plans will he made for
the Grange banquet on ApriI
30.
Saturday, Man·h 6
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878 will meet in regular session at 7:30 p.m. fnl luwing a 6:30p.m. dinner.
'
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Youth League
will have basel:mll and softbll
signups from noon to 2 p.m.
Saturday and again on March
13 for the same hours at the
fire department.

TUPPERS PLAINS Einal si gnup for the Tuppers
Plains baseball and softball
league will be from 6 to 7:30
p.m, at Eastern Elementary.
For more information call
Jakie Lute, 985-4308.

HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411 ,
F&amp;AM will meet at 7::10 p.m.
at the temple . Refre shments
will be served.

MIDDLEPORT - The
Middleport Literary Club
will meet at 2 p.m. at the
home of Nadine Goebel.
Patricia Holter will review
"A Knight in Shining Armor"
b~ Jude Deveraux.

CHESTER - The Chester
Ball Association will have
signups from I 0 a.m. to noun
at the church on Riebel Road.
An association meeting will
follow and all coaches and
other interested individuals
are asked to attend.

: MIDDLEPORT - Special
m~eting of Middleport Lodge
363 F&amp;AM 7:30 f.m . at the
temple. Work wit be in the
entered apprentice degree.

Monday, March 8
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Republican Party will
meet at 7:30 p.m. at the courthouse .

Thursday, March 4
- POMEROY
Holzer
Hospice Meigs County ''dinner with friends" 6 p.m
Thursday
at
Crow 's
Restaurant. Call 992-7463 for
more information.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053 Auxiliary,

BY THE BEND
Reaching out to shy teens
brings Moms, Girls together
Wednesday, March 3,

Community Calendar

Club members hear Meigs students return home with medals
review of bestseller
POMEROY Severa l
Meigs student s compe tin g
in the recen t Skill sUSA
Oh io. southeast regio nal
tech prep co mpetiti on
held Sat urday at the Tri Co unt y C are~r Ce nt er
and Hoc kin g Co ll ege,
return ed
Nelso nvi lle.
home with meda ls 111
recogni ti on
of
their
ex perti se .
Taki ng a go ld medal for
thei r int erac ti ve media
prese ntation were Jess ica
Ros ter. Steve n Major and
Sarah Lee .
Kenn y
Carsey took a sil ve r
medal for hi s electronic s
tec hnology project, as did
Corey Longstre th. Jeremy
Din gey and Darin Horn
for their presentation on

Page A3

The Daily Sentinel

Church services
Wednesday, March 3
MIDDLEPORT- Indoor
camp by the Meigs Area
Holiness Association, 7 p.m.
each evening through March
7, except Sunday at 6 p.m.,
atthe Middleport Nazarene

Church. Rev. Elaine Pettit.
evangeli st. The Si ssons providing the music.
Thursday, March 4
POMEROY - Meigs
County Ministerial .
Association Lenten service,
7:30p.m. at the Rock
Springs United Methodi st
Church.

Friday, March 5
GALLIPOLIS - Revival
services will be held at the
New Life Church of God,
2 110 Upper Ri ver Road,
Gallipolis. through March 7.
Friday and Saturday services, 7 p.m.; Sunday services. I0 a.m . and 6 p.m.
RUTLAND - Revival
services at the Rose of
Sharon Holiness Church in
Rutland. will begin Friday
and continue through March
14, 7 p.m. each evening.
Re v. Paul Draggoo will be
the evangeli st. Pastor Dewey
King, (992- 3090) invites the
public
Saturday, March 6
CHESTER - Heritage
presentation . "Our Ancestors
Still Speak" at the Chester
Courthouse I to 4 p.m. presentations on Ohio Valley
Dialects and quilts and the
Ohio Underground Railroad.
public invited, no charge.
Refreshment s.
Sunday, March 7
POMEROY - Tricky
Rick y Henson, a gospel
mag ician and ventriloquist,
will be at the Hill side Baptist
Church, 10:30 a.m . to noon.
For transportal ion or more
information, call Dr. James
R. Acree. Sr.. 992-6768 or
Tom Wil son, 992-7007.

Birthdays
Friday, March 5
REEDSVILLE - Alta Dill
will observe her 82nd birthday Friday. Cards may be
sent to her at 5091 0 Osl;10rn
Road, Reedsville , 45772.
Sunday, March 7
POMEROY - A celebra.tion of Rita Buckley's 80th
birthday will be held from 2
to 4 p:m. at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center.
Friends and relatives are
invited to attend.

"

'''
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Family Medicine® is a
weekly column. To submir
quesrions, wrire to Martha A.
Simpson , D.O., M.B.A., Ohio
University
College
of
Osteopathic Medicine, P. 0.
Box 110, Athens, Ohio 45701,
or via e-mail to
readerquestions@familymedicinenews.org. Medical
information in rhis column is
provided as an educational
service only. It does not
replace the judgment of your
personal physician, who
should be relied on to diagnose and recommend rrearment for any medical conditiom. Past columns are available online at ww wjamilymedicinenews. org.

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Tab Benoit to perform
at Blue Gator
ATHENS - Tab Benoit
be previewing the new
Whiskey Store album live at
9 p.m. on Thursday, March
II , at The Blue Gator, located at 66 North Court St. in
Athens.
When blues guitar singers
Tab Benoit and Jimmy
J'hackery teamed up to cut
:Whiskey Store, their joint
studio project of 2002, Blues
Revue called it "a rollicking
hour-long party."
. · In the months following
the release, the party never
let up. Benoit and Thackery performing collectively as
Whi skey Store - p~cked up
their inventory and took their
goods on the road in a tour
that included a stop at the
Unity Centre for Performing
Arts in Unity, Maine.
Whiskey Store Live captures
a high-energy performance

will

from Benoit and Thackery. The
nine-track set is an even hotter
version of the guitar duo's 2002
recording. In addition to material from the studio set, the live
recording also features a lew
tracks from each artist's solo
recordings ·on Telarc.
Whiskey Store Live is a guitar record, to be sure, but more
with a solid backing unit that
includes saxophonist Jimmy
Carpenter, keyboardist Ken
Faltinson,
bassist
Carl
Dufrene, and drummers Darry I
White and Mark Stutso.
Tab Benoit &amp; Jimmy
Thackery's Whiskey Store
Live (CD-83584) hit the
retail market last month .
For the March II performance where Thackery will not
be performing, tickets are $10.
For more information and
tickets call 740.594.7271 or
visit www.thebluegator.com .

Keeping·
Meigs
informed ·
Sunday

Times~sentinel
'·
Meigs • 99~-21.55 ,

DEAR ABBY: I have
qu estions about "growing
up." I am 15 and want to
talk - to my mom about it,
but I'm embarrassed. We
talk about some stu ff, but
most of the time I wait until
I can 't stand it anymore and
finally talk to her.
Do yo u have any ideas
about making it easier for
me to open up to my mom?
I want to just walk through
the front door and · say,
"Hey, Mom, I' ve got a
question" - but I can' t.
l' in too shy.
Abby, pl ease help! TOO SHY IN A SMALL
TOWN
DEAR TOO SHY: I' m
sad tO say your question is
very common. It is repeated
in nearly every batch of
mail I receive. Teenage girls
)"ant to talk tO their mothers, but they are afraid to
reach out.
What I recommend are
scheduled mother-daughter
dinners, nne -on -one time
where there are no distraclions, and feelings can be
questions
discussed ,
answered and opinions and
attitudes
aired
and
explained. This quality time
can be the basis of precious
memories and the foundation for trust and closeness.
If this seems far- fetched,
consider how many thousands of young girls have
such distant relationships
with their mothers that the
only person they feel they
can confide in is an advice
columnist. Mothers, please
reach out to your daughters.

Dear
Abby

You ' ll be glad you did.
DEAR ABBY: My chitdren attend a local elementary school here in Dall as.
They ·are in kindergarten
and second grade.
Other parents have told
rne about a practi ce that
occurs in third grade at our
school. If a child 's desk is
not · properly organized (to
the teacher's speci fications).
the teacher does a "desk
dump" in front of the class
and orders the child to put
the item s back using the
"proper organization' '
I don 't think public
humiliation is an appropriate
teaching technique. And I
seriously doubt that the chit dren learn anything more
than fear of their teacher.
Fortunately, the school
district does not allow corporal puni shment; however,
· this kind of emotional abuse
can be almost as destructive
as physical abuse for chit dren this young.
What do you think of th is
"teach.ing technique" ?
WORRIED PARENT IN
TEXAS
DEAR WORRIED : I
think it is unacceptable, outmoded and should be
scrapped. Instead of teach-

ing children, it dem e ~ns
them and causes resentme nt .
Sinee you fee l strongly
abo ut it, visit the principal
and confirm that the stories
are true. If they are. a&gt;k that
the teacher ,he ins tructed
about what is appropr,tate
arid effective and what is
not. If the teacher persists.
you and other co ncer ned
parent s should take thi s
matter_·up with the school
board.
DEAR ABBY: I am 7
years old . I live with mv
mother and father in a smail
apartment. I ha ve two fish ,
two cats. a hamster and a
mouse - but I would also
like a dog. My mother says
our apartment is too small.
My dad says to ask you
because l prac tice reading
through yo ur column. Plus,
I told my dad that I wo uld
ask your advice. Thank you .
- AMB ER IN CHICAGO
DEAR AMBER : At the
ri sk of getting myself in the
doghou se, I vote with ·your
mother. Two fi sh. two cats.
a hamster and a mouse are
already qu ite a sizable
menagerie for a family of
three living in a small apartment. Enm1gh is enough.
I'm pleased that you read
my column - it 's ne ver too
early tn start .
Dear Abbr is •rriuen br
Abigail Vair Buren. also
kn01m as .lewrne Plrilli{Js.
and 11 '11.\ .fin111ded by lrrr
mother; Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear
Abbr
at
w~~· w. DearAhh v.cnm or P. 0.
Bu.r 69440. Los An geles. CA
9006Y.

City complains to FCC over Comcast For The Record

MENTOR, Ohio (AP) - A
cable customer who ·saw too
much skin has prompted the
city to file a complaint about
Comcast cable with the
Federal
Communications
Commission.
Kevin Clarke, of Mentor, a
Comcast basic cable customer, complained to th~. city
and the FCC after discovering a movie with nudity and
sexual acts last month. He
was receiving HBO and
Cinemax even though he
hadn't subscribed to the premium movie channels.
Mentor
spokeswoman
Kathie Pohl said the city filed
a complaint asking the FCC
to investigate.
"We feel the commission

should order Com cast to
ensure that further violation
does not occur," Pohl said .
Comcast
spokeswoman
Gina Petredis said a trap outside of Clarke's home that fitters out signals malfunctioned. She said Com cast
replaced the trap three hours
after Clarke called to complain OA Feb. 17.
"It seems like an overreaction to one known P,roblem
that was resolved in three
hours," Petredis said of the
city's complaint.
A phone message seeking
comment from the FCC was
not immediately returned.
Phi I ad e I phi a-based
Comcast serves 22.5 million
customers.

Dissolution
POMEROY - An action
for dissolution of marriage
has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas
Court by Tamara Jean
Wise, Wapakone ta, and
Kenneth Eugene Wi se.
Pomeroy.

It's a Fact!

THANK YOU

S.naoDiva·
Ia Cllnlcatty Proven To lmpr0¥1
Speech In Bllckground Nole',

ALL WHO VOTED
Your comfort, support and vote
were appreciated.
·

You make this county work!
'

Best Always,

Delmar 11 Del" Pullins
1'~1

:t.·bl .....

Phon r- {HO I

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Meigs
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~--Center

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reason. No matter
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your situation, your
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visit hrblo(k.com

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EVENING &amp; SATURDAYS AVAILABLE
WALK-INS ACCEPTED

EDWARD C. BEITER, O.D.
INDEPENDENT DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY
LOCATED IN

.....

PIZZA

HOURS:

Mon- Frl 9-7; Sat. 9-5

www.turnplltaflm.eam

H &amp; A Block
618 East Main St
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Phone 992·6674 ·
Hours: Mon·Fri g to 6 .S ~t 9 to 5
Other Hour5 by Appointmt!!nt

2004

WAL-MART VISION CENTER
GALLIPOLIS, OH

740-441-2151

,,
'

I

I

�··The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting 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

READER'S

Page A4

OPINION

•

VIEW

Elections
Crow support
··• To the Editor:
·
There are five men asking us for our vote for Fourth District
Court of Appeals on March 2. I have met all five and I won't
Slly anything bad about any of them.
Most voters probably haven't met every one of the candidates, which is unfortunate, Ail live are public men, with
records that, with a I ittle effort, can be compared.
One only, Fred W. Crow III, has been and is a Common
Pleas Court Judge for the past I5 years. which means he is the
only candidate who has presided over the most serious crimi_nai and civil cases, including murder/death penalty cases in 7
different counties. Judge Crow is the only candidate who has
been assigned as a Visiting Judge in I I southeastern Ohio
: -counties. For 12 years before being elected Judge, he was the
. ~ Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney.
Judge Crow is the most experienced candidate by far, and as
a sitting Judge, that experience is as current as today.
There are some things you might not find in his record that
'.1 think say a lot about Judge Crow, the man. Several years
ago, 1 was diagnosed with leukemia and spent 86 days in a
•Columbus hospital. I worked for Judge Crow at that time, and
l cleaned out my desk before I left for the hospital. l handed
.:him my office key. He gave it back to me and said "you'll need
it when you come back," He was riglit
Paul Gerard
· Middleport ,

WMD

Wednesday, March 3,

Wednesday, March3,

2004

Obituaries

Undermining the mle of the law
of whites and Asians.

Francisco.

Not because I am a 'homophobe ,' a label unfairly
applied to anyone who does
Joseph
not embrace the gay agenda.
Perkins
Not because I am some sort
of religious nut, who thinks
that homosexuals ought to
be burned at the stake. Not
because I am a bigot, who statute that is part of
prefers not to associate with California's Family Code,
which defines marriage as
gays.
But because city officials that between a man and a
in San Francisco have woman. He al so dismisses a
brazenly tlouted both state 2000 state ballot measure,
and federal law. It is part of a Proposition 22, overwhelmrecent disturbing pattern in ingly approved by voters ,
California in which ideolog- which affirmed that 'only
icallv motivated elected offi- marriage between a man
cia ls, as well as activist and a woman is valid or
judges. have taken it upon recog ni zed' in the state;
declared
that
themselves to suspenc\ the which
California need not recogrule of law.
The gay marriage outrage ni ze same-sex marriages
was touched off a fortnight that might be performed
ago when San Francisco elsewhere.
California higher educaMayor Gavin Newsom unilaterally decided to grant tion officials are almost as
marriage licenses to same- brazen as San Franci sco's
lawbreakin g mayor. In
sex coupl es.
recent
yea rs, they have
Si nce then , more than
3,300 gay couples from all tricked up the admission
over have nocked to the city process for the academically
by the bay to get unlawfully elite nine-campus UC systo
get . around
married . Many of the cere- tem
monies have been performed Proposition 209, which for-·
by a .state assemblyman, bids racial · preferences in
Mark Leno. a gay Democrat public education.
The law has survived
from San Francisco.
·
challenges
before both
Newsom insists that he is
acting within the law. He the California Supreme
maintain s that he is merely Court and the United
upholding the equal protec- States Supreme Court.
tion rights guaranteed by the Ye t, UC officials contin ue to bestow preferences
California Constitution.
But San Francisco's upon ' underrepre se nted
recently elected mayor con- min oritie s' - Latinos and
ven iently ignores a 1977 black s - at the expense

not discriminate aga in st, or

marijuana .·

grant preferenti al treatment
If San Francisco Mayor
to. any individual or gro up Newsom is offended by the
011 the basis of race, sex.
law limiting marriage to a
color. ethnicity, or national man and woman. if the UC
Board of Regents doesn't
ongm.
There are also certai n ·care much for the law forexceptiona l cases where bidding racial preferences
state law ought to be in admissions , if San
ignored. Not because some Diego's police chief and
mayor or some board of City Council have a probregents thinks so, but lem with federal drug law s
because stale law conflicts prohibiting marijuana use
for medicinal . purposes,
with superior fed eral law.
That is the case with the they should work to change
highly
controversial rhose laws.
But they should not preCalifornia law that allows
marijuana use for - pur- sume to ignore those laws, to
portedly - medici nal pur- undermine the rule of law.
For as Thurgood Marshall
poses. It clearly runs afoul
\vith
the
Controll ed said: 'Lawlessness is lawSubstances Act , the fede ral lessness. Anarchy is anarchy
law that classifies marijua- is anarchv. Neither rac.e nor
na as a Schedule I substance color nor frustration is an
witli a high potential for excuse for either lawlessness
abuse. And it violates the or anarchy.'
(Joseph Perkins is a
Food. Drug and Cosmetic
Act. which requires that a co/wwrisr.fin The Sart Diego
drug
be
sc ientifically Unimr · Tribun e all&lt;/ can be
proven safe and effective reached at Joseph. Perkins@
before it can be used for Union Trib.com )

•'

'·
\'• .

' •.

''
·1

l
l

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

(USPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

afternoon,
Our main concern in all stories is to be Monday through Friday, t t 1 Court
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Ohio
Newspaper
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Association.
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45769.

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Mall Sut.crlptlon
Melgo County

tnolde

13 Weeks

...'30.15
26 Weeks __ . .. . _. . __ ..'60.00
52 Weeks
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13 Weeks
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26 Weeks
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___ .. _..•100.10
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CHESTER - Lloyd Wolfe. 80, of Akron, formerly of
Chester, died Feb. 7, 2004.
.He was preceded in death by his wife, Kathryn. Funeral serVICes and bunal were 111 Akron. -

COLUMBUS, OH - Buying an Ohio hunting &lt;&gt;r fhhing
license just got easier as the Ohio Department of N:uural
Resources Divi sion of Wildlife un veiled its new onli ne license
sales system. Any type of hunting or fishin g license or penni I
is now available via the Interne! at ohiodnr.com .
Last year, approximately -I(XJ.OOO hunting li cctJ&gt;cs II'Crc
BY J. MILES lAYTON
Pol icc Officer Tony King
POMEROY - William A. Carswell , 70, of Pomeroy, died sold in Ohio, while anglers bought around 800.000 fishing
JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
about a suspicious vehicle
Sunday, Feb. 29, 2004, at Riverside Methodist Hospital in licenses. Ohio is con siuered one of the top destinations in the
headed toward Pomeroy.
Columbus.
Midwest for white-tailed uecr and wi ld llirkey hunt ing. Lake
POMEROY
The King. Proffitt and Pomeroy
He is survived by hi s wife, Anna Hysell Carswell .
Erie and its tributaries annually ura w angle r.s from arounu the Pomeroy Police Department Police Cpl. Ronnie Spaun
- Memorial services will be held at l p.m. Friday at the country who fish its waters fo r record-siLcd walleye. smaJ J- arrested three people suspect- pulled over and searched the
Enterprise United Methodist Church. Pastor Arland King will ll]OUth bass, yellow perch and sleelheau trout.
ed of poiSessing chemicals veh icle. an older model
officiate. There will be no calling hours. Arrangements were
used for the manufacture of Buick.
handled by Ewing Funeral Home .
crys1a l · methamphetamine
The .search revealed $I ,000
laS! Saturday in front of in cash. a bag of marijuana,
ATHENS - , The Ohio Deparlment of Nalliral Resources Fruth's Pharmacy.
crack pipes and numerous
(ODNR) Divi sion of Wildlife' s District Four office will ha ve
Virgie Stires. 47 , Staci chemicals used in the manuPOMEROY - Lorraine E. Ratliff, 76, of Pomeroy, passed its annual open house noon to 3 p.m. Sunday.
Spencer. 20. and Jerry facture of crystal meth.
away March I, 2004 at Holzer Medical Center.
The ODNR Divi sion of Wildfi fe's Di strict Four ollice is Franklin. Jr.. 27. all of 'Crystal meth is made of highShe was born July 14, 1927 in Toledo to the late Iona Shull located at 360 East State St reet. Athens. In case of incl ement Lucasville were charged with ly volatile, toxic substances
.Hageman.
weather, the event will be posponed to March 14 .
illegal assembly or possession that are melded in differing
She was a homemaker and an Avon sales representative.
"Our an nual ope n hou se is an opportunity for anyone inter- of chemical s used for manu- combinations, forming what
She is survi ved by four children; Sharon White of Ariz; John ested in wildlife to share com ments and participate in Ohio's facturing illegal drugs. They some have described as a
Malloy ofTampa, Fla., Gwendolyn Werner of Langsvi lle, and profe ssiona l wildlife management proccS&lt;." said .Jim were arraigned by Judge
Jerry W Lewis of Cocoa, Fla; two sisters, Dolores Denman of Marshall , district manager. Marshall auus tha t fi sh and Steven L Story Monday in "m ix of laundry detergent
Rice Lake, Wis., and Louann Jeffs of Palm Beach Gardens , wildlife biologists along with law enforcement offi cers wi ll be Meigs .County Court. Their and li ghter nuid ." Proffitt
said a number of drug stores
on hand to answer questions .
Fla; seven gra ndchildren and eight great grandchildren.
bond
was
set
at $1 0,000 each. have reported that sudafed. a
Open houses wilL be held at the same day and time in
She is preceded in death by two grandchildren Jerry W
Columbus. Findlay, Akron. and Xenia. Information recorded Spencer and Stires are cur- ke y ingredient of crystal
Lewis. Jr.. and Angela Marie Morris.
Services are at II a.m. Friday, March 5, at Birchfield at these open houses is forwarded to the divi sion's centra l rently inc[trcerated in the meth . mi ss ing in the past few
Correcti onal weeks.
Funeral Home in Rutland. Internment will be at Miles office in Columbus, where it is considered during the formu - Crawford
Fa
cilit
y
in
Bucyrus
. and
"We not going to tolerate
Cemetery in Rutland. Friends may call 5 to 8 p.m. Thursday, lation of regulations for the 2004-2005 hunting seasons.
A statewide heari ng on the proposed rules will be held at 9 Franklin is the cuSiody of the drug trafficking in Pomeroy
- March 4. at the funeral home . Memorial contributions may be
or in Meigs County... he said .
a.m.
on Thursday, March II , in Columbus. After conside ring Middleport Jail.
made to help defray burial expenses.
Pomeroy
Police
Ch
ief
If convicted, each suspect
public input, the Ohio Wildlife Council will vo te on the proMark Proffitt said the arrest face s up to a maximum of .
posed rules and season dates during its April 7 meeting.
posed in their bids for reFor more information or directions to the open house. pl ease came from a tip he rece ived fi ve years in prison and tines
election, and their vote call (740) 589-9930.
SaiUrday from Middleport up to $ 10.000.
counts were: Clerk of Courts
Marlene Harrison, 2, 738;
from Page A1
Prosecuting Attorney Pat
Story,
2,377; Treasurer
rece ived 1,334 Democratic
votes. W. Scott Gwin Howard E. Frank, 2,579;
received 829 votes to Nancy Eugene Triplett, 2,558;
A. Fuerst's 714 votes in the Coroner Douglas D. Hunter,
Democratic race for Justice 2,840.
Other Republican -races:
of the Supreme Court, Jan. I
term . William
O'Neill State Senate, Joy Padgett,
received 1.362 votes for 1,977; State Representative,
The Sentinel welcomes your pho- tographs . Here are a few guide·
.Justice of Ihe Supreme Court, Jimmy Stewart, 2,675; Chief
lines ror submissions:
Justice of the Ohio Supreme
unexpired term.
• Color photographs are acceptDouglas
J.
Bennell Court, Thomas J. Moyer,
ed, provided they are in focus and
received I,306 votes for 1.989; Justice of the Supreme
have good contrast. Negatives
also are accepted; however,
Judge of the Fourth District Court. Jan. l term, Judith
please include a print along with
Ann Lanzinger,
1,749;
Court of Appeals.
the negative.
Other races: State Senate, Justice of the Ohio Supreme
• Black-and-white photographs
are accepted. provided they are In
Terry Anderson, 1.395; State Court, Jan. 2 term, Paul E.
focus and have good cqntrast.
Representative, Pat Lang, Pfeifer, 1,851; Justice of the
Negatives also are accepted;
1.282; Member of Stale Ohio Supreme Court, unexhowever, please Include a print
Central Committee, man, pired
term ,
Terrence
along with the negative.
• Standard-size slides are acx:eptWilliam E. Moore. I ,232; O' Donnell, I ,708; Member
ed.
providE¥~ they are in focus and
Member of State Central of Sta\e Central Committee,
have good contrast.
Commillee, woman, Susan man, Patrick L. Hennessey,
• Submitted photos should be no
smaller than standard wallet Size
Gwinn. 1.280.
1,964; Member of State
and no larger than 8 x 10.
Republican races
Central Committee, woman,
• Polariod·type photos are dis·
Republicans running unop- 1,865.
couraged since they do not repro·

- WilliamA carswell

ODNR to host Sunday open house

Lorraine E. Radiff

WE WAN-r
·YOUB
PBO-rOS!

IWAS

FORCED
FROM·
OFFICE.

---- -=

Crow
from PageA5
cent of the total votes cast.
Crow won his home turf of
Meigs County by a huge margin with 2,776 votes or 80
percent of the total votes cast.
Hi s closest competitor,
Collins, garnered merely 214
votes or six percent of the
votes
cast.
Nuzum,
McFarland, and Driscoll each
had less than 200 votes a
piece.
Crow also won Gallia
County with l , 182 votes.
Collins finished a close second with I ,004 votes and
Nuzum was third with 912

---------------------~
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.. •

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•

Lucky charms
When Irish actor Pierce
Brosnan got married a few
years ago I read that he hid a
statue of the Infant of Prague
outside the church so that it
wouldn't rain on his wedding. I come from a big Irish
Catholic family, but I have
to say, I never heru:d that one
before.
I'd . long forgotten the
Brosnan story until we tried
to sell our old farm to
finance the new one and it
wasn't going smoothly. Sue
vented her frustration to the
Squire's wife, a neighbor
who had come here from
County Clare in I 952. The
years in-between had not
lessened her brogue. If anything, it had ripened it into a
thing halfway between a
song and incomprehensible
vocal exercise. Her Rs lingered long after the rest of
the word was gone.
'It's not a pmoblem at
tall,' she trilled to Sue.
'Didn't l have a sister that
just went through the very
same thing? Yearrrs she's
been trrrying to sell her
house. Yearrrs, you underrrsland. I told hem she must
get a statue of St. Joseph.
He's the saint of all things
· melated to the home, don't
you know? Wasn't he the
one who found a place for

.Jim
Mullen

the
Blessed
Virgin
Motherrrr to have herrr
prrrecious child? If you
everrr have house trrrrouble,
it's St. Joseph you must turrrn to.
'I told herrrr, l told my sisterrrr, 'You must go get yourrrself a statue of St. Joseph
and burrry it upside down in
yourrr frrront yarrrd - facing away frrrom the house
- and you'll see he'll take
carrre of you.' Surrre
enough, two days afterrr she
burrried the statue my sisterrr, she sold hem house easy
as dew on the grrrass. Listen
to me now and do youmself
a favorrr, go get a statue of
St. Joseph.'
At first Sue thought it was.
a joke. But as the weeks
went by, the joking about
getting a statue of St. Joseph
turnep into, 'lf no one comes
to look at this house lomor·row, I'm getting a· stat_ue o( .
St. Joseph.'
I

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r

l didn't know if the · Guinness, if you please.' 1
Squire's wife was kidding or didn't know quite what to ·
not. Her husband was a great say, so I pul,led the two beers
storyteller, but we could and put them in front of him
never tell when he was and said , 'I'm so sorry to
pulling our leg, either. I hear about your loss.'
remember he told me he
' What loss?'
used to run a pub in Ireland
'Well you only ordered
before he immigrated.
two beers so I figure one of
'A customer, a small ski ri- your poor brothers must
ny lad comes in one day, a have passed on.'
new face lome, and he says,
"Oh no,' he smiled, 'Me
:Let me have three Guinness, brothers are fine. This one's
if you please, your honor."
for my brother in America
'Why, I'm thinking, would and this one's for me brother
any one person want three in Australia. But me,' he said
beers at once? But it's not -sadly, 'I've quit drinkin'.''
my place to ask so I pull
Finally, with fewer and
three Guinness and put them fewer people looking at our
in front of him and he drinks property, Sue got on the
them down and leaves. The Internet and bought a statue
next night, the~a thing. of St. Joseph and buried it
He asks for thre
ers and l upside down, facing away
give them to hi . It went on from the house in our front
for months like lock work. lawn. The next day four peoFinally I said, 'So tell me, ple had a bidding war on the
why do you order
three property. We got $5,000
1
Guinness every night?'
more than we w~re asking
"It's like this,' 1he says to for it. As for Pierce Brosnan,
me, 'See, one's for me, one's it did rain the day of his
for me brother ide America: wedding, but it stdpped durand one's for me brother in · ing the ceremony.
Australia.'
·
(Jim Mullen is the author a!
'Well, now, every thing 'It Takes A Village Idiot: A
was clear. That makes sense. Memoir of Ufe Afterthe City·
This went on fpr years. (Simon and Schuster, 2001 ).
Every night, thr~e beers. ffe also contributes regularly
Then one night he comes in to Entertainment Weekly,
with a sad look on his face where he C'an be reached at
~mt says, 'l'il tafce y.vo jiin_mullen@ew.com)

'

·.

''

...

'

•

Hunting and fishing licenses can
be bought on the Internet

Routine traffic stop nets
three suspects accused·
of possessing ingredients
used in crystal meth

Elections

Cartoon dishonest
· Dear Editor:
. Quite a controversy is raging over whether Saddam possessed weapons of mass destruction. Those on the left main·rain there aren't any, that it was a ruse. Rightists like O'Reilly .
.claim they have been misled. The cartoon by Ed Stein (Feb.
15) is intellectually dishonest, blatantly so. It's a prime example of how the Establishment is using both its left and right
wings to hide the fact that Saddam did have WMD's and the
U.S. gave them to him. I directed readers to the proof last year.
The U.S. also gave Saddam the components he needed to gas
the Kurds.
Consider the psychological game the Establishment ,has
played with its double speak. One day you hear, "We found
the evidence;" the next day, "Oops' No we didn't, so we must
·-' keep looking!" The fact is that they don't want to find the evidence unless they can get the "Made in U.S.A." labels off the
boxes. The Establishment is happy to let Dubya, its current
front man, take the heat. If it really wanted to find evidence of
WMD's, it would insist that Dubya look closer to home .
:: Daddy Bush probably still has the sales receipts.
· Jeff Fields
.
Middleport

Local Briefs

LloydWoHe

medi cinal purposes.
In 2001. the U.S. Supreme
Indeed, 65 percent of students admitted to UC Coun ruled that there is no
Berkeley and UC LA with medical marijuana exception
below average SAT scores in to the fed eral Controlled
2002 were Latinos and Substances Act and the
blacks; 5R percent at UCSD Food. Drug and Cosmetic
and 49 perce nt at UC Act. Yet. state and loca l officials in Californi a pretend
Riversiuc.
The long and short of it is that the ruling was never
that low -scoring ·underrep- issued.
Indeed. San Diego Police
resented minorities ' have a
much better chance of being Chief Bill Lan sdowne
admitted to UC school s than rece ntly informed the City
whites and Asians _
, Council. 'Our curre nt proThat clearl y violates the cedure protects the rights of
eight-year-o ld California qualified patients and prilaw. which unequivocally mary c~treg ivers to have
declares that the state 'shall access In legal amounts of

am profoundly ·troubled
by the gay marriages in San

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

Blues man
from Page A5

'

I

I

man band approach into a
portable festival. displaying
multiple styles and shades of
Blue. Stress ing audience
involvement , students found
· themselves a part of
Wheeler's act as they played
the washtub and African percussion instruments.
"Wheeler is a living person
who brings history alive ,"
said Peterson who incorporates many musical styles
into her lesson plans. ''You
can not get any more emotional than the Blues."
Wheeler said Blues came
into being through the mi sery of emancipated slaves
who were free in name only.

votes. In most counties,
Crow was in third place
behind either McFarland or
Collins.
Crow ran a tough campaign
against great odds in 14
counties. Crow faced stiff
competition from four other
candidates coming from
counties with bigger popula- ·
tions. To overcome these
obstacles, Crow campaigned
endlessly and spent nearly
$50,000.
McFarland
will
face
Democrat Douglas Bennett,
an Athens County Municipal
Judge, in the general election . Bennett, who ran unopposed in the Democratic primary, won I.306 votes in
Meigs County.
Wheeler said their world
was a harsh ? ne of inequality and discrimination. He
likened sharecropping to
today's credit card companies who enslave people
through debt. Singing the
Blues was one method of
escape for poor Southern
blacks or anyone who is
oppressed.
"The Blues moves people
and I hope it moves my students," said Peterson.
Wheeler was invited to
play in Meigs County by
Peterso n and Rebecca
Zurcher who met him last
year at a conference in
Atlanta. Zurcher is the Conee! facilitator for
the
Meigs Local School district. She said Co-nect
seeks to bring people and •
programs to the schools so
that students have an

STRUBLE RECEIVES RECOGNITION
Joe Struble , a member of the Pomeroy Rre Department for 50 )!ears. receives a pocket watch
bearing the fire department emblem in recognition of his long service from Fire Chief Rick
Blaettnar. Struble joined the department on March 7, 1954 and is still active. (Charlene Hoeflich)

duce well on newsprint.
• When submitting digital photos,
be sure the images are saved as
high-resolution, high.quallty JPEG
flies.
• Advantlx-type photographs are
discouraged due to their unique
sizes, which do not translate welt
to newspaper oolumns. Advantlk·
type negatives are not accepted.
• Laserwrlter prlnt!i of dllltal

1111ages are alscouraged slnoe
tht!y do not reproduce wan on

newsprint.
• Please be sure all subjects In

photographs are clearly Identified

on the back of the photograph or
on an attached sheet of paper.

tion. Letart Township. I 02
for, I7 against; 0.5 mill, fiveyear. replacement cemetery
maintenance.
Scipio
Township, 142 for, 73

Levy
from Page A1.

against: one-mill, five-y ea r,

Lebanon Township, 11 7 for,
39 against; one-mill, fiveyear, replacement fire protec-

replacement fire protection.
Sutton Township. 502 for.
210 againsl.

to
learn
opportunity
through a proj ec t-based
expenence.
Co-nect is funded through
an Ohio Department of
Education · grant The grant

give teachers new tec hniques
for teaching . The emphasis

money is used Lo bring pro-

grams and ,onduct workshops in the sc hool s which
are not only educational for
students, but are designed to

on the progra ms is Aine,rican

heritage.
"Wheeler is expos in g students to vario us forms of
mu:-,ic while Jt the same ti me
he is teaching them African-

American hiqo ry and the
meaning beh im.l a lot or

Blues songs." saiu Zurcher.

SWEETHEART SPECIAL
( 1 Space '0) • (2 Spaces

Mausoleum

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month)

Monuments

can be 1/2 the price '
of traditional burial

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$J0°0 per month.

Meig_s Countlj Ministeria[
Yl.nnua[ Community
Lenten Services
~
President Dee Rader invites n•eryone to
a/lend services and experience the uniqueness
of each of these churches.

Each service begins at 7:30 p.m. Thursdays
March 4 ~ Rock Springs United Methodist Church
March 11 ~ St Paul Lutheran
March I B - Forest Run United Methodist Church
March 25 • Grace Episcopal
April I ~ Trinity Congregational (candlelight service)
April 9 NOON - Stations of the Cross at
Sacred Heart Catholic Church

Call Ken@ 740-992-7440
Garden .\-

Congratulations To Th~ PVH Community Relations Depiu·tment
On Wilming AGOLD ABBY/Awar·d Fo1· Their· "Believe" Commer·uial!
I
A GOLD ADDY is recognition of the highest
level of creative excellence in adverrising and is
judged superior to all other entries in the annual
competition. The PVH "Beliet·e .. commercial will
automaticallv adt·anc~ to the district compeTition
that will take place nextmomh in Clevelatld. OH

PLEASANT
VALLEY.
HOSPITAL

�PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 3,

2004

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Prep scoreboard, Page 82
Rio softball slgnlngs, Page B2

Why they voted the way they·did in Ohio
By JOHN SEEWER
Associated Pres-; Writer

Why Ohio's Democratic pre,&lt;;idential plimary vote tluned out
the way it did:
ISSUES: The a.'Onomy, he&lt;~ til
care anu taxes were the issues
that mattered most. Two in li ve
muned the economy a' most
imponant. &lt;md that group tended
to back John Kerry. One in 10
thought the wm· in Iraq wa1 most
imponant.
QUALillES: Fimling a candidate who could get elected in
November Wil' the uominant
quality lclr voters. A third said
they wanted someone who
would defeat President Bush,
and they gave Keny overwhelming support. Voters &lt;~so said they
were looking tor someone who
stmd' up for what he believes in
&lt;md someone who cares about
people like them.
INDEPENDENTS:
They

from the south as
overnight progresses.

Wednesday, March 3
Morning

Temperatures wi ll rise to 56
with today's low of 39 occur·
ring aro und 6:00am. Skies
will be partly cloudy with 5
MPH winds from the north
turning from the east as the
morning progresses.
Afternoon

.

It should be a cloudy afternoon. There might be a bit of
rain around the area.
Temperatures will stay near
58 with today's high of 60
occ urring around 2:00pm.
Winds will be 5 MPH from
the southeast turning from the
northeast as the afternoon
progresses.

made up a quarter of all voters favored Kerry. Edwmus mai_le up
mxl split evenly between John some ground in the la'it week but
Edwarcb m1d Kerry.
not enough.
GENDER: Women accounted
INCOME: A m&lt;uority of the
1\lr about half of the voters on voters made less than $50,001
Tuesday. unlike the 2000 Kerry gained half their voies
Democmtic primary when they despite Edwards' attempts to sell
made up six in I0 voters.
himself as a populist.
AGE: Those older th;m 45
PERSONAL FINANCES:
accounted for seven in 10 of all Almost as rn&lt;my voters said their
voter&gt;. Edw&lt;ulls ·stayed a little tinm1cial situation .had gotten
closer mmng baby boomers. but worse when compared with
Kerry won by a wide margin those who said it was better or
&lt;unong people over 65.
tl1e same four years ago.
BLACKS: Blacks accounted
FEELINGS ABOUT BUSH:
tor one in six voters, •md they Voters dearly weren 't happy
strongly backed Kerry, giving with the president. Four in five of
him six in I0 votes.
all voters said tl1ey were angry or
CITfES: Kerry's strongest dissatistied with Bush. Over.lil.
support cmne in Ohio's big cities. about two in five said tl1ey were
He also gained about half the &lt;ulgry with the president.
vote in suburbs and mml areas.
KUCJNICH : U.S. Rep.
Edwmrls was about even with Dennis Kucinich, a fonner
Kerry in the suburtJs.
Cleveland mayor, hasn 't been
DECISION TIMING: Most much of a toctor during the privoters made their decision more maries. But he ran about even
than a week ago and most \Vith Edwards in Cuyahoga

Coumy. and picked up new-ly all
of hi' support in northe&lt;L'I Ohio.
He won about one in ti ve vote'
lium people who "rid they wanted someone who st&lt;md' up fOr
what he believes in.
GAY MARRIAGE: Four in
I0 voters s.tid there should be no
legal recognition of gay couples.

Almost hal f the voters in
Tuesday primari~s in Calitomia
and Vermont saiu tl1ey thought
gay couples should be allowed to
many, while about one in six felt
tl1at way in Georgia.
Erit poll condttcted for The
Associated Press wul tele1'isi011
lll'I\VIIrks

/J\· Edison Mediu

Resemt h/Mitt ,f,·kr hrtmrational
amo11g 1.503 Democmtic primaiT \'o/ers as tiler left 40 rwrdom·

lr selected precincts amund
Ohio mr Tuesdm: Mwxin of
.liJIII!&gt;lirrg ermr plm or rnirws 4

perremage poims ./rJr tire m·em/1
S{f~1lfJie, Ia rxe I"jiJJ".'illhg JTJl tps.

the

Thursday,-March 4
Morning

Expect a cloud y morning.
You will see light rain .
Anticipate rain ·accumulations
of 0.11 ·i nches for this morn. in g. Temperatures will climb
to 58 with today's low of 51
occurring around 6:00am.
Winds wi ll be calm turning
from the southeast as the
morning progresses.

700 W. Main Street, Pomeroy 992-2891

Afternoon

It will continue to be cloudy.
You will see light rain. The
rainfall is expected to end
around 6:00pm with total
accumulations for thi s event
neu.r
0.3 7
inches.
Temperatures will rise from 60
early afternoon to the high for
the day of 66 at 4:00pm as
they drop back down to 63
later this afternoon . Winds will
be I0 MPH from the south.
Evening
There is a good chance of
rain. Temperatures will hover
at 62. Skies will range from
mostly clear to cloudy with 5
to 10 MPH winds from the
south.
Overnight
Temperatures will remain
around 61. Skies will be partly cloudy to cloudy with 5 to
15 MPH winds from · the
south .

Evening

It will be a wet and cloudy
evening. You will see light
rain. The rainfall is expected
to begin near 7:00pm. The
rain should reach 0.08 inches
by this evening. Temperatures
will hold steady around 53.
Winds will be 5 MPH from
the northeast turning from the
east as the evening progresses
Overnight

It's going to be a cloudy
overnight. Light rain is forecasted. The rain fall should
reach 0.07 inches by this
ovemigh\. Temperatures will
linger at 51. Wmds will be 5
MPH from the · east turning

Prices Good Thru
Saturday. ·
March 6th. 2004

SAVE•A•LOT
FOOD STORE

Great Food

Great Prices!

L-~~:N0E~ ··'
Fresh

. Os~ar Mayer

Ground
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10,591.48 .

--::D:::E::-C--J:-:-AN:----::F=:EB::----cM
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R-

HIQI1

Pct.chlnge

llomprevtouo: ·0.81

. 10,678.36

LOw
10,586.88

9•25o

Recant high : 11 ,722.96
Jan. 14, 2000

March 2, 2004

2,200

•

2,000

~ee

1,600

2,039.65

DEC

JAN

:;.=.,., -o.ee

High

LOw
2,03965

2,064.40

FEB
MAR
Record high: 5,048 52
March 10, 2000

Standard &amp;

Poor's 500

1,1 00

1,050

:::,=.,.,·0.59

LOw
1158.54 , 1.147.31

1,000
MAR
Rocord high: t ,527 46

FEB

-r·----Local Stocks\
30.44
AEP- 34.56
Al&lt;zo - 38.60
ACI -

Ashland Inc. - 48.85
BBT- 36.99
BLI - 14.20
Bob Evans - 33.47
BorgWarner - 91.07
City Holding - 34.63
Champion - 4.80
Charming Shops - 6. 73
Col - 31.93
DuPont - 44.85
DG _;_ 21.93
Federal Mogul - .40
Gannett - 86.12
General Electric - 32.49
GKNLY- 5.15
Harley Davidson - 53.07
Kmart - 30.95
Kroger - 19.07
Ltd -19.60
NSC- 21.63

..

Fairgrounds

Bologna
11b.

Ea.

Farmington
'
Pork
Sausage 11b.
Roll

·- ~

High

Bag
Bags

1,150

JAN

90

101b.

1,600

March 2, 2004

1,149.10

d

pkg~

Fairgrounds
Hot
Dogs

$

12 Oz.

March 24. 2000

O'Da~'s 7.25 Oz.

Angel
Soft
Bath
Tissue

M'

\ Oak Hill Financial - 32.23
\Bank One - 54.75
,OVB- 29 .85
feoples - 29.02
fepsico - 52.30
Premier- 9.26
Becky Boots - 21.36
RD Shell - 49.64
Rockwell - 29.94
Sears - 4 7.85
SBC- 25.48 ~
AT&amp;T - 20.11
USB- 28.63
Wendy's - 41.41
Wai·Mart - 59.55
Worthington - 17 .50

Ma~aroni

'.J'.C'""" &amp;

Cheese

4/1f

~-\(j Dinner

Chi~ken
Pot Pies

a;t'1
h,

Frozeil
Fish
.
.

Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m . closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions, provided by Smith
Partners at Advest Inc . of
Gallipolis.

Stleks
PRICES

"

ATLANTA (AP) - Georgia
officials agreeu Tuesday with
the NCAA's 1inding of four
ru les violations in the men's
basketball progmm.
The
sc hool's
official
1'esponse to the violations including three that name former assi stant coach Jim
Hu.rrick Jr., the son of fom1er
head coach and West Virginia
native Jim Harrick - was
delivered to the NCAA in
Indianapolis on Tuesday.
The 52-page university
response was released Tuesday
afternoon, while I,500 pages of
supporting eviuence were
expected to be made public
Wednesday.
In its response. Georgia
requested that the NCAA not
impose additional sanctions on
the program, in particular
sc holarship limitations or a
postseason ban on new coach
Dennis Felton's teu.rn.
When the NCAA inquiry
was released in January, Athens
attorney Ed Tolley said each of
the violations had been selfrepolted by Georgia, and so the
school woulu not contest' the
finding s.
Charges of academic. fraud
and improper benefits were
known last March. Harrick Jr.
was suspended and later fired
by Georgia last year, while
Harrick resigned under pressure.
'The evidence taken as a
whol e, unf011u nately, overwhelming suppor1s the allegations which the NCAA has
made,'' Tolley said.
The Harricks, who also had a
Tuesday deadline to tile their
response to the NCAA, asked
tor an extension, attorney
Henmm Kaufman said.

.,

: SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) Outfielder Adam Dunn and
utility player Ryan Freel agreed
to' one-year deals · Thesday,
P.utting all the Cincinnati Reds
roster under contract for 2004.
, The Reds also hired Kelly
ijeath as a professional scout.
· Dunn hit .2 15 with 27
liomers in 11 6 gu.rnes last sea- .
·S(m, and was sidelined from
inid-August by a tom thumb
ligament. Freel hit .285 in 137
games during his second major
league stint - he al so played
nine games for Toronto in
~DOt.

THRU SAT.

•
•

Report: Rose to be inducted into WWE HOF
NEW YORK (AP) Pete Rose wi ll be inducted
into World Wrestling
Entertainment's hall of
fame later thi s month , The
New York Times reported
Tuesday.
Rose, former Cinci nnati
Reds player and manager
who is major league baseball's career hits leader with
4,256, participated in three

Wrest I e m a n i a
ev ents
from 19982000 for
WWE
He's ineligib le
to
enier baseball's Hall
of
Fame

McMahon

because he 's banned from
the game for lite .
'' He has a dee p, abiding
respect for what we do."
WWE chairman Vince
McMahon told the newspaper.
Ro se will be paid for hi s
appearance at the March
13 induction , and at
Wrestlemania the next
ni ght at Madison Square

Garden.
He ' ll be
pre se nted
by Kane.
hi s
300p o u n u
nemesrs in
t

h

e

Wrestl em a n i a
shows.

Rose

• ..J., .... ..'.

Rio hoops
lands three on
AMC South
Division
Second Team
STAFF REPORT

SPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
CE DARVILLE - Three
players from the University
Rio
of
Grande
Redm e n
ba s ketball
squad have
been select·
ed 2nd Team
A I I
American
Midea s t
Co nfere nce

s

u

0

t

h

Division ,
r e l eased
Tue s day
afternoon.
M a t t
Simpson. a
6-6 junior
swingma11.
6-6 jtmior
ce nter Sea n
Plummer
and
6·2
se nt or
swing m a n
S e

t

Deerfield

h

Deerfield
were give n
the honors
after leading
Rio Grande
to a 20- 11
overall
record. Rio
tied Mount

Huff makes Va.
Legislature his
cheering section

Reds·sign
Dunn, Freel

Banquet 7 oz.
Beefor

Portside
Chunk

Georgia admits
violations in
inquiry response

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) Thirty-live years after he last
wore a helmet and shoulder
pads, Sam Huff learned in the
state Senate and House of
Delegates he can still bring a
crowd to its feet . and get
mobbed for his autograph.
The General Assembly honored Huff' on Tuesday tor a 14season career with the New
York Giants and Washington
Redsk ins during which he was
among football's most feared
linebackers. He is a 1982 Pro
Football Hall of Fame
inductee.
Huff played offensive and
tlete nsive tackle at F&lt;mnington
High School in West Virginia
from 1949 to 1952. He was an
all-American at West Virginia
University before moving onto
the NFL.
He has been part of the
Redskins radio broadcast team
for 30 yeu.rs.
Now a thoroughbred breeder
ih Middleburg, Va., the West
Virginia native was honored in
the Senate with a commending
resolution sponsored by Sen.
Russ Potts, a professional
sports
promoter
from
Winchester.
In the House, he got a throaty
standing ovation when present·ed at center aisle.
Afterward, lawmakers. who
grew up as fans of the six-time
All-Pro trailed him into the
hallway, asking him to autojp:aph copies of that day's legIslative calendars. Delegate
William R. Janis, R-Henrico,
$ ked him to sign a small, red
P,lastic football.

Baeon

A DAY ON WALL STREET

Wednesday, March 3, 2004

V .e r n o n

'l~.:~;!~~~~:·~ JEmhifer Hayman (42) posts up River Valley's Becky 'lyons during a game ear·
..seasen. Hayman and the Eagles go for tt)eir third-ever district championship
~gainst Southeastern. [Brad Sherman)

i'i;

Nazarene for
second place
Plummer
in the South
Division at 13-5.
Rio was picked to fini sh
sixth in the pre-season
coaches' poll.
Simpson averaged I 0.1
poi nts and 4.6 rebounds and
was arguably Rio's go-to
player down the stretch. He
scored, a season-high. 20
points in the 56-5 1 loss to
Ohio Dominican in the AMC
Tournament semi-final s. He
also shot 4il percent ( 11 3-of-

Piease see Rio, B:Z

'

Cincinnati owner Schott dies Couch wants bottom
line from Browns

BY JOE KAY

Associated Press
CINCINNATI - Marge
Schott, the tough-talking ,
chain -smoking owner of the
Cincinnati Reds who won a
World Series and was
repeatedly suspended for
offensive remarks, died
Tuesday. She was 75.
· Schott was hospitalized
about three weeks ago for
breathing difficulties and
repeatedly needed treatment
for lung problems in recent
years.
Chri~t
Hospital
spokeswoman Dona Buckler
did not release a cause of
death.
Schott kept a low profile
after she ended years of turmoil by selling her controlling interest in the club in
October 1999, appearing at
news conferences when she
made donations to the zoo
and other local organizations.
She remained a limited
partner in the team's ownership group and sued owner
Carl Lindner because she
didn 't like her seats in the
new Great American Ball
Park, where the Reds moved
in 2003.
She loved to mingle with
fans and gave generously to
charitable causes but got in
trouble because she couldn 't
watch her words. She reportedly used racial slurs to
describe her players and
repeatedly prai sed Hitler
despite ad monitions to keep
quiet.
"I guess I always thought
of her as a tragic figure,"

Former Cincinnati Reds owner Marge Sc hott. shown in this
2002 file photo , was hospitalized Wednesday, March 12,
2003. Schott, the tough-talking, chain-smoking owner of the
Cincinnati Reds who won a World Series but was repeated ly
suspended for offensive remarks, died Tuesday a hos pital
spokeswoman said. She was 75. (AP file)
former baseball commi s·
sioner Fay Vincent said. '"I
think she tried very hard to
do the right things for baseball , but she had some enor·
mous limitations and she
had some uifficulty ·overcoming them."

Her outspokenness as the
Reds owner became her
legacy and her downfall.
" I think people are
remembered for the good
things they do when they 're

Please see Schott. Bl

CLEVELAND (AP) Tim Couch needs to know
how much it 's goi ng to cost
him to stay with the Brown s.
Couch spent the past two
day s having candid talk s
with Cleveland coach Butch
Davis. They worke~ out
some differences and finally
seem to be on the same
page.
Now, the quarterback
wants to di sc uss something
much more important with
the Brown s: Money.
Couch said Tuesday that
as long as the Browns are
fair to him in negotiations to
restructure hi s pricy contract, he 'll be back for a
sixth season in Cleve land .
" I do want to be here,"
Couch said. ''The coaches
want me here. It's just a matter of getting the contract
thing worked out. ..
The Brown s want Couch
to restructure the final two
years of his deal so they' ll
have more money to spend
when free age ncy opens on
Wednesday and in the
future.
Couch, under contract to
make $7.6 million in 2004
and $8 million in 2005 , said
he would be willing to
accept a pay cut to remain
with the Browns - to a
point.
"It 's going to have to be
something that's fair to both
siues," he said. "We'll ~ee . I
have no idea what the numbers are going to be. I do
want to be here. I just want it
to be fair. "

The team has not yet dis·
cussed dollar fig ures on
reworking Couch' s deal with
hi&gt; agent, Tom Condon, who
has been busy the past few
weeks trying to negotiate a
new co ntract for" another
client , Colt s quarterback
Peyton Manning.
Manning .agreed to a
seven-year. $98 million con·
trac t with Indianapolis on
Tue sday. freeing Condon to
work on Couch's tricky situ alion.
Couch is eager to get his
standing resolved. and he
knows the Browns are. too.
"The sooner the better." he
said. " It 's hard for me the
longer it goes on and it's
hard for them if something
doesn't work out for them to
get a guy or sign a guy."
Couch says he' II give back
some money to the Brown s
as long as it's goi ng to good
use.
"If I have to take a cut, I
want to make sure the
money is going to help bring
guys in here who can help,"
he said.
Davis and Couch met the
past two days to di sc us ~
"issues'' that both said they
had let tester.

�,

· Wedne8day, March 3.

The Daily Sentinel• 'Page 82

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

Redwomen softball signs first recruit for 2004-05
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE COM

RIO
GRANDE
University of Rio Grande Head
Softball Coach David Pyles is
getting a jump on the 2005
softball season. before the
2004 campaign even begins
witb the signing of Talya
Gillespie of Canal Winchester.
Gillespie, a short~top , is the
type of versati le player that
Pyles enjoys. She batted .378
last
season
for Canal
Winchester and had a .940
fielding percentage. Gillespie
was tabbed Ist team All-League
and I st team All-Distri~t.
Gillespie is glad to have the
decision (of choosing a college )
behind her so she can locus on
her senior season. "I'm really
excited and I'm glad to h.1ve
the decision out ol the way
before the season suU1ed." she
said. "I don't haw to worry
about other people coming over
to watch me and I can JUSt
worry about domg my best.''
She also expressed her feelings on why she selected Rio
Grande. "I Just hked it (the
campus)," she said. "It's kind
of a homey place, when I went
down there I really liked it and
Coach Pyles was really nice and
I met some of the girls too.''
Canal Winchester Softball
Coach Randy Hinton added
that he was happy for
Gillespie.
"That's what we work fo r,
to help them improve and get
to the next le'vel ," he said.
"With Talya, she has been an
outstanding player, she' II be a

Eagles
from Page 81
•

4-1 in those contests.
The Ross Countians, who
are enjoying their best season
in recent history, have garnered a reputation for their
up-tempo style of play which all starts with some
sound guard play.
"Suutheastern is a very talent~d team, they've got very
good shooting guards," commented Eastern coach Rick
Edwards.
Junior Ashton Hice (5-foot6) leads the way offe nsively
for the Lady Panthers. scoring 14 points per contest. She
is joined in the bac kcourt by

four-year staner for us."
Hinton li sted some strengths
about Gillespie's game. "She
plays good defense, she has
few more errors if yott look at
the books. but if you watch
her play you can see she has
outstandmg abtlity.
"Offensively, she led the
team in just about everything,
runs swred. bases stolen. she
does .t great job on the bases
and she does whatever it takes
to get on base.''
Pyles likes the versati lity of
his newest recrutt.
•
"She ' ll bnng some depth to
the middle infield position-."'
Pyles s.tid. "I look at Talya as
a second baseman and probably a back-up shortstop. but
she is a very athletic kid and I
wouldn' t be hesitant to even
look &lt;Ll her in ~enterfte l d.
"She has .1 good arm, good
speed She just has all the
tools that it takes to make a
good player."
Gillespie was a summer
traveltng teammate of freshman Shannon Criswell.
She plans to major in either
busines s management or
accounting.
Talya is the daughter of
Tom and Terra Gillespie of
Canal Winchester.

Head Softball Coach David
Pyles signed hi s second
recruit for the 2004-05 season in Bishop Fenwick Hi gh
School centerft elder Jenny
Philltps.
Phillips . from Liberty
Township. is another in the
line of players that brings
vet satility to the ptogram. In
add ition to ceRterfield, she
also has played catcher and
third base.
Phillips was exct ted and
rcltcvcd to put the stgning
behind her as she prepares
for her senior season at the
prep kvel
" It 's very cxctting." she
said. "I gttess all the hard
work th,tl I have put in has'
paid oil
"It 's good to know that
can do somethtng that I enjoy
and have it help me at college.''
Phtllips explained her teasons for selecting Rio Grande
as her col lege home . "I real' Jy liked the nursing school
and being able to play softball and do nursmg at the
same time, it (the signing)
really just seemed like the
right thing to do.''
Phillips feels that the level
of competition she has faced
will help her make the transition
to college.
Redwomen
"Over the summer we travsoftball signs
el to Colorado and we play in
biggest softball tourna·
Bishop Fenwick's the
ments, so hopefully by the
end of the season definitely
Phillips
I'll be prepared.''
Pyles is hoping that
RIO
GRANDE
Uni versity of Rio Grande Phillips can step in and fill
senior point guard Kara Bobo
(5-6). Bobo scores 10 PPG
and hands out an average of
fo ur assists per outing.
In addition to outside
shooting and ball handling
responsibilities, the versatile
backcoun duo wtll post up
from ttme-to-time as well.
But the lion's share of time
in the post is spent by sophomore Kri sten Monroe (6-0)
and junior Nikki Young (58). They average eight and
nine points respectivr.ly, but
make their biggest impact on
the boards.
"With their size, the 6-foot
Monroe girl , we're going to
have
some
problem s
rebounding when she's in
there," Edwards admitted .
Monroe haul s itl seven
rebounds per contest, but is

capable of reaching double
figures on any night. Young
is the team's leading
rebounder, however, with
mne per game.
Besides
rebounding,
Edwards sees balanced scoring and cutting dow n on
turnovers as keys to winning
the game.
"Come Wednesday, we
have to quit turning the basketball over. We had 25
turnovers against Waterford
and 24 the other night agairist
Paint Valley," he said. "We
can't continue to turn the basketball over offensively."
Statistically on paper, the
match-up appears very even.
Southeastern scores an average of 49 .9 points a game
while giving up 41 .1. Eastern
goes for 50.35 while surren-

The Reds plan to honor Schott in
some fashion on opening day.
"She will be remembered for her
Jo ve of baseball and for her passion
for the Cincinnati Reds," Lindner
said.
Schott inherited and e!lpanded
her hu sband 's busmess empire
aftet he died in 1968. Until she
took over the Reds in the midJ980s. she was known primaril y as
a car dealer who made campy television commercials. featuring her
beloved St. Bernards.
Once she got control of the lront
offi ce, she became one of the most
prominent fi gures in the hi story of
baseball's first professional team.
The Reds won the 1990 World
Series, sweeping the Oakland A's
while Schott rubbed dog hair on
manager Lou Piniella and hi s players.
Two years later, her use of racial

Schott
from Page 81
gone," Reds shortstop Barry
Larkin said, at the team's training
camp in Florida. "Now that she's .
gone, they will remember the parties she had to raise money for
kids, her invol ve ment wnh the zoo,
her giving to minority programs.
She gave to minority programs
before her raci st comment~ came
out.
"People ask me all the time about
her racist comments. They ask me
how I could talk to her," said
Larkin, who is black. "But I had a
good relationship v.ith her. I just
go on personal experience. She
was always respectful to me and
my family."

the void in centerfield that
wtll be created with the
departure of Kri sta Tucker
after the 2004 campaign.
"I think Jenny will come in
and probably co mp~te for the
centerfield position . for us,"
Pyl es said. "We lose (Krista)
Tucker and that 's a spot
that's going to be open and
it's Jenny 's to win. if she can
handle it
"We think she can, she's a
good, speedy outfielder with
a good arm and hi ts the ball
well. She's got al l the tools
that she needs ."
Pyles would not rule out
Phillips helping the ballclub
out in other areas if the situation came about.
" I do like versatile players," he said. "And Jenny is
one of those versatile players. centerfield is the number
one spot that I'm looking to
bring her·in as.
"But she can catch and she
can go to third base and play
those positions well, that's
always an option if centerfield doesn't work out."
Phillips is the second
recruit signed for the 2005
season,
joining
Canal
Winchester infield prospect
Talya Gillespie.
She is also accomplished in
the classroom as she earned
the
Atwood
Academic
Scholarship.
dering 40.8
Eastern has won two previous district titles, the first in
1995, and most recently in
1"999. Obviously, all the
members of that team have
long graduated, but some
current Lady Eagles still have
memories of that championship run.
"This group of girls that are
playing now, were in junior
high when Eastern went to
the regional tournament last
time," Edwards said. "They
remember those kids, following them and watching them
play. They're looking forward to trying to get there."
The teams meet at 8: 15
p.m. or approximately 30
minutes after the Trimble
versus Southern district final.

slurs created a national controversy
that overshadowed the club for
nearly a decade. Baseball officials
ordered her to watch her com·
ments, but she continued to publicly praise Hitler - saying he was
"good at the beginning" but then
"went too far" - and make disparaging remarks about ethnic
groups.
In May 1996, after hours of consultations with baseball officials,
Schott released a statement saying
she was sorry her remarks offended
people.
"This was not my intent at all,"
she said. "Let me take this opportunity to set the record straight. I
do not and have never condoned
Adolf Hitler 's policies of hatred ,
and genocide. Hitler
unquestionably one of histo- .
most despicable tyrants."
the team 's limited owners

Wednesday, March 3, 2004

www.mydallysentinel.com
'

-atrihune - Sentinel - l\egi~ter

Prep scoreboard
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Akr
Ftrestone 51 , Macedoma
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Cm O~k Hills 69, Loveland 60
Cle E . 53, Maple Hts. 52 , OT
Cle JFK I 03. Cle. Max Hayes 66

Cle Rhodes 58 Parma Valley Forge

?6
Cle St lgnahus 73, N. Royalton 63
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Masstllon Wa shington 57, Massillon
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Perrysburg 59, Maumee 36
S
Euclid-Lyndhurst Brush

71 .

Cha rdon 43
Uniontown
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45,
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DIVISION II
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Can
Cent
Cath
54, Alliance
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Canal W•nchester 57, Delaware
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Cols Beechcroft 74, Cols. Centenn•al
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Spring . Kenton Ridge 4 t, W Milton
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49
Vermillion 51, Bellevue 44
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Creston
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Nor..vayne 57
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Garrensvllle Gartleld 49
Bloom·Carroll47 , Marion Elgin 39
Bloomdale Elmwood 62, Kansas
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Bucyrus 50, Ashland Crestview 38
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C1n. N College H•ll 81, Cin. H1lls
ChriStian 42

Coldwa te r 63, Spencervill e 57
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Crestv•ew
56
E:
Patestme 53
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27
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•
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•
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M•llbury Lake 65 Delta 58
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43
Oberhn
61
Columbia
Stat•ort
Columb•a 44
•
Peninsula Wood ndge 78 Sullivan.
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Readmg 90 Bethel Tat e 33
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Youngstown
Mo on ey
73
Ne'w'l
Middletown Spr1n gl•eld 50
DIVISION IV
Ada 57, R1dgeway R1dgemon1 21
•
Ashland
Mapl eton
55. MeduTa
Chnshan 23
..
Carey 71 Vanlue GB. OT
C1n Seven H1lls 53 Cm Chr1 sMn 40 .
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E. Can 57, Salmev111e Southern 44 :
Fostona St Wendelm 68, Arcad1a 35 w
Fremont St Joseph 74 GreenwiCh S·
Cent 48
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Lafayette Allen E 66 , Lima Perry 42 ..
Leipsic 55 , McComb 40
Lucas 48, Cresll•ne 30
Maria Sletn Mar1on Local 64, Ft.·
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:
McDonald 53, N Jackson Jackson.
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Miller Ctty 58, N Bslt•more SO
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•\
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Norwalk St . Paul 43. Monroev•lle 41 Old Fort 63 Bettsville 33
Ottoville 63, Delphos JeUersoA 47
Plymouth 56 Mansfte ld Chnshan 54~
Russia
60,
Sp ring
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Chrlst1an 47
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Stryker 57, Gorham Fayette 43
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E 49
Tol Chr•st•an 62 . Tol. Maumee Valley
52
w. Unity Hilltop 68 , Def•ance Ayersv111e·

Rio

ready to vote her out as the controlling partner, she sold all but one
of her shares to Lindner in 1999 for
$67 million.
As she left the spotlight , Schott
blamed the other owners for her
fate.
"I don 't know what I would have
done differently, except for stood
up and fought with the boy s a little
more," she said, shortly after the
sale was complete.
Baseball commissioner Bud
Selig noted that Schott loved baseball , her team and her city.
"Though not without coQtroversy. she should be applauded for her
many humanitarian efforts on
behalf of the people of Ctncinnati,"
Selig said.
Jack McKeon , who was the Red s
manager when she sold control of
the team , recalled how Schott
would give him envelopes with

CLASSIFIEr&gt;

C•il~

hair from her dog. Schott7 ie, for
good lu ck when the team was
struggling.
" I' d have quite a bit of dog hair."
sa id McKeon , who managed
Florida to a World Se ri e, title last
season. " I was hopin g we didn't
Jose too many because sile would
always come down.
·
"She had two real loves - the
Reds and her dog "
Schott treated lier dogs like til e
children she neve r had and ro,·e
from obscurity by pttrchasin g one.
of baseball 's most stori ed tea ms
Growing up in Cincimhtli. Schott:
attended a Catholic gir ls' s&lt;.:ho&lt;J J·
and the University of Ci ncmnati.
She married Charles .1 . Schott in'
1952, and inherited a cm dealership , real estate and comp.mies thal
made bricks and concrete when he
died 111 1968.

"

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E ~ panslons
2~~:10/7K14 Llv lnb Room
2h 14 Good con ltlon call
:,c
l3.:_04.:.1.:_
68.:.2...:·3_948
_ $4
'-....!::-:::-:Vmtonan 1736 sq ft 3 bed·
room , 2 bath Sta inless steel
app I•ances 8 It II at ~·11I ng s
Hard• tap with saddle root 5"
on 12" root pitch ·) porcll
Cole's Mobile Home s 15266
US 50 E Athens, ' Oh iO
(740)592~1972 "Whe e you
net your money's wort "
•

Lots &amp;
L.,---~F- ~-E-~
I

new we 11, sep 11c sys t em .
1 lude
. 11/2
2b d
nc
s 12 b acres,
e h
I
room. 11
at s, gas og 16•80 sites available $1115
I
A k' $70 000 00
~replace s mg
.
.
pe r month 1nctudes water
•
Firm (740)247•2102
sewer &amp; trash. (740) 9:r2·
H
2167
OME.Iii
ForSaleorR ent:3bedroom - - - - - - - - .,
roRSALE
house In Pomeroy, large For Sale · 79 106 Acres .
yard on dead end street. River view. producing Oil &amp;
2BR House, Living &amp; Dining Absolutely no animals No gas wells Reduced to
Room, Kitchen &amp; 1/2 base- land contracts
Deposit 5115 .000
304 _529 • 71 06
1
1
men
' epprox. /4 II acre $400.00 Rent $400 DO altor 5pm
$32 000
approx 1 me out 1740)949 .7004
d
8 u Ch aIll n Rd 13041675 • -'~,::::::;____:.:____
FORECLOSURE!
~~=:;;:::;;=~
3 144
3 bed only $9,500. lor 11&amp;1·
H""" ~
3 bed room 2 bath · Buckeye lngsca•l·
-..R~!:'-

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

•••

Hmtt:s

I rto

~ON
llw-..;:,l·~u
'"iilio'~iiilclio'"iiii-.,J

11110

Moon-E

FORSAn~

entertainers Must be ef1er·
"Q\.1\.T"
"
www.ga Il lpo IIsctHee,co egecom
getlc, have 8 sparkling per- Accreolted
To $43 000 yrl Free Call No
Membe r AccredWflg
.~
so nallty and be m nood
Experience Necessary No
•
counc~ lor Independent College&amp;
Hinngl Full Benefits 1~800· phys tcat condition Must ••n;'~"ii:":ii:ooiil"~"~".:':O
· ...........,
842·1622eXI.22fl.
work weaken d evemngs.
Phone 740-384- 14 54 or
MISCEU.o\NEOUS
H,llls Ad In gr.ound pool 1 1·800·719-3001 ext 1144
Add rossers wanted lmmedi- 740·7 10-0007 for more
~atelyl No experience neces· deta•led mtormatton end an
acre {740 )709•1166 ·
Home sate In Cltv 3 bed·
sary Work from home. Call m
··:::'e::.rv:.::l•::w::..- - - - Barn Removal
d
b
h
3 be room, 2 at ' newly room, 2 tull baths, nice &amp;
-JOBS· Don't Tell Me You All re1erences &amp; lull lnsur· remode
1405)447 •6397
led City schools, clean , great location In City,
n Excellent way' to earn
Can't Get A Job Cat! Ken ange Cal l 304·3?3·0011
$85,000 firm (740)448-i 188 VInyl sldln~ Price to sale
A
now PhM 8 f74m44fl.Q5 39
money. Let~ talk
For tntervlew, (740)992~ ·---"~·A:;;N'IED
.,J
. or (740)446 0137
0o
NEW AVON
~7.:_44::0_ _ _ _ _...,.._
0
,
eeoroom, &lt;:! eatn , Letart Falls, OH , 3 bedroom
Call Marilyn 304·8~2·2645
Local company seeks motl~
houae, 1 bath , detached
Riverview/ Access. Fo
Joyce 304·675-69 19
vated Ind ividuals to work All types o1 masonry briCk , Information/
Pnotos: garage , new roof, siding ,
Aprll304·882-3630
from home, great pay, tra in block &amp; stone 20 yrs
wlnclows. carpet , &amp; kltcnen ,
~ww. orvb com
Cod
ng
peop • oca
tOday, start Immediately Experience tree est•mate
$65 000.00 (740)247-2000
~0303 or can (740)446
ho want to earn mona
740·44 1·9160 or 740-441. 1·304-773-9550, 304·593· ~31
hlle lostng weight. show 9186
1007
3 bedroom. 2 baths on 4.3
ng
otllers
how ;:_;::..,_ _ _ _..,.._
Informational
DVD/C
Paramedics
&amp;
EMT's Georges Portable Sawmill acres Close to Tycoon l ake.
vallable upon reques1740 need&amp; . Apply at 1354 don't haul your lo~s to the
Caii(740)70D·1166
41 . 1984
Jackson Pike , Gallipolis.
mlll)usl cell304·875·1957

'

Golfs Greatest Road Tnp

N1ce
home
for
rent
Meadowland Estate, North
of PI Pleasant. 3BA, washer/dryer, re fng/stove/dlshwa she r. References
&amp;
Deposit
reqwred
$650
month neg (3041593 3542
leave message

Med1 Home Health Agency,
Inc
seekmg
fult-t1me
PhySICal Therapist and PRN
OccupatiOnal Therapist tor
Oh10 and West V1rg1n1a client
base Must Oe licensed both
1n Oh10 and West V1 rg1n1a
We offer a compet1t1ve
salary E 0 E $5,000 SIGN·
ON-BONUS and benefit s tor
lull-l1me Phys1ca1 TherapiSt
only Please send resume to
352
Second
Avenue
Gall1polls, OH 45631 Atm
D•ana Harless. R N CliniCal
Manager

1170

ALAilAMA'S

HousES

APAKTMENIS

rid

ru ~·
t...--iiiiiiiiiiiiitiito-"

-

3 bed room house in
Mlddlepor 1•
$400
1
Pus
deposit, no Inside pets,
(740) 992·3194

&gt; oearoo"1
rick, 1 5 baths, carport,
No pets, No ' smoking.
650, deposit, references
7401446·9209
Nice 1 bedroom apt w/d
hook-up, central air 1 mile
Cheshire ,
cif
north
$375/monlh , (740)992-6226

MISCEU.ANWUS
MENGIANtliSE

mnRt:NT

I'OR RllVf

looking lor a fun fnend ty,
and rewarding enwonment?
Then Fiesla Salons ' busy
Mason local• on 1s the place
tor you• We have •mmed1ale
openmgs and great benehts
tor lull
and part-t1me
hcensed Hair Slyllsts
Benel1ts mclude
hourly
wages. se rv1ce comm•ss10n
up to 45%, reta11and tanmng
comm iSSIOns . 401 (k), medICal, VISIOn denta l &amp; life InS ,
advanced educat•on and
more• Call C1ndy at 1-888825-6363 ,;30 I 0 for more
mfo and to schedule an
mterv1ew

n

luxu ry offered in the new 20,000 square foot

no•••po•pe&lt;l

·v

Southern

How you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your ~lossified ads
Borders $3.PO/per ad
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for Iorge

POLICIES. Ohio V•U.y Publl1hlng ~•-.•• the right to «&lt;tt, reject, or Clnnl 1ny 1d 11 1ny tim•. Error• must tM reported on lhe flr.t d1y of
I
Tribun ..Sentinti·Regilllr will be r"ponelble tor no more than lhe coat or the 1p1c1 occupied by the error and only the first Insertion We aha11 not ba II
any toss or expanH that raautts from the publicati on or omlaalon or an advertlaement Correc:Uon wil l be made in the flrat a~o~allable edition. • Box number
are alwaya conHdenllal. • Curren! rete card appllel. • All real eatate advel'llaamenta are au~eet to the Federal Fair Hou alng Act ot 1968 • Th11
accap1a only help wanted ada meeting EOE atandarda. We will not knowingly accept any adve1'111lng In ~o~lol atlon or th a law.

H blJ' WANlH)

c

"Fodoral Pootol Jobou

a

Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid'

School
Fundraising

GOVERNMENT
JOBS!
WILDUFEI POSTAL. $ 13 51
to $58 00 per hour. Full
Benefits. Patd Training. Call
for Application and Exam
I
N Experence
I f
INFOA :noN SIGN ON normat•on
SONUS
1ST
100 Necessary. Toll Free 1-888~
CALLE~S.
SELECT :26
: :1:.:6
1- ::0::
90
: ..::
••::L:.
·1:.:00::·:.___
AREAS,
1·800·892·5549 Hamden Junction in VInton
EXT. 92, 7 DAYS .
County needs dance floor

the pleasures of

In Next Day•s Paper

need! Re asonably priced! tral heat propane heat
(304)882-2978
304-377- garage matche s llouse
paved dnveways and road
$ 15 44·$21 40/hr, now hlr· 4633
,
1/2 m11e out Pleasant A1dge
1ng For apphcat1on and tree
government JOb 1nfo, call Will rebwld automohve, Road, Galhpohs Ferry, WV
Own Business 35K to Amencan Assoc of Labor, truck and tractor eng1nes $145,000 Call R1ck &amp; Judy
50k/Year. Sem•nar Fr.day, 1·(9 13)599·8220 24 hrs ASE Cert•hed Mechanic Jordan (304)576·2035
Call Ken (740)992-7440
emp serv
Call (740)441·1306 leave a
me sage
stra1ght
s
Dnve r needed
truck. Class B COl. requ.re·
men1 , home every night .
beneiiiS . Call (7 40 )245·
RLJSINF$
5514
D1rector needed tor local
All real estate advertlalng
E~:perteoced
Cabinet area to work With schools.
In thle newepeper le
maker t year expenence
Area Rep/local Route.
aubj••tto
the Fedlfal
PTA's, and youth groups
Pay accordin g to ex pen·
6 57
No Sellmg $100K Income
Fair Houelng Act or 1968
ence Solid surface counterAvg 46 K 8 t 3" 788 1
!i 12 950 Investment for
which make• It U._el to
....
top fabrication preferred, but
STNA CNA HHA
Accounts, Inventory,
advertiae "any
not necessary. Apply m perTra1ning, Terntory {800)373preference, limitation or
son &amp; bnng resume 10 9084 Gau 1a County Counci l on
5470
di sc rimination bued on
Slate Route 218 Gallipolis. Aging 1s seakmg aides to
race, color, religion , HX
Ask lor Nathan
provide Home Care and LOCAL VENDING ROUTE I
familial status Of national
p
60 vending machmes/
origin, Of any lntenflon to
1
10
erson a
are
enror
excellentlocatrons al l lor
mekeeny auch
Foster parents needed· II
•234 . 6982
preterence, limitation or
you have an elc.tra bedroom Ci tizens 01 Ga llla County
$ 0.9 ,
1 95 800
1
&amp; w1sh to help a ch ild , you Benefits Include
discrimination."
can become a Therapeutic "Competit•ve wage
ltl
Cll!l
Foster Parent for you th ages "Mtleage reimbursement
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
Tills new•paper will not
'Day sh1ll
lNG CO recommends th e
k
b1rth to 18, you will rece1ve
now1ng ly accopt
reimbur sement ot $33.$ 48 a "No nighi/No call
ou do bus1ness with peo
advertltementa for reel
· 1 Sat or Sun . a month
le you know. and NOT t
eetllle which lain
day
plus paid
We are
1
violation of Itt. law. Our
looking
for respite
homes
Jn
•s•on/0 enta 1pan
en d money throug h th

••••HIRING 2004•uo
POSTAL JOBBI UP TO
.
WEEKLY FREE
$ t. n•
~ 7 71
ALLI
FOF.t
INTERV IEW
C
AND ~REGI STRATI ON

all

All Display : 12 Noon .2
Business Days Prior To

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Mmlll

Are you looking fo r a
stable JOb with a
profess•onal atmosphere?
We have the 100 for you•
Call on behalf of maJOr
Non-Prof1t and PolitiCal
rgamzahons and earn u
to $8/hour plus borluses
Full or part t1 me
sh1fts ava• lable
Call today to schedule
an 1n1erv1ew
1-877-463-6247 ext.
2454

{p;.

Display Ads

Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m .
For Sundays Paper

• lnc:tude Phone Number And Add res When Neede d
• Ads Should Run 7 Day 5

Young male purebreed
Australian Shep ard , to good
home (prelerably 1n the
county loves outdoors)
(740)256· 1385

r

'

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

11
ll~ P

Oeatl/;ir~

• Start ..,our Adt With A Keyword • lntr:te Complete ·
Description • Include A Price • Avoid bbre'll iatlons

1\\01 \('!\II\ IS

u••HIRING

Imm erse yourself in

Word Ads

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

It to

•

Count)' OH

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
\lr:rihune
Sentinel
~egi~ter
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
_r.._a_I_I_T_o_d_a_J_.·_·__o_ r.,.F..,ax- To (740) 446·3.,oo,~sr-----=o_r_Fa;_x_l-=o.:...&lt;7_40:.:.)-=99:..:2:..:·2-=15:...:.7"""""1•

66

way point of the season.
shot 60.5 percent ( 12 1-ol200) from the field.
Dcefielcl. the onlv se ntor
from Page 81
on the squad. was the heatt234) from the field, 40 per- and-soul of th e unit. He
cent (22-of-55)
from averaged 8 7 points. 4 s·
beyond the three-point arc rebounds and 1.6 ass ists per
and led the team in free game. Deerfi eld scored &lt;t.
throw percentage (84.2 per- season-htgh. 19 pomts tn
the AMC I st round wtn
cent).
over
Roberts Wesley all.
Plummer was Rio's domShawnee St,lle cent er
inating player early in the
Delano
Thomas was th e
season, as he averaged 10.9
points and a team-leading AMC South 's top player
5.7 rebounds per game. and Cedarv ille's Ray Slagle
Plummer, who came off the was se leded as Coach ol
bench beginning at the mtd- the Year.

•

~

Hom•) Suckle HiUs
1 and ]3 bed.. ·-- · rooms no w \ avail
Rent
able.
1starts
$255/manth Low &amp; moderate mcome Equal Housmg
Opportumty (740)446 ·3344
TOO 1·800·750·0750

1!!J Apt.

Beautiful Prom Dresses Full
White SIZe 8, Full Red SIZ8
7·8 Red Gloves (304)6755870

Computer desk/chair $125
Kenmore trash-compacto r
$75. Prom dress s12e 18
wedd1ng gown SIZe 7
New 1 bedroom apt Phone (740)446 -3053
740·446·3736
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Tara
Townh ouse Repa1red, New &amp; Aet:luill In
Apartments Very SpaciOLIS Stock. Call Ron Evans 1·
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors. CA. t 800-537-9528
1/2 Bath. Newly Carpeted
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Joh n Deere 4x2 Ga tor.
Pa tio. Start $385 /Mo No
$4 .200 Call (740)379-235t
Pets. Lease PI I,.Js Secunty
Depos11 Requ1red . Day s NEW AND USED STEEL
740-446-3481, Evenmgs Steel Beams, P1pe Rebar
740-367-0502
For
Conc rete
Angle.
Channel , Flat Ba r Steel
S~~CE
For
Dra•ns.
Grat1ng
IUR Rt:NT
DriVeways &amp; Walkways L&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Monday
2 store tronts m H1stor•cal Tuesday Wedne sday &amp;
downtown Pomeroy. Oh tac- Fnday 8am-4 30pm Clo sed
mg the nver lor rent. Thursday
Sa turd ay
&amp;
Sunday (740)446- 7300

r

~
10

HIKJSEilOLii
GootlS

Good Used Appliances.
Recond itioned
und
Guaranteed
Wash ers.
Dryers
Range s
and
Refrigerators , Some start at
$95 Skaggs App liances 76
V.ne St , [740)446·7398

Seasoned Oak F1 rewood for
sale spill and delivered
locally $50 00 a tru ck load
call 304 675 ·3508

IJUtUllNG
SUPI,.II.'
Block, br1ck. sewer p1pes.
windows lintels etc Claude
Wmters R•o Grande OH
Ca ll 740·245 -5121

r·

l'f: IS
Mollohan Carpet 202 Clark
niH
SAu.
Chapel Ro ad Por ter, Oh1o
(740)446-7444 1-877-8306
9162 Free Estnn ates Easy 1 lull bloode d male. Rat
Call (740 )245 . 5859
l1nancmg, 90 day s same as Temer puppy beaut•lul Cal l
cash V1sa/ Master Ca rd (740)256- 1997
2
bed room apartment,
Dr1ve- a- l1ttle save alot
recentl y remodeled. down
3 White Wolf-S1ber1an Husky
town Galhpol•s No pets. ret- Slate·llke 8' Pool Table pupp1es for sa le
Ca ll
erences &amp; deposit requ• red, w/wall rack &amp; access S250 (740)742 ·112 1 or (740)742
please cal1 (740)446·1 812
JVC KD·S600 CD car stero 3019
$40 alter 4 00 pm (304)6752 bedroom apt S1 At . 160
Four month old Ferret. vacpast Hol zer $475 mo 3776
cma ted With cage and al l
(740)44 1·0 194
Thompsons Appliance &amp; accessones very !ovmg
Repalr-6 75-7388 For sa le, $125 (304)675·1175
3
bedro om
apartment,
automatic
re·cond •t•oned
recently remodo led . c• &amp;
Golden RetMvers AKC , g.
washers &amp; dryers, retngeraheat. downtown Galhpohs,
females. 1-male Parents on
tors. gas and e!ectnc
no pets
references &amp;
prem1ses $300 each Call
depos1t
reqwed,
call ranges , a1r cOnd itioners, and (740)779·0068
wrinoer washers Will do
(740)446- 181 2
repairs on maJOr brands 1n Jack Russell Tamer pups,
Applications being taken tor shop or at your home
ta11s docked &amp; f1rst shots no
very clean 2 bedroom m
papers but purebred , $175
Twin bed $65, Full s1ze bed
each (740)698-7055
country sett1ng yet close to
$75, Couch $75 Recline rtown Large kitchen and hvrocker $40, table &amp; 6 cha1rs Lost· Chocolare Toy Poodle
mg room Washer dryer.
diShwasher
stove
and $125: wh1te chest-of-draw- 1n Kanauga area Reward
offered , goes by name Bear
refrigerator inclLJded Wate r ers $60. gl1der rocker $50
Skaggs Appliances
Call (740)446·8279.
and garbage mcluded Total
76 V1ne Street
elec tr 1c with A/C Tenan t
"""
FRufll' &amp;
(740)446·7398
pays electnc $400 depostt,
V F.GE't:.I.BLI:S
$475 per month No pels
Used Furniture Store 130
( 4 O} 6 2205
(740)446 Bulav1lle P1ke. maltresses,
7
4\-, V or
CRESS GREENS
5
dressers. .
couches,
958 as or lfQiniB
You cut. $6 00 per bushel,
bunkbeds.
rectmers
what·
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
we cut, $ 12 00 par bushel
MENTS
AT
BUDGET no ts Grave Monuments
Charles McKean Farm
PRICES AT JACKSON (740)446·4782 Ga llipolis,
OH
Hrs
10-4
(M-S)
Sunday
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
I \H'I ..,, 1'1'1 II..,
Dnve from $344 to $442 by appointment
,\11\I..,I(Hh.
Walk to shop &amp; movies Call Whirlpool &amp; Kenmore wash·
Equal
740 446 2568
•
ers. Kenmore drye r white.
g_O.:.
p'H
_ _ou_6_1n.=
po_r_
lu_ni-'ty_ _ $65 each Call after 6pm

!r~:!r ~~=~~~e:~~~~~::~~~-

riO

r

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· (740)446·9066
ED &amp; •FFORDABLEI
"
l'ownhouse
apartmen ts,
.'--QUJ·:s
~.. ..
and/or small houses FOR
RENT Call (740144 1·1111
for appllcaiiOn &amp; InformatiOn

Buy
or
se ll
Rlvenne
Ant1ques. 1124 East Main
Cottage Apt onL.ncotnAve onSA124E Pomeroy,740·
m PI Pleasant $275 00 a 992·2526 Russ Moore ,
mon ask lor Nancy 304- owner
P.~.------,
675·5540 or 304·675·4024

a

MlSCFJJANfo'~

r!~.=::NT

~--""-lU-Iiilliioilii._.l
.,
0
8 kh
1996 John eere ac oe .
4 x4 . ex 1 hoe 4 ·000 hrs
M ke 0 11 1
11 1740)446
•
·
a
•
04
8 4
- - -- - - - 2HusqvarnaCommerclaiZtu rn Mowers 2002, 62 •nch
cut 23 horsepower (still
under warranty) $5,000
2001 42 mch cut 18 horsepow,er $3,000 (740)682·
4105

c

Fo r
Lease ·
eaut l1 u 11Y
restored , unfurnished, two
bedroom apartm ent over~
looking the Clh' Park and
.,
River. All new appliances. 1
112
baths
$600/mo ..

MER~·~•s~.
~---ii~
iiiii=oii"
oiiiii""lii"•
·· .,J

Security
deposit
References required No
pets. Cell 740·446-2325 or
74 0-446-4425.
.:__:._::._...:::;:.:.._____
Gracious llvmg 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments a1 V1llage
Martor
and
Riverside
Apartments In Middleport
From $295-$444 Call 740·
992·5064 Equal Hous ing
Opportunities
Twin Rivers Tower Is accept·
lng applications tor waiting
11 t to . _. d s bslzed 1 br
s
r l"u • u
- ,
:~~tment, call 675·6679

2 beaded ~rom Gowns, very
GRAll'\
reoso nable
Evenlnns /
•
weekends call 740·256·
1,000 lbs round bale m•xed
6535 or 304·576·4009
hay, $15 a bale Square $2 a
3- 7'K10' wooden garage bale Call (740)992-7458
doors wltll hardware excel·
lent cond lllon (740)245· 10001f bales ml~~: grass·
clover. alfalfa-orchard grass,
5017
some barn sto red. $15-$25,
::.....:.._ _ _ _ __
(7401
698·2765
Baby Grand Plano, 53,500

100 plus yards polyester Massey
Ferguson
#9,
fabrics
$300 DO Serious square baler Call (740)379·
enquiries only (740)992·
5934

f'

HAY&amp;

Call niter 4pm (740)446· 4X5 round Dales covered .
good grass hay 512 50.
4525
For sa le Buck Stove with Square
bales
mos tl y
orchard
grass
$2 50
accessor1es $400 00 F1rm
(740)992·2823
(3041875·1080

�Wednesday, March 3, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

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'
• Free Estimates
• 5 &amp; 10 yr Warrami es
. '; ·
, .';;~ •.. ·'·"
• Huge Inventory
• Vanguard Ventless Fireplaces '¥'.;,:;.-'·

buid la&lt;VO """"'", bWgot pricocj, ·
111te rop-of.tht-llnt 20 btd MAl Mecloll
Chnic . Imaging Cere Cente of Cantdl
II'IC. IS lookJng to Mfl: 5 ytltf, 1% yitld
per year. 70,000 Cofport:te prtJmiaeorf
nora s at S1000 pre note•. tnfotrnation:

Gallipolis, OH WVOI0212
446-9416 r 1-800-872-5967

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

$1,3110 WEEKLY

Company

STUFFING ENVELOPES
No El&lt;P NeceSSilJ'YI
SSO Ca$h Hiring Bonus!!
Guaranteed In Wttmgl!
C.ll l.a88·590·9379

Noodl Home MillerS
Immediately In Your Area!
Postage Provldedl

In Butlness Since 19891
Start Immediately!

CREDIT CARD DEBT'I
Free Into on debt COI1tolidation.
Lower pey1111nts, Rlduoe lnt&amp;reat,
STOP FEES! Member BB8, Uconllld,
Bonded . 08trey Credit Counseling.
1-888-371.()112 EJI1102

FREE INFORMATION!
Call Ovr LMt Operators 24/7

To! Free: 1-1!00·357·1170

1mn.,..

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start

. . 6:30

Last Thursday or
every month
AII pack $5.00
Bring this coupon

lltiy $5.00
Bonanza Get
5FREE

MYERS PAVING

•
•

t

Henderson, WV

MONTY

Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304·675-2457

• Driveways t Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets

f~R~E

Ieo

Ir

• For Sale: Good grass hay. 1996 Ford Thunderbird , 3.8
; $1.75
per
bale.
Call V6, sunroof. power everything. 22 m.p.g 105.000
' (740)992·3709
mil es.
$2.900
OBO.
~ For Sale: Hay $1 .00 a bale, (740)645· 1302.
1 about 1,000 bales left Call
1997 Plymouth Voyager. ral.(740)446·7857
ley sport. quad sealing.
Hay for sale: Round &amp; loaded w/p/seats. alloy rims
square
bales.
Delano 54.995.00 . 1998 Ch,vy
JacKson's Farm. 304·675· Monte Carlo. 2-dr. V6. auto
1743 or 740·446-1104.
PIW Pl l $4,995.00 ' 1977
Chevy 3/4 ton, 4X4. 350·V8,
SEED&amp;
auto $ 1,500.00. Riverview
F'ER11LIZER
Motors 2 bloc ks below

•--------

r

Tobacco Plants ord er now to

guarantee
planting

ea rly spring
Dewhu rst

~~~~ ~8~~~:~meroy · Ohio

9
:._:.:c. _ _ _ _ _ _ _

1997 Saturn SC·2 coupe, 5

GreenhOu'se (304)8!l5&lt;!789 sp., sun roof, loaded, excellent co ndition, $4,200 080,
(740)949·2115

$5001.Hondas,
J~ep s,

· etc

Chevys,
I

1997 Sunf ire, 7 l K, $ 3,295:
1998 Olds Intrigue, 88K,
$3,895 ; 1993 Geo Tracker,
106K, $1, 195 . Over 20 in
stock, we take trades.

Cook Motors

POLICE

(740)446-010J

IMPOUNDS Cars from
$500. For listings 1-800-719- 1998 2 door Elderodo
3001 ex t 3901
Cadillac Good condition
$ ! ·500 ·00 · Motorcycle and
B
S
1963 uick kylark, origi nal trumpet. (740)985 -3839
aJuminum motor, 2 speed ,
auto. Call 740·441-9354 or 2000 Pontiac Grand Am 4740-645· 1502.
dr, V-6 , auto, air, tilt cruise,
PIW, Pll, AMIFM CD, alloy
1988 C1"1ev. Z24 Cavalier. rims. $6,995.00. 200 1 Satun
Very good body, no motor, SC2 3d d
t
· I'll
, r P/W,
. oar,PJL,
au o, AMIFM
a1r, 1 ,
no transmission . Good Iitie. cruise,
5425. (740)256· 1335.

1996 Ford Crown Victoria .·
one owner, 86,000 miles,
well equipped, good condi·
t lon, $7,500 negotiable ,
1740)992·5696

99

TRUCKS
FOil

1

SALE

1977 Ford F-250. 4x4 High
boy, 35x12.50 tires 460, 4spd. warn winch (needs
work) .
$3,500
080
(740)645·1302.

98
5
St .ooo

080, (740) 992 _n 19

~~~~::~~~!~:;. ~b~ ~~=~;
sunroof, o .D. nice body.
Just like a Camry. but less
9 :30am-5:OOp m.
money.
(740)388·8228.

r40

OV#l T~AGttE~ TOLl&gt; VS Tttf ~UMAN
rol&gt;Y IS TWO·T~IIll&gt;S wAT~Il. Af'Jl&gt;
NOw ttfS AFilAil&gt; TO

Phone (7410)~i93·6~1711
Athens, Ohio

750 East Slat e Street

ree.

'..~',~'r?
.,...
.....

..

~

I
Department
AUCTION
Saturday, March 6th 6:00 p.m .
at the Fire Station
All New Merchandise

77 Harley Sportster 1100cc,
-19_8_9_S_·_10-.-.-3-.-V-6-.-a-ut-o, mo tor rebuilt. good condi127,000 mi les. $ 1,500 . tion , $4500 080 (must sell
to get wile of my case)
Phone (740}643·2749.
- - - - - - - - (740 )949·460 1
1994 GMC Sierra SLE. ext.
John Deere 4x2 Gator,
cab short bed, 2 wh . 305 $4,200. Call (740)379·2351.
auto (18/24 mpg.), loaded w/
tow pkg ., matc hing topper, Serious Calls Only, leave
Lt. Autumnwood, 89.5 miles. message (740)992·5232,
origina l owner. all records, 1977 Harley Davidson M.G.,
well cared for. asking good condition, $ 10,000:
$8,5 00. Pho ne Lisa at 1978 Kawasaki M .C., fai r
(740)449·3869
(please condi tion. $400: 2 SAOW
mobiles. fair condition.
leave message.)

790

CAMPER~ &amp;
MOIUKHo~m;

Speed new engine with
8,000
mi tes
$2200 2003 Sun lite 2 1ft Travel
(304 )675· 7340

Trai ler excell ent conditi on
Sleeps 5 $8500 (304)675·
1992 Plymouth Voyager 3 .0 3514
V6 , SUPER CLEAN, A· t
"'IH\111 ...,
mechanically. Ask ing $ 1,500 ;:;;~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
can John 1740)379·9 t 22 .
Ho~g.;

rio

-------- ~
. IMPROVEMl'NJS
1997 Blaze1
LS 4x4. L..,,.;;iiiii.-iiiiiliiiiliiliorl
Load ed/e~~:tra . exc. cond .
BASEMENT
87.000
miles
(304 ),576·3364

$7500

WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references furnishe d . Establish ed 1975.
Call
24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870, R ogers Basement

NOTICES
Public Notice
Melga
County
Auditor Nancy Parker
Grue1ar announced
thai following the
Ohio
Tax
Comml111oner'e hear·
lng on oil and gee val·
uatlon lor the lax year
2003, the values lor
oil have Increased
from $2,025 per barral
to $2,1110. Baa valua·
Ilona lncreaud from
$340 par thousand
cubic feat to $360.
The
Tax
Comm1111oner llndl
thll the av1r1111 dally
production of oil and
gil bl vaiUI accord•
lng to the following
.
1chadule: .
ALL GRADES OF
OIL; T9ABLE VALUE
Average
Dally
Production: one bar·
rei or more;
$2,150 per barrel
Avaragl
Dally
Procfuctlon: tell than
one barrel; $1,2110 per
barril
GAS;
NATURAL
TAXABLE VALUE
Average
Dally
Production:
eight
M.C.F. or more; $380
per M.C.F.
Average
Dally
Production: lall than
eight M.C.F.; $180 per
M.C.F.
The llllng deadline
lor all and ga1 pro·
ducert 11 May 31,

2004.
(3) 3 lTC

,, .

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE
97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

aren.'t only for

buylnc or seHIIIC
Items, you can use
this widely read
section to wish

someone a
Happy BiJthd!ly,
provide 1 Thank
You, and place an
ld "In Memory"

$2,600, (740)256·1102 ask
lor Jr.

4-WD:s

Snapper

~

l

II

If

GRAVELY TRACTOR

~

SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Co ndor Street

I

of a loved one.
For more infoma·

don, contad your
local Ohio valley

Publlshinc office.
~.11Iipoli~ ilailp

Pafis

THE BORN LOSER

992-2975

~ l.AC.K. GOOO LOOK~,(&gt;., ~f\~P~

Lawu aud Gardeu Equipmeut is o11r
business, not our .~ideli11e

F"'DDt'.'\

t&lt;\11-1\l,l\ W\i'lt'.lt-16 PU'~Ot-IN...IT't­

(10'x10' 610'K20')

MAKE
SOMEONE'S

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

Pass

!!tribune

(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992·2155

,Joint t}len~ant 1\eaister
(304) 675-1333 .

""'
FW... DE.t-IIE.D I E.\/(~'{ON£

F"' l'l'\

1':&gt; BLE.':&gt;SED Witt\~ QUN...I\'{

r.II-\Yf\11,1/( l &amp;If.\ So __..., ,

TO Sfi'M?.&gt;,\E

COli EO lt-ll..l fE ?'

ThE. ~/&gt;Lil..- T~'{
l()C\(.Il-1£, W\Tf\lt-1!

-"'......,_

5LC'&gt;S(D

\o.l \If\ &amp;~':&gt; 7

on a limb!"

G

BIG NATE
KIGHT'·
I 'M
PICTURING

A MATC.t; liE·
TWEEN 1"\RS .
GODI'REY AND
tiS LACHANCE 1

HERE'S
GODFREY,_
SEE, ANv
t;ERE 'S

H11M . Yo l.IRE RIGHT
I SHOULD USE
SO MEOTHIN G ELSE
FOR MRS GODFREY

LA CHANCE. ...

""'
ARIE S (Marcil

TRUCKING

•

HAULING:

~

'

• Limestone
•Sand

· ~~~~~~~~

PEANUTS

..

Line
740-985·3564

It was

a: dark

So what else
is new?

and stormy niqht.

IMNRTS
Athans

Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
Room Additions,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall
&amp; More
FREE ESTIMATES!

740-742-341

Dean HID
New&amp;: Used

BETTY

475 South Church St.

Ripley; WV 25271

YOU KNOW, PI!'ZA,
WHEN YOU 1\-llt.!K
Ai!O\IT IT, ISI&lt;l'T

1-800·822·0417
"W.Vs #I Che'!}'. Pontiac, Buick, Olds

GREAT

GotJu~
Giving ~20 ea.

for automobiles. ·
~Call (140) 992-0413
~r (140)99Z.1011

&amp;tUoolll!w~. Lv mf1S811.

V~Y

WHICH AI.&lt;. 5CMEHOW i'Mv:tS

IT GO PERFECT Win\ AN
tVENING OF TV

HEAL.111Y.

BISSEll
BUilDERS !DC.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Roofing.
COMMERCIAL and

RESIOENTIAL

~-

11'!; PJLL liND
rAMILIAA AND NOf

REAl.LY Ii:s"MoRE
OF AHA~IT'l'\W&gt;l
ANfflir-JG

R&lt;A~~y A~~ 'WAT

&amp;

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

: GARFIELD

· ~~----------~
1'HI5 CAT FOOP ACTUAL-L-Y

I
!.

,

DOE!!IN''f 6MEL..L.. 1'00
'--~ PI5GU6-TI_N_c:.,......---'ll

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992·7599

(

OH, Wt;.L.L.L-1.. .... .

~

~

O

~

ll

~

011

1)1

•

NOW Ill N IIN(J
-\ .1

Advertise in this
. Space for
$50 per month

Mini-Storage

992-6396
992-2272

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room AddHionl &amp;

Aon)odollng

•N.wGitegtl
• ElectricAl

a Plumbing

• Roofing I Ou«er•

,

• ·Vinyl Siding &amp; Pain ting

•.P•Uo·and Porch Decks
Aed~cad

Winter Aatoa

'
V.C. V:OUN!J
Ill
' ll92..f21&amp;
Pomeroy, Ohio

~Vtir.Local

~~~

High&amp;Dry
Self-Storage
740·992.~~232
.,

.
'

~,

' '

'·

!

,,'

..,,
\---'-.1...1111-

''

f

lt.::::::::===:::::::...__

_j

2 1-Apri l 19 ) - A willmg ·
ness to rnake the ne cessary chungo s in
order to secure your future is your greatest
asset today. Use it to make the transac·
rlons needed lor a more profitable tomorrow
TAURUS {Ab ril 20-May 20) - It yo u leAl
inclined to take a cha nce today. do so only
on your· own 1deats rath er th an on those
another rs trying to push on you Wh at you
know is bf!St tor you holds tt1e greate st
pronu su.
GEMINI (M;,y 2 1-June 20) - Sho uld y"or r
havo to dent wllh someone today wllo drd
somet hing that displea sed you rn th e pas I.
keep your hea d and lhr s lime you "tl know
oxa cuy 11ow to dodge any unpleasant
episodes
CANCER (Jun e 2 1-July 22) ~ Tlrrs shou ld
bA a very pleas Ant day for you. prov1ded
you do not per mit a dr sagr eermmt over
sorn et htng of a material natw o to arise
between you and o friend. Keep money
out of the pi cture
LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug . 22 ) - There are two
separa te co ndilr ons exi st1ng today that
could be meanmgful to you personally.
One cou ld be some tr ouble at work. but
the othe r IS some kind ot pleasant social
happening .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22) - There could
be a shill rn circurn st;,nces today regArdIng a coupl e at matters that have been
subjected to whimsica l out side influences
lal"ely They'll now come back unde r your
cont rol.
LIBR A tSept. 23 -0ct. 23) - Even il you
feet your effor ts are temporarily berng
stymied . be pa11on t in all your endeavo rs
tuday. As the day wears on, a gradu al
chan ge lor th e better will begrn to in lluence your affairs.
SCO RPIO (Oct. 24-Nov 22) - Tl1ere"s a
good dMnce you may have to deal wrth a
dllltcuttlrrend today. However. 11 you show
a willin gnes s to stay trillnd ly and co mprollliSe. your example wrll alter your pars
behavtor.
S A~ITTARt U S (Nov. 23-Dec . 2 1) - Your
primary concer ns today mAy h Ave to be 1n
clea!mg wi!h 1110 de mands of Otrl ors .
Happily. another wllo ha s r10H1ing to gam
wilt be suppor tive in he lping yo u deal wi th
eac h sllp ulatlon.
CAPRI COR N (Dec . 22 -Jan . 19) Someone in your peer group who seldom
has ni ce thing s to say about otloers may
zero ill on you today. Kee p ca lm and don t
get upset Your pals will come through in
detending you
AQUARIUS ~Ja n . 20·Feb 19) - Do not be
rel ucl en t to make changes today if your
common sense and better judgmo nt
Instru ct you to do eo. Pay hee d to your
Inner voice and tal low Its wi sdom to lh e
le1ler

... »:&gt;'TIF 1\.l~Y·RE

26 Novelist
- Grey

52 Likely
53 Mark

7 " Quo

27 Pored over
of Zarro
28 Envelope
54 Ever,

R~ALLY

JNmLJqENT'

rival

Vadis ?""

role
abbr.
8 les, mature 29 ' ·Born Free "
9 Have
liotless
10 Society·
34 Congealing
column
36 Foot
word
42 Corp. biggies
11 Magazine
43 Sheds tears
VIPs
45 A Walton

to Byron

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrrt)· Ciph('r t1"1DtO ~rilllls are created Iram c~otalroM tl'f larrous penple pas I Rnd prese1t
Eac~ leHa~rn the ~'llt'e' slar,ds IO' another

Toaay-s ,;/uc: L equalS

"TMW HI

HSW

FWO

BVRUAW

H

OV

ATJW

PHYMAW

IVVY

EVR

C.

w

SHXXTOI.

HYM

OPWZ ,

PHKW

AWHSY
HYM

H

EVR
PVL

USWOOE

MVNWY."

IOWTYXWBJ

PREVIOUS SOLU TION - "It needs no dictionary ot quotat1ons to remind me
tha t the eyes a!e the wmdows of the sour.· - Max Beerbohm
(c) 2004 by NEA . Inc. 3-3

~~~~:t;~r b~ tt~ ~- ~ £Z/iS• UMI

WGID

- - - - - - liitul by CLAY C. jiiOU.AN

0 four

R~orrenr;te

I~ tier'

ol the

3crcrnb!ed words be·

iow to form four sim~ l• wtlrd, .

I

L IRELK

I I I I' I
I HRETB I
' I I I I:
I

F RAY

"Your wife has a lembie bite "
'
.
the dentist informed the husband.

Gnnning. the husband replied. "If
,.......--------. you th 1nk thai's bed , ycu shou ld •
A

I7
'

GE R E L

I I Io I I

, •.• her ... _, ..

PRlNT NUMGL?.W .

1

_

t}

.

l( i~ l ~. S

'E)

_

IN

_

.

G)

Com clete th e lhuckle Qt.:oted
by tilliniJ !n the m1SS1ng words
yoll de ... elop from step Ne. J below.

.SQ L'f~~tS

UNSCRA MBLE FORI
ANS'o\' (R

.

1

' I' I' I' 1· I' I' I

III

~RAM-LETS

[he~

ANSWERS

l-

IIII

z, 0 ,

.Jaunty- Acute - River - Excite - !N the CAR ~
The man was 1mpat1ently waiting for his wife to get
dressed Finally r,e ye ll ed. "You look really nice . but you
would loa' even better IN t11e CARl''

ARLO &amp; JANIS
('""-{(SOFT, FAT,I..AZY.'

J

~~
·· · .,:;:) EVE.RYT~IIJC.
DOIJHOI? YOU15...
Dlf.lG'
....,;.·-~ ~
I

~

rf' '·

•

SOUP TO NUTZ
BaD &amp;hS 9&amp;&gt; Bo&lt;s... o'l
G':lhtld Do... oN

• New Homes
• Qarages

•".,

·»912·1871

...•

.Stop &amp; Compare

·~

Remodeling

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio.

I

ROBERT
BISSEll
COISTRUCnDN
• Complete

5 Dog in Oz
6 Generously

-.r 'Birthday:

'

HEAP ING BoWL
OF C R ISCO '

l,(
~ 1 -'"-{iL

• Ag

30 Imitate

turndown

~

I SEE HER.
t'\ORE A S A

R.B.

• Dirt

50 Dish made
from taro

39 Marseilles

Thursday, Marc h 4. 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol
You could have hmes Ill th e year ahead
when things aren "t rosy. bu t 11 you don't
lose he ar t and keep plugging ahead .
betore H1 e year i!&gt; up, everytl1rng wi l l onc e
again come up rOses ror you
PrSCES (Fob 20·Murch 20) - Don"t bo
hasrta nt to reopen negotiation s ar1d bargain tor better terms 1t you teel a deal yo u
roccnlly struck with another IS too topsided . If you sti ck to your gun s. you'll win

Part

ol RSVP

25 Swindled

cousin
37 Approves

AstroGraph

garment
49

4 Reverence

35 " Addams
Family"

declarer scoops up East's jack, draws
trump s, and runs the clubs. disc arding his
two remaining he arts. Then he plays a
dtamond toward his hand and ends with
an overtrick.

I'm out

I'I'.CULTY
WREST LING'

3 Handy abbr.

daughter
La•nb's pen

, name
48 Goat's·halr

20 Schedule
22 Striding
along
24 Red Sox

channel

47

nest

warrior

Pa!is

dry

Cable
in France

32 Warble
33 Shogun·s

East

13 Tree spriles
19 Rubbing

DOWN

2 King ,

31 Clairvoyance

This 1S the 63 rd day of the year In the
63rd episode of the "Get Smarr TV spyspoof series. Maxwell Smart, agent 86.
has a large purple-colored bruise on his
right ankle. The Chief as ks MaK. "How did
it happen?"
Max replies , ··Br idge game . I got a pa rtner
who s1gnals a lot."
They probably did well . Defense is difficu lt
at the easiest of times. but it1s impossible
W l lhot~t good signaling . Look al today's
deal and decide how East-West should
defe_at tour spades. In particular, how
should they signal?
1 North's three-spade response is a lim it
~
raise. promising fo ur or five trump s and
~
\ 10-12 support poi nts {or eight losers, 11
!I
you use the Losing Trick Cou nt] .
{
West has an automatic opening lead of
-4
the heart ace East drops the th ree
(app ropriate on 03103), his lowest card to
deny bot h the heart queen (with wh ich he
would usually play an unnecessarily high
card; but tune in again tomorrow) and a
doubleton heart (with which he would normally play high-low: but lune in again
Friday).
Now West knows that South has th e heart
queen. It m ight be doubleton. but in case
it is tripleton, West should shift.
It is logical to lead the diamond eight at
trick two , hoping partner ha s the ace as
an immediate entry so that he can push a
hea rt straight throu gh declare r's queen.
Note th at _thi s is the onl y w ay to defeat th e
cont ract If West switches to a club,

-7

DAY!

movies

Method
2t Tissue layer
23 Swabble
26 Turn
sharply
19

28 Condor' s

The three starts
the picture

..lfeellike

NNotme!
My money is wilh
Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Flnanciol Services.
Box 189,
OH
Phone:

56 Shout
of glee
57 Evens up
58 Fall bloom

Chaney
of horror

~~~~~~~~JL~L:~~~22~~~~~~~ j ~---L~~~--~----~~--~

Pomeroy, Ohio

d 1 mo

FOR SALE

r ,

Gravely

J

'LESS, OF COURSE, SHE'S
A·CALLIN' TH' lo40GS !!

..____, ,.._,....II

WHISTLE 1
HOLLER
OR YELL

740·992·7953

lloA1S &amp; MOTORS

1986 Starcraft open bow, 4
cyl. Chevrolet 140hp. life
=
D,:ruim..;s;,;,;;.
e t. ~
$3;;,;00.;..
. ~-..., jacke ts, cover. runs great.
1ANS &amp;
$1.500/0BO.
(740)645·
•·
1302

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES
General Contracting
Homes,Garages,
Concrete Work
Roofing ·All types

1

YES'M,
GRANNY
BARLOW !!

NEVER

740-991-1431

Must sell $4500 o. b.o call
(304 )593·2493

Nice 1996 Dodge Dakota
1/2 ton, 94,000 miles. Priced

REMEMBER, MARY BETH,
A LADY ALWAYS SPEAKS
SOFTLY !! SHE DON'T

JIM'S SMALL ENGINE REPAIR

4-Wheeler 2002 Rancher
41C4 runs great big wheel kit.

Waterproofing.

PUBLIC NOTICE
W. Richard In Volume
The Slate of Ohio, 163, Pnga 440 Meigs
Dead
Melge County, ••· County
Purauent to the com- Recorda; and Except
mand of an order of t acrao deeded to
sale laaued from 1he Shirley
Long
.In
·- Court of Common Volume 249, Page
Pleea of. 1ald county, 637, Melgl County
and to me directed, In Deed Recorde.
The Mlnerale under
the action of Bank
One, NA, Plaintiff, w. the above delcrlbtd
Terry L. Ottman, et al, real 111a11 are lnclud·
Defendanll,
Relph ed with thll con·
li'UIIIII, Sheriff, &amp;IIIII veyance.
offer lor aale at public
Deed Reference:
auction t 04 Eall Volume 282, Paga
Second Street In lhl I 003. Melg1 County
city of Pomeroy, Dead Recorda and
. County of Melga and Volume 288, Page
:. ; State of . Ohio on 919, Mala• County
; Friday, the 28th day of Deed Recorda.
Property Addreu:
. March, 2004 at 10:00
o' clock a.m. of oeld 51781 Bald Knob
, · day th1 following Road, Lang Bonom,
I" delcrlbld Iandi and · OH 45743
Parcal
No. 07·
tenemen11 to-wit:
Situated . In the 00703.00
Townlhlp
of
A deposit of a certl·
Lebanon, County of lied chock, payable to
Malga ..nd State of the Shariff, or cuh
for tan (tO%) percent
Ohio
.
Being 10 acres on of till purchaao price
: till Elal 1lde of the will bl required at the
1 loltowlng d11crlbed time the bid 11 accept·
I reel e11111, being 80 ad.
I rocfl long 1nd 20 rocfa
The full price ahall
i . wide and being In bl paid to the Sheriff
1 Section 25, Town 3,
within thirty (30) d1y1
1. _Ringe 11 ol the Ohio
from th1 date of ule
Comp8ny'l Purchaee, and on· !allure to do
Lebanon Townahlp, 10, the purcheaar
Mala• County, Ohio. ahall bl adjudged In
, : ao11nded
and contempt of court,
ApproiHd at $20,()()0.
:: deacrlbld 11 lollowa
• Bllng . 111 rodl 00 Terme ol tale,
;· Will of the Northeall Cllh.
comtr ol laid laC· RALPH TRUSSELL,
lion, thtnca Wut 87 Sheriff
rocfa; thence North 80 AMY L. .ARRIGHI,
nlda to lbe place of Attorney
!llglnnlng, containing 1940
Huntington
Building
.
: 28-112 IICI'81.
'· Exception
2·112 925 Euclid Avenue
,. 'ic,.. claed to H•rry Cleveland, OH 44118

MINI BIKES • GO·KARTS • LAWN MOWERS •
POWER MOWERS • CHAIN SAWS • SNOW
BLOWERS • WEED EATERS • TILLERS • EDGERS

I

North
J •

machine

Selleck

38 Broke off

lcHivRo,~TI

VANS&amp;
4-WDs

MaroRCVO~

Pass

part

letter

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

LARRY SCHEY

Continental, 1998 Dodge Grand Caravan
miles,
$ 14,000 Sport. Loaded excellen t con-

r

Pass

5 I Dirty po@cs
55 Part man ,

27 Sorority

Opening lead: ¥ A

BARNEY

40.000
Phone: (740)245-9003 after di tion. 72,000 miles. Asking
$6,800.00. 1740)949·4037
5pm.
or (740)992·5082

+

I•

4•

lincoln

·· - - - - - - - "
CD. $6,995.00 1987 Ford 1989 Ford F250 4x4 35 1 5

1992 Dodge Spirit 11 s,OOO FISO, V-8, 4X4 Lariat auto,
miles Possible blown head air. $3,795.00. Riverview
:gasket (304)675-880t
Motors
2 blocks abo\le
McDonalds, Pomeroy, Ohio
1~93 Ford Probe SE. elec· (740)992·3490
tric blue, body excellent con- c:,;,::.:.a::lu:.:r~n.:.:..ne_e_d_s-w-o-r&lt;.
dition . spoiler, No transmission. $600. (740)446·7857.

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5
10 4 3
A Q 10 ~
olo J43
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Let me do 1t for youl

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+ KJ 4

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTINGI

if. .

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¥ A. K.J n

West

15 To 8 _

18

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Eaol WeHI

740·992·7953

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Q 10 \J
Easl

South

44 Sl!perman
foe - Luther
46 ....... partner
48 Dream

16 Dried rruit
or

South
llKQ I082

Hill's Self
Storage

43 Take vows

17 Brokaw

West

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

1 Moved
stealthily
6 Whoever
12 Vague
thought
. 14 Cater·
wauled

(exactly)

ti 3

• 8 7 5 2
.. 8 7 5 2

I mo

•
'

A 7 &lt;3
H52

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875-2497

Backhoe, Dozer,
Foundations,
Septic Systems,
Water and Utilities

www.delflyoc.arv

,----....,=---.,=.,..,...,
North
03 ·03·04

40 Puture
4I Slang~ lady
42 H's easily
deflated

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�www.mydai lysentinel.com

Wednesday, March 3, 2004

Grandy, Trimble run
over Southern, Bt

Buckeyes top Penn
State, 86

TO THE
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:; ll

('I '\ I S • \ o I. .)..J . :\ o .

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Four plead guilty in Meigs Comnion Pleas Court

SPORTS
• Lady Eagles claim
district title. ~ Page 81

BY

J.

MILES LAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Four people pled guilty in two separate cases in the Meigs
County Court of Common
Pleas Judge Fred Crow Ill
Wednesday.
Virgie Stires. 47and Staci
Spencer, 20, of Lucasvill e
pled guilty to illegal assembly or possession of chemical s used for manufacturing

i !legal drugs. Their accomplice. Jerry Franklin. will
have his plea hearing at a
I mer date. Stires and Spencer
were arrested last Saturday
when the Pomeroy Pol·ice
received a tip aboui the purchase of items used in making crystal methamphetamine.
Middlepon Police officer
Tony King, Pomeroy Police
Cpl. Ronnie Spaun and
Proffitt pulled over and

searched the vehicle driven
by Spencer. The search
revealed $ 1,000 in cash. a
bag of marijuana, crack
pipes and numerous chemicals used in the manufacture
.
of crystal meth.
Stires and Spencer, neither
of whom have any prior
felony convictions. entered
into a plea agreement with
the · Meigs
County
Prosecutor's office. If convicted, each suspect still

faces up Jo a maximum of 18
months in prison and fines
up Io $5.000. They were
released from the Crawford
Correctional Facility in
Bucyrw; on a $5.000 personal bond requiring Ihem to be
presenl for seniencing which
is set for April 12.
Adam Doczi . 20, and
Chri stopher L. Holsinger.
b01h of Pomeroy. pled guilty
to felony charges of vandalism and breaking and enter-

ing 1he Riverside Food Mart
in Pomeroy in late February.
Both Hol singer and Doczi
confessed to Pomeroy Police
Chief Mark Proffitt.
Holsinger and Doczi. nei ther of whom have any prior
felony conviciions. entered
i nlo plea agreemenJs with
the
Mei gs
Cot1111y
Prosecutor's
office.
Vandalism. breaking and

Please see Court. AS

Pomeroy Cliffs
Apartments
poised for
makeover

rehere1

BY

J.

MILES LAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
. Page AS
· • William Carswell
• Harold Nutter
• Millard Gilmore
'"

f ~--1

q

WEATHER
,
•

,~~t. \\ ·~1i

ursday March 4th

·a·n the
·~~ .1~ · \\~c.,,., .l'~J!'..·
Convocation Center, thens ~ ; "'" ·tf
n vs Mowrystown While Oak
1'UL

£\'

I

K.

'

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.• '

Finals Saturday March 13th 2:00PM
Quality
Print Shop
992-3345
Middleport, Ohio

Baumlumber
985-3301
Chester, Ohio

Wesam

Construction
992-6466
Pomeroy, Ohio

Crow's Family
rg.nt
2432

u,.-•!lr,... ~, Ohio

Ingels Electronics
K&amp;C
Jewelers
and Jewelry
992-3785
992-2635
Pomeroy, Ohio
Middleport, Ohio

D. V. Weber

Fisher
Construction Funeral Hom
740-378-6293
Reedsville, Ohio

Middleport Pomeroy

992-5144 992-5444

Swisher•Lohse
Pharmacy

Valley lumber
&amp;Supply
992-6611
Middleport, Ohio .

Pick 3 day: 2-6-6
Pick 4 day: 2-2-2-0
Pick 3 night: 9-3-1
Pick 4 night: 2-8-9-3
Buckeye 5: 4-8-14-19-33
Superlotto: 6-i8-23-27-29-41
Bonus ball: 28
Kicker: 8-2-7-8-0-2

West Virginia

992-2955
Pomeroy, Ohio

The Shoe Place
&amp;Locker219
992-5627
Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio

LoTTERIES
Ohio

Downing-Childs
Quality Furniture
-Mullen-Musser Brogan Warner
Plus
Insurance
Insurance
1-800-200-4005
992-6687
992-3381
740-667-7388
Pomeroy, Ohio

Details on Page A2

Dally 3: 7-9-8
Dally 4: 2-3-8-8

Association to pursue tree planting

INDEX
2 SECJ'IONS -

POMEROY ~ Pomeroy
Cliffs Apartmenls at 245
Union Ave. may be gelling
a makeove r in the future .
Woda Development of
Columbus wanis to do $2
million of interior and
exierior rchabiliJation to Ihe
apartments whid1 should
begin in the summer of
2005 and be completed in
the spring of 2006.
completed,
·once
Pomeroy Cliffs Apartment
will be called Co lonial
Greene. Thomas Simons.
vice presideni of Woda
Development. said lhe project will go as planned if
tl1e company gels alloc&lt;~Iion
of hou sing tax .credits from
the Ohio Finance Agency.
To give credence Jo this
request. Pomeroy Village
Council
unanimou sly
approved a resoluiion Slipporting
Woda
Developmeni 's plans.
Both Pomeroy Mayor
John Musser and Counci l
President George Wright
expressed support for \ the
resolu tion and said the project would benefii Il1e village. Musser sa id Ihe labor
and some of Ihe material s
Girl Scout volunteers had the mammoth task on Wednesday of sorting through over 23,000 boxes of Girl Scout cookies, for Ihe project wi ll come
preparing them for delivery to Meigs County troops. The cookies arrived at Pomeroy Vi llage Hall in two delivery trucks. This from local sources.
year's best seller was a surprise: the chocolate and coconut Samoa outsold Thin Mints for the first year in memory, accord·
'There going to spend a
lng to Cookie· chairman Cheryl King. Natalie Michael of Troop 1120 was ,this year's top seller, moving 616 boxes of cookies. couple million dollars on
Tiara Richmond of Troop 1015 was the second·best, with 451 boxes, and Hannah King of Troop 1120, third. w1th 440 boxes. this project and that is
Southern Brownie Troop 1120 sold the rt~ost as a group, with 4,056 boxes. "Through the cook1e sales, the scouts learn good for the local econoresponsibility, motivation to accomplish goals, courtesy, teamwork and self confidence." King said. The tradition of baking my:· said Musser. "When
and selling cookies by Girl Scouts dates back to the early 1920's, and today, over 325 councils participate in the annual this projecJ is finished. it
sale. Here, King, Tanya Holter of Racine and Phyllis Deem of Syracuse sort through the cases and cases of cook1es, prepar- is goi ng 10 be an improvement Io the community."
ing them for pickup by troop leaders. (Brian J. Reed)

'
BY BRIAN

12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby
Primary Results

A3
A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

Bt

Weather

A2

Places To Go

A6

© 2004 Ohio Valley PublishlnJO: Co.

J.

REED

BR~ED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
Representatives of the
Community
'Middleport
Association will work with
Middleport Village Council
and a local landscaper in
selecting. buying and planting trees for the downtown
shopping district thi s spring.
Meeting Thesday, morning
at Peoples Bank, the association authorized Vice President
Tom Dooley and Sue Baker to
meet next Monday with coun-

h

Other business

no charge tOr thtbe organiza-

The &lt;t~socimion will again
sponsor a Bunny Hop Bake
Sale for Easter. The event will
be held tium 10 a.m. until I
p.m. on April 10, &lt;md local
organizations interested in having a sidewalk bake sale an:
asked to contact Angie
Edwards at 992-9513 -or
Dooley
al
992-J 148.

Iion who wish In con&lt;.luct bake
sales. D(Xlley said.
Secreiary Sue Stnnc sai&lt;.l
the asl.\ociat ion 's membersh ip drive continues . To
date. 4 1 members have
joined the associaiion for
2004.
.
The annual Yellow Flag
Yard Sale will be held Apri l
30 and May I.

••

I 2

FDJO

949-2210 992-6333

Mer\:hants are cncoumgcd Io
conduct sidewalk sales during
the event. and the Easier
Bunny will be on hand Io pass
out treats to children. l11ere i'

iir T :.t...:
. W.l..nt::.

I!II•UIUJ.J I

Pomeroy

town thi s summer. and a
Middleport Girl Scout troop
has agreed to care for flower
beds once they are planted.

w.tf81DJDg

Farmers Bank
Home
National BankG) "Your Bank For Life"
Syracuse

to purchase a tree for the
·
project.
A village
committee
appointed by Mayor Sandy
lannarelli to purchase trees
has been inactive, and the
association has chosen the
project as a priority for
2004. Dooley said the association hopes to have trees in
place by spring.
The Crossroads/YES program at the University of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College Meigs
Center has offered assistance
in clean in g streets down-

T.

,.

Racine

cil to di scuss accessing funds
awarded seveml years ago by
the Ohio Department of
Natuml Resources for the purchase of trees. The association
has chosen tree planting as a
priority for 2004, and Baker
recently attended a meeting
with ODNR Urban Forester
Ann Bonner and village
workers regarding the selec·
tion and care of trees.
Dooley said the association will also consider contributing additional funds for
the purchase, and · wi II ask
downtown business owners

Gallipolis Tuppers Plains

992-2136 446-2265 667-3161

' 1.'&gt; -

'\. ,

'

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