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                  <text>Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, M,arch 25,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Inside The NCAA Tournament

2004

Plans made to
convert factory for
military blimp, AS

NHL

O'Connell on the NCAAs: One senior With agreement
star guard, one freshman star guard lapsing, it may be
•
BY

JtM

O'CONNELl.

'

·NCAA Toumament

Associated Press

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J . - If Chris
Paul wants to see hi s future he needs only
to look across the court at Jameer Nelson
on Thursday night.
Paul. the skinny freshman point guard .
with the quick tirst step, innate passing
5ense and solid jump shot, will be running
the offense for fourth-seeded Wake Forest,
as he has from his first game.
Nelson, ihe muscular senior P.?int guard
with very similar offensive skills and the
bene tit of 123 college starts. will handle
the ball for top-seeded Saint Joseph's, as he
has for the last four years.
. All eyes wilt be on the two stars when
they me~t in the East Rutherford Regional.
· "''m hoping experience and a Iittle bit of
size pays off," Saint Joseph's coach Phil
Martelli said.
The 5-foot-11. 190-pound Nelson is an
inch shorter but 20 pounds heavier than
Paul.
"You can't make it all about them. We all
have to guard Paul and they all have to
guard Jameer."
Nelson, a unanimous selection for the
All-America team, averaged 20.6 points,
4.6 rebounds and 5.2 assists while shooting
49 percent from the field and 80 percent
from the free-throw line.
Paul was the Atlantic Coast Conference
rookie of the year and was selected to the
league's all-defensive team after leading it
with 2.7 steals a game. He averaged 14.9
points, 3.4 rebounds and 5.8 assists while
shooting 50 percent from the field and 84
percent from the free· throw line.
Paul's most recent games- one in the
ACC tournament and the tirst two rounds
of the NCAA toumamenl - have been his
most impressive. He has 81 points. 22
assists and just three turnovers in those
games.
"He's done a great job," Nelson said,
referring to Paul. "He seems to be a natural point guard. He's so calm out there and
that's what a team needs a point guard to

OPENING ROUND
AIUOAnno

o.tondo, Ra.
t.lsslaslppi 5Wm 65, Morvroolh, N.J .

--

Florldaii&amp;M72.~ s1

52
xavier eo, L.ouiMie 7ll

--

EAST RlmiEAFOIIO
REGtONAl

AtHSiiC-.

v.

5undly,Min:h21

-..,N.c.

Manhattan 75. Florida 60
Wilke
Forest
79,
Virginia
ColrmJowoallh 78
f'fldly.- Ill
AI~AniM

-Cit\&lt; Mo.

Mempl1is 59, SOOth catolna 43
Oklahoma State 75. Eastom
WO!Ihingto&lt;l 56
Allho Bnodloy Contor
Wioc&lt;lnsln 76, Alcl'ionond 64
- g h 53, Central Florida 44

20&lt;
AtHS8C-.

Soturdoy, -

•

v.

Bullolo, N.
Saint Jooeph's 70. T...., Tecl\65
AI!IIIC~

A I - • - -·
COiumbut, Ohio
Illinois 92, CinCinnati 66
AI'T1l-c.ntet
o.tondo, Ra.
Xavier 89. M'mL.k~ ~ 74
$OmiiiNIIo
. f'tldoW,- 28
AlTho Clocrglo Oomo

-

ToiCBs (25-7) V8. xavier (25-10). 7:Zl
p.m.
CU&lt;e (29-5) vs.INinols (2&amp;6). 30 mlnutoo aft6f first game
·
a.oinploo IOIIIp
SUndoy,Min:h28
AlTho Clocrglo Oomo

A-

ST. LOUIS REGIONAL

-

SUnday,Mnh21

. RrotRound
Thuroday, - 1 8

AI~AniM

AIKey-

--

-Citi&lt;Mo.
Oklahoma State 70, Memphis 53
Allho Brldlov Ctntel'
............... 59, Wieoonsln 55

. ·---· ~1111·

'lhondiy,- 25

AI Collllnonllol AII1IIW.JiM! Rutl¥b4.N.J.
Oklahoma State (29-3) w. Pitlsllurgh
(at-4), 7:27p.m.
Saint.Jooeph'e (29-1) ""'wake Foroot
(21-9), 30 ~ firBt game.
Cl••apb..tllp

Conllnonllol-. Sllunlay.-·21

At Eao1Ru-4N.J.

Sam~nat-

RrotRound

lluldey,Mnh18

AtThe~COn!M

"""""

Texas 66, P - 49
Nol1t1 Carolna 63. All Forte 52
AIRBCCOn!M
Rllolgi\LN.c..

llulo! 96, Alabama ..... 61
Seton Hal180, Atl~ 76 .

Frtdoy,-111
At NatlicaiWtdl Arena

Columbuo,'Ohlo
Hlinols 72, Munay Stala 53 •
Cincinnati 80, EasiThnneoeee Stala

, 102,

-City,·Mo.
- 6 6 . ProYidence 58
.78, l~nols-Chle\tgo 53
.N.The lndloy c.ntor
MIIWaUtooo
Booton College 58. Utah 51
G~a Tecl165, Notthem Iowa 80

·--

Saturday,- 20
AIKey-

NeYada91,Gonzaga72
SUnday,- 21.

At-o,ftdoAreno

COiumbut, Ohio
Alsbama-Blrmlngham 76, Kll!i1ucA&lt;y
AI~ANnlo

A1abi1ma 65, Soothem INinols 64
Stanlood71 , T.....san Anlo!olo 45
Friday, lolerolo 19
A1'11l-centro
Orlondo, AI.
North Carolina $1ale 61, LoolsianaLalayelte 52

\fanderbilt 11 , Western Mlchijan 58
Second Round
20
AtHS8CAniM
Bufl1olo, N. v.
Connecticut 72, DePaul 55
AllhoPopolcentM

··-

Alaloama 70, -

N.~­

75

-

AI~-

Syracuse 72, Ma~and 70
AIKoyANnlo

Columbus, Ohio
t&lt;eni!A&lt;l&lt;y 96, Florida A&amp;M 78

ATI.ANTA REGIONAL

PHOENIX REGIONAl.
FlntRound
TliuoWdly,- 18
At HS8C Anno
Bulltllo,N.Y.
ConnecticUt 70, Vermont 53
Del'alJI76; Dayton 69, 20T
Allho PopotDeiMIO'
Marytand 86, Texas-B Paeo 63
Syraaose 80, Brigham 'bJng 75

"""""

Nevada 72. Mictllgan 5Wm 66
GOnzaga 76, VBipemiso 49
AIF'ttdor._ _ _ 19

Alabama-Birmingham
V/liril1lngton 100

vs.

Saturdav.-

Samlfinal ,.""""'

llalolali. N.C.
wake Forest 84, Mantlauan 60

(22·9)

St. Louie
Semifinal v.liififi!S

Texas 78, Nol1t1 CaroiN. ·75
.
AI RBC c.ntet
Rolelall, N.C.
tu&lt;e 00. Seton f!oll62

llullolo, N.
r.... Tecl\78, ~ 73
Saini Jooeph"s 82, Lllorty 63
AI R8G Ctnllr

Alabame·Binnlngham

Kansas (23-11). 7:10p.m.
Claor!ja Tech (25-9) vs. Newda (258), 30 -~y:,me

SUnday, Mll"'h 28
· At Edward Jones Oomo

SIIurdoy,- 20
AlTho POpol c.ntor

~-18

do."

Paul, 18, has spent the last few days getting ready for the 22-year-old Nelson.
"You can' t just watch one tilm on
Jatneer and understand what he wants to
do. You have to watch tons and tons of film
becouse he's such a great player and he's
so versatile," Paul said. "I know he's a
senior and one thing Coach always says
• about seniors is they play with a sense of
urgen~y because it could be their last
game.
Last season was almost Nelson's last in
college, but he decided to return for his
Senior year. He and the Hawks had a special season, losing just one game and
reaching No. I in The Associated Press
poll.
What if Nelson hadn't returned?
''I'd be sitting home saying. 'Isn't it
great Xavier made it from the Atlantic 10
and I hope Jim Thome gets healthy and
hits more home runs this year,"' Martelli
said. "He is the best player in college basketball because he is the best leader in college basketball. From the day he came
back he has demanded in a very quiet way

AtTD INMwt a~ Cwdrw

.. ~..=18

---

AI Edwald Jonoo Dome
· SL Louie

77

Ka- City, Mo.
78, f'aolfiC 63
At·The llnljley Canlor
Mthtf ,
Georgia Tecn rrr, Boo!toh .Cdtsge 54
.
Samlftnala
.
·
Fl1dly, March ;zs

67

SUnday, Mllooto 21
A!Tll-110- Ctnloor
Orlondo, Ra.
VandertJIIt 76, Nortto Carolina State

73 '

s.mTiourldoy,- 211

. AtAmerfco-Areno
Vande!blll (23-9) vs. Connecticut (298), 7:10p.m.
Ak!bama (19-12) vs. Syreouee (23-7),
30 ,.,._ afterfti'SI game
Challl!llonohlp
Satunloy, 27
AtAmerfco--

Semifinal winners

FlNALFOOR
At Tho Alaonodaono
Sen Antonio

SamHinole
Soolurdoy, April 3

East Rulloerloo!l chalri&gt;Km vs. St.
Louie charnpkln, TBA
Atlanta cloanl&gt;i&lt;&gt;&lt;o vs. f'looeoiJ&lt; champion, TBA Charnplon$Np

~Aj&gt;o115

Seorillo1al winners

L------------------~-~-----~--'

from his teammates that they pursue
excellence."
·
It's harder to be a leader as a freshman,
but Paul has been able to do it without
stepping on the toes or egos of the upperclassmen.
"My teammates will never let me not
know I'm a freshman," he said, laughing.
"At shootarounds or in the hotels my nickname is always 'Rookie' or 'Freshman.'
They never call me Chris. Coach told me
early in the season he didn't need me to
play like a freshman, he needed me to play
like an NCAA point guard."
And that's what he was with 22 points
and seven assists in the opening round
against Virginia Commonwealth, and 29
points and six assists in the second round
against Manhattan.
"He is T.J. Ford reincarnated," Martelli
said, comparing Paul with Texas' All-

America point guard from last season.
'Tm amazed at his speed, his calm. He hits
big shot after big shot, and not only hits
them, he wants to take them.
"When I watch him I think, That was
what it was like when we had Jameer as a
freshman.' I don't know all of the freshmen
in the country, but if there's anybody who's
had more of an impact on their team than
he has had on this team, God bless him."
Wake Forest coach Skip Prosser played
down the one-on-one matchup, but he
looks at Nelson and sees what could be
Paul's future.
"You look at the difference between
Chris and Jameer physically and I think
that's a natural maturation," Prosser said.
"He'll get stronger as he gets older. He's
going to play, and he's done pretty well.
"As I've said ad infinitum, ad nauseam.
I wouldn't trade him for any point guard in
the country."

British cave
explorers rescued, A2

harder to get
Russians into NHL
BY RUSTY .MIU.ER

Associated Press

COLUMBUS
European
hockey
prospect
Alexander
Ovechkin, considered the
top player available in the
NHL's June draft, may not
end up playing in the
league anytime soon
unless it is able to strike a
player-transfer agreement
with the sport's interna·
tiona! ruling body.
William
Daly,
the
NHL's exec utive. vice
president and chief legal
officer, said Wednesday
that the NHL's player·
transfer contract with the
International Ice Hockey
Federation concludes at
the end of thi s season.
Some clubs in the Russian
elite league have said they
do not wish to be a pan of
any new agreement.
"They seem to prefer, at
least some clubs in the
Russian league, to negotiate
individually
as
opposed to being paid on
a formula basis because
they think they . make out
better. that way," Daly
said. "We informed the
IIHF that we don't have
an interest in doing a new
player-transfer agreement
if they don ' t have the
Ru ssians included. That's
kind of where it sits right

now."
Of course, there may
nor be a 2004-2005 NHL
season anyway because of
th e stalemate between
management and the players' association over a
hard salary cap.
Ovechkin , a left wing
for Dynamo Moscow, is
considered the most talented player available in
the NHL's June draft.
Pittsburgh Penguins GM
Craig Patrick has called
him "head and shoulders"
above everyone else in
the druft class. Florida
Panthers
GM
Rick
Dudley
said
that

Ovechkin is "the best
prospect I've seen in 20
years in this business."
With the · NHL season
winding down, Pittsburgh
(53 points ), Columbu s
(54) and Washington (55)
are vying for the inside
track. to the No. I overall
pick. The team with the
worst record (and fewest
points) in the league has
the best chance of grabbing· the No. I selection.
Without a player-transfer agreement, it would
likely take lon ger to get
European players into
NHL uniforms.
Earlier this
season
Nikolai Zherdev, a 19year-o ld ri ght wing who
was the Blue Jackets'
first-round pick in the
2003 draft, tlew out of
Russia to ·Canada and
eventua lly joined the
club. His Red Army team
in the Russian Elite
League protested, saying
Zherdev still had military
obligations in Russian. A
mediator later determined
that the NHL and the Blue
Jackets had met all criteria to bring Zherdev to the
NHL.
Daly said the future of
any player-transfer agreement would be decided by
the Russian e lite leag ue .
"It 's uncertain at this
point. basically, how their
voting mec hanism works
as to how the Russian
league as a whole goes
and whether they agree to
be part of a new agreement," Daly said.
Daly is visiting NHL
cities and talking to clubs
about the impending
negotiations
on
the
league' s collective bargaining agreement , which
exp ires in September.
Many believe there will
be a work stoppage
because of the gulf
between the league and
the players' association
over the financial health
of NHL team s.

E-mail your sports·news to:
sports@mydailytribune.com

Two suspects arrested on drug charges

SPORTS
• Larkin breaks out of
preseason slump.
See Page 81

BY

J.

MILES lAYTON

charged with felony posses·
sion of a controlled substance
and receiving stolen property, a felony. Cremeans was
also charged with DUI, possessing fictitious license tags
and not wearing a seatbelt.
Pomeroy Police Chief Mark
Proffitt and Patrolman Freddy
Queen conducted the initial
search of the vehicle which
Proffitt said revealed drug
paraphernalia, about $50 in
cash and illegal drugs including oxycondone and Xanax.
·Meigs County Sheriff's

deputy Mark Boyd ~ nd the
canine unit, Thor. aided in the
search of the vehicle.
"Drugs will not be tolerated in Pomeroy," ~said Proffitt.
"Drugs have begun to invade
the local scene, but we are on
guard and have taken appropriate measures.''
Bing and Cremeans were
arraigned in the Meigs Coumy
Court Tuesday where Judge
Steven Story set bail at
$50.CXXJ. Ill percent cash down.
for Bing. Cremeans \Vas
released on a personal recog-

ni zance bond of S5.01X). The
Meigs County
Sheritrs
Department said Bing is currently detained in the Southeast
Psychiatric Hospital in Athens.
A conviction for the rossession of a controlled substance carries a penalty of up
to ei ght years in prison and a
maximum fine of $15 .000. A
conviction of receiving
stolen property ha s a penalty
uf up to 12 months in jail and
a maximum fine of $ 2,500.
Thi s arrest will come as
bad news for Bing who was

arrested nearly two weeks
ago by the PPD for the
alleged break-ins and theft of
property
from
Gravely
Tractor Sales in Pomeroy and
an Anne Street home .
Bing was charged with
three count s of receiving
stolen property. two counts
of breaking and entering,
three counts of theft, possession of oxycodone. possession of marijuana. and criminal trespassing. He was later
released on bail of $25,000.
Ill percent cash down.

Art education celebrated

Firefighters
stay busy in
Pomeroy

JLAYTQN@MYDAILYS ENT! NEl. COM

POMEROY
After
receiving an anonymous tip,
the Pomeroy Police pulled
over a suspicious vehicle at
10:4 1 a.m. Tuesday in front
of Farmer's Bank and arrested two people suspected of
possessing large amounts of
dangerous drugs including
oxycodone.
June A. Cremeans, 21, of
Middleport and Mich ael
Bing, 22, of Pomeroy were

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INSIDE
• A Hunger For More.
~Page · As

• Soul'd Out of Cincinnati
to perform. See Page A6

0BITUARIFS

TUPPERS PLAINS Will educational budget
deficits and cutbacks mean
the loss of a creative canvas
for school children?
While local school boards
have not indicated that an
economic pinch will mean an
end to any fine ans programs,
arts supporters nationwide
fear those programs may be
the first cut, if necessary.
March has been designated
Youth Art Month, and the
Council for An Education is
using the observance to
emphasize the value of art
education and to encourage
public support for quality art
programs in the public
schools.
At Eastern Elementary
school on Wednesday, Art
Teacher Becky Edwards was
seated around a large table
with a group of primary students, discussing texture and
its representation in art. The

Please see Art. AS

Page AS
• Maxine Husk
• James Leeroy Jarvis

BY

1

.

•

1

Meigs County ~mbraces t

with care packages

'

'

Springtime Sights li Sounds
A SPECIAL SECTION
In The

.

• ®aUtpolis 1JBatlp mrtbune
• l9otnt l)leasant ~eg;ister

For'Example Only: .

,.

'.l

·Contact Dave
'\ or Brenda at

• &gt;,

y·.: .740-992-2155
to have your
·church included or
for more
'
'information.
~

''f•

'•
J

-· ~!.

'

.

'.
I

I ·•

Name of Church
Date
Good Friday Service
All night Hymn sing
Date
Sunday Sunrise Service
6:00a.m.
Morning Service
10:00 a.m.
Evening Worship
· 7:00p.m.
Pastor
Pastor's Name
Address of Church

Advertisi ns.Deadline;
Friday, Marth 26th ·· ,_,
Date of Publication;

• Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

~ ReAcH· o~ER•· .1a',(iho HOMJ:s. .
'IN THE TRI~COUNTV AREA:!
'

:;-1

I

'

'

'

,

Advertising Deadline:
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7, 2004
12:00 Noon
Insertion Date:
FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 2004

Details on Page A8

INDEX
:t SECTIONS - 16 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics ·
Dear Abby
Editorials
'Faith•Vahies
Obituaries
Sports
Nascar
Weather

A3
B4-6
B7
A3

A4
A6

As
Bl

BS
AS

© 2004 Ohio VaHey Publishing Co.

Long Bottom Postmaster Judy Peters displays a small sampling of basic necessities that will
be sent to soldiers serving in Iraq. Many people ·from Meigs County have been sending care
packages to soldiers serving overseas since the hOstilities began a year ago. (J. Miles Layton)

MILES lAYTON

LONG BOTTOM - After
a year of hostilities in Iraq,
Meigs County still firmly
embraces the plight of the
commo11 sold ier by sendi ng
care patkages overseas.
Judy Peters. Postmaster in
Long Bottom. and Deanna
John son.
the
interim
Poslmaster in Reedsville.
have declared March a patri·
otic month . To ease the day to
day life of the 'old iers servin g overseas, Peters and
Johnson arc collecting a wide
var iety of · items Stich as
deodorant , toothpaste, razors,
sun -bloc and other basic
necessities.
"I thought it was a good
thing to show our support,"
said Peters. "I think these
items will be appreciated.
What we have to give are the
most needed items."
In previous interviews with
vetenms of both Gulf Wars,
soldiers hav e noted how
important the littl e things are
out in the desert. Common
observations usually include
comments about the desert
heat during the day and the

Please see Packages, AS

The Pediatric patients and staff at Holzer Medical Center would like
to thank the February sponsors of the Earl Neff Pediatric Fund:

March 30th 'and
April 6th
.

( enew

J.

JLAYTOJii@MYDAILYSENTINEL. COM

WEATHER

·to pu6{icize your upcoming T.aster
'E-vent!
.

MILES lAYTON

POMEROY
Three
!ires within 24 hours kept
firefighters
busy
in
Pomeroy and successfully
tested their response time .
Beginning at 7:45 p.m.
Wednesday, a fire started
at an unoccupied house at
the
end
of
Peacock
Avenue. Within three min:
utes,
firefighters
from
Pomeroy and Middlepon
responded to the call and
fou ght the blaze which
lasted nearly three hours.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Rick
Blacttnar described the
house, owned hy John
Ohlinger. as a total loss.
He said no one was hurt
and the cause of the fire is
sti ll under investigation.
While this fire was burnmg. another fire was
iCponed at 9:09 p.m. at
34115 Willowcreek Ro~d
in Pomeroy . Units from
Pomeroy, Middleport and
Syracuse
immediately
responded to the fire which
was contained mainly to
the porch of the house
owned by Karen Phalin.
Blaettnar said no one was
hurt and the cause of the
fire is under investigation.
Less than 24 hours later,
Pomeroy
firefig hters
responded to a call at 3:45
p. m. Thursday at Triplett
Car Wash located on Main
Street in Pomeroy. Due to
an accident. an electrical
box was sparking. Blaettnar
sa id the problem was
solved by turning off the
electricity.
So far this week, area
fire
departments
have
responded to at least four
tires which includes a fire
Wednesday at a mobile
home located along State
Route 124 in Minersville.
Blaettnar said response
time has been between two
to three minutes in each
case.
Worth
noting,
Meigs
Cou nt y has been blessed
recently with new fire
trucks in both Racine and
Pomeroy. The
Tuppers
Plains Fire Department has
also rece ived lilorc than
$13.000 worth of fire-fighting equipment from the
Ohio
Department
of
Natural Resources. •

Becky Edwards, art teacher at Eastern t;:lementary School, used feathers to demonstrate tex.ture in a primary art lesson this week. Experts say art education helps a child 's all-around edu·
cation and well-being. (Brian J. Reed)

BY

;: · f4. specia{section in.tlie Vai(y Sentine{

J.

JLAYTON@MYOA.ILYSENTINEL .COM

US Bank

_

Court Street Branch

11r. 4,1A-"' K

r•• r~.,.t,,;;_._. : ,
t...M.....
i-tt- r;""'w'"' r.",
~

'

Turnpike of Gallipolis

Kathy Hardy, Assistant Branch Manager
and Elizabeth Rumley, Branch Manager

•

' I

�PageA2

NATION • WORLD

.The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March

26,2004

Purported tape from al-Qaida No.2 urges All six British cave explorers rescued
Pakistanis to overthrow government
after being trapped for two weeks
Bv SARAH EL DEEB

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
CAIRO, Egypt - A tape
purportedly recorded by
Ayman al"Zawahri , the No. 2
figure in the al-Qaida terror
group. called Pakistani
President Pervez Musharraf a
"traitor" Thursday and urged
people to overthrow his gov ernment.
The pan-Arab satellite
channel Al-Jazeera broadcast
a seven-minute excerpt from
a tape it received Thursday.
Its authenticity could not
immediately be verified, but
the speaker sounded like alZawahri and made references
to the Islamic holy book, the
Quran, which is known to be
al-Zawahri's style.
The speaker also called for
a military upri si ng in
Pakistan.
"Musharraf seeks to slab
the Wamic resistance in
Afghanistan in the back," the
speaker said.
"Every Muslim in Pakistan
should work hard to get rid
of this client government,
which will continue to submit to America until it
destroys Pakistan."
Pakistani Foreign Ministry
spokesman Masood Khan
said the government has no
immediate comment on the
purported al-Zawahri tape .
When an al-Zawahri tape
released in September called
for Musharraf' s overthrow,
the government said it would
not be deterred in its pursuit
of terrorists.
In Washington, Defen se
Secretary
Donald
H.
Rumsfeld said he heard news
reports about the tape and
said if it was authentic, the
, speaker "is clearly an indi. vidual who is very highranking and is capable of,
and has in the past killed
innocent men, women and
children. And so one has to
recognize that."
The tape comes as
Pakistani troops are in the
· second week of a campaign
· along the Afghan border in
South Waziristan, a longtime
hiding place and stronghold
of Islamic militants from alQaida, Afghanistan's Taliban
and their Pakistani supporters.
It was not known when the
tape was made, but the

speaker appeared to be refernng to the connict in South
Wazirislan when he said, " I
call on the Pakistani army:
you, poor army, what a miserable state Musharraf has
put you in ... Musharraf ruins
your natural fences - those
tribe s on the border - by
engaging you in a fight with
them. Then he removes your
nuclear weapons.
"Will you stay silent until
Pakistan is divided again?"
The speaker repeatedly
named the Pashtun and
Baluch border tribes and
urged them to close ranks
with the Taliban against the
Pakistani army.
"Taliban and their supporters are your brothers," the
speaker said. "so how can
you allow the agents of crusaders ~and Jews to hurt
them?"
He used the word "crusaders" for Americans as
Islamic militants often do.
The speaker said such military operations on the borders violated Islamic law by
pitting Muslims against each
other at America's bidding.
"Every soldier who finds
this act to be legitimate is an
infidel, according to Islamic
law," the speaker said.
After Musharraf spoke
hopefully of capturing a
"h1gh-value target," there
was speculation that alZawahri might be in the
rugged border area w·here
local tribes have more power
than the Pakistani federal
government.
Paki stan Interior Minister
Faisal Saleh Hayyat said
Thursday that more than 50
terrorists have been killed in
the operation. More than 150
suspects have been captured,
said Brig. Mahmood Shah,
chief
of
security
in
Pakistan's tribal afeas.
The speaker did not mention Israel's Monday morning assassination of Hamas
Sheik
Ahmed
founder
Yassin, which suggests the
tape was recorded before
then. ·
Al-Jazeera
spokesman
Jihad Bailout said the Qatarbased channel received the
tape Thursday, but he
declined to reveal how. The
tape is 17 minutes long.
"Indications are that it is
authentic," Bailout said, "the

voice. the nuances."
In lhe United States, an
intelligence official said the
CIA was reviewing the 1ape
to determine whether it was
authentic . He spoke on condition of anonymity.
Vince Cannistraro, a former CIA counterterrori sm
chief, said the rapid response
of the tape suggests that AlZawahri was nowhere near
the Pakistani fig ht ?One. He
said the message was essentially a call to kill
Mussharref.
A Cairo expert on Islamic
militants, Dia'a Rashwan of
the Al-Ahram Cente r for
Polilical
and
Strategic
Studies, said the tape indicated al-Zawahri was close to
the
action
111
South
Wazi ristan.
"This is a counterattack. It
reflects how he can feel the
tremendous secu rity effort
exerted at the borders,"
Rashwan said.
In urging the tribes to rally
to his side, al-Zawahri seems
to realize that the Pakistanis
are much more dangerous for
him than the Americans,
Rashwan said.
The speaker also urged
Islamic clerics to tell the
Pakistani people "the truth
about Musharraf, the traitor
and killer of Muslims."
'They should incite the nation
to expel the crusaders from
Pakistan," the speaker said.
"The
crusade
in
Afghanistan. Iraq, Chechnya
-and Pale stine is targeting
Pakistan primarily, because
America does not want
Pakistan to be a special
power in the center of Asia."
Al-Zawahri is believed to
have provided much of the
ideology driving al-Qaida
since his Egyptian Islamic
Jihad merged with Osama
bin Laden's network in 1998,
experts say. The United
States has offered a $25 million re.Jard for his capture.

packed with Olis supporters wearing yellow ribbons.
Among them were his wife
Monica and the couple's 6month-old daughter. Many,
including Olis himself, quietly
wept after Lake
announced his decision.
"I want to thank all of
our longtime supporters,"
Olis said after Lake gave
him a chance to address
the court. "It means a lot

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CUETZALAN DEL PROMex ico ·
GRESO,
Resc uers
on
Thursday
pulled all six members of a
British exploring team from
the cave where they became
trapped two weeks ago by
rising water.
The cavers appeared tired,
but looked far from haggard. They asked journalists
and rescue workers if anybody had brought beer and
Si\id they were looking forward to seeking their loved
ones.
"We're
feeling
quite
cheerful ,"
said
Toby
Hamnett, one of those rescued. The extraction effort
took divers about six hours,
including a break to resupply compressed air tanks.
Three of the spelunkers
were rescued in the afternoon and the others were
pulled out in the evening by
British and Mexican divers
The
explorers,
who
became trapped March 17,
were members of Britain's
Combined
Services
which encompasses the
army, navy and air force.
Even as the crisis was
coming to an end, Mexico
demanded that Britain better
explain what the cavers five of whom were members of the military - were
doing in this country.
Mexico expressed "profound concern" that the military cave explorers had
failed to seek permission to
enter the country for scientific explorations.
The text of a diplomatic
note asked "a detailed
explanation of the type of
activities" the group was
carrying out "and about the
objectives of their investigation."
One Mexican newspaper
suggested the explorers

MIDDLEPORT - Free
soup and sandwich supper, 4
to 6 p.m. a1 the Middleport
Church of Christ Family Life
: Center, Fifth and Main.

: Church services
Friday, March 26
CARPENTER
Dr.
David . Rahamut, evangelist
from Tri nidad , will be con. ducting a crusade at the Mt.
· Union Bapti st church near
. Carpenter, March 26 and 27.
Included will be film on his
work in Africa on Saturday
night, and hi s witness about
being converted from Islam

. Birth announced
Four of the six British military cave divers , in black s uits and
helmets, stand with rescue workers after being rescued in
Cuetzalan Del Progreso, Mexico. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)'
might have been hunting for
uranium.
Britain 's Foreign Office
said in London that the trip
was "strictly a caving expedition, had no other purpose
and any suggestions to the
contrary are completely
unfounded."
British officials said similar teams had been openly
visiting for 20 years and
were helping to map the
massive cavern system.
Britain 's
Mini stry
of
Defense said the men were
on an "official military
adventurous training expedition" of a military caving
club, though not a formal
military exercise.

•

and the miracles in hi s ministry. Proclaim will provide
music on Friday night and
there will also be special
music on Saturday. Services
being at 6:30 p.m.
GUYSV ILLE
The
Carthage Community Church
on Route 50 six miles west of
the Coolspot will have a
spring revival at 7 p.m. on
both March 26 and 27 . The
Friday services will feature
Jay Hubbard of Little
Hocking and Jim Blair and
the Southern Gospel Aires of
Marietta, while on Saturday
Sammy Anders of New
Haven will speak and music
will be by the Builders quartet of Ripley.
POMEROY
Mike
Warnke will present "Live"
at the Common Grounds'
coffee shop located at 202
East Main Street, Pomeroy ,
7 p.m. Friday, Saturday and
Sunday. Love offering will
be taken.
·

DEAR ABBY: For a grandmotller fightin~ leukemia, a
chi ld battling Sickle ce ll anemia, or a parent awaiting a
Iiver lransplant, a safe and
available blood supply is
more 1han a wish - it's a
necessi ty. Our goa l is to
ensure that blood is available
Sunday, March 28
RUTLAND - "Released" to patients when they need it.
We encourage our nation 's
will be at the Rutland Free
10 donate blood. Our
citizens
Will Baptist Church at 7 p.m.
Pastor Jamie Fortner invites call to action comes at a time
when bl ood supplies are, perthe public.
ilously low.
Blood has a shelf life of
on ly 42 days. The su pply
must be constantl y replenFriday, March 26
ished. Donors can safely give
RACINE
Verneda blood up to six times a year.
Tuttle Hartung will observe To avert shortages, please ask
her 97th birthday on March your readers to donate.
Blood donation is safe and
26. Cards may be sen t to her
takes
only one hour. To be
at 45481 Pomeroy Pike ,
Raci ne, Ohio 45771 . An ope n eligible 10 donate, you must
house wi II be held from II be at least I 7 years of age
a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, (some states permil younger
teens to donate with parental
March 27, at her home.
consem), weigh al least I 10
pounds and be in good health .
The single unit of blood you
donate could help to save the
lives of up to three people.
To learn more about donating blood and to locate a
nea~by blood collection facil share program answer the ity,
contact one of the foll owcall. Each year members ing organizations 10day:
from over 400 camps pur- American Association of
Blood Bank s: (866) 376chase thousands of dollars 6968 or www.aabb.org:
worth of food , clothes and American Red Cross: (800 )
or
more ," said Dale Colburn, a 448-3543
www.redcross.org:
America's
local representative.
Blood Centers: (8 88) 872Modern Woodmen of 5663 or www.americas KAREN
America, a member-owned blood.org.
SHOOS
LIPTON
,
CEO ,
fraternal life insurance organization provides life insurance, annuities and fraternal
programs for more than
three-quarters of a million
Americans. There are local
·camps in Athens. Coolville,
Burlingham, Middleport, and
·Gallipolis.

Birthdays

Poor benefit from
Woodmen's program

REEDSVILLE
The
Church of the Nazarene' s
golden harvest food bank in
Reedsville is the beneficiary
of the Care and Share program Of local Modern
Woodmen of America members.
·
Modern Woodmen 's Care
and Share program helps
Molly Ann Hill
camp members across the
country provide up to $250
RACIN E Scott and worth of basic life necessities
of Raci ne
Mary Hill
announce the hirth of a to individual and families in
daughter, Molly Ann. on Jan. need.
"Whether a family needs
15 at Pleasant Valley
household
items after a tornaHo spital. She weighted 6
do destroys their home or
pounds, 13 ounces.
Grandparents are Bob and people down on their luck
Donna Byer of Syracuse and just need a little extra help,
Roger and Jane Ann Hill of Modern Woodmen camp
Racine.
members and the Care and

Some Mexican
news
media expressed irritation
that the cavers had shrugged
off repeated Mexican offers
of help at the same time
they were calling in rescue
divers from Britain.
Scores of heavily armed
state policemen guarded the
cave site at the bottom of a
steep canyon at the end of a
single-file trail through farm
and forest land bursting
with springs and rivulets of
water.
As a safety precaution,
half of the cave diving 1eam
was above ground when
heavy rains triggered floods
blocking the cave's entrance
on ' March 17.

Saturday, March 27
POMEROY - A gospel
sing will be held at 7 p.m . at
the Poplar Ridge Freewill
Bapti st Church on Poplar
Ridge Road off State Route
554. The McComas Family
and Cross Creek will sing.
For more information call
740-593-7390.

Friday, March

Dear
Abby

AMERICAN
ASSOCIATION OF BLOOD BANKS
DEAR KAREN : I'm
pl eased to pass along your
Important message. No one
can predict when a lifethreatening emergency might
strike- and a national blood
supply is something many of
us take for granted. Thi s is
something that can affect all
of us, so, my friends, let's roll
up our sleeves and make sure
that our hospitals and emergency centers are well
stocked.
DEAR ABBY: While I was
still married, I began dating
"Alvin," a man I met through
work . I then divorced my
hu sband - the marriage
wasn't good anyway - and
moved in with Al vin. It
meant giving up most of my
friend s and also my lifesty le.
Alvin gets mad if I wear
something he thinks is "too
tight" or "too revealing." He
goes wherever he wants
whenever he wants, but he
gets upset if I even vi sit my
parents. He is nasty to one of
my children, and I feel like
I' m constantly defending my
child.
To make a long story short,

.-

"Shoe~

known as Jeann e Phillip,,·.
and »·as founded hr her
mothet; Paulin e Philltp\.
Write
Dea r
Abbr
itt
W)VH·. DearAbb\·.(·0111 ()/· P 0.
Box 69440. L1is An geles, CA
90069.

with you!

Sunday limes-Sentinel
(740) 992-2155

News and
information for
senior citizens of
the Tri-County...

•••

BVY, SELL, OR TRADE
NEW· UIID FARM AND
INDUITRIAL EQUIPMENT

Mossoy Ferpson • Fomhond
• Bobm • Shennlu
New tdu • Rhino

KIPLING
SHOE CO.

our lease is up in a fe 11
week s. and Alvin' s bee n hinl ing that he and I wi ll be mo v·ing separa1ely.
I have a chance to renl a
wonderful apanmem. and ·I
am starting to think I should
take il no mailer what ha p·
pens with Al vin . but I' m
scared to death to be on 111)'
own.
Should I cui my lo'&gt;e ' and
move on with mv c·hi ldren '' I
hate to say lh i.,. ·but I lhink I
still love Alvin and the security he prov ides.
·
I have no clue what 10 do.
but I do kno w I am afraid . -,
NEVER BE EN 0\i MY
OWN
,
DEAR NEVER : The secu rity he provides·&gt; II sounds
more like ··m aximum -..ecuri ty" to me. You are li vin g with
a man who is comrolling.
abu sive to vou r ch ild and
hinting thai he's through with
you. You may be afraid. but
iC s ti me to mo,·e out and
mo ve on. ll 's bener for everyone's sake . You ' ll find emotional support if you look for
it. .Join Paren ts Withocil
Partners (800-637 -797-l vr
www . parent s without partners.org) or join the YWC A
Emotional support is avai l·
able if you make up you r
mind to reach out for it..
Dear Abbr is ll'ritren hr
Abigail Vait Bureu. a/.1';,

Celebrating.spedol days

,,,

New Shoes
Arrivinj 'Dail)' I

26, 2004

Red-blooded Americans needed
to ensure safe blood supply

;Winner of a 'pot of gold'

New Holloncl • Cub Codet

for the entire family "

I

Rt. 2 Bypass
Point Pleasant, WV

--· MASON~--1
FURNITURE

304-675-7870

to us."
Olis ' attorneys contended
that the government cannot
possibly pinpoint stock
losses caused by revelations of a 200 I deal that
wrongly boosted cash flow
because Dynegy, like other
energy companies, was
besieged by months of bad
news in the aftermath of
Enron's
collapse
in
December 200 I.
"All you can do as a citizen is put your faith in
the justice system, . and
that's what Jamie did,"
lawyer David Gerger said
when asked if his client
should have reached a plea
deal.
Olis was charged in June
alongside two co-conspirators, his former boss, Gene
Shannon Foster, and a former company accountant,
Helen Christine Sharkey.
·Foster and Sharkey each
pleaded guilty to one count
of conspiracy in August,
and Foster testified against
Olis in his November trial.
Foster and Sharkey each
f~ce up to five years in
prison, but . both are cooperating with prosecutors
and . probably will receive
lesser
sentences.
Oli s
declined to cut a deal ,
choosing to face a jury
that returned with a guilty
verdict after less than two
hours of deliberations.

Social Events

Page A3

BYTHEBEND

:Community Calendar
Friday, March 26
POM EROY - Free dinner
: at the Pomeroy Church of
Christ, Wesl Main S1reet.
Serving will be from 5:30 to
7 p.m . Everyone is welcome
. to come for food and fellow: ship.

BY MORGAN LEE

Dynegy executive sentenced to 24
•years in prison for accounting fraud
HOUSTON (AP) - A
former Dynegy executive
was sentenced to more
than 24 years in prison
Thursday in an accountingfraud case that fell under
tough new federal rules
aimed at crackin~ down on
corporate corrupuon.
Jamie Olis, a former
senior director of tax planning for the energy compa. ny, is obliged to serve
: nearly all of his sentence
· of 24 years and four
months because there is no
parole in the federal system. He is 38, and would
be behind bars until he is
62.
U.S . District Judge Sim
: Lake said the punishment
· "reflects Congress' intent"
that white-collar criminals
deserve harsh .prison sentences.
"I take no pleasure in
: sentencing you to 292
he
said.
: months ,"
: "Sometimes good people
commit bad acts, am,! that's
what happened in this
case."
The puni shment easily
· surpassed
sentences
in
: more
prominent
fraud
: cases, and dwarfed those
: of some Enron Corp. executives who have pleaded
guilty in that company 's
accounting scandal. Olis
took the chance of a trial
: and was convicted.
· Federal probation authori: ties maintained that Olis'
' actions in illegally disguising company debt in 200 I
eventually resulted · in more
than $500 million in
. Dynegy stock losses, and
. .; they had asked for 24 to
· 30 years in prison.
·
: The maximum poss ible
sentence was 35 fears for
one count each o conspiracy, securities fraud, mail
fraud and three. counts of
·: wire fraud.
The
courtroom
was

The Daily Sentinel

COMPANY

telephone

•Quality • Selectio11 • Service

or
ar .er

1150 Eastem Avenue
1 l3C Gallipolis, Ohio e

304-773-5592
Mason, wv___ J

-~n.\L~~et

44&amp;-9m or 44&amp;-2414
: Debbie Yeauger was the winner of a "pot of gold " given away at Peoples Bank in Middleport in
: observance of St. Patrick's Day. The jar had several golden dollars and candy inside. Here Carla
· King of Peoples makes the presentation to Yeauger.

Ap_ril 9, 2004

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
-

.

•

.

.&gt;1

I

must civet.every number·on your card to win.
liJJ~E f~~m

6~ Gallipolis

Chiropractic

s

~~Center

.......

c•• •••r

• Nutritional Counseling

• Most Insurance Accepted
Including United Health

740-441-0200
1-888-451-2225
990 2nd Ave. • Gallipolis

•
:
•

With n- vehicle purch•u.
See 'lllmplko for details.

• Diagnostic X·Rays
·Personal
Rehabilitation
• Personal Injury
• Workers Compensation

Tl

F
L

Joey D.

•

JIVIDEN'S "FIRM"
IQUIPIIBif
(740)446-1675

615-1812
113-5536

31 37 Inoalls Road •Gallipolis

Mason, WV

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•
•
r

Fa~(740)446-8286

mttes. Take riGht onlo ~ri~alls
.......-,1 mite on the

-~y

1

I

The Meigs CoUnty Commjssjoners reserve the rifjht to rej eCt any or all b1d s.

MERCURY.:

HOURS;

Mon- Fr19-7; Sat. 9-5

www.turnplll8flm.com

'•

Sealed proposals for the paving of ponion of Oak Hill Road and Whites Lane Road in Chester
Township, Meigs County, Ohio as per specifications in bid packet will be received by lhe Meigs
County Commissioners allheir office at the Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until 1:00 P.M.
Thursday, April I5, 2004 and !hen at I: 15 P.M. at said office opened and read aloud for 1he
foll owing :
Triple Seal Coal for Oak Hill Road (T-59) 1.50 miles and White Lane Road (T-51)
See spel'fications in bid packet
Speci cations, and bid forms may be secured at the office of Meigs County Commissioners,
Courtho se, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769-Phone #740-992-2895. A deposit of 0 dollars will be required
fo r each ~el of plans and specifications, check made payable to-. The full amoum will be returned
within (3?) days after receipl of bids.
Each bid pust be accompanied by either a bid bond in an amount of I00% of the bid amount with a
surety sat,\sfactory to the aforesaid Meigs Co~my Commissioners or by certified check, ~a s hiers .
check or IFtter of credit upon a solvent bank m the amount of not less than I0% of the bid amoum m
favor of tlle aforesaid Meigs County Commissioners. Bid Bonds shall be. accompanied by Proof of
Aolhority ~: the official or age~1t signing the bond. Bids shall be sealed and marked as Bid for
Chester Pa mg Project and mailed or delivered to:
.
Meigs Cou ty Commi ssioners
Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Anentio~ ~f bidders is called of the requirements contained in this bid packet, particularly to the
Federal Latx\r Standards Provisions and Davis-Bacon Wages, various insurance requiremems, various equal op~onunity provisions and the reqmrcment for a payment bond and performance bond for
100% of the ~mtract price.
No bidder max withdraw hi s bid within thirty (30) days afler the actual date of the opening thereof.

Jeff Thornton, President
: Meigs Counly Commissioners
•

,.,,

Senior Citizens make
up 65%ofthe
population of the
Tri-County.
To reach this
contact your
Advertising
•
Representativ~e. . ,
~;-_}J

~alltpolt11 :llBatlp Wrtbuue

•

.

446-2342
675-1333
992-2155

• tlotnt .lllea5ant l\egtt1tet
• The Daily Sentinel

Advertising Deadline - April 1, 2004

.•

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill

Controller-! nterim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

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

VIEW

Road Rage
Cleanup needed
Dear Editor:
Jsn ' t the road between the bridge and Triplett's Car Wash
just lovely?
It's a disgrace to the human race.
Surely we're not going to have to put up with it until the
bridge is completed.
Diane Zirkle
Middleport

READER'S

PageA4
Friday, March 26, 2004

Friday, March 26,

Obituaries

'The_Passion' is for those lacking imagination
I promised myself thai. in
order to give it the benefit of
the doubt. I would allow
plenty of time to thoroughly
research and reflect upon
Mel Gibson's "The Passion
of the Christ. " And after
much consideration. what
kept springing to mind was
the timeless argument made
in the epilogue to George
Bernard Shaw's play "Saint
Joan." It goe s something
like this:
One of the characters
says, "Well, you see, I did a
very cruel thing once
because I did not know what
cruelty was like. I had not
seen it, you know. That is
the great thing, you must see
it. And then you are
redeemed and saved ."
The man he was speaking
to replied. "Were not the
sufferings of our Lord
Christ enough for you?"
The answer came back,
"No. Oh . no. Not at all. I
had seen them in pictures,
and read of them in books,
and had been greatly moved
by them, as I thought. But it
was no use. It was not our
Lord who redeemed me but
a young woman whom I
actually saw burn to death.
It was dreadful -- oh, most
dreadful. But it saved me. I
have been a different man
ever since."
His antagonist replies ,
"Must then a Christ perish
in torment in every age in
order to redeem those who
have no imagination?"
This is the major fault
with Gibson's blockbuster.
The audience is forced to

George
Plagenz

relive the cruelty and torture
of the crucifixion in grim.
unrelenting ·· even sickening -- detail in order to
redeem tho se of us who
have no imagination.
"Oh," you say, "but this is
how the story is told in the
Bible. The Bible does not
shrink from telling the terrible truth of Je sus' death on
the cross."
To be sure, the evil of the
world -- the sordidness and
wretchedness of the human
condition. man 's inhumanity
to man -- is all there in the
Bible. But the Bible's writers employed a lean, spare
style, eschewing overstatement. The Bible accounts do
not flood us with the
"detail s."

' Willard Sperry, the long! ime dean of Harvard
Divinity School, used to
remind us in class that the
Bible writers exercised a
"fine reticence" in telling
their stories.
Read the account of
David's adulterous affair
with Bathsheba in the second book of Samuel. The
writer tells the whole
episode in less than a hundred words. Imagine what a
writer would do with that

story today.
I remember one of my
parishioners at
King's
Chapel in Boston coming up
to me after a sermon in
which I had used some colorful description. "Don't be
too vivid," she cautioned
me. I have always remembered her wise words and
have taught them to my
children who are all writers .
There are others who feel
the way I do about the
graphic violence in "The
Passion ."

Cynthia Astle, editor of
the
United
Methodist
Reporter, says, "I have
decided not to see the movie
for a simple reason: I don't
need to see it because I am
very aware every day of
what Jesus endured for my
salvation." '
The movie prompted a
wave of letters to the editor
In the Feb. 26 New York
Times. And the message
was clear: The violence all
around us -- in what we see
and what we read -- is not
good for us. Philip J.
Haupman, a psychiatri st,
wrote to the Times, "I wish
to. state my profound concern about the mental
anguish and suffering Mel
Gibson's movie
is likely
to cause not only to the
young and impressionable
but to anyone seeing it
Mr. Gibson's searing and
prolonged depiction of
sadistic violence is wrenching and traumatic. His
meticulous and obsessive
portrayal of torture, mutilation, bleeding and physical
000

oo •

pain is a lurid, cruel and
pornographic assault on the
feelings and sen ses of the
viewer."
Haupman concluded by
saying,
thi s movie is not
only blatantly anti-Semitic
but is also anti-Catholic.
anti-Christian and demear.ing to the true meaning and
message of kindness, love
and compassion that are the
real teachings of both
Judaism and Christianity."
Another letter-writer to
the Times that day, Rod
Latta, wrote, "This movie
panders to the same feelings
the Spanish get when watching a bullfight , or the
Romans watching a match
between lion and gladiator
in the Colosseum -- the
drama of life and death and
free-flowing blood and guts
We humans love it'"
The cultural war currently
being waged on our civilization is between that which
uplifts the human soul and
that which tears it down .
Malcolm Muggeridge, the
British writer, defines culture -- true culture -- as
"looking up from the
trough." Our culture, on the
other hand, seems of late to
get its pleasure from looking
down into the trough.
What's the .answer for
. Bible-loving people as far as
"The Passion of the Christ "
is concerned? l'll put it in
the words of Victory Van
Dyck Chase, another letter
writer to The New York
Times: "Forget the movie .
Read the book. It's good."
"000

000

VIEW

Get involved

James Leeroy Jarvis
COLUMBUS - James Leeroy Jarvis. 61, Columbus,
passed away on Wednesday, March 24. 2004, at The Ohio
State University Hospital in Columbus. ·
He was born on March 3, 1943, in Boone County, W.Va.,
son of the late Otho A. and Lenith Merle Lowe Jarvi s. He was
employed as a coal miner with the Southern Ohio Coal Co.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by hi s broth·
er, Otha Allen Jarvis.
Surviving are his wife, Bof\nie Chapman Jarvis of Ft.
Myers, Fla. ; two daughters, Lisa and Chuck Erb of Columbu s
and Teresa and Tom Rupe of Galloway; a son and daughterin-law, Eric and Jessica Jarvis of Columbus: five grandchildren; brothers and sisters: Mildred Miller of Columbus,
WillaDene and Charles Morris of Marengo, Dolly and Tony
Svoboda of Pomeroy, Louise Miller of Cedarburg, Wis. , June
and Roger Mowery of Pomeroy, Darrell and Susie Jarvis of
Saukville, Wis., Sherman and Ada Jarvis of Bucyrus, Frank
and Joyce Jarvis of Harts, W.Va., and Arthur Ottie and Sharon
Jarvis of Pomeroy: and several nieces and nephews.
A graveside service will be held at II a.m. on Saturday,
March 27, 2004, at Wells Cemetery in Pageville, with Frank
Jarvis officiating.
There will be no calling hours.
' Arrangements were under the direction of Fisher Funeral
Home in Pomeroy.
Friends may send online condolences to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.

from Page A1
cold temperatures at night.
Sunburns are common. Sand
finds its way into everything.
Many Gulf War veterans said
the essentials that most people take for granted are highly valued in a place which
does not have convenience
stores on every corner and
where basic hygiene is at a
premmm .
Peters said local businesses
have contributed the lion's
share of these items which
will be sent in April. Peters
has a nephew, Jeffrey Crum,
21, who is serving in lraq.

Dear Editor:
To all residents of Middleport, I'm not writing this as a
councilman's wife, but as a resident, taxpayer and concerned
citizen of Middleport.
Please, please attend council meetings. Look at the bills, see
where your tax money is going. Ask questions. Don't allow
five people to decide the fate of Middleport. Call Bob Pooler
at 992-3055 and ask why he votes "no."
The phone numbers for the rest of the board are: Mayor
Sandy lannarelli, 992-7039; Council members Roger Manley,
992-3194. Bob Robinson, 992-3550, Laurie Reed, 992-S 182.
Take an interest in your town.
Betty Pooler
Middleport

Art

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

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from Page A1

Kerry's problem and Nader's solution
When Harry Truman
stunned ·the nation by
defeating Thomas E. Dewey
in the 1948 presidential
election, a group of thunderstruck reporters went to call
on James A. Farley. Farley,
who had been Franklin
Delano Roosevelt's campaign manager in 1932, was
universally regarded as the
Wi se Man of American politics.
"Wh at happened, Mr.
Farley?" they asked.
"It's very simple, boys,"
Farley replied. ''The people
had been thinking of Tom
Dewey as the next president
for so long they decided it
was time for a change."
A similar problem now
confronts John Kerry. He
has spent the last few
months
marching
triumphantly toward the
Democratic nomination, and .
now has it sewn up. Various
polls show him in a dead
heat with President Bush,
and a few actually show him
ahead, by up to 10 points, if
the election were held today.
But Election Day is still
more than seven months
away. In that period,
President Bush will be seen
in the Oval Office and the

William
Rusher

Rose Garden, and traveling
around the country on Air
Force One, confronting the
various crises that are bound
to come up, and performing
the ceremonial duties of his
office .
And John Kerry will -what? He will probably fly
to Iraq to get a little Middle
Eastern sand in his hair. And
the Democrats, at their convention in Boston in July,
,viii undoubtedly give him a
big huzza and a temporary
bump in the polls. For the
rest, though, he will have to,
traipse around the country
from rally to rally, trying to
look presidential and avoid
making
contradictory
remarks. It's a I'ong way to
Tipperary.
Still, since Kerry is by
long odds the liberal s'
favorite in this race, the
media will fall all over
themselves to make him

look good, and to .give the by most liberals· for the rest
impression that he is bound of his life -- and thereafter.
to win. And therein lies
So !think it's entirely posGeorge Bush's opportunity. sible that, about early
By October, with any luck. October, Nader will let it be
Bush will look like that known that he is thinking of
American favorite, the pulling o,ut of the race and
underdog -- just as Truman throwing his support to
did in 1948.
Kerry. The media would go
Whether this turns out to out of their minds with
be the scenario or not, it is excitement, and Nader
generally expected that the would enjoy two or three
election will be close. And weeks of unrivaled publicitherein lies the opportunity ty. As Election Day neared,
for the third player in the Nader could insi st on havgame: Ralph Nader.
ing a long private talk with
Thanks to his aggressive Kerry, ostensibly to extract
harassment of corporations
concessions on various
for their alleged misdeeds,
issues -- much as Nelson
Nader has long been a darRockefeller forced Richard
lin g of the liberals. But
because his third-party can- Nixon to agree to the
didacy in 2000 is supposed famous "Treaty of Fifth
to have cost AI Gore the Avenue," (which highlightkey
points
of
presidency, and his decision ed
to run again thi s year may Rockefeller's foreign and
have the . same effect on domestic policy) as his price
Kerry, the , media have for not standing in NiXPn's
turned on Nader with truly way in the nomination battle
of 1960.
savage fury.
At the last moment, Nader
Now, Nader has an ego so
large it can only be seen could then toss the bouquet
from the air, and he may be io Kerry, and provide him
some
priceless
determined to press on with
regardless. But he cannot momentum in the last days
really enjoy playing the role of the campaign.
If it happens, remember
. of a spoiler again, if the
resuli is that he will be hated yo u read it here first.

...

students have been working
on the creation of imaginary
space creatures, and Edwards
used feathers, fabric swatches, leather and other materi als to demonstrate the concept of texture in art.
Students in Edwards' class
were clearly stimulated by
the discussion.
Educators maintain that
arts ed ucation is , indeed,
important to a child's educa-

sc hoo ls are as follow s:
Arnold. Aaron Maxson. son
of Ronald an d Wen di
Southern Elementary
Winners
Andrew Max son, and Tanner Tackett ,
Roseberry, son of Tom and son of A. Ray and Janet
Dena Roseberry, grade 4 ; Tackett , all grade 5: and
Katie Woods, daughters of Steven Mahr, ~on of Ryan
Tom and Lisa Woods, grade and Carol Mahr, grade 4 .
Runner,- up:
Alex
6; Lindsey Buzzard. daughter
of Rick Buzzard and Marcia Ackerman . dau ghter of Todd
Buzzard, grade 8 .. and Brody and Jesska Ackerman and
Flint , son of Mark and A~hle y Bate man-Lee, daughAngela Flint, grade 7.
ter of Gary and Dorothy Lee.
Runners-up:
Tiffany grade 5; and Emalee Glass.
Francis , daughter of Donald daughter of Jodi Harrison ,
Michelle Francis, grade 4; Vicki Leni ga r. daughter of
Ashley Weddle, daughter of Steve and Evel yn Lenigar:
Charles and Kelly Weddle , Oliva Clee k, dau ghter of
grade 8: Jaime Warner, son of Corbett and Pai ge Cl ee k.
Mike and Darlene Warner. grade 4.
and Samantha Patterson.
daughter of Tim Patterson
Meigs Middle School
and Barb Johnson, grade 7.
Winners: Brad Hood son of
Tim Hood. grade 6: Adrian
Meigs Elementary
Bolin, granddaughter of Joe
Winners - Garrett Riffle, and Janet Bolin, grade 7, and
son of Matt and Kristie Brittany Preast. daughter of
Riffle, and Alaine Arnold, Christina Preast, grade 8.
daughter of Brent and ,Denise
Runners-up:
Erin

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
HOEFUCH@MYDAILVSENTIN EL.COM

LITTLE HOCKING - Maxine Pearl Husk, 78, Little
Hocking , passed away Wednesday. March 24. 2004. ill her
.
residence.
She was born Sept. 5, 1925, in Creston, W.Va ., daughter of
the late George and Ruth Boice Nutter. She was a homemak er, and attended Faith Chapel Church in Coolville.
She is survived by her husband, Jame s Husk; a daughter and
son-m-law, Debbie and Douglas Kemper of Monroeville: two
sons and daughters-in-law, James and Shirley Nutter and
Randy and Rena Husk of Reedsville : two brothers, Robert
Nutter of Hockingport and Clay Nutter of Reedsville; nine
grandchildren and six great grandchildren; and several nieces,
nephews, family and friends.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by two si sters, Florence Sheets and Margie Nutter, and a grandson,
Timothy Garrity.
' Services will be held at 2 p.m. on Saturday, March 27, 2004,
at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home in Coolville with Rev.
Wilbert Lowe offic iating. Burial will follow at Stewart
Cemetery in Hocki 11gport.
Friend and famil y may call at the funeral home from 2 to 4
and 6 to 8 p.m. on Friday.

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

School spelling champions to vie for county honors·

Maxine Husk

Packages

Attend couru:il meetings

www .mydailysentinel.com

2004

"I support our troops and
hope they come home soon,"
Peters said.
Another group that is making a difference is the
Enduring Freedom Support
Group which fills small
packages with letters from
home, pictures of the community, prayers and , other
essentials that supply soldiers
needs beyond the barracks.
The group formed two
years ago prior to the U.S. led
invasion th at brought democracy to Afghanistan. Friends
and relatives started sending
letters and prayers of support
to a small list of soldiers
serving abroad and at home.
That list has grown to more
than 55 names.

tion and well -being, helping
to develop self-di sci pline ,
individuality, se lf-esteem, a
pride in self-expression, selfconfidence and academic
performance in general.
Studies on brain development have shown that experiences with art and color help
children learn other subjects,
including reading and math.
Extensive studie s have
shown that students participating in school art classes
and programs scored higher
on the Scholastic Aptitude
Test than those who did not,
regardless of their social or
economic status.

POMEROY - Spelling
bee winners from Meigs
County 's elementary and
middle schools will compete
for county championships at
7 p.m . Thursday at Meigs
Middle School.
Competitions were held in
each of the schools over the
past several weeks to select
candidates for the county
event.
Jacinda Yonker, talented
and gifted coordinator for the
Athens-Meig s Educational
Service Center, announced
the county competition and
asked that all school winners
be at the school and ready to
compete by 6:30p.m.
ln the event any winners
are not able to compete, then
a runner-up will fill the place.
Winners and runners-up
for
their
respective

Court News

Patter&gt;on.
da ugh ter
of
Paul ine and Bre nt Patter,on.
grade 6: Li lly Ann Jack&gt;,
daugh ter of Al len and
Henrie tta Jack,, ~rade 7: and
Au,t in Dunfee . .:-on of Stc1 c
and Terc"' Dunkc. grade g.
Eastern Elementary
Wi nner' : Aml rew Bi »e ll.
'on of T(&gt;dd and Diana
Bisse ll. grade g; Matth ew
Ho,ken. 'on of Tina Ho,ken,
grade 7: Ben Hud,o n. \O il of
Steven and Dannetl Hud son.
g r~ de

7:

an d

He a ven

We,tfall . dau ghter of Roger
and Shei la Westfa ll.
Runner,· up :
Meg an
Carnahan . dau ghter of Da vid
and Rhonda Carn ahan . grade
5: Casey H:mnum . 'o n of
Davi d and Wc ndv Hannum .
grade 7: Chantal Bauer.
daughte r of Robert Bauer and
Carrie Bauer. grade S. and
Cheyenne Dot:£i. dau ghter of
Jennifer Docz i, grade .J .

Court grants ownership of rich
shipwreck to Tampa, Fla., company

Cases heard in ·
Meigs County
Court
POMEROY
Cases
re solved in tlie Meigs
County Court of Judge
Steve Story between Jan.
26 . and March 14 are as
fo llows: Raymond E. Klein,
Pomeroy, theft, $65 in
costs, possession of drugs,
$50 fine; Kevin A. Konkle,
Syracuse, seatbelt, $30 and
L.
costs;
Quinton
Kovaleski, Canton. speeding, $30 and costs; Richard
J.
Krystowski ,
New
London, speeding, $30 and
costs; James L. Laird, West
Newton, Pa., speeding, $30
and costs;
M.
Lambert.
Jessica
Middleport,
no
drivers
license, $100 fine, seatbelt.
$30 fine;
Michael L.
Lambert, Rutland, speeding,
$50 costs; Randall L.
Lambert, Kitts Hill, lighted
lights, .$20 and costs;
Steven J. Lantz, Pomeroy,
speeding , $30 and costs;
G.
Larkins,
Branden
Pomeroy, seatbelt, $30 and
costs, speeding, $20 and
costs; Jonathan C. Larkins,
Middleport, failure to control, costs only;
Katrina M. Lawrence,
Marysville, speeding, $30
and costs: Melissa G.
Leach, Pomeroy, seatbelt,
$30 and costs, tinted glass,
$20 and costs: Wiley E.
Lemasters,
Wheeling,
W.Va., seatbelt , $30 and
costs; Linda M. Leonard,
Wayne, W.Va., speeding,
$30 and costs; Christopher
D. Lewis, Gallipolis, tinted
glass, $20 and costs:
Lori A. Lewis, Athens,
$30 and costs; Catherine L.

Lilly, Chesapeake , speeding,
$30 and costs, tinted glass,
$20 and costs: Dwight D.
Linkous, Portland, failure
to register, costs only; Ada
J. Loper, Stockport, display
plates, valid sticker, $20
and costs: David P. Lott,
Belpre, seatbe lt , $30 and
costs; Brandon G. Martin,
Kitts Hill, speeding, $30
and costs; Gary W. Martin,
Charleston, W.Va., seatbelt,
$30 and costs;
R.
Martin,
Johnny
Kingwood, Tenn. , speedi ng,
$30 and costs; Kip L.
Martin.
Ravenswood.
W.Va., open container in
motor vehicle, $ 100 and
costs;
Jennifer
Mayle.
Pomeroy, $20 and costs;
J.
McClintock.
Brian
Shade, seatbelt, $30 and
costs; James R. McClure,
Vinton, seatbelt-passenger,
William
F.
McFarland,
Bidwell, seatbelt, $30 and
costs; Terry L. McGee,
Waverly, W.Va., speeding,
$30 and costs: James C.
McKay,
Long
Bottom,
theft, costs only; Kelly M.
McKenzie, Pomeroy. $200
· and
costs:
Angel
D.
McKinney,
Middleport,
seatbelt-passenger, $20 and
costs;
Jason
W.
McKnight,
Middleport, criminal damaging, $18 1 in costs,
receiving stolen property,
costs only, contributing to
the deliquency of a child.
costs on ly :
John
C.
McVicker, Newark, speed. ing , $30 and costs; Dirk J.
Meersseman, Glencoe, R.I..
seatbelt, $30 and costs:
Chad R. Melick, Nashport,
speeding, $30 and costs:
Randy L. Milstead, Dexter
City, speeding. $30 and
costs.

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - A
federal judge has give n full
ownership of a Civil War·
era shipwreck to Florida
explorers who say the site
may yield one of the richest
sunken cargoes in hi story.
Odyssey
Marin e
Exploration of Tampa discovered the wreck of the SS
Republic last summer and
has already plucked 52,000
gold and silver coins from
the site in the Atlantic about
I 00 miles soutl1eas1 of
Savannah, Ga.
Early estimates put the
collectors' value of the coins
at $ 120 million to $180 million·. Discovery of more
coins is expected to push
the amount even higher.
Odyssey, which already
held sa lvage rights, peti tioned for title to the wreck
after reaching a $1 .6 million
settlement with a company
that had insured the paddlewheel steamer and its cargo
and paid claims after it sank
in a hurricane in October
1865 .
Besides the coins, the SS
Republic was carrying 59
passengers, thou sands of

cargo. The 1 10- foot ship.
on&lt;:e part of the Union ileet.
was taking the money and
suppl ies from Ne w York to
New Orleans to aid postCiv il War reconstruction of
the South.
All pa s sen g er~ got off
ali ve. but the ship and its
cargo ' ett led on the sand at
the bottom ot the Atlantic,
lost until Ody»ey explorer'
detected it last summer after
., eart: hing
1.500 square
miles of ocean.
The wreck is scattered
across a 40-by- 120-foot area
in 1,700 feet · of water. The
company is using a remotecontrolled robotic apparatus:
to excavate the site and remove coins and other
items.
Sal vage rights were granted to the company after the
wreck was diswvered la st
year, but it remained under
the federal court \ protection
until the judge's nliing
Wednesday.

Cleanup begins

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel ...

- Chester
CHESTER
Township will begin cleaning up their cemeteries on
Monday. Anyone wishing
to remove decorations must
do so before then .

bottles of cvcrythin )! from
pickled frui t to stomach bitter ~.; .

and

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Tlrimgr$ f6 d/)6

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FAITH • VALUES

·The Daily Sentinel

Pastor

Tliom
Mollohan

gtvmg of these commandments and even as they
migrated north through the
Canaanitic tribes, they were
surrounded by people who
"saw nothing wrong with
it."

But the Lord had called
them out of the immorality
of the world to walk with
Him in a new kind of life
characterized by His
holiness.
For those who believe that
such commandments were
given at a time when God
was still administrating Law
and not Hi s grace (and that,
somehow, He just winks at
it now as if it's no big deal),
consider that unrepentant
homosexuality is described
after Jesus' resurrection and
ascension as a sign of someone who is not interested in
walking with God on God's
terms (Romans I :26-27) and
has been given over to hi s
natural mind. Truly, this is
merely the bitter fruit of
"exchanging the truth of
God for a lie, and worshipping and serving created
things rather than the
Creator - Who is forever
praised" (Romans I:25).
Please let us understand
the horrific implications
here.
What is really in
question is the authority of
the Bible ... Is it or is it not
God's Word? If these passages can be cut out and
said to be totally irrelevant
to our society and individual
needs, than tbe whole of
Scripture has just been . lost
to us. If those passages are
suddenly unreliable, the
meaningfulness of all the
rest of the Bible has been
destroyed.
When we look at parts of

Friday, March 26, 2004

it we don't like and say,
"that doesn't really apply to
our society today," it is a
terrible hypocrisy to then
say, "Oh, the Bible is just so
encouraging to me."
"Pick-and-Choose" theology is a poison that may
spread slowly throughout
the body of God's church,
but it is a poison nonetheless and it only brings deat h.
I am not personally a fan
of controversy for the sake
of controversy, but I am
very interested in people
knbwing that God's Word
has relevance for them ...
for their spiritual destiny. for
their present pilgrimage, for
the re lievi ng of the burden
of their past and the bestowing of hope and freedom for
their future. Because I am
so interested in it, I seek to
admonish people to take to
heart what God has to say
instead of dwelling in the
camp of spiritual denial.
"Jesus loves me. Thi s I
know, for the Bible tells me
so.
He gave us His Son
for you and me to receive
His gift of forgiveness and
life through fai th. He gave
us His Word so that we
might understand what it is
He plans to accomplish in
the world and in our lives.
If you or I dare to take potshots at parts of His message that "don' t fit the
times," we' re putting holes
in the whole message and
we've sacrificed our only
hope on the altar of Self.
"All Scripture is Godbreathed and is useful for
teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, so that the man of
God may be thoroughly
equipped for every good
work" (2 Timothy 3: 16- 17).
(Thorn Mollohan has
ministered in southern Ohio
the past eight years and is
currently the pastor of
Pathway
Community
Church. He and his wife are
the parents of three children.
He may be reached by email
at pastorthom @pathwaygallipolis.com).

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

New pastQr

Church Briefs

A Hunger For More
.
In the past several
months we have witnessed a
tremendous surge In the
tides of cultural conflict as
local entities and some state
judicial systems face off
wi th those of us who defend
the Biblical definition of
marriage.
"So God created man m
His own Image, m the
image of God He created
him; male and female He
created them" Genesis I :27.
"For this reason a man will
leave his father and mother
and be united to his wife,
and they will become one
flesh" Genesis 2:24.
Even some denominations
are being caught up in this
systemic typhoon wi th two
very different-minded factions emerging. One side
claims to be "in step" with
the times and proposes that
they are in keeping of the
~spirit" of the Law if not
the "letter." The other
clai ms that the Bibl e is
authoritati ve for not on ly
.warm-fuzzy
words
of
encouragement but also for
living life at large, even to
the extent of shaping our
society 's morals and laws.
The implications of this
debate are as toni shing.
lndeed; it is evidence of the
plummeting of our socia l
conscience that it is even
being debated at all in various government levels and
certainly within "spiritual"
organizations.
Please be aware that the
Scriptures in the Bible very
dearly describe certain
kinds of sexual relationships
as unacce ptable
extramarital. incestuous and others (Leviticus 18: 1-30)
not to mention homosexual
(Leviticus 18:22).
" For those who say that
such commandments were
shaped by the moralities of
the day in which they were
written so that the prudi shness of the people might be
·appeased, keep in mind that
God gave these commandments to a people who had
not yet really ever heard
such teachings. Prior tO the

PageA6

Ffllowship
Apostolfc

Builders quartet of Ripley.
Evangelist to
speak on
'Live' coming
African mission to Common
CARPENTER
Dr. Grounds

David Rahamut, evangelist
from Trinidad, will be conducting a crusade at the Mt.
Union Baptist church near
Carpenter. 6:30 p.m. Friday
and Saturday.
Included will be film on
his work in Africa on
Saturday night, and his witness about being converted
from !slam and the miracles
in hi s ministry. Proclaim will
provide music on Friday
night and there will also be
special music on Saturday.

C:hu~ h

or Jesus Christ Apostolic
Vu nZ;mdt anJ Wan! Rd ., Pastor: James
Miller, Su nduy Sl·hnol • lU:JU a.m.,
b enmg - 7:JO p.m.

River \'alley
Aposlohc Wnrsh1p Center, 873 S. ]rd

A'·c., Middl cpon. Ke..,in Konkle. Pastor,

POMEROY
Mike
Warnke wil l present "Live"
at the Common Grounds'
coffee shop located at 202
East Main Street, Pomeroy ,
7 p.m. Friday, Saturday and
Sunday. Love offering will
be taken.

Su nday. I O·JO a.m. Wednesday, 7:00
p.m.; Youth Fri. 7:30p.m.
Emmanuel Aposlnli r Tahernade Inc.
Lnup Rtl off Ne'A' Lima Rd. Rut land.
Se rv ice~ : Sun IU ·UO a.m &amp; 7:30 p.m.,
Thurs. 7:00p.m.. Pastor Marty R. Hunon

Greg Sears

Assembly of God
liber1y Assembly ofGud
P.O. Box 467 . Dudding Lnne , Mason,
W.Va ., Pastor: Nei l Tennant. Sunday
Scrv kes· IO:Oil 11.m and 7 p.m.

MIDDLEPORT - Greg
Sears was recently appointed pastor of the Ash Street
POMEROY - A gospel Church.
Since 1978, Sears has
sing will be held at 7 p.m.
Satu rday at the Poplar Ridge been pastoring churches in
Freewill Baptist Church on Ohio and Kentucky. He has
Poplar Ridge Road off State lived in thi s area since
Route 554. The McComas 1993 , graduati ng from
Fami ly and Cross Creek will Hocking College in 2002
sing. For more information wit h a degree in business.
The minister and his wife
call 740-593-7390.
have three chi ldren, Jason,
Jonathan, and Joseph.
As pastor of the Middleport
church, he invites anyone looking for a home church to visit
the Ash Street Church. Service
times are Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.:
morning worship, 10:30
RUTLAND - "Released"
a.m.;
evening
worship, 7 p.m.;
will be at the Rutland Free
Wednesday,
Bible
study, 7
Will Baptist Church at 7 •
p.m. Sunday Pastor Jam ie p.m. For more information
call the church at 992-6443.
Fortner invites the public.

Gospel·sing set

Weekend revival
slated
GUYSV ILLE
The
Carthage
Community
Ch urch on Route SO six
miles west of the Coolspot
will have revival services at
7 p.m . on Friday and
Saturday. Special music will
be provided Jay Hubbard of
Little Hocking and Jim Blair
and the Southern Gospel
Aires of Marietta, while on
Saturday Sammy Anders of
New Haven will speak and
music will be by the

Baptist
Hope Baptist Church fSouthernJ
570 Grant St., Middleport. Sunday school
- l):;\0 a.m .. Worsh ip- I I a.m. ond 6 p.m.,
W..:dnc..Jay St.:r\ICC - 7 p.m.
Rulland Firsl Roplist Church
Sunday Sehoul - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:45 a.m
Pomeroy First &amp;ptisl
Pu slnr Jun Rrmkcrt. Ea~ t M:u n Sl ,
Su nd&lt;J y Sehoul - 9:30 a.m.. Wnrship 1\J:JU&lt;l.lll

'Released'
coming to
Rutland

J.'int Southern Baptist
~IX72 Pomertly Pike. Pustnr· E Lam :1r
O"Bt):t nl, Suntlay School - 9:JO a. m ,
Worship - K: 1 .~ &lt;~ . m . , 9:45a m &amp; 7"l.HI p m ..
Wednc"-.lay Servtce.&lt;.- 7:LM) p.m.
First Raplisl Church
i&gt;aslm . M.u k Morrow, 6th and Palmer St.,
Mi tldkport , Sunday School - 9: I 5 a m .
W1trstup - 10: 15 a.m., 7:00 p.m ..
w~·dne~tlay Sl'n tl"c- 7.00 p. m.

Soul'd Out of Cincinnati to perform

Rodne J.'in:t 811plist
PJ!&gt;Inr: Rid : Rulc , Sunday School - IJ :JO
:1.111 .. Worship • 10·4() a.m.. 7:00 pIll.,
W..:dnt·~tlity Sl· r \in.""~ · 7 00 p.m
Si tvrr Run Bapti ~l
.,,,stor: Juhn Swunson, Sunda y Sc hool \Ua .m .. Wur ~ hip - t ta .rn ., 7:00 p.rn
.Wednesday Services- 7-110 p.m.
J\.11. Union lhtptist
. David Wbernan. Sunday SchooiY..t:' &lt;~ . nt., Evtlllllg - 6 .30 p.m ..
Wedncsd1ty Scrvicc~ - fdOp m.
1•a~ 1m

Brthtehcm 811ptist Church
Great Beud . Rout~ 124, Racine. OH.
Pa~ tor . Da ni d \1e cea, Sunday Sc hool LJ:.\0 a.m .. Suntlay Worship · Hl"30 tun ..
Wednc &gt;day B1hk Stutly- 6:(X) p.m.
O ld Betht.of •·ree Will Boptist Church
2K6U I St. Rt. 7. Mtddlc por1, Sunday
S~ h nol - 10 a.m.. Eventng · 7:00 p.m ..
Th ur~d ~ty Scn' IC('S - 7·00

'

Hillside Baptist Church
St. RL 14 ~ just off Rt 7. F'astor· Rev
James R. Acree, Sr., Su nd ay Unified
Service, Wnrshtp . IO :JO a. m., 6 p.m .
Wednesday Servic~s -7 p.m.
•).

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Sunday .Times-Sentinel

·~

Sub~cribe toq~y.¥ (740) 992-~155

&gt;\;

Sou I'd Out of Cincinnati will be in concert at 7 p.m. 'Saturday at the St. Paul Lutheran Church,
321 E. Second Ave., Pomeroy. The public is invited to the free concert. A freewill offering will
be acce pted . Organized in 2001, the s ingers have shared their ministry in many .youth revivals
and youth rallies as well as congregations from varies denominations, Their style of music is
said to appeal to people of all ages.

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VIctory Bapllst Independent
525 N. 2nd St Middleport, Pastor: James
E. Keesee, Worship - \Oa. m., 7 p.m ..
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
F11lth Baptist Church
Railroad St. , Mason, Sunday School- 10
a.m .. Worsh ip - II a.m .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Jo'orest Hun Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hun. Sunday School - 10
a. m., Worship - t I a.m.
MI. Moriah Baptlsl
Fourth &amp; Matn St , Middleport, Pastor·
Re v. Gilhert Craig, Jr., Su nday School ·
Y:JO am .. Wo~hip • 10:45 a.m.

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

S~ea

yCiean

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ARCADIA NURSING CENTER

Coolville, Ohio

"Let your li ght so shine before

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Located less than 30 minutes from

men, th at they may see your

Rooting &amp; Building Work

Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg

We offer phys ical, occupalional,
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740-667·3156

good works and glorify your
Father in heave n."
Matthew 5:16

Pomeroy, OH
740-992-6215
"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear
before God and man."

•

Acts 24:16

Nest and Rest"

209 Third

Racine,

OH

740-949-2210
"A Home Bank for
Home People"

Zack's bath t. quite an event. The water temperature Is tested and all
the bath Implements are lined up and ready. Actually, It doesn'ttake long to
wash him. He's so small. Yet, how wonderful it Is to gather him up In his
soft "ducky" towel and hold him close. Nothing smells better than a newly
bathed Infant.
However, as he becomes older and meets other children from varied
environments, we must take just as much care to keep not only his body
clean, but his spirit as well, for y!JUngsters tend to Imitate what they see and
hear. We must begin early to teach a child right from wrong.
Psalm 14:3-4 says, "Who shaD ascend Into the hill of the Lord or who
shall stand In His holy place? He that hath clean hands and a pure heart."
Not only chHdren, but ail ofllli ntied to learn God's wiD for our lives. In
Psalm 51:7 we read, "Wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow." Won't you
worship together as a family this Sabbath? Better yet, make It a weekly event
SUNDAY
P1alm80

MONDAY

TUESDAY

halm 81

Psalm84

WEDNESDAY THURSDAY
Psa1m6S

Psalm 111

FRIDAY
Ps•lm/13

Scrlpturwtt Sllt~er•d by The Amtt~n Bible Soclefy
Cop)'rlQht 200•. Kei1ier-WIIIIams Newapaper Ser.llcet, P. 0 . Box 8005, Charlottea~lll11, VA 22;o5,

P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

740-949-2217
Sizes available 5x1 0 to 10 x 20

If ye abide in

49!1 Richland Avenue, Athens
740·594-6333.
1-800-451-9806

Blessed are the pure
in hi!art; for ,they
shall see God.
Matthew5:8

Me, and 1V/y
words abide in you, ye shall,
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done unto you.
John 15:7

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC

A. JACKSON BAILES, OD
507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 457611
(740) 991-32711
Tol Free 1-877·583•2433

SATURDAY

Sel'OIId B•pll.d Church
Ravenswmxl, WV, Sunday School t 0 am , Mn111ing worshtp 11 am Eveni ng- 7 pm.
Wl'tlllcsday 7 p.m.

Hours
6am·Hpm

a hrm FriemiJy

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH
'.'

Rutla nd Free Will Baptist
Salem St. , Pu~ tor : Jamie Fonner. Sunday
Sdwol - IO ,.a.m., Evcmng - 7 p.m.,
WiXIne:illay Service~ - 7 p.m

41

Hills Self Storage

'

Antiquity Baptist
Su nday School · 9:JO am .. Wor~ hip 10 :4~ a.m., Sunday Evenin g -6: 00 p. m.,
1-'aslor: Mark McComas

AtmO.\fJhere

%i[[ie's j(estaurant

Catholic

Homemade Desserts Made Dally
S~tc r\'d

Heart C• lhollc C hurch
16 1 Mu lhcrry A\·c .. Pomeroy, 992-~398,
Pastnr: Rc\', Walter E. Hei nl.. Sal. Con.
4 4V'i 1:'\ p.m. : M11ss - 5:30 p.m.. Sun.
Con. -fN5 -Y: 15 a.m., Sun. Man - 9:30

Home Cooked Meals&amp;: Daily Specials

Open 7 dnys a week
740-992-7713

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

a.m., Daily Mass· 8:30a.m.

- 7..~) p.lll

Church of Christ
Hemlock Grove Cbrl.stlta Church
Mini ster: Larry Brown, Worsh ip · 9:30
a.m.
Sunday School · !0:30a.m., 81ble Study ·
7 p.m.
Pomemy Church of Christ
2 12 W. Main St., Mini ster: Anthony
Morris
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. WorshipIO·JO a.m., 6 p.m., Wednesday Services 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Westside Churrh nf Chrl!t
33226 Children's Home Rd ., Sunday
School - t I a.m .. Worship - tOa .m . 6 p.m,
Wednesday Serv ic~ • 1 p.m.
Middleport C hu~h or Christ
.'ith and Main , Pastor: At Hart!IOO, Youth
Minis1er: Josh Ulm. Sunday School - 9:30
a.m .. Worshi p· H 15, 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m ..
\Vednesday Sel'\'ices- 7 p.m.
Keno Churth or Christ
Worship · 9:30 a.m ., Sunday School JO:JO a. m., Pastm-Jeffrey Wallac e, I !'.I and
3rd Su nday
Bear~·allow Ridge Churcb or Christ
Pa stor: Bruce Terry. Sunday Sehoul -9:30
a.m.
Wor sh ip - 10 :3 0 a.m., 6 :.\0 p.m.
\\lednesday Services· 6·.mp.m.

Zion Church of Christ
Pomeroy. Harri sonvt!le Rd . (Rt.t43 J.
Pa~lor : Roger Watsuu, Sunday School 9:30 a.m .. Wmship - 10:30 a. m .. 7:£10
p. m • Wednesday Servtces - 7 p.m.

Tuppers Plain Church of Christ
tn ~trumc nlal , Worship Serv ice - 9 a. m..
Commun ion - 10 a.m.. Sunday Sc hool 10:15 a.m., Youth -5:30pm Su nday, Bible
Study Wednesday 7 pm

Bradbury Cf.urch or Christ
MiniMer: Tom Runyan. 39558 Bradbury
Road. Mtddlcpo11. Sunday Sc hool - 9:3 0

a.m.
Wor~ hip -

tO ..lO a.m.

Rutland Chul'&lt;'h of Christ
Sunda) School - 9:Jll a.m., Worship and
Communion ~ 10:30 a.m., Boh J. Werry.
Mini ster
Bradford Chun:h uf Christ
Corner of St. Rt . 124 &amp; Rradh ury Rd .
Minister: Doug Shamblm, Youth Minister.
llt tl Ambe rger, Sunday School • 9 .'\0 a m,
Worsh ip - 8:00 a.m .. 10:30 &lt;~ . m .. 7:00
p m..Wcdnesday ServiL"es ·7:00 p.m.
Hickory Hills Chun:h of Christ
Evangel 1st Mtkc Monrc , Sunday School 9 a.m .. Worship · tO a. m.. 6:30 p. m.
Wednesday Ser\'u:es · 7 p.m
Reednille Church ol Christ
Paslnr: Philip Sturm, Sunday Sl· hool: 9· .~
a. m., Worshi p Sc rvi!.:c: 10:30 a.m ., Bihlc
Study, Wednesd,ly, 6 30 P.m.
Dn:ler Churth or Christ
Pasror: Bill Eshelman. Sunday school 9:30
a.m.. Norman Wilt , supe rintendent,
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m.
Church ol Chrisl
Intersection 7 and 124 W, EvJt n~e li st :
Dennis Sargent. Sunday B1bk Study ·
9:30 a.m.. Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m, Wednesday Bible Study- 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Hartford Church or Christ In
Christian Union
Hanford, W.Va., Pas tor: David Greer,
Sunday Schoo l - 9:30 a. m., Worship 10:30 a. m., 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
Sen•1ces - 7:00pm.

Church of God
Mt. Moriah Church or God
Mite Hilt Rd ., Racin e, P a~ lor : James
Sanerfield. Sunday School - 9:4.5 a. m..
Eveni n ~~: . 6 p.m., Wednesday Servtces- 7
p. m.
Rutland Church of God
Pas10r: Ron Heath , Sunday Worship - 10
a. m.. 6 p.m . Wednesday Se rv i ce~ · 7
p. m

l'rinily Chun:h
Second &amp; l )·nn . Pmlll'ru). Pastor· Re"
Jonathan Noble, Wonihlp 10.25 a.m ,
Sunday School 9: I ~ a.m.

Ct'nlrwl L'lusl~r
A,hul) IS,·nii."Ul&gt;CI. Pa~tnr · Boh Rnbm .. ul .
Su rkl.t ~ Sehoul · ~ · -15 a m.. Wnrshlp - t J
a.m.. Wednc 'Kla) S cn t~·e~ · 7 311 p m

Episcopal

E ntt' rprist'

Holiness

Flnt Church or God
Apple and Second Sts., P~ lm : Rev. David
Russe!t, Sunday Sc hoo l and Warship- !0
a.m.
Evening Serv ices· 6:)0 p.m., Wednesday
Services · 6:3() p m.
Church of God of Pmphecy
O.J . White Rd. orfSt. Rt. !60. Pastor: P.J
Chapman. Sunday School - 10 tun ..
Worship - I I a.m., Wedncsduy Services 7 p lll .

Mcetmg mthe old Amcnnm Lcgllm ll._l t
South Fourth A\enuf. Mtddkpnn
Pastor: Chris Stewan 10-fMI am Sunday
OlhcT meeting ~ in hu111c'

Pa ~t\lr .

Pine Grove Rihle Holiness Church
Rt. J25. Pastor: Rev. O' Dell
Mantey. Sunday S..·hoot - Y:JO a.m.,
Wor~ hip
· 10 :~ 0 a.m.. 7:30 p.m..
Wedncsda) Servi~c - 7 ~0 p.111

orr

Wesleyan Dibl e Holiness Chu rch
75 Pea rt St., Midd tcr1on Pastm Rl'\'
David Gi lbert, Sunday S.:huol · t 0 :1 m.
Wnrshtp · 10:45 pJn. Suntlay Eve 7 011
p.m .. Wedr1esd ay Service · 7 : ~1) p.m.
Hysell Run Holiness Church
Pastor: Rev Larry Lcmlcy: Suutlay SdJotJl
- 9 ·.~ ) a.m .. Worship · 111 : ~5 ,J m . 7 p m..
ntu r~d:.~ y Bihk Stud y arM.I You th - 7 p.m.
Laurel ClifT Free Methodist Church
Pastor: Glenn Rowe, Suntlay Sdttu•l ·
9:.'0 a.m.. Worship - 10:.'0 lUll . and f1
p. m .Wl•dncsthty S~ r v i lt'! - 7:0() pIll .

Rock Springs
Pas!Or: Keuh R&lt;ldcr. Sunday Sc hool · 9:15
am . Wor~hi p - 10 01. 111 .. Yuulh
Fellowshi p. Sumiay - 6 p.m.
Rulland
Sunda y Sdw\11 . 9:30 :1 m., Worshr p ·
I0: ]0 a m . Thur~d ay ScrvK·es · 7 p.m.

.4.bundunt Grucr R.r. I.
Thi rtl St MidJlcport. Pa,tor Tt· n.:~.J
Da l'ts. Sun day ~ cn· ice. I 0 :1.111 •
We dn csd ~t y ~rvi,· c. 7 p m.

Salem l'enter
llas wr: Wil lia m K. Marsh;t ll . Sunday
Slhuol - 10:!5 .u n., Worshi p - 9 15 a.m..
Bihl ~ Study: Monday 7: 00 pm
Snowville
Sumhty Schnnl - I 0 am .. Worshlp ·Y a m

I):::! _IS

•'oith Full Gos~l Chun·h
Lori!!, Bnllnm Pa~tnr SI~W f{Cl'd. Sll!Jday
Sc hool - 9 :30a.m. Wur:;h1p " 1} : ~0 ;~ m.
;~nd 7 r.m. Wedn~ sda y - 7 r m. Fri da~ fellowship ~~ rv i r.:c 7 p.m.

Bethany
P.ts tar: John Gilmore. Sunday School - HI
'' m., Wors hip - 9 il. m·., WeU n ~sll;1y
Sl..'rvke .~- to a.m.

Uarrisom·ittc Cnmmunil}" Chur.:h
Thcnm Durh &lt;~ m . Sund:t) · '.l :JO
11m and 7 p.m.. Wt;lilll'~ d&lt;~ y- 7 p m
P&lt;t~ l tlr:

Carmei ·Sulton ·
Carmd &amp; Bashan Rds. R11dn c. Ohlll,
Pastor· John GJ hnore, Sunday Scho11l ·
Y:)l) a.m.. Worship . 111:4:'\ a.m. . Bihlt'
Study Wl'd 7.00 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
The Church or .Jesus
Chrisl of Lltller-Ua.t Sainls
St. Rt. I fill. 446 -624-7 nr 4-46 -HK6 .
Su nd ~y Schuol 10:20- 11 ot. m., Reli ef
Soc icty/Pri cs th oud I I : 0 ~ - 1 2:rHJ nito n.
Sac ra nie nl Ser~ll"C Q- 10: 15 11 . 111 ,
Homemaking meet mg . h l Thur' . - 7 p.m.

Lutheran

Middl('porl Co n1m11nit~· Chu n h
)75 Pl'art St .. Maltllcpun . P ii~ IHf . s.un
Antk rson . Synd;ty Sl·ht&gt;ol 111 am .
hL·mng . 7 .~0 p.m.. w~· dn l'!&gt;da; S..:rmc L~O p.m

Murnh1g Slor
Pus tnr: John Gi lmore. Suntlay Srhth.ll - II
a.m.. Worship · tO a.m.

f'uilh Valll'}' lllbernadc C hurch
Railey Run R11ad l'."hw l&lt; c v l~ mllH."" II
R:t\l. son . Su nd ay EvL· nrn g 7 p.m .
Th u r ~Jay Sl"n·lll' · 7 p m

•:usl Lelart
P;~ s t u r · Sunday Sc hool · tO a m., Wot~h i p
- 9 am .. Wcdnesduy - 7 p.m.

S~-rHcu~ Mi~si•m

1Rscinr

St. John Lutheran Church
Pine Gru\'C:, Worship · 9:(1() am., Suntlay
School - I fl :OO a m. l'as tnr: la mes I'
Rrady

Paswr. Pete Shall er. Sunday Sdltkll " 10
am .. Wnr~ht p - \ II &lt;1m . Wedncsduy 7
p.nt

Our Saviour Lulherun Chwrch
Waln ut ;md Henry Sis. R avcn~w 0od.
W.Va .. Pas1or: Davit.! Ru ssc ll . Sun tl ay
School · 10:00 a.m., Worsh ip - II a.m.

Cooh 'illt' Unit~d Methodist Parish
Pu,lor. Hde n Kl \'uc. Cuoh•dlc C!ntt dl,
M:1111 &amp; hflh St Su nday Sdwol · 10
am .. Wm~lup - () ;1\ 11., Tuestl:ty Scn'ire~ 7 p.m

· Sl. Paul Lulh~nw Chun:h
Comer Syc11 morc &amp; Second St, Pomemy,
Sunday Sc hoo l -9:45a.m., Worsh ip· It
a.m. Pastor: James P. Brady

Beth el '«;:burch
Towmhip Rd., 46Sd Su nday Sc hool - 9
a.m, Wors hip am .. Wednesday
Services - tO a.m.

to\

United Methodist
Graham United Methodist
Worship · 9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun ), ,
7:30 p.m. (3rd &amp; 41h Sun).Wednesday
Serv1ce- 7:30 p.m
Mt. Olive-United Methodist
Off 124 be hind Wilkesville, Paglor· Rev.
R~lph Spires, Sunday Sehoul · 9:30 u.m.,
Worshi p - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m .. Thur.'iday
Services · 1 p. m.

Joppa
Pastor: Boh Randolph. Worship - 9:30
~ . Ill .

Lnng Hnt111m
Sunday School · 9 : ~0 a.m., Wur~ hip ·
10:30 ~ . m .
Reeds,·lllt•
Worsh ip · 9 :)0 a m., Sun day Sc hool 10:30 a. m.. F1r ~ 1 Su nday 11f Momh · 7:00
p. m ...en·ice
Tuppen Plains St. Paul
Pastor: Jane Bea111c. Sunda y Sc hoo l - 9
a.m., Wursh ip - 10 a.m.. Tuc ~tl a y Scrvict:S

Communily or Christ
Pontand-Racine Rd .. Pastor· Jerry Smgc r.
Suuduy Schou) - l): JO am ., Worship ·
11!:30 a.m , 'Wcdnl' sd,')' Savico - 7 00
p.m.
Bt'lhel Worship C~nter
Chester S( ho ol. Pa ~ fnr. R1)h Burhc r.
A ss t ~ ta nt Pa .. tor: Karen !Ja"' l~. Su nday
Wnhh ip. 10 am . E 'c ni11~ W11rshtp: (I pm.
Youth gmup ti pm. Wedne ~d a y 1'11wer m
Pr ay~ r , anti Btblc Stud)' · 7 pm
Ash Slreet Chun·h
Ash St .. Middtepon -Pastor· Greg S.._,ar ~
Sunday Schno l - lf _
,0 am . Mornin g
Worsh ip - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 [llll. Wednt' sday
Sc rvit l' - 7·1111 r m.. Vuuth Scnilt:· 7 00
p.m.
Agapt&gt; ur~ C~ nt ~ r
"Full -Gtlspe l Chu rch"'. Pa~tor s Jnhn &amp;
Pall)' Wade. 60J Sn·ond Al'e. Ma&lt;;t&gt;n, 77350 17. Service 111nc· Sunda y 10 JO am .
W~d n c~d ay 7 ]J ill

Pomeroy
Rod Brower, Worship · 9:.'0 a.m.,
Sunday School- 10:~ 5 am

Rose of Sharon Holiness Church
Leadmg Creek Kd_, Wull &lt;tnd. Pastor. R ~v
Dewey Kmg, Sunday sL"hool- 9:30 tun ..
Sunday worship ·7 p.m., WeUncstlay
prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Sunday SL·huot - 10JO a.m.

Syratu~

Oasis Christian Fello"·ship

Pearll'hapet
Sunduy ${·hoot - 9 a.m .. Worship · 10 a.m.

Hl)(kingpor\ Church
Grand Street, Sunda}' ~ch ool - 9:30a.m.,
Worship- 10:30 a.m .. Pastor Phillip Dell
I

I

Torch Chun:h
Co. Rd. 63, Su nday Sch~ol • 9:30 a.m.,
Worshi p · \0 :30a .m
\

Nazare?e
Mkldltporl Chun:h oftht Nazat'tne
Pustor: Allen M!dcap. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.,Worship - \O.JO a.m.. 6:30p.m.,
Wednesday Scr\'tces 7 p m.. Pa stor:
Allen Midcap
Reeds\'illt Fe llowship
Chu rc h ol the Nouarenc , Pastor Lynd:t
Kuhn, Sund;~y School - 9 : ~0 a.m ..
Worship - J0 ·45 a.m, 7 p. m , Wedne ~day
Services - 7 p.m.
Syracuse Chun:h of lhe Nazarene
Pnslor Mike A dk111~. Su nday Sehoul - 9JO
:J .m.. Worshi p - HHO am .. fl p. m..
Wetlne:ill:ty Scn· i ~·cs- 7 p.m.

Bible Cha'rrh

W V&lt;~ Rt I. Pa~tt~r Bnau May,
Sch1k1l - IJ 3U 11. m.. WorMup - 7:00

··~uo

..·!ihip Crusade lor Chriil

Rc\ . l·nmkhn

Dt c kcn~.

Service:

7 p 111

Cah·yry· Bible Church
Pomen:ly Pike, Co. Rd., Pastor: Rev.
Blackwood , Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .
Wl•rship
10 .~ 0 a.m.. 7:30 p.m..
Wedne"lla y Sri'\ ICC- 7 .l Or 1ll

11\"on -denominatmnal felltlW!&gt;hlpl

Minersvitlr
Pastor: Bob Rohinson, Su nday School - 9
am , Wnrsh1p · 10 it.m

t'11ith
Pli ~tor :
httla~ .

Other Churches

Heath (M iddleport)
Pastor. Rod Browcr. Sund~ y Sl" hoot - I,I:JO
u.m.. Worship - II :00 ~ m

C• lwary Pilgrim Ch•pel
Harrisonvi lle Road , Pastor: Churks
McKen1.1e, Suntlay S.:h11ol 9:30 :.1m .,
Worship - II a.m.. 7:00p.m.. Wednesday
Sel'\•ice - 7.00 p.m.

t'a~in•itw
lc t ~fl .
Sund:~~

t'orest Run
Pa)tur: Boh RohinMln, Suntla} Sl·htxJ) - to
a.m.. Wor~h ip - 9 a.m.

Danville Hollne§s Church
31057 Stale Routt'! 325, Langsvtte , Pastor:
Gary Jack.san, Sunday sc honl - Q :~O a m .
Sunda~ worship · 10 :~0 a.m. &amp; 7 p m..
Wednesday prayer se:rvicl' • 7 p m

Chesln
Pa ~ t or : Jane 8callic, Wnr.&lt;&gt;h1p · 9 a.m..
Sunday Sc hoo l · 10 a.m , Tlw rsday
Sc i'\" tees · 7 p.m.

p m . Wt"tlnc ..dJ} Bthle Stud) · 7:00 p.m.

Arta nd King . Sund:J} SL"hu1JI
]I U O &lt;t m.. W., r~ hip . Y..\0 a 111 .. Bih!c
Stud) Wl'll. 7:J()
Flat"·oods
P ~!&gt;hlf " Kc1l h Rader. Sunday Sl·hool · 10
u.m., Wnr~hip · It a.m .

Community Church
Pastor: Steve Tomek. Main Strret.
Rutland , Sunday Worship- 10:00 a.m..
Su nda y Service- 7 p.m

Meigs Cooperative Parish
No rtheast Cluster, Alfr~tl . Pa§tor: Jane
Beanie, Sunda y s~·hool - 9:30 u.m.,
Worship · t I a 111., 6:30 pm.

P11rtland fo' irsl Church nfthl' Nazart"nr
Pa~tu r · Wi1!1 am lu ~ u ~. Su nda ~ s~· hool 10:00 a.rn . Mom1ng Wnrsht p · 10 4 ~ a.m..
Sunday ServKc - fl .ID p.m.

p ~,t o r

Grace Episcopal Church
326 E. Main St ., Pomero)', Sunday Schnol
and Holy Eucharist l 1:00 a.m.

112 mile

-7 p.m

14 11 Britlgemun St.. S)r.tcu ~~- Suntlu~
S{·hnol - 10 a.m. E\·en mg
Cl p m.,
Wctlne~d&lt;~y Servi ce - 7 p.m.
llazcl Community Chun·h
Ol"f Rt. 1~ -1, Pa ~ t\l r : t::d ~d Han . SunLiay
Sl·ht1nJ - 9.30 a.m., W""hi p - 111·.\tJ ~ m.

Sti,·rrnille l'ommunit} Apostolic
Church
Puslm \\',~~· ncR Jn.,l'll. Sund u} Service 6 00 p.m.. Thur!&gt;du} - tl:UO p.m.
Rejoicing Life Chun:h
500 !\ . 2m.l AH·. Mtddlepun, Pastor·
Mike Forl"lll&lt;tn . 1-'a~ \, )r · Ementus
L &lt;~ v. r..:nc·,- rorcman . Wohhi p- I 0:00am
W.:Jnl',tl;:t} Sn.,IL"es- 7 p.m.
Cliflon THbernaclr l' hurch
Chfton. W Vu .. Sunday s,·hflol - 10 a.m ..
Wor~ lur - 7 p.m . Wednc ~Ja y St: r\'J(;e : ·7
p.m.
New Lift• \'ktory Center
Creek Road. Gollipotb, OH
PJ.,tor· B1lt St aten. Sun.Jay Scl'\'ll"l'' · I 0
:uu &amp; 7 p.m. Wctlnc,da} - 7 p.m. &amp;
Yuutlt 7 p m
)71~ Gcllf)!:l'~

l'uiJ t ;ospcl Church of the
Su \·ior
Rt 3.lH. Antt4uit). Pa,Wr J c' ·'~'
St:nK·e ~ . S:tl urduy 2 00 p m

Uvin~~:

M o rri ~.

Sakm Cummunit)· Church

R"l HI \\b t Col umhla, \\. .Va tlln Lte\·ing
i{()ad. l'aSlt ll" Ch.1rk' l&lt;ou~ll 1304-) 675·
~~XI&lt;. Sumi.J} Sd1no l Y:]U nm. Sun day
t·r,·nmg ~cn 1n: 7 flO pm. Biht y Study
Wc1 l 11 rsd a~ '~ n · r .:l' 7:00 pm
Hobson Chrislion Fdln\'l~hip Churth
PJsh•r. Hct'l"hd \Vh itl'. SunrJay School·
Ill :1111. Sunday Church ~Cr\lt' l' - f1 ·1() pm
W&lt;:d 11 e..Ja~ 7 pm

Restoration Christian l'elluwship
11tM 1\(~&lt;lJlL'l RnaJ 1\thcn~ . Pasl1't.
Lt\llll te (' IIlii ,. Suntllty Worship 'I0:1)(1 ~~~~ .
WI.'Jne,J . J ~ 7 pm
LHnJC ~'· it!t' Christian Church
Full Go.-,p~ l. l' u~tm · Rtlht: rt Mu ~set.
Sunday Sdtnnt 4 :.~0 am., Wor~ hlp ! O:JP
:~m . 7 110 pm. \h·dne .... l.t) So;n Jcc 7.00

Jllll

Pentecostal
P~ntn· u~tHI As~mbl~·

St . RL 1~~ H. a,·ine . Pash•r Willtam
Hoh;t&lt;.k. Sunday Sc hutll
10 a.m..
E\'cnmg · 7 p m . Wt: dn ~~Lia y Sen"Ill' ~ - 7

r,.m.

Presbyterian
Firsl l 'nilt'd l'rtsh.rh•rhw
H.ohl.·n Crt•l\. Wuhhip - t I a.m.

S~· ntr U St'
P :1 ~ 1nr:

7. ~11 p.lll

IJyt'sviltr Community Churt•h
Su nd ay Sc htl\t ] - 9 ..~0 01.111., Wur~hip 10:"10 u Ill . . 7 [l.nl .
Morse Chapel Church
Su nday school - tO a.m ., Worship - I I
a m . Wedne:~ d ay Sen·tcc- 7 p.m
Faith Gospel Church
Long Bono.m, Su nduy School · 9:30 a rn ..
Wo rs hip - 10.45 a.m.. 7 :30 p m.
Wedncsduy 7:~0 p.m.
MI. Olite Community Church
Pastor. Lt\\Jence Bush, Son da}' Sdwo l •
9:30a.m.. E,·ening- 6 · .~0 p.m.. Wedncd11y
Service · 7 p.m.
•·uu Gospel Lighthouse
11iland Rua(t. Pom ~ rny . Pa~ lur Hoy
Hu nter, Sunday Sl"IKml - 10 a.m .. EH•nrng
7 lO 'p m . Tuc,dny &amp; Thursd.ty · 7 .lO
p.m.
_nw~

Soulh Brlhd Communi I~· Chu rch
'SdH·t R1dJ,:e · P;t ~ !IIJ Lmd :1 Da111e1LnoU.
Sunday Schtlol · 9 l1 m.. Wnr~h t p Sc t"\"ll"l"
W :t.m.
Ca rl eton lnterdenomination11l Ch ltrt""h
Km!,!sbury Rtlatl, P ~tstnr · Rt•hrrt Vallet',
Sund.J}' Srhnnl - 11 ) () am . \\ur~hl [l
Sl'rvil"c JO:JO a.m.. E\enmg SL·n·ict' n

lfH rrisnn\·illr Prt'sb~·tt·r i u n Chun·h
Ruhcn Cr.m. W,lr\lup · ~ :un

P.J ~ tnr ·

Middl eport Presbyterian
Pastor· Koher [rom . Wnr~ h1p · I0 a.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seventh·Da} Advenlist
'
Mu lberry Ht ~. Rd .. Pomeroy, Pastor: RO)'·
L aw m s k ~. Saturda) Sen•1ces. SabbatP
Schoo l - ~p. m .. Worshi p - J p.m.

United Brethren
\II. Hermon L.:nitcd Bn&gt;lhren
In Christ Chun:h
Tc x:r s Cnmm ll tl ll y Jfl~ I I Wtck ham Rd.
P .J ~ Il•r. P~K· r ,\Jartmtlak . Suntlay Sd1o{)l ·
ll ~11 ;r m . w,H ~h 1p . 111· l11 n m . 7:00
p m . Wedne ~ da) Sen r ,·t·~ · 7: 011 p m.
Yt •U11t !_.! lllll jl m~ellng ~nd ,'~,: -lth Sund:tys
7 p.m.

Edc11lini1ed Brtthrrn in C hrist
St.llc Rt,ute I ~-1. Recti'' illc. Sunt.IJ}'
Sdlot il - J t .un .. Sund:ty Wor,Jup · Hl: Oi:J
a.m. &amp; 7 00 p.m. ,Wctl!ll'HL.i ~ Sen•tees •
7: 011 p.m.. W~·J ne~duy 't'l•Utll Sern,·e 7:011 Jl 111

l'·lll
Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene
; F'nstnr· Jan LI\"CIILkr. SwHI;ty Sehoul f.J:JO a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m. ·and 6
p m . Wedncsd"y Scr\il·e~ · 7 p.m.
Ch..ster Chu rch of the Nazanme
Puslnr: Rev. Hcrhe n Grmc . Sunday Sch\lo!
- I,I:JO .1.111 .. Wnr, hlp - t 1 run ., {, p m..
Wcdnc&gt;Uay Scrvrccs - 7 p.rn

Freedom (;os~ ell\1i ss ion
1\;dJ Knoh . &lt;10 l\1. Rd .1 1. P.t'l"r l&lt; t:\
R IIJ!~ r Willfnrtl. Suml:t} Sl·hont - 'J :.~O a.m
Wor~ hip - 7 11 111
\Vhil~:'s Chn Jit'l \\'r.'i h~~· lln
C'ntllvilk Rn ad. P:t ~ lur : Re v. PIH11ip
Ridenour, S1mday Sc h&lt;MJI · 11 1() a 111..
Wnr.;h1p . Jn ·J1) a 111 •• Wednesday S.-r1 ll"L'

in

. . . l ..... . .

992-3785

Middleport, OH

740-992-6128

Local source for trophies,
Ia ues 1- hirts and more

Insurance

Products+

Carolina AntiquE
&amp;: Craft Mall
312 6th St.

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TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N. Second St.

..
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Point Pleasant

Bill Quickel •

675-1160
Variety of furniture, glassware, crafls,

Financial
Services
992-&amp;en

Outside flea market April- Ocl.
La awn s Available

www kwrwwccpm

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

,\NOERSON
FUNt.RAI. HOME

l

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ROCKSPRINGS
REHABILITIION CENTER
The care you de~erve, close lo home

36759 Rocksprings Ad .
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992·6606

SWISHER &amp; ~OHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
~2-2955
Pomeroy
"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear before
God and man ."

Acts 24:1

Crow's Family Restaurant
"Featuring Kentucky Fried
Chicken"

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

- 992-5432
or God so loved the world

he gave his on ly
gotten son ...
John 3: /6

&amp;noulfer's
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Mci g" Count y's Oldest Florist
352 East Main

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Mv 2race is sufficient
for thee: for mv
stren2th is made
Perfect in weakness.
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Office Service &amp;Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-6376
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If ye abide in Me, and 1Vly Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
words abide in you, ye shaU
SERVICES
ask what ye will, and it shaU
214 E. Maln
be done unto you.
992-5130
John 15:7
Pomeroy

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

collection of bottles &amp; primitive-

l'salm 115

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Congregational

Rutland l'hun:h or tht' Nanu"t'nt"
SL" huo) IJ .~IJ a.m . Wt~r~h1 p ·
10 JO am . 6 JO r .m., Wedne..,da~
Set\ ke ~- 7 p.m.
Sun d ~y

·.'

•

�The Daily Sentinel

Page AS

OHIO

/

Friday, March 26, 2004

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Ohio Stale boys tourney roundup, Page 92
Hawks advance to Elite Eight, Page 83

PLAN ANNOUNCED TO CONVERT FACTORY FOR MILITARY BLIMP

K~ep ~
I

:

Jr.ec• c~
local

Friday morning
A
cloudy
mornong.
Temperatures wi ll rise to
69· with today's low of 51
occurring around 6 a.m.
Winds will be 5 to 15
m.p.h. from the south turning from the southwest as
the morning progresses .
Friday afternoon ··- It
should cont inue to be
cloudy. There is a slight
chance
of
ra in .
Temperatures wi II ri se from
71 early afternoon to the
high for the day of 73 at 3
p.m. as they drop back
down to 70 later this afternoon. Winds wi ll be I0 to
15 m.p.h. from the southwest.
Friday evening ... It will
remain cloudy. There is a
ge10d chance we could see
some rain. Temperatures
wi ll hold steady around M .
Winds will be 5 to I0
m.p.h . from the southwest.
Friday night ... It should
remain cloudy. Light rain is

expected . The ram os predieted to start near 3 a.m.
Ant icipate rain accum ulations of 0.06 inches for
this overn ight. Temperatures
wol l diminish from 62\ early
overnight to 56. Wind ~ wi ll
be 5 m.p.h. from the wu thwest turn ing from the 'south
as the overnight progresses.
Saturday morning .... It
will be a wet and clqudy
morning . You wi ll see
moderate rain. Expect adcumulations of 0.33 inches.
Temperat ures will linger \ at
56. Winds wi ll be I 0
m.p.h. from the southwest
turning from the west as
the morning progresses.
Saturday afternoon ... It
will be a cloudy afternoon.
Light rain is expec ted.
Expect 0.09 inches of rai n
by the end of this afternoon . Tempe ratu res will
hover at 57. Winds will be
5 m.p.h. from the wes.t
turning from the south as
the afternoon progresses.

Friday, March 26, 2004

-Rio Grand,e
::;ports
\

Today's games
Baseball
· Cedarville at Rio (OH), noon
Softball
Geneva at Rio, 3 p.m.
Saturday's games
Baseball
Cedarville at Rio (OH), noon
Softball
Malone at Rio, 1 p.m.

Bengals re-sign
strong safety to
three-year deal
Dan Howard, vice president and general manager of Lockheed Martin Maritime Systems and
Sensors , tal ks about his company's involvement with designing a high alti tu de airship for
the Miss ile Defense Agency in Akron . The unmanned high altitude airship wi ll be about 500
feet long, 150 teet in diameter, fly at 65 .000 feet and have the ability to carry 4,000 pounds
of payload. (AP Photo/ Haraz Ghanbari)

Buckeye 5 lottery winner says prize cap not made clear
CLEVELAND (API - A
store ow ner plans to appeal
a jury's decision that he
pay $1.3 million to a lottery winner who said the
owner fa iled to warn him
about a jackpot cap.
John Struna regularly
bought multiple tickets with
the same numbers for the
5
game
at
Buckeye
Convenient Food Mart in
Cleveland.
In
October
200 1, he choose the winning combination , which he
had played on 52 tickets.
The game 's prize is
$100,000,
so
Struna
thought that amount wou ld
be multiplied by 52 for
each of hi s winni ng tickets.
givi ng him $5.2 million.
But the Ohi o Lottery limits the wi nnings frnn\ an y
single BLockeye 5 game to
$ 1 million.
Strum! sued store owner

Harry Singh, claimiotg he
Kabat said Thursday that
did not make the cap c lear. he hopes the civil judgment
Coun ty inspires the state lottery to
The Cuyahoga
Common Pleas j ury ruled be more aggress ive about
Wednesday against Singh .
informing players of th e
The store ow ner did what rules.
he was supposed .to do by
"That has been a reque st
giving Strum1 a copy of of ours continually,'' Kabat
lottery rules. said Singh's said. "We have always
lawyer, Gary Seewald .
wanted them to do someStru na carried the ru les thing to alert players of
in his pocket but did not thi s cap and they have
read them . Seewald said .
done nothing to date ."
The jury's award could
Ohio . Lottery spokesput his client out of busi- woman Mardele Cohen said
ness, Seewald said.
the lottery has no plans to
" It cou ld literall y -destroy change the way it in forms
him," he said.
players of the rules.
Stru na believes ne ither
She said the rules are .
Singh nor the lottery made clearly posted on sogns
the rules clear, said his give n to lotte ry retailers
attorney, Andrew Kabat.
and on the lottery's Web
Strum! &lt;1lso sued the Ohio site. Also, retailers are
Lottery for fal se advertis- requ ireu to atte nd training
ing, .but the Ohio Court of conducted by the state that
C laims threw ou t that law- teac hes them about the cap
suit. It is being appealed .
and other noles. she said.

Proud to be apart of your life.

Local Stocks
ACI-30.42
AEP-33.09
Akzo -35.93
Ashland Inc. - 46.07
BBT- 35.17
BLI ~ 14.24
Bob Evans- 32.25
BorgWarner ~ 80.94
City Holding - 34'.29
Champion - 4.84
Charming Shops - 7.74
Col- 30.82
DuPont- 41 .96
DG - 18.97
Federal Mogul ~ .37
Gannett~ 87 .94
General Electric- 29.70
GKNLY-4.50
Harley Davidson - 51.07
Kmart- 37.97
Kroger ~ 16.58
Ltd- 19.58

AKRO N (A P) ~ G o ve rn me nt
ofti cial s and Lock heed Manin
Corp. an nounced a 52-1 mi llion
plan Thursday Ill convert a nearly 75-ycar-old blimp fac tory to
builo a high-fl ying. remo te-contro lled blimp prototype to monitor U.S. borders and s..:an the
horizon for enemy mi ssiles.
ln:kheeu MaJ1in in Scpteli1ber
rt.'Ceived a wntmL·t \\UI1h uhout S-10
million
from
the
Defense
Depanment 's Missile Defen se
Agency to design and hu ild the
unmanned. helium-ti lled airshi p
that would plltrol at 65.000 feet and
be able to Iifi about 4.000 pounds.
The company's Airdock facility this northeast Ohio city once
was the site of muss production
of Nav y airships durin g World
War II. and before that. much
bigger hydrogen-filled airships.
On Thursday. the state. the city
and the Summit County Port
Authority announced an array of
grants, loans and tax ince nti ves to
prepare the Airuock. whi ch wi ll
be owned by the Pon Authority
and leased to the company.
The prototype is expected to
be complete by summer 2006.
"For Akron. it's a verv emotional
thing,'' Mayor Don Plusquellic said.
"People here can remember &gt;eeing
blimps that were built here alwGys
llying overhead."

Subscribe today. 992-2155

NSC - 21.54

Indians edge
Expos, 3-2
WINTER HAVEN. Fla.
(AP) ~ Randy Choate's 'first
visit to Montreal will be
de layed a few months.
Traded to the Expos in
December. Choate had been
looking forward to li vi ng in
the picturesque Canadian city
with its fine restaurants and
old-world charm.
But those plans were
scrapped Thursday when
Choate wa.s sent to the Ari zo na
Diamondbacks for reliever
John Patterson, who returns to
the team that drafted him eight
years ago.
Choate had packed his bags
and left Chain of Lakes Park
long before Cleveland's Zach
Sorensen snapped a 2-2 in the
eighth inning with a sacrifice
tl y off loser Jeff Famswonh.
Ron Calloway, trying to win
a stan ing job in the outfield,
we nt 3-for-4 for the Expos.
who dropped to an NL-best
15-S this spring.
'

Oak Hill Financial ~ 32.01
Bank One - 54.12
OVB - 30.48
Peoples - 27.98
Pepsico - 51.22
Premier - 9.15
Rocky Boots ~ 22.36
RD Shell- 46 .13
Rockwell - 33.11
Sears ~ 43.12
sac - 24.07 1
AT&amp;T - 19.82
USB - 27.58
Wendy's ~ 40.95
Wai-Mart ~ 59.82
Worthington- 18.40
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.

NHL suspends
Blue Jackets'
Shelley
NEW YORK (A P) ~
Goaltender Many Turco of the
Dallas Stars was suspended
for fou r games by the NHL on
Thursday for high sticking in a
gaune agai nst the Edmonton
Oilers.
The league also suspended
Columbus Blue Jackets forward Jody Shelley for three
games for fighting against the
Minnesota Wild .
. Turco hit the Oilers' Ryan
Smith in the mouth with his
stick during the first period of
Dallas' 4-3 overtime win
Wednesday night.
The All-Star goalie; who
forfeits $195.1 2 1 in salary,
wa~ assessed a double minor
for high-sticking.
" It was an accident," Turco
said at1er the game. "That's all
I'm goi ng to say about that."
The Stars recalled goalie
Jason Bacashihua from the
Utah Grizzlies of the AHL.
Ron Tugnutt, Turco's backup,
most likely wi ll take over the
· stao1ing job for the nex t four
g&lt;,\1\les.
. ..
who
lorfe ots
She lley.
$2 1.m6 in salary, was given a
minor pena)ty for roughing: a
maJor for ftghung and a mtsconduct penalty at 6:0 I of the
second period on Wednesday's
2' 0 wi n against the Wild.

P-S«tJOnaJ.
1 ~ """'~·
Full J/eepel · phone - Jtor.tge ,,ffl.l5
Sale'

Retai lers are not specifical ly told to explain · the
ru les to players.
''In theory th at shou ld be
someth ing they shou ld be
doing.'" Cohen said.
Some people buy up to
I0 tickets with the same
comb ination trying to wi n
the $ 1 million maximum
prize . she said . "But when
we saw that someone
bo ught 52 tickets, it didn' t
make any sense to us."
Another person had a
win nin g ticket for the
Llrawing Struna won. so he
recei vcd $981.000 for his
tickets .
Messages seeki ng comment were left Thursday ai
a telephone li stin g under
Struna"s name . There was
no home listing for Singh.
and a person who answered
the phone at the store said
it was the wrong number.

CINCINNATI (AP) ~ The
Cincinnati Bengals re-signed
strong safety Rogers Beckett
to a three-year deal on
Thursday.
Beckett
had
become an unrestricted free
agent after the 2003 season.
Beckett, a fifth-year player
from Marshall. started nine
games lor the Bengals last
season and was founh in tackles with 87. He had two interceptions.
Beckett was with San Diego
his tirst three seasons.

1699.95

Spring sports
schedules
.needed

Staltc:&gt;n.~~y Sofa

&amp;. Mall:hing CJJalr
wfpl/lov.s

Sale 1

809.95
2 pc.
Hf

Gallia lind Meigs County
varsity sprinll sports coaches
~ml/or athletic directors are
;e.~~d~~~~ to send in your
;c
as soon as possimay fax. them to 446or
them to

"

•

Larkin.breaks out of
preseason slump
SARASOTA , Fla. (AP)
Barry Larkin broke out
of an 0-for-13 slump with
two doubles and a ·homer
Thursday, leading the
Cincinnati Reds to a 5-3
victory over the Pittsburgh
Pirates.
Larkin skipped a trip to
Lake land to play the
Tigers on Wednesday
night so . he could work
with hitting coach Chris
Chambliss. The 39-yearold shortstop is playing
what is expected to be hi s
final season, and said
recently that he didn't feel
ready at the plate.
He popped out in the
first, then doubled to right
field and hit a solo homer
to right in the fourth off
re liever Willi s Rl'lberts.
He doubled again in hi s
last at-bat.
"Today was a good
day," said Larkin, who is
hitting .273 with two ·
homers. "If I can take the
approach I had today and
apply it every day ~
that's
the
challenge
there."
Oliver Perez. who has
won the fourth spot in the
Pirates' rotation, had hi s
third straight poor outing.
The left-hander gave up
eight hits and four runs in
three innings.
Perez,
who
was
acquired in ·the trade for
Brian Giles, has given up
12 earned runs, 17 hits and
six walks in 7 1-3 innings
over hi s 1ast three starts.
A makeshift Reds lineup
sent eight batters to the
plate in the first inning for
three runs, pi ling up four
singles and a walk.
Sean Casey had three
singles, and the Reds had
II hits overall.

~

Indians'
Sta·nford
closing in on
dream job
'

BY ToM WITHERS
Associated Press

c:ontrac t
league
Thursday: or£eri ng. the
opportumty 1
o won a
setup job jn thei r
bullpen. In stead of
packing for J trip to
Japan to open the season, he was unpacking
in an un fa miliar cl ubhouse, hoping to make the !l ight to Cincinnioti.
''I'm just glad to have a uniform." he said, settling

WINTER HAVEN. Fla. ~ Ja son Stanford 's
route to the maJOr leagues inc luded a. brief stay
behind the deli counter.
On his way up through C leve land's minorleague system. the left-hander made most of the
requisite stops : Columbus. Ga .. Kinston. N.C..
and Akron. Oh io.
Stanford also made an unusual one. too.
spending an offseason working at Ryan's New
York Deli in Buffalo. N.Y.. where he made
more than his share of sandwiches.
In a few days. Stanford cou ld make the
biggest cut of his career if he 's named one of the
Indians' startin g pit chers.
"It's been an awesome experience,'' said the
27-year-old . who has had to continuall y prove
himsell· after not being drafted out of high
schoo l. "Two years ago, I was worki ng in a deli
in New York ~j ust surviving. Now here I am,
fighting for one of the spots in the starting rotati on."
Hold the mayo for a second. Stanford hasn't
won a ful l-time job with the Indians just yet.
But he is in the late-camp scramble with Jeff
D' Amico. Jake Westbrook, Chad Durbin and
Jaso n Bere for either the No. 4 or 5 spot in the
startin u staff.
Sta nl·orJ. who made eight starts for the
Indians last season after going I0-4 at Triple-A
Buffalo. has had a solid but not overly impressive spring . In three starts. he's 1-0 with a 5.25
ERA.
However. he has im pressed the Indians with
his composure and a knack for wiggling hi s way
nut or trou ble.
"He wurks hard and tries to lind a way to get
it done:· man ager Eric Wedge said.
Stanlord usually docs and it's not because he
can rely on a 95-mph fastball or a fall-off-thetable curve .
He's a pitc her's pitcher in the mold of former
Ind ians r ight -hander Charles Nagy. who
although he didn't possess the most talent. often
had the most wins.
"I fi gure out a way to ge t guys out;· he said.
" I kno w I caod light up the radar guns. but I've
gut a sneaky r,"tbal l."
Stanfo rd is full of surpri ses .
The Indi ans st umbl ed upon him in 1999 when
they wen t to scout a catcher at the University of
Kansas and became intri gued with the left-han de r popping the kid's mitt.
An injury to a Class A pitcher allowed
Stanford to skip extended spring trai ning in
Florida in 2000. And by season' s end, he was in
Dnuhle-A ~ later being named the Indians' top
minor league pitcher.
He suffered a back inJury the next year, but
recovered and fini shed 200 I in Buffalo, where
he pitched a complete-game three-hitter with 10
strikcoLots in his debu t.

Please ·see Jones. Bl

Please see Stanford, 82

Cincinnati Reds catcher Jason LaRue blocks the plate and tags out
Pittsb urgh Pirates' Chris Truby (29) during the thi rd inning of their spnng
training gamed Sunday in Sarasota, Fla. The two teams met again
Thursday with Cincinnati winning 5·3. (AP)
,

Todd Jones get chance with
Bv JoE KAY
Associated Press

SARASOTA, Fla. -Todd Jones walked through
the glass doors lugging UIJ overstuffed Tampa Bay
equipment bag, spotted t~ e receptionist and glanced
at her nameplate. .
"Hi Barbara," he said. "I'm the new guy."
One day after he was released by the Devil Rays,
the right-handed reliever had a new team and another chance.
The Cincinnati Reds signed Jones to a minor

R,~ds

Banged up Cavaliers facing tough stretch run
MtuctA
Associated Press
BY JoE

CLEVELAND
Zydrunas
llgauskas has a broken nose, Jeff
Mcinnis has an aching shoulder and
the Cavaliers have the toughest
stretch of their season coming up.
Yet coach Paul Silas left practice
Thursday upbeat about his team's
chances to reach the postseason.

"I've just got a good fee ling abou t
where we are right now and what
we're up against here," he said. "I
think, everybody understands it. "
He says that knowing hi s team has
lost three stra ight and is about to play
live games that coul d make or break
·
their playoff hopes.
The Cavaliers play at Philadelphia
on Friday. return home to face New
Jersey on Saturday and follow wi th
games at San Antonio. Dallas and

that's four road games shou Icier. which Si las said is extremeand four playotT-bound tea ollS in ly sore.
Silas let Mcinni s make the decision
seven days.
" If we ca n win the majority of to play Tuesday against Phoenix.
those. we' ll he very happy ... Si las which is now looking like a bad
choice . T his time. Silas want s
said .
They ma y have to do it without Mcinnis 100 percent before he
Mcinni s, who ru shed back from a returns.
" I assume the way it unfolded he
brui sed right shoulder and may not be
was n' t ready,"' Silas said.
avai lable until April.
Mcinnis skipped practice Thu rsday
Please see Cavaliers. 81
and instead re·c:eivecltreatment on the
Milwaukee ~

NCAA Tournament

Redick, Duke embrace the role of hated villain
BY PAUL NEWBERRY

Associated Press
ATLANTA - J.J . Redick is the
face of the Duke Blue Devils.
Confident? Go ahead and call him
cocky if you like. Hated? No {lroblem, that just goes with the terrotory.
A winner? You bet.
Redick and the Blue Devils find
themselves in familiar territory,
reaching the round of 16 in the
NCAA tournament for the seventh
year in a row. Success always spaw.ns
a certain amount of backlash- butld
'em up. tear 'em down - but Duke
doesn t mind a bit.
In fact the Blue Devils have settled
quite c~mfortably into the villain
I

role, relishing the notion that so many
fans want to see them lose .
"It has a lot to do with the amou nt
of success we've had." said Redick,
usually the prime target for opposing
fans. "We're the most dominant program in the ACC. We've won a few
national championships. There 's a
certain amount of jealousy, a certain
amount of envy. And we' re ponrayed
like choir boys. People don' t like
that, either."
Top-seeded Duke (29-5) meets No.
5 Illinois (26-6) in the semifinals of
the Atlanta Regional on Friday. No. 3
Texas· (25-7) takes on seventh seed
Xavier (25-10) in the other ga me, the
winners to play Sunday for a spot in
the Final Four.
Look for Redick to be right in the

•'

middle of things.
At Georgia Tech , he wound up on
his back in front of the home team \
bench dur ing a scullle wit h B.J .
Elder. North Carolina State 's Scooter
Sherri ll said before a game that
Redick ··acts like he' s gay," then had
to issue an apology.
"Jus t this year. there have bee n so
many incidents." Redick said
. Wednesday. "Whether it's hard fmo ls
during the ACC tournament. or trying
10 start something with me in fron t of
the other team's bench. or rude. crude
sl&lt;ltemems from the other team· s
fan s. there's a great level of hate for
Duke."
Is that really accurate. or just a conve nient moti v.ational tec hnique?
Coa~ h Mike Krzy zewski. who wi ll -

ingly di scussed the issue before the
start of the tourna ment. has now
decided it's off li mits.
Hmmm .
"That doesn' t have any bearing on
this game," he said. "I don' t know if
it's true. and I don't even want to talk
about it. What could we do. what
would we wan t to do, 10 change
someone's opinion? And why? Just
be yourselves. play your game and
run. your program . Let people form
their own opi nions.
"It does n' t bother me at all . The
on ly thing that would bother me is if
I did n't like our program ."
Duke and Illinois have plenty of
reasons to like · their programs, start-

Please iee Duke. Bl
'i

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 26, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, March

www.mydailysentinel.com

26, 2004

.Ohio State Boys Basketball Tournament

NCAA Tournament

Versailles eliminates Bellaire in double overtime

Hawks soar to Elite Eight

COLUMBUS (AP)
Ben
Shappie scored 23 points and hit a 3pointer from !he right wing with 13
seconds left in the second overtime to
push Versailles past Bellaire 68-64 in
a Division UI boys state semifinal on
Thursday.
For good measure, Shappie then
' sealed the outcome with two foul
shots with 3.6 seconds left as
Versailles (27-0) pulled off a stunning
comeback from a 14-point deficit.
The Tigers advance to meet St.
Henry in the state title game on
Saturday morning. St. Henry (21-5)
held on to beat Loudonville in the
other semi.
It will be a showdown of teams
from the same league - the Midwest
Athletic Conference. Versailles won
the title, beating St. Henry by a·point
in their only meeting.
It was the IOth double-overtime
game in state tournament history. It
also brought back memories of the
last time the teams met in a state tournament - Versailles knocking off
Bellaire 51-50 in the 1995 Division V
football championship game.
Bellaire (22-5) led by 14 points on
several occasions and was on top by
as many as 12 points in the second
half.

'

Boys basketball state touma..,ent pairings
DIVISION I
Tol. St John's (22-4) \IS. Cols. Brookha¥en (25~ ),

Friday. 6 p.m.; Canton McKinley (22-3) vs
Hamilton (23-2), Friday, 9 p.m
Championship: Saturday, 8:30p.m.
DIVISION II
Thursday's Semifinals : Canal Fulton NW 65. Day.
Chaminade·Julienne 51 ; Ottawa-Glandorf 61 ,
Dover60
Championship: Canal Fulton NW (25·1) vs.

onawa-Giandor1 (26-1). Saturday. 2 p.m.

First-team Ali-Ohioan Kyle Gehle,
who had 18 points, capped the
Tigers' furious comeback by hitting a
3-pointer with 3 seconds left to force
the second overtime.
Versailles did not have its secondleading scorer, Jpe Shardo. Shardo,
averaging 16.9 [:10ints a game, tore
the anterior cruci~te ligament in his
knee during the ~g ional title game
and will undergo1surgery in three
weeks. He watche~ from the bench.
His place in the li qeup was filled in rnore ways than \ one - by Paul
Borchers.
'
Averaging 3 J points a game,
Borchers scored 18 points and had 15
rebounds. He also continually went
head-to-head with the Big Reds' massive center, 6-foot-10, 350-pound
Aaron Agnew.

DIVISION Ill
Thursday's Semifinals: St . Henry 44 , Loudonville
41: Versailles 68. Bellaire 64 (20T)
Championship: St. Henry (21-5) vs. Versailles
(27-Q). Saturday, II a.m.
DIVISION IV
Maria Stein Marion Local (17-9) vs. Sebring
McKinley (24-1) , Friday, 11 a.m.:
South Webster

2 p.m.

11

(2~·3)

vs. Holgate (18-7). Friday.

,_

Champio)iship: Saturday, 5 p.m.

J

A~wther first-team Ali-Ohioan,
sophomore Nale Davis, scored 19
points and had 14 rebounds for
Versailles, while Agnew, a secondteam all-state choice, had 15 points
and 12 rebounds.

St. Henry 44,
Loudonville 41
Kurt Huelsman scored 17 points
and St. Henry had just enough to
make a big early lead stand up in a
44-41 win over Loudonville in a
Division Ill semifinal,
Huelsman, a 6-foot-9 sophomore,
scored four points as the Redskins
(21-5) roared to a 15-2 lead after the
opening quarter.
Loudonville (23-3), which shot

Duhon bruised his ribs in the ACC title
game. but he's played through the pain . He
shut down Seton Hall guard Andre Barrett,
and will likely play a key defensive role
from Page 81
against the Illinois backcourt.
"I love the kid," Krzyzewski said. "This is
ing with their three-guard lineups. On one a very painful injury, but he wants to pl ay. I
side the Blue Devils have Redick, Chris admire him for that."
Duhon and Daniel Ewing. For the Fighting
Illinois is coming off its best game of the
lllini, it's Deron Williams, Dee Brown and season - a 92-68 rout of Cincinnati. The
Luther Head.
Illini shot almost 64 percent from the field
That's not the only similarity. The Blue and committed just four turnovers. Williams
Devils cruised through their first two tourney matched his career high with 31 points.
games by an average of 31.5 points. Illinois Brown had 14 points and eight assists.
was equally impressive, routing Murray State
While Duke has the more impressive
and No. 4 seed Cincinnati by a total of 43 resume, Illinois has plenty of tournament
points.
experience. For the thtrd time in four years,
Actually, the lllini have been on a major roll the lllini are one of 16teams still alive. These
since mid-January. They have won 16 of 18 guys aren't the least bit intimidated by the
games - both losses were to Wisconsin Blue Devils' my stique.
since coming to the realization that two point
"It's just two teams trying to win a champiguards are better than one.
onship," Williams said.
One possession, Williams might bring the
The other Atlanta game also figures to.be a
ball up the court. The next time, it might be battle of the backcourts.
·
Brown. Even Head gets into the act, getting
Xavier is led by senior guards Lionel
· the go-ahead to lead the fastbreak if he spots Chalmers and Romain Sato, both averaging
: a chance to run.
more than 16 points a game. Texas counters
"They just kind of decide periodically with its own senior duo: top scorer Brandon
through the game who gets to bring the ball Mouton (1 3.6 points) and Royal lvey (4.2
· up," coach Bruce Weber said. ''We're always assists).
· looking to push it. That's one of our strengths.
"It's going to be a challenge, but it's a chalWe ' re not always looking for one guy to bring lenge we embrace," Mouton said. "We love to
' it up."
compete against the best of the best."
'

Duke

Cavaliers
from Page 81
\he Cavaliers don't seem to be letting
. _Mcinnis' injury or their three-game slide get
: them down .
:: Silas said they were focused during
Thursday's practice. The players did quite a
' bit or joking during a final shooting drill . .
: Even Ilgauskas seemed in a good mood
· despite a nose that was swollen two sizes too
:big.
'· "I' m going to try to play out the season with
mask and afterward get the surgery done ,"
llgauskas said. "We need everybody we can
. get. This team is banged up as it is, coming
: down the 'stretch we've got to get some wins."
: He said the mask will take some getting
· used to but will give him some confidence
: and protection underneath the basket.
If nothing else, the mask will make the 7. foot-3 Ilgauskas even more intimidating,
LeBron James said.
"He'll make a scary movie, I'll tell you,"
' James joked.
· He said the turnaround for the Cavaliers has
to start on defense and getting in front of

.a

just 30 percent from the field and
made only 4 of 28 3-point attempts,
could have tied it in the final seconds
after St. Henry repeatedly missed
free throws and hurried its shots
from the field down the stretch.
St. Henry led by the final margin
as it in bounded with 7.4 seconds
remaining, but Nate Stahl's long pass
ended up in the hands of
Loudonville's CJ Spreng. Spreng
reversed course and dribbled to just
inside the 3-point line, his runner
bounding off the backboard with 2
seconds left.
Trevor Scon scored 16 points and
Zach Young· had I I for Loudonville,
which was making its first appearance in the state tournament in 63
years. The Redbirds lost in the firs t
round of the 1941 Class B tournament, 43-32 to Xenia Soldiers and
Sailors Home. an orphanage.

Northwest (25-1). ranked 13th in
the final regular-season Associated
Press poll. advances to meet the
winner of Dover and OtttawaGlandorf winner in Saturday's
championship game .
The Indians arc making their first
state appearance as Northwest, but
the original Canal Fulton High
School played in state Class B tournaments in 1936. '37 and '38
winning the title the last year by
beating Enon in the final.

Ottawa-Glandorf 61,
Dover 60

Tim Pollitz scored 23 points and
twin brother Eric scored the Titan s·
final four points as Ottawa-Glandorf
beat Dover 6 1-60.
The Titans (26-1 ), ranked third in
Division II
the tlnal regu lar-season Associated
Canal Fulton NW 65,
Press poll , wi ll meet Canal Fulton
Northwest in the championsh ip
Chaminade-Julienne 49 game
on Saturday. Northwest
Dayton
Chaminadeupended
Matt Lewi s scored 23 points and
fueled two pivotal scoring run s as Julienne 65-5 1.
Eric Polli tz added 13 poi nts. five
Canal Fulton Northwest beat Dayton
Chaminade-Julienne.
rebounds and four assis ts.

Golf

S~ott

swings like Tiger,
plays even better
1

\

PONTE YEDRA BEACH, Fla. (AP) - At
this rate, it ll(!ght not be long before people start
. saying Tiger\Woods swings like Adam Scott.
1\vo ~uys with .similar techniques turned in
vastly dtffereht performances Thursday in The
Players Championship, which ended with Scott
ih the lead and Woods in jeopardy of missing
the cut.
The 23-year-old Aussie was all smiles.
The world's No. I player wore a scowl.
Scott hit his tee shot safely on the islandgreen 17th and reached for his putter.

Woods disgustedly put 1\is hands on his hips
and went to the drop area . .
The biggest difference w'as on the scorecard.
Scott signed for a 7-under \65 that gave him a
one-shot lead, a superb rou~d in which he routinely knocked down flags' and was rarely in
trouble.
.
Woods had a 75, his fourth\ consecutive round
over par, leaving him in 108th place in the 147man field.
"I just need to get myself going," Woods
said.

Stanford

mer Kansas basketball coach Roy William s.
After playing at a junior college in Bru;ton,
Kan., Stanford worked as a video technician
for the Jayhawk s and on Williams' TV show.
Stanford often spoke with the cu rrent North
.Carolina coach, who always urged him to follow his 'dream of pitching in the majors.
"He told me," Stanford said, '" If that" s your
dreatp. then go for it. Thi s will always be
here. And now with about eight days to go in
camp. I've got a shot at making it all come

1

Associated Press

At East Rutherford. N.J .. Jamee r
Nelson, Delonte West and Saint
. Jos~ph 's put on quite an eye-popping
· performance for Btlly Packer.
With their No. I nemesis watching
from the front row and their fans
chanting hi s name in the final minute.
the Hawk s show ed they were a worthy
No. I seed. Nelson and West each
scored 24 points Thursday night, keying an 84-80 victory over Wake Forest
in the se mifinal s of the East
Rutherford Regional.
The ce lebration almost came too
early, thou gh. Trailing 76-68, Wake
Forest whittled its deficit down to 8280 with 11 .9 seconds left.
But then Nelson escaped a doubleteam trap in the corner and passed to
West, who was fouled. West made
both free throws. and the Hawk mascot began flapping in earnest.
The only thing left to do for coach
Phil Martelli was walk across the
court and shake hands with Packer.
The CBS analyst and Wake Forest
al um, having said the Hawks did not
deserve a top seed, smi led broadly.
Behind them , Hawk s rooters ra zzed
Packer. He turned to them and said ,
"You're exactl y where you should be."
Martelli claimed all· along that the
Hawks (30- 1) sho uld be regarded as
highl y as sc hools such as Connecticut
and Oklahoma State .
"We certainly don't look like these
teams. but we sure do play like them."
The Hawk s) advanced to play second-seeded Ok lahoma State, which
banged it s way past Pittsburgh 63-5 1,
on Satu rday for a trip to the Final
. Fo ur. Sa int Joseph' s and the Cow boys
have never met in basketball.

College Hockey

Tony Allen keyed a late 17-5 sp urt
when second-seeded Oklahoma State
solved Pitt sburgh's tenacious defense
and beat the third-seeded Panthers.
Allen lead the Cowboys (30-3) with
23 points in a game that was much
closer than the final score.
Carl Krauser had 15 points and
Jaron Brown II for the Panthers (315), who lost in the regional se mifinal
for the thi.rd straight year.

Alabama 80,
Syracuse 71
At Phoenix , Sit down Syracuse. Join
top-seeded Stanford on the sidelines.
The Tide is on some kind of roll!
Alabama, a No. 8 seed, beat the
defending national champions in the
Phoenix Regional semifi nals. five
days after stunning Stanford.
Kennedy Winston and Earnest
Shelton put Alabama (20- 12) ahead
from the ou tside in the first half. then
Chu ck Davis got rough inside in the
second and the Crimson Tide is in an
NCAA regional final for the first time
in the school's history.
Nex t up Saturday is a matchup
agai nst No. 2 seed Connecti cut, a 7353 winner ovef No . 6 seed Vanderbilt
in Thursday 's first game.
Shelton scored 22 point s and
Winston 19 for Alabama, but the difference maker was Davis, who scored
17 of his 19 in the second half as the
Tide pulled away.
The Crimson Tide sank II of 12 free
throws over the final 8: I 0 and were
19-of-23 at the line overall.
Gerry McNamara scored 20 of his
24 in the second half, but Hakim
Warrick managed just four in the last
20 minutes after a 15-point first half.

Oklahoma State 63,
Pittsburgh 51

Connecticut 73,
Vanderbilt 53

At East Rutherford , N J ., Oklahoma
State took Pittsburgh 's pushes , shoves
and banging for 33 minutes and then
delivered a knockout blow that se nt
lon gt ime coach Edd ie Sutton to hi s
sixth regional final.

At Phoenix , Connecticut hit from
outside, pounded the ball inside and
ju st plain dominated Vanderbilt most
of the night.
Now the Huskies are a win from
becoming the Final Four team they

Saint Joseph's Delonte West (15) and
teammate Pat Carroll celebrate their 8450 win over Wake Forest in their NCAA
regional game Thursday in East
Rutherford, N.J. (AP)
were expected to be.
Ben Gordon had 20 potnts , nine
rebound s and five ass ist s and UCon n
beat the
co ld-shooting
(30-6)
Commodores in the semi finals of the
Phoenix Regional.
Rashad Anderson had 15 points and
Emeka Okafor added 12 points and II
board s for the Huskies. who staved off
a 16-3 second-half spurt by Vandy that
cut the lead to 52-45 on Corey Sm ith 's
jumpe r with 12:07 to play.

)

from Page 81

Stanford then went ·a combined 20-11 over
the next two seasons before making his debut
with the Indians last July 5.
Sometimes the unassuming nativ ~; of
teams early like they did during their seven- Tuc son, Ariz., can' t believe his quick rise
game win streak.
through the ranks.
"We were having a lot of fun in the first
"It's all about being in the right pl ace at the
quarter, coming out being aggressive. running right time," he said.
and jumping," James said. "There was a lot of
Stanford certainly is this year, vaulting into
energy in the first quarter and that's what we a possible starting spot i~ part because of
have to get back to."
elbow injuries suffered by ~ellow left-handers
In blowout losses to Detroit and Phoenix, Brianofl'allet and Billy Trab~r.
Cleveland allowed both teams to take advanYou never know until you, try.
tage of them in the first half and got into too
That was the advice Stant~rd got from forbig a hole.
.
"We just have to come out and make a statement in the first quarter," llgau skas said. "We
can't let the teams make the first move and
then try to catch up with them."
Silas said he thmks the Cavaliers (3 1-39)
need to win severi or eight of their last 12
games to make the playoffs.
The Cavaliers lead Boston by just a half
game for the final playoff spot, but the Celtics
have two advantages over Cleveland in the
stretch run. They have an easier schedule and
have already won the season series against the
Cavaliers, giving them the playoff nod if both
teams tin ish with the same record. ·
Silas knows the next seven days are key to
~alltpolt~
staying in playoff contention.
"We've got to win two or three of these
games coming up in order to just be there. It's
exciting," he said.

.

true."
And if it does, and Stanford gets to pitch in
Jacobs Field this season, he knows his coworkers at Ryan's Deli will be .there .
"I still keep in touch with .those guys," he
said. "Wheneve r I make my first start in
Cleveland this season, I' m hoping they can
come down."

Springtime Sights 8 Sounds
A SPECIAL SECTION
In The
1

•
11\atlp m:rtbune
•lloint llleasant laegister
• Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

Jones
from Page 81
· into a bare locker in a corner of the clubhouse.
Jones, 35, developed into one of the majors'
· top closers in the late '90s, piling up 144 saves
: from 1997-2001. He made the All-Star team
: with Detroit in 2000 and tied with Derek Lowe
: for the AL saves lead with 42, a career high.
- He has slipped in recent years. Colorado des: ignated him for assignment last June after he
went 1-4 wtth an 8.24 ERA m 33 games. He
signed with Boston and went 2- 1 with a 5.52
ERA in 26 games.
; Overall , he is 39-42 with 184 saves and a
j 4.06 ERA in 15 seasons with Houston, Detroit,
j Minnesota, Colorado and Boston. He got to
· know current Reds general manager Dan
· O'Brien when he was an assistant GM in
. Houston.
"Of course, that was 6 miles per hour ago,"
Jones said, joking about his fastball.
. The Reds aren't concerned with how hard
: Jones throws. They're looking for a reliever
· who will throw strikes and let hitters put the
· ball in play, a point of emphasis this spnng.
By bringing in Jones, the Reds sent the message that they're not satisfied with their relievers' aim.
.
: "Obviously one of our strengths in terms of
:.our depth is our bullpen," O'Brien said. "But

•

I

observing over the course of this spring, let's
just say there's been a few members of our
bullpen that may not be quite grasping the
approach we want to employ."
The Devil Rays released Jones on
Wednesday morning, setting their roster for
their trip to Japan to open the season agairtst the
New York Yankees.
,
"I had a good spring- gave up two runs all
spring - but was just one of the old guys that
didn't fit there," Jones said. "They gave me the
opportunity to pitch, and I impressed some people. I got released at 9 o'clock in the morning
and had three offers by noon."
He was fishing when the calls came in. He
chose Cincinnati because he liked the opportunity to set up for closer Danny Graves.
The Reds started sizing him up right away
. Thursday. A few hours after he lugged his
belongings into the clubhouse, he pitched one
inning in a 5-3 win over Pittsburgh.
Jones gave up a single and struck ounhe next
three batters in a brief downpour that delayed
the game for two minutes.
" I told the manager, 'This shows I'm durable.
I can pitch through rain delays,'" he said. "It's
been a weird 24 hours."
Jones writes a weekly column for a sports
magazine and was ~reparing a piece about the
Devil Rays' upcommg trip to Japan. The sudden career change scuttled his writing plans.
"My deadline was today," Jones said.
"They're going to have to cover for me this
week."
1

I

REACH
HOMES
... .... OVER 18,000
.
IN THE TRI-COUNTY AREA!
.

Advertising Deadline:
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7, 2004
12:00Noon
Insertion Date:
FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 2004

'• Tuxes, Togs, Title Fees extro. Rebate included in so.le\price of n~ vehicle listed where upplicoble ... On approved credit .
On selected models. Not responsible for typogroph1col errors. Pnces good Murch 25th Through Murch 28th.

.

...

'"'
Call · .
.· Dave Harris or Brenda Davis
For More Information
·~)i.•

\,

.

t

•.,

'

.,

,

·;;

.

I

CHIVlOLU

•

WI\LIITHIU"

I

'

I'I) Nl i.H

,,,. 1 1,

'"''"I

(~1)1

B LII &lt; I&lt;

· W~t Vir;l!la s .-1 c:l!!i fi·!r: '!rr;!!
1

~92'-2iS5
'

Monday • Saturday 9 am • 8 pm • Sunday I pm • 7 pm

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Young Badgers get
ready for Buckeyes
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) Wisconsin started and ended
the hockey season the same
way - with three losses in
four games . What happened
in between makes the
Badgers dangerous in the
NCAA tournament.
Wisconsin
(21-12-8 ),
behind .the goaltendi ng of
junior Bernd Bruckler. went
on a 16-game unbeaten
streak. Bruckler led the
WCHA with a 2.11 goalsagainst average and had six
shutouts, making life a little
bit easier for the young
Badgers. who have II freshmen.
"He helped our young
people forget their mistakes
lmd win some games,'·
Wisconsin coac h Mike
Eaves, a player on the
Badgers' · 1977 national
champions, said Thursday.
Wisconsin meets Ohio
State (26- 15-0) Friday night
in the semifi nal s of the
NCAA East Regional, and
the Badgers are feeling the
jitters already.
"''ve seen the whole spectrum this week," Eaves said.
"At times, the guys have
been thinking a little too
·much ahead. being here ,
which takes them away
from wha.t they should be
doing on the ice. At
moments, they were very
good, very focused . That's
what you kind of expect
from a young team."
Forward Robbie Earl.
who leads the freshmen with
14 goals and 12 assists, said
the Badgers really don 't
know what to expect in the
tournament.
"The coaches are just trying to calm us down and ~et
us on the right track. but Jitters are great. That's 11,1hy
you play this game, to have
· those jitters and have that

opportunity to be succe" ful,'' he said .
Ohio State is fresh from·
its first CCHA tournament
title since llln. while
Wisconsin has had to &gt;it
around for twu week&gt; after
being upset in the first mutu.l
of the WCHA tournament ·
by Alasb-Anchmage.
The Badgers have enjoyed
the rest - to a point.
.. It benellt&gt; us from the
fact that we didn ' t have to ·
play in a game l&lt;ht weekend
and get ourseh·es beat up
like the other .teams did:·
defenseman Dan Boeser ·
said ... It gave us a chance ,to
rest up and get hea lthy. The
negative part of that is
we ,ve been oul of a

~a me

·

situation for two week ; ..
Ohio State posted overtime wins over Notre Dame
and Miami of Ohio in the
CCHA tournament. then
beat Michigan 4-2 last week
for the league ti tle. only the
second in school historr.
"We beat three tournament teams. It\ a nedit to
our guys,'· said coach John
Markell, whose Buckeyes
lost 1-0 to Boston Colle~e in
the first rou nd of the 'East
Regional last yea r. .. 1 think
we had our priorities straight
this year compared to last·
year. We were more •.vorried
about the NCAAs than the
CCHA last year. We have a
newfound focu s. Riuht now.
we're staying on our goals ...
Senior forward Paul
Caponigri. who had rive
points in the CCHA champi onship and was named tour- ·
nament MYP. said the
NCAA tournament i' almost
like a new season.
"If we can feed oft our
confidence from last weekend, get off to a quick start.
who know s~" he said.

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, March 26, 2004

utrtbune - Sentinel - Re

i~ter

•
•

CLASSIFIED
Alli"O&gt;

FOR SALE

•
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road , Porte•, OtlKl.
[7401446·7444 1·877·830·
9162 Free Estimates, Easy
1tnanctno. 90 days same as
cash V1sa/ Master Card
Dnve- a· little save alot

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
Register
~ribune
Sentinel
Your Ad, {740) 446-2342 (740} 992-2156 {304) 675-1333
Call TOday... or Fax To 446-aoos
or Fax To /'7•'"'992-2157
-.~--~~~~~~~-

Oftfee florq-~

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRUE AM AQ
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...
\\\(JI \(I \ II '\I'

C- l Beer Carry Out permit
for sale. Chester Township,
Me~gs

County. send letters

of interest to The Da tly
Sentrnel, PO Box 729-20,
Pomeroy, Ohto 45769
Leaves to Haul
13041882-2268

110
.1

HELP WANIED

'ANEW CLINICAL
PEELS!'
Want to look younger AND
earn Money? Let's talk the
NEW AVON call
Manlyn 13041682-2645.
Joyce 13041675-6919,
April 13041682-3630

away

To Whom •I may concern. It
you are buytng 75 acres, on
Jerry's Run Road from a
Realtty here tn lawn I have
the 2004 Surveyors report
on lhts property Wtll sale
th•s reporl to you and you
save Larry Greenlee (304)
675-6131

2 white Labs, 3 yrs. old, lree
to large farm. 1 Lab puppy
miX. 17401388·1895.
4 puppies, 2 male &amp; 2
female 12 weeks old Slack
Lab /Blue Ttc Hound Mother
Blue Tic Hound (740)696·
1017

AS SEEN ONTV
INSTRUCTION
LEARN TO DRIVE
TRACTOR· TRAILER
NEW PROGRAM
No Experience Needed
Placement Dept
Fmenctng Available
CDUTra1mng
ALLIANCE
Tractor-Trailer
Tratnlng Centers
Wythevtlle, VA
Cell Toll Free
1-800·334·1203

ho

l

Absolute Top Dollar. uS
Sliver,
Gold Coins,
Proofsers, Diamonds, Gold
Rings,
u S. Currency,·
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151
Second Avenue. Gallipolis,
740-448·2842

Insurance Soclely offers an
excellent lncome.lfyou have
seleo abllly, a good educa·
lion and a pleaalng personalliy, contact ua by sending
personal resume to 604 4th
St. E South Polnl, OH, or
call 17401377-2193. We are
an
equal
opportunity
emplOyer.

1\11'! 11\ \ 11 ' 1
-., I

I ~\

II I -.,

110
1•

HFl.J&gt; WANrnD

u ••HIRINO

2004ru••
PO.STAL JOBSI UP TO
$1 ,047.71 WEEKLY, FREE
C,ol.Lt FOR INl"ERVIEW
ANO
REGISTRATION
INFORMATION SIGN ON
BONUS
1ST
100
CAlLERS
SELECT
AF{EAS. 1-1100·892·!144.
EX.T. V3, 7 OAYS

f _

1"!-11) f'f2.~1 D!:&gt;NftAL.. ~(.{;:
l-\fl6 ~ {&lt;D/Nb. ON OU~

6"'1tR£ ~/V~S.

0
0
D

Experienced
Accounting
person In accounts payable,
receivable, payroll, taxes,
quarter reports &amp; G.L. Send
resume to CLA 548, c/o
Gallipolis Tribune, Gallipolis
OH 45831 .

Heavy equipment mechan·
lc/welder needed, experience
necessary, tools
required. coil (740~247-2211

EOE

~-·~

~

ng
peop e oca
ho want to earn mane
hile toslng weight, show
ng
others
how
Informational
DVD/C
vallabla upon request740
..:,1!.;·,w19!!61:!4.. '-----1
Staff o'8vetopment Nurse,
LPN' Overbrook Rehab
Center is looking for a self·
motivated team player with a
high energy level to join our
management team. Must
enjoy working with people
training and developing staff
responding
quickly
to
staHlng naeda, monitoring
employee
performance,
lnservlclng and counseling
employee. Must possess:
Excellent communication
and Interpersonal sktlls.
Pr•sentatlon skills and the
ability to work under pres·
sura. Demonstrated plan·
nlng and organizational
skills Cntlcal thinking and
problem solving sk111s The
ability to follow through on
given taoks Train the Trainer
and Human Re&amp;Ource/Staff
06\/elopment experience
preferred but not raq.ulred.
Please send resume with
cover letter to Overbrook
Aehab Center, c/o Michelle

Must have good driving
record with own truck.
Exparlance In cable or eetel·
Uta 8 plus If you have a
MORE, EARN MOAE.Work

woo

School
Fundralslng

D~rector

needed for tocal
area to work with schools,
PTA's, and youth groups.
Avg. 46K 813-788·6157.

HELP WANTED

Gilmore, RN, DON, 333
Page St. , Middleport. Oh&lt;&gt;
45760 EOE
.-...
- ...
- -,
- - -T_D_R
_ IVER
_ _ _
'""" 5 0 8
Local petroleum company Is
seeking an experienced
drlvar lor nights and week·
and driving. Two-years min.
experience driving an 18·
wheeler Ia required. Class A
COL w!HazMe.t cert a must
lnteresled persons should
apply In person at United
Energy, Inc. 683 State Route
7 N. In Gallipolis M-F, Sam4pm. Employee benefits
Include
paid
vacatlpn .
health, dental, llle insurance,
401K plan Salary will be
-"
1
b
__
es_~_o_n_e..:xpe~re
:..nc...:..:_e·_ _
Veterinary Asslatent· need·
ad. Experience preferred,
but will train PTIFT, some
weekends
required.
Mln1mum
wage. 5 end
t F
h ~
resume o r~mc
.own
Veterinary Clinic, 360 SA
160 Gallipolis, or tax 740·
446·4101

on
SAVINGS

Shop
Classlfleds!

~
2004 by NEA, Inc.

1110

WANTED

To Do

WANTED: Direct care ass•sWtll Pressure Wash house's,
tants needed to work with
mobtle homes, metal bu1ld·
adults w1th mental retardslngs , and gutters can
t1on m a pleasant, homelike
(740)446·0151 ask for Ron
enwonment m Bidwell
or leave message
II 40 hrs/wk 1·9 Sun; 3·30·
·11pm Mon-Thurs
11\\,CI\1
21 26 hrs/wk· J.g Thurs, 2. ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
pm
Frt
;
oampm
Sat
1!11
11
1
7
10
No experience necessary.
B~
we offer paid training alongL
~~~OI'I'O~;;ImJNfiY:~;~
with an excellent benefits
package. No uniforms or
w
w
certi fication required. High PHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
School 01ploma/GEO, valid NG CO recommends tha
driver's hcense and three ou do business with peo
years good dr1v1ng exper1• 1e you know, an d NOT t
1 d
s 1
d
lh
h th•
ence
requ re
a ary en money
roug
••c
$7 00/hr Send resume to: ~all until you have 1nvestl
Buckeye
Community bated the offerinc.
services P.O Box 604
Jackson '
OH
45640 ·
·
D dl ' 1
11
ea ~ne or app cants:
4/2/04 . Equa1 0 ppor1un It y
Employer.
TURNED DDWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
Srnoou;
No Fee Unless We Wtnl
INsrRucnON
1·688·582·3345
Ill \I I "'I \ t I
Galtlpollo CarHr Coll191
(Careers Close To Home)
HOMIS
Call Todayl740·446-4367,
FOR SALE
1·800-214~0452
"---itiiiiiliiiiii;;.,-,.1
www.galllpollacaraereollege com
Accredited Memoer Accred•llnlil 213 bedroom, 2 bath on 5
~~~!;. ~~;randenl Col!eg11 acres 1n Rio Grande school
"'i,.:.:~~::O..--..., district. Coli 17401446·654 t .

P

r ~~AL
r16

"i1fO

MISCFI JANEOUS

·

3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car
garage. Minutes from town.
City schools &amp; water price
neg 1304)926·6661.

L.--~~~--,J

All real estate advertising
In this newspaper Ia
aubject to the Federal
Fair Houalng Act of 1968
which makes It Illegal to
advertise "any
preference, limitation or
discrimination baaed on
race, color, religion, aex
familial status ot national
origin, or any Intention to
make any auch
preference, limitation or
discrimination."
This newspaper will not
knowlnglv accept
advertl1emenl1 for real
estate which lain
\/lolatlon or the lew. Our
rudera are hereby
lnformad that all
dwetllnge advenleed In
this newepaper ere
available on an equal
opportui..lry baaee.
House tor sale on 2 1/2
acres of land, lull basement,
3 bedrooms. dining room,
family room wlftreplace. II\/·
in9 room, 2 full baths, utility
room, 2 car garage, heat
pump, 20)(20 out bu1ldtng,
30 toot pool with new deck,
(7401992· 1641
Letart Falls , OH, 3 bedroom
house, 1 bath , detached
garag e, new roof, s•dmg,
windows, carpet, &amp; ktlchen,
$65 000 00 17401247·2000
New Home- 3 bedroom , 2
bath, den . On corner lot.
Meadow H1lls, Osher Ad Pt.
Pleasant, WV. (7401446·
9340

r

APAnThtErm

~

.
HJR
. .RDIT
....

3 rooms and bath , upstairs,
'"---FOiiiiiR;;,;,RENriiiiO.-,..t newly decorated Aef/dep
•
requ1red No pets, (740)446·
2 bedroom house , 127 1519
K1neon Ave Gall•polts, Oh10
Phone 740-441·11 84
4 room apt. Kitchen, llvmgro om, 2-bedroom, bath
3 bedroom house , 1641 $400fmonth &amp; deposit No
L1ncoln Hetghts. Pomeroy, pets
17401367-7015
bath an half, reck room, (740)367·7746 before 8pm
deposit reqwed, no pets,
661 3rd Ave, Gallrpolls,, 2
17401667·3966
bedroom , unfurnished out·
3 bedroom house. lull base· s1de storage $300 + 1
ment, designed for handi· month deposit + utilities
capped, depostt &amp; refer· 17401245·9595
ences requ1red, The Oa1ly
Sentmel, PO Bo11 729·38, Apartment for rent $500 No
Pomeroy Oh 45769
Pets Available May 12th

~(2~~~vbcom$129.5g0o~~

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
On\/e from $344 to $442
Walk to shop &amp; mov1es Call
740·446-2568
Equal
:H-ou
_s_in..:g_O..:p_po_r_tu_n_i'Y:___
Con\4enlent location. Nice 1
bedroom. References and
deposit requ ired. No pets
17401446·0139
CONVENIENTLY LOCAlED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments,
andlor small houses FOR
RENT. Cell 17401441·1111
tor application &amp; Information

2707
809 2nd Ave. Gallipolis. LA ,
OR , 4 BR, 2 baths, fireplace ,
ref , stove, dishwasher
References, deposit, $650
plus utilities. (740)256· 935o.

Furnished apt 1 br , 2nd
A\/e Upstatrs. all utlhttes pd. ,
No
pets
Gallipolis,
(740)446-9523

: .o ooaroorr
~~~ck, 1.5 baths, carport,
r'o pets, No smoking.
~650, deposit, references.
740)446·9209.

tM~~~

1989 Norris Landmark
Double·wlde, 60X27 4 bed·
rooms, 2 full baths, living
room, den, kitchen, d1ning
room. laundry. $35.000.00 2 bedroom, 2 bath, CA .
1997 14x70 near Ewlngton
(7401 992·5295
$350 + deposit + references
1996
14)(70
Clayton 17401388·8371
w/ 12x24 add on , many
2 Br Mobile Home tn Spring
extra's, rented lot $21 ,500 Valley area. $300 a month +
13041675-8714
$250 deposn (3041675·2900
2003 Clayton Angle Brook or (740144 1·6954

Gracious livtng . 1 ar.~d 2 bed·
room apartments at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments In Middleport
From $295·$444. Call 740·
992-5064. Equal Housing
Opportunities.

Pleasant Valley Apartment
Are now taking Applications
for 2BA, 3BA &amp; 4BR ,
AppliCations are taken
Monday thru Friday. from
9·00 A.M ·4 P.M Office Is
Located at 1151 Evergreen
Drive Point Pleasant, WV
Phone No Is (304 1675·5806
E.H .O

Taking applications for a 1
bedroom apt. quiet neigh16x80, 3 bedroom , 2 bath, Beautiful river view, Ideal for borhood , ref/dep. no pets.
vinyl siding. like brand new, one or two people No pets (7401446·1370
only lived In 6 months. references (740)441-D181. Tara
Townhouse
(7401367-7060.
Mobile Home for rent 3br. Apartments, Very Spacious,
91 House Trailer, 14x70 on 1 wiwasher &amp; dryer (3041578· 2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors, CA. 1
t/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted,
acre plus. Central air, oul· 9991
Adult
Pool &amp; Boby Pool,
building, deck, $27.000. Gall
Nice 2 and 3 bedroom Patio, Start $385/Mo. No
(7401256·6663.
mobile homes tor rent Pets, Leese Plus Security
New 14 wide, Only $849.00 Includes water, sewer &amp; Deposit Required , Days.
down and only $164.88 per rrash, no pets, deposit &amp; 740-446~3481 , Evenings
month, Call Karena, 740· $300 par month , (7401992· 740·367·0502.
2167
385·7671.
iDr-·AI1~-~-~---, Twin Rivers Tower Is acoept·
~ulVolu.,
lng applications for waiting
Nice used 3 bedroom, total
FOR
RENT
list lor Hud·subslzed, 1· br,
electric will help with
apartment, call 675-6679
Delivery. Only $13,995.00,
EHO
1
and
2
bedroom
apart·
Call Harold, 740·385·9948.
menta, furnished and unturSPACE
VIctorlan 1736 sq. ft 3 bed· 1nlshed , security deposit
FORRDIT
room, 2 bath. Stainless steel required, no pets 74Q-992-

='--------

4bedroom , Ranch home , AcqUISitions, 91 Mill St.,
2bath, 2500 sq It w!BOO sq Middleport. OH. Shown by
ft . patio room 1n New Haven
$125,000 s1ts on 3 lots
(3041882-2401

809 2nd Ave , GallipoliS. OR ,
Tree trimming &amp; removal,
LA, 4 BA, 2 bath , fireplace,
expenenced , free estimates,
appliances 17401256·9350
insured, 17401698·0080
House on 2 acres. 2100
Wanted to do L•ght hou se· Sq. Ft. Trl-level . 4 bedrooms,
cleamng Weekly or mon thly. 3
baths.
access
Call 740·245-1206 For relerences call 740·245·5823
after/4·30pm
17401843-51 59

fenced yard, exc famtly
locat1on $675 00 a month
dep &amp; ref reQu~red Gall
(3041273-111 2
3 br 120 Howard St New
Haven wv $3SO month +
depoSit Rental applicatiOn &amp;
ref requued ; -yr mtn lease
(304)415-0585
3 yr old, 3 br 2 112 bath ,
excellent condlllon, &amp;II alectnc, 2 112 car garage, 10
minutes from Holzer Porter
area . $750 month, $750
depostl,
references
required . Call 74Q-446·4514
or 740·446-3248 a~er 5pm.
7 room house (304)675-

House tor rent: 5 miles from New 1 bedroom apt. PhOne
Galltpolis. 3 bedroom, 1 740·446·3736.
acre, $400. (7401245·5378.

rAN:~

Rootmg , srdmg , porches. No
Job to small, Free estimates,
20+ yrs exp., Reasonable,
13041773·5028, 304·882-

r...

;:::::FD:R;S:A:L:E::~ ~;:::~::::::~t.,.
10
HOUSES

3 br .. 1-1/2 bath, front
room/dinlngroom combo,
Affordable Services, Hauling
new appliances. famllyraom,
gravel, dirt, ect , Painting, covered deck, CIA-heat
Tree Trlmmmg, Driveway $90.000. (7401446·8508
Repair, Gutters, Chimney,
Plumbing Jack Of All Trades. 3br 2ba, House in New
30yrs. elCpertence (304)882- Haven totally remodeled
2196 (3041377-8266
$85,000 (3041882·3131
appllances. 8ft. llat ceHings.
Hardllap with saddle roof. 6'
Lawn care, light landscap· 4 bedroom 3 bath, Buckeye on 12n roof pitch _ porch.
1ng and other odd jobs Will Hills Ad . In ground pool. t Cole's Mobtle Homee
·
15266
also do Interior and exterior•~·:..cr.:.e..:l_740..:.:..17..:0.:.9_
· 1-16:..6:..___ US 50 E Athens, Ohio
k R
•
carpentry war . easonable
17401592·1972. "Where you
rates. Call Ryan Young 740· 4 br, 2 bath, central air, with get your money's worthn
dream kitchen, 1 acre of
645·2822 leave message.
- - - - - - - -ground, must sell $70,000
Need your car cle aned Call 13041675-3641
· _....:..._ _ __ _ _-'
1
•
Alan at 675-1103 or 593- 4bd , 2·story brick, full base2053 Leave message 1f no ment. 2·car unattached Commercial building lor
answer
Will hand/wash, garage. Price reduced. 4th sale, asking $39,000. Greal
wax, shampoo mterlors or St New Haven. (740)446· opportunity to start a busi·
complete details
4274
ness
or
to
lease .

209S

Secrelary tor busy office.
Pleaee send resume and latter at introduction to: P.O.
Bo• 359, Gallipolis, OH
45631
Wanted: Someone to clean
hOuse. Send resumes or let·
ter of lntera&amp;t to CLA 555,
c/o
Gallipolis Tribune,
Gallipolis. OH 45631

,JII

l1.W_ _ _ _ _ _ _
HELP WANTED

Rl \I \I"

HOMES

niWIP811ell

3 br Ranch w/garage, lg. Call (740,441·, 124

Ill

Center In Mason ~OE M/F
Lady to sit with elderly lady
in her home 8.0Q AM to 4.
PM. Hours maybe adjusted.
(740)992·5588 Ask for Jerri
or Paula.
--------Looking for
part-time
babysitter lor 2Jklds, In
Hartford, Mason &amp; New
Haven
area
Only
5
days/month Pay excellent,
Aeter'ences
Required
(304)882·3455
McClure's
Restaurant•
Gallipolis location only, full
time-prefer days. • Apply
between 10·11am, Wed .
and Sat

I

•

' '0'
1110

l!i4

=

I "f!-lJfll[o(. ~u 'r&lt;.E- 1&lt;141-ll.

petitive benetlt package
Apply In person al SHOE
SHOW Walmart shopping

ethic, you're a good candldate. 30-3!5K per year. Full
•
1
11
ume bene Its are ava able.
PIease caII Dl gItI I Dl lh
'" 1 t
between 9am·~m
o se up
Domino's Now Hiring all
an Interview. 1·877·692·
Cash paid lor- gold &amp; sliver locations great poy, fl ..lble 6324 Option 6.
hours
Pt. ~leasant ,
col~e &amp; coin collecttons, free
Galllpolla,
Pomeroy
&amp;
estimates, Glen Bissell,
Eleanor
(7~1992 ·7599

www.comics.com

Used Furniture Store, 130
Bulavllle Prke, Mattresses,
cou ches,
dressers,
bunkbed s. Reclin ers, what·
nots Grave Monuments
(740)446-4782, Gall• poll s,
OH Hrs. 10·4 (M -S) Sunday
by appotntment.
~;:;:;,;;;_;;;;,;;;;;;;..._ _.,

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(. ~
""
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for Iorge

10

FULL·TIME MAl TECH
POS ITION
Requirements CompletiOn
of radiOlOgical technology
training from an AMA
approved school. Current
certification with the ARAT
tn Radtology and MAl prelerred At least one year of
experience as an MAl tech·
n1c1an preferred. Abil rty to
operate MAl equ1pmenl and
set protocols Work tn other
area of the department as
needed Hours for this position are 1·00 pm-9 pm

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repalr-675-7388 For sale,
re-cond ttloned automatiC
washers &amp; dryers. retrlgera·
tors, gas and eleclrtc
ranges, arr conditioners. and
wnnger washers. W1ll do
repa1rs on major brands 1n
shop or at your home

POL.ICIES: Ohio Valley Publllhlng reserveathe right to edit, rej&amp;Ct, or cancel any ad at any time. Erron mu1t be reported on the flr11 dly
Trlbune-Sentinei·Reglater will be reaponaiMe for no more than the colt of the apace occupied by the errOf end only the flr1t lnMrtlon. We
not
any loee or ellpenae that result• from lhe publlcetlon or omiaelon ol •n advertlaement Correction will be made&gt; In the first svellable edition. • Box
are always confidential. • Current rate Cllfd applies. • All real estate ldvertlsementa ere subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act or 1968. • Thla
accepts only help wanted
I
We will not
eccept any ad\lertl•lng in violation of the law.

lwrtght@llc.net

r

ro BUY

Sunday Display: 1:00 p . m.
Thursday for Sunday•

HELPWANlED

-

~

Publication

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

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

r

r

Buslnesa Days Prior To

In Next Day's Paper

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Detcrlptlon • Include A Price • Avdld Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addren When Needed
• Adl Should Run 7 Day•

r

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

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2

Monday-Friday for Insertion

• All ads must be prepaid"

Now hiring Automoti\/e
on your life to be In a Technician at Norrie Northup
Ul!ITAND
Christian Rock Band call Dodge, 252 Upper Aivef Ad.
FOUND
17401441·1236 aak for Gallipolis. Ohio. 800·•48·
Joseph.
0842.
Lost male mixed breed, 25
lbs black/brown wlth white Clau A CDL Drlnra
Paramedics
&amp;
EMT's
on chest, feet. 17401742· Wanted
needed Apply at 1354
2227 or 740 593·7438
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis. ,
•Min. ot 2 years l)(p.
•Medical ina., 401 K
POSTAL JOBS
•Operation area 400 mite
$15.44·$21 .40/hr, now hlr·
radius of Jackson, OH
lng. For application and free
·~gn on Bonue
government job Info, call
Amerlcen Aasoc of Labor,
•34 cent par mile
1-(913)599:8220, 24 hrs
•95% No touch
a"m'-'pC:...:s:.:•c:rv'-----1280
Coro
Mill
Ad
Saturday·9·2. Clothing lor
POSTAL JOB!r
everyone, (All-sizes), PS-2
$15.44·$21 40/hr,
Now
games , toys, 4 Chevy Dental office part-lime
Hiring. For application &amp; fraa
receptionietJII8iatant need·
wheels.
government job Into, call
- - - , . - - - - - , . - - - ed. Aprox. 18 hour&amp; per
Amsrlcan
A11oc. of Labor 1·
Sat. March 27, Sun. March week. Send rMume to CL.A
G13·599-8220,
24hra.
28. 1 mile out Bulavllla Pike. 558 C/0 Galllpollt Tribune, emp/serv.
PO Box 469 Gallipolis OH ::;;:::.::::..:;.______
YARD SAL£.
45831 .
Treatment
Reaidential
Pr.I'I.&amp;SANT
Facility
youth
worker.
Pay
DIRECT YOUR CAREER
baaed on experience. Call
Yard Sale 2221 Jefferson
(740)379·9083 to apply.
Ave. furniture, baby Items, Here's your opportun~ to
SATELLITE TECHNICIANS
antiques. &amp; household Items direct your own career
NEEDEDI
Thur Frl Sat
Woodmen of the World Life

i!i-;,;,;.00:~
WANIID

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

Only quallfted applrcants
need apply to:
Holzer Clinic
· Human Relations
Department
90 Jackson Pike
Galllpohs, Ohio 4563 t •t 562
fax 740-446·5532. or call
Attn PI Pleasant
740-446·5169
Postal posit1ons. clerks/cam·
Equal
Opportun.ly
Employer
ere/sorters
No
exp.
req uired. Benefits For exam, Keyholder posi1ton avatlable
salary, and testing Informs· wtlh area show store exctt·
hon ce ll 16301393·3032 ext. ing career opportunity rataU
782 8am·8pm 7 days
experience preferred, com-

AVONI All Areasl To Buy or
Beautllul Angloria cat, 6 Sell. Shirley Spears, 304months old To good home 675·1429.
only. 740·992·0441
BULK PLANT DRIVER
Giveaway to good home Local petroleum company Is
Large black mixed breed seeking an Sll.perlenced
dog. 1 yr old, \/ery lrtendly, dnver for Its bulk plant oper·
needs a home with lots of ations Mon-Frl. Claaa B COL.
room to run Call 740-446- w/HazMat cart. required.
2398 after 6pm.
Interested persons should
apply Jn person at United
Giveaway: General Electnc Energy, Inc. 683 State Route
under the counter Stove,
7 N In Gallipolis M-F, earn·
works &amp; tn good condition 4pm Employee benefits
13041675·n18
Include
paid \/8Catlon,
health,
dental,
Ule lnsurRecliner &amp; fabric scrap for
ances, 401K plan Salary will
Quilts 17401245·5064
be basad on experience.
Xerox copier-does not work- Christian heaw metal quar.,
could be used for parts. Na tat needs male
vocalls1. Our
calls, please stop by the age group rangee tmm t8Tribune office it interested. 28 years. If you feel a calling

Oeaa'tir~

Se rta
Perfect
POSi tiOn
Adjustable Sleep System
twtn bed w1t h massager,
sheets &amp; mattress covers,
(7401742·1347

16xBO silas a\/Stlable $115
per month Includes water,
sewer &amp; trash. 174019922167
Lots for Sale. Meadow Hills·
3 miles lrom Point Pleasant
on Oshel Ad. 304·675·3000·
740-446·9340

r

22 18.

..

r

: - - - - - - - - : - : - 2 store fronts In Historical

1 bedroom apt. stove/ refrlg- downtown Pom8roy, Oh. fac·
erator &amp; utilities furnished lng the river, lor rent,
Call 17~01245-5859.
1 Bedroom, near Holzer,
C/A, WID hookup, quiet
location. $379 plus ut1lltles
D8posit &amp; lease required
(740)446·2957
1 BR Bachelor Apartment, Almond Magic Chef frost
Private &amp; Quiet $350 month free Refrigerator, $100,
Kenmore washer, $65,
(3041675· 1550
Kenmore
washer/dryer,
133 2nd Ave. 1 bedroom. $135 , both are white Call
kitchen, living room, air con - lifter 6pm (740~448·9066
dtfiOntng, gas heat $350
month. (7401448-4859
Good Used Appliances,
Reconditioned
and
2
bedroom
new
Guaranteed .
Washers,
stove/refrigerator.
Rent Dryers,
Ranges,
and
$400 .00
and
$400.00
Refrigerators, Some start at
deposit
No Pets. Off
$95. Skaggs Appliances. 76
Kingsbury and 33. Ask for
Vine St , (7401448-7398
Marge 17401992·4119.
2 bedroom apt . Gallipolis Kenmore Avocado 1·Double
0\/en, 1-Drop-ln range w/4
Vine St. 17401367·7886.
burner grill and Qrtddle 1·
2 bedroom apt St At. 160 Range Hood eiC con. call
past Holzer. $475 mo 1304 IS75·6373 If no answer
(7401441·0194.
leave message $300

liliiiiilaal

Help Wanted

One large Cast Iron Kettle
wrth stand Antique Printer
Tray. Ant1que
Franklin
Sewlng Machine with cabi·
net 0 11 Lamp collection
Table wrth 6 cha •rs Oak
lronmg Board. Oak Wash
Stand. 17401367 ·0002 for
appotntment.

r

~~ISE
i T.lLK'-'OJ't.l-.v

I

JET
New Holland Round baler
AERATION MOTORS
Spectal
Mason County
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Restdems recetve the foiStock Call Ron Evans, 1· lowrng diSCOunts 4x5 baler
800.537-9528
$1,500, 4x4 baler $1 ,000
Kee fer's Ser\/ice Center
-::::-:--:-....,---..:....- (304)895·3874
NEW AND USED ~TEEL , - , - - - - - - , - Steel Beams P•pe Rebar Used hog panels, S10
For
Concrete,
Angle, 1740)245·5464

i

Channel , Flat Bar, Steel "!'l:;--~:----.,
Gratmg
For
Drams,
Driveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
WANIED
Scrap Metals Open Monday, ~---ro-,;;B;oUY;,;,_.,J
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Bam-4 30pm Closed Hay waoons good. lair or
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; poor wtlh or wtthout beds
74 698-7244
Sunday (7401446-7300

2001 Cub Cadet lawn tractor. modal2 166, 16 hp. 01/P
Kohler angme, 4 2~ deck,
Hydrostatic transmi SSIOn,
shaft dn\16n, cast iron axle,
low hours, good cond1t1on, Reese 5th-wheel hitch , like
LtvtNJOCK
$1 .900, call 17401992·4001
new 2-glass front and top
show cases, llghter:l excel · ·
3 Prom dresses for sale lent condllton (740)992 · 2 re g•stered ANGUS Bulls, 2
years old. Good blood hnes
Srzes 2·4 Call after 5pm 3426
17401256·9004.
'
_1740-14_4_6_
·4_1_34_ __ _
BiiiUJLDilioiiiiNiiliiG-_.J
Full case
20 box es.
Sl!PPIJES
Western Super X, paper
shot gu n shells, 7 1/2 shot Block, bnck, sewer p•pes.
28 gauge, case never op en, wmdows lintel s, etc Cla ude
very colortul-$650 Also old Wmters , At o Grande, OH
Remington prctu re, 18- ~Ci\al!-t7:..;4;::0:;:
·2;;:4.::,5·~5~12~1---,
1/2x26, hu nter &amp; huge gnzPETs
zly bear lramed. very color·
S
lui $95 00 17401533·3870
.__..,;H~lR~AL:.;E~_.I

r_. .

i

Honda XA-80 2003 01 rt b1ke AKC Lab pups, 7 weeks, out
"--------~ $1,400.00 Weider weig ht of huntmg stock. Parents on
bench 210 LBS Olympic prem1ses Wormed and 1st Regtstered ANGUS and
Buy or se ll
Riven ne
we1ghls $200 QQ (7401992· shots Yell ows &amp; blacks. Crossbred bulls Top bloodAn tiques. 1124 East Mam
2326
17 40)388·951 5
ltne s, Slate Run Farm.
on SA 124 E PomerOy, 740·
992-2526 Russ Moore,
Jackson
17401286-5395
New 52" wtd e screen TV lor German short hatr Potnter
look
up
own er
pups AKC Aegtslered,' 18
sale Call 17401446-6541 .
www.stateru nfarm com
weeks old $200. (740)441·
6826.
fl.w &amp;
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
GRAIN
Jack Russell Terne rs young
adults 3 fem~les 1 male
$200 00 each $600 00 all 4X5 round bal es covered,
good grass hay $12.50
1740)985-4378
Sr:tuare
bales
mostly
grass
$2 50
Lab pupp1es for sale orcha rd
II you are interested in a career Champton bloodlme. proven 17401992·2623.
huntmg stock Re ady now•
M1xed hay barn kept 8001b
opportunity with a national health $250 each 17401643-2268
bales $12 00 each 304·576care
provider
comm11ted
to
I \R\1 St Pl 'l II"
3t35

t

Help Wanted

·RN

l5W

Are you looktng for a challenge ? W ou ld you
l ik e l o use your skill s to m ake a differe nce '!
If so, conSi der wh at Arbo rs At G allipoli s
Nu rs mg and RehabilitatiOn Center has to
o f fer :

providing

quality

care

for

the

elderly, we may have a position for
• New Compet1L1ve Wages

you.

• Ex ce ll ent B enefit s

To

Licensed

• Career Growth Opportunities

qualify
Social

OH

you

must

Worker

be

a

with

a

• Job Sati sfactiOn

current

• Profess10nal Workin g Enviro nment

in long -term care . Self-motivation
and

To quality you mu st be a Reg istered Nurse

licen se and experience

expert

communication

skills

are essential. To take advantage of

wnh a current OH license.

• this

Your o pportuntty to JOin a leadmg provtder
of qu ality care with quality staff m em ber s is

exciting

forward

opportunity,

resume,

please

Including salary

history, in conlidence to :

Stephanie Cleland, NHA
Arbors At Gallipolis
170 Pinecrest Dr.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

now! F or mo re tnform ation, please c ontact:
Judy Barcus

Director of Nursing Senrices
Arbors AI Gallipolis
740·446· 7112

•VI•

RANOY R. MILLS AKA
NOTICE OF
SALE
RANDY MILLS, ET AL.
DEFENDANTS.
By virtue ot an
Order ol Sale Issued
out of the Common
Pleas Court ol Meigs
County, Ohio, In the
case
ol
Home
National
Bank,
Plalntlll, vs. Randy R.
Milia aka Randy Mills,
et al.,
Defendants, upon a
Judgment
therein
rendered, being Case
No. 03 ·CV· 123 In
said Court, the
Sheriff
ol
Meigs
Counly, Ohio, will
offer tor sala at lhe
front door ol the
Courthouse
In
Pomeroy,
Meigs
County, Ohio, on the
30tH day ol April,
2004, at 10:30 a.m.,
lhe following Ianda
and
tenements, located at
2894 SR 124, Racine,
OH 45771. A complete
legal description ot
the real
aetate Ia as follows:
PARCEL NO. 1:
The
following
deacrlbed real estate
situated In the VIllage
ol Syracuse, County
ol Meigs and State ot
Ohio, and the same
being In 100 Acre
Lots No. 291 and 292
ol
the
Ohio
Company's Purchase,
bounded
and
described as follows:
Beginning al the
Soulheeat corner at a
lot now or formerly
owned by John J.

Hogan; thence In a
Northeasterly dirac·
lion following the
meanderlngs ol the
Pomeroy and Racine
Road
to
the
Southwest comer ol a
lot now or formerly
owned
by
Bert
Waaoe; thence North
21 deg. West and lol·

lowing the West line
of IM Bert Weese lol
a distance ol 240 feet
lo a stake; thence
South 69 deg. Wast
249 teet lo a stake;
thence South 30·1/2
deg. East 90 feet to
the NortM&amp;St corner
olthe John J. Hogan
lot; thence South 301/2 deg. East along
the East nne ot the
John J. Hogan lot a
distance of 150 leetto
the Southeast corner
ol the John J. Hogan
lot, the place ol
beginning , containing

1.24 acres, more or
less, there baing
881100 ol an acre In
100 Acre Lot No. 291
and about 36/100 ol
an acre In 100 Acre
Lol
No.
292.
Raearvlng unto the

former

Grantor,

Clifford H. Williams,
Truslae, his heirs,
succeaaora
and
a11lgna, a rlght·olway 25 teet wide, and
known •• the praaant
roadway through said
preml- Mreln con·
veyed, and the right
otlngraaa and egre11
at alltlmea.
Furthermore,
excepting all the coal,
oil, gas and other
minerals with the
right to mlna and
remove tho same.
II Ia further under·
stood and agreed that
all pipe line or lines
running through said
property ehall remain
IM property ol C. H .
Williams, Trustee, his
heirs, successors and
assigns,
and
tho
rlght·of·way tor these
lines
are
hereby
reserved by tM said
C.
H.
Williams,
Trustee, his hairs,
successors
and
assigns, with the
rlghllo repair, replace
and
maintain the
same.
Furthermore, this
deed Is given subject
to a lease given by C.
H. Wllllama, Truatee,
lo Donald Weese lor a
sm·a utract otland all·
uated
In
the
Northeast corner ol
the herein obove
described tract ol

land.
PARCEL NO. 2:
Situated
In the
VIllage ol Syracuse,
County ol
Meigs,
State ol Ohio, In 100
Acre Lot No. 292,
Town 2, Range 12,
Ohio
Company·s
Purchase, bounded
and described as tol·
lows :
Beginning North 21
dag. West 240 teet
from the concrata
marker
In
the
Southwest corner ol a
lot now or formerly
owned by Bart Wease
and In the creek;
thence North 21 dag.
West 100 feel; thence
South 69 dag. West
625 leal to an Oak
Tree on a rock; lhence
SoutMaslarly to the
Northeast corner ol a
tract ol land now or
lormerly owned· by
Mayme
Holmes;
lhance Southeasterly
to the Northaaat cor·
ner ol a tract ol land
now
or
formerly
owned
by
Mattie
Rlghlhouse and desIgnated by a concrete
marker; thence North
30 deg. 30' Waet 90
laat; lhance North 69
deg. East 249 teat to
lhe place at begin·
nlng, containing 1.7

reserved by the sal~
C.
H.
Williams
Trustee, his helre,
successors
and
assigns, with the
right to repair, replace
1
and
maintain
the
1

Reference

assigns, and
the
rlght-ol·wev tor these
lines
ere
hereby

'1500 column Inch Sat. or Sunday

1987 Subaru car, 4 wheel
dnver 2 door runs good
$400 OBO. Call 17401256
1652

2171

Pomeroy Eagle s

1988 Oldsmobile 98 Power

B and

everyth mg, lnlerio r good
body good, runs excellent
dnves great, many new
parts $700 OBO 13041882·
3955

MOUNTA IN G OLD

8· 12 on Fri
7· 11 on Sat.

1995 Chevy Ca\/alrer. red
17401446-2582

CHICKEN BBQ

1998 Honda Foreman 450 S
4x4, 250 hrs. exc condriiOn
S3 400 13041773·5730

Sunday, March 281h
Syracuse F;re Statton
$5 00 each
Meals Include Half Ch1cken.
Baked Beans. Potato Salad &amp; Roll

19,99 Bul c ~ Century 50 000
mtles, excellent cond111on 4
door, power locks &amp; wm dows. tape pl ayer 740-4464224

BINGO
March 27, 2004
6:30pm
Amencan Leg1on Middleport

$5 .00 each
Starburst $1,000 00
Plus $5,000 00 Jac kpot
All Packs

tO numbers
2000 Pontrac Grand Am ,
black 2 doo r 6tK , $7 ,500
17401441-1 269

Left on Jackpot T 1pboard

2000 Saturn LS/ Silver, 4
door, exce llen t cond•l•on
$6,500 17401382-6779

Broad Run Gun C lub
Sunday Marc h

28

12 noon
Outla w Slug &amp; Tu r key

2002 4-door VB L1ncolnLs
EKceltent condllton. approx
37,000 mtles
Askmg
$20,000
17401446· 1864
alter 6pm or (740)446-0974

Shoot

BASKET BINGO
s·oo

candidate must be reliable and have a
good driving record
For more
infom1ation, please contact
Gail Hamilton
Recreation Director
Arbors At Gallipolis
740·446-7112

L:::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::~

Deed:

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

WANTED

Diroc1 care assistants to work with adul ts with mental ~ar­

~tloo m a plea'Wl t, homelike envnonment tn Bidwell

lr)40 lm./wk: l-9prn Sun. 3.30-l Jpm Mun-Thun;;
2\ 26im;iwk· 3-9pm Th"": 2-11 pm Fri: 10am-7pm Sm:
I
N~ ex.penence necessary We offer prud tl-ammg along With
an excellent benefits package. No umfonn.c; or cenificalion
req\lu'OO High School Dtpioma/GED, vahd driver's hcense
and\three years good driving experience required. Sal~y:
$7 .oo1lr Send resume to· Buckeye Commumty Services,
PO. Box 61)1, Jackson, OH 45640. o.:.dline for applicwlls.
4/W4 E&lt;Jual Opporturuty Employer

Help Wanted

750 BoKIS &amp; MumHS

99 Dodge 1500 Quad-Cab
fUR SALE
SLT package, loaded many
recent update s, very clean, 10 It Jon Boat and tro ll mg
garaged $9,500, (7401 256- motor $250. 16 II Boat lrarl 6936
er. $275 C all 1740)441 0405

r

VANS&amp;
4-WDs

1990
Ford
150
XLT
Extended Cab 4x4, 92,000
m•les $3.500 (3041675-3052
1993 Grand Caravan all
power, good cond1t1on. A C
see at 6 Allen St $2.300 or
best offer Phone (740)446·
8026
2003 Dodge Ram 1500
quad cab. all power 5 9 liter.
V·S. appearance package,
57,000 mrles
$23,500,
17401992·5578

r

1997 38' SANDPIPE R
CAMPER . 2 Sl1de Outs 2
Bedrooms Oak tnm Pulleo
one trrne MUST SEE t•l
t3041529-7082 oc 13041525·
358 1

sun u t·'

1B'

Pontoon
Boat
S u nTr a ck e r
S1gnature/Senes Yea 2000
Mercury out board 40 hp,
power t1IL1 trrm. Otl rnjechon
Tra•IS!ar tra •ler. all hke new
must see betore spending to
much some where else
$11 ,500 or reasonable of1er
(304)675 -6277 E'vemngs
only

~to

Ho~u'
L\II'ROVINENTS

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconort•onal lrfotrme guar- .
antee Local references lurn•shed Establrshed 1975.
Call 24 H• s (740) 445-0870. Rogers Basement
1985 boal tor sale 17 toot Waterproof•ng
Chns Craft 140 hOrse mercrusar. •n board open bow.
good condttron (740) 441·
t 333

1911 F1sher tully loaded
1 w/trarler 75 Hp exc cond
reduced to $3200 (304)5932002 Honda 300 EX very 1994
good shape: 1994 Yama ha
Bl aster.
Qoo d
shape,
17401992·3976

MOTORCYCtES

Sho~ Classilieds
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

my
summer

I found

job in the
classifieds

Posting
SEPTA Correctional Facility
Job

7 West 29 Drive
Nelsonville. Oh10 45764
App lications may be obtained from and returned to
SEPTA , 8:00am. to 4:00p.m , Monday through
Fnday, Compl ete JOb descnptton 1s ava1lable for
review. The deadline for application for th1 s posting tS Friday Apri l 16. 2004.
Postllon· Counselor
Work Schedule: 2:00p.m. to 10 p m. Sunday
through Wednesday 10:011 a.m. to 6·00 p.m

Holzer Senior Cere Center has an open·
lng tor one full·llme and two part time RN 's.
We also have tull·tlme and part-time STNA
positions available. HSCC Ia a 70 bed long·
term care nursing facility located In Aural
Gallla County whose mlsalon focuses on
quality cere lor our residents.

Thursday
Hourly salary: $ 12.43 an hour
Mm1mum QuahficatJOns . Bachelor's Degree m
socu:J.I work. psychology. or a closely related field.
At least one (I) year of successful work expen ence tn mental health. substance abu se , correction s
or a relateJ fi eld withm the past fi ve years.
Preferred cnndidare Will have !tcense. in good
standmg, from the Ohto Counselor and Soc 1al
Worker Board, Oh10 Department of Alcohol and

Drug Addiction Scrv1ces, or related credentJahng
board A valid driver ' s l1cen se and good drivmg
record.
Symmacy of Dutjes: Pertonns tndiVJdual and
group coun seling and case management dulles
with client s in a correction al setung. Serves as a
member of the treatment te am assisting in the
assessment, lreatment plamun g, and mon1tonng of
client progress towards successful program
completion

Benefits Include:
• Competitive Wages
• Experience Credit
• Health Insurance (FT~

• Life Insurance
• 401 K (alter 1 year~
II working In a friendly, •·team·oriented "
facility appeals to you, please come see
us at:
380 Colonial Dr.
Bidwell, Ohio or call:
740-446·5001
Co me be a part of·
Caring

People ...

Tlu

412

SEPTA Correctional FacJiny 1s a D n 1g-Free
Workplace and an Equal Opportunity Employer

~-----------...)..'-----------.!.·----~··~-------------'--------------___:~

_ _ _ _ _. . . . . . . _ . . __ _ _ _ _ _..

BUlLETIN
BOARD.
. .
' cffl'i"oolufnll;kich week9ays

Round bales of hay lor sale,
$15 a bale Call (740)682· 2003 Pontiac Montana
29,000 mtles CDIPWIPUPD
8106
exc cond1t1on strll under lacThursday, April 22, 2004
Square bale hay lor sale
tory
warranty S15 500
Allrs Chalmbers B· Tractor Baled dry ·$1 80 per bale 1304)773-5103
6.30 pm
w1th cultivators new all over _
c_a_
ll 1'7-_
40-'~24_5_·5_6_
7_
2 _ __
Doors Open at
pm
$2 000 (304)675-3824
Square bales $1 50 each 93 Rodeo 33 000 m•les, new
t ~r es . brake s, &amp; pamt JOb
Orchard grass &amp; T•mothy
Middleport Amenca n Le g1on
$3,500 OBO 13041593-0922
Ford Farm Tractor 1949 9-N Call 17401441 ·1440
Mtddleport. OH
3 Speed tran smi SSIOn,
98 Chevy Extended cab
h1ghflow, very low hours on
21 games tor $20 00
2001
Ford
Mustang
mator engme overhau l, 4 ~m:---~----, 17401446-654 1
Spectal games &amp; drawings
new t1res, new battery, new ~lO
Al!IOS
Ca
valier
Neon
.
Salurn
Sponsored
by Rtverbend Arts
parnt, converted to 12 volt ~L--..,;miiiiiHiiSiiALEiiii'-_.J
run very good asktng $2,500 Grand Am. Cu tlass. lntr tgue
Council
Tracker
Ftrebrrd.
13041675-6440
$5001 Hondas.
Chevys, Geo
Jeeps , etc I POLICE Caravan . Intrepid Sunftre
Statesman Rototllle r 5· IMPOUNDS Cars from GMC, Bonnev•lle, vehicles
Horsepower chatn drive
$500 For l1s11ngs 1-800-719· are 1n stock from $1 ,195 to 740
(304)773-5674 good cond1·
$3,895
CI~II'&gt;.R' &amp;
3001 ext 3901
MOilJRCYLUS
t10n used very little
COOK MOTORS
MomR Ho~w.s
1740)446·0103
2002
Honda
XR -50 1995 Sunlight pop-up truck
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
TRLCKS
Motorcyc le
Like
New camper 11ght we1 ght root arr
mHSALh
$800 DO 1304)675·3824
to1let1shower •ns1de. smk,
3/burners stove heate1. lng ,
Arbors At Gallipolis. a I08 bed facility 1992 GMC 112 ton pickup. Electn c Scooter lor sale water heater, a.vnmg &amp; add1·
auto, a1r, 73,000 m1les Good $ t .300 1304 1675·6 t 75 see t•onal outs1de shower super
has an opening for a part-time cond1fl0n $4,000 (304) 675· at 2905 Mt Vernon Ave
niCe 54500 [304 )675·2949
transponation assistant. The qualified 6047

same.
Excepting a parcel _
ol real estate con·
veyed
to
Donald
Weese
by
deed
recorded In Volume
164, Pag,e 453, Meigs
County
Deed
Records.

Volume 337, Page 75,
Malga County Deed
Records.
Auditor's
Parcel
Numbers:
20-00815.000,
20.00616.000,
and 20.00617.000
The
above
described real eatate
Ia sold "as Is" without
warranties
or
covenants.
PROPERTY
ADDRESS:
2894 SA 124,
Racine, OH 45771
REAL
ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT:
$50,000.00. The real
estate cannot be aold
lor leas than two·
thirds the oppraload
value .
TERMS OF SALE:
10% down day ot
sale,
balance
on
acres, mora or leas.
delivery ol deed.
Raaervlng unto the
Sold subject to
former
Grantor,
second half 2003 and
Clifford H. Wllllama,
accrued 2004 real
Trustee, hla helre,
auccesaora
and estate taxes.
ALL
SHERIFF'S
aaslgns, e rlght·ol·
SALES
OPERATE
way 25 teet wide and
UNDER THE DOC·
known as tM preoent
roadWay through said ' TRINE OF CAVEAT
EMPTOR.
premises herein con·
PROSPECTIVE PUR·
veyed whh the r ight
CHASERS
ARE
otlngreas and egress
URGED TO CHECK
at all times.
Furthermore, FOR LIENS IN THE
PUBLIC
RECORDS
excepting ell the coal,
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
oil, gas and other
OHIO. THE MEIGS
minerals, with the
COUNTY
SHERIFF
right to mine and
MAKES NO
remove the same.
GUARANTEE AS TO
It Is lurtMr under·
THE
STATUS
OF
stood and agreed thai
TITLE PRIOR TO SAL
all pipe lines running
E.
through said premia·
Douglas W. Little,
es shall remain the
Attorney for Plalntlll.
property of C. H.
3119,26
Williams, Trustee, his

hairs, successors and

,\1 1\i...,IIHI-.

1936 Two door Chevy
Sedan long body Steel AOCl
Work 1n progress 70% com·
plated many hard to f1ne
parts must see •f you are
lookrng lor n1ce car $8.500
OBO
13041675·8793
Evenmgs only

r

Public Notices In Newspapers.
Your Righllo Know, Delivered Right 10 Your Door.

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
HOME NATIONAL
BANK
PLAINTIFF
CASE NO. 03 CV 123

"--------,..1

• Ge1 Your MQssage Across
Wl1h A Dally Sentlhel

D!Jlfrrncr

(An Equo1 \ Opponunity Employer)

_______ ___ _____::_____

�. ~age

B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 26, 2004

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Friday, March 26, 2004
ALLEYOOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

www.mydallysentlnel.com

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

BLIC
NOTICES
I'UIDLI... NOTICE
. , -NOTICE: Ia hereby
that
on
·.ulven
~aturday, March 27,
:JOCM, 111: 10: 00 a.m., a
• Oubllc oale will be
: hid at 211 West
.- Second St. Pomeroy,
· Ohio. Credit Express,
; lrlc. Ia selling lor cash
In hand or certified
check the following
collateral:
1994
Plymouth
4D
.Acclaim
· 1J4GZ78Y6RC302762
' · · 1993
Chevy
Cavalier
2D
1GIJC1440P7336966
· 1997
Chrysler
Sebring Convertible
2D
3C3EL45H9VT514267
1996 Old&amp; Achelva
4
D
1G3NL52M3TM30078
4
1995
Chevy
2D
2G
Camara
1FP22S2S2229192
1997
Chevy
, Venture
Van
• 1GNDX03E4VD23032
~a '
Credit
Express,
! Inc., Pomeroy, Qhlo,
reserves the right tb
' bid atthls sale, and to
:jV;IIhdraw the above
• ~ollateral
prior to
: -sale. Further, Credit
: Express,
Inc:.
reaerves the right to
reject any or all bids
1
1 submitted.
• The
above
:described collateral
!JV!II be sold "as IS·
~ere Ia". with no
t 'xpreaaed or 'implied
t.)arranty given.
~~·For further lnlor·
• matlon, of for an
:appointment
to
, lnapect
collateral,
• prior to sale dale con: tact Stacy Lyons at
992·1 n1 , or visit our
website www. credllx·
preas. com and look
under Repo's.
(3~ 24, 25, 26

I

j

Public Notice
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
RICHARD
HAGERTY, ET AL
PLAINTIFFS

vs

GARY L. CANTER·
BURY, ET AL
CASE NO. 03 CV 141
NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of an
Order of Sale luued
:but of the Common
Pleas Court of Meigs
'County, Ohio, In the
Cfle
of
Richard
i'tagarty,
at
al.,
Plaintiff, vs. Gary R.
Canterbury, at aL,
()efendante, upon a
J~dgment
therein
rendered, being Caee
No. 03-CV-141 In said
c'purt, the eherlff of
Melga County, Ohio,
)lVIII offer for eale at
the front door of the
'Courthouae
In
Pomeroy,
Malga
· county, Ohio, on the
30th day of April,
-;wcJ4, at 10:00 a.m.,
t~e following Iande
and tenamanta, local·
ed at 31005 Palntar'a
Ridge Road, Vinton,
OH 45686. A com·
plete legal descrlp·
tlon of the real estate
le u followe:
Situate In the Slate
o1 Ohio,. County of
Meigs and In the
Township of Salem:
-PARCEL ONE:
Baing 5.00 acrae eltu·
ated In Section 25,
Townahlp 8, Ranga
15, Salam Township,
Meigs County, Ohio
and
more
fully
deecrlbed ae followa:
Situate In the State of
Ohio,
County
of
.Meigs and In the
: townehlp of Salam:
: PARCEL ONE:
: Being 5.00 acres ellu·
: atad In Section 25,
• townehlp 8, Range 1s,
: Salam
Township,
, Meigs County, Ohio
: and
more
fully
. tklscrlbed aa follows:
· A tract of land located
: n the Southwest
of
the
: quarter
i Southweet quarter of
i Section 25, Salam

:r~.;,·~~ig!~:~n~:

Ohio and being a por: tlon of the Ianda con. vayed to Dick Hagerty
recorded
In
: as
. Volume 35, Page 645
: In Meigs County
: Official Recorda;
il_-Commencing lor
!taferanca at a 5/8"
:'\,ron pin found In the
:Southwest corner of
, Southwest quarter of
' the Soulhwast quar·
:Jir of Section 25;
Thence with the
i Weet Una of Section
· 25, N 03 deg. 58' 55"
E, 453.34' to an Iron
pin aet;
" • Thence departing
eald W.st line with 4
. new dlvlelon linea,
: 5) deg. 12' 09" E,
. pa..tng an Iron pin
: eel at 855.40' to an
: Jrpn pin HI lor a total
:111alance ol 885.40' to
: a 'point In the center·
: line of County Road 1
· (commonly
called
· F'lllntar Ridge Road);

s

ACROSS

Public Notices In Newspapen.
\"our Right to Know, Delivered R ight to Your Door.

Thence with the
centerline of County
Road 1 the following
2 COUfHI!I j

Thence S 50 deg.
58' 58" W, 58.99' to I
point;
Thence S 48 dag. 54'
05" W, 136.17' to a
point;
"
Thence departing
aald road, N 68 deg.
12' 15" W, passing an
Iron pin set lor rater·
enca at 30' lor a total
distance of 617.21' to
lhe point ol begin·
nlng and containing
5.00 8C!eS.
The
above
described lract Is
subject to all legal
easements and legal
rlghls· of-way
on

record.
All courses are corrected magnetic and
are for angular purposes only.
All iron pins set ate
112" In diameter and
30" In length.
This description
was prepared from
the resulta of an aclu·
al survey made April
1996, by Ohio Mining
Consultants,
240
Huron
Street,
Jackson, OH 45640,
w. Royce Horton, P.S.
5465.
Excepting all that
certain vein of coal
locally and varloualy
known as Number 4,
4A,
Clarion
or
Coal
Limestone
underlying the above
described real estate,
along with all rights
and privileges grant·
ed In deed recorded
In Deed Volume 201,
Page 425, of tho
Meigs County Deed
Records.
Grantees are aware
that the vein of coal
locally and variously
known as Number

Four, Four, Four· A,
Clarion or Limestone
Coal underlying the
property has been
mined and that subsl·
denca of the surface
has occurred or may
occur as a consequence.
Grantees
acknowledge
that
they have Inspected
the property and are
purchasing It In Ita
existing condition .
further
Grantees
acknowledge
that
they
have
not
received nor relied
upon any represents·
tiona from Grantor, Ita
employees or agenta,
respecting the phyel·
cal condition of tho
property, and that
Grantor shall not be
liable for any future
losa or damage t~at
may arlee out of the
exlatlng condition of
the property or any
repalra thereto under·
taken by Granteaa,
any and all auch Ill·
billty baing hereby
expraaaly waived.
Thla conveyance Ia
made subject to all
exceptions, reserva-

tions, covenants, and
conditione or record
now In Ioree and
effect.
Grantors hereby
reserve to !ham·
aelves, their hairs,
IUCCIIIOrl,
end
aaalgns a twenty (20~
foot utility aaaament
along Painter Ridge
Road (County Road
Number 1~.
Thla conveyance Ia
subject to the followIng
Reatrlctlva
Covenanta.
Theaa
rastrlcdona shall run
with tha land and be
binding upon tha
Granteea, their helre,
•uccessors
and
e11igna:
1. Must have water

under pressure, and a
aeptlc
ayatem
approved by Molga
County
Health
Depertmant before
moving Into real·
dance on lot.
2. Only one real·
dance per lot permit·
ted on Iota under live

acre a.
3. No junk, unll·
canaed vehicles shall
be allowed to accu·
mulate on lots.
4. Lola must ba
neat and clean at all
times.
5. Permanent realdances,
Including
house trailers or doubla wldea, must have
"underpinning" with·
In 60 daye ol placing
them on lot.
6. Campers, buses,
tents or basements
cannot be used aa
permanent
real·
dencei.
7. Until the proper·
ty you are purchasing
Ia paid oil In lull, no
trees over three Inch·
ea In diameter are to
be cut or removed,
unless permlaslon Ia
granted In writing by
the seller.
8. Melge County
Health Department
must be notified
"prior" to placing rea·
!dance on said parcel.
Reference Deed:
Volume 44, Page 141,

Meigs County Official
Records.
PARCEL TWO:
Being 2.09 acres situated In Section 25,
township &amp; Range 15,
Salem
Township,
Meigs County, Ohio,
and
more
fully
deacrlbed as lolli:&gt;ws:
A tract of land located
In the Southwest
quarter
of
the
Southwest quarter of
Section 25, Sa Iem
Township , T-08-N, R·
15·W, Meigs County,
Ohio and being e por·
lion of the Ianda con·
vey~d to Dick Hagerty
as recorded In vol·
ume 35, Pege 645 In
Meigs County Official
Records ;
Beginning et a 518"
Iron pin found In the
Southwest corner of
Southwest quarter of
the Southwest quar·
tar of Section 25;
Thence with the
West line of Section
25, N 03 deg. 58' 55"
E, 251. 17' to an Iron
pin set;
Thence departing
said West line, s 68
deg. 12' 15" E, pass·
lng an II'On pin set lor
reference at 587.21 ·
lor a total distance of
617.21 ' to a point In
the centerline
of
County Road 1 (com·
manly called Painter
Ridge Road~;
Thence with the
centerline of said
road the following 2
courses:
Thence S 48 deg.
54' OS" W, 10.00' to a
point;
Thence S 42 dog.
32' 58" W, 58.21 ' to a
point where the centerline ol County road
1 Intersects the South
line of Section 25;
Thence departing
said road and followIng said South line, N
87 deg. 02' 41" W,
passing a 518" Iron
pin found at 30' for a
total
distance
of
544.35' to the point ol
beginning and con·
talnlng 2.02 acres.
above
The
described tract Is
subject to all legal
easements and legal
rlghls·of·way
on
record.
All couraea are cor·
reeled magnetic and
are lor angular pur·
poses only.
All iron pins set ate
112" In diameter and
30" In length.
This description
was prepared from t
he results of an actu·
al survey made April
1996 by Ohio Mining
Conaultanta,
240
Huron
Street,
Jackaon, OH 45640,
W. Royce Hortol), P.S.

5465.

Phillip
Alder

Grantees, their heirs,
successors
an
assigns:
1. Must have water
under pressure, and a
septic
system
approved by Meigs
county
Health
Department before
moving Into resi·
dance on lot.
2. Only one resl·
dance per lot permit·
ted on lots under live
acres.
3. No junk, unll·
censed vehicles shall
be allowed to accu·
mulate on lots.
4. Lots must be
neat and clean at all
times.
5. Permanent residences,
Including
house trailers or double wldes, must have
"underpinning" with·
In 60 days of placing
them on lot.
6. Campers, buses,
tents or basements
cannot be used as
permanent
real·
dances.
7. Until the proper·
ty you are purchasing
is paid off In lull, no
trees over three Inch·
es in diameter are to
be cut or removed,
unless permission Is
granted In writing by
the seller.
8. Meigs County
Health Oepartment
must be
notified
"prior" to placing res·
ldence on said parcel.
Reference Deed:
Volume 44, Page 141 ,
Meigs County Official
Records.
Parcel
Audltor'a
Nos.: 13·00161.005
and 13-00161.006
The
above
described real estate
Is sold "as Is" without
or
warranties
covenants.
Property Address:
31005 Palnter',s Ridge
Road, Vinton, OH
45886
Real
Estate
At:
Appraised
$20,000.00. The real
estate carinot be sold
lor less than two·
thirds the appralaed
value.
Terms of Sale: 10%
down day of sale, bal·
ance on delivery of
deed. Sold subject to
second haH 2003 and
accrued 2004 real
eetate taxes.
ALL
SHERIFF'S
SALES
OPERATE
UNDER THE DOC·
TRINE OF CAVEAT
EMPTOR. PROSPEC·
TIVE PURCHASERS
ARE
URGED TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN
THE
PUBLIC
RECORDS OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO. THE
MEIGS
COUNTY
SHERIFF MAKES NO
GUARANTEE AS TO
THE STATUS OF
TITLE PRIOR TO
SALE.
Douglas w. Little,
Attorney for Plaintiff
(3~ 19, 26, (4) 2

1 Mouae
coualn
5
with
8 r:•~ __

11 Astonishing 51 Go bed
13 Gladiator's 52 Mal hello
54 Lariat
14 Sweater
58 Civil War
letter
prez
15 Must-llavea 59 91 1
16 Nev.
responder
neighbor
60 Creepy
17 Solar wind 61 John Passos
component
18 Toe-stub- 62 Grain crop
bar's cry
63 Dilute
20 Kaualletes
22 HunHng
DOWN
knife
24 Salt qty.
1 UPS vehicle
25 Tarboosh
2Usea
26 Flooring
charge card
3 Real
piec~
28 Flaky
4 Provide
32 Battery size
funds
5 Dashboard
33 Lithe
gadget
34 City near

I

BENNETT'S

HEATING fl COOLING
_Residential &amp; Manufactured Housing
Air Conditioners, Heat Pumps &amp; Furnaces
• Super Hi Efficiency EquipmenJ.t

• Free Estimales
'
• 5 &amp; 10 yr Warranties
• ~. _c
• Huge Inventory
· ,
• Vanguard Yentless Fireplaces 'I

'!!!!'~'!!!

Gibson
--~-

1~.

Gallipoli s, OH WVO I 02 I 2
446-9416 r 1-800-872-5967

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

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

6:30
Last Thursday Of
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
5 FREE

Henderson, WV

875-2497
Cell

Phone 674-3311 Fax 304·675-2457

· 1 Driveways • Tennis

Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
1 Roads 1 Streets

liT=

DO£Sf

LARRY SCHEY

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

IT'S NOT MY OUTGO
so MU'tl AS
IT IS MY

K I0 8
10 864

South

Wtst

North

Pa,;;s

1 NT

3•

East
Pass

3 NT

Pass

Pass

Pas s

Ullehammer &amp;Roe

35 Positive
37 Mischief·
makers
39 Court
4Q Clucking
sounds
41 Jotdown
42 Puffin kin

Let me do 1! for youl

UNIA'S PAINTING

H
~

~~

•

~
\H ......VIF r-' ~2rD

Or. Kelly K. Jones

BARNEY
0

740·992·7953
d 1 mo

Gravely

IS TO

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2975
Lawu aud Gardeu Equipmeut is our
busilress, 1101 our side/iue
Manning K. Roush
Owner

(\JE.lZ l'lOTIC.E. ~OW EVE.~'I
POL-l\IC.\1&gt;-.N. C.L-I&gt;..lfv\~ \0 WAI'I.i
TO&amp;-/&gt;.. Ut-\\fltK, ..
I

0 en Mon-Frl 9·5 Sat. 9·12

"llostmy"";ft;."
;,..,,~.. Stock
Market!"

Free
EIIIIIBIII

29
30

7 Bellows
8 Moffa solo
9 Quaker
"you"
10 Freight units
12 NASA
outl~s
(hyph.~

31
36
38
44
46
47

lor the revolution . W hat they. lack is the

spirit of general ization and revolutionary
ardour.M
This deal OI(CUrred in England, during the

Knockout Teams Championship last year.
The player on your left opens one notrump, and your partner overcalls three

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Cell!lbfl~

"0

Cltnr crypt.grams are created !rom ~uotal\01'1$ D\' Jamous people, Plst IW\CIIJ!tsent ·
, Each letter :n tM Cigr"ltl S181'10S lor another
·
·
Today's clue: NeQuals L

KFXFV

CKFS

MKEDN

0

SWJE

ZP

ADGJVAZKJEF

TZHJ

SVZEF

AVZEWFVT

J

WFVLJK

SJT

LJVO

YDGEMVF ."

.

LJKCOFSDGU

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Bach is lhe loundalion of piano playing. Liszt
summit. The two maKe Beethoven possible." - Ferruccio Busoni
(cl2004 by NEA, Inc. 3-26

t~e

Call

•Roofing
• Blown 1MJ,Ililtlon
• Room Atlditlons

BIG NATE
I THINK HE'S T+IE.
GU'( WHO bAVE US

\.-

• VInyl

OUII. I'HYSI'CALS BEFORE

R~placemcnt

BASKETMLL TR'(OUTS.

Windows

OOH . T+IE

" TURI'I YOUR
HEAD ANI&gt;
(OU&amp;H" GUY'
Public Notice

BISSELL

and set up their Inter·
est In aald real eetate
or be forever barred
New Homes • Vinyl
from asserting the
Siding • New Garages
same, for foreclosure
• Replace ment
of aald mortgage, the
marshalling of any
Windows • Roofing
liens, and the aala of
COMMERCIAL and
said real eatate, · and
RESIDENTIAL
the. proceeds of said
sale applied to the FREE ESTIMATES
payment
of
Petitioner's Claim In
740-992-7599
the proper order of Ita L..-----.Jf!W
priority, and for such
other and further
relief as Is just and
equitable.
The defendant(&amp;~
named above are
required to answer on
or before the 26th dey
of May, 2004.
By: Reimer, Lorber &amp;
Arnovltz Co., L.P.A.
EMC
Mortgage
Corporation
Ronald J. Chernek,
Attorney at Law
Attorney lor Plaintiff·
Petitioner
P.O. Box 968
Twlnaburg, OH 44087
(330~ 425-4201
(3~ 26, (4) 2, 9, 16, 23, .
30

BUILDERS IDC.

ONE SENIOR
CITIZEN,
PLEASE ..

IMPORTS
Athena

Advertise

in this
space

for
•$75

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used
4 75 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

1-800-822-0417
"W.Vs #I Chevy. Pontiac. Buick. Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dea ler"

BETTY
PUTT Ir-IG

'THE WORD

Ol)TVJml
CAU.E~

t.o...

per
month

Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
Room Additions,
,G arages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall

&amp; More
FREE ESTIMATES!

740-742-341
YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addlllone &amp;
Remodeling

• New Garage•
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; OuHers
• VInyl Siding &amp; P1lntlng

• Patio and Porch Dech
We do It all ex.cept

furnact work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

Pomeroy, Ohto

22 v..,. Local EJ:pertence

NORTHUP DOIGE

252 Upper River Road • Gallipolis ,
740-44'6'-0842 • 949·1155 Evenings

A5 I..ONG- A5 'THE-RE 15 SPACE,
I'M ~OING- 1'0 STARE OFF ·
INTO 11'

0
0

0

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$50 per month
HOWARD l.
WRITESEL
dOOFIIG
*"OlE
MAimNANCE
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GlnEI

ROBERT
BISSEll
CIIISTIUCDOIII··New Homes

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

*Free hllmlllh

740-992·1111

949-1405

Stop &amp; Compare

Saturday, March 27, 2004
By Birnlce Bede Osol
It'll behoove you in the year ahead to
actively seek. ways to make your hopes
and aspirations realities when you know
they are based upon fea sible and practical
foundatio ns. Your chances for success are
better than usual.
ARIES (March 2 1-Ap r\1 19)- What didn't
go wen for you in the past two days coul d
now run smoothly. If there is a product or
project you' re eager to get going, this is th e
time to put out the effort to do what needs
to be done.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - If you have
any projects or sit uations you're trying to
make a profit on , it would be best to keep
the state of your inte ~ tions to yourself.
Y.ou'll get further by tet11ng thmgs develop
quietly.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20)- When con varstng with someone today to whom
you're attracted, listen well and reveal little.
The more tho person is able to talk, the
more you'll learn how to cultivate the
frie ndship.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22)- PeO ple with
whom you associate today are apt to be
mo re attentive than usual, so be sure that
you say only th ings that would enhance
your reputation and standing In the eyes of
your peers.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - Today is a good
day to try to lind ways to open a line of
communlco.tion with someone you haven't
been able to talk to lor some time. Your ce ll
or e-mail is apt 10 be responded to.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) - It may be
wiser today to settle for a hall a loat than to
hold out fo r more and possibly get nothing
If conditio ns are unsettled. but a small
profit is certain, take it and make your
sandwich.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) - You r greatest
asset today is your ability to accu rately
slze up si tuations for what they really are.
Your ju dgment can be rel ied upon. so don"t
hesitate to use It whe n circumsta nces call
tor it
SCORPIO (Oct. 24 -Nov. 22) - Because
you're exceptionally perceptive today when
it comes 10 finan cial matters, you may be
abl e to help another solve a dilemma she
or he is facing. Go ahead and give advice
when asked for it.
SAGI TTARI US (Nov. 23-0ec. 2 1) - For
best results in handling a domineering
companion you·re saddled with today, let
th is person think what you conceive is
something she or he inspired in you . II'S a
small price lor peace .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - ThiS is
an e~ece lle n t day to put your hand to those
smell patch-up jobs around th e hOu se that
need repair. You'll be mentally adept at fig·
uring out how to tix that leaky faucet or
clo gged drain.
AQUARIUS (Jan
20-Feb. 19) Re creational breaks will not be a waste ol
time today. because they'll serve to refurbiSh your attitude and give you a positive
outlook on lite. Social ac tivities of all types
are recommended.
PISCES (Feb. 20 -March 20) - This could
tu rn out to be a part lcu lar'ly good day for
scouting out bargains, especia ll y Jar
househol d it ems. If you·re In the market for
a hi gh-pri ced item, check the stores out
today.

0 ReorronQe,
le•!er!
scrar--. b led
low

fo ~r
~o term

or

the

word~

be·

leur .,..ord.!

LLJDVER

!I?
I i I __j
H E !J L

r---- - - - - ,

I ~.'.: det~~~~~~nctr~J:~~:~~d !t~~~~~

P A P Y L

I- I_ I_. J_'

I

0

3

..

put me 1n a very poor state _of
mind .. My bro ther says

~~-------~~ that."Mol~hlilsofdoubt ca_, ~ c~f!·
L URAL D
. ate rnounca1ns of ··-··
·

.

1--r.,. -=,..,•.;. :. .,. ,:...;:1,_:;. .,-;5, - 0

Crm·rl"le thl! ~ hutk le Quo tea
.
.
.
.
.
by l.i• ·1g in lilt! m•umg wotd.s
'----'-----'----'----L---'---~ y:;u t:l!velop !r o rn sfc "' No 3 belc.w.

6

PRtN1 NUMBERED t EllERS IN

IHESE SQU ARES

@)

UNSCRAMBlE ABOV E \EllER S
10 GEl ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Assign- Power - Gourd - Unkind - DOGS WI!\/
F~rst dummy: ''What do they do at a dog \rackT
Second dummy : "Th~t's where people go to race dogs." ·
f' irst dummy "Do the DOGS WIN?"

ARLO &amp; JANIS
Q~ .. . 1t&lt;JQ ,..

CKII Ci-11&gt;. CHfl ...

ooc.Jwo ...
CI1A CHA
(i-\1\n•

SOUP TO NUTZ

oUC\41
)

You D iD S~THiNG
SliD, Ro;'Bct{... I c11n

f

~

TecL -.-~-_.J]r::;::::::::::~;.1

l

ITS WRI~N CILL
OJeR Y~ f="ace 'M

1

'••

I

,.

27

to Pedro
49 Coman- ·
c~ ..· kin .
50 Light anack
53 AV..Wbilt
55 Ooh's
partner
56 Prolix for·
cycle
_57 AuH&gt;or .
-Rand

January 1870 pamphlet railing against
the Bakuninists (who?) , wrote: "The
English have all the material requisites

promising offense but not defense. In
England , though, the _weak no-trump,
showing only 12-14 points, is highly popular. Then, three hearts should be treated
as a strong hand· indicating some 14-16
high-card points and a good siK-card suit.
(With even more points, one doubles lor
penellies first) Here, South judged well
to take a shot at three no-trump.
West has no winning lead as the cards
lie. He chose the spade queen , South
winning with his king when East played
low. Declarer, after crossing to dummy
wtth a hoarl , played a low diamond lo his
10. West won with the ace, cashed the
spade jack, and continued with another
spade, bul Soulh's second useful 10 won
the fourth rou~d of lhe suil. He look 10
tricks in all: two spades, six hearts, one
diamond and one club.
Karl Marx is buried in Highgate
Cemetery, in north London. and -I have
just learned - the Bakuninists were supporters of a Russian anarchist, Mikhail
Ateksandrovich Bakunin (1614·76) .

SHARE!!

Snapper

204 Condor Street

25

48 wan,

hearts. How would you read that b1d?
II the opener has a strong no-trump,
three hearts is a weak jump overcall,

(304) 273-5321

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

24

Upper limit
Hair style
Suitors
Missouri
range
Vamp
or siren
Gowhhout
grub
Airport
vehicle
Nile dam
Break the
rules
Grabbed
Cable
channel
Cuts lies
Sheer
Law
Small nail

f1nal of that country's first-ever Senior

I
I 4-1

ONE OF TH' HARDEST
THINGS FER YOUNG-UNS
TO L'ARN ...

19
21
22
23

Kar l Marx (where is he buried?) , in a

....

316 Washington Stre11t
Ravenswood, WV 26164

Care

1

•
•

Writing increases
one's knowledge

OUTALt~eAl&gt;YGONE. ~~

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

740-991-1411

Public Notice
Excepting all th~l
certain vein of coal
laea
deeded
by
locally and varlo"aly
Margaret
Nurat
to
known as Number 4,
Theodore
Elselateln
4A,
Clarion
of
by
dead
dated
Limestone
Coal
November
16,
1885,
underlying the above
In
and
recorded
dascrlbad real estate,
Volume 61, Page 224
Public Notice
along with ail rights
and 225 recorda,
and privileges grent·
Meigs County, Ohio,
ad In deed recorded LEGAL NOTICE
and
deeded
to
In Deed Volume 201,
Thomas
Darst,
Elsalataln
George
Page 425, of the whose leal place of
Meigs County Deed realdence Ia known and wile to Elsa S.
Recorda.
as 118 Union Avenue, Lee by deed dated
Grantaae are aware Pomeroy, OH 45768, November 19, 1891,
In
recorded
that the vein of coal but whoM preeent and
Volume
73,
Page
211
locally and variously place of re1lclance 11
212 ol the
known 11 Number unknown will taka and
Four, Four, Four A, notice that on Auguat recorda of deeds of
Clarlqn of Llmeatone 20, 2003 at 2:53 p.m., Melga County, Ohio.
Save lind except a
Coal underlying the LaSalle Bank, N.A.,
property haa been fka LaSalle National small tract of real
mined and that aubal· Bank, 11 truatea estate conveyed to
dance of lhl surface under the pooling Louie Reibel, begin·
has occurred or may and servicing agree· nlng at a polnt26feet
occur aa a conae· ment
dated North 20 deg from the
quence.
Grantees 1210111999,
Serial Southeall corner of
acknowledga
that 1999·4
flied
Ita the M. E. Church
they have lnapactad Complaint In Caaa Parsonage lot; thence
the property and are No. 03-CV-095 and on north 66 1/2 deg. west
purchasing It In Ita September 23, 20113 3 feat and 9 Inches;
thence north 20 deg.
existing condition.
@ 8:30 a.m. llled Ita
Grantees
further Supplemental east 17 feet and 4
acknowledge
that Compliant In the Inches; thence south
they
have
not Court ol Common 66 112 deg. east 3 feet
received nor relied Pleas Meigs County, and 9 Inches; thence
upon any repreaenta· - Ohio alleging that the , south 20 deg west 17
tiona from Grantor, Its above-named feat and 4 Inches to
employaaa or agents, Defendant(s), have or tho place of begin·
respecting the phyal· claim to have an 1 nlng, and containing
cal condllion of tha Interest In the real abolil 65 square feel,
property, and that estate
described more or leas, and Ills
further unde~stood
Grantor shall not be below:
liable for any future The land referred to that no part of tho
loss or damage that In this Commitment Ia wall _on sal.d paraon·
may arise out of the situated In the State age lot Is heraby con·
axietlng condition of of Ohio, County of veyed.
'Pancel No: 16·01943
the property or any Meigs.
repairs thereto under- Situate In the Village .\lnd currently set
taken by Grantees, of Pomeroy, County forth In dead book
any and all such lia- of Meigs and State of 335, page 95, record·
ed 5.11 .93
bility being hereby Ohio:
commonly
Beginning at the Also
expressly waived.
known
as:
118 Union
This conveyance Is Southeast corner of a
Av11nu~
,
Pomeroy,
c made subject to all lot formerly owned by
exceptions, reserva- Lucinda Starkey on Ohio 45769.
i:he Petitioner furtions, covenants, and Union Avenue In said
ther
alleges that by
conditions or record VIllage of Pomeroy;
now In foFce and thence north 20 deg. reason of default of
effect.
East along the North the defendant(&amp;) In
Grantors hereby line of said lot 100 the payment of a
note,
reserve to them· feet; thence south 70 promlaaory
according
to
Its
tenor,
selves, their heirs, deg east 50 feef;
and thence south 20 deg the conditions ol a
successors,
concurrent mortgage
assigns a twenty (20~ west 100 feet to the
foot utility easement line of said Union deed given to secure
along Painter Ridge Avenue:
Thence the payment of said
not and conveying
Road (County Road along the line ol said
the
premises
Union Avenue, North
Number 1).
described,
have
been
This conveyance Is 70 dog. West 50 lee!
broken, and th&amp; same
subJect to the follow· to the place of begln·
become
· 1ng
Restrictive nlng. Said premlaaa has
absolute.
Covenants.
These being a part of Lot
The
Petitioner
restrictions shall run No. 425 ol aald Village
that
lha
defen·
prays
with the land and be ol Pomeroy,
and
dant(s)
named
above
binding upon the being the same pram·
be required to answer

KI 0-72

5 4

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

/cHiVRO,~T·

JIM'S SMALL ENGINE REPAI

• VInyl Siding

•

•

Openin g lead: .a Q

FREE ESIJMATES • FASJ TURNAROUND
WE REPAIR :
MINI BIKES • GO·KARTS • LAWN MOWERS •
POWER MOWERS • CHAIN SAWS • SNOW
BLOWERS • WEED EATERS • TILLERS • EDGERS

Hunting land in
Lebanon 1Wp.
or
Wi 11 lease up to
$5.00 per acre_
Call 740-592-4323
Cell 740-541-4323

J 7

Vulnerable: North-South

ABetter

per acre for Good

•

Dealer: South

Phone (740)593-6671
Athens, Ohio

'&lt;&amp;~ IW&lt;n~&lt;n~rdird
MANlEYS
blia:IJ'i~uim
SELF STORAGE Paying
up to $400

. A H654
• tO 9
• Q 7 6 5

South

750 East State Street

ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

iHit.T PO'riClN FW:IC.ED
&gt;&lt;OI!r. OF I&lt; F'VNCil THAN
OOU''lS
IW-111.~
~"(

East

West
.. Q J 3
• J 8 6
t A9 43
• K Q 9

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949·2217

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

(10'1110' 610'K20')

• J 2

olo A 3 3 2

Hill's Self
Storage

740·992·7953

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

Nortb
03-10-0&lt;
• 9
. AKQ 732

MYERS PAVING

43 Wrinklanoaed dog
45 Big a.. ...,,
47 Ptaih--tljJOiciwl
50 Rslaed,
oahoraes

'

,,

�2004

LI

ALONG THE RIVER
Family history tells 6f
bygone Reedsville life, Cl

rTl\C

Behind the Wheel: ·
lhe 2004 GMC Envoy XUV, Dl

:f

tm

.,. 11 you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR Th1s Week. c;o The Gaston Gazette. P.O. Box 1893. Gastonia . NC 28053
BUSCH SEffiES · "

NEXTEL CUI,. SERIES

·

three
m~~;~hashas seems
Won two
in-

~

to~r

What: Food City 500
Where: Bristol (Tenn .) Motor
Speedway ;.53l miles). 500
laps/ 266.5 miles
When: Green flag drops after
1 p.m. Sunday

Chevrolet

last year's winner: Kurt

two more shot s at Johnson.

Busch
Qualifying recorct: Ryan Newman. Dodge. 128.709 mph ,
March 21. 2003
Race record: Charlie Glotzba ch . Chevrolet. 101.075
mph, July 11, 1971

but, try as he m1ght. he

Most recent race : For the
second year m a row. Sun -

Johnson. beat another. Bob·
by Labonte, in a battle of
crews that proved decisi've.
Thanks to another caution

flag, Labonte had essentially
could not qu1t e wrest le h1s

car back 1nto the lead. Johnson guarded the top. not the
bottom. wh1ch IS one of sev-

eral dozen aspects to the
hallowed old track that are
uni que. Johnson was more
survivor tt1an VICtor, but the
experience left him overflow-

What: Kroger 250
Where; Martm svil le (Va. )
250
Where: Bnstol (Tenn.; Motor Speedway 1. 526 miles), 250
Speedway (.533 miles). 250 laps/ 131.5 miles
When: 1 p.m. April 17
laps/ 133.25 miles
When: 1 p.m. Saturday
Last year's winner : Denn 1s
Last year's winner: Kevin Setzer
Harvick
Track qualifying record: Mike
Track qualifying record: Bliss, Chevrolet, 94 .275
David
Green,
Pontiac.
mph, 2000
126.495 mph . March 22. Race record: J1mmy Hensley,
Dodge. 74.294 mph , Apn l
2003
Race record: Harry Gant, 17, 1999
Buick. 92.929 mph , April 4, Most recent race: Bobby
1992
Ham1lton. '"a Dodge. won
Most recent race: Ford driv- the March 13 race at Ater Greg Biffle won Satur- lanta. The serie s has run
day's race at Darlington, giV- only two races. with Travis
ing car owner Jack Rous h Kvapil holding a sli m lead
his 13th series vi ctory at
over Carl Edward s in the
the egg-shaped track.
pomts standings.

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

· SRfSfOUJl\fA ----~•

What: Sharpie Profe ssional

Food City 500
March 28

en ne

Sharple500
Aug. 28

OSHP enforced 'None for Under 21'

SPORTS
~-

.• Eagles to fly with
tough non-league slate.
See Page 81
• Corvin takes reigns of
Blue Devils.
See Page 81
_• Experienced hurler
leads River Valley. See
Page 81

- :...J..' '

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
GALLIPOLIS - With
high school · proms and
graduations just around the
corner, the Ohio State
Highway Patrol wants to
keep area young people safe
so they can the teens'
futures intact.
This spring, the Patrol is again

joining with ,....,-,,..,the Ohio
Dep31tment
of Public
Safety in
the "None
for Under
21" prognun to discourage
underage
Lt. Grau
drinking and

the use of fake identifications.
and to prevent tragedies that
occur when teens drive
impaired.
This program will aid
in
helping
troopers
teenagers make good choices and troopers will relentle ss ly look for those teen s
who do not.

Please see 11. A5

YOUR -TURN ·-·
'

TERRY LABONTE

one.

Nextel Cup Series. No . 5 Delph ijKelloggs Chevro let Monte Carlo

ti~~~~: of the
lastpast
yearfour.
and has

~

Around the World in 60 minutes

This poem was written by 12·
year-old Ben Creech of Allegan, Mich.

Daytona

•

tough track,
.,,. the obvious favorite
""~~en . who swept the

The cars are in their garage .
like lions in their cages just waiting
for their moment
to roar their mighty roars.
like bears '"the winter.
waiting for thei r chance
to come out and explore.
'

'

Veteran slowly getting a feel for 'softer' tire

Judy Graf, left, and Pat Holter, active members of the ChesterShade Historical Association display a framed photograph of the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge taken and donated by Mary Zieg for the
benefit auction to be held at the annual dinner. (Charlene Hoefiith)

Chester Courthouse to
benefit from dinner, auction

The drivers are waiting

' may be the most fa. IJIOUS uack. and Darlington may
' have more history, but Bristol is
'unquestionably the fans · favorite as evidenced by how diffi.• cylt it is to buy tickets to Bris. tot's two annual races.
· .,It was no fu r being a "field
:. filler• at Darlington, where the
·" slower cars were like roadblocks. Expect more of the
. ·same at Bristol. There's little
· room to stay out of the way of
~ : lhe faster cars.
~ __...·Michael Waltrip's series of bad
. · breaks almost defies belief. His
;: best finish so far is 23rd , and
:~ he's finished in the top 25 only
~ ·once. If Waltrip is going to make
·:_."ttie ·"Chase for the Cham pi·• • 0QShlp," i.e., the 10-race title
_ ~laYoff at season's end. he's go, ::-;rig to have to actually gain
-ground on the points leader 1n
-; the remaining 21 races.
·-. Tha first six finis hers at Darll~;~~~~lhad their best showin
season. Meanwhile,
in the points race Dale Earnhardt Jr.
- all faltered .
failed to fimsh in the
•
the first time this
a 10thh•m to

BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH

HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Then a hu sh comes over the crowd
as a m1ghty voice calls out,
"Halleluiah! Thank God for th1s day! "
And the singer sings the anthem

CHESTER
While
re storation or the 1823
Chester Courthouse has now
been completed and paid for
through various grants and
fund raisers. expenses like

like a robin sings for a mate.

Then the drivers start the cars,
and the lions are unleashed.

Roaring like madmen,
they roar until every car roars.
Then . the race beg1ns.
Flying above the pavement,
putting speed to its limits.

paying the utility bills and
keeping up with routine buildmg 11131 ntenance never stop.
So as in the last eight years,
a benefit dinner and auction
will be held Friday night by
the Chester-Shade Historical
Please see Audlon, A5

the drivers zoom over

200 miles per hour.
Everything seems well.

tard.

until a crunch is
One lion is this tr ck's supper.

Sometimes they c n control
themselves and n9t'have damage.
Other t1mes theca~ fl1ps over
three or four times, hits the wall,
gets h1t by another ~ar,
flips over the others
and lays the re- dead .
The medics hit the ~ce n e,
like a cheetah catching its prey.
Then . the race goes ~n .
The lions run faster qnd faster,
200 laps man oval. I
And then, all of a sud~en, it's over.
The winner celebrates\

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week
Terry Labonte, winner of two championships and 22 races, is a driver's
driver. No active driver, with the pos·
sible exception of Mark Martin, is
more respected than the 47-year-old
Labonte.
Labonte finished in the top 10 of the
points standings last year, r~turning
for the first time since 1998. The sea·
son highlight was a victory in the
Southern 500, which also marked the
occasion of Labonte's first victory, in
1980.
"It was just one of those days where
everything went your way," Labonte
said. "They don't come along very of·
ten. We got out front there at the end
and held them off.
"It was just one of those days that
we had everything together. It's hard
to do that for the entire race a lot of
times. It was a great weekend for us.
And without a doubt, it was the biggest
win of my career."
So far in 2004, Labonte has struggled to regain the form he displayed
down the stretch last fall. He returned
to Darlington for Sunday's Carolina
Dodge Dealers 400 but could manage
only a 19th-place finish after qualifying 26th. He did, however, finish on the
lead lap:
"Overall, we're not very pleased
with what we've accomplished," said
Labonte, describing the season to date.
"At times we've run better than we've
finished. Sometimes that happens. We
don't have the new tire and the new

: •:bas'

tpp-five finish
Kenseth, by the way. but
·"' tieil~ him the standings.
:ll,:lt:s.a
I theme. All the
/!'tlli•C~
races thus far
•.have
by.drivers who
·•
in Nextel Cup.
· Darlington winner,
regular in both.

~"an

'•w'll~~;'ie,u;·~0~e~us~cithh has
In theclimbed
points
~i-lltilndlni!s

since Daytona ....
-E&amp;1·nHttrdt Jr. and Matt
'~l;ti~,~~ ha,ve four to~r10
,fl
races .... The imarwr.ii...;;· Mairs posted anat Darlington

·Waltrip, Earnthe
iS-year caif.1~1e '~'as· 1111\si\M no 'better
his·only
Jeli,mmate,ls~ off to

25.,'W81tltl~

Junm1e

day's Carolina Dodge Dealers 400 wa s decided by a mg w1th pride and satisfacfoot or less. Thi s time the tion. Ryan Newman finished
foot wasn't at the finish li ne. third, followed by Robby GorIt was on pit road, where one . don and Ell1ott Sadler.

could h;ive enNh•n•• ·would ·do so
first season.
distinguished by
and installing
walls) only
·barriers
and every
It's no surprise
considered
. of his career

~-..,

driver.

,f

IS

OBITuARIES

Everyone else pac ks u~

and goes up 1o North C ro11na.
And it sta rts all over.
For some, it's a hobby. \
Others, it's for fun.
1
If you ask drivers like Dale Jr. or
Tony Stewart, they'll say racing is life.

WEATHER
When Darlington Raceway started
hosting spring races, in 1957, they
Photo s by John Clark,INASCAR Th is Week

Terry Labonte, top left, has been racing In NASCAR's premier series since
1979. But the veteran Is having a tough time learning the characteristics
of Goodyear's new tire compound.
·
rules dialed in yet. We're gaining_on it. balance of the cars," Labonte said. "We
I don't think that's really uncommon -think that with the new tire , we don't
for our team. We've done that in the have our front-end stuff right. We
past. I think we're getting closer to it." don't think we have the geometry
Before the started of the season, quite right. That's what we're working
NASCAR opted for a new Goodyear on. We think with this new tire, the
tire - the "softer" compound that was geometry we ran last year is different.
expected to put the racing back into We know it is. The tires have respondthe drivers' hands.
ed differently. We don't really have a
"We don't really think that what handle on that."
we've been missing on is really the
Contact Monte Ouuon at hmd4858@peopl epc.com.
•

were for convertibles.

The 14th event of the Convertible
DIVIS ion schedule was the Re bel
300, and Fireball Roberts wo n it by
two laps over T1 m Flock. The race
wa s sched uled for Saturday, but it
rained, and in those days. South CarOlina had laws prohibiting sporting
events on Sunday.
That's when they ran it anyway,
though. Track president Bob Colvin
sought spec ial dispensation from local government officials. He pa1d a
$50 fine, and the race went on.
• Rookie Kasey Kahne won the
Las Vegas pole 1n only his th ird career try, matching a modern-era
(1972 -) record . The only driver ever
to win a pole in his very first race
was Dick Hutcherson , who accomplished the feat at Greenvllle-P•ckens

~~~:J~~::~:_~_ __I:::======================;-:---=:-=-======-:--.;;;;;~;;,;;;;;;;,~;;~~~(S~.~C.~)Speedway in 1964.

alley

Around Town
Celebtations
Classifieds

Choices do not come easy
for college-bound seniors
I

BY

J.

MILES lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
RACINE - High school
seniors across Meigs County
are trying to decide where to
altend college next fall.
The deciston is not an easy
one as most high school guid·
ance counselors and students
will tell you. Many factors
are in play during the decision making process that will

BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
24 PAOFS

A3
C4

D3-5

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather

B1

A6
© 2004 Ohio Valley Publlo(Jing Co.

992-6611

determine the next few years
of education and the course
of future careers.
" It is very hard trying to
decide where I am ~oing to
go next year," satd Codi
Davi s. a valedictorian at
Southern High School.
Mike Wilfong has been a ,
guidance coun selor at Meigs 1
High School for 15 years. He \
Please see Choices, AS

POMEROY - Meigs County
Commissioners have relinquished
titles to 39 vehicles forfeited to
the county in the Fred Priddy
drug forfeiture case and sold &lt;l_t
au.ction last week .
Meeting Thursday, commissioners approved the transfer of
ownersHip of the vehides to
those who purchased them at a
Rutland auction on March 20
conducted
by
the
Internal
Revenue Service.
Priddy ' forfeited ownership of
I

68 vehicles and other items as
part of a negotiated plea in a
1999 Meig s County Court drug
case. The IRS placed a lien on
the vehicles in order to collect
$1.2 million in back income
taxes. and the proceed s from last
week's sale will go toward that
tax debt. The coun ty had no role
in the sale and will not realize
any money from it, according to
Commissioner Jim Sheets.
Over 800 buy er numbers were
issued at the sa le , but Sheets
said a lotal collected has not yet
been reported:
Sheets said the remaining vehi-

cle s were nor tran sferred because Wright of Langsville filed a civil
they are not titled in Priddy"s suit in Common Pleas Court askname. Another I 0 vehicles li sted ing thm the item s be returned to
as forfeited are '"missing," them and all eging that the agreement was made under duress .
Sheets sa id.
,
"Any other vehicles forfeited The case was later sett led .
will require a co urt order before Wright purchased three of the
we sign them over to anyone," vehicles at the IRS auction.
A spec ial in vest igation into
Sheers said.
Sheets said firearm s Priddy former Prosecu ting Attorney
forfeited in the county court case John Letlles' handling of the forwill be turn ed over to a private feiture. ordered by Judge Fred
dealer for disposition, with any W. Crow 111 and conducted by
proceeds also going to the IRS Michael S. Miller, found no
. wrongdoing on Lentes ' part and
against Priddy 's tax debt.
After being imprisoned, Priddy, determined Priddy agreed willhis wife, Barbara. and Larry ingly to the forfeiture .

Tuesday, March 30th is
~&amp;

National
Doctors' Day

'1(14/d de Race 1flid 1-U
(), St~.~triaf!a-

MEDICAL CENTER
Holzer Medical Center salutes our physicians on this special · Discover the Holzer D(fference
day, recognizing their role in caring for the sick, advancing
www.holzer .org
medical knowledge, and promoting good health.

SUMMERFIELDS
46435 St. Rt. 248

Chester, OH

740-985-3857
i

INDEX
4 SECilONS -

Southern High School students Amy Norman, who is holding
up a college brochure, and Cadi Davis listen to their high
school guidance counselor Gabriele Porter give advice on
which college to choose next year. Davis is leaning toward
Ohio University while Norman is planning on attending the
University of Rio Grande. (J. Miles Layton)

Meigs commissioners transfer Priddy titles

on Pall~ AB

l

555 Park St • Middleport

106 North S!ICOnd Ave. • Middleport, OH

Detallo

instlrt
Comics
A2
Down on the Farm
Editorials
A4

&amp; Supply
Co.

·'

Page AS
-• Margarete Sauer
~ Charles Conger
• Henrietta Rossi
• Warren Browning Sr.
• Stanley Starcher

Thailand was· just one nation
showcf!sed at an exhibit at
Carleton School in Syracuse
on Friday afternoon. Students
in the school-age program
Ireland,
have
studied
Thailand, Japan , Mexico and
Canada in a month-long
study. Classes heard from
guest speakers, completed
internet searches on their
respective countries, made
flags and native foods and
learned about music, dance,
games and culture In each of
the
countries
studied.
Friday's school-wide program
gave students an opportunity
to see displays and hear
reports from their classmates.
Here,
Thedore
McElroy floats a Krathong, a
lotus-shaped vessel, to simulate the celebration of the
Thai holiday, Loy Krathong,
while Frankie Council models
a native costume from
Thailand. (Brian J. Reed)

Be sure lo thank your physician on their

'I

)

'

day!
•

\
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