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                  <text>Sunday, April 4, 2004

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH ~ Pt. Pleasant, WV

Page 06 • &amp;unbap tll:imt! -&amp;tntinel

Defense shines in
Green-"White game, Bt

Snowflakes greet
Reds, Cubs, B2

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
••' t I:'\ I~'"\ t•l

·• J :\u

SPORTS
• Meigs splits doubleheader
with Jackson. See. Page B1

Limit 1Ham WHh
~20 AddHional
Purchase Excluding
Alcohol, Tobacco
Products and
_Prescriptions

J\I(,NIJ \\ , \1 11 1&lt;11 ., 1 , .roo 1

I 11

Cumberland Gap
Semi-Boneless Ham

''"•l.all .- ... t,. .. I,,,,.,

ODOT offers funds for rail facility construction project
Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CDM

MIDDLEPORT - A $200,000
gran t will serve as seed money
for other funding for construction
of a loading facility at the
Hobson ra il yard.
Meigs
County
Economic
Development
Director
Perry
Varnadoe said Friday the Ohio
Department of Transportation has
offered $200.000 toward the

USDA Inspected
Natural Juice Whole

HI\ I\

· $500.000 needed to const rue! the
facility. Once built. the loading
facility will allow local timber
operations. far mers and other businesses to load. cargo onto .trains at
the station. saving valuable road
time to Columbus and other rail
loading sites.
"There are some businesses for
which mi l_ rs the most etTect i\'~
mean s ol transporting cargo.
Varnadoe said. "For some local
busrnesses, such as tho se pruduc-

ing hardwoods and other lumher. end their \\Ork day. Varnadoe said
a local rail loading facility would the railroad company would be
al low significant growth."
·willing to lease the land for the
"Those businesses are ready to loading fat:ility to a public ent ity.
use the loading facility as soon as suc h
as . · r-he
Community
it's constructed."
Impro vement Corporation.
Varnadoe said I hose lumber
Varnadoe · said the Ohio Rail
companres export goods as far as Co rmni,sion
and
Appalachian
Japan.
Regional Commi"ion may provide
The Hobson yard. owned bv additional funding fo r the project.
Norfolk Southern. now ser\es '" ~~
He surd construction \\Ill not
switching stalion. where 35 tu -+0 like!) . be comp le ted for at least a
local rai Iroad workers begin and yea r:

'

¢
lb
All Varieties 12 oz Cans
7-UP Products or

12 Pack
Coke or
Pepsi
Products

'

.. . ...

Page AS
• Lee S. Layne

r ;-IMI't 4 roiAL

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

OBnuARIES

¢

USDA Inspected
.
Water Added Cumberland Gap

Whole Hickory Hills
Boneless Ham

With $10 Additional Purchase Excluding Alcohol,
Tobacco Products and Prescriptions
'.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

INSIDE
I

• Community Calendar.
See Page A3
• Holding symbol of
peace, pope deaicates
attention on Palm Sunday
to youth. See Page AS

'

lb

~-

Meigs ·tech prep teams t~ke contest superiors

~-·--·-·--_.,..-

~·

The plant cloning project of Ty Au~. Randy Hudson and Justin Whitlatch, left to right, won
another first place in the Consortium showcase contest at Marietta. The project had Corey Longstreth . Dann Horn. and Jeremy Dingey. left to right, took a first place
earlier won a district science fair competition at Ohio·university and will be entering the superior rat1 ng on their interactive technology project to promote a local small
business. The trio featured Locker 219 in Mtddleport. (Charlene Hoeflich)
state contest and the international science fair in Portland, Ore. later this month. ·

'

~

Umtt t Ham Wtth $20 Additional
Purchase Excludin~Alcohol, Tobacco
Products and rescript1ons

WEATIIER

POMEROY - Two Meigs - High
Schoo l college tech prep teams
returned wit h first place superior
awards from the recen t WashingtonMorgan-Meigs Cunsortiun~o showcase compet ition held at Washington
County Career Center in Marietta.
Darin Hom, Corey Longstreth and
Jeremy Dingey took the superior ranking using technology to promote a
local small business. The trio did their
project on Locker 219- The Shoe Place
in Middleport owned by Dick Owen.
TI1e students' intemctive media pre&gt;.entation enhanced by a tri-fold of pictures taken in the store and a display of its

products won . them a ti-ip to Cleveland
April 29 and 30 with a guided tour of
attractions including the Rock and Roll
H&lt;~l of Fame. This-is the third ye&lt;u·s st udents of Suzmmc Bcnu have won top
awards in the district competition.
On April23 and 24 the stude nts wil l
take thei r project into state Vocational
Industrial Clu bs of America tV ICA)
competition in Columbus.
In the engineering/environmenta l
category under the instruction of voag teac her Tim Simpson. Randy
Hudson , Justin Whitlatch and Ty
Aull won a first place rating on their
project of plant tissue culturing . The
students have perfected a method of
cloning plants in a sugar ~o lution
inside a test tube.

· That project was selected in earlier Donnie B:u11ett. Chuck Dais: Richard
district
competition at Ohio Dewee..e. Dakota · Dewitt. Pat Dow I.
University to go to th e state contest. Shane Napper: Carl Noel. Josh Ray.
and then nn lo -lhe international sci- Jordon Stott.s. Ben Collins and B. J.
ence fair whoch will take place later Mannout. cmncs. &gt;.econd place: Amber
thi s month in Portland. Ore.
Bare. Casey Blackhum. and Raymond
Other Meigs ·win ners in the &lt;.:om- Hess, !lower 'UTangements and armngepeti tions were:
ment type.s. third place: Corey Vaughan.
IT/b usiness category: Andrew Tyler French . Kenny Carsey. Philip
Henderson and Jeremy Banks. com- Murdock. and Don llysell. high voltage
put er custnmi7ing. second place: tesla coil. founh place: Alfred Zeigler,
Jessica Rosier. Steven Major and Philiip Smith. John 1\clson. Justin Oi ler
Sarah Lee. Morga n's Raid.· promo- and Cwtis Jewell. homemade arcade
tional video. third place: James macl1inc with jukebox. tinh place. and
Hicks and Lindsey White. computer David Varian. Justin Workman and Brad
customizing/anatomy. fifl h place: Smith. greenhouse design. sixth place.
and Gram Arnold and Wes Sel lers.
Automoti1·e category: James Hale
computer construction. sixth place.
a nll Th urien Carter. l'Ut -away on a
Enginecring/envirorunental category: l&lt;mr cy linder engine . fourth place.

Home National Bank gives money away
BY J. MILES LAYTON

showcase money like valu- other had "IIAWAII" printed
ab le co in s and rare bills .. He on it. If Axis forces ca ptured
said each customer went either Hawaii or took over
RACINE - The Home away a little richer.
Allied forces in Nort h Africa.
:·]t's alw:tys good when peo- the bills would become
National Bunk and coin collector Bob Graham were pie give away money and. its a demonetarized - wo1th less.
giving away money Friday good way to make a friend.'' .
Severa l peop.lc inquired
as part of customer appreci- said Nease with a smile.
. about coin s tl1 cy possessed.
ation day.
Grdham also displayed the Graham said he ta lked to a
Coin
Club's man who identified three
Graham gave away newly Oh-Kan
minted nickels, dimes and renowned collection for any- coins with a combined
quarters to patrons last one interested in how nioney worth of more than $1.000.
· Friday m the bank. Graham can sometimes be worth more
Nease said bank customers
took spec ial pleasure in dis- than meet' the eye. For enjoyed Graham\ emhu sipensing the new nickel , instance, a ;imple printer's asm and the disp lay of
which
celebrates
the mark can make an old dollm· antique coi ns and rare bills.
Louisiana purchase. By bill into an investment.
" I think all this is interestnoon, Graham estimated that Graham had some notes print- ing and the customers seem
he had distributed at leas! ed by the-Pomeroy National to appreciate it." he said.
500 coins.
Bank which featured one of
Each- hour on the hour. a
"''ve been getting a really the early bank presidents.
customer was awarded a spegood
response,''
said
The coin man showed two cial 50 cent piece. The six
· Graham.
.
' special bill&gt; from World War winners were : James Barber.
Home National Bank II which had special mark- Gregory Pullins. Rachel Dill ,
President Bill Nease said ings. One was marked with a Dale Lawson. Roy Proffitt
banks are a good place to special yellow dol · and the . and Melvin Freeman.
JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Details on

Pallo A3

Fresh Flclric:lla

Bi·Color
Sweet Corn

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

SAVE 30¢

tA

· Calendars

A3

Classifieds

·B3-4

· Comics

14 oz Sour,
Fruit and Creme

All Varieties 9-11 oz Pkg
Green Giant or 16 oz Pkg

Starburst
Jelly Beans Bag

_ Kroger
frozen Vegetables

••

•

12 PAGES

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials
Obituaries

A4
As

Sports

B1

Weather

A3

© 2004 Ohio Valley PublishinG Co.

..'--'-...
... ...
.

I ••

•
RELAY

~

WITH

.-

-~

FOR LIFE•
•

Prlcea and ltema Good at 919 E. State St., Athens and
530 E. Main St., Jackson Kroger Stores April 4 thru Aprll10, 2004.

Some Items may require a deposit.

Vl•lt our Web•lf• at www.Kroger.com or

\.__ ____J~~~!!!~~· ~·~•'!!!rvlce_!If

f ·BO~·KROQERS

Coin man Bob Graham displays his coin collection as part of
custome r appreciation day last Friday at Home National Bank
in Rac ine. Graham gave away the new nickels for several hours
to lucky customers. (J . Mi les Layton)

AHention Cancer Survivors!
And those interested in the fight against cancer
·__ The 2004 Meigs County Relay for Life will be held

June 4 and 5
,- st-Ji-IH-a.sler,a__High S€hool At.h/etic Field Gn Sta.te RGufe-7.

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover-the Hulzet' /Jij.fel'enc;;e;:;---=!:==::-::-

A cancer survivors' reception will take place at 6 PM on June 4

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY:
WE RESERVE THE RIQHTTO LIMIT QUANTITIES. Each of lheaa advartlaed llama Ia
required to be available for Hie. H we do run out Of an advertlaed Item, we will offer you your
choice ot e compe·r able Item, when aVailable, raflacUng the same savings. or a .ralncheck
which wlllentHie you to purchasa the adnrtlsad Item at the advertlaed price
wtthln 30 days-. Only one vendor coupon will be accepted per ttem.
Copyright 2004. The !(roger Company. No eal4a to dealers.

For mote information, pleose contact Courtney Sim at 992-6626.

All are invited to attend and join us in the fight against cancer!
For more information, please cell Chairperson JoAnn Crisp ct (740) 992-2136.
•,

www.holzer.org
.

.

v,

,.........

�•

~

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PageA2

EDUCATIONEastern posts honor holl aves kind,ergarten registration·announced

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, Aprils, 2oo4

TUPPERS PLAINS - · Larissa
Cunningham , Westfall, Matthew Whitlock.
These students have been Victo~a Goble , Bradley
Grade 6: Breea Buckley,
Kayla Wade Collins, Matthew
named to the honor roll at Goegtein ,
Eastern
Elementary Hawthorne,
Breena Friend , Hannah Hysell,
School :
Hayman, Zakkary Heaton, Whitney Putman , Amanda
Grade 2: Latham Bissell , Alexandria Hendrix, Adtlie Roush , all A's; Darci
Zachary Browning , Jenna Hill, Jason Kelley. Rachael Bissell , Lawrence Collins,
Burdette, Samantha Cline , Markworth, Dylan Milam, Karissa
Connolly,
Miller, Timothy Samantha Cummins, Erin
Chase Cook, David Frank, Kri~ta
Aliyah Gantt, Katie Keller, Minear, Christopher Morris, Dunn, Samuel
Evans ,
Jonathon Kuhn, Sarah 'Ethan Nottingham, Derick Kimberly Minear, Phillrp
Lawrence; Joshua Parker, Powell, Thomas Pullins, Morehead
Audrionna
Madison Rigsby,- Jessica Garri:lte Rltchll!, - stTarrdcr Pullins, - Chelse Rousli ,
Sampson , Erin Swatzel, Welch , Emrly. Wheeler.
Jerry Rucker, Hannah
Wyatt Westfall, all A's;
.Grade
4. Cheyenne West. ~elly Winebrenner.
Grade 7: Brittany Casto,
Sarah Anderson , Tyler D?czr , Mane Powe." , all
Barber, Haileigh .Bush , As ; Chrrstopher Brssell , Kyle
Sargent,
Katlyn
Garrett Caldwell , Cassidy .Janae Boyles, Tyler Cline, Suavage, all A's; Keith
Cleland , · Paige
Cline , Dan1elle Cline, . Baylee Aeiker Matthew Barringer
Thunder Clonch , Monique Collins, Emtly Dav1s, Krrst1n Heather Brooks Mo
'
Shannon
Goh
•
rgan
Dugan , · Molly . Dunlap , Ftck
Kendra Fick, Meredith Brenna
Holter,
Paui Burt, ·Zachary Carson ,
Daugherty,
Gaul , Hannah Hawley. Morrison Kelsey Myers · Brandon
'Parker, Ashley · Rhond.a Durha~, Zachary
Jonathan Hayman, Kaitlyn Jacob
Hoffman, Jenna Hysell, Putman ,
Shalaina Hendnx, Alex1s Hrrzel ,
Jenah Joshua Hupp, Cody Hysell,
Tanner Jenkins, Sidney Robinson,
Johnson , Keri Lawrence, Sampson ,
Courtney Randr K1ng, Kaylee M1lam,
Whitley
Leach ,
Emily Thomas
Mrchael Moore, Alyssa
5: · Jonathan Newland, Amber White,
Moore, Dakota O'Brien ,
Grade.
Devon Baum , Katie Wilfong.
Cody Rayburn, Josh.ua Barrett
Robinson,
Benjamin Brady ' Bissell , Megan
Grade 8: Andrew Bissell ,
Sampson, Jasmine Smith, Carnahan,
Jessica Nathan Collins, Kelsey
Kolton Snell , Alex Victory, Cleland, Ash leigh Duffy, H~lter, Morgan Werry,. all
David Warner, Phoenix Scott Gilbride, Morgan As; Megan . Brodenck ,
Watts,
Heather Wells,. Hall,
Danielle
Maxey, Joshua
Collms , Ryan
Allie Dav1s, . Kyle
Edwards,
Christopher Yeater.
Brayden
Pratt,
Grade
3:
Marshall Rawson , Jennifer Reed, Kathenne
Hayman,
Aanestad, Randall Armes, Zari
Roush ,
Robert Cassandra Hook, Tyler
Rebecca
Chadwell, Warner, Morgan Windon, Kearns,
Jerold
Kuhn ,
Mallory
Nicodemus, all A's; Hayley Aanestad, Christopher Martindale,
Larissa Riddle, Kyle Young, Colin Connolly, Nathan Samantha Parsons, Amber
all A's; Hannah Adams, Gheen ,
Rachel
Kille, Pooler, Saralisha Powell ,
Alex
Amos,
Dominic Beverly Maxson, Ashley Hannah . Pratt,
Trista
Barnhart,
Maxwell Miller, Britney Morrison, Putman, Kyle Rawson,
Carnahan , _Samuel Collins, Sheena
Riffle, Lonnie Gortney Scyoc.

Scholars'hips available

GALLI I POLIS
in
Parents interested
enrolling their child in
kindergarten
at
Ohio
Valley Christian School
should call the school at
740-446-3960 for registration information and applications.
Appointments are currentmade.
ly
being .
Kindergarten - screenings
can be arranged even if a
child is already registered
at a public schoor.
· Upon
receiving
the
application. parents may
mail it in or bring it with
them when they have their
screening appointment.
The school office will
schedule an appointment
in order"' to interview the
parents and screen the
students for kindergarten

readiness.
Sometimes,
even when a child may be
old
chronologically
enough to start kindergarten, they may not be
developmentally
ready.
This screening will help
the school · discuss the
needs of each child and
make appropriate recommendations.
Children must - be - Jive
years old before Sept. 30 ,
2004 for enrollment~ in
kindergarten and six years
old by the same date to
enroll in first grade.
Parents must provide a
copy of the child's official
birth certificate (not a hospital certificate). immunization record , Social
Security card. and custody papers (if divorced)
with the application forms

RACINE -Stacy Eakins a student
of Southern High School has been
named a United · States National ·
Award Winner in English .
The Academy recognizes fl;)wer then
10% of all American high school students, according to a release from the
Academy. Eakins, daughter of Teresa
Eakins from Syracuse and the granddaughter of James and Barbara Hunt
of Ravenswood , W. Va.
Eakins was nominated for the award
by Scott Wolle, teacher at Southern.
Her name will appear in th~ United
States Achievement · Academy official

yearbook which is published nationally. ·
The Academy selects USAA winners upon the exclusive recommendation of teachers, . coaches, counselors,
and other qualif.ied sponsors and
upon the Standards of Selection set
forth by the Academy.
The criteria for selection are a students academic performance, Ahterest
and aptitude, leadership qualities.
responsibility, enthusiasm , motivation
to learn and improve, citizenship, attitude and cooperative spirit, dependability, and recommendation from · a
teacher or director.

Monday, April 5
Morning
17:0Gam-Noon)
Temperatures wi ll rise 10
40 with wda) \ low of ~0
occurring around 7:00am.
Skie' wnl be sunny with 5
to 10 MPH winds ·from the
nnrth\\: ~~1.

Aftrrnoon
1I :00pm-6:00pm)
Tcmpcratur~' · will
hold
qcady around 44 with
today\ hi ~h of 46 occurrin 2
arnund 5700pm. Skies win

be sunnv with I 0 MPH
wi nds from the northwest.
Evening .
(7:00pm-Midnight)
Temperatures will drop
from 45 early this evening
W 36. Skies will be clear
with 10 MPH wimh from
the nonhwest turning from
the west as the evening progresses.
Overnight
( 1:00am-6:0Uam)
Temperatures will linger
at 33. Skie:, will range from

clear 10 partly cloudy with 5
MPH winds from the west
turni ng from the ~ou thwe st
a' the O\'ernight progresses.
Tuesda~·,

April 6

Morning
(7:00am-Noon)
Temperatures will climb
from 32 to 52 by late thi s
morning. Skies will be panly cloudy w mostly cloudy
\l"ith I 0 MPH winds from
the 'outhwcst.

Community Calendar
Public meetings
.

Monday, April 5
REEDSVILLE - Olive
Township Trustees. regular
meeting, 7:30 p.m .• town~hip garage on Joppa Rd.
· SYRACUSE Sutton
township Trustees ·will
meet at 7 p.m. Monday at
Syracl,Jse Village Hall.
LETART
. Letart
fownship Trustees will
meet at 5 p.m. at the office
building.
RACINE
Racine
Village Council , 7 p.m. , at
municipal building.

'''
•••

BUY, SEll, OR TRADE

New5hoes
Arriving 'Daily I

NEW • USED FARM AND

INDUSTRIAL EQUIPMENT
Massey Ferguson • Fafmhand ·
• Bobcat • Shenniu
New Idea • Rhino
New Holland • Cub Cadet

KIPLING

SHOE CO.
"Shoes for the entire family"
Rl. 2 Bypass

Poinl Plecisonl, WV

304-675-7870
2nd Ave.

FARM

EQUIPMENT, INC.
1150 Eastern Avenue

l3tl Gallipolis, Ohio •

44&amp;-9n7 or 44&amp;-2484

Luclv

1

· Tuesday, April 6
ALFRED
Orange
Township Trustees, 7:30
p.m., at the home of th.e
clerk, Osie Follrod.
POMEROY - Town hall
meeting
with
9ongressman
Ted
Strickland
where
the
recently passed prescripton drug plan for Medicare
recipients will be discussed. Meeting to be held
at 11 :30 a.m. at the Senior
Citizens Center, Memorial
!Jrive, Pomeroy.
.

Wednesday, April 7
ATHENS - The Region
14 (Athens,
Hocking ,
~eigs , Perry and Vinton)
CEO Consortium will conduct an organizational
meeting for the implemen-

tat io n of the Workforce
Investment Act (WIA) at 10
a .m . at the OU Inn in
Athens.
. PAGEVILLE Scipio
Township Trustees, 6:30p.m.
at the Pageville townhall.

Clubs and
organizations
Monday, April 5
RACINE- A regular meeting of Racine Chapter 134,
Order of Eastern Star, will be
held at 7:30 p.m. on Monday,
with a mock inrtiation. Officers
are asked to attend.
Tuesday, April 6
MIDDLEPORT - The
Middleport
Community
Association will meet at
8:30 a.m. Tuesday at
Peoples
Bank
in
Middleport.
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM , at the temple.
Regular business meeting.

Church services
Thursday, April 8
VETO Revival services will be held at the
Veto Tabernacle 7:30 p.m .
April 8, 9 and 10. John
Elswick will be the speaker. There will be special
singing
by Ray and
Delores Cundiff.·

Support Groups
Monday, April 5
GAlliPOLIS -The Holzer
Center for Comprehensive .
Weight Loss Support Group
will meet from 6:30 to 7:30p.m.
in the Holzer Medical Center
Education and Conference
Center Rooms AB.
GALLIPOLIS -A surgical weight loss informational meeting will be held
from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m . .in
the Holzer Medical Center
education and conference
center. For more information call 866-821-4541.

Blue ribbon winners from the Ohio Valley Christian School
Elementary, speech meet of the Ass~iation of Christian Schools .
Southeastern Ohio District Association were, left to right, front, Paul ,
Miller, Josh Curry, Daniel Irwin, and Melissa Stump; middle, Jul.ie ·
Tillis." Allie Hamilton, Matthew Wright, Kyle Scott, Michael Fahmy,
Ben Tillis, Sarah Sydnor, Michaela Owens, and back; Cameron
Lentz, Joseph Beaver, Elicia Erwin. Olivia Kostival, Lindsey Miller,
Valerie Terre-Blanche, Hali Burleson, and Heather Mahan. Nearly a
hundred students participated in the categories of scripture memory, Bible. prose, poetry, fable and folklore and patriotic origin.

.On dean's list

. Tmci
Hill,

··~ij-9'--;.c_,C_~

Tuesday, April 6
LETART
Oris
Bumgarner will be celebrating his 99th birthday
April 6. Cards may be sent
to him at Route 1, Sox 56 ,
Letart , W.Va. 25253
POMEROY - Robert C.
"Bob"
Hartenbach will
observe his 82nd birthday
on April 6. Cards may be
sent to him at43748 Russell
Road, Pomeroy, 45769.
Wednesday, Aprll14
POMEROY
Tom
Parker who resides at
Darst's
Private
Care
Home, 33164 Children's
liome Road , Pomeroy,
45769 , will observe his
88th birthday on April 14.

w

r~JE frA~M ~

Gallipolis
Chiropractic

~~Center

Dr. Joey D.

Sunday Times-Sentinel
992-2155

Keeping
Gallia, .
Meigs&amp;
Mason
informed

•••sne

Sunday Times-Sentinel

773-5536
Mason, WV
I

(7 40) 446-1675
Fa~(740)446-8286

Subscribe to~ay • 740-992·2155

31371ngalls Road •Gallipolis

Rl. 7 Soulh lo Sl. Rl. 218,
miles. Take rlqhl onlo lnoo.ll•
I

r-71
'
~M E RCURY
HOURS:
Mon- Fri 9-7; Sal. 9-5

1

www.turnplkeflm.com

Straighten Up Your Life
In April Special
·
TO the 1st 1 00 1\'ew Patients

We Offer A $25 Complete
This Offer Incl udes:
• Privale Consultation with Dr. Jones
• X-Rays: a Necessity
• Complete Onhopedic and Neurological Exam&gt;
• Confidential Report of Findings
• I s1 Adjuslments
• Referral to proper speciC~ Ii st if it is dcfermined
chiropractic can't help vou.
·

Call or stop by our State Of Tile Art
office to make Your appointment'

304-173-5311

$10 DIM· $11 PI
..

IJI,-JOJfiAiaMM#.

Dr. Kelly Jones

See Turnpike lor details.

Point Pleasant, WV

AfiewllaW....,..,
WfMIIeWIUII_.l

31&amp; Washington St. • Ravenswood. WV

With new vehicle pun:h•se.

675-1812

Chlropradlc Center
Chiropractic Exam

Gallia • 446-2342
Meigs • 992-2156
Mason • 675-1333

•

p

pie one piece of advice .
it would be: Read , read,
read! In reading, you will .
open up new worlds, real
and imagined . Read for
information;
read
for
Dear
pleasure. Our libraries
Abby . .
are filled with knowledge
- - - - &lt;md"loy;- and it's all there
- free for the taking _ A
person ".who does not ·
p.m . PST. An individual read is no better off than
will answer your call and the person who CANNOT
pr\)vide ostomy informa- read.
DEAR
ABBY:
The
tioh and referrals to local
support chapters and advice you gave "Afraid
special-interest networks. for the Children" concernThe UOA Web site is ing the two 5-year-old
www.uoa.org. It contains girls walking home alone
information about differ- was correct.
I should know. I am a
ent types of surgeries,
management police officer. Those two
ostomy
tips, patient discussion little girls are definilely in
boards , organizational danger walking home
activities. and links to alone. Five- year-aids are
sources for ostomy prod- extremely vulnerable to
predators and traffic vioucts.
Please don't procrasti- lators. It is important for
nate about contacting concerned adults to safethem . It will make a posi- guard children . Calling
live "difference in your the police for assistance
rehabilitation and help is vital , as an investigayou to return more quick- tion is necessary to see
ly to a full, productive life. why those children have
DEAR ABBY: I am 12 been put in such a danyears old, and I am the gerous situation.
only male I know who
Don't wait unti I it's too
reads your column. There late and children are
is no reason for us guys abducted or hit by a
not to, because you give speeding car. When it
unconditional advice·. You comes to children , it is
help us see different always better to be safe
views frorn our own , just than sorry. - BETTER
like you do with females. SAFE THAN SORRY
So don't be afraid , guys
DEAR BETTER Amenl
read it! READS
CONFIDENTIAL
TO
EVERYTHING ·
MY JEWISH READERS
DEAR READS: Bless Happy Passover~
you for the endorsement,
Dear Abby is written by
but I have a flash for you Abigail Van Buren . also
males of every age known
Jeanne
as
read my column. (They Phillips, and was founded
just don 't always tell by her mother. Paulrne ·
each other about it.)
Phillips . Write Dear Abby
I'm pleased you are an at www.DearAbby.com or
enthusiastic reader. If I P.O. Box 69440 . Los
could give younger pea- Angeles, CA 90069 .

Celebrating spedt1/ dtl)'s
·
with you!

L

Ch!IC~ei!Mr

Heines, Pomeroy: Bobbi
Racine; Jaime Hill,
.
Syracuse; Jamie Hupp, Long
POMEROY -llle followmg Bottom; Carl Johnston. Portland;
• Diagnostic X-Rays
stud~nts were named to the Mallory King, . Pomeroy:
R;:.~~~~~~n
dean
s I1stWinter
llLI:!ocki?g_CoJJ~ge_stehMni
-'~j~~~:Ja~~~=ilj--::::::~:~~:~.~~~~~~::.for-lllc
tenn: Demck Victoria
JS
. PersonallnjuryBolin. Rutland; Janet Calaway, Fallon Rou;h Racine·
·Workers Compensation
Rce.dwillc:
Trenton-Joe Davis. Spencer, C~Jville", 'JenHjfer
·Most
Insurance
.1
lnduding
UnitedAccepted
Health
M
. idulepon ; Darlene Doerr. Thonn Racine: Shelly TI10rla..
Pomeroy: Tara F1shcr, Long Racine:
Stacie
Wal,on.
7 40·441·0200
Bottom:
Zachary
Glaze, Coolville ; Kasey Williams.
1-888-451-2225
Pomeroy: Christy Haning, Long Chauncey; and Amy Wilson,
990 2nd Ave. • Gallipolis
Bottom: Holly Hannan. Athens: Ponland.

DEAR ABBY: I am a
54-year-old married man
with two wonderful children. Two months ago, I
was
diagnosed
with
colon cancer. That was
the first shock. Then . I
learned that I would need
to have part -of myt:olmr .
removed and would have
a permanent colostomy. I
was devastated.
·I had the surgery and·
·am healing, but I don't
know how to get on with
my life. I need more help
with self-care than my
doctor can give me. I
also
have questions
about intimacy, returning .
to my career and participaling in activities with
my family.
Is there any place .I can
find support from other
people who have had
this kind of surgery? I
feel so alone , - B.J. IN
GEORGIA
DEAR B.J.: You are not
alone. There are an estimated 750,000 people
with ostomies in the
United States, and I am
told that number increases by about 65 ,000 each
year. One of them is a
woman who works out
with me at my gym and believe me, she lives
a very full life and misses
out on nothing in her
business or personal life.
You should contact the
United
Ostomy
Association Inc. It's a
nonprofit
organization
whose missi.on is to provide education, informalion and support for peapie who have had ostomy
or related surgeries.
There
are
many
resources available for
you . Call the toll-free
number, (800) 826- 0826,
between 7:30 a.m. and 5
'

Sunday
Times-Sentinel

•

You must cover every number on your card to win.

2004

Birthdays

Number
·is••.

Monday, Aprils,

Man Who had colostomy
is desperate for support

Southern student named to
Achievement Academy

Spelling bee winners .

Ribbon winners

BY THE BEND

at the time of screening. ·
Ohio Valley Christia~
School is located in First
Baptist Church at 1100
Fourth
Avenue
in
Gallipolis.
On schooJ
days, the office is· open
from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30
p.m. The ·kindergarten
program is a full day,
every day program , which
is known for its Biblical
emphasis and for teaching
kindergarten . students_ 1Q_
read. · Students typically
score above the 95th percentile on nationally standardized tests .
Parents with children in
other elementary grades
than kindergarten should
call 446-3960 for information. High school students
should call the high school
campus at 446-0374.

POMEROY - Fraternal Order of Eagles Aerie No. 2171 , will award two $1,000
scholarships to a son, daughter or grandchld .of an active member.
.
Applicants must be 2004 high school graduates and should submit a written letter
of application. .
Applications are available at the F.O.E. or guidance offices at Ea:otern, Meigs,
Southern and Wahama High Schools. The deadline for applications is Aug. 1.

· Ohio Valley Chrisitian Elementary School spelling bee winn"ers in
the Association of Christian Schools International Southeastern
Ohio District meet held recently at the Christian Life Academy in
Jackson were left to right. front, Kathleen Long, Ranjit Mavi,, Riley
Nibert, Ben Tillis, and back, Bryce Amos, Seth Amos and
Stephanie Shuler. Hayden Flinner, not pictured, was also a winner.

The Daily Sentinel

PageA3

'SIISTIII.al

�OPINION

Daily Sentinel

_ =~The

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

Congress shall make rro law respecti11g a11
establislmrmt of religiot1, or prohibiti11g the
: free exercise thereof; or abridgi11g tile freedom
· of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
. people peaceably to assemble, and to petitiorr
· the Goverrrmertt for a redress ofgrie1•a11ces.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

VIEW

911
Suprised
Dear Editor:
tee to pursue Meig' 911 . I ran my campaign on getting 911
:activated. When I talked to the commi"ioners ahout it. I wa'
told ho one wanted it. and I was asked what I \\·anted to give
up.
I told them at the time I had the .information on 911. :-low I
.read Mr. Thornton is fonning a committee. He never :even
· · · contacted me to see what information I have.
My question is. are they going to spend $5.000 again to go
through the motions and then. after the election. tell us it's too ·
expensive, or just forget it all together like they did the last
·.--time?
: :: Paul Carter

&lt;
·· Moderately Confused

Monday, Aprils,

Monday, April 5, 2004

It mll'ot ha' e been last week';
-.ound and fury that obscural

the 'signifying nothing· pan of
Richard Clarke's 9111 cumnJis'ion testimony. Sen. Slade
Gonon. R-Wa~h .. a~ked the
most pointed question: Could
the 9111 attack•; ha,·e been prevented if Pre,idenl Bush had
implemented each of Clarke's
recommendations immediatclv on takin~ office·)
· ·No.' replied Clarke.
No·&gt; So. what really roils
Clarke about the Bush admini'stmtion·&gt; George Will put' it
this way: 'His belief that the
lmq w.;.. "'"' a tmgic blunder.
arising from the president's
monomania about Saddam and
draining resource' from the
war on' terror· Which maybe
tells us to torget ral states and
blues states: The great divide
now pih American; who
regard the lmq War as a key
front in 'the war on terror.· and
Americans who don't.
But it is the genius of the
Bu&gt;h docuine that '-'Ces the
truly hig picture. The president
believe' American sccuritv
rdie' not only on foiling
attacks of AI O&lt;!eda jihadis which his administration has
done with rem&lt;trkable success
for some 30 months. knock
wood - but also on draining
the terrorist swamp. as Donald
Rumsfeld like' to say. That
a long-ten11 offensive

against both terrorists and the
nations that suppon terrorism.
That means a long-tenn goal of
democratiLing the Muslim
Middle East. Iraq is Step One.
And a murderously difticult

Diana

West

step it is. as the horrific killings
and mutilation in Fallujah tjlis
week remind us. But irn;~gine a
·war on terror' that left
Saddam Hussein unsc~thed
(iJot to mention Uday and
Qusay); and allowed a
Ba'athist regime to flout the
international community. shelter AI Qaeda offshoots and
renegades. run its tonure
chambers and rape rooms.
fund jihad against Israel. and
generally menace the region.
Without bothering to speculate
what measures Ba'athist lmq
might have taken by now. consider the boons to world peace
that would not have occurred
without its defeat.
. I ) Rogue-state Libya would
not ha,·e volumarily surrenderal its WMD program and
applied for membership in the
corrununity of nations. In an
interview last year with the
British Spectator. Italian Prime
Minister Silvio Berlusconi said
Libvan . dictator Moammar
Gadhati told him. ·r will do
whateYer the Americans WJnt.
because I saw what happened
in Iraq and was afraid.'
2) Pakistan's secret role in
passing nuclear secrets to
rogue-states such as Libya.

Obituaries
. Lee 5. Layne

lmn and Nonh Korea \\Ould the summit was canL·eled b)
not haw been exposed. As hpsH:ountf) Tunisia hecause
UPI's Amaud de Borehgm·e unnamed countries tailed to
hw. reponed. ·suddenly. CoL support calls ftlr ·tolemnce .'
Gadhati. suitably impressed by ·understanding· (lr 'democmU.S. military capabilities in cy· in a 'ummit statement.
Iraq . had no compunction That there was no 'uch conabout leaking o;ecreL' that led to sensus i., untonunate: that
a Pakistao1ian and I= ian con- . there W&lt;t' c\·cn such a debate is
nection.·
promismg.
Meanwhile. Iran's bold stu3) Syria would not be showing sign!ii of wanting to come dents stru~~le on lor freedom.
in from the cold. ·syria has Scholars 1,; Alexandria have
appealed to Austmlia to use its called for an elected legislaclose ties with Washington to ture. an independent judiciary
help the Arab nation shake otT anJ a free press. Pro-refonn
its reputation as a terrorist deinotNrator' h&lt;tve marched
haven,'
reports
The through Damascus I be fore
Australian. That, of course. being 'an L·stedl. A recent ediwill requi.re a whole lot of torial em it kd ·Arah Reform
shaking. but any &gt;UCh move- Now· in the. Jeru,akm Post
ment is noteworthy. 'The summed Lip the 'ituation thi s
0\'enurcs by Syria.' the paper wav: ·Amon~ the conclu,_ions
11 rite,. ·are seen as a response · the-Bush aJtJlini,tration Jrew
to the West's detennination to from September II was that .
cnnfrnnt rogue nations that the risks of inaction outmay either pose a threat thcm- weighed. the ri,ks of action:
:.ch-..: 1 • p4tS~ on weapons to that ad' ocating stability
Jen·m 1 t .... :·
above freeJom in the Middle
-1 ) ,\ nd. of course. there East was wumerproductive.
would not be a shiny. new. hypocritical. and unwonhy of
hard-won interim constitution the United States: and that
in lmq that promises to allow retorming the Arab world was
democr.Kv to take root.
a sine qua non for defeating
Will freedom spread to terrorism . .. . Tl1e more forcelmq's mothoritarian neighbor'' . fully the Bu'h .itdministration
.The recent collapse of an Arab (follows these cnndu,ions) .
summit on the subject has the more il will put repressive
made me · 'tnmgdy ·hopefuL Amb regimes on the dclcnOrganized a' a response to the :-~in:. anti lht: !ll{lft! coura!!e il
Bush admini,tration's call for. v. i-ll gi,·e to the be-..t elen1enh
in Ar~1h ~ocict\.·
Middle Eastern reform It\ 11·ell 110111! the' dli&gt;n.
another Bu'h masterstroke for
(/Jiwht \k.w i.\ d columni.\'1
decoupling the need for panArab political . prugr&lt;"' from ji&gt;r n,., 1\i ,_,/ringlon limn . Slw
he
confal'fed
du
the bogs of the braeli- cull
dimWH '\\ ·0 \'l'ri::on.net. J
Palestinian ·peace process· -

RACINE - Lee S. Layne. 70. of Racine. died Saturday.
Apnl J. 200-l at the Holzer Medit:al Center. Gallipolis.
Born on Aug. 5. 1933. he wa' the son of the late Henry
Layne and Steib Sayre Layne. He was retired from the
Mon Rowr Towmg Company a' a !irst mate.
He \\'a' a member or the Sacred Heart Catholic Church
in Pomeroy were he s.lng in the choir. was a longtime
member ot the Racme Volunteer Fire Department and was
a member of the Racine Board of Public Affairs. He loved
to !ish. hunt and draw and was a lifelong Democrat.
He ts sun'lVed by his wife of 5 I years. Ann Layne of
Racme. &gt;ons. Leo F. Layne of Parkersburg. W. Va .. Kevin
Layne and Kenny Layne. both RaGine, and )roy Rife of
Ravenswood. W. Va. and a daughter, Donna Bums of
Ponland.
.
Also ~urviving_ are sisters. Carol Layne and · Sandy
Layne. both of Ptttsburgh. Pa., a brother, James Layne of
Ptttsburgh. Pa .. and grandch ildren. Melissa Dan. Tina Joey.
Barbte. Heather and Wendy: great-grandchildren including
Ktrstm. Robbte. Brooke. Paige. Du;s tin~ Allison, Dalton.
Kylee. Hailey. and Brendan.
Besides his parents. he was preceded in death by two
brothers.
Funeral · seryices will be held at II a.m. Tuesday at
Sacred Hcan Catholic Church. Pomeroy. The Rev. Fr.
Walter Heinz will officiate and burial will be in Sacred ·
. Heart Catholic Cemetery. Pomeroy.
Friends may call from 5 to 9 p.m. Monday at the Roush
Funeral Home in Ravenswood. W. Va. with a vigil service
set at 8:30 p.m.
In lieu of !lowers memorials may be made to Roush
Funeral Home. P. 0. Box 933. Ravenswood, W. Va. 26164.

Local Briefs
Egg hunt set
TUPPERS PLAINS ·_ An Easter egg hunt will be held by
, the Tuppers Plains Fire Department and Ladies Auxiliary at
the fire department from 2 to -1 p.m. Saturday.
The children will hum in age groups of I to 4 years of age.
5 to 9 years. and I0 to 14 years. Refreshments of hot dogs,
slopp y joes and chips wi II be available. and there will be giveaways of bicycles and Easter baskets.
·

1

I M NOT

LEAVIN6...
I'M JUST
STRETCHING
BETWEEN
·AMERfCAN

Albany

www .mydailysentinel.com

1:::==. PASTIMES.

STfP-FATH£R,It15
51:CON0 WIFE,

&amp;. THEIR THREE
ADoPTED KIDS.

Holding symbol of peace, pope dedicates
attention on Palm Sunday to youth
BY FRANCES D'EMILIO
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

VATICAN CITY - Pope
John Paul II celebrated Palm
Sunday Mass in the wmpany
of thousands of yo ung people
who joyously waved fronds
and oliye branches and
cheered encouragement as he
began a heavy schedule of
_Holy Week ceremonies. .
The Vatican described the .
gathering of more than
40,000 faithful in front of the
altar on the steps of St .
Peter's Basilica as an "antidote" to the fears of terrorism
and war around the globe.
Security has been heightened in the last few months at
the Vatican -over concerns
that the heart of Roman
Catholicism could be target
of Islamic extremists. Italian
·police oflicers patrolled the
· crowd. and Vatican plainclothes s.ecurity personnel
kept a close eye on participants.
Still. the atmosphere.
under a hazy sun which Pope John Paul II. clutching a braided palm as a 'symbol of l1ope and peace, gives
burned away morning fog. on Sunday, his blessmg to some cardinals in a Palm Sunday serv1ce on St. Peter's
was relaxed . After blessing Square, a celebrat ion the Vatic.an described as an ·'antidote " to the fears of a
participants at the end of the world grappling with terror and war. {AP Photo / Pionio Lepri i
two-hour ce remony, the pope . ance from hi s window o~er­
John PauL who turn&gt; X-1 Youth Da) in Colog ne.
spoke brietly with a young
girl who broke away from the looking St. Peter's Square. next month and who ha' Germtlll\ 111 the ~ummer of
crowd and headed for his where hundreds of youths Pcirki ;lSon 's di,ease . .looked 2005 .. But when a Berlin uniwan and weak as be clLncheJ \'cr ... ii\· ~tudcnt. in a TV
chair.
were still gathered.
Tllen John Paul was driven
The coming week will see a braided palm at the .start of hookLip from th&lt;ll ci ty. invitJohn
P,' IUI )Jres 'tde ,·tt HL&gt;i)' the ceremony. But he la ter ed the pope to join .them in
aroun d the sq uare in an openThursday services at the seemed to 2ain ~tren2. th . noLl- Cologne. he didn't an.,wer.
sided ··pope mobile... stop- Vatican. a Good Friday pro- ding in pleasure at.cl1cc r' anu
Cnln~ne's
Card inal
ping to kiss babies held out cession at the Colosseum and applciuse from the crowd .
Juachilll
Mei,ncr
ha'
said the
near him. In the afternoon, he
ym111g
The
pontiff
urged
pope
11
ill
go
"if
God
gi\'es
made an impromptu appear- Saturday night and Sunday
.morning Easter ceremonies. people to prepare for World·· him tht" ..,trenglh ...

••

NELSONVILLE - The Hocking Outreach Program
Experience (HOPE) Center at Hocking College is reyuesting
information from non-profit agencies' and organizations
regarding special community events, fundraisers and activities scheduled to occur in 2004 and 2005.
The HOPE center will use the information to promote
Hocking College student participation. Information is to be
provided to SuLanne Brooks. 74i0-7530-3591. Ext. 2334 oremailed to brooks@hocking,edu with dates, times and descriptions of events. .

DAYTON (AP) - Prime
Hamilton County. home of Pentagon fi gures.
that make' Abram' Tanks.
Electnc Co.'s
defense contracts awarded to General
Another wa~ a rmored vt:hi· won S~6.X million in defense
Ohio companies climbed Aircraft Engines division. eles. Allen County. home of cnntrael uolbrs. nearly dou more than 20 percent in !iscal tOpJ?Cd the list with $1.27 . the Lima Army Tank Plan! ble the year before.
year 2003. bumping lh!" state bill ton . nearly 25 percent
from 15th to 12th. according more than 2002.
·
to a newspaper's review ol
Montgomery County. where
government ttgures.
pan of Wtight-Patterson Air
But not all of that money Force Base is, was secnnu
stayed in Ohio. and the $4.3 with nearly 5629.7 million. a
tor yo1r COI-IeiCe
billioti amount did not 27 percent increase.
To ol'ller protl TUIEDOS
account for work that Ohio
Greene Coumy dropped to
Save time and money shop local
subcontntctors did for prime third from second. with a
contractors in other states. nearly I O.R percent decline
the Dayton Daily News to $545.3 million.
The Fabric Shop
reported Sunday.
Aircraft engines was the
0 H'1 ht 0 1
The 20.4 percent increase big~est category of Army
ne 9 n Y
Pomeroy
was the bigycst pcrcentag•c prli11c contract awards in Open Late Till8•00
"'"" Phone# 740-992-2284
jump in the 0 years of sta- Ohio last year. according to L------~-"' .""""
~~
tistics
that the newspaper r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
reviewed.
Defense Depcmment stafiiiilo~~~~~~~fi
tistics show coumies with
big miliwy installations or
major contractor sites got the
117 E. Memorial Dri\'e
lion \ share of tile dollars.

-

l\t1eigs County Court

SfAHtER - 4123
© 2004 by NEA, Inc.

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The message scrolled
has brilliantly chipped away choice advocate' have been
across Kate Michelman's cell
at abortion in a string of little too complacent that the nght
steps that have escaped wide- to an abortion can never be
phone as she sat in the ballroom of a San Fmncisco hotel
spread notice and thl" wide- lost. Too many beliel'e it canrecently. Around her, the
spread outrage. · In his first not and .wi'll ,·,nt happen . Bul
room buzzed with the converJQan
day in ollice. Bush reinstated. the Supreme Court is not
sation and clicking flatware
the global gag rule policy that immune to socia l currents.
of 975 people, the largest
Ryan
prevents U.S. money from Thi' highlighh how imporfunding any overseas clinic tant it is to elect a pro-choice
turnout in the nine years San
that performs or counse ls pre,ident."
Francisco has hosted the
National
Abortion
and
clients about abm1ion. Bush's
San Franci'co bu.sine"matl
Reproductive Rights Action
The amendment failed by emissaries to international and philanthropist Richard
League's (NA RAL ) Pro· one vote, 50-49.
conferences proclaim that the Goldman ,
a
lifelong
'(When the president signs U.S. recognizes that life Republican. dro ve the poiill
Choice America lunch.
Michelman , the longtime the act) we will have lost begins at conception. For the home. He waiJ..ed to the
president of NARAL, read another b~ttle in this long third year in u row. Blosh has lectern and announced pubthe message and let out a soft struggle," Michelman to ld the can~eled the U.S. contribu- licly he was supporting
groan .
audience. "This act has the lion tu the U.N. f&amp;mily-plan- Democratic c:and idute John
When she took the stage potential to be used as the ning program . He has pushed KetTY for president.
minutes later, she shared the legal rationale to overturn . for and funded abstinence'This i, the mo.st important
only education for young election of my litetime.·: said
discouraging news with the Roe vs. Wade."
sold-out crowd: ' Democratic
If you looked across the people both here and abroad, Goldman, a man n~&gt;t given to
California Sen.
Dianne enormous ballroom at the despite research that says it hyperbole. 'There is no
Feinstein fell short in her hundreds and hundreds of doesn't lower HIV infection choice."
attempt to stop a bill called ·smart, accompli&gt;hed, com- or pregnancy rates.
I have little argLimcnt with.
the ' Unborn Victims or mitted women, you might
Last year. with Bmh's vig- tho'e who ,toppon Busll's reViulence Act." For the first shake your head at the Bush orous suppon, Republicans in election hecause they like"his
time in fedenil law, the administration's folly. How Congrc" passcci the so-call.xl stan ces on sul'11 i"uc &gt; a&gt;
Repoblican-backed bill that can it think it wi ll succeed in partial-bi rth
legislution . national .scn1rity and taxe,.
President Bush just signed making abortion illegal which. for the lirst time since But they &lt;hnu ld mak~ no miswill recognize an embryo or again? We won already. The Roe vs. Wade, re-criminalized take abou.t thi ,: A vote for
fetus as a separate person. Supreme Court said so 31 abortion . These same legisla- George Bu, h in Noven1ber i'
(Scott Peterson is being years ago. It's . a done deal. tors continually try to limit · a vote against a woman's fun charged lor the murder of his Living in an America that access to abonion and contra- damental freedom to decide
wife and unborn baby under forces women to back-.alley ccrtion for poor women .and for hef'elf. withnut political
Cali!ornia
state
law.) butchers to end unwanted women in the military, who interference, when and if 'he
Feinstein introduced and pregnancies seems as prepos· both depend on t he lederal becomes a mother.
fought doggedly for an terous, in the year 2004. as government 1(\r health care.
Compla( ency is no longer
an1enilinerft to tfie acf thiirlivingln an Amert=·1ti'lh-:ratr-.;;._,,"f'f'hhe&gt;ituation ;, perilous." ·""Tin t&gt;ptiou.
called lor increJsed penalties makes women wear burqm,.
Michelman ' aid. 'It \ very
rJoan // ,·w, ir o m lumni.11
on crimes that harm a
But the assumption of &gt;cary. There\ a lot going on .for 1he Son Franci.1co
woman's pregnancy but keeping this fundrunentallib- in the world . and th b (unborn Climnide. Send n mullc/1 /s to
maintained that an attack on a eny could be the agent of its victims' act ) might get her in mre of th i1 neu·.,,wper
pregnant woman was still a demise.
missed. But this is a very, or ~mt! her e-mail at joansingle-victim crime.
The Bush administration very serious setback. Pro- l}'ml !il .! fc/mmiclt•.com.)

I

.

=

Mcqo

Meigs County grants Office
'

Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

=

POMEROY Cases only; Harvey . C. Horn, criminal damaging, $200
resolved in the Meigs Columbus, illegally taking fine and $i i 9 in costs; Mary
Counly Court of Judge deer, costs only; Timothy A. A. Searles, Pomeroy, passSteve
Story
between Johnson , Pomeroy, speed· ing bad checks, $22 and
March 15 and March 28 ing, costs only; Billy Jones, $25 in fines; Levi D. Searls,
are as follows : Eldon S. ·Albany,
passing
bad Rutland, display plates/valid
Baker, Syracuse, firearms checks, $25 fine and sticker, costs only; Jonathan
in motor vehicle, $25 and $8i .46 in costs; Darrick Q. L Smith, Pomeroy, no dricosts, _domestic violence, Knapp, Rutland, speeding, vers license, $i 00 line; Kelly
$100 and costs; Benjamin $30 and costs; Patty L. D. Smith , Middleport, passW. Call , Pomeroy, drug Laudermilt, Pomeroy, pass· ing bad checks, $25 fine
abuse, costs only; Keith A. ing bad checks, $25 fine and $155 in costs;
Clawson, Renlon, Wash. , and $125.37 in costs;
Tara
R.
Soulsby,
drug abuse, $70 and costs;
Timothy M. Lupardus, c 00 1 ·u
·
b d
VI e, passmg
a
L
Cotterill, Shade, no drivers license, checks,
Denver
$25 fine and $ i 41
Pomeroy, illegally taking $50 fine, seatbelt, $30 fine, in costs; Henry Sprouse,
deer, costs only; Kourtney L failure to control, $50 and Galena, · illegally taking
Craddock,
Middleport, costs; Dustin Millhone,
use/possession drug para· Reedsville, speeding, $i 5 deer, costs only; Robert A.
costs;
Jason Venoy, Pomeroy, conphenalia, $50 fine , drug and
Nottingham
,
Long
Bottom,
sumption in motor vehicle ,
abuse, $50 and costs;
Matthew Dillard, Racine, criminal damaging/endan- costs only; Frederick E.
speeding, $45 and costs; gering, $50 and costs; Werry, Pomeroy, disorderly
Lee M. Fitchpatrick, Rutland, John T Owens, Cheshire. conduct, costs only; Opal
seatbelt-passenger, $20 and seatbelt, $30 and costs; D. Whitlach , Pomeroy, ille·
costs; Michael Freeman, Brett E. Price, Long gaily taking deer, costs
Pomeroy, disorderly con- Bottom, . illegally taking only; Carl H. Wilson ,
duct, costs only; Todd deer, costs only; Kenneth Racine, hunt deer w/illegal .
Norville Goode, Racine, R. Riddle, Coolville, illegal- firearm, costs only; Wanda
ly taking deer, costs only;
S. Wood, Apcine, DWI
speeding, $30 and costs;,
Robert W. Riffle, Racine, and/or drugs of abuse, $25
Brice T Hill, Syracuse,
while hunting/reckless man· disorderly conduct, $50 fine; fine, no driver's license ,
ner, costs only; hunting qeer Chris Roush, Pomeroy, pos- co~ts only, driving in
wlo permission, costs only; session, $300 and costs, marked lanes , costs only;
Alvis R. Horn, Columbus, speeding, "$35 and costs; " Robert M. Writesel, Powell ,
illegally taking deer, costs Clay J. Russell , Middleport, speeding, $50 and costs.

Abortion .on line in election

•

Sentinel • Page As

Ohio received $4.3 billion in defense contracts last fiscal year

Screening offered·

THIS IS
FROM MY FIRST

Daily

HOPE requests information

ATHENS - · o· Bleness Memorial Hospital in Athens will .
otTer blood pressure screening as well as cholesterol and glucose screenin~ Wednesdav.
The free bl&lt;'iod pressure· screening will be open to the public
from 10 a.m. until noon and rrom 2 p.m. until 4 p.m. in the hospital\ patient entrance lobby. The cholesterol and glucose
screening which will be offered for a $5 fee, will be available at
the' same lm:ati.on by appointment only from 10 a.m. until noon
and 2 to .J p.m. To make an appointment call 740-592-9300.
Free CtJion-rectal cancer home screening kits and information will abo be available at Wednesdity's screening.

•

The

2004

Action is better than inaction

mean~

I was surpri,ed to read yo11r artic-le on selecting a commit-

PageA4

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
AMENDMENT OF CDBG FY' 2003 FORMULA PROGRAM
Meigs County intends to request an amendment' of the Meigs County FY '2003 CDBG
Formula Allocation grant program funded through the Ohio Department of Development
Community De~elopment Block Grant (CDBG) Small Cities Program, a federally funded
program administered by the State.
The Meigs County Commissioners will hold a public hearing during a regular meeting at
the Meigs County Commissioners Office, Courthouse. Pomeroy, Ohio on Thursday, April
15, 2004, at 1:1,5 P.M. for the purpose of providing the public information about the
proposed amendment
·
The proposed amendment project consists of street improvement (paving) of 3,178 L.F.
on Lincoln Hill Road in the Village' of Pomeroy, from Butternut Avenue to Brown Alley, to
facilitate traffic to the Flood Road. The estimated cost of the project is S25, 105.00. FY
'2003 CDBG Formula Allocation funds will be' provided for the project in the amount to
$20,000. The balance of funds ($5, l OS) will be paid by the Village of Pomeroy.
Citizens are encouraged to attend this meeting on April t 5, 2004 to make suggestions
and to provide public input
. on the proposed amendment activity. . '
If a participant will need auxiliary aids (interpreter, brailled or taped material, assistive
listening device, other) due to a disability, please contact Gloria Kloes, Clerk, prior to April
t s, 20004 at 740-992-2895 in order to ensure that your needs will be accommodated.
The Meigs County Courthouse is handicapped accessible.
Written comments will be accepted until 1:00 P.M., April t 5, 2004 and may be mailed to
the Meigs County Commissioners, Meigs County Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
•

Jeff Thornton, President
Meigs County Commissioners

............................
........................
Nikola Bicak, DPM• Podiatry
Nikola"Bi'cak;-OPM~ a-podia1riS"t~RS

recentlyjuincthhc tletl-ie:.tted-medi-eal-stafb.__.
at PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL. D1:. Bicak will be located in the PVH
Neuro-Physiology Center and available on Thursdays only, beginning on April X.
'

'

Af?pointments can be made by calling. (304) 674-7289.

. - --=,..,..,-.....,.=-~ 1 = =

PLEA
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, April 5, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

INSIDE
Snowflakes greet Cubs, Reds, Page 82
Southern winter sports banquet, Page 86

·N ews About ·Senior Citizens
In Meigs County

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, Aprils, 2004

ACTIVITY SCHEDULE
The Me1gs Multipurpose
Center is open Monday rhrough
Friday from 8:00a.m. un!il 4:30
p cm . Reg ularl-y--s cheduled
acti vities held throughout th e
week inrlude se wing , quilting,

~~EIGS

T'.e Senior Nutrition Meal is served Dally at 12::00
For l ng r.d1on
- t 1·ntonn•rlon contact Belinda WetHngton

Wednesday fro m 10:00 a.m.
until noon.

5

fur lunch and select what you
want from the ala carte menu. or
bingo, checkers, and games.
yo u can enj\lY the regular ·meJI.
Dance ream praCtice is held Ala carte 11ems arc individuall y
eac h Munday al I :00 p.m. Cost prked . The sugge:-. ted donation
is $I .00 per session allended. for the noo n meal IS $2.00 for
The Knilling Cirde meers on those 60 or older.

- - -Pear-Halves-

-

-

Garlic Bread

7

Chicken Pot Pie
• Pickled Beets
.Jolla with Orange• 'Biscuit

12

.

,

interes te d 1n any o f th e trips, ·
plea se make your reser vat io ns as

Corn
Mandarin Oranges

Garden Salad
Apriool

I

Cheese Cuoes

Augratin Potatoes

Mixed Vegetables
Fruit Juice
Bread Pudding
Roll

,

Oatmeal Cookies

~~

Lettuce &amp; Tomatoes

Creamed Pea s

Bro cco,li spears

Augratin Potaoes

Baked Potato
Fruit Juice

Pasta Salad

Pinea~ple

Banana

White or Brown Bread

Bun

Buttered Carrots

R1ce

Brussel sprouts
Mashed Potatoes
FruiJ Crisp

Fruit Pie

Roll

Roll

What to do when driving throws you a curve
and over have more an.:idents

per mil e than drivers age '30 Ill
54''
• How to deal with
aggressive drivers?.

• How

t'he ·a ging
as vision
prnblems·, hearing loss , and
slower reaction times affect your
proce~s,

does

suc.h

dri ving ability ?

• How can you best respond
t o adverse driv ing co ndilion s.
such as rain, ice and dark nf
night ?

\'Y._,f

• What are the safety rules
for making a left turn , when. are bfway, etc.'!

m ~ uran ce

you expected w· yie ld the ri ght

d iscounts to persons co mpl eting

• How med1cari ons may
. affect dri ving?
The fee for the class is $10.00,

cu mpan1 es

offer

the 55 ALIVE course, Check
\o..•ith your ins umnce company.

To enro ll in the class or for

check or money order made

payable to AARP.

further information ,. call Alice

Certificates will be given upon
.completion of the cour'se . Some

Wamsley. 55 ALIVE Volunreer
ln, trucmr. at 992-J938 .

Group exercise class

learn about taking care of our

Exerc isers completing thi s
c lass v..ill recei~·e a Vl.'e l\ness T-

The first group exercise class
gardens and housepl:mts at
was
held March 29th and will
home .
continue until May 3lsL The
The first meeting was held on
class wi ll meel on Mondays and
March II at I :00 and wil l meet
again on April 8 (same time.)
us and bring your ideas for Wednesdays from I0:00 II: 15.
If you enjoy plantin g and sprucing up the front of the Cost is only $25.00
working in a llower garden, join Center.

Red Hat Society Chapter

PARTY
'TIME!

with an Easter Bonnet Contest.

an egg hunt and oth er fun
activities. The Evening Party is
open to all ages and will begin at
5:30. Brtng your kid s or
Bin,go will be held on April 27 grandchildren and join in the
Hal Kneen and the Maste r bag tq take your goodies home
at 1I :00. The Ohio Cons umer fun .
Gardeners will be at the CeJlter in .
What ·if you are JUSt a beginner Cou nsel will host. "Beach Ball
on April 15 for the annual plant
~ingo". Join us for a fun time .
exchange. Speakers will begin at gardener'' Well. this is the place
1I :00 and the act ual exchange to be· to start a perennial ga rden
without a lor of cost. Everyone
will start at noon.
is
welcome to come even rf you
Bring in your bulbs, seeds and
Linda King will Pre sent a
other seed lin gs yo u want to don't have any plants to bring in
program entitled .. All About
share with others. Bring a plastic tor the exc hange.
. Eggs;· "n April 6 in the
•
' Conference Room at I I :00.
~~~------------~~

BINGO

"All about eggs"

·~~//

shirt award . Call Joy ~entley at
992-2681 ext. 233 for more
information or tn sign up . C lass

size is Limited to len ( 10).

Support groups
The

Meigs Multipurpose Center.

Caring and Sharing

Sttpport Group

me e t~

on the

fou rth Thursday of cnch month
at th e Mei gs Multipurpose
Center at I :00 p.m. The meeting
date is April 22. Lenora Leifheil
will prese nt a program on Pari sh
Nurses.
Contact Lenora Leilheit at
992-2161 for more information.
The Stroke Support Gmup will
meet from 1:00 p.m.-2:30 p.m.
o n April 13 . Lia Tipton,
Occupational Therapist, Holzer
Rehabilitation Center, is th e
coordinator. Pl~ase note that
the Stroke Support Group will
now meet on the second
TUESDAY or each month.
The Diaberes Suppon Group
will meet on April 15. Meetings
begin at 10:30 a.m. and are held
in the Conference Room at the

Angie Swift, a pam:n:as and

kidney tran splant recipi ent from
Middleport, will speak about her
recent surgery. Thi s should be
.very interes ting, so bring a
friend and join us on Apri l 15.
The newly form ed Healtlry
Li l' ing Support Group meets
twice a month and focuses on
losin g weight and adopting a
healthier life slyle. The weigh!
Jo ss program is pallerncd afler
Dr. Phil' s Ultimate We ight Loss
Solution and also include s
. sharing
of nutri tion al
'informati on and diet ti ps.
The meetings will be held on
Tuesday, April 6 &amp; 20. All
meet in gs start at I :00 P·l" · and
are held at the Cent er. For more
infor mation, call Beth Shaver at
992-2161.

~&amp;(JiP

WE HONOR

'CfJ~_welen, Inc.

·J

212 EAST MAIN ST.

POMEROY, OH

992-3785

l!il

G0LDEN BUCKEYE CARDS

"We_Care For Yon Like Family"

We apprctJatc the financia l support received from the
fo llowing churches, organizations. and individuals:
Racme United Methodist Women R;u:1rie .Baptist Class #4
Ga lli polis Elks Lodge# 107

Joann Wood

30

Beef Pepper Steak

Roast Pork
,,_.; th Dressing

Ted Strickland to visit

In Memory of Leo Dav1d,on

Tom ato JUice
Biscuit

29

Lemon lush
While or Brown Bread

-To help rai se money · ro· sponsonng a basket or donatong
upgrade our computers, the a port1on of the cost for one o f
Center 'is hosting a ~' Ba s ket the baskets. call Tammy Queen
Bingo" ~May 6 at6:00 p.m. at at 992 -2 161. Watch the
the Middleport Legion. ~
newspaper for mure de tails on
The Center staff hill' sent when and how to get a ticket to
letters to area businesses to attend the "Basket Bingo." If
request assistance purchasing you purchase your ucket by May
the Longaberger Baskets needed 5 you arc registered for a special
Ted Strickland will be at the p.m . on thi s date. Everyoiu! 1s
drawing with a c hance to win an Meigs Senior Center on April 6 invited to come and hea r the
for the Bongo pnzes.
If you are interested in additional basket.
at I 1:30 a.m. lu talk about the inforr!HIIiun about this new drug
M e di c are Prescription Dru g plan and to ask question s. Bring
Plan.
a friend and slay tbr lunch .
Lunch will be served at 1·2 :30
The Red 1-lat Society will meet
on April 20 at I :00 at the new
Bob Evans in-Mason, WV.
All women are xelcome to
come to attend the meetings .
Women over 50 wear red hats
An Easter Party will be held
and purple attire while those
on Thursday, April 8 beg inning
under 50 wear pink · hats and
at I0:00 and will be followed by
lavender attire. Call Beth Shaver
the ·Annual Easter Dinner.
at 992 -2 161 for more
The Cenler will hos t an
information·.
Evening Easter Party on April 8

\Vomen \ Auxiliary

Warm Apples

y

Chicken Tahitian

Salmon Patty

Chicken Fillet
Potato Wedges

BBQ

Sausage Gravy
Hash brown

28

27

26

Social Security
cp re
· i ves
Arhen' Social Security Office
will h~ at the MeiJ;S S&lt;!J!ior
Ce nter to a:-,sist people w1th

Social Secunty problems and to
provrde information. The dares
are April 14 &amp; 28 frum I0:00
a.m.- 11 :00 a.m.

ENJOY
ALL THE
ACTIVITIES

• HOME . OXYGEN

• HOSPITAL BEDS

•.CPAP MACHINES

• WHEELCHAIRS

• NEBULIZERS

•OXIMETRY

24 Hour Emergeucy Service • Free Delivery

voo~ ­

- sENIOR
CENTER

Zl Ohio Hhcr Phoz•

406 E. lluron St.

l•i
!:

23

California Bier d Vegetables
~J-!±i-J;Jj At ·Jie£o"ce
t~ Roll
' -

••

•

22

Carrot &amp; Celel)' Sticks

New activity at Center

In Memory of Bonnie C&lt;lnde
_ Former m,e mbe" 'l[_the YM ll

Roll

Bun

Mea'! oaf

Honey Be"e Ambrosia

16

Pumpkin Roll

Gre.a'l Beans

Scali, 1ped P·ota toes

The i\t\RP 55 ALIVE Dri ve r
shopping 1n Bon.neyfiddl e for th~ holida y light di splay - Safety Program will be held on
Histoncal Dis tri ct, buffet lunch cost $40.00.
Wednesday, May 12 from 8:00
No,·ember • a three-day, a.m. - 4:00 p.m . al the Meigs
COS I $40.00.
two-night ·
trip
. lo Senior Ce nrer.
Wednesday, June 16
WINTERFEST
AT
PIGEON
AMISH COUNTRY to visit the
Crowded roa ds, agg ress ive
Ohi o Amish Country with FORGE. Cost approxim :uely of drivers, and even eyes1ght that is
shopping, slop at cheese factory, $:100.00 would include travel , not whal it used to be can spell
Amish Family Meal - cosl ac~..:ommodations. so me meals . trouble on the road. That is why
s hopping at leas t four s hows, you should take the AARP 55
$50.00.
September (dale to be and the holiday light di splay. .
ALIVE driver sa fety program ,
announced) • COVINGTON,
lhe 8- hour classroom refresher
AU trips include extra cost for course designed especially for
KY for a Luncheon cruise on
the B &amp; B Riverboat with a river the Senior Center to fund sen ior drivers 50 and over.
view of Cincinnati. stop in progrotms. To make final plans
The Defensive DrivJng
fur
trips,
there
mus
t
be
at
least
Newport on th e Levee ·· cost
Refres her Course will help
30 people interested. Final answer ·these ~.:ammon questions:
$65.00 . .
October (date to be payment on all trips must be
• Why do drrvers aged 55
an 'n ounced)
WEST made I 0 days prior to departure.
. VIRGINIA FALL FOLIAGE
For further information or to
with stops in Charleston at the
Stale House, buffet dinner in make reservations. contact Beth
Beckley, New River Bridge and · Shaver, Actlvltres Coordinator,
We will be sthrting a "Garden
Hawk's Nest cost $50.00.
at 992-2 161 or Alice Wamsley,
Club"
at the Cenler to help plan
November (date to be Volurttccr Trip Conrdr nator at
and
plant
lhe flower beds in the ·
announced) • COLUMBUS to 992-3938.
front yard of the Center and

In Memory bf Earl Williams
Poll y Curti'

Good Fooay -

Hot Dog with sauce
Baked Beans
Macaroni salad
Watermelon

Peach Glazed Pork Chop

h_
i s turiL" &lt;il
murals on th e downtown Dresden, one meal
fl ood wall. tour the 1810 House , and the Longaberger l-lomes t~~td

Annual plant exchange

-

Happy Easter~

21

Crackers

t-

BASKET BINGO

-

Turkey Roll/Dressing
Mashed Potatoes

Spaghetti with Meatballs

20

Roll

rhe Ro4encs at the hisrorical
Ohio Theater-a wonderful
holiday lrcat - cosl $75.00 (no
meal included in thi s price.)
De&lt;·ember (date to be
announced) - DRESDEN with
a stop in Zanesv1lle. shopping in

bsherman@rriydailytribune.corn

1S

Garlic Bread

Chili

BY BRAD SHERMAN

Center Closed

Scal!0ped Potatoes
Mixet1 Vegetables _
Cherry Torte Cake

14

' 13

19

Baked Chicken
Ma• 'led Potatoes/Gravy

Spec tac ular featuring

9

Ham

Cole Slaw
TropicaLFruitSalad _
Corn Bread

Biscuit

The following trips for 2004 .
are being planned . If you are

C hr is tm a~

"

8

Soup Beans

Beef Slew
Crunchy Garden Slaw
Fresh Fruit

Country Fried Steak
Baked Potato
9roccoli with Cheese
Strawberry Short Cake
Roll

TRIPS FOR 2004

see the Radi o C11y Music H:tll

Meigs splits doubleheader with Jackson

prepared by Belinda Wellington

Roll

•

soon as possible so final plans
can be made.
Wednesday,
April 21 CINCINNATI for th e fl owe r
and ga"rde n show, .slo p at a
garde n cenler and buffet meal.
sponsored by the Meigs County
Master Gardeners- cost $45.00.
· Make your reservations with the
Me igs County Exre nsio n Office
at 992-6696.
Wednesday, May 19
PORTSMOUTH to view the

Menu~o

6

Jot&gt;nnie Mariehi
Tomato &amp; Cucumbers

i\11 ages are invited to attend
the ueti·Y.i·t-i e~- ~L"-hcd ul ed. J ~.:-~i n··US

A(Jril 2004

COUNTY SENIOR NUTRITION PROGRAM

Lady Huskies ·
advance to
NCAA title·game
NEW ORLEANS (AP) With one fimd swat. Diana
Taurasi
sec ured
Connecticut's
place rn
anoth er nati o nal c hampi onship ga me.
Connecti~:ut -fou gh t off
repeated co mebac k s by a
gutsy Minnesota tea m. and
stayed on I rack to win a third
strai ght NCAA title with a
67-58 vit:tory in the sem ifinals Sunday night.
Taurasi sco red 18 point s.
made the pass thai leu to one
of the game's bigges t basket
c·ru shed
and
Jhen
Minn esota's fina l ·hopes by
flickin g
away Shannon
Schonrock's 3- point shut
near the end.
The Huskies (30-4) ,rccovered the ball and Ta uras i
dribbled out the final seconds. smiling when the
buzzer sounded and s lapping
hands with teammate Ann
Strother.
The Connecticut victory
keeps alive the possibi li ty of
the (irst championship dou ble for a school. ·
UCo nn will play Georgia
Tec h for the me n 's titl e
Monday ni ght. And look
who's waiting for the
wome n in Tuesday night' s
championship game - none
other than Tennessee. winner
of six national titles :tnd
UConn's main rival fur
supremac y in women's basketball.
Tennessee advanced 10 its
11th NCAA championship
game wilh a 52-50 'victory
over LSU in the othe\ se mi final. It wil l be the second
straight year and fourth tim e
since 1995 the two powers
have played for the tiJie.
Connecticut won the three
previous times. including a
73-68 victory last year in
Atlanta .
Tenne ssee rs the onl y
school with three straight
nittiona l
championships,
winning from 1996-98.

JACKSON - What first
- loOKed toffi&gt;·trurnnirro- mo-Meigs. instead 11io·necl
not half bad.
After being mercy rul ed
11 -0 in ga me one. the
Marauders regrouped to
win 6-4 in the second con- .
test and earn a split of
Saturday's
non-l eague
baseba ll doubleheader at
Jackso n.
Meigs ran its early season mark to 2-1, while the
double-dip served as the
seaso n -openers for the
lronmen.
Both
of
Jackson 's pre vious games
(Scioto
Northwest.
Circl ev ille)
had bee n
rained out. whi le Me igs
had three of four called olf
durin g the first week of the
season.
Saturday 's games were
originally sc heduled to be
played in Rocksprings, but
the week- lon g show ers
made Jhe field · there
unplayable .
Jac kson scored th e first
dozen fUllS Of th e day.
including the lirsl tall y of
game two. and looked
worthy of the newly-displayed 2003 .district champion s hip banner o n I he
outfi eld fence .
But
after
Brandon
Fackler 's lead-off home
run in the seco nd inning of
game two finally put
Mei gs on the scoreboard.
the momentum shifted.
The Marauders scored
twice more in th e inning
off Ironmen errors 10 cl aim
u . 3-1 advantage . then Jackson 's Zack Hoover slides home as Meigs pitcher Doug Dill (3) applies the tag. Jackson
defeated Meigs 11-0 in game one Saturday. but Me igs came back to win 6-4 in game two.
Please se~ Meigs, 86
(Brad Sherman)

two at
Cedarville
STAFF REPORT

sports@ myda1lytnbune.com

CEDARV ILL E In a
doubleheader that could a
lung way in Llelerminmg w_hu

wins the American M ideas!
Co nference South Division
softbal l crown . Cedarvi ll e
scored a pair nf huge victories over the Uni vers ity of
Rio Grande on Saturday
afternoon. 2-0 and 6-5.
Rio G rand e ( 13-7. 2-2
AMC South 1 managed only
seve n hits in the first ~amc as
th e Redwo me n ,·ould not
so lve
Ceda rvil le
hurler
Nata1ie Fox (S--\1. Fox wen t
th e distance for the Lady
Jackets ( 15-7, 2- 0 AMC
So uth ) fanni ng 12 batters IQ
become CU's all-time leader
in ~ l ri k eo uh .

Seniors Emily Cooper and
Kri sta Tucker set the tab le
well for Rio Grande wi th
hoth players collect in g two
hit s
ea~: h .
The
other
Redwome n players could
on ly ga lhc r three hits thus

Please s_e e Rio. 86

Defense shines in Green-White game Sadler
•

•

WinS In

Texas
BY STEPHEN HAWKINS

Associated Press
FORT WORTH. Texas Elliott Sadler look adva ntage
of anoth er hard-luck moment
for Jd f Gordon in Texas. then
barely held off rookie K;,sey
Kahne in an excitin g finish
Sunday.
Sad ler's victo ry in th e
Samsung/Radio Shack 500
hi :-.
second
caree r
NASCAR Nex tel Cup win came by two' imndredth s of a
seco nd over Kahne . the rookie who has three runner-up
finishes allll a third-p lace

Lady Vols edge
.LSU 52-50
NEW ORLEANS lAP) In the e nd, Tennessee alwa'y s
seems lo· find a way.
LaToya Davis scored with
1.6 -seconds left after LSU' s
Temeka Johnson lost the ball
in t!J e backcourt . givin g
Tennessee a 52-50 victory
o_vcr the Lady Tige rs in the
on
national
se mifinal s
Sunday ni ght.
Nolhing has come easy for
th e Lady Vols this season,
but remarkable bal a nce and
resiliency have put them in
th eir lith national title game .
It was th.e third -strai ght
two-point , last-second victory for the Lady Vols, who
had only three phi yers score
·· in douhl e fi gures.
With the score tied 50-50,
once aga in Tennessee put the
ball in · the hands of Tasha
Butts, who had scored the
winning points in the Lady
Vois' last two narrow wins.
She missed th b time, givin g LS U the ball with 6 seclinus left. But Tennessee
trapped Johnso n in the backcourt, forcing the turnover.
The ball squirted out and
~hyra Ely ca me up wi th it
and quickly fed Davis un derneat h for an uncontested
layup.
Tennessee will play the
winner of the other se mifinal
between Conn ecticu t · and
Minnesota .
Shanna
Zolman
led
Tennessee (3 1-}) with 12
hitting a 3-pointe r at
shot-clock buzzer with
-~~-1--=---'!'L Jeft-to g1ve e nncssee a
50-46 lead.
.But LSU (27-8) rallied 1o
tie it at 50 when Johnson
dtove and dished to Tillie
Willis with 27.2 seconds left.

Rio loses

showim.! in :\C\'en races for
Ray Ev~rnham .
.

" It's unhd iev ahle:· said
Sadler. · in hi .s 'econd season
fo r Robert Yates Raci ng.
" I' ve always had a good
knack for th is track. so a
good win .i" j u ... t \ery. \ery
special. ..
Sa&lt;.ller and Kahne were rac inu alone at the front of the
field. with the ruokie trying
to gel hack in rhe lead fllr the
seventh time. He· led 148
laps. but not the one that n;attered.
S·adkr led by a half-seco nd
with 10 lap' left . hut Kahne
kept trimmin!! · tile space
between the two car, . He

Quarterback Tim Bessolo (10) evades the pass rush of Jamaal Whyce (96) and Ashley McNeely (53) during the third quarter of Marshall's annual Green-White game l1e ld Saturday at Mars hat I· Stadrum. (Andre Trrado)
·
14 · y·a rds
to . Wilbur fourth dtlwn. Sen ior li ne- Tunbtallc
an t1 H .tram
By ANDRE TI RADO
a tirado@mydailyregisler.com Hargrove, and II yards to backer Kev in Atkins led the Moore eac I1 tilanage&lt;.I 17
___.::_:___:_____:__--"-,---'---_.::_____ Hiram Moore.
Marshall defense with six yards on the grou nd. with
o d. ..
1
tried tn l!P high several times
The Green team won the tackles .
I _ Jtterent payers get tin g
"' the 'corne"." i'lut ne,er
HUNTINGTON. W.Va . game 25- 14, but no one in.....The...t:irst score nf the s~:c- carnes.
clllild gel had in front.
.It may not have been the audience of 4,715 wou ld oml hall t:ame on a blocked
rvfeanwhilc. Green team
Con1in~ out of till' I a&gt;~ turn.
in credibly exc itin g, . but it des·c r·r' be th e ,a 111 e -, 1,_· ,·1n JJUnt t&gt;v Cun i.s Keve s that receiver Tremel Guillor'
,
.
f
o
J
•
'
Kahne
made
one l:t&gt;l 11ush
h
h
sure sated 1 e 1 rrsl or &lt;&gt;l·t·eJls.· r· ve shoot-'out. With was picked U)J in the end- had four ca tches fm 51
:111d had his left front Jlanel
&lt;.Ie f ense t h at sc&gt;me f ans have the score 5-0 ai'ter o ne half. zone bv conwrhad. Rohcl'l tl yank while sop hom ore
.l. ll"l alun~;..itlt:
th~ r ~ar of
bccn see k· .mg 1-or years. '.··o:tcll Bo'-'- y Pr·tr•' lt ce re ' Terrel l' for a touc hdow n. . S 11aun L :tuton 1l;ru. o t1Hcc
.
1
1
M
h
II'
'
·
'"'
'
Sadler\
Fmd
:h they cro,sed
f
De ense ru ec at a" a s lll&lt;Jtlt.Dlt'.· Jy :1,vat·tlcd lit,
Fr&lt;nn
rhe re.
Morns catches for 54 yards.
·
·
G
·
'
·
'
the
finisl1
line
arouml
the
W
annual Green/ hrlc amc White team 14 points. and mo ved the team down the
Former Gallia Academy
· s1ar t ers 1·ease
1 d lll,·tde the Green team play field with a 39-yard com - standout Jel -f 1\1u 11 Ills
lapJJcd car of Johnn y Sauter.
as d e t-enstve
was
.
d
d
fth
('
It
was the. ei"lllh-close't
find
th
on_ secon
tr an
our
catch-up in the seco nd half. pletion to. Shawn Ltuton on the field for t11c ,rccn
"
stnng quarterbacks. Wtth
Marshall's det:ense rol led and a 14--yard touchdown to ~"am and played for Ill&lt;" I of
isl:.~~ ~L:~ hi~~~;f,;d hv that
both Stan H_i_ll a_nd Graham up 18 sacks· 011 tile d·,ty·. &lt;tnd Hargrov_e.
the t'ame. With the ~radua'
llltt··h
i,,
a
little
bit
disappoint•
I
f
h
d
d
Goc hneaur st e rn e or 1 e lr' tnited the Green team 10
Runntng
back
Earl tinn of slandout J:"on
'
b
k
B
d
·
·
1
ing.''
'aid .We
··w~ · ju .,l
game_. . ac up~~ _ ern·~-~~ only 13 poinls. before Charles and wide ret:civcr Rader. Mttllitb ts .'n 11e
an'out Kahnc
,_,-01 there.
didn't
-Mor4'4s..-)IJ'Ilmy....,.ktnru:_[,_4u.u.,...Mo-rr~ - ptt~'tl
f
w,e Josb IMllih.otiLwere o11t of _thid pi the hunt lor the
•
Tun Bessolo _h_e ld lhe keys l·t,urth quarter tou··hdowns . the game for varrous rca- srarttn~ 11~ht end .fm_,,~i'""'"'T€&lt;edcte\l IAtlclr-mr&gt;re--&gt;ttl~lttl-l;v"',oee----=
~
·
"mtld ha1·c hcen there ."
to 1he h_e rd.. o tl ense.
Marshall's
first
team sons. "hilc a gr&lt;\duation Mullin, caught one ·p"'' lor
Sadler :tl·cr:rgcd 1_\X.S-lS
.., Mmns ltmshed J 1-21 .fw- defen,;e nho mmtnteJ -tl-suc- de)}letcd Hfkt1 ., iw line _''-" ' i-" y.ards in the~'""''· and
mpll in the r,tce , "~d by
1.32 yards and an tnler~ep- cessflrl goal line st,llld, player&gt; seeing time on hoth reprised hi s role as a long
lion . The sophomore also stuffing White team running teams.
·
snappe r lor both teams on
Please see NASCAR, 86
three tou c hdown passes of back Michael Wcsl on
Running
hul'k
Tank pun1111g dtn'n' -

1

10

•

�Monday, April 5, 2®4

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, Aprils,

www. mydailysentinel.,c om

Snowflakes greet Cubs,
:Reds for workout
CINCINNATI tAP)
Dusty Baker was bundled in
two jackets, a stocking cap and
-batting glov~s as he left the
shelter of the clubhouse tunnel
and stepped into the windswept visitors dugout.
''Ain't too bad out here''' he
·declared, chomping down on
his toothpick.
On that matter. the Chicago
Once Lidle throws the tirst
Cubs manager was in a tiny
-~--___.:.m:::i~norit~.
/ .:::.
,
. pitch, the foc us will he on two
fiCCubs and me'tloctffimtl71" teams that had an offseason to
Reds worked ou t in wintry con- stew about failures.
ditions at Great American Ball
Chicago had five months to
Park on Sunday. a day .hetore think about how it came within
their
season
opener. outs of its· tirst World Series
Temperatures were. barely appearance since 1945, then
above treezmg, a stmgmg north collapsed. The Cubs added
wmd turned noses red. and Gre~ Maddux in the offseason.
llakes no bigger Lh;.~n a grai.n of imp~ovi ng their chances for a
beach sand floated 111 the mr.
sewml straight NL Cen tral
'·ts that snow ·!" Cubs special title.
·
assistant Gary Hughes asked.
They' re not at full strength at
Indeed, It was - another the outset. Right-hander Mark
unmiStakable s1gn ttwt opemng Prior isn't expected to pitch
day wasat_hand. .
_
until May because of intlamThe clly s notonously ltckle mation in his Achilles' tendon
April weather is expected to and a stiff elbow. Kenry Wood
moderate a lillie by the tune will start his second straight
Cory bdl~ takes _the_ mound opener Monday.
Also standing in the way is
Monday attemoon 111 I rom ot a
crowd that bought out the another bit of Cubs history.
42,000-seat ballpark 111 only 16 Last yem, they won their fi rst
mmutes.
division title si nce 1989 and
Lidle . who lost 15 games last got their first playoll series vicseason tor Toronto, has never tory in 95 years. The next hurpitclled a _season opener and die: having back-to-back winhas little t1rsthand knowledl!e , ning seasons for the fu·st time
of the special place II holds Ill since 1971-n.
Cin&lt;:i nnati's hea11.
"That's unbelievable:· Baker
"Just what I've heard," he said. "That seems almost
said Sunday. "Just the simple impossible, how the Cubs had a
tact that the v1ce. president 1s · winning season and inv,u·iably
¥01 ng to !Jc her~ g 1.~cs you that the next year it was always a
leel~ng tt s speCial. .
losing season."
Y1ce Pres1dent DICk Cheney
The Reds have nothing but
plans to throw a ceremomal bad memories in their new
first pitch, the second consecu- home. They lost their first live
live year that a prommem · oames at Great American Ball
Republican has opened the Park. including tw o ex hibi. Reds ' season. Former President tions. and 93 overall in the
George Bush threw_a first pitch inaugural season.
Satilmy Sosa gave the place
before the ballpark s maugural
game last year.
.
its tirst hi storic moment by hitReds owner Carl Lmdner ting his SOOth career homer on
suppo11s th~ Bush-Cheney lick- April 4. TI1e next day, Ken
et. One ot h1s sons hosted a Griffey Jr. dislocated his shoulcampaign tund-ra1 ser las t der while diving for a ball.
111 . suburban
Griffey strained his right calf
September
Cmcmnali that ra1sed approx1- while .running out a grou nder
matdy $1.7 nllllton.
.
last Monday, sidelining him for
The Reds urged tans to amve the last week of spring training.
early on Monday because . of Manager Dave Miley expects
tougher secun ty. Secret Serv1ce him to play in the opener. but
agen ts toured the ballpark dur- will wait to see how he feels
ing the workouts Sunday and Monday 1noi-ning before commilling to him.
met With team officmls.

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

~·
' '
'

Major League.Baseball
American League

National League

w

l

Batt1more
NY Yankees

1

Tampa Bay

1

Toronto
Boston

0
0

0
1
1
0

-1

w

L

C_hicago §oJC

0

Cleveland

0

- 0

EAST

1

CENTRAL

0

Kansas City

0 •

Minnesota

0

0
0

Seattle
Texas

0

()()()

1·0
1·1
1·1 •
0·0
0·1

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Oakland

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Mueller 3b 5 0 3 0
MRmrzll 50 2 1

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5 0 10
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5030
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4 10 0
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2 0
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Dubach ph 0 o o 0
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Totals 36 211 2

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BAbrts 2b
Mora3b
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Butista dh
Bigbie ll
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Totals

ab rhbi
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Boston
OQ1 000 010 2
Baltimore
030 000 31x 7
E--06734 (1), PMarlinez (l), Mora (1). DPBoston 1. Ba ltimore 3. LOB-Boston 14, Bal·
Mmore 7. 28-Sellhorn (1 ), Jvlopez (1),
Segui (1)_ HA-Jvlopez (1). 58--Gibbons
p), Matos nJ. C5-Ke.pler (1), BRcberts (t).
IP H RERBBSO

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PMartinez L,~ 1
6 7 3 2 1 5
Timlin
2-3 3 3 3 2 1
Embree
1·3 0
0 0 0 0
Williamson
1 1 1 0 0
1
Baltimore.
P.onson W.1·0
5 2·3 7 1 1 3 3
Rlopez
t t·3 1 0 0 1 0
DeJean
t·3 1 1 1 2 0
BRyanS,!
12-3 2 0 0 0 2
HBP----by Penson (OOrtiz). by PMartinez
(Segui) .
UrllJires-Home. Rick Reed; First. Ted Barrett:
Second, Ed Rapuano; Third, Alfonso Marquez.
T-3:21 . A-47,683 (48,190).

Atlanta

0

Florida
Montreal
NY Mets

0
0

0
0
0
0
0

000
.000
.000
.000
000

0
0

Philadelphia

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Chica~

Cubs

Houston
Milwaukee
Pjttsbur_gh

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0·0

0-0

o-o

0·0
0-0

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Arizona
Colorado
Los 'Angel~s
$an D1ego
San
., Francisco

•·NewYork
y·Bosl on
Toronto ·
Baltimore
Tampa Bay

101
61
95
67
86
76
71
91
63
99
Central Division

•·Minnesota
Chicago
Kansas City
Cleveland
Detroit

72
76
83
79
68
94
43
119
West Division
W
L

W

M·Oakland
Seattle
Anaheim
Texas

L

90
86

96

66

-

GB

0
0
0

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Away

0·0
0·0

0-0
0·0

0·0
0·0

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0·0

0·0
0·0
0-0

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0·0

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0·0

0

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0

000

0·0

0-0
0·0

0
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.000
000

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0
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0·0

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Countlel Llk
NoOne

J!-.CanJ
G111i1 County, 011

In One Week With Us
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0·0 :

Saturday's Resu lts
No games scheduled

Sunday's Results
No games sche&lt;illed

Monday's Games
Chic8go Cubs (Wood 14·t 1) at Cincinnati (L1dfe t2-t5) , 2:10p.m.
Philadelphia (Millwood 14·t2) at Pittsburgh (Wells 10.9). 4:05 p.m.
San Diego (lawrence 10·15) al los Angeles (Nomo 16·t3). 4:10p.m
Milwaukee (Sheets 11·13) at St.louis (Morris 11·6). 4.10 p m.
San Frar.::isco (Rueter 10·5) at HoustOn (Oswal110·5). 7:05p.m.

~~~~~----- .

East Division
Pet
.623
.566
53 t
.438
.389

GB

Pet
.556
.531
.512
.420
.265

GB

6
15
30
38

4
7

22
47

Pet
.593
.574
.475
.438

W
x-Atlanta
y-Fiorida
Philadelphia
Montreal
New York

10 t
61
91
71
86
76
83
79
66
95
Central Division

W
x-Chicago
Houston
St.loUis
Pittsburgh
Cinc1nnati
Milwaukee

3
19
25

L

88
74
87
75
85
77
75
·87
69
93
68
94
West Division

GB

93
69
77
85
71
91
x-cllnched dlvisien
y-clinched wild card

L

W

L

x·San Franc1sco 100
Los Angeles ·
85
84
Arizona
Colorado
74
San Diego
64

61
77
78
88

98

Offeello~~

Baseball Today

2003 NL Final Glance
Pet
.623
.562
.53 1
.512
,410

10
15
18
34 ',1,

Pet

GB

.543
.537
.525
.463
.426 .
.420
Pet
.62 1
.525
.519
·. 457
.395

GB

'

3
13
19
20
GB
t5'1_
16'/,
26'/,

36'1.

2003 AL Leaders

2003 NL Leaders

BArnNG-Mueller, Boslon, .326; MRamirez,
Boston, .325: Jeter. New York .. 324: Wells.
Toronto, .3 17; MOrdone.z, Chicago.. 3t7: GAnderson, Anaheim .. 3t5: !Suzuki. Seattle, .3 12:
Pierzynski, Mirmesota .. 312.
RBl--CDelgado, Toronto. 145: AAodriguez,
Te11as. 118; WeUs. TorOnto. 117: BBoone. Seat·
tie, 117: GAnderson. Anaheim, 116
HOME RUNs-AAodriguez. Te)(aS, 47: CDel·
gado, Toronto, 42: Thomas. Chicago, 42;
JaGiambi, New York, 41. ASoriano, New York,
38: RPalmeiro. Texas. 38.

BATTING-Pujols, St. Louis, .359: Helton. Colorado.. 358. Bonds. San Francisco, .341;
Renteria, St. Lo u! ~ .. 330: Sheffield, Atlanta.
330: Kendall , Pittsburgh, .325; MGiles. Atlanta.
316.
RBI -PrWilson, Colorado, 14 t: Sheffield.
Atlanta, 132: Thome. Philadelphia, 131 , Pujols.
StLouis, 124; Sexson , .Milwaukee. 124
HOME RUNs-Thome, Philadelphia. 47 :.Se ~­
son. Milwaukee , 45; Bonds, San Francisco, 45:
Pujols. St Louis, 43; Jvlopez, Atlanta. 43:
SSosa., Cl1icago, 40.

RETURN TO SENDER
Mels pitcher AI Le11er was hi\ 1n the head by a •
line drive Salurday ,pnd could miss his firs! star!
of the season. leiter grabbed the side ol his
lace ar1d fell on the mound af1er ge"ing hit by
Alex Gonzalez's liner in the second inning of
New York's spring training victory over Florida.
He was taken to JuP.iter MediCal Center for a
CT scan .and X-rays, wh1ch were negative
A PHILLIES FIRST
Jim Thome got the hrst hit at Philadelphia's
new Citizens Bank Park on Saturday. Thome ,
who led the Nalional League with 47 home
runs last season.' homered on a 2·1 pilch Irom •
Indians slarter Jeff O'Amco 1n the first inning

This date In baseball
AprilS
1971 - In their last open1ng day. the Senalors.
behind pitcher Dicl1 Bosman. beatlhe Oakland
A's 8·0 before 45.000 fans at RFK Stad1um.
1979 - Ballimore manager Earl Weaver got
his 1.000th ,career victory when the Orioles
beat the Ch1cago While Sox
1983 - The San Diego Padres beal the San
Francisco G1ants 16· 13 in the h1ghest sconng
opening day game In 50 y·ears. Winning pitcher Tim Lollar also drove 1n lhree runs.
1993- The expansion Florida Marlins won
their first game. 6-3 over the los Angeles
Oodgers. at Joe Robbie Slad1um. The new Col·
ora do Rockies losl to the Mets 3.() in New York

•

,.

110

110,

H ELP W ,\ i'I!Hl

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Call for Application ·and
Exam
lnlotmation.
No
(OtiO
LosT "~n
Experience Necessary. Toll
FouNil
Free 1-888-269-6090. ext.
Lost
or
Slolen ·
Part
Doberman ml).; dog. female ,
reddiSh brown in color. trail
frOpped spaded Aprox . 10
rllonths t&gt;ld red snap collar.
Rro Grande area Rewardl!
Call 740·245-5060/740-245·
9575.

.

r

Huge yard sale 1/2 m~e out
850 'from Bidwell We have
lots for everyone. CHEAP.
M3-4t10

Spring is finally here, and Alabama's beautiful Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail is· ready to play . We bet you are too . So swap gloves, dust
····· · ········· · ··· ··· ······'···············~··································································································~········································

r

IS ONCE AGAIN A 3 WOOD,
·· ··· ··········~············· ··· ···········•!••···· ··· ·······················································~ ~·· ······ ·· ········ ~·· ······················~······ ·· ····················

PE

TURE.

WAI'ITED

ro8UY

I \WI 0\ \II· '\ I
st 1&lt;\ It I '-1

Make 50Q;;. selling Avon.
Limited
lime
ONLY.
(740)446-3358. First 5to call
receives a gilt
oney .
You could earn up
· to $8/hour plut

bonuaea.
We also offer paid
traming . .holidays
and vacalions.
We are hmng so give us
a call today!
1-877-46H247 IKI. 2457

'ANEW CLINICAL
PEELS!'
Want to look younger AND
earn Money? let's talk the
N~VON cal!

ovotC·c

•

'

'

20 MORtLE

Publication Sales Co. hiring
18 sharp en thusiastiC
Individuals to travel tho U.S.
Travel, training Lodg1ng and
transportation furnishec!
Return Guaranleed. Star!
Roday 1·800·781·1344

Veterinary Assislant ileed·
ed. Ellperience preferred,
but will train . PT/FT. some
weekends
required.
Mmimum
wage
Send
resume to French Town
Veterinary Clinic, 360 SA
160 Gallipolis. or fa)( 740·
446-4101.

Ace red ted

Member

2167 .
Taking
applications
on
14x70.
3bed room.
lnterseclion of CreekView
Dr. &amp; Garners Ford Rd .
S375+deposit.
(740)2455671

Barn Removal

1180

WANTED

To Do

I

Affordable Servlce·s, Hauling
gravel, dirt, ect, Painting,
Tree • Trjmming, DriveWay
Repair. Guliers. Ch1mney,
Plumbing Jack Of All Trades.
30yrs. experience (304)882·
2196 (304)377-8266

Jim's C&amp;rpenlry and small
landscaping. C&amp;ll (740)4462506.

Will Pressure Wash hOuses.
mobile homea, . rnetsl butld·
lngs, and gutters. Call
(740)446.0151 ask for Ron
or leave message.

r

W.~NTE!l

Chocolate Lao pupoy. 4
month old male no papers.
lull-blooded. $200 00 (304f
Looking for a 2 or 3 bedroom 59J..D830
hOuse to rent with a two car
m1xed
pupp1es
garage to do some car Husky
detailing. Can be reached at (740)388-8623 or 1740)656·
2141.
(740)446-7515.

roRmr

\li.Rl II \~Ill&gt;!

FRl;n; &amp;
VEc;ElABI J:'i

1-'&gt;

~

© 2004 by NEA , Inc .

www.comics.com
Jl'\j\~(

10

1\1.

10

B LISINK'iS
O!~'OlmJNITY

"'

HoMEs

· mRSALE

"'

H!O VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO. recommends tha
ou do business with pea·
pie you know, and NOT t
end money through th
ail unlil you have investi·
a ted the oflerin

230

All real estate advertisi ng
In this newspaper is
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes it illegal.to
advertise Rany
preference, limitation or
discrimination based on
race, color, religion , sex
familial status or national
origin, or any intention to
make any such
preference, liml1a1ion or
discrimination ."

I'ROFI':'-"il&lt; lNc\1.
SERVIn:-;

TUA NEO DOWN ON .
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We W1n!
1·888-582-3345

Ill- I l.I.S I \11-.
310

r

wrs&amp;
ACR&amp;\C.E

1 acre level lol Sunset Lane
off Sandhill Rd (304)6752820

This new spaper will not
knowingly accept
adverti,sements for real
estate which is In
violation of !he law. Our
rea ders are hereby
informed that all
dwellings advertised in
this newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases

Ho~ •.:~
&gt;URSALE

213 bedroom, 2 balh on 5
acres in Rio Grande school
distr1ct. Call (740)446·654t .

D1n Am , LA, Large FM. 'All
Oak. K11. Ut1! Rm . ,3 Br 2
F.B.R. 2274 ,Sq. It, 2 Car
Garage. 18x40 healed pool
on 1OOx87 lol (304)674Ot25

16x80 s1tes available $115
per month includes water.
sewer &amp; trash , (740)992·
2167
Lots for Sale: Beautifully
wooded 2 38 acres Green
Township , $47,000. Call
(740)44' ·95 ' 6.
.
Ohio Land sale near St At
23&amp;32 about 10/acres, Mid
30's call (614)253~2083
1Oam to 6Dm Saturdays·.
leave number. time to call
Wanting to lease a Farm that
has Hay &amp; Tillable ground
(304)458-1860 or (304)458·
1887 or cell 593-1755 In
Mason, Gallia &amp; Meigs
Counties

Rl·.\1 \I.S
10

Hmt;t~

FOR lb:NT
t bedroom Muse. 1005 3rd
Ave . $250 month Call
(740)256·6661 .

10
Hou;;rnow
1 and 2 bedroom apartGOOllS
ments, turni~hed and unfurKESSEL'S PROot lCE
nished. security deposil
Good used Appliances , Amish Cheese . lunch Meal.
required . no pets, 740·992· Recondilio ned
and Fresh Fru1t ana Vegetables
2218
Guaranteed
Washers , Open Thurs-Fr i- Sa1 . 1354
Dryers,
Ranges .
and Jacks9n P.1 ke . Ga llipol i s.
1 bedroom apt. stove! retrig·
7
Aefngerators.
Some
start
at · 0
6 7787
erator &amp; utilities furnished
I \K\1 Sl 1)1"1 1• S
$95.
Skaggs
ApDllances.
76
Call (740)245·5859 .
~'\:.11\ISIO(K
V1ne St., (740)446·7398
1 Bedroom, near Holzer,
C/A, WJD hookup , ·quiet Kenmore range , washer' (610
F•RM
379 plus utilities. dryer all good condition .
location . $_
EQul~1El'T
Deposit &amp; lease required. 1497 Neighborhood Road .
(740)446·4423.
(740)446·2957
Farmall M. runs good good
Mollohan 'Carpet, 202 Clark sheel metal, 1740)949·2700
1 BR Bachelor. Apartment,
Chape l Road, Porter, Ohio.
Privale &amp; Qwet $350 month
(740)446-7444 1-877-630- Ford 5600 Tractor round hay
(304)675-1550
9162. Free Estimates. Easy baler. 'S1de del1very rack. hay
2
bedroom
new financing, 90 days same as tedder . disc. mower Call
slove/retrigerator.
Rent 'cash_ Visa/ Mesler Card (740)245-5064
$400.00
and
5400.00 Drive· a· little save alot
V1con round baler f1e ld. ready
deposit
No ,Pets. Ott
Thompsons Appl iance &amp; Charles L. Ha ti1eld cal
Kingsbury and 33 Ask lor
Repair-675-7388. For sal~ . (304)675-4566
Marge. (740)992-4119
re·conditioned
automatiC
W.·\ ~n:tl
2 bedroom apartmenl, refer· washers &amp; dryers, refrigera·
roRLY
tors
,
gas
and
electric
ences and secunly depoSit
ranges:
air
conditioners.
and
.(740)949·25 17
wringe r washers . Will do Hay wagons good. IM or
2 bedroom apt. St. Rt 160 repatrs on major brands in poor w1th or Without beds
pa.s:t Holzer $475 mG shop oral your home.
740 698·6809
i740)441·01 94.
Used Furllllure Store. 13p
L1HSIOCK
P1ke.
Grave
3 rooms and bath, upsla1rs. Bulaville
newly decorated. Rel/dep Monuments (740)446-4782.
required No pets. (740)446· Gallipolis OH . Hrs . 10-4 (M· 4;H P1gs lor sale Born
S)
t 519.
t '25!04 thru 02. 20 04 Call
530
~· (740)448·2002 alter 6 ·00
4 room house, 260 State St
ANT1Ql1·:..,
PM cell (740)541-7491
$350 month plus utilities 1
(740)446-3667.
Painting gekling. 5 yrs old
sell
A1verine good natured. broke. 2·
Buy
or
APARTBEAUTIFUL
Anl1ques . 1 t 24 East Mam monlhs advanced tra1n1ng
MENTS
AT
BUDGET on SA 124 E . POmeroy. 740shoes. hauls. baths experiPRICES AT JACKSON 992-2526. Russ Moore,
enced nders only Good bar·
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
owner ·
rei prospect1 ve (740 )388·
Drive from 5344 to $442
0d36
Walk to shop &amp; mov1es. Call J5"lO MISCH&gt;LA~HJL s
740·446-2568.
Equal
MEROIANIJ!St:
Reg1ste red ANGUS and
Housing Opportunity
Crossbred bulls. ToP. blood·

r

~---·

21ft roUnd above ground
Condo in K1ssimee. Flonda .
pool . accessories .. deck &amp;
June 12· 19, sleeps 8·t2
vinyl coated chain link fence
people 4 mi from Disney.
$1200 Call(304)675 -3215
Call {740)446·t27 t.

Gun cab1net· holds 10 guns.
2 bedroom house. 1 1 Conven1ent location. Nice
Garfield Gallipolis, Ohio. bedroom References and $200 080. (740 )992-7653
$350 month. (740)441..()194. deposit required . No pets .
~46·8226
JET
For Sale-House, one &amp;1 /4
740
46
0139
AERATION
MOTORS
}4 .
acres. 3000sqft. 3br, 2bh, lr, 2 bedroom. 1 .bath. central (
r · oeOroom, 2~2' ca
Repaired, New &amp; Reburlt In
a1r, $400 month .
Call CONVENIENTLY .LOCAT·'
arage, .1.9 acres SR141. dr, tvr, fsb (304)773·5984 or
Stock . Call Ron Evans. 1(740)446-3481 or (740)645· ED 1 AFFORDABLE!
593-3702
1ew photos/into onlm
800·53H526.
21_9_2__.._ _ _ _ _ _ TownhouSe
epartmenls,
I'Vww.orvb.com Cod 3310
House lOr sale on 2 1/2 and/or
small
houses
FOR
r call 740·446·7633-:'
3 bedroom
house
m
acres ot land, full basement.
NEW AND USED STEEL
Pomeroy, $400 a· mo., $400 RENT Call (740)441·1111.
3 bedrooms, dming room .
tor application &amp; mformation . Steel Beams, P1pe Rebar
deposit. rlo pets, (740)949·
bedroom. 2 bath,
lamily room w/l1rep1.ace, llv·
Concrele,
Angle ,
For
~iverview access. private ing room, 2 full baths, utility 7004
Furmshed apl. I br. , 2nd Channel, Flel Bar, Steel
~oat dock 1n Gallipolis. 1 room. 2 car garagQ, heal
Ave. Upstairs, all utilities pd .. Grating
For
Drams.
~ere lot. View photos/info ·pump. 201120 out buildlnQ, 3 Oedroom, large lawn , t car No
pets
Gallipolis. Dnveweys &amp; Walkways . L&amp;L
garage. No pets. Pa\[101
~~line
www.orvb.com 30 foot pool with new declo:.
(7 40)446-9523
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Village , (740)379·2540.
~ode 90303 or call 740
(740)992-1641
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
.46-0531 .
8t9V1&amp;nd St. Pt . Pleasant, 2 Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed· Fnday, Bam · 4 :30pm. Closed
320 MOBILE HOMES
SaturdBy
&amp;
br. full .basement $400.00 + room apartments at VIllage Thursday,
and
Riverside
'bedroom. 2.5 bath .· 4 Z&lt;'l
utll ref. &amp; dep. 304-675· Manor
7300
446
7
40
Apartments in M1ddlepor1 . Sunday. &lt; ~ )
cres, 3 car garage,
8902 I
From
$295·$444
Call
740New
Bowfiex
lor
sale
. Never
SRS54. View phOtos/In!
Norns landmark
1989
www.orvb.corr Double-wid e, 60X27. 4 bed· Nice I bedroom apartment 992·5064 . ECI UBI Hous1ng beer1 usedl Call (740 )446nline
8951 if no answe r leave a
~ode 32904 or call 7 40 rooms. 2 ful l baths, living $375/month, washerfdryer Opportunities
hook·up, CMtrel 91r, 1 mile __;_.:________ _ messane
67-7619.
room , de'n, k1ichen, dining north ol Cheshire on At. 7 New 1 bedroom apt Phone __::.:.::.:•.:__
· ------room . laundry $35,000.00 (7 40)992·5226
740-446-3736.
Single Shol 243 3 9 Red
3·4 bedrooms. 1. 1/2 bath,
(7 40 ) 992·5295
F1eld Scope $:299 (3011$)675·
Middleport, above grouno
R1ver
view. 3 bdrm.. 2
581 5 (304)67 4·0598
pool, fenced ·yard , garage,
owner
will
finance , 85 Granv11ie 41x65, clean , balhs. basemen\ and deck Small House $275 00 a
good condition, new appl1. All electric . located in month Call Nancy {304167~· Walk behind Gravely mower
(740)992-2886
Ferry,
WV 40:24
(304)675·5540 $600 .
variOus
Gravely
ances &amp;
nice fu rnllure Gallipolis
f 1b
Outbuilding Ready lo move
oolmonth, no pets . By HomesteaCI Reality Broke r anachmenls
for
sa le.
7
4
1
2 1
bd .., '' ory bnck,n•" acahseed· into. Cell (740)245·5021 or appt {740 )446 .34a 1
Pt. Pleasant , wv
l
.7_4_0;_
199_2_-7_6_53_____
11
men' 2·c8 r u
{740)388-0460
j;~~;:.;,;;;.~~--, -~------ljfarage. Price reduced . 4th - - - - - - - - - l\10B1LE HOMES
Ta ra
Townhouse Whirlpool refngerator ice
maker •75 (740)99" 6810
Sl · New Ha..~ en · (740)446 • 95 Fairmont, 16)\80. 3 bed· L__
Aparlments Very Specious
, "' ,
.r;•
427 4 ,
room, :2 bath . -' must be
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors. CA . 1
BL'ILlll'IG
8 room Ranch . . !ull base· moved, books $19,000 sell 12x55. 2 bedroom mobile 1/2 Bath Newly Carpeted .
St'PPl.JES
.$16,500, (7"'0)667~6357 , home. No pets ,· 2 refer· Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool. ____
ment. 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath.
s
$
1
N
740.667·9823
ences, 250 month. $200 PallO. tart 385 Mo
o
2 5 acres. tam11y room . covp
,
Pi
lly Block, brick. sewer p1pes
depoSII , vinton . ( 74 0)388·
els, ..:ease
us ecur
ered deck, $99,900 No land Vletonan , 736 . sq. ft. 3 bAdDeposit R8qul red, Days WI Mows, lintels etc Claude

mRSAtE

s

1420

-

r

..;m;;o;R;,REN'riililii•-'
s

Aetereocll-S-----&amp;vallab!!o.__Mtl!LJc!ion~!;ra;;,c~IS:J(~7~40~):j44~6r·2~1~9~6~~r~oo~mr.,~2~b~a~th

Whlttf{74t))446·7139.

Pn~
HJR SALE

Off1ce . space downtown
Pomeroy, approx. 1800 sq.
tt .. street level, near court·
house, $450 mo .. (7 40)592·

AI'ARTh 1E!'.'TS
mR R~xr

Ac t.:n:!d&gt;tu•g

AU references &amp; lull 1nsur·
ance. Call 304·373·0011 .

bedroom
lor rent
sewer &amp;
deposit &amp;

r•.·-~-us.:..~.·-r_roll r

I

AKC lab pups. 7 weeks: oul
of huntmg stock Parents on
prem1ses. Wormed and 1st
shOts. Yellows &amp; blacks .
(7'0)388·9515
S3DO per month, (740)992· ,:,
",;5;::8-.....,..,.,..----~

couhc11 lor Independent concgos 3 B.edroom Brick Ranch t
af1 d Schools 12749
, Acre lol Reduced (30.4.)67.5·
170
1714
M !SU:l.IA~EOLIS
oearoom. .o oem. TT
~cres. 3 bay shed. Also to
ale camper, vacant lot 1
Agco-AII1s (Simplicity) 1718
Garden Tracto r 50" deck. Porter View photos.linf
www .orvb.com
hydro, 637 hOurs. new block. ~nllne
$2,100 ~ode 33004 or ' Call 740
t1res
ag
~304)6755253

HoMEN

l·OR JlJ...:.NT
Nice 2 and 3
mobile homes
includes water.
trash. no pets,

TRAVEL U.S.A

QUALI TV LAWN CARE
v d 525 00
d
,ar s
.
an up. 25
years
experience.

HELP WAm-ED

POLICIES : Ohio Vat!ey Publishing rase~•• the rlght to edit, reject, o r cancel any ad at any time. Errors must be rsported on the first day of publicstion and
Tribun&amp;-Sentlnei·R!!!glsler will be reaponslbh!l for no mora than the coal of the spece occupied bV the error end onty the first insertion. We shall not be liable
any toss or 1111pense that resul ts from the publication or omission of an edvertissment. Correc:tlon will be made in the flrat avellable edition. • Box number
are always confidential. • Current rete card applies. • All real estate ad\lertlaementa are su bject to the Federal Fair Housing Act o l 1968 • Th is~••;,.,,,.,
accepts only help wanted ada meeting EOE standards. We will not knowingly accept any advertis ing In lliolation of the taw.

The Tuppers Plains·Chester
Water Dlstr1cl is accepling
application s tor the next two
weeks with intentions of f1ll1ng two entry-level positiOns
within the next 12 months.
One position is for an ott1ce
clerk and the other IS for a
field maintenance position.
The otl1ce position mu st be
able to work with lhe public
and have general lo:nowk
edge of Microsoft Word and
Excel. The second position
is considered a lield maintenance pOsition but electrical
systems and control knowl·
edge lo be given preference
in the applications selection.
No prior water ·knowledge is
required; we w11l train as
needed. Your may p1ck up an
application at 39561 Bar 30
Road, which is three miles
soulll of Tuppers Plain s just
·aff State ReUle 7.

1

Now you can have borders and graphics
Ill-"
added to your classified ads
{,~
Jm
Borders $3.00/per ad
·Graphics 50¢ for small
$ I .00 for large

iwright@ic.net

Treatment
Residential
Fac111ty youth w.orker. Pay
basad on exper~enc£ . Call
1-::-,-1----~.nl'fl'~m,..._
~m 9Q81 •• apply
fS"&gt;lng 39 ptiOplo IOCIIIl
Joyce (304)675-6919.
April (304)882·3630
~ho want to earn mane
f,vhile 1os1ng we•ght. show
·ng
other!!
how.
AVONI All Areas ! To Buy or lnformallonal
vailable upon request 740
Sell
Sh~rley Spears 304·
41-1984.
675-14:29

I

Thursday for Sundays Paper

HELPWwn:n

HMdymM· yard work, no
JOb 10 btg, .senior discount.
Tim Kern (740)992·27 41

do

,

1.

POSTAL JOBS
$15.44·$21.40/tlr,
Now
Hiring. For application &amp; tree
government job info, call
American As!loc. ollabor 1·
913.-599-8:220.
24hrs
ernplsar11.

-

Friday For Sundays Paper

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Absolule Top Dollar: u.s.
Sliver,
Gold
Coins,
Proofs'ets, Diamonds. Gold
U.S. Currency.· Paramedics
Rings,
&amp;
EMT's
M .T.S.' Coin Shop . 151 needed. Apply at 1354 All types of masonry brick,
Second Avenue. Gall1pohs Jackson P1ke, Gallipolis.
block &amp; stone 20 yrs .
740·446·2S42.
E.~rperlence free estimate ..
1·304· 773·9'550, 304-593·
Cash paid for- gold &amp; Silver POSTAL JOBS
1007
con s &amp; co1n 'collections. free S15.44·$21.40/hr. now hir·
estimates ,· Glen 81ssell. ing. For eppllcaUon and free Deycare has oPenings for &amp;II
government job In fo, call ages, call Dawn for dela1IS at
(7 40)992· 7599
American Assoc. ot Labor, (7 40)949 ·2990 m Aacme
Complete hOspital
bed ,
1-(913)599·8220 24 "" area.
(740)992·5949
emp. aerv'

off the ciLJbS, and go outside to play. Special spring packages now available. Call 800 .949.4444 or visit www.RT JGolf.com for details.

NOT ATE

Y.ARIJ SALF.-

GALUI'OUS

.

.

Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p . m .

• All ads must be prepaid"

Well tender needed lor oil &amp;
gas company in Me1gs
County, Ohio. must provide
own transPortation, apply at
J.D Drilling Company. 107
North Third St., Aacmc. Oh
100.
- - - - - - - - - 45771, Monday thru Friday
7am-4pm.
HEY DRIVERS!!!
Here IS a great opportunity 150
SC'HOOIB
to .come grow with us.
I
NSTRVL,O'l
Kuntzman Truck1ng an 80
year old. Regional Truckload
Carrier with terrn1nals in Gallipolis CAreer College
(Career's Close To Home)
Alliance and Columbus Oh1o
has opened a new termin al Cali Todayt 740·4,46·4367.
1·800·214·0452
1n P1keton. Oh10. Only ha1d
IVWW.galllpohscureorcbllege
com·
work1ng, exper1enced dnv·

1 Lost: Min1atum P1ncllcr m111
Black!Tfln FemAle. Rnswers
"Sa1sy". Black collar
to
wrrabies
, tag .
M1ssmg e1s with a clean MVR and a
3/29i04 Tuppers Plains area. minimum of two years expe·
Reward Call {740)667-6308 rience need apply.
We have openings for:
White .Rat remer , black &amp;
-t5 Company Onyers
brown face . black on back.
15 Owner Operators
female.
Reward .
Call
(7401388 ·8186
Lawn Care helper. Must be
dependable. hardworking,
70
good driving record . $6.00
~
YA Rll SA I.E
per hour. (7'40)388-9416.

72

Buslne5s Days Prior To

In Next Day 's P a p e r
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbre'Jiations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

r• PER'iO~Al,'i
ANNC

All Display : 12 Noon 2

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...
I'S

pjsolay Ads

Daily InNColumn: 1:00 p . m.

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

\N~Ol ' N('t : ~tt·.N

Oea.rltirlhf'

Monday-Friday for Insertion

HOW TO WRITE AN AD

• Min. of 2 years oxp.
13 mon old small white •Med1cal Ins., 401K
female house dog . needs
• Operation area 400 mile
love &amp; fenced in area
rad1us of Jackson, O.H
1304)882-221 1
•Sign on Bonus
Giveaway to good home. • 34 cent per mile
Large black m1xed breed • 95Qo. No touch
dog t yr old. very lriendly,
needs a home with lots of Call 800·652·2362
· room to run. Call 740·446Domino's NoW Hiring all
. 2398 after 6pm
locations great pay. flexible
Outs1de cats~ male and hours
Pt.
Pleasant,
female . (740)742·3805
Gallipolis.
Pomeroy
&amp;
Tear down old sheep barn Eleanor

THANKFULLY, 15 DEGREES

Word Ads

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

r

1

Mrip County. OH

MelfiJS, Gallla,

0-0 •

0·0
0·0

GB

ribune - Sentinel - ~egtster
CLASSIFIED
•
weeov·--t

~

Away :
0·0 •
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0·0
0·0

L
Pet.
0 ....J1QQ__
0
.000

0

East Division

L

w
o•

_ o

St. Louis

0{)

W

-

CinCinnati

0·0

2003 AL Final Glance ·

ab r hbi

PCt.

0·0
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Bahimore ~

Boston

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Monday's Games
Detroit (Johnson 1Q·t0) at Toronto (Halladay 22·7). 1:os·p.m
Chicago White Sox (Buehrle 14·14) at Kansas City (B.Anderson t4·1 1), 3: 10p.m
Cleveland.(Sabathia 13·9) at Minnesota (Radke 14·10). 8:10p.m.
Texas (Rogers 13·8) at Oakland (Hudso n t6-7'1. 10 .35 p.m.

Orioles 7, Red Sox 2

w

0·0

Last Tue5day's Result
Tampa Bay 's. N.Y. Yankees 3
last Wednesday's Result
NY Yankees 12, Tampa Bay 1

Sunday's Result
Baltimore 7, Boston 2

EAST

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

nee
,
,
edroom. t .5 bath. Ci A,
ater softer. Pomeroy, OH
law
photos/Info
o
ww.orvb.com
Cod
0603 or call 740·992
650

-a

Stlllnleas steel OQn .

ancM. 81t llat ClllinQi.
Hard! lap with uddle root 5"
on 12" roof pitch • porch.
Cote's Mobile Homes t5266
US ~0 E Athens , OhiO
{740)59:2-1972 "Where you
gel your money's worth"

s

740·446·3481 '

Evenings

r

li\\ &amp;
GR\1\

Good m1xed 11ay. S1 50 a
bale. (740)742-7004
Round bales ol hsy for sale.
S15 a bale Call f7 40)682·
8106 .

AlTOS
&gt;URS~LE

I

$5001 Hondas,
Chevys.
Jeeps,
etc
POLICE
IMPOUNDS Cars
from
$500 For I1St1ngs 1--800·719·
300t ext 3901
1995 Chevy Beretta. excel·
lent condi tion. engine good.
rre nsm1~s1on touchy S3 000
OBO (740)256 ·6 105 tor
more 1nlormefli'ln
2000 Neon 87,000 m11es
NC. trll. runs good S3 250
OBO (7401 256·903 1
200t Mrtsub Shl Mirage LS 5
speed ,
1o adeo . 30.000
m1ler. 35 . 40 m P g S4.SOO
080
1995 Suba ru lmpreza AWD.
2 door auto, S2 ,SOO OBO
Call (740\256·1189
95 Dodge lnlrep1d. 4 door.
leatner seats LE 3 5 motor,
24 valve wholesale pnce
55,5.50 sen tor $3.800 or

Wmters, .RIO Grande, OH best offer (740)44t-95t0

eleC\f-~c.~~~~'l-0~.~s~e~2·=:=:=:=:;;=(c~a~ll~740-~2~•~5~-5~1~2:1 f.'~aillli:7'1ITP'ii""'i~iii;;

-i:-bedroom all
and trash service prov1ded. No ·pets (740 ,441 •4540 _
Twir1 Avers Tower is accept·
1ng appltCA{IOns tor wa1t1ng
Beautiful riveT view. 1deat for liSt lor ~ud-subsized, 1· br
6ne·or two people. No pets. apartment, call 675· 6679
references (740)441·0181
EHO

----------- -----

l1nes. Slafe Ru"li Fa1m.
Jackson
(740)286·5395
up
look
www slaterunfarm.com

7

�Monday, April 5, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

•
Monday, April 5, 2004

Card of Thanks

Card of Thanks

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.com

.

ALLEY OOP

Get Your Message Across
With A Daily Slntlnet

BRIDGE

BULLETIN BOARD
wishes to Thank all the
Churches and everyone for thei r
prayers during the illness and
loss of our loved one.
Also special thanks to the many
people that vis ited Ernie while
he was ill . Thanks to everyo ne
se nt cards. flowers. and food

•

#lu66ard 's vreenht~use
carpet cleaned free .
Call Captain Ste11mer for info.
Offer expire.s 4/30/04
Toll Free 888-338-7847

Megan Manuel for alwayS being ~here .
Bobby Crow. Jim &amp; Sharon Louks.

BUNNY HOP BAKE SALE
Saturday; April 10
10 am

Rick Crow. Dr. Hunter.
Bob &amp; Beverl y C hapman.
and Hospice .
You will always be remembered.

IMPROVEMENTS

1986 Ram Charger, Royal

1

1979 Honda CXS (500CC)
Silverwing, wate r cooled,
shaft driven, runs great, helmet included, price $700,
740·992·6396.

Register to WIN!!!

Mobile Homes, Houses, log Homes, Decks, Dnveways,

r

~

'
CAMPERS &amp;
MOTORHOMFS

Special rates to Trucking and Dump Trucking Companies.
LAWN CARE DIVISION.

675·3400

Mowing, Trimming. Tree Tri mrriing. Aeration , Fertilization,

"' 5 4
• Q 8 5 3
• Q• ' 2
... Q J 10

Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304·675·2457

t Driveways • Tennis Courts

• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
t Roads t Streets

The ·
'

D~ily

Tree Service

Let me do it for youl

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

UNOfS PAINTING

·sentinel··
992·2155

(.IVIC..
BARNEY

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

Meigs County's Largest selection of
annuals, perennials, vegetables,
shrubbery, fr'ult, ornamental trees,
roses, rltoaoaenarons, ana azaleas.

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Ba shan Road
Racine. Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

Sizes 5'x1 0'
to 10'x30'
Hours

7:00AM· 8:00 PM
\11411_mo. pd

Snapper

Gravely

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Stn•et

Pomeroy. Ohio

992-2975

THE BORN LOSER

l..awu aud Garden r:quipment i.'i our
btnim•.•.:s, rwt our ,·if!efiul'

/

~

t&gt;Oi'l'T '(OU Tf\11'-IK "~

GE\11(\\G C:IJ'i Of J.Vtl\)1
l C.I\1'\'T TN&lt;.E IT
!\(\\'( 1-1\0\i:E I

OVERIV..C\11'\(,~

'(OU~ ~1\\0i&lt;.lf\\G I~

Manning K. Roush
Owner
Open Mon-Fri 9·5 Sal. 9·12

Care
Free
Estimates

R.B.
Trucking
Ncws'""''""'·l
'"'

and read at .12:01 PM
on April 29, 2004 at
the · Office of RFG
Associates, Inc., 2556
Bell
Street,
Zanesville, OH 43701.
Instructions to bid·

lede;at grants from
Federal Emergency
Management Agency
(FEMA)
and
USDepartment
of
Housing and Urban
Development (HUD).

Lane. Information on

d~rs 1 specifications,

Robert Guenuer Jr.,

the

and bid form outlintng the terms and

Agent
lor
the
Township of .Rutland

South 00 degrees 51'
39"West.),
thence, with the east
line of Section 7 and
the west line of a 135
acres tract as con·
veyed
to
Albert
Harmon
by Deed
Volume 314, Page 103
of the · Meigs County

conditions of the pro-

Hazard

Recorders

Mitigation

Office,

HAULING:

• Limestone
• Sand
• Dirt
• Ag Lime
740·985-3564
Public Notice
85" 36' 00" East a dislance ol994.071eet to
the
Point
of
. Beginning, passing
through two Iron pins
set at distances ol
plus 19.23 feet end
plus · 119.23 feet,
respectively, contain·
lng 11.278 acres,
. more or less, out of
Parcel No. 03·007·
009.
SUBJECT to all legal
right-of-ways, easements, restrictions,
reservations,
and
zoning regulations of
record.
·
SUBJECT to
the
right-of-way
of
Township Road No.
225.
SUBJECT to the
rlght-ol·way
of
Township Road No.
405.
SUBJECT to the 100
year Flood Plain
rellrlctlone, II appll·
cable.
·
SUBJECT to a 50.00
foal wldo oaeemant
being reeervod unto
the grantor, hlo heirs,
and/or aealgns,lorav·
er. Said aaoamant Is
lor tho purposes of
running utilities to
other parcels of land
on or near Townehlp
Road No, 225. Sold
aaeemanl runa In a
north·eouth direction
scroll the woet end
of
tha
above
deecrlbed property
with the west nne of
said 18eoment being
the centerline of

11'

c;ONS'I'RIJei'ION
Roofing-SidingPainting-G uttersDecks-Etc.
For Fast Courteous
Service, Free
Estimates
&amp; Affordable
Prices, Call ...

Dennis Boyd

740-992-1189
740-992-2902

"llostmyshirt , •
in the Stock
w- Market!"

WHI\TTI\YA
MEI\N,

'I'OLl
S-MELL
DANGEl'.&gt;

'•·.~ ~~-nudm0/1•o•~tt~~~ .

("-.__

K lU65:J

A.

A I 6 2

30 --the

A J

North
3•

BUILDERS InC.

New Home~ • Vinyl
Siding • Ne\\ Garage'&gt;
• Rcpla\.'cmcnt

See
Rocky "RJ"

Window:-. • Rooi:ing
COMMERC IAL and
RESIDENTIAL

IMPORTS
Athens

740-992-7599

PEANUTS
IF AN'&lt; OF VOU KNOW
A 6001;' ~!KING 50N6.

FREE TO SIN&amp; OUT

NO, I DON'T

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

for

BETTY

1-800-822-0417
Olds

$75 )
per

Ti-IINK ''ONE MORE
FOR THE ROAD''

'~

.

~~--'...L..-U F/( j~

month

GARFIELD
GOQ!7 MORNING,
GARFit:L-D

Advertise in this .
Space for
$50 per month
CARPENTER

ROBERT
BISSELl
CONSTRUCTION.

*HOME

GRIZZWELLS
c;.U\-ffi\~R, \1'~ \\ME ~ ~

A\\~UAl ~~~ C\.EA~Iffi

Af\D '1
f\~D

and

Docks

We do It all except
furnact work

Remodeling

V.C. YOUNG Ill

740-992-1871

992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Yeart local

Stop &amp;. Compare

neignbor

39 Saloon

41 Clever ploys

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celeorrty C1pter ;'\'p:ogra'~'5 are Cle3teJ ''Jr- J~ otat·,r5 M •amc•JS ~P·~ CJS1 a-x: ;l!e5ert
E~~ et:e· ~ It€ Ctll"er s:an~ tv il"-.:lr,e·

ToO&lt;iy ~ Cll!!1

" BH

XMST

~ ea .. a,s

SOG HTLHH

W MM

GLWDP

LC

P

CBTHVGYWX
OKWMJWTR

'

G YWX G . "

RHCVRH

GLHWTOVHTTHV.
LYH

"

GEMINI (May 21·June 20) - Use your
srnarts as ·well as Any little b1! ot openmg
you spot when 11 comes to your 1"inanc1al
affairS today You could be the luck 1 e~t w1th
thmgs 1hat appear to be qUite diflicult tor
15 A HIKIN6
oth ers
CANCER (June 21 •July 22) -Once yov
set you r rnmd to someth1ng today you II be
capab le of ach1eV1ng outstendmg accomplishments The secret to success tor you
IS to tnst truly beheva 111 yourself
LEO (July 23·Aug 22) - Hold pos1trve
·.~
• .~
thoughts today and don"t g1ve up on any. ';- ',•
~
thing that ts 1mportant to you. A matte1
. .
over whtch yuu 111ay have been qLHie lewlui will turn out lo he nothrng but a paper
dragon
VIRGO (Aug 23·Sept .22)- The formu la
that IS requrred for success today must he
cornpn,sed of an equal amount of elbow
grease and 1mag1n atron Dev1se R plan II'
your head and let you r muscles do the
re:ot
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) - Something In
wt)rch you·re presently rnvolvetl may
appear at lust gl&lt;tnce to after only sparse
returns . However, once you get your teeth
into 11 you'll ltnd 1!1S h 1gger tnan you tl11nk
SCORPIO IOt:t. ,24-Nov 22) - You w111
have two eKtremely powerlul forces work·
( \ 11
mg for you today O~e w1U ·be celcsllat
Lady Luck. but the other w1!1 be your
earthy pract1calrtY They 'll coflectrvely spell
s·uccess
SAGITTARIUS (NOV 23-0cc. 21) ~ A
mailer wh1ch was prevrously wrestled hom
your grip carl be reclarmed today through
dii1Qent ettort an· your part You II no w tmd
0 - - - - - - - - . - . . . .- - - , - , · ways to turn a nega t1ve Sl!uat1or1 rnlo d
posit1ve one
GAH! M'r' t.JNOt:RWt:I\R 15 ON
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan
191 1
'THE: OUT5tOt; Of' m.' ..lAMMIJ:5
Assocrates wllo have clout Will tend 10 be
supportrve today of causes or protects u1
whrc~1 you·re 1nterested If you t.rst lead the
way The b1ggest push could come tor an
old !rusted ally
AQUAR IUS (Jan 20-Feb. 19'f- That ;,It!
adage '" The harder you work. th e 1uck1er
you gel" w111 hold true for you today Doors
ol opportun11y Will sw1ng wrde open lor you
to dnve through rf you put yOur shOrildt;l to
the wheel
PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20l - You can
double your effect1venes~ today rl yorr re
wdh ng to work m tandem wrlh ;:mo111er
whose a1ms ami mterests parallel yours
Each wr ll 1nS01re and pull the othe r lOtward

. -

New&amp; Used

headline
51 Seine site
52 Kan .

3t Paperback
10
33 Get a load of
35 Kyoto sash
36 Silenced
38 Wide st.

8 Boot upper
9 Noted
lithographer
10 Book part

37 Threadbare 12 Even- 39 Stilct1 loosely 19 Commuter
40 Wii1e
vehicle
in France
20 Cash giver

T . N.

8YHT

YH

OCKRYL

NSTPHHG

best ! can· wrth the ttme 1ha11s g1ven me · - Jeanne Moreau
1Ci2004 by NEA. Inc 4·3

'-Your 'lllrthd!ly:

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

Dean Hill

space

949-1405

AstroGraph

.. ·
~~-t·~-t-~·
.
-

in this

Melodram ~

atic cry
escape
7 FedEx units 29 Wit

syllables

34 Pasture .
35 Job·salety
.org.
36 Big blow

28

6 Hasty

32 Refrain

F.ast
.-\11 pass

Heart··

interjections

a sprain ·

I

THAT DAILY

WOlD

PUHLU

G.H U

cpp

f

SOUP TO NUTZ

i

u I' I I I I

1

p

Ay

r!,T( 1J

r---o-T-rj-:-.c-r-s_c,l_,I

~

! ~ave ~w o neighbcrs who

are very ncs'/ I overh eard oce
aoss.p sr:.y ~ o tr.e ather. "You
Can i ce!1eve ever(.r.ing y~u

, . - - -- - - - - - - " " 1 nearbL.: ·. cu sure

RAHTHE

:a.1-~-- -- 1t.

.. :;."!::· e·-: ·I.e :~~c&lt;lf" c.1or~d
::·~ · .. ··;; ,.,. '"'e - !\;.,,; ...-ord!
r: ~-::c ., ~,.... s" ": '·C: ."J ::er;w

SON6 ..

Advertise

HOWARD l.
WRITESEL

5

Tr~ated

trot

Hupp

FREE ESTIMATES

4

ground
floor

31

22 Par1 of WAlS 42 Paris
23 New England
airport
cape
43 Wide yawn
Favorites
44 Gayle's sis
Jack's giant 24 Mae West
rote
46 Dash
Beach
25 Change
47 Caravel
alternative
tor a five
of 1492
Singer
26 Ark builder 48 Grab
Bonnie27 .. _ ·Breaky 50 1914
Mild
DOWN

•

where your work or ca reer rs concer-ned
819 oppor tunrl1es are m the of11ng 11 _you re
not atra1d to Wor.k hard and go utter them
AR IES (March 21-Apnl 19)- Evert 1l all
early md1cators srgnal that you seem to be
tuckrer lor others today than you are tor
yourself. when alliS sard and done , you re
the one who"ll carne out the best rn the
end
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) - ,Under your
sktllful ma·nagement today. a JOint venture
in wh1ch you"re mvolved that has thus lar
proven unlruitful coutd now tur n around
tnto a prot1lu-: undertaking. Ma1ntam con·

~GH

BISSELL

*Free Estimates*.

I

t

+

WHEN DANGER JU:,T
Tuesday, April 6. 2004
POLISHED OFF AN ON ION
Bv Berni ce Bede Osol
BAGEL AND A H"Z.ELNUT .
Do riot be hesrlant to take on an addttiOn
DECAF tN THE TE"CHER&gt;
heavy respons1b1lity rn the year ahead
al
LOuNGE. IT'S NOT THAT

~"'-

*SEAMHSIGUTTER

•

0 • 4

"

o)K 98632
• A7

G

My money 1s w1th
Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services.
\
, Box 189, Middleport. OH
'·, Phone , 843·5264."

posed purchase of Project
South 00 dog. 51' 39"
forever. Said ease·
services may be (4) 5
West a distance of
mont Is 'for the purobtained by Interest1,637.73 feet to a
poses of running utllad bidders by conmarked stone found,
ities to other parcels
!acting
Robert
Public Notice
being the true Point
of tand on .or near
Guentter Jr., Agent, at
Of Beginning for this
Township Road No.
(740) 454-3724. Bid
IN THE COURT OF dascrlptton;
405, Said easement
packets may also be COMMON
PLEAS, thence, from said
runs In a north-south
obtained at the office MEIGS
COUNTY, Point of Bealnnlng
direction across the
of RFG Associates , OHIO
continuing, with the
west end of the above
· Inc., 2556 Bell Street,
BRUNER
LAND east line of Section 7,
described property
Zanesvltte, OH 43701.
COMPANY, INC.
the west line ol a 135
with the west ti.ne of
The two (2) properties Plaintiff
acres tract, and the
said easement betng
Included In this bid Case No. 03·CV.091
west line of a 25
the centerline ol
tor demolition servlc- JOHN E. CHESSER,
acres tract as con·
Township Rood No.
eo Include: 35117
ET AL.
veyed
to
Albert
405. Containing 0.057
Leading Creek Road
NOTICE OF Harmon by Deed
acres, more or less,
and 35124 Lsadlng SHERIFF'S SALE OF Volume 314, Page 103
of easement,
Creek Road, both In REAL ESTATE
of the Meigs County
All Iron pins set are
Middleport,
OH
Defendants
Recorder's
Office,
112 x 30" rebar
45760.
Pursuant to Order South 00' 10' 50"
cappad and labeled
e distance
"Claus 6456".
A
non-mandatory of Sale entered In this Weal
Tho bearings tn
pra·bld conference ·causa, I will offer lor 522.00 feat to an Iron
will be held at 1':00 aala at public auction pin set; thence, leav·
this description are
Public Notice
Sunset Home
lor angle calculation&amp;
p.m. on Aprll12 , 2004 at tho front steps ol lng the section tina,
Construction
at
tho
RFG
the Courthouaa, too South 87' 25' 56"
only and are baaed
Legal Notice
Robert Guentter Jr.,
Aaaoclatea ,
Inc. · East Second Street,
West a distance of
on the north line of
Bryan Reeves
RFG Auoclatee, Inc.
Office located at 2556 Pomeroy,
.Malge 933.47 feet to a point
the northeut quarter
New Homes,
"Agent" lor Rutland
Bell
Street, County, Ohio, on the In the centerline of
of Section 7 uaed as
Room Additions,
Zanesville, OH 43701.
14th day of May, 2004, Township Road No.
an aaaumed bearing
; Townehlp wilt be
• accepting eealed bids
A bid bond lor thelult
at 10·00 o'clock a.m., 225 (Croaa Road) ,
of South 88' 54' 40"
Garages, Pole _
following pasting through two
East.
: tor the purpo18 of amount of the bid OR the
·eulldlngs , Roofs,
demolition of select· a certified check,
described real prop· Iron pln11. set at dis·
The above deocrlpSiding, Oecks,
tanceo ofplue 821.47
lion prepared by
ed olructurae lor caehlar's check or let· orty:
Hazard mitigation In .,r of credit on a aolSituated In the feat and plus 921.47
Roger
w. Claue, Kitchens, Drywall
vent bank or aavlnga State of Ohio. County feet.
respectively;
Registered Surveyor
Rutland townahlp. All
&amp; More
and loan aaeoclatlon of Me(ga, Townohlp of thence, with the conNo. 6456, based ori a
. bide ohell be eubmll·
FREE ESTIMATES I
new eurvey of March
. ted In a 1811ed enve- In tho amount of ten Columbia, being In terllne of Townohlp
740-742-341
: lope marked: Bid· percent (10%) of the
tho northeast querter Road No. 226. thalol·
6, 1996, eubject to
any facto that may be
Rutland
Townahlp bid ruual accompany of Section 7, Range lowing two courtll;
• HazardMIIIIJatronand
the bid.
15 Weal, Township 9 (!)North 11 ' 38' 08"
dlacloaedlnafulland
: muel ba received .to
The
agent
lor North, of "Tha Ohio Weal a dlatanco of
accurate title search.
· the
attention
of Rutland Townehlp, Company
Flrol 187.381aet to a point;
Theaa premises ware
· Robert Guenttor Jr.,
Robert Guonlter Jr.,
Purchaoe", and being (2)1hence North 03'
oppraload
at
Agent,
Rutland
raeerveo the right to bounded
and 47' 02" Weal a dla·
$11,000.00 and can·
Townohlp, P.O. Box
wolve any lnformall· ducrlbed 11 lollowe:
lance of 255.07 leal to
not be sold lor leas
d00FIN8
ties, reject any or all Commencing for ref- a point In the canterthan 2/3rds of that
2112, Zoneavllla, OH
43702·2112. Bide can
bide and to hold euch eronca at an Iron pin line Intersection with
amount.
1110 be delivered to
bide for a
of
found capped "J.T. Townohlp Road No.
The terme ol sale are
~-=====ROj~t'::GU..iti•"i:"~=Yi•ly1(60)-dliy~ before- ·Swart-l'4i&amp;"-at-1ft--405 ~.lfarmOA-Road)t-,-lo·wnthlp-floed-N~al&gt;-b&gt;-lutnd-o~&gt;n--,--,
AICP,
at
ony action onci northeut corner ol thence, with the can· 225. Containing 0.508 day of sale , balance
Aeaoclatea, Inc.,
to award a contact to Section
7 (Note: terllne of Townahlp acroa, more or lass, to be paid upon dellv·
Bell
Street, the lowest taapon· Reference bearing on Road No. 405, North of easement.
ery of deed.
Zaneovllle, OH 43701
elva
and
moat the east line of 1he 112' 42' 42" Westa dis· 'SUBJECT to another RALPH E.-TRUSSELL
by Noon on April 29,
reaponelble bidder.
north half of the lance of 49.57 feat to 50·00 feet wide aaae· Sheriff of Melga
2004.
Thle project Ia being northeast quarter ol a point; thence, leev- mont being reserved County, Ohio
Blda will be opened funded by a variety of Section 7 used as lng the rood, North unto the grantor, his (4) 5, 12, 19, 26, (5) 3

I

59 Scot's no

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "What drrves me ts cur10S1ty and uymg tJ live the

Public Notice
heirs, and/or assigns,

"

NNotme!

Open 7 days
a week daylight
to .dark!

SI~IU

i'HEKI\lL,LO~Of
l't.OPl..E :'JNOR£ 1

1

1\10T WfiEf\\
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Call

COMPARE THESE PRICESII
4" pot of annuals 9441
4" pot of perennials $1.16 Buy 5 or more forSt .00
Flat of plants $6.60
I Hltnalna Baskets $6.60

l,uhlic Notic:.-s in
\'our Rit!hl to Kno"·· Dcliv.-n·d RiJ;thl In \'uur

IN TH' KITCHEN
MAKIN'

(304) 273-5321

Free Estimates

740-992-5232

17 Alcoh girl
18 Pick out
20 Basilica
par1

IS a say1ng that there
are many homeless people livtng on the
north bank ot the R1ver Thames because
they didn 't draw trumps soon enough
However. there are an equally large num·
ber on the south bank because they drew
trumps too soon.
Ask yourself ~ what will my trumps be
used for?"
If only to dra~ the oppos1ng trumps. then
often you tnstantly get on with that JOb.
6ut sometimes even that . must ·be
delayed because there 1s a more press·
ing problem. as on th1s deal.
You (South) reach three spades. Wes"t
leads the cl ub queen . Thts marks East
wtth the club ace. so you duck 1n the
dummy When West contmues the su11 at
tnck two. you play low from the dummy
again 1t is all to no ava11. though .
because the defend ers take the l1rst
three tncks in the su11. When East shifts
to a dtamond, you win w1th your ace How
would you continue"'
Alter North makes a ltmft ra1se . South
was ,tempted to go for the vulnerable
game. knowing that a 10-card lit 1S often
worth an extra trick in the play. But he
w1se!y passed .
Your trumps will be used to remove the
three held by the opponentJ;, but if you
play a spade 1mmed1ately. you wtlf go
down because East w1ll win and cash the
d1amond ktng. You must get rid of that
dtamond loser belore touch1ng trumps
The onty park1lig place 1s on the kmg of
hearts . Cash the heart ace: then play a
heart to dummy's jack. keep1ng your fingers and toes crossed , When the finesse
w1ns. discard a diamond on the heart
k1ng . Fmally, 11 is t1me to lead a trump

THOUGI'IT IT
MIGHT BE TH~

316 Washington Street
Ravenswood , WV 26164
Dr. Kelly K. Jones

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

33795 Hiland Rd.
. Pomeroy, Ohio

o) A

21 Large tank
~
22 Go on stage 2
24 Solitary type 3
27 Scents

West
Pass

Soldiers
in gray

In England . there

NOW !! /~--....-.

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage

58

16 Doctrines

~ How qutckly should I dr.aw trumps?"'

A TOYOTA.

HEH, HEH !! GOT YOU BOYS
RIGHT WHAR I WANT YA

~~~

15 Stow run

A common ques!IOr'l lrorn a beg1nner IS

D#liV~S

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

staffer

Ea!'.l

The ways to use ,
your trumps

Pll~Sil&gt;~NT Of Ttlf
PALINI&gt;/lOMr SOCI~TY

'~

/)t/1"

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

JONES'

·

TFN

at

53 Essay byijne
54 Hosp.

... . 84

750 [ast St:llr Street l'lwnc (740)59.1-6671
A thl'ns: Ohiu

Pro Lawn

'

Municipal Building,
1601 Second Street,
Mason, WV (304) 7735200 M-F, 8:00a.m. to
5:00p.m. Bids witt be
accepted until' April
19, 2004,4:00 p.m. at
the
Municipal
Bulldtng ·and witt be
decided upon at a
regular council meet· .
lng on April 19, 2004.
at 7:00 p.m.
The Town of Mason
h.. the right to
accept or reject any
or all bide.
·
Town .ot Maaon
Raymond Cundiff
Mayor
4-5&amp;12 2T

about
8 Privileged

wet
57 Hankering

South

/ THr

Morning Star Road- C.Rd 30 • Racine,

obtained

45 Critical
49 Sunbeam
50 Team stats

14 Filmdom's
-Gardner

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

landscap1ng JObs such as ·plant1ng and mulching.

$15.,00 ,per month!

INVITATION TO BID
The Town of Mason
is now accepting bids
for the construction
and Installation of a
culvert from drainage
located on Taylor

West

South
I•

Spraying of fence lines, leaf Removal, as well as small

773-6060

8 4

Dealer: South
Vulne1·able: Both

{Commewal and Residemial)

'

1987 camper. Yellowstone
24', air. ref. sell conlain. vary
good condition, $4,000080.
(740)388·8743 after 6pm

the specifications lor
the project can be

sound
4 Tumble

t 1 Self·images 55 Out
13 Melville sea
of the wiqd
captain
56 Cold and

fH ItS {I~

· Opening lead: "' Q

Saturday, April 1Oth

SHOP CLASSIFIEDS

I

•

or log home, Aluminum bnghtening.

on this page for as low as

UBLIC
NOTICE

1 Balloon

... K 53

WV Contractors Lie . #003506

Ta~e

19ft Fisher fu lly loaded
w/trailer 75 Hp exc. cond
reduced 10$3200 (304)593-

b=-=~~~w~~~~~- - LJ~~~~~

879-2457

FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

14Ft. Flat bottom John Boat
with trailer. 5 H.P. outboard
42 lb. thrust trolling motoi.
$800 fi rrT). Call after 4pm
(740)742·2457.

•

•0

Henderson, WV

Sidewalks, Gas Station A'Mlings, Oegreasing of
Equipment, Boats, Campers, Tractor Trailers,
Dump Trucks, painting or staining of your deck

BoAlS &amp; MOTORS
FOR SUE

1994

Bring this coupon
Bu)' $5.00

MYERS PAVING

POWER WASHING
(Commercia l and Residential)

Walmart (Plaza) Mason

everv month
All pack $5.00

f\ortb
4 Q.It07
¥ KJ o2

~ 11·6883

Siders JeWiers

· SE, V8, 4x4, good inside/

. f~ C·::::::~

-

Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30
Last Thursda)· of

9-5 Closed Sunday

Owner: Jeff Stethem

SEYOUR .
BUSINESS'

"1986 Ford Cargo Van
straight 6 cyl. 3·speed col·
: umn. 45.000 original m11es.
~ Runs great. (740)446-3040

• C'otnbination Pots
• Perennial s
• Spruce Trees
• Shrubs
,
• Peat Mms

PomerO)' Eagles
BINGO 2171

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

~in St.. Pt. Ple asa nt

BASEMENT
pkg ., 177.000 ,miles Good
WATERPROOFING
cond ition, $2,800. Call
Uncond1l1onal. lifelime guar(740)446·2398
antee. Local refere11ces fu r1993 Ford F 150 diesel. 7.3 nished. Established 1975 .
24 Hrs. (740) 446litre. 4 WD. air. crUise. power Call
Basement
~ windows. looks good rubber. 0870, Rogers
• everything" works. 256,000 Waterproofing.
: miles .
$5 .000
OBO.
' '(740)992-6810

t

• Bedding Flowers
• Vegetable Plants
• Blooming
&amp; Fo li age Baskets
• Potting Soil

740-992·5776

Italian Charm Bracelel with
4 charms Drawing on

HoME

4-WDs

• Porch Boxes

Office: (740) 992·2804 Cell: (740)

SII!\ICI S

VANS&amp;

i. Easter Flowers

Monday-Saturday

Downtown Middleport
992-3148 or 992-9513

"
Again, tlra11k
you.
Joyce, Silerri, Sammi, Travis.
;lvary Mae, Pete &amp; Suz

· - - - - . . . . IBID
1993 Chevy S10 Blazer.
4WD. fully loaded, trailer

Syracuse, OH
Now Open

MUST SAVE AD
Get an area of

Ruthi e Spaun for her support.

i

Phillip
Alder

41 Tease
42 Stare

person

whoever helped in any way.
Thanks to Danny Brown
for his every day \' isi ts and to

ThUCKS
FUR SALE

ACROSS

•aoooo1umn inch weekdays
'15"' column inch Sat. or Sun~y

The family of Emie Sisson

NEA Crossword Puzzle

I'

I''

'

I' I' .·1

SCRAM ·lETS ANSWERS
Pcnkco ~ Nn:Cv ~ Us.'JCr - Sct1f.r: ~ HAf~.;..-t:NEO
"I want to be prl'S:clent lhc young tad :o'd his 1'3rjpa
· Tt1e yo1mg dream of asn~rr:Jt1-.:i~S: J;J; nP . .,r· :1ccur, hs
o·&lt;Jndpn Slohccl, b.u! th~ old 11,1V•:: r.--c"·cr cs of wr.at
r r: vcr flt\ ;'P[N LD

ARLO &amp; JANIS

�•

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, AprilS. 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Rough

Southern Winter Sports Banquet
Ashton Brown, Coach's good to being great and to members
were
Dustin
Award;
and
Stephanie work hard this summer to get Brinager, Terry Bell, Brad
Crouch, R.J . Hamlon, Jacob
Bradford and Cassie Cleland. there."
The Southern varsity club Hunter, Jesse Mc.Knight, Joe
RACINE _ The Southern Outstanding
Cheerleading
Winter Sports Banquet was Awards
and
Four-year consisted of the following ,Nottingham, Josh Pape, Darin
. players: Susan Brauer. Ashley Teaford. and Buddy Young.
recently held in Charles· w. Cheerleading Awards.
Hayman gymnasium where
Receiving
senior Dunn. Linda Eddy. Jessica
The 13-8 boys varsity basmember of the boys and girls Cheerleading&gt; awards were Hill. Katie Sayre . . Brooke ketball team was honored by
basketball teams and cheer- Cleland. Dailey. Hawley. and Kiser. Jordan Neigler. Joanne head coach Jonathan Rees.
Pickens.
Dea.Ja
Pullins. Rees "laid down the law" as to
leading squads were honored Bradford.
for great seasons. The large
Next to recognize her team Ashley Roush . Kristiina what hi s expectlltions were for.
crowd in ·attendance was treat- was reserve gi rl&lt; basketball Williams. Kasie Sel'ters, neKt season and that he "was
ed to a fine meal and awards coach Rebecca E~am who .Bethany Vance. and Mallory not satisfied with this year's
assembly.
praised her'team for continued Hill. Brittany Morarity was record". · .
Rees spoke of discipline
Southern High School ath· improvement throughout the the team manager and Nikki
Jetic director Ryan Lemley season. Evans also challenged Riftle wa' scorekeeper.
both at /home and on the.court.
gave the welcoming address . her club to .. work hard and to
Earning special awards . and l;ited several facts that
then girls' coach Scott Wolfe continue improving" through- were Katie Sayre: Most Steals help create winners. including
gave the invocation .•After the out their careers.
and Best Offensive Player: hard work and achieving
Reserve team members Ashley
Dunn.
Most goals. Rees said, .. We are curpotluck meal and a main
course provided by the were Emily Babbitt. Linda Rebounds : Joanne Pickens. rently on a job laying 5 miles
Southern Athletic Boosters. Eddy. Amber Hill. Mallory Kristiina Williams. Brooke of pipe and our goal is to lay
· high school principal Gordon Hill. Jordan Neigler. Adelle Kiser. Coach\ Award: Deana 3.000 feet per day. When five
Fisher and Lemley gave Rice. Kasie Sellers. and Pullins. Best Defensive Award o'clock comes we don't quit.
thanks to all those people who Bethany Vance .
and Hustle Award: Susan when it gets dark we don't
have helped with the boosters
Head varsity coach Scott Brauer. Best Free Throw quit, we only quit when we
and various programs.
'wolfe then honored his sec- Percentage: and Jessica Hill achieve our goal for the day.''
"This is true in basketball
Cheerleading advisor Tracy tiona! champion varsity club and Ashley Roush . Most
and in real life. You don't quit
Pickett was first to make a which posted a 16-7 overall Improved.
presentation by · honoring record. Wolfe praised his dub
Senior Awards went to Katie until you achieve your goals if
members of the 2003-04 for working hard last off-sea- Sayre. Deana Pullins. Jessica you are going to be successcheerleading squad. Pickett son to make 2003-04 a sue- Hill, and Ashley Dunn.
ful. ..
first made presentations to tha cessful season. He said.· "For
Next. freshman boys coach
Rees praised his team for its
reserve
squad-Amber two veais Fve said we had to Chad Zimmerman awarded 13 wins. and challenged them
Holsinger, Stephanie l:loskins, get bett.cr than White Oak. we the freshman basketball team to post more victories next
Nicole McDaniel, Allie Rees. finally achieved that goal. . for their effons. Team mem- season. Varsity team members
and Chelsea Smith.
Now. we have to get better bers were Nick Buck. Randy were Wes Burrows. Josh
Next. the varsity squad- than
Trimble. " Trimble Collins. Weston Counts, Jacob Harris. Dustin Keyes. Jak,e
Stephanie Bradford, Ashton accounted for three of our Hunter, PatrickJohnson, Mike Nease, Craig Randolph, Tyler
Brown. Cassie Cleland. seve n losses. If we tum those Lavender. R. J. Leach, Scott Roberts, Aaron Sellers, Josh
Brandi Dailey, and Sarah into victories that iurns a goOd Musser. Eric Zeiner. and J. R. Smith. Derek Teaford, Jeremy
Hawley-was honored. Hawley 16-7 season into a great 19-4 Hupp.
Yeauger. and Chris Tucker.
The Re serve boys were hon- Additionally. team manager
and Smith were recognized as season. This summer we must
by Coach
Steve Pat Snyder was honored for
Most Improved cheerleaders: work extremely hard to make ored
Bradford and Cleland were up for the loss of O!Jr se niors. I Randolph. Randolph praised helping out the team.
for
improvement , Senior awards were presentco-captains:
Dailey
and . challenge you (the team) to them
McDaniel, Most Spirited: take . that jump from being throughout the season. Team ed to Josh Smith and Jeremy
STAA' REPORT
spor1S0mydailytribune.com

Meigs
frQm Page 81
matched their hosts the rest
of the way to win by a pair of
runs.
Fackler went 2 for 4 at the
plate with two runs scored
and one batted in, and also
pitched the final two innings
to pick up the save.
Winning pitcher Mike
Davis helped his own cause
with a pair of doubles.
Jeremy Blackston and Eric
Cullums also had two hits
apiece for Meigs.
Jared Humphreys had two
hits'. including an RBI triple.
for Jackson. Meanwhile
teammates Zack Hoover and
,Brenton Wayland added a
double and single each in the
loss.
Fackler's homer, which
easily cleared the fence in
right field. answered a
Jackson score in the bottom
.of the . first and evened the
score at 1-1. Then Davis doubled and Matt Holley drew a
walk, both eventually scored
on tielding errors to make 'it
3-1.

NASCAR
from Page 81
seven caution periods that
took 45 laps. Twelve drivers
led the race, with Sadler topping the field the final 27
laps. ·
Gordon finished third and
Dale Earnhardt Jr. was
fourth, his fourth top- I 0 linish at the I 1/2-mile track
where he got his tirst Cup
win four years ago. A week
after a runner-up finish at
Bristol, Rusty Wallace was
fifth, stretc hing his winless
drought to I05 races.
Kahne led when he took his
Dodge into the pits on the
262nd lap. Just after he got
back on the track, and before
Gordon apd Sadler had pitted, Ward Burton spun on the
backstretch to bring out the
caution.
Staying on the lead lap
on ly after getting the free

Jackson cut the lead to a
sing le run in the bottom half
of the second on a two-out
Hoover single Op the middle
that plated Brenton Wayland.
The Marauders had a
chance to blow the game
wide open in the third and
fourth innings. however, as
the Meigs Countians twice
had the base loaded with only
one out. But Jackson used 12-3 double plays to erase the
threat both times.
The two teams exchanged
single runs in the fifth. Meigs
scored in the top half when
Davis doubled home Fackler,
then
Jackson 's
T.J.
Md)unald had a run-scoring
double himself. ·
Meigs added a pair of runs
in the sixth , which turned out
to be the game winners.
Blackston led off the inning
with a double and eventually
· scored on a Dill single to
right center. Dill later scored
himself on an error to give
his team a 6-3 lead.
The final two runs were
scored off Jackson ace Justin
Ochsenbein, who did not
start either game. Ryan
Delong started the second
game for Jackson and gave
up three·runs on four hits and

walked three.
.Jackson added one more
run in the bottom of the
frame, but failed to make it
all the way back.
Jackson stranded four base
runners over the final two
innings while Meigs left a
dozen runs out on the base
pads for the game.
Humphreys pitched the
first game for Jackson, allowing only four hits over his
five innings of work. He
struck out four and walked
three in picking up the win.
Doug .Dill suffered the loss
for Meigs. as the lronmcn
touched up the senior for six
hits through the first three
'innings.
Jackson took a 2-0 lead
after the first inning thanks to
RBI singles by Humphreys
and Justin Rippeth.
Rippeth was 3-3 in the first
game with a pair of runs
scored and batted in.
The third inning was highlighted by a two-run sacritice
bunt courtesy of McDonald.
The bunt · easi Iy scored
Rippeth from third, but alert
base
running
from
Humphreys saw the multisport star score all the way
from second . The unusual

play saw the lronmen build a
5-0 cushion.
Jackson went on to add
three more tallies each in the
third and fourth frames,. winning 11-0 via the mercy rule
after five innings.
Two of Meigs' four hits
came in the first inning when
Blackston and Cullums singled back-to-back to start the
game. Cullums added anoth.
er hit later on and Matt
Holley doubled.
Meigs looks to stay unbeaten in Tri-Valley Conference
Monday at Nelsonville- York.
That same day, Jackson
opens Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League play at
Logan.

Subscribe todm·.
992-2155 .

Javy Lopez horneral and drove
in three ruth. and fellow newcomers Ralilel Palmeiro and MiC
Tej&lt;rll both bOO rwo h1t' to
the Orioles over the Boston Red
Sox 7.-'2 Sunday night in Lee
Mauilli 's first gmne as
Baltimore's J11lll13!,&gt;er.
· ManineL experienced . an
unchardCieristic 13p'e m control
while yieldi~ three secondinning nms. t ne Red Sox fell
behind the New YO!X Yankees (II J in the AL 8.Jst foc the first time
thi~ season by virtue of the opening-night loss._
.
Signed a~Aree ae.ent' dwmg a
busy winter for the Orioles. I..opcz. •
Palrreiro and Tejada combined to
go 7-ter-11 -with three
and
four RBls. Tejada 1v-Js also perfect
on 12 chan&lt;."CS at shoo.'itop.
Martinez w'Js the loser. gi1ing up
three run&lt;;, two earned arrl seven
hit' in six inning;. He struck our
five. walked ore arxl hit a Iutter
It was his liN appeamnce in a
£ame. tllal oounted since Oct 16.
when the three-time Cy YOWlg
Award winner blew a 5-2 agaim;t
the Yankees in Game 7 of the AL
champion,hip series. and New
Yort went on to win 6-5 in II

.

S - Brandon Fackler
HR - Meigs: Brandon FacKler, second
inning, none on. Jackson: none .

I97th lap.
There has never been a
repeat winner 'at Texas, and
no driver has ever won from
the front row.
Just 20 laps after his previous stop , Labonte got only
gas and came out of the pits
first. But after the restart on
lap 205 , Joe Nemechek took
over as Labonte started slipping because of an alternator
problem. He slipped to 35th
four laps down before recovering to finish 25th.
Elliott stayed in the top 10
for much of the race, and led
twice for 26 laps, until a cut
left tire sent his' unsponsored
Oodge into the ' wall on the
275th lap.
Making the slowing transition to retirement while serving as a mentor to Kahne in
his old No. 9 car, Elliott is
running a limited schedule
for Evernham. Without sponsorship, Elliott might not
drive again
until
the
Brickyard 400 in Au gust.
pitched five innings, giving
nine hits and six earned runs
witli one strikeout.
Cedarville now possesses a
fiv e-game winning streak
while Rio Grande lost for the
tb.itd slrai.g.b.t-!\"Uill'-----~1
Rio Grande will play nust
to Pikeville College 3. p.m..
Tue sday.
The game originally scheduled on April 2 against
Concord College has been
cancelled.

;;oCL:\TS•\'ol.)-t '-o ,- .,
•

•

•

•

TlTSl)\\

.)-

J•

•

•

• Reds drop season
opener. see Page 81

BY

J. Mtl£5 lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTI~EL.COM

...

,

\H~to\\ . rn ~ d. t il ~c.,( • Jill liC' I.fi, JJI

).

CHESTER - Two men have· been
charged by the Meigs County Sherift"s
Office with kidnapping and other
felonies related to an incident that sent
a woman to the hospital Sunday.
Shawn Fitzgerald. 25. of Coolville,
has been charged with two counts of

assault. kidnapping. aggravated burglary
and the intimidation of a crime victim.
all felonies. and one misdemeanor
charge of domestic violence. Thomas
Shuler. 24, of Coolville. · ha' been
charged with kidnapping. complicity to
aggmvated burglary. and two complicity
charges to assault - all felonie,.
According to the Meig, Sheriff's
report. Fitzgerald all~gedly broke

into Steven HuJ,e·, home in Che~ter
and threatened him with a baseball ·
bat while Shuler was waitin o nearbv
in hi~ vehicle outside. Huh.;' tried to
defend him,elf with a .22 caliber
rifle. but Fiv~erald took the rille
from him anl firer.! severa l round,
into the ceilin!! . Accordin!! to the
sheriff',
report . Hube
said
Fitzgerald hit him in the head with a

ha,ehall ·oat and then he alleued l1
kidnapped
H uhe ·'
!! irl t~ien~
Kimberlee \la1le. the e-.-'girltriend
of Fiugerald . ·
·"
·
When \1eiQ,. Cnunt\ Sheriff',
deputies arri,ed. HuJ ,e liar.! bloo.d on
hi &gt; face und arm' ..-\n e mer~enc1 ·
s4uad treated him for hi ' infurie~.
Please see Kidnapping. AS

Meigs County Relay for Life fund-raising b.egins

Boston ultimately tired m&lt;mager Grady Linle for. among other
things,le&lt;~ving a tiring Martinez in
too long.
Little's successor. Terry
Fmncona. watched the Red Sox
stmnd 14 runne" against Sidney
Pon&lt;;()fl and three relievers in tempemtures that dipped into the 30s.
Ponson. the winner. allowed
one rnn. seven hits and three walk~
in 5 2-3 innings. His fine effort
bocked his stature as the new staff
ace and belied hi' career nwnbcrs
against Boston &lt;;oming in: 1-9 ;uld
a 656 ERA in 12 !!'unes.
BJ. Ry.m got five out' for the
save.
Randy Hays, a member of the Relay for Life Cancer
Fighters team, serves a hotdog to Sandy Wise from his
stand in the Farmers Bank lobby. The food sale was a
fund raiser for the team ·s contribution to the American
Cancer Society. (Charlene Hoeflich )
'

Bv

CHIIRLENE HoEFLicH

HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL·.COM

• ODOT warns of work
zone dangers. See Page
AS
• Holzer inplements new
therapy program. See
Page AS

POMEROY - Fund-raising is already underway by
the numerous teams who will
be participating in Meigs
· County's Relay for Life to be
held June 4 and 5 on the track
at Eastern High School.
Friday the Cancer Fighters
of Farmers Bank served hotdogs and· other refreshments
at noon to raise money for
the event. On April 24 the
Fraternal Order of the Eagles
and the Meigs County
Health Department teams
.will host a public spaghetti

-.

... "" .

Pomeroy gets new postmaster

I

Not in the
tniddle tivet Pott.

,............ ,gf

dinner at the Eagles Club on
West Main Street. Dinners
will be served from 2 to 5
p.m. All of the proceeds will Luminaries decorated to honor a cancer survivor or remember a loved one who lost their bat·
go to the American Cancer tie to the disease· are being sold at Farmers Bank. Here the Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz purchases
Society.
several from Sue Lightfoot. chairman. (Charlene Hoeflich)
Since the Relays for Life
"I am proud to repres~nt
were started 20 years ago. next morning. Team mem- one with something signifithe
many cancer sun·ivors
the event has spread 10 over bers take turns walking or cant to their life . Placed
4,000 communities in the running on the track through- around the track the luminar- and the families of those who
United States and into nine out the night. The relay kicks ies light the way for those have lost their battle to cancer.'' said Ligh tfoot. "As the
off with a survivors lap
other countries. It was which is followed by a recep- who travel the track by night . luminaries light ur the night,
Sue Lightfoot is the lumi- it i ~ very clear II' h) we relay
declared the
American tion ·honoring them.
Cancer Society's signature
A luminary ceremony is nary chairman for the event and why we need to continue
event in 1993.
. held at dusk on the opening Luminaries can be purchased to raise money for cancer
Meigs County 's Relay for· night. The luminaries consist at Farmers Bank or by calling re.&gt;earch. education. advocaLife is an L8-how:_eyent, of tea lights in paper bags- her at 992-3138. They will cy and service:· 'he added .
beginning at 4 p.m. on June 4 decorated to honor a cancer also be sold at the relay. Last
Jo Ann Crisp i' £eneral
and closing at 10 a.m. the survivor or reniember a loved year 400 luminaries were sold chairman of the event.

WEATHER

-

"

mrungs.

CLUE FOR FRIDAY.
APRIL 2. 2004

'•

\P"IIf .,-UO..J.

Two men charged with kic;tnapping of Chester.woman

SPORTS

INSIDE

Meigs 6, Jackson 4 ·

-

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Page AS
• Shelby Ann Jarrell
• Norman C. Will
• Willard Pa&lt;;kman

Meigs
o 3 o o 1 2 o -6 10 2
Jackson 1 1 o o 1 1 0 -4 9 3
Mike Davis, Brandon Fackler (6) and Malt
Holley. Ryan Delong, Tommy Baker (4) ,
Justin Ochsenbein (6) and Tylef Baisden.
Ben Jord8n (4).
WP - Mike Davis

LP- Ryan Delong

.•

..•

OBITUARIES

000 00
041
Jackson 233 3- x
11 81
Doug Dill . Eric Burnam (4) and Man
Holley. Jared Humphreys and Tyler
Baisden.
WP- Jared Humphreys
LP- Doug Dill

ne

• •

run'

Jackson 11 , Meigs 0

Chevalier and Stephanie
Broccolo went . 4-for-3 and
Brandi Jones went 2-for-4
with
" double and an RBI.
from Page 81
Sophomore right fielder
11 runners on base.
Jenny Olding clubbed a twol=l===:R,i•e~-~1ae-41~ea;;es-~~G~-~~~~~~~~~~~
the run home run . Junior first
with no outs in the seventh
~baseman Amy :Z:oRIJ --&lt;~lso
but could not dent the plate.
Fox relieved Allie Smith .to added an RBI hit.
Andrea Lotycz topk the get tlJe, win . She pitched the
Courtney Thayer and Tara
tough luck loss for 'Rio final 2·, innings yielding .one Mun&gt;on were the big hiller'
Grande. Lotycz (7-3) pitched hit and one walk .
for the Lady Jackets as they
six inning s yielding 10 hits
Tucker . wenl 2-for-4 and delivered two RBI 's each.
and two runs (one earned) scoreJ two . runs for ' the
13roccolo (6-4 ) su ffered the
Redwome n.
Kri sten loss for Rio Grande. She

Rio

MORE LOCAL SPORTS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

HMC recognizes social
workers, As

BALTIMORE (AP) - One
iB:I inning did in Pedro Martinez.
ju&lt;;t like la..t October.

M91QS

pass under yellow. Kahne Gordon has been snakebit at
resta'rted eighth. Gordon and the track. He was involved in
crashes the first four Texas
Sadler were 1-2.
There were three more cau- races (1997-00), including
tion tlags before the final when he Jed the inaugural
restart on the 302nd of 334 . race in 1997.
"We've had some crazy
laps. Gordon and · Sadler
things
happen (o us here,"
maintained the lead and
Gordon said. "The last three
Kahne was seventh.
Six 'laps later, Gordon sud- · or four races have heen phedenly fell off the pace nomenal for us here in Texas.
because of an electrical prob- But we just haven 't been able
lc;m . By time he switched to to win.' ,
Kurt Busch finished sixth
his backup battery, Gordon
to
take over the series points
had slipped to fourth behind
Sadler, Earnhardt and Kahne. lead, 19 ahead of Matt
Kahne went inside on the· Kenseth. his Roush Racing
314th lap to overtake teammate and the defending
Earnhardt for second and season champion. Kenseth
.
•
started his dogged pursuit of tinished 16th. .
Bobby
Labonte
and
Bill
Sadler.
It was a good comeback for Elliott, two of NASCAR 's
Kahne, who last week in old guys, started on the front
Bristol finished 40th after an row, but neither was a factor
early crash with Jamie into the end.
Arter starting on the pole,
McMurray.
Texas is one of four tracks Labonte led only five laps
were four-time Cup champi- during a caution after defendon Gordon hasn' t won a race . . ing race winner Ryan
Despite hi s fourth straight Newman 's car broke slid into
top-five finish· in Texas. the outside Turn 4 wall on the
with one strikeout and one
walk.
Jn
game
two,
the
Redwomen jumped out to a
5· 1 lead but failed to hold on
as the Lady Jackets scored

Yeauger.
Special Awards
went to Wes Burrows, Most
Assists and~ Most Defensive
Rebounds:
Jake
Nease,
Coachfs
Award,
Craig
Randolph. Most Steals and
Best Free Throw Percentage:
Josh Smith, Most Offensive
Rebounds:
and
Jeremy
Yeauger. 110 Percent Award.
Gordon and Linda Fisher
were recognized for their contributions to the spons programs. and Mrs. Fil;her for
keeping scorebook. Tim
Cogar. Josh Pape. Dale
Teaford, and Brad Crouch
were recognized for keeping
the boys_ video and Brenda
Johnson and Maxine Rose for
ticket taking, and Johnson and
C.T. Chapman for running the
clock
at "'oames .
.
Rees closed with challenging his team to get to the
spring and summer shootouts
and open gym and to Qe more
successful next season .
Mr. Fisher recognized the
members of the Tri- Valley
Conference
All-Academic
team-Stephanie
Bradford.
Sarah Hawley, Ashton Brown.
Deana Pullin&lt; Katie Sayre.
Ashley Roush. · Kristiina
Williams. Craig Randolph.
and Jeremy Yeauger. In order
to achieve this award a player
must be at least a sophomore.
maintain a 3.5 average, and
must have lettered during their
varsity spon.
The benediction was given
by Scott Wolfe.

Huskies wreck
Geot-gia Tech, Bt

second inning
dooms Pedro,
BoSox

BY

J. MILES

LAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTI NEL. COM

.'
Detail• on Pace A8

INDEX
SErnoNS Calendars
2

Classifieds

- Egg is not at a place of business
- Egg Is not at a private residence
-Egg Is not inside a m&lt;t.~·made ogject
- You will not need digging tools
;- You will not need to climb or the use of a ladder

The Daily Sentinel

12 PAGI!S

A2

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A2

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

~

Le Ann Matvey, project coordinator for the Southeastern Ohio
Breast and Cervical Cancer Project, joins Meigs Countians,
Diana Coates, chair of the local MCCI, Carol Adams, treasurer, Carolyn Grueser, membership, and Donna Williamson, historian, to review papers on the newly awarded nonprofit sta·
tus of the organization. (Charlene Hoefle h)

MCCI attains 501 (c)3 status
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Sports

B1

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Weather

A6

POMEROY
The
Meigs County Cancer
Initiative (MCCI) has

© aoo4 Ohio Valley Publlohtng Co.

achieved its 50 I c3 nonprofit' statU$, almost four
years after community
members joined forces to

Ple1se see 501 (c)J, AS

POMEROY - By special
delivery of the U.S. Postal
Service, Pomeroy has a new
postmaster.
Starting this week, . Tom
Sanders, 54, will be in
charge of IS postal employees who process hundreds of
thousands of letters and
packages each year and who
provide carrier service to
four mral routes, three city
routes and one auxiliary
route which is split between
Pomeroy and a neighborin.g
post office. For the past three
and a half years, he was the
postmaster in Oak Hill.
Sanders replaces Charles
Grim who retired las t
August. Bonnie Brown has
been the acting officer in
charge until the replacemenl
postmaster
could
be
appointed . Sanders has
· worked for the U.S. Postal
Service for the past 36 years.
His father Harland Sanders
also worked for the post

Pomeroy's newest postmaster Tom Sanders helps Diana
Woods process a letter bound fo r Syracuse . Sanders has
served in the U.S. Postal Service for 36 years. (J. Miles Layton)
office and was the postmaster in Benton for a number
of,years.
Sanders said he was naturally drawn to the post office
at a young age. After graduati ng Gallia Academy in

1968. he started work "'i1s a
can·ier.
"I tonk the te\1 in high
'chool and th ev called me
into 11ork:· he ;uid. "I gue"
Please see Postmen. AS

Brought to you by:

CROW'S

FAMILY
•

.~ aiOLZER--ci;lNU.:: -

DOWNING
CHILDS MULLEN
. MUSS;ER
INSURANCE

INGELS
RADIO SHACK
&amp; Picture Gallt:ry

• Hither Academics • Hands on training ~nd exper1ence • Seamless path to an Associates Degree or hlaher
• Designed for h1gh school students • T~t'lntcally challenglna
Buckeyt! HillS Gall! a Acacltmy Jackson Oak Hill ,RlYer Vallty South Gallta VInton Caum~ Wtllstoli

Coursc&gt;s offered: Heolthcore , Aura Service

u. of Rio Grande

and Information T~chnology

•

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I

Ohio V./ley
Tech P1up

Contact yu~r high !Kh1lol coun..elur today!
•

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