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                  <text>Plige 88 • The Dally Sentinel

www.r:nydallysentlnel.com

Wednesday, April 7, 2004

. . . . . . . . . . . ..c......~.-........,..~• ..-.......~. . .~..tllltJ·•~4

Southern defeats
Alexander for
first win, Bt

Eagles shut out
Buckeyes, Bt
\

HOLIDAY COWRING CONTEST
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

•

CONTEST RULES

:; o l I.:\ I S • \ ol.

:;.~ .

:\ o . 1.i ~

l'lll · R S ll \\ . \I' R II H.

"" " , ""I." 1, "

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Meigs to receive $1 OSK for tlomeland security

SPORTS
• Griffey homers as Reds
beat Cubs. See Page 81

J.

Meigs County · Emergency
Management Direclor.
Last week, U.S. Homeland
POMEROY Meigs Security Secrelary Tom Ridge
County will receive nearly announced the award of $100.7
· $108,000 in the latest round million to Ohio communities at
of homeland security funding
· ' from the federal government. a ceremony at the Cleveland
The money will be used for Police headquaners.
Gov. Bob Taft, also at the
training,
communications
announcemenl,
highlighted
equipment and protective gear
for those who would be ftrston · the distribulion of $68.2 mil the scene of a terrorist attack, lion in counter-terrorism
according to Roben Byer, grants allocated to Ohio earBY BRIAN

REED

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM ·

lier thi s year from I he $46.581.200 for first respon- . purchase equipment needed
Homeland
Security der needs. The county has for those who would firsl
Department, 10 enhance the · already received two home- respond to a local attack.
abilily of first responders to land security grams. both of
"We wi ll look at the needs
prevent, _respond to and which are being used to facing the county in terms of
recover from potential acts upgrade radio equipment for responding to a possible terof terrorism.
police
and
emergency rorisl attack.'· Byer said.
The la1est award 10 Meigs depanments in the county. 'The funds will be used for
County. in lhe amount of Bycr said additional commu- the purchase of personal pro$107.947. is part of lhat dis- nicalions equipmenl might tective gear and training for
tribution,
Byer
sai d. be purchased wilh lhe latesl th ose who- wo uld be first
Statewide, counties will grant , but said mosl of the called to a lerrori st in cident
'
rece1ve
a
total
of funding will be set aside 10 in the county."
'

Bridge edging toWard completion Girl
BY

J.

avoids
possible
abduction

MILES lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
Nameo__________________

Age. ________

Name•--------------~----- Age•--------

Address•--~----~----------------------

Address'-----------'-----------------Phone'----------~---------------------

Phone:_______________________________

Page AS
• Ma~orie Sfakianos
. • ~elinda Persons
• Maxene Hoffman •

WEATHER

Detail&amp; on Page A2

LO'ITERIFS
Ohio

Name._____________________
Age•----'Address; _______________________________
Phone•--------------------~---------

DOWNING CHILDS MULLEN
MUSSER INSURANCE.
POMEROY OHIO

Name•--~----------------- Ageo ________
Address, _____________________________

Phone'--------------------------------~

CROW'S RESTAURANT
POMEROY, OHIO

Pick 3 day: 4-5-2
Pick 4 day: 4-7-2-8
Pick 3 night: 4-2-6
Pick 4 night: 2-9-3-8
Buckeye 5: 26-27-31-35-36
Superlot\0: 1-14-36-37-4446 (11)
Kicker: 9-9-6-2-2·2

Name•____________________ Age. _____
Address: ________________________,--___

'West Vtrginia

Phone•--------------------------------

Dally 3: 9-6-8
Dally 4: 6-5-3-6

BROGAN WARNER INSURANCE

Powerball:2-7-16-35-37-(10)

POMEROY, OHIO

·

INDEX
Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

Obituaries

A3
A4
As

Sports

Bt

Weather

A2

Editorials

© a004 OWo VaUey Publishing Co.

Name•---~---------- Ag••-------Addreea. _______________________

Phon••---------------------------------

·'

--1bur.Bank ~

l'f:l

L!J ~f~nk
-

MEM:BERFEHe-

-

POMEROY • TUPPERS PLAINS
, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
MASON,WV

Age._·_ __
-Nam••------'-----------Addresa.______________________
Phone~--------------------~--------

SHOE PLACE/LOCKER 219
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

BY J. MILES lAYTON
'
JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

A large crane operated by Jerry Young and Charlie Rickard. both with National Engineering
Company, drills holes at least 90 feet deep into the Mason side of the Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge. Once these holes are drilled. they will have the water and sediment pumped out and
20 yards of concrete pumped in from the bottom up. (J. Miles Layton)

Southern Local approves $400,000 in repairs

2 SECflONS- 12 PAGES

'

MASON -- A large
crane has been drilling
holes into the ground
beside the Ohio River on
the Mason side in preparation for lhe construction of
piers for the riew PomeroyMason Bridge during the
past several weeks.
Charlie Rickard, one of
lhe crane. operators with
National Enj;ineering, said
lhe holes bemg drilled this
week are at least 90 feet
deep. He said water, mud,
silt and rocks will be
pumped out of the hole
which will eventually hold
one of the large concrete
piers needed to hold up the
bridge . By his estimate, 20
yards of concrete will then
be pumped from the bottom up. In this section,
there are six piers in a
cluster.
Rickard said there Will
be another six piers in
front of this cluster and
numerous sets of piers
drilled across. the Ohio
River on the Pomeroy
side. The closer the piers
get to the water; lhe deeper
. the drilling needs to be.
Rickard said the next set
wi II probably be al least
120 feet deep. Rickard and
hi s partner Jerry Young
said they begin the day at 7
a.m. and leave only afler it
gets dark .
Once comple1ed, the
bridge will cost an estimated $45.8 million according
to the Ohio Department of
Transponation. The concrete cable stayed bridge
has a 671 . foott main span
and 244 foot end spans.
The bridge features Ashaped pylons to hold the
cables. The bridge should
be completed by 2006.

BY

J.

MILES lAYTON
. JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE -- After many months of
bidding processes and working with
Ohio
School
Facilities
the
Commission for the money, ,lhe
repa1rs , and upgr ades 10 Southern
High School are aboul to become a
reality.
The Southern Local School Board
unanimously approved more than
$400,000 in capital improvemenls at
Wednesday's meeting. The money
will be used for many projects including a badly needed new roof. The new

roof will be built on top of the old
roof, which is incidentally the original
roof used by the high school for
decades.
"The repairs 'we have planned will
help us get cm•ght up with the times,"
said Richard Hi II, a school board
member.
More than $74.899 will be spent
replacing bathroom fixtures , which
have been less than perfe,ct for some
lime. Showers will be replaced in the
boys and girls locker rooms. An elevator will be installed to assisl studenls
who use wheelchairs . Outdaled phone
systems will be replaced and in some

cases upgraded to wireless tecnnology.
"These renovations and repairs will
help u&gt; serve the siUdents and staff of
the dimict." said Southern Local
Superintendent Bob Grueser.
S10ckmeis1er Enterpri .,es. a Jackson
engineering and construction firm.
won Ihe lion's share of the project by
submitting the lowest bid
$315.200. ARD&gt;tle Piping was awarded $74,899 'f9r plunibing repairs and
KAL Electric also had lhe lowesl bid
of $13,798 for eleclrical "ork.
•
Grue,er said the work will begin
June 7 and shmlld be completed hy
the beginning of the next school year.

POMEROY - A young
girl who was waiting on her
school bus Tuesday morning
may have just avoided being
a crime victim.
The girl was waiting for a
school bus on Mulberry
Avenue when ,he was
approached by a man whom
she did not know drivin g a
dark, two-door car.
· Pomeroy Police Chief
Mark Proffin said the man
asked the girl to get inlo the
car, which she refused to do.
Proffi tt said the victim
descril,led the man as being in
his early to mid-20s, white.
dark hair. and had a long face
with a lrimmed goalee .
Proffitt said the girl knew
she was in danger and was
persi.&gt;tent about not wanting
a ride from I he stranger. After
a few minutes. the man gave
up.
"These kinds of 1hings can
happen in Meigs Cou111y and
thank God this girl realized
how much danger she could
have been in before it was
too lale." he said.
There are no suspects in
custody. but Proffitt said
PPD has increased patrols
before and after school to
en sure the ·.safety of the
school children.
The chief urged children
and parems to be especially
vigilant bec&lt;IUse the same
thing could happen to somebody else.
According to the Ohio
Attorney Gene ral's office. ·
there are 25 reg1stered sex
offenders in Meigs Counly.
Ohio law prohibits a sex
offender from residing wit hin 1.000 feet of any ~chool.
Unless a resident is classified
as a sexual predator. habitual
sexual offender or aggravaled sexual offender. the law
does not rc4uire the Meigs
County Sheriff's deparlment
to notify 1he neighbors . The
Ohio Attorney General's
office li't' the name' and 'ta tu' of each sex offender living withil) em:h school district in Meigs County.

Namel______________ Ageo _____
Addresll _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Phone•- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

SWfSHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY D
POMEROY, OHIO

•

• Htaher Academics • Hands on tralntna and experience • Seamless path to an Associates Dearee or ~taher
• Deslaned for htah school students • Technically challenatna

Courses of{erfd: Htolthcarr, Auto S•rvlce ·

llud•Jt H11ls Gellla Acedtmy llt:ltlou O.k Hltl RMr Vlllley South Gellll vtntan County Wtllston u.of Rio Grandt ond Information Technology

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�PageA2

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, AprilS,

2004

Community calendar

Easter services

NewsChannel

Local Stocks
ACI- 32.32
AEP --' 32.22
Akzo- 37.78
Ashland Inc. - 46.23
BBT- 35.04 ·
BLI-15.27
Bob. Evans - 33.64
BorgWarner- 85.80
City Holding- 34.41
Champion - 4.80
Charming S~ops- 7.90
Col- 32 .61 '
·
DuPont- 43.60
DG -19.20
Federal Mogul - .39

Gannett- 90.15
General Electnc - 31.40
GKNLY- 4.70
Harley Davidson .:... 54.68
Kmar1 - 45.27
Kroger - 16.93
Lid- 21.02'
NSC -22.20
Oak Hill Financial- 32.52
Bank One - 54 .27
OVB- 34.40
Peoples- 27.75
Pepsico- 54.84
Premier- 9.00
Rocky Boots- 25 .79

AD Shell- 48.80
Rockwell - 35.20
Sears - 43.71
SBC- 24.58
AT&amp;T -19.52
USB - 26.8 1
Wendy's - 41.66
Wat·Mar1- 57.98
Wor1hinglon -19.24
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
closing quotes -of the previous day's
transactions. provided · by Smith
Partners at Advest Inc. of Gallipolis.

Sunday Times-Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992-2155

' be presented worship is at 7 p.m. · ·
Zion Church of Christ
Good News" will
Bradford Church of Christ
POME~OY - Easter ser~ at 6 a.m. at the Enterprise
MIDDLEPORT - "Why
vices at the Zion Ch!lf"Ch of United Methodist Church. A
Christ will open with sunrise ·breakfast will follow. Worship Did the Father Forsake Him"
will be the sermon topic d.urservices at 7 a.m. Sunday school service will be at 9:30am.
ing the Easter sunrise service
will be held at 9:30am. and the
Rutland Nazarene
worship service adt 10:30 am.
RUTLAND Rutland at Bradford Church of
Rutland Free WiD Baptist Church of the Nazarene will Christ. Breakfast will follow.
The Easter program, "At the
RUTLAND - A hymn present a drama, "Midnight
sing will be held at the ·Cry," at 9:30 a.m. on Easter Cross," will be presetedl!t9:30
Rutland . Free Will Baptist Sunday with special singing . a.m .. followed by the worshtp
Church at 7 p.m. on Good by Bev Adkins. Tammy setvice, "Why Did Jesus Come
Friday. Groups to sing will Taylor, Darlene Vanaman. Back to Lite" at I0:30a.m. ·
Evening worship will be
include Joy FM, Glory . Eloise Drenner, Jim Vanaman
held
at 7 p.m.
Bound Quanet, Marvin and . and Keith Kennedy. An
.
Trinity
Congregational
Deana Clark Family, Evelyn Easter sunrise service will be
POMEROY - Maundy
Roush and family, Gabriel conducted at 6:30 a.m. with
Thursday
service will be
. Quanet, Jeff Daugheny, and breakfast following.
at
Trinitv
Church at
held
Two for Jesus.
A penny drive will be
Hysell Run Holiness
sponsored by the children in 7:30p.m. East~r sunrise serPOMEROY- Easter ser- the opening of Sunday vice will be held at 7 a.m ..
vices at the Hysell Run school with a special pro- followed by the Ea~ter worHoline s.s Church will begin gram directed by Sharon ship service at 10:25 a.m.
Sacred Heart
with a 6 a.m. sunrise service Wise. for children.
POMEROY
-On Good
Syracuse Nazarene
and communion, . followed
·
the
church
will
Friday,
by a breakfast. Sunday
SYRACUSE
-Good
school will be held at 9:30 Friday communion will be observe the Stations of the
a.m., worship service at observed at Syracuse Church Cross at noon, followed by
10:45 a.m. and the Sunday' of the Nazarene-at 6:30p.m . confession from I to 2 p.m.,
eveing service at 7 p.m.
An Easter egg hunt will be and Liturgy of the Passion
Long Bottom UMC
conducted at II a.m. on and Death of Our Lord and
Holy Communion at 7:30
LONG
BOTTOM
Saturday.
p.m.
Easter Vigil Service
Easter sunrise services will
A sunrise service will be held
be held at at 7 a.m. Sunday at at 6 a.m. on Easter Sunday, fol- will be conducted at 8:30
the Long Bottom United lowed by breakfast at 7, p.m. on Holy Saturday, and
Methodist Church. There· Sunday school at 9:30, and Easter Sunday Mass will be
will be Sunday school at worship with special singing observed at 9:30·a.m.
Racine First Baptist
9:30 a.m. and worship ser- and music fium the children's
RACINEEaster Sunrise
bell choir at 10:30 a.m.
vices at 10:30 a.m.
service
will
be
conducted at
Enterprise UMC
Hillside Baptist
POMEROY ·- Maundy
POMEROY Hillside 6:30 a.m. at the church at
Thursday
Service
at Baptist Church w.ill conduct 6:30 a.m., with breakfast ((}
Enterprise United Methodist Good Friday services at I follow. Sunday ' school is at
Church
will be
held p.m. An Easter Sunday pro- 9:30. followed by morning
Thursday. Silent Communion gram will be presented at worship at 10:40. The church
meditation can take place 10:30 a.m. by the Sunday wi II conduct a ground breaking ceremony for its new
anytime between 7 and 8 p.m. school department.
multi-purpose center after
followed by the choir's Easter
First Southern Baptist
·
the
worship service.
POMEROY- Easter suncantata, "Because He Lives"
Reedsville
United
' rise service will be held at
which begins at 8 p.m.
Methodist .
An Easter Egg Hunt will First Baptist Church at 7 a.m.,
REEDSVILLE - Good
be held at the Enterprise with, breakfast to follow. A
United Methodist Church at Bible study for all ages will Friday services will be held
T
begin at 9:30 a.m., followed at 7 p.m. at the Reedsville
2 p.m. satur day ~or famttes
by worship at 10:45. Evening United Methodist Church.
of Rock Springs, Flatwoods
iiii=-:•-:~;z::-::;1\~-.rA.'l
and Enterprise Churches.
There will be prizes for the
children and refreshments
will be served.
The Easter Sunday Sunrise
Service, "Mary Magdalene's

CLUE FOR THURSDAY.
APRIL 8. 2004

New5hoes

Arrivins 'Daib Y

M..tey Ferpaon • F1rmh1nd
• BobCit • Shennlu
New ldU • Rhino
New Holl1nd • Cub Cldet

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Whete, oh whete hi~~
rny GoldetJ fgg
gone·r
Could it be by .
the Rivett?
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.I

Clubs and
organizations

RACINE - Meigs County
Republican Pany 7:30p.m . at
the Racine Legion hall.

Thursday, April!!
CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge 453. 7:30 p.m. :tt the
hall . Refreshments.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW 9053 will meet at 7:30
p.m _;tl the !mil in Tuppers
Plain s. A meal will be scn·cd
at 6:30p .m.
Saturday. April 10
RACINE :
Return
Jonathan Mcig' ·C hapter.
Daughter ~ of the A. merican
Revolution. 10 a. 1.1. at the
Racine PubJic Lih1 .1ry Patsy
Gaines. state chap lain . to
give a program on Rebecca
and Daniel Boone.
Munday, April 12

Public meetings
'

Thursday, April 8
POMEROY
The
Athens-Meigs Educational
Service Center will meet at 7
p.m. Thursday at
the
Bradbury Learning Cetiter on
Bradbury Road, Middleport.
Thesday, April 13
RUTLAND Rutland
Village Council will meet at
6:30p.m. at !he Ci1ic Center.
Wednesday, April 14
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Council will .meet in ·
recessed session at 7 p.m. at
the municipal building l(l
discuss grant\ and pri ont itc

potential projects.

Church services
Thursday, April 8
VtTO- Revival services
will be held at the Veto
Tabernacle 7:30p.m. April ~.
9 and · J0. John Elswick will
be the speaker. There will be
special singing by Ray and
Delore s Cundiff.

Birthdays
Wednesday, April I 4
POMEROY - . Tom Parker
who resides at Darst' s Pri-cate ·
Care
Home.
33164
Children's Home Road,
Ptimcroy.
45769.
will
ob,erve his 88th binhday on
April 14.

FAMILY · MEDICINE '

Stopping the spread of mono
. Que.&gt;tion: My daughter was
dia~n!&gt;Sed with mono. The
doc'tor told her there was no
treatment for it, and she
&gt;houldn't kis.\ anyone. Can
vou tell me more about this .,
How did she get iL and why
can't sile kiss anybne '' Does
&gt;he have the "kissing disease" that leenagers get''
What can she do since tilere
is no treatment ''
An,wer: Mononucleosis.
also
called
infectious
mononucleosis or simply
"mono." is a very common
infection caused . by the
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). 60
percent of U.S. children and
ninety percent of adults over
40 years old have antibodies
to this virus in their blood. It
is interesting. however. thin
this illness is often so mild
that less than half of us can
recall ever having a "monolike" illness.
That leaves an unfortunate
one third, like your daughter,
who develop classic "mono"
symptoms - usually during
their teenage years. Though
tjle peak age for infection is
between 15 and 17, mono is
ciommon throughout the
young adult years.
After exposure to the infeclion, symptoms can develop
in 14 to 50 days. This often
makes it hard to find the
~oi.trce of the infection. The
~mptoms of mono can come
l:n1 gradually or abruptly.
Usuallv. there is a fever, a
~ery sore throat' swollen
~lands and fatigue. The per·
son may also have very bad
l&gt;reath. In some cases the

spleen and liver can hecome
enlarged. It is not unusual for
mono to coexist with. strep
throat. or a "streptocoC(a!
infection of the throat," if you
want to get technical about it.
In fact, Tt is u s ual~y the very
sore throat that triggers the
visit to the doctor.
Those with an acute infection have a high concemration of the Epstein -Barr virus
in their saliva. and the disease
is spread by exchange of thi s
bodi lv tluid. In the teena~c
years-and on college campu~'­
es, thi s exchange is most
often accomplished by kissing . So , you are correct.
mono is often referred to as
'' the
kis sing . di sease."
However. the infection can
also be spread by drinking
out of someone else's glass,
using another\ straw. or
coming into contact with the
airborne virus as a result of
an infected person's coughing
and sneezing.
Remember that I men tioned earlier that a large
number of people can have
mono ·and never have symptoms'' Well, gtles s what:
They can spread the infection, too. The diagnosis of
mono can be made with a
simple blood test that many
physicians perform in the
office. Once thi s diagnosis is
made, the treatment is primarily rest, fluid s and management of the fever as wen
as over-the-counter medications for aches and pains. If a
strep throat is present. that is
treated with antibioti cs.
Strenuous exerci se and con-

· tact 'ports should be avoided
for the tlrst few week s. These
activities can be resumed
once the fever is gone. ·any
' pleen enlargement has sub' ided and the patient has· no
·more sy mptoms·. While there
can be serimrs complications
from mono, they are not very
frequent. Most people can
resume full activity in three
to 'ix month&gt; with no problem,.
·
But while your daughter is
ill. he sure that no one drinks
or cats using the same cups.
bowls. glasses. place sett ing
or utensils . Even when free of
symptoms, she still may be
able to spread the viru s for
several
weeks. That's why I'd rec·umme.nd that you keep up
this routine for the next
month or so. Als(/. it's alway s
a good idea to use paper cups
in the bathroom.
Fwnil\' Medicine® is a
week/\' ·column. To submi1
&lt;juesti&lt;ms, 1vri1e to Martha A .
Simpso11, D.O., M.B.A., Ohio
University
College
of
O.Heopathic Medicine, P.O.
Box 110, Athens, Ohio 45701 ,
or via e-mail to readerques·
1ions@ j{mr i Iymedic ine news. o
rg. Medical informatiotl · in.
this column is provided as an
educatiOIIGI service onlv. It
does not replace the judg·
mell/ vjyour personal physician, wlw should be relied on
10 diagnose and recommend
lreatment for any medical
mnditions. Past colunms are
available online a1 www.fam·
ily111ed ic in en ews. o~g.

Tickets for the dinner and
dance are $15 and will go on
sale Monday at SwisherLohse Pharmacy and Franc is
Florist.
Again this year s{holarships are offered to s tudents
who are either a child or
grandchild of a Pomeroy
High School graduate. The
applilatipn deadline is May
21.
There are no official appli·

cations. Those apply ing are to
send a resume, transcript of
grades, letter of application, a
current photo and a notation
of their relationship to a
Pomeroy High graduate to the
Pomeroy Alumni Association,
P.O . Box 202, Pomeroy, Ohio
4576\1.
Graduates who wish to
donate to the scholarsh ip fund
may do so be sending their
donation to the association.

O'Bieness Memorial Hospital
to offer breastfeeding,class

Number
IS•••
0

You must cover every number on your card to win.

•

CHINESE

Gallipolis
Chiropractic

.....
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. ATHENS O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital in Athens
will offer a breastfeeding
~lass for expectant mothers
this month.
The class, which is held in
conjunction with the lactation
program sponsored by the
Q'Blcne" Birth Center, will
take place Tue sday. from
~ :30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. in

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Mon • Fri 9-7; Sal. 9·5

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DOWNING
CHILDS MULLEN
MUSSER ~

iNSURANCE

INGELS

DEAR ABBY: After reading the lener from "Concerned
in Northbrook," where the 14year-old niece was .instructed
to stay home alone and let the
tile man in, I feel compelled to
share my story.
My ,former
husband.
"Steve," seemed allracti\ e.
gentle and polite . While
working as an installer for a
nationwide security company.
he lured a I4-year-old girl
into his van and sexually
assaulted her. Her parent s'
detem1i nation to shield their
daughter enabled Steve to
plea-bargain a prison sentence of only eight months.·
After hi s release, Steve
returned to work as an
installer for · a satellite TV
company and currently work'
for another security compan y.
installing systems in homes .
IX !though he is a registered
sex offender, no one would
ever guess Steve is a
pedophile. His pflrole officer
told me that he shouldn't be
around children . Can yo u
imagine leaving your 14year-old daughter home
alone to let in my charming
former husband 0 - ALSO
CONCERNED IN NEW
HAMPSHIRE
DEAR ALSO
CONCERNED: Your warning is
chilling. Parents, please take
note and take nothing for
granted. Better to be overly
cautious than not cautious
enough.
DEAR ABBY I just
turned 13. My best friend,
"Heather,'' moved ari hour
away, and we have kind of
drifted apart. On Saturday. I
ran into her a\ ·my friend
"Tanya's" house here in

"

:-,mc.:e

--

•

-, he

2004

mo\'ed'

m., av

Dear
Abby

town. We all went to the
mall. and Heather met
"Johnny." a .16-year-old guv
who goeo; to my school.
Well. Johnny came hack to
Tanya's house (her pare nt&gt;
weren ·t home). and he and
Heather were all u,·er each
other. They were hut and
heavy on the couch while
Tanya and I tried to "al&lt;;h
TV To make a ion£ &gt;torv
short. Johnn y and Heather
ended up having &gt;ex righ 1
there in the same room "llh
us. •l couldn't helie'e what I
was seeing - the y hadn ·l
known each other more than
a few hour~ .

The news about Johnn y
and Heather spread fasi.
· Everyon e wants to know if I
still con sider Hea ther my
friend. Kids are calling her ·
"eaw." along with other
names I won ·t mention·.
As much a' I want to he
her friend. I'm worried
about getting a bad reputation if I stick up for her. PJu,.
I'm scared my mom wi II
hear about what went on that
day. What should I drl'' STILL CAN'T BELIEVE IT
IN A TEXAS TOWN
DEAR S'r!LL CAN'T
BELIEVE IT: Tell the truth.
Say !hat you and Heather
used to be close friends. but

P.S. I hope you WILL tell
your mother "hat happened
that day. Heather \ mother
need, to know ·that her
daught~r i' '~xua ll y ac·ti\e.
and \ ulnerahle to 'STD, and
pregnancy. It will' be doing
Heather a treme ndou' fa\'or.
and help her to a'oid a lot of
trouble in the near future. _
DEAR ABBY: J' "e JUq
had the 111&lt;hl dreaded of all
. 'hoppi1i g tnp&gt; : the New Bra
E.\peditinn .
woman O\'er
the al!e of I 2 luol-&gt; forward
to it.l·d rather 'trip and wax

"n

a ~it c h en lloor.

·

:"low bra"iere manufac·
turer-. h:He maLic thing ...
\\tlr\e by placing the strap
length adju,tment in the
BACK of the hra. What were
thn thinkinQ ., · Wh\ not
mo\·e the OJ;~mng io the
back of men·, brief, - it
mdke.., ju ... t a... much ;.,elh t" .
1\1 he interested in hearin~
from other \\omen ahuLtt thr. .
lunac~. Ahb,. dear. let', ,tart
.a Glmpaign to. return ~anit~
ttl women·~ under\\ car. DOllBLE-JOINTED
1\'
D ..\YTO\'
DEAR DOUBLE-JOII\TED : I' ll Join you on th e

handwa!..!on hecau ... e I tuo

'o me tin1e, wonder whether
cc rt~1 in gar ment~ haYe been
Lk'i!lned b\ men \\ tthuut
fir~t ...l·o n~u ltlng \\Omo:n .
/Jeur Ahl&gt;r is HTillol hr
Ahigail \ (Ji t Bu rn1. als;,
~'"'" 'II· w 1&lt;'111111e Phiii!Jl.'·

tlll d

11·u .1

fin mded IJ\ her

1//IJ//re~e

'Puuli11 e Plitllip.l .

Wrile

Dea r

A/J/11·

at

1\·lrH ·. DeurAhhY.(om t)r P. O.
Bo.r 69.f.IO. Los A11g eles. CA

90069.

Teacher workshops held
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.
-A variety of language arts
workshops were held recently at the Heritage Christian
Academy in' Ravenswood to
facilitate spelling, comprehension, conceptual skills,
writing and grammer, reading , and higher order think·
ing skills.
The workshops, conducted

for ali teachers in grades K4
- 6 as well as the secondary
language arts staff; were presented by Dr. John Butler of
Precept Marketing Group.
Inc . of Elverson. Pa., considered a pioneer in education.
The workshops were conducted as a part of a broad
staff development program
at the school.

HCA is now in its 29th
year of operation. offering
all grades and subjc.:t&gt; . and
is now in the pn,ce\s of
interviewing
prospcctiw
students for the · upcoming
2004-2005 te rm. The school
ts
located
in
north
Ra ve nswood across from
Ra ven Lanes.

Re-thinking
your first
career choice?
Let us help you re-think that first career choice and find
an exciting career that will work in the real world ;
At Rio Grande we can train you for one of today's ,hottest
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Education
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Nursing
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Pharmacy Tech .
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• And so many more!

The demand for cowboys and
ballerinas isn't
what it
used
to be.

------- .~~==~~==~-~--

Sunday Times-Sentinel
740-992-2155 ..

RADIO SHACK
&amp; Picture Gallery
•

April 8,

yo u're not clo..,e an~ more. ·

Celebrating special days
- · with you!

CROW'S

-'

or

.

Brought to you by: ·

16" 1 Toppi

O' Bleness' basement confer- preparation for breastfeeding .
ence room B-7.
maintenance and manageMichele
(Platt) ment of breastfeeding, and
Biddlestone. O'Biene,s' inter- · acl~ice for working mothers .
national board certified lactaThe class is provided free
tion consultant . will lead the of charge, no regi stration . is
class. Topics to he di scussed
reyui re cl . For more informawill include : advantage'
breastfeeding for mother and tion . contact Michele (Platt)
child. anato my of the breast , Hiddlesl@C at ( 740) 592physiology of breastfee ding. '!364.

Th~rsday,

Teenage girl gets no security
from installer of home system

PHS alumni begins reunion planni·ng
· POMEROY - Plans are
being made for the annual
Pomeroy
High
School
Alumni Association's annual
reunion to be held on
Saturday, May 29. at Meigs
High School.
: A social hour will be held
t;rom 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. in the
school cafeteria followed by
the dinner. A dance with
George Hall at the organ will
follow from 9· to II p.m.

PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

•

•

�~ The

OPINION

Daily Sentinel

.

.~

.111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

..
~

4

..
• •

4 • .

Charlene Hoeflich

'

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law ·respecting at1
establishment of religion, or prohibiti11g the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
·people peaceably to assemble, .and to petition
· . the Govert1mer1t for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
•

VIEW

READER'S

War
Side dfects .
. Dear Editor:
: Presideni Bush announced. rather boastfully. · that
308.000 new jobs were created in March.
The Associated Press re~;mrts Ohio received $4.3 bil-.
lion in defense contracts. 11 would appear that most ot
this is for airplane cngi11es. tanks and armored vehicles.
Would it be a "stretch" to assume that these items are
needed to replace those lost in Iraq·~ A war does create
needs, and usually increases job opportunities. Case in
·point: We now have 15.000 "security contractors" work... mg in Iraq. These are not the ordinary servicemen, but
· more on the order of mercenaries or soldiers of fortune.
who are being paid very large salaries for the work that
: they do and the risks they take.
· Those of us of the "Geriatric Generation" remember
. what brought the "Great Depression" to its end.
.. These "oood" economic reports may help some people
·but I dou6t if they are any consolation to the 600 plus
families who have lost loved ones or the 3000 that have
been maimed.
-. I have one grandson who completed his tour of.duty in
the area and . returned safely. I have another one over
there now.
Let us all pray that. this conflict will end soon and all
· of this kil'l ing, on both sides, will end, and that is the
·
(Long) Bottom Line.

Henry E. Bahr
Long Bottom

Thursday, Apri1 8,

2004

•••••

Moments after leading the
way in scuttling reauthorization of welfare reform. Sen.
Edward Kennedy. D-Mass ..
declared to the .press that
Morton
1 he'd ne\·er seen the Senate
Kondracke
·so dysfunctional' in all his
.J I years serving in the
chamber.
He rneam it as a blast at
the Republican majority. poverty rate fell frmn 13 .7
which denied Democrats a percent in 1995 to a low of
vole on raising 1he minimum 11 .7 percent in 2001, though
wage. but blame - disgusl. it rose to 12.1 percent in the
in fact - is deserved on all 2002 recession.
sides ..
With their mothers work- '
Congress. caugh\' up in Ihe ing, 2.~ million fewer chil- .
rancid panisanship rife in all dr~n live in poveny. includAmerican politics, resem- ing
700.000
Africanbles an infinity of mirrors in A1;:,eric~n children.
The 1996 law has e~pired.
which each shows one side
poillling a linger of blame al Congress keeps extending it,
!he olher - and gelling although il might slop doing
nolhing done in !he process. so. depriving states of $16.5
Welfare reform is only !he billion in federal assistance
lmcst ·\'ictim. bul it's !he lo help poor women .
most
lamentable.
The
The pending reauthorizareform. requiring recipients lion bill would increase
to work in return for assis- women's work requirements.
tance instead of remaining but lhe Senate- by an overdepende~l generation after
whelming 78-20 vote recenlgeneration, is one of the sig- ly - . added $6 billion over
nal bipanisan achievemenls five years lo make sure that
of the 1990s and an unques- an additional I 00,000 lowertioned social policy success. income women receive child
It' was originally lhe brain- care assistance to he! p them
chi Id. in the .mid-1980s. of keep .working.
·
the co-chairmen of the
The Bush White House.
National
Governors demonstrating once again
Association,
Republican that ·compassionate conserLamar
Alexander
of vatism
is a chimera.
Tennessee and Bill Clinlon opposed lhe money, but 31
of Arkansas. who made il a Republicans still supported
pillar of his ·New Democrat' it. including Majority Leader
presidential campaign in Bill Frist of Tennessee. .
Now it's all in jeopardy.
19'12.
When Clinton entered !he Why? The two sides explain
White House, he pushed it with an endless ·chain of
reform against the fierce blame thai goes from GOP
opposition of reactionary refusal to allow a vote on !he
wage
lo
liberals in his own parly and mimmum
reactionary
Republicans Democrats' refusal · to agree
who wanted to make its to House-Senale conferterms as punitive as possi- ences to House Republicans'
ble. After veto fighls, il was refusal to give Democrats a
passed by a GOP-dominaled proper role in decision~mak ;
· Congress in 1996.
mg.
If it wasn'l one ·lhing, it
And it has worked, as even
be
another.
former
opponents
like would
accuse
Kennedy acknowledge. The Republicans
welfare rolls have fallen Democrats of, in the words
from 5 million in 1994 to 2 of Sen . Chuck Grassley. Rmillion, and the national lowa, ·a consistent pattern of

ob&gt;tructionism· designed 10
prc\'ent the GOP Senate
from achieving anything Ihi' .
.
year.
Indeed, !here i&gt; a long list
of blo~ked measure,. including an energy bill (al a lime
when Denwcrals are blaming Republi cans for high gas
prices) . a measure to free
U.S. exporlers from $.JO million a month in 1arifh
(which mighl create joh'l
and cap' on medical mal~
praCIICC hab1hty award&gt;
(which mighl hring down !he
cost of heallh care).
Republica~s refashioned
the malprawce btll 10 apply
only 10 especially burdened
oh,lelricians and pedialri- ·
cians.
fi gurin g
that
Demn,T&lt;Ih wouldn'l dare put
wom c11 and children ahead
of II'
·ial lawyer,· lobby.
The , '· '"''crah 'till filibustered.
Welfare reform reaulho-

-

-

rization is c\o~e to dying

becau se Demo~rats insist on
altaching amendments to
raise the minimum w~1ge.
extend uncmploymenl insurance and overlurn a Bush
administralion labor regulation restricling ovenime pay
for while-col lar workers.
There\ a strong case to he
made for alllhree proposals.
The minimum wag~. for
instance, hasn'l been raised
since 1997 and ils current
level of $5.15 an hour lea Yes
a family of lhree $5.000
below !he rove rty JeyeJ.
Ke.nnedy proposes to raise il
to $7 over a 1wo-year period.
But merils aside. there is
also reason IO susrect !hal,
Grassley
charged.
Democrats are ·more interested in politics than producl' and thai lhese are ·message amendmenls designed
to appeal lo Democrats'
trade union base - and to
embarra.;s GOP candidates
- rather !han achiel'e pas-

as

sage.
The likeliesl large! al 1he
mom enl 1s Sen. Arlen
Specler. R-Pa .. who would
normally
vole
with

DcmO&lt;T&lt;Its on !he labor mea... urc-. blll i~ racing a "tiff primafl from ri~ht-wing Rep.
Pat ·l&lt;&gt;Omcl. 11 ho could use
!he votes. In charge that
Spee1er i' too ·Jiberal.'
D,·modal' think Toome~
would 11&lt;' ea,ier to beat in the
fall than S1'ec1er.
Rcpublinu" are dneloping a mininnim wa~e bill of
th~ir o11·n - dctai'!s to come
- anti prumi-..ed Dei1104,.'1'Ut:-;
1hc 1otc' Iiley seek if
Dcmocr.ti '- \~ nuiJ agree to
permit a fiiwl \ote on the
'' elfarc nh' &lt;hure and then to
appoinl c• lllkree' 1\·i1h the
House .
Democrats
refused.
demanding thai Senate
Republican., shnuld intlucnc:e Hou'e Republicans to
treat Hou se Dcmo.:rats with
more re,pel'l The supposed
bo1101i1
line
i'
!hat .
Democrat' are killing welfare refurm because Rep.
Bill Thoma,. R-Ca lif .. is
mean I(&gt; Rep. Charlie
Ran Qcl. D-N.Y.. in the Ways
and' Mean' Comminee. I ·
don'! bclie,·e iL
Some
moderate
Democ:ral ic: Senator' are prinltcly furiou' with ,Kenneqy.
·Minorily
Leader
Tom
Daschlc. D-S.D .. and other
haru-lincrs. but lhe whole
Caucus I'Otcd in locbtep on
welfare cloture. That's whal
happen:-, in gang wars.
Republi&lt;:ans claim that
Democrats will get !heir
comeuppam:e i 11 Nol'cmber.
when 1he GOP again will
charge ·obslruclionlsm · and
. hope s 10 pick up scats as il
'
d I'd Ill

~00 1

-

-·

.

Bob Smiddie
·. · Albany

The Daily Sentinel
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Take this stat and
Everybody says
that
Johnny Paycheck's 1977 hit,
'Take This Job and Shove It,'
is one of the great counl ry
songs, an anthem ofwotking
class defiance. What people
forget is the bitter realism
behind songwriter David
Allan Coe's lyrics. See, it's
not so much a tough guy's
boast as a working stiffs fanlasy:
' I'd give the shirt right off
of my back,' the song goes,
'if l had the guts to say, 'Take
this job and shove it. I ain't
working here no more."
But he hasn't got the guts
and that's the whole point.
His woman's crying and he's
got bills to pay, but he can'!
afford 10 confronl lhe bosses
who have. made his factory
job miserable.
In 2004, the same guy
would count himself blessed
to have a factory job at all.
As everybody knows, the
United States has been 'outso urcing' high-wage manufacturing jobs to low-wage
Third World countries for
years.
l couldn't help but think of
Paycheck (he died last year)
while watching the tlurry of
media excitement over lhe
Bush
adminislration's
announcement that the U.S.
economy created 308,000
new job
last month.
Washin.gton Posl columnist
Howard Kurtz was typical in
spinning the numbers as
'unadul~rated good news for
a president who has been on
the defensive over lhe loss of
more than 2 million jobs during hi's tenure, not to menlion
good news for the economy.'
Unlike many others, Kunz

that'll work. Righi now. the
country is not paying attention 10 the Senate. Poor
women are about to be victimized by pafli san pointscoring. but they have less
cloUI than either the AFLCIO or 1he U.S. Chamber of
Commerce.
I Morron Kondracke is
&lt;'.\HIItir~ editor of Roll Call.
the "'' "''IWI&gt;er (1( Cap'ito/
Hill. !

0

•

'

•••

economic !rend w watch. managers might fire you as
According 1.0 an article by soon as look at you.' he said.
Steven Greenhotise in The 'The store managers have a
New York Time,. many cor- tocholu in lhe lower middle
porations regularly cheal class. They're hein g paid
low-wage
employees .oul of $20.000. $30.000. They're in
Gene
!heir wages by docloring management They gel medLyons
time sheels.
ical. They have no job secuWorker' have tiled law - rit y al all. and they want to
suits ag&lt;!in.,l Family Dtlllar, keep their loeholu in the
rep Boys, Tc\co Bell. Toys lower middle class, and '
did allude to the 'fine print,' 'R' · Us. Kink0's, Wal -Mart lhey'll often do whalever is
which actually saw unem- and olhers. charging they necessary to do it.'
ployment rise to 5.7 percent. systematically shorlchanged
Sounds to me like !hey
and the number of persons employees by suhtracting also may be Wctlching soout of work for more than six lunch hours !hey never got. called reality TV shows like
months hit a 21-year high. clocked !hem oul without 'Survivor'
or
' The
Only a handful of accounts !heir knowledge or simply Apprclllice.' which exalt a
probed deeper.
allered computerized records kind of moronic social
According to 'the Los with a few keystrokes.
Darwini sm in which it's
Angeles Times, an analysis
Wai-Man
officials every man for himself. and
by Wells Fargo Bank econo- ~xplained that .such a pnu:- chealing nnd deception are
mist Sung Won Sohn showed tice violales company policy · the norm.
that most of the job growlh and thai managers who cheal
Screwing over · hourly
was caused by 'significant . hourly-wage workers (called worker,s is made easier by
jump in part· time workers 'associate s') promptly gel the facl thal so many are
for economic reflSO(ls to 4.7 fired. That's pretty much kills, single mothers, seni6r
million from 4.4 million. In what !hey told Ihe Times ear- cilizen~ and immigrants
fact, the increase in part- lier !his year about Wal-Ma11 (legal and iI legal) who arc
timers accounted for the vast and Sam's Club managers afraid lo defend themselves.
majority of the increase in who locked associates inside
Anyhow, here's the big
stores for all-nigh! ·off the pkture: In 1977 when
employment.'
Got that? What's happen• cipok' labor. even forbidding Paycheck recorded his ;,ong,
ing, Sung w~ote, is thqt long- them to leave for medical the average CEO in !he
term unemployed workers emergencies . Shorl of an Uni1ed Stales made approxiare accepting part-lime actual fire, opening emer- mately 39 limes the annual
work. Hence •. the stalislics gency exils was strictly for- sala ry of lhe average
also showed a decline in the bidden. Greenhouse wrote employee . Today's estimates
average work week and no aboul one store manager who vary between 600 .and I ,000
increase· in
overlime. refused lo come in afler mid- . limes more. President Bush's
Granted, working beats not nigh! to let a nauseated asso- idea of an economic plan is
working every time. Bu!._ ciate out of the building. The to make &gt;ure they gel a big
pari-time employ men! nearly sick man!s superxisor wa~ lax cut. Any qu'cstions?
always translates to lous y told to give him a mattress to
(Arkanws
Democrat.
'
pay, no security and no bene- lte on.
Ga~erte m/um11ist Ge11e Lrmrs
fits such ·as health insurance.
Anyway. -cumpany policy is a nadnna7 maga:;ine a;,.altJ
So it would be wiser to post- or nol. a lawyer who succe;,s- 1rinner wui co-awhor of 'The
pone the celebration until it fully sued Taco Bell for Hwr1i11g of tire Presidem' (Sr.
becomes clearer exactly shorting workers' paychecks lt1a r1i11 's Press. 2000 ). You can
explained the facts of life.
what's going on.
e-mail L_w!ll.\' '" ge~te­
' A lot of this i;, thai dislricl lyons2@cs.com.) .
Meanwhile, here's another

..

Maljorie
Sfakaanos
SHADE
- . Marjorie
Eileen Sfakiano&gt;. Shade.
passed away on Monday.
April 5, 2004, at The Ohio
Stale University Hospital in
Columbus .
. She was born on Sept. I,
1927, near Pratt's Fork,
daughter of the late Delbert
C. and Marie C. Williams.
She attended school at
Chester and Harrisonville
High Schools, She worked
with the Soil and Water
Conservation District and
had been designing and making doll clothes since 1971.
She was a member and Past
Presidenl of !he Athens
· Emblem Club, Past Presidenl
of the Ohio and West Virginia
'Emblem
Clubs,
Past
Assistanl Marshal in the Stale
Club and !he Supreme
Emblem Club.
Surviving are her husband.
William: daughters. Rose
Marie Gardner and Marjorie
Louise Hunter: her step- .
daughter, Lennie (Jerry)
Bockmore: stepson. Steve
Sfakifnos; five grandchildren
and four great grandchildren:
two brothers and three · sislers; several · nieces and
nephews and many friends,
including a special friend.
Ginny Gano.
She was preceded in heavenly rest by her granddaughler, Alesia Well. and a sislerin,law.
Services will be conducted
. at I p.m. on Friday. April 9.
2004. at Jagers &amp; Sons
Funera Home in Athens. with

bur.ial in Burson Cemetery.
Shade.
Friends may call from 6 to
9 p.m. on Thursday al the
funeral home.
Athens Emblem Club will
hold services at 7 p.m. al the
funeral home .

Melinda Persons
PICKENS. S.C.

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Melinda
Persons,
22. died
Monday.
April 5.
2004. in
Pickens.
S.C.
She is
Melinda
survived by
Persons ·
her father.
Denver
Persons : ' her
husband.
Thomas McMinn: four sisters : Lisa Bolin. Revea
Foster. Tracy Clark and
Connie Osborne; four brothers: Dennis and David
Persons and Tim and Bobby
Clark.
She was preceded in death
by her molher, Linda Mays
Persons; two brothers. Chris
Paullon and Charles Persons·;
and lwo sisters . Denise
Persons and Marcia Persons .
Services will be held in
Pickens. S.C.. and burial at
Piny Grove Baptist Church
I
Cemelery.
.

Maxene Gaul
CHESTER

www .mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Pa~e A5

Once troubled
Youngstown
•
pnson reopens

National Volunteer Week

-

Maxene

Gaui Hoffman. 81, of
Chester, passed away at her
residence on Wednesday ..
April 7. 2004.
She was born on April 2.
1923 in Sumner. daughter of
the late Oris and Lucy
Smith Gaul. She was a
homemaker and a life long
member of !he Chester
Nazarene Church . She was a
beloved
wife, mother.
grandmottier, great-grandmother and sister.
She married Paul E.
Hoffman on May 31. 1940
who survives her. She. is
also survived by lwo daughlers and a son-in-law, Beth
Sherman
of
Canal
Winchester. and Janet Sue
Chafin
of
and
Tom
Crestline: lwo sons and
· daughters-in-law, Steve and
Barbara Hoffman and Terry
and Janet Hollman. bolh of
Chester. II grandchildren,
10 great-grandchildren, a
sister and brother-in-law.
Marvene
and
Howard
Caldwell of Tuppers Plains.
and several nieces and nepihews.
Besides her parents, she
was preceded .in death by a
. daughter. Myrna Carpenter,
two sislers, Doris Spencer
and Avis Hanley, and a
brother, Cecil Gaul.
Funeral services will be
held at I p.m. Friday at 1he
Chester Nazarene Church
wilh !he Rev. Herbert Grale
officialing. Burial will be in
Chester Cemetery., Visiting
~ours wi ll be Thursday from
61o 8 p.m. al Ewing Funeral
Home.

YOUNGSTOWN (AP)
- A 2.0 16-bed private
prison that closed three
years ago amid security
problems has reopened. the
company that run&gt; il 'aiu
Wednesday. ·
More than 500 workers
lost their jobs in 2001
when lhe same company
pul !he Norlheast Ohio
Correctional Center. the
state's only . privately
owned
and. operaled
prisop, on inaclive 'latus.
The U.S. Marshals Service
began sending irunates this
week to the prison. which will
house about 300 prisoner.;.
said Nashville. Tenn.-ba.o;ed
Corrections Corp. of America.
The company has hired I 35.
employees and said .thai num- ·
ber may increase 10 as much
as 400 depending on prison
growth, said John FerguSon.
chief executive officer.
The company is the
nation's largest owner and
operator of private prisons.
II operates 64 facilities in
20 stales with a lola! capacity of 65.000.
Faced with chronic
unemployment.
former
Youngstown
Mayor
Patrick Ungaro a11d City
Council embraced CCA's
offer in the mid-1990s to
build a prison on an old
induslrial sile.
Bul problems plagued
the prison throughout the
four years it was open. Two
. inmales were killed. six
escaped and 1he company
agreed to pay $1.65 million
to settle a class-action lawsuit filed by prisoners .

Local Briefs
Bunny hop ba~e
sale set
MIDDLEPORT The
bunny · hop bake sale will
.begin at 10 a.m. Salurday in
downtown
Middleport.

Grave cleanup
announced
SYRACUSE Sutton
Township is preparing for
cemetery cleanup and mowing . . Families wanting to
keep grave decorations need
to remove them by April 15.

Advisory issued
REEDSVILLE
-The
Tuppers · Plains-Chester
Water District has issued a
boil advisory for residents on
Ohio 124 in Olive Township,
from Forked Run State Park
to the Buckley Farm near
Reedsv ille, not including the
park itself.
The advi,ory is due to a
repair of a main line break,
and all customers affecled
are asked 10 boil their water
for three minutes before
using it for cooking or-drinking unlil further notice.

Classes offered
CHESTER -A !ole painting class will be offered at 9
a.m. on Saturday, April 17. at

the Chesler · Courthouse.
Linda Blosser will be the
instructor and those participating are to take a chair,
box. or olher items on which
to paint. The cost of the cl&lt;tss
if $10.

Pomeroy
egg hunt
POMEROY
The
Pomeroy
Merchants
Association will stage an
Easter egg hunt on the Bob
Roberts
football
field
Saturday morning. The hunt
for children seven to 12
years of age will take place
at 10 a.m.; the hunt for those
one to three and four to six
will take place at 10:45 a.m.

Restricted area
reduced
MARIETTA
The
restricted area of Ohio 7 just
south of Marietta has been
reduced in length, the Ohio
Department
of
Transportalion announced
today.
.
Traffic has been returned
to a four-lane pattern
approximately I ,000 feet
south of Bramblewood
Heights Road.
The restriction was placed
in January lo allow for emergency slip repair along the
highway. Since thai lime .
approximately 75 percent of

a

••

•

2004

It remains 10 be seen if

Dear Editor:
When I was a young man in high school in the late forties my best buddies were members of the basketball
team. There were about six and they were all sons of
well-to-Qo prominent local businessmen. After high
. school I went to work in a factory. My buddies went to
. coll~ge. Shortly thereafter, the Korean War started and I
was drafted. My buddies continued to go to college. The
· draft allowed certain deferments meaning if you go to
college, you don't go fight. Clearly this was a law made
by the rich to protect the rich. And clearly it was unjust.
: After the war. the draft was discontinued.
What do we have todayry A "volunteer'' Army. A recent
study shows that military recruiters go to small rural
towns where there is a lack of opportunity. However, the
military is there offerin~ some great opportunities, travel, exctting jobs, and htgher education. If you don't get
caught up in some rich man's stupid war. But then you·
have pride in yourself for having served your country.
And since there is no draft. the rich boys don't .even
· 'have to go to college. They can just go into business.
· : · If pride is so imJ?Orlant why aren't there more well-todo boys in the mi htaryry Wake up, kids, wake up.

Thurliday, AprilS,

Obituaries

Welfare impasse a case of partisan posing

The Daily Sentinel
,.

Page·A4

the projec1 has been completed.
"The progress !hat contractor
Beaver Excavating
Company has made on this
projecl has allowed ODOT
to shonen the restricted work
zone," said ODOT District
10
Public
Information
Officer Slephanie Filson.
"Although this means a
reduced length of traffic
restriction in the area, we
still ask motorists to exercise
caution when traveling this
section of State Route 7 in
order to keep construction
crews and the traveling public safe."
One section of the project
remains to be repaired. It's
completion will require the
acquisition of several properties, including three houses,
"After evaluating survey
data and core drilling samples, ODOT found varying
soil
composition
and
drainage problems among
other issues ," said Filson.
"Properly repairing the
remaining section adjacent
to State Roule 7 will require
additional benching and
slope establishment, as well
as the .in stallation of
drainage . conlrol. This has
resulted in the need for additional righ1-of-way. In some
instances, ODOT will only
require slope easements to
perform necessary work. In
olhers. we will be purchasing property and houses."

All impacted property
owners have been contacted
by ODOT. A series of property owners' meetings are
under way. The real eslale
acquisition process includes .
appraisals of propeny, price
negoliations and a built-in
waiting period to allow for
necessary relocallons.
·
"We will continue to work
closely with each impacted
property owner in the
Bramblewood Heights area
to make this transition as
smooth as possible for all
involved," said Filson.
. In the meantime, construction crews are back on site in
an effort to complete as
much work as possible.
· "It is important to balance
the needs of the propeny
owners impacted by this project with those of the
motorists traveling this section every day," said Filson.
"We will continue to move
forward on !his project
where we can until the real
estate acquisition process is
complele. Our final goal is to
return a much ·safer State
Rout~ 7 to the public."
•
.

CorrectiOn

POMEROY Donna
Nelson was 'incorrectly identified in a culline under a
picture of Meigs County
Cancer Initiative members in
The Daily Sen1inel on
Tuesday. The Daily Senlinel
regrets the error.

Since 1974, National Volunteer Week. Apn l 18·24, has been
the officia( time to recogn ize and celebrate the efforts of val ~
unteers. Hosp1ce is a special concept of care des1gned to· provide comfort and support to patients and their families when a
life-limiting illness no longtr responds to cure-oriented treatments. Hospice care neither prolongs life nor hastens death.
Here are Pleasant Valley Hospice volunteers who give freely of
their time to improve the quality of life for another. left to right.
Liz Gaskins, Donna Richmond. Connie Mullins . Rosalee Miller,
Becky Peck, (Home Health &amp; Hospice billing/ volunteer services
coordinator) and Bud Richmond. Other volunteers are are Butch
Watson and Betsy Crank. The goal of hospice care is to'improve
the quality of a patient's last days by offering comfort and dig·
nity. Hospice care is provided by a team-onented group of specially trained professionals. volunteers and family members.

Reward to be
paid regardless
of case outcome
COLUMBUS (AP) - An
anti-c~ime group will pay
$60.000 to lwo people who
helped end a string of highway shootings. regardless of
whelher the suspecl is convicted.
A lipsler will receive
$45,000 for informalion thai
led police 10 the man charged.
in the shoolings thai kepi
central Ohio drivers on ed~e
for nionths.
The tip,ter. reportedl y a
relative of suspect Charles A.
McCoy Jr.. should rec·eive 1he
money wilhin 60 days. the
Central Ohio Crime S1opper'
announced Wednesday.
Kevin Miles. the group·,
president, refused 10 idcmify
the tipsier or confirm reports
thai 1he person is a family
member of McCoy's.
Bill Taylor, a former
Columbus police officer and
longtime Crime Stoppers
member, said the organization needs to pay out rewards
~uickly to ensure its reputa-

tion.
"We lose some credibility
out on the street if we waited
on convictions,' 1 said Taylor;
noting that could delay a
reward by months or years.
"It would hurt us in the long
run to wait for convictions all
the time."
McCoy' s· anorneys had no
comment on !he award.
Conrad Mal som of Las
Vegas. who called police
after he spotted McCoy\ car
at a budget motel ju&gt;t off the
Las Vegas slrip. will re&lt;:eii'C
!he remainin g $15 .000 nf !he
reward . Mi k~ said.
While Mal,om's help wa'
critical. the group felt . someone else C\'cnwall y would
have found MeCoy and

turned him in. Mile&gt; said.
By comrast. the unidentified tip,ter ga1·e police
McCov\ name for !he first
lime . i\1iles said .
"Wilhout the original person giving us the name. we
would not have known who .
the person was." Miles said.
referring to McCoy. "We feel
that's a lot more important."
Malsom. 60. an unemployed &gt;ale&gt;man who lives in
a motor home a1 a !:.as Ve~as
!railer park. declined lo comment Wedne,da). He said he
hadn '1 heard from the Crime
S10ppers group.
Crime S10ppers based its
decision on recommendation' rrum the ta'k force thai
in,·e,tigaled the siluutings.
Miles &gt;aid. Several busines ses and one indi\'idual contributed to 1he 560,000
reward for informalion leading tO an arresl and indictment in the shootings.
McCoy pleaded innocent
Monday to a 24-count indict·
ment including lhe fatal
November shooting of Gail
Kni sley, 62, of Washington
Coun Hou se. He faces the
death penalty if convicted in
Knislev's death btcause it
involv~d an attempt to ·'kill
two or more persons.''
according 10 the indictmenl.
Rell'ard ing
informalion
!hat lead&gt; l(l an arrcs1 rather
1il an CLHll·iction is a policy of
Crime Stopper' International.
the
president
or
the
Arlinglon. Texas-based group
'aid Wednc,J&lt;~y.
·
"The purpose of !he Crime
Slllpper' sy,lcm is lo catc h
tile bad gtl)' ... '&lt;lid Steve
Walrath . "We don'! have any
mnlml o1·cr !he judic ial sys·tem...
·

PROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR LIFE.

Today in the Sentinel ...

,~~&amp;~~
•

The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992-2155"
www.mydailysentinel.com

�•

Page A&amp; • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, April 8, 2004

www.mydallysentlnel.com

•

INSIDE

The Daily Sentinel

Major League Baseball glance, Page 82
Mickelson looking for green Jacket, Page B3
Browns' Polley steps down, Page B3

Bl

•

Thursday, April 8, 2004

Auto racing
at a glance
BUSCH SERIES

The Franklin Park Conservawrv nurture&gt; plant' and people. It promotes environmental appre,·iation and ecological
awareness tOr everyone. Th e Ullltjllt" botanical col kerion~ and
gardens provide life-long learning opportunities in J friendly and accessible seum~ which pre'\erv~·~ tradi tion and provides a refuge for Jhe soul.

.

'

Adults
$4.50 .~
Students (..Jth'i \lalid .... ,.~"""
Senion (60 and QVet) 15
Clril~n 2~12 '· , l~sp :
Chif~ ultder 2 Pn:e
CHIHULY AT THI CONSEI.VATOilY

.
L.

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Pepsi300
Site: Nashville, Tenn.
. Schedule: Friday. qualifytng &lt;Speed Channel, 4:35
p.m.); Saturday. race (Fox, 4
p.m .)
Track :
Nashville
Superspeedway (tri-oval 1.33
miles. 14 degrees banking in
turns)
Race distance: 300 mile s.
225 laps
.
Last race: Matt Kenseth
won · the O ' Reilly 300 at
Texas Mot or Speedway after
takmg the lead from Bobby
Hamilton Jr. just before a
caution fla g with only six
·
laps to go.
Last vear: David Green
passed Johnny Sauter on the
backstretch of the final lap to
win the Pepsi 300. It was his
firsrBusch victorv since June
1996.
Fast facts: Green finished
second at last June's event in
Nashville .... Five full-time
Nextel Cup drivers
Johnny Sauter. Kasey Kahne.
Greg Biffle. Robby Gorclon
and Michael Waltrip - are
expected to compete this
weekend. Biffle recorded his
first Busch win at Nashville
in 2001. ... Busch has three
second-place fini shes in 13
career start,, two ,of them in
races won by Kenseth .... No
polesitter has ever won a
Busch race .at Nashville nor
has a driver starting farther
back than lOth.
' Next race: Aaron ·s 312.
AIJril 24, Talladega, Ala.
·
On
the
.
Net:
hnp://www.nascar.com

•

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Atl,ult discoun~d' ra~

p~r penon

· •"
.
Senior disco11nted en•ocrs.... a
perso~ '
'·
College·
counted tates ;are

.

.

Classes at Franklin Park

Con~c.:'TVJton ·."·

&lt;aiJ.
Chihuh·

itl'dm ;m
.It

COn"en·:1ron·

will

· the
run

through Juh· 4. 2t 1114. The
exhibirio11 prc~L'Tlt'i Chihuly
glas~ sru lprurL'' 111 a \',lrit· ry
of beautiful hot.inical set(lng5.

Colorful srulprurcs \\'ill
tloar ·in mdoor ponds, be
suspLndcd wnhin the air

and interspersed within the
Con·~L~n· atory\ flourio;;hing
plant collc ctiom.
•

The conservatory offers a wide range of educational

· classes for school groups. families, ami individuals of al l
ages. Its extensive plant collections are the site for handson learning about the natural world. inspiration for arts
and crafts, and knowledge about gardening. A changing
calendar of special exhibits adds another layer of educational opportunities throughout the year.
The Bonsai Sertes
May 5, 12, 19
Watercolor Gardens May 1, ~. 15, 22
Tai Chi lntro Course Aprili4.21,28,May 5, 12.19
Family Fun Saturdays Mar 13, May 8
Little Sprouts Club Apr 13 , May II

Contact information
Phone:(614) 645-TR.EE
Address: 1777 East Broad
Street, Columbus, Ohto
43203-2040
Web site: www.tpconservatory.org
Delicate lllue Morphs , flickering
Orange Sulfurs, colorful Swallowtails
and the exotic Atlas moth, plu s thousands of butterflies from around the
world have the Conservatory all a flut ter. See more' than 100 species of butterflies flying free in the Pa cific Isla nd
dunng the Conservatory's specia l I Oth
anniversary
of the
Bloom s &amp;
Butterflies exhibition. The co lorful
butterflies are a perfec t compliment to
the lush· foli age, fragrant nectar plants
and Chihuly an glass on , display.

Park
Franklin
Co nse rvator y pn.'~L'nts the..•
brcathtakmg blown glas&gt; art
glass of Dal e Chihuly displayed .. within th e lmh surroundings of their indo'"
garJl'ns.
"Thi;., is a spc:ciJI opportunity
for
the
'
Conservatory," said Paul
Redman.
con~en· ;Hory
executive directo r.
"The
selection ·
of
Columbus and rh e conservarory is a rewarding _testi mony to the vibraitcy of
our city and th e quality of
the
·Franklin
Park.

NASCAR
NEXTELCUP.
Last race : Elliott Sadler
overcame ·several late cautions and barely held off
rookie Kasey Kahne to win
the
Samwng/RadioShack
500
at
Texas
Motor
Speedway. Sadler finished
just two-hundredths of a second ahead of Kahne for the
eighth-closest finish in Cup
history.
.
Next race: Advance Auto
Parts
500,
April
18,
Martinsville, Va .
On
the
Net:
http://www.nascar.coril'

CRAFTSMAN
.

TRUCKS
Last race : Bobby Hamilton
held on to win the inaugural
EasyCare 200 at Atlanta
Motor Speedway after bump- .
ing Mike Skinner corning to
the finish line on March 13.
· Next race: Kroger 250,
April 17, Martinsville', Va.
On
the
Net:
hllp://www.nascar.com

Prep Schedule
Today's games
Baseball
Meigs at Alexander, 5 p.m.
Southern at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Softball
Meigs at Alexander, 5 p.m .
Southern al Eastern, 5 p.m .
Tennis
Gallia Academy at Athens
Track and Field
Gallia Academy, River Valley . at
· Chesapeake Lions tnv1tationa1

Coaches
reminder

·..

Koh6 TI6oxc

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;•• ,

Meigs rallies in seventh to defeat Waterford
8Y BRAD SHERMAN
bsherman@ mydailytribune.com

WATERFORD - Chrissy Miller's
two-run single capped a seventh inning
rally. as Meigs scored five in the final
frame to edge Waterford 9-8 in TriValley Conference softball Wednesday.
The win improved the Lady
Marauders to 3-1 overall and in the
TVC. Their lone loss was to Vinton
·County Tuesday.
Meigs entered the seventh down 8-4,
but used four hits and heads-up base
running to pull ahead.
Lead-off hitter Sammy Pierce drew a
base-on-balls, and later scored on an
RBI single by Melia Whan. Nikki
Butcher doubled and Jaynee Davis singled ~orne runs to cut the deficit to 8-7.

Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken

.

228 Moin St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

·

Drive-Thill W"utdow

992-5432

\-fi sty Ottenoorger went the distance
for Waterford. She gave up nine run~
on eight hih. but received no help from
her defem.e. which committed eight
error' behind her.
·
Meigs brqke the 'coring ice "ith a
pair of runs in the top of 'the 1iN. but
the Washington Countiam an,wered
with a pair of their own in the home
half of the inning .
.
Wate.rford scored f~ur more in the
third build a 6-2 c ushion. then the
clubs exchanged a pair of run' in the
fifth and sixth.
Meigs is at Alexander today.
,

1

Me•gs
Waterford

Meigs 9, Waterford B
20" 0
204

020
002

5
0

985
898

Samantha Cole. Joey Hanmg \4) and Megan Garnes
Misty Ottenberger and Sl1annon 8ai'Tt1 _ WP - Joey
Hanmg. LP- Misty OTtenberger

Griffey homers as Reds beat Cubs
BY JoE KAY
Associated Press

CINCINNATI - . Greg ·
Maddux returned to his roots.
Ken Griffey Jr. returned to the
lineup and got the better of
him.
Griffey hit a two-run homer
in his first at -bat of the season
Wednesday, leading
the
Cincinnati Reds to a 3-l victory over the Chicago Cubs that
spoiled Maddux's reunion
with his original team.
Adam Dunn also homered
off Maddux. a four-time Cy
Young winner trying to reach
more milestones and more
playoffs with the long-suffermg franchise that got him
started.
"Chicaso is a s~cial place.
no questton," satd Maddux,
who left there for Atlanta after
the 1992 season. "I enjoyed
my first six years playing
there and always enjoyed
going back there as a Brave .
There's a little added Oavor
when you wear the uniform.''
On his big night , Maddux
got eclipsed by another 30somcthing star looking for a
throwback season.
Griffey, who missed the ·
season opener because of a
strained calf, hit his 482nd
career homer to put the Reds
up 3-0 in the third and leave
the pro-Cubs crowd in a funk.
Maddux turned away with a
wide-eyed look as Griffey
rounded the bases on his first
homer since July 12 . The 34year-old outfielder dislocated
his shoulder and tore a tendon
in his ankle last year.
"It felt good," Griffey said.
'.'I finally got a chance to go
out there and have some fuo."
Ultimately, the only pitcher
to win 15 games in 16 consecutive seasons got beat by a
pitcher who has never won
more than eight in any season.
Paul Wilson ( 1-0) allowed
only four hits in seven shutout Cincinnati Reds' Sean Casey, right, congratulates Adam Dunn after Dunn hit a solo home
. run off Chicago Cubs pitcher Greg Maddux in the second inning, Wednesday in Cincinnati.
Please see Reds, Bl
Cincinnati won 3-1. (AP)

Prep Baseball

Eastern falls to
Southern falls to Alex Nelsonville, 5-3

BY SCOTT WOLFE
contingent tightened up the score
-Sports corresspondent
in the fifth when R.J . Harmon
walked, advanced on ,a sacrifice
: All spring sports coaches are
RACINE The Southern bunt by Ty Hill. and scored-on a
TUPPERS PLAINS - It was one of those
singled by Wes Burrows. the tally
reminded to send in their game
Tornadoes played right into the now 5 _2 Alexander.
games that someone had to win and someone had
or meet reports by II :30 p.m.
All was quiet as Wes Burrows
to. lose. Unfortunately, ~ good pitching effort by
hands of fate and the adage that
They can be faxed to ·446"walks and errors will come back settled down 10 pitch a~reat game.
Steve Semelserger went down the tubes as
3008 , or e-mail them to
to haunt you."
B
-1 · d h
b
Nelsonville-York claimed a hard-fought 5-3 win
sports @ mydail ytribune.com .
t he bpartan
ats
· h t ·m
Southern ,.'elt the wrath of both f urrowsh st fence
th
·
h
b
over
t he host "·
"'astern Eag Ics '"
ned ncsd ay mg
0
1
You may also call them in at
in the , third inning .when awakened
or muc in the
e llJ~
ut t eRyan
ats
bo~s Tri-Va lley Conference varsity_ baseball action.
stxth' when
446-2342, ext. 33.
Alexander plated five runs en Jewell walked, Bolin walked,
astern is now 1-3 both overall and itt the league,
They do need to be in by
H 0 lbe · 1 d h
.
while Nelsonville i; reportedly even at 2-2.
route to a 7-2 Tri- Valley 11
erryan error rtJetsmg
e
orne
a
run
,
E
1
1
k
2
0
I
d
·
h
fi
1
·
·
11:30 p.m. to make it in the
Conl.erence t'nterdt' v t'st'onal wt'n and
home another run ,
as ern oo a - ea m t e trs mmng on a
next day's edition.
Chris Myers double, an error that allowed Ken
over the Tornadoes. Alexander is the score now 7 _2 _
now 1-2 and Southern is 1-3, 0-3
Burrows allowed j ust five hits,
Amsbary to reach, a walk to Terry Durst and a 6-3
111 the league.
. ..
. struck out four and walked five
ground out by de signated hitter Dustin Riggs.
In the second Eastern gave its hurler more supSouthern took the tntllal lead. m batters in suffering the defeat.
the second when Cole Brown sm- tflolbert posted the win with 10 . pprt when Will Woods doubled, stole second, went
g_led and scored on a Phil Pterce strikeouts and just two walks.
to third on a wild pitch. and scored on Corey
smgle. 1-0 Souther:n.
Southern httters were Jeremy
Shaffer's 1-3 ground out. the score 3-0.
In the .thtrd mmng, Cory Bear Yeauger, Wes Burrows, and Cole
All was quiet in the Nelsonville camp until the
d
third
•r If you have an interest in
led off wtth a walk and
was
sacnB
ll
·
h
·
innit~ . Semelserger sat down the side in order
.
.
rown, a wtl smg 1es, an
spons and like 10 write, then the
ficed to second by Mtchael Bohn. Pierce a double.
over the trst two innings. but in the third. three
Alexander hitters were Terry
errors on ground balls allowed McDonald to score
Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
Terry Holben had an RBI smgle to
put runners on the corners. An Holben with two si"Jcles, Abele a
the first run, 3-1 EHS.
The Daily SentineL wan vou
" "-::::::1----eJrmr then let home the first run · 1
d
1~
· "--!- Semel~urger struck out the -~ide in the fourth
We are currently looking for
and Tony Costanzo walked to load -s•~ e. han ewe • a • ou e.E
inning but in the titih the Buckeyes tied the score.
"'.n
·ngers
to
help
improve
our
.
em goes to
astern
·"''
the bases Alex Abele smgled
Th out
sd
McDonald singled, Bunting si ngled, and two erro"
ur ay.
Spons . Co verage. dprimarily to
-home· two· runs, then an error
brought &lt;icross two runs. the score deadlocked at 3allowed home two more as Coach
Alexander 7, Southern 2
3.
write features an to help in
other reporting duties.
Kyle Wi ckline's Alexander club Ale.anoer o o s o o 2 o 14 •
In the sixth frame. Nelsonville scored what
led 5-1.
Southern o 1 o o ' o o 2 4 3
proved to be the game-winner. Cunningham
If you're interested, then call
Butch Cooper at446-2342, ext.
Coach Ryan Lemley's Southern Terry Holoer&lt; and Cory Bear wes Burrows
and Andrew PhilSon. WP -Terry Holbert LP
Please see Ea..les. Bl
33 . -1
Wes Burrows
•
BY ScoTT WOLFE
Sports corresspondent

Sports
stringers
wanted

Cr.op-Eamily Restaurant

Cassi Whan reached
on an error. then stole
second to move into
scoring position. setting up Miller\ gamewinning shot. her lone
hit of the game.
Butcher and Davi s
had two hits and two
run s batted in aplece
for the winner, . Whan
Miller
also had two hi~;· and
an RBI.
Tiffany Wallace led the .Lady Cats at
the plate with a 2-for-4 day and three
RB!s . Teammates Mallory McCutchen
and Desiree Van Dyne also had a pair
of hits each.
Joey Haning, who relieved 'tarter
Samantha Cole. picked up the wm on
the mound .

.

1

Prep Softball

Southern
defeats
I Alexander
: for first win
BY ScoTT WoLFE
Sports corresspondent
RAC17\E - Behind a ~reat
pitching effort from junior
hurler Brooke Ki 'cr. the
Southern Lad\ Tornadoe'
broke into the. win column
with
a
6-1
Tri-Valley
Conference win mer Ohio
Division rival Alexander
Wednesday at Racine. s Star
Mill Park .·
Southern 1-2 both in. the
league and' m ·erall. while
Alexander drops to 0-3 ..
Southern took a 2-0 lead in
the bottom of the first ·after
Ki ser and Company mowed
down the Spartans. Deana
Pullin&gt; Jed off the inning with
a single. then after Pullins

•

Please see Flnt. Bl

Eagles
shut out
Buckeyes
BY ScoTT WoLFE
Sports corresspondent
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Eastern Lidy Eagles bounced
back into the win column
Wednesday night by defeating
Ohio
Division
foe
Nelsonville- York. 6-0. in a
varsity Tri-Valley Conference
softball match up at Ea,tern
High School. ·
.
Eastem i; now ~-1 merall
and in the league. while
Nebonville falb to 0-J in both
venues.

Eastem took a 1-0 lead in
the second innin g to break a
'curele" deadlock. Morgan.
Weber reached on an error.
stole third and after Alvssa
Holter singled. then scored on
a hit ball that wa' misplayed
allowing Kayla Siders to reach
safelv. the score 1-0.
ln ·t he third inning. Jenny
An11c' dmtbled to lead off the
inning and was sacriliccd to
third by Sara Barringer. Sandy
Powell then slammed an RBI
single. ~owell advanced on an
error and -a sto len base. then
Kas.s Lodwick walked and
stole second still with just one
out. Tw(&gt; strike outs ended the
inning with tw o runner~
stranJed on base.
Eastern added two runs in
the 1\i'th "hen with one out
Lodwick ~· aiked and &gt;tole second the Brittany Bi ssell
reached on an error that
knocked home a run. and
Morgan Webe r had a 1-3
ground out to bnng home
l3issell. the score 3-0 Eastern.
Meanwhile. fa,tem's Katie
Robertson went the di;tance to
claim the . win for the Lady
Eagles. She sat the side down
in order in all but two innings.
striking out I0 and walking
JUSt three.
Eastem added some insurance in the sixth inning when
C"ey Smith walked and stole
second. Anne&gt; laid down a 53 sacrifice. then Barringer haJ
an RBI single and ad~anced
on an error' and scored on a
Kass Lodwick double .
That is all Ea.stern needed
in posting the important 6-0
Win.

Eastern hitter' were Kass
Lodwick and Jenny Armes
with doubles, Sandy Powell a
si ngle. Casey Smith two singles. Sara Barringer a si ngl e
and A ly"a Holter a single .
Nelsonville- York hitters were
S. Higgins. K. Fox. and J.
Bi,hop with singles. and L.
Hanning a double.
J~ Bi.'.)mp __su ffered th,e'-:-"'
lo;:;ss"-·_ _ _,_
for Nelmnvtlle- -ork with
four 'trikeouh and 'ix walks.
.. Eastern ·s . Nelsonville-York 0
N-Y
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 2
Easterno 11 0 2 2 ~ - 681
Btshop and Bolin Kalte Ropertson and
Kass LOd wtck WP - Kalte Robertson . LP

- Btsh op

.

.

�Thursday, April 8, 2004

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

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T-305 A-1 6.134.

33 2 6 2

Reds
from Page 81
innings.
. Wilson .hadn't gone seven
innings without allowing !I
run stnce h1s last start of the
200 I season. He felt even
more nervous than Maddux
at the outset.
"I felt like I was going I 00
mph for the first couple of
innings, but I was able to settle down," ,Wilson said.
Ryan Wagner pumped his
fist after stoking out Sammy
Sosa with two runners aboard
to end the eighth . Danny
Graves gave up a two-out
homer to Derrek Lee while
getting his first save on a nostalgic night.
Maddux , who turns 38-next
week, hadn't pitched with a
cub on hi s jersey since Sept.
20, 1992. the first of hi s four
Cy Yo ung seasons. He
returned to Chicago in
February after winnmg II
di vision champion ships and a
World Series in Atlanta, hoping to transfer some of that
playoff feeling to his old
haunt.
,
The thousands of Cubs fans
in the crowd of 30,20 I made
him feel ri gh t at home.
"I was OK," Maddu x said .
" I was surpri singly OK .
Mentall y I was where I'd like
to be for the next 30 games."
Maddux heard a '·Let's go
Cubbies!" chant as he walked
from the bullpen after com·
pleting his warmups. He and
Sosa got the two b1ggest ova' lions during introduction s much louder than anything
for the home team .
Ri ght away, those Cubs
fans got to see some unexpected Maddux history.
Madd ux hi t D' Angelo
Jimenez in the knee wi th his
first pitch. Jimenez was
caught
stealing
before
Maddux hit Griffey in the
calf - the first time in his
career that he'd plunked two
batters in an inning.
"I guess if you play long
enou~h, it's going to hap·
pen,' he said.
'
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pitches at the same speed and
rarely throws one that stays
- - -strai$.ht. Dunn .got ,one .that
·
didn t bend and hit it deep
into the seats in right fieli:I in
the second inning for the
Reds' first lead of the season.
An inning later, Maduux
, left one belt-high for Griffey,

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First

Sealed proposals for the paving of portion of Oak Hill Road and Whites Lane Road in Chester
Township, Meigs County, Ohio as per specifications in bid packet will be received by the Meigs
County Commis,ioners at their office at the Counhouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until I:00 P.M.
Thursday. April 15. 2004 and then at I: 15 P.M. at said office open-ed and read aloud for the
following :
Triple Seal Coat for Oak Hill Road (T-59) 1.50 miles and White Lane Road (T,5 1)
Sec specifications in bid packet
Specifications, and bid forms may be secured at the office of Meigs County Commissioners,
Counhouse. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769-Phone #740-99t·2895. A deposit of 0 dollars will be required
for each set of plans and specifications, check made payable to-. The full amount will be retu rned
within (30) days after receipt of bids.
Each bid nust be accompanied by either a bid bond in an amount of I00% of the bid amount with a
surety satisfactory to the aforesaid Meigs County Commissioners or by cenified check, cashiers
check or letter of credit upon a solvent bank m !he amount of not less than I0% of the bid amount in
favor of the aforesaid Meigs County Commissioners. Bid Bonds shall be accompanied by Proof of
Authority of the official or agen t signing the bond. Bids shall be sealed and marked as Bid for
Chester Paving Project and mailed or delivered to:
Meigs County Commissioners
Counhouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Attention of bidders is called of the requi rements contained in this bid packet, particularly to the
EederaLLabULStandards J&gt;ro.-isiQJl5_and.Davisdlacon Wa2es various insurance reg_uirements various equalopportunny provisions and The requ1remem Tor a paymem bond and perfonnance bond for
100% of the contract price.
No.hiddcr may withdraw his bid within thirty {30) da_ys after the actual date of the o_penil)g thereof.
·
The Mejgs County Cqmmjssjoners reserye the rjght to reject any or all bids.

II

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Percival S. I

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. from Page 81
walked and stole second
and scored on an error and
4-6 ground out Fox, 4-3 N-

.

In the seventh, the Bucks
added an insurance run on a
walk and . misplayed ball in
the outfield.Eastern sent four batters
to the plate on three occ::.sions and five in another

4 ~

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AS SEEN ON TV
iNSTRUCTION
LEARN TO DRIVE
TRACTOR - TRAILER
Hewlett
Packard
175A NEW PROGRAM
Oscillos~;ope ,
(740)446· No Expenence Needed
Placement Dept
0212 . - - - - - - Financing Available
Tear down old sheep barn CDL!Train1ng
tor lumber &amp; ctoan up trash ALLIANCE
Calf (740)446-7732
Trac1or-Tre1 ler
Tra1ning Centers
iAlSTANJ)
Wythev1Ue, VA
FoUND
Call Toil Free
:
1·800·334-1203
Found- black male lab
neutered. camoUflage collar Assisted l1ving openrng in
• Darwm area. (740}992-3230 my home. Call (740)388·
0 118.
Lost: Brown &amp; white male
Jack Russell Terner Found AVONt AU Areas 1 To Buy or
·on SR325. Rio Grande area SeU. Shirley Speers, 304(140)245-5497 .
675· 1429.

r

Neksonvllle-York 5, Eastern 3
1

-

5 3 2

Eastern 2 1 0 0 0 0 0

0 0 1 0 2 1

-

3 4 6

Perkin s

and

McDonald .

L-osl: M ~r11a ture P1ncher m1x
Class A COL Drivers
Black/Tan. Female. answers
Wanted
to
"Sassy", Black coua·r
w/rab1es
tag
M1ssing
3/29/04 Tuppe rs Pla1ns area. •Mm of 2 years exp.
Reward . Cali (740)667-6308 •M ed1~;altns .. 401 K
•Operat1on a rea 400 mile
White Rat Terner, blac~ &amp;
radius of Jackson. OH
biown fa~;e, black on back,
•
Sign
on Bonus
fem ale.
Reward .
Call
•34
cent
per mile
(740)388-8166.
• 95% No touch

Steve

Semelserger and Terry Durst. WP
Perktns. LP - Steve Semelserger.

Tlumms llo·if·bt'sf Rt'nfal fNtfN'
POPCORN

MA·~ntrt

only one way to
II make popcorn for a big
llcrowt::l _Rent a popcorn
Looks great at a ·

Per Day

TRASH PUMP
Pump dirty water out of your
way with a rugged trash
pump. We have plenty of .
pumps from which to
choose .

Per Day

SCAFFOLDING

STUMP GRINDER
And you thought that .
unattractive stump had to
stay in your yard for
Getting rid of it is easy.

Call 800-652-2362

r

Dish
Network
Sate!Ute
Installers neecled loca l work,
paid training , steady work
GALUPOLIS
load good pay, must have
Garage Sale: Thursday B-4, truck or van call Suburban
Friday 8·2, 224 First Ave Services lor details 1·866·
l:ots of chlldren's/womens 821-0423
olothes , toys, kids-ridin g
toys, couch, much more. Domino's Now Hlnng all
Rain or Shine Park on locations great pay, flexible
hours
Pt.
Pleasant,
street, walk up drive.
Gallipolis,
Pomeroy
&amp;
~oO,en's &amp; Men's clothing, Ele anar
oar seat. stroller, chair, bed·
gpread, drapes. household French City Homes now hlr·
ifems . 35
Grape
St. lng 1 part time employee
fhursday, Friday &amp; Saturday. Apply wl1h ln.

Per Day

TRENCHER
Put this trencher to work for
to lay underground
Ica.ble or rope. Save time
tough shovel

Day

YARDSAU:-

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publlehlng f1tllllf"YIIII thtt right to ~It , rej&amp;et, or cancel any ad at any time. Errors mual be reported on 1t1e !Irs! day of
Trlbuna-S.ntlntti·R-vl•ter wUI be reeponalble fCM" no more lhen the colt at the 1pace occupied by the enor ind only the f1rst 1naertion. We shall nat
eny lou or expenM tl'lal reautta from the publication or omi1eton of an advertisement. Correction Will be made 1n the flrat ava ilable edttion. o Box
are elweya confidential. • Current rate card eppllea. • All real est11te edvertlaemenla are subj.ct to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1%8. o This
accepq only hetp wanted Mil meeting EOE ltllndardl. We will not knowingly accept any advertlalng in violallon ol the law.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

110

" 1--'(f.A~· OLD &amp;'f£ FOR Tttt. -7T~Ait,HT

Now Acceptmg Resumes lor
Management Posi11on 111 a
local
Convenience
Store/Gas Stat1on Please
send Resumes to TCS 200
Main St Pt . Pleasant. WV
25550

c AT''~

lwright@ic.net

Overbroo~
Rehab1htat1 on
Center is currently seeking a
Wa rd Clerk . Must have
excellent
organi zat 1ona l
skills, excellent communtca·
liOn sk1tls . reliable trans·
poriation . lypmg and com·
puler skills E"perience m )a
medical f1eid prelerrE(~ ­
Hours are 9am·5.30pm .
Come and fill out an applrca·
t1on
at
Overbrook
AehabiHtat1on Ce nter , 333
Page Street Middleport, Oh
45760 EOE

- -- -

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Included
waivers

DRIVERS Ill

q_,

~
©
by
2004

www .comics .com

NEA , Inc .

WA!ffi':U ·

310

To Do

HOMES
IURSAU:

IW4

YARD S,\1£·

.. PoMERov/Mmrn.E
4 family garage sale, AprilS·
8·3.
Children-adult
clothes,
dishes,
toys ,
longaberger.
Noble·
Summit, Durst.

iO,

Per Section

Per Day

April 9tt1 and 10th. Willow
Creek Ad . behind old
Pam lda Scrubs, clothes ,
POrct) furn1ture etc. 8:00·

Blade is
extra

4&gt;00
Huge y&amp;rd sale Saturday,
Apnl 9tM+ 1Oth 124 Rutland .
Furniture, Bllerclse equipment. clothes, nousehold
cind miscellaneous. Acrose

rental
center

All types of masonry bnck.
block &amp; stone 20 yrs .
Experience free estimate .
1-304 -773-9550, 304-5931007

e room,
a ,
ca
arage , 19 acres SR141 .
iew photos/in fo onl10
ww.orvb.com Cod 3310
r call740-446-7633 .

--·-

~;,r__w.,.~•B•UY-•1

Serving You
2 Locations.
740•446·3399 ~V'Y'Vtof
1J8tiiA~.'7 740•992•4034

Carpentry, odd jobs, floo r·
mg , sidmg, roofing, remodel·
ing, decks, no JOb to big or
smalll
Ask
for
Matt
(304)882-2978, 304-3774633

'

II \ \ \ 1 1\1

Caah paid for· gold &amp; sliver
coins &amp; coin collections, tree
estimates . Glen Bis&amp;SII,

399 S. THIRD ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OH
OPEN MON.·SAT.
7:30AM . 5 PM

(~ 40)992 - 7599

I

I

••

kl
011
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO. recommends tha
ou do business With pea
le you know. and NOT t
end money lhrough lh
all unlll you have investi
• • ated the offerln

I

L,._,.;liiliililliiililio.,;.J

All references &amp; ful1 msur·
ance Call 304-373-00 11

I

-----

3 Bedroom

46·86~6

"

Brl~;k

Ranch 1

ere lgt Atd'I&lt;;Vd +3-04.).67,5:,.
17 14
roo m, ,
a , ,
cres, 3 bay shed. Also fo
a1e camper, vecant tot 1
orter. V1ew pholos/inf
nlin e
www.orvb.co
ode 33004 oo Call 740

•'

R1o Grande . Spacrous

All rtll ..tlte ldvenlelng
In thla MIWI(Miper II
. eubject to thl F1der11
Felr Housing Ac1 o11 e68
which m•k.. ltlllegal to
ad\lertlll " any
preference~, limitation or
dl1crimlnatlon baaed on
rac1, color, religion, •••
tamlllll 1t1tu1 or n1tion11
origin, or 1ny lnt1ntlon to
mike 1ny IUCh
pret•rence, limitation or
dlscrlmln•tton."

Oa~.

10

llm •s•~~

tuR RIJ\T

IURSALE

MOIIIU: Hmu:s
FOR R ENr

2 bedroom all electriC wa ter
1989 Norris
landmark
and trash serviCe prov1ded
Double-wide . 60X27. 4 bed·
No pets. (740)441 ·4540
rooms , 2 full baths, l1v1ng
room. den, kitchen. d1n1ng
2 bedroom tra1le1 w1th garroom, laundry $35,000 00 den spo1s, v1nt on a raa Call
(740) 992 -5295
(740}2 45·544 0 or ~ 740 )·
1990 14X75 3br, 20a has Sif 5. 2799

-Gatl:ledral C&amp;Jtings, -central &amp;auttlui-flver ~ew , -+deal.for
air, deck $14,800 (304)882- one or two people No petS,
3682
refe rences (7 40 )441·0181

Kit. Utll Am , 3 Br 2 1994

Oakwood

Mobtle

muRrxr
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
ments. turn1shed and unfur·
n1shed . secur.ty OepoS!I
reqwed . no pets 740-99222 18
'
1 bedroom aol slave ' relngera tor &amp; utll111es fwrn1shed
Call (740).245·5959

Nice 2 Mel

3 bedroom

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICE S AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 We stwood
Dnve from S344 to S442

Furn1shed apt 1 br 2nd
Ave . Upslatrs all u111ilies pd
NQ
pets.
Gall pOliS
(740)446-95 23

95 Fairmont . 16X80. 3 -bed·
room , 2 bath, must be
moved, books $19,000 sell
$16,500,
(740)667-6357.
740-887-9823.

"21"67
-----------:----:--:
Pome roy $300 a mo ' $150
dop , no pols, (740)667 3083 aftar 5pm

\II IU II \\IllS!
10

HotJSEHOI.Il

Goms
Good Used App l!anc%
Aec ond1110ned ·
and
Washers.
Gu:lranteed
Ranges
and
Dryers
Relr1gera1 o rs . Some start at
$95 Skaggs Appliances. 76
V1ne St . 1740)446-7398
Mol loha n Carpe' 20.2 Clark
Chnpe Road Porter Oh10
(740)445-7444 1-877-8.309162 Free Est1mates Easy
f1nancmg 90 days same as
cas 'l V1sa. Master Card
DriJe- R- 1111le save a1o1

Used Fur•Hture Store 130
Bulaville
P1!..e
Grave
Mon uments 1740)44 G-4 782
Gall1p0l1S' OH Hrs 10-4 (M·
S)

r

8Jy or
sell
R 1 o~E'r1ne
Ant •ques 1124 East Ma1n
on SR 12.1 E Pomeroy 740992·2526
Russ Mo ore

~0 ':;:"~·~':-:-------,
""' 'IL&lt;;tH .LI~Wt s
1\.-) EI-t&lt;.. ll.\ ~lliSE

10" table saw. S75 no motor

6 · p1ner. S7S·no motor, JI Q·
saw 530, no motor m1!e1
bOK $30 (740)388-8349
21 t1 round above grouno
pool. accessones . . deck &amp;
v nyl coa l,ed chan1 l1nk fence
$1200 Cali304)675·3215
ASS Co mputer Monitor
Keyboard
W ndows
98
Lexmark Z43 Pnn1er exce l·
lent cond1110n ca ll (304)458·
1997

G ra ctous liVIng. 1 and 2 bed· Hanclicap Scooter tor sale
roOJn apartments at Village s 1.300 {304 )675-6175 see
Manor
an.d
R1vers1de a1 .2509 Mt Vernon Ave
Apartments m Middleport
JET
From $295· $444 . Call 740·
AERATFON MOTORS
992·5064. Equal Housmg
Re ~ a 1red New &amp; Rebu111 In
Oppor1umt1es.
Stock Call Ron Evans . 1·
New 1 bedroom ap1 PhOn e 600-537-9528
740·446 -3736
NEW AN O USED STEEL
New Haven • 1 bedroom fur· S1eel Beams P1pe Reba r
n1shed
apartment , has For
Conc re1e.
Ang le ,
No pets Channel Flat 13ar. Steel
washer/d ry er
rele rences Grating
OeposJ!
+
For
Drams.
(740)992-0165
Dn~·eways &amp; WalKways L&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
North 41h Ave . M1ddlepon 2
Tuesday. Weanesday &amp;
bedroo m furn ished apa rtFr1day. Sam-4 30pm Closed
ment, deposit &amp; references ,
Thursday.
Saturday
&amp;
no pets. (740)992·0 165
Sunday. (740)446-7300
Sm'all House. $275 00 a
New Bow1!ex lor sale Never
month Call Nancy (304)675been used l Call (740)446·
402 4
(304)675-55 40
895 1 1f no answe1 leave a
Homestead Reality Broker
message
PI Pleasant. WV
Two beaut1fu.l Alyce Pcom
Tara
Townhouse
dresses for sale Size 18 &amp;
Apartments. Very Spac1ous ,
22 Call (7 40)446·8971
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors. CA. 1
1/2 Balh, Newly Carpeted .
Btll.lli'G
Adu lt Pool &amp; Baby Pool ,
Pat1 o. Start $385 Mo No
Pets, lease Plus Secunty
Block. bnck , sewer p1pes.
Oepos1t AeqL.ure::l, Days
wmdows . l1n te ls. etc Claude
740-446·348, , Eventngs
W1nters. A 10 Grande, OH
740-367·0502
Call 740·245·5121
Tw1n R1vers Tower IS ac~;ept­
fRITlli&amp;
lng appllca!IOns tor wM1ng
Vn;ETARLE.~
I1SI for Hud-subs1zed. 1- br.
apartment ~;all 675-6679
KESSI:L'S PROOIJCE
EHO
Am1sh Cheese , lunch Meat
Fresh F•u11 ana Vege tables
mu R~~'T
Open Thurs-Fr1-Sa 1 1354
Jackson P1ke Gallipolis.
Oll1ce soace downtown 0
Pomer&lt;¥ aopiox 1aDO ..SQ
I \In I ' ' 1'1'1 II '
11 .. street level, near cour1·
·" 1 1\1 ... 1()( h.
house. $450 mo , (7 40)592·

St'PIUIS

51',\lr:

1758

F.S.A . 2m_~ !!......L~m•J goo&lt;td-e"'"""""~!Hil"
le"'"'"·--&lt;ah-lln&lt;oo"""'ll..e-----lh"'o"'m,es-fer----t.ef!-1- Garage. 1ll~u-t'ieit&amp;O P
bedroo~bl!lth . $10, 000can mcruaes water . sewer &amp;
on 100x67 101 (304)874· (604)895-3843
trash, no pets daposl1 &amp;
0125
S300 per month , [740)992For Sale-House, or,e &amp; 114
acres, 3000sql1 3br, 2bl"l, lr,
dr, tvr, fsb (304)773-5984 or
593·3702

"""P''po' l

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repan-675·i388 Fo1 ~a l e
re-cond1!10ned
aL.tomat1c
2 bedroom apt 1n R1o
washers &amp; dryers retngeraGrande. S325 re'J t. 5325
tors . gas and Eleclnc
depoSit Call !740\245-9060
tanges. a1r cond1t•oners. ana
2 bedroom apt. St At 160 v.rinye r wasne1s Will de
past Holzer $.:175 mo repa1rs on ma)Ot brands 10
shop or al yout home
(740)441·019:1

Walk 1o shop &amp; mov1es Call
740: 445 -2558
Equaf
1 bedroom house AJC lor 1
Hous1ng O~portun1 t y
or 2 persons. Mill creek and
Convement localiOn N1ce 1
2nd Ave (740)446·2200
bedroom . Relerences and
2 b~droom .. 1 bath centra l depOSit reqwred No pe ts
a1r, $400 month .
Call (7 40)446·01 39
(740)446-348 1 01 (740)645CONVENIENTLY LO CAT2192
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
3 bedroom
house
Ill Townhouse
apartments
pels. andior small houses FOR
M1ddl.eport .
No
+
depOSit. RENT Call !740!441 -1 i 11
$400 00
(740)992·3194
tor appl1ca110n &amp; mtorma110n

Hartford WV. 4-br. 1-ba, 2
lots, n1ce garden space, all
utililles·
available, 3 bed room
house
1n
$13,000.00 OBO (740)742- Pomeroy, 5400 a mo. $400
2535
deposit. no pets. (740)949· '
7004
Hom e sale jn Cltv 3 bed·
room, 2 full baths, nice &amp; 3 bedroom hOuse· Pomeroy
clean, great location in City, area . Basement and carport .
Vmyl siding. Price to sale Deposit and references
now. Phone {740)448-9539 . requ1red PMne (740)992·
.2272
House tor Sale: Good rental
mves tme nt. Duplex, two 3 br Ranch w/oarage, 1~.
rentals or one large home, fenced yard. 9Jt;C. !amily
30,.40 heated pole building, loce.t1on S675 .00 a month
new roof, siding, windows, dep &amp; ret required Ca ll
very good neighborhood , (304)273 ' 11 12 (304)6381140 Second Ave. Gallipolis, 7411
$119,000
Ohio. Asking
OBO, call Karen C 740- Beautiful 1 bedroom cottage
nestled 1n 40 a~res ot
645-2068.
woods. Nice SIHing room. lg .
No money down, Mason WV ba th room , utility room , CIA
3·Br, 1-Ba, new carp~! . paint, $400/mo (6 14)595-7773 or
C/A, ductwork furnace . 800-796-4686
$230.00 monlh. (740)698Beautiful 3 Bedroom House
7002
in country Ut1Uy room , livi ng
rce re uce •
room, kitchen . $400/mo .
edroom, 1.5 bath, CIA, (614)595-7773 or 800-798·
ater sol1er, Pomeroy, OH . 4686.
photos/i nfo
o
lew
Newly Remodeled 2Br, ldeal
ww.orvbt:om
Cod
0603 or call 740-992
lor slngte person Pt. PL Clty
50
Llm1ts (304)675·2359 6-9
PM
Sandhill Road 3Br 1Ba
v1ew. 3 bdrm .. 2
1600/sqfl Ranch on .6 acre R1ver
level lot. Oak rtoors. 1st baths. basement and de~;k .
hOuse on
A1ght past All electric. loca1ed 1n
Marshall
University Gallipolis
Ferry,
WV.
$103,000 (740)949-1'131 $700/month. no pe ts. By
appt (740)446-3481 .
after 6.00 PM
MOBILE Ho~U:S

AI~-\KT:'IIE'\"IS

sale on 3 room s and balh. upsta1rs.
Le1art newly decorated Refrdeo
requ11ed No pets (740)446151 9
You could fish your badlands
and mcrease property value Apartm ent tor rent 1 bed·
tool Make land mto lakes room, LR lurn1shed kitchen,
1 bat1 (740)446-1370
(740)388-8228 .

3 bedroom Ranch . 2

ar garage, 1n ground pool
75,000 3460 State Rout
18, 740 256-1962 .

Log home. 5 acres. 3·4 bed·
room, 2 bath . huge kitchen
wloeK cabi nets &amp; ISland
cook1op, finished basemen!
w/gas log fireplace + central
neat1a1 r. 30x54 heated workshop. $197,000. (740)2459169.

to come ' nrow with us.
•
INsl'RUCt10N
Kuntzman Trucking, an 80
year old, Regional Truckload
J'RmES1&gt;10NAL
Carrier with terminals in Gallipolis Career Collega·
SI:RVICl.'i
(Careers
Close
To
Home)
Alliance and Columbus Ohio
Calliodayl740-446·4367
,
has opened a new teFmlnal
TURNEO OOWN ON
1-800·2 14..()452
This new1paper will no1
In Piketon, Ohio. Only hard
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
www.gall1poliscareercollege
com
knowingly •ccept
worklrlg , experienced driv·
Accredl!e(l Membe1 Accredlrlng
No Fee Unless We W1n!
•d..,ertlllmlntl for re•l
ers with a clean MVA and a Council , for lndependenl Coli COM
1·888-582·3345
••tal• which II In
minimum of two years e"'pe· and Schools 127 4B
v1o1111
on of 1he l1w. O~o~J
rlence need apply.
r"der• ere hereby
We have opeMlQS for:
Informed th•t 1 u
10
15 Company Drivers
HOME'i
dwelling• 1dven1..a In
15 Owner Operators
thla rMWIPflplr •re
FORSAt,E
Agco-Allls (s1mpllc1ty) 1718
av•U•ble on an equel
Make 50% setting Avon . Garden Tractor SO" deck.
0;:;P;;;P_;On~u;;n;,;l1y;:.,;b0,;1
213
bedroom,
2
bath
on
S
--&amp;,..,;
;;";,;;;,·....11
Llmtted
time
ONlY. hydro, 637 hours, new block.
tires
$2 . 1 00 acres in Rio Grande school
(740)446-3358. First Sto call ag
dlstnct, Call (740 )446•6541
Din Am , LA, Large FM, AU
(304)6755253
receives a I .

to $1/hour plu•
bonuns.
We also offer pa1d
tralnlng ,1lo11aays
and vacations.
We are

Ho~u"

IUR SALE

1!;4

FIT Home Resplratory)DME -Daycare has open1ngs lor all
ages, call Dawn for detailS at
Duties inc. F/U w1th home
(740)949·2990 In Racine
Respiratory patients.
Assess Chart . recommend , area
educate, Work w1th 02 ,
Georges Portable Sawmill,
bipap/cpap. nippv Vent.
don't haul your lOgs to the
neb/med.
mill JUSt call 304·675·1957.
Hrs. 8:30-5pm, M-F
Apply in Person/ send
Handyman- yard· work, no
Resume to :
JOb to big, senJor discount, 4bd., 2-story brick, _lull base·
m&amp;nt, 2·car unattached
BOWMANS HOMECAAE
Tim Kern (740)992·2741
garage. Price reduced. 4th
21 OHFO RIVER PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS OHIO 46563 1 Roollng, sid1ng. porches, No St New Haven . .(740)446Job to small. Free esti mates, 4274 .
20+ yrs. exp.. Reasonable,
EOE/AAE
(304)773-5028, 304-682Drug Free Workplace
8 room Ranch , full base·
2095.
Employer
menl, 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath,
Will Pressure Wash house 's, 2.5 acres. tamlly room , covmobile homes, metal build· ered deck, $99,900. No land
lngs, and gutters. Call con tracts . (740)446-2 196.
(740)446·0151 ask for Ron
or leave message.

Barn Removal

10

Taktng
apphcahoris
on
14x70.
3bedroom
Intersection of CreekV1ew
Dr &amp; Garners Ford Rd
$375-&gt;-depos •t
(740)245 5671

63 acre s for
Blossmg
Rd
(3Q4 )882-2567

IH\1\I.S

$15.44-$21 40/hr, now hiring. For application and free
government job mfo, call
Amencan Assoc of Labor,
1-(913)599 -8220, 24 hiS.
emp. serv.

11!50

l.m~&amp;
Aclt~~•GE

16x80 s1 1es ava1table $11 5
per mcnth Includes water.
sewer &amp; tras h, (740)8922167

POSTAL JOBS

Respiratory TherapiSt

llJR RI:~T

1 acre level lot Sunset Lane
ot1 Sandhill Ad (304)6752820

Affordabie Services. Hauling
gravel. d1rt. Bct.. Pa1nt1ng,
Tree Trim m1ng. Driveway
Repair Gutters. Ch1mney,
Plumbing Jack Of All Trades
30yrs. expene nce (304)8822196 (304)377-8266

Res!denllal
Trea tment
Fac1hty youth worker. Pay
based on expenence Call
(740)379-9083 to apply_

MoBILE Hom~s

FOR SALE

VIctorian 1736 sq . ft. 3 bed
room , 2 bath. Sta1nless steel
applianc~s . 8 ft !tat ceilings
Hardi lap With saddle root 5"
on 12" roo! pitch - por~;h
Cole's Mob ile Homes 15266
US 50 E . Ath ens, OhiO
(740)592-1972. "Where you
get your money's worth"

Paramed1cs
&amp;
EMT"s
needed. Apply. at 1354
Jackson Pike, Gallipol1s.
Pool appliCallOns for the
Galhpolts
Munic1pal
Sw1mmmg Pool may be
p1cked up 1n the MuniCipal
Butldtn"g at 518 Second Ave .
Deadline Apnl 16, 2004

MOBILE HOMES

Must Move 1980 Comm
· 12K60 tra1ler-good cond1l10n
$2,000 OBO-underpmmng
2-6•8 decks (740)256-6270
or (740)742·1115 (eve)

Overbrook Center IS currently accepting applications tor
lull-t1me STNA"s for the 7p7a shlft. come 1n and f11l out
an appiication at 333 Page
Middl epo rt . · Oh
Street.
45760 EOE

JOBS!

CUTOFF SAW

$6

Day• Prior To

Sunday Display: 1:00 p . m.
Thursday for Sundays Paper '

TRAVEL U.S.A

ssa

JCT. RT. 35 &amp; 160
GALLIPOLIS, OH
OPEN MON·SAT.
7:30AM· 5 PM

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • lnc?ude Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When ,Needed
• Ads Should Run 1 D•y5

Yard Sale: 1 mile out
GOVERNMENT
Bulavllie· Pike , Friday &amp;
WILDLIFE I POSTAL
Saturday. Rain or Sh1ne.
$13.51 to $58.00 per hour.
Full Benefits. Paid Training.
Publication Sales Co. hiring
Yard Sale: 912 Mill Creek
Call for Application and
18 sharp enthusiastic
Ad .
Gallipolis
FridayExam
Information .
No
Individuals to travei the U.S.
Saturday. Apri19th-1 Oth, 9·4,
EMpe rlence Necessary. Toll
Travel, training Lodging and
r1ght around curve from golf
Fraa Hl88·28i-e090. ext.
transportation furnished .
ciourse.
100.
Return Guaranteed. Start
Yard Sale: Ale Grande
Roday 1-800-781-1344
~unic 1p&amp;l Building. April 8th
HEY
&amp; 9th 9-4:30. Rain or Shinell Here Is a great opportunity
ScHOOLii

Painting? Roofing? If
you 've got a job that
seems over your head,
rent scaffolding.

Thomas

"' H\ It I"

Blad. k1tten to g1ve away to
good home. Very lnendly
and playfuL Call (740)992·
5329

498846
2 1-3 4 I 1 0 3
2·310000
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inning, but left potential
runs stranded on the base
paths.
Eastern
hitters were
Myers a double and two
walks, Woods a sing!~. and
'Morris two singles.
Semelsurger fann ed eight
and walked four. Perkm s
struck out three and walked
seven in posting the win .
N-Y

1

I \11'1 ( l' \II\ I

C.1 Beer Carry Out permit 110
lor sale, Chester Townsh1p. .
HELP WANJU)
Meigs County. send letters 1
of tn terest to . The Oa1ly
"ANEW CLINICAL
Sen!tnel, PO Box 729·20,
PEELS! '
Pomeroy, Oh10 45769
Want to look younger AND
earn Money? Let's talk the
NEW AVON call
Mantyn (304)882 -2645 .
Blue
Healer
Australian
Joyce (304)675 -6919.
Mixed to good home
April (304)882 -3630
(304)542·4076

10

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Absolute Top Dollar. U.S.
'
Silver.
Gold
Coms.
SWM 41 seek1ng SWF 30· Proofsets, Otamonds. Gold
45 for tnendshlp and poss1· Rings ,
U.S Curren~;y, ·
bly more . n Interested wnte M.TS Cbin Shop, 151
to PO Box 533 Gallipolis. Second Avenue , Gallipolis,
Oh10 455j1
740·446·2842.

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Daily In - Column : 1 : 00
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In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In- Column: 1:00 p.m.
Friday For Sundays Paper

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

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who's had a lot of success the
played into runners reaching
few times they've faced each
second and third. Pickens had
other. Griffey is 6-for-14life·
her third RBI single of the
time with two homers.
night This time the line was a
from Page 81
Maddux gave up four hits
two RBI safety, the score 6-1
and two walks in six innings,
Southern.
paying for those two bad · stole second with one out,
Alexander threatened with a
pitches that spoiled ihe out- Brooke Kiser single home two out triple by Hudnall in
Pullins. Kiser then stole sec- the s i~th, but Kiser got a pop
come but not the occasion.
"I actually had a good ond and scored on a Joanne fly to end the inning.
time." Maddux said. " It Pickens single.
The Southern defense made
Southern went on to load the just one error in giving Kiser
would have been better if
we'd have won. I actually bases with just.one out, but did great support. Alexander had
enjoyed the night and look not score. Jenny Warner sin- three miscues.
,
forward to pitching again in gled and Ashley Roush
Southern hitting was led by
walked to load the bases, but a Pickens with three singles and
five days."
strikeout
and fly out ende.;l the four RBis, while Kiser went 3Notes: Rain delayed the
inning.
game for ·33 minutes in the
4, Sayre 2-3, and Pullins 2-4.
In the Southern second, Jenny Warner had a single and
bottem of the f1fth. ...
Madaux went II years, 6 Jordan Neigler walked, Emily Hill a double.
months and 8 days between . advanced on a bunt by Pullins
Alexander hitters were
appearances for Chicago. and scored on a throwing error Hudnall a double and triple,
The only Cubs player with a that allowed Pullins to reach Kaufman a single, Jill Howard
longer such break was Larry third base. Sayre walked and a single, and Kylie &lt;!Juthrie a
Gura, who went II years, 8 stole second, then Pickens, single.
months and 18 days (1973- who was 3-4 on the night, sin~
Kiser was the winning"pitcl]·
85) . ... Maddux made his gle home her second run of the er with four strikeouts and just
debut with the Cubs on1Sept. game for a 4-0 SHS lead.
one walk_ Downard with relief
Alexander came back with from Minor suffered the loss.
3, 1986, as a pinch-runner for
Jody Davis in the 17th one run in the fourth when They combined for two strikeinning. He failed' to score, Sarah Kaufman singled, stole outs and three walks.
stayed in the game , pitched second and scored on an
Southern goes to Eastern
one inning and took the loss Ashley Hudnall double, the today.
against Houston. .. . The Reds score 4-1.
Southern got the run back in
Southem 6, Alexander 1
started Griffey, Dunn and
1 53
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Downard and Hudnall. Brook Kiser and
25. All three had major gled, advanced on a Brooke Katie Sayre WP - Brook Kiser. LP Kiser bunt single that was mis- Downard.
injuries last season.

Jeff Thornton, President
Meigs County Commissioners

Reese

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HR-MOrdonez (1), Cal.ee (2). OliVO (1), Gutel

Expos 3, Martina ~

OCbnss 4 1 2 1

1- 1

l1

1·1
1·1

Oucarp CUJs {Clefnerr1 0-0 1al ~ (Acevedo Q-0). 12·35 p m
Milwaukee (Cap.w-w:&gt; ()..()) at Sl lootS (Suppen !HI) 1 10 p.m
Mo-treai iOiio.a D-Ol a1 Flondi!l (Wills 0--0~ 7-ClS p m
Ptula!~ll&lt;t jPao.lla D-O) at P1tts00rgh (Vogelsong 0-0) 7:05p.m.
N If Uets { E~:(}.O \ at Atlanta 1~ C-0). 7.35 p m
Colotado (Keooedy 0..()1at A.nzona 1Des.sens Q-0). 9"35 p m
San Franosco ~~rmaf1S0(1 0-0) at San Diego {Wells 0--0) 10·0:5 p m.

i,Chi: .:=::--==---"-=7.::::':.;;:::----)

4 1 1 2

500
500
500

L1

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Slloula

CEvrttrt

'
1
1

W1

""""'"' ....._

~37t.:..MII;62z_

lb rhbl
Bq,ood 4000
Vd-o2b
4 I 1 0

1-1
1-1

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Aoridl

ab r hbi

-

500
500

-- --

,.

P10

1
1'

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Ananta 18. NY M8ts 10
Montreal 3 Fbrldii 2
PtHiaOelpnia 5. Plttstlur!Jl4
Housfon 10 San Fr.tnctsco 1
Cn;:tm;m 3 Ch«::aya Cubs 1
St loul&amp; 9. M 1~ 4
Anzona 9. Colorado 5
Los Angeles 2. san 01ego ' . 11 n

OaklarC 3 Texas 1

Clrlcinnati

Madcl.II LD-1

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~7C~6 ( 15 1

4 0 2 0

T~

.

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Detroit 7 Toronto 3
Tampa Bay 9 NY VaroO.aes 4

~3, Cubs1

SSosart

1

Ctncago Cubi

' '"""'91'

CttC:ago WMre SOl (5c::noenewe6 (}.(I f 31 N Y Yankees rvazqvez o-o 1 1"05 p.m.
M.mesota I 511-.-a D-'01at Detr011 ICome/Q D-0) 2·05 P m
~and ~ 0- Amco 1).-{Jf 31 Kansas Cll'f 1Aflelal 0-0 1 2 10 p.m
~m I ESCObar D-Ol al Seattle Galtl3 0--Q), 4 35 p m
Boston rwaKeheia D-Ol at B31timofe (RIIEJy o-Cii. 7 05 p.m .

Grdm2b
CPn:scn d

'
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.......,

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Anaheim 10 Seanle 5

Texas 2. Oa+&lt;lanel t
NY Yantees '3 Tamoa Bay 2
BostOI1 , 0 Baltlmore :3
Oe!rOII 6 Torooto 3
Clewland 1 1• Mtnnescta &lt;4
Mah&amp;lm 10. Seattle 7

1

F1onda
Montreal
NV Mets

o-o
1-2

y~ ·· AesiAts
Boston 4, Bat~e 1

Olcago SOx 4 Kansas City 3

·-

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L

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500

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1

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The Dail y Sentinel • Page 83

m:rtbune - Sentinel ·- l\e
National I Mgl•

EAST

Thursday, April 8,

www.mydailysentinel.com

www.mydailysentil'lel.com

-SUQD
A

~

CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

J~

f•R.\1
L.~oiiiiiiiiEQliiiiiilii~il-,;;lE-'lii
iii !TilliiiP
'

t Craftsman Lawn Tractor 15
H P Kohler eng1ne automat·
IC 1f8r'!Sm1SSIO,- 42 Inch
mow~r cteck..mulcher Very
good conct1fl0n 5750 Call
Herb Bush (740)446-1618

�•
Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Auction

'

Auction

M••

=

~t Your
With A Daly

SAM SKINNER
ESTATE AUCTION

Thursday, April 8, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, April 8, 200~

www.mydailysentinel.com

AQfo8e ,

ltll lei

I

BULLETIN BOARD

WA~

JUST

su.

ACROSS

~£.!

Phillip .
Alder

--

01

llu66atd '.r.qreenht~use

· Auctioneer Rodney Howery
740-592-6174.

LPN
Holzer \Vyngate. an assi sted living
commun ity. is s~eking a ski lled nurse who
. is ready to move into a more challenging
... and rewarding Lan:cr oppOrtunity.
.... : ro he .c onsidered. please suhmit your

EQU1~11Nf

In l£11'ing

Locust Posl. 14-10 Case

Memor-rof'

Tractor. gas &amp; oil swabber.
Call (740)24S·5535 .

r

i

LI\Th"'OC"K

IF
lO

·-------,.1

r: -

r

I

r

Round bales of hay. $10.00 1993 Ford F 150 diesel. 7.3
each, w111 load, delivery litre. 4 WD, air, cruise . power
available. CSII (740)367· windows, looks good rubber,
everything works, 256,000
OS12.
080,
miles.
$5,000
(740)992·6810

_C_L_A--=ss=-:H:-::"s-=o. pi=-E-0-S----, r._IO......,.;RIJIDl-SAL-E_.1

lL----------------.....1
F3:-::6

79 Ford F250, 2 wd, needs a
little work . $500 080, call
(740)245·9498 .

For Sale: 1999 Dodge Truck
4x4, .full size with topper,
IMPOUNDS Cars
hom 69.000 miles. (740)441·
$500. For listings 1·800·719· 0121
3001 e&gt;l 3901
$500!.Hondas ,
Jeeps, etc I

Chevys.
POLICE

t

\"ovr ll!~lto Kno••.l~•mll RiJjll to\au

Vacuum
cleaner,
Children·• Toye, Mite:
Car Parta, Tlraa, Etc.
Bay *11,
Nama: Carl Wilson
Ill,
Addrott,
44844
Forllt Run Rd.
City : . Racine, OH
45771
Terma ol the tale will
be caah or certltlod
fund.
Hill's Sell Storage
29870 Baahen Rd.
Racine, OH 45771
(3) 25, (4) 1, 8

Conaullanla.
Buckeye Hilla
Hocking
Valley
Regional
Development Dlalrlcl
reserves the right to
waive any technlcall·
. ' Ilea or Informalities In
the bid which does
not alter materially
attar the conlract doc·
ument. Bid apecltlca·
Ilona may be picked
up at Buckeye Hilla ·
Hocking
Valley
Regional

i

Let me do 1t for youl

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

liNDA'S PAINTING

316 Washington Street
Ravenswood, WV 26164

105K.

33795 Hiland Rd.

Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232

FOR SALE

wllh trailer. 5 H,P. O!Jtboard
Others In stock , we taka 42 lb. thrust trolling motor.
Hades. COOK MOTORS
$800 llrm. Call after 4pm
(740)446·0103.
(7401742·2457.
1999 Aed Hyundal Tiburon , 1999 Fisher 1611 . V-bonom
auto, 4.5K mil es, 1 owner. with
galvanized
trailer.
$5,500. (740)379·2816.
$2,000 080. (740)441·
2000 Chrysler Sebring LXI , 7632 .

Get Your M!luaae Acroa .
WM A Q8lly S"entintl

BULtmN BOARD '

HAULING:

(304) 773-5354

Friday,
April 9th
Marinated London
Broil, Grille'd ~­
Chicken &amp;
Mushroom Sauce
Open to the Public

.,.....,...,_,.r:--:-: """:--.,
1.·

~

i

1
i

GRAVELY TRACTOR

29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio
4577t
740·949·2217

~

SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Street

~

~ At:.l.:..lo-=:l..-~

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2975

Sizes S'x10'
to 10'x30'
Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

p-

l

'""
W~ PL"-YI~G TE.Nt·\l') ,.._~0 MY

Ot'PO!:&lt;C.l--11 Ri',N !'&lt;\£.

Mann1ng K. Roush
Owner
Open Mon-Fri 9-5 Sal. 9·12

1/1411 ma. pd

N.-L CNE.R Tf\E COURT I

A.":&gt;":&gt;()()!\~~\.

LO:&gt;TTfiE. /N\T(}I,
TfiE :;.OLE.":&gt; OF
Ff.t.i e,E.CJ&gt;,N
1
TO ,.._C.fiE
~---1 !
00 YOU

•sand

• Dirt
• Ag Lime

i

CAMI'EIIS

Pa&gt;ls

2A
5

¥

Pass

4 NT

Pass
Pass

Pass

7•

Pass

Pass·

Pass

.

EQUIPMENT

"' ' I~\ II I "'

TT

CAMPERS &amp;

BISSELL

I

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

ADVERTISE YOUR

LETS PUT
YEAH , ~TE!
'tOU!I. SENSE SEE IF
OF S MELL
'fOU CM
TO THE
IDENTIFY
TEST'
THE TEACHERS
A S THEY GO

to dark!

S NIF F
SNIFF
..-SNIFF

Are you in the market

BUILDERS IDC.

New Home s • Vinvl
Siding • Nc'\' Garages

See

-~

Rocky "RJ"
Hupp

• R c placc.mcnt

COMMERC IAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE 'ESTIMATES

93 Columbus Rd.

7 40-992-7599

'

~======~~

r

PEANUTS
IS LONEL'&lt;
WANTS TO

IMPORTS
Athens

HOME?

TR'I' TO T~INK
OF SOMETJ.l1N6
NICE ...

I AGREE .. A HOT
FVD6E SUNDAE WOULD
TASTE 600D Rl614T NOW ..

Advertise

·in this
space

· c;e

Dean Hill

-_..,.

New&amp; Used

BETTY

4 75 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

for

YOU KIJOVJ I \lfll((\11&amp; NO
flAIR ON 'lOUR H€AD ~

1-800-822-0417

$75

"W.V's #I Chevy. Ponllar. Buick. Olds
·
&amp; CusLom Van Dealer"

&gt;ACe IT, 8€nY1~LDNE5S
IS WASTED ON MEN

ACTUAU.'f A"iiRAC-1\IJ€.

per
month

'

BUSINESS
•·

$25.00 per month!
~

,~

The
Daily
Sentinel
992·2155·

Sunset Home
Construction

GARFIEI,.D

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

252

i HOWARD£.

• 949-1155 Evenings

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

' WRITESfl

949-1405

WHY PO I BO'I'HER
BAKING COOKIES?

Upper River Road • Gallipolis

Advertise in this
Space·for
$50 per month

740-742-341

•ROOFING
•HOME
MAINTENAN
•SEAMLESS
GUTTER
•Free EsUmateu

RIS NORTHUP DODGE

740-~46-0842

• Room Add lllona &amp;

-

Remodeling
• New Gar11gea
• EleoltoiGftl &amp; P-IYmbing
• tlo~:~rf'nQ &amp; Gl·ftH'&gt;
• Vmtl S1ding &amp; r\ uo .ting
• Pa 1io and Porch Oe ~ks

We do it allu.;epl
furnact work

V.C.

YOUNG Ill
992·6215

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Years Local Experience

ROBERT
BISSEll

GRIZZWELLS

· DOWN

2
3

4
S

..Tumbler'~

17 Breaks up

pad
Tabloid
topic
DA's degree
Secret
messages
Divvies up

19 Yardstick
20 Tiber locale
22 Practiced
Zen
23 Hard wood
25 I'll~

• New H.omes
·~ara&amp;es

-

• Complete
Rem odeling

jl

140-992-1611
I

.I
Y'f

- ·~h

-----

27 Vo~antc

47 Legallhlng
48 Greph part
49 To a great
extent
51 Serpenl
53 Popular
cruise stop
55 Senorita"s

aunt.
28 Pry
55 list
-a date!
31 Uproar
shortener
Construction 33 Swa.bbie
57 Color
area
35 Common
to match
Scored
level
in tennis
39 Quick-witted
LOndoner's 41 Straggler's
brew
plea
Holiday
j2 wds .)
number
44 Inquisitive
PaUse
46 Cause goose
fillers
bumps

6 Not in a

flow

whisper

7
8

9

CELEBRITY ~IPHER
by Luis Campos
Celeb&lt;ily C1pher crypt~rlm\ ani "realed l·omquotarons by 'amO\.s oeoDI~ pas! ana ~~e~
Eic~ 1en111tn lllij C!ptler stanos '0' anonet

Today's clue A eq:..als U

00

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KYRHJXWT

FOFZC

ZY

COZ

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JFT

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Vf

ZOF
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DBRH.CYFB
HJF

J. VVWB

CAXTB · UAXTB

RWRYXB?"

EJXV

EXJAO '

PREVIOUS SOLUTIONJ- 'Slavery never goes oul of faSh iOn. - Thackeray
·courage 1s bemg scare 10 dealh - and saddlmg up anyway ..
- John Wayne •
(c) 2004 by NEA. Inc 4·8

r~~;~t;~r S©\l..~]~\-~c~S'

WORD

GAM I

fdilld by C:lM R. POllAN - - - - - -

' Friday, April 9, 2004
By Bernice Becle Osol
Many new 1ntere'sts and inVol veme nts
could be 1n th e off ing for you m the year
ahead. The wider you e)(pand your hOri . zons and 1he more you use' your talen1s.
th e larger your opportuniti es for success
will be.
A~IES (March 21 -April 19) Just by
being who you are and d01ng what comes
naturally today, pleasant happenings will
be in store tor you. Bathe those you
encounte r In your personality, warmth, wi1
and cha·rm .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ----' 11 w111 be
spontaneous of you .today to be canng and
11elpful to those who reQUire your assiStance . You'll do so Without lhough1 ot
reward. yet you'll be equally repAid , even 11
it's not immediate
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Wh1l e m1n·
ghng with others 1oday. you will have
opport uni1tes to gather pearls of wtsc:lom
What you learn won'1 necessari ly come
from one person . but th rough the comb1na"
ti on ol many.
CANCER (Ju ne 21-July 22)- Tl1is cou ld
be a day for super~or aChievements and
you would be smar t no11o was1e 1t on tuvial or frivolOus ac1ivit1es. To gain the most
ou1 of thm gs, concentrate on goals 'Tha1 are
truly worthy.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - You 11 see "' 11111e
clearer and a bit further ta&lt;;Jay than your
assoc1a!ions wit I. Wh~?.n it really countS. rely
upon your line of s1gh t, not the1rs.
V1RGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) - Although the
re1gns may be taken out ot your hands
tOday, there w1lf be no need 10 be upset or
discouraged. All Wtlt work . out we ll. as if
th1ngs- were bemg orchestrated by you
LIB RA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Even though
you're usually one who Can take pnde 1n
yourself for tnd1v1dualism when 11 IS called
for, you usually ·prefer bemg a tearri player
Today your at11tude w t11 st rengthen fr1ends.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) - All the disconnected pieces w1ll be favorably JOined
together today where your work or career
IS concerned. It'll be your calling to follow
your mst1ncts toward rewardmg end •'
results.
SAGITTARI US (Nov. 23·Dec 21) - A cou·
pie of soc1at contac ts w1th connec110ns
(whO really haven 't done too much tor you
by way of using them) may go all out tor
you tOday Without you even hav1ng to make
your WIShes known
,.
C APRI COR N (Dec 22-Jan 19) - II
beh ooves you to use your rmagma11on to
the fullest. 11 there 1s someth mg you 'd 1tke
to br ing to a successful conclu sron, you
can ta ke innovat1ve steps loday 10 make 1
thlo; A reaury
AQUAR IUS (Jan. 20-Fetl 19) - 1fs qw1e
likely tha1 you 'll possess a s1xlh SE!nse
today rega rdmg what you should do and
whO you sMutd 1alk 10 regardmg gethng
lmportant1hings done. Do as your IntUitiOn
d1rects.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20 ) - You can
successfully add to your matenal s1ockptle
today by blend mg 1nSp1ra110n wuh perspiration. One alone may not y1eld much, but
collectively they could be Quite profitable

0

~e-;·r~l'·~e le:t!lrs oi th i!
lc•Jr scrcr.-.bleO:: words be
ltlw :o form io•Jr ~ ;."'':r le wo•'i!

[

TEEKLT

L I I I I' I'
T AAGE

I' I I" /
I-T'._" TH_A,..;:.L_,s-i ~
5

,___,_1.......
1-L.I--~.1__,

t

My sis:er -in-!aw says that
when company ;s com1ng and
she hasn I had time to
s:ra1ghten :he neuse , she

r

- - - - - - - - - - , covers the coffee :able w1th ···

;I I I I' ~ I j··-·
() ca·ds.

. ARYL Y
.

.

.

.

.

C:.~t•ro ! ere l,;e .:::~uck l e a~·cted

ov

~ ~;:

....;

11 t~e ,., ,~s~ng

.... orCs

l_.......I.-..L.---l-..L....J:.......J vcu de vf! lco from S''!!:: No J be low

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
&lt; - ,_ o'
Warmth · Oasis · Jelly · Coddle · TWO RITES
A lamous com1c was rost 10 a couples Mt1elh wed·
ding ann1versary. He lold the couole .
bigamy was
the only cnme where a wrong 1s made up of TWO

RITESI"

ARLO &amp; JAN.IS
... 50, A~/&lt; YtJ!JRDOCTOR· tf
.?AIIJTEX IS t&lt;'t&amp;~T FOR
.YOU (CliCK)

... YOU CAU &amp;~fA 30 ·J)b,Y
. SMWl£. OF B080011J Fff£ ...
( CLIO&lt;)

/ .

GH BACK IUTO UF€
WITH Pf.f!KITR&amp;X ...
(CliCK)

SOUP TO NUT.Z'_

CONSTRUCTION

Stop &amp; Compare

The opponents' tru'mps are often thorns
in your side during the card-play. Th is can
be ~pecially true on deals· where you
cannot afford to remove them early in the
play. But sometimes you can combine
trump extraction With tricK establishment
-. as in today's layout.
How wo uld you plan the play in s8ven
spades? Weslleads the club queen .
Many pairs with good memories use
Roman Key Card Blackwood , wh1ch
allows one to uncover not only the lo ur
· aces, but also the king and queen of
trumps . Here , though, because South
knows of 10 or 11 combihed trumps , he
does not need to worry about the spade
queen. Even .if her majesty is missing,
she can be expected to drop.
, South cannot be sure about the fate of
his low diamond. but he knows North has
at least five hearts.
You have only 12 top tricks : seven
spades, two hearts. one diamond and
two clubs. You must establish a long heart
in the dummy. But here you will have to
ruff two ·hearts in hand. That requires
three dummy entries: two for the ruffs and
one to get to the winner. Now 1hat the
club ace has been removed from the
dummy, you need.to use all three of those
top trumps- you must riot draw a round .
of trumps.
The play goes: club to the ace. hearr to
the ace, hear1 king , trump to dummy
(entry one), heart ruff high, spade to
dummy (entry two). heart ruff high. trump
to dummy (entry three) . Now cash the
heart jack and discard the diam ond
seven. Terrific!

AstroGraph

~Y'

23foot 1984 camper Frolic
Brand BunkhOuse, new air,
,awning sleflps 6, $4,500.
(74.0)388·8700 attar 4pm .

3369

Open 7 days

a week dayflghl

TFN

Windows • Roofing

CAMPING

I

1 Weed
preventer
6 Ms. Kudrow
10 Not sinking
12 Bulletin
14 Start walking
15 Takeover
16 Skirted
the Issue .
18 Bradley and
Asner
19 Genae slope
21 W~al
Pandora
unleashed
23- to lunch
24 Dlstrou
call
26 Edible roots
29 Huntsville 's
loc.
30 Goat's·hair
garment
32 Zingy taste
34 Iodine
source
36 Brief craze
37 Infant's
sound
38 Pitcher

47 Crash into
50 Stain,d·
glass art
52 Commuter
deatinations
54 Declared
58 Palermo's
place
59 What white
symbolizes
60 Oxford or
pump
61 Truce result

Nolan11
40 Today
4Z,_Horde
12
43 Marmalade ·
chunk
13
45 PDQ

-... 'lllrthda,y:

Morning Star Road· C.Rd 30 •.Racine, OH

&amp;

28 ft.
Holiday Rambler.
Cold roof air, awning, good
condition . $2,900 . Call
17401367-0512 .

r

of plants 56.60
I Hl!nQIIIr19 Baskets $6.60

1989 32' Airstream trailer. all
standard eqUipment, plus
many extras. Very good condition. Phone (740)446·
2561 .
.

1'1111"'-~---..,

Ot::.·FEE\ I

BIG NATE

4" pot of perennials $1.18 Buy 5or more for $1.00

MOTOR HOME.'&gt;

Cougar Model 276 EFS
2002 Fifth Wheel, excellent
condition $20,000 (304)882·

'""

COMPARE THESE PRICES!!
4" pot of annuals 94~

740-992-1189
740-992-2902

8oATI&gt; &amp; MOTORS
lllR SAL[

.

1'\ :':&gt;IMPL.E C.~C: 01'
Tf\C::. l'bO\':IY Of

(:R ,uu...... I'\N~

Meigs County's Largest selection of
annuals, perennials, vegetables,
shrubbery, fruit, ornamental trees,
roses, rhododendrons, ana azaleas .

Dennis Boyd

740-985·3564

P"'
NO-ll'~

~1&lt;.10\J:':&gt;,

Decks-Etc.

• Limestone

www &lt;•ngfntu•tl .carn

THE BORN LOSER

l..awrJ and (;anleu Rqr~ipmeut i.11 our
husiuess, not tmr .\·ideliue

For Fast Courteous
Service, Free
Estimates
&amp; Affordable
Prices, Call...

on this p'oge for.fls_low tiS.
Mason, W. VA

EV'RY MORNIN',
LUKEY !!
Snapper

Gravely

Hill's Self
Storage

c;nNS'fiUJC;'I'JON
Roofing-SidingPainting-Gutters·

UnConditional lifetime guar·
' MOTOR HOME'S
antes. Local references fur·
1987 camper. Yellowstone nlshed. Established 1975.
39,000 miles, leather lnterl· 19ft Fisher fully loaded
24 Hrs. (740) 446·
24', all', ref. self contain, very Call
or, sunroof. e~~;celtent condi· w/trailer 75 Hp exc. cond
good coridltlon, $4,000080. 0870, Rogers· Basement
tlon , loaded, $13,500 OBO. reduced 1o $3200 (304)593·
Waterproollng.
(740)388·6743 aller 6pm.
(740)441-()957.
1994

RIVERSIDE
GOLF CLUB

Kelly K. Jones ·

(304) 273-5321

SIDtL 11'

R.B.
Trucking .

Ir

$1,995.

•t&amp;o-column Inch Sat. Of SUnday

Dr.

H\lt--IK.IT')

18'
Poptoon
Boat
SunTracker
Signature/SerieS Year 2000
Mercury out board 40 hp,
power tilfl trim. oil Injection.
TraiiStar tra11er, all like new
must see before spending to
much some where else .
350 $11 ,500 or reasonabl e oHer
080. (304)675·6277
Evenings
only

'S"'OOiumn Inch weekdays

~ CONVOLUTtD
TI'IAN MY
g#lAIN IS.

~

Public Notice

PUBLIC SALE
Nollcela hereby given
that on April 17, 2004
at 10:00 a.m. a public
sale will be held tor
the purpose Ot satisfying a landlord's lien
on the contents ot
sell-service storage
rooms. The goode to
be sold are described ·
generally as house·
hold. The rooms will
. Development Dlstrlct 1 be opened lor viewing
Immediately prior to
245 Millers LJone, OH
45750 during regular IOIICIIatlon of bldt.
Description of propjlr·
buslneao hours (8:00
a.,. to 5:00 p.m. ty a folloWs: Mattreaa,
Monday
through
Twin Manreaa &amp; Bo•
Spring I,
Friday.
(4) 1, 8
Entertainment Canter,
Charcoal
Grltl,
Chrlatmaa trH, Mite:
Public Notice
Clolhes, Children's
Toya, CoHH Pot, Etc.
PUBLIC SALE
Bay•16
Nama:
Marlene
Notice 11 hereby given
that on April 17, 2004 Capehart
30446
at 10:00 a;m. a public Addresa:
-~ . aala will be held for . Nichola Rd.
:~ the purpoN -ol salls·- City: "MiddTeporl, OR
., lying a landlord's llan
45760
:·on the content• of Terms of the sale will
. aell·servlce atorage be caah or certified
rooma. The goods lo fund.
be oofd are described Hill's Salt Storage
29870 Baahan Rd.
generally 11 houaa·
Racine, OH 45771
hold, The rooms will
be Opjlned lor viewing (3) 25, (4) 1, 8
Immediately prior to

Tt-1/S IS MOllE-

BARNEY

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

•

door, 74K, $2,795; 1993 14 Ft. Flat bottom John Boat

Caravan.

Phom• (740)S93-6 671

AI hens. Ohio

Tree Service

Century. auto. 1995
Yamaha
_
( 740)446-3005 Wolverine, $2.000
1740)256·6169.
Beretta , eltcel2001 GSXA 600, Excellent
tent con~ttion, engine good,
condition
. · can (740)416- Bikini Top fits 22-29'11 Cabin
transmission touchy. $3,000 1415.
Cruiser Pontoon boat never
080 1740)256·6105 lor
been used (304)67 5•3 35 4
more Information.
BoATI&gt; &amp; MOTORS
Grand Am, 99K,
$2,195; 1997 Neon Sport, 4

7&lt;;11 f.ast Sial&lt; Slrccl

Ravenswood Chiropractic
,
Center

1936 Two door Chevy
Sedan long body Street Rod
Work in progress 70% com- 1986 Ram Charger, Royal
pleted many hard to fine SE, VB, 4x4, good inside/
parts must see if you are out. Call {740)446·6861 .
looking lor nice car $8,500
&lt;10
080
(304)675·8793
MO'roRCYClliS
Evenings only

.1 995

¥

East

1

Make entries and
extract thorns

.I GIV~ UP!

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Self Storage

4-WI&gt;s

North

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Res 1 d~ntiel)

H'1gh exOJ Dry

VANS&amp;

sollcllallon of blda.
Description of property as follows :
Mattress,
Dryer, 1990 Buick
Couch, Air condition- runs. Call
er,
Exercise alter 5:.30
Equipment,
Weed
Eater, Lawn Tools, 1995 Chevy

Box Fan, Elactrlc and
Keroaene,
Heeter,

and

I 1f.w 'Rr11li11A.
..,.......7

At.r!Th

West

Opening lead: ofo Q

Free Estimates

ground. Washington C. H.
HAl:' .&amp;
TRUCKS
Selling 200 head of Borrows
GRAIN
·
FOR SALE
and Gilts. Roger Bentley ~~-------_.1 ~
(937)8S4-2398 .
Good mixed hay, $1.50 a 1993 Chevy S10 Blaze r.
bale.
(740)742-7004
4WD. fu lly loaded, trai ler
Dairy gOats- Registered
Alpine- Doe . Buck and Round bales at hay for sale, pkg ., 177,000 miles. Good
$2,800.
Call
Wether Kids, call (740)988- $15 a bale. Call (740)682· condi tion ,
(740)446·2398.
2073.
8106.
Painting gelding. 5 yrs. old.
good natured, broke. 2·
months advanced training,
shoes, hauls, ·baths, experienced riders only. Good barrel prospective. (740)388-

I•

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

Crossbred bulls. Top blood - gCool d. runs good. S900 080.
lines. Slate Run Farm.
a I (!40)256·6476 .
--.
Jackson.
(740)286·5395
97
Olds Cutlass LS e)(cel·
Up
32nd Annual Bentley Pig loo k
lent
cond1tion 86,000 miles
Sale, Friday, April 16, . www.staterun Iarm.com.
7:30pm. Fayette County Fair
V6 Loaded (304)675·8165

REQUEST
FOR
QUAltFtCATIONS
Sealed bids will be
received by Buckeye
Hltla • Hocking Valley
Regional
Oevelopmenl Dlslrlct
at · the oHice of
Buckeye Hills, 245
Mlltere Lane, Marlena
OH 45750 until 5:00
·p.m. [prevailing local
lima on lha 30th day
of April, 2004 lor the
quslltlcatlon of thrN ·
Envlronmantal
Conoultanta In a
Browntlsld lnltlatlvs.
Bldo ohall be tiled
In tho oHice at
Buckeye
Hilla
Hocking
Valley
R e g l o n ' al
Development Dlatrlct
In a oulad envelope
plainly
marked
E nv Iron menta I
AIISIImant

South

WILLY-NILLY

LIVFSTOCK·

missed.

Dealer: North

I DON'T JEST GO

1-UR SALE

s

Vulnerable: East-West

JONES'

poor with 'or without beds, · - - - - - - - '
740 698-6809
.
~~;;;;..:;::;;;:;;...._ _ _., Regis1ered ANGUS and 91 Chevy 8erelta GT. Looks

By his wife
&amp; children

ofo K

landscaping jobs such as planting and mulching.

WANTEll
TO BuY

Hay wagons good. fair or

Never
Forgolten
&amp; Sadly

WV Contractors Lic.#003506

A 7

or log home, Alum inum brighteni ng.

Saturday, April 1Oth
12 noon · 2pm
Pi~:tures $5.00

F..uu.l

In Memory

and thoughts.

•

Speda! rates to Truckin and Dump Trucking Companies.
LAWN
RE DIVISI N

Pomeroy Eagles 2171
Band
"American High.way"
8-12 Friday
7-11 Saturday

ofo l076432

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Equipment, Boats, Carripers, Tractor Trailers,

(Commercial Building)

Email: wyngal@aol.com
EOE

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• J 10 8

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Dump Trucks, painting or staining of your deck

FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

300 Briarwood Drive
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Fax 740-441-9026

.

South_

POWER WASHING

EASTER BUNNY
French 500 Flea Market

in our hearts

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

(Commercii!l and Residenlial)
Mobile Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks, Driveways,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Degreasing of
.

illl-114

East.

• K 9 5 2
ofoQJ 98

Owner: Jeff Stethem

Mowing, Trimming. Tree Trimming, Aeration, Fertilization,
Spraying of fence lines, leaf Remova l, as well as small

at the

From the moment
the sun ri ses to
the last Beam of
daylight, you are .

•

TRI - STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

See.lhe

Holzer Wyngate - Gallipolis

who passed away
5 years ago today
April 8

740-992-5776

ofo A
West
• \1 6 5

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304·675-2457

Buy $5.00
llonanza Gel
5 FREE

04

A Q 10

'I J6542
• Q 6 • 3

875-2457

Bring lhis euupon

'•

(Commerci~l

·resume or apply in person :

Moodispaugh

Porch Boxes
Combination Pots
Perennials
Spruce Trees
Shl'\lbS
1
Peal Moss

•

Henderson, WV

&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:.10
Earl)' hirds start
6:30
Last Thursda)' of
t'\'er_y nwnth
All paek $5.1HI

Monday-Saturday 9-5 Closed Sunday

Exclusive Hartwell Hare in each
Basket Tuesday, April 20
· Doors open 5 pm
21 games · $20 .00 Pomeroy Eagles
Sponsored by
.
United Fund For Meigs County

Paid Health, Dental &amp; Life Insurance
Flexible Scheduling

Joseph

•
•
•
•
•
•

North

Office: (740) 992-2804 Cell: (740) 517·6883

Full time

.... .
...
..

Easter Flowecs
Bedding Flowers
Vegetahk Plants
Blooming
&amp; Foliage Baskets
Potting Soil

EASTER BUFFET
at RIVERWAY CAFE
Syracuse, Ohio
All You Can Eat
$4.99 kids &amp; $6.99 Adults
1t :00 a.m . to 2:00 p.m.
992·2507
reservat1ons &amp; questtons

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Syracuse,

Saturday, April 10
10 am
Oo~ntown Middleport
992-3148 or 992-9513

MYERS PAVING

Every Thursday

OH
Now Open

BUNNY HOP BAKE SALE

/

Pomero)' Eagles
BINGO 2171

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

~URi

YOU DIDN'T
CCM£ '1'0

te'"column inch wHkdaY'
'161" column kich Sat..or Sunday

Saturday starting at 5 pm at
Howery Auction 4 miles west Athens
on Rt 32/50
Last minute sale to sell part of ' Sam's 60
~· · year antique business collection. Very brief
· · _listings on antique &amp; collectable items.
:... ~urniture, glass ware, ponery, stone jars,
-~ .tools, primitives, cupboards, stands. tables.
· 'chairs, granite etc. Lots of unseen boxes
, stored. No reserve sale by order ·of
; · executor Robert Cnsty. Cash or good
. . check-accepted.

The Daily" Sentinel • Page 85

ALLEY OOP

ARe You K DDI"".G·'.:.-~~ ;;.e.,.:n ~
.4\n'1'1H·nG ··~1,-1-\ a &lt;0~ Sv~._"f'c&lt;; ~

" 6AY ,i)O TO DRUC.5.'"
Af'l!BU ( SO:'VIC£ ,IIL~AC.E.
F~OM

THt.AD COU~IL

�. .-

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday,April8,2004

www.mydallysentinel.com

Reds win season opening
series, B1

PGA- The Masters ·
'

Mickelson in search of
greatness, and a green jacket
BY DOUG FERGUSON

Associated Press .
AUGUSTA , Ga. - The
man in the green jacket raved
about Phil Mickelson's record
at the Masters - seven times
in the top 10, no worse than
seventh since 1999.
Mickelson saw what was
coming and
beat everyone to
1
the punch.
"But no wins," he said.
. Then, he reached over and
playfully tugged at the sleeve
of the Augusta National member sitting next to him.
"I want what you kave," he
said. "I want one of these.
Those are nice."
Getting one has proved to
be a . major challenge for
Mickelson, who comes into
·the Masters riding a streak 0-for-42 in the majors ' as a
professional - that has come
to define an otherwise impeccable career.
No one questions his awe. some ability. Mickelson has
won 22 times on the PGA
Tour, more than any -other
active player besides Tiger
Woods. He is long off the tee
and has a short game that
even Woods says is the best in
golf.
But his lack of a major
became even more glaring
last year when another Lefty
- · Mike Weir of Canada showed the mettle of major
cha'mpions by making clutch
putts down the stretch to win
the Masters.
What about Pl)il?
"l_think he's going to win a
major championship," Mark
O'Meara said. "And I think
it's ~oin¥ to happen soon."
Mtckejson 's hopes are higher than ever this year, and for
good reason.
Coming off his worst season on the PGA Tour - so
bad that one golf publication
failed to list him among the
top 30 players going into the
year Mickelson looks
.
stronger than ever.
He refused to stan 'practicing until· Jan. I to emphasize
that last year was behind him,
then came out of the blocks
by winning the Bob Hope
Classic and getting into
Sunday contention every time
•

Only two other players in
PGA Tour history have won
more than Mickelson without
capturing a major - Harry
"Ligtithorse" Cooper· (3 1 -vicIDries) and MacDonald Smith
(24).
Mickelson is undeniably the
best player to have never won
a · major, but there is some
question wheiher he can be
considered a great player
without one.
"A guy like Mickelson , you
would like to think he·s a
great player," said Els, a twotime U.S . Open and British
Open champion. ·• At the end
of the day, you look .at major
chan1pionships. That's how
you really gauge yourself.''
The gap between Mickelson
Phil Mickelson , center. enjoys a moment with fans after . the
and
Woods was made clear by
Par 3 Contest at the Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta,
the work of their publicists.
Ga .. Wednesday. (AP)
Woods' camp puts out a
he has played.
controversy over the all-male package of his career results,
He has toned down . his membership at · Augusta with a cover photo of Woods
swing, costing him some 15 National.
posing with an array of major
yards off the tee that he could
"I really think the American· champions)Jip trophies and a
afford to lose in exchange for public is ready for us to talk headline that says, "How He
playing out of the fairway. He about golf." club chairman Did It."
ts controlling his irons with Hootie
Johnson
said
Mickelson's people put out
three-quarter shots instead of Wednesday when asked about two pages of his major results
swinging from the heels.
Manha Burk's campaig n to that showed how he hasn't.
"Phil, he's probably played get a woman into the club.
There is no shame in
the best out of the whole lot,"
The course has never been Mickelson having not won a
Ernie Els said.
this firm and fast since offi- major. He is only 33, just
This might be the place for cials beefed it up two years coming into this prime.
Mickelson to prove it.
ago by adding some 300 Woods once noted that Ben
Mickelson is so serious yards. The last time it was this Hogan was 35 when he won ,
ab-o\lt this year's Masters that crusty and dry was in 1999. his first major. Hogan ended
he came to Augusta National Legend has it the sun used to his career with nine majors,
last week for two practice shine under players'. feet ·"and he had an accident in
rounds. He identified his because their spikes cou ldn't
there somewhere," Woods
_problems the last three years penetrate the turf.
- all of them third-place tin"This is what we 've been said.
The surp'rise is that
ishes - by working with looking for," Johnson said. _"l
Mickelson
has never even led
coaches Rick Smith and Dave couldn't predict a score, but I
Pelz to figure out where he think it will be pretty tough after three rounds in a major.
can save a shot per round.
out there if the course stays in His two closest calls were the
1999 U.S. Open, wh~n Payne
"I cenainly feel like I have the same condition."
a very good chance." One reason so many people Stewan made a 15-foot par on
Mickelson said. ''I've played consider Mickelson a strong the last hole; and 200 I PGA
very consistently, which is fa\,orite is because Woods, a Championship, when David
something I didn't do last three-time champion, doesn 't Toms made a 12-footer for
year. l have a IQt more confi- appear to be on top of his par on the 18th.
"I don't judge my.self harshdence that I'll be there come game.
the weekend. I'm playing
"I don't know if he 's not ly in the fact I haven' t won
well enough to get into con- playing well now or he just is one," Mickelson said. "If I
tent ion without having to do waiting for the majors," Vijay thought it was a negative that
anything extraordinary."
Singh said. "I just .speak for I had not won, I think I would
lt all starts to unfold the rest of the guys. I think dread those events more than
Thursday in a Masters that is our play has gone a step high- I would look forward to them.
far different frorn a year ago. er, and that's closed the gap I just get so excited to be here.
I can't wait for Thursday to
The storms have passed -· -if there was one."
not only the rain that turned
Mickelson looks poised to start, and hopefully have
the course into a soft and close the gaping hole in his another chance at breaking
soggy mess, but the cloud of · resume.
through."

~

at
Midqleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,ntl'\1~•\ol. . ~t :\o '••

• Smell like a Rose. See

Page 81

F-150
Auto, Super Cab
#50030

11{11•\\ , \I'I~II•J. ·• oul

"""'H \ tl.uh .ua .. ,J, , ,.,

Coolville man pleads not guilty to kidnapping,,other charges

SPORTS

NICE TRUCK!

Bv J.

lence. Represented by co urt
appoimed altorncy. Charle.s
Knight. he pled not guilty
A to all charges at hi s prePOMEROY
Coolville man charged with liminary hearing in Meigs
kidnapping
and
other Coumy Court. If indicted
felonies faced his accuser by a grand jury. Fitzgerald
Thursday in Meigs County will appear before ' the
Coun.
Meigs County Court . of
Shawn Fitzgerald, 25, Common Pleas.
was charged with two
During
the
hearing.
counts of assault, kidnap- Kimberlee Mayle described
ping, aggravated burgl ary the
scene
in
which
and the intimidation of a Fitzgerald, who was hercrime victim. all felonies, ex-boyfriend,
allegeuly
and
one
misdemeanor broke into the hume- of her
charge of domestic viu- boyfriend Steven Hulse in
MILES LAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Chester and threatened hnth Hul ,e had blond o11 h1s
of them with :1 baseb:dl face and arms . An· emerbat. She said Hulse tried to gency squad tre:Jt ed him
defend himself with a- .22 for his injuric&lt;
caliber rille. but Fitzgerald
Meigs deputy Dunn)
took the ri ll e from him Mohler and Middleport
and fired seve ral rounds patro lman John Riky disinto the ccilin~ .
cO\cred the car with Mavle
·Accord in !! t(l th e Meigs and hoth suspects 'on
County Sheriff's report. Dobbins Road · at the interHul se said Fitzgerald hit section of State Rollle 7.
him in the head with a The vehicle was stopped
baseball bat and then he and both Fit1gerald and the
allegedly kidnapped . Mayle dri,er. Thomas Shuler.
leavinu the rille be hind. we re arrested. Shuler. 2-t
When '
Meigs
Countv of Coo lvi ll e. wa; also
Sheriff's deputies arri\ed. ch arged with kidnapping.

compl icit) t(l aggravated
burglar). and til o complici11' charge; to as.sault - all
t'elunies".
~Ia\ lc said ;he had some
iniuric' trorn being hit with
a · ba,ehal l hat. CShe -wa;
u·:lll&gt;ported to o·Blene&gt;s
Ho;pital and later rekascd.
Fitlgerald i' curre ntl y
incarcerated
in
the
Middlt'pmt Ja il with a
bond ;et at ::-200.000. I 0
percent cash d0\1'11. Shuler
11 as
released earlier this
week &lt;in a personal recognl/ance bond of S5 .000.

Super Crew, 4X4
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OBITUARIES
Page AS
• .Eloise Forth.
• Philip 'Flip' Werry
• Allegra Will ·

INSIDE
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A2
• O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital to offer Diabetes
Education Class.

Browns CEO Carmen Policy stepping aside
BEREA (AP) -- Carmen
"I opened the door and it extension last season through said. 'That means I will get
Policy arrived for work on an was like someone had sucked 2008. The deal was structured paid and that means I really
early morning in October the air and the life out of · so Policy could slowly turn won't have to work that
nearly two years ago and real- ·Berea," Policy said. "He was over more responsibility to hard.''
ized his days as president of a major presence for this Lerner, who said he'll be
AI Lerner's reluctance to
the Browns were numbered. organization. I'm talking more visible but will main- step into the ~;mblic spotlight
After
the
death
of about the aura, and the inner- lain a low-profile.
thrust Policy mto the role of
. Cleveland owner AI Lerner, power of the man."
There have been· signs of team spokesman - somehis close friend and partner,
After Randy Lerner took Policy's departure for some tning the former lawyer from
Policy sensed it was time to over, he leaned on Policy to time.
Youngstown accepted.
move on.
teach him how to operate
Lerner
bought
back
But that role also directed
"lt was surreal," Policy inside the NFL and requested Policy's 10 percent owner- some unfair criticism at
said. "I had a feeling it would that Policy put together a ship share last . year. Also, Policy, whose five-year
be different from that day on.'' long-term plan.
Policy purchased I 0 acres of tenure in Cleveland has been
On Wednesday. it changed
For Policy, pan of that plan land in California's Napa marked by losing records and
for good as Policy announced meant finding his successor Valley, where he plans to some turmoiL
he will step aside and let - and he found one sooner build a home and wmery for
The Browns are just 26-53
someone else run the Browns. than expected. ·.
his private label.
since 1999, including a playPolicy's five-year run as the
Collins, who has worked in
Policy already seems to be off loss to Pittsburgh in 200 I.
club's president and chief the league office since 1989, enjoying the idea of working The club went 5-11 last seaexecutive officer will official- is intrigued by the idea of pan-time for the Browns.
son, which began and ended
ly end May 1. but he will stay working for one of the 32
"That means that I will wit_h a qu~er~ack controveron as a consultant through the teams he represented while have a business card," he sy mvolvmg Tim Couch.
2004 season.
brokering deals across conferJohn Collins, the NFL's ence boardroom tables.
senior vice president of mar"It's pretty hard not to get
ketin~ and sales who has excited abour the opponumty
negotiated more than $1 bil- to come to Cleveland and join
lion in sponsorship deals for the Browns,'' Collins said.
the league, will replace· "This is a team environment
Policy. Collins received a and that feels really good to
five-year contract.
me.''
"What we're doing today is
Policy emphasized thai he'
'
right for the Browns," said wasn't retiring or leaving to
Policy. "I was ready to leave. pursue any other opponuni1 am · ready to leave because ties. There has been wideit's the right time pursuant to spread speculation he could
the plan - a plan I designed.'' head an ownership group if an
While the announcement of expansion team is ever awardthe ·front-office shift was ed to Los Angeles.
Straighten Up Your Life
abrupt, Policy said it merely
"My 'leaving has strict releIn April Special
completed a plan that had vance to the Cleveland
To the I st 100 New Patients
been in place almost since Browns," he said.
We
Offer A $25 Complete
. Randy Lerner assumed ownBut it does slightly alter the
Chiropractic Exam
ership following his father's team's power structure.
This Offer Includes:
death on Oct. -23, 2002.
· · Coach\ Butch
·
•l'rivate Consultation witll Dr. Jones
Policy had been hand - already enjoys
• X-Rays; a Necessity
piG!ked by the late owner to control of football operations.
•
Complete
Orthopedic
and Neurological Exam•
_ ____,... the club when Cleveland will now repon only to Randy
1
•
CunfidentialRepoOJJt£indi,JO&gt;s
_ _-'was a war e an expansion Lemet- anviil::Collins::=. • Ist Adjustments
.
franchise and returned to the
"John will be responsible
to
proper
specialist
if
it
is
detennined
•
Referral
league in 1999 following a for all business matters,"
.
chiropractic can't help _you.
-· three-year absence.
Policy -said. "Coach Davis
Call
or
stop by our State Uf The Art
But Lerner's death changed will be responsible for all
office to make your appointment!
things for the 61-year-old football matters. It 's that
Policy, who recalled arriving clean and ~irnple . "
Dr. Kelly Jones
at the team's offices the next
At Randy Lerner's request,
J 16 Washington Sl • Ravenswood. WV
da~ and sensing a huge void.
Policy signed a ciJntract
~04·273·5321

.·D'Amico hurls Tribe over
Kansas City, Bs

See Page A6

Eric Buzzard displays his first place winning ribbon
which he received for his project on Dan Darino.
Pictured with him is Morgan Hall who did a project on
roller coasters. (J. Miles layton)

Research Study Fair brings out best and brightest
BY

J. MILES LAYTON

JLAYTON&lt;!!MYDAilYSENTINEl.COM

WEATIIER

POMEROY - Gifted and
talented elementary students
from Eastern and Southern
school districts competed in
the Talented · and Gifted
Research Study Fair Monday
at
the
Athens-Meigs
Ed_ucational Service Center at
Bradbury.
Dozens of students in the
third through sixth grades
crafted research projects on a

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wide variety of topics including the history of pizza making, sports figures , and historical personalities.
"One student made a helmet of clay. another a roller
.coaster, and there were several power point presentation s,"
said Jennifer Roush. teacher
in the Talented and Gifted
Program in Meigs County.
Roush said the students selected a topic they were interest~ in
last October and have worked
one day a week since then on

developing them. Some students
designed surveys, administered
them to their peers. and then
made gmphs of tl1c results on
their computers. Other students
composed charb on the v:uious
parts of tl1eir projects. designed
articles penaiQing to their subject, tmd 1:remed moJels.
The th ird and fourth graders
worked in teams while the
fifth and sixth graders worked
'
on individual projects.
''The work was on an
eighth to lOth grade level."

said Rou sh.
Each team or individual student. Liepending on the grade
level. gave an oral presentation
for the judges, John Costanzo.
Athens-Meigs County ;uperintcndent: Bob Grueser. 'uperintendent of SDuthe.rn Local:
Deryl Well. superimendent of
Eastern Local; Doris Well.
'county elementary supervisor.
and Carol · Brewer. AthensMeigs Educational Service
Center ABLE program director.
Winners for the third and

fourth grades were: first
place. Rebecca Chadwell and
Tyler Cline; second place
(tic) , Emily A;h. Bay lee
Collins and Kyle Young; third
place. Timoth! Elam.
Winners for the tifth grade
were : tirq place. E1ic Buzzard;
second place. Megan Carnahan;
third place. Zari Roush.
Winners for the sixth grade
were : first place. Katie Woods;
second place (tie). Hannah
West and Whitney Putman;
third place. Wade Collins.

Fourth Leading Creek Stream Sweep set for April 24

INDEX

FAMILY SIZE!

The winners in the Talented and Gifted Research Study Fair Monday at Bradbury Scho.ol came from third
through sixth grade students in the Eastern and Southern school districts. They were left to right. front,
Tyler Cline, Rebecca Chadwell, Baylee Coll ins. Emily Ash , and Timothy Elam; and back. Megan Carnahan.
Zari Roush . Katie Woods, Whitney Putman. Hannah West. Wade Collins. and Eric Buzzard. ·

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© aoo4 Ohio Valle&gt;· Publishing Co.

FROM STAFF REPORTS
NEWS&lt;IIMYDAILYSENT\NEl.COM

. RUTLA,t-/D -The fourth
annual Leading Creek Stream
Sweep will be held April 24
at the Rutland Firemen 's Park
in conjunction with Earth
Day.
The event is sponsored by
the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation in partne rship
with the u·.s. fish and
Wildlife Service, Rutland
Township Board of Trustees

and Rutland Volunteer Fire
Department, ~eigs County
Recycling
and
Litter
Control Office. and other
agenc1es.
Volunteers will meet at 9
a. m. at Rutland's Firemen's
Park by the Civic Center for
the Stream Sweep, which _will
continue to noon, ending with
a ' luncheon at the park.
Volunteers will be cleaning
up along Leading Creek and
Little Leading Creek at severa! pre-sel~cted sites, said Jim

Freeman. sweep coordinator.
Last year. about 50 vol unteer1 participated in · the
·event. Freeman said.
Groups
participating
included scouts and youth
groups. along with
students and other interested individuals, he said.
Groups and individuals are
invited to participate in the
. Stream Sweep by stopping at
the park beforehand. or at the
Meigs ~WCD office 111
Pomeroy, and filling out a

registration form and waiver.
Ch ildren under 18 will need
thei r forms signed by a parent
or guardian. Freeman said.
Stream Sweep T-shirts will
be given to the first 50 panicipants to
turn in their registration
forms .
Other organit.ations arc
also US\isting: Cleaning materials ' inc luding'- garba"e
bags
....
0
....
•and work gloves . were supplied by the \1eigs County
Office of Recycling and

Litter Prel'ention. Rutland
Township is assi sting with
collection of filled garbage
bags.
Freeman 'aid the Stream
Sweep. modeled after the
Ohio River Sweep. which is
held in June. targets different
areas of the Leading Creek
watershed each year. For
more information on the
Stream Sweep or the Leading
Creek Improvement Project .
contact the Meigs SWCD at
992-4282 .

April 9 • 1 6 is

Pediatric Nursing

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Week
::Holze!'"Medieal C~nter recegnizes our
Pediatric nurses for their dedication ahd service.
For more informalidn about Holzer Medical Center's
Pediatric services, please call (740) 446·5075.

•

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MEDICAL CENTER
-J)isem 1er the lfolzerD(ffe l¥&gt;nf".t&gt;-- l - - - -

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'•

'

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