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                  <text>Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Lawton homers twice in
Indians' win over Tigers

Rio
from Page81

CLEVELAND (AP) - Matt Lawton bat away as Lawton rounded the bases.
got Cleveland off to a good &gt;tart and then had a couple of words for him as he
David Riske tinally finished off a win.
crossed home plate.
. Lawton . hit two homers. scored four
..The tir&gt;t pitch \\'as up and in and I got
runs and drove in four. and Riske eamed a linle excited:· Lawton said.·'] wanted to
the Indians' first save thi,; season in a CJ-7· · hit the next one out. When I did. I got
win Sunday over the Detroit Tigers.
more excited and threw the bat. It hit
Cleveland's bullpen entered last in the Pudge in the ttl&lt;l! and he was upset about
AL with a 6 ..69 ERA. three blown saves that. but he was cool about it. He said.
and 58 hits allowed in 40 I.J innin£&gt;.
·Don't let go of the bat. ...
"Riske was fantastic and ·Law.' had a
The next time up. Lawton wa' hit in the
great day:· Indians mana~er Eric Wed~e back by an 81 mph pitch from
said ...That's the Da\'id Ri.,ko: \\e kno\\ :·· Sonderman. La" ton took off for second
Carlos Guillen homered and had trlllr clll a ~-I pitch and scored as Omai- Vizquel
RBls for Detroit. which lo" &lt;·enter fielder lined it to right-center for a double and a 2Alex Sanchez to a strained left uroin in the 0 lead.
seventh inning.
In the sixth. reliever Steve Colyer's first
Sanchez ba~ely made it t&lt;&gt; second on an pitch sailed up and in to Lawton. who
RBI double ~ hopping the tina! 40 feet eventually walked after having to duck
on his right leg and fall in~ on th,· base. He away from yet another tight one.
was helped to his feet b' trainer, .. "ho
--when he hit me with the bat. I got a litassisted him to the duuout·.
tie bit mad. bu t I knew it wasn't on pur.. ! can't play tomorrow... Sanche;· .'aid. pose:· Rodriguez said. "I told him to
.. Hopefu ll y. I won't be out too man' throw it ,omewhere else.
days."
.. But we didn't throw at him. We wem
Lawton led off the lirst with his third inside with a ·breaking pitch.''
homer and hit a three-run 'hot in the
Lawton responded again in the founh.
Jounh - botli utl right -h;rnder Jeremy After Ronnie Belliard ~ot a broken-bat
Bondern1an ( 1-11.
,;ngle and Coco Crisp-drew a two-out
It was the si~!h muliihomer ~ame of w;tlk. Lawton hit a 2-0 pitch to right-cenLawton·s career and tir't ,;nee he hit two ter for his founh homer and a 5-0 lead.
against Cincinnati bst June 2X .
A two-run double by Guillen sparked
Cliff Lee 12-01 allowed three rtlll&gt; and the Ti£ers in the sixth. Guillen then stole
six hits in 5 1-.1 inning'. striking out six third mld scored on a bloop single to right
wit hout a waiL Riske. whu had blown two b) Rodrigue? to make it 5-J.
saves and entered with an ERA of 15. 75.
Ben Broussard opened the bottom half
pitched a perfect ninth.
·
with his tirst homer. Jodv Gerut later hit a
··] wanted to be &lt;lUI there:· Riske said. run-scoring single and Travis Hafner an
"When I'm stnr~gling - and hope(ully RBI double tor an 8-3 Indians lead.
I'm done" ith that 1\l&gt;rd - I want the ball.
.. If we could have held them at 5-3 we
I wanted to get it done:·
had a chance:· Tigers manager Alan
Lawl&lt;ln was determined. too.especially Trammell said ... How often can you keep
after the tiN pitc·h of the game backed coming back'!.
him utf the plate.
Guillen. who went 3-for-5. followed
He hit Bonderman·s· second pitch 427 Sanchez·s RBI double in the seventh with
feet and o,·er the wall in right-center. a two-run homer. and Carlos Pena hit his
Lawton stood and admired his work. then third homer in the eighth to make it 8-7.
. Bonderman allowed seven runs and
!lipped the bat backward - hitting Ivan
RodrigueL
eight hits in 5 1-3 innings. He struck out
The' Tigers catcher angrilv kicked the six and walked three . '

"

Redwomen sweep a pair
from Urbana
RIO GRANDE The University of Rio
Grande Redwomen softball team (21-9. 5-3
AMCS) got a pair of wins by beating Urbana (5-

3.

day's tirst encounter with Eastern
being th e big winner. The Eagles
broke loose from a 3-3 deadlock
with a· five run fourth inning
before the White Falcons dosed
back 10 within one followin~ a
four run fifth. The \isitors left no
doubt as to the outcome in the
sixth as seven Eagle baserunners
found their way horne for the 15-7
victory.
Eastern totaled 12 base hits in
notching the win with Durst driving in four runs with a double
and three singles. Myers added a
double and a si ngle with Riggs
also contributing a pair of singles
for the Eagles. Smith . smacked a
single, as did Shaffer. Morris. and
Young.
·
Wahama had seven safeties with
three of those going for extra
bases but it wasn't enough to halt
the Eastern bid at a doubleheader
split. Dustin Vickers was the orily
Falcon with a multiple hit game
with a pair of singles with Jeshua
Branch stroking &lt;t triple in addition to Anthony Mitchell and
Chad Zerkle with a double apiece.

Jan Smith and Brandon Fowler
collected singles in the second
game of the 'baseball outing for
Wahama.
Goeglien picked up the win for
Ea;tern with Smith garnering the
save.' Branch took the loss for
WHS with Luca&gt; Litchfield.
Brenton Clark. Jeremy Smith and
Brandon Hodge also seeing action
on the hill for the White Falcons.
The Falcons spring record
moved to 3-5 on the 2004 season
as vetera n Wahama coach Gordon
Spencer edges closer to his 500th
career victory at the Bend ' Area .
School. WHS is slated to visit
South Gallia on Wednesday and
play host to Calhoun County on
Friday before closing out the week
with a two game set at Wirt
County on Satu~day.
Game--1

Wahama.11 , Eastern t
Eastern
100 000
1 3 3
Wahama ' 071 003 11 13 2
V1ckers , Sayre (4) and Rite, Stafford (5)
Semeleberger. Shaffer (2} and Durst. , WP· V1ckers. LP - Semclsberger.
Game-2

Eastern 15, Wahama 7
Eastern
111 507 0
15 12 4
Wahama 111 040 0
7 7 2
Branch L Litchfield (4), Clark (6). Smith (6),
HoOge (7) ana Rlfe. Goeglien . Smith (5) and
Durst WP - Goeglien. LP - Branch . S Smith.
'

Red men
from Page 81
pitched well enough to get the win.
He allowed five runs in· 5 2/3
innings with five strikeouts and six
walks.
The losses ended a 16-game
home-winning streak for the
Rcdmen that dates back to. last season.
Rio Grande will look to regroup
as they step out of con ference on
April 22 to host Ohio Valley
College. The two squads squar~d
offApril6 in Parkersburg, WV, with
the Redmen winning 3- 1.

Redmen take a pair
from Tiffin Saturday
RIO GRANDE- The University
of Rio Grande Redmen baseball
team kept pace with the upper echelon of ' !he American Mideast
Conference South Division winning
two games from visiting Tiffin on
Saturday. 7-6 and 7-0.
Rio Grande (31- 12, 10-4 AMCS)
twice came from behind to capture
the first game. The Redmen jumped
out to a 2-0 lead in the first inning

on a solo home run off the bat of
junior center fielder Scott Peterman
and an RBI knock by Marcus
Gool sby.
, Tiflin ( 13-24. 4-14 AMCS) took a
3-2 with three runs in the second
frame. The Dragons touched up Rio
starter Brent Watterson for four
straight hits after two batters were
retired. Justin Wagner scored ~yan .
Rammel with an opposite tield single to right and Mike Schmidt rattled the fence, scoring Mike Griffie
and Wagner with a double .
Senior shortstop Brent Ewing
clubbed his tirsr home run of the
· season · with a two-run shot in th e
home second to give Rio a 4-3 lead .
The score remai ned the same until
the sixth inning when Tiffin plated
three runs to lead 6-4. The Redmen
committed three errors contributing
to the Dragon rally. Wagner had the
big hit with a two-run double.
Rio would tie the score at 6-6 in
the bottom of the sixth when
Michael Branon reached on a twobase error with the bases loaded.
Goolsby then gave himself a special birthday gift, delivering a
game-winnin g single through. an
drawn-in infield in th e bottom of the
seventh to give the Redmen the
' thrilling win.
Goolsby went 2-for-4 with two
RBI , Peterman was 2-for-3 ,with two

runs scored. including the game
winner. Kris Schuler also . had two
hits with a walk and a run scored.
Chad Wolfe got the win in relief.
Wolfe (4-0) pitched two. innin~ s.
giving two hits with one strikeout
and two walks. Watterso n lasted
five inninc s. scattering nine hits and
yielding six run s (four earned).
Wagner led the Dragons with a 3for-4 Jay and three RBI.
Rio broke open a pitcher's duel in
game two on the strength of a fiverun lifth inning . Schu ler led the
inning off with a long home run to
right 'field. Ewing and freshman
Nate Chau added RBI singles in the
decisive inning and Charlie Kabealo
lifted a sacrifice tly that scored a
run.
Goolsby got the scoring started in
the home first inning , knocking
home .Schu ler with two outs . Chau
scored the other Rio run in the
fourth. after reaching base on an
error he later scored on a wild pitch
off Tiffin starter and loser Nate
Long (2-3)
· Kevin Hale got stronger as the
game went on and held the Dragons
to three harmless singles. Hale .(8-3)
went six innings of shutout baseball.
striking out six and walking three.
Junior southpaw Justin Ros s-Walker
closed out the game with a perfect
seventh.
·

PAID ADVERTISEMENT

Wallace
from Page 81
April 29. 2001, at California
Speedway - was hi' seventh
at Martinsville and enabled
him to break a tie with Lee
Petty and take over sole pos. session of eighth on the career
victories Iist.
Labonte knew his odds of
winfjing weren't good with
Wallace ahead.
"Seriously. catching somebody here and passing them i.,
two different thin~s." Labonte
said. ''We had
great run
today and we wi ll take this.''
Dale Em·nhardt Jr. linishcd
third and Johnson was founh.
giving Chevrolet the next
three spots on. the grid behind
Wallace's Dodge.
.
" I just love this race track.''
Earnhardt said after his fifth
strai!lht top-live; finish on the
V1rgmta track. ·1 want to wrn
here so bad I can '1 stand il. ..
Earnhardt took the lead in
the season standing,. live
points ahead of Kurt Bu,ch
and 12 in front of defending
champion Mall Ken,eth ..
'
Johnson, ..u sittin~ duck ..
according to new clucf Chad
Knaus after ducking in like he
was going to pit whh-ttbmtt-1-&gt;5
laps to go. then staying nut
while aJJ· the leader; piltcd.
said he was surpri.scd to he lqft
alone .
"We reall y thouuht that

a

~orne more were goi rlg to "tay

the

N.fill~r~tht6him,Bt

•

at

.

Finally. Rio put some insurance runs on the
board with another two spot in the sixth. Annie
Tucker led off the inning with a single. She later
scored on a wild pitch. An. RBI single by Emily
Cooper scored the other run.
In game two Urbana got on the scoreboard first
on some fine hitting by Tiffany Trainer. That two
base hit set up .an RBI doubl~ by Abbra Massey
that scored Trainer. Following Massey's double
was Bobbie Jones with a RBI single plating
Massey.
In the bottom of second inning Rio put an eight
spot on The Lady Knights. Olding got thin gs started off with a walk. She ended up sct•ring on a wild
pitch. Jones. '~ho was on base. scored on an RBI
single by Annie Tucker. Tucker scored on a RBI
single by Cooper. !Vista Tucker had a RBI single
that scored Michele Dettwiller followed by an RBI
sacritice tlv from Lauren McQuin that scored
Che.valier. Not to be outdone was the stellar bat of
Jones who scorched an RBI single to &lt;&gt;core Cooper
and tinally Olding. Krista Tucker scored on an
RBI double by Conn.
In innings three and four Urbana put three more
on the boltrd thaoks to · a two-run hoti1e run by
Marissa Rose nberger and an RBI double that
brought home Katie Mallet. That is all the visitor&lt;;
could seem to get otT starting pitcher Stephanie
Broccolo who improved her record go to 9-6 on
the season.
The Redwomen were not done with the bats just
yet. They tacked on some more run s in the fifth
and sixth innings that would seal the \'ictory to get
two much needed wins to stay alive for the
American Mideast Conference playoffs. Jones was
the ditTerence in both games as she had the hot bat
going 6-for-7 from the plate and produced four
RBI on the day.

min·or and saw them coming
but we were having a discus_,ion on the radio and felt like it
wou ld be best to stay out.''
Newman emerged second
after taking just ri ght-side
tires. and Earnhardt was third
with Wallace 1ight behind him
on the restan.
.. It was ha,ically a mi,take,"
Knaus said.
The hole on the track. 2-tn-3
inches deep. hun Jeff Gord.on
more than anyone. Running
second behind Earn hardt and
with u car capable of winning, Gordon was forced to
make repeated pit stops for
repair; under ye llow and
dropped to 22nd in the field.
He rallied to finish sixth.
.. It was unfortunate the
racetrack came apart. I hear
they are going to repave it. I
gue-..~

we were just one race

earl \ ... Gordon said.
··(t definitely took away
anv chance we had of winnitig. but I gue» that is part
of it. You hate to have a race
,Jip away from you like
that."
Gordon Maned from the
pole far the third consecutive
race on the 0.526-mile oval
and was 'eeking hi' third consecuti 'e victory here.
Newman was fifth. abo in a
Dodge, followed by Gordon.
Jamie McMurmy. Kcnscth.
Sterling Marlin and Dale
Jarrett.
Tile race W&lt;h ,]owed II
.time' for 106 htl" hy &lt;:.tution.
rncluding tht: six laps before
and the II lap' after the
repair' to the trac~ wcrr made.

Unclaimed Vehicles To Be
Set Free in Gallipolis
Unclaimed Auction, repossessions, lease returns and other used vehicles to be let go
at ft~ck bottom prices; Five days only at Norris Northup Chrysler Dodge Jeep
By Todd MiChaels
Automotive Corrcspo nc.lcn l

GALL.IPOLIS, OH -A
unigue opportunity takes
place this week for consumers in the market for
cream of the crop used vehicles.
This Wcdnesd~y. April
21st through Sunday, Apri I
25th , Norris North~p
Chrys ler Dodge Jeep - in
cooperation with Fleet Liquidators of America - is
hosting what may be the
greatest five-day sale in the
history of Ohio . Over 173
unclaimed and other used
vehicles arc being offered
direct to the public at rock. bottom prices.
Mike Northup of Norris
Northup Chrysler Dodge
Jeep stated ... For those in
the market for a great used
car. th.is will certainly be
the best time to buy. For a
$59 down payment• plus
tax. title &amp; fees. then start
making payments. customers can get intu the quality

unclaimed or other used vehicle of their choice at absolute rock bottom prices.
This is a once-in-a-lifetime
ey.cn t , so adjust your
sChedule s and make room
for this five-day event."
While unclaimed andrepossessed vehicles arc
some of the most so ught
after vehicles in the usedcar marker today, th &lt;!y are
also the most difficult veh icles for the public to
come by. But, as Mr.
Northup said, "Thi s may
be the only time ·these vehicles will be offered to the
public. We have obtained
these vehicles with the intent of passing the great
savings on to the customer."
Almost every type of vehicle and price range wi II be
available, from luxury 4x4s
to basic transportation.
Many arc even still under
warranty.
"We've made it easy for
you. We'll mark the pay-

ments right on the windshield. Ju st pick your ve- ·
hicl c and pick your payment. You won't find a
faster, eas ier way ·to purchase a great pre-owned
car." stated Mr.-Northup.
Extra sa le s and finan ce
staff wil l be on hand to ass ure customers prompt ,
quality service and th e best
finance terms possible.
Mr. Northup said, "We'll
have over $3 million in financing available for thi s
event, so chances arc we

can arrange financing for
just about anyone who is
employed."
Trade-ins will be accepted. and customers
should bring thctr title or
payment book to expedite
delivery.
"The Ohio bargain-hunt·
ers dream come true happens this Wednesday
through Sunday at Norris
Northup Chrysler Dodge
Jeep. Every unclaimed,
fleet and other used vehicle

$59 DOWN*
UNCLAIMED
VEHICLE RELEASE
INFORMATION:
LOCATION:
Norris Northup
Chrysler Dodge ~eep
252 Upper River Rd.Gallipolis • (74) 446.0842

DAYS AND TIMES:
Wednesday, April21
. 9am -Bpm
Thursday, Aprll22
9am-Bpm
Friday, April 23
9am·Bpm
Saturday, April24 ·
9am-7pm
Sunday, April25
_Noon - 6pm
First-&lt;:orne, first served. No dealers wholesalers allowed.
is just $59 then starr making
payments. • Customers may
never sec savings like this
again," said Mr. Northup.
A ftcr the $59 Down Unclaimed Vehicle SuperSale ends
at 6:00p.m. on Sunday, April
25th , many of these vehicles
will be sent to auction. Any
questions can be dircc_tcd to
(740) 446-0842. Sec the box
above for more information.

•Au offers with approved credit. $59 plus tax, title &amp; fees. Additional down payment may be required for credit approval. ··E·xampte: 1999
Pontiac Grand Am . Sale Price $3174 . $79/mo for 48 mos. @ 10.0% APR. $59 down payment, for a total of $59 down plus tax. title and
fees. Total amount financed $3115 plus tax . Subject to credit approval &amp; lenders final approval. ©2003 G&amp;A Marketing, Inc. Unclaimed
vehicles refer to used vehicles currently wilhout a binding offer.

Appeals ·court blocks
Clarett from entering NFL
Draft this weekend, Bt

Southern girls cniSh

11. 1-5 AMCS) 6-1 and 10-5 Saturday afternoon at
Stanley Evans Field.
ln game one Rio got on the board tirst in the bottom of the third inning on a two out Jenny O!dm£
single that led to a two-run homerun by Brandt
Jones.
In inning five the Redwomen put two more on
the scoreboard. Krista Tucker led the inning off
with a walk and ended up scoring due to an RBI
double off the hot bat of Jones. Jone s later scored
on a delay steal before Amy Conn was tagged out.
In the top of the sixth inning Urbana got thmgs
going with a two out triple by Katie Mallet. She
ended up scoring on an RBI ;ingle by Bobbie
Jones to put the Lady Blue Knights on the board.
That run was all they could earn off staning pitcher Andrea Lotycz who improved her record to 12-

Middleport • Pomeroy., Ohio

Meig~

SPORTS
• Dillon traded to Pats.
.SeePageB1

BY

County unemployment rate stands at 16 percent

J. MtLES

Th~l\employmeht rdte in February gains in the past several m,onths .

lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - At 16 percent,
Meigs County has the second highest
unemployment rate in the state of
Ohio for March, beat out only by
Morgan County at 18.8 percent.
Ohio's rate fell slightly to match
the U.S. unemployment rate of 5. 7%.
but , according to the Ohio
Department of Jobs and Family
Services. only because frustrated job
seekers gave up looking for work.
Meanwhile. the majority of counties in Ohio remain well above the
statewide level. and nine counties
had unemployment rates above I0%.

for Metgs County was 17.5 percent.
Acconlin!\ to Meigs County Jobs and
F,amtly Services Director Mike Swtsher.
employmeAt !\~ were mamly m the
servtce sector, ~htle manufactunng
employment remained unchanged.
"Unemployment is declining. but
we sull have a double digit unemployment rate:.· he said ...1 think
when State Route 33 is lini shed: it
wtll allow for more development.·
Swisher said 50 percent of the
workforce in Meigs County commutes to neighboring counties for
work. While -Meigs County may
have a higher than average unemployment rate. neighboring counties
like Athens or Gallia have shown job

Perry Varnadoe. director of the
Meigs
County
Economic
Development Office. said the spike
m unemployment is a seasonal thing.
He also satd a bad_ state and national
economy has allected everything.
Despite this. recent construction projects could mean beuer and more
jobs in the future.
Varnadoe cited the spec building in
Tuppers Plains which cou ld anract
jobs to Mei gs County. Also. there are
a lot of construction projects in the
near future which Varnadoe said
include several commercial buildings.
Tentatively. there is a hotel planned
for construction at the site of the .old
Pomeroy Junior High and KFC -Long

John Sill-er, will be building a new
restaurant in the very near future.
While the unemployment numbers
are di\Couraging. they trul y do not
paint an accurate picture- of the
unemployment problems facing
Mt;jg&gt; County. Keith Rader. director
of the Meigs Cooperati,·e Parish.
said there are a ·number of people
who'e unemployment benetits haw
ended and they are not now considered pan of these labor statistics. He
said the number of people requesting
food from the parish has increased.
Rader said the parish ·distributed
food ba;ket' to more than 750 people
ion December. The · Parish provided
mote than 1-l!O adults. 8-52 children.
or 784 households with food last year.

New Powell's supermarket to open Mid-May
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEil@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Lo'ITERIES

from Page 81

111

In the top of the founh inning The Lady Blue
Falcons got on the board. Nicholette D'Ambrosia
scored on a delay steal and Amanda Stewart
crossed t~e plate on an error by Annie Tucker. That
is all Notre Dame could muster off starting pitcher
Andrea Lotycz who improved to 13-3 on the season
In the bottom of the tifth and· sixth innifg Rio
added some uisurance runs to seal the game one
\'ictory. In inning five Rio got a double off the bat
of Amy Conn. She was later replaced by Stephanie
Flowers .. who ended .up scoring on a RBI double
by Kristen Chevalier. In the sixth inning Krista
Tucker doubled and scored on a two base-hit bv
Olding. Olding then scored on a double by Conn to
put the game away for good.
In game two it was Rio once again scoring first. ·
Krista Tucker got a one out W;llk in the inning and
later scored on a wild pitch. Annie Tucker re&lt;!ched
on an error, which scored McQuin and Olding to
jump on top. 3-0.
In inning three Cnoper led off with a single. stole
second and the hot bat of Olding brought her
around with a single.
In the top of the fifth inning Notre Dame got on
the board as Becky Waldo scored on a wild pitch.
That would be the only run the Blue Falcons
.
would get in the game.
The Redwomen put up some insurance runs in
inning five as Krista Tucker &lt;&gt;tarted off with a walk
and was brought around once again by Olding.
Olding scored on a RBI double by Conn.
Hardman. who replaced Conn. and Annie Iucker
scored on a RBI double off the bat of Michele
Denwiller.
Stephanie Broccolo picked up the win to
· improve to I0-6.on the year and McQuirt came in
to pick up the save in three ·innings of relief work.
Rio now owns a six-game winning streak.
Next up for the Rio will be at Mount Vernon
Nazarene College on April 20. Game time is set
for 4:00 p.m.

'

Eagles

out." he 'aid. "I looked

Monday, Apri119. 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio
Pick 3 day: 5-9-3
Pick 4 day: 7-3-5-5
Pick 3 night: 2-4-8
Pick 4 night: 1-S-6-8
Buckeye 5: 16-18-24-3(}.34

West VIrginia
Dally 3: 2-7-7
Daily 4: 9-3-8-0
Cash 25: 3-6·14·22·23·24

INSIDE
• Time Out for Tips. See
Page A3
• Community briefs. See
Page A3
• Community calendar.
See Page A3

WEATHER

POMEROY
New
refrigerators and shelving
are in place and groceries
are going on shelves at the
former Kroger store in
Pomeroy • . as preparation
continues for the May opening of Powell's Foodfair.
The Powell family of
Pomeroy and Fooh Foods. Inc.,
Huntington, WVa., continue
renovation and stocking work
at the supi:rrnarkel location on
Ea&lt;;t Main St., in hopes of a
mid-May opening date, accon:ling to Tun Fonh, President of
Forth Foods, the wholesaler
which now supplies . Powell's
Super-Valu downtown. The
local grocers and Forth Foods
have tonned a pannership
allowing the move from the
9,000 square-foot store downtown to the 36,000 sql13TC-foot
store vacated in November by
the grocery giant Kroger.
The Pomeroy store will be
the eleventh Foodfair outlet,
Forth said, and will offer a
complete grocery line. a full
deli and other services,
including a pharmacy.
"We're now in the
process of recruiting a pharmacist," Forth said. "The
pharmacy may not be available to customers on opening day, but it will eventual ly be a part of our store."
The store's owners plan to
keep the same pricing structure - that is, the same retai I
prices ~ as in the current

J.

Bv BRt-N
REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Bob Haggy, a stocker at the new Powel l's Foodfa ir in Pomeroy, is one of the first of the
store's new employees to begin work. Haggy was a long-time Kroger employee, but when
the Pomeroy store closed , he was transferred to Marietta, a 100-mi te drive which he said
made it nearly impossible to continue working for the grocery chain . He wil l join 50 to 60
employees at the new Powell 's location. (Brian J. Reed)
store on Second Street, Fonh
Fonh said he has begun to app li cati ons. and we've_
said, but ·in a brighter and hire employees for the new . hired some stock people
more spacious sales space.
store. In . addition to the 20 and management personnel.
"Except for the interior sig- employees of the current but most of the hiring is still
nage, everything the customer Super-Valu store, another 30 to 10 come," Forth said .
sees here at the new Powell's 40 will be needed to fully staff "Those with particular job
store wjU be new," Fonh said. the bigger store. Lee Powell, ski lls who haven't yet
In addition to new case work manager of Powell's Super- applied are encouraged to
and shelving, the store will have Valu, said the store has received do so, but most of the hiring
will be done from applicanew flooring, new checkouts nearly 450 applications.
tions
already received."
and a newly-paved parldng lot
"We 've received plenty of

Fourth District Appeals candidates spend
thousands more than previously reported

Dotolla on Pace A6

BY

J. MtLES

LAYTON'

JLAYTON@MYDA ILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX
:l SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

Calendars

A:3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A6

Editorials
Sports

B~

Weather

A6

© 2004 .Ohio Valley Publlohtnx Co.

POMEROY Follow
the money is more th an just
a slogan m politics or journalism.
Prior to the post primary
campaign expense re~ort
tiled April 9 at the Scmto
Board of Elections, it
appeared that Fred Crow III
had outspent his competi·
tion ,by a 10 to I margm in
the race against four other
Republican candidates for
the Fourth District Court of
Appeals. In Craw's pre-primary expense report tiled
Feb. ·19, he reported
$49,799 in expenditures.
Crow's
competition

Unclaimed funds
posted today

reported a fraction of this
including
the
winner,
Matthew Mcfarland .
Granted, the last few
weeks of any campaign are
usually the most expensive,
but every judicial candidate
. except Crow ·increased
spending nearly tenfold in
tile two weeks leading up to
the March 2 primary.
McFarland ·reponed -only
$5,610 in expenditures in
pre-primary expense report,
but his post campaign
expenditure report indtcates
that he spent an additional
$55,961 a total of
$61,571 which is the most
of any primary candidate
for this position. McFarland
loaned himself the bulk ·of

this money or $45, I00 after
the pre-primary expense
report was tiled. McFarland
has $21,425 in outstanding
debts to his campaign.
In a mere two weeks,
McFarland, a magistrate in
Scioto County, spent more
than $33,000 on mass mail"
ings
from
Strategic
Communications. He also
paid more than $21.188 to
the
Communication
Council who attempted . to
canvas votes from thousands of people via telephone. None of these
exp.:nditures were listed in
the pre-primary cam pai gn
expenditure report just a

Ple8SI SH Spend. A5

POMEROY - Does the
State of Ohio owe you money''
A Iist of .unclaimed funds
published in Tuesday's edition of The Daily Sentinel
inc ludes $193. 155.82. representing fund s in dormant
bank accounts. forgotten rent
and utility deposits. uncashed
checks and forgotten layaway
deposits - a ll belonging to
Meigs County residents.
In the past year. more than
$47.625 was turned over to
the Ohio Department of
Commerce's Division of
Unclaimed Funds. representing unclaimed funds for
Meigs Count y residents.
Those who find their name on
the list published today can
begin the process of claiming
their rnonev at the Division of
Unclaimed-Fu nds· website, at
www.com.state.oh .us. or by
submitting a claim co upon in
the newspaper advertisement.
When the divisiun receives
the coupon, a claim form will
be mailed. asking the
claimant for evidence supporting the claim.
..The
Di,·ision
of
Unclaimed Funds paid a
record $43.4 million last fiscal year to more than 36.000
current or former Ohioans:·
said Lt. Gov. Jennette
Bradley, director of the
Department of Commerce.
Thi s vear's unclaimed
fund s list for Meigs County
includes 2.005 accounts.

Slip necessitates full closure
of Ohio 124 near Antiquity ·
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MY DAI LYSENTI NEL. COM

POMEROY - State Route
124 (formerly State Rou te
338) in the Antiquity area
approximately 2.5 mi les east
of Racine. has been closed to
Ohio
all
traffic,
the
Department of Transportation
(ODOT)
District
I0
an nollnced Monday.
Stephanie Filson. ODOT
public information officer,
said that c Iasure of the road
was necessitated as the result
of a severe slip that has displaced pavement in the vicinity. The affected section of
roadway is 500 to 600 feet in
length, she reported.

··we have seen significant
rmwement at this location - a
drop of up to 18 inches in
some areas- and it continue s
to move,
said Filson .
"Mei gs County ODOT crews
were on site all weekend in
an effort to keep the road
open for motorists. At thi s
time. however. the department has decided to detour
traffic in order to protect the
safety of the traveling public."
The following detour is
posted for area motorists: the
new U.S : 33 (Ravenswood
Connector) to State Route
124 West.

Please see Slip, A5

\

Footprints to Footsteps
A special celebration lor molhers and lheir babies who
hove been delivered at l:folzer during 2003.
·
Sunday, April 25, 2004 • 2 PM • 4 PM
Holzer Medical Center Education &amp; Conference Center

Gifts for Mom and Baby • Educational Information
Professional Photographer Available • Door Prizes • Refreshments

For more information, or to RSVP, please coli 1740) 446·5077 by April 2Jrd

Holzer Medical Center and Holzer Clinic

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holze1· Difference

www .holzer .org

�.

•
•

·page.A2

REGION .,

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, April2o, 2004

BY KANDY BoveE
KBOYCE@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

POINT PLEASANT · _
Three inmates from the Lakin
Correctional Facility for
Women spoke to students at
Point
·Pleasantlending
High School
Wednesday,
some
ersuasion
to
the
Prom
P
Promise pledges students
signed.
The pledges are part of the
week-long activities in which
students promise not to drive
while under the inlluence of
drugs or alcohol.
Monica, Stacy and Lori _
whose last names were not
revealed _ told students their
stories and how they had
ended up in prison because of·
their disregard for the Jaw.
Not only did they have to
serve sentences for their
crimes. They were punished
far worse by the memoriesmemories that they killed
innocent victims while in a
drug or alcohol-induced state.
Monica said that she woke
up from a coma days after the
accident to lind out that she
had killed her best friend,' a
passenger in her vehicle.
"When I tried to call her

house after the a~~ident. her
grandmother told me that I
was an alcoholic monster.''
Monica said. "( guess that"s
when it hit me, what I had
done."
Stacy said that she was a
typical mother who drove a
minivan. owned a big house
and drove her children to
school- with one difference.
She had a problem with alcohoi.
"I hadn't had much to drink
that day. but I nodded off and
hit another car. The victim. a
21-year-old student who was
home from college visiting
his parents. was making a
Taco Bell run with a friend.
"He was killed and his
friend was badly injured. His
pareJlts didn't get to.say goodbye. The last time they saw
him was to identify his body:· .
Stacy said.
Stacy said that her own chitdren are living with their dad
while she is in prison. She
only gets to see them once a
month.
"It's hard. but the hardest
part is living with the pain
I've caused other innocent
people." Stacy said.
Mason County Circuit
Judge Davi~ Nib~rt said t~at
most people don t re.cogmze
how small the am?unt ot alcohoi or drugs It takes to
become legall-y drunk or
drugged and affect judgment.
only takes one beer, one
dnnk, one wme-cooler, one
p1ll or one c1garette 1f you are
under the age of 21 ," Nibert
said.
Nibert said highway accidents are the leading cause of
deaths for people ·under the
age of 35 and encouraged students to keep their promise

:·Jt

...r

that they pledged.
"I hope that you will carry
thut promise on to graduation.
Let"s all be safe, so we're all
living in June 2004." Nibert
said.
Lori said that her problem
was with drugs. but she also
drank.
"It started by smoking marijuana when I was 12 with my
friends to be cool and fit in.
By the age of 15. I was out of
control. I skipped school,
shoplifted,' ran away from
home. I was a mess." Lori
said.
Lori said her parents turned
her over to the state because
they realized they couldn't do
anythin£ with her. She was
sent to 'a group )lome. then a
shelter, then rehabilitation,
but she .Lust got worse.
BY th e t"lme she was 18· her
drug habit had escalated to
include huffing •. taking .pain
killers. PCP. Oxycontin . . Lori, an inmate from the Lakin Correctional Facility for Women. addressed students at Point·
crack. cocaine. LSD. anything Pleasant High School. Wednesday as part of 'Prom Promise week-lo ng activities. She and two
oiher inmates shared with the ·audience how they were incarcerated for causing death while
she could get her hands on.
·
"The addiction began. to under the influence. (Kandy Boyce)
take hold of me. I got so I
couldn't function unless I had year-old girl laying on the wanted to die. I couldn't get wanted to fit in and be cool.
something. My hair started ground beside my car. I said. the picture of that little girl Every decision has a consefall'ing out. My arms were all ·God, let this be a dream. This out of my mind." Lori said.
quence. Make a decision
Lori said that she is better today to be alcohol and drug- ·
bruised from the needles. I can't be · happening to me,''
now, but· she knows that the
wore. long sleeves.all the time Lori said.
free ," Lori said.
It
wasn't
a
dream,
though,
pain will never go away.
to hide it. I remember when
The assembly was part of
''I will live with her ghost
my dad saw my ar·ms - he ·and the little girl died six days
later.
for the rest of my life." Lori a week of activities precedcried," Lori said.
Lori was still in a drug- said.
Lori said she was on the
ing the prom. It was orgaLori told the students that nized
way to the pharmacy to pick hazed fog when she was senby
Prevention
taking drugs and drinking was
up
a
prescription
of tenced .
After she went to prison. fun. but soon her body could- Resource Officer David.
methadone for her mother
she was sick for weeks while n' t function without them, and Downing to encourage stuwhen her accident occurred.
''Before I left, I took two her body was cleansed of the she needed more and stronger dents to hav~ fun without
drugs.
methadone and five Oxycotin. drugs.
using controlled substances,
"I
was
dope-sick
for
weeks
.
"You think that just a little and to make a commitment
On the way, I nodded out anp
when I woke up I remember I couldn't sleep. I would weed won't hurt, but what
the steering wheel shaking in shake and tremble. I was so about when a little won't do it to remain alcohol and drugmy hands. When I got out of sick that I couldn't even anymore? My adolecense and free until the prom and
the car, I found a little 10- attempt suicide, although I a life was taken because I beyond .

.

Coming lhursdai}~ the Sentinel ...

Insurers: Ohio·market
stabilizing but more
work needed
·
COLUMBUS (AP) -The these high premiums. You
market for medical malprac- have invested poorly," said
tice insurance in Ohio .is Nein, a former insurance brobecoming less volatile. but ker.
Clinton said his company's
insurers are still struggling to
stay solvent, the heads of five losses were becau.se of skycompanies told a commission rocketing legal costs, not
studying
the
problem investments that amounted to
a low percentage of its spendMonday.
The five companies write ing.
"I think the myth going
more than 70 percent of the
malpractice policies for Ohio around is we lost money on
doctors. They told the Ohio the stock market," · Clinton
Medical
, Malpractice said. "We didn't invest in the
Commission that insurers are · stock marke.t."
Nein asked the executives
less wary of the state since it
passed limits on what for their opinion of a bill now
patients can receive for pain in his Senate Insurance
Commerce
&amp;
Labor
and suffering.
"The Ohio market is Committee that would place
becoming a much more sta- a one-year freeze on most
ble environment. I don' t medica] malpractice insurthink we' re going to see the ance premiums. None said
upheavals we saw in the they would. pu II out of the
1990s," said R. · Kevin state but all said they had
Clinton, ·president of the reservations. .
"We would not invest capiAmerican
Physicians
tal i9 Ohio if we were .not
Assurance Corp.
From 1995 through 2003, able to set our own rates,"
Clinton's company had $139 said Timothy Kenesey, presimillion in insurance losses in dent of Medical Protective
Ohio, he said. However, he Co.
The commission's chairadded that the caps on jury
awards will make forecasting woman, Ohio Department of
profits and losses in the state Insurance Director Ann
Womer Benjamin, said ·the
easier.
The
five
executives, problem of doctors leaving
though, said they were wait- practice or leaving Ohio is
ing for the .Ohio Supreme alarming and a solution must
Court to rule on the constitu- be found. She said she was
tionality of the caps, which not aware of how severe the
took etfect last year. No case problem was when Gov. Bob
has reached the high court, · Taft appointed her director in
which in 1999 struck down a December 2002.
broader law capping mal"Our most talented doctors
are finding · it increa&amp;ingly
practice claims.
All five companies report- difficult to practice in Ohio,"
ed losses from 1997 through she said. " It is an extreme!~
2002. Higher jury awards complex issue, one T didn t
have led to the removal of appreciate."
The commission held its
some doctors from so-called
quality coverage and forced lOth meeting since its crethem to seek coverage with ation by the Legislature last
higher premiums, the execu- year. A future meeting will
focus on the role of lawyers
tives satd .
"In the last four years, the in malpractice lawsuits,
average size of a medical Womer Benjamin said.
malpractice claim has gone
up by 63 percent. That's live
dollars. That's not funny
money," said Paul Butrus,
executive vice president of
Medical Assurance,
an
Alabama-based insurer.
Republican state Sen. Scott
Nein of Middletown, one of
four lawmakers who joined
The Daily Sentinel
the commission in questionSubscribe today o 992-2155
ing the executives, tried to
www.mydailysentinel.com
blame the companies' losses
on investments that went sour
with the stock markets.
"That's why we're ~eeing

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Clubs and
organizations

Social Events

Oldaker. The public is invited
'to attend.

Other events
Friday, Apri123
POMEROY - A community supper will be served
from 5:30 to 7 p.m. at the
Pomeroy church of Christ.
Everyone is invited to come to
the picnic style supper.

Support Gro~ps
Thursday, April 22
POMEROY- Caring and
sharing Suport Group will
meet at I p.m. at the Meigs
Senior Center. The topic will
be on the parish nurse program.

TIME OUT FOR TIPS
: Spring is the time of year
we often think of eggs.
They are nutritious and
ta;ty. whether eaten alone or
used in cooking. They add
color, tlavor. texture. smoothness, moistness. structure and
richness to many foods. Eggs
thick en sauces and puddings
and allow angel food cakes
and souftles. to rise. . They
coat foods before ·frying or
baking and hold il1gredients ·
\. together. as in a meat loaf.
Eggs help keep oil and
vinegar from separating in
mayonnaise. They also make
beautiful garnishes. help
broths look clear and prevent
sugar crystals from ruining
candy and cooked frosting.
Eggs are a nutrient-dense
food. A large egg only has 80
calories, but supplies high. quality protein, iron and BCcimplex vitamins. along
with Vitamins A. D, E. K.
Two eggs make one serving.
The yolk contains 30% saturated fat and 70% unsaturated
fat, along with 215 mg of
cholesterol. People who are
watching their fat and cholesterol intake should limit the
number of yolks they consume or only use egg whites.
Variations in the color of
the shell or yolk have no
effect on the nutritive value
of the egg. The shell's darkness is determined by the
breed of the. hen; the yolk's
color is coni rolled . by the
hen's diet.
·
Eggs come 111 different'
grades. They may be Grade
AA (Fancy Fresh), Grade A
or Grade B. As consumers
we can buy Grade AA or
Grade A. Both are equally
nutritious. The only difference is that Grade AA makes
a better-looking fried or
poached egg. The Grade AA
covers a smaller area, with
the yolk in the center. The
Grade A egg spreads out over
a larger area. Both are fine
for cooking and baking.
Eggs are a great buy.
They supply all of the essential· amino acids for usually
less than a $ LOO a pound. If
eggs are the same grade but

Tuesday, April 20, 2004

Community Briefs

Thursday, April 22
RACINE - The Racine
Thursday, April 22
Water Board will meet at 10
TUPPERS
PLAINS a m. at village hall cou~
VFW
Post
9053
wil meet at
chamber.
MIDDLEPORT - . The 7:30 p.m. at the hall m
Meigs
County
Health Tuppers Plains. ' here will be a
Department is sponsoring a ·special drawing.
parentmg workshop for parents and daycare providers
from 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.rn. at the
Muddleport Church of Christ
Monday, April26
Pamily .
Life
Center.
RACINE -. The Southern
Admis&gt;ion is free. Breakfast Band spring concert will be
and lunch will be ·provided held Monday, April 26 at
along with daycare fauilities. Southern High School. The
Numerous door prizes will be concert will feature music
given during the day. Register performed . by grades 4
by calling 992-6626.
·
through 12 under direction of
Band Director Jeanette

causes eggs to become tough
. and rubbery. Put eggs in a single layer in a sauce pan and
cover with one inch of water.
Bring to a boil; cover. Remove
from heat. Let stand 20 minBecky
utes. When time is up, cool
quickly
by pouring cold water
Baer
on them . This will prevem the
greenish ring from appearing
where the yolk and white meet.
Fresh eggs that are harddifferent sizes, choose the cooked are harder to peel than
larger' size if there is less than those that arc several days old.
Safety must be a primary
a seven-cent difference
concern
when using eggs . . If
between one size and the next
they
are
not
handled properly,
smaller SILe. Remember,
they
can
cau~e salmonella
though, that most baking
food poisoning. This food
recipes call for large eggs.
borne
illness causes tlu-like
Before you buy eggs, open
symptoms
and can be very
the carton to be sure that none
arc cracked. Check the expi- dangerous, For instance, do
ration date on the end of the not hide Easter eggs then
carton. Keep the eggs in their serve them. If eggs or egg
original container; large end dishes are left at room temup, in the refrigerator. Most perature for more than two
refrigerated eggs will keep hours, food poisoning can
about four weeks. Yolks will occur. Remember to keep hot
keep a day or two in the foods hot . and cold foods
refrigerator, but · a · film of cold. lf you want to eat hardwater should be placed over cooked eggs later, store them
them to keep them from dry- in the refrigerator. They will
ing out. Whites can be kept keep there for one week.
You must also be {;autious
three to five days in a covered
when preparing eggs. When ·
container in the refrigerator.
Eggs can be frozen for four you handle eggs, wash your
months. To preserve them in . hands. ulensils and cutting
this way. beat slightly and board with soap and hot
add 1/8 teaspoon salt or I _ water before· using thern
teaspoons sugar for every again. If you are not sure if
two whole ellgs or four yolks the eggs have been sitting out
to prevent thtckening. (Don't or if a raw egg has touched
forget to reduce the salt or another food, throw them out.
sugar in your recipe by that · Make sure . that both the
amount.)
Place in an ice yolks and the whites are firmcube tray ; freeze; pop out; ly cooked. Foods like pie
place in freezer bag: label meringue or French toast
and date . When needed for where the eggs may be
cooking or baking, ·thaw in undercooked, could be danthe refrigerator and use gerous to those in high-risk
immediately. If you prepare groups. such as the very
a dozen eggs by this method young, the very old, unborn
and equally pour the beaten babies and those with com eggs into an ice cube tray promised immune systems.
Never eat · raw eggs or
with twelve compartments,
you will know that each foods with raw eggs. If you
frozen egg section· is equiva- have a recipe for eggnog or
lent to one egg. Otherwise. ice cream that uses raw eggs,
three tablespoons egg equals first cook the eggs into a cusone large whole egg: one tard. Or you can use pasteurtablespoon yolk equals one ized eggs or egg substitutes.
large egg yolk.
These have been previously
Eggs should be hard-cooked, treated to prevent the spread
not hard-boiled. Overcooking of the salmonella pathogen. ·

Area Agency
to host
bereavement
teleconference
POMEROY -The Area
Agency on Aging will be hosting the Hospice Foundation of
America\
II th
Annual
National
Bereavement
Teleconference. "Living With
Grief: Alzheimer's Disease."
The program, modemtcd by
Cokic RollCns of ABC News.
will be broadca51 Wednesday,
April28, from I:30 to4JO p.m.
in the Community Room at
Wa.,hington State Community
College in Marietta.
An expert panel will discuss
what is known medically about
the diagnosis. pro•7 ression. and
treatment ot the disease:
explore some innovati vc pro-·
grams for patients and care·vers
coping
with
~ Izheimers: focus ~on the particular grief issues that patients
and families face dunng the
course of this illne ss: and
examine the challenges and
opportunities that Alzheimer's
d1sease presents to clinicians.
caregivers. hospice workers.
and policy advocates. The
panel also will discuss dementlas other than Alzheimer's.
The teleconference is fre e
to the public, Continuing
education ui1it's are avai !able
for professionals. Prior registration is reyuired to attend
and the deadline for registration is Monday.
Caregivers. health care professionals. funeral directors.
counselors. educators. cler~y
and others concerned with tne
effects of this disease are
encouraged to attend.
To register or for more.
informat1on about continuing education credits contact Mechelle Adams @ 1800-833-0830 or 374-9436.

night. There will be a vacatio~
Bible '&lt;:hool meeting ~t 5:4)
p.m. on Sunday at the church.
and the annualmother..cJauohter
banquet will be held thertat l
p.m. on May 8 carrying out the·
theme· Trea.1urefl of the Heart."
Report\ were given on the
new women\ Bible study and
the new visiting program.
Members were reminded of the
"30 pieces of silver" offering to
oo to the Christian Church in
Marietta. Final preparation\
were made tor Ea1ter Sunday
breakfast and spring cl~aning at
the church. and it -.as noted
that the care package has been
re~eived by the mis&gt;ionarv.
Visitors· lists were disuibuted
and decisions made on who will .
sent card and sunshine ha.,keh . .
Singup &gt;heets were 1 pa"ed
around for food for the junior
faculty meeting to be held at the
church camp on Mav l. ·
· Paula Pickens opened the
meeting with praver requests and
·
Hos tes.·&gt;es
· -.ere Tracy
pr.uses.
David&lt;;On w1d Misty DeWee..e
who had devr~ions Jo.:usin¥ on
Mary Magdalene. Davioson
gave the closing pmyer tor the
meeting &lt;mended by those
named'and Cherie Willi:unson
Suzie Will, Diana Maxwell.
Becky Amberger. Madeline
Painter. NevaChapmw 1. Carolyn
Nicholson. Jackie Reed. Nancy
Manis. Geny Lightfoot. Shc1ry
Smith. Geny Lighdoot and
She s1111 th
ny
·

TOPS club
honors losers
MIDDLEPORT - Several
memhcrs were honored at a
recent award cemetery of1DPS
OH 5780 of Middleport .
Among the honoree&gt; were
chapter division winners. KOPS
members. those with perfect
attendance and those members
have a weight loss tor the 2003.
For infonmation on meetings.
call Kay Grahan1. 992-7735.

April Lydia
Gardeners plan
Council Meeting flower show trip
POMEROY Several
. POMEROY - · The Vleigs
upcoming events were noted
County
Master Gardeners have
at a recent meeting of Lydia
planned
a trip to a Cincinnati
Council held in tfie activity
building at the Bradford flower show Wednesday.
The $45 coq in clude s
Church of Christ.
The Women's Fellowship . ravel by motorcoach . a stop
will meet at the Pomeroy at a garden center, admission
Church at 7 p.m. Thursday to the flower show at Coney

i,Iand. and a buffet dinner at
Ryan\. There are 10 'eat;,
available and re,ervation'
can be made "ith the
Exten1ion Office. 9lJ~-6696 .
The third annual Mcios Olunty
Ma&lt;,~er g:.utlcners ga;&amp;n pany
"a1 held Saturday &lt;d the extenlion oflice. GI.JC\t 'J:eaker wa1
Jody RaLL"-'h. owner of Radcliff
F&lt;Uln Ever:'day herb ·Co. She
talked on hcrm a' omuncntals.

Spring rally
practice held
, CHESTER - PrJCtice tar the
distric1 'pring r.tllv to be held on
May I at the ~nior Citi7.ens
Center wc~&gt;o held at a ra:ent meetin~ of Che,ter Council 323.
D:iughtm ofArTk:ric&lt;L at the hall.
Deloris Wolfe had char~e of
the meting which opencd'l'·ith
prayer. scripture find pledge to'
the American lb2 . a letter""'
read from Pat Fcllrbanb. 'tate
councilor. It was anni•unced
that. Julie Curti' had·hccn married to 1\lil'hacl FlcmminQ. A
mceti112 of the Pa'1 Councltors
Club \,·as announced and
member' were reminded tD
take hingo prizes.
l11e 92st hirthck11 of Enna
Cleland wa&gt; celebrated durin"
the srx:ial hour. She was pre»ent:
cd card' 'md a lame l'la,kcl of
.snack focxb. Rc&lt;tdin~s ·were
given hy Thelma White. Jean
Welsh. l'vlarv Jo Rarrin2er.
Esther Smitl1: and Wolle. Oti1e"
there were Ruth Smith. Doris
Grueser. In;\ Ne" ell. Laura
!\ice. Opal· Hollon. E1eren
Grant. Garv Holter. Marv
Holter. He len Wolf. Goldie
Frederick. Charlone Grant.
bther ~mit h. ;md Sandy White.

Alumni
. plan
reumon
. RUTLAND - The 75th
annual Rutland Hivh School
alumni banquet will be' held·
at the Rutland Civic Center at
6 p.m. on Saturday. May 29.
Mu~ic will be provided by
Dee and Dalh,. The dinner will:
be served by the Star Grange
778. Reservations are $15 each·
and are to be mailed to to thC:
Rutland Alumni Association,
Post Office Box 125, Rutland,
45775 by May 15. Anniversary
year reunion group' wanting
reserved seating are to cal l 7422439 or 992-5934.
.

Iii

Business Briefs

Ill UIDMIIVII 1111.
8111DIIIl8ltlll4583f

umber.
~----

Community Calendar
Publi~ meetings

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

·Inmates' stories serve as warning to prom-goers
With proms 10 be held at
Eastern High School Saturdar
night and at Meigs on May 1.
stlldems in those schools need
to hear the stories told br
. three Lakin Correctional
Facili11· inmates at a PoilU
Pleasam High Sclruol preprom assembly held lastlreek.
Kandv Borce , Point
Pleasai11
Register staff.
reported on the stories told b1·
inmates Monica. Stan and
Lori and how their disregard
for the law led to their imprisonment.

'

commissions, sponsor bonuses
and possible infinity bonuses.
Designers also enjoy the
MIDDLEPORT Jodi opportunity to win prizes,
Gill of Middleport recently awards and trips. The company
became a consultant for offers a generous hostess plan
Tastefullv Simple, Inc ., a
national direct sales company
based in Alexandria. Minn.
As a consultant and independent business owner, Gill conducts in-home presentations and
markets the compan):"s line of
gounnet foods and _gins at home
taste-testing part1es. Guests
receive samples, easy meal ideas.
recipes and serving suggestions.
The company now has over
19,000 consultants nationwide.

Joins·company .

for those wishing to host a party.
~1fon11ation about the Home &amp; .
Garden Party opportunity or produ&lt;..ts is available by calling Searls at
Route I, Box 143A, Middleport,
Ohio 457ffi. 742-3052.

Center

Joins firm
MIDDLEPORT - Bonnie
Searls of Middleport has
joined Home &amp; Garden Party.
Ltd .. a party plan bu.sines~. .
Founded on Chnstran pnnclples, Home &amp; Garden Party is
one of the fastest growmg party
plan businesses in the Ui1ited
States. The m'!iority of Home &amp;
Garden Party products are made
in the U. S. and include handturned stoneware, candles, bakeware, beautiful framed prints and
decomti ve accesSOiies to enhance
d1e beauty of every home.
Home &amp; Garden Party
Designers are independent contractors who set their own hours
and earn 30 to 40 percent in personal commissions plus ovenide

.-

Straighten Up Your Life
In April Special
To the 1st 1oo New Patients

we Offer A $25 Complete
Chiropractic Exam .

This Offer Includes:

• Private Consultation with Dr. Jones

• X-Rays: a Necessity
• Complete Orthopedic and Neurological Exams
• Contidential Report of Findings
• lst Adjustmems
• Referral to proper specialist if it is determined
chiroprac1ic can't help you.
Call or stop by our State UfThe Art
office to make ym1r appoimmenr! _

Dr. Kelly Jones
:S16 Washlnpon SL o Ravenswood, WV

304-273·5321
-

·~--·

••Lane
IIIII!
) MI.·'"'

"

�·'

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Paily Sentinel
111 Cou~ Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
. establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or ·of the press; or the right of tl1e
' people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

PageA4

VIEW

nks
Support appreiated
Dear Editor:
The employees of Kroger in Pomeroy would like to thank
· the Meigs County Commissioners for everything they have
done for us. We appreciate the support we had from them and
the community.
I am sure it helped each and every one of us in one way or
another to try to get over what Kruger did to us.
We cannot thank you enough for the help and support you
have shown. We arc proud to live in a community where there
are people who really and truly care about each other. The
community gave us great support and donations to help us
. through this time. and Jack 's Septic Tank service was a blessmg . .
I think almost every one of us were finally placed in other
Kroger stores. We thank you all so much and all our love to
all of you.

Tuesday, April

20, 2004

sheep?' says con:.ervative
bioethicist Leon Kass. His
argument is that if Dolly was a
cloned sheep - and it was then a cloned human embryo
ha' the potential to become a
human baby.
Kass. the controversial
chairman of President Bush's
Commission on Bioethics.
wa' disputing the claim made
But Kass, in a Webcast I
by advocates of cloning for hosted recentJy, con tended th at
medical research that the prod· the product is identical to the
uct real ly isn't an embryo. a one which - in experiments
'life.'
with sheep. cats. mice, rabbits
I'm on their side of the bot. and goal' _ has resulted in a
tom line -cloning should go birth. Dolly, the sheep cloned
forward - but as Ka's told in England in 1996. is the first
me in an interview, 'One and most famous case.
should not try to win this arguScientists in South Korea
ment on the basis of termino- have cloned human embryos
logical sleight of hand.'
for the first time and Kass
Kass wants c;ongress to insists that. even though no
enact a morJtoriUI1) on the successful pregnancies have
research. Furtunatelv. it's occurred in primates, ·what
unlikely that will hapj)en &lt;my you gel in SCNT is an earlytime soon. but cloning is the stage human ei11bryo.
subject of a furiou s debate.
' Kil) it if you want,' Ka's
President Bush is against it. challenged. 'but don't call it
Sen. John Kerry, 0-Mass .. is just a bag of cells.'
for it.
Challenging is what Leon
Advocates of therapeutic Kass does. As a professor at
cloning, including scientific the University of Chicago and
researchers. · biotech cumpa- autho( of five books and
nies and disease groups, claim numerous articles. he chalthat so-called ·somatic cell lenges the notion that science
nuclear tmnsfer· (SCNTl does should be free to produce anynot produce a human embryo. thing it cail in the name of
Its slogan is ' no sperm. no 'progress.'
life.' an attempt to remove any
Leamed in the classics. phimoral onus from destroying losophy, literature and the
the 'entity' to harvest stem Bible. as well as science. Kass
cells for potentially lile-saving leads a movement- bmnded
research.
'neo-conservative' by its foes
Advocates contend that the - which sees a danger of
SC:"'T prbcess - involving . unbridled science producing a
removal of the nucleus from a society resembling that in
female egg and replacing it Aldous Huxley's famed 1932
with the nucleus from a donor's novel ·Brave New World.·
cell - produces ·something
In that society, people were
that has never existed before,· kept docile with mind-calming
which will never be implanted drugs, babies were manufac- ·
in · a woman and therefore tured in· artificial wombs to
should not be considered . fulfill society's needs for vari'human life.'
· ous classes of work, and no

West Nile season is here again
R.S. and prevention of secondary
M~SON COUNTY HEALTH
infections such as pneuma-

JEFFREY

R.

FOWLER,

DEPARTMENT

research on fruit flies, wonns
one wanted for anything and
mice suggest that &gt;.arneexcept their inherent human
day it might be possible to
nature.
Kass' opposition to cloning extend the maxmmm hfespan.
and his role as adviser leading meaning that ·four. five ?r six
Bush to restrict federal fund- gener.ttions mtght be altve at
ing for embryonic stem-ceii one time.'
He thinks that increased life
researi:h has led adversaries to
expectancy
and an aging socibrand him 'anti-science' and
declare he has ·a 16th' century ety already have had negauve
effects on children and have
sensibility. ·
In fact, I found him eamesl, lengthened adolescence and
scholarly. widely informed. thl\1 lifespan extenston m1ght
deeply moral and well-inten- make vigorous ·old' people
tioned. Even if he is too con- reluctant to make way for the
servative and pessimi!;tic. his young. or innovative ideas.
Moreover, he worries that.
are
certainly
concerns
'
if
people .:an look furwmu to
thought-provoking.
The exchange over SCNT living inddlnitely.they w1ll be
was part of a larger discussion. less inclin ~d to build cathe·
co-sponsored by the Alliance drals, writ~ the B-minor Mass .
for Aging Research and the or write Shakespem-e's sonAmerican Association for the nets.
· ·nme is a gift.· he said. :but
Advancement of Science as
the
prospect of endless. tune
part of its SAGE Crossroads
program: on the desirability of has the possibility of underresearch into the causes of mining our taking time seriouslv and making it count.' In
agmg.
Kas' declared. ' I am not a Greek mythology. he notes.
Luddite. I am not a hater of the immortal gods were bored
science. I esteem modem sci- and busied themselves watchence and regard it as one of the ing the purposeful activities of
great monuments to the mortals.
Kass said that his presidenhuman intellect even a' I wontial
council ha&gt; no power to set
der about some of the uses of
. the technology.'
· ·
· policy and that he would not
Kass is specifically. worried advise curbs on ag mg ·
about the consequences of sci- research. but hopes that scienentific advances that will tilic se lf-regulation might
move beyond conquering the 'somehow get control so th:n
diseases of aging
we can reap the benefits of
Parkinson 's. research without paying the
Alzheimer's.
stroke and arthritis - to con- worst costs.'
quering the aging process
Having interviewed many
itself and extending the maxi- aging researchers. I'd say that
mum human lifespan from their ability to extend the
I00 years to 130 or 150.
human lifespan is not immiPublic health and medical . nem- particularly given curdiscoveries increased average rent funding priorities - and
life expectancy in the United that Kass' concerns are largely
States from 47 years in 1900 to speculative. But he's a deep
79 today. and scientists estimate thinker and they are fascinat·
that if the diseases of aging ing to contemplate.
(Monon Kondracke is execwere cured. life expectancy
could go to 90 or so.
utive editor of Roll Call, the
But genetic and biochemical newspaper of Capitol Hill. J

---:-.- - - : - - - - - - - You can help reduce the
POINT PLEASANT
number of mosquitoes in
With spring knocking at our your community by simply
door. we once again must eliminating standing water.
focus our attention to the where mosquitoes breed .
• Dispose of any waste
ongoing threat of West Ni1e
':'ims. West Nile encephali- that could hold water. such
Its IS an mflammation of the as cans. containers and tires.
brain caused by the mosqui• Drill holes in the bottom
lo-borne West Nile virus. of trash receptacles and
WNV is a close relative of recycling .bins. ·
•. Clean your home's roof
St. Louis encephalitis and
first appeared in New York gutters frequently, and check
City in .l999. It is not known storm drains and . window
how the .virus entered the
United States.
wells.
WNV
is
transmined
• Empty standing water
from boats, trailers, toys.
through the bite of a mosqui- wheelbarrows and pots.
to that is carrying WNV Tum thetn over when not in
Mosquitoes become infected use .
with the virus by biting a
• Do not allow water to
wild bird that has the virus.
Though birds are the prima- stagnate in swimming pools.
ry host of w Nv, it is not water gardens. ornamental
· or
birdbaths .
d
pool s
transmine directly from Ornamental pools should be
birds to people. or through aerated or stocked with fi sh.
person-to-person contact.
Swimming pools should be
majority of people
who are infected with WNV cleaned and chlorinated
show no symptoms. Some when not .in use.
may experience mild sick- · • Inspect and change the
ness, headache . or fever landscape of your property
before making full recovery. to eliminate any standing
However. WNV can cause water. Remember that in
serious disease that affects warm weather. mosquitoes
the brain in some individu- can breed in any puddle of
als. particularly the elderly. water. even a teaspoonful.
This disease can cause
Now that you've eliminatpermanent
neurological ed the mosquitoes' breeding
damage. resulting in death.
grounds, here are some ways
Symptoms of WNV infec- to protect yourself from
tion can be as mild as being bitten by a mosquito.
headache.
slight fever.
• Inspect all window and
swollen lymph glands. rash, door screens to be sure
or as severe as high fever. they're "bug tight''.
• Stav indoors at the times
disorientation. still neck.
muscle weakness. paralysis. when inosquitoes are most
coma or death.
prevalent - morning, dusk
WNV has no spec itlc ther- and early evening. When
apy or treatment. To date. you are outdoors. cover up ·
there are no prophylactic with long pants and a longtreatments such as vaccines sleeved shirt.
·
to protect against infection.
• Use insect repellents.
However, the sy mptoms and Repellents deter mosquitoes
complications
resulting from biting when applied
from infection· can be treat- properly to exposed skin and
ed. ·
clothing.
In severe cases. intensive
For more information
supportive therapy is need- about protecting yourself
ed, such as hospitalization and your family against
and nursing care. airway mosquitoes , contact the
management and respiratory Mason
County
Health
support. intravenous fluids Department at675-3050.

BY

and wink ... He's such a
joy."
_G_A_L_L_I_P_O_L_I_S___T_w
__
o
Hemsley was born 12·

..REALLY?
YOU'RE A
SCOUT?

Despite Bush's warning, can we trust Sudan?

H(ER.
~

2004 ,bY NEA , Inc.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley
·Our main concern in all stories is to be

(UsPs 213-960)

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~----------------------------~

Finally. attention is being
paid to the killings, rapes and
other evils of genocide in the
Darfur region of Sudan. After
only mildly rebuking Sudan
President Omar al-Bashir on
March 22, President Bush told
him on April 7 that the
Sudanese government 'must
immediately stop local militias
from committing atrocities
against the local population
and must provide unrestricted
access to humanitarian aid
agencies. I condemn these
atrocities.'
,
And U.N. Secretary-General
Kofi Annan, after these atrocities had .been going on for 14
months. expressed . 'a deer.
sense of foreboding' on Apnl
7. 'The international commu·
nity cannot stand idle.'
If the National Islamic Front
government keeps banning
humanitarian workers from
Darfur. Annan said that 'the
international community must
be prepared to take switi and
appropriate action. By 'action'
in such situations I mean a
continuum of steps, which
may include military action.'
Because of this pressure, on
April 8, a 45-day cease-fire
was arranged between the
Sudanese government and two
rebel groups. the Sudan
Uberation Movement and the
Justice
and
Equality
Movement.
But t~ Sudanese government has continually broken
il&gt; agreements, and accordingly, international vigilance and
pressure must be maintained .
Even now, the U.S . State
Department reports continuing
aerial bombardment and other
military actions. encouraged
by the Sudanese government,

·

Nat
Hentoff

following the cease-ftre.
Meanwhile in Congress,
Virginia Republican · Frank
Wolf, who for years has personally visited countries to
report on human rights abuses,
has introduced a concurrent
resolution in the House 'condemning the . Government of
the Republic of Sudan for its
attacks against innocent civilians in the impoverished
Darfur region of western
Sudan.' The resolution stands
as he monitors the questionable cease-ftre.
Wolf has been joined on the
Senate side by Kansas
Republican Sam Brownback,
who has also been vigorously
involved in protesting human
rights crimes in a number of
countries. He went to southern
Sudan to interview Christian
and animist black slaves who
had been rescued from their
Arab masters in the North.
In focusing on the crimes
against
black
non-Arab
Muslim farmers in Darfur by
the · Ardb · Muslim Janjaweed
militia - supported by the
Sudanese government - the
Wolf-Brownback resolution
charges that Sudanese government forces have 'engaged in
the use of mpe as a weap&lt;)n,
alxlucted children. destroyed
food and water systems and

burned villages.'
'Nearly 3 million people are
beyond the reach of aid agencies trying to provide assistance, and mortality rates in
the Darfur region are catastrophic- possibly as high as
1.000 per week. There is no
question that the Sudanese
government is complicit in
these attacks and they must be
held responsible.'
Doctors Without Borders the Nobel Peace Prize-winning medical humanitarian
relief organization - reported
that the region is the scene of
'catastrophic mortality rates.· '
Wolf tells me that if these
atrocities are not definitively
ehded - and conftrmed by
aJ lowing international human
rights workers on the scene he and Brownback plan to go
to Darfur to see for themselves, and to help brinjl media
coverage of this genoc1de.
Also calling world attention
to Darfur is Samantha Power.
who won a Pulitzer Prize for
one of the most important and
haunting books of our time,
"A Problem from Hell':
America and the Age of
Genocide' (HarperCollins,
2003) In an April 6 New York
Times op-ed, she wrote that
Sud.an ' ts desperate to see
American sanctions lifted ...
' President Bush must use
American leverage to demand
that the government in
Khartoum cease its aerial
attacks. tem1inate its arms supplies to the Janjaweed and
punish those militta accused of
looting. rape and murder.
~The Europeans can help by
urging the Security Council to
refer the killings to the newly
~ated International Criminal

-'

~

- -

....

Court. Though the United
States has been hostile to the
court, this is one move it
should not veto, as an investigation by the court could deter
future massacres.·
On April 7, Kofi Annan,
admitting his and other world
leaders' responsibility . for not
having done more to prevent
or stop the genocide (in
Rwanda)' proposed a cmcially
needed ·action plan to prevent
genocide, involving the whole
United Nations system.'
Part of the multi-dimensional plan 'calls for both the U.N.
Secretariat and the Security
Council to keep the mandates
and resources of all our peacekeeping forces under constant
review. particularly with the
threat of genocide in mind. and
to be ready to reinforce them
promptly when the need arises.' Regardless of whether the
cease-ftre in Darfur holds, thi s
plan must go forward for the
future.
·
Annan pointed out that even
now, U.N. peacekeepers 'are
no longer restricted to using
force only in self-defense.
They are also empowered (to
'protect) local civilians threatened with imminent violence.'
If that mandate had been in
place in Rwanda 10 years ago,
hundreds of thousands of lives
would have been saved.
(Nat Hentoff is a national/\·
renowned authority on t/ze
First Amendment and the Bill
of Rights artd author a/sever·
a/ books, including his current .
work,, '711e War 011 the Bill (J[
Rights and the Gathering
Resistance ' (Seven Stories
Press, 2003).

~· ~ ·

..

'

•

·- · -'

Cassandra Bowen, front right, has opened Tuppers Plains Car
Wash on land purchased from the Meigs County Community
Improvement Corporation . The car wash opened for business
last week. On hand for the ribbon-{;utting were Meigs County
Commissioner Jim Sheets . Orange Township Trustee Wilbur
Robinson. Betsy Hawthorne of Farmers Bank's Tuppers Plains
office, Loretta Murphy, secretary of the Tuppers Plains
. Regional Sewer District. Township Trustee Roger Ritchie ,
County Commissioner Mick Davenport. and Farmers Bank and
CIC President Paul Reed. (Brian J. Reed)
•

...:JJiii

Guiding Hand children
to represent Tri-County
March of Dimes

•Moderately Confused

Car wash .opens

Ilia.

Betty Writesel ·
· Pomeroy

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

-1&gt;0

BY

Fruits of science worry Bush's bioethicist
·t have to ask you. is Dolly a

Tuesday,April2o,2oo4

local Guiding Hand students, .Jesse Frazier and Tia
Hemsley will represent the
March of Dimes campaign
for the education and prevention of premature births.
Both children were born
premature, and have suffered severe health problems. Frazier was born
. eight-weeks premature with
the rare Kabuki Syndrome.
This disease was fist discovered in Japan . There are
less than I 00 known cases
worldwide.
Frazier, who now is five. years-old, has faced a number of surgeries to correct
the problems caused by the
syndrome, including kidney
problems, cleft pallet repair.
and the installation of a
permanent feeding tube.
Although he's small for
his age, Frazier hasn't let
his size stop him.
· "Jesse I ights up our
world,,
said
Lorna
Montgomery. a nurse at
G)Jiding Hand. " He defi~
nitely knows how to work a
. crowd. He '11 blow kisses

Spend
from Page A1
few short weeks prior to the
March 2 election.
"I thought honesty was a
good trait for judicial candi·
dates," said Crow whose post·

weeks early and only
weighed two pounds and
three ounces . The nineyear-old has cerebral palsy,
developmental delays and
is in a wheelchair.
Sandy Thompson. a secretary at Guiding Hand,
said, "Tia has such a bubbly personality. She wants
10 learn to do things herself. And, she . is the first
student from our facility to
take a rabbit to thi s year's
Gallia County Junior Fair
for 4-H."
This year's March of
Dimes eve nt for the TriCounty area. will be held at
3 p.m. , May 2 in Harmo~
Park in Point Pleasant,
W.Va. The March of Dimes
is a non-profit organization
founded by Franklin D.
Roosevelt . Its mission is to
improve the health of
babies by preventing birth
defects and infant mortality.
The organization annually
holds an event to show support for its cause.

Business Briefs
Director retires
MARIETTA- Thomas C.
Vadakin has retired as , a
director of Peoples Bancorp,
Inc., effective at the April 8
annual meeting of shareholders:
Vadakin \vas ,appointed
Director Emeritus allhe regular board meeting.
In other action at the annual meeting, shareholders reelected Robert E. Evans,
Robert W. Price. Pau T.
Theisen and Thomas J. Wolf
to three-year term s as directors of the company. With
Vadakin 's retirement. the
company now has II direc- ·
tors.
Shareholders also approved
a proposal to amend Peoples
Bancorp's
Code
of
Regulations' 10 designate
additional officers. clarify
and separate roles of the officers, and establish a leadership director. Board Vice
Chairman Joseph H. Wesel
was named leadership director and will preside at meetings of the board in executive
session when the chairman
also holds an executive officer position.
The Board also appointed
Rhonda L. Mears as corporate · secretary. to replace
Corporate Secretary Ruth
Otto, who will retire.

announcement was made at
the
Company's
Annual
Shareholders' Meeting held
today at the Morris · &amp;
Dorothy
Haskins
Ariel
Theatre in Gallipolis, Ohio.
Also during the meeting,
Steven B. Chapman, Robert
H. Eastman and Jeffrey E.
Smith were re-elected to the
Board of Directors to each
serve a three year term ending in 2007.

MedConnex
Patient
Advocate
announced

GALLIPOLIS
- Gina
Bryant of Gallipoli s, was
recently named the Patient
Advocate of the MedConnex
program through · the River
Cities Community Health
Coalition.
MedConnex is a program
that acquires free prescription
maintenance
medications
through pharmaceutical companies for patients who qualify locally. A minimal application processing service fee
is reguired for patients who
are mterested and whose
physician practices in Gallia,
Jackson or Meigs counties.
Bryant is a 1988 graduate
of Southwestern High School
where she took classes in
business and computerized
accounting~ A native of
Gallia County and the daughGALLIPOLIS Ohio ter of Gene ·and Ann Elliott,
Valley
Bane
Corp. she resides in Patriot with her
[Nasdaq:OVBC] President husband, Robert, and their
and CEO Jeffrey E. Smith two children.
announced that the Board of
The MedConnex offtce,
Directors
approved
an located at Holzer Medical
increase in quarterly cash Center in Gallipolis; is oj.Jen
dividends of 5.5 percent.
Monday through Friday from
will 8:00 am until 4:30 pm. For
Cash
dividends
increase to $.19 per share more info1mation. or if vou
from $.18, per share payable have questions about ·the
May I 0. 2004 to shareholders MedConnex program, please
of record April26, 2004. The call Bryant at (740) 441-3913.

Report dividend

Local Briefs
Conferences
Thursday

Advisory lifted
PO~TLAND

- Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water District
TUPPERS PLAINS
has lifted a boil advisory
Eastern Local School District isued for customers on
will hold parent/teacher con- Tornado Rd. from Portland
ferences from 4 to 7 p.m. on Road and . including Hoback
Thursday. Parents should call Road in Lebanon and Su_tton
the respective school office· Townships. Results of a
to schedule appoin tments.
water sample are considered
..
safe .

primary expense report changed print advertising from the
Brown Publishing Company,
very little - only $6,837.
Craw's
pre-primary . which mns many newspapers
expense report shows that he in southeast Ohio including
spent $49,799. His total cam- the Athens Messenger.
paign expenditures were
Milt Nuzum. a Mariella
$56,636, the bulk of which Municipal
in
Judge
was spent on public relations Washing.ton County. reported
firms and advertising. Crow only $4,474 in pre-primary
spent $12,051 to purchase spending while his post pri-

mary expense report said he
spent more than $21,363. The
bulk of this went toward
$13,7 10 in mailings from
Printing
Richardson
Corporation. Nuzum spent
$2,412 on adv,ertising from
the Parkersburg News.
Clark Col lins, an Ironton
Municipal
Judge
in

lilY PIYIEIT Plll*
$1111WI ·$11 PEIIIITII n1•1 YUI

............

Land bansfas
POMEROY Meigs
County Recorder Judy
King reported the following transfers in real e&gt;tate:
Charlotte Knight Dillard,
· Roger F Dillard. to Mark
Edward Dillard, Mary
Dillard. deed . Chester.
Joseph W. Pullins. E.
Faye Pullins, Edythe F
Pullin s.
to
American
General Finance, sheriff 's
deed , Orange.
·
. Terry Moore. Linda
Moore. to Ohio Power Co ..
r.ight of way. Village of
Syracuse.
·
Johnson,
· Bruce
Elizabeth John son. to
Tuppers
Plain s-Che ster
Water District. right of
way, Lebanon .
Albert E. Lawson . Susan
K. Lawson; to TP-CWD.
right of way. Lebanon.
·
Richard Allen. Randon
Allen. to TP-CWD: right
of way, Lebanon.
Christine D. Robinson.
Patrick Belt. to TP-CWD.
ri ght of way, Lebanon.
Eugene G. Long. Viola
Y. Long. to TP-CWD.
right of way. Lebanon.
Sarah Mahlman. H.P.
Parker Mahlman. to TPCWD. right of way,
Lebanon .
Geraldine Varney to TPCWD. right of way.
Lebanon. _
Lawrence
Hayman ..
Jennie Hayman. to TPCWD. right of way.
Lebanon.
Sarah Mahlman. H.P.
Parker. to TP-CWD. right
of way, Lebanon .
Daniel A. Lawrence,
Howard M. Lawrence. Jr..
to TP-CWD. right of way.
Lebanon.
Rubert J. Lawrence.
Julie
Lawrence. Julie
Thompson, to TP-C WD.
right of way. Lebanon .
Michael Evans, Sharlee
Evans, to TP-CWD. right
of way, Lebanon.
Donna Burn s, Ru sse ll
Ray Burns, to TP-CWD.
right of way. [,ebanon .
·odessa Proffitt to TPCWD, right of way.
Lebanon.
Eddie A. H llpp . Sharon
Hupp, to TP-CWD. right
of way. Lebanon.
Gerald Moore, Karen
Moore . to TP-CWD .. right
· of way; Lebanon .
Jon Richard VanMeter,
Lenea A. VanMeter, to TPCWD, right of way,
Lebanon.
John W. VanMeter. Betty
V. VanMeter, to TP-CWD,
right of way, Lebanon .
Carl S. Morris . Kathleen
J. Morris, to TP-CWD ,
right of way, Sutton.
Ted Smith. Krista Smith,
to TP-CWD. right of way,
Sutton.
Charles Ty son Mugrage . .
Charles to Mugrage, to
Charles Tyson Mugrage.
Lori D. M ugrage , deed.
Kenneth D. Doty, Sarah
Doty. to Samuel Lee Kern.
Peggy Jean Kern . deed.
Bedford.
A.
Kok er,
Richard
Barbara C. Koker, to FiN
National Acceptance, deed.
Sullun.

Slip
from Page A1
ODOT hasbatlled sl ips in
the Antiquity area adjacent
to the Ohio River for some
time.
"Recent excessive rain
and resulting hig h water has
further aggravated an existing ~lip at this location."
Lawrence
County.
was
another
candidate· who
reported only $4,710 spent in
his pre-primary expense
report . In the two weeks leading up to the election. Collins
spent $42.462 mainly on
newspaper advertising and
mass mailing.
Robert Dri scoll, an assis·

Kenneth Swann to TPCWD. right of way,
Salisbury.
James L. Legg. Kandice
R. Legg, to TP-CWD, right
of way, Salisbury.
,
Jan
Parkt;J.
Donna
Parker. to TP-CWD, right
of way. Salisbury.
Robert Jeffers. Pamela
N. Jeffers . to TP-CWD,
right of way, right of way,
Columbia.
. Thaddeus Dye. Linda G .
Dye. to TP-CWD. right of
way. Columbia.
L.
Beegle.
Roger
Marvien.e E. Beegle. to TP·
CWO. right of way,
Lebanon.
Freeda L. Wells to
Freeda L. Wells, Willi am
Foster Well s. deed. Oli ve.
Christopher G. Allen to
Paula R. Allen. deed ,
Scipio.
Douglas L. Miller 10
Delilah J. Ritchie . deed.
Salisbury .
Freeda L. Wells. to
Freeda L Wells , William
Foster Wells, deed, Olive.
Christopher G . Allen,
Paula R. Allen. deed.
Scipio,
L.
Miller,
Dougla s
Delilah J. Rithcie. deed .
Village of Middleport.
Edna M. Nance to Ralph
E. Cundiff. Jr .. Lois J .
Cundiff, deed, Chester.
Joyce Vance. Donna Jean
Vance. Ro semary Vance. to
Alec Cole. Kell y Cole.
deed. Scipio.
Emma Jane Walton. Jane
Walton. to Scutt Walton.
deed, Village of Pomeroy.
Ferris
M. · Ju stis.
Margaret Ju stis . to Alma
James
Davidson.
Davidson. deed..Lebanon.
Glenn
R.
Lawson.
Eleanor ~. Law so n, to
Bruner Land Co.. In c ..
deed, Olive.
Manda L. Eastman to
Theresa Ann
Shaffer.
There sa Ann Eastman,
affidavit. Bedfo rd.
· Countrytyme ALC, Ltd ..
to Samuel C. Hutchin so n,
deed, Letart.
Edith Gerldene Blevins.
Edith
G.
Blevin s.
deceased. to Arlin Lenuard
Blevin s, Jr. , Ronald Elbert
Blevins. Ri chard Neal
Blevins , - certificate · of
transfer, Salem .
Jan A. Parker. Donna L.
Parker, to John Helgeso.n,
Tawny Helge son. deed,
Orange.
Ema E. fox, deceased,
Lewi s J. Fox, deceased , to
lola Fox Howell. Ruth Fox
Douglas, deed , Salisbury;
Ruth Fox Douglas , lola
Fox Howell, Roy V.
Howell , to Jeffrey D.
Howell. Leonard C. Lyons,
deed, Salisbury.
Lawrence L. Driggs,
Eyvonne Driggs. James W.
Morris , Judy L. Morr(s.
deed. Olive.·
Elmo F. Smith. Elmo
Smith, Virginia D . Smith.
to Elmo F. Smith and
Virginia D. Smith. affidavi t. Bedford.
Virginia D. Smith . Elmo
F. Smith. Elmo Smith. to
Elmo F. Smith and Virginia
Smith. affidavit.
said Filson . "We will now
have to evaluate the damage
and work to find a solution."
ODOT cannot determine
al thi&gt; time when the road
will reopen, she aded .
"Our highest priority Is to
maintain the safety of those
traveling Ohio's roadways."
said Filson . "However. we
arc. committed to opening
this route as quickly as is
safe ly possible ."

.County
tant
Athen s
Prosecutor. repartee! $8.561
in sp,ending prior to the post
primary filing where he spent
$8.05-1 mainl y on advertising
and printing costs.
.Incidentally. Robert Bennett,
who ran unopposed in the
Democratic primary. reported
$2.331 in expenditures.

I.

�•

'
•

.PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Tue~day,

Apri1

Miller edges Southern, Page B2
"Tigers roll past Tribe, Page B6

20, 2004

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
l

Local.Stocks
Col- 32.68
DuPont - 44.99
DG -18.77
Federal Mogul - .36
Ganne!t- 90.06
General Electric - 31 ,10
GKNLY - 4.50
Harley Davidson- 58.51
Kmart - 46.35
Kroger- 16.97
Ltd- 20.33

ACI-32.30
AEP- 30.65
Akzo- 37.67
Ashland Inc.- 45.53
BBT-33.76
BLI-14.64
Bob Evans- 32.25
BorgWarner -1:16.50
City Holding - 32.93
Champion- 4.7 1
Charming Shops - 7.39

'

NSC -21.89
Oak Hill Financial - 32.40
Bank One- 51.56
OVB-35.00
Peoples - 25.25
Pepsico - 55.07
Premier- 8.80
Rocky Boots - 26. 13
RD Shell - 50.1 0
Rockwell - 34.59
Sears - 41 .92

SBC -24.41
AT&amp;T -18.85
USB- 25.99
Wendy's- 40.52
Wai-Mart - 58.37
Worthington - 19.05
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the previous day's transactions, provided by Smith Partners at
Advestlnc. of Gallipolis.

Tuesday, April2o, 2004

OSU baseball
'will retire Arlin's
No. 22 jersey

~

l
City of Clleetar

MEIGS CouNTY
UNCLAIMED FuND$ AccouNTs

Bunflll Everett E. Indiana St
Gaul Richard

Gillialan Carolyn, PO Box 133

2004

l;lty of Lang011llle

Simmons Matilda J . 6974 Pilol Knobe Rd

City of Long BoHom

Daughter yearns
to drive despite
moms trepidation
DEAR ABBY: My 14-yearold daughter. "Michelle."
wants to take driver's education next year when she's in
the lOth grade. Most of her
friends will be taking the
Dear
class. I explained to her that
Abby
so afraid something will
happen while she's behind the
wheel, I don't want to sign for
the class or her permit.
Michelle has assured me
that she's responsible and leges will be forfeited.
would never drive without
(I) Should I get a traffic
my consent. She says I should ticket, I agree to pay for the
trust her. She 's a great child- ticket, as well as the differa' straight-A student and very ence in the insurance premitrustworthy. I do trust her, but urn for as long as the premiI can't get over my fear of um is in effect.
(2) I agree to pay for damlosing her. She says she
understands, but I see the hurt ages that I incur not covered
in her eyes whenever she tries by insurance.
to talk to me about it.
. (3) At no time wjill I ever
Yesterday a boy in a nearby drink alcoholic beverages and
city, driving with only his . drive. nor will there ever be
permit, was in an accident any in the car.
that killed seven children - · (4) I will not drive the car
ages 15 and under. I'm sure until I and all passengers have
the boy's parents trusted their buckled up,
son or they wouldn't have
(5) I will keep the car I
'signed for his permit. Now drive clean, inside and out, be
they have to live with this. I aware of its needs for gas, oil,
don'tthink I could handle the etc., and wax it as needed.
guilt. I'm afraid if I sign,
I have read the above agreeMichelle may drive the way ment and sign it in accorthat boy did and wind up in a dance with the rules.
fatal accident. Children aren't
Signed,
perfect. Sometimes they do
( ) Child
things they shouldn't.
( ) Parent
Am I doing the right thing'
Date:
Please help me, Abby.- PRODear Abby 1s written by
TECTIVE MOM. GLEN, Abigail Van Buren, also
MISS .
known as Jeanne Phillips,
DEAR
PROTECTIVE and was founded by her moth· .
MOM: Much as you might er, Pauline Phillips. 'write
wish to, you cannot "protect" Dear
Abby
at
a child by keeping her igno- www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
rant. In her driver's education Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
class she will learn basic rules 90069. ·
of the road, including how to
safely operate an automobile
under strict supervision. After
that, some states, including
your own, place significant
restrictions on teenage drivers. Only at age 18 is a person entitled to apply in
Mississippi for a full, !JnTestricted one-year license.
.
If you wish to add restrictions of your own, the option
is yours, particularly if the car
is yours. I suggest making a
contract with her that stipulates what grade average she
must maintain to keep her driving privileges, limiting the
number of passengers she can
transport, and also setting distance limits. A version of the
following
contract
has
appeared in my column
before:
DRIVING CONTRACT
I ( ), agree to the stipulations stated below granting
me the privilege of driving. If.
at any time, I violate this
agreement, my driving privi~

I'm

1

Hall Randall K, Route 1
Hall Randall K, Rt 1
High Voltage Investment Club. 46939
SR 248
.
Mackin Robert J, Rr 1
Newlun H. St Rt 124
Rice Claire, Route 3
Suttle Greta. 33550 Perry Rd

Bailey lester B. 810 S 4th Av

ClarK Joann, 572 High St
Dawson Errold. Rr 1
Ounon Margaret, 365 South 5th Ave .

Gard Michael T, 38475 Leading Ck Rd
Giordano Doris J, 276 Sycamore St

The following is a list of current or former county
residents who had unci&amp;Imed mnds worth 550 or more
reported to the Ohio Department of Commerce's
Division of Unclaimed Funds within the past year.
Check for your name and your relatives and friends' names
in this year's list. Owners ' names are listed under the

hometown of the last known address reported to the
Division.

The Ohio Department of Commerce
Division of Unclaimed F~ds
·
77 South High Street, 10 Floor
Columbus, OH 43115-6108

Jefferis Paul H, 291 N Front Ave #206
Lemley Betty, Route #1

L1ttle Clarence. 443 Sycanlore St
little Irma, 443 Sycamore St ·
little John, 443 Sycamore St

Mackin
Mackin
Mackin
Mackin

City of Portland

If you see a possible name match. go to the Ohio
Department of Commerce's Web site at
www.com.state.oh.us and click on the Treasure Hunt icon.
Follow the directions to print your claim form. Complete the
tonn and mail it with a copy of the required proofto:

City of Mlddlepon

Ellen E. Rr 1
Florence, Rr 1
Richard, Rr 1
Teresa. Rr 1

Remember: The accounts listed here are only those $50 or
more received in the last year,''so even if you don 't see your
name here, check out the Web site at www.com.state.oh.us
for a full list of owners.

MajOfVIcki, 1&amp;1 Railroad St

Priddy Bartara. Rt 1
Reuter Frances E. 850 Maple St
Rice Sidney, Rr 1

Rickard Gertrude, 866 S Third Ave
Rickard Gertrude, 866 S Third St
Romines Mary, 1100 Powell St Apt 305
Russell James. Deport HI
Russell Margt, Deport HI
SantorO Thomas E, 839 S 2nd f!t,11e
Sauer Richard D. 35876 Leading Crk Rd
Scally Yllonne, 1BO ,Garfield St
Searles Rosa M, 689 Beech St
Sharon Mary, 809 2nd Ave
Thomas Mrs Woodrow, clo Polly
BO'Mand
Ward Jerry W. 192 Beech St
Welsh Mary E, 55 South 3rd St

If you do not have access to the Internet, names and
addresses of unclaimed accounts adveriised in prior
years are on file with your County Treasurer, as well as
unadvertised accounts of less than $50. The Division
will also search for accounts in names not appearing on ·
those lists, Send a list of complete names, along with
the Ohio counties in which they may have lived, to the
above address. We will provide claim forms
for possible matches :
The Ohio Department of Commerce
Bob Taft

City Dl Pomeroy
Aaa Drilling School, Debbie Sexton 52
Walnut St
A11erion Perla, 212 Union A11e
AVerion Perla G, 212 Union Ave ·
Bailey Lois GEstate, 211 213 E 2nd St
Bartels William J, Rr 3
Baxter John, 39252 Rock Springs R
Beck~r John H, Unton Alie
Becker Lewis, Union Ave
Becker- Wm F, Union Ave
· Bowers Elwood E. Rt 3
Brown Harold D, PO Box 704.210 W
Main St
Brown Lynnsa. 200 1/2 West Main 51
Arold 0 Brown Ods Inc
Buck Mary, 38690 St Rt 1.24 cJo Harold
Burt

Buck Mary M
Canterbury Lucille, Main St
Davis Emma L Estate, 32593 Rose Hill
Rd
Davis Kenneth R, 30282 Dyesvllle Rd .
Dillard Oave, 39604 State Rt 143
Eblin Chas W, Rr 1
Eblin Mary M, Rr l
Folmer Mall E. 1562 Nye Alie
Fowler Carl M, Buttermil St
Freeman Richard, 1610 Lincoln Hts
Fyffe Lawre,nce K. 42788 SR 6B1
Garrett Thelma, 93171 Hysell Run Rd
GHmore Elza, 1648 Lincoln Hts
Gloeckner Ruth. Rr 1
Hendrix Trudy, PO Box 21

Da•ld L. Moore

Jennette Bradley

Superintendent

Director

L-----------------------.J
Hobstetter George, 400 Lincoln Hill
Holt" William R, Rr 1
Houdashelt Charles R. Route 2
Houdashelt Mary B, Route 2
Hysell Oorotl1y, Rr 1
Ingels Earl F, Rt 3 ·
Jeffers stacy, 37270 vance Rd
Justice Brian, 33841 Hysell Run Rd
Justis Lucy, Forest Run
Justus Eliz V, Rr 1
Kerns William, Minersville St
King Clyde 0, Rr 1
Kuhl Bessie 0
Landermllk L, 11 1 Forest Run
Landennllt V, Rr 1
Maag Helen E, Route 1
Maag Helen E, Rr 1
Marcum Connie J, Route 3
Mcgraw Hellen L, 37900 Holley Rd
Mckee Ralph Herbet, Main St
Nease Jo.an E, 34675 Tr 3B2

'

Neese Richard P, 34675 Tr 382

.,

Anderson Roger D, 1905 Ne Emerson
Davis Aspray, 693 Hood
Fellener AnnaL. 732 112 4th 51 S
Goski Sylvia, 163 Winchel St
Hunt Gerald F, 1607 Ne 142nd Ave
Kilbane Sara, 4206 W 140 St
No11en G. Rr 2
Price .Curtis E. 29261 Sellers Ridge
Proffitt James, 54551 St Rte 33
Richard Gerald K, 115 Ne 73rd AYe c/o
Tracy
·
Shaffer Michael A. 191 Heather Lane
Shaffer Wendy A, 191 Heather Lane
Toriello Paulina . 8105 Sw Elmwood St
Welby June, 181 1 Nw Couch St
Yost Margaret I, Rr 1
"City of Racine
Adams Roger, PO Box 369 c/o J D
Drilling
Amos John M. PO so .. 369 5th St
Atki"ns Carolyn, PO Box B61
Callicoat AMa L, 50330 Ours Rd
Campbell Rober!, PO Box 177
Cama.han James W , PO Box 458
Christiansen Betty, 2103 Kentucky St
Crisp Alan. Po Bx 826
Crisp Lori, Po Bll 826
Culler Hcillie, 470 S Walnut St
E11ans Johnie F. PO Box 277
Farmers Bank And. 24265 Rowe Rd
Foltrod Jack E. Route 1
Hoback Nancy E. Rr 1 Box 60
Joseph Rose. PO Box B12 Main St
Justice Brenda, 25004 Apple Grove
Dorcas Rd
· Justice Dan, 25004 Apple Gro11e Oorc'as
Rd
Lyons Gretta . Rr 1
Manuel Les ter P, 48790 Manuel Rd
Markins Kenneth 0. 45890 S R 124
Mcdonalds, 44040 Yost Rd
Mcdonalds, 44060 Yost Rd
Mikt~lecky Thomas. 807 Ohio St
Mills Roscoe, 44040 Yost Rd
Mills Roscoe, 44060 Yost Rd
Schifano Angelica A. 2402 Douglas Alie
Shain Robert S, PO Box 446
Yeauger Jennifer And, 24265 Rowe R?

·Ohio high .
schoolboys '
baseball poll .

City of R-.clavllle

Governor
'L t, Governor

Vennari Martha, 42015 Seneca Dr
Veterans Memorial Hospital, 115 E
Memonal Dr
Weaver Marie, Foust Run
Whitlock Joseph. 316 Hitzgall

Norris Northrop Dodge, 33641 Hysell
Run Rd
Parfitt Gladys I, 227 Union St
Payne L.ois, 36071 Wolf Pen Rd
Priddy Gary L, 32719 Hysell Run R
Pullins Loris R, Route 3
Reed David F, Rr t
Ridgeway Crystal, 37607 Te&gt;eas Rd
Ridgeway Jeff, 37607. Texas Rl;i
Roush Rebecca, 300 Mulberry Ave Apt

35
Russell Paul, Spring St
Scharfer Erma L, Rr 1
Scott Paul W, Route 3
Shorr Phylis, Mulberry St
Smith Kim, 39604 State Rt t43
Stafford Herbert, 36071 Wolf Pen Rd
Stahl Marjorie, Rr 1
Stahl Nora, Rr 1
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy, PO Bo&gt;e 269
Vaughan Elizabeth J, PO Box 84 c:lo

Vaughns Beauty Salon

Adams Bonnie, Rl 1
Ac;lams Dale , Rl i
Car Care Center, 68662 St Rt 124
Cowdery Tina , 68662 St Rt124
Ford Motor CrEtdit Co
Grate Herbert II. 40040 Stale Rte 7

COLUMBUS (AP) - How a state panel
ol coaches rates Ohio high school boys
baseball teams in tl1e first of five regular·
season polls of 2004 for The Assoc iated
Press (by Ohio High School Athletic
Association divisions. with first-place
votes in parentheses. recordS at lime of
voting):
DIVISION I
I. Spring. Nor~h (7) .
9-0
.... 121
2, Celina (1) .
. 11-2 .... ...77
3~ Hamilton (2)
.. 8·1 . .. ..... 70
4, Fremont Ross {1) . . . . B-1 . . ... .. 68
5, Cin . St. Xav1er {1)
. 7·2 ....... 60
6, Cle. St. Ignatius (1) . . . 9~1
54
7, Sylvania Sou1h11iew (1) . B-0
. 53
8 , Cin . AndersOn (2)
.. 10·1
.. 50
9. Dublin Scioto (I) . . . .. 7-0 .. .... 47
10, Gahanna Lincoln .... 7-1 ....... 42
DIVISION II
1, Hebron Lakewoocl (10) . 10·0 .. , .. ,.99
2, Cuya FaJis Walsh Jesu~ (5) 5·1 ... ... ...84
3, Chagrin Falls Kenston (2) 5·0 ...... ...63
4, Vermilion (2) .
. . 7-0 ......... 57
5, Washington CH (3) . , .. 8-0 .
48
6, Tlpp City Tippecanoe . . 9-3 .. ... 44
7. Bellefontaine
.. 7-1 .. .... ....40
B. Ottawa-Glandorf . . .. 6-1
...38
9, Lima Bath. . . . . . .... 7-2 .... ., ...36
10, Del. Buckeye Valley ... 9·0 ... .... ,.35
DIVISION Ill
1 , Bucyrus (6)
. 8-0 .... .•132
2, Chill. Zane Trace (5) ... 6-D . .... .. 103
3, W. Lafayet1e Ridgewood 8-1 ... . 101
4, Perry (3) .
. 6-2 .. ... .. 100
5, Hano'lier United Local . . 7-1
.....93
6, Coldwater (5) .
. .. 9·2 ..
.. 63
7, Louis'liille Aquinas , . . . . 4·0 ... ... 49
8, Bucyrus Wynford
. 5·1 ..... .....45
9, Wheelersburg (2)
. 10-0 . . .. .44
10, Gates Mills Gilmou r . 3-0 ... .... ...39
DIVISION IV
1, Cin . Country Day (8) ... 7-0 .......... 167
2, Newark Cath. (B)
.. . 8-1 ... .. ..... 131
3. N. Lewisburg Triad (1) .. 11-2 ... , ... 120
4, Edon {2) . , . .
. .. 9·2 ... . .. 115
5. Def. Ayers'liille
... 7-4 ..... ... 112
6, Strasburg-Franklin (1) . 8-1 ...... 99
7, MonJpetier (2)
9-2 ........96
8, Sycamore Mohawk
.. 4-2 .. ... ...63
9, Maria Stein Marion Locai4-0 . ...,..... 58
10, Tiffin Cal11ert
. . 8·0 .... ... ...46

Neff Herbert F Jr, PO Box 208
Sams Judith, Rt 1
Schul Herman, Route 1
Talbott Linda A, Rr 1

City of Rutland
Anderson Anna l, Rr 1
Barley Donna, 32925 Sidehill Rd
Bratton Ghelc:ie. 36702 New Lima Rd
Cohee Nancy Shera, 32654 Mccumber
Rd
Collins Hilda, 36220 Zion Rd
Courelle Martha M. 65 Plerlmount
Jinks Lawrence, 69 Mccumber Rd A
Long Helen. Route 1
Oliver Beatrice. Rr 1
Paquette Chaplin, 93 Library
City of SyracuM
Dempsey Ronda , PO Box 312
ReLish Randy T, PO Box 179
William J L, Rr 1

' ' Thank you from 1;he bottom of my heart.
In 1996 I had the symptoms, but could not believe that I was having a heart attack.

Lee slam pulls
· Cubs away from
Reds, 8-1

Almost immediately upon arrival at O'Bleness, I was surrounded by .the emergency
department ~taff. Things happened fast. The doctors and nurses got me stabilized, ran
lots of tests and admitted me to the cardiac care unit for more extensive testing and

CHICAGO (AP) - Derrek
Lee hit a grand slam, leading
Matt Clement and the
Chicago Cubs to an 8-l win
over the Cincinnati Reds on
Monday.
With Chicago leading 3-l
in the seventh inning, Lee
connected off reliever Ryan
Wagner, sending a drive into
the right-field bleachers. It
was Lee's fourth career grand
slam and first with the Cubs.
Clement (2- I) settled down
after a rocky first inning to
allow one nin on four hits in
6 l-3 innings.
· .
The right-hander retired II
batters in a row and 15 out of
16 at one point, striking out
si~ and walking four. ,
.
Aramis Ramirez h1t hts
.fifth homer of the season.
Corey Patterson added a tworun single for the Cubs and
Alex Gonzalez had three hits
and scored twice.
· Wagner allowed five runs
without recording an out.

diagnosis. I received wonderful care. They told me I would be transferred to Colum.

'

bus where I had a heart catheterization and stem placement. My heart doctor told me
the team at O'Bleness saved my life. In fact he said, 'They really know what they're
doing down there in Athens.' I told everyqne what my cardiologist said and how much I
•
appreciated the. wonderful care I received. I felt like I had a new lease on life and I still feel
that way. A lot of people at O'Bleness had my best interest at heart and I thank them from
the bottom of mine."

Nina Kirk

'

Heart arrack survivor

..

• Proud to be apart of
; your life.

O'BLENESS
Memorial Hospital

· Su'bscribe today" 992-2155

"Hotpi~ Dri\'1,

Atbcua, OH 45701·2.302

(740)593·5551 • www.obltnm.org

•

COLUMBUS · (A P)
Former Ohio State pitcher
Steve Arlin, who helped lead
the Buckeyes to their only
national cham piclilship in
! 966, will have his No. 22
jersey retired between games
of a doubleheader Saturday
against Michigan at Bill
Davis Stadium.
Arlin is considered the top
pitcher in Ohio State history
and one of the greatest pitchers at the College World
Series. In 1965 , facing elimination· against Washington
State, Arlin struck out a
CWS-record 20 batters in a
15-inning. l-0 victory. The
next year, the Buckeyes won
the title with Arlin on the
mound in five of the team 's
six games, twice beating topseeded Southern California.
Arlin had a two-year record
of 24-3 and held OSU marks
. for victories and strikeouts
(294) until 1999. His .889
win percentage is the best in
school hi story. He led the
nation in strikeouts as a
sophomore with 165 and
went 13-2. The next year he
went Il-l as Ohio State won
the national title.
Arlin, who went on to pitch
six seasons with the San
Diego Padres, was a two-time
first team All-American and
All-Big Ten selection and
still holds two CWS records.
He was the MVP of the 1966
CWS.
Now living in San Diego.
Arlin will attend Saturday's
games and will accept a
framed jersey.

'
'
~----

~---

Prep Softball

Southern girls crush Miller with 16 hits
BY ScoTT WoLFE
Sports correspondent

RACINE - The Southern Lady
Tornadoes have finally been swinging good bats and came storming out
of the gate Monday to the tune of 16
hits in a 20·8 win over the Miller
Falcons.
The girls varsity Tri- Valley
.Conference softball win at Star Mill

Park was the second league win for Jenny Warner had a one-out single.
!=oach Scott Wolfe's club (2-5 over- Katie Sayre walked. Joanne Pickens
all, 2-4 league). Miller falls to 2-5 , 2- had an RBI double, Brooke Kiser an
4.
RBI single and Ashley Roush a 6·3
Miller took the iead early and groundout. That forced home a run.
Southern chased them down . Toth Emily Hill walked then Nicki Tucker
singled to lead otf the game. Mallory had a booming two-run double to
Altier reached on an error, then two give SHS a S-2 lead.
walks forced home a run, and anothMiller scored a single run in the
er scored on another walk.
third inning, but winning pitcher
Southern came back in the first Brooke Kiser pitched her way .out of
With five runs and never looked back. the jam, the score 5-3 Southern.

Southern broke the game open in
their half of third inning when Kiser
singled and advanced on an error.
Hill reached on an error. and Tucker
hit one off the left fielder's glove to
knock in two r.uns. Holly Duff
walked. Deana Pullins reached on an
error to lo~d the bases, and Warner
was hit with a pitch to knock home a
run. then Katie Sayre had a base

Please see Southem, Bl ·

Dillon

traded
to Pats
BY JoE KAY

Associated Press
CINCINNATI Running back
Corey Dillon got his w.ish Monday,
finally leaving a Bengals team that hasn't won in 13 years.
The running back wound . up on a
championship team.
Di lion was traded to the New England
Patriots for a second-round draft pick,
ending his stellar and stonny career with
Cincinnati. The Bengals built their
struggling franchise around him in the
I990s, but tired of his complaining and
lobbying to go somewhere else.
One of the NFL's most accomplished
backs now gets to resuscitate his career
with the defending Super Bowl champions, who filled their most glaring need
in exchange for the 56th overall pick.
"I think everybody pretty much broke
even," Dillon said. "We're talking about
the New England Patriots. l'hey' re the
defending Super Bowl champs. They
got exactly what they wanted. I guess
Cincinnati got exactly what they wanted. Corey Dillon got exactly what he
wanted. I'm haP,PY· It's a good deal all
around, I think. '
Dillon. 29, wasn't happy during the
Bengals' renaissance season under
coach Marvin Lewis. While the Bengals
stayed · in playoff contention, Diflon
groused about his lack of carries and
lobbied for a trade .
"I set a couple of records in
Cincinnati, so I'm always going to have

Please see Dillon. Bl

Be,ngals runn ingback Corey Dillon heads upfield for a short gain, du ri ng the second quarter, against the
Arizona Cardinals, Nov. 2, 2003, in Tempe, Ariz, The Cincinnati Bengals traded running back Corey Dillon to the New
England Patriots for a second-round draft pick. (AP)
·
Cincinn~ti

•

Appeals
court
Belpre's
blocks
Clarett
Robertson
Adams
from
entering
NFL
pitches Eagles no hits
draft
this
weekend
over Lancers
Prep Softball

Meigs·

ScoTT WOLFE
Sports correspondent
BY

TUPPERS PLAINS - Katie Robertson pitched a
one-hitter and had 10 strikeouts as she led the high
flying Eastern Eagles to a 8-0 shut-out win over the
Federal Hocking Lancers Monday
night i·n girls' Tri- Valley Conference
Hocking division softball play at
Eastern High SchooL
p
Eastern is now 9-3 overall and has. n't skipped a beat since losing its
•
I,
band students to a trip last Thursday.
After a scoreles s first inning,
a'
•'
Eastern plated two in the second
inning. With two out, Brittany Bissell
singled, Sara Barringer had an RBI
Robertlon double, then Danielle Carroll had an
RBI double for a 2-0 EHS lead.
Robertson was well on her way to a great outing
and with the exception of a walk and hit batter was
perfect through three innings. A B, Russell double
broke up the no-hit bid in the fourth inmng, but
Robertson was still very much in contrOL
Eastern scored a si ~gle run in the second inning
when Jenny Armes walked, stole two bases, and
·scored on a 1-3 groundout by Krista White. Eastern
added two in the fourth when Kayla Siders singled,
Bissell had an RBI single, Carroll reached on fielder's
choice, and Casey Smith doubled, the score 5-0.
Eastern scored one in the fifth and two in the si,xth
inning,the score 8-0 ,

.
n
.

Please see Easles, Bl

BY LARRY NEuMEISTER

Associated Press

STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydai lytribune .com
BELPRE - Just three days
removed from Joey Haning's
no-hitter against Federal
Hocking. the shoe switched
feet Monday.
Belpre hurler Jessi Adams
pitched a complete game nohitter, and her Lady Eagles
defeated Meigs S-0 in Tri Valley Conference softball
action.
Belpre (3-5) evened its
conference record at 3-3,
while Meigs (5-5) fell to 5-3.
Adams allowed just two
walks and struck out three .
Meigs starting and losing
pitcher Samantha Cole
walked seven and struck out
five -in four innings of work.
Haning threw the final two
innings and struck out a pair
of batters.
Adams helped herself at
the plate by going 2-4 with a
double and run batted .in .
Teammates Aubree Miller

Please see Meigs, Bl

NEW YORK - Maurice Clarett's bid to jump to the
NFL was blocked Monday by a federal appeals court that
left open the possi~ility he cou ld enteJ a supplemental
draft.
The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
put on hold a lower-court de&lt;:ision to
allow the former Ohio State star and other
.. thlete s. liJ..e Southern California's Mike
William,. tn enter this weekend's draft.
Player&gt; are barred from the NFL until
three years after high school graduation
under current lea~ue rules .
The appeals court said it stayed the earlier ruhng to s e~feguard the NFL from
Ctarett'
harm and to ensure a more thorough
review. Its final opinion will probably be
issued after the draft, perhaps weeks from now.
Any potential harm to Clarett would be lessened by the
NFL's agreement to hold a ~upp l emental draft if the
appeals court later ruled in his favor. the court added.
The ruling came on the same day Williams filed his own
lawsuit in federul court in Manhattan . saying the NFL had
issued conflicting statements about eligibility for the draft,
thus causing him to 'ao;ritice his college career. Williams
hired an agent. which usuall y means a player cannot return
to play in college.
But Williams ' college coach. Pete Carroll, said it was'
possible the wide rece iver could return to schooL
"We ' ll continue to help our guy out , just like we did
when he was making hi' decision ." CarrQll said. "Nothing ·
uefmiti,·e h'" bee n declared by the N@.twA . Some step'

Please see Clarett. Bl

�The Daily Sentinel

Page B2 •

Tue~day, April 20, 2004 ·

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday; April 20, 2004

'

Prep Baseball

Eastern falls to Fed Hock
BY ScoTT WoLFE
Sports correspondent

TUPPERS PLAINS - Despite a good
effort, rhe Eastern Eagles boys varsity baseball team fell to league nemesis Federal
Hocking 7-1 Monday night during TriValley Conference baseball action at
Eastern High School.
Federal Hocking plated two runs in the
first on a Grimm walk , a Springer double.
and Barnhart RBI single. the score 2-U
Federal. The Lancers went up 3-0 in the
fourth When Willis singled arid scored on
an error. 3-0.
Gandee rode home aboard a two-run
Grimm home run in the fifth inning. then
the Lancers added three more in the seventh inning for the 7-1 finale. Eastern
scored its run when Corey Shaffer doubled

and scored on a Matt Morri&gt; single.
Cundiff was the winning pitcher with
four strikeouts and one walk. Goeglein suffered the lo" despite a good effort. He was
relieved by Jon Owens in the seventh. They
fanned none and walked four.
Eastern hitters were Chris Myers two sin gles. Ke nAmsbary a single. Terry Durst a
single. Shaffer a double and si ng,le, Morris
a single. and Owen a single .
Federal Hocking hitters were Poston two
singles. Gandee a single, Grimm a single
and home run. Springer a double and sin·gle. Barnhart a single. Little a single. and
Willi s two single s.
Eastern host Vinton County Tuesday.
Federal Hocking 8, Eastern 1
"Federal HOcking

Eastern

200

120

3

-

6 70

000

1 00

0

-

180

WP-Cund1H and Poston. LP·Goeglein and Durst.

Meigs held scoreless at Belpre·
STAFf REPORT

sports@ myda;lytribune.com
____;____.:..__:__ _ _ _ _ _ _
BELPRE - Belpre J,litcher Tom Wolfe
held Meigs to just two h1ts during a 3-0 TriValley Conference baseball victory
Monday.
The win gave Belpre (7-1) sole possession
of the Tri- Valley Conference Ohio Division
at 7-0. Meigs (8-2) fell to 7-1 in the Ohio.
Wolfe threw a complete game: he struck

out sevt;n and walked three in earning the
win. Mike Davis suffered the loss on the
mound. He struck out six and issued five
free passes.
Davis gave up just four hits, three of those
·
belonged to Shane Colvin.
Meigs plays host to Galli a Academy today
while Belpre is at St. Mary's.
Belpre 3, Meigs 0
Meigs

000

000

Belpre
201
000
WP - Tom Wolle. LP - Ml~e Davis.

0

-023

x

-341

Falcons edge Tornadoes, 3-1
BY Scorr.WoLFE

· the inning, The Tornadoes fought back with
one and threatened by leaving the tying runs
on base. Patrick Johnson tripled to lead off the
RACINE - It come down to fundamental inning and scored on a passed balL With one
baseball and whomever inade the least mis- out, Chris Tucker singled and Brad Crouch
singled with Tucker advancing to third on a
·takes.
passed
ball, however, he and Crouch were left
Monday night. Miller made just two errors
stnmded
on the corners, the score 3-1 Miller.
and received a good pitching effort to post a
Southern put two runners on in the sixth
3·1 victory over the Southern Tornadoes durand
on in the seventh, but they too were left
ing Tri-Valley Conference varsity boys basestranded.
ball action at Star Mill Park . Southern falls 2Southern hitters were led by Brad Crouch
8 overall and 0-6 in the conference.
with
two singles, Patrick Johnson a triple, and
Miller struck first in the second inning
when Aichele walked, then on a botched singles each from Chris Tucker, Joe Phillips,
force play made it to second with Bolyard Jeremy Yeauger, and J.R. Hupp.
Miller hitters were Gotlke. Luning. Doup,
reaching safely at first. The ball was hit back
Mauro,
and Bolyard.
to Southern pitcher Cole Brown, but when
Cole
Brown
suffered the loss for s·outhem
Brown turned to throw to second no one had
covered and all hands were safe. A I-3 sacri- with five strikeouts and four walks, while
fice bunt by Osborne advanced the runners Doup posted the win wiih nine strikeouts and
and S. Luning h.it a sacrifice fly to score one walk. while giving up seven hits for the
Aichele, followed by a single by Gotlke 'for Falcons.
Southern hosts South Gallia Tuesday.
the 2-0 Miller lead.
Miller went up 3-0 in the fifth inning when
Miller 3, Southern 1
0 2o
0 10
0
- 352
C. Luning walked and scored on an error and Miller
Southern
000
0 10
0
- 174
RBI single by Mauro. In the Southern half of WP·Doup
and Luning. LP-Brown andYeaugP.r.
Sports correspondent

from Page 81

three sea:-.ons.

"Corey joins Ke1 in Faulk and our other very
love for Cincinnati and that fan bao;e ." Dillon good bach to deepen an alre&lt;tJ)' compet;tr ve
said. "But today is a new day. I'm just 11oing to runnin" back posrtion." Patnots coach Brll
tlnish what I started in Cincinnati m New Behchrc
. "k· .,m'd .
England. It's the first time I've been this excited
Dillon agreed tQ restructure rhe last t--:o years
abOut a season since I've been in college."
on hi s wntmct. sotiening the Patnots salary
New England gets the type of back that it cap hit for 2(XJ.+. in orJer to make the deal.
covet~J for an unbalanced offense. The Patriots · During hi s seve n 'ea~ons i,D Cincinn~ti.
had the league's 27th:mnked rushing attack Dillon be&lt;.:ame one of the NFL'· top runnmg
behind Antowain Smith and Kevi n Faulk last backs and one of its most cmgmat;c ligures. He
season. forcing them to rely on Tom Brady's complained from time to time about being on a
short. high-percentage completions to get losing team. but c(1anged Ius mmd and agreed
point&gt;.
to a li ve-year. $21i million deal be tore the 200 I
Brady led the Patriot ~ to 15 straights wins. s1!ason.

,;tlj..~~~~~~~).

If your business is interested
in participating in this
Special Edition,
Call Brenda or Dave
at CEZ-2155
l

'

The Daily Sentinel
~J~~·~~~·}.·

ATTENTION
Parents, Grandparents, Aunts,
Uncles, Friends... you can
congratulate your graduate with
a personal ad of your own!!
Call Today!!
Deadline is Friday,
May 7th at 5:00 p.m.

.
.

·
·
_
..

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS .YOUR AD NOW ONLINE .

·

Eagles

Southern
from Page 81
clearing triple for three RBis.
Pickens reached on· an error, Kiser singled
for the second time, Roush walked, Hill had
an RBI single, Tucker singled, Duffy had a
run scoring ground out, and Pullins had ai1
RBI single to account for the 17-3 SHS lead.
Southern held on for the 19-8 league win.
Southern hitters were led by Brooke Kiser
with four singles, Nicki Tucker a double and
single, Jenny Warner two singles. Katie Sayre
a double and single, Ashley Roush two sin-

Meigs
from Page 81

gles, Joanne Pickens a double. and singles by
Deana Pullins. Emily Hill. and Holly Duffy.
Miller's offense wasn't too shabby.
The Falcon s collected I0 hit&gt;- Siera Toth
two singles. Mallory Altier a double and single, Ashley Heavener a triple and single.
Courtney Wright two singles, Kelsi Brown a
double, and Jenna Murphy a triple.
•
Brooke Kiser was the winning pitcher.
striking out two and walking nine, while
Altier suffered the loss with no strikeout s and
seven walk s.
· Southern hosts South Gallia Tuesday.
Southern 20, Mltter 8
Miller
201 ·
122
Southern
5 0(12)
111
WP-K1ser and Sayre . LP-AIIier and Bray.

0
x

-8107
-20 16 2

bottom of the first inning, then added three ·
more in the fourth to round out the scoring.
Meigs plays host to Galli a Academy today,_
while Belpre entertains Federal Hocking. ·

L

and Sunni Randolph each had singles.
The Lady Eagles scored a pair of runs in the

Clarett
from Page 81
would have. to be taken for the players to get
back into college footbalL"
Although Clarett never announced he hired
an agent, there have been reports that he did.
He was never cleared by Ohio State or the
NCAA to play after being suspended last year
for accepting money from a family friend and
for lying about it to NCAA and university
investigators.
NCAA spokesman Jeff Howard would not
. comment specifically on the Clarett case. but
he said players who hire agents could be rein-

Belpre s, Meigs o
Meigs

000

000

0

Belpre

200

300

;t{

- 00 I
-540

WP- Jessi Actams. LP- Samantha Cole.

stated if the school petitions the organization.
"The individual facts of each case ultimate-·
ly will determine whether or not an athlete is
reinstated."' he said.
NCAA president Myles Brand said if the
NFL ultimately loses the case that graduation
rates for football players could decrease significantly.
"Not because of the small number that may
be eligible to go to the NFL:· he said. "but
rather because of the literally thousands of
wannabes who will give up concentrating on
their studie s. both in high school and college,
for that one in a million chance to ~et in the
NFL. And they will be the losers." ~
After more than an . hour of argumentS:
though. the appeals court said the NFL
showed it could win its case.

If your child is a ,, I I
"Star Athlete" ~ · on
~..;
in your eyes, ~ S\0. 0~
include them in ·~~ ......::. II
'"-· ·
t h.ts sect1on..

. 'h

*Football
* Basketball
*Baseball
*softball
*Track

* Oolf

* Gymnastics.
*Tumbling

Child's Name
Child of: Parent's Name
Team Name
Message

*Soccer
*Karate
*Swimming
&amp; More!!
This special section wDI run on

Tbw:'sday, April 29th in .Tbe·Daily Sentinel.
Hurry, Dead.Une for entries is April 23, 2004!

I

I

Melg•, Gall1a,
And Mason
Counties Uke
NoOne
ElnCanl

Russell had the lone Federal Hocking hit :
Robert so n posted the win with I 0 strike- .
outs. one walk. and one hit batter. Terri :
Wolfe suffered th e loss with six strikeouts.:
from Page 81
.and three walk s.
.•
Eastern
is
slated
to
make
up
Vinton:
Eastern hitters were Casey Smith a double. Jenny Armes a single. Kayla Siders a County Tue sday.
si ngle , Bissell two si ngles and a walk.
Eastern 8, Federal Hocking 0
ooo
·o o o
0 - 0 17
Barringer a double and two RBis. and Federal Hocking
Eastern
021212
K
- 871
Carroll a double .
WP·Aobertson and Smrth . LP -Wolfe and Stover.

School wUI soon be out, but IT'S NOT TOO LATE to
salute your athlete from this past school year!
There will be a Special Edition
on Friday, May 14th
saluting all
Meigs County Class of
2004 graduating Seniors

al:ribune - Sentinel lL\.egi£iter
C L A S S I F I E D· •
We Cove

culminating in a ~2-29 1·ictory orer Carolina in _
the Super Bowl. A week later. the Patnots :
decided not to exercise their contract yptioll on ·
Smith. who wa~ their leaJing ru,her tor the lasr

Dillon

Fill out the fom below and dtop off or mail
(alons with your payment •nd photo) to:
The. Daily Sentinel "AII-Sta,..", 1t 1 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769

____""____

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______ _

Child's N a m e - - - - - - ' - - - - -- - - - Parent's Name-------- - - - - - ' - - - - Town _____________________
Team Name __________________________
PhoneNumber _________________~---------Message (up to 10 words): ---------~----

___.,. __ ,. .. -- __ ____ __ .,.__.,.,.,...,,.,.,....,..___.,..,..,.
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Tr1bune-Sentlnet-Reogllltar will btl raaponalbla for no mOra than the co.t of thl ·~ca occuptea by thl .,-or and only tl'le l trst lnMn lon. ~·shall n~t be II
any ~ 1 or aa:penH that ,..utt. from the publle.Uon or omlaalon of an IJdvwtlnmant. CorriK:tion llrill btl made In the flr1t available Mi 1tlon. • Bo• -,wopa;oo•l

ara always confidtlntlal. • Cu11'11nt rata card appllaa. • All raal aatala aav.-lumanta .,.. IYbjact to tha ll"ederal Fair Houalng Act ot 1968. • Tt'tll n•
accept• onlv help -nt-.:1 ada m..tlng EOE ...nclard .. Wa will not knowingly accapt a nv advltrtlaing In violation of thil law.

.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
lli:J.pWA:m:o

~.,r.10_...::.~.s-~-- leo

lwrigh~ic.net

DIETARY AIDE

Learn to Drive
Tractor-Trailers

C-1 Seer Carry Out perm1t

Home for sale · 116 Mabehne
Dr.. 3 bedroom . 1 !:lath,
basement , garage . direct
.access to hik1ng &amp; bik ing
trails".
S63.000.
V1ew
phOto/i nto
onl1na
at
www.orvb com CQde 41504

"Wfl tram Men and Women
Scen1c Hill Nursing f=:enter,
"Full and Part Time Classes
a ianctem Health Care
'Job Placemenl
Facility. 1s seek1ng a part
·coL Tra1ning
ti me Dietary Aide to join our
'F1nanc1ng A~a1lat:lle
outstan,ding
team .
AS SEEN ONTV
Experience in meal prepara,
ALLIANCE
M.C.A .G.IPI Pleasa nt S r tion and food serv1ce preTractor-Tra1ler Trainmg
Center 101 Second St. , PO ferred .
Centers . Wytheville, VA
Box 12 Pt. Pleasant WV. Is
1.000-334-1203
accepting sealed b1ds on a We offer a perfect attenWW-N alll&amp;ncelractor1raller com
pooltable. _Bids close April . dance Incentive, shift diNerentlal, an excellent workmg Legal secretary, experience
30th . Opened May 3rd
envi ronment and mUch prelerred Send resume to
GIYEAm\·
mo.e' Please apply 10'
The Daily Sentinel . PO Box
729·40, Pomeroy, Oh 45769
Attn: Justin Frum
Free k11tens. part Persian, Scenic H1Us Nursing Center McDdnalds of A10 Grande,
311 Buckridge Road
Gallipolis and Point Pleasant
very tame . &amp; adorable Call
61dwell , OH 45614
WV are now hiring . Paid
(740)44 1-0633
Ph: 7401446·7150
vacalions. holidays and .
Old Tra iler to tear down &amp;
insurance available. Flexible
Fax: 740/446·2438
move out call (304)675·5956
Email: admm.shn@
hours. Start1ng above mmi·
tandemhealthcare.com
mum wage Apply w1th in

tor sale. Chester Township,
Me1gs County. send leMrs
of mteres1 to . The Daily
Sentinel. PO BOle 729·20.
f'omeroy, Oh io 45769.

or call

SF/DF/EOE
HA @tande"mhealthcare com
Bracelet lound

4·16·04

Twin Rivers park1ng lot call Dispatcher
to ident1fy (304)675·1333
Local trucking company IS
looking tor an e)(perlence
Lost Bracelet . 4/ 12/04 m dispatcher. Qualified candi·
Gal11polls. One s1de white dates must be able to work
gold. other side yellow gold. 1n a hectic, customer-d riv~n
Phone 740,441-5025 or env1runment and possess
740-256·6535
adequate computer skills. 1: General Manager
: Finance Position
w1th
the
Famil1arity
:Sales
OHN.JV/KY
lfi·Siate
area
IS
a
YARn SA!.E
· Certified Mechanic /
must. Salary will be based
Techicians
on eJ~pe nence.
. Parts/Service Clerk
Benefits
include
pAid
holi·
074 . YARIJ SALEdays . vacations and S1Ck
PuMEROY/MID!li.E days. life: llealth and dental ~ompet 1tive Salaries an
Performance
· Bonu
insurance and 401 K plan.
2 Family sale. April 22-23- Interested
candidat es Program Available . Please
end Resume. References.
24 . Quilt p1eces. computer should send their resume
nd Salary Requirement
desk. recline r rocker. musi- and salary history to CLA
o PO Drawer 110 Ripley,
cal instruments. good clean bm:.
555 c/o Gallipol is
cl~thes. pot s. pans. and Tnbune,
P.O. Box 469 ~V 25271. lmmediat
ppenings.
dishes, old records, mise Gallipolis OH. 45631.
items. 22842 Bucktown Rd.
Now Accepting Resumes tor
Letart Falls.
Fast growing business . Management Position in a
Cashiers and cooks need· . local
Convenience
7th Annual 6-Mile Yellow
ed for all ahttts. Full and Store/Gas StatiOn Please
Flag Yard Sale , Fri-Sat. April
parHime. Send resume to send Resumes to TC5 200
30th &amp; May 1st, Only $5 to
Dally Sentinel, PO Box Main St . Pt. Pleasant. WV
sign-upl We advertiSe for
729·8, Pomeroy, Ohio

you! Call 7 40·992·4055 or
740·992·3 148.
Yard Sale,

25550

45769

Thurs. Fr i. and Full time position available

Sat Apr)! 22 ,23;23 . Lone to work as a Victim Ad11ocate
Bottom
Commercial il" a reslde l"tlal setting. The
Ideal candidate will have a
Building. 9:U0 til ???
mil"lmum or an associate's
degree In social serv~ce
field and have e~~:perl ence
working w ith women and
Moving Sale Chestnut Ridge chi ldren In orlaia. Cand idates
acrosa
Rd . from Church must be able to work witt1
1Oth until ? nearly all must 11ictlma !rom varied cultural
and socio-economic back·
grounds, must be able to
WA~TED
work .l nctependently, and
TO BUY
maintain
contider'ltlallty.
lntereated peraon1 may
Ab1oluta Top Dollar: U.S, raply to: Peraonnel, P.O. Box
S~lver ,
Gold
Coi ns, 454, Clalllpol lo, OH 45631 .
Prootaeta. Diamonds. Gold
Rings ,
U.S. Cu rrency.- FulliTime Customer Support
M.T.S. Coin Shop. 1~1 Clerk. Local Bu1ine11 Send
Slcond Avenue, Oalllpolla, Aetume to PO BoK 353
740· 448·2842 .
Hender~on , WV 2!106
Beaton Terrier youl"g dog,

(740)742·2326
I \ 11 '111 , \ II ' I

._, ,

Ina
•·

I ~\

14 I ..,

IJF..LPWANTFD

'ANEW CLINICAL
PEELS!'
Want to look younger AND
earn Money? Let's talk the
NEW AVON call

Marilyn (3041662-2645,
Joyce (304)675-691 9,
. April (304)882·3630
AS SEEN ON TV
INSTRUCTION
LE ARN TO DRIVE
TRACTOR· TRAILER
NEW PROGRAM
NO Experience Needed
PlaCement Dept
Financing Available
COL!Tra1ntnQ
ALLIANCE
Tractor-Trailer
Train1ng Centers
Wythevtlle. VA
Call Toll Free

1·800-334·1203
· AVON! All Areas! TQ Buy or
Sell '· Shlrrey Spears. 304 ·

675·1429.
ParamediCS
&amp;
EMT's
neeOed. Apply at 1354
Jackson P1ke. Gallipolis.

HEY DRIVERS Ill
Hera Ia a great opportunity
to come grow with ua .
Kuntzman Trucking, an
year old, Regional Trucldoad
Carrier w ith terminals In
Alliance and CoiLUf1bus Ohio
has openect a new terminal
In Piketon, Ohio. Only hard
working. experienced drlv·
ere with a clean MVR and a
minimum of two years experience need apply.
We have openings lor:
15 Company Drivers
~ 5 Owner Operators
For Into call Ray
1·866·4"3 6·, 013

eo

LAWN LABORER· Will be
responsll:lle for lawn mainte·
nance. Have the ab~lity to
perform proper maintenance
on equipment. Must have a
valid opa"ratore license, high
school diploma or GEO
Send resume to Me 1gs
Industr ies. Inc., P.O Box
307. Syracuse, Ohio 45779

LPNe•FUH Time
Proper license ot certlflca·
Uon required. We oller pay
lor expe rience, shift diHeren·
Ual, perfect attendance
Incentive. ahilt pick up
bonus, excellent working
envlronmel"t and much
morel F'liiaae apply to:
Attn : Dlarina Thompsol" , HA
Scenic Hilla Nur1ing Center
311 BuCkrldge Road

Bldwoll, OH 46614
Ph c740/446-7150
Fox: 740/446·2438
Email: admln .thnC
tandemhealthcare.com

SFIDF/EOE
HAOtandemhealthearuom

POSTAL JOBS
St5.44·$.21.40/hr, now hir·
lng. For application and free
government job Info, eaU
American Assoc. of Labor,

1·(913)599-6220, 24 nrs.

Publication Sales Co. hiring
1a sharp enthusiastic
Individuals to travel tile U.S.
Travel, training Lodging and
transportation furnished
Return Guaranteed. Start
Today 1-80().781·1344

'

.

wwW.comics.co m

2004 by NEA , Inc.

WAIVIID

To Do

Superintendent vacancy
The Eastern Local District,
50008 State Route 7.
Reedsville.
Ohio,
IS
announcing the ret~rement
of
resignation
Superintendent, Deryl E
Well effective July 31, 2004 .
The d 1st rict is seeking appli·
cants from qualiried individu·
als that hOld a valid superintendent certificate/ license or
can prov1de proof they have
the ability to obtain such a
license. Candidates may
contact Mrs. Usa M. R1tchie
Tre.asurer, at (740)667·3319
for an application package
and additional information
Deadline to sul:lmit applica·
tion materials is May 14,
2004. The Easter.n local
School District is an equal
opportunity employer.
The Mei~;~s County Co1.mcil
on Acing is accepting appli·
cations/resumes
for
a
Registered Nurse lor the
posit iOn
of
Clinica l
Supervisor, The successfu l
candidate will be highly
organized , sell motivated. To
apply for th!s posillon, see
Darla
Hawley, ~ Human
Res ources
Director/Executive A11lstant
at the Meigs Muttlpurpo1a
Senior Center, 1 12 Eaat
Memorial Drive, Pomaroy,
Oh . An EOE

ScHoolS
!Nl.IIIUCOON
Clllllpalll C1r11r. College
(Career• Cloal To Home) ·
Call Today! 740·446·4367,
1·600-214·04~2

. , r.,.10-llliiHiiiiio,,iii!E.Siii
... _ _ .

.

Roofing . siding, porches. No
·Job to small, Free est1mates.
20+ yrs. e~~:p .. Reasonable.
(304)773-5028, 304-8822095 .
----------:Will do Lawn mowmg &amp;
weed eating in Hartford.
New Haven &amp; Mas on area
304·882·1119
Will mow town yards in Pt.
Pleasant area Please call
Adam Watson at (304)675·
3795

j2 10

oeacoom. &lt; oam.
Rivervie w access .. privatE
oat dock m GallipOlis. 1
ere lot. View photos/1nf
pntine
www o rv b carr
~ode 90303 or cal l 740
46-0531 .

v

oearoom . " oam .

'""~I

q.fl. Ranch Style. 2 out
buildings. Mitchell Rd .
~afllpohs. View photoslinl
www.orvb.corr
]online
k;Ode 40704 or call 740
41·8299.

3 bedroom . A frame, 2 bath .
laundryroom, new roo f. sid·
0PPoKil.JNITY
·--iioiiiiiiiiiiiliiiw ing &amp; waterline. large
garage. $67.000 (740)256·
Loca l Candle Ro ute- Make 6928.
100k per year simply restock
in·store displays. No selling. 4 bedroom 3 bath, Buckeye
Accounts , inventory, train- Hills Ad. In ground pool. 1
ing. support and protected acre (740)709·1166
territory for $13 ,950 1nves1&lt;.oc, .. 4 .22 ecres.
men!. 688·324·1014
ar garage, SA 554.
175,000. VIew photos/i n!
nllne
www .orvb.con
~ode
32904
or ca ll 740
NG CO. recommends tha

I

I""' .

~HIO.,VALLE:t'Pu':LISH

b'ou do business with peo
pie you know, and NOT t
~end money through th
fai l until you have lnvesll
!gated tha offer!~

F

I'ROITSS!ONAL
SERVIrni
TURN!D DOWN ON

IDCtAL IICUR!TY 1181?
No Fee Unl1" We Win I
1-886·~62-334~
1 ~ 1 \I I .., 1\ I I

HOM&amp;'i
tllRSAu:

WANrnO

::-Re_;s_ld_e_n-::11a::,--::T:-re-a-:-lm-e-:nt Ass1ated living opening in .2 bedroom house In
Pomeroy, possible financing
Facility youth wo rker. Pay my home . Call (740)388· w/good credit,
based on experience. Call 0116
7244

(740)698·

(740 )379-9083 •a epply.
ng
~ope OCI

67-7619.
80HIIda Dr. 1.5bath,_ 2BR ,
utilltyroom. fenced yard, new
porch, 8)(16 outdoor bldg. 2·
car garage. (740)367·71 88
8 room Ranch , lull base·
ment, 3 bed room. 2.5 bath,
2.5 acres. fam ily room, co11. ered dec~ . $99 ,900 . No land
contracts . (740)446-2196

GJ:

All real "t1t1 advertlalng
In tt\11 n.w1paper 11
'IUbject to tha Federal
Fair Houelng Act of 1;ea
wt\lol'\ mlkll It lll1gel to
adVtl1ile "1ny
pretar1nca, llmltltlon or
dlacrlmlnatlon ba1ad on
race, color, religion , Hx
famlllalltltul or national
origin, or 1ny lntenlfon to
make any auch
praferenca, llmltltlon or
dlacrlmlnatlon."
Thll newspaper will not
knowtngly accept
.clv.rtleementl tor real
lftlta which Ia In
vloletion of the law. Our
re•d•rl are haraby
Informed th1t all
dwelllnga advertl..d In
thlt newapaper are
av1llablt on an eq1.4al
opportunity ~·••·

3 Bedroom Bnck Ranch 1
Carpentry, odd jobs, lloor- Acre lot Red uced (304)675tlo want to earn mone
1ng, siding, roof1ng, remodel·
1714
hila losing weight. show
il"g. decks . no job to big Or" r~~::;:::-ron:::ll:.,."'
nc
other!!
how smalll
AsK
for
Matt
e room,
a .
nformational
DVDIC
(304)882·2978 , 304·377·
cres, 3 l:lay s~. Also fo
vaileble upon request 740 4633
ale camper. vacan,l lot 1
Porter. View photosl lnf
41 ·1984.
Great
Buys.
03 . new
www.orvb.co
nllne
Oakwood MOdular Homes
Day Care
Wanted : Bartender, full time
ode 33004 or Call 74
call for deta11s 7~0·446+
Apply in persOQ at the All shifts, hot meal. lanced in
46·8626 .
348~ or 740-446 -1567
yard
Link
accepted
Holiday Inn of Gellipolis

Openings

(304)862·2766

FIND
AJOB
IN THE ·
CLASSIFIEDS

Furn iShed 1. bedroom house
w1th A/C. No ·smokmg.
Aoplica!IO ns bemg taken .
(740)446-1 759

l\·IORO..£ HO\IE'I
FOR RE:\1'

·

28r Mob1le Hor1 e all eiectnc.

Georges Portable Sewm111,
don't haul your logs to the ~r.:;,ca::;ll;,;7,;40;:;·..;4o.46;.·,;o
76;:;33-.
. __.
m1H just call 304-67~ - 1 957
3 bedroom , 2 bathS on 4 3
acres. In the Country, SceniC
J1m·s Carpentry and small
$75 .000
Call
view
landscaping. Call (740 )446·

2506

(7401709·1 166

ater softer. Pomeroy, OH. '
1ew
photos/ 1nfo
01 i
ww .orvb com
Cod
0603 or call 740-992
650

Pt. Pleasa nt/Sandh11l Road
3Br 1sa 1600/sqft Ranch on
.6 acre level lot Oak floors .
1st house on R19 hi pas I
Marshall
Un1vers1ty

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

partially/furnished. very mce
no
oets
S325 month
(304)593-1939 leave message 1301 )697- 1341
-------3 bedroom mobile home 1n
Middleport . DepoSit and ret·
erence~ requued. No pets
17 40)992-5858

2167

...,

AI~\Rnn::,;rs

1968 mob1le ho.me . 12x60.
$800 OBO Needs movecl 1 and 2 bedroom apart·
1mmed1ately. (740)441·0988 ments. fu rn ished and unlur·
11 no answer leave messa g~ n1shed
secunty deposit
requ1red no pets. 740-992·
2000 Oakwood Home l6;o;84 22 18
3br 2ba, all eleCirlC. cenlral
a1r. Call affer 8.30 pm 1 BR . complete k1tchen.
(304 )458 -2048
A/C. Ref. &amp; dep No pets.
- - - - - - - - - - : - (74 0)446-0139
78 Shultz 14&gt;:70 three bed· - - - - - - : : - - : - - : - : :
room , all electnc. must move 2 bedroom apt. St At 160
S2.500 · (304)675·7783 or past Holzer. 5475 mo
(882)882·1108
(740)441·0194.
- - - - - - - - ----,-,----Before you buyl _
2 SA first " floo r apartment
Does your dealer?
with
small
yard
24
Move his homes • Do site Ct'1iii1C01he
Road
preparat1on • build lounda· $395/month. uti \.it1eS not
lions - Ro~l and set houses: included Requires 6 months
Do heatinQ and air- Have 1n- lea se and $395 secunty
house service people • deposit. No ·oels For appli·
Install septic systems - Do catiOn and to make an
electrical/plumbing • Do appomtment
phone
driveways. II the answe r to (740)44 t -11 08 .
·any of these questions is no ,
lor
rant
or II they-"sub·ccintract". You Apart ment
better see the oldest most Huntington . 7 clocks from
exper ienced
dealer
m Marshall K1tchenet1e OMAll'lens County, Since 1967 room, Oath, livmg-room
Coles Mobile Homes 15266 $450 monthly (304)675US 50 East Athens. Oh 1o 58 13
45701 "Where you get your
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
money't worth "
AT
BUD'G ET
MENTS
PRICES AT JACKSON
&amp;
ESTATES , 52 Wostwood
ACKEAGE
Onve from $344 10 $44:2
Walk to shop &amp; mov1es Call
16x80 Sites available St15
Equal
per month mcludes water, 740-446-2568.
Houa1
ng
Opportunity.
sawar &amp; trash , (740)992-

r

2167
83 acru for
Rd
Blessing
(304)882·2567

sa le an
letart

You could llsh your badlands
and Increase property value
tool IV!ake land mto lakes

(740[368-8228 .
IH\ 1\1 ..,

Houst:s

FOR Rl~''f

Tara

Townhou se

Apartments Very Spac1ous.

Ad ult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Pat10. Start S38S Mo. No
Pets Lease Ph1s Sacur1ty
Depos1t ReQUireo Days
74 0- 446-3481 . Evenmgs
7 40·36 7-0~02

Sr•.KE

----~---

HlRRIXr

Lms

Sm. Eff Apartment Includes
util1t1es partially fu•n1sned.
1r"1 Pt Pleasant 5285 month,
$150 depOSit (304)675-7783

Twlfl R1vers Tower IS accept1ng appl,cat1ons \Or wa1t 1ng
2 bedroom Trailer. Flat rock liS! tor Hud·sub5J2ed . t. br
area $300.00 'Call after apartment. cal ' 675-6679
5:00pm
(304)458·1502 EHO
leave message
=~-~~----,

$1'03.000 .(74:0)949- 1131 . Mobile hOme lor rent
alter 5:00PM
$375/month . 5375 depos1t
Call 740·367-7762 or 740·
Sandhill Road ·3 Br t Ba
367-7272
t 6QQ1sqtt Rancn on 6 acr"
"
level lol Oak lloors. 151 N1ce 2 and 3 bedroom
on R1ght past mob1 le homes lm rem
house
Un1vers1ty ncluoes water. sewe r &amp;
Marshall
5103.000 (740 )949·1131 trash no pets. deposit &amp;
after 5·00 PM
5300 per month {7 401992-

f320 :\1orm.E Hmn''

APARTI IE.'TS
FORRD.T

L- - - - - - - - " • 2 Bedrooms 2 Floor s. CA. 1
1' 2 Bath. Newly Carpeted.

1979 Bayv 1ew wnh expando
Must be moved. $2.500 Call
(74 o)J8Sc 91 25

IURSALE

BusiNESS

www galllpolllcll•lfconaga.com
Accladlt.d Mlmbar Accradltlng 0% Down payment pOIIIble
CoYncl I&lt;Jr lndep•nd•nt Cell•~•• and financing avallal:lle lor
anti Stttoola 12748.
bad credit or good credit on
this beau.tltul home 4 bedrooms.2 baths, garage. This
Is your chance to own and
not rent . You will not see
Barn Removal
e81ler qua!!lying require·
All referencea &amp; full lnsur· menta. You can buy this
ance . Gail 304-373·001 1.
home ror about $450.00 to
5500 .00 a month. Will not
To Do
last long . (740)949·2547

lji)

nmSALF.

~::'::'-"':"~----,

emp. serv.

by Aplil 23. 2004.

TRAVEL U.S.A

~

.NURSES
Scenic Hills Nursing Center,
a Tandem Health Ca re
Facility, Is seeKing a select
1ew to join our outstanding
team. We cUrrently seek :

1r

new roof, s1d1ng. wlndO\VS.
very good ne1ghPorhood.
t140 Second Ave Gallipolis.
OhiO. Ask1ng
St 19 .000
060. call Ka ren @ 740·
645-2088
@nee reduced-$65 .666 . ~
edroom . 1 5 bath . C1A.

~

v;;;GI~;;; DEAL~Re;~IP
FOR INDUSTRY LEAD·
lNG ATV'S/WATERCRAFT
SEEKING
RESPONSIBLE/MOTIVAT·
ED IND IVIDUALS
TO FILL
THE FOLLOWING
POSITIONS

(~0 1 )59 1 -2 488

HOUSF.S
FURRf:'lr

1 6· Tra11er 1n Letart
House to r Sale Good rental
Furmshed. all ulllilleS pa1d
mvestment. Duplex , two
S300 month S300 depos1t
rentals or one large hon-e.
i304i~2-2656
.
30x40 heated pole bu1ldmg.

r

r

Now you can have borders and 9raphlcs
added to your classified ads
(.;;,
.lr1't
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for large

~

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2
Bu•ln••• Dav- Prior To
Publlcat:lon
Sunday ~~~~~~~~,;~~~o''ii::',;.
Thur•day

• All ads must ba prepaid'

• Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needed

To Help Get Response .••

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Mondey-P"rld•y for J:n••rtlon
In Next D•v~• P•per
Sund•y In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Prld•v P:or Sund.•v• Paper

• start Your Ada With A Keyword • Include Complete

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items

\\"\CJI \ ( I \II \1 '-,

Ouu/~;,~

•DR RE.'T
Aprox 13.000 sq.

tt. located

0 ., Eastern A·,.e Would be

great tor recreatJOni:!.l use or
warehouse space . Opt1ons
are l1 m1tl~ss Call 740-2455060. 11arn-5pm Mo'iday·
Fr1day
Conver1ently located or
JacK-son P1ke 1n Spr1ng
Valley ·area Great for sma ll
busmesses or
med1ca1
offices. Ful y iln1shed &amp;
newly carpeted Great location . 740-245 -5060 11am·
Spm. Monday-Fr 1aay
0111ce space aowr1town
Pomeroy. approx 1800 sq
It . street leveL near courthouse 5450 mo i740J592·

1756
Riversites for rent. family
type. 3 campsites. full
hoo_l&lt;up, near river. 3 docksites , no hookup . Call

(740)992-5956
"'IS"'lo~"'!'H~O-l'S_EH_(_)_l.lJ_..,
GOOI~

L_ _ _ _ _ _ __.
8 p1ece Oak d1nmg room
suit Cal 17401367 ·0002
GoOd Used App lla'1c es.
Recol1d 111oned
and
Guararteed
Washers .
Dryers
Ranges .
and
Refr igerators, So--na start at
S95 . Ska~QS Appliances. 76
VIne .St . (740)446 -7398
Mollohan Ca rpet. 202 Clark
Chapel Road , Po1ter. Ol"llo

(740)446· 7444 1-677·630·
9152 Free Estimates. Easy
f1nancing, 90 oays same as
cash V1sa 1 Meste r Ca rd.
Onve- a- ti ttle save alot
Queen· s1ze bed New Oak
headboard like new 0011
spr1ngs &amp; mantess $175
(740)446-7398 alter 5pm

(740)367-7886

Thompson s App 11 a nce &amp;
Repa ~r-675·7388 For sale,
re -cond1t1oned
automat1c
w&amp;shers &amp; dryers refrigerators , gas and electnc
ranges . a1r condltiOnelli, .and
'o\!r 1nger washers Wi ll do
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· repa1r5 on maJor brands 1n
ED &amp; AFFORDAB LE!
shop or at your home
Townhouse
apijrtments,
and/or smel l· hOuses FOR Used Furniture Store. 130
RENT Call (7 40)4-4 1· 111 1 Bulaville
Pike
Grave
. lor application &amp; Information Monuments. (740)446·4782,
GallloOIIs OH Hrs 10·4 (M·
Grac1ous IVInQ 1 and 2 baLl· S)
room apartments at V1tlage ~il:t:--------,
Manor
an·a
R1vers1de
Apartments 11"1 Middl eport
From $295·$444 Call 740· · 99.2·5064 Equal Hous1ng Buy or sell
R1venne
Qpportun l1es
Ant1ques t124 East Ma1n
on SR 124 E Pomeroy. 740N1ce one BR unlurnu;hed
992·2526
Russ Moore
apartment Range &amp; retng
owne r
" prov·ded Water &amp; garbage
~
pa1d Oepos1t requ11'"ed Ca I
(740)446-4345 after 6pm
~lEKCHA~I&gt;L~•;

t Br possible 2. located '"
New Haven everyth mg in
walk1ng d1stance. appliances
ll..1rn1Shed. total ElectriC $300
month $300 deposit Na N1ce two bedroom apart·
ments Large rooms Fully
Pels call (304)882·3652
eqwped k1tct1en Central
2 bedroom house 1n c1ty. hea11ng CCOI1ng
hookuP
ssoo
month
secunty Washer 'dryer
depo!ll
&amp;
references (304!662·2523
reqLu•e d no pets (740)4464053
::----~-:-:---:--:~
Pleasant Valley A.pertmeflt
3 bedroom
house
1n Are now talo.mg Appll(:atrons
Pomeroy. S400 a mo.. S400 for 2BR 3BR &amp; 4 BR
depos1t. no pets. {740)949· Applical1ons are
taken
Monday thru Fr1day. horTI
7004
9·00 A.M -4 PM Off1Ce IS
3Br House With detached 2 Located al 1151 Evergreen
car gar111ge $400 month plus Onve Pomt Pleasarl WV
depos11
1n
Glenwood Phone NO IS (304 \675-5806
EHO
(304)743-8584

r

li.snr.L' -.;mt·s

1 114 Carel 11ear1y flawless
SOI1ta1te
D1amond
E'1gagement A1ng s1ze 771 ·2 Plat1'"1um sewng $3 500
Fum 1304\675-7252

-.-

Dinn.ng room swte. table 6
cha1rs &amp; hutch Vl&lt;ltfl glass
doors var 11 good conditionAs kmg 4850 00 Can be
seen at MCAG Pt Pleasant
sen 1or Center 101 Second
St
Large capac1ty Maytag
electr1c Oryer e~~:cellent con01!10n $125 00 (7 40)992 -

1121

�•

-Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, April 20, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, April 20, 2004
ALLEY OOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5
NEA

BRIDGE

Crossword

48 Gave food
49 Dairy-case
1 Verdi opera
buys
5 " Nightman!" 51 Divide
In two
8 Take home 53 Once
atrophy
named
11 Objective
54 Bear
12 Gehrig or
in the sky
Piniella
55 GreekP
13 Aloud
57 Hunter's
15 Car import
need
16 Soho co.
61 Weekda
62 Charged
17 Trout
atom
habitat
18 Anaconda 63 Edict
20 Melt
64 Fast jet
22 Arab VIP
65 Hi~h note
25 Loop trains 66 Sk&lt;rt vent
26 Tokyo,
formerly
.DOWN
27 Roam
around
1 Ottoman
official
28 Orion 's
follower
2 Cash
31 " Now hear
substitute
-!"
3 Family man
33 Turf
4 Cover story
34 Aunt Bee's 5 She,

Puzzle

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

-

•!
~orth

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thunday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30

#lu66ard 's qreenhtNUe

•
GREAT WUKLY INCOME!

THOUSANDS OF BUSINESS

National Cor11Jany

In

Nltlon-"

"-oe Provided!

can ,_ m

Loans

SALE or vlall

ClrMt

-'*" .

740-992-5776 .
$2,000 WEEKLY!

Positions Available.

Ma1hng 400 brochureel

TRI · STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

GUAAAmEEO!

Owner: Jeff StEittlem

1~14-0221'

DL 130

Per101111lloane. UnMCUnld,

Sand $35 00 application fee

$1,380 WEEKLY
STUFFING ENVELOPES
No Exp Necessary!

to ENAC., 800 W.

$50 Cash Hiring Bonus!!

at
..... Tho foC.C»j -

,...._I&gt;!'

II ill -

...

· "'f

r9"

.,..,...,..11

Tho~

Hutchinson

St.,

'

·

Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304·675·2457

of

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

every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
SFREE

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

L;,.

&amp;

IIv.

L,--V·F.G·ET-"-BI•Jol·l&gt;·
· _.I.

(740) 591·0670

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

Let me do 1t for youl

316 Washington Street
Ravenswood, WV 26164

~~

~· ~

VEGAS

Dr. Kelly K. Jones

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete .
Angle.
Channel. Flat Bar, Steel
Grating ,For
Drains.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
Fnday. Sam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday, Saturday
&amp;
SlJnday. (740)446-7300
$too
Sl ave/Fn·dge
Washer/Dryer
S450.
Formal&amp; Wedding
dress
StOO. Aocklord Fosgate
400S/800Wt amplifier $ 250 ,
12"B d
8 $' 5
(740)~5~:;.9
ox '

8UILDING

~..,

Sl1l'I'LIES
___
_ _ __

Block, brick. sewer pipes,
windows. lintels. etc . Claude
Winters. Rio Grande , OH
C 11740 245 512 1

r

Ir;;;:;:;;::;::;:;;;;:;::;::;:::;
°

1
FOR SALE
FARM
..__ _ _ _ _- '
7 week old Toy Poodle, ..,
black. $250.. ask for sandy 2001 Murray tawn mower. 21
or Daniel./740)245·9261.
HP, 46 cut. Like new. Call
(740)266·6574.
Border Collie pups, $100. "'E;;o;;~op;:;~=!'5:=:;J
(740)388·t520
l"i or ~ate: ownsena snee
:E_n-gl:..is-h.-S-e-1te_r_p_u-pp-i-es. ~nd goat Turntable. use(
1-nly 2 limes. like bran
Hunting sock. Registered , .U'
born 211 4/04 , $200 . Call raw! .~.os6)~900, wrlltak
(740)441-1892.
~500! 740 245-0485.

Mob1le home 1969 remolded . 12X55, 2 bedroom, t
bath $3.500.00 Motor home
1976 Runs good, Champron
$3,000.00 1999 Pontiac
Bonneville, Green runs good
$6,500.00 (740)992·2306

i

TROCKS
H)R SALE

I

1.,~-------·· ~ SLT
99 Dodge
1500 Ouad..Cab
package, loaded, many

Sharlff'o Sola of
Roal Eatata
Coae No. 03·cv·102
; Ths Stall ol Ohio,
' l!elgo County
Mid 'TI'uat,IV
Pl1lntlff,

VI.

8 yr. old Pal . Mare. Well
broke, $1 ,600.
3 yr. old Gel~ing, green
broke. $500.(740)44lHJ367

recent updates, very clean,
garaged. $9,500. (740)256·
6936.

Dairy ~oats- Registered
right ol wsy line, N. 48 Alpine· Doe , Buck and
Dtg. 31' 21" W., 248.21 Wothor Kids, call 1740)9aa·
1•1 to the point of _2_07
_3______ _
BEGINNING and con· Nice Fair Pigs 6wka otd
11 I n Ing 1 •00 Ac-.a, Yorkohlre/Hampshlro plga
mort or 1111.
FORLASTBOURCE· ar~flclslly bred born &amp; brad
OFTITLESEE
O.B&gt; In Maoon County 35·40 lba
324, Pg. 587 of tht (304)8~5·351 5 or 593-2728
Meigs County, Ohio Reg. Quarter horae, 2 yr old
Recorde of Oeeda. Golding, Cutter Bill blood·
Plrct I
N o.
11 • llnaa. Pro11y hor10, Blaze 3
00025.001 .
Whlto oqcko. Roady to train,
These prtmlsee art S900.(740)44H716.
locetad ot 318U Red
Hill Road, Langsville,
Ohio 45741-8707 and
were 1ppralaad II
FOR SI\LE
120,000.00 and con· t..--:.~::i:i._.l
not bt aold lor 1111
than two·lhlrda of that $500\.Hondao.
Chevy a,
amount, to wil:
Jeopo, otc I POLICE
$13,333.34.
IMPOUNDS Coro from
TERM SO F SAL.!: $500, For tilllngo 1·600·719·
10% Clth In hand at 3001 ext3901
doy of · oole with bol·
anct bt paid by C11h 19'7 Jeep Station Wagon, 2
or Certified Check door. 4 cyl . 4WD. Phone:
upon dellvory of deed. (740)446·4999 Price: $975.
Rolph E. TruaNII
1987 Cutlass, runs good.
Sheriff
of
Mtlga body aolld . 1986 Ford
County, Ohio
Explorer. 4x4 , $1,200 each
Mark K. McCown, 080. (740)742-6716 .
AHornoy
• ---------311 Perk Avenue
1989 Pontiac Bonneville.
Ironton, Ohio 45638
good rlJnnlng condition
740·532·8744.
$900,00 (740)742·2168
(4)13, 20,27
1992 Dodge Spirit, 58.400
miles. runs &amp; looks Qood.
$1,200 . (740)446·2668 .
Public Notice

~~---ii4-iiWDsiOiiiiiio--'

Miry J, H1wk, ET AL
Dlllndants.
In pu,.uence ol an
order of sala In the
above entitled action I
will offer lor Silo a1
public auction at tha
door ·
of
tho
Courth~uoo
In
Pomeroy, Ohio In tho
abova named County
on Friday, May 14,
:2004 1110:30 A.M. tho
following doocrlbod
rut ostato.
Blluato
In
tho
Township ol Rutland,
Metgo County, Ohio:
BEGINNING 11 a point
In the contarllna of
Route 124, Hid point
Ia whe,. the contar·
line ol Corn Hollow
Road lntoroocta with
. Route 124; thonca
with the ·c enterline of
Route 124 S. 500eg.
33' E., 153.971eetto o .
point at the center ol
a brldiJII; thence N. 37
Deg. 11'32" E., 24.92
: lut to the true point
• of beginning, oald
: point Ia also In the
Notice Ia hereby
. northerly right of way
given
lhlt the annual
· line ot Route 124;
meeting of the ahare·
: thence leaving said
holders of Farmers
right ol way and along
:a
1evarance
llna
Banes hares, Inc. will
. ~hrough the property
be
held
at
the
: ol Oouglao Chapman,
Middleport Church of
Chflat, Family Life
. O.B. 309, Pg. 395 (lour
Center,
437
Main
· calloO end following
Street,
Middleport,
the · centerline at o
Ohio, on the third
small creek lor (two
Wednesday of April,
cello), N. 2 Deg. 25'
2004, at 4:00 p.m .
13"E., 94.17f•t, N.35
accordlr)g
to
Ita
Oeg. 20' 37" E. 60.51
bylaws, lor the pur·
feet to a polnl; thence
leaving said creek, s .
pose of electing dirac·
54 Oag. 08' 43" E,
tors and the tronsac·
lion
of such other
313.52 feet passing an
bualneaa
as
may
Iron pin at 20.00 feet
to an Iron pin, S. 41
properly come before
Oeg. 28'39"
164.01
sold meeting.
Jo
Ann
feet to an Iron pin In
Crisp,
the N'ortherty right of
Secretary
way line Route 11 24;
~3) 22, (4) 2, 14, 20
thence along said

'

w,.

•

•

rid

Al!J'OS

1992 Plymouth Laser Turbo .
for part $200 will not part
_o_u_t.:..l30_4:..16_7_5_·4_6_t7_ _ _
1994 Chrysler Town &amp;
country high mileage runs
good $1,500 (304)675-1043
1997 Sawrn 2o Auto.
$2,895; 1995 GMC full size
shor tbed truck. $3,495,
1997 Z·24, $2,995. 18 oth·
ers 1n stock, starting $995.
COOK MOTORS
(740)446.0103
-,-- _;_F_;_d_t_ _ _S_E
99 8 or
aurlJS
,
fully/loaded power/moon·

root, s d1sk CO, cost new

~75 $4500 .QBO 675·

2000 Dodge Neon. auto, eir,
$3,100080
1998 Dodge M1ni Caravan,
needS paint work,· 52 ,300080. (740)256·1233

!~N~~~--~~ANS--&amp;~-_,

1985 Ford Ra~ger 4X4 VB, 5
speed, S2,500 call after
,.:5~m~30~4o:;8~75;;,·3::,:7,;:45;..,._

~1.

Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.

Pomeroy, Oh1o

740·992·5232

POviN

:

Tti~ ST#l~f'T

BARNEY

R. 8 •

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

AllTQ PAlm&gt; &amp;
ACCESSORIES

Wlndshisld, rear ondo,
Trano. axles, $25 &amp; up;
Motors &amp; bodies, St oo &amp; up.
740 388·6226

Mtii:o-~---~'""'1

&amp;

.._ooiMiiiiOTOiiiiRiiiiHiiiOiiiMF.'iiii.,l

SI~JtL

Trucking
HAULING:
Limestone
s U

•

Cougar Model 276 EFS
2002 Fifth Wheel, excellent
condi1ion $20,000 {304}882·
33119
..,lin If I '

1810

HOME
IMJ'ROVEMFNI'S

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UnconditiOnal lifetime QUaranlee Local references furnished Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs (740) 4460870, Rogers Basement
Waterprool1ng.

Hours

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

Dirt
• Ag Lime

Painting-Guttersec S·

•

C.

•

Owner

not our .o;,·ideliue

0

pot of perennials $1.18 Buy 5 or more for $1.00
Open 7 days

BUILDERS InC.

r-.....;c-.,-, SPE.C.OII'\G. OOWI'\ 1\
Dl RJ F:.ON&gt; !

. . ,a.. "J_ .

&amp;!':OUGHT HIS STUPID

I JU~T l&gt;oNT

CAT To CHESS PRI&gt;.C.TICE'

LIKE CATS'
I'M

(".,&lt;Tf

,A';l

H

RESIDENTIAL

IMPORTS

FREE ESTIMATES

Dean HIU
New&amp; Used
475 South Church st.

: BETTY
l DOI'I'T

Ripley, WV 25271

for

HOWARDl.
WRITfSEl
•ROOftiiiB
•HOME
MAINnNINCE
.SEAMlESS

aumR

*freeEsllmlteh

949-1405.

FEEL SAFE

oF A

6WIND"!1-IE
WHEEL'?

OP.I1/e:ll.

GARFIELD
GARFI t:L..D, I KNOW
YOU'RE' ON A PI 1:1"••.

Advertise in this
Space for
$50 per month

00 Yru ~rALLY

11-IINI&lt;. YQJP.
F~IEND
I~ M\JC!I

1-800-822-0417

$75

FREE ESTIMATES!

Toctay s clue: A equals U

" ALF
BD

WI~

HER

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions
&amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Eleetrleal &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gunere

• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Pstio and Porct'l Decks

We do It att ucept
furnact work

V.C. YOUNG 111
992·6215
Pameroy, Ohio
22 Year• Local Experience

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages

• Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

OXRKOWRBOOW

a·

B 0

TDAILFMU

BO

WDB
NFRB¥

0 WL S 0 t F

T 0 A t L F MU

RNFMF

ZIODPXRW

M 0 U F ."

spade. three top hearts on the board, live

B 0

.diamonds and three club ruffs in hand.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "I eal Jess , we&lt;gh less. train less and care tess."·
- Ray "Boom Boom" Manc1n1, after he rettred from boxing
(c) 2004 by NEA, Inc. 4·20

'O©~JJlA-~~~~·
_ _ _ _ __; ldilod
CLAY I . POLLAN
Ofour
harra,ge len•rs o' tke
:t&lt;rambled words be·

AstroGraph

1Ml1 DliLT

PUULII

-.r'lllrtllda.v: .

GEMINI (May 21·June 20) - It you're
hoping to be productive today, find an
atmosphe1e in which lo work that provides
solitude and seclus1on where others aren't
likely to Intrude on your concentration
CANCER {June 21·July 22)- In order to
WELL, SURE ..
g"et the best out of yolJrself today. spend
your time with associates who share interTO CROSS THE STREET ..
ests similar to yours. Each will serve to
Inspire the other tO become more positive
and creative
LEO (July 23·AlJg. 22) - Be both patient
and persistent today. blJI take things one
step at a time. If yolJ don't blindly rush forward into anything. many of your objectives and goals can be advanced at this
time
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- Have faith in
your ideas and don't let others dissuade
you from them before you have a chance
to try them out. Your iff!agination and creativity can earn you special rewards today.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) ~ Gains are
possible today in a joint enterpnse you are
involved 1n with another. However, nothing
wilt come of it if you don't personally take
~OW CAN YOU
the lime to keep watch on the project
SAY"IltPii~
yourself.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 22) - Although
you may prefer to do things' alone. today
TERRI&amp;€
partnership sjtuatlons can offer you
greater benefits than wolJid actions you
take Independently of others. Don"! be a
loner.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - Pay
);losE! attention to the tasks at hand today
and try to perform your duties up to the
very best of your abilities. There are e~r~tra
dividends in it for you at this time for jobs
done well.
CAPRI CORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ~ Go out
ot your way to make a concerted afton to
establish a good rapport w1th someone
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , . you could meet socially today. ThiS mdiVId·
ual could turn out to be a vallJable conta ct.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) - II you
stay on top of thin~s and don't dilly-dally
today. a matter that you've been anxious
to finalize can be settled once and lor all to
your advantage. Strike while the iron is
hot
PISCES (Feb. 20- March 20) -Your mental facultieS Will be 8SpSC18tly keen today
and you should be able to lesrn or accom·
plish almost anything to which you set
your mind. Set specific goals and go au
out. .
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) - Measures
can be taken today to blJild upon your
material holdings. Focus your attention
and erforta on ways to strengthen your
pratent potltlon and enr~a nce )'OlJr finan-

SHE'S A

DRIVER!!

cial tacurlty.

YOUNG'S

TCAI
LGRIF

Z A

SOUP TO NUTZ

~y

WOlD

GAM I

low to form four words.

I

TKOYNT

~

I I' I I I

H A WF R

I." I.

j J; J

.

.

If

Overtheyearsl'veobserved
people in the workforce. Many
people believe that life would
be !Jetter if they didn't have lo
go through it by • • • • • • •.

"'~

.

•

I
I1--r,-,,~,....:..,,.,.7.:..,1,;_,,- 0
1 M GA

YOll MAY !-lAVE

Athens

740-992·7599

&amp; More

-4/2:0/04

NOW, 60 OUT THERE. AND
Sf.IOW EVER't'ONE THAT 't'OU'RE
THE KING OF THE JUN6LE ~

,

Eacl'l letter 1n !M Clpner s:ands 'c· anctnet.

Wedneadav. April 21, 2004
By Bernice Bade Osol
You Should be able to establish greater
stabilitY 1n your material affairs in the year
ahead Your re!t~rns may not flow in at an
overwhelming rate. but they won"t need to
Your growth pattern will be consistent and
solid.
·
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Devote as
mlJch time as possible today on projects
that are.personally Important to you. Much
can be accomplfshod at this limt~ in
advancing your self-Interest s ·and private

~~

NOT

A.FAAt'O

:.Jo

R®lty''~

COMMERCIAL and

Kitchens, Drywall

by Luis Campos

CelebnN C1~he1 ti)'P!0~1ams a1o created from quctaucns.ov famous oeaplo oast ana present

runs his diamonds for these 12 tricks: one

~
~~
~

.

Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Roofing

Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks,

CELEBRITY CIPHER

atta1rs.

New H"ornes • Vinyl

740-742-341

992·4197

PI\SI'.Mr..W OF r., PICKUP TI'Uc.K.

t'\R . l&lt;OS.A, FRANCIS

a week daylight
to dark!

New Homes,
Room Addlllona,

Middleport American Legion
Middleport, Oh10
21 games for $20.00
Drawing for $1 00 Longaberger
Gift Certificate
Sponsored by River!Jend Arts
Council Advance Tickets

"'((:) M.f&gt;.N.;
DO 't'OIJ 7

BIG NATE

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

Bryan Reeves

Thursday, April 22, 2004
. 6:30pm

!&gt;,

Meigs County's Largest selection of
annuals, perennials, vegetables,
shrullbery, fruit, ornamental trees,
roses~ rllodoaenarons, ana azaleas.

Sunset Home
Construction

BASKET BINGO

YOU 1'\0D 'lOUR f.\EJ\.0 MORE. Tf'N-1
BOBeLE. f\E.I\1/ OQL 01'\ nit.

CJC 1'1£ (\'":, 1\

n Mon· Fri 9·5 Sat. 9· 12

per
month

Call Captain Steamer for info.
Offer expires 4/30/04
Toll Free 888·338·7847

"'!

spade. South will have no option but to
finesse, and when it loses, hE! is quickly
one down.
II Soulh is iorced to ruff a club at trick lwo,
he might still rely on the 50·50 spade
finesse. But it is beMr odds to bank
everything on a 3-2 frump break, which
occurs some two· thirds ol the time.
At Irick lhree. declarer plays a diamond to
dummy's jack, then he ruffs another club.
Back lo the board wilh a trump, South
ruffs the last club with his penultimate
heart. Now he draws trumps, discarding
his spade loser on lhe last round, and

It is a periecl dummy reversal, which is
suggested by dummy's excellent trumps.

4"

* space
0

Get an area of
carpet cleaned free .

P"

P"you oot-~1 Tf\11'\K

Manning K. Roush

740-992-5594
740-992-6862

7th Annual 6-mile
Advertise
Middleport-Pomeroy
in this
Yellow Flag Yard Sale! 0

MUST SAVE AD

""l

BISSEll

~~!~ l.iiir...

Maps avallable.Apr l81h
Call 992·4055 for Info

1'-:)K iOU 1\0UE.:'&gt;TIOO,
CJ\It.f 7

TFN

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

0

'

OF 'Et'\ ~

f.?.,..,,, .

Friday-Saturday Apr 30 &amp; May I
Look for the yellow na11sl

P"Ml\'il

Lawr1 ar1d Garderr Equipmerrl is our
busir~e~·s,

THE BORN LOSER

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

Residential &amp; Manufactured Housing
Air Conditioners, Heat Pumps &amp; Furnaces
• Super Hi Efficiency Equipmen.. .
. • Free E~timates
· · ~~A
• 5 &amp; 10 yr Warranties
.. . . , •
• Huge Inventory
• ., ·i!.;;l'&lt;·
• Vanguard Ventless Fireplaces "•lij~N

¥

992-2975

Yaras

Dennis Boyd
740 992 1189
740:992:2902

. HEATING U COOLING

0

Pomeroy, Ohio

Flat of plants $6.60
Hanging Baskets $6 .60

BENNETT'S

'flfF.El!.!!

11

Will Mow

Estl·mates
&amp; Affordable
Prices, ·Call...

985 ]564

20.4 Condor Street

in Saville
6 House site
7 Rainy
season
hazards
8 Dog
ancestor
9 tn a huff .
10 Bare

~ub ace and to shift immediately to a

SALES &amp; SERVICE

1/1 4/1 mo. pd

For Fast Courteous
Service, Free

•

740•

'

kin
38 More than
satisfy
39 Keats opus
40 Went down
41 Gentlest
44 Country
addr.
45 Forum hello

for East to overtake at trick one with his

GRAVELYTRACTOR

Sizes 5'x1 O'
. t!) 1 0'x30'

Roofin'g-Siding-

D k El

an

0

l ,

Pass

Wilh this distribulion. the best defense is

Snapper

Gravely

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

·~'INS'fRIJ'~1'1'1N

, ,,

•
1984 Soatty Camper 19ft,
Sleept 5, Stove, Furance,
Beth/Shower, Frlg. In good
condition $3,000 (304)458·
1825

1993 26' Dutchman Travel
Trailer. Sleeps 6, good condl1ion , fully self contained,
$4,900 1304)675·1501
---------2001 29ft Sprinter 5th
Wheel Camper. One Slide
Out Ellcellent Condition
$15,500 Phono (304)837·
3211
---------2002 Jayco 2911 trailer warranty, setup on lot at Kro9e1
Park (304)675-4230 days
(304)675-4853 evenings
---------35ft. 5th Wheel. sleeps 6.
Call (740)645·2729 tor more
inlormatlon,

Hill's Self
Storage

1'1'

Pass

4.s•••

menace

47 Mountain
· curves
response
50 Thumbs
(hyph.)
24 Amend
through
52 Right,
25 Crumbled
on a map
away
29 "Kind
53 Opposite
of all
of exercise
56 Garden tool
30 Distress
signal
58 Wire gauge
59 - tai
32 Put
35 Fix potBtoes 60 Baseball
36 Go- detail
greet Mel37 Makes do
with

queen.

AISLE

(304) 273-5321

:=======~ I"I=======~

MOTORC\'&lt;LES
·-----•
2002 Harley Oavldaon 883R
Sportotor, 1,050 mlloo, per·
teet condition, $7,000.
740 379·2601 '

CAMPFJIS

Ronnie Jones

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

H"16'11XOJ Dry

--------

Massey Ferguson #12 Hay 1993 Dodge 3/4 ton
Baler $600 (304)675·5.906
Cummins Otesel Emerald
green excellent condition
Mass6y Ferguson 50, 4 cyl. $5500 (304)675·5324
gas. Price $2,850. Phone
(740)446·4999.
89 Toyota Truck 2 WD runs
LtvF.srocK
good$1 ,1 00(304)576·2389. ·

i

~ ~fJtiJJIA.
~

has plashc on it. 17,000
miles may be seen at 7 r
Wmdsor Ct. Pt. Pl.

'-.-.:EQutPM•,:;::;,EN~r:.,..,J

CLASSIFIEDS

•

Almost new!! 1999 Otds 68,
Passenger &amp; Rear Seat,
never been used . Radio stilt

~~·p;.;~·~-~;.:.,
· . _ __,
PI:.TS

SH' QP

FO'HI SALE

East
Patis
Pass
Pass

43 Foot port
45 Touch
46 Computer

worked out the killing defense, how can
South make his contract ilthe opponents
begin wnh two rounds of clubs?
~orth 's seqHence showed four or live
spades, exactly lhree hearls, and game·
going values. South used Roman Key
Card Blackwood lo Jearn lhat his partner
had two key cards (eilher two aces or one
ace and the trump kmg) plus the frump

SILAS AIN'T

I

97 Dakota 4x4 , 56,000 mi.
SLT club cab. Loaded, new
pa1nt. pyt $135, Retails
S11.000. Sell for $6,400.
(740)446·1 127.

KESSEL'S PRODUCE

~r~-~~----

Arnu;

93 Toyota Corolla. Clean,
good condition, great gas
mileage. Call {740)4461947

Troybui!t rototiller. pony size.
HOMEGROWN
excellent condi tion _$600.00
ASPARAGUS.
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In TreadmiH·litecycle Sears. Ava-ilable now at Charles
Stock: Call Ron . Evan~ . 1· 1.5 HP $125.00. Cedar McKean Farm . (740)4469442.
chest $100.00.
800·537·9528.

JET
AERATION MOTORS

MPEX Powerhouse OlympiC
Steel Weight Set 45 Lb Bar.
250 Lb We1ghts, Curl Bar.
Dumb Bell Bar, Weight Tree.
Adjustable Bench Like New:
$125.00 Phone: (304)593·
2301 (leave Message)

tO

North

42 Broncos·
div.

can the defenders defeat six hearts for
sure? Take your tii'ne. Then, after you've

CHECKOUT~"-"~

Fauns

West
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

14 Late-night
host
19 Approves
21 Columbus
seh.
22 Noncoms
23 Joke

Some deals offer both Sides the chance
16 be clever. For exftmple, on today's layout. after West leads the club king. how

CAN»Y"

Ii

Dealer: South .

Devilish defense

\

]3r .1'i~ ~ 1

750 East State Street Phone (74())5 113·&lt;~67'11
Athens. Ohio

,
30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner:

fi 4:!

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

. (Commercial aod RI!Sidential)
Trimming, !ree Trimming, Aeration, Fertilization,
Spraymg of fence hnes, Leaf Removal, as well as small
landscaping jobs such as planting and mulching.
FREE EmMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

Tree Service

10 8 3

•

Opening lead : • K

Mowin~,

JONES'

•

Vulnerable : East-West

••

GOT A "NO

MtiCELlANEOUS
M•:ROJANJ)LS};

7 4 2

South

Bucket Truck

MlscELJ.ANE;oo;

•

2.I.

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

:r.-·MI:RcHANDisE·---·Ir .

!)

04-20·0-l

Q J"
A KQ
J 3
9 5 4 2
Easl

' •. A
8 6R j6 3
... K Q J 10
SouLh
• A Z
' I J I0875
+ - A K Q 10 0
... 7
.

LAWN CARE DiVISION

Call 1-888-590-9379

1·773-975-9678

;

6:30

:1

.,

4NT

Guaranteed In Writing!!

' Illinois 60613
Chicago,

875-2417

Mobile Homes, Houses, L"og Homes, Decks, DrNeways,
~
Sidewalks. Gas Station Awnings, Degreasing of
Equipment, Boats, Campers, Tractor Traile~.
Dump Trucks, _painting or staining of your deck
or log home, Aluminum brightening.
Special rat~ to Trucking and Dump Truckina: Companies.

Day or NJQN ·

Up To $10,000
haH price of payday loans.

Early birds start
Last Thursday

Wt"sl
• K 9 5 4

MONT-Y

POWER WASHING

1·80()..577·7735

'

Henderson, WV

(Commercial and Residential)

Call now lot tree Information

'

MYERS PAVING

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

FREE POSTAGE. SUPPUESl
Stan lrrwnediatetv'
Free Call Anytime

No Expenence Neces5111Y:
Call

• Porch Boxes·
• Combination Pots
• Perennials
• Spruce Trees
• Shrubs
,
• Peat Moss •

Monday-Saturday 9·5 Closed Sunday

MAKE UP TO $25&amp;'8HifT

800-331-4555 X 2361

one hour.

1-1188-395-0247

BARTeNDER "IRAIIEES HEEDED
Local

• Easter Flowers
• Bedding Flowers
Vegetable Plants
Blooming
&amp; Foliage Baskets
Potting Soil

S3000

an~ up with

www.gwbo.com

I'Ne: 1-ID0-357·1170

Bills?

Too Much Debt'?

SlUing A lualn••

Buelneaa Since 111119'
Start lmrnedialelyl

BUY FORECLOSURES!
Use lrl\•eators Money!
Split Prollllf
Training!
Fme Information!

.,

Overdue

In Buying or

FREE IIFOIIIIATIDH!
Call Our Uve Operators 2417
Toll

INSTANT CASH

For Sale By Ownll"l
In-lid

Needs Home Mailers •
Immediately in Your Area!

Syracuse, OH
Now Open

•
•
•
•

sT

_,n~ t~uckle ~vofed

CoMplete
by lrll+n9 1n the m+ssmg word$
'-...1.-..1..-!.-.J......J- you deYelop from stl!p No. J below:
.

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.

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.

_

.

PRINT NUM8EIW lETTERS 1
IN 1HESE SQUAI£5

9 g7ic;~~!~E~ tmm TO I

I I I I I I ·I

SCIIAM·LETS ANSWERS

•.-H-o"

Embalm • Taunt • Yield· Visage • TABLE SET
"The tr0ublewith amicrowave," the mother mumbled as
she ran around the kitchen, "is that the meal is ready before
I can get the TABLE SET I"

ARLO &amp;JANIS

r

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Major League Baseball

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Detroll 10, GlevelMcl4
Seattle 2. O&lt;ikland I , (14'1

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HBP---by Arrr:I'{O {.laG.ambo). by Arrf¥} (Jatar) .

AMS&amp; IIB · 4120

Umprras---Home, Anget Hernandez; First Mike
E...erm: Second. M!!.rk Wegner: nuid. Larry
Young
T-2:53 A.-35.027 (33.991 ).

New York

031 • 000 000 - · 4
Bolton
010 011
11x 5
E- AAodrrguez (I ), Mueller 2 (4), Reese (4).
DP-Nvw York 1, Bostoo 2. LOB-New York
9, Boston 7. 28- Matsul (31, TLee (1),
Mueller (11, DOrtiz (2). McCarty (1). HAJaGrambi 3) , Var r1a~ (2). 5-EWilson

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CENTRAL

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c.,cmnatr
Prl!sbl..lrg_h
ChrC8QO Cubs
St Louis

Los Anga~
Sa n D11ag_o
San Francrsco
Colorado
Arrzona

Ti"n~n W. 1 ·1

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2·3
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41!0

McARTHUR - Easlem 's
Ross Holter had a slrong
showing at the recent Vinton
County Invitational track meet
Holter won the discus throw
with a distance of I 33-8 (with
teammate Darren Scarbrough
finishing third) and was second
in the shot put with a throw of
43-7.
Eastern's boys finished seventh overall with 29 points
with Meigs coming in eighth.
Vinton County (I 70) won the
boys team title, followed by
Waverly (149) and Jackson
(I 08).
Also for Eastern , Bryce
Honaker (25.50) was fourth in
the 200-meler dash. whil e
Meigs' Josh Manley wa~ seventh in the 1.600-meler run
(5: 19.7) and the long jump
(] 6-3).
Meigs 4x 100 relay leam fin ished seventh.
On the girls side, Meigs was

3
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.429

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E- Kearns (1 ). Freel (2) . DP-Crncinna!i 2
Chrcago 1. L6s--Crnc111na11 7. Chrcago 11
2 8-Griffe~ Jr. (3). Freel (3). ASGonzalez (2),39-ARamirez (1). HA-AAamirez (5)
Delee (2). s-c1ement.

Cinclnnlti

RWagnar
Reith
Ctllctgo
Clemen! W,2·1

inspect the track every
night."
The cement that came loose
was at an· expansion joist where grooves filled with
flexible material allow the
track 10 grow and shrink in
extreme weather. The cement
had been in place since 1976,
Campbell said, and had been
ground down for leveling
purposes just over a year ago .
Thai work turned the .526mile oval into a two-groove
racing surface, a development heralded by drivers as a
big improvement
Crews will begin removing
all the asphall from the track
next Monday, Campbell said,
but he' s not yet sure whether
lhe concrete repairs can be
restricled to the affecled area
or need 10 be more extensive.
" I don't want 10 hi I the
panic button over one problem, bul while il may be a
small problem, il cau sed a big
problem ," he said of the
delay.
''I don 't want to have to
redo everything just because
of one ·issue."

seventh overall with 27 points,
while Eastern finished eight
Waverly ( 165) fin ished firsl,
followed by Southeaslern
( 148) WJd Alexander (86).
· Meigs' Sara Engle .was third
in the di scus (85-1 I) and sixth
in the shot put (26-6).
The girls' discus also· saw
Eastern 's Jill ian Brannon (81 9) fini sh fi fth and Meigs'
Angie Smith (7 I -0) finish
eighth.
Also for Meigs. Ashley
Samar was sixth in the 300
hurdles (58.90) and eighth in
the long jump (12-8), while
Beth Hysell was seventh in the
800-meter run (3 :06) and
eighth in the (6:41 .9). Ashley
Savage was eighth in the 3,200
( 16:45).
The Meigs' 4x 100 squad
was fourth and the 4x200 team
fini shed fifth _ Easlern,
Darcy
For
Winebrenner was seventh in
the 200- meter dash (32.40),
while Rachel Ell iolt was eighth
in lhe 800-meter run (3 : 12.3 ).

IP

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HBF--by Clemen! (WPena)
Umprres-Home, Cl1uct Merrweltler; Firsl.

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CO pitched ICI 6 bai!.Br!l i"1 the 11t.
Umpires--Home, Jeff Nelson; First, Marty Fos* ; Second, Joe Brinkman; Th ird, i rrn Tsctuda .
T-2:53 A-13,650 (43 ,3Q).

Giants 4, Padres 3
s.n Diego

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7-6 in 11 IMf'IQ$

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Umprres-Home. Pau t Emmet. Frrst. Mrlo.e
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T-4:47 . A-26.020 (47.447)

NL Leaders __________
===::__::___

• Lady Marauders rally
past Gallipolis.
See Page 81

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BY

J.

MILES LAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY- The clock
is ticking for the former
Pomeroy Junior High
building, which wil lcome
down in May.
Pomeroy Mayor John
Musser has sel May 3 as the
date demolition by Jeffers
Excavation can lentatively .
begin_ Musser told the
Street Departmenl, which
has been using the burnl-out
remains of the auditorium
as the village garage. Crews
should be in the new village
garage, which is ,quickly
taking shape behind the The old Pomeroy Junior High wil l be torn down somet1me
Please see Sdlool, AS ned month to make way for a new motel. (Miles Layton )

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ABI-Rolen. St Lours . 23. Hrdalgo. Houston.
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Eastern, Meigs compete
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Sports@ mydailytribune.com

2

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Resurfacing
may -get more
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Martinsvi lie

· STAFF REPORT

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· MARTINSVILLE,
Va_
(AP) - A resurfacing job
scheduled to begin next week
at Martinsville Speedway
may get a lot more ex1ensive
if inspection crews find more
evidence of failing spots in
the concrete turns.
A large chunk of cement
came loose in the lower
j;roove of the third turn durmg Sunday 's NASCAR
Nextel Cup race, leaving a
pothole about a foot wide by
a-foot long and a depressiOn
~s deep as 3 inches.
:: The race was red-flagged
after Jeff Gordon ran over the
chunk and damaged his car,
and repairs to the track took
over an hour.
: Track president W. Clay
Campbell said Monday he
still doesn't know what
caused the cement to come
loose. He said the track had
been inspected afl~r a lruck
race Saturday nighl and nothmg appeared wrong.
"If we could have seen that
problem ahead of time, it
wouldn't have been a problem," Campbell said. "We

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Atlanta (Thomson 1·0) at C•ncmnat (Acevedo 1.0), 7:10 p.m.
Anzona (Desserts 1) at Milwaukee (Sheets 2·0). 7·35 p.m.
St Lows (Suppen 0.2) at Houston (Miler 2-Q ), 8:05 p.m.
Los Angeles (lshu 2..0) at Colorado (Ken~ 1-0). 9:05p.m.
San O~o (Lawrance 1·1 ) at San FranCisco (Hermanson 1-0), 10:15 p.m.

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Su~ .. Results
Cleveland 9. Detro• 7

8ostofl (P.Martinez 1·1) at TOI'OOIO (Hal ladS)' 1-2 1. 7"05 p.m.
.fampa Bay iHend-ldtson 0.1 ) at Batiii'T'IO(e (Po"lson 1·0) 1 as p.m
Ka11S8S City (B.A.ndarson 0-0) at C19vsland 10ur1:im 1-1). 7 05 p.m
N.Y. Yankees (Graman 0-0) at Cmcago White So• {Buehrle 1·01. 8.05 p.m
Detroll (Johnson 1·2 ) at MiMesota (Silva 1-0) 8:10p.m
Oaldf!!lnd (Harden 0.1 1at Seattle (A Frankl111 t-0), 10·05 p m
Tuas (A~ 2-01at An ahem [Ra.Ortlz 0. 1), 10:05 p.m

NewYorlt

EAST

MriWaukee

Ch1C9:go So• 5, TNnp.a Bay 0
NY Yankees 7, Boston 3
Minl'l8SOta 8 Kansas Crty 3
SEiattle 4. Te.las 2
·
Oakland 7, A.nah111m I

Red Sox 5, Yonkees 4

Sunday,Aprl120,2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

c

.....- .. , ... Vl:lkland . 14: La~. leYeland .
13: AKennady. Anallerrn. 12: Be~ran. Kansas
Cny, 12, MiSweeney, Kjlnsas Crty. 12: Posada,
New York . 12; Blalodo: . TS.IIas. 11, MYoung.
TVJ:as, 11; OOrtlz. Bostoo. 11 . MOtlonez.
Cllcago. 11 .
HOME RUNs-Beltran. Kansas Crty. 6. ~
Oakland, 6: Posada. New York. 5. THatn8r
CM!ancl. 4: Glaus. Ar1aheim. 4. MOn:lcnez
Cl1cago. 4: YGLierrero. Anahetm 4: MrS·
wetll1ey, KWJsas Crty. 4: law1on, CleYaland . 4.

BBoona. Seattle 4.

Spanish lessons
make justice
Bv J.

MILES LAYTON

JLAYTON@MYOAILYSENT INEc COM

POM EROY - Ju; tice ma v
be blind. but it can no lo ng.;r
re main deaf to the largest
growing ..,egme nt of the populat ion_ ·
Hundred; of Hi spani,· ;e_d;onal v..orker; are em p lo~ed
each year in the local ag
industry. .part.icularly in the
Raci ne area where lhere are a
lol of vegetable fie ld; and
greenhouse;_ Due lo th i'&gt; seasonal influx of migrant workers. the Ohio Supreme Co urt
has asked local coum to be
more u;er-friend ly to Spani .; h

'peaker' ··we ha'e
quite a few
H i,panic
penon&gt;
c:omJnuthrough th~
court _ prima rill on
t raffic .
often'e,.-Mary Grueser , aid l\1eig'
Count\ Court J ud2e Ste1en
Stor) . -.. B, '"" - people mu,l
undeNand their righ t,.-Mei~, Count\ Court v. ill
"Xl l1 cbc weli \ e"cd
In
Please see Spanish, AS

Tigers beat up on Indians
CLEVELAND (AP)
With
Indians reliever Jake Westbrook ou1
of lhe game after pitching seven perfect innings, Rondell White finally
got a pilch he-could hit.
White had a lhree-run homer off
Rafael Betancourt in a six-run eighth,
and lhe Detroit Tigers beat Cleveland
I 0-4 Monday night
"Westbrook was unbelievable, but
Ihen we got a couple of hits and I just
wanted to keep it rolling," White
said_ "I got a curve ball and wanted to
take it up the ,middle, bul put a good
swing on it "
Westbrook, who struck oul seven ,
came on 1o pitch with the Indians
trailing 4-0 in the first inning following a 65-minute rain delay. Before the
rain shower and hailstorm, Indians
starter Jeff D'Amico ?ave up four
runs. In 12 minutes, D Amico faced
six batters, and did not get an out.
Betancourt (0-2) came on to start
the eighth and gave up one-out singles to Carlos Guillen and Ivan
Rodriguez before White lined his
third homer into the lefl-field bleachers for a 7-4 lead .
Detroit then loaded the bases on a
walk, error and infield single against
Scon Stewan, who then gave up a
lhree -run double to Brandon Inge.
Al Levine ( 1-0) pitched 1 I -3 hitles s innings as Detroit improved to 85. The Tigers didn't get their eighth
win in 2003 until May 11, when they
were 8-25.

"It doesn't come easv for lhe
Tigers," manager Alan ·Trammell
said. "Sirange things happen somelimes in baseball . I can't explain il,
but it was ~real to come right back
after they ued il. We got some big
hits and Rondell 's was the biggest. "
For the second game in a row, a
Tigers outfielder was hurl. Bobby
Higginson hobbled off"in the seventh
after he injured his right leg fielding
a single 10 right by Omar Vizquel.
On Sunday, centerfielder Alex
Sanchez pulled up lame with a
slrained left groin while trying to run
out a double_ ·
"I'd say it's a small chance he'll
play Tuesday," Trammell said_ "Like
Alex, he's day to day."
Indians manager Eric Wedge said
he didn't want Westbrook to get hurl ,
so he lifled him after the right-hander
threw 83 pitches.
"He did more lhan his job tonight
and I thought I left him in a little
longer than I should have," Wedge
said. "I can 't keep him out there arid
put him in harm's way.
"We tied the score and pul our
setup guy in, bpt il jusl didn ' t work
out."
Weslbrook was disappointed , . but
said he understood the decision.
"I felt like I could go another
inning, but he was just looking oul
for me," he said. "It's probably the
best stuff I've had in a big league
game_ I had a good sinker and

changeup."
The brief shower and hail slorm
l~rned inlo a long dela y when 1he
grounds crew took nearl y I 0 minute'
10 cover lhe field_ By then 1he rain
had essentially &gt;lopped, but the
infield needed 45 minutes 10 repair.
_ D' Amico didn 't come back. having
made only 22 pitches in the shortest
of his 127 career starl s.
Leadoff batter Fernando Vina
reached on an error by shortstop
Vizquel. Guillen walked and
Rodriguez singled home Vina . Afler a
single by White loaded 1he bases.
D' Amico walked Carlos Pen a 1o
force in a run· and Higgin son hit a
two-run single for a 4-0 lead.
Westbrook go1 Craig Monroe to
make the firsl out of the game - 79
minutes af1er lhe fir sl pitch - on a
fly ball to right
Ronnie Belliard doubled to open
the boll om of the fir st. moved up on a
bunt by Vizquel and scored on a
groundoul by Mall Lawlon 10 make il
4-1.

Casey Blake hil hi s second homer
in the fourth 10 pull to 4-2_
Tigers slaner Nat_e Robenson
allowed four runs and fiv e hils over 6
2-3 innings . The left-bander struck
out eight, walked four and left afler
yielding. a lwo-out double to Bel liard.
~eliever Jamie Walker gave up RBI
single s to Vizquel and Lawton on 1he
only two pilche s he threw as
Cleveland tied il 4-4 in the sevemh .

PAID ADVERTISEMENT

Unclaimed Vehicles To Be
Set Free in Gallipolis
Unclaimed Auction, repossessions, lease returns and other used vehicles to he let go
at rock bottom prices; Five days only at Norris Northup Chrysler Dodge Jeep
By Todd Michaels
Automot ive Correspondent

GALLIPOLIS, OH - A

unique opportunity takes
place this week for con ,sumers in the market for
cream of the crop used ve, hicles.
This Wednesd ay, April
21st through Sunday, April
251h , Norris Northup
Chrysler Dodge Jeep - in
cooperation with Fl eel Liq uidators of America - is
hos ting what may be the
grealest five-day sale in the .
history of Ohio . Over 173
undaimed and other used
vehicles are being offered
direct to the public at rockboltom price s.
Mike Northup of Norris
Nonhup Chrysler Dodge
Jeep staled , "For those in
1he market for a great used
car, thi s will certainly be
the best time to buy. For a
$59 down payment• plu s
tax, Iitle &amp; fees , then slart
making paymenl s, customers can gel into the quality

unclaimed or other used vehicle of lheir choice at absolute rock bettom prices .
This is a once-in-a-lifetime
event , so adjust your
schedules and make room
for this five -day even1."
While -unclaimed andre posse ssed vehicles are
some of the most sought
after vehicle s in the used car market today, they are
also the most difficult vehicle s for the public to
come by. But, as Mr .
Northup_said, "This may
be the only lime th.ese vehicles will be offered to the
publi.c , We have obtained
these vehicles with the inten! of passing the great
sav ings on to the customer."
Almost every type of ve hicle and price range will be
available, frQm luxury 4x4s
to basic lransporlation .
Many are even s1ill unde r
warranty.
"·We 've made it easy for
you. We ' ll mark the pay-

ments right on lhe wind shield . Just pick your vehicle and pick your payment. You won't find a
fa ster, easier way to purchase a greal pre-owned
car," stated Mr. Northup _
Extra sales and finance
staff will be on hand to assure c,ustomers prompt ,
quality service and the best
finance term s po ssible.
Mr. Northup said , "We'll
have over $3 million in fi nancing available for this
event, so chances are we
can arrange financing for
just about anyone who is
employed."
·
Trade - ins will be accepled , and customers
should bring their title or
payment book to expedite
delivery.
"The Ohio bargain-hunters dream come true happens this Wednesday
lhrough Sunda y at Norr is
Northup Chrys ler Dodge
Jeep , Every un claim ed ,
fleet and other used vehicl e

Page AS
• Maude Seckman

INSIDE
• Fifth anniversary arrives
at Columbine High School.
See Page A2
• Oregon judge orders
halt to gay weddings, but
· gives legal recogniton to
same-sex marriages. See
Page AS

WEATIIER

$59 DOWN*
UNCLAIMED
VEHICLE RELEASE
INFORMATION:

LOCATION:
Norris Northup
Chrysler·Dodge Jeep
252 Upper River Rd.
Galllpolla • (74) 446-0842

DAYS AND TIMES:
Wednesday,April21
9am-8pm
T-hursday, April22
9am-8pm
Friday, Aprll23
9am-8pm
Saturday, April24
9am-7pm
Sunday, April25
Noon-6pm
First-come, first seJVed. No dealers or wholesalers allOWed .

is just $59 then start makin g
Cu stomers may
never see savings like Ib is
again, " said Mr. Northup .
After the $59 Down Unclaimed Vehicle SuperSa!e ends
al 6:00p .m. on Sunday, April
25th, many of lhese vehicles
wi ll be sen1 to auc1ion . An y
questions can be directed to
(740) 446-0 842. See th e box
above for more informati on_

Detallo on Pa&amp;o AS

' INDEX
2 SECflONS- 12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby

Editorials
Obituaries
Sports

Weather
© aoo4 Ohio VaUey Publlohlng Co.

Barbara Crow and John and Cheryl Thomas join Brianna Abbott of Lifeline of Ohio in thanking Deputy Registrar Sue Maison and BMV employee Carrie Wamsley for their role in
encouraging organ and tissue donations at a surprise visit to the Meigs County license
bureau on Tuesday, (Brian J. Reed) .

BMV workers thanked for organ donation work
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Employes of the local
Bureau of Motor Vehicles are often the first
people to sug~est organ donation, and as a
result, many hves are saved. Some of those
lives saved are local residents who benefit
-from the donation of organs .
Deputy Registrar Sue Maison and, her
employees Patsy Ogdin and Carrie
Wamsley were surprised Tuesday aflernoon w1th a visit from represematives of
Lifeline of Ohio, the parents of an organ
donor and the mother of a local liver transplant patient, lo thank the license bureau
workers for their role in saving lives.
"This is a way to thank BMV workers for
their role in the organ and tissue donation
pr0eess," said Brianna Abbotl of Lifeline
of Ohio, an organization which coordinates
organ and lissue donation _ "They are the
first people who ask the question, 'Do you
want to be an organ and l!ssue donor?'"
John and Cheryl Thomas of Syracuse
lost their I 6 year-old daughter, Brandi, two
years ago in an automobile accident, but
Brandi's death made life possible for many
others . Every day, her mother wears a pin
recognizing her daughter's gift to others.
As an organ and tissue donor who declared
her wishes on her driver's license, Brandi,
through her death, made life possible for
several others. Her kidneys, heart and liver
each saved a life, while her corneas and tissue helped many others .
Barbara Crow's daughter, Morgan
Matthews, lives a happy and active life
which would not have been possible wilhout a donated liver. She received a donated
liver three yc;ars ago, and is now a student
at Ohio University, and a competitive athlete who will soon compete in a nationwide

- - - - - -- - - -- - - - - - -- - · -

---~---

Cory Williams and Jeremy Roush began planting 30 Cleveland
Select pear trees in downtown Midd leport last week. Now. the
Midd leport Communi ty Association ho pes local residents will
contribute toward the project by ma king a "living memorial ".
donation_(Brian J. Reed )

Tree sponsors sought
Bv

BRIAN J. REED

BREE D@MYDAI LYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - Vi sitors
to Middleport and 1own residents will agree, "WhaJ a difference a Jree makes."
Now lhal 30 Cleveland
-Select pear trees have been

planled
in
do wntown
Middleport. the Middleport
Commu nity
fl.ssoci ati on
hopes local res tdenl s wli l
help pay fo r them_
The tree' cosl 5225 each_
includi ng si te preparation.
Please see Tree. AS

PAVING UNDER WAY
Donna Schmoll completes a disp lay at
Farmers Bank and' Savings Co .. dedicated
to encouraging organ and tissue donations. The display features a ·spec ial qui lt
honoring organ donors , and inc lud ing
Matthew Ault, a Meigs High School student
who died severa l yea rs ago and who donated organs so that others might live. (Brian
J. Reed)
·
olympic event for transplant rec ipients.
The families of Brandi Thomas and
Morgan Mauhews remain thankful to those
who donate organs, and encourage others
to con sider a gift of life lhrough organ
donations, and are active in. promotmg
April as Donate Life Month .
"You touch lives with every thing you
do,'' Abbott 1old BMV worke rs.

Crews fro m the Shelly Co . began .a two-day paving project at
the Pomeroy/ Mason Bridge on Tuesday. The $16,000 paving
job will repair major damage to. West Matn Street caused by
underground line work at the si\e of the new bridge , as well as
that caused by winter weather. according to Don Til lis, ODOT
Manager on the bridge project. (Brian J. Reed )

.

IS

p~yments . •

•All offers with approved credit. $59 plus lax , title &amp; fees. Addilional down payment may be required for credit approval. ''E&lt;ample: 1999
Pontiac Grand Am , Sale Pnce $3174. $79/mo for 48 mos. @ 10.0%APR. $59 down paymenl, fo r a total of $59 down plus Ia&lt;, title and
fees. Total amount financed $3115 plus tax. Subject to credil approval &amp; lenders final approval. ©2003 G&amp;A Marketing, Inc. Unclaimed
vehicles refer lo used vehicles currenlly wilhoul a binding offer_

•

0BITUARIFS

Medical Laboratory Week
National Volunteer Week
and
Ad1111lnlstratlve Professionals Week
April 25 - May 1 is

Laundry and Linen Week
Holzer Medical Center salutes our lab and administrative professionals,
and
for their hard work and ded ication!

'

Discover the Holzer D!l.fer·ence

www.holzer.org

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