<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="5388" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/5388?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-13T01:09:36+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="15316">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/b80f722a6cd9d9e63ecb509cbbae5d6e.pdf</src>
      <authentication>9a4f0b2e28bcb53c1196e61ec2bae44a</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="18280">
                  <text>,

..
•

Page 06 ~ -jlunbil!' tlrimt!i-&amp;entinel
. •

Sunday,.April 25. 2004

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

-

"

'

U:.S. troops likely to

Buckeyes set recOrd with
14 players selected, Bt

'

•
move mto
parts
of Najaf soon, A2

IN THE

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.) tl ( I \ IS • \ ol. ."i-t- '\o. thh

SPORTS
• Redwomen sweep two
from Seton Hill. See

'10:\ll

n.

\I'Ril. :!h. :.!1104

"""

"'"'·•i""'"'""·t..-..,"

Swift recovering from double transplant

Page 81

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTI NEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT ~ Angie
Swift says her long but successful recovery from a double organ transplant is a miracle, made possible through
the prayers of family and
friends.
On Dec. 20. 2003. Swift
was
called
from
her
Middleport home to The Ohio
State University Hospital to
receive a long-awaited kidne)
and pancreas transplant. Four
months later. Swift. the wife
of Middleport Police Chief
. Bruce Swift. is back on her
feet and continuing her recO\ery.
in\'ol\·ed
The
surgery
attaching the donor organs to
Swift's bladder. while leavin~
the malfunctioning organs il1
place. It has elimin ated
Swift's need for horne dial v,is
~four times daily~ and.has
· cu red her of the diabetes
DQ Manager Beth Schneider and Angie. Swift. a former DQ employee, display the patriotic Dairy .which created the need for the
Queen T-shirts now on 'sale to benefit Swift in her recovery from a double organ transplant. Schneider transplants.
The threat of organ rejecis organizing a car wash at the Middleport DQ on Saturday. also to benefit Swift. (Brian J. Reed)

tion dimini,he' Jailv. but
there will alwav; be· -.ome
risk. Swift 'aid. - ·
"The first three month' are
the most critical in a pancrea; · ·
trathplant. but the tmnsplant
won., be con,idered ·succe"ful' for a year." s\\ tft sai&lt;.J.
"There will :.l,ways be some
risk of_ rejection of both
organ~.

Swift'' fncnds and former
co-worker' at Dairy Queen in
M tddleport plan a car wash
fundraio;in~ e\ent from I()
a.m . to 4 p~ m . on Saturday. to
help with the continuing
expense of Swift's reco,er) .
She require' se\·en pre scription medic;Jtion~ . lncluJing
anti-rejection treatment. and
while ·pri\ate insurance and
~leJicare cover much t\f the
cost. there are still L'll-pa)merm. travel costs and other
out-of-pocket expense' to
worrv about.
Dairy Queen Manager Beth
Schneider s;ti d a S10 donation
at Saturday\ car will not only

Please see Swift. AS

Sun shines on Flower Festival 'Evening of Poetry'
· planned at Rio
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

1BREED@MYDAILVSENTINEL. COM

OBITUARIES .
Page AS
• Lui a S. Greer Reed

INSIDE

BUY MORE, S,AVE MORE!
Tony's, Red Baron or

Pizza!

Buy ANY 5, Save an EXTRA s2
Buy ~NY 6, Save an EXTRA s3
Bu ANY 7, Save an EXtRA s4

• Shortage of supplies
hamper treatment of
North Korean blast
victims. See Page A2

WEATHER
The Flower festival is not just about cloggers. queens , crafts or musicians,
about flowers
by the truck load. Paul Hill Greenhouses was one of many producers there to sell flats of flowers and hanging baskets. Crestlyn Hill, owner, Maddison Hill, Jessica Lyons. and Missy Thoma,
left to right, sit in the shade surrounded by a bountiful crop of colorful flowers (J. Miles Layton)

Bv J.

MILES

lAYTON

MIDDLEPORT- A night
for poets and those who enjoy
th eir work is planned for next
week at the Uni,·ersity of Rio
Grande/Rio
·
· Grande
Community College Meigs
,
Center.
In observanc.e of April a~
Poetry month. the college
branch wil l host its fourth
annual "Even ing of Poe1ry"
on Thursday. It is an opportu nity for local poets to share
their work, and for others to
enjoy poetry reading.
The center will also award
prizes in its youth poetry contest. a new Poetrv Month
event designed to encourage
young local poets.
The young poets who arc
recognized will also share their
work. according to Director

ess
Chicken Breasts
ual or Lesser Value

12 oz Cans~
II Varieties

••

Pack
Coke Products
With $1 0Additional Purchase
Tobacco Products and

Detallo on Page A6

·.INDEX
Selacl Varleltea 16.65-30.7 oz
Freachetta, 22·32.47 oz Red Baron
or, 13.72-17.5 oz Pkg

Tony's Frozen Pizza

ARE YOU 65 OR OLDER?·
Would you like to save money on your prescriptions?
Starting May 3rd Kroger Pharmacy can help
you enroll in a discount card program that will

2 SF.CfiONS- 12 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries

Sports
Weather

A:3
B3-4

Bs
A:3

A4
As
B1
A6

© 01.004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

A
'11'
·"Pn
_;,_

·-rm pleased with the tjUUI ity of the work l'w 'een from
our young poets." Pine' said .
" It 's wonderful Ill ~nnw that

..,o rnany yuung people in our
communit! are wnting pot'l-

ry. aiKI doing .it \\'CII."
ll1e publil· is encouraged to
attend the "Evenin~ ofPoetn .. at
the Rio Grande hr,UJch on ·Mill
Street. It begin' at n p.m .. and
-reli-e,hmem' will bl' sen ed.
"Open llnor" lime v. iII (t"n
be avai Iable to anvone "ho
would like to share iheir poetry. Pine' said.

Crowned Prom King and Queen

JlAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

USDA Inspected

'Gina Pines. a poet hmdf. who
organized the conte't. She '~id
nearly 350 poems were 'ubmined from 114 young · poets
throughout the coumy. Thlhe
winner' will be noti1ied on
Monday. Pines said. and theit
work will be puhli,hcd in The
Sunday Time,-Sentinel un

Andrea
Warner was
named Prom
Queen and
Kevin
Marcinko ,
Prom K1ng at
Eastern High
School
Saturday
night. Warner
is the daughter of Gary
and Bon~ie
Warner of
Chester, and
Marcinko the
son of Kevin
and Belinda
Marctnko o(
Tuppers
Ptatns. The
prom theme
was .. Stairway
to Heaven ...
(Brian J. Reed)

RACINE ~ With the sun
out, it was a perfect afternoon
to hold the II th annual
RACO Flower Festival at
Star Mill Park in Racine
Saturday.
Sponsored by the Racine
Community
Area
Organization (RACO), the
event provided a wide variety
of entertainment, a parade,
crafts and royalty. RACO
President Kathryn Hart estimated that at least 500 people
attended the festival which is
sometimes plagued by April
showers trying to grow those
May flowers the Racine area
is famous for.
"The good Lord gave us a
blessing with ada:\' like this," .
she said. "I think we had a
good turnout."
Dan Smith, who auctioned Deana Pullins is crowned as the new Flower Festival Queen by
Jeri Hill, who was last year's Festival queen. Ashley Dunn was
• Please see Festival, AS
the runner-up.

SAVE YOU MONEY!

Prices and !lema Good at 919 E. State St:, Athena and
530 E. Main St., Jackson Kroger Stores April 25 thru May 1, 2004.
Some Items may require a deposit.

VIsit our Web,.ite at www.Kroger.com or
call Customer Service at 1·800-KROGERS

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY:
. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. Each of these advertised Items Ia
required to be ev•llable for sala.lf we do run out of an advertised Item, we will offer you
your cholc• of • comparable Item, when available, refleCting the same savings,
or a ralnch~ which will entitle you to purchase the advltrtieed Hem at the IKivertlaed
price within 30 days. Only one vendor coupon will be accepted per Item.
2004. The Kroger
No aalea to d•alera.

Ohio v.~
Tech Prep

• ,.,..,.,. Acldtmla • Handl on trainlnt and ~rlenu • S.amlfil path to an 4HOClatft Oqret or htcMr
·• OftitMd tor htJh ld1oot tWdtnU • Technically chatt.nllnt
Courses offered: Healthcare, Auto Service
'·

.

'·

..

••

�\

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

NATION • WORLD '
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

."

US Arrry soldiers secure the area after rockets hit two hotels. a hospital and a police vehicle
maintenance department in the northern city of Mosul. Iraq. The attack killed four Iraqis and
wounded 16, pol1ce said. (AP Photo/ Ka ram Hosain )
'

U.S. troops likely to move into parts of Najaf
soon; American patrols to begin in Fallujah ·
BY JASON KEYSER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

..

1

•

FALLUJAH , Iraq - U.S.
troops will begin patrob
with Iraqi security for&lt;:es in
Fall ujah. the military said
Sunday. as the United
States backed down from
warnings of an all-out
assault that could &gt;park
new bloodshed and deepen
anti-American sentiment.
The patrols are to begin
Tuesday. and Fallujah officials will ann&lt;&gt;unce in the
city that anyone seen carrying a weapon will be considered hostile. the military
said.
Meanwhile. a U.S. general told The A&lt;,sociated
Press troops will move into
a base on the ed~e of the
holy city of N~pf that
Spanish troops will abandon
when they withdraw from
Iraq in the co ming week&gt;.
But the Americans will
remain away from holy
sites - an effort to avoid
outraging
Iraq's
Shiite
majority. which opposes
any U.S. foray near their
most sacred shrine. ·
Brig. Gen . Mark Hertling
said the troops aimed tu
"counter the forces" of radical Shiite cleric Muqtada
cualiti.un
al-Sadr.
A
-&gt;pokesman, Dan Senor, said
weapons were being stockpiled . in mosques and·
schools in Najaf. a practice
he said must stop.
The measures in Fallujah
and Najaf were announced
a day after President Bush
held a telecunfer~nce with
senior national security and
Jhilitary advisers ·to .discuss
the situation in Fallujah and
the rest of Iraq.
The
moves
appeared
ai·med at bringing a degree
of control over the cities
without
re-igmt111g
the
intense violence that began
when · U.S.
authorities
moved on the two front s
simultaneously at the start
of April.
The wave of fighting
since has killed up to I ,200
Iraqis and Ill U.S. troops,
nearly .as many in 25 days
as the 115 Americans who
were killed during the twomonth invasion that toppled
Saddam Hu ssein a year
ago.
The deal to bring patrols
into Fallujah meant extending the cease-fire for at
least another two days. U.S.
official'
said .
Military
action in Fallujah wa&lt;, sti ll
an option, Brig. Gen. Mark

Kimmitt said. hut the warning was dramaticall)\ toned
down from those in the
past week.
The new steps in Fallujah
were not withouJ risks.
There was ' little guarantee
that guerrillas in~ Fallujah
won't attack joint U.S.- Iraqi
patrols. Some Marine commanders said privately they
had hoped to push on with
an offensive deeper,' into the
city and were concerned
patrols
would
Marine
become target&gt;..
Iraqi security forces ·due
to patrol with them were
equally ill at ease .
"" I don't feel safe because
the Americans themselves
· are not ·safe.'" police Capt. ·
Jassin1 Abed said. ·'They
get shul at. lhey can't
guarantee safety .for themselves, so how can they
guaramec my safety~"
U.S. occupation leaders
are under pressure nut to
launch
major
military
action . Some U.S.-picked
Iraqi leaders were angered&gt;
by the Fallujah siege. The
tup U.N. envoy fur Iraq,
L1khdar Brahimi who
has
been
·asked
by
Washington to help pick a
new government - warned
the United States against
a"ssaults
on
Najaf or
Fallujah
""When you surrou nd a
city, you bomb the city.
when people cannot go to
hospital. what name do you
have for that' 1 ... If .you
have enemies there. this is
exactly what they want you
to do, to alienate mure people &gt;o that more people
support them rather than
yuu,'' Brahimi said of
Fallujah on ABC's "This
Week ."
"In this situation, there is
no military solution," he ·
said.
In the latest U.S. deaths,
a soldier was killed Sunday
when a roadside bomb hit
his
patrol
in
eastern
Baghdad. A U.S. Coast
Guardsman also died of
wounds suffered the night
before in a suicide boat
attack on · oil facilities that
killed two Navy sailors.
Iraq 's main outlet for oil
exports, the Al-Basra terminal , was damaged and
won ' t be able to resume
loading
tankers
until
Monday at the earliest, said
Oil Minister Ibrahim Bahr
al-UIIoum. The closure cost
Iraq around I million barrels in exports the first day.

Mortar attacks in the
northern city of Mosul
killed two Iraqis outside a
hotel. and an explosion outside a hospital ki lied two
Iraqis and wounded I0, the
U.S. military said.
As U.S. officials toned
down recent warnings, they
al so spoke of progress in
F~llujah. "At this point, it
would not seem to be constructive for either side to
be laying down ultimatums:' Kimmin said.
Sti II, he said there had
been no more weapons
handed over not even
the kind of rusted. broken
or otherwise usekss ones
that were surrendered last
week. U.S. · officials have
been complaining for days ·
that guerri lias were not
abiding by a call to disarm ,
issued under the agreement
reached
with American
negotiators.
•
He also said insurgents
were still shooting at U.S.
troops in the past 24 hours.
A helicopter gunship fired
on a house in Fallujah
where guerri llas had been
seen preparing a mortar on
Friday, killing 25 fighters,
Kimmiu said.
The patrols are "the first
step to returning the city to
a sense of stabi lity," he
said.
Hachim al-Ha'ssani, a top
Iraqi mediator in negotiations .over Fallujah, said
city officials ~ad promised
the
patrols would be
respected. "We hope the
U.S. soldiers will not be
attacked when they enter
the city. If · they are
auacked, they will respond
and this will lead to prob- .
lems." he said.
Marine · commanders have
expressed concern that the
city officials cannot speak
for the insurgents.
Marines on Sunday began
allowing more· families who
fled · Fallujah amid recent
fighting to return. Kim.mitt
said 67 familie"s would be ·
let- in Sunday. More than a
third of the city's population of 200,000 fled the
siege. Marines had hillted
their return because guerrillas were , not turning in
weapons and because they
wanted to keep civilians out
in case lighting resumed .
Meanwhile, Hertling told
troops based outside Najaf
that the U.S. military was
"coordinating to move" into
the Najaf base being vacated by Spanish fortes.

'

DANDONG . China Injured fhildren lay on file
cabinets as an overcrowded
North Korean hospital struggled to cope without enough
beds or medicine for hundreds of victims from last
week.· s train explosion. an
aid worker who visited the
facility said Sunday.
Sinuiju
Provincial
Hospital, just across the border from China.· was treating
360 people injured in the
blast . according to Tony
Banbury, Asia regional director for the U.N. World Food
Program . .More th'an 60 percent of the victims there were
children, he said.
'·They clearly lack the ability to care for all the
patients." Banbury said.
Thursday's huge explosion
in the town of Ryongchon,
fed by oil and chemicals.
killed 161 people and injured
at least I ,300. officials said.
J'he death toll rose by
seven Sunday, but it was
unclear whether the higher
number reflected new fatalities or simply freshly confirmed casualties. Aid agencies didn't say whether they
expected the number to
mcrease.
As relief workers assessed
damage_, trucks crammed
with tents, blankets, canned
food and packages of instant
noodles rumbled across the
Chinese frontier into North
Korea, part of a multinational offer of help .. South Korea.
Japan and Australia also
offered aid.
Eleven trucks from 1China
crossed the bridge into North
Korea un Sunday. carrying
$120,000 worth of aid. The
trucks were driven by

BYTHEBEND
Woman in love with liars
is ready to face the truth

Monday, April26, 2004

Monday, April26, 2004

.Community Calendar

Shortage of supplies hamper treatment
of North Korean blast,victims
BY CHRISTOPHER
BODEEN

PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

Chinese police and bore red·
Nearly half of the dead
and-whiie banners saying were children in the school.
''donations from the govern- which was torn apart by the
ment of the People's blast . The disaster also left
Republic of China."
, Lee Yoon-goo, the Red thousands of Ryongchon res·
Cross chief in Seoul. pro- idems homeless.
posed coordinating relief
"They've been taken in by.
efforts with North Korea's other families." BeijingRed Cross in a telephone
based Red Cross spokesman
message via Red Cross liais.on officers at the truce vil- John Sparrow said Sunday.
lage of Panmunjom, in the "We were fearing people on
buffer zone where the Koreas the streets. We breathed a big
have faced off since their war sigh of relief when we saw
in the early I 950s.
that wasn't the case."
Australian
Foreign
Minister Alexander Downer
Aid workers recounted seesaid his . country also would ing huge craters. twisted rail·
help if Pyongyang asks. "But road tracks and scorched
at this stage, they do seem to buildings. But most of the
be coping, albeit not very
well. with this disaster," 1.300 people that North".
Downer told Australian tele- Korean officials said were ·
vision's Ten Network.
injured had been evacuated
In Sinuiju's
hospital, before the aid workers
Banbury said the most seri- arrived in nearby Sinuiju.
ous injuries were suffered by
"People were cleaning up
children in a nearby school
who were struck by a wave by hand and . loading their
of glass, rubble and heat. meager belongings onto ox
Many had serious eye carts," Banbury said after
,
visiting Sunday. ''They
injuries, he _said.
. The hospnal was 'short of .. 100 ked 11.k W ld W
JUS!
about everythmg ,"
e . or
ar 1
Banbury said - including refugees."
antibiotics, steroids and
U.N. officials estimated 40
painkillers. Equipment was- percent of Ryongchon was
n't plugged in, suggesting it damaged.
was broken or electricity was
North Korea'.s 1 communist
insufficient. and the number
of beds was .so meager that government relaxed its nor,
some children were resting mally intense secrecy as it
on file cabinets.
pleaded for international
Pierette Vulthi, a UNICEF help. It has
' blamed the disasrepresentative in Pyongyang, . ter on· human error. saying
said the devastation at the
school could have been far the cargo of oil and chemimore lethal. She said the cals ·ignited when workers
blast occurred just after · knocked the train cars against
noon, I 0 minutes after the power lines. The statement
morning session ended. and was unusually frank for a
many children had already
government that controls
left. ·
"It could have been much . information tightly. both to
thewurld and its own people.
worse," Vulthi said.

Celebi'Gting special days
· withyou! ·.

Pub,lic meetings

Concerts

II and I to 3 p.m. on Tuesday
at the health department.
Children must be accompanied by a parent or legal
guardian, and shot records
lijld medical cards must be
J:lrovided. A donation will be
accepted for immunizations.
but no service will be denied
because of inabi!ity to pay.

and plays

'

Monday. April 26
POMERt1Y - The Meigs
Monday, April 26
County Library's regular
DEAR ABBY: I am helpRACINE
- The Southern
board meeting will be held at
lessly
in love with a· man
be
Band
spring
concert
will
3 p.m. at the Pomeroy
held
Monday,
April
26,
at
who
treats
me like dirt. I' II
LibFarY.
Southern High School. The
call him ""Brad." We ha\"e
concert
will
feature
music
been together for · eight
POMEROY
- Meigs
performed
by
grades
4
years .
Count:- Veterans Service
POMEROY
The
through
12
under
the
direcDuring that time. he has
CommiS&gt;ion will meet at 9
Pomeroy
United
Methodist
tion
of
Band
Director
told me he was married (he
a.m . on \1onday at 117
Church will host a fellowship has been divorced for the
Oldaker.
The
public
Jeanette
Memorial Dr.. romeroy.
dinner with serving from .t:30 past five years). and lied
is invited to attend.
to 6 p.m. at the church. The about
havine
cancer.
Tuesda~·. April 27
dinner is open to the public.
thatcomes
out
Everything
RACINE Southern
Loc·al Board .of Ed11 cation. 7
of his mouth is pretty
Friday, April 30
Monday, April 26
p.m. at t,he "·hool.
MIDDLEPORT - A free much a lie.
CHESTER
Bethel
Last year. Brad and I had
Worship Center will be host- dinner wi II be served from 4 a baby girl. He wanted no
Wednesday, April 28
to 6:30 p.m. at the Middleport
POI\IEROY Regular ing a week of "Great Church of Christ's Family part of having a babv and
meet1ng of the . Soiuthern Expectations'' , a spiritual Life Center. Fifth and Main.
avoided me- during the
Con,ortium .for Children will renewal revival; 7 p.m. each
entire pregnancy. To top it
he held at I0 a.m. at the night continuing through May
off. when I was in my
office. The meeting is open to I. Guest speaker will be
ninth month. I found out
Blaine
Bowman
from
the public . ·
he wa' seeing . someone
Lebanon. There will be speWednesday, April 28
else.
' He swears nothing
cial music each night with
RACINE
-Shirlev
"Them Bowmans" will be Appleby . of Racine wiil happened. He says he juSt
our special music on Friday observe her 93rd birthday needed someone to talk to .
For the baby's sake. I
and Saturday night. A nursery Thursday. Cards may be sent
placed
her for adoption.
will be available. The Center to her at 44210 Yost Road,
Wednesday, April 28
is located on S.R. 248, at the Racine. 45771.
and she is with a good
MIDDLEPORT The former Chester Elementary
family. Now that the · baby
Middleport Literary Club will School, 1/4 mile from State
is gone, Brad has come
Saturday, May I
meet at 2 p.m. at the home of Route 7 in Chester. For more
POMEROY Garth around acting sweet and
Frankie Hunnel. Phyllis details. please cal l the church Sovel, who had a stroke four caring. Yet he still exclude s
Hackett will have a poetry office at (740)667-6793.
years ago and has .not been me from family functions
rev1ew.
able to talk ur use . his right and cares more about his
arm or leg, will observe his ex-wife's
feelings
than
Thursday, April 29
birthday on May I. He is now mine.
POMEROY -The four
residing in Belpre with his
Am I sick in the head to
local chapters of Beta Sigma
Tuesday, April 27
daughter and son-in-.law, be in love with Brad? How
Phi Sorority will celebrate the
POMEROY - A hearing
7.1rd anniversary of •rhe specialty clinic will be held at Thonda and Daren Cogar. do I stop loving him and
Cards may be sent to him
founding of the international the Meigs County Health there . I 308 #2 Hocking find a normal relationship?
Department. An ear, nose and
HELPLESSLY
IN
women 's orgamzation and the throat specialist will be see- R.oad. Belpre. 45714.
LOVE
55th anniversary of the first ing patients with current or
DEAR HELPLESS: Are
local chapter with a Founder's · suspected · hearing problems
Thesday May 4
you sick in the head' If
Day Dinner at the Riverside along with a hearing screen
CHESTER - , Ethel Orr galloping masochism is a
Golf Club· in Mason . Social te-st for children, ages birth to will ~elebrate her 99th birthillness.
the
time will begin at 6:30 p.m. 21. Sherry Weese should be . day on May 4. Cards may be classifiable
The dinner will be served at 7 contacted to schedule an sent to her at the Northview answer is yes. Somehow
p.m.
· appointment 992-6626. ·The Senior Living Center. 267 N. you . have confused pain
clinic is offered free of charge . Main St .. Johnstown . . Ohio. and -anxiety with love. How
· do you stop loving him
RACINE - The Racine by the Ohio Department of 4303 I,
and find a normal relationAmerican legion auxiliary Health and the Meigs County
ship?
A psychotherapist can
will host a birthday party Health Department.
NEW HAVEN - Mildred
help
you
understand why
for the American Legion
Fry will observe her 90th
POMEROY
Meigs birthday on May 4. Cards you have tolerated the
Post 602, 6 p.m. at the
hall. Dinner and entertain- County Health Department may be sent to her at P.O . box abuse. and help you rebuild
ment.. Members and family will conduct a childhoo1 75. New Haven, W. Va. your self-esteem and learn
25265.
.
to form health y relationinvi. ted.
. immunization clinic from 9 1

Birthdays

Clubs and
organizations

Other events

If your business is interested
in participating in this
Special Edition,
Call Brenda or Dave
at S'/92-2155

Patsy Gaines. right, DAR state vice regent, spoke about Daniel
Boone at the recent meeting of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Here Cleo Smith presents her with a bottle of the Chester-Shade
salad dressing, made from Smith's original recipe.
POMEROY - A portrayal on the life and adventures of Daniel Boone wa~
given by Patsy Gaines, vice
regent of the Ohio Society
of the Daughters of the
American Revolution at a
recent meeting of Return
·
Jonathan Meigs Chapter.
Gaines, a , professional
storyteller, took the members back to 1717 -.xhen
Daniel Boone's grandfather,
George Boone, at the age

The Daily Sentinel
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.

\\'rite

Pauline Phillip; .
Dea r
Al&gt;h1·
m

11"\l "H:DearAbhr.com or PO.

Box 69-UU,
CA 90069.

Los Angeles.

Keeping
. Meigs ·
informed

of 51, took the courageous
step of uprooting his family
from Bradninch in England
and sailipg to America.
She said he was driven
by the same two desires
that would later encourage
the zest for adventure and
historic actions of hi s
famous grandson freedom and land.
He had heard tales of · a
sanctuary for Quakers in the
New World and where no

one was persecuted for reli- His exploits and fanie. howgious beliefs, of cheap ever. could not help him navland available in the 28-mil- igate America's increasingly
lion-acre land grant that complex legal system. she
came to be known as said. Boone set out again at
Penn&amp;ylvania.
In
I 712, the age of tiS , heading to
before he sailed to America, Missouri. There he would
he sent his Jhree children, repeat the joy and despair of
Squire, Sarah and George, the boom and bust cycle as
to investigate the lmid uf Americans
continued
to
promise . George returned migrate on the trail he blazed .
In
conclusion,
Mrs.
home with a glowing report,
Sarah and Squire remained Gaines said that Daniel
in America.
Boone · died on Sept. 26,
Daniel Boone was the 1820 and is buried along
sixth child of Squire and side of his wife, a mile
Sara Morgan Boone. The below Chareue Creek on
education of Daniel Boone the elevated second bank of
is a much disputed matter. the. Missouri, a mile from
He was taught the basics of · the river. Historians have
the three R's but never mas- declared Boone "the most
tered spelling and grammar.
Squife Boone is said to
have
remarked "it's all
right let the girls do the
spelling and D~niel will do
the shooting and that is
what we need most. "
1l1e history as detailed by
Gaines in her presented noted
that Daniel married Rebecca
Bryan on August 14, 1756 in
North Carolina where. during
the next ten years, five of
their ten children were born.
Daniel continued to hunt the
wilderness and enjoyed the
out of doors. Being restless
and eager to explore the
wilderness and search for rich
and fertile land, he explored
Kentucky and helped to open
the trans-Application West.

significant. most emotionally
compelling myth-hero of the
early republic and the
careers of frontier heroes
were often seen as versions
of or vanat1ons upon
Boone's own life.
Re gent
Peggy
Moore
presided' at the meeting. A
brurch was served by the
hostess committee: Mr,.
Robert Ashley. Mrs. Keith
Ashley, Mrs. Frank Sisson.
Mrs. Hilton Wolfe. Mrs .
Harold Hager and Mrs .
Wayne Ru ssell.
The next meeting will be
held on May 8 at the new
Meigs Elementary School in
Rutland. Members will take
a tour of the new facility.

Sunday
Times-Sentinel
Meigs • 992-2155

·Proud to be apart ofyour life.

.t'~'j~~~~~~~­

ATTENTION

mlllhn:

'

·

~ 1""'/TP.J ·~ (~\\~~--.. ··f"l

ships. Your physician can
refer you.
Fill your time with
wonhwhile acti,·ities to dis'
tract you from loneliness
while you're. getting your
head straight. One rewarding activity is to \"Oiunteer
yQur spare time .to a worthv cause - working with
animals. the eider!\·- or a
charity of your choice . It"s
also a way to meet '" constructi\'e people.
DEAR ABBY: I'm a 22 year-old woman. When 1
. was
II,
my
parents
di\'orced. Becau se Mom
was an alcoholic and a
drug addict. my brother and
I lived with our dad.
I know a 16-year-old boy
named ""Sam"" who is experiencing the same thin g.
Hi s parents are dimrced
and he lives with his mother She. her boyfriend and
his friends smoke a lot of
weed in the home and are
stoned most of the time.
Sam has tried to talk tn
her about it. but she only
ye ll s that he can't tell ·her .
what to do because he's
the kid , not the mother. He
wants to move out. but his
brother is only 9 . . and Sam
can't support them both.
Sam has thought abo.ut
telling his father what his
mother is doing, bill he's
afraid his mothe~ will never
forgive him.
Abby. I care for both the
boys. I don't want to sit

DAR hears of Daniel Boone's adventures
.

_,l~.,._f,)l.., ~~.YJ. __,~,.._

Abby

Church services

Sunday Times-Sentinel

There will be a Special Edition
on Friday, May 14th
saluting all
Meigs County Class of
2004 graduating Seniors

Dear ·

idly by and do nothing .
Should I tell someone. or
keep my trap 'hur' - 0!\
THE FE'iCE 11\ RHODE
ISLAND'
DEAR 0:'-: THE FENCE
Get .off the fence . Contact
Sam 's father and fi ll him
in on what"~ going on . It
"·ill giw him a c.hance to
imer\"cne and take custody
of hi' children which
cou ld be a step in the right
direc1inn for al l concerned.
If his fat her 1' a re&gt;punsible adult. Sam and his
brother will ha,·c a more
normal home en,·irunment.
and the mot her will be· put
on .notice that there are
conseque nce'
for
her
actions. Let" , hope it help'
her clear her head.
c
Dear Ah/J\" i.1 11-ritrm h,Abigai/ Vim Buren. also
knmrn as Jewm e Phil!tps.
and 11 as frn mded '"" her

Subscribe today • 992-2155

.............
...........................
...
. ..................
'

Nikola Bicak, DPM
Podiatry

304-674•7189
•

•
•
•
•
•
•

Fungal nails
Heel spurs
Foot &amp; ankle pain
Hammer toes &amp; bunions
Diabetic foot care
Diabetic shoes &amp; inserts

•
•
•
•
•
•

Sprains &amp; strains
Corns &amp; calluses
Fractures
Orthotics
Skin diseases &amp; infection
Laser surgery for ingrowns &amp; warts

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

•

�•

OPINION

The Daily, Sentinel

The DBlJy Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill

•

Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

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

VIEW

READER'S

nkyou
Appreciated care
Dear Editor:
On Jan. 16. friends took me to the emergency room at
Holzer Medical Center, where I was taken into surgery at once
for two very serious blood disorders in my left leg. My surgeon cut out the area they were in and upon opening my eyes
in ICU, I found I ha,d a large open wound more than four inch·
es long and deep enough to put my hand in.
In the days that followed. student nurses came to my room
to look at the wound. Several of them almost fainted when
they saw the wound. Thanks to the care given me, after 12
days I was able to transfer to Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Center to continue iny recovery:
My own doctor took over my care and I was placed in the
hands of the nurses and staff here. I had heard both good and
bad things about Rocksprings. In the days, week and month
that were to follow I found for myself that the good was true
and the bad, as far as I'm concerned, is not true.
The men and women here do a hard job. They do everything
possible to meet what is asked of them, but sometimes they
are asked the impossible and it cannot be done. I have seen
them push themselves to the very breaking point. They could
use, as far as I am concerned, more funding, especially from
·the Federal government, and a lot more often as well. If we
can fund the putting together of Iraq after we have won, then
why •can we not ask Uncle Sam for more money for our own
people.
All who work here do the job to the best of. their ability,
something we can all be proud of and should be.
David Edwards
Pomeroy

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. Thev shuuld
be less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in lhe column above
· are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. s editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concern 1n all stories is to be
accurate. If you knoW of an error in a
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992·
2156.

Our main numbf&gt;r Is
(740) 992·2156.
Department extensions are:

News
EdHor: Charlene Hoeflich, EICt 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, E•t. 14
Reporter: J . Miles Layton , Ext. t3

Advertising
Outside tales: Dave Harns, Ext. 15
CleaaJCirc.: Judy Clark. Ext. 10 ·

Circulation
Olslrlct Mgr.: TBA, EKI . 17

(USPs 213·960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published
every
afternoon ,
Monday through Friday, 111 Court
Stree1, Pomeroy, Ohio Periodical
postage paid al Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press
and
the
Ohio
Newspaper
Association.
Postmaster: Send address corrections lo The Daily Sentinel, 111
Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route
One month .. , ..........'9.95
One year ............'119.40
Dally ................ ...50'
Senior Citizen rates
One month .............'8.95
One year .......•• oooo196o70
Subscnbers should remit in
advance direct to The Dally
Sentinel. No subscription by mail
permitted in areas where home
earner serv1ce IS available

Mall Subsl\rlption

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
E·mall:
news@mydailysentfnel com

Web:
www.myda1lysentinel.com

Pagei\4

Inside Meigs County
. . . ' 30. 15
26 Weeks ............. '60.00
52 Weeks . . . .
' 11 8.80

13 Weeks

Rates Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks
........... '50.05
26Weeks
.. ' 100.10
52 Weeks
....' 200.20

'

www .mydailysentinel.com

Monday, April26, 2004

Obituaries

Digging for answers
have a new cooking recipe.'
wasn't going to write
Rep. Steve Buyer, an Indiana
about the nun-release or the
Republican,
told
The·
release of John Kerry's mili- •
Washington
Times.
Having
tarv record. While intriguing
learned of the assassinations
to ·be sure. this mystery during
a closed-door brieting
why it i' that a presidential
Diana
by David Kay, Buyer won·
c·andidate who has focused
West
ders
why u.s.·officials have
the nation's attention on his
not
publicly
discussed the
military record didn't long
relevance of these murders.
ago release every scrap of
is a very good question.
This
ortictal documentation corpoison gas - sound like Certainly. the prospect of a
mborating that record those
fabled weapons of mass violent ·death might explain
dinh next to inore urgent
As the reluctance of Iraqi scien·
4uestions of the day. For destruction?
example. most of my hrain is NewsMax.com has noted in tists to talk to weapons
still trying to wrap itself connection with this incident, inspectors to this day. As
_around the unwieldy fact that former Iraq Survey Group Charles Duelfer, Kay's sucthe United Nattons is touted chief David Kay named Syria cessor. recently told the
as the savior of Iraqi democ· as a likely repository for Senate, · ·Many perceive a
rac·y even as its multibillion- Iraq's missing WMD. ' We grave risk in speaking to us.'
dollar Oil-for-Food relief know from some of the inter· I wo)lld think so.
It may take a very long
program is bemg investigated rogations of fonmer Iraqi offi·
as a pit of Iraqi fraud and cials that a lot of material time before we unearth international
corruption: went to Syria before the war, maybe literally - all the
How could this be'? I don't get including some components answers. Which, strangely
of Saddam's WMD pro- enough. is part of the reason
it.
There are other 4uest1ons grams.' Kay told the London John Kerry's military myster·
in urgent need of answers. Telegraph in January. I won- ies ha1·c suddenly become
One concerns the AI Qaeda der: Did these Al Qaeda · mor~ compelling. World·
plot foiled in Jordan earlier chemical bombs come from class 4uestions still stump us,
this month. Described as an Syrian 'components' oflraq's but Kerry could have long
ago signed a government
attempt to kill thousands in WMD programs''
l also wonder what hap· release to make his complete
simultaneous
chemical
attacks on government build- pened to the 'Iraqi officials' military record (not to menings and foreign diplomatic Kay mentioned. One of the tion his FBI tiles) avai lable
missions (including the U.S. more sensational, if underre- to the public. Why didn't he?
embassy) in Amman, the poned. stories to come out of Is it morally wrong. as his
&lt;1ttack was thwarted when liberated Iraq is that nine campaign absurdly suggests,
Jordanian officials arrested Iraqi scientists - all having to even ask him to do so? Is
~ ·suspecu!d militants' who had been interviewed by the Iraq it an attack on Kerry's 'patri·
1
crossed into Jordan .from Survey Group - have been otism' to expect the facts'
Syria with a mega-haul of murdered in the year since Up until this week's mini·
Hussetn
was firestorm. which Kerry self.explosives. detonators and Saddam
deposed. 'I want the world to ignited with a false assertion
pm son gas.
Is it just me, or does this be informed that these indi· tha_t his complete record was
weaponry arriving via Syria viduals are being assassinat· at his campaign headquar-explosives, detonaters and ed, and it's not because they ters, the available public doc-

umentation was scantv and
restricted to certain inedi.t
outlets. And. as of this writ·
ing. I'm still not certain what
portion of the record his
campaign has decided to
make public.
All of which i.i odd given
John Kerry's deci,ion to pr~ ­
sent his military experien.:c
as his chief qualification 10
run the country. This in itself
gives pause , comidering his
high-protile role as a leader
of the antiwar movement on
returnin!! from Vtelnam and
his se:rri ng slander of
American servicemen as war
criminafs rn public testimony
at the 111ne. Kerry even
famously threw his medals
away in-protest of the wai· only lo have it revealed years
later, less famously. that he
had actually thrown away ·
another mao's medals for
show. (His own ribbons are
&gt;afely displayed on his office
wall.) Which also ratses.
many questions - or should .
John Kerry is running for
prestdent. If he wins. he will
be the one trying to crack the
really profound questions. It
seems a small thing now to
ask him for easy answers
about himself.
Correction. Last \l'l!ek, this
co/wu/1 incorrl'ctlr n~fi'rn'd
to rite I flserricemm killed i11
1993 a/ Mogadis/1&lt;1 as
Marines; titer H'el'f U.S.
Arm\' soldia.1.
(Diana Wesl is a co/umllist
for The Washington Times.
She ca11 be contacted l'ia
dicma\\ '\\'@ l'eri:mwet.)

&lt;?fAHlER.

~E

Cii'JCINNATl Pas&lt;·

~·

BUSH

KERRY

I

fra9K:~JI

New goals for Latina athletes
We take for gmnted today
that girls will grow up playing
sports. Fields and courts all
over America are crowded
with girls shooting and throwing and kicking.
But the girls who need sports
most participate least.
lnner-dty girls, particularly
Latinas, are decades behind
their suburban counterparts
when it comes to athletics. In
the suburbs, girls' participation
rates almost equ\11 the boys'.
But in San Francisco and
Oakland, Calif., for example,
girls accounted for just 25 per·
cent of youth sports partici pants, according to a 1995
Haas Jr. Fund survey. In
Alameda County, 65 percent of
white girls ·participated in
extracurricular activities while
only 37 percent of Latina girls
did.
Sparse facilities, lack of
transportation and limited
opportunities in many city
neighborhoods are to blame,
for sure. But another factor has
been holding Latina girls back:
their parents, many of whom
still hold a very traditional definition of femininity.
So Lillian Dominguez, who
emigrated from Nicaragua at
age 5, was surp'rised to find
herself last week among a
throng of other parents inside
the gym at the Columbia Park
Boys &amp; Girls Club in San
Francisco's Mission District.
Dominguez, admits she knows
almost nothing about soccer.
She was the cheerleader/dri II
team type in high school, who
now, in her 30s, has the pol·
ished look of a woman who
knows whether her colors are
autumn or summer.
TI10ugh soccer wa~ the core
span in the Latin netghborhoods where she grew up,

Monday, Apri126, 2004

Joan
Ryan

Latina girls like Dominguez
watched instead of played.
When her daughter asked to
join the Columbia Park soccer
team, she balked.
'I thought of spans as something where there were fights,
bad words, parents being
angry," Dominguez said. ' I
didn't want my daughter part of
that.'
Out
on
the
court,
Domingu~z's pony-tailed II·
year-old daughter, also named
Lillian, booted the soccer ball
past a knot of opposing players. 'Go! Go! Go!" the coaCh
hollered. Parent~ with cameras
around their necks and babies
on their laps clapped and
cheered, tilling the stands for
the ~han1pionship game of the
first and only all.girls winter
soccer league in the Mission.
The round-robin playoff last
Tuesday night among the
league's six teams capped a
season in which the stands
tilled a bit more with each
passing week as protective par·
ents tumed into zealous fans:
Many, like • Dominguez,
watched their daughters pattie·
ipate in a ~port for the first
time.
'You see everybody here so
positive," said Dominguez,
who &lt;relented when her niece
said she'd keep a close eye on
her daughter. 'All the girls are
competing, but it's not all about
beating the other team."

University of California,
Berkeley coach Suzanne Sillett
oversaw a team in the Mission
League,
representing
Community Bridges Beacon.
The group is ba&lt;;~Jd at Everett
Middle School in the Mission,
which has no girls' soccer
team. So Sillett, )Vith a grant
from the Oakland-based nonprofit Team-Up for Youth,
started one at the Beacon center in Novemi,Jer. Only three or
four girls showed_ up for the
first lwo months. Then other
girls, overcoming parental concerns and their own fears of
trying something new, began
to join.
La't week, for the final game
at the Columbia Park league,
Sillett had 12 girls in unifonm.
By night's end, they had won
the championship, going home
with the ftrst trophies of their
lives.
'People say they've never
seen this many girls in the
Mission playing soccer," said
Sillett, whose group joined
with three other Mission
District organizations to create
the league. 'These girls are
challenging stereotypes and
cultural ideology."
rerhaps most important,
they are learning lessons even
more powerful than sportsmanship and discipline:
They're learning to respect
ownership of their own bodies.
Thts is important for all girls
but especially so for low·
income, urban girls who face
greater risk of physical and
substance abuse than their
middle-income,
suburban
counterparts.
These girls have to survive
in a very tough environment."
satd Deirdre Murphy, who
coached two teams from
Jamestown
Community

Center in the Mission girls
league. She wrote her master's
thesis for San Fmncisco State
~n the impact of 'ports on
inner-city girls of color.
'Sports can have an even
stronger impact on these girls
than on suburban girls. Sports
can teach them how to be
smart about not giving ·m to
pressures about schooL dmgs.
boys, sex ."
In the stands, I 'sat next to a
13-year-old girl
named
Jasmine Palencia, who had
come to watch, her I0-year-old
sister play. Jasmine herself
beg&lt;~n playing soccer two years
ago. She was reluctant at tirst
because she was nervous ahout
making mistakes in tront ot
other people. Now, she said,
. she not only has Icm·ncd to
calm her nerves on the soccer
field, she can give u speech in
front of her classmates without
her knees knocking and her
voice catching.
Her father, a gardener, has
seen a· change in both his
daughters. 'They have so much
confidence." Marcos Palencia
said. He stepped to the edge ot
the court and snapped a picture
of his daughter . on the gym
floor, capturing in his lens what
seemed to be just a soccer
game.
But the simplest acts - &lt;I
girl kicking a ball, a father
leaving work early to cheer her
on - can trigger the most
complex alchemy, and a young
athlete who learns how lo chal·
lenge sports boundaries can
tum into a woman who knows
how to draw her own .
(Joan Rwm i.1 a m lu11mi.ll
for tht' . St1n Fran6.\l 'fJ
Cluvnicle. Se1lt! commenh to
her in CWl' of tlli.) nell'.\fXIper
or send llrr &lt;'·lllail 111 j(J(Inryan @sfclmmicle.mm. J

Record enrollment.at Rio Named to

Lui• 5. Creer Reed

RIO GRANDE
A
record number of students
Lui aS,. Greer Reed, 85, of New Haven, W.Va., and former- have been accepted :.u the
of
Rio
ly of Pomt Pleasant. W.Va., died Saturday evening, April 24, University
Grande
2004, al Pleasant Valley Nursmg ood Rehabilitation Center in Grande/Rio
Pomt Pleasant.
Community College for lhe
. She was a retired switchboard operator at Kaiser Aluminum 2004- 2005 school year.
m Ravenswood, W.Va.
and even more applicants
She had been a member of Heights United Methodist are expected.
Church 111 Pomt Pleasant, and was a current member of the
· [n early April, the admisNew Haven United Methodist Church in New Haven. She was sions department at Rio
a 1936 class graduate of Point Pleasant High School.
Grande had already accept·
Born June 8, 1918, in Mason County, W.Va., she was a ed 737 qualified applicadaughter ol the late John William and Carrie Mae · (Greer) lions. Last year at the same
Greer.
time, Rio . Grande had
In addition to her parents, she was also preceded in death by accepted 500 applications.
her husband, Homer C. Reed: a sister, Ercell Adkins; and three When a student is accepted,
brothers, Robert "Bob" E. Greer, Lionel D. "Jake" Greer and
that does not mean that the
Randolph Greer. •
She ts . survived by three nieces, Sue (Jerry) Crawford, student will necessarily
San~ra (Jtm) Shell and Sue (Glenn) Icenhower; two n~phews. attend Rio Grande, but it is
Wtlham "Pooge" Greer and Bill (Sue) Sprouse; two stepsons, one way to gauge the interSam (Cora) ~eed and Charles (Betty) Reed; seven step· est in the college.
While the bulk of studaughters, Shtrley (Leo) .Brown, Vera (Robert) Hartless, lleta
(ToJI!my) Whitt, Martha Snedegar, Sybil (Charles) Downey, dents who will apply have
Dottle Stmlh Preston and Connie Smith Capehart.
already
done
so.
Rio
Also survtvmg are several great-nieces and great-nephews, Grande accepts applications
John Greer, Ronnie Smith, Matthew Shell, Allen Icenhower, for the 2004-2005 school
Carol Miller, Julie Taylor, Carrie Kennedy. Resa Duffie and year until the begmning of
Amy Icenhower; and numerous step-grandchildren and step- fall semester.
great-grandchildren, great-great nieces and great-great
The sharp increase this
nephews.
year is being attributed to
Services wfll be II a.m. Tuesday, April 27. 2004, at the new programs , · expanded
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, with the Rev. recruiting methods and the
Ronda! C. Browning and the Rev. Charles Frum officiating. growing regional interest in
Burial will follow in the Suncrest Cemetery at Point Pleasant. Rio Grande.
Fnends may call at the funeral home from 5 to 9 p.m.
At the end of the spring
Monday, April 26, 2004.
semester of the 2002-2003
Those wtshmg may e-mail condolences to the family at sc hool year, Rio Grande
crowhusscll @charter. net.
had a record enroll'nent of
is
2.499.
That
figure

Court News

Numeruu .\ case.'J· re!Joh•ed

rn

Mei~s
'

Co11111\'. Coun

POMEROY
Cases
resolved in the Meigs
County Court of ·Judge
Steve Story between April 8
and April 18 are as follows:
Peter L. Basar. Kent. speeding, $30 and costs; Charles
0. Brandow. Bradford, Pa ..
speeding, $30 and costs ;
Ty son
K.
Buckley,
Middleport, speeding, $30
and costs; Byron A. Carsey,
Albany. speeding, $30 and
costs; Jane M. Ce la, Malta.
speeding, $50 and costs:
Freeda
L.
Chandler.
Middleport. ,
tamper
w/hydrant/pipe/meter, $97
in costs: Eric D. Chapman,
Cottageville, W.Va .. speeding, $30 and costs: Andrew
W.
Chel linsky,
North
Canton, speeding, $50 and
costs; Jeremy M. Connolly,
Reedsville,
unreasonable
speed for ~ondilions, $20
and costs: Gregory A. Cox,
Chillicothe, drug abuse, $50
and costs, speeding. $17
and costs, DUI, $350 and
costs, seatbelt, $30 and
costs; Howard W. Davis,
Ravenswood, W.Va .. left of
cei1ter, $20 and costs; Sarah
M. Davis, Rutland. scatbelt,
$30 and costs ; Christopher
R. Diddle. Racine, seatbclt,
$30 and costs; Daniel L.
Doebereiner,
Waterford.
speeding, $30 and costs;
Ellen B. Estes, Park Hills,
Ky.. speeding , $50 and
costs;
Alfred
Evans.
Pomeroy, failure to control ,
$20 and costs; James A.
Evans,
Racine,
display
plates/valid sticker. $20 and
costs; Joshua B. Glaze.
Middleporl. fleeing, $100
and costs, operating w/o
'license plates. $50 and

costs: Patrick D. Gonzales,
Longmont. Co., phy.control/under influence, $150
and costs;
David
W.
Grindstaff. Racine, reckless
operation. $200 and costs;
Michael T. Gri ndstead,
Clifton, W.Va., speedi ng,
$50 and ·costs; Melissa
Gruescr, Syracuse. passing
bad checks. $882 in costs;
Kevin J. Hall, Newport
News, Va., speeding; $30
and costs; Shannon L.
Hammons. Phoenix. Ariz.,
speeding, $30 and costs;
Billy D. Harden, Vinton,
display plates/valid sticker,
$25 fine; Dallas A. Hill;Racine, seatbelt, $30 and
costs; Jesse W. Howard,
Middleport, tleei ng, $ 100
fine, no operator's license,
$100 and costs, operating
w/o license plates, $50 and
costs;
William
D.
Humphrey, Athens, reckless
operation of vehicle, $300
fine; Charlotte M. Hunt,
Coolville, speeding, $30
and costs; Richard L. Hunt,
Middletown, $50 and costs;
Tyson
G.
Jerald,
Lumberton, N.C., seatbelt,
$30 and costs; Dana A.
Johnson. Ashland,
K'y.,
speeding, $50 and costs;
Michele
D.
Johnson,
Mason. W.Va., speedi ng,
$30 and costs;
Betty
Kalinowski, Bidwell, passing bad checks, $150.69 in
costs; Mallory A. King,
Pomeroy, speeding, $10 and
costs; Jason D. Kirby,
Gallipolis, speeding, $30
and costs; Steven R. Layne,
Crown City, disorderly con·
duct, $50 and
costs;
Angelika,
K.
Lovejoy,
Proctorville, speed ing, $50
and costs; Michael J.
McBride, Reedsville. equip·
men! mtsuse, $20 and costs;

I .
Blue Jeans band kept the
large crowd entertained for
hours. The cloggers danced
fro~ PageA1
their hearts out to popular
off some pumpkin rolls to music familiar to everyone
raise money for ·the Southern like Aretha Franklin's time·
Band Boosters earlier in the
day, said the festival brings less classic "Respect."
people together.
"You can listen to any kind
"I enjoy coming here and of music you want to hear out
meeting old friends," he said.
"This is what the festival is here today," said Smith.
Hart said the money raised
all about."
Lasl year's Flower Festival by the festival will be donal·
quQfn Jeri Hill ' crowned
Deana Pullins as the new ed to several organizations
queen . Ashley Dunn was including the United fund.
nalJled runner-up.
the Senior Citizens Center.
Again this year the
Sonshine Circle took top Serenity House and for charhonors in the lloat competi· itable programs sponsored
tion followed by .the through the Dorcas-Bethany
Southern High School Future
Farmers of America in sec- United Methodist Church .
ond place, and Kay Hill in Hart, who has been associ at·
third . Butch Mitchell , adviser ed with the festival for years,
to the Southern High School
FI'A, was pleased with the said the event was a success
outcome and said this is just because. the weather cooperone of many projects the FFA ated, the entertainment was
has planned for the year.
Pertormers like the Rock good and everybody was
N' Country Cloggers or the . having a good time.

Festival

expected lo be higi)er at
the end of the current
spring
semester
since
enrollment was htgh again
last fall semester.
"It's obv10us that intere't
in Rio Grande is increasin~ . "
said Rio Grande
~
President Dr. Barry Dorsey.
"I think student&gt; are tinding Rio Grande a~ a positive learning environment
with small class sizes ami
faculty and staff who are
willing to work with them
individually."
"Rio Grande has taken
extra steps to recruit students to the campus and let
more people know about
lhe exciting things happen·
ing at the institution. and
those steps are paymg off,"
Dorsey said.
The ·
Rio
Grande
Admissions
Office
has
taken on several new initiatives to reach new students.
and the office is now · being
led by admissions officers
Tammy
McCain,
Julie
Haines ,
Jana
Fryman.
Rebecca Thomas Long. and
Erik Miller.
The live leaders all work
on different regions for
recruiting and
they are each spreading
the message of the educationa! opporiunities

available on the Southern
Ohio campus.
"One big area of increase
is 111 the on-hne applica·
" Hame;
·
ttons.
"u·d.
High school studenh and
adults from all over the
regton and the country
have
been studying Rio
Grande through its Web
site, and many of the peopie have ended up applying
to attend the college .
Another area for increase
has been in the parts of
Kentucky
where
Rio
Grande
has
reciprocity
agreements, meanmg that
students from those areas
can attend Rio Grande and
pay Ohio's in-state tuition
fee. In return. students in
some parts of Ohio can
attend Kentucky colleges
and universitie s and pay
Kentucky's in-state . tuition
costs.
·
Rto Grande has also seen
increases due to new pro·
grams . This year, for exam ple. Rio Grande added a
Radtologic
program
i"n
response to the demand 111
the region for qualified
professionals in thi s field.
and because area resident s
expressed a desire in study·
ing in this program.

Jackson replacing attorneys
LOS ANGELES (AP) Michael Jackson is replac·
ing high-profile altorneys
Mark .
Gcragos
and
Benjamin Brafman in his
child molestation case. the
lawyers told The Associated
Press on Sunday.
The pop superstar's new
lawyer will be Thomas
Mesere&lt;~u Jr., another wellknown cnminal defense
attorney who represented
actor Robert Blake in hi s
murder case until they
recently parted company,
citing irreconcilable differences.
"Based on recent develop·
ments and discussions with
various persons in the
Jackson camp, it became
clear that it would be best
if Mark and I decided to
step down," Brafman said.
"And that's what we elect·
ed to do."
Asked why, Brafman said,
"For reasons we choose not
to discuss publicly."
He added, "We both wish
Michael well."
Mesereau, who has tleen
meeting with Jackson tn the
Orlando. · Fla., area, declined
to answer questions Sunday.
''I'll have no comment on
the developments until I

Swift
from Page A1
pay for a. clean vehicle. but
will also entitle the driver to a ·
free milkshake from the
restaurant. A rain dale has
been set for May ~.
Schneider is also selling
patriotic DQ T-shirts for $ 10,
with proceeds benefiting
Swif!. The shirts are available
now at the store.
Through
an
earlier .
fundraiser sponsored by
employees at Peoples Bank
in Middleport and other
donations, the community
has raised over $3,000 to help
Swift deal with her continu-

appear m court Friday." he
said, referring to a pretrial
hearing w~ere Jackson is
expected to be arraigned.
Jackson· s spokeswoman ,
Raymone K. Bain, said she
was unaware of the change
when asked about it by a
reporter.
Geragos.

who

was

1n

Northern California handling the Scott Peterson
murder case on Sunday.
said he , Brafman and
Mesereau will notify Sanw
Barbara Cottn ty Superior
Court
Judge
Rodney
Melville of the subst itution
of counsel during a conference call Monday: He
declined to ,discuss reasons
for the change.
Dana Cole, an attorney
who has worked closely
with Mesereau on cases
including
Blake's,
said
Mesereau was approached
by Jackson soon after he
was charged with cf!.i ld
moleswtion.
He
said
Mesereau was unwilling to
take the case at the time
because he was tied up
with the Blake case.
"Michae l Jackson has
always been very impressed
with the pro bono work and
contributiOns Tom has made
ing recovery. Swift is grate-

111 the African-Amencan
community." Cole said.
Santa Barbara District
Attorney Thomas Sneddon
had no comment. satd Jason
Karpf of Tellem Worldwide.
a tirm handlin£ media
inquiries fi1r Sneddon in the
Jackson case.
Loyola University law
professor Lauric Levctbon
said the change could mean
Jackson lost laith 111 hts
attorneys. or they in him .
She also said Geragos and
Brafman may have previ ously agreed to take the
case on ly through its preluninary stages.
Levenson .said Geragos'
work on 111e Peterson case
may be a f&lt;(ctor. The c,tse
wi ll not only take up much
of Geragos · time. but it
also could have made 11
more difficult for Jackson
to tind an unbtased jury.
she ,aid.
Jackson 's case. moved tnto
a new phase last week
when a grand jury secretly
indicted him on child
molestation
charges.
Contents of the indictment
are not yet known a11d will
be disclosed at his arraignment.
Jackson. 45. was original ly charged with seven
counts of lewd or lascivious
conduct involvmg a child
under 14 and with administering an intoxicant. report ~
cdly wine. to a child under
14.
The indictment m~ans
that a ~rand jury has decided th ~r~ is probabk cc~use
to hold Jackson for tnal.
Jackson is free on · $3
million bail and recently
has been staying at a
Florida mmpm111d with h1s •
children.

ful.
"The community has been
so supportive and generous.
and I appreciate 11 so much.''
Swift said. ''I'm convinced
thai this surgery was meant to
be. There were a lot of
prayers going out to me when
I y.;as in the hospital - from
friends and family and people
I don't even know. It has
been a miracle.''
As for the future. Swift is ·
unsure of her plans. She has
con•idered a return to restau rant work when her condition
·allows, but she said she is
also thinking of a cureer n
change. perhaps a job as a
dietician or a diabetes educator.

;e•e.

All-Ohio

RIO GRANDE - Kn s11
and
Mi,t)
Puckett ,;,
LanQ&gt;I·ille. students at til e·
Uni\·ersit:
of
Ri P
Grande/Rio
Gran de
Communi t) College. hm ~
been named to the • All
Ohio
Academic
Tea!1l .
which mcludes the top 4-1
community and technic a.l
college students i"n the
state.
The tWill SISICrs Wil l
graduate from R1o Grande 's
nationall }· known
Fine
Woodworking prog,ram at
the end of the semesteJ
with
a" ociat e degrees .
After graduati on. they plan
to continu e their studies in
the new bache lor\ degree
pro gram
in
Industrial
Techn o lo~v at Rto Grande .
While' 'l:o mpletin g thei r
'eClu cations . they plan to
start thei r dream of open ing then· own fin e wond ~
working bu~inc~:-. .
The dau ghter- of Darrell
and Linda Puckett "r ·
Lang sville .
Knslv
an d
Mi st} Puckett arc graduate'
of Mei gs Hieh Schn" l
Thev e&amp;· h ha,:C a .1.( ) 111
'theii· cia""' at Rio Gr,uHJc
;uid are e .xcelltll~ in 1h et1
Fine Wo&lt;,tlv. tlrkin~g rou r~c"
orr the RIO Grande CUll\ ·
pth. the Pu ckett sisters a1 c·
nnolved with thetr famth
and community. Last stlllimer. im example. th e~
helped build a displa\' f,,
the WtlkeSI·ille Methodi 'l
and Presbyterian churches'
JOint Btbk School
The stslers ha1 e ,!I S\&gt;
won ;-,e\ era! :-.cholar..,hi p"
and hnnilrs in college an d
high sehoul.
On April 21 . the .J.J AllOhio Ac;uJemic Team 't ildents will be honored at ''
ceremony 111 Columbm
AI"' on that day./ th e
names of all uf the \l' lll ners. including Knsty .md
Misty Puckett. "'Ill he·
printed in a half- a~ c
advertisement
1n
The
Columbus Dispatch .
The .J.J ·s tudents fro m
across Ohio on the .\11
Oh io Academic Team \\ c'Ic'
chosen for their .rc·aue mic·
&lt;Ichicvement...-. aL·tivitic . . l1IJ
campus and in the q&gt;m mu·
nit y. and pmiti\C .rttitudc",
and \o\ork ethics

Keeping
Meigs
informed
Sunday
Times-Sentinel
Meigs • 992-2155

~ -·

G

2004 GRADUATES.

••

(:

")

I I

Life goes by prelly las~ especially your last year
of high school. So much to do to get ready tor
life out on your own. Deadlines, pressures... but
we can help in one area though, you still have
plenty of time to order your senior announce·
ments and accessories. With our wide variety
of styles to choose from. you can custom taylor
your order to sun your style instead of setding
for what everyone else has Stop in today and
see. Now open Saturdays from 9-12 for your
convenience. Mon • Fri 8:30 • 5:00

Since 1948...

The Quality Print Shop, Inc.
255 Mill Street
Middleport,' OH 45760

'1'f.

'

L-R: Koltic: Robabon. G( il\!
Legion and Aly&gt;'a !loite r.

Fin~

of Rutbnd

•

-\m.;JJL':IIl

••
•

'11lank·You Rutland
~ American L~gion For •
~ Your Contri~ution to •
the Eastem Lady Eagle
• Basketball Program! •

•• •• ;&gt;, . .

1740) 992·3345 ~ Fu: (740) 812-3314

\•

•

· The Daily Sentinel • Page As

j.t

�'

PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

•

Gordon wins atTalladega, Page B2
Indians edge Tigers, Page B6

.Abuse allegations led to
murder ct)arge against priest

NewsChannel

Monday, April 26
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will remain
around 57. Skies will be panty cloudy to cloudy with 5 to
I0 MPH winds from the west
turning from the nonhwest as
the morning progresses.
Afternoon (1 p.m.-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will stay near
62 with today's high of 64
occurring around 5:00pm.
Skies will range from mostly
sunny to cloudy with 5 to I0
MPH winds from the nonhwest turning from the west as

the afternoon progresses.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
There is a slight chance of
rain. Temperatures will fall
from 63 early this evening io
54. Skies will ~ mostly clear
to mostly cloudy with I0
MPH winds from the west.
Ov~rnight (I a.m.-6 a.m.)
Temperatures will hold steady
around 51 with today's low of 49
occurring around 6:00mn. Skies
will mnge from clear to mostly
clo~ody with 5 MPH winds tram
the west turning from the nonhwest itS the overnight progresses.

BY JOHN SEEWER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

-

els and has spoken to youth
and busi ness groups.
Last summer, a seveo\th-gmder walked up to Lester at a mall
and hugged him, saying she
wa' inspired by one of his talks.
"You can sec there's a
problem. but you don't know
how to approach other
teenagers . They give you
ways to talk to other teens,
or even adults," he told The
Columbus Dispatch for a
story Saturday.
Programs like ~·sta nd" are
funded by the foundation's
$330 million endowment
created after the 46-state settlement with tobacco conipanies in 1998. The foundation
spent about $38 million of
the · endowment on antismoking programs this year
and plans to spend about the
same amount next year.
· The tobacco survey comes
as lawmakers consider more
cuts in anti-tobacco programs .
to ease budget problems.

1

·~") 7~ ~~

lhis~·s,Doy1 a heartfelt "Thank You" could be
~ .· ,· ·~
. ·. ·. · .~41ltpu could ever give. your mother.

miss this opportunity to say it.
1~, .J:~)1lon'i
Be ·Published Greeting Examples ...

· ,nf'Djllly
' .
Seqtinel
.
.
~

Officer accused of nof'helping shooting victim sued
CINCINNATI (AP) - A
University of Cincinnati student
arrested for disorderly condLoct
when he complained an off-duly
police officer wouldn't help a
dying shooting victim has sued
the city and the fonner olticer.
Andrew November's federdl
lawsuit accuses Michael Baxter
Jr. of false arrest, malicious prosecution and intentionally causing
emotional distress. He seeks
monetary compensation and
punitive damages but did not list
an amount.
Baxter resigned from the force
in October. 'The lawsuit 1iled
April 14 in U.S. District Court
said the city is responsible for

~aining

police.
Police said Baxter was in unifo1111 but working an otl'-duty
a.~ignment at a restaurdllt on
April 15, 2003, when a man mn
. in and alerted others to the shooting.
November, from Onnge near
Cleveland, was standing in line
to place a food order. He ran outside, then tried to enlist Baxter's
help. The officer told him "it was
not his problem," the lawsuit
said.
'
After police · and medics
arrived, November a'ked Baxter
for his badge number so he could
write a complaint. Baxter arrested him for disorderly conduL1,

,
..

Frida~' M~y.7th
~".\'
,-

and November wa&gt; jailed tor two
hours. The charge wa' cbupped.
The shooting victim, Varian
Mines. 23. of Cincinnati, later
died.
Police said Baxter, an officer
for ti ve years, was not mnong at
lea't seven officers who responded to the shooting. The depanment's rules and regulations
manual requires officers to
respond when made aware of
any emergency or criminal situation. whether on- or olt:..ctuty.
Tha lawsuit said November for
weeks suffered ·•anguish of the
experience believing that his failure to get the police officer to act
resulted in the vic.tim's 'death."

.

,_

'1fli'

Happy
Mother's Day
(Your
Mother's
Name)
"

Love John,
Joe and Susan

Mother's Day
(Picture)

(Your
Mother's
Name)
Love john,
Joe and
Susan

Monday, April26, 2004

Eastern boys
fourth at Ogg
track meet

Study: Tobacco use on decline among Ohio teens
COLUMBUS (Ap)
Tobacco · use among Ohio
teens last year was 22.2 percent, a 45 per~ent decrease
from 1999, according to a
sta~e health study . to be
released this week.
More than 1,200 high
school · students responded to
the study conducted with the
health department and the
federal Centers for Disease
and Control and Prevention.
Advocates credit the work
of anti-smoking programs
such as "stand." part of the
Ohio
Tobacco
Usc
Prevention and Control
Foundation. "Stand" has
nearly I ,200 teens directly
involved in leadership roles.
said Michael J. Renner, executive director of the Ohio
Tobacco Use Prevention and
Control Foundation.
· Brandon Lester, 18, joined
the program about 2 112
years ago and has been
active on teen ad' ;sory pan-

r

•

Robinson and that he
was involved in the
ritualistic abuse of
her." said Claudia
Vercelloti, who is a
director of the Toledo
office for Survivors
Network of those
Abused by Priests
and has been' in cone
tact wilh the woman.

TOLEDO - A woman's '
allegtions that she was sexually abused as a child by Roman
Catholic priests during Satanic
rituals eventually led police to
review the 1980 killing of a
nun and charge one of the
priests with murder.
Investigators told The Blade
The woman, now
they could not substantiate the in her 40s. described
woman's allegations, but her Satanic ceremonies in
mention of the Rev. Gerald which priests placed
Robin.son spurred police to her in a coffin filled
take another look at the nun's with
cockroach.es.
murder - in which he had forced her to ingest
always been a suspect.
what she believed to
Robinson, 66. was charged be a human eyeball
Friday with killing Sister and penetrated her
Margaret Ann Pahl, who was with a snake "to constrangled and stabbed about 30 secrate these orifice•
times on April 5, 1980. Her to Satan." She also
body was found in a hospital alleged that the group
chapel, surrounded by lit can- of clerics killed an
dles with her . arms folded infant and a 3-yearacross her chest.
old child, perfo1111ed
They had worked together an abortion on her
for several years at Mercy and mutilated dogs
Hospital. Robinson, the hospi- during the rituals,
tal's chaplain, performed the according to a copy Sister Margaret Ann Pahl is shown in
funeral for Sister Pahl, 71.
of her statement.
this undated file photo. A Roman
Police
detective Steve
Vercelloti said the catholic priest charged in the 1980
Forrester and Tom Ross, an woman did not know strangling and staiJbing of Pahl whose
fnvestigator with the Lucas that Robinson had IJody. was found covered by an altar
Prosecutor's office, been . a suspect in cloth in a hospital chapel always was a
County
Thesday, April 27
told
The
Blade that the nun's Sister Pahl's killing. suspect in the killing. Police never could
Mornin~ (7 a.m.-Noon)
don't know if
Temperatures will rise from killing was pan of a ''ceremo- she"I knew
what she gather enough evidence. though. until
ny" in the chapel. They would
4 7 to 56 by late this morning.
they reopened the case about five
111
not elaborate.
was
setting
Skies will be sunny to mostly
months ago. On Friday police arrested
In December, authorities re- motion," she said.
cloudy with 5 to 10 MPH examined old evidence and
The diocese decid- the Rev. Gerald Robinson. who perwinds from the northwest.
concluded that , the murder ed against turning formed the funeral for the 71-year-old
Afternoon (I p.m.-6 p.m.) weapon, which they did not over the allegations nun. (AP Photo/Toledo Blade, File)
It's going to be a cloudy . identify, was ."in the control of to authorities .because
Calls to the prosecutor:s
afternoon. There is a slim the suspect." They used "blood they had been made earlier and
oftice
and home were not
chance · that it could rain. · transfer patterns," a rarely used investigated,
said
Sall y
'Temperatures will linger at technology that analyzes the Oberski, a spokeswoman for answered Sunday.
Robinson was scheduled to
56. Winds will be I0 to 15 patterns made when an item is the diocese.
be
arraigned Monday.
"They were found to be
MPH from the northwest laid down. DNA evidence was
Betore his aoTest. he was pernon-credible."
she
said
turning from the west as the not a factor, Forrester said.
fonming
pastoral care at nursA message seeking addition- Sunday. The allegations were
afternoon progresses.
ing
hori1es
and hospitals in the
al comment was left with Ross against several priests and
Toledo
area.
the diocese said.
Robinson's ''name was menon Sunday.
Calls to Robinson's attomey,
The woman whose allega- tioned among several others ...
John
Thebes. went unanswered
Vercelloti said the · diocese
tions led to the reopening of
Sunday.
On Saturday. he questhe case testified before the should have given the infonmationed the strength of the new
Lawmakers
borrowed Diocesan Review Board on tion to' police and prosecutor' evidence in the murder case.
Jun~ II and wrote a detailed because Robiuson had been a
about $240 million of the statement alleging · years of suspect in the nun's death.
"l11ere ·s a reason these cases
foundation's scheduled pay- abuse by Toledo diocesan and
are
cold and sit for 24 years
'They should have turned , it
ments in 2002-2003. and the religious-order priests during over whether they tound it because the evidence is not
credible or not," Vercelloti good to begin with." he told
money won't be repaid until her childhood.
The Blade.
"She did mention Father said.
2013-2014 . Another $112
million was borrowed to help
balance this year's state budget, with a promise of repayment io] 2015.
Now. slate lawmakers have
proposed a 20 percent cut in
the foundation's $107.5 million payment for next year.
or $21.5 million, to subsidize
the state's Medicaid program.
Rep. James P. Trakas, Rlndependence, is expe(ted to
introduce an amendment to
House Bill 434 that would
eliminate ·;stand .."
· "To me. it's kind or like a
,~To
slap in the face." Lester said
of the proposed cuts. "We've
1X3 Greeting $10.00 1X5 Greeting- $13.00
worked so hard. We've
helped so many people. ·
Happy .

I

'

STEWART-· The Eastern
boys track and· field team
finished fourth at the Ogg
Meet held at Federal
Hocking High School.
Meigs finished eighth.
Eastern· s Ross Holter
( 132-5)
and
Darren
Scarbrough ( 123-0) l'inished
l'irst and second respectively
in the discus thrpw.
Holter also finished third
in the shot put. while
Scarhrough
was
fifth .
Meigs· Chris Anderson was
sixth.
·
Eastern's Kevin Marcinko
was second in the long jump
( 16- 10) and fifth in the tOOmeter dash, while Bryce
Honaker was third in the I 00
and tourth in the 200.
Also ror the Eagles, Chris
Davis was seco nd in the
3.200-lneter run (II :55).
while Tyler Lee was sixth in
the II 0 hurdles and Josh
Marcinko was sixth in the
HOO.
For Meigs. Josh Manley
was second in the 1.600
(.'i: 15). while 4x800 relay
team finished third.
On the girls' side. Eastern
was fifth oyerall and Meigs
finished seventh.
Beth Hysell (6:33) and
Rachel Elliott (6:41) gave
the Eagles a one-two finish
respe ctively in the I ,600.
while Meigs' Ashley Savage
finished fourth. ·
Eastern's Erin Weber l'inished third in the discu s and
fifth in the shot put, while
tea mmate Jeri Hayman was
second in the 400 (I :06) and
fourth in the 200.
Also for Eastern, the
4x200 team was second, the
4x400 relay ' team finished
third and the 4x I00 squad
was fifth.
For Meigs. Ashley Samar
was ' fit'th in the long jump
and 300 hurdles. while Julie
Glomm was third in the I00
hurdles and Sara Engle was
sixth in the shot put.
Fort Frye won the girls,
team title, while Federal
Hocking won the boy s team
championship.

Branyan back
with Indians
CLEVELAND (AP)
Russell Branyan is back with
the Cleveland Indians, whoreacquired the free-swi nging
outtielder on Sunday from the
Atlanta Bmvcs in exchange
for a player to be named.
Branyan began his career
with the Indians in 1994 and
spent seven seasons m
Cleveland's
organization
before he was traded to
Cincinnati in 2002 for first
b&lt;iseman Ben Broussard.
He appeared in II games
this season for Atlanta's
in
Triple-A
affiliate
Richmond. batting .179 (5-for28) with one homer and four
RBis.
Branyan had his best season
with Cleveland in 200 I when
he batted .232 with 20 homers
and 54 RB Is in 11 3 games.
In 2002, Branyan had a
combined 24 homers and 56
RBls for Cleveland and
Cincinnati.
· The Indians said Branyan
will repon to Triple-A Buffalo
on MonJay.

Destroyers
destroyed again

Perez, Pirates
shut out Reds
BY ALAN ROBINSON
Associated Press

PITTSBURGH -A nearly
three-hour rain delay was of
no real bother to Pirates lefthander Oliver Perez. It was the
thou ght of another two-day
· delay that worried him.
Perez. eager to pitch despite
the extended wait at the stao1.
shut out Cincinnati on six hits
in his tirst major league complete game and Pitt·sburgh hit
three homers Sunday in beating the Reds 6-0.,
. "I'm very happy to get that."
Perez said. "''m j ust hoping to
get some more (shutout&gt;)."
Rookie Jose Castillo hit a
two-run homer and Rob
Mackowiak and , Humberto
Cota had solo shots off Reds
sianer Jose Acevedo (2-1 ) to
help the Pirates end a fourgame losing streak. The Reds
had won four of live overall
and
were
-t-1
again~t
Pittsburgh.
Perez (2-0J almost didn't
make the starting rotation
coming out of spring training
as he struggled late in camp t&lt;;&gt;
make numerous adjustn)cills
to his delivery. but has been
the Pirates' most reliable
staner since then .
He struck out 10 - the sixth
time in his 43-game career
he's had double-digit strikeouts - and walked one whik
lowering his ERA to 1.7-1. He

Celebrating speci,l dtlfs
· · · with you!
Sunday Times-Sentinel
(740) 992-2155

Fill out the form below, attach It with your payment
and send It to
The Dally Sentinel "Mother's Day"
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769
For more Information call99l-2156

r-------------------------------------,I

I
CIRCLE ONE: A. 1X3 Greetlng ...$10;00 B. 1X5 Greeting... $13.00
Mother's
Name
1
1 Your Name (s):
I Your Address
'
I

I City, State, Zip
I Phone"#
I

I

1
1
I
I

I
I
I

,
Ads Must Be Prepaid

I

L-------------------------------------~
Make Checks Available to: The Dally Sentinel

COLUMBUS (AP)
Andre Bowden ran for two
scores, and Shane Stafford
th.rcw for a touchdown and
r~n for another to lead the
Tampa Bay Storm past the
Columbu' Destroyers 46-36
Sunday.
Stafford completed 18 of 26
pa"es fur 212 yards for
Tampa Bay (5-7).
Ryan Vena was 16-for-28
for 175 yards and three touch- ,
down' for the Dcstroye" (3 8). He also ran for a score.
Sedrick Robinson caught
six passes for 69 yards and
two
touchdowns
for
Columbus. while Wilmont
Perry ran for another score.

'

J

innings
durin~ his last two starts.
includinu Pinsburgh', 2-1 l·ictory ove~ the Met~ on April 17
in which he didn't fi~ure in the
dedsinn ,
•
Pe rez didi1't figh t it when
pitching coad1 Stlin Williams
began retooling his dclil'ery
midway throu gh spring trai ning. though he didn't fully
understand why ohe chunges
were needed. Peret.. 22. had
~everal big o.;lrikeout !!ames
last 'easo o~ with lhe Padres
and Pirates. but v-as on ly ~·
10.
.
··Hc"s got a temper at times.
and he "'id to me he "''" still
~triki n g out a lor of guy&gt; ...
,aid Cola. who caught Pero.
"But I suid 10 him. ' How
many wins are yo u ge lting·.1•
He\ rea lly been uubta11Uing
( throu~h

the makeo ver!."
The Pirate~ are tf\ in~ tu
smooth Perez's deii\·erv to
give him better rhythm- and
keep him from throwing more
pitches than nece'5ary.
" I th ink it's remarkable he's
done the things he'.s done."
manager Llovd McClendon
said ...... lr"s tol1gh enough · to
pitch· at this level. but to pitch
while making adjustments is
L

Please see Reds, Bl

Area sectional.
pairings released
Rio Grande's Kristen Chevalier slides safely into third IJase during the Redwomen's dou·
IJieheader sweep against Seton Hill Saturday.

Redwomen sweep
two from Seton Hill
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune. com
RIO GRANDE- The University of Rio
Grande Redwomen softball team received
outstanding pitching from sophomore right
hander Andrea Lotycz as she guided her
team to a pair of wins over visiting Seton
Hill, 8-0 and 13-3 on Saturday aftemoon at
Stanley Evans Field.
Rio Grande (26-1 0) leaned on the right
arm of Lotycz and she responded by pitching
both games in improving her record to 16-3

on the season.
Lotycz went six innings in the first game.
yielding four hits and had one strikeout.
The Redwomen used a five-run second
inning as a springboard to the game one triumph.
Sophomore shortstop Kristen Chev:olier
leJ the Redwomen orfense. going 3-for-3
with three runs scored and two RBI. Senior
second baseman Emily Cooper ,added lwo
hits with a run scored. an RBI and three
stolen bases.

Please see Sweep, Bl

BY BUTCH COOPER

J) entertains R,lck Hill i:I·Ki

bcooper@mydailytribune.com

and Waverly (3-8) travels lll
Vinlon Count v 15·61 amonu

l;l her game~ · being played

Gallia County rivals will across south eastern Ohoo.
meet once aguin to open secIn Division IV. alsn on Mal
tional .baseball tournament 10. Miller (~-71 will he &lt;it
play.
Southern (2-9) with 1he winRi,ver Valley (1-11) will ner playing Trimble 11 0·.11
travel to Gallia Academy 17- Mav 13. while Eastern 15·91
7) May 6 in first round action pia)·, host to Waterford 1 1-101.
of this year's Division II sec- and Ironton St. Joe 10-91 travtional.
·
els to South Gallia (-1-71.
Gallia Acodemy. with the
The Ea,tern/Waterford winNo. 4 seed has sw~pt the two n~&gt; will meet. Crooks\ ille (6teams reg ular season game~ .1) Mav 13. while the South
this year.
Galli.v"St. Joe winn~r squares
The winner will joLorney lll niT aguinso S)ii11111C' Vulky
top-seeded Warren (I 0-0J (7-~). also on May 13 .
May 10.
In softbull sectional act ion.
· Also in Division II basc- Meig.s (7-Si earned a No. :
liall. Athens ('X-3) will . play seed &lt;tnd wi II play host to
host to Meig' (10-2 ) on May Marie!la (-l - 5) Mav 12 in
I0 witll the winner facing Division II. The ll'i~ner will
either
Warre11.
Gallia face the v- inner of the Warren
Academy or River Valley (6-31/Athen' (-l-.Jil'vlay l'i.
May L1 in the sectional fin:~ I.
May 10 will be a busy day
Please see Sedional, 82
in Division II as Jackson ( 12-

College Baseball

NFL Draft

Buckeyes set record
Rio Grande splits twin
with 14 players selected bill at Ohio Dominican BY CHRIS STADELMAN
Associated Press

STAFF REPORT

B. u1hofAJ;~N!

-~
COLUMBUS NFL teams
.t
chose seven more Ohio Stale players Sunday, bringing to 14 the number of Buckeyes
taken in the twoday draft , the
most from one
'chool since the
league cut the
draft to seven
rounds.
The previous record for one
school was set in 2002 when II
Miami Hurricanes were selected.
The draft was shortened to seven
rounds in 1994.
"This has been a tremendous
class of young men. blessed with
extraordinary talent and even more
extraordinary character." wach Jim Former Ohio State cornerback Chris
Gamble holds up a jersey of his new
Please see Buckeyes, Bl
team. the Carolina Panthers. (API

sports@ mydailytribune.com
COLUMBUS - The University
nf Rio Grande Redmen bascbail
team battled Ohio Dominican tn a
split of '' key American Midea'l
Confcrcnc~ South Division doubleheader on Saturday at Panther Alley.
Ohio Dominican blanked the
' Red men I0-0 in the first game with
Rio taking game two . .J-1 .
Rio Grande (32- 15. 11 -7 AMC
South) was no-hit in the five-inning
fir't game. Ohio Dominica n (2,8-151, 15-7 AMC South) ldthander
Jonathan Sanche7 (4-~) fired his
third shutout of the 'eason and hi'
firSI hn-hitter.
Senior righthander Jason Williams
pitched three innings in hi' fiN 'tart
of the year for Rio Gmndc and wtrered hi' first loss (~- 1 ).
In game two. sophomore rigl11y

Kcl'in Hale out-dueled Chris or,,
for the .J-1 win .
Hale JlJ ••'\ 1 fanned sc1·en in '''"t:n
inning~.

walking onl! 1\\~ l in 1hc

complete game ll'in' for the Rt•dmc n.
Ofat falls to 7-.J on the 'cason
with the ddea!.
Th~ Rcdm~n

in the fourth
Kc,·in Dolan

.\cored :Ill four run"
ioonin~ .

!..!1l l

the

Soph&lt;HliOIL'
innin~ ..,t~lrll.·d

wilh a bunt ~i1l~lc. nHn eJ t~l "~?cnnd

011 a hit b1 frcslllllllll Narc l'hau and
scored C11i an RBI sin~lc h\ H.A . ·
Scott. Junior third htlsc mail Kri'
Schuler collected ;u1 RBI &lt;ln a ficld ~r\

ch(li..:C and :-.ophtHlll.'re catcher

Jorge Mnr:ote' added an RBI sinulc
to t':"lo~c oul the 'corin!.! .

..

Game' 1hrce and rmlr of the series
arc 'Chcduled fnr SLonda\. bl'~inninc
.
at I [1.111.
Thur,da) ·., rtllll out of the Ohio
Vallev Cnlkcc came is tcntali ,cl;
re - ,clicduicd'ror·~ p.m .. ~londa) &lt;it
Robert Elllll' held.

-

••
•

ha &gt; permitted
onlv two
run; in 15

Prep Baseball/Softball

~

Deadline for this Speclol Molher's DayTrlbule Is Thursday, Aprll30, 2004

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

Monday, April 26, 2004

•

�Monday, April 26, 2004

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Gordon gets win over Earnhardt with controversial decision

Results

TA LLADEGA . Ala. \ AP) - This Earnhardt Jr. with SIX laps remammg
tunc. the dec tsion ~N e ill Jeff Gordon's and barely beat him . ending DEl's
winning streak at Talladega and bringW"Y·
At tcr a NASCA R rultn g went Ing a ram of beer cans and garbage
ag,unst him a wee k earl ier m from the pro-Earnhardt fans.
" I don't mind a little controversy.
\1m1msHIIe. Va .. costtng Gordon a
shot at vtctory. the sanctlOillllg orgam- es pecmlly when tt goes my way."
L.tt JOn handed the four-t11n e Nex tel Gordo n satd, smtling
In Martinsvtlle, Gordon had little to
Cup l hampllln " conu nverSJal w111
Sun da) at Tall .tdeg.t Supers peedw ay. smtle about after hts car was damaged
Gordon se11 cd the le.td from Dale when he hit a large piece of concrete

At Talladega Superspeedway

Talladega, Ala
Lap length : 2 66 m11es
(Car number In parentheses)
1 (11} Je ff Gordon Chevrolet

188, $320 258

2 (3) Dale Earnhardt J r Chevrolet

188 $241 433

· 3 ( 14) Kev1n Harv~ck Chevrole1..

188. $11!5,808

4 (8) J1mm1e Johnson , Chevrolet

188, $139,655

5 (21) Robby Gordon Chevrolet

188, $139,927

Ford

Buckeyes

8 { 16) Casey Mears Dodge 188

$108 205

from Page 81

• 9 (33) Jam1e McMu 1ray Dodge

. 188, $115.705
· 10 (19) Bobby Labonte Chevrolet
: 188 $126313

Tte"e l s.ud o n Sttn day
"They' ve playe d a tremend olh tOl e Ill Otlr SlH.TCSS .
es pec iall y the past tw o
ye ars. and we wtll mt ss
them both as student uth lctes and yo un g men r m
not surpn scd to sec that so
m.my ot them we re ta ken tn
the NFL dr.tft. .tnd I tull y
expc•t .111 of the m to be success lui at th at le ve l. "
Qu .trl erb ack
C rat g
Krc nzcl and offensn e line men Al ex Stepanovich.
Sh.tn e Oh vea .tnd Ad 11e n
C l.tr~ e were amon g tho se
chosen in the J,tter IOUnd s
S.tfety Wtll Alle n. recCt \e r
Drew Cartel .tnd linebacker
Robert Rey nolds .tl so went
on the dt.tl't's second d.t y.
Step.mov1c h w.ts taken in
th e four th round by At tzon .t
" 1th th e I OOth p1ck Allen
.tho went 111 th e lourth
ro und . t.tken by T.tmpa Bay
w1th the I I tth p1ck
Stepano vrch, .m AII -Bt g
Te n guard hts sen tor season .
also ' has played cemer and
co uld end up pl ay 1n g that
pe sHton rn the NFL.
Allen dtdn ' t bec ome .t
starter until ht s sent or seaso n. ~Nhcn he was named an
All -American alter m.t kmg
83 tackl es and two tntcrce puons.
Three more Buckeyes
we nt 111 th e f1fth IOUnd . The
C htc.t ~o Bears too k Krenzcl
.It, J.fS. C.u o lrn .t selected
Carter wHh th e 16Jrd pi ck
and Tennessee took Robert
Re ynolds wtth th e 165th
se lection
O tf en stve tackl e Oli vea
w.ts t.tke n 111 the last round .
209th overall. by S,m Dt ego,

11 (17) Ryan Newman Dodge

. 188,$123,592

12 (2) M1chael Waltnp _Ch evrolet

188. $112 301
. t3 (20) Brendan Gaughan Dodge
188.$89 015
14 (29) Johnny Sauter Chevrolet

188, $86 935
t5 (18) Greg BrHie Ford. t88
$86.480
16 (7) Date Jarrett -Ford

188

$106.957
t7 (1) R1cky Rudd Ford 188
$106281
18 (30) Scott W1mmer Dodge
188 $96885
19 115) Jeff Green Dodge 188
$95 845
20 (23) J1mmy Spencer Chevrolet

188 $87 335
2t (38) Jeremy Mayf1 eld Dodge,
188 $90 095
22 (37 ) Tony Stewart Chevrolet

188 $11 4 353
23 (40) Ken Schrader Dodge
188 $70 265
24 (28) Ky le Petty Dodge 188
$77 949
25 ( 13) Terry Labon te. Chevrolet

188 $96,930

26 (35) Enc McClure Chevrolet

188 $65 t 75

27 (39) Brian Vtcke rs Chevrolet

188 $75 620
28 (12) Ell1ott Sadler Ford 185
$102903
29 (34) Johnny Benson Dodge
15 1 suspens1on $63 9 10

30 126) Kasey Kahne, Dodge
150 $97 080
3 1 (9) Sterling Marlln Dodge 146
overheating $99 050
32 (4) Joe Nem echek, Chevrolet
146 en g1ne latlu re, $71 500

33 (32) Rusty Wallace Dodge
144 $107 108
34 (5 ) Scott R•ggs

\lCribune- Sentinel - ~e ister
CLASSIFIED

that had dislodged from the track
while running second. NASCAR
refused to let Gordon' s Hendrick
Motorspons team repair the car durmg the 77-mmute delay while the
track was being repatred . He wound
up sixth
Sunday, with Earnhardt making a
strong move to pass for the lead com mg off tum four on lap 184 of the 188lap race, rookie Hendnck driver Bnan

Vickers and Casey Mears collided.
sendiAg Vtckers shdmg and bringmg;
out th e II th c.tutton ll.tg of the race. Under NASCAR' s rule change from
last fall . freezmg the field when the
yellow comes out rather than lett ing
the competitors race to the flagstand;
Gordon got his first Nextel C up v tcto~
ry of th e season. third on Tall adega·~
2.66-mile Qval and the 65th of his:
N ASCAR career

Chevrolet

144 $89,322
35 136)an Shepherd, Dodge 65
transmiSSIOn $61 705

42 (31) Matt Kenseth Ford 59

eng1ne fa ilure, $ 112 298
43 '2 4) R1cky Craven Chevrolet
7 eng.ne fa1lure $69 58 1
Race Statisttcs
Ave rage Speed of Race W1nne r

129 396 mph

T1me of Race 3 hours 5 1 m1n·
utes 53 seconds
M arg1n of V1ctory Unde r Caut1on
Caut•on Flags 11 lor 55 laps
Lea d Changes 54 among 23 dn
vers

while Phtladelphm made
Clarke. a guard, the 227th
sclccllon.
Krcnzel was a two-year
starter tor Ohio State . compi ling a 24-3 career record
and wmning th e 2002
national champtonshtp. He
completed 55 percent of hi s
passes last year and threw
fo r 2.040 yard s.
Carter tnjured hi s knee
last ye.tr, cuum g his season
short after he had caught 25
passes for 410 yards through
etght games. Re ynolds had
five sacks and two interception s in his career and was
the th1rd-leadm g tackler on
th e team in 2003.
Olt vea was a second-team
&lt;\11-Bt g Ten selectiOn after
st.trtmg all 13 games as a

Sweep
from Page 81
Semor center fielder Krista
Tucker. went I -for-2 with a run
scored and JUntor first baseman Amy Conn went l -for: 3
wtth a run scored. Semor left
fielder Abby Hardman was 0for-2, but scored two runs.
Seton Htll ( 11 -19) pitcher
Brittany Patton was plagued
by five errors. larme Clark had
two of the four hits for the
Griffins
R1o Grande had seven hils m
the lirst game.
Lotycz pnched five mnings
m the second game, giving up
four hils and three runs (one

earned) wnh three stnkeouts
and one walk.
Conn and Krista Tucker
both collected four hits each.
Tucker drove in four runs and
Conn collected three RBi s
Tucker also swiped three
bases. Conn had a double and
a triple.
Cooper, Brandt Jones and
Michele Denwiller all went 2for-3. Deuwiller had two
RBI's and Jones had one
Chevalier went 1-for-3 wnh a
run scored.
The Redwomen scored two
runs each in the first three
innings and dropped the hammer with a seven-spot m the
fifth mning to end the game
early.
Rio
Grande's
offense
exploded wtth 15 htts

Jen Crudinale suffered the
• loss tor the Grttlins, pitching 4:
2/3 mnmgs, grvmg up all 15hlls andl 3 run s (nme eruned ~
wnh four stnkeout s and twti
walks
Seton H til took a bnet le.td
(3-2) with a three-run second
inmng. Jenell Eckenrode went
1-for-2 with a run scored and
an RBI and Becky Ftelds waS:
1-for- 2 wnh an RBI .
•
The Mt. St. Joseph gamethat was slated for Fnday was
cancelled and wt II not be made
up.
Rto Grande wtll tra vel to
Doctor Singleton Park on:
Tuesday afternoon for twO:
crucial Amencan Mideasr
Conference South Divi sion
games versu s Shawnee State.
Game one is set for 3 p m

play May 5 wtth the vtctor
moving on to face Northwest
May 12
Rtver Valley, a dtstnct
semifmahst the past two
years m Dtvi ston II, drops to
Dt VISion Ill thts year. The
Ratders (4-6) will entertain
Wellston (2-11) May IQ. Topseeded New Lexington (6-5)
Will face the winner on May
15.
The' Divi sion Ill distnct
tournament is scheduled to
take place at Rio Grande .

Eastern (9-4) ea rned a No
2 seed tn Dmston IV and
will awatt the wtnner
Southern 's May 12 game at
Crooksvtlle (6-10) Southern
is 2-6.
The Witmer ot the Eastern
vs.
Southern/Crook sville
game w1ll advance to the dts
tri ct semifmal at Mtnford.
Date and ume w1ll be determined at a later date.
Meanwhile. South Gallia
(0-6) travels to Green (6-6 )
May 12.

-

G.a lh• C"&lt;&gt;unly OH

.

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

l\egister
~ribune
Sentinel
Your Ad, '(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today•••
Or Fax To (740) 992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234
To Place

Offtee 11o~cf1

Clat ke started 3 1 ga mes at
guard and 12 at tackle dut mg ht s career
Three Ohto State players
were taken m the ftr st round
S.tturd .ty: de fen Sl ve end
Wtll Smtth. cornerback
Chrts Gamble and wtde
rc c et ~e r M1 chael Jenktns.
Tt ght e nd Ben Hartsock,
Tim
defen srve
tackle
Anderson .
punter
B .J.
S&lt;tnder and defensive end
Dam on Scott also were
taken on the ftrst day.
Two other Ohto college
players were taken Sunday:
Miamt of Ohio guard Jacob
Bell in the frfth round by-the
Tttilns and Bowling Green
quarterback Josh Harri s by
Baltimore m the stxth
Bell was the second
M tamt player sel ected this
year, joinm g the man he
hlocked for, Stee lets firstIOund
pick
Ben
Roethh sbet ger
Harn s " Bowlm g Green 's
all -t11ne leader in total
ollen se wtth 9 ,976 yards
wrth 98 touchdowns.

Sectional
from Page 81
On that same day as the
Meigs/Maneua game, Gallta
Academy (2 -8) will be at
Ymton County (8- 1) wrth the
winner advancing to meet
etther Northwest (12-3),
Jackson (5-8) or Waverly (110).
Jackson and Waverly will

Reds
from Page 81
even tougher."
The biggest problem has
been geuing h1m to the
mound regularly.
Perez's scheduled start
Fnday against the Reds was
pushed back to Sunday when
game
the
Cubs- Pt rates

l•._.bllc
V~Lir

Defendants

veyed
to
Albert
Harmon by Deed
Volume 314, Page t 03
of the Metgs County
Recorder's

South

oo·

Offtce,

1o·

so·•

a
distance
522.00 feel to an iron
pin set; thence , leavWest

Pursuant to Order
of Sale entered In this
cause, I will offer for
ing the section line,
South 87' 25' 56"
sale at public auction
West a distance of
at the front steps of
the Courthouse, 100 933 47 teet to a po1n1
1n the centerline of
East Second Street ,
Township Road No.
Pomeroy,
Meigs
225 (Cross Road) ,
County, Oh1o, on the
14th day of May, 2004, passing through two
1ron pms set at disat 10·00 o'clock a.m.,
lances of plus 821 .47
ihe
following
described real propfeel and plus 921.47
erly:
feet ,
respectively;
thence, wrlh the cenSituated 1n the
Slate of Ohio, County
terline of Township
of Meigs, Township of
Road No 226, the fol·
Cotumbte , being In
lowing two courses ;
(1 )North 11' 38' 08 "
the northeast quarter
of Section 7, Range
West a distance of
15 West, Township 9
187.38 feel to a porn!;
(~)thence North 03"
North, of "The Oh1o
Company
Frrst
47' 02" West a diS·
Purchase" , and being lance ot 255.07 feet to
a point tn the centerbounded
and
line Intersection wtth
described as follows :
Township Road No.
Commoncing for ref·
erence at an Iron pin
405 (Harmon Road);
found capped " J.T. thence, with the cenSwart 7426 " at the • terline of Township
Road No. 405, North
northeast corner of
02' 42' 42" West a disSection
7
(Note ·
Reference bearing on
tance of 49.57 feet to
a point; thence , leavthe east line of the
north hall of the
ing the road , North
85' 36' 00" East a diSnortheast quarter of
Section 7 used as tance ol994.07 feet to
South 00 degrees 51 ' the
Potnl
of
39" West.),
Beginnrng, pass ing
through two tron p1ns
thence, wllh the east
set at distan ce s of
line of Section 7 and
the westline of a 135 plus 19 23 feel and
acres tract as con plus
119.23 feel,
respectively, contain·
veyed
to
Albert
lng It 278 acres,
Harmon by Deed
Volume 314, Page 103 more or less, out of
Parcel No. O:l-007of the Meigs County
Recorders
Office, 009.
SUBJECT to all legal
South oo deg. 51 ' 39 "
righl· of·ways. ease·
West a distance o f
ments, restri c tions ,
I ,637.73 feel to a
and
marked stone found, reservations,
being the true Point
zoning regulations of
Of Beginning for this r e c ord.
SUBJECT to
th e
description ;
of
thence, from said right-of-way

•

"

west ltne of a 25
acres tract as con·

I

andJor assigns, forever. Said easement Is

lor the purposes of
running utilities to
other parcels of land
on or near Township
Road No, 225 Said
easement runs in a
north-south d~rectlon
across the west end
of
the
above
descrrbed properly
w1lh the west tine of
said easement being
the
centerline of
Township Road No.
225. Containing 0.508
acres, more or

less,

of easement
SUBJj;CT to another
50-00 feel wide easement being reserved
unto the grantor, his
he1rs, and/or. asstgns,
forever. Sa1d ease·
ment is for the pur·

poses of runnmg ut1l·
ilies to other parcels
of land on or near

Township Road No.
405 , Said easement
runs in a north-south
direction across the

west end of the above
described property
with the west line of
said easement being
the
centerline of
Township Road No.
405. Contarning 0 057
acres·, more or less,
of eas ement,
All iron pms set are
112 x 30" rebar

capped and labeled
" Claus 6456".
The bearings In
this description are
f or angle c alcu lations
only and are based
on the north ltne of
the northeast quarter
of Secllon 7 used as
a n a ssumed bearin9

of South 89" 54' 40"
East.

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

Dally In - Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday.. Frlday for Insertion

All Display: 12 Noon 2

Buslnes• Days Prior To

In Next Day's Paper
"~:~:::~In-Column: 1:00 p .m.
F
Sundays Paper

Publlc:atlon
Sunday Dl•play: 1:00 p . m.
Thursday for Sundays Pa''"'r

• Aft ads must be prepaid'

• Start Your Ad• With A Keyword • Include Complete

Detcriptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevl•tlon•
• Include Phone Number And Addre11 When Needed
• Ad• Should Run 7 Days

Thursday was rained out He
wasn' t certam when he would
have pttched aga m 1r
Sunday 's game had been
washed out.
"He was a little anxtous to
gel out there," Cota sa1d. "He
was really pumped up ... and
he didn't want to wan through
any more delays."
Perez looked sharp from
the start despite a delay that
pushed back the startmg time
to 4:25, retiring eight of the

first mne battei s. He was 111
trouble twtce. but stru ck out
Barry Larkrn to end the thtrd
and Juan Castro to end the
seventh. both ttmes with runners on first and thtrd.
Perez was especmlly ettecttve agatn st Adam Dunn.
stnkmg h1m out three stratghr
ttmes. Dunn came into the
game 6-for- 17 wuh four
homers and seven RBl s
against Ptttsburgh this season
before gomg 0· for-4.

r

110
1.
ANNOUN(

EMENTS 1

C· 1 Beer Carry Out pe rmit
lor sale Chester Township
Me1gs County send letters
of Int erest to tho Dally
Sentmel PO Box 729 20
Pomeroy OhiO 45769

C..ldwell s Fresh
Produce
Thu rsday
Fnday
&amp;
Saturday McCormiCk Rd
1102 Galllpohs b h1o

r

GJ\ F, \\\AY

2 yr old solid white beaut1·
lui female cat spayed Call
740·4 41 ·1560 after 5pm
3 puppieS Beag le m1x 1
male 2 femal e, 7 wks old,

1740)992·3516
Aeg1stered 6 yr old female
Sch nauzer to nght home
Loves children com pan
10nsh1p (740 )44&amp;-2 800

r
~

WTANO
FOUND

1-t.l..,;hll: t..o

The above description prepared by
Roger
W
Claus,
Registered Surveyor
No 6456, based on a
new survey of March
6, 1996, subject to
any facts that may be
disclosed In a lull and
accurate title search.
These premises were

at

appraised

511 ,000.00 and cannot be sold for less
than 213rds of thai
amount.

The terms of sate are
10% cash In hand on
day of sate, balance
to be paid upon delivery of deed.
RALPH E. TRUSSELL
Sherrfl
of
Meigs
County, Ohio
(4) 5, 12, 19, 26, (5) 3

.

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT
OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus , Ohio

Office of Contracts
Legal Copy Number·
040329
UNIT PRICE CON·
TRACT
Malltng
Dale .
04/3012004
E040(408)
Seated proposals
will be accepted from
all pre-qualified bidders at the Office of
Contracts of the Ohio
Department
of
Transportation ,

Columbus , Ohio, until
10:00 a.m
Wednesday, May 19,
2004
FOR IMPROVING
SECTION MEG -681 ·
15.00, STATE ROUTE
68!
IN
ORANGE
TOWNSHIP, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO, IN
ACCORDANCE WITH
PLANS AND SPECIFI·
CATIONS BY GRADING,
DRAINING ,
RESURFACING WITH
ASPHALT
CON
CRETE AND REHA·
BILITATING BRIDGE
NO. MEG-681 ·1500, A
THREE SPAN CONTINUOUS
REIN-

K.-.••~.,.

D~llv~.-&lt;ed

FORCED CONCRETE
SLAB ON RECONSTRUCTED
SUB·
STRUCTURE,
(SPANS: 32'.40', 32' ;
ROADWAY; 28 '· 6"
FACE/FACE OF RAIL),
OVER
MIDDLE
BRANCH OF SHADE
RIVER.
"The date set for
complellon of this
work shall be as set
forth In the bidding
proposal." Plans and
Specifications are on
file In the Department
of Transportation.
GORDON PROCTOR
DIRECTOR
OF
TRANSPORTATION
4126
513

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
DIVISION OF MINERAl
RESOURCES
MANAGEMENT
DEPARTMENT
OF

N A T U !I A l

RESOURCES
1855
FOUNTAIN
SQUARE
·THIRD
FLOOR
COLUMBUS, OHIO
43224
Unlrl THURSDAY
JUNE 10, 2004 1 :30
P.M . and opened
thereafter for furnishIng the materials and
performing the labor
for the execution and
construction of
SOUTHEAST OHIO
UNDERGROUND
RECLAMATION PROJECT
MEIGS
COUNTY.
OHIO
RECLAMATION PRO·
JECT NUMBER MG·
XX·05
In accordance wllh
the plans and specifl·
cations prepared by
the DEPARTMENT OF \
NATURAL
RESOURCES, DIVI·
SION OF MINERAL
RESOURCES MAN·
AGEMENT, COLUM·
BUS, OHIO. BIDS
WILL BE OPENED tN
THE SECOND FLOOR
CONFERENCE
ROOM OF 185 5

1 .... Neowsp.upers_
Rla&amp;ht. t...,. VOIUI- l&gt;••..:•r-

(BUILD lNG H·2) OF
THE
FOUNTAIN
SQUARE
OFFICES
OF
THE
OHIO
DEPARTMENT
OF
NATURAL
RESOURCES ,
The
United States Office
of Surface Mining
Reclamation
and
Enforcement Is supplying 100% of the
funds lor this project,
THE ESTIMATE FOR
THIS PROJECT AS
DETERMINED
BY
THE OtVIStON OF
MINERAL
RESOURCES MAN·
AGEMENT
IS
$146,61 0.00
A pre-bid meeting
will be held on
THURSDAY,
MAY
13,2004 at 10. 00 A.JI! .
at
the
RulfMine
Drainage site . The
site is located In
Perry

Township,

Lawrence
County,
Ohio approximately
0.6 mtlas north of U.S
52 In South Point,
Ohio at 415 Lawrence
County Road 56. NO
PLANS OR SPECtFI·
CATIONS Wtll BE
SOLD AT THE PRFBID MEETING,
Copies
of
the
plans, specifications,
and proposal forms
will be forwarded
from the Division of
Mineral
Resources
Management ,
Deparlmant
of
Natural Resources ,
upon receipt of a
check or money order
tn the amount of
$30.00 made peyable
to
the
Ohio
Department
of
Natural Resources
(ODNR) and malted to
ODNR, Division of
Mineral

Resources

Management, 1855
Founlaln
Square ,
Building
H· 2,
Columbus,
Ohio
43~24 anenllon Julia
Mtner
(Telephone
Number: (614) 265·
6629). Plans and
specifications
become the property
of the prospecllve
bidders
snd
no

Lost a male bl ack &amp; tan
Yor k1e
the Middlepor t
area If you have any mfo
please call (740)992 0206

refunds witt be made.
For

information

regarding the protect,
the primary contact
person Is !he Prolect
Engineer,
Tom
Barnllz;
rn
his
absence you may
contact the Project
Officer, Barb Flowersi
In
the
Jackson
District Office at (740)
286-6411.
Each bid must be
accompanlad by a
BID
GUARANTY,
meeting the requirementa of Section
153.54 of the Ohio
Revised Code.
CONTRACTORS
ARE ADVISED THAT
EMPLOY·
EQUAL
MENT OPPORTUNITY
CONDITIONS
ARE
APPLICABLE TO THIS
BID
tN
ACCOfiDANCE WITH THE
PROVISIONS
OF
SECTIONS
153.59
AN0·1 25.111 OF THE
OHIO
REVISED
CODE. WAGE RATES
ESTABliSHED
IN
ACCORDANCE WITH
SECTION
t513.18
AND 1513.37 OF THE
REVISED CODE ARE
ALSO APPLICABLE
TO THIS BID.
Bids are to be
seated and delivered
to the address given
above. No bidder may
withdraw his bid withIn sixty (60) days after
the actual data ol the
opening thereof.
The Director ot.
Natural
Resources
reserves the right to
reject any or an bids,
or to accept the bid
which embraces such
combination
alternata proposals as
may promote the best
Interest of the Stale.
4126

513

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

Los t Bracelet 411 2104 m
Gall1pol1s One s•d e while
gold other s1de yellow
gold Phone 740-44 1·5025
or 740·256 6535
Lost Large black long
hatred cat near Le G rande
Blvd (7 40)446 2233
tost L1ttte yellow 1sh &amp;
Drown pup weanng brown
¢oll ar, answers to the
name Pepper Lost on 386
Garland Creek Ad Crown
C1ty, Oh10 If any 1nfo
please ca ll (740)256-6006

r
""

May

YAR!ISALE
YARH S.u.EG~LLti'OLIS
I st,

8am·2pm

@1136A Sl At 850

B1dwell Ocean Aquanum
baby sw1ngs, bouncer,
playpen baby cloth es,
toys a1 r mattress, sweep·
er too ls &amp; home m1sc ,
CO s, mov1es subwooter,

7th An nual 6·M1Ie Yellow
Fla g Yard Sale, Fri·Sat,

April 301h &amp; Moy 1st Only
S5 to slgn·upl We advertiSe for you! Cal1 740·992·

r

4055 or 740·992·3148

®alltpolts llatlp m:rtbune
(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel

%~ · 1

Absolute Top Doll ar US
S1lver
Gold Coi ns ,
Proofsets,
Diamond s,
Gold
A1ngs,
US
Currency,·M T S
Co in
151
Second
Shop,
Avenue Gall ipOli S, 740·

446-2842

(740) 992-2155

I '11'111\\11 \I

~oint ~leasant

ter
. :11.\egts'
'

(304) 675-1333

Want to look,younger
AND earn Mon ey? lets
talk lhe NEW AVON call
Manlyn (304)682·2645,

Joyce (304)675·6919
Apnl (304 )882·3630
A leadmg prOVIder of sup·
port se rv1ces to IndiVIduals
With MRIDD IS lOOking fo r
a fu ll 11me QMRP and

HO ME SUPERV ISOR
Superviso ry 9)( pen ence
requ1red Benef1ts 1nclud·
ed For more mformal10t1
you may call Roberta Van
Gundy a\740-44 6·8145 or
fax a resume to 74Q-446·
3987
An
Eq ual
Opportunity
Emp loyer

FIM/DIV
AS SEEN ONTV
INSTRUCTION
LEARN TO DRIVE
TRACTOR- TRAILER
NEW PROGRAM

ALLIANCE

"'' U\ 14 I "

116
.1

Tractor Tra1ler
Tra1nmg Centers
Wy1hevtlle, VA
Call Toll Free

1-8(1{)-334-1203
AVON I All Areasl To Buy or
Sell Shirley Spears, 304·

675· 1429

(7 40)446·8508 rf tound

'

HELP WANrnD

110
IIEI.P WANrnD
1.

'ANEW CLINICAL
PEELS I'

Foun d mother do g but she
1s m1ssmg her pupp1es m
R1 o G rande Mc Donald s
~ r ea
{740)446·9508 11
Flupp1es are lound
Foun d Black &amp; white short
ha1r dog around Klych er

N~t.lces

IIEI.P WANJED

No Expenence Needed
Placement Dept
Fmanc1ng AYat lable
CDUTra1 nlng

Found pupp1es at Holzer
Chn1 c area 4·5 days old
mothe r's
m1Ss1ng

Township Road No.
225
SUBJECT to
the
rrght-ol-way
of
Township Road No.
405.
SUBJECT to the 100
year
Flood Plain
restrrcllons, if applicable.
SUBJECT to a 50.00
feet wide easement
being reserved unto
the grantor, his heirs,

Oead'liirM

Word Ads

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

Ad 1740)446 6630

Poonl of Beginning
continuing, with the
east line of Section 7,
the west line of a 135
acres tract, and the

'

Now you can have borders and graphics
~ ' addedtoyourclassifiedads
Jm
Borders$3.00/perad
Graphics SO¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

{1::..

POLICIES: Ohio Vall•y Publl•hlng res.vu the right to lldlt, reject , or c;:anc::el any ad at anv time Errors mu1t be reported on the l1r1t day of
Trlbun ..Sentlnef.Regtater will be reapanalble tor no more then the cast ol the apece occupted by the error and on(y the tirat lnserttan We ahall
eny Ia•• or upenae that re•ulta hom the publication or amlaalan of 1111 edvertlaemant Corractton will be made In the l1r•t ava1labht ed111 0n • Bo ~
etweye confidentiel. • Current rate card applie1. • All ret! a•tlde advertt ..ments are eubJ~ to the Federal Fatr Hauling A.ct at 1968 • ThiS

oewropope' l

s e nt o J.

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
BRUNER
LAND
COMPANY, INC
Platnllff
Case No. OJ..CV-091
JOHN E. CHESSER,
ETAL. .
NOTICE OF
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE

•

•

188

$108 380
7 (25) Jeff Burton Ford 188
$126 572

·

www.mydallysentlnel.com

2004

NASCAR Nextel Cup

NexteiCup .
Aaron·s 499

6 (6) Mark Martin

Monday, April 26,

www .mydailysentinel.com

Dlspat&lt;.:hcr
Local truck1ng co mpany 1s
lookmg for an e)(penence
di spatcher Oual 1f1ed can·
d1 dates must be able to
work In a hectiC custo mJJrdnve n enwon ment and
possess adeq uate computer skill s Fam11tanty w1th
the OHIWV/ KY "in -state
area IS a mu st Salary w1 ll
be base d on expenence
Benefits Include patd holidays, vacations and siCk
days, life, health and dental msurance and 401K
plan
Interested
candidates
shOuld send the~r resume
and salary h1story to ClA
box 55 5 c/o Gall ipoli s
Tnbune PO Box 469
Galli poli s OH , 45631
Fast growing business.
Cashiers and
cooks
needed for all shifts. Full
and part·tlme.
Send
resume
to
Dally
Sentinel, PO Box 729-8,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Help Wanted Full t1me
waitress apply In pe rson at
the Holiday Inn , Gallipolis

HEY DRIVERS l I I
Here Is a great oppo rtuntty
to come grow w1th us
Kuntz man Trucking, an 80
year
old
Regiona l
Truckload Carner wit h tar·
m1nals In All 1ance and
Colu mbus
Ohi o
ha s
opened a new termmal In
Piketon, Ohi o Only hard
wo rklnliJ experi&amp;('Ced driv·
ers w1th a clea n MVR and
a mlmmum ol two years
expe rtence need apply
We have openings lor
15 Company Drive rs
15 Owner Operators
For lnlo call Ray

HIMQ(304)675·9726
c ustomer
SerVICe
Pos1t1ons PT and FT start
at $19 45 per hou r, traln1ng
pro v1ded Call Laura 0

931 779·5000 Job 1362

i

.,.

....

=

Scemc H1lls Nurs1ng
Center, a Tandem
Health care
fac1l1ty, 1s seekmg a part
t1me Housekeepmg a1de
Responsible for cleaning
all areas of lacd1 ty equ1p·
me n! and carts
Knowledge of san1 tat1o n
safety and
lnlect1on control proce·
dures a pl us
Housekeeping/laundry
B)(perlence prelerred

Mercerville Lots for sa le
shared entrance off Sl At
21
3 13 acres Phone

a

1740)256·1825
f
o nlm
ww o rbv com
Cod
22 04 or call 740-446

1082

HEALTH CARE SEij·
VICES currently ha s a
I au ndr y / h ou a eke e PIn Q
supervisor·ln·tralnlng post·
tlon open Rotating ached·
ule w ith on-call d ulles
required Must possess
strong supervisory skills
be hard working and
depend abl e Benefit pack·
ag e avail abl e EO E
Send appllcation/ re"-u me
The Arbors At Gallipolis
1'70 P1n ecrest Orwe
ATIN Linda Dennis

(740)446·9088
Paramedics
&amp; EMT's
needed Apply at 1354
Jackson PikB Gallipolis

Completel y
refmtshed
tlilme: G reat locatiOn 1n
GalliPOlis Ohio 3 bed
room 2 full baths Pnced
10 sate
now Pho ne

0

•

We offer perfect atten
dance mcent1ves sh1H differential and much more
Please apply to

•

(H Ql~~5
.... '

Attn Betty StiCkl er
3 11 B~Jckndg e Rod
Bidwell OH 456 t 4
Ema11 adm1n sh n@
tandemhealthcere com

Ph (740)446-7150
SF/DF/EOE

LAWN LABORER- Will be
respo nstble fo r lawn mam tenance Have the ability to
perfo rm prop er mamte·
nanc e on eqUipment Musl
have a valid operators
hcense h1gh school d1pto·
ma o r GED Send resume
to Me1gs lndustnes Inc ,
P 0 Box 307 Syrac use
Oh 10 45779 by Apnl 23

2004

Learn to Drive
Tractor·Trailers
•we lra n Men and Women
'Full and Par1 T1me Classes
• Job Place ment

~

'COL Tra1n1ng

1"0

110

1.

HELP WANTE!l

'
V IRG INIA DEALERSHIP

FOR INDUSTRY LEAD·
lNG ATV SIWATER·
CRAFT SEEKING
RESPONSIBLE/MOT!·
VATED INDIVIDUALS
TO FILL
THE FOLLOWING
POSITIONS
General Man ager
Fmance PoSI!ton
Sales
Cerhft ed Mechan1c/
Tech1 c1ans
Parts/Servt ce C lerk

Tractor· Trade r Tra1mng
Centers Wytheville VA

1-8(1{)-334-1203

alllaocel ractortra lef com

Mn~t~tftge

Tht&gt;ru111 ! l

needed
tor
busy
Chi ropractiC rehab illtai!On
Center Must be OhiO
hcensed and well sk1\l ed 1n
all areas of therap eut ic
ma ssage E )(cell ent pay
and work atmosphere
Please fax resume to 740·
886· 1609 Attn Kathy
McOonal ds of R1o Grande
Gallipolis
and
Pomt
Pleasant WV are now hirIng Paid vacat1ons, holidays and msurance available
Ftex1bl e
hours
Startm g above mimmum
wage Apply w1th m

Need 7 ladles to sell Avon

Call (740)446·3358
•eea Of OO&lt;
We are hirmgl
Yo u could ea rn up
to $8/hour pl us bonu s·

••

••
We also offer pa1d
trainin g, holidays
and vacations
Full or part time
sh (H avaiable

Callroday
1•8n-483-8247 IXl

2•ss

ompet1hve Salane s an
Performance
Bonu
Ava1l able
Program
Please send Re su me,
Aeferery;;es, and Salar
Aeqweme nl s to P
rawer 11 0 A1pley, W
5271
lmm edlat

Re s1dent1 al
Treatmen t
FaCility youth worke r Pay
ba s~d on expenence Call

(740)379·9083 to apply
STATE TESTED

NURSING ASSISTANTS

POSTAL
JOBS
$15 44·$21 40/hr now hlr·
tng For applic ation and
fraa government job Info,
ca ll America n Assoc ol

Labor. 1-(913)599·6220,
24 hrs emp. serv

Supennten dent Vacancy
The EasterrJ Local D1stn ct
500 08 State Ro ute 7.
Reeds vi lle
Oh 10,
IS
an noun cmg the ret1rem ent
res1gnat1on
ol
Supenntendent Daryl E
Well effective July 31
2004 The dtstn ct IS seek·
mg ap pl iCants from quail·
fled mdlvtd uals that hold a
valid supenn tendent cer·
ttl lcal e/hcens e or can pro·
v1de proof they have the
abi lity to obtam such a
license Candid ates may
c onta ct Mrs
Usa M
A1tch1 e
lfeasure r
at
(740)667·33 19 fo r an
app hcat1on packa ge and
add1!10nal
mformai!On
Oeadl1ne to submi t app h·
cation matenals IS May 14,
2004 The Eastern Local
School 01stnct IS an equ al
opportuni ty employer

SL'Il!J!}L~
INSTRUCI10N

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call TodayI 740·446·4 367
1·800-214-0452
www galllpoNsGai&amp;Oin;;Qjlegs com
Au:redited Member Accrecllltn g
lndePf!ndent Colleges
~md Schools t274B
CounGII lor

Scen1c Htlls Nursmg
Center, a Tand em Health
Care Fac11i ty, 1s seekmg a
se lect few to JOin our out·
standm g tea m We cur·
rently seek.

FultTimt, Shift 2p·10p
Proper certiftcat1on
req u1red We offer com·
pet1tlve wages sh1ft differ·
ent1al, e)(cellant benefits
perfect attendan ce lncen·
tives and mu ch morel
Plea se apply to
Attn dianna T hompson,
H~
Scenic Hills Nursi ng
Cerl te r

311 Buckrldge Rood
Bidwell OH 45614
Ph 740/446·7150

SF/DFIEOE
HR lltan demhealthca.re com

•',,

i1
JJj

Camo ufla ~e

Ong1nal
Army Coll ecttb les. Sam
Somerville s 40th Year by
Sandyvi lle
WV
Po sl
OHice. Satellite Sys tems,
ch annels mcludmg
Loc als $19 99 month ly
after p rog~am mlng cred it
1996 Talon al l w heel drive

eo

TUrbo (304)273-5655
WANrnD

To Do

my homo Call (740)388·
0118
Handyman lor less Need
a dectc;, some lights, got
leaks? Big small early

1740)446·7053 No Foo
No Obhgatton

'

60 vending maChines/
excellent locations
all tor $10,995
8()()..234-6982.
Local Cand le Acute- Make
100k per year s1m ply
restock tn store di splays
No se llm g
Accounts
mventory, tra1n mg suppo rt
and proJected te rntory for
$ 13 950 mvestmen t 888
324-1 014

IjoHIO
. "'VALLEYPUBLISH
"'
lN G CO recom me nd
hat you do busmess w1th
eople you know, and
NOT to send mone
hrough 1he mall until you
have mvest1gated the
ffermg .

230 I'ROFTh'iiONAL
SERVIti'S
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY
/SSI?
No Fee Unless We W1n1
1-888-582-3345

HoMES
fOR S.u.E
124 acres good w or~1 n g
cattle farm w1th a new 3
bedroom, 2 b ath home 2
ponds, 2 barns and other
extras $285,000 or Will
dtv1de 1nto developm(lnt
plots Farrn has lots of road

frontage (740)367-7156

2 bedrQom house 1n
Pomer9Y, poss1ble fmanc·
credtt,
tng
w1good

(740)698-7244
3 Bedroom Brick Ranch 1
lot
Reduced
Acre

(304)675·1714
3 bedroom, 2 bath 3/4
acre on Rock Lick Ad

$60,000 Phone (740)446·
7197

,.,. (740)446-0422

W ill
Pressure
Wash
hOuse s, mobile hom es,
matal build ings, and gut·

ters Coli (740)446 0151

a¥ tor Ron or leave mas·
sage

Spa re time work. Full t1me
Inco me use ou r catalogs to
gat
big
orders
cal l

ABSOLUTE GOLOMINEI

Barn Removal

A ssisted living opening In

Fax 7401446·2438
Ema11 admln shn O
tandemhealthca re com

fOR SALE

Ill \I I Sl\11

All references &amp; full Insurance Cal l 304·373·0011

STNA

Hm.m;

HELPWANTFJJ

150

9539

Tra ile r lot for rent $75 00
month phone after 6 00
pm (304)675 4874
You co uld hsh you r bad·
lands and mcrease proper·
ty val ue too• M a ~e !and
1nto la ~es (740)388·8228

IO

Hous~

t-oRRFNf

I'

© 2004 by NEA Inc

'Financing Ava1la ble

AS SEEN ONTV
ALLIANCE

)NWW

'

www.comtc.s.com

Fax (740)446/1 248

1-866-~36·1 01 3

MANAGER·IN·TRAININQ

HlR

lwrtghl@tc.
Lots nos 9 &amp; 10 Heat!ey s
add1t1oo m Bidwell to large
level lots Pnced to slae
now Phone (7401446-

HAOtandemhealth ca re corn

Ar~KI'\tf:\Ts

440

HOUSEKEEPING
AIDE

1&lt;&gt;
Hams Steak house Now

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

SHOP CLASSIFIEDS
FOR BARGAINS

--·-~--.........,.------ , --------------

3 bedroom 2 baths on 4 3
acres tn the Country
Scenic view $75,000 Cal l

(740)709-1166
o4 b.9droom
3
bath
In
Buckeye Hills Ad
grou nd pool
1 acre

(740)709·1166
4 bedroom, 1 t/2 bath 2
story brick 2 car unat·
tached garage $37,500
Fourth St New Ha11en WV

(740)446·4274

___

....:.......

Gl

All real eetate advertlrung
in this newspaper Ia
subJect to the Federal
Faar Hous1ng Act of 1968
whach makes It Illegal to
advertise 'any
preference limitation or
dlscnminatlon based on
race color, religion , sex
familial status or national
angtn , or any Intention to
make any such
preference hmltat1on or
dlacrlminatlan.·
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
adYertisements for real
estate which 1s an
wlolat1on of the law. Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings .!tdvertrsed tn
lhls newspaper are
avaalable on an equal
oppprtunlty bases._

Great Buys 03 new
Oakwood
Doublew1de
Homes call for details
740 446-348 1 or 740 4461567_

!:.t

2.~ar

3 bedroom Ran ch

garage 1n ground
ool $75 000 3460 State
Rout e 218
(740)256
1962

N•ce BI·LeYel 3br 1bath
kitchen liVIng &amp; add• taonal
11vmg room ctown sta• rs
579 900 (304)67 4 0090
alter 6 00
PI Pleasant/Sandhill Road
3Br IBa 1600/sqft Ranch
on 6 acre level lot Oak
floors 1st Muse on Right
past Marshall Unavers1ty
$103 000 (740)949 1131
after 5 OOPM

MDBILEH~m;

I'ORSAU:
2000 Oak wood Home
16x84 3br, 2ba all electnc,
central a1r Call anytime

(304)675·7157
18 Shultz t4x70 three
bedroom all electnc must

move $2.500 1304)675·
7763 or (682)862·1108
Before you buyl
Does your dealer?
Move his homes • Do site
preparatiOn build founda·
liOns - Roll and set Mouses
. Do heating and air · Have
•n-house service people _,
Install septic systems - Do
elect ncellplumblng • Do
drcveways If the answer to
any of these quest1ons 1'
no, or 1f they ~sub-co n ·
tract" You bener see the
oldest most expe rienced
dealer In Athens CountY
S1nce 1967 Coles Mob1le
Homes 15266 US 50 East
Oh1o
4570~
Athens
"Where you ~et you r
money's worth

r

Lurs&amp;i

AOIFAGE

16x80 sites aYa•lqb le $115
per rronth includes wa1er,
sewer &amp; trash (740)992·

2167

3 br Ranch w/garage lg
te nced yard .,c lam tly
location $675 00 a month
dep &amp;.. ref reqwred Call

(304)273· 111 2 !304)636-

7411
House lor ren t Aacme
area 3 bedroom no pets

1740)992·5858
Nice 2 bedroom hou se
n1ce yard n1ce neighbor
hood 1272 E Bethel
Chu rch Ad $390/month

(740)388·1855.

Nice 3 bedroom house m
re ferences
country
req u1red no 1ns1de pets
HUD approved S500 per
month plu s uhhlies $500
depoSit (740)742·22 10

I"'" MOIJ!tE HOMf~~
FOR Rf.N"I
14x60 2 bedroom· AJC
$300month
+
218
depOSit
On
Reference
No pe ts

W&amp; D

1740)256·1044

2 bed room· all •electnc
mob1le home W1ndow a•r·
$325 depos1t $250 Spnng
Vall ey area Call [740)44 1
6954/304·67 5·2900

2 BR first lloor apartmenl
small
yard
24
wtth
Chl llicolhe
Road
$395/month utll!lles not
1nctuded
Aequ~res
6
months lease and $395
secunty deposit No pets
For applicatiOn and to
make an appointment
phone (740)44 1 1108

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS AT BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Dnve from S34 4 to $442
Walk 10 shop &amp; mov 1es
Call 740·446·2568 Equ al
Housmg Opportunity
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE '
Townho use apartments
and/or small houses FOR
RENT Call (740)4d t ·11.,1
for application &amp; 1nforma·
!10M

Grac1ous 11v1ng 1 and 2
bed room apar1men1s at
V1 llage
Manor
and
A111ers1de Apartmen ts 1n
Middleport From 5295
$444 Call 740 992 5064
Equal
HOUSing
Opportun1t1es
Sm
Efl
Apartment
mcludes ut1ht1es partta lly
furn1shed 1n Pt Pleasant
5285 month S 150 depo sit
(304)675 7783

Ta ra
Townh0u se
Apartment s
Ver y
Spac1ou s 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors CA 1 112 Bath
Newly Carpeted Adult
Pool &amp; Baby Pool PaM
Start 5385/Mo No Pets
Sec ur 1ty
Lea se
Plu s
Depo s1t ReqUired Days
740 446 3481 Eve nmg s
740 367 0502
Twm R1ve rs Towe r IS
acc ept1ng appl1cal10ns for
WSI!tng l! st to• Hud s ub·
SI Ze d 1 br apartment
call 675 6679 EHO

I"""

3 beOroom mob1le home 1n
Middleport S375 a month
plus depos•t (74 01992

3194
3Br 28R Mobile Home
Caru thers Mo bt le Home
Park (304)675 3818
N1ce 2 and 3
mob1le home s
1ncludes water
trash no pets
$300 per month
2167

bedroom
lo r ren t
sewe r &amp;
depos11 &amp;
(740)9'92

RE.•&lt;r

Sl' \! F
mRRI XI

Aeta11 o r Orf1ce Spa c e
Pr1me Dm,ntown Galhool1s
1ocan on call (74013.79
9511 or (740)379 2204 for
more mfo
Rtversates for rent t am1ty
type 3 campsll, s, full
ho oku p near r1v er 3
docks1tes , no hookup
Call (740)992·5956

\II H&lt;"tl

\\IllS I

Pomeroy $300 a mo St 50
dep no pets (740 )667
3083 alter Spm

p10 HDL ISt:HOW

St1 ll tak1ng appl •ca!IOn
14x70, 2 bedroom ne1gh·
borhood Ad No pets rei·
erences,
depoSII
(740) 446·6890 after 6pm

England Corsa1 r sofa &amp;
cha1 r Dark green excellent
$450 080
cond1t1on

r

~

APARJ1\I EI'mi

roRRENT

1 and 2 bedroom apart
menls
turn 1shed and
unfurn•shed,
secunty
depoSit reqUired no pets
740·992·221 B

bedroom
apt
Washer/dryer
hookup
mctuaes water sewage
and trash $350 rent
OepoM requ1rM No pets
740-44 1 1184
1 bedroom upstairs apa rt
men!, $275 + utilitieS
depoSII reqUired lor applt
CBIIOI"' call (740)379 951 1
or {7 40)379· 2204
1 BR

complete kitchen

A!C, Ref &amp; dep No pets

(740)446.()139

1 br apt Pt Pleasant
1br house Oh1o central a1rl
heat no pets dep req 446·

2200
Ntee one BR unlurntshed
apartment Range &amp; refng
provided Wate t &amp; ga rbage
pa•d Depo s1t req u1red

Coli (740)446·4345 offer
Gpm

Gootlli

(740)446 1663

Good Used Aopll ances
Recond1t10ned
and
Guarant eed
washers
Dryers
Ranges
and
Aefngerators Some start
at
$95
S~aggs
0
App11ances 76 V1ne St

(740)446 7396

Good washers &amp; dryers
S95 &amp; up e1ectr1c ranges
$95 &amp; up Frost free refng·
erators S150 &amp; up Ltke
new Side by s1de w 1th
water &amp; tee 1n the door
$375 couch $75 full s1ze
bed box spnngs &amp; m al·
tress $150 lull SIZe bed
bo)( spr~ngs &amp; mattress
$125 table &amp; c ha1rs $100
glider rocker $45 lamps

$10
Skaggs Appliances
76 V1ne Street

(740)446 7396

Mollohan Carpet
202
Cla rM Chapel
Ro ad
Por te r O h10 (740 )446
1·877·830·9 162
7444
Free Estima tes
Easy
t1nancmg 90 a9.ys same
as cas h V1sBI Master
Card Onve a· l!llle save
alo t

�.
·Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

I.

t

!

•I

IIIL.:

Gel Your Mel$aOe ActQSS
.WIIh A'Dally Sintinel

RECEPTIONIST
Established busy optometrist's office
is seeking a reliable friendly
individual for receptionist position.
25-35 hr/wk. Duties include basic
secretariaVreceptionisl dulies and will ,
be cross-trained to perform patient
pre-testing and eyewcar selection.
Hone~ty, dedication. &amp; atlention to
derail are requi red. Minimum of 2
years work experience and/or I year
post-high school educalion are also
required . Salary based on
qualifications. Please send a complete
resume including job/school
references and salary re4uiremen1 to:

'8"'column Inch weekdays
'15'" COlumn Inch Sat. or SUnday

Don't Forget "MOM"
Rings, pendants, bracelets and
Italian charms.
Place your order newt

appliant:es,
Kenmore
stove (seltcleaning) GE
refrigerator, deep freeze, ·
sectional ,
etc .
Call

(740)441·8272.
Queen size bed. New Oak
headboard. like new boX

r

re~condilioned

automatic

washers &amp; dryers. refriger-

ators. gas and electric
ranges, air conditioners,
and wringer. washers. Will

do repairs on major brands
in shop or at your home.

r

Buy

(740)441-1892.

r

FRurrs &amp;

r~1
Beautiful Ivory Wedding
gown Size 5 never been
worn $300 Inez Smith

(304)675-6518
Illinois Railroad Pocket
Watch , Lever Set. ~ Abe­
Lincoln
Series·.
21·
Jewels, 14-K Gold Filled
case, $375. Also Older
Bulova Accutron Wrist
Watch,
~space
View··
Series, 10-K. Gold Case.
1971- LOOkS New-$300.

JET

6800.

I

~--V;,EGilliii:J:Iiiiii\liiiJIE&gt;iiiiiiO..rl
HOME GROWN
ASPARAGUS.
Available now at Charles
McKean Farm. (740)446·
9442

KESSEL'S PRODUCE
Amish Cheese. Lunch
Meat, Fresh Fruit and
Vegetables Open Thurs~
Fri -Sar. 1354 Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis. Ohio.

1998 Grand Am 2D Auto.
$2,895; 1995 GMC full

size
shortbed
· $3,495:
1997

truck,
Z-24 ,
$2.995. 18 others in stock,
starting $995.

COOK MOTORS
2000 Dodge Neon, auto.
air, $3,1OOOBO
1998 Dodge Mini Caravan,
needs paint work, $2,300-

080.(740)256-1233.
2000 Grand Prix GTP, silver 23.000 miles, $12,000.

Call(740)388·9804
2003 Caviler 4door, 4 cyt. ,
auto, 9,000 miles. tit1 ,
cruise. air cond .. CD play er, $6,500. (740)441·0337.

92

o r :::ia1e : 10wnsen
jsheep
and
goa
ffurntable. Used only
imes. li~e brand new!
~ost $900, will lak

tlsoo• (740)245-0485.

r

LMSfOCK

12 Good Fair Pigs for
Mason and Meigs County.
Call (740)388-9033 after
Bpm.
7 1/2't r old Mare and a
nice pony 1 1/2yr old ,
make offer. call (740)742-

9217

Ford Temp. Power
seats. windows, locks. 4
ely. auto. $1,000. Call

(740)446·2248 a Her 5.

r

1995 GMC 2500. Short
bed, eMtended cab, 4x4 ,
129.000 miles, 350 eng ..
&amp;uto trans , A/C, cruise.
P.Ower wi[ldows &amp; .door
locks, i owihg package, bed
liner. new tires. $8,000 ca ll
(740)379-2.789 evenings.
1996 Ford Bronco XLT 302
4M4 , automatic, power Win ·
dow, power locks, AJC ,
Excellent condition. 49.900
original
m1tes, garage

kepi

AERATION MOTORS

4-WDs

· Young heavy breed laying
hens. (740)992-7042

r

Rw&amp;
GRAIN

siraw lor sale $2.50 a bate

1991 S-10 Blazer, 4dr.
4wd, auto. 8ir, cruise, body
fair , runs great, $2.000

(740)645·0850
2001 Chevrolet Suburban
2500 4X4. Navy Blue,
Cloth intenor, cruise. CD
player, A1r, Tow package.
52.000 miles $25.000 Call

(304)675-3117

BUD.DING
SUPPLIES

r

PETs
FORSA!.E

Baby rabbits for sa le, $5
eoich. Small white male
donkey.
$150.
Call

(7401256·1652.

SSOO! .Hondas,
Chevys,
Jeeps, etc ! POLICE
IMPOUNDS Cars from
$500. For listings 1.-800719-3001 ext 3901
1987 Cutlass, runs good,
body soli d. 1986 Ford
EMplorer, 4x4, $1,200 each

080. (740)742-8716.
1991 Chevy Geo Tracker
4x4, hard top, new trans·
mission, new tires and
many other parts. Very
good condition. $4,000
080 740-446-46 16 or

740-446-1637.

2002 Ford F-1 SO, super
crew short bed, 4 door,
tonneau cover. XLT Triton.
8 cyt., 19,000 miles,

r

$24.200, (740)992-3981

MnmRCYO.F.S

40

MOTORC\UES

I

871-2457
Cell

Phone 674-3311

AKQ-13:!

t

II

...

5

:t

Wt&gt;!it

MONTY

Fax 304-675-2457

Driveways • Tennis Courts
1 Parking Lots • Playgrounds
1 Roads 1 Streets
WY Contractors Lie. #003506
1

J.: asl

•

•
•

Q 2
, 6

•
•

AKQ6 5
K 7 6 J

"'•
•

K 9 .l
1037
9 1 2

... IY 9 II.;

South
. i\843

South

....
'""

•

,/ 5

t
4

.I I 0 i

. .
Phone (740)593-667
Athens, Ohio

750 East State Street

landscaping jobs such as planting and mulching.
FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

Tree Service

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

Let me :lo 1t for youl

316 Washington Street
Ravenswood, wv ·26164
Dr. Kelly K. Jones

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

JAts &amp; MmuRS
fOR SALE

:::

•

A

Ta~e

JONES'

BARNEY
A MUD BATW ?!

MaroR

&amp;.

i740)446-9355.

n

2000 Challenger
With
slide. 32' li ke new, electric
jack, new tires/battery.

$20.000. (740)245·5130.
2001 29ft Sprinter 5th
Wheel Camper. One
Slide Out Excellent
Condition 515,500
Phone (304)937·3211

~~~
High 8l Dry

Self-Storage

MaplewOod Lake

45771
740-949-2217

Between Radne

Sizes 5'X10'

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

2003 8 Tou ring .cruiser
Motor Home, Length 22'.
floor plan, rear bath, self
contained . fully equipped,
excellent condiiiOn (must
see) Asking 537,000

740-992-5232

Trucking

25 fl . Camper for sale 360
more
call

HAULING:
• Limestone
• Sand
• Dirt
• Ag Lime

(304)675- 1631
32' Dutchman
classic
camper. Sleeps 8. pr1va1e
queen s1ze bedroom, 24'
awning. fully self con·
tained, AJC, furnace , new
carpet, country curtains &amp;
quills. Must see S6,000
Call
(740)379·2789
evenings.

FLEA
MARKET
and Syracuse on
St. Rt. 12A
Space Avallab~

949-2734
Sl~"AL

R.B.

(740)367-7070

740-985-3564

1'1'

f:ONS'I'llllf~'l'ION

Roofing-SidingPainting-GuttersDec~s-Etc.

Hours
7:00AM - 8:00 PM
111411 mo. pd

t

• Vanguard Vcntle" Fireplaces "'I~

'!!!~.E.'!!! Gibson 1~.

--"---

Ga llipolis, OH WVOI0212

) IJ OFF HIM
Snapper

Gravely

•

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2975
Lawn and Garden Equipment is our
business, uol our sidelirw

p-Tf\E.Y SP..'I t:AJi:L_'{ TO

~/'---, TO ~15C.. AA&gt;:E:) r'-IWI
~~Tf\'I, W~L~Y~D

Manning K. Roush
Owner
Open Mon-Frl9-5 Sat'. 9-12

Will Mow .

Yards

740-992-5594
740-992-6862

DE's GREENHOUSE

0
v

Meigs county's Largest selection of
· annuals, perennials, vegetables,
shrubbery, fruit, ornamental trees, .
roses, rhododendrons, and 11za1eas.

Friday-Saturday A1•r 30 &amp; May I
Look for the yellow flags!

The .
Daily
Sentinel
992-2155
'

Hanging Baskets $6.60

to dartc1

THIS

ME"I'IS~

Morning Slar Road - C.Rd 30 • Racine, OH

1·740·949·2115

TFN

BISSEll

. BUILDERS InC.

New Humes • Vinyl
Siding • New Gamges
• Replacemcnl

See
Rocky •iRJ"

Windows • Roofing

PEANUTS

Hupp

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

IMPORTS
Athens

FREE ESTIMATES

740·992-7599

Advertise

in this
sp·ace

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

475 South Church St.

BETTY

Ripley, WV 25271

for

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

Sunset Home
construction
Bryan Reevea
New Homes,
Room Additions ,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Rools,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall
&amp;More
FREE ESTIMATES!

740-742-341

HOWARD£.
WRITESfl
*ROIFINI
dtiME
MIINTENIJICE
*SEAMlESS
GlnER

NORTHUP DODGE

252 Upper·River Road • Gallipolis
74o-446"-0842 • 949-1155 Evenings

Advertise in this
Space for
$50 per month
YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addition• &amp;
R1mOO.IIng

• New Garage•
• Eltctrlt::al I Plumbing
• Roofing • Gutt•r.
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Pa in ting
• Pallo 1nd Porch Oeckt
We do It all except

furnact work

*Free Eltlmltlh

V.C. YOUNG Ill

949-1405

POI'Mf'Oy, Ofllo

992-6215

ROBERT
BISSELL

CONSTRICnOI
• New Homes
• Garages

·Complete
Remodeling

'

'(OLJ

KNOW
WHAT

• week daylight

GRIZZWELLS

15 Cowboy's
charge
16 Tease
17 Ike 's ex
1B Choose
20 Queens
ballpark
21 A Gershwin
22 Feet grateful
23 Holds down
a job

52 Buffalo 's
lake
53 Garment
edges ·
54 Yang
complement ==
55 Faxed
19 Hesitant
sounds
DOWN
20 Keep ulloat
22 Gal1ey mover
1 Morse-eode 23 Have

-:JJ{'IIU(),.J, f\E. Cf.J.I'E)
~~

LEt&gt;.)T

coums' ·

supper

24 Eurasian

units
Maximums
Oz. or lb.
Hawkeye
Burlap fiber

37
38
40
41
42

First

husband
43 - , vidi , vici

Dealer: South

30 Par for the

Vulnerable: l':asi ·West

course
31 Tennis

Stone site
25 Yanks·
44 Infrequent
4 Dishing out
adversaries 45 Climb

stroke
33 Indent
34 Mink and
sable
35 Movie

5 Aboul

l. 1.
\Vf'st

Pass

\'ortb

4•

t:.ut
Pass
Allpa~

Opening lead: ~?

· 3 Blarney

rutfs w~h the spade nine to uppercut declarer's ace Alternatively, if South ruffs in the
dummy. East discards. In either spin . the
defenders take two diamonds and two
spades.
Four hearts cannot be defeated it declarer
(North) guesses the~pade position correctly. Suppose"'tl'!'e ·defense Degins with three
rounds of diamonds North ruffs. draws
trumps, plays a club to South's ace, and
calls for a tow spade_ If West ducks. his
queen falls under South's ace on the second
round . II West wins. East can be finessed
out of his spade kmg
Did you win on day one?

range

26 Aula

6 Not do

27 Adamson

cousin ·
g· Falco or

30 Cell

residue
47 Calendar
square
49 Jell

lioness

28 Crumbles
habitants

32 Undergrad
degs.

11 Jellyfish

34 Brief crazes

habitat

35 Electrical

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celt'h!rl\' C·phl'r Cl'fPiograms are rtea100 r:ol"' q~ota~J·&gt; 01 !arrr~JS et;o~ pasl aM :·esel''
· Each !ett~· 1n1r.e cpher s!~Ms lo• ~~c~er

·roday s clue L equals I'

" PZHBH ' M

ADTL

MCOH

TAMCOF

AN

BCDF

OAHMD ' P

NATTAYCDF

ADH

EBCFZP

PZH
RSWZ

IM

YHHX ."

KZAOH
PZH

WAIWZ

TAS

Z AT P U
PREVIOUS SOLUTION -"I lave my 1gnora1ce. c'lensh 1! It~ il~e hav1ng o
ch ild's perspect1ve on th e world . - .Renee Ze llwe.ger

I C) 2004 by NEA

AstroGraph

46 Hearth

7 Apply
makeup
B Dulcimer

McClurg
38 Accumulate 10 Arm bone
39 Carder's
demands

a rope

magnate

THAI DAILY

'UZZIII

Inc

4-24

S©R$J1-A-c:Zt~S·

WOAD

G.1r MI
- - - - - - fdittd by ClAY I ,CU1N - - - - --

(!bur 'lllrthdoty:

IF THEY

Tuesday, April 27, 2004
By Bernice Bade Osol
T~A CTIN(,,
A number of pleasant chances could be in
,-----;:;;! WE' (OUL D
store lor you In the year ahead if yoiJ allow
WIN IT
yourself to be llaxible and open-mrnded.
ALL I
One alteration could mean added funds m
your wallet , as well as a rise in prestrge
and s1atus
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -You're •n tor
a 019 disappointment today rl you expect
others to drop What they are doing and
cater to your whims of the moment Be
careful not to be demanding of fnends or
!amity
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) - Do not
allempt to lavishly praise others today rn
hopes at Uattenng them into doing your
bidding . Your insrncerity will be readily d1s·
cerned by your co mpaniol")s and totally
4/26/04
retected.
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22)- Should you
lind yourse ll in the company today of people who are financially better of! than you
are, don't attempt to ~eep up w1th then
spending habits. They won 't thin~ lesser o1
you.
LEO {July 23-Aug 22) ..._ In order td
achieve your goals toda,y, your targets
must first be cle&lt;trly defined .· Concentrate
on trylflg Ia do one thing at a time and
doing it well instead of scanering your
forces.
•
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Having a
doubtful or negative attitude today w1ll
greatly increase your level of dillicult1es . If
you see yourself as a fall guy. you'll act
and behave in ways to prove yourself
right
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Don't ignore
your better judgment today concern1ng
commercial o r busrness dealings you
have with Individuals whose motive s are
suspect. Chances are your susp1c1ons w1t1
be correct.
SCO~ PIO (Oct . 24-Noll_ 22) - It's nice to
be a cooperatrve good guylgal, but don't
carry this so far today that you allow yoursell to be pressured 1nto doing somelhmg
lhat 'you know you shouldn 't do. Play
things smart
, SAGITTARIUS (Nov, 23-Dec. 21) - It Will
turn out to be more wor~ and far moro
costly for you 1n the long run today if you
try to get cheap. unskilled help to do
something for you wh1ch it 1a~es a pol ·
I shed proleSStonal to do.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22•Jan . 19) - Do not
all ow your·selt to get in the middle of two
friends concerning a complex finan cial or
bus rness problem loday Your input won 't
help, but rt could hurl yoiJr rclalionshlp
L-101' 1'HE BA17
w1th them
1'1ME5 ROL-L-!
AQUARIU S (Jan 20-Feb 19) - YouH!
gorng to have to be extremely selectiV e
today re ge.rdrng who you consu lt for
adv1ce An rnelfectrve counselor could
really steer you wrong and cause you
addrtional problems and woes
PISCES (Fefj. 20-March 20) - Normall y
you're the type of perso.n who doesn t
dilly-dally when it comes to work that
needs to be pertormed, but today you
could get ott to a slow start by •gnonng
your dutres at hand.
ARIES (March 21·Apr11 19) - Exercrse
sell-control today where your e.. pendl·
lures are concerned or you co,utd end up
Putting yourself tn a deep hole When it

KEEP CON·

0

~t arrong!!J i!!Jfle•5 ci
fcur I.C I Omb ' IH~ WO'C, 1

· low ro form (our wo•d s

re::ec;ti'l ma~r:ed rorme
sc hdO!='V ab2ut n,,n,•trc
n:o :;--:::r :!r;:&gt;::: ·n h::;ouse "ThE/
gc: UlE" :::r·::~n house alngh:. '
r.11 r. us::." ''d ~augne. a. ·1: cc;:
,__Jr::--Y-rS-iEr--E-r-R--,-1· tWICE as mc.ch aS they --- ....
_,~,
ooc··'
1
1

·--------,
R, I I I I
.

.

.

.

wer~

u

t

r .. .;

1

.. , ., ,. "'''
!l•"l'J

r, .n ;

r

.ie·•ekP •,,,rr

rh.!!

\"~"-

,..,

."..Jo

w !:;r(;l

J ce1&lt;::"'

A Pi tN r NUMBERED L(ilfii'S 1
'f:l' IN THESE SQU.OES

2\0

v

4

UNS(P AMAtE tETrH$ TC
(.[f AI"J SWEQ

SCRAM-lETS
()I I t. tt: r-

!i
ANSWER~

'•-: : 'J

..

Giant - !1nmk - RtdG'Ie - KINO of O!R f

The mom ~elteti aboul hervoung daughter playtng in the
vard An older n1om consoled her .. "Ktds can grow up tn
olmn.1 onv KINO of DIRT.

ARLO &amp; JANIS
~.

"FAUlTY
I&gt;.!Tf. L.LI GrWC.t."

I~THAH&gt;I&lt;.MM£.

N&gt; "5TUF'i D' ;

comes lime to pay the brlls you'll regret 11

'~m/! \\EWS AH ARTICLIO

SOUP TO NUTZ

AeoUT A fAM=&gt;ll?
At1b~ WWJ WE\-\1

bLD 1&lt;\C. 1&gt;-ia"'\" ~
I&lt;.KIS. a KID. SIS1E!,I&lt;

i\\l&lt;.OU41\ ALO\ Of'
ct&gt;JM£\IC Slll&lt;t.iOO
toR A ?AI'{'; til.

DoNalo \oJ:lVL~' WHOC1&lt; HrM

ON TiW&gt; knUC~\E"·&gt; Wo11\."

5LrDe. \&lt;:Ole_ ~l ~ d1L N I
Lb HIS aRtTH/"'e'iiC

AN\O'JIE ..

740-992-1611

. r -,

~~~:-.-~sc,.:~II~ "

Stop &amp; Compare

22 Yttrl Loctl Experttnce

,

'•

GE.\) l&gt;PU\RlX.'iE.f

0
v

co

per
month

S25.00 p,er IJJ·q nthl

command
51 Miscellany

ladies and gentlemen . welcome to the
Alder Bridge Casino. where all week you w1il
be able lq bet - virtually. if not physically on the ABCs of bridge_ In every deal you
must decide whetller to place your money
on South. the declarer. or on East-West the
defense. Here 1s the first deal: fa1tes vas
jeux
The contract is lour spades. Who will triumph; the declarer or ltle defenders? As a
side Del. can North make·tour hearts?
In the auct1on. maybe North should have
insisted on mak1ng hearts trumps. but
(unlike with spades) he couldn't guarantee
an eight-card lit there.
West cashes two top diamonds. Then , to
defeat the contract, West must cont1nue w1th
any diamond. Let's suppose he leads the
q~.Jeen. Declarer. looking through the backs
ot the cards. ruffs on the board. plays a
heart to his jack. and leads a low spade
toward tne dummy. However. West goes in
with his queen and plays a fourth diamond.
It declarer discards from the dummy. East

.•

4" pot o1 perennials s1 :1a Buy 5 or more for $1.00 ea
Flat of plants $6.60
Open 7 days

$75

Shop the
Classifieds!

...,
BRVIU5 GOE.~ TO &amp;.DORLY mt&gt;
.

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

• 0

0

,..

UP sr\QR\01'\

WISE ...

446-9416 r 1-800-872-5967

0
0.
·7th Annual 6-mile
Middleport-Pomeroy
Yellow Flag Yard Sale!

&amp;.D N&lt;IDWL1""'

\NO

Dennis Boyd
740-992-1189
740-992·2902

Air Conditioners, Heat Pumps &amp; Furnaces
• Super Hi Efficiency Equipmen)$,
• Free Estimatc.s
·
• 5 &amp; I 0 yr Warranties
,
• Hu ge lnvcmory
' , . "'

A Jump
on
SAVINGS

.to·10'dO'

Estimates
&amp; Affordable
Prices, Call...

Residential &amp; Manufactured Housing

Unconditional lifetime guar ~
antee . ~ocal relerences furnished . Established 1975 .
Call
24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870. Rogers Basement

Racin e, Ohio

Service, Free

BEATING fl COOLING

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

29670 Bashan Road

For Fast Courteous

BENNETT'S

IMPROVEM};NlS

Hill's Self
Storage

April 30 - May 1

r

CAME

(304) 273-5321

i

1987. 32· Itasca Class A.
V6,
t9K ,
$13,500.

Wate~proofing .

'l''

TH' 'DIRT
30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

HoMf:S

Sportsman,
for
detail's
please

'

IT WUZ -lEST
WATER 'FORE

304 675-3818
C\;\ U'IORS

Man"
14 Kill time

26 C~arer
word
29 Shake - - ! 2 Resorts to

A Q .1 .2

Players and readers,
place your bets

IT'S IETTtll T
··-.:I'M
Ttit BLUEBI/lD OF CONSUMt/l
·· · •· ..· (,ONFil&gt;~NC~!

.

Residential)

Spraymg of fence lines, Leaf Removal, as well as small

Used stock Dunlop tires
from kawa&amp;aki 650 Prairie.
Tire llfe aproM 75% 011
front aprox. 60% on tla~.
Front lire-25"x8"M12. Back
tlre-25"M10"M12. (740)645·
5186-for info.

48 Fan noise
50 MD's

36 Gas-pump
platform

LAWN CARE DIVISION
(Commerd~l and

47 Droplet

13 .._ Ramblin '

canine

Mowin_g, Trimming, Tree Trimming. Aeration, fertilization,

2003 Vol usia Intruder 600.
1.000 miles, silverlwhita,
garage
kept .
S5.200,

2000 650 Yamaha Classic
2 windshields , saddlebags, mustang sea t 8000
m1les in perfect cond . 304773·5109

(740)949· 1131 aller 5pm

I~

Mobile Homes, Houset, log Homes, Decks, Driveways,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings.. Oegreasing of
Equipment, Boats, Campers, Tractor Trailers,
Dump Trucks, painting or stainin_g of your deck
or log home, Aluminum br~ghtening.
.
Special rate5 to Truclo.ing .1nd Dump Truck1ng Compan1es,

0(1 811s pDge. foe."os low os

\. \

Last Thursday of
nery month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
5FREE

Henderson, WV

.

(Commerdal and Re~idential)

I

2002 Honda Shadow 7so
A.C.E., 1 \~e new with mariy
eMtra's,
Adult
ridden
$5,000
f1rm
Racine

40 Scamp
41 Berry
1 Sword light
products
5 Not prepaid 43 People
8 Hera's hubby
10 poll
12 Big
46 BMW rival

M·l6~

Nol1h
• .) 10 ';' 6

Office: (740) 992-2804 Cell: (740) 517-6883
PQWER WASHING

(740)446-7300

Block, brick. sewer pipes,
windows.
lintels.
etc.
Claude
Winters .
Rio
Grande, OH Call 740-245·
5121 .

-

6:30

MYERS PAVING

Owner: Jeff Stethem

HOME

NEW AND USED STEEL

ACROSS

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

...,,lnH '"

VANS&amp;

1-800-537-9528.

r

$7,800. (740)742-

1900.

Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt
In Stock. Call Ron Evans,

Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete.
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
G rating
For
Drains.
Driveways &amp; Walkways
L&amp;L Scrap Metals Open
Monday,
Tu esday,
Wednesday &amp; Friday, 8am4:30prTJ. Closed Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday.

TRUCKS
FOR SALE

)

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

i

Phillip
Alder

24FT Pontoon boat, 86
model good condition

(740)446-0103

(740)446-7787

Riverine

Antiques, 1124 East Main
on SR 124 E. Pomeroy,
740~992-2526.
Russ
Moore, owner.
.

1995 Geo Metro. 2 door,
runs good, great gas
mileage, $900. (740)256-

English Setter puppies .
Hunting stock. Registered ,
born 2114/04, $200. Call

,\11\I...,I!Hh.

sell.

•..Porch Boxes
• Combination Pots
• Perennials
• Spruce Trees
• Shrubs
(
• Peal Moss ·

Pomeroy Eagles
BING01171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start

(7401992·2849

I \I&lt;\ I -..1 1'1' 1 II"

or

L

Easter Flowers
Bedding Flowers
Vegetable Plan!&gt;
Blooming
&amp; Foliage Baskets
Polling Soi I

Mondny-Saturday 9-5 Closed Sunday
740-992-5776

LONGABERGER , fabric purses
and accessories. New shipment
arrived Mason Jar
(old Heilig-Meyers)
408 Main, Point Pleasant

$1,200. (740)446-2668

{740)446-7398, attar 5pm
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repair-675-7388. For sale,

•

1992 Dodge Spirit. 58,400
miles. rUns &amp; looks QOod.

springs &amp; mattress, $175.
(740)367-7886.

Main Street Point Pleasant ·
Wai-Mart Plaza Mason

675-4477

phone call s please.

Mo•MQ Sale: Household

Siders Jewelers

•
•
•

~L.--, --f·;·R·~
-A-ll. •. _,.I

_,.._A

:rhe Daily Sentinel • Page 85

continent

--- llu66ard 's Greenht~UJe
Syracuse, OH
-Now Open
-

-=

10

'

www.mydailysentinel.com

Business Card ... $25 .00/column inch per month

:- 2JO Pl,l Ot.Y CiEFORE PUBLICATION' §-

-

Monday, April 26, 2004
ALLEY OOP

To place an ad Call 992-2156

5ULC.ETI\ BOARD DEADWE

Receptionist
James L. Schmoll, O.D.
443 Gen. Hartinger Pkwy.
Middleport, OH 45760
Please respond by May I. Absolute ly nn

Business Services

---

BULLETIN BOARD

'

.,r.o_".ous•Gooo;•
. •EH•o•w-...1

Monday, April 26,._2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

.

,

I

~

·~~~
- -'
&gt;

("

�•
Monday, April

www.mydailysentinel:'c om

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

26, 2004
•

Major League Baseball

•

:- •eago•
EAST

'""""'

L

Pet.

6

10

7

a

11
10
12

.667
588
421
.._12
333

~_!_

NYY......

T~Bay­

7

6

Toronm

w

L

Pel

1!

6

.667

"

7

611

CENT!W.

..........

Ch&lt;agO""
Det«t&lt;t

I

".7
'

Clevel!lnd

K"""" C&lt;ty

GB

P10

$1111

Homt

AWI/I

&amp;-2

W3

5-3

7~3

11.

7-3
3-7

5-5
3-5
5-5

5~2

'
"·
6

l2
l4
L1
W2

1·8

GB

H
4-6
PlO

· Strk

8-2
6-4

WI
. Wl

8

579

ll

5-4

368

"

5·5

12

5'

4-6

WI

4-5

11

353

5

2-8

Ll

5-4

w

GB

Homo

8

,5 79

5-5

'""
W4

8

579

7~ 3

W3

7~3

tO

9

526

4~6

l3

4~5

'

13

316

4-&lt;l

L5

L

"11

Pel

P10

'

5

Toronto 5.

4. Kansas Cny 2
Chleago 5oJ: 6. Tampa Bay 5
AAahelm 4, Oakland 3
~

fllol~lffiOre

Phtla~lll

.
.

4 ~5

Conc1llnat1

64

Hooston

37
t7

St

·~

51 1 •

~:1:1

4 022

~lod!;:J'l

B8oo1e 2tl 5 1 3 1

t.tVong $S

.tlthbi
50 1 1
5022
3 0 1 0

E~d'l

50 3 1

FJrner cfl

500 0

M::Ou'1 PI

00 0 0

0k1:::o M

5 1 '1 0

lbanezl

J OOO

Merrlllf

454 2

.k.&lt;l:r.l ~

. 0 0 0
5 0 10

No:d

4335

. E'rong 2tl

3 1 1 1

&amp;a,asc

5221
AGnzlz 1b 4 3 3 3

Wmct
TOIIII

1 2 0
4 2 .2 0
40 615 6 TOIIIIs

s.ttte
Tuas

001

113

000 -

6

043

204

Oh -

14

o1

40 141714

DP-Tew 1 LOB-S&amp;att!e 9. Texas 8. 29-EMartne.z (8). WIIVI (6). Dell'CCI (3). AGonlalel
2 (3). 38 Me ICh (1). HR-Qiefud 11). Mench
(3). ~ ;&lt; (51 8ara}as [1), AGomalez (11 SFSpeno, N..:_
1P H RERB8SO

r-

Wasdrl
f-iamr8Z
fililanmr W,NJ

22-3 9 7 i
1 1
21-3 2 2 2 2 0
365,501
42-3
1
2 1·3

7
4
?

3

3
3
0

3

0
0
0

4
0
2

0
M&lt;Ny
1 2 0 0\ 0 1
H8P----t7p' Vob"lti (Mird'l). 1J1Wasdrl (OienJdl. iJ1
RHBnkrl (E'Itu-oQI w~
·

l./!T1lrfes-HcrnEi, Mio.u Wrn1ers. f1rsl 1-lur'(er
Wet
t . Secood. Tm TJ0010!15. Tl'mi, Brwe
Froenvn~ ...

T-2:59. ~1.110 (49,1151.

-

Twins 4, Royals 2
KanauC~

.tl rhbi
4 c0 0
3 12 0
""""'1b 4 1 2 0

""".,
"""'" 1.
.....
mw"'
""""'
"' : ~ ~ ~
~'

0 00 0

""""'.

3 02 0
30 0 0

Ryon I

10 0 0

''"''"
""""'~

4 0 2 0

ToG!b

abrhbi
Grlfmo2b 5 0 1 0
8eo'lrM cl 4 0 0 0
JGru:lz 11
4 1 1 0
$Ws(f!
3 0 3 1
MIS'wiPI
Har.oey!b
Stlnne!l c

G1.1811i1

DJasusn

0 1_ 0 0
4 0 2 0
2 0 1 0
0000
4

o1 o

MLopaz :Jl 3 0 0 1

400 0

Blanco ss 3 0 1 0
Ra'lda ph 1 0 0 0
34 410 4 TOIIII!
33 210 2

Mlnneaota
Kanaa1 Clry

5-5
64
6-4

Lt
Wt

6·3
6·3

tO
t2

,,
"
4 .

368

Mrlwau-.ee
PmstltJrgn

tO

8

9

m

WEST

w

L

Pel

6
9
10

IX!7
526

1t

lOUIS

12
tO
8

Anzona

7

San F-allCISCo

7,

4. (l2l

Lt
LJ
WI

2 ~8

7

3~

Homo

W6

7-3

L1

6-3

6~4

L1
WI

4-6
3-7

5·5

L1

5--4

·~·

Wl

3-5

P10

...

Homo

7·3
6-4

W1
L1
W1
W1

'

8~2
~

,,"
'' ·

579
526
500

GB
21
4

,, "'
"'

5~5

...
5-5

5

1t

6~4

•••
3-&lt;l

~

·- =
·-.,.,,
3~7

5~3

5-6

004

000

000 -

4.

000

100

001

2

-

"""
...........

IP

H

CSMIWJ.O

7

9

t

Aomoro
Nil!twl S.6

t

0

t

'

72&lt;3,

9

""""'""

~ Lt·l

R ER .BB SO

1
0

'

0

2

0

1

2

4

4

1

1

t

I

t

&lt;3rms1ey
1·3 a o o o o
HUlsman
110000
Romero prtlled ttl 1 batltY !1'1 ttle 9!tl
HBP-by Nathan (Gutell Oy BnAnoerson
tJJonesl WP-Grmsie-,•.
Ulo'l)ois 11om. Marwl Hudson. F~ Dana
DeMuth.Secona. Jm .Jotce-Th.ro Koowr1 Danley.
T-2.39 A-23.159 [407B5l

=-,.--,,-,;,-:-;---;;----1
Blue Jays 15, Orioles 3
~~~~:o.::=::.::,;...,_.;:::;:
~ ::':::,----1
TotOnto aD r n bi
ab r h bi
Oafkrt

4

..tn9:':.flr1

2012

2 10

Qhofto r
3 1 1 1
\f\Niiltsd 5 4 22
Cl)tlpo 1b 3 1 2 3

BAbns2b

5 1 1 0

,\ b'a3b

4120

Tejada ss

2 I 0 1

Gorne.z1b 101 0
~d'l
4 12 1
H111Ske 3b 5 I 2 3

A?'mo1b 2012
llopez 1b 1 0 0 0
~lfl 4000
~r!
3 0 0 0
.EhiSia rl
0 0 0 0

Casi'c

Ma1os~

5000

Cl-b:lsn2b 41 1 a
Wo:t.Yrd ss 5 4 4 2
Totals
41151714

4020

4 o1 o
4 0 0 0

s.pe~

Dsio. c
Totall

33 3 7 3

15
Batlin'IOfe
101
010 000 3
E.....Ciarl&lt; 111 Mara (81. Tetada (41. DP-Toron1o
1, Bantmore 1 LOB-Toronto 10. Battmore 7.
2B-Ciari( (I), COelgado (4). H1nske {3). Woodward 2 (6). APafne•ru t4), Bgbe (3). 38Woooward (21 SB-----Mora (2). 5~----Catalanotto.
HlnSke, Tf!l&lt;lda
IP H RERBBSO
Toronto

T'""""

~W2-3

Fm,.,-

"""""m

230

103

060 -

7

7

3

2

2

3

1

0

0

0

1

1

1

0

~

0

0

3

"'"'""'"'

att rhbi
3000
~d 4000
F'la.zza c
4 0 0 0
KGarc&lt;~rt

4 1 1 1

.JPhltps\b 3 0 0 0
Valet1t ~
30 10
zeE :~:~ 2 o o o
Gterrez 2b

3oo 0

Le~~eq1

,

5·5

..,

DGrtia Itt 1 0 0 0
Morenop 0000
Sp--i:er ~ 1 0 0 0
Locw-p
0000
Totals
29 1 2 1

,Umpores-Home. Mark Wegner f1rst.

Larry

Youn;;~,

Mike

Secoxl. Angel Hernandez.
Ewrtt. T----2 52. A-31 ,028 (48.190).

Th~tct,

2

3

3

s

5

3

3

2

1

0

0

0

0

1

Abul

4 1 2 0

Sec:Qrd. ~Keley.Ttwd.T~r.~McCielanc! .

Oelee1b
Al1nu l:l

4 01 0
3 2 2 2

T-2:21 . A-17253[40,120)

B.am:l!! c

3 12 1

Blwskt p

0 0 0 0

--

D&amp;rncrl d

1otals

IP

LerterL1-1

5

Morer10
L~--

2
1

RERBBSO

H

7
2
1

3
1
0

3
1
0

0
0
0

Totals

Bost:~n

4
2
2

8 2 1 1 2 13
1 0 0 0 0 1
WP------Momnn PB-----f&gt;oazza
Unoptoes I b1e JetTy Layne First. Jerry Meals:
Sa;ond PauiScm:ll::er.Thord . EdMontagus.

!!.lnd~ia~n~s~3...:,Ti~ogers!E~2______

Cleveland

Oe1roit

att rhbi
LawtonH
40 10
VizqJeiss · 3000
Gerut r!
4 11 1
Hatr.er 1:t1 . 3 0 1 0

Cnsp &lt;to

o oo o

VMrtnzc
3 0 0 0
Bllierd 2tl 3 1 1 0
Brssrd 1b 4 1 1 1
AEscL...- d 3 0 1 1
Meflon1Jb 3000
Totlls
30 3 6 3

Vna2b
CGIIIenss
IR:lrgz c
\o\lhite ct1
AS-dl2 po
Hg!;J1sr1rf
CPena lb

aD rhbi
400 0
4000
30 0 0
3 10 0
o o 0 0

4 0 1 0

Clevelll{ld

021

000

28 2 2 2

000 -

3

Detroi1
010
000 100 ...:.. 2
E-Vozquel (4 1. DP--CleW!iand 1. DetrOit 2
LOB-CMiand 4. Detro• 3 28--Broossard
(21 HR---Geru1 (31 CPena 141. C$--Cnsp !2)
SF---CPooa.
IP H AERBBSO

""""'""

4 0 2 0

20
MlwH
30
30
EWm 2b 2 0
Tlooplt
10
Garo2b
00

""""'"'

T"""'

00
0 0
1 0
0 0
0 0
0 0

31 0 4 0

R EA BB SO

4
0

0
0

0
0

1
0

7
2

s

4

2

2

1

s

1

0

0

0

0

1

.

AslrQS 1

3000

""""""'

Hiclalg:&gt; of

4 0 0 0
4 0 0 0
4 0 1 0

FOntes p
Clwxt&lt;t p

Brllmnn

""~'

2000
1 0 0 0

En~:b

4 , 1 0

lib , hbl

...,.,
BiQqod

A~~ss

JVzcno 2b 4 0 0 0
2 0 10

""'""'
JKent pl1

100 0

Blti.

abrhbi

4 0 1 0

Miles 2b

0 0 0 0

VNI.fiEIZ p

a oo o
0 0 0 0

3 I I 0

""""'~

Helton 1b

4 1 1 0

"""""'

4 12 2
4 0 2 0

Bumotzd

c.o.oo'
Hlliday I

30 0 0
300 0

'

'

I

that he· s done that to us,"
said Detroii'.s Brandon lnge,
who went 0-for-3 and saw
hi s I 0-game hillin g streak
ca me to an end. ''When we
were in Cleveland. every: ·
lhing he threw was right
where he wanted it. Today
he was no different. He didn't leave one pitch up in the
zone to me. or to anyone
else th at I saw."
The seconu straighl strong
performance by Westbrook
allowed the Indians to re sI
their woeful b,ullpen. On
Friday night, Indian s reli evers gave up II runs in the
sixth inning of a 17-3 loss at
Detroit.
On
Saturday.
~ Randell White hit a threerun ho111er off reliever Chad
Durbin in the ninth inning of
a 5-3 Tigers win.
The · Indians snapped a
three-game losing streak and
avo ided being swept at
Comcrica Park for the 'first
time since May 20-22, 2002.
Cleveland got the scori ng
started in the third off
Detroit
starter
Jason
Johnson ( 1-4 ). After Ronnie
Belliard walked with one
out, Ben Broussard drove
him in with an RBI double.
Broussard scored on a single
by Alex Escobar to make it
2-0.
Gerul made it 3-1 with a
homer in tlie third.
The Tigers cut tl1e le ad to
one in the seventh. White
walked. went to third on a
Higgin,on's 'ing le scored
on Pena\ sacrifice rly.
Johnson went' six innings,
giving up three run&gt; on five
!Jits and two walh while
striking ou1 one.
Before the game, I he
Indians acquired reliever
Rick White from the. Los
Angeles
Dodgers·
in
exchange for minor league
oulfielder Trey Dyson. To
make room for While. pilcher Jason An!lcrson was
rcturnetl
to
Triple -A
Buffalo. II was the lndi&lt;tns'
third hullpen-relaietl transaction in as many days.

cs--

""""'
""""

7
1

S
t

2
1

I
1

2
0

2
2

2

2

2

1

0

Eiuel-rle

. 7 2-3 11

0

0

0

0

1

1

1

2

5

5

1

lbrhbl

•

E~ct

4000

4000

Piar-ul2b 4 0 I 0 Carrol 2b 3 0 0 0
4 o 2 a OCbera ss 4 1 2 0

Bureln

3010

l.br1ttal c
DaBellli

4
4
4
4
,

orwe_n o o a o
~1b

ToPerz~

Paclila p

TBt:sta 3b
Cpdty~

0 10
0 10
000
0 20

JAM'alf

Cllwayll
SchOOc
Dayp
BKXtep

0 10

ledeeph

ooaa

Cmverp
AHmdzp

0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0

20 0 0
2 1 0 0
3022
0000
3000
2010

Wkrsn1b

~c

,3

4000
40 0 0
Abilo3b 2000
BonOs~
2010
Ttrterd
2 o1o
Hrnndsrf A 0 0 0
Feiz1b
4010
Tnall!lc
~ 0 0 0
Nl"efezss 3000'

J..lo::h"d

2 2 1

St,res:!l 4 0 0 1
(';as!Aj2tJ.4222
~p
2 0 1 0
Totals

ooo

ooo -

a

201

Oh -

6

25 2 5 2

Ph~la

000

DOO

000 -

0

Montrell

000

002

0011 -

2

_

DP-Mcntrea! 2. L06-Phdadelph!a 8,MO"ttrea14. 28-0aBell (4), ToPerez 2 (2), ~y (2) .

Snoio~

~ p

Totals

...
"""""
_,

Pac:l*l L.o.3

RHemocdez

DavW.2·t
BU:18S,5

1P H
I 1-J'

31

2-.3

1

a
I

~. B~

RERBBSO

2
0
0

2
0
0

4
0
0

o o

9
0

0

0

2
0

3

G:oonan: ~rst. Bill M1ler:

9'IGran

10 0D
1b 3 0 1 '

Saoozlb
Beh:Jl
J€cn:nrf
Ross e

10 0 0
422 0
4 ,1 0 0
301 ,
3123

Cora2b
lstup

000 0
31 0 4 0

4 0 0 0

Tolftls

37 913 !J

000

000

000 -

0

033

101

01ll ----

9

E-f"e~z (1}. LOB-San FrilllC&lt;sro 7. Los Angeles B 28-Feliz (2). Con-91a (1], I:M·~ [3). HR-

~

..1oAcew1C10 L2·1
PNartc:n

6
2

7
3

5
1

5
,

1
1

~-0

9

6

0

0

1 10

IP~RERBBSO

-Loo-

SonF"""""'
Cocpe.- L.0-2

eom..

U11cAw llcme. Doug Eddngs: f'wst Dlll"11as·
SClg1a: Secon:l. Chafle Aeibrd Third. Jsfl ~
T-2:14. .lt----13,264 (38.496)

AoiM:b

4 22 1
4010

Rntena ss

30 0 1

RSrosrl

4 1 2 1

McKayc

210
L..nx:t-1 p 0 0 0
1Sf1"91s p 0 0 0
TotMI
32 5 9

Sllouis
Mllw.-...

Spoey 21l
Jenknsl

4 1 2 0

.a

~~b

3

01non11
JG1IIen N

0 1 1

oa o

RERBBSO

100
000

1

1

2

1

1-3

0

0

0

0

0

1

1

0

1

3
2

3
2

0
0

5

LGnz!z~

4 2 3 2

'
Kata2ll

--·

5

5

2

2

1

1

1

Q

'
0

6

2
1

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

4

2

4

0

AOruz,W. l-2

52-3643

R~

0

0

1·3

00.

0

0

0
0

0

1

1

1

1

0

0

0

0

1

Fura~l

ooo

ss

J.JFroo lb

41 1 3
4 ' ' 0

Greane ss 4 0 2 1

Dssensp

JDre•Nif
JEstdac

4 0 1 0

Lwmcep
10 0 0
Ell1g"'s ph 1 0 0 0
Eldmrq:to 1 0 0 0

Al:.mon ph 1 0 0 0

Choalep
VI11Mip
Baerga ph
Cbmp/1

2 0, 0
0000

VN1se ·~

Totals

Tota11

~p

RIS'Tla p

Ad'nndc

Totals

7
12

-

Bumpp
EasiE!y 2b

No.rrez W

0 0 0 0
0000

Srnolt:zp

0000
0000
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0

Mrd;alp.-

10 0 0
JGarca pn 1 ' 1 o

37 121412
oo~

LCI'OOI 3tl 4 0 0 0
Y'IQ:Iero 1b 3 0 1 0

Tlvnsr1 p

0000
\ 0 0 0
1 000

4 0 1 1

Waynep 1 0000
Cbrerarf
&lt;1 0 0 0

2 1 1 0

31 C O

000 -

LCsbllo 2tl

DeRosa 3:&gt; 4 2 3 3
MGoles 2b 5 0 1 0
AJones ct 5 1 2 0

5 12 1

005
044

abrhbi
5 14 0

P.erred

3 0 0 0

Maynec

110
004

t

Florida

lTor:he 1b 1 0 0 0

San Oiego

0

ab rhbi

abrhbi
4 1 3 4

3

Winisp
Ch0i1b
34 7 11 6 Totals

E--NfNin (3). Greene [2). DP-San Otego 1

Atlanta

110

000

Florida

010

010

10

1

3000
4 o 1 t

AGutzss

AriZona 2 LOB-San Doego 5. Anzona 9 2B-Loretla (5), Klssko (5), Pay1171 (21, Greene 2 {7).
LGonzalez 2 {6). D8au1osta {5\. De&amp;sens [ 11.
HR-Gm:son 2'(8). SB--BGile9 (1). LGonzalez

Nunez II\ CS-Nunez (1) $---Furcal lhomSttl

2 SF-OeRosa

"""""'
Dessens

.

W,1-2

""'"

H RERBBSO

IP

H

AERBBSO

4
1-3

7
3

4
4

0
4

1
·2

3
0

TI10msooW.2-1
Rensma

7822'27
1 0 0 0 1 0

2-3

1·

0

0

0

1

Smoltz

1

---·

003330
Florida
2311
1 1Wlllos
1 ·a o o o o
BumpLD- 1
51-3 6
02

4
2

4
1 4
200

'

~~

1

"~

Vioyoe

1

0

0

Q

2

7

2
·3
2
0

2
3

3
0

0

3
1
0

0

0

0

2
2
0

0

'''
•••

LoTIERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 9-5·5
Pick 4 day: 0-5-3-2
Pick 3 night: 4-6-0
Pick 4 night: 9-9-6-6
Buckeye 5: 14-18-28-31·33

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Charley Chaffins

CHINESE RESTAURAN

Chiropractic
Center

INDUSTIUAL EQUIPMENT
Mossey Forcuson o Farmhand
• Bobcat • Shenniu
New Idea • Rhino
New Holland o Cub Cadet

CIIICUitltr
DIWWiblltl

All You Can Eat!
'

Bestf{et
' su .

WEATHER

ilrll!lliWIIJIIII.M
• Diagnostic X.- Rays

• Personal
Rehabilitation

(740)446-7227

• Nutritional Counseling

FARM
EQUIPMENT, INC.

615-1812

Point Pleasant, WV

113-5536
Mason, WV
Delivery reatrictlona
with othBr offer1.

I

• Personal Injury
• Workers Compensation
• Most Insurance Accepted
United Health

New Hour ~· M.W.Th. F 7:.'0-5:00:
lue-7 30-7:00 S:~t. H:OO- l 2:00

1150 Eastern Avenue

E

740-441-0200

Gallipolis, Ohio •

44&amp;-9m or 446°2484

Not Yllid

lin dueling

1-888-451·2225
990 2nd Ave. •

•New owners
• New Management
•, Newly Remodeled

2

Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries

...L..----,

Tl

'/fOWl. eomplele

New Shoes
Arriving 'Daily!

,Jiome

F
L

r-TI ~·

HOURS:
Mon - Frl 9-7: Sat. 9-5

www.turnpllleflm.com

1

Rl. 2 Bypass
Point Pleosanl, WV

304-675-7870

304-773-5592
2nd Street _ Ml!§on..}YV _

Members of Donna Jenkins' fifth-grade class at Meigs Intermediate School signed up to
help clean Little Leading Creek at Rutland Saturday morning. The youngsters were part&gt;ci~
paling in the fourth annual Leading Creek Stream Sweep. (Jim Freeman)
and to help peopl e take
more of interesl in the
streams. While the exact
amount of trash collected is

unknow'n at .this lime. volunteers co ll ected enough 'to
entirely fill the Rutland
Township dump truck "

B1

Weather

A6

ning, media re lations and othet ski ll s
needed to lead volunteers in the
community toward a specific goal.
According to· lannarelli. the program in Middleport will focus on
training a diverse citizens' task force
in developing a plan for downlown
revitalization that may be used to
secure grant funding.
Once the program is succes;fully
completed, the ·village will rec eive a
$10.000 mini-grant from the
Appalachian Regional Commi."ion
to help implemenl a re\italizalion
plan, lannarelli said.
,

MIDDLEPORT - A new program developed to strengthen local
leadership will address downtown
revilalization in Middleport, Mayor
Sandy lannarelli lold Middleport
Village Council Monday evening.
lannarelli and Meigs County
Commissioner Mick Davenport
have selected a commiuee which
will begin meeting on May II for a
21- hour
training
program,
LeadershipPlemy, developed by the
Pew Institute for Civic Change and
funded
through
Buckeye
·Hills/Hocking Valley Re gional
Brenda Phalin and Colin Rou'h of
Development District.
the Universi tv of Rio Grande
The program teaches pa11icipants Crossroads Pro'gram reviewed plans
co~riict managemenl. slrategic plan- for
an • Appalachian Herilage

Other business

'

•Qualiry • SelectiorJ • Service

4351econtl A-"" • laMIPOMI. H
I

·r

numerou .\ pothole~. cleaning
1l1e park.s. weeding :tnd other
Uhilletlc change~ ... t·o the _vil~

]aQe.

'Voun2 said one ual' last
week. he .&gt;a \I ihree ·streel
dcpanment wnrl&lt;cr' riding in
circ les around town for
Youn2 &gt;aid ih.e., e wmkers are
lazy."
"They are n(&gt;t doing diddly
squat•·· he said. "I hJvcn·l
seen Jack {Krautttr ) and his
guys do a thing iri this town ."
Young blames Kraulter and
said hi s worl&lt;ers shou ld either
be Jtsdplined or replaced.
Young adYocateJ that council
"jump on him (Krautterl once
a month .. to !.!et thin~~ done
or th ings will continue 10
ueteriorate in the \'illage,
As to the "aler uepanmem.
Young also alla&lt;.'ked ihe
worker.s for loafin~ . He 'aid
one employee li e"d tn him
about Wi.lter pn::'\~Url~ ~oin~ to
bi, hnme whi~h forced hint
lO do a lot of unnece-.. . . an

For tl1cir sen ice. th~ vollltlteers were rewmdeu with
Siream Sweep T-shirts and
pizza &lt;tfterwarus.

work jusl to disc'oYcr ih~ ·
lruth.
·
~~ If 1l1n· did 1his 10 me. then
1 know ihey are uoing it ((t
0\hl!r CLI...,tnmer .... " 11~ said.
Council m~mbcrs . f11u~ht
hctck .
"
"The mayor l)ohn ,\1uS&gt;er J
i-. Joing a gnuJjnb. D(~n·r put
rhc

hLtm~

on

th__...... aid

1140·-446·161&amp; ·BOD·231-m&amp;

Please see Mayor. As

Festival. to be held at the Rio Meigs lcms at the \ il!agc \ ~ewer treatment
Center from 1'0 a.m. to 3 p.m. (~11 facilily. ~;her~ gate' ha1e been
May 21.
e111creu unlawfully.
Phalin said the vill•iQe has authoCouncil aho Ji,cthsed Yandali ., m
rized closing North Seconu Aw .. -at General H;rninger Park .
from Race St. to Mill St.. anu Mill
CounL·il aho:
Sireet in front of the center. to allow
o Appruveu paym~nt of !:&gt;ills in the
. for musical performance.-. craft amnunl ol· S 15.060.23 ,
demonstralions. a dance demnnslrao Appro1wl1rathfer of S l-+3 ~.'i6 fnr
lion and other c1·cn1s (.ksigneu Ill final JXI) mcnt of natural t!a" . . en ire
educate resiuellls aboul Appalachian at the \1idulepor1 Higb School.
heritage ~
·
Cenlral Building :t nJ clernenlar)
A dairce lesson for tho,e interesleu building.
in dan cing at the celebration will be
Present 1n·rc lannardli. Council
offered free of charge al 7 p.m. on member' Siephen Houcl1m,. Ro~c·r
~1ay II a11hc Family Life Cc111er in
Manle1. Katlr1 SetHI and Bob
Middlcpon. and the public is invit - Roi:&gt;in:on. and ·Fi.-c·al Officer Linda
ed. Phalin .said.
Hanson. C nunri I !111!111 bcr~ Bob
Village
Admi~istralo r
Brau Pooler and Laurie Reed were
Anderson di s~uss~u 1 ancbl ism prob- cx.cl1stxi from th~ meeting .

www.holzer.org

hln: Me•Thur 1:3p'5:DO

•,

coun-

. cil member R111h Spaun. "We
are tr} ing our be"t !"

'

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

"Shoe&gt; for lhe entire family "

~M ERCURY

Yo.un~ ...... aiJ are en\ t"rcd in
dirt :anJ gra~~~ repairing

Information at your fingertips ...

SHOE CO.
MASON
FURNITURE
COMPANY

Sports

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

~~ KIPLING

With new Yehlcle purchase.
See Turnpike for debolls.

A3

Classifieds

must cover every number on,your card to win.

POMEROY
Former
Pomero'
.\Ia) or
Vic lOr
Youn g Ill cundemnetl the
street anu II ater Jcpartmenl'
al ihe Pnmeroy Village
Council mee1in~ Monuav.
Young ~·um( ._ \\ ith a .. long
laundn· li'l of thin~s 1he
slrcct · JepanmetH ha.-- failed
tO ULT&lt;Hllpl ish either UUe 10
h11iness or a lad of leader'hip from long lime street
'upcn is or Jack Krautter.
lth·ludcu in thi' Ji,t :tre
repair" anU impro\ ~ment~ to
B~ech
Grll\'e Cemelen.
ckan in ~ ihe Sidewalks th:n

~

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

SEcnoNs- 12 PAGilS

Calendars

•••

By J. MILES lAYTON
J LAYTO~ @ '.l YOAI LYS ENTIN EL~COM

Middleport to implement training program

Delallo on Page A6

•

Mon -Timrs: I I :00;1m· I0:00pm
Fri-Sa1 . I I :I lOam- I 0: .'Uprn
Sun: 11 :30am- 10:00pm

umber

lazin~ss

1

hour ..... In no unct'rlain tenn~.

.

INDEX

I

RUTLAND - A small
army of volunteers, assisted
by pleasant spring weather.
participated in the fourth
annual Leading Creek
Stream Sweep Saturday
morning
at
Rulland's
Fireman's Park .
Approximately 43 people
-youth and adults alikeshowed up to help clean the
banks along Leading Creek
and Little Leading Creek at
in
selected
locallons
Rutland and Salisbury
lownships.
The entire SWCD assisted with the sweep, which is
also supported by the Meigs
Office of Recycling and
Liller
Prevention,
the
Rutland Township Board of
Trustees,
the
Rulland
Volunteer Fire Department
and the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service aleng with
other agencies.
The stream sweep is modeled after the successful
Ohio River Sweep, which is
held in June and the timing
coincides with Earth Day,
which is April 22.
The goaL of the sweep is
10 help clean up the
Leading Creek watershed

181 Up.. r River Rd.

GIRIHIIS. OhiO 45&amp;3f
Open l·lotJI"'.;:

1

JiM FREEMAN
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

Dally 3: 3-94
Dally 4: 54-9-7
Cash 25: 1-9-15-16-19-22

;~~~n~FARM AND

be facing,''' he said .
Justice. 37. said his first
order of busine&gt;s is lo
familiarize himself with the
issues facing Meigs and
other counties in the 29
member district. Civic leaders said whal Meigs County

1

Bv

West VIrginia

$

T.J. Justice

i

needs most is a hospital ami matters to see what coulu be
a jai I.
done in the fu tu re. He took a
"Healih care is a hu~e parti cu lar intere.-t in the jail
concern for us in Mei'gs situation and .-aid he wt)uld
County."'
said
Mike visit limnarelli befoi·e llc left
Swisher. director of Mei·gs for his home in Wellsion ~
County Job and Fam ily
Perrv Varnadoe hriefeu
Services . "Hilving a h ospi~ Justice on the stren~ths ihc
lal is one of the 1hings com- coumy ha~ to oiler prchpec panies are interested in:·
tive business inJu~trv. He
Middlepon Mayor Sand~ mentioned the inJtistrial
la nnarellt expre ssed co n- park. the spec bui l uin~.
cern aboul the need for a infrastructure
impnneproper1ail in Meigs County. ments amlyuality etlucalion
Since ihe county jai l is from llote local schoo l Ji,defu nct. pri .,o ners mu .q lricts which boast a hiol1
e
either usc the ._jail in graduation and college
Middleport. whicll L·an only acceptance rate.' .
hold four prisoners. or they
Juqice is no stran~er to
mu't be incar~erateu in local and state ~o1·ernment.
other jai ls like tile one in . Prior to lh is clppointment.
Ja c:kson or Athens counties. he served '" the Governor's
lannarelli. said· it cu.-Is lhe Regional
Econom ic
cou111y money when pri so n- Developmcnl
l:!r!-1 are incan:craled· e l se~
Represenlatiw
to
where.
Chi ll i&lt;:othe. In thai capacity.
Jusli cc saiu he an'U lli s
slaff would look into these
Please see Justice. AS

Teams join in Leading Creek 'Stream Sweep'

2

emandez .

Szumi'lSki
Wrtasd&lt;

MILES LAYToN

Former mayor
condemns street
and water .
departments for

1

I

7

-110 000 -

(1), SFinley (3). s-Dessens SF-BG1les. RaH·

IP

Bv J.

2010
34 2 9 2

E-Poerre ! 1). LCaStllk:l (2) LOB-Atlanta B.

......

\\\\\\111,,ftth-.,tllttt.-Jt.,ll l

20 00

Florida 8 26-AJones (4). WCort:IQro (21 38JDrew \1 ). PJerre (11. HA- DeRosa (1). 56-

Son [);ego
lJiwr91Q1 L.2-2

..!-.:.!UO-l

Justice comes to Meigs County
POMEROY
TJ.
Justice, the new direclor of
the Governor's Office of
Appalachia, paid a visit to
Pomeroy to meet witli community leaders at the Meigs
Coun1y
Chamber
of
Commerce Monday. ·
The Governor's Oflice of
Appalachia (GOA) serves
as an advocate for the
l'egion by developing policy
and promoting specific projects and proposa ls that
originate from the region 's
residems. The GOA advises
local groups and residents
of possible funding so urces
and methods for addressing
problems and acts as a liaison to connect people and
resource ?.
~
"We're here to support
you and lo help you overcome challenges you might

t

0

Elm-

Ill~()\, . \J'I{JI

'\tl . l(l -

JlAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

t

• 1

5 2 2 2

34 712 7

• Reds win, but may lose
Kearns. See Page B1

4
3

RERBBSO

w"""

Hardeo L0.2

=~D ~; ~ ~ ~

2 1 1 1
2 1 1 3

000 000 -

H

D8tista rf
TracylJ

RaHitllc

003
111

Atlanta

c.,tron ss

Pao,-toncl

SPORTS

Braves 7, Martins 2

BGIIesrf
Lo"gd

-1

Oakland

7
0

abrhbl
llllaiqz 3b 4 1 1 0
Loratta 2b 5 1 3 0
New11b

1

3

1P

FRodriQVI!l

D'backs 12, Padres 7

Kleskol

0

E-Glaus 121. Scutaro !1), Menechono (1). DPAnahelm 2. LOB-Anaheim il . Dak!and 6 2BKarros (2). Hatleberg (3) DMiller (3) HR-

~15 .5

3

3001
.. 1 2 0
4 2 2 1
2000

1
0

Salmon 12: SB- fpgg111s 2!6)

Edmonds (4). ASanders (7). KGnter (4 1 SBE~(1) . cs--MAndftrson[2).&amp;---SupPan.
SF~teraa.

""'[);ego

'
0

KarTOS (tl 3 0 1 1
·McMin d'1 , 0 0 0
Httberg 1b o1 , 2 0
Scwruss 4 000.
DM~Ierc
4 o , a

4000
4 0 2 0

Anaheim
Oakland

4. 2S--lanidord (6,, Ect-nonds {8). McKay ~ 1)

7
2

2

Clu-azo ~ 1 0 0 0
32 3 I! 1
:J6 4 7 3 Tolals

Tctabl

000 012 5
000 011 2
DP-St LouiS 2_ LOB-St. Louis 3. M1lwallkoo

72-3

}O(J:\IS•\oJ ..)-t .

z

6

2 2 0 4

Mnchno2t:l 3 0 0 I)

200
000

72-3
I 1-3.

4

4 1 1 0
4 1 10

BMOOa c
AKni:t)' 2b

BCWKrf 2000
0 Moelelc 2 0 0 0
0 ElShet.-; p 2 o a o
0 KGIIllo3b 1 1 1 1
29 2 $ 2
5 Totals

2

2

Samon cto 2 1 1 3

3 0 1 0

Hetns 3tl

vSiwltsp o·a a o
Kso::Mk p11 1 o a o

1

1

6

Edcltn ss
Erstad 1b
Figgnsd

Pdstttk d 3 0 0 0
CL.nSei ss 4 0 0 0

PH

6

abrhbi
ab rhbiKotsar cl 3 1 1 0
5 10 0
Byrnes~
30 10
5 0 10
5010 · EChavzJb 400 0
2100
Gklus:JJ 3000 Dye rf

Mitweukae
abrhbi

3 o 10

~p

5

4

Angels 4, Alhletlcs 3

Cardinals 5, Brewers 2

ECIMdcl

3

9

lshiiW,3-1

"""

ltbrhbi
MAroo12tl 4 0 ' 0
LJ*fn:U
4 0 1 1
Tgud111
000 0
Pl4ols lb ... 1 1 1

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Iztu"s (1). Bradley 2 [4]. Cora Hl SB-OAOOerls (13). SF-A0$5.

B
1

Roethlisberger:
Manning, Rivers have
nothing on me, B2

422 2

Loa Anv-i"

~ ~
1
1

Elfl:klyd

JHrn:.td

Sen Francisco

38----&amp;lmoidcr [2i. SB-Cepictty (1). C&amp;-

OGabrera (1). Sc:hneider(l)_ 5---Padtha Day.

1
10 10
0000

,

Loa~
lbrllbi
~~
523 0
tzturl&gt;SS
51 2 2

HA-Mackowiak 131. Cola [21. GastiiO (2). 5..10Ac8Yedo. OIPerez
IP H RER88SO

Arizona

32090

oco

Cocoerp
Corroop

32 610 6

ooo

2000

oo a o

1 1 0 2
0 0 2 1
-.
t ,.--• - "- ' - '

0P-CrlCII1flato 1. Prttsbur'gl 1 LOB-CII"'Crl·
natt 6. P!lt!b.lf915. 28--Casey (91, NJ•l5cKl (71

7

abrhbl

2
1

GiantS 0

Ortwn2b

011

0

Expos 2, Phillies 0

Tot*

Cincinnlltl
Pittatugh

0

Pokte
1-3 I 0 0 0 0
AIJ&lt;J1s W.2-Q
1 1 0 0 0 0
Q8aez pt:hed 10 3 bfi!lei'S I'! h . !ln. TreM*r
pitched to 3 batlets ., the 9th. LCMer pitched IQ 1
batter il the 91h .
~- Ted Bimft: Ff'SI. Allnso Mar~- Secold. Aidl Reed: Ttm:l. Ed Rapoaoo. T2:43. A---17,497 (40.615)

By&lt;dd

(.Wt;n1b

Mciwk.

0 6 0

000010

""'"

t.fndesol1

~

Indians edge
Tigers, 3-2
DETROIT .(AP) - Jake
Weslbrook completely dom inated the Detroit Tigers
agam.
After throwing seven perfeet innings of relief against
Detroit
on
Monday,
Westbrook. held the Tigers to
two hits in Cleveland's 3-2
win Sunday.
"It's two great performances in a row," Indians
manager Eric Wedge said.
"We needed so meo ne .to step
up today, and he was . the
one ."
Weslbrook a11ov ·ed only a
second-inning home run to
Carlos Pena and a seventhinning single to Bobby
Higginson on a grounder
thai originally was scored as
an error.
Westbrook had retired 27
slraighl batte rs over hi s last
three appearances before
Pena's homer with 1wo o uts
in the second,
" I k.new I tiad to go after
them again." Westbrook
said . "The way I pitch, I've
got to go after them and get
them to hi I ihc pitches into
lhe ground. They know what
I throw,' but not when ."
Westbrook ( 1-1) got, the
start in part because of
Monday 's performance. and
part ly due to injuries .
One
starter,
Jason
Stanford, is on the disabled
list with a strained left forearm. Another, C.C. Sabathia.
hasn't pitched since he was
pulled before a scheduled
start on April 22.
"He definilely pickeu up
where he left off,'' Wedge
said. "Detroit is a good hit ring ballelub. which makes
his performance all the more
impressive ."
The right-hander slruck
oul three and walked three
in his second career complete game. He had a complcie-gamc loss against the
Tigers lasl September.
The Tigers cou ldn't help
but be impressed by the
Cleveland righ1-handef
"That's 1he second time

1
1

BAbreurl

2·3 . 0 0 0 1 0
1·3 0 0 0 1 1
MR:wra
1 0 0 0 1 1
HBP---t¥ .Nazquez (Millar) WP--Gadon.
Um~. Phil GUZZI: First, James Hoye:
Second, Jerry Cra.vbd: Tllild. Brwo O'Jiba
T-2:48.A-55.338\57.478J

Houslan

0
0

1-3
1·3
0

"'-

4 0 1 0

TRdmd
JN'Isrlss

Spiv':JY [8\. Jenkons 14) HR-Putols 17).

lCart"

40 0 0

GWhlle
Gon:k.n

Rockies 4,

0
0

IPHRERBSSO

TrefMerll)-1

40 0 0

H

1 OJantnll

2 t 1 2
MYlroet 3 o o a
Ml.ffl:f13b 2 0 0 0
lnged
3000

Totals

ab rhbl
4 0 0 0

7
2

.NazQ~L2-2

0
0

lJrtJe ss

~

IP

T-_:'_:":._·_A.,..,.
-oa ,635
._ 1_39_.345
.,-l:_ _ _ _
1 NowV""'

4

abrhbi
WHans2b 4030

Ge.OO

000

Boston
F'MartlnezW.3-1
W1brnsonS.1

2

g-:=1~1)1~= (2). JoC~ (2).

200 000 2
New Vorii;
1XKJ 000 000 ---- 0
E-Jeter [31, Posada (3). DP-New 'fork 1.
LOB---Boston 7, NtN~ York 5. 28-00rtlz (7),
ARodrogucz (51. Soerra (',I HA-MRarmrez (5).
SB-AAodnguez 12) CS-M~Iar (11

.... _ .
Cleman1W.3-1
Bortwskl S.4

1

o o o o
o o o t

100 100
120 5
001 DOD
113 6
Two outs ....m.n Wllllllll9 rUI"l ~ ­
E-J9Gonzalaz 11). DP--Tampa Bay 1. Chcago 2. LOB-Tampa Bay 6, ~ fi. 28Cr.Mbd (I). \NHarTis (4). 38-lugo (1). HA-Hull (2). Hall (II. Unba (2), Kone!ko (4). SB-

r.,.,...,

""""''
""""'

3' 2 4 2

1

31

~ 9,

.......,....
S..Frw1
.tlrhbl

lb rhbl
400 0
4011
3 1 2 0
4010
4111

0

lampe~

0

""""
~~

3 0 0 0
' Bion3:J 3100
(X)rtz d'1 4 0 2 0
~~
3122
32 410 -4
~11
J 0 0 0
K1!J,!II;NI1
0000
New Vork
000 000 100 1
Vantelu;
40 0 0
Chicago
001
200 . lOx 4
~lb
3000
LOB-New 'r'orll 3. ChiCago 4. 26-Barren {21.
Crespo'&lt;!b 4 0 0 0
HR-t&lt;Garaa {3). ARamorez !61 58--CPAlterReesess 4000
son {3)

0

---·

8b r hbi

0

Chicago

o o o Red Sox 2. Yankees 0

F't:n9cw"IL,2- 1

51·3 10 9 7 2 4
Pamst1
212242
D&amp;Jean
1·3 4 4 J
1 0
Bauer
1·3 0 0 0 0 0
Groom
1:?0002
HBP----by DsJean 1Catalanotlol. by Ponson
(J~ t PS---Casr.

2

0 2 1
lB.'Ine
1·3 1 0 0 0 0
Ump.-es---Ho-ne Jrn Woll: Fwst. T!YI'J' Randazzo:

p 3oao

Totals

3 1 1 2
t.Qrdzrf
300 0
Thmas ct1 4 1 I 0
E&lt;iiPrz 1b 4 0 1 0 Cal..ool
300 0
..klCrta: 11 3 1 0 0 Knertto 1b 4 1 3 ,
l.i.q:l ss
4 0 2 2 Gloedpr 0 I 0 0
Hale
· 4121 Ovde3b 4001
Blun:!!
4000 AwMI:id 300 0
TPerez p-t 0 0 0 0
Drnsftt ph 1 1 1 1
OIM:Ic
2100
Toblla
:r1 5 13 5 Tollll:ll
31695

CPttwld
SSo:;a r!

cn-.oo~

0

~

______:_____ I -....,-....,...,--.
1
-6.-D
=

0

Clticogo

lib rhbi
Ciwfldf
5 1 4 0
Rots3b
5000
EW:Ield ' 4 I 21
Hufl&lt;to
o1 1 2 1

2

11·3

0

2-3
2

\lilcmal

T------2'25 A-------8.267 (4ti.iii)

•
0

U11pow funs, Er~: Cocper: Fif$1., t.4M Raitj:
Seccn1 O'udo. ·~ T'hi'O. C B. Bl.d!nor.
T-2·16 A-----3J912 {50.449]

r.....,...,

9
11·3

1

While Sox 6, Devll Rays 5

4 000
4021
4 0 1 0

ASGm ss 3

oo o

DPat1ersal
()::Jref

2

2

--(-1.

,.,

San Francosco 5. Los Angeles 3

AEMbztb

2

2

o ·o o

~W.3-0 61-3 5
Haridl3la
2-3 a
Vl'Uiel
2-3 a
FIR!ltes
1-3 0
OlaoonS.4
1 0
La:lge pot:fla:l t) 3 b.1lloS fl1he

ClllCrm&lt;ftl 9. Pltlsb.Jr!f&lt; 7
San Doeqo 4 . Anzona 2

lib rhbi

Matsu~ss

2

- -

Secald. Dale Swt ThrU Matt ~

lib rhbl
rutwu:2b 3010
IAilrlss -4010
GrfJod
-4 0 0 Q
Casay1b -4020
D.rol
-4000
Ywlbtc -4 o o o
WF81atf 3 0 2 0
PNort1p 0000
JCastro3b 3 0 0 0
.IOAYOOp 1·000
R-T\Morf 1000

010
010

2·3,-l
1·3 0

.,_....,
"""

s~•

Houston 8. ColoraOO 5
Flonda 7 Atlanta 4

~c~uoo~4~·M~em~~,~~------ l ~
Hewvcn
Chicago
J.Jol"nsor1L1-4

10 1 0
31 4 9 3

7 6
0 .:ii

7~2

3·7

OOOD

IPHRERBBSO

W?M¥L2-2

7~2

~

0 0 0 0
1000

s

5-4

s.turdlly's Results
Phdao:Mtlptua 7. Mont.-~1 0
'-1.iwaukee 3. St. LOUIS I
Ch1Ca90 Cubs 3. NV~ 0

W~W.1-1

000
010

10 0 0
311,

000 1
Co6ondo
Ob 4
DP-ttou&amp;ton 2 LOB----Hwston 7, Colorado 6.
2e I . ''lg 17). Ensc.g (3). Clay1on (3). Hef.
!On (7). HR-M.!!Sweeney (1'
"Mier

CnlC&gt;Illlah tHaf1lr19 1-0) at Pmsburgh (Vogelsong 1-2,1. 7"(}5 p m
Floni:la [Pavano 1-0l a1 Coloraoo lELa non 0-3). 9:05 p m
crucago Cubs (Zambrano 2-D1 AI Anzona (Jonnsorr1 2!. 9 35 .p.m.
MOI11I'llaltl H11rnandez 1-21 a1 S11 OIE'QO { Pea~ 1·1\. 10'05 p m
4.tte.nta /Ramorez 0-1 1 at San FfanciSCO (Schmidt 0-2 1. 10-15 p.m

E--cGuzman (4 • DP-Monnesola 3 Kans.as
CJ!lf 1 LOB-Mif1!18SOta 5 Kansas Crty 8 2BFord 12). JGonzale.z 14, ~~~THuntar t t l. C~
Oftermal'l (11. Blanco 12 1. Blancc PI 5-Sm

c0

31 1 5 1 T&lt;*llol

,..

6·35·4
5·4
4·5

L1

2~8

5I

368

00

Eastern girls
win again, Bi

'

t-t:M1g I
Ma.Swyf'f
FR!y&amp;sd
J(m;Jyp
11taiap
G'1zalaz a,

5-3

4·4
4·6
2·7

~

...

P10

G8

...,

Monday '• Gamn

&amp;auk! If

-

2

SUI1dly'• Rnulta

Texas 3. Seanle 0

Tuu

AFtwlklr1L1- 1
Vila'e
Jarvos

556

Montreal 2. PhMadelphla 0
Plttsb.irgn 6 Cnanna11 J
St LouiS 5, M1lwaulee 2
Chocago CubS 4. N¥ Mats 1
Coloraclo 4 Houston 1
Los Angeles 9, San Francosco 0
.ll,nzone 12. San D1ego 7
Atlanl&lt;! 7. Ronda 2

Kansas Cry 10. MiMeSOl&lt;l. 1

Rangers 14, Mariners 6

BDIIYcs c

Homo

7
8
9
&gt;0

Gol&lt;lraoo

Seattle (Meche 0.21 at Balllmore (Alley 1·ll 7·05 p m
Toronto tUlly 0.2) a1 Mtnnesota (Radke 2-t }. B., 0 p m

A.Lria S6
Qll!rud lb

...

"'
5
""
w
..,
""·
"" • '"
10

Los Afl9eles
Saf'l 01ego

:n

P10

L

Crtcago Cubs

7~3

G8

14

5~4

J -5
64

Pel

•• ..,,

7

54

...,

L

7

CENTRAL

20 2 1
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0

L&lt;lgop

10

NV Mets

fllonUV"• ca.mes

ab rhti

"

2~5

Boston 3. NV Yan~U!6S 2 12
Tampa Bay 4, Ol~gc Sm t
Anahe.m 6 Oal!.lanc 3

TorOnlo 15, 9altrn0fe 3
Te-as 14. S8att1e 6

Atlanta

s-a

S.turday'a Resulb _
Derron s Cleveland 2

Sunctlly'a Aeaulb
Clelleland ·3. D8tr0fl 2
Boston 2, NV YllrU8s 0

w

..., """"""

7-2
6-3

~

EAST

5~4

Home

. ....-·"""p,

Nallonal League

'

,..

•

,
'

R
Discover the Holzer Dijferenct&gt;

WWWoholzeroorg

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="490">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9941">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="18282">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="18281">
              <text>April 26, 2004</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2900">
      <name>greer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="594">
      <name>reed</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
