<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="5398" 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/5398?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-13T02:18:23+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="15326">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/24deab5ebffaaddeaac6e98711352fe7.pdf</src>
      <authentication>08aeb5e7bdbe3b9a811cf03e5bccda1f</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="18310">
                  <text>. Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May 6,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

College Softball

Redwomen on a roll
~ntering the post season
Bv M.\RK WtLLI.\Ms
Special to the Tribune
RIO GRANDE -· The University of
Rio Qrande Redwomen softball team is
one of the hottest in the American
Mideast Conference entering thi s weekend's AMC Qualifying Tournament.
Rio Grande (30-11) has won 13-of-15
and is the No. 3 seed out of the South
Division which means the Redwomen
must travel. The first' round opponent.
Seton Hill. is one that is familiar to the
Redwomen.
Seton Hill (14-20) the North
Division 's No. 2 seed was swept in a
doubleheader bv Rio Grande, 8-0 and
13-3, April 24 a-t Stanley Evans Field.
The Red women have one of the most
explosive offenses in the AMC.
Sophomore right fielder Jenny Olding
has had a record-breaking season, clubbing nine home runs and driving in 49
runs, leading the team in both categories. Olding has scored 44 runs and. is

pitched ( 154. I) and strikeouts (65) .
Sophomore Stephanie Broccolo has
struggled at times this season, but is
still solid in the pitching circle . She has
an 11-8 record with a 3.40 ERA. ·
The Redwomen have a team ERA of
2.88.
Seton Hill brings a .274 team batting
average to the post-seascin and has three
outstanding offensive players in
Brittany Patton (.375. 10 RBI, 16 runs),
Heather Koontz (.348, 9 RBI) and
Amber Dietelbach (.341, II RBI) .
Patton and Jennifer Cardinale lead ·
this young team in the pitchipg circle.
Seton Hill has a team ERA of 5.28.
Other first round match-ups include:
South No. I Ohio Dominican hosting
North No. 4 Notre Dame College;
South No. 2 Walsh vs . North No. 3
Geneva and North No. I Tiffin plays
host to South No. 4 Mount Vernon
Nazarene.
Rio Grande has a I0-4 record against
teams in the tournament.
The tournament is May 6-8. ·

batting A 16.
Junior first basema n Amy Conn leads
the team in hitting at .417. Conn has 30
RBI" s on the season. Senior center
fielder Kri sta Tucker has had another
solid season . batting .375. with a home
run. 31 RBI"s and a temn-leading five
triples.
Senior second baseman Emily Cooper
is one of the besr table sellers in the
league and disrupts a team's defense
when she gets on b.ase . Cooper is batting .361 with 36 runs scored and 39
stolen bases.
Sophomore Brandi . Jones is also a
force to be reckoned with as she has
belled five home runs and driven in 32
while batting .373.
Sophomore hurler Andrea Lotycz has
had · one of the best years for a Rio
Grande pitcher in recent history. Lotycz
is 19-3 on the season and has a _personal 13-game win streak. She has 2 1 complete games. two saves and five
shutouts. She leads. the staff in innings

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
. • o ( I :'\ I S • \ o I.

) 1,

'o. 1·~: ;

BY MARK WILLIAMS
th~

Tribune

RIO GRANDE - The University of
Rio Grande Redmen baseball squad is
slumping entering the American Mideast
Conference Qualifying Tournament.
The Redmen are 3-9 in their last 12
games and are the No. 3 seed from the
South Division and will travel North No.
2 Point Park this weekend.
Rio Grande (34-21) tied the all-time
single season win mark (set in 1995)
with a 13-5 win over Mount Vernon
Nazarene last Saturday. The Redmen
have some offensive stars that can cause
the opposition problems .
Junior center fielder Scott Peterman is
the team's leading hitter at .365. He has
nve home runs and has driven in 39 runs.
He leads the club in doubles (12). runs
scored (46) and stolen bases ( 18).
Sophomore right fielder Marcus
Goolsby is the club leader in home runs

(7). He has 26 RBI's and has scored 30
runs while hitting .361. Senior H.A.
Scott, despite being hampered by a ham- .
string injury all spring, is leading the
Redmen in RBI with 45. Scott ripped six
home runs and batted .340.
·
Rio Grande has a team batting average
of .318.
Rio brings a solid pitching staff, led by
sophomore right hander Kevin Hale.
Hale posted a 9-4 record this season with
a 2.95 ERA in 73.1 innings pitched. Hale
led the team in strikeouts (68) for the
second straight season.
Rio can aho fire three lefties at the
opposition in senior Tim Sutton, sophomore Brent Watterson and freshman
Nate Chau.
Sutton (4-3) leads the team in ERA
(2.76), Watterson (3-5, 5.08 ERA). has
struggled of late, but when he's on, he's
tough to hit and Chau (4-3, 7.06) continues to mature as he enters his tlrst postseason tournament.
Rio has a 4.50 team ERA.

• Griffey hits Reds to
victory. See Page 81

BY J. MILES lAYTON
JLAYTON®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

2003 Ford Taurus SW
!.~ ONLY 10,800 Miles

RACINE - Taking advantage of a
beautiful spring day, Southern
. Elementary students walked around
a grassy track to raise awareness for
cancer Thursday.·
Circling the track were 345 luminaries with the names of .cancer survivors and victims written on them
much like the annual Relay for Life
will-have in June.
"We are trying to incorporate more
youth into these events so that we
can educate and teach kids about
cancer." suid Jennifer McGuiness. a
project coordinator with th e
American Cancer Society. "They
don't realize how many people have
cancer and how it effects everyone
until they see the number of luininaries and names around the track."
Classes competed against each·
other to mise more than $1.100 for
the American Cancer Society in the
first mini Relay for Life held at
Southern Elementary. Debra Harris's
tlrst grade class took the first place
honors. McGuiness said the money
will be used for cancer research, education, early detection and prevention
programs, as well as patient services.
"I think this mini-Relay for Life

1999 Chevy Monte carlo
:~ec~ ONLY 52,000 Miles

Point Park (20-13) will bring a potent
offense to the diamond, led by the trio of
Cory Gearhart (.413, I HR. 33 RBI, 27
runs), Doug Haidet (.387, I HR . 20 RBI,
30 runs) and Traelic Cotter (.369, 5 HR.
28 RBI).
.
The Pioneers are hitting at a .327 clip
entering the post-season.
Point Park has three solid pitchers in
Joe Martinson (7-1, 3.05 ERA, 58 K's),
Brandon Keck (5-l, 3.58) and Fred
Moses (4-3, 4. II , 45 K's). The threesome heads a pitching staff that sports a
respectable 4.16 team ERA.
Other first round match-ups include:
North No. I Saint Vincent (22-18) versus
South No. 4 Shawnee . State (17-22);
South No. I Mount Vernon Nazarene.
(33-15) hosts North No.4 Walsh (22-27)
and South No. 2 Ohio Dominican (3417-J) entertains North' No. 3 Geneva
(25-16).
No official times or dates have been
set for the Rio Grande/Point Park series.
The Tournament is set to run May 6-8.

Phio State punter Trapasso pleads
~nnocent to underage drinking charge
; · COLUMBUS (AP) - An Ohio State
punter pleaded innocent Wednesday to a
cnarge of underage drinking, court documents showed.
Albert J. Trapasso. 18. appeared in
Franklin County Municipal Court for
his arraignment, according to court documents. A poli "e report showed
:Frapasso was charged with underage
prinking on April 25.
· Messages seeking comment were left
ror Trapasso's attorney, Steven Brown,

and athletic department spokesman
Steve Snapp.
·
Trapasso s charge was the latest in a
string of legal problems involving Ohio
State football players. On Saturday,
campus police charged tight end Loms
Irizarry and tailback Ira Guilford with
felony robbery. Ohio State coach Jim
Tressel has suspended both players, who
have a preliminary court date May I I.
Since Tressel was hired in January of
200 I, there have been at least 14 inci-

The

e

t:

1

t:

U
tj

Pi~~re
Art

mertime un~mJ)Ioym~:-'111 fig ~
urcs generally . dec·! inc

2003 Ford Mustang
AutoTrans.

.With or without a picture and
YourSpeciaiMessageHere!
for Only $2Q.QQ ~f:e .

WEATHER

F-150 Superca
Auto. Tlllns., V8
t£01032

4 WHEEL DRIVE

Details on Page AS

INDEX
2 Su:TtoNS- t6 PAGEs

:mo LIMITED PAC

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Faith• Values
Movies
NASCAR
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A3
Bs-6
B7
A3

A4
A6
As
B3

As
B1

AS

© 2004 Ohio Vullcy PubltshinR Co.

Court Street and the steps of the Meigs
County Courthouse became a church for
one hour Thursday afternoon. as Meigs
County faithful observed the National Day
of Prayer with a prayer service that includ·
ed prayer for public officials, Meigs
County communities, the state and nation.
Doug Shamblin, pastor of the Middleport
Church of the Nazarene, spoke on "Saving
the Sanctity of Marriage in our Country,"
and at noon. Gladys Cumings. a member
of the Meigs County National day of Prayer
Committee. joined National Day of Prayer
groups around the nation by offiering a
prayer written by Dr. Barry Black. Chaplain
of the U.S. Senate. Music from students
at Mid-valley Christian School, Bill Crane
and Dana Johnson was also included in
the service. The prayer service is part of a
week-long observance which also included
a Bible reading marathon on the Pomeroy
parking lot, a prayer breakfa$t for publ ic
officials, and a music concert. County
Commissioner Jim Sheets. pictured with
Rev. Rod Brower, reads a proclamation
commissioners signed dec laring the county's observance . (Brian J. Reed)

Other Sizes Available

M!ly 7 at 5:00p.m.

!Jl

~tiiiXXIXIIIIIXXIXXXIXIIXXIIIXXXXXIXIIIIIIXXXIIIIXIXIIXIIIIIIIXIIIIIIIXXIIIIXXXIIIXXIIIXXIIt
·.

those lost jobs will he replaced
when Powell 's Super ValLI
opens thi &gt; weekend. In addition to carrying over 20 jobs
from the old location to the
new location. Lee Powell.
owner. said he "til employ an
additional 30 to 35 worker' at
the l &lt;u·~er store.
Despite these nwdest
ga in.&lt;. :1 t least SO percent of

hi !.W.C~l

:-.ector nf the IX:nlll)mV""tha t :-.CL' lll-. l\) be !!1"0\Vill!!
in- M~il!~ Cuuntv~ ~-1o._\

recently: J!JL• Wildhitrsc c,rlc
opened

it:..

do(lr:-o

/\the1;~ nr Ci,!llia ~.:ounti~..,

have ,!Jo\\ n joh ~.tins ill the
]Xtst se1 era! ·lllotiJh, hul that
L·o uld

h~ ~.:ha n t:ing.

U lh.'lllpfo) ment

numh~r_..,

mav t"'' " funh cr dJ,.L' if
li KN Sinter ~ki&lt;~ls in
Gallipoli' l'iuse&lt;. Tile J'l•mt
rnanuf:ti.:turl':- po\\ der dlld
fo r~cd tran.-..nli~ .. ii.Hl ~Oilil'~'­

n-:Jlh . A number ul the plant· s
~6! uurl-.cr.., liYc in ML"igs
C'm11111 . SJJK\' tile plan1 h'b
been opcr&lt;tting at a linancial
ll ,_
"'.., for ."''l.'\ L' ral \ear\, there
ha~ h..'L'II -.u111c- Jbcu.-..sion

about c!n-.in!..:! it d(HVIL
If thin~!-.-- werL·n·t ~rim
~:nuu~h . tl1crc i~ . . till a... soft

.h irin~

frcL'/1.'

at

Oh i l

L' ni1 :' rsit1

til"t
!1.1&lt;
in cffCL't ·since
F-:hru:11·1· of last \C,JL With
-. LII C hu~J!..:!~t l"llh j~lOill i ll~ . it
j...., li~L'h ~ tllttt the rc~i (;n· ..,
lttr~L'"' ~·mplo) cr w ill ~101 he ·
,parc·d and the lreetc will
rL~m ,tincd -

in rcnla tn in l'I1.L·rt.

Scptemher ;111d it cmplo) .'
abnut 50 pcopk. Fnilh
PharrnaL') npc n ~J ih door"

in Middlcponla't Nllreml1c·r
and it cmpl&lt;lys more I han 20
wo1l er~ . AcJW\'1 the rin.~r in
J\1;tsun. u Boh C''"l'
Rcst"urant opened in March
and it c mplny' at least 120
people mail) " r them fmm
Mc ig~ C~uun 1 y.

AI bt'J .1'! t'lllployec' lusl
thci rj{)b~ whc r1 Knl~~r clt~~·J
last [xl'C llll~r. hut man~ LJf

A 'car i.H!O t hi~ month .
f\1ei!..:: ( 'uunlv had tht• hi l.!hc"'t Lln~mplny i11~nt rate in lhc
'li.ltC ;Jt 13.::; percent uncmpl\1) niL'llt rali..' .• tL',:on..l ing to

the Olmr UeparllllL'III or Job
~111d

F.nnih Scr'\ icc:-.. Fl)r the

pa-.t )'L'ar. -i\ ki ~' County ha-.

been jode1 in~ back and
fnrtil with ~ lur~an l\runty
fpJ t h~ hig.lllh-.1 lrncmpluymctll rate: in the· 'tate. At I H.6
pt..'I\'L'111. \ h1rgan County

'till lc.1d in)! the!'"'-'' ·

Nurses.Week

!

Deadline is Friday,

TODAY at
(740)992-2155

becau.-..e of coJJ-.truL·t ion Ltnd
other &gt;Casonal employme nt.
the unemployment rat e in
Meigs County remain s relativel y unafkcted . If la'J
summcr·s trend-. remain the
same. the uncmphlyJnL'III
rate will d.rop on averagL' little more than on&lt;: pell'Cnt.
Ol1io's uncmplnymcnl r•ltc
n:: maincd till' ~am..: matching
the l l.$. unemployment r"tc
of 5.7 pcn.:cnt. according to
the Ohio Dc·p;ntJnenJ1lf Job&gt;
and
Familv
S~ r\"ict..~:-..
Meanwhil e. tlic majoritv trf
coLJnties in Ohio rcn1ain ·we ll
al1&lt;li'L' the statewide il'vcl. and
nine counties had u11ctnplo) ·
lllL' III rates ahmc I0 percent.
The scn·ice indusJ ry i' the

3 IN STOCK!!

2003 Ford Explorer

::
!l
n
!l

lAYTON

POMEROY
Uemployment figures have
rhangcd little during the
pa&gt;t year in Mei gs County
because of a weak national
ami regional economy.
Unemployment figures
held qeady in March ut 16
percent - nearl y the same th e workforce in \1eigs
as it was in Marcl1 lasl year Count y L'Oilllllllh:-. [() ncigh at 16.-l percent. While sum- horim! L'f' ll llli~~ fur wo rk.

~Brenda or Dave t~·

.....--;-,

Unemployment rate
remains steady
Bv J. MILES

Pick 3 day: 0-1-2
Pick 4 day: 8-5-7-1
Pick 3 night: 7-7-5
Pick 4 night: o-g-2-4
auckeye 5: I t'&gt;-17 -18-29-3 1

!j

r.:=====:::;---::-::-:::-----:-:-;--~--~,~-

for women each yea r in- Meigs
County. Across .til e 2\1-county
region. the lung cancer rate is 10.8
perce nt higher and the mortality rate
is nine percent higher.
The guest speaker al Jile mini rela y
was Betsy Nicodemus. who is a &lt;:a n&lt;:er caregiver. Nicodemus\ husband.
Roger. 48. passed away of
esophageal cancer August II. 2003.
"Because of te...:hno logy. it gave
me and my hLJs banJ a1101her year
together." she said. "I th ink thi s mini Students ilt Southern Elementary walk around the track at Southern High
Relay has opened the eyes of these School to ra ise m.oney and awareness fo r the American Cancer Society as part
students to the harsh reality of how .of a mini Relay for Life like the one that will be held at Eastern Hig11 School
cancer &lt;:an affect people of all ages.·· June 4-5. (J. Miles Layton)
·
At some point during the Ja y when
theirsehedu!es pennttlcd. more than Health Departmen t and Hol1er who hclp..xt coordinate the evem.
Relay for Life "ill b~ held Jun~ .J 500 stude nt&gt; walked or dan ced Hospi tal Tobacco Prevention project.
"I appreciate alii he help from the stall. .1 at EasJcrn H i~h Schilol. but ther~
around the track to mu sk by Rockin
students
and the volunteers that made will alsu be another mini Rcla\ fm
Reggie. Educational information
this
&lt;U
I
possible."
said Junic Mayn•u·d. Lik next week Jh cr~.
was provided by Jhc Meigs County

OmoWITERY

!:
~~

Don't Forget to congratulate
your special graduate with
a personal ad in our
Special Graduate Edition.

men and 10 nev·/ cases or lum.! ca nce r

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSEN TINEL.COM .

t:

PARENTS· GRANDPARENTS
·FRIENDS

has been ve ry successfu l." said
McGuine" . "Thi s is a great way for
kio:js to join with the ·community in
the fight against cancer."
Cancer ·rates in southeast Ohio
have been climbing in·past years and
Meigs .County· is unde r ,iegc.
according to a repmt released hy the
American Cancer Society. Between
1997 to 2000, there was an average
of It'&gt; new cases onung cancer for

Page A5
• Mildred Milburn

:tfiiiXXIIIIIIIIIUIIX:::IIX:::X:::IIIIIIXIIIXXiiiiiiiiUXUIUIIIIIIIUIIUI:r;XIIIIIXIUIIXXXIIIXXll ·

'

\\ \\" .111 ul ,u h ~'"ltlu u I co t 11

:.! OO...J

DAY OF PRAYER

OBITUARIES

dents ilivolving 15 players, according to
an Associated Press search of court
records. The problems include underage
drinking, drunken driving, disorderly
conduct, assault, falsification of a
police report to theft, robbery, felony
drug abuse and carrying a concealed
weapon.
Trapasso, a 6-foot, 220-pound player
from Central High School in ·
Pickerington, punted three times in last
month's annual intrasquad scrimmage.

t:

I )( II t \ ' , :\I .\' .......

Southern Elementary holds mini Relay for ·Life

SPORTS

•

Special to

,v

..

•

College Baseball

Redmen baseball enters AMC
Tournament as No. 3 seed

The Queen's
visit, As

Pedro, Red Sox
solve Tribe, B2

is May 6 • 12
1-11.212-5119
HOURS:
Mon - Frl9-7; Sat. 9-5

www.turnplkeflm.com

Nurslng is a ream Effort"

11

Holzer Medical Center salutes and honors
all of our nurses during this special week.

MEDICAL CENTER
Discm'el' the Floh·r I&gt;i[/('l'cncc

www.holzer .org

l"t

�PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Fridar, May 7, 2004

U.S. seizes Najaf governor's office; Baghdad.
car bomb kills five Iraqis, one U.S. soldier
BY DENIS D. GRAY

AND -

SCHEHEREZAOE FARAMARZI
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

NAJA F. lra&lt;J ~ U.S. soldiers
seized the governor·.., office
Thursday in- the holy city of
_Najaf. lvt·esting control from
'Shiite militiamen loyal to a rad:ical cleric in hallb that left an
estimated ~0 insur~elll' dead.
: In Ba2hdad. a' suicide car
;bomber killed live li~tqi cil·il·ians and an American soldia at
:the edge of the heavily guarded
:Greeti Zone that houses the
:U.S. headquancrs. The blast
;wounded 25 people. including
·two U.S. soldiers.
: Amid concerns that U.S.
:troops were about to move
:directly against anti-American
·cleric Muqtada ai-Sadr. his
:militiamen dug in in Najaf. tak:ing positions behind e•U1hen
;mounds leading into the city
·center rutd firing a barrage of
:mortm shells and small anns
.fire at the U.S. base here late
:Thursday.
. Ameri&lt;:an soldiers rcspLinued
:with a heavy ban·age of 120mm
:monar tire. U.S. jets streaked
:across the blackened night sky.
:and two large plumes of smoke
-could be seen rising over the
: ea~t bank of the Euphrates.
: Earlier Thursday. gunmen
·took cover behind buildings as
American helicopters !lew
'overhead. An increased number
:of fighters were seen in the city
·center as the militia attempted
:to regroup after losing the gov:emor's oftice.
: ·•we will tight . until the last
:drop of our blood." said Dhia
-Shami. as he stood behind a din
. de.
.'bamca
: "We expect the Americans to
·retreat." ' said fellow militiaman
:Malek Holeicha. "We are light :ing for our faith. They don't
:have any faith."
·
: At the city's Imam Ali shrine.
·one of the holiest sites in Shiite
:Islam. a coftin wrapped in an
. :Iraqi nag was brought in :apparently one of the dead
:from the lighting.
· "This is a martyr for
:Muqtada," mounters chanted.
: The Najaf fighting came as
:chief U.S. administrator L Paul
·Bremer announced the appoint.ment of Adnan al-Zuruti as
:govemor of Najaf province, a
:step that is pan of the campaign
·to regain control of the area
'from ai-Sadr's militiamen. His
ai-Mahdi Anny seized government buildings and police stalions throughout the province
on April 4.
The United States is planning
to. hand some sovereignty to a
transitional Iraqi government

I I I '''
•••

Former Oregon governor
·admits sexual relationship
with 14-year-old girl in 1970s
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) ~
Former Gov. Neil Goldschmidt
told a newspaper that he had a
sexual relatmnship with a· 14year-{)fd girl when he·wa~ mayor
of Portland in the 1970s. The disclosure came the swne day
Goldschmidt resigned two chairman post&gt;.
Goldschmidt. whose · single
four-year term ended in 1991 , told
The Oregonian for a story in
Friday editions that his knowledge of upcoming media
accounts of the altair and deteriorating health prompted him to
resign and come fm:ward with the
story.
Before the st01y surfaced late
Thursday, Goldschmidt resigned
as chairman of the {)reooo Board
.
" as chairof Higher
Education and
man of the board of a linn trying
to acqui~ Ponland General
Electric, Oregon's largest utility,
citing health rea'il&gt;ns only.
. One of the state's most intluential behind-thc·sccnes political
players, Gold1Chmidt told The
Oregonian that he has lived witl1
"enonnous guilt an(! shrune" for
30years.
BefOre the publi&gt;hed accmmL
the Willamette Week, a weekly
shopper
that
prints
on
Wednesdays, reported 011 it~ Web
site Thllr.iday that it told the governor a day earlier it wa1 preparing a Slot):' alleging his aflair. .
According to Oregon laws 111
effect in 1975. sexual intercotmie
with a girl under age 16 con&gt;liWted thirrl«gree mpe. The &gt;talute
of limitations, however. ha&gt; loog
since pa&gt;.'ied.
Golcbchmidt who w:t&gt; married
ar the time of Ore nine-montl1 rei a-

tion,hip. said he didn't think there
m-e tmy legal rmnificutiuns.
"How can such behavior he
era-.ed when the uamaoe to otl1ers .
and to myselflivcs on·.il· he said in
a st.1tement to The Ore~oni,m . "I
have '-&lt;11 in places of wofi;hip each
yeill' at Yom Kippur, the day of
atonemenl in my religiou~ tnttlition. reading in silence. searching
for personal pe:tee. And I have
found that the answer to that question is that it cm1110t he eraled.
''Tlte pain mtd damag~ that I
have cauS&lt;."d have been with me
constm11Iy. I have known all '~ong
U1&lt;1l my private apologic&gt; wKl
actions. deep •md 011e though they
wen~. would never be enough. I
apologitc now. publicly :md completely."
Goldschmidt mtd his lawyer
did not return -.everal phone call:
trom The A'sOl1Ulcd Press.
Rumor; of extr.umtrital afbil'i
were
hintetl
at
dllring
Goldschmidt\ political cill'eer.
and Ire .decidt"&lt;&lt; against a &gt;eeond
tenn a' govemor after his fir~t
marriage ended.
Gold\Chmidt was UWIS[Xll1atinn -,ecretary lilr the C:u1er
admini&gt;tnttion. m1 exL·wtivc with
Nike and rut intematiom~ u:tdc
consultant
The relationship stancd in
1975. when Gold\Chmidt was 35.
and ended in 1976. Gold"hmidt
said he agreed to a tinancial settlcmcnt with the womw1 in 1994.
Goldschmidt ;umounccd hi&gt;
rc&gt;!~nmion fium tltc state B&lt;xlflf
of Higher Education on ThUtxlt)
&lt;dicnxxm. citing only his hc; ~th
~nhlems - heu1 arrhythmia •uRI
hlockcd :meric&lt;.. which put him at
ti.&gt;k li&gt;r a hew1 atiJ.tck.

• Bobcat • Shonnlu
New Idea • Rhino
New Holland • Cub cadet

16" 1 Topping

615-1812
· Point Pleasant, WV

113-5536
Mason, WV
Delivery reatrictiona ~'l.'~'~!Y •lot ~·'"'
with other offers.

Cl!eck lilt IHI
dr!OIIIWIICIIOI.CDII

PIZZA

sg.gg

.......
oey

• DiagnoStic X-Rays

• Personal
Rehabilitation

FARM
EQUIPMENT, INC.
2150 Eastern Avenue
IZJ Callipolis, Ohio •

44&amp;-om or 446-2484

(740)446-7227

• Nutritional Counseling
• Personal Injury
• Workers Compensation

• New Owners
• New Management
• Newly Remodeled

• Most Insurance Accepted Lin chul;nJ

United Health

101 Upper RIVIII' Rd.
BIIIIPOIIS. Ohtl 4503f

New Hour&lt;~: M.W.Th. F 7:30 -):( I{J ,
Tuc -7;.~·0-7 t)() S&lt;II.IUIO- )1 .00

Olll'n H i1 11r~ :

740-441-0200

.\1\m - Thur ~: I I :tll)aJJt· I U:Oilp111

1-888-451-2225
990 2nd Ave. •

Fri Sat: II :(Xlam- I (I:JOpm
Sun : 11 :

Public meetings
Monday, May 10
TUPPERS PLAINS,
Tuppers Plains Regional
Sewer District Board, 7 p.m. ,
sewer office.
Tuesday, May 11
DARWIN - · The Bedford
Township Trustees will hold
their regular monthly meeting at 7 p.m. at the township
halL

Donna Jenkin ~ will serve as
hostesses.
Monday, May 10
POMEROY
Meigs
County Republican Party
regular meeting. 7:30 p.m ..
Salem Township Firehouse.
Tuesday, May 11
POMEROY
- Meigs
County
Chamber
. of
Commerce wi II hold its
monthly Business Minded
Luncheon at noon on
Tuesday at the Wild Horse
Cafe. Theresa Lavender of
the
Meigs
County
Department of Job and
Family Seyvices will spe&lt;\1&lt;
about
the
One-Stop
Employment and Training
Center and employment
.opportunities.

Saturday, May 8
BURLINGHAM
Burlingham
Modern .
Woodmen will meet for a
potluck ·dinner at 6 p.m. at the
halL Mothers will be recognized with a flower:
RUTLAND
Rerum
Saturday, May 8
Jonathan Meigs · Chapter,
·LONG BOTTOM - Glad
Daughters of the American Hearts. from Parkersburg ,
Revolution will meet at I0 W.Va. will sing at 7 p.m. at
Olive
Community
a.m. on Saturday at the Meigs Mt.
Elementary School for a Church.
building tour with Principal
MIDDLEPORT ~ Gabriel
Rusty Bookman. Pauline Quanet at Middleport Ct 1rch
Atkins. Sharon Jewell and of the Nazarene, 7 p.m.

Church services

must cover every numb,r on your card to win.

:...r:;._ _ _..,

New Shoes
Arriving Daily Y

KIPLING

With new vehicle purchase.

SHOE CO.

Seelllmpike for details.

"Shoe' for the entire family"

DILES

HEARING
.CENTER

DEAR
ABBY:
I'm
engaged to marry "Kun" in
August. He has a 3-year-old
daughter. "Krystal." from his
first marriage. We didn't
meet until a month after hi s
wife, "June," left him. so I'm
not a home wrecker.
I moved in with Kun several weeks after we began dating
and have been cleaning his
house, taking care of Krystal ·
when she.'s here, doing his ·
laundry, cooking for him just like a wife would do.
Abby, June doesn't warit
KrystaL She remarried six
weeks ago and has asked us
to take her. June 's husband is
loud, mean and abusive, so I
don't think it would be safe
for Krystal to stay there.
· My problem is I can't stand
kry staL She's a spoiled brat.
I don' t want to be a full-time
!nother, although at some
point I'd like to have a child
of my own.
I haven't told Kurt how I
feel because I'm afraid he'd
~ick me out. Now I'm wondering if I should tell him I'm
feaving before he sends me
on my way. I don't think we
can work this out because he
loves .Krystal, and l don' t
ihink he'd understand why I
aon' t want to be her stepmother. What should I do?~
UNWILLING STEPMOTHER IN NEW MEXICO
DEAR
UNWILLING:
Level with Kurt, the sooner
the better. Unless you can
accept that he and Krystal are
a package deal and learn ·to
love her, to marry him would
be !I' mistake and a disservice
to all of you. That little girl
has already struck out once in
the mother depanment. Kurt
needs a wife who is ready to
embrace not only him , but
also the child who will

r-TI
'
~ MERCU RY
HOURS:
Men · Fri 9-7; Sal. 9-5

-w.turnplkeflm.com

MASON
FURNITURE
COMPANY

~Qualify;

Selectim1 • SL~n ' icl'

304-773-5592
2nd Str~ct

Ma1on, WV

304-675-7870

•

a.l
•
O...J~ ~.n~te.

Other events
Saturday, May 8
POMEROY - Letter carriers in Pomeroy will collect
non-perishable- food items
from homes on the Pomeroy
route on Saturday. for donation to the Meig s United
Methodist
Cooperative
Parish.

Support Groups
Friday, May 14
MASON.
W.Va.
Widows Fellowship, noon. at
Bob Evans Restaurant.

lifestyle is not being unreasonable. It's your money. and
you can spend it ~or not ~
as you see fit.
Let her know that as an
adult , her choices are her
Dear
own. If she chooses to get a
Abby
job and work her way through
school in order to be close to
her boyfriend , that is her
choice. It would be nice if she
had
a
self-supporting.
always be a high priority 'in upwardly mobile love interest
his life.
· ~. but si nee she doesn · t. and
DEAR ABBY: Our 20-year- she's determined to live with
old daughter was suspentled
from a small private university. him, she must pay the price.
As to the fastest way to get
We offered her tutors. lessons
or a transfer to any number of "the of!'' out of the picture . .
other schools around the coun- here 's what NOT to do: Do
try to help her lind the right not bad-mouth him . It will
field of study. She refused. She only make her defensive and
can do the work: she was just drive them closer together.
Dear Abb\' is . Ll'riuen b\'
not motivated.
Abigail
v,,;, Buren, als~J
She now wants to attend a
large university in another known as Jeanne Pl1illips,
state to be near her boyfriend. and · was ./(mnded In her
We suspect that they want to morhe1; Pauline Phillips.
Dear
Abhr
a1
live together. He smokes Write
www.DearAbbv.com
PO.
dope and lives on welfare,
and this is unacceptable to us. Bnx 69440, Lns Angeles, CA
She says she's tinally find- 90069.
ing her backbone and becom. '
ing independent. We told her
that . being
independent
means assuming financial
respons;bility for oneself,
and that we will no longer
provide anything beyond
medical and dental coverage
for her. She thinks we're cutting the purse strings on her
lifestyle"
new "college
because we don't like her
boyfriend, which is true.
Are we being unreasonable? Also. any advice on the
fastest way to get that oaf out
of the picture would be
appreciated. -MAD-AS-AHORNET MOM IN VIRGINIA
DEAR MOM: Refusing to
subsidize
her
" live-i n"

targe Gazebo
with 4x4

$10.00 down/SIO.OO Month/0% Interest*

~

Sgt. Greg Fields recently
returned home after being
with the National Guard I092
Engineering Battalion in
Operation Iraqi Freedom for
the past year.
A Pomeroy native and
Meigs High School graduate,
Fields is the son of Joe and
Rita Fields. He lives in
Wilkesville with his wife,
Terra, and children , Randi
and Taylor.

1-800-200-4005 or (740) 667-7388
Hours: Monday- Thursday 9·5; Friday 9-6; Saturday 9-4; Closed Sunday

H A

p

p

M

y

g

A

Audiologists on staff.
Wide ranee of technology and
Diftaland other hNringalds.
Amplified telephone and TV devices
435 SICOIId lVOIH • hiHHitl, DB

1140-446·1611 •100-231-1111
IIDIIftl: MDI-IIIII 1:10-1:01

•
•
•

•

•

•

••

y

-y

~

~

~:tZ'~

~:tZ'~

~:tZ'~ .

Pam Shields

Melissa
·Kisner

In Memory
Happy Mother's
Day
Helen jeffers
April 7. 1997

Love,
Dusty, Zach
&amp;. Trish

Missed by
Bob and girls

'

•

•

Sunday TimesSentinel
'

Subscribe today¥ 740-446-2342

and

Feeder Base

· [dilEJ

~

~afJ!uf

-~

~aflluf

~:tZ'~

~:tZ'~

~:tZ'~

Trudy Lyons

Carolyn Salser

Eu/onda
Haley

•

Free huringwHttlnls.

F~er

Po~l

QUALITY
FURNITURE
PLUS
42123 State Route 7 • Tuppers Plains, OH •-.;

or

Sgt. Greg Fields

Rt.2Bypass
Point Pleooont, WV

Refreshments .
Sunday. May 9
LAUREL CLIFF- Bobbv
Siders of Columbu' will sing
during morning worship service. 10:30 a.m.. at Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church .
Pastor Glenn Rowe invites
the public.
Monday, May 10
LONG
BOTTOM
Revival through May I~ at
Faith Full Gospel Church. 7
p.m .. with Dave Dailey us
guest speaker.

Lovet
Tosh, Tommy,
Trish &amp;. Zach

iS...

Tl
F
L

•

Girlfriend is eager·to be
wife but not stepmother

Luckv
Number

Friday, May 7, 2004

Community Calendar

Clubs and
organizations

An Iraqi fam ily looks at the site where a car bomb exploded near
a checkpoint to th, main complex housing U.S. administrative
offices 111 central Baghdad. Iraq. Thursday, killing at least five
Iraqi civ1lians and one U.S. soldier and injuring 25 people, the
U.S. military said. (AP Pholo/Muhamrned Muhe1sen)
June .iO and is looking to end carded desk a few hundred.
ai-Sadr's uprising. which has yards from the city's main
left pans of southem lrayi out- Shiite shrines.
A witness told Ass.ociated
. side of malition control.
Press
Television News that
U.S. troops have been stepping up their assaults on al- troops fired on the insurgents
Sadr's followers.
raiuing and ended up destroying four
offices and buildings where buses of Pakistani pilgrims.
we&lt;lpons &lt;u·e stored in several which were seen burning. The
.smnhem cities in increasingly witness said ···three or four ..
blooJ1 skirmishes. Moderate Pakistanis had been killed.
U.S Army soldiers secure the s ite where a car bomb exploded near a checkpoint to the main
Shiite. leaders have called on al"We 're going to demolish complex housing U.S. administrative offices in central Baghdad . Iraq. Thursday, ki lling at least
Sadr's militiamen to ahandon them ~ and even Bush ... five Iraqi civilians and one U.S. soldier .and injuring 25 people. the U.S. military said. (AP
Najaf. isolating the cleric and shouted one maskd man. wal'- Photo/Muhammed Muheisen)
making it easier for U.S. forces in ~ a Kala&gt;hniko1·. ·'We're
gl~ ng to win. by God \ will."
checkpoint.
organizing militants to fight ~ave hi~ nam ~ ;p., Ahan Elias
to act ?tgainsl him.
Militiamen also fired on
The U.S. soldier slain by lite U.S. troops in Iraq on behalf of ;.nd sail! lte was !rom Denver.. '
On Thursdav. U.S. forces·
··1 am a civil t:IH1in~t!r work~
moved .to outlying areas of Italian troops huther south ne•u· bomb was the 21st U.S. scr- al-Qaida. The statement's
N•uaf. Jrawing militants from r\asiriyah. wounding one. tlte vil·ematl killed in lra4 in May. authenticity could . not he con- ing here in Baghd~rd:· he saicl.
adding that he worked li&gt;r th~
. The suicide bomber also died. tinned.
the city center and enabling Italian military said.
In the past two days U.S. sol- . An Internet statement .signed
Abo Titursday.the U.:'). mili- Penla£on.
other troops lO · sci1.c the tli'oEli ~~'- shown on Dubai -baseil
story g&lt;11ernor's o1lice without diers estimate they have ki lled by a ~,~·oup linked to al-Qaida tary said two U.S. soldiers were
ahout 80 militiamen. One U.S. daimed responsihility.
killed and two were wounded Al-A rabiya TV appealed to
resistance.
An estimated -10 militiamen soldier was killed Wednesday.
The statement. on .a Web site when a roadside bomb ex plod- Islamic associ at.ion' to work for
W"P'
Llll[·
• • kliJC"u1 ill '.'LIIlb,·ttlh
,
"lthink we are going to gain known for militant Islamic ed in Baghdad just before mid- his release.
&gt;ide the city. said Capt. Roger momentum from now on.'' said messages. was signed by the night Wednesday.
With tl1e tape came a stalc'Maynulet. a tank company Lt . Michael Watson . a platoon military · wmg
or
the
Meanwhile. a blindfolded melll from a prel'iousl y
commander with the Army's leader with the 2nd Armored "Monothei sm
and
Jihad · mart described as an lrctqi-. unknown group calling ibelf
2nd
Armored
Cavalry Cavalry Regiment in Najaf.
Group." which is believed led American being held hostage in '"The b la m1c Rage Brigade.~·
Regiment.
Th~ Baghdad bomb exploded by Abu Musab ai-Zari1awi . The Iraq was shown pleading 1()1' The gro up said Elias was kidAfter the soltliers took the outside a 3-foot-higlt ·concrete Jordanian is wanted by the help on an Arab TV station.
napped on May J It ll1:tdc no
building, heavy ~unfirc was bi &lt;L~t wall that protects a U.S. .United States for allegedly
The man, speaking English. demands.
heard near the govemor \ oftice
and smoke was seen rising.
Gunmen fired from rooftops as
motorists fled through deserted
streets. honking their homs. .
One U.S. convoy of
Humvees leaving the area was
ambushed twice in I0 minutes
by insurgents tiring rocket-propelled grenades and auton'tatic
rifles from rootiops. An AP
reponer who witnessed the
~macks saw five militants who
appear to have been killed in
retaliatory lire.
.
Elsewhere. coalition troops
exchanged gunfire with dozens
of ai-Sadr militiamen in
· Karbala. 50 miles nonh of
Chiropractic All You Can Eat!
Najaf. 'v!ilitiamen took ambush
.....,_.,:;;. 111- Center
Massey f&lt;l'1uson • Farmhand
positions behind cars and a dis---1

-Page Aa

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Love,
Aubree ]alene

'

Love,
Denny&amp;.
linda

Love,

"".1rk &amp;.
Teresa Haley

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. HIll
Controller-Interim Publisher
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 grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

VIEW

anks
Enjoyed entertainment
Dear Editor:
We were invited to the banquet at Overbrook Center for the
volunteers churches and were very happy with the entertainment by Myron Duffield and his lovely wife. They are very
talented and the music was very nostalgic memories that some
of us sang along. Not only did the staff prepare a wonderful
meal. but they took us back with the tunes of yesteryear and
they were blessed with their talent.
I don't think anyone could top them. They reminded me of
showboat days.
·

Friday, May 7,

2004

End of the world

The Daily Sentinel

READER'S

PageA4

Paul Maier's latest theological thriller, 'More Than a
Skeleton' (Thomas Nelson,
2003) is a sequel to his bestseiling suspense novel. ·A
Skeleton in God's Closet'
(Thomas Nelson, 1994).
Both are gripping mysteries.
What may be the biggest
mystery of all, however, is
why this Harvard-educated
college history professor at
Western
Michigan
University has chosen to
take on the big guns of the
strong (and growing) evangelical movement, which
has made Bible prophecy a
runaway success in churches
and · bookstores across the
nation.
The popularity of the fictional 'Left Behind' series of
books detailing the 'end
times' when Christ returns to
Earth (the Second Coming)
is unprecedented . Tyndale
House, publisher of the
series written by Jerry B.
Jenkin s and Tim LaHaye ,
sold more than 40 million
copies of the first II volumes in the series.
The
12th
volume.
'G lorious Appearing.' is
now on sale. This is the final
book in the series. It tells of
Christ's return to begin his
1,000-year earthly reign as
told in the Book of
Revelation.
Maier, a Bible-believer
himself and an ordained
clergyman in the Lutheran
Church-Missouri
Synod,

George
Plagenz

where they don't come much
more conservative. is the son
of the late Walter Maier.
famed 'Lutheran Hour · radio
speaker. Maier believes the
Jenkins-LaHaye follow.ers
are taking things too far. He
refers to the movement as
the 'excessive prophecy fixation in Christendom today.·
'I fear.' he says. 'that overliteralizing of what is obviously symbolic material in
the Bible sends some people
into a panic. disillusions others when prophecies fail and
antagonizes still others with
the image of a strange.
quixotic God.·
He adds, The heart of the
gospel is replaced by amateur forecasting which turns
away serious seekers. ' Maier
hopes th at his current book,
'More Than a Skeleton.' will
leave a truer impression of
what Christianity has always
believed about the last days
- 'without the beasts. horrors. tribulation and doomsday scenarios.·
. In a story on the ·prophecy
mania' in Time magazine,
only one negative observa-

Keith and Dolly Woods
Middleport

tion of the trend was quoted.
It came from - guess who
-Paul Maier. who has broken ranks with his fellow
evangelicals on the matter of
' the end times."
Christianity has a lways
taught that the days of this
world are numbered. The
Bible points to the signs that
will accompany the ' last
days.· With these Bible signs
as their guide. prophets
through the ages have
warned that the .curtain was
about to fall on human histo-.
ry. So far they have all been
wrong.
·
But more Christians than
ever appear to believe that
the 'end time' is approaching. One recent poll has said
that 17 percent of Americans
believe the end of the world
will come in their lifetime.
Some believers have even
pasted instruct ions on the
dashboards of their automohiles. telling passengers
what to c,lo if the driver of the
car should suddenly be
whi ; ked from behind the
steering wheel m.1d transportcd to heaven.
The passengers who sud- ·
denly find themselves in a
driverless . vehicle are told,
·Do not panic Shut off the
ignition and steer the car to
the side of the road.' (Note:
lf you are in a car with
pnwer steeri ng . be forewarned. Such cars won't
steer with the ignition off.)
Many who take these pre-

cautions seriously have read
the 'Left Behind' series,
which purports to be a trueto-life account of Earth's last
days, when believers will be
snatched away from whatever they arc doing and taken
to ·meet the Lord in the sky"
- a process known as 'the
rapture.'
The word ·rapture· comes
from the Latin word meaning 'to seize or carry off.'
St. Paul describes the rap- .
ture in these words in one of
his letters: 'The Lord shall
descend from heaven ... and
the dead in Chr.ist shall rise
tirst. \hen we who are alive
... shall be caught up together with them in the clouds
and meet the Lord in the
mr.
Does Maier. author of the
two 'skeleton' books., have
plans to rattle more bones?
His latest hook . coauthored
by
Hank
Hanegraaff. takes on Dan
Brown 's bestselling novel
'The
DaVinci
Code'
(Doubleday. 2003). Titled
'DaVinci Code: Fact or
Fiction?' (Tyndale House.
2004 ). .the book alerts readers of the immensely popular .
novel to its ·immense number of errors.'
Beyond thi s current book ,
Maier leaves open the possibility that another theologica l thriller may appear
before the 'end time s.'
Move over. Father Andrew
Greeley.

MONICA,
· ROSSI

Moderately Confused

RACHEl,
CHANDLER,
JOE~

PHOEBE ...

PIMP

MY

RIDE.

Should conservatives trust the people?

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concern in all· stories is to be
accurate. If y'ou know ot an error in a
story. call the newsroom at (740} 9922156.

Our main number Is
(740) 992-2156.
Department axterislons are:

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12 '
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: J. Mites layton , Ext. 13

Advertising

(UsPs 213-9&amp;0)
. Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published
every
afternoon,
Monday through Friday, 111 Court
Street , Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
postage paid at Pomeroy.

Member: The A'ssociated Press
Ohio
Newspaper
and
the

Association.
Postmaster: Send address correc·
lions to 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 .............•.•..so•
Senior Citizen rates
o .ne month .. . . . ..... • .' 8.95

Outtlde Sileo: Dave Harris, Ext. 15

One year ; -. .. . .... . ...1 96.70

ClasoJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10

Subscribers should remit in
advance direct to The Daily
Sent1nel. No subscription by mail

Circulation
Olotrlct Mgr.: TBA, Ext. 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich , Ext. 12
E-mail:
news@mydailysentinel.com

Web:
www.mydallysentinel.com

permitted in areas where home
carrier service is available.

Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks ....... . ....• ' 30.15

26 Weeks ....... . ..... '60.00

52 Weeks ....... . ....' 118.80
Rates Outside Meigs County
t3 Weeks . .
. . ' 50 05
26 Weeks
... ' 100. 10
52 Weeks .. ..... . . . ' 200.20

Recent developments in
California have made some
conservative theori sts a little
uneasy, even though the
results have been, at first
blush. heartening. California
William
is one of about 20 states that
Rusher
have initiative and referendum provisions in their constitutions. These provide
that, by the petition process,
proposals can be put before put a permanent cap on real
the voters in general elec- estate taxes; banned bilintions. Such an 'initiative.' if gual education (insisting on
passed, becomes a part of English); outlawed 'atfirmastate law, or even part of the tive action· in state educastate constitution, just as if it tion, employment, and conhad been adopted by the leg- tracting; and, most recently,
islature. And a ' referendum,' decreed that state spending
. by tlje same token, can in val- must ne.ver exceed state revidate a law the legislature enues . And last year, after
has already passed. In eft'ect, the Democrat-controlled legthe voters act. for these pur- islature and a Democratic
poses, as a sort of super-leg- governor had run up a state
islature.
deficit bigger than that of all
California, however (and 49 other states combined, the
many other states), go even voters recalled Democratic
further. The state constitu- Gov. Gray Davis less than a
tion provides for the recall of · year into his second fourthe governor, and other high year
term
and
put
state ofticials. by the same Republican
Arnold
process - a petition to put Schwarzenegger in his place.
the removal of a particular
It goes without saying that
official on the ballot, fol- these developments have
lowed by a vote of the peo- distressed the state's liberals
pie in a special election or (if no end. What is the point of
it's close enough) the next making the legislature and
general election.
the governor the stooges of a
In recent years, these tech- bunch of powerful unions.
niques have become increas- • and then pouring billion s
ingly p61mlar in California . into the latter's coffers. if the
By u;.e of the initiative pro- voters can make end run&gt;
vision , California voter' around the usual legislative
have. among other things, process? What is rather more

surpn smg, however, is that
certain conservatives aeree
with the liberal c ritique.~
These
conservatives
stress that.the several states,
and the federal government,
have never been, and were
never intended to be. direct
plebiscitary democracies, in
which the voters as a whole
make the laws. On the contrary, they are representative democracies, in which
the voters choose representatives who in turn, after
due deliberation , make the
law s. This provides a needed distance between the
passions (and, it may be,
the misinformation) of the
voters and the adoption of
the laws that will shape and
control society.
This arrangement is inherently a conservative one, and
admittedly ought not to be
trifled with lightly. Even if
the legislature and the governor make mistakes, their
need to seek public approval
and re-election will (or so
the argument goes) keep
them obediem to the voters'
wi;,hes in the long-run.
But California's rec~ll , initiative and referendum
processes were afl adopted a
~entury l1go when Hiram
1ohnson. ;1 progressive
Republican governor (he
was later Teddy Roosevelt's
running-mate on the 1912
'Bull Moose· ticket). per'uaded the voters that the

legislature .was in the pocket
of the Southern Pacific
Railroad and that only drastic measures could cure t))e
problem.
The reform devices have
all been .used only very spar·
ingly eyer since (no . recall
effort against a governor.
prior to last year's, ever succeeded), until Democratic
control of the state · government, beginning some 2C
years ago, started producin~
laws dear to liberal heam
but at sharp variance with
the voters' wishes.
In other words, the
Johnson reforms are doin~
exactly what they were
intended to do: limit the
damage a runaway legislature can do, and·force it back
on track. Already it is cleat
that the Democrats in the
legislature have gotten the
message. They may not have
seen the light, but they have
felt the heat, and they have
already crumpled before
Schwarzenegger'!
Gov.
demands for deficit reduc·
tion, budget reform, and
other specific reforms.
There is nothing un-conser·
vative about that. 'Trust the
people.' Winston Churchill
reminded Congress in 1941.
It is still good advice today.
( William Rusher is a
Distinguished Fellow of thf
Claremont Institute for thf
Studr of Statesmanship ano
Poliricaf Philosop!ty.)

Friday, May 7,

2004

Obituaries

Local Briefs·

Mildred Milbum

Senior Play

MIDDLEPORT
Mildred I. "Mic" Clark
M i I b u r n r---:::::---,
70.
of
Middleport
went to be
with
her
parents.
John
&amp;
A I i c e
C h u t e
Clark,. and •
her brother. ..........._
Paul Clark.
on Wednesday May 5, 2004.
She was born March 15.
1934 in Racine. She was a
homemaker.
Besides her parents and
Brother she was preceded in
death by her faithful. loyal
Pekinese. Andy.
She is survived by her
companion and friend Jan
Durst, Middleport; her chi ldren: Rose (Mike) Tyburski.
Charlotte. N.C .. John Ord.
Racine. Cathe.rine Hass.
Columbus. Debra ( Randv)
Blanton. Paintsville. Ky.,
Robert
Milburri
Jr ..
Columbus,Paul
(Darlene)
Milburn. Chillicothe, Tammy
(Mark) Clemens, Columbus,
Patrick Milburn, :Chillicothe,
David Milburn. Co lumbu s.
and Kelly (Kevin) Murphy.
Galena; 22 grandchildren and
II great grandc hildren: a
brother. Floyd ··so" (Lee)
Clark, Portland. Ore.: and a
sister: Mabel Wickline .. New
Matamoras.
Services will he held· at 11
a.m. on Saturday. May ~.
2004. at Fisher Funeral
Home in Middleport.
Burial will follow at
Graham Station Cemetery in
New Haven. W.Va. Friends
may call from 6 to 8 p.m. on
Friday at the funeral home.
On-line condolences mav
be sent to www.fisherfuneraihomes.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentincl.com

The Queen's visit
Tj

RACINE - The Southern High School senior play will
he "Up in the Air"' at 7 p.m. Friday at Southern High School.
"Up in the Air" lasts two hours an&lt;J there i' no set price for
admi"iun. just a donation.

'

Variety Show
ROCKSPRINGS - · The annual variety ;,how will be held
at 7 p.m. Friday and Saturday in the Mei~s High School gymnasium . The price for admission is $5 tor adults and $3 for
'tudents.

Fair registration
for Market Animals
ROCKSPRINGS -The Junior Fair Market animal tagin and registration i~ 7 a.m. to I0 a.m. Saturday at the
Rocksprings Fairgrounds.

Plan yard sale
CHESHIRE-. A yard sale to benefit the bus ministry at
Hillside Baptist Church of Pomeroy will be held from 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. on Friday and Saturday at 8892 North Ohio
7. Cheshire. next to the railroad tracks.

Plan fair
POMEROY -· A Deaf Awareness and Health Fair will he held
· from II a.m. until I p.m. for students at Meigs High School. and
I tCl 3 p.m. for the community, al the school on Tuesday.
Information about deafness. as well as free weight and hlood
pressure checks, information about high blood pressure. childhood depression. 'hepatitis and arthrit is will be offered.
The ~vent is co-spoilsorecj by Washington State
Community College and Meigs High School and information is avai lable by contacting Jacki~ Newsome at 992-2158.

For the record
Marriage licenses
POMEROY - Marriage li ce nses have been issued
in Meigs County Probate Court to David D. Williams.
47. and Colleen S. · Flanagen. 33. both of Albany:
David Lee Fowler. ~4. St. Joseph. Mo.. and Mary
Ellis Beals, 43. Middleport: and Larry O'Neal Napper.
26. Rutland. and Juley Ann Eblen. . 19. Pomeroy.

Weatherfotds to appear at Gospel
Lighthouse Church
Th e Weatherfords will
appear in concert &lt;ll 7 p.m .
Wednesday, May 12 at the
Gospel Lighthouse Church
in Point Pleasam.
The Weatherfords began
their career and ministry in
1944, under the gro up 's
founder, Earl Weatherford.
Withi.n a few years , they
began to develop a distinctive sound, which would
separate them from the typical quartets of that era. By
the mid so·s they were recognized by gospel music
lovers · everywhere as the
indu stry 's foremost singe rs
of close harmony and blend.
Their classic album. "In The Friends" and "What a
Garden" released ·in 1959, Precious . Friend Is He.''
still stands as one of the Both. which feature the vel most beloved gospel record- very voice of legendary Lily
ings of all time.
Fern Weatherford. are st ill
Top name gospel singers, being performed at every
who
achieved
national Weatherford · concert. Earl.
prominence while serving Lily and their son Steve.
with
the
Weatherfords, · have all been featured on
include such greats as Henry th e
popui&lt;1r
Gaither
Slaughter.
Olen
Payne, "Homecomi ng" series of
George Younce, Armond videos.
Morales,
Bobb y Clark.
After Earl Weatherford's
Danny Koker, and
Jim death in 1992, lead singer
Hammill.
Steve Weatherford. took on
For several years during the road and stage managerthe 50's and 60's, the ial duties for the group. The
Weatherfords were well Weatherfords: based in Paoli,
known across the nation · as Okla., are still enjoying
the church choir of Pastor great success and are loved
Rex Humb'ard's "Cathedral by a vast number of gospe l
of Tomorrow" in Akron, music followers. The other
Ohio. During the week, they member of the group, Kelley
would give concerts across· Looper, from Brooksville,
the country, but always Fla., contributes to the tradireturned to sing for Sunday tion of smooth harmony.
services. They were viewed
During the 90's. Earl and
and loved by thousands as Lily Fern were presented the
they appeared on a weekly Lifetime Achievement Award
TV program which originat- by the Great Plains Music
ed from the Cathedral.
Singing Association; The
The group's two most Living Legend Award by the
memorable songs down Grand Ole Gospel Reunion;
through the decades, which and Favorite Mixed Group
are still being requested by by Great Plains Gospe l
hundreds of Weatherford Music Association. Lily Fern
lovers,
are
"Tell
My received
the
Female

Celebrating s~cial
days'with you! ·
Sunday Times-Sentinel
992-2155

Entertainer of the Year. 1993
and 1994. from the Great
Plains
Gospel
Music
Association. and in 1998.
the Living . Legacy Award
from
th e
WQm~n · s
International Center in Sail
Diego. Cali f. Many importam and intluential women
have recei ved this honor. but
she is the first in any kind
of Christian ministry to be
honored by this organiLation.
Lily Fern has also received
two honorary doctorates in
music,
th e firs t from
Oakland City University in
Indiana. and the other from
Pacific
International
Univers ity
Springfield
Missouri campus. Earl and
Lily have been inducted into
the Southern Gospel Music
Association Hall of Fame perhaps the most significant
honor to be bestowed upon
Southern Gospel performers .
Still dedicated to traveling
ch urch
ministry..
The
Weatherfords · perform year
round, from coast to coast.

The National Historic Landmark. Delta Queen docked in Gallipolis Thursday as a part of its tour
of the Ohio River. Today, Mason countians can get a g11mpe of yesteryear when it docks at the
Riverfront Park in Point Pleasant. W.Va. (Contributed photo!.

After harrowing st~rt to fire
season, problems persist for
California firefighting agencies
SAN DIEGO 1 API
Southern California·, 11 ildtire -;cason got off to a harrowing start 'this week that
demonqrated all too dearly
that the state still faces man y
or the same problems it did
.during la't fall's catastrophic
fires.
A half-million acres of
· bug-infested.
tinde r-dr y
trees have ·yet to be
remo,·ed. Firefighting agencies arc still understaffed
and short on cash.
lncon,istent
buildin~
codes in fire-prone areas
continue to put homes at
ri sk. Confusion persists.
about the rules fnr when 10
activate military aircraft.
And incompatible communi cation networks prevent firerighters from talking to each
other.
"To put firefighters on the
. ground and aircraft in the air
means monev. and there is
·no new money." said Charl es
Maner.
chief
of th e .
California Departnient of
Forestry and Fi re Protection
in San Diego.
This week ·s fires have
blackened more than 29.000
acres and forc ed hundreds to
!lee their homes. mo stly in
Ri ve rside County. east of
Los Angeles. Those areas
were largely unscathed by
la't year's blat.es. wltich
killed 2~ people. destroyed
3,1\3 1 homes and charred
nearly 750.000 acres.
Firefighters aided by
milder weather had th e
upper hand 011 the fires
Thursday, bllt officials are
bracing for a long i.H ld dan gerous su mm er. in part
because of extre mel y hot
and dry weather latel y.
") think we' re .sittin~ on a
powder keg.'· said ' John
Huwk i n ~. a senior Forestry

Department· commander in
Sun Diego during la~t year\
fires who h:b since joined
the Ri1·erside County Fire
Department.
Officiab note sewra l
improvements this . season.
including better training for
military pilots and new com-

putent.ed 'ystems 10 warn
residents of fires. San Diego
banneu new homes with
wood-,hingletl roofs. and
l'ederal officials Wednesdav
relaxed rule' for sending
millions of dollars to remow
dead trees in three at-ri sk
cou n ti~s. The muncy has yet
to be give n out. however.
Out' many vulnerabi lities
- highlighted in a report
last month by a commi~siun
form ed after last year\ fires
- are on ly slowly being
audreS&gt;ed.
The report recommended
clearer rules on using federal
militarv aircraft. Cri tic s
argu ed· that last year's fire'
would hale done less damage ·if the aircraft had been
Jispatchecl sooner. Rep.
Duncan Hunter. who lost his
home in the fires. ·waited 22
hours for two tankers that he
requested. and then-GoY.
Gray Davis' office met simi lar delays.
The rep ort also urged
reconsideration
of
Cal ifornia·s rule against
using firefighting aircraft
after su nset. The deadlie&gt;t of
last \'ear's fires 11 as believed ·
· to liave been started lw a
lone hunter in San Die~o
County who se nt :1 distre~"
sig nal about a half-hour
before nightfall.
The Forestry Department
is rc \'icw in g re.,trit:tion .., on
night flying and expec't&gt; to
reach a decision soon. 'aid
Jim Wright. deputy director
of operations.

The report al'&lt;l rel'(lm ·
mended betler cooperation
and communication &lt;.llllOil2
fire agencie·~ anJ make" ~e\"·
eral big-ticket request&gt;.
including staffing of all
engines with more firefighl ers and acquiring i50 more

fire

eng1 11e . . .

Communication is a problem
becau:-.e the :.,wte':-. m.an\ fin:
ag:em:ic~

do not operate ·un
the same rauii1 frcLJuencl'.
The danger; appe:1r e,pecial ly (!CUte in s~lll Diego
County . The City Council
~he\Yed

mea~ure:-.

:-.uch a:-.

brush-clearance ruks anJ
replacement of c.xi:-.ting
wood-shingled root\. The
proposals.
which
were
hacked bv the fire chief.
were c.o·n~idercd too expen--:
:--i \·e fur homeowner\ .
·

San
Diego
County
Superl'i,or Dtanne Jacob has :
met resistance to h.er propo,- :
al for a regional firefi ghting
au th ority. Tl1e c·miill\ h"s
about (10 firt&gt;fighting agcn cie .... ~ome nf them ,·o\unteer
fur\.:e~ that rCJy· Oil pancal..~
breakfasts t\&gt; pay the hills. ·
Wright called it a "hodge. :
podge" arrangement.
·
"Lots of pc'opk don't ""nt
to gh·e up their Kingdom tn
go into cuonJinated ~.;.~Jllit) :·
h~ said .
Dan Fie ITO. "ho ·' ""··
flame~ Tth.&gt;.day night from :
his hillt&lt;&gt;p hom~ in Ri,·er,illc '
Count\. -..aid he ha~ l""~~cn
thinkin g about c lt~ clriJ~g dr:
bru . . h frnm aruund hi-.. :·
hou~l'.

"But I rc'&lt;ill) ha\ ~n · t Jone:
any1hing tn prepare· ... · he:
"1iu. "Out it's ddinitcl\ in
Ill\ ' mind a~ something we
ne.ed to do .'·

Lyme disease cases climbed to record level in 2002 :
ATLANTA (AP) - Lyme disease has
climbed to it&gt; hi ghest level on record in
the United Stales. in part . because of the
hui ldin~ of more and more homes in the
woods.' the gmwnment reported Thursday.
During 2002. a tot al of 23.76J cases
were reported to the Centers for Disc;t'e
Control and Prevention - up ~0 percent
from the prel'ious year.
"I t is alarming to us." said Dr. Erin
Staples, a CDC researcher. ··People really
h;Ive to kn ow they can reduce the ir risk
of Lyme disease."
Lvme disease bacteria arc transmitted to
htm;ans by tkks that arc carried hy deer.
The CDC attributed the rise in cases to
growing populations of deer that support

deer ticks. mnre home' being built ' in:
wooded area.-. and hetlt."r rt'cogni'tinn

llll1J

reponing or the di~ca~e .
Only Ha w"ii. '\1ontana "nJ Okl.thom"
reported no l'&lt;hCs in 200~ .
People ~:an lower their ri~k t'f gelling :
the disease hy thing !!beet repellent .lll~l'
promptly remo\'ini tick~ from the b(1J: .
ihe CDC said .
The disease is often id~ntified by :111
expanding "hulls-eye" rash that de,elnps
days to weeks ;Iller a tick bite. Other
symptoms includ~ tiredness . r~vcr. llllhl'k
aches and joint pain .
If untreated. the disease can (alise jo im
swelling and brain inilammation .

venue
0
740-992-7900
James Acree Jr. Director

�\"

PageA6

FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

Shanley, priest at
center of Boston sex
scandal, defrocked

Friday, May 7, 2004

Friday, May 7, 2004

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

A Hunger For More

F~.!llowship

u.m ..

BOSTON (A P) - Paul Shanley, a central figure in the
c:hilcl-molestation scandal that engulfed the Boston
Archdiocese. has been defrocked. along with another priest
imprisoned for raping a 12-year-old · boy, the church
announced Thursdav.
ln a letter elated ·May 3 and obtained by The Associated
Press, Archbishop Sean 0' Malley informed Shanley that
Pope John Paul II decided on Feb. 19 to remove him from the
prie,thood.
.
The archdiocese relea,ed a statement later Thursday cQn·
firming Shanley's dismissal. and announced that Ronald H.
Pm-tuin - who was sentenceq in 2002 to 12 to 15 years
behind bars for · raping an altar boy - also was defrocked.
Paquin. 61 . also was named in 24 lawsuits alleging he sexu·
· ally mole.-tetl other children .
Shan lev. 7J, is awaiting trial on charges of raping four boys
at a parish in Newton in the 1980s. He is free on $300.000
b"il. His trial is ,.,et for October.
Last month. the church settled for an undisclosed amount
with the four men anti their families. Two of the alleged vic·
tirm. now in their 20s. have said Shanley began raping them
11 hen they were 6.
Defrocking. ur what tht: Ruman Catholic Church prefers to
c·alllaicization . is only rarely applied in extreme cases ofmisn mduct. It comes about only after a long process involving
the Vatic:an . At le"st a few other priests ha•e been defrocked
si nc:e tire crisis erupted in 2002 .
. ','It often takes years. and it suggests to me that the archbishop is moving forward expeditiously with these priests.
It's happened ml:rch earlier than I though!,"' said Roderick
MacLeish Jr.. an attorney whose Jirm represented Shanley's
alkg~d victims "nd hundreds of other victims of childmolesting prie~ts.
· tn its letter to Shanley, the archdiocese said it intend~d to
make •the tlecision public ··for the good of the Church" by
M"y 15.
.
It intimnecl Shanley that he will no longer be eligible for
fi nan&lt;·ial ,uppor1 from the archdiocese. and that his stipend
and medical henefits will be eliminated at the end of the
month.
"What has happened today is sending a strong message,"
said Rodney Ford. father of one of the alleged victims. "We
never thought Rome was listening to us. Today Rome is finally saying that we're going to deal with these individuals."
Once known for his street ministry to gay and troubled
l out h. Shanley became a focal point of the scandal after
plaintiffs" attorney~ forced the church to release internal
records showing complaints about Shanley.
Among the records were documents indicating that he was
transferred from parish to parish after the sex allegations surfaced. and that he had attended a forum with other people
who later went on to form tht; North American Man-Boy
Love Association. or NAMBLA, an organization that advocates sex between men and boys .
Shanley resigned from parish work in 1989 and moved to
Californ ia.

(Titom Mollohan has ministered ill sour/rem Ohio for
nearly 11ine years and is pas·
tor of Pathway Communin·
Church. He and his wife are
(he pare/lis of rlrree childre11.
If you would like to .send a
commellf or questi011 to him,
he mav he reached by email
at pastorthum@pathwaygallipolis.com).

10·"\()

:t

Kc,in K.mld.-. Po~,tor.
Wedn ~:&gt;da\, 7 {1(\

~

m

Sund~y

Lnnp Rd ,,t'f N~·'' Ltm~ RJ Rutland,
St'r\ic'l-, Sun I() fill .1111 &amp;. 7. 111 p.m .

Su nd &lt;~y

S~'L'IC~~- I{):(~) ~ .m.

Ten nant.
and 7 p.rn

Wcdll&lt;'..d.ty

McKI!n7ic

- 10 ~0 a .m .. 6 :~ 0
\\ doe~d a y Scr,·rce•- 6JO p.m.

First Southrrn Bapli!!it

Pumcro~ .

Pnmchl~

P1k!.'. P.tSitJt. E Lamat
Schnnl - 9.JO &lt;1 . 111 ..
am _q,-1.~ am&amp; 7 t)(l p.m ,

K. l .~

BY RACHEL ZOLL

Methodists. said evangelicals
.were just beginning to
- - - - - - - - - - - - , - explore the idea and that no
PITTSBURGH
break was imminent in the
Conservatives in the United 8.3 million-member church.
But he said he and others
Methodist Church proposed
splitting the denomination were convinced that no com·
Thursday, the latest sign of promise could be found after
decades of disagreement yet another bitter General
over homosexuality that con- Conference debate over what
tinued at a national meeting the Bible says about gay sex.
this week.
"We can't bridge that
The Rev. William Hinson. divide,"" said Hinson, fonner
president of the Conf~ssing pastor of First United
Movement for conservative Methodist C]turch of Houston.
AP RELIGION WRITER

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel ...

GGPfaceJ) ff; ~ f5
v~rtJc$ tf; 3Pf;,

The Rev. Troy Plummer.
executive director' of the
Reconciling
Ministries
Network, which advocates
for
gay
and
lesbian
Methodists. rejected the idea.
He accused evangelicals of
plotting to harm the church.
"It disturbs me," he said. "We
can still be a family together.'"
The announcement came
after- conservatives prevailed
at the meeting in maintaining
the church's firm stand
against homosexuality.

Delegates affirmed that
gay sex was "incompatible
with Christian teaching'" and
made it a chargeable offense
under church law for clergy
to conduct same-sex marriages and for unmarried
ministers to have sex:
Evangelicals expect that
those who want a broader
role for gays and lesbians in
the church will continue to ·
ignore church law and
appotnt sexually active
homosexual clergy.

·r

·r

·r

·r

·r

r r

·r

·r

r

-r

r r r r r

·r

-r

•·io:l Baplist Chun:h
\ l ar~ \l urn&gt;~' -

fuh ~ nd Pa lme r St ..
~hJJI~- 1~Ifl. SunJa) Sl- hlllll - 9. 1~ a 111..
\\'l•r~h1p - 10 :1~ a. m .. 7:00 p .m ..
\\'~ dm:,dJ) Ser' tt:&lt;.' 7 00 p.m

Comrnuninn · l 0 "m .. Sunda y Sc hrHll ·
10 15 .1. m.. Yo1u1h - ~ ~0 pm Sunday Bihlc
Study \\'cdm·-.da) 1 rrn
Bradbu~

Rucinl.' •'irst Baptist
PJswr Rrd.. Ruk.
,! m..

\\ '1H~hrp

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
Young's Carpenter Serulce

W~d nc,dJ. y

a.rn . 7 00 p 111..
7·011 p. m.

~0

Sen tl'l''-

26 years in local business
Roofing &amp; Building Work

Pomeroy,OH
740-992-6215

The.letting go is
unthinkable now. )'et,
one day this young boy
will become a man
with adventure and
aspiration on his

P.1 ~1t'r

Jnhn

s,~am.m .

Snrttlay Sl'hllol -

Wi'tlr1L·vla~ Sa\ io:c~- 7 00

pm

J);t\ 111

Hc nd . Ro ull' 12-' .

l'.t~tor

. Dante!

Y. \0 a.rn ..

Do ug Shamblrn, You th Minil&lt; t ~: r .
Bill Aml'oe rgcr, Sunday S~·houl - Y..\0 am,
W11r-;hip - IU)O a~ .. 1 0:~0 a.m., 7.00

R.1~m~· .

Jl

OH.

Sdn"•l Wur'h1 p- IO ..lll a Ill.,

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience &lt;;lear
before God and man."

Acts 24:16

are making the
difference today. You
are teaching your
youngster to be
courageous, yet
cautious... to smile and
have dreams for the
future. You encourage
him with faith and
support You strengthen him with your presence. It has been
said "a picture is worth a thousand words." So, it is.
Have you taught your child about his Heavenly Father! In
the book, Words llfWjsdom, there is a quote by Frank Clark,
"The most important thing that parents can teach their children
is how to get along without them." One day you and your
youngster will be apart, yel you can still make a difference today
in a spiritual way as you resolve to worship as a family this week.
It will give your child the courage he will need to make a
difference in the world. One day he will say, "Thanks M?m."
Have a blessed Mother's Day.

•

www kW!llw&amp; com

(740) 992·1'1451

209Thlrd
Racine, OH

740-949-2210
"A Home &amp;nk for
Home People""

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.

Racine, OH
P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769·0683

499 Richland Avenue, Athens

740·594-6333

1·800·451·9806

7 40-949-2217
Sizes available Sx 10 to 10 x 20

If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done w1to you.
John15:7

www.karraudlolo .com

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

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mulberry Heights

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(740) 992-3279
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

6am-8pm

AtmO.\fJhae

10 a .m .. h :~O
Wedne sday Scr.·tc ~ ~- 7 p.m .

Homemade Desserts Made Daily
HottW Cooked Meals &amp; Daily Specials
Open 7 days a week

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
•
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8
.MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N. Second St.

-

Middleport, OH

740·992·6128

Local source for trophies,
olaoues t·shirts and more
"Do not steal. Do not lie.
Do not deceive one
another."
Leviticus 19;11

p.m.

Dexttr Church or Christ
Putor Bill Eshelman, Sunday school9:30
a .m , 1\'orman Wtll, superintendent.
Sunday wmshlp- 10: 30 a.m .

ScnK~'

Church of Chri1t
lnte ru~ctto n 7 and 124 W, EvangcHn:
Denn is Sargent, Sunda)l Bible Study 9:]0 a.m, Wor~h1p : 10 :30 am. and 6:30
p m., Wednesday Bible Stud)· -? p.m

Wedne sday Services • 1 p m.

Christian Union

p. m.

Hartford Church of christ In
Christian Union
Hartford. WVa .. Pastor:David Greer.

Forrsl Run Baptist
: Arius Hurt. Sunday School - 10

Ra ~ha n

.un .. Wor!ihip - 10: 45 a.m.

Satterlic ld . Sun daY School - 9: -l 5 a m ..
bcnmg - 6 p m., Wednesday Service~- 7

Baptist

Sl· hool - 9·30 a.m , Wors hip 10 :-l~ a Ill Sunday E\·c ning - frOO p.m .•

p. m

Salem Communit~· Church
tlf \\ ~-,1 ('ol uml'o l&lt;~. _\'• .\'a 11m LLC\ tn!'
Rtlad. Pa~111r. Chari&lt;'- Roush t ~W 1 67).
~~~JO:.

Sunda) SL'Ilnlll 9 'l.O am. Sunda~
""'r\1C&lt;' 7"[)(1 pm. Ril'ol ~ S tud~
\\ cJne ....la) ~cn L re .,·t)(l pm

Frida~

Hohsnn Chri~lilln Fe-!lo\\ship lhurch
Pa,111r' Hrf'oo,·hd \\ htte. Sundn~ Schnol·

-

S und &lt;l~

111 am

\\c,Jn.·:.da ~ 7

f&lt;' ailh
Balk~

letar1
P.JStC\r: SunJ a)' S..:houl - 10 a m . Wt lrShLp

Paslor.

.~0

pm

\'alit"~

Rt'&lt;itorati,on Chrislian FellfJlll'&lt;ohip
Hi1&gt;0J'1l't R•~td. -\lhc·n,, Pa,hl r

Lonm.· Cn;th .
Wcdn~··...b:

V.,•dnt'~ da~

Suni..l.ty

Thur~day Scn· r~· e -

P:t~l11r

~Ill ·

7:00 pm

Pet ~

a rn .• Worsh1p - II am. ,
Jl.lll.

\\'edn..-~ du~

s~·hool - I ~ 11.111. benLng
Wedn.:sday Sen 1ce . 7 p.m.

7

p.m -

Putor Jumc.NP. Brady

Presbyterian

United Methodist
Gr11ham t.:nl1t'd Methodlmt
Worship - 9:30a.m. On &amp; 2nd Sun) ,,
7:30 p.m. (Jrd &amp; 4th Sun),W~dn~sduy

Salem SL. Pastor: Jamie Fortner. Sunday

p.m.

SdiLH•I - 10 a. m . Evet110g - 7 p.m.,

Reedsliille Fellm.-ship
C hurd1 \lf tht" Natarcne, Pastor

Chester
Pastor· Jane Be:Jllre . Worship - IJ ot .m.
Su nday s,·hool
10 a.m . · Thur~day

S.: r\'kc~

Boh Randolph. Wor:.hip -

9 :~0.

am .

~ond

Haptisl Church
Ravcn~\l.ood, WV, Sunday School 10 am-

Ru~scll,

Sundar. S ~ hou l and Worsh1p- 10

a.m .

. ~1 oroing wm~h1p I I urn Evcmng · 7 prn,

IO · ~Onm.

E~· cntng

SrrvLCCS· (dU p .rn , Wednesday
Ser.•tces- fd U p. m.

Wednesday 7 p.m.

Catholic
Sacrtd Hearl Calholk Chun:h
!6 1 Mulht:rry' A\ c .. p,Jmcmy, 9Y2 -5 KI.J8,
Walter E. Hc mt., Sa t. Con

.J.45 -S: 15p m.; Ma sll- ~UU p .m ., Sun.
Con. -R:45·9 15 a.m ... Sun . Mass · IJ ·JO

Rttdsvlllr
Wor shtp - 9:30 a rn .. S unday Schtl~ l I0·30 n m , Fi rst Sunday of Month · 7:00

Church of God or Proph«y
O.J. Whit.: Rd . oil St. Rt 16(1, Pa~wr: P.J

p.m. scrvicc

ChJ.p lllan, SundJ)' Sc ho11l - 10 a. m .,
Wor ~ hip - I I a. m., Wednesday Scrt·ices ·
7 p.m.
·

Tuppers Plains St. Paul
PaslOr · Jane Beultle, Sunday Sch011 l - 9
n m. , Worship . 10 a.m , Tuesda) Serv iL·e~

K&amp; C JEWELERS
212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy
992-3785

..
..,...., ....
____
.:ff•btr .:tuneraiJIPome

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

L•

JgiiHM1

._

:r.III-M44

If ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
words abide in you, ye shall
SERVICES
Products+ ask what ye will, and it shall
Financial
214 E. Main
be do11e unto you.
Services
r . I !ENCtES In&lt;.
992·5130
John 15:7
Inc~

Full tine of
Insurance

Pomeroy

992·66n
ANDF.RSON
FUNt:RAl Hoi'ofl·
17H.oyt~~ Strm • PO Boll70
New Ha~'tl\, WV .15W

J111Je!ii H. Andef'SOCl, Lk:tnsed. Funeral Dlrtetor

Heltll

l'untnl Ploftlllnt

LynJ &lt;~

· 7 p.m.

s~ r8CU5f

C hun:h of tht' NazarYne
Pa~tnr M1kt· Adkm ~. Sunt.lay Sc hoo l · 930
a.m .. Wnr ~ hip
10.30 a.m, 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Sen kcs · 7 p. m.

Long Bollnm
Sunday S(·hool - '.l:.~O n m . Wnrshtp -

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

Wcdncf.da~ ·

Sen ier~- 7 p.m.

Chestt:r L'hun:h of th~t Natan:ltt:
Pa~tnr. Re1 Hcrtll.' n Grate, S unda~ Sc ho,11
- IJ:.\(1 a.rn , Wm~h1p - II am .. (1 p.m .
WcJne,Jay Scrvkes · 7 p.m .

3JW~

run Gospel Lili:hthouse
Hiland R1lad. P" mero~. Pa•tor·

.740-992-6606

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE·
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptlo~;~s

Pomeroy

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear before
God and man."

Acts 24:1

R o~

I.J ~\) ,t 111

Hunter. Sundil ~' School - 10 am. E' crt mg
J 30 p.m., Tunday &amp; T hur ~d a~ · 7;JO

w.1r,h1p - 10 '0 am. 7:00

rIll. \\ rdnt'~da~ S er\ICC~ - 7 00 Jl .lll
Ynurh grn up meclin£ ~nJ &amp; ~lh Sl• ndays
7 rm

'
South Bethel Communit)' C hul"('h
Sther RidJl,e - l'o.stor Lmd.t D .lm ~I\,.,OJ .
Sunday School - 9 a.m . Wr10ohtp Sen l\'l' _
10 J 111. 2nd and 4th Sul'lday
Carleton lnlerdenomlnalional Church
Kiug , hury Ru~1 d, Pa~1&lt;11 Rl&gt;bert Y.tnl'l'
Su nda } SciHwl - Y Jll a m .. Wor~lup
Scr\'ll'C IO.JO .t.m.. E\c nmg Se nLl'l' (1

Eden l'nitl'd Bn-thrt"n in C hrist
Stat&lt;' R,)ut~ I~J . R c,·d~\ille. Sunday
So:hool- II :t n1.. Sunda) Wnr,htp- IO· (X)
:1.m &amp; 7·UU p m. \\ ~ Jn e,d11~ Scnt..:e• ·

7.011 r m. \h·dnc~d. t ~ Youth Scnkl' 7 Ol\ p.m

•·ret"dom (imipt'l Mission
Knob, on C11. RJ . Jl. Pa ~ hw Kt'l
Rt1gcr Wdl forJ, SundJ y Sl·honl- Y 111 ,t 111
B~ld

Worsh tp-- 7 p m.
While's Chape-l We'&gt;lt.utn
C't11li\LIIe R, ,;JJ. f'.I• IM: fh·' l'h dllr
Nnlcfl o1llr. Suntl,t~ 'irhonl · Y·31l d 111.
Wor~h 1p - IO :.iU am. WeJnc~d:ly Se rv t ~·c

ROCKSPRINGS
.,...,...,...,,•• Family Restaurant
REHABILITIION CENTER
"Featuring Kentucky Fried
1'he r:are you deserve, close to home
Chicken "
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
W. Main St., Pomeroy
Pomeroy, OH 45769

992-2955

in lhri&lt;ol Church
3fi41 1 \\1d.:ham Rd,
P~swr l'~tcr \lartmti:!lc. Sun.l.u~ S ~ hon l - .
Com11111 111t~

p.m

Pomeroy Churrh of the Nwl-lln:nt:
P a~ litr. Jun l a\cndcr, Sunday Sdwol •
9:JO u.m.. Wor~ hip · 10 ..10 a m. and 6
p.m ..

\II. Humon l'nitcd Hrethl'f'n

p.m

j(1ppa
Pa~tor ·

United Brethren
Tcxa•

P a~ tllr.

Kuhn , Sunday Sc hool · lJ .\U am ..
Wor~ hip - 10.45 ;t rn .. 7 p.m .. Wednesday

-7p m

Ht s Rd .. Pomeroy. Pastor: Roy
Satu rdn) Semces Sabbath
Sl·hool- ~p. m . Worship : ' p.m
La~~o.· !nsky.

Ser\i ct·7 pm

Allen Midcap

Sundny S..:hool. IO·JO 11111.
SyriK'use First Church or God
Apple and Second St .~ .. Pastor: Rev. Dav id

- 7 p .m ..

Se,·enth·Day Adventist
~ulberr~

MI. Olh·e Community Church

Pastor: All~n MiJcap, Sunday Sehoul ·
lJ.JO a.m ,Worslup · IO :JO a.m .. ,fl JO p.m ..
W~:dncs d .1y Scrvrcr ~

Seventh-Day Adventist

Pastor: Lawrence Bush. Sunday s~·hool ·
Sl 30 a.rn , ,hentr),\1 - 6 .~0 p.m . Wt"J nc~a~

Middleport Church or lhe Nazartne

a.m,

II

falth Gospel Church
Long Bottom, Sunda} Sc hool · 9:30 a~ ,
Worship - 10 : 4~ a.m .. 7:30 p .m
Wednesday 7 30. p m

Worshrp · 10;30 a.m , Pastor Ph1llip Bell

Nazarene

Pastor Rohc=r Cro~~o. .. Worshtp • 10 a. m

a.m., Wednesday Sen·tce • 7 p m.

Hocklna:porl Church
,Orand Stre et, Sunda y School · 9:30 a.m.,

Ralph Spires. Sunday School - 9JO a.m..
Worship - !O:JO a.m .. 1 p,m., Thursday

Pastor. Ron Heath, Sunday Worshrp - 10
p m .. Wednesda y Serv ices - 7

Mlddltport Prttbyterilon
Morse Chapel Church
Sunday school - 10 a.m., Wnnh tp -

· IOa.m.

. Co . Rd . 63, Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.,
Worshtp ·I O ~Oa.m

Rutland Churth o£Gocl
a.m , 6

Township Rd .• 468C, Sunday School · 9
a,m, Wonhip - 10 a.m .. Wednc:Mlay

Mt. Olive United Melhodist
Off 124 behind Wilkcs\•ille, Pa5tur. Rc\.

Pa~tor

Sundtty School - ':U tl tt.m .. Worihlp 10:30 a.m .. 1 p m.

'fOrt"h Church

Q :.~O

Harrlaonvilk Prtsbylr:rian Church
Robert Crov.. Worsh rp · 9 am

DyenrJIIt Communily Church

Serv ice· 7;30 p.m.

J~ ne

Syracuse Flnll:nited PrHb~· ttrian
Pastm: R6ben CI'O\Io . Wonh1p- ! I a.m.

7:30p.m.

Bethel Churth

Ser"ke~

Sunday Sc himl ·
Worship. II a.m.. 6 :.~0 p m.

Pentr-rMtal Assembl~
I ~J. W..t&lt;.t nc. Pash.&gt;r: WLIIL am

p.m

School · 9:30 a.m .. Worship · !0 JO a.m .

Main &amp; Fifth St , Sunday School - I 0
a.m, Wonhrp- 9 a.m., Tuesda~ Ser\'ices-

(I(J

H0l1ucL SunJJ: SdH&gt;ol · IU J 111.
b cn mg. 7 rIll .. IA cJ IW"&lt;la\ ScnKC' . 7

Halel Community Church
Oil Rt. 124 , Pastor Edsel Hart, Sund a~

United \1rthodlst Parish
Pastor Helen Kline, Cool ville Church,

Ser\ IC&lt;' 7

Pentecostal

p m ..

{o

W\'J ne,Ja~

rrn

Syranase Mission
IJI I Bndge man St . Syra~u~e. SJnJav

Racine
·Shalkr, Sunda} Sdhllll · 10

\\ or'h1p IO·t)() am

l-ull G,;hpcl. ra~wr Rot&gt;t"n \1t"'~r
S und a\ s~ht•III.J ·lO am. \\ or, htp !O·l(l

Rc\ E.nt mi!H

E\'cning 7
7 p.m

Sn nd,1~

· 7 pm

Lanj;ls,·illl' Chri!'llian Church

s.·n'L.:e-

Tabf'rnade Churrh

Run RnaJ

Ra" ~••ti.

C~lv\lle

Sl. Paul Lutheran Churc:h
Comer S~cumore &amp; Sccoml St., Pomeru~.
Sundaay S~.:huul · 9 4~ 11.1n., Wor~h1p · II

Be~t11e.

Chun·h ":n 1c~· · fllO pm
pm

•ntr~

7 111 p Ill

7 p.m.

Servic~s

f\!arl.. McCornus

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

El'enmg. I

Ea~t

arn.

Our S1nlour Lulheran Church
Walnut 11nd Henry Sts , Ruvensv.ood,
WVa .. Pa~tor : Davrd Ru§scll, Sunday

Meigs Cooperalh·e Parish
Nonhcast Clu ,.ter. Alfred. Pasto r

\1orm. '

~aL~

~7S Pearl Sl. Mtddlcpnrt
Pu-.ttw S.t m
Ander,nn . Sunda~ Schnol I() &lt;un .

a m.. WoNhrp - 10 a.m

Rel1 &lt;'f

James P.

Scn•iccs - J :00 p m.

Jt· ,~e

Ser.J..:.: ~: S.uurda~ ~ :UO p .m

Middlt"pOrt Communit)· Churt'h

Morning Star
P:tstor Jnhn GLimnrc. Su nda ~ Se houl · II

Lutheran

Services· 7 p.m.

MI. Moriah Church o£God
M1l e ~hi! Rd ., heine , l:'a slor : James

Sund"~

Bill

a. m ..

St. Rt .

Sunday School - 9·30 a .m ., Worsh1p IOJO am., 7:00pm, Wcdncsd!ly

Church of God

Rc' Gil~ert (ra!g, Jr.. Sunday School ·

your light so shine bef•~rel
that they may see
works and glorify
•• "" '"' in heaven.''
Matthew 5: I

~0

10

7 pm

Harrisomille Cnmmunit~ Church
Th.: mn OurhJm Sunda~ · &lt;J '0
&lt;1m nnd 7 p.m . Wednc,day - 7 p m

Pastor: Jtlhn Gllmnre. Su nday School VIO u m. Wn r~ hip - 1 0 ·~) am . B1hl c

St. John Lulher;tn L'hurch
Pmc Gttl\C, W111 ~ h tp- 9 .{10 a.m .. SunJ.t)
Pa ~ tor .

S undu~

hll Gospt&gt;l ChurCh or tht Living
Sanior
Rl JJ~. r\nllljUit~ . Pa ,tor .

Pa ~ ttlr'

1

b t Thut~ · 7 p 111

Sc hool - !0:00 am

Youlh 7 p.m

Jrtd 7 p m Wcdnt&gt; ~d n} - 7 p m .
r~lln\1 ,hip '&gt;\'fllr~· 1 P m.

Carmel-Sutton
Rd, . Ra~·rne, Ohio.

Carmel &amp;

'J.JOI)

Pa~t ur: B!ll Staten. Sunda} Ser.1ces · 10
a m &amp; 7 p m. Wed m·'-li:~) - 7 p. m. &amp;

•-aith Full Gospel Chul'i'h

11 : 0 5- 1~ :00 n utlll.

Soctcty/Pne sl ht11ld
S&lt;~rramcn!

Nt"' tift.Victory C~nter

.

111

111 .

time .

-7

J 17.' Genrges Cree k Road. Gallrpoh~. OH

Lung Bounm. Pa~l m : St~'l&lt;' Rt't'cl Sum.la)
!k h•1ol . IJ.JO a.m. Wt1r:.h1p - 9 10 J .m

Brthany

Christ of Lauer· Day Saints
W. t. lbll. ~oll':l - li~ol 7 or -lolh-7 4Xfl.

Sunda~· Schtl11l 10 :20- 11 a

Sc r v ic~

Wed~~ ~m' i c e

l'\&lt;'Otn ~

Johll Gi lmore. Sunda~ Sch11ol Ill
am . \\'orship
9 a.m .. \\'ednc;;Jay
Scnke ~- IU.t m.

Latter-Day Saints
St

Grcf! S..-ar'

. WedneMlay &gt;c:n iL'\!. 7 p. m.

P&lt;~~tur:

Jnd Y11Uth - J p.m.

p m . Wc.lnr!'.d.a) Sr r. ICC · 7 00 p

~ . m.

Vlttory Baptist Independent
~2:'1 N. 2nd St. M!ddlepo!l. Pastor: James
E Keesee, Worship - IOu .m .. 7 p.m ..

Davls-Qulckel Agency

9;1.' a.m ..

Sunday School - I 0 a m.. WtJf'!&gt;.hip - 9 a.m.

School- 10:00 a.m., Worship- II a.m.

Wednesday Scrliices · 7 p.m.

R ~,.

7:~0p.m

MiJ dkfll:l ri - Pi.l~tu r.

Reedsville Church or Chrisl

Ju mes R . Ac ree, Sr .. Sunday Unifted
Service . Wnrsh1p - 10:30 a.m .. 6 p m ..

Pa~tu r

Bt~l c S tud~

H!JillCI\lU ~mg ni'L't: tLn ~.

Pastor: Philip Sturm. Sunday School: 9 :~0
n m, WorS:hrp Service: !0:30 n m .. Bihlc
Study. Wednesday. 6:30p.m.
'

Hillside Bapllil Church
St. Rt. 143 jusl ofT Rt. 7, Paslm : Rev.

740·992·7713

Thursday

Wor~h rp -

BitJic Study: Monday 7:\.JO pm
Sno~ tille

Brild)'

Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Mime's 'l{.estaurant

Sch1K1l- 10: 15 il.m ..

p. m .. Sun day E,·e. 7. 00

p.m.. Wednesday St'nk~ ·

Hills Churrh of Chrlsl

lJ :t.m.. Wor ship

Rest"
Hours

- 7:00 pIll.

E\ungdist Mike M011re. Sunda y Sr:hnol ·

Sc hool - 10 J'l.m., Evening - 7:00 p.m.,
Thursduy Ser\·ir:es- 7:00

Pa~ tor :

11l .•Wcdn c :.Ja~ S~'l'\'l l'C S

Hitkor~·

Bil'olc Stu d) - 6:00 p.m.

Antiquit~·

Wor~ h 1p - 10 :4~

Pa~ tm. Wilham K. Mar shall. Sunday

- I() a.m

-IJa m. Wt"dncsJa y-7 p m

Old Bethel fret" Will Bapti.o;t Chun:b
28601 St. R1 . 7, !vlrddlepon, Sunday

~ ·J U

Schn~tl

St ..

Wol)hip - 7 p rn ..

Abundant GriK'e R .E I.
92.l S. Thtnl St.. Middlepon. Pao;tor Te r~ 'a
Da\r ~.
Sundny st&gt; nke . 10 &lt;~ rn.

Salem Ct:nter

Pa,tm: Rl'\.

Fore man. \\ur~htp- 10:00 am
Sen t..:e.,- '7 p m.

p m.

W~dnc sda y

7 p.m

P01~tor :

Erne ntu s

Pra)er: and Billie Stud~ • 7 pm
.-hh Stret"l Chun"h

50 l7,

Study Wed. 7:00p m.

:\lin 1.'t ~r .

:'\] n· ~· ;t. Sunda~

Sunda~

w~-JncM.la)

am., TIIU Nda~ Sen. ICC:~·

PaMm

Clifton TabtrniKit' Church
C lifwn. W.Va., Sunda~ S~·huo1l · 10 ;u!J. ..

"Fuii -Gmpcl Cll urdt ". P&lt;~ ~ t\&gt;r ' John &amp;
Pauy Wade. 61).' Se~.:mKI Ave . !\bsun. 77.l-

The Church or Jesus

.t

G r~:tl

S ~.:hool

Sunday

Pas wr : Gknn Rowe . Sunday s~·h no l ·
lJ ·'O ,1111 . Wor~ hip - I() ' O u. m and fl

Br!ldf&lt;lnl Church or Chris1
(',1rncr of St. Rt 1~-' &amp; Bradbur; Rd.

WL ~CIIli lll, Sun1lay Srhn&lt;&gt;lm . J.::, l·mng - n JO r m .
\\'c·dn~•J,t~ Sc'n ll'l'• · 6 ..\0p.m.

l'.t,l•H

.

Mmr ~te r

Mt. Moriah Baplisl
Fnurth &amp; Main St , Mrddlcpnrl. Pa stor:

Warm Friend"·

\1i ddlc p~.1n

I)J.vrd Gillx•fl, Sunduy

(tlrlllllUillon- I()J() a.m .. 81•l• J We rry.

.\ II . L' nion Baptist
'1 .1'\

~. m.

Rutland Church or C hrist
SumJ.t) Sch&lt;'Ol - lJ.JO a.m .. Wor~ l'o1p and

I L1 m . 7·0!l p m

llla .rn . \\'1\r, hip

p m..

Laurt'l ClifT FI'Ct' 1\h:thodlsl Chul"t'h

\\:1&gt;r-.h1p · IU..~O

Kutlund Free Will Baptist

mind. You, however,

Scnptures &amp;lecttHI by The Amencan Bible Sbclef)'
Copynght 2004. Kerster-W111&gt;ams Newspaper ~rvlces P 0 . Bo~~: 8005, Charlottnville, VA 22906,

"Ne~·t and

·IO:JO a.m.. 7.JO
Sr:nil·e · 7..\0 p m .

]().,\0

.I Ill

B.apli~t

Sih·er Run

Pa~1m

'"Let your light so shine before
men, thai they may see your
good work&gt; and glorify your
Father in heaven."
Matthew 5: 16

.

Wedne ~ &lt;~)

R oh Bart-er.

Kar~·n

Agwpt" Lif11 Center

Rutland
- 9 . ~0 a.m .. WnJhh ip -

Fo rl.'man

'A ednt'...Ja~

p.m

;1111 ,

Rejoicing Life Churt'h
~n J A1e .. MtJJkp~.•rt.

~.

La-...r"· n ~c

Schon I · 9 ..\0 a m .. Mt&gt;rmn g.
Won. hip . 10 .~0 a.m &amp; 7 pm. \\'e dnc~da~
Se r' Lee - 7.00 p.m . Ynuth Scr\ILe- 7;(X)

Sundav · 6 p m.

Pa,tnr: Re\ L .trl)' Lernle~. Sulllla~ S~·huol
9 ~() :1.111 . Wt lfShip !(),..+~ J.m .. 7 pIll..

Chul'('h of Christ

Tolin Run}Oil ..\955X Br.1dhury
l&lt;tlild. MLJdlq'l\1n. Sunday Scho'l&lt;ll · 9· 30

a.m . Wursh1p · 11 o. m.

ARCADIA NURSING CENTER
CooiYille, Ohio
Located less than 30 mmules from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg
We offer physical. occupational,
speech. art &amp; music lherapies
740..667·3156

Wnr~h'l'

SdKK•I - Y JO

~I)IJ

R

0 01\l'. SunJa)
Worsh1p. 10 am. EH·nrn!,! Ww~lup. 6 pm.
Y11uth gro up b prn, V..c dne~ da~ . Pt r~~o.e r in

A~h

Rock Springs
Ke1th Rader. Sunday School · IJ J."i
Wnr~ h 1 p
- 10 a. m .. Youth

fclln ~~o.~h1p.

Hysrll Run Holiness ('hurch

~finL'ter ·

Su nda~ s~· h f•n l - 'J &lt;(]

- 10

a.m .. Wo r ~ hip
II a.m ., 6
Wednesday Ser.•ices - 7 p.m.

r r r r r r

Sunda~

Rnd Bro,.,l·r. Won- hip . Y..~O a.m ..
s~· htJo l - IU·J5 am

Wt"Sh~ya~n Biblt" Holiness Chun:h

Thpprrs Pl.11.in Church or Chri&lt;ot
ln.s trumr ntal. Wor~ hip Service - 9 a m .

Faith B•ptlsl Churth
Railroad St .. Mason. Sund11y School - 10

·r

M;~nlc ~.

p.m . W~ dnl',du: Sr:r.'rcc~- 7 p.m

llelhlehem D.11.plisll' hurch

Methodist stand against gays .leaves denomination divided

Zion Chul't'h of C hrist
Harrb1ln1 ille Rd tRt . l·Bl .

75 Pe:trl St. ,
P.t~!m

a.m ..

Pine Gro,·e Hibl~ Holiness ('hun:h
112 mik ntl Rt ..l~~ . P;t ~tor : Rc, , O' Dell

7.00

•

Sunda~

Pa~ tt•r-

Roger Wat ~ 1111. Sunday School 'J:JO a.m. Worship - 10 30 a.m.. 7:00

7.00 p. m.

Sunday

prayer mewng- 7 r m.
p.m.

P :l~ tur :

SunJa~

Pa~tor:

Rn

S..:hnul. P&lt;t•lnr

A'~ • ~ l an t Pa ~ t••t

Pomeroy

!.&gt;ewe)' Kin£. Sunday ~hnol · IJ:JU a Ill..
Sunday
wor~h1p · J p m . Wedll&lt;'lolia y

a.m.
Wm~hiJ'

P.t ~tor

l&lt;utl an d.

k~~o.cll , Sunday Senrn· ·
6 00 p.m . Thun.da~ · o,(l() p.m

:\lt~C'

C'h e ~tcr

Wal lace. bl anJ

RidKt" Chun"h or Christ
Tr:rr~·. SunJ&lt;~ y School -9 : ~0

Sq\ 11:1.'~

7~

a.m .

Chun:h

'lktbel Worship t:rnter

Pea rl Chapel
Sc h,ool · 9 am . Wur..:h1p - IU a.m

Sunda~

p m ..

!U:JO

Pa~n.w w~ ~ ~~~

p. m.

Pn~tor Boh Rnhm,nn, Sunday Srhool - 9
a m . WtiNhip . 10 a.m

am :

Wur~ htp

Sth·ers,·ille Communit~ Apostolk

Ponland-RIKmc Rd . P01't"r Jtm Pn•ttm,·
SunJay .S dll~ll - IJ·.Itl ,a-m .. ~-'*ur~hrp ·
Wc dn e~da~

Rd . Pastor: Reli

Black-... ood'. Sunda) School · Y30
Wl·duc"'la' Sen ~ee · 7 JU p.m.

Communit~ of Christ

10 ..\0 a m .

Rose of Sharon Holiness Chun:h

Pll ~Wr: Bru~·r:

Jtt ,\ 111

\\ ~ dn e,d, 1 ~ Sn\lle~ -

Pa~ tur-Jdlrc~

Ll!admg Cree l Rd

First flaptisl
Pa, tor J.m Rrud&lt; n t . [;h t ~;11n St.
Sun.l;t~ SLhn&lt;11 . 'J ·JlJ J.m .. \Vonh1p-

\'vnr•lup ·

a.m..

S unda ~

He~~r~ allow

Pom ero~·

U' l:lr ~;~nl.

.~0

10

1Non-denomrnatiunul il'lhol-'l,hipl
Meetmg m the: o) ld Amemo~n l..t-gLIIII Hall
SoUih Fnunh ,-\,enlk.' \1 rddleron
Pastor: Chn~ Sic'"' an J!LO!I Jm Suno.L~
Other lllt..'el lllf:• m h&lt;•mc'

Rod Rmwcr. Sunday Sch&lt;'lnl ·"' 111
a m.. Worship . II :00 a m

WeJ n~·~ t~y

7r m

Fnda ~

Oasis Christian rello111 ship

Pli.~!Or .

Rnad.. Pastor: Char lc ~
Sunda~ Schotll "11U it m .

Wnrshtp - I I a 111.. 7:00 p m .
S~tT irl! · 7.(10 ·p 1n

Pa~ 1,,. .

Caha_, Bible Churt'h

He-ath ~ f\.fiddlf'port )

Cah·ary Pilgrim (hapt"l
Harri~ont· 1l le

Faith 1-' eUo"·ship Cru.sack Cor Chri~
R~ \ Franl..Jin Dllkens. Sen·ke.

ltJ·4'i am .

Pomeroy P1ke. Co

MiiW'rs,·ill«'

Kenu t.:hun:h or C hrist
w,,l ~l np · lJ :J U .un., Sunday s~hon l J rd

Wm~h 1p -

Other Churches

Dan,·lllt Holiness Chul'i'h

Sunday wmshtp - 10 ~~~ ll m. &amp; 7 p rn.
Wednesday rraycr ser \ • i c~ - 7 p m.

Church

I. P.J. ~tor : Bnan May.,
Sund.a~ School - 9 )()a.m .. Wur..h1p - 7:00
p m . W!!dn\!)da ~ B11'1k Stud~ 7:00pm.

St&gt;rvin• - fl·l,() r rn

Sund.:a~

forest Run
Pastor· Rnl'o Rnhm.-..,n. Sunda~ Schnol · 10
am . Wo1'1.hip ·4 am

.liO"J SUitt' Route .t25. Lang~ \· l le. Pa'&gt;t.lr.
Virtm Rou'&gt; h. Sunday schtMrl - IJ&lt;~(l H m..

Bibl~

Letan W Va Rt

Portland Fi'rst Churrh of lhe ~a7..al"tnt'
W1lham Ju ~!h, '&gt;unJa~ &lt;;,·hool -

a.m .. Wnrship - II u m.

Sunday St•f'\Jce 7 p.m.

p. m.

filinit"'

\\,·Jr~~.·...J~~~

pm

P a~rnr ·

Pastor: Keith Rader. Sundoy Sc hoo l - 10

Communit)' Chu~h
Pastor. Ste,·e Tnmt•k. Main S u~·l.' t.
Rutland. Sunday Worship- IO· IJ() a m..

Wed rK"sday Scn·1ce'- 7 p. m.

- &lt;J JO a.m.. \\'11r~ hip - 11 11.111 . and h r m .
Wl!dnl''-liily Ser\ k~· 7 p m.
Rutland Fir.&lt;~t Raplist Church
SunJil~ S•·h\, ,11 - 9 ·1 tl a m . Wor ~h1p IOA:'i.un

.1 1lP2

·

;, m. Wtlf,htp- X: 15. 10 JO am . 7 p.m ..

llopt" Baptist C hun:h tSouthl'fnl
St . 1\hddkf"m. Sunday 'l' htotll ,

m. n .111 r m.
...

S1udy Y.ed 7:30
Flal\uMJd§

Holiness

~llm, tl·r: Jo,h l 'lm, Sunda} Schrol ~ Y·JO

~70 Grat)t

IO::lO ..
~ef'\ lt:t'"

Pa siPf Bth Rntnn,.on,

Entrrprist
Pa~wr: :\rh111d Km g Sun da ~ Slh111•l
10 l(J a.m. Wor,hlp ~ ·Jo .:un B11'l h.•

Grace Episrup11l Church
.t!6 E. Main Sl .. Pomtro). Sunda} Sl·hnul
and Holy Euchi!.nst 11 00 a.m.

\\'estsid«" Churrh of Christ
Horne Rd . Sundi.l)

ScT\' t Ce~- 7

IJ ~() u m . V.nr~h1p -

10·00 a.m .. Mnmtng

Miildleport Church of Christ
5th and Mam . Pa ~t or AI Hans..m, Y(wth

Baptist

1(1

m..

Episcopal

Sl' htMII · 11 a m . Worsh tp - I Oa.m .. b p rn.

Liberty A!l~mbl~ o(C;od
~t· 1 l

J

IS~mcu..e1,

Sunday s,·h.:IO] 9 -I _
, a.m . Wor~iu p - II
a m.. Wedn f.'"CCJ~ Sl'l"\ll'C~ 7:JO p.m

JJ2~ 6 Childrf'n·~

Assembly of God
Pa ' w'

~.'i

lll

:hhur)

Rt'l.

Sunday Schunl9 IS a.n1

Anlhon}

Ser,R·~·&lt;o

Pume 1 o ~ . P;~-.t~w

Nut&gt;k. Won.hip

Schon! - (1 :.\0 a .m .. Wnrshi p-

Pomrm~·

llmf'oo 7 fM,r p. m., Pa ~t" r Mart ~ R Huuon

\\' . V&lt;~.

Min J~ ter

llHO am .. 6 p m.. Wr dnc!Oday
7 r rn .

•:nlmanuel ..\.postolic Tabtrnarl" lrn:.

Ma ~nn.

Jonathan

Mnm ~

p m : Ynmh Fn . J .\U I'm

PO . IJox -1(17. Dudding Lane.

Second &amp; Lynn,

Church or Chri§l

11 W Main St,

Central Clusltr

Trinity (..'hun:h

Sunday S•·hL)()]- 1 0·~ a.m., 8thle SructY 7 p m.
Pomero~·

Sunda~ S..:hool

Congregational

am .

Rin·r \ 'alley

Sunda~.

- 7·.\0 p.m

Mini sr.·r: Larr} Hrn11m. Worc;hip - Q lO

Wor;lup Crntcr.- R7J S . .~rJ

A\~·., ~liddlcpo n

. IVlO a.m

HrmiOfk (;ion f'hri.~•i•n Chul'l'h

\',m/.,JIH.h aml \\ard Rd . l',ts!,1r J&lt;.~ m&lt;:'
.\lrlkr. Sunda~ s~· hnol . 1U .\U .t m ,
b~·nm~ · 7 :~0 run

A po~rolrl'

Da1l~ Mu s~

Church of Christ

l 'hun:h or .l rsu~ Chri&lt;ol A.postolic

broken to see the devastation
that this has caused in people's lives.
But this doesn "t have to
be. May we see a renewal in
our roles as parents and
know that we shape the
future when we give ourselves to the shaping of little
minds. Mothers. you influence the world when you
influence the lives of your
children, God offers you an
'Opportunity to be His means
of challenging fear. hatred,
and injustice in the world.
One day soon our children
will receive the mantle of
stewardship of our communities, our town. our nation,
and our world. While there
will be problems (of that, we
can be sure) how those problems are handled and
whether or not our children
will be slave or free to them
is being decided right now.
When those days dawn. 0
mothers, may your "children
arise and call (you) blessed"
(Proverbs 31 ':28a) for you
have loved them, you have
accepted them unconditionally, you have prayed for
them and you have done all
to prepare them to meet life
victorious! y.

- 7 p.m

Rutland Churc:h or 1M Sauarent&gt;

Apostolic

A few years ago, the facilwilderness of confusion or a
pit of destruction?
itator of a leadership conference for a large corporation
Mothers,
nonetheless.
have the power to pour a
asked the group "Who are
the world's most influential
Pastor
foote~ of encouragement and
leaders?"' After some discusThom
acceptance for their chilsion and thorough rethinking
dren's ultimate victories. lt"s
on the topic of leadership ,in
Mollo"an a lot easier to want to do
light of the things that they
what is right or persevere in
had learned, the group unanhard times wheo one knows
th~t there is SOMEON.E
imously annouoced that
mothers are the most· influWhen our oldest son was who is rooting for him and
entiat of leaders in the world still a baby. there were times believes in him no matter
with fathers following at a when he needed his mother what the world thinks or
close second.
not because he was hun- . does.I
'' ·
We mayrejoice when we
Insightful. don ' t you gry; not because he was
{hiok? Laws may be iostitut- cold· not for any reason have expenenced the blessed in legislatures. but they're othe; than he si mply needed ing of godly mothers! Have
only created and pursued to hear her voice and feel a care to not take such a
when someone has convic- her touch.
blessing for granted either'
tion (or a marked lack of it)
A sweet elderly lady next God has granted you a preabout something . Public pol- door, upon observing the c1ous treas~~· the worth of
icy may be shaped by p81ls ,calming effect of my wife's wh•.ch .. IS far more than
and petitions, but these too presence upon our boy, s'oft- rub1es (Proverbs 31: lOb).
are merely the fruit of some- ty reflected "there"s no Thank H1m for that treasure
one's sense of justice and place like m~ma's arms, is aml honor her this weekend!
fairness.
there'?" 1 could only agree as
Mothers may reJOice too Ill
Where is such conviction 1 watched his tears dry ~nd knowmg that they . have
forged? Where is a sense of heard his crying fade into ~nparalleled . op.portumty to
justice and fairness molded? the sourds of peaceful con- 1nfluence a hfe 111 matters of
Where does one's · sense of tentment.
fail h. godliness, ·love and
right and wrong or one's
We learn tirst about love hope . God has appointed
drive and · motivation get and warmth, acceptance and you, if you're a mother, to
rooted though we see not its belonging from godly moth- partner with H1m tn the
fruit until its ripening and ers. Fathers may have the blllldtng ot a soul.
.
Also .. we may gneve
the time for harvest has unique calling and role of
come?
.
radically shaping a child's when. lor one rea~on m
It's in the homr. It's m the · perspective of God (another another. we a.re depnved of
cradle. It's m the arms of the · subject for another time), but such a blessmg. Losmg a
one by whom ~me's impres- a person's foundation for his mothe~ is painful for anyone ,
SJons and earliest recollec- or her take on life and his or but It ts an angUish to see a
tions are first laid and estab· her sense of worth begin young child lose his or her
mother to death.
lished. The thoughts and with his or her mother.
This is not to say that
Even more tragic though is
images that shape the per·
sonality and perspective of other things don' t have the the loss of a mother to the
adults and secure for them a power to challenge that world when she IS swalworldvJew that moves them foundation. They do. How lowed up 111 busy-ness : .. or
onward and upward or anguished is a mother 's sor- worse, abandons the ch1ld m
leaves them wallowing in row when she has done "all order to pursue other "interdefeal are .delivered first the right things" only to find ests.'" .
,
through th1s one called her child wanderin" into a
In the mstances where I ve
"mother.''
"'
observed this, my heart has

The Dally Sentinel • Page A7

www.mydailysentinel.com

992-5432

God so tm·ed the 1\'orld
he gave his onlY
lbl~ !((llff'n SOil ...

John 3:16

&amp;nouffer'!!
:fire &amp; &amp;aftt!'
tOu.-ni.E

1-100·111.0117

Mcig~;, County' ~

352 East Ma1n

Pomeroy, Oh

Okkst

F l on~t

IIIJ!

W

"l ~ l u~ ~en d L,j O'lt tho 11ghl£ wllh sf11!Cilll care"

740·992·2644

740·992·6298

Y erace

is sufficient
for thee: for mY
stren2th is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

Office Service &amp; Supply

137·C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

992·6376

�•

Indians Notebook

Pedro, Red Sox solve Tribe

Stanford not ready

WITHERS
Associated Press

I

May 7, 2004

Red Sox 5, Indians 2

BY ToM

I

Fri~ay,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

CLEVELAND Pedro Martinez
didn't complain. critkize or condemn
a thin g.
After a storm y week. MartineL 'JUsl
pitched - in a place where he has
always been perfect.
Boston 's ace dominated Clevelantl
again. se ttling in after a sha-ky start to
toss seven ~t run g innings and ledd the
Red Sox to a 5-2 win over the Indians
.on Thursday night.
Martinez ·(~-f1 gav·e up four hits three in th e fiN it)nt ng anti
improved w Il - l in 15 cared· starts
agatnst the lndmns . He 's also 6-0 at
Jacobs Fiel&lt;.l.
'"[ just ' think I got luck y today.'"
Martinez said with a smi le shortl y
after telling a dub spokesman he wasn 't going to speak with reporter &gt;.
Martinez made his second appe.trance si-nce publicly criticiLing
Boston's front office. cu tt ing off contract talks with th e Red Sox and
declarin g he would explore rree
agency after the season.
The next day, he was hammered fo r
six runs and nine hits in four tnnings
dunng a loss to Texas. Thi s one didn · t
start much better for the three-t11ne Cy
Young Award winner, who quickly fell
behind 2-0 in the first.
But the Indian s did little after that .
putting only five runners on base with
just one gelling to third. Martinez
walked three and struck out eight.
"Came back')'" Boston manager
Terry Francona snort ed after being
asked about Marunez 's re covery. '"He
just lookeu like he said. ' You 're going
to have to htt it. ' and thev didn't After
the first three hitters . he was in control."
With hi s I05th victor) for Boston.
Martinez moved into a ttc wtth Lefty

BY TOM WtTHERS
Grol'c for eighth plac·e on the dub's h1m credit.'"
Assoq:Bted Press
Omar Vitqud followed \vi th a single
career" in:-. l1sl.
'"I think all Ill) p11chcs l'cre there:· an&lt;.l 1\ent to third nn JuJ y Gcrut"s base
he said. ··Jt was just a malter of gelling hit. Victor Martine7·s RBI grnundnut
CLEVELAND - The Indian s wnn't lt ct\~ tu make any
made it ~-0. but ~lartinct got Dlll or tOll!!h decisions on thctr starttn~ rotattun for a cou pl e
in a C.I"O(l\C.
·M;;nn\ Kanmet hnmcro:d in the· thL' itl lllll ~ \\ lu:n Ttd \"' Hafner l111cd
months: Jason Stanford's left arnt i"s still snrc.
sixth u·t'f C:C. Sabathi.t (I - I) and out and dL"rul got doubled up ~1t ... cl.'Stanford. who !tad been e'pected to retu rn next week
Poke) Rc,·se hit a gn-ahead RBI dou- Ot1d.
from the 15-day di sabled list. wtll l1e stuclmcd until at
hlc in the se1·enth a' the Ked Sox won
Martinez diJnttnatcd until leaving
least the All-Star break because of a 'trained forearm.
their 'l'l'!'nd stratght to split the four- after the sc1·cnth .
The 27-)(ear-old won a spot as the lnd i&lt;1ns' No.
··pcJro wa . . Pedro." lndiaJb lll i.lllaccr 5 -;tarter during tr;tining (,t mp hlll made ju~t two
~ume sene...,
·Kevin 1\'lill&lt;~r h&lt;1d four hth for Eric Wedge said ··W hen a guy pitches
start s before geuin g hun .uH.I hc1ng
Roston. ~oing home .tttcr d 2-5 trip to the way he did. you have to hope for a placed on the DL on April 16.
.A._
mistake. but he tltdn't make too
Te\as and Ckl'dand.
'"He only got a co uple starts. hut he
"There Wi ll be S(l!llt' oil!' to breathe many.
thre~"&lt; it pretty good.'" said manager
Down 2-0. the Red Sox tallied with
nn the pi&lt;~ne ... Fr&lt;l!tc·ona said.
Eric Wedge. who allded 11 was a
Alan Embtee pitched the etghth and two runs in the sixth and two more in
setba&lt;:k to lose Stanford.
Keith Fmtlke threw a perrect ninth for the seven th .
How ever. Stanford's ,thsencc
Reese·, double capped an eighthi~ SIXth ~i.l\'(' in ...,IX challC('S.
will afford Wedge more lime hdorc
Sahathia allowed r(&gt;ur runs and ei~ ht pitch at-bat in whic-h he tmtled off two
he has to move one of hi"' 'tarter-. to
two strikes from . the L1ullpen. If Stanford had .come had. Jell D'Amico
hits in 6 2-3 inning~o, The lefl-hander pirches with
·didn't wa lk or strtke out a bauer. hut Sabathia. who left a game tnnling for appeared to he the most likely candtdate to pitch 111 long
disgustedly to"cd hi s glove and cap in the fir~t time in five "tluts thi s 'eason.
relief.
Rick White carne in and gave up a
the dugout after being. pulled.
D'Amico dropped to 1-2 with d 7. N FRA :~fter lo sing
"I'm the Nn . I starter. that's wha(l run-scoring double to Mark Bellhorn.
on Wednesday night. Since wtnning his ftrs t ' tart. the
.1m here for. t \l Will these games and putttng Boston up -+-2.
nght-hander has allowed 2-1 runs in 2X lltntngs. In his last
that's what I gotta do:· 'aid Sabathia.
Ramtrez dro'e in another run with a two starts. D' Amico has gi,·en up fi,e homer run,,
"ho was disappoin ted he let down single in th e eighth.
'"We need htm to imprO\·e.'" Wedge said.
fans who came to see him dud with
He had ti ed it 2-2 in the sixth with · Stanford had been scheduled to start at Double-A Akron
Martinez. '"I want to give everyone hi s seventh hom er, poking an outside on Saturday. Trainer Lonme Solort said ·stanford had a
who came tontght my apology. This pitch over the wall in nght. Ramire z 1s second MRI. which showed swelltng hut no structural
was a big game.··
6-for-9 with th ree RBis in his career damage .
Martinez ,lrrived in Boston's club- agai nst Sabathia.
Stanford won't throw for a I'&lt;CC~ before begin ning a
··It's unbelie vable that he can do
house about 2 1/2 hours before tltc
rehab proaram. Soloff scull if a·IJ ~oes well. Stanford
first ptt&lt;:h. and imme&lt;.liately began that ... Sabathia smd. "That IS just sick. should be 0pitching agam in mid -July.Joking v. ith R.tmircz.
lt wasn't a strike and he sened tl out
" It 's a littl e sore st ill so we lkc idcd to step back.''
"The baby is ready today.'' Ramirez there like that.'"
Stanford sa id. '" l could pitch with 11. but I wou ld rather
'aid as he patted Martinez. who smi led
Notes: Martinez has ,tlready allowed
wait it out and see what happens '" oppused to maybe
from behind a pa1r of sunglasses . six homers in 43 2-3 inmngs this seahein g out two or three years.'"
"There is no &lt;:old weather. so he is son. after givmg up only seven in 186
Stantord IS the third. young lc lt- hander to be stddmed
~·uod ··
2-3 innings last -.e.:~so n .... Ramirez 1..,
by an arm tnjury. Billy Trabct and Brian T.tllet - both
" Martinez wasn't so good early on. now ried with Lee May for 6.Jth on the le ftie ~- are out thi-.. ~ea~on following el bow "'urgery.
Matt Lawton unl oaded on the right- career homer list wttlt 35 4 .... Lawton
'
hander 's first pit&lt;:h. dn ving his sixth has led off the first with a hom er six
BULLPEN HELP: Jose J11uenez
reJuinthe In dians
homer over the wall in straightaway times in his career. ... Cleveland has on Friday after missing nearly a llH&gt;nth 1\ it.h ,\s tr ained left
side.
cen ter and denting a camera perched hir 24 homers - 19 ha ve been solo
shots.
The Sabathia-Martinez
Jtmcnc z. wf1o wa-.; stgncLI as a fn:e agent thts \\inter. was
on the railing.
'"That doesn't happen ve ry often.'' matchup drew 26.825. the second- 0-1 ~"&lt;ith a 9.00 ERA before he 1\Cill on the DL nn April 9.
The right -hander threw J2 pitches in a rehab .tppearance
Martinez said ... You've got to g ive larges t crowd at the Jake this season.
for .Butlal o on Wed nesday ntght.
Wedge wouldn't dtsclose who \\'Ill be npttnned to
Buffalo. but it will likely be K:11uhitc&gt; T,tdano.
1

'"II

Spider-Man ads on bases don't fly
RoN BLUM
Associated Press
BY

NEW YORK - SpillerMan a&lt;.ls on bases didn't fly
with baseball fan s.
A dav after announcing a
novel ·promotion to have
advertisements on bases next
month ,.
Major
League
Baseball reversed course
Thursd·ty and eliminated that
part of its marketiog deal for
"Spider-Man 2.'"
'The bases were an
extremely small part of this
program:· said Bob DuPuy.
baseball's chief operating
officer. '"However. we understand that a segment of our
fans was uncomfortable with

An ad for "Spider-Man 2" ts
shown atop a base, stmtlar tc.i
those that were to be at major
league ballparks dunng games
as part of a promotion. (AP)
this particular &lt;:omponent
and we do not want ·to detract
from the fan' s experience in

' "
any way.
Under the original phm.
red-and-yellow ads were to
appear on bases - but not
home plate - during games
from June 11-13. The plan
began to crumble Wednesday
night when the New York
Yankees sa id they would
only allow the &lt;tds on bases
during batting practice and only for one game that
weekend.
The ads were to appear as
part ot a deal involving
Major League Baseball
Properties, Marvel Studios
and Sony In c .. the parent of
Columbia Pictures. which ts
releasing the movie on June
30.

Prep Football

CASEY (NOT) .;\T THE BAT: In a prolonged , Jump .
third ba &gt;em an Casey Blake w.ts gi1·en Thursday off.
A notorious!)' slow starter. Bl,tke's battinQ ,tveraQe has
"We don't want to do anydropped
to .242 after goin g 7-for--17 I.I.J\I) ·wi tlt a homer
thing that takes away from a
and tour RBis.
fan's enjoyment of the
Fal'ing Pedro Martinel wa ... n' t going tn help him much.
ga me .
stud
Geoffrey
'"It's a good day to give him a day oil.'" said Wedge, who
Ammer, president of worldfeels
Blake is trymg too hard. '" He needs to rdax."'
wide marketin g ror the .
Blake
, though. doesn 't reel he 's pressing . But he agrees
Columbia TriStar Marketing
that it's probably bes t that he sits out hefore thing' get
Group.
worse.
Man y ba se ball purists
"' Part of me wanted to stay 111 and gn nd 11 nut. but I need
denounced the pl &gt;tn. includto step back.'' he said. '"The days off can he good.'"
ing Fay Vmcent, a former
Lou Merloni started at th11·d for A lake. and gnt a chance
baseball commissioner and
to face his former Red Sox teammat~s tor tlte first tim e 111
presid ent
of
Columbia
the regular season .
Pictures .
Baseball's Hall of Fame
said it could find no records
of ads ever appearing on
week . That's how this game
bases during games.
is.
Ynu never know what's
The ptomotion will go on
going
to happen. We were
with giv~aways and other ads
down early. but you could tell
from Page 81
at ballparks that weekend.
we were goi ng to come back.
because we didn't stop playAdam Dunn struck out.
IIH! .
Griffey lined a bases-loaded
;.That wa:-. a crazy inning.
single to nght field.
I'\'~ never ~een anythin g like
Brandon Larson loaded the that hel'ore.'"
bases again with a dribbler up
Bill Hall matched his
the third-base ltne. and Casey career high with three RB!s .·
'cored when Bennett could- two with a filtlt-mning l10me
n' t handle pinch-hitter Juan
run lhat g.ci\C the Brev.-crs a
tapper
near
first
Castro's
.j.
2 lc;td.
.
ch01ce for the team . he added.
followed
with
base.
Bennett
Among his num erous hon Milwaukee scored two runs
ors. Faulk, a middle line- his wild pitch.
against A;tron Harung in the
"The wheels fe ll off.'"
backer and ti ght end t'or the
first. The Reds lied it in the
Milwaukee
manager Ned
White Falcons, was a special
fourth
. After Hall restored the
Yost ·said. "Bennett got th e
hunorable mention All-State
lead. the Brei\ ers made it 5-2
as a junior. honorable men - groundball he needed. then in the sixth
tion All-Stare in the 2003 sea- the tly ball. You can't ask
Notes: Griffey's home run
son and a Student-Athlete of young pitchers to get six snapped a streak of 6 7 at-bats
the Week pick for WOWK- outs. Any time ymt give " wllhDttt mte. his longest
major league team four or drought since going 79 arTV
out&gt;, you' re mtruuble."
five
He has also wort honorable
bar- in May 199.\.
The Reds gave up a twomention All-State in bttskelGriffey's five RBb gave him
run lead in the ninth innin~ in
ball.
one
game and :1 9-0 lead in I ..Jo:1 for his career. making
Faulk works at Riverside
him the 60th mcrall player
Golf Co urse. He has not the other while bemg swept "nd stxth acttvc player to
decided on a major al WVSC. in two gan1es last week in reach I..JOO ... Hall set a
hut is leaning toward busi - Milwaukee.
'"That was crazy:· Graves c·areer high by cxtcndmg his
ness.
hittin ~ -..tre;tk to six games.
said. "They did it to us last

-

-

Reds

Wahama's Faulk signs with WVSC
BY KEVIN KELLY

kkellyn@ mydailyregtster com
MASON .
W.Va .
Wahama Hi~h School's
Aaron Faulk v7ill be playing
foot bail under another banner
this fall when he JOins the
ranks of the West Virginia
State College team wached
by Carl Lee.
Faulk signed with the
Yellow Jackets program
Thursday at school in the
presence of Joe Johnson.
WVSC's assistant coach and
offenstve coord inator. and
Jim Toth. his assistant coach
and defens ive cooru!llator

Eastern
from Page 81
:in the sixth and three runs
·in the seventh inning to
:post the big 13-1 win.
: Eastern pounded out 11
:hits led by Sandy Powell
' with four RBI's on two sin:gles, Ka&gt;s Lodwick a home

'Does
from Page B1
Wildcats in the seventh includ·
ing a strikeout to end the game,
the score 8-5.
Kiser stuck out five and
walked four in picking up the
win. Arnold suffered the loss in
just two-thirds of an innin.Q of

the but just on a 'd tffcrent level.
W h ' t e I" m nervous. but ready.'"
Falcons .
Playing under the tutelage
Lee,
the
Marshall
Faulk. the of
son of Ti 111 University and Minnesota
Faulk
of Vikin~s standuut who has
Belpre. brought a fo&lt;lt hall ca mp to
Ohio.
and Point Pleasant. was another
Ruth
Ann plus.
'" I like Coach Lee. He's a
and Danny
.Portet
of class act. and the schoo l is
Faulk
Ne~"&lt; Haven . close to home."' Faulk said.
said he chose · Johnson said Fmtlk'' athletito ' ign with WVSC because cism. coachability and desire
the s&lt;: hool and the progr.un 1&gt; to win made him a prime pick
a good fit.
for th e Yellow Jackets. Having
" It 's li ke being a freshman played in two undefeated seaall over again." he said. '"Of sons under Ed Cromley at
course. I will be a freshman. WHS also made Faulk ll good
with

run and single,. Morgan
Weber two 'si ngles. Casey
Smtth had a double ,
'Barringer a triple , Holter a
double, Bissell a double.
and si ngl es by Jenny
Armes, and Kayla Siders .
Vinton County had two
hits, both of which were in
the thild inning on singles
by Lash and Reed.
Robertson funned five
work.
while
Misty
Oi'lcnbcrgcr cu111c on i11 J·ciicf.
They funned one und walked
live. while giving up eleven
hits.
Southern hitters were Kiser
with a triple and .,inglc. Sayre
two singles, Roush two singles. and singles by Pullins,
Pickens, and Tucker.
Waterford hitters were
Shannon Hill with two lingle,,

-

-

Friday, May 7, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

~

If you have a question or'a comment, write: NASCAR Th is Week. c(o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1893, Gastonta. NC 28053

What: Chevy Rock and Roll
400
Where: Richmond (Va.) Inter·
nat1onat Ra ceway (.75 mi.),
400 laps/300 m1tes.
When: Saturday, May 15
Last year's winner: Joe Ne·

tn the etght years the Wltat: Charter 250
What: OhiO 250
Fontana facil ity has been Where: Gateway lnternat10n· Where: Mansftetd. Ohto (.44
hosting C~p events. It was al Ra ceway. Mad tson. til. mt. ). 250 laps/ 110 m11es
career victory No. 66 for the (1.25 m1.), 200 laps/ 250 When: Sunday. May 16
four -time champion. Gormtles
. Last year's winner: First race
don's teammate, Jtmmte When : Saturday. 7 p.m.
at thts track.
Johnson , frn1shed second. Last year's winner: Scan Track qualifying record :
mechek
g1vmg Chevrolet a 1·2 _sweep Rtggs
None
Qualifying record: Ward Bur· after the make took the first Qualifying reoord· Casey At· Race record: None
ton, Dodge, 127.389 mph, five pos1t1ons a week earlie r wood , Chevrolet, 132 .423 Most recent race: Rtck Craw·
May 4, 2002.
111 Talladega. Ala. Gordon be·
mph . Ju ly 30. 1999
ford, 1n a Ford. won the
Race record: Dale Jarrett. came the second dnver to Race record : Kev1n Harv1ck . Kroger 250 at Martinsvil le
Ford, 109.047 mph, Sept. 6. wtn consecut1ve races 1n Chevrolet, 116 595 mph . Speedway on Apr il 17 The
],997.
2004. duplicating a feat ac- July 29. 2000.
Trucks Senes ts tn the mtdMost recent race: Jeff Gor· complished eart1er tn the Most recent race: Ford dnv- dle of almost an enttre
don won for the second year by Matt Ken seth. Date er Greg Btffle won the Stater month wtthout a race.
week in a row. capturing the
Earnhardt Jr. retamed the Brothers 300 on Apnl 1 at
Auto Club 300 at California points lead desp ite a disap- Cattfornra Speed\'lay 111
Speedway. It was Gordon 's pointing 19th-place fin1sh. A Fontana.
thtrd v1ctory at the track, third-place fmish marked

1&gt; tn a span of five races, Jeff
· Griroon has l1i&lt;Ned from 13th to

· ·. third In the N~dei Cup pOIQts
standings and narrowed his
points deficit from 160 to 27 .
1&gt; Many observers were almost
counting Gordon out of the
championship race. To say he
has qweted the critics is· an unqerstatement.
1&gt; What's up with Tony Stewart?
The controversial driver - and
former champion - has been
under fire from other drivers tor
rpugh drlvmg. particularly In the
past mont~. Stewart is still in
the points race but seems all
too often to be his own worst

where he ts the only driver
to have won more than once

Ryan Newman's career best

at Cal1forma Speedway.

KYLE PETIY

Nextel Cup Series , No. 45 Georgia Pacific/Brawny Dodge

enemy.

1&gt; An otherwise uneventfu I race
got crazy at the end. when sev·
eral drivers ran out of gas, rhus
shuffling the standings '" the fi·
nat tap. Bobby Labonte fell from
second to fifth , and Kasey
Kahne dropped from fourth to
13th.
1&gt; fhe weather was sweltering in
the part of Califorma known as
the Inland Emptre. The tempera·
titre almost reached 100, whtch
seemed unbelievable for early
May. Teams reported temperatures of 140 degrees in the
cars' driver compartments.
1!- Stewart, by the way, finislled
second in Saturday's Busch Se·
nes race. Amazingly, he has nev·

Tony
Stewart

Rusty Wa ll ace blamed a bump

~

Petty says both fans and NASCAR wrong in Talladega
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week
Kyle Petty, in marked contrast to
the principals, lambasted race fans at
Talladega for pelting cars with beer
cans after the controversial finish of
the Aaron's 499 on April2S.
Thousands of Dale Earnhardt Jr.
fans took part in a near riot after the
race ended under caution, thus preventing their favorite driver from
having a chance to win. NASCAR officials ruled that Earnhardt's pass of
Jeff Gordon took place after the yellow flag had already been displayed.
"What's the issue? They're going to
have to change the rules," said Petty.
"That's how simple it ,is. If you don't
want to finish like they did last week,
change the rules. Under the existing
rules, we as competitors can't do anything about the way the race ended. I
don't really to hear any more about it.
We did what we were supposed to be
doing."
But Petty described the fans' conduct as deplorable.
. "The fans obviously had their heads
up their rear ends about throwing
stuff out on the race track," he said.
"Those weren't fans. We have fans
that are huge .Nextel Cup fans. Those
people that threw stuff on the race
track are not fans . They didn't come
to see a race. They were disappointed
that they didn't see what they thought
they should have seen.
"l understand that. I've been to the
movies, and I didn't throw my popcorn at the screen when- the movie
didn't end the way I wanted . That's
just not the way you act in this socie-

er won a race in what 1s consid-

ered stock-car racing·s Triple-A
minor leagues.
"Gordon has won three of the
etght Cup races run at Cal!forma
Speedway. No one else has won
more than once. It was his first
victory since 1999. though, hav·
lng taken two of the track's first
three events.
1&gt; Dale Earnhardt Jr. leads the
sport lri both the champtonshtp
standings and money earnings.
His
season
total
of
$2,967,552, is far ahead of
Stewart, !he only other driver to
exceed $2 million. Twenty-seven
drivers have already topped the
$1 million mark.
1&gt; Kahne has now won three
poles in 10 tries, but Ryan New·
man also has three poles. Nei·
\her has won a race yet, though.
1&gt; Fifteen dtfferent drivers led
Sunday's race. Among them
were Ken Schrader, Morgan
Shepherd and Todd Bodine.

1&gt;HOT: Teammates Jimmie John·
son and Jeff Gordon both moved
within striking distance of the
points lead. Gordon has won
two races in a row .... Athird·
place finish propelled Ryan Newman into sveenth position in the
points race, up two spots from
last week .... Brendan Gaughan
posted a sixth-place finish, the
second straight week he's been
tile high~st-flnishing rookie.
•NOT: A. 19th·place finish a)
California co$t Dale Earnhardt
Jr. mOSt of i\is Nextel Cup potnts
lead .... Ellfotl Sadler, who's
"been surprlslng'iy strong for
most of the this season, covld
ql!inage only a 22nd&lt;place finish
SurJIIay and slipped to 10th in
the points.

ty."

Race winner Gordon and runner-up
Earnhardt both passed up opportunities to criticize the fan behavior after
the race.
Petty has won eight times during
his career, which began in 1979. Sunday's race in Fontana, Calif., was the
6SSth of his career. He will turn 44 on
June 2 but hasn't won since a race in
Dover, Del., on June 4, 1995.
"We don 't have to have a top-five

from Tony Stewart for "ru1ntng" h1s
race car and cost1ng h1m track pos1-

t1on. wh1ch Wa llace blames for ano!h·
er crash later on '"the race. "The
k1d needs to calm down a ltttle btt .'
satd Wallace. refemng to Stewart. "I
don t know what's wrong wtth him.
He's really frustrated for some rea·
son:·
NASCAR This Week's Monte Dut·
ton gives his take: · It's unltke Stew·
art to have trouble keep1ng h1msell
·under contro l 1n the car. H1s problems
once he cl1mbs out are well documented. Someth1ng IS am1ss. howev
er. In a str1ng of races. Stewart has
been h1s own worst enemy. gettmg 1r·
rat1onally angry at other dnvers who.
as 1t turned D'Jt. weren't at fault. "

A team sport?

0

ne of the announcers on TV
called NASCAR the ·utttmate
team sport· the other day. As

far as l know. 1t's JUSt one guy m the
car. So, IS it really a team sport?

Madison Lewis
London. Ohio
Some have satd NASCAR ts an indi-

.,

vidual sport with a team concept.

While only one person on each team
drrves a car. the team ttself is made up
of dozens of employees. from ptt crew
members to publiC relations staff. The
Nextel Cup c~rcuit is made up of approximately 45 race reams. While drtv·
ers may race for the same owner, they
only somet1mes work m cooperation
wtth teammates whr/e on the track.

The ftrst ma1or NASCAR race ever
run 1n the state of Cal1forn1a occurred

,,

Valley

batters and wa lk ed just one
tn p1cktng up lite win. while
Eri&lt;:a Reed sufrered the loss
with one and walked tw o
and hit two.
Eastern
hosts
Miller

Rusty
Wallace

s

·John Clark/NASCAR Th1s Week

Kyle Petty said the controversial ending of the race In Talladega on April 28
did not reflect well on fans in attend;mce.

car," said Petty. "We don 't have to have
a top-1 0 car. We need to be in the teens
somewhere. We've struggled to get
back to where we were two yea rs ago
as an organization. We look at it a little
different than some other teams.
We're probably a year to 18 months be-

hind where we thought we should be .
"We're back on the plan we needed .
I don't look at it as being a financial issue or a driver issue or a crew issue. I
have to look in the mirror and say it's
more of a management iss ue than anything."

on Apnl 8. 1951. when Marshall
Teague won at Carrell Speedway '"
Gardena. dnvmg a Hudson Hornet on
the half·mlle d1rt track Among other
tracks Included in NASCAR s sched·
ute during the 1950s were Oakland
Stad ium . the Bay Meadows horse
San Mateo, Merced Speed·

trac~ 111

way. Santa Clara Fairgrounds in San
Jose. Redwood Speedway on Eureka
and Ascot Stadtum tn Maitland. Two
Sacramento tracks, the Californta
State Fatrgrounds and Capital Speed·
way. were on the sclledule at various
t1mes. One histone race occurred on

March 12, 1961, when Ftrebatl
Roberts led every lap in a race at

March banks Speedway, a 1.4·mtle
track ~~ Hanford. It marked the f1rst
w1re-to-w1re vtctory 1n a NASCAR SU·
pe rspeedway event

&amp; supply

Co.

Mond ~'Y·

555 Park St • Middleport

Eastern 13, VInton County 1
Eaatern
002 5033 13 112
VInton Co 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 I 26
WB - Robertson Md LodwicK LB -

992-6611

Re&amp;d ana Coll1nt

Crow's Family Restaurant
Fell(urtng Kentucky Fried Chicken

Zlll M•ln St.

Dri~t·Thru Window

Pomeroy, Ohio

ladle lllaelt

Mull\ti'Y M~Cutck~m two sin·
gles. Huley Druyer u triple.
Desir~ VllnDync u single. and
singles by Kyle Robinson und
Kaylu Murphy.
Southern hosts Waterford
Momlay.

'IW'WGIIQ

1

jii'We. . t

n

252 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH

106 North Second Ava. • Middleport, OH

Southern 8, Waterford 5

:----·--··

Southern 20 2 004 D 8114
Watarlord 011 012 0
581
· WB - K1ser and Sayre. LB- Arnold and

'

~

.,.

~

' "'#

"' ' .. "' . .t

,, .::"' ' ' '..jt

'

"

'~

'

Barth

)

'•

�•

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, May 7, 2004

www.mydailysentinel com

Fr1day, May 7, 2004

www mydallysentmel com

\!rrtbune - Sentinel CLASSIFIED

Major League Baseball
Na1looll League
WT

W

Pet.

L

Strll

P10

GB

Hotne

~~u~,~~~3!'~~~iooi'
~~~~5~5f;~~Wi2~-l

NV YaniiJIM

6
3
0

s.nmore
Tcxono

Tampe.Biy

a

CENTRAL

W

2
2
8

520

333

2
7
1

Pet

GB

357

e

l

Ch&lt;aoo
.~~~Sa.~=-==~1~7=:il
630
M~IA
6
1'0t-:: 593
De1mi1~~~==jl3

~~land

~

Kansas City

464
444

15
8

12
8

308

w

L

Pel.

'
r--~..as
18

10
10

5

655
643
464

7

393

WEST

Oli&lt;1ancl
Sea. .

,

.AriW!eim

~2
7 T~ Bay

2a

L2

e-7

P10

Strti

Home

Away

5=53

W
l

0Q-55

76-65

28

l4

78
87

6-7
48

6.&amp;

2 12

L

2 fJ

GB

s..

P10

2._ _

7

g...5
--,
88 _
~
_JJ
1i_
79

L2
l2

6-.t!

81,

TlM.ndlv• Relutll
BoSton5

W2

"
__§_

_

~a

8-2
3-7
4-6

571

L

Away

e.2

W6

.. 2
H._

w
w

55

W1

3

6-6

'7
67

5 0

3

OOSpm

Bay

-o a

Oakland Aedman2

2 al Anahe m Lactay 2 3

Hendrid(son

NY Mes
Ph adelehlll

·-""'
.,...,.....
WEST

Slln Oie90
Anzo a
Coorado

46
46
6-&lt;

55
37

l

w

48

462
276

••

L

l'&lt;f.

GB

0

14

15

~

2

4

462

w

L

Pel.

7

0
1
5
5

630
62
.....
.....

7

"

'2
2
2

P10
73

,.5 ..."
2

3

55

5

46
55

GB

P10

0 05 p m

•b r hbl
Kaa2b
4000
Cin ron ss 4
0

•b hb
TWiik 2b5220

LGnzz
4 020
HI b
b
0
S Fm~cf 3
0

SSasarl 4222
ARmrz 3b 4
Hnds'o\l 4220

CPnson c 4

DBur1

4

Oel eeb5255

30
4 0

Baenc502

Ma~nec

AEM1tss 4 0
Cmenp300
Mactas ph
0 0 0
Merc:kp 0000

0
a00

Ossens p

Vlrealp 0000
Dfi'IDeph
000
8a81'Qll ph
Q Q0

Gochlw n ph

34 3 8 3 To111

Totals

Ar :z:on•

02
010

Ch ugo

0 0 0

401115 1

000

000 03• -

052

3
1

E-Kill a 2 LGo za ez 2 H enb and
4 1i acv 6) DP-A zona
Ch cago
LOB-o\ zona 0 Ch cago 0 28-LGon
za ez (6) OBau sa 6) HA Delee 4)
IP H RERBBSO

A lzona
Dassens l
v arrea
Anndo ..,n

4

'

82

2'

'
2

2

0

'

3

2

3

3

2

Mono

Ch c:ago
7

CementW S
Merclc:e
Hawkns

23
3

Wa~meye

7

3
0

0

0

0

0

0

St Lou •

3

0

3

3

4

6

0
0

0

2

2 0

2

Ban&amp;en p 2000
H ph
0 0
ANunez ph 0 0 0
Tot11 37212

P ttaburgh

000

000

29 5 8 3
002 OOx -

2
5

401
E,-Monaes 3 Ensbe g 3 LOB-P tls
burgh 9 Hous on 8 29 S ynes 4 H
Bagwe 9) Ensbe g 5) SB-JKe
1S-WMe2
PH RERBBSO
P ttsburvh
Benson l 3 2 5 2 3 6 5 5 5 5
Meadows
300000
0 0 0 0 0
STo es
Houston

000

'I

Houaton

7 7

6-B

47

87

l2
l3

83
87

7 9

64
55

l
l

66
87

55

l3

89

03 6

2

2

0

0

0

3
23

010

5 5
•
3

48
48

2 DP S
St Lous5
(8 By d (4 )
e 5 SBWo
SF

6

5

4

4

2

23
23

D

0

0

0

0

2

0

0

0

3
3

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

2

0

7
0
0
0

'JO 3 8 3

000

OOt

000

020

000

0111

2

2

0

0

0

6

OOQ
200

002
000

7

4

0
0

0

0

9

2 3

Bchnan II 4 o o
Lnbnlc:p 0000
RaHdzc " 0 2 0
AVBZQ2 lb 3 0 0 0

Lwncep 3000
Atlnson If
o0 0
To ala 31 713 5

3

2

3

210 000 -

5
2

2

2

Totu

San F anc sco 000 000 tOO

2

0

0

0

ab hb
DWserl 4000
DaRosa ss 4 0 0
Locheb 4 000
JEstda c 3010
AJones ct 3 0 0
Hssmn 3b 4 0 0
Ho nslf 41 20
r-lmpn p 2000
JGaca2b 4 0 0 0
JuFcoph
12
EddPzph
0 0 0
Tolafl34382

2

3
0

5
2

DJmnz 2b 4
Laknss 5
~"'as ey b 4 2
Dunn
32
0
GrfJc
5235
Lason3b 30
0
RedngpOOOO
Gavesp 0000
aCuzrl3 0 1 0
RW ~!l P 0000
JCa&amp; o3b 0 0
Venne ~00
Haangp 2 00 0
Fee rf
2
0
36 110 S Totala 35 810 I

200

0

6

5

2

4

3

0

3
0

5

'
23

0
2

ab r h b
4 0 2

ShStwl

CGzm ss
Koske3b
Otlmntl
JJones r1
LFodc

DO -

0

0

0

0

P~tR~an

367 Pe e F o da

357 JW

•

Lou s 27 Htllton Coo ad o 25 Dunn
C nc nna1 24 PodSedn k M lwaukee 24

ab hb
Kosayc 5034
Bynes
5000
ECha z3b4 0 0 0
Oyert
4
20
Httbegtl4
0
Durazo dh 3 3 3
Cosb~ss 4
0
OMec 2 0
Sculao2tl2 0 0 0
MMnph 000
Mnchno 2b 0 0 0
Tota•
34107

I

Looncf 4
2
Jee ss
50
AAdgz3b3 0 00
Sl'ltledrt 3 0
o
Posadec 3 0 0 0
Masu
3000
BWmsdh3
0
TCaktl4
0
EW sn 2tl 4 1
Tot••
New Yo

32464
~

040

40

0

4000
40 0
4020

dh 3 0 0 0

676533
23'23002
1310010

6
23
3

538552

7

6

23
3

0

0

2
2

0

0

0

23

ARam ez

Your Ad,

3
0

3

0
0

0

0

'0

0

0

0

7236445
3 0 0 0 0

a o a

0
0

0
000
28 2 5 1

0

a o o

'

0

M waukee

Casey C nc nna1 2 Edmonrts 51 Lou s
2 Cas Ia Coo ado 2 Bggo Ho1,1son
1 H de go Hous on 0 Heno Colo ado
0 SSosa ~h cago 0
TRIPLES - DW sa AI an 11 4 P erre F o
Jan~

ns

A zona 9 Thoms Ph adelph a 9
Podsedn k M !waukee
DRobes osAngees SPereFo
ou s 9 Cama on New
6 RSande s
ou s 6
PITCH NG (3 Dacl&amp;lona) - C emens
Hous on 6 0
000 2
C eman Ch ea
go 5
833 2 29 sh Los Ange es 5
8 33 3 76 JKennedy Co o ado 4 0 l 000
223 Eses Coo ado 4
800 560
TGa ne New Yo k 4
800
B5 PW
sonCncnna 30 000 479
STRIKEOUTS
RJohnson A zona 5
Wood Ch cago 50 Beckett F o ida 45
BShee s M waukee 44 Clemen en cago
4 C ema ns Hous on 4 LHe na dez
Men ee 3
SAVES - G •vas C nc nna
2 Benitez
F o de
Gagne Los Ange es 9 fiB gas
San F anc sco 9 Meaa P sbu gh 9 Hoff
man San D ego B Chacon Coo ad o 7
Sexso

SCOREBOARD

F d•r Ma., 7
edlo

Te•asT~esup

sng Ragesae

0

STARS
Wednaaday

0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0

0

0

0

-B Mue a ad Davd Onz R&amp;d So•
Mue a h a ebreak ng lh ee un home n

Thd

he 9 Xlh n ng and On l home ed 1W ce n
Bosons95woove Ceveand

oe

Ve non We s B ue ays homered w ce
and edaceee ~gh w ~ f11eRBs ead ng
To onto o a 0 3 v cto y ove Kansas C y
-Dev d Be Ph es h e h ee un hom Sf

302

Rvarl2012

Flo Ida

S~hndc3000

hb
20

400 0

ab

YumS\LE
PoME Rov/Mmnu

I'F.RSONMJl

Flllplna-4 Love
Find your Philippine

Lady
for love

1 800-497-8414

rhb

and

Pee
5022
Easey2b 302 0

P~

9d a caee hgh wl~ lou RBs n
adephas54wn ove S Lous

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Ga age Sa e F day May
7th and Sa u day May
8th
637 Po eca1 Roael
Ga l po s
Washe 0 ye Go Cart
Cu a ns Law n mowe
ots of M see aneous
Househo d Items

ANNOUNO.l\!EI\TS
C1 Bee Ca yOutpemt
to sa e Ches e Townsh p
Me gs County send etta s
of nterest o The Oa y
Sent ne PO Box 7.29 20
Pome oy Oh a 45769

r

G!VFAWAY

Alwhte bue eyed mae
kitten tte I a ned about
8 we eks ad (304)882
22 1
Free to a good home 1 1 2
od
beagle
mx
Neu te ed house/b roke n
a11ect onate
gen e

(304)675 4500

li pace n heALWes

0

MayFose

74

y

0

F s1

r

STOLEN BASES

De o a

UNrAND

FoUND

hod etc Summe wood
Dr o I Wason Satu day
8th
Large Ya d Sa e Satu day
May
8
at
694
Cente pont Road Oak
H u C othes VHS moVI eS
COs Famed a 1 nck
nacks baskets and o s
more come ea y sta t ng
@ 800am
May 78 3 m esou 554
I am ad gh n Chesh e
8 and name co h ng
baby adu t
May 79 Mu t lam y ya d
sa e 554 Jay 0 Sp ng
Vatey A szes cohng
nc ud ng
boy g
nfant/ odd e teens La ge
var ely ol terns books
curt a ns I nens
house
wa es
bean es s!uHed
an ma s col eel b es desk
9am 5pm

Found Black/wh te ca
very ame On Roush
Lane Sandy Scot! 740
o
Go a
367 7328
Westfal 740 367 0185
lost Back Lab puppies
wMe on chest 6 months
old Last seen 5 2 04 297
Ou y Ad 740 446 1264
lost Female Husky m 11
dog Any nlo p ease cal

(7 40)446 4610
Pekingese dog
tack snave answe s o
name Tedd e had wh e
bandana
on
neck

Puh•llc

Nocllce Is hereby
given
1hot
on
Saturday May 8 2004
at 10 00 am a public
sale will be held at
211 w Second St
Pomeroy Ohio Tha
Farmers Bonk and
Savings Compony Is
selling for cash In
hand or certified
check the following
colla1eral
1996
Chevrole1
Beretta
1GILV154XTY114523

Bank Plamllff vs
John J Ginther at al

of 1 402 68 feet lo a
P K nail se1 In lhe

Defendants

upon

center line of County

Judgment

therein

The Farmers Bank

and tenements locat

rendered baing Case

No 03 CV 146 In said
Court the Shariff of
Meigs County Ohio
will offer for sole at
the front door of the
Courthouse

in

Pomeroy
Meigs
County Oh10 on the
11th day of June
2004 at 10 30 a m
the follow1ng lands

Ohio roserves the
rlgh1 to bid at this
sale and to withdraw

ed at
47485 Morning Star
Road Racine OH
45771 A complete
legal description of

the above collateral

lhe real estate Is

prior to llle Further

and

Savings

Company

Pomeroy

Road #30
Thence

with the

center line of Coun1y
Road #30 South
64deg 51 40 East a
distance of 120 93
feet to a P K naUset
Thence
South
67deg 23 57 East a
dlatanca of 53 76 faet
to a PK nail set
Thence

leaving

said center line south
OOdeg 53 18 West
passing thru a 518
Iron pin set at 16 25
feet and going a total
distance of 1 329.20
feet to 1he principal
point of beginning
containing
5 0202

The

Farmers Bank

and

Savings

as follows
Being a part ol a
58 5 acre tract ol

reserves

land last transferred

ways and easements

the righlto rejecl any
or all bids aubmll1ed
The
above
descrlbad collateral
will be sold •• Is

to Alan Wayne and
Julia E Sheppard as
recorded In Deed
Book 291 at Page
565 Meigs County
Recorder a
Office
Meigs County Ohio
said tract being situ
ated In the South Hall
of
Section
13
Township 3 North
Range 12 West
Sutton
Township
Meigs Counly Stata
of Ohio and more
particularly
described as follows
Beginning at a 5/8
Iron pin sot on the
South line of said
58 5 acre tract 11ld
pin
bears Narth
99•55 04 West a dis
lance of 2 292 52 feet
and South 89' 29 13

of record
The bearings used

Company

where Is

with

no

expresalone
or
Implied
warran1y
given
For further infor

mellon or for on
appointment
to
Inspect
collateral
prior to sale data con

tact Cyndle Gillilan
Diana

Rector

or

Randy Hays at 992
2136
515 6 7
Public Notice
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY
OHIO
HOME NATIONAL
BANK
PLAINTIFF
VI
JOHN J GINTHER
ETAL
CASE NO 03 CV
146
NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of on Order
of Sale laaued out of
lhe Common Piau
Court
of
Meigs
County
Ohio In the CIH af
the Home National

'

a

West a distance of

545 26 feet from lhe
Southeast corner of

Section 13 1'3 N A
12 w
Thence with the
South line of said
Section 13 South
89'29 13 Wast a dis
tance ol160 25 lee1to
o 518 Iron pin oe1
Thence
leaving
oald Section line
North 00 53 18 Eall
p11alng lhru a 518
Iron pin ttl at
1 385 31 feat and
going a total distance

acres more or lass

subjeclto all right-of

In the above descrlp
lion are assumed and

are lor the delermlna
lion of angles only

value

TEAMS OF SALE
10% down day of
sale
balance on
delivery of daed
Sold subject to
sacond hall 2003 and
accrued 2004 raal
estate taxes

ALL
SHERIFFS
SALES
OPERATE
UNDER THE DOC
TRINE OF CAVEAT
EMPTOR PAOSPEC
TIVE PURCHASERS
ARE
URGED TO
CHECK FOR LIENS
IN THE
PUBLIC
RECORDS OF MEIGS
COUNTY OHIO THE
MEIGS
COUNTY
SHERIFF MAKES NO
GUARANTEE AS TO
THE STATUS OF
TITLE PRIOR TO
SALE
Douglas W Little
Attorney for PfalntiH
(4)30 (5) 7 14

was

Professional

Surveyor 16844
Excepting
and
reserving the coal
previously conveyed

Reference Deed
VOlume 5 1 Page 159
Meigs Coun1y Official
Recorda
Excepllng
1 200
acres conveyed lo
State of Ohio by deed

dated O.cember 19
2000 and recorded In
VOlume 117 Page 3
89 Meigs County
Official Records
Audllor s Parcel No
11H11143 008
The
above
described real eetate

Ia sold at It without
warranties
covenanta

or

PROPERTY
ADDRESS
47485
Morning Slar Road
Racine OH 45771
REAL
ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT

have an Interest
Situated In the
VIllage of Middleport
Meigs County and
S181e of Ohio and fur
thar described to wit
The Eas1 One-half of
the Lot No 124 being
a strip of land filly

Butternut
Avenue
Pomeroy OH 45769
and the unknown
heirs devisees laga
tees
executors

(5) 7 14 21 28 (6) 4

feet on Lincoln Street

and/or

and lilly feet on an

heirs of Dora Wining

alley and also lour

all of whose rest
dances are unknown
and cannol by rea

VS

Steven Craig et of
O.fendanta
Case No 04 CV.032
Judge Fred W Craw
Ill
LEGAL NOTICE
Unknown Spouse 1f
any of Tanya S Burt
Hass whose last
addreaa 11 unknown
will take notice that
on March 19 2004
Cltlflnanclal
Mortgage Company
Inc
Iliad
Ita
Complaint In the

ala for Alzheimer s

Disease and Related

alley towards

notice that on the
26th day of February
2004 Deutsche Bank

Fourth Street on Lot

National

No 123 fore distance
of filly feel all sltuat
ed In Palmer Addition
to
the
VIllage
ol

Company

spouses and assigns
and

COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS
COUNTY
OHIO
Deutsch a
Bank
Truat
National
Company
as Custodian or
Trustee fka Banke,..
Judge Fred W Crow
Trual Company ol
California NA
Plalnllff
Cue No 04CV022
VI
Helen Townsend e1

Common

Pleas Meigs County
Ohio
Case
No
04 CV 032 The object
of and demand for

relief
In
the
Complaint Ia lo lore
close 1he lien of

•

the

unknown

guardians of minor
Incompetent

Trust

as

Custodian or Trustee

fka Bankers Trus1
Company
of
Calllornla NA filed Its
Complaint In the
Common Pleas Court
ol Meigs Counly
Ohio In Case No
04CV022
on the
docke1 of lhe Court
and the ob"ct and
demand for relief of
which pleadmg Is to
foreclose the lien of

plaintiff s mortgage
recorded upon the
following described
real estate to wit
Property Address
115
Butternut
Avenue Pomeroy OH
45769 and being
more

Public Notice

1640 Graham SchOo Ad
boys c othes 7 0 worn
ens c othes 8 12 toys
n sc terns

Dementta

2 Fam ly Yard Sae 8 5
Saturday May 8 3607
Buav l e Pke Too much o
mentiOn

Funded Program In
Meigs Monroe Noble
and
Washington
counties
Small
minority owned and

1JBatl!' 'QJ::nbune
(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel

mit proposals Details
of serv1ces and fund

lng are Included In
the AFP Compleled
proposals deadline
5 00 p m Moy 28
2004 Call Deboroh
Brown

(740) 992-2155

.$1omt .$1Ieasant

The above named

defendant Is required
to answer within
twenty eight
(28)
days after last publl
calion which shall be
published once a
weak for six consecu

live weeks or lhey
might be denied a
hearing In thlt cau
LEANER SAMPSON
I ROTHFUSS

Satu day May 8th
031
Longabe ge
baske s women s c otn ng
househo d terns
much

~egtster

Satu day May 8 9 5
June on Rt 7 S &amp; Lovers
Lane Word p ocesso fu
nitu e WWII A e Klcl en

F day
Fam ly
Fu nture
g s 8 pus
worn ens t&gt;oy s 8 12

Yad Sae 12 mes out
Aoute2 8 May S 6 7 8

5!7 5/8 2 m les Eas of
Po ter on 554 Household

Pt&gt;MFROVIMIIIDLE

ems
c othes
shoes
desk
ounge c hars &amp;
p om d esses

2 Fam y yard sa e 2 1 2
mte l orn At 7 on 143

Vanely of ;1ems

'"4

YAR]) S\l.E-

AAA Planner

5 lam y 613 Elm St

(5) 7

terns Ra n postponed to
14 15

/' '~~ ,. f. ..
Capo 1 Sa e 121 Second
Ave Fr day Sa u day 5/7
5 8 9am ? Ch ld ens &amp;
adu t c oth ng household

Mu

~

sew ng
mach nes drapes bed
d ng chars hand oo s
msc

May 7 &amp; 8 St At 143 n
Ha r sonv e 9 5 urn tu e
sma app ances c o h ng

VISA

76

RACO YARD SALE AT
STAR MILL PARK Rae ne
May11 121om9 o4pn
and May 13 om 9 o 2pm
A p oceeds go o scho a
sh p
und
C oth ng
sl oes pu ses c u ta ns
com o te se s
nens
pans c oth g n ce loys
d s es g assv-..a e baby
!ems h gh cha ca seat
bJoks sweope s TV s
ho day deco at ons rugs
p l ows
cha s
m crowaves lu n tu e &amp;
otso msc On May 3
an cloth ng $1 00 a bag
and m sc ems one ha I
p ce Thanks o you sup
poI

and C aft Sae Sat
8 00
long abe ge
Fu n tu e
What nots C othes a
s zes Ba sket Tee B d
Houses 2nd li a e pass

Ya d sa le 4 Ma n
ac oss I om Tu End e We
F day 900 to 630 Sat
900 to 300 Lots of M sc
terns lew co has ma ble
end ta bes needs wo k

304)675 7323

Ente a nment
0 shwashe TV s s e eo
Console Lamps D apes
Bedd ng
D shes
Househ'o d tams Chu ch
Pew Women s Teens
Popu a
Name B and
Cohng Los Moe N ee
ems 3 M es Eas on
Sandh
Road o Be e

4 Go f c ubs k ds tee ns

AUCTION
Modu a
House and Too s &amp;
Equ pment Buckeye H s
Ca ee
Cente
Ao
G ande Oh o T&amp;E at
1 1 OOam House a 2 00
Noon on May 8 2004
740 245 5334

Absolute Top Do a U S
Slve
God Cons
P oo tsets
0 amends
God
R ngs
US
Cu rency MT S
Con
Shop
151
Second
Avenue Ga po s 740

446 2o42
I '11'1 0\ \II\ I
Sl IH It Is

110

t 10

Hu 1 \h'ilf n

Fam y ya d sa e
Hobson Ad M dd epo by
Megs
Cape
&amp;
Oecorat ng F day May 7 h
0 4 &amp; Satu day May 8th
9 4 Househo d I ems
Home
n e o
g ts
women s and mate n ty
c othes and muct1 mo e
0 ew F sher eSidence 5
m nu as
from Rae ne
Locks &amp; Dam on 338 I am
se ng my a e husband
too s plus o s o house
hold terns

HH P \\ wn:n

Learn to Dnve

Ya d

8 2004

WMffi])
T08U\
nume ous terns
Sa fm95

All Olsptay 12 Noon :Z
Business Days Prior To
Publ ication
sunday Display 1 oo p ""
Thursday for Sundays Paper

110

\•RD SALE
Pr PI EASAI\'f

May

La ge am y ya d sa e
Our f rst ever K ngsbu y
Ad CA 18 Sgns posted

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

• All ads must be prepa1d "'

msc

Tractor Trailers
We rn n Men and Wome
F and Pa T me C Asses
Job P acomon
CDLTanng
F nanc ng Ava abe

AS SEEN ONTV
ALLIANCE
Tractor Tra e T a n ng
Cente s Wythev le VA
1 800-334 1203
Loca
Agency
seek ng
PCA S and Home Hea th
Ades w
a n the ght
pe son company olfe s
bene ts I ex b e schedu
ng compel t ve wages
and a g ea wo k atmos
phe e
Peas e
send
esume o CLA box 568
co Ga pols li bune 825
Th d Ave Ga pols OH
4563
heath phys ca the apy
se vces Motva ed sef
d ected nd v dual WI ke
I ex be schedu ng good
ndependence and com
pensat on Oppo un es
ava abe nAhe11s Megs
Jackson V nton &amp; Ga a
count ~s Ca
888 464

26
needed
Chopacc
Cen e
Mus
censed and v e sk ed n
a a eas o th e apeul c
massagf' Exce en! pay
and wo k atmosphe e
Pease ax esume o 740
886 1609 Attn Ka lly
Med

Mus be abe o perlo m a
aspects ot Re sp ala y
Ca e nc ud ng ~KGs and
ABG s Ru a hea hca e
lac ty compe 1 ve wages
good bene I s I 9)( be
sche du ng
Contact
Hasp a
Doc o s
Ne sonv
e
Cadopumonay 0 eco
1950 Mount San Ma y
0 ve Ne sonv e OH

45764

{740 753 93

ex 6262 EOE

Waste Management nc
she eadngpovde
n
he so d waste manage
ment ndust y We a e cu
en y oolo: ng o a espon
sbe mo vaed ndvdua
o assume the espons b
tes o
Sea ehouse Attendant
Ga a County Landt
Bdwe OH45614
Qua ed cand da es ffiU.il
possess competency w h
compu te ope at on nc ud
ng M c osofl 0 I ce spec I
ca y M crosoh Wo d and
Ex ce Mus also posses
peasant e ephone sk s
and ab ty o mu ask
Was e Management nc
.offe s a compe ve com
pensa on and bene! ts
package nc ud ng 401K
Health and L e nsu ance
Sho Te m and long Te m
0 sab y among seve a
o he benel ts

Agency nc seek ng a fu

ne a d PAN AN s and a
PAN
Occupa ana
The ap st for the Gdl pol s
Oh o a ea
Mus t
be
censed both n Oh o and
Wes V rgna We offe a
compet t ve sa a y bene 1
package o fu I me and
401K EOE Pease send
esume to 352 Second
Ave Ga pols OH 45531
Attn
Ha ess

ANEW CLINICAL
PEELS
Wan o ook you nge
AND ea n Money? lets
a k Me NEW AVON cal
Ma lyn (304)882 2645
Joyce (304)675 6919

Resumes w be accep ed
unt 5 14 2004 w lh a ten
tat e
sta
da e of
6 4 2004

n e ested pa es may
send a eswme to (pease
do not con tact s e d ec
y
Was e Managemen Inc
34 5 Twp Ad #447
G ENFORD OH 43739
Job Code SA0244

EOEAA MFD

Ap 1304)882 3630

Now you can have borders and graph1cs
-.._,.
added to your class•fied ads
{,;.
lr1'.
Borders $3 00/per ad
GraphiCS 50¢ for small
$1 00 for large
150

o assume
es of

10

St ltOOL'

Ho,1e;

I Ns 1111 rnoN

1\lonu 1 Ho\IFS
lOR

FUll Sill

Gall pol s Career
Col ege
(Ca ee s C ose To Home
Ca Today 740 446 4367
1 800 2 4 0 4 52
W\1/v. gn po see ee o ege on
A eo sa Memoe A ed ng

B ckRanch nancewe
estab shed ne ghbo hood
5 B 2ca ga age
#b
ext a ga age n back Mus
to
app ec a e
see

Co
or ndependen Co ege
a d ScMos 2748

By owne
nov ng
ga age deck e• as ve
f on age ou sde cty m
740 949 8049

WANTID

foDo

A I rea estate adver1 s ng
n th s newspape Is
sub ect to the Federal
Far Hous ng Aet of 1968
wh ch makes t ega to
advert ae any
p ele ence I m tal on o
d ec m nat on bated on
race coo e gon aex
faml al status or nat onal
or gin or any Intention to

am an expe ence Ch d
Ca e p OV de p OV d ng
ch d ca e n my home
am a non smoke and
have a anced n ya d Ve y
easonab e ates S 0 pe
day pe ch d $ 5 on
weekends Ava abe any
hou s 10 m es sou h o
Ga po s Ca 740 256
740 256 9350
1673 0

dl sc r mlnat on
Th s newspape wll no1
know ngly accepl
advertl8ements to eal
es tate wh ch s n

""iOn n

voa t onofthelaw Ou
ea~rs

are he

e~by

ntormed tha all
dwellings advert sed n
lh • newspape a e
aval able on an e qual
opportun ty bases

6x80 s es ava abe S 5
h nc uaes wate
seve &amp; ash 740 992

pe mo

216
ca ga age n g oun
oo $ 5 000 3460 S a
Roue 2"18
( 40)256

Me gs Memo y Ga de s
on he Ve e an s
dE!
(740)992 2636

962

925
Wash
houses mob e homes
me a bu d ngs and gut
e s Ca 740)446 0 5
ask fo Ron a eave mes
sage

21 0

Lo on Sand H

N ce 3 bed oom
ba h
cone ete d veway ca
po $49 000 Eas1 Be he
Chu ch Ad I 40 44 9 08

0!~~ ll&lt;ll I~Tl1

.,
"'
OH 0 VALLEY PU8L SH
NG

CO

s

2

2

h you bad
ancls and nc ease p ope
ty va ue co Ma~&gt;:e a net
no akes 740 388 8228

ac e o

on Racoon
u y u
n shed 2 bed oom mot&gt; e
home boat docKs deck
ng boa amp 24 ca po
Ask ng
$35 000
Ph
(740)367 025 ce
ao
645 0508

C eelo.

14x65

10

msc
Yard sa e 81 Beech St
M dd epo t May 5 6 7
clothes, toys, mise

Eanup o$800h plus
week y bonuses
We olfe pa d hO days
and vacat ons
Heath Bene! s ava able
Fu o pa I me open ngs
Ca I today
1 877 463 6247 ex 2454

&amp;

EMT s
1354

Back Yard Sa e Thu sday
F day Saturday Home
ne o
amps rae ne
abecha s 27 coo te e
v s on cookbooKs novels
&amp; old books t ad ng ca ds
e ect c hasp a bed Hoyt
hyd au c It plus s ze
c o1hes 123 Park Or

Ca o na Lumt&gt;e
n the
Flea
Ma ke
Bu td ng
Baby Adu t Todd e TV
Stands Mate n ty 0 s es
Toys
Lois of
M sc
Someth ng o Eve yone

ng m sc

Hugh Ya d Sae May 6 7 8
730am? CabCeekRd
5th d ve on the left
Todd e bed bunk bed lu
nture
cohng
oys
Home fnter or Lots of
g eat stufr Cheap
Some h ng lor everyone
norlh of Lak n at ba n on
ell May 7 8 sam ?

Dlspalchers needed
Expe ence p e e ed Out
not equ ed Ca Monday
Fr day 8 4 740 446 7930
o app y at 1354 Jackson
P ke

ce t ted and at east

1

yea exp Ca
740)446
1637 or send esume to
P an s &amp; Son 300 4th Ave
Gal pols Oh 45631

Pas t on Open at Da s
G oup
Home
Adu

1740)992 5023
P n ShOp part me 20 +
pe wee~ mov ng nto u
me Mus be dependat&gt; e
and have good PC ab es
and know edge ol g aph
ICS (304)675 2952
ee mg
peop e oca
y vho want to ea
oney
wh e
os n
e gh show ng othe

Qua ed cano da es !!lllS.l
possess p o expe ence
n emp oyee supe v son
and fam a y w h heavy
equ pmen ope a on and
e)(pe ence n e the so d
was e and! I o ea th nov
g
const uc on
Add on a pete ed qua
cat ons would
c ude
co npute
e acy OSHA
p og am know edge and
e•posu e to heavy equ p
men! mane ace

0
Down
Paymen
Possbe wgood c ed on
h s bea
y es o eo9 h ce u y home 3 oed
oo Tl 2 ba h cen a a ~
2 ca ga age s ud o
apa men pe enn a ga
den o many ame
es o
st mus see $92 000 ca
740)992 58t\3

Wasle Managemen
nc
o e sa compe t va com
pensa on and bene
package nclud ng 40 K
Hea h and L fe nsu ance
Sho tTe mad LongTe m
D sab ty among seve a
o Me benel s
Resun es v be accep ed
un 5 14 2004 Ppston s
cu en y ava abe

In a ested pa 1es may
send a esume o (pease
do not con act s 1e d ec
educat anal a de pe m t
Past on s g aot funded fo
20 hou s pe week/50
weeks pe yea
1111e esled pe sons shOu d
subm t a lette of nte est
and
esume o Caro
8 ewe a
he A hens
Me gs Educat anal Se v ce
Cente 320 1 2 East Ma n
St ee
PO Box 684
Pome oy Oh 45769 More
11fo me on s ava labfe by
ca 1ng 740 992 5592 The
Athens Me gs ESC s and
equa opportun y emp cry

e

The Harold D spatch has
mota outes ava abe II
n e es ed
ca
Scot
304 526 2816
The Mason County PubliC
Lb a y s seekng a Part
melbayCe~
The
successful appl cant must
be f endly lam a w th
compute s aM able o I ft
up lo 25 pounds Saturday
and even ng hou s a e
equ ed lnte ested app
can s may p dt up and
app ICal on at 508 v and
51 ee
Po nt P oasa t
EOE

y

Pl&lt;or~~-.;M&gt;~ 11

Sill\ !O:S
TURNED DOWN ON

SOCIAL SECURITY
ISS I?
No Fee Un ess We Wn
888 582 3345

I!HI f· SI \II

10

Exce e
s a te home
Ve y good cond on We
alo.e caeo andcean 3
bedoom a wak n cos
e s 2 ba hs w h ga de
ub n mas e BR ba h
nc udes unde p nn ng A
eecl c w h ce a AC
M st be moved S12000

cond o
smok g

HOMI~
lOR SAl I
pump v AC Ga ned a GP.
flQS &amp; declo. S 4 800
304 882 3682

y no nsde pes

e

e1e

ces eou ed $400 00

a

Home

eec c
Ne ghbo hood epp ances
nc uded
Co ne
ot
beh nd
A mo y
P
P easanl Ask ng $69 000
(304 )593 3542

4 bed oom 1

y b ck 2 ca u a
ached ga age $37 500
Fou th S New Haven WV
(740)446 4274

s o

any me

2000 28lt:48 Do b ew de
3 bed oo ns g ea cof)lj
on stove I g a c ean
$1 500 (304 642 9142 0
304 335 0528
28~70

wde

Redman doub e3 bed oom 2 ba h

4 ooms &amp; balM 52 0 ve
S No pets S300 month

ep ace w lh vent ess gas

ogs 101'.66 cove ed bat:k
poeM hea pump M s be
moved (740\245 9159

Was e Managemen nc
34 5 Twp Ad #447
GLENFORD OH 43739
Job Code SM0244

$30\J deoo s

7 40 446

3945

ca pe

g ea coM s eve
59 500
OBO
{304)642 9142
OR

EOEAAMF/ VD

a

304)335 0528

\lo1111 E HmtE:&lt;;
1\lR RJ ~1

Youth Fundra1s1ng
he p dayca as summe
eagues schoo s PTA s
coaches a se money Ia
oca a ea Av 46 000 y

8 3 779 4542

wwo bvcom
22011 o cal 740 446

1082

N ce 2 bed oom mob ti
h o me
No pe s
Ca r
40 44 6 2003

eo
won I as
sk ng kt
ong 1 800 83 3238

•
•

Ho1 '&lt;E'
FOR Rl~l

Landt I S te Manager
Ga a Counly Landi I
8 dwe OH 456 14

o s ol

Rd 2 26

Bohoeacem
m es orr Ho ze H sp a
620
E e g een
Ro
9 500
560
E e g een
Rd
s 8 500
Ca
740 446 8840

RliSINF.~'

Mob e M n Oonu conces
son bus ness o sa e
Loca y owned
Eas y
make $1000 00 o moe a
eeke d
events
Eveyhng sets up n a
spec a y des gned OX 0
canopy Exce en! pa
t me o fu t me oppo tun
y
$9 950 00
Donuts
Gao e
M dd epo

I

3 un ou d ng 2 bus ness
es &amp; 1 aoa men to sa e
Located
n
M dd epo

make any such
p eference lim tat on o

y pe son
n my nome Expe enced
w ih mos lnesses home
cooked mea s 28 y s
expe ence good e e
ences 740 667 0499

ch d en o p ay
me
I om town Ca (740)446

S\1

Beo e you buy
Does vou dea e
Mo e h s homes Do s e
p epa a on bu d ounda
ons Ro and se houses
Do hea g and a Ha e
n hose se vee peope
ns a sept systen s Do
e ec ca p umo ng
Do
d ve'l ays If the answe o
any ol hese ques ons s
no o
hey sub con
ac You be e see he
odes mos expe encecl
dea e n A hens County
S nee 967 Co es Mob &amp;
Ho nes 5266 US ::&gt;0 Eas
A hens
0 o 45701
Whe e you ge
you
moneys wo 11

740 446 308

A fordab e
Se v ces
Hau ng g ave d
eel
Pa n ng Tee T mm ng
0 veway Repa Gutte s
Ch mney P umb ng Jack
Of A T ades 30y s ettpe
ence
(304)882 2196
304 377 8266

(740)992 4294

Sa turday May 8th Ran o
Sh ne 9 ? a 0 d Ba 1 Shop
Ant qu ty

8 00 am? QuIts Chars &amp;
Dog pen

Rae ne May 7 h and 8th
Bam ? new and used

n/the

•

Or Fax To (304) 675 5234

o•splav Ads

8

at (740) 374 9436 for
AFP packet

, ,. .

HUGE Too Sa e some
ant ques May 7th &amp; 8th
F day Satu day at 108
Pea St Mddepo t Oho
!om 95 YadSae Ran
o Sh ne

Dally In Column 1 00 p m
Monday Friday for l.nsertlon
In Next Day • Paper
Sunday In Column 1 00 p rn
day For sundays Paper

4 Fam y 2905 2907 29 6
MapeAve F Sa May7

645 Fourth Ave Furn tu e
household terns c oth ng
a s zes Satu day May
8th aam

(304) 675 1333

particularly

described In plain
tiffs
mortgage
recorded In Mortgage
Book 75 page 393 of
this
County
Recorders Office

Saturday May 8
Ya d Sale
Va eyVew Apa mens
R o G ande Oho
Tw n bed TV coffee ab e
end able bedsp eads
r ugs shee s boys 4T
OVD s
moves
name
brand co has d shes
shoes

moe

State

women
business
enterprises
are
encouraged to sub

Mu I Fam ly May 6 7 B
1853 Ne ghbo hood Ad
Co h ng nfan 2K house
wa es home deco ols &amp;

S A 1 60

Public Notice

feet facing the alley

required to answer
the oomplalnt within
(28)
twenty eight
days after the last
publication of this
legal notice This
legal notice will be
published once a
week for s1x succes
slve weeks
(4) 16 23 30 (5) 7 14
21

r

administrators

sonable diligence be

are

YAROSAI

5!7 518 G Is clothes 0 5

11

ascertained will take

above

YARilSA!•

GALUPOLLS

m

a strip of land four

named

n

co

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Ares Agency
on Aging at Buckeye
H1lls Hocking Valley
Regional
Development District
245 Millers Lane
Marlel1o Oh10 45750
Is reques11ng propos

Sheffield now incor

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT
MEIGS
COUNTY
OHIO
Cltlflnanclal
Mortgage Company
Inc
Plaintiff

of

attyemall@lsrlaw

porated lnlo the
VIllage of Mlddlaporf
Ohio
The
delendants

Public Notice

Court

lest known
addresa
1s
115

and running from the

prepared

from an actual survey
made of the premises
on the 13th day qf
August 1986 by C
Thomas Smith Ohio

whose

feel oil the South
side of the East One
Half ol Lot 123 being

The above descrlp
lion

Attorneys for Plaintiff
PO Box 5480
Cincinnati OH 45201
5480
(513) 241 3100

dant has or claims to

r

(7 40)245 5945

al NOTICE IN SUIT
FOR FORECLOSURE
OF MORTGAGE
Dsfendants
Dora
Wining

plaintiff s mortgage
recorded upon the
real estate described
below and In which
plaintiff alleges that
the foregoing defen

$20 000 00 The real
estate canno1 be sold
for leas than two
thirds 1he appraised

In Nll.!""SI&gt;:np~r:s
e d Rlgl-.t- to Youua D••c • •

Nc&gt;._l~~s

Dellv~•

Enclosed Porc h Sale
6 m les
om Rut and
Wo h the t p Monday
May 3 Sunday May 16
am Spm
3 966 McCumbe
Ad
Dexte
Oh o Ant ques
canoe pedd e boat parro
w cage stove gas g
fu ntu e she! unts worn
ens jeans m K ke new $5
a pa r sho s I sh 1s
shoes co ect b es CD s
casse tes VCR
apes
TV s m c owaves
su
ound speake s se p o
pel ed mowa
electr c
garage doo opene cedar
chest A 7N to AT 124W
to Langav le Take Dexte
Ad o small wh e church n
Oexte go ght hen r gh
aga n onto McCumbe Ad
about m le

Mu 1 lam ly
554 F day &amp; Satu day
Ad u 1 g Is nfan and ad
d er name b and c oth ng
double strol e ch ld ens
moves toys and mu c h

Lost

Y o u r Rlu;ht: t.o K ... uo"""

JUST SAY
CHARGE IT'

(304) 675-1333

Oeacl~;,u-

Word Ads

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

3

BWagne Ph ada ph a 7

0

Tim Tsch da

Oftftee lloar-~

L&lt;&gt;o

Dunn C nc nna
0
sco 0 Cabre a F o de

63

OH

n

iRegtster

Sentinel

40) 992-2156
Call Today••• (740) 446-2342 (7Or
Fax To (740) 992 2157

23

Ova bay

c..

ChiCago 23

Los Angeles 3

ab r h b
Szkr1 4
0
Spezo3b4000
BBoone 2b4 0
banez
3000
EM nzdh 30
b
McCkn dh 0 0 0
Oeudb20
0
Aass20
0
OWsnc 3000
\Inc
3000

4 0 0 0

F o da

Oa kla nd

\!trtbune

To Place

Rolen S Lou s 34 Cas11 a Co

..

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

fjg

son P ttsburgh 355
RUN S - B&amp;Qwe Hous1on 28 Pu o s S

RB -

0

Vdro2b 4 000
0Cbeass4000
Wlk en lb 3 2 2 0
TB sa 3b 3
1 0

C

M nneao11

0

0

Else Cenl

LGonza ez A Ilona 24 AEve etl Hous on
23 SF nle)' A :zona 23 Bonds San F an

0

Punoph
0 0 0
Bowenc 2000
Cdd~e pti
0 0 0
A vas 2b
3
THnle M
Totala 35
7 1 Tota 1

3

3

P nsbu tJ'I

2

001 000
Sea«la
ooo oot
E-Kosk a 2 JA neon 2 Sp ez o 3
OP-M nneso a 2 LOB-M nnelio a 6
Seatt a 4 28 ShS ewa
5) R vas 4)
SB-JJones (7 LFo d 3) ISuzuk 6
CS- Su.tuk 4 S-Au e
IP H R ER BB SO

ab r hbl
EC~ vezc 4 o 2 0

LH ndzp

0
0

M nna•ola

6
9

100 -

SOx -

Montr••l

Sedge

2
0

Clnclnnat

0

nez

San ana ~ nneiO .11 30
SAVES MA ve a New Yo k
FCo de o Tau&amp; 0 Perc va Anahe m 9
Nath.!ln M nne!I~Ma 7 Fouke Bo&amp; on 6

H

8

5

23
23

PMa

389 lo Duca Los Angelea 370 CW son

o a o o

~

ab r hb

23

'

a o o
0

Tampa Bay 42

Bet e Los Ange es 369 Case)' C nc nna

..

Ullwaull..
lb hb
Pdsdnk c 3 2 2 0
BHa ss5223
KGn 2b 4
0
Jenkns It 50
Obayb5
20
Ongtn3b4 0 0
Gnevert 2 0 0
BCakrl
000
GBnnt! c 3 0
Obmp 3000
Kschnllp 0 0 0 0

SanD ego
Geeness 5 2
Loetta2b 4 3 3 0
BGesr1 5 3
Nevnb500

B

Zamb a no

Mt .. Co\ln~ OH

we cove
Meigs, Gallla,
ArJd MaRn
Counties Uke
NoOne

Boston 39 Ha ada~ To onto 38 Robe
so" De o 1 33 Bueh e Ch cago 3

San F anc sco

23

New Yo k
000 000 100 01 2
Two o.u s when w nn ng un sco ed
OP San F anc sec
LOS Sen an s
co 7 New Yok 5 HR Fez 3) Pazza
6 KGa a 5 SB DGa c a (
CS
G ssom
S To eaba

0

0

310

5234225
13

Pauac 3
KGa car1 4
Spnce
4 0 0
JPhpsb400 0
~cEwgc 4 0
0
DG1ca2b 3000
Leep
2000
Vdenlp~
000
Ge e.tp~
000
Totaa 36252

2

6
0
0
0

020

IP

2
0

Ze a 3b

133

hbl

300

35 4 7 4

aoo

30
000 C M Cleve and 3 0
000
v one Sean a 3 0 000
STRIKEOUTS - Sch ng Boston 45

o ado 27 0 erbay M !waukee 25 BeH e
Los Ange es 25 Hlda go Hous1on 25 Low

6238440

Payton cl 4

-o

7

Clave and
EGeu
)D PBos on
C avead2
08-Bos on 5 C eva and 5 2B 8&amp;1
ho n 2 5) Reese (3 3B-Reesa {
HA-MAam ~~ 7 law on S 58Damon 5) C$-MRam az (
IP H RERBBSO

a o a o

2
0

Ma su ss

6

0 0

5

aoo

4
JR neon t.A nnuota 4
800
Aoge a Texas 4
A manza Taxa.

Rhodes Oak and 6 l&lt;och Ch cago 5

5

An1Mm

See w

0

••

Bo1 on

Lo• Angel••

100 000 3
Anah• m
051 OO• 7
DP-Tampa Be~ 2 LOB-Tampa Be~ 6
Anahe~m 8 HR-JGu vn 5) SB-Lugo
4 CS-OaVanon
SF-JoC uz
IP H REABBSO

1P

law1on If 4
Csp
0000
Vzquess4
20
Gerurl
4 0
0
VMr1nzc 4001
Haedh4000
Bad2b 30
0
BrssdbJOOO
Malon3b3000
AEscbcl2000
TOUI3 1 252

001
000

ooo

40 914 9 Tota a

To ala

ShedsS2
3 D 0 0 0
3
JeGonza ez p lched o 4 batte 5 n he 5 h
H8P-by JeGonzB ez JGu e
WPDGonza ez Sele
Ump as Home A ek Reed F s
Ed
Rapuano Seco d Ted Ba ett T~ d ANon
soMa Quez
T 240 A 34536 45030

Cleveland

Wollp
2000
Ronsss
000
T01111 34 4 8 4

500
30

Con~netl

Rdmndc 3 0 0
AGnlZSS 4
2' 2
Wsp
000
Bumpp
0000
Mdca3b
000

200
010

~·
76
69

5

0

Mchesp~1 000

3

•b

E~adb32
0
F1ggns3b 5
2 0
VGeorl 4
2
Gausdh 32
Gen~
J
23
Dllnon c 2 0
0
rtalte3b 0000
BMona c 40
0
AKn ~2b 4 0
0
Tota a 32 7t1 7

300

T1mpa Ba._

hbl

Echtnss 40

Cmngs ph
0 0 0
JoCuzri 300
Tot•l• 33 3 8 9

...w,- -...... ....

5

623BS2
2
300001

ab r hbl
B1ggoe
30
o
.Nzcnou 4 0 0 0
Bqwel b 4
2
JKen 2b 40 0
Bic:mn
00
anerl
4
0
Esbg3b4
22
Asmus c 3
0
WM p
000
OPmoph ooo
Doep
0000
Total•

9-3

5 1 TOll I

5

0

IP

~
Hou1ton

CWisn b 4
Synes 3b 4

6 1

oo a
a oa

001
000

Be e
OaBel Jtl
ToPerz ss
Ledse ph
Lb na c
Peti e
30

E- Ren e a 4 Po anco
lous
Phadepha2 OB
Ph ade ph a 7 28 -Womack
HA-Luna 2 Thome (9 81,1
Lanklo d
S- Taguch
Puo s

Aatroa 5 Pirates
ID ttbl
Rdmnct 5 D 2
Wisnss50 0
Kandalc 3000
Mndea r1 4000
Cast lo2b40 0
Mckwkfl 4000

w

B~dc

3000
2000
2020
0 0
4
3
4 2
R Snd~rl 4 000
Po e If
0
Mhenyc
000
To ala 36 710 7
St LDU.

Oessens p tcned to 3 bane s n he 5 1'1
WP-\1 Ia &amp;al Clemen
Ump es-Homa Je Ke ogg F s1 Doug
Eddings Second Dan essogna Th d.
Cha e Re to d T-3 04
A-38 69
39 345)

Pltt•burgh

W2

07
B5
B-.&amp;

w

THee

ab

New Yo k

7

hb
5 20
Panoo2b5000
BAbe rl 3 0
T~ome b

ab r hbl
5
0

Wmack 2tl
Tguc~ c
Lnal
McKayc
Suppanp
Lnkdt
Edmnd c
Pu os b
Roan 3tl
Rneass

Phlladelph a

00
0

W3

0

Tacy3b

....

WldnMday • Rt.,na
San Diego 2 A11aota 0
FlortOa 2 OS AngMs 0
Ph ~18 5 51 LOUIS 4
Colorado 2 Montrea 0
Cl'lCirman 5 MM~ 4 0
NY Met5 6 Sail Franctsco 2
Anzona 2 Chcago Cubs 0
Houston 6 Piltsb.Jrgh 2

OUIS 7 Ph ~IS 4

301
000

Ch eago

57
4 3

....,..

96

82

'
0

Cubs 11 Diamondbacks 3
Arizona

...
Wl

"
5
5
6

97
69
69

75

3

'
2

...,
57
536
5 7

l
l2

3

2
8

....

Homo

W4

48
464

12
13

...

75
76
77

'
15

8
6
5
5
3

ChiCago
C nc nna
S1 Lous
U lwauk&amp;e

2;

3
3

W

"""""" Cubs

P10

BIW'
•b hbl
Cno.1dtf "a o a
Lgoss
4
20
Ficlo.dh
4000
TMrtnzb3
20
Balde cl 4 2 2
HuH3b
40 0
B um:?b
3000

a Ct-.cago CubS Zllmbl'ano 2
3 20 p m
S OUIS (Moms J-.2) a Montrea K1111 ~) 7OS p m
Los Angeles (W AMirez D-Ol a Pmsourgh 0 Perez 2~ 7 05 p m
Mlwa kee D0a~J~s 2 a NY Mas Gl8vM4 ) 7 Opm
s~ Frurasco Rue 9f o-3 a CnctMati Lldle 2
7 0pm
Houston R&amp;ddtng ().3 a AI:Uln a Thomson 2 1 7 35 p m
San D1119o Peavy 2 a Flond8 Pa'ISno 2
7 35 p m
Ph ~0811*!18 Pad a D-4 a A Ilona Johnson 3-2 0 05 p m

Kansas Crty Alteldl 0.3 a Boston {Wakefiek:l2 7 05 p m
Chcago Whtte Sol Garland 2 ) a Toronto (l.J ty 2 2 7 05 p m
CirlNelahd C 8EI 3-0 ai Sahnore Bedard Q.{l 7 35 p m
Dl'llltlll BondBrma 3 ) a 18)(85 Benort 1 0 8 05 p m
Mnnesota Santana

57

GS

Anaheim

Tam~

Friday I Gamel
Colorado Es es 4-

Fridar'so.n..

Tampa

2

S1

NY 't'ankees 4 Oakland 3
Ml'lntl9o a 5 Seattle

0 OS p m

6

Housloo 5 P!TtSbu rj'l2
G~cago Cubs
A~ 3
Lo~ A~ 9 Flonda 4
Montru 3 Cololado
Cm111na 9 M twaukoo 6
NY t.Aets 2 San F enc:ISCO

Anahetm 6 DetrOit 3

N 'f Yankees tJebef .Q) ;rt Se.lnle R Franldii'J 1 2)

Aoroa
AI onta

Thur'IUy I Aeauha
San [)ego 7 Allama 3

TAII.IIS 6 Tampa~

~ 2 Mlf'lfleSOtll

""-

San FranciSCO

Wednesday • Reautts
Dlcago So. !i Baltimore 5
Boston 9 Clewland 5
Toront:o 0 Kansas Cll)l 3

Oildand 7 NY Ya/11(89&amp; 1

L

C£NTJI.U.

5

"24

w

"""""'

.....
...

Homo

EAST

Cbrerar1 5000
LO'I'Ie3b3000
Phepsp 0000
LHasph
000
GcsqupOOOO
Choph
000
WCdeo b3
0

Angel• 7 O.vll Rays 3

�Friday, May 7, 2004

www,mydailysentinel.com

Friday, May 7, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentin el • Page B7

ALLEYOOP

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Mother's Day
May 9th

Siders Jewelers .
Main Street , Pt. Pleasant
Wai-Mart Plaza, Milson

Pomeroy Eagles 2171
Band
"Audience"
8-12 Friday
7- 11 Saturday

Open
·4 Hours only Saturday

Now At Our New
Location

4/u66ard 's Grunht~~ne
.. Syracuse, OH
Now Open

GRANNY'S
GREENHOUSE

Easter Flowers
Bedding Flowers
Vegetable Plants
Blooming
&amp; Foliage Baskets
Paning Soi I

3 prizes given

away
Every buying customer gets
free pot of flowers
Don't forget Mom!

4279 St. At. 160

Vera Bradley 15% off

,.

Now thru Saturday, May 8th

@$1eport $375 00. pilJS
deoosit. No inside pets.
(7 40)992-3194
S bedroom. 2 bath, private
very n1ce. added room:
~. month (740)445-

lot.

NIC:e 2 and 3
mobile homes
1ncludcs water,
tras~ .. no pets,
$300 per month.
:0::167

1440

bedroom
tor rer:~t
sewer &amp;
deposit &amp;
(740)992·

AI'AIUMEI'fl'S
lllR R EI\T

I and 2 bedroom apartments. lurnished and
unfurnished.
security
deposit reQUired. no pets,

740-992-22 18
bedroom
aot.
Washer/dryer
hOokup.
rent,
deposit
S290
required. No pets. 740·

Bonanza Get
S FREE

2 bedroom , just past
Hqlzer. $425 month. ·cal.t
(7 40)441-1 , 84.
2 qedroom. near Holzer.
CIA , WID hookup, quiet
loca!IOn. a'.'ailable 511/04,
$4'29
plus
tJtilities.
(7 40)446,2957.
. BE AUTI FUL
APART·
MENTS AT . BUDGET
PliiCES AT JACKSON
EStATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344 to $442
Wallo!. to shop &amp; mov1es.
Call 740-446-2568. Equal
Housing Opportunity.
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFOROABLE1
Townhouse ' apartments.
andlo r small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)44 1- 11 11
for application &amp; information .
Gracious living. 1 and 2
becfroom apartments at
Village
Manor
and
RT\Ierside Apartments m
MiddlepOrt . From $295$444. Call 740·992-5064.
Equal
Housing
Opportunities
MOdern 1 Bedroom apt.
Call (740\446-0390.
New 2 bedroom apartr;ne!lt, $400.00/mo plus
ljt~it. no pets. (740)992~ f1 9 ask lor Marge .

~1ce 1 bedroom- complete
~1tchen , A/C ; Reference
~nd deposit. No pets.
(740)446-0 139
*'cti 2 bedroom .apartment
for rent Middleport, ·Qh,
$.._:}25/mo., $300 deposit,
(•74Q)596-2198 or 740!191 -0649.
.

r~~ ~

APA11111 IEI\'I"S
fl&gt;RRENT

St•ACE
HlRRENT
Retail or Office Space.
Pnme Downtown Gallipolis
location , call (740)3799511 or (740)379·2204 lor
more info
Riversites for rent, family
type. 3 c amp s ites, full
hookup, near river. 3
docks lles, no hookup.
Call (740)992-59&amp;6

BlliLiliNG

SUPPIJF:'&gt;
Block. brick. sewer pipes,
windows,
lint els,
etc.
Claude
Wi nters,
Rio
Grande, OH Ca ll 740·245·
5121.

t

1997
Olds.
CiJtlass.
86,000 m11es . Loaded ,
excellent cond. $2,700
(304)675·8 165

2 AKC Pomeranian puppies, MIF, cream &amp; sable,
taking deposit, $400; AKC
miniatu re
Schn auze rs,
M!F. sip, blls. taking
deposit, $400, (740)696-

1998 Ford Taurus.
All e~~:tras, garage kept,
e~~:ce ll a nt condition,
92,000 miles, $3,800 .
(740)448·4053.

· AKC Black Lab puppies.
males and females . first
shots. work 740-992-978 4,
home (740)992·3887

H OUSEHOLD

Goot);

1999 Alero, $3,695;
1998 Neon Sport , $2,795;
1993 Caravan , $1,995;
~ 998 Grand Am, $2,895.
Others in Stock.

~ice one BR unfurnished
dpartmenl. Range &amp; refng.
Prov1ded Water &amp; garbage
paid . DepoSit required.
Call (740)4 46-4345 after

Gpm.

AKC registered Yorkie
pups 2 female. 1 male.
each
OBO
$600.00
(740)992-0053
or
(7 40) 41 6-044 1

Good Used Appliances ,
Recond1t1oned
and
Guaran1eed.. Washers.
Dryers.
Ranges.
and
. Refrigerators, Some start
at
$95
Skaggs
Appliances , 76 Vine St.,
(740)446-7398

leopard Gecko Aquarium,
heat lamp, cricket !arm &amp;
supplies Paid $1~ 0 sell lor
$40 (304)675-4500

G&lt;X&gt;d washers &amp; dryers.
$95 &amp; up; electric ranges.
$95 &amp; up; Frost tree refrigeralors, $150 &amp; up: Like
new side-by·side with
water &amp; ice 1n the door,
$375; cou&lt;:h , $75; full size
beet: box springs &amp; mattress. $150: lull size bed
box springs &amp; mau ress,
$125; table &amp; chairs, $ 100;
glider rocker. $45; lamps,

1580

~10.

Skaggs Appliances
76 Vine Street
(7 40)446-7398
Mollohan Carpet, 202
Clark
Chapel
Road,
Porter, Ohio. (740 )446·
7444
1-877-830-9162.
Free Eslimates, Easy
fmancing, ·90 days same
as cash . V1sal Master
Card . Drive- a-. lmte save
alot.
ThompsOns Appliance &amp;
Repair-675·7388. F9r sale,
re-conditioned automatic
washers &amp; dryers. retrigerators. gas and electric
ranges, air cond1t1oners,
and wringer washers. Will
do repairs on major brands
in shop or at your home .
Used Fut nitu re Store.
130 Bulavllle Pike,
Mattresses.
dressers,
couches, recliners , much
more. Grave Monuments. ·
(740)446-4782 Gallipolis,
OH, HAS 10-4 M· F.

I,
.

Buy or sell. R1verine
Antiques. 1124 East Main
on SA ~24 E. Pomeroy,
740-992-2526.
Russ
Moore, owner

FRum; &amp;

All varie ties of flowers and
garden pla nts. Caldwel l's 1
mile SOIJth of Tuppers
Plains on SA 7, (740)6673366

KESSEL'S PRODUCE
Amish Cheese, Lunch
.Meat, Fresh Fruit" and
Vegetables Open ThursFri-Sat. ~ 35 4 Jackson
Pika, Ga llipolis, Ohio.
(740)446·7787
I \In I "il 1'1'1 II "
,\II\ I "iiO( 1,

BN Ford Tractor. Disc &amp;
brush hog , needs oil
pump. $1.300. (740)3670632.
Massey Ferguson 255
Diesel with front loader,
2800 hrs. $10,500 moving
must sell (304 )674-01 33
Massey Ferguson 50, 4
cyl . gas. Price $2,850.
Phone (740)446-4999.
Moving· Locust Fence
Post, Must Sell (304)674·
.
0133

MEIICHANDL~I!l

L IVESIUCK
For sale Boar Goats for
Fa.ir Projects (304)675·
1126
Registered ANGUS and
Crossbred
bulls.
Top
bloodlines,
Slate Run
Farm, Jackson. (740)2865395
look
up
www.slaterunfarm.com.

I H \\"I'~ lit I\ 110\
lO

F

AUTOS
SAUl

FOR

I_

L.-~~::::ii...,J.

$500t. Hondas . Chevys,
Jeeps, etc I POLICE
IMPOUNDS Cars from
$500. For listings 1-800...
719-3001 ext 3901
1989 Pontiac Bonneville,
good running condition
$700.00 1740)742-21 66
1993
Bronco
(304)674-0133

• Limestone
• Sand
• Dirt
•Ag Lime
740·985-3564

2003 Cavalier 4door, 4
cyl. , auto, 9,000 miles, tilt,
cru ise, air cond., CD player, $6,500. (7 40)441 -0337.

i

TRUCKS
IUH SAUl

~ 970 Ford F350, 10 Ft.
Grain bed , low miles.
many new pa rts, new
tires/wheels.
(740)2450485.

1979 Chevrolet 112 ton.
129,000
miles.
Bod y
good/lair,
runS great
$400+
accessories.
$1,000 firm . (740) 4 413131 leave message.
1991 Chevy
$4,500. Call
5752

FARM
EQlliPMF.NT

IS4D MISCI-UANF.OliS

2000
Kla
Sportage
Automatic, 2 whee l drive,
eXcellent condi tion, little
over 39,000 miles. white
with brow n Interior, $6,500
OBO or will trade for small
2 door automatic car
(304 )675·4 144
2002 Mitsubishi l ancer
ES, 31,000 miles, au to,
. CD pl ayer, rear spoiler.
$5,900 080. 740·256~6 ~8 . 740-256·6200.

V EGETABLES

· Nrce two bedroom apart·
~ents Large rooms Fully · DP Air Strider climber. arm
~qUiped kilchen Centra l
exerciser like new, Rowe
Jie.eting / co.oling
pottery, crock, p.fate &amp;
Wa$herldryer
hookiJp
roaster (304)675·5549
(304)882-2523
Gas cook stove- J yrs. old.
18.000 BTU. AC w1ih
PltJasant Valley Apartment
remote , 3 months otd .
~~ ·
now
taking
(740)256-6809.
Appfications for 2BR. 3BA
~ ~BR .. Applications are
JET
Eken Monday thru Friday,
AERATION MOTORS
~on'l 9:00 A.M.·4 P.M.
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt
Office is Located at 1151
In Stock. Call Ron Evans,
1·800·537·9528.
Evergreen Dnve Point
Pleasant, WV Phone No is
(304)675-5806. E.H.O
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
TE\ra
Townhouse
For
Concrete , Angle,
Apc!rtments,
Very
$pa'cious. 2 Bedrooms. 2
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
Graling
For
Drains,
trtoors. CA. 1 1/2 Bath,
Driveways &amp; WalKways.
Newly Carpeted, Adult
L&amp;L Scrap Metals Open
Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Patio,
Monday,
Tuesday.
Start $385/Mo. No Pets,
Wednesday &amp; Friday, SamLease
Plus
Security
4:30pm. Closed Thursday,
Oep..,slt Required , Days:
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday.
740-446-34 81 : Evenings :
(740)446--7300
740-387-0502

':

Moving, must sacrifice a
fine Baldwin Spinet plano.
Fine wood craftsmanship.
Hardly touched. Original
price we ll over $3,000.00.
Will let il go for $800.00.
Call/7401992-51 10.

(740)448-0103.

HAULING:

$3,500

Silverado,
(740)245-

Wf. N~~f)

c

MO~f

MfN ---

CAi,L tJP Tl'tf P~fSf/lll~.f!
/

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me do 1\ for

2001 GMC Jimmy SLE
4x4, CD Player, all power,
e)(C. shape $12,500 or take
over payments (304)773·
5177 or (304)593-3596
2002 F-350 SAW 51, 400
miles XLT. $28,500, Fif1h
wheal towing package,
many extras. (740)645·
2103.
94 S-10 Truck for sale $
wheel drive $2,500
93 Toyota for sale S1,500
..
(304)675-2245
96 F150 XLT 4• 4 Super
Cab. 302, auto old, AJC,
cruise, tilt, pw, pdl, keyless
entry, JVC CD/MP3 player,
6" lift, 35's on American
Racing wheels. Reese
style drop hitch, bed liner,
diamond plate tailgate protector, nerf bars, cab visor,
sliding
rear
window .
$9,950 090. 740-367725~
or cell 740-6454647.

V,w;&amp;
4-WDs
1987 Ford Aerostar Van,
good condition, $1,500 .
36 Gun Liberty Gun Sale,
$1.700. Call (740)3792150.

----1990 Plymouth Voyager
Van. one owner, V6 LE, 7
pass, auto trans. E)(cellent
Condition. All power With
A/C. $2 ,900 (740)4463217 .
1999 Mercury Villager. 7
passenger, front/rear air,
94,000 miles. good condl·
tlon .
Asking
$7,700.
(740)441·0658.

youl

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center
316 Washington Street

Ravenswood, WV 26164
Dr_Kelly K. Jones

BARNEY
START A

ONE , DOC -·
YA GOTTA
MY THUMB

(304) 273-5321

for 2004 Meigs
County Fair.

GRAVELY TRACTOR

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
4577 1
740-949-2217

Serious
Inquiries Only

Slzee5'x10'
.
•
\&gt;10 1 O'X30'

Call

Hours

' J,

7:00AM - 8:00 PM

985-4159

Snapper

G ravely

Hill's Self
Storage

Stalirmarr /'ood
\tt111d \milahlc

1/1411 mo. pd

~

8~..~.-....:. . . . . . ~...---L.......J~::...__;:uu::..._j

SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

THE BORN LOSER

992-2975

~

VE.EBLE.FES1EK'S

Law11 and Garden Equipme111 is our
busi11ess, nol our sideli11e

VO IC.E f\,fl..) 1\LLTI-\E.

QUI'IUTI~ OF

1'1

501'-l\C 1)0011\ I

Manning K . Ro us h
Own e r
0

n Mon-Frl9-5 Sat. 9-12·

Will Mow

Yards

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

740-992-5594
740-992-6862

Residenti al &amp; Manufactured Housing
Air Condi tioners, Hear Pumps &amp; Furnaces
· • Super Hi Effi ciency Equipmen.

Meigs County's Largest selection of
annuals, perennials, vegetables,
shrullllery, fruit, ornamental trees,
roses, rltododenllrons, and azaleas.
COMPARE THESE PRICESII

BIG NATE

4" pot of annuals 94¢
' pot of pttennlals $1.18 Buy 5or more for $1.00
ol planla $6.60
IH•1ng11~g Baekela $8 .60
Morning

New Homes • Vinyl
Si din g • New Garages

.. ··!'

~

• R!!pl a(.;emcnt

• 5 &amp; 10 yr Warranties
, !'.'
• Huge Inventory
' • · · ,,.". ·
• Vanguard Ventlcss Fireplaces ~~;. ,

Wi ndows • Roofing

ENTRAILS \ WE'LL.
DR.IN1&lt;. THEIR l!&gt;LOOI&gt; '

todartc:l

\,/URST ANI) rRUIT
PUNCH ISN'T SllTING
T OO

WE LL.

s~e..::, '~

PEANUTS

Rock)' ••f:wu,
H~

COMME RC IAL and

RESIDENTIAL

'!!!~.e'!!l
~~!~ ·~Gallipolis, OH WVO I02 12

Opan 7 dar.•

•-doylght

5 LJDDENL'( 11'( PII.E.GAME f1EAL OF BAAT -

anewcar

BUILDERS InC.

• Free Estimates

·

WE' LL TEAR 'E.I1 UP'
WE"LL RIP O UT Tt1E.II'.

Star Road - C.Rd 30 • Racl_ne,

BISSELl

HEATING fl COOLING

THE LAD'( SAID FOR VOU
TO SIT ~ERE UNTIL TI-lE'(
CALL '{OUR NAME ...

IMPORTS

FREE ESTIMATES

Athens

740·992·7599

LOOK AT T~IS .. IT SAYS
IF VOU SEINE ON A
JUR'(, TI-lEY PAV VOU
FIVE DOLLARS A DAV.,

FIVE DOLLARS WILL BUV
A LOT OF COOKIES!

446-94 16 r 1-800-872-5967

VANS &amp;

ATS &amp; M010RS

4-WDs

$2,900.
9 1 Ford F250, 7.3 Diesel,
needs clutch &amp; pressure
pla1e, $1,500. (740)3670632 .

FOR SAW
· 1994 18 foot Islander Baja
with tra iler. garage kept,
very low hours, IIM.e-new,
call $7,500, {740)992·
2268

1995 Su ntracker 24 It
Pontoon Boat, 60 hp
motor &amp; trailer. Ca mp er
lncloser, full canvas cover,
40
M OTORCYLLES , . por ta potty, changing
room. gas grill, $7,500.
740 -367-7025, ce ll 740 2000 Yamaha Wa rrior
645-0508
red/white plastic. Nerf
bars, loud pipe, new han2000 Sea Ray, 180 BR,
dle bars &amp; grab bar. runs
3.0 liter. 18-0B, Power
great.
$3000
obo
steering, Am-Fm , CD,
(740)843-5235
Bikini Top, lots of equip.

Dean Hl11
New&amp;: Used

HOWARD l,
WRITESEl
dOOFINC

F

2001 Honda Shadow Spirit
motorcycle .
VT11 oo,
excellent condllion . 1
owner. Asking $5,300.
(740)446-7668 .

brand
new
(304)675·3354

2003 .Suzuki AM 125, like .
&lt;Rew oot1dilion. $3,500
080. (740)367-0632.

1989 Terry Rasor~ 5th
.wheel"" with · hitch . 'Good
condition. Asking $5,000:(740)4 16-1415.

95 PW 80 Yamaha, in real
good condition, $600. Call
(740)446-9552
or
(740)441-0694.
Four wheeler 98 model,
4x4 , like new, $2,800.
(740)446-1 750.
Suzuki 650 (2002), low
miles. like new. one owner,
(740)992-6084
White 2002 M~l Harley
Devldeon Electrte Glide
standard, 18,600
miles.
Never bean wrecked In
great · shape $13,000,
080 new back tire and
brakes, · recent service
looks good, runs great
(304)675·3488

ADVER I

'"'

Opening lead:

BENNETT'S

84 Chevy Pickup 4x4. Has
noise in tran smission,
body ve ry good condition,

North
Db I.

23
26

Easl
Pass

All pass
•

K ·

condition

'96 Coleman camper, lolelout sleeps 7-8. stove &amp;
refrigerator &amp; sink, ~$2500,
(740)992-6084

r

to

HoME
IMPHOVEMENTS

I

*~~~:TENANCE

BETTY

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

l-800-822-0417
--w.v·s #I

Ch evy, Pontiac,
&amp; Cu stom Van

Butck.

BUSINESS IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

11-\ANI\ '(OJ fOil A
1/Eil.'&lt; PlE:ASIINT

Olds

N\JH, 1r You'u. EXt.US€

ME:, l'M GOIIJG BACK
M'&lt; ROOM TO GIVE M'(
KIDS ACALL

EVEIIJIIIJ G

~:...'""'"""

\1/SU;IMNIIIERE~
POL ITS,

NICS 1t10JGI-ITFUL
W'(

ANDMI

AAlll S~

OI$A?POINTINGI
REALLY

ENGI\GING

COI•NI:,\!SAIIot\ALIST!

~ F.;.i,~

*frea Esdmates*

949-1405
GARFIELD

Sunset Home
Construction

YOU'RE A BAI' BOY,
GARFI El-l'!

aryan Reeves
New Homes,

Room Addition••
Garages , Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks ,

Kitchens, Drywall
&amp;More
FREE ESTIMATES!

740-742-341

Advertise in this
Space for
$50 per month

BASEMENT

UR

ROC.K STAR

*SEAMlESS
I mER

WATERPROOFING
Unconditional
lifetime
guarantee. Local refe r·
ences
furnished .
Es1abllshed 1975. Call 24
Hrs. (740) 446-0870,
Rogers
Basement
Waterproofing.

\'liNNEil. W Iil-l A

Advertise
in this
space
for·
$50 per
month

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Add itions &amp;
A•modellng
• New O•rages
• Eltctrlc•l &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting tc Qutt•,.
• Ylnvl Siding I P•lntlng
• Pt.tlo • nd Porch O.C ks

'

GRIZZWELLS

ROBERT
BISSELl
COimlmOI
• New Homes

• Garages

• Complete

We do It all except
lurnact wortc

Remodeli ng

V.C. YOUNG Ill

740-H2-1m

992-8215
Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Vt l rl LOCII Experience

\\

Stop &amp; Compare

'IOU

~I« 'T'l ~ ~--.,

d.~ A
~~"1'1\le:?

~IS~~ W EA-s~L

Mi 6Er
6PATU~ A !7

The obvious line is
straight and true
Who first pointed this out? -In this. world
nothing can be said to be certain, except
death and taxes.~
On most bridge deals. if you follow the
obvious line of play or defense, success
will be certain .
The contract is lour spades. West leads
the heart king. W~at would be your plan
as declarer? As a secondary matter,
what do you think of the auction?
West has a textbook weak-three opening
North is too strong to overcall three
spad~s. Against a weak three, when
strong, you assume partner has six
points and bid on that basis. If partner is
weaker than tllal. it is all his fault! So,
North makes a takeout double, planning
to convert a four-diamond bid by his partner lo lour spades to describe his good
black two-suiter. But when South bids
spades, North happily ra 1ses.
.
The North hand - the one with the
longer trumps - has live losers: one
heart. two diamonds and two clubs. It will
be hard to elimina te the first th.ree losers,
but those low clubs can be ruffed in the
South hand .
So, win wi th the ct ummy's heart ace. draw
one round of trumps, and even 1f both
opponents fol low sui t. play off dummy's
two top clubs and ruff a dub in hand.
Here. you then ex1t wi th a heart
Suppose West wins the tnck . The
defenders take two diamond tricks ending in the West hand, and West leads
another heart. You can trump high in the.
dummy, ruff the last club, and take the
rest with top trumps.
The death-a nd-taKes comment was
made by Benjamin Franklin in a letter
wri tt en on Nov. 13, 1789.

G

16
17
19
2t

22

9 6 3
J 6 5 3

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

740-992-52~2
Trucking

A K 10 8
Q 10 9 4

3.

30 Yrs_ Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Cook Motors

t

•

NEW

R.B.

Q 9 4
J 6 3

"' 7 ,2

• Bucket Truck

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

•

'

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: East-West-

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

Self-Storage

5

•

Licensed in Ohio and WV

'JW;;~~
High&amp; Dry

•

• Q 10 52

740-843-5264

1997 Dodge Stratus, 4 cy!.
2.4, auto, all power. Ve ry
good condition. $2,000 .
(740) 446-7029

KQJI0762

• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets

Box 189 •,Middleport

1996 Mustang Red, V6 ,
CD player. Sunroof, eMcel·
lent
shape
$3,900
(304)675·8878

H7 6 4

South

Financial ·Service~

1993 Cadillac Deville PIS,
automatic. ·power se ats.
P/W, AJC, new tires. 141 k
miles $4200 (740)949 ;
2253

IS

•

•

11

14

.

•

Rocky Hupp Insurance

AIJIDj

~085

\II IU II\ \IJI~I

A:-&lt;llQUI·S

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457
• Driveways t Tennis Courts

' We can insure you valuables! '
\ For a Free Quote or Appointment

IUH SAUl

Truck tool box, three TV's,
old bottles, ·ei€ctnc cords,
marbles, car radios's, old
. tools. (740)256-6488.

unfurnished 1 &amp; 2 bed·
room apts. Portlir, Ohio.
740-367-7746 or ' 40-367·
7015.

r.

•

4

12
13

East

Soulb

Tree Service

441-1 184 .
1 bedroom upstairs apartmeflt, $275 + ulilihes,
depOsit reqvired. for appli~
catiQn call (740)379-95~ 1
or (7'40)379-2204

W est

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Ta~e

Twin Rivers Tower is
accepting applications for
wailing list lor Hud-subsized, 1- br apartment,
call 675-6679 EHO

; IO

8711-2487

LaSt TJmrsday or
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5,00

JONES'

:toiedrqom mobile home in

Doors Open 4:30

05·07-04

AKJ93
A 4

• 7 2
"' A K 6 5

What would you lose if there wa s a fire?

'

740-441-1259

r

Henderson, WV

Nortb

.
•

1

8

"'! I

_IF YOU RENT

Mizway Tavern
Euchre Tues
Karaoke Wed &amp; Fri
Pool Tourn Thurs.
Band Sat AM IX 9-1

MOTHER'S DAY
SPECIAL

m R R~'NT

&amp; Sunday

----

Call:

1 mile from Holzer

MoHn.E H0\1~:-i

MYERS PAVING

. 6:30

740-992-5776

Buy 1 get 50% off 2nd

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
Early birds start

• Porch Boxes
• Combination Pots
• Perennials
• Spruce Trees
• Shrubs
i
• Peat Moss

Monday-Saturday 9-5 Closed Sunday"'

10-2

THE EMPTY
NEST

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

111 thing to do for your Mother
Is to come into ,Siders
Jewelers and buy her a
beautiful piece of jewelry.

AstroGraph·

Answer to P'rft~l Puufe

45 Indifferent
, 48 l.Jtb worker
Poychlc
52 Fael bad
power
53 Not e"en
Plaid
once
wearers
55 u.s. loader
Candied
56 Anaconda
Item
57 Wide valley
Movie
58 Peddle
terrier
59 Raggedy
Fox's prey
doll
Historian's 60 Pout
word
6t Tax-form ID
Gas or tel.
Andes
DOWN

empire

Greek Jetter
Wreath
Pilot'sald
PCB
regulator
TD passers
Ease olf
Mall activity
"'VIve le -!"'

29
30 Lee

of cakedom
32 Make lunch
34 Car Import
36 ..Shane''
star
38 Double
helix
39 Designated
41 Retract
43 Seine site
44 Cloud's
region

1 "Como usted?"
2 Mingle
3 Straw bed
4 Crockery
5 Dock
6 Orbit part
7 Close
at hand
8 Grassy
area
9 Begum's
spouse
'10 Healher '
habitat
1 I Summer mo.
18 Chitr.,.w
20 Skaptic's
retort
(2\ods.)
22 Campus
square

23 Mr.
Parseghian
24 Contest
25 Opera
by Verdi
26 Metal
fastener
27 Rorem and
Beatty
28 Ms.
Rowlands
otfllms
31 Nautical
position
33 Popular
shift
35 Nile wader
37 Ellington
of jazz
40 Combines
4.2 Oryads

44 "Beouty .net
lhea...t"

...

remake

45

Rum-«&gt;obd

46 !llg cat

47 Sen.
- Cranston
48 Biology
topic
49 SomeCDe
Balled

so

together

51 " My, myl"
54 - do
cologne

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Ce1eD!1~

C1p!1e1 cryptograms a1e crealecl trom quottlllmS ~))&gt; tamous people
Each leiter 111 ~ oph!r st!M5 101 aroolher
Todaysclue: R eQuals L

" RXY K

XJ

RXPK

B

5 - V X OZ M W·K

XV

X

FBE

J OWXV Z .
J ZNWT

N YYK WKE

YXRL ,

X' E

PXWP

pa~larc! present

ZN

ZMWA

XZ

LK

LT

RX Y K

ZN

E N G A .'"

ENMURBJ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ""The bagp1pes sound exactly 1he same when you
have 1inished learn1ng them as when you start.'
- .Conductor Thomas Beecham
lc) 2004 by NEA, Inc. 5-7

"'our 'lllrtixllly :

Saturday, May 8, 2D04
By Bernice Bede Osol
Triare is a good chance that in the year
ahead you will find a lucrative market for
any special knowledge or expertise you
possess. B'e aware of what you h3.ve to
offer and tile considerable value your skill
would be to others.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - If you find
yourself for11Jnate enoiJgh to be in the com·
pany of profound thinkers today, be a good
listener. Enlightenment you acquire
throuQh the ir Knowledge can be IIJrned into
real power.
GEMINI
(May
2t-June
20)
Circumstatlces may provide an opening lor
you today to get involved wl111 people who
have done all the spadework on something
that is potentially profitable. It could be your
lucky day.
CANCER (June 21·J1Jiy 22)- An ally may
play ·a big part today in making a dream
become a -reality for you . Teaming up with
another could prove to be a~~:actty what yoiJ
needed .
LEO (July 23-AIJg. 22)- There are no limits today as to what you can ach1eve w1th
yoiJr talents and ciapabilitias. All you have
to do is believe in yourself , raise you r
sights and tenaciously go after what you
want .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- Al though yOu
may not deliberately seek anention today.
your presence will have a favorable impact
on whatever you do, wherever you are. and
on all those with Whom you spend your
time .
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 23) - Even 1! early
indicators don't ·show that things are going
yow way. situations will have a way of
eveniUatty working out to your ultimate
advantage today Keep the faith and keep
plugging away.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -This cou ld
be a perfect day to make your case con·
earning a delicate matter you've wanted to
d1scuss with a close friend . Indicators are
that accord is more than likely to be
reached .
S~GITTARI US (Nov. 23 -Dac.· 21) - Any
concerted effort on your part today toward
mak1ng stndes for personal accumulation
will not go unrewarded Do yoiJr best and
what transpires wi ll take care of lhtngs lor
you.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22·Jan · 19) Because you'll try to underplay it. your
commanding presence today wi ll not be
offensive to your asSOCiates and companIOns. The subtle way you carry yoursf"JII
only enhances your esteem
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19)- Rece1ving
accolades and taking bows won 't be as
Important to you today as getting the job
done right. In fact, you may pr~le r being
the power behind the scenes instead of the
lront guy.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Allhoug!"l
yoiJ may not realize It, your" qulet. lnlliJence
over your circ le of frl•nds and associates Is
r•tl"1tr powerful today. You'll use il In •
manntr tnat will benefit • II concerntd.
ARIES ( March 21·Aprll 19)- Tt'IISII on•
of thou blettld d•Y• whtn most an'jll'llng
yout•ke up Mnl out I IJOCIIIfu lly tor .,.ou.
Whtrt yoiJ oan r.. p the greattlt gllht
today, howe¥er. are f rom 111ue1 that further
your pr•atl&amp;e.

SOUP TO NUTZ

0 fovr
Reorrong e letter' ~I
Ktamblt d words

tk•
be·

low lo form lgur words

B !S REC

I r I I. I'

I

I
.

R UPS U

l' I I I'

I

I~,'
INECHE
1~ I I, .

@ P~tNT

A close
upset about turning fifty He
told me lhat fifty IS when you
go from present tense to

N UM6E~E D

L:fiERS IN SQUARES

E)· UNSCii!AMBLE

FOR

AN S WE~

SC RAM-LETS ANSWERS s- 6- o4

Vermin - Mower- Clink - Cheery • WHINE
Conversation overheard at children 's playground:
'Waking up my kids for school is a real chore They
usually rise and WHINE '"

ARLO

ty JANIS

"

�.
''

:R•ge B,8 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, May 7, 2004

www.mydailysentlnel.com

T\

ALONG THE RivER
Volunteers seiVe higher purpose
at community ce'nter, Cl

I

Behind the Wheel:
2004 Ford Explorer, Dl

,.

tme -

un a
GM'S #1
DEALER FOR
CUSTOMER

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
Pnmt•r·o~ • ~liddlt•port • ( ;allipolis • ~Ia~ 'I· '""1-l

Ohio \'aile~ l'uhlishingl'o.

81.23 • \ 'ol. :JH . :'l:o. ()o

Gallipolis police make arrest in Food land robbery ,

SPORTS
· ·NASCAR Weekend.
See Page 87
• Bannister's run
endures. See Page .85
• Cowher upset Plax
missed minicamp: See
Page 86
• Palmer takes over
Bengals' starting job.
See Page 86

BY MILLISSIA RUSSELL
MRUSSELL@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM

GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis Police
Chief Roger Brandeberry announced
Friday that an arrest has been made .in
the March · 2003 robbery of the
Gall ipolis Foodland store.
Police in vestigators, after consu lting with Gai'lia County Prosecuting
Atlorney Brenl Saunder&gt;. filed robbery charges Friday on William J.
Denny Jr .. 19. of Gallipolis.

According 10 Brandeherr~. a
Foodland employee wa' allempling
to make a nigh! deposit around 9 p.m.
al the Ohio Valley Bank\ Superbank.
. located in the Food land &gt;tore.
The police report stales that a man
wearing a ski mask knocked th e
female employee 10 the ground and
tpok the bank hag:. The mwt then !led
th e scene and ran toward Grape
Streel.
Brandeberry ~aid officas collected
several pieces of c1·idence thai night

and the follo1l·ing morning. The
departmcnl'&gt; K-9 officer. Virago. wa,
also used 10 track the su;pecl.
In his stateme·nl. Brandeberr1 &gt;aid.
although the case ha, been iriacti1·e
for se1eral rnonlhs. it 11·a, one that' he
beliewd . would e1·erllually get
solved.
"We had some good forensic e1 idence. and we just needed lo get
some firmer information on a

SU\-

pecl." he said. "We recently got :1
break in that regard. and our ofticer&gt;

ha1·e d(&gt;ne a great job pulling thi'
t:a:-.e together.··
Brandebern added that he i,.
pkased that ihey were able 10 giw
the local merchant some ci(•sure.
"All mhherie' are seriou' becau'e of
!heir 'inlem nmure and the high po,sihilil\ of injUf\' and ucath.'' he &gt;aid. "We
belie1·e thin liur ability 10 'ohe crime&gt;
like thi .s pro1·ide' soine deterrence 10
tho'e who ma! think that uoing thh

Rio Grande graduates moving fotWard
BY STEPHANIE JENKINS
SJENKINS@MYDAILYTRIBUN'E.COM

RIO GRANDE- Almost
400 studen" a1 the
Universily of Rio Grande
started their lives Satu rday.
having received their diplomas.
University sla ff and
adminislration as well a~
family and friends. ginhered
.to supp011 !he Class of 2004
in !heir future endeavors.
About I00 of th ose students
were graduate students.
havino
achieved
their
Maste~'s Degree.
One student rn the
Master's
program
for
'Intervention
Specia list,
Steven Lillie. s~jd that his
graduation "was the fourth
most im portant event of my
life. al'!er high school graduation. my tirst college graduation, and . matriage." He
plans to teach spccial'education .
One of the fastest growi ng
programs at the . University
of Rio Grande is also the
technology
program.
Stephen Cox, management
information systems coordinator. said the information
tec hnology program has
acquired new courses and
new fields of study wi thin
ihe program. such as th e ·

Page AS
• Harold Abbott
• Martha Lou Breit
Crawford
• Esther Daniels
• Frank E. Greenlee
• Arthur H. Snodgrass

Please see Forward, A6

I
'' \

' I

Travis D. Halley, of Crown City, receives his diploma Saturday at the Univers ity of · Rio
Grande's graduation ceremony. (I an McNemar)

"Nursing is a demanding
profession:· he said. "Our
- - - - - - - - - - - ·graduates tonight will soon
RIO GRANDE - More make a difference in somethan 80 nursing graduates one's life, and there can be
took the stage Friday no higher calling than servevening for the University of ing and helping olhers.
"Thi s pi nning ceremony is
Rio Grande Holzer School of
Nursing Pinning Ceremony. a time of great relief. and a
Friday marked the twenty- time of gratiiUde,'' Dorsey
third year for the nursing said. "A time to thank .the
school 's associates degree faculty, friend6 and family
program, and the eigh1h year for their support.
"It is also a lime of great
for the school's bachelor's
degree program.
emotion."
he
added.
Founeen graduates received "Although many of you wil l
their bachelor of science in continue on to the bachelor's
nursing, while the remaining program. this may be !he last
67 graduates received their day that you spend among
your classmates and fnend, ... A rbw of soon-to·be nurses wait anx iously for their turn dur·
· associ ale nursi ng degrees.
Dr. Janel Byers, School of
Graduate Holli e Simmons ing· the University of Rio Grande 's Holzer School of Nursing
Nursing administrator, said of Wellston said that. pinning ceremony. (ian McNema r)
'the pinning ceremony is a spc- although she is. not working
more
RN~ ...
cial activity to honor and rec- yet, she hopes to slay in the 10. the more I realized how wanting
Samons said . . ··My family
ognize nursing graduates. It is area and find a job. prepared we really arc ."
held in addition to the regu lar Simmons said she believes
Gallipoli&gt; rc&gt;ident Pam and the ho,pilal were very
·
commencement c~rcmon y her edliCati'on at Rio Grande Samon' has worked al supporlive."
which was held Saturday. .
has prepared her for the ·· Hn lzer M edic&lt;~ I C''emer fm
Samons said she hope' to
University of Ri~ Gmndc 'real world .'
23 years. bul tell rt was ncc- continue lHl 1.111U gel her
Presidenl Dr. Barry Dorsey
"In the beginning. 1 wasn ' t essary to return to school to Q,_~~.: hdor\ Lle12rec.
commented on Ute irony that the sure:· she said. "But the fur- rece1ve hLr degree.
.
··rm eoin; to take my
graduates were being honored !her we got into the program
"LPN po.,ltlons arc bemg time." ,11~ ;aid. "I'll work and
during National Nursing Week. and the more people I talked pha~ed oul and they a1 e take a few t:lassco.: as I go."
BY MILLISSIA RUSSELL

MRUSSELL@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Details qn Page AS

PROBLEM
CREDITil
Call Terry Settle

(304) 755-8~01
800-339-6437

INDEX
4 Sr•cnONS- 28 PAGES

Around Town
Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Health
Obituaries
Sports
Weather .

.

A3
C4
D3
insert

A4
.'A2
A6

Bt '

AS

© 2004 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

DAUi DENT

RACINE- Mother·, Dal
means different lhin~s to dif·
ferent people. hut Tt come&gt;
· down 10 one person- Mom.
Ke II ie Cundiff has three
children who range in age
from seven yea rs ,,Jd In 18
. monlhs . On Sunda1. Cundifl
suspects that she· will ge l
breakfast in bed and a .~ifl
!'rum her husband Todd . "The beSI part about being
a mother is 1he lm·e I get from
rny children... she sa.id .
·'There really isn't a worse
lhin£ about be in g a mom."
In~ the United State;
Mother's Day was first suggested in 1872 by Ju lia Ward
Howe (who wr01e the words
to th e Battle h11nn or 1he
Republic) as a day dedicated
10 peace. Howe would hold
organited Mother\ Day
meetings in Boston eve ry
year. .
Karah Coleman works fulltime al Peop le's Bank in
Pornerov and has lwo small
childrc1i.
"Even lhou~h it is Mothe r';
Day. I am going 16 stay home
with my cj)i ldren and we're
going to dO ·nothing all day
except mayhe ea t or walch
Tv:· she .said.
Cole man ~aiL! breakfu~t in
bed may he .rn nplion. hut il
will he sim ple.
"Thev 'no" lww t(• make
ce(eal ~md may he toast.·· she
said.
While &gt;orne people may
thin k it was a greetin g card
company thai c:mte up with
the idea of cekbr:ni ng
\1nther's Day nalionally. ~
wa, actualil a woman from
West Vi rg11ii a. In I Y07 1\na
Jarvi" be'gan a ~ampaign to
esta bli sh a national Mother's
Day. Jan·i.' persuaded her
mother\ church in Graflon.
W.Va .. I n celehrate Mltlher\
Day on the 'ccond anniver'ary of her mother\ death. the
,econd Sundav of Ma y.
Jarvis and ·her supp,lners
be!.!an lo \\Ti te to mini..,ter....
bu~i nes~man . anJ pnl it icians
in their quest to establish a
natinnal Molher\ Dm . It was
so strcce&gt;Sful that hi' 19 11
Molher\ Da1· w;ts ccfchr;ned
in almr~st · t'\'~f\
~tate.
Presidenl Woodr'"; Wil,nn.
in 191-l. made the official

Please see Mother, A6

TEARY SETTLE

• H1afler Acactemks

• Hands on training and experience

Courses offered: Healthcare, Auto Service

~HIIb GIUidcadlmy lerttGn OIIIHIIIIIIverValley SoumGIUia vntonColrty Wellston u.ofRioGrande and Information Technology

'

...

a

• Seamless path to an Associates Degree or higher

• Desfgned for high school students • Technically challeng1ng

'

MILES lAYTON

JlAYTON@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM

URG's Holzer School of Nursing pins 81

WEATHER

Mother's
Day means
more than
breakfast
in bed
Bv J.

1

OBITUARIES

Please see Arrest. A6

a

•

•

Ohio Mt/ley

Tech Prep

Contad your high school C\lunselor IOdayl

•
~--'--

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="491">
    <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="9942">
                <text>05. May</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="18312">
            <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="18311">
              <text>May 7, 2004</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="205">
      <name>clark</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4524">
      <name>milburn</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
