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Sunday. April ZO, 2003

OhicJ V.. ll&lt;"y f'ulllishing Co.

Page 6 Yearbook

--

-

- --

Malp County honor.rolls, Pap 2
1

When everyone else is closed.

••

•

· Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio,

Rutland Council ·applies for ~ock expansion grant
couple
dies in
accident
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

News editor

Staff report
RUTl-AND - A Rutland
couple died Sunday afterI)OOn following a tractor accident on New Lima: Road.
According
to
Meigs
Emergency Services, a
Rutland EMS unit responded
to the scene of the accident
just after 5 p.m. and found
the bodies of Charles Searles
and Sandra Searles.
A spokesman for Meigs
County
Sheriff
Ralph
Trussell's office said this
morning that circumstances
surrounding the accident
were unclear.
An investigation was continuing and further details
would be released later today,
' the spokesman said.
· A sheriff's deputy said the
1couple had been last. seen at
noon but was not reported
missing until late in the afternoon when the EMS unit was '
dispatched.
"The inyestigating officer
was busy Sunday night and
was not able to complete his
report of the incident," the
deputy said.
"We expect a complete
report of the investigation to
be released later (today)."

,

'

-.

•• •

Where doyou go?

'

.,

'

• KidSCO&lt;?P·
Page 3
• Peoples Bank
winner, Page 5

Just because it's
after 5 o'clock doesn "t
.. mean that you can 't
get hurt.
When pain starts you
can count on us beinQ
._.
there for you.
Whether it is
Wednesday night or
Christmas Day our
staff of dedicated
high-skilled
physieians are there
to make sure you g~t
'
the best care possi ble.
At Holzer Clinic you
can count on us.

Inside: .

-

• Meigs girls
stong at Rotary ·
meet, Page 6
• Meigs County
prep baseball,
Page6

AlhleyW-rd

Index
1 Section - I D ,....

Medical Excellence.
. Local Carint:
1-IO.LZER CLINIC
(;alii polis

740.446.5287
Meigs- 740.992.0060

The first section of the docks was
built with a ODNR grant of
$328 ,000. It consisted of 360 feet of
10-foot-wide, self-s upporting boat
docking along the lower parking lot
wall. It was completed last fall in
lime for the Sternwheel Festival.
In April 2002 , the village applied
for about $900,000 to continue the
project . To date. no action has been
taken on that application.
Since this month is the deadline for
applying for a 2003 grant, Musser

said it was necessary to file again to
"keep our name in the hat .''
As to when a decision on th e 2003
grant applications will be made .
Musser said he has no idea.
"It will take time for the legislature
•
to work 011t the budget problems and
once that's done then maybe some
decisions will be made," he said.
"Meanwhile: we just have to be
patient."

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

Organization key for busy mom
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

Stafj writer
REEDSVILLE - How
does a busy mom juggle
family responsibilities, an
active schedule and a full time job?
Kelly Milam of Reedsville
says the secret is organization - and patience.
Although her children
don't play soccer, Milam fits
the "soccer mom" profile
perfectly. She, her husband
Kevin and their children,
.Kaylee and Dylan, live on
Silver Ridge, and it's a good
thing because their home is a
mere hop. skip and jump
from Eastern Elementary
School - the center of a
busy schedule for the Milam
children,
"My kids are in everything, so I don't have much
time for . myself," Milam
said.
She does have pli'!]IY of
time to devote to her children's extra-curricular activities, though. She's adviser
to the Shade Valley 4-H
Club, and is coach for
Eastern's sixth-grade girls'
. basketball team.
When she's not actively
involved in volunteer work
on her children's behalf,
she's likely on the way to
another event - a scout
meeting or a baseball
game, for example.
The family also enjoys

Kelly Milam is deputy cle rk in Meigs County Court. but the real work begins when she heads
home. Her children keep her active, and she's a busy volunteer coach and club adviser.
(Brian J. Reed)
four-wheeling together on
their rural property.
Milam. a deputy clerk in
Meigs County Court for I 0
years, plans her work
schedule , as much as she
can, around those activities .
" I don't take a lunch hour

on· Thursday, because I
have to leave early to pick
up my son from his Boy
Scout meeting," Milam
said. "Then, it's straight to
baseball practice, then
home for homework."
And where's Dad'!
Kevin is an over-the-road

truck driver. so most of the
day-to-day activity falls on
Kelly 's shou lders.
"He's going to be in
Texas for Easter.'' Milam
said. "But we're used to his
being gone a lot , and we've
learned to be really organized."

Woman
working
to see all
88 barns
MARION (AP) - Once
Mary Cline learned the state
was preparing for its 200th
birthday by having bicentennial
logos painted on barns in each
county, she knew what she had
to do - see all 88 of them.
· ~1 have always loved barns,"
said Cline, who grew up on a
farm and now Iives in this city
about 40 miles north of
Columbus.
Cline learned of the project
last June and called the Ohio
Bicentennial
Commissi'on,
which sent her a list of bam ·
locations.
Either alone or with her sonin-law, Steve Ward, Cline droVe
around the state to see the barns
and take pictures, completing
her goal last weekend.
"We had trouble sometimes
but we found them;'' she said
'1'he most we got was seven in
one trip. We'd go east to tht
West Virginia line, drop down
and then come back.
Sometimes as much as 45C
miles as last as you can go."
Anist Scott Hagan sr,em four ·
years painting "Ohio ' in 20foot-high script on the 88 barns
to prepare for the state 's bicentennial this year.
Brad
Knull,
the
producer/director of a video
documentary call ed "Brush
with
History :
Ohio
Bicentennial Barns,'' said he
has met several families who
duplicated Cline's feat.

U.S. administrator 2003 Soil, Water stewardship
arrives in Baghdad Week eyes food for future

. Q- 3, Rutland Elem.

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editori11ls
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

POMEROY - An application for
funding from the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources (ODNR) to
expand the boat docks along
Pomeroy's parking lots and install
handicapped ramps at both ·ends has
been filed by Pomeroy Village
Council.
John Musser, project coordinator

for the village , said that the upplica.
tion requests $986,000 to complete
the $1.2-million project.
However, he said that might be too
much to hope for in view of the
state 's budget;u:y problems. He was
somewhat' more optimistic about getting a les;or amount.
"We would be extremely happy
with $200,000 which would allow
the village to finish the portion below
the levee and add a handicapped
ramp at that end." Musser said.

5
7·9
10
10.

4
5
5

6-7
2

c 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - coalition-run
radio
The retired U.S. general announced an II p.m .-6
appointed as Iraq's postwar a.m . curfew.
administrator arrived in
In Texas, President Bush
Baghdad on Monday, while attended Easter services at
two more top members of Fort Hood, joined by two
Saddam Hussein's regime helicopter pilots who were
· among the seven prisoners
were reported captured.
Landmg at the Baghdad of war rescued from Iraq a .
airport from Kuwait, retired week ago. The five other
Lt. Gen. Jay Gamer said his former POWs spent the day
priority was to restore basic with their loved ones at Fort
services such as water and Bliss.
electricity as soon as possiTensions appeared to ease
ble.
between the United States
"What better day in your and Syri~. with Bush saying
life can you have than to be that· Syna appears to be
able to help somebody else, heeding warmngs against
to help other .people, and sheltering escaped members
that is what we intend to of Sa,ddam's reg1me .
Israel began letting down
do," the 64-year-old Garner
said in his first postwar visit its
guard . Authonlles
, to the capital.
declared that the Iraq_, mrsWith Baghdad slow ly sile threat agamst their cHIreturning to normal after zens was over and prepared
days of looting and arson, for the departur~ of 700 U:S.
Marines pulled back Sunday soldrers mannmg Pat not
and left the U.S. Army in
·
control of the capital, where Please see Baghdad, 5

Vicki Morrow, education
"Our conservation distric1
coordinator for the Meigs is in the business of provid·
Soil and Water Conservation ing conservation technica:
POMEROY- The abili- District, local sponsor of this assistance to farmers anc'
ty to feed a world that could year 's Soil . and Water
Pleue see Soli, Page 5 · .
~row to eight bill ion by 2030 Stewardship Week.
rs a serious task that will
require a serious stewardship
ethic amo ng all of us,
according to organizers of
the 2003 Soil and Water
Stewardship Week set for
April 27-May 4.
Food for the future will
come from those . people and
nations fortunate enough to
have the soil and water for
agricultural production. the
ability to ·provide stewardship for the land, and the
freedom to pursue their agriculture in peace.
"Despite . our struggle s
over technical and ethical
questions
involved
in Vicki Morrow, education coordinator for the Meigs Soil and
increasing food production, Water Conservation District, joins Meigs Count)
the world's .toad still Commissioners Jim Sheets, Jeff Thornton and Mick
depends on an adequate sup- Davenport in proclaiming next week Soil and Water
ply of good farmland," said Stewardship Week. (Brian J. Reed)
Staff report

Medica_l La.borato.Y
Week
. is April 20·26

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

Holzer Medical Center salutes our
Medical Laboratory Professionals during this special week.

www .holzer.org

\

�'

Loca·l • State

J'he ~aily Sentinel
:ruesday, April 22

POMEROY To be
incilttkd on the honor roll,
students must make a grade of
B or above in all their subject, . ·The honor rolls from
their respective schools are as
follows:

Bradbury
1

• Columbus 44°150°

I

~-....___:...._.~

.. ·..._

C 2003 AccuWeather, Inc.

()~"
/~-~~.:..
...-~
--:..~~*••
Cloudy

•

April 21, 2003

Page2

Showel'i

T-storms

Fiur~es

Rarn

.....
Snow

k:e,

Cloudy,, cool week ahead
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Cloudy conditions will
dominate the forecast this
week with just a slight break
on Wednesday.
The National Weather
Service is calling for a chance
of showers today and
Tuesday with clear sk1es forecast for Wednesday. Highs
should be in the 60s with lows
near 40.
Cloudy skies roll back in on
. Thursday
with showers
expected
Friday
and
Saturday. Highs should be in
the 60s Thursday and Friday
with lows in the 40s. .
Sunday will bring clear
skies again with highs reach-

ing the 60s and lows steady in
the 40s.
.

WEATHER FORECAST

Today ... Mostly cloudy. A
chance of showers through
early afternoon. Highs in the
upper 60s. West winds I 0 to
15 mph. Chance of rain 50
percent.
Tonight .. .Mostly cloudy.
Scattered showers after midnight. Lows in the mid 40s.
West winds around I0 mph.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Tuesday ... Mostly cloudy.
Scattered showers through
early afternoon. Cooler . with
highs in the upper 50s. West
winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance
of rain 30 percent.

Iraqi-born Ohioans
want to help homeland
CLEVELAND (AP)- With
war winding down in Iraq,
some Iraqi-born Ohioans are
eagerly awaiting their first
· chance to visit family in
decades while others look forward to helping rebuild their
homeland.
Dr. RafaJ Badri has built up a
modest collection of donated
medicine and surgical tools. If
flight~ don't open to Baghdad,
he said he's willing to repeat a
dangerous 300-mile desert
crossing he's made before from
Jordan.
"I'm a doctor. And I'm sitting
here and people are dying," said
Badri, 50, who Jives in subur. ban Mayfield Heights. "Believe
me, I'm ready to drop everything and get on a plane."
Adil Altaei ha~ built houses
in Ohio with Habitat for

Humanity. He wants to do the
same thing in Iraq.
'"People lost their houses," he
said. "I'm ready to go back and
help them."
Altaei, of Lakewood, has had
no contact with his family in
Iraq for two months.
In 1991 . when he was 18. the
former Iraqi soldier rebelled
against Saddan1 Hussein after
the Gulf War. then _fled and
spent five years in a refugee
camp. He has since ta4ght himself carpentry and·ls studying
architecture at Kent State
University.
After years of exile. many ·
former Iraqis arc waiting for ·
!lights to resume to the country ..
Some say they want t0 return
permanently.

Grade 4
Morgan
.Howard, Kyle Johnson,
Shelby Johnson, Colt Kerr,
Shannon McLaughlin, Paula
VanMeter, Olivia Bevan,
Kabrien Borthwick, Valerie
Conde, Nikki Davi s, Brenton
Southern, Chandra ·Stanley
and Tanner Tackett.
·
Grade 5 - Tyler Andrews,
Autumn Ebersbach, LaTricia
Smith. Jacob Well.

Harrisonville

.

Kindergarten - Cheyenna
Lewis. Mitch!! II Metts, Brittany
Qual Is, Breahna Thompson,
. Dakota Wilson, Brook Andrus,
Shania Gilmore , Colton
Hannah, Paige Phillips, and
Courtney Wheeler.
Grad~ I - Josiah Beha,
Daniel Morman and Trevor
Williamson,
Brandon
·Newlun, Christian Romine,
Samantha Spires and Brandon
Thompson.
Grade 2 - Casi Arnold,
Ashley ·Jeffers, Ashleigh
Sayre and William Taylor.
Grade
3 - Stephanie
Ho alcraft, Zachary Sayre,
Samantha Chabot
Grade 4 - Tessa Chabot,
Ashley
Edwards,
Dillon
Edwands, Hope Hajivandi, Zack
Jeffers, Julia Lantz, Ttffany Lee
and Melanie Taylor.
Grade 5 - Dawn Bissell,
Alisha Chapman, Dean
Hively and Michael Wallace.
CC I Class (Rm:h)
CC 2
Class (Bames) Donovan
Atwood, Joey Foley, I.a:y MUJ;;an.

corner .;? .
Write On! · .. ~

ARBOR DAY
by Vicki Whiting , Editor

Alyssa Cremeans, Shestan Patterson , Bo- Dara Powe ll .
Curtis, Haley English, Cody · Ravenne Reed. Garrett Riffie.
Fink, Kacy Fink , Amanda Kasey Rou sh, Sarah Thomas.
Grant, Kendra Haning, Eddie Caitlin Tilli s. Christian Woods.
Grade 5 - Chelsey Arms,
Hendricks, Christopher Jones,
Corey King, Thomas Klein, Ashley Carey, Caleb Davis,
Chandra Mattox, Alexander Kristine Dav1 s. Taylor Deem ,
Morris, Tess Phelps, T):ler Kristen Eblin. Corey Fink.
Price, Maggie Smith, Bethany Veronic a Grimm . Holly
Spaun, Amber Steinmetz. Jeffers, Ryan Jeffers, Michael
Robert Strohl, Steven Stump. 'Lee, Ariel , Nitz, Erin
Madelyn Thomas. Justm Patterson, Ri chard Reuter,
Tillis, Caitlin Will, Haley Jacob Riffle , Cayla Taylor,
Ryan
VanMatre ,
Meri.
Will. Tisha Zeigler.
Grade 3 Cheyenne VanMeter...'
LD : John Pierce, Jodi
Beaver, Darienne Betzing,
Scarberry
Olivia Cleek, Andy Fairchild,
DH : Dale Elli s, Carrie
Ronnie Haning, Taylm' Jones,
Jeffrey Roush, Zachary White .
MR : Patricia Clark , A.J.
Sheets.
J&lt;.:opec,
Marjorie Lewis. Nate
Grade 4
Jordan
McBane,
Keely. Shuler,
Anderson,
Brianna
Buffington, Hannah Cleek , Emma Swiger, Augusta
Nathaniel Gilkey, Chelsea Wright.

Pomeroy

waaklv Wrldna ··

ANewspaper In Educadon lciMIY Page for Young People

Monday, April 21, 2003

Hail. Bradley Helton, Nikki
Wayland. Valerie Wolfe,
Alison Walker.
Grade 2 - Robbie Dillon,'
Harley
Fox ,
Makenzie
Greene, Colton Hall, Treay
McKinney, Rachel Payne,
Nakayla
Ratliff.
Kyrie
Swann. Tyler Triplett, Zach
Yeauger. Vanessa Crane,
Braden Baker, Matthew
Casci ; Andrew McNabb, Jessi
Meadows, Jacob Mulholland,
Emma Perrin, McKayla
Powell, Keana Robinson,
*Bradley Wills , Clarence
Owensb,Y. Nikkie Rayburn ,
Adam Ltttle.
Grade 3 -· -Curly Carpenter,
Bruno Casci, Desirae Cundiff,
Michael Davis. Zach Fink.
Halli Hall, Raynee Herman,
Marlee Hoffman. Austin King.
Ben Reed, DiJaun Robinson,
Nathan Rothgeb, Travis
Tackett, Kimberly Curl. J.R.
Jewell. Jeffrey Kimes, Megan
Walker, Jesse Wiseman, Tori
Wolfe.

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Meigs Local honor rolls.

~hio weather

SU!lny Pt. Cloudy

~onday,

Dawn Armato -Brehm &amp; Sherry Flak, Illustration &amp; Design

National Arbor Day is the last Friday in April. Bu~ many states
observe Arbor Day on different dates, based on their best tree
planting times. To find out when your state celebrates
Arbor Day, go to www.arbor-day.net

Seud vo..w J·to ry to:
Den Utckerson

®afiipolis :mailp l!l:ribune
B25 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631.

Please include your school and grude.
Ty Somerville
State Farm Insurance
Po int Pleasant, WV
Sponsors· of: Mrs, DOeffin ger's 3rd grade class
North Point Elementary
"
Point Ple.nant, WV

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

Spo,nsors of: Mrs, McNickle'§ 3rd grade class
Southern Elementary

Can you help
the bird find
its nest?

(USPs 2 113-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Ra cine, OH

American Electric Power

Addiso n, OH

Toler &amp; toler
lnsufance Services

Tammy wants to
plant five trees
in order of height. Use
the clues on her planning sheet to list the \t:::::;:;;;;o'
trees in order from tallest to shortest.
Match each leaf to a tree and write
the name on the tree.

·Middleport

On ..... ,,....,,
Day, people
celebrate by .
planting trees.

In 1987, third
graders in Southern
California s tarted a
club cal led the Tree
Mu sketeers. It was
the nati o n's first youth
environmental
organi zation - a
nonprofit charity where
kids were boss I

Whypla11t irees?
According to the
.Natipnal A.tJjpr pay
Foundation, there are ·
many reasons to plant
and care for trees.
Trees:helpclea)l
_the atr!
\) Trees bring
·
L:.l, songbi~ds,
...
..
1
1!, Trees make your

l

Today tl1e Tree
Musketeers is still going
strong, with groups all
over the country.•Their
goal is to plant one
million groves of trees
worldwide.

~ neighborhood

more beautiful.
. Trees save energy
' by shading houses
.in the summer
and blocking cold
winter winds.
'.
Can you think of
some more reasons

To find out more about
Tree Musketeers, go to

.· to plant trees?

Point Pleasant Register

www.holzerclinic.com

ENTERTAINMENT

Precious Memories

www.Gharter.com

'os·enou6e~
. '99·~90 lJ3MSNII

......,..~ Se~ds of Change
Look through the newspaper for ideas ·and
inventions that have made big changes in
1eople's lives. Describe the idea or invention
!lnd explain what changes it has caused.

Jim's Farm Equipment

Herbalife Independent Distributor

www.jimsfarmequipment.cori'l

www.bluestllrr.net

..... ...

......... 'IH
14H
......... . . 11H
..... .... ..... 1

7H

for only a $1 a day.

Vauahan's Supenrnuket
Middleport, OH
Sponsors of: Sandy Needs' :Srd grl'lde class
Eastern Elementary
Middleport, OH
Superm~~rket

t '

~

..'

Edward Jones' Investments

Find the V.llllb in the puule.

OAK
MAPI.E
CHERR Y
BIRCH
MAGNOLIA
HICKORY
RESCUE
CHANGES

·.

ARBOR
PLANT
ENERGY
LEAVES
FRUIT

www.qualitywindowsystems.com

WEBSITE DIRECTORY

.t
,•

Holzer Clink
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs, Little's 3rd grade class
Central Elementary
Point Pleasant, WV

"Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Mrs, Davenport's 3rd grade class
Bidwell Elementary
Bidwell, OH

Quality Windows

Take your business Into the homes of over 40,000 con·
sumers In Gallla, Mason, Meigs Counties EVERYDAY
with a listing of your web address In our

Holzer Clinic
Gallipglis, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Ours' 3rd grade class
Washingto n Element&lt;Jry
Gallipolis, QH

Dr, &amp; Mrs. Gerald Shute
Gallipol is, Ohio
Sponsor.; of: Jerry Howell's 3rd grade class
Green Elementary
•
Gallipolis, OH

.Jree Twins

HOME IMPROVEMENT

MAKE YOUR BUSINESS A HIT!!

Holzer Clinic
Gallipoli s, OH
Sponsors of: Sheila Bevins' 3rd grade clasS
Middleport Elementary
Middleport, OH

Advanced Hearinx Center

www.herbsndiet.com

BlueStarr Network

Ri o ~Grande, OH
Sponsors of: Phyllis Branden berry's 3rd grade dass
Washington Elementary
•
Gallipolis, OH

------------------------~
··
Ji'widen's Power Equipment

......... SH!

INTERNET SERVICES

RiG nre

Gal lipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Sandra Mock's 3rd grade class
Ohio Valley Christian School
Gallipolis, OH

AGRICULTURE

WELLNESS &amp; WEIGHT LOSS

Buckeye Rural Electric Co-op
Rio Grande , OH
Sponso.H&gt; of: Becky Woodyard's 3rd grade class '
Southwest~rn Elementary
Rio Grande, OH

l~art Falls, Ohio
Sp onsors of: M5. Holter's 3rd grade class
Southern Elementary
Middleport OH
'

www.photosonchina.com

Charter Communications

Pomeroy, Ohio

Darrell Norris and Marshall Roush Gr..rfhouses·

Pleasant Valley Hospital

GIFTS &amp; COLLECTIBLES

i

Middleport, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Struble's 3rd grade class
Southern Elementary
Middleport. OH

\Nww.mydailyregister.com

www.pvalley.org

•

Skyline l.llnes
Gallipolis, OH
Sponso rs of: Sa ndra Walker's 3 rd grade class

Vauahan's

The Daily Sentinel

Holzer Clinic

Gallipolis, OH
Sponso rs of: M rs, Perry's 3rd grade class
Ri o Grande Elem entary
Rio Gr&lt;!lnde, OH

Pom eroy Elementary

WEBSITE DIRECTORY

www.mydailysentinel.com

Gavin .,ant

Sponsors of : Ms, Cru m's 3rd grade class
Addavill e Elementary
'

Published
every
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Fitzgerald,
Adrianna Dlatrict Mgr.: Mike Jenk1ns. Ext 17
carrier service is available.
Hutchinson, Jamie Johnson,
Mall SUbfCrlptlon
Vada Johnson, Damon Jones,
.
General
Manager
Inside
Metgs County
Sara Klein, Anna Little, Ciera
13 Weeks . ..... , ...... '30.15
Charlene Hoefl1ch, Ext 12
Marcinko, Austin Miller, Jack
26 Weeks .
. .. ' 60.00 ·
Reitmire,
Cody
Rice,
52
Weeks
....
:
.......
' 118.80
E-mail:
Gabrielle Rice, Kaylee Rowe,
news 0 mydallysentlnel .com
Jessica
Ryder, Thomas
Rates Outside Metgo County
13 Weeks .
. ... . , . . ' 50 .05
. Schoolcraft,
Carolann
Web:
26Weeks.
.
. ... ' 100.10
Kindergarten Sammy Stewart, Carly Taylor, Patricia
www.mydailysentinel. com
52 Weeks ...... • ..... '200.20
Ash, McKayla Barrett, T):ra Swiger, Jamie Walters.
Grade 2- Ryan Caruthers,
Boothe. Hannah Cremenas,
Haley Kennedy. Nick Lester,
Bre Mitchell, Taylor Northup.
Palmer,
Anna
Taylor
Reynolds, Tia Wise. Austin
Wolfe, Brette Crane. Chaisty
Abbott, Jordin Brannon,
Jenny Casto. Michael Davis,
Mariah Shoemaker, Leslie
COMMUNITY
AUTOMOTIVE
Hoffman. Kel sey Hud son.
Kwesi Lane. Reuben Lawson,
Norris Northup Dodge
City of Point Pleasant
Issac Watson.
www.norrisnorthupdodge.com
www.pointpleasantwv.org
Grade I - Dillan Andrews,
Dylan Bass. Bre Bonnett,
Tishea Boothe. Kimberly
Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis
Mason County Chamber of Commerce
Casci. Rocco Casci, Devon
www.turnpikeflm.com
www.masoncountychamber.org
Cundiff, Billy Ferguson,
Courtney Holley, Olivia Lane,
*Taylor Rowe, Levi Smith.
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce
BUSINESS TRAINING
Shannon Walker, John Casto.
www.meigscountyohio.com
Stephen Batey, Morgan Bell,
Gallipolis Career College
Miachaela Davidson. D.J .
NEWSPAPERS
www.gallipoliscareercollege.com
Dixon. Scotty Dowell, Patrick
Evans. Isaac Gibbs, Cheyenne
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
.
MEDICAL

~

Cheshi re, OH

Correction Polley

www.holzer.org

'!Will .. .
fUll. .. .
Clllllll "' .....

•

Home Nationcd Bank
R&lt;l cine, OH

Holzer Medical Center

'

Keep your Kid Scoop reader
pals laughing and laughing.
Send us your favorite summer
.jokes and riddles.
· Deadline: May I8, 2003
Published: Week of June I5, 2003

www.mydailytribune.com

..... :. . ... . loll!

?ummer Jokes
and Riddles

1

At first glance, these two trees look the·,
·same. Look closer! Can you find 8 or
more ways they are different? '

BARK

Standards link: Visual Discrimination: Finding similarities and differences in common objects:

PINK

Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Mrs. Sara Spurlock's 3rd grade class
Vinton Elementary
Vinton, OH

then in thi s week's Kid Scoop
storic~

and

a~.: tivities.

..

J R Morrison &amp; Assodates

L E N E R G y A R
E .U

c s

s

E R B A 0 E

Gallipoli5, Ohio
Sponsors of: Mrs. Fellure's 3rd grade class
Hannan Trace Elementary
Mercerville, OH

letart Corporation

A

R R M 0

v

K A K A L y R F N

E N

s

I

c

0 0

K I

D K G

p A 0

R N L B L

c

B R A

s

Women's Basketball Te•m

H A

Un'iverslty of Rio Grande

T 'H

Rio Grande, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Price 's 3rd grade cl ass
Washington Elementary
Galli po lis, OH

H p G A y R R E· H c
R A N E T I u R F E
M T R 0

Gallipolis ferry, 'WV •
Sponsors of: A 3rd grade class
Beale Elementary
G,:.lli po lis ferry, WV

T R

·.
.'

--------------------------,•
Ohio Valley Tech Prep

Gallipolis, OH
Sponson of: Mrs. Saunders' 3rd grade class
Bidwell Elementary
Bidwell, OH

•

Ohio Valley Tech Prep
Standards link: Letter sequenc1ng. Recognizing identical
words . Sk1m and scan reading 8ecall spelling patterns,

.

Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs, Short's 3rd grade class
Addaville Elementary
Addaville, OH

Ohio Valley Tech Prep
Gallipolis, OH
·
Sponsors of; lou Ann Shawver's 3rd grade class
Green Elementary
Gallipolis, OH

8 E V 0 N D¥-:\ Scao
Trees are Terrific

Melp County Economic OrtelopiMnt Offke
Pomeroy, OH
Sponsors of: Marge Gibbs' 3rd grade class
Salisbury Elementary
Po meroy, OH

Look through the newspaper for pictures and
,t ories that show why trees are terrific. Write
a k·tln t(l the ed itor about why trc '' 1
terrific. Use information you find in the
newspaper to support your opinion.

Gallia Reads

Stondardo Link: Writing Applications: Write formal letters to present
1nd support unilied impressions of things.

For more information on becoming:~aiCi~~~ssii)p:0onn$;soiiirt,",ocoOinnitteaiCcttCarfi~:osift0atfi.WJ~i6-ni2_.
;

Gallipolis, OH
,,
Sponsors ol :
Jui l" Vaugran's 3rd grade
Mindy Young's 3rd grade
Marge Gibbs' 3rd grade
Plus 9 additional
3rd ghlde cl.tsses

.•••'
••
.• •'•
••
.. ;·'

'.

�The Daily Sentinel
~~ The
r:
'·•
I •

0

•1n1on
•

111 Court Street • Po~eroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

KAT£ HVDSON OR.
SAI(AH MICHELLE

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

G£LLAR?

Carl Esposito
Publisher

Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

NATIONAL VIEW

It costs.
. SARS proves we end
up payingfor globalization
• Southeast Missourian, Cape Giradeau, 011 globa/iza·
tion: Globalization has not come without a cost. In today's
world of international travel. if someone from Japan sneezes.
someone in southeast Missouri may soon catch a cold.
Or. maybe even something worse.
. .One el(ample is the so-called mystery disease now known as
SARS. for severe acute respiratory syndrome. The deadly
form of pneumonia has killed mote than 50 people and
~equired the hospitalization of more than 1.400 others. mostly
in Asia.
Its effects are being severely felt elsewhere, though, and it
seems only a matter of time until it arrives here.
The culprit, according to health officials, is a corona virus. a
pesky bug similar to the one that can cause the common cold.
In this age of global positioning systems, cell phones and
high-speed connections, it is still a virus that has never been
seen in humans before.
So much for progress.
. It seems that the access point to the United States could end
up being through our own airlines as international air travelers may be passing the virus on to others. That has prompted
the U.S. State Department to advise citi.zens to avoid world
travel- as if the travel industry wasn ' t in enough trouble.
The news wasn't all glum. however. Officials offered some
encouragement , saying that many of the sick seem to improve
with steroids and im anti-viral drug, rib&lt;l.virin.
Ultimately, however. it seems the health officials have been
open about what has happened and how they're dealing with
it. That might be the best remedy until a real cure can be
found.

TODAY lN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.. Today is Monday, April 21. the Ill th day of 2003. There are
254 days left in the year.
·
·Today's Highlight in History:
' On April 21, 1918, Baron Manfred von Richthofen, the
Ge~man ace known as the "Red Baron," was killed in action
dunng World War I.
·on this date:
In 1649, the Maryland Toleration Act, which provided for
freedom of worship for all Christians, was passed by the
Maryland assem bly.
In 1789, John Adams was sworn in as the first vice president
of the United States.
In 1836, an army of Texans led by Sam Houston defeated
the Mexicans at San Jacinto, assuring Texas independence.
In 1910, author Samuel Langhorne Clemens, better known
as Mark Twain, died in Redding, Conn.
In 1940, the quiz show that asked the "$64 question." "Take
It or Leave It," premiered on CBS Radio. ·
In 1960, Brazil inaugurated its new capital, Brasilia, transfernng the seat of national government from Rio de Janeiro.
In 1972. Apollo 16 asjronauts John Young and Charles
Duke explored the surface of the moon . ·
.
In 1975, South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu
resigned after ten years in office.
In 1977 ,' the musical play "Annie" opened on Broadway.
In 1992, Robert Alton.Harris became the first person executed by the state of California in 25 years as he was put to death
in the gas chamber for the 1978. murder of two teen-age boys.
Ten y1=ars ago: An 11 -day siege . a.t the Southern Ohio
C~rrectional Facility near Lucasville ended after ri oting
inmates reached an agreement with prison officials.
:Five years ago: A~tronomers announced in wa,hington they
hlld dtscovered posstble stgns of a new famtly of planets orbittog a star 220 light-years away, the clearest evidence to date
of worlds forming beyond our solar system.
·one year ago: In a huge upset in French politics, extremeright leader Jean-Marie Le Pen qualified to face incumbent
Jacques Chirac in the runoff for French president. (Chirac
ended up winning.)
.
··
Today's Birthdays: Ice skater Werner Groebli (''Mr. Frick")
is 88. Britain's Queen Elizabeth the Second is 77. Actresscomedian~writer Elaine May is 71. Actor-turned-talk show
host Charles Grodin is 68. Singer-musician lggy Pop is 56.
Singer-songwriter Paul Davis is 55. Actress Patti LuPone is
54. Actor Tony Danza is 52. Actress Andie MacDowell is 45 .
Rock singer Robert Smith (The Cure) is 44. Rock musician
Mi.chael Timmins (Cowboy Junkies) is 44. Actor John
Cameron Mitchell is 40. Rapper Michael Franti (Spearhead) is ·
35. Comedian Nicole Sullivan is 33.
. :Thought for Today : "I am a great believer in luck, and I find
the harder I work the more I have of it.'' - Stephen Leacock.
Canadian economist and humorist ( 1869-1944). ·

SPEAK OUT!
·Ever yell at your television set? Ever read something in the
newspaper that gets your dander up'
'
.
'
·Next time you get the urge td expre~;s your opinion, pick up the
telephone and call the Daily Sentinel's new "Speak Out" line.
Speak Out line callers need not give their name . They must,
h9wever, follow a few simple rules - be brief (calls are limited l
to two minutes), no profanity, no personal a~tacks on individuals.
·The "Speak Out" lint: is open only after 5 p.m. each day. Do
not call "Speak Out" during regular business hours.
·To call "Speak Out," dial the Sentinel's main number (740)
~2-2156 and then dial extension 29. Begin talking at the tone.
'

Don't let scam artists take advantage of troops
It 's hard· to believe that
anyone would try to make a
quick buck by taking advantage of our pride in our
troops or our patriotic feelings. but according to the
Better Bu siness Bureau
(BBB), it's already happening.
·
Consider these reports:
One website announces its
intention to, "within 31 davs
... ship every soldier a cornmemorative novelty dollar to
show them we appreciate
them and care for them. We
will ship them to each company in every battalion,
every carrier and ship, as
long as the funds keep coming ... Would you be willing
to make two small commitments to show these guys
you care'''
The site then asks consumers to send money and
forward the e-mail to five
other people .
Another website is selling
patriotic T-shirts, claiming to
give 10 percent of all profits
to the Red Cross Disaster
Relief Fund. When the Better
Business Bureau contacted
the Red Cross, they had
never heard of the website .
Shortly after the war
began, people in Charlotte,
N.C., began receivi ng unsoli ci ted phone calls asking
them to send in money to
support the troops and their
loved ones. The callers were
·not affiliated with any known

J\llonday, April 21, 2003

Obituaries
Margie
Carpenter
Grueser

CAN WE GET

I.
I

Monday, April 21, 2003

Daily Sentinel
www.mydallysentlnel.com

.' .

Page4

.

used for the purposes that we
intend, not to line the pockets
, of di shonest people or fake
charities.
Fortunately. the Better
Business Bureau works to
Ted
alert consumers to scams Iike
Strickland these , and to educate all of us
on how to be more savvy
shoppers. On their website.
www.bbb.org, the bureau has
,
compiled trustworthy inforcharity, and they refused to mation on thousands of busiprovide any additional in for- nesses and charities.
mation about their organizaConsumers \vho have question.
tions about the truth of adve rOther scams fratldulently tising claims or the credenclaim that their products are tials of businesses and chariendorsed by the federal gov- ties can contact the Better
ernment or the military. In Business Bureau for reliable
Cincinnati, the BBB received
spam e-mails trying to sell information before they part
emergency survi~a l ski ll s with their hard-earned dolthat are '"U.S. Coast Guard lars.
The BBB also offers tips
approved."
Others
are
selling on how to protect you from
''nukepills" . that
were scams. Here are a few of
allegedly purchased by the them:
• Carefully verify claims
federa l government. Some
that
sound too good to be
callers are even claiming to
true.
represent the government
• Don ' t reveal personal
when they call, saying that
information
, such as a Social
. the government is requiring
number.
or fin a n~ial
Security
Americans to purchase emergency kits, with payment information, such as a credit
being deducted from their card or bank account number,
to a caller you don't know.
checking accounts.
• Request written informaMany of us are eager to
learn of ways that we can tion about a charity and its
encourage our troops, sup- programs. As with businessport humanitarian relief and es. www.bbb.org provides
protect our families from reliable information about
danger. But we all want to charities.
'
make sure that our dollars are
• Do not be swayed by

'

claims of government aftlliation. government approval or
other government references.
Official government websites. such as www.ready.gov
Securi ty),
(Homeland
www.fda.gov (Food and
Drug Admi1iistratimi) and
www.cdc .gov (Centers for
Disease Control) provide
reliable information about
government recommendations.
As always, you are invited
to con tact my office with any
concerns about consumer
issues or questions regarding
government actions or recommendations. My office
can . be reached toll-free at
(888) 706- 1833, and my
website, at www.house.gov,
has links to legitimate websites where you can s~pport
our troops. I hope that each
of you will tinct meaningful
and effective ways !O support, encourage and thank
our troops .
As always, please let me
know what you think about
this and other important
issues. Write to Congressman
Ted Strickland, 336 Cannon
HOB, Washington , D.C.
205 15, or call (202) 2255705.
(U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland,
a DemocraT from . Marietta,
represents
Ohio's Sixth
Co11gressiollt&lt;l . District, ·
including Gallia a11d Meigs
counties.)
·

How democratic will Iraqi democracy be?
After roughly 100 Iraqi
and Muslim countries. All Palestinian constitution
Muslim countries would like the creaiion of which is conexiles. sheiks and clerics
gathered in a fortitied and
to see their governments sidered a prerequisite for
air-conditioned tent in Iraq
app lying sharia (Islamic reforming the Palestinian
this week to begin piecing
law)."
Authority - defines not a
Diana
This doesn't bode well for deniocratic republic, but an
together their cou ntry 's
future.
U.S.
Central
democracy. fledgling oc oth- Islamic state. Not a good
Command
headquarters ·
West
erwise. As Islami c scholar sign. And this week in
released a 13-point summary
Ibn Warraq explains in his France, La Republique found
of the meeting that included
book ''Why I am Not a itself taking an unexpected
the outcome of the historic
Muslim"
(Prometheus, step closer to European-style
1995), Islam ic law "tries to sharia with the surprising
first vote in Saddam-free
Iraq . The Iraqi proto-body intractable problem facing legislate every aspect of an elect()ral success of the
voted to meet again in 10 democratic reform in Iraq (or individual 's life. The individ- Union
of
Islamic
days, and also voted on a anywhere else in the Muslim ual is not at liberty to think or Organizations, .an Jslamist
string of high-minded reso lu- world) is how to reconcile decide for himself; he has but group that preaches Islamic
tions.
that founding principle of to accept God's rulings as law for France, a place where
Point one said "Iraq must democracy - the separation infallibly interpreted by the 5 to 10 million Muslims call
be a den1ocracy''·. po1'nt three of church and state - wr'th doctors o ,. 1aw, " or c1encs.
·
home. Having won a big
said "the rule of law must be Islamic law. which is predi- Another problem is that chunk of seats on the new
...• a11d po1.11t •o
r cated o.n the inseparable 1s1am1c
· 1aw 1·umts,
· ,or even Islamic council created by
Paranloullt
.
1· u
stated that the coun try "must union of religious and politi- "denies the rights of women the government to foster "an
be built on respect for diver- . cal power.
and non-Muslim religious official (read: moderate)
si ty including the role of
"Those who would like to minorities.'· Which, of Islam for France," the decidwomen .'' No word as yet on se_rar_ate . ~e l igion ~·rmn ~~e course, is no w&lt;ry to run a edly un:modcrate group has.
how "respect" for- "diversity state. are sunply dreammg. a democracy.
earned 1ts place at the goYincluding the role of women'· conference partiCipant told
We have already begun to ernment table.
translates into legal or politi- The New York Tunes, echo- ~ see elements of sharia reThis prompted surprisingly ·
cal rights: maybe that comes mg a hne th~t res&lt;!unds w!th introduced into post-Taliban tough talk from France's
at the next meeting.
much of Iraq s Shute Mushm Afghanistan , where, as Interior Minister Nicolas
Meanwhile, there's some-. ma)onty. At least one lraq1 Freedom Hou se's Nina Shea Sarkozy: " It is precisely
thing positive .to be sa id Sl111te. clenc .at the b1g-tent has warned. a "theological because we recognize the
about the plainspoken cert i· plan.nm.g sesston. She1k Ayad iron curtain" is dropping right of Islam to sit at the
iude with which some of Jamal ai-D1n, however, d1s- across the country even as table of the republic that we
these democratic building &lt;~gr~ed .. "Dn.:tat?rs may not the United_ States pours in will not accept any deviation.
blocks are being laid out. at slle"~. tn the name. of reh- hundreds ol millions of polit- Any prayer leader whose
least on jpper. But such ener· !!'on. he sard, calling for a ical &lt;tnd economic recon- views run contrary to the valgy is lacking in another key system ot government that st ruction dollars. Will that ues of the republic will be
point on the list. Point six is · sepa;.ates ~hef I rom poll- happen in Iraq? It's too soon expelled." And there was
downright phiGgmatic which !.res . l .~et s hope such a to tell, of course; but not too more: "Islamic law will not
it comes to noting, merely. system IS an tmprovemem soo n to make ourselves apply anywhere," he said,
that, "the meeting discussed on a dtc:tatorshl~ t~a'. IS secu- acutely aware of the possibil- "because it is not the law of
the role of religion in state lar) She1k ai-Dm s IS a ra\e ity.
the French republic.''
and society."
vo tce ohl dtssent. More typtNor is it too soon to develNot yet anyway. But who
It did, did it'1 Well. what ca 1 rs t_e co~ment ol anot~- op a really good nose for . knows what can happen in, a
did "the meeting" say '' er Shute 1ma_m., '.o Agence srm1iar developments else- · democracy'!
Nothing that could be di'- France Pre_sse. Our o bJec- where. Citing an article in the
(Diana West is a colunmi.H
1
tilled into a declarative point ll:e IS to . ~et up an 1samrc
Israeli newspaper Makor for The Washington 1imes.
of consensus. Which should- stdte, becduse thts I S the R1shon, Cybercast News Site can be contacted via
n't be Sllrprising. The most supreme amb1t1on of all Arab Service reports that the new dimwwwatt@global.net.)
\

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\

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The Daily Sentinel• Pages

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

Some facts about Social Security Basket winner
months and retiring in 2003 here's something you should
is $1,741 per month.
know. This year. you'll get
• A ·widow can get Social one credit for each $RlJO you
Security benefits at any age
• The lowest Social if she has children under age · earn ... up to a maximum of
Security number ever issued 16. Otherwise, benefits start four credit s. That means that
once yo u make $3,560 ...
• (00 1-0 I -000 I) went to
as
early
as
age
50
for
dis"
Grace Dorothv Owen of abled widows and 60 for all four times $890 ... you've·
earned the maximum numConcord, N.H.: more than other widows.
60 years ago.
•There are about I ,300 ber of credits for 2003 .
•Before 1940, lump-sum
Here' s why your credits are
Social Security payments Social Security field oftices important. To get Social
were made to those not eligi- around the country. Find the Security retirement benefits.
ble · for regular benefits. one nearest you at w- most people need to have 40
Ernest Ackerman got the ww.soc ialsecurit v.gov.
•A woman who has never credits. And each year. the
first lump-s um check for 17
cents. He retired one day worked outside the home a.mount of earnings you
after Social ' Security began. can get up to one-half of her need to earn a credit is
He had paid 5 cents in Social husband's Social Security adjusted ... to keep pace with
benefit while he is still liv- increases in average wH ge~.
Security taxes.
• If you didn't take Part B ing and up to I00 percent of But you do need a total of at
least 40 credits to get Social
Medicare when you were it after he dies.
•There is no time or dollar Security retirement benefits.
65 , you have, until March 31,
2003 to file for it. limit placed on the total
However, those credits
Otherwise, you 'll have to amount of Social Security don't need to be earned in
wait until January 2004 for benefits any one person can consecutive years. And ·of
the next open enrollment receive. No mauer how long course you need to be old
you li ve, your benefits will
season.
enough to receive benefits,
continue.
• Social Security retiretoo. People bon] in 1938
ment benefits are hased on
need to be at least 65 and 2
your highest 35 years of
months of age to get their
earnings ... not your last
full retirement benefits.
three or highest five years.
Lou Harvath is the man• 'rhe maximum Social
Security benefit pa):able to
· If you're keeping track of agerof 1/te Athens Social
. someone turning 65 and 2 your Social Security credits, Security offia.

BY Lou HARVATH
Special to the Sentinel

··

RUTLAND
Margie
Bernic:e Carpenter Grueser.
80, of Rutland. pas.ed away
Saturday, April 19, 2003. at
her residence.
She W&lt;rs bor~ July 21.
1'!22, in Meigs County.
daughter of the late Ellsworth
Elza and Dora Carpenler.
She was a homem&lt;rker.
She is survived by a daughter, Marilyn Joan (Tom )
Wolfe; sons, Gary (Carolyn )
and Marion L. Jr. (Debbie')
Rife. Clarence Jr. (Evelyn)
Buskirk and Michael J.
(Peggy), James N. (Rebecca)
and Patrick B. Grucser; six
grandsons and five granddaughters: several greatgrandchildln: a brother.
Lawrence D. Carpenter: and
a sister. Kathleen . M.
Carpenter.
In addition to her parents.
she was preceded in death by
three husbands, Marion L.
·Rife, Clarence R. Buskirk
and Nicholas N. Gr.ueser:
brothers, Henry, Edgar and ·
Perry Carpenter: ' and sisters.'
Anna Ct1rpcnter Cline &lt;rnd
Evelyn Carpenter Rife .
Services will be 11 a.m.
Tuesday, April 22. 2003. in
the Birchfield Funeral Home
at Rutland. wilh the Rev.
Amos Tillis offici&lt;rting.
Burial will follow in the
Miles Cemetery at Rutlanll.
Friends may cal l &lt;tl the funeral home from 6 to 8 p.m .
Monday, Apri l 2 1. 2003.

·Deaths
James Lee
CLIFrON. W.Va.
James
Ronald Lee. 54. Clifton. W.Va.,
died Saturday. April llJ, 2003 ,
at Pleasant Valley Hospital in
Point Pleas&lt;rnt. W.Va.
He was born March I, 1949
in Mason, W.Va .. son of the late
James and Doris Geraldine
Davis Lee.
Services wi ll be helll at I
p.m. on Tuesday, Apri l 22.
20\)3. at Fogelsong-Tucker
Funeral Home in Mason.
W.Va.. wi th Rev. Donald
Roach officiating. Burial will
follow at Graham Cemetery in
New Haven , W.Va.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 6 to 8 p.m. on
Monday.

Courts
Marriage license
POMEROY ~ · A marriage
license ha&gt; been issued in
Meigs County Probate Cou11
to Terry Lee Sayre, 3R 1 Long
Bottom, and Cynthia Dawn
Earley Young. 3h. Lung
Bottom.

Montana Huddleston of Winwood, W.Va., pictured with
Shane Cremeans, was the winner of an Easter basket given
away·by Peoples Bank's Pomeroy branch, in connection with
the bank's sponsorship of the American Cancer Society's
Relay for life . Relay Team Captain Edie Harmon presented
the basket on the bank's behalf. (Brian J. Reed)
.

Community Calendar
Public
meetings

One Credit
Equals $890 .

For the Record
Meigs

EMs~

Holzer Medical Center
Main Street, Holzer Medical
II :25 p.m. David Jacks, Center
Pearl Street, Pleasant Valley
II :22
p.m.
Mildred
POMEROY - The Meigs Hospital
Bronko,
Main
Street,
Holzer
County Emergency Mellical
Medical
Center
Service responded to these
Apri119
calls:
·
a.m.
Lorna
I 0: I0
April20
Davidson, South Front Street,
3:41 p.m. Patty Laudermilt,
April 18
Holzer Medical Center
Mulberry
Avenue. Pleasant
I:2 1 p.m. Sol Bigley, Stale
II :15 a.m. Charles Berry, Valley Hospital
Route 124. Camllen-C iark Water' s Edge Apartments,
5:02 p.m. Charles and
Me1\1prial Hospital
Holzer Medical Center
Sandra
Searles, New Lima
I :13 p.m. Arthur Kibble.
I: 14 p.m. David Barnes,
State R0ute 7, Camden-Clark Salem Street, Holzer Medical Road, Dead on Arrival
5:32 p.m. Denise George,
Memorial Hospital
Center
I :33 p.m. Mildred Baker,
5:02 p.m. Virginia Hindy, Gibson Road. O'Bieness
6:08 p.m. Robert Evans.
State Route 7, St. Josephs
Race Street, Holzer Medical
Lasley Street, Holzer Medical
3:04p.m. Nancy Anderson. Center
Holzer · Medical Clinic,
6: 17 p.m. Joyce Pearson , Center
II :07 p.m. l'erri Hawley,
· Holzer Medical Center
Page Street. Pleasant Valley
Crew Road. Holzer Medical
5:40 p.m. Addie Buck, Hospital
Holzer Medica l Clinic.
6:20 p.m. Justin Temblin, Center
Sultan ai-Tikriti is married Ahmad Chalabi , leader of
to Saddam 's youngest the Iraqi National Congress
daughter. Hala, and was exile group. told the BBC on
deputy head of Iraq 's tribal Monday {hat Saddam is
from Page 5.
affairs office. He was the alive in Iraq and moving
nine of cl ubs in the deck of from place to place. He said
missile installations south of cards
issued to U.S. military the INC is receiving in forTel Aviv.
to help them recognize mation on Saddam's whereU.S. Central Comm.and. regime members.
abouts 12 to 24 hours after
sa id forces had captured
He was being questioned the fact.
Abd ai-Khaliq Abd al- by the opposition group and
The New York Times
Ghafac Saddam's scie ntific will be turned over to U.S. reported Monday that a scimm1ster,
on
research
Ahmed said. entist who claims to have
Saturday. Abd ai -Ghafar officials,
Central Command ' had no worked in Iraq 's chemical
was the four of hearts in the information on the reported weapons program told a
U.S. rnilitary's most-wanted surrender. ·
U.S. military team that Iraq
deck of cards.
Seven of the 55 most- destroyed and buried chemiSaddam ·s son-in- law and wanted
members
of cal weapons and biological
one of Saddam ·s body- Saddam\ regime are now in warfare eq uipment only
guards. both hiding in Syria. custody, though none from days before the war began
were persuaded to leave that the very top of the list. An March 20.
country and surrendered to eighth figure, Ali Hassan aimembers of the opposi tion Majid
nicknamed
Iraqi National Congress in "Chemical Ali" for
his use
Baghdad. according to a of poison gas against the
spokesman for the group. Kurds - is believed to have
Haider Ahmed.
been killed in an airstrike.
Jamal Mustafa Abda llah
As for Saddam itself,

CHESHIRE
-The
Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency wrll hold the
April Board of · Directors
meeting at 4:30 p.m., at the
Cheshire office.
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
Garden Club will meet at 1
p.m. at the Syracuse Fire
Station for its business,
meeting. Members should
bring gardening tools to
work at the park following
the business meeting .

'

Thursday, April 24

ATHENS Survivors
Suicide Support Group, 7
p.m. at the Athens Church
of Christ, 785 West Union ·
Street, Athens. For more .
informaton call the church,
593-7414
POMEROY - Caring and
Sharing Group will meet at
1:30 p.m.. at the Senior
Citizens Center. Diana
Coates will talk on home ..
land security.

Social Events

Other events

Monday, April 21

CHESTER - Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern Star, will meet at
7:30 p.m. at the Chester
hall for · mock initiation. All
officers are asked to attend.
POMEROY - The Me igs
County Hight to Life will be
held at 7:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Library.

. Saturday, April 26

MIDDLEPORT
Pancake breakfast to bene•
fit the American Cancer
Society will be served from
7 to 10 a.m. at the
Middeport church of christ
Family
Life
Center.
Donations accepted.

r.;~;..~~ Yog:;~-,
Monday 6:00 P.M. to 1:00 P.M.

I

lntermepiate Yoga Class

I .

Monday 7:00 to 8:00 P.M.
Both classes begin May 12 to July 14
.'

Mcig~

Senior Citizen's Building
$2. oO per c/ ass
Open to a II ages
Call 992-2682, Ext. 233
for more iriforrnatir&gt;n or to register

I

Soil

•

Support
Groups

Thursday, April 24

Baghdad

. a first-grade coloring contest,
Park.
The puhlic is invited to par- fourt h-grade poster contest
and sixth-grade essay contest
ti~ipate in the event. For
more information contact the on the theme Food for the
from Page 1
Future. Winners will be
Meigs SWCD at 992-4282.
In addition. Morrow is vis- announced soon.
ranchers on private working iting
"While
providing
local
elementary
lands who want to reduce soi l schools in conjunction with food for the future may seem
erosion, improve water quali- Arbor Day programs, espe- out of our grasp. ·each of us
ty, and make a better home cially
the
relationship can do something around our
for wildlife," she added.
between trees and Soi l and own place to conserve naturLocally, the Meigs Soil. Water Stewardship. Each al resources," said Morrow.
and Water Conservation third grader in the munty will
For more informa1ion
District is sponsoring the receive a white pine tree from about SWCD services, conthird annual Leading Creek the Meigs SWCD and the tact the Meigs SWCD weekStream Sweep, which wil l he Meigs Recycling and Litter days at 33 101 Hiland Road,
held 9 a.m. to noon April 26
Pomeroy, telephone 992office.
at the Rutland Fireman's Prevention
The district &lt;liso sponsored 4282:

Tuesday, April 22

RACINE - Racine Area
Community Organization
(RACO) meeting will be
Monday, April 21
held at 6:30 p.m. Star Mill
LETART FALLS .- letart Park building. Pot luck to
Township Trust!)es, 5 p.m .,
be served. New members
at office building .
welcome.
RACINE
, Village
Council will meet m
Wednesday, April 23
recessed session at 7 p.m .
CHESTER - Pomeroy
at the Muncipal Building.
Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern Star, will have
Wednesday, April 23
inspection
7:30 p.m. at th·e ·
TUPPERS PLAINS hall. Deputy grand·
Eastern· Local Board of Chester
matron will be the inspectEducation, r_egular meeting, ing officer.
6:30 p.m., Elementary
library conference room.

Jb.
l~ ·-

M"igs County H('ttrt Health Awareness Coa1irion
~

-

-

--

-

---

.

~~- ~~-

J

...dfi

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'

�The Daily Sentinel

Monday, April 21,2003

Six

Page6

SAN JUAN , Puerto Rico
(A Pl - Austin Kearns. Adam
Dunn and the rest of the
Cincinnati Reds ' hitters
would love to play a little
more at ~ozy Hiram Bithorn
Stadium.
The
Montreal
Expos
oojoyed their Caribbean stay,
t~o. And now, three weeks
ilno the season, it 's time for
their rc;tl home opener.
Dunn and Felipe Lopez hit
consec utive home runs in the
ninth inning and the Reds
connected six time s in all to
beat Montreal7-5 Sunday and
stop a five-game losi ng
streak .
' Aaron Boone homered
twice, Kearns hit his major
\~ague -leading ninth shot and
Jpse Guillen also went deep
19r Cincinnati.
. A day earlier, the Reds
tnade seven roster moves
after being swept in a doubleheader that left them with
titeir worst start since 1986
~nder manager Pete Rose.
.. The Expos were hoping to
~~p their I0-game stay .on the
island with a sweep. Even so,
it was a productive stay at
their part-time home. as the
surprise NL East leaders went
6-4_
Montreal will play its ofti cia l home opener on Tuesday
night against Randy Johnson
the
Ariwna
and
Diamondbacks. and a crowd

Monday, April 21, 2003
I

Self meets with
Kansas players

Track &amp; field

Track &amp; field

Holter sets record·
at Vinton County

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP)
- Bill Self met with the
Kansas players Sunday night
to discuss his plans for the
team, a day before he was to
be introduced as the new
coach of the Jay hawks.
Self, who spent the past
three seasons at Illinois,
arrived on campus earlier .
. Sunday and had dinner with
chancellor
Robert
Hemenway. interim athletic
director Drue Jennings and
several staff members and
current players.
Self made a strong impression on point guard Aaron
Miles.
Williams resigned last
week to take the North
Carolina job, seven days after
the Jay hawks lost to Syracuse
in the national title game.

BY ScoTT WoLFE

Sports correspondent

Fduero wins Monle
Carto Masters
MONTE CARLO, Monaco
(AP) - Juan Carlos Ferrero
beat Guillermo Coria 6-2, 6-2
Sunday in a weather-shortened final to win the Monte
Carlo Masters for the second
. straight year.
It is the Spaniard's ei~hth
career title and first smce
September, when he won the
Hong Kong Salem Open.
Heavy rain delayed the
start of Sunday's match more
than an hour. With the threat
of more rain, organizers and
the players agreed to shorten
it to a best-of-three-sets
match, instead of best-offive.

M. Schl.lmacher
wins San Marino
Grand Prix
!MOLA, Italy (AP) - A
grieving
Michael
Schumacher won the San ·
Marino Grand Prix on
S,unday for his tirst victory
. this .season, racing hours after
his mother's death.
His only gesture after the
race · was a raised fist to
acknowledge Ferrari 's redclad fans. He accepted the
trophy and stood for the
German and Italian national
anthems. There was no champagne and he seemed on the
verge of tears.
Brother Ralf Schumacher
finished fourth. 'Team officials said .the brothers never
considered withdrawing after
learning of the death Sunday
mornmg.

Davis Love Ill wins
fifth MCI Helftage
HILTON HEAD ISLAND,
S.C. (AP) - Davis Love III
chipped in on the final hole to .
force a playoff. then hit the
tlagstick with his approach
on the fourth extra hole to
defeat Woody Austin and win
his fifth MCI Heritage on
Sunday.
,
Trailing Austin by a stroke
on the final hole, Love rolled
in a wedge from 66 feet away
to tie 'for the lead at 13-under
. 271. Then , after · watching
Austin miss makable putts
for the victory on the second
and third extra holes, Love
struck a 6-iron that bounced
off the pin and settled about 3
feet away.

Lance Armstrong
finishes eighth
MAASTRICHT ,
Netherlands (AP) - Lance
Armstrong finished eighth
Sunday in the Amstel Gold
Race, the fourth leg of
cycling's World Cup.
The four-time defending
Tour de Fr~ce champion
was in a group of nine nders
that couldn't catch winner
Alexander Vinokourov of
Kazakhstan, who ·pulled
away with .three miles left.
Vinokourov built a 20-second lead and held off the
competition · throughout the
final climb in the !57-mile
event.

Meigs· Shannon Soulsby runs the 400-meter dash. in which she finished second. Saturday
at the Gallipolis Rotary Invitational at the University of Rio Grande. (Doug Shipley)
·

Story.wins 800, Soulsby nabs
two second-place finishes
l

BY BUTCH COOPER

Staff writer
- - - - ' -'- - - - - -RIO GRANDE ~ It was
the match-up area track
enthusiasts were looking forward to this year.
Gallia Academy's Ty
Simmons and River Valley's
Allan Brown were Gallia
County's returning sprinters
who ran at the state meet last
year.
Simmons had been hampered by injury when Gallia
Academy and River Valley
faced each other for the first
time at Fairland two weeks
ago.

On Saturday at the
Gallipolis Rotary Relays, the
two finally got it on.
Simmons came out strong
to win the IOO,meter dash
with a time of I0.95, while
Brown was second with a
11 .32.
The two met again in the
200 with Brown (22.62) beating Simmons (22 65) by the
slimiest of margins.
Simmons helped Gallia
Academy\; boys finish a
close second in the boys team
standings with 9:1 points,
while Washington Court
House won the boys iitle with
9~ points.

River Valley (72) was
fourth and South Gallia (15)
was ninth.
The Meigs girls track team
held their own at Rio Grande,
linishing third with 57 points.
The big story for the
Marauders was their performance in the 800 with Emily
Story winning with u time of
2:36.29
and
Shannon
Soulsby (2:42.66) coming in
second.
Soulsby went on to finish
second in the 400 with a time
of I :04.6 1.
Meigs. thou gh, struggled in
the boys team standings. finishing IOth.

McARTHUR - Six of the
eight teams competing made
came from the Tri- Valley
Conference, thus Eastern
made the most of its TVC
mtm-meet
debut
with
Eastern's Ross Holter claiming the shot put record in winning the event by a large margin.
Outside participants included Jackson and Southeastern
with
Federal
Hocking,
Alexander,
Eastern,
Nelsonville-York, Meigs and
Vinton County representing
the Tri-Valley Conference.
In the boys division,
Eastern sophomore Ross
Holter was able to maintain
his dominance of the shot put
pit with a meet record toss of
43-7, surpassing the meet
record set last year by EHS
graduate R.J. Gibbs (42-6).
Fellow teammate Darren
Scarbrough finished a close
second with a toss of 43.1 as
the duo moved on to the discus area, where Holter tossed
a second place finish and
Scarbrqugh earned a sixth.
Senior sprinter, Brandon
Werry, after claiming his preliminary heat win , was able to
sprint to a second in the I 00
meter dash ( 11.84) and a 3rd
in the 200 meter dash (24.2).
Distance man Chris Davis
paced himself to a sixth place
in the 3200 meter run with
Werry anchoring the 4 x I 00
relay of Beatty, Cross. and
Weeks) who nailed down a
fifth place finish overall. The
Eastern boys team was sixth

BELPRE- The seventh-ranked Eastern
remained undefeated by defeating
Belpre 15-0.
Eastern was led in hitting by Kass
Lodwick with a double and single and two
walks, while Krista White had two singles
and a double, Sandy Powell three singles
and a walk, and singles by Tiffeny Bisse ll.
JennyArmes, Alyssa )-loiter. and a double
by Casey Smith, and two singles by
Morgan Weber.
Eastern took a 3-0 lead in the lirst inning
when Armes had a one-out single, White
had an RBI double, Powell walked, and
Lodwick had an RBI single. Another run
came home on a passed ball for the 3-0
tally.
. In the second inning. Bissell singled with
two out and scored on an RBI that left
Armes safe on an error. Eastern struck
again in the third when Powell and White
had back to back singles and [.odwick
walked to load the bases. Smith and Weber
had run-scoring ground outs to bring home
two more runs. In the tifth inning. Ea.itern
plated eight runs.
Singles by Holter. Powell. White and
Weber set the stage for booming doubles
by Lodwick and Smith. Two errors, two
walks, and another Weber si ngle also contributed to the big EHS inning.
Eastern plated a si ngle run in the seventh
on a Brandy Bissell walk, a Becky Taylor
walk, and Hallie Brooks drove home a run
when she reached on an error.
Robertson had 12 strikeouts and one
walk in pitching a three-hitter.
Harris suffered the loss, giving up 12
hits. fanning one, and walking eight.
~gles

Eastern_
rally fall's short
. .
STEWART- Federal Hocking held off
a late Eastern rally to daim an 11 -8 TriValley Conference baseball victory
Wednesday.
Eastern hitters were Cacy Faulk with a
double and single. Jon Owen a double and
single, Riggs a single, Brent Buckley a single, Chris Myers a single, Ryan Smith a

BY ScoTT WOLFE

Sports correspondent

Vikings mercy rule
Tornadoes

..

.J

Will .

\

The Southern track team of
Coach Beth Bay competed in
their second meet of the year
Tuesday at River Valley. For
the girls team, Kristiina
Williams placed first in the
one mile run, fifth in the long
jump, and fourth in lite 400
meter dash. Amy Lee placed
fifth ·in the 800 meter dash
and fourth in the mile run.
Susan Brauer placed tifth in
the shot put, and Linda Eddy
placed sixth in the 400 meter
dash.
For the boys team, A.J .
Simpson placed first in the
long jump and fourth in the
I00, 200, and 400 meter
races. Aaron · Sellers placed
second in the one mile urn
and fifth in the 400 meter
dash. 'JYier roberts placed
,sixth in the 800meter dash,
and Matt Thomas placed
fourth in the discus throw.

' CHICAGO (AP)
Ellis Burks is one of the
few hitte rs to figure out
Mark Bu ehrle. His team mates are learning, too.
Burk s. Shane Spencer
and Karim Garcia homered off the Chicago lefttlllllder as Cleveland beat.
the
White
Sox
7-4
Sunday.
:_ Burk s and Spencer hit
C!m&gt;eculive home run s in
. the first inning. the fir st
M th e season for each, as
Cleveland took a 3-0 lead.
Burks was 2- for -2 against
'Buehrle with a i walk.
"It see ms like Burks has
my number right now."
Buehrle said.

Warren
hitters
were
Rebecca Gates a single,
Lemon a single, Coffman a
double, and Marley a single.
Eastern hitters were Phillips
a double, and singles by
Lodwick, Smith, and Weber.
Ironically, all the Eastern hits
came in the fourth inning.

of about 35,000 is expected at bined for 34 home runs in I 0
Olym1)ic Stadium.
games at SaQ Juan. .
'fhe wrapup of this visi t to
Plenty of other shots almost
Puerto Rico attracted a crowd left the park . Fernando Tatis'
of .II ,6 19 for a game that was bid for a go-ahead drive in the
delayed by rain fur more than Montreal eighth was caught.
an hour. The Expos are play-. by Kearns in right-center, up
ing 22 games here this season, against an outfield billboard
with the nex t game June 3 that
advertised
'·Home
against Anaheim.
Rums."
"It was a beautiful cxperiEndy Cha vez got the homeence. with beautiful fans." run derby started with a leadEx pos pitcher Tony Armas Jr. off shot in the bottom of the
said .
. first off Danny Graves.
As fur the return to
The thunder and lightning
Montreal , "it 's the same, I just came' later when the Expos
hope the people back us," he were making 5-all in the sevsaid.
enth on · an RBI si ngle by
. Overal( the first I0 ga mes Chavez. and there was a rain
drew an average of 14.n2. delay of 1 hour, 22 minutes
topping the Expos' average of after the inning ended.
I 0,031
last season in
M
1 w· 1 · k
Armas did not give up a
ontrea . tt I ttc ets rang- home run in his first 26
ing from $10-$85, the extra
revenue will produce a boost innings of the season . The
for the team owned by major Reds changed that. quickly
tagging htm for a career-high
league baseball.
Dunn gave the Reds a boost four.
with his seventh home run.
Kearns homered on the first
· He batted for Scott Sullivan pitch of the seco nd inning and
( 1-0) and hit his first career Boone connected one pitch
pinch ~ hit homer, connecting later. Kearns homered in all
on an 0-2 pitch from Luis three of the Reds ' games in
Ayala ( 1- 1). Lopez followed Puerto· Rico.
with his first homer of the
Guillen hit a solo shot in the
season.
third and Boone had a twoThere were a total of seven run drive. Boone started the
homers at the ballpark where day in a 2-for-26 rut, and had
it 's 399 feet to ,dead center. been hitless in his last 10 at315 to left and 313 to ri ght. In bats.
all, the Expos, Red s; New
Scott Williamson pitched
York Mets and Atlanta com- the ninth for his third save.

CINCINNATI (AP) Whe.n it comes to the draft,
the Cincinnati Bengals are
No. I again.
·
• Three time s in the last 12
years , the Bengals have had
the first overall pick - more
than any other team in that
span. They've had a top-1 0
pick in all but two of those
years.
Though they're at the front
of' the line when it comes to
picking talent. they're still at
the bottom of the league
when it comes to winning
with it. They can add to their
legacy or break with ·it thi s
weekend, when they have the
first overall pick in Marvin
Lewis ' first draft as head
coach.
Will they choose a quarterback ? Will they trade down ?
Wjll it matter?
There's more to it than bad
karma .
The Bengals don' t mind
doing the unorthodox on
draft day, and it usually
backfires. For example, they
drew draft-room gasps in
1992. when they traded up to
get ()avid Klingler at sixth
overall even though they had
former
MVP
Boomer
Esiason at quarterback.
Klingler never made it, and
the legacy began.

Garcia. who had three
hit s. homered in the third
to help the Indi ans snap a
four-game losing streak
and end Chicago's fourgame winning streak. .
Jason
Davi s
(2 -2)
allowed three runs a nd ·
2- 3
seve n hits in 6
innings for the Indian s.
, D'Angelo Jimene z and
Carlos Lee homered for
the White Sox.. who
dropped to ·7-2 at home .
Lee has homered in four
consecutive game s, driving in 10 runs over than
span. Jimenez had three
hits .
Buehrle (2-2), whose
ERA rose from 1.57 to
3.27. gave up seven runs

in 4 1-3 innit1gs and
allowed I I hit s. matching
hi s career high . He had
given up ju st one home
run in 28 2-3 inning s
coming in.
Buehrle ha s been strugglin g with hi s so me of hi s
pitch es
tht.s
season,
including his cutter.
Casey Blake chased
Buehrle with a two-run
double in the fifth. and
Josh Bard hit an RBI singlc off Gary Glover for 7I lead .
Chicago 's
Magglio
Ordonez was
l -for , 4 ,
extending
his
hittin g
streak to
16 games.
Cleveland
outhit
the
White Sox 15-10.

Vinton County added
three more in the fourth
inning to mercy the
Tornadoes.

Sputhern drops
doubleheader
to Fort Frye
RACINE
The
Southern ·
Tornadoes
dropped . a pair of varsity
baseball games, 18-3 and
14-3, to the Fort Frve
Cadettes Saturday after-·
noon at Racine's Star Mill
Park .
In the first game,

In 1999, ow ner Mike
)3rown passed up · New
Orleans' offer of a treasuretrove of picks. Instead. he
decided to stay put and take
quarterback Akili Smith with
the third overall pick, the one
that has become the symbol
of a failed franchise . ·
Brown had the opportunity
to overhaul a sorry roster
with an infusion of draf(
picks - all of the Saints'
picks in I999, plus firstrou'nders the next two years
as part of a package.
Four years later. Smith is
on the discard pile, the
Bengals are still at the bottom and Brown is declining
interviews.
At the time, outsiders considered it a good move.
There 's no impostor. Once
Smith arrived, the Bengals
never gave him a chance to
forge an identity - the most
common thread to their
dozen years of drafts. The
Bengal s choose good play'ers, then fail to develop
them.
In Smith's case, they
couldn.'t have bungled more.
Smith missed most of
training camp in 1999, but
was rushed into the lineup
long before he was ready.
The rookie started four

games, got battered and
ended the season hurt.
Smith opened 2000 as the
starter, but was , forced to
funct ion with two rookie
receivers (Peter Warrick and
Ron Dugans) . and a weak
offensive line. In effect, he
was set up to fail.
Making , matters much
worse. head coach Bruce·
Coslet - who was in charge
of developing Smith - quit'
three games into the season;
leaving the young quarterback adrift .
Then, just like that, the
Bengals gave tip on him:.
Smith has started one gaine
in ear.:h of the last two sea-·
sons, spending the rest of the.
time rusting away at No.3 on·
the depth chart .
Last year, the Bengals
pulled another puzzler, tak,-..
ing punter Travis Dorsch in
the fourth round so he could
take over for place kicker
Neil Rackers. Then , they,
decided to stick withr
Rackers , keeping Dorsch,
around as the NFL equi valent of a spare tire - a wast~
of a good draft pick.
:
There was nothing wrong.
with taking Dorsch. if the
Bengals needed a punter.
There was no point in doing
it the way they did it.

Southern hitters were
Jordan
Hill ,
Jeremy
Yeauger, B.J. Marnhout.
Joey
Phillip s,
Ju stin
Allen, and Cole Brown all
with singles.
Mendenhall led Fort
Frye w·ith three singles,
and Erb had two singles ,
while Fleming had a double and single.
Eleven Southern errors,
including four in the third
allowing three runs home ,
led the Cadettes to the
win. Fort Frye broke it
open with five runs in the
six 1th inning. opening the
flood gates to the 18-3
route.
In the second game it
. was much of the same .
Southern again committed
several
early
errors,
although The SHS pitch-

ing held Fort Frye to j ust,
eight hits. Southern had .
six hit s on the dav.
Southern hitters were
Jordan Hill two singles;
Jeremy Yeauger two sin...
gles, Joey Phillips a sin-'
gle, ami Curt Crouch a
single. Fleming had two;
singles for Fort Frye . . ,
Southern hosts Feder~]
Hocking
Monday
in ~
Racine.

'

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Tuesday night, Eastern beat
previously undefeated Warren
Local 5-2 in a great battle of
the elite. Katie Robertson
pitched, a great game to pick
up the win, striking out five, ·
scattering four hits and walking just two. Robertson was
the winning pitcher of record
with great catching assistance
from Kass Lodwick.
Eastern went up 2-0 in the
third on back-to-back walks
to Morgan Weber and Sara
Barringer and a blast by Nikki
Phillips that wa,s misplayed
and brought home two runs,
the score 2-0 Eastern.
The Lady Eagles soared
again in the fourth when
Lodwick, Casey Smith, and
Weber all singled consecutively to load the bases and
Phillips delivered a booming
two-run double, her foUrth
RBI of the game. Jem1y
Armes followed with a sacrifice fly to drive home the fifth
run for the 5-0 lead.
Warren fought back. After a
lead-off strike out Lemon singled up the middle and
Coffman doubled to left center to put Warren on the
board. Treadway walked,
Clatterbuck sacrificed the
.runners, Horner walked to·
load the bases then Marley
singled home a run but a fine
play on the throw in nailed
the runner going to second to
get East.em out of the inning,
the score 5-2.
Eastern's Robertson then
retired the side in order in the
seventh to secure the- EHS
Will.

lift'Reds past Expos Bengals to draft another
quarterback as top ·pick?

Tribe's dingers defeat ChiSox

Eagles blank Lancers

STEWART - Ranked seventh in the tirst state poll,
Coach
Pam
Douthitt's
Eastern
Lady
Eagles
remained perfect at 9-0 with a
convincing 22-0 win over
Federal Hocking Wednesday
night during Tri- Valley
double, Ken Amsbary a single, and Bret . · Conference Hocking Division
Parker a single.
j
actiiln.
Federal
softball
Federal Hocking hitters were Poston a · Hocking drops to 2-7.
single, Rosson a single, Willis a single,
Eastern hitters were Sandy
Searls two singles, Cundiff two doubles,
Powell three singles alld a
Springer a single, McCumber a single, and
triple. Krista White two douGandee a single.
bles and a single , Casey
Little was the winning pitcher with relief
Smith a single, Jenny Armes a
from Willi s. They fanned four and walked
single, Becky Taylor a single,
just three in allowing nine hits.
Tiffeny Bissell a single, Nikki
Ken Amsbary allowed I0 hits, and had
Phillips a single, and Alyssa
three strik eout s and four walks, while
Holter four walks.
Eastern made five errors behind him .
Sara Springer had a single
The game was decided in the first. inning
and Jenni Stover a single for
when the Lan cers scored eight runs.
the lone Federal Hocking hits.
Eastern committed three errors in the tlrst.
Krista White hurled another
great game for the Eagles of
Coach Pam Douthitt who
continue to be one of the top
teams in the state. White
fanned three, walked one,
McARTHUR - Seven errors and a graand gave up just two hits in a
great effort. Beth Hart sufcious Vinton County offensive attack
·helped lift the Vikings to an 11 -0 interdivifered tlie Joss for the Lancers.
sional victory mercy-rule win over the
Eastern plated two runs in
Sout!Jern Tornadoes during varsity basethe first when Nikki Phillips
ball action in Vinton County.
singled,
Alyssa
Holter
Vinton Coumy pitching' headed bv starter
walked, Powell had an RBI
and winner Josh Ousley fanned · 10 and
single, the first in a series of
walked none in handcuffing the Tornadoes
six runs batted in, and White
and limit ing them to just three hits.
had an RBI double, the score
2-0.
.
Southern's Justin Allen fanned five
including striking out the side in the first
Eastern then broke the
inning, walking two and giving up six hits
game open in the second
behind with a co medy of errors behind
when Morgan Weber and
him .
Becky Taylor reached on
Southern committed seven errors before
errors, Bissell walked to load
·s uccumbing to the 10-run mercy rule.
the bases, Phillips walked
Southern hitters were Joey Phillips a
home a run, Holter reached
si ngle, Adam Ball a sin gle and Curt
on an errm to bring home a
Crouch a double.
run, and White had a two-run
Vinton County hitters were Josh Ousley
double. Kass Lodwick batted
a double and triple, ·a- double by Nate
home a run and reached on an
Emmert. and singles by Ryan Kent, Josh
error, Armes walked and
Ruckel and Adam Howell.
Weber had a double sacrifice.
Southern errors in the second led to a 1rSix more walks, a two-run
0 Vinton County lead. SHS made four
Powell single, and a two-run
errors in the third, coupled by an RBI sinArmes single completed the
gle by Ryan Kent, a single by Ruckel, and
scoring with the score I6-0.
double by Ousley as VCHS grabbed an 8Eastern plated one run in
0 lead.
the third and five in the fifth
to complete the mercy rule

Pleese see Southem, Pep 7

Southern at
River Valley

Prep softball

Prep softball/baseball
Eagles crush Belpre

overall in the meet.
For the girls portion of the
program, Jen Hayman kept
pace with Jess Crawford of
Nelsonville-York" for second
place tinish ( 1:05) in the 400
meter dash and a sevent place
inthe 200 meter Dash (30.20).
In the 300 low hurdles,
Jennifer Chadwell posted a
fifth place finish in a'time of
56.11.
In the two mile run, Rachel
Elliott paced herself to a sixth
place and Cassie Nutter was
able to clear the high jump
bar for a 7th place overall finish. The girls.team ended the
cool, foggy evening with a
seventh place overall finish.

The Daily Sentinel• Page 7

www.mydailysentinel.com

Are you 65

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'

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
\?HIO
Home Natlonoll Bank
Plaintiff
vs
John R. Hill, et at.
Case No. 02 CV116
1'/0TICE OF SALE
By vtrtue of an
Order of Sale Issued
out of the common
Pleas Court of Meigs
County, Ohio, In the
case of the Home
National
Bank,
Plaintiff. vs. John R.
Hill,
at
al ..
pefendants, upon a
Judgment
therein
rendered, ~elng Case
No. 02-CV·116 In said
Court, the · SheriN of
Meigs County, Ohio,
Will offer for sale at
the front door of the
Courthouse
in
Pomeroy,
Meigs
County, Ohio, on the
22nd day of May,
2003 , et 10:00 a.m.,
the following lands
and tenements, locat·
ed at 407 S. Broadway
Street, Racine, OH
45771. A complete
legal description of
tne real estate Is as
follows:
Being a part of a tract
of land transferred to
Scott D. Wolfe as
recorded In Dead
l!ook 289 at Page 203,
Meigs
County
Racorder'o
Office,
Meigs County, Ohio,
also being a part of
the VIllage of Ro~lno,
Section 16, Township·
2·North, Range·l2·
West,
Sutton
Township,
Meigs
County, State of Ohto
and more particularly
described as fOllows:
Beginning at a point
which bears North 00
degrees 44' 31 " Wast
a dlatance of 1B. 70
feet
from
!he
asaUmed Norlhweet
corner of Lot 40 of
Wolfe's Addltlo~;
Thence South 89
degrees 57' 41" Will
a distance of 25.00
feet to a point on the
East right of way line

of Broadway Street ;
PROPERTY
Thence along said
ADDRESS: 407 S.
right of way tine
Broadway
Street,
North DO degrees 44 • Rai!ine, OH 45771
31" West a distance of
REAL
ESTATE
105.30 feel to a point APPRAISED
AT:
being the Intersection
19,500.00. The real
of said rtghl of way estate cannot be sold
line and the South for less than twotine of a 10 foot alley;
thirds the appraised
value·.
Thence
leaving
said Br.oadway Street TERMS OF SALE:
and along said South
10% down day of
line North 89 degrees
sale, balance on
delivery of deed. Sold
57' 41" East passing
thru a p.k. nail set at a subiect to . second
distance of 25.00 feet
half 2002 and accrued
and going a total dis·
2001
real
estate
lance of 1 44.00 feet to taxes.
a p.k. nail set;
All sheriff's sates
leaving .operate under the
Thence
aald South line South doctrine of Caveat
00 degreea 44' 31"
Emptor. Prospective
purcha,sers are urged
East a distance of
105.30 feel to a 5/8"
to check for liens in
the public records of
Iron pin set;
Thence South 89 , Meigs County, Ohio.
degrees 57' 41" West The Meigs County
passing thru a 5/8"
SheriN makes no
Iron ptn set at a dis- guarantee as to ,the
lance of 105.54 feet
status of title prior to
and going a total dissale.
Douglas W. Little,
lance of119~!JO feet to
the principal point of AHorney for Plaintiff ·
beginning containing
4114, 21 , 28
15,162.06 square filet
more or lass subject
PUBLIC NOTICE
to II lagal easements
and rlghts'of-way.
Bearings
are. . ADVERTISEMENT
assumed and are for
FOR BIDS
the determination of
Tuppers
PlainsChaster
angles only.
Water
The above descrip- District
tion waa prepared 39561 Bar 30 Road
Reedsville, OH 45772
from an actual survey
Separate
sealed
made on the 14th dey
BIDS for the conof June 1996, by C.
struction
of
the
Thomas Smith, Ohio
Tuppers
Plains·
Professional
Chester
Water
Surveyor, J6844.
District,
Wa1er
Except the coal
Distribution Syatem
underlying the ourImprovement
face of the said above
Dorcas-East Letart
tract.
DEED
REFER- Service Area will be
by
the
ENCE: Volume 103, received
PlainsPage 481, Meigs Tappers
Cheater Water District
County
Official
al the offlcea oi the
Recorda.
PlainsTho
above Tuppers
Water
described real aatote Chaster
District, 39561 Bar 30
has been oaalgnad
Road,
Reedsville,
Auditor's
Parcel
Ohio 45772
until
Number 19-00460.000
(local
tho
above 10:00 a.m.
doacrtbad real estate time), May 13, 2003
Ia sold •aa Ia" without and then In the
warranties
or Conference Room of
covenants.
the sold office pub-

.'

l~ltz,ht:

llcly opened end read
aloud.
· The work covered
by
the
Contract
Documents includes
the following:
Contract Number
00-1,
Water
Distribution System
Improvements
Construction
of
approximately, 12,500
I. f. of B·lnch, 6 Inch, 4li-lch and 2·inch water
main, construction of
one 90 gpm. water
booster
station
together with all nee·
essary appertaining
work.
The
Bidding
Documents may be
examined at:
Burgess &amp; Nlple,
Limited,
4424
Emerson
Avenue,
Parkersburg,
WV
26104
Dodge Report, 2
Players Club Drive,
Charleston,
WV
25311-1640
Plains·
Tuppers
Chester Water District
39561 Bar 30 Road,
Reedsville, OH 45772
Dodge
Report,
1175 Dublin Road,
Columbus, 014 43215 .
Copies
of
the
Bidding Documents
may be purchased at:
Burgess &amp; Nlple,
Limited,
4424
Emerson
Avenue,
Parkersburg,
WV
26104, (304) 485-8541

N••tlc~!O&amp;

1.-. Ne"'sl:-••pers.

l u K1"1••'""• D e l i v e r e d Kight:

ew.ecuted by a surety
company authorized
to do business ln. the
State of Ohio In the
full amount of the
proposal, In lieu of a
BID BOND, a certified
check or cashier's
check In the aMount
of ten percent' (10%)
of the proposal will
be accepted. BIDS
shall
be
clearly
marked on the out·
side of !he package
"Bid for the Tuppers
Plains Chester Water
District,
Water
Distribution System
Improvements
All Contractors and

t:~•

Ycn.ar

l&gt;o~r..

Informalities or Irregularities In the BIDDING.
By order of the
Tuppers
PlainsChester
Water
District.
This 21st day of
April, 2003.
(4). 21, 28, (5) 5 3TC

date at office of RFG
Associates, Inc.
Instructions to bidders, specifications,
drawings, and bid
form outlining the
terms and conditions
of the proposed proj·
oct may be obtained
by Interested bidders
by contacting Robert
Guentter Jr., Agent, at
(·740) 454·3724 ..
The
successful
PUBLIC NOTICE
bidder must have
insurance and secure
LEGAL NOTICE
a
bid/performance
Robert
Guentter
bond for the project.
Jr.. RFG Associates,
A PRE BID MEET·
Inc.
"Agent"
for
Rutland Township will
lNG Is scheduled lor
be accepting saeted 1 May 12, 2003 at 1:00
bids lor the purpose
PM at the Office of
subcont~actors ;
RFG Associates, Inc.,
Involved with the of etevatlon(s• to
2665 Bell Street,
project will, • to the structures for Hazard
Zanesville OH 43701 .
extent
practicable · Mitigation In Rutland
The
Agent
for
use Ohio products, Township. Four resiRutland Township,
materials, services dential
structures,
Robert Guenlter Jr.,
and labor In the 33240 SR 124, 33316
reserves the right to
Implementation
of SR 124, 33206 SR
waive any informalitheir
project. 124, and 33222 Dexter
ties, reject any or all
Additionally, contrac- Road,
all
In
tor compliance with Langsville OH, are
bids and to hold such
bids lor a period of
the equal employ- proposed resldenllet
sixty (60) days before
ment
opportunity home for elevation
requirements Of Ohio that will Include genlaking any action and
to award a contract to
Admlnlslrallve Code eral
construction,
the lowest responChapter 123, the electrical, HVAC and
Governor's Executive plumbing
composive
and
mbst
Order of 1972, and nents.
responsible bidder.
Governor's Executive
This project Ia being
All bids shall be
funded by a variety of
Order 84-9 shall be submitted In a seated
required.
·
envelope
marked:
federal grants from
Bidders must com- B I d • R u I I a n d ~ Federal Emergency
ply with the prevail- Township,
Hazard
Management Agency
US
(FEMA)
end
ing wage rates on Mitigation- Elevations
Public Improvements -and
must
be
Department
of
In Malga County es received to the attenHousing end Urban
Development (HUD).
determined by the tion
of
Robert
upon payment or
Ohio
Bureau
of Guentter Jr. RFG
Robert Guenttor
$50.00, NONE' Of
Jr.,
Employment Associates,
Inc.;
Services., Wage and Agent,
Rutland
Agent for the
:~~~~DE~ILL BE Hour
Division
:rownahlp, PO Box
Rutland Township
Hazard
Prospective
BIDThe
Tuppara 2112, Zeneavllle OH
Mitigation
DERS may addresa
Platna.Cheater Water 43702·2112.
Btda
Pro]ect
Inquiries to:
April 21 &amp; 28, 2003
· DJstrlct reserves th•
must be delivered or
rtght to reject any and received at the office
BIDS
or
to of RFG Aaaocletas,
Burgess &amp; Nlple, all
Limited ,
4424
Increase or dacraaaa Inc., 2556 Bell Street,
Emerson
Avenue, or omit any Item or Zeneavllt., OH 43701
Parkersburg,
WV
ltemsandlor award to by Noon, May 21 ,
26104, (304) 485 - the loweat and best 2003. Bidders may
BIDDER. Each pro- bid on any combtna·
8541
Allenllon:
Anna
posal must contain tlon of thaae atruc-'
Hayes, PE
the full nama of avery turas tor elevation,
person or company but each bid price will
Proposals shall be
accompanied by a intereatad in the be evaluated sepaBld Guaranty and
same. The Tupper• rately.
Contract Bond meetPlalna-Chealer Water
Bids
wilt
be
Ing the requlrem·ente
District reserves the opened and read at
of Sac. 153.54 ORC
itght to waive any 12:01 PM' on the same

.
'

or older1

.

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lij% Discount .
on your home delivered subscription1

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Monday, April 21, 2003

r ~~=- l.,r___~.:.~.._,..~l r

\!Cribune - Sentinel - ~egi
CLASSIFIED

JET
Good quality slraw. Volume
AERATION MOTORS
d1sco unt &amp; delivery avail·
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt ln able . Heavy sq uare bales.
Stoc~.' Call Ron Evans, ; . $2 ,85 pe, bale . (304)675·.
800·537·9528 .
5724

wecov~

Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
~ountle$ Like
No 0!'8

lit\ \-.,I'OIU \1 Ill\
Large swing set: tull size
cap; love Seat: older
child's chopped 3 wheeler,
(7 40)985· 381 0

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

C~ 1 Bee r Carry Out permit
for sale, Chester Township,
Meigs County, send letters
at Interest to : The Daily
Sentinel. PO Box 729·20 .
Pomeroy. Ohio 45 769

Do you need your GEO or
High- School Diploma? Do
you know how to write an
effect1've resurr.!e" Do you
know what qualities employ·
ers are looking For in an
employee ? Do you know
how to kEep a job once you
get it? We can Help ! For
more information, call the
Meigs
County
STEP/JOG/ABLE Pmg'8m
at: 740·992·6600 or 740·
992-69.30, or stop In Monday

th rough Friday at Itt West
Secood Stree t in Pomeroy:
Oh. Make a difference m
your life Today!

l...arrAND

FOUND
Male dog, black &amp; while/
brown, beagle lost in Bidwell
area. Very Skinny small dog
(740)388·8449
Please return ~Magg 1e" to
Maple Shade-East end, we

F

heLYARDSALE

r

YARD SALE·
GALLIPOI.JS

3 family yard· sale Fri. Sa!.
Sun.April 24·25-26 N. 3rd
St hoUse 39 Cheshire Oh

IJT4

YARD SALE·

i'oMEROY!MJDDLE
Middleport-Pomeroy's

6th

annual 6-m1le long Yellow

Flag Yard Sale, May 2 &amp; 3 ,
look ror the yellow flags! Call
for into about loc ations, 740·
992·4055

r

AUcnONAND
fu:AMARKET

Kessel's Produce and Flea
Mkt. Open ThlJrs-Fri -Sat
Now renting spaces, 1354
Jackson Pike, (740) 446·
77 87

• Adi Should Run 7 Days

WM'ffin

mBuv

Absolute Top Dolla" u.s.
Silver.
Gold
Coins,
Proofsets, D1amonds, Gold
Rings.
u_s_ Currency.·
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151
Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
740·446-2842.

110
1,

Hll.P WANTEIJ

1.,111•0-Hl_J..P_W•ANTF-•Cil_..l

letren

rlO

Physical
Therapist
Assistant. excellent benefits.
141
send
resume:
Columbus Rd., Athens, Oh
45701 or laM:. 740-593-8221 .

No Layoffs Here t!l
Earn
an e:dra $420.$1680/mon.
Part-time, flexible schedu lel
1-800-695-9166 or visit
www.NoLayoffsHere.com

C all Today! 740·446-4367,
1·800·214-0452
WW'i'l.gallipohscareercollage.com

Re

#90·05· 127 4 B

MISCELLANEOUS

• AMI

WA~1HJ

of

To Do

tke ·

lou' sc:-Qmbled words · bo·

Handyman. yard
wo rk,
(740)992-274 1 ask for Tim.

P UC F L U

Newell's Lawn
M owing
Services. Call (304895-3399
Cell (304)674-0870

r J ·u v c

Will pressur,e wash homes,
tra11ers. decks: metal buildmgs and gutters . Call
(7 40)446-0 151 ask for Ron
or leave message

I I~ I I

All real eatat. advertising
In this newspaper Is
aub}ect to the Ff!deral
Fair Houalng Act of 1968
which maket It lllegil to
· advertise "any
preference, limitation or
dlacrimlnatlon baaed on
race, color, religion, aex
familial ttatua 'or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such
preference, limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon."
This newtpaper will not
knowingly accept ·
advertiJementa for real
eatata which Ia tn
violation of the law. Our
readera are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advertised in
this ntw$paper are
available on an equal
opportunity bates.

I I \ \ \I I \I

1----,....:V-.A_N.,.E_R.----ll

Dad to teenage driver: 'Before
5
1
~
you back out of the garage, be sure
1'--'-·I_ _.I____.1
__....__--' _.. and look in the rear view mirror and
the side mirror." The teen replied,
T H0 P S A
. 'Oh dad , I look· -·· · · ·-'
=N1

1

I
.

I

...,1....:.....:,.1:.,,....:..lr--,li-:er-'-rl--1 G)

1-,

.

.

_

_

•

Complo•• th o thueklo quoted
by f1lling In the mis.sin9 ward!

L..-L..I....L....I....I.......JL.......JL....--' you develop from step Nc. 3 below.

&amp;11.
Q

PR INT NUMBERED

lFHERS IN SQUARES

Owner Must Sell!
Pnce Reduced
Ranch Style Home. 8yrs.
OI'I,JI&lt;Il iNnY
old. Appro&gt;~ . 2CX)()sq . ft. 3bf'.
2ba , LA. DR FA , 2 car
!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· garage. Conven1ent
lNG CO. recommends that Locat1on
you do business with people
you know. and NOT to send
money through the man until
you have 1nves11gated the
offenn

10

BUSINI-:s';

MoN•~·
lll Lll1-\ N

SCRAM·lETS ANSWERS
·Unlike - Sixth -Began - Follow - WHEN you LOSE
A famous coach ,once said that ... You aren 't as good
as everyone tells you when you wm and not as bad as
they sav WHEN you LOSE ."

DEBT CRISIS!
ConsolidatJon Is the key to
personal loans, mortgages
and other f1nanc1al serviCes
Available up 10 $500.000.
Low Interest CALL TOLl:.
FREE . t -877-436-6297

to' l

fl20

MOBILE HOMFS
FOR SAl.£

12x60 1970 PMC, good con·
dition. 4 yr. old furnace, new
floors. new carpet wi,th
14x:24 unfinished attached
room , $ t"soo 086. must
move! Call (740)949-0812.
leave a me~sage .
1989 Clayton Newport
mobile home 14x60 2 br.
eKe. cond . (740)256-6147
2001 14)(80 Oakwood, 3
BR , 2 bath . all appliances
included . We'll make down
payment, you take over payments ot $370 month, or buy
to' $22,000. (2 16)351-7086
evenings and weekends, or
(216)257·1485 d ays:
Cole 's Mob1le Homes
US 50 East. Athens. O,hio.
45701 , 740· 592· 1972
Good used 3br/2bth . Only
$7995. Includes delivery,
Call Karena 740·385-9948
Land Home' Packages ava ilable. In your area . (740)446w
3384

Buildin g lots, State Route
141 . 10 m1nutes from
Gallipolis. Restricted , with
water &amp; electric. All w1th road
frontage . (740) 379-2830

470

HOUSFS

3 rooms &amp; bath . all utilities
FOR RENr
pa1d ·, downsta1rs $285.00
919 2nd street 740-446·
2 bedroom
house
1n 3945.
Middleport. $300 per month ,
APART·
$300 d eposi t, no pets, BEAUTIFUL
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
(740)992·5039
PRICES AT JACKSON
2 br .. house $375.00 per ESTATES, 52 Westwood
man . $300.00 dep. call Drive from $297 to $383.
Walk to shop ·&amp; movies. Call
(740)441 -0720
740-446-2568.
Equal
3 br. house in town available Housi ng Opportunity.
May 15th unfurnished w/
carpet $400. pe r month Beech St. Middleport, 2 bed·
$400. dep. 1 yr . lease con- rOOm furnished apartment,
tract call (740)446·0332 ask utilities' pa1d. deposi t &amp; refer·
ences. no pets. (740)992tor Heather.
'
0165
3 br., 1 car garage. nice outbuilding, country selling,, Furn1shed efficiency. All utiliconvenie nt
loca tion
1n ties pa1d , share bath, $135
Gallipolis. close to town . month , 919 2nd Avenue.
$500. a man./ $500.00 dep. 1740)446·3945

l

WAr-'fEIJ

..

TOREN£
Wanted to rent· Pasture in .
Gal,ha Co. with good fences
&amp; Water supply. Phone: Jim

no pets 7 40·(7 40)2 45·0372

i10

Ho~~IJ)
VUUI-"'1

r

I':

For Sate · Reco nditioned
-washers, dryers and refrig· ·
erators
Jhompsons
Appliance. 3407 Jackson
Avenue, (304 )675·7388.
Good Used App liances,
Reconditioned
and .;
Guaran teed .
Washers.
Dryers.
Ranges.
and
Refri gerators, Some start at
$95. Skag gs Appliances . 76
Vine St. (740)446·7398

Reg. A11 gus bulls- Top per·
formance bloodlines. Mame
Ch i· Angus show heifers.
heifers, br8d heifers and
cross bred bulls. Slate Run
Farm.
Jackson .
OH . 1996 F150. 6 cyl. $7900.
740·388·0173 m 740·367·
(740)286·5395
7187

Kenmore Washer/Dryer 2yrs·,.
old Excellent Condit1on. •
Super capacity, Heavy Duty. :
Call.
(740)446·4 11 6
(740)441 ·9414
'

1997 Fo rd Ranger XLT,
Runs g re at . looks great.
$5.000. (304)675-6986

mOdel
Whirlpo ol
refr~d g. $125 .00. Wh1rlpacM
washe r $75.00, GE dryer
$65.00 all Almond (740)446·
9066

Late

IN

Rio Grande area. 2400
sq.ft., Office/ Commercial 9060.
Building for Rentl Le ase
2 br. trailer At 7 Gallipolis
Plenty off par'~ing . (7 40)245·
City limits 740·(740) 44 6·
5747
2491

r

Loni&amp;

Beautiful A1ver VI&amp;N Ideal
For 1 Or 2 People.
Refere nces, Deposit, No
1/3 acre lot on 554 1n Porter, Pets. Fdster Trailer Park ,
all utilities (including sewer) 740·441·0181.
Ready io· build. $16,900.
Mob1te hOme fo F ,_rent , no
(7 40)256·9200
pets, (740)992·5858
154 Acres of Hardwood Fall
Timber &amp; Pine Pulp wood for Small 2 bedroom $285. per
sale by owner. Show date month 3 bedroom&amp; 2 baths
May 2 , lOam May 3. 1Dam. $400 per month. $400
Deposit up front references
(304)458 · 1656
required No pets 1nside ot
Lot for sale in Racine . out. Free gas with bath. Call
(740)992·5856
(740)245·5622

ACREAGE

One bedroom furnished
apa rtmen t in Pt. Pleasant.
Very . clean ancJ nice . No
Pets. Phone (304)675-1386
Pleasant Valley Apa rtment
Are now taking Applications
fo'r 2BR , 3'8R &amp; 4BR.,
App lications
are
taken
Monday thru Friday, from
9:00 A.M_·4 PM. Office Is
Located at 1 151 EvergreE:~n
Drive Poirit Pleasant , WV
Phone No IS (304)675·5806.
EHO
Tw1n Rivers Tower is accept·
ing applications for waiting
list for Hud·subsized, 1· br,
apartment. call 675-6679
EHO

i

An addnion:~l $5tf you ne~d an in -to\l.n
locall&lt;)ll for }l •lll ~a rd .~t~ lt:.

HAULING:
• Limestone
• Sand
• Dirt
• Ag Lime
,.

EVANS LAWN CARE
Racine, OH
• Free Estlmote-s•
LownMalntalnence-, Shrub
TrlmmlnQ, Snow Remo.,ol
&amp; Other lown Core Needs
Jamie fvans
!ind;, Evans
i140)

8~3·51 t

~'R~
High&amp; D.ry

Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

BoATS &amp; MoroRS I 740·992·5232
H)R SAU:

Electric wheelchair, good :
cond asking $1.400. call ..
(740)446·4122
~
Gorgeous Butter Yellow lor· ;
mat gown . worn approxi· ~
mately 3 hr., new asking ..
$80.00 size 14 call 304·675-:
8902

•

•
•'

•
•

••'
••

•••
••
•••

•

JIM 'S SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR

IMPROVEMEIITS
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditionai lifetime guarantee. Local references fur·
nished . Establish ed 1975
Call
24 H,.. 1740) 4460870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing

A 11 Flah ) 6 .95
n u \ tJt'1mlfrlr

Buy 1 Gilt Certificate,

Get 2nd Free!
Heather i\. Fry 1..~].1'.

740-992-5379

7 40-992-2432

lll,n llang.int; ha , k .- ~&gt;­
~5 . Y5 &amp; $9.Y)
12 IlL H.LIIIg mg /J u, kcb
$ 1 I. 'J:'i
6 in. Pcr·L: n111al' S1.::!:'i.
-1 in poh .~ 1.00 - '1-1.25.
Sin &amp; l \1 111. Cia) pvt ~
&lt;~ t:. Jmhl n&lt;llt nn il lll pl; ml -

11 .1)1

t:r-.

&amp; \7 .95
Opt•n .\r1on -Sa1 l.}- 5

Al.~o 1ww arceptitllf

most imuranre

THE CRAFT
SHACK

C l os~·d

Pomeroy Eagles
BING02171

Craft . Basket and
Antique Mall
Grafters Wanted
Grand Opening
May 1st
202 East Main
S1reet Down1own,
Pomeroy
(740) 992·0003
Prim e loca1ion with
lots of arkin

Ever)' Thursday &amp;
Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30 1st Thursda)'
of every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00 Bonanza
Get 5 FREE

OLD GLORY
AUCTION
SERVICES
Every

Thursda~·

at 5:30p.m.
Consignment Wed. &amp;
Thurs. 10am-3pm
Now doing eslale
&amp; household sales.

Tree Service

~~

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

(304) 675·5282
www.wvpcdr.com
cdoctor@wv cdr.com

30 Yrs. Exp, • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones
Free Estimates

Snapper

Dean Hill

l{ivcrway
Cafe

Lawn a11d .Garde~~ Equip111e111 is our
bu.&lt;iness, twt our sideline

10x20
St Rt 7 Goeglein Rd.
Pomeroy

Jim Taylor

Best Service at
the Best Price
New Homes • Vinyl
New Garage~
• Rep laccml.!nt
Winduws • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

p1&lt;t1nog •

J&amp;C Lawn Service
Mow&amp; Trim

740-992-6694
Please leave
·message if no
answer

Ripley, WV 25271

1-800-822-0417
"W.V's #I Ch evy. Pontiac, Buick, Olds
&amp; Cu stom Van Dea ler"

CANCER CHECK
Fin all y.,. M a ne y paiU 1u YQ1! wht:n c mt'er
strik es . You choose the amount up to $50,000!
Pays in addition to other in iiurancc.
Yuu usc the money however you like.
Cancer wi ll Mrikc whl'n you lea"'t expect it.
It willlra\·c you nnd your tanHiy finan cially

CANCER CHECK will he

lhr.:rc \~, h t: n ) nu m:r.:U 1L

Ca ll nov. ·ro rcservi: ,L.Uilll.:h~d .
Ojll:ll 'lrun·5pm
ho:c "'"m•l.:&gt;. Ill··· 1n I"""' ~'"""r
l ·all~'' ''' 111 ~ nut "" "'ru~&lt;·r nee &lt;I•

(740) 446-1812

740-992-7599

.-hi

10 ,1/Jo•u/otrr

Scn~o ·,,

ROCKY Ht:PP INSURANCE
&amp; FIMNCIAL SERVICES
. Box I H'i MIDDLEPORT . .OH 45760 .

740-843-5264

l'fwr.1'

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio

. J&amp;S Painting

.VIKolo

25 yrs. experience

Tate the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Frl9ndly &amp; Professional

Let me do it for youl

Jnh.'riur, El!criur,

( ' uumttrd&lt;~l

for free estimates

740·992·5678

45771

740·949-2217

•SEAMLESS
GOnER
\\ 1th I he hi g ta ~te ..

475 South Church St.

&gt;~rapped.

dOOFING
•HOMI
MAINTININCE
"The Llu k rc,taw ani

New&amp; Used

.Pomeroy, Ohio

lOxlO

Auclioneer

· · Du\

JONES'

992-2975

HARTWELL
STORAGE

•
740·992·1717

Eu'DlUCA!l
REl'RJGERA:IlON

on

.-f Bellt'r

Sunda ·

We Make House Coils

204 Condor Street

Phone 992-9553
or 742-0226

r•

SAVINGS

750 Easl Stale Street !'hone (740)593-6671
Athrns 1 Ohio

PC DOCTOR

HOWARDL.
WR!TfSfl

Sherry Cunningham
Congratulations ! You have
won 2 free movie tickets to
the Spring Valley 7 in
Gallipolis. Call the Register
today for detaits .(304)675·
1333

~-t :'iO

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Sizes 5'x1 0'
to 10'x30'

*Free Esumates.*

Hours

949-1405

7:00AM ·8:00PM
1114,1 mo. pd

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCDON

YOUNG'S
SUE's GREENHOUSE CARPENTER
Vegetable, bedding flats &amp;

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1611

Owner

Certified Arboriot

Stop &amp; Compare

Custom
Building
&amp; Remodeling
Over 1b years Expcrienct'

m

• Roo m .·\ ddilll)ll"
• Kitchen &amp; B &lt;~th
RcmOOcl ing
• Repl acement Window .;

• Pon:hcs • Decks • Gt1ragc"

Tailli ght lenses
Mil d Steel

Pipe
Structuml
Al uminunl
Sminh:..,~ Stl!cl WEL 1

Ca-.t !run

Time to plant cool weather vegelable
plants &amp; pansy 's, 4" perennials $1.18

Buv 6 get 1 FREE
Largest selection of perennials Er shrubs
at the lowest prices in Meigs County

1·740-949-2115

G&amp;R Sanitation
33561 Bailev Run Rd.
Pomerov.OH 45169
· semce vou can counl orf·
Gene Alms

740-992-1119

992-3114

Brass
Sti ck. Mig. Tig, Gas.
Pwp &lt;~nc Welding
Plusmu. Air An:, &amp;
:'\cclylcmc culli ng

Seamless Gutter
Services
• No sf'fii/IM
• No Lenks
• Free Estimates

APWelding (740) 949-0901

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

Own.er Oper&lt;Ui'(i

Dm-id Rhodt-'' &amp; Norma Rhl)(/t&lt;.f

Office (740) 985-3511

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

. Home (740) 985-3622

WATER

Sim.:e 1979
Aulhmtl(d

S&lt;r.l~t

l'ro 1\1dcr Fw

RalnSon

Fre~ Est1mates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215.

Pomeroy Oh10
') Yea•s oca1

3124 TFN

MYERS PAVING
Henderson , WV

875-2497 or 446-2912
Ceil Phone 674·3311 Fax 304-675·2457

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

Marcum

ROUSH'S

Building
Service

LAWN
CARE ,,

• De~.· ~, &amp; Pmcllc!&gt;!
• Runm AUdi!lmt'i

• RHo.lling

LAWN
MOWING

I

• Viny l &amp; Wm~~.t

Sidinw,

110'K10' &amp;10'K20')
(740) 992-3194

THOMPSON'S

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electr)cal &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• VI nyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks

Morning S1ar Roaci • C.Rci 30 • Rac ine, OH

• Siding • Roofing
• Complete R chab~
Fullv ln~urt'!d
Free ·Estlmut('.'\

Stale Cenijic'd • Portahle

992-6635 .

SERVICE

hanging baskets $6.60
4" annuals 94¢

• New Homes

Rad iator,. :-hroud s &amp;
Side tank s
Broken tab s
Pla~ tic. tnnb &amp; B liXCll

'

992·5776
Sytacuse Now Open

Easter &amp; Mothers Day

tllli.·•l"~ "lthm'i

992-5479

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE

0

THERAPEUTIC
MASSAGE

3211 9 Welsh1own Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45l69

'

Jeff Warner Ins.

GRAVELY TRACTOR

•

••

*'Spring*'
*' Special i}

Gravely

Grilles

~

--~.;.:;:__-.

WE REPAIR
• Lawn Mowers
• Power Mowers
• Chain Saws
• Snow Blowers
• Weed Eaters
• Tillers • Edgers
• Go Karts • Mini
Bikes

M otnn;:ycle:- f.airings
Auto : Bumper~

BURN
Fat,
BLOCK !
Cravings, and
BOOST "'
Energy Like
You Have •
Never Experienced.
..
WEIGHTi. LOSS
REVOLUTION
&gt;
New product launch O&lt;.:tober!
23. 2002 Ca ll Tracy at 1
(740)441-1982
:

~

Sr!iiN'rcd fl} The M 1 th.lkp&lt;~11 Communll~' 1\\ \0~ .md
rh~ )Jpmcwy ~jt·rrha nl . . '' ""l'i&lt;lt i~ !O .
r,, ,1gn up. "1ur in Oh'1n R11cr Hl'ar C11nr MrdUkport
IJDJ'll !.')Jon." 111 Ot't'iu• ~en lte &amp; Suppl) HI \·Hddlct'l• rt 11r
Ch,1pm.1n SIHIC• &amp; Oh io VJ!Ie~ B ul~ Slnrc-l)nmtrm
Fur mort information cull 992-4055

'

Cellular

r.1d1n . n~w,p11per,, tl}t'P" &amp; p o~ •~· r,!
A ll for $5.00: ·.
•

All Makes &amp; Models
Free Eslimales
Fasl Turnaround

740-985-1564

{740) 949·2108

.ALLtEL

6 nulc' long thruugh ,\11ddit.'pm1 &amp; Po m e ro~ I Hundr~d
of map.., di,trihllted ~ Ad' ert1~ c:d &amp; pru muter.l wu.lcl} on

ATV's fender.-

-----------------·

•

MEMORY

We 'll see her again someday 1his much I
know tor sure.
She 's jus1 over some golden day break on
heaven's peaceful shore.
Love and miss you, Mom,Gene, Yvonne
Frank, Tina and family

"

:
•

IN

ing in our ear.

6 ft . 'tinished mower. used 3 :
t1mes.
5 H .P. Craftsman plane r
304-675·5162

Catwalk. 10' , $50; small
do!}r'cat carrier/house, $10:
sweeper. $40
(740)992·
1426 leave message.

MEMORY

In Loving Memory of Ann Marie (Ankrum)
Mills who passed 1 year ago.
Her favori1e chair is emp1y.
Her porch swing's s1ill hanging 1here,
She went wl1h or Laving Savior 1o.walk wi1h
him up 1here. Th e Angels were all singing
when 1he mas1er called her name. Bu1 life
for us he re on earth just hasn't been 1he
same.
We s1ill cry a1 memories of her 1ha1 we hold
so d~ar. "If no1 this side, 1he othe( s1ill ring·

i

2 br. mobit8 home, $350.00
Now Taking Appl lcat'ionsa mon. plus dep. and util. no
35
West
2
Bedroom
pelS (7 40)446-4313
Townhouse
Apartments.
Sewage,
2 br. trailer for rent, no pets Includes Water
call 740·441·9060 9·5pm Trash. $350/Mo., 740·446·
afler 5 pm call 740-245· 0008 .

LIVEl&gt;TOCK

94 LEXUS. ES 300, loaded,
111 K, clean , good condition,
AT S1Ud A .Q. H.A . 1996 leath er, $5,500, (7·40)590·
Palomino 16 H/H 12001bs 2496
Very good Natured _ See
Fouls on FS: rm . Mare
Tra nsportati on
Ava ilable.
L. F.G. Stu d Fee $300
1304)675·6440

Gracious 11vmg. 1 and 2 bed·
New 2003 Doublewide 3 BR
House For Rent air and room ap arlme~ t s at Village
&amp; 12 Bath. Only $1695 down
and
Rivers1de
electric . 2003 Madison Ave . Manor
and &amp;295/mo. 1·800·69 I·
Pt. Pleasant . (304)675·6453 Apartments m Middleport.
6777
From $276·$348. Call 740·
Partial furnished 3 bedroom 992·5064 Equal Housing Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark ,
New 3br/2bth . On ly $995
Chapel Road. Port er. Oh io. ,
doublewide
w/attached OpportunitieS':
down and only $197.47 per
(740)446-7444 1-877·830· .
garage,
3 miles !rom
month . Call Harold , }40Pomeroy on 143, $375 plus Honeysuckle Hill s Apt. local· 9162. Free Estimate3, Easy ·
385w7671 •
ed on Coloma! Or. behind financmg, 90 days sa me as
depol ~· (7 40)992·7401
Highway
Patrol post. 2 br · cash . Visa/ M aste r Card.
Vindale mobile home, 12x60
with expando, wmdow air, Unfurnished 2 br, house with now available re nt star ts Drive· a- little save alot.
full basement, close to town, $285.00 per mon. tow &amp;
gas heat , furn 1she d , one
AN11~
fa mily ow ned, very nice , asking $350.00 a man. +u til· mode rate Income Equal
1'
ities,dep.required call 304· ·Housing
Opportunity
pnce reduced . (740)742·
or
304·593·0152.
675·8902
[7
40)446·3344
0
'
TDD
1·
2979, 740-992·3394
Buy
or se ll. A1ve r1ne ·
800·750·0750.
20 MOBILE HOMES
We have new sectional &amp;
Antiques. 1124 East Main ·
HJRibNf
Mobi le home lor rent 2 br.. on SA 124 E Pomeroy, 740smgle wide homes as low as
wa ter &amp; kitchen appl iances 992-2526. Russ Moore .
$180 per mon th. 800-837 2338.
2 bedroom 14x70 mobile turn ., no pets call (740)441 · owner
home in Middleport, $325 4540 leave message.
""!' MISCELLANEOUS
DUSINFXS
plus deposit,
no pets,
MERL'IIANIJlSE
(740)992·3' 94
Mode m 1 bL apt (740)446·
ANI&gt; Bun.OJNGS
0390
Corner
Re sta urant
Middleport, ·ohio estab·
lished 1991 busin ess &amp;
buifd1ng , turn key operation .
(740)992·3955

1996 HarleY Spo rtster, 1200
Custom excellent cond .,
many extras 3000 miles ask·
ing $8,500. 304-675·8957

May 2nd &amp; 3rd.

FRurr.;

immediately. (740)928-4941 ~.
atter6pm.
-

-----

1995 Harley soft tail custom
$12 .500..
1986
BMW
Touring K100 AT $3500.
(740 )245 "5747

MXI SpM, 18', $8,500,
:2000 Chev. MalibU. Limited
1 palr 200 wan EV. PA sys- Edition. 33k Miles, loaded. (7 40)992·6914
tem speakers, fits 24x28 in Excellent Condition . Call
cabinet 12 ·in. EV ·speakers Aha• 6 pm. (740)446· 1955 ·
ex 16 In
horns asking
2000 Olds mob ile Alero
$500.00 740 367·0822
2001 .Keystone
Hornet
42,SDp mi. ext. warranty to
&amp;
Camper. 24 teet, Extra Nice.
100,000 mi. 4 new tires,
(304)675·6436
VEGE:I'AHLE&lt;;
AM/ FM/&amp;
cas sette/CO,
White wl Gray int ., spoiler, 2002
Hornet
Camper,
Home grown Asparagus . exc. cond , (i'40)44t -9865
sleeps 10, has dlne"e &amp; liv·
Charles McKean Farm 740· after 5pm .
ing area slide out, 32 ft.iong.
446·9442.
Never
been
trailered .
2001
Pontiac
Grand
Prix,
I \lnl...,ll'l'lll"
Excellent
condition.
like new con dition, bur·
,\ I I \ l'l«ll 1,
$15,000. (740)446·2252
gundy, loaded, 22 .000 actu·
al mites. 13,000 left on war· 36' Terry Fleetwood camper,
ranty,
$13,500
090, queen size bed. bath, ale,
(740)992· t493
new furnace , no refrigerator,
5th wheel goes with it, ask·
1968 Internation al Low Soy :2002 4 dr. Taurus SES fully ing $4,000 OBO. (740)992·
tractor, 5 ' belly mower, eq. $1 1,800. 304·675·3354
6190 after ~m
excellent condition. great for
'I R\ IC I '
yards or fa rming. (740)742· 91 Fo rd Thunderbird, 5.0
moto r looks &amp; runs good
2301 after 5:00.
(740)·446·0 130.
HOME

r

r

1987 XR-250, good con-di·
lion, new tires. run s strong,
$950 OBO, (740)992·6925

Trucking

S5 gcb yo u nn the m;1r &amp; a ye llow tl ilg

r

RENf

Townhouse
Trailer ,for rent $400. $400 Tara
Deposrt.
{7 40)441 - 1283 Apartments , Very Spacious.
(7 40)4 46-4060
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1
1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted.
Trailer for Ren t. (740)446· Ad ult Pool &amp; Baby Pool. ·
4824
Patio, Sta rt $385/Mo. No
Pets. Lease Plus Security APARTMENfS
Deposit Requir ed, Days:
tURRENr
740-446·348 1; Evenings: ·
740-367·0502 .
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
ments. furnished and unfur·
SPACE
nished, security deposit
FOR
RJiiiT
required, no pets, 740·992·
2218.
- -- -- - - - - Trailer space for rent irl •
Bedroom Apart ments Middleport, {740)992·5858

For sale- shares of property
· m Langsville, Ohio area ,
part of 135 acre farm , great
for hunting, call (740)7422008
---,.-----Property "for sale· close to
Green School. 2 mobile
home lots. Own 1 &amp; rent 1.
Approximate!'{ 1/2 acre .
Great investment. (41 9)991·
0924
Star tin g
at
$289/mo.
Washer/ Drye r Hooku p.
R10 Gra nde area, 3 to 30
Stove and Refrigerator.
at.. GS lots. some restrictions ,
(740)44H519
vo.._.tel &amp; electric (740)245·
5747
2 one bedroom apartments
in Middlepor t, ava ilable

1983 Yarflaha Venture.
36 ,000K mi., lull dress, new
tires, runs weat, loo~s good
$3,500. (740)245·0460

Join 1he 61h annual Yellow Flag Yard Sale!

17' Bass boat, 140 hp
Reg . Border Collie puppies
ImPorted bloodlines classic 2000 Chev. malibu limited Johnson, (2) fish/depth find·
m ar~ings (7 40)379·9110
Editioo,33K miles. loaded .. ers, live well, trolling motor,
''aile,, (7 40)992·1385
exc cond.call after 6pm
(740)446· 1955
Boat &amp; trailer, 1998 Marda

APAKI'MENTS
FOR

I

R.B.

(740)682·7512

1'

170

Greenhouse worke rs needed and also management
NURSES (RNa)
positions available, call $47_00
per
hour, Couch $200 .. Table $60 ..
(740)643-1248. Alexis Taylor Columbus. OH . All Umt s. Recliner $125., Bed &amp;
Dresser $150 .. CoHee Table
Gardens.
FULL TIME (800)437·0348
$20., Car Carrier $50.
(740)44 1-1283 (7 40)446·
WOlD
4060

Reedsville location , 1 1/2
story hOme on approx. 1
acre, 3 bedrooms, (2
upstairs, 1 on first floor,) 1
bath , living room. eat·in
kitchen , enc lose d back
porch used as utility room,
enclosed front porch used
as TV room. Great location,
in walkmg distance ol local
market and Post office. Fru it
trees , ci1y water. natural gas,
detached 1 car garage, tor
call
more
information
(740)678·62S 3

r

BUIUJING

Cute boxer mixed pups. (740j949·9008
Shots &amp; wormed. 6 wee~s 1994 Corvette. White Red
aid April 21 ssa . 379·2915 leather, glass top S11 ,000

''P''P"I

~10

low to form four simple words .

I

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publishing reserves the right to edit, reject, or cancel any ad at any time. Errors must be reporteC:I on the first day of publication and
Tribune-Stntinei·Aegister will be ruponsible for no more than the colt or the space occupied by the error and only the tlrstlnHrtton. We shall not be I I Ioblle
any less or expense that relllltslrom the publication or omission olan advertisement. Correction will be made in the first available edition. • Box number
are always confidenti al. • Current rate card applies, • All real estate advertisements are aubjaCt to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968. • This n..
accepts only help wanted ads meeting EOE standards. We will not knowingly accept a~y advartlalng In violation of the law.

..__PRii.rirri:!iii~iii~~ii~iiiNAL-r' ..l'l'r:,O::::~:~:~:~:~:: :::1 r.:e:::--A"'!U-~-IS-&amp;~GE-'-.,_II';![) M:~E~~~~:S

1993 Dodge Caravan . ac,
good cond. asking $1800.
$5001 Pollee Impounds! call 740·446·9552 or 740·
Hondas, Chevys, etc! Cars! 446-4122
Trucks from $500 . For list·
1993 one ton Ford work van.
ings 1·800·719-3001 ext.
looks good, ru ns gdod , like
3901
new tires, $2,000, (740)992·
1493
1987 Po ntiac 6000 runs
needs tires , $350.00 OBO 314 Ton GMC Work Van,
304-675·6870 or 740·446· 34M, Origina l Owner, air,
2639.
auto. 1111. cruise. $10.500.
(740)446·2957
1986 Buick Skylark, bodies
good, needs moto r, asking 87 dodge van $ 1:}QO. ~§k lor
Jr. {740)256· 11 02
$300, (740)742·2481

t

'

Thursday for Sundays

1985 Ford , 4 wheel drive,
runs good. uses ve ry little
oil. 51.100-neg. (740)742·,
9217
- -- ' - - - -- - 199 1 . Chevy Blazer, runs
good, $1200, (740)992·
2563

L

r

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15' Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Day5 Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display : 1:00

Overbrook RehatSi li tat ion
TURNED OOWN ON
Center is currently accepting SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
applications for its upcoming
No Fee Unless We Win!
nursing · assi stan t cla ss
1·886·582-3345
Applications will be accept·
[![\[[,[\[1
ed until May 1, 20Cl3. The
class wi ll begin May 12,
HOM~
I \11'1 I 1\ \II '\I
2003. Applications may be
roil SALE
picked up at 333 Pa ge St. , ·--oiiiiiriiiiiiii-_..1
" 1~\1(1 ....
Help wanted caring tor the Middleport. Oh .or contact
Lee ,
Staff (3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up
Ei lderly, Darst Group Home, Cassy
now paying mi'nimum wage, Deve lopment Coordi nator at for immediate possess1on all
.
HILP WANfi-:D
new shifts: 7am-3pm, 7am- 740)992 -6472 . For more within 15 min, of downtown
,Gallipolis. Rat6s as loW as
5pm , 3pm-11pm, 11pm- information . E.O.E.
6%. (740)446·3218.
Address wanted Immediate· 7am, ca ll 740.992-5023.
ly! No experience necessary. Work at home. Call Join the team ot quality care Sub contractor for siding &amp; 3 Bedroom newly remod·
sof1itt installer, se nd resume·
405·447·6397
protessional s at Overbrook Daily Sentinel, PO Box 729· eled. in Middlepor1, call Tom
Anderson after 5 p.m.
Center. We are taking appli- 31. Pomeroy, Oh 45769
ARCADIA NURSING
992·3348
catio ns for
part time
CENTER
LPN 's/RN 's for 12 hour
3 bedroom , 2 bath . 508
Full· Time RN qr LPN need·
shifts. Ben·efil package avail- The following is a schedule
State Street. Thu rm an. OH
ed. Available, 11 · 7 shift We
able. Please come In and of dates and places th e cor·.
$45,000 . Ca ll (740 )379·
offer excellent benefits that
rectional
officers
testing
will
co mplete our application
9249 or (740)245-0358
Include Health Insurance,
be
given:
tod'ay at 333 Page Street ,
401 K. Life Insurance, com·
April 15. 2003 A.D. Lewis
Middleport. Oh
petitive wages. plu s shift
Center 3 br. home at 171 Lar1at Dr.
community .
Gallipolis . OH., app1. only
differential and opportuni·
Local body shop seeks qual- Huntington . WV
please 740-446-9403 or
ties for advancement. II you
April
22
,
2003
Putnam
Co
ified repair tech . Competitive
740-446-7845or 1-304-675want to join our team . con·
pa¥, good wor~ing .environ·. Bo'ard of Educat10n Ol11ces 3216.
tact Susan Wiriland. 0 .0 N.
Winfield
.
WV
· men1. Ca ll to set up interArcadia Nursing Canter
Aptil 25. 2003 Charles E. . 3, yea r old Brick RanCh ,
view. (740)446·4466
East Main Street
Yeager
Career
Center
Hamlin , wv
3.000+ sq.ft., 2-1 /2 acres.
Coo lville, Oh
Los1 your Job? Need to
April 29 , 2003 Caree' inground
pool , storage
7 40.667 ·31 56
Work? Let's talk ...The new
building, excellent neighbor·
EOE·MIF/HIDV
Technology
Center
Avo n!
The re
are
Huntington WV
hood, (740)446-0 149
.. 25.000 .. customers in oU r
HOME. 4
area needing service. Earn May 6 , 200 3 Mason Co, 4 BEDROOM
Attn : Work from home.
bath . only $14,900. For list·
$1 ,000+ Monthly by selling Library Point Pleasant WV
$500- S1500/mo. PT
$20. ot Beauty Products to 6 All testing wilf begin at 10 ings ca ll 1-800-719-3001
$2000· $4500/mo. FT
People. 5 days a Week! am, to· make an appointment E)Ct.F 144
800·286-9748 •
Great tor : Couples-Sing le to take the test please call· - - - - - - - - www.retire411 .com
Moms-. Fami lies- 304-558·2 1 10 and ask for 4 br. 1 1/2 bat hs. brick and
A.VON I All Areas! To Bu y or Handicapped. Plans lo Fit Helen or Sandy. The test ~ill frame , full basement, 2 car
Sell. Shnley Spears. 304- any Need. No Stock Ups. No also be giVen on Apnl 30 garage. New haven WV
675·1429.
Door to Door. It will Work for 2003 and May 13, 2003. [740)446·4274
You! $10.00 Sta rt up Fee. Please call lor more infor·
Bookkeeper needed. part- Ca ll April , 304-882·3630 lor mation on these test dates. · 55 acre farm on S A 554 . 3
time,
knowledge
of Deta11s.
bedroom , 2 bath house with
Peachtree. AP &amp; AR &amp; data
base ment. 2 barns, 10 acres
en try, Alexis Taylor Garden, NEED
Sl FOR THE Truck Drivers. tmmed1ate pasture Spring fed liveslock
(740)843·1248
SPRING ?? Now Hiring hire. class A COL req uired , tank _Good hunting. Stocked
Flexible Schedul1ng 1·868· excellent pay, eK perience pond. Free gas. $125,000.
Drivel wanted . to deliver
974·JOBS
requ1red . Earn up to $1,000 Call (740)367-7266 between
U.S. Ma1l Part-lime. Must
per
week .Call 304-675- 9a m &amp; ·9pm.
have Stationwagon or M1ni·
Need 5 lad1es to sell Avon 4005
Van and live in Rio Granqe.
Bulaville Pikg. 2 story, 3 br ..
1740)446·3358
Patriot
area . Excellent
140
2 ' 112 ba., liv. room , dining ,
BUSINI:J&gt;.'i
wages and fuel allowance.
fam., &amp;. game room, 2 car
TRAINING
Need. ca rpenter with 10 yrs .
Call Monday- Friday, 2:00gar.. 3 car unattached, pool.
back· ground exper1ence in
5 OOpm (330)721 ·9706
re modeling 304· 727·48 11
GaiHpolis Career College 1 acre $f75.00.00 (740)4468050
(Careers Close To Hom ej
E,.;perienced,
licensed

1

Heall)' equipment operator.
50% paid on health Insurance, partial payment retirement, wa ges based on
experience,
mail
resume/wages ex pected to:
Daily Sentinel, PO Box 72930, Pomeroy, Oh 45769

ldltod loy CLAY I . ,OUAN - - - - - - -

Reorro nga

p.m.

Monday·Frlday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
:!·~~·~ay_1IInn-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Sundays Paper

• Start Your Ads Wtth A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed

'~~:t:~y S©1?-..4U1A-"t.~s·
0

~:00

·'••

r

I

Dally In·Column:

&amp;

4-WDs

IURSALE

1992 Mere. Cougar 2dr. 8
SUPPUI:&lt;l
cyl , sunroof. auto, ale,
107.000 miles, eKcellent
Bl ock, brick, sewer pipes, condition. Phone. (304)675windows, lintels, etc. Claude 1519
Winters, Rio Grande. OH
Cell 740·24 5·51:21.
1993
Cavalier
Good
Condition. 106,000 miles.
New tires. $2 ,000. Make
good
work
car.
Call
(304)882·2098 ahe' 5 pm .
AKC Re gistered Labrador
Retriever
puppies. 1993 Pontiac Grand Am SE,Champion
Bloodlines, 2 dr. 6 cyl. 139,000 m11es,
Ready fo r Easter. Males rernote starter, P.ior.1eer
$200, Females, 5300, Slack casststerio. new tires. runs
&amp; Yellow. (7 40)446·0080
good, · nice car, $2,500.

classified@ mydailyregister.com

Display Ads

Vi\N.~

NEW A.N D USED STEEL
Steel Beams , Pipe Reba r
For
Concrete .
Angle,
Cha nn eL Flat Bar. Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Sc rap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday. Sam -4:30pm. Clos ed
Th ursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (7 40)446-7300
1988 Camara, At , Ac , T-tops 92 Ply Gr8.nd Voyager
89,000
mi.
good 150,000 m iles, looks and
While 's Metal Detectors
cond.$2500 .. firm . Also 96 runs good $2200 abo:
Ron Allison
Plymouth · VoYager. AI , AC, (740)388·9875
588 Watson Ad
loca ted at
~~
Bidwell Oh. 45614
2515 Jefterson 304·675·
M&lt;YIURCYLU:S
ohone (7 40)446·4336
21 17

l&amp;egister

Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy Visit us at: 200 Main Stt\et, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
E-mail us at:
E-mail us at:

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

\\'\()1 \(I \II '\I..,

New &amp; Used Heat Pumps·
Gas
!furnaces.
Free
Estimates. (740)446-6308

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008 .
E-mail us at:

Offiee 11o~~

Amus

true~

El11e Can!

To

The Daily Sentinel • P.

• Interior ltcmodelint;
General Cu rptntry Wnrk

·· Bags • Belts

740-985-4141

- '2~ . 00 servke fee fm f!kldns
llf'! .. wec:p~r s ut ym•r ho me

SEAL IT 00'6TRUC1lON

Rt~lnbo"'·" ,

Kirby, Eln:-trolu~. HooHm t: ureka,
l'ri·Stwr, Realna &amp; mONt other brands.

Parts shipped UPS • Fast. Dependable Service

v.•c
(304) 273-4098

Ill HI 'H ( ·· •LI I II

small yard
$35 per ocre

Mike :\·t an·um, (l't4·uer

Over 25 yeClrS in Bu.rine.&gt;.&gt;

{

I CONTRAQS
1 $15-$25fo~

{I

, j t1

Roofing, Siding,
Paln1i~g . Electrical,
Decks , Etc.
Free Estima1es
882·1189 882·2902

\.

call now to

schedule your

lawn care
service,

lnaured

140·948·1101

1-B88·211DIIN

�. Page A10 • The Dally Seriline.l

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, April 21, 2003

All work and no play make
this husband suddenly single

ACROSS
1 Pouch
4 Hurry
B Buzz
11 D11y of
the wk.
13 Verve
14 Single,
in Parts
15 Blissful
opot
16 Morse
signals
17 Like Capp's
· Abner
18 Sensibly
20 Health food
21 Yes vote
22 "What's
that?"
24 Tremble
27 Usual
30 Pipe fittings
31 Fishline
winder
32 Tease
34 Chromo·
some
material
35 'Turnpike
36 -salad
37 Moor
39 Filleted
40 Nam~,
to Pierre
41 Body part
42 Swiss

DEAR ABBY: I didn't
you never see her and do not abuse. How you have tolerat'know I had a problem until .
respond to her e-mail s. it ed it for 50 years is beyond
the day my wifefloverlbest
shouldn't be difficult to tell mecAsk him why he married
friend walked out on me two
your f()rmer classmate that you. His reply may provide
weeks before our 13th
· you are very busy and do not you with some insight. Then
anniversary.
ha ve the time she has to ask yourself -· is thi s how you
All our married life I
devote to a friendship. Say it want to spend your remaining
worked a seven'day-a-week
kindly, and wi sh her all the years? Your signature says it
factory job on second shift,
best in the future .
• all. I couldn't live in an
and in the morninlls managed
DEAR ABBY: What do atmosphere like that.
ADVICE
my own retail busmess.
Dear Abbv is written bv
you think of my husband's
I thought everything at
behavior? We 've been mar· Abigail Van Btu·en, also
home was great. Our house require work and nurturing.
ried almost 50 years. and if I known as Jeanne Phillips, and
and cars were paid for. We . DEAR ABBY: 1 am a didn't speak all day long we was founded by her mother,
even owned a boat. It turns female college student. 1 am would h ve in a silent world. Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
out that all my wife wanted having a problem with a for- My husband says nothing. not Abby at www.DearAbby.com
was for me to hold her, love mer classmate from last even "good morning." He will or P.O. Box 69440. Los
her and "be there" for her. semester. I'll call her Theresa. stalk right by me on his way · An!feles, CA 90069.
Now she lives 6'00 miles W~ started a friendship, but out the door and never say a
away.
the conversation was always word.
I learned my lesson the hard awkward, and we had few
This is nothing new. It has
way. I closed my business, but common interests. so 11 was a been like this nearly all of our
it's too late. Abby, please chore to spend time with her. married life. We ~re both col·
warn your readers about the Not · a good formula for · lege-educated, wtth responst·
danger of becoming a worka- friendship.
ble pr~fessions, and were
holic. Material things are not
Theresa calls my apartment ratsed m well-educated, proworth the price of losing the and my cell phone. and she e- fe ssional families. No on.e
one person who shares your mails me on a weekly basis. I else I know gets treated thts
life. I hope my story will save screen all of my calls and way.
.
.
.
someone else's marriage. - never respond to her e·mails,
l have .tned tal~mg to htm
HIT WITH REALITY IN but she hasn't taken the hint. about thts, but tt does no
MICHIGAN
How does one "nicely" end good. Thar:ks for any insight .
DEAR HIT: So do I. In a friendship without burning you can gtve me. - SUF·
No matter what
order for couples to grow bridges? Our paths may cross FERING IN SILENCE IN
direction you turn
together, they must communi- again one day in the corporate MASSACHUSETTS
cate, spend time with each world. None of my family or
DEAR SUFFERING I!'i
other and share mutual inter- friends have an answer. - SILENCE: Your husband s you can always find
ests. Good marriages don· t BESIEGED IN MASSA- behavior could be a sign of
It In the
just happen . Like anything CHUSETTS
long-standing depression or it
else worth having, they
DEAR BESIEGED: Since could be passive-aggressive

Dear

Abby

45
49
50
53
54
55
56
57
58
59

capital
Opposite
of veto
Luau guitar
Game traps
Nobel Prize
city
Longing
Dog·food
brand
Honey
drink
Mach 1
exceeder
Actress
Laura Pollution
control org.

'

Coming Sunday: Yearbook Community•Keligion

substance
20 Physicist
· Georg DOWN
22 Removed
weeds
1 Fuss
2 Autobahn 23 Internet
addr.
vehicle
24 Math proof
3 So·SO
abbr.
grades
4 Tint again 25 Arm bone .
26 Ladd of
5 ABaba
films
6 Household
27 Not far away
pet
7 Annapolis 28 Make-for it
grad
6 Luau dance 29 Stripe
9 Apartment 31 Leeway
10 Brooks and 33 Spoiled
35 Greek P
Gibson
36 Powwow
12 Skulks
drum ·
19 Caustic

(hyph.) ·
38 News .
network
39 Two-piece
part
41 Fiery crime
42 Pays tor
43 Just
scrapes by
44 · Cleft
46 '"Gotchal"
(2 wds.) '
47 tizzy
48 "Star Wars"
mentor
50 Traipse
51 -de ·
France
52 PBS relative

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

Astrograph

I
Tuesday. April 22. 2003

fort s to succeed .

BY BERNICE BEDE OsoL

The best laid plan s won't
stop you from suddonl y veer-

in g off in a new direction

when somelhing very opportune and unexpected happens
in the year ahead. Interesting
~e v elopment s arc in the offmg.

TAUIWS (April 20-May
20) - l'oday's development
where your soc ial life is concerned could be construed as
a new beginning of all important course that will reveal it -

self as lime unfolds. Much
fun is in the offing.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
-:With the end in si ght regarding an objective you 'v e
been quite anxious to attain.
it ' ll prove. as of today, that
your diligence and patience
have pa id off. Yqu'll be glad
you hung in there.
CANCER (fune 21-July
22 ) - This is a parlkularly
good day to initiate or launch

Dec. 21) - Due to an unexpected shift in circumstances
that takes place today yott
may very wtsely now reverse

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Events that lake place today

could .be responsible for rai s-

ing your sights where your

your position on sornelhing

career goals arc concerned.

about which you had been un-

They'll make you realize that
you have more gotng for you
than vou thought.
.
VlkGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
- Teaming up with the right
type of partner today could

relenting.

CAPRICORN
Jan . 19) - TrJ
yourself locke
ideas or plans

(Dec 22not to get
in on any
today that

would tie you down too far in

infuse new life -in a situation

advance . Somelhing unex·
pectcd that you 'II want to be
part of is likely to pop up today.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb.
19)- Operate in the realm of
finances or material acquisi tion today -this could be an

that up until now you have
been attempting on your own.
Thi s union wil l contain
strength.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- Be on the lookout today
for a new development rntttated by another that could
help supplement your earnings . It may require extra
work. but it's nothmg that you
can't handle.
SCORPIO ·(Oct. 24-Nov .
22) - There's a strong possibility--that- rcrdayyou ·could

WORD SCRIMMAGE-e SOLUTION BY JUDO HAMBRICK
2QOl

~H

will turn out to be a dynamic

new relationship. Your per-

edge and expertise you've ac-

sonalities will make a win-

quired will prove to be ex-

ning combinalion.

tremely valuable in your ef-

AVERAGE GAME 250-260

._llL

to

2nd DOWN

=_!!_

previous
Word
Scrim·

3rdDOWN

-·~

41h DOWN

=

JUDD'S TOTAL

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-

-

ooooooo
.
.
o"·
oo;
fi\@,@®'@f.'AI@,
00000 00 •
0
©®'
~~~~~~~ ·0
~~~~2gg 0
~

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tst Dowo Toto!
+ 20 Potfl!S

MDOWN

fH)tN,V'A)tJV@ ""·7 '"'"
rotat
\!3'0\CJ\CJ
Pomts
+

:lrd OOWN

Answer

151 DOWN

89
392

WORD®©®CD@@@®®-

~!h

F. .t..,. S'f"CIIIilll, ~

meet someone, forming what .

a new emcrprisc. The knowl-

ll'&lt;Ceptionally rewarding day
for you once involved. In fact,
you could be downright
lucky.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) - The course of action
you've been following for
some time may suddenly take
a new. tum today. putti~g you
on ·a far mOI'e exciting path
than the one you had been following.
ARIES (March 2l·April
19) - An individual who is
prcsenlly under some obliga·
tion to you may surprisingly
wipe the slate d ean today .
It'll come ·about without any
provocation from you and
will be very welcomed.

DO WN

=

by JUDD HAMBRICK

...

Business students turned writers DuPont o~ering
Rio course
blood tests in C8
inspires poetry,
short fiction
communities

Bv BRIAN J.
Staff writer

REED

FOURPLAYTOTAL
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN
DIRECTIONS: Make a 2· to 7·1etter word from the leMers on e&amp;ct'l yardl1ne .

Pomeroy

• Time. Out for Tip~ .
with Becky Baer. Se'e
Page 3
• DAR hears about ·
Saddam Hussein. See
Page 3

A1&lt;1 po.n1~ 10 eact1 wor!l or te ner ustnQ scoring dl r&amp;cllon~ a! nght Seven·tlitt&amp;r
get a 60.~nt bonus .A.tl words can be !ound 1r1 Web! ter'R New Wcr1d
Gclege DtcliOflal)' .
JUDO'S SOLUTlON TOMORROW

wo rds

..an HE DIDN'T
· 't-\AVt To ~E.T

SNII'l'Y ABoUT

Bv CHARLENE
News editor

Foilrchlld, 3ld .,_..

Pomeroy Elementary

Index
1 Sectlun - 10 Paps
Rt &amp;~T

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
weather

ACIW?S Tf&lt;E CENTER

OF THE PLATE .. .
l

IJl=======
__jt .___...

L...----......._
: tAHEr\ \~ 1

:r

Eo&lt;
ril

~ E LI E VE.

-''""''

THE OUE$TtON. T EDD't' ,

;z,

1".&gt; : WHAT C.AN'T

I

PO .,.

-=:
;$
r-.

WHY ARE YOU ..JUe&gt;'f
SI'T'TING 'fHERf. ?!

'THERE'' NAPPINC. roBE
C'ONE, MAN' 1'-'"-'1-

'0"'

ril

~
ri z
j 0=:
ll

2
6-9
10
10

4
5
5

6-7

2

POMEROY - Within a
w~k, the $675,000 Memorial
Field House located at the end
of the Meigs High School parking lot will be competed and
athletes will begin moving in.
Superintendent
Bill
Buckley said Monday "the
workers are putting finishing
touches on the building this
week ... some lighting and
trim, and carpeting in one
locker room for the varsity
players."
The 9,000 square foot
structure has two 'locker
rooms, a weight rooin, a multipurpose room, offices, rest
rooms and a storage room.
The superintendent said it
has been especially designed
for outdoor sports, although
wrestling practice will take
place there in the winter.
One advantage, he said, is
that it will eliminate lots of
din being carried into the
high school, which· was completely renovated last year. It
. will be used by both high and
middle school students.
The dedication of the facili·
ty will not take place until the

two memorial stones
made
of
black granite are set,
probably in
July, said ·
Buckley.
0 n e
stone will
Buckley
feature an
etchtng
depicting the life and times of students and staff who died
while attending school or
who were employed in the
Meigs Local S'chool District,
while the oUter will list their
names in random order.
As of Monday, the office
had a list of about 30 names
to go on the monument.
Buckley said he thinks
there could be more and he is
asking that anyone who
knows o( someone who might
qualify contact his office at
992-2153 before Friday.
Currently, his staff is verifying the names on the list.
Buckley said that the names
.will be listed in a random way
so that if a name should be
left off or as more need to be
added they won't appear to be
out of place.

Bv J. MILES lAYTON
Staff writer

SYRACUSE - A newlycharted flood plain has
Syracuse village· property
owners concerned about
increased costs associated
with purchasing flood
msurance.
Homeowner's insurance
does not cover flood damage. The average National
Flood Insurance Policy
(NFI P) costs about $382 per
year. Insurable structures
located in flood hazard
areas. secured by a federally backed loan, are required
to purchase flood insurance.
Bob Lemley's home is in
the floodplain. Like many
other residents, he claims
his home is at least one foot
above the new 580-foot elevation standard set by the
Federal
Emergency
Management
Agency
(FEMA).
Even though he doesn't
think paying for it is right,
Lemley knows he has to pay
for flood insurance .
"T:here's nothing you can
do about it." he said.
Lemley has the option of
appealing the FEMA desig-

The village of Syracuse has a sign posted outside each
entrance warning ,of real or imagined threat of flooding. (J.
Mites Layton) .
i1ation by paying for a professional survey of his
property and submitting a
letter among other forms to
the amend the floodplain
map.
"It would
iake
a
Philadelphia lawyer to figure all thi·s out," he said. "It
isn't worth messing with."
Before the 2002 update to
Syracuse's Flood plain map.
the village was using flood

maps dated July 5, 1983.
The United States Army .
Corps of Engineers Huntington
District
(USACOE) conducted a
study of the Ohio .River
Floodway · in 1998. Meigs
County was one of I 0 counties that were studied at that
time.
This study replotted the

Ple•se see Flood, P•ce 5

Uvlng With Grief:
Coping with Public Ti agecly

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TUPPERS PLAINS
Customers in the Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water District
and the villages of Pomeroy
and Syracuse, as well as other
areas exposed to a chemical
known as C8, will no~ qualify for free blood testing from tons of salt," Poole said.
In fact , Poole said last May
E.l. DuPont de Nemours &amp;
c
the chemical may have been
~ccording
to
the in five of TP-C's six production wells since the system
Associated Press, Wood was established in the midCounty Circuit Court Judge 960
George Hill ordered the 1 s.
· 1 · tt
1· t t
Lubeck, W.Va., residents,
pay or es - who first discovered C8 in the
c hemtca gtan
ing for those residents look- water supply there, filed the
i.ng to determine their ex.po- class action suit in which, Hill
sure to 'ammonium perfluo- made his order Friday.
roocanoate, or C8.
DuPont, meanwhile, has
C8 is a detergent-like maintained that CS has been
chemical agent used by used at the Washington Works
DuPont in the manufacture of since the 1950s, and that it is
Teflon and other resins and not hazardous to humans.
fini shes at its Washington
"DuPont has conducted
Works
Plant
near voluntary blood anulysis for .
C8 for employees for more
Parkersburg, W.Va.
Hill temporarily suspended than 20 years and has detecthis ruling to allow time for ed C8 in the blood of employappeal to the West Virginia ees," a DuPont fact sheet
about C8, issued in 2001,
Appeals Court.
A year ago, the TP-C Water said.
District, and the villages of
"In 50 years of C8 use at
Pomeroy and Syracuse dis- Washington Works, there
covered traces of C8 in their have been no observed
public water supplies.
human health affects associat. System managers like ed with C8 ," DuPont mainDonald Poole at TP-C and · tains.
John Anderson in Pomeroy
Last March, the chemical
said, at the time, that the con· company agreed with the
t&amp;mination is so slight as to be . U.S.
Environmental
insignificant in terms of pub- Protection Agency to supply
lie health.
alternative drinking water
"In order to ex.plain the pro- supplies to residents in comportion, you might say it's the munities with C8 contaminasame as a pinch of salt to 10 tion. ·.

•

olj

z

.

C 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

&lt;

HOEFLICH

···-· .

Andy

CB is a detergent-like
chemical agent used
by DuPont in the
manufacture of Teflon
at its Washington
Works Plant near
Parkersburg, W.Va.

Syracuse

Sunny, HI: 601, Low: 401

, .... .

REED

Meigs fieldhouse New floodplain has local
nears.completion residents in deep water

IT~

tF YOU THI{OW A FASTBALL

.Bv BRIAN J.
Staff writer

MIDDLEPORT - What
could 12 business majors
possibly know about writing
poetry and short stories?
More than one might think,
accot;ding to Gina Pines,
director of the University of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College Meigs
Center.
Pines has taken mi the task
of fostering a creative spirit
in a dozen business students
at the Middleport branch
campus.
At the request of students,
Pines created the elective
class the day before the university's spring semester
began, and while . a similar
class is offered at the Rio
Grunde main campus, Pines '
course emphasizes creativity
in all forms, not just the written word.
Of the 12 students participating in the course, six. do so
ex.clusiveJy online, while the
other half of the class attend a
three-hour weekly class.
But Pines is quick to point
out that the class itself is not
classroom-centered. ·
Instead, the students have
taken
hikes
around
Middleport and enjoyed the
recent warm spring weather
in Dave Diles Park to inspire
their individual muses, and
Pines said the outings,
designed to sharpen all the
senses, are working.
"Some of the students were
writers ~fore they enrolled
in the class, but others were Mary Beals, Julie Carter ~Peart Scott and Becky Collingsworth join creative writing instructor
Gina Pines at Dave Diles Park, where singing birds, blooming flowers and the Ohio River form
Pl•se ... Rio, Pap 5
a perfect creative backdrop for their creative writing class. (Brian J. Reed)

Inside

AVERAGE GAME 195·205

mag\) ·

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

I

•
',

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

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