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                  <text>•

Page B 8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Thursday, May 1, 2003
ACROSS

Prince Charming battles
past abuse to win leidy's heart
DEAR ABBY: I've been
going out with an extraordinarily attractive woman I'll
call Alice. We love spending time together. However,
she has some issues I don't
know how to handle. Alice
was abused by several exboyfriends and her selfesteem is zero. She is intelligent, witty, caring -- but
doesn't believe a word I say
because of the mind games
she has been subjected to.
I'm one of those "knight
in shining armor" types
who is faithful, doesn't
throw temper tantrums,
remembers to put the toilet
scat down, gives my lady
ftesh flowers, etc ., but
whenever we' talk about our
future, she ends up in tears.
She tells me she doesn't
deserve to be treated so
nicely and runs away
because everything I am is
so foreign to her. · It's as
though she's waiting forthe
other shoe to drop ·-- a shoe
I don't have in my hand.
I want Alice to know she
is a valuable person and
worthy of tbe love I want to
give her.~Have any of your
female readers been abused
by an old boyfriend. met a
mce guy, and then were
able to have a normal relationship?
ANONY-

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
MOUS IN ANCHORAGE
DEAR ANONYMOUS:
The answer to your question is an emphatic YES .
Read on - the following
letter arrived the same day
as yours.
DEAR ABBY: I have
been in several abusive
relationships in the past.
Not just physical, but mental and verbal as well. I
have kissed a lot of frogs
who ended up being toads
instead of princes -- so I
finally quit looking. The
barrage of abuse to which I
had been subjected left me
with self-esteem so low I
wondered why any man
would want to be with me .
My last boyfriend tried to
have me arrested after he
hid a bunch of his stuff and
said I stole it. Aftel' long
investigation by the police,
they realized he was lying.
The guy left owing me a

a

large sum of money. arid the
only thing I can say is that
it was the best loss I ever
took.
Last fall , after things qui eted down, I found a better
job. I quit looking for the
frog who would turn into a
prince, and met a man . who
adores me. He thnks I am
pretty. I cried the first time
he said it to me. I had never
heard it from anyone
before . When w~ talk on the
phone , I hear "I love you"
no less· than a dozen times .
This has helped me greatly
and my self-esteem is slowly rebuilding .
I'd like to say to all the
women who read your column that if I can break the
cycle of abuse, anyone can.
It may take time to find the
person God intended you to
be with, but you will. FINALLY HAPPY IN
OKLAHOMA
DEAR
FINALLY
HAPPY: Congratulations
on your healing. After any
trauma. it takes tim~ to
recover. That IS why It s so
important to proceed slow_ly, and not jump from the
frying pan into the fire.
Learning to trust your
own judgment, act on your
instincts and not con:tpromise your Ideals IS a

.;.
1 Linen plant
5 Good buys
1 o Like
Steve
Austin
12 :rrendy pet
13 Ballet duet
.' 14 Hire
15 Style
,
16 Actor
process. Counseling can
-Mineo
18 Early )au..
speed it up.
Dear Abby is written by 19 More petite
23 Fern. title
Abigail Van Buren, also 26
Cleveland
known as Jeanne Phillips,
NBAar
and was founded by her 27 Floppycontents
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Dear Abby at 30 Heart
Write
www.DearAbby.com or P.O. 32 Bl\1 Dipper
netghbor
Box 69440, Los Angeles, 34 Impassive
CA 90069.
35 Lost soma
36 Comics'
Miss Kelt
37 They exist
Do You Feel the 38 Tack on
39 Most
Need to Read?
nimble
42 "Big Blue"
45 Coffee
maker
46 Internet
fan

NASCAJt
88
'

50 Pay hikes
53 Funny
play
55 Black-belt
sport
56 Respect
57 Gray rock
58

~eremonlal

ftre

DOWN

Rover's
pal
2 Cargo
3 Show
backer
4 Cato's
dozen
5 Lair
6 Unit
of energy
7 Halk
wearer
a EngineerIng toy
9 Danca

1

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
choice
Sly
tactic
sight
21 Whirlpools 41 Midriff
42 Annoys
22 Hard
43 Pagan deity
to find
44 Actrese
23 Rockies,
-Sorvlno
e.g.
47 Dry up
24 -of
48 Rim
passage
25 Kilt wearer 49 Grain crop
51 Was Idle
28 Bye,
In Bristol 52 Summer
In France
(hyph.)
54
Caveman
29 Old great
from Moo
31 Young
foxes
33 Not even
35 Wet
37 Travel

20 ,Arctic

move

10 Loud

thud·

11 Chaech,

to Chong

12 Took
a spill
17 Dune

buggy kin

Offici'als
deny
sheriff's
transfer

40

Acting on advice
of attorney
in civil suit
BY BRIAN

BY

BERNICE BEDE 0soL

Usually you're preny single-minded concerning your
goals and ambitions. but in
Ihe year ahead chances are
you'll be pursuing Iwo major
objectives. They will be tackled simullaneously and both
will be successfully achieved.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - There may be two
ways Io handle your financial
affairs today. Ihe right way
and the wrong way . H you
choose the former, no maHer
how difficult that might be,
you 'II make great gains. ·
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
- It could be one of those
days where your restless spirit
needs· a busy schedule to feel
content, productive and satisfied. Assign yourself a long
list of things Io do.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) - That wonderful sense
of humor you have could turn
out to be your most effective
tool tod~y. It will help you jlet
your potnts across to senstttve
people without ruffling their

feathers.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) All it will lake today i ~ to
have Ihat i'niimate ·talk wilh a
close associate to get things
rolling. Your friend has been
eagerly wailing for you to
oR_e:n up comrncmications .

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
- Keep your tactics nexible
today and an objective that is
of personal importance tb you
can be ;tchieved. You need to
Work toward altering existing
circumstances 10 suit every·
body .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- You know if you.' ve been
);tgging behind a bit regarding
new knowledge that is impor·
tnnt Io your career . If Ihts is
the case. make time today to
crack the books and start

Dec. 21)- You. bener than
most, should know there is al'ways more than one solution
to any problem you face. Today make certain Ihat you
evaluate all options at your
disposal.
. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan . 19) - Don'! think keeping everybody at bay is how
you ' ll get ahead of them at
work today. On the contrary,
having .a meeting of the minds
and blending everyone's ideas
IOgeiher is how you 'II succeed.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb.
19)- Having Iwo social .interests vying for your attention today may momentanly

Whether your favori.te
subject is math or music,
science or social studies.
you'll find something
interesting in the
newspaper. In fact. the
paper is such a reliable
source for the information
you want, you can even' use
it as a homework and
school research tool.

have you rolling the dice.
Which to choose is simple:
Select the one thai wi II be the
most siimulming and refreshing.
·
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20)- Usually Ihe media may
be the best source fo,r providing you with interesting news.
However, today the most fascinating bulletins could be revealed at the dinner table.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) - Make time today Io
catch up on all vour correspondence, either by phone,
e-mail or in person . You
might be amazed at all the
new information and data
!here is Io get caught up on.

1\'0IUl SCRIMMAGE-C SOLUTION
BY JUDD HAMBRICK
u,..H F•••ur•
XOJ

-

~..llL

-

~

&gt;dOOWN

Answer
to·
previous
Word
Scrim-

• 87

AVERAGE GAME 240·250

REED

POMEROY - Meigs County
commissioners will not approve
a request from Sheriff Ralph
Trussell to tran sfer funds within
his budget , at· least not until a
civil lawsuit is settled.
Two weeks ago, Trussell
as ked commissioners to consider transfering $29,000 from his
food line item into his salary
line, in order to help make
deputie s' payroll at least
throug\J the end of May,
Trussell said the food appropriation is essentially unnecessary, becituse the county jail has
been closed since late 'last year.
He said he would keep $1 ,000
of $30,000 appropriated in the
fund so that his staff could provide interim meals for priSO\}ers
held in custody for brief periods, if the transfer was
approved.
On Thursday, commissioners
said they have been advised by
their attorney, Tom Luebbers of
Cincinnati , to refrain from making any transfers at all within
Trussell's budget until a lawsuit
Trussell filed e_.Wicr this ye;tr is
decided.
.,
The suit alleges improper and
inadequate appropriations for
Trussell 's operations , and is
now pending in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.

85

AVERAGE GAME 200.210

by JUDD HAMBRICK

FOUR PLAY TOTAL
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

mag~

I WA':l REt:US[O

DID
LEAllll
AU.iliiS
PSWlWWC
SMF'?
~OU

n-.1 A MUSIC
CLUB'

• 0 of A meets, See
page Al .

IX'f5 JUST SAY

~oW

l/ltM~\-\1?

t

~APRWJCT

OF MY TIMES...

• Motivational speaker
coming, See page Al
• Water garden demo
held during Rutland club
meeting, See page AS
Stonny, HI: 70.. Low: 50s .

I

·'••
Olivia CIHk,

3rd tirade,

Pomeroy Elementary

Index
l Sections - Hi Pages

.-

.

~
z

_.,

tWS VtttY GOOl&gt;.

ttt

ALwAYf ~NOwS
Tt4e fliOitTe-fT
l&gt;ISTANCe

~

POMEROY
Prayers for national.
state and local leaders,
for peace and prosperity
' were offered from the
steps of the Meigs
County
Courthouse
Thursday, as Meigs
County o.bserved the
National Day of Prayer.
The event, organized
by a local DaY of Prayer
Committee
led
by
Brenda Barnhart, was
part of a week-long
prayer
observance ,
which included a prayer
and
Bible-readmg
marathon, and a riverfront
con-cert
at
Pomeroy' s amphitheater
Thursday evening .
Members of the clerRobert Crow, pastor of the Harrisonville, Middleport and gy, church members and
Syracuse Presbyterian churches, was one of those who offered elected officials participrayer on beha~ of the elected officials on the national, state pated in Thursday 's
and local levels during Thursday's National Day of Prayer observance at the Meigs County Courtrouse. (Brien J. Reed)
Please see Prayer, AS

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Sports
Weather

www.mydailyientinel .com

Bicentennial
contests planned·
for Meigs County
Competi.tion set
for homecoming
event on May 10
Staff report

POMEROY
- Meigs
County 's Ohio Bicentennial
Committee will hold several
contests in conjunction with
the
Meigs .. County
Homecoming on May 10 at
the Rocksprings Fairgrounds.
Prizes will be souvenir
commemoratives from ·the
Ohio
Bicentennial
and
include Ohio Bicentennial
key chains, Ohio Bicentennial
bears, Cat' s Meow Meigs
County Bicentennial Barns,
Meigs
County
Ohio
Bicentennial Barn pillow s.
and Meigs County Ohio
Bicentennial bell pulls.
Members
of
the
Bicentennial Committee will
also conduct a drawing for an
Ohio Bicentennial throw to
be given away the day of the
Meig s County Homecoming.

Art contest

The Eastern High School Handbell Choir, led by Chris Kuhn , performed patriotic and inspi·
rational music during Thursday's National Day of Prayer observance. (Brian J. Reed)

vote of event vtsltors, with
prizes to be awarded in the
three age categories.
Name, address, phone number and age should be
.attached on back of picture. .
Entries are to be brought to
the
Meigs
County
Fairgrounds between 9 and I 0
a.m. on May I 0 or may be left
at the Meigs County
Museum , 144 Butternut Ave .,
or the Meigs County
Extension Office, Mulberry
Heights, before 4:30 p.m. on
May9.

Cake decorating
contest

A ,cake decorating contest
will be held at the Meig s
County Homecoming on May
10. Rules for entries are as
follows:
The decorated cake should
portray the celebration of
"Ohio's 200th Birthday." The
size of the cake is the choice
of entrant, but should be no
smaller than 8 inches by 8
inches. It should be placed on
a disposable base.
Judging will be based on
appearance, originality and
·conformity to the theme.
Cakes are to be brought to
the
Meigs
County
Fairgrounds between 9 and I o·
a.m. on May ·10 .
Prizes will be awarded.
Following announcement of
winners, cakes will be used in
a cake walk at the Meigs
County Homecoming as a
fund-raiser for tile Meigs
County-Ohio Bicentennial
Committee.
t···

The theme for the art contest will be "Depicting Ohio
!iistory."
Judging will be in three age
categories: 12 and Under, 12
to 18, and adults.
,
Pictures may be in any
medium (oil,' watercolor, pencil, ink, charcoal). The size
should ~ no smaller than
eiglu by~ ~ 0 inches . Painting
or drawing may be on canv;1s,
Mail box
paper, cardboard, wood or
slate. They may be framed or
decorating contest
unframed. All work must be
The
Meigs
County
original and the work of the Historical Society is sponsorentrant.
Judging will be by popular
Please see Contests, AS

I

I

'

New Meigs
Middle
School
opening
Tuesday
.

Inside

··~

• ·1001

BY BRIAN J. REED
Slaff writer

Please see Sheriff, ~5 ·

=

DIRECTiONS: Make a 2· to 7·1fttter MYd from thflle!ters on II&amp;Ch yarellne.
Add poin\s to each word or letti&amp;f using scoring djrectlooa at rtght. Se11an-lstter
woras oet a 60-polnt bonus. All words_can be IOU"ICI tn Websteno New World
co- Oictiona'Y ·
JUDD'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

~78

JUDO'S TOTAL

0
0

41h DOWN

Syrclie... . 1nt

catchinll up.

SCOkPH) (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) - Use your know-how
today to help another do
something she or he has been
unable to ftgure out, and Ihis
person, in turn, will come
through for you on another
matter irn(lortaniio you.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23- .

J.

Staff writer

Astrograph
Friday. May 2. 2003

FRIDAY, MAY 2, 2003

50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 179

AS
BB4-6
B7
B7
A4
·As
B 1-3
A2

( 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

_Open house
Sunday
BY J. MILES lAYTON
Stiiff writer

ROCK SPRINGS - The
finishing touches are going
on the new Meigs Middle
School, so that it can be
open for classes Tuesday.
Meigs
Local
Superintendent Bill Buckley
said the school will be open
for business for at least 488
students and 30 teachers
next week. pending a final
inspection.
"We really look forward
to the school opening ,"
Buckley said. "Everything
seems to be in order, and we
have jumped through all the
hoops to get lhis place
ready."
The district will hold an
open house from 2 to 5 p.m.
Sunday for the community
to see for themselves what
the new $1 I million build.
ing offers.
The . 70,000 squ are . foot
building located on the hill
overlooking Meig s High
School includes 15 regular
classrooms,' three science
labs, seven special education ·classrooms, one computer lab, a life skills class-

,.
room, a music room , an art
room, a library a gymnasium, a cafeteria, . plenty of
storage rooms, administrative, space and a nurse's
room .
Buckley said the 7,000
square foot gymnasium will
seat 500, and that the 3,000
square foot c~feteria and
kitchen area is more than ·
adequate to accommodate
the 940 sludents attending
the school.
"The cafeteria already has
food in it and is ready to
start
serving
lunch,"
Buckley said .
· The building has a first
floor of 5 I ,000 square feet,
a second floor of '18,000
square feet, and an equipment mezzanine of 800
square feet.
.
Principal Mary 0 ' Brien
was a frequent visitor the
school this past week as she
organized and set up things
for the days ahead. Chairs, The new library has lots of space available to house a growing collection of books and periodbooks and other things icals . Unlike President Abe LinColn, who had to read by candlelight to further his education,
needed to be in place.
there is a lot natural light coming from a huge window which overlooks a scenic valley. (J. Miles
· ·
'
"I'm e11.cited and I want Layton)
thi s to be a place where people walk in and think this is video cameras placed at more should there be ,a need.
John Sharp , a social studBuckley said junior high ies teacher, already has his
a place for education." she strategic point s throughout
the building.
.
sat d.
students will get a chance to room decorated and ready
The security system cam- tour the school before it for the students.
In addition to ol~- fash­
ioned methods of teachers eras can zoom in and foe us opens.
"We're blessed for sure ,"
patrolling the halls to disci- with the touch of a switch.
Many teachers nave spent he said . "We are happy to
pline students who step out Buckley said the school has the last few weeks moving get in at the end of the
year...
of line, the school has II the option of adding five into their new classrooms.

I

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BtTwfeN Two

oil~
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Joint Replacement

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C:::

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To attend, patients must have been seen by a Holzer physician o~d
scheduled for a joint procedure within the month.

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ME 0 I CAL C.E N T E R
Discover the Holzer Difference

For more information,

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Call (740) 446·5161

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;ponsored by lhe Holzer Medical Cenler Pre-Admission Deportment in conjunction wilh

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HMC Social Services,.Therapy Services, Dielory, Chaplaincy Services,
Respiralory lheropy and Nursing Educa~on.

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www.holzer.org

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·Local • Ohio ·

'

The Daily,Sentinel

Friday, May 2, 2003

Mini maestro

Saturday, May 3

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W. VA

0 2003 AccuWeather, tnc.

Sl.rlny Pt. CIQidy

Snow

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&gt;.~·0~/

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

rain 20 percent.
Saturday... Partly cloudy with
a slight chance of showers.
Highs in the mid 60s. North
winds 5 to I0 mph. Chance of
rain 20 percent.
Saturday
night...Partly .
cloudy. Lows in the mid 40s.
EXl!NDED FORECAST
Sunday... Mostly
sunny.
Highs in the lower 70s.
Sunday night...Increasing
cloudiness with a chance of late
night showers. Lows near 50.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Monday... Mostly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the upper
60s.
Thesday... Mostly cloudy with
a chance of showers and !hunderstormS. Lows in the lower
50s and highs in the lower 70s.
Wednesday... A chance of
showers and thunderstorms
during the day, otherwise partly
cloudy. Lows in the .lower 50s
and highs in the lower 70s.

Inmate died of infection

Local Stocks
AEP - 25.73
Arch Coal -18.11
Akio - 22 .34
AmTech/SBC - 23.29
Ashland Inc. - 29 .55
AT&amp;T -16.77
Bank One- 36
BLI - 12.42
Bob Evens - 25 .18
BorgWarner- 58.58
Champion - 2.89
Charming Shops - 4.50
City Holding - 29.34
Col--2t .43
·
DG -14.71
DuPont - 41 .99

Federal Mogul - .1 4
USB- 22.46
Ganne« - 75.08
General Electrtc - 29.to
GKNLY-3.50
Hartey Davidson- 43.74
Kmart - .7
Kroger - 14.88
Ltd . -13.89
NSC- 20.97
Oak H~ Financial- 24.27
OVB- 22.75
BBT - 32.85
Peoples - 23.67
Pepsico - 43.76
Premier- 9.45

Rockwell - 22.44 ·
Rocky Boots- 8.09
RD Shell- 41 .35 ·
Sears - 27.53
Wai-Mart - 55.94
Wendy's - 28.86
Worthington - 13,64
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
day's transactions, provided by Smith Partners
at · Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

COLUMBUS (AP) - No
venomous spiders have been
!Ound at a prison where prisoners were 1reated for infected
sores and a 19-year-{)ld inmate
died of a blood infection after
complaining of a spider bite.
Sean Schwamberger was one
of at least 32 inmates ·treated
with antibiotics for the sores in
recent weeks at the Pickaway
Correctional Institution in
Orient, state prisons spokeswoman Andrea Dean said.

Many said they thought they
had been binen by something,
she said, but they didn't know
what.
Schwarnberger died Tuesday
at Ohio State University
Medical Center, where he'd
been sent April 20 after passing
out in the prison exercise yard.
An autopsy Thursday showed
he died of a bloo.:l infection,
Franklin County Coroner Brad
Lewis said, but that did not rule
out a spider bite.

Banner.''
Members reported that Opal
Eichinger
and
Margaret
Amberger had been ill, and that
Greta Davis had been recently
hospitalized. .
Logan and Little Hocking
chapters will be joining the coun-

•

•

.. l
•

cil, it was announced

Erma Cleland shared an

"Easter Meditation," and Esther

Smith, "Night Before Easter-."
Mary Jo Barringer and Mary
Holter were remembered with
gifts in honor of Secretary's
Week.

AUTOMOTIVE
Norris Northup Dodge

City of Point Pleasant

www.nonisnorthupdodge.com

www.polntpleasantwv.org

Senate ·passes bill.to expand refuge
also would include the Lake tors. · It contributes about
$5 .6 million a year to the
Erie islands.
Land available from a will- area's economy, according to
ing seller within these the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
boundaries would be pur- Service.
The bill was co-sponsored
chased by the federal government and added to the in the House by Democratic
refuge, which was created in · Reps. Marcy Kaptur of
1961 and now covers more Toledo, Ohio, and John
than 9,000 acres. Tile pr_o- ,Oingell of Michigan. It also
posed addition could add would expand the southern
boundary of the Detroit
another 5,000 acres.
Each _year; the refuge River International Wildlife
attracts about 130,000 visi- Refuge in Michigan .

lhl ,., . . . . Ill
DWIIbJf,.... ...... -, ._,.,
Gallia-Meigs Community
·Action Agency is offering free
. 'homehuytr edNcation ~lasses
for anyone interested in pur,chasing and maintaining
their own 'home.
Topics.covered durh:•g the classes
Include:

•Budgetinc
-•Fiftllndna

&lt;ndltluues
•SIIopplna for yor hotH
!

ranee
-Lnpllssues
»Heme Maintenance
•w.tdna with R•l Estate AaWIItl
For more Information about attending
these fr- claeees, call
(i40) H2-8129 or (740) 448 1018

Don't forget her!!!

M"thers Day·

'

Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

WASHINGTON (AP) The U.S. Senate unanimously approved a bill Thursday
that would expand the
boundaries of two wildlife
refuges along the Lake Erie
coastline.
Sen . George Voinovich
said the bill, which now is on
its way to President Bush for
his signature, would protect
Ohio and Michigan wetlands
and the wildlife that depend
on it.
"As a fi sherman, boater
and outdoorsman who has
lived on the north coast of
Ohio all my life, I'm glad for
this chance to help the refuge
thrive," said Voinovich, ROhio.
'
Under the bill, the Ottawa
National Wildlife Refuge in
northern · Ohio would be
extended to Maumee Bay
State Park in the west and to
state Route 2 in the south . It

133 Court St
. Historic
Downtown .
Pomeroy

..•

Daughters of America meet
CHESTER
Chester
Council 323 Daughters of
America met recently at the hall,
with Doris Grueser presiding.
Members recited the Pledge to
the American Aag, the Christian
Aag, and scripture from 1saiah,
and sang "The Star Spangled

I.

The Ohio Valley Youth Orchestra will have their Spring
Concert at 2 p.m. on Saturday at the Ariel Theatre in downtown Gallipolis. The winner of the "Mini Maestro for a
Moment" will be announced at tile concert. Candidates who
are up for the honor are pictu red, left to right, Pete Harnish
of Athens, Meagan Barrows of McArthu r; Megan Johnson of
Chillicothe, and Sara Dovyak of Gallipolis. Candidates have
been raising money for th.e honor, with all funds raised
going to the Ohio Valley Youth Orchestra. The candidate with
the most money wil l earn the llaton and honor of conducting "Stars and Stripes Forever. " Donations will also be
taken the day of the conce rt at the Ariel. For more information, please call Pam Dovyak at 446-3154, Scott Michal at
(7 40) 596-3614, or the Ariel Theatre at 446-ARTS (2787).

Ice

Showers possible Saturday
A cold front was moving
south this morning and it should
move well south of the Ohio
river by this evening. There will
be a small chance for a few
'showers today, but high pressure building in from the north
will bring in drier air, putting an
end to any significant wet
weather.
This dry stretch should
extend through the upcoming
weekend, although there could
be a small threat for more
showers and thunderstorms
Sunday night.
The mercury will only climb
back through the 60s. Similar
temperatures are likely on
Saturday, although sunshine
will help to take the edge off the
cool temperatures.
WEATHER RIR£CA5T
Tonight ... Mostly cloudy with
a slight chance of showers.
Lows in .the lower 50s. North
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance of

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•

NATIONAL VIEW

Inadequate
Housingfunding does not
consider growing HIV population
• The Times-Picayune, New Orleans, on housing for people ll'irlr AIDS: The federal program Housing Opportunities
for People With AIDS is designed to provide financial assistance to needy Americans who are livmg with HIV or AIDS.
However. the formu la that the U.S. Department of Housing
and Urban Development uses to allocate money to localagencie- is fundamentall y flawed, and to make matters worse the
money has been slow to trickle from Washing!On to the people who need it.
Not everyone who tests positive for HIV has AIDS, the
ucauly disease that the virus causes. The federal program is
,upposed to help people with HIV pay their housi.ng and utility &lt;.:osts. regardless of whether they have actually developed
AIDS. But fundin g is based solely on the number of people
with AIDS .
·
But the number of people with HIV is still growing, and the
HUD money is supposed to help them, too. So local agencies
oavc to divide a decreasing pool of money among an increasi;ng number of needy clients.
• Serving more people with less money just isn't possible. An
~tV-positive person's rent and utility bills don't drop just
oecause the amount of federal money available declines. HUD
6fflcials need to rework tl;Ie formula to reflect the growing
number of needy people who are living with HIV They
shouldn't offer services to those living with mv and then
i;gnore their existence as they dole out dollars.
· It" s laudable that community groups are working as hard as
they are, but it shouldn 't have come to this. Funding for a program as important as this one should have come much sooner. And the formulas used for that funding should accurately
retlect the number of people in need.

'

:TODAY IN HISTORY
' .

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

; Today is Friday, May 2, the 122nd day .of 2003. There are
?43 days left in the year.
: Today ·s Highlight in History:
: On . May 2, 1863, Confederate Gen. Thomas "Stonewall"
Jackson was accidentally wounded by his own men at
Chancellorsville, Va.; he died eight days later.
· On this date:
In 1519, artist Leonardo da Vinci died at Cloux, France.
· In 1670, the Hudson Bay Company was chartered by
England's King Charles II.
· In IR'IU. the Oklahoma Territory was organized.
.
In I932, Jack Benny's first radio show made its debut on the
NBC Blue Network.
In 1936. "Peter and the Wolf," a symphonic tale for children
by Sergei Prokotiev. had its world premiere in Moscow.
In 1945. the Soviet Union announced the fall of Berlin, and
the Allies announced the surrender of Nazi troops in Italy and
parts uf Austria.
In 1957. Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy, the controversial
Republican from Wisconsin, died at Bethesda Naval Hospital
in Maryland .
In 1960, convicted sex offender and best-selling author
Cary l Chessman was executed at San Quentin Prison in
California .
In 1965. the •'Early Bird" satellite was used to transmit teleYision pictures across the Atlantic .
In 1972. after serving 48 years as head of the FBI, J. Edgar
Hoover died in Washington at age 77 .
Ten years ago: Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic
approved a plan to end the Bosnian war (however, the Bosnian
Serb assem bly rejected it four days later). Authorities said
they had reco vered the remains of David Koresh. from the
.hurne.d-out Branch Davidian compound near Waco, Texas.
Five years ago: In separate radio addresses, President
Clinton and congress ional Republicans lambasted the Internal
Re ve nue Service and promised more reforms to prevent abuses by the tax-collecting agency in the future. "Real Quiet"
won the Kentuc ky Derby.
On e year ago: Yasser Arafat emerged from hi s West Bank
headquarters. hours after after Israeli troops withdrew from
hi' compound and released the Palestinian leader from
months of m nfinement. The Rev. Paul Shanley, a priest at the
epice nter of the clergy sex abuse scandal, turned himself in to
atlthoritie' in San Diego to face charges in Massachusetts of
rclping hoy' during the 1980s (Shanley has pleaded innocent,
and i' awaiting trial).
Today"s Birthdays: Actor Theodore Bikel is 79. Actor
Rmcoe Lee Browne is 78. Rock musician Link Wray is 74.
Bianca Jagge r is 58. Country singer R.C. Bannon is 58. Singer
Le,ley Gore. is 57. Singer-songwriter Larry Gatlin is 55. Rock
,;nge r Lou Gramm (Foreigner) is 53. Actress Christine
Bara'nski i' 5 L. Singer Angela Bofill is 49. Actress Elizabeth
Berridge i., 4 1. Country singer Ty Herndon i$ 41. Wrestler~c t or The Rock (~way ne Johnson) is 31 . Actress Jenna Von
Oy i' 26. Olympic gold medal figure skater Sarah Hughes is
18.
, Thought for Today: "Have you ever observed that we pay
much more attention w a wise passage whe n it is quoted than
when we read it , in the original author?" - Phil ip G.
Hamerton . Eng lish artist and essayist ( 1834-1894).

-·o

What_ is your favorite Bible passage?
I'm guessing that since the
Sept. II , 200 I , attacks, the
number of people who had
gone to their bookshelves to
take down their dusty Bibles
has increased dramatically.
And I'm guessing that the
number increased again after
the war with Iraq brok.;: out.
It is customary for , us to
reach for the Bible and to fall
down on our knees in prayer
in times of stress and trouble.
The passages in the Bible we
tum to in such moments, and
the prayers we say, are familiar ones.
I was visiting an old friend
in the hospital a few months
ago. I opened the Bible I had
brought with me to Psalm 91
and read the ancient words.
You, too, probably know
them by heart: "He that
dwelleth in the secret place
of the Most High shall abide
under the shadow of the
Almighty.... "
"I was hoping you would
read that," he said and his
e'yes began to water.
Since then I have been asking people what their favorite
Bible passages are. Psalm .90
("Lord, thou has been our
dwellin~ place in all generations .... ') and Psalm 91 have
· been mentioned several
times . One man chose
Hebrews 12:2: ''Looking
unto Jesus, the author and
finisher of our faith ; who for
the joy that was set before
him endured the cross ... "
Someone s ug~ested I poll
the readers of th1s column for

George
Plagenz

their favorite Bible passages.
.So that is what I am going to
do. At the end of today's column you will find a post
office box number where you
can mail your selection. The
results will be announced in a
few weeks.
· Of course, people read the
Bible for all sorts of reasons
(some better than others). A
man I knew who worked at
the Harvard Club in Boston
claimed he was an atheist and
from all I could gather, he
was. He was well-read in
most of the philosophers and
he was also well-read in the
Bible.
He used to be a doorman at
a hotel in New York and he
always carried a Bible with
him. People would often see
him with a pencil in his hand
underlining passages in the
Bible.
"They thought I was awfully religious," he once said to
me. "But do you know what I
was doing? I was underlining
all the contradictions I found
in the Bible."
A lot of us approach the
Bible in a similar way, Our

mouths are so full of questions about it that every time
we open the Bible one spills
out: Is the Bible true? Do you
believe in miracles? What
about the virgin birth? Is the
Sermon on the Mount ("Love
your enemies," etc.) really
practical?
We forget that the Bible is
for nourishment, not for
argument.
Then there was the private
in World War II that Howard
Whitman wrote about in his
book, "A Reporter in Seanch
of God" (Doubleday, 1953 ).
This soldier used to climb a
hill near his camp and go up
there so he could· be alone
with God. He carried a Bible
with him but he never opened
it. "I just wanted to show
God I was on his side," the
soldier said.
Well, no one would want to
despise that. There is a certain assurance a person gets
from having a Bible with him
in his pocket - just there.
It's a little like having someone you care for in the same
room with you even though
neither of you is saying a
word.
But we do have to open it
once in a while, too. When
things go wrong in our lives
and troubles begin to pile up
and we don't know what to
do. After we 've tried this and
that and all the while, there
on the table lies the Bible shut tightly. This is when the
assurance of a closed Bible
must be heightened to the

relief of an opened one.
There are many who fmd
in the Bible a veritable treasure trove of help and inspiration. What are the beloved
passages these people keep
going back to again and
again? Sometimes there is a
story that goes with their
favorite Bible passage. I like
this story:
A missionary •was translating the Bible for a native
tribe in the Sou_th Pacific. But
when he came to John 3:16
he was stumped. There was
no word in the native dialect
for the word "believe."
Then one day as he was
taking a walk he saw a large
man stretched out on a hammock, a picture of peace and
contentment. In that instant
he had the word he was
searching for. The hammock
was the key to the locked
door. He went back to his hut
and translated John 3:16 in
these words:
"For God so loved the
world that he gave his onlybegotten son that whoever
(rests all his weight on him
- i.e.: 'believe') shall not
perish but have everlasting
life."
What is your favorite Bible
passage? Send it and any
story that may go with. it to
Favorite Bible Verses, Box ·
06580, Columbus, Ohio
43206.
(Geor8e R. Plagenz is a
colummst for Newsraper
Enterprise AssociatiOn.)

Prayer

Obituaries

Contests

Mary Louise
Perry ·

from Page A1

from Page A1

ing a ~ail Box Decorating
Contest in recognition of the
Bicentennial of Ohio. The
mailboxes will be exhibited
and judged at the Meigs
County Homecoming. .
All Meigs County residents are asked to decorate
a mailbox and submit it for
judging.
·Entrants may . use their
existing mailbox, buy one
or build a(\ origjnal de sig n.
It should meet U.S. Postal
Service guidelines, but does
not have to be a box in use.
It can be a rural or free standing type of box or the
type seen in town , attached
to a home. There will be
three age groups: 18 and
over; I 0 to 18 and under 10.
Winners will be choserl in
each age group and category (rural or freestanding
and attached).
Completed
mailboxe s
should be taken to the
Meigs County Mu seum ,
Ma~ 8, or to the Mei gs
County
Homecoming,
where all Mailboxe s will be
judged,
and
winners
announced at 5 p.m .

hour-long prayer service,
and yout h groups, including
the Mid -Valley Chri stian
School Choir and the
Eastern
High · School
Handbell Choir, performed
inspirational mu sic.
The National Day of
Prayer is observed annually
on the first Thursday of
May, by virtue of a proclamation from Presi dent
Bush .

MASON, W.Va. - Mary
Louis King Perry, 78, of
Mason, died Friday, May 2,
2003, at Pleasant Valley
Hospital in Point Pleasant,
West Virginia.
She was born January 24,
1925, in Pine Grove, West
,'Q'irginia, daughter of the late .
James A. and Opal Edna
Wildman King.
She was a secretary for the
West Virginia State Road
Commission District in
Charleston, West Virginia .
She was a member of the
Mason United Methodist
Church.
Surviving are a son,
Stephen Todd Russ.ell of
Mason; a brother, John
Marshall 'King of Reedsville;
and seven grandchildren.
"Besides her parents, she
was preceded in death by her
her husband, Edw!!rd Lee
Perry, in 1994; a daughter,
Linda Lee Frye; and a brother, James Ralph King.
Graveside services will be
II a.m. Monday, May 5,
2003, at Suncrest Cemetery
in Point Pleasant with the
Rev. Samuel Cale officiating.
Friends may call from 6 to
9 p.m. Sunday, May4, 2003;
at Fogelsong-Tucker Funeral
Home in Mason.

Deaths
Dan Buffington
, ALBANY
Dan
Christopher Buffington, 44,
Albany,
passed
away
Thursday, May I, 2003, at
Cabeii-Huntington Hospitl\),
Huntington, W.Va.
,Arrangements will be
apnounced by Ewing Funeral
Home .

LOcal Briefs
Plan dinner
REEDSVILLE - Olive
TownshiP. Fire Department
and Auxtliary will hold their
annual rib dinner on Sunday,
with serving beginning at II
a.m ...

The meal will include
meat, baked potato, salad,
dessert and cola for $6.

Immunizations
offered
•

. POMEROY
Meigs
County Health Department
will conduct a childhood
immunization clinic from I
to 7 p.m. on Tuesday, at the
office at 112 E. Memorial
Drive.
Children must be accompanied by a parent or legal
guardian, and shot records
must be provided.

'
President
Bush greets an unidentified sailor after landing in. a small jet on the USS
Abraham Lincoln off the California coast Thursday. Bush declared that major combat in
Iraq is finished during a speech aboard the carrier. (AP)
·
.

.

Bush visit adds to crew excitement
as USS Lincoln nears San Diego
BY CHELSEA

J.

CARTER

Associated Press
ABOARD THE USS
ABRAHAM LINCOLN Still giddy after a visit from
President Bush, thousands of
war-weary sailors set about
packing up and preparing to
once again touch dry land
after more than nine months
at sea.
Some 2,500 sailors on the
USS Abraham Lincoln who
gathered on the flight desk of
the aircraft carrier cheered
wildly Thursday as Bush told
them they were "homeward
bound" after one of the
longest carrier deployments
in recent U.S. military history.
Petty Officer 2nd Class
Delphine Djossou, 28, of
Washington, D.C., who later
shared a table with the president during dinner said she
was too excited to touch her
meal of steak, lobster, crab
and shrimp.
"I didn't eat anything. I
talked the whole time," said
the sailor.
Djossou and others , said
they were surprised by how

down-to-earth Bush seemed.
Petty Officer I st Class Will
Harthoorn, 41, of Stockton,
Calif., recalled the president
telling him he fixes coffee for
his wife every morning, the
same ritual Harthoom said he
follows when he's home.
"He goes and makes his
wife a cup of coffee every
morning. He said that is the
most important thing you
need to do," Harthoom said
the president told him.
Petty Officer I st Class
Theodore Morales, 37, of
Tucson, Ariz., indicated he
couldn't wait to share the
memory of having a meal
with a Bush with his 7-weekold son, Chance.
"Maybe one day be' ll say
'Hey, .my dad met the commander in chief,"' he said.
Chance was one of 150
babies born to fathers away
on the Lincoln, a point not
lost on Bush during his
speech. "Your families are
proud of you and yow' nation
will welcome you," he said.
Many of the 5,000, sailors
said it will be some time
before they forget their last
'day away from port, and sev-

eral praised Bush for making
it special.
"It's like when you thought
everybody forgot about you,"
said Djossou. "He came out
here and made everything
better because he didn't forget."
After dinner, some of the
excitement over the presidential visit was replaced by the
anticipation of arriving home.
Sailors packed up their
clothes and computers and
lined up at phones to make
last-minute arrangements to
meet loved ones.
Airman Denise Burt. 23, of
Grand Rapids, Mich., won't
be among the ones leaving
the ship in San Diego on
Friday, however. She is part
of the·crew that will return the
carrier to its home port of
Everett, Wash., in a few days.
She hopes it won't be so
long that her 13-month-old
daughter, Amaya, forgets her.
"I sent an e-mail picture of
myself and they told me she
tried to grab it out of the computer," she said. "I guess that
means she knows me."

What are
master
'gardeners?

And now, let's consider North Korea
When President Bush took
office in January 200 I, three
relatively small but unambiguously hostile nations
were actively seeking to
become nuclear powers:
North Korea, Iraq and Iran.
In the wake of Sept. II , Bush
called this problem to the
attention of the nation and
the world, forthrightly labeling them an "axis of evil."
Of the three, North Korea
posed the most imminent
danger, thanks 10 the disastrous mishandling of that
by
President
problem
Clinton. When it became
clear in 1993 that North
Korea was on the verge of
producing a nuclear weapon
(and indeed might already
have produced at least one),
Clinton sent Jimmy Carter to
Pyongyang to negotiate a settlement. In return for North
Korea's promise to halt its
nuclear program, the socalled Jo\greed Framework of
1994 pledged to provide both
food and fuel to North Korea.
Unfortunately, no inspection
procedures to enforce this
agreement were insisted
upon .
.
·
By 1998, it was clear that
North Korea had simply
shifted from one method of
making a nuclear bomb (plu'tonium processing) to another (uranium enrichment) and
was thus violating the agree-

William
Rusher

ment. If Clinton had really
wanted to resolve an international crisis to add luster to
his legacy, here was his
chance. Instead, in a dazzling
combination of cowardice
and cynicism, he simply left
the problem on his succes•.
sor's doorstep.
UtiHzing the momentum
afforded by the American
people's response to Sept. 11,
·Bush moved to confront the
danger. Wisely, he chose to
force the issue with Iraq first,
since . Saddarn Hussein was
believed nearer to acquiring
ftuclear capability than Iran
- to becoming, in other
words, another North Korea.
In just three and a half weeks,
he ended Saddam's ambition
forever.
Right in the middle of the
crisis over Iraq, North
Korea's Kim Jong II sought
to blackmail the United
States with a series of bloodcurdling threats, which have
continued off and on ever

since. To their credit,
President Bush and Secretary
of State Powell refused to
panic - declining even to
describe the North Korean
situation as a "crisis." But
with Iraq cleansed of Saddam
Hussein, we can be sure that
their, attention is refocusing
- laser-like ·- on North
Korea. (Iran remains a danger, but a less pressing one,
and the mullahs there face
serious threats to their power
from millions of young,
democratically
inclined
Iranians .)
. The best guess is that
North Korea probably still
possesses those one ·or two
nuclear bombs, plus missiles
capable of reaching South
Korea and Japan, and the
ability to make a bomb per
month, thanks to Clinton. On
Wednesdays and Saturdays,
Kim Jong II asserts that he is
actually producing more
bombs and intends to use or
sell them; on Thursdays and
Sundays, hi s government
calls these statements mistranslations from the Korean.
Whatever the truth of the
matter. there is no question
that North Korea must, one
way or another, be prevented
from establishing itself as a
nuclear power. As with Iraq,
the alternative is for · the
United States to spend the
21st century under threat of a

from Page A1
"Our attorney did not 'forbid the transfer, but he did
advise us against making any
transfers from (Trussell 's)
general fund appropriations
until the lawsuit is settled,"
Commissioner Jim Sheets
said . "The lawsuit deal s with
appropriations , and we have
been advised that any appropriations adjustments would
be ill advised while the suit is
pending."
Without the $29,000 transfer, Trussell said hi s salaries
line item will be entirely
deleted by the end of May,
and that another wholesale
layoff of deputies would be
; necessary.

'

;:•GM:ten
section.
&gt;

Tornadoes leave path of damage.
BROKEN BOW, Okla.
CAP) - Tornados swept
across eastern Oklahoma
overnight, damaging, homes
and overturning tratlers but
causin!l no major injuries,
authonties said Friday.
Several businesses were
damaged, cars were overturned and . tree limbs littered Broken Bow, a town
of about 4,000 in the southeast corner of the state,
authorities said. Much of
the town was still without
electricity early Friday.
The twisters began developing about 6 p.m. and
moved
east-southeast

across Oklahoma and into
Arkansas , the National
Weather Service reported.·
A sheriff's dispatcher in
Polk County, Ark., said
rootiops had been blown off
some homes between Board
Camp and Big Fork, near
the Oklahoma border, but
no injuries had been reported. Emergency workers had
to use chainsaws ·to clear
trees in roadways so they
could reach damaged
homes.
Near Muskogee, in eastcentral Oklahoma, one or
more tornadoes destroyed
two mobile homes and dam-

aged others, the sheriff's
office said. The storm also
knocked down power lines
and trees near the Port of
Muskogee and damaged an
Oklahoma Gas &amp; Electric
Co. plant.
Jim Liels said he and his
family struggled to get out
their back door to a storm
cellar when the sirens
sounded in Broken Bow.
"We got it open and
debris was going over our
heads and it was taking up
trees and buildings," Liels
said.

(PG13) 7:30 &amp; 9:30
ITANI'IINOADAM U.NDLI!". JACK NICMOLION

The Daily Sentinel
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Correction Polley
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Public
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Saturday, May 3
SYRACUSE - Sutton
Township
Trustees,
7:30
HARRISONVILLE
'
Saturday, May 3
p.m
.,
Syracuse
Village
Hall.
Harrisonville
Lodge
411,
. PORTLAND - Lebanon
F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m .. at hall .
Township Trustees, 7 p.m.,
Tuesday,
May
6
Refreshments.
tbwnship building.
'
ALFRED
-Orange
Township Trustees, 7:30
Sunday, May 4
Monday, May 5
~.m . , home of the clerk,
RACINE
Racine
RACINE
Racine
Osie
Follrod.
Chapter 134, Order of
Village council meeting in
Eastern Star, practice for
regular session, 7 p.m.,
officers
for inspection, 2
council chambers.
p.m.
CARPENTER
'
Monday, May 4
Columbia
Township
Friday May 2
RACINE
- Annual
Trustees will hold theinegMIDDLEPORT- Annual
inspection
of
Racine
ular monthly meeting at inspection for Middleport
7:30 p.m. Monday at the Masonic Lodge, 7:30 p.m., Chapter 134, Order of
Columbia
. Township Masonic Hall. Dinner at Eastern Star, 7:30 p.m.
Refreshments ·follow.
6:30.
Firehouse.

Clubs and
Organizations

Social Events
Saturday, May 3
ALFRED- Alfred United
Methodist Church breaklast, 7 to 11 a .m. Auction,
10 a,.m. Public invited.

Birthdays
Sunday, May 4
CHESTER - Ethel Orr,
formerly of Chester, will
celebrate her 98th birthday
on May 4. Cards may be
sent to Northview Senior
Living Center, 267 North
Main St., Johnstown, Ohio
43031 .

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afternoon .
Monday through Friday, 111 Court
Street. Pomeroy, Ohio. Second·
class postage paid at Pomeroy.
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Newspaper

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45769 .

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Community Calendar

nuclear weapon smuggled
into this country and detonated, killing hundreds of thousands. If Nohh Korea denied
doing it, we couldn't even
prove she was lying.
The solution is plain
enough. In the words of The
New York Times, "The goal
of negotiations should be
nothing less than getting the
North to give up its nuclear
ambitions, rejoin the nonproliferation treaty and allow
intrusfve inspections. ... (In
return) Washmgton is willing
to consider security guarantees, diplomatic recognition
and economic aid."
But what if Kim Jong II
refuses? His one or two
bombs have never been tested, but we must assume they
might be able to vaporize
Seoul or Tok:,:o . And short of
that, he has an army of a million men along his country's
border with South Korea,
within 2.5 miles of Seoul.
What it would take to eliminate those bombs, and incapacitate that army, are grim
questions indeed, with even
~mmer. answers. But if Kim
tnsists, this country will have
no choice.
(William Rusher is a
Distinguished Fellow of the
Claremont Institute for the
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.)

Sheriff

· Flnd..out1n
~uriday'a Home &amp;

(740) 992-2156. .

•
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The Daily Sentinel• Page AS

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

Friday, May 2, 2003

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

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Friday, May 2, 2003

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FREE Inspection of Your Child Passenger Safety Seats
• Saturday, May 3, 2003
Fer ••r• llflrllltlll:
• Pleasant Valley Well ness Center
314·815·4141. Ext. 1128
• I p.m. to 3 p.m.
• In co~junction with the Pleasant Valley Hospit;ll Baby Fair
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PageA6

Faith • Values

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, May 2, 2003

Don't tell the
In :many C~tholic .paris.hes, the
birds to shut up! majority of 'altar boys' are gi~ls

F~llowsWp

Apostolfc

Church of Jesus Christ Apostolic
VanZandt and Ward Rd., Pas lur: James
Miller. Sunday Sthllll l - 10: 30 a. m.,
Even ing -7:30 p.m.

NtESSE
Associated Press
BY MARK

ATLANTA (AP) - As soon
as she was old enough, thirdgrader Ellen Clarke joined the
first wave of girl altat servers,
helping break up a club
reserved for Roman Catholic
GUEST VIEW
boys fo r centuries.
Seven years liner, the 15year-old is still serving, but now
'" sing among the ·branches."
she·s surrounded by other girls
Micaiah stared blankly at me.
helping out priests and deacons
While ) can identify with
on Sundays at Atlanta's Our
Micaia h about having the
Lady of the Assumption
grumps some mornings. his
church.
.disposition toward the birds
Altar serving has become so ·
typitles the complaining attipopular with girls that they outtudes people often have connumber the boys in many
up!"
cerning the bl ess ings of God.
parishes. That's exaclly what
I gritted my teeth. I just did
For ex.ample, rain · is a
some in the church feared when
not feel like havi ng to serve blessing, but we complain
the Vatican allowed female
as referee so early in the day. when the rain makes mud.
servers in 1994.
The sun is a blessing, but. we
Where was their mother?
Before girls could serve,
I could only imagine that repine when its shine makes
many parents pushed boys into
Jeshua was bossing Micaiah the temperature too hot. Life
allar serving, especially in
around about some thing, or is a blessing,~but we lament
churches with shortages. Girls Altar girls, from left, Samantha Madrid, 15, and Ellen Clarke. 15, watch Kelly Thompson,9, help
that Jamin was humming one with di scontent when all of it
have now taken over in some Amanda Madrid, 10, with her robe as they all wait for the service to beg1n at Our Lady of the
of his little tunes just to be an is not alwavs convenient.
parishes, which has ' made it
irritant. These boys of ours
We need"to be careful how
easy for boys to drop out. Assumption Catholic Church in Atlanta; April 18. Altilr serving, which for centu ries was a boys-only
are constantly doing deliber- we complain about the blessThat's bad news for a cburch domain, has become so popular with girls that they outnumber the boys in many parishes. (AP )
ate things to turn each other's ings of God. Scripture is
already suffering from a priest
screw.
instmctive on this point as it
~hortage - because altat ~rv- attractive in some ways," said participating in the same activiAnd priests such as
Finally, Micaiah let it np, recorded Israel's complaint
mg
~as
always
bee~
a
pnme
Lynne
Amault,
director
of
ties.
Most
servers
participate
Monsignor
Stephen
"I said- SHUT UP!'"
about the Manna God suprecruitmg ground lor future · women's studies at Le Moyne between fourth and ninth Chu rchwell say letting girls on
"What 's going on in plied for their daily food durpnests.
College, a Jesuit school in grades.
the altar has increased overall
there?" I roared in response. ing the years of their exodus.
"Girls
can't
do
that
much
in
Syracuse,
N.Y.
Twelve-year-old
Molly
youth
interest in Mass.
So, God sent them birds,
That got the parental dander
the
church.
I
guess
that
was
a
Now
that
they've
tinally
got
Rolfes
said
it
doesn't
matter
to
The
church still struggles to
activated. I stomped- across lots and lots of birds. God
way to get more girls a chance to serve. girls want to kids who wears the white robes lind boys who might want to
the hallway, and positioned mustered up a great wind that
involved," said Clarke, who do it, Arnault said.
on any given Sunday because become priests, "but being a
myself in the doorway ready blew in scads of quail for
wore
jeans
and
a
T-shirt
while
No
one
keeps
track
.
of
the
most servers volunteer for sim- server doesn' t automatically
for action .
them to eat. But, the people
practicing
recently
for
Easter
exact
number
of
altar
servers
ilar
reasons- to get more out lead you to be ordained a
There sat Micaiah on the soon lost their appetite. and
services. "I do it to give back to mitionwide, but altar girls have of church and to be able to par- priest," said' Churchwell, a
edge of his bed, with one leg the co mplaints started all
the community, and it makes become an increasingly fami 1- ticipate rather than sit, kneel priest at St. Luke the Evangelist
crossed, putting on a sock. over agam.
going
to church a lot more iar sight carrying the cross. and stand for an hour.
in Dahlonega.
The window by his bed was
This entire matter may be
interesting."
washing
the
priest's
hands
and
"There's
not
a&gt;
many
distmcThere hasn't been enough
open , and a cool breeze was considered from the standIn less than a decade, girls lighting capdles during Ma,s,. lions - you're paying attention time to tell whether fewer altat
blowing through the room. point of Manna versus meat,
have
flocked to the altat in say priests and parishioners.
. to what you have to do instead boy&gt; wi ll lead to difficulties
But, there was no one else in or sunshine versus rain. But
some
churches.
At
Our
Lady
of
At
least
two
dioceses
in
the
of what's going on aro und gelling men to enter the priestthe room with him .
the question will always conthe Assumption in Atlanta, they United States - in Arlington~ you." she said. "As guys ~ei hpod. said the Rev. Mark Huber
"Who are you telling to frq_nt us---what would life be
of the Lincoln diocese.
make up 44 of the 75 altat Va., and Lincoln, Neb. -still older, they think it's uncool."
shut up, soq?' I asked stern- lik~ without the simple, yet
But it 's up to the bishop of
,
servers.
don't
allow
girls
to
be
altar
But
ll.!any
boys
said
they
important, bl essings of God? - ·
ly.
the
diocese to decide who may
Why
is
the
activity
so
popuservers.
enjoy
serving.
"I
don
·r
really
Evelyn Roberts was a lady
"''m telling those stupid
lar
among
girls?
.
Some
clerics
worry
that
girls
care
about
the
girls,"
said
13become
an altar server, and in
life
experience
birds to shut up. They are whose
"Whenever a group is denied will continue taking over altat year-old Andrew Bowman. Lincoln. he decided to stick
making me mad!" he replie~. involved one diftlculty after
·
a
possibility for doing some- serving duties, simply because '1be Ma's goes a lot fa,ter with the boys-only tradition,
Sure enough. bi·rds could another. ·After getting to
Huber said.
thing,
that makes it particularly boys and girls often don't like when you're part of it."
be distinct! y heard cheeping know he~ at the first church I
and chirping outside, and pastured, she made a remarkhaving a big time ·tweeting able comment I have never
about the stan of their own forgotten.
She said, "Preacher, you
day.
For a moment, I did not might think I'm crazy, but,
know what to say. The best I after I received Christ as my
POMEROY - Women of prayer.
The next meeting will be
told how they spent their time
could come up with was, personal Lord and Savior. the
the Meigs County Churches of
During the business meet- during the February ice and held June 26 at Zion Church
"Don' t tell the birds to shut next morning, for · the first
Chri ~t met recently at the , ing, led .by Pickens. it was snow storm.
of Christ, with Pomeroy memup, because .the happy sounds time in my life, I heard birds
Pomeroy
Church
of
Christ.
announced
that
Kathryn
Ann
Lambert
led
the
probers in charge of devotions.
of birds are a blessing from singing !"'
Paula Pickens of the Johnson had made up pro- gram with scripture and read, Each member was asked to
God ." Then, tongue-inConsidering the alternatives,
we
need
to
be
careful
to
cheek. I added, "Besides, in
Bradford Church had devo- grams for 2003 .
ings, and members exchanged bring something from their
Psalms it says that the bifds. never tell the birds to shut up.
tions, and Pat Thp ma led the
Each of II members present plants.
wedding for display.

Ron .

'
...,

r

r

r

r

r

r

r

r

r

r

r

r

r

·r

·r

r

·r

·r

·r

·r

·r

·r

·r

..

/frO

•

Morgan, I am
sq proud or
the way

Young's carpenter Serulce

EWING FUNERAL HOME
106

Mulberry Ave . Pomeroy, OH
740-992-2121
Fax 740·992·2122
Ben H. Ewing

tri&lt;ycle with Gabe. He
likes wdo everything you

26 years in local business
Roofing &amp; Building Work

do, and now he is

Pomeroy, OH

Licensed Embalme r. Funeral Director

740-992-6215

Soecial1s1

you art sharing your

Liberty Assembly of God
P.O. Box 467. Dudding Lane, Mason.
W.Va ., Pastor : Nei l Tennant, Sunday
Services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Baptist
Hope Baptist Church jSouthfm)
570 G ran! St., Middleport, Pas10r: Rev.
Dav id Brynn, Su; day school - 9:30 !1. 111.,
Worship- 11 !WI. and 6 p.m., Wednesday
Service- 7 p.m.
Rutland First Bapllst Chun:h
Su nday School - 9:30 ~t . m .. Wors hi p 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy FlnJt Blilptist
Puslo r Jon Brockert. East Main St.,
Sunday' School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:30 o.m.
First Southern 811.ptist
41 K71 Pomeroy Pik e. P;1s1or: E. Lunu1r
O'Dryant , Sunday Sc hl.)o...,l - 9.30 a.m.,
Worship - 8:1 5a.m.. IJ:45 am &amp; 7:00p.m.,
Wednesdny Service .~ - 7:00 p,m.

teaming

to

shart. What

a shining example you
are!'"

A shininK example...
we have an opportunity
to short God's love with

Worship
God Together
This Week!

olhers each day, even in

the simplest of ways.

1122 Jackson Pike Gallipolis, OH
(800) 434·4194

VIctory Bapdlt Independent
~25 N. 2nd St Middleport, Pastor: James
E. Keesee , Worsh ip - IOa.m.. 7 p.m.•
. Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

·r

time? I'll bet you du.
When you smile, let your
happy spirit show
through your eyes. As
you speak to a

(7401 992·6451

relative. a
touch on
t
h e

have peaa with God ..-.through Uim we have ohtained access to this grace
in which we stand and we rejuicr in our hope ofsbaring the glory of God."
l had a coworker who was there for me countless times when I waS

fttlinK less than.coilfident. She said to me simply and rea..,uringly, ""It'll
right'" Finally, I realized that this was her way of sharing with me
God's glory and love aud His blessed control in my life. Won't you visit
God's House this Sabbath? Let others shore with you His glory and a
shining hope for the ruture.
•
be ali

P.O. Box683
Pomero , Ohio 45769·0683

rr. ~ 8brlt s.x.ty

~ SfHdfld t7y
~2000 . Kl'lter-W...,_~ ~ . P

0 Bo•II005. C"-If0nell'lfll, VA2290e, WWW ]!wrwwlmrD

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

c-

Jeanie Howe II
33334 Hy&gt;cll Run Rd .

For a who le
new you ·

(740) 992-4507

ARCADIA NURSING CENTER
··otd Pa.~ hi o ned Co m pa.,~iun- Modern Care"
Nt:\lkd m a hca ut1 ful cnunlry ~cltmg: ISR
:'\0131 £:.1~1 1nnd ea~ il y acce.,sibic from the
Apprdach1an Ht ghwot y
MV"•c and An Therapies
Ho~pu.:t' anJ Respite Care
740·M l·.l l56 Fnx: 740· 667 ·0080
Ph)l'itc:•l. (&gt;.:nlpatu m.danJ Speech Tiu:r&lt;~pic:­
\\ t: Acu·pt Medk:,lfC, Medll'&lt;lld, &amp; ln~uran..:e

Mt. Morllilh BaptJst -~
Fourth &amp; M~in St.. Middlepon . Pastor:.
Rev. Gilbc n Craig. Jr.. Sunday School -"
9:30a .m., WoNhip - 10:45 a.m.

i22 E. Main St. Pomeroy. OH45769
you pay your next home or

uut n pn:mium. L' h~:ck oul rmes!

..

Call; Judy. Brandi. or Jane Ann
992 -~~985 (l'omeroyl 5114-0660 (Ath"ens)

Hills Self Storage
. 7 40-949-2217
Sizes available 5x10 to 10 x 20

Antiquity Baptist
Sunda)' School - 9:)0 a.m., Worship ·
10:4.5 a.m .• Sunduy Even ing - 6:00 p.m .•
Pastor: Mark McComn:t
Rudand l&gt;'rtt Will RaptUt
Salem St.. Pas lor: Re " Pau l Taylor.
Su n d&lt;~)" Sehoul - 10 a.m .. Ev eni ng - 7
p.m., Wednesday Serv ices- 7 p.m.

Hours
6 am - 8 pm

Homemade Desserts Made Oaiiy

Second B.aptlst Churt'h

/tom e Coobd Mta/s &amp; Daily Spteials

Ravenswood. WV. Sunday School 10 am. Morning worship II am Evem ng -_7 pm.
WedneMiay 7 p.m.

Open 7 day ~ a week.
740·992-7713

Catholic

Birchfield Funeral
Home
212 Main St· P.O. 80K 188
Rutlan4. OH 45775

740·742-2333

Sacred Heart C11.thollc C hun:h
16 1 Mu lberry Ave ., Pomeroy, 992-.5898,
Pas1or: Rev. Walter E. Heinz. Stu. Con.

....•

Pomeroy. OH 45769
740·992· 7996

www.herbsndiet.com

R&amp;l FEED &amp;SUPPI

K

399 W. Main St.
Po)Tleroy, Oh
(740) 992-2164

Purina
" Stuff" For Pets, Farm Animals &amp;
Tropical Fish' Full Une of Perina
Chow • Garden Seed &amp; Fe11illzers

"Let your light so shine before
men, that they may see yo ur
good works and glorify your
Father in heaven."

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
Local source for trophies,
plaques !-shirts and more
Carolina Antique
&amp; Craft Mall
312 6th St. Point Pteaunt
675-1160

Matthew 5:
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•
Davia-Quickel Agency Inc,

•

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URANCE

ENCIES Inc.

Vari~.·l y'of

Mmthcw 5: I6

212 E. M!lln Street
Pomeroy

IF;ath&lt;!r in heaven."

Middleport, OH

74~992-6128

Other Churches

United Methodist
Gnham United MethodJ1t
Worship - 9:30a.m. {ht &amp; 2nd Sun), ,
7 : 3~ p.m. (3 rd &amp; 4th Sun),Wednesdo.y
Service - 7:30 p.m.
Mt. OU'fe United M~:thodlst
Off 124 be hind Wilkl!sville, Paslor: Rev.
Ralph Spires. Sunday School - 9 : ~0 a.m .• ·
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m .. Thursday
Services - 7 p.m.

Ca lvar}' Bible Churth
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rl.l, Pastor: Rev.
Blackwood, Sunday School - ~ :.10 a.rp ...
Wo r~hip
10:30
11.m .,
7:31l p.m..
Wednesday Service· 7:30·p.m

Bethel Wor!hlp Center
C hester School. Pastor: Ro b Barber.
Assislant Past or: Karen D nv i ~. Sunday
Wot~h ip: 10 am. F.:\lcning Wor.~ hip: 6 gm.
You th group 6 pm. Wednesday: Pnwer in
Pra yer , (md Bibh: Study· 7 pm
Ash Street Church
Ash St., Middlept1n- PaslUr: Glenn Rowe ,
Sunday School - !J:JO a.rn ., Morni ng
Wor~ h 1 p · l(l::\0 a.m. &amp; 7 pm . Wedn esl.lay
So:nice · 7·()0 r.m. Youlh So:rv ioe- 7 00
p.m.
Agape Life Cen1er"Ful l-GilSpel Churc h'"." Pa~tnrs John &amp;
Pany Wade. 603 Sec unl.l Ave . Ma son, 773501 7. Scr\'lt'e time: Sunda) 10.30 a.m.,
Wedncsda} 7 pm

Stiversville Cu mmunhy Chur("h
Pa stor: Wayne R. Jewell. Suniliiy Service~
- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00 p. m.;Thursd:Jy - 7:00
p.m.

Abundanl &lt;.;nu:e H.F. I.
IJ2J S. Thi rl.l St., Mi(!Jkpo.111. P;t ~tur _TcrcMt

Sun da y ~erv i n!,
WNlncsJa)' ~cr\"ice, 7 p.m..

[ (] ;un . .

F11ilh full Gospt'l Church
Long H~1110m . Pt~!\ to r Sle\C Reed. Sllnduy
. S( hool · 9:]0 a .m. \\'m~ h1p · t,l :.\0 .1. 111.
. anJ 7 p.m., Wedne&lt;iday - 7 p.m.. Fridayfel low.,hip scn ·ict.: 7 p.m.

Che!iler
Pasi or: Jane Beattie. Worship - 9 a.m.,
Sunday School
10 a.m. , Thursday
Services- 7 p.m.

St. Plilo'ul

Pa~w ·

Mike Foreman , Pu.s 1or: . E111cri tu ~
Lawrence Forcmun. Wur.&gt;h.ip - I ():00 am
Wcdn\!sdny Services- 7 p.m
Ctirlon TaiM'rn.acll' Churt·h
Clifton. W.Va .. ,Sunday School - 10 11.rn .•
Wor~ h ip - 7 p.m .. WetJ m: ~day Servin: · 7
p.m
Nrw Life VictorJ Center
J773 Gcm8cS Cfl"l!k Rolld. Galll f~llis , O H
Ptt.~Tor

Bill Staten. Sunda) Scl""l ' icc~ - 10

.7 p.m.
Yuutl1 7 ]1.111.

tU I I

&amp;

W~ dn C~ay

· 7 p.m. &amp;

Full Gospel Churth of t ht Li\'in~t:
Suvior
H t.J.~8. Ant1qU 1ty. Paswr: JcN' MPrrb .
Scrvicl.'s: S&lt;.~turday 2:00 p.m.
Sah:m CoPlmunity Chun-h
!toad. ·West Culumbi:1, W.Va ..
Pastor: Clyl.le Ferrell , Su n d ll~ School lJ :30
e~m . Sundliy l!vcning !-.en 1cc 6 pm.
WcJne:.day ~c rvke 7 pm
U~.:ving

The Beliel·ers' Fellowship Ministry
Ncw Lime Rd ., Rutl and, Pu;, IDr:· Rev.
1.

R o bi n~on.

Service~ :

Wedne'id:1y. 7: .U&gt; p.m .. Sunday. 2:"!-tl p.m.
Harrison,·ille Conlmunit}· Church
Pa ~tor : Theron Durham, SUnday · 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m., Wednesday - 7 p.m.
~iddleporl Community Church
.'i7.'i Pet1rl S1.. Midl.llepDn . Pastor: Sam
Andeno n. Sun day Schoo l 10 a. m ..
EwninM - 7:30p.m., WcdncSI.lll)' Sen·ice 7:30 p.m.

Faith Valle)' Tabernacl e Churth
Bailey Ru n Road, Pastor: Rev. Emrn~tt
Ruw§on, Sund a"y Evening 7 p. m..
Thu rsday Service- 7 p.m.
Syn_cuse Mlsskm
141 1 Bridgeman St., Syr11cuse. Rev. Mike
Thbmp son.Pastor. Sunday Sc hool
10
a.m. Evening- 6 p.m .. Wednesda y Service
-?p.m.

Hobson ( "hristiun Fellowstlip f: hurch
Hcrsthd While. Sunday Sdloo l10 am . Sunday Church ..cr.· ice - 6:30 pm
We dnesday 7 pm
Pa ~t o r :

Restora1ion Chri sti an rellowship
Road. Athens. Pustor·
Lonnie Coats. Sunday \\-"or~h1p H\:0!.} am.
Wednesd•ty : 7 pm

9 365 Hooper

Langs,·llle Chri§thm Chun:h
Full Gospel. Pa s1or: Rohen Musser,
Sundar School 9:30am, . Worship 10:.'0
am • 7:00 pm. Wednesday Service 7: 00

pm

Pentecostal
Pentecostwl Asse~bly
St. Rt . 124, Racine, Pastor: Williu.m
Hoback. Sunday School - 10 a.m.,
Evenini - 7 p.m.• Wednesday Services· 7
p.m.

Bechel Churfh
Townshi p Rd., 468C, Sunday School - 9
a.m. Worship - 10 a.m .. Wedne sday
Services- 10 a.m.

MotH Ch•pel Church
Sunday school .: 10 a.m., Wors hip - I l
a.m.. Wedne sday Service - 7 p.m.

Mlddleporl Presbyterhm
Postor: Rober Crow., Worship · l 0 a.m.

Hockingport Church
Grand Streel, Sunday School - 10 a. m.,
Worship - II a.m., WednesdaY Serv ices 8 p.m.

Flillth Gospel Chul"l"'h
long Botlom, Sunday School · 9:30a.m ..
Worship : 10 :45 a. m., 7:30 p.m..
WednesdBy 7:30p.m.

Torch Church
Co. Rd. 63. Sunday Schoo l - 9:30 a. m..
Worship - 10:30 a .m.

Mt. Olil'e Communitl Church
Pastor: Lawrence Bush, Su.nday School 9:] 0 a.m.. Evening- fd O p.m.. Wedncduy
Sen ' ICC- 7 p.m.

Nazarene

Full Gospel Lighlhouse
3.\045 Hiland Road . Pomeroy, Pastor: Roy
1-Ju nter. Sunday School - 10 a.m., Evening
7:30 p 111 ., Tu esday &amp; Thur~ d ay - 7: 30
p.m.

LongBottom
Sunday School · Y:] O a.m ., Worship ·
10:30 a.m
Rt'fllnilkWor~hip - 9:JO a.m., Sunday School ,. 10:.\0 a.m., Fi rst Sunday of Month · '7 :01f
p.m. ser\'ice . , ,

N. 2nl.l A\le .. Middlt&gt; j)l•rt,

Harrisonville Prtsbyterlan Church
Pastor: Robert Crow, Worsh ip· 9 a.m.

Reedsville t'ellowsbip
C h u r~·h of .the ;.Jazurene. Pa smr: Teresa
Wald eck. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:45 a .m.. 7 p.m.. Wednesday
Sen·ice ~- 7 p.m .

Joppa
Pasl or: Bob Ranl.lolph . Wo r~hi p · 9:30
a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m .

Pla i n.~

Rlfjoidn g tire Church
~00

Dynvllle Community Church
Sunday ,School • 9:30 a.m.. Wnnhip ·
10:30 11.m.. 7 p.m.

Middleport Church ot the Nazarene
Pastor: Allen Midcap , Sunday School 9:30 a.m.. Worshi p - 10:30 a.m .. b:JO p.m .•
Wednesday Serv ices · 7 p.m.. Pastor:
Allen Midcap

Northeast Cluster, Alfred. Pastor: Jane
Bea tlie. Sunday Schfxll - 9:30 a.m .,
Worihip - 11 a.m., 6:]0 p m .

Re\ . Fra nk.lin Dickcm, St'rvic:e:

Frida), 7 p.m.

CommunHy of Christ
Portlil nd-Ra .:ine Rd .. Pastor: Michael
Duhl. Sunday School - 9:30a.m., Wor ~ hi p
- 10:30 a. m., WeUneJ&gt;tllt)' Services- 7:00
p.m.

Meigs Cooperative Parish

ThppeMI

faith Ftllo w10hip Crusade for Christ
Pa~ IOr :

Syra("Uif: Flnt United Presbyterian
Pastor: Robet1 Crow, Worship - ll a.m.

'?p.m.

a.m.

•

Fain·ie"· Blblt' Church
Lc1an . W.Va. R1. I. P:t~lor· Bri:m M~ y.
, Sunday Sthool - 9:.\0 :1.111 •• \l.or.-. lup - 7:00
p.m., Wcdn!!sl.lu.y B1hk S IUi.l~ 7 1.1/l p.m.

Hazel Community Chun"h
Ed~e l Hart, Sunday
School - 9:30 a.m., Worship . 10:30 a.m. ,
? ;30 p.m.

Coolvtllt United Methodist Parish
Pastor: Helen Kli ne, Coolville Church,
Main &amp; Fifth St .• Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worsh ip· 9 a.m., Tuesday Services·

Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St. , Pomeroy,
Sunday School -'9:4.5 a.m., Worship - 1l

Scrva:e

-7 p.m.

Syracuse Church of the NMzart'ne
Pus1or Mike Adkins, Sunday Schoo l- 9:30
a.m., Worship - 10:3 () a.m .• 6 p.m.•
Wcdnc:&gt;duy Services - 7 p.m.
Pomero~· Church orlhe Na.r.arene
Pustur: Jan Lavender, Sund ay School 9 : ~0 a .m., Wo rsh ip · IO:JO a .m. and 6 ·
p.m., Wedncsdny Servkcs - 7 p.m.

/
South ~thel Communit)" Church
Si lver Ridge- Pa stor Linda Dam e~·ood .
Sunl.lu; School - 9 a.m., Worshi p Ser.,.k-c
10 il . ltl .

•.

Presbyterian

Off R1. 124, Pustur :

St. Paul Lutheran Chun:h

Church of God

Church of Gnd of l"mphecy
OJ . Wh ite Rd. off St. Rt. 160, Pastor: P.J .
Chap man , Su nday s~· hoo l • 10 a.m.,
Worship - 11 a.m., We-dnesday Serv ices 7 p.m.

Racine
Brian Harkness, Sunday School 10 a.m., Wo~hip - 11 a.m., Wednesday 7
p.m.

Pa.~ lor :

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Wa lnut and Henry Sts .• Raven swood.
W.Va., Pastor: Da vid Ru ssell •. Sunday
School - 10:00 a.m., Wonhip - II a .m.

Hutford Chun:h or Christ In
ChristJan Union
Hartford , W.Va., Pastor:David Greer,
Sundoy School - 9:30 a.m.. Worsh ip 10:30 a .m.. 7:00 p.m .. Wedn esda~
Services · 7:00p.m.

Synrwe first Church of God
, . Apple and Second Sts., Pastor: Rev. David
Ru!&gt;sell. Sunday S!.:huol and Worshi p- 10
a.m.
Eve ni ng Se r\'ices~ 6:30 p.m., Wednesday
Services - 6:30 p.m.

Eut -Let11rt
Pllstur: Brian Harkness , Sunday School 10 a.m., Worship · 9 a.m., Wednesday · 7
p.m.

St. John Luthenn Church
Pine Gro v~. Wonhip- 9:00a.m., Sund ay
School· 10:00 a.m.

Christian Union

Rutland Church of God
Pa swr: Ron Heath. Sunday Worship · 10
a.m ., 6 p.m., Wednesday Services - 7
p.m.

Pastor: Dcwaync Stutler. Sunday School II a.m., Worshi p · IU a.m

Lutheran

Chun:h ol ChrtJI
Intersect ion 7 and 124 W, Evangelist:
Dennis Sargent, Sunday Bible Study 9:30a.m .. Worship: 10:30 a .m. and 6:30
p.m .. Wednesday Bible Study - 7 p.m.

p.m.

Ca rmel ·Sulton
Carmel &amp; Hushun Rds . · Ra cine. Ohio.
Pas.1or: Dewayne Slutler, Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m.. Worshi p - 10!45 a.m , Bih le
St udy Wed. 7:00 p.m.

The Church or Jesus
Christ or Lattrr-Da)· Salnt!l
St. Rt. 160. 446-6247 or 446-7486,
Sunday School 10:20- 11 a. m. , Relief
Society/Priesth ood 11 :0!1·12 :00 noon,
Sacramcm · Se rvice 9· 10: I !I a.m .,
Homemukina meeting. 1it Thurs. • 7 p.m.

De11ter Church of Chrllt
Pastor: Bill Eshelman, Sunday school9 :30
a. m .• Norman Will, supcrintendenl,
1
Sunday wor1hip • 10:30 a.m.

or tht !\a U~ rene
Wi ll i&lt;un Ju~ l i~ . Su nday Schr&gt;OI 10:00 ;un .. Murnin if Wurship - J0;45 a.m ..
Sunda} Savicc - 6 :~0 p.m.

- 'DO a m.,

Wed n c~d ay

Pa~ltw

M ~rgarc t

Hethuny
Pasl or: Dewaync Stutler. Sunday St" hool 10 a.m., Wor~ hip · 9 a.m.. Wednesday
Service~- I0 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Pastor: Philip Stunn. Sunday School: 9:30
a.m., Worship Service: 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study, Wednelday, 6:30p.m.

Mt. Moriah Church ut God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine , Pas10r: James
Satlerlield . SundB y School - 9;45 a.m ..
Evening - 6 p.m., Wednesday Services - 7

Salem Cl'nter
Pa stor : Will iam K . r-.111r ~ hall . Sunda y
Sc hnol - JO: I5· a.m.. Worship -9: 15 a.m..
Bible SIUdy: Mond:~y 7:00 pm
Smh\'vllle
Sunday S!.:hOOI - lU tt.m., Worship 9 a.m.

Laurel Cllrr F,., Methodist Church
Re\·. Lcs Strandt anl.l Myra L. Stmnd t.
Su nday School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship 10:3011.111. and 6 p. m ., Wt:dn~sday Service
- 7:00 p.m.

ReedsY!IIt Cbul'&lt;h or Chrtal

' J•tarl Chapel
Sunday School .- 9 a.m., Worshi p- 10 a.m

.;,
Rutl11nd
Sulday School · ~ --'0 :un .. Worship 10:30 u.m .. Thursdoy Se rvices- 7 p.m

Hysell Run Holiness ChUrch
Sunday School - Y:30 a.m .. Worship 10:-15 a.m.. 7 p.m.. Thursday Bible Study
aml You1 h - 7 p.m.

Hickory HJ.lla Chun:h of Christ
Evangelilt Mike Moore, Sunday School9 a.m., Worship • 10 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Ruthmd C hun:h of the Nlil:tarenl'
Pastor: RC\'. Loui s S. Slaubs, Sunday
Sch ool · 9:30a.m., \l.'orsh ip - 10:30 a.m.,
6:30 p.m.. Wcdncsduy SC I"\' i~' l!l't- 7 p.m.

Da vi~.

We!ileyan Bihlr Uoline!l!'l Chur"h
75 Pearf St.. Middlepo rt . Pil'~tor: Rev
David Gilbert, Sunduy Sr.:huul - 10 a.m.
Woohip - 10 :4 ~ p.m., Su nda y Eve. 7:00
p.m .. WcdncWay Service - 7:30p.m.

Bradrord Church or Chritt
Comt!r of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.,
Minister : Doug Shamblin, Youth Minister:
8111 Ambt-rger, Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 8:00 a.m.. 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.rn.,Wc:dnuday Services -7:00p.m.

Minersville
Pastor: Bob Rohinson, Sunday School - 9
a.m .. Worsh ip - 10 u..m .

Rock Springs
Pastor: Keith R~er, Sunday School · 9: I S
a .m_, Wors hip - 10 a . m ., Youth
Fe llow ship. Sunday - 6 p.rn

PID.e Gron Bible Holiness Churth
orr R1. 325. Pastor: Rt.:v. O'Dell
Manley, Sund11y School - 1) :30 a.m.,
Worship
I 0:30 a.m.. 7::\0 p.m..
Wednesday Service-7: 30p.m.

Tuppers Plain Chun:h of Christ

K&amp; C JEWELERS

l';acond Sl.

Leadi ng Creek Rd., Rutland, Pastor: Re v
Dewey Ki~g . Sund ay school - 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday ' worshi p -7 p.m.. Wed nesday
prayer me et mg- 7 p.m.

Pomcrny. Harrisonvill e Rd. (Rt.l4 3).
Pastnr: Roger Watson , Su nd ay School ·
9:30 &lt;~ . Ill . • Worsh ip - 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m., Wcl.lnesd:~ y Services · 7 p.m.

Heath (Middleport)
!~a stor : Rob Brower, Sunday S~hool - 9:30
u.m.• Worship · II :[)() a.m.

Pomeroy
Pltstor: Rod Brower, Worship - 9:3 0a.m.,
Su nday School- 10:35 a.m

1/2 mile

Our Carini Wa~s HelP families

190 N.

Rose or Slit~ ron Holinns Church

Zion Chun:h of Christ

Ridenour. Sunday Schoo l

Seventh-Dav. Adventist .·

Stventh·Diil~· Adnntist
Mulherry Ht \ . Rd .. , Pom crn}', Pa ~ ILw Ruy.
l:Jw i n s ~ y. Slllurda\ Se 1 vk e~ . S•1 hh~ 1h ·
s ~·hou l . 2 p.m .• \\'o;"'ibip . J p.m.
!

United Brethren
Mt. HemHm United Hreth~n
in Christ Church
Texas Cummunily 364 11 Wi r kh &lt;un Rd . '•
Pastor; Rober! Sandc1s. Sunduy SdM.•I - :
9:30 a.m., Worship - I0:.'0 a. m.. 7:t}() ·
p.m.. W~d n esd ay Services-7:00 p.m.
Eden United Brethl'fn in Chrisl
State RoUie 124. Recd~•· i l lc . Paslnr: Rc\ ..
Bill Duly. Sunda)" Schtlol · 11 a..m .
Sunday Worship - 10:00 :1.m. &amp; 7.00 p.m.
W~ dnc s da y S!! r vke~ - 7:,00 p .m.1
Wi'dnt~sdu)' You th Sef\·i.:e - 7:(XJ r.m.

Carleton lnt erdt!nominational L"hul"l"'h
Kin ~ .,hur) Road . Paslor: Rnht"rl Vano:c.
Sunday School - 9:30 a. m., Wor~hip
Service 10:30 a .m.. E\·eni ng Senke 6
p.m.
Fretdom Cospel Mission
Bal d Kn nh. on Co. Rd. ~ l. P a~1or · RC\'.
Ruger Wi llford. Sunday Sch('ttl l - 1:1 :.\U a.m.
Wm ship- 7 p.m.

C hrsler Church of the Nazarene

'

,

Herbalife Independent
Distributor

"If yo ur VCR's in trouble
bring it 10 me the douhie··
34549 Ball Run Ad.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

"A Home Bank for
Home People"

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

g&lt;ntle
shoulder
speaks voium.,.. Just listening with a sympathetic ear can bt innluable at
the eud of the day. Even five minutes or sharing is special.
Romans ~:1•2 tells us, ·~herefore, since we are justi~ltd by faith. we

Fomt Run Baptist
Past&lt;.)f . Arius Hun. Sunday School - 10
a.m .. Worship - I I ;a.m.

FomiRun
P;astor: B9b Rob i n~on , Sunda}' School - 10
a.m., Worship - 9 a.m.

Calvary Pllarlm Chapel ·
Harrisonlo'ill e Road. Pt~s tor : Chorles
McKenz ie. Sunday School 9:30 Et..m.. '
Worship · II a.m.. 7:1KI p.m.: Wt!d n e~da)· ·
Service-7:00p.m.

Rurwlilllow Kldgf Ch'urch or Christ
Pastor:Bruce Terry, Sunday School -9:30
a.m.
Wors hip - 10:3 0 a.m ., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6: ~0 p.m.

~lei

Boplill Cbul'&lt;h

•·111twoods
Pa stor! Keith Rader. Sunday School - 10
a.m.. Worshi p - 11 a.m.

Dam•ille Holiness Church
31057 State Route 325. Langsvlle, Pastor: ·
Gary Jackson , Su nl.lay S(; hool - 9:30a.m.,
Su nday worshi p - 10:30 u.m. &amp; 7 p.m.,
WcdncsJay praye1 sen ·ice- 7 p.m .

White's Chllptl W~lt}' lln
Coolville Road. Paww Kev. IJtl ilh p
Worship - llUU a. m ..

uo

Community Church
Pa~tor:' Stt: ve Tomek. Main Street,
Rutland , Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m..
Sunda y Servke- 7 p.m.

Keno ChUn:h or Christ
Worship · 9:30 a.m.. Suru..lay School 10:30 a.m., Pastor· Jeffrey Wallace, Jst and
·'rd Sunday

Wedm: Mtuy Serv}ces- 7' p m

liorlllmd flrsi C hurch

Holiness

Middleport Chun:h or Christ
!hh and Main, Pastor: AI Hanson, Youth
Mini ster: Bill Frazier, SUJ1day School 9:30a.m., Worship- 8:15. 10:30 a.m., 7
p.m.. Wedne~a y Servi ces- 7 p.m.

a.m ., Worshi p- 10 a.m., Tuesday Serv ices

Enlnprise
Pastor: Arland King. Sunday School - IU
a.m., Worship - 9 a.m.. Bi ble Slud)· Wt:d .

326 E. Main St .. Pomt:roy, Rev. l ames
Bernacki, Rev. Ka!harin Fos ler, Suriday
School and Holy Eucharist I I :00 a.m.

Pomeroy Westside Churth of Chrisl
33 226 Children's Home Rd ., Su,nday
School - II a.m.. Wors hip - IOa.m., b p.m.
Wednesday Scrvi ~s- 7 p.m.

Rudand Chun:h or Christ
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:30 a. m.. 7 p.m.

Hll~ldt

!1 .m .

Grace Epiieopal Church

Pomeroy Chun:h of C hrlsl
212 W. Main St.. Mmi.ster: Anthony
frtorris
Sund~t y School - 9:30 a .m .. Worship!0:30 tun., 6 p.m., Wedllt'5day Services 7 p.m.

- Y:]O a.m .. WorNh tp • l l a.m .. 6 p.m ..

Central Cluster
Asbury {Syracuse), Pn smr: Bob Robinson.
Sunday School - 9:4.5 l .lll ., Worship - l J
a.m.. wednesday Services - 7:30 p.m.

Episcopal

7 p.lll.

Silver Run Baptist
Pastor : John Swa nson. Sunday School ·
·loa.m .." Worshi p - II a.m.. 7:00 p.m .
,Wed nesday Services· 7:00 p.in.

St. Rt. 143"just off Rt. 7, Pa stor: Re v.
James R. Acree , Sr., Sunday Unified
Service, Worship • 10 :30 a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

School 9: 1 .~

Pastor: Jane )iealltt:. Sunday School · 9
- 7:30p.m

Trlnlly Church
Second &amp; L&gt;n n, Pomeroy. Pastor: Re v.
Jack Noble. Worship 10:25 a.m .. Sunday

Church of Christ

Racine First Baplist
Pastor: Rick Rule , Su nd ay Sc hool - 9:30
a.m., Worship - 10:40 a.m.. 7:00 p.m.,
Wedn esday Servkt&gt;s - 7:00 p.m.

Bethel Frtt Will Baptlsf Churt:h
28601 St. Rt. 7, Mi ddlepo rt , Sunday
School · 10 a.m., Evenina: - 7:00 p.m.,
Thursday Services. 7:00

Congregational

Hemlock Grove Christian C hurth
Mini:.tcr: Larry Brown, Worship - 9:-'Q
a. m.
Sunday School - 10:30 il.lll. , Biblt.: S1udy-

Bradbury Church or Christ
Minister: Tom Runyon, 395.58 Bradbury
Road, Middl eport. Sunday School - 9:30
a.m.
Worship- 1£1:30 a.m.

Bethlehem Baptitt Churt:h
Oreal Bend, Rou u~ 124, Racine, OH ,
Pastor ; Daniel Mecea, Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Sunday Worship - 10:30 a.m..
Wednesday Bib le .Study - 6:00p.m.

9vfi[[ie 's t](estaurant
740•949-221 0

Ma ss- 5:30p. m.. Sun.
Con. - 8 : 4~ - 9 : 1 5 a.m.,. Sun. Mass- 9:30
a. m.• Dlliley Mass- 8:30 tt m .

lnstrumcnlal, Worship Service - 9 a.m.,
Communion - I 0 a.m.. Sunday School •
10: 15 a.m., Youlh- 5:30pm Sunday, Bible
Study Wedne gday 7 pm

Faith B•ptllt Chun:h
Railroad St., Masori, Sunday School · 10
a .m ., Wors hip - II a.m ., 6 p.m ,
Wednesday Servil!es • 7 p.m.

Worm Fri1'11dly
Armo.\·phc•rt'

Advanced Hearing Center

You say you don,t bave

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Licensed Pre-Need Insurance

P11stor· Rn . Hcrhcn Gra lc. Sumlay School
4 : 45 -5: 1~p. rn .:

First Baptist Churfh
Pastor: Mark Morrow, bth and Pallllt' r S1. .
Middlepnn . Sunday Sch1llll - Q: 15 a. m ..
Wor ~ hip - 10 :15 a.m., 7:0 0 p.m.,
Wcdnesda}' Serv ice·?:{)() p.m.

Mt. Union Baptist
Pas10r : David Wiseman, Sunday School9 :4.5 a.m.. Eveni ng - 6 :30 p.m .,
Wcdnesda)' Services - 6:30p.m.

WILLIAMS &amp; ASSOC.
INSURANCE
B ~ fo rc

Emmanuel Apostolk Tabernacle Inc.
Loop Rd off New lima Rd Ru1 land,
Services: Sun 10:00 a m. &amp; 7:30p.m.,
llm~ . 7:00p.m., Pnstor Many R. Hutton

Assembly of God

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
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Ri\'er Vallt~'
Apo st oli c Worship Cc mc r. KD S. ) rd .
.Av e., Middlepurl. Kevin Konk li.', Pa~ lur,
SundaY. II a.m and 6 :00 p .m ,
Wednesda y. 7:00 p.m .: You1h Fri. 7:30
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WORSHIP /GOD THIS WEEK

•

One of the ethical home
practice s my parents insisted
was that we brothers were to
not tell each other to '"shutup".
Terry and I have attempted
to instill the same consideration in our boy s, but they
nonetheless inflict the verbal
slam on each other all too
often.
One morning recently. as
we all were in the process of
starting our day, I heard
Micaiah from his bedroom
blurt out, "Shut up! "
I let it slide by without any
respon se, and continued
putting on my tie . But. it was
not long before I heard
Micaiah say again, "S hu t

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Pomeroy, OH 45769
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~

W

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�Page AS

Local News

The Daily ~entinel

Friday, May,2, 2003

National Day of Prayer

Inside:·

The Daily Sentinel ,

OVP track honor roll, Page 82
Major League Baseball, Page 83
Scoreboard~ Page 84

,

.

Page Bl
Friday, May 2, 2003

Buckeyes to
honor coach
Fred Taylor
COLUMBUS (AP)- The
late. Fred Taylor, who
coached Ohio State to its
only
NCAA basketball
championship in 1960, will
have his baseball jersey
retired by the Buckeyes on
Salurday.
Taylor wore No. 27 while
playrng first base a( Ohio
State from I947-50 and was
the university's first AllAmerican in the spo11.
He later spent a short time
in the major leagues with the
Washington Senators before
returning to Ohio State to
coach freshman basketball.
Taylor. who died in
January 2002 at age 77, took
over the varsity in 1958 and
compiled a 297-15R record
with the Buckeyes before
retiring after the 1975-76
,season.
,
Taylor's jersey is the first
to be retired by Ohio State's
baseball team, the school
said Thursday.
· Athletic director Andy
Geiger will present Taylor's
widow. Eileen. and other
family members with a
framed
jersey
before
Saturday's
doubleheader
against Michigan.

People lined Court Street and the corners of Second Street. and filled portable bleachers set up
for Thursday's National Day of- Prayer observance at the Meigs County Courthouse. (Brian J. Reed)

·Water garden demonstration
held during Rutland club meeting
RlJlLAND ·_ Members of then put all around the outside comets andgoldfish .are highly
Rutland Garden Club saw a of the liner to prevent soil from recommended for water gardemonstration of a water gar- draining to the water are as well dens, Kneen said.
den installation at the home of as preventing weed growth and
A brief business meetintfolJoy Combs during their recent to keep the soil from slipping in lowed the demonstration.
meeting.
from the top.
Combs pn;sented the devoMeigs County Agriculture
Cement block or decorative tion, "A Message to E.T."
·
Agent Hal Kneen assisted in the plates can be used for the eleva- . · Reports were given on all the
demonstration.
Kneen lion of plants. Kneen recom- recent meetings.
explained that the fl.rst step in mended the outer edge be built
Laura Bums of the Athens
installing a water garden is to up around the garden with Garden Club will be the regionplan what type of pond is need- stone, or any other decorative al director for 2003-2005.
ed, and what type of water material desired.
Members discu~ed the
flowers are desired for the gar- · Several types of plants were preparation and plantihg of the
den.
shown that are good in water flower beds at Harrisonville. A
Combs had prepared an area gardens.
red, white .and blue theme will
seven feet by four feet by 20
Combs said she hopes to line be used this year.
inches, with no shelving. The the outside of her garden with
A new !lag has been placed
bottom of Combs' garden was flat creek stones, and to have a on the flag pole by the commulined with heavy plastic, fol- water fall at the proximal end.
nity park garden.
lowed by sand, before the liner
Kneen recommended that the
Pauline Atkins won the travwas installed. Kneen said most garden be left two or three days eling prize furnished by Combs.
water garden liners will last 10 'after filling before inserting and Betty Lowery will furnish the
years.
'plants or other items such as May prize.
The liner was stabilized to the fl.sh.
Bullington will host the May
top, and landscape fabric was
Some fl.sh such as koi, fantail meeting on May 27.

,our nom•----~-

NAMElOUR

PHOENIX (AP) - Fourtime NL Cy Young Award
winner Randy
Johnson
underwent successful arthroscopic knee surgery, his first
operation in seven years.
Johnson had tests on his
right knee about two weeks
ago, and the decision to operate was made after a second
test showed loose particles
causing .intlammation in the
Jeft-hander's knee.
Johnson, 24-5 last season,
won his tirst game in three
decisions Sunday
after
spending two weeks on the
disabled list.
Doctors removed the panicles in a brief operation and
drained fluid from the knee.
Johnson, who will be on
crutches for a few days
before beginning rehabilitation, is expec ted to miss
three-to-six weeks .

OWN PRI&lt;E

'IODA'f 10 '10'10' •

satviiiiA'f 10

siiiiDA'f 1I '10 I

Find where
local secluded

historic sites
are In Sunday's
·. Tempo section. ,

John Rocker
sent to Double-A

-·

Every individual connected with PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL VOLUNTEER SERVICES is dedicated to compassion,
service to others and quality care. But quite often our volunteers exceed even the high standards that we ask of them. PVH
employees, Board of Trustees and members of the medical staff proudly salute the people who have achieved this higher
level of dedication. During NATIONAL VOLUNTEER WEEK we wanted to take a moment to say ... "thank you."
~~
+ Christina S. Gillies
+ Margaret M. Greenlee
+ W.W. "Nick" Griffin
+ Frances E. Grimm
+ Shirley A. Hall
+ Keith D. Harper
+ Larry "Gene" Harper
+ Thomas "Jack" Hill
+ Janet E. Holland
+ Russell V. Holland '
+ Annabelle E. Hudnall
•
+ Eula D. Hudnall
+Margaret Hutchins
+ Lillian Hyer
+ Eleanor E. Jordan
+Nell M. Keys
Cleo' E. King
+ Eleanor E. Lee
+Nora W. Lewis
+ Mary E. Lieving
+ Edward Martin

+

. + Fanniebelle Martin
+ Carql A. McDaniel
+ Edna L. Meads
+ Evelyn Nelson
+Fredrick Nibert
+ William Nibert
+ June Nibert
+ Mary Nibert
+ Ira Patterson
Helen L. Plants
+ Cora Poling
+Jack Pyles
+Lois Pyles
+ Barbara J. Randolph
'+ Carolyn Rhodes
+ Zetta Ritchie
+ Elsa A. Roach
+ Elsie Roaten
+ Jean F. Roush
+ Frankie L. Shinn
+ Grace J. Somerville

·+

+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
.+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+

Carl L. Stollings
Ludena K. Stollings
Karen S. Stone
Venida Kate Stone
Dorthea A. Stricklen
Roberta Swisher
Yvonne Swisher
Jeanne V. Tatterson
Reta Thomas
Donald Tolliver
Wanda Tolliver
Nina M. Vaughan
Glen "Dale" Watterson
John Watterson
Aleta Weaver
Dixie Wickline
Quenti.n Wickline
Bessie Wilson
Edwin A. Wilson
Dale V. Wood
Susie Wooten

Eastern defeats Southern, 7-3
BY ScoTT WoLFE
Sports correspondent

TUPPERS PLAINS _ Breaking
opening a 2-2 game in the fifth
inning , the Eastern Eagles avenged
an earlier loss to the . Southern
Tornadoes with a 7-3 win Monday
night in boys Tri- Valley Conference
Hocking Division baseball play.
Eastern is now 6-11 and Southern
is 5-11.
Eastern hitters were Chris Myer~.
Ken Amsbary, Terry Durst, Jon

Owen. and Dustin Riggs each with
singles. Southern hitters were Joey
Phillips with two singles, Jordan
' Hill a single, B.J. Marnhout a single, and Adam Ball a single.
What started as a pitchers duel
ended in a defensive circus for the
Tornadoe''· Justin Allen pitched a
great game but eight Tornado
errors opened up the three-rings of
entertainment for the Eagles, who
promptly took advantage. Allen
struck out eight and walked three
Eag les.

Cacy Faulk was the winning
pitcher . for the Eagles.
Faulk
p'itched a gutsy game as well and
came home the winner also with
eight strike outs and three walks.
Faulk worked out of several jams to
earn the win.
Eastern took a 1-0 lead in the first
when Chris Myers singled, Ryan
Smith ~alked and Durst had an RBI
sing le, the score 1-0. Eastern went
up 2-0 in the second when with t~o
outs, Myers · reached on an error,
Smith reached on an error, and a

catcher's interference· call loaded
the bases. Cacy Faulk was then hit
with a pitch to push across a run,
the score now 2-0.
Southern pushed to within one in
the third when Jordan Hill led off
with a single and after Faulk struck
out two, Joey Phillips singled home
Hill. , the score 2-1.
·
Southern tied the game in ' the
fourth when Cole Brown walked
and after a passed ball rode home

Please see Eastern, a:z

Branyan's
recovery
•
go1ng
slowly
CINCINNATI (AP) The Cincinnati Reds are
eager to get Russell
Branyan back in the lineup,
but he says his right shoulder still lacks strength after
off-season s_urgery.
" It just feels kind of
empty," said Branyan, who
is playing his way back into
s h~pe
with the Reds'
Triple-A Louisville affiliate. "There's not a whole
lot of strength in it when I
throw the ball. Most of my
throwing right now is coming f~om the strength and
rotation of my body."
But Branyan said . he is
able to swing the bat without pain. He worked out for
Reds officials last week in
Cincinnati.
Since hi s surgery to
repair a torn labrum in
December, Branyan has
been in a physical rehabilitaiion and strength program
devised by team doctors,
trainers and rwiength coaches.
"Right now, I'm pushing
it to the max," he said .
The Reds obtained the
infielder-outfielder
last
June in a trade that sent
first
baseman
Ben
Broussard to the Cleveland
Indians.
He achieved career highs
in hits (86), home runs
(24), and RBis (56) in 134
games with Cincinnati and
Cleveland.
In his first I 0 games with
Louisville this spring,
Branyan hit .364 with five
doubles. He has played first
base and outfield.

Randy Johnson
to miss three to
six weeks

:where is that
· historical
marker?

+ Margaret E. Amburgey
+ SueT. Brady
+ Donna Brinker
+ Lethia B. Bumgarner
+ Marilyn "Terry" Casto
+ Lillian Chapman
+ Anna E. Christian
+ Freda Colegrove
+ Arlene Cook
.. + Koneda L. Devrick
+ Viola Ellis
+ Joanne Ferguson
+ ·John "Joe" Fierbaugh
+ Thelma M. Filson
+ Mansfred "Bud" Forte
+ Belva D. Frye
+ Carolyn Fulks
+ Charles Fulks
+ Elizabeth 'Gaskins
+ Laura Gaskins
+ Survilla Gilland ·

Prep baseball

For more information
about becoming a
volunteer please call:

304-675-4340
Ext. 1100 or 1146

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
•

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
(A P) - John Rocker was
assigned to the Tampa Bay
Devil Rays' Double-A affiliate.
The
former · Atlanta,
Cleveland and Texas closer
signed a minor league contract on April I0 and spent
the past three weeks in
extended spring training.
The 28-year-old Rocker
has spent parts of five seasons in the major leagues.
including three with the
Braves. with whom he had 38
saves in 1999, He has 88
career saves with a 3.40 ERA
in 278 games .
Rocker hopes to regain the
form he had before his career
plummeted after he made
msensitive remarks about
minorities, gays and others in
a 1999 Sports Illu strated article. He was released by the
Rangers in October after
spending most of last season
on the disabled list with bursiti s in his left sho!Jlder.

'ISU coach
Steve Barnes
suspended
·AMES. Iowa (AP) -Iowa
State associate head basketball coach Steve Barnes was
suspended for making what
the university said were
thre atenin~ remarks against
the adminrstration and athletic director Bruce Yan De
Vel de.
Barnes ' suspension came
one day after Van De Velde
suspended Eustrchy and recommended that he be fired
because of newspaper reports
that the coach had ·partied
with college students after
two road games.

Cincinnati Reds starting pitcher

Austin throws to Colorado Rockies batter Bobby Estalella in the seventh. (AP)

Austin not stone cold
Boone, Guillen

homer in Reds win
BY JoHN MossM.,N
Associated Press

DENVER (AP) - Jeff Austin wasn't about to let Coors Field deprive
him of hi s first major league win.
Shrugging off the burdens of the hitter-friendly ballpark, Austin took a
shutout into the seve.nth inning. and
Aa(on Boone and Jose Guillen each
hit two-run homers as the Cincinnati

Reds beat the Colorado Rockies 7-2 rriore," Austin said. "Baseball is baseon Thursday.
ball. You've got to pitch your game.
"He doesn't get rattled," Reds man- . "Maybe I changed a little bit here. I
ager Bob Boone said of Austin, who threw a few more sliders than curves.
was making his second big league Those walks in the seventh inning
start. "He never got rattled in this park, bothered me. I didn' t like to finish that
way. I had gotten there by attacking
and that is pretty speciaL"
Austin · (1- 1), who had a two-hit hitters. Then I stal1ed to nitpick." . ·
shutout through six innings, departed · All seven of Cincinnati's runs came
after walking the first tw.:&gt; batters in with two outs. The Reds won for the
the seventh. Pinch-hitter Greg Norton sixth time in eight games and posted
hit a two-run double off reliever Gabe their third straight series victory.
White to cut Cincinnati's lead to 7-2.
Austin said being staked to an early
''You just go out and pitch like any- 7-0 lead was "huge."
place else - keep the ball down, hit
Please see Reds, B:J
your spots, change speeds, nothing

Yanks, Rockies account
fOr scoring increase
BY JOSH DUBOW
Associated Press

Jeff Ne.lson has a theory
about why scoring is
slightly up after the first
month of the baseball season.
"The Yankees seem to
be scoring a lot of runs
ever~ night." the Seattle
Manners' reliever said.
New York Yanke(!s
infielder Todd Zeile has
his own guess.
"I know when I was in
Colorado, there wasn't a
lot of scoring there early
last season and this year
there is," Zeile said.
"Maybe that's the difference."
·
. It turns out both Nelson
and Zeile are right.
Teams are averaging 9.5
runs this season,, up ffom
9.3 through April last sea·on, according to the Elias

Sports Bureau. That 2.2
Home runs are also on
percent increase in scoring the rise after dropping for
can be attributed to the two straight years, rising
Yankees' big bats and the 10 percent from L91 last
thin air in Colorado.
year to 2.10 this season.
Teams are combining That's still well below the
for four more runs a game · record-setting April 2000,
at hitler-friendly Coors when teams combined to
Field a month into the sea- hit 2.54 homers. and the
son. Apparently, the humi- 2.34 from 200 L
dor the Rockies Used last
Last year's drop in
sea~un to m~ke the balls , homers could be at~uted
Jess lively isn't working as to umpires calling't'e high
well this season.
strike, which hitters are
"Every day I come here , JlOW getting used to.
something different hap"At times you still see it,
pens," Cincinnati manager but not as much. The big
Bob
Boone
said thing they' re trying to do
Wednesday after the Reds' is to get a uniform strike
13-11 win over the zone so guys know what
Rockies. "I'm sure I've to look for and don't have
seen that before - I just to adjust to each umpire's
can't remember."
zone every night. That
The Yankees are 'ctoi ng helps out the hitters and
their scoring everywhere, speeds up the game."
averaging 6.6 runs this
Baseball is getting closseason after scoring .S.l er t.o its. goal of reducing
during the first month of the time of game to 2
last season .
hours, 45 minutes. Last

I
I

Starting strong
The first month of the baseball
season had more offense,
strikeouts and shorter games,
while attendance dropped from
April of last year.

year, nine-inning games
averaged 2:52 - 6 minApril averages
2002
2003
utes shorter than the previ(Both teams/ game)
ous season. Through
Runs
April, games this season
9.3 ... 9.5........
are' down to 2:4 7.
Home.................................
runs
1.91
2.10
. ..........
Walks and strikeout s,
(Each team/9 innings)
meanwhile, are pretty
much even with last seaWalks
3.5
3.6
son as players become
6.5
6.6
accustomed
to
the .Strikeouts
umpires' strike zones.
Time (9-innings)
2:54
2:47
, _,
Teams are walking 3.6
batters per nine innings;' Attendance
26,217 24,920
compared to 3.5 last season. There have been 6.6 Through April 30
strikeouts vs. 6.5 last year.
Average
attendance
Jeff
dropped 4.9 percent, from
Bagwell
26,217 to 24,920, with 22
leads the
of the 30 teams showing
losses, Much of the drop
majors with 10
can be attributed to the
home runs in April.
weak economy and the
unusually cold weather in SOURCES: Major league Baseball; AP
the
Northeast
and Associated Press
Midwest.
'""""'

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Page 82 • The

Daily Sentinel

OVP Track Honor Roll
•

as ol May 1

Girls
Boys
100-1. Mklkilf, Asll~ (OakHill) :12.7: 21ie. Mc~nniss, Niki
1QO.melef dash - t. Simmons, Ty (Gall" Academy) :10.7; (GaiUa Academy) AND PelT)', ~ (Galia Academy :13.1:4.
2. Brown, Allan (River Valley) ,11 _1,3.Maddox (PI:&gt;int Pleasant) Close, Felicia (Gallia Academy) :13.2; 5. Taylor, Kari Beth
:11.4; 4. WelT)', Brandon .(Eastern) :11 .6; 5. Bailey, Jarrod (River VaHey) :13.71: 6. ~es. Charity (Gall" Academy)
:13.5: 7. Keefer, Nikki (PI:&gt;intPleasant) :13.89:8. Sicl&lt;les, Leslie
(V1.nton County):11 .6:6.Roush, Dank!! (Gailia,Academy):11.7; (Galka
Academy) :13.7: 91ie. Hayes (Vinton County), Jenkins,
7. Bele!la, Erick (Oak H~) :11.8: 8. Kaiser, Sebastian (Meigs) Caitlin (Gallijj Academy), AND Jenkins. Sarah (Ohio Valley
:11.8; 9. Sl"l"300, A.J. (Soutllem) :.11 .9; 10. Barney, Michael CMstijjn) :14.1.
'
(Vinton County) :11 .9.
.
200 - 1. PelT)', Kayta (Galia Academy) :26.71 ;.2. Close.
200 - 1. Simmons, Ty (Gallia Academy) :22.3: 2. Brown, Felicia (Gallia Academy) :27.5; 3. Peoples, ·Charily (Gallia
ADan (River Valley) :22.62: 3. Bailey, Jarrod (VInton County) Academy) :27.81 :4.Taylor, Kan
23.4: 4. Roush, Dw&gt;et (Gallla Academy) :23.9: 5. Berney, Beltl (River Valley) :27.90;5. ~dkiff, Asllley (Oak Hill :28.3;
Midlael (Vinton County) :24.2: 6. Peoples (Gallla Academy) .6. Garnes. Megan (Meigs) :28.4: 7. Howard, Rachel (Point
:24.2; 7. Maddox (Point Ple~nt) :24.3(.8· WelT)', Brandon Pleasant) :29.18;8. McKinniss, Nil&lt;i (Gallia Academy) :29.6:9.
(Eastern) :24.3:9. Batey. Ben (VInton County) :24.3: 10. Lewis. Jenkins, Ca~lln (Gatlla Academy) :29.7; tO. Jenkins, Sarah
Dustin (South Gallia) ;24.53.
(Ohio Valley Christian) :29.8.
400 - 1 Brown, Allan (RM&gt;rVBI"Y) :51.7;2. CatO.han, Jamie 400 - 1. PelT)', Kayta (Gallia Academy) :62.7: 2. ~s.
(Jackson) :53.1: 3. Roush. Dank!! (Galla Academy) :53.4: 4. Chanty (Gall" Academy) :62.9: 3. Soulstly. Shannon (Meigs)
Simmons, Ty (Gallia Academy) :54.1;5. Aldrid1, Eric (Jackson) :64.61 : 4. Midkiff, Asllley (Oak Hill) :64; 5. CakJwell, Undsey
:54.1: 6. Reffert. Matt (VII'I1on County) :54.19: 7. Deshul&lt; (Point (Gallia Academy) :65.25: 6. Haye, Daniele (Vinton County)
Pleasant) :54.2; 8. Peoples. Solomon (Ohio Valley :66.8; 7. Garnes, Megan (Me~s) :67.58; 8. Sowers, Brittany
ChristiariGI&lt;Iia Academy) :54.22: 9. Thalen, Rapahel (South (Vinton County) :67.6;9. Heyman, Jennifer (Eastern) :67.9;10.
Galli a) :54.41 :10. Nibert. Chari"Y (River VBiey) :54.43.
Maione, Kayla (Ojlk Hill) :68.0.
. 800 - 1. Aldrid1, Eric (Jackson) 02:08.0; 2. Roush. Daniel 800 - 1. Story. Emily (Me~s) 2:36.29; 2. Sanders, Tlflany
(Gailia Academy) 02:10.2; 3. Hudson, Rlyan (Galtia Academy) (Gallia Academy) 2:42.0: 3. Soulsby, Shannon (Meigs)
02:15.3; 4. Thalen, Raphaei (South Galla) 02:15.5;5. Hav.ldns 2:42.67; 4. Attar, Sally (River VBIIey) 2:44.1; 5. Zinlle (Ohio
(Vinton County) 0216.0:6.Roush, Chris (River V811ey) 02:17.0; Valley Christian) 2:44.6: 6. Maher. Kattin (Gallia Academy)
7. Lester. Chris (River Veley) 02:18.3; 8. Bellomy (Jackson) 2:46.7; 7. Adkins (Gallia Academy) 2:47.87;8. MoCorl&lt;le, Kalli
02:1a.8: 9. Simmons (VInton County) 02:19.0: 10 Hurt (Point · (~nton County) 2:46.2; 9. God&gt;Mn, Beltlany (Gallia Academy)
Pleasant) 02:21.0. .
2:52.23: tO. Ireland, Kally (River Valley) 2:54.67.
1,600- 1. Roush;Chris (River Valley) 04:49.9; 2. Saunders, 1,600 - 1. Wiseman, Sara (Gallia Academy) 5:14; 2.
Todd (Gallia Academy) 04:66.0: 3. Ondera, Jesse (Jackson) Emmert, Star (Jaokson)5:33.83.Zirille (Ohio Valley Christian)
05:04.3; 4. Lester, Chris (RiverVBHey) 05:07.0; 5.Pugh, Ga1T8nt 5:59._2; 4. Attar, Sally (RMir Valley) 6:07.8;5. Wamsley, Jackie
(Wellston) 05:14.3;6 Reynolds, Zacll (Vinton County) 05:15.7: (Gallta Academy) 6_:08.0:_6. Maher. Katlln (Gallta Academy)
7, Harkins. Was (Vinton County) 05:18.4; 8. Conley (~Ilion 6:11.4; 7. Pyles, Enn (Po1nl Pleasant) 6:22.05: a. McCorkie,
County) 0518.4; 9. Salters, Aaron (Southam) 05:1a.8: 10. Kellt (Vinton County) 6:26.6:9. Williams (Southern) 6:27.9;10.
~~~~~
3200-1. Roush, Chris (River Valley) 10:20.8; 2. Saunders, ~-~-8
3,200 - 1. Wiseman. Sara (Galha Academy) 11.08.0, 2.
Todd (Gallia Academy) to:55.o: 3. Ondera, Jesse (Jackson) Emmert, Star (Jackson) 12:47.2; 3. Wamsley, _Jackie (Gall1a
10: 57.0: 4. Wolle, Jeremy (River Valley) tt :09.2: 5. Pugh, Academy) 13:17.0: 4. Burdette, Andrea (Mags) 1~: 18; 5.
Ganrant (Wellston)11 :36.5;6. Graham ~nton County) 11 ,41 _0, Ellkltt, Rachel (Eastem) 15:42._5: 6. Savage. Asll"Y (Mags)
7 Con'•" (Vi ton County) 11 .550. 8 Arnold Grant (Me" 1 16:10.35;7.Lester. Summer(RMtrVai"Y)16:27.0.
. · · ' ·. , '
'9"
100 hurdles - 1. Close, Felicia (Gallla Academy) :15.4; 2.
· . ':'' •n
12.02.0, 9. Hively. Kyle (RM&gt;r Vaf"Y) 12.19.3, 10.Canady. Matt Kinnard,Sarah (Point Pl&lt;!8senl) :17.40;3. B&lt;Jin, Brook (Meigs)
(Galha Academy) 12.302.
. .
. .
:17.4; 4. Rees, Lexxi (Gallia Academy) 17.65; 5. Kayeer,
110 hurdles - 1. Neal, Chns (V•n~ County) .t5.75, 2. Jennifer (Point Pleasant) :17.71 ; 6. Boster, Alix (Gallia
Common (Wellston) :17.4: 3. FISCO. Nick (Gall" Academy) Academy) :17.a: 7. Niple (Vinton County) :20.0; Btie. Ratcliff,
:17.8; 4. Peny, Dane (Vinton County) :18.1: 5. Rerny (Vinton Mary Ellen (Vinton County) AND Hayman. Jennilllr (Eastem)
County) :18.4; 6. Howard, Joe (Meigs) :19.3; 7. Polcyn, John :20.9:10. Andrew (Southam) 21 .0.
(A~ver Vai"Y) :20.2:8. Cross, Austin (Eastern) :20.3: 9. Kinnan.
300 hurdles _ 1. Close, Felicia (Gallia Academy) :48.53: 2.
Andy (M01gs) :20.7: 10. Bey (Vinton County) :20.9.
Bolin, Brook (Meigs) :50.8; 3. Siokies, Leslio(Gallia Academy)
300 hurdles - 1. Rerny, Brody (V~ County) :43.87; 2. :51 .66; 4. Kayser, Jennifer (Point Pleasant) :52.01: 5. Boster,
Herald (Wellston) :44.2;3. Neal. Chip (Vinton County) :44.5;4. Aleic (Gallla Academy) :53.75; 6. Pridemore. H. (VInton
Wolio"nan, Bryan (FVver Valley) :46.07; 5. Corr&lt;nom (Wellston) County) :56.1: -7. Rees. Lexxi (Gallia Academy) :56.2; 8.
:46.9: 6. Fisco. Niok (Gall8 Academy) :47.3; 7. Gill, Btod10 Chadwell, Jenlfer (Eastern) :56.5: 9. Ratcliff, Mary Ellen
(R~ver Vai"Y) :47.3: 8. Polcyn. John (River Val"Y) :46.1: 9. (Vinton County) :57.9: 10. Nlple (Vinton County) :59.7.
Kinnan, Andy (Meigs) :46.9; 10.1had&lt;8&lt; (V01ton CoUnty) :52.1.
4x1 00 ~ 1.Gallia Academy :51 .78: 2.Point Pleasant :55.23;
4x100 relay- 1. River Vai"Y :46.41 :2.Vnton County :46.5: 3. Vinton County :56.3: 4. Meigs :58.0: 5. Jackson :60.64: 6.
3. Jackson :46.8: 4. Pl:&gt;int Pleasant :48.29: 5. Gallla Academy Wellston :61 .0;7.Ohio Valley Christian :61 .6;a. Eastern :62.3;
:46.6:6. Meigs :49.0;7.Oak Hil :49.9;8.Easlefn :52.0.
9. River Valley :68.3.
4x400 - 1. Galla Academy 03:40.6: 2. Vinton County 4x200 -1 .Gall Ia Academy 1:54.82;2. Meigs 1:55.4;3. River
03:44.6: 3. River Vai"Y 03:47.7; 4. Pl:&gt;int Pleasant 03:51 .3: 5. Valley 2:03.4: 4. Eastern 2:04.9: 5. Vinton County 2:05.0; 6.
Oak Hill 03:59.0: 6. Jackson 04:06.5; 7. Meigs 04:09.6; 8. Wellston 2:07.8;7. Oak Hitl2:10.
Eastem04:30.1.
,
.4x400 -1 . Gallia Academy 4:18.27:2. Meigs 4:29.28 :3.
4x800 - 1. Gallia Academy 08:44.2: 2. V~nton County Jackson 4:46.64: -4. Vinton County 4:50.6: 5. River Valley
09:05.4; 3. River Valley 09:19.9; 4. Point Pleasant 09:20.9; 5. 4:53.09; 6. Point Pleasent 5:04.37.
Meigs 10:14.0:6. South Gallia 10:25.0:7. Oak Hlll10:47.0: 8.
4x800 - 1. Gallla Academy 10:29.30:2. Meigs 11:34.8:3.
Jackson 11:03.4.
Point Pleasen.t 11:52.91: 4. River VBIIey 12:02.58.
Long itn"!'- 1. Gallamonl, Evan (Jackson) 20' 3":2. Roush, . DISCtJS - 1. Phillips, Hermooy (River Valley) 121'03'': 2.
Daniel (Galla Academy)19' 7": 3.Martinko, K8Yin (Eastam) 11! Bunnell, Leah (Walston) 99'05"; 3. Ostrander, Samantha
3";4. Schneider, Phiipp (Oak Hill) 18' 2': 5. Scherer, Billy (Oak (Jackson) 89'04": 4. Haner, Nicole (Gallia Academy) 8T07";
HiiQ 1T 9":6. Ba1ena, Erid&lt; (Oak Hit) 1T 7"; 7.Hallrnank (Vinton 5tle. Harrison, Laura (River Volley) AND Hipes, Kaley (Point
. ~·) IT 3.5": 8. Henson, Drew (River Valley)1T 3.25": 9. Pleasant) 66'00' 7. Evans, Leah (Jackson) TrfJ:J': 8. Ashley,
Stobart, Ryan (Melgs)17' 3':10. Lee, Chonyghee (Oak Hil) 16 · Emily: (Meigs)76'11":9. Woods. M
.(Vinton County)75.03":10.
6.75".
Davies, Ash"Y (River Valley) 73'02.5".
Higfl jump - 1, Emmert, Aaron (Vinton Counly) 5' to'· 1, High jump - Ilia. Rankin, SOley (River Voi"YJ AND Attar,
Lewis, Dustin (South Gallia) 5' 10"· 1. Gallamore E~ Sally (River Vai"Y) 4'08": 31ie. Davis, Kaytee (Oak ~ill).
(Jackson) 5' 10: 4. Marcum (Point ~) 5' 8"; 5. 'Kaloor, ~·. Kristin (Point Pleasant). AND Sm~. Kelly (Jackson)
Sebastian (Meigs) 5' s·:6. Saunders. Pete (FVver Valey)5' 4"; 406 : 6tie. Soulsby, Shannon (Metgs), Games. M~an
6. Hallmari&lt; (1/11'1100 County) 5' 4"; 6. Saunders, Todd (Clalla (~). Prldemo&lt;e. H(Vtnton County), AND.Nuller (Eastern)
Academy) 5' 4"; 8.4tied at 5' 2".
4'04 : 10.Jenkins, Ga11tn IGallla Academy)402". , •
Discus- 1. Phi~ (Wellston) 140 6": 2. Holter. Ross
longJUmp-1 .Ciose,Fehaa(Gal,llaAcademy)1608._25;2.
(Eastern) 139 9"; 3. Hudnaii,KeYin (PI:&gt;int Pleasant) 139 2': 4. Pe_IT)', Kayta (Galli~ Academy) 160T: 3. Taylor, Ken ~~
Scalbrough. Darren (Eastam) 127. 1·: 5. Sh!&gt;ley, Shannon (River Valley) 15 01 :4:K1nnard, Sarah f"?int ~leasent) 14 08 :
(GaiHa Academy) 125' 0": 6.DeGarmo, Luke (River Valley) 124' 5. Allen, Bethany {V1nton County) 14 07.5 : 611ie. Jon~~·
1"; 7. Huffman, BOOby (Vinton County) ItT 6"; 8. Thomas Caitltn (Gallla 'Academy) AND Samar, ~~ (M81gs) 13 08 :
(Soult1em)114' 2.5"; 9. !'.Ida, Chns (River Valley) t09' 8.; tO. a, Emmert, ~el (_Vinton County) 13 05.5 ; 9..L"?, C8SSio
R sh J
(Meigs) I09' o·
·
(MeigS) 12'08 :10. Btng, Lauren (RM&gt;rValley) 1108 .
~ ·~~. Hudnal, ~ (Ftlint Pteasant) 46. 6_25.; 2.. Shot put - 1. Bunnell, Leah· (W~IIstonl. 33'04.5.":_2.
Hol18 Ross (Eaatam) 46' 45•. 3 ' hipley Shan
(GaJH
Ostrander, Samantha (Jackson) 30 10.75 . 3. Phillips,
.~.1 ,., 6•. 4 """'"" iw:,,.:...,1 ,., ·5•. 5 Nnonida Ch a Harmony (River Valley) 30'00": 4. Haner. Nicole (GaiHa
~ .., ~
• · • ,_.,. ,, __ , ~ • · · ns Academy) 2a'05"· 5 Scheffier So.phia (Point Pleasant)
(River•. Vaf"Y)
45' 0.75': 6. Scarbrough, Darren (Eastern) 43'
: · Laura (RM!r
' . Vai"Y) AND Holmes.
King Na~·-(Gal" .,...,.__,) 41 , 475•. 8 Ba1
2T10.5",. 611ieHamsoo,
925
7
. ., .
,
~-· •
18 - - "'
:
• ·
ey: Asllley (Vinton
T~VIs (Easlefn) 40 4.5: 9. DeGarmo, ~ (Rtver Valley) 36
County)2T07.5": 8. Harms, J. (Vinton County) 26'0025": 9
•
Thaxton, Undsey (River Valley) 26'06.5": 10. Malone, Kayta
6 : 10. East, Gary (1/11'1100 County) 38' 5.25
Poie vau! - _1 . Peyton, Jet!, (~Ha Academy) 12' 6 : 2. (Oak Hill) 28'03.75".
,
Bodimer, J.(Gall~ Academy) 11 6 .
,
,
.
Poie vau! - 1. Boster, Alix (Gallia Academy) 6'06":2. Lewis,
(The .wa grls CNP 1rBCk honor roll IS COfrlPI/ed by River Courtney (Gallia Academy) 5'06".
tmlf6y boy.!l1adc ctlllCii Ed Saym. Boy.$' ooachBs in tt&gt;s area
tv fHTIIlil their lrBCk I8IJUits tv xcbaldcoacMtsceinter.net) ·
·
al8 u~

Major League Baseball

Burks not.hanging he~d
.during lndians'-woes

Baker's return to bay Tigers
area a shaky 0 ne . .

CLEVELAND
. Ellis
Burks has seen a Jot in 16
major league seasons, which
is why he's not discouraged
by the Cleveland Indians'
awful start.
At 7-20, the I rtdians are off
to their worst ' start since
1969, and they entered
Thursday night's game with
an eight-game losing streak
- their longest skid since
1990.
.
April was a very long
month.
Despite the string of losses, Burks said he's seen
enough positive signs . to
think better days are ahead
for a team loaded with young
but unproven talent.
Burks points to the extraordinary number of rookies
who are either starting . or
playing important roles with
the Indians.
Amazingly, Burks thought
the Indians would be worse
than they are .
He came to sprin~ training
with low expectauons, but
had his mind changed after
seeing some of Cleveland's
young players progress during camp.

from

CINCINNATI
Standing in the stadium he
promoted, commissioner
Paul Tagliabue generously
praised Cincinnati Bengals
coach Marvin Lewis on
Thurway and again predicted a return to glory for
the NFL's worst team.
Tagliabue told civic and
business leaders at Paul
Brown Stadium that things
are turning around for a
team that's been without a
winning season since 19.90.
With Lewis and owner
Mike Brown sitting nearby,
Tagliabue said the lea~ue ts
pulling for them to fteld a
winner.
Cincinnati has been one
of the league's concerns .
The Bengals rarely sell out
at home and have been subjected to national ridicule
becau se of their ineptitude.
Ta111iabue · came
to
Cincmnati and stumped .for
the stadium in the 1990s.
Soon after it opened in
2000, he attended a. news
conference at the stadium
and asked fans to be
patient.
They lost patience as the
· Bengals went 4-12, 6-10
and 2·14 during their first
three sea sons at the new
(

•

Dillon
expected for
voluntary
·minicamp
CINCINNATI (AP)Running back Corey
Dillon is expected to join
the Cincinnati Bengals'
weekend minicamp after
skipping workouts last
month. Dillon also is
scheduled to talk to the
media.
Dillon wa~ the ·only
starter who failed to
show up for last month's
voluntary minicamp, the
first since Lewis became
the team's head coach.
When the media noted
his absence, Dillon
became angry and lashed
out on the team's Web
site.
Lewis has been non·
committal about Dillon's
decision to stay at home
with his family while the
rest of the team got
together, He didn't have
much to say Thursday
abqut Dillon's decision
to show up for this
weekend's workouts.

caved in for Southern as
errors highlighted the
Tornado follies . The Faulk
boys , Cacy and Cody,
reached on errors, then
Durst walked, and Owen
had a two-run single to give
EHS the lead at 4-2. But the
action never stopped there .

Riggs singled home a run,
then Brent Buckley and
Ryan Smith reached on
errors, before Allen buckled
down to strike out the last
batt~r. the score 7-2.
Southern later plated a
sing le run, the score 7-3.

Page B1

Give Yo1lllr G~lfer
One of Eiglht JP erfecf Place~t
for Tlhaf JPerfecf Ho[idav'
66

ovember, 2002 Mouey~ magazine ...

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Associated Press

Dusty Baker is glad his first
series against the San
Francisco Giants is over.
Maybe the feud
between
Barry
Bonds and Mark
Prior is just staning .
.
Alex Gonzalez hit his first
two homers of the season;
including a three-run shot
with two outs in the lOth
inning, to lift the Chicago
Cubs over San Francisco 5-1
on Thursday.
Sammy Sosa followed with
his SOSth career homer, and
the NL Central leaders took
two of three from Bilker's formerteam.
The series got testy at the
end.
Both benches emptied in
· the third inning after Prior
plunked Bonds in the upper
right leg with a curveball.
Bonds, hit twice Tuesday on
breaking pitches by Kerry
Wood, began walking to the
mound and Prior motioned
him on as they exchanged
words. No punches were
thrown.
In other NL games, it was:
Atlanta 8, Houston 7;
Montreal S, Milwaukee 0; St.
Louis 6, New York 5 in 10
innings;
Cincinnati
7,
Colorado 2; Pittsburgh 5, San
Diego 2; Florida 4, Arizona 3;
and Philadelphia 4, Los
Angeles I.
Baker spoke with Bonds for
several moments; tellin~ him
the pitch wasn't intenuonal.
Plate umpire Marvin Hudson
issued warnings to both
teams.
·
Bonds walked off when
asked about it after the game.
The Giants and Cu~s play
a~ain July 29-31 at Wrigley
Fteld.
Chicago went ahead in the
lOth after an error by third
baseman Edgardo Alfonzo

NL

t·

put two runners on with two
outs . Gonzalez connected off
Ti 11 1Worrell ( 1- 1). and Sosa's
shvt made it 5·1.
It was an especially sweet
victory for Baker, managing
his first series in San
Francisco since leading the
Giants to the World Series last
season. That wasn' 1 enough 10
patch up problems with
·owner Peter Magowan. however, and Baker left last
·
November.
Juan Cruz (1-0) pitched two
perfect innings for the win.
Braves

8, Astros 7

At Hou ston. pinch-hitter
Mark DeRosa came through
with a tiebreaking, two-run
homer off Billy Wagner (1~2)
in the ninth inning , and
Atlanta finished a three-game
sweep.
Andruw Jones also hit a
two-run homer for the Braves,
who have won five in a row.
seven straight on the road and
14 of 16 overall following a
4-8 start. John Smoltz got hi s
II th save in II tries thi s season and 27th in a row dating
to last season .
Lance Berkman, breaking
out of a season-long slump,
tied a career high with six
RBis for Houston, including a
three-run homer off former
Shane
Astros
pitcher
Reynolds.

for the Mets, who rallied from·
, a 5· 1 deficit. St. Louis starter
Brett Tomko hit a two-run
double and Scott Rolen had a
three-run double .

O

Exp
· OS 5 , Brewers

At MiIwaukee, Zach Day
(3-1) threw a three-hitter for
. his first caree r shutout as·
Montreal finished a threegame swee p.
Michael Barrett and Brad
Wilkerson homered for the
Expos ( 18- 10), who have won
six of seven and are eight
games over .500 for the first
time since May 23, 2000.
Montreal leads the majors
with six shutouts.
• Milwaukee (9- 19) has the
NL's worst record and has lost
eight of nine.

p·

t
5 p d
Ira es • a res

2

At San Diego, Jack Wilson
hit a three-run homer off Jake
Peavy (4 -2) and Kip Wells ( I I) pitched into the eighth to
win for the first time in six
stan's as Pittsburgh completed
a three-game sweep.
The Pirates came into the
series having scored just II
runs in five straight losses,
then outscored the Padres 209. San Diego·Iost its tifth consecutive game.
Marlins 4, Diamondbacks 3
Cardinals 6, Mets 5,
At Phoenix, Brian Banks hit
his
first homer of the season
10 innings
leading off the eighth inning
. At St. Louis, Jim Edmonds for Florida.
homered off Scott Strickland
(0-2) in the lOth inning as the
Cardinals completed a three- Phillies 4, Dodgers 1
game sweep.
At Los Ange le s, Bobby
The NL Central champions
Abreu
arid Mike Lieberthal
won the first two games 13-3
and 13-4. New York has lost homered off Hideo Nomo (3five in a row and is 11-17 4) to back a solid oUting by
overall , last in the NL East, Brandon Duckworth (2-1 ).
despite a $1 17 million pay- Four Philadelphia relievers
combined for four scoreless
roll .
Rey Sanchez had four hits rnntngs.

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) T.J. Ford, the All-American
point guard who led a resurgent Texas team to the Final
Four for the first time in 56
years, will forgo his final two
years and enter the NBA
draft.
·
Ford · said he didn't make
his · final decision until
Wednesday night although
published reports as early as
Tuesday had speculated he
would leave.
•
He said it was difficult to
give up a college career tie
enjoyed but ultimately decided to chase a life-long dream
to play in the NBA. Ford
raised eyebrows in the room
by wearing the football jersey
of his friend Longhorns junior

wide receiver Roy Williams,
who spumed . his chance to
tum pro early and will return
for his senior season.
Ford said the gimmick was
merely to try to promote his
friend.
Ford , who said he has not
hired an.agent, is projected as
a lottery pick in the June 26
draft and is likely to be among
the first guards selected.
He was the second All American to declare for the
draft Thursday, JOtntng
Marquette junior Dway ne
Wade. The other three members of the All -American
team were seniors.
But Ford soon made it clear
he would consider leaving for
the NBA.

Reds

takes ," Rockies manager
Clint Hurdle said. "He got
some balls up in the zone . He
got beat with some breaking
balls, his third-best pitch.
"We need to hit better.
Three hits in thi s ballpark ? .
Come on ."
Cruz said he got what .he
deserved.
"Every mistake I made
they made me pay for," he
said. "It was just one of
those day s. But it 's some. thing !·can fix. "
Felipe Lopez led off the
game with a walk. stole second and scored on Austin

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B1

"It helped me relax. I could
throw a curveball without
. worrying," he said.
Aaron Boone had three
hits, including two doubles,
and three RBis. He also
made a diving stop near the
third base line to rob Preston
Wilson in the eighth.
"Jeff was awesome,"
Boone said. "We need guys
like him to step up if we' re
going to make a run. I think
we're starting to come

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still losing·

Associated Press

Ford declares for NBA draft

(The arBB girts' CNP ITIJCk honor roH is compiled by River
Valley girts tradr coadl Marl&lt; Cline. Girls ' cOaches in the area
are urged to e-mail their track results to · at
gl_mclineti58CMIC.Of!/ or rumvtlsol.com.)

stadium, which . was supposed to , provide enough
income to allow the team to
field a winner.
By hiring Lewis in
January, Brown signaled a
change in course. The
Bengals hadn 't hired an·
outsider as coac h since
Forrest Gregg took over for
the 1980 season.
Brown also pleased the
league, which is trying to
help minorities get coaching jobs. Lewis coordinated
the defense that helped the
Baltimore Ravens win the
Super Bowl in 2000 and
had been considered a top
coaching candidate since
then.
repeatedly
Tagliabue ·
complimented Brown and
Lewis, who has more
authority than his recent
predecessors. He also had
nice things to say about the
stadium and the team's
downtrodden fans .
Tagliabue seldom 4favels
to NFL cities at this time of
year for public appear·
ances. ,
Lewis told the crowd,
which included several vet·
eran players and top draft
pick Carson Palmer, that
Tagliabue usually reserves
his late-season trips . for
playoff cities. ·

poned by snow. cold or rain.
Following hi s strong
spring, Elder thought he was
headed to Cleveland but the
Indian s wanted him to build.
up arm strength in the
minors before joining them.
Elder, who pitched in 15
games for the Indian s last .
season, has done everything
the club was hoping .
Wedge plans to use Elder
for an inning or may be two
when necessary.
•
BASELINES: The
Indian s
named
Greg
Hibbard as their pitching
coach at Mahoning Valley
(A ) The 39-year-old went
57-50 in 165 career games
f(}r the Chicago Cubs, White
Sox and Seattle Mariners ·
before injuries cut his career
short. ... Attendance is down
30 percent at Jacobs Field
from this point a year ago,
but general manager Mark
Shapiro is convi nced the
fans will come out once the
weather - and the Indians
- warm up . ... Ohio State 's
baseball team will play
Cleveland State at Jacobs
Field on Tuesday. · On
Saturday, the lnd.ians are
honoring the Buckeyes'
.national ~:hampion s hip in
football .

aboard an Adam Ball single,
the score 2-2.
In the fifth the ceiling

Tagliabue tries to drum
BY JoE KAY

Burk.s,
who
signed
through thi s seaso n with a
club option for 2004, was
part of a rebuilding project
with the Boston Red Sox in
the late 1980s. He remembers some of the painful
time s that team went
through .
•
ELDER STATESMAN : Dave Elder got a
bonus when he re-joined the
Indians on Thursday warmer weather.
The Indians brought up
Elder followin g the righthander 's strong start thi s
season in the minor leagues.
He didn't give up a run in .
eight appearances at Triple·
A Buffalo, extending a trend
.he started in spring training
when he pitched scoreless
relief for six innings.
Elder's contract was purchased from Buffalo by the
Indians. who outrighted
right-hande• Aaron Myette
from their 40-man roster and
sent him to the Bisons.
While he was in Western
New York, Elder had to
endure unseasonably co ld
weather
even
by
Buffalo's standards.
After playing in unb~ar­
ably blustery weather in
their home opener, the
Bisons had five games post-

Eastern

NFL

Associated Press

'

Associated Press

up support for Be~gals

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

Indians Notebook

BY TOM WiTHERS

. ..

· Friday, May 2, 2003

Friday, May 2, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com ·

Austin, who made 31 relief
appearances -.over two seasons for Kansas City before
being acquired by Cmcinnati
on March 6, gave up a leadoff single to Jose Hemande'z
in the second and issued two
walks in the third. but
escaped without any damage.
The only other hit Austin
allowed was a one-out single
by Chris Stynes in the f(}urth.
Nelson Cruz (3-2) gave up
seven runs and nine hits in
five innings for his second
straight loss . He struck out a
career-high nine.
"Cruz made some mis-

r
1

He had an injury scare two
weeks ago when he spent four
hours in an emergency room
after taking a fall during a .
pickup game on campus. Ford
downplayed the injury as a
"spill" and the medical treatment as precautionary but did
not disclose details.
Before Ford 's freshman
season at Texas began in the
fllll of 200 I, he was diagnosed with spinal stenosis, a
narrowing of the openings of
the vertebra the spinal cord
runs through ..After consulting
with doctors, Ford decided
against surgery to fix the
problem , and tests later
showed that the condition had
improved.

Kearns · two-out . single.
Boone followed with his
fifth homer.
The Reds made it 6-0 in
the third. Sean Casey singled and , with two outs,
Boone hit an RBI double.
Guillen then homered to
left -center, his fifth .
After Cru z struck out the
first two batters in the
fo urth , Lopez homered, his
second.
Austin. who began the
at
Triple-A
season
Louisville , got his first
major league hit , a singl e in
the second .

XXXXXXX%XIIXXXXXXXIIIXIIIIIXIIIIIIXIIIIIXX~l

Saturday May 3
9:30-1:30
,...........................

Ju an Gontakt hit 111 o
homers. givin g him a majo(.
league-leadin g I I 11n the;
season, ~ nd Carl E1crctt hi rhi s lOth for th e Ran ge rs.
Form er Ran ger Frank
Catalan otto hom ered otT
Colby Lewis i3 -2J "'a pan.
of a six- run second inning;
for the Blue Ja y,.
White Sox 7,
Athletics 5
AI Chit:a e-o. Maggli li
Ordon ez went 3- fo r-5 with;
a home run . and Mioucl'
e
'
Ol ivo also hit a so lo homeras the White Sox a\otded a
sweep .
Paul Konerko had a pai r
of RBl s. and
Frank
Thoma s. Carlo s Lee an&lt;.[
Tony Graffanino also dru1·e·
in run s for Ch icago. which
won for just th e fourth time
in the last I I games.
Twins 6, D-Rays
13 innings

Indians, Angels
postponed
The series finale bet\\een
the Clevelaml Indians and·
Anaheim Angels was post·
poned by rain on ThuNia}:
night.
Officials m Jacobs Field:
waited more than an hour:
after the schedu lecl 7:05 p.m.
start before calli ng it when ~
storm sy,tem seltled o1·er
northeast Ohio.
The game was not immedi -:
ately
re schedu led. The·
Angels, who wont he llrst two:
games in the three-game .set.:
will be bat:k in Cleveland'
from Aug. 8- 10. .
·
Indi ans maJl ~l i!C r Eric
Wedge said he · II "11101 c hi,
rotation buck one da v with
rookie Jason Davi ; (2-31:
starting Friday\ 'cries opener:
against Texas· Joaqu in Benoit:
(0-0)

r--------------------------------""1

HEALTH

and
FITNESS
1

•'

Getting fit and
staying fit is in!
A SPECIAL FEATURE
OF
UI:be ®allipoh~ Jlailp UI:ribunr,
~oint ~lea~imt l\egistcr and
The Daily Sentinel ·

U

Friday, May 16

u

•• t~
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Dave McCormick u

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Advertising Deadlines:
Wednesday, May 7, 2003

~

- Display AdvertisingCall Today
Tribune- 446-2342
.Register - 675-1333

Reaching over 29,800 readers.

...

s,

At Minn eapol is. Cristtan'
Guzman 's one-out duuble"
off Trav is Harper ((}-2) in
the 13th inning sco red
Jacq~e Jones &lt;tnd lirt eu
Minnesota.
Tony Fiore ( I -0) worked
two innings for the win '"
the Twin s overcame a -1 -11
·defic it to complete their
three-game sweep.

=r-=-= ~HmtHJ :~

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·~-~---·· · ··········· · ···· · ······ !:II

~·

Jerry Hairston's bunt single
chased
Maroth . Matt
- - - - - - - - - - Anderson came in th en
· walk ed Melvin Mora to
One pitcher got a win load the bases.
. wi th out throwing a sing le
Gary Matthews fo llowed
pitch . Anolher lost des pite wi th a two-run iufield sinthrowi ng seve n no-hi t gle, .and Jeff Conine and
innings.
Gibbons added RBI single s
Two unusual feat s led to to make it 6-3. ·
an all -too-usual occ urrence:
The Orioles ( I S-12) are
two more losses for the three ga mes above .500 for
Detroit ·Tigers.
the first time since May 4,
Ja y Gibbons broke up 2000 .
Mike Maroth 's no-hit bid
with a leadoff single in the Red Sox 6 , Royals 5 .
eighth and the Baltimore
Ori oles went on to score six
runs with two outs to sweep
At Boston. Todd Walker 's
a d_oubleheader against RBI dou ble off Jaso n
Detroit with a 6-4 win Grimsley ( 1-2) in the eighth
Thursday.
sent the Red Sox to a threeGibbons hit a go-ahead · game sweep of Kansas Ctty.
two-run single and Tony
The Royals have dropped
Batista drove in another run four strat ~ht and ft ve of stx
in the eighth as visiting att_er getting off to a franBaltimore rallied 10 win the chtse-best 17-4 start. Mtke
opener S-2.
Sweeney, · Carlos Beltran
The Tigers dropped to 3- and Rau_I Ibanez homered
23 after losing their fourth for Kansas Ctty.
.
strai ght game.
Trot Ntxon homered tor
B.J . Ryan (3-0) earned the Red Sox , who won thetr
.the first win without throw- fo urth consecutt ve. game
ing a pit~h•after he picked a.nd seco?d tn a row tn thetr
off Omar Infante on first last
at-b at.
Boston
base when he relived Pat tmproved to 10-1 at home
Hentgen with · two outs in after lostng the opener at
the seventh.
Fenway Park.
In other AL games, it was
Boston 6. Kan sas City 5; Yankees 2,
New York 2. Seattle I; Mariners 1
Chicago 7, Oakland 5;
Toronto 7, Texas 6; and
At New York , Mike
Minnesota 6, Tampa Bay 5. Mussina matched a career
The Anaheim at Cleveland high with hi s eighth straight
game was rained out.
win, backed by home runs
Fewer than I ,000 fans from Alfonso Soriano and
appeared to be at Comerica Jorge Posada off Joel
Park during the late-after· Pin'eiro (2·2); · and the
noon contest. By the time a Yankees won for the II th
heavy rain fell in the eighth !ime in 14 games.
inning, there didn't see m to
Muss ina (6-0) became the
,be more than I 00 people at first Yankee s pitcher to win
the ballpark.
hi s first six star'ts si nce Bob
· "What made the day Turley won seven straight
worse w·as nobody was in in 1958 in hi s Cy Young
the
sta nds."'
Detroit' s Award season .
Omitri
Young
said.
Mussina leads the majors
"Nobod y is behind · us. in victories and his nine
The se people don ' t care strikeouts boosted hi s ALabout us. I'd rather be on leading total to S I .
the road .''
In the second game , Tony Blue Jays 7,
Batista followed Gibbons'
hit with a single to put rim - Rangers 6
ners on first and second.
At Toronto, Roy Halladay
Maroth (0-7) retired the
won his first game of
(
1-2)
next two batters before
the
season
and Toronto
throwing a run-scoring wild
overcame
four
Texas
pitch to make it 3- 1.
homers,
including
Rafael
Geronimo Gil followed
with an RBI single and Palmeifo's 498th.

Sentinel- 992-2157
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•

Page .S4

• The Daily Sentinel

Scoreboard
Pro Basketball
National Basketball Aaaoclatlon
Playoffs
FIRST ROUND
I Best·of-7 )
Saturday; Apr il 19
N ew Jersey 109, Mrlwaukee 96
j3os ton 103 lnd1ana tOO
Ph oen1X·96 . San Anton•o 95 OT
Oalla s 96, Portland 86
Sacramento 96, Utah 90

•

Sunday. April 20

Or lando 99 Detro•! 94
L.A La~e r s 117, Mtnnasota 98

Philadelphia 98 New Orleans 90
Monday, April 21
San Anton1o 84 , Phoenrx 76
Jnd1ana 89 Boston 77
Sacram&amp;nto 108, Utah 95

'

Tuesday, April 22

M ilwauKee 88, New Jersey es
M 1nnesota 119, LA La\cer s 91

Wednesday, April 23
Phtlade lphla 90, New Orleans 85
Oetro1t 89 Orlando 77
Dallas 103 Portland 99
Thursday, ~pnl 24
BOston 1D 1 Indiana 83
New Jersey 103, M•lwaukee 101
Mmnesota 1 14 , l A Lakers 110, OT
Friday, April 25
Orl ando 89 Detroit 80
San Antomo 99 . Phoef')IK 86
Dallas 115. Portland 103
Saturday, April 26
Milwaukee 119. New Jersey 114, OT,.
New Orleans 99, Philadelphia 85
Utah 1 07 Sacramento 104
Sunday, April 27
Boston 102 . Indiana 92
L A Lakers 102 M1nnesota 97
Orlando 100 Detr01t 92
Portland 98 Dallas 79
PhOenix 86 San Antomo 84
Monday, April 28
Ph 1ladelph1a 96, New Orleans 87
Sacramento 99 , Ulah 82
Tuesday, April 29
New Jersey 89, Milwaukee 82
San Anton1o 94. PhoeniK 82
lnd1 ana 93 Boston 88 , OT
L A Lakers 120, M1nnesota 90
Wednesday, April 30
New Or leans 93 , Phi ladelph ia 91
Ph1ladelph1a leads senes 3-2
DetrOit 98 Orlando 67 , Orlando leads
senes 3-2
Portland 103 Dallas 99 Dallas leads
senes 3-2
Sacramento 111 , Utah 91 . Sacramento
WinS SerieS 4-t
Thursday, M•y 1
Boston 110. lnd1ana 90. Boston wins
s€nes 4-2
New Jersey 113. M1lwaukee t 01 , New
Jersey wms senes 4 2
San Anton10 87 . Phoen1x 85 , San
Ant on1o w•ns sen es 4- 2
LA Lakers 10 1, Minne sota 85, Los
Angeles wms se nes 4- 2
Friday, M•y 2
Detroit at Orlando. 7 p m
Philadelphia at New Orleans , 9 30
pm
Dallas at Portland, 10 30 p.m
Sunday, May 4
New Orlean s at Ph1ladelph1a, TBA. if
necessary
Orlando at De trOi t TBA 1f necessary
'Portland at Dallas TBA, 1f necessary
'
CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS
(6est-of.7)
Monday, May 5
Boston at New Jersey, 7.00 p m
LA Lakors at San AntoniO. 9:30pm .
Wednesday, May 7
Boston at New Jersey, 7 00 p m
l A Lakers at San Antomo . 9 30 p m.

Hockey
National Hockey league
Playoffs
CONFERENC E SEMIFINALS
(Best·of.7)

Thur•d•y, April 24
New Jersey 3, Tampa Bay 0
Anaheim 4 Dallas 3, SOT
Friday, April 25
Ottawa 4, Philadelphia 2
Vancouver 4, Mmnesota 3, OT
Saturday, April 26
New Jersey 3. Tampa Bay 2, OT
Anahe1m 3 , Dallas 2, OT
Sunday, April 27
Philadelphia 2, Oltawa 0
Mmnesota 3, Vancouve r 2
Monday, April 28
Tampa Bay 4, New Je rsey 3
Dallas 2. Anaheim 1
Tua1d1y, April 29
Ottawa 3, Phil adelphia 2
Vancouver 3, Minnesota 2, Vancouver
leads senes 2-1
Wedne1day, April 30
New Jersey 3, Tampa Bay 1, New
Jersey teeds sertes 3-1
Anahe1m 1. Dallas 0, Ana heim leads
series 3-1
Thuroday, Moy 1
Philadelphia 1, Ottawa 0, senes tied 22
Frldoy. May 2
Tampa Bay at New Jersey, 7 p m
Va ncouver at Mmnesota, 9 p.m .
Saturday, May 3
Philadelphia at Ottawa 3 p m
Anaheim at Dallas, 3 p m
Sunday, May 4
New Jersey at Tampa Bay, 3 30 p.m , 11
necessary
Monday, May 5
Ottawa a t Philadelphia 7 p m .
,
Dallas at Anaheim , 10 p m . 1f neces:
sary
Minnesota at Vanco uver, 10 30 p.m.
Tualday, May 6
Tampa Bay at New Jersey, 7·30 p m , tf
nec essary
Wedneaday, May 7
Phil adelphia at Ottawa. 7 p m , tf necessary
Anahetm at Dallas. 7 30 p m., 11 necessary
Va ncouve r at Mmnesota, 9 p.m ) 1f necessary
Thur~day, May 8
Mmnesota at Vanco•!ver, 10 p m., 1f
necessary

Soccer
Major League Soccer
E••tern Olvl1lon
WlTPto GF GA
4 3
Columbus
2 1 1
7
4 3
Chicago
1 0 2
5
New England
1 1 1
4
4 4
MetroStars
1 1 1
4
2 2
0 1 2
2
3 4
O.C Un1ted
Weatern Dlvl1lon
WLTPta GF GA
2 0 1
7
4 2
San Jose
Kansas City
1 1 1
4
6
6
Los Angeles
3 4
0 1 3
3
0 1 "1
t
Colorado
2 3
0 1 1
1
2 3
Dallas
NOTE · Three pomts for IIICtory, one po1nt
lor tie.
S•turdly'• Gamet
San Jose at New England, 4 p m.
Colorado at MetroStars. 7 30 p.m.
Dallas at DC Un11ed, 7·30 p m
Columbus at Kansas C1ty, 8 p.m
Satui'Ooy, Moy 10
Los Angeles at New England. 4 p m
DC United at MetroSiars, 7 30 p m
Colorado at Columbus 7.30 p m.
San Jose at Ch1cago, 8:30 p m.
Kansas C•ty at Dallas. 8·30 p m

Transactions

~

BASEBALL
American League
ANAHEIM ANGEL$-Re-acqu1red LHP
Enc Cyr off wa1vers from Cmcinnatl
CLEVELAND INDIANS-Purchased
the contract of RHP Dave Elder from

Buffa lo of the ll. Sent AHP AaroO Myette
outright to BuHalo
KANSAS CITY ROYALS-C alled up
RHP Kyle Snyder from Omaha of the
fCL Sent AHP Jeremy H1llto Omaha .
MINNESOTA TWINS-Placed RHP
Mike Feners on ll'le 15-day diSabled liSt,
retroactive to April 27.
OAKLAND ATH LETICS- Announced ,
LHP Micah Bowte cleared waivers was
sent outnght to Sacramento or lhe PCL
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS-Asstgned
LHP John Rocker to Orlando of the
Sournern League.
Natlon•l league
COLORADO ROCKIES- Placed INF·
OF Ch ns Richard on the 15·day disabled
hat. Purchase d the contract of OF Mark
Sweeney from Colorado Sprlngs of the
PCL Tra nsferred RHP D nny Stark from
the 15- to the 60-day disabled list.
Optioned AHP ScoH Elarto n to Colorado
Springs.
HOUSTON ASTROS-AsSigned INF
Julio Lugo to New Orleans of the PCL.
Purchased the contract of INF David
Matranga from New Orleans
BREWERS-Recalled
MILWAUKEE
AHP Ruben Quevedo from Indianapolis
of the ll. Optioned U1P Shane Nance lo
Indianapolis
SAN DIEGO PADRES-Optioned LHP
Ol1ver Perez to POrtland of the PCL
Recalled LHP Mike Bynum from
Portland.
FOOT6ALL .
•
National Footb1ll L.eagu•
BALTIMORE RAVENS-Agreed to
terms with WA Marcus Robinson on a
one-year contract
BUFFALO . BILLS- Released
OL
Ronald Boldin
GREEN BAY PACKERS-Re-signed C
Frank Wmters
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS-Waived
FB Patrick Washington and OT Chns
Z1eman n
OAKLAND RAIDERS- Signed WR
Charles Pauley, WR Willie Ou1nnie and
FB Chad P1erson
•
ST LOUIS RAMS-Signed WR Mike
Furrey to a one-yeer contract
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS-Signed WR
Bosley Allen. RB Allan Amundson , T Ben
Archibald, WR Mike Bueh. P Fraddie
Capshaw, P-PK Nathan F1kse , CB
Jose11o Hanson. S Kslly Hardy, TE-OL
Marcus Heffman , DE LaKendrick Jones,
T Jason Jowers, WA Troy Mason , C Ben
Nowland. LB Marcus Reese, G Shane
Riggs , LB Raymond Welts and LB VICtor
White
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS-Signed G
Shane Ha!l, WR Jerheme Urban. LB
Tracy White and WR Jason Willis
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
CARO LINA HUARICANES-Stgned
RW Craig Adams to a one-year contract
COLLEGE
CENTRAL- Named M1ke Boschae
men's basketball coach
CD NCOA OIA·MOORHEAD-Named
Jessica Rahman head women's basketball coach
ILLINOIS STATE- Signed
Denver
Johnson, football coach , to a four-year
contract
NEW ENGLAND-Named Curt Smyth
golf coach
N.C. STATE-Signed Chuck Amato,
football coach , to a one·year contract
extens1on through 2007
PITTSBURGH-Named
Agnus
Berenato women's basketball coach
SOUTHERN ILLINOIS-Named Matt
Pamter men's basketball coach
WESTERN MICHIGAN-Named Steve
Hawkins men's basketball coach .
WYOMING - Named Joe Legerskl
women's basketball coach .

,.

Friday, M!IY 2, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

www.mydallysentinel.com

utrihune

Sentinel
CLASSIFIED

Empire Maker's heel could
make the difference
BY RICHARD RosENBLAn
water and Epsom salts. Pan
Associated Press
· of the shoe was cut away
- - - - - - - - - - below the bruise to . help
relieve pressure and allow
LOUISVILLE, Ky.- The the h.o of to absorb more liq·
stron~est Kentucky Derby uid while soaking.
favonte m II ~ears might
Empire Maker, owned by
.Juddmonte Farms, will be
have a~ Achilles ?eel. .
Emp1re . Make{ s bruised racing in the three-quarter
foot w~s agam he focus at shoe for the frrst time.
~:f~~ehll~h~o~;~~- tw~r~~~~ The horse took Wednes~ay
Bobby Frankel proclaimed off, o~ly walkmg ms1de
his 6"5 favorite " 100 per- Frankel s bam. But the son
cent" after a jog Thursday of 1990 Derby wmner ,
morning, but opposing train" Unbndled was back on the
er Ron Ellis said "It's not an track Thursday.
"He looked fine , but he's
ideal situation" '
"It would
sad for the never bee~ a great jogger,"
race to lose the big favorite, Frankel satd. "H~'s got ,those
the drawing card," said Ellis, long legs and he doesn I ~re
who trains 12-1 choice them up .and down like ptsAtswhatimtalknbout. "A lot tons .. He s ~ better galloper
of people are looking for- than Jogger. .
.
ward to him running. I know . A I 112-mlle gallop Fnday
they think he's a superstar. IS next, followed by a Derby
The way he's run, he could mommg gallop leadmg up to
be."
the 6:04 p.m. post lime. A
The way Empire Maker ~allop . should be a bet!er
worked out With a special mdlcatlon of how Empire
three-quarter shoe on his Maker handles the track. .
bruised right front foot reaf"~' ve had horses With
fi_rmed frankel's belief that bruises that ar.e gone m a day
hls colt ts ready to handle 16 and horses with bru1ses that
challengers in the 1 1/4-mile take a month," Ellis said..
Derby on Saturday.
Bru1se or no brutse,
"I •
d
h •
E · Mak f
h
. t s as goo as el ~ ever mkplre .
er ~ces ~ 1onkug I
JOgged. No btg dea ,' satd tas trymg to g1ve .-ra e
Frankel, who also trains 8-1 his first Derby victory. Only
co-third choice Peace Rules. one favorite has won the
"These things are an every" race in the last 23 years:
day occurrence for me and Fusaichi Pegasus in 2000.
every other trainer."
Two-time Derby winning
The bruise was· discovered trainer Nick Zito, who does·
after Empire Maker won the n't have a horse in the race,
Wood Memorial at Aqueduct says history could work
on April 12, a victory that against Empire Maker.
established him as the top 3"Over the years," he said,
year-old.
"there's been so much luck
News of the injury, howev- involved that if you do make
er, didn 't come out until a little mistake, it's hard to
Tuesday, after Empire Maker recover."
returned from a morning galD. Wayne Lukas, who
lop. The colt could have hurt sends out lmfg shots
the inside part of his hoof Scrimshaw and Ten. Cents a
several ways, including step- Shine in his ouest for a fifth
ping lJWkwardly on a stone Derby win, ~aid the injury
on the way to the track or on "can't be a positive in any
the raci!lg surface.
way, shape or form."
Vetennanan Ken Reed has
Trainers can scratch a
tre~ted the bruise with a horse from the Derby as late
moiSt, wann .wrap to help as 15 minutes before the prereduce swelling _and has ceding race. After that, only
soaked the foot m warm racing officials can pull a

be

horse.
Once
Empire Maker
leaves from the No . 12 post
with Hall of Farner Jerry
Bailey aboard, nobody not even Frankel - has any
idea if the bruise will affect
the colt's performance.
" I wish it was that easy to
predict they're going to run
good every time," Frankel
said. "But it's not the nature
of .the game . U~til he proves
he s a Secretanat or Seat~le
Slew or one of those, you re
always ehg1ble to run a bad
race."
Empire Maker is ttie
biggest Derby f~vorite since
Arazi was 6-5 m the mom"
ing line before finishing
eighth in 1992. After impres·
sive wins in the Florida
Derby and Wood, Empire
Maker was already being
touted as a Triple Crown
threat, in part because of his
regal pedigree and Hall of
Fame connections.
But Frankel balked when
asked what separates Empire
Maker from the other 3ld
ye.~ hsi~ do the talking,"
th tr ·
·d "I
b g
e amer sa1 .
can ra
alii want about a horse. I've
b
d'
. d
h ..
eFen · lksa ppomte ~0 ~u~ :
ran e.1 was 0 - orm
Breeders Cup races befor~
SqUirtle. SqUirt won, the 200
BC Sprmt. And he s 0-for-7
m Tnple Crown rac~s~ but
~as three seconds: Aplltude
m the 2000 De,rby and
Belmont , Sta~es ,
and
Medaglia d Oro m the 2002
Belmont. .
In Emp1re Maker and
Peace · Rules,
though,
Frankel has one of the
strongest Derby hands ever.
If Empire Maker fails to
come through, it might not
be the bruised foot that beats
him. It might be Peace
Rules, the Louisiana Derby
and Blue Grass Stakes winner.
"Peace Rules couldn't
look any better," Frankel
said, "and he's never taken a
backward step."

To

Place

Your

Otftfoce-

r

HELP WANTED

22 1

r

Female spayed c:at 3 years
old . Beautltul Cat1co. Indoors
&amp; out. Loves to talk , 74D-

:1.5&amp;6535
Lovable, gentle pupp1es to
give awflll. Call 388-04 t 6.

Local Area Industry seeking temporary
personnel.
• 40 Hr. workweeks anticipated,
rotating shift work required.
• Technical and/or maintenan.ce
e xpe'lience preferred.
• Entry level wage rate @ _approx.
$10 .00 per hr. With moderate benefit
package bemg offered.
Interested candidates are to submit
resumEls to:

Human Resources Dept

Holzer. Senior Care Center, a premier
long-term healthcare facility has a few
se lect positions open and we're
looking for people who are dedicated
to providing quality services for the
elderly.
Positions available are:
RN- Unit Manager- Full time
LfN - Part Time
STNA • Night Shift- Full Time
If you would like to become a pan of
n.,

Hot Dogs also
available
Meals to go!!

P.O. Box 1051
New Haven, WV 25265-1051
By May 9, 2003

L

An Equal Opportunity Employer

RESTAURANT AND
MANAGEMENT POSITIONS ,,
The Wild Horse Cafe '
located in Pomeroy, Ohio is now
acceptin g applications f@r Kitchen
Manager: Executive Chef; Bar
Managers and Bartenders, Dining
Roo m Attendants. Bus and Dish
Tank Personnel and Host/Hostess.
Send resumes to:

'l

REAL ESTATE

'

In Rutland
Post467
5/5/03 - 5/7/03
PaylnQ $80.00
per;ame
Starburst

REAL ESTATE

For Sale
Bank Foreclosure Property
3 Bedroom, 11x2 Beth located
on 60/120 corner lot at 45
Riverview Drive Middleport,
OH. Cell (740) 94S:.2210, ask
for Sheila for en appointment
to see. Priced at $45,000.00.

$500.00
Each nl9ht we

start at 6:30
PodcJo,.$5.ooea.
nlvht.

Everyone
Wetcome

HAPPY AD

tc.nny A Judy Klotl
Mey 1111 lt71

Love. Matt, Missy
ROM&amp;: AmAnda

'

BINGO

E 0 . Employer

Tammy Hupp
51185 St. Rt. 338 Racine, Oh
45771

with what
you'll find in
the
Classifieds!

Special
American
L119lon

Please apply in person at:
380 Colonial Dr.
Bidwell, Ohio 445614

PUBLIC ADVERTISE·
MENT
Thl following per·
oon11 property wttl be
IOid IIIUCtlon lo lito
tety tten c111m1, by
Hartwell
ltol'lgl,
34055 Lau,.l Clltl Rd.,
Pomeroy, Ohto 4671111.
8111 witt, be held
May 10,2003,11 10:00
e.m. 11 the IIOrltll
ltlcttlty lldd,... ltellld
......... The fallowing

until lnd OCCUpcllill
,,. II follows:
Unit 78 Occupent:
Stephanie Rou1h
218 · Rock
St.,
l'o!Mroy, Ohio
· Contlnta: Two chill
of dr-., tlllphone
aland, 1011, colfH

---------------·····--..

YARD SAu;.
GAUJPOI...tS

~~--oiiiiiiiiliiiliiii-_.1

1915
Chatham
Vanety Thurs-Sat

Large

2 Family, Fn , Sat baby
items, ~s. g1rls, &amp; womens
clothing , v1deo cassette
r«order, &amp; miscellaneous
Items 209 LeGrande Blvd
272 Kerr Road { 2 mile from
H50)
Friday,
May
2
Saturday, May 3. 9am. kids
to extra large, toys, household collectibles.
274 Bulovine Pike May 2·3,
9AM-4PM, clothes, Wedding
Gown, Umforms , Toys,
Toddler Bed, Baby &amp;
..cH.:.ou.:.so=hol:..d:..i.:.t•..cm.:.•_
· ____
3 , Family 1/2 mile olf
Bulavllle 44 BuHernut
MlcrowB\Ie, TV, girts clothes.

Mise
Garage Sale May 2-3, 2534
Georges Ck. Ad 81g wornens cloth ing, everytt1mg
from sleepwear to leather
coat, ladles &amp; mens, bar
stools, gym equip , comtorter set. small appliances,
VCR ,
home
interior,
microwave, mise
--------Infant,
children,
adult
clothes Home lntenor. mise
1 mile below dam May 1·5

3 Family Yard Sale May 1,2,
&amp;f3rd. 9-5, 4 miles past Rio
Grande oH 325. Wolf Run
Road. Baby bed &amp; other
1tems Toys, clo1hes different

The public Is welcome

VFW Post (9053)

BINGO

will have a
at the Hall in

Tupper Plains, Ohio
on Saturday, May 3rd

at 1 p.m.
All members and their spouses
or friend. Auxiliary members
and their spouses or friend are
welcome.

Guest speaker will be
state VFW Chaplain
Barry Walker.

3S Grape St Saturday Only,
wicker swing, golf clubs, furnttUre, clothes, shoes and
odcls &amp; Ins
--------533 4th Ave. Rain or St11ne.
Fri. May 2. 8-4 and Sat. May
3, 8·noon

May 3rd
6:30pm
1st pack $10
· All packs after $5
Starburst $1400
American Legion
Middle1port

!MAT DAILT
PUZZLII

--

Mizway Tavern

Yard sale An!1que dresser,
cars &amp; trucks, tools, lawn
mower rider &amp; all kind of
goodieS Frt Sal

ing, Christmas items, bread
maker, tceeream maker, ~~- 2 family yard sale at Hills
isher, glassware , CD s, Citgo, Sat, May 3rd. 9am-?
maternity, baby bed, clothes ·Lots of mise Items.
and other baby Items.

S© Rcil lA '7" ~ 'B~'6·

WOIO
tAM I

1he

be-

ch•lr,

ldtcheu utenelll, elec--

tric lin,
weight
cordlno
bench,
phone,

many
Unopened boXII.

Unit 53 Occupent:
Annette Shlrmln
305 N. 3rd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

bench, wood 1taal 1

T.V., folding ch1tro,
bench, child'• bed
treme, ml1c. boxed
It-a.
Unit 71 Doaupent:
ChriiUne Herter
1501
Nye
.Ave.,
Pomeroy, Ohio
Contonto:
Relrtgerltor, w11hlr,
tempe, bid 1nd met·
t,.tl, chlld'l btcyclel, ch1rco•t grill ,

II

II~

Ir

7

•

.

Comoloto tho thutklo quoted
by filling In th• m!ulng wo rds
you devoloo from Slip No. 3 below.

~

PRINT NUMBERED
~ lEHERS IN SQUARES

Yesterday's SC:ItAM-UTS ANSWERS
Lonely- Filmy- Goose , ·Tavern- LEVEL
The cooking instructor was upset over the Inept attempts of her students. For example. when told to measure out a cup of water, one studerll asked if il should
be a heaoino or LEVEL cuo.

••

(4) 25 (5) 2

•

I
I' I' e

I 1
'-..J.-...1.-,.1,;,-'---'--"'

poHtng
canlatero,
mlcroweve, chlld'l
toy1 IUIIc.tiH, Win·
dow 1ir conditio-.
clothee,
pillow,
Tupperwere,
Chrtiii'IIU tlnee, c.tlncllle, child'• WOOd
chlll'l, litter bor,
pitcher, Ulenelll, 11~
verw1,., N1tlvlty ut,
cer1mlc
muga,
HeltowHn flgurlne1,
meny
unopened
bolU.

I I

...•
;

..•

r

AUCI10N AND

F'L.EA ~~

__

r

·-------,.1

Looking tor gOOd depend·
able drivers at PIZZA PLUS
Full or part-t1me hrs App ly in
person , 1044 Hackson Pike
or Call: 446-Q088.
Lost your Job? Need to
Work? Let's talk. The new
Avon!
There
are
..25,ooo••customers In our
area needing service Earn
$1 ,000+ Monthly by selling
$20. ol Beauty Products to 6
People, 5 days a Week!
Great for: Couples -Single
M o m 1 • F a m 1 I 1e 1 •
Handicapped. Plans to Fit
any Need No Stock Ups, No
Door to Door. It will Work for
Youl $10.00 Start up Fee
Call April . 304·882· 3630 or
1-888-748·3630.
NEED $$
FOR THE
SPRING?? Now Hiring
Flexlbla Schedultng •' ·888974-JOBS

VIllage Pizza IM
Taking applications for walt ress &amp; cook. Flexible Hburs,
Top Pay, Pa1d Health
Insurance, Paid VacatiOn.
Full-Time, F'art-T1me. Apply
in person 3004 Jackson
Ave
--------We are currently accepting
applications for the posit1on
of Metns Cou""-• Humane
tl
...,
Offlce f 20-25 hours per
week , some low enforcement eKpenence helpful,
although
not
requ 1red.
Humane officer classes will
be provided Send resumes
to MCHS, PO Box 682,
Pomeroy, Oh 45769

r.~l~:;)!F.;:;,~~~;.;,;;.;.,._....,
'fRAINING
·--tiiiiiiiiii.-,.1

Golllpolll Career Collage
{Careers Close To Home)
Call Todoyl 740-446·4367.
1-800-2t4-0452
New
Store
Opening . www galllpoltscareercollege.com
Management
pos1t1ons
Reg #90.()5·t274B.
available with new shoe
store opening In Gallipolis
1
MISCEIIAMDUS I
Excltmg career opportunl·
.
•
hes. Retail expenence preferred. Competitive benefit 1Bx7 t1 overhead Yt!Ooded
package. Sales personnel garage door. needs some
also needed E-metl resume repa1r. Call. 446·1542
to gfmetzgerOaol.com or
apply in person on Tue or Beautiful 14 CT gold Bndal
Wed , S/6 or 5!7 at Shoe Set rounded cluster diaShow, 305 Upper Rive r monds , w1de gold band
Road, Golllpolts. EOE MIF
Pretty Design $300 00 2
Longaberger
Baskets
No L.oyoHo He"' Ill
$45.00 446·4348
Earn an extra $420 •
$1680/mon .
Couch $200 .00. Recliner
Part-lime, llex1ble schedule! $t25.00, 19 in TV $50 00 ,
1-81)().695-9166 or vlsll
Coffee
Table
$20 00,

176

www.NoLayoffi.Herw.com

K1tchen Table and Cha~rs
$60 00 Freezer $100 00,
NURSES (ANI)
Car Carrier $60.00, Boat
$47 00
per
hour,
Slalom Sk1es $50 00 367Columbus , OH All Umts,
7272
FULL TIME (800)437·0348
Pan time beautician , rent-astalk&gt;n, coli (740)985-4291

Full S1ze Manress Set New
tn Plastic wrwarr Sacrifice
$119, Call Phone 304·4t2·

Go to Work Immediately! 8098 or 304-552- t 424
laborers and C!encal needS1ze
Pillow Top
with 9 8 motor &amp; trailer, located -In Jackson, Ohio Is ed In Gallipolis Area . Call Kmg
Mattress set, New sttll In
Aototlller, toys, baby ~ems, accepting applications for E&gt;tras al(304)522·4975
Plastic Sale $299, Cell
boys 10-12 clothes &amp; more elementary teachers lor the
Retired-Children
grown- Phone 304-412-8098 or
May 3rd. 8-4, Bill Cross res- 2003·2004 school year.
Etdra bedroom-Empty Nest· 304·552·1424
iOence m Racme , Ohio, 806 Applicants must be state
Want
to stay at home Foster
certtf1ed Applications can
Picken St , g1rl jeans 8, be piCked up at the school Parents Needed. Become a Queen Pillow Top MaHress
womenfglrl clothmg rug , office located at 10595 Therapeutt c Foster Care set, New in plasttc wfWarr
bedspread, oods &amp; ends
Chillicothe
Pike ,
M·F G1ver for youths ages 0·18. W111 accept $199. Cell phone
Middleport-Pome roy's 6th between the hours of 9·00 You will rece1ve re imburse-- 304-412-8098 or 304-552·
a day plus 1424.
annual 6-mlle long Yellow AM and 3·00 AM. For ment $30-$45
·
WANim
Flag Yard Sale, May 2 &amp; 3, more 1nformat1on you may mileage and paid respite.
we are looking for homes in
..., Do
look for the yellow llags! Call contact
Steve
Rhea,
0_
Athens, Me 1gs, Galli a, and ...__ _ _. 'iiii--,.1
for tnfo about locations, 74Q- Adm !nlstre.tor at 740-286surrounding
count1es
992·4055
1234
- Core Oponlngal
D-,
Train 1ng begins May 2. Ca II
RamerfHudson gar~ge sale· ELEMEtfTARY TEACHERS for more Information or to Fenced 1n Yard. Home
Tackerv1lle Rd , Racine , May The Chrl'stian L1fe Academy set up an lnlhal meeting Cooked Meals. Excellent
1 2, 3, colleclibles tools loce.ted 1n JacKson, OhiO is Oas1s TherapeutiC Foster Refe rences. Link Accepted
household, much more
accepting appliCations for a Care Network-Albany-toll Opemngs fill ing up fast
elementary teache rs tor the free-1-Bn-325·1558
(304)882-2766
Several garage &amp; patio 2003-2004 school year
- - - - -- S - -sales, May 1, 2, 3, 9am-?, Applicants must be state SALES POSITIONS OPEN Georges Portable awnll 1I,
tots of new &amp; used tools, certified Appl ications can Hardware &amp; or building don't haul your logs to the
bicycles. dolls, furn iture be picked up at the front materials. Part time &amp; Full mtll just call 304-675-1957.
elect ncal &amp; Indian items offiCe located at 10595 t1 me posil!ons a11a11able w1th
EllitS Presley collection , Chi lhcothe
Pike ,
M-F growing , succesful local Want to Lease tabacco
glassware &amp; ceramics , between the hours of 9:00 company Send resume or quota to my larm tn Gallia
homemade wooden barn &amp; A.M . and 3 oo P.M For more piCk up apphcahon At O'Dell County 740-256-1348
house knickknack shelves mtormat1on you may contact True Value Lumber. 3rd &amp;
clothmg, new homemade Steve Rhea Administrator VIne Street, Gallipolis, Oh1o Will care for elderly in your
quilts (all s1zes), somett11ng at 740--286-1234
home or mme EMp and ref4583t .
for everyone State Route -------~--erence (304)675-7961
124 between Racine &amp; ELEMENTARY TEACHERS The City of Point Pleasant1s
Syracuse
The Christian life Academy accepting appllcatlor,~s and
Will pressure wash homes.
located 1n Jakson, Ohio Is
resumes through May 15, trailers, decks, metal buildThree family yard sale, May accepting applications for
2003 lor the following posi- Ings and gutters. Call
1st &amp; 2nd, 9am-5pm, 41190 elementary teachers for the
{740)446..()151 ask for Ron
tions·
Laurel Cliff Ad, Pomeroy, 2003·2004 school year
1 Harmon Park Pool or leave message.
AppliCants must be state
Hudson
(Part· Time
Manager
Yard salt~J, FridaY, Saturday, certified. Applicat ions Cliln Summer)
Will stay with elderly parson
Sunday, Darwin 681 E 112 be picked up at the school 2 Recreation Dlrectoo (Part· In there home. Nights only.
mile out
office located at 10595 Time Summer)
(304)675· t 898
Chllllcotha
Pike,
M·F
3 Ufeguarda at Harmon
II \\"'-~ l \1
Yellowbush Road. Thursday between the hours of g-oo
Parle Pool (Pan·tlme .aum&amp; Friday, baby crib, toys, A M and 3·00 p M. For more
mer)
Kitchen
tab le, Information you may contact
clothes,
Applications
may
be
OPPoRnJNny
Longaberger Items &amp; more. Steve Rhea, Admlhlstrator
obtained at the City Building · - - l i i l i i i i i l i i i i ; . r l
J..ARD,
n.
l-•1_740_·2_86_·t_23o4
_ _ __ . 400 VIand St. Poln1
.
INOTICEI
r-1. cLI!A~Nu
• Harris Steak house Now ~euant Welt VIrgin ia.
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
We
are
an
Equ&amp;l
Hlrlng.(304)875-9726
Opportunity Employer. we lNG CO r~mmendS that
Baby stuff, everything but Help wanted caring !Or the
do r(ot discriminate pn the vou do business with people
crib , girls clothes. Front elderty, Darst Group Home.
baala ol race ; religion , color, you know, and NOT to send
Firehouse
Cafe ,
New now paying minimum wage,
sex. age, national origin or money through the mall until
_H_ave_n_
. M_•_Y_3_._ea_m_·_?___ new ahltts· 7am•3pm, 7am- disability.
you have Investigated the
oflerlng.
Big Yard Sale Sat 8·? At 2 Spm, 3Pm-ttpm, ttpm·
Truck Drtverl , Immediate
North
beside
Flatrock ,1am, can 74().992"5023 ·
Grocery, clothes, nlc-nacs, Individual with Secretarial, hire, class A COL required,
baby clothes, chainsaw, Accounting, and sales skills. excellent pay, experience
Send resume and refer- required. Earn up to 11,000
weed eater, tires ect
~F-Irs_I_A_n..cn_u_oi-SO::-u-th-s.,-ld-e en ces along with salary por WHk.Call 304·875·

1180

r

Success has different forms for
different people. For some people
1. . . . . .• success depends on being well
,.-------'"""~..., known, wh ile for others on never
M E ·M N U I
being - · -- - - " -

Contente:
Night
1t1nd, tr11 weight

L 00 P

5

Y&amp;rd Sole Sal May 3, 8·? on
hill behind Pt Pleasant
Moose Lodge, brand name
clothing, baby items &amp; lots of
m1sc.

Auct1on, May 3rd, lOam,
36545 Flatwoods Ad, Sat , Angle's Flea Market, 333
9am-5pm , GE kitchen sto11e Mechanic St., Pomeroy,
$150 lots of misc.
Ohto. (740)992·9734 more
mto
8 family sale May 5·6 , 9am 5pm. Skate -A-Way Rmk ,
WANTED
(740)985·9996 Troybill 6hp
TO BUY
electriC start !tiler, Eastern - Star 1tems, word processor,
Absolute Top Dollar U S.
car stereo speakers, ce11ing
Silver,
Gold
Coins,
fan, com mercial venet1an
Prootsets, D1amonds, Gold
blinds, mountain bike, 4-tlres
Rings,
US Currency,2-weddtng
(235· 75-15 ),
M.T.S. Cotn Shop, 151
dresses, S· 10 trUck too lbox,
Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
Avon, waterbed ralls, furm74().446·2842
ture . clothes, toys. lots of
1 \ 11'141, \1 1 '1
miSC
...,t I ~\ II I ...,
Big
yard
sale ,
5439
Townsend Road, Fnday &amp; ftl1'11.011"'"-------,
Saturday
•
HELP WANTED
May t-3, 692 Art Lewts St,
Middleport, all sizes 1n clothing . Beame Bab1es, knives ,
porcelain dolls, toys, knicKknacks, m1sc

Wo

..t"lon

8I.JSINEX';

HELP WANTED

"'iijldr;;;;;;;;~~~;,;;;;;;;;;;;~

I I I

·. I

Ohio
.
Contento: Bicycle,
hand tooto, r1k11,
1~1, hOII, C~
lng, Qll grill, mile.
houeehold lteml, picwlcke~

YARD SALE · May 3rd &amp; May
5th thru 9th. 1.2 miles out Rt
2t8

U RT I

Buckshot only

lura•,

3, 112
P1ke,
Items,
much

0 I MU E M

Tues- Euchre
Thurs- Pool Toum
Wed &amp; F ri· Karaoke
Sat. Band Blue Jeans 9·1

12 noon May 4th

118nd, Will 1hlll unit,
child'~, IIIWing
box,
oto 1lbu1111,
IIHir C. len, OhiO
Stitt )ICklt, Mllgl
High School y11r·
booko, CD'o, vld1o
tapeo, mtoc. houll"
hOld lttml.
unit 11 occup~nt:
Rolllft freemM 3111
E. Mlln St., Pomeroy,

?
Yard Sale Sat. May
mile out Butav11te
turn ,computer, babv
sinks, pool table ,
more

low to form four simple wordo.

Forked Run Sportsman

llmpe,C~•-

YARD SALE May 2nd . 3rd
95 C!ndy DriVe. Porter 9:00-

May 3 &amp; 5 , 8·5, 34 Smithers
Ave. Ladies size 8-24 cloth-

l•tter1 ol
0- Rearrange
lour S&lt;:rambltiG wordo

•

1

•

to tke f'lederel "•lr Hou•ln• Aot of 1118• . •
In v4oletlon ot tke le..

Accepting applications or
resumes for part-time paramedics, MCEASA PO Box
34 Polnl Pleasant WV 25550
or call 1-304-675-8134 ·lor
May 2 &amp; 3. 907 S 2nd Ave .
more 1nlormat1on
Mtddlepart, large assortment name bra nd boys
Attn: Work from home.
YARD SALE
SATURDAY clo thes
(N1ke ,
Tommy
$500· St 500/ro&gt;o PT
May 3 • 9·? . 236 Upper Hllf1ger, Jordan &amp; others )
$2000· $4500/mo. FT
River Road. Ram Cancels
800·286·9748
May 2 &amp; 3, 9am-5pm, 3 fam•
www retire41 1.cam
YARD SALE • Fndoy,&amp; lly, Baum Addition. kids
Saturday only 9-5 3 m1les clo thes , biCycles, Home
AVON! All Areasl To Buy or
out 588 tram H1gh School
lntenor, mise
Sell . ShJrley Spears, 304675·1429.
YARD SALE 495 Shoes1rlng May
2·3,
9am-5pm,
Ridge, Gallipolis, Saturday Rejoicing
lite
Church, Babysitter needed one
May 3, g.? Rain or Sh1ne
Mtddleport, all proceeds go weekenD a month starting
Feb 1, 4 children under 3
Yard Sale and Food stand , loWJOS·TV
Saturday Mav 3rd. 9 A.M. May 2nd-3rd, 9am- 5pm, yrs 304-675-7816.
until ? , At Gallipolis Boat househo ld 1tems. mise ,
Classic Rock Band looking
Club. 111 V1ne Sl
Russ &amp; Dee Spencer resi- lor a bass player (304)675YARD SALE at
1939 dence, 2nd Ave , Reedsville, 7816 or (304)6t7·4305
Chatham St. May 1st, Ohio
Elementary Teachers
2nd,&amp;3rd. Freezer, furmture, May 3rd &amp; 4th, 2 m1les N of
clott1es, di'shes.
Chester on At 7, 13' boat The Chnstlan Life Academy

- - - - - - - ldlood ~y CIAT R. POllAN - - - - - - -

GUN SHOOT

181111,
mlcroweve
ablnd, Chrtlti!IU dlcoretlone, trumpet,

and clothing 111 Oak Dnve
Spnng Valley Sub

Large 4 Family Sale, Baby, YARD
1722
SALE·
Chi ldren's
and
Adult Neighborhood Road Frtday
Clothing.Jeans, Glassware, 9th - Saturday, 10th 8:00 AntiqUes,
Misc .
583 5.00, Ad ult &amp; Childrens
Georges
CreeK
Road Clothes, Toys. Mise
Thursday,
Fnday,
&amp;
YARD SALE- Fnday &amp;
Saturday. Rain or Shine
Saturday. 668 Left Fork
M!l\f 1·2 &amp;3rd, t20 Maple Road ,
Drive GaiHpolis, Ohio. 8.30 Road · bestde of Caldwell
Trucking. E11erythmg Cheap.
A.M . to 5 00 PM

slj!es.
3 ~amity- adult &amp; baby clothtnq , toddler beds, TV, booster seat, Househokt !tems.
much more. 11458 SA 554. May 2 and 3 (9·00 AM )
f;aln or Shme. 2 m1les Past
3 Famlly-755 Shoestnng Ho4zer on 160, turn on Kerr
Ridge Road, Clothes, Drum Ad then turn on Pine Hill
sa), Prom Dress (Tiffany), Road T.V., computer 1tems.
some furniture, Lots of Odds guns, tools , clothing, much
.&amp;:...::E_nd
c.s_ Fr_t. _&amp;.,.s_a_t-....,-..,- more (watch tor s1gns }

Pomeroy Eagles
Band- Fast Eddie
May 2-3

PORK CHOP DINNER
May 4
11:00-?

clothing,

GARAGE SALE, Mf1113 &amp; 4
from 9-5, 2 miles North on
St At 160 from Holzer
Hqsp1tal Horse Saddle ,
Bridle &amp; Blanket like new,
Rugs, new Radio, Hunter
Ce1hng Fan , Highchair,
Babybed
mattress .
Household 1tems. Clothing ,
Tomatoes, Cabbage &amp;
Pe~r Plants, Plus lots of

baby sturf and much more
9-:5 Thurs-Sat.

LOYALTY DINNER

Diffemtct.

swivel rockers,

me "~•1 d•y o r
1

e

May 3 8AM·4PM , 238 2 tomtly, May 2·3, 51660
Bulavllle PiKe Aid ing lawn Bald Knob Ad. Long Bottom,
mower, Soloflex, com pu ters, Oh1o, ra1n or shtne.
toys, boys clothes
34250 New Lima Rd .
Mov1ng Sale 227 4 th Ave
Carpenter's, May 1-3, 9am·
10·2 Saturday May 3, 03 ~ pm appliance, end tables
Some furniture.
weddmg gown. TV. dresser,
6 chairs &amp; table, cedar chest
Movmg Sale. May 3,
Furniture, household goods &amp; more

Saturday 9-?, 3107 Bulavme
P1ke, Clothes, Womens 8925 Fourth , Thurs-Sat. 8-5 14, Boys 5·7, Toys , MISC ,
glassware, linens, granit- Bear Ben1e Bab1es.
ware. canner, exerc1se, tv's,
sewing machine. lots more. Saturday 9-?, 5 family Yard
Sale , Home Interior, glassBoy and Girl Ck&gt;thes 2HT, ware , desk toys , baby
clolhes , house decor &amp;
At 7 South , Eureka , OhiO
740-256-6488 Canceled 1f m1sc 3110 m1le out Georges
Creek Ad from SR 7 N
rain .

~~:;::;;:::;::::~ _lo-ts_o_t_m_•~-----------

Sunday,
May 4, 2003

Baked Beans
$6.00
(includes drink)

YARDSALE

Th

llllun 7 D•Y•

I

C
!f.i

FISH FRY

The Racine American
Legion 602 will be having a

•hould

a-

WALLEYE

11:00 am - 6:00pm
Rutland
American Legion
All you can eat
Fish, Cole Slaw,

1100 p.m .

P•p•r

PUPPIES • 1/2 Pekmgese,
Children
clothmg
230 Saturday May 3, Turn off
112 Chihuahua, 245·9644 .
LtnwOOd Dr. Gallipolis, Ohio At 7 on to Georges Creek
Road go about 1/2 m1le, go
~
9-6 May 1,2,3
around sharp curve and it's
· - - - - - - " " 'lpl Fairfield Lane, Fr1day &amp; on the nght ·
Home ln tenor, household
KEvs FOUND on COurt St SaturdAy May 2&amp;3 little
gOOds, tots of name brand
near El Rod's. CALL : USE girls clothes 2T-4T. Juniors
clothes 6 mos -4T. and tots
name brand clothes stzes
HERBS INSTEAD at 446- 3 &amp; 8_12 , stroller, carseat, more.
1616
shoes. toys Starts 10 AM-5
Thurs-Sat 463 SA 2t8 new
lost. Purse lost at corner on PM both days.
model toys kids clothes all
Rt 160 Need keys &amp; cell
s1zes. lawn and regular furPhone. REWARD 446-3687 Friday 9am-5pm Friday May
2, Saturday, May 3 6408 St niture , computer, foosball
Rt 588 Exerc1se equip, 2 table, bed clothes

r

\JP To 1 5 VVorda, 3 D a y •
Over 15 VVords 2.0¢: Per VVord
A d • M u • t Be Prepaid

•n•ertlon

Ir ~~ I ~~y~ Ir ~~ 11"6 lliuWANTED lro

14 Family movtng oul of
Cheshire Eveythlng must
C-1 Beer Carry Out permit go Ra1n or shine. May 2nd &amp;
f9( ule, Chester Townsh1p, 3rd 9-5
,.lgs County, send letters
of mterest to The Dally 4 FAMILV-May 1,2,&amp;3 , 9- ?
Sentinel , PO Box 729·20, at Pnme Automotive 2132
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
, Sta1e At. 7 N
G1rls 18rnos and up, boys ,
Looking to rent 2 Bedroom ladles &amp; men clothlhQ
1
or larger, Mason Co One .
'
hlld (304) 675 _ D1nmng room Table , w1cker
ad It n
0
8
~ '
c
·
stands, computer de&amp;k and
much, mt.ICh,rnore !f ra1n we
will move tnside

;:H:E:L:P:W:::A:N:T:::E:::D:..::H:::E:::LP::W:::A:N:::T:ED:; ANNOUNCEMENTS

WE'RE LOOKING FOR A FEW
GOOD CARE GIVERS

~~"~!:00 ... ~.

•t•rt Your Ade Wtth A Keyword • lnclud• CO!nplet•
D•ec:rlptlon • Include A P~tc:e • Avoid Abbreviation•
• l:nc:tud• Phon• NumtNtr "'"d Addrw•• When N••d•d

ANNoi.JN&lt;EMENrs

GM:AWAY

claaalfled 0

•

• Ad•

~~

Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Csll us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
E-mail us at:

Oe-ad'e-;~e4

M o n d a y t:hru F r i d a y
: 0 0 a.n-a. t:o 5 : 0 0 p.n-a.

r

Visit us at: 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us st: (740) 992-21 57

I
E-msll us at:
• .:.....-~~~~~~.!!~~~~~~~~n!e~l-~c:om

to/-0~$"

AJ:l

Register

Sentinel

E-rnall us at:
claa•lfled 0

ACI---

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
HELP WANTED

m:rtbune

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446- 2342
Fax us at: (740) 448-3008

~~-

4005

Swap meet . Plenty of requirements to: 4367 State
Vendor space.' Concetsiona Route 160, Galllpolla, OH W1nt1Q short-order cooks I
45631
watitraas muat be dependand restrooma RT 35, close
to dragstrtp. For more Info Need 5 ladles to sell Awn able &amp; be able to work tloxi·
ble hro.304-875-30t 0
contact Tom or Jesse (740)446-3358
(300)675·7588 6am· ???

HOMES
FOR SALE

OI'I'ORTIJNITY
NEW STORE OPENING
Management
positions
available w1th new sho.e
store open1ng m GallipoliS
Exciting career opportunities. Retail expenence preferred Compettve benet1t
package. Sales personnel
also
needed.
E-ma1 l
resumes
to
glmetzger@aol.com,
or
apply 1n person on Tuesday
or Wed nesday, 5/6 or 5/7 at
SHOE SHOW, Wa lmart Shp
Cntr. Gander Dnve, Mason ,
WV EOE M/F

i

MONEY
TO LoAN

DEBT CRI31S1
Consolidation is the key to
personal loans, mortgages
and other financial serv1ces
A II
$ 00 000
va able up to 5 ,
.
c
TO
Low Interest Al l
LL
FREE 1-677-436·6297

j

PR~ONAI.
SF.RVICI!S

TURNED oowN oN
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1-688·582·3345
I{ I \I I .., I \II

T;;i;;;-,;;;;;~.-~;~

All real estate advertletng
In this newapaper ia
aublectto the Federal
Fair Houalng Act of 1968
which m•k•• h Illegal to
advertise "any
preference, limitation or
dlserlminatlon bated on
,race, color, religion, ae•
familial 1tatu1 or n•tlonal
origin, or any Intention to
make any such
preference, limitation or
discrimination."
Thla newapaper will not
knowingly accept
edvertlaernents far real
eatilte which Is In
violation of the lew. Our
readers ere hereby
Informed that 111
dwelling• advertlaed in
this newapaper are
available on 1n equal
opportunity be...
Home from $199/month.
4%
fore closure homes
Oown 30 years at 8 5 % apr
4 hstmgs call 800-319-3323
ext 1709 ,

r. .~.o_•.•~.:-.s.~--,.,1 r M~~s~ I
(3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up
for Immediate possession an
w1thm 15 mm. of downtown
Gallipolis Rates as low as
6%. (740)446·3218.

1991 mobtle home and 5
plus acres w1th t1mber, located Nye Avenue . ca ll
(740)992·2377

1997 16x80 Trailer for sale, 3
bedroom, 2 baths, $18,500
2/3 acres Level Lot, 2 story Call 446-4807
house.
roo ms, 2 baths,
porch and large deck heat 28x40 Doublewide, 2 bedpump, recently remOdeled, room , 3rd bedroom opltonal,
corner of Green tree of 2 lull baths, total ele. large
Bulaville
Pk.
$69 ,500 front and back porch 30x30
(740)367-7272
garage w1th off1ce and stor·
age area 112 acre tot on
3 Bedroom newly remodBlazer
Road .
Addison
eled, '" Mtddlepon, call Tom Township, $55,000 00 Call
Anderson after 5 p m
740·645·t32 2
992·3348
87 Gulfshore 14Joi70, 2 bed3 bedroom, 1 bath, 2 story room 1 1/2 baths 367-0632:
home in Pomeroy, 1 car
garage, ftreplace, (740)992- 96 Norris Mobile home, 2
9492
br ,2 ba , central a1rlheat w/
stove, refndg .. washer &amp;
3 br home at 171 LBriat Dr dryer 20 Fl. deck~~/ awnmg,
GalliPOliS OH .. appt only m very good shape, elderly
please 740-446-9403 or lady movmg to retirement
74Q-446-7845or 1-304-675· home 304-675-3806 or 304·
32t6
643·469t

a

4

BEDROOM

HOME, 4 Cole's Mobile Homes
US 50 East, Athens , Oh10,
45701. 740·592·1 972

bath, only $14 ,900 For listmgs call 1-800-719-3001
EtctF144
----------4br. 3 baths, storage build·
ing, fenced yard , CfA,
Modern appliances, All
Electnc,
Good
Neighborhood Pt Pleasant
Call (304 )675-6515 after
Spm.
-'------.,.-,--55 acre farm on SA 554 3
bedroom, 2 bath house w1th
basement. 2 barns, 10 acres
pasture. Spnng fed livestock
lank. GOOd hunttng Stocl&lt;ed
pond Free gas. $ 125,000
Call (740)367·7266 betwaen
9am &amp; 9pm
--------Brick Ranch Home. 3br 2ba
1 car Attached garage, 1 car
detached garage. lnground
pool On 112 acre lot
Ser10us Inquires. only
(304 )675·805 1

Land Home Packages available. ln your area. (740)4463384.
New 2003 Doublew1de . 3 BR
&amp; 2 Bath. On ly $1695 down
and ,&amp;295/mo 1-800-691·
6777
New 3br/2bth Only $995
down and only $197.47 per
month Call Harold, 740385-7671
~1:11"--::'"'........- - ,

r

8I.JSINEX';

AND

BuwiNGS

I

Rio Grande area, 2400
sq .ft ., Offtce/ Commercial
Bul ldtng tor Ren t! Lease
Plenty off parking (740)245574 7

r

Lars &amp;
4iGiE......
-Bu-la-~-~~-a-P-tk-e-.2--st-o-~-.3--br-.. ~. . . . . AiCRLii.
.
2 1/2 ba ., liv. room, dining,
fam ,&amp; game room 2 car
gar , 3 car unattached, pool,
$175.00000
1
acre
(740)446·8050

1 acre building lots, 3&amp;112
acres, and 5 acres tracts.
Green Schools. Great location. At 588 (740)44 6·9966

1 79 Acres Lot Stoneybrook
Estates. Sand H ill Road ,
Point Pleasant Land already
Cleared ,
Ready
for
Construction Publ1c Water.
City Schools (740)446·9966 675·3524 or 675·5440.
New home- 4 bedroom, 2 Serious lnqu1nes Only
bath , llvmgroom, fa mily·
room, dining room den , 1/2 acre lot, Tycoon Lake on
modern kitchen , 2 car Eagle Ad . city water. $8500,
garage, hp, all electric, witt1- (740)247·1 tOO

By Bu1lder, aHortable New
Bnek 3 bedroom 2 112 bath,
2 car garage. Corner lot.
Great Locatio n, Green &amp;

In walking distance Pomeroy
Golf Course. 3 acres ,
$110,000 ,
call
Susan
(740)985·429t ., work 740·
446·7267.
For ule by ownera in
Addison overlooking river, 1
1/2 acre, 3 br., 1 be.., din. rm ,
kit , tutJbasement, tn ground
pool , trutt nees (740)446·
4528

Approxima tely 1 acre on
Centena ry Road. 1 more
from proposed n'ew school
site 74().446·4543
on
Raccoon
Camps1te
Creek Rd &amp; Barefoot Park
alec &amp; water on site $3000,
(740)286-8806
Lot fo r sale
(740)992·5858

1n

Aac me.

May 2 &amp; 3 at 3220 Howard
Avenue (Bellemead area)
Sam-? Lots of Name brand
wo men ·~ and big
mens
clothing. Lots of misc. and
much ITlOfe
Saturday, 8·7 220 River
Street. beh ind old Napa
building Robert F1sher's
Yard Sale Sat May 3, 8-4
1 t 4 Howard St Haven
Heights New Haven WV

' f

·---·~ --· - -

...

--

.'
---~----------

�-.

•

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

r. __.~.CREA.·l·1i·~·E-·' r

APAKIMEN"r.i
FORRENr

It

Level l ot , 1.5 acre, good Pleasant Valley Apartment
blacktop rd. 15 min. from Are now taking Applications
Gallipolis. All util. available. tor 2BR , 3BR &amp; 4BR ,
740-446-7993
Application s
a1e t ake n
Monday lh ru F rid ~y. !rom
Property for sale- close to

Ron Allison

588 Watson Ad

Wanted to buy: lot lor
mobile home. Gallia County.
with
water.ele .. sewage

hookup. 740-446-9209
I&lt;I \ I \I ...,

HOU'&gt;Eli
IURRE:Nr

bedroom house in
Rutland, $300 per month
plus deposit, (740)992-0309

·2

2 bedroom, I bath. Quiet
country nome. Nea.r Porter
no pets. ret. required. $400.
pe:r. t monlh deposit 3888234 atter 8 pm.

~

br. house, full basement ..__ _•Goou;iiiiiiiiiO.-rl
$.375.00 a mon .+$250.00 .
For Sale : Reconditioned
dep. .
3 br. w/ full basement &amp; washers, dryers and re~!i Q·
Thompson s
, garage, lg, yard $450.00 a erators.
mon.+ $250.00 dep. 304· Appliance. 3407 Jackson
Avenue, (304)67S-7388.
675-4469

0

MDIIILEI~n ~~
.
·vn. ~•

Schools. References and
deposit required. 367·06
,- 32.
3 Bedrooms $450.00. Also 3
bedroom house $4SO.OO +
qeposit 740-446-4824.
B'eaull'ful River View Ideal
flor 1 Or 2 People,
References, Deposit, No
Pets, Foster Trailer Park,

·

,,

,

740·44 1 ·0~81 .

Clean 2 bedroom Mobile
Home in Country. 256-6574.
Mobile home for rent, no
Pets, (740)992·5858
Newly redecoraled trailer in

~iddleport. deposit &amp; refer·

ences requested, no pets,
(740)992·5073 or 740·992 ·
5443.
Trailer for rent, $375.00 per
month $375.00 Deposit. On
S:ulaville Pike. 367-7272 or
441-1283,
'

,,..._ _ _ _ _ _"'!

~
. _ AP.FOR~~

L.

ni!.I"'J

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and unfurnished , security deposit
r~uired , no pets, 740..99222 18.
1 Bedroom Apartments
Starting at
$289/mo,
Washer/ Dryer Hookup,
Stove and Refrigerator.
(740)441 ·15t9.
3br. bath &amp; 112_$ 300 _ a

ence.
month(304)
+ deposit
675_8806&amp; refer·
Apartment A"ailable Now.
AiverBend Place. New
Haven, WV now accepting
applications for HUD-subsi·
dized . 1 bedroOm apart·
men!. Utililies included Call
(304)882-3121 Apartment
JWailable tor qualified senior/disabled person. EHO

• Limestone
• Sand
• Dirt

~~~

High&amp; Dry
Seff-Storage

Every Thurliduy .
at 5:30p.m.
Consignment Wed. &amp;
Thurs. IOam.Jpm
Now doing estate
&amp; household sales.
Phone 992-9553
or 742-0226
Auctioneer
Jim Taylor

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232

...,,........,=---....,

i

r

l'li~-~T~R-UC·~-,.,--,
·~

APART·

.1 -740.992· 7007

992-5479

mix Or nw tcll
has loi o.:L"
~5 . 95 &amp; $9.95
12 in . Hanging Bas kets
$ 11.95
6 l11 . Pcrenni ;d s $1.25.
4 in. pu t~ $ 1.00 • S 1.25
~ in &amp; 10 in. C l ny pot !-&gt;
&amp; C{Hllhinatiolllon pl•lnt-

I0

Gellnd Free!
Heather 1\. Fry L.M.T.

740-992-5379
O ff~ r ~ ( n lt h no

:'1 ·11·01

Ab·o now acapting

Open Mon-Sal CJ -5

must insurance

Closed Sunda

Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday &amp;
Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30 1st Thursday
or every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00 Bonanza
Get 5 FREE

I

750 EaSI State Street Phone (7410)~593·-6417t
Athens, Ohio

We

JONES'

Tree Service

M

Bucket Truck

Make House Calls

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

204 Condor Street

Saturday, May 3, 2003

Dean Hill
New&amp;: Used
475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV25271

Pomeroy, Ohio

Lawn and Garden Equipmelll i,, our
business, not our sideline

Best Servl'ce at
·
t h e B est p riCe

~~"-"-'"-

BUILDERS IRC.

1991 Bayliner 18' , Merecruise 130 wltrailer &amp; full
ca'hvas, excellent condition. New Homes • Vinyl
asking $6 ,300, (740)992· Siding • New Goroo,esl
2060
• Replace ment
-------1992 28ft. Bayliner deck Windows • Roofing
boat w/ trailer 120 Hp, force
COMMERCIAL and
motor w/lots of extras, good
RESIDENTIAL
cond. $68.000 304·675·
FREE ESTIMATES
8628
·------7 40-992·7599
1998 ~ 7' Fisher bass boat
60hp Mere, 72# E'llinrude
trplling motor, very low hrs ..
garage kept, like new.
(740)742-2301 after Spm.

O pl' ll

(140) 446-t812

s,.,.,.

1990 International Single
A)lle Dump truck, 466 DT,
Allis Chalmers DO Road
Grader. diesel engine,
(740)2S6-6t 47

Duel console, Ranger trailer
crome wheels w/ spare. 115
HP, Mercury Tracker w/
3props, (T)Oioguide TM, 2
locators GPS. Runs and
looks great. $6,500.00, 4461991 Dodge Van axe. shapes_;!;97,;;0.;.
.. _ _ _ _ _....,
asking $1100.
z
Wanted 4 dump truck loads
AA~!~~
ol dirt304-675-6512
__
........~ .

740-949·2217

1114 11

Finttll y... M uncy paid to .YQY when cancer

strikes. Yo u chQOM.'.thc umount up to $50,000 !
.Pays in &lt;;~ddition to other insurance.
You u ~c the monc)l however you like.
Cttnn :r will ~trikl.' when you least e11.pec1 it.
It will ·lcavc you and your family fin ancially
mapped . CANCER C!'JECK will be
there when you need i1.
Ca ll !lOw to reserve Y.Q.W: check.
ROCKY HUPP INSURANCE
&amp; FINANCIAL SERVICES
lJ OX 189 MIODLEPORT, OH 45760
740·843-5264
3J t8 1fn

Special

Let me de 1: for ycul

on A/C
as low as

UNII1 PIINniG

•~•trillll!

Add

&lt;

mo. pd

r

Dear
Abby
ADVICE

centered on Penny that she
has no other social outlets .
Ir is interesting to me that
she and Penny ' s father do
not seem to have a social
life of their own, and makes
me wonder what she could
be running from .
Penny and her mother
could benefit from counseling together. While a close
mother/daughter bond is
important,
~ou
have
described one m which the
mother has become obsessive . Both of them need to
understand that this behavior could cost Penny her
relationship with you.
Please don't end the rela tionship yet. Your lady
needs to learn how to set
boundaries, and she needs
your support now more than
ever.
DEAR ABBY: My daughter' s preschool teacher sent
the following le!ter home

smaller pieces.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) FirS! and foremost, you must
be able to have complete trust
in those with whom you are
dealing, If you limit your involvements to those types.
your commercial involvements will work oul fine.
VIRGO (Aug, 23·Sept. 22)
- Concessions will be called
for in an arrangement you
have wilh another today. If either is holdin!( out for a one·
sided deal, it" II collapse. Keep
fairness in the picture, and
it" II s ucceed.
LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct. 23)
When performing any
work or service for another
today , concentrate on the rewards )'ou'll receive rather
than on the muscles and exertion it may take to complete
the j_ob.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) Ask not whal your
family can do for you today •.
but what you can do for them.
You ' ll get far more reiUrns
from service to loved ones
ihan you will from serving
yourself.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-

15 11t.A \-1\C£
'(~W, Mt::l'i-1?

$ggtmo!lth•

Hours
7:00AM - 8:00PM

$75

.CANCER CHECK

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

45771

. : Slzft ~~10'
to 10'X30'

"W.Y's # I C hevy, Pontiac. Buick. Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

Ta~e

Racine, Ohio

for

r

uboru O UT
r' Plwu .1

29670 Bashan Road

in this
space

I

lj \

Hill's Self
Storage

Advertise

Bass Boat 1994 Ranger A72

9 .ml-~ plll

1- n-r~""' "'l"' . m·• mh'"'"' f'" ~ "P
('all "' fm llll•l'" •'•&gt;mPUitl ""'J'

A.•J

BY BERNICE BEDE 0soL
At times your course may
seem uncertain in the year ,
ahead, but the adjustments
yo,u make as needed . will
usher in inleresting and un·
usual conditions that will lead
to your ultimale success and
happiness .
TAURUS (April '20- May
20) - Condi1ions are extremely favorable today for
having something for which
you have been hoping materialize . You can achieve any thing you wanl once you ignore the naysayers .
GEMINI (May 21-lune 20)
- Do not permit a few set·
backs to discourage you today . There are slrong indications that your luck is there
for you 'lnd will help you
achieve "fhat you want and
usher in success.
CANCER (June 21-July
22)- Be cognizanl of details
19day, bui don't allow lhem to
obscure the big piclure. II will
be imporlant to focus on your
qverall concepl and then you
~ an properly handle the

1-800-822-0417

~~ii~~~f~i~~~~~~~~

last week, If you think it
would benefit your readers,
would you please consider
rinting it? -- A PARENT
NTEXAS
DEAR PARENT: The
meS Sflge in that · letter is
powerfuL I hope other parents will heed t!. Read on : ,
" Dear Parents : Today I
attended the funeral of my
3- week- old niece , She died
of suffocation in bed with
her mother, her father and
her 2-year·old sister.
" I don't need to tell you
the shock and sorrow this
tragedy has caused. As parents, we can only imagine
such a nightmare. It will
take a , lifetime of healing
and God's grace to get past
this.
"Although my niece ' s
death was tragic , she didn ' t
die in vain if, through her
death , other live s can be
saved.
."I know it 's popular and
natural to gather your children into bed with you -whether for their safety and
security, for bonding. or just
to get a good night's s leep.
We've· all been there,
"So, it isn't out of judgment or criticism fhat I
write this note but only out
of caution -- a warning. Be
carefuL It CAN happen , It
happened to my family .

Plea se, don ' t let it happe n
to yours ."

- Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jearm e Phillips,
and was founded by he r
mother, Paulin e Phillips .
Write
Dear Abby at
www.Dea rA bby.com or PO.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.

Do You Feel the
Need to Read?

ACROSS

42 Popeye'l
Olive-:
43 Loud clamor
1 Incite
44 By ihe book
5 Pouch
46 Takes a taxi
B Apiece
49 Andes
12 Fluency
nation
13 Ken,
50 Pierre's
neighbor
14 Love,
here
52 Mike
to Pedro
problem
15 Made do
54 Ireland
with
55 Snap
16 Always,
56 Diva 's solo
to Poe
57 Skip a turn
17 Firms up
58 T~tnk filler
18 Soy59 Smallest
·20 Light
attractive
19 Mongrel
wood
pup
43
Roof
21
Keen
22 Slice
problems
24 Musician's
23 "-been
DOWN
44 Film
job
had!"
princess
25 Obi·Wan
1 Right,
24 More
45
Blows it •
player
to
a
mule
sporting
47 Light tan
26 Note
2 Acorn
27 Accord
27 Arm bone 48 Knee
bearers
30 Seine
neighbor
28 Tulsa's st.
3 On the
vista
49
Energy
29
Simon
or
briny
31 Went first
51 Hush-hush
Diamond
4 Gather
32 Mauna org.
33 Tummy
5 Fragrant
34 Rare
53 Nose-bag
muscles
6 Wide st.
mineral
bit
35 Novelist
1 Rifle
35 Novelist
-Seton
8 Phllly team
-Rand
36 Shouting
9 iowa town
37 Freedom,
39 Rascals
in slogans 10 Soda pop
40 Twice 01
11 Ballgame
38 Eye part
41 Make
40 Feasts
stat

--

Whether your favorite
subject is math or music,
science or social studies,
you'll find something
interesting in the
newspaper. In fact. the
paper is such a reliable
source for the information
you want, you can even use
it as a homework and
school research tool.

Astrograph

992-2975

(J04)675 _1935

I 81

• DEAR ABBY:
live-in
~irlfriend, "Penriy, ' and I
are in our mid-30s . We have
·two young daughters from
previous relationships. My
problem is Penny 's mother,
"Marge," who ,insists on
being included i'n everything we do. We can't make
a move without Marge
demanding to know what
we did, where we went, who
we met, etc. She even wants
to know what we ate if we
go out for a meal!
Penny 's mom invite~ herself on our shopping trips ,
to the movies and dinners
out. If we do something
without letting her know,
we ' ll come home to multiple messages on the answerlfl$ machine from Marge,
usmg the excuse that she
" worries " when she doesn't
know where we are .
What I don' t understand
is the fact that this woman
has a husband at home. Why
she can't leave us alone, I'll
llever know. It's to the point
that I am rethinking my
future with her daughter,
because I don't want to
hang with " Mom" all the
time. Please advise. ••
tHREE'S A CROWD IN
SOUTHERN IDAHO
. DEAR
THREE'S
A
CROWD: It appears that
Marge ' s life has become so

Snapper

SALES &amp; SERVICE

1,--"''ioiliviiiliiiiiitttto_.l

•

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

I
~

t-------,.-f,..,,

"W.A.C.

Dec . 21) - Continue \o scan
horizon for exciling and
stimulating things to do today
where there are many opportunities to mingle 'with fun
pals. Leave the chores for another day .
CAPRICORN (Dec , 22 Jan, 19) - Your laienls lie in
areas 'w here you have finely
honed your ski lis, be they social activities such as a sport
or a commercial affair, such
as accounting . Success is
iikei.)' in either case ,
AQUARIUS (Jan, 20-Feb.
19) - Chances are something
good or even lucky could oc~
cur for you today thr.o ugh persons wuh whom you have a

t~e

social affiliation . This will be
deliberatiy brought about
throu_gh a kindness.
PISCES . (Feb , 20·March
20) - Broaden your perspeclive today, Don t be afraid to
think bigger and bolder than
.usuill, and ihere won't be any·
lhing you can't do , It's not
only in your hands -- it's in
your head,
~RIES (March 2 1-April
19) - Be careful not to pre judge a siluation with which
yo\1 deal with today . You'll
find the picture will be exceplionally bright once you focus
on the postti ve facts at your
disposaL

WORD SCRIMMAGe- soLUTION ev JUDD HAMBRICK
-r. 200J Olllltel F•111.or1 ~rldk:lllt , l...:

N

R,

®

Answer

1" OOWN

;...!L

-

• 21
• 82

AVERAGE GAME 200.210
... -ll3

JUDO'S TOTAL

• 122
313

to

previous
Word
Scrim·
mag\) ·

WORD®©®0@@@@®··
0000000

0
0
0
0

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®®®©®@@
AVERAGE GAME 18Q-170
by, JUDD HAMBRICK

:kdDOWN

"'Lot." ' To"l
+7P0111IS

~lt1

&lt;thO-Total
+30P0111IS

FOUR PLAY TOTAL
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

'.

DOWN

=

~ke a 2· 10 1-lertar word trom the letters on each rardllne.
Add points lo each word or letter usmg scoong dlr9C1ions at righl. Seven·lettw
.....ords get a 60-poin1 bonus. AJI words can be lounct In Webster's New World

DIRECTIONS:

....

JUDO'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

CoAege Oic1tonary.

\1t'S Rtto.\.L'1', REAllY,
REALLY
CLITE!

l140J
992-1385
'

per
month
2001 Ke~ sto n e Hornet
Camper. 24 teet, Extra Nice .
(304)675-6436

r:j~~~;~]

Hornet Lite 24 QL .
light weight, tows easily,
many options, $1 1 ,975.00,
740-446·9210,
- - - - -- - 36' Dutchman camper tor
sale, more · inlormation ·call
Raymond Smith (740}992·
2003

n os

.., I

I{\

I~

I .._

;;;;p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

r10

HOME

.........

0
~-AMn&lt;iiiiliiOIOw.O~-"iiloo,J
.~~~

YOUNG'S
SUE's GREENHOUSE CARPENTE
Meigs County's Largest selection of
· annuals, perennials, ve!lttables.
shrubbery, ttuit, ornamental trees,
roses, rhododendrons, ana azaleas.
COMPARE THESE PRICESII
4" pot ol annuals 94e
4" pot or perennials $1.1818Mf 6
I FREEl
Flat or plants $6.60
ot&gt;en 1 . .,.
a wMk daylight
Hanging Baskets $6.60
to ••""
Morning Star Road- C.Rd 30 • Racine, OH

r--· - - - -

nt

IIOWARDL
WRITESEl

........
1

i

diME

1·740-949-2115

MIIITDWICE

FISHING DERBY
Racine Gun Club
Prizes Awarded
Food , Beverages &amp;
Bait Provided
Sun., May 1Blh
All Kids 17 &amp; Under

dUMlESS

GmEI
I*fnl Elllllllau

949-1405

~

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Uncondi1ional lifetime guar·1
s tur·
1 . Loca1 reerence
anee
nished. Established 1975.
Can 24A Hrs·. 1740)
446·
0870
• ~e rs · Base me n1
walerprooting ,

Plastic &amp; Metal Welding
Pipe
Structural

Grilles

Slain lc.,s Slee t WEL

fenders
Motorcydeli fai ri1 ig!!
Auto: Bumpers
Radiaton.

Aluminum

Cu!)l Iron

:-hrouds &amp;

B nh~

Side lanls

General
Home
Maintenance- Palntmg, vinyl
siding, carpentry, doors.
windows , baths, mobile
home repair and more. For
free estimate call Chet, 740992-6323.
C&amp;C

11

ATV 's

Broken tubs
Plaslic 1anks &amp; Boxes
Taillight lcmes
Mild Steel ·

Stick . Mig. Tig. Ga ~.
Propunc Welding
Pla-. ma. Air Ar_
c. &amp;
Acetylene cullmg

State Certif ied • PorlaMe

AP Welding (740) 949-0901

&lt;;It

r:

I

/cHivRo,~Tj

GRAVELYTRACTOR

FOR SALE

r

.

TFN

LARRY SCHEY

PC DOCTOR

Gravely

---''- - - - - , - - - Honda 1994 Gotdwing
Aspencade GL1500, cruise,
stereo, 15.000 miles, excellent condllt'on $9200.00,
446·4395 or 446·9234 .

r

in . Hangmg

c r !oo '$4.50 &amp; $7 ,1}5

~omeroy

Brand New 4-wheelers. 50
cc $1299, tOOcc $1599. Will
trade tor a great deal Call

BoA.~R&amp;SMALEaroRS

Jeff Warner Ins.

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE
992-5776
Syracuse Now Open
All Flab $6.95

Buy 1 Gift Certificate,

For Sale, from 2001 Yamaha Road Star.
$350.00 to $1 ,6.0 0.00. Open Low Mileage, Lots ol e~tras ,
M·F 9 to 5, Sat. 9 to 3,
Closed Sun. Call: 388·9303. 74Q-2S6-6890.

r

N eu• ltmu Addt•d JVt•ekl}'
36198 PMd1 Fork Rd.
Pomtroy, Ohio, 4J769
Hour• 10-6 pm

Easter &amp; Mothers Day

20 Cars

2000 Dodge Dakota 4~&gt;:4
Sport V6., 5 speed. airo. 67k
miles, sharp. $11 .700 80,
740-339-3685 or 74D-2455347.
- - -- - - - 2000 Oldsmobile Alero
42,500 mi. ext. warranty to
100,000 mi. 4 new tires,
AMIFM/&amp; cassette/CO.
White w/ Gray int. , spoiler,
exc. cond. (740)44t-986S
a•er
" Spm.
---''----,----::-2001 Caviler, 31 ,000 miles,
good condition $6,500.00.
2000 Ford Explorer 55,000
miles 4 Wheel Drive
$10,000.740-441-0337.
94 LEXUS ES 300. loaded,
11 1K, clean. good condition.
leather. $5.500, (740)590·
2496
- ------99 PI ymou
'
th
Breeze.
loaded. like new. $4.400.00
9t Buick Centurv. new tires,
\ike new, $2,450.00
740·379·2748.

Cellular .

Ctased lund•y•

* Spring &gt;:&lt;
&gt;:&lt; Special *
THERAPEmC
MASSAGE

1

$SOO POLICE IMPOUNDS, 69 Mazda 626 4 cyl. 5
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
Hondas. chevys, e1c1 speed, PIS, PIS, Air. Looks
PRICES AT JACKSON
cars/trucks from SSOO. For &amp; runs good . Please Call
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
listmgs 1·800-719·3001 ext 304·593·0148 it no answer
Drive from $297 Ia $383. BURN
Fat,
BLOCK 3901
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call Cra.,ings. and BOOST - - - - - - - - leave message.
740-446-2568.
Equal Energy Like You Have $5001 Potlce lmpoundl! 96 Dodge Ram 1500 4x4 ,
Housing Opportunity.
Never EJI.perienced.
Hondas, Chevys, etc! Cars/ Ex. Cab. $9,500. 304-675Beech St. Middleport. 2 bedWEIGHT- LOSS
Trucks from$5011 For list· 4838 Leave MiBSsage.
room fu rnished apartment,
REVOLUnON
mgs 1-800-719·3001 ex t.
~"ANS &amp;
New product launch October 3901
"·
utilities paid, deposit &amp; refer• 23 , 2002 _ Call Tracy al - -- - -- - 4-\\ni
ences, no peta, (74°) 992 · (740)441-1982 ·
1973 Ford LTD runs well, ~~-------,.1
0165
new tires, new battery, new 1993 Dodge Caravan , runs
Garage Apt. 2 br. appliances Homelite 240 chain saw, 18" dislribulor. 446-2639.
good. looks good. asking
;Water turn. 106 Locust St bar. extra chain. lUSt tuned
51 ,650.00 Call: 44&amp;.9~52 Of
up, Owners Man ual Inc . 1985 Oldsmobile Cullass
$275.00+ $150.00 dep. $125: golf clubs, cart. bag, 3 Supreme. V-8 , automatic. ~,.,--'--,-----~446-41~2.
... 1740)446 .9()6 1
woods, 7 irons , putter, loaded, very low miles, 1993
G20
Chevy
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed· wedge , all acc~Ssories , garage kept ,call evenings Conwrsion Van.
room apartments at Village $150, (7-'0)742-3167
304-458-181 7
1999 25 ff . Starlit camper wJ
Manor and
Riverside - --'---:::::---Ro
...at Oaks membership
1
JET
1989 S- 10 $1 ,t50 .. 1995
Apartments in Middleport.
$
304-895-3742
2.39S, t 996 - - c - - - - - From $278-$348. Call 7&lt;QAERATION MOTORS
Beretta
Repaired,
New
&amp; Rebuilt In Grand-Am $3,295., 1995 1994 dhevrolet Astra Van
992·5064. Equal Housing Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1· Grand-Am $2,795 ., 1998 130,000 new tires &amp; muffler,
Opportunities.
_.:.:.:__ _ _ _ _ _ 800·537-9528.
Malibu $5,395. 16 Others in runs well, looks good, seat·
HoneySuckle H1lls Apt loCal·
slock Cook Motora 7-40. ing for 7, extended body·
eel on Colonial Dr. behind
44&amp;-0103
Choo-Choo con.,ersion 304·
Highway Patrol post, '2 br Large swing set; full size - - - - - -- - 675-3781 evenings or 304·
now. available rent starls truck cap; IO\Ie seat: older 1994 Corvette, While Red 675 _7004 day $3000.00
$285.00 per mon. low &amp; chi ld's chopped 3 wheeler. leather, glass top S11 ,000
moderate income Equal (740)985-381 0
(740)682·7512
t996 Pontiac Minivan , 7
Housmg
Opportun 1ty
passenger, all leather,
New &amp; Used Heat Pumps- 1994 Saturn SL, 4-door. p/seat, rear air, loaded:
(740)446-3344 or TDD 1- G as
Furnaces. Free dark b1 ue, t1ntvu
· -" WI'ndows, $5495, R1verview Motors,
8()()-750-0750.
6
6'""
p
Estimates. (740)44 · o.J\«J
auto, PIS. IB, AJC. Looks • {740)992·3490
runs great. 68,000 miles. '-- ' - - - -- - Nice
Two
Bedroom
1997 Ford Explorer , 4 dOOr,
Apartments, Large rooms. NEW AND USED STEEL (304)B7s. 1469
Steel
Beams,
Pipe
Rebar
-$4,800.00,
740-446.()425.
fully equiped kitchen, central
heating/cooling , washer/ For Concrete, Angle. 1997 Ford Escort. amlfm
Fla t Bar, Steel cass/cd, lots new, runs
M&lt;YroR&lt;..Y~
Dryer hookup. (3041882- Channel.
Grating
:=or
Drains, good,
$2800
080, __
,
2523
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L (740)992-4276
Now Taking Applicatlons- Scrap Metals Open Monday, - - -- - - - - 1992 H. D. Springer Soft Tall,
35 West 2 Bedroom Tuesday, Wednesday S. 1997 Toyota, Camry. l.E low miles. lOts of chrome.
Townhouse Apartments. Friday, 8am-4 JOpm. Closed auto, A/C. loaded, 1 owner. (740)9Q2.oo27
Includes Water Sewage, Thursday. Saturday" &amp; '56,000 miles. $9.500. - - - - - - - (304)882-3772
1998 Kewasa&lt;i 300 Four
Trash , $350/Mo.. 74D-446· Sunday. (740)446-7300
Wh8efer $2,800. 74()..4.460008.
1999 Pontiac Grand AM. 0425
Office Furniture
·4dr, V-6, loaded, p!seat. rear - - - - - - -One bedroom fur nished New, scratch &amp; Dent.
apar1ment in Pt. Pleasant Sa"e 70°'c! t·8D0-527 -4662 spoiler, 47K , $7995, 1999 Big Bear 4x4 all time,
Very cl&amp;an and nice No Argonaut 519 Bndge Street, AiveMew Motors. (140)992- good condition. new lires.
$2700, (74())843-1053
Pets. Phone (304)675-1366 Guyandotte/Huntington . MIF 3490
BEAUTIFUL

MOlURCYo..FS

.ALLtR

A YUit't)' o f •·a m o un a~~
r lt&gt;lhillll: • nd hunlini
r qu ipm,nt

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 7

www.mydailysentinel.com

MX

. 'j

Craft, Basket and
Antique Mall
Grafters Wanted
Grand Opening
May 1st
202 East Main
Street Downtown,
Pomeroy
{740} 992-0003 .
Prt' me location with
lots of arkin

j«l

comes fiBI1

, Under New
Managagement

·Footurs, Walls,
Stops • Flat Work.
Replacements,
Walks. and onves.
Stencil Crute
FR!IISTIMATIS ""

THE CRAFT
SHACK

~~:::::--~----~
10
AtJIUS
·FOR SALE ·

"

CONCRETE
BLOCK/BRICK

Stop &amp; Compare

OLD GLO.RY
AUCTION
SERVICES

,\lUI\' SI ' IU'U IS

740-985·3948

140-992-1811

•Ag Lime

WILSON'

Racine,Ohio 45111

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

1

I

f4x70 2 b8droom, Green

HAULING:

-------,--

PRE· Moving Sale:
1953 Farman Super H. Runs
Simmons Queen size good . $1500. (304)895-3364
Beautyrest Mattress &amp; Box
Sprlng Set From Spare 3. 1997 Terramites, low
Bedroom . New 2000 hoUrs, new paint. Call
Excellent clean cond. $900 Huntington. (304)736-4800
new, Now $275.
Very Comfortable, large 860 Ford Tractor ' new
contemporary couch excel- clutch , good metal. new
lent condition. $1200 new paint. Runs well. $2.700.00
Now $425.
740·379· 2615.
TV Stereo Oak enlertain ·
I: r .
WANIED
ment ceinter with glass
BUY.
10
doors, adjustable shelves
tapeiDVD storage. Holds up
to 24 inch TV $800 new Now WE want to BUY tobacco
$375.
poundage. CaII: 245 ·S1s9 or
245 9160
Magnavox modilar stereo ~:;,;-:.:.;:::;.·- - - - - ,
tuner/amp lour big speakers
in good condition . sounds ~--Lt•VES10CK----,J
good , Greet
250 · tor tami~ or kids ~10 horses tor sale, green
room.
$
FOUr•FOO1h''!) h 'ed 1OO1 bOX broke pa'n1S, (740)992·32,76
with several drawers on
wheels tilled with collection AT Stud A.O.H.A. 1996
ol assorted tools. Good Palomino 16 H/H 12001bs.
Condition. take all $225.
Very good Natured. See
By Appointment Only
Fouls on Farm Mare
Lea'ole Message 740-446- T
·
A 'I bl
ransportat1on
va1a e.
6968.
L. F.G. Stud Fee $300.
~,----c:---,----,--Used Furniture Store, 130 _13_04_1_67_5_-6_4_40_ _ __
Bulaville Pike. We sell Fair Lamb tor sale
Mattresses,
dressers,
·
couches,bunkbeds,bedroom (304)675-7716
suites, Recliners. Grave Mare for sale 304·674·6141
monuments. 740-446·4782. qr 740·208-8024.
Gallipolis. Oh. wanted to, - -- - - - - buy-good uSed couches, Mare Quarter Horse, Black
mattresses,Qre_ssers.
and WhitePaint Geilding.
740-446-4543.'
Whirlpool Washer, Designer - - - - - - - 2000, $175; GE Washer. Reg. Angus bulls· Top per·
$95; GE Dryer, $95: Electric tormance bloodlines. Maine
Range, 30", $95; Frost Free Chi· Angus show heifers,
Refrigerator. nice. S1 SO; GE hailers, bred heifers and
Electrk: Range, nice, $165; crossbred bulls. Slate Run
Maytag Washer &amp; Dryer Set, Farm ,
Jackson . OH
lik!3 new. $400: Kenmore _17_4_01_28_6_-5_3_95_ _ __
Washer and Dryer Set,
$300 : Drop Leaf Table and 4 Riding Horses For Sale
388-8358
chairs. $165; Couch, $50; ~,....-~-~-....,
King size Bed, $150; F~111
HAY &amp;
size Bed. $150; Various
Gn·~·
other p1eces ol turnilure. ~Lw----~-·--"'
Skaggs
Appliances. Good quality straw. Volume
"(7:'S41!')4-46
0;. - -7• 39•8----, discount &amp; delivery available. Heavy square bales.
AN11Ql,IES
$2.85 per bale. (304)67S~~-------,.1 S724
II&lt; \ ''l'«ll&lt; I \ Ill 1\
Buy or sell. RiVerine
Antiques , 11 24 East Main rto
A'~
on S A 124 E. Pomeroy, 740·
\J I~
992-2526. Russ Moore, J..--~~~'OR-SIIAJ.Eiiiliiitttto_.l

P/B
CONTRACTORS. INC.

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRICTION

Trucking.

Pure Beagle Pups $25.00,
740-379-2964.

Registered
Miniature
Pinschers puppies. $200
eact1. Black &amp; Tan. Will be
very small. PBrents on
Premises. Mother: 71bs.
Good Used Appliances. Father: Sibs. (304)576·2002
Reconditioned
and
Guaranteed
Washers. Registered Norwegian Elk
Dryers. Ranges, and hOund male 1 112 yr. old,
Refrigerators, Some start al needs to run $125.00 304·
$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76 882-3S28
Vine St., (740)446-7398
Wanted· Russian Blue kitten
Mollohan Carpel, 202 ClarK or cat, (740)843-S2S3
Chapel Road, Pori,, Ohio.
(7401446-7444 1-877-8309162. Free Estimates, Easy tfli;r;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
financing , 90 days same as r•o
FARM
cash. Vise/ Masler Card.
rru_, •.,.....,
Drive- a· liMie saW! alot.
.t.:..\IU.,.!,.ILI'"~

3 br. house in town available
..,.,ay 15th unfurni shed w/

.
C;

R.B.

i

5747

carpet $400. per month
$400. dep. 1 yr. lease con·
t(act call (740)446-0332 ask
for Heather.
·'
Newly remodeled 3 bad·
rQom in Middleport, 2 car
garage . fenced yard.
$450.00 month plus deposit.
·References required
7'4p-446-4S43,
!iice 4-5 bedroom farm
hOuoe, between Pomeroy &amp;
.Ajtnens. quite country setting, available ir.nmediately,
call (740)593·7456, 740·
707..0030.

SUPPU~

"-------"'
Block, brick, sewer pipes,
Tara
Townhouse . wmdows, lintels, etc. Claude
Apartments. Very Spacious. Winters, Rio Grande, OH
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA 1 { Caii74D-245·512 1.
112 Bath. Newly Carpeted,
PJ.: rs
Adult Pool &amp; Beby Pool ,
HJR SALJ-:
Pallo, Start $385/Mo. No
Pets, Lease Plus Secunty CKC 4·112 month old male
Deposit Required, Days: black/white Shih-tzu. Free
740-446-348~ ,
Evenings: Frontline. Asking $250. abo
740-367-OS02,
304-67S-1 S89 or 304-67STwin R1vers Tower is accept· _24_s_7_ _ _ __ __
1ng applications for waiting
list for Hud-subsized, t- br,
apartment. call 675·6679
EHO
j400
SI•At:E.
FOR SALE: Full Blooded
1-TIR RENI'
..__ _ _ _ _ __. Heeler Pups, $75.00 each.
740-379-2836,
Trailer space tor rent in - - - - - - - Jack Russell Male neutered.
1 year old. long hair. $50.
r.::-~:----....., (304)67S-4186 or (304)674·
3231
HOUSEHOW

~Ia Grande area , 3 to 30
acres lots, some restrict ions.
IHB.ter &amp; electric. (740)245·

Busmess Card ... $25 .00/Column inch per month

8UU.DING

,.

·Meddling mother's shadow
dogs couples every move

To Place An Ad, Call992-2155

Bidwell OH. 45614
Phone (740)446-4336

r

Friday, May 2, 2003

Business Services

White'• Metal Detectora

9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Office is ~-:::--~----"'1

Gre en School. 2 mobile Located at 1151 Evergreen
home lots. Own 1 &amp; rent 1_ On\le Pomt Pleasant, WV
Approximately 112 acre.
Phone No is (304)67S-5806.
Great investment. (419)991· E.H.O

0024

Friday, May 2, ~o~l

www.mydailysentinel.com

I

Custom
Building
&amp;
Remodeling.
Free
Estimales, tOr All Your Home
Repair and Remodeling
Needs, (74())992-1119

Seamless Gutter
Services
• No SPmns
• No Leaks
• Free E.•limales
lJ•~ n f' r

Dm·ilJ Rhmlf' ,\

Office

SERVICE

Home (740 ) 985-.1622

.

01110
22 Veara ocal

SCAT.~'

WV

178-2487 or 441-2112
Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

I SEE YOU'RE WATCHING

T~E NATURE PR06~AM THAT
II.HAI\L~t: 811.DWN TAPED FOR YOU ..

QOOw""""·

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

[lO'xlO' 610'x20')

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

-n\ERt: W!Sr-rT A LINE.

992-6215

Henderson,

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

~ DOl'\.

OtJE CALL .. ONE ~NECTIO~ ...

MYERS PAVING

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

TWE LADlEs:

Pomero~.

Pdf""

WV Contractors

LDN&amp;
r~

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Lie. #003506

Rin•n\a\.
t 'a ftin Syracuse
(Formerly Whimt\•S}

Under new ownciship
and new management .
COME JOIN US
7 Days A Week!
Morning

Rlu~df' '

(740) 985-3511

If I 5TAN O
ON Tl\E TOILET .. . PLEA5€ ~ ...

• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; lltumblng
• Roofing &amp; Guttera
• Vtnvl Siding &amp; Painting .

• Patio and Porch Deck•
Free Esl1males

If I Sti UNDER 111.E.

~NK .. IOA, S(

Remodeling

Opt&gt;rut!'d

&amp; Nn mw

(11~~6E

• Room Additions &amp;

'1lle Little res1uunm1
.,.. itt'! the hig tas1e..

' OUI!&amp;e
NO"f

I DON'T UNDERSTAND HOW YOU
CAN I&lt;EEP WATCKIN6 THE SAME
PR06RAM QVER AND OVER ,..

T~IS 15 THE ONE WHERE .

THE RASBIT GETS AWAY..

-

�'

I
Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, May 2, 2003

_ www.mydailysentlnel.com

-Point softball wins SEOAL, 81

,

tm

nt

.Hometown News for Gallia, Mason &amp; Meigs counties
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant • May l, lOOl

..

11&gt; If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week. C/O The Gaston Gazette. ~0. Box 1893, Gastonia, NC 28053
-

WINSTON «!UP SERIFS

Pontiac Excitement 400 ·
Where: Richmond (Va.) Inter·
national Raceway (.75 mi.),
400 la ps/ 300 miles.
When: Saturday. May 3
Last year'o winner: Tony
Stewart
Track qullllytOC record: Ward
Burton, D0 dge, 127.389
mph, May 4. 2002.
Race record: Dale Jarrett.
Ford, 109.047 mph, Sept.
6. 1997.
Moot recent race: Until a
Whlll:

trademark Sunday afternoon

at California Speedway, Win-

ston Cup's first nine races
had been won by nine differ·
ent drivers. But who better
to become the season's
fi rst two-time winner than

youthful, brash, supremely

confident Kurt Busch?
Busch, still just 24 year&gt;
most notably, Rusty Wal-

Hardee's 250
Whore: Richmond (Va.) lnter·
national Raceway (.75 mi. ).
250 laps/ 187 .5 miles .
When: Friday, May 2.,

What: Ha rdee 's 200
Where: Lowe's Motor Speed·
way, Concord, N.C. (1.5 mi.),
134 laps/ 201 miles.
When: Saturday, May 16

lace's heart in the Auto Club

Laat year'a winner: Jason

Last year's' winner: First race

What:

old , won for the SIXth tim e in

two seasons by breaking,

acingly close.

H ttiJ 01 1111 WI I I(

I

v
WINSTON CuP SERIES

E

s
u
s

Ryan
Newman

Steve
Park

Something went dreadfully wrong
with pole Win ner Steve Park's Chevrolet on the first lap at Fontana . He
was in fifth place by the ,ime he
reached the second turn : the likely
culprit was ·a tire going down." but
the' ensuing crash also took out one
of the favorites. Ryan Newman . "He

(Pa rk) came up, and I don't know 1f
he didn' t have control or lost control
or what ," sa 1d Newman. '' l:le just got
up into me and shoved me int o the

wall."
Inside Track's Monte Dutton
Clves hiS lake: "Imagine haVIng a
flat tire on the first lap . Park was a
bi\ter man even afte r winning the

pole. lashing out at the media for alleged spec ulation that his job was in
danger. He's quite obviously under a
lot of pressure. and he can't catch a
break."
·

VOUH TURN

Jeny Nadeau, center, ftnlshed fourth In Texas but ·has llnlijrllt!d no· hleher than 14th In any other race this season.

one put him down .

AREER ROSSROADS

: I. Jimmie Jo!mson
• t. Michael Wl!!riR
.: 7. ·Ricky C@'tm
Bobby Labotrte

• ..

.

• 207
- 239

.Nadeau not very happy with the way his career is going

-268

• I .. 272

By Monte Dutton
·NASCAR This Week

- 300
- 32:4

I. Kevin Ha!yigl
;Uj, Elliott Sad!e•

: 1lulcH SaiD

~ 1. Todd -Bodine

:.a.
• 3.

I

t's a new season and a new team
for Jerry Nadeau, and as in the
•
case of many other drivers, things
have not yet come together for the 32year-old driver from Danbury, Conn.
All Nadeau bas to show for the season to date is a fourth-place finish at
Texas Motor Speedway on March 30.
Ot~er than that isolated showing,
Nadeau, in his U.S. Army-sponsored
Pontiac, has finished no higher than
14th. That's where he finished in Sunday's Auto Club 500. He ended up on
the lead lap despite spinning out
twice.
"I'll be honest," Nadeau said. "I'm
not very happy with how my career
has gone in Winston C.Up. I've been
competitive my whole life. I worked
hard to get to Winston Cup . I may
have not had the smoothest runs getting here. At times I felt like I didn't
have the right people behind me, but I
kept sticking with it.
"I feel like being with the team that
I've got now is probably the best opportunity I've ever had in my life, as far as
the team being behind me, the guys

' 1.275

Ron Hornaday

Dallkl Gift!!
; ~· Shane Hm!ol
• 1. Ml!ce B!lss
: .. Jason lle!ler

: 7. Jamie McMv!l1D'
' .. Kasey ll8hlle

:.. Scott-

: M.

·102

-UO

. "145
·158
- 188
-221
-222

Johnny Sauter

. 229

: CltAFIIMAN T11ucx
· 1. Bobl!'i Hamilton

670

: 2. Rick Crj!wford
• ii. E!lendan GaUCI!Dn
; A. TedMusgraye

-39

• !. !lennis Seqer
: t; Tt·avls !WaPI!

• l. Terry Cook

. f. Robert Pressley

· e.

Jon WOOd

• '10. Jason Letner

-76
-79

-80
. -101
-113
·119
-150
- 15§

WHO'S HOT

ANO WHO'S NO'f

HOT: A ninth-place finish by
'points leader M.tt Ken.~~! was
, his eighth top 10 In 10 races.
• 1&gt; NOT: .leNm)l Mllytleld hiS fin. lshed 18th or worse ·In nine
straight races.
1&gt;

working hard and the crew chief (Ryan
Pemberton) working with me.We may
not have the budget like a Yates or a
Hendrick (muiticar teams), but I feel
like I've got a better opportunity now
to win races than I ever have."
Qualifying, by the way, has been a
bit better. Nadeau has qualified in the
top 15 six times. He was sixth at California Speedway, the two-mile, Dsbaped track in Fontana.
"If ·you look at my stats, I think I've
always been a pretty decent qualifier
since I got into Winston Cup," Nadeau
said. "I think a lot of that is how I grew
up. We used to go in the back of a pick·
up truck with our go-karts, and guys
used to come in there with enclosed
trailers, chrome wheels, and I knew I
didn't have the best stuff, so I knew I
had to drive a lot harder and a lot more
on the edge than they did. I think I just
picked it up from that and applied it to
Winston Cup. I can control that edge.
Sometimes I go a little bit overboard
and end up smacking the wall."
While he waits for his fortunes to
change, Nadeau, who won a Winston
C_up race at Atlanta Motor Speedway
on Nov. 20, 2000, is keeping his chin up.
"I feel good," he said. "I don't get as

upset as I used to get. You only live
once, and I just try to take it day by
day. There are times that I used to get
so frustrated. I was frustrated for
four years. Even though I won a race,
I was frustrated because you look at
other people's careers, and you kind of
look at how they were brought up and
how they were into the series and you
say to yourself, 'Wow, it would be cool
if I had a ·start like that.'
"When I came into Winston Cup in
'97, I didn't know a soul. I didn't have
managers. I didn't have people telling
me where I should go or what I should
do. I just drove anything I could get
into. I think sometimes that might
have gotten me in trouble. Then, you
look at guys like Jeff Gordon and how
his career got started with (stepfa~
ther) John Bickford and (crew chief)
Ray Evernham and spending three
years in Busch. I did four races in
Busch. I did two ARCA rac~s and then
right into Cup. I'm not complaining
about that. I'm happy to be in the elite
Winston Cup Series. Maybe I wish I ·
would have won a lot more races than
just one right now, but t.here are many
years to go down the road, I'm sure
this team is going to win many races."

How does NASCAR let him get
away with th1ngs li ke that? I watched
Dale Sr. gel away with the same
lh1ngs and now they're letting Jr. get
away with them. Can 't he win a race

honestly? I've seen NASCAR t&gt;lack·
fl ag a Busch driver for doing the
same thing.
To NASCAR : Please be fair to all
the drivers. Not everyone will want to
watch the race if we all know the out·
come beforehand.
I will always believe that Dale Jr.
did not win that rqce . t-tow he can

rake all the glory and look.the other
drivers in the

f~ce

is beyond me .

HUCh and June Patterson
Magnolia. DH
NTW - We've had severallerrers
similar to this one In which fans have
questioned Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s wfn ar
Talladega. We've also had a few sui}
porting the sport's newest star driver.

· LEGENDS AND LORE

In the three-year-span of 1996
through 1998, Jeff Gordon accorn·
plished something that has not been
equaled dunng NASCAR 's so-called
·modern era" (1972-present). He
straight yea rs: 10 in 1996. 10 in
1997 and 13 In 1998. Darrell Wa ltrip
never did it. Dale Earnhardt never did
it. David Pearson, Ca le Yarborough
and Bobby Allison never did it.
Prior to 1972. however, Gordon's
feat was surpassed by Richard Petty,
who won 27 races in 1967 . 16 in
1968, 10 in 1969. 18 in 1970 and
21 in 1971. That's a five-year span
in which Pettywon 92 times.
1&gt; Quote

of the week, fromJell Burton:
·we had a f1hh to a 10th-place car,

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~to argue withtlla;t.;;;;;

ORRIS ORTH

Jeep

FREE with any
USED car under
I 00.000 miles!
'I

f

I Mil O \

O ~ ,o

IIIMLifl M

"'ftl- ·

CH RYSU.R.

.

Ow'*: Mlkt NOfthup Gtntral Man~: Pete Som..vlll• Flntnce: Alan Oural
r -: ,.......,.,, .-..... "'*"-·I.Jii"')' Plef'ce, ,~.,. Tlllk. John ~. -JoM a.nn.t~ , I'IM .,..,,

~!!!': ~~= ~aa:..... O.Oipollo, """'
I

HE'LL
COVER
ANYTHINC!

"YM Sllllllelli ........,.

News• editor

Please see Council, A5

Index
•'

1

Sections - 11 ...,.,

A3
Calendar
B4-5
Classifieds
B6
Comics
B6
Dear Abby
A4
Editorials
, A3
Movies
AS
Obituaries
Bl-3
Sports
A2
Weather
c lOOJ Ohio valley Publishins Co.

'

I

RIO GRANDE, Ohio- For University
of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community
College students, commencement is hot
the end of an e1lperience, but the beginning
of many more, the institution' s president
said:
The step from the classroom to the real
world will begin for 436 Rio Grande graduates at 2 p.m. on Sunday, May II on the
,....--.., college green, Dr. Barry M. Dorsey said.
U.S. Rep. Ted Stricklaqd, whose Si1lth
Congressional District includes Gallia and
Meigs counties, will be the commencement speaker.
"Obviously, we look forward to com., mem:em.ent every year," said Dorsey, who
will preside over his 12th graduation ceremony. "It is the highlight of the year for
the graduates and the institution.
'"The reason we call it commencem~nl is
Brown
thal.it is not the end, but a beginning," he
added. "We try to put each student in a
position to be successful, and this is the
beginning of their professional life."
"Our graduates have not only acquired a
body of knowledge, but have also developed attitudes about the world, developed
critical thinking skills and developed relationships." Dorsey said. "The friends you
make in college are generally your frienl!s
for the rest of your life. These are the most
important things about commencement."
•
Eastman
P11111 111 Speak. A5

No gimmicks.
no dedudible
•

800•441•0842

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)- The Pepsi
Bottling Group is ceasing production at its
bottling plants in Huntington, Princeton and
Marion , Va.
About 40 jobs at the Huntington plant will
be eliminated, said Michael Goodwin, a
spokesman from the company 's headquarters
in Somers. N.Y. ··
The Huntington plant employs 94 al!ogether. About half the jobs are in warehousing
and sales, which will not be affected by the
shutdown of the production lines, Goodwin
.
said Friday.
It's not clear how many people will · be
affected a! the Princeton and Marion plants.

·Waugh, Halley, Waad
Funeral Dlreclors, Inc.
•

Connie Bowman and Vicki Swindler

'

non, the only weapons system
the Bush administration has
killed. .
"I know there's people hurting here in Silicon Valley."
Bush said. "I know this incredibly vibrant part of the American
economy over !he past years is
not meeting its full potential.
The pian I just outlined is one
that would boost the economy
to Silicon Valley."
A handfu I of moderate
Republicans recently joined
Democrats in the Senate in cap·
. f $350 billi'
pmg tax re1Ie at
.
on,
and say they have no mtentiOn
of recanttng to help Bush reach
his $550 billion mark.

Pepsi cuts Huntington jobs

and
no cost to vo~1!!

'

and clear to
members of
both political parties in
the United
S 1a 1e s
Congress,
we
need
robu ~t
tax
relief so our
fellow citiBush
zens
can
.
find a job."
The president promoted his
$550 billjon tax-cut plan. a!
Umted q&lt;:fense Industnes,
which helped produce tanks and ·
armored vehicles used in Iraq.
The comPIIlly also manufactures !he 40-ton Crusader can-

BoWMan's Ho111e Care

--norrlsnorthupdodge.com
s.~ee

BY KEVIN KELlY

SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP)
-. President Bush turned his
focus Friday from Iraq to prolr
!ems at home, saying thai a
jump in unemployment made
!he case for a massive tax relief
. plan that Democrats and moderate Republicans have trimmed.
Bush confronted news that
the nation 's unemployment rate
had climbed to 6 percent in
April, a day after his triumphant
appearance aboard an aircraft
carrier home from the war.
'The economy is not growing
fast enough and you know it as
well as anybody here," the president told workers in recessionplagued Silicon Valley. 'That 6
percent number should say loud

The Pediatric potients and siDH ar Holzer Medical Cenler
would lilce ID thank the April sponsors of the
Egrl Neff Pediarric Fund:

NORRIS NORTHUP DODGE,.INC.

t!'\

/.

SYRACUSE, ' Ohio ·
Syracu se Village Council
passed it~ garbage ordinance
at Thursday's il1eeting . The'
ordinance will r~gulate trash
collection in the village .
The proposed ordinance,
which will go into effect within 30 days, mandates how
trash collection is to take
place.
The ordinance also sets a
standard for how trash
removal contractors would
submit proposals to contract
with the village. Official
times and dates for trash collection will be established.
The ordinance establishes a
penalty for anyone who violates the law.

Ted Strickland to speak Bush turns to unemployment
··at Univ..Rio Grande
comme11cement May 11

won 10 or · more ' races 1n three

depending on where we were." Hard

liKE'S SUPER GUIRAN,EE!!
8 months or 8,000 miles
USED CAR WARRANft!

J. MILES lAYTON
Staff writer
BY

RussELL

GALLIPOLIS , Ohio The Holzer
Tobacco Prevention Center sponsored an anti. tobacco art contest in the schools recently and
a gallery-style art show was held Friday night
for students and parents to view the results.
Students from Southwestern, Vinton, and
Washington Elementaries, and the Ohio
Valley Christian School and Kyger Creek
Middle School ,. participated in the event.
Kristen Torres, Tobacco Prevention
Coordinator at Holzer, said that students were
permitted to choose any type of art project
they liked, and many ·chose drawings, paintings, and collages.
'The annual Kick Butts Day was held April
3," Torres said. "That program is an initiative
to keep kids from starting to srpoke. This show
stems from the activities on that day.
"We wanted to see exactly what !hey would
say about tobacco, and how they would put
that down on paper," she added.
"It's easy for them to say smoking is bad,
but we wanted to see why they think smoking
is bad." she said. "And this way they can see
what their peers !hink about smoking too."
Washington Elementary students Stephanie
Perry and Brooke Davies won honorable mention with their group project, which also. ·• ·
included Carli Walcnfelsz and Alyssa Stanley.
Perry and Davies said they know. smoking is
bad, and they work to convince those who do
smoke to qutt.
Carli Walenfelsz, left, Stephanie Perry, and Brooke Davies . discuss their winning anti-tobacco project with
"Smoking is nasty," Davies said. "And cigDavies' mother, Renita Layne, far right. (Millissia Russell)
arettes have nasty stuff in them."

ordinance

went below the yellow line (during

the Aaron·s 499 on April 6) and no

nature and the other you could attribute . they treat county propeny with the
to just plain bad luck," said Martin.
utmost respect." .
"Acc idents are going to happen.
Martin said his office recently leased
That's a fact of life. Unfonunately, the two 2003 Chevrolet Jmpala police
accidents did occ ur wi!hin a month ·s cruisers and they are currently being
time fr.une . However, when you con- used for routine patrols throughout the
sider the number of call s we respond to county.
each day and our low number of cruis"The two cruisers which sustained
er-related accidents. you'll see, overall,
we have a pretty good record."
minor damage are currently being
Martin said with emphasis, "I want to repaired and we just added a couple of
inform the public that these accidents new cruisers to our fleet," said Martin.
are no!hing 10 be alarmed about. 1 am "We definitely have enough vehicles to
very confident in the driving skills of all respond to any number of incidents
our deputies &lt;md I know for a fact that within Gall ia County."

BY MtLliSSIA
Staff writer

garbage

rules for different drivers? It was

very-clear that Da le Earnhardt Jr.

damaged after a
deputy hit a deer
while on patrol.
Another
cruiser.
which was parked, ·
sustained ligh! damage after being
shUck by a moving
garbage truck. And a
third cruiser was
totaled after running
Martin
off !he road near the
intersection of Ohio
Routes 141 and 7 near Gallipolis.
'Two of the accidents were minor in

Program encourages kickin' butts

pas~~s .

Dear NASCAR Thlo Week,
Why does NASCAR have different

"f l. ~ Goiilor.i · ' '· • 152 ' .
~ 4, :. _tsun Busch
.
~:'3M·

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio -· Despite public concerns, Gailia County Sheriff
David L. Martin insists three recent
accidents involving sheriff's cruisers
are nothing to be alarmed about.
Local residents have been puzzled
after three separate accidents, all of
which took place in April, have left one
sheriff's cruiser totally disabled and
two others in need of repairs.
According to Martin, one cruiser was

Council

lffifRS FROM OUR READERS

Milt tw!ll!b
16Tl
~ a. Dale t,tm.Wdt ~- . •"

Staff writer

GALLIPOLIS. Ohio - A
dedication service for the Clyde
Dupin Crusade is scheduled for
7:30 p.m. today at First Church
of the Nazarene on First Avenue
in Gallipolis.
Dupin is scheduled to speak
and !he entire crusade ministrY, ·
team will be in attendance. ·
The crusade begins at 7:27
p.m. Sunday at the Gallia
Academy High School gym and
runs through Thursday evening.
The crusade minisuy team
includes Dupin and his wife
Grace. Rick and Phyllis Webb.
Bob Andersen and Jeff Ray.
Grace Dupin is scheduled to
speak at I0 a.m. each day of the
crusade during ladies' Jeas
being conducted at First Church
of the Nazarene.
Rick and Phyllis Webb will
lead singing throughout the crusade. The Webbs have been featured on the Christian television
program "Day of Discovery."
Andersen is crusade musiCian, a .role in which he ha~
served for more than 40 years.
In addition to working with
Dupin crusades, Andersen has
worked with evangelists Billy
Graham, Bill Glass and Ford
Philpot, to name a few.
Prior to today's dedication
service, crusade counselors will
meet at 7 p.m. Ushers and choir
members will meet following
!he service.

R

. 1.

BY TONY LEACH

Staff report

the afternoon hovering men-

IN TtiiE SPOTLIGH -t ·

Sheriff: Cruiser crashe~ not a major concern

Dedication
service
tonight

lltCtiMONIJ IIAIA
~~LPom'lae Excitement 400 . Cllevy 'MiNitl:r:Brio:.tQj~}'
May3
'

500 at California Speedway.
here.
Keller
Wallace was hoping to end a Track qualifyiOC record:
Track quallfylne ""'ord:
'72-race losing streak and
Dale Earnhardt Jr.. ChevroNone
had the elusive victory in
let, 126.868 mph , Sept. 6, Race record : None
sig'ht until Busch's Ford
Mo1t recent race: Dennis
2002 .
swooped by his Dodge w1th
Race record: Dale Ja rrett,
Setzer. in a Chevrolet. won
12 laps remaining. Busch
Ford. 104.928 mph, Sept.
the Advance Auto Pa rts 250
only led 27 laps, most noat Martinsville (Va.) Speed·
8.1995.
tably the f'flal 12. He start·
. way on April 12.
Moot recent race: Matt
ed 16th and was fifth by lap
Kense'th , in a Ford , .won the
20 and second by lap 40.
CaliforniaSpeedway.corn
Although he waited until the
300 at Californ1a Speedway
appropriate time to roa r into
on April 26.
the lead. he spent most of

·

JERRY NADEAU,

CHI\FTSMI\N THIICK

•

50 CENTS • Vol. 1, No. 36

Chris Homer and. Joan Wood

·Production will be consolidated at a new
facility bi:ing built in Wytheville, Va.
"Our business is growing and we have a
need for greater capacity," Goodwin said. "In ·
this case it makes sense to build one state-ofthe-art facility instead of bringing three facil· ities up to a higher level of production."
Goodwin said all affected employees can
apply for positions at the new plant, which is
expected to begin production late this year or ·
early 2004 . .
The $65 million Wytheville plant is expected to have 200 employees when it goes int'o
full operation, The Herald-Dispatch of
Huntington reported.

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