<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7002" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/7002?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-07T05:39:51+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17405">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/104ab9fdfd676d49d7371c7a8b9d0f59.pdf</src>
      <authentication>7fe1bedb8a92867988e1e73615351594</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="22943">
                  <text>•
Ptge A 10 • The Deily Sentinel

www.mydallyHntlnel.corn
z

ALLE-YOOP

Wedneeday, April 3, 2002

&amp; ,

NIA Croe1word Punle

. .IDOl
PHILLIP

ACROSS

ALDER

1 ill1olcllllltd . 40-U.. m". ••
WOOf
I A*t Clllrlt u P11o1W

.......

I

A KJ J

w...
• u

.

11
11
14
11

I

1\Jilt:J

F.an

. ..... ·•

f 4

A IOI4J

'

•
•

Q" I

t

II r1 J I

• • k

21

lk&gt;11ltr: South ·
Vuliu:rlhlo: llolh
~~~rik

l'nu

s•

••

l'u•

hu

~PA

A~/

7't4ftrAPY/

VOU WASH

UM,

NO!!

!AT

- THEN
BOX I
ALL. "tO N

I!

THE BORN LOSER
~

~

.

fi\'1 PI (;.C,'I BmK IS FULL ., . .

WI-\P.,T DO l DO W111-\ IT ~OW?

"*

olllcer

21 Klckoll

12 Mort tX·
thlnd
nalvt
30 lua\13
ng uP'
lbbr.
DOWN
18 Runw
34 Big IIUrcl
IUrface
35 ThleVII t
1 ChatiJI
2 WlbUnk
1~ Micro40 Dig,...
8Cidr.
acoplc •n~ 41 Mou11rt ·
3 Gun lflthuIIIII
43 SUbmlla..i
llul'l org. 20 Bhlp'l
45 link abDr~
~Hchll1
-41 ChtUII
.
4 Sllrt II
22 Reply
17 Gold, In
5 Be • roll
mocltl
23 •un6Mltlrld
I Willi
tcaPH
41 hrth (pre!.)
24 lltddlllll
50 ·- Te
gr1nl11
7 Cor 1111$101'1
lllltelope
Ching' .
I Iuddy
25 Friend
51 Excnoment
• · Deep
·never - ? 52 DlniJif'
10 USCG
(2 wclo.)
color .

.

• Rock'

27 :::~q·

21 11M 1

IIOpWttch
21 Illig WIWI
31 cla0rl8

channel

:12 ~
33 1m - I ...
-

at IIIII

onoozlng
37 fnsud IOjiiC
at Tenn.

~A

---

0

.What's inside

BY TONY M. LEAcH
TLEACHGPMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY- A new project geared toward replacing
an aged water line on Lincoln
Hill has been planned; however, the date for the new
line's construction has yet to
be determined.
Village administrator John
Anderson said last week a
new' water .line will be

'EVAIPV

ZNW

KAITTNAVC
IV

WO

N.WYDV

AN P L R

B

EV

Kuhn~

NX

8Y

.ENNHKI

TNMV

ONWYC

Hl&amp;h: 50s, Low: JOI

NX

BY BRIAN J. REED
BAEEDC&gt;MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM.

Details, A:Z

SK
•

I

I

30-member troupe
'superior' at contest

Weather

YNL

•

kii0\\1 ~tHIIt..'rhint:t :~bm1t. Tht:rc

up to you determine which
can bring you thr grcatnt rclurn for your time and atten1

tion .

ARIES (Marth 21 -April 19)
- You love a clullf'nRr, but
don 't be oagrr to jump into
sitwations whrrr: the odds arc

•110in11 you ··you'd~ octting
yuunel( up for a fall , Kno"(
where to lo9k fur ron,.nce
and Y"" "II find it. The AotroGtaph M•rchmaker instanrly
rcvoals whkh •itp~s art ru-

m•nlic•lly pttf&lt;ct for you.
M.til $2.75 to Matchn,.k&lt;r,
c/o tl1i~ 11cw1ra1~'• 11.0. Do:c
17511, Mnruy Hill Station,
N&lt;w York, NY 101 !M't.
TAURUS 'April 20-May
20) -- Th.re 's a fin&lt; line ~­
tween asking qutstions and
~ing nosy. Know the differr:ucr. and Jnind your owt\
business.
GE~INI (May 21-June 20)
-- Linlil yuur fin~nci.ll invC"tcmr:nu to things you 've

chr.-kod out thoroughly and

senus··r\S.A
Honor Band
concert
~~

· Today'l clue: R equsls H

•

tht yr-ar :.htad, btu it ~ill be

"We will definitely try .start
the project as soon as possible,
however, I can't say when that
will happen ."
Anderson said the village is
still s:earching for grant
inoney to fund the project .
and once the engineering
plans . have been approved,
permits will be sought from
the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).

Eastem
band
·. . ','i.l': ,. . .
to

poople, putlnclprtHnl. Elch ltlllr In lhe cipher standi for tnolhtr. . ·

10.

mual might cumc your way in

nectors and upgrade offshoots
to other streets.
Anderson said the project is
currently in the engineering
phase and a date to begin
· construction has not been
· scheduled.
.
"Right now, we have other
projects to complete and .a
specific d~te for the new
water line's construction has
not been arranged," he said.

Spotlight: ·Tobacco Dangers

Stocks fall
. NEW YORK (AP)
Worries that rising tensions
in the Middle East could
qua'h the economi~ recovery 4rovo · 1\t;lCk , prices
sharpfy lower Wednesday,
with the Dow industrials
dropping more than 100
points in their · fourth
straight lming session.
The Dow dosed down
115.42, or L1 percent, to
10,198.29. The blue-chip
index has lo.st 228.62 in the
past four sessions.
The broader market also·
stumbled. The Nasdaq composite
index
&lt;)edined
20.05, or 1.1 ,;&gt;ercent, to
1,784.35 after falling 58.22
Tuesday to its lowest dose
in a month. The Standard &amp;
Poor's 500 index fell 11.36,
or 1.0 percent, to ·1,125.40.

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 9-7-0
Pick 4: 4-5·3·7
5upiiLaiD: 9-12·27·31·36-42
Bonus Bell: 34
.
Kicker: 4-8·Hi·3-8
Pick 3 dlfY: 6-9-7
Pick 4 dl)': o-9-9-8

~

than

"Besides being old, the
water line is not reliable, has
had breaks in it and is difficult
to find parts for. It's literally
fajling apart," he added.
"Once the new line is in
place, it will reliably supply
clean water to residents in} he
Lincoln Hill area ."
In addition to repla cing the
old line, Anderson .said work
crews will install new co. n-

by Lule Cempoe

APRIL 31

Mor~ ON,orruni~its

installed on Lincoln Hill to
replace the current line,
which is considered an
"antique" and falling prey to
general deterioration.
"The water line on Lin coln
Hill is very. very old," said
Anderson. "I believe it was
installed sometime· before the
1900s. It's c~rtainly not performing to capacity like it was
intended.

c-ty Clj&gt;llor cryplagromt oro crtlltd from quollllono by lai!IOIJo

..

· Thu,..l•y. April 4, 2002

·Lincoln Hill vvater line to ~ . replaced

CELEBRITY CIPHER

1 I' I

!WEDNESDAY

I

Lilah Frecker, 84
•
George B. Hudson, 75 '
Raymond King, 81
Charles Sayre, 59
rAargaret V. Barber, 76
Detau.; A3

f P~ar

· - ~- -

Hometown News,.per

•

Deaths

'::~:~.~, S~R~lA~~t-~s·

i~~~~

I

Tribe beats Anaheim, 11

major. Then South
•
, HVNATVCIV.'should have bid three
di•monds, aiming for
FNRY
AVKTVZ
duce
no-crump, but
I
tl1at would have pin- ·
PREVIOUS SO~UTION - 'There lit a lot 01 heavy heartl In '
pointed the lethal
tl)e locker room.' - Trevor HoHman, on lhe dtalh ol Pldre '
heart lead.
leam!lllhl Mike Darr
'
With rwo· heart los~----------~~--~·~----------~~---J en, it looks like South
WOlD
GAM
I
needs the spade fi. !Olio~ ~y CLAY l. ,CI.1AN _.;..._,_ ___
r-----------~ · r------------.
nesse to work, but the
Kelly.
spade
nine improves O rlearranae letrers of rhe
PENCIIl.
four scramb.l•d wordt b•·
his chances.
low to forrr. faur simple ward.l.
'
0
After winning with
F
0
the diamond ace,- de~I EDAMO
clarer draws the missing trump, cashes the
diamond king, and
exiu · with a heart,
C0 K N K
The defenders take
I~
two heart tricks, but
;
=--:-.~•"'- .
. . what then? If East is
on lrad, he will be
DU A L
cndplayed, forced ei5
ther to lead .into dllmTWE SECftef TO ~SIN6
. my's spade tenace or
A 1.06 LIKe 1'~15 IS NOT TO
to concede a ruffLOOK OOWN .. JOS1'1.001&lt; Uf..
and-discard. So, West
wins the second heart
and returns the spade
four.
However, declarer
plays low from the
dumm)l. Here, South
is home, but even if
East could put in the
SCIIAM-L~S ANSWERS
.
'
spade 10, declarer
Openly·
ExpelQuest·
Viscid
·
STYLE
;
would win with the
Fa"mous comic on fashion: 'They should put expira- 1
ace and finesse dumtion
dates on clothes. That way people would know when :
my'• spade jack.
what
they are wearing has gone out of STYLE."
..:
South gets home if
...
Wc•t has either the
••
spade queen or the

~~~~~

t

. Melp Cou,nty's

buy

1:'- ::se Got
=~
up

21 '1--

r..

denied · a fuur-.can..l

BIG NATE

nontld'l
roiMI
'" Dlllry ....

t ...lmllll

r..111

We give nu 1mint
value to nine• and
\(J,. However, they
Ilene rate lots of trick•. ·
J&lt;ut imagine the difference between tbrse
two ham~.\:
SPADES A 3 2
HEARTS -A 3 2
DIAMONDS A 3. 2
CLUllS.A 4 3 2"and:
SPADES A 10 9
HEARTS 1\ 10 9
DIAMONDS A 10 9 ·
CLUJJS A 10 9 8
The second band
will umally be worth
two ur three tricks
more in the play :
Give partner SPADES
J 5 4. Opposite
SPADES A 3 2. that
· will rarely b.: worth
. twu tricks. Due uppo-.
site SPADES A 10 \1,
it i~ a 76-!&gt;Cre&lt;'lll shot
for two tricks ..
In Imlay's dr•l,
Sollth w:~s ilcalt 01\e
valua~lc spot card.
Wuuld yuu h~w med
it to best dli:ct? How
would yotl plan the
play in five clubs after
w,•st lead&lt; a diamond?
..
North's three -dub
l'csponsc woa~ a limit
raise showi1ig 10- 12
&lt;uppurtpoint&lt; with at
l&lt;•ast five dubs, .111&lt;\

600P

44 DIMrt

23 Kind Of

Opt&gt;nlna ~•d : • a

"5ALTH

lltp II¥
'lwWII

tennlnal

41 Frulllulce
nulllltll
53 .Ice hockey
18 Playground
localn

.KQ!tlll

~•Ill ~ W~•l

43

Nerve 0111

11 ~
ng illlor
17 lliiNIIII

AI 2 ·
J , ..

,.

=-""

CIIOit

fundi

•

¥1f,Q71

• Q ...

Mlaf,bor
Hillel

is tou mtu.: h uncenait~ty lingcrin~-t

nt thi~ rime .

..

CANC:ER Qu11c 21-Julr
21) -- E•t:~l&gt;lish P'"ICI""ic pri -

uritil.·• c-.rly · in thC' day, and
dun 'c allow }'Oursl'lf ro get off

tra,k. You could end up \~a~t­
ius ;all uf ruur tinu.• jousting:
with windmills.
·

LEO Quly 23-Aut~. 22) .. If
you allow your ego to over• .
co1nt common sense, yoU i..t.
eould end up matchint~ tall •
tales with o pro at ttlling '
whopptts. You'll lose.
VIRGO (Aug, 23-Sept. 22)
•• Have eompecenr people
re1dy to aHisl you at a monlent's noriu if you hopt to
finish in the black. Without
th&lt;m, you're not likrly to

succeed.

·

LIBRA (Sqlt. 23-0ct. 23) -

An atlftnpt to pltalt everyone
could 'cau~e you to be indecisive, and allow auothrr who
doa not have your.,.;, int&lt;r~
nt1 at hoarf r&lt;&gt; coli the •huiJ.
Takt allancc.
SCOI~PIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) •• J)on't say anything
ncptivc about anotht'r co-

wOrker, evrn if ic's deserved.
What you say will go directly

••
f
,•
•

into the pipeline and "" diitonrd in tho proceH.
SAG ITT Al\.IUS (Nov. 23- {
Dec . 21) •• Oncr your fman- I'
cial alfai11 get muddled up, it'!
gC'Iing IC'.I he difficult to gL't ~
the~n straightened out ag:~in. '
Tlnngs could end up costing
you more dun they ~lmuld.
CA\IIli,CORN (Dec. 22- :)an . 1"9) •• You've got to be
pr~pan·tl to ~lo for n~ur~"'l(
before you can ;ask w'mething
. of othrn. Set rh&lt; proper examp!&lt;, and p&lt;ople will follow
your load.
·
AQUARIUS (fan. 21!-Fd&gt;.
1"9) -· The"' mi(llot "" a ttnlggle betwten your negative
imaginario11 and your positive
conceptions. Takt control of
your thinking, and don't let ,
..If-doubu crowd out opti· .
milna.
_
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
•• If there is money involved;
consider any situation that
yoU manage for ano,her as a
sacred trust. Live up ro their
'rust, and y&lt;iu won't betray

younelf either.

·

W.VA.
.
Dilly 3: 3·8-4
Dilly 4: 1-1·4-8
jll;uJbll: 8-14-17-29-36 (3)

Index· ·
' 2Sedllnt-ll~

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
DearAbby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A3
84-6

87
A4
A6

A3
A3.
81-3
A2

D 200l Ohio VOlley Pul&gt;llshinJI Co.

....

.....

•

j

•

•

WHAT'S RUI:LY IH t~- '~"" C(~l&lt;l11 (:r~w· ·-"· fifth! griiilnt' Salisb1.uy Elementary
couldn't believe how much'?!fid' atiltf" t11ere .ls lrf cigarettes·- like arsenic, butene, and acetone. Here TraCey O'Dell, tobacco prevention nurse for the Meigs County Health Departmf!nl.
talks to Crockett about the harmful Ingredients In cigarettes and ·the health dangers they
Impose, iiS"teacher Karen Walker, left, listens ln. (Charlene Hoeflich)

IC in' utts
BY CtwuNIE 1tOEFUCH
HOEFUCHGPMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Wjth statistics showing that
90 percent of people who smoke started before
they turned 18, the goal is to keep kids from
getting hooked on tobacco products by making them aware of the health dangers.
· That \vas the emphasis of programs carried
out in sevefill Meigs County schools Wednesday by Tracey O'Dell, tobacco prevention
director for the Meigs County Health Department, in observance .of"Kick Butts Day"
She traveled to several· elementary schools
where she c"o nducted interactive presentations
and displayed a variety of products - like
Decon which contains arsenic, fingernail polish which is made with acetone, candles prepared with stearic acid, and butane "lighters
filled wit~ butane - all ingredients in tobacco
which are known for causing major health
·
problems.
O'Dell visited Mid-Valley Christian School,
Southern Elementary School, Meigs Middle
School and Salisbury .Elementary telling the
story of the health .haUrds of tobacco use, and
sent educational information to the other elementary and. mi~e, schools in the county.
Materials w~ d,Stti~utcd to students to lJSe
in counritigl ,tlie ' ~er
tob;tcco related
message,. they. see, as they go about their daily
activitid. Not only will they be recording the
number of smoking relerences, but the names

ot

of brands they see being promoted.
On April 19 the score sheets will be collect~d and the number of references to smoking and other tobacco use and the sources of
promotion will be tallied and reported through
the newspaper.
·
As explained by O'Dell, smoking messages
·
are everywhere.
· "It's not just posters and signs, it's bumper
stickers, book covers, briefcases, calendars,
magazines, CD tape covers. hats and jackets;
and scoreboards;' O'Dell said. "Everyday kids
are bombarded with ads from tobacco compa- '
nies encouraging them to use tobacco products.
"The tobacco industry spends $8.2 billion a
year on advertising and marketing to attract
new smokers and to keep people addicted, and
many of those dollars focus ·on attracting
young people to tobacco," she added .
During Wednesday's program, the students
were given the opportunity tci sign the "Kick
Bum Day Pledge" stating that they want to be
a "youth advocate who ·will sta nd up against
tobacco usc and all its dangers."
·
"Concerned youth can ·make a difference;'
said O'Dell,.not only in their own lives, but by
helping others. "It's a fact that approximately one
out of every three kids who start smoking will
die prematurely from a robacco-rclated illness.
"Isn't that enough reason to try and make a
difference?"

TUPPERS PLAINS- Fresh from a successful competitive season, the award-winning Eastern High
School Marching Band will send six of its 30 members
to Saturday's performance of thr Ohio Music Educators Association's (OMEA) Honor Band .
The small, but powerful band, under the direction of
Chris Kuhn, is just back from the OMEA District ,17
~and ~n~ ~~qi~ I,~rge Group AdjLdicaled - F\Ient in
Po.rwitoutH, where ;jt was one of only five bands to
receive a superior rating . .
•
Athens High School, Vinton County High School,
Portsmouth High Schpol and Gallia Academy were
among the 16 other schools _c ompeting. The contest
was ·held at Shawnee State. University.
The band's award-winning program included three
songs: "Miss Liberty March" by John Edmondson;
"Encanto" by Robert W. Smith; and "Heatherwood
Portrait" by James Barnes, according to Kuhn.
The group's superior rating now qualifies them for
the opportunity to _c ompete at the OMEA's regional
contest in Gahanna on April 28 and 27.
Seniors Sara Mansfield and Amanda McKnight and
juniors Thomas Simmons, 'Tyler Simmons, Nichol
Honake-r and Carrie Crow will don their green and
white band uniforms to play with the honor band. The
concert will be held Saturday evening at Ohio University's Templeton-Blackburn Memorial Auditorium on
Union Street.
The rest of the Eastern band musicians still have
work to do, as well. The band plans a trip to the competitive Smoky Mpuntain Music Fenival in Gatlinburg,
Tenn. , April 18-21.

HONOR lAND MEMBERS -

Thomas Simmons. Carrie
Crow, Sara Mansfield, Amanda McKnight, Tyler Simmons
and Nichol Honaker are Eastern High School's. members-of
the OMEA Honor Band, which will perform at Ohio Univ~rs~
ty 's Memorial Auditorium on Saturday. (Submitted)

Did You know that the Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation is
offering gri:mt monies for Transitional Work Progr-ams?
Did you know this program coil reduce your workers'' comp cosls?
Call Holzer Work Unk tO see how this program can be prO'(ided Of
no charge lo slale funded employers.

Call
•
446·5733 or
'
....... 1·866·308·2266
·f

MEDICAL CENTER
·Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holZer.org

...

�•

•

•
Thurtday, April 4, 2002

'lhund-.y, April 4, 2002
.... -Th_e_D_a_n_y_Se_n_tin_e_I_ _ _ _ _ _ _..;:O:.h=.'IO;;;...-_ __........._____:=::z:.:;Pa:t:ge.::.:i:..:Al::.::

LOCAL BRIEFS

&gt;"

. Court rules vehicle search constitutional

Ohio weather
Friday, April 5

.

t

C:OLUMBUS (AP) -In a significant
Fourth Amendment decision, the Ohio
Supreme Court on Wednesday ruled
that police may search the inside·of a car
following the arrest of an occupant of
the· car, no matter what the reason was
for the arrest.
.
The court said the, 1999 search of a
Cincinnati man's car, a search that discovered drugs, was constitutional.
The car's driver, Marvin Murrell, was
pulled over for speeding and then
arrested after the officer discovered an
arrest warrant for not paying child support.
The court's 5-2 decision overturned
its previous major ruling on vehicle
searches, the 1992· State v. Brown decision, and brought the Ohio Constitu-

,
•

ol Cotumbuo IH'/..' l ,

\/ "[§!!~~ ~W. VA.
KY.

, Inc.

Clauay

Silowll'l T·IIO'TT\1

"

Rlln

'

~ t

Flurrfft

&lt;·~ · · " ···

Snow

~

lot

Slow.warmup set for weekend
BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Overnight temperatures will
· dip into the upper 20s in the
Ohio Valley, the National
.JWeather Service said.
High pressure is expeected
to move into the region on
Friday, providing a slow
warmup.
Temperatures slowly .will
rise through the upper 40s on
Friday and through the 60s
over the weekend.
Sunset tonight will be at
6:59, and sunrise on Friday is
· at 6:09 a.m ..
Weather forecast:
Tonight. .. Considerable
cloudiness. Lows near 30.
North winds 5 to 10 mph.
Friday... Mostly cloudy and
continued cool. Highs near

50. Northwest winds 5 to 10
mph.
Friday
night ... Mostly
cloudy. Lows near 30.
· Extended forecast:
Saturd~y... Partly . cloudy.
Highs in the mid 50s.
Saturday
night ... Mostly
clear. Lows in the lower 30s.
Sunday... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers late. Highs
in the lower 60s.
Monday... Cloudy with a
chance of showers. Lows in
the upper 40s and highs in the
mid 60s.
Tuesday... Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the upper 40s and
highs in .the lower 60s.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy.
Lows near 40 and highs in the
upper 60s.
•

. EPA calls for deanup
UNIONTOWN (AP) -The US. Environmental Protection·
Agency has a new cleanup plan for a closed toxic waste dump
that calls for planting more trees apd other vegetation.
The EPA wants·the 30-acre Industrial Excess Landfill in Stark
County between Akron and Canton to naturally cleanse the
contaminants in the groundwater.
.
The S7 millio.n plan calls' for upgrading the groundwater
monitoring system and working to eliminate a benzene problem
in the water under the dump.
The landfill, where industrial wastes were dumped, ceased
operations in 1980 and was covered with soil. The U.S. EPA
·declared it a Superfund site in 1984.

Jackpot pes to S43M
CLEVELAND (AP) -The Ohio Lottery's Super Lotto Plus
jackpgt is growing to $43 million for the next drawing Saturday
night.
There were no Super Lotto Plus game tickets with the correct
combination for the S34 million drawing Wednesday night.
Sales in ~uper Lotto Plus totaled $6,241,531 and players
shared $1,001,555. Sales in the Kicker totaled $802,858 and
players shared $448,640. Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled $155,036
and players shar~d $175,788.
.
J There were Ill Super Lotto Plus tickets wifh five of the numbers, and each is worth,S1,500.There were four tickets with five

.

tion 's search and seizure provisions into Brown decision was wrongly decided,:
alignment with a 1981 ruling by the Justice Alice Robie Resnick wrote for: ·
U.S. Supreme Court.
the majoritY.
,
·
•'
That decision, New York v. Belton, · The Brbwn ruling did not provide
allows police searches of individuals ·and "persuasive reasons" to depart from the
their vehicles immediately afier an arrest search procedures set out in the U.S.·
to ·check for weapons and to make sure Supreme Court's Belton decision,•
no evidence . is being , hidden or Resnick said.
destroyed. ,
The protections against unreasonable •
After Murrell was charged with search or seizure in the Ohio and U.S.'
cocaine possession, a Hamilton County con~itutions "should be harmonized,.
judge threw out the results . of the whenever p.ossible:' Resnick wrote..
search."
· Chief Justice Thomas Moyer and Jus-•
The Hamilton County Prosecutor's tice Paul Pfeifer dissented.
:office appealed, and the I st Ohio Dis- . "It is well !ettled that a state supremei
. trier Court of Appeals overturned the court may interpret its sfate conllitution !
trial judge's decision. The case was then to provide greater individual rights thaR'
appealed to the Ohio Supreme Court. those provided in the federal Constitu:·
The state Supreme Court's 1992 tion," Moyer wrote.
·
. ,.

•

o ~ ·-~••J.nt •
..

Sunny Pl. Cloudy

.:Driver. lnjurtcl

m.onthly luncheon on Tuesday,April 9, from 12 p.m. to I
;POMEROY - A two- P·!ll· at the Overbrook Center
vehicle accident on Ohio 143 in Middleport.
We~nesday resulted in ill)ury
Mike Bartrum, Meigs
for one of the drivers, the Counry native and football
Gallia-Meil!l Post of the State player for tbe NFL's Phila~el­
Highway Patrol reported.
phia Eagles, has been sched•Matthew D. Wandling, 16, uled.as 'the guest speaker.
39651
Landaker Road.
Those planning to attend
Pomeroy, was transported to the luncheon should ll.SVP
Holzer Medical Center by by calling 740-992"5005
Meigs EMS (rom the scene of before~vtonday.
the 4:50 p.m. crash in Salisbury Township, the patrol
said.
Troopers said Wandling was
southbound on County Road
14 (Wolfe Pen) when he
SYRACUSE - The Herpulled onto 143 to head east- itage Family will be at a hymn
bound and collided with a sing to be held at the Syracuse
westbound pickup truck dri- Mission Church on Bridgeven by Todd M. Workman, 28, man Street April 13 at 6 p.m.
·38540 Carpenter Hill Road,
Rutland.
Damage· to both vehicles
was moderate, and Wandling
was cited for failure to yield.
.
\
POMI:.ROY - Beginning
ballroom dance lessons will
start at the Senior Citizens
Center Tuesday and continue
for six weeks, 7 to 8 p.m. Ger'POMEROY - Units "of ald Powell is the instructor
. Meigs Emergency Services and the cost is $60 a couple.
answered I 0 calls for assis- Those enrolling are to wear
Jance on Wednesday. Units leather soled shoes.
· responded as follows:
' CENTRAL DISPATCH
" 10:47 a.m., Ho)ze~ Medical
Center Clinic, Dennis Sael~ns. Holzer Medical Center;
"1:48 p.m., Gilkey Ridge,
POMEROY - A spring
Ronnie Powell, O'Bieness carnival will be held at the
Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy Elementary School
4:24 p.m., Main Street, Saturday, 5 to 7 p.m There
motor vehicle accident, will be games · and refreshShawna Manley, HMC;
ments.
6:46p.m., State Route 124,
Clara Saunders, HMC.
.
RUTLAND
10:59 a.m., Maples, Thomas
Tucker, Pleasa1,1t Valley Hospital·' .
•
·4:58p.m., State Route 143,
RUTLAND Rutland
jvtalhew Wandling, HMC;
' 10:58 p.m., Meigs Mine Township Trustees announced
that · cemetery cleanup will
No. 3, Carl White, HMC.
begin on April 15. Anything
SYRACUSE
1:58 p.m., Childrens Home anyone wants to save now on
graves should be removed
n,oad, Oudia Chase, PVH;
14:56 p.m., State Route 143, before then.
Jtlotor vehicle accident, Todd
Workman, Tim Stout·, refused
•
t(eatment.
• TUPPERS PLAINS
: 5:32 p.m., Eagle Ridge
Road, Dora Hysell, HMC.

.

.

Hymn slna
·planned

Ballroom dance
·dass offered

.

Fa~

Mayor to name laW diredor
CLEVELAND (AP) . - Mayor Jane Campbell planned on
Thursday to name an assistant U.S. attorney to. lead the city's law
department, a newspaper reported.
Subodh Chandra, 36, who spechlizes in prosecuting health
care fraud will start next month as law director, The Plain Dealer reported.
· Chandra, a Yale Law School graduate, will oversee about 75
city lawyers in a department where morale plummeted during
· ·
the final term of Mayor Michael. White.
The former mayor took much oft)le city's legal business away
from City lawyers and spent as much as $7 million a year in taxpayer money on private firms.

Family, friends m•orialize boy

backers hall rulln1

DAYTON (AP) -People against animal farms better have a
good case before challenging their construction, say farm advocates touting a court ruling against neighbors -who opposed a
hog farm.
"This doesn't make animal agriculture sue~proof. But to us
what this says is you better have a leg to stand on if you're going
t~ attempt to stop animal agriculture," Joe Cornely,,spokesman
for the Ohio Farm Bureau, said Wednesday. "Here's a signal from.
the courts that agriculture has a right to exist."
. '
Last month, visiting Darke Councy C.oiTIITion Pleas judge
William Millard ordered !Wo neighbors who. had sued tp block
construction of a hog farm near Greenville in western Ohio to •·
pay the farmers $144,450 for lost income and legal fees.
The judgment followed a December 2000 decision by Millard
denying a request by the neighbors ~o stop Tony and Anita .
Knapke fi'om creating the 1,960-head hog operation. The neigh- ·.
bors argued it would create a nuisance and hurt property values.

EMS calls

ansWirecl

camival
planned

WESTLAKE (AP) - An 11-year-old boy who received Ia
fatal electic shock in the pool of a Mexican luxury hotel wiD be
remembered as a child who was a "friend to everyone," his uncle
said.
,
Tom Kiczek died Monday morning,while vacationing with
"
VANWERT (AP) -A woman was sentenced to six months
his family in San Jose del Cabo, Mexico.
"It's every parent's worst nigh tmare;' Kiczek's uncle, George in jail and six months in a rehabilitation center for providing the
·
drugs that killed an acq'uaintance. .
Soos, sat'd .
Police said the shock originated from a faulty lighting fixture · . Sara Boroff. 19, was sentenced Wednesday in Van Wert Coun'on the side of the pool a! the Presidente Inter-Continental ty Common Pl~a.s Court. She pleaded guilty to reckless homi- .
Hotel.
dde in February, and an involuntary manslaughter charge was
dropped.
,
Judge Charles Steele also ordered Boroff to pay more than
· $4,000 for Lacy Trammel's funei-al and $5,000 to start the Lacy ,
ASHLAND (AP)-The county prosecutor said he expects to Trammel Memorial Fund to educate Van Wert High School stutile additional charges against the former Perrysville police chief. dents on the dangers of drug abuse.
·
who was fired for staging a traffic stop to cover up an acciden"
tal shooting.
Ashland County Prosecutor Jtobert DeSanto said Wednesday ·
that his office and the sheriff's department are investigating Tim
Sommer's tenure as police chief. DeSanto expects lo .take additional charges to the grand jury April 24.
.
"There may be more serious charges coming. The defendant
knows that. We're looking at what may be irregularitio:s there;'
said DeSanto, who declined to elaborate.
Sommer was fired Monday by Perrysville's village council and
arrested Tuesday on a charge of filing a false report. On Wednesday. Common Pleas Judge jetli-ey Runyon set a $10,000 bond
for Sommer and scheduled a preliminary hearing for April 10. .

rei
rovkl
ced
OVe ose p
er senten .

Cemetery

deanup .

in Rutland

Ex-chief's .bond set

NEED TO REPLACE

Cemetery

YOUR OLD
SUNGLASSES?

cleanup in

numbers plus the bonus ball, and each is worth S10,000. The
Traficant said he was trying to find a man who worked at his
6,243 Super Lotto Plus tickets with four of the numbers are
each worth $100 and the 267 tickets with four numbers and the farm to teltifY. He also was looking for a cement company's
bonus ball are worth S500.There were 7,451 Super Lotto Plus record. keeper to show he paid for concr~ at his farm.
ticl~ets with three numbers plus the bonus ball.

POMEROY - Salisbury
Township trustees will be
cleaning cemeteries in prepaation for mowing. Anyone
; MIDDLEPORT - The with decorations which they
Meigl County Chamber of wish to keep should remove
~ommerce will hold its them right away.
•
•
•
••

fi.!J:II

KM!nelh McCullou9h, R. Ph.
I Chc~rt.. Rlf'lle, R. Ph • .
Pla•crtpllon Ph. 992-2155
112 Ea.eMaln Sb alit
Pomarov, Ohio

,,.....,._ 8.85

.RocloNII- 19.35
USB-22.41
Roc:lly Bools - 7.20
Glnnett-78
Ganlr8l Ellc:lrlc-38.76 RD 8111111 - 64.59
~tch/811C- :17.62
Sen-o18.13
Aehland Inc. - 43.115 GkHI..V-'-80
Har1ey DIIWIIan ...:.53.86 llhoney'l - .35
AT&amp;T -15.16
WaJ.Mart- 58.80
Kn1111-1A3
...... One- &lt;10.50
Wendy'a- 34.32
Kr01J8f- 22.01
au-13.72
Llndl End- 43.34
WOIIhinglon - 15.13
8ob e.... - ZT.ee
Daly ttock rjjporla are
Lid. -18.73
BorgWamer- 80..47
NBC - 21.115
~-3.0S
111e •
Clotlng
Ol6111illg Shape- 8.86 OllkHI FraCiill -19.511 quotes 1lle pr.WU
diY't ~. prO:
0118-23.70
atY Hokling -15.&lt;10
vlcied by Srni1h , _ .
B8T -37.A9
. Coi-26.17
,..,... - 2'.89
.. Ad\IM Inc. ol GalOG-15.50
lipoHI.
P..,oloo- 49.87
!11Poril-...87

HOURS
Mon- Frt 8am- gpm
Sat. Som - 5 pm
Sun. I Oom- 4pm

J.m.

•
•

Did the Tribe beat Anaheim?

••
•.

.•

.

'

Feclfral-- .78

¥P-ol8.18
Coli- 23.19
Na/J-ol8.115

ear-old woman retraces
Un erground Railroad
route·
.

•,

LOCAL STOCKS

•
•

73-

Slaves flocked to the
"Chilly Jordan," as it was
called, swimming . across
when the river was l01f, or
escaping in . boats or even
clinging to logs when the
water wa.s high, and le;aping
acro~s ice floes when it was
· frozen . ·
With partner Peggy Over- ·
ly, Gore n~rrates a tour called
. "Crossing the Danger Zone."
"Thi1 really was the danger
zone here," Gore said ,of the
Kentucky-Ohio
~order,
. which was heavily panelled
by sl2ve catchers.
"Th.,Y were so cloJC and
yet so fa( when rumway
slaves arrived at the Ohio
n.iver, Gore taid.
· Buuerfield flew from Ger• ·
many to Cleveland to be at
Southgate's side for the first
week of her . trip. People in
Germany gave . her practial
itenu for the trip, including a
pocketknife, flashlight and
reflective vem.

Luncheon

planned

.

RIPLEY (AP) - A 73- leered to drive the route in
. _,year-old woman has begun a advance.
'two~month walk across Ohio
She will head · first to
retracing the route of the Cincinnati and · then to
Underground
Railroad, Columbus and Cleveland,
whkh took escaped slaves to with stops in between at key
freedom .
locations along the Under. "Lei's go," Joan Southgate ground · Railroad, including
of Cleveland shouted to . Oberlin in · northeast Ohio,
companions as she began the where abolitionists openly
327 -mile walk on Tuesday in defied the Fugitive Slave Act
this Ohio River community to help fleei ng slaves.
southeast of Cincinnati.
Southgat•. oegan the walk
She was accompanied by at the Ripely home of John
her son, Danny, grandsons Parker, a freed black man
Nikolas and Jeremy and Hes- who rowed his skiff across the
ter Butterfield, a friend from Ohio River numerous times
) Germany.
to help slaves escape from
· Southg;tte made it 10 miles Kentucky.
to Higginsport on the tint
Ripley Mayor lUthy Gast
day. and fhen set off seven was among the well-wishers
miles for Chilo, where. she at . Southgate's departure,. as
wantaying Wednesday night. WliS jerry Gore, who leadl
She plans to use a laptop tours of the Underground
computer to correspo_nd with· Railroad route.
three Cleveland schools
Gore marked_the occa.sion
with
an impronjptu history
about her e~periences along
the path, whicb ' wa.s mapped lesson ·against th~ backdrop
out by friends w~o volun- of the Ohio River.

Salisbury .'IWp.

••

Judge MftdS out,Ultlmalulft

CLEVELAND (AP) __.:_A federal judge told u.s. Rep. James
A. Traficant Jr. that if he does not have enough witnesses to fill
the. day and doesn't ta'·· argumen1s should
""' tb e sta n d, c1ostng
begin Thursday.
Outside the courthouse Wednesday, Traficant told reporters
that U.S, District Judg~ Lesley Wells cannot order him to call
witnesses.
r-.
"I d '
da
h
.
on t give a n\n w 0 ordered anything;' he said. "If I
:c;:t~ defY a court order, it won't be the lint time. And I may

www.mydallyaantlnal.com

How'd~ Reds do?

• Glllllfl ........11aldiJ't51 d ..
•

..••
..•

The Daily Sentinel

•

•

: Reider Services

-

•
:

eon,ctlon Polley

be--·")OU lrllow d ..
"""'In • ttory, Cllll,. Mwa:oom

• Ia

:
: .. (740) 8112-21~.

,....o.pwln•U•

: , . rnlln runbtr It IMI2-21118.
•

•

.,.,.......

......
-

1

,.,._

F!LAIR
'
___.,__ .,.,_

.

· George B. Hudson

.on

~Govemor

to announce
solution to
atch state

udget deficit

De8tl1s
Raymond Kin1 .

Charles Sayre

..

Malllarel V. Barber .

ARE HERE!!

.,..""'-

I

71e Sept, 1/at

To.aand•mall
...., .,. . . MI.com

300 Sac.ond Awnue In tile Llfol) Itt Mill- CIS,•IIJ. OH

Ontllaw.b

I'UIINITURE 4 DESIGN oac·~-

THURSDAY
Gospel. jubilee.
POMEROY
WJillam
Mayes to teach Bible at Faith
SAJ'UADAY
Valley Tabernacle church,
HARRISONVILLE - Har·
Bailey Run Road.
rlsonvllle . Lodge 411 at the
SYRACUSE
VIllage hall, 7:30 p.m. Master
Council, regular meeting, 7 Masons welcome.
p.m., · Syracuse Muntclpat
SUNDAY
Building.
MIDDLEPORT -A service
•
REEDSVILLE
Olive of hope and healing In memo·
POMEROY - George B. Hudson, 75, of Pomeroy, died Township Trustees, · regular ry of Lindsay Bolin and Brad
Tuesday, April 2. 2002, at the Holzer Medical Center, Gallipo- meeting, 6:30 p.m., township Runyon, Ftrst Baptist Church,
lis.
Middleport, 7 p.m. Special
garage on Joppa Ad.
Born
November 6, 1926 at Hartford, Wc~t Virginia, he
testimony by Jennifer Walker,
was the son of ihe late Dewey W. Hudson and Cassie Adams
TUPPERS PLAINS- VFW special music. Service Is
Hudson .
·
Post 9053 · Ladles Auxiliary, especially lor teens, others
He was a retired coal·miner from Southern Ohio Coal Comregular meeting, 7 p.m. Elec· welcome. Mark Morrow, paspany, and a member of'the 'Clifton Masonic Lodge 23, F&amp;Afl,1. ·
tlon of officers. ·
tor.
. He was a veteran ofWorld War II and ·the Korean War.
He is survived by a daughter and son-in-law. Cheryl and
· Donald RusseU o(Pomeroy; three sisters, Margaret Williams of
East Liverpool, Law:a Autherson of Middleport, and Donna
and Kenneth Eblin of Rutland; four brothers, Luther Denver
Hudson of Norton, Bernard W. Hudson of Lexington, North
Carolina, Lewis R. Hudson of Racine, and Sonny S. Hudson of
Middleport.
·
Also surviving' are seven grandchildren, April (C~ris) Stewart, Heather (Sean) Hawley, Heath (Kyla) Hudson, Elizabeth
Russell, D.J. Russell, Bryant Lee Russell and Kaitlin Russell;
one step-granddaughter. Martha Qeffrey) Watts; six greatgrandchildren, Brock Stewart, Kaylee Stewart, Kelley Hudson,
Devon Hawley, 'Korey Watts and Chris Watts; a special nephew,
Tony Eblin of Middleport; several sisters-in-law and brothers"
in-law; and i)ieces and nephews.
In addition to his parents. he was preceded in death by his
wife, Bessie McDaniel Hudson, in 1985; a son, Raymond
Bryant Hudson, three brothe.rs, Charles Hudson, John Robert
Hudson and Dewey Hudson Jr.; and a sister, Marie Bush.
Services will be held at I p.m. on Friday, April 5, 2002, at the .
Fogle~ong-Tucker Funeral Homein Mason, West Virginia. The .
Rev.james H. Lewis will officiate, and burial will be in Graham
Cemetery, New Haven, West Virginia. Friends may call at the
COLUMBUS (AP) - In ing from Ohio's tobacco setfuneral home on Thursday. April 4; 200Z. from 6-9 p.m.
dealing with its projected tlement dollars. using rainy
two-year: s1.2 billion budget . day funds and requiring more
deficit, Ohio is taking a two- financial institutions that loan
pronged ·approach - patch money to pay taxes.
this year's shortfaU first, then
Now, state budget officials
debate a longer-term •elution. say the economy proVed to be
Gov. Bob Taft plans to use in nwch worse shape than
more of the state's rainy day they· realized when making
. fund and to limit state agency those October estimateJ, leadspending to addrelf a S500 ing to this new s1.2 billion
P0MEROY - Raymond King, 81, a former reJident of miUion deficit this fiscal year, deficit.
Meigs County, died Friday, Mar~ h 29 2002, at his home in which ends June 30.
They also •ay they may have
BartlesviUe, Okla.
·
The governor wa1 schedd
d h ·
f
He is survived by four daughten and a son, along with two uled to discus• details of this un ere~timate t e tmpact 0
Jisten, Elizabeth Clark .of Albany. and Gloria Meehan of Aori- Plan at a news conference a 1999·change in Ohio law on
sutc revenue.
da.
Thursday.
. That still leaves a $750 milThe effect of the · change
He wa.s preceded in death by his parents and his wife .
Funeral Jetvices were held on Monday, Apr~ 1, 2002, in lion deficit in the next fiscal means a decrea5e in revenue .
Oklahoma, where bunal also toi&gt;k place, •
year. Taft has ruled out a gen- from the corporate franchise
era) tax increase, but has said tax,. a drop magnified by a
he might ·con•ider 1targeted recession .
taxes on bu1inesseJ.
MASON, W.Va. - Charlc1 Sayre, 59, M.uon, died Thursday.
Ohio's rainy day fund i• just
April 4, 2002, at Plea.santValley Hospittl.
over SI billion. Only about
Arrangements wiU be announced by Foglesong-Tucker $600 million of the fund is
Funeral Home, Mason.
actually available, however.
·
. Earlier agreements use portioru o£ the fund to addreu ·
preVious shortfalls in the
HOCKINGPORT - Margaret Barber, 76, Hockingport, 2002-03 budget.
In 1992, the state was forced
died Wednesday. April 3, 2002, at the Arcadia-Nursing Center
in Coolville.
to take S.300 million out of i1S
· She was born May 5, 192~, in Wood County, W.Va., daugh- rainy day fund, leaving 14
ter of the late John and Mabel Boomer Ruble.
. cents in the account. ThenShe is survived.by a brother, Calvin Ruble of Coolville; a sis- G.W: George- Voinovich and
ter, Ruby'· Satterfield of Moundsville, W.Va.; and several nie~ Jawnulcen cut funding to state
and nephews.
agencies and raised taxes to
She wa.s also preceded in death by her husband, Albert; three balance a budget that wn St
brotheo, Harold, John and Arthur; and two sisters, Martha and billion in the red.
~ ·
Mand~~~
Servia~ will be 11 a.m. Friday in White Funeral Home, gled for weeki last fall to
Coolville, with the Rev. Phil ltidenour officiating. Burial will addreu a Sl.S billion deficit
follow at Stewart Cemetery in Hockin~ort. Friends may call lint identified in October.
at the funeral home an hour prior to the lllrvice.
Taft signed a biU in December patching that deficit
through budget cuts, borrow- ~~·;f..!ll)'!lr_'-1 ,i,;lltprl~~, '1"-R

BANDANA BRIGHTS

oaw ••l"l'k 11

•

_

FRIDAY
Community Caland11r 11
pultllahad 11 1 free ••r·
POMEROY- Meigs Coun·
vlca to non•proflt group• ty PERl, Meigs Senior Center.
wlihlng to announce Noon luncheon with meeting
.'maatl.nga infl epeclll and speaker to follow.
eventl. Thl calendar 11
not dtllgned. to . promote . WEST COLUMBIA
11111 or rund·ralaara of Gospel sing , 7 p.m . West
1ny ty~. 'Item• 1ra printed Columbia United Melhodtat
only •• I pace permit• 1nd Church. Singing will be Two
c1nnot be gu1rant1ad to for Jesus, Every . Thursday,
be printed a 1peclflc num· E.arthen Vessels, Gtpryland
bar ol daya.
Believers. A love offering will
be taken to benefit Bend Area

~BIWllY•

EJd. 3

n

CALENDAR

EJd.12

•

.......

PO!'-ffiROY - Lilah Irene Frecker, 84, of Pomeroy, died
Wednesday, April 3, 2002, at Rocksprings Rehabilitation Cen•
ter in Pomeroy. •
. She was born on August 7, 1917, in Pomeroy, daughter of the
late Willial\\ Denver and Edna Heitger Corrilan:
·
She was a~ . employee of the former Elberfeld's Department
Store, a member of the Ladies Auxi)iary of Disabled American
Veterans Chapter 53, and was a homemaker.
Surviving are a son and daughter-in-law, Rodney ·and Mona.
King Fre~k'er of Pometoy; a sister and brother-in-law, Mildred
· and Robert E', Bow1i1an of Pomeroy; two si1ters-in.-law, Clara
Baer of Pomeroy, and Lila Carman of Jackson; an aunt; Elizabeth Carnian of Pomeroy; two grandchildren, Jason Frecker
and Amy Frecker of Pomeroy; and several nieces. and nephews.
Besid~s her -jlWlnts.• she was preceded in deatli by her husband, Earl .E. Frccker; and two brothers, It-an Carman and
Orville Carman.
.
Services will be I p.m. on Saturday, April 6, 2002, in Ewing
Funeral Home, in Pomeroy, with the Rev. Keith Ro,.der officiating. Burial wi ll follow at Pine Grove Cemetery. ·
Friends may ca-ll at the funeral home ori Friday, April 5,
2002,'from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m:
·
'
.

.

S.lllllrst•,.••tal•lii(.Sa d ll

.... - .

: GlrM.. HWIIJ f

Ullh Fledcer

MEIGS
.

Eastern Baseball Eagles improve
to 2-0 with win over Waterford

- ow rnUI 001aon In II..,... ..

:

obitUaries

The Dally Sentinel • Paga A 3

(740).t41-1259 • 1-800 9,PS-NEST

-.mp.t~y•••-

ALL AGES , ALL TIMES

..
•

.

••

..

.~

.

'•

~4

00

..

�•

0

.. '

.

•

.

•

.

----=-~ the .Bend

PageA4

_Th_en_an......._ySen
__t_L1e_1

•

'lbund-r. April •· 2002

om eserve p arie tic et ome
•

..

DEAR. ABBY: I can't agree with
your advice to "·Poor Litde Butterfly
in Oklahoma," whose mother went
on an eight-hour harangue after
finding yut hec married daughter
,
got a tattoo when ,she was 20.
I think the couple did the right
thing to put Mom on a plane home.
I do not agree with your advice to
ADVICE
"mend fences" and take the "high
road." This is 2002 - not 1940. Tell
the mother to get over. it. There is attack from one's mother cannot be
- . and should not be ·- borne by
nothing sh~ can do.about it now.TATTOOED MOM IN PENN- . an adult. Mom was out of lin'c.
''Poor" has a right to her life ~nd
SYLVANIA
DEAR TATTOOED MOM: beliefs. If her tattoo pleases her and
That's tr)le. I may have been smok- her husband, that's good en.oughl
Abby, I, t'oo, was a victim of attack
ing the peace pipe for too long.
Many readers agreed ·with. you. by a relative - · my daughter.She
was so adamantly against my getting
Read on: . .
·
DEAR ABBY: I feef strongly . a tattoo that I . decided it wasn't
that MOM should apologize for worch the hassle. (I had always wantmaking all o!the fuss. An eight-hour ed an anklet of roses ~nd leaves.)

Dear

Abby

Then, several summers ago, my w~s re2cting to more th~n the tat- ~gainll me. My wife never once
daughter had an accident. Her 'truck too.
took. a st~nd against her mother. Sh'e
was totaled, but fortunately she . DEAR Abby: That couple dld let her mo.m criticize me to everywalked away unha.rmed. She came the right thing sending her mother one without ever setting the record
· home and said, "Mom, if you want hotile. They stuck up fol' each other straight.
that tattoo ";;"" go get it. Life is too in the face of adversity. That marMy wife made a· decision that day
short. I'll even buy it for you ." And · riage is going to endure.
about where her aUegiancc stoo4 . .
she did! I got my t~ttoo at the ripe • Unfortunately, mine will not. 'Ten · The events of that day were the sinold age of 69 - .and have riot years ago, on the morning of my gle greatest indictor of how the rest
regretted it. - HAPPY WITH first daughter's christening, my of our marriage was to go. - .
ROSES IN KlNGMAN, ARJZ. · mother-in-law looked over her GETTING DIVORCED 10
DEAR HAPPY: Thanks for the newspaper and proceeded to lecture YEARS LATER
rnput. ·.
me about how they do things in
DEAR
• GETTING
· DEAR ABBY: Your response to "their" family. She made the mistake DIVORCED: How sad that a lov"Po-or Little Butterfly" was wrong, of giving ine this lecture while an _ing daughter was forced to choose
wrong, wrong.This is an issue of the overnight guest' 'in our home between her husband and her
.daughter preserving her self-esteem, (which, by the way, my wife and I mother - and made the wrong
not an argument over a tattoo. This bought with no help from her choice.
bmterfly had every right to ask her ·mother).
(Pauline Phillips and l~er daughter,
mother to take oill - YOUNG
Abby, I sent her packing the next Jeanne Phillips, share the pscudony~r
MOM IN WASHINGTON
.day. My mother"in~.law proceeded Abigail. Min Buren. Write Dear Abby~~
DEAR YOUNG MOM: I sus- to. bad-mouth me to the rest of th~ www.DearAbby.cMn or P.O. Box
pect you're right that the mother family, trying her best to turn them 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.) ·

-

ucough CPR" has merit, no substitute
.

.

Queuion: , I've gotten e-ntails
from several different friends about
how to survive a heart attack by
coughing. The gist is that coughing
every I 0 seconds wiil keep enough
blood tlowing through·the damaged
heart to sustain you long enough to
call for help. One of the e-mails
even said that this is now part of
baiic CPR trafning. This sounds farfetched to me. Is it legit?
An1wer: Heart disease is the
number one killer in our country
today. One slightly twisted Way of
looking at this fact is that it shows
how much progress we have made
on· dealing with infectious disease
and trauma ·- once the leading
causes of death. The bad part of
heart disease statistics, of coune, js
that about 1.1 million people will
have a heart attack this year, and
about 60 percent of those will die
before they can reach the hospital.
The ·best treatment for heart dis-

ease is prevention. ' I've · written
before about the .importance of frequent exercise, eating a balanced
diet, lowering cholesterol, controlling diabetes and blood pressure.
These behaviors reduce the risk of
heart attack for each individual as
weU as collectively for our population. These practices won't, however,
do anything beneficial for the person who ls in the process of having.
a heart attack right now.
The best chance for surviving a
heart attack is to have CPR started
immediately after the person collapses. The first six minutes arc particularly important because the
brain is likely to suffer permanent
damage if it goes Witho"ut oxygen
for a period longer than this.
It is important for everyone from
high s~hool student! through old
age to learn basic ~PR, because you
never know when you may need to
resuscitate a loved one. I k:now•.

·Family
·Medicine
because I've done it, and I sure was
glad that I had the necessary training
to save the life of my father-in-law.
. Basic CPR cla!!es are presented in
essentially every community. The
American Heart Aisociation accredjts these. courses and can help you
find one nearby. Your local chapter's
number should be in' the phone
book, or they can be located from
the national organization's website
at www.amecicanheart.org..
Cough CPR isn't a myth, but it
isn't quite the way your e-mail pre-.
.sentcd it, either. It works this way:
Coughing mom.entarily increases

the pressure insid~ the .chest. This cardiac catheterization, the cough
pressure forcefully pt11hes air out of CPR may restore a regular beat,
the lungs and simultaneously it also making the use of other treatments
pushes some blood from the heart. unnecessary.
In this regard it is like chest comAn individual suffering a heart
prcssions done in CPR. Unfortu- attack usually has pain, weakness and
nately, it im't as effective as ches.t" sweating as symptomi, or some simcomp.ressions, so the amount of ply collapse. In these situations,
blood reachll1g the brain and the · coughing - while theoretically
rest of ..the body is less than ideal. beneficial - is of no practical benThat said, it could sustain conscious- efit because the person is already
ness for a brief period.
unable to cough, or it expends. more
Cough CPR is mosthelpful wheti energy and only makes matte(!
the heart suddenly develops an worse.
irreglllar beating that prevents it
Instead of pondering the merits of .
from pumping properly. This can , cough CPR, I'd suggest that you
happen during the process of a car- and your e-mail friend sign up for a
diac catheterization or at other CPR course to get the necessary
times when the heart is being mon- information and skills to save a life,
itored in the hospital. Beginning · ("Family Medicine" is a weekly col·
cough CPR at the time the irregu- umn. To submit questions, write to john
lar beat begins ~an sustain circula- C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio University College
cion until more. sophisticated treat- of Osteopathic Medicl,ne, RO. Box 110,
ments can be starte.d. In the case of Athens, Ohio 45701. Past colu.mns are
irre~ular beats as a consequence of a at~t~ilable onlit~e at www.jhradio.org/fm.)

'I h l' Stor

3 AI
.Grammy Awards to
...............
i ••••
retum to New York
four-year absence

1

•3000 13UI
nlsht and weekend minutes
6oo anytime minutes . ·

·

wltii1!Woo)Ur MMcl COMI'IC1 on this
Afl&lt;f WlrtiHt Pllllll Advlnt11t pl1n

"

NEW YORK (AP) -After conciliatory rather than coma fou~-year hiatut, the Cram- bative had lured the
my Awards will return to Grammys back. The GramNew York next year for the mys' return said nothing
45th annual ceremony- and about the two mayors' differit .was a simple phone call ing ttylet, Bloomberg insistfrom new Mayor Michael ed.
Bloomlierg that sealed the
"No matter who't mayor,
deal.
the Grammys thould.come to
"Only a couple of dayt New York," Bloomberg said.
after he wat elected, the "The Grammys belong here
mayor caUed me up in the because this it the musical
most' humble tones," said center of the world."
Michael Greene, head of the . Giuliani, through a spokeiNational
Academy
of woman, declined comment.
Recording Arll and Sciences, Greene - who arrived for
in announcing the Grammys' the news conference at The
return to Madison Square Theater at Madison Square
Garden. ·
Garden in a y~llow taxi "We talked about the was effusive Wednesday in his
importance of bringitlg the praise of the ex-mayor.
"The way that Rudy GiuGrammyt back to New
York;' Greene said Wednes- li2ni handled the last year of
day. "To New York - you've his mayoral term wat brilgot a great new mayor."
Iiane;· Greene said. "We're
The smiles were in contrast very, very thankful to the
with the anirnotity between mayor for the thinp he did."
Greene
and
ex-mayor · The 2003 show, the ninth
Rudolph Giuliani, who had time the Crammys will have
a«:wed the academy chief of come · to Ntw York, will be
unleathing a ttream of held Feb. 23. It will be the
. obtcenitiet at · a mayoral first time the Grammys are
ttaft'er back in 1998. Greene broadcatt on a Sunday night.
denied . the allegation; GiuThe annualthow generatet
liani called him a liar.
an ettimated S40 million .for
When the Granunys 'moved the local economy.
back to Lot Angelet the next
U.S. Sen. Chuck Schumer,
year, Greene said the Giuli2ni abo attending the news condust-up was not a factor. But ference, said the return of the
che Grammyt stayed in Cali- Grammys was particularly
fomia for the duration ofJhe significant while New York
Giuliani admininratipn.
· rebounds from the Sept. 11
·Bloomberg dellected tug· terrorut attacb that killed
gations that hit approach - nearly 3,000 · people&lt; at the
1

'

Worid Trade Center.
"New York alway' wants
the Grammys," Schumer uid.
"But this year New York
needs the Grammys." ·
Grammy-winning singer
Marc Anthony, a native New
Yorker. joined Sony Mutic
head Tommy Mottola in pretenting Bloomberg with an
autographed guitar from Let
Paul's ·
collectiqn.

Get 1 Nokia 5165 for $2t.ft
suaested retail price: $79·99

The guitar, which features a
S~pt .. 11 scene painted on it
by a retired city firefighter,
will be auctioned, and the
proceedt donated to a fund
behefitting widows arid
·orphans of the trade center
retcue workers.
Greene has aaid he would
like to . alternate the thow
between New York ind Los

Mill-In Nokia rebate: $so,oo
Your CDftl

on the ATilT WlriiiH OIJI!II Advlntqe
pl1n "" be ,vun fQr Jlfllf)lluIn to 111 AlloT Wireless deafer todl)l

mlife,;,

'

Outdoor An•ish-Built
r=urniture Is r1t~rt~!
"lauy l•l&lt;llllt · o-.. 111 ( ' lu&gt;O'-ot' 1

· • AGIIQD
•

111111'

Large Wheel
Wagon Barrow
Wheel Planter
Planter
Water Buck
Trough Board
Planter Planter
Small
Wagon Water
·Wheel Pump
Planter Planter

Today in ~ Sentinel_ B8

"~fae~ fe Gt f1'

T/t!ng: f'l ;}f)~;"

Woodlarld
Centers
nds
•
serv1ces
'

.

•

BY KR11 DoTSON

services and personnel, and
with a new mal)agement
· GALLIPOLIS -'--Woodland team, that this will be the per-.
Centers is expanding its child feet opportunity for us to
and family services, almost demonstrate the positive
ooubling current clinical staff changes we've made in the last
due to increasing .demand.
nine months," Tener said.
" ... we will expand to add
Tener pointed to the "open•
13 additional clinical profes- ness" of the staff to ~etter
sionals, joining our team in serve the community . and
Gallia, Jackson · and Meigs concentration on critical incicountie.s to help in serving dent stress debriefing . for
our . ~hr!dren, a~ole.~cents and · emergency ,. personnel and
Tanuhes needs, sard Wood- school officials.
.
.
land executive dircdor David
"There arc many people
"(ener,
- who work with devastatingly
' "We also hired a child psy- emotional issues and situations
chiatrist - Dr. Lilly Spetie - like fires, accidents, saicides
an.d a nu.rse .practitioner.. - and murders that may need
Dtana Snuth - on Feb. 1, he some mistance in coping with
added. "They have been hdp- those major traumatic experiing with medication services. cnces," said Tener. "We're also
Since they have been here, a lot more involved with the
we've added almost 3~ chi!- schools to help provide supdren to our case loads .
port systems for at risk ahd
Tener said Woodland is l:tigh risk youth.
anticipating ?ddi~.g another
"And we're doing mC!re
300 to 450 chents tn the near school testing in the areas of
future.
.
. IQ and psychological evalua. "We have met with com· tions."
munity stakeholders to let
Another improvement Tenthem know of our plans for ner has made in his first year at
expansion trying to work with Woodland is making the centhem to best ·meet the needs ter more visible in the comof the children in their com- munities it serves. Whether it's
munities;''Tener said. "Basical- one on one with community
ly, we're gearing up to handle leade!'ll, or attending regular
the projected increase in civic meetings Tener said,
demand for quality mental "we're trying to lei people
health services in the tri- know we care and want to ·
county area. Our ultimate goal help meet their needs."
i• to provide excellent mental
Woodland Centers ·now has
health services to all individu- a website that people can
als that need it and we want to access for education and inferassure people in the Jackson, marion on mental health
Gallia and Meigs counties that issues:
·there is a health facility that is www.wci.centersite.org.
'more ·than ready and able to
"We · encourage people to
:step to the plate and provide visit it and not only learn, but
those services. ·
to communicate with us;' he
"We don't want anyone to said.
.fall through ·the cracks," he
Tener's email address is
:added.
cxecdirwci@mindspring.com.
: All three branches will also
"Feedback is an important .
·expand hours as needed.
tool for us to better know
"We're hoping that with what the communiry needs
these expansions, increase in and wants from us," he said.
. KOOTSONOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

:ssA flood assistance
·:avail-able·for Gallia.

Wellston intercha~ge project beg·ins
Bv ANDRIW CAitTIII

struction of a full interchange diverting Oh(o 327
WELLSTON - One of
traffic under Ohio 32 and
southeast Ohio's more
eliminating the current
dangerous intersecti~ns is
"at-grade" . intersection.
in . the process of being
Construction is expected
made safer for motorists.
to be completed in · the
summer
of 2004.
Gov. Bob Taft was ·
among the · dignitaries on
· According to a release
hand Wednesday at the
from the Ohio Departjunction of Ohio 32 and
ment of · Transportation
327 near Wellston in Jackvolumes
District 9 office, other
.
son County for a ceremo- at this intersection have work in the area Includes
nial groundbreaking mark- nearly doubled in the last reconstruction of Ohio
ing the beginning of work decade and we know th'at 124/County Road 78
on the Wellston inter- there have been some trag- (Fairgreens Road) at the
ic accidents as well.
change project.
intersection of Ohio 32,
"So this interchange diverting County Road 78
Taft said the project is
vital to traffit safery ·and project is essential to to. pass over 32, thus elimisafety for the · nating another ;It-grade
economic
.
.growth in - the improve
motorists traveling this intersettion.
·
regton.
route,
and
also
to
serve
as
a
·
"Here at Route 32, catalyst for economic . "We'll continue to ·work
We've. seen a major growth and development." h:ard on the highways in
increase in traffic with all
this region," Taft said.
The nearly. $9.2 million
the development," Taft
.
.
. f.
"Route 32 ... Route 33 ...
said. '"in fact, since 1994, proJeCt wr 11 consrst o . con- Route 35 to r1take that
ACARTEROMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

.__--. traffic on
Route 32
ha1
increased
32 pe·r~
cent and
truck
traffic by
over so
lett
~~~~~t.

four lanes all the way from
Gallipolis up· to Dayton.
We're starting to work on
the next exit just to the
east of Chillicothe right
now."

A portion of the funding
for the interchange project
was secured from the Federal Highway Safety Infrastructure program with the
help of Sen. Mike De Wine
(R-Cedarville). Additional
funding Is being provided
through the Ohio Department of Transportation's
Highway Safety Program
and the Transportation
Equiry Act for the 21st
Century (TEA 21) .
Complet~ General Construction of Columbus is
the contractor for the project, which was designed
by URS Greiner WoodW&lt;rd Clyde.

NOTICE TO PUBLIC OFA
FINDING OF NO SIGNIFICANT .IMPACT ON THE ENVIRONMENT CFONSil
.
COMBINED NOTICE
.

•

Apri I 4, 2002
Mejj~s County Commissioners
Meiis County
.
117 Eas) Memorial Driye. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
740·992- 7908 .

,.

To All Interested Persons, Agencies, and Groups:
The MeiiJs Col!nty Commissioners, propose to request the State of Ohio to release Federal funds under Section 104 (g)
of Title I of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974, as amendt!'l:l; Section 288 of Title II of the Cranston
Gonzales National Affordable Housing Act (NAHA), as amended; and/or Title IV of the Stewart B. McKinney
Homeless Assistance Act, as.amended:. to· be used for the following project(s):
·
Mei11s County SJale Route 143 Water Project
Leadinll Creek Water PisJrict'Water Line Extension
Source of Federal Funds~
CDBG: $515,600
ARC: $250.000
•
Leadinll Creek Conseryancy District -$267.800
Meigs County will proyide funds for thj; insJallation of 85,500 L,F. of
Wa1er Line Extension in portions of Columbia and Scipio TQwnshjps in Mei11s County

..

·to serye resjdeots who need a safe, dependable supply of water

It has been determined that such Request for Release of Funds will not constitute an action significantly affecting the
quality of the human environment and accordingly the Meias County Commjssjoners, have decided not to prepare an
Environmental Impact Statement under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, as amended .
Environmental Review Record(s) (ERR) for each of the Project(s) listed above have been conducted by the Mei&amp;s
County Commissioners. The ERR(s) documents the environmental reviews of the project(s) and more fully sets forth
the reasons why such statement is not required. The ERR(s) are on file and available for the p11blic's examination and
copying, upon request, between the hours of 2;,00 a.m. to .tOO p.m., Monday through Friday (except holidays) at I he
above address.
No further environmental review of such project is proposed to be conducted, prior to the request for release of federal
funds.
The Meias County· Commissioners plan to undertake the project(s) described with the Federal funds cites above: Any
.interested person, agencies, and/or groups, who have any comments regarding the environment or who disagree with
this Finding of No Significant Impact decision, are invi!ed to submit written comments for c.onsideration to the Mei&amp;s
County Commissioners at the address above listed by 5:00 p: m. on April 12. 2002, which is at least 15 days ~fter the
publication of this combined ·notice. A notice regarding the responsible entity's intent to request release of funds 1s listed
lmlflediately below.
.
·
·

I

I •

NOTICE OF INTENT TO REQUEST A REI.EASE OF FUNQS' rNOIJRROFl

To All Interested Person.s, Agencies, and Groups:
On or about, but not tlefore, April 22. 2002 the MeiiJS CoUnty Commissioners. will request the State of Ohio to release
Federal funds under Sectiort 104 (g) of Title I of the Housing and Community .Development Act of 197~, as amended;
Sectiqn 288 of Title II of the Cranston Gonzales National Affordable ~ousing Act (NAHA), as amended; and/or Tuie IV
of the 'Stewart B. McKinney Homeless Assistance Act, as all!ended; to be used for the pr~Ject(s) listed above

hit by tlooding between March
15 and 20: Gov. Bob Taft, who
The MeiiS County Commissioners plan to undertake the project(s) .described above with the F~dcral funds 'si~es ~bove.
GALLIPOLIS - The U.S. issued a disaster declar.ttion for
Any interested person, agencies, and/or groups, who have any commen.ts .regardrng the. envrronment, ~e rnvrt.ed to
Small Businm Administration l.:lwrence Counry' on. March
submit
written commehts for consideration to the Meia:s County Commtss•pners at the address above hsted pnor to
has dedared a disaste,r in 22, announced that Gallia and
April22. 2002.
Lawrence County · following Meigs counties were also
·Uooding there two weeks ago, impacted by floodwaters.
The Meias County Commissioners are certifying to the State of Ohio, that M~ig~ c;o~nty and Jeff Thom)oo in his/her
but residents of adjoining SBA loans of up to $200,000
official capacity as Presjc!ept of County Cpmmissiooen, consent to ac~ept the J~nsdrctron of Federal .courts rf an actron
co11nties who suffered damage are- available to repair damaged
is brought to enforce responsibilities in relation to environmental rev1ews, dec!Sion·makmg, and actron: and that these
are- also eligible t&lt;;&gt; apply for homes. Homeowners and
responsibilities have been satisfied.
help, the director of Ga.llia renters are eligible for up to
;County's Emergency
The legal effect of the certification is that upon its approval, the MeiiS County Cpmm_issipners may use the F!!deral .
.d Man· S40 ,000 to rep1ace persona1
)lgemen.t Agency .sat · .
. property. Loans to businesses · ' funds, and the State of Ohio will have satisfied its responsibilities under the National Envaronmental Policy Act of I 969,
. Once SBA, which assuts. prt- and non-profit organizations
as amended.
vate p~perty and busmess . of up toSI.5 million arc also
The State of Ohio will accept an objection to its approval of the release of funds and acceptance of the certification only
ownerun recoupmg lili:efrom available to repair damage to.
if it is on one of the following. grounds: (a) the certification was · not, in fact, executed by the responsible entity's
diSasters. declares a di
r m real estate, mach1nery and
Certifying Of!icer; (b) the_responsible ~ntity has fa~ led to make one of the two findmgs purs.~antto Sectr~&gt;n 58.~ or to
one county,lm~dMin.::_gNcoulln- equipment, inventory and
make the wntten determmatron requtred by secllon 58.35, 58.47, or 58.53 for the proJect, as applicable, c) the
aes can app y, 1131
""
u .
h
1 property.
"F
wJ'th
prJ'va
h
ot
er
persona
responsible
entity has umitted one or more of the steps set forth at subpart E of 24. CFR Part .58 for the preparation,
.
or anyone
re
E
. 1.
.
0
publication and completion of an Environmental Assessment; d) the responsrble entrty has omllted on or more of the
residential darmge, or .damage t cono(~~L)nJUry lrsas~r
steps set forth at Subparts F and 0 of 24 CFR Part S8 for the conduct, preparation, publication and completion of an
to a commercial business, I oans
can a .so e
Environmental Impact Statement, e) the recipient has committed f~nds ~r incurred costs not authorized by 24 CFR Part
:Would encourage anyone to made to small busmesses
58 tJefore release of funds and apprl)val of the envtron.mental certaficallon by State, or 0 another federal agency actrng
go down and see what's avail- unable to pay btlls and meet.
pprsuant to 40 CFR. Part I S04 bas submitted a written finding that the project is unsatisfactory from the standpoint of
able:' he said.
expenses du~ to flooding.
environmental quality.
u.s. Rep. Ted Strickland'• . The ~cadime for .sBA phy~­
.·
.
pffice announced that SBA real damage apphcatrons 11
. Written objections must be prepared and submitted in accordance with the required procedure (24 CFR Part 58), and
hat opened a diluter Joan May .28, ~nd Dec..20 .for ceomust be addressed to the: State of Ohio; Environmental Officer: Office of Housing and Community Partnerships; .P. 0 . .
assistance office in the South nonuc 111JUry applicattons.
Box I00 I:. Columbus, Ohio 43216-100 I.
Point village building. Starting
Gallia_has 110ught a disaster
Monday, the office wiU be dedaratron fro~1 the s~te to
6bjections to the Release of Funds on bases other than those stat~ above 'will not be considered by the State of Ohio.
open through Friday each help Wtth covermg repm costs
No objections received after (Mll,Y IQ. 2002. (which is 15 days after it is anticipated that the State will receive a request
week from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. to local government infrafor release of funds), will be considered by .the State of Ohio.
until further notice.
structpre, such as roads,
Information can also bo bJidges an·d culverts. The iniThe address of the certifying officer is:
obtained from SBA's Re~on 2 tial deadline to report prelimtoll-free number, 1 -800-359~ inary ~mage - which NuU
Jeff Thornton? President
2227, Monday through Friday estimated at about $334,000
Meigs County .
from 7 a.m. untU 6 p.m.
- was 24 hours . into the
Counhobse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
South Point was the hardett- tlooding, he explained. ·
KKELLYOMYPAILYTRIB~NE.OOM

. '
•

Pacre
AS ·
o

~------------~~----~~. .~~.~~--~----~~~na=u~~
· ·~~~~=2~:

.Y KIVIN KIUY

,,

•

Sat.tt

w.·n- woiW tilt SJS -loll Itt.
You ""' • tlllaf or t~s.
'

·

)'h~ Daily Sentinel

'

�TM a.-. tant!MI • .._..A'

The Daily Sentinel ·

·eou

The Daily Sentinel
.

111 Court at.• Pomeroy, Ohio
·740 11112-21111 • Fu: 740 llt-1157

most

www.mydeltyeentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Kindergarten
regimation
be)ins at OVCS

nd tran

'&lt;:W.UPOUS -

hMii
illtfl~ lli ~lii:'Olli~ tl\tit
thikl ill ld~ tt 0100
-\\llty Chh~l\ Scl\001 mould
tall ~ ~ u 7oi0-..WS.
)I)W lbf ~MIIt!Ol\ lnfufm*•
lioo "lll ~aUOI\1,
Ap~l\tmtllli ate euHtlllly
btl~ millie- Kindt~~~~

'

Den Dlcke...on
Publlahtr
Dlene Kiy Hill

Charlene Hoeflich
Qtntl'lll Mln.,.r

!,.,,,,

tp

Control..,

lel\!1!1\lllgS tll\

llt•. •f~Uiw.,. trfttHII. n.,,,.IHI,., H 1m~-~'u. w(lftf.t. , . , ....."

t\"en

,;n,.flllli•.t.

.

·

tioo., tht 'chool ollltt will

1lw aplltloiU IJII"Uf41Jt llle NiWifllt ~It' Mf liN t'fUUIIUIU qf1ll1 OlHJ ~f'1
I'IIWUi.ui, Cu. 'I HlwrNI HII.N. .,.,, od~tt•wln JMftl.

itth~lllt&gt;

tli ippGif\tm\'1\t Iii ·
IJ!det to 11\ti!Nii!W tht pattl\6
imll \!Cffi!l\ tht tl\l\1\mu k\lt
ltit\\1\'~ft'ell re.dll\~. Som~!­
lil\\1!15, "~" when • dllld ma~ bl;
elwn~ogiCGII~ ~~~ ""~' to

NATIONAL VIEW

~tatt kindefl!llrtl!l\, thl!)' may 11ot
bl; tle\1\\lllpllll!lltall~ re.d~. tim
~~ni~ will htlp the ~thool
diiltuss th11 need3 or ~e~~ch duld

Don't do it

mtlidal1ol\i,
ehildll!tl tl\Ust b\; ~ )il!lllll old
bl;fure Sept 30 li'&gt;r enrolltnent
111 ltinllefl!llrtl!ll al\d 6 }'l!th tild
by the .ame dab! to emoll il\

LAMBRO'S VIEW

Short-term attacks won't affect Bush! long-range goals .

1\ntl!l'.ld~

'

Patetllil mmt plm'lde a ropy

DoNAi.o LAMPO
regret. the care lmd lbeding of one's Hoose und at nlt\)or org&amp;mizntions on the
WASHINGTON - Atler 14 months political base is critical to a su~'l.'tlssful ri~ht.
.
'Boouuse of Umbnugh, we getting
in office, President Bush is · coming presidency. Cunservntives huve been
under lire from some frustraled conser- giving Bush a pass on some decisions cnll~ from dozens of r,oople who were
vutive lenders who think he has ten the they did not like (the Bush-Kennedy concerned ubout it,' suld Michuel
ideological reservation too many times. educution hill) becuuse of the impor- Fnrnc. u Heritugc Foundntioo vice presAn~one who hus been following tru1ce of the wttr. But ltttely they hnve idcnt.AII ol'these griev&amp;mce~ h&amp;we ml!rit,
Bush s performance might well wonder been expressing their disgrunllement but 10 n large degree they arc overwhelmed by the bl1tUe llgtlinst terrorism
what there is to really complain about. much more aggressively.
He has led the United States and the
''The danger for us is that Bush .may Md Bu~h 's lendership skills in rullying
civilized world in a mighty military begin to take the conscrvnti ves for the CO\mtry behind one t.'l.lmmoo purretaliation against the terrorists w~ · gmnted. Y~u·re ~ecing some ~igns - t?f pose. "Conservutives will cut him al91
sluughtered more than , 3,000 Amen- thut huppemng ~tth the steel tuntf deer- of slack to nUtintuin domestic .unlty,"
cans. He has freed the Afghan people sion, foreign nid nnd other spendln~ says the Hudson Institute's Mlii'Shtlll
·
and installed a government that no increases," said Stephen Moore. prest- Wittmmm.
Ronuld Rcagon; .Bush's mentor, simi·
longer poses a threat to its neighbors or !Jent of the Club for Orowth. . ·
us. He.hus begun a global roundup of
Phyllis Schlatly, who heads the con· larly ungcred biN buse when he mlscd
terrorisls with the help of our friends servutivc · grussnmts . ~roup Eugle turill's to win polillcnl points with vot·
and ullies. He has steered the economy Forum, suys the president 'has been get- ers. signed the TEFRA tliX bill, 'nnd
agreed to much more sponding thl\11 he
out of a short and shallow recession i~to tin~ a pass from us until now.'' . .
a faster-than-expected recovery, w1th
' A lot of people thought the educutJon wanted. But Rcugan used his political
the help of his well-timed tal\ cuts. Busi· bill was terrible. But we dldn 'I runt nnd cupital to ~ore the big points by restorness is improving, manufacturing orders rave nboul it because we wonted to sup- ing Ammca 's conlidence, destmylnj
nrc rising, unemployment Is down und port him on the war. That's changed. the Evil Empire. ilnd rebuilding the U.S.
consumer confidence Is up.
The amn~sty bill lipoed It over for us. economy through lower tax rates.
But Bush has made severul decisions It's out of sync with what gmssroots Like Rcagtm, BuNh Is keeping his eye
lately that have angered supporters in America wnnts."
on the bigger politicul picture - dcfcnt·
his party's conservative base.
The Nalional T11xpayers Union is in~ ·the Democrats In November Wld
He is pushing u provision in a mtuor angry about the steclund lumber Utrin·s. wmning full contnll of Congress in
bordeNecurity bilf to offer umnesty to "That's two new tux hikes on the Amer- ordct· to puss .the rest of his III!Cndu:
illegal immigrants, .u move aimed ut icun people," . NTU President John NegotiUiing free trnde ugreonients, enerHispanic voters. He is raising tariffs on Berthoud told me.
·
gy independence, lower ttuc rutes for
imported steel to help out steel plants in . Even anti-tux crusuder Grover economic expansion. und privutizutlon
Pennsylvania and West Virginia and Norquist. one of Bush's most loyal con- retbrms in Social Security und health
raising tariffs on. Canadian lumber lo scrvative supporters, is outruged by his cure that will lust fo.r generutions.
help the timber industry in the North· move to shm:ply boost foreign aid. In the mennthne, despite my own mis·
west. He has signed the campaign Numerous stud1cs show thai the world's givings about some ot' his decisions.
finance bill that he believes is unconsti- poorest countries remain essenliully let's keep In mind thut Bush hus not
tutional and that he opposed In his cam- unchanged. despite trillions of dolllii'S in breached his pnrty 's core bellcl's on
paign. He has proposed a 50-percent U.S. aid over the past hulf century.
tuxes, defense, nstrong foreign policy or
hike in foreign a1d spending, which conConscrvutive · talk show king Rush key socinllssucs like abortion.
servutives huve been fighting for Limbaugh is one l)fthe udministrution's "As long us he stnys tn1c on lhcsc core
decades.
.
.
bi$gest critics, especially on the cum- areas, he's not ~oing to hove nnr, ml\)or
There is little or no evidence that these pa1gn tinnncc l'estrictinns the president problem with n1s politi~nl buse, • FrllllC
moves have weakened Bush's populari- ha.~ signed into law. Shocked by the says.
ty, . at least not yet. His overall job absence of nny public opinion uguinst I think he's right.
approval score Is running about 80 per· the bill, Limbuugb took the unusual step
cent. Amo.ng voters who identify them- of devoting more than a week of pro- ,
selves as R~publicans, it is.90 pc:rcent. s.raf!IS as.alnst it. Sucl?enly, phones we,re (Donald Lam/Jm i.vfllliiiH In for Vt/G'O·
Yet, as h1s father learned to hts great nngmg 10 the Capnol, at the Wh1tc tlonlng Morto11 Kmulracke.)

,.

. • San Francisco Chronicle. im choosing text/Jook.1·: No one
can argue wilh lh~.nolion Ihal teachers should be involve4 in
selecling lextbooks, shaping curricululll and setting ~-ducationa1 goals. ...
.
II is equally importuhl that lhese decisions be made in a
public process with an opportunity for input from everyone
wilh \u stake or ex~rtise in public education. And the decisions must be based on what is best for lhe students.
We are concerned that a new bill by Assemblywoman Jackie Goldberg, D-Los Angeles. while well intentioned. may
work against some of these objectives.
Goldberg's AB2160 would allow textbook and curriculum
decisions to be part of collective bargaining negotiations with
teachers~ unions.
· ·
Labor negotiations are no place to decide education policy.
firsl of all, such talks are conducted behind closed doors,
shutting parents and other interested parties out of the discussion.
,
·
·
Second!~. the approa~:h and materials for teachin~ California's children should never become entangled wuh wageand-benefit issues. This state's continuing effon to upgrade its
public schools - and to change textbooks and cumculum to
meet the rising standards - should not be subjected to the
risk of beco111ing n "bar~aining chip" for either side.

TODAY IN HISTOitY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BY

IIi' th\l elilld~ \Jindal blrth l:t!t~
lilkare (1\ot •. ~pita! ttrdil·
eat1!), iuuuul\lU~Ill\ 1\!tot:d,
liOtlal Security ll!td, and cu&amp;-.l)ldy papen (If i\llPbc.tble) With
th~ dpplltill1011 romu dt the lillie
. ofth~ st l:l!l!llilli!, ltumui\IUtiiJIU
I:I!I:}Uil\!'&lt;1 ah! 1:)( tbu~ diphtheria,
whoopilil! roul!h, al\d tetai\Ui
(OPfi,llr tlw if thli fuurth dll:ll'
I! befuh! thli "~!'! i\( 4). thM
plllliJ (1Jf fuur II' th~ routtli d~e .
l• belhh! the "~!'! · l:)r 4); twt~
11\l!.t!ll!!, IIIU111p! illtd rubtillil
(MM1\); ~t1d 3.H~piltltl! n.
FAth thlld 111lilt also haw aTB
lklil ~~ lkltu thl!ir docmr tlr till! ·
tliillla Cmmty Hl!alth Ol!pittt&gt;
ml!ut~rjaJt , 1,2002, ~~

lbr hl!llt!Jtg .md vWut1 will ·be
t'l:&gt;lldutb!d by the aehool ltll!M!
wh~tl ~~t:hool !~ttl,

OhiiJ Valley Chrutlillt Sehool
II ltle•tl!d tn the lllttt lllptlit
Chul'th ilt HOO llllutth A:w.,
Cilllliptllll.

Today is Thursday; April4, the 94th day of 2002. There ure
271 days left in lhe year.
Today's Highlight in History:
· ·
.· ·
On April4, 1968. civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.,
39, was shot to death in Memphis, Tenn.
On this date: ..
In 1818. Congress decided the flag of the United States
would consist of 13 red-and-white stripes and 20 stars, with a
new.star to be added for every new state of the Union.
In 1841, President William Henry Harrison succumbed to
pneumonia one month after his inaugural. becoming the first
U.S. chief executive to die in office.
.
In 1850, the city of Los Angeles wa~ incorporated.
In 1887, Susanna Medord S!!lter became the tirst woman
elected mayor of an American community - Argonia, Kan.
In 1902, I00 years ago, British financier Cecil Rhodes left.
$10 million in his will to provide scholarships for Americans
at Oxford University.
•·
·
In 1945, during World War II, U.S. forces liberated the Nazi
death camp Ohrdruf in Germany.
In 1949, 12 nations, including the United States, signed the
North Atlantic Treaty.
RYAN'S VJEW ·
In 1975, more than 130 people, most of them children, were
.
killed when a U.S. Air force transport plane evacuatin$ Vietnamese orphans crashed shortly after take-off from Sa1gon.
In 1981, Henry Cisneros became the first Mexican-Ameri·
can elected mayor of a major U.S. city- San Antonio, Te:o~a.~.
In J983, ihe space shuttle Challenger roared into orbit on its
One of the most disheartening stories 1 lose the competitive advantage for their does It mel\11 to huve integrity? How d~s
maiden voyage.
·
.
have read in a long time appeared in the kids." .
one face adversity? What Is of I'Cf.ll vulue
Ten years ago: His campaign acknowledged that Bill Clinpaper
yesterday.
The
dateline
wa~
my
old
And,
while
~ou'
re
chautlcuring
the
in the world'/
ton had received an induction notice in April 1969 while
hometown, Ridgewood, N.J.
kids or watchmg their Little League Evcl')' kid's mind ~*leks int'o111111tion
attending college in Oxford, England; Clinton said the notice
Tonight in Ridgewood, there will be no gwncs, you're on the pbone with the and gu1dunce, and when the family doeHarrived after he was due to report, and that his local draft
basketball games in the school SYms. No office or checking your e-mail on your n't provide It, someone else will.
.
board had told him he could complete the schQOIIenn.
.
gymnastics
practices.
No
homework.
No
Blackberry.
Parents.
are
more
distructed
"You
wnrit
an
elder.
who
really
cares
five years ago: Space shuttle Columbia blasted off from
Rotary Club meetings. No Knights of and oveJWorkcd than ever. At least 2~ about the kid and who can give him good
Cape Canaveral on what was supposed to have been a 16-day
Columbus.
It took seven months to agree percent · of the country's 130 .million ideiiH on how to get through life," Domon
mission; however, a defective power gene;rator forced the
shuttle's return four days later.
·
on a date, but the town has designated employees work weekends, according to llllid. "OtheJWI~. he's going to .get It
.
March 26 a~ Ridgewood Family Night, the latest numbers from the Bureau of from others.IIJld everyone else has someOne _year ago: Chinese President Jiang Zemin demanded
when families can spend an evening Labor Statistics. Nearly 40 percent use thing to sell. has some agenda to prothe Umled States apologize for the coli'ision between a U.S.
together with no obli$8tions.
cell phones, pagers or e-mail to do work mote."
Navy spy plane and a Chinese tighter jet; the Bush adminisThis is What Amencan.family life has during their off-hours, a study by . the Someday, the Smithsonian will house
tration offered a chorus of regret~. but no apology. Hideo
come
to: We have to schedule our nonprQfit Families and Work Institute an exhibit showing Pfii'Cnts and children
Nomo became the fourth pitcher in major league history to
throw a no-hitter in both leagues with Boston's 3-to-0 victory
unscheduled time.
found.
szuthered around a Monopoly board on u
"'The conditions are terrible," said
Even our so-called down time Is sup- ~itchcn table. An cngruved plllle will
over Baltimore. (Nomo, who threw a no-hitter for Los AngeWilliam Damon, direCtor of Stanford's posed to be productive. We go to the · explain, "FamilicN once spent hours
les in 1996, joined Cy Young, Jim Bunning and Nolan Ryan
Center on Adolescence. "At least some gym, volunteer ot the library, read "good- .IOgether engaged in activities that Hddcd
as the only pitchers with n~hitters in both leagues.)
Today's Birthdays: Sin~er-actress Frances Langford is 88.
people are waking up and ttying 10 do for-you" but boring books. And we no houHChold income, offered no
something. At le~~J~t they're shining a lit- expect our children to follow our ~xam- enhancement of social status and could
Composer Elmer"Bemstem is 80. Actress Elizabeth Wilson is
77. Author-poet Maya Angelou is 74. Sen. Richard Lugar, R· .
tie flashlight in the daik."
pie.
.
.
not be Included on college applications."
None of this is news. Every parent · This is the time of year when accep- The family iH diflllppeoring under a pile
· Ind., is 70.-'Recording executive Clive Davis is 70. Aetor
Michael Parks is 64. Bandleader Hugh Masekela is 63.
knows the situall
. 'on. You're shuttling the tance letterH from college~ and private of summer-camp brochures, multiplica.
kids from .piano to dramll to aikido to the high schools are showing up in the mail. tion tables,.djpruma book ~. Little
Author Kitty Kelley is 60, Actor Crai$ T. Nelson is 58. Actor
algebra tutor and then home for · two Parents can hold the letters m their hw1ds League scheaulcs and ollice mcl1108.
Walter Charles is 57. Actress Caroline McWilliams is 57.
hours of schoolwOrk. In the past 20 and convince themHCives that they won; When we tum families into Jt'OUJlH of
Actress Christine Lahti is 52. Country singer Steve Gatlin
years, the time childien spend in unstruc- the sacritice.of family time wa~ worth the independent contrac101'8 connected by a
(The Gatlin Brothers) is 51 . Writer-productr David E. Kelley
lured play has declined by 12 IKxn a result. There is never a letter detailing for common refrigcl'lllDr, we lose more fhan
is 46. Actor Phil Monis is 43. Actress Lorraine Toussaint is
werk. The time they spend in Ol'giUlized them, in concrete black and white, what a qualnl way of life. We lose our best
42. Rock musician Craig Adams (The Cult) is 40. Actor
sports has doubled. 1be time spent eating was lost and forever irretrievable.
cl1ar1Ce to make the next generation bet·
Robert Downey Jr. is 37. Actress Nancy McKeon is 36. Actor
with
the
families
regularly
has
dropped
nme
around
the
dinner
table,
on
hikes,
tcr than·our own. .
Bany Pepper is 32. Country singer Clay Davidson is 31.
33 percent over the same period.
at the sink washing the dishe.~ together ••
•
Singer Jill Scott is 30. Rock musician Magnus Sveningsson
"When
1
talk
to
parents,
I
see
a
sense
of
that's
when
.
wisdom
and
morals
are
(Joan
Ryan
1
.
1
·
a .columnl.rtfor the San
(The Cardigans)is 30. Magician David Blaine is 29. Singer
uncertainty abOut whether what they're passed from one generation to the next. FrancL1co Chmnlc/e..Send comments. w
Kelly Price is 29. Rhythm-and-bluc:s singer Andre Dalyrimdoing
is the right thing," Damon sald. This is when )dds begin 10 li:mn their her in care ofthl.r IU!wspaper noend her
ple (Soul For Re~l) is 28. Actor Heath Ledger.is 23. A4.1ress
"But they don'tdare get off the track and own blueprint for H well·lived life. What e:f1Udt at joanryan@.vfgate.com.)
Nawha Lyonne 1s 23.

It~

f

-'-----~:-----------------

'

AI low ••·
\

.

time to correct a sorry situation.in family life

•

•

·

tl\li Ula'b! l!l)iil&gt;pfi4\1! !\'COli\·

Labor negotiations are no place
to dedde educational policy

'

Uft.
~1\!t\ly N1Ji,.

tl!l\!'&lt;1 at a publi~ ~hoot
\Jpoo rtctNillj:! lht ~lka•

un n••.i f'd N dllittJ tnuiMifiit H dfltM •H IMI.,. .......t _,, lri#pltwe• •~~a~kr.
No t11Uif,._M lttlfN will N ,.M.tW. IMitts 11wMifl .. J• ~ taYk, ...._.t.tU.,
,,.,,, ,.01

1r a d\ild Is

M

. ..

-·----·,

--- ----~

----· - ..... . . - ...

...

'

....

•

.

*

.

On loans tor the purchase of a new or used car or true~.
Call tnow. Thll Ia a limited time otferl

••

..

It'• almpla... you eave money.
'

Member FDIC

F B Farmers Bank
·L*»VJ We're Your Bank

--

-.

•

- -=·-----.;..._________II'....,.,.,..

-

for Cife.a
'

�...••~

••
"
••

..

'

.

•

Inside:

. Zwick waiting for his s/wt, Page B2
Bonds still smokin', ,Page BJ

..

The Daily Sentinel
•

•

Plge 11
'111undiY, April .. 2002

0% HURRY.'''
FfNi! •••

Eastern baseball gets off to a 2-0 start

THuRsDAY'S

·: HIGHLIGHTS

ORNCING

~~REBATe•
AP/(!L 8

BY Icon WoLFE

. ·

Stockman
comlna home.

V,}

to Ohio State
COLUMBUS (AP) l'ony Stockman, a 6-foot-1,
165-pound guard who has
been released from his scholarship at Clemson so he can
play closer to home in Medina, says he has been offered a
scholarship by Ohio State and
has accepted.
Stockman, a former Ohio
Mr. Baskeball, told The
Columbus Dispatch for a
story on Thursday that Buckeye coach Jim O'Brien
offered him the scholarship
Tuesday night. ·
After sittiQg out next season
as required by NCAA transfer
rules, Stockman will fill the
combo-guard role being
vacated by Brent Darby, who
will be a senior next season.
"Stockman averaged 12. 1
points per game, made 155
three-pointers .and .shot 37.3
percent ·behind the arc in his
two seasons at Clemson.

~

LINCOLN
~MIItiCArt

~ UkUIIY

Mercury

2002 LINCOLNLS
2002 FOCUS SE
Auto, Tllt/Cruln,
Pwl' wlnclowall more.

2002 MERCURY
GRAND
Power Equipment,
va, Automatic
#C0288

$20:1970

Automatic, moonroof,
Alpine stereo system

2002

SUPERCAB

ICi. SPORTS PICG.,
pollill'lld alum. whHII,

. 4 Door, oulomatlc1

PoW~Jc\Cif!~mtnt

.

.s499*Mo

2002F1SO

EXPLORER
4X4

'}.Sian &amp;: Drive ,
· Sales Event~! ;.f

AMII'MICon l more.

· .oan

$24~302
.

$18_,895

'

2002 MERCURY
VILLAGERS
SAVINGS UP TO .

~ENTINEL CORRESPOJ&gt;!OENT

WA'i:ERI'ORD -.The Easter~ Eagles defeated the Waterford
Wll_dcats 7-3 Wednesday mght
~urlng a damp .road tnp to Washmgton Co_unty.
.
Eastern IS now 2-0 overall and m
the league, while Waterford is 0-2.
, .., rfi rd
k 101 d h
wate o t~o . a , - ea w en
Dan Doeberet!ler_ hit a ho_me run
m .the second mrung. Chm Lyons
then tied the score in the third

when Chris Lyons hit a home run,
then Charlie Young doubled and
Jimmie Putman singled to give
EHS a 2_1 lead.
Eastern came back with three
runs . in the fourth when Cacy
Faull&lt; ~alked, Young walked, Putman singled, and Ben Holter hit a
t
d · bl h
I
wo-run ou e, t e score 5- '
1W(,) walks (Brannon and Lyons)
and a two-ruri young single
pushed the scar~ to 7-1· in the

Drese

sixth before Waterford plated two
runs in the frame on another Doebcrciner home run.
E,1 stern hitters were Young with
three singles, Putman two singles.
Halter a double and single and
Lyons a home run.
p
h
. .
. h
. hutnllan was Ike '-': 111111hng pile lker
Wit e even str1 eouts, t ree wa s
and eight hits. Baker suffered the
Joss four strikeouts and iive walks.
-

PIMH 1H hNm. 12

anea

·Alex drops LAdy Eagles
BY $&lt;:oTT WoLPI

SEJ~TINEL

CORRESPONDENT

WATERFORD- The Eastern·Eagles (II) were defeated in the leat:ue for the first
time in nearly two years on a cold, damp
Wednesday night gam~ at Waterford.
The Eagles dropped last night's game 3-2,
after claiming its first b'lllllC Monday 12-5
PIHI•••Drop~,82

tint shot

,

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP)
- Cleveland Indians rookie Ryan Drese wa.i expecting to get
a turn in
the rotation, but not quite so
abruptly.
Told 2 1/2 hours before
Wednesday's game thai he
wa~ going to surt in place
of Chuck Finley, Drese
went out and earned his
second major league win as
the Indians beat the Ana"' heim Angels 6-5.
Drese, who was 1-2 in
four starts for Cleveland la~t '
year, thought he , might
pitch against the Angels, but
as a reliever.
WASHINGTON (AP) "I was a little surprised. I
It just didn't seem right to see
didn't think I'd be surting.l
Michae,l Jordan limping
thought I'd be coming out
of the bullpen," he said.
through games as a backup.
, It's also jarring to realize
"Once he said I was going
that, after 13 yean in whi.ch
to ~et the ball, I wanted it.~'
his last game was always a
Fmley opted out ~f ~ts
playoff PlP!'J~.t" ended
scheduled sure after_his wtfe
thir· ~Wit· • · 'S:~t"twcr• ..... actress Tawny ~-~en
points against his former
~ c~tat'hged esaladaebur In d
1 WI
'h'l
J
k
spou a se an
coach• l 1 ac son.
battery for allegedly attackAfter that career-low pering him on Monday.
formance Tue!day agamst the
Manager Charlie Manuel
Lakers,Jordan a~oke Wednessaid Finley's absence wasn't
day mormng W!th a swollen
a diltraction.
right knee and decided
"I haven't really heard
eno.ugh was enough. He was
anybody talking about it in
placed on the injured list by
"EAR THE CALL- Indians pitcher Ryan Drese throws to the plate during the first Inning against the Angels Wednesday. Drese
the Washington Wizards, and
PIIIH HI DNH, 12
was bumped up in the Tribe's rotation after Chuck Finley was _unable to pitch after his wife was arrested. (AP)
he announced he was done
for the season.
J'o1dan ended his season
with a 22. 9-poiilt scoring
average, the second~lowest of
his' career. He averaged 22.7
FROM STAFF REPORTS
in his second season with the
CHESHIRE
- Both
Chicago Bulls in 1985-86,
Eastern track teams finished
'
.
when he played just 18 games
comforubly in second place
CINCINNATI (AI') .
tingTodd Hundky in thc- ~idc
because of a broken foot.
in a meet held at River Valley
One
long.
wild
inning
turned
of
the thigh with a one-strike
• Jordan, 39, said he does plan
High School TuesdaY.
Kerry Wood's season debut pitch . Hundk'Y started toward
to return.
The bays finished with 89
into
more of a preview.
the mound, then . stopped in
"I signed a two-year conpoinll behind the meet-winWoud struck out 10 batters pain as the benches cleared.
tract to play;• Jordan said.
ning 156 point tally of River
in only five inninl!$. and
Corc'Y Patterson drove in a
"Obviously, my health will .
Valley. The girls finished with
Sammy Sou hit his first career-high four runs for the
always determine my playing
55, again behind River Valley,
homer
of Cub.i, who stranded 14. runsutus. But at this time, my . which won the girls' session
the season a.1 ncrs in the opener hut piled
plan is to play next .season:'
with 136 points.
the Chic~'O up 13 hit~ this time.
Cubs beat the Cincinnati
Pattcrmn, a free swinger
The boys 4x100-meter
relay team turned in the
Red1 10-3 WedneM!ay night. trying to be more patient this
Wood (1-0) came out for a sea.10n, doubled home Chicabiggelt Up!l:t of the day. edgpinch-bitter
in the sixth go's first run ofT Elmer
ing RV with a time of 48.5 to
because he'd already thrown Demns (0-1 ), who lasted only
win the event. RV posted a
104 pitches on a cold night. 3 2_3 inning~.
48.6.
. The right--hander threw 34 in
H un dl ey h't
Eastern swept the throwing
1 a two-run
NEW YORK (AP) the
second
inning
alone
homer
in
the
fourth,
l'attenon
evenu,.
with
R.J.
Gibbs
win~
Baseball ularies topped $2
only
14
for
strikes.
ning the shot put (44-0) and
"We made him throw a lot had an Rl31 single and Boone
billion for the first time this
Ross
Holter
winning
the
dilof pir&lt;:het;• Reds third ba&lt;e- dropped Sosa~l high popup,
year, with Texas shortstop
cus
(112-11)
..
Eastern
took,
mail Aaron Boone said. "He's lettin~ Pattenon score for a 5- ·
Alex Rodriguez atop the ·list
four
of
the
six
places
in
the
at $22 million.
one of those pitchers that it's 2 lead.
shot
puL
no fun going out to bee, espePattenon !lnglccj home two ·
The New York Yankees led
Kevin
Marcinko
won
the
dally
on
a
night
lilcc
this.
We
more
runs ofT Jim llmwcr in
aD clubs with a record payroll
long
jump
with
a
bound
of
were able to sc111tch a fouple the 1ixth, and Sosa followed
of nearly $126 million- $92
17
-foot-3.5
inchges,
·
of
rum together, and then he with a two-run homer to
milljon more than Lot--place
Brandon Weery posted a
settled in."
right. In two games, Pattenon
Tampa Bay.
of
second-place
finishes
pair
UnfortUnately
for
Wood,
by
is
5-for-7 with three singles, a
The figures are the mule of
HEAVE HO- Eastern's R.J. Gibbs throws tile shot put Tuesthe time he settled down, it double, a triple, three walks
a week-long study by The
- Planet 1111Ndl, 12
day. He won the event with a toss of 44 feet. (Dan Polcyn)
was time to go.
,
and five RUI!.
Associated Press of comrac11
started
out
the
way
I
: Wearing
elbow-length
"I
for 849 players on openingwanted, but I came out in the slecws on a 41-dcgrcc night,
day I'CKten and disabled lisu.
R"cond inning and the w.allu Wood had an overpowering
hurt," ~aid Wood. who walked fastbaD and not much d'iC. He
four in five innings."I was able starred .the game throwing a
to~ it back together and go 95 mph fa~tball that the lleds
CINCINNATI (AP) - Left-bander Lance inning of an exhibition game against
fiom
th~-re:•
couldn't touch Wood
Davis felt line a day after hu latest s.tep in Philadelphia on March 21 and complained of
The lopsided game got fanned the first two battPrs on
rehabilitation.
pain in the shoulder. An MRI found infbmh~
iri the 11indl, when Jix pitcht'l.
Davis, on the 15-day disabled list with mation, and he was put on a strengthening
When Wood suned mixing
Reds reliever I..uis P~ncda hit
DENVER (AP) - Clint .
inOammation in the back of ·program .
two !nltm and was eJected .by in the~ of his pitcht.., he got
Mathu scored in the 66th
his left shoulder, m&lt;~de 25
Abo, the Reds signed infielder Kevin )orplate
ump1re Mike Everm{ in trouble fa.r. He walked two
minute on 2 shot that barely
throws ·during an off-day dan to a minor league contract and released
Both ' benches and bullpem battt:n on four pitche&lt; apiece
crossed the goal line, 2nd the
workout Tuesday without problem.
minor
league
outfielder
Jermaine
m~ptac:d. but the pl.ym d1d in the secopd, when Juan
United Sutes overcame .a
• "Everything felt all right," he said Wednet- • Allensworth .•
nothang more than mdl about Encarnacion 1inglcd , home a.
day. "The ball felt like a fi!ather because I've Jordan was releMCd by the !'billies last Frislow surt w beat Mexico 1-0
for a few mmu~.
run and Ikssens drove in
beert worlr.ing our with 2-pound balls."
day after hitting .273 with one ho'!ler and six
in · a tuneup game for the
J&gt;ineda
wasr:jected
afier
hitanother with a groundout.
Davis pe up four bomen in' the tint RBh in 20 garnet this spring.
World Cup:

Tribe

Air Jordan done
for season

$4.,000

Eagle track teams second at RV .Reds can't put two
wins back-to-back
Reds

I

. MLB Salaries
exceeedtwo
billion

ALIGNMENT

•

'2495 .

$4995 We will meet or beat any competitor's
. .~~e!~~e~~c.!.~!~.:=;;.~f!·, •.
................................. -·------·
-------·
---. Motorcreft..

2-whHI

4-whHI

CI!ICIIII&gt;d adjUII cambtr llld lpt. Addltlonll portlllld ,
lobar moy boo roqulred an """'"voii!PH-

lnd

._ bo ...._

MOTORCilAn

FAIT LUBE
• llorvlca lnctudn up to 5 quar1o o1 Moiororah oil alld now1
Molotorah oil fl~ff • Portorm Mufii-Polnt V•hlclllnopoctlon.
• LUbo • CIMi&lt;ikand fiN JltiCHIIfY flUidt • Allin 29 mlilufft
olllllt • Dlttfl
boo .,.11'11,
.

MOTOR CO.
FLOORMAT8

·

,.,.,._, IINIADYAL. _. ........._ -

oo ·

$

WIPER BLADES
· Starting $
95
at

.

SPLASH GUARDS
Starting
at

$1 0 ·.

Pair

US tops Mexico
In World Cup
wann-up

~

T

•
•

I

I

•

•

•

'

•

Reds

LINCOLN
' PREMIER,
' EXPERI EN£:E

•

Davis feels good after throwing_

•
•
••

~

'

'
'

'

.

,,

�'
Page a 2 • The Dally Sentinel

' Th

Track

SPRING FOOTULL
- Ohio State quatterback Cral&amp; Kren-

here (the clubhouse);' Manuel
said, "We all know Chuck's
going to take care of this,''
Manuel was plea.1ed with
Drese's response to his late
a.1~ignment.

"He wa.1 a little ermtic at the
i stnrt, but he relaxed and settled
down:' the manager said,
Drel~C f!Ye up three tuns and
nine-hits in 5 2-3 innings. The
26-year-old
right-hander
walk~-d two and struck out two.
"We knew he had a very good
arm, and he pitched a tremendou! tpune," Anaheim manager
Mike Sciascia ' said, "It was a
gutty performance, In the 6nt
inning, we had him on the ropes,

·Eastem
f1omP11pBI
loss four
walks.

strik~outl

and live

East~rn

hosts NelsonvilleYork Friday.
EASTl\RN 7,
ALEXANDER 6

...1

ALEXANDER. - The
Emern Eagles broke open a
5-5 game in the sixth inning
when Cody Faulk pounded a
two-run double to push
across the eventual winning
runs in a 7-6 victory over
Alexander Tuesday,

Eastern took a 2·0 lead in
the first inning on a lead-otT
single by Chris Lyons and
Jimmie Putman hit an ltUI
single, followed by a · Ken
.Amsbary KBI ainl!lc. Living:ston homered for Alex in
the bottom of the frame for a
l -1 tally, then the Spartan!
rook a 4-2 lead in the second
o·n a series of singles by
Wooten, Kidder, Lawson, and
Brooks.
Ben Holter hammered a
two-run horne run with t&gt;utm~'l aboard to tie the· f!rne
and the Eagles went up 5-4
on singles by Lyom and Putman, That lead · was shortlived as Warren homered to

· 252 UPJMr
River Rd.

O•lllpolle, OH

in the 100 and 200-mttler
dashes, postinR times II.II
~nd 2~.S, ~speitively."He tini htcl second to 1\.V\ All~n
Drown in both 111cts.
Ryan Wach~r tinbhcd st~­
ond in the II 0-meter hurdles.
The udy Eagles" won only
one individual event, the 400meter dllsh. J~nniCer Hayman
won the one-lapper with a
tin\t of ld1 .7. Hayman Qlso
finishtcl second in the 200·
n\eter and third in the discus. ·
Kimberly Marcinko Wll
second in the lonl! jump (12·
9.5) and third in the 100rneter dAsh (15.3).

or

tel (16) throws durIn&amp; the first day of

and (Brad) Fullmer hit one right
on the screws but it wa.1 a dou. hle play. That could have made
the dift'erence in the game,"
Dr:ese got otr to a ihaky start,
giving up a single to leadoff man ·
David Eclutein, then walking
Darin Entad and Tim Salmon to
load the bases with nobody out,
But Drese allowed jult one filii
- on Thly Glaus' one-out single
- and. ended the inning when
Fullmer hit into a double play.
Ricky Gutierrez hit a solo
homer in the eighth otr Donne
Wall to give the Indians a tworun lead, Gutierrez 111.'10 singled
and scored in a three-run second
inning. and Mall Lawton and
Brady Anderson had two hits ,
and twO ltUis each,
Indians closer Dob Wickman
gave up an RBI single to Tim
Salmon and a run ~scoring

a

fNM .... I2

back job. (AP)
sported a vanity jacket and jeans - and
not a uniform .!.... as he spent his spring
bn•ak watching the Buckeye ' tim pi'\IC·
tict• jn chilly weather omside the Woody
Hayes Athletic .enter.
" I just wanted to come down and be
around practice. I've been excited for it ·
to start," said Zwick, who won't join the
Buckeyes until Auaust."I'm looking forw.~id to sutmner coming and just trying
to be around it as much as I can."
Holdover junior quMterbacks Crnig
Krenzel. and Scott McMullen went
·
v•ry
d1'I"1C
'IIt
.
- ~r•tt' tl' t'l! at1d tl1en. •II of a sudden for
"It's
thrmtKh their paces runninR the offense,
•
" • •
·- ' '
•
flipping passes in the gusting winds and not to say it c3n't be done," Krenzel said the past month or so there hasn't been
when asked how hard it would be for a much. They eflioy coming out and peekworking
on
timing
with
their
receivers.
to st rt ••t Ohl'o St·-.
"It\ the mg
, in th e huddl e an d trymg
, to 6nd out
Krenzel started the Duckcye.s ' lm two n~reshnl"ll
•
•w
games last year - in~luding the win at terminology. it\ the defenses you face what\ going on,"
•
Michigan _ while McMullen got the ·and it's the speed of the game," The second-year coach said the quarcall to start against Illinois on shon
Ohio State coach Jim 'Irtssel frequent· terback spot wen 't be decided over the
notice when three-year stmer Ste\111 Bel- ly ran over' to Zwick during drills to IS spring practices. The pec:kin8 order
lisari was arrested on dr~mken drivi.ng point out 3 coverage or 1 play. He said he wiU be determined only after Zwick is
charges.
· ·
•
Wal happy to see so many recruits and actually in the huddle and competing in
Now that Bellisari is gone, Krenzel and high school playen watching the Duck- prnctice with Krenzel and McMullen.
_.McMullen are getting almo51 all of the eyes practite,
·
Memnwhile, Zwick will be watching.
practice snaps this spring, But there is still
"Some people go to Florida and Ciln- He~ staying with his brother, msecond·
a lingering feeling that Zwick may have cun. Other guys go to the frigid spring year dentlll student at Ohio State, while
the right stuff to step in and contend for practice here," Tressel said. "It's fun for attending practices this week.
the startinlJ'ob when he arrives on cam them. They get anxious, too. They went "My time w1'U coma," he sas'd."l've just
. , ,
·
- through all that football and then all that
~
pus 111 1m sununer.
got to sit and wait for it."

fromPIIpBI

CPU
555 Park St
Middleport

Ridenour
Supply
Cl'ltater

!-llell jmlttloognot,nol

98S·3308

www.~.com

11-VIItty

I'MIIIngiiiAP -

"i

Amilestone for Gordon

-

Jell Gott1on It tXpecltd 10 &amp;tart hie 300tl!
carnr NASCI\R Winston Cup race In Sunday'!
Samou"'l'l''aQioShack 1500. Gott1on Ia the on~
driver 10 rtooh llle 3001h·race mllealone In con·
IIOCUllva starts beglnnk1g wlllt hlo oaroer·fltlt raco .

M'IYtf

.611tY IHi I ,
latltm 3, 01110 llllltV tmlallln :10:•·
lloul!llltlltiiU: s, HlM&amp;n u
..aooM - 1. 11V 10:1U,
II OM 1111111111 - , ' l'lutt, !IV, ,..., •.
Wtollttf1.l, 11 .a: s, ~ llv, n .o: • ·
H11M. OV!'. IU
lOOM - I!OWn. 11'1, 1UMi I. Wte!y I,
11 ,1: 3. LM, ao, 1u: • · M!Mtt, 1,
lUi I . laundtll, IIV1 .1Ui f , ~~-.

1Mm -

I

WINSTON CUP

IlOOM - 1. IIOulh, 1111; I , Luou, Ill/; 3.
M04101111n, ; •· Malltn_. I ,
lOOM - 1, ltown, ""· 13,1ll, WittY, I ;
a. LIWia, so: 4, 1am11i .ca. au: a,
laUndttl, 1111; MI!Otnllo1 ~ ,
q10QM- 1, lllltm ot.l : I, IW 4U;

BUSCH SERIES

11-: Samaun~JRadloShock 500
I Re~: O'Aai~ :lOO
WIM!t: Te&lt;as Molor Speedway, Juetln, Te~ Whm: r •••• Motor Speedway, Jusllp, Te•aa.
When: Sunday, 2 p.m. EST.
I Wlttn: Salurday, 2 p.mEST.

1

11-. dllllnce: 500.5 mMils,334 laps

Marl( Ma~n . 127.417 mph.
.
I Bu~eh qUIIilylng ..cord: Man Kenoeth: 189.B80
JOHNNY ORAWFQA!i I Co• Nowtllo"""' hnklng: 24 de!lreet banking In rums, a
1 mph, ManMO, 2001 ,
·
1 Dtltndlng ohlmplon&lt;Kevin Harvlck won Iaiii
deor&amp;ellh
alralghta,
Aobllv QDI'dOn will again raoe the IMy
Dt'htndlng IIIM!mplan: Dale Jarren
I yeala Jani·King 300.
.
800 and COCI!·Cola 600 on May 28.
lltoryllntl AHer numerous drfver complaints
1 BtoryiiM: Jeff Green led 187 of lhe 250 laps lo win
aliar II&amp; opening, Te101s MoiOI SpeedWay was 1 ihe ehannellock 250 Marth 23 al Bnstol Molor
repaved
and Neon!gured. Now d~Yera selln\ lo
Speedway. Greg Biffle leads the polnla alarn:llngs tiy
•
enloy competing on the 1.5-mlle lrt-oval.
7 pointe over Gmen.
·
obby Oul'doll Wlll ,m~ke hlilhlt'd attempt to
run tM lltdl"lliltJull; ro111 lind lhu Cncu-r,oln
1100 on tho Mllle dhy,
On May 2ll, Omtlon wW drive aNo. ~lllaUara,
ownl!d by John Menard Md ~luhlll'tl ChUdrc!ll.ln
the Indy 1100, lhoo hy to LllW&lt;!'s Motor spoodwoy b1
Charlotte "lid runllt~ Cooa•Colalro lh Chlldli!M'
No, Bl Ohovrolilt.
CltlJ!IIIilr Wlrolo" wtll !JJOII!Or bolh cafl,
Ool'don ll'li!tl ibr the M~murllllt&gt;ay weck~nd
dwblo In lw7 anti :I!MJ, but \llaon'tabl~ lo pull it

==-~~;~~'::.~~s

3.0VOIU
~ - I, ltown1.1W, A.1 : I , limN,

ldmiiJd!d:!•"'
•

sea: Hlnlon, ~l'.i 4,
t10t11:. S, llavtt, 0VIl; I , HUIIIt, &lt;M;~

towoon,

au.

lOOM hutdln - 1,
IIV,
lOOM - 1. Nlbtt1, 11Vo'l :1r.l; I, I , 0111,
IW; 3. laalllt, 0"9t•· Mallin 1,
Shot l"uu - 1, G~_. 11 ....0: I , Nidi,
IW; 3, Moumlna, OVIl; 4, IOIItbo, 1: I ,
Holltt, li I , Iaiiy I ,

R

DOOM - IIOUIII 11'1, 11 :1• •1; I, WOI1t,

lllflil)ooulll! vr raht,
A min delay In the :!OOllndlon.apullo 500 caUSed

Oordon to ml" the alar! oft he Coca-Cola IIAJ,
while min )1011tponlllllhe t1lilt lndiMapulls iiOO
WltU thelltllowllll! Monday, He !llll ran bolfi rilll·
lit!, bUIIIOI oil th~ illllllil d•Y·
. ll&lt;ll'don h8o lltur lop.obinn~hoaln !Own fndl•·
nJilJOII! 1100 11llrt! and wuloodll!lt with one lap 1o
IIi) In lliilll belbl'l! run nina tJUI ollllol and 11tll!hintl

I

"I've btJI!n liilHIIJcllllve In lh• Indy llOO ovar)l
yelll' and have eume within a lap of winning II,"'
Oortlon oatd, "We'veJutt lef al'ew slip away il'om

'

lll.u ·

Unforgetta/Jkytar giwJ
driwr onefas~forious ride
"brlvtt ...
ll'lllaiiKrrl'lllttwdlo/1'. wuil ... Oijm,
l'llltw, . .,...,.
It Marl! Dlml
e. llllllox NfVtj lltl'vicl

'"'*

•••••••••••••••
A LOOK AHEAD
Apt11 14 - Vlralnla 1100,
·· Ml~n1vlllt Gptedway .

ApriU1 - TaladGgA 500, ·
JOHNNY CtW/JIIQ~DI Otloi N M -

llllllllmMnl Jr.'l ......... IIDDII Gtrronlllt•• • vouno
lOlling In 1 car dnl1llhlp'~ Ill
- - h Olllbrtly 11f1011W11.

,.,.,,..11om.

...

·············YMAT THEY'RE SAYING
.,

-.y

"

"J lwe it. Jt makes you feel
secure you ltave Jo much grip,
ytJU
'

~. '59

Atlanta

11o~h

wemn!Jie tu get Fox to let them tuke
oiTil'om tltclrdutleo broadcasllng tho llu!!Ch
rncoat NathviUeiOoomrrete al Mllrtlnsvllle.
"'l'hlolo al!l'llal npportunlly 10 have!Omo
run," Hammond Yllld. "It dt-rlnllely will
ruklndleoomc great memorlt• we had
tOMelher and give U! another chonco wmake

some new ones."

The truck Waltrip will driVe In the
Advance Autu l'arl&gt; 200nnlshod In thoiDp
10 rour tlmt!slaat IMJJIIOn llfld won the pole at
Phoenix with Complon at the whool. Melling
Hedng, which htlJ ouoponded Ito Wln8lon
Cup oporallon, lo preparing the IJodgo truck
at llo ohop In Concord, N,C,
:.
The race will be held the day bo.1oro the
Winston Cup drlvel'!l run the Vlrvlnla liOO.

When the Winston Cup circuit hill Tal·

ladepliOO, Ford IJlama will have to ralle lhe

"

rear 1poUer on the TaW'UI by a quarter·lnch.
That mak01 the Ford opoUer meuure olx
lncbOI tall by 671nchel wide. Durlntr the
Daytona liOO In FebruarY, the l'onl'orear
tpoller wu 11!1 lnchel tall. The rear lljJOIIer
on ll1e ChevroletJ and Dodpo will remilnot
6\llnchel taiL wlrllo tho Pnntloco wwturt at8\t lnchot taU by &amp;7 tncllet wldo.
In tho Da)1ona'IIOO, a Dodle won. but 11'111'11
lOOk l'out otthe lOP IIX IJ)Oll,

loltllylllllilliiiiJr• .

oni'IICIIWiltt. . Moeorlpu~M~r ,

Dl 0 YOU I&lt;NOW

r••,. or older

tN••• 1ft••

I

' tAddriMI

1· .Ct•:;..
eee.
r.a ,eea.

1
1 ,

(Beside Goodwin's
Auto Sal~s)

IDike Bing, Owner
Randy Bing,
Technician
Jim Bing,
Technician
740-992-1998
'
'
740-887-6133

,
a

I
I
I·
I
I
I
I

31 , Mllcl nnet, ,
32. Ken lohrlld_ir1 7P,

·~
•• ,..
•
' 58f,
11 ' 11'1\1 ~,!!7 ·
12. t~&gt;Uilntpw.
~~· m;.w'•e84.
:U
Sf•

21: K

33,J0o1Nf-,:4:47,
:14. John Martlll, """'
38. lluoQitol Jontt, 410,

34, c=~-~ ·
a1
•• ,..
.- . ·
Jlil, Kenny .IIIIIOf, liM•
3UIIO'iCotnatoti, Ma.
-40, HullttlGtdlir, M7.

:li;,'Ui , '

2t, llliltil!{cibiJoit, 840,

•

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

BANKS

j,'Q,H"iHftt,
·~
a.
,!!J· '

t( 1

.

ao.Jolm~l7.

11. I
lid~~ tl(),
Jtlalp,lld1 $27,

740, .. I

Jlifllrtlll1
a. ~¥'~~·

t:.:l::,
"'C.tir;.lra,
I.IIJOii f71 .'

'.

••

1. M
e~ M

W

CONSTRUCTION

ON

,,ML
.....,,

TIE118E

e,IIJOII=·

I

10. ~
, lOt .
'st-~.
12,
lrnmtt, 110.

736 E. Malo St.
Pomeroy; Ohio

11 ,

•

11.

(74o) 992-5009

HemlltonJr,, 174,

"*"*• JIH,
11, Jllfilt McloMtly,f29,

14, Tony

. PLEASANT VALLEY WELLNESS CENTER
•

'

·ao4~67S- 1222

•

Bing's
.Auto
Repair

TEXAI MOTOR SPE.EnWAY

27, M!ohul w.-rto,534,
21. 110t)tw Hlirllllltlli,111,
~ . Jtfl Cltttn. m ,

11. IHIIIIIOti~!D4.

1., 11~111uw, M2,

L--~--~--~-----------------~

I

740·742·2289

_..•TRAC.KPROFILE-

DRIVER STANDINGS

1

1 •VIPifrDIIN,MtiPim'Pt,WY..,

I .

(Acro11 f(om
Rutland Bottle Gael
Main Street, Ruttan~, Ohfo

l!lnischllldlr'• didn't 1111 much 1'111 anti
reluotlon over'll1e l!uter weekon4. On Frl·
clAy htdrovea modlllod ClUt Joplin, Mo.,
end on Salllnlay drov•ln tho World ctOnt·
lllwt tprlnt W'- Ill tho dtri tnlck In .....
Jy, Mo., 111111 hi OWIJI,

I
I

I • Clirr
• ltlllel
• ZIIH
I
.
I tlllepllolet ( )
el11111
I
I
Plwc 110-~~ fonn, detldund mall widuam I'IIIW (I men &amp;: 8mn mulmum) Atld
I entry j)lymettl. AU chedurlllfl be made-out to the "PlMnt Valley WcllncN c-r.• .
I
MIINIPIIIIIIIV.,WtliiJOIIIIIIAIIII~ ............ 2 . Ill,

.........

ntlscar Diecast
Collectible Shop

No dme all far Sdlldll

1 • NIIMI If npl"alns -

I

c. m"l Cox News Service

ladetla supenpeedway AprU 21 for the Tal·

r-~-~--~-----------------~-,

I
I

By RICK MINTKR

'
Fordl Jet 1n1k It T~ldep

can,r"" "• •race here. "

I

Retiree Waltrip plans
retum for single race

m(md.

Lowe'• Motor SpeedWay

Main St.
Pomaroy, Ohio
Drlve-Thru Window
228

992-5432

Waltrip on thu winner's list at thl! track,
which opened In 1947 and hold IIH nrat Cup
race In 1900.
~
Wallrlp'sll'llck will CHIT)! hi• fllmlllar No.
17 und wUI be sponsored by Duok Head Foot·
wear.
''This Ia WJingto be f\rn," Waltrip oakJ ..
Aoalstlng Waltrip will be h~ formorci1!W
chief and cumnt Fox anal111 Jeff Ham·

-

Talladega Suptrtpetldway ·
AprH Rl - N~PA Auto P_1111l11100,
Oalfomla SpeedWay
Mty 4- Pontloo Exollmini•OO.
RlcillmOfl(f lntemtliOtiil RiitieWtly
Mty 18 - The Wlnalon,

Featuring
Kentucky
Fried-Chicken

NASCAR NOTES

rotl.remont and run a Craftsman
Truck Series race al Murtln~vUlo,
Va., April 13.
Waltrip, In hla l!t.'t!oncJ year aHa racing
analyst for Fox, will drlvethelruck that hall
hoon driven on an occa&amp;lonal haBIBby Stacy
CompiDn.
Com'\&gt;lon, who Is runnlnH both lho Win·
•I on Cup and OuHCh Orand National Serloo·
this 80aM&gt;n, will II&lt;! raclnH hls lllllKlh carol
Nashville, Tenn., while lhe truck race 18
being held at MartlnovUle.
·
Waltrip, a three-time Wllllton Cup cham·
pion, wuoneoflhe beet evoron the hal!·
mile oval at Martln.vUle. £Ieven ofhttll4 ,
Wlnoton Cup vlclm·les woroat MartlnsviUe,
Only Richard Petly, WIHl lrnd 15, Ia nhoad of

'

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL .
CO·ED FLAG FOOTBALL TOURNAMENT

I

D

thll'lhiOharklite Iaiit y@ill', hun't uld whelhl!r
IMJ'IIley to run boUt rat't!! lllllln,
- HICk Mtmer
-

I
I
I

AICI: Advance Aulo Pam 250 ,
Wltere: Martinsville Speedway, Ma~nsvllle,
Va.
Wilen: Aprtl13, 2 p.m EST. ·
Tellvlalan: ESPN2
Hlttory: Ma111nsvllle SpeedWay Is a charter
member of lhe &amp;erie&amp;, hOstlng an event In
eaoh of ltaaeven seasons,
Storyline: The oerteo heads to Ma111navllle
foll&lt;lvOng a four·week break alter lhe Craflo·
man Annlverury 200 at Oa~nglon, Ted Mus·
grave slipped b'i Robolrt Pressley 12 lape
from lila finish 10 v.in the event

arroll Waltrip plans 10 oomo out of

1\my 811!WIIl'l, who drlvl!!l Joo tllbbo' J'clntiao in

'

I
I
I
1
I
I
I

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK$

!

Wln!Utll eup, ton both Hllliltlln lll!lllllrld iiOOJ!lhtl
hlti!ah oll\!r lhlm caroWllt!rChlp OanaMI lot' an
•fndYcatrldtthllyf!ll;,
, • '
•
]Jut Stewllt'l, who ftnllhod 1lxth allndy and

""'

I

'Uttle E' reveals
t1 rookie season in book

l\lw'lh,

'

Bu~eh tiiGetiCord:

Ma•M7, 1999.

It's double duty for Gordon

Drops

ltlllllllll f'lnll

Crow's
Family
Restaurant .

THIS WEEK'S ACTION ON THE TRACKS

sea, 11.1 and I-nd. 111t1n11n, 11.1.

a,

110 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769 .
Phone 992·1135

992~6611

. Sl. Rl. 248·•

Bealdes the previously mentioned BaiJles,
groundout by Garret Anderson
in the ninth to cut it to 6-5, But '
S4ndy Powell added another double, but was
Wickman struck out Glaus with
thrown out stealing, keeping Smith's 1-2· 3
a·ruMer on second to end it 11nd
from Pip II
innlt1gstring in tact.
earn his tint save,
Against Alexander, Eastern came out ltrOng
Drese (1..0) outpitched one of
5 over Alexander, Ea111rn il also 1· 1 In the with a •even-hit attack. Coach Pam Douthitt
Anaheim\ herulded newcomen,
league and Waterford II now 2-0, ·
said, "We played fairly well considering it
Aaron Sele, ·
'
AgainJt Waterford, Eastern 'led early, then • being our first pme, Krista (White) was very
The 31-year-old Sele, signed
suffered a three-run anault by Waterford in nervous, but did a good job,Thh Will her first
as a free agent in the of&amp;ea5on,
the sixth. Eastern went up 2~0 In the first on game and only walked three Overall we did
struSI!lcd in his Angels debut aTifreny Bisaell walk and Krista Whltesing!e, pretty well .. ,our errors we're all throwing
just as Kevin Appier dill the
Sandy Powell had an . RBI lingle, and Janet error•"
night before. Sele gave up four
Calaway had a single that loaded the bues for
Eas~er~ · hitters were Sandy Powell with
Nns on eight hits in 6ve lnninp.
a
sacrifice
Qy
fi:om
Kass
Lodwick.
,
,
h K Lodwi k
He walked three, struck ot~t
Jeconda Smith, the WHS hurler then set· two !Ingles 1" a 2-4 nlg t, 111 . . c a
ewo, and threw 99 pitches, He
·tied down and set the BHS batten down in double, and linl!les by White, Jenny Armes,
left tmillng 4-2,
order the rest of the same. The mld-innlnp -1*Jet Calaway, and Tiffrany Spencer, Alwxran.
Sele, whose 69 wins since
developed into agreat pitching dual between . ~er hittel'l were Whitlatch with a double and
1998 were the most by ari AL
the young freshman hurler Krista White and smgle, Conder, Williams, and Jordan.
pitcher during that ~pan, signed
the veteran Smith.
_.Eastern cook a 3· 0 lead In the first and
a $24 million," three-year conIn the lixth· Inning, Waterford's Alana never looked back enroute to the win,
a:act with the Angels on Dec.
Miller led ofF with a walk, and Carrie Bauer· . Krista White picked up the win with 14
26. He wa.1 I 5-5 with a 3.60
bach reach on an error, then J. Baltzer dou- strikeouts, three walks and one hit batter,
ERA for Semttle last 10113011.
bled home twO runs, and Balter advanced on Miner suffered the lo11 for Alexander. Sh~
a ground out. Baltzer then scored on a field· fanned four, walked eight, and gave up three
tie the game in the fifth, 5-5.
.er's choict ~lth whu proved to .be the win: hits.
.
Almbary led off the 1ixth • . ning run.
Ea1tern pl~y• h011 to Nel1onville FridAy.
with a double, Cacy Paulk , . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -....
fanned but hustled out the
error to reach safely, then
Brent Duckley walked to load
the. ba!c5. Cody Faulk then
drilled .a two-run double for
the EHS lead,
Alex threatened in the sevPoint Ple...nt, WV
enth with a Living:ston, hiJ
-.turder,
:1.1, 1001
second of the day, Jimmie
N 611M ......,, If "'*..I A1t1 .u, lfiiiJ
Putman then came on in
reliefofCbarlicYoung to post
the save, Youns got the win,
• Orclnenoe n.ldt
.striking out four, walking
four, and giving up ten hit!.
• R•ln or llllne
Lawson 1ufl'ered the loll in
eGameehllnMI&amp;m.
relief Qf Hale. They combined
to fan nine and walk cwo,
• Double ellml...uon

• Mult be Sl

Valley Lumber

Set us lor Your SIII'IIPower 'Tbola &amp;
Aoeeasorlea

• *'0 enti'J fM per tt•m

---··'

83

.

sprln&amp; Pf'Ctlce
Wtdnesi:lay In
Columbus.
Krenzel
OUt! Wtdnesday.
Zwick,
the and Scott McMullen
acdaimed pa!Ser from are fllhtlnl\ for the
startln&amp; quarter·
Massillon's Washinl!ton Hil!h School;

.Drese

The 0.11 Sentinel • P

·www.mydallyMnttnel.com

Justin Zwick waits and watches
COLUMDU (AP) - High school
se-nior Justin Zwick litenlly and figuratively was looking O\'l.'r the- shoulders of
Ohio State\ two establ"htd quart~rbacks as,.
the Buckeyes began
spring football work·

www.m

•

'

11, Ifill)' Cqmp!On,_.2t.
. 17, AlhtGn t..Wtt, v.&lt;1 .
. 18. --~.~7 .
1t, L.llr'r' ,ayt, - ·

~t -

L.any W. Banu,

Owner/Operator.

_.

--

'
'I I

..

•

••

•

•

�.

'

.

~I=S~·='==·..::=I:::I=--------.:.:.:1h:unHr~~..;;.;;~Apr!;;.;;~;..;:c..; ;,;~; .; ;i: .

· Thursday, April 4, 2002

www.mydallyMntlnel.com

_Th_e_D_al_.I:...y_Se_n_tin_e_l.;..__ _ _ ____:I=N::.::
.

·sands hits two·

Nlldonal LMp

more home runs.in
Giants' romp
BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Barry Bon'ih seems destined
to destroy his home run
record ..,....;. by the . All -Star
·
break.
'
Looking unstoppable, Bonds hit
two more long
'h omers at Dodger
Stadium, leading the San Fran·cisco Giants over Los Angeles
12-0 on Wednesday night.
The man who made 73 a
inagic number last year joined
Hall of Farner Eddie Mathews
as the only players in history
to open a season with a pair of
two -homer games. Mathews
did it for the Milwaukee
Braves in 1958.
.
"I just try to see it and hit
it," Bonds said. ''I'm strong
enough to hit it out of the
ballpark.l'm just trying to stay
consistent OJJd hit it."
Bonds' stat! after two games:
5-for-6, four homers, five runs
scored and nine R.Bis.
"I ihink it's natural to be
awe-struck a little · bit," said
winning pitcher R.uss Ortiz,
who also homered."We'rc f:ins
of the game, too. You just feel
privileged to play with someone like that. He's spoiling us
right now, it's definitely fun to
watch."
Bonds' two homers - both
over 440 feet - gave him 571
overall, two behind Harmon
Killebrew for sixth place on
t h e career list.
r
MVP
T h e .our-time
· putt h e
Giants ahead for good in the
· · WJt· h a t h ree-run
6rst mnmg
homer off Hideo Noma that
,
d 443 .eet.
r
sa1'I e d an estimate
&amp;
h , Bon ds went
In 'th e 10urt
. a 459 even d eeper, Iaunc hmg
foot drive.
·
"You just accept it, you
know what I mean?" Giants
manager Dusty Baker said.
"You accept it and be .t hankful
for it." ·
Padres ·8, Diamondbacks 7
San Diego stopped its
shutout streak at Arizona, then
won when Trevor Hoffman
retired Steve Finley with the
bases loaded in the bottom of
' the ninth.
' The World Series champion
Diamondbacks; behind Randy
Johnson and Cart •Schilling,
blanked the Padres in the first
two ga!l'-es of the season.
D'Angelo Jimenez led off
the game with a double and
scored on Ron Gant's sacrifice
lly.Jimene:i hit a go-ahead single as San Diego scored three
times in the ninth for an 8-5
lead,
Arizona scored tw~ce iri the
bottom half and loaded the
bases with . two outs in the
ninth, but Finley hit a foul pop
.on a 3-1 pitch.

"'

NL

MAiwNs .6, ExPos

5

Before a - crowd of only
4,779 at Olympic Stadium,
Montreal was not able to puU
otT another late rally against
Florida.
Derrek Lee hit a grand slam
and A.J. Burnett pitched
shutout ball into the eighth for

the Marlins.
Trailing 6"1 in the ninth, the
Expos made it close when
Michael Barrett hit a solo
home run and.Vladimir Guerrero hit a three-run shot. With
a runner on first, Lee Stevens
made the final out.
On Tuesday night, the Expos
opened by rallying from a 6-1
deficit before a crowd of
34,35 t.
PHIIJ.J.ES 3, BRAVBS 1
Vicente Padilla went !ix
innings to win . in his first
major league start and Pat
Burrell homered for Philadelphia at Turner Field.
Padilla earned a spot in the
rotation after posting a 2.77
ERA in spring training. He
had made 83 relief appearances in the majors.
AsTROs 15, BREWERS 2·
Daryle Ward did a nice imitation of Mois~s Alou 1 hitting
a 'three-run h.omer and an
R.BI double at AStros Field.
Ward, whose home run
highlighted an eight- run
fourth inning, tied a career
high with three hits. Houston
. is hoping he can be the fulltime replacement for Alou,
who signed with the Cubs.
Brad Ausmus also homered
and drove in four runs before
a crowd of23,381, the smallest
in the three-season history of
the ballpark that used to be
called .J;:nron Field.
RocKIES 6, CARDINALS 3
Larry Walker hit a three-run
homer and Colorado picked
on Garrett Stephenson at
Busch Stadium.
Step h ~nson, returning firom
reconstructive el b ow surgery,
·
gave up six runs an d six h its 111
four ihnings.
PIRATES 5, MEn 3
Pokey Reese hit a go-ahead,
two-run single in the sixth
inning after an error by Gold
Glove
·second
baseman
Roberto Alomar, giving Pittsburgh its first win of t~e season.
Mo Vaughn hit his 300th
career home run- his first in
the NL - and came out of
the dugout to acknowledge
the cheers at Shea Stadium.

hat

W

g::rnetl

Houolon
MllwaukH
· Pllllburgh
Si. loula

San Frar&lt;&gt;IICO

Mionl
Colorado

San 0/ogo
LoaAntaln

AROUND THE DIAMOND
....... ........

1
1
t
t
1

W

L

Pot

1

t
1
t
1

.100

t

1
1
1
1

Wut
W

2
2
1
1

0

San Diogo 8, Arizona 7
San Fro...,_ 12, Loa Angoltl 0

L l'al.

1
1
1
1
1

Clnlrlll

~··-

PIIIIburgh (~ 0.17) 11 N.Y. Mitt
IE- H), t: 10 p.m.
Coiolodo (TI\Oft\1011 4·5) II Sl. lOUII
1 - 7-7), I:t 0 p.m.

.100
.100
.100
.100
.100

01

.100

t
t

.100
.100
.100
.100

L

Pot

1
2

.100
.333

0 1.000
1 .887

2 .000

01
112

1

1 112

Tuoiclly'l Clal!lll
San Frar&lt;&gt;IICO t, LOI Angolel 2
MllwiUkH t, H®llon S
l.loniraal 7, Florida e .
Anzono t, San Diogo o

. ·

Wednoldly'l Gamel

Pl""burgh 5, N.Y. Mite 3
FIOrklo 8, Monlflal 5 .•
Phlladllp111• 3, Alllnta 1
Chlaago Culll 1Q, ClnolnnaH 3
Haullon 15, MllwoukH 2
Colorado 8, Sl. Louie 3

2

MliwtiUkiO (J.Wrighl 11•121 II Houalon
(Reyno/do 14·111, 4:05p.m.
FIO!lcla (Pinny 10•101 II Monlrul
(Ptveno 1-8), 7:05p.m.
·
Chlcego CUbe (Cruz S:1)11 Clnolnlllll
(Acellldo 5-71, 7:1.0 p.m.
~hllodelphla (A&lt;amo t2·8) ot Atlonlo
(Mirqula 5-81, '7 :35 p.m.
Son Fro..,laoo (Jonoon t ·21 11 (.oa Af1111'
IH (O.Pora.t Nl), IO:tO p.m.

loll

1llmpa Soy
lbroniO
Solllmorw

-

Now 'fork

MlnMIOII
Cll-..a
Chloogo
O.irolt
Konlll Clly

w

l'oL
0 1.000
1 0 t.OOO
1 t .500
1
0 ~500
000
Clntrll

a

w

a
a
1

L

L

Ql

1/2
I
t

I

retired Jerry Hairston on a
fly ball befQre Mike Stanton
got Chris Singleton to hit a
routine fly tQ ce nter.
Mariano Rivera, who blew
a save opportunity against
Arizona in Game 7 of the
WQrld Series last year, got
· three outs to earn his first
save of the season.
MARINERS 7,
WHITE Sox 6
Bret Boone hit an . RDI
single with two .out! in the
bottom of the ninth, caf,ping
Seattle's four- run ral y at
Safeco Field.
The Chicago bullpen,
d f,
· h
10
tagge
or elg t runs on
hits and seven walks in the
pitched well in the cold my fi'rst two games ofthe season,
whole career." ·
~ II apart.
again .e
11orontQ and Boston Were once
A;
9 n •
ra1' ned· out · at Fenway Park,
THLETICS6 • ~NOER.S .

Camden Yards.
"! 'was nervous all day," he
said, "This was my first start
since July, and it was a big
night for me - being back
with the team I've always
loved . It 's great . I' m on
Cloud 9 fight now."
Signed by New York as a
free agent in January, Wells
(1 - 0) looked every bit as
good as he .did duri11g his
first stint with the Yankees,
when he went 34- 14 in
1997-98 and pitched a perfeet game.
"I had it all working, but it
was a little tough with the
wind coming in. I prefer cold
weather," he ' 'l aid. "I've

Boomer back

On the mOUnd

.

AL

tl2

Ql

Pot

0 1.000
1 ...7

112
2 .333 1112
2 .000
a
2 .000
2

0
0
WMI
w 'L

Pot

,....

01
1
2

3

Pridoy'I-

Tlmpt Soy. (Ktnnldy 7-8) II N.Y. Yt"'

k - (PIHIIte li-tO), 1:08 p.m.
1
0-nd (hN 84111 (IIICI- :
mtn 1-1), 1:01 p.m.
•
Anllllt1m (SOtlotnlwe/1 10.111 II 1lluo.
(Vlldlo t-13), 3:08p.m..
•
Mlnnt110ia (Reed 4·8111 Toronlo (lyon 5- ;
41, r:o8 p.m:
Bolton (LOWI5•t0) II SoHimore (1'bwtra
8·tO), 7:08p.m.
CHico go WHIII SO• (Go nand 8· 71 01
l&lt;lnall CIIY (llyrd 8-8), 8:05 p.m.
;
Olldand (i'jlljuall-0) 11 SooHia (BaldWin 7·.
51, 10:08 p.m.
,

C1llll Cn\lfll)', OH

·I n one week With us

•

RIACH OVER 'I IS,DDD PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR

m:ribune
Sentihel
ca~T;~::;... ·(7!0) To446~~~~2 (7!~2To992·2156

•• •

rll...i~~-~~---_.1
.~~:.~ 11"
11'.' Hm.PW~ 11··
._____.
8

\'\."\!ll \ f I \II \ I \

band as the cwo were retllllling Orange County district attorney's
home &amp;om dinner on Monday office.

r

PusoNill

In hlallld gtroge. Aoln oo
shin,. Sloroge Building,
Fow Anllqu11, Nlco blby
blld·
ohlngto lo lwln blld,
ha1 malchlng droaaor, 13' &amp;
19' TV'o, work gOOd. Boyo
clolhoo· 12 monlha·
24monlhl, olze 8. Now
gra .. calchar lor uaoloro.
Go Cort, 10' Olkt, TUllO
WHy wall? Slart meollng Tapoa, A9Door, Huge
Ohio olnglll lon/ghl, call toll amCIUnl ol aport1 oordo, afol
lrtt 1·800·788·2823 ...1 ot loya end mloo., 3110 mile
1821 . .
oul Cloorgoa Creak 1rom SA
7 North.
~~ ~·-·
· """""'"'....,EN'I'S Huge Cleaning Oul Build·
~
lnga, end Baumonl Sole.
,
Mechanic &amp; Carptnlry Sluff
C·t Saer Carry Oul permll Qaloro Now SHunero Baby
lor Ult, Chtll•r Townthlp, StroiiM Car But F(eezer
Mtlaa Counly, , Hnd lollera Clotho~, 2 muoh 2 1111. :i
ol fnlerool lo. Tho Dally mllea oul218 on Kriner Ad.,
Slnilnal, PO So• 729·20, Franklln'l Top of Hill. Friday
Pomeroy, Ohio 48789, · &amp; Balurday.
-------Mako Earth Day lVII'/ doyl r1 YARD SAIJI..Oonalolo AoUoe lndualrloo.
l'oMmloY/MII)Il!.t
Sioroa In Alheno and Alba· ~
•

I

INC. PARCEL AI
DI!SCAfiiD IN THI
MI!IQI COUNTY
D!I!D RI!CORDI:
VOLUME 331, PAQI

01!0111111 12' 41"

WI!IT 287.184 FliT
ALONG
THI
CINTIALINI OP'
SAID ITATI! ROUTI!
331 TO THI POINT
OP' IIQINNINQ ,'
CONTAINING 2.1111
ACAII IN 100 ACAI
LOT 211 AND 0.11..
ACAI!I IN 100 ACAI!
LOT 220 FOR A
TOTAL OF 3.114 '
ACRI!I, MDIIII OR
LIIS, I!~CI!PTINQ
ALL
LI G A L
IAII!MINTI AND ·
IIIGHTI OF WAY.
· Prior lntlrument
rilftrlnCtl: VOlume
N P... 7t
Property lddmt:
11231 IIIII Acute ·
331, l'laoln1, OH .

MlnUfiOIUIIrt I · 371;
THI!NCI NOATH 10
Trtldlrt Truet .
DI!QAEII
41' 12"
Comjlllny, TrUIIN for
WIST
115.05
FI!IT
llciWIIIWian ltrlll ALONG A NDATH
1117·1, AgiWment
cl8led Dlcemberla, UNI! 01' THI SAID
1H7 PUINTIPP VI, FOUR, INC. PAI'ICIL
TO A 2" IliON PIPI!
DennyJ.
FOUND/ PAlliNG AN
Terzopplaul, Ill 11
IliON
PIN liT AT 30
DI!FI!NDAHTI
FI!I!T:
THI!NCI NOIITH 10
COUIIT OF COMMON
Alii W 41"
DIG
PLIAI
I!AIT 711.710 FliT
MI!IQI COUNTY,
ALONG AN IAIT
OHIO
LINI OF THI lAID
FOUA, INC. PAIICIL
In pureuenoe Of an TO
AN IliON PIN liT;
Order Of ..11 to me
THI!NCI!
lOUTH 84
dlreot.cf from Hid
Court In the ebave 010111!1!1 111' 13" 41771
App_relud
11
llnti!IN tlollon, 1 will IAIT 13.00 P'II!T
ALONG
A
lOUTH
ttO.OOO.OO
expo" to lilt 11 UNI OF THI FOUA,
Termt of 1111:
public euotlan Ill the
INC.
PARCEL
TO
AN
Clllh
CourthouH on May INIION PIN liT AT
23, 2002 II 10:30
a.m. or ..ld dey the THI IOUTHWIIT ltllph 1. Tru....l
following cfetorlbed
PAI'Ig_{ lherlff, r.t.lgt Countr
realnllll: . ·
IITUAT I! D
IN AI OIICAIIID IN c:.rtoe 1. 1111111111
THI! MI!IQI COUNTY • ~ llmpt
1
LETAIIT TOWNIHP,
DIID AICOAOI:
on
MIIGI COUNTY,
STATE OF OHIO AND YOLUMI! 2N, PAQI! 120 1!. Fourth-IIINI,
lth Floor
lElNO \00 ACRE 1121;
THI!NCI IAIT Clnolnnlll , Ohio
LOTI 211 AND 220, 11Uot
FEET ALONG 411202
TOWN 1 NORTH,
THI!
lOUTH.
UNI! Of' ~1"~241•"1I'IANQI 11 WilT OF THI lAID COAIIN
•
•j,j-iftor.l7
THE
OHIO f'AIICI!L TO A POINT
p Ct 110087732
COMPANV'I
CINTIIIUNI ' 14) 4 11 11
PUIICHAII! AND IN THIlAID
STATI
' '
II!INQ DI!ICAIII!D Of'
IIOUTI
Ul;
f'OUCIWI:
AN IAON
II!QINNINQ AT THI! flAiliNG
flfH II!T'AT 1a2 FaT
INTIAIICTION OF
Rlf'IRINCI;
THI! lOUTH UNI! OP' I'OR
THINCIIOUTH 11
100 ACIII! LOT 211 DIGRI!I!I IU' Ia"
AND
THI
~.
JOt.... f'IIT
CI!NTI!AUNI Ofl THI! WilT
W1
ltllllcwa
y011,
THI
ALONG
ITATIII~
IIIIW
tftat
you
..
CINTI!IILINI! Of'
THIHCI
14 lAID ITATI .IIOUTI
twnl!lf
40.
DIQAI!I!I 12' 41"
Lovt, JIOII&amp;trt,
WilT 111.111 FliT -~~14 '
El1110, Ewa,
ALONG
THI!
Dlbblt,
J.W.
CINTI!ALINI OF
lAID ITATI IIOUTI .
Ul TO A I'CIIHT, lAID
~IHT IIIHO AT A

gg::.:.:

jj'.a;;;;..

.

HOftTHUIT

COANIII Of' FOUII,

www.reuaolnduolnnorg . 41h, 5ih, Blh. 2 tl2 mlloe
Oul SA 248. liHII boyl,
Mory Kay lndapendonl Con· gino clothoo, loy a, tto.
.oullanl,
Plllll
call
. (740)949·3027 1or prod ucla April 5111 &amp; 81h. Lo.ll ot new
·(ol1orlng tOo/. off on all llemo, acro11 from lhe
prodUCII 1or lhe monlh o1 Molga VII Clink&gt;.
April) ,
.
·
S
9aumonl 8
nummiiQt ale,
1111 Dofonaa for oil _ . Carmoi·S~IIon U.M.C. Sui·
Learn al .your own PIOI wllh ion Building, Bunon Rood,
prlvalo lauon•: VOl'/ afford· Apnl 51h, 9:00am-4pm, Aprtl
able, Jay Clarlla Kenpo Ka·. Sin 9am·1pm. SOmething
'111 •1740) 742· 2848
tor.Everyone.
·
communlly Yard Salol 112
GIVFAWAY
mile on Eagle Ridge' Ad
1.~-------'· Go oul Roule 7 Nortn oi
'
Pdl!llroy, Ohio, 10 Mlrnol'l
3 call, 10 good hOme only, Gardlno, turn nghl. Go 10
ur1ou1 calla only. 740·9t2· 11ral lnleraoollon, olgn• In
0188
,
yard. WMI ba Solurdoy lho
;,;.:.:__...:..,_____ 81h ol April. I om 1111 Whon·
To A GOOd Home Colloo IVIr. Aoln or shine. Will
Col Bob Toll&amp;. Mitten Pow• Ho111 onl/qUH, 1ool1, guna,
Spadlld &amp; Otclawod. c/olhll, porcelain tdVortlll
(304)578·3289
algno, lhermomeiOr, 111
klndo of oolloqlor llom1.
1 ~- • _
'
......
F • ,•.Pil#
Don't mlu thll ul•. Call
OUNil
740·9t2·1827

r

I

T.,11 R(J. lrtl. Small EIIOirlc rolltll, tithing
ml&gt;. Piallo 'call (740)«8· aomalow8~~-11blm•l•l,·. Hoge·•Holot·
n-·
11 10
Roclno on 124. WalCh 1oo
YARD SAt£
l algnl, t-5 Frklly . Salurdoy
:=::::=;:=~ Elilto Vard Solo, April 4th,
,
51h, 8ih; 8:30 ·am. 345
aroniSI., Middleport
\':GARDSAIJ!. .. Garage·Salo Ap~l 4·8
~
ALUI'OLI!I
' 8:00am.• 4p.m., ' Elll Si.,
Upper l.lonkiY Run.
1812 Mercerville Ad., Mor· 0/othea, loyo, homllnlor/or
ctrvllle. Rain/ Shine, 418• &amp;cra111.
4!7. 8:00- Dark, SaiUrdl~

r
~
r

1·01). Dirk Sunctey

·

·

·

·

r .,
·

I

PI: I'U1A!IANr

Dial-Up

Success With
InfoClslon!
.

,.:r:

~~·

--··

Manrlly JIW 8al-

.

·

~-~~t,"'~

· Wh~ 1o _ , , , _ _,.,
· """""" - w i l l '
Vard - · Thurllday,
T~ 8pft, T"""' No Gllllnllcloi, no linN. dolJ ......

e.. .,. ol-

&amp; UHd lllrM tnt oiOOO"'*II.Urt -

1110 - - H o, llld- '"'"'u!"1'~--:--= :':::'.::~~
loti.
'
:;,. PilOt. Dount, • c.N ,,;. hOml. fOt mort lnlor·
fllclly Apt I , ......, lllooL Loll. No LIOINt lind U.OO I ~
f - t-Jpm. - · AtQtMod. Ptoctc•lflll Ohio odd&lt;• -slop• 10: J'O

:lei=:•
r:r.:
oltcll l..;·- :r:::
rovi,
2

Home

"'*"'-.
,.....,
o--. .....,

Jr.ttr/or,
lflll/on
1

-

,_,

IIICI

m....
=.;:=::...____
FIIO!Iy, t:ooam, ·~ fll'lll/tt,
HtrN lnnd Clollttl. 111'

v--

llldlll !IIIII - · JofWI Dlort
lldlnG - . . : ' _.,
110f7HCIIJII.
.

1r1 Cltiollft.

" " ' - - · Ap11 1t1 S
l'tll, U . Glrll -lnnd

=

~ nur'T.,~ ~
C.
uitlo
fwMi Ti
JOIP
~~l•lllCIII'1N

~,,~
Mr. I ...... ":':'.:
•4 *"" g 'WI
'
!~~"" n!'- ~
~
- - - -·

fight.

..,.,..,..,

Floe MtllltiWv";'ll=

r-••'"':t .......:.f.' e.
Mull-

Cloy
4
tg.
1
lfhurl.), Allll
(1 .),
lprn. l.ola Ill - ·
lolnlli611GIOr•billl~...

L

- -

r::' :',,:,R ~Ill'/.

1w10- WVII5511 .

.

l'lllt 11tnt 110t1110n to cornrtlilllllt ...
llfoGd ' umo ......
L.,.-.iiiliii :.-p Uonl In ......,. CO.Wv 6
~
...... Co OH.. ,....
AIIIOttllt Tap Oolllr: U.l . good pfVIIlG/ollll' ...... fiJI
. . .. Qo1d Colnl, Proof. - t o 304-77S.t814.:
- · l)ltmondo, Gotd rnt1 to '*"""'wv2 ~
~1,;· U.l . Cuffe110Y,• 4IBOUnbtrWV:
·
. ;a. CoflllftoQ,
Put ,.., I'C 10 WOrk. 8laY
cnJ · Qajlpous, ,...,. hOml
~ Manly.
~
1. tOO: I 01 ·1843
loU· I ; . Floftll1d Pomeur N.JO.
...00 11t11M'. , _
_,
fiiiiY ~. 1-100-17t-

-.

'!' !!t

told

HluWAI'mll

:z.:===,;,;;;;::...~- IWAHT£01

. . !.--·- _._

Sign on Bonus!

e.:

ila

---------------------~---------------------------4-----------

•

.
'
~.!;"'lonlnol'!...,_
Cia
1111 ~'!,lPPI•
4 Family Yerd Sa\1 Loon iiPolle ~~ p.;:..,oy·loca
Town !'tall. 11-4 Frklly, April iJonl only. Apply In ptl'tOi1
51h..
EXPANDING Cot.1PAN
.
8 Family Yatd F~ I NEEDS PEOPLE ...Wo
811. April 5,1 1·1. Flrtl from Hemf. MoiiC&lt;'dton
HOUIO on 1111 off At. 33 F1111 llllnlng I lilt&gt;
Slldlil1 Ad. FINn/lure, Johrt pM. Fret 9ooldll. CaH or
l.lrgo lrtlido ond Oullldt Otoro t10 Riding Mow11, v
I
1
I
I
Soil, t184 ~IIOnl R(J, 1101111 ~· l!oyo, ~ -.RRHomaFr~~-.o 1·
Vlnlon, OH. B:OOtm 10 clothol. Mint-Women• eee-228-411Bl'
5:00pm, SOM&lt;ay 4/6/02. c/odtlo. AIIO plua liM WDma.
'"""" ~·-- one. e ..rclll Equipment, Hl~ng SOon, Prlvall Orgoni·
Name .,.and_,. ~-. Homo lntorldr. To mucH ullon Noodtl CIUII !AanogStrolltra, Cor SHII, Toyo, t.hc. lo 1111.
. •· Mull ba Maturo and Per·
11/o &amp; Tall Mini Clothing,
IIOIIIIlle, Outlol end Sk/HI
2tl 10 NtiQhllorhOOd Ad., Don'l Mill Tltll One. 11/g- Nlaodlld lncltldt: SChlldul•
gnl 1111 - · FumHurt, /ng, Ordolll1a. ,.,_,ng,
.Friday end Saturday.
IPPflonoet, C&lt;)floCJablt, lrtvtrl!OOY MaTntonlnct lnd
Tburo. F~. t-1, 2 mliH
etafte, &lt;loOorallvo /tome. Manly ~.'Sol·
Of Porw on 1164. Loll
And much more. l.ola of . ,, 11onofb lnd
I)!W - ·
Now IIOml 1or s;fll. Fret ouWr 1ncont1v11 pr.,;,..,.
'"" 5111 5111 7m11 Siu11. Ctmf, ~ 17flltrtcl f1o1urM 1o PO 11oJr
..,.~ 14;, 10:e- ='"~11Ur-Frf.
e.a 303.Gelpo/li.OH488a1.
0111141 Oft r1ght.
Ot
.
MoCfuro'l ,_
:
Vord Soil
&lt;llfi.A /Mil l1trlng tl 3 - I I . 11111 or
April 4 &amp; /Mil. lnt/dt Amorf. Oohol Rd.
PIHIInt =-~ ~~::.
CIR..,..IIODMoCcitmlcli
-~~
t ·30
&amp;
R(J.
• om

,riOoy IIICitalurdiY, IId I . -

·--~- · -

ssoo 00

Salt. 820 4ih
Ave., ~1/polle, Ohio. April
4•5•8· I.30om to 5.00pm.
3 Ftmlly. 3 mlleo 0111888 Ot1
lett, ()OI'nlr of 1&lt;11111 Btek.
Friday and lliurday
g·ooam to 1
.
.

·

ly Almoaphere, Aavena· Will /)ltllure Wish hOUIII,
wood Core Conler, 1113 tralloro, lnd dooka. Coli
Wllhlnglon SUHI, Aav--441-4238. Ilk lor Ron or
111111 mntilgo.
wood, WV.
·
Will wor111or 14.00 Hr. mow
Como Join Our T1111111i
goua odd Job• ond polnl
You'll Be Glad Thot You 304.a&amp;2·1121
Dldlll
•
'

NOWI $182,000 (will below
cortlllod
oppraloal).
(740)4-11-3131
.
Land nome pockaQII.
lind/ Homo/1.1nd Improvemania In 0111 1ow poymonl.
Loon offloora on hen~ 7
a wtek. (740)448·
3 ·
·
Now houao· 11nonolng avoll·
able lo quoll1111d buyoro. 0%·
down 1800 I(/ 11 2 112
·
'

=··

bath, 3 Bedroome, eu.,om

wl.~lld.:...~800 mo/PT, OHIO VALlEY PUBLISH· :".,!~: :,g~ob~:~n/9~~
~. "Mr • · ,
lNG CO. rooommondo ihll I ,.....2112 oar ro on 1

~.;: =~in888gor :~J:n-8288 you do bullnlll wllh pocp/o 1~· acreo. 111r.J.POIIer

· wtiiiHII OU 1 oom .
www.
Y r·
·
OHptrltt NHd of • Floral
Otllgner. p 11111 01. 11
13041458,1041 or (304)n:J.

·*

you know, lnd NOT 1o Hnd
montYihrough lhl mtll until
you IIIVI lnvt111gttlld iho
offering.

trH. (740)«&lt;-4e141111 epm
0 1740)446-3248 after epm
r
Nloo 3 br. houu 1or Hll 11
Clalllpot11 Ftrry nlct lg. lot,

-room apart• Buy or HI\, Riverine Anti·

mtnll, lurnlllhlld lnd untur· quae, 1124 Eul Moln on
nlllhlld, IICUn!y dlpoll1 re· SR 124. E. Pome•oy, 740·
qulrlld, no /*1, 740·tt:l· 992-2528. Aun Moore,
2218.
owner,
-------=
1 Blldroom Upotalro Apart· Suo'1 S.leollblea on lhe"T"
ualld homea 1or under mont, 720 Sooond Avenue. In Mlddlopo~ . Dalla, glo11·
12,000, Cllll 1-800·837·3238 ott Slrlll Porl&lt;lng. Walor, ware, Aladdin IT\Inlolo, and
1or ln1o.
Sewer,
Troth
Pold. mora. (740)ii2.0288
13001,.,, 1300 dtpO'" . Day
Lors &amp;
1(740)441·5218, Evening
MlscEu.ooxlu!
ACREAGE
• 174014411.0101 ·
Ml!RcHANDisl! .·
IIAUTIPU~
APAIIT·
2 ooreo, 33&lt;175 Bailey Run MINTI AT I.UDOIT P~~ 1201240 v .15000w Onan 4
Ad., off OHIO 124, 112 milo 01!1 AT JACKION II, cyl. Genoralor lnd Trana1ar
Wet~ 01 Aoull 7, walar &amp; TATII, 52 Wollwood Orlvo. Swllcn, 13500 , (740 l«S·
oopilo alrHdy In, 11 4,1100, /rom $2t71o $383. Wolk lo 2845
.
·.
oxcollenl building 1111, 111op &amp; rnovloa. Call 740· - - - - - - (l37)3t8-02 58
448-2588. Equel Houalng 30 Gallon Eloctrlo Hot Wo·
Opportunl1y
·
ter Heater, New, $100. Car
47 ocra 1arm w/11194 mObile Accopllng appllcollono II Luggaga Hauler, $40. Grlll,
hOme, 3 bodroom, 2 both, THE MAPlES, 100 Mtmort· $40. Lfghl Foot Ladder, $40.
~:O'B:2 :J:d, 180.000, al Dnve Elll, Pome~, OH . 17401448·9742
' Agt and Income gu tllnal 45• Huleh Ook $400 Oln·
LOt lor Salo- Approx. 2 112 apply. Priority will ba given lng Aoom Tobia 2 1.;011 4
ocrn, oloarlld &amp; roady lor 10 ihOU wllh lncomt under chalra: . Oak. . $300.
building, graval driveway, S9,71i0. Ranta oro compul·
_
wlltr &amp; IIIICir~ ovtllobll, od ocoordlng to your In· 13041882 2702

r

i

Growing Bulin••• NMde new root, r'IIW window• ,.ol'ler

.-.....

Aeklng come.

I

For further detalla, Bakera Reck Deh.uce, $65.

Holpl Work /rom homo. 304·675·1499
113,995, 'IColl (740)448· call(740) iiz-7022. EHO Kliehen Table, Aouno, $35.
Full T1me 0111co LPN, Moll-ordlr/E•Coml!llrca Up
4814 lrom 8,5 or (7401448·
(740)258-!144~
Slralghl Ooyl, No Weak· lo 1582+ wHkl PT. It 000· • Partlllly AoniOdtllld home, 3248 '"" 8pm.
For Aenl In Pl. Ploallnl, 3 _::..::::.:!
· :...,___
lndl or Holldayti. Apply ·In 14000/wHk Ft:. F- book· 2 Bedroom, 1 Bllh, Full
blldroom mObile nomt lnd Crolilmon Lawn Swoopor
per110n. Mlldlcal Plaaa, 938 lot
t ·800·4211-011 B. So11m1nt, l.lrgo UnonocH· Lola 1or ·•ala· 111 0.377 1. .Bod room colla go. wHh 2 blno tor rldlnt mower..
Slola Roule180 Gtll/pollo. www.NewFuluri4U.com
lid 2 car g~rago. 127 Kino· aoro• 114,000 &amp; (1) 0.459 (304)675·3962
. lliO . (3041875,1eG4
'
·
on Dr., 180,000. (740)441· aero• 11e.ooo. Al~lne Ad,
.
Heir llytlltt
Slort Your 9uolnoao To· 0485
Porter oreo, 1111 &amp; reaely 10 Greclouo living. 1 and 2 For 1111 complete Bingo
Flllla lllono, 1111 "UIII·
dey... Primo ShOpping Con·
aol up on. AEP. tltotrlc, bodroom apertmonll 11 VII· machl~e with llgHtlld board.
malt No AppolnlmOnl Sol· tor Bpoce Available AI AI· Rar&lt;&gt;H SiYit 3 Sodroom, 1 control -•go eyalom, &amp; lago Manor lnd Alveroldo Cell 740-949·2044 or 740·
on', hu lmmlldlata open· lordablo Aolo. Spring Volley SolhCI'f'l!j ~A, gR. Kllch:i water avefloblo. Call Apartmlnll In Middleport. :.94;.:9;.:·23::2;:.3_________
lnga tor lull or porl·llmo
P1oza, Cai740-448-0t01
:·rn 175 ,.;; 1 ;~~78 • (740)4-18-4514 1.1-F/ 8·5 or ·~ •o m. S 2JII-SE348. C~ll 7 Fret Gil Fumaoao and Air
92 0 8n/· qual ouong Condlllonar Elllmaleo. Call
He/relylllttforour Mooon
'
' ·
coli (740)448·3241 alit! ~
2827
1
locallon.
f3D I'Roflllll!iiON
8pm
· -..,.....u leo.
(740)448·8308 or 1-800·
81ntlllllr&lt;&gt;ltldt: hourly
SFJMas
Atmodollld Ranch Home.'
-rn 1 Sodroom Apart· 291.ootll. 11 you don'l 'toll
wagtt; Hrvlct oomm11110n ~
. Thr11 Sodroom1, Balh,
RI!AL F.8rA11!
menl, No Peto, 12301 uo we bolh IOHI
.
uP lo 150%; rltlll and tan·
Llrgo Kllohon and Olnlng
.
montH lncltldta water 1100
nlng commluiOno: 401(k);
TUIINID DOWN ON
Room, 2 Cer Goraga, 2
WAN!m
dopoait 17401448-381 ·7
Grovtly with AllocHmonll
mild, vlalon, dental &amp;Nil
IOCIAL IICUIIITY /Ill? 110rogo Bulldlnga, Rllduoad
·
11100. OBO., Stack ,t,ngu1
Ina.: vaool/on, odvoncoct lid. No Fn Unltll WI Win/ Prlcrt. (140)448-t-178
Crlldll worthy buytlr looking New, t SA Townhouae, IIHr. 800-9001btl..85 centl
and 1110ftl
1.-552-3345
Moaoz HoMD lor houH 10 buy, Galllo, Ml· Nllr Holzer, CIA, Economl· lb. (304)578·3238
11 you want I Irish ltlrt or
oon or Mllga, plOOU cal col Gu HHI, W/0 Hookup, Grtlllb'l PllnO· Tunln &amp;
i:JOI\Uio
Jim, (740)tt2•3187
No Plio, 1359 p/ue utlllileo. Ropolrt. Problema? r:f.od
(740l44il-2857
Tunlld7 Coil Tho Plano Dr.
740-448 4525
Now Tokln~ppllcellono- :..::=:..:·
3e WoOl 2
room Town· Holpllll Equ/prnonl . Any·
llovsei
ttouu Apartmtntt, lncludll one lnleretlld pilate . oau.
FOR
•Walor Sewage, Trllh. (304)875-1468
·--iliiiii"""'-.';,..,1 l31i01Mo.. 740·448.00()8.
Single Sodroom Apartment, lndopondonl Horbollle Dis1 ·3 Sodrooma Foroclouct Ground FlOor, .Wallr Pold, t~butor, Call For Product Or
Homea From l1ii/Mo., 4% Wuhlr/Dryer Hookup No Opportunlly. (740)«1-1982
Down, 30 Yoara II U% POll. S2751mo p/ul d~J)o.u .
JET
~PA. For Lll11nga, 800-319- 1740)«8·4043, 17401339- AERATION MOTOAS ·
3323 E111. 1708.
3083.
. Aopalrlld, Now &amp; Rebuilt In
2.BA, t lllth. 7 room 1101!11. Twin Rivera Tower acoapi· 100
Siock.
Call Ron Evano, 1·
Very Nklo nelgltborhood.
lng app/lctllona 1or
·837-91!28.
829 High . St Middleport. .
Ca/1740-012·150t41or more . 1br. .
I api.oll Jolin Onll5000 ganoraiOr
lnformollon.
ul/1. po/d .
and !:304::.·.:::87~1·::.2103:.::.,_ __
2br.JiOUII1or ronl. f215Q. 1
Lg. Sunbaam 011 grill. aide
rnollltt + Utlmlel. At!. 0.
burner, 1~11 propene tank
poi/1 Af&lt;lulrlld. Call
180.00 304-875·1504
(304)878-8808 9•/!pm.
Metal Dtlk. 4 Orawtrt on
3 blldroom, lull bllomlnt, 2
0111 lido, Sholvt on Bottom.
canr 017 ~. ~7~;!!2 " : 18&gt;80 aiiH, 1100/rno. 740· 30&gt;20, VII'/ Nice. Po~..,
rii="N&lt;, j;ii. 740- 9t2·2187.
~;o S,!~~·n~~=~~=:
985-42t8
Slorogo Spoce lor ront 4033 goly Ann Colla. 110.
. .1
No 3 SA 1 11(/Uirl 1011. WIIH metal (740)985-4409
.
AvalaDit
w.
'
IIIIIV/ng. Locolod In Cliy ot
.
Balh, Family Aooml- Point Piauont. Inquire II Microwave, Good Condition,
Coml&gt;o, LA, CIA, W-1 (304I874-0t02
126. 2 Crock poll. Work
ApriltB
Dlytr
HookuP, BuHin
.
Good, 15.00 aoch. let Ttl
.
2000 101180 FOI1ulll Mobile OVIIV&amp;-, Now Point &amp;
Ml/ulr, Nk:l, 115. (740)448Wlllled: Full '!liN Homo 3 bodroom, 2 full Corpoillvu Oul, largo bodl·
f.12t
bai11, oovorod 121&lt;18 pOoch, ~~cat 1o o11y oc1too11.
:..::::......=~=-:::=
lloMr:8
on niOI rtntod lot in Muon.
mo. plua ulllllllt end
NI!W AND UIED ITEEL
(304)n3·53-15, (304}593· dopolll. (740)448-Utl
SIHI Blome, Pipe Ribar
,
""'""""'
, 0219
For Concrlil, Angle, Chan·
For Ront 3br. wllh
nil, Fill Sor, 81111 Grallng
1 yr. old houll 3 blldroom, 2000 DuiOh _ , . , _ QlriQt In Country, 1325 48• Big 9c,_ !V Wood For Drelno. Drlvowayo &amp;
. 2 - · cta, va.MICI ctlllnga, 3 b0droo8:;.,! ~ b~)!t,: mon1h + ~ + Roleron- Cae/ng. . s~n~. · Workl wolkwl)'tl. L&amp;L Scrap Mtl/oCI1od in lht country C11 4 porcilll,
·-• • - 011. (304)882·2855
jUit Ifill
( 40)387· 111 Opon Monday, Tuooday,
tern, 178,000, doyllmt hOmo _18d0. 134,000 or Pilot
e ietinhlro). 7
Wlld.-ey &amp; Friday. a.m.
041
Ollllpalll c.- Col111 740 ..,-8808: oft1r e, 740- lnltrllild In Ilk·
4:30pm. Olouct Thurllday.
(CatHrl CfoiO To llornt) 742.tll07.
lng ov11101n. On niOa rant·
..... _
. Rlcond/1lonod Solur!:l, &amp; Sunday.
Col Todlyl740 Ill 1381,
ed lot, It Olcl Town l.1oblll
~ra, 0 ,, Flo
, 17401
7300
1.eoo-214-0482.
HI 9oiiJh Pork Olivo 2 Home Peril. l.1oYing Nlaodlo
;:l!t().(J5.12741.
lfQry ...., front Sill lor PlY 011. (304)175: ; - : ~Toe: .:,: Ouil llotllo Wollr Cooler,
lll6
porcn. ,.., ~·dick, •t38
~Villi~· Fronch 178. (740)448-ms
M8:J'I 1 1oJo11i0m • tlbOVI 1f.ro&lt;Mld
pool. 3eX27 11!114 Ftirmont 0ou- l!~Rer-~ Cfly Mlylog, 74Q.448.77H. Wllllll lif&gt;OCIII' 314 200
(304)87S. 48
bltwldo, :IIIII, 2 Balh, potn, sioo.
For Solo: Recor&lt;&gt;Hionod PSI 12;"00 Per 100; 1' 200
Doing......, 1 lfrlg7 Do- 131 Dr1VI, 3 Lllgl ~ 1 ~40)288-8t2l, 13001mo. LGol1od on 218. • - •· dly.- lnd rofttg- PSI 135.00 Por 100; All
10 llldroaml, 1 lltln, Lllgl
(740)288-t044
triiOro. ThomptOtll Apptl- /lruo CGmprlllion Fl111nge
,_,..., N Co- - · c:.tpor1 end B , _ - pr1cad , _
ortOt. 3407 , _ , A.,.. In Siock.
Ad · .Hk11- ltri&lt;*l
llldl
Yord, .aoo, oil Nildd, 111111110- t4&gt;(10 lrl..,, lOIII · nul, (304)671-7318.
fiCIN IYANIINTI!~P~
r.io.eMHuoo.
(1..,.....2118
3t85.
uoo
•
month, 1180 depot- ~~ u~ ....._
11
, _ , , OiliO, 1·800•
.
8
""' _ , ,,
k no poll. 2 badtoorn, coil ......, -...,...
• ~ 837-9828
"a llodrooon, 1 - I n A.- . ~ - · n10a loll. (r401142·21t4
condll- end Guoron· ::;.:::=..----...,........:::.
118 W."~-· eo.-1flnl- loONd on R133 lllh•ltld. WUhtre, Drylll, Wtll&lt;lnl Produc11: 'DoUIIIe
""'""'
138.500 00 7~322t Ponwov/AIIwnl Coil 740- t4&gt;(10 21A All Eltotrlo, I'IMgiO. lind Roi~IOrl 11ttr1gi!l whlla lnd dark VI'
Do
· ·
1182·2tl71or tlolih.
W.llr Polrl, FIIICIIdln PioiY· SOme 111r111 115. Sklaai nil/a, txlrooio, popper,
a badtooon, In Mldllljl or1.
ground 1111 Cora Mill Rd., APPflllnOit 78 Vlna tl. epioH ,._, All Maillt l.liWil Mowt1t coil Tom AndlfiOn oftlr JUII gltllng lfor1od7 111 C&amp;l(74ol248-f211
(t.t0)440-13Ge
., baHt: 11iv11 lnd llnl•
IIICI ~ " - Equip- lpm, (140)f82-:1341.
:;"~ :,.:-,:; 2 badtooon . - hOmllor LIM au- 8leoplr 80111 . -. Caii 74Q-94D-3021.
::"~..;.::..;
a Dr.hOml flAY ,..oldnt mort lniOimonCI'l
rllll, no pttl, (7401H2· OE Flofngera~or, aom
Millo (7
now carpal, Cotttnt lana,
IIIII
_ , C&lt;&gt;ndl11on. (740)318bock bookl Ml'*'
,
t~~~ior ;;"~.:. ===~ 2 lA, TOll/ E/totr1c wHh ett7
· W~Nm; ROmonoa,
Clnlfug,..,hornlo:!: ~138,500. 301112·3772 AI oOtllootlln 1111D0utt- Canirlt AJt, Allaci~Atl)' No MIYIIG-IOr;•801. F/cilon
end
Olhoro.
mon1 or bul/n:ll/11... ~~· « :1044124712.
..,, wv .,..7384408.
,.,. · Fllflror-,... 11 eo. Almond · 17B. (740)H5-2718
- · riiPOIIII - qulrttl. 1380 IIIPtllfl, ueo ~
NB. ery. , _ 11000 Eleotr/o Whool
10 f1111, Call (740)2415-04et boo trl, HO. Call ~. rfl-m,
Mewing OUI
8:00pm, Chllr Uko Niw 1500
,,..
~.;::·
,
..
t-1 1 1"'"" ""
•
_.
tOvtly mOblla hornl. ,.,. "'"'·
(14il)ue
eliel
1304 ~i75-ntt · • ·
QUNI. Ctl
I 1111'' ~ t40 Lot It! Oily. ~ lob70, AlrMdlt 10 101 up C1rl
1inll, •m
II •
lonf 10 ~ Cltuflllill, lot II 3iltl .,_ T•· llilullul VioW - ' MoiiONn Carpti, 202 Cilll1 Primo FH 0o1u&gt;0 modol 400
- , ltcl ·t.n Largo , _ M0bt1o Home Peri&lt;. For I Or 2 ~· l!eflitrr Cltapll · POIW, bhio. Aft 81ttlonlry ~·
"'::"~oa~a.::. Ill In ICilciJIIn, 1'011*1 Aif Hll now w1nyi aiding, now 011,
p~"r (740)446-7444 1-e77·130- lllr/11 In Fon/RtodlnQ
m~~·-::,r--~ 11117 HNIICaniiiiiAtr. TwoCor ' undorplnntna. ' yr. holt "'
[
orll.
• •t82. Fr~~ltilmiiii, Euy lliand/PuiHIII.P. MoniiOr.
,....
• GMJool'luoLMgo ....... C'IIICIAIC. Niwllok 011 ·
'
~doyaiiiNUIJI8. 1'11, 1·304-455-105811·
Moo ,., , 11 Ill&gt; - · ew· ~ 11 liM».!!!!_
and 110rm door•• Hll For...., 2 w 00011 -0.....:.. _ - -.f:!14· ;:llr;.;llfll=m;.;
. ----,.::-:-:=
Plia&amp; eludou• li04of1Jo
Ot (7-,_..- ..,..,., IW"":;:: Hornell liAt Ollon llfd, Qol. ·~r .. - ·
Pram- 1111 2 304-5784111
/XIII="'"'IOIOIIIPIP' :.~~F= bock llpollo,OH. (740)44t.OOOO 11Mo1 lor 8.. Piazgral •21,:;:03;:,__ _ _ __
LaMMclwina ..... .
dloft Uii000111....,2M1 rw. 2 llldroom Ma$11- end II
:1111. w-=... Col
1r1......,
LAlli or~
lflo1r/o, , _ . ~= 1 :"""'· 1100. ::'~::
~·
NU
'
+ Otpollll. PIM
t1
tl, 1 carpal,
LMni!-"
Chair, Uo. Pot
Mort lnd WOIWt ...,..
•
· Old 111 pill a-M Ulld 'llll'ilurt lldro CaQt or l'taultr S40
-Prom .... ~ 4 , _ -llfi. Mull 101111(7
.
. ~on F.., Dr.: Holldly lnr1 In~· (7~42
'
.
21rN,.,.__ lltl(740)44e4170.
PooVPollo ....

fl·

I

L

r·'

I

j

ccvW-•• W.O..

.,

.

-a... I

'a:

C::

t:"tric.

:&amp; ,....._,
'

To

71114 ·

e.:

l:;:;

p-

w-.

ol-.-

::,v,:.

!l:f:";

mo4010

17..o,- .... -

=:'

!_!' ..,pllll
, . . .... ~, .,.,.~!!."'11
''""' Poollorl. Qhto - - ··-L
,"~
CIIT,
·
.
M(t!
7toll
00
'
, _,., •
..._.._
,

=-----

n-- I

I

=..;r=;.-;;;;z.
,. ,.

=
=
*" ..-.,;

-

~·..::;:.: =-···'C""sz~ ~A-.~=·~

,......,..~

.

=

,..

FGrOIII«-IIIIIOI'IOft •·C4l(
'
1184 (304
·
10""" 4 uuom,
~
'
1
·~ 1lllfintn t 112 - . 14Q.-•-•
_,......... HOmt _ _ .
""
11 a1t:
· W. do tl ,._. Cl1 P.A.N.... - 01 "'
'· No c- lad ~ Ill
- . Cao .. llj, ........ ..... ""' front ,.,. Dill'.... ,....
/ng. Dti:!tl. Dral-. flllll'h, -.
•••.::.:
IMnal 00\t- FH~
7
.,., llolno..a. (740)44t• ..,..., no.,....
L.olr1l " " -·
Col

Floflr- Plln. 1o. . , _ . . . . To · ~ BOWFront- Co11 ......1• ....,., HoJnmrt. 10 ""'
0514
a. 0 Spilt, OH 481111 .
- - - . . . . ; , (7-40)44B-nt3
0113
- - · . . . - -"

INOTtCII

Computerlllnternet U•r•

·r

~ 1

AHI1QUF3
-nd-2·iiiloiiliii-"lit..J_ ' - - - - ·

r'o

3 Fomlly Yord

.,

·e
:~ 1r MoB~~OME9 1r
~~=-_. ·----..... ·~

~~ 1

r . ".•- I

I

s

ARD !1\L£-

Or'IIICI-. Ltlltt ol .ov-

,_

o110

I

eryJNng.

WHIIl,. LIF1' Oflll- S111 Fnmclsco'1 arry Bondi hlta his lecond home run of the pme off 1.01 An;elee pitCher Terry Mu~
. holland • catcher PIIUI Lo Ouca loOks on Wednesday. (.AP)

Avoid lhl Tratflc

i"ork Fndrom Homes
rome OUI uppo~
Cell 1·800·.234·0019
AVONI All Arllll To Bu or
Soil. Sh/ney Spoara ~'
875•1420· ·
0111ce Manoger/Molnlo·
nance Wort&lt;or
·
111nlorHIIId .wrllt J·2·V·3e
Waler Aaeociallcn, Inc.
PO Box 488 Pt Pleaunl
wv 2858011 once, Include
your maiNng addllll ond
ltlephone numbar. An opp/1·
call0t11orm Will ba malllld lo
you bv relum mall.
Boor!f ot .Oir11010r'o

Loll:

~.

Everyone Welcome

Come Join our 1rlondly ltaff,
Siyllll Naadod. Aonland ba
your own boll, Col/
(7401448•4247

brown PtJPPI' mini plr&lt;&gt;har /ltmt, emoktr, much mloc.,

5
•
I
~ .,._
!:.~
,~
,:-1111 ·ntrn11
•

Racine
American Legion
PORK CHOP
DINNER
Sunday 11 :00 am
Cost$6.00

Acoopllng Appllcollono lor
GIFT SPECIALIST. Mull ba
lblo 10 work 10om.·7pm.
Monday Thru Frldty ond
OcCIIional
WtlkiOdl
around Clift Giving Holldoy1.
Gill morohandlolng, Dloplay,
lnvenlory Conlrol, &amp;tiling
Doportmenla, And Atordlr•
lng Ara oomo Of lht Toohnl·
quoa roqulrlld, ~nowledgo
ol Collocllblu Helpful. Flo·
ral Arranging And Snaonol
Oocorallng lmp()nanl Acllvl·
tiel. Courteout And PtriOn·
aiSor;lco Mull Come Nalu·
rally. WIN Report To Corpo.
roll Gl11 Monogor. lnlre·
qulnl Traval Oul ot ArlO
Polllblo. 5onct Aoaumt To:
JA25 200 Mlln SlrHI. Point
Ploa11n1, wv 256eo

I

r

(304) 675-1333
Or Fax To
875·5234

Pkli.

·

l'ly. 1·800·837·71500

Public Noll"' In N''"l'l"'""·l

Register

100 WOAKI!AI NII!D!D CNA'1 ( Btaldtnt Al•l•· Top to Bottom CltanlnP. Qrtal dtll for ilomtont Want a new home? Own
Auomble orob, wood ll/lll.
S.Nico, profolllonol, roo· whO won11 2100 11(/. h., 4 your own land? WI dol Call
lltma, Molenol provldlld.
.
donllal, office olo1n1no 11 blldroome, 3 baiha, IOido o! (7401441-33841or your ntw
To S480+ wk
AppllcaiiOnl Are Now Soing on
offordobll
price. ,,.,,.1, In ground pool on hOmt lodlyl Trado Ina wtl·
Fretlnlorrnoil0t1
Hr. Aooopllld For.CNA'o &amp; Rto-\7401Dt2·2t79 or (740)0t2· WllliondiCI 112 ooro. won- come
24
ldonl Auloltnlo. Locol, 391
do~uloroo In Gr10n SchOol :::;;:_________~
1•801 -428-4780
Com/*lllvo Wogoo &amp;Fomi·
Olllrlol. Save r11110r 111 WI hlvo III&gt;P&lt;OXImoltly 10

'
MoonllgHI Eooona. Full
nrvlco mole tnd tomole ea·
corte ond donooro. Pro~
and Pro/ealllonalond Conll·
dtnllll. WI 1100 do Birth•
O.y, Prlvala 'lnd Bacnolor
P,_ortlu
epm·
eom.
(r40)388·170t.

r ..

6

HDIWANI11Jl

·-iiiii_.l

1.~-------' Qaragt Salt. Saturday 0·4

I

· Vour Klllllllf.l K•uw, Dtlllven:d Rll&amp;ht lu Your

NOW ONLINE

Place

·To

..,

SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) ....., niWtt
.
The charges were revealed
Chuck Finley fomtd it difficult to
think about baseball after his wife, houn before Finley was scheduled
actres! Thwny Kitaen, \WS charged to make his season debut againsi
with spousal abuse and battm'y. · the Anaheim Angell, the team fur .
The Oeve!and Indians' pitcher which he pitched for 14 seasons. ·
w.u !C!'Jtched &amp;om his scheduled She \WS ~~JTCtted Monday niWtt .
!tart and did not come to the !Ia· after arguing with Finley as they
dium Wednesday alter authorities dmve home from dinner, said 'Thrj
said that ){ir.aen att1cked her hus- Ric:harfh, a spokeswoman fpr the

OOCV142

We Cover ·
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!

5·12), 2:t8 p,m,
;
Tl&gt;U (Do vii 11·t 0111 O.kland (lldlo 13·
8), S:SS p.m. .
..
•
MinniOoit (Miyt -17•t3) lllbiOnto (!'tal•:
ladly W), 4:06 p.m.
•
N.Y. YlnkMI (Mulllna 17·11) ll 811111· •
mort (Ponlon 5·10), 7:05·p.m.

Finley's wife·arrested.

IHI!AIFF'I SALE
IlEAL IITATI!
. CAll! NUMII!I'I

- Sentinel - l\e

CLA551 -F IID

TIIUNMy'ICial!lll
Ollrolt ILiml 5-10)11 Tlmpo Soy (Rupo

3 0 1.000
Oli&lt;lond
t .557
2
firtclly'e Qomoo
Sooltle
I 2 .333
FIOrkll (~verez t ().~~ 11 Phllldtlphla Ana holm
(Ouck\Wtth 3·2), 3:05 p.m.
,
0 3 .000
Plnlb&lt;Jrgh (0.11/l!lomo 3-7) 11. Ch~
'IIIHclly'l Goi!IM
Cubi(Biro 11-1 t 1. 3:20 p.m.
San Diogo !TOmko 0·01 11 Sin Frenclaco 1llmpa Soy 8, Dllroll 8
Olldond 3, 1llxao 2
(RUIIer 14·12), 4:05p.m.
l.lontllll jOhko 1-4) ol C/nalnnotl A""holm 7, C-nd I
SHHit 7, Chlclto Whlla SO&gt; 4
(HIIynH• 7), 7:10p.m.
N.Y. Moll (Aallolo 8·14111 Allanla (lO))IZ
4· 7). 7:38 p.m.
WICI~'I OlmH
MZOOI (Hilling 12•11) II MIIWiukH Toronto at Bolton, ppd., rain
N.Y. VonkHI 1, Solilrnore 0
(Ruocn 8·12), 8:05p.m.
$1. lOull (W.WIIIIIml 115-01 II Houtllon lomflo Soy 2, O.lroil 1, 12 lmlnge
(MIIck17·3~, 8:06 p.m.
· Mlnneooll t, Kon111 Oily 0
Colorado Cl1acon 8·101 11 Loa Angal11 Olkllnd I, TIUI 8
(1111111 ().01, 10:10 p.m.
Clevettnd t, Aneholm I ..
SIIHit 7, Ch/Oigo Wnlla SO• 8

but not before Red Sox
b
sta•ter Dust1·0 Hermanson
Scott Hatteberg's ases•
'
1 d d · 1· · h · h h
was forced to leave the game oa e smg e 111 t e CIS t
l·n the second ·lnn•' ng Wi' th a drove homekl the go-aheadd
gro 1'n 1·n,iury.
run · as Oa and remaine
'
Always a fan favorite in unbeaten with a wild victory
New York, where his affinity over visiting Texas.
for the city's nightlife is well . The, wm was ~anager ,Art
chronicled Wells hat a histo- Howes SOOth With the As.
ry of pitc~ing well when it
Texas rallied for five runs
matters.
in the seventh, highlighted
Nicknamed "Boomer," he by Rafael Palmeiro's threeboasts an 8-1 career record in run homer.
the postseason with a 2.74
David Justice homered and
ERA, a big reason why drove. in two runs for Oak·
George
Steinbrenner land, which beat 'l'exas for
brought him back to the the sixth straight time , Billy
Bronx after shipping the out- Koch earned his first save
spoken left-bander to toron- with Oakland.
to in a trade for Roger
TWINS 1, RoYALS 0
C lemem.
Eric Milton (1-0) gave up
Wells allowed four hits, two first-inning singles, then
wl!lked one and struck out retired · 19 strai'ghc to pitch
.
one in? t-3 inningt ~gaimt visiting Minnesota over
1.
u
k
. eei
the 0~1oles . It was hJS tint Kanm City.
IOf
start smce last June, when
Milton struck out rwo and
Wells cut short a disappoint- did not walk a batter in seven
With an oversized gray jer- in g. 5-7 seas~n with the crisp innings while outduelsey hanging from his shoul- Ch1cago White . Sox to ing Qan Reichert (0-1).
ders and the familiar No. 33 . u~?ergo back surgery.
Eddie Guardad,fpitched . the
on his broad back, David ·
I thought he had a pretty ninth for his second save.
Wells stepped to the mound good curveball, and he used
Devil Ray• 2 Tigen 1
and resumed doing what he't both .sides of the plate,"Ya.n ' 12 inni~g•
'
always wanted to ~es manager Joe Torre md.
Randy Winn snapped an
.
do pitch for I thmk be kept . them otT 0 r · 10 1 k ' th
n n
1
v
k
b
1
"
'
•
•ors
rea
WI
an
""'
N
h
t e
ew ,or
a ance
·
Yankees.
N ew~omer Robin Ventura single in the 12th inning that
No wonder he likes it so homered over the right-field hfted . Tampa . Bay . o.ver
much. He's great at it.
wall off Jason Johnson (0· 1) Detroit at ~roplcana field.
Fighting oft' ari uncharac- in. the seventh inning to
The D~vll Rays, who lost
teristic case of jitter~, Wells break up an outstanding an AL-hlgh 100 games last
pitched magnificently into pitching duel.
seaso~ • are off to t~e first 2-0
the eighth 'inning at the Yan·
Wells was lifted after Mike start m the team 1 five-year
kees beat the Baltimore Ori- Bordick doubled · in the history. They are two games
ales 1-0 Wednesday night at eighth. Steve Karsay then over .500 for the first time
since May 21, 1999.

tan

-

~rtbune

1012

(1..,.....1218.

!fhol11..., ~

. ...._..
GIIM TOf&gt; Tllble. 4

t~ . lian(l,
ollllra

-N __,

IIW1vtl

umbrtl/a ond
MlnrMiallHI Ouoitly
, bOitdl. Mldliulrt _ . 1 · - (7'"0)~ee uu1
'
old Plld 1100 lor- ...,.. ""
:
ond

=:,..;
... - ·
ill tor 1121. Call (740)246- ltOii;
0321er • .• .,...

Wll .......... ..,.. good . . _,
irllOk ' -• Ilia 810,

125 740-7424757

.

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

•

�.

.

••

~~

t'

1r. .__~..~-"'-- .....

SliM. WOOd Ot Cool Bum- 1899 Hon&lt;11 Clvlo EX, 2001 S:IO 4x4, Full 4 dOOr
tl', Hoban Gat WtldHtr· Blacl&lt;, SII,DOO. Auto, Excal, crow coo. 7,500 mllta.
, . . _, 3 Tralltrl, 01 or• 1tn1 Cond111or&gt;, Now Tim, Sllckar prlet, $2MOO, grtat
ant lllzM (7.0)992·10t2
CNIN Control, Powor Win, dtollor $18,000. Colt Hollie

'

~-~~-:::--:-::-Vlnllgo 81aok Wool Cape

StJI'IIuEs

Adlortblo AKC Golden R.,
lrlevor
Puppleo.
VII
Chocktd. l740)379,:1639
AKC Mlnlturo Plnachor puP,
plot 3 female $380. uch, 1
molo 1300., 5 -too old,
poporo on promiMo 304,
458,1988
::::::-:::-::--:---:-AKC Reg. Black Lab pupplea lor Mit ,good hunting
proapocto VOice moll 441 '
7183orcall 304-875~4488
AKC SIOorian Hulky Puppy.
Block &amp; While Female, Blue
Eyoo, Like Snow dogs.
$150 to $225. 1740)446·

FQO

1

1'

r

1 )

'...J

.Jfllnl

in

Beautiful Famate Bolton
Terrier Puppy. 8 weoka Old.
1740)258-! 997
':--"-:'--:-::--:---:Oachohunda Pupplea lor
Mlo. $250. 1740)445·3243

I

11'5rRUMJ!NI'S

Several String tnotrumanll,
Ampllltor, PA Syatemo and

· Mualc Equipment in gener-

al. (740)245,9189

'"'

j

M111UR'll

740-667-0363

.

-

Hill's Self
Storage

door, 1uper nice cat wtev1ry 14~ Polar Kratt Aluminum nence- Painting, vinyl sld-

~ "••••y Fomueon 4•43 option. new tlrn. 92.000 IC' Jon Boat. $300. Phone tno. carpontr'/, dooro, win,
• • ,...,..._
••
£
$
(304)875 2248
dowe, baths, moblkt home
185 HorN) 70 houro. 4WD. tual mlleo, 5,!95.00. 1'
·
· rapt~lr and more. For fret

eab, heat &amp; air, AM/FM
CUHtto lhlreo. Frcnt tlrea
12.4~24, rear llreo 18.4·30.
130,000. 0111 Hollie Marcum
1740)388-8834

304, 773~5! 88, 740 '9 92'
8719
1992 Pontiac sunblrd, 90od
condition, caii740-949,3Q87
aher lipm,

1991 Welk:raft 25 112 h. 112 eatlmale call Chel, 740·992·
Cabin, Sleepa 8. Stove, 8323.
Sink, 454 engine, 295HP,
(740)387,0850, (740)387, l:lr"'"":~~~":":'..,
7272.
El..r.crRlcAl1

Dloc- 7' King KU11er. Exce~.
lent Condhlon. $450.
1740)245~370
•
Ford 5030 Tractor, 82 H.P..
485 total hro., 4 hyd., largo

1993 Eacon LX Wagon,
S1350. 1988 Mercury,
11100. 1~ 1/2 II Boat,
85HP. 88 Trailer, 51000.

1999 Polano Wave Aunner,
3 Seater, Excellem Condl·
lion. New Trailer, 1740)448,
0183
.
Mlotor Boat &amp; Traitor with a

O

I

1 740 )388~9908

291170 Baahan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-$48-2211

r

l.w-Rmo~iiGERA!iiiiiiii110Niiiiiorl
~

Realdontlal or commirclal
wiring, now MF'IIce or re,
polro. Ma~nald etec-

weighted tlre1, flberglatl 1994 Toyota T100 fruck, 70 h.p. Evaue engine. trfclan. R
oonopy, 310 Ford End foal!- VB, auto, AJC, I OWQII, (304)875-4577
WV000308. .
or. with Bh. bucket, equip- $4,300; 1992 T~ PaHO,

~=~~~ S1:. ~ onFI~~ ~~;ootcO~~: 4 ~;.,~~::

r Electrical.,

Houra

:(175-1788. ·~~~~

1304)875-2902
Kubota :!010 4x4 28 horae
power 190hro, '8' tintah
mowor, • 6' buoh~ hog,
113.000
17.0)992,2401
...ntngl. •lllillldt.

A/C, $1,400; 1988 Corolla,
4 dloor, auto, A/C, low mlleo,
12,400. ·740-2f58:80t2
1995 Do&lt;foo Spirit good
ooncttlton, t2250.oo: 108K
1740)849:3228.

Maaaoy Forgueon 382, 55
hp, 717 hr., llko new,
$1 5,800,(740)985-3843
Set of 3· 14 Inch high eiNr,
anot John Dttrt plowo.
Good Shape. 1740)378,

1996 Honda Ctvlc LX. Auto,
Air, Cruloe. PW, POL. 4
Door, Bleck, $8500 OBD.
7 40

·

Free Estimates
11111\t:t:t II Sl

:;1:::::;)388::::=:'.::98===::--:~'-:

Mlll!1h·utH1

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

AuthorizedAgent

Advertise

new In the

2 lwo:l'tarrOfd AQHA rogioltrtd lpptndlx ooldlngo.

Groan brOke. Ona Palomf·
no, ono Bay.
Alklng
$2,SOO.OO tach. 740,8435178
':':'"- --::-- - 20 yr. Old Ouarlor Mare,
BliCk Wltll While Bockl,

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

1989 F·l50 Exttncltd Cob,
Topper. Very OOOd Condl,
lion. $3500. (740)307-7530

5 apeod, Atolt Hitch &amp;

Groat 4-H Horoo. Will t981 GMc Sonoma e'

W'~":a."'f.t':~"!i. ~:r Cab, Topper, 4•4. 1JK
~~· $1500
oao. =:·v-~ r~'i:
3

7..soo.

1 .0)44I·IOI
Trucit,
'1740)441·
QOOd 4·H lnd FFA Fair 0013 .
Pial. Hamp, Yolk and Pot· 7:,99
:::::-'-::F-:t:::•• -:""-.10
:-:B:-rarn Croatt&gt;rld. (740)388· . 3 • ~.
' nuno
8()33, ( 740)38e-OI 7I afiM GOOd, High . MIIOI, $2300
e:QOpm
OBO. (740)25H267
"**ll, WhKo New Zoa, 1994 Ford F150XLT, 302F1
land doe Now ZootondiCeJ. ~. pwlpl, amllm ...... tilt,
' doe. 7&gt;40-048- oruiM,
....ftOoralltt
oloth 1""
Homlo mbl
leriOt, lui'I'Wr
matching
2378
topper, 0oc1 mat, tlntlcf ,.,,..
8httllnd I'OIW t400 Gott - · duat - · c11rome
"1-10~.(~7«l~l[!l-~~~~1~1-·:-=,.·
- · 88,000 mlloa, Ell·
:::
. oondlllon, .$7,SOO.OO
Throa y-. old fiOidon pony ,:,080~·.,:7,_,-;.;..~21,;,3_1-,--~
1111111ort, pol, but not
11rototn to rt~. Aattlng t 997 Toyote Tocoma LX,
1421,00, 7&gt;40-742-3033
2x4 EICI. Cob, NT, AMIFio1
;;,;;;=.;..;..;;..;.;==- CD, NC, PIS, Cruloo, Tint·
Wonted
to buy
CoY•
.,_
prlco.
Tall fatHorae, t8 .,., ltd llnlr, 1'or1ntou
. _ llhlrJ&gt;,

r-.., - ·

or · Proforal&gt;ly &amp;21(, Super 811arp, $10,500.
G!ld!rtp: (740)2AHt..
(740)441·1871
&lt;IIYf·
Whtto 5 '1'. old ftmalt Lama (740)44Hlfl18 -...go,
w/3-oldblbylaml. 22' lox TNOfc, No Enalno.·
....... 1-'t Doo~UV. 8 QOOd for Slorage. lll!OO.
, . old. 30U'IW2311
(740)448-23H

~-~11111.1850.

~01(7~)~

["'..

~~

m:.~

Now Homes &amp;. Remodeling
"Specializing In Log Homes
&amp; Rubber Roofs"
Garages, Pole Buildings, Concrete
Roofs &amp; Siding
Co111rrtercial &amp;. Residential

~_..,

.(ff:o.
lll!!-

w••r
(740) 992-3987
&amp;
~ftft~~~~
owner

Operator, John Dean

TFN

Clll.
1Jinyl

WILLIAMS
EXCAVATlON
(Syracuse, Ohio)
Bulldozing,
Trackhoe/Backhoe,
land clearing, Septic

405 5th Street

•Residential

tank, ditching, water

lines, site work,
basements/footers,
driveways, ponds

(Insured)
Free Estimates

Business Services
Sunset Home
Con·l!t""Uctt"on·
~ W

.---~--------"""'-...,
.

.......
"Quality Home
lmprovttments"

Compottu.o Prtm
New-·R~tna

HocnD&amp; • Room Addlllooll
Sldtna• Pole llaml

Decks • Gal'll&amp;es
Fm Eadmela • Wvtll91'

(740) 992-2753
(740) 992-1101

MANlEYS
SELF STORAGE

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
(101x10' 610'1121')

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

G&amp;R

33S6 1Bailey Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
"Service You
Can Count On"
Owner

Gene Arms

WERRY'S

Garegea, Pole Bulldlnge, Roofa,

'r·"=============~~
RESIDENTIAL &amp;

MANUFACTURED HOUSING
Ht-Emdency Heat Pumps, Air
Furnaces

'·lftlnUI:Dtl·

fiiii:IIIIIUJIII,

WRITE$EL
Roofing· Home
·Maintenance-

Gutters- Down
Spout
Free Estimates
949-1405 TFN

~Cut Above

the Rest"

Houre:
Mon·Sat 10-4
217 E, 2nd St•
Pomeroy, OH

(740) 992·5908

and weekend
care available

992.;sg75
email@

CONTRACTORS, INC.
Racine, Ohio 45771

740-985-3948

CONCRETF/BLOCKIBRICK
• Footers, Walls, Steps •
Plat Work,
Replacements, • Walks
and Drives • Srencil
Crete

Free Estimates
Serving Ohio and W.V.

. wv il031712

Advertise

in this
.space.
for
•so per
month

I den'; wan+ to hur+
your f•~l;,.,,, ; bu+ i+
wouldn't ~!' ri~nt +c

lit

s+ay a courl•. I nopt
you vnder•ta"d .

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"

&amp;ETTER, IF liE JUST
ROASTEI' TIIEM

Bl

ITHURSDAY

•I'm 5 .. 8 Yftlr I'Art WornnliH
• Fne IJI"IIal Ther.-lat
• Vne Ill You Com_.r
W•rrwoty On Htlf&lt;l lllodtlt
fMI'V. •:s'l'lllll\1'1'.~ •IIIIIOF. lnnnlc&gt;ry
• ll••k lll•nclnM r\•1ltoblt
• rrtcH Fit r\11 BudJIIU

Frt~llltlnatle

IIIATINQ

HENDRIX

lrpnt lqulp.

HealbJa "

10 Yr. Ptrta I

Coolln1

t•

ltlt.

o.

~· f1,3110 (aa.)878-

.::13~1.:,0::--:::~:-:::--:--­
.,

good tiroa, . . _ noadl 11114 .loop GrMct ~
work, POQ.OO or ,,...., ~ 4114, . . _, Ewoy740- 11411
lhlniJ WOrfll, Olr1IQI ~
IIIOtlltnt COtdloil. 122K
tm Unootn Con1foorqt miiH, S7•ts. (740)448Coup .... 3tt7
.
• 480 Y-1 eng, IUOI good od 1t181 P-450 ~Old 414,
304-117....,17 lpm 4 c1qor .,., ..., DIOiof

Fri,Jay, Af&gt;ril 5, 2002

'

I

It'&lt; likdy th•t you'll b• i11 •
volvo~ i11 more than on• &lt;II·

'

Anytime.
AU the Time."

terprisc in the year ahead .
They m~y not be interrelated,
but e~dt will yield th• type!
of r.,uhsthat you dc1ire .
. AlliES (Murdt 21-A!&gt;ril 19)
- A KOool i~ca utay ~otne from

•• .
'...

:. ~uurce other than you.
S.J!lll&lt; gem• rould be uncov-

• Veo1YIIcir • Bq
MOno F~.. "Ill 111111 In)'• t-tpHCt, manuel.' 7,oo0 lllbleld lo FuU Utile cll'l
tlmt.
mlloa.
S38.000 ,.
t982 Otdt 811, .... good, - 8ll 1111 0.,, 111110 1111
Other A' llorlel
-good. 1100. (aa.)B1t- 1011. ~ dUr11t&gt; Dod,

-l)rfce.

2321
~
1001 -fat Ill.· Call
Wll
...
lor 128.000
11183 lufdt aytotfl. 1300. Hollto Ma=m (740)388(740)4411:3717
-

( 1 Wt 'I'J/ '&gt;il//

llrlvewaya, Pallot,
Parklno'play Areas,

ciates. ( ;et a jump on life by

· undt'ntilnJinK the influences
that'll ~~nvern you in tht ytar

I

Loeal1143-5264
Supplement; Life lDIUnote;
IIIII Flnel E11pe• 1n; Cancer a:
Retirement,
" 401K RoDoven;
m

•

•head. Send for ynuf A&lt;tro·
Groph prrdictiono by m•iling
$2 tu 1\mo- Craph. c/o this
ncw• r~ prr. 1'.0. Uox 1758,
Murr.1y llill Station , New
York, NY 10156 . Uc sure to

.. .
Ill/

, Jtatc

TAUitUS (April 20- May
I

,..111 !xplliltiOI
,_...,1111U1

the one· to follow iu course .
On « you c&lt;~&gt;bli!lt your
route, J t.m't lrt uutsnlc iiTnu .
cm.L'll Jeter yo u .
GEMINI (M•y 2 1-Jtm&lt;' 211)

~

r

•

(tollffw)

yum ZuJi ac siKn .

20) - The road u&gt; &lt;uccc" lies
in pcrsistcllcr. amJ yuu·re juu

••
,•

Sldlwalkl, Floo11
2t

ertd if rou listen to your asoo-

•'
'

~or Medkel

84dllllen •Nerflltlr
• 'lbaDeat Co.er

877-353-7022

· -- llun't just u lk .llmut your
br i ~lu ideas, m.ak ~ a 'ol1n!rlcd
I

'

· by Lula Campo•
Cipher Cr'/PIOQrama are croatod from quotatlorto by 1t1110111
pootona Prattnl. Eacf1toHor In lho clphlr ottndt 101' anottlor,
Toc»y~ ct~: · 0 11/UifS J

Ctltb~ty

-10.

'IRYY .I!Q
•

RQ

RLUPAIAQ

HZU

JAM

J AT

ZURPH.'

IRN

AI'IZUHYCU ·,

TXY

WPAH

I

IAHZ

. HZU

WPAHHIKKUPN~Q

· PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Beware you be nolawallowtd up In ·
bookal An ounce or love Ia worth • pound of knowledge.'
-John Weeley

wo••
UMI

THAT DAILY
PUUUR
ORtorrangt lottoro of lko
lour tcromblod wordt bo·
low to form four 11m~lo word1.
r--;;;-::- -·~-:;--,

I

DREN0 T
11

,

,

I. I,

12

.

I
I

I

.

1=."'.:

My husband is very poor at rB·
memberlng special dates and
days. Oneyearhafcrgctmybirth·
t;tay, but granny reminded me that
lit's better to remember spectaf

,

r...,.Ar-U,_· -~.,s_,_u"T""-1

pI I I.

, ,
MU R y M

I

1---,r-~--rr-"T"_,,

I,

~~

,

1., r.

I', I,

f--rT_W'T"I....,..G_Er-H"'t:"_, • • · · • • ·,

1·

1

1 1

·

t e ~:. m:~: .l~k~h:h~~~~~o q~~:d~

-.1.-..;...1.,_..._..._..__. ~ou develop lrom llop No.

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
IN THES E SQUARES

3 bolcw.

4

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Meadow. Knock · Aloud · Pagoda · GOOD I LOOK

My husband who Is a hypochondriac-, returned from
visiting the doctor. "That doctor Is a real sadist," he
m,umbled. " He keeps tellillQ me how GOOD 1LOOK I"

'.

.~ ~

U-HR.
SERVICE
"'ne Prlee.

t

1..t Cflew· ..... 8ltvtllldo
lhor1wtwf-. 1S00oar,

APRIL 41

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.,

r
r

&gt;Hiullng oLimlltone
oQrritJ • .land o'fgpeoll
tflll Din oftluloll

ac.

(10011114110

• llodlll

I

aeo e... 1111

ONE

-

t

Ito.

AT fl. TIME ..

~-

SeD-Storage
.3J79J HO.fli RJ.
,.,.,.0/M

(olemani'J
---

3ll

· lislling West's sui.t
while he, West, still
has the spade ace as an
entry. .
As you have two
stoppe~ but two cards
to drive out, it is usu ally correct to 1luck
the first trick, After
doing that here, Y&lt;ltt
win Ean's hc;~rt rc tum and play " d1•L·.
Wlll'n E:1st Will! with
his ace, he docsn' t
have another heart to
lend. And if East does
have a heart, the suit
must be splitting 4-3,
when you will lose
only two heart tricks
and arc safe .

BUT IT WOOL" 8e

Agronomy Association Standards

Alllllklt

'*"'

maining heart, eitab·

J!5J7 St. Rt. 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 45720
• 4·H feed for lambs, hogs, sleers, chickens and
rabbits.
• Seed Potatoes
• Onion Sers
• Full~inc of Bulk Garden Seeds
• Fertilizer Specifically Designed for Garden Crops
• New Fertilizer Buggies
• All buggies have been paltem tested to meet

J

1974 Chriy Nova, 300,
o18.000 ot1gto11 miN. one
- · 11101 GOod, !our good
Uroo, 12,800,00 or trldf;
Groncf Am. n1oo bodl',

I w&gt;n+ to

I

~~~
High I Dry

~

thoughts
in mind when he
wrote in a letter to his
future wife, Annu ls.1·
bella Milb;mke (who
ldi him after !lnly a
year of m imiage), "I
know that two and
two make fol1r •• and
should be ~lad to
prove it loo it I could
-· thuugh I must say
ifby any sort of process I cuull.l convert 2
&amp; 2 into five it wouiJ
give me much greater
pleasure."
Urid~e players muy
have dtfficulty in . no·
trump contracts whc:n
an oppon~nt has five
cards in ;J suit he is
tryin~ to establish ••
as in this deaL
WL•st k.ui&lt; till' lwart
siK, Ea!l putting up
the queen,
First, rnuttt your
top tricks, There arc
five: two hcarls and
thr•'e dhunonds, So,
you must drive out
both mil~ing ace~ to
get to nine tricks.
Here, i'f you wjn the
first trick and at'tack
spades, you are safe,
But it il natural to
start on the dubs .
Then, though, East
can win with the ace
and return his re·

Day, evening,

P/1

'-'

h;~d similar

children

HOWARDL. ·

Stnll
lNf

twot•
When he replied,
"How um t h do y ou
want it to be?" he w.~s
emplwed,
J&gt;erhaps Lord Uyron

:' BARNEY

Now accepting

MI!YIOchtgribuam

~

cuu,mant applying for

WITTLE ONES

or

W.w

a JOb was asked,
"What is two a nd

••'

SUNDAY I,;AL:Ll:IJI

74"-742
U"
· • 3411

--~

Suppost'Jiy

••'
1..-r...i'O

740-992-7518

FREE ESTIMATES!

A" ll.t

Five cards

I

COMMIJKIALIM HSIDIII11Al
FREE ESTIMATES

Sldlng, DecIce K1tc h8nl Drywall
·
1
1
&amp; More

~ lU

•

Opo~- "'

~

992-3174
1 mo :Y13
pd

11\'r

New Horhes • Vinyl
Siding • New Gar·aae••l
• Replacement
Windows • Rooflna

Bryan Reeve•
New HOmH, Room Addltlone,

•

&amp; Qll ... $

BUILDERS InC.

I

Conditioners &amp;

740-892-3885

~
882-2343

........

V!Wwrillobl9. ~ h.

PLUMBING
New Haven, WV

ru
:u
• "- Q'

r

I I tl'l

• I

~

Pocket Knlvee
&amp; Collectible•

~

..

• J '

pr~tend

I

1982 GMC piCk-uP, lufl:t~o
Old, 89,000 mlt11, now
paint jOb, whlto lpoke
wholtt, alum. toolbox, aak·
lng $1850, 1740)84~2821

!jll_lj

&amp;

In this space
for
'25 per month

Chea out whars

-

140-992 -9158

18,000 llrm. 1740)245-5087

II'

..

'992-5479

!fi!!JfJWJ flli!Jili!JlJ!!!J fll!,!J II;! MACK'S
J.D. CONSTRUCTION

&amp;

Condition, 100,000 mll11,

I

Jeff Warner Ins.

~": .. ~

&amp;11/int.. A~ lint.~;....

COiiJPUTfRS

78

7:00AM • 8:00 PM

l ___....,.!:.!,!~~

1

1998 Oklo CullaN Clara, 4
door. 81,000 miiM, loll 01
2820
_
opllono, now tiro, 1 owner,
Time lor Frotl-ng Pu- VIr'/ oaaulllut, In porloct
lura and Hay Flotda
ccndlllon, 15,395.00. 1·
ATV Broodcao1 BHctoro, l2 304·773-5188, 740-992·
87 9
\loll, Hlgt1 Quellly, Fila moat ;,
_;,1:._-::-:-:-~c-:::-­
ATVt, 5296.
· 1997 oeo Prism wllh ToyoJim't Fam~ Equtprnom Inc. ta Engine, 51 .ooo mtiM. Au,
(740)448-2454
tomaflc. Air. One Owner.
Book 17500, Aollullt Tille;
LivEsrocK
$3500 OBO. 1740)448-4788
1998 Mlon1o Corio, Excallont

I•

.......
.."

Holloway Street , Hender- IInder, $1000. (30,.)528· waterproofing.

EQun:J\IENT

r

,,.

r.

iii!~;;;;~~;;;;~ son, WV. Phone (304)fS?S· 5515 9-Spm Alk for Dabble
iO
FARM
1747S
(740)25e-1502 aher 8pm '
1992"Lincoln Town Car. 4
C&amp;C Gonorol Homo Mtlnto·

1

Cellular

CARPENTER
Sanitation
SERVICE

PUtS

L--------'

I \II\ I -.. 1 1'1 '1 II "
.\1 1\I ...., I (Hh

r

THEIIAPIST
10 Yean Experience

days,

Ll ME- )
sT0 N.E

=~--::---:-

Mt.sJCAL

· I''"""

MEA Croaaword Puaal•

LICENSED MASSACE

BANKRUPTCY

740.992 7036

8627

r

•New Homes

L· , ,

-----=--- :-:---__,.,.;;,-,--- HERBALIFE

~-:---:---:-::--::-

The Dill» S Awl • ..... J

T 1r.•.: 'h. Pi1IN
:u' ·t PoiNTING'

I

~

1.~------pl,
~
8 Full BIOOdtd St. Bomartl
Pupptoa. 8 matea, 1 female.
s150 ooch. Both paronto on
prtmlou Call 1740)2581852 ahor Spm.

16

Call: 339-3785. .

•vo ......

wl-.

I

875:(1314

ROBERT IISSEU
CONSTRUCTION

95 Pontiac Tranapon 3. I Buick 455 cl motor, 90%
Specializin11ln: Deep
top condllton. 1304)875, outomallc, AM'l'M calttllt, ~. ssoo. 400 Turbo • G1rage1
1'115\te, Swedish, Shiatsu,
8132 (304)875~1844 or air, till, cruiM, high mMn, Longtall thaft tronamltllcr1,
Cranioucral,
•Complete
vtr'/
dopondooto, 1150. 1740)448-35&lt;11
rcfle:xolol)', Myofascial
01.
$2,900.00. 740-992:2952
and Yoaa Therapy Gift
Remodeling
95 Dodge Neon, Tinted :::'-::-::-::=-:-:::-:-:Certifk:ates Av1tlable
Wlnclowt, A/C , Rnr Spoil, 97 Ford F~350 XLTI, 4dedx4, I!IIPillll"~ro~
.• -~~&amp;-., Stop &amp; Compare
$30-4' minutes
or. 114,000 mlltl, $2500 poworalroke, auto, 01 '
V\MI'UCO
$45 - " mlnutes
OBO. 1740):J88.0129
many
exlraa, ,
MOTOR H!lllmi
FREE ESTIMATES
7.0.985:3~
s, 9,000.(740)992 ·2401
WSIIMeiiiiW Slllt
" F
96 Morcur'/ Couoo~. loaded, evenlnga &amp; weekends.
·
IWOOd
•
T
740.992·1871
1978 "'
37119 Tt1111 lltM, Just
rid. V8 automatiC, 79,000
• 2 . u11Y
" 7122/TFN
mlloa, VIr'/ oharp car, aak, 97 Toyota Tacoma air/ till, 5 Self Contained. Completely
tng $5,000.00. 740·992· apetd 4x4, much more oxc. Aomodolld,
$2000.
2952
cond. $7800. 304:578-2331 1740)357416e ·'
:::'--:-'-::--:----97 Ford Explorer, 4x4 , 2000 Dodge 15 Pa-nger 2000 Wlnn Motor Homo,
Leather Interior, 88,000 Van. Loaded. . 21,000 9,000 mllu Coot over
Independent
Clll relieve a deiMor of finaaclal obli••llona and
mlleo, $13,000. (740)446, mlloo. Coot over $30,000 $80,000. Sell lor $35,000
.7506
new. Sell lor $21,000. duo duo to falling health. 740·
Distributor
IITIJIIC I fair dl&amp;lributlon of ISSelaiiiiODJ
Ll ly' A I S I .1989 to falling hoafth. 741).742· ·742-3033
crediton. ~penon JOinglhrou&amp;h bankruptcy
c~:vv"" cu0~1 c:e•s,ooo. 3033
•.
·:-:1.1-oto_r_H_o_m_o.- ::a7=-·:-:Ye-:ll..,ow-, ·
I Lost 27lb.
may n:llln catlin property, known u
1984 Mercury Cougar,
Counlr'l Club, 33' only
32
*exempt'! propeny, for hia or her personal use,
II aoo. 1990 Pontiac ~rand,
MOTORCI'OJS
15.800 mllu A mutt - ·
Thia may Include 1 car, a house, clolhes, and
Am, 4 dloor, St200. 1965 ~
, Too much 10 llat. Only
100%
Ford Crown VIctoria, $800,
·
$15 ,700. 1740)448-9210
household &amp;oodl, You should di~ any
1990 Pontiac Grand, Am, 2 2000 Hondo 450 Foreman, =:-:"':'7.::":::-7';-:-:--:: natural/Guaranteed
quealions n:aardlna bankntplcy 10 an ottorney
dloor, $1200. 1989 Pontile (740)441 ~8230 aftar 8:30pm FlV: 1998 Ooldlan Falcon 3l
bcfon: proceed!••. for lnfonnatlon regardina
Ftroblrd, VB, 5 apotd,
ft, mint oonclltlon. Slid~ out
$1800. 1990 Fora Tempo, 2000 Yamaha TT·R 125, LA, picketed ook cablnota
•
Banknlptcy contact:
SSOO. 1992 Meroury Topaz, Excellent Condition, S1750 and kitchen noor. Selling lor .. _. .. ........,_Wlllllm Slfranek, Attoraey
11400. 1987 Ford Aeroatar OB0. (740)258~8257
bOOk valuo. SI4,SOO. Call " " " " " ' - "
(740)591-5025
AlheDI
Van $800 1991 Ford Tem·
l740)25e·11164
L..--....l&amp;.lllloiilifoll L_,.,;.,_;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..l
po 's120&lt;i 1995 Mercury 2001 Harley Oavldaon
Mirqula S750 1988 Olda XLI 200 Cullom LX Blue Tioga, 1994 model, tully
Citra, s7oo. 1fi92 Goo Mot: 1,043 mttn $11,500: equipped, FO&lt;d Chaoala,
YOUNG'S
ro 1800 1991 Che~ Mot, I304)a7s-2897
Twin Bodo. lloopo 8, good
•
•
.,
shape. Yardman -42 Inch
ro, $800. 1979 Oodgo PICk, 96 Honda 300 Fourtrax 4x4, cut, good ahope. Coli
up, $700. 1987 Plymouth 1740)448~2715 or (740)258, 1740)367:7070
Horizon, $300. l984 GMC 8710 Aaklng $3150
All Makes Tractor &amp;
Brtoadter Semt, 53500. Call
·
·
Delivered &amp;
• 'Room Addltlono •
1740)368-9303
For sale ,, 1990 and , ,
Equipment Parts
R-oling
1993 Yameha Warrior
· .Spread $15.00
Factory Authorized
• New Gar1ge1
1988 Buick Century. rune ATV's. $2300. for both •1'116r-'-';H~OME~~-,
per ton, 8 to 1D
• Eltctrlcal&amp; Plumbing
Case-IH Parts
gOOd. many new partl. phone 304:695-3678.
tone, limited
$500.00. 7.40'992,1933
~
IMPRo\IEMmrs
• Roofing • GU11.,..
Dealers
• VInyl Biding 6 Ptlnlthg
1988 Mercury Topaz, 4 dr.
IIQA1S &amp;
area, call for
1
(){)()
St.
Rt,
7
South
• Pallo •nd Porch Dec::k•
228389 mlloo 1700. call
roR SALE
IAIEMENT
detllll. Cell:
304·875~4817 after Bpm
. WATERPROOFING
(740) 591 2173 Coolville, OH 45723
Free Estimates
Mon.~Frl., weekenda any· 12 toot Aluminum llahlng Unconatttonal lltettmo guarOr luve n"eme
V. C. YOUNG Ill
time.
.
boat. 600 lb boat tratler, 9 antee. Local references tur992·6215
p
I
Q
nd
p
112
HP
Sponwtn
Evonrudo
nllhed.
Eotabllohod
1975.
end
number
1991
1
~or:roy,~~
TFN
ont ac ra · r x motor, ewing away trailer CaM 24 Hrs. (7..0) 448·
~------"'~""
SE. 2dr. $2,000. 080. 801 jack, HummtngOird Depth 0870, Rogero Basement
.•

Block, OriCk, plpM,
llnltlt, ttc. Claude
Winttro, Alo Qranclt, OH
Cell7&gt;40-245,5121 .
,

ludgtl Prlctcl - 80 Plymoulh VOy- V:ll, Ilona Alllypot, To
auto IOldod, IOOkl and runt OVer 10,000 T , _ _ ,
QrMt, ntW dru SISOO. 304, Rebuild Kilo, 740-245-Sen,

.

www.mydtllyu ••ML.com

I

OOP

4 Nta~y How Tlrtt,
QOOdrl&lt;lt P18S/75R, 14".
Llttttmo Wtrrtnty, 1185.
(740)338:0&lt;192

1;. Nllun Maxima . LOaded.

Bvn.ooiG

i

•

- · sunroof, CD Player, MI...., 1740)388 8834
Cll11740)388:9525
'

witt. porlod Aed Trim. Ptr'
' loot lor Civil Wtt At-Enact· 94 OodQo Spirit. 92,000
"'""'· 155.00 (740)2118- mllta. Air, i'llt, Crultt,
8448
11000 OBO. (740)258·1233

i

Thunc:tay, April 4, 2002

\

..

cfl(u·t tv. CXCl'LII C tll c lll . ( )JI I)'
ii C: Iiun ' l'.\11 b l'i l lj.l t hl.' l ll il 1t' o ·

LJci up;.

Ci\NC:Eil Uun c 2 1-Jul y
n) •• ltttj•l&lt;lll•'ll t rh.llt H&lt;' th.u
you (eel wuuhl h4.'11L'Iit 110t~
ouly ynurself.. but o the r~ i"
wdl. They wil l J' rovc tu be
a,lvnni&lt;IJ.(L'mls H1r all .
LliO Qul y 2.\- AuH· 22) You usu:tlly f&gt;refor to call your
own ·shoJI, but co mbining
with •nother could produ ce
what neither of you could do
on your o wn .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scp1. 22)
-- Goo~ dtinll' can happen OJ
work when cv&lt;rynne Iouks
out fnr •ach other . The•• de-

vclnpmcnu won 't emanate
fro m prnun• i11 authority, but
from follow cu-wnrken .
LIUilA (Scp.t . 23-0 cc. 23) •
- Eve11 if you may nut be fully
awart of it , yn u arc both
popular a n~ influ•ntial with
your P• • rs. Fo rtu nate ly. it

doesn't nttd ~our recognition
to fulfill iu•lf.
SCOiti'IO (O&gt;t. 24- N.,v .

.22) -~ Sut:Jalt7ir"ag wuh if1cml'

Kratifying. a&lt; •pcndi11g tint &lt;
with your f.tmily . If you have
w 111:1k1.' a c:lloicc, k C' t.' ~' thi; in
' mi mi.

SAG ITTARIUS (Nov . 23-.
Dec. 21 )·· T itning ·ll crucial,

sO if you attempt to l' romote
someth ing, w ait for the right

OIH!ning to laun ch yuur idt:iU .
If yu u hnvc a ~ lron ~ 1(·1111 1:
pl an. everythitt g will f• ll ittto
pl."•·
C AI •lli CO ilN (ll cc. 22·
Ja n . 1'1) •• A nottcc:t hk ohtt't
Ill C:lfC llf11 U,1 11 C l'~ fO Ufd (1fOYC:
tt')

~~ ~·

nr. ltcn.t ll y

. ~th· ,a nt,a~l.'m l ~

li&gt;r you . 1\ccp y&lt;Hi f' eye pcd cd
fur the inJicatoD.
AQUr\lli US Qan . 20- Fcb .
I'J) •• The ball 11 •qu.rcly itt
n~ur l.'ourc, 110 r.tiH· l h ~· Jnitiaitvt, and m:tkc thit&gt;l(l " ·'PI'""
to · get • new endtavor otT the
grou nd . •·
I'ISC ES (Feb . 20- March 20)
· -. Surpri&lt;tnttJy, it may b• the
th ingo which you have linle
C&lt;&gt;ttlrul "vcr th• t could tum
out tu br the 111011 promising

fi:,r you . Ll't

th ~

elenumu have

their way:

1i aay br fu11 , but 1t wo~n 't be .H

I

�..

Kyger Creek Plant among Ohio's dirti~ A2

-II Q .... llT1rll ~-

•
Malaseouty's

..

lAihlfslnslde

.

Appearq e~er~ nusday in~ Pitt Sentinel
High School Play
AsHToN -

fW\ftlm tt~ ~

wm ~ ~

Dll\1 ''Doo't Root~ lbt" (11'1 ~
. 'The~ I the ftMtu bt ~ llftd Is i~·
~· l\bOOt blah~ ~\S 111\d ~WlYS wM 1:'1
t~uerut~ ~lp..
.
~pi~ mm M "~~&gt;"'· 111\d ·~ vt ~it the door,

Hometown Naws,.per

Crash
doses

United Fund
Tough

FROM STAFF REPORTS

ear

POMEROY - The Pomeroy / Mason 13ridge was temporarily closed 'thursday evening after being struck by . a
tractor trailer.
Accordin g to Mci!l' County Sh~riff' Ralph Trussell, the
bridge was closed around 7: 10 p.m. after a semi hauling
·metal trusses hit a corner of the bridge while attempting to
,make a wide turn at the bridge approach on the Ohio side.
"The bridge was immediately dos~d and oflicials with
th~ Ohio Department of T;Jnsportation were contacted,"
said Trussell ."T h~ bridge was inspectt·d and only light damagt' was reported ."
"The bridge wa• reopened a slfort time later," he added.
Trussell said the semi driver was stopped by police on the
. West Virginia side of the bridge.

Dance
POINT Pt'.BASI\NT - The HMIDOO Pm'k 'too.lh
C&amp;.nl\\f wm bast il ~ fur !lt~th..., ~\lellth- 111\d tl#bll,\•
~ &amp;tudM~ oo Sa.~ t'rom 7J~,m. ttl It) p.m.
'n\e elwlt b ~ ll« ~·
.
.

I;

I

ChariM It Sliytt, S9
Vlralnl• Hull, '19

•

Wlffiam D. Durbin, 78
LilAh lltttket 84
CynthiA Northway, G6
D..... AS

FuGazi

Mlt)IJL~I)Oil..'f Uui~J Ft111tl fur

. FllOIIZi will be performing Fi'ld"Y
AprilS nt HuntillilOil ~s 22 22 Club, 2222
3n1 Ave., Huntinatoo. ~ OJ)I!I' ut
7:30 p.m. Tickets are $6. . Mtw infur.
motion c:l.ln be obtu.ined by en"ll.llling
Nathan Boggess nt punkroekprom·
date&lt;taol.c:om
·

Exhibit
· • On exhibit nt the Hunlinaton High
RCMISSMCe Center ls work tenturi~ l t
artists from the Tri·Stntc Art ASilocllltlon.
Hours are from I0 .to 4. Tu4.t~duy throuJ!h
Saturduy. For inlt•nnnlion call 523-4071.

· Htsh: 40!. Low: 20s
DMIIIa,AS

Slwlna forw1rd

this weekend

WASHINGtON (At')
~ Brtak o\lt the barbueu~
grlll1' tlayli~ht&gt;sa\tlns . tlmc
rehuus thh weekt:»d.
.
'that 111~~~~~ ~~~ th~ dot:ks
ahead - sptlhg t&lt;lt'Watd, fall
ba~k - to galt\ 1111 hour o(
light hl. the eWilltll! · tot
wartl1 sUnllller evenltlg
rettuthltl.
It~ aim a I!OOd tltlte to
replace batteries lt1 slitOke
alarms, slllcty adlltll:llte!! utgc. ·
l:&gt;ayllght-savltli! tltli~ lasts
until Oct . 27.
5tlli1C patts tlf the COUll•
try dtllt't observe dilyllght!il\llng tlllle. Those ltldttde
Atltoha, Hawaii, the part o(
lndlalla ltltilted ltl the J:lait- ·
ertl thllc ttllle, Puerto P..ko;
the Virgin lsland1 atld
Atlietkan 5atlioa.

'Art'
• The Chnrlcston Stage Cmn.l'""Y will
halVe Performnnces of "Art ut the
Capital Center Frldny, A_prll S nnd
Satiudaf, April 6 nt 8 p.m. For lnl'ormll·
tlon cal (304) 343-!1272 or 766·5721 •

·Jazz Dance
Ous Giordano Jw: DW'\ce Chlengo
will perfonn Sunday, April 7 ut 3 p.m.
Combines mnny types of dnnce into one.
Perfonn1111ccs arc 111 tbr nil IIJCS. For
tlcketlnformntlon, cont110t the Chnrleston
Music Association 01 744· 1400. Ticket
sales arc for seuson only unless buyer
lives 50 miles or more fron\ Chnrleston.

OHIO
Pick II 3-3·4
Pick 4: 2·0·7·1

Expo

luck~ 1: 6•11·30.! 1•36

Pick 1 dey: 8·1·5 · ·
Pick 4 day: 3·0·1·9

• 2002 MidWest Music, Movie nnd
Model Expo will be held Slllurdny, April
6 from noon to 8 p.m. lit the Columbus
Convention Center. Ticket price Is $25
and can be obtained online by uslna
www.tlcketmoster.com or ehorae-by·
l·phoneby colllna (614) 431·3600 ..

·W.VA.
Dally J: 4·3·2
Dll~ 4: 3•2•1•1
Cel~ 21: 4·5·G·!H0·21

lndu

Lipizza~er ·Stallions

lllctl0111 • 11 ,.... .

Celtndar
Cla11Witd1
·Comic•
Dear Abby
. Editorial•
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

. · The ·world famous Llplzzuner
Stallions will be at the Nationwide Arenu
on Saturday, April 6 sturtinJ nt 2 p.m.
Tlckelll are on sale runslnglrom $17.50
to $24.50. Tickets can be purchased
online
by
going
to
www.tlckctmuster.c;om or by culling
(614) 431 ·3600.
.

o

Ken Peplowski
The Columbus Music Hull and The
Firehouse Jazz Society presentH Ken
· Pcplowski and the Benny. Oondmun
Swin11set. Peplowski wfll be performlna
Saturday, April 6 at 9:30 p.m. Tic:kcts
can be bousht for 520 by joins online to
www.tlckctmaster.com or· by culling
(614) 431 ·3600. Children 12 1111d under
are admitted f~, For more information,
contact the Columbus Music Hull ot
(614) 464-0044. Box office hours ure
night of i hpw time and 30 minutes prior
to the lhow.

Joe DifFy
WTCR presentll Joe Dlll'y
with the HWY 23 Jamboree ut the
Purumount Arts Center Sunday,
April 7 ut 2:30 p.m. 1\ckets can
be purchased through www.tlck·
ctmuster.com for $ rs or by c:ull·
1n11 (304) !23-5757.
.

HJabway 23 Jamboree

Steel Guitar Jam Coming soon •• ~ .

• WTCR, an cvenlna featurlna
local talent, 8(!Uate dlinclna anll
family entertainment at 7:30p.m.
Snturday, April 6 at the
Paramount Aria Center. 1\~kets
are $10 and $5 for children. Jlor
Information call (606) 324·3175.

Carrot1bp
The evc=nl I~ ~n rrom JO
u.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday, April 6
Carrot TO!) will be Pllrform·
at the Hl8J!Iand8 Museum and
DI8Covcry Center. More ln(or· lnfl Tucllduy, April 30 at ~ g.m.
matlon can be oblalned by cdll· ut the Purnmount AJU· Center.
.Ticket~ llllll be obtained by aolna
Ina (606) 329-8888.
to www.titlcetmo~ter.tom.

AS
83·5

86

A5

A4
A3

A3

81 ·3

A2

CIMIO V•llly Mllthlnl Co,

The
Meigs
Colltlty's 20(Jl e&lt;Uilpalgn was
su~cessful dcsP.ite • increasing
dlttlcultlcs in raising timds.
llruce Fisher, treasurer of
the UI'MC, addreslcd th~
increasing dittlculties in ltleetlng the needs of agencies
~erved by UFMC duri11g
Thunday evening~ alumal
meetht!l of the Ul'MC Hoard.
Ilad1 of the tlhlc ogehdes
recelVitl!! fu11dlng tlllt!Ui!h
UFMC took a five pettelH
cut ill its allocatlou, fisher
said, but thel\ltld's board plans
to "ltlakc Up" the cuts "' the
year progresses, If possible.
"We're glllllg to be askhtg
you fur your hclpt fisher told
the agellcy reprcsetltativcs
attctldihg Thmsday'! tltccting.
''We believe the stories you
tell us o!~~h }'l!ar dclllqll!thlte
th~ !tlifl':JI'tam:e of th~ Wilril.
that the Uulted !llllld for
Mel~ County dl;les ror, the
people of our collii11Uitlty, a11d
it'! bnporti!llt to rclllclnher
th•t a $20 gift call be jttst as
illljlOftattt &lt;II II lllrget otl~ ."
IJUtllig the tlteetillg, 1htn•y
O'IJell and bonald Vaughan
Jr. were t~ppoittted to the
UI"MC board, and '1btit IJoolcy, president, outlin~d the

Thornton still
•
recovering
BY BRIAN J. REED
I!REEOIG&gt;MYtiiAILYSENTINEL.COM

ANNUAL MEETING - Above, Tom Dooley, UFMC president,
addresses board members and agency representatives during
Thursday's meeting. Below, Bruce Fisher. right, UFMC treasur·
er, presents a check to Margaret Par1&lt;.er of the Meigs County
Historical Society and Museum. (Brian J. Reed) ·

POMEROY - "The power of prayer is getting me
through thi!."
,
13y telephon e during Thursday's regular meeting of the
M(•igs County commissioners, the board president, .Jeff
Thormon. disc ussed his ~ontinuing recovery from a second
tnajor surgery in three months.
Thornton rcmait,lS hospitalized at St. Mary's Hospital in
Huntington, W.Va., where lw underwent the second opeT'Jtion in late March. His address is Room 4163, St . .Mary's
Hosp.ital, 2900 First Ave., Humingtou, W.Va. 25701.
"I've bce1.1 overwhelmed by the kindness and support of
Meigs County people,".Thornton said, "and es\)ccially the
churches and church groups \n the ~onnnunity:'
_ ., Thottiton. said he has received mort' than 300 cards since
,..,
he was hospitali~ed la!t month .
"Things are going a lqt better now, and it's because the
prayers and support of fdends,"Thornton said.
·
Thornton said he will likely be transferred to a medical
facility in Pittsburgh, Pa., or Cincinnati, for rehabilitation,
once his condition further stabilizes ..

of

buring the regubr business meeting, t:ommissioners

ap,pm\oed transfers of funds for the Me ill' R ecycling and
Litter Control prograt1l and the county auditor, and
approved paym ent ofbills in the amount of$184.487.46.
Thc board tabled action on appointing a new mentber of
the Rio Grande Colnmunity College board·of trustees. The
flew member will replace . Michach Kucsma, who has'
resigned.
Present were colllmissionets Mick Dawnport and Jim
Sheets, and clerk Gloria Kloes. x'
.
1

year~ a~tlvltles.
Th~ mcctlllg was held at

the Riverbetld Arts Council.

....

Suspects held in rash

Gallipolis Fintar
bank robbery solved

of·Racine·burglaries.

BY MIWJIIA RUIIIU
MRUSSELLOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

IV TON\' M. LllCII
attempted to flee from officer! dent, an unidentified male,
tLEAOHitMYtiAil't'!IENTINEL.COM oH fotJt . ·
currently being held by law
1
1\.ACINE - A rash of bur•
"Several check• were stolen enforcement officials in Washglatles IH ltadtle has tesulted . during the breaking and ington C~unty . for breaking
it! the arrest of tWo jleo~le and et1terlt1g and were bcinlli u1ed and . cntermg, ~~ wanted by
law cHforcctrtellt official! by the alleged pt•rpettator,," Racmc pollee for ins alleged
believe a t11an being held by s.tld joucs
· connection with two burglarpollee it\ Washitlgtoh County
ThttopploU!
is ·being ic•; one on Hill Road and
to be the main suspect lu one h . d . wltl b --k ·111 ,1 1 1 lll1other on Vin e Street.
f h
c arge
1 rc" g • 1 '
,. A
.
I
d'
.
o t e. tr 111tcs,
.
~tlterln~, receiving •tolen
pur!e, Jewe ry, ere It
20, property t1lC ft 0 f C.1IC Ck! c.ani., and other nusccllancom
Jamie Thtto"plou!,
"
P..adne, Ql1~ a juvenile were , 1 tl ' • . J fi r ,' H~ item• were !tolen from these
iltteited tit\ Wcd11 esday night rei 1 llg artcst, '111 0 gc;y.
two rc•ldences and we believe
111
1
(or thelt alleged conucctlt!11 In • ntrr~ntly being hdJ the the man being held in Wash~ rcccllt brc,lkltlg at1d cut~rll1g Mcl!!ll County Jut I.
ingtnn County I~ the main
. at~ ltaclnc r~sldenct', an·t!tdThe Juvenile WJ• released !l"pcct,"sald jone•."This indi1
lng to l\adnc Marshal Curtis lit tll hi! co,utt ap pearance 011 vidual is aim wanted by
Jo 11 e1,
April IO, 1a1d Jones.
..
atlthorltic! in Wood Cou nty,
·Tht!opploU! WA! C~l'tUrcd ilt . Jollc! added tf1n~ a thu·d · W.Va., ult •iJnilar charge•."
hiM home by members ot' the Individual, who 1n ay have
"the bur~lary incidents ;1rc
P..adlle, Po111eroy and Middle· bceil Involved in the burglary, still under investigation and
port jloll~e depMt111Cnt!, a11d I! !till sought by authorities more inforillation will be
Mdg~~
Cuutlty
Sheriff'! for qucstloulug.
rd ca1cJ as it comes in," he
Oeparttl1el1t, Mler he allegedly
In anoihcr burglary lnci- added.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis City Police announ ced that
the Feb. 27 robbery of tli e Fir;star Dank in the Silver 13ridge
Plaza has been solved.
The suspect in the robbery, Randy E. Clendenin, 45, Putnam County, W.Va ., committed suicide after he allegedly
robbed a Grayson, Ky., bank on March 27, police said.
· Officers had been working tlosely with agents from the
Federal l.lureau of Investigation field ofliccs in both
Port,~mouth and Charleston, W.Va., as well as local police
and sheriff's departments, following-up a mnnbt·r of leads. ,,
Police were infornml by Firstar employees that a white
male had entered the bank and demanded cash from two ·
tellers 011 duty. The suspect escaped with an undiscloseli
amount of money.
.
Clendenin was sll!pected of th e Grayson robbery. where
officers were able to gain pursuit of the suspect, It is
believed took his life to avoid capture. Local oflicers were
intrigued by the description of this suspect and the fact that
his home was in the area they believed their suspect lived in.
Kentucky official! and Fl.ll agents were able to provide
photographs of the suspect, as well as other trace evidence,
which provided cot1clusivc evidence that Clendenin had in
f.1ct robbed the Silver Bridge Firstar, as well as a UB&amp;T
Dank in C h~rleston .

The Holzer Medical Center Diabetes Support Group will meet
SUnday, April14 from 2:00 • 4:00 pm
in the Hospital's french 500 Room. ·
In Mica• Covnty: Wednesday; April17;at 10:30 am· Meigs Seni~ Cenler.

D
· All ore welcomeI For more Information, or to

,

.

call.t740) 446•S080
•

•.

;

'•·

MEDICAl CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

AprilS, 9 ancllO from 2!00 · 5:00pm in the French 500 Room

....-----:------------.;...---"':.:,-~I..' ~

L.:.:.~.:..:.~::.:.::~----.,..-----------

lO()~

8v IMAM J, Rm
BREEo.t.IYtlAil\'SENTINEl.COM

..

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="464">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9909">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="22945">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="22944">
              <text>April 4, 2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="796">
      <name>barber</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5406">
      <name>corman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2496">
      <name>frecker</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="735">
      <name>hudson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="470">
      <name>king</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5407">
      <name>ruble</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="335">
      <name>sayre</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
