<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7003" 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/7003?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-09T10:28:31+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17406">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/95efde7c932aded1f6657cdbd0336e19.pdf</src>
      <authentication>40007ffa11285d22fb6291bc73c48436</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="22946">
                  <text>..

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

..

�•

The Daily Sentinel

The Dilly s.nttnet • Page A 3

PageAl
F"tW.y. Apllls. ~ou

•

LOCAL BRIEFS

/

Chilies........,.. s.,.•

Report: Ohio coal plants get dirtier

Ohio weather
Saturday, April 6

AKRON, Ohio (AP) increiiSCd their emissions of
Six of the state's coal-burning
sulfur dioxide, which con- ·
power plants are Increasing
tributes to acid r.Un and is
their emissions, according to•a
lmked to health piobl~nlS.
rep6rt.
'
"Instead of reducing their
But they are doing it legalemission : plant like ihe
ly.
Muskingum Ri'.-er plant have
Margaux ~hields of the
dr3rl'3ticall)• increased smog
Ohio
Public · Interest sions grew by 3,529 tons to 14th.
""
Research Group said the nearly 1.2 million tons. At the
Ohio utiliti~\ were not and soot pOllution output,''
1
plant~ have "dranutically same time, nitrogen oxide alan~ in increasing sulfur !hlid Dr. Eric Fitch, director of
increased their emissions, emissions
dropped
by dioxide pollution, according the/ -environment.d science
putting local Ohio conununi- 155,132 tons to 373,140 tons. to the report.
program at Marietta College.
ties at risk."The report tomes "It's not getting worse,"·
The report said 60 percent "This puts resid~nts in towns
from Clear the Air, a national Hemlepp said of power-plant
environmental group based in pollution. He called Thurs- of the country's 500 most like Marietta at un3cceptablc
polluting power . plants risk."
.. Washington, D.C.
.
day's report "bol!'ls."
The planJs' pollution According to the report,
increases are perfectly legal, the Ohio plants showing the
said Pat HemJepp, spokesman · sharpest increases in sulfur
for Columbus-based Arneri- dioxide were:
can Electric Power Co., • AEP's Muskingum River
which owns two of the plants. plant in Morgan County,
Pollution reductions at ranking 'third in the country. ·
"""
lc:e
some big plants in Ohio allow • Miami Fort in Hamilton
utilities to increase po~ution County, ranking fourth. It is
at smaller, older plants under owned by Cinergy Corp. of
federal cap-and-trade pro- Cincinnati.
•
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
grams for sulfur dioxide. A • Kyger Creek in G:illia
. Dry and warmer conditions are expected across the region
similar system is in. the works County, ranking fifth. It is
· on the weekend, the National Weather Scr~ice said.
.for nitrogen oxide.
. owned by Ohio Valley ElecNo precipitation is in the forecast 'until Sunday night, when
Hemlepp said nationally, tric Corp.
rain will spread across the area from west to cast.
sulfur dioxide and nitrogen • Cinergy's Beckjord plant
Highs wilf be in the mid-40s on Saturday and about 10
oxide levels are dropping - in Clermont County, ranking
degrees warmer on Su nday.
.
proof that the federal system eighth.
Overnight ldws will be in the 30s and 40s.
is working.
• Akron-based FirstEnergy
Weather forecast
In 2000, Ohio was No. 1 in Corp.'s Sammis plant in JefTonight...Considerable cloudiness. Lows in the upper 20s . .
the country for emissions of ferson County, ranking 12th.
Northwest winds 5 to I0 mph.
both pollutants. From !995 to • AEP's Conesville plant in
Saturday... P~rtly sunny. Highs in the mid 40s. North winds 5
2.000, the sulfur dioxide emis- Coshocton County, ranking
to 10 mph.
Saturday night...Cleanng and cold. Lows 20 to 25.
Extended forecast
all the gun charges and that
Special prosecutors plan to
Sunday .. Mosdy sunny ami warmer. Highs in the mid 60s.
time would be served .con- try · Gary DeMastry on 40'
Sunday night...MO&gt;cly cloudy Lows 42 to 47.
secutively to any sentence counts of tampering &gt;fith eviMo.nday .. Cloudy wid1 a chance of shoWl'r.;. Highs in the upper for the bank robberies.
· dence, nine of theft in oflic~
6os.
.
and one of money lau:1dering.
Tuesday .. Cloudy. A chance of shower.; during the day. Also the
"They just won't let it go,"
chance for a thundcr.;torm in the morning. Lows in ,the upper 40s and
No appointment necessary ·
said
DeMastry's
attorney
Max
high~ in the mid 60s.
Mon-Fri 8-8 Sat 8-6 Sun 10-5
Kravitz, who wants prosecuWednesday .. Mosdy clear. Lows 37 to 42 and highs in cl1c upper ·
CANTON (AP) - A map tors to · drop the charges
60s.
.
VISIT OUR GRAND .
Thur.;day ..Partly cloudy Lows 38 to 44 and highs in the upper ~Os. accused of heading a group of against the· former \\yo-term
io River
NEW LOCATION!
home-repair scam artists that Fairfield County sheriff.
DeMastry, 46, was convicted
federal• grand . jury has targeted elderly people is
68 GANDER lANE
indicted two brothers on being extradited from Gear- in December on 32 of 50 corIn front of Wai-Mart
ruption charges related to misvarious charges in a series gia.
773-9560
of bank robberies in southAndrew Kutscher, 37, of spending public money on
NEW BOSTON (AP) - er n Ohio.
Akron, who was arrested entertainment, meals and per- ·
New Boston Coke Corp. pcrWilliam Gregory, 56, of. Wednesday in Atlanta, w:is sonal travel. He was sentenced
rnaiicntly shut down its plant Cin ci nnati, was indi cted indicted on 13 felony theft_ in January to six years in
on Thursday, leaving about Wedne sday on eight counts ·charges and one count of prison.
220 workers unemployed, of armed bank robbery engaging 'in a pattern of corMayo r Jim Warren said.
between Sept. 28, 200 1, rupt activity in Stark County.
The plant on Tuesday locked and Feb. 20, 2002. He also
Prosecutors accuse Kutscher
out about ZOO workers· after was indicted· on eight of scamming· hundreds of
faih ng to reach a new labor count s of b!'andishing a thousands of dollars from 13
·
agreement with stee lworkers. filfearm dunng
an ac t o f Stark County residents. They
Negotiations to keep the violence .and one count of said one couple from North
plant open had been under- co nspiracy to co mmit Canton .paid · $175,000 in
way since Monday, when the armed bank ro bbcry, said repairs to Kutscher, on a house
steclwqrkers'
contracts Gregory Lockhart, U.S. valued at S'!OO,OOO. .
expired. Gov. Bob Taft's office, Attorney fo r the Southern
Most of the charges stem
U.S. Reps. Ted Strickland and District of Ohio.
from work Kutscher did in
· Rob Portman and U.S. Sen.
Michael Gregory, 47, of 2000 and 2001, but his activiMike DeWine were involved Fairfield, was indicted on ties date back to 1996, prose~
with the talks, Warren said.
one ·count of armed rob- cutors said':
The company cut off elec- bcry, one count of assault
tricity in the planf Thursday on a federal officer and one
morning in anticipation of the count of discharging a
shutdown, Warren said.
weapon during an act of
violence, Lockhart sa id .
LANCASTER (AP) .- A
William Gregory would former sheriff convicted of
be sentenced to a mandato- corruption charges will go on
ry term of 147 years in trial again Sept. 9 facing 50
CINCINNATI (AP)- A prison time if convicted of tnore criminal counts.

MASON, W.'lh. - Chades K. "Buddy" Sayre, s~. Mason,
died Thunclay. April 4, 2002, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
He WI$ born on Dec. 3,1942, in Point Pleasant,W.Va., U)n o£
Ruby Holcomb Allinder ofPQint PlC~SU~t, and the late Charles
K. Sayre. He :was a tetimi boilennanr tOr Local 667.
Surviving in addition to his mother ue his daughter, Risa L. .
Sayre of Mason; two sons and daughters-in-law, Michael J. and
Allison Sayre of'West Columbia, W.Va.• and jan\es Kelly and
Angela Sayre of Burlington, N.C.; a sister and brother-in-law,
Connie and Jim Rohr of Point Pleasant; a btother and sisterin-law, Michael and Marie Edwards of PQint Pleasant; two
grandchildren and a step-granddaughter; and several ni«es and
nephews.
·
•
·
Friends may call at the Fogelsong-Thdter funeral Home in
Mason on Saturday from 6-8 p.m. Burial will take place at the
convenience ofthe family.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Masoll United
Methodist Church Cancer. Support Group. P.Q Box 336,·
Mason, W.Va. 25260.

Kyger Creek in Gal/ia County
is ranked fifth. It is owned by
Ohio Valley Electric Corp.

().

\llra(nll Hull
• -WALDO -Word has been r«eived here of the death of
Virginia josephine Hull, 79, Waldo, on MondaY, March 25,
·2002, at the Arbors in Delaware, Ohio.
. She was born in ReedSville on Dec. 21, 1922, daughter of thelate Clyde and Edna Polk · Pickens. She was a graduate of
Chester High School.
She was a member of the Waldo United Methodist Church,
a social member of the American Legion Post 605, and Pythian Sisters.
Surviving are five. daughters, 12 grandchildren and eight .
great-grandchildren.
·She was also preceded in death by her husband, Howard C.
Hull; and a grandson.
· Services were conducted at Boyd funeral Home in Marion,
with Pastor William Thomas Jr. officiating. BuriAl followed at
Waldo Cemetery.

Dry, .warmer weather ahead

Suspect.

extradited·

Coke plant
.down for good

Ex-sheriff faces
more charges

Brothers
indicted

Ill

Ill

Urgent Carel!·
'

I
l

.· Buckeye Egg to
1 pay $50,000 fine

NEWARK (AP) - A judge has fined Buckeye Egg Farm
$50,000 for a fly outbreak and illegally discharging egg wash
water into a creek in what is the latest complaint charging the
state's largest egg farm with violating environmental laws.
Even though Judge Gregory Frost ofLicking County Common Pleas Court found the company in violation of a year-old
agreement with the state to control flies and other environmental problems, he refused to close some of the company's
barns as the state asked.
"No .one can argue that this court has not permitted sufficient time for the defendants to ·bring their operations into
compliance with the court's previous orden:• Frost said in a
ruling issued Wednesday.
He said if fly outbreaks continue, "This court will not hesitate to .shut down those barns which are not being operated in
. accordance with the court's orders and prudent management
techniques."

LOCAL STOCKS
FlderaiMOgul --.80
AEP -- 47.15
Arch Coal-- 23.17
USB -- 22.&gt;40
G1nn1tt- 78.07
Akzo-48.73
AmTeoh/SBC -- 38.15 · a-111 Eltdr1cl -- 37.30
GKNLY - U5
Athlend Inc. -- 43.80
AT&amp;T-15.10
Haf11VDIWIIon--53.30
Bank One -- &gt;40.75
Kmlrt -- 1.37
BLI -- 13.97
.
Kroger - 22.30
Bob Evant - 28.43
Lllndl End - 45.28
. BorgWamer - 60.77
Lid. --17.48
NBC -- 22.12
Champion -- 3.14
Cllam*lg Shapl-- 8.82

OlkHI FIW1clll--1~:110

Clly Holding - 1UO

OVB -- 23.80

Reader services
· Correction Polley
Our main oonctm In Ill IIIOrltt II
to be aocurtte. II you knOW of an
lf11lr In a ttorY. Clll the MWtrOOm
It (740) 992·2158.

Associates

Nlwl DeDel'tiMnte

.

TM main

nurnbtt II 992·2158.

Dlpa/lrl*liiXWitlonl tlrl:

Clenlnl...,...,

Ext 12

HeM

Exl.13
Ext 1\4

· 11t

Other HrYICN

Medical Director

Ca// 510W. Union ·Street

.lfedival

BBT- 37.55
P.apltt -- 25.25
Ptptlco - 50.43

Athens, Ohio

{740) 594-7979.

Prernllr -- 9.20
Aoakwtll -- 19.82
Rocky l!ootl -- 7.20
AD Shell -- 53.38

s.... -- 49.78

Shonl)''l -- .38

Wai·Mert -- 59.28
Wendy'• -- 35.04
Wor1hlngton -- 14.97
Dally atock raport1 are
the 4 p.m. clotlng
quotH ol the pravlout
day't tran11ctlona, pro·
vldld by Smith Partner•
at Adv11t Inc. ot Gal·
llpolll,

The Daily Sentinel

Dr. Eric Hasemeler

Ulah flecker

(U. . IIMIO,

Pldllttd Friday,
every ·111
-·
Moncllr
. ll1r011gh
Court
81.,
Pomoror, Ohio. S.oond·claa

=

Plld 11 Pomeroy,

il-~!"ir. 'Tho -

.,_or_,_

SubiCI'Iptlon.ratee
01110111

"*"" .
an.,..,
DillY

Ext. •

CII!Nin.cl Adl

13Ext 5 . 211-

www.~ .com

12
70

...
.,04

50 ctntt
lklbtclriJirl r10I dtll~ng to l)aV lho
canllr 1111)11'111111 1n tldvtnllt dlttcl to
'Tho Dilly 8ofMJMI, Clldlt will ... giVtn
Cll!1or...., ....... No .... \plbl by '
mol ponnlttod In orou wt&gt;ort l1omt
Cll!1or ....... It tvdltllo.

Clroullllon

-omyddyMnUnll.com
On the Web

Pr- lnd

lho Ohio Now- Auoclatlon.
Pwb:w.... a.d lddrfM; correc·
11on1 to Tilt c.11y Sonllntl, 111 court.
11., P""""O'f· 01110 •a1ee.

Ext 3

To Mrtd •m~~ll

rot

CENTRAL DISPATCH

~~127.30

13=-.. . .

e:J.e:l

lssuecllkenses

POMEROY - Mmi4ge
licenses have been issued in
Meigs County Problte Court
to: Ed\W.ro Russell Spencer,
74, l'omeroy,. :tnd Ddores
Ruth Fr11nk, 68, Rcethville;
Dlvid Anthony O uubarure,
21, and Rebecuh Nicole
Congo. 20, both of Long Bottom; Jeremy Lee Sh~mblin,
21, ll\d A!\IDtldi!. Dawn Barrett, 20, both of New H~wn ,
W.Va.; ~nd jason Dustin
Kerns, 25, Crown City, lnd
Christy .Dilne Phalin , 20,
Pomeroy.

Wednesd~y. April

Road dosed ·

Concert set
MIDDLEPORT - The
Matthews Family will IH"scnt
a concert at th&lt; Ash Stre,·t
.Chur.:h, Sunday .1t II :.\0 .1.111.
The churd• is loc•tecl .1t J'IA
Ash St., Middlqmrt.

.Dinner
to be held

Golf
toumament ·

To dose road

·

NRC says hole should ·
have been found earlier

OAK HARBOR (AP)
An acid leak that ate rhrough
a steel cap over a nuclear
plant's reactor vessel should
have been spotted as many as
four years ago, according to a
Nuclear Regulatory Conunission report released Friday. .
Inspectors said there were
many opportunities for . the
operator of the Davis-Besse
plllnt in Ottawa County to lind
the problem, which wasn't discovered until the plant was shut
down in February for refueling.
Plant employees found leaking boric acid created a 6-inch
hole in the steel cap near a
cracked control rod nozzle. The
· hole was stopped by a steel
layer impervious to the acid.
The NRC said it was the
most extensive corrosion ever
found on top of a U.S. nuclear
plant reactor. Inspectors spotted
a second caviry two weeks later.
. The NRC said the damage
did not pose a safety threat but
did order operators of all 69
pressurized wall!r reactors in the
Unill!d States to submit information on the strucrural integrity of their plant's reactor head.
Significant corrosion began

Association

meets

at least four years ago, accordPOMEROY
Mci~s
ing to preliminary findings of
County
Township
Trust&lt;~cs
an NRC inspection. Inspecan~ Clerks Assodation will
tors said it was caused by
meet on Friday ;ot 7 p.m. or
TUPPERS PLAINS
cracked control rod nozzles.
FirstBncrgy Corp., which Hickory Hills C hurc h of the EMS office.
operates the plant, said it \W.S
not surprised by the findings
and that its own investigators
came to the same· conclusion,'
said contpany spokesman
Richard Wilkins.
The plant had visual inspections over the years, but corrosion was overlooked because
plant ·staff and management
for years did not realize the
significance of boric ncid
deposits on top of the vessel
head, .according to FirstEnergy's findings.
The acid is a byproduct of
the nuclear fission proceu
inside. the reactor.
The damage to the reactor's
"
steel cap will keep the plant
shut down until at least June.
The plant is along Lake Erie
and about 25 miles east of
Toledo.

·super Saturday'

Reds knOck

oR.cubs
See Page 81

ROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR LIFE.

OLIVIA FICK BENEFIT

(1 year old liver transplant recipient)
DilliH'r/( hilll''&gt; l' \ 111'1 ion/
l.i\1· \ul'lion

!7:':8

2:00
pm
Tuppers Plalns Elem. Gym
D(ngm Chleken/Noodln, Soup
lltiMIComBrtld/Sandwlch~l'lll

new ltemJ, IJift certlftc1ta,
craft )lemo, jewel..,., miiiC.
·

Odgw &amp;udlgn lncludg; O~er 200

Reine duwjos ror Middleton Doll 1nd Loftpberpr Buktll

f10U5

UH AucUpp; Z H-n llckeiiiO O.V, 2001 roolbalt, handm1de

211-

~.21
181.11

corner cabinet, hllndmoide qulltl/comfotlen, H ton llmnlono,
11vlnp boncll, !Uindcnfted crafl IIHII. lot'eHII, IICIInner, .
Lonpberau bMkell, many other .,..., lltlllll

11011.72

SYRACUSE - SyrJni,~
Volunteer F1n· 11c~l.trt111&lt;' nt
will haw l rhickcn .111,1 nb
oorbecue dinn&lt;r Sund.t\' .a
the 6re St4tion. S&lt;' rVII\~ Will
begin at 11 .1.111 .

GREAT BEND - Ohio
Department offr:uuportotion
has nnnounced that a 1,000foot section or O hio 338 run1\ing south of the Williun S.
RACINE - A pork chop
Ritchie Jr. (R3venswood) dinner will be held at the
Bridse will be dosed begin- R:~dne American Lcl.\1&lt;&gt;11 h~ ll
ning April I0.
Sund:~y with servin g to b&lt;·gin
The closure, due to new at II :1 . 111 . The cost is S6.
road cot\struction, is slated for E:veryone is wd~omc .
60 d~ys, weather pcrn1itting.
Traffic coming from West Virl;inia to O hio will be required
to turn right on Ohio 338
when exiting the bridge.
• Travelers mAy use Ohio 124
POMEROY A golf
as a detour.
·
tournQmcnt of middle sdtool
teams from W.\h~nta, Point
Pleasant, ond Pomeroy will be
held at the Pine 1-lil l~ Golf
POMEROY - Skinner Club Monday at 4 p.m.
Road will be closed to all but
locll! traltice for an indefinite
· period of time to repair a road
slip, according to Orange
Thwnihip Clerk Osi~ FoUrod.

11:111:1-

Plan meetlnp

I():ll a.m., M&gt;urth StroeN,
Usa Coppick, treated;
• 4:13 p.m., U.S. 3:1, motor
DANVILLE - \'\h•kend
vehicle accid~nt, John l~nce, meetin~ will be held at
treated;
Danville Chur.:h of Christ,
4:48 p.m., Holrer Medical . with Brother Oen\'l'r Hill.
Center.Clinic, DonnuJenkms, The m&lt;'t'tittg&gt; \\1ll be hdd at
Hi)ller Medical Centt&gt;r.
. 7 p.m. on S:.tu~l•y •nd h p.m.
Suuday.
on

01110 Vlllly Pu-lng Co.

AciVtltlllng

'

All 01 Ut AI Tilt Hul Thin/:.
Tllal You''' Fa/Jul~u.r AI Fo,ly!!l

PORTLAND- Cynthia Genldine "Gem" Northwa~ 66,
of Portland, died on Thunday. April 3, 2002, at Holnt Mtdical
Center in Gallipolis.
She was born on November 27, 1935, in Portland, daughm
of th~ late Charles and Ada Holter VanMeter. She wu a member of the Stiversville Community Church in Portland, was a .
volunteer at the Meigs County Humane Sociery and Ptesident
of Ladies Auxiliary 2171, Pomero~
'Surviving ate her children, Katelyn Qinl) Holmes of Alabanu, Christopher (Donna) ·Bissell of Michigu~, Kurt Naistetler
of Logan, Kimberly (Byron) Vaughn of Den\~r, €olondo, and
Valerie Northway; grandchildren, Stephan Sag\", Jtss Eisele,
Christopher, jdf and Laur11 Bissell, Rick Naistetler; Matthew,
Amanda ·and Samantha Kingston; and Alyssa and Austin
Vaughn; a great-granddaughter, Mina Kolb-Sag\"; two sisters,
Jean "Miclt" Fitch and Shulee "Chuck" Evans, both of Portland; and two brothers, Gary VanMeter of Alabama, and Mac
VanMeter of Pomeroy.
Besides her parents, she was pr«tded in death by her husband, Leslie North\vay; and a broth~r. Harold VanMeter.
A Celebration of Life and g.~thering of Family and friends
will be held Saturday, April 13, 2002, at 2 p.m. at Stiversville
Community Church in Portland, \vith Pastor Wayne Jewell
aflicia.tillg.
MemoriAl contributiQDs may be made to the Stiversville
Communiry Chun:h, P.O. Box 80, Portland, Ohio 45750.
Arrangements are by Roush Funeral Home, Rawnswood,
•
West Virginia. 1

William D. Durbin

Col,.... 23.88
DG --15.83
DuPont -- 45.70

Ill

Noetl•••r

POMEROY - Lilah Irene Fr«ker, 84, of Pomeroy, died on
3, 2002. at Rocksprings Reh~bilitation Center in Pomeroy.
.
She was born on August 7, 1917, in Pomeroy. daughter ofthe
late William Denver and Edna Heitger Carman. She was ~n
employee of the former Elberfeld's Dep~rtment Store, a member of the Ladies Auxiliary of Disabled American Veterans
Chapter 53, and a ltqmemaker.
.
Surviving are a son and daughter-in-law, Rodney and Mona
King Frecker of Potneroy; a sister and brother-in-law, Mildred
POMEROY - William D. Durbin, 78, Pomeroy, died and Robert E. Bowen of Pomea:qy; two sisll!rs-in..Jaw, Clata
Thursday, April 4, 2002, at Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center Baer of Pomeroy, nnd Lila Caruun of Jackson; an aunt, BliZll: in Pomeroy.
beth Carman of Pomeroy; two grandchildren, Jason Frecker
· . Arrangements wiU be announced by Cremeens Funeral and Amy Frecker of Pomeroy; and several nieces and nephews.
Home, Racine.
Besides her p~l1:nts, she was preceded in de~th by her husband, Earl E. Freckcr; and two brothers, Ivan Carm~n and
: Orville Carman.
. '
Se.rvices will be held on Saturday, April 6, 2002, a~ 1 p.m. at
Ewing funeral Home in .Pomeroy, with the Rev. Keith Rader ·
officiating. Burial wiU follow ~t Pine Gro.ve Cemetery.
friends may call at the funeral home on Friday. April 5, 2002,
from 6-8 p.m.

No Appointment Necessary
7 Days A .Week • 9:00am - 9:00pm

Network Providers For
• Medicare
• Aetna
•Anthem
• OU Employees
~'Central Benefits
• Ohio Health
• Medical Mutual
At ·

Cynthll1ienf

Christ n~u Thpper. Pl•ms
will hold "Super -;.turo•y''
with th.- th&lt;llle of '"The
POMEROY - Units of Prodlg;al Son" on Apnl \J .
Meigs Emergency Services R~gi~tntion will begm ot 9
at\S\\'U\'d th~ c.JI$
assis- a.m., utd the prugwn wdl
tance on Thunday. Units
end 4t 1. lunch " t•nw,,le.J
re panded as lbllom:

EMS IUDS

Bp!Crll(ngwgs• Dwlpllctnhowtr (EtviJ lmpti'HIIator), High

Counll')', Swlnll•l Senior, Fedenl Valley CIOIPf"'

Por mor1 111/o: Tamml Barber
378-9807 or Tm1 Bar111 98$-3743

�..

Opl

The Daily Sentinel

___L_

--~~
Ill~---,_-.­

E'~~aM~~·

... THESJtlW

bM ROSIE-

Ohio Valley Publishing Co,

r

7'-JOp.a.
~---­

IUSEDTO

740 Ul-t1M•Fu: T"IO-IIl-1117
www.ntyCIIII'y u nllnelcom

v-,.z•• IIIIIW,._ti.

atahlerOclncypoatcom

The Daily Sentinel
111 COurt lt. Pamlnly, OND

---'*'
--.c.-

o.rdro fl.._. a.t.t+a

TlfAT \S.

~.to .... ..,.-....
7o)O)"""
-r,]O ....

.

,_fn.

~

'Arm r

r
~ ...'b.

· Publlahlr

T't .... ..._

-

011- t.._u-

.

...

Boo ..l.l&gt;odJitot .....
- W.\'0.
Pwor. Nt:U Tt~WtiAa~
SUa\ll.l Stn-..'d· lll.OO lUlL tn.ll p.a
~1).

_.._,. __

S...""" All!-."-'tf

-A-..,y21lW, ...,.Sa.

~
.........,..._
..... ,_

.........
s.t..""

Gnrt 't

•

_

Agency~ flight

school blunder
trumpets need.for system riform
. • El Paso (Thlias) Times, 011 INS blll11der pmves 11eed foi·
overlwul: Tite revelation of a colossal blunder by the lmmi·
grution and Naturalization Service proves·how massively and
rapidly the INS must be reformed.
'"A night school in Fl.orida received student visa approval
forms for two suicidal terrorists who si~ months earlier had
tlown separate airplanes into the World Trade Center. President Bush W(ls JUstitiably outraged, "plenty hot" as he
described it, and was harshly critical of the INS. There's no
e~cuse tor what Bush culled "this embarrassing disclosure.''
El Pasoans know very well how cumbersome the INS has
become, both in approving visas and in monitQring the peo-.·
pie who receive them. U.S. Rep. Silvestre Reyes, D·Texas,
has authored legislmion that would create an Agency for
lmrnigration Affairs in the Justice Depanmenr. Two new
bureaus would result, one to deal with. immigration adminis·
trution and ooother to handle enforcement. ·
Reyes suid last November that such reforro is needed
because the. INS has conflicting priorities. "It is expected to
administer services and benefits on one hand, ood do enforce,
ment ofimmigrution laws on the other," Reyes ~xplained ....
Bush has ordered the·altomey general to mvesllgute, ood he
!lressed the INS to do better. But it will take more thoo thut.
The reform that Reyes and others oiler must be quickly
approved by.,Congress ~implemented by federal officials.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

Wurship -· 10:.\0I.m.

Flnt Solilhtm Raplist

WEST'S VIEW
.

41 !l72 POIJlCI'll)' Pi\i.~
Pa...aor: E. l.umnrO'BI')'Ull

•

Billy Wilder was dnematic chronicler of social relevance
An appreciation of a Hollywood ti~·
where they dido 't speak the language,"
ure, however notable, may seem a b1t .
Mr. Wilder would later tell The New
misplaced amid the dire headlines of
York Times. "But anyone who had listhe day. But in mark.iQg the passage of
tened to the speeches knew that Hitler
Billy Wilder, who died last week at 95,
would want Austria and the Sudetoo .
we pay homage not only to· a remarkpart of Czechoslovakia. I was on the
. ably creative career in motion pictures,
train to Paris the day after the Reichstag
but to a man whose life, neatly span·
Diana
ftre." Not much later, Mr. Wilder, who ·
ning pr~ctically the entin: 20th c,entury,
also knew no English, was on aboat to
bore Witness to events of recumng rei·
New York, about to embark on the
evooce,
American experience as Ill\ immigrant.
Wilder's sterling screen credits alone,
He was prescient. His mother, his
COLUMNIST
of course, are more than. enough to
grandmother and his stepfather would
merit reflection, not to mention ample
die in Auschwitz.
gratitude. "Some Like It Hot" (1959) which starred Claudette Colbert as a Billy Wilder's chan may have been
and ''The Apartment" (1960), a pair of Europe-roving columnist ood Ray Mil· set by cataclysm ·and flight, but these
comedfes he directed and co-wrote with lood as a Spanish Civil War vet. Leslie ore not recurring themes in his work,
I.A.L. Diamond, are among the more Halliwell summed up this last one a~ not even in his darker ood more cynical
famous titles that won the writer-direc- "unique, sophisticated entertainment explorations of humoo nature. Having
tor ood producer six Academy Awards gleooed from the century's grimmest decided. to become an Americoo Mr.
and 21 nominations (12 for writing, 8 headli.nes, .endi~g , :-vith, a plea against Wilder !eft his past behind. "As q~ickly
for directing and I for produci g). Gth· Amencan 1solauomsm. .
as possibly, Mr. Wilder made himself
ers include "S.lii!~~!.Boulevard ' ( 1950), There was also the smgularly great into an American" his Times obituary
· u ghoulishly memorable riff on Holly- war-movie-cu':"-sRy-thriller
"Fi~e noted. "He uvoid~d the c(ltes and livin~
wood, "Stala¥ I 7," a tout tragi-comedy Graves to Cruro, ( 1943). Set am1d rooms where refugees met to drink cotabout a Naz1-run POW camp ( 1953), Rommel's. victorious swee~ thro_ugh fee and spe_ak Gennun. Instead, he luy
und "Sabrina," (1954), a Cinderella North Afnca, the drama unfolds m a on a bed m his rented room and listened
romance.
Libyoo hotel where a stranded British to the radio and learned 20 new English
Devotees look back farther still to Mr. ~ldi~r (Franchot Tone) assum~s the · words every day.'' This partly expTains
Wilder's collaboration with Charles 1dent11y of. a dead 11_1a11Servant JUst. as how he alone among the man~ German
Brackett that begoo in 1938. In their ~om11_1el h•ms.elf (Ench von Strohe1m) migrs who prospered in Hollywood as
dozen years together, the writing team _as settmg up ~1s staff. headquarters. You actors, directors and ~roducers could
produced a sparkling flow of film could call th1s mov1e another one of master the American idiom as a brilliant
marked ils much by . versatility as by those "unique, sophisticated entertain· . screenwriter. And there was no looking
excellence. There was the ~rfect film ments gleaned from the century's back: "I had a clear-cut vision "he later
noir - "Double Indemnity ' (1944) :- grimmest headlines." . . .
.
, said. 'This is where I am going to die."'
and, to dote, the most harrowing depic- . In mooy ways\ so was .B•IIy ~llder s . Than~ull~, not before becoming one
tion of alcoholism - ''The Lost Week- hfe. Born a Jew. m 1906 m w~at IS now of Amenca s greatest writer-directors,
end" (1945) with Ray Milland. There Po!~d, Mr. W~lder ~g~ htS screen· endowing his adopted land with an
was also romooce - "Hold Back the wntmg career m Berhn 111 the 1920s. enduring film legacy.
Dawn" ( 1941 ), an immigration melo- He later became one the first to flee .
drama bused on Mr. Wilder's own dice&gt;' Nazi Gennany in '1933 as a refugee of (Diana West is a columnist and edito·
experiences as Ill\ visa·need7 immJ· the kind of ooti-Semitism that still rial writer for The Washington Trmes.
grunt, and "Arise My Love' (1940), twists world events toduy. "A lot of my She can be contacted via dwest@wash·
friends had a fear of going to a country ingtontimes.com.)

Sum.tuy SChl.!t)l - 9:Jil ll.m.

Fint BapUsl Chun::h
Pn~\tlf : Mu.rt Morrow
6th umJ Palmer St. MidUlcport
Su1k.lay S..:hool • IJ; 1.5 a.m.
W11rship • 10. 1~ o.m.• 7:00p.m.
Wctlnc5dn~ Sct't'il't'• 7:00p.m.

ltaK'itte •lnl Bapllst
Pasmr: Rkk Rule
Sundny SchtXll · li:JU tun.
Worship · 10: 4() a.m., 7:00p.m.

'wcllru:s~oluy s~·~-...ICc s- 7:00p.m.

West

today is Friday, April 5, the 95th day of 2002. There ore
270 days letl in the year.
Todny's Highlight in History:
On April 5, 1951 , Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were sen·
tenced to death following their conviction in New York on
charg~ of conspiring to commit espionage for the Soviet
Union; co-defendant Morton Sobell was sentenced· to 30
years in prison (he was released in 1969).
On this date:
In 1614, American Indian princess Pocahontas married
Engllsh colonist John Rolle In Virginia.
In 1621, the Mnytlower sailed from Plymouth, Mass., on a
return trip to Elnglund.
..
.
tn 1649, Elihu Yale, the English philoothropist for whom
Yale University is named, was born.
.
In 1792, George Washington cast the first presidential veto,
rejectingn congressional measure for apportioning represen·
tailves among the states.
In 1887, British historian Lord Acton wrote, "Power tends
to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely."
In 1895, playwright Oscar Wilde lost his criminal libel cuse
.. .
against the Marquess of Queensberry, who'd accused the
writer of homosexual practices.
.
•
PLAGENZ'S
VIEW
l.n 1964, Army Gen. Douglas MacArthur died in Washing·
.
.
ton nt uge 84. .
·
.
In 1975, nationalist Chinese lender Chiang Kai-shek died at
age 87.
·
In f976, reclusive billionaire Howard Hughes died in Hous·
ton nt age 72.
.
· , The churches have not been having Pollock said he himself spoke to 200 about the minister who didn't have time
In I 981, Fox Broadcasting Co. made its prime-time TV
an easy time lately. USA Today reports, different audiences a year but he gave to prepare his Sunday semton, so he
debut by airiil~ the premiere episodes of "Murri~d ... With
"Almost
all -Americans suy religion only two or three different lectures to preached a sehnon from one of Harry
Children" und 'The Tracey Ullman Show" three tlmes each.
Ten yelli'S ago: Medical student Suada Dilberovic became · matters to them, yet more of them than those audiences- lectures to which he Fosdick's books of semtons.
ever are opting out."
had devoted a month or six weeks of After the service, one of his parishthe first fatality of war in Bosnia-Herzegovina as Serb 'nation·
In
2001,
25
million
Americans
said
preparation. ·
ulists began forcibly opposing the republic's secession from
ioners complimented the preacher.
they
had
no
reli~ion
more
than
dou"lf I were Demosthenes or Immanuel "1:'hat, was u great semton," the man
Yugoslavia. ln Washington, D.C., a crowd estimated by ·
ble the number In 1990.
Koot," he said, "I could not deliver a srud. ' It ought to be published.''
authorities at half a million marched in support of abortion
"Has
Sunday
become
just
another
different and vi!BI address each week to "It has been," the minister replied.
rights. Wal-Man founder Sam Walton Qied in Little Rock,
Saturday for millions?''
Ark., at age 74.
the saine audience - particularly if that . Some churchgoers think it wouldn't
Then
there
is
the
scandal
in
the
were only one of my duties as it is with be a bad idea for most ministers to
Five years ugo: Allen Ginsberg, the counterculture .guru
Catholic Church over priests charged the clergy.'' ·
.
who'd shuttered conventions as pOet laureate of the Beat Gen·
"steal" their sermons from books of.
with
sex
offenses
involvin~
minors.
Another who put in an understanding "Best Sermons" - or in any case to
eration, died in New York City at age 70.
·
Now accus~tions of pl~g1arism in the word for the clelJ!y who have been make liberal use of semton outJines and
One year ago: The · United States ood China intcnsitied
pulpit ore bemg heard tn the land. A known to crib the1r sermons is a col- illustrations that ore •available under
negotiations for the release of an American spy plane's crew;
New York Times article tells of an Epis- league of the ·alleged plagiarist.
President Bush, in a ~onciliatory gesture, expressed regret
each camouflaged titles as ''The Minis·
~al priest in a wealthy parish in
over the plane's in-flight collision wit~ a Chinese fighter that
,"If plagiarism of the sort that Ed (the ter's Manual" or "Resources of Inspira·
M1chigan who. was suspended for tak- suspended rector) is accused of is pun- ti.00."
trisgerea the tense standoff. Dutch dnver Perry Wacker was
.
..
ing semtons off the Internet and preach- ishable, there would be no one preach- "At least we would get a good ser:
convicted of manslaughter ood sentenced to 14 years in
ing
the·m to his congre~ation.
prl~on in the deaths of 58 Chinese immigrants who suffocating on Sunday."
moo every Sunday," says one disgnm:.
Many people are crit•cl!l of preachers We might also have to suspend some tied churchgoer,
ed in his truck In Dover, England. Wang Zhizhi became the
·
:
who get their sermons from books of the evangelists who wrote the Bible. Father Andrew Greeley, the Catholic
fil'!lt Chinese player to play in the NBA when he took the
(unless they wrote the books them- Mark, describing John the Baptist's sociologist, has suggested .thaj
court for Dallas against Atlootit (Woog scored six points and
selves) and various other unnamed attire (Mark I) said, "Jotm wore cloth· Catholics bothered by poor preaching
grabbed three r-ebounds as the Mavericks bem the· Hawks
108-to-94.)
.
sources.
ing made of camel's hair with a leather send their pastors a subscription to "one
Channing Pollock, a famous 20th belt around his waist. And he ate locusts of the moderately good homiletic ser·
Today's Blrtltdaxs: Actor Gregory Peck is 86. Novelist
Arthur Halley is 82. ActresJ Gale Stonn is 80. Movie procentury speaker, was not such a clergy and wild honey."
vices" filled with sennon illustrations,
ducer Roger Connan Is 76. Country music producer Cowboy
critic. He once wrote, ''The overwhelm- Matthew, writing later, found no rea- stories and ideas for sermons - even
JIICk Clement is 7l.lmPJ1:ssionlst·uctor Frank Gorshin is 69.
ing majority of preachers I have heard son to try to improve on Mark's gift of complete sennons.
~ of Sta!! Colin Powell is 65. Country sin_ger Tommy
ore good and devout persons, I have no dcscri~on. So, we read in Matthew 3, Does anybody care if the minister
Cash is 62. Actor Michael Moriarty i~ 61. Wnter·director
doubt, but. they have nothing to say. "John s clothes were made of camel's uses this "help" as long as those of us in
Peter Greenaway is 60. Actor Mux Gail 59. Actress Jane
Their senrlons ore eloquent only· of hair wtd he had a leather belt around his the pews can hear a good senoon on
Asher is 56. Singer Asnetha Faltskog (ABBA) is 52. Rock
superticiaJ think.ing, limited experience waist. His food was locusts and wild Sunday morning instead of "superficial
musiciwt Mike McCready (Pearl Jam) is 37. Country singer
and pious platitudes,"
honey."
thinking and pious platitudesr•
Troy Gentry is 35 . .Singer Paula Cole is 34. Country singer
But f9r many reasons, .said Pollock, ' Sow1d familiar?
(George R. Plagenz. i~ a columnist for
Pat Green is 30.
"You cannot blame these parsons.''
Maybe you have heard the story Newspaper Enterprise Association.)

.

Sllt~tr Run B11p1is1
l~u111ur: John Swunson

~u; :

• tOn.m.
Worship · I lu .m., 7:00p.m.
Wc\.lm:slluy ScrYiccs- 7:0::1 p.m.
Mt. Union Raplbot
l'u.~tl'lr :

Davill Wlsemttn

S1rnday Schoul-9:45 n. m.
livening · 6;;\0 p.m.
WcUncstlny Scrvlccli • 6:.l0p.m.
Hrlhlt•hcm UapUst Chun·h
' Gn:ul Bcntl. Route 124. Rucine. OH
Ptlstor : nankl Mc..-ceu
Sund11y Sclll)()( • 9:311 tuu.
Sunlluy Wur~ hip • Hl:30 Jl.m. ·
WcJneMiuy EJJblc Stud~ . 6:00p.m.
' Old

H~lllrl

Free Will HapthJI Chun.it
S1. Rt . 7, Middlcpon
.liynlluy Schnul . tO.u.m.
EveninG · 7:011 p. m.
11mrMlluy SerYk'e~ - 7:00

Scrvltlct - ?p.m.

llllhilde H11pllllt Chun-h
S1. Rt. 143 ju~l off Rt. 7
Pustur: Rev. JAmes R. Al!rcc, Sr.
Sumluy Unified Scf\licc
W\lO.hip ~ 10::\0 n,m., 6 p.m.
Wcdmm luy Scr¥it'llll· 7 r.m.
Vlclory llut&gt;llsllndepcndent
52 .~ N. 2nd St. MiddiCp!lfl
l'!l ~ tm : Jnmcs E. Kcc!lcc
WurlilliiJ -· IOn.1n., 7 p.m.
Wcd ncMIU)' Scrvkc.~ - 7 p.m.
•' alth Haptlst t:huf'('h

Ruilruud Sl.. Musoi1
SumJu y School· 10 rt. m.
Worship · I 1 u.m., 6 p.m,
Wcdncmduy SeJVkem · 1 p.m.

•'nrt'11l Run Baptist
Paslor : Arlu11 Hurt
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.
MI. Moriah Raptlst
Pounh &amp;. Mtd n S1., Middleport
l'ustOr; Rev. Oiltx:rt C!'Pij, Jr.
Sunduy School . 9:30a.m.
Wor!lhlp . I0: 4~J.a.m .
Antiquity Raptbt
Sundny School- 9:JO a.m.
Wouhlp • I 0;45 a.m.
Sunday Evenlna · 6:00 p.m.
Pastor: Mark McComU
Rutland Fm WIBIIIptlot
Sllltm S1.

Putor: Mev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evenlns " 7 p.m.
V/cdnetday Scrviee• • 7 p.m.
Second Boptlac Chorrb
Raventw~, WV
Pator: ~~ld W. McClain

Llnpwllle Cllrl•ll•• Church
Pu!llor: Robert Mu~~r
Sunday School - 'i:30 a.m.
Wonhip-10:30u.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdne11duy Servl~c 7::\0 p.m.

Retdt¥111e Churth of Chrltl
Pu6lor: Philip Sturm
Sundny School: 9:30 11.111.
Worship Scf\llce: 10:3U u.m.
Bible Study, Wcdne ~duy, 6:30 p,m.
lleJIIer Churt'h·of.Chrttl
Puslor: NnthMn Rubins1m
Sunduy ~chu0\9: 30 u.m·.
Nunllltll Will, supcrintcndcnl
Sunday w!lrshill • 10:;\0il.m,

Church of Chrl11
lnl.:!tKctlon 7 an~ 124 W
Bv.tmgelisl: Dennis Sarpnl
Sunduy Bihle S1ud)' ~ 9:30a.m.
Wonbip: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wednctduy Bible Study · 7 p.m.

Ahu~11nl (ffllt-,

S.km rtntfl'

IUhle Slutly: Muulttl)t 7:11CI pm
SlmW¥111~

SumJny Sd1u''' • 10 lt.lll.
Wnfli,h\1\ • o, tun,

• 10 : -1~ II.IU.. 7 p,tll ,
llmlmlay tiihll: S1mly lind Vnuth . 7 )l.m.

Pn ~mr:

Wm ~hi p

n,m,

\j

l'•~tul' :

llcwuyn" Stuller
SlmliU)' Sl.'l luul · ~ ; ~ () 11.111 ,
W11 r~lu p · 10 : 4~ u.m.

Churrh 11r JPUN

nunn

sucnuncn1 Sl• rv kt~ Y· IO. I~ u 111.
Humo mukin~ mccl lllJ, l ~t Thur ~. • 7 p.m.

l .ufhl·ran

hllh Vwllry llllwrmwlt' ('lml'l.'h
llttilt')' l(llltltnut1
H.cv hnm tt't1 Mnw~u n
Stllltluy HH•nht,tt7 ll.lt\
'llll!r~t luy Sl' l ll l~'l· · 7 ]1111

~:Hsll .l.!lart
l 1 n ~ h•r : 1\rhm Hn rknc~8

Wc liU c.ot;l u~ .

Sl. JPhn Lulhenn Chun•h
l'inc Omvc

S~riU'Uiitt

7 l'·m.

Mtll'lnt

W~; thw~ t luy St.'n'il'\'

W1•rt&gt; lli1' It a.m.
WmhtcM iny 7 fUil .
&lt;.:uu!YIIIl• l lnll\ld M'• lhudl ~t
Pustnr: llulun Kllm:

l'11rl~h

W11nilup . \1 u.m.
' 1\!CSlhl ~ .'i~·r\'k4.'~ · 7 p.m.

Insurance

Products+

Financial
ENCIES.Iae. Services

1192-M77

White funeral
Since 1858
9 fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
10

';un\IUy Sl•hntl) ~ :.\ {) lUll

S11mluy C\'CIIitljl ~cl·\'k'C f\ 1"111
Wc~hlt' ~lln)' ~CI'Ykc

7 1'111

l'tlnltt.~NII•I4_..bly

Sl. W.l, -1:!4, Mlid""
Wlllluml-h&gt;bftl:k
Sund~ty .~d1111.1l · 10 n.m.
H\'l'ninl! • 7 p.m.
Wc.lu~..-~llt•y Sc!Ykc:~ • 71'·"'·
l'il ~ l,lf:

Tt\wn~h l!l Kd .• 4_f!H('

Sl;IMHf\ • t) 11.m.

Syr•ct!\t' ~·lnl Unllfd Vrt11bylerl1n
hider Muh\Jrl Cn1w

Sumluy S ~ h;11 1l
w.,,'!ll~lt'

lilllo.lll.

11 11.m

ll~errllll't-"' 1•rr11h)'ttrl•n ~ 'hurth
rwnr~ h ill . IJ u.m.

Su1iduy .~chu11l l) u.m·,
Wl,iNthljl • ln il.lll.

\t!Hnl " l

t ' \t "llih · l l; tl

y
R1l., l'nuu:ruy
lotoy Luwln"k)'

Mult~~:rry lit~ .

\'~~tor :

Su11trll n ~

Service.:

Sttht1ath Sch1•'l • 2 p.m..
Wonhlfl 3 11.111

hllh Cl~lflll~ll'hun:h

Lunv H111111111
Hortlord Church Ill Chrlllln
' ChriiUan Vnlon
Hanrord, W.Va .

Pastor:Jim .-.ujlhe&amp;
Sunday Schuol · ·II a.m.
Wo~hlp • 9:3{) a.m .. 7:30p.m.
WcdneJday Servtcc:t •. 7:30p.m.

( 'lnnrh of (,od
Mt. Mortu Chureh Ill God
Mile Hill Rd., RM:"ine
Pucor: Jamet Satterfield
Sunday School· 9:•1$ 1.m.
Et~enlllJ • 6 p.m.
Wcdnctdiy Scrvlcct ~ 7 p.m. ·
Rulllltd Cbureb Ill God

212 E. M•ln Sb Mt

Pomeroy

MI. Oll~tl t mn111unlty Omrth

w,

· . Middlej)()rt Churth of the Nlurtne
Pu tc'r Allcn.Mldcap
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp ~ 10:30I.m., 6:30p.m.

740-992-5444

Brog•n-Warner
~tal ~•tatt
218 E. Second Pomeroy
740-1112-3325

Marketing 'P roD&amp;rfy
Since 1911

•

'}f#U.f4t ?fHU
174 Layne Street

New Haven, WV 25265 ·
H. Andereot'l
Olr«::or

INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992·5130
Pomeroy

.

Pa•w: Terewt Wlldock

South Bttbel New Ttfiament

I rrlliW'I Family Restaurant
"FNturlng /5111tucky Frlld
Chlcktn~ .

EWING FUNERAL
HOKE
Dlllfllty •nd &amp;lrvW. Alw•y•
E.tllbll.h.d 11113
.

992-2121

Countyi OW••' Fk&gt;n.t
Main
Pomeroy, Oh

W. Main St., Pomeroy

.Lit "' ll'ld ~~ tt.K.&amp;f!f• w!lh . . . . t ..,..

992·5432

992·2955

Pomeroy

992-7028

.740-11112·2844 74HH.f2N

sufficient

FLOWER
106 BUTI'ERNUT AVE. ·
Po~ov,OH

for thee: for m111
strenilth Is made
Perfect In weakness.

992-6454

'RoWers lor all occasions'

II

•ngalfn'•

lngel's Carpet
169 N 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

Jf..drn t JnltN.IIt'lthrtlln Ctfrtllt
l 112 milt~ nHnh ur M«d•vlilc
\Ill SUtt~E.K11Uie 124
f'umr: Kcv Rutlcn Markle~
.~untt.y Sd~11.1\ · II .:m.
Sundeiy WPr!lhip • 10:00 a.m. A 7:00p.m.·
W~nc!lda)' S.T'\'Ice. · 7:3() p.m,
WedncW.y Youth Sel'\'l4!e • 7:.30 p.~.

Rvcnh11 7:30 fl ,m,
Tuelldaf II 1burlld•y · 1:3(1 p.m.

R-.W. Yollowolllp

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctor•'
. Prescription•

m.. 7:JI) fllll .
• 7 : ~1 p.m.

Surwtt.y Sehoul • 10 1.rn.

SliiW)' School · ~ :30 a.m.

ht L fllller. DlriCI«
SfO IAII . . Strt11 • ,...,_ OH 411..

lt y · PII~•

Full GUipell.lfhthuuN

Sei"\'ICC-ti • 7 p.m.

Suodoy School · 10 o.m.
I

74o.tt2-514f

111: ~0 •

Wcthu:~ ''"Y Scrvl~:cR

J:ll~llllland Hood, l'umcroy
r·•~ttM" All)' Hunter

P..lo(. All~;, Mid4:1p

Blessed ·are the puFe
. in heart; for they
shall see God.

Wc•r~hil'l

l'11111ur: Mn KntH:n ti. Smi1h~ Sr.
Sun,lily Sdmul . Y. 'll.l 11.111
w,,, ~ hlr • w~.w 11.m.. 7 p m.
Wcdnellllay ScrYh:c • 7 p.m.

'\a1an·•H·

Chun:h or 1he N11..arene

:tllller ;tanerll

Mf.llfrmon lJIIIted Brelhnn
In ( 'hriMt Churrh. . 'II: xu• C'IIH1!11 UIIIi)' un rR M2

lJrtll.:d .-allh Churrh
HI. 7 111ll'tlllll'rlf)

Wednc~~thty

I nill·d lln·lhlT II
l~t-.tor : l(n~n S!lln.ku.
" SU III.Iii ~ Schuol • Y: ~tl.lr..IU ,

Sd1nnl • IJ :1U 11.111.
HYcnh1il · 7 p.m.
WL-dntduy Scr\'lcc 1 fll11,

J[) 10

hi

Chnltr
Pattor: J~~nC .Beiuie
Worthlp • 9a.m.

2M Ws-ii""-•~,OH4S760

l'ta ~ tnr: I :uwumcc lhuah
Sun du~

Cu. Kd , (13

' Mclp Coopel"lllhc Parl8h .

''""'' RonHnth

l lu.m,
WcdncHdll~ Sc:N ice.~ . K~· "'

WcL 1111~Nduy 7: I() J&gt;.lll,

Sunday School . 9 : ~0 u,m.

ThurlldiA)' SctYiceN • 7 p.m.

Sundot S.hool • 9:3{) o.m.
Wor~hip . II 1.m., 6:30p.m.

Wo)l'8l\ lp •' 10:4!'i 11.111., 7:.l0 11.111,

·r,.,,,h Church

Wm11hip - 10:30 a.m.• 7 p.rn.

li' \n 11.111,

Clruntl Sln~ct
Sund':y schulli . Ill II m.
Wm·~hi JI ·

Ml; Oll~e Unllt!d ~tlhodl~l
·Off 124 hchind WilkcliYille
PB~Iur : Rev. Ralph SpireA
Sund~ Sch(l(1l • Y: WI u.m

NonheaJlt Clu,!er
Alfred
P.llltor: JMC 8elttle

Sundu~ ~ch4MII

IIIK'klntciJltrl Chur~'h

Gruham UniU!d MtlhndiMI
WorHhip • 9:~0 a.m. (I~~ &amp; 2nd Su n),
7:;\0 p.m. (~rll &amp; 4th Sunl
WCdnc~a~- ScrYicc • 7:~0 p. m.

Sunday Wonhlp • 10 o.m.• ~ p.m.
Wednetday Service• • 7 p.m.

Davla-Qulelull Agency Inc.
,

s"'""' t 'umnmnlly t:hurrh

U,·,•ltljl; ltutnl, Wl'~l l\1 lmnhlu, W,VII.
11tl\llll' l'lytl~ 1-',•1'11!11

Ml•ldlttmrtl're~byltrl•n

1\·lur. l:hHJHJI l'hun:h
Sunduy ~ ht iUI fo 11 .m .
Wur11hlp It 11.111
Wctln~·)i(.l uy Scr~lcc • 7 p,m.

Uethtl thur(:h
Suntlu~

llttrl

IJyts¥1111..' C'ummunlly ( 'hnrrh
Sumlny ,1-khtk•l IJ:.IOu.ttl .
Wm·qhlp . lfl :.l!J n m.. 7 fl.lll

Sumlny SchtMtl . Ill n.m.

Sundoy Schunl • \i 4!'i run.
Worship · I t ~&amp; . m .

. .-~111111\~hro .

Sm1duy Sd111UI • li : 4~ lUll.

·S1mlluy S.:h11ul · 11:Jfl .ttnl .
Wul·~ hlp · l ll : 1 1l u 111 ., 7:,iil p.m.

992·3785
Full line of

Pn ~lur : l ~l 'lll!

·

('tltllvillc C"lmrch
Muln &amp; l ~ lnh St .

St. Pllull~ ulht•rrtn Churth
umer Sy.:amurc &amp; ScL'flnU Sl., Pumcnt~

7 fl.l ll.

llnlell 'mmnunlty l'hul'l•h
011 1(1. llo!

Our SM~Iour l.ulliur11n ( 'h11rrh

· W~lnul 1111d llcnry StN., ltn\'UR~Wullll ,
W.V11 .
Pa ~ hll' : IJuYid RtJ.~~cl t
SunJuy S.: ht'lli • I tl.OOn.m.
WtM'H hljl • II 11.111:

Ohil)

New dn1~h N11 Stutlhty snr'lf ll'~

~~~ ~lm:

l\1bt.-lun

1411 lh klwc mnn S1., S}ltt~· ~~ ~~·
~ ~1•, Mlkt• ' 11u•mtl~Pn.Pt~'&gt;l t&gt;l'
Sttm lu~ St· hot~l
IO u.m.
liVcnintt • (• p.m

Pn~ 1n1 : Hrl nu llnil.:llr.hs
Sundll)' Sd11~1 l 10 tuu.

WnrNhip • 1) ;()(1 11.111.
Sumiay S\ihnlli · IU:IWln m,

1\ •lii~'IU)',
ll;lll..' \11111

l'u ~ l tlr

Slm,tny Sch1111l . Ill u.m,
Wtmdlip · IJu.m

,

1'1111'"'1\o""........, t.'llo..,h
Olt~rlll, W.Va.

Sc rvl~·cl!: Thm"N, Nile~ 7:UO pm

MlddltiJOrl Cmnnmnlly t'hurth ·
~?!'i i 1Ci1i-l !\t. ,. Mltldlr.'jkll l
PnMiur: Sntu AtKfci'!IH11
Su•KJ~ y Sd1•11•l Ul u.m.
fln•uluw 7:,1!1 fi.IB
\V,•d11l-~tiU)' ~l'l"' ll'l' . 7:.\IJ fl.Ill.

Mt•rnfnu St•r
1 1 u ~ tll t. Dcwuynu Stuller
SUtl;luy S~· huot • II u.tn.
Wm slti)l · Ill 11.111.

Sumluy St'h•ll•l 111;20· 11 u.n\.
Rclluf So,:icty/1 1 ri c~lh'llld II :0.~ · 1 2 :011

\\\'tt.Shifl · ltHl)·"
\\\'lll~"\\b.) Scnl\~s • 1 p m.

w,...h"·!lt!ny • 711.111.

Blh lc Swlly Wed, 7:011 jl.lll.

Chrt11t ol J..atii",.O.y Sal•ttt
St. Rt 160, 441'i- fl247 ur 44ti.7486

l 1.a,.ur. ~hle R.1reman
~~~~hw t;n-.mm~ U\\~1",-'l': fl.~'

1 1 11,~\11\' WIIYlll'

IIMrrllllm\'lllc t'mnmunil)' t 'hun·h ·
Pu~1t1 r: 'lllCI'IIIIIllnhtull
Sun;\n ~ . ,_ ~_lllu . m . 11ntl 7 p.m.

kttd nu, Ohltt

l .at liT- J);n Sainh

n ••...,

.2tkl ..\\t , M...ki~"&gt;rt

Uod'sl\lm1tleur Pr1bw

WcJr...-~tl 1t y, 7 ~_1() 11.111
Snmluy. l :.\0 11.111.

~ '1rrnn•I·!Sut1un
C nnm~ l~~ liu!!lllln Rd ~ ,

R&lt;lo!M~~~tl.ll\o

~·l

\I tit\,~ M.-Quh\' }ht.

Sn\'kc~ :

Wcllik!'il.ln y St•l'\'l ~cs Ill u.m.

&amp; , ~J.Itl-11'\.
H"-u~ . 'HIU r m

Sa\·lnr

'I'll" llell''''~n· f't•IIIIW8hlll Mlnlstr.~
N,•w Lim~· ltd , Mmhtntl
Pu'\11\f' H. ~v, M t ll ~IU'CI J M•*'ln stl ll

lll.•wuync Sttul,·r

Sundn~ Sl:i'll"ll•l • IO)t.m.

~U~ Stf\ 111.'1'."\. • ltl t..) ll "'

Mt ,,, _\lt,Anlltjllll.)'
l 1 , t~h or' k~sc Mmri l'l

lk-lhMny

ldurtl curr Jt'ree i\blhodlsl thun:h
R~\\ L.cs Smmdl and Myru 1... S1rum.h
St~ntlay S.:hut•l · '11:.\U tt. m.
Won.hlp • IU::\0 u.m. nntl (I fl.IU,
Wcdnc!idll)' Scrvll·c - 7:00 11.m.

('•"'".ly t'\•ln:tl

P.a\\\lf \\~ ne ~ lc\\ot:ll

•)•II c;,l'!pd Church of' Uw IJvlna

•1111h lo'ull (lusJWI t 'hun:h
l.•lt\it lt111lt11\\
Pn~ t, Jr: Sww kc~l
Smtlht)' Sd11111l • 'llU 11.m.
Wtll~ hltl • \il ;.\1) ll.ni. AII1171Uil ,
Wl.'tln~~dny · 7 Jl•m,
Ftitlu~ r,• lhlw~ hll' ~e n kc 7 rl.m.

.Wun;hlp • ~: IS·&amp;t.m.

p,n1.

N"" tift' VlrtiN')l ( 't"nter ·
.\77 \ ( "'-""~"' ( 'n.'\'~ ~.1\kl , tlallir~&gt;.~i5, QH
l'u'll"·· Hill St;~t~n
Sun,ft~ Sl.'l\ 11..'\!~ lth.m. ,1111:1 fl'"·
\\hlnc:o.di'Y 7 j\.m. &amp; \'1)Uih 7 p.m.

IU', I.

Sunl\u)· ""''"' ~~~. Hln.m,
Wt.&gt;thl'''d;t~ "l!"'il''. 7 Jl.111.

WorHhlp . 10 u.m.
Wct.lnc"llty :'i c rvlr.:c.~ • IU M.lll

RACINE PLANING' MILL K&amp; C JEWELERS
Mill Wor1&lt;
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

11\.-I,H17

~~ .1 !\ 11mU Sl ., ~MYictliMI
l 1~t~ hll' 1\'1\"&gt;wlll:l\ h

' :.~l

ln • •m.
\\\ wst\111 • '7 1'·'"·,
\\l\.ilk•'o\1;1) s~nk~ • 7 p.1n.

Sl't\ lt'l' 11111\' Sunda~ IU \0 a.m
''"""""-''1.1.1) i '""

11(1'-lnr: Wlllhmt K . Mu~:tll
Suntlu) S\•htk•l • It): I~ tu n.

Run lloiiMSS Churrh .

Th~

S\.-....-.1 • .,~~l •.m.

Sl"~tl;•y·SdMIIll ·

f1CI1 ·&amp;.''''"'1Aw. Mt'''"'

W1'11"Shl)1 · II): m b,m,
·nm~llty s~·""k~.. . 711,m.

ltd.

\\\.""'...t.) """''" . 7' ~· r.m

A•ttiR' IJI\o- t'rtUtr
, . "Full-nnl!)W:I C'hlll\.'11"
1'11,\tlt('&gt;( Jnl111 ,'li: 1,1111) \\':tdt''

Mutltmd
Sundii) S..·huul • lf:JO 11.m.

Wt~l'llhlp

Hldwry Hilla C~ur&lt;h or Chrlll
EvanacliYI Mike Moore

Sdll"-11· Hl:1.' ~o.m .

SdMnl ~: I~ 11m,
\\'nr!!Mp .. 10 h m.
"'"''" Fdl11\\~td)l. Sull\lo~y • ft r m.

Re\'. 1\brk Mlchnd
Smuluy Sd~&lt;.Jnl · IUU·u.nl.

Bractrord Church .r Chrisl
Corner uf St Rl. 124 &amp; Bnu.lbury Rd.
Mlnls1cr: Doua Sh1mhlin
Youlh Minister. Bill Amberger
Sunday S~:hnol · 9::\0 a.m.
Worship - 8:00 e..m.. 10:30 11.n1., 7:00 p.n1.
·
Wtl1_!1esdlty Scrvil:es • 7:00p.m.

Hn1\\'tf

1...1\lnr: K~ilh tt'Mk.'t'

Wetlllt:Sttay Scrvk.! • 7:?.0 1i tn .

Rud•nd Chun:h of Christ
Sunday School :· '.ii:JO 11.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.

)t,~

Smlol.a~

1\:arl Sl., Mid..Jit:P"rl.
PaliUlf: R..:\'. IAtuti Cox
Sundu.y Wnrship · '.1 : ~0 run .. 7:.\0 p.m.

tly~tll

~"~

\\\tn.htp 10:,\0 ~ m..

tll"e« OUirNt,·h l\lhU!oolrieoi
-" 7.&amp; N kdht:-1 H:.J , t1'11.'~~''
,,..~~~........ Rc\ ~·~II) anJ UaiHhl r".:\l..
Suntla) S\'n let"' Ill 11m ,'i;&lt; fill 111
\\,'\.11"'"\o.~) sn, "'-"-"' . l 11m

ktd. Sprin~

7~

Wonhlp • 10:3() n.m.

Wc9no!Kl~y

Sm~.1y

Wtslfy•n Rlhtt Uulln~ Churrh

Sundny Sd\OOI • 9::l0 tu.n.

"l

1\"

\\\ \t'.hi11 • ':':30" m.

O ' U..-11 M~nk )
SUit\luy &amp;:h! ..ll · \I:JO u. m.
Wunhip • IU:~Illl. m.. 7:.\U p.m
Wtd1"11:~W y Scl"ooh.'\" . 7:JO p.m.

Bradbury Church or Christ
Plutor: Jim Eaton
39~~8 Bmdbury Rood, Middlepor1

2 ~601

l"a,h lf:

, ...

').a""W" ~"' hla'l~~'"-'

\~ S.M.i f'hU\'"
A\h St , M"""U&lt;-1'"'"'' f&gt;.:~'-I\W" 011.-tm lhw,"
S\uli.b.~ ~- t-r,.,\1 ltl tlh 111
Su~i.\~ ~t\"-"' f\ t•lJi.tll
\\b.ll~..: ...~ 'kn
J fll.lr m

10 ll.m.

ftfttm Od."ft'S

~

l""~-l­

.

Pmntm)'

1\l~tor. tt~Y.

ln!tnm\ehlll

Wo111hlp • 10 a.m., 6:30p.m..

\\\'of'\hi~ •

l OOp.a.

· 1\~Yl'l\l) Pl\~t\l .

Suno.LI~ ~bt~ · ~ 11 m.

1/J: IU II.l nff H:l \2,

Wtwshlp ServiL-,: • 9 1.m.
Communion • 10 1.m.
Sundu.y School - 10:15 a.m.
Yoolh- ~i:30 pm Sundtty
Bible Study Wed~sdly 7 pm

s.n ....

11 ·ll) lUI\

.... rt('hapot

Phlt (lrul~ Rlhlt UDthtfSS l'huKh

........... Plain Cbor&lt;h or Cbrtst

P&lt;i_(,U'- "'"'

\1 •• l t
\\\lf'.h1p lh -"l ~ tn
_ \\\'\~b.~ ·Stl'\"'-'1.." 1 ·t•l run

"'-lh R\lh~Mnn
1\o."bo..,\1 • ,h, m
\\'"'itur • m «. m

SUI'ld")'IAI;t~JOI· V:1'0 , ,,n; ·
SUI~ wtnhir ·7 p.m.
\\'tdne..\tia) pri)Cf ll~ttlhl»· 1 p.m.

Wa.IM~y Strv~ • 7 p.m.

Sunday S~hool • 9 a.m~

S...""'"" .

~· ~

~---1.-IWQotol

N:•i

M k~lllt.ttl\1

...... . ....
-·-~
"'"""' • ~ p ... . .

~s..

~ ~o!oles..l)

·--\0011;! .. 0\rlst

Stnkb~

·l.a.dln(l CMl. R.tl., R11thu'IIJ
~~~1ar. M.t·~ . lk'o!o'ey Khll!

Sunday School ~ 9:.30 a,m.
Wonhip · 10;.\0 a.m.. 7:00 p.nt.

""""" \\' \\, Rl- I

( lthcr ( ·hurrh,.,
I\"11.~·••Ht._.,~

s.n.,. . '~....

'*''""'- t:looodo

SlhWl;\:tl'-t

Rt~tl)(' Sbaron ffoUft\'51 Cllu"'-h

ll:t'l(:r w.t,'U,)ft

\\\:.~ ~ lO:~LIM

r-11\

1)"'-"'',...
S..l\11~'

Cl&gt;t...... lb...
ftoe&gt;o. ........
lb..l -..
~ So:lotool • 'i-.!10 .....

~

~ti.'IMIIIIil \\\~

MIM'h.'illt

\\\wsJup - II ' '"'" 7:00p.m.
sG\ k."t ~ 1~ p.m

P.umcruy. Burisoovlllc Rd. tRtlO) ,

b)tt

~ S.,-t.,.~ -l(ttrl.a.•
H)" -.I~ . .....
~y.s.:-n ..~ b ~l

....

s~ ~-b...." 'J-""\0• m

V.W.~)

S~mlity Sc ~il

Plagiarism accusations cloud ministers' good ·message

is

.

\\\)tshir • 8: I ~ a.m., 9:-l!'i um'&amp; 7:00p.m.
W...'\ltlcsduy Scn•k'\'5 · 7:00 p.m.

-

......... Jtn.t ftw.tdt .,.~.• ow

h~\ll", Mt-t! 8 M'A'W

Plst1Y: ~ l\'k Kd\1-.:
SunJ.a~ S..·ho.•V ~· ltJ •.m

Zion c••rdo .i11:tui11

~-\~'il~

~Sa'\ h.-c. ..,. ~-

t

\\\....,.. , 't\"'Oa-..~ ~r•

~~~r.

0

~-·lO
~,.

~ """"~ ~•.'&lt;! ~­

P~.: .... lt•~ll'l
SunrJas Sd\lid • lth.. m.
V,\ilfWI' - ~ &amp;..-.

Cll...y l'llarilo t'llol'd
ltlllri.-..;ltn 1lle R•\td

Pas!:ot:Tmy S~t-'llo-.rt '
Sundtly &amp;hool ·Y:JO 1.m.
\\\nhip ~ 10:30 1.m.. 6:.\0 p.m.
.,........,,..., S.rvi&lt;os • t.Jtl p.m.

m

P~.-\\..-,tw..;a"'

"""'"' Gil)' lo&lt;tsuo
SW'klla) :t.t.:h..a.'ll • "-'U lUll
Sun.J;t.y' \III'~'P • 1O:JO «.•n. &amp; ? P-"'
\\~ pR}"C'f 11C'nk'\" - 1 p..:nl

............ Rldto Cloo!do of Clorlst

---tlo.MJI

~~~~ -"'~ f'&gt;....

lkot. IMidol ...... l

lu llftd W Siundli.y

WM:UnSt.
Sunday S..•honl • 9:30 11.m.

'"P-• -

0u'4lltlloKII'IIItS.S Qilllrd
JIO!'i7 ~ R~lUtc ,\l5, ~~·h.-

.,.,..,, tlnt llaptht

..

"'""'

P;M,_.- -""-

'"'"""' • II ....

\\\~

~!Son··~

....... o.m...--.~·.
~ -..~

...~

\\\ ...p.IO:OOIOLWI.
SUD.lQ Sctvlli..""C-7 p.M.

K- Clludl tl Cllriot
Wt'lnbip ~ ~lO ......
Swldly $dlool .. 10:30 IL.m.
hslllf'-JeiTft')' V."')lll~

'* c

~S..~~lOii..M..

~)

h)Str\llr.ti ~ l

~ -.,.. ~

.b1tt ......

Aroo$ n.l~
~t.UI Slftd, RUit.oil

\\'b.tntsd;lly Senirt • 7 p.m.

.....

.......,.K.... b.kr

i(! l.'loooM

.........,.,"" IULa

~- · 'k.'Ooa

.,., b

a-.

o-..r

..

~-

-

~ -lo.!O .... .,., ....

\\~~-&lt;a ""...

hs.l\~ R~'

o..r.:. fA&lt;lmlt

-..,.~ofiMI '

~ S..'h.d ... m~'"

c

Ybulh Minb.ttr. Bill f'rWn'
~ S&lt;'-1 • 'l::IOLm.
W\onhip-11:15. IO:lOa.m .• l p.m.
- y s . M a s -7p.m.

Wvn.hip- 10:45 u n.•

a..m.

~r.::~

lth .... Moio

Rolland flnt llaptbt Clooudo
Sunday Sd-~ . Q:.~ 11.m.

t

r

"A\.~ .. . , a~f\r•

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

~S.-tu.&gt;l ....

S..O.rSdoool · u .....
w..-,s.m... . lp.a._

Fix it

4

~

'" t . b) Str\llt..'ti ... ....

.MwJ•~-·
....... ~­
s..lqSdoPd
- ..._, ....

% &amp; ·-11"1/11.,....

-...;p - l--6p.a.

lli&gt;pe .....,., O..rch tS..,....l
S70 Gout St. Middkpon
s:un..Jo,y s-:ht.lbl · ~)0 111-nl
Woo.hip - 1t l .m. ll.hd r. p..m.

t

ot-1s ....

~·~
.._

h~!Slnu"

'M t

,

~

.Qt. E. ~-St., ...~
~"- ~~Itt'\.~~

''*' \\.......
put.

~~­

~

- - 9-..llluo.

t......., ....

.

SoooloiiS&lt;Ioool· ......

*

~- - 'L'OIUio

~~otfiM! a

~so..- .,...~~~

--o.,.;a..-

- . , ~ oltllrlo!

M'

~- - ·

l'oW!fCWG

t t ~Oiiltllllia a...:t.

P•
a....tla.rill
• l.ll26 Clliboo.. Rol.

NATIONAL VIEW

!11!-~t... N

, . . ....... !SL ....

~- ..... ·l p.a

•

'Sltnal~

( "II:.; ll :.;.1\lo &gt;11.!1

~
- ·-llk.!O
Btios..ly
J -...

l..IMftJ AN""'J.rGM

b

1Jr S•n!l!,.e • PI,. AS

·~­

..tbbt' ttr~~

~---.... - " "
-~of---

~-··- ,..

t

~

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

~- -~~~­

~ -9-.JiiUI.

~1:00~-

·

p

S:.ICkOOL&amp;i:?':lOfo..IL

-~

-IIIA. ..

...... PJ...01

o...a,u.tol$u...

K.nia~.._.

o.tlOicQmln

Controller

s.s..-.-.
Diill7---.. .

ms..lrdA'I~~t... '''P ....

. _ 1to1

~klyHIII

........... ....'fl•

~- ·...,....
~----

~tlc.t.t't e' J
QJ.
k ll ItO

Sot. Cboo.~Upa;-S:lDp.a

Apooiloli&lt;

_.,..

--,_.......,
.....
...
---....
....n__
-a. _ ................
---.....
- .... -........... _"""".....,
---.
.
.
1&gt;--................
..
·---0....
.....
......
--·.........
, ,,.
........ .....
~

-

:flrt &amp;

....

.

6altt~

............,

SUI

OWIZSa.Nh

Cor.

12:9

OfficE SErvicE &amp; SUpply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992~76
,.

�..
'

Communily Calendar
Is published as a free
. service to non-profit
groups
wishing
to
announce meetings and
special events, The cal·
endar Is not designed to
promote sales or fund·
raisers of any type.
Items are printed only as
space permits and can·
not be guaranteed to be
· printed a specific num·
ber of days.
FRIDAY
POMEROY - Meigs
County PERl , Friday.
Meigs Senior . Center.
Noon lunche.on with
me&amp;ting and speaker to
follow.
WEST COLUMBIA Gospel smg, Friday, 7
p.m. West Columbia
l:Jnited
Methodist
Church. Singing will be
Two for Jesus, Every
Thursday, Earthen Ves·
sets, Glorylano Believers .
A love offering will be
taken to benefit Bend Area
Gospel jubilee.

•

.

nd

....;;;;..y
!
~'!r..~
Biggest challenge for gifted son is fitdng in with peers

Th_
._e_D_a_il_y_Se_n_tin
__
el_ _ _ _ _

LOCAL
EVENTS

.

..
Pirates are winning, Pag_e 82
Diamond roundup, Pclgt 83

Page 81
Friday, April 5, 1002

DEAR ABBY: I h.tw ,,
12c..,.,ar-old son who 1- .ta&lt;leii\Kally giltd. He mhler&gt;t.mds, spe~ks and j,;ads on ,,
nnKh high&lt;'r level than the
\IXth-grJdc progr.mt he" til .
Unf(ntutluely, the · ·d10ols m
our .tre.t are limited in thetr
.ththty to deal wi-th gitl:e&lt;l

intdlectual level. He should
feel comli:mable with who
he is - and he is an academic high achiever who
grasps concepts above his
grade level. At the same time,
encourage him to go out for
team sports or join specialinterest groups with kids his
ADVICE
· ~ hh:l e nts .
·
own age.
One teacher told me that
DEAR ABBY: My husti&lt;Hhtlly
ht•
is
a
12 - yc~r-old,
th&lt;· gifteJ progr.nn my son is
b:md is in th~ rniliury,.
· currently in is not c hallcng- but his intdl ~cttl.ll op.tcity is requiring us to move every
tll!l hint, while .mother so ftr .tdvam::_ed it ~s becont- two to three · years. We are
tc,tcher has suggested he ing diflicult to strike .the blessed to have family and
lmng down lm level of right b.ll.IIKC.
All this boy want~ is to friends scattered all over the
&gt;pcedl. readtng, etc,, ·to the
.:ommunk;tte with kids his United States. Atl:er eight
k w l ol the other students in own age who have the SJtne ye;trs of trying, we are finally
ht&lt; das&lt;so that he c.m lit in abilities and imercsts that he expecting our first child.
more Cllily.
Is it proper to send baby
has . A!-ty . suggestions would
My e&lt;JtKern is that my son be appreciated . - SOUTH shower invitations to out-of.
will bcw lllt' borl'd with CAROLINA MOM
town f.1mily and friepds even
&lt;d tt.lOI ;md quit, or get so
DEAR MOM: Consider though l know they will be
deprc!'ed about not fitting in hiring . a college studcm to unable to attend? tltJt he \nay .gt•t himself into tutor your s011 - and IJer- BURSTING . WITH JOY
lfl.lllbk
'
haps mentor hitn. He needs IN SAN ANTONIO
Wh.tt c,111 I do to foster his C&lt;)tlt;lct Wtth peopk 011 his
DEAR
BURSTING:
tntelltg&lt;'II CC, Abby ? EmoNo. A better way would be

Dear

Abby

1

Local Board of Education
meeting, 9 a.m. Saturday
at · the high school. Interview for superintendent's
job.

convention delegates will
be elected. Racine Grange
will visll. Junior baking
contest will be held.
SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT - A service of hope and healing in
·memory of Lindsay Bolin
and Brad Runyon, First
Baptist Church, Middle·

to write your family and
friends at)d share your good
news now, Send a birth
announcement after the
baby arrives.
DEAR ABBY: I hope
you're not sick of "grandmother stories," because I've
got a sweet one.
My grandmother, May, was
the "Dig HNshey Dar
Grandma ." She did not
approve of smoking, ~nd my
father did not approve of
giving candy to us kids. .
After dinner at Grandma's
house, Dad would go outside
to smoke and she'd go into
her kitchen . Then she would
call out, "Come on, kids!"
She'd reach into her freezer
to break oft' pieces of a big
H•mhey b.1r 3)1d give us each
a piece.
Now, 45 years later, my
husband ·and I keeiJ assorted
bite-size chocolates in a
·drawer of our entertainment

port, Sunday, 7 p.m. Special testimony by Jennifer MONDAY
Walker, special music.
POMEROY - Revival,
Service Is especially for Mt. Hermon U. B. Church,
teens, others welcome. Wickham Road off Texas
Mark Morrow, pastor.
Road. Special singing
April 11 , Ray and Delores
DANVILLE - Danville Cundiff; ApriJ 13, Earthern
Church of Christ, meeting Vessels. John Elswick
with Brolher Denver Hill, 7 evangelist.
p.m. Sunday.

center just b~low the Disney
videos . Our grandson knows
the little HerShey's are his,
and the bite-size Snickers Jrt
rny husband's.
I can no longer eat choco~
late, .and my beloved grandnta - the only one I knew
- passed on in 197 L But
whenever I'm in a store an~
see those large Hershey bars!
I smile, remembering the .
ones in the small Jreez~r of
Grandma's
old-fashioned
fridge. DONNA IN
PORTLAND, ORE.
· DEAR
DONNAc
Although you cannot ea!
chocolate now, the memory
is delicious. Thanks for shar~
ing it .
,
Paulirle Phillips and lttr
daughrer,Jearme Plrillips, shMt
tire pseudo11ym Abigail Va'
Burell. Write Dear Abby at
wtvw.DearAbby.c~m or P.O
Box 69440, f..qs Augeles, CA
90069.

•
POMEROY Meigs
County/Ohio BicentenniaL
Committee meeting. Mon. day, 5 p.m. at the Meigs
Museum.
RUTLAND - Rutland
VIllage Council will hold Its
council meeting, Monday,
6:30p.m.

\IEAAfEMOOY. .

BANDANA BRIGHTS

ARE HERE!! 1~~~~

"'L
t!!.
IIJI_ •.,&lt;J.Oitt~
,.~,~
~
300 Second Avenue In the Lafayette Mall •Ollllpolll, OH

(740)441·1259 • 1-800-995-NESr

FruoAv's

HIGHLIGHTS
Pro Basketball
NBA

Thuradly'l GIIMI
Atlanta 95, Indiana 94
Orl!indo 105, Cleveland 101
San Antonio 102, Houston 78
Denver 88, Minnesota 87
Dallas 115, L.A. Clippers 90
Portland 88, New York 80

ArraiJIIment
scheduled for
Finley's wife
SANTA ANA, Calif. (AI') Actress Tawny Kita en was
ordered back to court on April
29 to f.1ce charges she attacked
her husband, Cleveland Indians
pitcher Chuck Finley.
Kiraeri was to be arraigned
Wedneliday but told court officials she was ill. She Wil.! released
several hours later and left jail
without talking to reporters.
If convicted of misdemeanor
spou&lt;!al abuse and battery, she
faces up to a year in jail and
$6,000 6ne.
She was arrested after a Monday arsument with Finley, who
pitched for the Anaheim Angels
for 14 years. She was accused of
ilssaulring him as the couple
drove home from dinner, kicking him repeatedly with her
high-heels and pressing her foot
down on the accelerator. He
was not seriously hurt.
The 40-year-old Kitaen Wil.!
ordered to have no contact with
her hu.~band, However, she will
be allP\1/Cd to live in the couple's Newport Beach home
while Finley will stay ehewhere.
Finley, 39, who ntil!ed his.
!pOt in the Indians' pitching
rotation, was expected to rejoin
the ream Friday in Detroit
Kitacn is lx.'!lt knowt1 for her
role in the Tom Hank! movie
"Bachelor !'arty."

leads
atBeiiSouth

• Air CondHionlnt
•AMII'M lttrw
• Till llllilng

$

Brand New 2002 Chevy
Monte Carlo 88

Blind New 2002 eNvy
llvnlo ~Ton Longbid 4x4

• Powtl' Windows • Onttar
• Po- Locka
•1•" Aluminum
• Po- Mlrroro
W!.olo
• Kevlftt Entry

Air Cottclltloltlng

• V.f Aim Air

P-,

• P - Wlnclow1

•"-Loc:lui
•"*Viae lntry .
•Till I CrulN

• UOO V-1

DULUTH, Ga. (AP) Steve Elkington · shot an Sunder-par 64 in the opening
round of the BellSouth Classic, overcoming a doublebogey to take a one-1troke
lead over Phil Mkkelson,
Elkington, who won the
1995 ~.GA Chantpiomhip,
hasn't played all that well this
Ieason, mis1ing the cut in four
of eight tourwmencs.
·
Mickelson, the 2000 winner, birdied aii four of the par
51.
Dudley Hart, Thomas
Bjorn, Je•per Parnevik, Frank
Nobilo and Ian Leggatt
opened with 66s .on the TPC
at Sugarloaf.

• P - Mlrtart

• Tlaller PIOI!agt • CD lrlllm
• , _ Wlndotn • TlH' CruiN

WVU hires Dan

Brand New 2002
Pontiac Grand
AmGTCoupe

Or Sedan

• AIWM 1tno
Yorlec 1000 P - • TIM IIMI1ng

Daldc:h

Pre-owned
2001 Chevy cavalier

Coupe Or Iedin
·~

·~~~~-·

• Air Col!dllloftlnO With CD
~

......

2001 Pontile Bunfltw
Coupe Or Stden

·•ut•llllllco

...........

• Air C:ondllauln• • CnllN CGnlrGI

•AIIIfllllno
Will! CD

.........
.,_
...
.,_...

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

MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
(AI') - Spurned by Bob
Huggins and others, West
Virginia hired Bowling
Green's Dan l)akic:h at ill
head coach Thurtday.
Dakich p!Jyed at Indiana
and was an assistant to Sob
Knisht for I 0 yean there. At
Wur Virginia, he'll try to
rebuild a tHm that set
recordt for IOfftl in rwo of
the patr four KaJOIIJ and was
racked with diKipline problentf.
,
The Mountaineers were
8-20 this KatOn, 1-15 in the
Uig Eatt.
He repbcn Gale Cadeu:,
who retire4 in · February
afur ~ teatOnJ with the
Mounuineen and a tehoolrecord S65 wins.
Dakich wat 89- 57 in five
teatOIIJ at Bowling Green,
without a trip ro the NCAA
tournament. Tbe FakonJ
W~l 24-9 this KaJOII - the
Khool't · moot vicwriel in
more. than half a century.

·fl--

. • Crlillll:dllf

G2&gt; Oldelill:lb••

•

li

•

•

..

.

Eastern improves to 3-0, beats Warren Local
B\' Scon WOLFI
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

Elkln~n

• vorteo v...Power

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

•

POMEROY - Meigs WILKESVILLE - Praise
County Trustees and and worship service
Clerks Association, Friday, Wilkesville
United
; p.m. EMS office.
Methodist Church. Free
spaghetti supper at 6 p.m .
SATURDAY
service at ·7:30. p.m.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411 Singers and musicians
. Saturday at the hall, 7:30 welcome. William Mar·
p.m. Master Masons wei· shall, pastor.
come.
• SALEM CENTER
DANVILLE ~ Brother Star Grange 778 and Star
Denver Hill to hold meet- Junior Grange 878 will
Ing at Danville Church of meet In regular session
Saturday with a potluck
Christ. 7 p.m. Saturday.
supper at 6:30 and the
RACINE - Southern meeting at 7:30 p.m. State

, Brand New 2002
Chevy Silverado
Shortbtd 4x4

•

•

'

VINCENT - The Eastern Ea~les
resembled lumbe~acks as they brought
ouc the big tiluber in pounding out 21
hits in a 15-7 shellacking of the Warren
Local Warriors Thursday night in a
non-league boys baseball game.
Eastern is now ~-0 overall and 2-0 in
the league.
_
The Eagles pressured the Warrior
defense until finally the •wdling bend
broke in the fourth inning when East·
ern plated five runs. Trailing 3-2, East-

ern took the 7-3 lead and never looked
back, scoring seven more markers in the
sixth and one in' the seventh for the 15·
7 tally.
In the Ea.~tern siXth, Chris Lyons led
otfwith a single,Young had an ll..DI single. Amsbary had . an lUll double,
Holter had a ground out, Cacy Faulk
walked, Ryan Smith had an lUll single,
Urad Braf\non had a single to load the
bases, and Cody Faulk singled home·
two runs. Urent Buckley· singled home
another run to put runners on the cor-

ners and Buckley was thrown out at
second allowing Faulk to score on the
play and break the game wide open.
Hitting-wise Lyon~ was 4-for-6 with
two doubles, Charlie Young was 3-for4 with a double and tWo singles, Ken
Amsbary was 3-for-5 with two doubles, Ben Holter a single, Cacy Faulk 1for-2 with a single, Ryan Smidt was 1for-1 with a single. Jonathan Owen a
single, Bradley Brannon 3-for-4 with
three singles, Cody Faulk two singles;
Brent Huck.ley a single, and l)iler Wine-

brenner a single.
Warren was led by . Welch with a
triple, Roush 3-for-5 with atwo single~
and . a home run, Hendricks 3-for-4
with a ·tWo doubles and a single, Myen
a double.
Kl:n Amsbary was the winning pitch.er.in going the distance for the win. He
had three strikeouts and four walks. For
Warren,Jusrin Eichinger, Tompkins, and
Beach and combined in the lo~~ post·
ing six strikeout! and nine walks.
Eastern hosts Nelsonville Friday.

Reds winning at home?
Cincy tops
the
Cubbies 3:1

Bv ScOTT WOLfE ·
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

RACINE
- Taking .
advantage of a Rachel Chapman no-hitter, seven hits and
fourteerl Rebel
~ w;llks, the

CINCINNATI (AP) .:.,_
Sammy Sosa hit his second
homer, but Fred McGriff's
error set up two Cindnnari
runs and the Reds held on
for a 3-1 victory Thursday
night over the Chicago
Cubs.
The Reds took ·two of
three in the opening series,
a turnaround for the
majors' worst home team
of 2001'. The Reds lost tWo ·
· of their 6m rhre~ at Ciner- .
gy Field last season, on
th••ir way to a franchisereconl 54 home losses.
Ken Gritl'ey Jr. hit an '
IU31 single, He also had a
fastball by Juan Cruz (0-1)
glance otl' his batting helmet in the third - the
tixth batter plunked in the
serico. Griffey went to 6r1t
without com.plaint, and
didn't even look at Cruz
when they cr01oed paths
after the inning.
The
benches
and
bullpens
cleared
on
Wednesday night after
Reds reliever Lui! Pineda
hit two Cubo in the ninth
inning and was ejected. · ·
The Reds won despite
getting only · three hitt.
McGriff's error at .first base
•~t up
une~rned runs
in the 1econd.
)me Acevedo (1 · 0) limit-

Tornadoes
rolled to a
22-1 non1ea1~e win over
South Gallia
.'Thunday
high school soft-

two

I'I .. M

,a2

......

Chapman
no-hits
Rebels

IN THEREHundley, lett:

Cincinnati's Sean Casey (21) slides safety across home a11
waits for the ball .In the second Inning
Thursday. (AP)
.

Meigs chops down Nelsonville
BY JIM lcM.ueY
SENTINEl. CORRESPONDENT

NELSONVILLE - The Meigt
M.u.1uder batelr.iU team 6naUy got w
take the 6dd Thursday evening, alier
their 14&lt;aton had been
delayed by in ctimate
weather and even a
bomb threat at Mcigt High Sc~l.
The Marauden traveled to Nel~
sonviUe and came horne with · a· 12-2
win over the Buckqes. The Maraudm
plated nine runs in rhe top of the sixth
inning to break open a Ul W'ltle u 15
M.arauden nurched to the plare in the

Prep·

dcci.ive inning.
Sophomore Doug DiU went the dis-.
tance for the Marauders giving up just
four hitJ while striking out !11.'\len and
walking one Buckeye.
Meij9 plated the tint runJ of the
game io the top of the fourth inning~
Dill drew ~walk and thert 1tole second ..
.Jmh Napper then •lammed a double to
center field Koring Dill. Buzzy Fackler
then doubled to left field ~&lt;:oring NapJll!r. Dill in the meantime was cruising
along holding the Buckeye~ hitlest
throu~ five: innin8'·
.
Metj9 busted the game open in the

top of the 1ixrh: Napper grounded out
followed by a walk by Fackler. Zach
Glaze then ripped a single into center
to give the Marauder. two on with
only one our. following a pamd ball
that advanced both runners, Brandon
IUmsburg walked to load ·the .bun
~ith maroon and gold runnen. Darrick
Knapp then knocked in two runs with
a single. David McClure followed suit
by singling home IUmsburg. Jimmy
Smith drew a fi-re p:m and Jacob Smith
followed with another walk that
brought Knapp home. Dill then hdped
,l'l·ra ... Melp.112

Lady Marauders win big
. · BY MlouiiiY

walked to teore M..-r and Mcig&gt; led 1-0.
iUmN£1.~
jeMica Bbettnar then 1inglrd to left center
NELSONVILLI! - The Mei19 Maraud- daring the baleS and ttaking Mcigt 10 a 4er tOfi:ball team took tD the dumond for the ()lead,
tim Ulne tllil teat011 on Thurtday and J'OI'After the lint NdtonviUe batt.it reached
ed a 1t-S win over the IJuckeyn at Nd- . on an · error, Jeffen retired the next three
sooviUe.
.
batkn. Mci19 plated two rum in the second
Meigs rolleaed tiw' biu and . turned 16 inning without the benefit of a hit. MuHcr
walks into nlnt as Katie Jeff~. Carrie walked and Burcher w~ hit by a pitch ~
Abbott and Jaynud)~ ~bln.ed ~ li?Jil both crossed home plate· WJth the help ltf
the Hudeyc:' to ~we: b1t1 ~ile bllllllg JUft .orne lloppy throwing by the Buckeyn.
_wal.kltn poong the wrory. .
Neltonville lllll13gl:d' one nan on anc hit
• Me1gs JUmped to the early lead tn the top in the bottom of the tecond inmng aJ Hanof the 6nt ..._IUra Mu.n ~ to lad olf mng mgled and ~on:d f?' the Huckefn.
the pne, Mutdy Chancey aaifiad hn ro AWJ~ey IJutbridge tcored the lone Mcigs .
second bdore Nikki Butcher and D....d
I
l'lssn
.
.
•~ a2
drew walks tD load the bales• .Jeffm then
_..,

m-

/

'

night
ball.
Southern is now 4-1 overall
and 1-0 in the Tri -V~l1ey
Conference Hocking Division. South Gallia is now ()-1.
Chapman had a great game
in striking out eight and
walking just one, while going
the dinance to pick up the:
win. Chapman hurled 34
strikes in 54 pitches to totally
dominate the ' game. Katie
Sayre called another good
gaine . behind the plate as
Chapman's battcrymate. Julia
Gwenn suffered the loss in
three inning&gt; of work with
one inning of relief from
Holly Haner. They combined
for 14 Walk., and struck out
. two, while giving up reven
hit..
Southern hiiting was led by
Brigf;tte Uarnes and Emily Hill
who each went 2-2 with two
walk!. Barnes had a triple, a
double and two lUll, while
Hill had two singles and two
RJR Rachel Chapman went
2-3 with a double and single,
and Katie ~re had a single .
and three RBI!!. Chapman and
Barnes each .cored four runs
apiece, while frt'1hmen Brooke
Kiser and Joanne Pich.11s and
sophomore Kate Sayre each
scored three runs apiece.
Southern broke the game
open with K'\len runs in the
third and cigltt in the fourth.
The lone South Gallo run '
arne when Gwenn reached
on an error at thin!, foUowed
by two throwing errors, and a
ground out to tint by Haner.
Southern hostJ Alexander
Fridly in a 1VC intmlivisional
tilt.

South Gal1ia will pby at Eastern of Pike County Tut'iday.

..

Wahama rallies for Win
BY GAilY CI.Mal
SENllNEl OOARESPONDEHT

MASON,W.Va.- Bradford
Clark's clutcli, two out lmn
loaded single in the eigltth
inning .gave coach Gordon
Spencrr't Walwn,a Whire Falcon b.uehlll nine io second
wra inning dimtond win Of
the week Thund2y noening aJ
the Bend AKa rum tqueaked
·past 6fih ranked Hunrmgwn
St. .Jor by a narrow 2-1 margin. .
Clark drove in both
Walwna uilin on the .by
with an RBI smgle in the

fourth in addition to his
game-winning blow in thr
extra &amp;arne. The senior threesport stM ako pitched the first
teVen innings for the local diamond nine and JCattered four
hits while allowing an
unar~ run With four free
va-t a"nd 13 ttrikeouu. jared
Long c.une on 10 worl the
eigltlf!. frame for WHS to pick
up hil second -mound VKWry
of the )'OUng 2002 basebaD
season WJth IAmg rxnnguish1ng a mild St. .Jor threat by
I . . wl'
a2 .
f!ft._le

I

•

�Paae " -2 • The Dally Sentinel

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

·Pittsburgh claws up over .soo·mark.
.
NEWYOR.K (AP)- Don't p:mir!
That's the advice from mdn.•ger llobby
Valentine after his New York Mets
!:"~:~=~-, dropped their ;ccond
straight game to Pittsburgh and enabled the
Pirates to climb over the
.500 mark for the first
time ~ince 1999.
The Me1s .arc hitting
·.226. Not to worry,
Valentine said.
·Mike Pi.azza killed
Andereon
promising rallies in each
of the two los1e1 by hitting into double plays.
Chill out, Valentine &lt;aid.
_ Mo V.wghn and Piaz'

ML

za, each repre'ientin g tht.: tying run, ~tru(;k

out for the final two ou11 in Thursday's 32 los&lt;. No big dcaiS:ilcntll:c said . -·
Jay Payton and Rcy _Ordonez, ilw 7-8
hitter&lt; :n the lineup, have a combi ned
three hits 111 three g.mi C&lt;. itclax,Valcnrine
said.
"It\" bit early 111 the &lt;ca&lt;on," th•· manager reminded everyont·. 'Tm not putting

a panic thmg on it. I know we'll hit ."

Ahh, but when' ·

Lad
y
from Page

iri the foLJrth inning ;1'1 ~;b~:
drew a leadoff walk imd &lt;cored,
again the Mara,der&gt; platt•d the
run without a hit in the inn mg.
Jefl'cr&lt; n:t:rcd 1ix of the la1t
run

bJrter't 'ihc faced

·t~burgh

. Nelsonville took a page out
ofthe Meigs book by scoring
two runs in the sixth inning
without getting a hit. The
13uckeyes capitalized on two
Meigs errors and pulled to
within. 12-5 heading to the la&lt;t
inning. Davis closed the game
on the hill for the Marauders
allowing 011e hit and no runs in

81

~even

The Mets won the opener against the
Pirates mostly on a collection of bloopers
and bleeders. Their bats were largely
silent in the next two games, except for
Vaughn's 300th career homer on Wednesday and solo shot~Joe McEwing and
Jeromy llurnitz that counted for Thursday's runs.
.
.
team that
This was against a [
lost 100 games last season and had not
been-over .500 since Aug. 15, 1999.1t was
not the best way to prepare for a_threegame series against division champion
Atlanta.·
For his part, PimbLirgh manager Lloyd
McCiet)don was pleased w!th the way
the low-budget Pirates played against the
high-priced Mets . llut, like Valentine, he
al10 was awar~ of the calendar.
" Jt ''\ t Iuet; games,•· IH~ sa1'd .·.. .,.ta lk to me
-ofter 160.1 hope we're over .500 then. It's
a good feeling. We have · to continue to
mow in the right d1rection .
"This series is over, We played great.
The fact is we've got a tough game
tomorrow against the Chicago (;Libs.
You 've got to move forward."
The Mets led early against Jimmy
Anderson (1-0) when McEwing hit the

;1s

first leadoff homer of his · career in the
first inning. After McEwiog connected,
Anderson walked Roberto Alomar and
hit Vaughn in the shou lder.
h looked like disaster beckoning for the
left-hander who lost 17 .games last year.
But he bailed himself out by getting Piazza to hit into a double _play and retiring
Edgardo AJfof)zo on a grounder.
McClendon wa! suitably impressed.
"Jimmy came up big," he said. "The
first inning was a little hairy. I said to
inyself the first im1ing could define his
season, whether he could show the character to come out of it. He certainly did."
An inning later, the Pirates had the lead
against Shawn Estes (0-1) when Kevin
Young hit a rwo-nm homer. Pittsburgh
made it 3-1 in the third on hits by Anderson, Adrion Brown and Armando Rios.
Meanwhile, Anderson retired 19 of 20'
Mets batters before Burnitz' homer finished his day in the seventh. The Pirates'
bullpen finish ed up with Mike Williams
earnin g his seco11d save.
"The double-play ball to Piazza was
huge," Anderson said. " It gav.e me a new
breath of life. I threw strikes and made
them hit my pitch." •

Meigs
from Page Bl
his own cause by blasting a
two run single to right center, scori ng McClure and
Jimmy Smith·.
The big inning continued
for Meig&gt; when Napper
doubled to center scoring
Jacob Smith and DilL After
Napper moved to third on a
passed ball and Fackler
walked, Glaze got his second
hit of the inning, single to
right rhat . scored Napper,
Ramsburg then drew another walk before two consecutive outs ended the Maraud. er onslaught,
J:.he Buckeyes finally got
on the board in the bottom
of the sixth by plating two
runs. Elliott got the first
Buckeye hit of the night and
Fox followed with th~ second 1ingle in a row for the

the inning.

Abbott .came on in relief in the
Meigs had five hits led by
bottom of the fifth inning. AhDlaettnar with a single and
CJa Werry reached ba&lt;e on a
double.
Amanda Fetty odded a
fifth inning single and later
scored after stealing a base and triple with Alicia Werry and
taking advantage of some poor Butcher each adding a single,
throwing in the field bY the 13utcher scored three times for
the winners with Werry and
Buckeyes.
Musser
each stepping on home
Meigs sealed the game with "
big sixth inning; the Marauders plate twice,
Jeffers picked up the win
scored four runs as Dutcher led
off with a smgle. Afier two con- going four inning" allowing
secutive
outs, - Blaettnar two hits and recording two
slammed a double followed by strikeouts.
The Meigs JV team trounced
a triple off the bat of Amanda
Fetty; Werry walked and later the Nelsonville reserves 17-!.
Meig'l will travel to Waterscored as the Marauders colford on Friday,
·
_lectcd four straight walh

a

home team, Hall belted a
single scoring 'Elliott and
Fox scored on a Kline single.
Dill then retired the Buckeyes, ending any threat of a,
Nelsonville comeback.
M~igs plated one run in
the seventh as Jimmy Smith
walked and Napper drilled a
triple to bring him home.
Dill .retired the side in order
in the last of the seventh to
seal the 12-2 win for Meigs.
The Marauders pounded
out eleveJI hit! led by Napper with two doubles and a
triple. Knapp and Glaze each
had two singles, Fackler a
double and McClure an4
Dill a single each.
. The Meigs JV boys won
also last night, 17-3 in five
innings.
Eric Cullums
innings and
pitched
Brandon
pitched
one in the
The M;t~'aud•m travel co
w,,t~nr.-.r.-1 on Fri!lay.

For Jim Wen:v
QATE: Aprtlllh, 2002
~7PMTIII11PII

OPEN TO THE PUBLIC

•

-·
I

striking out the sid~.
Although Waham·a fell
out of the latest Class A state
liaseball rankings Thunday's
victory was the sixth in a
row for the Mason County
crew as they improved to 6I on the year. Fifth rated St.
Joe dropped to 5-3. following the extra inning setback.
St. Joe had baserunners in
seven of the eight innings · Romh aHd Ry.m Hotlg~ ·
I k and Long man- were tlwn im:cd intentional
b ut Car
aged to keep the visitprs f'&lt;!c P""''' to fdl the bases
away from the plate except with White Fako1H. St. Joe
for a lone first inning relief pltrhcr lkmdon ll:lrtunearned tally, After two man th en fanned the next
were out Chiles reoched on two WI IS batter&lt; bdilrc
an error, the first of two on Clark strode to the plate .md
the · day for Wahama, and dchvcrcd ho&lt; ~·""" winning
moved into scoring po1ition ba&lt;e lm .
on a wild ·pitch, . Blatt
Wa!J,\,Jl,, mana~ed Jll&lt;t ·
walked and Barker singled two hits 011 the day wit h
to stake St. Joe to an ·early 1- · Clark eomi n ~ up with both
0 advantage.
WI IS safctic1. St. Joe h.1J
'TWo Irish pitchers also five bo te knocks witl1 Fcr!(tl
worked their way out of son collcrtin!' two hit' wid:
several Jams as Wahama also Harim an,
!l.n·ker
and
had run_ners reach base in six J-luvou r.11
h.JVlll!(
nne
of the .e1ght frame_s. Howev- npicre. B.:kcr \Wilt &lt;even
cJ while the Whtte Falc~ns innings 011 th e tllOLllld ft&gt;r
hurlers were accumulating St. Joe with ll.:rtman com·
strtke out totals_ w get_out of_ ing 011 in th L· ~ighth . Jlak,•r '·
trouble the VISitmg pitchers
,
.
1·
·
d'
r
k
gaw
up two run&lt; nn one 11t
aII owe d tis c.ense to ta e. · Wlt. 11 1•our ltl'l·k·Wilt&gt; (I Ill1 &lt;IX
·
care of most of the wor k .
.·
,~, h
allowwa ama was h e ld h'tl
1 ess
.walks With, llamnan
. .
until the fourth when the mg one hu With two m: kc-:
Falcons knotted the score OLitl and two walk' dt:ring
after. Rickard walked, stole his two-.thirds or an ini1i11!,\
second and third respective- stmt.
.
.
ly before racing home on
Th e Wh1tc hdwm w:ll.
Clark's RBI single to make atwmpt to CO ittl llllC its Will·
it a !-1 affair.
ning string thi&lt; afternoon
St Joe mounted a mild when the Bend Arc team
threat in the fifth when ~vclcomc j visiting South
Clark walked the first two Gallia for a 4:30 p.m. contest
batters of the inning before before embarking on a Satgetting out of the jam by urd.1y trek to Fayetteville to ·
inducing Chiles !o hit into a close out the week,

BY THE ASSOCIATED PR£SS
.
Barry Bonds failed to homer for the
first time this season, but rookie Ryan
NM... It
hatiiiOtt Uti nortllwtat """' ot
Jensen didn't need his help - thanks to
.._111M
1M
AMIIMt
wilt II toot LOI No, •u; tlltnctl
the punchless Los Angeles Dodgen.
11..11111 ot lht piMa ot Ntllllnet 10 norlll H ,...,... and
Jensen (1 -0) allowed three hits in seven
lllotoiiOitlort ot woll 11 WIIOII :10' Wtll IO I ttl:
innings, got two hits. himself and scored
Pllllllll lanll"-. '"'""' plaot ot tlltntt north to
1111. • lie 111111 M1M rae Ilion..
ott . .,... lnd 30' Will
the decisive run after singling
Ill~ l&amp;ptlt Clllinh of llllltftOWII, WUI II.. tiA.I lttt to tht
Chflal, fllinll't . LIM IIOIIU lhtl on nonh lint ol wh1t
to start a three-run sixth as
Cleft.,
IU llaln Jtnlltry 11, 1001, Wit to~mtrly lltnt
the San Francisco Giants won
. llrott, lllclclloporl1 CITIIANK N.A. AI IIHitlltll'l
lot;
3-0 .on Thursday night to
Ohio, on tho llllra TIIUITII tlllll Itt lhtnot north fO
sweep the season-opening . series at
Wlllntteloy ot April, Complaint . 111 C111 dttl1110 and 10' 1011
1001, tl 4:00 p.m. No. aa.cv.ooa In 1111 tl! fttl IO lht
Dodger Stadium.
·
""'dllll to Itt Court at llommo.n norlhtnt· oorntr ol
"It's a great thrill.'' said Jensen, a 26..-b'tltwa, · tor _tho flltu ot -Mtllt whal Wtl lorm11ty
year-old right-hander. "I started every1111111011 ot tlnllnt COIIIIIy, Larry I. lltnt llllt"ttn'a tot;
dlroolora anti tho lptnotr,
'M t 11 a lhtnot tauth I
body with a strike. It's a lot easier when
triiiiiOIIon ot tuoh Cownly Cltrk or tltarttl IIIII '0' Will
you're up 0-t ·on everybody."
·ollltr bllaln..t at Coul'lt, ~0. 1011 111, tail rtet to lht fttot
IIIIV PIOPtrly 001111 100 ltoonll llrotl, ol
Bonds went 1-for-2 with a double was
baglnn na
lllfllro Mid llltlllnt. . flomi!Ov, OH 417tl, oonlllntng 101100
hit by a pitch and walked after hom~ring
tttktna toroototuro aoro mora or 1111.
a record-tying four times in the first two
Jo A!Ill Crltp; tnd tllqlng thtttht
Alto 1 former
lloroltrt
Dttalldtnlt, Atnta 11111111 II 10 hiVt
. games of the series, He's batting .750 and
Gall Ohllllltr altt . r,.. 1nd undltputad
has driven in nine runs - seven more
Aantt Ohllnttr't uat along tht north
than the Dodgers have scored in a season
~io •. 10, ,,, 1001
Unknown H1tra, · tldt Dl Whll Wll
CNdltort,
·Dtvltttt, 1orm111r.
that began ~ith 9-2 and 12-0 losses.
IIana
L.tulttl,
llttlattln 1 lot or 1
The sweep was the first for San FranAtfmlnlllrlleirt,
· rliht•OI•Wty It niiW
cisco in a-three-game series in Lo's Angeht.Oulora and IOOittd I• P..oook
Attlan• hove or llrttl.
les since Sept 24-26, 1982.
BYI-BYI - Tampa Bay's Ben Grieve hits a second-lnnlnl home run off Tlaera pitch·
o111m
to lltYI tn
lltlartnot Dud·
·
"That was an unbelievable start, a great er Jose Lima Thursday afternoon. (AP)
lnltrlll In tilt r111 Volume au, paaa
three days," said Giants manager Dusty
tllttt · duorlbtd 111, Mtlga County
below:
Baker, an outfielder for the Dodgers in
The game at Amos Field drew 21,528,
Tampa Bay became only the seventh
lltoordt.
lllutltd In tilt Dttd
AudltOrt PIIDII
1982.
the smallest crowd in three seasons at'the team to ever stm 3-0 after losing 100
Vllltgt at flomtroy, No.
11.01 211
Rich Aurilia hit a one-out single before park formerly called Enron Field. That games the previous season. The others to - - - - - - - Ohio, County or
Ptroel TWo: lelng
Bonds was hit by Odalis Perez's first pitch broke the mark set Wednesd~ty night, do it were the 1905 Philadelphia Phillies,
Publlo Nollot
Mtfgt tncl IIIII ol I Plrl or ~01 NO. 100
In Iugar Run In lh1
to load the bases. Reggie Sanders'. sacri- when 23,,381 fans-showed up. .
1906 Brooklyn Dodgers, 1929 Boston _....;;..~..;.;.;;.;;;;,;.__ OhiOI
fltrotl Ona: Iaing Llnoolu
fice fly scored Jensen to put the Giants
BRAVIII 11, PHIWBS :Z
Braves, 1952 St. Louis Browns, 1971 · THIITATI 0' OHIO t Plrl ol LOI No. 100 Anntullon Hill
to
COUNTVO,
In Iugar llun In Pomeroy,
ahead, and after j.T. Snow was hit by a
Gary Sheffield homered for the third Chicago White Sox and 1994 New York
• nd
CUYAHOGA
Llnooln ·. Hill beginning 11 ihe
pitch, David Dell singled in Aurilia and straight game, and Andruw Jones and Mets .
·
IN THI COUIIT 0, Anntullon
to louthtllt oorntr of
Bonds. ·
Chipper Jones connected during Atlanta's
"I don't knl)w what we can do. I'm ju!t
COMMON P~IAI Poril.trov,
1 nd
1 lot now owned
MIIQI COUNTY,
diiOrlbtd I I fOIIOWII Ilona llttlattln tnt
·. "We had great pitching and great seven-run si)!:th.
happy we're playing well now," McRae
OHIO
ltalnnlng 11 • tltkt ttma baing the
defense, and that's the reason we won,"·
Sheffield, acquired from Los Angelos in said.
In lht 1111 tldt of Norlhwlll oorntr ol
Aurilia said.
an offseason trade, hit a three-run homer
Winning pitcher Ryan Rupe held the CAll NO. OI·CVoOOI Ptnook llrltt, Lot
No. SU: thtnoa
whloh lllkt 1111 Iouth 71 • 30' w111
· The Dodgers threatened in the third, in the first. Sheffield has seveJ1 RBI! and Tigers to three hits in seven shutout
A,IDAVIT ,011
touth I dtgrttt 44' SO 1111 thano• North
innings.
putting two runners aboard with nobody is batting .462 (6-for- 13).
IIIIVICI IV
waat 11 t.4 !tat from 20·30' Wnt 140.1
PUILICATION
out. But ·alter a sacrifice, Cesar lzturis
Sheffield hit the first pitch from Terry
On Friday, the Devil Rays w~re to play
lhl northWtll OOIIIIP rtet, to lht North lint
TO OHIO of Lot No. 101, whloh of Aent l!ltollttln't
grounded to Jensen, who trapped Mark Adams (0- 1) over the left-center field at New York in the Yankees' home open· PUIIIUANT
IIULI 0, CIVIL
wtt formerlv owned lot: thtnot North 70•
Grudzielanek off third, and lzturis even- fence in Atlanta. JasO'n Marquis (1-0) er.
PIIOCIDUIII U~A) b y
Velantlna 30' lui 123 1111 to
tually was thrown out trying to take sec- allowed a homer to Scott Rolen .
"No, I don't think they're mes!lng:•
lber1b1oh latota; the Norlhtlll oorntr
CITIIANK N.A.
tlltnu
tiona of lltna llttlttttn't
ond for an inning-ending double play.
.
MAIWNI 1, ExPos 0
·
Rupe said of the AL champions.
AITIIUITII
fltiOOOk llrlll IOUih 101: thtnoa.-eouth S•
In addition to outscoring the Dodgers
Brad Penny (1 -0) pitched a four-hitter,
RANGI!RI 7, ATHLIITICI 5
Pltlnllff
I dtlrttl and 44' ao• waat 1ao ''" to
. W..t f7 .1 IIIII lhtnot tht
24-2 in the series, the Giants outhit them and Derrek Lee homered for the third
Texas ended Oakland's 20-game home
pltoa or
touth 74 dtgr111 1nd btglnnlna oontalnlng
32-12.
·
str11ight game for Florida before just winning streak, holding on in the ninth
10' 1111 IIU ltll to 20/100 lOft, mort or . Jensen struck out four and walked 4,551 in Montreal.l'enny, who went ·4-0 behind struggling John Rocker.
IIIII northwtal oorntr lttl.
·Of Lot No. IU 1
none. Perez (0- 1),'who entered the. sixth with a 0.30 ERA against the Expos last
The Athletics had .not lost at .the ColiAudltor'i Ptrotl
lhtnoa north · I No. 11·01111
with a two-hit shutout, allowed five hits season, struck out three and walked two seum in the regular season since. last Aug.
dtgrMI 10' e111 1t0
The Daftndlnll
and three runs in 5 2-3 innings. He in his second career shutout.
24 against Detroit, though the Yankeet
fttl 1lona tht w..l n1m1d lbOVI Ill
lint or Lof NO, IIIIo llqilllld iO IMIWII
walked none and struck out 1ix.
Lee homered in the fourth otT Carl beat them there in the playoffl. Oakland's
I IIIII IOOUII pot!; on or btfort tht d1y
Felix Rodriguez worked the efghth for Pavano (0-1).
string was the fifth-longest in the rnajon
lhiiiOI lOUth 70 of, 2002.
the Giants, and Robb Nen the ninth for
D-RAYs START 3-0
since 1901.
dtlll11 1 Will 211.1 CITIIANK N.A. AI
1111 lo tht pltot of TIIUITII
his first save.
The Tampa Bay Devil Rays want to
The Rangers averted a four-game
llltlnnlna,
Rocms 6, CARDINAU 1
enjoy this feelin1p1long as they can.
swetp to start the &amp;eason. Rocker made
llmlnlhl
1. oonltlnfng
12/100 IV:
John Thomson worked 1even strong
The team with the lowest- hi1 first appearance for Texas, giving up a Jottph, btlng flrtt tort.
IHAI'IRO 6 PILTV,
lftl L,L,,,
innings and Colorado roughed up Andy
·paid and youngest roster in the three- run homer to rookie Carlos Pen a du~ 1worn, dtpottt IXCIPT
followlna from tht 11m1nlfl1 1. Jouph,
Benes, unused in the final month last_year .
.
majori can boast of lcimeihing . in the ninth and later retiring David Jus- r~. ••v~ J~~~~~1t above
dotorlbtd AHornty ti•LIW
and left off the playoff rotter because of a elte: a 3-0 rec.ord
tice and Miguel Tejada with two runnen AHIIIIIIV In 1111 1bova prtmltu told to AHornty for Plaintiff·
7.38 ERA.
Coming otT_ an AL-Ieading 100 toue1 on base to end 'it.
· tnlllltd 1ollon tor 11avmo11d llttlttolll lllllllontr
'or•oloture, Moriey by dud dlltd
Wtll 11. crtlr
. Benet (0~ 1), slowed by a knee problem, Iast year, the surprising Devil Rays comAlex Rodriguez wat hit by a pair o( lltlllf ' Juelgmtnt1 '•brutry 24, 1111 eoo
Avenue, 2nd "oor
made his fint start since Aug. 3 and lim pleted a season-opening sweep by defeat- pitches and got into a staredown with A's IIIII urvlot or baglnlllng 11 1111 Cltvtltnd, OH 44113
oomer of 1 (211) 121•1130
appearance 1ince Aug, 30. He lasted four ing Detro~t 9-2 on Thumby. Jlinch-hitter . st.trter Cory Lidle. The benches emptied, ~u:,~on:;:~nDI,:: aoutllwltl
lot lormorly owned
innings, giving up five rum - four Randy Wmn had a grand ilam, and Ben but there were no punches and no ejec- Dtftndtnll Afn" by 111111 llttltttln ,.,,,, 11,28,2002
earned -on four hiu.
Grieve, Brent Abernathy and Chris tions.
0111 Ohllngtr 1k1 1111 e1m1 bllng lht (4) 2, I , II, 2002
Juan UribeandBennyAgbayanihome- Gomez also homered atTropicana Field.
YANKBI!J .f, 0JUOLI11
o=::~w~llll~:r:~~
red for the Rockies, who took two of
"lt'1 early, but we're playing good,"
Mike Munina pitched .even tcorelen Crtdllor1, Dtvllllt,
three· in the ~Cason-opening series in St. manager Hal McRae taid. "We need to innings, and Robin Vcnlura hit another LttNH,
.
'· t he way h. omer to heIp New. v,ork win.
Acfmlnltlrll«l, lnd
Louis. Last year, the Rockies swept the contsnue
to come out an d pmy
llloutort
· Cardinali in Denver to 1tart the year.
we played in the lim three ballgamet."
MUllin a gave up (our h.itt and Allltnt;llllt plllntlfl
Thonuon (1-0) allowed a run on seven
"Jt't a long haul and you have to play improved to 4- 1 agaimt his former team. lin
ouro111d
'
b
b
11
•
d
·
h
"
h
h.
ro1ton11JII
dlll11n01
hits, 1triking out three and walking none. conssstent ate a m o~ er to fUstam t e
.entura, w ose omer beat Baltimore to . 11oortofn
tht
AJTRDS 6, BUWDI 3
momentum that we teem to be gather- 1-0 the previous night, connected· fo" a '"ldtnet ot 1111 11111
Lance Berkman tied a HoultOn club in g. But it taket more than three garnet to three-run •hot oft' Sidney Ponson. Rook- dlfendtnle, fMfudlllfl
record for home ruru at -the start of a sea- really feel like you're playing well and you ic Nick Johnson also homered for the ~,0:::::.0,~,
aon with his third in three days, and have momentum;' he taid,
Yankee~, who won twice at Camden 111111111 retldtnet Dl
Shane Reynold~ (1-0) allowed two rum
Tht Devil Rays moved three games Yuds afUr losing die 5eaaon opener.
0 ';!j·
Racine
on .even hitt in six innings. •
over .500 for the firtr time since April 24,
Bwa JAn 7, T'IVINI :Z
forth, unllnown, tnd
American Ulglon
Roy Halbday stayed in ~ntrol for ounot
will!
Chril Truby homered in three straight 1999- 19 games into their second seaPORI&lt; CHOP DINNER
to open last year for the Astros, Berkman lOti. Thil mark! the tint lime they've eight inninp, and rookie Eric Hintke hit . ==~=::::
Sunday 11 :00 am
went 2-for-4, railing hil average co .462 been in fir11 . place in the AL Eatt alter three doublet at TOI1)nCO won itf home 1111t we 11 ColtH.OO
while driving in three i'uril,
opening day.
opener,
oi!INNO IIIOIIIIDMd In
IUIIOII 270J,U
IM/or •tot.ot olllll
1111111111 CoM of Olio
Syracuu Volunl6er Fire

=

NL

P.l••.aooa

l

-. Rebate

·AL ·

April 8, 2002 • Skin Testing 4:30 • 6:30 pm
April 10, 2002 - Skin Test Reading 4-:30 • 5:30 pm

SYRACUSE FIRE DEPARTMENT
April 15, 2002 • Skin Testing 4-:30 - 6:30 pm
April 17, 2002· Skin Test Reading 4:30 · 5:30 pm

I

I'
11..a1 FamousSUper90
, _ SllperFifllr i1cluded

m. (Refail$2951)

April 22, 2002 • Skin Testing 4:30 • 6:30pm
April24.,..2002 - Skin Test Reading 4:30 ·5:30pm

RUTLAND FIRE DEfARTMENT
April 29, 2002· Skin Testing 4-:30 • 6:30 pm
May I, 2002- Skin Test Reading 4:30 · 5:30 pm

Meigs County TuberculosisOffice 992- 3722

:=!,C::1:,"!1

446-4940
1a247~1ao

LENNOX

winning Hrvlc:e. We are the largest dealer
serving Gallia County, ·

~Lmle31152-Weil\9ii~I'Mmli8

,~'w

:: (76.J

••

/.,.
"'"".

v .:
......... .... ................... ·······················
.
······· ............
'

•

Sunday

HUNTER

•

'

Chicken &amp; Rib BBQ
HIVIng 1111 :00 a,m,
111he Flrt Station

•

I'

llufo of Cfyfl
flrOMturo U(A),

warra~ c:lalnw. 25 Years of continuous award

0

.

IfNI ,.,._,. to Olio

AROUND THE DI.AM'OND

David White Setvlc:es welcome• all cuetomers
of the two Lennox dealers that have gone out
of buelnese. We can handle all manUfacturer

•:······~········~····················································•
•
••
ti
••
•••
•••
•••
•••
•••
••
•••
•
••
•••
•
••
•
••
•••
••
••
•••
••
•
••
'
•
•
••
•
••
••
-••
•••
.....
\

rt-J

!:

!:\:

RACINE FIRE DEPARTMENT

•

'

Plp81

SALEM STAll GRANGE

•

'

fiCNII

Bonds doesn't homer; Giants sweep L.A.

talk to real Nle references,)

&lt;

Benefit at the Rlldne Glut Qllb

Wahama ·

fidder~ · cho1ce f&gt;rl\'lr to ~~­
ting down two &lt;tr.UJtlll hitters on 1tr1kc&lt; w reure the
side. Thl· Iri;h .11m mountl•d
a thr~Jt~ucd iu tlw Cl~hth
when Lon~ !l•IW up J t\\'o
out b.ISC hit til Huvoura.
ami ,1 b."c on b.ul&lt; tc&gt; !·~rgu­
, 011 bdin•· f.uon 1 n~ th~ final
St. joe hitter tu &lt;'lllrlge
un&lt;rathecl.
In the F.\kon •·ighth Urad ·
Romh walkl·d .1\1 get thin!l'
swtcd ani! promptly swipt·d
second and third.
R.y:m .

winter-Hoi summer??! Don't give your hard earned,
GCI!Un to the utilities. Anew Lenno~ HP2e Heat Pump can cut
)'OIIr LP, Oil, Eleclric fU(l111C8 or older Heat Pump heating
monthly billlliteraly In halfl 50% off your cooling bills
tooiiRea!lyl (Stop fn the office if you want to see the figUres and

Reds

Boone scored on Jason
LaRue's two-out double off
the wall in left-center.
hom Page II
Manager Don Baylor and
the trainer came out to the
ed the Cubs to five hits in six mound to look at Cruz's pitchinning'~ . becoming the first
ing hand after he walked
Cincinnati starter to make it Boone on four pitches to open
past the fifih mning this season. the fourth, The trainer used a
Danny GraVes pitched out of nail file on Cruz's right index
a two-on. one-out threat in the finger in . the dugout between
eighth as he got his first save in mmn&amp;'two chances. The Cubs put
Todd Walker walked in the
two on with no outs in the fifth, advanced on Barry
ninth before Graves retired · Larkin's gmundout and scored
them.
on Griffey's single 10 right otf
Act'Vedo retired ! 0 in a row Cruz, who gave up three hits
before Sosa reached out for a and three runs - only one
down-and-awzy pitch and hn earned - in 4 2-3 innings,
it into the Cubs' bullpen in
NOTES: The Cubs . claimed
right field 111 the fourth inning. Mario Encarnacion otf waivers.
his second homer of the series. from the Colorado Rockies,
Both have gone to right field as giving them a backup outfielli- ·
the Reds tried to carefully er. Infielder Julio Zuleta was
pitch him away,
designated for assignment to
· Sosa's 452nd career homer open a spot on the 40-man
moved htm into a tie with Carl roster for Encarnacion, who
Yastrzemski for 24th place. failed to win a 'J'Ot as the
Gntfey is next with 460.
Rockies' fifih oudielder during
Grilfey went 3·for- to with spring ·training. ... LF Moisn
two lUlls and four strikeouts Alou .,, out his third pme
in the series.
with a strained right calf....
, Acevedo got the bette~ of a The Cubs will pby their 87th
matchup between· two young Wrigley Field opener on Fristarters who got their fint big lhy They're 48-37-1 in home
league promotions last IeaSOn. openers. .. . Acevedo's wild '
Both threw hard on a cold pitch in the first inning was the
n'igbt ~ It was 43 degrees at founh by Reds starterJ in three
the first pitch, and players ~mes, ... When Aavedo
retired the side in order in the
could 5ee the1r breath.
Sean Casey doubled off second. it marked the lint 1-2Cruz to stan the Reds' second 3 inning by a Red! stjner in
md McGrtlflet A.Jron Doone's three pmes. The Reds' rotagrounder skitter through his tion pitched the ffwest innings
legs, sending Cm-y home. in the majon last season.

Friday, Aprll .l . 2002

Friday, April 5, 2002

.

It FOtkld Ram
8p&amp;Wma(l Club

-

Fr1day, Aporll191h 6 pm-10 pm
Sat9am-5pm

~
._,_
f.O F 1 F

..., ,_,.,,
OH••·
.,,,,.,
1ft_,...,.
,.....,..

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

or HttfflH oiiHII

..... ...,.,.. .,.

MoM Wnlflnll

..., ........ ., '!!"W ............
~

..... . ,.._. ., . .., c..........
.....
Til'-......,.,
..,.,
..
I......
.
MJM••af(lt Mtslor
....

.......

.

...,,.,...
.... w........
.,....
......... , ......., .....,,,
..
....
Glllr._,.,
......
::.:::-:::
•..
.
.
,..,.. a '"., ..,..
"""' ...........
.
., ....... . .
••·

C2t1)

•••

.
... =
,.,. ,,_ . ..
............
.....
.,
..
.
.
.
o1.,..,..
...
..
_.
.
::...;:
.
~
=
!::.-:::
.~
..,... .. ,.... . ......... .. ....... ,...,,
lliwt.l
lolliMc:-t.f . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .,
....,,.,, dlr..., 111M 1M ... • •
era 11; ., ...,.. a ,,. ,_

Ill . . . . . . . . . . , . .

to tift

..:::#::-..
":
11J ., ...... ..
Co

.,..

Ulll

1

~

:r:....-:~::
- - M'llls

O.tltllll.

Air UfUng Sag System

VFW Lfaton OMCB
Sat ~ll9c1

OH .utfJ.

~ ... 1'11

· At•••

- 1

I .......

Ooll

us, Clllllltr ........

.... •Hit ..,. Ao•M _, ..... 0 11
'I

- Dept.
April 6, 2002
Fund Or'we for

. ,. . . . . . .

I .., ~....._

. $5.00
Chester Vol. Fire
11:00 AM to 6:00 PM

1Mrn•., w•••••
m.
u...

...... .,'*it ... 1' It . . . . . . . . . C
M fN .-1 11]11 ., Cllt II Sllj
P

•

cmMMlflA.AI

. . . . . Clilft ....

,

• ••••• ,
I
~l'ljlt

~

oiCW.

SPAGHETTI
DINNER
all you can eat
with beverage

Jf

Ud .,tall

,..,., C#HHM•,
. . .,
pt t '1st I "
, Uhfll-.

Lfutic by Pwe Countty
Meah's &amp; GuHtt

•

�.
Friday,

r·

fEribune - Sentinel -

l.f_.,..n~.~,...J!..,..1

The Dally Sentlner.'Page B 5

.!~ ll.or_Maroll&lt;:mD
____.•I t \~= 1

MC Rog. 8loek Lob PIJI&gt;' 1995 Dodgo Splril, t 878 FlH Hortoy !loYidlon, Buick 455 o1 -"'· flO%
~,:"!!..,:.~ h11unllng condition, R:IIIO.OO, fDel&lt; tnanr ulraa. R..dY lor coniplolo. $!100. &lt;100 Turbo
,~~ ~~~ • (7&gt;10)948-322t.
oumiMf. Call ovoni!IQI Lo&lt;&gt;Q;all ohoft ,,.,..,_,
00

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Countltes Like
No One
Else Canl

fl~orca .. -~·~

.M&lt;C
Husky Puppv.
Chryalor Conoon:t,
BlackSlt&gt;o&lt;lan
&amp; While Fomolo Blue loaded, 93,000 mllol,
Eyes. Like Snow dog. S2900080.- (740)2!5eot233
$150 to $22!1. (740)«6: 19911 Hondo CMc LX,"'*&gt;.
$627
,Air, Croln, PW, POL, ~
·ileOulllul Famale ao51 on [)oo{• ~ • $&amp;500 080.
'torrler Puppy. 8 wooko Old.
•
~740)258· 1997
19911 Dido Cullus Citra, ~

17401386 78

l

~~~~~~~

St50. (7&gt;10)'WII·3!141

.......,~~~~.,

2000 Vomaha TT-R 125,
e.-,; Condition, $''180

080· (7&gt;10)25W25?
.
2001 Harley Oovldoon
XL 1200 CUllom LX ~·
1.043 mlloo. $11.~.
. (:l04)e75-2Si?

CAMPUS &amp;

MaroklloMFl;

Condition .

5'

mower,

$13,000

co Player

$450. dowa SunrOof

{~40)245-()370
Trae Ior, on
H••
p
.Ford 50'"
oJV
w;
,
485 1o1a1 hra., 4 hyd., 1arvo
wolghlod !Ires, llberglaas
cpnopy. 31Q Foro End load·
el wllh 811. buckel, aqull)monl nevor rained.on. Kepi
Inside $19,000 FIRM.
5·:.:..:.
2902:___ _ _
::l:l04.:...:.)&amp;:_?.:..
K¥bol• 3010, iJ&lt;4, 28 horse
power 190hra, 8' flnlah

(7&gt;10}Ue-211M •,
.
.
81 H.D. Sporfllor I200,
Blodr, 15,000 mlloa, Lolo of
Chrt&gt;mo Ouol $M~ Slsav
Bor, wlndohltld, Forword
Conlrola. Exealltnl Condl·
lion,
$6500.
Phone
(7&gt;10)«0-el!t7 ovonlngl.
96 Honda 300 Founrax 4x4,
(740~715 or (7&gt;10)258·
eno. Al!&lt;lng sst so.
FOr Hio 1· 1890 and 1·
1893 Yomahl warrior
ATV't. $2300. lor I&gt;Oih
phone 304-811!5·3878.

r

(740)992·2401

eVenings &amp; weekends.

0183

Twin Bods, alaopa 6, ~
shape. Vadrdmahn
42 cnchll
cut, goo
1 ape.
a
(7&gt;10)387-7070

natural/Guaranteed

140 992•7036

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Uncoll(jiUOnal Uletlme guar·
anlee. Local references fur·

nlshed. Ealabllshed 1975. ·
Call 2• Hrs. (740) 446·

0870, ~ogera Basement
Waterproofing .

C&amp;C Qeneral Home Malnle·
740·892· 4 Nearly Na'N Tlrta. BF nanol· Painting, vinYl sld·
lng, carplfltry, doors, win·

dows, baths, mobile home
repair and mora. FOt free

osllmala oall Chol, 7•0·992·
6323.

r'~~~NI

LIME·
STONE
Delivered &amp;
Spread $15.00
per ton, 8 to 10
tona, limited
area, call for
dl!talls. Cell:

(740) 591·2173
Or leave name
and number

Volt, High Quality, Fits most ForO Crown VIctoria, 1600.
I 990 Ponllsc Orand· Am, 2
Jim's Farm Equipment Inc. door, S1200. 1989 Ftontlac
(7~~~40;;_)4;_;4,;,6·,;,24;,;;84.;,.._ _,_, Flreblrd, V6 , 5 opaed,

$1800. 1990 Foro Tempo,
$500. 1992 MarouN To~i ,
In Memory ·
$1400. 1987 For&lt;iAeroliar -;;;;;;·~~!i
Van, $600. 1991 Ford Tam· J1P
po, $1200.
198811188
Moroury
~
Marquis,
$750.
Oldo ~
Clora, $700, 19112 Goo Mtl·
Loving
ro, $800. 1991 ChoyV Mal·
mory of
ro, $600. 1979 Oodga Plok·
MarahaU (Bob)
up, $700. 1987 Piymoulh
Adallir
Horizon, $300. 1G84 QMC
Brigadier Semi, ~500. Call
Aug. 12, 1915 •
(7.a)388·9303
•
AprU 5, 1998

terad append. ht geldings.

Green bro~•- One Psloml·
no, ont Bay.
Asking
52,500.00 each. 740-M3·

1':

'I'RucKs

'

Mn

and pteuanl charm.

wt work on lhe form.
Wo know you'n
happy In Htl¥tn
obovo Wllh Rtoymond
beoldo you, ohorlna
God' 1
I

on.

Ourtlvq hiYo
chanaed 1lnre you've
lOne,
B • lth God' hel

.:.:.:.=-----

We don't need io ltll
)'Ou, "Go home and

New, Very CIHn, EJCOtlltnl
Wanted to buy tor rel!i.sona· Truck, 14500. (740)441·
bla price. Tall Horae, 18 :::00:..:.1lr__
' -----

re•t"

B«auteyou'nwtlh
Jau1 , where ore 11
the boot.
We lo•eond mliiJOU

hands or beller. Preferably 1993 F·150, Auto, Rune

(JIIdlng. (740)245·9189
Good, Hlgn Mllol, 12300
Whllo 5 yr. old female Lama 080. (740)25HI257
WJ 3 week old baby Lama.
tted female Oonkey 5 1994 Ford F150Xl.T, 302Ft

46,000 o~gln~l miles, one
owner, runo good, lour good
II rea, $2,500.00 or trade;
1986 ()rand Am, nlco body,
Oood llrtl engine nHdo
\&lt;fork , S20o.OO or trade.
740·1185·4149.

52K, Supar ah.lrp, 110,500.
(740(411·1871
daya,
(740)441-11815 evenings.

~·

""""~'"'""
1-'4..
fri-14-.4

In this space
for
'25 per month

~

, f'f'l,(lliol

Wllllklwl&amp;
Siding

In I I

1993 Escort LX Wagon.
11350. 1818 Mercury,
1)100. 15 1/2 II Boll,
85HP. 86 Trailer, 11000.
17&gt;101386-990&amp;
1084 Cavalier R8. Runo
Qood. (30ol)675-2369

•H•

. 8 pm.

t991 Chevy· 4x•, lllhr•odo
1110r1 wtiNibaN, 11100 - ·
!H. 350 6tj). Nit kH. 0.
pondablo. 17,300 (:!04)8711-

.::'3::1:..0-~--:--!!--:-1llt4JoopGrandChorLararlo 4x4. L.Oe&lt;IOd. Ev.rv·

-lonl

thing -

-

GM!IO

Kopt.

~

l3tand rures IW Ql1
trusl.

'

Cer\mleQ:l, Sill I~ I
I g..aranleed.

740-667-0363

Remodeling
• New Qaragea

'VInyl Siding &amp; Palnllng
• Patio end Porch Decka

Free Esllmates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·621 5
e~y.on~

•••

TFN

. New Homes &amp; Remodeling
"Speci11lil.ing In Log Homes
./lint,
&amp; Rubber Roofs"
1'~ Garages, Pole Buildings, Concrele
Roofs &amp; Siding
A,
Commercinl &amp; Residential

fJ(

[jjlll

mo.

Day, evening,

•service You
Can Count On"

and weekend
care available

Owner
Gene Arms

992.;s975

992-3174
I mo3113
pd

HOWARD L.
WRITESEL.
Roofing· Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down
Spout

. Free Estimates

or email@

weny10chgcrilbl.cam

.. P/8
CONTRACTORS, INC.
Racine, Ohio 45771

740-985-3948
CONCRETE/BLDCK/BIICK
Footers, Wal.l1, Step1 •
Flat Work,
Replacements, • Walks
. und Drives • Stencil'

!

Cre1e

Free

E~limatcs

In this space
for
1/Jf:t. ~A Cut Above '25 per month
f:t:J i1· &lt;8ilb tne Rest"

If:..
l l tl.~

(740) 992-3987
Owner &amp; Operalor, John Dean

TFN

~~~lt-~~!{f.
(Syracuse, Ohio)
Bulldozing,
Trackhoe/Backhoe.
land clearing, Seplic
tank, dilching, waler

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

(Insured)
Free Estimates

7 40-992·3985

FIELDS ·
PLUMBING
405 5th Street
New l'laven, WV
•Resldentlol
•Commercial

e;t, (304)0
882·2343
wv LICII0212C3

now Open 11r!lllltltl !IIIII!

Hours:
Mon·Sat 10.4

HUBBftiiD'S GllffiiiOUSf .

llllldlnt 6 Uttlttlltt 1'llnll

217 E. 2nd St •
Pomeroy, OH

(740) 992-5908

Poll=~
()pel Dilly t-5
aM~Sttl*ll

140·ft2·511i '
Shude River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"
33337 St Rl. 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 437l0
4-H fcet.l ror lumbs, hogs, steers, chickens and
nbbits. '
Seed Pot11toos
Onion Sets
Pull Line of Bulk Garden Seeds
Fcrtili7.er s'pccifically Designed for Garden Crops
New Fenili zer Buggies
All buggies have beeri pattern lested to meet
Agronomy Aswclation Standards

I-~

•

Pomeroy

BISSEll

BinGO

lcHiVRO,~T/

COMMEiCIAI and IISIDOOW.
FREE ESTIMATES

74()-992·7599

1

Every Thurt4ay
6 Suadlg
Doors Open 4:30
fllrty birds start
6:30
Progressive top One
Tbursdlvs

LARRY SCHEY

7$0 East Stale Sueet

Phone (740)593-6671
Athens, Ohio
.
"

~1(~

RESIDENTIAl. &amp;
MANUFACTURED HOUSING

HENDRIX

High&amp; Dry

. HI· Efficiency Heat Pumps, Air
Condltlonns &amp; Furnaces

ll'

33795 HiLinJ Rd.
Pommy. Ohio

•

W•rr•nfr On S&amp;o~d Mudelw·

lryom

Heating &amp; Cooling 10 Yr. PW
24-HR.
Llbor.W...,n!J
SERVICE
~'One Price.

Self-Storage

Anytime.

All the Time."

740·992-5232

Repkwementlfindows
American U••tmPI
Patio Rooms WICK'I

D

IIAVLDIG and
EXCAVATING
o!leUIIng ollmHtone

oQriVtl • Send. •ToptOII

4&amp;;

YOUR COIDfTf

connknon, uc
(740) 742-«115

(740) 992·3470

Qulllr c-nte Work

Drivewaya, Patios,
PaJkif9play Areas,
SidewalkS, Floors
2t ,..,. bpetlei!Ce
FNIII!elln(loll flw)

877·353-7022

•

Now accepting
children

Pocket Knives
&amp; Collectibles

.fill Dirt oMulch

•

WITILEONES

Advertise

Windows • Roofing

~-~'l'IM~l'~$ • llllf;l( Inventory
• ll..k flrtJul&lt;lna Malloble
• Prlc.. To Fit Allll..tl••l&gt;

WERRY'S

~~~~~~~ MACK'S
J.D.

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

1

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

949-1405 TFN

• Replacement

Condlllon. 122K
:111114 ~. 15,500 ..,. mil.., 17411!5. (?.a}Ue•1UII mlfet, wllh rod in- 3117
•.,nor. glragt ..... ::.::.::.....--~-­
room oondlllon. Nona - M 1l18ll uncotn . Ni&gt;lgalot,
Ofound ar&gt;yWNrt. Prtr:od. loaded, wilh T.V. t)'Nm,
'fJ'flt II - . g..(300)&amp;75- Ql&lt;lng 130,000.00. 7o40'531i7
ii2·2roll

•

(740) 992-2753
(740) 992·1101

(10'1110' 610'1120'1

Servina Ohio and.W.V.
wv 11031712

-===============~

t'KII,E

New Homes • Remodellna
Roonna• Roon1 Additions
Sldlna • Pole Barns
l)tcks • G•raaes
t·m Jl,stlmlllts • WVI31tlt·

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

• VrH! 1c II Year l••rt W•rranlle.
• •·m ltiJ(Ual 'fhrrrnmar.t
."1 ';
• frH to Yrar OmiiH't111fUt

97 Beech st.
middleport, OH

Compt11U¥e Prim

33561 Bailey Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

740.742·3411

rt!KE.'i!J l&amp;rm::::::.1.

"Quality Home
Improvements"

BUILDERS IDC;

FREE ESTIMATES!

1tt2 Unoiltn Town Car, 4
·,
2216after8p.m.
4-WDII
dl&gt;or, oupor no:. carwl"""'f
oPIIon, new llr,.., 92,000 ... 1gee Ford Econollna V111,
1uol mllot, $5,195.00. 1· 35tW. Nowllr.., Muot Nil
'30H73-5186. 7&lt;10·lli2· now. 1800 OBO. (?.a)«1-

0980

100{! St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

EXCAVATION

Bryan Ruves
.
New Home~, Room Additions,
01r1ge1, Pole Bulldlnge, Roofs,
Siding, Oeckl, .Kitchena, Drywlll
&amp;More

1962 Olda 981 ! una good; 89 Silverado 112 Ton. 8ft
looko good $7w. (304)675- llfd Wllh liner and tool bole.
2'329
306 Aulo. lrontmloiiOn.
••~ Crulte,
A/C,
1&amp;500.
11183 Bulc~ Skylark, . -. (740)245-5946
(f&gt;I0)446o3787

~It

· Dealers

WILLIAMS

,.e,.•,.,.

sunset Home
construction

(7&gt;10)~·235e

1

740-992-9158

Advertise

Business Services

22' SO• Truck. No Enalnoo.
aooct lor SloriQI. lfl!OO.

I

· M11hiii'IIIHI

lJetiT1e Warrarft
Free Eslli t 11195

.

1~1 Pontiac Flreblrd For·
mula, iooktlruno lllce new, .11--~-~-.,
$3.500.00. Call 740-742· 12
VAM~ A

&lt;141111 ~1~r. h Sl

~

"1974 Chevy Nova, 350, er, Bed u,.., Suptr' Sharp,

• Room AddiiiOnt 6
• Electrical 6 Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Outter1

Cnse·IH Pans

Free [SIIIl13IC~

~"'t.u I l'f

d•u,&amp;hter Phrlllll,
~•nd Forn~lly

(716 . Atm)lj
11997
Toyota Taoom1 LX,
I, ._ _FOR
2•4 NC,
£&lt;1. Cab,
M , AWFM
_SAU:
_ _ _ CO,
PIS, Crolla,
Tlnl·
Ill WIOOOwl, Tonneau COV·

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized

.......

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

G&amp;R
CARPENTER
Sanitation
SERVICE

CONSTRUCTION

~
,.. f.l.w(,.,.
.•,.,

Authorized Agent

YOUNG'S

111~11

whoela, 59,000 mloot, E•cellonl oondlllon. 17.500.00
080. 740-~11·2131

·

DEPDYSAG
PUTS

7:00AM • 8:00 PM

dowa, dual exhauat, chrome
\ Ill ~\

Satnnelt
·
WIDWn
,Attomey

Houra

Witt, Flonrice,

all. pw/pl, srnllm 0111., lit,
orulee, lumbar 1Ut1 oloth In·

Vea lng Angus BuU, $650. lorlor, mtlchlng llbergliin
1740)«6-6566 or (740)339, 1opper, bod mo1, llntlll win·
II(\ \\ l'f 1H I

This may include 1 car, a house, clothes, and
household goods. You should direct any
questions regardins bankruptcy to an attorney
berorc proceeding. For infonnation regarding
Banknaptty contact'

· to 10'x30'

•~ w
• P,
we continue on.

Asking Cab, Topper, 4x4, 134K
$425.00: ?40·742·3033
mllot, Aulo, AC. TIC, Loll
ride.

2622.

may retain certain property, known as
"exempt" property, ror his or hu personal USC.

29870 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
' 740·8ol9·2217

'

We mlu rour ht)p u

trained/ mannerlll. Sholl , lng 111110, (740)114tlo:!e21
Wormed 1 Trimmed . After
.
5pm. · 11800
OBO. 1888 F·150 ~Jdondtd Clb,
5 IPttd, RHOO Hllch &amp;
::(7_;;40~)«:.:.;,1·.::10_;;13::__ _ _ Topptr.
Vory GOOd COndl·
(Jood 4·H and FFA Fair lion. S3500. (740)311?-7530
PIQI. Hamp, York and Pal·
rarn croubrod. (740)366· 1990 Ford F150, opprox.
9033, 1740)388·0179 aflor 85,000 mlloo on 11188 3111,
8:00pm
very
OOOd
oondltlon.
13,800.00. 740-llt2·31811
Thrn yaor old golden pony
.
alalllon. areal pel, bul nol 1991 QMC Sonomo Exl

·

amnBearllirdistributionofasseiSilllong

creditOB. A person going through bankruptcy

• Top • Removal ·Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

mon uch doy.

Great 4·H Horu. Well wheela, alum. toolboM, uk·

d 30 '675-6238

en relieve. debtor or financial obliptions and

• Slzee ll'x1 0'

We mlu Jour smile

Slaok wllh While Socka, palnl job, whlll apokt

to

BANKRUPTCY

------

JONES'

~~Q~~

==-----1882 QMC plck•up, lul~olzo
:zo yr. old Ouarttr Matt, bed, 89,000 mlltl, new

broken

r---------------,

Hill's Self
Storage

It'•
lite• 41o.. ye1rt
1lnce vou went awav

1

FOR SALE

ln Memory ·
_____
,;__

Jeff Warner Ins.

992-5479

Tree Service

I
~.t~------.,1.
2 lwo-year·old AOHA rogla·

Certifil.:rucs Avallublc
SJ0-4!5 mittulcs

,
IMPRoVEMENTS
(740) S9Z.50l5
•
Ath.ens
·-iiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiioP 1...---l.lllllo.lillo.iiill 1--.;..._;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;__....J

ATVa, $295.

1 yr. old Nazarene Donkey
Jaok: Gentle $400 OBO.
C~nalder Trade· Farm
Equlpmenl or ·Sporllng
&lt;loodo.
Allor
5pm,
(740)441-1013

ll!Oclt.oloa)l, Myofasclal
and Voaa Therapy Gift

•~~-~~---,
"
r1U
HOME
VAWI.htllbl4lltlllt

Ilk·

&lt;lood Shape . (740)379· lng $5,000.00.
2820
29'52
,
Goodrlda P185/75R, 14'.
Lllollme Warranly. $185 .
97 Ford E&gt;ploror, 4x4, (740)339-()482
.
Pull TYPo Lawn Mower, Ex·. Loalhor lnlorlor. 88,000
cellon! lor Four Whaoler. mllea, $13,000; (740)446·
12HP, 60" CUI eiiHilrlc llart.7·5011:::::;:_ _ _ _ __
$750 (740)388·6934 leave message
llvely'a Auto Balta. 1989
Chevy Cortlco, $1000.
nme fOf Frost Seeding P'ae· 1984 Mercury Cougar,
lure and Hav Fields:
$1200. 1990 Ponllac &lt;lrand·
ATV Broadceal SOedors, 12 Am. 4 door, Sl200. 1¥85

.

cr.niosacral,

27
in 32 days
•
100%

Tioga, 1894 mOdel, fully

Cellular

Speclalil..in1 in: Deep
Swedish, ShloiSu, l

n ui\NIIIJ

.tequlpp&amp;d, Ford Chassis,

I

j

Coal over

"-'-=-'-'----

a Trailer with a

Windows, NC, Rosr Spoil· 70 h.p . Evouo engine.
or. 114,000 miles, S2500 (304)e75~77.
080. (740)388·0129 "
96 Mercury Cougar, loaded
At!ltl PAKili &amp;
rod, VB . aulomal~, 79,000
A~

Snoe John Deere plowa. mllaa, very aharp oar,

LIVESTOCK

THJ:RAPIST

HER BALI FE

·

95 Oodge Neon, Tlnled Motor Bolt

.
Maaoov Ferguson 362, 55
hp, 717 hr., like new,
$15,800,1740)985·3843 .
Sol ol 3· 14 Inch high clear·

r

LICt::NSF.D MASSAGE

I0 Years Experimcc

$80,000. Sell lor $35,000 s•op •. Compare
dut lo laMing htallh . 740t
Ill
?Q·3033
FREE ESTIMATES
.Y
Motor Homa. 87 ollow·
74"-992·1671
olone COunlry Club, 33' only
II"
1.5,800 miles. A muol 101. 1.----...:::'mtr=•~•
Too much lo list Only
St5,?00. (7&gt;10)446·9210
.--------.
RV: 1998 GOlden Falcon 31
ft. mint COndlllon. Slid&amp;-. ou1
d
LR, plckolod .oak ca1&gt;1n01s
lndepen enl
~kl:'~~~.''f,r:..mng~;
Distributor
(7.a)256-16M
I Lost , lb.

I

Call t7&gt;10)388·tl525
• '
BoATS &amp; MOJ'ORS
79 carveIIa Coupa, t-top,
FOR SAL£
64,000 miles, Aulo, 12,500
firm: (740)a?0-2282 · · 1991 WaiiCraH il5 112ft. till
Cabin , Sloopa 6. SloYO,
94 Dodtla SpiN!. 82,000 Sink, 454 ""gina, 295HP,
mlln Air, Till, Cruloe. (740)387-()850, (740)367·
$1000 080. 1740)258·1233 72?2.
94 Nlasan Maxima . Loaded. 1999 Polsnt Wove AUMOf,
&lt;op condlllon. (304)875· 3 Staler, Exctllonl Concfl·
8132 (304)675· 1844 . or liOn. Now TroMor. (740)446·

bush-hog, leaVe message.

ii

Kris
Kaniecki

1878 Trolwood 22ft Fully
,Soli Conmlnod. Cornpielely ~New Homes
Romodolod,
$2000. ~ Gara,.1
(7&gt;10)3117-04ee
••

vary bHuliful, In ptrttcl aummer· Ukt new. $8!!10. 8,000 mlltl.

tent

ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRIII'
riQN
U\,11

door, 81,000
mllot,I ownar,
loil o1 2001
XR50R,
Bought
Complele
opllons,
now llrH,
July 2001
.. Only
rodeNewone 2000 Wlnn Motor Home, • "'e--..!llng

COndlllon, $5.395.00. 1·
304·773·5186. 740·992·
6719 ·
.
lnOiromonto . 1997 Goo Priam wllh Toyoand Ia Engine. 51,000 mlloo, 1uJ.
In gonor· lomallc. Air, Ono 0wr)or,
Book 17500, Robulll Tlllo,
13500 oao. (740~_.786
1998 Monla Carlo, Exctllonl
:::;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;; Condlllon, 100,000· mllto,
se.ooo firm. (740)2~·5067
1999 Honda Civic ex,
Black, $11.900. Aulo, E&gt;col·
,
lanl Condlllon, New Tlroa,
IJ!oc· 7 King Koller. EKCol• Crolse Conlrol, Power Win-

l\egtster
TO Place
Qtrtbune
Sentinel
YOur Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675·1333
Call Today••• Or To 448-3001
8711•5234
Ot Pllt
H2·t157

r

740-742·21111

19911

Local843-$264
Supplement; Life Insurance;
and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;

Retirement,
·
&amp; 401K Rollo,en;
Major Medical
Home

Advertise your business on this page
for one month for as low as $25 .
Phone992~21 55

.,

I

•

AB Video
&amp; Tanning
Cnllfk;~T.........
w~r ·

,....,..

c..,.,....,.A•\; '

•

(304) 773-5601

�~

8 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, April 5, 2002

www.mydellyaentlnel.com

ALLEYOOP

NEA Croaaword Pu••l•

BRIDOI

GOOD•

PHILLIP

BYE'
i •

43 .......
44 Light .
1 W-plpe
Pl-kM
5 PuH
41 Reply to I
a or....,
knock
41 Clock hind
12 1177 While 50 Mont...l
movie
turndown
13 .....
52 Arkin or
neighbor
Ant
14 Fronko"' S4 Anne...
lleln't
55 - de
HNtnt
colovn•
15 LOHIOIM 5I Andet
11 LUlU
empire
touvonlr
57 Chott
17 Underolztd
IWIY
11 Forowoll
5I Stull 20 Collor oltn
Morll
22 Br. WIY Of 51 Floh'e
23 0 d Ollh
homo
24 Singer
DOWN
Mormtn
27 Without
wornlng
1 ttsa~
' Ill It
2 Mil
30 Oullll
31 Stine VItti 3 Seol 1
dttl
32 Port of
4 LOCII
UCLA
5 Oklahomo
34 Sompto
city
35 Borrol
I "- h or
37 · - loot Ill"
Blue?"
38 8thlnd, on 7 Lucrative
8 Btrktd
llhlp
t Tht chlllt
40 Reglont
10 Silver and
42 Border

ACROSS

ALDER

....

.
\\'t-~ 1

. : •• !

• "11 t

• a~

'If Q Ill I .f

""

'

• "J 1n 1
K 83 I

.. &lt;./ J I l

&amp;

!'11 uth

• QJ

.. ..

.

s.m th

,.
'
10

H
I'IISI

~

~

•

A II~

•

Q118$4

Deall'r; South
VuiHCI'!Ih l't' Nurlll•South
w~~ •

N ...-. ..

J::ut

l'h ~•

~1

••

, ....

l '1•~•

~ A

l'a'~

l'a u

l'n•

I'IIIU

I'IU

"" ~·

r···-

Ohl

.
'

Ojllmlnjt lrutl. A Q

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
I

A-G. JELL
INVff'o/'fb/l

Jlr.-

----

OM, f&gt;.i.1_ 1':.\Gt\T...
\

,..

.....

BIG NATE
WELL" DID

YOU SEE I"'

YOU BI&lt;:EAK

PRETIY... UH...

UP WITH

UPBEAT
AW UT

I&lt; E ~ ~y ~

IT

Howord ·
lura
It Kind ol
38 Be
humor
porchtd
11 Lubrlcoto 40 Koon
21 Condy·
dloclpllno
tlrlper
41 Heorty
24 Ambullnct
IOUP.
· wrkr.
43 Sportt
25 Scorlett'a
locete
homo
• 44 String tie
21 Riel.
45 Humdinger
27 Oeature
47 Writer
28 Zttt tor
. Ferber
lilt
41 Cudgtlone't
21 Aloakin
brMW
allport
tt Not him
33 Family
51 NoH·beg
nlcknomt
moratl
35 Piercing
53 Delay38 Voluablo
Scregga

Kin); l' .~r o uk I of
E!:y pt said in 1'.150 ,
"In a lew years there
wi ll be only fi vt• kin gs
in the wo rld -- the
King of E n ~:l a nd and
r:-"~~r.-l'"""'l::l""""'l'l'th e fo ur kin gs in a
park of cards. "
Yct anot ht• r in cor·
rec t
pr e di ct i o n .
With in two years,
thcrt· was li O Kin ~: of
En!;l:lll\1, ami as yo u
know, Eli za beth II
celebrated 50 years on
the tltnmc ea rlier this
Y&lt;',1r. T here arc some .
20 re illlliliJ.: mon;trchs,
and in February we
g&lt;lt a 1it•w kin g when
Slll·ik HamaJ bin lsa
AI Khalif:1 turned th e
Stale of llah r,rin .in to a
killlld&lt;ll ll ,
ill this deal, taken
fi·om "It ight T hrough
CELEBRITY CIPHER
the l'.rck" by Robert
by Lula Campoa
I&gt; an&lt;;" alid No rman
Celebri
ty
Cipher
oryplograma
are created !rom quotatlona by famoua
dt· Villi crs Hart; one
people, paa1and present. Each letter In the cipher atandalor anolher.
king ran .ha ve a key
Today's clue: f equals K
ro lt• --what is it? ·
ill the book., we arc
H NY
YZODNX
' OMZYZ'D
XN
told ollly thnt South
OXPOMIXC.
HZZT
P N S ON
rc.ld ll'' live diamon ds
alld i• do ubl ed by
E Z
XN0
DMNSTA
OKGBXC
E.t st. ill 1n y debatabl e
au cti &lt;III , ll o te that
FITOP . '
ROIXHST,
ESO
South 's two-diamo11d
rebid guarantee.&lt; at
- . (OKGNY/KNOKM) CSP
least a six-card sui t.
DGNKIVZTT
Wam ed by Eas t's
PAEVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Waylon J t nn lnga WBI an American
lll lWise do uble about
archetype·
, the bad ~uy with the big heart.'- Krll Kriatoflereon
th e bad tl·um p· split, '
South w on the club
wou
load with his,ace and
OAMI
r:~~:t:~'
sccr~~lA~
r..~s·
played n low spade to - - - - - - ldlood' ~y CLAY • . rOLLAN _;;...._ _ __
dummy's 10. When
Rec rronoe Jenera of t~e
the fin esse worked ,
fou r scrambled word• be·
South ruffed n club in low to form four Jlmplt word1.
hnnd, ran th e spade
queen, led th e spade
jac k to dummy's ace ,
ruffed a second club,
RI V0 S
returned to dummy
with heart, trumped r--r-,.,
a third ·club , and . 1
. 13
. . .
cashed the heart ace.
~======~
E T y T ·s 1:. "";'
·111,That
d was
Eastnine
·11 tricks
11eld I
old are you?" the little girl
an
stt
k"How
5
.
s
c
u
r
as
ed
the
old woman. "I'm 98," the
1
6
II I
trumps.
ld
''0
Wh en South contin - .___.___._....__...__,
o woman bragged. "Wow," the
ti ed with hi s las t r~--:G~L-:E::--:T~H~N:-..,1 ~~~~tlga~ped,"didyou- - - - -at

O

t'IO I·i'D
SHE

i AKE
IT~

A~ t...

I

a

PEANUTS

;-rl-"l•:--l

I I

FREO IS LONEL'I'
AND WANTS TO

TRV T.O T~ INK
OF SOMETiliNEi
NICE ...

~OME?

I FRIDAY

1 A6REE .. A ~OT
FVD6E SUNDAE WOULD
TA5TE 6001:' Rt61lT NOW ..

APRIL sl

I I I

heart, East had to ruff
17 18
0 Comploto rho chuckle quolod •
and was cndplaycd,
. . . . .
by filling In lhe miJJing words
un able to stop de- ,__.__,__.__....__,__. You dovolop from slop No. 3 below.
cl aror scoring both 8 PRI NT NUMBERED
l ETTERS IN SQUARES
dulllmy' s d iam o nd
_____, ' kin g .1 nd his di amond A UNSCRAMBLE FORI
V 'AN SWE R
.·
&lt;JUCCn.
The co ntract is dcSCRAM-LETS . ANSWERS
fcotcd if West inserts
Rodent - Usual - Rummy - Weight - MOMENTS
th e spade king at trick
My husband Is very poor at remembering special
two, whid t would
dates and days. One year he forgot my birthday but
cost Soutl1 " vital
granny reminded me that it's better to remember 'spedumm y entry. An - · cial MOMENTS.
.
oth er easy play fc)r a
' · king miSsed!
~

C

.

.

------------l~~~----------~
S:~turdny.

Apnl (,, 2002

Fric:nJ, and ;~'sudatcs &lt;.: ould
play i111p1,11t.utt w1cs in th l'
yc.1r .t hea d. Uc th e giver in
your rci;Hiumlnps·, ;1ml yo\1•11
end 11p getting more thilil
your share b:h:k,
II R IES (M•rch 21-April I ~)

-- Yuu c.:ouiJ IIH..' l't sonu.•cmc
new in the nc&gt;.:t r,:o upl ~ of
.days \\ 1_lla whom yov'll have a
great ,k,JI in com mon. T hey
may pruvc to be a Vt.~ry im-

portant rricnd . Trying to
p:Hc.:h up a

bruk~· n w n ~:m ce?

T he IIHr&lt;&gt;-Graph · March~
ntakcr .c.1n help y.,u undor~tand w hJt to do to 11Mke rhe
rcl.ation~hip work. M.ul S2,7:r,

to

M;H ,:hmakcr, (/u thi$
IIL'W~f:Mpcr, 1'.0 . Uox · 175X,

Mumy H ill St.Ui011, New
York, NY IOI51o.
TAU llUS {Ap1 il ]O.M .•y
211) -- llny opponunily that
prc•rnu iocl( to c1Jimtl'c your
!litL:urity will h.t vc longevity
.atuchcd to it. Thi~ t•ould be
your ht,kr d.ay .
c;EM INI (M•y 21-juttc 211)
-- Ym1 'II ht.• .1hll· lu lv .,Jfc ••

tiJfli nth

IJI ,tUCr CJ!tli(,lr lO OIIC

YOLl ~ Ll Ct' t.'~\ f LJll y lll i lllot~cd pre- .

,·iuusly. Usi.' the Mltt c taC'ti&lt;.' '
tl1.11 work.~.·~.l bc:fo11:. ·
CANCE R (J un e 21 -J uly
:!:!) ·- s,,UH'Ollt.' )'(lf\'c
la·lpcd pn•viou~lr ,\,Ill of(L•r
p n 1 tht..• ,J\\hl3 11CC you

nct•J .

None uf u, .:.111 pruwcu witho ut thl' .11d uf ut hcr~ .
l.£() (July 23 - All~ . 22) -WIIJI 111.1k&lt;•• you exciti ng is
your open cufiotity. T his :~s­
pec! occun in pan dur to a

mo nl! 'desire to search out
· new ide.a5 :. nd thOJc who can
aniculate them .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
-- lnvo lvemenu With humanit.arian clemenu wilf be

thr ones that appeal the n1011
to you. Focus on that which
can benefi t larg&lt; groups of
peop!t.

ch:mges and a'lj\15tnumts bc:t- •
tc: r t han must -- even chose:
you do nnt pe""""IIY orchc•- •
trale. What yo u do will bene- :

fit .dl tlm&gt;c with whom you're •
involved.

,

SAGITTARIUS {Nov. .23Dcc. 21) - Yuu can readjust a
rece nt nego tiation th at didn' t ;
turn out as f.1ir ly •a you had :

hoped. You'll only

g~t

one •

chan"'· so u tili z~ it.
CA I'Il iCO ilN (D.c .. 22J.ur. 19) -- C&lt;&gt;!ll )&gt;~ tenl p&lt;rformattcc4 cuu ld ca r'n you
lllUt'C th.an u ,.; uo~t lr'J a ~ond
, •,lf11111g q~d~.

h~vc ro
be&lt;t .

and no

lllll'

•
:•

will -•

I'!) - Yn11'r&lt;• nut likely to t!&lt;'t
bored with those you encoun~ill

A Supplement to the

O•n. 2U-Fcb.

riley rirr of you.

LlllRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) 1
- 'Y'our winning mitudc will
be rc8ee1ed in all your en-

You're one of tho•• people
who knows h&lt;&gt;w to get along

deavors and relationship". Optimism has proven that it is

hre.
I' ISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
-- Yuu tend to finish !tronl!ly.

what maktl thing.&lt; happen.
SC0!\.1110 (O&lt;t, 24-Nov.
22) - Dc•pitc in habi1inK "'
obstinate sign, you lumllc

'

tel! yuu w do your

AQUARIUS
ter, nor

:

with those fru m all walkJ of

~alltpolt~

~otnt ftlea~ant .Rtgi~ttr

The Daily Sentinel
April~ 2002
··

• make enough time to finalize
impo rt ant mattrrs. Yo u

should be able to conclude
them ro your sarbfacrio1t.

• ••

'

.

\

I

I

JBailp ~rihunt

�</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="22948">
            <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="22947">
              <text>April 5, 2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1513">
      <name>carman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1946">
      <name>durbin</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2496">
      <name>frecker</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2512">
      <name>hull</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5408">
      <name>northway</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="251">
      <name>pickens</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="335">
      <name>sayre</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="451">
      <name>vanmeter</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
